<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10138" 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/10138?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T12:42:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20578">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ecf1a01f1a4d78d1523d03b2de9a8e85.pdf</src>
      <authentication>cab1d89087c83d50ee0ee4b96668fd63</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32393">
                  <text>--~- -

•

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Poineroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio

Community ·Calendar
Comaallltf Cll1•dlr Hetwo daJI bel'olt o event
ud 1M daJ ot t11at naL Items
alllt be received welllllldTuce
to !llllll't pu• Mbl IB tile cal·
elldar.
FRIDAY

Call 378~6312, 3_78-6133 or 667- . p.m. Costis$3.50foradUJtsand$2
6946 for infonnauon.
for children . Desserts are extra.
Pu151ic welcome.
SYRACUSE - Revival at the
Syracuse First Church of God will
STIVERSVILLE • Jerry Cotterbe Friday thiough Sunday at 7 p.m. ill will speak at the S tiversville
nightly with Steven Carney, Chilli· Word or Faith Church on Saturday
cOihe, on Friday; Mike Lainben on and Sunday at 7:30p.m. Pastor
.: MIDDLEPORT • Revival will Saturday· and Mike Finnicun on David Dailey invites the public.
be throligll Friday at the Bnidford s
'
Church of Christ. Tim Wallace
unday. Pastor David Russell
MILLFIELD - There will be a
Wheelasbwa. will be the speaker: invites the public.
•
round and square dance on SaturServic:ea are 7 p.m. niabtl~ and at
ALBANY - Meigs County day at the Russell Building in Mill9:30a.m., 10:30 ~m. Bl!d.7. ~ p.m. arangers and interested persons are field with music provided by Out
~ Sunday. ~pecial mus1c mahdy. ·· encou.raged to attend a grange of the Blue. John Russell will lie
~ursmy provided. .
·
· membership meeting at lbe Albany the caller• .
,.
. LONG BOTI'OM : F 'th F ll G~ge Hall in Albany (tonig~t)
WARREN • The Ohio State
.
at
u
Fnday at 7:30 p.m. sponsored' by
{j~apcl Chw:ch m Long Bottom Lowell Ashcra£t, area membership Grai1t~e officers:wifr be conferring
w11l ~ve ~~val tJ:uouib Satwday chairman, and Bonnie Vonderhov· the stxth degree at Warren Local
Hi h S
.
C
at 7 ~.m. nia!Jtly with Cbarles Hall, el state membership chainnan
g chool m Washington ounty
Manetta, evangelist. Special
'
·
on Saturday at 7 p.m. Those who
. ~inaing_ night!Y· Fellows~ip
SATURDAY
have received .the fifth degree are
l 'ft'ednesday evemng. Homeoommg
POMEROY - Kay Cecil. invited to attend. Contact Opal
dinner, Saturday at S p.m. Pastor antique collector and appraiser,. Dyer at 742-2805 for further inforSteve Reed invites the public.
will present a program at the Meigs mation.
POMEROY • Mt. Hermon Unit- County Museum in Pomeroy on
BASHAN - There will be a
cd Bre.lbren Church, Texas Road, Saturday at 2 p.m. Bring in several
weekend
·meeting at Red Brush
Pomeroy, will !)Old revival throUgh of your favorite items for appraisal.
Church of Christ in Bashan on SatSunday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
LO'I'J'RIDGE • Country music . urday at 7 p.m. and Sunday' at I 0
Rev. Charles Norris, evangelist. night at the Lottridge Community am. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Fos~ev. Robert Sanders, pastor. Center will be Saturday from 7 ter, W.Va., will be speaker. Everyinvites the public.
p.m. to midnight. All bands are one invited.
welcome. Refreshments will be
HENDERSON • There will be a · served. Everyone welcome.
•
SUNDAY
round and square dance Friday
POMEROY • American Legion
. from 8-11:30 .P.m. at the Hender· . KANAUGA • The Liberty Baseball
sign-up will be held Sunson Community Building. Music Mountaineers will perform Satur-· day from 2-3 p.m. at Meigs High
will be 'It~llld the Country Gen- . day at the D.A.V. CCnter in Kanau- School for particigants age 16-19.
tlemen.
Bowles will play fidThere will be a $1 sign-up fee and
dle. Everyone wck:ome.
ga.
· a birth certificate copy must be proMIDDLEPORT • There will be vided.
.
CHBS'lliR • A free COOlmunity a western dance at Middleport Eleimmunization clinic will be held mentary sponsored by the MiddlePOMEROY • The Meigs Vocal
Friday from 9 Lm. to 3 p.m. at the pan Arts Council on Saturday from Music Depanment will present its
Chester Fire Department for ages 8-11 p.m. Cost"is $3 single. $5 cou- annual spring concert Sunday at
two months lhrouab tindcnwten ple. Refreshments available. Public Meigs High School's auditorium at
age. Parents must bring child's welcome.
2 p.m. The lbeme is "Forever and
immunization m:ml.
Ever Country."
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
TlJPPERS PLAINS • There will High School Senior Class will prePOMEROY • Bruce Stone will
be a round and square dance on sent the dinner t~eatre, "Up the . be in concen· at St. Paul Lutheran
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. spon- ·Down Staircase," at the Eastern Church in Pomeroy on Sunday. at
sored by the Tuppers Pllins VFW High School gymnasium on Satur- 6:30 p.m. The public is invited.
Post No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary. day at 6:15 p.m. Tickets are $8 per Refreshments will be served folMusic will be by the Happy Hol- adult and $5 per child age 12 and lowing the concert.
low Boys. Red Carr will be the undti. Ticlcet price includes dinner
caller. Everyone welcome.
and can be purchased from any
CHESTER - The Chester Basesenior or at the school. Tickets for b'an Association will meet Sunday
RIPLEY, W.'VA. • The Libeny the drama only will be sold at the at ~:30 p.m. in the Chester ElemenMountaineers will perform at door for $4 each and will go on tary gym. All parents are invited to
Skatcland in Ripley on Friday.
sale at 7 p.m. .
attend.

.

.

•

REEDSVILLE· There will be
LONG BOTTOM · A sm!X'gasMIDDLEPORT . The Jellisons
an informational meecing regarding bord dinner will be held Saturday will perform Sunday at 10 a.m. and
the o~ening of the Fellowship at 5 p.m. at the Long Bottom Com- . 6 p.m. at the United Pentecostal
Chrisuan Academy at the Fellow' munity Building. Cost is $5 for Church in Mid.dlepon.
ship Church of the Nazarene on adults and $2.50 for children 12
Route 124 near Reedsville on Fri- and under. Public invited.
day at 7 p.m. and Saturday at I 0
POMEROY - County western
a.m. and 7 p.m. School material
SALEM CEN1ER • Salem ~n­ line dance classes will be offered
aild rooms will be available for ter Elementary PTO will sponsor a . Sunday from 2 -4 p.m. at the
view. Registration I!!so available: spaghetti dinner Satwday from 5-7 Pomeroy Municipal Building.

'

~ ~:1"'
The ~.em=:-~-p'appteciation
of the Occupational Work Ex~ {OWE)
class of Meigs High School was
held Thursday at McDonald' s in
Pomeroy.
Students presented pllques and
OWE mugs to show their ippiecialion to their employers. Marcia
Robinson spolce on behalf of the
OWE class and thanked the
employers as thC students not oaly
made money and earned credit, but
gained experience and knowledge
in the business world.
Employers and guests llllalding
were Cbuck Blake and Bob Dan- ·
gerfield, Big Bend F!&gt;odlaod;
C.huck Kitchen, Dairy Queen Bra. zter; April Shoemaker, Dick
Vaughan, Vaughan's Cardiul;
Roscoe and Sandee Mills, Mi:Dollaid's; Judy ~....- . Jon
f Fishe :-r:::-::0
r's Big Wbeel; Linda rig· gle and Mike Smith, Overbrook
Center; J. D. Story of Smith-Nelson Motors; John Anderson of
Andersons; Lennie Haptonstall of
Sears; Bill Gilmore and Tammy
Starcher, Middleport~ and
Tees; Kelly Winter of Pizza Hut;
Carl Hysell and L. B. Vaugban,
Meigs County Juvenile Offu:ers; ·
and Larry Banks, Banb Construe-

.......
Special suesu attendias wert
FaiiDD Taylor, Meigs High School
principal; Gordon Fisher, assi•ant
pnnc
' ipal, ••
u.o._. Higb·, James Carpenter, :Meip Local su{!Crintendent; John Riebel, supenntendellt
of Meigs County schools; Dave
Harris, The Daily Sentinel; Cliff
Kennedy, guidance counselor,
Meigs Hi&amp;h; 1..-ry Rupe, president
of the Meigs Loc:al Scbool Board;
William Buckley, secondary sup:rvisor, Meigs County !chools.
. Also attending- Ron Logan,
msuuc:tor of the OWE class and
students, Heather Davis, Chad .
Deskins, Lila Harr, Corey Hatfield,
Tam Lee. lCdly Mlrcillko, ~e

May, Jason McDaniel , Grant
Reynolds, Marcia Robinson, Lonnie Sroufe, Paul Van Coney, and
Sllannon Walker.
Jim Hill, Manning Roush, Judy
Spencer and Gene Triplett mate up
the OWE advisory ·committee.
Employers participating in the program but unable to attend were
Lulce Curry, Odd Lou; Dennis Sae' ·
lens, Dairy Val'ley; Bill Haptonstall, Sears and advisory committee
member; Angela Capehart, Kelly's
Komer; Salfy Conard, S. and N.

crarts.

.

Core~ Hatfield

on behalf of the
class presented Lo.,an with 'an .
appreciation plaque. "

Mrs. Buckley ·
hosts UMW
meeting

Gardening
of herbs are
a way of life
in Meigs
-B·l

i

r'

'

'

chairs and trash are· strewn along
both sides of the dark and musty
hallway. The smell of smoke
lingers despite a cool draft frOm
broken windows.
For 11 days, more than 400 prisoners and hostages lived behind the
.barricaded iron gate daring a dead·

The Balthaser farm is located on
Briar Ridge Road (County Road 2)
approximately 1(l mile off RouLe
325 in Danville.
Further information may be
obtained by contacting the Meigs'
Soil and Water Conservation District Office at 992-6647 or the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District Office at446-8687.
·

DANVILLE - The Meigs and
Gallia County Soil and WlltJC ConSClVBiion Districts and Coopemive
Extension Services are
·
.a pond clini'c Tuesday atsponsonng
5:30 p.m.
at the Curtis Balthaser farm fn
Salem Township.
The evening will begin with a
dry
hydrant demonsttation by
the local fb depajtmenL
·Eric Norland, state specialist,
natural resoun:es, Ohio State University, will discllSS "F'ISh Stocking
Rates and Weed ConbOI (Biologif
. ire

•

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
I• N""' Op.,. Fer .
TlWS...On. .

ltll111'111ts(flew.... &amp;
v_..,.,....L ....._ ......, Pette4

cal and Chemical)."

Mike Dub!, district conservationist, soil conservation service,
and Hal Kneen, extension agent,
Meigs,IGallia Counties will discuss
"Update on Pgnd Safety, Weed
Identification and Procec1111g Your
Pond From LivestocJr Damage,"
Rel'reshmela will be served fol·
lowing the clinic by the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Uldies Auxiliary.

rea
•

LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) The corridor of cellblock L is eerie.
Filthy mattresses and sheets, desks,

Along the river ..............81-7
Busi8ess/Farm............ .;..Dl•8
Classirted .................- ..Dl-7

.,
111: 11::

• ·:

1

!

:::::.

I&lt; .1111

Deaths••,...........................A-6
EditoraJ ._ .. --......._........ .A4

Sports......................- ....Cl-6
Weather. ..................- ......A-2

.., "'( ~~

Showers. Hlp mlow... 10..

~-

'

.

14 8eollon 128 Pape
A lluldnleclla
new Pll*

"'c.

......, c. 11hti 11. 11 sa.... .,,
·Pin AIM&amp; Mn.l4111tws.

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

. SPECIAL Of 'THE MON'TH
(

HUIIAU'I IIDIROUSE

SJUCUII

992-5776

.,.,,

..

,.,

.... ,_.,.,

..

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

... ,...

'""'''''""'

.Soap box derby plans underway
•

. '
)'

/

ast

•

· RIO GRANDE - A one-day
CiaiiSIIIidle, currently traveling ued. ''They must leave to .acquire
I
.
· conference 10 help area coolmuni; with Gov. Voinovich's business gOO!I jobs. Most parents and grandThoma, MAD~ state repl-eseatative fram Meigs
REMINDER TO STUDENTS - "Be alcohol
ties sttengthen their tools for eco- development tuur in Europe, will parents would prefer to see the
(:oUDty, at left, od Rought attach 1 red ribbon
rree before yo a taro tile key," says Ellen
nomic growth has been scheduled discuss the trip during his presenta- development of local jobs. By jomto ·a car at Southern Higb School while Gerlld
R0113bt, lllate aecretary ~ Oblo Mothers Against
for Thursday, Mar 6 from 9:30 lion, "Retention and Expansion of ing forces, we can malce the differDrank Driving (MADD). Rought said Friday
Rought, vi~' advocate from the Meigs Couaa.m . until 4 p.m. m die Student Local Industry from aDomestic ence to improve the local
.tbat wrecked ears will be placed throughout
. ty MADD chapter, looks on. ('I'-S pboto by Jim
economies or the region. n
Center at the University ·Of Rio and Intemational Viewpoint."
Meigs County to rembld students or tb~ hazards
Freemo)
Local coordinators for. the conGl'llll!le.
"We were pleased with the
or driYina tliuk clariDI pl'OIII naaon. Here, ~t
ference
include Wayne R. Kin,,
The conference is designed to · res.ults of the· Economic Develop·
.
.
.
·manager
of Member Relatiqns IUid
assist economic development pro- ment Symposium last fal~," swd
Industrial
Development for Buckfessionals, ·~members frQm the • Dr. Barry M.. Dorsey, ~dent of
pull.!!f;:,JIId pnv-.' wlllii,_JQWn·. l:lle \.)1\I,VM&amp;" '..JU...B,JQ Grpcl.e. el~9f~.:«;:nqpin•j~
sliip trustees, l1l8)'llrS, city councils :·Howev.er, we believ.e ~a highly fnc.; t&gt;r. Cllarles F. Palmer, dean.¢
and county commissioners with mteracllve and paruc1pat~ con- the Emerson E. Evans Colleg~of
efforts to attraCt business and ere- ference •in which the region s ceo- Business Management at Rio
.
nomic developers, public officials Grande; and Kingsley Meyer, Rio
GALLIPOLIS~ A Kerr man man; Summer Martyn, 11, Route 1 right rear comer of Martyn's vehi- ate jobs.
William B. Snyder, ~onomic and business ~pie ta!J' .~ each Grande's director of Adult and
was arrested for driving under the Thurman and Shannon Fallon, 15, cle . The impact forced Kiser's
Ed1K:ation.
influence, ~ess operation and I0975 State Route 141 Thwman.
vehicle to the right and onto the development manager for Colum- other, rither lban JUSt bemg talked Continuing
Reservations
can be ma.de by
failure to control Friday niabt folB.erryman was transported by sidewalk where the vehicle rolled biiS Southern Power Co., and Paul at'. is vital to strengthening the
calling
the
Loren
M. Berry Center
towing an accident which IDjured Gall18 County Emergency Medical over and came to rest on its right · Clapsaddle, who also directs eco· communicatic;m and coope~on to
for
Economic
Education
at Rio
fiv~ people ~nd damaged tjlree
Service; the others by private vehi- side against a parked vehicle nomic development effons through ensure retention and expans1on of .
Grande,
24S-S353
or
(toll-free)
1•
vehicles. ;
cle.
·
owned by Autom!)tive Rentals, Columbia Gas of Ohio, are the key existing business and industry, and
800-282-7201.
A
registration
fee
ot
figures in helping develop the con- to attract new jobs to the region.
Randall'!). Kiser, 2S, was incar·
AccordinJto a repon from the Inc., 1704 Eastern Ave.
ference,
a follow-up to a similar . "Our most valuable expon loss $10 may be made payable to the
cerated ~y after 10 p.m. in the Gallipolis Police J)epanment. 'Kiser
Kiser's vehicle sustained heavy,
Gallia County Jail.
was soutbbcl!lnd on &amp;stem Avenue disabling damage and was lOwed meeting at Rio Grande in October now is our a~gressi ve, educated BCEE/URG. For more informa.·
young people, Dr. Dorsey contin- tion, contact Jerry Gust at the Berry
Treated and released from Holz- (State Route 7) at a high rate of from the scene; Martyn's sustained 1.992.
Center.
'
•
er Medical Center were Kiser's speed and Martyn had exited a moderate damage and was driven
passenger, Jarred Berryman, 19, 23 • parking lot on the cast side of the away. The rental company's vehiBurger Street, Gallipolis; driver. Eastern Avenue and completely cle also sustained mOderate damage
'..... ······ Kathy-!·. Martyn, 31; Roure .. J..Thur, ., eniered the road.
and remained at the scene.
man, and her passengers Jason _ 'Kiser was unable to slow down
Continued on A-2
Manyn, two months, Route l Thur- or avoid collision_ and struck the

Five treated for injuries, three Vf!hicles:-damaged ··.

OPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5

,

•

MIDDLEPORT ' Plans are and JacksOn counties in West Vir- experience world competition on a
underway for the June 27 soap box ginia. To qualify, contestants must national level.
Anyone Interested in competing ·
derby tribe held in Middlepon.
be between nine and 16 'years of
or
assisting in any form should
The Meigs County Soap Box age on or before August 1.
contact
Williatn Snouffer or Gary
Derby Association held a meeting
First, second and third place
at Blue Sbak Cab in Middleport.
winners will receive savings bonds Snouffer at992-707S IX' 992-6471.
There will be two divisions run and trophies. The fusi place win- Help is needed in all aras... sponthis year: stock car and tit car. The ners of~ div~ions will travel.to sors, driven and volunteers.
A J!IOOling will be held Monday
event is open to girls and boys ages . Akron With their C8;f and fam1ly
at
7
p.m. at the Blue Streak Cab
nine through 16 living within . memllers to compete 10 world comCompany
in Middlepci'L All inter•
Meigs, Gallia, A.~ Jackson and ~tition. This. is a once-"!-a-lifeested
parties
and participants are
Vinton counbes m Ohio and Mason ume opponun1ty for the children to
·
not only malce new friends, but to urged to attend.

'. ·Two Ohio lawyers nominated for posts
~

'0

. · BJ Tbe ~lated Pitu
Two Ohio lawyon liave been

•

•

•

J

nom108ted to SCJVe as U.S. attorneys, officials said.

'

.

CoNnuNCK PLANNING-

An--

· lc dewlllpiHIIt _ , _ wiD be conducted at
the Unhenii;J ~ Rio Gnode CJ£1 May 6 to as&amp;ist
caamaollJ ktt 1 In t11e1r elfarts in attrac:tlng
Industry 111111 aew jalll. Seen plaaola1the conference qadi are, rr. left, Kingsley Meyer,
cllredur 1!1 Adult ud C021tinuing Education at

Rio Gnode; Dr. Cbailel F. Pabaer, dean o1 Rio,
Grande's Ell._ I. BYIDs Cotteae or Business
Manaaemeat; William B. Snyder, economic:
development lDilaager ror Columbus So,tllern ,
Power Co.; aad Wayne R. King, m!lnliger or
member ·relatlouod lodutrlal development
for Buckeye Raral Elec:trlc: Cooperative Inc.

Meigs County,Fair board plans
- ~Show and Swap' event May 15,16
.
.

•

By CHAilLINI HOEFLICH
. . 'l'lalil SaadMI Stair

:::::~. ?-:e'!.=:a'Ci ~7!:===-jffilld~:

.(under age 6 eat free) .

'"

Ohio ·Sens. John Olonn and
Howard Metzenbaum on Friday
nominated Edmund Sargus Jr. of
St. Clairsville for the poaition of
u.s. aiiOI'IIey for the Soiltbem Dis·
trict of Ohio. Emily Sweeney. or
Cleveland was recommended for
the U.S. attorney for the Nonhern
· Disaict PDIL
.
The Democratic senaun sent a
recommendabon leuer Thunday to
President Clinton. who is expected
to 1llllte formal ITOIIIillllions after
an FBI bal:tground check on the
nominees. Tlie nominati0111: then
lbouJd be conflnnad by tho Senate. .
SarJUI is a graduate o! Brown
University and Case Western
Res«ve Uni~ School ol Law
in CJevelancL He IS I patner With
BQftleh .t: SlfiUS law rum in St.
Clllnville.
"I'm vorj .much looklnl forward to the cllallenp of the job.

pull, a horse show and quarter Antiques Club, the car show sponhorse races, along with ·an exten- sored by the Oldies but Goodies
Car Club, and lbe ans and c:rafu
sive display of 1eSIOied can.
. .The gates will open at 8 a.m. show to be llliOd both inside.the
and it will cost $2 to get onto· the ·new commen:ial building as·well
grounda each day. However, f()r as OUisidc that buildina·
thole wbo plln to lllald both clays,
Addllou Lewis and Mary Kay
Roee
Who are in charp of the craft
an
ldYance
ticbt
Clll
be
~
an iullilest in both," Slrplllid.
the
Sprlnp Palrpaands oo
at
tho
Supr
Ran
Flour
Mill
for
$2.
show
exhibitors report· that the
· MI. s~ bas leMid • an May 1511114 16.
Whilo
tbe
llir
bolnl
II
bringing
response
fro" eraflen bu been
· ulilll~tt U.S. ltiDIDey in tho aarth· · A Weill Count,.:S!.ow and the _....., or accivitiel together,
gOOd
llld
that
they IXpec:t the Ilea
-~ 0111 dillrieulnco 1982 and hal bean Swap• hu lleoa p
by tho
the
clubl
and
odler
panicipana
wW
to
be
filled.
S6wrl1
antique cleaien ,·
chief of the appelllll dlvillon far · p.fojal COIIIlY Aidoltlan Society
be
"do!DI~~~*
own
tbina".ICCOrdare
l1lo
COIIIillliD
to eiltiblt and
the lalt four e ·Sbe ilalfldu· · {Falf Bolrd) b llilt •I Did
sen. Lewirllkl
110 of
w... •~~~ ... un1- n ..
w~~~;a. ina to Dill~ pmi~
S:b ,,..
GoiJtc 01 • day badl days y.'ill
¥erti1JIIId ~Cleveland State the toad baOtlll wiD be
,
be tho wMp• n:tor lbow lfiOD·
Jud&amp;inJ Of llie ear ahow will .
Unlvinity'a Cleveland·Minllall and the bll._ will be
· Contlllled oa A·2
.CoUtll ~Law.
. .e111111aiDera. Tliere will be UICID so.rod by the Big Bend Farm

.

.
.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE .DOOR, . . .

hallway about SO yards long. At the
end of the hall is the cellblock corridor, separated by another set of
gates behind which the' prisoriers
had set up a barricade of desks,
chairs, footlockers, bunks - anything they had.
The prisoners controlled the
entire wing of eight cellblocks
each containing 80 cells, and ~
Conlinued on A~2

M·a n jailed for D.U.I. .after wr~ck

c Maw• 'I.IUea.

.

ly uprising at the Slate's maximumsecurity prison after a fight turned
into a riot. Nine inmates and one of
eight guards who were held
hosrage were tilled.
Reporters on ·Saturday were
allowed into the prison to see pan
or the cellblock and .areas used for
special purposes during the siege.
At the entrance to L block is a
sei of.iron gates that open into a

Rio ·Grande conf~r~nce to eye
economic development ideas

-

.

Inside

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Gaiiii)OIIs-Polnt Pleasant, April 25, 1993

.

·.

-

.Sands examines another Gallia
ghost town- James Sands-B-4

Mulberry Heights Road, Pomeroy, OH.
. .
.
Adults, age 13 and. up -. $3.00 -Children, age 6 to. 12 ·..:... $2.00
.

0

Grant sough~ for rehabilitation
project in Racine • Hoeflich • B-6 ·

·Meigs County Senior Citizen Center·

..

•

Cincinnati rips C.hicago nine 15-5 - C-1

Pond clinic planned

SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1993
Serv~ng 7:00·a.m. to 11:00 a.m.

'

. .. "' ...

•

'

.

#c.

APPRECIA110N BREAKFAST· Meigs High School Occupl·
tioul Wort ElLjlednce ltildents joilled their employers ror an
appreclatioa breakfat TllarsdaJ at McDonald's. Tbe students
II"' Jl)aQ8a awl OWE map to their employen. (Sentinel Pboto
by DliYidilarris)
.
..
.

Mrs. Nancy Buckley bosled the
recent meeting of the Reedsville
United Methodist Women beld
recently at the churth basemenL
The meeting opened with Jllll)'Cr'
by Mrs. Diane' Jones. Mrs. Grace
Weber gave two readings titled
"Think and Be Glad" and "Look
Up and Live."
Mrs, Nina Boston conducted the
?usiness session. Fony' tbree shut·
10 calls were made and cards were
senL.
Members discussed buying trays
for the kitchen. A balce, food and
craft sale will be held May IS at
the church basemenL
·
The meeting :was closed with
prayer by Mrs. Emma DursL
·
Mrs. Pauline Brewer became a
new member.
, A game was played with 'a prize
·g1ven.
.
Refreshments were served to the
above named and Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Pearl Osborne, Mrs.
Frances Reed, Mrs. Gladys 'Ibomas
and Mrs. Lillian Pickens.
. The next meeting will be with
Mrs. Durst who received the door
prize. Each member received a pot·
ted pansy from the hostess.

anca

J

~

L block corridor filled
with· debris at Ollio pen

.o ta

'

..

75 n·nh

• VoL 21,' No. 10
Copyrighted 1183

Invites You·To The

.

~..

ea:r.:

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

'

...

Sunda.'

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

:•

0

Friday, April 23, 1993

Students honored during OWE banquet

ap~

-- -.....

'•

u,.,...

c.

L

r

I

'

'•

'

�..

. - ,.

~

.

Pomeroy lllddlepOrt-Galllpolla, ~oint Pleasant, wv

A2 Sunday nmee SenUnet

Ap~l25,

.Local

MICH.

Polic~ jail fo~r

. '

IToledo I s1• I
•

I•

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis police arrested four people
overnight Friday. ·
.
Arrested were Randall D. Kiser, 25, for driving undel' the influ:
· ence, ~~~ opetlllion and failure to conlrOI (see related story);
Marlena L. Gilllon, 30, 3810 Gcoracs O'Cet ROad. Gallipolis, for
D.UJ. and failure to yield h11lf of die roedway; Qavid D. Pmston,
49, 2111 Corwin Road, Oak Hill, for two felony and two misdemeanor. counts of paning bad checks and Rita D. Carpenter, 42,
2136 Sardis Road, Oaic Hill, was arrested on a warrant from Jackson P?lice for passing bad chccb after local police stopped her for
speeding.
.
.
..

PA.

IND.

64•

.,

•

.........

--

'

,.

,)·"j.. ~ .'i- ,;,• -~" )• (:';-

W. VA.

Weather
South-Central Obio
. Sunday, showers and thunder·storms. High in the lower 70s.
:chance of rain 90 pen:ent.
Extended forecast:
Monday tbrougb·Wednesday:

Monday, chance Of showers,
mainly in the east. Lows in the 40s.
Highs in the lower 50s to the lower
60s. Tuesday, fair. Lows in the 40s.
Highs in the 60s. Wednesday, fair.
Lows 45 to 55. Highs 65 to 75:

STATE CANDIDATE·
Jason Butler, - of Mr. and
. Mrs. Ed Butler learned
recendy he Is a eandldlite for
the Star State Farmer of Ohio.
To be eligible for the highest
FFA award in the state, be bas
already won the Star District
10 Farmer Award, to be liven
at the State FFA Convention
in Columbus in June. He is
oow one or 10 FFA members
in the state of Ohio competing
for the Star State Farmer
Award also to be liven at the
state convention. ,The Star
· State Farmer .Is picked l'rom a
total FFA membership in
Ohio or over 17,000 members.
Jason is now in a final cut or.
10 FFA members from all
over Ohio competin1 for the
coveted Star Stale Farmer
Award. He ·is a senior in the
· Agribusiness .Program in the
River Valley FFA chapter at
River Valley High SchooL
I

Meigs ...
Continued from A·l

LOG SKID - The fun adivilies or the draft horse competition
- the log skid, the feed run and the wagon obstacle course - will
take place at 2 p.m. on ~unday, May 16~ at Meigs County's Show
and Swap weekend at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. John Rose or
llashan, shown here at a Meigs County Fair contest, is a regular in
draft horse competitions.

L-block... .__c_on_tin_u_ed_f,.,_om_A_-1---:-----gy,mnasium at the end of the corridor. Each cellblock is attachett to
the corridor, about 100 yards long
and 15 feet wide.
Throughout the standoff, eleclrical and water service to the wing
was shut off. The smell of smoke
indicated that some frres had been
set
The corridor is lined with debris '
piled several feet hjgh, leaving a 3foot-wide path down the center.
•·Naturally, they did a lot of
dama~e. " said Jim Hieneman,
administrative assistant to the warden. "'Every window down through
there is busted out. Some of the
ceiling is gone. The lights, a lot of .

'

I

Sunday Times-Sentinel IA3

'I

-Tri County briefs- Veteran OVP employee Donald Wright retires

Accu-Weather' forecast for daytime conditions·and high

I

•

April25, 1993

Sunday, Aprl125

, , · !Mansfield !s3•

·M- _.,.___ --

1193

OHIO Weather

, ,

- ........

I

•

Pea•

....

the electrical components have
been destroyed. VIrtually every
commode and sink within the cells
have been destroyed."
Reponers were not allowed to
go beyond the barricade.
. Hieneman said none of the cells
is in livable condition. All will
need at least minor repairs. He did
not know how much the work
would cost.
An area normally used as a
lobby in the adminisuative section
of the prison was used as a command center for authorities. Plywood panels cover the iron gates
that formed one wall of the
makeshift center.

Fires are out, but
questions smolder
.

take place on Saturday afternoon
and at 5 p,m. that day there will be
a trophy presentation. Bill Neutzling is in cha'rge of the car show.
Saturday 's schedule includes
quarter horse races on the track at 1
p.m. and a draft horse halter show
at 6 p.m. Tim Bearhs is in charge
of the draft horse activities which
in addition to the h3Jter show will
feature a fun show on Sunday.
Chairman for the quarter horse
races is Susan Sheppard.
The draft horse show &lt;Will
include 10 halter classes, three
mule classes, two hitch classes, and.
a novelty class. The entry fee is $3
per class and the prize money, $15.
for firSt, $10 for second, and $5 for
third.
Sunday's event with dr,lft horses
will begin at 2 p.m. and have competitive .classes in log skid, feed
run, and wagon obstacle course.
There will be an entry fee of $5
with payback of $12, $10, $8, $6
and $5 for placing, first through
fifth .
The antique tractor pull to be
held on the in-field will be at 1
p.m. on Sunday. Larry Hollon is in
charge of the puU.
Entertainment
Entenainment at tile fairgrounds
will begin Friday when the Middlepan-Pomeroy Lions Club sponSors
two performances of the Walker
Bros. Circus.
.
There will be no charge to get
onto the grounds that day. Performances have been scheduled foi'
4:30 and 7:30 p.m. Proceeds from
those performances wiU go into.the
Lions Club Sight Program projects,
according to Jeff Warner, local circus chairman.
·
On the hill stage Saturday will
be "Middlebranch" at noon, "Born
Again Believers" at 2 p.m. "Idle
Time" at 4 p.m. and the "Midnight
Cloggers" at 6 p.m.
On Sunday the "Out of the Blue
Band" will perform at I p;m:, the
"Chester United Methodist ChiDCh
Children's Choir at 2:30 p.m. and
the "Licksltillet Band" at4 p.m.

'
. WA.SHINGTON (AP) - The cate the public - to say nothing of
flames at the Branch Davidian President Clinton and his advisers
compound may have ~onsumed - blames ~uk leader !)avid Koremany of the answers, bilt the ques- sh for the inferno on the Texas
tions remain. Was this tragedy prairie last week that killed more
·inevitable? Would the government than 80 people, including two
have done better to have done noth- dozen ~hildren.
But offiCial accounts have been
ing?
·
challenged
by survivOrs, attorneys,
The instant opinion polls indiIawmalcers. Contradictions persist.
And the inevitable government
investigatioas will now begin.
Among the questions:
(USPS 625-800)
- Why didn't agents arrest
Published each Sunday; 825 Third Ave.,
Koresh before Feb. 28, when a mid
C allipolia, Ohio, by the 9hio_ Valley
by lhe Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
Publishing Compan;y!Multtmedta , lnc. ·
and Fin:arms resulted in the deaths
Second class pos tage paid' at Ga11ipoli1,
Ohio '"4563 1. Entered as second clan
of four agents?
mailing ma tter 'at Pomeroy, Ohio, P01t
Numerous Wa~:.o residents have
Qrri ee.
said Koresh visited town frequently
Member: The AsaoCiated .Press, and the
and could have been arrested easiOhio Ne ws paper Association , Nation al
ly.
Advertisi n g Repre11entative, Bra nham
Ne wsp Aper Sales , 733 Third Avenue,
But ATF officials said they
New York , New York 10017.
never spotted him away from the
SUNDAY ONLY
place he called Ranch Apocalypse.
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
I dditi on, theY S81'd, theY had to
By c.,.rler or Motodwuto
· n a
one Wcck .....................,......: ....,............eo,
serve the search warrant at the
One Y
ear.......................................... $46.80
compound to look for illegal
srN~J!Tc~ P&gt;: .
.
weapons, and Koresh was backed
sunday.............................:............ 75 Centa
by 15 to 20 followers who were
No s ubscription• by mail permiLt.ed in
" jQSt as violent" in ·the words of
areas wheR motor carrior ouvice lo • David C. Troy, ATF's intelligence
a vaila61e.
chief~
;·
The.Sunday Times-Sentinel will not be
: - How Were those inside lipped
reoponalble ror •d•ance paymenta made to that raid, and why did the A1F ·
. 10 ca rri::.L SUBSCJUPTIQNS
. . . pursue its plans ~yway7
.
·
Some have sa1d the cult knew
· · sandal" only
OneYear....·...............................,...... $47:84
something was up whal'the Waco
s.. MonLho...................................... $24·79
Tribune-Herald that mornin~ startD~ IIy ond sunday
cil .ruMing a series .of invesugalive
MAl~:if&amp;.~:?;,10 N 8
reports. Others have said Koresh
13 weeki ...:.....,.....:..........:..............S2t.84 ·received a _phone call from an
26 Woekl.............:............................ f43.16
unknown persop."
184 76
52
w~kls;;i;;;;·0 ~~·i;i~'c;)~;;c;:..· '
One law enforce111ent veteran
· 13 Weeki ....................... :..........,.:..... S2a. co.
said lhe.vC'I'}' ~nee oflOO A'IF
26 w..~to ................... :...,.................. f4 U O
ag· enls· in Waco ·w
. as an obvious
52 Wee\u ....................:...:.,.:o ........... ss~,.w
L.....-.-,...--..;.·;·.;.~-..,.
· ..;.·...,.....J sigit to the locals. :
·

Man taken into custody
GALLIPOLIS -

gratulations, Graduates" ~ke. Here, pictured
left to rl&amp;•t. are Sue Grace, instructor, presenting dlplo11111 to hm Glleen pel Roberta Smith,
as Pal Neece, another Instructor, displays the
cake. Also pa•lng tile test liven in March were
~icbard Cook IUid Becky l'VilsoD. (T-S Photo by
Charlene Hoefticb).

DIPLOMAS PRESENTED - Four members
of the Raclue Adult Basic Education class .
1~ tile eullllnatlon quaiU'ylng them
recendy
to receive their ge.eral equivalency b1gh school
diplomas. To boaor the graduates, the ABE
class held a di~lier_ party complete with a "Con:

P••

Man ...
Continued from

A Gallipolis man was cited for
improper backing following a twovehicle accident Friday evening in
Green Township, Gallia County,
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol repol1ed.
·
Rodney P. Clark, 24, 3305 Lincoln. Pike, Gallipolis, was northbound on Lincoln Pike (County
Road 20) when he stopped at the
intersection of S.R. 141 and then
backed into a following vehicle
. driven by Shari D. Fogelstom, 31,
42 Chillicothe Road,..Qallipolis.
No injuries were reported.
. Clark's vehicle was not damagell
and Fogelstom's su~tained light
damage. Both vehicles were driven
from die scene.

Fire destroys area man's barn
VINTON - A bam owned by Jolm Patterson, 604 Porter Road,
Bidwell, was destroyed by fire early S~blrday morning, the Vinton
Vohmteer File Department rejlorled. .
·
t spokesperson said the possible cause of the blaze.
re
a.m., W8!l eleclrical in nature. The depar!rn.ent sent
1 rrefighters and two trucks to the scene and remamed there for
slightly more than two hours until the rue was ouL
It was Vinton's 26th run of the year.
·

A LOT TO OFFER.

GVFD responds to car fire
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man's vehicle sustained $300
worth of damage Friday when a leaking Cud liile caused a frre in the
engine companment, the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depanment
repaned. . .
·
·
The GVFD was called to the Montanes Jesus residence, 161
U~ River Road (State Route'7), Gallipolis, Shonly after 3 p.m.
Nme fuefighters responded with one buCk, but the fue was out on
arrival.
.
.
Someone had extinguished the blaze in Jesus' 1981 Chevy Citation with a bucket of water, the report said It was the 7lst call of
the xear.

The Army can give you a
definite edge on life if you
want to learn valuable hightech skills. We offer hard-toduplicate, hand!Kln training
in a wide variety of challenging specialties. Hyou qualify'
the Army offers training in
the following fields:
n Communications
Electronics
n Automatic Data
n Digital Communications
Telecommunications
Equipment
n Tactical Fire Control
n Tactical Satellite Microwave
Systems
n Avionics
n Computers
These are just a few of the high-tech skilis•in whiCh you can
train. There are over 250 specialties to choose from.
'
· Technically speaking, the Army h~s a lot to offer. Your Army

A Bidwell youth's vehicle sustained heavy damage Friday after·
noon when it struck a stump, Gallipolis police reported.
Darren W. Powell, Gallia Met.
Estates, 381 Buck Ridge Road,
Bidwell, was .northbound on.
Chal\lam Avenue and was unable
to stop for a stop sign !II the inter·
section of Smithers Street, police •

Man cited for D.UJ.

GALLIPOLIS - A Vinton man was cited Friday night by the
state highway )l8IIOI for driving under the influence.
Rodney S. \Vhi11e, 26, was also cited for no operator's license,
driving left of center and no seat belL

Gas theft reported
BIDWELL- Todd Petrie of the Korner Store, State Route 160

and 554, Bidwell, told (Jallia County sheriff's deputies a man
pumped $6.S4 wonh of gas and left withoUt pa~g. The same man
returned later that evening and pumped an addition $8.62 worth of
gas without paying for it. the report said. ·

ARMY. BE ALL 10U CAN BE:·

reported.

The vehicle skidded through the
intersection and sttuc)c: a stump.
No injuries were reponed and
no citations were issued. The vehicle was towed from the scene.

.

.

LANGSVILLE - Randall Curtis
Johnston of Sanford-Davis Road,
Langsville, has recei ved an
appointment to the United States
· Air Force Academy in Colorado
Springs, Colo.
·
Son of Cecil and Becky Johnston of ·the Danville community,
and Mrs. Joyce Elis, Columbus,
. Johnston "Cheesie" will grad11ate
froni Mei4!S High School on May
23. He wdl repon to Jbe Academy's Cadet Wing on July 1.
Appointments are received by
approximately 15 peri:ent of applicants, according to a Jeuer whlch
Johnston received from Col. Roben
Y. Foerster, Director of Admissions. Nomination for the appointment was made by former Congressman Clarence Miller last
November.
Johnslrin said that it has been his
goal for years to receive an
appointment lo the United States
Air Force Academy. "I have been
working towards that goal in my

.When You Need Prompt' '
·Dependable Propane Delivery~-;·~ ·

.

Ronald E. Phalin, 49, Route 2
Gallipolis, was westbound on S.R.
141 when he struck the deer.
No injuries were reponed. Th.e
vehicle was driven from the scene.

BIDWELL - Jim Splete, 113 Bethel Chun:h Road, Bidwell,
told Gallia County sheriff's.depulies someone smashed the wind·
shield of his 1991 Jeep (]ICidree while the vehicle was parked at
his residence Friday night.
'
·
.

;Police cite two

•

GALLIPOLIS- Galli~~:lice issued two citalions Friday. ,
Tracy M, Reapp, 18,
· i Drive, Gallipolis, was cited for
underage consumption and DarreU L. Palrick, 21,1524 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis, was cited for furnishing minors with alcohol.

~ 61~-~~6-2l6~

Gallia Local Board to meet
.

.

Ferrellgas Speclallz~s In Responsive
Customer Service
Whal mailers mosllo you When il comes lo propane?

Free.Clothing day
slated Thesday

April30 tax deadline nears

When you call Ferrellgas, you gel alllhis and more lor your
propane dollar. Your delivery learn is sal,!ty !rained and
experienced in providing prompl delivery and emergency
service. We also oHer special budget-minded cuslomer
programs thai help you save money and eliminate worries
aboul running out ol p1opane.
.
·

Level Payment Plan
• Ferrellgas lnslallalion Review • 24-Hour Emergency
Service • Aulomalic Keep-lull Service
614-446-2264
1-800-~86-2264

p

.

varied. During llie summer of 1988
he managed his own lawn care
business which consisted of 10 customers and one pan-time employee. He worked at Gillogly's Apple
Orchard in 1991 and since February has been employed pan-time at
Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport.

a Eaat Broad StrMt,
Suite 000
Columbus, Ohio
1·800 886 OLAW
L - - '1-800 886 0528)

·oPTOMETRlST
·Is Proud To Announce
The ·Relocation of His
Gallipolis Office To

228 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Oliio
(614) 446-3300
The· new spacious office feat~:~ res ·all
types of contact lenses and all types of
glasses including:
The No-Line Bifocal, Children's Vision,
Low Vision &amp; Free "Off Street" Parking.

·KEEP

JUDGE
EXPERIENCE - PLUS
•Judge Municipal Court
•Referee Domestic Relations
•Magistrate Common Pleas Criminal Court
•Military Pollee
, •New Approach to Court Operation and
•
Sentencing
· •Commitment to Education

Transfer Smm, Super 8; 16mm, Slides Pictures
..
to VHS Tape.
.
A·lso mass produce VHS tape to VHS Tape
Call for More Information

614-446-6939- 61'4-446-7390

IX IWILLIAM s. MEDLEY I
Paid for by Commlt1ee to Elect William S.
Morton Dickey,

'·

cat 1U11T 1'011 •

HOI' IUIIIEA

PHYSICAL THEUPY SERVICES

1UY tHE IBn

EMS responds.to 8 ca·lls_

. r"vi'LuA&amp;re-c'OuPON'l rvAi.'UA&amp;i:E-c'OO,,N'l
I 5150°00 From 11 515000• ~!~ 1
I •,

UNNOX • HP22 ' •,··.FlO. DAVII WliTI SIIVlC(, II&lt;.
Expl-&amp;-31-a

01

•n

Expt~•

POMEROY • UniU of the to VMHi 11~03 p.m. Rutland to
Depot Street for Pflyllis Custer who
Service respo11ded 10 eight calls for was = = d to PVH; 11:47
to Pap Street for
assiatan~e Friday and Saturday p:m. ·
Stel11John1011 Who -~~~~~Sported
toPVH.
.
JeiiiOIIC1lngSaturday ~ 12:50 a.m. Syrl. Frldal- 4:50 p.m. Pll!neroy to
Lincoln Jfei&amp;lttt fiir J11011 Parlonai cuse to Third Straet. for Todd
who wu llllllpodetl to VMH: 8:SS Kennedy who was traJ)sportodto
p.m. Middl~ 10 North Second VeteranS Memorial Hollpllal.
Street for TOdd Grover who wu
treaiCd • dla - : 9:38 p.m. Middl~ 10 Pip SIIIIOI for Bamlce

I

mvr::

L-----------~L,;;---------The smart way to replace your old central A/C

DAVID WHITE SERVICES_, INC~

5315 Habbardsvle It • Alas, Ohio ··./.~,..~~
l--.W.1110 - ·-' t; J
· "C..,Iomen ..,. •• are lite be.el"

ShKe 1977

(Physician Referral By Appointment)

~

Hospital·n·ews'

"

· Chil'*' whO wu ll'lllsponed to

. VETIIlANS MEMORIAL '
Plea~Mt Valley Ho~tal: 10:03
Friday admlaalona - Octa
p.m. ~ to Pilmer Streel Ward, Pomeroy; Bdward Workfor Dorotby ADtltoay wllo was man Swh" and Slnib v ..........
uauponed to PVH; 10:4t p.m. vin!Dn.
'
n-•l•

.• .

-L.......
-.
-==·
a::!i
....,._
--

llelil!.L !'P"M

.ln;.

•t:=:;Oolllt . U..P.t.IOC

-C.-At

.

!, .
·~

\

., .. ,., . "'
I

...

..

..

·.

Col"pe•llll9n for You.
.

'

.Prowl••• Phplaal fterapy Fer Over • Yeara!
•

'

Rt. 35 WHt • Gllllpoll" OH. • Mlnutn from 'Holzer

Home OWned .

Home Operated

..

614·446·2206

--

'

I

We Accept Medlc~~re, Ineiu'anoflll and Workert

6ck AeMbHitltlon
· oCai'diiC Rehabllhtjon
. oAdult Fltriua

''SERVING THE PATIENT AND THE PHYSICIA~"

lt'*Q:: ;!'~ ·. .PriU, cli8dlarpa -None.

,,

"Remember to exereioe your risftt to choooe
yoor phyoical therapiot. "• (Medicare Law 1802)

.Phyalclll Therapy
&lt;6port8 Medicine Program
•Work R.covery

Mei45 County Brncrpnc:y Medical

4-3!1-83.J

•

Dr, A, Jackson Bailes

POMEROY - A 44-year-old Well~ton man was char!!ed with
failwe 10 control folloWlllJ a ~s night crash at the mtersec·
lion of FII1WilOds and Rocklpringl
.
Wlyno Olender Willllppelli in Mciga CoUnty Coon.
.
Editor's Illite: Nama, 111t1 l!ld addft~HS are printed as they
appear ou ollldll reports. .

'

AnORNEY AT LAW

I

Man cited in crash

·casa·BACK

· ~ 614·221~
...J- L. W. CENNAMO .

MEDLEY

•

POt4ROY - Patricia G. CounCe, 4S, Charleston, W.Va., was
extradited to Meigs County from Charleston to face charges on
uttering aforaed chock.
' .
Counce is being held in the Athens County Jail pending a preliminary hearing in Meigs Cour!ty Court
.

'

BIIKRUPRY

•

-Weddings
-Hous~ Contents for '
-Family Reunions . . Homeowners Insurance
-school Events · -Graduations

Woman extradited on charge

01110

which currently produces the PMTs · busy taking photos, going on !ripS~
seen in all Ohio Valley Publishing · fishing and camping, and having;
·Co. newspapers, including the Tri- fun with my grandchildren, • he\
bunt, The Daily Senlinel and the
·
Point PleasantReglsrer.
Armed with these tools, Wright
record.ed, developed and printed
film of major and minor events not
only in Gallia, but Meigs and
Mason counties when the OVP
bought the Tribulll in 1959 and
added the Register to its roster of
newsp~ a decade later. In addjtion · h1s photo,raphic duties,
Wright also ass1sted in display
advertising, did proofreading and
putinsometimeasanaddressographer for mail subscriptions.
AgraduareoftheArmy'sLab&amp;.
Pholo Technical School at. Fort
Monmouth, NJ., Wright. con'!Dued
his education at the Uruvemty of
Rio Grande and Case Western
Reserve University He and his
wife, Hazel Evelyn, ~ the parents
of five chjldren: Donald Ray,
Floyd, Terri, Cherri and John. ·
DONALD E. WRIGHT
As Jor retirement, "I shall· keep

WILLIAM S.

Your Complete Video Taping Service

. HOCKINGPORT • The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
will be shulling off the water in Hockingport at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.
Service will be off for approximately six hours so crews can make a
connection to a new line. Work will be delayed for one day in the
event of rain.
'
· ·

••

academic studies, extra-curricullir
activities and my personal life,"
wrote Johnston in a resume submitted to the Academy.
He is currently serving as senior
· class president at Meigs. At the end
of this year he will have completed
colleglf prepatatory courses that ·
include four · years of math ,
English, French and social stUdies;.
earth science, two years of biology.
chemistry, physics, speech and
drama, personal typing, wood tech·
nology and physical education. ·
He received the Presidential
Academic Fitness Award in 1987,
the Academic Excellence Award in
Meigs County Schools in 1989 and
1991, and in his junior year was
inducted into the National Honor
Society.
·
The Meigs senior has been in
the French Club for four years, on
the Meigs High School Quiz Team
for four years, in HUGS for four
yeats; and on Student Coimcil for
two years. He was junior class
president, on the cross country
team in 1992 811d the Meigs High
track team in 1993, and belonged
to the Teen Institute-Drug Aware- ·
ness Program and served on the
Regional Teen Inslitute staff.
He is a master sergeant of the
Civil Air Patrol. Squadron 1404,
Jackson County, and was in the
Oovetnor's S·cholar Program at
Ohio University for th~e years.
The firSt year he receive? the "Outstanding Scholar" awatd in computer science, the second year was
named a student leader, the thirc;l
year a studeni director and was
then selected to be an executive
student director .for the summer
1993 program.
He attended Buckeye Boys
State, the American Legion's program on democrac:y, ana the Summer Science Semmar at the Air
Force Academy in Colorado last
summer.
His work experience has been •

tft~o ~alf.rfer~ .

