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75 n.·nts

S111HI;1~

Major Leag_ue baseball results - C-1

Schooldays
event draws
large .crowd
.

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Inside

.'Dracula' opens at Ariel Theatre;
·250 on hand · .Kevin Pinson • B-6

Along tbe river ,...- .......Bl-7 ·
Business/Farm.. _ .........Dl-8
Classified -------·".....03--7
Deaths. ..............,..........~ •••.A· 7
Edltorai ........- .......- ..... - .Afi
Sports..............................Cl -8
Weather...... ".,....- ...........A-2

I'

Pomeroy High School's 60th
class reunion • Fred W. Crow • A-6
I

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P11p Twenty- 'fhe.Dally Senllnel 1!193 Gndaadon Edition

·Vol. 28, No. 14 .

_Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, May 23, 1993

.Copyrighted 1883

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An exciting thing is about to happen
in your ~ommuni•y - The children of
. the future are about to make their ·:,.
· mark. We at the' FARMERS BANK
care about the future. And we care
about the you~ and growth of the
community. Not only do ·,we offer
student loans and free . checking
accounts to full-time students, we are
' willing to disCUBS any of the tman,cial
needs or answer any questiol18 of the
younger generation.

No matter your needs, we at the
FARMERS BANK and 'SAVINGS
COMPANY can help make the sometimes confusing world of f_inwuie
available and Understandable. We're
dedicated to the advancement of our
community, ~d would like to start
with \he GRADUATING CLASS OF
.
'
19931 After all, who bettel! to help
you plan YOUR future_ than Your
Bank: For Life?
•

Stop by the Fa1111ers Bank- no matter what your needs, let us be your BANK FOR UFEI
'

!

Congratulations, 1993 Graduates!
And Let's Be Careful Out There!

Your Bankfn.
Membet F.O.I.C.

w au a

211 West Second Street

P. 0 . BOx 626 .
Pomeroy, OH -45769
6141992-2136

SM

Route 7
P 0 . Box 339
Tupper$ Pto ons. OH 4$783
6 1 4 ·~7-3161

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Aug. 16-21 Fair. Tbe Meigs County Highway
Department assisted with tbe project by provld·
ing nn at the site. The contract work is being
done by Associated Fabricators witb Bob
Tbom pson, owner, donating bis personal time
and equipment to tbe project. (T -S Photo by
Charlene Hoenicb) .

GOING UP • A n~w horse barn for t1t1e
County Junior Fair is under construction
on tbe Rock SpriDis Fairgrounds. Tbe 38 l! 100
· foot structure willleature 10 x 12 foot staBs on .
either side of a 14 foot alley. The barn is the
·major construction of the Meigs County Agrlcu· _
tural Society tbls year In preparation for tbe

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·G:oal fiJ:ms feel UMW~;ng;.bs ..
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issu.es beyond their control
tract."
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (~) - induslry~. .
.
''The BCOA companies have
,__ The United Mine Workers ts
Meanwhile, top mdu~try nej!Obeen
playing a shell game to hide
justifying irs second walkout this tia~rs and tbe U~. are talttng
yw by citing issues coal operatorS !herr cases to lhe editorial pages of the true ownership of new mines
and to circumvent !heir obligation
.
cannot contro), a company presi- coalfield newspapers.
dent said
B.~ . "Bobby" . Bro.wn, chtef to offer 60 percent of lhe jobs ere·
Peter Lilly, president of Eastern · negobBtodor tbe ~tli!mliiOUS ~ ated in !hose new mines to UMW
Associated Coal Co., ' said' the Oi!e~ato~s Assoct_au~n . sent a~ members," Trumka said.
While bolh · Brow!~ and Trumlca
union's demands for job security oplDlon .P~ to editaial page .edicalled for a return to lbe bargaining
are U1ll'elilistic.
tors earlier m t!Je w~. .
.
• The UMW wants "job security
UMW Pres!denl Rtchard Truni· table; no new negotiations have
been SCheduled,
in ihe form of guaranteed employ- ka follo~ed swt.
In West Virginia, ~h Mineral
mentlevels," Lilly said Fnday.
In hts com_mentary, ~rown
Co.
asked strikers to move a picket
But he said tha.t IS impossible accu~d_ lhe .~mon of pusht~g t!Je
shack
near some of its Logan
.W.anse some issues are beyond the -!ICIObBbons 0111 of balance .v.:•lh
;;p;;:tors• control · · ·
!IS demand that every ~e~ numng County operations. The company
Eastern Associated is a sub· JOb c~ted by~ assocuwon mem- says lhe shack is on company prop·
sidiary of Peabody Holding Co. of ber or tis.offihate go to a UMW eny; lhe.union contends it is located on public right of way.
St. Louis. Tbe UMW struck m~Abert.. ,
•
,
"Wr;'re going to get it moved,"
Peabody subsidiaries for a monlh
. , ~ tog .or every 111 m~ WOJ! t
in FebruarY and March.
do 11, sa_id Brown, v:-ho IS ch'!ll'· said Blair Gatdner, spokesman for
The uMW has about4,000 min- man, prestdent and chtef executive St. Louis-based Arch Mineral.
ers on strike in Illinois, Indiana and officer _of CONSOL, Inc., of Upper "We don't have to facilitate the
•..•a, ... ''
su.....,.
West. Virginia. The strike began St. !;lair. Pa.
.
May 10, a week after lhe expiration
BCOA h~ ma~ a JObs pr'!"That!icket shack is th. ere to
of a negotiated extension· of the ~sal lhat balailc~ Job opi!Drt~m­ stay," sai Howatd Green, .a ~m­
contract, and was expanded to ues for ~MW mmers wtth JOb ber of the UMW's governmg
West Virginia on Monday.
opportu!nlies. for o,~ers who ~so board.
" There's a nice, quiet picht
· "It seems to me thal the issues . may be qualtfied, Brown satd.
line
!here in a safe location, and if
lhe union has put on lhe bargaining "Ale we wiliiJ!g to negotiate ~­
lhe)'
want to inflame lhe situation
table have 11101e to do with the 311£· lher on the specifies? Absolutely.
.
lhey
can
just come down and try to
· viva! of tbe UMWA as an institu·
Trumka, m~~wh!Ie, ~ccused
lion than with the welfate of its lhe operators of rmdjng ~honest move that shack.'' Green said.
mina-s," Lilly said Ill a meetin&amp; oC • ways to avoid honoring their con-

By JIM FREEMAN
• Times-Sentinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS - Now that lhe
trials are over, the mother of slain
12-year-old Jeffrey S. Halley plans
on becoming an activist for chit·
dren 's rights.
"I want Jeffrey's death to mean
something, io help change .things,"
Carolyn Burgess said during a
·phone interview Sa(Urday morning.
Burgess said she plans on purSII·
ing la.ws to increase lhe penalties
for people who hart or molest children.
William D. Lemas~rs II, 26,
was found guilty May 15 in lhe
Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of
Jeffrey L. Halley. 36, and 12-yearold Jeffrey S. Halley, bolh of Gallia
County. In addition, he was found
guilty of aggravated robbery and
IWO tounts Of kidnapping 1D the '
incidenL
Th\USdl!y, be received a,life sen. teilc~ fot anh 111111 a: J serve 30 years of each before being
eligible for parole. In addition,
Lemasters received lhree 10-yw
sentences for the robbery and ltid·
napping convictions and two threeyear tenns for mandatory fuearm
specifications.
Another man, Fred Drennen of
Ravenswood, W.Va. , pleaded
guilty on March I to three countsof aggravated murder and is serving three concurrent life sentences
wilh lhe possibility oC parole in 20
for his role in the double
SJayillJt.

Drennen's .wife, Michelle ,
helped plan lhe robbety lhatlead to
lhe kilhngs, but was granted immu·
nity in exchange for her testimony.
Burgess said she was disappointed at first that Lemasters did
not receive lite dealh penalty for his
role in Jeffrey's murder, however
sbe changed her mind afterwards
when she !bought about his family.
1 lhink the life sentence was Ote
best possible punishment. sbe said.
"I wished it ..would have been
possible for Fred Drennen to get
more.than what -he did," Burgess
reflected.
Giving Michelle Drennen
immunity was completely wrong,
Burgess said. We were told that she
would probably have to serve at ·
least six monlhs because of her role
in the incident.
'
Famil;~~ and friends
·
Burgess satd support from family and friends played a maio! role

.t .,. . . .

illb l!X'Gl

Perhaps her biggest supp")rter
was her 12-year-old daughter
Cari&amp;aL
'
"~ tried 10 protect her from the
delails, but she would find out,"
she said. " She felt tbe same way I
.
did"
· Mrs. Burgess pointed out that
her husband, Gene, has been very
understanding during the ordeal.
A lot of husbands would have
trouble dealing with this - he
·never did, she remarlced.
Burgess praised Meigs County

Sheriff James M. Soulsby for his
handling of lhe case.
"No matter how blealc it was. he
kept going. He kept on going when
others would have quit. .. and stuck
with the case until the end," she
said.
"Sev·eral deputies were there
everyday ·and stayed right there."
she added. "We were grateful for
their support."
In addition~ she commended
Mej$s County Prosecuting Auor·
ney John Lentes and Assistant
Prosecutor Charles Knight for !heir
support during the trial.
"They kept asking if I was OK,"
she said
"It was very hard to go (to lhe
trial) , but harder to stay away," she
added.

Tbe blll'dest part
The hatdest part of the ordeal,
Burgess noted, was when her son
and his fallllr tint dill iS I 114.
11- ... dltiuas dleY' dldl'l't plari
on being gone long, she said.
"Knowing those lhings, it was
obvious something was really
wrong," she explliined.
I had to keep on hoping, she
said "If YO,U don't ~· you don 'I
have a chlulce." she SBld
"I'm going to try to gel started
back: with my life, get back to
being a molher," she said, adding
lhat she will continue to keep up
with lhe case.
"It'll never be over until the &lt;lilY
I die."

a

FB Farm
ers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company ·

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MOther of slain boy
to pursue issue of
children's rights .

G)
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LEHOfft

. PARTICIPANTS • Laura Sites, Trace 'Fra:
ley, Cecilia Goett, J. R. Fraley and Josh Dill
were amo111 tile 16·20 younpters partlcipatin11
in tbls ye11r's annual St. Jude Bike· A· Thon . .
wblcb was held Saturday morning on First
Avenue opposite tbe GalUpolis-City Part. Last

year's event produced $1,065.55 locally. om.
clals were hoping Saturday's results would be
even better. Lori Sanders was in charge of Saturday's activities. Additional details will be
announced Monday.

Study eyes three Mason sites
for possible new port facility
.,

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Radae Artl
slllp llad
ScboWIIIIPI
Klllbll ~llolal'UIDJII

aad 0.1.1. r~bal11 .

Rldae Artl
sblp. (See ....,. 011
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POINT PLEASANT - Three the,ghcill Point Pleasant Polyester
sires in Mason County are among Pl-. Both sides of tbe plant have
the 10 chosen for consideration fCJ" room for port development, accorda projlosed public port facility to be in&amp; to the study, llld the flood plain
located along abo Ohio or Big is wide. 'J'be sfle is j!JSI downstream
from the Gallipolis Locks &amp; Dam,
Sandy rivors in West Virginia.
Jack Faucelt Aaocii!U is under which is liomewhat undesirable ·
CODIIIICI to the U.S. Anny CCllpl of from a navilabilltY 111111dpoint.
The Oaliipolls Ferry site h
Engineers Huntin,ton Distric:t to
conduct a fouibility study of tile l'P""l'l from the AlCZO planL The
port facility. :
· . study said u'i a VerJiargc area. but
. The facility would most likely on a band in lbe river. A residential
be a multi-user, multi,procluc:t port deveiopalolltllljoins the site. .
Tbe third.lite is 11 Laltin State
located on a site wilh substantial
acreage IIIII would allow for silnlf· · Hospilal. The study said lbe opml·
icant e~pansion and would liavc tion•I pardon of the hospital is
ample riverside ·ac:c:ess, accordina across !ltato Route 2, but. a l~rge,
10 Michael F. Lawtencc, vice presi· · · abandoned buildina domiDatos lbe
. deal of Jaclt FIUCCU Alaociates.
site. Tbe building may praont a
posalblc
hiltoric iqiater IIIOblom,
The pro~edMason County
. sitei are Ill
1c Grove, Oallipolis ·and the sire is UJl5lRIIlll ofan exist·
Ferryllldtho
· area.
ing AE.P fuel doct on tho
~ other. seven, sitos litlell in
the ~Io Qroye site is next IQ

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the study are Huntington, Greenbouom. Ripley, Belleville, Vienna.
Pohick and Benwood Junction.
Mason County landowner$ have
untillhe end of the day Monday to
suggest Other possible sitos for tile
proposed port. Frank Lee, dlaec:ltar
of lbe Mason County~
Aulhority, addOd that Iiiii i1lould
conlain at leu~ 200 ems. be onllle
river l1ld served by rail.
Lawrence said some concern
wu expressed by 1IIOIIIbon of the
West Virginia Port ~ 11 a
. May li meeting over tho C4+CJitlinl•
ty for input from lacal aowmmeat
and ~ommunity offieiala ill tbe
selectioll proc:e11.
Aliyone submi ttiq a Naioa .·
County lille Ia llliiDid 10 a
or the repon, map or lette~ ·
Ch~rloa.I•ahee,

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Maloa ,.___

De~Awllu!IJ.

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Sunday Tim• Sentinel

Southern seniors honored at Friday awards assembly .

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IToledol71" I
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!Mansfield 173"

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W.VA.

Hill;
Caldwell;
and the Board of Regents Ohio
Science - Ray Proffitt; '·
1993 Marine Distinguished Ath- Academic Scholarship.
RACINE - Approximately two
Business Education - Christie leteAward-NickAdams:
Christi Maidens received th\1
dozen Southern Hi~b School Maidens:
1993· Air Force Math/Science Hocking College Principal's SchoJo.
Mathematics- Todd Grace and Award- Julie Hill and Ray Prof- arship • and the Howard M.
seniors were recogRized at the
school's annual awards assembly at Julie Hill;
fitt:
.
Lawrence Sr. Memorial Scholar:the school Friday morning.
Dramatics - Mary Smith;
Boy Athlete of the Year ship.
•
E118lish- Julie Hill·•
Prior to being recosnized,
The Howard M. Lawrence S(.
• Michael Evans;
seniors marched to the stage to
Foreign Lan~e- Julie Hill;
Girls Athlete of the Year- Memorial Scholarship was founded
Vocal Mustc - Tamara Hay· Megan Wolfe.
"Pomp and CircumsiiUice" wearins
· · in the memory of Mr. Lawrence
man and Russell Singleton;
their graduation gowns.
In addition, Nick Adams, Nicole who was a 1938 graduate of South~
Following the Pledge of AileActivi~ - Christie Maidens;
Beegle, Rabena Caldwell, Todd em High School. The recepient of
. giance, the. following students in'
Citizenship- Michael Evans Grace, Tamara Hayman, Heather this award must pursue a degree io
each calegory were recognized:
and Raberta Caldwell;
, . Hill, Julie Hill, Ray Proffitt and business administration.
:
DeKalb award- Corey Rowe: ·
Pelfcct Ailendance -Julie Hill; Angie Swiger.
.
·
Russell Singleton received the
Agricultural Education WSAZ Best of the Class . Honor awards w~re given to Kibble and O.U. Foolball scholat,ToddGrace:
.
Corey Rowe and Tom Adldns:
Todd Grace, Julie Hill and Christi ships.
·
Social Studies - Raber1a CaldPresidential Academic Fitness Maidens.
Heather Wll received the Racine
well and Todd Grace;
-Todd Grace and Julie Hill:
Scholarship winners were
Area Community Organizatioll
Ohio University History Award
Award 'of Distinction • Geoff announced:
Scholarship and Michael Evans
-Todd Grace;
·.
Porter, Wendi Harmon, Christi
Todd Grace received the Ohio received tbe Creed James and 1GbGirls State- Kim Jenkins:
Maidens and Corey Halficld;
· University Manasseh Cutler Scholble scholarships.
·
·
Boys State - Todd Grace;
Salutatorian- Julie HiD;
arship, the Holzer Clinic Science
Graduation for SHS seniors will
Industrial Arts - · Jeremy Cleek
Valedictorian- Torr Grace: ·
Award and the Alpha Delta Kappa be held at8 p.m. tonight at the high
and Jason Powell;
1993 Marine Scholastic Scholarship, the Racine Area Com- school.
Home Economics - Heather Achievement Award.
. . Raberta munity Organization Scholarship

===~::Gtlp/llciNel:
~~::!:W=::....!::...~~c~,IIII3~Ac~cu-:w..lhor,lnc.

Weather

Monday, showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows 55 to 60 and
highs 75 to 80.
Tuesday, a chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows 50 to SS 'and
highs 70 to 75. Wednesday, f~r.
Lows 50 to 55 and highs 70 to 75.

Showers,·thunderstorms
·are likely ·statewide
By The Alloclated Press
With the cold front drawing
closer to.Ohio today, showers and
~ thunderstorms will be likely
statewide. Highs today will be in
. the lower to middle 70s across the
; state.
·
.
. A cold front pushed east out of
: the plains Saturday' night and dlen
drew closer to the Ohio Valley.'
The record-high temperatw'e for
Saturday at the Columbus weather
station was 93 degrees in 1941
while the record low was 35
degrees in 1883,
Sunset Saturday was 8:46 p.m.
Sunrise today was 11 6:10a.m. and
sunset will be 818:46 p.m.
Around the oatiOD
Thunderstorms struck parts of
me norlhem PlaiDs e.l'f. Salurday,
but fair weather prevailed across
·most of the rest of the United
StateS.
In 111e east, a warm han moved
into the area, driving out several
days of unseasonably chilly weather. Freeze warnings had been .
issuedbpartsofWestVirginiaon ,
·Friday night, with frost warnings
issued in neighboring Virginia.
In the Pacific Northwest, the
strong winds thal whipped the area
earlier in tbe week abaled Saturday,
taking with them the area's cool

weatM'.

(USPS &amp;JIS.IIOO)

Published uch Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
G111ipoli1, Ohio, by t.he ~hio. Valley
Publi1 hiPI Company!Multuned1a, Inc.
Second cla" poetage paid at Callipoli1,
Ohio "5631. Entered as secon~ cla11
maiUng. ma~ter at Pomeroy•.Oh10, Post
Of!! co.

Member. The Associated Preas,. and the
Ohio Newapaper Auoc:la~ion, National
AdY8l1itinl Repreaental1Ve, Branham
Ne"apar.r Salu •. 733 Third Avenue,
NewYor , NewYork10017.

GALLIPOLIS -A Point PleaSant, W.Va., woman was ~ited for
failure to maintain an a§1ll'ed ~lear ·
distance Thursday momin$ following an accident in Gallipolis Township, Gallia County, the GalliaMelgs Post of me State Highway
Patrol reported.
Debra L. Harper, 116 S. Part
Drive, was southbound on State
Route 160 at the U.S. 35 entrance
ramp when she struck from behind
a vehicle driven by Debra K. Zuspan, 38, NeVi Haven, W.Va.
.
' No injuries were iellOfted. Zuspan's vehicle sustained light damage and was driven from tbe scene.
Harper's vehicle was not damiged.
A Gallipolis woman was cited
for failure to yield Thursday
evening following a two-vehicle
accident on Second Avenue (State
Route 7), the Gallip!)lis Police
Deplirlment reported.
Shari L. Harrison, 30, 193 Lariat
Drive, was . westbound on
Sycamore Street at die intersection
of Second Avenue when she failed
to yield for a northbound vehicle
driven by Sandra K. Vei9J, 49,
1404 Georges .CJllek Road, Gallipolis.
I
The two vehiCles collided, causing light damage. No injuries were
reported. Both vehicles were driven
from the scene,

Temperatures were in the mild
range in almost all of the COQ!Itry.
Moist conditions brought thunderstorms to much of lbe nation's midsection by lbe end of the day.
Thunderstorms hit North Dakota
early and were expected to touch
the Great I..akes region and parts of
Oklahoma and Texas later in the
day.
Rain was expected across much
of northern New England by
evening.
Thunderstorms, sometimes
severe, were scattered acros.s the
northern and southern Plains on
Friday. They brou$ht hail the size
of quarters and wmd gusts of 60 · A McArthur man was cited for
hauling an overwide load Thursday
mph to Bums, Wyo.
·
Hi&amp;hs were in the 50s and 60s in afternoon following an accident in
New ·H nglmd; lhe 60s in lhe On:at Huntington Township, Gallia
,
Laltes region and northern Plains; County,lbe palrol reported.
Terry L. Farley, 40, 4259 Coal
the 60s and 70s .in the mid-Atlantic
region and Pacific Northwest: the Valley Road, Vmton, was east70s in lhe Midwest, the .Roc~es bound on Coal Valley Road (Counand most of the Great Basin; the ty Road 141) when he slid off the
.80s across the South and most of nght side of the road to avoid a
California; the 90s in southwest westbound tractor-trailer, driven by
Texas and partS or Southern Call- Charles D. Caudill, 30, which was
fomia; and the low I 00s in south- hauling an oversized lolld. Farley's
vehicle struck a ditch.
em Arizona.
No mjuries were reported. FarFriday's high temperature for
ley's
vehicle S!Jstained light damthe nation was 102 degrees at
age
and
was towed from the scene.
Coolidge, Ariz.
Caudill's truck was not damaged.

Government workers, farmers,
hit by tax bill's spending cuts
WASHINGTON (AP) Republicans and conservative
Democrats may think President
Clinton's big deficit reduction bill
is shoJt on spending cuts, but don't
expect vecerans, farmers or many
·Medicaid recipients to agree.
They're among the targets of
$90 billion in spending reductions
included in the five-year, $340 billion budget-cutting ·measure the
House is scheduled to vote on this
week.
The legislation is dominated by
$250 biUion in Wt increases on the
rich, corpor~tions, ene~gy user~,
some higher-mcome Soc1al Secun•
ty recipients, and others.
But the bill also would cut
Medicare reimbursements to doctorS and hospitals, civil servants'
salaries and dozens of other benefit

progtalllS.

And those in the cross hairs
know iL .
"It could have been worse, but
we're not jumping up and down
and saying this is the most wonderful thing that ever happened to federal workers," spokeswoman
Diane Witiat of the American Fed·
eration .of Government Employees
said Friday.
.
As lawmakers prepare to vote
on the package. Republicans and
conservative Democrats say the
public is thirsting for even deeper
spending cuts than Clinton has proposed.
.
After all, the $90 billion the bill
would cut from benefit programs
over the next five years is but a tiny
fraction of the $4.7 triUion the government will spend on those same
programs during thai period.
Nonelbeless, $90 biUion is a lot
or money by most measures, and
the cuts will have a real impact
Two-thirds of the bill's cuts
would hit Medicare, the rapidly
growing health-insu~ program
for the elderly and disabled. Most
of the reductions would come in
the reimbursements the program
makes to _doctors. hospitals and
other providers of medical services.

A Syracuse woman was cited
for failure to maintain an assured,
clear distance Friday afternoon following an acc.ident in Salisbury
Townshi~. Meigs County, the
palrol reported.
Shannon K. Slavin, 23, Rustic
Hills, was westbound on U.S. 33
when she strucli: from behind a
vehicle driven by Angela I. Brickles, 29,41714 Bear Wallow Road,
Shade; wbo had stopped iii traffiC.
No injuries were reported. Both
vehicles sustained light damage
and were driven from the scene.
A Gallipolis man was cited for
failure to maintain an assured, clear
distance Friday afternoon following an accident on Eastern Avenue
(Stale Route 7), Gallipolis police
reported.
Daniel E. Wright, 19, 63 Burnhimer Road, was northbound when
he .auuck from behind a vehicle
driven by Gerald W. King, S(i, 128
Saunders Drive, Gallipolis, who
had stopped in fraffic.
No injuries were reported. Both
vehicles sustained moderate damage and were driven from the

scene,

-

A Gallipolis woman was cited
for no ot:ator's licen•e and
imprOJ?Cr
tins Friday evening
folloWllll a twO-vehicle accident in

Order Now•••
For Earliest
Spring
Setting

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No 1ublaiption• by mail pennitt.ed in
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--·-·~

Local

Pomeroy, Ohio·
M,lge County Dl•plll)' Yerd N1ar
Pomeroy-~n Bridge
J•meeABulb
Phon• 892·2618

VInton, Ohio
llooN'............
1U·Milln It

Phone
. 3.1101

.,

Springfield Township, Gallia when she went left of center and day when he struc·t a deer. No
County, the patrol reported.
sii'UClc an eastbound vehicle driven injuries were reported. The vehic~
Rebecca M. Cordell, 24, 130 by Candy s. Gee, 28, 15290 Han- sustained light damage and was
driven from the scene.
:
Fourth Ave., reportedly backed into nan Trace Road, Crown City.
Ronnie E. Searles, 47, 35324
a vehicle parked oo Market Road · No injuries were reported and
(Township Road 497) and owned no citations were issued. Both vehi- Loop Road, Rutland, was south~.
by Rayford A. Minnis, 63 cles were driven from the scene.
bound on S.R. 7 in Salisbury
Woodsmill Road, BidweU.
'
Township, Meigs County, Friday
No injuries were reported; MinA Gallipolis man's vehicle sus- · morning when he struck and killed
nis' sustained light damage and tained light damaie Friday night a deer. No injuries were repo~.
was driven . from the scene. when it struck a ure lying in the The vehicle sustained light damage
and was driven from th~ scene. ; .
Cordell's vehicle was not damaged. road, the palrol reported.
William R. Holley, Route 3 GaloPhillip D. Allie, 39, 920 PitchA vehicle owned by Danyana C. . ford Road, was northbound on lipolis, was northbound on S.It.
Gillenwater, 30 Island Ave., Gal- State Route 7 in Clay Township. 325 in Perry Township, Galli&amp; ·
lipolis, sustained heavy, disabling Gallia County, when he struck a County when he struck a deer. N9
damage Wednesday night in a one- tire on a steel rim.
injuries were reported. The vehicle
·
vehicle accident in Gallipolis
sustained
light damage and wa$
No injuries were reponed. The
Township, Gallia County, the vehicle was driven from the scene.
driven from the scene.
patrol reported.
The driver, whose identity is
The patrol also investigated four
unknown, was westbound on deer-vehicle accidents recently.
•
(Township Road 207) when the
Forrest E. Thompson, 65,
vehic~ went off the rig~t side of Atwood Drive, Rio Grande, was
the road and struck a dttch. The westbound on State Route 588 in
vehicle then contin!Rd down the Springfield Township, Gallia
ditch before crossing the road and County, Thursday when he struck
striking another ditch off the left and killed a deer. No injuries were
side. ·
reported. The ·vehicle sustained
.
'
11te vehicle was towed from the moderate damage and was driven
scene.
from the scene.
Walter A. Parlier, 48, 2364
Two vehicles sustained light Jonesboro Road, Midland, was
damage Thursday afternoon in an westbound oo U.S. 35 in Gallipolis
v ESTABLISHED 1895
accident on Third Avenne, police Township, Gallia County, Thursreponed.
Elaine M. Clickenger, 43, 3913
COLONY THEATRE
Ingalls Road, Gallipolis, was westbound on Locust Street at the interFRI. THAll THURS.
Perfonnecl ~, ... Arlll Pllyers
section of Third Avenue when she
IIU. MURI
JUNE 4 &amp; 5, I P.a.
pulled from a stop sign into the
. IN
·~
Morrie
and Dorothy Haeklne
path of a northbound vehicle driven
GROUNDHOG
DAY
P.G.
Ariel Thaatno
by Dorothy I. Gordon, 62, 833
One
Ev.,tng
Show
7:30
428
2nd
Ave., Galllpoll•, Oh.
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
Adml8elon
$1.10
CIIII446-ARTS for mora Info.
No injuries were reported and
no citations were issued. Both vehicles were driven from the scene.

Ma,rijuana plants seized

·J.C.~
~~ru,~L
~ ~~
DUCULA

"'y

-

Two vehicles sustained light
damage Thursday afternoon in an
accident in Ohio Township, the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department reported.
Erma J. Waugh, 19,21860 State
Route 7, Crown City, was westbound on Hannan Trace Road

SPRING VAlLi Y CINEMA ,...,,

· Lemasters transported
POMEROY - Following his sentencing Thursday afternoon,
William D. Lemasters II, 26, of Racine was transported from the
Meigs County Courthouse to the Ross County Jail.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Lemasters was transported .for security reasons pending the completion of paperwork for
his transport to the Orient Reception Center,

Deputies probe ·accident
RACINE - A Racine man escaped ,injury in a one-vehicle
wrec.k on Forest Run Road approximately one-half mile east of
Minersville Hill Road Saturday around 1:45 a.m.
'ferry D. Spaun was eastbound and swerved to avoid a deer, a
repon from Sheriff James M. Soulsby stated. His 1982 Chevrolet
pickup truck went. off the left side o~ theroadwa)_'. stru~t an
embankment then overturned before cOJDmg to rest on tts top m the
.roadway.
.. · · .
·. No injuries were reported and heavy dainage was listed to the
vi:bicle.

Columbus man cited in wreck
' MINERSVILLE - A Columbus man was cited oo a charge of
· failure to maintain control after a one-car wreck on State Route 124
.. at Minersville Saturday around 6:20a.m. ·
According to a report from tbe Meigs County Sheriffs Department, Rui Z. Hang was northbound in his 1988 Toyota Camry and
lost control of tbe car in a curve. The vehicle then went over an
embanlanenL
..
·
·. The driver was not injured, but the vehicle was totaled, the report
stated.

pxemption deadline nears
POMEROY -June 7 is tbe last day to apply for the Homestead
exemption, a state-reimbursed program providing real estate tax
reductions for senior citizens and the disabled.
In order to qualify f.or the _exemption, you must be at least 6S

{

l

DAVE;
• ...a . .. ...-r. '""' . '
CK)

GALLIPOLIS - Loren W. Mullins, 41, 1 17 White Oat Road,
Gallipolis, was jailed Friday night on a municipal court order for
failure to appear.

Man cited for D.U.I.
GALLIPOLIS - Michael Harris. 22, 307 Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, was cited early Saturday morning for driving under the
influence and no operator's license, the .Gallipolis Police Department reported.
Also cited by police 'Was Steven J. Artowood, 36, 1011 1/2 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Friday for disorderly conduct by intoxication and
open contatner.

Station reports gas theft
VINTON- Gallia C9unty sheriffs deputies investigated a gas
theft Wednesday afternoon lithe Vinton Citgo station, State Route
160. According to the report, a man in a white pickup truck pumped
$6 worth of gas and lefi without paying.
.
.

Gallia Board to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Local Board of Education
will hold its regular meeting 6:30p.m. Monday at the administrative

offiCe, 230 Shawnee Lane. Gallipolis.
.
,
Items on the agenda include tbe sale or 1. 78 acres of land near '
Hannan Trace High School to tbe Guyan Township trustees.
Editor's Dote: Names, ages ud addresses are printed as they
appear 011 ofllclal repom.

l:10,ta10 DAILT

IIA'I'J. . IA'I'/ltOO h20

M1'1Da IAT/.utl

American Eagle
cancels flights
MIAMI (AP) . - American
Eagle canc.eled a dozen commuter
flights after suspending 17 pilots
for wearing ~nion solidarity buttons.
The airline said the pilots violated a dress code by wearing blue
lapel pins proclaiming, "I'm on
board."
The quarter-sized pins were distributed by the Allied Pilots Associl\tion.
,
AI Comeaux, spokesman for
American parent company .AMR
Corp., said 12 Miami flights were
canceled Thursday because of tbe
suspensions, which were necessary
because button-wearing had "gotten out of hand."
Fifteen other flights were also
canceled Thursday for mechanical
or other reasons, he said.

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

~;Planning

continues for soap box derby

. MIDDLEPORT - Planning con·tinues for the June 27 soap box
:derby in Middleport with time trial
:scheduled for June 26.
• All drivers whO will be racing
: this year need to contact William
:Snouffer at 992-7075 as soon as ·
•possible in order to register. Par; ent' s :signature and a copy of the
: child's birth cenificate are needed
· on lhC registration form. No fee is
'

~

. f'

·ttr ,}...,.. . 1 (1

...

•;.,•

.•

•

required.

Car clinics will be held Wednesdays from 5-8 p.m. ·and Saturdays
from 10-4 p.m. Anyone needing
help building or modifying their
racer is encouraged to altend. This
is hands-on experience with qualified volunteers to belp in the process of making the racers ready for
tbe upcoming race.
"We are in need of sponsors,

The nex~ derby meeting will he
held 7 p.m. Wednesday 11 the Blue
Streak Cab Company in Middleport: All interesled parties and participants are urged to 111end. Allyone interested in competing or ·
assisting iJI. any fonn should contact William or Gary Snouffer at
992-7075 or 992-6471,

donations and volunteers,'' Snouffer said. "This is an important community effort and a once-in-a-lifetime c:wortunity for lbe children to
experience world competition. The
local race is sanctioned by the All
American Soap Box Derby Associatioo in Akron and our winner will
go to Akron and race in the nationally televised All American Soap
Box De!by."

BOW·MAN'S

HOMEGARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
Sates, Rentals &amp; Service

, . HOME OXYGEN

•Hospital Beds •Wheelchairs
.Patient Lifts
•Commodes
•Diapers &amp; Chuxs •Ostomy
•Lift Chairs
•Bathroom Aides

24 Hour Emeraen&lt;r Senke
Respiratory Therapist on Stoff

446·7283 '
Third &amp; Pine St.

•I

3
BIG DAYS

SATURDAY
8 A.M. TIL 5 P.M.
SUNDAY
1 P.M. nLS P.M• .
MONDAY
8 A.M. nL 8 P.M.

SAVINGS

•1t10 Jl 10

r•

'•
'•

I ' I '-. I
I 1, l ) l'l ) \ \ I

:I,.',

,~

Ill

7tOO,t:20 DAILY

I ,

M1'IIIftl SAT/&amp;WI

LENDING SUPPORT· Bob Evans Farms
Inc,, coDtrlbutes to the 23rd Annual River
RecreatiOh Festival spoDsored bl the Gallia
' · County Chamber of Commerce, P1ctured from
~· ten.to right: Jay Moore, Festival clJairman; Tim
Neal of Bob Evans Restaurant in Rio Grande;

~:

hOD 1:20

t.
~:

HOME ALONE II P.G.

STARTII&amp;IT

. Joe Blazer of Bob EvaDS Restaurant in Gallipolis; David Shafter, Corporate Contributions
chairman; and, Chamber President Jay Caldwell, The River Recreation Festival will be July
2-4 at the Gallipolis City Park and Riverfront

?41t Outdoot, St~tsldt ecmatt '81( qJ,e

BOSTON POPS ORCHESTRA
August 5- 10, 1993 .
Our adventures on thls trip will Include a guided tour of ca~ Cod to
Provincetown, historic Bolton, and Hyannis, home of the Kemedys; an after- '.
noon whale·watchlng cNIIe; and reserved seating for a Boston Pops col'icert 1
-followed by a lobster bakel What could be more ·cape Cod"?
·One low price lbcludM; .
, •Pre-tour reception O(ld valet parking .

•Deluxe motorcoach transr:iortatlon
• Five nights accommodottons •
Three nights at the Hyannis Regency
Two nlrf!ts en route at the Ramada Inn In Fairfield, NJ
• Five breokfasts
• Ave dinners, Including a lobster boke
and a dinner-show
•All tours and admissions listed
•Boggage handling. ttps and taxes
• Treveler's lnst.rance
• Escorted by Mary Fowler.
Peoples Choice Cqordlnotor

S9881

By England, Natlona~
Smith Brothera

Flexateo~

STIUIIIG IT

OPA-LOCKA, Fla. (AP) . ' Investigators believe vandals
(wed~ed two pipes under the tracks,
: cauSing an Amtrak locomotive and
"four passenger cars to derail . Six
:passengers suffered minor injuries.
· Amtrak's 10-car Silver Meteor
:was traveling from New York 10
; Miami with 57 passengers and 17
tcrew members Friday night when
, the accident occurred.
: The pipes were placed between
•rail swiiChes, whepe ,the line splits
:in different directions, said Clyde
:Tucker of the operations center for
i CSX Transportation, which main' tains the tracks.
.
· ' "Vandals, that's the repon I'm
); setlJJI8,
. "he S8l'd •
i The FBI, National Transporta. lion Safety
.
.Board
. and local police

etc. Sauder, Riverside, AriiSirNg

STilTING IT

RECUNERS, SWIVEL
3 PIECE
LIVING ROOM SUITES ROCKERS, WING CHAIRS

:Vandalism
;· susp~cted in
;, derailment

SUMMER ON CAPE COD

DESKS, COMPUTER CENTERS, .

TV/VCR CARTS, MKROWAVE
CARTS, WARDROBES

I '

1 )

$58 881

DINEnES
With 4 Chairs or·6 Chairs
By Imperial, Steward, .

Corolla Classics.- Kincaid

STAITIIII Ar

$2 88 81

BEDROOM SUITES
By VaughlniB....tt,
Standard, Kincaid
I
Banett

STAUIIII Ar

$5 99 95

By

ETC. By Fle111teel, Cllrlyle,

England, National
Flexsteel

England, National

STIRTIIIG AT

5149 95

STIRTIIIG IT

SOFAS
England, National, Smith
Brothers, Flexsteel
STARTIII&amp; IT$

·were mvesttgabng.

news

~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
' Friday admissions - Richard
;Finlaw, Pomeroy; Cecil Wise, Rut:land, and Bobby J. Ord, Syracuse.
Friday discharges - Emma
:Searlea, Middleport. ,

and what could be more thoughtful
than rememberh1g lhal special
grad on Graduation Day with a gift
from Paul Davies Jewelers.
Our store is full of great gift Ideas
in all price ranges. And now enjoy
20~50% savings on all jewelry.

31995

SPECIAL ORDERS
AVAILABLE
AT SALE PRICES.
SEE SKIP,
MITCH OR BEY!

PDca per person: $580 double. S565 t~. $550 quod. or $650 single.
A deposit or $100 Is due by June 15to hold yourre5e!VCitlon. Anal payment Is due by July 1.

·

,. cples ~-Choice travel opportunities and choice financial seMc:es for persons 50
and over. For reservations or Information, contact Mary Fowler, People• Choice Coofclnalor, at (304) 675-1121. Peoples Choice Is a division or the ·Peoples Bank or Point Pleasant.
Member FDlC. Membership QUC11111catlons apply.
·

,,

'

SAYE

Til
5 P.M.
80YEARS OF

TilE BEST
DEALS ON
QUALITY
FURNITURE

By

50%
Spring Air Back
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET.UP
WE REMOVE OLD ITEMS .
BEDDING OR FURNITURE
*DOWN PAYMENT MAY BE REQUIRED
"WIIH APPROVED CREDIT
...._.41f41MUM
PURCHASE
.
.

.
*
leCOIID
c.AJ.LI'Oul. OHIO

All!.
4118:1 •

MEMBER --~TV

I
.I

·sUNDAY
1 P.M.

MATTRESSES &amp;
BOX SPRINGS
·'

I

OR

11011

WITH FREE
FINANCING

'

5.89995

OF

CoJTection
GALLIPOLIS - An arti.cle in
Friday's TrlbiW! and ~lllirw/ coocer::;:J the arraignments of
ace
f1Pistl Vincent H. Vamey,
23, Route 1 Ewington, and ~gory
,s. Pickens, 27, 12283 State Route
f 60, Vinton, ioadvenently used
Varney's name twice in one seDtence, The seDtenco lhould have
read, "VII'IIO)' it repnaellled by
Mark MUiict 01 J.U.IIId Pick·
ens is rqr Med by Jcy WJa.
•fCobml•·"

$19995

SEaiONALS

~

~Hospital

Gallipolis

•
'

OF ~

___......,..

· Fll., BAT., IIUN.
SANDLOT P.o.
AND

the life of an soldier in the Civil
War.
The department is asking for
donations of lumber to help repair
the bridge over the small creek at
tile part, where the OVI re-enactors wiD be encamped.
A waterball fight is .scheduled
for 2 p.m..and will feature firefighters from the Centerville, Gallipolis,
Oak Hill, Madison-Jefferson and
Greenfield units..
Proceeds from the dinner aid the
Centerville depanment in mainting
operations. In addition to Mrs.
Daniels, Junior Hall and Bill Lambert are serving· on the ·planning
committee.

•

tN-tl)

lsOO,tr20 a..uor

CENTERVILLE - Activities
surrounding the tenth annual Centerville Bean Dinner and Parade
sponsored by the Centerville Volunteer Fire Department are .forging
ahead, according to Ann Daniels, .a
member of the event's planning
committee,
The dinner and parade are set
for Saturday, May 29, starting with
the para!le at 11 a.m. Parade units
are to form at the old Centerville
Elementary School. The deadline
for entries is May 24 and can be
made by contacting Mrs. Daniels at
245-5635.
The parade will feature 11- number of area fire departments,
twirling groups, vintage automobiles and others. Gallipolis Municipal judge candidates William S.
Medley and Richard C. Roderick
Jr. are also expected to be in the
parade. Retired educator and Welsh
· heritage expert Roger Williams
will serve as this year's grand marshal.
The parade will travel down
State Route 279 through the village
and end at the Centerville Community Park, where the dinner will be
held . .In addition to beans and. combread, the Centerville Grange will
sell sausage sandwiches, hot dogs,
pie, calce, coffee and pop. •
Activities slated for the day will
be centered around the park,
including entertainment by the Jordan Family and clogging groups.
Demonstrations by the Gallia
County Rescue Team and LifeFlight are scheduled, as will be an
encampment by the 9lst Ohio Volunteer Infantry, which will recreate

''
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•

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Authorities jail one

. **** .:::--.

•

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GALLIPOLIS - William Campbell, 683 Starcher Road, Gallipolis, was treated and released Friday aflemoon at Holzer Medical
Center after he accidentally shot himself, the Gallia County Sheriffs Department reported. ·
··
. Campbell was repo~y hunting from the roof or his residence
when his.,22-caliber rifle discharged, shooting him in the arm.

IARCIAIN NMIH'I' TUISDAV

ln•' K•t -.r

Non-members please Odd $25:

Man injured in shooting accident

GIPT ca7JPJCA'nl AVAIL&amp;Il&amp;l

!lltOIIIriH 't' UVII

Centerville bean dinner, parade

years old during 1993, live in the home and have an annual adjusted
gross income of no more than S16,500. Meigs County Auditor
Nancy Parker Campbell.
There is a separate application for owners or manufactured
homes, Campbell said.

IAIIIIUIN MAn-1 lAT. I lUll.

446 4514

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

Y'OLtlt

·

REEDSVILLE- Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department seized 19 marijuana plants Thursday evening from
behind a residence near Reedsville.
.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the plants were starters
only about one inch tall.

-

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money .

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A3

i-'------Tri-County
briefs----:-----. Plans are complete for lOth
.

Six individuals·cited in area auto accidents,
South-Central Ohio
Sunday, mostly cloudy with a
cbance of showers and thunderstorms. High near 75. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Extended foreciiSl:
Monday through Wednesday:

.

May 2~. J993.

Times-Se.itlael Staff ,

MICH.

, ,

- -·-

By JIM FREEMAN

cooditiODS

Ac:cu-Weak• foJ'IICIIt for

-

.... .

May23, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport Gelllpolla, OH Point Pleaaent, WV

OHIO Weather
Sunday, May l3

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Ohio/W.Va.
Ohio News in Brief:__, Video yields new indictment in slayings ·.
Probe finds abuse claims unfounded
CAL.DWELL (AP) - A videoThomas Dillon, 42, of Magnotape that allegedly shows a man lia, was charged Friday with one
charged in the deaths of two fiSher· count of aggavated murder in the
men visiting the grave of a slain death of Jamie Paxton, 21, of Banhunter was prime evidence in nock. Paxton was shot three times
bringing a third indicunent against on Nov. 10, 1990, while hunting
the man, the Belmont County Sher- near St. Clairsville in Belmont
iff said.
County.
"Yes, it's pretty food. a clinch- . The FBI made the video, a ~
er you could call1t, ' Sheriff Tom to the day after Paxton's slaymg,
McCort said Friday. '' Abopt as from the home of Frank and Lillian
good as we could get.'.'
. Plewniak, the couple told· The
.