--,..--..

Water outage planned

Callloday and ask about how these services can
help YOU··

TOl,t, AilE

. RANDALL JOIINS'fON

POMEROY • Meigs County Auditor ~ancy Campbell said April
30 is the last day for businesses io file 1993 personal property laX
returns.
,
In February, lhe auditor's offrce mailed a. Wt return to every
business that filed in 1992.
· . Campbell said tax returns are required of all tangible personal
_ property owned by businesses, individuals, par1Derships, associa·
lions and~ used in business.
For more 1aformalion, cab the auditor's offiCe at 992-2698.

Prompt delivery. Re~abUily . Safety. Energy-savings.
Knowledge and experience. Friendly, helpful delivery people.

CHESHIRE - The GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency
will hold its free clothing day for
low-income people Tuesd/ly from 9
a.m. to noon at the Cheshire Village Hall.

'

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Local Board of Education
will hold its regular meeting 6:30p.m. Monday at the administrative
office, 230 Shawnee Lane.
Items on the agenda include the adoption of an intradislricl/interdistrict open enrollment POlicy and a sm&lt;*e·free environment policy for the 1993-94 school year.
,.

Editor's note: Names, ages
and addresses are printed as they
appear on ollicial reports.

Avenue. With ~vious exP.Cfience
on two Army newspapers in Germany, and at Camp Pickett. Va.,
and F~rt Me ape, Md., Wright
found himself the~ and
darkroom man for the farm, and
while he became more involved in
the technical side as the years ptogressed, he lw remained the Tri·
bune's photographer for three
major events at the Gallia County
Junior Fair - the I.ittle Miss and
Mister contest. the queen's pageant
and .the livestock sales, .
Over the years, Wright lw seen
many changes iri the equipment
used by the !&gt;us~, an~ pointed
out that he started with a YICW cam·
era loaded with four~by-five film.
He adyancecl to the. ~~~~~ ·S~
Graph!c before famdiarizm' himself w1th the 35- and 120-millimeter cameras, as weU as the Brown
camera for graphics. To create the
halfto.ne r~produclions. of Phol;OS
and ~v~nts, he began wtth
a F8U'Ch1ld Photo Laythe, and m
the 1980s operated the. Autokon,

Johnston receives appointment

Windshield damaged

A Gallipolis man's vehicle sustained moderate damage early Saturday morning when lie struck a
deer in Green Township, the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department
reported.

under the influence.
.
·
James F. Miller, 46, 2011 State Route 588, Gallipolis, was later
released on a summons to appear in court.

TECHNICALLY SPEAKING,
THE ARMY HAS · . ·

A·~

A GallipOlis man was taken into custody by
depuues early Sawrday morning for driving

G~ C~ sheriff's

GALLIPOLIS - The man who
w!IS behind~ ~era ~or 36 years
With th~ Gallipolis Dwly Trlb_une
stepped m the .lion~ of a lens Friday
I'! celebrate wtth his C?-Worters on
h1s final day before retirement.
Donald E. Wright has been
around the photographic business
for more than 40 years, starting as a
U.S. Army cameraman, and intends
to pursue the field in his well~
earned off-hours.
The Gallipolis native said he
was mtrtiduced to pho~C~Y in
1951 when he was stationed in
Japan. Assigned to the Signal
.Corps, h_e shot .35-millil!'eter
mou~n p1cture f1lm of arullery
exerciSes for ~e Records Section
of the 40th Bngade, and was promoted to combat photographer dur·
· mg the Ko~ .war.
.
. Whe~ his Stx·y~. rune-month
h1tch With the serv1ce ended, be
retume_d to Gallipo!is and joined
the T~Jbune staff m ~ay 1957
when Its offices were still located
on the 400 block of ·Second

.

•

I

...·

• t

'

I

�.

-

-

. . ...

.

,.

Commentary

April25, 1993

.. .

•.

.

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A4
•

.

~unbq
.

1tinus- Jentia~l

..
Ohio/W.Va.
_Autopsies show yictims were beaten; Riffe promises action wm '·
April25, 1993

From AP, starr reports
. inmates' displeasure wilh addition- before lhcriot~ ouL
LUCASVIllE- Five inmateS al restrictions put in place recently.
State correcuons spokesw~ll!an
~- dlllil)g a riot at the Soulhem
: '!'- couple of years ago, that . Sharron Kornegay ~-d th~ upnsmg
' Ohro Correctional. Facility were fac1hl)' was operated pretty much cost the state $7 mill100mpersonbeaten to death in the opening like a medium-security facility," nel and operations costs. The eslihours ~f the uprising, preliminary he "S8llik·d. "We ~ided rt s!Jo~dili~ mat~ _diddamnot inc.ludideetthehe co.st of
autopsies show.
run e a lll8ltllllum-secuncy .ac - repamng
age IllS
pnson.
At · least two of them were ty .... Tbatdidn'tsitwellwilhsome
In Columbus, legislative leaders
repeatedly stabbed according to people."
said they have asked the Correcresults of the autop;ies perfOillled
Wilkinson said prison officials . lional Institution Inspection Comat St. Lute Hospital in Fort received -no wamings'of a possible .. rnittee to investigate the siege. The
Thomas, Ky. One ·was stabbed at uprising but later learned that panel of House and Senate memleast 22 times.
inmates had made unusually large . bers was asked because of its
Another inmate, found in an purchasea at the prison ccxnmissary · expertise about pri$011 maum, said
adjo~ng cellblock two days after
·
•
·
·

' IllS nJnl An~ GaUipolll, OhiO

Ill Court St., PomtfQy, Ohio
(614) m -lt56

(614) 446-lJG

ROBERT L WINGETT
l'labUsher

HOBART WILSON JR.
Ellecullve Ecltor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aalstut I'Ubllsher·Coatroller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, ·and tbe American
Newspaper Publisbers Association.
.
'
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letiers ore subject to editing and musl be s,igned with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned tellers will be
published. Leuers should be in good liSle, addressing issues, not

~~;tr?u:.d~::~~

Aronoff: Meshel's
departure ends era
,

.

,

Senate President Stanley Aronoff,
R-Cincinnati, and House Speaker
Vern Riffe, D-Wh~lersburg..
Ar!¥loff and Rrffe Will meet
. wilh other legislative leaders next
weedseet to dhiscustaffisthe cothemmittee'sf .
n
, sue ass mg,
scope o
the investigation and potential
i5S1!es of confidentialicy.
During a visit to lhe University
of Rio Grande Friday, Riffe took ..
umbrage at critiCism of Gov.
George Voinovich's handling of
lhe situation.
·
,
• .

"It isn't fair to say the governor
Frw oldie~ h 1 1
didn't do his job," Riffe tol d a r.ae rl • 11 " • lllc w
h '
meeting of sol!lheasteJn Ohio edu- ~ IIcea ~ • :pod._ lllc_hJs. . •
cators. "He d1d. He followed !!he Jlil:llllylfillaj ...... lmyE.O..···
advice' of experts. When the gover- ~:'5.ar~ . 1 .lty_
·
nho(sd~ng,h!'ll_ tebll ~~·but when .::·r.:._~
SSIIp!re .s omg JS JO , 11 s wrong to
. -~ -~·
.,
criticize him:
· Mirlrrla 4y,36,o1Cml
"We're going to get to the ibot- GJU¥e,. ~ . . . die fne fieed ,
tom of lhis because we owe it to ~Slid !'"ida.J h:
the families," he added. "And ljt sped: lrilll JqiCII:ICr"L Wile. •
understand this: the prisoners are _:Hb411y- offie i"s .._ h: 1
not going 10 run lhe prisons in this ~ould ar ~die
r ,Ire Slid.
state."
r!_top ~loot:&amp;~..,- r..a,.- lis.
, 111CpJ :aiil
.

·

did-- ,

State fznds h.ostages' personnel records mostly clean ·

The autopsies of a sixlh inmate .
By ROBERT E. MILLER
~led in the riot ~ those ~( two .
Asloclated Press Writer
mmates whose bodies were found
COLUMBl!S - Three of lhe ·
Thursday had not been re~.
eight guards taken hostage in the
· Michael Lee, a spokesman for Lucasville prison siege had been
Ohio Department of Rehabilililtion disciplined for mostly minor rule
and Correction, identified the infractions, state personnel records
inmates found. dead Thursday as show.
·
Bruce Edwin Harris,35, and David
· None has been accused of abus- ·
Scott Summers, 31.
ing prisoners at the Southern Ohio
Lee said 39 of the more than Correctional Facility except in one
400 inmates who surrendered were instance, when one of the former ·
injured, none seriously._Most-were hostages locked a cell area 30 min' treated for minor cuts and bruises.
utes too elirly.
Nine inmates and one guard
Some inmate-negotiators listed
died at the maximum-security .
~
prison after the !lprising began
Apnl 11. The standoff ended
.
peacefully Wednesday when
inmates and state negotiators
'
approved a 21-point agreement in
which prisoQ officials agreed to
. PRINCETON, .Va. (AP) review inmate complaints about A highway became a runway for a
living and worlcing conditions,
North Carolina pilot whose plane
Authorities still were investi~t· engine failed as he flew over soulhing how and why the uprismg em West Virginia.
began.
Thomas Sweeney of GreensReginald Wilkinson, direCtor of boro,N.C.,landedFriday afternoon
the: state's prison system, said one on U.S. 460 near Princeton. He was
reason•for lhe riot may have been unharmed but "shaking like a

personalilies.

I

..

•

abuse by guards as one of their · before his employment and attest· wtal of four days in 1992 - one in......, -far'". ·we 4
c~.'r~· The more than 400 ~- . ing that he was or would become a day in one instance and three days IC ••
n
pnsoners a1 the· Lucasville resident of Ohio.
prison surrendered Wednesd;~y '
A ~Cview of lhe records Friday
after 11 days.
turned up •no perfonnance evalua· .
Nine iniiUiles were killed during lions except for letters document·
the siege, along with one guard. ing ~uspensions for. absenteeism
Roben Vallandingham, 40, of Min- and negligence.
ford.
The Department of Administta·
Files at the Department of tive Services, which ~ps recordS
Administrative Services Depan- on all state employees, also had
ment on Valtandingham. contained nolhing olhcr than routine informa.routine employee information. It tion for guards barrold Clark Jr., ·
included staterneniS he signed thai '28; Kenneth Daniels, 26; Larry
aulhorized a background check Dotson, 45, and Michael Hensley,
36.
'
·
.
James Anthony Demons, 25;
•
I
.
.
Richard Buffmgwn, 44; and Jeffrey
"We
Deliver
aad·Spa e di'.Jt'-stba. .t""
Ratcliff, 26, were suspended for
brief periods for infractions of
•
deparlment rules, their files
•TopSoil
•Mason Sand
leaf," one witness ~d.
·
showed.
Sweeney was. flymg home from
Demons was suspended for a
-AU Dirt
•Concrete Sand
Columbus,_ Ohro, where he b.ad
-shredded
•Pit
gone on busmess. "
"The good Lord was on his
TopSoil
•Drainage Gravel
VINTON UCEWAY
side," said Cap_t. W.E. Gearhart of
the Mercer County Sheriff's ' NOW OPEN' EVERY SUNDAY
eSbaa
·•Pea Gravel
Department.
. .
'
Gates Open at 11 :00
Swee11ey told pohcehe landed
Tile
his single-engine·craft'on the road
Races Start at l P.M.
after realizing he would not be able
.Culvert Tile (all s • up IDs-)
· Bkycle Races far Kids
to reach Mercer County Airport.
•Block and llcw'lar lllix
He said he was able to stay alofl
May2
long enough for cars on the high' Na llchalalic bovlfB9U. Nalmponaibll
way 10 see him and clear a landing
far lbuts ar occidtnta.

ALL SIZ'ES
PLUS ,RIP 14P

p•J
I ot ·rnak es lOreed ·Jand•Ing ·
on Merfer co·unty hi.ghway.

West Virginian among inmates
killed in Ohio prison uprising

Run

•Drainage

su...

PROSPERITY, W.Va. (AP) - . spokeswoman Tami Collingsworth
-A funeral is scheduled Monday in ·· said. .
'
Ral~igh CountY for a former West
Farrell's body was one of five
Vir~tinia man killed in an inmate
that inmates put in the prison •s
upnsing at an Ohio prison, officials exercise yard on April 11, the first
said.
. night of lhe riot, she said.
Franklin Elwood Farrell, 49,'
The uprising ended Wednesdl!y
was in the lOth year of a 25-year when inmates released guards they ·
sentence·when he died in the dis- had taken hostage.
turbance at the Southern Ohio CorF8rrell,had lived in Josephine
rectional Facility in Lucasville, before he moved to Norwalk, Ohio,
Ohio, said Trisb Colby, where hls mother lived, officials
,
..
spokeswoman fori the Ohio Depart· • said.
ment of Rehabilitation and Correc:Survivors include Farrell's
lion.
mother, Elhel
Farrell of Norwalk.
I
Farrell had been convicted on
charges of aggravated arson and
carrying a concealed weapon,
Colby said.
.
"His mother told us he made
arrangements for a burial plot a
long time ago,"... prison ·

area.

The plane "was spitting and
sputtering. I thought he was going
to hit the mmmtain," said Thomas
Bailey. He lives nearby and rushed
10 check on Sweeney after seeing ·
lhe plane come down.
MotOrisiS helped Sweeney push
the plane about 100 yards onto a
side road.
After a mechanic repairs his
plane, Sweeney will have to take
off from the highway, he said. His
plane has. fi~ed wings, so it cannot
be dismantled and moved to an airport, he said.

For more infprmation call:
388·9617 or 383·9300

fhe Art of Entertainment
rS-A6940

Cheshire man
faces .trial in
Mason court
ber 1992 session of the Mason
County grand jury, according to
Prosecuting Attorney Damon Morgan.
'
Stepllen L. Hays, 30, Cheshire,
is scheduled to go on ttial June 14
at 9 a.m. on two counts of sexual
assault in the third degree, two
criuniS of incest, two counts of sex·
ual abuse in the first degree and
· .four couniS· of sexal 8$SIIult by custodian. .
Sentencing has been set for
three ~lhers, Morgan said.
Edwin L. "Chip" Hines Jr., 31,
New Albany, Ind., pleaded gui11y
last Monday to -two misddemeanor
counts of DUJ causing death. He
was indicted during the January
session of the grand jury.
His sentencing will be May 13
at 9 a.m.
Gallipolis resident Donald Rat·
cliff pleaded guilty to lho felony
charge of concealing stolen property Thursday, according to Morgan.
Sentencing has been set for May 28
at 9:30a.m.
·
· Morgan fried felony infonnalion
on Buddy L. Curry, 18, Polni
Pleasant, for breaking and entering
·at 22nd Street Shop-A·Minil and
grand larceny 11 Cenlral Blemen·
tary School. Curry pleaded guilly
to botb charges.
· He will be sentenced May 28 at
9 a.m.

Lottery numbers

CLBYBLAND ~AP)-.. Here ire
Friday night's 01110 Lotltl)' Jelections: .

Pick 3 Numbers
4-9-2
' (four, nine, two)
Plek .. Hubers

8·1-4-9

'•

.

,(el&amp;ht. one, four, nine)
Buc:k1Jt5 · .
7-11.;15·18-27 .
(acv~ ~hi. fifteen. eighteen,

..

..
''

"

••

.'

...
,
I

'

{\DPIONEER.

IF YOUR LAWN LOOKS LIKE
THIS....

POINT PLEASANT - ' A !rial
date has been set for a Gallia County man indicted during the Septem·

-

• 6" X' 9"
1

~one

Woofer

•IMPPRijilil 0

2-518" Cone Twet~ter _

1

7 Cane

~ iLCF Cone l'._!llr

•100 Watts Max. Music Power

BUT YOU WANT IT TO LOOK LIKE
THIS ...

DEH-520

• Supertuner

CALL US ...WE'RE THE
LAWN SPECIALISTS .

I

I

329-1242 or 1-s~o-an-ooso
·-

•6-112" 2-WIIIJ.SJSJlileiiiii
. Ier
1

....

~

8,.

$

•

Slim ori'e-Piece 3-Beam Laser Plck:up .

• New Single CD Micro Mechanism

LAWNLoRD·s

•

'

•,4-Speaker High Power: 25Wx.2, 15W x 4-EIAJ

Call Today For A Free Estimate

-

TS-111645
'

• 8/s Digital Filter,

&amp;-112"1MPPRigilileCor''* 7

ca.. ,.,.....

• 1-5/Bn Tvseeta

•100 Waltl tMu.Poeua:

'

• 1-Bit DIA Converter

'

• LCF Blended Cone:ti"W!I!IIer

SKYLINE LANES
1032 ST. RT.7 N.

• Vertical Flex 'Dust Glad
• Slim Profile for Wider In u

• 5 •• aha 5

GALUPOLIS, OH.

(614) 446·3362

@1~--

_· . ' J9

, . - - . - - - - , • - . ~ T._....

u

KEH-2500
• Super:tuner

Q C:

.. _,.._..,.o'oTu"'u-

LEAGUE

• 4-Speaker High IPOWW(25W x 2 ar 15W.: t BY)
.

nME

Tuesday Ladies Trio
Wednesday Mixed (2 men &amp;2women)
Wednesday Ladies Doubles
. Thursday Men's frio
Senior Thursday Fun Day bnixad)
Friday Scotch Doubles (mixed)
Saturday Mixed Doubles .
... ,.
Sunday Aduh •Junior
'

May 18
May 12
May I
, May
· May
May 21
· May 22
June 6
I

.

7:00PM
7:00PM ·
1:00PM
7:00 PM ·
1.;00 PM
7:00PM
7:00 PM
7:00-PM

•

Other leaguea avallllbl!t a requaated.

:::!~Lotto jackpot ...S20· . .lllls....-•s•~•n•u•p•a•t•the•._,_o·nt~d~•-•k.•.•· - - -

'

•
.

au~~tn•

.

liiiJ

- Sale• - Service!

.Bo.h's Eleetroaiat
470 STill I t 7 . .II
. III.IIPOUI,- ·.
. (614) 441 4117
•

••

'

•

�~

-.

_....,--.

'

..

,

..

..

.

..,

.......

~

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

'

.

'-

~

. . ........
•
•

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

Page A&amp; Sun(bly 11m" sentinel

-----Area.deaths. - - Deaths
elsewhere
Eima J. Dexter
GAUIPOLIS - Elina J. Dexter, 87, 3000 Bethel Road, Columbus,
fonnerly of the Burkhart Lane community in Gallipolis, died Friday.
April23, 1993 in Rivenide Methodist Hospual. Colwnbus.
Born Feb. 28, 1906 in Gallia County, daughter pf the late Evan and
Mattie Bmidge Reese, she married Harry Dexter on Dec. 2, 1925 in Gallipolis. She and bet husband owned and operated Dexter's Plumbing &amp;
Heating, where she served as the booklceeper.
A longtime member of the First Presbyterian Church of Gallipolis. she
was a lifelime member of lhe Gallipolis Emblem Club. She was also a
member of the Pythian Sisters and Gallipolis Chapter 238 of the Eastern
Star.
I
Preceded in death by her husband in 1978, she had resided in Columbus for the past 13 yean. She was also preceded by two sisterS, Elizabeth
Fife and Anna SlanWO, and by three brothers, Sherman .Reese, William
Reese and Oscar Reese.
·
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John W. (Lalira) Davis of Columbus; a
son, John S. (Ann) Dexter of Ashland, Va.; five grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren; and a sister, Mn. Nellie Roberts of Gallipolis.
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, with
the Rev. Alben Earley officiating. Burial will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call It the chapel one hour prior to services on Monday.
Pallbearers wiU be Brent Davis, Glenn Davis, J .R. Reese, Jim Reese,
. Chris.Kette and Mike Dexter.

William Mulford
POMEROY - William C. (Bill) Mulford, 92; of Athens, formerly of ·
Meigs County, died March 12, 1993 in Ath~ns County. Fune~ ser-·
vices were held at the Jagers Funeral Home wtth burialm Amesville.

''

26 fined in Meigs court
POMEROY ...., The following
cases were resolved Wednesday in
the Meigs County Court of Judge
Patrick O'Brien.
Charles Green, Athens, driving
under tbe influence. $450 plus
costs, 30 days in jail suspended to
10 days. one year operator's license
suspension, one year probation;
driving under suspension, $100
plus costs, 10 days jail and one
year probation; possession of a
controlled substance in less than
the bulk amount, costs only; criminal ti-espassing, 10 days in jail plus
costs; criminal damaging, 10 days
in jail, costs and restitution;
James D. Ashton, Henderson,
W.Va.: safety violation, $65 plus
costs; Lewis Pulver.1-ong Bottom,
no registration tags, failure to jlay
annual tax, $10 plus costs; Seiji
'Hironaka, Athens, speed, $25 plus
costs; Janii.e Gillispie, Pomeroy,
failure to yield right of way, $10
·plus costs; Ronald Atkins,
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $50
fine suspended to $25 plus costs,
six months probation;
Ronald Reynolds, Pomeroy. seat
belt violation, $25 plus costs; Man:
Solocheck, Hunttng'ton, W.Va ..
speed, $25 plus costs; Alice J,
Kautz, Pomeroy, ·speed, $20 plus
costs; Michael JOSeph Eblin, Rutland, speed, $2.3 plus COSIS; David
E. Peterson, Columbus, failure to
control, $20 plus co.sts; John K.
Lambert, Chesapeake, speed, $21
plus costs; Nina A. Turner, Mariet·
Ia, speed, $23 plus costs; Douglas
E. Crites, Coolville, speed, $22
plus costs;
. Alex Halley, Cheshire, speed,
$21 plus costs; Susan Donaldson.

'

..

Guido Carli
ROME (AP) -;;:. Guido Carli,
who as treasury minister and central bank governor helped guide
Italy's postwar economic expansion. died Friday of a heart attack.
He was 79.
Carli represented Italy at the
1944 Bretton Woods Conference
that drew up projects for the Inter- ,
national Monetary Fund and. the
World Bank. He served as governor of Italy's central bank from
1960 until1975.
In 19'76, he becl!me president of
t!Je Confindustria, Italy's most
influential association of industrialists.
In 1983, Carli was eiCcted to the
Senate as a Christian Democrat He
served as treasury minister from
1989 until1992. After leaving politics, he worked as.consultant to
banks and private companies .

'.

RECOQNIZED - Certificates tor their
"exemplary eR'orts" dur1111 tbe lire at Meigs
High School on Marcb 2l were/resented to participating lire dep1U1111ents aD ottlcials Friday
by FeDton Taylor, MHS principal. Work to .the
damaged areas or the scbool Is nearing completion. l'he presentation took place iu the third
noor room wbere the fire started. Here Taylor

ACROSS
1 Plercea
6 Wooden pin
11 Trademark
16 "Vallay of
the-"
21 Doctrine
22 Less cooked
23 Sullerer !rom
Hanaen'sdlaease
24 lllrd on a quarter
25 Crimaon
26 Long lor
28 Rlvw In Germany
30 Encourage
32 Peld notice
33 Near
34 Sum up
3~ Anlsh
36 Trade ·
37 Wine.cup
38 - Bela KliPP&amp;
40 Beer mug
42 Evil
43 Equal
44 Scheme
45 Lair
47 Sowed
49 Scorch
50 "Beverly Hills- "
54
55
56
59
80
62
64

446·9585

CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
WVD13372

Scarce
Female relative
Church aervlcea
Anger
Footllke part
Gosalps
Vut throng
85
law"
'
66 Proceed
67 Hint
69 Blemishes
70 Strong wind
71 Tom· Hanks 111m
72 Fuss
74 Merits
76 Airline Info
77 Repair
78 Surfeit
79 Recalls
82 Commlulon
84 Metal atrands
85 Hall
88.Spoken
88.Transaction
89 Liquid measure
90 Support ·
11

I

25%0

Your ~nr·inn

Dlacount For
Qualifying
Cuatomert

1-100·300~9515 in OH.
1·100·227~9515

We do ... fabrics that
atun abuse.

Cenlfled Fine Fabric ~~~

phia Athletics. New York then
EV ANSVJLLE, Ind. (AP) swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in the The head or a coal operator strUck,
World Series.
by lhe United Mine Workers earlier .
The squad boasted Hall of this year says he sees hope in nego-'
Famers Ruth, Gehrig, Tony tiations with the union for a penna-:
Lazzeri, Earle Combes, Herb Pen- nent conbliCL
nock.and Waite Hoyt
Meanwhile, UMW members on
Koenig was tbe club's starting Saturday planned a q11ly in St.
shortstop from 1926 to 1929, He Lo~i~ 8!1d a m~h on a top ~oal,
finished his 13-year career with a · off1ctal s .home m. Beverly J:lills, ,
.279 average, hitting .391 in 1928.
Caltf. Umon offictals ~b~ . the, .
march "We come for JUStice, not
for brunch.''
·

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-3

Tawney Jewelry

Start On

Coal official sees hope ·

By JULIE E. DILLON
additiQns to these culinary herbs vesi Co- a small family.
Tlmei-SeDdnel Stair
include lavender, catnip, lemon
Each year, you will become
·: PORTLAND - If you're think- verbena and bee balm. :
familiar with five new gourmet
~. Of starting an herb garden the · Mn. Hill, who owns and oper- treaSurers. and you will eventually
t~:f · to remember, according to · ates Connie's Ohio River Herbs owna20-herbculinarybed,framed
. I . 'horbiil enthuSiasts, is 10 start and E~erlastings,'bec8me inJerested by paths between the four gardens.
!ltnall. ·
·
in .hjlrbs about seven years ago Carve out the bottoms of four large
Don't try to create ·an elaborate . when sbe started her first hero bed (12-inch) green plastic polS. Bury
fOrmal pracn, si1op1y start with a at her home. She sa~s it's a hobby these in the center of each square to
· · f~w culinary (cookinS) herbs in a• .she finds very relaxmg an,d enjoy- contain the tall spreading herbs,
1)¢ B!llitde as two feet by five feet able. She loves to show off her leaving three or Jour inches abOve
Knowledgeable herbalists say beautiful gardens and she enjoys the soil level. These will be the
that when starting your herb garden dealing with people on a personal focal unit of each bed. Remember
you ·could simply place them basis and heiJ)ing them to become to 11llow enough space betv&gt;.:een
among your perennial flowers, as a more knowledgeable about various beds for the.lawn mower.
border to the house or in the veg- plantS. She welcomes any groups
Bobbie' Karr, Wipple Road,
etable giUden. If you're planting · or individuals who would be inter- Pomeroy, iS also an avid herbalist
perennial herbs place lhem in the ested in touring her gardens and . Her home is surrounded with beaucorners of the vegetable patch so · greenhouses.
tiful herb, everlasting and herbal
tbe.Y won't be rototilled· up each
Mrs. Hill belongs to an herbal beds. She became interested in the
~'·
group which she founded several world of herbs abOut siX years ago.
Connie ·Hill, Letan Falls, an years ago - The River Valley She started with herbs and everlastavid herOalis~ says a basic culinary Herbalists, consisting of members ings which she uses in making vari. herb bed should consisiS of plants from both sides of tbe river from ous craft items such as wreaths and
itlcluding speannint, sage, pepper- Meigs and Jackson ·county. This swags. She says she also started
mint, oregano, lemon balm, tar- group sponsors an herb fest annual- with a fewl culinary herbs and recrlgon, dill, summer savory, pars- Iy and this year's fest will be held ommends this for first timers.
l'e'y, marjoram, rosemary, basil, at the Ravenswood Parle
Mrs. Karr says the fli'SI thing to
tlryme, chives and nasturtiums'. All sometime.in September,
do when planning an herb garderi is
or these are perennials with the
According to an article, "The to decide what you want to do with
excepliOJ;l of sweet marjcram which • Pleasllfe of Herbs," another plan your plants be it cooking, craft ·
is an an~ual. A basic culinary herb for your bed could be the "add-a- making, medicinal, and so on.
bed should be located along ,a south bed-a-year" plan.
·
Then, plot it oot on paper to deteror ·southeast facing wall of your
· In this·ptan, a three-foot by three · mine the heights of the plants you
house with perennials in the back foot bed holds five different culi- will be growing. After that select
and annuals in the front. Simple narY herbs llhd yields enough har- five to 10 plants and experi!llel)t
., I
with color and texture and add
1
· l'
'I '
.' ill i from there year after year.
·1 \
· · ! I · ' TTT!'fl
Since Mrs. Karr makes a variety
1
i/11
of craft items from her plants sbe
:l
' ' '~
· . ~ ·.. recommenils the followtn$: silver
! l
~ l. .-..~:... ·~t .J • \~K~ king artemesia, sweet anntc, sage, ·
'
;'!1. · ""'-i·, thyme, oregano bloQ,ms and
, ..,..1\'~'l".;· &lt;!i · '
&gt;• '•''t' yarrow. Everlastings good for craft
\: making include lovc~ in-a-mist,
straw (lowers, garlic chives, !,annis
hyssop, globe anlaranth, lavender,
stance and flax ,
.
Mrs." Karr and a couple of other
herbal enthusiasts, Doona Nease
and Dianna Lawson, will sponsor a
- plant exchange during Heritage
Weekend in Pomeroy on June 12 at
the mini"park on eoun Street. For
those who bring in a plant for
exchange they will belgiven a 'start
from a.variety of heros.
So, if you're planning on starting an·herb garden remember, start
small and ihink It th)'ough. Don't
attempt to create an elaborate garden because you'll only be wasting
pfeclous time which could be spent
enjoying your herbs.
.

-

''

92 Fairy tala monster
94 Couriers
98 Stop
99 Playing card .
100 Temporary bed
102 l.dcallona
103 Gravestone abbr.
104 Choose
105 Black and Red
106 In bUeball:
flrat,aecond
and third
108 The sun
109 Math term
110 Yes; Sp.
111 Walla metal •
112 Ownertllllp rights
114 Merry
118 Wager
' 117 NewllPBI*
executive
119 Trick
120 tam
122 "Streetcar" name
124 Base
125 POlson
128 Sign on
128 t'Jegallve
129 Succor
131 Challenge
132 Obeie
133 Anlou and bose
135 "Nightmare"
Street
138 Three-:loed stolhs
139 Twill !
140 Distant
141 French summer

142 A, E, -. -. U
143 Oanaon 10
144 Shill
145 Get up
147 "The Main -"
149 Obtain
150 U1)C811ny
152 Go In
154 II fond Of
156 Swisa-French
river

158 Vlllon
159 Met:nOranda
180 Sumptuous meal
. t61 Bread Ingredient

DOWN
1 Waist band
2 Molars

•

I

3 In addition ·
4&amp;1st
5 Pigpen
6 Swaps
7 Mo~e robust
8Po8H88
9 French article
10 Go utray
11 " - Faith"
12 Tear
13 Simian
14 Neon symbol
15 Bureau part •
16 Profound
17 Grein
18 TV's Sue Ellen
Ewing: lnHa.
19 S.A. anlm$1
20 Automobile style
' 27, 011)1
29 Chlel
31 Prohibll
36 Chair
37 Swiss 39 Eric40 Ginger(cookieI
41 Tidy
42 " - Ballay"
43 Wrlles
44 "Hearts Alire"

star
46 Spanish article
48 COlorless
49 Pellllons
50 Crate
51 Corona or
· panatela
52 Wear away
53 1'Total - "
55 Placea lor
worship
56 Form ·
57 Choice part
56 Wise panona
61 Certain
63 Clrry
64 Workman
68 Repeat

·performances
70
71
73
74
75
77
78

Phil Collins group
Trade
Mysterious
House additions
Wander
Men
Warble

80
81
83
84

.

Kiln
Sink In middle
Male sheep
Emerges
vlt;torlous .
87 Situate
89 Pared
90 ";-:, Wetelhe
Days"
91 Swill
. 92 Haul with effort
94 Smelling organ
95 Pack away
96 Moremat..e
97 MaliCe
99 Rip
· 101 Occupant
105 Sluggish
106 Bunqle
107 Mix
111 Han
l12 Evergreen tree
113 Soli mud
115 Lairs
its Seize with 111a
t811lh
118 Evils
119 Give prior nollee
121 Jacket parts
123 Therefore
125 Unproductive
126 Hearing organs .
127 Newest
129 Detested
13o Downy duck
131 Owtng
132 Baiaars ·· ,...
. 134 Stlmpy"s partner
138 Holds on property
131 Choral
composition
. 139 Abound
•• 140 Uberete
144 By way ol
145 ,S I - currency
14.1 Santa's helper·
14f'A Gabor
148 Attempt
149 Tibetan gazelle
151 Concerning
153 Negative .
15$ F•ree islands
whirlwind
157 Helium symbOl

•

I

!·

.

.•

CREATE A FOCAL POINT -Placement of
a focal point in your berb garden - be It whatev·
er you want - plays an impor~~nt role in the

overaU scheme or your 1arden. This garden features an autique water pump as its focal point.
(Pboto provided by CODDle HW)

EVERLASTINGS -Many fioral enthusiasts
add to tbeir berb and nower gardens witb a
variety of everlasting pianls. Everlastings dry

very well tor use in craft items such as wreaths
and swags or simply in dried arrangements.
(Pboto provided by.Connie HiD)

1

1

I'

'

•o

Get A Head ,_

presenls certulcates to Dlumy Zirkle, Pomeroy
Fire Chief; Bob Byer, Emergency Medical Ser·
vice director; Meigs County Sbe~irr James
Soulsby; Kenuy Dyer, Middleport Fire Depart- .
ment assistaut chief; and Jack Peterson of the
Syracuse Fire Department, picture left to rlgbt.
(T -S Photo by Charlene Hbeftich)

SUND'A Y P.U ZZLER

Three people killed
By Tlie Associated Press
Three people died in traffic accidents over the weekend, the S~
Highway Patrol said. ·The patrol
counts fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday
to midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SATURDAY
HAMIL TON - Sharon K.
Allen, 36, of Hamilt.on, the driver
in a one-cal' crash on a Butler
County road.
CINCINNATI- Curtis Hill Jr.,
17, of Cincinnati, passenger in a
one-car accident on a city street.
CIRCLEVILLE - Leisa M.
Starkey, 31, of Kingston, the driver
in a one-vehicle crash on a Pickaway County road.

Aprll25, 1893

'

Now .is the tithe to plan
for youfherb garden
•,

51 Buament

in auto accidents

•

Section

~·

Frank Gaudette
SE.ATTLE (AP) - ' Frank
Gaudeue, Microsoft Corp.'s chief
financial officer, died Friday after
an eight-month battle with cancer.
He was 57.
.
Gaudette, who also served as the
company's·execulive vice president . Mark Koenig, who was the last surof operalions, joined Microsoft in viving member of the 1927 New
September 1984 after llolding top York Yankees team featuring the
executive posilions at C3, Infor- "Murderers' Row" that included
malics General, Rockwell Intema- Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, died
lional, Frito-Lay and other compa- Thursday of cancer at a convalesnies. .·
. cent hospital. He was 88.
·
As executive vice president of
The 1927 team was in first place
Microsoft's operations group since from start to finish in the American
January 1992, Gaudeue oversaw League and ended up 19 games
finance, manufacturing, hu.man ahead of the second-place Ji'hiladelresources, investor relations, the
infonnation technology group and
· Microsoft Press.

Portland, failpre to control, S20
plus costs; Charles Landers.
Pomeroy, assault, three days jail
suspended, restraining order issued,
$25 plus costs; K~nneth Green,
Shade, DUI, $500 plus costs, six
months jail suspended to 30 days,
OL suspended for .one year, one
year probation; driviog without a
license, S125 plus costs, six months
suspended to 30 days concurrent
with DUI, one year probation;
Mark Koenig
Walter Haggy, Rutland, assault,
WILLOWS, Calif. (AP)
I 0 days jail suspended, one year
probation, $50 plus costs; Mary
Mills, Middleport, DUI, $350 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
three, OL suspended for 90 days;
left of center, $20 plus costs;
Albert Cupp, Pomeroy, driving
, under suspension, days jail sus~ed if vali~ OL presented withm 90 days, $100 plus costs, one
year probation; assured clear distance ahead, $30 plus costs;
Howard Jeffers, Pomeroy, seat belt
violation, $25 plus costs;
Larry Robinson, Guysville, seat
belt violatiqn, $25 plus costs; Jason ·
Nottingham, Long Bottom,
improper passin,, $30 plus costs;
expired regislralicln. $10 plus costsl
no OL, three days jail suspended if
valid OL presenled within 45 days,
/ ·
$75 plus costs; Grove Nottingham,
Athens, scat belt violalfoil, .$75.
plus costs; seat belt violation,' $25 ,
GOL.DLROCE THILLIUffi" RIOGS
plus costs; speed. $26 plus costs.
In addition, the following people f¢eited ~: Raben Chambliss, JacksonvtUe, Fla., speed, $65;
422 2nd Ave.
Thomas Wildt, ' Parkersburg,
Gallipolla,Ohlo
W.Va., speed. $64; Kevin Grueser,
Long Bottom, failure to yield, $60. .

Along the River

April 25, 1893

d

~·

•'

AVID HERBALIST- Bobbie Karr, Wippte'
· Road, Pomeroy, Is an avid herbalist. Sbe became
interested ID berbs about six years ago as a .
hobby. She creates a •ariety of crafts from her
plaDts wblcb sbe harvests from her beautiful

herb, evierlastiDg and nower gardens at her
home. Sbe Is also pictured as sbe works to maiD·
tala her 1ardens. Oue of her 1ardeas features
ooly culinary herbs while the otbers are Interspersed witb a variety or plants.

DECORA11VE ACCENTS ...: Part of the fun
In creating your berb garden Is 'deciding what
type of decoratiYe IICCCDtl YQU want to feature
for the walkways. ThiJ particular garden fea-

Wood{andCenters, Inc.
ONE OFTHE MOST COMPREHENSIVE &amp; PROFESSIONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES IN SOUTHEASTERN OHK:I

lures brick. Oilier possible .items could Include
pebbles, mule•, stone or slmpJy grass, (PbQ.to
provided by Connie Hill)
'
·

'

Woodland C.nta,.la funded In part by tna Glllla ·JackiOn-Me~• Bolrd or
Alcohol, Drug ~ddlcllon 1nd "-nlll HHfth Strvlcn

PRIVATE
'INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED

-24~Hr.

-comprehel'\tlvt Adolesdenl

&amp; ,._dOiescents

Counseling &amp; Tlleropy
&gt;Children's R-enllll
and/or Out·Patlenr TroaJment

C'rlsls lrlei'Yenllon
Servlata - Adufts, Children

-24 Hr. Emorgenty Servlcos .
-Mamaoe &amp; Fomi~.Coun""!lng

"'lcttm'o Aaalolance Progr""'

ENTHUSIASTIC
•
• CoDDle Hill,
who O'll'IIS and operates Ohio
River Valley H,rbs and EverIas!ings, also au enthuslutlc
herbalist, Is pictured at left as
Ae attftldl to •• llerba 1a one
of two 1renhouat1 It ller
bome near Letart Palls. Also
plctufed IJ Ollt, ot ller maay, · , outstudlnt . . deu. Her pr.l ·
. dens. and aree••ollel are··
available for tottn to.poupa
and lncilvlduills wiJh prior
uotlce to Mrs. HID.

RESIDENT

HERBALI~T

PSY~HIATRISTS

· PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS

.Pati&gt;-StrWA tor tho HomoiHI
.Pay-horopy
o£"1'f0Ye• Aast. Progroms
~lila Molgo Hoadotan
oCU. Manogoment

s...-

·&gt;Evwatlon &amp; Tooting .
•Aduft Community Tralnlrlg
•Sl!POrvtood HOusing tor
Emoltonatty ~bloc!

MEDICARE•MEDICAII&gt;TITLE XX•~SI..~ID~IN~G~~~~~~B~Y~St~AT~E~O~F~OHIOoEVENING APPTS. AVAilABLE

JACKSON
· 200 MAIN ST,

286-5075

24 HOUR

CRISIS '-INE

LOCALCRlSIS UNE

44~·5554

TOO AVAILAiiL£

GALLIPOLIS

OUTSIDE OF · ·
GALUPOUI
CALUNo AREA
TOLL FREE DIAL 1

POMEROY

412 VINTON PIKE

&amp;THEN

MULBER.RY HEIGHTS .

800-252-5554 •

,

j,

.'

•

' &lt;

992;,2192 .

•

,.

..

.

I

)
,I

'·

..'

&lt;

I

'"

,.

~

\1

"

•

�.

•
.

..

'

.

.

•

wv

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

OH-Polnt

VAS '93-'94••

season sales
underway

KRISTEN FREDERICK, T .S. LIPSCOMB

MIDDLEPORT and
Miss Fr.ederick is a junior at
Jack Frederick, I;.eading Creek Meigs High School. .L
·
Road, Middleport, announce the
Lipscomb is a 199rgf.lduale of
engagement of their daughter, Kris- Meigs High School and serves with
te.n Elizabeth, to Talmon Shawn the United States Marine Corps.
Ltpscomb, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wedding plans are incomplete
David Lipscomb, Pomeroy.
·

KAREN AND CHARLES JACOBS

Craigo-Jacobs

..

,WeddiJ)g policy

WENDY BROWN, TODD PETRIE

and sevend friends of the couple.
The bride and groom both wore
vintage clothing from the Zeppelin
era. The bride was accOUiered in a
rose silk dress, circa 1910 with a
.black cape, black elbow: length
gloves and high-lacing black boots.
Her black hat was adorned with
.cabbage roses and oSttich feathers,
. The groom wore a black frock coai
·and a 10p haL
A honeymoon will be taken in
August.
Craigo is a reporter and
lifestyles editor on the staff of The
Ken10n Times. Jacobs is a curatordireciOr of the his10rical museums
of Hardin County.
The couple reside at 225 1/2 N.
Market St., Kenton, 43326.

GALLIPOLIS - Karen Craigo
and ~harl.es Jacobs ~united in
mamage m a double-nng ceremony on Tuesday, March 30, 1993,
aboard the Goodyear airship "The
Spirit of Akron."
.
~ Rev,. R.Scott Jo.bnson of .st.
John s United Church of Chpst,
Ken10n, pc:rformed the .ceremony.
The bhmp seats etght people.
Those in auendance were Donald
and Elsie Craigo of Gallipolis, parents of the jnide; Shirley Jacobs of
South Thomas10n, Maine, mother
of the groom; Mark Jacobs of
Akron, brother of the groom and
Adrian Jacobs of Akron. nephew of
th~ groom.:r:tte pilot was Aaron Jeffries. Awruung on the ground were
George Jacobs, falher of the groom

Brown-Petrie

The Sunday Times ~Sentjnel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
VINTON - Mr. · and Mrs. a student at the University of Rio and Mason counties as news and is
R.ichard Bfl)wn, Vinton. announce · Grande majoring in Elementary happy to publiSh wedding stories
the engagement and upcoming Education. Todd is a 1989 gmduale and photographs without charge: ·
However, wedding .news must
marriage of their daughter, Wendy of North Gallia High Sc~ool and
RicheU Brown, 10 Todd Petrie, son will be a 1993 graduale of the Uni- meet general ·standards of timeliness. The newspaper pref,ers to
·
of Mr. and. Mrs. Dean' Petrie, Vin- versity of Rio Grande.
The open church wedding will · publish accounts of weddings as
ton.
Miss Richell is a 199.1 graduaie be Friday, May 14, 1993 at 6:30 soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
of North Gallia High School and is p.m. at the Vinton Baptist Church.
edition, the wedding· must have
taken place within 60 days prior 10
the publication, and may I» up to'
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the -editorial department by.
Thursday, 4 p.m., prioi to the date
of publication.
' ·
· Those not m&amp;king the 60 day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allOws.

toOK AGAIN!

ANNIVERSARY TO BE OBSERVED • Martla L. and Cora
Woodard Sr., Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy, will celebrate their 76th
wedding 110niversary on Friday at 7 p.m. at their home with cake
and ice cream; They have two children, four grandchildren and
five great-grandchildren.
t

Frederick
-Lipscomb
·
·
'
Mr.
Mrs.

. Dressel-Baston

PhOtographs of either the tiride "
or the bride and groom nlay be,.,
pu~lished with wedding stories it.,
desired. Photographs may ·be either: :
black and white or good quality~.
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Genenilly, snapshots or instant-developing pho10s
are not of acceptable quality.
~:Questions may be directed 10 the •
edi!OOal department ,from 1-5 p.m.
Monday through Friday at 4462342.
.

· GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs. Saturday, May 15, at 1:30 in the
William E. Dressel are announcing afternoon at the St. Louis Catholic
tile upcoming marriage of their . church. ·
.
daughter, Julie Marie, to Clarence · • A .reception will follow ·at the
Hillman Easton II . The open ·. Elk's Lodge.
church wedding will take place on

'!1~· y
'

.

:.

'

·~.

'

&lt;.·~.·.;\:..

1

• -

1

1.

,j
1

1•
1

J

Taxforms due

GALLIPOLIS - The ninth annual membership drive for Valley •
Artists Series was launched Sunday
with a brunch for volunteers.
Shirleen Wiseman. Gallij)olis, host- •
ed the luncheon in her home on ·
Third Avenue.
Chairman for the Executive
Coffimittee, Dr. Donald .M. Thaler,
welcomed volunteers. He empha~ized the iinponance of support for
the arts ro continually improve the
quality of life, especially in
Appalachian communities, where
premier tour·-of tbe U. S. and offer ail exteDSive
'MOSCOW BOYS CHOIR - The Moseow
many have 11,0t had the opportunity
repertoire In the series.
Boys Choir is a featured event for tbe 1993-94
to .participale. Programs such as
Valief Artist Series season. Tbe gru~p is doing a
"Shady Grove" are also made
available to the schools as well as
an adult audience. · , · •
·Dr. Greg Miller, Director of the
~
Fine and Performing Arts Center, ton Family, seven children and pardescribed the 93-94 series for ents. will appear on a Sunday after- ·
noon in October. This talented famworkers. Dr. Miller CO-"mented on ily all play at least three instrUtbe quality of ihe artists. "Events
ments and offer a warm and varied
such as th.e Moscow Boys Choi( program,
with vocal, instrumental
would cost as much or more for
and
clogging
numbers.
one event in Columbus as the price
Jan
Thaler,
Coordinator for. the
of the entire series in Gallia Coundrive,
announced
that series sales
ty." This outstanding choir, founded in 1957, is doing their premier will run through May thir~. There
tour of the United ·States and fea- are more than forty volunteers selliure a broad repertoire from Rus- .ing the series. For information in
sian Classics 10 folk music.
· Meigs County, contact Lee Lee at
Other featured 1events in the 93- 949-2454. In Mason County, contact Captain Terry Casto at 67594 season include the Vocal Arts 3491.
.
Ensemble of Cincinnati, who will
In
Jackson
County, Helen
be perfonning at the University in
March 1994. Director Elmer Anderson will provi~e information
Some homes uy to separate .
Thomas is Director of Choral Stud- and direct you to a volunteer. Her
ies at the COnservatory of Music, number is 286-1025. In Gallia · you from'the environment . ·
University of Cincinnati. The choir, County, contact Jan Thaler, 446Our homes make you a
4425, or Saundra Koby, 446-9356.
began in 1979, is composed of pro- You may also call Con~ McNerThree distinct·~ rings· -- partofit
fessional musicians. Internationally ·
plain polishtd, ftot ta1urized, bf91t
lin
at
the
Performing
A,ts
Center
Jlt
,
Call today ror morelnrormatlon
famous, the Nelson Riddle Orchesridgad ...each ono craWI'old wifl a
the
University
of
Rio
Grande,
245;
tra, will be a featured event of the
brilliant diamond in . a elendtr lix
prong setting. Elegant! ExpNIIi.,.!
season. The group, direcled by son, 5351.
Valley
Artists
series
is
a
cooperAvailable in 14K yellow or ...,.
(
l
Christopher Riddle, holds many
gold.
·
lJ
~.tf
'
turu,
ative
venture
between
the
Universi
movie C(edits, including "High
\
Inc.
ty of Rio Grande and Tri-Count,
95 .
Sbciety" and the "Great Gadsby."
FROM 1
Community
Concert
Asspc:iation.
To complete the season, "Shady
More choicts nuU.e fo; b&lt;tter IMng:
Grove" will play in April. This is a Thes~ two series joined efforts in ·,
.P.O. BOX 614
unique blend of Appalachian music 1984. Certain performances· are ·
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
422 SECOND AVE.
and modem dance, choreographed partially funded throu'gh the Ohio ·
1-800-458-9990
GALUPOUS,OHIO
Arts
Council.
,
.
,
.
•
·
by Kathryn Posin of ~ew York. It
All perforiiiances are Ui the I:ine
is narrated .by ewight and Allen
and
Peqorming,.N!s cepter at the
. Dougherty, traditional musicians
University
of Rio'Grarige.
·
from southeastern Ohio. The Dut'
··''

1\ppla,&lt;hi~

295

Tawney Jewelers

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
village income tax forn13 are due
by· April. 30. The Middleport tax
office hours are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
weclcdays. '
·

P---------~--------.-~~-

NT. CO. ---

MAYO

I

IBCOiAftOI DIY DELIIDY

II

..;High ~scription Co~

GUARIIfi£8

I
I

I

'

•.