STEUBE.NVD:.LE - A privale consulting flllll has found no
evidellce dl8l!'\Sidenls of a group borne were physically or verbally
abused.
.
.
. .
A Wheelersburg consulting fum spent SIX weeks 1ntemewmg
. more than 30 employees aiJout allegations of abuse filed by the staff
and mMtgemcm a die Shaffer Plaza, said Richard Pfamenschmidt,
superin..,.,.,..., or tile home.
The repon from Bob Cross of Cross Manageinent Consul_ting
Services said no specific times and dales.of a~ could be prov1ded
by the Jefferson C01111ty Menial Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities workers
.
Some group ~ wutcrs had filed with the board wrin.en ·allegations of physical and verbal abuse toward the residents by staff
and JIUPI&amp;'CIIICIIL The worker$ also lllleged a lack of effective communication with supervisors and poor management of the group
home.

Court delays hearing
for Lucasville guard

Marietta attomeyfreedfromjail .
MARlETTA- AnaJomey bcld in jail for more than a week on

PORTSMOUTH (AP) - An who is serving a life senlence for
arraignment has been continued aggravaled murder in Stark Coonuntil Monday for a IIWd accused ty, prison spokeswoman Tc:Jsa
of carrying 12 l'llllildS of ammuni- · Unwin said.
tion into the state's maximumWood was transferred to
security prison, where inmates bar- Lucasville after he held a guard
ricaded themselves for 11 days last hostage for an hour at the Lebanon
month.
·
Correctional Institution in March
Municipal Judge Howard Har- 1992, Unwin said. ..
c.ha Ill delayed Friday's arr~gn.Earlier 'this year, Wood was
ment because Robbie)). Stringer, found with a zip gun, a firearm
32, of South Wcbsler, did not have made from a pipe. during a prison
an attorney.
search. ·
~!ringer was. ~~ed with conStringer did not haye a gun
veymg amm.unmon mto a correc- when he was arresled. Prison J?Cf·
tiona[ facility. If convicted, he sonnet do not use .22-cahber
c~ld be senleneed to two years in
weapons.
pnson and fined $5,000.
Stringer has worked al t.he
. Stale Hishway Patrol troopers · prison since Aprill99l as a relief
arrested Stringer as he worted the officer He had no record of discisecond shift Thursday at the South- plmarf problems Tate said.

a caucmpt of court cluqe has been released.

Common Pleas Judge S.usan Boyer sent James .Dunn to the
Washiugloo County jail on May 12 for refusing to tum over a tape
that may coarai? cvidc:nce about a murder case in which Dunn was

a~:tiJdease the tape becNJsc: he said _county Pro~u­

tbr Mite Spahr •eneged on a proposed plea barsam. Spahr den1ed

thecblqe. ·
·
.
.
H ·
Dunn was released Thursday on his own recogmzance. e 1s
appe•lins lhe mnll:!!lpt ci&amp;alioo.