'

I

Do you feel y0u iUe oaying too much for
your prescriptions? then you shOuld~
.shopping with us. With the cost ol medtca·
lions constantly on the rise, we fe~llt Is
our responslllUIIY to offer our
customers even! •dvantage possible.
You see. we've made 1t a point to know
when genetic equivalents are available.
Then, working 1\and·in·hand with your
doctor, we fill your prescription.- ~xacllv
as ordered, and you ~ave in the process .

CASINO NIGHT - Several Individuals recently made donalioils to help defray the COflt of the trip to Las Vegas that will. be
. given away May l durln1 Casino Night at the French Art Col~y, '
including GaBipolls Manldpal Court Judge Bill Medley (top), pic·
lured with to~ Miller, program director at the fAC aad Brent
Eashilan (boUom) vice-president of sales and promotions at East·
man,'s Foodlan~ Grocery Stores, pictured with Mary Bea Sheets,
program coordmator at the FAC.

.-•

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

.J.lutland 41umni
13anquet
l

MaY2~th

:.Ww Prescription Prices
'MELISSA CLAY. GREGORY LUMBATIS
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

Clay-Lumbatis
MR. AND MRS. STEVEN E. GRADY

Grady-Vanpelt
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Paul L.
Grady, Bowman Run Road,
Racine, announce the marriage of
their son, Steven E. Grady, to Tina
Maria Van pelt, on Friday, April 9,
in front of Judge Patrick O'Brien . .
The groom· is an aviation sup. port equipment technician third
. class petty officer with the U.S.S.
Dwight D. Eisenhower. He has

served in the United States Navy
for four years.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Houstcin, Virginia
Beach, Va.
·
Vows will be renewed in
August with an outdoor wedding
for friends and family in Racine at
the home of the groom's parents.

'

l• Now Open Fo• .

QUALift BillER, 1ft PIICI LOWER
1.11101 Sll.lmlll .
..

The S•cuorl. "

ltMag "--s lflew•lat &amp;

VIJihiWo}, 1io11M hsltots, PoHH
Plants, Co•plorellto el Sill •hry
Plus lzaiHs &amp;

RUTLAND - Mr . and Mrs .
Warren Clay, Rutland, announce
the engagement and apprqaching
marriage of their daqgbter, Melissa
Sue, to Kent Gregory Lumbatis,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lumbatis, Woodsfield.
Miss Clay is a 1988 graduate of
Meigs High School. She is·a cosmetologist and is woddng as a dental assistant for pr. J.L. ·Riestembetg and Dr. T.C:. Lavelle, Athens.
Lumbatis is a l984 graduate o(
Woodsfield l:ligh . School and a
1989 .graduate of Ohio Northern
University College of Pharmacy.
He is employed by The Prescription Shop and Holzer HoBIJital.
.
Plans are currently, bemg ~ade
for a September wedding.

••••••lllre.s.

c•h••,lrocall '

c.Mow• '1.15 ML ,

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
· SYRACUSI

., ·r

OPEN 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 5 DAYS A WEEK
CLOSED SATURDAYS
OJ)EN SUNDA'eS 1:00 P.M.· 6:00P.M.

SPECIAL' OF THE MONTH

. ·

Located 01 II. 141 at Ceateaary, 2Y. Miles From
.
Gallipolis, Olllo
· PH. 446·7039

,

OPEN DAILY 0:5, SUNDAY 12-5

992·5776

·fMiJ

....

+.,.

.

.

'

•

ducatLon

•
'

' ·-····
.......

.. ' ..

..

1':'••

Parents

"

.

...

.fit{.
•
l '

.,
.

.t

'
)

'·

i

'!Of

,.'!I

~

I("~

Chances are $1.()() each.

••

...

•

..

.,

.

.

.•• Ill

.,

.
I

r

'

'

.

·.,

....•

..

!1 ..

..

Alumm- $12 •
Guests· $10

Civic
Centel"

~utland

p,_:t land All.lmni Assn.; Box 125; Rlltland, OH 45775

'

.

.Some Priced~ Even ·Below Dealer Cos't!
.

• Mill Outlet • B.rand Names • DiscOunts Up To 70%
For- ~omplete Details....
. AREA CODE
.

'

614

CALl US TODAY! 992·6173
ALL CARPETGUADIITEEDI- to·DAYS SAME AS CASH
'

•

"

"

'

I

'

.

. ·. Local bUsinesses and/or people
who have provided donations to
help defray tbe cost of the trip to
· Las Ve11u ate: Dr. Gene Abela;
Dr. Kenh Sheete, D(,- Donald
' Thaler; Dill Medley, Municipal
· Judge: Ron Toler (If Toler an&amp;l
Tol~ ~ Servic:ea; and .East·
man~s Foodland. ·
,
'

Save 1DO's 01 SSS

·2 Weeks
Warehouse
·Carpet
Sales

The trip to Las Vegas, co-spon. so red by AAA of Southeastern
Ohio, is valQCd at $1,000. A "cake
a ino'nth • worth $1 SO will be
awar~ed ''during the evening.

't'

..

-

e·

Proceeds from the event will be
used 10 ~ tbe FAC in outreach
projects for the community. All
FAC programming is offered
through support of the Ohio Arts
Council. Snacks will be provided
and beverages can be purchased for
$!/glass.
•·

~.·

' ~' :

..

...

.

•. .

'

(Music by The S.wing Shift Band)

"

GALLIPOLIS - Amateur
gamblers can test their luck at The
French Art COlony's Casino Night .
and try to win a trip 10 Las Vegas
where they can rub elbows with tbe
pros. The event is set for 8 to J.l
p.m. May I at the FAC,, 530 First
· Avenue.

••

.....,...""'· .

115 E. Memorial Drive ·
Pomeroy
992-2104

,,

llldrl.ort, Ohio

.'.
' "'
..

•'

Veteral!s Menlorial Hospital .

_Veterans Memorial Hospilai

992·116••

),•

.

/}

Prescription Shop

FAC schedules
'Casino Night'
event May 1

'~YOU'l~E FANTASTIC. THANK YOU! ~ ' ...
,.

Uinnel" - 6:JU
Uanc::e - ~:uu

'

To mark National Volunteer Week, April 26-May 2, we
'take this opportunity to sincerely thank all of you volunteers.
You provide uncovntable and valuable ·services·tooursiaff · ·
members, visitors and patients. Words cannot express our
· deep appreciation of your worthwhile, dedicated. work.
.
So from the entire staff to all of you, let's just say:
.

•.

WITHOUf PU1TING .
A LJD ON VUVE!

FHANK YOU, VOLUNTEERS!

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

•Free Parking (Video Touch Lot}
•Fast &amp;I Friendly Service
IStore Charge Accounts
,
I
•Free Delivery, to Home
9r .Work
'.
• • '(Cheshire, Bradbury,
•
Middleport, Pomeroy, Mason,
Minersville, Rutland, Syracuse}

'.,

·'

'

•

,
'I

,.

. \;'

�~·

•

84 Sunday nmes Sentinel

Aprll25, 1993

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

.

• April 25, 1993

.

Chestnut Grove: a 'ghost town' in Gallia
by Jim Sllllds
Special Corresp1111deat
One of Gallia County's "gbost
towns" is located
west of Vinton.
All that is left
ofCbestnutGrove
is an old bouse that
was built by Ste- ·
ven Wilcox in
1849. The town
. once bad· a store,
' wagon
post office, blacksmitll and
making business. ·· ·
'·
The post office was established in
· 1870 witll Wilcox serving as postmaster until 1885. George Turner
: was then the postmaster. He was
. followed by Rebecca Wilcox who
- served ~ 1887 to 1898. William
Wellcer was the last pOstmaster.
In 190S, the Olestnut Grove post
· office was closed and fllllil was delivered in the community by rural
free delivery:
. Attheturnoftbeccntury,George
. Turner's wagon malting business and
: tbe blacksmitb sbop of James Craig
· were joined by a new business ven: ture, the Cbestnut Grove Telephone
. Company.
There were lOfamiliesthatmade
up the company. The population of
Chestnut Grove was about20 then.
According to a letter written by
: Beabice Wilcox Clarlc, a copy of
· which was given to us by Ernestine

CRAFT SHOW

A Craft Show,is lieing held at the Syracuse Mu~icijial Park on
Polsley, all the wood and the stone
'
Saturday,
May 8, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with proceeds to g~.to
for the Wilcox bouse came from lbe
,the London Pool fund raising project to help operate tile facility
farm.
in 1993. Cost.for eacb 10 fL space will be $IS. Crafters will be
''The ston~ was_quarriecj from the
permitted to set up beginning at 9 a.m. The C~t ~ho:OV is be~~g
east side of lbe Indian Mound Hill.
held in conjunction with the SY"'fuse Ball Assocw~on s ~nmg
The stone for all buildings in the
Day
ceremonies tbat includes a' Parade of Players h&lt;:g~nrung at
community came from the same
11 a.m:·followed by a ~es of ball games at the mumc1pal.park
placl. All nails arid iron work were
throughout the day. The Big Bend An~q~e Tractor Club will also
made in a blacksmith shop which
have'a display at the park. Persons wiShmg to rent spacC:S ~or ':"t
stood diagonally across' the road from
craft show are invited to complete the followmg and mad 11 wnh
the house. The wort was done by an
the appropriate fee by April 30. Anyone needing additional
information can contact Bill Ro·ush (614) 992-5315 or Don
· Englishman named Craig who made
Shaffer (614) 992· 7503.
all his own tools before he could
ready the iron for the house. He
·SYRACUSE VILLAGE CRAFT SHOW
becam~ prosperous and was a loved
and trusted friend."
The Chestnut Grove store stood
IName::__~~------~------------------at tile end of the kitchen overlooking
1
•
thechestnutgrove for which the town
I
was named. In tile house there was a
1 Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _- - ' - - - - - - long basement room which became
BUU.T IN 11149 • Tllll bollle near VIDtoa
built ID 1849 by
1 Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _"T"'_ _...:....._ _ _ _- ; - ' known as the weaving room.
the Slevin Wilen: fiUIIily. 1'be ~Is all that Is left of • to'lflltbat
was called Cbestnilt Grove. Runaway slaves and Morgaa 's Raiders
The women of the community
: Do you need electricity? YES__~ NO_ _
··
are
a part oftbe structure's history.
sheared the 'sheep, washed th~ wool,
,.I
x$15
1 Number of lOll. s"'ces needed
and wove b~ and coverlets to ,
'·
women \vent and gathered .up the ·
sell. There was another section iii the oak tree was huge even in 1863.
I Total Fee:~-------------­
maaeril!l and later made quilts with
·.
It
was
struck
by
lightning
in
1920.
basement which was once.used to
: Type of craft or item for sale:'------------"'-It partially recovered arid lasted for what they could. ·
hide runaway slaves. '
"Across
the
road
in
front
of
~e
1 Make check or Money Order payable to:
According to Mrs. Clark, who several more years. Morgan's Raid..
hoilse was an old hewn out log bam,"
ers
killed
all
of
Wilcox's
pigs
·
and
wrote in the 1960s, "In the basement
I
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
are still the markings where bunks · other livestock. What they couldn't Mrs. Polsey wrole. "It was rotting ·
:Mail to: Syracuse Village Craft Show, PO Box 218,
were faslened to the joists under the eat or take with them they destroyed. andpanofitwasfallingdown. When
it
was
cleared
off,
a
large
marble
According
to
Mrs.
Polsley,
when
house."
·
Syracuse, OH 45779-0218
. I
A story is told of.one slave who Morgan's men left the Wilcox holne, stone was found undemeath it It was
a
large
marbl~ stone that started rollthey
took
bolts
of
material
from
the
was caught by slavehunters and
thrown into the well.During the Civil store. They fastened the material to ing d&lt;!wn the hill. It looked like an
WarsomeofMorgan'sRllidersspent . their saddles. As they went down the old rock. It was cleaned up and was
the' night under a big oak tree jn the road, the material caught on the trees put out at the end of the front walk.
"One day when Mrs. Clark came
front yard of the Wilcox'h9me. This and· bush'es. After they left, the ·
out for a visit, she saw this stone and
was so surpristid because it had been
missing from the marker of her great
grandfather. She said it had been
missing for a hundred years. How it
•Oxygen Service
' .
was found underiheold log bam is a
In the Home.
mystery. The stone was taken out to
•Ostomy Supplies
Mt. Tabor cemeterY and placed on
top of the marker."
•Diabetic Supplies
Several of the early settlers of the
.24 Hour Emergency
' Chestnut Grove comfQunity are bur·
Service .
ied in the Mt. Tabor Cemetery. The
.
Free Delivery!
Wilcox family along with William
· Metcalf, W.A.•Lilucks, K.G: Kirk·
,.
endall and George Radekin helped
to found the ML Tabor Me.thodist
/
Episcopal ~hurch which stood near
l:lome Owned Home Operated
the cemetery from 181?7to the World
"Strvlat tkt Aru fer Over ts Yuu"
War II era.
The unique lbing about this church
was the bell, which had been given to
· the Methodists by the members of
First H~ntington
Baptist Church.
,

.

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

wv

. Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Page-85

'South Pacific' leaves Broadway for Gallipolis

-

River Valley performers bring romantic ~usical to the Ariel stage

...
...

~

-

.......
••

·.

m

~

.

=--

--

•
'

A

Open Sundays 11 :00-6:00

Handmade Wreaths $15 • $20 • $25
SAILORS- Lonely sailors stationed in the South Pac~fit dur·ing World WarD sin11 '"''bere is NothinR Like a Dame." ·