Food poisoning cause elusive

•

AKRON - Health officials doubt they will find the cause of
food poisoning thll affectal nearly 100 customers of a Chi-Chi's
ReslaUillllt in sullulbll Copley Township. Eleven people required
hospiJal admissjm
..
ifealtb iuspeciOis who spent more than two weeks invt:Stigaling
the Olllbmlt or sa1mone11a said it was probably some mtstake by
emnlnyees that ooKftl tile problem.
r'NOIIC of their pnx:esscs were incorreCt," said Toni Welding,
Summit County Health Department supervisor who directed the
•1
· m~~t;on,. ••11aerc was m.nan error.''
n~~ been scnldling our beads as well," said Mejie Renaud,
dilecll¥ of ttchnin' semces for Chi-Chi's 200 ~urants.
.
WeldiDI Plsp• a that somethins went wrong w1th the handling,
prepallllioo and serving or chicken, a common source of salmonella
bacU:ria.
AKRON - A Kl:lll Stile UniYmity pirdling coach has filed a
parent infiiM g 1 t sui!_~ hi;' beH!r.e'~llaslidishc.
~~~ keeps
a IJasrlwll c:ap in sllape- leu 11 c,_.,.. ma
w .... ~g '
The suit was filed Friday by Richard Scb!lOnover ~f ¥unroe
FaDs agaiost W'dd Injun Products of Laguna N1g.uel, Calif., m U.S.
Dislrict Court.
.
.
The Ball Cap Buddy made by Wild Injun was pa~enled after
Sclloonc&gt;Wr's p1re11t for a similar ilem was awarded in May 1991,
Sclloonc&gt;Wr's at101ney, Stqlbcn G...uaid. .
.
.
A mesnr reting c:amment was left this morrung at the Wild
Injun bt:iKiquaiDS.
.
Scboouma- astcd the COUll to ordez Wild Injun to SWp marketing its cap washer, to turn over its profits from the item to
ScboonoYa- and deslluy its advcnising materials.

~CT.

ORMAN HALL

· · STRATHAM, N.H. (AP)''Afttc a tough week in Washington,
• where he battled Congress OYer his
tax plan and even his haircut
C!lllsed controversy. President Clin·
ion tried to refocus an.enlion on his
~ic
in the stale where,
as a candi
• he dubbed himself
•.•the comeback kid..
' · It was the
~ fcx:.used on
,in his wcetly
· address, which
'·was pre-recorded Frid&amp;y in lhe
White House, and that he planned
''to Cliscuss in a commencement
' address to sraduates of New
• Hampshire Techaical College.
~
In the radio address, he spoke of
"the opponents and the special
" in~" tryin~t his eco, 1101111C plans ID
•
• • "Some of my opponents want
to cut Social Security and lax c:red~, its to working families with
incomes of under $30,000 just to
~ get a tax CUI for the rich," he said,

g!:

II

:t

All

1

675•2871

CONDITIONING

14 KT. GOLD

IWII000612

POINT PLEASANT

· NEW YORK (AP) -The FBI
, is trying to match finserprints
, found on everything from glass
.: beakers to a $100 bill with those of
;:· more than a dow! suspects in the
World Trade Cenler bombing.
· Tbe items were seized from
.' New Jersey sites where authorities
::'say the bomb that killed six JlCOPle
·and injured more than 1,000 wiS
• built.
Accotding to laboratory repons
. sllpplied by a legal source who
.,scquested aDoaymity, the FBI
. cles&lt;:J:ibea a~ of 18 PJsprdl in the

1-800-462-5255

Lottery results
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were thlce tickeu lOki naming all
'rive numbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye S drawing, and
each winnins ticket is worth
$100,0110, the Ollio Loaay Slid.
The tidteu were p.urcbued in
Fairporl Harbor, Amherst ·and'
Toledo.
Here are Friday's wimins numbc:n:
Pldl3 "-ben
1-6-2 .

HOtliiiiOIUNI
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IN

"0. Plaprrs",

march of Bo1nian Serbs a1 the
Clinton admlnillrltion, in a DOlley
~t, toot ill c:ue from the 'Euro~on JIOIIlCtlna civilians.
.: French Foreill' MlniSier Alain

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This Event PreSented By

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WEIGHT CONTROL

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gather to draft
.strategy on Bosnia

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:~~:!~~~e~:!:C~\r:w~~d
be set at $2,000 a year, lhe Tunes

,

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D. ,

~llies

•Illness
or Injury •Physician Referral
.
•Health Ca_re Events •Support Groups

So Lfl'l G.t sr.tedll
can Today For AF,.. Estimate .

''

.

'" "Is there anybody here tonight
. ·• ho feels the Unital States so-n·
knows how 10 create a job? I
" 1ean a real job. We can get a
opusin a job, but that's not a real
itb." Perot told the crowd. He was
'!ferring 10 the hiring of Clin~'s
cousin to tate over the Wh1te
~travel office.
• Perot joked that he and his bar·~r .decided to open a chain of
, s~ops after learn~al Clin~n
!!ell clipped by a ;)
a-cut styhst
Ibn Beverly Hills, Calif.
• Perot was to attend a second
~inn.esota rally this morning in
ltoches~er, then head to Wichita,
lfan., for an aftcmooo rally and to
s't. Louis for an evening appear-

~

LAWN CARE
·S IALISTS!.

.... I '

ftonts.

+at

·We're the

(lilt, foar, •• line)
811CUJe5
3-16-21-31-36
(tine, llio!J I R,lWellty-0ne, lhirty-oni:, tbirty-lix) .
.

.

tl

Take Jhis Summer Off
We'll Take Care of the Lawn

&lt;'.'
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r ·- ...

:-:. tfteme.

'''.! He wasted no time attacking the
"'Cllinton administration on several

Relax

'

SCI a
annuat!y to be paid by p~tienu
before msurance woold begm pay-

• !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!il

f:'

IIIIIIE

lllll•••••••••••llll••••-.

~3

'

.

mite, Merritt said. Langdon was
am:sted Thursday after he tried to
explode the cases in a car he
parked near the deputy's car in lhe
sherjfrs department parking lot,
the sheriff said.

(eilbt.lix. two)
Pld4N• hn ..

''

.

~umma,

Deputies foil bomb attempt

'

said.
sild.
Employees and employers
The fingerprints of the only would share costs under both plans
indicted fugitive in the case but the employees' share would be
Ramzi Ahmed Yousef - were srea~er under the lower deductible
found on a brown bottle of sodium · plan, the newspaper said.
azide, a propellant found in the
Benefits would be aYailable by
locker, the reportS say.
· ·
1997 under either plan but they
The reports also disclosed that would be phased in more rapidly
the FBI is checking the finge~ts under the more generous plan.
apinst a list of at least 16 suspects,
The White House says the ~iSalameh's pribl!.~!oundbottlon inch"_!~!_Salameh, Yo.usef
haandbeenthe dent probably will not unveil his
such items as a
p c
e four .,....,. suspects w00 ve
final health care proposal before
of gun po~. a 50-JJI?UIId bag of indicted in the bombing.
- mid-June. .
8IIUIIOIIIUJR mlrate, a JIICCC of duct
In another report, the FBI dis·
tape and a•.Jdass bcakct, the report closed that investigators found
•
$2,615 in U.S. currency and a
small arnount of Jordanian and
Iraqi currency during their search-

M

HOLZER ·HEALTH HOTLINE

EL YRJA - A Lorain school teacher has been indicted on
charges of sexually molestins male students, some under l3 years
old, during the firsl3-lfl monlhs of the year.
.
David J. Ksenich was indicted by a Lorain County grand Jury
Tilesday. The scaled indictment became public after he was arrested
and posted bond.
Ksenich a sixth-grade teacher at Homewood Elementary School,
has been ~riled from teaching, Assistant Prosecutor Jonathan E.
RosenbaiDll said
Ksenicfl has an lDIJlUblished telephone number and could not be
reached for comment early today.
·
Ksenich will be anaigned Wednesday on two £elony .counts of
~ sexual imposition ~ four misdemeanor cou~ts o_
f unportun·
mg. The relonies .e punisbab1e by up to two yean I!' _pnson and the
other charges are punishable by up to Silt months m jail.
-The Associated Press

'

•

BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn~
'.' (AP) - . Ross Perot opened a
" •I Clean Out The Bam' tour of
· t1uee Midwestem ~ by urging
llresidelil Clinton and Congress to
quickly enact p&lt;ilitical reforms.
"' 'And no be didn't Ctorget Clinton's
v• haircuL
.~ · : "If our cumnt elecled oqicills
•·· :;. would just knuc:kle down, face
" the issues that concern us, do the
··j!Jb now, can we agree that we
'' would put, them back in office and
" Put the president on Mount Ru"'"·1\lore?" Perot asked an overflow
crowd of about 4,0110 Friday night.
' ··:we don't have four ye~~~to wait,
'" 'fC need action. tonighL"
.
" • Perot's mtss1on ·was to meet
:" shppOrters and build membership
~ iD his grass-roots govc:rnment' reform organization, United We
'" Stand America.
The nilly brought back memo,: ries of last year' a pelidential cam.... , • PmJt
e "high-fives" to
~"~as entered the audito, 'rfum and the crowd WBYed plastic
.,.shovels in keeping with the rally's

j

Teacher indicted for molestation .

The C.
sberilf's
department,
, Robert
J...an&amp;doo
allegedlywhtze
tried
to set off a car be thought was loaded with d)••ni~e, is lncaled downtown oear shops and business
~ offiCeS. Sbc:riff Ken Mcnitt said.
' Partcisburg is about 10 miles south
· or~
·
''If he had gotte11 the explosives .
he wanled. he could ha~ blown up
most of Ibis block,'' Meniu said.
Two undertovel' ..,u supplied
',Langdon with four e"!pty cases
Ladgdon believed contained dyna-

' £:

"!'&lt;'

months.
' ·· Common'
The senteuc:c was handed down Friday by Summ1t
Pleas Judge Maureen O'Connor to George CiruUo, 44, of Tall-

.I

.
Feb. 26 bombing of the 110-story
twin towers.
One report describes multiple
fingerprints of suspect Mohammad
Salameh, 2S, of Iersey City, N.J.,
that were allqedly found on ilems
seized from a Jersey City storage
·locker where authorities say many
of the bomb's components were
found.
· ·

swzng th. rough
:. three Midwestern states
.n

. I!:
. j.;e~'ot-tiegzn:s

'

ES

d~do~~tr~r:~sag~~'t1foo

F'BI. b.Ul•tdS .CaSe WI•th tiIngerpr·nts
I
·1•0 Trade Center bombin·g ·attack

AKRON - A Summit County man convictal of raping his chil·
eben's babysitter has been sentenced to a halfway house for six

madge. wbo pleaded guilty last IIIOIIth.
He was also udtred to move out of the victim's neighborhood.
He will be on p~oblliol for five yell'S.
Cirullo could ba~ been sentenced to 10 yean in prison for raping the 16-year-old ptlast year. The victim and her pnnts agreed
to the sentence aflcr mcCtinR with the iudse~ PapJllis. onc or Cirullo's lawyers. told the judge that all
of his client's problems 511:!11 fnm alc:ohol abuse.

Clinton also is fond of New
Hampshire, where he spent months
during the campaign, went through
some hard times, and wound up
coming in second in the .Democratic presidential primary there. He
gave himself the name of "comeback kid'' on primary night

,

ic Advisers, and Rob~rl Rubin,
coor~inator of the Nauonal Econom1c Counc1l, back the more
modes! proposal.
.
. While both plans would !t9UifC
h1gher taxes, these adv1se~s
expressed concern that the presldent might lose support f~ reform
because of the greater lax mcreases
to cover the costs of the more genemus plan.
The president favors the more
generous plan, according, 10 The
PosThL
r
ld

Both newspaJiers emphasized
that no final deci~ion has been
made and the specifics of a final
standard health care benefi! ~ack~e PfOPC!S8l f!om the admuusualion are still bemg worked o.uL.
· According to the reports, Hillary
Rodbam CliDton and the health
care policy advisers favor !'Je more
generous an~ COIIIJ?fChe~Jve p~.
But econom1c advisers, mcludmg
TreasUry Secretary Lloyd Bentsen
Laura .D'Andrea Tyson, the head of
the President's Council of Econom-

ft.'"

Rapist heads for ludfway house

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
· - A man who plotted to blow up a
: Wood County sheriff's deputy
: investigatins him for car theft did
: not care if he liilled or injured othI ers. the.sheriff said Friday.

WASHINGTON (AP) - White

Jll=

$12,500

SPECIAL PRIC.I
SPECIAL DUCK

program.
"It's all part of his efforts to
bring his message out to the people
of America directly," Jones said.
"I think that what IS valued out of
these trips is that direct contact,
and that's what he's going to
engage in. "

Ind., was arrested uec. 11 and
charged with ttaveling in interstate
commerce with intent to murder
Date Haubach, of Medway.
Transcripts of l)cr conversati~s
with the unidentified detective
were filed Thursday in U.S. Dis·
trict Court.

DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- An
Indiana woman accused of. offering
an undercover detective $2,000 to
kill her former husband repeatedly
'tried to back out of the alleged plot
before her arrest, according to coun
documents.
.
Penelope Hau~c!' pf ~11stin,

\lished

Air, 4.3 V6 gas engine, AMIFM stereo
with cassette, sliding rear windows, 5
speed 'manual transmlsal(ln.
'

DIAMONDS

ates of the technical collese· is the
ftrst of a series of a commencement
speeches the president will deliYcr
in the next few weeks.
He will speak at the West Point
graduation May 29 and at Northeastern University in Boston on
June 19.
The White House announced
earlier this month that the president
planned 10 make at least one trip a
week out of Washinston to refocus
public attention on his economic

Woman tries to back out of murder plot

The other, more modest plan
would phase in a complele benefits
t(omic advisers strongly disagree package over lime to lessen the iniabout two widely divergent health tial cost to both government and
we plans being considered by . businesses that don't·now provide
P
esident Clinton according to employee health coverage, the Post
1
S~tunla .
said.
ll" One
would ~tee a
Sharp divisions over the plans
~ hensiYe ackage of health emerged in what Saturday's edi• bene~ to inclu~ standard medi- tions of The New York Times
~ procedur
' d phasi
·
described as ...a spiriled three-hour
'
es an ~m
ze
meeting" with the presiderit in the
'::.~~p~e~~~eSatur~ Roosevelt Room of ·the White
day
. • 1 editions
House oil Thursday night

1.993 FULL SIZE PICKUP

TW

assisled draftins and phirmacology, as well as a two-year nursing
prosram,
"The investment that the students make by goilll! to that school, '
he identifies that With elements of
his own economic plan," said
While House ~ty Press Secre- •
tary Arthur Jones. "Here those students are preparing for )cbs in an
economy, and he is hopmg therC's
an economy 0111 there for the young
people to participate in."
The address to the 176 ,Rradu-

touse health care expens and eco-

RESIDENTIIJL • COMMERCIIJL • INDUHRIJH

1317 .0HIOS1REET

referring to a proposal made this
weet by Sen • .David Boren, .00kla., and others, which would
freeze spending cuts and kill his
energy tax.
.
Clinton landed at Pease Air
Force Base and shook hands with
SOllie of the roughly 70 people who
were there to greet him. He then
headed for New Hanlpshire Technical Collese. where he was to
deli- the conimencemenl address.
Later, he was to meet with support·
ers at a private recqJiion in ManchCSier, N.H.
The White House said his
speech would focus on the economy and his budget plan, an especially relevant topic given the jobtraining aims of the college.
The IIChool offers SDrgicaJ Jech·
nician training, automotive programs, a variety of busin~u _pro~· and comp.uler applications,
machine lOOl and computerized ,

:·Advisers
present two differing health care plans to pre.sident
.. '

HEAnNG

''771e Company
You Can Count OA"
FREE ESTIMATES

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

:After hard week, Clinton returns to New Hampshire

·----··------~2~4~HOU=R~:EII:E:RG::ENC::Y:8:E:R~YIC:E·~COM::II:E:RCIA:L~·~INDU8=
· ~TRIA;;L;·;I'IWI~~1~1~

Lucasville.
He was working
ern
Ohio Correctional
Facilityin inJ
cellblock, where death row is located, Warden Arthur Tate said.
Slrinscr took rounds of .22-caliber bullets into the prison last
week and Thursday in a half-fuU
bag of Fritos com chips that had
been resealed, Tate said.
"He was going to give them 10
an inmate,'' Tate said.
An inmate could have used the
bullets to fire from a homemade
weapon, Tale said.
Investigators suspect that the
bullets were to be given to inmate
Michael Lee Wood, 33, of Canton,

Coach sues for infringement

.Dillon pleaded innocent to
charges of aggri.Yaled murder in ,
the deaths of Claude Hawkins and
Gary Bradley.
'.
Hawkins, 49, of Mansfield, was •·
killed March 14, 1992, in Coshoc- .
ton County. Bradley, 44, of
Williamstown, W.Va., was shot ·
April S. 1992, near CaldweU.
Trial in those cases is scheduled
for Sept. 20.
·
DiUon is being held in the Lake
County jail on unrelated federal :
firearms violations. Young said .he
expects the federal case 10 wrap up
· soon and believes Dillon may be
moved to Noble County then.
Noble Countr. will prosecule the ,
case, and so w1ll have to pay for •.
the prosecutions, Young ~d. But
Coshocton County has i:.ontributed
to the costs and other counties are
expected to chip in, he said. .
.
Young will be assisted by •
Franklin County Prosecutor '
Michael MiUer, who yolunteered to "
help, Young said.
.

Columbus .Dispak:h in a copyright
story published Saturday.
The Plewniaks live acros!\ t~e
street from Paxton's ~ra~e 1n
Union Cemetery in St. Clairsville.
The video was shot n~arly .a
year before .Dillon w~ idenbf!ed !n
federal court .as a pnme suspect ~
the slayins~ of five eastern Oh10
sportsmen suiCe 1989. Two of the
slayings had not yet occurred. .
The cemelery was under survallance because of an anonymous
typewritten letter from a writer
claiming to be Paxton's ~cr. .
The Times Leader 10 Martms
Ferry received the letler about. !I
year after Paxton's death. The wnter
vided details about Paxton's
sla:g and said he had visited his
grave.
McCort said authorities are still
looking for the typewriter.
Noble County Prosecutor.
Lucien Young said Dillon should
be served with the third indicunent
early IICJ[t week.

Nation/World

May 23,1993

Sunday Times-Senlinel/A4

May23,1993

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May 23,1993

Commentary

May23, 1993

Clinton's energy tax still in question
By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

Supremacist group
terrorize neighborhood

wield the power to kill the energy
lllll, and are all pan of what one
finance staffer calls "the most pub-

licly secret group ever." They are
currently trying to forge a bipirtisan oompromise by recruiting some
Republicans to their si~.
One Rq~~~blican senator, handi·
capping GOP chances oC victory at
5().50, ~eves that with a win in
the Texas special' election, the
Republicans can count on 44 votes
in the Senate - plus that of Sen.
Richard Shelby, D-Ala., who is
counted in the Republican column
almost automatically since his
falling OUI wilh lhe White House.
Republicans believe they could
craft a majority with th!l help of a
handful of Democrats who are
leaning against the energy tax.
To placate the Boren.Jed
brigade, Clinton may have to serve
ilp significant concessions, or face
defeat in the Finance Committee,
where Pem9Cl8ts retain a slim 11-9
majority. Democrats on lhe House
Ways and Means Committee
already ransomed the energy laX
only after offering up a series of
tax breaks for farmers, the alu·
minum industry, home beating oil,
multinational corporations, small
businesses and real estate. The Sen-

WeLL,I .......
THiNK We'Re
SacKot(

TRacK.

t
ate may have to follow suit.
But Clioton desperately needs to
rescue the bill from Senate Finance
without tolally alienating Bradley}
the grandfather of the Tax-Reform
Act of 1986 and who some·
Democrats regard as a wild card. If
Bradley turns against the energy
laX, Senate Finance staffers believe
it could spell defeat on the commit~
tee. .
·~
Bradley never met a laX loop:
hole he liked, and is deeply disaf~·
fected by Clintoti' s re-inttoduction.
of narrow taJt breaks eliminated·
under the 1986 act. That bill, which
closed cherished tax loopholes for.
many special interests, was
Bradley's brainchild, and he see(.
the current amendments as anathe:
ma to that spirit. "The best laX pol~
icy is that wbich serves the general
interests and not the narrow,"·.
Bradley told us.
',.
Any question about whether
Bradley has the siomac" to ~se
a Democratic president was dis- ·
pelled after he essentially killed '
Bill Ointon's proposed invesbnent"•
laX credit contained in the current ~
bill. Now Finance Commiuee
sources predict ·he will defect qri
Btu if the administration capitulates
to pressure from special .!ntereslS to ·
water it down.
'
~
Tbe key question is this: When ·
will Bradley say "enough is
enou~h?" At this point, be is play""·
ing his cards close to the vest. "He
has been ftghting for ~o monlhs ~
some of lhe most egregtous loophole revisions that Clinton pro-~ '
posed," said one Senate source.
"If there is an effort in F'mancc'ltt.
chip away at or open up loophoics,
Bradley is going to get in. the~
way."
•
The predicament for Clinton is
that if he bows to lhe democratic
opposition he could furlher erode
his credibility wilh the voters, who
thought they were electing a presi-,
dent who believed in tax equity. On·
the other hand, without winnin&amp;,:,
over the fellow D.emocrats in,·
Congress, Clinton's cherished-.•
health·c.are legislation may be
D.O.A.
As one laX lobbyist summed i ~
up: "People get militantly upse(
about laltes they have to pay when,
someone else snuck out the door." .
Jack Anderson and Michae~
Binsteln are writers for UnltetJ,,'.
t:,eature Syndicate, Inc.
,:

•
May·and the PHS 60th reunion

FredW. Crow

Berry•s World

~-----Today

in history------

By Tbe Associaled Press
Today'is Sunday, May 23, the 143rd day of 1993. There are 222 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
·
·
On May 23. 1934, bani&lt; robbers BoMie Parker and Clyde Barrow were
shot to death in a police ambush as they were riding in a stolen Ford
·Deluxe along a road in Bienville Parish, La.
On lhis date:
.
In 14~0, Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgll!ldians, who sold her to
lhe English.
· .
In 1533, the marriage of England's King Henry VIll 10 Catherine of
. Aragon was declared null and void.
· ·
.
In 170 Capt. Winiarn Kidd was hanged in LOOdon after he was COO·
victed of p118Cy and murder.
.
·In 1788, South Carolina became the eighth state to ratify the U.S. Con·

mer Atto~,Y General John N. Mitchell in connection with their Water·
gate convtcuons.
In 1991, lhe U.S. Supreme Court upheld re~ulations barring federally
subsidized' family plannin11 clinic.s from discussmg abortion wilh pregnant
women, or from telling women where lhey could get abortions.
Ten years ago: Vladimir Danchev. an announcer on Radio Moscow
swprised listeners by praising Muslim rebels in Afghanistan and criticiz:
ing Soviet policy in three English-language newscasts before he was
take~! off the air. (Danchev was allowed to return to work in an off-the-air
c~ity after undergoing what was termed ''a cdurse of treatment'')
Ftve years ago: Le,u than a week before a scheduled superpQwer sum· .
mit in Moscow, Secretary of State.George Shu1ti ~ent to c;:apitol Hiil_w
ask for a prompt Senate ·vote 10 ratify the 10termcdiate-range nuclear rrussile treaty.
.
. 0i1e year ago: The United States and four former Soviet republics
w~.
signed an !'II"ICment in Lisbon, Ponugal, to implement_the S"FART misIn 1873, Canada's North Wes1. Mounted Police forte was established.
sife-rcducuon treaty that bad been agreed to by the Sovtet Umon prior to
In 1915, ~laly ~~ war on Austria-Hunllary in World War I. . . its diuolution.
,
In 1937, indUSirialistJohn D. Rockefeller died in Ormond Beach Fla.
. Todafs. Birth~ys: Bandleader.Artie S~w is 83. Actress Betty G_am:u
In.194S •. Nazi official Heinrich Rimmler committed suicide' while · ts 74. PianiSt Abcta de Larrocha 11. 70. Smger Rosemary Clooney 1s 65.
~ 10 Luneburg, Germany. . .
.
Actreu Barbara Barrie is 62. Actress Joan Collins is 60. Boxer Marvelous
In 1960, lsmel IIIIIIOUJiiced it ~ Captured former Nazi OffiCial AdOlf Mervin Hagler is 4L ·
__ . .
·
Thought
for
Today:
•
'He
~ho cannot rest, cannOt wotk; he who cannot
. Eie:=~.:fr.f~~oun ref~ to heir 111e - . ~former
let go, cannot hold on; be who cannot ftnd footing, can~o forward."
NiltOII Wltite House aides H~. Haldeman and John E~ and fcir· -Henry Emcrsop Fosdick, American clergyman (1878-1
.
.

r.

.

...

group of young people age 77 or
older should have one f10al fling toassistance.
end all flings or something lik~
The class banquet given by Ole lhat ·
"
Crow will be held at the Legion
Most of the graduates will lie'
Hall on Friday, May 28th. This is interested in the factS of their lives~·
one day before lhe alumni banquet It is my desire 10 have a questionto be beld at Meigs High Schoof on naire of all the members attendingi
May 29111.
to ascertain lhe clzsmate who ltafl
I can remember a brief.speech I had the most operations and the
gave at our senior commencement one who consumes the most pills:
when I remarked lhat this is the las! It would also be interesting to dis•·
time lhis entire clzs will be togeth- cover the rate of divorce in this
~- It did not take any great amount
group. I would bet the pertental!CI '
of wisdom to come to this conclu- of divorce would be less than 10%:.
sion. This happens every year and Today lhe national average is better·
will continue to happen as long as than 50%. ·
we have graduating classes. And so
At this year's program we wiU
it has happened to lhe PHS class of show the films taken at the SSth ·