. Dr KEVIN PINSON

Gallia health unit announces
~ theme for immunization week

Tlmes-5entlnel Staff
•
GALLIPOLIS - Six weeks
worth of rehearsals and hard work
came to a head til is weekend as
thespians from R,iver Valley ·High
School presented Rogers and Ham·
merstein's rorilantic musical, South
Pacijic.
Friday's opening performance
. drew an almost full house of 275
. ·people to the Morris and Dorothy
Haskins Ariel Th.eatre. A second
performance was slated for Satur· day m~lit. ·
·
,
A hne was already forming out·
side the theater a full hour before
the curtain. At the same time, backstage resembled a bee bive as each
1
actor, extra and stagehand buzzed
from area to &amp;rell. fulfdling individ·
ual objectives to benefit the whole.
. Advisor Cindy Graham and a
handful of volunaeers .flilted from
student to student aiding in applying makeup, checking props and
soothing jangled nerve~ .
. The orchestra, under Music
Director Tom Moore and Orchestra
Director Tom Phillips, ·was also
occupied preparing 'for wJJat turned
out to be the finishing touch on an
empressive eveninj!.
South Pacific IS the story of a
romance between a young Ameri-

~~~~~~
Medical Shoppe

1480 Jackson P\ke .

James Sands is a special corre· ·
spondentoftheSundayTimes-Sentinel. His address is: .65 Willow
Drive, Springboro OH 45066

M1rk Dillon,.SIIu Manager

I

.

Dee Dillon, R.N.,

446:2206

1-«10-445-2208

•I

'

.

'

Craft Supplies and Handmade Crafts

1-----------------------

GALLIPOLIS - The week of
April 24-30 bas been declared
&gt;National Presch\)01 Immunization
·week by the Ceriaerfor Disease
· Control in Allanta, Ga. This year's
~ theme is ''Hands Across the Nation
for Preschool Immunization". The
nation's goal for the year 2000 is to
·see that every cbild is fully vacci~ naaed by their second birthday.
· . The Gallia County Health
•. Department is womng in cooperation with a network of many organizations across the state and the
·country to assure that every cbild is
properly immunized. It is currently
: .estimated that only 52% of Ohio's
:--2 year-olds have been properly
::immunized.
:- The Gallia County Health
: Department bas giv~ free immu. nizations two days each week for
: many years, which is more thah
: most public agencies have offered.
: However•. according to stale statis: tics, only 31.2 percent of children
: in Gallia County have received tile
· required vaccines by tile age of 24
NATIONAL PR~-SCHOOL IMMUNIZATION WEEK.
: months.
National Pre-School Im111unization Week will be observed April
Proper immunization will not
24-30. Pictured above Is Judy Linder, RN, with Donovan .Cre·
: only help to "Stamp" out childhood . meens.
: diseases but will be a cost cutting
· measure for future health care. A
1992 study by tbe National Associ·
ation of Children's Hospitals and
Related Institutions staled tbat "For
: every $1 that is spent on Immunizations, $10 is sa.. ed later on in
health related illnesses."
'
: During National Preschool .
Immunization week only, immu.nizations will be available on TuesALL SIZES • ON SALEIII
day, Wednesday, Thursday, and
Fri&lt;f3y-April 27-30 at the Gallia
SAVE
TO
County Health Department. Hours
are 8 am-11:30 and 1 p. m.-3:30.
Vaccinations are given free of
. charge to the public on a nondisFrom
:criminatory bases. Please bring
:immunization record with you.
I0 Point Diamonds.

WREATHS·N·MORE •

1-800-462-'5255

can nurse and· an 'Older French
planter during World War II.
Famous songs from the production
include "Some Enchanted
Evening" and "I'm Gonna Wash
That Man. Right Outa My Hair."
At 8 p.m. it was on with the
show.
Sociologists say you can recognize a bored audience because it
sounds like an infmnary- tbere's
a lot of coughing, throat clearing
· and foot shuffling,
Friday night, however, when·the
au4ienc_e was ngt laughing or.
applaudm~. you could not even
hear breathing.
.
.
Romantic leads Gwen Fulks
(EI)sigil Nellie Forbush) and Aaron
~cCarty (Emile de Becque), as
well as comic reliefers Wayne
Spence (Bloody Mary) and Alan
· Ward (Luther Billls) held the audience's attention in.a death grip and
did not let go until the final curtain.
Even those in support roles from the sailors to the Bali Ha'i
dancers .- played .heavily ip creating a near-Broadway quality performance, surpassing most theater
goers expectations of an average
high school production.
. ,
This weekend the Ariel was
used exactly what it was created
for. And those who missed it
missed out

Blocks and
Wooden
Cutouts Priced
cis Marked

Israel Gyp - Natural

Broom Bloom
Large Bunch

$3.99sn.

$4.50Bn.'

Snowflake Gyp

Colored Lace
Mauve &amp; Peach

Wreaths

$3.75Bn.

$1.19up

ASII. Color1

Small $4.00 Bn.
Large $7.50 Bn

Bird
Nests Lge.

Birds of
The Worlds

99' Ea.

99' and Up .

AaoL Colo&lt;,

Straw

Spanish

1

~fi}

99-Pkg.~,~
Moss

Located In aide Trl-County Sports
(ntxllo - n County Fllirgrounclo)
Point Plea11nt, W. VL ~75-2181
·
Store Houra 8:30-8:011 M-F; Sal. 8:30-5:00

·

COMPARE RICE'S PRICES!
Complete with

•2 pillow thamt
•1 daybed cover

•Unk springs

•Innerspring meltreu
•Diybed
(Brest wllh while)

....-

~

519995

wAITING IN THE WINGS ~Sabot Jamie Grllham roosts on
the stain to
the baekstage bustle.before tbe perfonnaace.

'

Sugg.
Rollll
$211.15
SAVES1DO

5ll.cquisitians !Fine Jewelry . . ··-·~-HOL:ZER
HEALT·H HOTLINE
.
.

......

.DIAMONDS! DIAMONDS!

•

30%
50%

:Betas to celebrate
Founder's Day

)'W1SmEI'S
GUID£

To Pi2 Carat
I• Stock

HOliilHOTUIIE'
1-10042-5255

•

KANAUGA - Members of the
Beta Sigma Phi sorority in Meigs
County will ce1ebrale Founder's
Day on Thursday at the Holiday
Inn in Kanauga.
Founder's Day is celebrated to
honor the 62nd year of the sorority.
There are now 250,000 members
active in chapters in 28 counbies.
The anniversary will be
observed locally by the Xi Gamma
Epsilon, Xi Gamma Mu, Preceptor
Bela Beta and Ohio Eta Phi chapters. Patty Pickens,fjesident of Xi
Gamma Epsilon. wi be serving as
c~airwoman of the Founder's Day
activities.
For more. information, contact
any sorority members of the above
chapters ·or Linda Rostenberg, edi,
~or of ''The Torch of Beta Sigma
. Phi," Beta Sigma Phi International,
1800 W. 9lst Place, Kansas City,
MO 64114, or call {816) 444-6800.

0

PROM. NIGHT
.CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS -IN STOCK

14K GOLD CHAINS
•NECKLACE$ •BRACELETS
SAVE

.

"

\

'IiALI DANCERS - Ensign Nellie Forb(!sb
(Gwenn Fulks), In blltlu:obe, and tbe Ball Ha'l

'

- COMPIIIIIIYWIDI

By Tbe Associated Press
: NEW YORK - Twenty-eight
.years after Julio Andrews twirled
. ·on an Alpine hillside, warbling her
· love ·ol"The Sou1ld of Music," the
Ausbian government bas honored
· her and tile Oscar-winning film's

•Illness or Injury_•Physician Referral
•Health Care Events •Support Groups

maker.

Calling Andrews "an Ausbian
}deal" and · "our Maria von
-Trapp.'' }{ans Katscbthaler, the
i_OI!~mor .of. Salzburg,' .presented
..-- gold medals J'lriday to Andre~s and
Robert Wise, who produced and
ilireeted the 196S movie.
· "It clearly means a confirm&amp;· ·
tion of the joy I felt making the
· film," Andrews said. "It's just lbc
icing 011 the cake." · .
· "The Sound of Music" was
based on the story of tile alngiris
von Trapp Wnily, whicb fled Aus.. tria after tiW Dillon was IDIIOXed'
by Germ
_
In 1938. The von
TliJliiS se . in VermonL
·

,,

'

cquisitions_. ..-Gold
........
.
Clt•hu

.9l
_

A specially trained R• N. is on duty to answeryo,Q.r~guestiopson-c· ..:.
. health care &amp; inf9rm"you about avail~ble services. . . .
. ,. ·
11 am-10 pm 7days a week. ·
'
"
•

FINE JEWELRY

•Sellco Watcltes
AND MTS RARE COIN COMPANY'
~rOSS PelS
cORNER SECOND AVE. AND GRAPE ST. . .. •R•re CoilS
G~POUS,OH.
.

HOLZEQ MEDICAL . CENTEQ
.

..
,.

-

I.
'I

:X

'

.

..
.,

'

daacen perform "I'm Gonna Wasb Tbat Man
RIRbt Outa My Hair."

Names in the news

THE , ANSWERS· YOU NEED...
AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE!·

50% TO 70%

-~·

HASKINS·TANNER ·
OFFERS

I
\ ',

I

' • ! J}

f

FOR THAT.VERY SPECIAL

'

Piano students win
'superior' ratings
. GALLiPOLIS - Tbe seventh ·
and eightb grade piano students of
Marion 1!. Ford.pllrticipated in the
OME:A District XVII Solo and
Ensemble Contest whid was held
. April I 7, in Athens, at the Ohio
UniversitY Scbool of Mu$ic.
Students earning "I"; or superior
ratings, were: Joy Chaksupa,
Nicole France 8l)d I.,eisa Wallen. ·
Students earning "II", or Excellent ratings, were: .o',ngela Bowman
and Snh Dan!Jer, .
.

· . MAKEUP - Dancer. Tina
Russell checks ber Upstlck backstage before tile performance. ·

: ·I·
·'

.. •·

Like a.good neighbor,
State Farm is there. ®
See me for
car. home. life .
and health
insurance.
'

.

STATE FARM

INSUIANC .~

CAROLL SNOWDEN
. 342 81cond A'll.
O.lllpolla,.Oh. .

•Over 100,Styl~s in ijle
latest models to choose
from
. .
.·
•Color coordinated ti~s and
· cummerbi.mds
•Free Brochures
•Free Consultation
•5 employees have a
combined total of over 80
.. years of experience in ·
fitting tuxedos
,
•Prices st:.arttng at *29.95
Over 100 $tyles ·to ChooSe From. ·
OPEN ruEs., wEo: a. THUR!i. EVENINGS nL 5:30 P.M.

flhone446-4210
Home.4 • . Q11
BloorrHngt~ IIlin~•

Still Farm InSurance ComQa"~' ··1-iome Oll1ce1

•

•

332 SECOND AVE.
GAlllPOU$, OH.
(814) -.os7&amp;
OPEN MON. It FRI. TIL 8

.

•

"'

..

�. -.

~

.

~

...

-

.'

..

..

•

c..,
•

Pomeroy.:-uJddleport Gallipolis, OH 'Pull:l: F

Tlmes sentinel

OH-Polnl Pleasant, WV
April 25, 1993_

•

by Bob Hoeflich
Her address is 14 Hillhouse St.;
Greenville, S. C., 29605. Betty for·
mc:rly resided in Hartf'O!d. w. va.
Margie Blalce, inslructor in the
nursing program at Meigs High
School, extended a $jleeial thanks
to Cecelia.Lisle and Karen Clark of
the laboralory.81 Ve!erans Memorial Hospital. Margie says that the
tw,o did a great job at the program's
recent health fair working aU day in
doing cholesterol testing. There
were I02 people going taking part
in the health fair during the day.
Bruce Stone (you know him as
Bruce Stalnaker), of FlOrida and a
former Pomeroy resident, is in the
area and will be performing 81 6:30
p.m. Swuiar 81 the St. Paul Lutheran Church m Pomeroy. His mu.sical presentations are entertaining
and, of cOUISC, are open to the publie. · He's the son of Jo Stalnalcer
and Harley Stalnaker. _
•
·
·
. ·
Another vote 'for it's a small
world theory.
.
.
Evelyn Fi~:k Youn~~: of Sidney
who was mentioned as the contributor of a poem about small towns
in a recent colwnn has had a tele·
phone call and a visit from R!!th
Bumgardner.
· '
· Now Ruth Bumgardner was in·
Middle~ in the 1970's when her
husband; Bob, was pastor of Heath
United Methodist ·Church. They
now live in Sidney and so contact·
ed Evelyn when they re~d about
her being from Meigs County.

Some of you, no doubt, will
While l'ni cenainly a believer
remember Betty J. Cunningham in humane treatment, I always
Hunt, formerly of the Big Bend thought you forfeited some rights
area and a graduate of Wahama . when you committed crimes and
High School.
were serving time in a penitentiary.
Betty is criticaUy ill and doctors I somehow thought that was part of
say the best medicine she could' get the penalty. Just shows what I
would be word aod support from know-"ilr don't know. Do keep
friends. That's where you come in. smiling.
•

Commaalty Calendar Items
appear two clays berore an event
alld tile clay ot that event. Items
must be received well Ia advaace
to assure pab.lleatloa Ia the cal·

elldar.

have recotded 12 albums of ~ospel
music in thier 18 years of mmistry .
.....
'"
) - - - willak'.
die ....
,.._ in which they have held pastoral
19IM,,.
and evan~ehstic positions. They
z
~~
have mimstered in 25 states and
a
a
Canada.
..6 ....
Traveling from tbier home in
nils [ -, .... jocfndes the
Portland,
Ind., the Jellisons sing as
lat. W 7 I '.Jdiia\,a'onlained
a
lrio
and
use musical accompaniiii 1111: r · -. Pt:ala:ostal
ment
of
piano,
electronic keyboard,
rlldie and
bass
and
drums.
Their singing proIf~' 1.-. T-ad\ Darla.
gram
will'
include
original as weD
n.: ....
Tau Chan·
as
old
gospel
favorites.
A:l;, . . . ili
- DlMa The~
· The public is invited to attend.
IIODDI.EI'OaT
-,
,
.•

-- ·•J•

l'

school cafCII:ria.

11JI!SDAY
CHESIDRE - Die Glllia-GIIIIia-8lllil,llii-P
Communily A:cliDa
hold a free
q T
from 9 a.m• ., . . . . . . . . . . .
school hliJdi"' iii'C' 7•

ck••

.:C:::., 1JI
I

;

.

nc
Jel.
and

;n , r.a&amp;

Zlr7;

. SUNDAY
POMEROY • American Legion
RACINE 11lle • • - Ala
Baseball sign-up will be held Sunday from 2-3 p.m. at Meigs High Comm~ Olj - 5 Wlill-a
School for participants age 16-19. Tuesday ll 6:30 pa. illS. 11M
There will be a $10 sign-up fee and Park. New m 1 ' CI$:111C'IIW~'. .K.
..
a birth tertifica~ copy q1ust be JI.I'01
R~CINE
'7llle
ya= 1 Kl
v~ded. .
·
P omerOJ Braacll d dte MIIJW
POMEROY • The Meigs Vocal will meet Tuesday a1.wn. Admission to the performance·
•
Music Deparllllent will present its Racine United M+ f C
is $3 for adults or $1 for students.
w.il
annual spring concert Sunday at -Quilted wall 11. . . .The performances are under' the
Meigs High School's auditorium at . be llinounccd.
direction of Celia McCoy.
·
· 2 p.m. The theme is ~·Forever and
REEDSVIUE F
1.-ai
Ever Country."
· Board of EA•rtijcw_, a :. -...
.
POMEROY • Bruce Stone will ing;Tuclllay, 6SOpa.a6cJiljll
r-.
be in concert 81 St. PQUI Lutheran school to discuss JMII
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at ten.
6:30 p.m. The public is invited.
. I .'ll
'
·RACINE - .S:pccial m , - £
Refreshments will be served folRacine Lo~e N:o. 451 ~
lowing the concert
'J.'n~, ~ . JIIJIII. AlDmtll• a ..
' .
CHESTER • the Chester Base· uon. or m- aaalli aa
ball Association Win meet Sunday lice degree. Rc::fJ • "'"""
at3:30 p.m. in the Chester ElemenWEDNESDAY
tary gym. All parents are invited to
POMEROY
- Tile !14L c• Sail
attend.
and Water CoDICiw:lliua nI•5
MIDDLEPORT • The Jellisons board of superv.ima M i l the Herbs
will perform Sunday 81 iO a.m. and Wednesday ll 8 "JJ.Dl. • 6c lltip
•
6 p.m. at the United Pentecostal SWCD Office.
I..AiiGE YAF* I Y OF HERBS, PI:RENNIAL
Church in Middleport.
POMEROY - TheM b c
ROWERS~ EVERLASTINGS.
Will
' POMEROY ··The Meigs CoiDI- ty dry fli'C l!ydrant
(I Lacs far Dliylng) Wholesale &amp; Retail
ty 4-H Better Livestock -Dairy Club meet at ihe Mciigs Soi1..a .._,
will hold its first meeting Sunday Conservation DisiPtt Olliioc 11111 ·~~.:-::::s::=-.:Ti:J:1.~~s:~~-9::;·~~~5~:oo:;:.;S:u:;n:.·.!1~2~:00-4:;~:~00~--!-1
from 1-3 p.m. at the·Ed Holter resi: Wednesday at 6:30 pma. . A l l - .
,
dence. Anyone. iillerested' in bers urged to !lttmit
exhibiting a dairy project at the fair
LONG •B O:fro)(- a.-s.c
should contact Mike P'arkcnt 992z a71
2264 or Ed Holter at 992;5258 in will be in c:oacmw
p.m.
81
Faith
ru1
G
n
,
•
7
the evc:nings, or the Mei~ou.nty
Long Bouom. P.astor SlciC . _ .
Exten,s1on Office at 992
.
invifes the public.
POMEROY • County western
POMEROY - l!lcj!ln; _,Baars ,
line dance classes will be offered
Western
Square Dnge Dill willl
Sunday .from 2·4 p.m. at the
sponsor
an
open rdace ,. F
Pomeroy MUnicipal Building.
from 8-11 ,p.m. at lll'llfld Olit
MON1&gt;AY
Resort.
Gary
S'lllll
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- Sevierville, if&lt;eau .• w4llllle lillie
.,,
. . . . . llllr PEON CARE TO REMEMBER!
· ty Veterans Se£Vice Commission caller. .
will meet Monday at 7:30 fi.m. in ·
.
.
the Veterans Service Of ice in .
MIDDJ;EPOR:1I'- 'fi'• ·1 aa
Pomeroy.
Literary Club willliiiCI:II W '
at 2 p.m. 81 the Jlei&amp;sO.r MREEDS VILLE _, The Eastern lie .Library. Mrs. !Ia.. 0 . .
Local OAPSE Chapter will meet will n:view MA Vmaacnu -._,
p
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the high Judith Merkle Riley. Faniiil alii,
CllliO
Vlntori', Ohio
.,
tell of a "waaland v.iJiDl.~
m
n
'hrd'
NMr
McCoy-Moore
5
a s :
p
;
aug
Funertl Home
A. ....
21 N. Main St.
n

I

. . .- .

llllt.,. ••

7

a*'

Meigs seniors to present play

I

.

I

-

Fund-raising
p_roject set May 2

7

•

I

Order Now•••
For ·Earliest
Spring
Setting

7

;

'

Slllld8y, April25
· . CENTERVILLE • Thurman
CROWN CITY· Rev. John Grange regular meeting, 8 p.in.
Arnold to spealc at Good Hope
United Baplist Church, 1 p.m.
. GALLIPOLIS • Support Group
for Divorced Persons, 7:30 p.m.,
LECfA • Rev. Jackie Clark to New Life Lutheran Church, 1210
preach at Walnut Ridge Church, 7 State Route 160. Free babysitting
services provided:
p.m.
.
Tuesdly, Aprn '1.7
EUREKA • Four-day revival to
EWINGTON • American
start at Eureka Church of God. Legion Post 161 meeting, 7:30p.m.
J;:vangelist. Marvin Wickline Jr. to
·
• ·· ·
preach IDllil Wednesday, April28.

Grandson of
GALLIPOLIS • Rivetby mini- . Gailia residents
crafters of
Art Colony, free •
hands-on workshop, 1-3 p.m., by on D
..ean's LI' st
Beth Hensley of Minis and More in
F~h

Huntington.
EVERGREEN • Trinity-United
Mcthodisa Church. Special singing
by The Exodus 81 10:30 a.m. worship serviCe.
.

..:...OAlllPOLIS • MS SUpPolt
group, 1:30 p.m. at New Life
·
Lutheran Church.

Moaday, April '1.6
GALLIPOLIS • GAHS Band
Boosters mcepng, 7 p.m. in high
school bandroom. Parents of all
GAHS ·band members asked to
attend'.

G_ALI..IPOLIS • Christopher Ty
Williams, a sophomore from Pick·
erington, in the School of Speech at
No.rthwestem UniversitX. has been
named to the Dean's List for the
winter quarter of the 1992-93 academic year.
· ' · Ty is the son of Roger and Sue
Ann (Maclcinzie) Williams of Pickerington. He is the grandson of Bob
and Minnie Mackenzie of Gallipo·
Iis and Roger and Catherme
Williams of Thunnali.
.
Students on the. Dean'sList
have attained a grade point average
of at least3.67/4.0.
·'

;

.

Sumnier Term - ·May 17 • J8ae 25
CLASSES !NCWDE;
Monday:

~IIILifDIT

'"2-6661

N.UOHILL!

7S3·l,55

IILPII

423-7516 .
THI PL.UNS

. 797-4S47

LOWUL

896-2369
TDD OltLl'

376-7123

'
Making the most of ·

your money is what our . •

..

new Value One.Account ~
is all about.
Siinply by keeping

balance, just pay a small ·.·.

·ELECTROLYSIS

Rev. Atond Mar1hll Early
LM, Brion ond Clllle

Provides Pailless Treatment
' for Hair Re11ovall

'Wa ara pleased y,~ith the personal
intarast teachers give to our child' ran. Wo have not found this con·
in larger oystems. w•.h"P"
paola will vota for the llyy to pro·
vida smallor classes, better rasourcos, and avoid baing forced
into consoidalion. 7
•

cem

ttor•_.,

-IU
,.._.liM'"' ..., --·
'"''
••• '"' ••.,
I-1...........
~ ----..
- tw...,
.... --tho
.......... -.................................................. .
--.......
_.
a.._..__
. . . . ,.. ,....... froM • .-yet I
.IIIW'IM . . IIIII .......,. tMI

.-

-

a'

problrltft.
oowerlng the

.

I

a

call 446-3211
Pd. lor by CHireno eommmlo tor
OIIMpollo CHy - ,
Brad Voho, Tr..aur•

~.eo..._ _,horloclolllolrloy

......... -

Rov. AI and Marthe Early

For anawwo to your qut~otlon'.,

. _ . , _ _ _.T..,oloohoo_h_04

-----

'I&amp;

monthly fee and you can

•

.. ....__

..............................., ....."

- - Jow•otqtlorolory._,...,... .. _
._,_'
1171,..,
.....Hapld,.
._...
1 ..... 1101:1

- ·c..._..

IIIII
..__

•

..,_a ' Tz

_.....

get all the ,same privileges.
'

You'll also receive THE;

ONE_Card: It works like a
check for ordinary pur- ,
chases or like an ATM
card when you need cash •.

-

~

~-·

II

••

.

--- .

....;

I

...........L.- -s••Dw•
7 Clli,Coq.-.lheta......_....,.,.....,.
tl ..... ,_... .... Ullll old. MDII fll hlft MN Uled

. . . ._.,

......._

...

ca....

w•l&amp;lnd...,

..._. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I
A.COIIllkl.
.._.... F . 4r....... efMirNIMWII.Dwlnc 'I IMpr.._'•

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

--

an

--a

....
.

-tho--.
Till·-.,.....n..,....

. . .......,.,. ht•currentlhll ........ ~

...~

... - - .............
-•

.._

-

.. Volleyball Basics
7:aG-9:30 P.M.
. ...
Fr. .
Su~~trvlltd homtWork_Vfltln:omp'uter lab, lind _ , . . . .
win bt provided tach evening at no cost.
-·
Registration 11 open tO anyone lnttn 1ted In _..cil·IIUil-.
Registration and mettlng: Thursdlly, Aprl21, 1111
7:30P.M.Eastern High ScMDI c ' '

..

Strv-.,

'f
~ •
~o

t; ; • pafuo ,, . .,.,..,, . . ..,.,.,......., •

your recordkeep-

Sales·- Rental- Seroice

ing simpler, we'll

'

1

Ml

...,10~

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

.....,......._Ill........._.,.., .... ,, .................
,.,
a w.-.1 .. llllltolo 11o1r . . ...,.
..

.

.

•Hospital Beds
•Wheelchairs
•Bath Safety Aids

oOstcimy ·suppliet
•Diapers • Chuxs
aLift Chairs
-Hundreds of Other.

int-. .... .......

....................
,..,,, ........
.'
S lewellln....,..C1)Poftot*•"'Y

..__. n .......

•

Items in Stock

E' l..,olo - - - - - · -

.. ..... ..,.....
.....__..._,......._ ..... ..,...to ... •an
. . . . . ..c:.t.................... , ''""'•• ,., ............ ...., to ....,
- - -. . . -

1t~HM
......- - - - · -·

Mlldldll'
J

•'·

•

...........
lw
I lljlllllro,_lllr, 1 "M uljei&amp; .. MONttwi_•~
c..ll!r..._. ._.,.._...__,.,-. r ,. . . ,.nan 'bl :tht 'ciOiiffOi~~..-

..
riMW¢h; llitrllltllf
1

.

"'I

•

,••
•

~

-•.

'I

'

'Some Owned and Opemted

CAIIDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

Gallpal~

446:7283

fiG Grand Central Ave., Suite 1 ·

,._., w. v•. (near Partanburg)

.

.

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY .

Respiratory Tl.er"Jst - 24 H01r Emerge•cy Service
· We 811 Medlcart, Mellcaltl, etc., far the patleat. .

·~·

And to make

FOR HOM~ USE

.., ................
tro. ....... ~
l1llo

O J ) ) - ..,..,..... -

:

MEDICAL SUPPLIES

..

--....-------.·
a.-- - _..,ofl----.. . . -..,. ._. ,.
--....
--. ------- ..
a

whereinthewaid

•

•

----lnt-Thoy111ryonyt~~~og,•

-.... a uv .
_..._._.....,,. • • u. prot~~tn~ WCMM, • Mld. -n..'
-llllr-e~,tftll:lllrftM ID prc:!hCt . . . . When lntllltcl lite peo-.-.........
a u ....,.,
.. .._..
a.ca• .,.,. 11 •.... ,...
-

Flower Artlnging
7:3Q:9:30 .P.M.
FH: To bt announced

and virtually any-

____
- .,.._ -•WMJIII.-Int•-•
.. _oll,ollo... Two0411ort
..
....

.

.._ _ _ _... PI"

FREE

money, anytime

'

..,I · - - - -....
• ---.llllor-111-.,0hollolpo-..
.... _..._..,,., uo...,.,...ao,..__,

Video Adventure (Youth) . ·
. 6:()().8:00 P.M. ·

..

..,_rtMn

II:Cftc:J' . :, WY lit 11... .._ MONd tD 'Ainfta. fi.

'z

access to your-

f'""ledherto
II I 0' 1 ... WY, ..... ,....., ~tte'
................. ,

. . .

z

will have instant ...~"

,

......... inleNIIIRtt.fllhi.Htr ..... tohefpdlbo

. . . .. . .

Clla. . . .

.

trllr1._....,_. ·
.......,

·

il

a.--llllllli:

...... prodUCM hM'.

ucllon. 04 '"'
1104'*111•.1
D 10 further DOrrtct her ptobllill. but • tMI
. undeiWMI E~rotpla mar. the Once 1

-.......-.-._

Ala•..

~.,a

ALL FEES PAID AT TIME REGISTRATION
This program madt posalblt by a grant .._ - - . .
Ohio', Division of Education
JWIII · ...
Community Educitlon and University a1 Rio Gl '

r

Tal Frtt .

. Jack101

sendyouaneasy. to-understand
summary every month.
·Come iii and ask about

.Value One It's what your
bank is doing to help.

BANKEONE.
VVhateverittakes:
Member FDIC

295-4533·
.

.
.....,..............,'

,,

Jalln

Basic First Aki!CPB
7;31):9:30 p.M.
FH: $6.00

.

''

about keeping aminiinum

j ..c.dy Col doee not ,........, hlr Jul'lkw •nd
. - - - - - - - - - - . _ , _ 0 4 lligtiiCIIaoL
ond por·
cepMallli . . . ckMided by Yalulw, lhg docton

_....

6:00-8:00 P.M.
FREE

.,

r

s

Wollwrc!ze

:

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304}675:1675

account, you'll qualify for

.

•

CJ Stomp, TushPulh and1..-.)
6:00-8:00 P.M.
FH: $6.00

Thursday

WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
~ (POINT PLEASANr MEDICAL CENTER)

if you don't want to worry · ..

--.lhol-111
__
............ ..,__,
.------......
_...,.
... .--t
-.. . .a.--•
. . . ho ·--....
.....-----.. ......-- ................... - ..
__- -.......... ·--........___..,..._lllotl•--....- ..........-.

Electric Sl!dt, Acky 8'...-y,

..

'TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,

'•

Smi{e!
-

Une Danct
(Class will !ncludt tht folb unuy

.

"Ain't.Nothing Wrong 'with the
Radi(}," "If Tomorrow Never
Comes," "It's My Party," "Do
Run" and "Great Balls of Fire."
Also on.. the agenda is "Romeo."
Anyone familiar·with the lyrics can
probably guess which members of
the band chose iL
Tickets, $5, are available
at Peddler'6 Pantry, 340 Second
Ave., GaUipolis, and at the door the
night of the concert
.

ings or Money Market IRA . :

Unwanted
~aflaf · and lodr Hair~

.. ~ • • _ . . . . . . . . .

Section 1: 7:00-8:30' P.M.
Section 2: 8:31):10:00 PAl.

Tuesday

593-7761

Crossover will leave the dancing
to area pros Paulette Harrison and
Kay Hemsley of the Shady River
Shufflers and Eddie and Barb Coleman and Friends. Harrison and
Hemsley took second place in line
dancing at the WV Staie Clogging
· and Hoedown competition. The
Colemans outstepped competitors
to win first in the Country Dance

Petry, Rich Rogers, lCim Freach, Rich Butdler,
Sheryl Walters aad Sandy Butcher. Not pic·
lured is newest Dlezaber Tom Scharliger. '

limited checkwriting:And

~;-;;;;~;;;;~;;;;~

FREE

IIUIIITIA ·

'--'···-·-&lt;p·-

. CROSSOVER BAND • Preparing ror their
May lap,earaace !II th~ Ariel Theatre· are
Crossover Baud members (lel't to right) Chuck

VOTE YES
MAY 4TH
GALLIPOLIS
CITY SCHOOLS

._lhlt

Basic ComPuter O!IIH)OSl

•

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

,

7:()()..10:00 P.M.

'3 7H1SS

FAMILY PRACTICE

no-fee checking with un- :

EASTERN LOCAL
COMMUNITY EDUCIDOI

yo ·
some

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

$1,000 in any linked sav-

Phone 388 8603

f

wanserclzt

. ATHINS

n

Claris Erwin.
:
Devotions were given by ;
Katherine Evans.
•
The meeting was closed with ;
•
prayer by Frank Ihle. .
Refreshments were served.
:
Al!ending were Bill and Flo
Grueser, Dorthy Roach, Dorothy .
and Gene McDaniel, Loretta ·
Frimeyer, Lester Bowers, Kather· ;
inc and .Qlen Evans, Bud and Hazel '.
Wilson , Mary and Osby Martin,:.
Dorothy Balcer, Elsie King, Bonnie:
Smith, Fran¥; lhle, Raymond and
Fari Cole, Thelma Boyer and Net·
tie and Willard Boyel'.
,
Hosting the May meeting will
be Mary Hysell, Dorthy Roach and ;.
I:Io and Bill Grueser.
I
·

a combined balance of

.

0

GALLIPoLIS • Gallia County Victims of Cloil:dW-'sP 5 '
Right to Life held i~s monthly . ral Service, iu u - • •rz meeting recently.
, ·· lion located in.:A* , Ollial, (lllllj
The meeting began with prayer 468-4608 that belps w
.....
by Mike Meny. The following iop- cally and psyc'ho111,1ic:alU)• ..._
ics were discussed:
have been victimsro f• - e
Final plans for the Ma;y 8,
The next.Riptc life 1' 5 £
Mother's Day Bilke Sale, the D &amp; will be held May n,aa•
I
X abortion technique, and the Vic- Memorial Litncy_ '1lllc 1 ';: is
tims of Choice Organization. The invited.

FH: $20.00

· Ask yot1r dealer about
Peoples Bank financ~g for a.
new lawn or garden tractor
· of your choic~! - .

..

Right to Life conducts meeting

•

'

co.

LOGAN

7

Sunday nmes Sentlnei-Page-87

MIDDLEPORT - The Home
Builders Class of Middlep'Ort
Church of Christ met recently with
Dorothy Roach presiding. Opening
prayer was given by Bud Wilson.
· The class voted to donate $100
to the Mount Mission School and
to the K.Y.O.W.V.A. Scholarship
Fund.
Listed iri need of prayer are
Willard Boyer, Claris Erwin, Dorthy Balcer, Bill and Flo Grueser,
Josh Frimeyer, Osby Martin, Clay
and Geneva Tuttle, Carey Jackson
and frunily, Esther Bums family,
Joe Bishop family, Debi In~el,
Albert Martin, Laura McDamel,
and Hether Friends.
A card was signed by all for

feeling thai' reaching just one lis·
tener with a song is cause enough
to continue. Richard says simply
"I love music. I love to entertain." '
But, the coin has tWo sides. For
while the three may have talcen on
a wrinkle or two, as performers
they've ironed out many more. It's
experience that lends a steadying
hand every time ouL
JiARRISONVILLE ~ The Sci- CORteSL
A few songs to expeCt are "Boot ·
Rich Butcher, Sandy and Sheryl
pio Fire Depilrtment will have a
SCOQtin',"
"Momma, He's Crazy,"
fund-raising project on May 2 at have been "in the business" togeththe department headquarters. There er for 25 years. They were just
will be a hog roast with dinner to Y'?Ungsters when they started out .
be served ftom 11 a.m,. to 6 p.m. With Sandy and Sheryl's dad, Red
Cost will be $4 for adults and S2 Stewart, in a band called "Red
for children. Homemade ice cream Stewart and the Ambassadors."
and pie will also b6 available for an Red sang lead and played lead gui- •·
tar. Mom Betty saw to the outfits,,
el\tra charge.
fixed
the girls' hair and sat on the
In conjunction with the dinner,
a tractor pull will be held. Weigh· edge of her chair and watched
in will begin at noon with the pull every show.
Sheryl says she cringes when .
to ~tart at 1 p.m . Classes are 800
thinks about all those years.
she
for lcids; and 900, 1,000 and 1100
that any of them could have
Not
for adults, with ·a SO percent payquit,
S.andy and Sheryl echo the
back:
,

•

••

•a.

Gallia, County calendar .

By EDNA WHITELEY
GALLIPOLIS - Crossover
Band takes the Ariel stage at 8 p.
m. May I. Moroaa:uratefy, they're
talcing it by surprise. A P.f:ek at
plans reveals a show unlike any
they've done. Certainly it's unlike
any ~~ the ~el sinc.e the theater
reopened. Possibly evec.
Crossover's members include
lead guitarist Rich Rogers, ~tarlst
and vocalist Rich ,Butcher, vocalists Sandy Butcher and Sheryl Wal. ters, bassist ·Kim French, percus·
sionist Chuck Petry and steel guitarist Tom Scha!'liger,
·
The moniker means the group
combines music styles. Usually it's
Top 40 Country and Light Rock.
But not May I. That night they'll
replace the latter with songs of the
'SOs and '60s.
The Ariel is a different setting
from the clubs, private parties an!1
outdoor'festivals Crossover tyPical·
ly plays, so they're plannmg a
show lit for a theater. There will be
a quicl\er ~ace, costume changes
and a mynad of details that will
ensure the audience is entertained,
including line dancing two step·
ping, clogging and jilterbugging.
Not to mention Ricfl Butcher's
"Elvis," Sandy's "Loretta Lynn"
and Sheryl's "Minnie Pearl." In
short, a SHOW. "

•

Horne Builders make donatlon

Band sets
May 1 show
for Ariel

Community Calendar Jellisons to perform Sunday

Beat of the Bend~ ..
If you. live in the Village of
Racine: your house needs fixin'we call it "rehabilitation" these•
days, and you don't have the
moacy to do it. then Racine Village
COWICil member, Jeff Thornton, is
your man.
Jeff is going to JliCP8IC an appli·
cation for a SSOO,OOO ·grant under
the Community Housing Improvement Program and must get all of
the nceeuary informationi together
within the next three ·weeks. The
f!lbab program will cover the priYJ1C owner residence, .the privately
owned rental residence, and public
rCsidenccs. The grant, if approved,
..yill not only take ca«: of coSts on
rehabilitating structures but can
)iovide funds for sidewalks, water
a,ld sewage and even the demolishillg of any properties beyond reha·
bilitation.
: The grant WOUld provide 100 .
percent payment of any work
approved on a property meaning .
~ the owner does not ha_ve to pay
any of t!te costs for the 1mproveRICI!IS. The propm is for !Roder·
~ 111corpe ~e and th~ IIICorne
level cntena. mvolyed mcludes:
OIIC person With an IIICOIIle '?f not
~ver $19,250; two people With an
1ncome o~ not o_ver $22,000;. three
p(lfSOilS w1th an IIIComc of n.~ over
~24,750, There are add1t10nal
11icome levels for more than three
~and Jeff bas~· If ~on w~t to get 111to the progtam JUSI gtve Jeff a phone call at
9~9-:Z351 or you .~ leave wor4
for h1m at the mayor s offiCe.

~-

•

''"'''"''''("

,' ... .... ........ ,...

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

,

,

I

'·

�• J

•

wv

OH Point

•

1913
' .

SALE

lftl

'

.Sports

.1

SQUEEZE
CATSUP

(

..

ROYAL CROWN
,PRODUCTS
24 Pak 12 Oz. Cans

59

•

$ 39

USDA .SEUO BONELESS BEEF BOnOM

R-ound Steak......................La. 2.
FRESH
·
. .
(
Ground Turkey.
.......-.....lt 89
.
.

CAMPBELL'S

CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP
10.75 Oz. Cans ·

~

LONGHORN COLBY
.

s

$189

$249

TOASTER .
PASTRIES
11 oz.
(
PRINGLE
POTATO CHIPS
6·7.5 oz.

c
'

PINK

.

$

·

-

'(

-

s

2% Milk. ~-~. .:.,__~. GAL s1

59

BROUGHTON'S

·

,

Cottage Cheese. .24 oz.

1

COUPONS
.
.

·.

SUNDAY, Apr. 25
MONDAY, Apr. 26
TUESDAY, Apr. 27

Ice Cr.eam.............HALF GAL.

NINE LIVES

CAt' FOOD

II · MUELlER'S OLD

$1oz.
· IANs

---

I . TRIPLE VENDOR 1
I
COUPON
1
1 · Ceupo• too• . I

.20
PACir PEPS .
,

NOODLES .

. ,·3;· · ·1·

1 , TRIPLE
1
.1 COUPONS
I WITH ,THIS•COUPON I
I (See Store For Dttells) 1

$ .

. ·

11,

r-----~,

I

o~-~-;,r;-· ~

.·S··.

$ 09

DAIRY LANE

FRANCO AMERICAN
-~-

TRIPLE

..

'

Ultra Tide. . . . . . . . . ~2 oz_.Reg./47

SJ..aoz. ~

.

Reg. Price '4.49
Ltu Colpo• 50'
5 99

PKG.

Price

At Powell'• Super Valu
25 thru u.y 1, 1113

3

soc

I

OFF·

I Sulllar, .....,, I
....., .
II lprll 25, 26, 27 I
. ·u•n s TIIPU
1
I' COUPONS WITI
I
L
THIS COUPON
.
'

•

to~cover

&lt;\

BROUGHlON'S ·

.

D(aft unlikely to land enough men

. 16 OZ. CAN

Gr:apefruiL.-.. . . . . . . 4, .· 1

I

o
•
Oh
•
.
e
e
ea
·
s
.
Tf'V
.
zn
lO
l t d if4 t G 17 1
• fi00tball game
State'S ann Ual

S cal

ARGO
PEAS

.

'

•

...

•v

wlth ~~r!."':.:.t~e~

. .

'·,

\,

.,

=3

•,

' .
~-----~·
'

CffiCAGO (AP} - Chris Sabo and i.aay Walker -bit a solo homer ·
Rlllgers 15, Brewers 4
and Joe Oliver hit grand slams Sat- for the Expos. Montreal had 12
At Milwaukee, Jose 'Canseco hit
urday, the fll'St time since 1955 that bits..
. a two,.run double during an 11-run
Cincinnati bit a pair of them in the . Hill (34) struck out folir and sixth iming and !!~so hit a two-run
same game, leadinJ the Cincinnati walked three. He pitched hitless homer, powenn~ the Texas
Reds to a I 5-S v1ctory over the ball until Willie McGee singled. ·Rangers past the Milwaukee BrewChicago Cubs. ·
with one out in the sixth inning and ers 1S-4 Satmday. .
· .
Bip Roberts and Reggie Sanders shut out the Giants until Royce
The Rang~ combmed five hits,
hit two,.run homers, helping Tom ClayiOn's RBI single in the sev- three walks, three e~rs and .a hit
Browning (1·2) win his firsl game enlh.
. batter for 11 runs m the stxth.
Dave Bwba (2-1) gave up five Texas ca~e ~ithin. o~e run ~f
since last June 26. Steve Lake
homered for Chicago as both tams runs 011 nine hits
matchmg 11S b1ggest mrung, while
took advanlage of a 26 mph wind
Padres ·5, Mets 3
it was the biggest burst ever 118ainst
blowing out to center field.
At New york, Phil Plantier and the Brew~rs. .
Sabo drove in a careet-high five Derek Bell each hit two-run
&lt;;harhe .Le1brand\ (3-0) won .
runs with his homer, tWO doubles homers, sending the San Diego a~atn and IS off to h1s ~st start
and a single. Hisfii'Sllifetimeslam . PadrespasttheNewYorkMets5-3 smce he went 4-0 to begm 1986
came !n die first inninJ.
Silurday.
.·
. with Kan~ Ci~y.I;Je g.a~ UJ! two
Oliver's homer, hiS rust of tlie
Gary Sheffield led off lhe sec- runs on fiVe hilS IR SIX Jnmngs,
seasoo, came in the seventh iming ond inning with the first of his two struck out five and walked none.
and was the second slam of his singles and Plantier followed with
Josias Manzanillo (1·1) lost his
career. ~e also bit ~me Oct. 1,' his~ homer of the seasoo. BeD first major leag~e star~ He_ fa~ed
1991, agamstAtlanta.
·
•hit his fourth homer,wilh one out in only one battm' m th~s-mrung,
The last time die Reds hit two . the ninth against Jeff Innis.
and T~ did the . of its dam·
slams in the same gllme was on
F11111k Seminara (1·1) combined age agamst three re 1evers.
July 29, 1955, when Smoky with three relievers on a six-hitter.
Orioles 6, Royals 5
Burgess and Bob Thurman con- Howard Johnson homered for the · At Kansas City, Cal Ripken
nee!ed agl!iMIPiUSburgh.
Mets.
doubled home the tying run and
. Browning spent the last half of
Bret Saberhagen (2-2) who Glenn Davis singled him in as Balthe. 1992 season on the disabled list . began the season with two vu;IOries ~more. ca.me from behind in the
b.ecause of knee surgery. · He · over Colorado lost his second e1ghdl1qmng and went on to defeat
two-run homer ia tbe fourth Inning of Satur~
CELEJ,JRATING AT HOME- Tile Ciucln·
allo~ n!Jie hi~ and two runs in straight decision: He gave up three Kansas Cily 6-5 Sat~y. .
day's
National League game at Cblca1o's
nati Reds' Blp Roberts (right) ccimes to the plate
·seven mnmgs wnh no wa)ks and runs on eight hits in seven innings. ·
· The Orioles rallied agatnst Je~f
Wrigley
Field, wllere tile Reds won 15-5. (AP)
and finds teammate Cesar Hernandez (middle)
one~L
Seminara (1-1) allowed three ~ontgomery (1-1), w~o b.lew .h1s
and an unidentified bat boy celebrating Roberts'
G~eg H1bbard (1·1) was the hits inS 213 innings. Relievers fust save opportumty m ftve
loser.
Roger Mason and Rich Rodriguez chances.
In the Browns' camp,
The Reds lOaded the bases in die followed.
'With the Orioles trailing 3-2,
rust on a single by Cecil Espy, a
Gene Ranis gave up pinch hiu.er Mike Devereaux singled with two
double by Barry Larkin and a Todd Hundley's RBI single before out in the eighth and scored when
grounder that Hibbard misplayed. getting one out for his third save.
Ripken doubled off the wall in left
. Sabo. followed with his fourth
After Harold Baines walked, Davis
home run of the season.
Blue Ja)'SlO, Willte Soll4
singled to center, making it 4-3.
Cincinnati added three runs in
At Toronto John Olerud and
Ballimore's Mark McLemore
The 6-2,,195-pound.Smith wa.
the third on a ~ 10 Larlcin, a sin- Darrin Jackson.'each got three hits, led o!f the ninth with his fllSt home
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve- Ball of the Detroit Lions.
Oh10
Slate s leading rusher last
gle by Randy Mdlagan, a double Paul Molitor homered and' the · run smce Aug. 18, 1988. Then Jeff land Browns' head coach Bill
The Browns wiD have five picks
season
with 819 yards. He bad 596
by ~abo and a throwing error by . ToroniO Blue Jays beat the Chicago Tackett walked with one out and Belichick, who fulfdled owner Art altogether in the draft, which has
yllfl)s
and
eight touchdowns in lhC
. left fielder Candy. Maid!&gt;nado.
·. White Sox.1(}.4 Saturday.
.
scomi on singles by. B~y Ander· .Modell's pledge 10 be active in tbe been shortened from 12 rounds to
last
five
games
of die season
Roberts made 1t 9-0 m the fuurth
Olerud drove in two runs and son and Riplcen, maltipg 1!6-3.. . ·free-agent market, still has some · eight. They traded their fourth·
Smith
said
he 'grew up 'hating
wi~. bia first home run. ~inlles by raised his avetage to .435. Joe . The R,oyals rallied. for Cwo runs needs 10 meet in today's NFL draft round pick 10 Chicago for starting
Mill1gan, Sabo and~ Sanders Carter drove in two runs.
m the boltom of the mnth. Doubles
Belichick,' whose team was 7·9 center Jay Hilgenberg and their the Browns but nevertheless has
!oaded the ba.a for Oliver's homer Juan Guzman (2·0) took a 7-0 ~Felix. Jilse and. Chris Gwynn fll)· in his second season last fall, is eight-round pick to the Rams for developed into a Cleveland fan and
said playing here "would be the
· m the seventh off Dan Plesac. lead in10 the seventh inning He left ished Mike Mussma (2-1).
likely 10 draft for offensive line- linebacke( Frank Slams.
,
Sanders hit his second homer in the after Ozzie Guillen's ~t, two,
Marlius 2, Rockies I "
men, linebacker, defensive end and
While Belichick confounded .ideal situatiOn for me."
Belicbick compared him to
eighth.
.
run single and Lance Johnson's
At J?enver, Lui~ Aquino and wide·receiver.
speculation in his fust two drafts
The Cu~s scored a ruil m the · RBI single.
two .rel1evars comb1!1ed t~ scat,ter
Tbe Browns signed 14 free with the Browns,lhe pre-draft spot· Cleveland running back Eric Metfourth on Singles by Can~y MalReliever Mark Eichhorn 10 hits Saturday, pacmg lhe Flonda agents, 10 in one day last week, light this year has focused on cor- calf.
Smith "has got a lot of talent
doRado, Steve Buechele ind Jose relieved wilh die bales loaded and Marlins 10 a 2·1 expansion-duel and Belichick said that would mean nerback Tom Carter out of Notre
·and
he's an excellent receiver"
. Vizcaino. Lake hit his rust homer retired George BeD 011 a.glounder . victoiy_pve(~ColortldoRoclcies. ~~pressure IO.improve through Dame and two Ohio Slate teamBelichick
said. "He's Very fast aim
in the seventh.
back 10 the mound, jliesolring the '· . Aquino (1·1) wrilfl~ out of"" ~ seleCtions.
.
. m~. running back Roben Smith
a good runner. He's similar to Eric
Rey Sanchez had four hits for four-nm lead.
Jams. In the seventh 1ilmng, the
Now we can dictate to the and linebacker Steve Tovar.
Chicago, including an RBI single
Rod Bolton (0-3) allowed six Roc~ loaded the bases on a ~in- dfa!! in.Siead ~f ~ving it.dictale to
the 5-foot·l 0 112•. 188-po~nd Metcalf in that he can run and
during a three-run ninJh.
runs on eight hits in four innings.
gle, error and a walk, but Aqumo us, S&amp;d Belich1ck.
Carter, who ran an 1mpress1ve catch from both out of the back:
Expos 6, Glues 1
· Guzman blanked Chicago until induced Alex Cole to fly out for the
With key needs ·addressed' 4.42-second-40-yard dash in pre- field and from the wide position." ·
The 6-2 1/2, 241-pound Tovar
At Mootreal, Ken Hill pitched a the seventh Guillen's RBI double lhird out.
.
· · through free-agent signings, includ- draft worlcouts in Indianapolis, "is
four-hiaer and doubled home a run . trimmed~ Blue Jays' lead to 7-4 . Aquino pitc~ed ~ve11 s~orel~ss ing two additi~nal backups"! q~- · ce_rtainly some~Y. we·~ have to yisited the Browns' training camp
m Berea two months ago .to mee1
as the Montreal Expos won their in the eigblh. ToruniO scored three mmngs, allowmg e1ght bus w1th te~back Berme Kosar, Behch1ck think about," Belich1ck S&amp;d.
sixth straight game, 6-1 over the runs on Roberto Alomar's RBI two walks and four strilceouts. Cris satd the Browns can look for the
Of a hsJf-dozen players given with Belichick and team scouts.
'"TI)ey said I'm definitely high
San Francisco Gilnts on Saturday.
triple, a run-scoring pound out by Calpenter had a hitle~ eighth. . best availa~!e players without ~e c!osest scrutiny by the Bro.wns,
on
the1r draft board, they're defiUtilityman John VanderWal Carter and an RBI single by
Bryan Harvey relieved 10 start regard topos1110n.
He s one of the most athleuc of
, drove in three runs with two singles Olerud.
the ninth with a 2-0 lead.
"We're free to take the .best the group and we've seen a lot of nitely interested in me and that
·
.
player on the board at the urn~. him,'' Belichick said.
.
we'D just have 10 wait until Sunday
whoever that may be," he said.
· Browns' linebicker David Bran- 10 see what hapjlens." Tovar said.
Browns' director of player perThe Browns will have the 11th ·don re-signed with the team last
.
.,.J
pick in the firSt round and 13th in week but Cleveland's two other sonnel Mike Lombardi said the
the second.
.
starting linebackers; Mike Johnson team would consider using Tovar
~nnng
On
Friday,
the
Browns
D'aded
and Clay Matthews, are sliD talking in the outside linebacker slot. ·
.
· S'1:'
·
.
· . their third-round pick for three- with the team.
Tovar played inside linebacker for
the Buckeyes.
'
: ·
·
.
· .
Slale who will be a ...ruor· ·th-18
• e... ,
time Pro Bowl nose laclde Jerry .
..
By RUSTY MILLER
fourth-and-two keeper at the scar._.'""
"'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -. let 39 with· less th.an two minuteS completed 10 of 20 pasaes for ISO
In the Bengals' camp,
.
Backup quarlerback Bret Powers • remaining 10 lock up the victory.
yanls with one intetception.
'
passed for two touchdowns as the
The Scarlet's Jayson Gwinn and
Hoying, a sophomore-to-be
Scarlet beat the Gray 17-10 in Ohio Jason Sim.~ and the Gray'~.~ from.SL Henry, completed IOof 19
State's annual intrasquad scrim- ston Hamson and Dan B1g :c:PE!·bacfor!40BoyHards~.~ttw·Stn
0'nogf
mqe Salllnlay.
Daddy" Wilkinson each had two
_..... ..
Defense dominated the game, sacks as the defenses forced 73 passes for 34 Y •
with the Scarlet stopping fii'Sl-team yan1s in ~on 11 total sacks.
The Scarlet team, coached by
quarterback Bob· Hoying on a
Powers, a uansfer frqn A$ona linebackers assistant Fred Pagac,
By JOE KAY
seasons.
,
thi~ when that lime comes, we'D
scored on its first possession. ScarCINCINNATI (AP) - Fans of
• Quarterback Boomer Esiason be m pretty good position. ••
let coveted 65 yanls in 10 plays, the Cincinnati Bengals probably is gone, leaving David Klingler 10
!Jntil then, they're going to ~
inc:luding Powers passes of 26 and wiU come away from today's NFL learn the hard way - as a starter theU' lwnps.
14 yan1s 10 DeWayne Caner. Pow· draft saying, "So what?"
behind a weak offensive line.
The Bengals have nobody ready
ers then hit tight end Cedric SaunSo what if the Bengals land
' Wide receiver Tim McGee left to replace Munoz, which is why
del'S on a play-action JliSS over the some -big ruunes? They can't possi- for WashingiOn, and Eddie Srown they're most likely tQ use their
middle to cover the final seven bly get as many as they've lost in - who sat out last season with a · first-round pick_ the futh. oveiall
yanls for the touchdown.
the last four months,
neck injury- wants out, too.
_ on offensive uu:lde WiUie Roaf
Josh Jackson, who added the
So what if they finally gel
• Tight end Rodney Holman of Louisiana Tech, if he's avail·
exiJll point, lcicked a 36-yard field around 10 fiXing one of the league's signed with Detroit as a free agent. · able.
goal inlo the wind oo the last play worst defenses? Everyone knows
• Eric Thomas, the team's only
There are several good defen·
of the opening half to give the it's going to be a~ong rebuilding.
dependable cornerback, signed sive linemen available, another .
Scarlet a I0-3lead.
There's more wrong with the wilh the Jets, who got Esiason in a weak spot the Bengals need to
The Gray team's only points in Cincinnati Bengals than one draft trade.
patch.
.
the first half came on , Tim can tix. .
• Offensive Iackie Anthony · · Whoever is chosen will have an
Williams 23-yard field goal after a
When coach Dave Shula is Munoz retired from the'team.
opportunity 10 start right away, a
drive stalled at the Scarlet six. asked about 1he team's priorities
• SD'Ong safety Barney Bussey. a sign of how much the team has
Williams, who convattd just 16 of .for the draft, be gets long-winded.
valuable backup, went to Tampa deteriorated.
29 field-goal attemptS last seaoo,
"We've got our needs. Those Bay. · .
The draft has been trimmed to
earlier missed a 36-yard attempt are - not necessarily in this order
All the Bengals got from the eight rounds ·thl's .year, whl'ch WI' II
with the wind 10 his back.
-defensive line, cornerback, free-agent market was a baekup
L
Sh !do Wh" f ·
make more college players free 10
Scarlet e~tplllded ill lead .to 17-3 inside linebacker, offensive 13ckle, comerbaco., e n
1te . rom. sign with the team of their choice.
in-the third qliarter when Powers wide receiver. To name a few,'' he · Detroit. General man11ger Mike Theoretically, the Bengals could
threaded the needle 011 a JIUIIl die said.
Brown· has decided to sit out the benefit from that,.
three for Caner, who ran iniO the
He could, have kept going: place bidding wars for big names and
Brown thinlcs il'll only bun,
end zone 10 complete the 13-yard lcicker; INicltup quarterback; offen- wait until next year, when prices
"My belief going into this was
scoring play. Ja~kson added his sive linemen.
might come down if a salary cap that it would CUI in favor of the
fifth pointoo the lllltra-pointlcick.
The Ben gals have lost five goes into effecL
more glamorous teams," Brown
Gray ~losed the scoring on a starters 10 free agency, trades or
"With a cap, there are going 10 said. "There are teams that are a
one-,Yard run by William Houston retirement in the off-season. That's be .a large number of teams that are lillie bil shinier than we are, alleast
late m the third quarlllr.
five important flayers from a team gomg 10 ~ve 10 9Cale back, ~~~~ • at the moment. I don't see a shorter
Hoyina completed pauea of 18 that went 5•1 last year and has ~Y releasmg players or re~gobat- or cut back draft as a benefit."
yards to Buatel' Tillman and ·lO won just eight games dle ·last two mg contracts," Brown S&amp;d. "We. .
.
. •
I
10 Robbie Davia 10 give the
· •

Free-agent signings mean .reduced
pressure to improve th;rough draft .

ME RICO

Cubed Steak. . .~. . . . .La. - ·
USDA SELECT BONELESS BEEf · $159
Chuck Roast.. . . . . . . .La. ·
KEN~UCKY BORDER
69(
W1eners.....~..........:l2 oz~ ·
. SUPERIOR ASSORTED
. . $129
Lunch Meats..........La.

DETERGENT

April 25, 1993

.

28 OZ. BOnLE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY; OH.
WE RESERVE. THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES
SUN.,
25.THRU MAY 1, l993 ·

.

'

Cincinnati
hammers
.
Chicago in
15-5
rout
.

DEL MONTE·

.Monday thru Sunday'
8 AM-10 PM

.

'

I

STORE HOURS - .

PORK

Section C

1tim.es - ~entin:el

I

IN THE OLD COUNTRY...,. BBIIbaU H'all fll Jl..,. Joe DIMat·
alo (rlabt) ~·d• wltil u uulde~tllled AS RHui player wblle
tbrowltll o.a tile flnt W dulal au AS IOIU·ItoJneu pae Ia
. Rome, 1~, Satllrdu7. DiM.alo armed Ia IIIIJ 'n. . .y to ri11t
1ill Jlllnall ~~ome 1111w11 1a slcDrtor ... 11nt ttme. (AP)
·. .

·Villanova wins longest run in Penn :Relays ..

four plays 1\Cued fl!ne yards, ~ith
By RALPH BERNSTEIN ·
Hoying stqpped while rollina right . .· PHILADELPHIA (AP) _ Viion fourdlllid two.
. lanova and IIIChor Louie QUiniiiiB
Sc:lrlet ~ran out~ c:loc.k.
got a meaiunl of reveap when the
Tile leldina I'Uiber m the Jliii!CI Wildcats won tbe 6,000-meter
. wu aopbomore.-to-be Edd1e relay Salulday at the Fenn Relays.
Georp. Who U*led 52 yanla 011 12
FaVOied Artansu tl...-t ~~~e·
carries for the Gray, wllile Travil baiOD
dlo third leg 8
McGuire bad Dine carries for 43 · and .:'o~w~ fourth.
·
way
ysrda 10 ~the Sclrlet.
On Friday,~ edaed VilThe announced aaendance was lanova in tlie dilllance medley by
. 24,920 at Ohio Stadium. ·
·
·

'i.ifihii

'

•

•
•

retirement, trade losses

'
t

•

two meters in a Slirring stretch fin.
Ish featuring Quin1ana and the
Razort.cb' Nla11 Bruton.
Villanova, with Ken Nason,
Michael Going, Brad Sumner and
Quinlana, beat Wisconsin 10 the
rape by some 10 meltll, with Prov·
icfence ,third and Arkansal fourth.
ViUanova's willning time wu 1S
minllles, 0.23 sec:ooda. WIJc:onsin's
time was 15:01.97 and .Providence's 15:02.63.

..

·

Arkansas was leading in the _ .·

~gbtaway of tl1e lhird lap on the

thlta leg when John Schiefer .
· dropped the baton. VIllanova's ·
Sumner raced put him and the
Wildcall never lrailed with Quin· tana running a 3:43.7 anchor and
wavlna his hands In triumpllu 11e
flaslieCI acroa the ftnilh liDc
. . Schiefer, ~I I 1'1. 1111
incident, tried to .
willa blppened.

.

•

·

.

·.,

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

Aprll.25,1113

Sunday nmes · Sentinel Page C3

Angels hand Red Sox ·4-lloss
By BEN WALKER
pen."
fun to w•tch," manager Butch
AP Buehall Writer
• - Langston gave up only one hit Hollsoo said.
The Boston Red Sox were deter- for eight innings. In the ninth,
Lang5too (2-0) strueJc out seven
mined to break out of their hatting pinch hitler Bob Zupcic doubled and walked one in his 9PC(JIMj oomslump, so they came out 1winging. wilh ooe out and scored when Car- p!Cie game of tbc
He
It woaked, too, but only a little. los ~- singled wilh two outs. up a double to Mite
in
They managed just one run. •
The Red Sox, blanked by Randy the fourth inning, but
· The Red Sox;·liC!d hitleSs a day J f?hnson o" four hits Wedne~y until the ointh.
.
earlier by Seattle's Chris Bosio, mght, had not been shut out m
Rookie Tim Salmon keyed a
managed only three hits against tJuee straight games sinCe Apri127- threc-nm sixlh wilh a two-auo sinMark Langston in a 4-1loss to lhe 29, 1981. They ~ent 27 ~gs on ' gle off Frank Viola (3-1). Viola
California Angels on Friday night.
lhe West Coast wtthout sconng.
hurt himself with a throwing earor
"They were very aggressive at
"We're not in that much of a in the inning.
the plale," Lan~ said. "That's slump. We just had three very good
In other games, Mil~ beat
lheir style. They re up there swing· games pitched against us. _':fe'U · Texas 3·0, Chicago dere•ted
ing .and trying to make things hap- break ouL And when we do, II II be
(See AL oa C-4)

=·

..

..
lmt~_ :T - Lop•'• .Renee Stiver. - (11) lftl biiCk
lint hue •bad or River
Valley rafdter 'MIA!.- Kelley's throw to rlrst
. _ _ Jeuller Neal Ia tile fourth loafng of
' Frlday•a SKOAL IOftball pme Dear Cheshire, ·
wile~ tile Ralden a.e from behlud to win 1$·
•

17. Stiverson later came home oo Melissa Coop·
er's three-run homer, whldl gave the Chieftains
a 14-10 advau~e that was eventually Wiped out
when a seventh-toning walk to Neal rorced in the
winning ruo .ror .the Raiders. (Times-Sentinel .
photo by G. Speucer Osborne)_

:Sev~nth-inning rally giv.es River Valley
~ 18-:17 comeback victory over Logan _

ed the plale in ev~ inning but the and Renee Stiverson (all1-4). .
last, kept after its host until the
The Raiders are scheduled to
Rai\lei's . rust lead was eliminaled ·play a dQ'!blehea.der _against Gallia
in the third.
·
Academy m Galhpohs Monday,
Afler the first-inning riot, the Inning totals
Raiders didn't score again until the Logan: 344.-312-0 = 11-12-1
fifth, but Logan still hung on to the RV: 10-00-030-5 =·18-11-4
lead, which alW six ftames was a
WP- Scott
four-run margin. ·
LP - Bennett
The Raiders' se_venth began
wilh a Jennifer Neal single. Then
Raider reserves win .
after Brooke Lieving's fielder's
At Logan, the Raider reserves
choice n:sulled in Neal's retirement beat lhe Chieftains 16-10 in part
and Licving's reaching base, five behind the hitting of Amy Haulstraightsinglef.caningofflhebats dren (1 -2, solo ·HR) and Missy
of Luciana Scou, Maureen Kelley, Manley (1-5, triple)." ·
Alicia Ward, Beth Salisbury and
Renee Gilmore's Raiders (6-2)
Niclde Meade, lied lhe game. Then expanded lheir two-run lead in lhe
Bennett, who started the g&amp;ll!C but top of the seventh wilh a four"run,
was sent b8clc to the hill in the sec- rally to lock it up.
ond, walked Sally Saunders and
Manley, the winning pitcher,
Tonya Drummond to load the had nine Ks and six walks ..
bases. Then Bennett lost Neal,
These Raiders will play at
;
which gave_ M~ no choice but to Meigs Tuesday.
•
(Cor•h•nl from C-2)
score the wmnmg run. . ·
: IU tbc Rocties, it was a differScott, the will!'ing hurler,,struck
at1 win givea tile way the bullpen out five and walked 10. Bennett
hiS blowo lead after lead.
and the tbree other UJgan pitchers
; Called on to piottct the one-run siruck out lhree but watkcd 13.
lead, both Reed llld Holmes were
The Raiders' attack was pumped
· lJooed by the otherwise supportive up by Meade (2-3) Scott (2-4, flistl:nlwd.
inning triple, four RBis), Salisbury
• Reed .replacell starter Bruce (2-4), _Dtummong,. Lieving, Ward
ltuffin with
loaded in the (all 1-2), Kelley and Neal (both 1Jiftlt ...,,caed pinch-hitter Steve 3). Logan's hitters were Jaime
Decbron a JXllql.
Smith (31.6), Angela Roley (2-2),
' Holmes gave up consecutive Reggy Dalton •. Aim~e Roberts
l/d(l'd flf f.i!l.!l
Plgles in the Dinth, lild a fly ball (both 2-3), Melissa Cooper (1-3,
(,1\LLII'Ulh. Ill I
.aVIIICCd the lead runner 10 third. fourth-inning three-run HR),
But lte got Dave Magadan to . . Robyn W~, Courtney Frasure
pound into i double play to end
CroMword Puzzle on Page A-6
the game.
: "I'm the lumniP.or man in Col~-.-~--r---.
Indo right ..o;::r.·ifimnes said. "I
made a big pitch when I had to
qainst Maaadln. It was a curve- ' (-!!-f~
11&amp;11, and all I was thinkittg was

PICK·UP _and DELIVERY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPO-RT • SYUCUSE' • MASON·

: CHESHIRE- UDdel a virtual·

POOR Boys TIRES
~..•

.,.~

Pool hours
To'day - 1 ~ 3 p.m. and 5-7
p.m., open swim
Monday - 5-7 p.m., college
swim
Tuesday ....:.. closed or Greek
activities
Wednesday -closed for class
Thursday - 5-1 p.m., college
swim
Friday- 5-Tp.m., open swim
Saturday- closed for class
Sunday, May 1- 1-3 p.m. and •
5-'1 p.m., open swim

r

Home atbletic eveoiS
.
Today - Baseball vs. Central
Swe. 1 p.m. (DH)
Mooday -Softball vs. Walsh,
3:30 p.m. (DH)
Tuesday - Soflhall vs. Morehead State, 3:30p.m. (DH).
Thursday- Softball vs. Mari~tta. 3:30p.m. (DH)
·
Note: No street shoes will be
allowed on the new gym noor or
rackelball courts. Those coming to
participale must have gym shoes oo
hand.

ld l.·ll·_·_ I·
( .lli 1 ) I , 1

,

' , ,

OPE" MONDAY-FRIDAY, 8:00
u~ ·7:00P.M.; SATURDAY, 8:00 u.·1-GO r.a.
.
.

"
1

SPECIAL APPOINTMENTS ACCEPTED FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

:t~.f.

:--~~*-

r
..

.,_.· _ifu_)' , ,.
·',;

-.··:

/.

. . ·.
r

;

·--~
L,_
.,_.,, - "/i&gt;

ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
HEAT PUMP SYSTEM .

The Most Efficient ·Heat Pump in the·
Manufactured Housing Industry.

II'I"'::ITTA.!aa•

-·- .

Featuru:
'

•10 Yr. Limited Warranty
&amp; Copeland Scroll Com-

pressor
•12 S.E.E.R. efficiency
•Dealgned for your
Coleman, lntertherm &amp;
Miller Furnace
•frM Eltlmates
. •Finanaclng available for ·
everyone _no matter what
utility company you are
on.
•Very affordable
III'II:D'nlrDII•

l

•ce.

1134 ·

II I 1:11 I I&amp;IUJI noc Heat
-·~
• Pump
CALL

. BEINEn~S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; .COOUNG ·
(614) 446 9416 or 1-800-872·5967
._._oln 1110-urod -ng-lngl
cooling • - wlh \!!! ~· I ...,Ice lo bock Hu_p.

1191 SAffORD SCIIOOl RD., UUIPOlll, ·01.

1weat to five games as Dennis
,Mania gave up two runs in 6 '113
inainp for his first victory of the
R.soo and Greg Colllrunn hit a
two-nm homer at Olympic. Stadi·
pm. Martinez (1-3) settled down
~ allowing a run-scoring double
10 Will Clark and an RBI single to
Barry Bonds in the first inning.
::rrevOr Wilson (G-2) tool&lt; the loss.

~

AUI'O ENGINES - INDUSTRIAL ENGINES • AIR. COOLED ENGINES

·~gfne Remov.a land Installatiota Senlfce
eComplete Engines and
Short Block AISemblia Availabff.. . ·.

DIIVH-umE

. SAVE-A-LOT

\

~~- w11o hid just two hiu in

SEE RICK TOLLIVER, TOM MD liE AD,
CUY SAYRE oa TIGER SAYRE.

oeustom_ Pf~Mbendfng Sei ufee Allailable · ~iili.ALij~.LijW~OiijRK~~iiiii·i·ii~

fais previoua 27 at--., singled
with oae out Ia tbe eighth off
ltl hea lab MD~ (0-1) lo lOUt
it'2·1. Oaut'a bit drove Ia Jefr
. ......, wltO bad I -Jwt MCloud
au error by 1borutop O~ie
s '1

·-· I•800·964·3673
1

f

•

-·

I

•'

I

e.

'

.

·~

•
-~

5

COMPUTER
FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT .

MONROE NO-GAS
SHOCKSCLOSEOUTS

TIRE BRANDS

UNDER CAR

MONROE STRUTS

-Goodyear
• Michelin

•Front-End Parts
•Brakes ,
•Resurface Rotors
•Belts •Hoses
•Oil Changes
•Exhaust Systems

P155/80.R13
GENERAL 300SL
WHITEWALL

-General •Falls

•B. F. Goodrich
• -Kelly
•Uniroyal • Cooper
LARGE SELECTION
OF USED TIRES

No Ralnchecks

MONROE GAS
FILLED or Call Foi
Your Cat or Van
Lowest PriceS

Guaranteed

GOODYEAR

AQUATRED
P185170R14.-••$82.00
P195170A14.:.....85~00
P205170R14 ....... 89.00
P205170R15...- .•93.00
P215170R15....... 96.00
P195175R14 ••••... 84.95
P205175R15
.......94.95
.
""'"'"""

TOURING TA BLACKWAU
B. F. GOODRICH .195nOR14
•.•. ~ ...................... ss.l-.95
P195l65R15 ............................. 49.15

The Orave)y 14-G riding tractor is job-engineered