1933.
reunion of our class. 'l1llise pictures
As soon as graduation occurs should show what five years can do
the members will scatter on the to most of us. The ftlm does show•
four winds to many different states. at least 4.members of the SStll
As time passes you will notice that reunion who are now deceased.
there are several that will never They are Ester Edwards, Hobart·
return to a cws reunion. There are YOUR$, Thelma Karr Lytle and A'\IIi
several in this county that have Zo Sisson. Charles and Ellen .
never attended a clzs reunion arid Gibbs, both of whom attended the'
probably never will. This I cannot 55111 reunion, are now deceased. .,
understand. However, the factS Ill'(:
Edith Bowen Witt, who has
there and cannot be disputed. For ~n instrumenlal in lhe. orpniza· ,
example: When we li841 our first uon of past ·banquets, has had .,.
oommittee meeting, we discovered severe stroke and probably will not:
that inttoductions had to be given attend this year. Rupe wants Edilh
for -one or two members. Father to know that he is going to misr
time had changed the appearance seeing her and wishes her a speed)''•
of several whic~ confused a few of recovery. Her address is LIOI 'J'heo'
us. With one exception, all the Oaks, Chapel Hill, NC 27514,
members of this committee were
Rupe, th'ere will be some sur•"'
from Meigs County. Sttange, isn't prise goodies that will be passed ur·
it Rupe?
members attending the banquet 011&gt;
AI. the reunion to be held at the Fnday, May 28th.
. ,•
Legion Hall on the 28th the dinner
Last, but not least, the writerl
will be different from the usual would like 10 thank Roy Miller"•
banquer meal. This year we have Robert Burdette, Helen WilliamsOO
· engal!ed Paul Casci, Middlepon, Boster, Carl Jennings, Mary Baer•
who IS in ch11rge of..this dinner. Grueser, Louise Hartung Bearhs '.
Paul has prepared many' rileals for Calherine it'aub Welsh and Delli '
dipitaries all over the country and Schwartzwalder Starkey for their·
has won the "'tefs Wilh Distinc- assistance in promotina this event '
tion" award which is annually Hope we will all be lroUnd for the
given to outstanding chefs all over 65111 in May 1988.
&gt;
the US. He is a holder of the "Blue
Get your vocal cords in wne '"" :
Goose" aWM'd which is lhe second the singing of the Purple and tl.~ '
highest awud given in the cooking White.
industry. If his meal is as good as
An invitation is given by the '
anticipated, Paul may receive Metgs County Historical Society 10
the"Golden Toolhpick"award. The all alumni over fifty years of age 10•
class will hive to vote on lhis at the rel~te on video, "their history in
conclusion of the me~!. George Meigs County" on Saturday after·
. l;for&amp;!t, who also has h1gh c~n- noon at the Meigs County Muse~ 10 .the field of meal planmng, !"ft. There lbou1d be 111111y lnumt~l ·
Will assut Otef Paul. .
fiClS of life whieh one might
At banquets of thu type, most : "enJOY tellinll or lislening to
cwsmates will gather and will try · ln.God We Trust.
.
to tell the story of his·or ber life in
Carry on.
•
.a matter of a ·few fl!lnut.eS. This is
Editor'• aote • Lo•l·tl•e( ~ ·
impossible and before the night is Altoraer Fred w. Crow 11 tile
over many tales wil111fow. taller coatrlbator ·or a weeklr cobtand events become more dtimatic. lor ne Suadar Tl•a-Selllme1
In other_ words, so~e of them ar_e Rnden wlllda110 lpp'-d, crlt;
stretchmg it a. bu._Sil..what, 11. - ldze_or
oa ~~.:r• "
maket for a good eve.nin_g .and (except relltloa or po
are ~
everyone goes home feeling tmpor· eacoura1eil to write to Mr
tanL When you lhink of it Rupe, a Crow, .. can ot
IIOEWii*le'. •

10'

I

-•.a

til'-

J

Nancy Ann Lewis

GALLIPOLIS - Aulton B. Castle, 79, State Route 32S, Thurman,
died Saturday, May 22, 1993 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born June 3, 1913 in Tunnelton, W.Va., son of the late Joseph Wake·
field Castle Sr. and Carrie Frances McGinnis Castle, he was a retired
employee of Island Creek Coal Co., Evanston, Ky., and the Merry Stone
Co.,Rodney.
·
. He was a member of lhe Salyersville (Ky.) F&amp;AM Lodge No. 7f8 and
the Salyersville OES. He was a 32nd Degree Mason in the Ancient
Accepted Scoaish Rite, Valley of Coh111bus.
Surviving ~ his wife, Minnie J. Tackett Castle, whom he married
OcL 23, 1952 10 Catleasburg, Ky.; a daughter, Mrs. Donald (Charlotte)
Mwray of Belaire, Md.; a stepSOn, Donald.Paul Richards of New Boston;
two grandsoos, one granddaughter and one ~-grandson; tb= brothers.
Norvin G. Cisde or TWIIIClton, Burl F. Castle of Morgantown, W.Va.,
and E. Hadan Castle of Rowlesbora, W.Va.; and lhree sisters, Cathern
Metz IIIII Agnes Williams, bolh of "runnelton, and Mrs. Melvin {Ruby)
F'ISher of Myersdale, Pa.
He was also preceded in death by lhree brothers, Monroe, Joseph W.
and Woodrow Castle.
·
• Graveside services will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at lhe Campground
Cemetery, Thnnelton. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore.Wetherholt
Chapel, Gallipolis, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday, aild at the Browning
Funeral Home, Kingwood, W.Va., from 7·9 p.m. Tuesday. . .

GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers for the fwteral of Nancy Ann Lewis, 70,
Bidwell, who died Wednesday, May 19, 1993 ill Heartland Victorian Village, Columbus, were Anthony Birchfield, John Birchfield, Stanley
Payne, Keith Payne,1ohn Lewis and William Lewis.
Services were beld ill II a.m. Sillurday in the McCoy-Moore Wetherholt Cha_pel, Gallipolis, with lhe Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating. Burial
was in Pine Streei Cemetery.

GAlLIPOLIS - Margaret HoUSIOR, 75, 53 Grape Street, G8J.lipolis,
died Friday, May 21,1993 ather residmce. She was a retired employee of
tile Gallipolis Elks Lodge and a member of the First Baptist Church and
the Gallipolis Emblem Club.
.
She was born October 31, 1917 in Ga11ia County, daughter of the late
Ezra and Ida Mae McCarley Tipton.
·
Survivors include two daugllters, Donna Polenz of Marengo and Karen
Fahringer of Pittsburgh; fom grandehildren,1ennifer and He!lther Lawhon
and Daniel and Amy Fahlinger, and one great-grandson, Nicholas Watson.
She was preceded in dead! by her parenlS; her husband, Don Houstop,
and one brother.
Friends may call6 to 9 p.m. today at lhe Waugli·Halley-Wood Funeral
Home. Services will be held 11 a.m. Monday 81 the funeral home with the
Rev. David Varney officiating. Burial win fOllow in Mound Hill Ceme·
tery.
.

I

sunday nmea Sentinel Page A7

Kenneth Jacob Wolfe
SHADE • Kennelh 1acob Wolfe, 83, of Shade died Friday, May 22,
1993, at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilillllion Center.
A tree-trimmer and-supervisor, he was lxm July 16, 1909, in Racine,
son of the late Jed Milton and Aoa Neigler Wolfe.
He is survived by his wife, Anna L. Otn Wolfe; tJuee daughters and
sons-in-law, Eillen and David Tritt of DarliJtgton, Penn., Ruth A. and Bob
Graham and Penny D. and Gene Powell, all of Pomeroy; five sons and
daughters·in·law, Howard and Ruth Wolfe of Georgetown, Del., Carl L.
WOlfe o{ Bidwell, Gale (Gene) Wolfe of Mason, W.Va., Marlin L. and
Emily M. Wolfe of Shade and Benny R. and Robin M. Wolfe of Shade;
14 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.
·
' Also surviving is a brodier, Hilton Wolfe of Racine, IIIII several nieces
and nephews. ·
Services will be held I p.m. Tuesday at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Rev. Sam Basye officiating. Burial will follow in Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call Monday from 5·8 p.m.

Raymond A. (Jack) Sayre
TROY - Raymond A. (1ack) Sayre, 70, of Christiansburg died Fri·
day, May 21, 1993 at Grandview Hospital in Dayton,
'
Bom on March 28, 1923 in Southside, W.Va., he was the son of lhe
late Elmer and Emma Glenn Sayre.
·
~ was ~ed in death by fii'Sl wife, Calherine Marie Sayre. He is
sumved by his second wife, Rulh Cory Sa~.
Also surviving_ are a son, Raymond Keith Sayre of St. Paris a daugh·
k!· Mrs. Clevis (Lav~na Sue) Banks of Troy; lhree stepdaughters, Mrs.
R1c~ard (Eleanore) NI~hman, Mrs. Bruce (Gertie) Marshall, and Kay
Edgington, ~ of St. Pari~; lhree brothers, Elmer Sayre, Jr. of Henderson,
W. VL, Mwue Sayre of Pittsb~gh, Pa. and Paul Sayre of Indiana; two sisters, Peggy Snowdon and Sylvta Cook, both of Pomeroy· eight grandchildren, 8 step-grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. '
. He attended lhe Troy Church of lhe Nazarene and was a member of the
F1sh and Game Oub. He bad served in the U.S. Naval Reserves arid was
retired from lhe Troy Pul&gt;lic Sch09l System.
.
Funeral services ~ll be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday at the Baird Funer~ H~e ,ill Troy, With the Rev. Ronald Barber officiating, Burial will be
m Rlverstde Cemetery in Troy. Friends .may call ill funeral home Sunday
from 2 10 4 and 6to 8 p.m.

FIRST PRESBmRIU CHURCH SEEKING
ENERGEnC CHRISTIAN ADULT FOR
PART·TIME YOUTH DIRECTOR.
Applicatio1 for• •wala.ltlt at IH c..rcl!
office, 51 Sta,. st....t,t.. coner of Stile
Streeta1d TlllrtllweiH, 9:00.1:00
Mo1day to Friday, or cal 446·1 030.

Mabel Marshall Stevens ··

RACINE • Mabel Marshall Stevens, 95, of Racine died Friday, May
22, 1993, 81 Overbrook Nursing Center in Middleport.
Born Feb. 22, 1898, in Middleport, daugbter of the late Taylor C. and
Merle "Maggie" Brown Grogan, she was a homemaker, employee of the
fonner ij.M. Cross Music Store and a member of the Maple Grove Bap- '
list Church in Lakeport, Fla.
She is s~ved by a da!tghter and son-in-law, Margaret and David
Yost of ~10e, ~ven grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
· Preceding her m death were two brothers, Frank and Cecil Grogan· a
sister, Margaret Quivey; fii'SI husband, Fred W. Marshall in 1950 and~ond husband Feltoil C. Stevens in 1984.
· Services will be beld 11 Lm. Mo~~~ at Fisher Funeral Home in Middlepon wilh Pastors Earl Shuler and vin Riddle officiating. Burial wiD
folfow in Riverview Cemetery in Middleport.
Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to a chtirch or
shows as "Our Man Higgins" and' favorite charity.
·
·
Chester B. deGavre
•'The Hardy Boys Mysteries."
Joseph Smitll
' ONANCOCK, Va. (AP)
Retired Army Brig. Gen. Chester
WASHINGTON (AP) B. deGavre, a pioneering para· Joseph Smith, a retired Air Force
trOOper and chief of staff for the lieutenant general who helped
GALLIPOLIS- Rulh S. Whitmore, 86, who lived with niece Mr. and
1944 airborne invasion of soulhem organize the ~erlin airlift in 1948, Mrs Sid Vance until failing beallh required nursing care at Pinecrest Care
France, died Sunday ill age 8S.
died Wednesday of respiratory fail· Cenier since 1985, die«l Thursday, May 20, 1993 at Pinecrest Care Center.
deGavrc was one of the first ure. He was 91.
·
Born June 14, 1906 in Alhens COunty, daughter of the late George C.
Smith, who lived ill a retirement ancHlaence Linton Sickles, she was registered nurse in Athens County
Arm'/ officers to take parachute
traitun~ ill' the start of World War home for military personnel, died and a saleslady for Morris &amp; G.C. Mwphy Co. in GalliJlolis. She atten~
n, joinmg the Airborne ,Command at the Andrews Air Force Base schools in Marshfield, Athens County, and was a member of Grace Umt·
at Fort Bragg, N.C. He improved medical center in suburban Wash· edMethodistChurchinGallipolis.
techniques and standardized equip- ington.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in dealh by her husband,
ment for the airborne forces as a
The airlift, begun when the Ralph Wltitmore, in 1981. They were married Oct. 4, 1930. in Athens.
parachute-training offtcet and chief Soviets blocked land access to Also5ng ber in dead! were two sisters, florence Lucille Watson
of test and development.
Berlin, brought more than 2.3 mil· and
Knowles; and five brothers, Edwin. Clinton, Linton, Luster and
His decorations included a Sil" lion tons of food and coal into the George icklcs.
ver Star from the Korean War and city during the 6-month blockade ·
Surviving are a nephew, William J. Tucker of Owensboro, Ky., who.
·.the Legion of Merit wilh lhree oak- that ended Sept. 30, 1949. '
was~ in the home, and by several other nieces and nephews.
leaf clusters.
Smilh, a 1923 West Point graduServices will be 1 p.m. Sunday in the Willis Funeral Home, with the
John Frost
ate, took over the Military Air Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in Reynolds Cemetery,
LONDON (AP)- Maj. Gen. Transport Command in 19Sl. He Addison.
IOhn Frost, whose heroic role in the retired in 1958.
. Nephews will serve as pallbearers.

•

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•••••••••••••

Deaths elsewhere

Ruth A. Whitmore

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"''of

• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
Clash leaves 13 U1.,lead' 61 hu•t
',

,.

·'

Allied War
defeat
at Arnhem
World
II inspired
!he during
m~JVie · .
':' A Bridge Too Far," died Fnday
l!ftera long illness. He was 80.
JOHANNESBURG, South
British and Polish para!foops Afrt'ca (AP)
ANC supporters
dtAh
th e battled a n'v•J
- black '""'UP Wl'th
were trappe
a
m
em
tn
. b Ge
~
and
a
•·Nelherlands
Y nnan orecs
guns and fuebombs Saturdaf in a
had to fight
against ed
tanksli while
•
f 1 township clash descn'be as a
waitin11 •or an armor re e co • "Wild West shootoul." At least 13
umn that600never arrived.F
I
people were' 1tilled and 61 wound·
. With
men, rost c ung to eel, police said.
tbe norlhern end of a bridge over
the fighting erupted as hunthe Rhine for four days before sur- dreds of African National Congress
rendering and becoming a prisoner. sunnnn"rs marched toward a pOlice
Of some 10,000 Allied soldiers, su:ifoo:-They were fired on by resit.200 were killed and 6,600 taken . denlS.of 8 migrant' workers hostel
prisoner during the nine-day battle. Joyal to the Inbtha Freedom Party,
Frost was portrayed by Sir lhe ANC's bitter rival.
ANC suppotters fired back, and
Anthony Hopkins in. the 1977
movie.
. lhe gun battles lasted several hours,
Aan Bishop Grlmlh
'
police snokesman. Capt. Wikus
. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Weber sald.
-. AM Bishop Griffilh, an award·
"It ·was a big, Wild West
winning journalist and former fash- shootout," he said. "Bod! sides
ion editor of the Charleston Daily were engaged in a number of
Mail, died Friday after a long ill· shootings.''
ness. She was 70.
·
Even as the violence raged,
, Griffilh wrote thousands of ani- ANC leader Nelson Mandela gave
cles chronicling the fashion world one of his m.ost upbeat assessments
and proftling cele,brities during a
26-year career.
· She is survived by her husband,
Roger D. Griffilh, and two daughterS.

Rldwd MUJ'Aby
LOS ANGELES (AP) ,_
Richard Murphy, who wrote the
screenplays for "The Descn Rats"
and "Coinpulsion," died Wednes·
day at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
of complications from a stroke. He
was 81.
; MU1)lhy's screenwriting credilS
&amp;\SO include the 1941 Gene Autry
film "Back in the Saddle," "Cry
o'f tlte City," "Panic in the
Streets," "Broken Lance" and
''The Last Angry Man... '
: He received Academy Award
nominations for "Boomerang!" in
1!14 7 and "The Desert RalS" in
. 1ll63. .
Murphy also wrote and directed
·~Three Stripes in the Sun" and
",The Wackiest Ship in the Army"
and wrote for such television

BIUIICAIIDI
MUSIC
320 Seconc:1 Ave.

Glllpollt

448-0687
• sumiMr Lesson•

· eaand InstrumentS
.eQulta,.
eOruma

ePIInC)o()rgan
..

\I

I

*i

Aulton B. Castle

Margaret Houston

••

ebration. Several of them will have
to come in wheelchairs or with

wv

-------Area deaths---------

Sunday Timcs-Scntinel/A6
\

WASHINGTON Four give on this. Tbey cannot iive on
A Dhillon of
months into a presidency is a pecu- this because any prospect for any·
liar time to be dropping phrases thing on heallh care is in big trou·
~IC.
like . "end game," but both ble if they do."
Democrats and Republicans
believe the stakes could be that
IllS Third An., GaUipolls, Oblo
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
high
if the Senate submarines Bill
(614) 446-1342
(614) m-1156
Clinton's energy lalt.
"The Btu (or British Thermal
ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publbber
Unit) tax is lhe choke point on the
whole Clinton economic proHOBART WILSON JR,
MARGARET LEHEW
gram," one member of the Senate
Esec~llve Edllor ·
Cootroller
Republican leadership says. "If we
can beat it, we can force lhe presiFor the White House, lhe energy
A MEMBER of Tbe Associated Press, and lbe American
dent to go · back to the drawing tax is shaping up as a Senate refer·
Newspaper Publisbers Association.
·
board ... to come back to Congress endum on lhe new administration.
and cut spendin'- ftrSt.'' ·
Without a win, according to our
•
LETJ'ERS OF OPINION are wolCDmo. Tboy should be less than
Clinton won t be able to demo- interviews wilh Senate .Democrats,
, ~00 words .. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
nize Bob Dole, R·Kan., or gnash Clinton's political capital might be
name, address and telephone number. No unsicned letters will be
his teelh abOut gridlock if he loses too depleted to sell Congress a sec·
publiabed. l.elten should be in sood lute, addreuing issues, not
lhe
Btu battle. It's strictly a family · ond wav~ of new taxes- $100 bil·
p;nonolities.
feud among Democrats, who are lion by some estimates - to pay
shruply divided along regional and for the heallh-care reforms he will
ideological lines. Key Senate propose next month.
DemocralS lire mobilizing to swap
Ultimately, Clinton has to cut a
lhe $n billion energy lalt for deep· deal wilh lhree Democratic sena-.
er budget cuts, sparing·pain for tors - David L. Boren of Okla·
their heavily energy-dependent homa, John B. Breaux of Louisiana
states.
and Kent Conrad of North Dakota
"They (the administration) -and a wild card colleague who
should have realized a month ago is towering in lhe background: Bill
By MITCH WEISS .
that the tax plan would·be a real Bradley of New 1ersey. Boren,
Associated-Press Wrher
problem," said a Senate Democrat· Breaux and Conrad each sit on lhe
TOLEDO- Yolanda Johnson has been watching her children more · it: stnitegist. "However. lhey can't · taX-writing Finance. Comll)itiee; all
closely since lzt summer, when they almost were hit by a car carrying
white people who were shouting racial sliD'S. ·
The car narrowly missed her sons, Randy, 8, and Michael, 7, as they
played near a parking lot.
"They'd be screaming, 'We're going to get you Diggers.' These were
scary people.••• We didn't know who these people were, whether lhey
were going to pull oUl guns and slllrl shooting. They just kept coming
around," said Ms. Johnson, who is black.
Police don't know for sure who has been harassing lhe black residenlS
of Weiler Homes, but they suspect lhey might be members of lhe White
Aryan Religion, a supmnacist group.
· Two men police say belong to the group have been accused of plotting
to blow up lhe 378-unit prcdominailtly black government housing poject
City police and federal agenlS las! wedt mided an east side home near
the housing project and arrested the two men. Authorities seized two
handguns, knives, and materials to make bombs.
.
Thomas Johnston of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms'
Toledo office, said the men were planning to plant bombs at WeilerHames on July 4. He said there could be as many as 30 members of lhe
group in Toledo. Johnston said the group also might be linked to violent
crime in metropolitan Delroit. ·
Residents of the 40-year-old housing project said a group of whites has
been bolhering them since last swnmer.
"These dudes would pick on the little kids," said Tony Rogers, 24,
whose mother lives in Weiler. "They wouldn't shout nothing at us
because they knew we'd get them. But lhese white dudes would shout ...
at the kids. It wasn't right"
Toledo has been beset by cross burnings·and other racial incidents in:.
recent years. About 20 pen:ent of Toledo's 330,000 residents are black.
"Yeah, whites don't like blacks and blacks don't like whites. So
what?" said Rick Pawlicki, 18, who lives near where the supremacist
group operated.
.
"I don't think they wete lOin&amp; to blow up the~ project And if
they did,-they'd be doing us a favor," said Pawlicki, who ts white.
A researcher for a national organization that monitors hale groups said
this was the ftrSt time she had heard of a plot to bomb a housing project
"The idea ... is an especially horrifying (wist," said Angela Lowry, a
researcher for Klanwau:h, an Alabama-based group that produces a week·
· Rupe, •the month of May is, in several years have _passed. They do
ly update on hate crimes for 6,!JOO law enforcement agencies nationwide.
my opinion, the best month of the not spend much ume in thinking
Federal authorities discovered a similar bombing plot in Dayton earlier year for enjoyable living. May is · about seeing their fellow class·
lhis year.
between Spring and Summer and milles in the future. Usually it does
Philip R. Pummell, 28, of Jamestown, was accused of JCCruiting an often has a few days of each before
undercover ATF agent to blow up the National Afro-American Museum it ends. It is lhe one month where
and.Cultural Center on Jan. 18- Manin Luther King Jr. Day. His case is many flowers start to' bloom, the
pending in U.S. District Court
trees blossom and grass becomes
greener each day. It is a month
where many i~ viduals are happy not occur until five years hence.
To organize a clas~ reunion is
to be alive. In short, the sav begins
to run in the older person s limbs not a simple task. As time passes
and lo and behold each thinks he is lhe problem becomes more com·
20 years younger.
plex when you are trying to trace
May is the month when we ~ve the whereabouts of your former
lhe Kentucky Derby, Pi'eak:ness and classmates. For example, Rupe·,
sometimes the Belmont horse yours truly, together with the
races. The hockey teams are bat- reunion committee, have tried to
tling one anolher for the champi. track down the names and addressonship. The pro basketball teams es of the 80 members of the class
are fighting for lheir championship of 1933 .. For the most part, this
and the baseball season is startihg work was done by Bob Burdette
to become interesting.
.
and Roy l&gt;:filler.
While walking in town most
Bob is our necrology expert and
people have smiles on their faces has kept a list of tfie deceased
and greet you as a long lost friend. members of the class of •33. Roy
The frogs are letting us know that has worked many hours in obtain·
winter is over and spring and early ing the present addresses of the liv·
summer are just arouncl the comer: ing members of our class. Out of
May is the month that many of us lhe 80 lhere are only two members
pay Uibute to our beloved ancestors who have seemingly disappeared.
on Memorial day. Mothers also
They are Marjorie Darst Murray
have a day of honor. Indiannpolis and Clarence Gilmore. Anyone
has ilS "Indy 500" which event is having any information on these
run on Memorial Day. TV time is ·two individuals should contact
cut down by the couch potatoes.
either Roy Miller'or the writer. Out
May is also a sad monlh as far of the 80 members 38 are living
as the graduates are concerned, · and 40 are known 10 be deceased.
They have met for the 1zt time as Just this week we received word
students. These sttidenu do not lhat Rollin Hawk had passed away.
give a tinkers damn about alumni Rollin had been sick for quite some
banquets as their minds am prcoc· time and we will miss hlftl. When
"No, I didn't go on a fad diet. I'm into long-term
cupied by what is going to happen you consider that lhe youngest in
weight control. "
10 them in the future. The new this class will be at least 77 years
graduates do not become interested of age, it is remarkable lhat twenty
in lhe alumni banquets until after one classmates will attend this eel-

Pomeroy-Mi'ddleport--Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

\

'

of Soulh Africa's.political situation
in recent weeks.
Man· deJa, 0-at.:fc'
'n hun~-~of
.,........
WWII
miles away at an
C rally in lhe ·
eas•town·of Estcort, -••'d multt'·
~,
party negotiations were close to
setting a date for the country's fii'SI
elections open to the black majori·
ty
·"It's clear to everyone that .
democratic changes are coming,''
Mandela said. "We are now on the
verge of. announcing a date for
elections."
But the fighting in Tokoza, a
township southeast of Johannesburg, underscored the explosive
nature of many black areas. ANC
and lnkatha, a conservative, Zulu
movement, have battled repeatedly
in the township.
Two white security guards were
among the 13 killed Saturday,
Weber said. Of the 61 injured,
three were police who suffered
burns when their vehicle was fire
bombed. ·

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�...
Page A8 Sunday nmM Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolli, OH

Point Pleasant, wv

May23,1993

"In October' 1790, Col. Saffonl
and his comrades under the directioo
of Gen. Rufus
· Pulliam arrived at
thesiteofGallipolis, cleared the
. groimd, built forts
and erecled cabins
to the number of

,

GALLIPOLIS SQUARE IN 1?90 • This sketch by Henry
Howe sbows how Gallipolis might have looked in 1790 when Col.
Robert Saft'ord aDd others laid out the towD. Most of tbe activities
and celebratloDS took place in the fort on right right side of the
picture.

80.
"Most of the
colonists arrived during the last wca
of October 1790 and took posscssioo
of !he cabins assigned them. As long
as they wm supplied with provisions, life passed smoothly by; balls,
soirees, etc. were regularly given in
which the etiquette of St. Cloud pre-

Safety, precaution theme
of 'First-on-the-Scene' event ·

Saffold we l1lo laan that he was Jm10ved to the larger cities; many
died during the fourth and fifth yean
among a pwp of 30 htDcn •
signed under the mmDWMI ofCapl. after their aaival, 111111 some went
McMinn wbo 10 supply Gal· beck 10 France.
lipolis wilh fralt - .
"Tbcir two peat holidays were
the Fcurth of July and the deslruc·
"Besides their Wlpl ea:h was allowed as a stimulus to inclumy tioo of the Baslil1e, both of which
the valuable skills and furs. McMann · they c:ciebrated .with all the pomp
· was killed at Fort Rcc:oo;uy. It was and siocaity their
and ardent
feelings
would
command.~
not the c:ustom of these hunJas to be
at thecbase on the Sabbalh, but it was
Saffonlalsorelalcdabouttbe viSit
their c:ustOnl to .make and mend to Gallipolis of the future !Qng of
mocassins, to clelm guns, to Slretch Ftaooe,Louis-Pitillippc. He was then
and dress stins.
•clute. the year being 1798. J.ouise.
"Salford was one of these huntas Philippehadmivedin theOidFrench
,
and co one ocean he saw a panther City by keelboat.
It seems that as the boat was leav·
near the river co a IRe. He shoe il
through the lungs. It fellllllll rolled .ing the captain, under the influence
into the river, where afla: 10011w of too much of that famous Scioto
. shot had broken iJs under JIW,.
.
il wlnelll8defrom the grapes grown on
maintainedasharpSifUIBlewitb!IOIDe Gallipolis Islllid, became entangled
five dogs. The JIBDthc:r was IO feet into 10 argutDent with Louis-Phillong and had killed l!ldcovc:ml witb lippe.
'
"Oqllain Muretprocoedecl at such
lea..es a racc:oco and a wolf which il
length in bis rage at the future Icing
was wa!Ching."
·•
Trappping was much pp:acac~rutic"cededby that it was necessary for bystanders
the early ICitlers of Gallipolis wilil to intapolle to prevent bis laying
beaver being the most valuable ani- violent hands on the Royal Penon-'

n-s

age. This seems to show that the
French immigrants, or at least this
captain, had thus early laid aside aU
sympatby wilh monan:by and illlbibed the true spirit of RepublicU-, •
ism."

When lots were issigned in 061lipolis in the 1790s, it was done by •
chance. Safford was appointed to

draw out of one box a number lllat:
corresponded to a loL
Another man then drew frota.tbe
second box the name of the Ftalch· '
man who would have possessioo of".
that lot. So the process continoed 10 ,
theend.
'
There was only one "glitch" and, '
that was that Safford had misl*n •
some sixes for nines as the wriliftl of .
the .miDbrzs was old style Fnach. ~
The drawing of lots was done itt the •
Public Square, the name the Prmch •
gave 10 the City Park.. The llllille ,,
change occured early in this cenlltry.
James Sands Ia a specW an-e-,
spoaclentortheSimdayTI•a Sen·
tine!. His address is: 65 Willow
Drive, Springboro OH 451166- ·

vailed.
· "Early·every Sunday morning all
adult males were required to be on
parade and practice tactical evolutions; Ibis was regularly followed by
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia etc.);
Massandotherservicesoftl)eChun:h;
County Farm Bureau conducled a
(4) number of victims;
·and the afternoon was given to rec"First-on-the-Scene" emergency
(S) condition of victims as it reation."
mal.
safety aware116$S progrlllll, dealing appears (bleeding, heart attack,
The above is the way Robert Saf· , "Fir this pnethe Imp was placed
with agriculture-related acc:idents, amputation, shock, etc.);
under wa1er wbere tbe beaver wm
at the Gallia County Fairgrounds
(6) type of aid already given to ford described the beginning of Gal· want to swim, and over the sunken
The Store.with "All Kinds of
lipolisto a Mr. L.P. LaCroix in 18SS.
on May 1.
the victim (CPR. bandaging. etc.):
ttap was placed, co the end of a stick
for Pets, Stables, Large and Small
Paul Shoemaker, president of
(7) whether someone will meet The interview first appealed in the in the bank, a bail, wbich the beaver
the Gallia County Farm B1111111u, the EMS at the entrance to any Ironton Register newspaper but on ieaching ~to obtain, would Slql 00
Animals, Lawns and Gardens.
November IS,185S it was~tedby
welcomed everyone and inttoduced remote location;
thetmp.andbecanght Leftlongthey
Ed Vollbom, Gallia County exten(8) any special condition that the Gallipolis Journal.
. It was this interview that supplied would gnaw off their foot and eSsion B$ent, who emphasized to the could hinder rescue efforts: and
group m attendance the importance
(9) any other important informa· a lot of !he information used by Wil· cape.
"Thecdonistsw=slowin adapt·
liam G. Sibley in his book, "The
of family membrzs recogniZing and lion that will assist.
ingthemselvesto
Westem life; many
. being aware of the hazards that
Mudd added, "Never hang uP French 500." I;n the interview witb
•
exist on a farm. .
the phone until the dispatcher tells
399 W. Mail
992·2164
Pollifoy
Vollbom said, "A family mem- you to do so."
ber is usually th'e first to arrive on
The Gallia County EMS and
the scene of a farm accident. Holzer Medical Center made their
Whether that person knows the services available to respond to
procedure to follow or makes the simulated accidents. Bob Bailey,
right dec:ision when an acc:ident is director of lhe Gallia County EMS,
discovered, depends greatly on demonstrated what can happen
whether he or she has been lrained when a person gets too close to a ·
in assessing farm acc:idents and has power take off shaft. He and other
flfSI aid training. Your goal as the .members of the Gallia County
fust ~ on the scene is 10 keep _ EMS w_er.e on the scene to help
the VICtim alive until the Erilergen- ~ock vtCums Paul Shoemaker and
Do you feel you are !Jaylng too much 101'
· your prescriptions? Then you should b8
cy Medical Service (EMS) his granddaughter Kact Shoemaker,
shopping with us. With the cost of medU:.
arrives.~
.
who were riding a tractor when it
lions constantly on the rise, we feel It it
Glenn Graham, well-known overturned going around a bend.
our responslbtllty to ofler our
local farmer and a Farm Business
Dani~l H. Whiteley, M.D .•. on
customers even; •dvantage potSible. instruCIOI' at Buckeye Hills Career lhe medical staff of Holzer Medical
You see, we've made it a point to knOW
Center, told the group about the Center, "treated" the victims..
when generic equivalents are avaUable.
accident he suffered 20 years ago
After the necessary emergency
Then, working hand·in·hand with vour
when he was caught in a com pick· and ·stabilizing treatment was pro- ·
doctor, we lUI your prescription. exaccJy
er and lost both legs.
vided to the victims, they were
as ordered, ;md you save in .the process.
Graham commented, "When transporled to the hospital by the
~w Prescrlpllon' Prtcea
you are on a tractor, always set the EMS.
DEMONS'IlRATION- Taking 'part Ia a mock fana tractor
:;,ree Parking (VIdeo Touch Lot)
brakes and turn off the engine
As a special service throughout
staged for the recent "Fint-G~-tlle-scne" prop- at the
accident
before getting off. If it could hap· the day, the HMC Mobile Unit was
•Fast a. Friendly Service
Galli&amp; County FalriJ'Ounds were GaiBa EMS per501111el -"lng
pen 10 me, it can also happen to at the fairgrounds 10 provide free
oo victims Paul Shoemaker and &amp;reedd•.pter Kad Slloemaku.
.•Stora c;hlrge Accounta
you.~
blood pressure and blood sugar
Concerned
parent
Sharon
Shoemaker
looks
on.
Dr.
Daniel
H.
Another local farmer, Bob screenings.
•Free Delivery to Home or Work
Whiteley l1lo partklpated·ln the demCIIIib atloa.
Massie, demonstrated \O,' the .audiThe_F11111 Bureau Youth served
(Chaahlra, llredbui'y, '
ence how to turn off a tractor. He a spaghetti lunch; and members of
Middleport,
Pomeroy, Maaon,
said all family members need to the Friends by Choice Farm Bureau possible lhroufh the efforts and soil and Conservation offices, the
J\tlneravllla, Rutland, SyracuM)
know exactly how to turn off a Council had something special for cooperation o the Gallia EMS, Gallia County Sheriff's Depantractor. He reminded them that not the children, a petting zoo. This HMC, the Gallia County Junior ment, Jividen's Farm Equipment
WITHOUT PcnTINt;
all tractors are turned off wilh a group, made up of Connie Massie, Fair,;,Board, the Gallia County and Jim Fraley Farm Equipment.
ker.: some you push, some you ·chairperson, along with Sharon extension staff, the Farm Bureau Also helping was Jeanneue EUiott,
A LrD ON V4LVEI
pull. He emphasized that you must Shoemaker and Denice Payne, councils, Patty Dyer and the Water who chaired the School Poster
know how to do this, and know planned ~ial events for emphaConteSt, along with aU of the chilhow a tractor operates.
sis on chtldren's safety. As a fea·
dren and schools who pat:ticipated.
. Anolher imponant subject when ture, Debbie Walker, ventriloquist,
Jackie Graham and Katie Shoetalking about ~ safety is ho':"' to and ~r friend "Jerry~ entertained
maker who co-chaired this initial
9U·6669
.
handle con tam mated clothmg. the children.
"First-on•the-Scene" demonstration
Becky Culbertson, Gallia County
Linda Nibert, EMT·P, from th.e
J!IOject. expressed !heir appreciaextension agent in home eco- Gallia County EMS, conducted
POMEROY - Units of the tion to all who participated and
noinics, covered this subject in CPR training and distribuled frrst Meigs County Emerp;ncy Medical assisted.
detail.
aid hooks.
Service respooded to eight calls for
Deputy Richard Mudd from the
For many interesled people who assistance overnijlht.
Gallia County Sheriff's Depart- were unable to attend the May "1
Units responding were:
ment told the group how to proper- program at the Gallia County FairFRIDAY - 3:08 p.m. Tuppers
ly make an emergency call.
grounds, another "First-on-the- Plains 10 State Route 681 for Okra
Jfe said, ''When reporting a farm scene~ dernonslration will be pre- Grogg who was transporled to St.
acc:ident 10 the EMS, give !he dis- sen ted at the Fred Taylor farm, JoSCP,h's Hospital; 3:28 p.m. Midpatcher the following information:" located on Kerr Road, approxi- dlepon to Soulh Third Street for a
(1) location of the accident mately ope mile west or Rodney fire involving an a_utomobile ow.ped
scene:
· Pike on Saturday, Sept. 11 from 11 by Dana Hanmng; 4:04 p.m.
(2) telephone number from a.m.·3 p.m . Panicipating will be Pomeroy to Sharon Road for
whee you ae making the call;
Fred and Odella Taylor, Harold and Bessie Heck who was transporled
(3) nature of !he acc:ident (elec· Susan Taylor, and Blaine and to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
trOCUtion, entrapment by tractor. Donna Taylor.
4:50 p.m. Tuppers Plains Squad
"First·on·lhe~Scene~ was made . assisled Coolville Fire ~ent
for a Route
motor144
vehicle
acctdent
at
State
in Athens
County
and transported Clayton McBride
Boulevard, Owensborough, Ky., to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
Municipal
GALLIPOLIS'- The following and Blondena B. 'Clark, 6S2 Roush 9:56 p.m. Racine to Racine Fire
Department for Marion Snider who
cases have been processed by" the Lane, Cheshire.
A dissolution was granted to was transported to VMH; 11: 12
Gallipolis MuDlcipal Court of
J;)iana L. Bing, 4646 State Route p.m. Middleport to South Third
Judge William S. Medley:
Wmen Dotson, 39, Bidwell, 218, Gallipolis, and Carl R. Bing, Street for Beuy Hawley who was
was fined $100 plus court costs for Jr., 4022 Hannan Trace Road. transported to VMH.
SATIJRDAY - 6:2S am. Syradisorderly conduct by intoxication. Northup.
Bond
was
set
for
Donald
Isaacs,
cuse
Fire [)epartment and Pomeroy
Dewey ~ley, _612 Fiflh Ave.,
Gallipolis, was fmed $1 SO plus
in which
Isaacs is charged with a motor vehicle
to Stateaccident
Route 124
for a
· court costs for passing bad checks.
So if you're just starting out, still renting, or on a fiXed income,
violation,
Rui
Z.
Hang
refused
trea1men1.
Curtis J. A!Cxander, 48, 591 Mt.
and you dream of owning your own home, check out our
Zion Road Patriot, was fined $100
Residential Lean Program.
·
·
plus ~ ~ts for disorderly con-

Stutr' ,

,. R&amp;G Feed &amp;~ Supply C.·~:
:High Prescriptioq Costs

E,MS responds
to eight calls

School Days program presented,at Forked Run ·State Park
•. '

REEDSVILLE • School Days
was held at FOOted Run State Park
near Reedsville,on Wednesday
when over I ,000 school children
from Meip, Athens and Washing·
!On Counties ascended on the park
for a day of learning and fun, all
compliments of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
· ·AccordinJ! to Terry Carter, public information manager, ColiDDb.us, representatives were there
from lhe Ohio Division of Water,
Ohio Division of Soil and Water,
Ohio Division of Patks, Ohio Division of Watercraft; Ohio Division
of Wildlife, Ohio Division of Oil
and Gas, Ohio Division of Recla•
!nation and the Ohio Division of
Parks and Recreation. There were
-/ ~so local representatives on hand
from the Meigs Soil and Water
~onservation District and the
~eigs Department of Utter Control
Pod Recycling. .
r' Ron Milfs, program section
;:i.anager, Division of Parks and
i:tecreation, srated the progran has
lii:en in place in Ohio since 1988.
j[be program is brought to students
pP across Ohio in an effort 10 edu·
l:Bte !hem about lhe outdoors and
!re says its·an excellent opportunity
tO set the information out to a large
number of stodents in one location.
·~ Randy Wachter, manager at
.Forked Run State Park, said this
was the fli"SI time the Pf08ram has
been offered at Forked Run and
that it produced the single largest
gathering of school children ever at
the park.
The children were initially
divided into two group and from
there they broke into smaller
groups 10 participate in four ses·
sions of the 11 stations set up
around the wt. During lhese· sessions the children became actively
involved in demonstratioqs and
games of all types regarding the
various departments which were
represented at the event. They
learned not only about nature but
about fesJ!.CCt.for it as well.

'

SPEAKER -Ron Mills, school days program
director, speaks to the 1,000 plus students_who
participated in the program at Forlced Run State

Park on Wednesday. The program was made available
through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

I

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May23, 1993

Prescription Shop

------Court news------

Gerald K. Day, 21, 179
Williams Hollow Road, Crown
City, was fined $100 plus court
costs for disorderly conducL
· Anita Merry, 9100 U.S. 35, Bidwell, was fined $50 plus court costs
for passinJ a bad check.
Malvin S. Valentine, 43, 207
Second Ave., Gallipolis, wu fmed
$100 plus court costs for oo operator's ilcense.
Jerry Nibert, S6, Gallipolis, wu
fined $450 plus court costs for
drivin&amp; under the influence. He .wu
also sentenced 10 30 days in jail,
with Ill but lhree days suspended,
six 111011ths probalion and a 90-day
licclnlf suspension.
ComBICIII pleas
·
The following cases have been
proce11cd by the Gallia County
Common Pleas Court 'of Judge
Joseph L, Cain:
.
A dissolution ·was granted to
Linda P. Woolf, 646 Second Ave.,
GalliPOlll, and Robert A. Woolf, 9
1/2 61ive Sueet. Gallipolis. ·
, A dissolution was granted. to,
Ramon 0. Clark, 40S W. Legton

Section B

Along the River

Trapping was practiced by early Gallipolis .settlers
by Jim SaDds
Spedal Correspo~~clent

..

\

...,

.,

I

"'
PROTECT NATURE- Students in Mrs. Karen Walker's
l rourtb &amp;r•de clasa at Salisbury Elemeatary listen to Nancy Gogle
~with the Ohio Department or Natural Resources u she explains '
fthe Importance of lllfepardlq nature against harmrul chemical
.aDd other unnatural chemical pollutaDIII.
·
.

\

LEARN TO RECYCLE - Kenny Wiggins, director' of tbe •
Meigs County Litter Control Department, speaks to Rutland EJe.
,•entary Mh &amp;rade students about recycling and how It can aft'ed
and protec:t the envlronmeot.
.

FURS AND ANTLERS - Fourth grade students from Rutland Elementary who participated in Wednesday's School Days
pro&amp;ram at Forked Run State Park listeD intently to a representa·
live l'rom the Ohio Department or Natural Resources as she speaks
about trapplng.ud furs.
.
\

t

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·lng staff In the company•• Allegheny Region
the.
quarter of 111113. There are 53 afllfla In the .-glon in Ohio,
Wast VIrginia and Penn.ylvanlll. Awns w- pr11 1nteclllld
lunch was bald at The SloWIWIY. Rocky Hupp
alllo leadIng agent In the region. Pictured, k, Jim Bush, Lany
Drummond, Jatf Hall, Rocky Hupp, Roger Bush, Jim Qa a ely,

•

w•

Dava Wateon, staff
·manager. · ·

ma~:~ager,

•.

and John Capwell, "'Ilion
,
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•nran• . na1111

•11.t11

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175-11" ,_7761 •u-7tt6 .,._,_

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•IIILIPOJT IUUtNfULI

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lfOW A BAT CATCHES INSECTS,SbtrriU Huabell, a Dllltlrlillt II Burr Olk Stille ·.
tPark, pliJI a pme wlllllhlciiDIII'rola' llacbte
./aDd Riverview £1e-ntary lldlooll ill wllkh tba .

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studenta lara how 1 bat catchea Insects. The
lludmll were part ora IP'OUP olcmr 1,000 cbll.
dftD that partl-ted lit the Selaoot D171 proaram at Porlled Ru Stiata l'lrll 011 Wedlletday•

WATER SAFETY STRESSED - Third
·a ude students uf Debbie Pratt, or Riverview
Elemmtary, ud Jeultle Norrll, Will EieiDeD•
tary ol Atbeu, IDSWer CjUIIIJoill •d lilteD to a ·

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82 SUndliyllmu SenUnel

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Wedding po~icy
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason co~nties as n_ews an~ is
happy to publish weddmg stones
and photographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli·
ness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thutsday, 4 p.m., prior to the date
of nublieation.
PhotOgraphs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acce)»ablti quality.
.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial department from 1-5 p.m.

Ridenour-Roach
Brannen-Bums
GALLIPOLIS -The families
of Angela Dawn Brannen and
: Mark Alan Burns announce the
: engagement and upcoming mar.· riage of their children.
: Miss Bmmc:n is a 1988 Gallia
· Academy High School graduate
. and a 1992 University of Rio
· Grande gn•lnw. Bums is a 1984

GaUia Academy High School graduate employed with Hall ConsbUction of Oteshire.
The wedding will be on June 30,
1993 at the Church of Christ in
Christian Union. The Rev. Leland
Allman will officiate. The reception will follow shortly thereafter at
TheSIOWaway.

Monday through Fnday at 4462342,
•

Ducky Derby slated
,...

POMERQY - The Pomedl:y
Ducky DeJby will be held June :t:2
during Heritage Weekend activit!s
at 3:30p.m.
,.
The derby_will ~ to. the !lair
of the beauuful Oh1o River m 'lh
anticipated flotilla of 1,000 ducke
Anyone mar "~pta duck" fer
only $5 and pnzes mclude _a $1,()00
U.S: Savings Bond, aS~ U::S .
S~vmgs Bond, a membership 10 IIJp
B1g Bend Health and Filness C.ter, a "duck dinne( from Kroge!,
.and many more )li'IZes. .
., ·~
. The derby will begm along ~
nve{bank i~ front of ~m~y Vii·
Iage Hall With th~ finish !me at~
levee area at the CIIY parking l~L .,.
Proceeds from the race will JP
I? the Pomeroy Merchants~!"'
uo~ to f_und several beautificau~
prOJCCts m &lt;k!wntown ~roy . Further mformauon ?n till:
Ducky _Derbr ~ay be obWned 1!1
conlactmg D1~k Warner at Krog~
992-5490, or Joan Wolf~ at Ba!J!
One, 992 -2133 ·
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The open church wedding will
be·an event of Joen 12 at3:30 p.m.
at Victory Baptist Church in Middleport. A reception will follow at
the Kyger Creek Hall.

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Couple will
observe 40th
•
anniversary
WEST COLUMBIA, W.VA.Mr. and Mrs. James B. Roush will
celebrate their 40th wedding
anniversary with an open house
hosted by their children on Sunday
from .2-4 p.m. at their home in
West Columbia, W.Va.
The couple was married May
18, 1953 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
by Pastor Daniel M. Dorsey.
PAULA WILLIAMS
._
They have four children: Bobby
......
of Letart, W.Va.; Mrs. John
(Diana) Johnson, West Columbia,
•
W.Va.;
Connie Burton, Middleport;
•
aqd Mrs. Carl (Tina) Gagnon,
Letart. They also have eight grand·; GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs. Gallia Academy Wgh School and · children.
: Paul D. Williams of Gallipolis, are the University of Rio Grande. She
The couple requests that gifts be
;: proud to announce the engagement is employed with Holzer Clinic as a omitted.
... and upcoming marriage of their medical secretary at the Sycamore
,:daughter, Paula Gayle, to Mr. Branch.
Mr . Carper is a graduate of
,:Grant C. Carper of Chillicothe.
" Mr. Carper is the ·son of Mr. and Bishop Flaget High School and is
; Mrs. Tom (Jewell) Dailey and the employed as a Sergeant with :the
HARRISONVILLE- Wade
:late Charles R. Carper also of Ohio State Highway Patrol.
Nicholson was initiated into the
; Chillicothe.
The.wedding is planned for May Harrisonville Order of the Eastern
:;: Miss Williams is a
of 14, 1994.
Star at the group's May meeting
•...
with Pauline Atkins; worthy .
•
malrOD, and Roben Reed in charge.
&lt;o.
A practice session was held 'for
...
inspection.
·~
••
The charter was draped for Zelia
Taylor.
•
Birthdays recognized were Betty
Bishop, Bernice Hoffman and Pearl
•• •
Canaday.
.
Robert 'Reed gave the blessing
•
before the group entered the dining
......
area, where they were served
•
••
refreshments by that. committee: ·
Gladys
Nicholson, Pearl Canaday,
...
M11rgaret Belle Weber and Ann
~Webster.

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OPERATI,D DY CAROL KING- WINNH\ OF 7 IIAIIl AND \TYUNG AWAIW\

Youtig-Rigsby

"

TUPPERS PLAINS • Robert
:and Barbara Young, Tuppers
:Plains, annOiinc:c the engagement
:and lppiOIII;bing marriaae o( their
±daughter, Anpe, to Troy Ripby.
:son of Rex and Iudy Rigsby,
.Sprinatlcld. • ·
:: · MUs Yliil a 1986 lflduale
: or Easlem · school anci a 1990
• • lllduale of ·
Univenlly with 1
of aclenec In elemenWy

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ANGIE YOUNG, TROY RIGSBY

-•

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To:
d customers
All My Friends an
be working at Sobs
1993 I will no longer
.
Effective June 1st,
Electronics.
communications
.
a position with Na~~es tor cars, trucks or
1 am taking .10stalling cellular ph
Distributing and
anything mobile.
,
been able to leave
anY years you nave ave needed to nave
over the past m natever work you h 1st 1993, you can

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ate. is a teacher at Uutding Hand
Sehool in Cheshire. Edmonds, a
graduate of Par-kers~urg High
School wf'lo has served 10 the u.s. .
Navy and is .a junior at Marshall
Universily, is the owner of Will
Powa- Tumbling in Point Pleasant. ·
The wedding will be 011 June 12,
1993 at the Bob Evans Log Cabins.
fn the event of rain, the Bob Evans
sbelterliouse will serve as the site.

$259 95

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WED., MAY 26-11 :oo.6:30
GALUPOUS OHO VALLEY~ACKSON PIKE
THURS., MAY 27-NOON-6:30

FOODLAND

RIO GRANDE - Mr. .ad Mrs.
: Leonard Newberry of·Gallipolis
: announce t~e engagement and
· approaching marriaze of their
daughter, Lyoitla Jolene Newberry,
: to William Henry Edmoods, SOil of
· William Edmoods of~.
: W.Va. and Soe F'qner of Deaver.
· Colo.
·
· Ms. Newberry. a 1976 Sooth. western High School graduate and
a 1980 Rio Grlllde ~ i:Jlldu·

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$249.96

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ALL AGES AND
FAMILIES·

at Rock Springs at 1 p.m. to prepare for inspection.
·
Rosalie Story presented the litcrary program on "Memories or
Mother."
)'!.ead ings included Mother's
Home by Linda Montgomery,
When Molher Churned by Helen
Quivey, How We Know When
You're Gelling Old by Westina
Crabtree, A Family Is by Barbara
Fry and Thrift Tips by Patty Dyer.
A quiz on the frrst president 10
be born in the hosp ital .was condueled.
'
The youngest and oldest mother
were presented gifts from the leet!ll'er.
·
Eleven members of Athens
County visited.
Star, Hemlock and Rock
Springs Granges will be exhibiting
attire Meigs County Fair.
'
It was noted that 144 auended
the annual grange banquet. Hemlock Grange will be host at the July
meetmg.
. The meeting closed and Hacnsonv11le Grange entertained .for
the social hour.

SJ 599s

· ~

Hanel-Shoemaker