to deliver four seasons worth of professiQnal results.
• Over 20 custom attachments.

· TRAILMAKER
P20516SR15 ............................. 59.95
P205175R15 R\YL .. $59.95 P215/6SR15 .............................64.95
P235175R15 RWL .... 65.95 P215160R16 ...................;......... 84.95

Sj488

• Strategically lOcated controls .

• Dependable all-gear direct drive.
·• Kohle~ ~ercial grade engine.
• 50"
llleel deck.

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

RETAil. PRICE

. (UP TO 5 QUARTS OF 5 W 30 • 10 W 30 or 10 W 40)

ADIIlTIOHAI. IUOOESRD
VAWE DAYI PRICES:

Profeulonal

16-G/50" Mowa•

Professional
18-01~" Mower

,.

~~

OIIJIRI

15899
,
o11199
'V

ProfeulonaJ
20-G/50' Mower
'Hydr1ultca J40D •ctdiillonal
No! '11110 witt! any oilier prDI'tl01ion.

~IIAAVILY

PMJ'OII--

.

GRAVELY TUOOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
.
.

2M C.. f St.

.,

..

.

'

PH. 992·~75
,·, '' .

'

,'

..

11 Point Safety . ·$
lnspect'u
Rotate nres FREE

•

95

EVERYDAY

.....

.MEIGS
.
TIRE.
CENTER
..
'

IMMfll, IOF'A lfJfUII

IIANMNG K. ROUSH D/B/A ·
.

P20SnOR15 ............................. 49.95
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

OIL • LUBE • FILTER

&amp;RAVRY VILUE PRICI:

Brawa3; Canliulll
• Tam GIPine (3-0) redia:overed
u ~te!'P and pill:bed four-bit
ball b eiat- inninp IIIII :U.t~g
ltaa 0.. dcJiveml I tio. I
iilale ill die ei&amp;btb u Adallla beat
$LLcais II BUICh Menaial Stadi-

il the nilltlt bef'c:ee Mike SIIUI- • JCiiw~ 81111 101 0111 rl die jam
fur his major le!tluc-leadinl eigllh

I

. BEFORE YOU BUY '

$14'

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

Tile finl.two Clrdinlb leiChed

C~CK OUR PRICES ·

SHOCKS

SERVICES

TIRES

P215170R14 .................55.15
P215170R15 .................58.15
P225170R15 ................. 5US
5................. 62.115
I P2:55n'OR15 ................. &amp;4.115

:

244 S. Church
Ripley, W'l

MONDAY • FRIDAY - a·A.M. • 5 P.M.
SATURDAY 8 A.M. ;. 12 Noon

P155/BOR13 ..... - ..$35.95
P165180R13 ........... 37.95
75180R13 ........... 38.95
3........... 39.95

.. tbc eiJhdt.

"COMPlETE AUJ'OMOTJv.E MACHINE SHOP SERVICE"
+ Cylinders Bored I Sleeved I Honed
+ Blocks &amp; Heads Milled.
+ Complete Magnaflux Inspection
+ Valve Guides (Repaired or Replaced)
+ Heads Rebullt I Exchanged

•

'

• .Luis (lmzaln drove in two runs
illd bad two bits for the Asuos.
-: . Mm6,1'11dral
• BotibY Booilla bit two homers
;.. one fiom each side of the plalr:
,.,_ aod ~ in five runs as New
Vort belt SID Diego behind left· .
fwnder lbDit 'I'mulll S1a Sllldi-·
'om: 1'anaM (l-0) scattered eight
biu aad gave up one run in eiaht
iuninp IIIII Mite Mllldux liniJhfd.
- --Barilla hit 1 two-run homer in
ibe first iDninJ off rig!Jt-hander
Urea H~rris (1·3) ud added a
11ne-ruo shot off lefty Pat Gomez _

'\

+ Complete Tune-Ups
+ Crankshafts Grtndlng
+ Oven Cleaning of P~
.
+ Computerized Engme Analyzer
+ Flywheels Ground
. · +Camshaft Bearings Remov~d and Installed

6 DAYS A WEEK

AU-SEASON XNW

:
l'llillles z, Dodgers 0
• At Pbiladelphia, Curt Schilling
iossed a five-hitter and Dave
PoDins homeml off Ramon Mar·
lillez (2-2).
: Schilling (3-1) struck out a
pmer-higb nine.
1\llnl-4, Pirates 2
~ At Piusbwglt, Greg Swindell (3J) gave up two runs and lhree hits
111 8 1/3 innings and Houston. shut
iiOwn for seven innings by Dave
Quo, worked over reliever Denny
J.fe.ile (0-1) for three runs in the

AUTO ENGNE REBUILDING
(ALL MAKEs •. A,LL
MODELS)
.
'
~

The Shoe (ofe

-·

double play...
;
Expos 7, Gluts 2
• Monlrelll extended its winning

i.-.................................

nU:n IIII:I'IIJI.

NOW IN BLACK!
NIKE AIR
FORCE MAX
Basketball Shoe

die..._

1991 LUMINA "~34" .......·.~..................Bright Red, 8600 .,.lles..............\...........)12,995.00
1991 RANGERXLT.......,.......,.....:.......,4x4, Auto., Air, 18,000 Mlles., ...,.:........,..'10,995.00
1991 TOYOTA COROLLA DX ..........Auto., Air, Ona Ownarl .........,...................'7,800.00
1992 MAZDA PROTEGE OX ...........ona Owner!, Air, cass...............................'8,800.00
1992 EAGLE SUMMIT DL................Auto., Air, Loadedl
.....................................'7,500.00
.
.
.
1992 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE....Auto., At, Loaded! .................................s12,495.00
.
'
.
.1985 TEMPO GL. .........,.....................Auto., AC, Low Mlles..................................'21495.00
1983 SUBA,RU WAGON .......,...........Auto., AC, 4x4, Newnres......:.............L........'995.00
1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY................A~to., AC...... ~..............................................'2,950.00
1990 F-150 XLT..
AC, Cruise, nn. Power.......·.......................'8,995.00
1987 HONDA ACCORD ....................Auto., AC, Stereo....:...................................'S,495.00
1990 TEMPO GL......................~........ Auto., AC, Cruise, nit, 4door.....................14,995.00
•
1990 CROWN VICTORIA.................Auto., AC, Loaded!, V-8.............................'9,495.00
1990 CHEVY CORSICA LT..............Auto., AC, Stereo.......................................'4,995.00
1987 NISSAN PICKUP......................Ac, Stereo, Low Miles, Cleanl...................14,500.00
•
1991 TEMPO GL.................................Auto., Ac, Cruise, Loaded!.;......................'6,995.00
1991 CHEVY CAPRICE......:.............V-8, Auto., One OWner! Loadedl................'7,995.00
1988 CORSICA 4 door.......,............V-6, Auto., AC, cass...................;............~..'4,495.00
14,495.00
1989 TEMPO 4x4 ..... ,..........................
Auto., AC, Only 49,000
Mllest..:.;..............
.
'
.
1992 RANGER STX...~......................~V-6, AC, Bedllnar, Only 8,000 llllesl........'1 0,495.00
'
1992 TAURUS GL.. ........:....................Loadedl Low MllesL..-YOUR Clf01CE 112,800.00
'
.
1992 TEMPO GL.............;.... .,.............Loaded ILoYI.MIIes........... YOUR CHOICE'8,800.QO
1991 TOPAZ...~ ......................................~c, CruiSe, nn, Loadad!...................~........'6,995.00
1989 BRONCO II .........;.............:.......,.OM Owner, Loadadl..................."............*8,995.00

W.tch for our Mother'• Day Tire Sale May 3rd through 8th.
· Eree.Bailoona for Klct.. Prize. for All Molherel

.

.NL gameS ••.

"WE WANT YOUR ·BUSINESS~

ASK FOR. LON OR OSCAR
. :' lf,J'"
oNewl Certified Air Condition Service
·
•2 a.y Drlv•thru 011 Bay
.
•Alignment with Experienced Operator, Neweet Technology
-Exhau.t Cuatom Bending, Meg Welding, et~.
oUaad Tire• -New Tlrea Dlacount Prlcea
-Lawn and
Tractor ·lmp"ment, ATV
. .Garden,
.

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE - This week's
acti_vities schedule for Lyne Center
is as follows:
Gym hours
Today - 1-3 p.m. and 5-7
p.m., open recreation
Monday - 5-7 p.m., college
recreatiOn
Tuesday - closed for Greek
activities
Wednesday-5-7 p.m., college recrealion
·
Thursday - 5-7 p.m., college
recreation
~
'
Friday - 5-1 p.m., open ~­
ation
Saturday- closed
Sunday, May 2- 1-3 p.m. and
5-1 p.m., open recreation

-

.\.\GllMENr AIIIJ '-. .

SALEI

iy cloudless sky River Valley's
:v.&amp;y softball te8m era.~ a four)1m deficit in the aeveath inning of .
Fridly's ScJutbeastern Ohio Atblet·
ic Iague pme apinstl.ogan and
.»sed six bits and three walks to·
bealtbeCblenllos 18-17.
: The decisioo ended a three)llmelosiqllleltforSharon Van~·· Ro!den (4-5, 34) after their
losses to Athens (19-4 at home
:Ibundly), Jecboo (14-12 at home
:r..day) _aad Albats (10-4 at The
l'laiosMcDdly).
• 11te Raiders rocked Chieftain
·«tarte, Lisa Bcllllelt IIIII her three
)liCe "u for 10 runs in the first,
'Wbeu a Otieftains gave up eight
:Walts ud tow bit.t while hitting
j)IIC t.ler. But Lcpn. whiclt dent·

'

242 West Main
992·2101

.

_,

·

•
.
Pomeroy,·0•1• • .
I

�'

.
•

PIQ•

Su!'d&amp;Y Times

C4

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH

Sentinel

1ft McHale's last home game,

Point Pf

April 25, 1113

·--~

·

BQston beats -Cleveland 107-99 to e·nd Cavs' 10-game win streak
!BOSTON
B1 HOWARD
toughCeltics.
limes Ibis
SCI!IOD
with
(AP)ULMAN
Kevin some
the Boston
So has
Shennan

~Hale has struuled tbrouch

Douglas.

FridayniJht
differ-ent.
16 usisu alld
t1ae
McHale
·ledwas
Boston
with 11 season-high
Celtics belt lbeCJev:l
1 ea-.
reboun&lt;ls, Douclu handed out a lien' 107-99 in 1 . . - widt.,

G~HS

edges Athens S-4

GALLIPOLIS - It took two
singles after two outa wen: recorded by the visiting Athens Bulldn!r•
. in the sixth inning of Friday"s
Southeastern Ohio Alhledc League
came against GalHa Academy to
push the Blue Devils to a S-4 wm.
The ~ulldoas went ahead after
half an mning, but after the Devils
took a 2-llead that held until the
third, Athens (6-3, 3-3) tied in that
frame. Then Gallipolis scored in
the third to n~gain iiS onc-nm lead.
Athens tied it in the fourth and
went ahead in~ sixlh, setting the
st&amp;Je for the Academy's sixth·
inrun11 comeback.
W1th two out, Blue Devil slugger Dylan Evans reached on an
error and' later scored on Ryan
Barnes' double to tie the game at 4-

AL games...

--

. Central Dlvllloa

. ,._

'W
J'Hh"eeo&gt;hi• ..........ll

L
4

.733

Sl. Loaio -·- ·······--'

6
7

.m
.533

1.5
2.5

1

.625
.431

3.5

II

.500
.313

-...J ... - ..........10

, Clio:o&amp;o.....- .....- ....1
'-

, ................ _..
· ~ ................1

:Florida .................... J
:..

7
I

I'd.

Gl

~ 1.01 An~Me~ ...... ~-----6

, CIHCIRNAn........J

21
31
38
41

.654
.531
.531
.494

4
14
14
17

·42
53

.411
.346

IS
29

W L

Pet.

.611

6

.600

y-H- .............. 55 !S

1

.S&amp;I

I
'
9

.5S6
.400
.400

l·SmAntonio ...... .48 32 . .600
x-UWt ....................47 34 .580
Dtnvc::r ................... 35 46 .431

11

.353

.5
3
3
4~

MlM-. .............. 1! 63
Dollu ..................... IO 71

~

They played Saturday

· , ,ClNCINNA TI. (Btowninl 0· 2) at
'·ChlaF(IIibbudl.cJ), t115p.m.
;
Floridl (Aquino 0- 1} 1t Colorado
.-(........., ~. I :151"1'·.
~
S.. F ',... (llwbl. :Z..O) • Mc.trul
•'(llill2-0),1:35 ......
~ ; Sao=o
(Semi.a.an 0-1) at New

'· Yodr. (
l-1), bOO p.m.
-. Loa Ana ., (JCeviD Grota 2-l) u
''PbiWolphia ~ ~ H15 p.m.
. (Walt l-1~ 7:05-

a-0) at PiuabuiJh

Atlanta (P. lim.i&amp;h l-1) II St. l.olli1
: ,(r_...., 0.2), 1:05 p.m.

:

GB

'=

Loo A•=••(Caadioui 0-2) at
Pt.U
ti·
1-0),J :~p.m..
I· I)" PiUibu'lh

'. HooJ,..

..

, (raolia0.1),1 :35pm.
' San o;.,.o (l!ll&amp;nd 0.1) ot Now Yod&lt;

.

--

Pet.

W

L

...................10

~5

. ~7

6
; rw.vaa ......~······· ·• 1
, T .........................l
I
;' Mll'IPIU. ...............6 1
, CU!'II!I.\ND , .... , .5 II
A 10

.1147
.500
.500

•-

• Baoun. .................. ll

.462

.313
.286

r; aaldmcn-..............
' •
WtMn DI•Won
: Calafomia •.•.- .........10

, T.,. .......................1
, Qica...................... l

2.5

3

5.S
Sj

.SOO
.315
.375

2

2.5
2.5
3
4.S

21.S
23.S

.4&amp;9
.407

u.s

36S

Frld!ly's sc:ores

Bollon -10'1, CilM!J..AND ~ &lt;::1
No.. y .... 99.Phibdolphia 14 .
11....,.122,Mil"lllkool06
Miami 121,
120 (Of)
Owloac 104, CU..ao 103
Orlando 119, NowJcaey l16

w........,.,

· ~

.•

. .

c.llu 103, Min
11100
ll1oh 105,GnldanSIII091

•

S..Dio 122, LA. Lokon 93

.......... 112,S....,_I08

''•

•

•

ANGf.lS

NEW 1993 NISSAN SENTRA XE
'

$179
.

00 ,.,

-tit

'
'
''
f

I

NEW 1993 NISSAN MAXIMA

$279° :.,It

. I'

'

ONLY 24 MONTHS!
• lease payments plus tax &amp; t~le . Cap cost reduction (S4 HI
Sec:IIW$1,0110 Malina) plus first payment and 1tcurlly cMpoliltt~

Allan11 It Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Miami at t.uliana, 7:30p.m.
n.llu atlloul\011,1:30 p.m.
Ourloae u Milwaukee,. 9 p.m.
SaCI'UIIalto It L.A. Lakms, 10:30 p.m.

Today•s Rnales

•

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
'flmes.Seutlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS -They're dif·.
ferent, and yet they 'n~ alike.
. How different? One'u girl, and
the olher's a boy. She's a senior·
participating in lho last sport of her
prep career. He's a freshman still
learning 'lhe ropes in lhe world of
varsity back and field
But the one lhing they have in
common is SIICCCSS. Success on the
field. The f.eld portion of track aiid
field, that is.
, Gallia Academy's Amy Hemby
ljlld Burt Wood have made themselves part of the elite among shot
putters .and discus throwerr
throughout soulheasiCJ'll Ohio, as
shown by their performances in
both eventj this ac~ (sec charts).
"This OIIC's going to be hard to
break ... the 113," said Hemby,
whose performance in the discus m
Monday's Locan triangular meet
was her best of her CIIRlCf and the
......nnd time this seuon she hu
iiien IICt personal reeud. Her Jat,
CSI throw is to dale the best in Blue
Angel history, yet another accolade
for one who was unbeaten in the
event and has n~mained in the top
three in the shot put piior to Saturday's Boyd County Classic.
Hemby, a three-sport athlete
(she leUCI'ed in vollcy~ll and basketball) . whose twin sister Kelli
n~tumed to !IOflllall after participal·
ing in track 111d field during lheir
junior ye. (the twins, u expected,
created their fair shan~ of confusion
for track coac" Keith McGuire),
hu been involved in field events
since eighth grade. Durinc her
farewell ICIIOII, she takes time to
educate the younger shot pullers
and discus throwers.
"I try to help them, show lhem
how to do it richt." she said. ''The
eighth-grade girls will be good."
But there are times when she
doesn't feel like playing teacher.
Immediately before she goes into
the discus cage or the shot put circle, "I have to cet by myself and go
through the motions in my mind."
she said.
Accordiq 10 McGuire, Hemby
and Wood keep their bodies as well

.

•-

Bobby Ayala, pitcher, from lndilnapolia
ol the American Aa~ocillion.
HOUSTON ASTROS -l'llrchued
the CXJn.tn.c:t « Mat Grant. pi.\Cber, £rom
Thcsca ollho Paoilic Coat Lap. Sent
KadRhO&lt;Ioa,cudWda-,10-r-..
ablod liot. Oolimod Ted Wood, ltUI(IOJder,
to oa.wa oltbc lnlemltiorlll Lclauc.
NEW YORK. METS -Claimed Jeff
Kai•u, pi1chor, on waivc.n.from lhD
Cincinnati Rcdl.
,

BasketbaU

NBA - Supended Minncaot. guard
0oua _Wec1 for one aame •nd f~ned him

llooloo1 "W ............ l_p.m.
Philadelphia at CLEVELAND. 3:30
p.m.New Jmey al Daroit, 3:30p.m.
~ IC Mia.ne.ou,_
3:30 p.m.
Portland at LA. Cli~, 3:30p.m.
Seanle at Golden Slice, 3:30p.m.

SS,OOO for~ ,.,.,.. Mike Callahan
;, Thwsday nir)&gt;t aaamo.
NEW JER!EY NETS -Activated
Dwayne Schituz.i~a , c•ner, from the injllrlld till. Waived O.ve Happen. cenw. .

Footb!lU

Nallanal F....,.lll.ea&amp;ue

- * NHL playoffs • Toronto 4, Deaoi.t 1, Detroit lcadl

K·

ri.CI2-l

St Lwis 3, Oticsao 0, St. Louis leads
ICI'i013-0
•
Winnipeg S, Vancouwcr 4, VanCouvoc

Calgary S, Loa Angeles 2. Cal&amp;uy
loadualeo Z.l

CHICAGO BEARS - Siped TetT)'
Oboe, wido receiver. Si1ned VcmJce
Smhh, orrcn.ive lineman, to In offer
du!d..
·
DETROIT UON'S -Traded Jerry
Ball, non tackle, to the Cleveland
Browna for a 1993 third·nq~.d 4nJ\ pidc.
LOS ANG ELES RAMS - An·

nouncl:d that 1hc New Yod: Jeu will not
match lhe offer sh.oct. Jivcn to RJ, Kol'l,
ufd.y.

mfSBURGH STEI!IJ!RS - Sipd
ar.1 UoY41, linebacker, to a four-l..'

........_SAN DIEOO CIIAJIOER s~s._

Tbey played Saturday
Washinston at N.Y. hlanden, 7:30

... ._, _

Discus

"

Shot put

Jackson
3/30 .............138-6(1)
41-7(2)
Ironton
4/3 ............. 132-11(1)
45-6~6)
Fairland Lions Invit
4/9 ............. :.143-2(1) . 45-1(1)
Fairland quad
4/13 ...........141-11(1) 48-8 3/4(1)
Gallipolis vs. Point
4/15 ............ .141·6(1)45-113/"(1)
McCoy Classic
4/17 .............130-2(1)
46-6(1)
Logan triangular
4/19 ............. 154-4(2)
none

Hemby and Wood a
tale of lovers of ·success ·

Nall01alluketball Alloclaelon

CUcaaoatNew Yo*, 1p.m.

•

Burt Wood·

Jackson
3/30............. 100-8(1)
30-6(1)
Fairland girls' meet
4{2........ ..................... canceled
Fairland Lions InviL
4/9 ............... 106-3(1) 31-11(3)
Fairl&amp;nd quad
4/13 .............106-1(1)
30-8(1)
Gallipolis vs. Point
4/15 ............. 104-8(1) 34-8 1/4(1)
McCoy Classic
4/17 .............106-2(1) 34-2(2)
Logan triangular
4/19 ...........113-11(1)
31-8(1)

·- ·-

0

•

Discus Shot put

ONLY 24 MONTHS!

Auto., air, power windows, casseHe.

.,.•

':ICt
AmyHembr

Air. c · rsette,tllt, cruise.

MONTREAL EXPOS - Activated
John WCUeJand, pitcbor, fnm lS.day d.ia-

San Ao!Alnio at Phoeni.J., 3:30pm.

"'

.."
~

LP- EMu. ·

then retired 23' strlipt blaas.
Manager Phil GirDer llooed
when he pulled Elcfnd lilera ..._
off walk in the aiutla, bitt Jesse
Orosco fmishcd witb hi" 1 Rlief
for his fii'St save.
Kevin Brown (2-1) laad !lis ·
scoreless sueat stopped aa IS
innings when DIIIIyl Jlwuihllil a
two-run single in the tlaild. AI
error by Palmciro • lim 1tae llllalk
both runs unearned
·
TI1enU,Tw' 4
Tony Phillips horecd oa dac
fQunh pileh of .die pme and 1'IDil
Fryman also homered and daole iP
rour runs for Dclroit.
·
Alan Tilmmell, hitless ia !lis
fll1it 11 at-bits this :: - . llld a
two-nm, ~.AootNe lblllaeted a
six-nm stxth inniD&amp; for the TJFIL
Scott Erickson (0-2) lost b dac
lim time in cigbt c:amer ""i••
against DelroiL
Minnesota's Dave W'mfidd bil
his 11th gr&amp;ll!l slam,

'I

·'

Natloul Leaaue
CINCINNATI REDS - Called up

n.n:u 109,lndilna 104

p.m.

;!

American Leaaue
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - Optionod
Jtromo.Wsltc.l, outficldc:r, 'to Vancouver
of &amp;he Pacific Coatt Loapc. Activated
Scott Lewis, pitcher, from 15-dlf dia·
ablecllie:t.
CIUCAOO WHITE SOX - SiP'ed
Mite LaValliere, catcher, to 1 mmorlcap contnct.
·
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Placed
Jamea AUitin. pilChcr, em the 15-day daabled list. RccaUed Mike. lpuiak, pitdl·
ct, frcm New Orleans ot the American
Aaociation.

IO.S

leadllt:riec 2-1

~

4 .714
6 .571
7 .S33
7 .533

, Minn ct· ............ ,_..
: ,Saale ..•,_ ...............l
I
,Ool&lt;lond ................ .S I
t~x.n.u 01)' ''''' ' ¥": ••6 10

'I! Transa~tions

-

~s

.619
.630
.494

Friday's scores
2.j

MORE FOB t.EASE

BasebaU

AnUJnio. 8:30p.m.
Phoeai.la1 Datvcr, 9 p.m.

GB

.1

~~trcllat ~7:30p.m.

lO.S
37.5
.123 ' 45.5

lba:tm!.lt San

AMERICAN LEAGUE

T-

Buffalo at Booon, 7:30 p.m., if ncc:a-

.222

SaCZ1!11Uo ............
S6 .309
x-cllachod plo~,.bclb
y-cllDcbod divi.i~ tldo
~clinched coni'~ ti.lle
o-'"liadaed ovcnll belt ~'~~Clad

r ~1-0).l;.tllp.m.

•' · Atlanta (Maddn 2-1) at St. Louil
• (Ollvaze~ G-0),2:151~..
•, · CNCINNATI (BikMr 1-1) at QUe~­
:' 110 (CIIIillo 0.1), 2:20p.m.
Florida (Bow~~~~: 1-l) ll Colorado
0
t (Smilh 1·2), 3:0! p.m.

1

26
30
41
43
41

'

Wa~hington,7 :30

pJn.

1
8.5

Tbey played Saturd•y

"TOday'II&amp;IDII

Saa F
&lt;Swill 0.1) ot ~
(N.-1-0), I :3S p,m.
I!

......"1
N.Y. bbnden at

Mlclftlt Dl•llloa

:zs

Haultat (Jbmilcb

NewJ...ey at PilllbwJb, 7:30p.m., if

WESTERN CONFERENCE

6.s

PaciFic DIYI•Ion
19 .763

;'

n.mhat·Tomrno, 1p.m.
Vancc~~'ICI'at Winnipea.l p.m.

Monday's games

o-.Pboc:rm .............. 6J
x-Scaalo ................ 55
•·IUIIand ............. S1
•·LA. Clippc:D .....40
•·LA. Lakm ........ 31
Gnldan s.............. n

•:

Calp&lt;yatl.o&amp;Anaoloa,3p.m.

3

TUnl

II .313

Todlly's games

Pltllbogb at Now I....,., I p.m.
Chit:ago at St. Lou.il, 1 p.m.

3

Wtllem IMwllloa

\· ................9
f S. Fnnci1co •.......10
-. AIIMlta ...................1 0
'.C&lt;IIondo .................. 6
: San llilp ............... 6

.104

•.a.INI!L\ND... .S3
...........................43
x·.O!!d=• .............-l3
ladiana ............ .!.. ..40
lletn&gt;i1.......... ....... 39
Milwauk• ... """''''21

NATIONAL LEAGUE

801tc11 at Buffalo, 7;30 p.m.
Quoboc: II Manaeal.l p.m.

y.OU.... .............57 24

i*J~,~·=·
~=E==·=~:;::::...:and~IW~agl~u:·
:;:;:.:~;:!.--i
·,
.....
· &amp;bMc.Hale
(See cm.ncs
aC-5)
:l

WP-Hun

..

'

- * Baseball *-

.:

(ContinUcdfromC·3&gt; ...

Toronto S-4, Deuoil downed Min·
nesota 124, Kansas City slOpped
·Baltimm: 7-6 and Seattle beat New
York 6-3.-The·Cleveland at Oakland game was rained out.
Brewers 3, Ran1en 0
Cal
Eldred pitched one-hit ball
, ALL THE WAY- Gallla Academy hurler Brlaa Hurt fanned
for eig~t innings and struck out 10
12 bitten and -!ked one on his -y to finishing what be started Friday's SEOAL home game apinst Athens, which tbe.Blue Devils as Milwaukee beat Texas.
Eldred (3-1) allowe&lt;l a double in
'won 5·4. Hurt also bad 1 doable IIi the contest. (Times-Sentinel
the fll1it inning to lW'ael Palmeiro, .
:photo by G. Speucer Osbonle) ·
'

4. Then Mike Dou..Uy's sia&amp;lr:
brought BltDCS home widl wlaat
proved to be the pme-w' • a-.
Senior Briu H•t' :t u.s
walked one for a co•.......a
victory, besting J - &amp;ria, wlao
whiffed niilc IIIII wllbd r- il a
complele-~ dfcn.
.
FOrClaltipnUs, [ h 'y . . r.l
hits,andtr=,...a.t.allyll
Barnes, Brett Crm
• .Slim
doubled. For ~ ...,_ Wlllrton md Pat McHaP " · eel, .a
Wharton l11d Troy Bo1ia .:Ia ...
two hits. No -other de"il• wac
available.
biDill totals
Athens: 101-101.0=4-8-2
GAHS: 201..()()2..x =5-7-1

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

1993

·

_,..

as their minds ready for the next
throw. ''There can be as long u 10
minutes between throws," McGuire
said. "On one or lhose cold days,
some of the people wen~ standmg
around all bundled· up. They were
C&gt;ut rwmi!!f.• and it paid off."
.
"I didn t know what a shot put
or discus was," said Wood, a new,
comer to track and field who took
it up for the first time as a sevptthgrader in 1991. His participation in
football (he is a lineman) and
wrestling (he will probably hit the
mat 11!"11 varsity heavyweight next
winler) helps him come by hjs
strength honestly.
· Humility also seems to be
another of his slrengths, as havinc
only three non-winning efforts irl'
both events doesn 'I seem to have
gone to his ~cad . "I _just did w.ltat I
did .. .I just tried to do my best," he
said ·
Before he grew into his current
5-foot-11, 180-pound frame, lhe
former Little Leaguer - he 111st
touched a bat and glove in the 1990
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament as a·member of the Gallipolis
A's- was a lot like many boys his
age, living more or_less for ruining

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THAU THURS.
TOll CAUIIE, JACK NICHOI.SON,
.,. DEIIIIIOORE.IN
,

•

87 Escort GT

'3495
GOLF TOURNAMENT- Cliffside Golf
Course Manager Mike Hayaes, center, receutly
met with GaiDa Aeademy Baud Boosten to tee
orr plans ror the second annual GAHS Band
GolfTournameat. Pictured with Hayues are, left
to r~t, Booster President Kitty GriMth, Boost,
er BUI Grlmth, Band Qlreetor Rod Tolliver and
Boosler Vice President Greg Smith; The scram-

a pitcher's day with lhe crack of
the bat on an 0-2 pi&lt;ch.
Today, baseball is a distant
memory, at least for his physical
self. Wood, whose father Chuck
was a shot put and discus thrower
before his 1972 graduation from
GAHS, has more than that going
for him in his family tree.
Willie Wood •.Bun's IDicle and a
1982 GAHS graduate, was the last
to place in the state tournament (his
149-foot, eight-inch throw· made ·
him fifth in 1982.) in the discus.
Mike Wood, another of his uncles
(he graduated from GAHS in
1977), was a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League champion shot
putter because of his 47-foot, nine- ·
tnch heave in the 1977 league
meet

ble will begin 9 a.m. May 22 at the golr course
and proceeds will be used to purchase new balld
uniforms. PIJrti~ipallts are urged to sign up
early, as last year's tournameut was a sell-out.
For more infoimatlon, contact Mrs. Griffitb .at.
44(;-0049 or Smith at 44(;-7313. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kevin Pinson)

Auto Exchange No" Ills

TWO LOCATIONS:
TriiMII (Ftmarly m Allll Slllsl
Phone 767·4999

I

AftEIS BOlDA

'.
'I

"Spring Fever De11ao"·

•

Accord LX 4 Door

$2500°

0

i
••'

OFF

•

•

•I

KANAUGA DF11VE-IN

'

The Kanauga DriveIn Will ee·Opening
·Friday, April 30.

446·1088

AmHL
~

~

ESTABLISHED i89S
'

CROSSOVER BAND

DEMO

Top 40.Covntry,
50's&amp; 60'•~

.' ..

SAT., MAY 1; 8 .M.
SHOWniES
FRI., SAT., SUN. 7:30, 10:00
liON. THRU TtiURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADIIIISSION $1.60- ~

•

SPRIN6 VAlLEY CINEMA
446 4514

~

.

••
:
••

7

JAU COICIII lilY I
,Morrie •nd Dorothy H•klns
Arl•l Theatre
426 2nd Av•.• ~lllpoll1, Oh.
c.n ;;;; -.,-;.;,r;, for mo•elnfo.

•

I;

$1400°

IARGAIN MATINIII $AT. A SUN .

IAIIGAIN NIGHTTUISDAY
GI" Cll'rJP'ICAt'U AVAILABLBI

I 11 t I
l
I : 1 1l \ 1\

''&lt;

, Civic 4 Door
0

•

OFF
..

\!

(Continued from C-4)
In his 13th and almost certainly'
last NBA season.. McHale bas been
severely limited by ankle problems
and, uncharacteristicalfy. complained rccendy about a shortage of

to • aa.o-yeatCCDIIICI,

s

..•

'1

plllymcu~.

AIIY!ID

IIIIOCI

lt~t=l
·••• sou• COVIll

HOLIDAY
POOLS, INC.
2973 Ptedmont Aold - Huntington, WV

,

.

• •(Ntvaao 0.1). 2~ p.m.
•• Balta~ (McDonald 1-1) It Klrll&amp;l
'City CAoolor 1-2~ 2,35 p.m.
'• tiJNELAN'I) (MeN 0.1) I t OUJIRCi

one

ALLEN'S GARAGE
35117 LEADING CREEl RD.
742·3095

MIDDLEPORT

• (Do"" 0.2), 4,Ql ,....
', Nn' YcD (W'.. D-:0) Ill S01:1tle. (Cum·
: minp G-3). 4:35 p.m. ~
,
B0110n (Claneftl 3-0) It Calitomia
f (Sandonoa Z.O), 1:05 p.m.
·
~.

;

-*NBA *...-

•

' EASTERN CONFER,ENCE
At ..ntlc IMYIIIDn
:
• TMiil
W L Pd.
GB ...
· ~.,.... Yodl .......... 59 2l .721
' ........ ................47 34 .510
12
43 31 .531
16
: ~ .........,.......«! 41 ·""
19

,

••.New-.,. .........

r1llioali .................. 36 45 M4
""'M1111p1U ........... 76- S5 .321

I~........................22

59

.:172 .

23
33

37

Brakes, Drums and Rotors Turned
· Shocks, Struts, Tune-ups ·
Radiator Flush, ·Exhaust Work

I

•
••

•
With S4 seconds left Friday
nicht he left after a 32-ininute
stint. The rans, convinced they had
seen his last ~pllar-season !lOme
came, gave h1m 1 one-mmute
slandlng OYition. McHale waved
several times as teammates and
.opponeniS appiiiUIIcd . .. .
"It was really spec11l ; sa1d
McHale, who cave more strong
indication• he will retire after the
seiiOIL "llhought about it
day
lone. I said if this is lhe last one,
.you might u weU,co out.~ere and
try 10 do lhc best you can.
He wu
ci thnle
wi!JI
17 poinu, just one be d Kevm
Gamble's telm, hich . Boston
benefited from injuries that kept
big mea Bnd Daughetty and Larry
Nance out for peveland, w~se
10.c- winning saeak ended..
McHale mined the prev1ous
three pmca with a beclt injury and
scored fewtlf than 10 poiniS in eight
of the nine JIIIIOI.before thiL ;, !· •
. "I've lOt to plly betler, he
saicL "$iPeCUIIY, by Dlayiq ,beau .
illld ~inl more.cons1s.ent I II CCI
more time."
• -~
'
.Asked if ~e had made up h11
mind about retirfu, he' said._
· ........,•.'We'D ;ee, We'D see.~"·
.
.
, Douilal. conccmed abo11t h11
plllybtc time md role on the ICIIII,
left lhe Celtics for four days in
December. .
.

al'

9:3G~2:01

Today'• games

Chiclp (Fernando&amp; 2-1) at Toronto
• (S....... ,.. l-1), 1:35 p.m.
Det1oi1 (W•ll• 3-0) at Minnuoh
Cf-' 0.2), 2:05 p.m.
Tes.u (koaen l·l) at Milwaukee

'

· Celtics ...

TAMPA. BAY BUCCANEERSSicltod Anlhony ....... o!f....av. tad:lo,

304-429-4711 ......fri. 9:30-5:00; 511,

''

,

,

'des

I

•

DftAJt.li.

91 TOYOTA

90 FORD

DRin' HORSE
FIELD DAY ·

4 door, White, 5 spsed, air,
AWFM. "
maroon, air.. .

Camry,

TauNs, 4 do6r, air,
local bade.

•ssoo

SUNDAY, MAY 2.- 12 Noon • ?~

'9400
Skylark, 4 door,
automatic, air..

Cenlury, 4 door, sil·
ver, 6 cyl, auto:, air.

$6700

•7700
91 TOYOTA

Sponsored by Ohio Valley Draft Horse/Mule
.
Association and the Ken Amabary Chapter of lzaak
Walton League and Baum Lumber

FOOD SERVED BY EASTERN .BAND BOOSTERS

.· -o... Ole Flthl•• Fu• - Wt FREEl

4 Miles North o( Pomeroy Ac~ Fr~m Shlte Garage

•&amp;400

91 CHEVROLET

'6400

*9400·

ATHENS

•7800 '14,275

HONDA

••

•

90 PRELUDE

Camry 4 dr.. air,
auto., white.
Iaiii*-

'

''
•
•

Acclaim, 4 dr.• auto.,
air, cnise, AWFM.

S-10 Pickup, Tllhoe S( blue, 5 spd., air,
Pkg .. 5 ljld .. VI, air,
9800miles. .

OLD TOOL AND TBACI'OR SHOW
'
Brl119 Yow All.... ...! Uanllll THis nd Traders
liitDisplar ne.n.
·

I

•

91101(1(

91101(1(

' •HORSE PLOWING •LOG PULLS
•OBSTACLE COURSE

90ACCORD DX

CARS

THE. HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE .

110 I. STITI ST. • (614) 594·1555

IIC.n•, Air

'4295
baled on SI.OOJ down
cuh or trldt Str Hktpenon for
dttalls Plu W • title.
'

•Paytner~ll

.,
'

f

l
,"'IISCCII'fll f11f • I liillk '

797-4931 '

COm~r 882

&amp; Joilljson Rd.

''',,
'

�•

·•

Page C6 Sunday nmee Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•

- -

·Farm/UuSiriess

Aprll25, 1993

Outdoors

·'---

1timts - ~entiatel

SeCtion n ·
Aprll25, 1883

•

Ohio fishing report

Dow _Lake the place to catch rainbow trout

In the Open

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is ~ weekly fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natwal
. ReSoun:es:

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

Southeast

DOW LAKE - About 4,000
catchable rainbow trout measuring
10 to 12 inl;:hes ~released in the
Athens County lake last week.
pow· er, recrea•'on
and a hos t of Pros pee ts .or
• ang1ers persutng
· ·
u
olher uses for millions of Ameri- trout, channel catfish and largecims and Canadians.
.
moulh bass are rated as excellent.
The Mississippi River, which Spring offers the best fishing
cuts our nation in two, is often opportunities as heavy aquatic vegcalled lhe "fourth coast of the Unit- etation dominates Ibis lake in mid
ed States." This signifiCBRt ecosys- to late summer. Boat motors are
tern forms the hirgest remainil!g restricted to lQ.holsepower.
unfragmented strip of habitat for
PIEDMONT LAKE - One of
migrating waterfowllll!d neotropi- Ohio's top fishing lake, Piedmont
cal birds, and serves as a drainage offers walleyes up to 1&lt;4 pounds,
basin for38 states.
..
muslties up to 42 pounds and Oathead Catfish up to 70 pounds. CrapSt8rgazcrs and hiketS take note. · pies averaging 10 to 15 inches ilnd
Reserve Wednesday, Apri128 or bluegills averaging six to eight ,
Wednesday, May 12 in your caJen. inches are reported to be abundant .
dar as night to see the stars as jiart in Ibis Belmont County lake. Fish-'
of an Ohio University Communi- ing again should be excellent Ibis
vetSity prognun.
.
year. .
In lhc spring night sky, partici- '
Southwest
pants will see the constellations · ROCKY FORK LAKE -Use
and Jearn about spring star clusters minnows fished around brushy
and planetary activity. Practice shoreline areas to lake crappies up
wilh binoculars and telescopes will to 13 inches. Try fishing during lhe
be incorporated into the class.
late evening or early morning hours
To start May on the right foot with live night crawler rigs or
lhe program has scheduled ana- trolled crank baits aroultd the soulh
hike wliich will explore the identi- beach and Kelleys Cove area to
fication and folli:lore of wildflow- take \YBI)eyes. A few mus.Jties over
ers, birds and bqddiD~ trees.
40 inches are taken here each year.
. For more informanon, or to regEAST FORK LAKE - Hybrid
ister contact the OU Office of striped bass up to 12poundscanbe
Continuing Education at 593-1770 , · found. Most stripers are taken ilnd
or toll-free in Ohio at 1-800-336- kept by anglers average about 21
5699.
inches." The.se ftsh are attracted to
shad and can be taken on deep.div· Turkey season starts Monday. ing crank baits. Night fishing in lhe
Good luck and safe hunting.
stream channel, the upper half of
the late and lhe tail water will pro,

The rivers run through it
Ou tdoor enthusiasts t'n Gallt'a
and Meigs counties clearly under.stand the link between the Ohio
River and outdoor recreation. One
way or the other, most people wilh
a love for the outdoors are invariably drawn toward th.e river for
fislling, boating or skiing.
'The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is starting to notice the connection too, it appears.
The service's third region,
which consists of Ohio and seven
olher states, has been renamed' !he
''Great Lakes-Big Rivers Region."
. The region was previousll known
by the tired monicker o "North ·
Central Region."
The descriptive new title incorporates the two predominant features of the midwestern states,
according to regional directa Sam
Marler, will also provide better
identity to lhe region.
"My experience. has been .th~t
many people who live both wtthin
t~is geographic region, !U'd lhos_e
who live elsewhe~, ~~ ~·- .
ate lhese states w11h thetr b1g nvetS '
su7h. as. th~ Ohio, Missouri a~d
MISSISSippi, 110~. of co~. w1th
lheGreatLakes, Marlerwd.
!he re~ consists of &lt;?hi&lt;!, Illi-·
no.IS, Indiana,. Iow_a, M1c~1gan,
~mncsota, Missoun and W1sconsm.
Ohio is pinned between two of
bodies of water associated wilh the
resion; the Ohio River and Lake
Ene. The Ohio River borders three .
of the eight states in the region •
(Ohio, Indiana and Illinois) while
the Great Lakes border all of the
states with the .exceptions of Missouri and Iowa. ·
·. The Great Lakes ecosystem is
the largest system of fresh, surface
water on earth, according to the
service. More than 750 miles of
freshwall\r seas provide water for
consumption, transportation,

FRESH TRADES
ARE HERE!

NOW

l

.-1989 DODGE COLT.2 DR.

8,988
,. · ~

1990 Ford Esc01t..........'115~
Auio., 4 door. air

1989 Chevy Caprice Classic
· .........................'11~
l.oadedll..ow Miesl4 door •

1989Chevv,. ~~ .....'150~

,

1988 Fora"fonv. Van....l2oo--nt
Auto.,,air,l..ow Miesl

VB engine, power steering,

4x4, LDadedl

WAS $2,995

NOW

.........................'131-..otcrH

'

'I

t

1181 Rlllll .PULSAR 2 .DR.

S1p0ed, short bod

Monthly Payments Based Upon
11,000.00 Down Or
t:qual Value In Trade-In
and Balance Financed Thru
Lending Institutions.
&amp; FHs Nor lncludfKi

Red, V-6, new Olds trade.
Automatic transmission.
·Lady .driven.

power brakes, automatic·
· transmission,. AM/FM stereo
cassette, 8 foot bed, rear step
bumper, chrome wheels, large
tires . .
·

1990'Muda Ex. Cab PICkup

T ·---

1990 CHEVROLET BEREnA 2 DR.

NOW

1177 ·can. CUSTOM ·DELUXE C·ID 4 WD

4x4,L.ow .C0

4 cyl. e~gine, power steering,
power . brakes,
5 speed
transmission, · AM/FM stereo
cassette, air conditioning, sunroof,
rear defroster, good tires.

·

.
,,

·1993 OLDS. CUTLASS SUPREME 4 DR.
Agua color, l~aded, power windows, power door
loc,l(s, power seat,·tilt, cruise, cassette, only 3,200
miles. Sold new by us.

··
'

'818
or True• aa4 we

'.

.

GBO .·· •

lOW

- Bring Ia your.I»Nt deal oa a New Car
.
wtll t17 tCii mad or ...t the DeaL \ ·
FOR A .GOOD D~'. ,
'.

SEE BOB ROSS or JACK ROUSH ·.
•Pur Service Department la ~n Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
MuHier Shop Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
New Hours in Salea Mon.-Fri. 8-7; Sat. 8-3

~·

i 61.6 EASRRII AVEIIUI

GALUPOLIS, OH~

·,I

'

'

•

'

COLUMBUS · Richard Sisson,
senior vice chancellor for academic
affairs at lhe University of Califor·
nia, Los Angeles, has been chosen
as the new senior vice president for
academic affairs and provost at The.
· Ohio State t)niversity.

~-;····

446·3672

I :

'

'

brief.•.

coa·

, ..

' .

. ' .,
4

Gallia County native Richard Sisson
r~commendedfor Ohio State position

:-.Weekly ~bservati.ons ·
1

V6 eng., power. steering, power
brakes, auto. transmission, air
cond., AM/FM stereo, tilt and
cruise, 65 passenger cloth captain ·
chairs in front, .good tires, extra .~
clean.
WAS·$9195
.,

-

NEW YORK - From the
White House to the sweatshops of
· Soulheast Asia, practically everyone except the Japanese has been
gratified to see the yen rise in
value, hoping it will brake Japan's
powerful export machine.
But a nllmber of economists and
investment strategists say the
Japanese are right to worry about
lhe pricey yen's long-term consequences, which are mixed at best
and harmful at worsL
Some say it's possible Japan
could relapse into a deep recess1on,
undermining whatever economic
· good may emerge elsewhere in lhe
world if Japanelle cars, computers
and electronic gear become Too •
expensive to buy.
· The yen's surge Ibis past week
depressed lhe value of the dollar to
its lowestleve'J since the end of
World War II. The catalyst was
President Clinton's assertion lhat a ·
higher yen would help ease J3J?80's
trade surplus.
.
"The yen's kind of become a
political football," said Stephen
Waite, an international economist.
at Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. in New
York. "If you've got lhe presidem
of lhe United States making Slate-

Other countries benefit from a
ments .on exchange rate policy,
traders are going to have fun wilh more expensive yen as well, particularly those wllh export-driven
that."
economies,
lite lhe smaU nations
By Friday the dollar was fetch ."
ing about 110 yen on the foreign of Southeast Asia, which depend
exchange market, 18 percent beloW on Japan as an export market and"
its value a year earlier and nearly compete with Japanese exports in
half its value of the mid-1980s. other parts of lhe world. .
But a cheap dollar .and expen·
While some currency traders said
the dollar had stabilized, others dis- sive yen harbor some big risks. If,,
agreed.
Japanese manufacturers weaken as ·
a
result, Japan's economy could'
''The dollar is g~~::f to go lower
in lhe long run," · Eishi Wak· shrink, narrowing Japanese demand
abayashi, head of the New York · for imports instead of expanding iL
Ironically, that could make
foreign exchange trading desk at
Nippon Kangyo Katumaru Intema. . Japan's trade surplus bigger and
tional Inc., a securities firm . He create even greater pressure for a
·
predicted the dollar would fetch 80 more expensive yen.
yen by 1995.
"If the Japanese economy is.'
On the surface, this is good for mired in a slump the yen will ~et
the United States b,ecause it will stronger," Wakabayashi sa1d .
make American exports more " That is what lhe Japanese governaffordable abroad. That will ment is worrying about."
For the United States, in particu- .. '
increase lhe nwtet share and proflar,
a weak dollar raises the threat '
its of U.S. manufacturers, create
jobs and conrribute to lhe domestic of inflation, which has been tame •
economy's growth, which has for years. Higher inflation, in tum, . .
can spook the bond market, the '
shown signs of faltering.
"This is the most favorable powerful arbiter of interest rates in
development for the American lhe economy. Thete was some evi- :
export sector in years," said Gar- dence that was happening Ibis past ·' ·
don Richards, an economist with week, wilh rumors circulating that '
the National Association of Manu- speculative investors were dump- ·• •.
ing U.S. Treasury bonds.
:
facturers in Washington.
·

istrator after the president. Th,e
senior vice president is responsible
for lhc university's instruction, cur,
riculum and faculty, including lhe
selection and promotion of professors.
Among the units reporting to lhe
senior vice president are lhe uni•
. E. Gordon Gee, president of vers!ty,' s 19 c,olleges, librari~s.
Ohio State, will recommend Sis- admiSSIOns._ and student financ1al
son's appointment by lhe universi-' ' •al(J, minority affairs, and regional
ty's Board of Trustees at its next campuses.
meeting, May 7.
Si~n c:amed a. Bachelor of Ar_ts
Sisson's appointment would degree ID mtemauonal relauons m
begin Aug. I. A native of Porter in ,1958 ~d a ~ter &lt;!r Arts degree
Gallia County, Sisson, 56, earn~d 1n pohucal sctence m 1~. bo~
his bachelor's and master's de~ from Oh10 State. He recetved h1s
from Ohio State. He has been m his Ph.D. in tlOlitical science from the
current' position as UCLA's chief University of California, Berkeley,
academic officer since 1991 and a in 1967.
political science professor there
A Vi~tnam -era yeteran, Sisson
since 1968. "Dr. Sisson has an out·, began h1s academiC career as an
standing record of academic leader- . instruc!Of and assistant professor at
ship at one of lhe nation's premier lhe United States Military Acade·
comprehensive research universi· my at West Point. He went to
ties," Gee said. "He has had experi- UC,LA in 1968 as an assistant proence as a department chair, acting fessor and was promoted to associdean and vice chancellor. I am ate professor in 1970 and professor
pleased that he welcomes the in 1975 ..
opportunity to r11turn to Ohio and
Sisson w~ chair of.lhe Departlead lhe academic endeavors of our ment of Pohucal. Sc•ence from
state's foremost university.
1981-87, acting dean of lhe Divi"He also brings to Ohio State sion of Social Sciences from 1988square feet of Jake, Fisherman's Cove also bas a · his experience and reputation as an 89, and vice chancellor for faculty
. . PAY LAKE OPENS- Wendell Brumfield or
bait and tackle sbop and snack bar. The Jake
internationally recognized scholar relations from 1990 until he was
..~alllpolls casts his line at Fisherman's Cove
will
be
open
24
hours
a
day
starting
May
28
aud
'
of
lhe politics of India and South appointed senior vice chancellor
·aear Vlnty. The new pay lake, located 3 1/2
wil~
oiTer
primitive
camping
for
long
term
visits.
Asia,"
Gee said.
for academic affairs in 1991.
miles nortli of Ninton on State Route 325, is reg(Times-Sentinel
photo
by
Kevin
Pinson)
.
"I.
am
very
eager,"
Sisson
said,
Among his university service,
.·•.,Jarly stocked ~itb catfish and rainbow trout
....
··-··
............
....
.
.......
:
...
:~to
..
come
back
to
my
native
state
he
chairs lhe Concilium on Under-·
said owner David Crittendon. Besides 50,090
and
to
my
home
university
to
help
graduate
Education and the Aca'
.
lead
Ohio
State
into
lhe
21st
centu·
demic
Council
he is a ll)ember
'"}rfoney lde4S
Grimes elected CEO ry and to lhe next level of excel- of the Medical and
Governance Board,
among the nation's distin- Executive Budget &lt;;:ommittee,
of Multimedia, Inc. lence
guished universities."
Executive Committee for the Pubf
The recommendation of Sisson lie Arts and the Board of Trustees
'Econil.ialc Coliclltiou . _
year,-bqt lhey cannot fully finance
GREENVILLE, S. C. - Walter ends a one-year-national search for of the. UCLA Foundation.. . .
..&lt;:ontributed by Stan Evans
health-care reform.
- E. Banleu, C!tairman of the Board a new senior vice president for acaWnh the Nauonal Assoc•atton
~ •After apparently ~g illtried
·Inourview,taxeswill~impOsed of Multimedia, In~··. Thur~day demic affairs and provost that of State Universities and Land
this
on health-care providers such · as announced lhat J. William Gnmes began wilh Frederick E. Hutchin- Grant Colleges, Sisson is a member
~ller
year.
hospitals-and posilbly on heallh in- wa! el~cted president and chief son leaving lhc position lit ..
of lhe Executive Committee of the
~:a~:
surance premiums paid by compa- tlxecuuve officer of the corpora- April 1992 to become president of Council on Academic Affairs and a
aurficed. The
nics. That would buically fohn~~ onGrirnes has been the compan 's the University of Maine . Jban member pftlle Standing Committee
Huber, dean of the College of on Access and Diversity.
white HoUsi= IIC·
what Is aileady ~ ad hoc ~uce.. president and chief operating olfi, · Social
and Behavioral Sciences,
Sisson's scholarly interests have
knbwledgecl,thata
.
The cost of llll!nsmed ~ts IS cer. Mr. Bartlett,: who has held the ·was appointed senior vice president ·been in lhe multicultural societies
V ~T is indeed
· a~ reflected m lt_eaJih ms~ce dual offices'or chairman and chief during the search period. .
·
of Soutl! Asia, the cultural basis of
being considered
premuuns-when unmsured Jlllll~nts executive Officer will continue to
The senior vice president for politics in South Asia, and condias ·~ one means to
shbw u~in emagency rooms, the serve as cbairm&amp;ii of lhe board a academ~c affB;ifs and provost is ~e ~~s fo/ developm~t of democ~­
fnipnce health-care reform.
cost of ~!r tptment is shifted to position he has held since 1989. '
universlty's h1ghest ranking admm- IC msutuuons m former coloma!
:"'However, considered does not those with msurance. . .
· Bartlett said when making tlie ·
.RKlan.p[oposed, let alone enacted. . The eoonomy slowed sharply announcement; "Bill Grimes brings
WtwouldbesurprisedifaVATwas duringlhcwinter.Largelybecauseof . s1r0ng leadership siriUs to his new
iiabpted during tl)e ·next couple of the I percent. amp in March retail position at Multimedia. He is reef
sales and downward revisions to ognized for the success he has
~J:'early .every olher industrial January and February data. we now · achieved in the media comm.unica,·
ak
r al added estimate that real ODf grew !II only a lions business, ilnd he has gained a
~\llJIIUY m es use 0 v ue2.S,pcrcen
'
• 1 rate
.. in the first quarter, . unique. perce~tion of lhe ind,
. us.try's
taxes.A5percentVATihatexempted
aJ
hall
Gri
f004,housirig,heallhcar.,andfinan- barely half as fast as the4.7 pen:ent ~:r~~~~ that~ ,
cial services would raise about $60 surge of the fourth quarter.
board of ~·-•
and Wal hav.
vAT has other
The sloWdown was partly caused
uua;tors
ter , e
A
billion a year.
at· by severe winter weather, which dis- d~l~gated to me today are most s•g·
tractions: it falls on consumption but rupted retailina homebuilding and mf1c~nt, and I look. forward to
.· not on savings or investment, and it .
.
9' •
·
'
work1ng closely wuh them m
disrorts economic decision-making mdustrialproducllOII . But.thew~ directing our company's future
IC$1 lhan other taxes. Retailen would was only partly to b~e. Econorruc growlh "
·
fight aVAT, but many othd''llusi- fundamentals, particularly labor
· ·
nesses WoUld prefer it to alternative market conditions, remain sluggim. Business
forms of taxation.
The profile of activity during the
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
But whatever lhe economic lOgic · ftrstlhree monlhs of lhc year leaves
McDonnell
Do'ullas C!XJ!. and the
of a VAT, political reality, arjues the secGni1 quancr to tic1t Off from
Air
Force
"dehberately
misled"
~iLCanadund1apanadopled soft footing. The sharp declines in
defense
auditors
on
lhc
company's
· · . VATs in the past ~w years: in bolh MaR:h retaU sales left lhem .below financial status and the nature of
· - .. coun~ he..PQJNiai:!tY. Cl.f '!'e in· lheir first quaner average, and April Jiayments made to develop lhe C.
c~bentgovemmentfell~tiCally. Mlailsaleanee4toriseby0.8percent 17 cargo plane, the Pentagon's
Alide from that unpleasant mterl\8· just to,gef back to \he ftrSt..quarter aUdit chid said.
tiOnai precedent, heallh-care reform level.
·
iohn F. McDonnell, chairman
will inevitably ~tate a wide range
Still, early-April data are encour- an~ chief executive officer of
of dorneslic interest~. The Admini· aging. F'or nilw, we still believe that MoDonncll DouaJas, qn Thursday
stration does not need to funher the economy can grow al'aroul!d a 3. denied his COIIIpllly conspired with
OPEN FOR BUSINESS - JeiT Steele, owner ud proprietor of ·
complicate its task by Jli'OPqsing an percent rate ~ thC current quarter.
Air Porce officials to obtain ·
Tile
Specialty Sbap 011 152 Tlalrd Ave., has htld bls' store opea for
."bailout" paymentl and Slid it iJ
unpopular tax.
.· ·
Stu E\'UI II a IIDIIIclal
1f not 1 VAT, then wltat'1 '~Sin RltDtwldtMerrUILJKl.latllelr strong eniiU&amp;h finlnclaJJy to fulfill ••1 rrr .._ MarU. Hll pfoducts IDc:luile bulk prden seeds ud
J!...rotluce, beer· uti wbie..aklnlsupplles and ora.nic bealth
wlee" on alcohol and tobacco 1lOUid Oelllpollollb. HeCIIII be •ft!died all or tbe terms of tbe"C-17 JI'O(Iuc- Jllull,
toocll..~-8elltlnel
photo)
•'
.
tlon conttact.
bring in sa much sa $52S bittlon a at 444-1176.
,

Economy here.
Must see. ·
Priced to Sell!

8

2door, 6 cyl., auil., air

4door, IWIO., Clean!

we

'

4 cyl. engine, power. steering,
power. brakes, auto. trans., air
cond., AMIFM stereo cassette and
cruise, power driver seat, pt&gt;wer
windows and power door locks,
rear ·defroster, electric remote
mirrors.
Was 10,495

.

By CO~ WIDTE
and otlier products of the soil and the lheme of ''Hands of Healing".
the quality 81111 quantity of these. . First graders will be presented with
Gallia County
•. •
Soli and Water
.pro&lt;\ucts depend on the conserva- , an activity coloring book and some
· .t Conservation District
tion wise use and proper manage- information from "Sammy Soil
rGALLIPOLJS • Churches, me~t of soil and water resources. Saver" and his frieridCopnie White
S&amp;bools and lhe Bossard Library in
have the need to protect our about the importance of oul" soil,
GGllia County will celebrate Soil water from pollution which water and plants. These activity
,aqd Waii:Z Stewardship Week April depends on .sound conservation books have been donated by Mead
~S-May 2
. practices. Also lhe District is~- Corporation-F~ Papc_r ~viSion.
.. :. As pan of the event lhe Gallia mg forward a prograln of soil and
We would lite to mVJte everyC9unty Com!Bissioners proclaim water conservation in cooperation . on~ with young children to attend
!he week in Gallia County.
wilh nunierous agencies and c;ount- the children's story time at the
· ·--:The proclamlllion focuses on lhe 1~ individuals.
·
BosSard Library on Tuesday, AJ.lril
· 'fatt lhe our well being depends on
During the week area churches 27, at 5 p.m. For more informa~on
the production of ample food, .fiber will be looking at lhe message of contact CoMie Ylhite at 446-:8687.
·

4-Wheel Drive. Automatic transmission,
air conditioning, only 51,000 miles.
Locally owned.

w~s~:a:uu. '12,181
1192 MERCURY ftiPAi IS 4 DR.

1988Ch11Vy Beretta GT ...'112""11am!

1986 Ford Bronco........ .'13D""rorolnM

I

, .1988 DODGE D-1 SO

1981 CBD. ASTRD CS WINDOW VII

19890ldsDelta88........'139'0Mamt .

observed by Gallia County residents

1985 HONDA CRX

V6 engine, power steering, power
brakes, auto. transmission, AMIFM
· stereo cassette, air cond., tilt and
cruise, power. driver seat, power
locks and power windows, rear
delroster, cloth split bench seat.
Extra clean.

with ConDie White of the Gawa County Soil and
Water Comervatlon District olf'JCe are commissijlners Harold Montgomery, Ken Farmer, and
Harold Saunders.

Soil and Water Stewa-r dship Week

SABLE IS 4 DR.

.

Auto .. air,

•

··•
PROCLAIM SOIL, WATER STEWARD·
:'"SHIP WEEK , Tbe GalUa County Commission-.
· 'rs have prodalmed the week of April25·May 2
' as SoU ud Water Stewardship Week. Pictured
.'

Automatic transmission.
COMPARE ANYWHERE!

Pleasant Register and the SundayTimes-Sentinel value the contributions their readers make to the•
sports sections of these papers, and
these contributions will continue to
be published.
.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
d~dline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winter
sports is the last day of lhe NBA
Finals. Likewise, the deadline for submissions of local baseball- and
softball'-related photos and related
articles, from T-ball to the majors,
as well as other spring and summer
sports, is the day of the last game
of the World Series. The deadline
for photos and related articles for
football and other fall sports is the
Saturday before the Super Bowl.

lDr'IJ Be&lt;!, 5 Speed, XLT Pl&lt;g.

By.RICK GLADSTONE
· AP Business Writer

- ~DOOR.

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sentinel, the Point

1989 Ford Ranger ........'139'0Mamt

Yen's rise and·dollar's
fall good or bad?

duce the best results for channel best results for bluegill anglers. ·average only eight inches in Jenglh.
catfiSh anglers.
Fisb around the larger rocks along Bluegills average only six inche~.
Ohio River
the east shoreline to take small- This 1,800-acre Jake, however, ts
Nearly all the fishing effort has · mQuth and largemouth bass up to one of norlheast Ohio's best bass
been confined to bank rishing five pounds.
lakes wilh fiSh averaging 12 to 23
along the Ohio River. A good spot
CHARLES MILL RESERVOm inches. Bass ftshing prospecl$ this
to fish is immediately below .the _ F'ISbinjl efbt should be directed year are rated as excellent.
Mcldahll..ocks and Dam at Neville in area with sunken Cbristmas trees
in Clermont County. These tail and olher shoreline cover to take
FINDLAY LAKE- Bluegills
walerS JX'Ovide exceUent fiShing for black. and white crapp1'es up to 13 ate abundant and can be taken on
sauger, wh'ue bass, carp, ca tfi1sh inches. use crank baits, spinners or small worms or larval baits fished
and msliwater drum.
rubber worms when bass fishing.
beneath a bobber. Use -minnows
The Little and Great Miami ·
Northeast
fished around areas with underwaRiver tributaries provide iood
CLENDENING RESERVOIR ter slruCture to take crappies. A 12 •
white bass fishing opportun1tie~. _ Try using jigs and twisters or to 15 inch protected slot length
Other tail water areas along the small bladed lures fished at night to limit is in effect at this 93 -acre
ri_ver will also oO:er good opponu- take saugeyes averaging IS to 18 Lorain County Jake for largemouth
mtles to take white bass and cat- inches. Crappies are numerous, but bass. .
fish:
Celitral
HARGUS CREEK LAKE Bluegills, channel catfish, largemoulh bass and muskies dominate
the fish population in Ibis Pickaway County late near Circleville.
Use small worms and larval baits to
take bluegills. Largemouth bass .
averaging 12 to 15 inches are wide·
Jy scattered, but ay the upper end
of the lake for best results.
KNOX LAKE- Fish shoreline
areas with woody cover or vegeta'
tion to locate the more productive
areas for largemouth bass. Try
using small spinners, minnows or
Just traded. 5 speed; ali',
night crawletS for lhese flSh .which
are protected by lhe 18-inch minionly 74,000 actual miles.
mum length limit. Channel catfiSJi
TWo-tone paint.
up to 10 pounds can be taken on
trilditional baits.
Nortbwe$t
BRESLER RESERVOIRFish along the wave-washed shoreJines in April and May wilh minnows or j1gs tipped with twister
tails to take walleyes. Fishing ·
around the sunken islands and
pump structures with red worms
and larval baits will produce the

1987 CHEVROLET SPEORUM

Sports '.leadlines posted

•

I

.,

·

RICHARD SISSON
areas. Among his recent books are
Politics and Culture in India, published in 1988, and War and Succession: PalCistan, India, and the
Creation of Bangladesh, published
in 1990. He wrote the latter with
Leo E. Rose .
. He is married to Willa Sisson,
director of academic and staff personnel in UCLA's College of Letters and Science, the
largest academic unit in lhe University of California system. They
have three grown sons.
President Gee thanked the 19member search committee, chaired
by Professor Pal!l Allen Beck, fOr
its diligence in reviewing and interviewing the candidates for senior'
vice president and bringing forward
excellent candidates.
Gee also expressed his apprecia- • ·
tion for lhe ongoing work of Senior
Vice President Huber. In naming
her to the position last year, Gee
charged her wilh restructuring the
Office of Academic Affairs. Huber
has reassi.gned and restructured
several units within Academic
Affairs to srrearnline and improve
lhe effectiveness of her office.
"Dt. Huber has provided strong
leadership to prepare lhe Office of ;
Academic Affairs for a new senior·
vice president who will maintain
and enhanc·e Ohio State's stature
by. focus\ng our attention and · ·•
resources on a clear set'of academic priorities," Gee said.

Business briefs..•
NEW YORK (AP) - Merrill
Lynch &amp; Co. reached ago:ement '
with lhe Securities and Exchange
Commission to refund at least $10 ·
million to investorS' who overpaid
for so-called unit investment trusts
due to a pricing error. · ·
For a 15-year pert(iQending in
198 7, Merrill underpaid people
who sold Merrill's urut invesanent
trusts on lhe secondary market to
other investors, Richard Walter,.
the SEC's regional administtatDI' in ,
New York, said Thursday. · · ··:

•

MAYNARD, Mass. (AP) - ~~
Troubled Digital EQuipment Corp.- ~
launched a major ~ng cam-'• ,
paign a~d ~ew corpors!e logo tc!'. :
,enhance 1ts tmage.
.• ,
· The ·campaign, running in 23: :
countries, is among lhc com~tcr.;:
company's "largest, Henry Heisler,
C&lt;Xporlte lclvertising l1llillp, said,:
. Thursday. .
. .
:.

�. ..

..

..
OH-Polnt P-leasant, wv

11mes Sentinel

Inton
•

ponders
bombing
of Serbs
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON - President ·
Clinton is giving ''serious consideration" to limited bombing of
Serb anillery sites and lifting an
embargo against weapons shipmeniS to Bosnian Muslims as.ways
to stop "elhnic cleansing" in lite
B.......5

~·
• a news conference FriHe told
day he was DOUbled by the risk of
widening the war and by other
"minuses" that could result. He
said the United States and its allies
musl have limited obiectives a.nd
'
not be drawn into a partisan role in
the conflicL .
·
"This is clearly. the most diffi.
cult foreign ·policy problem we face
and that all of our allies face,"
Clinton said. "And if it were easy,
I suppose it would have been
solved before."
As he took questions in the
chandeliered Easl Room of the
White House, CliniOD faced mount· ing pressure from wilitin the gov·
emment and from Congress for a
morer.ssive strategy to contain
th e S
. ,
The State Departlllent disclosed
that a dozen foreign service officers. including several who keep
daily watch on the situation in
Bosnia, had met Monday wilit Secretary pf State Warren M. Christopher to urge military action.
They presented him ·with a letter

that argued the current mixture of
diplomacy and economic sanctions
had not worked.
·
A bipartisan group of 46 House
members urged Clinton to take
. stronger action to help Bosnia
while Senate Republican leader
Robelt Dole of Kansas said "if we
can find isolated military targets
we ought to go at them from lite
air.

PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Mtrch 20) Try to keep
your priorities in order today. If tt&gt;ere is 1
something important that you must anend,
do it first and save ltle play tor tater.
ARIES (March 2t-Aprll t9) Valuable information can be gleaned today ltlrough stlm·

ASTR.O·GRAPB

.

1..

1993 -

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

..

.

Public Sale .
&amp; Auction
Rick Paaroon Auction Compony,

.•

........

April 25, 1993
Opponunities could develop for you in the
year ahead ltla~ might make it possible for
~ou to generate income tram a second
source. This .Is something you've lhbught
about previously, but.never acted on.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) This is a good
day to arrange tor a get-together with a
person who has been indebted to you for a
long time. c;;onditions have changed, and
you could be In for a pleasant surprise.
Taurus , treat yourself to a birthday gilt.
Send for Taurus· Astro-Graph predictions
torthe year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus a
long, se~· addressed, stamped envelope to
Astro·Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
4465 , New York, NY 10163. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
GEMINI (M1y 21-June 20) Th1s could be a
busy .and rewarding day for you, and you .
m1ght have to handle several situations
simullaneousty. Fortunately, this is something,you're more capable of do1ng than
any other sign.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) A tri~nd of
yours who is in need ol assistance of a
non·material nature is anxious to talk with
you. but too proud to broach the maner. 11
will.be up to you to initiate the discussion.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be quite
fonunate today in your intangible involvements. The good will you can accumulate
might mean more than money.