MIDDLEPORT - Fred and
Gerri Hanel and Roger and June
Mowery announce the engagement
of !heir daughter, Cok:oa. 10 TOlly
Shoemaker. son of Lester and
Peggy S~12'..

Young 1s a 1989 graduate of
Eastern High School and is soon 10
complete a bachelor of science
degree in mathematics at the University of Rio Grande. •
An open church wedding will be
held June 5 at 5:30 p.m.. at the Carteton Church in Kingsbury with
Rev. Clyde Henderson officiating.
Music will begin at 5 p.m.

o.- t~•

Academy High School graduate
who is employed at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center. He is also
attending the University of Rio
Grande.
The wedding is scheduled fo~
June 4, 1993 at Calvary Baptist
Church. The reception will follow
shortly thereafter at the James A.
Rhodes Student Center on the Rio
Grande campus.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
County Pomona Grange met
recenlly at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall with Master Arthur
Crabtree presiding.
Patty Dye~', tegislative representative, discussed "Changes in
Chemical Labeling."
The baking contests were
judgedasfollows:
Heath coffee cake, first, Murl
Bradford, Hemlock, second ,
Do!Othy·Smith, Racine; third, Ailegra Will, Harrisonville; crunchy .
. brownie bars, age 5·9, Chelsia
Montgomery, age 10-14, Rachael
· Ashley ; peanut butter banana
muffins. frrst, Pauy Dyer. second
Allen Smith.
Several pounds of eye glasses
weredonaledforthestateproject.
Any member wanting to make
reservations on the bus going to
convention should call Patty or
Opal Dyer. Each grange is to furnish ' 18 dozen cookies for. national.
convention.
A
gift will be sent to
deaf ft'lct. A
state and
or une 25

:ri"' . ~..· """:.

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Stevens Bumette-Shong

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MICHAEL SHONG, DONNA STEVENS-BURNETTE

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel-~e B3

-~,:..~~
·~

COLENA~TONY SHOEMAKER

Tillis-Young

: KINGSBURY - Jeffrey and
:Debra Tillis, Rutland, announce the
-engagement and approaching mar:nage of their daughter, Jodi Lynn,
:U, Wesley R. Young, son of Roger
::anit'Yvonne Young, Pometoy. ·
: Miss Tillis is a 1991 graduate of
,-Meigs High School and is now
~orking on an associate degree as a
;:)nedicallaboratory technician at the
::University of Rio Grande.

340 2ad Ave. • GaiUpolls
446-2755

. TO OBSERVE 45th ANNIVERSARY • Carroll and Gladys
(Hedrick) Casto, Cheshire, will celebrate their 45th wedding
anniversary May 29 in the Poplar Ridge Church Fellowship Building from 2-4 p.m. The couple was married May 29, 1948, at Ban.
cron, W. Va. An open house ceremony will be hosted 'by their rour
children and eight grandchildren. The couple request that gifts be
omitted.

JODI TILLIS, WESLEY YOUNG

•

'

RIO GRANDE - Mr. Paul
Stevens of Cleveland and Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Love of Crown City
announce the engagement of !heir
daughter, Donna Stevens Burnette,
to Michael Todd Shong, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Shong of Bidwell.
Ms. Burnette is a 1987 Hannan
Trace High School and is majoring
in history at the University of Rio
. Grande. Shong is a 1988 Galli a

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

Pomona Grange updated
on-labeling of chemicals

PANTRY

POINT PLEASANT - Mr. and
The bride-tO:be is a graduate of
Mrs. Harold Ridenour are announc- Point Pleasant High School and
ing the engagement of their daugh- Marshall University and is
ter, Angela, to Jason L. Roach, son employed with the Jackson County
of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Roach.
(W.Va.) Board of Education.
The open ~burch wedding will
The groom, ~so a graduate of
take place Fnday, July 16 at 7:30 Pomt Pleasant High $chool. atten~­
p.m. at the . Heights United ed Fairmont State Coll~g~ and.1s
Methodist Church with the Rev . . employed by Hardm~ s m Pomt
Ralph Sager Jr. and the Rev. Mike Pleasant.
Evans officiating.

r

~

PEDDLER'S .

JASON ROACH, ANGELA RIDENOUR

MARK BURNS, ANGELA BRANNEN

May 23,1993

May 23,199~

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Galllpolll, OH....Polnt Pleasant, WV

t.,. '

•ii!ebCIOf

•

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educat!m.
Rigsby is 1 .1986 graduate of
Kenton Ridge H!.lh School in
SDrinlfield arid a 1990 gnw1ua1e of
tlrbelia Unhenity widt 1 blchelor
of 1111 in h-lerVicel.
The open chun:h wecldiila will
be • e_, cl1ine 12 • 5:30p.m.

It tbe~~Church,
Pll'IDII SIR!et, Be1pr0.
.

.,

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Rt. 35 West • Gallipolis, OH. • Minutes from Holzer

Home Owned

614-446·2206

.Home Ope(attd

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�Page

84

Sunday Tlmea

•
Sentinel

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23,1993

May 23, 1993 '

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

-Names in the news.;.._

Gallia calendar of events
vations available at GaUipolis AAA

Sunday, May 23
CHESHIRE· River Valley High
School an and band depanment' s
firSt annual spring .concert and art

show, 3 p.m. in the RVHS gym.
Concert will last approximately one
hour. Public invited.
'

GALLIPOLIS • Multiple sclerosis support group at New Life
Lutheran church, I :30 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS • Shafer Family
to sing at Elizabeth Chapel Church,
?p.m.
.....,.,.
GALLIPOLIS · West Vir~inia
· Belle GaUipolis luncheon, stght·
seeing and dinne.r cruises at '12
noon, 3:30 jl.m. and 7 p.m. Reser-

Tuesday, May 25
EWING TON· • . American
GALLIPOLIS · Buckeye Hills
FFA Alumni will host antique and Legion Post 161 to meet at Legion
·
classic tractor pull at the Gallia HaU, 7:30p.m.
County Junior Fairgrounds. Gates
CHESHIRE • Cheshire Chapter,
open at 12 noon. pulls stan at 2
OES
meeting. 7:30 p.m. Fathers to
p.m.
be honored, Masonic Hall.
.
Monday, May 24
GALLIPOLIS • French Art
GALLIPOLIS · OAPSE meet·
Colony will hold horticulture worlc·
ing, Washington School. 7 p.m .
shop from 7until 9 headed by Hal
CENTERVILLE . Thurman l(neen, horiiculturist. Call 446Grange meeting,!! p.m.
3834 for reservations.
·
. GALLIPOLIS. Support group
RIO GRANDE· The Open GBIC
for divorced persons, new Life Garden Club will meetat6 p.m. at
the OOM Park (Shelter House I)

Costume Co.ntes"t slated ~b~~~-~i~~picnic.
POMEROY · Be a part of the
festivities Heritage Week:end by
participating in the costume contest. You may wear an authentic
costume or reproduction of a costume that would"have been worn
during the 1800's.
The costume contest will be
held following the parade on Saturday morning. The parade begins at
10 a.m. with the judging iinmedi.
ately following. All participants
will be introduced and awards presented on Stage One at noon.
Categories include authentic
costume and reproduction costume.
There will be separate categories

MR. AND MRS. VERNON ROUSH

Celebrates 40th anniversary
d

. MASON • Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush !lf Mason celebrated their 40th
.-wedding anniverwy May 8.
.
.
.
: Vernon and Patty were marred May 8. 19S3,!ly the Rev. L.R. Mahoney
;at the United Brethren Church in Mason. The couple has three children,
·Vernon Jr. of Gallipolis, Guyla of Mason, and Thomas Henry of West
~Columbia They also have four grandchildren, Sally, Matthew, Katie and
·Molly.
: The children hosted a dinner for their parents at Sebastian's in
:Pubnbwg.

~

Community Ca1endar

-community Calendar items Bring two dishes - a dessen and a
:appear two days before an event vcgelable.
-and the day of that event. Items
:must be received weD in advance
TUESDAY
~to assure publication in the cal· HARRISONVILLE · Har'l!ndar.
·
risonville Senior Citizens, Tuesday,
7 p.m., townhouse. Snacks served.
SUNDAY
All members attend.
SHADE • Revival at Shade
United Methodist Church, Sunday
RACINE • Racine Area Comthrough Wednesday, 6:45 p.m. !flUnity Organization, Tuesday, Star
Special music. Chet Lemley, evan- Mill Park, 6:30p.m. New members
. gelisL Everyone welcome.
welcome.
MIDDLEPORT · Doug McCo·
mas, musical evangelist, performs
at Victory Baptist Church, Sunday,
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev. lames
· Keesee invites the public.

MIDDLEPORT • The OH KAN
Coin Club meets Monday at Burkett Barber Shop in Middleport.
Social hour and trading session at 7
p.m. precede the meeting._Refreshments. New members welcome.
POMEROY - Three night
revival at Faith Tabernacle Church
on Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
Monday through Wednesday, 7
p.m. nightly. Jerry Cottrell, Palestine, W.Va., evangelist. Pastor
Emmett Rawson invites the public. .
CHESTER ; Chester ElementarY PTO, special meet.ing, Monday, p.m., school cafetena. All parents and teachers welcome.
POMEROY • Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission
meet.'l Monday, 7:30p.m., Veterans
Service Office, Pomeroy.
REEDSVILLE • Eastern Local
OAPSE Chapter, Monday, 7:30
p.m., high school cafeteria.
POMEROY · Meigs High
School spring sports banquet, Mon. day, 6:30 p.m., high school cafeteria. Meat, rolls and drink provided.

25%0

GALLIPOLIS • The annual
Moore· Woodyard family reunion
will be held Sunday, May 30; at the
Proctorville Fairgrounds, begiMing
at 11 a.m. Activities will last until
5 p.m. Family members should
bttnjl picaic lunch and refreshmenll for their groups.

•

•
•

3114-429-4718 .... fri. 9:31-5:10; Sat. 9:30-2:

•

OPEri ttOUSE

(please bring a guest with yoii).
All former teachers are especiaUy invited. This wiU be a special
year for the class of '88, '83, '78,
'73, '68, '63, 'S8.
If there are any questions,
please contact Margaret (Ball)
Caudill 286-5272, Mary (Ramsey)
Sites 286-7401, Linda .(Ramsey)
Dunlap 379-2139, or Keith Adkins
256-1074. Please mail your $10
reservation fee to Southwestern
Alumni Association, 1.'0 Box 21,
Thurman, OH 45685 by May 25.

HEAR the Latest
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Centerville alumni
set banquet May 29

The UNITRON

CENTERVILLE- The Centerville Alumni Banquet will be held
Saturday, May 29 at 7 p.m. in the
old Centerville Elementary School.
The banquet will be preceded by a
social hour starting at 6 p.m.
Reservations are due by May 26
and may be made by calling 2459195 or 245-5596.

LISA KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist

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Wicker Sofa wfwy pattern ... .. ..... ............ .. .. .. ... 1883.00
· Wicker Cocktail ....... ... ........... ............ ................780.00
Wicker End Table .... .. ....... ................ ....... .. ..... ... 600.00
Country Tour Bakers Rack by Knob Creek ..... 1155.00
Sofa Table/Maison Ferme by National Mt. Airy.970.00
End Table/Maison Ferme by National MI. Airy ..645.00
Mahogany Finish Round Table
w/claw foot by 4!ne ...... .. ............ ......... ... ... ...... 5;!5.00
Hunt Country Wicker Bed by Lane ..... .. .. .. .. .... 1465.00
Wicker Bow Front Chest by L!ine .... .. ............ . 1160.00
Hunt Country Desk, cherry top wlhand
wrought steel base by Lane .. .. .. .. .. ... ............ 1175.00
Iron Frame Mirror by Lane ................... ..............470.00
Jasper Corner Curio w/mirror back.
cherry finish ................................. .. .. .. ... .-....... 1809.00
Tapestry Settee by Stoneleigh
Claw and ball foot .... ...... .................... ......·.... 1820.00

NOW
1125.00
468.00
360.00
693.00
582.00
387.00
315.00
891.00
696.00

$99.00

Catl our office NOW for additional details on this great new plant

1089.00

NATE COMMUNICATIONS
12U5 VIAND STREET
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550

. ALL BAR STOOLS NOW ON SALE

ALL LAMPS, PICTURES 11d
ACCISIOIIIS

"

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Oroup to perform
MIDDLEPORT -1be West Vir- ety of secular and sacred music ginians, ·a show choir from Alder· Broadway, pop, show, patriotic,
son-Broaddus College in Philippi, country, jazz, gospel, contemporary
w.Va, will perform Wednesday at ·Christian and classical. The perfor7 p.m. at the First Baptist Church m·ances combine dance, colorful
in Middleport.
costumes, full ins~entation and
This group of college musicians humor and worshtp tnto a concert
has excited and uplifted audiences . that has so~'!llng for everypne..
throughout the North American . The group ts u_nder the direcuon
continent in well over 2 ()()() con· of Joe Burke, asststant professor of
·
' ·
music at Alderson-Broaddus Colcerts.
1
The group perfonns a wide vari- ege.

LA/{£8

(Fq.r merly Mason Lanes)

''

•

3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets .
. (304) 773-5585

•
!·
.

'·

SUMMER HOURS
Sun.~Thurs. S:Oo-10:00 pm
·: Fri.·Sat. 5:00·11:00 pm
·Closed Wednesday

•

!
•
•

•Senior Citizen Discounts
•Reservations Available
•Private Parties Welcome

•
~

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Adult &amp; Youth Sum~ner Le~gues
Starting Now.

·-- ~ ,

•'

Bernard V. Fultz
AttofHey and Counselor at LAw
· Pomeroy, Ohio

john C. Miller
Senior lnvestmeJJI Consultant
Bane One Securitii!S Corporation

BOWL ALL DAY SUNDAY 51.00 Per Game

•

.. '

Mason, W. Va.

'

•••

PHONE (304) ·875-2722

NOW
·· 830.00
160.00
750.00
. 132.00
1320.00

.

~

You're invited to an educational seminar from Bank One,
covering two important topics for today's investors:

• -Understanding Estate Planning
• Investing For Income In A Lnw-Interest-Rate Environment
Wednesday,June 2, 1993 • The Senior Citizens' Center
·Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy • 7:00p.m.· 9:00p.m.
.

.

.

I

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Bank One
Securities
Corporation · . .
Mrmber NASD And SIPC

Refreshments will be served. Seating is limited, so please RS.V.P. by Tuesday, June 1
by calling Maxine Griffith or Joan Wolfe at 992-2133 or Joan May in Rutland at 742-2888.
.

30%oFF
••

Mon.-Wed.-Fri.
9:00 e.m.-6:00 p.m.
Tuea. 9:00 a.mi.·:&gt;:'UU.ft.m.

NOW OPEN!

FEATIJRING
•Local Gallipolis AND Point Pleasant phone number
•Toll free calling to all of West Virginia .
. •Toll free to all ofGallia, Jackson, Ross, Pike and Scioto Counties
In Ohio ·
·
•Roaming America ·Automatic "follow-me" ro~er calling
•Economical Rate Plans to suit. any budget all with free atr time

40% OFF

. Was
Maple/white Kitchen Fann lsland .. .. .. ............. 1550.00
Butcher.Block Table .: ...... ................. :....... .. ... .. 1100.00
Maple and Green Fann Table .........................1,250.00
Natural Maple Windsor Side Chairs .... .. ............ 220.00
Maple and White Buffet and China .. ...............2200.00

992-2168

LOCAL MUSICIAN'S DAUGHTER TO PERFORM •
.; Samantha Hall, daughter or local musician, George Hall, will per. form witb The West Virginians from Alderson. Broaddus College
~ on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at tbe First Baptist Church in Middleport.
She was born Ia Middleport where she lived until she moved to
: wiufield, W.Va., wbere sbe resided witb ber mother, Carol Kay
: Hall. H..lls a senior accounting and managemeat major at Alder: son Broaddus and bas been a member of the voup for four years.
: She plays percussion, saxophone and keyboards and sings alto.

''-£AGL~

·.

705.00
282.00

1oe9.00

Dr. N. P. Kim• • Dr. N. W. Robinoon

CALL 446·7619 or
1·800·967·3277

1·800·300·9515 in OH.·
1·800·227·9585

ALL 'tAYlOR WOODCRAFT

Family reunion to
be held May 30

p.m.atPoplarRidgeChurch . .
MERCERVILLE • Revival·
begins 7:30 p. m. Sunday, May 23,'
at Mercerville Missionary Baptist
Church. Rev. Charlie Cremeans,
pastor.

.......
-..
........
_.
-111111-11.111--

SIGMA

''SPECIAL ·.

338 2ndAv•.

POPLAR RIDGE . Popular
Ridge Free Will Baptist Church
revi'(al, 7 p.m., May 20 through
May 23. Rev. Clovis Vanover,
evangelist. Ron Lemley and the
Glory Land Grass will sing at 7

I¥ I

SW alumni reunion set May 29

POMEROY • Big Bend Stem- wheel Association, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m .. Carpc;nters Hall, Pomeroy.
Anyone interested in helping with
this year's festival welcome.

RACINE · Southern Local
School Board meets Monday 7
p.m. at the high school.

- ,

:;-...

. CHESTER · SOLOS (Meigs
WEDNESDAY
Singles Group), potluck, Sunday at
CHESHIRE • Gallia-Meigs
Shade River Saddle Shop in Community Action Agency, free
Chester. Call Sharon Hausman, clothing day. Wednesday, 9 a.m. to
985-4312 for information.
noon, old high school building,
Cheshire.-:---::--POMEROY · A choir from New
The American flag was raised at
Harmony ~aptist Church, North
Monterey,
Calif., after the surrenGeorgia, will perfonn Sunday at 7
der
of
the
Mexican garrison in
p.m. at First Southern Baptist
1846,
and
the
U.S. annexation of
Church, Pomeroy Pike. Pastor
,
CaJif~ia
~as
proclaimed.
Lamar O'Bryitnt in~ites the public.
MONDAY
POMEROY · The Meigs County Library Board will meet at 1
p.m. Thursday at the library.

POMEROY • Faith Tabenacle
Church revival on Baily Run Road.
Jerry Cottrell to preach. Services.
start at 7 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
for male and female adults and District Library board of Trustees
special meeting, 5 p.m. at Bossard
children.
Library.
The board will discuss
Prizes will be awarded 10 the top
three entries in each category.
MERCHANDISE.~
Judging will be based on appear- .
1
ance including accessories, authen~-W H" IEN YOU PURCHASE YOUR
ticity and uniqueness.
:::t:::!~
POOL FOR THIS SUMMER
DI5COcnn '
There is no entry fee, but those
INIROUND OR AIOYE IROUN!I
PIKIS
participating are asked to preregis·
.
~Nt POOl$
MIT ID
ter by June 1. Registration forms
. • •• INO IPICIAL
Ill SIOCI
are available at the Meigs County
Extension Office, Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 or can be
. . . . . . . . . . . . . !1.....-rt,IUI
obtained by calling 992-6696
FRII'IOLAR COVIR
between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday thru Friday. _
HOLIDAY POOLS, INC.
~Ph-:

PATRIOT • The Southwestern
High School Alumni Association is
holding !heir class reunion on Sat·
urday, May 29, at the Southwestern
Elemelllary School.
The Alumni is for all classes
ever attending Southwestern High
School (CenterviUe and Cadmus is
invited, too). The evening activities
include a catered dinner; entertainment, and the Silver Wings Band.
Registration begins at 6:30 p.m.
with dinner being served at 7 p.m.
Reservations are $10.00 per person

in Elvis death

Revivals
VINTON • Fellowship Chapel
revival to run . nightly from May
16 to May 23. Rev. Bill Voland
from Tulsa, Okla., to preacli.

Pro-

Probe is sought,

NEW YORK (A.P) - He's con- - ·''We both have really bad hair,
sideling a run for office, but Jphn really straight hair,'' Barry said.
F. Kennedy Jr. says he' d enter any "He assured me he would have his
campaign without the so-called hair done very badly for the
Kennedy mystique.
show."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Officials in Elvis Presley's home
"It's hard (or me to talk about a
county filed a lawsuit demanding
legacy or a mystique," Kennedy
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. (AP)
says m the June issue of Vogue -Toddlers, grandmas and even
that the state launch a new investigation
into Presley's death.
magazine. "It's iny family. It's my · Navajo President Peterson Zah
mother. ·It' s my sister. We 're a jumped, shook and panted as
" We're attempting to send a
signal that the county commission
family like any other."
Arnold Schwarzenegger urged
is serious about wantin~ a thorough
Not when it comes to public them to "pump it up."
investigation of this, ' Bill Gib·
office, !hough. His father- assasSchwarzenegger visited the
bons, the assistant Shelby County
sinated in 1963 - was president. Navajo capital Thursday to honor
attorney, said afler the lawsuit was
His uncle, Robert Kennedy, slain in schoolchildren who won presidenfiled Friday in David~on County
1968, was attorney general and a tial fitness awards. He listened to
Chancery Court.
senator. Another uncle, Ted, has the national anthem sung in Navajo
Presley died at his Memphis
been a senator from Massachusetts before bending at the waist and
mansion on Aug. 16, 1977, at age
since the 1960s. Cousins serve in beckoning to the crowd to join him.
42. A death certificate issued the
the U.S. House of Representatives
"C'mon," he shouted. "Let's
foilowing October listed the cause
and the Rhode Island Legislature.
do some of that sexy twisting."
death as heart disease.
of
The 32-year-old Kennedy , a
The Navajo Nation in the past
prosecutor in the Manhattan district has attracted important people ·attorney's office, says he's thought Jesse Jackson and Hillary Rodham
about his own chances at elective Clinton among them.
· HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
office.
"But nothing has been Iik:e
LE MENU 1993 • Ohio Valley Christian
StiU And KnOll' Tbat I Am God", "Sing To The
I• Now Op•" For
''If I were to do it, I would want this, •• said tribal spokesman Duane
The Sea~on.
School jut concluded its annual spring musical
Lord Wltb .A Joyful Song", and "0 Be Joyful".
to make sure that was what! want· Beyal.
ltdAtg l'ltlltl (Fiower~Dt &amp;
e'!titled "Le Menu '93". Tbe program opened
. The Sounds of l&gt;raise also sang some of tbeir
ed to do, and that I didn't do it
"This is a star," he said with a
v.,.t.Wo), 1i1nt1Ut1 hlltlh, PtHttl
Wtlh tbe higb school choir's rendition of "Be
selections that took them to the National Fine
because people thought I should," · shrug. "Linle kids might not know
Plcltts, c..pleii llM .. Sla ..hry
Our Guest'', followed by solos "If Ever I Would
Arts Competition in Greenville, S.C. Tbe band
he said.
who Bill Clinton is, but they know
Plus AiaJHs' ........__
Leave You" (Christy Mock), "Part of Your
sounded spectacular witb varied compositions
· 'The Terminator.'"
SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
from "Under The Sea" to the lurking "Kaos" or
World" (Kristin Torres), and a duet ''Sisters"
MIAMI (AP) - The offbeat
. c.loHtt, "ocGII &amp;
"Get Smart" and ended witb the Big Band ·
(Meredith and Amy Pollard). Tbe cboir followed
world of Pulitzer Prize-winning
WINTERSET, Iowa (AP)C-'Hiaww'l.IHeL
witb tbe sacred selections "Calvary's Love", ~Be
· "Chops" and ''Lancaster Overture".
humor columnist Dave Barry, "bad With his romantic novel "The
HUBIARD'S GREENHOUSE
hair" and all, is expanding into Bridges of Madison County," still
SYUCUSI
prime-time television.
topping the best-seDer lists, Robert
OPEN DAILY 11-5, SUNDAY 12-5
CBS has put "Dave's World" James Waller is headed for the
992·5776
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- (Women's Infants and Children) tdents may call the Health Depart·
in its fall lineup and given it a recording studio.
strong slot, between "Evening
Waller will record an album, ty Nursing Mother's Club will Department or other programs, res· ment at 992-6626.
Shade" and "Murphy Brown" on "The Ballads of Madison Coun- meet on June 2 at noon at the
ty," for Atlantic Records. He Meigs County Health Department .
Monday night.
Jonathan Axelrod, executive strummed a: guitar and sang part. of
MEIGS COUNTY
Meetinl!S are o_pen to anyone
producer with I ames Widdoes. said a song during Oprah Winfrey's talk interested m learmng more about
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
the series will focus on what it show, whiCh was broadcast live breastfeeding. Pregnant. women are
means to be a man in the '90s.
Frid!IY from one of the covered especially encouraged tO attend
· 963 Gen. Hartinger Parkway
'
.
The pro&lt;Jitcers bought the rights bridgys featured in his novel.
,
before the birth of their babies so
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
10 two of Barry's books, "Dave
The song told of a cowboy they can be better prepared· for
·Barry , Turns 40" and "Dave ·'a rider of sundowns and old faded breastfeeding.
oGeneral Practice ·
Barry's Greatest Hits," and said dreams'·- and a woman named
It is now recognized that breast
oEmphllala on Headache,
each episode will be drawn from Francesca.
milk gives babies the best start in
Neck &amp; Back Pain
them.
Waller's book tells ' of the life, protection from illness, easy to
oSportalnjurlHJCar Accldenl8
. Barry isn't involved in romance between Robert Kincaid, digest, rapid brain growth, fewer
seriptwriting or production. but is a fictional National Geographic allergies, better teeth development,
oMoatlnaurancea Aceept41d
pleased with what he's seen so far. photographer, and Francesca John- and more, according to Elaine C.
He also likes the choice of "Night son, an Italian war bride Kincaid · Matheny ,laclation consuliant
Court" star Harry Anderson to meets when he stops at her farmFor more information on the
play him.
bouse to ask directions.
Breastfeeding Project- of the WIC

procedures for hiring a direcror and
other ~$sary business.

Lulheran Church, 7:30 p.m.

offiCe.

wv

OH-Polnt

&amp; .. Ow Smtritifr ~ • .d• Nd artd 1011111! aftlv illillGfwMtr iJ,....._tJUJi,_ .orr.,., s~JJ,.nmu trf. ,.,_~ tya bel ... ..,.,., Iitty.;,_rwt., lit FDIC C1 993 BANC ON~ CORPORATION

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....... .. .

·-··- ·

. . . ..