VIRGO (Aug. 2:1·Sapt. 22) Strive to be
tlex•ble today where an imponant objective
is concerned Circumstances might neces· ,
sitale changmg tactics at a moment's
notice.
. LIBRA (5ept. 23-0ct. 23) Your best ideas
m1ght c.ome·to you today by reviewing a sit·
uation you handled successfully: a problem
you're lacing now is quite similar. Trade on
your e•periences.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Two person·
ally rewarding situations might develop
today from separate involvements with oth·
ers. You should be able to derive benelits
from both.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) You
shouldn't have any trouble finding several
solutions to critical issues that you'll have
to deal today. The problem might be decid·
ing which one to use.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) It's imperat•ve that you use your free time produc·
11vety today. 'If you don't do something you
deem to be worthy, you m•ght feel guilty
about it later.

10163. Be sure to state your zodiac sign.

GEMINI (May ~1-June 20) There is a
chance you might be a trifle e&gt;&lt;travagant

luc:llon
· ·V(rglnlo,
Uc....
,Ohlo 1.WMI
77W715.

Words

Days
1
3

15

6
10
Monthly

15
15
15·
15

Over 15 Words
$ .20
$4.00
$ .30
$6.00
$ .42
$ 9.00
$ .60
$13.00
$1.30/day $.05/day

57- M111iull.,or-u·
58- Fruit.o A V.....loo
5!1- For S.lo or Trodo

u-oo

''

====-::::--'-----1

with your resources today. This is a~pt·

32- Mobilo
lor Sale
~ Fara~ f•r Sale
~ 8 ,..;-a..ild....,
n- Lo111 f! Ac.....,
36- Reol E.talo Woaood

41- H~- for

r.,...

enjoy yourself today. but don't i'reat serK&gt;us

64- Ha~ A CraiB
65-- SOod 1: Ferlllilor

a..,

Boa111 1: Mo14n lot Solo

Au14 P.rt.ol: A..-.n..
Aulo llapoir .
Co•piortEqul,...a

u.- r.inaiolood a -

-s.....,r.. a•••

your hopes on an Unrealistic premise. Use
your imagination to your advantage; don't
cause it to be an instrument of disappoint·

a...

11- Help 11'aoood
12- Sihla~DI Waldad

4- .Giveaway .
5-HoppyAdo
6- Loot and Found,
1"- Loot and Found
8- Public Solo &amp;

VIRGO (Aug. 23-5ept. 22) Be e•pectant
and think positively today, but don't build•

47- ll'utadto a••
411(or

-

55- Bullcli111 SuppU•

7.PJIL

DotYWII.

4!1840.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Even lhcugh
you m1ght not want to hun another's feel·
ingsi sofnetimes it's more constructive to

be.as fonhright as possible instead of
painting an unreal , rosy Picture.

SAG ITTARtUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
Commercial dealings could be a trifle more
complicated today than they appear on the
surface. If you are prudent and cautious ,
you should do OK. If you're not, that's
another story.

Announcements

3

Ann~ncements

LOst &amp; Found

6

GUVSI Wo To .._. From
:3 Announcements
Youltl WE'RE UVE AND WAIT•
INOf loi00-11104311 Ell. 3557.
Dur-hlr, For Quolllod 11111- $3.1111
llln. Mutl 'l e 18 Yrt.
nou. No MHimont.
Only UnlatarPoi
Co. ~-0111.
For
You S.tl.
Fill
Soiling ..._.. Mlflclal
Flo""rt To YCI\W - l l n l r 01
Morohondlee.
Prtceo
Rongo From -"' Ta $21.H. 4
Giveaway
eompotHivo With ~ -".:--:~.;.;.:~:.:!=-=~ Lao!: S Beoglel. 1 IIIIo, Z
st-.
H!th Add
Quality$100.00
" - "'"·
~- ·-"Ill
·~ rot- You Cl1ii
To ='2 s ""' u •~
•- F - . , In Bidwell $2,000.00 To Your 1 - Aunt, .,_r Dooi Na4 F-, 011.. AIM·, -...1 114-31811412.
6 3814110
•
O..ring - · • Day 8 - .
Wrflo Tocloy For Dolollo To Dapl. 3 kltt11111 to glv-. • - l
~_; P.O. a- lOS, Oolrlltle, IN block l - .. 30W7147711.

-1 -1::X

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If you stan
seeking easy outs today, they might prove 41301-otOS.
to be more detrimental than lacing a testy Ftsho-no CoYII Flohlna Loki
development. Don't duck challenges.
St0.fdng Rot- Trout · Wo
Havo lMi hM And Tocfdo UmM
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Usually
Of Sla On Trout I Polo UmM
you're an indiVidual who a·lways likes to
Oaen AI: t A.ll. To 7 P.ll.
plan a lew steps ahead. Today, however,
Cloood On Thundoyo. 3 112
From VInton Olilo On 325
you might impe~l your productivity because Mil•
North, lllakl A Kid Flohlngll
you lack a blueprint.
614·3118-1178.
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) Your reason- Mynlo Boach AIM: llf!tol On
ing in a joint ventur~ might be ~shade
9-h. 1 • 2 Am, E", f40I US
Sounder than your·counterpart today.
Nightly. ws IR2I w~ ::•
Inc. Mom. Wk. Cal 80SListen to his or her views, but don't discount your oWn judgment.
MYRTLE lEACH RAIIADA:
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) For reasons
Ocoan Franll Luaury Cando 110
beyond their control, people you depend
Pool ...Stoepa 4 To I. Sill W•k,
upon today could let you down. II might be Call uw-, eo:HIII-3157. •
a bit tough, but you can handle things

*

~::O.Iltd -

Pu,., I14-

Boy'o Nlkl bellball 1111111, ofu

I, IIIII .... 114-'JU.2121.

_

·GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
__::...:..:.:,;,;;:,;,:,.

Employment Services

..
·· ::.~

__

~

··"',.•·

~

I
family of Gretta
Carnahan would like
to expnaaa our aincena
thanka to family and
friend• for their their
prayera, beautiful
flowera, . card a, and
glfte of food, end for
their vleite to the
hoapltal and funanal
home. ·
We would like to
thank Rev . . Kenny
Baker for hie vlelte
and eoneollng worde,
tht doclore, nureee,
and ataff at Veteran•
Memorial Hoepltal ,
th·•
Syracuea
Emergency equad,
and Ewing funeral
home for teking care
of
all
the
arrangement• .
A apei:lel thaflka to all
who particlpeted In
the E81tern St11r
Chapter t 34 eervice
on Sunday evening.
To Pall beerert, Tom
Wolfe, Tom Beegle,
Ken!leth Thalu,
Marehall Roueh,
Stephen Slpeon, and
Ed Wagner. We.thank
yo~. (!lay God bleee
one aild all.
Mildred Carnahan,
Ruth
Slmpeon,
Sieph~n 1 and Mary
Slmpaon, John Joe
Shaw.

,..

... ~ •. f

.',

•
r'

r ~•

. ~ "" . . .

.,

.. ..

-~

\

....-..

. .... fl

#

....

-!&lt;

.
•,

;~ · -~

.,
',._...-.

...
.. .,""

......-~
~
,.. ·'..'

·- J'
.,,.

..

-~

~·~
' '

How to survive
l,mscratched ·

Judge drops charges

-

Fill out this coupon and bring it to our store's Catolog :
1
Depor1ment, and -Ne'llgive you a free Sale Catolag to gel .
yoU storied. Place on order from that Sale Calalog, and
-·11 add you to our Fall Seor.on Moiling list lor Calalogs.
....

'

_...

'PcLIP.
11!1 • - •

• .1

.......::.~j_
....

.

..

: ·. YESI I'd like to have : ''~;#
: a copy·of, your ..Jatest : -:..•-,J
••
••• Sale ~atalog I·
• '•'"l
"••• Name•--------~~----------~-~·• ... .
Add-•/
•• City/~·-----'-----_,-Zip,.
•
•
•• .
••••••
~

·~;;.;!

. In Memory of
MARK ALAN BEEGLE
Died Aprl1.26, 111112
" For God 10 loved
world, that he
geva hll . only
bago~naon."
,Ev. . though a year
h8a paaeed you are
alweya will be
In our mind and

'·

I

I

~-

~ -

.

~ -:.K•

SlrMt

Apt.

•

~

•

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

\UN

'

·~· '

'. .··j

tb,.., ,.

'...' .

heart&amp; avery day. .

· We love you. .
Mom·endDad,
Nlc~l, Melenfe.Bru~

. JeaaleaandWeyne,
·
Clau4a

•

•
&gt;.

' I

'

or 114-843-Rit.

Will Do ' Smlll Lawns, For $10,

EOE IIIFIHN

Guitar lenont, first le..on tree,
for moi't Information 304-675·
11180.

Now Tllfdng Apptlc:allono At:
Domlnoo PI~1 __ GaNipotlo •
.Point PI-nt, wv.
PARK RANGERS
O.mo
Wardono, Socurfly
llllntonanco~ Etc. No Exp.
Necanary. •ot Info Catt 219;
7811-te4t 'ElL 8710 t A. II. To g
P.ll. 7 Doyo.

Partial List:
New carpet remnants, amber glass
table lamps, cookWare, Iron skillets,
kitchen Items, milk bottles, pitcher
and bowl sets, fans, kerosene heaters,
Coleman thermos, glassware, dolls,
wood easel, weed sprayer, weed eater;
cyclone seeder, lawn mowers, new
tools, and many items too numerous
to mention.
Terms: Cash/ Approved Check
Auctioneer: Finis {Ike) l.~ac
614-388-9370/388-8880

Licensed and Bonded In Ohio,
Indiana, WVa. 1.«)30
Not Responsible For Accidents Or
Lost Property

T~e

.

.... .._

Hom• Nu,..ln·g

Special Auction·
l.saac's Auction '.House
Monday April. ~6, 7p.m.

~r ond Bobeot work, by thll
hour, lowoll roll, 814-843-5123

- d Avonuo, Oolllpotlo.

HarrisotWIIIt Elam. PTO
wlshlsto thank the
Merchants of
Mlddltpat1 &amp; POfiiii'OY
IIICI olhlrs who donlted

. -

..

Please Prinl:

Wanlecl To Do: In

Colno, Gold R~ Sll- CoiiW,
Gold Colno. II.T.&amp;. Coin Shap,

2. ·-old,-.. -··2. ___,;.,;,. ; . . . .:;. .___ =

-

Tri-Stllo Troo Sorvleo. Toppln9•· W1ntlng to baby8h In_ my hom•,
Trimming~., FMCiinCI, Aamov. •. Chnter,
any
age, · M1ry
Stump H•moYII, Free Ea- Oorr!paoy, 614-985-4282 oftor
tlmatoo. 614-387-0553. .
7pm. .

USA TRICk

Wontlll ·To Buy: J101k Autoa
With Or Without ........ CoU
Larfio Lively. 114-318-11303.
lop, Prtceo Paid: All Old U.S.

,,...,....,
,.,...,......,..'.,.v_lc_ln.,..lt.;,y,.,.,.__, •
Plavlul Y - t.onahlltr
Whlto ·BI1H1k Fo. .to, r-..
810 Solllh Soc:ondil Mlddi!Port,' 7 ~
7
Yard Sale
Gray Wllllo Molo To Good Homi
April .,....,.... •ay ... c;toal. ,•
Only! 814 441 0317. '
---------·~ :
Free Puii!IIH; 112 CoeUr ·• 112 - - - - - - - - - ~5"~-.=
ry, _,. applllm·s."' ..;
lleagla,-•14-44t.Q417.
Gallipolis
t ngo, loll......
-~
Gormon Shephonl - · 12
&amp; VIcinity
All Yonl Solei 1e Paid In
DllolfiW: 1 - ...
- Y ) ' h i _ C . . _ AUUWISII . . . .: Crown City dar ...._ thll Ill loi fo run, '
NMdl A..,U, 11~ uta•
Cllaol• Walnut Streeto Friday 8uildly odlton, 1:~ ,_, .
IIIMion ·IO:IIOa.m.
30th, Soturdly IM, ta.s, At lllondoJ
Old ' hOUM Ill... ...... hill
-y.
lfll
Uphololry
Shop.
property.-··

I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• •

.~. a. I~====~==========~==============~
18 Wanted to Do
111 wanted to Do

-

For Mora lnformallon ·
1-·237-1842

..

.

w~ r c,-wr

o tm bV MEA. tnc.

8:ooam-

280-lllti,Ext.~.

t-e4 ExH 34,
Hurricane, ~nl VJ".'Jinla

r_. ~

Pomeroy,
Middleport

~ . ,,
4--'l~/l."1

Exten.. va
Lakin

1 Card of Thanks

Lao!: 7.aow cat cotllr,
ln'o pat, _ , Wohllntoi Hlah,
:..EI!t..J! - 114-1112-:Min,

·-

• . wv

rnldMII

I

Colo:

.

worker

Loam To Drho Howl
C.re, In Your Home, Raferencea, Tr~mlng For SS. 814-44J-1851.
(Training Avallalrle)
Anor 4 P.ll.
Free ofght-k Job proparadon 614-448-7782
•ocl
To
Do·. UJhl HouH Will till g1rd1n1, reaeonable
USA TRUCK to Looking Fot program obout nonlradHional W. '"
,.
rltll, 304-875~130. Gil narM
Entry t..vot Dot"" For Our Ex· omp-1, (ONOW), 1-800- ~l••nlna, Call Rlt• 1yne &amp;'14-- on llt1.
Pindlng 1'1101. ..
,;•::3::,:1-e508=::.··- - - , - - - - ~810. •
OUr FREE SEMINAR To 18 W8nted tO Do
8
PubliC Sale.
~ptoto
An Tho
Application
-rn About
TruckingAnd
In- 1IF~~~;;~~~~
!'&gt; • 0 Landocopo Caro
,
&amp;Auction
du81ry And Our TraTnlng Pruning, LlndiCiipe Work.
Pragramo.
Kapp Call 114-387-7'928 For
'Tuoodoy -Aprl127, 111113
tlmotoo.
' 10 A.M., 2 P.M., • e P.M.
I'eo=---m-m.:.ono--=Eioc,..,.tr.,...lca""t'""--:-ho-m-.-=-,
tn~ller t'-ctrlc.l aervlct, 114·742·
Smtloy'o Motot
3034.

ALL Yinl le~ Mull le Plklln •:
Adwnce. DEADUNE: 2:00. p.m. .
thll dly be- !Mod 1o1 to Nn." "
Sundly !'dillon • 2:00 p.~&lt;:".
Frfclly. Monday odltlan • 2:00
p.m. 8aturdly.
·
·•••
-_ _.. I Da;,...,_
10 'iiOOi; ......
~- To X·Lioge, Tor.. "'
Wrllllho,
.- ~
Clooonor Delli,
Lam,., !11,

"'""*'·

.

"It's not enough that nw hairline's receding. The
beach under my &lt;house has to start. eroding tool" '·

rewarding d3y for you, provided you don't
·think is a shoo-in could prove tar more ditt~
cult than yoU had anticipated .

Avallobl&lt;r.
To: DRIVERS
Joickoon, OH

-·

Sand 11-mo
P.O. lo1 1~,

E•untlatt

take things lor granted. Something ·you

l.ong-1.,.
Quaillfled

For

Wanted to Buy
9 Wanted to Buy
11 Help Wanted
ComiiiOto Houoohold Or EotatMl Any Typo or Furnllon, Wanlod to buy: . .d moblloi
FLORIDA WANTS YOU
Applloncao, Aritlquo'a, Etc. Also ...... .,4 t41 0171
Orlinda ITomJIIl 1t1o1ng Eoc:olo
Apprallol Avalloblel 114-245lint PlY And llor)ofHo, ~II 407lltla.

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

Eloclrieoll: Reloi~en•lio~
Cenerol Hauliofl
MobUe Ho•• Repair
87- Upholote&lt;y

For

9

"K

,..

~I OJ lltlllt

por
Pluabinsi:U..Iilltl

i___ _ _ _,.....L_ _ _ _~-----+-_;_--:-----

"The least we can do is lift lite -AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Have fun
arms' embargo," Dole said in a · and enjoy yourself today . Try to, get
televised response to Clinton •s mvolved 1n acllv111es that are both mental
news conference. "We should .. and physical, but don't take them or your·
work with NATO forces before we self too seriously.
start any unilateral air slrik.es. I
support air strikes."
The House members said in a
unaided.
letter to Clinton that "the United
BRIDGE
StaleS cannot acquiesce in genocide
in Bosnia." They called for a
"U.S.-led victory strategy" that
included lifting the.arms embargo
PHILLIP
against Bosnia and use of NATO
ALDER
airpower.
·
Among lite signers were Steny
Hoyer, D-Md., David E. Bonibr, 0Mich., two deputies to the ~ouse
majority leader. Five Republicans
also signed.
NORTH
Additionally, The New York
+AJ962
Times reported lhat Madeleine
Albright, the U.S. ambassador to
I KQ8
.... 7 64
the United Nations, had recommended launching aerial assaults
WEST
EAST
on Serb artillery. "I have heard
+K 7
+a
from her and some others," Clin- · •s3
•98764
11097U32
. ton said. He declined to reveal 14
+KQJt098S2
+-- ·
what she had suggested.
Clinton said, "The principle of
SOUTH ·
ethnic cleansir.g is something we
+QI0843
• AQJ102
ought to S1lllld up against."
I AJ
He added, "That does not mean
+3
litat lhe United States or the United
Vulnerable: North-South
Nations can enter a war in effect to
Dealer: South ·
redraw the lines, geographical lines
of republics within what was
Sootb
West Norlb Eaol
Yugoslavia, or that that would ultiPass
t+
s+ 6+
mately be successful."
.
. Pass
All pass
Our Catalog Is still' GROWlNG,
6+
6t
He acknowledged U.S. and
Open\ng lead: +K
European acti(lns had not ml!"aged
and like our stores, aiW'ays CHANGING
to st:op the bloodshed. He sa1d new
U.N. economic penalties that will
to give you the clothes, home fashions,
be imposed against Serbian-dominated areas beginning Monday rep-sporting goods and electronics your
resented "some progress."
In fielding questions on the 14Ed Gardner said that in opera a guy
family wants at the value prices you expect...
month war •lhat has left an estimatgets
stabbed
in
the
back
and
instead
of
ed 134,000 people dead"or home- bleeding,,he sings. By the same line of
all In one BIG ltook~.
less, Clinton again l')lled out '!nilat- thought. in bridge a declarer is
·eral U.S. acuon or commnung stabbed in the back but instead of goAmerican ground ttoops to ihe war. ing down, he finds a riposte and makes
And, We're S'I'AYING. · So, if
the contract anyway.
In today's deal, West leads t)u! clu.b
you're among the millions of Americans
.
.
king against six spades. Things look
good to South, but when he puts up
who prefer Catalog shopping, we invite
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) dummt's club ace,.East ruffs it. Back
_ A judge has dropped murder, · comes the heart mne. Suddenly there ·
you to try JCP.enney Catalog.
k'dnanning and conspiracy charges ts a guess to make 10 the trump su1t.
Wtthout peekmg at the d1agram,
1 . rr·
agamsl a fonner 00d¥guar:d for the should you finesse, assuming East got
At JCP.enneyyou a~ COMe .flrst •••
founder o! the Btlhonatre Bo_ys a ruff with a singleton spade, or should
Club, ~n mve.stment and soc tal you play for the drop?
.
toll free ordering ·anytime, fast de.livery choices
group bed to crone.
North, under pressure from West's
James Piwnan. 37, was accused jump to five clubs, felt that five
to fitYbUR busy lifestyle ... and, you con
'
with group founder Joe Hunt in the spades wouldil'l do justice to his hand.
t9841cidnap and murder of Heday- As he bad to bid at least six spades, he
at Eslaminia. Charges against Hunt made a .six-£lub cue-bid. Now, fortu.choose to pay by charge or cash.
.
in' the slayin$ were dropped in Jan- nately, the brakes were put on below
after a JUfY could not reach a the seven-level.
Why not •ttirt shoppln8 Catalo8
~Ct
How should you play the trumps•
Two other club members, one of You shouldn't! You should t~y .to get a
today? ~uy a copy of o.ur BIG, Spring
·ctim's son have been .count of the West hand. Thts mvolves
Ihem. th e .Y'
.. •
no nsk, because tf at a~y .pomt West .
convicted m lite killing.
.
ruffs, you overruff in lh~ dummy and
&amp; Summer Catalog for just $5 and
San Mateo County S_up~nor draw the final trump.
Coun Judge Dale Hahn d1sm1ssed
Put the heart ace on East's return
we' II give you a $1 0 certificate to use
1he charges against Pillman on . and lead out your other three top
· Tliurs!IIIY at the request of Deputy hearts. While West is discarding,
on your first order.
Attorney General John Vance . throw away dummy's three diamonds.
Vance would not say if lite charges
Now play out the A-J of diamonds.
· were dropped in exchange for ·.. At this point, you will have a complete
It's easy, it's convenient, its ...
l&gt;iuman's testimony in any future coun\of the West hand. You w1U know
cases:
.
that he bega_n with two hearts, one diaHunt is serving a life sentence . m~~ and e1ght clubs. By .a process of
for the murder of Ron Levin of eltmtnatl.on, th1s leaves h1m wtth two
appar' spades. Take. a conftdenl trump f•·
BeverIY .Hills · Levin. • who
.
nesse and clatm.
~ntly swmdled Hunt, disappeared
linden ,,. in&gt;:tM~ ,. ...., .cord-pJ•y q tn '1984 and h1s b!)dy was never u... ~~&gt;PflilllpAldor, /nCJirtoflllllnonpopor.
· found.
·· ·
Tiley con ,. , , . _ Oft/y
cohlmn.

I

Jiorlunlly

•

..

ESTATE AUOION
SATURDAY, MAY I, 1993
10:00 A.M.
GALLIPOUS
Honest, willing to-rt hard
and tlesinl8lfllings?·We can
pro-iicle llabiizad income
admce lor qualMIId . . .
represe!Uiive.llo you
qualify'l First year inoome

PAINTING

Interior &amp; tJCterlor, minor
IWPIIra, frM tetimatlt, loWftt

pricoo, hlghllat quolfty,

5510,

.

polen(ial, $25,0()0.$4(),000.

In Memory of
Madge G. Fife
Feb. 2, 1916-April
28,1991
God looked around
Hie garden
And - an emp!y

..,_.

then looked down
upon the ..rth
And IBW your tired,
tired face.
put Hleenna
eroundyou,
He lifted you to
reat.
garden muat be
beautiful,
He only tekae the beeL
He knew that you
were eufl,ring;
He knew you were In e
lot ol pein;
He kn.., that you
wouldn-r
wen on thle lirth
again.
IBW the road waa
getltlng rough,
wtl!l hard to
climb.
He cloaad your weary
eyellda. .
·And wltlapered "PtltiCe
lttlilne. ".
,
h broke our h..rta to
loiByou,
But you dldn1go
alone; For part of ua
went with you ,
The dey God took you
home.
le tlmee we all
need to telk to you,
To get your advice.
Or ~·your arme
ero)lnd ua,
To tell ue It will be
elrlght•
llilltaed w. comfort
"!!hatlW,
with thtt greet
memorllla we heve 111
you.

Send Resume to: Marketing
Director, P.O. Box 505 ~
GrtWe
OH. 431233-0505

3 Announc:ements

304-773-

Five legged Mission oak table, drop leaf
table, . arts and craft baby crib 4 children&amp;
spindle chairs, large cedar chest with
band and studs, old telephone switch board
cabinet, table radios, ass'l chairs, mirrors,
linen feed sacks, collection ol pitchers, iron
kettle and skillets , Spring Hill and GW
Pomery milk bottles, . metal tins, 10 gal
Donahue crock (damaged) apple butter •·
slirer, stoneware, Watt Ware, Van Briggle,
brass items, Japan, Germany, green
depression, advertixing items (newspapers,
post cards, etc.)dolls (Indian, small bisque In
wood cradle), stuffed bears. metal toys,
wagons; Space Cadet jack knife, cement lantern statue, duck decoy, large carpenter
dovetail box, other wooden boxes, pulleys,
small ox yoke, 36" Mail Pouch thermometer,
and many other items to \)npack.
Auctioneer: Finis (Ike) Isaac, 614·3889370/388-8880 •
Terms: Cash/Approved check Licensed and
bonded in Ohio, Indiana, WVa. 1030 .
Not Responsible For Accidents Or Lost
"
Property

co"""

~=~:: =~~:..
~~ .
An l!acollant Op-

nlghl lrovol.

o"

. ,.u

13-- IaauraDCe
14- Buaiaeu TraiDiDI '
II&gt;'- Sehoobl: l .. ~n~ctioo
52- Sponiof Coodo
!6- Radio, TV &amp; CB Ropoir . . 53- Aatiq17- Mioeelfo_,,..
54- M;oe. Meret.ooclioe
IS- Wonood To Do

Auclioa
ll- Wanted 14 Buy

lllrklll. Spoolal ofloolll.
Ed Frulor Nco: 130.
llloan Coufty Auction '"'
nouncoo llarothon Salol Saturday. Hugo lood of -chandl'"
of Ill kfndo at thll -~ OYOr
prlooo. Aloo up to PO
'mou'" purch11H to 101n11
lucky win.... Drawing 11 oftd of
oalo. Located at ond of Jortcho
Rood on AI. 2. Solo atorto at

.......

Aulooforllalo
TruoulorSolo
Vo• 1: 4 'I'D'o
Molorcrcle.

- A.........,,,.. a....

matters too lightheartedly, especially those ·
penaining to your career and household.
LEO (J4Iy 23-Aug. 22) Be carelul with

111ent.
LIBRA (So!Pt. 23-0ct. 23) This can be a

a..,,

U- Mol.ilo Boa~ lor
43for !\eat w

.

Thll Chlll'o O.tloy And Clipper
l.oWtw (Acroee From Holid1y
Inn, botllpotts) loi Hiring
For WattrM. ., Bar11nd1r1 &amp;
llnlr Cooke, A•or 3:00 P,M, Mon
4al, No Phone Calla.
'
TRUCK DRIVERS
Llmijod

On S::"IM on Fridaye too. AM

"'"'"'

Waatlld lOs~,
Li••tock

1&gt;1\111'

GR usm:rs - FAn'!

whom you discuss confidential matters
today. II you let your guard down, you
might tell too much to the wrong person -·
and do yoursel.l a disservice.

Rio Orondo, Ohio 114-245-51!12.
Aucllont OVIry Fri l Sat, 7:00,
Pll, Itt. Alo AUction Cantor, Rt.
Z N·l Rt. 33, "on top oflhll hill"•
· Dlftarwol -fan In nightly.

··...._,

I \I ; I 1 'I I' I' I I I '
,\ I I \ I ' I I 'I I,

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
•

able, provided you aren't overly generous
with things belonging to another.
CANCER (June 2'1-July 22) Have tun and

Waduneyer•a Auction SII'VIce,

Pot.o lor Solo

Rate

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Isaac's
House
Antiques and Collectibles
May 1st, 7 P.M.

lUll lfml auctlonMr; complllo

ula,ting discussions with smart friends .

Spend time with people you think are
bright, and ask a lot of questions.
Apri126, 1993
TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) Guard against i
inclinatiOns today to do things halfway. This
. could deprive you of larger rewards apd ·
yield only small ones. Major changes are ·
ahead tor Taurus in the coming year.'Send
tor Taurus' Astra-Graph ptedictions today.
Mail $1.25 plus a long, seli·addressed,
stamped envelope to Astr&lt;rGraph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 4465 , New Vorl&lt;, NY

8

Wanted

8

•

Sunday

Locatl!d t7 milea north oU~onton and 22 miles
aouth ol Galllpolle in Arabia, Ohio lit the Emqry
Arbaugh r'aldence. To aettle the estate of
Kathryn Arll"'ugh, (Case No. 93AMo14202)thelolrowing will be aald:
Oak stand, cherry chest. eouch &amp; chair, woo~n rock·
er, 2 televisions, electric lift chair, fuel oil stove, po~­
able washer, Coldspot chest deep freeze, table
chairs, oak k~chen cupboard, sideboard, 2 coffee
grinders, butter mold, antique irons; kerosene lamps,
4 electric fans, gas range, wooden trow bin, blue wil·
low ware (seiVice for 6), antique dr,.sser,· electric ice
· cream freezer, wheelchair, old clock; Coleman stove
and lantern, 22 quart canner, 2 von beds, wash
stand, Tupperware, sewing machine·; one lot stone
jars, canning jars, iron pots, small brass kettle, 2.
antique wooden beds • high post, 2 washboards,
kraut cutter, glider, 20' la~n mower, several kitch'en
appliances, some collec_tor's dishes, humidifiers,
microwave oven, Kerosun stove, metal bed, and oth·
er miscellaneous rtems.
Terins: Cash
Concession Stand
Emory Arbaugh Jr., Administrator
Lee Johnson
Al,ICTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio
Phone: 256-6740
Not

ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAY,
MAY 1, 1993- 10:00 A.M.
LOCATED AT 2813 MEADOWBROOK DRIVE,
OFF SAND HILL ROAD, POINT PLEASANT, WV
ESTATE 'oF THE LATE DAPHNE E. CAUDIU
WILL8ESOLD
Round oak table lion heads.and claw feel, C~mbridge 2 pc.
contemporary living room suite, recliner, swivel rocl\er, rodulr.
3 pc. French tables, w~lnutlamp lable, desk. like,_, RCA
ramole control color console, 7pc. wood dinette, Kenmore 18
c.f, frost free refrigerator, Tappan microwave, 3 pc. 11111Pfe
small poster bedroom suila, 3 pc. French Cherry Bu• ••
bedroom suito, Watartaa bhlnkat ches~ Jenny lind bad, til
size bed, maple cresser, cedar wardrobe, card tables, Mltillllg•l
and dryer, milk glass, stemwin,' Cominpare,
cookie jar, 6 place setting Moss Rose chita by Diamond,
Wheat Patlem set ot china, Brownie camera, omalloitclteo•l
appliances, ftalw818, Quality c:cokwara, pntlllft cootcer,
Anniversary cloclc,. beautilul painting on canvas, ~.
mirror, lamps, linens: towels, quilts, double wadcing ring,
flower garden, bellspraads, Christmas dacoralions, Home
lntorior; kai&lt;ets, Eureka sweeper, old crock&amp;, wllllr hole,
pc. porch set, wrought iron lawn furniture, nioe 3p:. alumlnun• I
glider and chairs, picnic table, hand IDols and mora.
AUCTION C:OHDf1CUJ) 8r

RICK PEARSON AOCftON Cl.
LUNCH

MASON, WV

773-5785

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
CO-EXECUTORS:
·JEAN DUNCAN AND HELEN WILLIAMSON

_

....

rEAMS: CASH OR CI£CK WITH lO.

............ &amp; W_, ViglniUit

Estate Auction
Saturday May 1,1993
101001.11.

Located in Racine, Ohio on Cherry St. Watch
for auction signs on St. Rt. 124.
ST~TE AERIAL FARM STATISTICS
..,~~
AN OHIO CORPORATION
. This is the Personal Property of the lata
le
~
Coltar Hayman. Case It 2.n04
proud t~e p~oduclng hand painted Marshall 011 ·
"Antique or Collectors Items"
Aeria.Alaintli'tlll of homea end farm• for over 35
Fainting couch, oak man In the· mountain
yea{a In our gnaat elate
chJ!Ir, rockar, Ice cream polor tabla, oak arm
but
chairs, oak dressers, oak stand, oak strelght
pleaae beware. of Imitator• who would lead you to
chairs, wood bed, · stand w/clrawar, tin
believe thai they are selling a handpalnted por·
advltlslng · box, ·Iron bed, meat cleaver,
trait when In fact It Ia lu•t an . expenaivt color
husking peg, tool chest, 'trunk, corn jobber,
print. All of our Independent contraclora carry a
wash board, wood box, misc. antique dlsMs
bonding card to ldeniHy our company. Thllt will
be your aasurance thai you will be purehaaing a
and
day bad, wood fancy high bed.
,.
quality Marahall Oil f'alntlng that Ia complelely .
"Mise"
guaranteed. We thank you for your paat bualne••
Alum, extension ladder, wood step ladder,
and your coptlnued lntereot. ·
April29, 1993 ·~:00 pM
wh~lbarrow, wash tubs, misc. hand toola,
Gale H. ·Aatlea
Located at Boggs Auction Bam old Rt. 35
chrome tabla end chairs, Kelvlnator no froSt
Pnaaident
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
refrigerator, Magic Chief apt. stove, potty
State Aerlet'Farm Stlltlatlca, Inc.
chair, lawn chairs, and act.
The Estate of the late Marie G. Sheets
John Wolfe-Executor-This house will be for
Clean lilt chair recliner, living ·room
sale. Executor In charge.
'
chairs, dressers, chester doors, color TV
This Is from next door neighbors
.
.
floor model, lamps, Old foot stool, oval
·
· "Mise"
'
drop leaf table, wood stands, fans, lawn
12' alum. row boat, new and used trolling
chairs, end table, throw rugs, oak wrltlog
!11otors, 5' Ford Brushcuttar w/stump jumper,
desk, towels, work cloths, dollies;" dresser
tabla saw, 30 gal. gas hot water tank, 20 gat.
scarf, blankets; reco.rd P!.II.Y!Ir! _!)u_!!et,
propaila_ tanks, propane cannons for blrda,
bicycle, post vice, mole trep, burn.lde Stove, · '
walker, sulte·case, rl!dlq;-s,eWJ':'9 ~ll· oak
rocker, cassett11 player, ollf chair, maple
fls,hlng polaa, hand and aklll - . ' mlec.
table , 4 chairs, oak hutch, electric cook
toola, lots and Iota of aaa shells and act.
Our proven selling syitam, exciting product
stove; refrigerator, washer and dryer ,
"Housal1okl and Antiques·
llna,s.end top benefits and commissions are
mirrors', table and 4 chairs, afghan,
Carnival tulip plate, · &amp; Carnival gta...a,
ona of the reason a we are a leader In one of
sweeper, broiler oven, wooden desk,
Swayzea'a grean mason qt. jar, frosted vaae,
the nation'• top 3 Industries. If you ere:
garden hose, - 3 piece bedroom suit,
pink depreaslon dl&amp;hes, Carnivel dish, cut
• Sports-minded
curtains, · Iron board; depression glass,
glaas lt~nis, Ruby advertising gl8u, stem
• Bondable, ol.lagal age
american sweetheart manax 6 plstea blue·. ltema, berry dlshaa, Foretoria bowls, glue
.• Independent, enjoy travel
willow platter, Jullt pitCher, Betty Ctocker .nl.•mlaatp~ha nt, small oil can, coffee grinder, hanl
oak
book tin box, g)'alnt&amp;d sew. desk, 108 .•,
lap writing desk; oak picture bmaa,
Let us tall you how our top aalesf*)pl! ara
,.
pick, silverware of · all klrfdt', · blender,
pink depreas!On oil limp .baN, IOta . of
building their rutu.res with our company•
butter dlsh,cast 11'0!1 doo~ l!op, plua
baakata, draw knife.and IOta mo;.. 1 ·
'·
mlJCh
more.
.
·...
.
· Owners Gernat Smith and Dave Yost
. '•
· Send your reauma
' and a cover letter to: .
Cash -Poaltlvei.D.- Rehshmenta by Dorea
T.....-• cash or check'w.lth proper I.D. F
......
"LaciiH aid
'
45116
Personnel Dept. .
1
Dan Smlth-auctlonea; 11344 Rhett Mllhaon
Auctlon'a er David Boggs lie
p.o. Box 114 ,
614 ..8 7'1'60
· r
15926
JuanitA Tackett, Executrix &lt;446-n&amp;O
Portamouth, Ohio 45662.0114
.,'
Tackett llcenaed and bond~ In State of Otilo
"Not Raaponalble For Accldenta Or Loas Of
Property"
·
.
·
Cre~lpg Tif!nd&amp; ·l&amp; our Buaine•a
Not reaponalble for accident C!f loas of
LlcanHcland Bonded In favor of OhiO _, W. '
I'O"'"'rty
..
,
....
.
EOEJM.F '
.
P ,...
""
Va. ·

Estate Auction
Thursday

Can You
Shatter

t'he Myths?

1

.

.

•

..

.

~,..

.

�"'

... . ..... . .

,

~

..

.

- -- .....
OH-Polnt Pleaeant; WV

Sentinel

---DII-2
......

32 Mobile Homes
Sale

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

tor

Buslrilss

21

-

OpportunHy

clly

COmblnod ....... 100. In
-

..

- -

15000 far balh - · 30W75-

!,lorp -....; lol

In

Point

- · ..,-a-.
114-4*1lt7.

.

Rentals

,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

WI!;..., .... _,...._

5I

Household
-.

51

Goods
'

.

-..

liM, Ret. - . 1245/llo.

DopoolllleqWod. 114~7.

2 llodroem Unlurnlohadli
· 2 Bod,
$30C). monlh $200 clopoeft. " " , _ Fumlohld, Colli IQ Ad,
N. lloln 81. 2fi BR.~,otove, rot., • ott 321, No PM. Rr'r enc•
lloqulrlcl, 114-24WI22.
.,.,
alnodylumlohacl
ploWed....lrden · 175-155hll• 4:30.
Zlldrm.op&amp;,toilal-,.,..
2 or 3bclrm. hoole In Rutlond, pl..,_
_ , - l oa -·
t olaundry
ochool
...,.,ad, no In
town. ~ ovolloblo
pllo1 114--1 o1tor lpm or 111: vm...O~cfrNilaiiio. MD
onylomoon-ndo.
oall114.fta-s71\ EOH.
.
335 Socond Avo, GAIIII&gt;OIIo. 2 3 , _
opollmonl
Nl..
Bod-. S:J5M!o. + bopoolt, no.l9hboll ood.
~~
a
Coli U Only. f14.44W41D, 614- ......... ""'ulrod. 30U75448-1141.
•
10i0.

aa-. -.

"-"I ,.,.......

· 5I

or

Rooms.

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wroughl Iron Tabla W/4 Chalro;
Fan Bock Rocking Choir $58;
Oardan Atch Woy'o fl?I.OO

46 Space tor Rent

,,

Trollor l.o4 Willi Bam Pond, 7
1111• FnMII Ootllpolf., Wllor
Paid. $110/llo. 114-2116-mL

'

.

P.ll.

=· -pi-

• '10 -

of cablnelo,' ... ""··
bath, 1111 ...... W/garlge. '"""
lalod, FA'""""'"· Encloood oar·

g-.

In

110. SYRACUSE ~Fonner three room bait shop.
50K100 lot. Natural gas circulator. City water. · City

lege' StrMt, Rio Grande, Ohlo.
AR Apor1monlo Arl Fumlohod

GUARANTEED INCOME ...you will be guamnteed a minimum income for your family's seCYrity•
OUALIFICATIONS.. .honost, ambibous, spolls·minded,
good car, mature, good references.
FRINGE BENEFITS ...extm-o!dinaoy pension and profit progmm, quatity medical covomge, dental cove._ for you · ·
'
and your family.
SUNDAY, Call (614) 353-11111r- 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
lor Interview appointnlML Aek lor Chud&lt; Morq..-. · ·
MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY,
Call (614) 446-3373 hom 9:00a.m. to 7:00p.m. or.
walk·in al the BAt WMiern, 1118 2nd Avenue, G8111pollo
Wid aok lor Chuck Morqueu.

· Cly ..._. 011111:1 ~ To
. ::::~.. ~ At..l '

=

1110 Clayton
-t11
· hoot
dlclr. ttne
droorn,
two
localod on 1o1 In Roolno

Wl1h Rolrlaorolor, 11ove l Cor·
piling Wol.r, And Tnoh
Pold By ew..r.· H lntwHiecl
Contact: Ae.ldlnt Manager, Anglo SllgN- At: 114-24!1-9110,
Or The CHico 514-81134514. EHO.

SYRACUSE ·lA 124- Boo.-Hul COOI.VIU.E- Thll2 siO&lt;Y homO
ranch oype Mmo w/permUlono localod on ·a comor lol. Mhu 3
&amp; ilcllng oil. Homo hu oo many bdnns., 1 balh, IN. nn., din . ""··
exaras you have to ... Uia one! utility rm. &amp; kl. with ret~ &amp;
Bam, at1aeh. got., pr_..r lraif. ...... Blown-In lil!lulallon, gu
or lal. 4.5 oc. m'l. priced ligl110f lu..-. aoralor &amp; aoplk: system.

·1 112

srory,

aqUd&lt;sola . Colt~tooooll

HOllE PHONE:

HOllE PHONE:

HOME PHONE:

(114) tl2-35i2

14f.2540

1'14) t12-tllt

-

Real Eatete General

Real Estate General

'

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

Barn ....., 12"' • 24", $1.00 NCh,
. 814-1'12.ZS21.

Tammie Dewltt....................... 441·1514
,Judy Dewltt............................441~262

•.-•dDmll•. aood conciUon,

t-_,. ,. ----·

-orl
:Tim.........
so"='.:-.."NF
Belt drmaohlno,

.•

Cindy Drongowskl ................ 245-9697

304.e75-1117.
3 t J uoni, -lillY 4,~.- lo'

lake
a comfortable way of life. laoge opacloua
rooms include 3 bedrooms, cleluxe·eat·in kitchen, family
room with vaulted caiijng and brick fi,.place, and large livil!l
room.. Loads of windows take full advantage of the 460 of
lake frontaga. HUGE full walk out banment doubles living
space if needed, 2 car ga._ plus gelllg&amp; door entn1nce to
basement woll&lt;ohop. Maintanance free axtelior allowo you
leisure time to watch the geese g,.cefully slide in and out of
lhe lake or go aftor that luliker bass in the lake. 52 loot
t ..ated deck w~h atrium dOors off master suite; aa W8ll as
family room, also enhances tha great la'ka front location.
$152,000. S&lt;tliouo buyers onlyl ·
l6ot

-·
- airJ1!!z
-·
- : $30,000.
Tr1 Portt
Drtvo,undor
• ~ 111-4112 IMve mn .. gt.

n.

.....,-

·:

- • roomo, 1 112 Solh, Dining "
• ' UtiiMy Room, Oarogo, Nfco
•• :_~~~~. o-t
FrMI'I Locitlon
Downlown1
• - llpolla On Socond A..nuo,
:-114-441-7711.

Raccoon Townohip ............................. t18Acres
Raccoon Townohip ........ ........ ...., ......... 80 Acres
Harlioon Township .......... ................... .. 81 Ac~as
Ohio Townohip ..... :............................. 133Ac,.s
Huntington Townohip ............. .............. 16 Acr11s
·
IWESTVACO

32 L.ocuBt Street, Galllpoll1

446·1066

FARM CONSISTING OF tB4+ AC., PLUS 2 HOUSES- 2 slooy Colonial home with·4 BR.
LR, OR, kil. , bath. Second ho~se has 2 ~R. LR; bath, basement. kitchWI, bem, .tool house and
3 misc. bli:lgs. ~pnd, fencing, or~eludes mH111181 ri{llls. CaiiiDday for complete hsting.
t516

- ·1 yoor old church Lulldlng
• · (IIIIo lppl owodj, 3 tiodroom
~
recenlly Nnudaltd,
• :U of lend, nn1 to lila
~ drp·?'llnlnl
In H8Jrt.onwllle,
: • Olllo, . $34,900, 514-1112-2001 011
v

........

OWNERS WANTING TO RELOCATE
YESTERDAY! REDUCED PRICE I WANTS
SOLDC _ Spacloua family rocim, htighlano tho
pleasu,. of lhio taotelully decol8ted lri~-'. 4
bedrooms, 2 lull betha, 2112 baths, eqt!ipped
kitch•n with recenfly replacad range and
re1rigll8tor, rec:. room, attached 2 car galllg&amp;,
decking, inground pool. Slorage building, plus
much mote. floctley area.
.
1520

·:·-·-1.
: ·-

o1y1o homo, 3 bodroomo,

-1 1 belh, anochod g~rogo, ~ : Aitdlnon wl.......-;. cen1r1l1lr,

:_.. F-11. ..._. 304-713-5150.

· .,. a.wn rooru and blth In Ryt..

·. ·::'
Jra .._,$atecl, .ome
~---··· . . . . . lot,

out·

. :21102.

: ·nw. II r d oom, two

blth, full

Looated on
7 at Eunoke.
room, dining room, kitchen and bath tocattd on
acres mil. CALl TO SEEifl

· · :.t ?Mill, Mk, Z car gar• •
·&gt;..W
.:a-"""'
llolgo Hlg~. prtca
,.
...
- 4 4 5 4 101/ ....
·
polulllllftl.
·

I
I

NEW USTINQ- FARM

Twot ,..,.., . . ...... ~.
•._ aICfeeiiM
- INic:lll- " " 8CI"IP.'JIIO,
'I'I'IGr•

bollia gas haot, county wale&lt;. 1 bam, milk house, ahop,
lool ohop, lwo car garalj8. CALL FOR APPOINTMENTIII

.mOdular ..._. Ovor
.• 1100 _ , . ft. 3 BR, 2 ,b11.~1 2
, . , prage. OVIr 13 acr11. wat•
··Voly n1oo

.• s::" rto,tty. 30W'/Io~3.

.

•32' Mobile Homes
for Sale

--..

t112.17 ,.., month Including obr
~ _.. ........ , . . laC ,..,., .,.. 14110,
.............. ..,,, Hlrtlng ·

..........

.

116.17 acrea, m.ore or .l..o, 4 bedrooma •.living room,
dining room, kilchan, dan, bafl and laundoy room. FA

: or-.Rt.aS:sooMM-1112. .

.r

.
.
LDTSI LOTS! LOTSI- Coty schools. Situated
~looa I~ downtown. ,Pall today. for more
onlorrnation. .
•
141Q
NEW LISTING! PRIVATE! - $43,100.00 Nice hom•, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, seveml filet
of cabinet opace in kitchen, complehi wilh
app!lanceo including diohwaoher. living room
8nd laundry, 2 acre lawn. Living room and
loundry, 2 acre lawn. Ovorsizad ono car
garaga. Energy efficient electric haat·pump
with central air conditioning.
1534

Morm

: · buldlngo, _go_ and ~II•• off
. •...... potlllng, $17,500, &amp;14-\i2-

:

: • FOR YOUR CONYE~IENCE TRY
·;.,...,_._OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
. . . . . t-100-814·1.061
FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE .
UP

.428 SECOND AVE., GALUPOUS, OHIO- 44&amp;-4206 441-0500

NEW USTINGI APPROX. 41 ACRE FARM Wilhin minutoo of hoopital. Juot off SA 1eo, 2
bedroom home with belh, 2 liloo, pcle bams,
pluo. HV&amp;ral bulldingo.,and ohedo. Fenced
puture. Call lor more dottalo.
11541

&amp;:;

2~7

EYERGREII;N ROAD - IMMEDIATE
POIIEISIONI - Stari pacldnli today. i,llila 3
bedroom ltoma wilh ballr, ltltdlan, llvtng rocim
noeda a famllyl o - r haa Nplacad roof,
fum-. water h - and mol&amp; wilhin the pool
c:oupl• of,..... Coman - · Prioed $20'o.

'

.

·

IC111

COWIERCIAL - Lots of opportunitloo_. . .
building with 2 .oparlm.,... O.or1 ..... Mobjle
hom• site wilh oaptic and watar: P•rlect for
omall' gro.. oy otor•. Gr. .t mom and
Opll&amp;tion.
1

tl;t·

NEATI CLEAN! COZVI - Ranch style homa
wilh vinyl siding. one car garage, 2 bedrooms, .
living room, kill:han, balh, laundry, approx. 43 ,
acre lol. Nice for
otarting out or retiring. '
Call UIIW!d taloo a
I
'
1524

,·
'

.

Whole Sidu....$1.41 lb.
FREEZER WRAPPED
l QUICK FROZEN
Call lclr appal ntment to
hive 'fOIII beef, pork or
lhetp sl1ughtered, cut,
wrapped 1nd quick lrozen.
WE WILL HAVE YOUR
PORK HICKORY SMOKED
IF YOU DESIRE.

446-7457

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD - Is this 11-1 stooy
log home !'ith besemant, 3 bedrooms, 2112
baths, family room, living room, kitchen,
laundoy arH, skylight, salellita system, cove rod
porch, heat pump, ceniral air, 12'K12' building
and much maN. Call lor details.
t4Z5

llonagor
John Pope

~.

,· KilT Road
II- KilT, Oltlo

I

•

IN VINTON VILLAGE - Hera you wil find thio
3 BR, 1~ bath ...,. olory homo wilh living room,
kilch.,~· laundry and dan. A detached one c:ar
garage, blown-in ,insulation and mor.. On a
t2Tx115' comar lol Aoldng only $30,000. Can
lodly lor your appoinln)enl
141li
.

.

.

·

POMEROY-Old Union Ava.-Two big Iota with a Male over
t/3 acre. At the end of the road ttill a t983 Claytoo
double. wide with 3 bedrooms, 2 belhl, 1amgy room,
dining room, and a new front porch. Kitdwln is equipPed,
including a new diohwasher. Has conlral air, and a watar
• softener..All in good condition.
$34,000
RACINE·i..t.rt-Make your appointmenl IDQay lo """ lhis
3 bBdrliom home 'fith a 1wo car garage, new roof, nowar
wiring, wonderful garden spot, and a cozy lilling room. All
this on approx. 2 aaeo of land.
ASKING $32,000

RUT~81n lhrMI-Here's a good • has loll of polential. Thla 1 1/2 story home has 2 or
possibly 4 bedrooms, 112 balemerit Would make a good
rental properly. W~l accee1 land ,conlt'act willl $2,500
down for 10 years at 10% 1nta111st and monlllly payment
of $204.84.
$18,000
MIDDLEPORT-Mill Slr..I•A, Handyman's Spilcial-2 lots
and a five room house with 2-3 bedrooms. N"'!ds quite a
bit of work Inside but the ouiSido looks prerty nice.
•
'
$8,000

HYSELL RUN ROAO.NOI far out o~ town is a ~anch-styla
home with a laoge kitchen lhat has loll of nice cabinelo.
Nice shady ya!d 8nd a petio for cooking ·0\Jt, 3 bedrooms,
and all on 314 acre:
$20,100

bedroom home Ia juat
alallll&gt; Nving room, nice
cute
look. Hat new roof, new
wiring, large
out bacll, .,d reoentiy axtanttively
remodeled interior. II has a heal pump.

.

,..

.

.

.

"t.

'

\

$28;000 .

DOTTIE TURNER, lrok•.........,,.. , ...., ....ll:wtl2 '
. , BRENDA .IEFFERS.......:•.•.~................-112-3018

353 Rk:hl•nd Avanue

!)ARLINE aTEWART.................................II2.aeJ
SANDY •urCifER....................................-•NS71

Ohio 46701

.

LISTING ON JACKSON. I'IKE - One
of the few homes In lhe a,.a, lhio btick ~anch
offers feaiUros like laogalamily roOm with stone
fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 11/2 baths, full
baseman! and 2 car gaiBgll&gt;Also laoge lot wilh
fruil trees, cent111l air and more. Spring Valley
area locabon. $79,900.
1800

Deep lot. 2 '

.: I.

I,

Good naighbomood.
1 bath, living room,

dining room, eat-in kitchen. Won't find many at

lhis jow price. $34,900

immaculate 3 bedroom home ·

1208

CITY BOY,. COUNTRY GIRL! - Ha111's it
house that will satisfy both. Within walking
distance to downtown, this home's location is
great Whia at the same time irs located in a
quiet location backed up by acras IW1d acres of
woodland. laoga 4 bedroom home wilh over
2100 sq. ft., 2l\ baths, living·room, dinil!l rocim,
, eat·in kitchen and .family roorry . _Scraaned in
porch, la19&gt; patio and above ground pool . 2 car
build-in gaiBgll. Good stomge. $91 ,000.
12t7
20 ACRES ON RODNEY HILL - Located on
Jackson Pika just beyood Spnng valley. Prime
building location. T1118s, view. $27,500. 1204
TRULY AFFORDABLE - Crisp, clean 3
bedroom, 1 balh ranch with vinyl· siding and
replacement windows. This home has a one
car attjtched garage and a fumace that is lesa
than a year
. old. The
. prico is $49,500. 1502
SPRING VALLEY AREA - Vary well kept,
.!ell built splil laval brick home . in. good ,
naighbomood. Features include 3 bedrooms,
1112 belhs, living room, family room and nioa
aal·in kitchen. Pallial basement, covered patio,
nice ya!d, maint~~nance 11118, gaoage. Priced to .
oell al $79,900.
1215

move in

condition. Newly painted intarior, new carpet
and new bath. New central air unit Gas neat
Sto~age building. FencOd lot. A must lo ... at
$39,90011
120t

THE ltARKETll2500+ sq. ft. ot'livabilily induding
a 19'4'" x 20' family room, large master
bedroom wilh d,.ssing area, 2112 baths (one :
on aoch level), living room, covered patio and
deck, plenty ol closets and storage spaco.
Come ·
see ,
for
yoursefll
1400.

.•

1.37 ACRES WITH 30x5&amp; 2 STORY
FRAMED STRUCTURE - Good start on
apartment building, commercial building or
residence. Localed on Jackson Pike just past
~piing Valley area. Priced al $26,900.
1202
nRED OF APARTMENT UVING? - Step up
to h'!'fMIOwnership lor iusl $8,000. Ideal for lha
single pal'$0n, thi~ 1 bedroom, 1.bath homo is
located i~ Eureka 8nd offers oW streat.parl&lt;ing
8nd a small otooago building.
1504
INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY - Ovar ·
$1,200 per month income.is produCed from thia
five unit apartment building. Good location in
town. Good Alntal history. Vary nice tot with
IICCOU to beck alley. $59,900.
f2oe
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD - Newer Clayton
doublawida located on 1.524 acres. Vary nMt
and clean 3 bedroom home. la190 outbuilding,
room to hav• a ga!den, outdoor picnic or
whatever. Must-·
1703.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
.,

.'

t&gt;ay

..

,

.

\
ROCKSPRINGS ROAO.An older home wllh the
downalalro oompletelv 18110..11c1. Has an enormoua IVIng
room with 2
windowo and a nice stone fireplace . 'The
beautiful kitchen has new cablnall wifl an leland, and 3 .
bedrooms, with ·large walk·in clo1e1o, dining toom,
wraparound porch, a!'&lt;~ many oulbuildlngl, ililling on 1. ·
112 ·acrea. ·
,
$51,000
.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS PICK UP THE FREE.QUA~ITY HOMES I.ROCHURE AT SOME
··
OF THELOCAL IANIS, R£TAILSTORES, SUPEIMARKETS,'MOTESL ANDRESTAUUNTS.
.

I

-Your
privacy is preserved ·
i
ranch.
Offering 4 bedrooms, 2112 baths, .fonnalliving
and dining rooms, large family room wilh
fireplace insert,. large kilchan wilh dining area .
Oversized 2 car attachild garage, 2 horse stall,
large woll&lt;shop, storage building, fenced
property. As pretty as a private park! $99,900.
1610
WANT TO BUILD 'fliiS SPRING? - Better
taka a look at this 8 acre lot on Lower Rivar
Road. Priced to M!l at $7,000.
1503

Roomy
. Family room
in
lower level (nol much to finioh), 3 bedrooms,
eat·in kitchati, living room. Priced to sell at
.
1205
. $49,900.

t:IEW LISTING! - WOODED PRIVATE
SETTING! - Over 4 acres and doublewide
setting on 1 perm~nent foundation, 3
bedroomo, 2 _balhs, hvong room, ~ining room ,.
kitchen, famtly room, electric hast, 1 car
garage. Green Elemantaoy, GAHS. $3as. f505
LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! _ 242
LARIAT DRIVE - Brick r~~nch' style homo 3
B,R.s, 2 baths, basemWit, 'FR, LA, kitchen, Md
dtnong arsa. Low utilities. House ramodelo~
1987. Must sea to appreciate. 103'KI91'1ot.
.
.
f505

areL

Real Estate General

.

POMEROY-Main Street-A commercial building with
2,000 square feet and 3 apartments· above lhal have j~st
been remodeled and all hive ..w fumaoes. The upslaiN
has a sns a,tnonth income. Great plilca for a ~~siness,
and an income from .tha apartments to pay lha biNs .
$58,000

ADDISON AREA
2.47 Acre
3 Each 5 Acre Tracts
Property has beeo surveyed
and ready to build on . Flat to

HERE'S YOUR CORNER OF COUNTRY! Vary nicely remodeled home resllng on 2.84
ac111s of Golia County. Oak kitchen, 181110deled
bathroom, now windows and more, leave you
wilh little to do. F1118 gas heat. 3 bedrooms, 1
large bath, living room, dinioo room. Bam and
oulbuildil!l. $59,900.
1224

RACINE-Manuel Rd.-Are you looking for hunting land or
a possible building site? We have just the place. ApproK .
16.62 acres for only
. $8,500

EXECUnVE HOMEI - 2 story brick Colonial,
3 BR, 2ll baths, lull finiohed basement, alectric
heat pump w/solar heating system. This house
has amenities too enotmous to mention. Call

11640

.RACCOON CREEK PROPERTY
2.25 acres, more or less. Lovely
modern home, 2,100 sq. fl. ol
living space, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
large garage. Ideal for summer
fun. Large deck overlooking creek
area.

room,

balh
. with
living room,
laundoy room
large walk in attic that could
ba converted into 3rd bedroom. Nice covered
front porch and laoge pabo, a. one car garage
and more.
1300.

'

(POMEROY) UNCOLN TERRACEifl - This
home has Iota ol character and the lady of tho
house has lots of good taste when il comes to
Nmod&lt;tling. Irs a 2 story homo with 3 big
bedrooms, nice sized livil!l room and plenty of
space in the kitchen Btld dining anoa. ~ull
basement and laoge attic. Rool jus! 2 yrs. old.
Taka alook·lor only $24,900.00.
1522

4~ ACRE FARM- Fencing, bam, 2 stoiy vinyl
~dod home. i\ooth 3 bedrooms; family room,
· liVIng room. bath, cellar house, 1 car detached
ga"'ge, county water plus drilled woll. W~hin
sltort dJSIIi11C8 of Gallipolis.
. · 1526
NEW UITINQ- BUILDING LOTS- Min,u i.l .
of Holzar Hospi.... 011 SR&gt;Ieo. Fivo ·(s) acre
tiiiCts. One tract inducleo pend. Rood lro~tagt
Restricted. Call for detailo,
·

BUILDING SITES

LARGE
$24,1001 - 3·4 bedrooms wilh potential lor . INCREASE YOUR LIFEI - CLOSE TO THE
MINES - Tired .of driving over 25 miles to lila
mora. Close to grade school in Vinton. Call
minas? Hare's a country setting with a 3
Carolyn lor more details.
1604
bedroom home that will cut down your driving
. time and increase the lima you spend doing
· things you want. 2 baths, 2 car garage,
$42,500. Call Dave tor details.
,
12t1
YES, YOU CAN HAVE IT ALL - Toion living,
laoge lot, off stJMI parl&lt;ing, all brick. This 1l\
stooy has a lot to offer. 3 bedrooms, 12 bath,
· living room with fireplace, dining room, laoge
eat~n k~chen : Upstairs you'll find 2 veoy large
unfiniohed rooms, full unfinished basement
Fumace and cenlral air is onl)l3~ yrs. old. Call
much
you can buy
only
Carolyn before irs too lata. Priced at only
$43 500. This horne offers 4 bedrooms, 1 bath,
$74,900:
Ktt
livin'g
family IOO!Jl, laoge ki_tchen With
dining room,. f&amp;!Jllly room, large kotchan woth
t2 ACRES JUST OFF JACKSON PIKE - .
dining area situated on an overs.zed !Ot.
Localed just beyond Spring Valley area. layo
Comfortable family ~ving at an affordable pf1Ce.
nicely, moslly pasture ground. $29,900. 1203
Hurry before irs tbo late.
1600.

ThWI this 3 bedroonl iairch beauty is lor you.
Laoga ,living room wilh fireplace, den, laoge
· lamily room or dining room, nioa kitchen, 20K40
inground pool, laoge bam, stooaga galo,. plus
6.190
m4. YoU will not find more for

205 North Second ~n. ·
OH
. . "lllddtaport,
..
. '.

3 bedrooms, 2 baths, lg.
living room, garage,
storage building,

Building Site
Surveyed

99~~2886
.

OFfiCE
.

A-FRAME NESTLED IN
A WOODED SETTING

PROFESSIONAL
NEIGHBORHOOD
5 acres +- Wooded .

"'·

.· FREEZER BE.EF .
:•
SALE

NEW LiSTING! - 304 Sycamore Str"1 Good investment properly. Hou·sa and
OP,artment· Or could be converted 1o one large
hOrne. Nice double lol Call for mort details.
1537

Wood ~a[ty, Inc.

-.

BONNIE STUTES R£11tTIJRt

Real Eatete General

U.S.D.A. Cholet lnspectod

OWNERS WILL .CONSIDER REASONABLE
OFFER! - Oualif1 built 4 bedroom ranch style
home with fantastic view of Ohio River. 2l\
balhs, basement ~aa finiohed family room.
Situated on 1 acr. lot with paved drive.
Pomeroy area.
,
t528 ·

PRICEI 64
.
- living room,
kilehon, and dining araa combo, bath, covered
caopo". IMMEDIATE POS'SESSION.
1502

Real Eatate General

.

BARR'S MEAT
PROCESSING

HOME AND 30 . ACRES - Stone -and wood
sided bam styled home with 1l\ baths, 3
bedrooms, lamily room, living room, kitchen,
full basement, 9"18Qil. Lllod mlling, approK. 20
tillable acres, lencing, pond, bam and
oulbuildii!IS. Extra nice. Call today. 1St 0

THE
Thii
dairy, veoy
successful,
tobiiQCO farm. Basic
tobacco base
1993 over 13,000 lbe. Major
remodeled home with family room as a new
addition that catchao anyone'• eyes. Large
bam In good condition, milk house, silo. and
feodlng oquipmen~ good fencea, pond, r\loal ,
wat•r and one of the beat pasture fields.
Owner wants sold nowf Wa want to halp.
Negotil\ted prica loday, including toba= base,
$1(11,000. Planting bme, please cliiiiDday. This.
bargain can be yours.
11546

WISEMAN, REAL ESTATE

· ' Nloo 3 - - ..._ wllh Iorge
. 2 car glrsiiO. IOoalod 011 nlca
~ IGI. All beclrooma hive MW car·
• p11 .-ad bohlnd Rutlond
: • Etoinontory ochool, 114-742·

Real Estate General

Real E.state

da &amp; sunday
urs y

joggor .......

$711, 114-8112-toll.
Blroh - . , 1140. Eu.....
lonl. t70.
P\lp tont,
$10.
•

SALEM STREET • Good investment property,
oldln 2 slory consisting of 3 BR, beth, FR and
more. 3 sewage and water hookups on
properly. CaU for more info.
,
1511

&lt; 3Room-On3- Par-~lillY Remadtltd. Need• Workt
• -p,fOo, t14-S114442.
: ~. ~ b.th. half blltment,

=

bnnd Escorvo Iorge car
lop 1 . _ 01nllir. $50' linn.
304-175-e!IS.
.
.

bond, d•l .._,,
ncarMr, playw . CD, lnP"f,
amlfm, $75i 114-31f-7729.

pump. 1100. SIU7U135.

Russell D. Wood, Broker ...... 446-4618
Phyllis Mlller.......................... 256·1136
J. Merrill Carter ......................379-21B4

Cathy Wray ............................ 446-4255

-r3 .....- . - . lorgo laval

:

o

AIIIFII radio- '"'""""" I 2
·opookon,
· 140: 111212 - ·
.oprlngo Rd., p.,m.roy, Solurdily
24th onlyl
·
ATV for 1!0111!- NO. n.... rima
tor ATV. IL .....,. doop -

Martha Smhh: ............- ..........379-2651

. _ lol, M0,0001 llooutflul ¥lOw of
:~ KMnM RIWf In HendlrMn,

:-&amp;pol.

Z1G6.

·Shower curt•in- pink floral, pink
u.... &amp; plotllo hooltt, good
condition, $5, 114-148-2522,. .

Sovon

::=..~~~~·

Hotirs: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Cl sedTh

·-==~=4~~~-~---------­
~ :Air T-p Air Condhlontr, w-

Real Eatete General

: -Willlcr nde Anyt....,

•

-Ill-·

Cheryl Lemley; ......................... 742·3171
Sheryl Walter ..... _ 367-0421 or 992-6583

:• :ldtchon,
3 -·
- .._
1 112gooLotho,
Uvlng
hoot,
~ .. on '"' lal, --e'M-112·•12 after

· - Wh-par $5, COM f14-441·SZ30,
Or 114-Z4M217.

1504.

colon

. W.UI$150, 1'14211 1715. ,;.

- _ . ,_. llofMrVltlo on AI.
• .790, 114 21111101 Allor I P.ll.

IIV2411L

For· lola:

-

· ~rdwood,

~ asldng $29,900.

. ·nooino, Willi Elootrlo, Wood
• Hall, ' - ' " Qonoao. Bam. I

, _ , • oohool, sDOOo uao, 114-

~":,1~~-=~~~
_,..,
.,.,

• ·•
,. •
• •••
-OIIor,l14-38
0.
·
2 l - olumlnum portoblo
11.. loddor, $25, 614-Mt-

614-384-3645
: ·s loodo or .,_,
for-:;...._...;._...;....
April only! . _ _ _.....
•• lor-...n
.,00,""'·'""
... 114- ,.__ _ _ _ _ _Good
___

Real Estate General

3 Bod-

"
•...
S40~,~t150;oloo- . lo-

-on

So_,l pair ot hoovr
giovoo, boon woohod, uo
·
lorn bodroom .... $40. 304-675• polr, ll4-tl2·3703.

s....
"'"- llnod, 120114
belli" • -· UO. dlnooauo pot-

K.woAid (Kiclo) Plano, eor-.
TV. Blo-loa 1i:'m T-o,

w-

• •.. rr~aom.or; 11" 1 - ,
• _614-IID2-1207.
.

11412041.

~

~~- 11ov1ng Solo: F-urw, 711

rolrlgoio:lor·

:.·:;-_
·1710·
-:::·~--~-:-~ ~
. ..... ... . Nngo; .. _
·-

BRUCE TEAFORD SHERRY RIFFLE
Jill HU
BROKER
SALES-ASSOCIATE SALES ASSOCIATE

. ne.r ldloall, ,.., ....
,. 130.000, 114-1 tl 2203 or 114-

&gt;zo

-um

Merchandise

no.•

Penn's Warehouse ·

you.

O.IH~Ia

Slu

.....
, -· 11on1m w1 loathor
l~m•. ,._ - . - ..., -

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous

;.

PRICEO TO SELLI WAS $6,750
NOW ONLY S$,750.00
UST WITH US!
THREE GENERATIONS OF REAL ESTATE
PROFESSIONALS TO SERVE YOUR REAL
ESTATE NEEDSI

Now Accopllng Appllootlono For
Volley VloW APoot_.o, CBIIIIA
Pr$011 ~ On: WOOl Col-

'SELL.naw accounts {a tol'{ cost nocessity that repeats).
SERVICE... established acoounls lhat will be turned over to

1 112 .....

. "" '

Oilier &amp;ius

s,r.

pnlyl

ea

sewer.

su~ss.

:" .u::.ilo~L.c":"J'
~ ~=
Suldlwlalan Wllhln
!

·~ ldl. -

patod pcn:lt Room lor

·=::· -

111. NEW LISTING - LAND CONTRACT! - This
house has been made inlo four very nl.. apar1mWII
· renttllls. Ali have their own kitchen and balhroom. You
in one and rent out tl18 olher lhree. VERY
CLE;AN. New Caopel throughout the apartments. Call
for more information. •

POIIEROT - Rocl&lt; Sj&gt;Mgs Rd.
no 11omo """3 bdnno:,IQ.....

....,..,__
Tt!s brick and nice lawn. Prk:8CI to oat
homo·
u.-prtcod
al $34,900.

MANAGEMENT POSITlON ... will be yours after 6 months of
opeciafized baining.
EARN ... an eXceptional laoge inc9me in a security income
field.
TRAINING ... sales training, expenses paid.
FIELD TRAINING ...you will be llained by our management·
laari1 under actual selling condibons to insure your

- . 2 Cor

-

POMEROY - Nl:a brlclt llllCI1
homo localecl on Boocn st.-·
alom. IChool. Big living room.
eol-ln klehon, 3 .........
w"'-ilwood lui bath, 'tul
b-. ~~~~~ balh. FA goo,

.MANAGEMENT TRAINEE

are avalatlle on an equal
OfJPOrtu...-; .......

spindcls 2''x2"x36" • $1.99 ea.

For

130; l&gt;lonlo

hao

C

mid 30's.

lnlonned lhel all -lings
ac:Mrtised ln lhlt newspaper

dcclr bcllrdll"x6"xt0:·$4.70; l"x6''xi2'-$S.79
~reneeboardl7/16''x4"x6'·SO¢
cor renee --••7/16''x6'x8'-$21.9S ea.
,-2''x4"xl2' • $3.79; 2"x6"x~'tg-S3.75;

:MZL

Living """" - .

Snobbish woman to maid: "My
husband will be .bringing home
guests lor dinner. Is everything propc
erty prepared?" Smug maid to
woman: "Oh yes madam. My BAGS
are PACKED!"
·

._
- boo"""!o _MO; 38212
Roobprlnvl Rd., _ , 241h

I:.P;.:..

HOW WOULD
8.31
IN
TOWN PLUS AN OLDER HOME FOR ONLY
StO,OOO.OO? Well, if this sounds good, w.'ve got lhe
place for you . With some work this co,uld be e~celtent
rental pmperiy. And at thai plica, you can't beat 11!

Help wanted

low. Our reader$ are hereby

--.tuil
no. fM.iii.

&amp;.-..
225 Olllp - · WIOnan
onglno, $11118,114-HZoSI81.

:::=.., 11

UIUhlts Pakl, 114 441 4411 After

advertisements for real estate
wNeh Is In Ylolallon ollhe

SCRAM-LETS
KIDNAP .
OBTUSE
DEPICT
QUAKER
ZODIAC
EDGING
BAGS are PACKED

MarchandIll

bruah GuorU
wllh
haodUghl pralocfon, 1111; 113
ailabl
· w' --•••• Fi'-av
•· brick ood siORO panels IO''x48", like Pmnutone, ,._
For lola:
~ IMaM- oabW IIG',
lor
.
mobile
1•••
· 1l"· blue.
- 1pr. 100"XM"...,L!fllll
Eo.
-.'!!.~, Runo And Cloona Good! - ,
.zszs.
ODIId.
:W cu. ~I( ld COo
l l:~rcd=,~~~~r~~S~li5~.9~S~ea.~:·
now '""""'d' $2.99 co.
...., 114.ua 11845.
K.........,,
-Rowing
Eun:loo
o Oil'
$3.69 ea.; 23 pes. up-$3.49 ea.
F- 1 1ua 14" Ford lloohl,.llko
1100And
For llalh,
~..::OU. .lttr I ~·· OOICOUt2 cu.
mulch $1.49; 40 lb. poaing
..1lihoolo a o..., aood !11~4~4~*~111L~c::_:_~._:_:.:_::.:.:._:
$1.2300:
.
-lllon,$100,114-8112-2321. . s.
wMh
52 Sporting Goocia SO gal. plastic clean barrels $7.95 :a or lwo for $15.00;
F- ' - -r., ,.. conclllon, handle
:..puler. ~
rm $28.00.
..
$10 - ;- lUll olzo Fold lltl kit, $1C15., M1 lor $75. Hrm. 30W75~
12 ~
Whim ocrylic plutic stacking chai!s, US .mf'g. (Malibu) med $100; 114-8112•2SZ:I.
IIOH.
:::~~111o111~ m
·
back $S.9S ca. or two rar $10.00.
0enoo1a -ian Ploducto Old
Bobr ~ 145;
6 lie web aluminum chaioe lounge folding chain $11.95 ea; laolullng · Amino Add BOdy ~.:t.:'"" $35; lh,.. !lfowor
two ror $20.00. · · .
· ,
Bulklll!lloo:'J.: and tat .
$20,114-446-1422.
53
Antiques
l.aqjo
.thid&lt;
chaise
lounge
cushiono,
reg.
$29.95
eo.now
A=-~=-::
OnoEiootrioHMtorZI
112x11x1
Buy 01 H1L Rlvwlno Anllquoo,
S!S.9S;tworm$28.00.
Tho•ll-lotllll.
1J2
For
220
Volta
$35
Uood 40
1124 1!. llaln 11-. on RL 124,
Hair
cedor
boncl
planmra
n:g.
$19.95
now
$14.95
ea;
rwo
Oo
Cott,
__
~
hp,
Cloon,
Kill
!loun,114-S~IIIL
·
- " ' · - : II.T.W. 10:00
o.m. to l:OO P.IIL, Sunday 1:00
$23.00. Three other styleo wood planmn,liiJe. good prices. .
Swllch, ....,, nogallobW, 304- Prllty tollolo ..,... - · ·
to 1:00 p.m. • - • ·
I pc. gelcoal fiberglus rub and shower combo, whim
. . 6711-6156.
.
IIIla 1l. Lone oklrt, only $70.
SIS9.9Sea. 2 JUJd 3 pc. white JUJd colon $199.95 ea.
-.ell6-33111or lntonnoiiOnl
Hobort _ , -lao. $450. 304WNto ooblno4
1 f".;·sho- only $169.9S; 2 and 3 pc. $1g9.9S
'
175-1311.
Prvm . _ olzo 5, "dry
50 ,.... old,
I
I 1'M412-3710.
4 x8' 1reoted lottiee $1.95 ea; 6 pc. up-$6.95. 4'x8' mated
deonod, oxcollon1 condHiori,
thlck lattice pone! $16.9S ea.
.
$100, ' - fllQoo., 614-812·
54 Miscellaneous
Insulated gluJ'panols, oevcral siico, some low-E-glass
:nu ollor lpno. ·
·
SIS.OO to 129.95
Large sizes, ~alues to over $100.00 ea.
au-. Slzo Wllw Bod, - . . . ,
Merphandlll·
L-c
selection of minon, all plate glass, square and oval,
Exeollonl Condhlonl $100, An.r
·110 Watt Pw Cllonnol IICS
-..
•SoaN
" Konmoro 5PII -· •••12••
beveled edgeJ, low prices.
~-••a. •-lonl conclllon,
· • ·~ ~.
Sorloo Syolom s..-,
Bone commocleo US mfg. 3% gal. flwh,longated, n:g. $99.95 flll, 114-IIV2o3244. .
A- hHch, 120,
Fow 110 Will Par Channoo
Spoakoro, Compacl Dloo o..t
now
$S9.9S.
Uiwn
-paM
$5·
old
nlahl
• .C.Oono, 5 INnd GrojjNC E·
Luge soleclion or nails and deck and drywall screws at low otond, t100j 1000 ~bail oalilo,
• quollzw, Dlallol AII/FII s..-.
prices.
~
$20; 114-1'1•·;1824.
. H'f.urntable, 1100, I'M-2~1444
We
now
have
a
craft
and
piece
gOOds
and
wallpaper
section.
Lonox Puleo Fumooe 125,000
~~~~~u.~·---------­
Good
prices
aru Uood 2 112 Y-. $100; I'Ci:i4i.li;G
' ' 1170 Chavy Tandem Dump
•)'ruck, 12 R. - · $1,800; Oliver
va ......
•..11035 Dozer I Cyll.,..., Dloul,
- Noodo Wortc, rl,soo, 514-311'
WellsiOn, Ohio ·

3 lad""""" 1 112 Bmh, Total
EIICiric, Na, C1Nn1 Hat Air
Conditioning. AddiMII ~ No
Polo, 114-317-1'131.

Fumlohod Elfloloncy, 7 112 Noll
Avo.,
Qa!Npclhl.
$1110/llo.

knowingly IICCepl

Bunk Bod'o, -or Bide. Fun
Llno Of Soulhwottom V•• · Storll"..l At 120.00; lndlonollany
. Shopo o I SliM Storti~!
.•, sa:oo, 2 Locallono ·llookM o
.• Auction Or 4 lllloo 0.. 141.
: Opon U.ll. To I P.ll.llon -Sot.

=

,- - .-H-o_m_es_tor_Sa_le
__ ,33 Farms tor Sale '
31

'
This newspaper will not

· BUILDING SUPPLIES
Buyouts • Closeouts • Surplus

"' Bile! DuNn tMI se~;
" !lfowor heal M4.H;Cor lod:o,

Sl....... ·••h oooldi!ITier 2:00
-·All .. pa.
cou· ...
••or
p.m., 304-773UII,IIoMIIWY.

Lodloa

Iangiii, gray wlplold _ , dl)' deonod,

4

-and oklrtlna,
- . .,.__
,........
llopo
Call 114:MI-2434 oil&lt; far IIIIo.

imlallon or dlscrimlnallon.'

,.,. -

Boddlng ·Twin llal11ol $89, FuU

for Rent

SO&gt; lamllal aloiUI or nollonal
origin, or any lntertllon to
make any such preference,

ANSWERS TO

54 Mlsc:ellaneous

114-:.C:131L
Firm Flo&amp; Ex 01 I llochlno, 1
-hOld, $140, 114 441 3211.

2323.

Riclr• aru, t14ofl2..5851.
Rant· 2 or 3 bod""'"''

ol1968 wl1ich mal&lt;os lllogal
to a&lt;IYertlse •any preference,
imlatlon or dis&lt;:~mlnollon
basad on mce, color, '1811glon,

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Fkwood: AJI-SpiH
DoiiYOIId $40 l'toii.Up lood.

MetriC l'ftOWIII', ADi 114-112•

FurniShed

~lor
I!!~~~~~~~~
42 Mobile Home$

AI roll ...... a&lt;Mt~lslng In
lhls n o - r Is subtoct lo
the Fedoraf Falr Housing Acl

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Chromo bNoh ~~"!"'~. 145; '"
pod • . . . - ~1 t10 oooh;

OR

Polo, lloDooll &amp; RolwWnc:oo.
$27Mio.•14-.15211.

Real Estate

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household
Goods·

L1erci1CJildlse

4S

Sunday

•

HousehOld
Goods

I -~I. Rrol Avenue, Qa~
llpollo. un Slroll Porldl!l. No

-man wHh
-'Ilea,
1113 14x70 Rod5 ,_, ..,..nty, In-

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Apartment
torRent

1 Bedroom. NMr Holler
HaMill!. E....-oal Qao Hoot,

41 Houses tor Rent

..,

Plant, ......... 114.eSW4:n.

oolt"" - .

44

Wanted to Rent

,Ju,. 11, 30 ........ """' Gavin

- . 1tll 141711 ...~
:J.~.womnly,
·
old"lnfi·
. .~... t 1 Coll lor In
• 114-315-

M21

____

~

April 25, 1993

1993

.

'

·. 446-3$44
'

'

DAVID
BROKER - 446-9555
Loretta McDade - 446·n29 ·.
carolyn Wasch- 441-1007
SQnny Games- 446·2707 · .
· B. J. Hairston- 446-4240
Pat Cochran- 44&amp;-865S•IIIiil-lill•ii
·,

·.

'

•,

'

�..

. ..

~"'

'

I'

.;
•

Times Sentinel
- 54 111ce11aneous

T::~:~;~' '2&gt;©\\~lA-l££!rs~

lllrchandlse

wv

Ott Point
71

WOlD
UME

Autoa for Sale

1893

April

Real.Estate General

Real Estate General

I

•

1~

-.ltP22,

I1--,--l
I
I

pold

114-M:I-5171

0E N G G I
1:,..-.,...-..,,. .,. . .....;_..,,. . .::.....

.

DulY--

WI* II: I HIIYr
&amp;
Dry«, fi!IO Sol,;__~ T1bll &amp;
Cliollo, SIO; ..,_ Stoll Dar

9

..... - - l71; 114-318-

I

IG

~.~o.r.:..~

.,.... m

C 111111, I ....... ,._.Tim,

R...

1• 1• 1•

_

'"~.

Good hOoting .....,.. Briel&lt; -

1100,

So~~-$~00.

-

-diWta;

41,DGO m111J11, ... -

-flWIIY. -

13 mo.

lll1lndld
4
, _ lf!w. • IOMllo- IIIYI
Hno-.

Compleht the chuckle quoted
by lillong in the missing words
_ you develop from step No. 3 below.

Yooo INIJ . - 1111 nell y11r.

Cool
1112.

a ..-. _ , a.-.

1111 Co

1117 """' Toonpo, G~

·

31M-175-

t);{::"

~"':rio~
No~~Condl1111·
'!"l• a .,._,

I I I I lar3 I I I I I I
'

.

..

'"""
- a o... "........
... ,,..
4411141.

" " S.10 11-r, Alum. -11,
Lato Of Ellrul Lillo - .
li,(IOO. 114-37N7118.

01111. 30,000 -

Aeuro Int. . . L.S, I Sf'lld,
111111; sony, .Lu• Dllc,
....,.II, Cruldi Flloa ·Amp, lug
Bro; Sunr01111 Ell...lonl Conolttcn; $11,500. o14-3N-2221.

~li,Hl"t

-· --n

Mt;. 1150.
-

In·-· . . .

---~~~In
lhrH IMII"""'""

Eloven
momo---~11¥1ngroom...,~!l'lf:l: ,

Shepllord pupa, !I

or 115-

Iaiii

Build your _ , ov"""'ldng a lar!te lll&lt;i. 73
IICIN ml cl raD1g lind. cfNn ond moved, w1IIJ a bl
cl
. 8 Ac. "'
·. t
mit.UNTills
1\U
lllll'lf
opporluniiN.
Ill _.
II IproperlY
pold fishing
lokw. Grill lor o c:l1ut&lt;h ..,.,, complng groundl or

you .- . . tour wu o.•. Four O¥WIIzecf blcho•.

3
a aso.puDDloo
oirlor i:oo

---·-..-..*'cellng,-.....
,.,...,. ..., -.p

fill . . .JI.MJI.

bllh
!!" _.., on:lllcl - ·- Filii noor taunclr)'.
'
fwd 2 - - . , . . . ,
5.4411C. ""'- f'IO'i ... ~yow,.,. ..,;
lit en Dlo - " - Cluolllod Buwwa oroy.

-.UingAold Fn&gt;ntage.

' 1125. VACANT LAND -

now-·

-

I

· VACANT LAND - Sflrlngllekl TWp. 59 ac. mil
trom Holzer Ho!iplal. Grea1 location for large

aero~~

homel on a hll.

Kill. LAKEVIEW SUeDtVISION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO eUILD- 21o 5 aaes mora or loss. llf1ve

'Will Top Sun lomp.

Sporli

5 acres roUing

lind.

- · CHAAIIING HOllE -l.ocoled 1&lt;111 oil SR 35.
- · ronc:ll wlll1 now ....,.,..menlo. Lovotv
now....,..~.
roof 3 yaars 0111, 2
-.....• LR. dn. nn. , ldl,. onc:loled 1n&gt;n1 pon:to ontce
rm. IWitudy ..:I b•IITiell...
'

A g'stawl tlmll8wan cat. 304l'lloiiCIIollor 4pm.

cio.. tri

Good Condition, With 11111rucIIM Will Sill $40 Clall ·
114-2114-

Rd. to Cllarollla Like Or. 10 Lakeview Cl
011'81tnQ 2 nat to rolling lots, a vartety o1 lreee and
beautlul vll1' ol Ill iilke. All omenllles available.
Rllrll wller, u~ ellc1rtcily, 10rator aysloms
..,.,.__ Reslrtcttve covenants apply. Close 10

to WNte

Holler lind llllOIIPin.l-

1172. STAlE ROUTE 110- 3 oc. 1o1 ml. $15,000.00.

Musical
lnltruments

1816.71 ACRES ml wlh ~bam. Sccltown, OH ,
1141 . 10 AC. 1111. HANNAN TRACE RO. Crown
Cly. $25,000 or ollor.

........, •
Roland
~do llorlln • Gibson
Gulloro And lluch llo,... BHt
A..t- P - · Hummingbird
Mullc, ......_., OH 114-2861111.

11873. PAillE DEYELOPIIENT LAND - Land 'tays
woN. Oldlr 2 olory homo whh 4 bedrooms and
buildings.,Homo In noed cl nopalr. t17 ac. ml. C.llor

location"'!" pr1co
~

w••-sewor.

• omp. 44110. 304-

EIICirlc 1.,._1257.

lett Pontile Clrend Pfll, biUI
foul' - . loiHIIdr :13,000 mltu.
vwy good.oao,
- -·
llra'o,
11\DOD
114-1112·2001,

75 Boats &amp; Motors

=~~llerprooflng. Eo-

•,

system , new Vinyt Whol!: s;&lt;i ~ insulation blown ·
Wor1&lt;shcp, com cnh, collarhou so: Qnd sioraga buiding
All mi_
noral rights !jO. fNII '""'"· Col. &amp; So. Power eo'
alectnc. Be the forst to see and b••Ythis fa"".

,.,_nc..Or 114-237:

Colt t-I00-287.Q5711

niH

BUSINESS •OFFICES r. SALESROOM FOR LEASE
OOWNTOWN, 2ND fii/E., Gl &lt;!!JE TO COURT HOUSE

Real Eltate General

11-ns-

WE

MONOPOLY ON bPEN HouSES.

n •-"" Sable LS. lHM. II

•

.·;,•.

·-

ANYHOIIII

II:St~IIII E IIIC I AI.

I NVDTlll llNT rtiOI'tlaTIQ

OW-OCA,_

SAID • MPIIIAIIAU

2:00 to 4:00 P.M•
242 LARIAT DRIVE, GALLIPOLIS

5686 OTI;T;,••·~;;,:;;..:~·::

DIRECTIONS: Jockson Pike paal Holzer Hospital,
turn flrstetreetto right beside Econo Travel . •sos

DIRECTIONS: Approx. one
left aide or SR saa.

Boolobll Runobct:d With 10
HP - r y OUtboerd, ._.._
m2.

-

20FI.--Inlloord
Encino.
111111 fllle
Very
Clctiid Condition,
_P""!fJ
_,..

-

'&lt;

Dana Tool Bol For Full Slle
Plek-41p, Tolalte For 13 Fon1
PlckuD , ... tt.; hck 01111
For FOnt Plck.IJp All For l200,

Ra-.

11t ... 2171.

tllll Fonl
xu: su.,...
cob. 4ll4. v.. oulo., AC, ' -·

1133 E. MAIN·;;;.,;;.,.;;;;;
DIRECTIONS: SR 124 (E.
Mlileravtlle on left aide of road.
LEMLEY, HOSTESS.

before

11528

NO APPOINTMENTS

,_

3:00 Ia 5:00 P.M.
120 CORA MILL ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
DIRECTIONS: Slate Roule 588 from Rodney turn
first road to right, house on right elde of road
before Quail Creek MH Park.
.
j520

~ESSARY!

COME AS YOU ARE!!!

Real Eatate General

· tNt GIIC S.IS Air, Sllupl

....... till Fonl f.110 Larlol

t..

ll,llll; tll7 eat&gt;, Auto, $3,481;
PU, Air;

Ellondld
Nllllft

t~

a-

HOUSE FOR SALE
3 Bedroom Brick.
2% b.tha, cantralalr,
,.xcellent condition.
Clo1e to ha.pltal.
114-441-3435

C.:lll PU;

1115 Cllov. C.10 PU; till lllzdl
PU 8horg:
· l2~i_ till Fonl
llanatr I II; 1w. Ford 414
~'"1M4
v. $-10 PU ~~

,_'
"_,.'

~,

. . = ..=
~,.;

l3~llfl;

~

MD Aulo SliM, ltwy.

110 N. IM~ 41 181'•

"'

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH. 4563t
R11a11H D."Wood, Broker

Real Ellate General

garage, Ileal pump. Also lncludoo 4!KJO aq. h.
commercial building presently being used tor a

I'":

IMPRESSIVE BRICK RANCH - GREAT VIEW OF ~E
OHIO RIVER FROM THE FAMILY DINING OR LIVING
ROOM. FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM AND LIVING
ROOM. 3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, MASTER BEDROOM
FEATURES DRESSING ROOM AND SLIDING DOORS
LEADING TO PRIVATE PATIO/POOL AREA. EQUIPPED
KITCHEN HAS SNACK BAR. THERE IS AN INTERCOM.
ATIIC FAN, LOTS AND LOTS OF. CLOSET SPACE,
ATIACHED GARAGE, MUCH, MUCH MORE. CALL
FOR AN ,APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS HOME SOON.

-·".
.. .
... l

-~

l-800-585· 7101
(614) 446-7101

•

'

"

'

...

.' .
.~.

.
.

NICE COUNTRY HOME ON APPAOX. 10 ACRES LARGE LIVING ROOM, EAT-IN KITCHEN, AMPLE
CABINET SPACE, 3' BEDROOMS, DEN 2 CAR
GARAGE. KYGER CREEK AREA. BETTER CALL
SOON I $52,000.

30C-7n-IIIO.

welding bUsiness has lhlee phase eledric. For more
Into cal lila SARGE.
1

NEW FREE OuAUU HOMES BOOK SHOWING NEARLY ALL
LOCAL REAL ESTATE LISTINGS, IN COLOR, IS NOW
AVAILABLE. PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR YOUR
FREE'COPY.

Civoler. :12 II. Duel enalno, wllh
trailer. POOO. :IOW7UIII.

1841. COMBO, HOME ond BUSINESS - BoautHul
whKo bolcle homi with 3 bedrooms, llf8PIICI, 2 cor

'
'

r@JMii]

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

-.

1m. HANNAN TRACE SCHOOLS - Neol 1111&lt;1 deon
t.ot, now roof.

Canaday ::~

'446•3636

114-1111:1-1517.

tll2 Cllovv. ont; 14,000 mlllo,

'

'

.

Realty _

1114 11ft. W.ucr.tl bowutcler,
150HP, outboerd mercury, too
llllftY_ ...... , ..... 080,

IIIII: tttl Clll.lhroto. Vol, Autan:atle, A~,
Loadildt ..,500. 11• 4t1 lii!IIOS.

i 14-ltiMDM.

le&amp;O. NEW LISTING - Lola ol space In lhlo 4
bedroom home located on MI. TlbOr Rd. and ...,..
with 15 acres, Including a pond. Very niCe tocalton.
$44,000.00. Call the SARGE.

3 BR homo -

._.,~· " - ~~~ · ~

...,.,..... - I n l i e r ond
.... Clanga klpl. -71-:lllfi.

Z-24, f311115. U Ranaer,
at 2, 131100. 11 PonDac
1001, l2285. II -tar Yilt,
t22M. .... u.- CG::drllrllat,
12411. Qrond .....,.., l2285.
Ia "Pontile Prtx, $2411. 84
Dodge Rom 10, 4•'!:.$2295. 15
DodGe SIIIIIJY, Slloa. Seallya
u..cJ Cua. 304 112 3712.

=~-- $4,200. -

know more, oon1ac2 '"" SARa£.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 44j~·7j~"

t882 Rlnlllr 11 112 II.. old walk thru wlndlll:lold, 1411 HP iiO

~

VIRGINIA IIIITM, IAOI(EII.............- ..311 1131
E1MC1! •Hill, IIEALTOR.:................44f.1117
RUTH IAIIR, IIIALTOR .......................~722
DIIORAH ICITU, REALTOR ............4t1 . . .
LYNDA I'IIALEY, IIEALTOR ...._ .......... UI 1101
IIICIIAEL •UIR, REALTOR............. til 1101

""TIIICIA 1110111, REALTOIL ...............24_,.
8'TEYEII IIGT.IWOROI......- ....·-·-· ·:MHtDI
· W1L11A Wit ua..-w. AIIOCIATE. ...-241 11711
.w1E11 WILUAMION, ASIOCIA1E....24540l0
Htt. NEW LISTING - 3 bodooom- homo Will
1.6 acres o1 land loco! eel on MI. Tabor Rd. Want to

49:.1 ACRES -NICE FARM HOUSE

~oce 9 room country homo, up 1o 5 bed rooms il needed.
Uke ft!IW~I ngle roof recgntiy inslailad. Aural

for Sale

OliN like new lrueiiL 1o1en
In -~~ - - too M,

LR, OR, Nl·ln lclcllen. belh, fuel oil

.••

- . COUNTRY LIVING· You 1011 8&lt;e this 2 BR, 2
bath Kajon MH wlh 11~1n ldlellen, gas l'llol, LR, on
t-2"""' mi. $25.000. Bonus: Oldor MH.

.·.:

1825. VACANT LAND - ctoee ln. 5 acr11 rolling

llrid.

UMd E!IOt

882~iltl.

cc

tllll:l K. . .llld KSIO. til hOO
llkooil. --3323.

evanlngo.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

1178. HAVE A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY ESTATE -

~""':"--n.IMIItf ftiCim .,;d
_,
..., open .....-.lloloilum 111111

-

.

BASEMENT
WA1ERPROOF1NO
Uncondnlonll lllellme guoronIM. Loool
lumlohed

Very nicL

t1171 Font F250, 4WO, 12000,

VACANT LAND

Foyw wtlh

Improvements

~.;

1171. POINTS OF PERFECTION SURROUND lhill

~4

Home

Real Estate General

$2,100; tllll !rock C.m110,
M,qoo, 114 311 1111.
lett C.vatllr Z24, loiHIId, tow
mf!i!, ~~- __,lion, 114-

.'
..... ..

23. LOCUS ST.
446·6806

tOl~MO

81

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

- . - 11WII7-7t01.

.. '
~

84

Filth comp...,
"Scampor'", ..... ooll COntained,
q - . .... bod, lull .... both,
alMce I ID I, axe _..t, 30C-

Willi Eldroo $1,1100: ft8l Plain
Honda Q:ldwli:B 116oCC $t.500i
tm.Cl'llwy K·t 4 WO Ple~.Up,
Dill-bled For Rlllorollon

:

Pets for Sale

30'1140'xt'

'111"""10 Of 114.JQ.2550.

Real Estate General

Transporl.l11o'1

Spl:

245-tl)52.

Servtces

U1

-1111 .......

t l l t o - Oold WinG 1500

11tt Covalllr 211,000 lliloo,
14,100: 1810 0.0 43,000 uu•••

Bldg

t045.
Will build polio COY-, d-1,
ecrNned rooms, put up vln~l
lldlng or lrallor oklr11ng. 114·

•o•

S3IOII. to4-t7W847.

-

-Real Estate

t1181 -

~.'!!!0

;

Real Estate General

Mt; -

Improvements

Improvements

Plotnlod St.ll SldN Clolvolume
81.,.1 Roolb~~·.e· Sliding D-.
Nl Walk
, 15,111 Er.ated.
Iron HorN Bldfll. t-1100452·

.=•

tttl KlwNIIol Ninja 100 R,
4,100 lllel, st.wawm CondJIIon, Price To Sill AI: lt,4H,
114-24W581.

Gcood
•

Times

Home

MotorcyciH

74

tNt Oldl CUt- llu..-- :L1
V..L AIM, PW, ~·
iiOii

Int...,..._

--~;:;.:.:;:,;,:,.::::..:::~---___:.::::::..::;.::.:=.=~--~~~~-- -

wb old,

..., 1 Ton Dodge
Churdl .,..,

/Aj

•
---

81
Ullthy

CoiiiNin tNI compor,
eall1nl
oondtlon, utra1,
$tiOO oao. '"' • ust.
Ttulwoccl 1~
behind campor.l200, •
·2511:1.

Ra._

top, IICIIIonl concfl.

Witn Grey
Concllllori, ...... .,._

Tho aurprlaingly ·large, tY. floor, low-m•lntenence, brick home 11 .114 Flrot Ave.,
Glllipollo, OH. l ..turea 4 lllrge bedrooma, 3 lull batha, large L-ahapeclllvii)WdJnlng
•aa with •••llent lir•p-, ond • birch ponalld IMIIiy room with flrepilcl. A geroge,
corport, l•ge Wilk-in pontry, Iorge loundry room, numer- l•ge liorllll" .,..., .,_
trill 1ir, lnd •n M!ciooed b10k·porch o....,lnglnto • .large lev8l y•d •nd IIIey •• 111
lncorporlllld Into the unique ftoor pi1n. FIYI enlr)'Woya and a wlndertng hili provide
lor privacy. The efficient kltchen hu i buill-In ovone, dlahwaaher, lalond ronge with
hood, and ap10ioua cobinell. All of thla Ia under a - root.
SHied bldl will be received until 12:00 noon on the 22nd day of Ma~ leta for the
real Illata located at 114 First Avenue In the City of G•llpolla, Galilll Coun~, Ohio,
being pert ol Lolli and 2, 43'6"xt73'10"; llao 5' oH iol13; ond 43'6" oH a•..,. Loti ·
more p~rtlcularly dacribed in Volume 229, Poge 113, Deed Recotde ol Galiill CountY,
Ohio. S.ld rell eotato ia owned -by the eotale ol Nellie w. Sc~rberry, decnaed. Eoch
bid ohould be dlre_cled to Francia Burdell and Eata Voilborn, executor ond oxeculrlx ol
the eollte ol Nellie W. Scarberry, dic-ed, and mailed by certified mill to Froncla
Burdell, 480 Bandy Road, Bidwell, OH. 45614. The executor ond executrix r111rve the
right to reject any and ali bidl. The bldl will be llbulated 112:00 P.M. on the 22nd day
of May, 1993 and the •ucce..!ul bidc;!er noUfled. The real eollte incluclngthe r•ldlnce m•y be viewed on the 6th·doy ot May, leta, between the houro of 5:00P.M. and
7:00P.M. ond on the 8th dey ol Mey, t993,'botweon the houra olt:cio P.M. ond 4:00P.M.
'
FRANCIS BURDELL, Executor
ESTA VOLLBOAN, Execulrlx
.ol the Eatate ol
W.
dlceMed

'1-!S"

~

I 0

c..- a ~~~·

-

erything properly prepared?*
Smug maid to woman: "Oh yes
:
._·=--.a...---1-'--'-'-..L._ ....._--'- madam. My -- are ---!*

WI! Iiiii ... $500, 114-11112-

-

PS.-- .

Hno--

home guests for dinner. Is ev-

C0 Z A0 I
1-_,..;...l,. .;,1,-,; a;,..;1~1~~...;_

Home

81

camping

Vlclorio, whne II Font
XLT. 4 · 30W711't171.
~~~ IUOIInlf., -

This extraordinary First Ave. view of the Ohio River can now be
youra with property stretching to the' river shore.
·

Ellc. - - 10M11-1712.

--1.--J.L..--.L..--1.-1. .....:.~·.

dillon, wl -hliilnl•; 2
.,....,. .......... 114-112·7548.

-Ford
"'tl e-n

tiM ....,_ flrHird. Bleck.

I

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

*

1111.

-,.1;,._,;.1~~--I "MySnobbish
woman to maid:
hu$band will be bringing

L..

-.a OnYIIY, good con-

=n~~
•

IO,CSI - .
-lc ,.,..., I 79
C8mpers&amp;
$'1,200, lft4.37l.!l152.
Motor Homes
1171 Fonl, 4WD, 414, ch•l , . ,
whillla. Uo.. 401 CJ., '-ded, 1m Toct c d lllh " -· 35 A.
filet~ p
gs, poao, 114-111Z.. L1nc1 Cru'-, Alii For Plul, 114ZI25.
441-2441.

tNt Pontllo 8W ...~.... ted

wl~

-,1~'

~· ......, ......... 114-1142-

-"'-

1111 Chry. Lel11cn
Oldlflnrlll .......
l'hblnl, 12,111:

_... Orond Prix. $'1
: IIID
Aule SliM, ltwy. teo . lf4-441.

I

I

Two lftld cool Iron siOYII,
no..; 11om 10 opood blcycll,

3I.OOOmL. ltiOO,

•• 711,000 nolllo,
l14-llll:loal7. .

RAQEKU

...

78

v... -

···-j.!,..lllf..
••

TIP CEO

Lilli.~.

~.

t14 1111:1 me.

~41111;

I' I I

114 ••• 3002.
•
T - s.n llodlt .2800 EJI...Iont Condllloll, liNd Very

11417

cond,
010.
2722•1 ...., .

BUTESO

lor 4ll4 trucll al oquot volue;
$1500•

w-... _., liz• s.

27Nntor1

vans &amp; 4 WD's

I

2501.
Wtlk

- - Slopeldl, lop.,

.... Cllov. -..,. , ........ 73
tloo.Bunblrd: 1117 ~ Colt 4 t17'111 P
Dr, • Aul-lc, Air, Slllrpl Yen. 1*4

INDPAK

LIMa-

1117 Pontiec ..........., eiC

toM,..

ton truc1&lt; 79

IIIII . - . -

72 Tnlckl .for Sale

Equipment

simp le words. Print letters
eoch. in its line of squares.

100
tool
· - -~~~
ond 1111 3
-.
........
30U75-251D.
TOihlllo ¥C I Plw Alllllhl lnd
10ft. dill!, S2000 or ~•

-

71 Autos for Sale

"7i':'

the 6 scrambled
0 Rearrange
words below to make 6

Tlllul-. entenna and rotor,

OH Point Pleasant, wv

ftlitetl ltr CLAY I . POLLAN - - - - - - -

,

Tool
.,._ - · 11110 t6,
120, f14-N4017.

,.

1993 -

' '.

Dlghel
WlYI S,-ltllr, Gcood Conclltlon, Aeklng: 1:1!!0. Fot llato Infneonlc

•

-Ion 114-371-2152.

f-'Jrm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

low-.....

--

c- Iller, 114-379-2831 AI·

house wllh LR, aat·ln kltcllon, bath, gas lumaco .
~lind oul&gt;ldg 30'xt5' opprox. on 5 .88 .CS. m1.
$201.

to

•

1123. COUNTRT PLEASURE • 3" bodfooms, LR,

· ......,- lfl. r.o.~ty room, -.no111 on 5

-

mA. Con be puii:lould with llddllonll5 ocno

-

M lnllmlldonll 4-row com
,......, -- - ........ 114-MII-

-.

'

~
plow; olaht
_ , diltill whh dfac
opl--.IM-II:i..T.J02.

-t«;
.
.
.
.
:::'A.'l.

w-

••'
•

'

,

e Row:
1Mk, WhHI

~.. I, 1, I, 10, ' 12 Ft. \ 2, &amp;

•
••'
' '

1111 liCE FAMILY HOME with plenty o1 lfli&lt;O for
IYonycno. Wlhln walking d - ol ~hopping contor.

•

3 BAs, 2 balhl, IUH .basemenl, new windows
central air. unk. M~ Ne to apprec;Jate. Call for an
-r.men1. Wilma Wlllamson. 245-0070. -~

.
..•

•nd

3 ..,._ - • tl Fl. Harsg:c~ors;

~.::..:

'•

•

PloniOI'I 2, ~- •

flu Hitch

•

1112. JUIT LOVELY tH2 MODEL 14'x70'
REDMAN IIOBILE HOllE • 2 bldrmo,. muter
bedrocm very 11n1t wlh belh. Loodl ot stonga. 2nd
bednn. and belh. ~llannlng living room, ldlmen
cablnals, carpet, Ike new, and awnlngo, Rlnlel
tot has ""'"~' ptanto and now"'ng ,,_, Thlo Ia one
good bory

- · 71ACS.IIIL- ~ blm.

ClaM

cFonl

bam.-

... _____

tor 4 P.ll. Wlllldlya Ani11-

. , . .. :J64.112~.

-n.

lin. COZT 11'3 BA HOlE ..., LR, DR,
....., _,,-·~.lUll ollumace, CIA
..,.,.. end41'132:
haYia
l i t - !OWn. Muol-1 I

61 Farm Equipment
Z20

-to

'~

- . EUREKA-- and deon 2·3 bedroom nonch

w:.

•

Wllh Ftll ledtli FanMII H Tnctar; Othlr Fllld R..dy EqulpIMnl. Howe'• Farm Maehinety,

.leclllon, Ohio. 114-281-5144.

'

•

· TOO 0000 TO BE TRUE - 3 bedroom
.'""""-to,_,II 'the -.oltlll you could'
•tor: IIYina room, dlril1fl room. ldlmen. ulllly, lUll

• .,. NIM ft hoy
blne. Oohl 85 ~- mlxor.
llolh 11"0'1 _..t,
~ItS.
-

'•

biSirMI.. wlh lirep~Ke, awtmmlng pool ptua 2 car

-

Sol 01 TIWM 14" - · I Fl.
Dlec. Ower,_ Fuel T•nk. 8N

-.......
'
'

.'

THIS HOME HAS STONE EXTERIOR ANO STONE
FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM - 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS, CAt:!PORT, PLUS DETACHED APARTMENT
WITH GARAGE. RENT FROM APT. WILL HELP MAKE
YOUR HOUSE PAYMENT! .64 ACRE LEVEL LOT
APPRQX. 3 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS (Agent Owned)'

•

I

$26,000 TWO BEDROOM FRAME HOME - LARGE
LIVING ROOM , EAT·IN KITCHEN, UTILITY ROOM
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT SOON I '

.• •

•c:••c:•.'-"""·

EYEAYTHING YOU COULD WANT AT A
REDUCED PRICE OF l74,100111 - Very
convenient locetion. C.ntanary atea. Thia
home oWero 3 BRa, 1 112 bllhs, l.R, DR, 15
X 30 family ""·· lui blsemont, FP, atblched
garage, cent. air.

J

..

· $711,1100.

Font Troo101, 114-371•2272.

••DPPf
--, 1:44...,_
........
rider

63

wltPi , , . .
fT H~Vac, prrce

fi'IOIWet

Llveltock

1111 AllHA Fal Golding_ "-&gt;-

!!.7 - A 11ft

IIYI FundJ...

By

ltondy'o """"' 114-211WSZ2.

31 ........,. for 1111. 13.110 ooch.
a4-e7Sot371.

~
,._,

club -

· 175. IICh. 304-

~ or FFA -

ooH, wolghtl

· 2&lt;10 Itt. 304 lfi2.2Stl.

-

.. ,.., "'· 114-MH011.

··-·
-···

A.l. ........... pollld -

I&gt;:Nd~'tl - 1 ,

bul IK

114-

Chi.._ ....

k

And
~

PriCed. Slot•
_ __,Ohio
.....

Clllb ""' lor Rio, Dur0co, flO
11CII,I14.tl2.e324.

,
___
=
Joe-.

Ccounlf

6 WY. "Fw lntomnlz •

..u ...

..

. .-•
•

REOUCEDIIIIddleporf. 1 1;yas home 4 bedrooms
FANG heal, nice lot Iaroe front
paved elnlel, cfos8
to shopping NOW ASI&lt;ING
,000 '

18H. NEW LilTING .iuBT OUTSIDE CITY
u.TII ~ remod1l11t holM wfth 1.11 ecra
on 81* Rt. 14 t. Tlllo homo IMIUIII: 3 BR, 2 bllll.
LR, FR. OR, Ullly, ccvoriHIIIanl pcrdi lind polio. Tho
lot 11110 _ ,........ . . - . . Alldng ontr

lrama home 3 bedrooms, 2 intpl..,.,
balh, crsltmfweil, approx. 1.4773 ....,. with some riwr
~ontagel ASKING $20,000

Willi .

NEW usnNG- S,R. 124 ne.- Autlald 98.99 eavs
IWO hOUtelia one IIO!y, 1 Ia two IIOIY both aldar ........
includes 2 ahadll ana brick buldng fiue ge1 wfnlr....._
ASKING $115.000

MII,ICIG;Iocll nowror on ........ ,.•.

1171. NEW LII11INI • - - 45.IMIIICIN ,.,.
or loll. Two IICIY 4 -...,,•. P-'1' lrvnta en
27i and ~rpolnt Road. 1\pprol 30 .....
lllol&gt;ll bam, ·-ng. pond lnd ,.,.
machln.ry lncludeel. Call today tor colftftl•te

' lnlotmlllon.

'

........

17113. BIIICI( RANCH • Sluatld on 1 IC. rn.1 ~- 7 to lhoflptng cenor. Tl'lll " - foiiUreo 3
bedtooms,
lUI · ldldion
dlril1fl
- 'tn2
bedroomo. 2IIINty
,.,.,.,,_
family and
room,
ldicllon
tialo~n~~l. 3.,.. go- and 1 cor llllechOd l"'llle
Col lofiM -tan.
.

e

IP A 1101111 OF 11011 ITYI.E Alii 1.0W
IIAIIIlENAHCI II In JOUr luluro, Conoidlr IIIla 4

1101.

NEW LISTING- Mlddlepcirt. W - 81.- One 1oor 11wne
wilh 2 be«ooina, beth, F.A.N.G. t.m,awpeUdryw... nice
~~~~ porr.tl. oil _ , ~- CUte, cozy I aliordaoblel

- m capo Cod""'* home. Hcmllllllialld en
2114-""" hu 11100 oq. ll. olll¥!ng - · . . . .
,..
-.g elllllt4124 D-.g -lor 1 -

---

1121. PRICED TO IELL- Tlllo ho. . IWI 1000 oq~
n or lYing ....... 3 -.m . .... ouii&gt;UIII1na...,
ilul* en 112 ocn rn.1 P-l201-

COME ON .. AND SEE OUR SflECTIQIIII
OUR DOOR mALWAYS OPEN TO 'fOUl

•LilTING -

HENRY E.CI.ELAH0......_, ____ ............. - ......!1!12-t'ltl
KATHY CLELAND ...........___........._ ........- 11112-t'ltl
TRACY BRINAGER......................- ............ _.141-1411

1111. NEW
homo -laG

.. .

"

0

'

...-

Sdioolt. , _ . ..

'.

~

'

'

.

.. .

•,

T.......,.

and cent. llr. RIYir
'

,•

.

3 bedroom, 2 l&gt;llh ronah

on 112 ec. mA tn -

c.,.n, Et. !II -

OFFICE......- - .........-~······ ·..---·- ·- - -.Ift-2251

.

CITY UVINQ • Come In •nd look II lhio
ellra nice home. Equipped kitchen, FR,LR.
DR.;_.~ iumace, a.nt. •lr. FP, Pllio,

'-

RACIN~·IR.331

I

•
•

•

COMMERCIAL BUIUJitG. located on Second St. in
Pomeroy. Lorge commen:ial room dcwnlllairo ·2 llplft·
manto upatairl. ONLY $20,000
•

Pollld

. d -Frl,.lloy :lOth
- 20IIo
-Hoo.lolo.
7:30.- t3
- . 7 ~~~~-. ID wllh
C8IWI, 1 IIMrt.
•uttaan
Col-

.

air,
open, alorage
acaping. loCated on
89,500

V!llfir

•

wo.-...,...

•
••'

LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
IUSINEIS? - SA tiiO ANI' 111Mv1ie Pike.
Ai&gt;Pf'lx. 200' X 200' lot. AI utiM..a ovll•-u- ·
(888)
-·

~

·188-

••

t•

2 BAa. LR wiFP, ltildwt. blth, utility, very

ciolllo town.

oiOHNION AIDQE AOAO • ADDIION TWP. 3 pandl,lobam bul, &amp;5' ·
Xtoo 1tM1. wlfr -~~ ilooro. U.,
'

Ia""·

_...,IIIII!.

f•

(578)

LOT FOR t.LI ON IT. RT. ·t.O, NOAYH

-~

=·

U&amp;'IITA111 • Appro~. 8/4 - · IIIII.
Bt..,.llfellfDtalrame. ' ,.

•·
•

QIU

••

MJIORAIIIC

.1

VIIJf· OF OHIO AIVI!R

YAWY - 1,414

r

--Ill I(IIUIICIItaull,

7

!
'
•••
., --

I IAI. I balha,

LR.DAI
.....
puMp,
ltulllllnge
an

Too muoll fNDPirft lp ...rtl~

.

•

'

PRICED FOR 'M! IEGNtERI • $20,800 - 38 ' ACRES, IIINUTEI TO TOWN • NIC.
home on propllly lolluree 3 BAa, bath, LA,

'

'

1.-ACAES + 10 X 121 METAL
BUILDING ""'ipped ...., ldtt:l.l, baolhr:,
afllae, eiD. GMIII blllin111.
CARIII!L ROAd· 4 mi. N. ol Alo Gralllfe.·
AtllnX. 24 olau~Veytd vactrnl lind.
!dill lor- home.

.,.,000 '

IM!IIUM • AJC

111

Rood, 40-A. IIIII,

IIICIIflr oflladed. •180 per monll inaame
flam tlrallll hallie ....

a . r ·coiMIRY HntNG

....

FOR

A

. lfiLIIIDII ~- ,. btlclllllnCIII, 2.374

IIGIIIIIII\ 4 BAI, I INtlle, llrglltiiQhlfl, 2
II IN&amp;I pa...... clllk. IIIII ~. 2 cer
'

kitchen, blm; loblcco bla.
.
ST. AT 14t ..Julll mi!IUIII lo lo'M1, homl oft·
ero 3 IIRo, 1 1/2 bllhl. LR, DR, unalllched
garage lind nQ garden lfiOl Clll tor moN
delaiil.
'
.
' AJ IENTION RAST raE HOlE OW!tEA...
t t Gavin Streel· Ntae homl olleta :S BAo,
LA, ldtchan. FR, bath I illundry ""· , llum,
alclng. nice r•rd.
414 THIRD AVENUE· 415 BAa, 2 balha,
kllchen. DR. l.R, elum. a~c~ns~. ge1 halt,
cent.llir. new ..,.,.C. (103)
ATTRACTIVE HOIIII! IN VILLAQE OF

c.N1IAVIW - Conveniently located,
o-• ' - done work to meklllllt • com·
lollll&gt;lot hallie.

PlEASANT VALLEY ESTATES • LARGE
HOME offero &lt;4 BRo. 2 bltho, kitchen, LR,
FR. gao furnace, fireplace, central air,
attiChed gerage, pool.
NICE FLAT LOT· $/4 acra mn with t988
mobile home in very good ccn&lt;ilion . Priced
In the 20'1. Call Aultl for details.

.

.

•

OLD CHEVY· OLDS BUILDING· 420' front
0f1 Sacand Ave. lind 82'1rontage on Grape.
RACCOON ROAD· 3 BRa, both, ltitchan,
clning room, 2 1f.l cer un1ttached garoge,
beiUtilul we aded 4.5ecroa (864)
CHENIY DAIYI! • 2 BRa, 1 both, LA, khch·
en, 111• hMI. tilt; Wiler, ueed as rantai pro·
petty. $21,000. , . ,

of llltlnga.
\

...

COZY HOME IN
I NOW IN
BLOOM ON ~E
MAINTAINED
HOME HAS EASY
INYL SIDING FULLY
CARPETED .. EAT IN KITCHEN WITH COUNTER TOP
RANGE AND BUILT IN OVEN .. 2 BEDROdMS CALL
SOON THE PRICE IS RIGHT!
"

,,

-I

~

_,

'.

.

-.

�. ~ Pomeroy-Middltpot1 _ Clalllpoll•, OH-Polnt Pieasant, wv

Page

Special disaster payment program
announced for 1992 crop corn
~ producers

By Lila Colliu,
Galla ASCS Orlke

·MYSTERY FARM • This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Spil and W"ater
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
•. Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
. pale in .the weekly contest may do~ by guessing
the farm's owner. Just. mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentine!, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or tbe Ga!lipolis Daily
Trivune, 825 Third Ave., GalFipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the
.

Ohio Valley Pub!ishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone·nRmber with your card
or Fetter. No te!ephone cans wlll be accepted. AFI
conll$1 entries sbou!d be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner wll! be ch11sen ~Y lottery.
Next week, a Mei!IS County farm w;ll be fea·
tured by the Meigs .Soil and Water C9nservatlon
District.

·. es
'Sheep
.
. l•n ven
. . ·.tor
. ·y
. dec"
. lz•n
.
upin~lasthalfoflhe 1980s.".

· WASHINGTON(AP)-World
)beep inventory at lhe beginning of
this year was an estimated 819 mil·
1ion head, a 4 percent drop from lhe
previous year according to an
Agriculture DePartment rqx&gt;tt.
·.: "This marks the. third straight
year of flock declines, and indi·
cates the world sheep industry is
'still working through .lhe collapse
of wool prices in 1989, low sheep
. meat prices in more recent years,
.and economic reform in Eastern
Europe and the former Soviet
Unioo," says lhe report this month
on lhe wocld livestock situation.
. However, the report said that
over lhe past six to nine months
wool prices have shown some
·improvement, •'although in real
. terms, !hey are still well below lev.els established before a price run·

sai~:

.

,

NFL

Pick 3:
680
Pldt4:

draft

"Ui

ends today

ie e

for 1993-crop-~ if dlellljal- · ·
ment in prodnm.., • 7 ia a;;.
of65'1&gt; or.mm:.
The
period • •
May 7, ~3. ClllliKl :ya.local
ASCS Office ·(446-!6116 i;; Glllia
County) f'?l' eddjtjnnll M•i• '+•

• Super Lotto:

10.Zl·Z7·32-33-39

mc=atioo

Kicker:
595111

Pile•'

GALLIPOLIS • Each year, hun· The Scene ·Safety ....,;nat, LiJcal
dreds of serious accidents change agencies and oraaaiulioas
the lives of Ohio fanners and their involved in bdpiq 10 JC16e .,.._
families, according to Jacltie Gra· narsetuparc:Eiolm¥ !Me!Ccaham Gallia County Farm Bureau ter, Gallia Collilty S!;erill's Dqlmsafety chairman.
ment. Sllte Hi,abwly l'llrol, Gellia
· Psually, farm accident victims County Healdi Dqjat-'ll. Jm•
are discovered 'by family members den's Farm Equipalcat,. WIERoremp1oyees who must act quickly AM, WMGO-FN, ud die Fua
. to save lhe victim. FreqReDdy, lhe . Bureau youth and
first person on the· scene becomes
Every family is inpooW., die
lhe second victim by malting inall" local &lt;:ammunity. Yo. ...ay lialC
. propriate decisions when trying"w··· 'one lire so learn 10 lbi* afl:ty.
make a rescue.
Because you cauot predict
The ability to make the right exactly when an ace••··
decisions when a fann accident is pen, you must leam 10 lllill: llloill
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S. discovered depends on whether safety at all times. Ac il •ca.
exports of fresh asparagus, peppers you, the [IISI person Dil lhe scene, be costly wilh muy dollars Foil..
and celery aU incfeased significant· ·have .becn trained in assessing farm For example: paia 1111111 tliiifli1ailc.
ly in value in 1992·over lhe previ· accident scenes and first aid. You loss of Fimbs, bospita11lills,. a.l
ous year, according 10 the Foreign must Qe familiar wilh the macbin· hired hei.J!. You ba1C clllly CIIIC ire
Agricultural Service.
·
',ery, siorage facilities, and Sln!C· and that s w,hy it is impollal4 b
The primary market for these lures on the fann so lhat decisioos everyone to get involftd ill.dais
vegetab!es was Canada, said lhe made will not furlher injure lhe yic- type of program.
agency's report this monlh on hor- tim or put yourself in danger. Your
For more infCJriiUIIDI ..... die
ticultural products.
goal as the fli'St person on the scene First On The .Sceuc 7*"1*- a."Most U.S. fresh vegetable • is to keep the victim alive until tact: Gal!ia County Fana B exports to the Eui'opean Communi· emergency medical service arrives. 212 Pearl Street SniJc A 11' "-"'·
ty face strong comp.etiilori from .
That's why Gallia County Farm Ohio 45640 1-800-777-9nfi
Europe811 and Mediterranean coun- Bureau is sponsoring a Firs I On
. tries, such aa Spain, Morroco, Bel·
• gium, lhe Nelher!ands, Turkey and .
Israel," said lhe report.

ll'IAII:::;,.

wil,..,..

Pomeroy-~lddleport,

Ohio, Monday, Aprtl 26,1993

UMW sending ·message to coal operators
,

CHAJUJISTON, w. va. (AP)
- A UDited Miae Workers
ij*i
1171lllioa JIJllea In SL
LcNilllld 1M Ailgelea over lho
5 ' - - 10 1e11t a mea·
. . vl.....,lty 111 COil opera~«t
11 ... MaJ 3 contract oxiCnslon
F •w cbwiiiUf.
•
"I lbl;;t tiiCio IJICI other evenll
G&amp;r i delr demollstralioll of lhe

sible." .
for aatrona contract." he said.
He said the union. planned
MltiCI Workers drcucillln camouflage fall~:• staged a ''We demonstration• Tu~y a! plants
come for jus , not for brunch '' owned by Hanaon Industries,
march Saturday outside the posh which Ia lhe parent company U.S.
1M Angeles mUIJion of a top coal coal giant Peabody Holding Co.
The unioo also planned to rally Sat·
offx:lal.
And in SL Loulu tJnlted Mine · urday at the U.mp_per St. Clair, Pa..
Workers union leader uraed the headquarters of CONSOL Fnc,
In Beverly Hilla Saturday, lhe
nalloa '1 lar1101t coal producer to
..._._.dwdepl!lol~.lhat remembOr how impo!Wit workers union members marched on the
UMWA IDCIDben bavc tllrOUihOUt are u It gem up for tiClgotlatlons estaiC of Lord Qordon White, an
1118 a.l fieldll and lhrou&amp;hout lhls
the '!"ion·
. offiCial of Hanson Industries.
ca try," UMW apokeaman Jim
I thmk It certaln!y sends a
About 80 demonstrators, some
Gn 5 Mltlid Slltlday aigbL
. clear and unrnlallkable meuage," carryins alps reading "Justice in
•'It llio ~ u OIIDOitUDity Oroafold said. "Our objective il to lhe coal fieldJ now," marched for
10 *-•auate the uni'hakab!e win a Slflllli contract and we'd like one hour in a bid to ''rock the Dris·
._•illaclll of UMW A families 10 see that achieved u lOOn 11 pol· · tine Beverly Hills nelghborhooil.''

There were no arrests.
"II was 11 demonstration of
union solidarity and an attempt Ill
prevent calamity in the coal
fields '' UMW ~eprcsentative Joe
Drexler said ouUide White's
walled estate.
In St. Loul's, demonstrato(s
gathered in tl)e shlidow of Peabody
Holding Co. 'a downtown office.
Peabody Coal is a subaldiary, of
Peabod~ Holding Co. of St. Louis,
the nation's largest coal producer. ·
"Peabody started over 100
years ago as a mom-and-pop operation. Today, tl)ey are the larsest
prlva~ely-owned coal company in
the world. They have forgotten

----Rainy day for recycling

Akron.newspaper reports inmate
warned guard the .day riot sttuted

wl'!',

Nutritionally advanced
horse f•d specifically ·
.formulated for your olde
horse's less efficient
metabolic systems...

Saturday, May J, 1993 will be
the "first On The Scene" mid-day
program at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. This safety
awareness program dealing with
agriculture related accidents will
start at II :30 a.m. and is being
sponsored by the local Farm
Bureau organization in cooperation
with several other local groups.
Severa! demqnstrations will be
· conc!Qcted lhroughout the day start·
ing at about l p.m. A spaghetti
lunch will be available. Hopefully
for many farmers, Saturday, May I
will be a good day for field work.
the late season will bring many
long work days and the result is
usually more accidents. This pro·
gram' is a must for spouses and
children with limited experience
around farm equipment. If you
found a family member caught in a
tractor PTO, would you know how
to tum the tractor off! Attend the
"First On The Scene" program.
Edward Vo!lborn Is Gallla
CoRnty's extension agent, agri·
culture.
.- ·

. Researchers· continues to find
hew lhings abourthe importance of
Vi18.111in E and selenium in lhe diet
of dairy cows. According to Dr.
:Bill Weis s, a researcher at
O.A.R.D .C., we have found that ·
feeding dry GOWS 1000 l.U. of supplemental Vitamin E per day and
la&lt;;tating cows 500 I.U. of supple·
mental Vitamin E per day with
diets containing .3 p. m. of supple·
mental selenium reduces the inci·
dcnce and duiation of clinical mas·
titis by about 40 percent as compared to cows not fed any su~ple·
mental Vitamin E or sclemum.
B:eeause feeds differ in content and
consumption varies durin~ !he
~pre-fresh" and "post-panuntion"
it is difficult to balance these levels. Call for a complete review of
this topic in the recen.t DHI
;:Insight" newsletter. ·
According to John Lawrence,
Economist from Iowa, beef product
movenient continues good in spite
of ;ecord hij!h live canle prices that
were established in the week end·
liig March 26. It appear&amp;, according
10 Lawrence, that retailers are rea~
ijjring select beef over' choice !O
l!elp overcome. the higher-priced
product The choice-select boxed·
1111cf spread has remained quite nar·
row. In February lhe spread fell to
f7.76 per hundred and bas stayed
under $~.81 since. Dr. Lawrence
. predicts lhat as more of the 199Z
C!Jlves start coming · to slaughlct
there will be an increasing su~ly
of ~·se lect" resulting in a WJder
price spread.
·
,

1992 MAZDA 626
Automatic, AIC, sunroof, loaded, only 12,000 low
miles. Local one owner.

• Unique feed form ...easy t
chew and digest.

.,....,.luctrl!·atltl.,.....
•II.,W,•pril"l•fl*

•

. . . . . . . . . .JIJ,I

Highly palatable·

• Improves skin &amp; hair coat

1992 CADILLAC SEDAN DMW
Lt. blue metallic with blue leather trim. Only
12,700 miles. Bal. of 481$0 Warranty.

While It may !lave illiiiPellld 10111e partldpatloil at .
anual recydlq day car allow
at Melp Jll~h lchoo!, Satur·
dlly moralaa a rain didn't dla·
courage people frGIII ilriDIIDI
In their recyclable -terTall.
Accordlna to Mtlll Couaty
Litter Control OIIICer Kenny
Wl1glaa, turnollt waa.areat.
Wllllu uld 25 batterltl, 200
1a!IO.. or motor oU, lour to..
of 1Faai, 500 pollndnf'rood
caDI, 200 pOUDda or iltvtralt
CIDft 100 pOUIIC!I Of tldiDI,
100 11ounda of Juaa aad two·
. Jlter IJottlea, a tOD or Dtwlp8•
pers and 500 pouada or card·
board wen turilecl In lor reeyc!lng. The event w11 aponsorecl by VOCitloaal Jadllltrlal
Chaba oi,Amirlel (VICA) and
the Me!a .COIIDI.I ,Litter CCIII·
trol otrli:e. Top, Wlfalaa a,epa·
ratu recyc!ab!ea. AI .lett,
G!ean Morrla ~ ParkeribiD'I,
W.Va., wlpn ralawater or ltie
1!170 ·Cbnro!et Chevelle
88'54 he dla;i!l)'ld at the car
ahow. (Sendael photot ~1 Jim
Freeman)

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

R&amp;G Feed &amp;.Supply Co.
399 W. Millie

992·2164

PomeroJ

1

1991 GMC JIMMY

•
Auto., AJC, 4 wheel drive, only 9,000 tow miles.
"93 Buick Trade".

Ohio University
College of Business Administration

•

1989
OLDS
98
BROUGHAM
•

Executive MBA
Program·

Only 54,~00 miles. Exceptionally clean. $ter11ng
sliver with dark grey vinyl roof.

1988 BUICK aNTURY 2 DR.

ts an a.ff!rmattve action tnstitutton.

For detaile, call 614-593·2028

or 614-593-2029,

V·6 with only 31,000 low miles. Blue. "Buy with
Confidence,"

or complete the coupon and mall it to:
.

'

.

'

.

' i·

~

·····································••!•••····~·
Director. EXecutive M.B.A. Program
College of Business Adrn!nlatratlon
Haning Hall. Ohio University
Athens OH 45701 -2979

Ple!IM - d mo lllfonutton on the kecaU.o M.B.A. Pro.,_.

.....

'

il-tl-

:r r1
-

'

..

•-

-

....

•

Zip

'

ft~'== Deadline Saturday

10

1 ......
.
· ;' $" !ehe - ... f1je, which
...., •
~ • ~ hI 'st.....
1
.......
_
.
.
- -11_ . .._".u.wlldllll
_.
.._..._ Sneral , or ,._ alne
I 1'1 wilD ••,...
. . _ ... ....,... vehlclea
5
hd
ape 2 .._

..!'a:;:

State

By KEVIN PINSON
OVPNewaStaff
(Editor's note: Till Identity of
till lnwst11ator Interviewed for this
story Is beln1 wlthlltld to protect
him/or jwun Ulldlrcowr work.)
the Gallla County Sheriff's
Depai'IIMnt bu reuon to believe a
burglary ring responsible for
almoel $1 m!Uion worlh of !hefts is
operstins out of tbe area.
Sheriff Jamea D. Tay!(l' said the
rill$ appears to be using the count)'
u Its bale of operationaud hal h11
all the surroundln11 counties,
Including some In Kentucky and
West Virginia.
,
"They're liviD$ ~ere and we
don't need 'thole kind of people,'''
he saicl.
Invelllaators believe lhe ring is
alao reaponsible for at least five
brl!akins 111d enterlnga at local

buslncnea - Crown Ciry if:DDI1
Mlrt. Crown City; Styline I,..,
OaFlipoiia·, Dentill DavJiJ ~.
Smith'• office, Oallipolia; it1Je
Spring Valley~~)'. GaDiJI!Ilis, and the R1o M1n1 Mlrt, llio
Grande.
All of !he break-ins hav.elibe
same method of operation, 11
department investi«ator lai4.
.' ~
suspcctl cut the phone ud ·a t.m
w!re.s before prying open doon.and
breaking into the buo'p rei' ·lib.
The rina a1so takel other ilemJ.
he said, but it1 main obje.ctiv.e
always seem a 10 be the ufe, ~n
some cas ea. the safe was 1even
taken alona if it could not be 'Cut a
broken open 11. the scene.
SiW!ifar evidence, auch..._as
match ng footpr Inu, h
. a• ,...,CJI
found at some of die aime-.
the inveal!Jalllr added
Some'ollhe bulinoascnfli'!JJDI"

Attorney says cult member le~rned
of FBI's raid fr()m -TV photographer
WACO. -r.. (AP)- One of
The fire ended a Sl-day atandoff .·
... people wllo died Ia David that beaan after agenta of lhe
~·1 1 1 ~ ~ told the cult Bureau of Alcohol, TobiiCCO ud
....,_ Q '
5
J:GI!IInJ . Pirearma who c:unc to arre1t Xore·
bMalfttlrl il4dlelllwl!loriJ ah ahot it out with cult members.
1 TV DIY?VIIPMr lbe day lhe Four apntneretiUod.
·a• • llr ,..,,..,;Kmuh'l·lawyer
DCIGuerin said when he visited
IBid.
lhe ~pound during the ltlildoff, ·
na n ...,, Dicll DCIGuerln. he ~ aevoral tlmea witb David
a5auaill s 5 1 lhll Karelb lilted Mil:liaei Jonea, wilDie body wu the
.a. 10 dnrlr If·a wiD aacl leaal flnl of die cult memberl' ldendlled
•
u pnliiC
. tlq lbe euli'1 by authorltlea.
... lflllll ~ Jio¥k1111a for
DeOuerin saijS J01101, whq wu a
r?ilJ
- 1 'aewr- mall carrier, told him he'd be4n

.:==.s;

.,.if--

nn- -•

S•h_..r.
Ia lhe ,_1 dayiO .......,
_...
.......

.

abaentee n die May 4 e!ec:tlon,
Rita
Smitb,
dltector
die Mtla•
County
Board
o'fpfB!eot~:.'d
IIIIIOilliOed. She saicl dllllbe · .
........., bo
lbal
froin 9
iiii~aoon.QJIIIII . y
Till 0111y laue 10 be 011 die ·•
ballolla ........•!I operadna levy

a.

tor Pomeiv)'.

.....y. . ,

..-_.-*lliiialt•·dJtllilllic.
I • •_ _ .
.. .. ,.
rs.w.r.
7 ; 7• •• ..._4.
··. .,
1 -~··
,.
.. i'
•;•iii' ·:
_ 7

* )

5

**
:.J 9,;k,
::.0,.,:-;m_ ·
$
'\"14. • ..
'•II!Jiill;'
mi::e' •=-. __ .._...,
q:U...i:n· ,.
1

5

1

~

.._jjl..

27

=-=::*"
• Y•

!

5 ......... _,.., ...,Ji ..._

:a .._..,._.. 1:.
•40 ~' ~.,
1111 " - I!
;ne
II

Ia '-

=

2 • .~­
e .. J' ;" ,._I!'"~ w••- 1w•
1
'1
111'5' 1 .
lhnm
_:;,r~-:;::
smsa!n OlD 8, , . n0:;;;w .. ·
1
- . ...... 0
1 ~ !.., E.

•

F

_

..n

hZ: 1!rf"

a:,..

--.:11

~-·

~ 41!. --'11111 tiS lbDiJc 101
.-

If

'•,..!

Investigators bearing
·down.on burglary ring

..

The College of Business Administration of Ohio University is
currently recruiting the •eventeenth group for Its very BUC\=essf({(- , .
weekend Executive M.B.A. Program at its l.aJu~uter Campus.
Classes will begill in September 1993.
Ohio Unluerstty

w•

r.

• Contains added nutrients
n~ed by older horaea.

_________,..,_

they got thet way becau.e iof lthe
UMWA," said Jobn Buov!c,
retired ICCrctary-trcuurcr for lthe
union.
The union sb'UCk Pelboily llibsidlariOI in Febnwy .,_ "MtlWI'
negotiations with the BitnmiMJII
Coal Operators Aaaociati011 cOl·
lapsed. 'fhe aii!OC:iatioil llbpCIIOUJ
the nation's 121arplt.coi!poiluoen.
.
Work resumed after a 60-i~
contract extenaion wu!Tacllell
March 3.
Neaotiationa continue in
ingiOD, D.C. Groasfe!d ·cJoclinodliD
diiCUSI the ltaiUJ of JIIIIIO&amp;i•tiaJII,
Union official• Hidthe :Jirike

, CASVILLE, Oh1o
· (AP) . IB11tlillc
LU
guard abo ut lhe wam;ng.
An inmate at Ohio's maximum· second luard. w)lo Wll raqiqa•
security prtaon warned a guard lhat duty, tliought nothin£,! ii\. idle
trouble was coming lhe day prison· newspaper said. "You
ibMiill
ers S'-8~ a riot lhat led to an II· the thne," be said.
.
day sicse In which 10 people died,
The Beacon Journal &lt;ili4 !Ddt
a newsPJPef reported.
· identify either IIJIId.
.
The 11uard relayed lhe warning
.Atabout3:IS p.m.. hundJ 1 ...a:
to a second gua;:d, who thouiht pnsoners rioted and todk UiliiMil11olhins of the prisoner'• comment, cellb!oclt L:
.
.. • , .
the Akron Beacon Journal reported
The upnaing ended WriJ. 1. s
SundJy.
•
wilh lhe surrender of 4ff1 1pria •
Moan while, Gov. George and release or five hoatQDI. OIJe
Volnovlch !Old .The Columbus Dil· guard who ba&lt;l been belif!h: I ¢
atch he wu coallderlng upgrad· and nine inmate~ died in the ..ang ~urity IWUS It lhe Southern off.
·
·
OhioCOITCCtionalFacllity.
· A telephone meuap IC"ili"'
The ~eacon Journal reported." comment was loA It ,the]ll'i.-a!id
that an mmarc told a guard before there wu no answer at 1he O!Jlo
. ..lin .. APt~ 11 shif! chansc that Department of RehabilitaUIM lllllll
"somelhmg was IOlliB to go down Correction.
today."
Officials said Saturlla,- 1llleJ
The guard said he !Old anolher don't lalow how 1on1 dielr Jmati-

Introducing Purina Equine Senior™

'

.._, 'LI ..:...:..-.
'1'. Fz;.WIIII!i.llilltll.._

••

·Gallia County F.arm Bureau
t 0 sponsor Sale
n." t.y seuun
• .ar
, ,

Older
Horses
Have
•
"Special Need:~" ;

·Local crops suffering
.from cool, wet weather

'

chase multiple peril aop ·

Exports.increase '

It smd lhat over the S3!11e penod,
The sheep m~ust~y su11
world sheep meat pnces have appears to be workmg us way
shown more mm:ed unprov_ement t!'roug~ lhe.effects of low meat and
from producers standpomt as hve pnces 1n 1990 and 1991, .even
reduced culling and smaller lamb though a 40-year-old wop! support
crops reduced meat supplies.
pr~gram . hu to' a large extent
"Produ~ers ar~ p~obably ~ow . shielded 1t from the last .sev~~~l
contemplating rebuilding, but g1ven y~ of low world wool pnces, 1t
sun large wool stocks1 only modest S81d. . .
.
and uneven growlh .m the world
Pnce. mcrease~ that began m
econo~~, and contmued strong 1992 suggest culhng may ease m
comJJ{ltt,bon ~m .olher meats, any 1993,1he report said.
rebu1ldm~. ~Ill hkely be gradual
"Both live and retail meat
and ~all. It smd.
.
.prices were up in 1992 as a smaller
Estimate~ for lhe Umted States lamb crop pushed meat production
showed the mv~tory at the stan. of down 4 percent." it said.
the _year drop;nng fo~ .the thud
straight year, to 10.2 million head.
That was only 100,000 head above
the record low of 1986, lhe report

Farm Flashes

GALLfPOLIS · The laiC week
sun was welcome. All crops are
suffering from adverse cool-wet
conditions. Wheat, barley, veg·
etable plants, and outside to~cco
float plants are showing stress from
recent weather. It appears that the
wind during the cool-wet time may
have caused additional problems.
Leaf yellowing and mottling and
tip burns are some of the symp·
toms. In some cases, additional
pi augen fertilizer may be needed to
tum the crl!'ps around, ~ut generally
wann sunny days are the best cure.
Plan to join your friends for an
educational evening on Tuesday,
:April 27 at the Curti~ Balthaser
{arm near Danville. The topic Of
· the evening will be a pond clinic.
The Balthaser farm is located near
die Meigs/Gallia County line. Mr.
I! a! thaser is well known lhroughout
lbe area for his cattle production
and conservation program. Signs
~ill be posted on Route 325 near
Panville, directing to the farm.
From Gallia County the easiest
route for most will be to take Route
:S.'2S north from Vinton. Eric Nort~nd, OSU Extension Specialisl,
will be lhe featured speaker on the
topic of "Fish Stocking Rates and
Weed Control". The program is
)leing sponsored by soil and Water
Conservation Districts in both
Meigs and Gallia Counties and the
OSU Extension Services of both
cbunties. Plan to anend!

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia ASCS
Secrewy of Agriculture Mike Espy
announced on April 9, 1993 new
assistance for j)roducers of com
crops whose harvest was of low·
quality due to natural disasters in
1992. These corn producers may be
eligJblefordisa•terpaymentsbased
on lhe low quality of lheir crop,
even !hough the quantity harvested
wolild not usually qualify lhem for
disaster assislance.
Adjusunents in production will
. be made for those producers of
1992-crop &lt;;om who suffered losses
from reduced quality caused by
damaging we8lher or related coodi·
lions. The factors for determining
actual production will he: 80% for
Grade No.4, SO'I&gt; for Grade No.5,
and 15'1&gt; for Sample Grade.
Producers who fi!ed a written
disaster application 'for 1992-crop
com may amend a previously filed
applicatioo to include los9es due to
reduction in quality. In addition,

who have not previously
filed a disas'ter application on
1992-crop com may file for a loss
due to reduction in q,uality, provid·
ed lhe producer has not filed for
disasier benefits in both 1990 and
1991 crop years.
Producers are required to pur-

·Ohio Lottery

driving hla 'car, with U.S ..Poatal .
Service taa• on it. when he uw •
television photo1rapher who
appeared JQjjL
He aaid the ph. oto~apher
warned him, '"There's so 10 he
a big 111nflsht wilh lhele
0111
null over here. Y011 better get out
of he~e.'''
.
Jonea. who wu also Koreall 'a
brother-In-law, told the cult !elder,
DeOuerin said, and the group wu
ready wllen Jbe ATP qenta ai'rlved
Feb. 28.
...• ..:..
Colli\ NCCrda bad earllet ,_,.,.
fled Joneua lhe mallmaa who ·
nodlled ~ lba&amp; the ATP wu
prepuinl to ralcJ'Ihe COIIp~uid.
Pedinl qan11 CO'ddn't imaiedfal'
Jy be naolaed for com mont. on
O.Ouerln'aacOOUDL
· Durlt11 ibo atandliff, O.Ouerln
• .... -•" and
~ KoNih·liked ,or ""' ""'
·
SOorttiRH PROM - lslt lltd eo Nip •
fOr ckx:IIIDIDII proflllllliD, tl;o c:ull'l . Klagl!ld
Qaeaa or 1111 l!IH lloalhtra Pnil •
· ~ rilbll and •liblillllna a · S.turda;r ••••laa were Nick Adana . .d
111111 fund for hll clllldawl tor any
Ruther Hill. Plctiired wltl tlie prow 1'071hJ
, Collllltul 011,., 3
lhort71al'ltr
CI'Oftlial ~tiM q111111 Ia Mn. LeU · ·
.
'
'

•

1 1!10

· afO...
• •-Wa..~!li:ft
.m FS!!III-iildlillt.uuiuut~.
lileilll
c .. ,...,
.... .., qz !'*IS 1i!tlllird

DIIJiiiMt
AC 5

n-••,_

-

1,..~.
-·-

..,

a

• -

llil.

C'..diia eeili'l!' ~ ~
=
r-af*lllilllm-.
&lt;JIIwu•ir•WIIIIl•-...,
l!lle
----~
1I1!Jc lim iipla• !lliila ..mJ1J
jplll 1
mt" CIDl tk lliiUII' llld!
"linDie ..... illlliiiB - Clll
rihc lliiJIItt .-lllillll*lliiiiiiiiJDIIIIl

d'c zllt"'

..,._ 6!111!1116 allinw raiirot
·m af lllblilm
.
w 1iSWilliiiJ D
il1Ciidb 6ilm w.iilh ~ llildi~ 1liilh

1f:...... dtre•:'

~~lie
"' •
,....,...:,_..,___
.. .

"

· - - - .., ... ''ii 'ail&gt;
~Ii.oelllBlwiMI

liD1111Mlt•• .. '
a1'
a

'*'Eiil&amp;l

dllc4'JWDI!i, ~

.

�</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="32395">
            <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="32394">
              <text>April 25, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="883">
      <name>dexter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1967">
      <name>mulford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="636">
      <name>reese</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