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May 23,1993

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Divine apparitions sweep nation, change lives ·

•

'Dracula' haunts the

r1e

By KRJS'J't:N MOULTON
Associated Press Writer

~·
HANDS OFF - Miss Wells (Lynne Hopkins) fends off the
advances ol Butterworth (Rod Stapletoa).
•

Bring us your old photos
· and·let us make you 2-5x7
copies for only $14.95, a
savings of $5.00.

TAWNEY STUDIO
· 42• Second ln. • Gallipolis, OH.

446·1615
"We auo malce Pa••por1 Photo•!'

rise~ Cowering behind the couch Is ny-eatlng lunatiC R.M. Renfield
(Jeff Icard).

•

Lucy Seward, one of Dracula's vicWords and pictures
tims who slowly transforms from
Bf KEVIN PINSON
· wholesome to .evil as the prince of
;.
Times-Sentinel Staff
, The Cleveland Opera House
: may have Phantom of the Opera,
~ but only the Ariel Theatre has
:Dracula.
·
·. The tale of Bmm Stoker' s king
: or the vampires opened Friday
·: night to a crowd of approximately

darkness' inOuence changes her.

'

Tim Snow (Dr. Seward)· and
Ronnie Lynch (Jonathan Harker)

~ 250.

" Every town with a population .
·big enough to supply an audience
Cusually has a theater group, but
·Gallipolis is twice blessed with the
~ grand old theater and the talented
:Ariel Players. A pat on the back
·goes to director Brad Painter who,
:during rehearsals, demanded per·fection and gave even the most
:minute details his full attention. ·
: As Dracula, Mark Schlosser
projected an aura of evil so believ·
:able, the temperature dropJ!!:d 10
·degrees every time he took the ·
:stage. He even managed 10 elicit a
Jew ·gasps and screams from the
:easily·startJed. ·
: Kim Painter proved herself a taJ.
:ented actreSs in the difficult role of

should also be commended for
their tole.s as Englishmen .turned
vampire hunters, as should Doug
Adkins (Abraham VanHelsing) for
his portrayal of the Dutch professor
educated in the ways of the vampire.
The cast was rounded out by
Jeff Icard as R.M. Renfield, Dracula's psychotic apprentice whose
stage presence made him appear as
if he would be more comfortable in
a straight jacket arid Rod Stapleton
(Butterwonh) and Lynne Hopkins
(Miss Wells) as Dr. Seward's servants whQ brought comic relief 10
an otherwise spooky SialiC.
For those who missed it, Dracula will be staked out at the Ariel for
two more performances, June 4 and

you are planning a weddingr
then you should come see us at
Haskins-Tanner.
You wil have over 190 styles of
tuxedos to choose from. We have a
large selection of thelalest styles
and cor,llmentary accessories lor .
this apecial occasion.
~

LandefS
..,NN LANDERS
"1!193, Loo ;u 1 o~,.
Thna S)'lldlcate
Creaton S)'Ddlcale''

· DEAR
on1 hWIFE:• When
I ,__ I read,
ha"John
tS
Y uman, ......w w t was
coming. John may be "human," but
he didn't show
ooc1 'ud
very g J gment
if the scenario was as you described
·
IL
.
Assuming that the student in
hormonaloverdrivethrustherselfon
John, he did not have 10 oblige her
with a bonus of five or six
additional kisses. It is always the
responsibility of the profcssionaliO
resist advances or the student, the
patient, the clien~ the parishioner,
etc. If sorllething out of line does
occur, it is the person with the power
who is 81 fault for allowing iL
nAnn Landers: My daugh•
.,.ar

..

s.

FEEDING TIME - Dracula (Mark Schlosser) moves in for a
little o_ecking wllh Lucy Seward (Kim Painter).

•,

graduates

, POMEROY - Darcy Lynn
: Stone, daughter of Elmer and Sarah
· Stone, and a 1992 graduate of
: Meigs High School, Pomero~.
; recently graduated from The Hrur
: Experts Barber School, 6322 East
• Livingston Avenue, Reyn!:!ldsbu~g .
·
Stone completed an mtensJVe
• program that consisted of personal·
: ized instruction in both theoretical
; and practical aspects of barber
· styling. The program included
: advanced training in precision hair
; cutting, razor hair cutting, facial
• shaving, hair coloring, permanent
: waving and barber law.
:
Stone is also a licensed Manag' ing Cosmetologist after graduating
' from the 300 hour Manager Train·
; ing Program at Ohio State School
• of Cosmetology.

"different• all righL Most young ....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
women would be appalled by this.
All too often the "laundress" gets
the ring around the collar and
someone
else gets one ·on her
fi
mger.

COMPLETE EYE.

~

. ...

FOR $29
In celebration of

NATIONAL SIGHT WEEK

SUMMER QUARTER
BEGINS
JUNE 28, 1993

May 24 through May 28, 1993
at

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(614) 446·4367

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CLIP·OUT COUPONS
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Introducing the Rustics collection of outdoor. and casual sho~s from

Call the Ophthalmology Department
at 446-5421 for an appointment

"The School That Means Business"

•'•

their stake-driving skills arter hammering Drac·
ula (Mark Schlosser) in his corrm.

Holzer Clinic
'
Eye Department

Southeastern Business
College

,

STAKEOUT - Jonathan Harker (Ronnie
Lynch), left, aad Dr. Seward (Tim Snow) admire

90 Jacklon Pike
••

•
I

r

HOLZER FAMILY PHARMACY

DARCY STONE
I

~ Stone

I thought this was mighty strange
but said nothing. What do you say
about this, Ann?·· QUIZZICAL IN
S~tu~~~ELD: She's

JOINS STAFF · Sharon,
Penny and Kelly of Hair High·
lights, Gallipolis, announce
the appointment .or a new
member to their sta". Terri
Stearns, a graduate pf TriCoul)ty Vocational Scb()(ll; has
had extensive training in Dayton and Columbus workshops.
Her training includes
perming, coloring and clipper
culling. She bas previous
experience with Regis Salon in
Athens.

REGISTER NOW!

CHESHIRE • ·The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency will
hold its free clothing day for low
jncome on Wednesila)'~ May 26.
from 9 a.m. until 12 noon. The
agency clothing bank is located in
· the old school house building in
Cheshire.
·

IHord•lile Pricts

ho

that is being repeated elsewhere in
the United States and around the
world . Hundreds of people say
Mary and Jesus are calling them to
prayer and reconciliation.
·
Reports of Marian apparitions
·come from Ireland to Venezuela,
Africa to Ukraine. The ~cported
appearances of Mary to SIX young
people in Medjugorje, Yugoslavia.
since 1981 haveattractedmiUions.
In the United States,"terrs of
thousands of pilgrims have converged on a neighborhood in New
Jersey, a church in Texas. a hillside
in California, a shrine in Colorado,
many of them hoping to see Mary
or a miracle.
Hundreds of prayer groups have
been formed . In Utah alone, the
number has risen from about a
dozen to more than 50 s1·nce 1989.·
Marian conferences arid newslet·1ers abound.
Sandra Zimdars-Swartz, a religi.ous studies pro~essor at the University of J{ansas and author of the
1991 book "Encountering Mary,"
said the phenomena shoul!l not be .
ignored.
" lt~s a popular movement an_!~
it's going to have an impact," she
said.
·

EXAMINATION

· Free clothing day

·ou•litr For••lwear at

from M' h'
s
me
IC •gan taU\
blasrotugwheet kheenrd'taaunnd
.d rays uDosuan!'t sg~et
·
~
e~tcited, Ann. I don't do her wash,
she has been doing it herself since
she was in high school.
I noticed that "Dee" wi!S spending
a lot of time in the laundry room,
and when I went to Check, I saw her
folding a man's coaon yarn sweater.
I asked, "W005e sweater is that?"
She replied, "It's Neil's •• a teuu1c
-"'
I·
guy Just started to date." •
"Why are you doing his laundry?"
I asked. Dee said, "I'm sure no other
woman he has dated would do it,
~er!n~ant to show him I'm,
lei' carne

Ann

Groggel to
graduate
June 5 .

•

through the Rev. Jack Spaulding or
one of nine young adults who say .
they he\11' the voice of the Savior
and his mother.
F.or five years. St. Maria Gorctti
has heen home to a phenomenon

.
h er h anky-panky? sure
stu.dent-teac
•

.,
Dear Ann Landers: I read
rV~e~tlr ~at Cthhe Univer~ll.tly ~r
1rgtnt&amp; tn
arloue·svl e tB
consi.dering a ban on se~tual
relationships between students and
professors. Well, aU I can say is "lots
of luck. •
My husband teaches in a
Midwestern university, and I have
had more than a lillie experience
ERICH GROGGEI..
• ·
with this. sort
of
thing.
"John
11
ha d
· loaded 'th
edl
rugg Y n some,
WI
chann and extreme! y popular with
· a1 human
the students • John
· IS
so
·
Since I am on campus three days a
" 1have se(lll whatgoes on WI"th
wee..,
John and the young women who
throw themselves at him.
Apparently at the University of
Virginia (as weU as other plal;es),
there are several male professors
who are notorious for hitting on
: RACINE · Erich Matthew students.
I don't doubt for a moment
$]roggel will graduate from Air
Academy IDgh School in Colorado that this is a reality, but from where
I sit, I see a lot more action the other
Springs, Colo., on JuneS ,
·
•
• He is the son of Larry and Jan way around.
John
told
me
several
months
ago
Groggel, Colorado Springs. Colo.•
that a Very sexy Sbldent Cornered
fonncrly of Portland.
' He has been awa~ded an Air him after class and hung around
force ROTC scholarship and has asking ques\ions about her tenn
been accepted at Embry-Riddle . paper until it got dark. She then said.
Aeronautical University. He will "You've been so helpful I could kiss
begin studies in electrical engineer· you!" And she did just that - right
ing at the Prescott. Ariz., campus in on the mouth. Being mere mortals,
lateAugusL
they didn't stop at one kiss. John
' Groggel has passoo all the phys- told me they 'kissed about six or
ical req_uirements necessary for seven times, and then he said, "This
pilot trallling and will be pursuing is dangerous. You are leaving right
that goal for summer of 1996. He
has completed six AP, or coUege now;• With that, he ushered her 10
courses, during high school, includ· the door.
John told me about the incident
ing chemistry and calculus. He has
immediately afterward and
c~~~!:~~e~ four years of German explained, "I want yOI! to know
Ia
studies in preparation for
about this in ease that young woman
IIIIII""Y career.
·
tries 10 blackmail me.·You' will know
!Jc·r}';
that she came on to me."
The purpose of this letter, Ann
Landers, is to let you know that an
equal number of female students go
after professors (some for better
grades) as the othel way around.
Thank you for letting me have my
say.- A WIFE .

..

J
CROSSES TO BEAR -Abraham VanHelslag (Doug Adkins)
,. wards off Dracula (Marl! Schlosser) wbUe waltioll tor the sun to

before the Virgin Mary statue,
caressing her outstretched hand and
bowing their heads.
Perhaps tonight, they '11 hear
what they came for: the words of
Jesus or Mary, purportedly spoken

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - One
by one, middle-aged women step
up on the altar of SL Maria (loretti
Catholic Church, placing roses

NQ

i

wv

OH-Polnt

,..

.,

CHiLDREN'S CHEWABLEt- OFF
ONF-A·DAV VITAMINS :w\0' OFF

Gallipolis

�11m11 Sentinel

·sports

PEPSI
COLA
.PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE. RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Prices Good May 23 thru May 29, 1993

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

CHICKEN

39(

I

ARGO

leg Quarters•••••••••~~... .
CAROLINA
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BALLARDS

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B~~-~RDS_ .
s 99 ZESTA
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I .

USDA CH.OICE BONELESS BEEF BOTIOM

Round Steak •••••••••J.LJ..

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Beef Patties•••••••.s.~-~01..
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KAHN'S
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42

BROUGHTON'S

2% Milk•••••••••••••••~~••$1

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KEMP'S

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Vidalia Onions ••••••1~••• 49c

S.

GROUND
BEEF
10 POUNDS

90
•

5 SJ ?o~

MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER BLEND
COFFEE
'

$299

II
GoodQao:'~ N. Ppwell'e
on.r
Mllr 111hru
Umlt

1,.,

CHUCK
10 POUNDS

s

: Drumbeats: In his prevjous
three outings, Mesa was 2.0 with
an ERA of 0.50.... Of Sorrento's
37 hits this season, I 9 have gone
for extta bases. ... 'I1Ie Tijers beve
n.ot lost a road series in their last
. five, winning three and !f&gt;litting the
·.other two. They've spill the rust
. two of.the three game set in Cleveland.... Bill Wertz made bis ma~­
lesgue debut for aeveland, reliev;Jng Mela in the sixth llld Jiving up
. ne run and two hits m l 2/3
• innings.
,
Blue Jays 7, Twins 0
· At Toronto, Todd Stottlemyre,
• injured in the third inning, and four

Telievers combined on a six-hitter
with 15 strikeouts as the Toronto
Blue Jays beat Minnesota 7.() Sat·
urday to send the Twins to their
sixth straight loss.
DeVllll White went J.for-5 with
a homer and two RBJs for the hot
Blue.Jays. Toronto won its third
sttaight game, and seventh in the
last nine.
·
After Paul MolitOr's single put
the Blue Jays ahead 1.0 in the rlfSt,
White added a run-scoring single in
the second inning.
. ·
Roberto Alomar followed with a
walk to load the bases and second
baseman Chuck Knoblauch made
his IlfSt error of the season, booting
Molitor's luird grounder and allowing two runs to score.
Stotdemyre was in command
when he sttained the tricep muscle
in bis right arm. Danny Cox (4·0)
~lieved and held the Twins on two
hits for 3 Illinnings.
Athlelicl6, White Sox4
At Chicago, Ruben Siena drove
in two runs and Dave Henderson
homered for the second straight
pme. leading the Oakland AthletICS over the Chicago White Sox 6-4
Saturday.
.
A day after Oail:land rallied from
a 104 deficit in the eighth inning
for a 12-11 win, the A's went
ahead at the stan and led the rest of
the way.
Rickey Henderson, who drove
in five runs in Oakland's big comeback a day earlier, led off the game
with a single and later scored on
Sieml's sacrifiCe Oy. Dave Henderson hit his seventh homer, leading
off the fourth against Dave Stieb
(1-3).
Bobby Witt (4-2) gave up two
runs on eight bits in 6 2/3 iMings.
He left after Ozzie Guillen hit a
two-nm hoiner, his rJrSt since Sept
5, 1991. It was Guillen's lith
career home run in 3,944 at-bats.
Dennis Eckerlsey gave up Joey
Cora's RBI double before getting
two outs for his eighth save in I 2
chances. He bas recorded saves inthree straight days.
·

· ·. ·Yvi!ftiees'r. "ed §x :f

•· --

At Boston, DaMy Tartabull hit
a three·run homer in the first inning
and the New York Yankees took
advantage of Roger Clemens' wildness Saturday to beat the Boston
I

Mtke Witt (3-l) allowed two
runs, five hits and five walks in
five innings.
Mets 6, Braves 1
At New York, Dwight Gooden
pitched eight strong innings, hit a
homer and drove in three runs as
New York beat the Atlanta Braves
6-1 Saturday to give Dallas Green
his rlfSt victory as manager of the
Mets.
.
Gooden (5-4) also had two singles as the Mets won for only the
seventh time in their last 26 games.
He gave up seven hits.
Vince Coleman and Jeff Kent
also homered for the Mets against
John Smoltz (4.4). Gooden, Cole·
man and Kent entered the game
with a combined total of two
homers.
Green, who took over for the
fired Jeff Torborg, lost 4-2 to
Atlanta in his debut on Friday
night

90

l

.

••
•

PLAY AT THE KEYSTONE - As Cleve·
land secoad baseman 'Carlos BaerP. watches at
right, Detroit's Cbad Kreuter (m1ddle) gets to
second base too late to beat tile out tag by short-

So niCS top
Rockets

stop Felix Fermin in the rourth Inning c1 Saturday's American League game in Cleveland,
. w!Jere the Tigers woo 5-1. (AP)

·

SEATILE (AP)- The Seattle
SuperSonics proved that there was
no way for a road team to win this
NBA Western Conference series.
But it wasn't easy.
The Sonics, trailing through
most of the first three quarters.
earned trip to the Western Conference finals with a 103-100 overRangers 4, Angels 2
At Arlington, Texas, Roger time victory over the Rockets on
Pavlik, called up from the minors a Saturday.
The Sonics won four of seven
day earlier, shut out California on
games
in this conference semirmaJ .
.four hits for 6 213 innings Saturday
series,
in which no roed team was
and the Texas Rangers beat the·
able
to
win. Seattle now plays
Angels 4-2.
Phoenix
in a series that begins
Rafael Palmeiro hit a three-run
Monday
at
Phoenix.
·homer in the rJrSt inning off Scott
Sanderson (6·2).
.
,
PLAYS KEEP·A WAY Pavlik won in his first major
Seattle
guard Gary Payton
league appearance of the season.
plays
keep-away from
(lert)
.He struck out seven and walked
Houston
counterpart
Kenny
five. The Rangers had gone ll conSmitll
In
tile second quarter or
.~~ti'Le.,Jl~~~s.,wi~out a ,victory ..
·Saturdlly's NBA.Westera Con·
UUJu a starting Jllleher.
.
rerenee ~mifinal pllyoll' game
Pavlik was 4-4 with a 4.21 ERA
In
seattle, wbere the SuperSon·
for Texas last season. He had been
1es
won 103•100 In .overtime to
pitching this year for Triple-A
win
tbe series 4·3 and head Into
'Oklahoma City, and was promoted
·
the
conrerence
nnals against
Friday.
.
Phoenix. (AP)

a

.

Mozambique
·c()~sins, Crear, Drummond ~ole New York Games
..

: • By BERT ROSENTIJAL
·: NEW YORK (AP) - Maria
Motola and Tina Paulino of
Mozambique turned the New- York
, Games into a family affair Satur: l!aY· And sprinler Jon Diummond
• and hurdler Mark Crear used the
: meet to score the biggest victories
• of their careen.
' Tho four overshadowed a star' studded cast of athletes including
Carl Lewis, Jackie Joyner-Kersee,
:. Kevin Young, Quincy Watts and
E.velyn Ashford.
The powerful20-year-old Motola fought off a sttong. unexpected
challenge from her cousin, Tina
Paulino. to win the women's 800
meters in l minule, 56.56 seconds
- the fastest time ever run in' the
. United States.
Paulino, 19, racing against
Mutola for the first time, was a
'

close second.in I :56.62, also faster
than the previous best in the u.s.
of I :S7 .0 by Tatyana Providoil:hina
of the Soviet Union at College
Park, Md., on Aug. 7, 1976.
As the 1-2 finishers charged '
toward the finish line, Motola was
aware that she was being closely
pursued, but she didn't realize it
was the inexperienced Paulino,
who began running competitively
onlr, last year.
.
'I didn't know it was my cousin ·
until I looked back in the last 20
meters," said Motola, the 1993
world indoor champion . "I saw
somebody. It surprised me that it

was her.'·

vious best was 1:59.87.
, Joetta Clark, a two· time
Olym-p ia.n. finished third in
1:58.17, the fastest by an American
this year.
While the 800. produced the
most stunning performance of the
IA:AF-Mobil Grand Prix meet, the
men's 100 meters and the men's ·
ll 0 hurdles produced the biggest
upsets.
.
The confident ·Drummond, the
1991 World University Games gold
medalist from Texa&lt;~ Christian, led

all the way in winning the 100 in
10. 16, beating Olympic 200 champiQh Mike Marsh, and Lewis, the
world record-holder and winner of
eight Olympic golds.
Ma~h and Lewis were both
timed in 10.20, with Marsh award·
ed second place.
·
Crear, the 1992 NCAA champion in the no hurdles from Southern California, upset a field that
included world record-holder and
two-time Olympic champiOn Roger
Kingdom and three-time world out-

medalist Jack Pierce fourth in
door champioo Greg Foster.
Crear, competing in the flfSt of 13.53.
Meanwhile, Young, the wOrld
two races in the event Saturday,
clocked 13.31, the fastest in the record-holder and Olympic gold
world this year and the fastest of medalist in the 400-meter hurdles
. his career, :wit,h Foster second in won in 48. 71, the fastest in th~
l3.50.and Kingdom, still recuperat- ~oild this year, despite chopping
• ing from reconstructive knee h1s steps over the rma1 hurdle.
surgery, fourth in 13.52. Tony , Watts, the Olympic gold medalDees, the 199~ Olympic silver ISt at 400 meters and the secondfastest ever with a time of 43.50
medalist, finished fifth in 13.68.
Two-time Olympian Arthur used his big kick to win in 45.02:
Blake took the second hurdles race with 1991 world champion Antonio
in 13.41 , with Olympic bronze Pettigrew second in 45.15.

In this year's French Open,

Security checks_may provide only drama

wm

•

May 23,1993

innin~-

;t::'Y

•

C

Red Sox 7-3. Clemens (5-4) lost for the seventh lifi!C in his last eight decisions
at Fenway Parle. He gave up seven
runs ori seven hits and six walks in
five-plus innings.
Clemens forted home a run with
three consecutive walks in the third
inning. He ~ to be talil:ing
to plale umpue Chuck Meriwether
. as he walil:ed off the mound.
In his last start. at home on
Monday against Toronto, Clemens
was knocked out by a live·nm sixth

Riley faces win-win situation
when Bulls-Knicks series starts

'

GROUND
-9 LIVES CAT FOOD

; CLEVELAND (AP) -:- Tony
,Phillips and Scott Livingstone
· ,drove m two runs -'t Saturday as
:the usually high-powered Deuoit
,Tij!ers used singles and doubles to
beat the Cleveland Indians 5-I.
· Detroit has won 4 of 5, and nine
'of its last 12 games.
. Mike Moore (3·1) won for the
·first time in a mood!, allowing live
'hits, inc! uding Paul Sorrento's
·eighth home run, in 6 2/3 innings.
;MOOre had Jl!)-decisioas in his pre•vious four~ since beating Min'nesota on Apri123.
·
Jose Mesa (4-3) lasted 5 2/3
i.nninj!s, allowing four runs and
.seven hits~ In bis four wins Ibis season, Mesa has an ERA of 0.28; in
his other six apearances be is 0-3
'with a 6.21 ERA.
. . The Tigers began the day tied
with Texas for the major-league
.•lead with 49 home runs, but they
haven't relied entirely on power.
They are 12-5 in games in which
they beve not hit home runs, and
.have the last seven of those.
. . Detroit loaded the bases with
one out in the thin! and again with
'no outs in the fourth, but the two
threats produced only one run on
~ivingstone's fourth-inning sacri·fice fly.
·
The Tigers took the lead with
three in the sixth. Kirk Gibson led
.off'wilh a single. to01c second oo a
ilallt, and scored on Chad Kreuler's
double. Livingstone hit an RBI·sin·
gle, continuing to second on the
throw home, and Phillips singled
him home.
. They added one on Phillips '
-~I-double in the eighth, but again
.left the bases losded. I

Paulino, apparently shocked to .
be so close to her cousin, appeared
By STEPHEN WILSON
to slow slightly just before the linPARIS
(AP) - No Monica. No
ish, ~ibfy costing her a viCIOiy,
Andre.
NoJimboorMac.
·
• I didn't even think about passThe
French
Open
is
missing
ing her," said Paulino, whose prethem all this year, leaving ,the
Grand Slam event short on personality, controversy and drama.·
Sure, most of the top players
wilJ be here when the $8,1 million
clay-&lt;:oun classic·opens Monday at
By HAL BOCK
The Lalcers failed to three-peat. Roland Garros. The favorites will
For
h
be Jim Courier, aim~ng for his third
NEW YORK (AP) coac
So did the Detroit Pistons. So straight men's title, and Steffi Gtaf,
- Pat Riley, the NBA semifinals Riley's trademark word Ill idly by going for her thin! career women's
between his New Yodt Knicb and in h1s own private dictionary waitthe Chicago Bulls are a win-win ing for someone to seize it.
·.
championship.
·
- He either gets n~
- h, or
Both are worthy,_ respected
slluauon.
An·d now, along come the champions.
Sut the French ()pen
richer.
Cbicagci Bulls, winners of-two - .and tennis in general - has
': If the Knicks prevail, RileY. is straight NBA crowns. hoping to ,;, bee h' b · th 1
f
n111r
guaranteed about $S1 ,000 and well, you know what.
n It Y e oss o some
d f&lt; him
hot t
qucie ~J~U~~es, crQwd-inspiring stars.
more unponan Y or • a s a
Some com111111ies bave said they and compe·u1·ng n'valries.
'
~ NBA title.
Will avoid uslng-- "three-peal" so
· and go on to a that they will not have to pay the · The missin~&gt;-in·action
Jist is
· , • If the Bulls 'WID
., Seles, who
headed
by
MonlCB
was
lhird straight championship, royalty fee, which would increase
Rlley's bank account will get con- the price of the merchandise. 11 stabbed in the back during a match
~y fatter thlll that, especially would be hard to iomore the word.
in Hambur$ last month and was
if anybody uses the cetchy tenn
Financially, Riley-will benefit forced to Withdraw from both the
"·~-A _, .. to -'---'be """--'s
'
French
.......,..,._. """"'' ....._u no mauer who wins .the Cb ~oS Open,and Wimbledon.
th F
h h
y,
eles has won e rene t e
accomplishment. That's because ~ew York series that lt8rts
New Yodt's coach owns the WOld. especially if it happens to be the past three years and CBDtUred a tolal
. Back when the Riley-coached Bulls. The payoff could approach of eight Grand Slam ,tltles, includLos £R-'- Liken won consecu- $2.S miDion, __.,M to one shirt ing the Australian ()pin in January.
"She'll dermitefv~ m'·....,"
' ~..ti.ve
NBA crowns in I 987"88 • the manufacturer._ _ .,.
._
search wu 00 to ~vide an incen- . "That's great, .. the coach said, · said GraC, who .rejl I Solea
as
live for the 101111 1 nestiiOBIOn, a ·"It's the American free-enterprise the top seed. "I!ecau10 cl who she
sjlecial reason to do it again. You syslem. It's only awkward,forme if is and the way she plays we wanaed
Cllll, afler all, weal' only so many you look at It that way."
her lobe there." . .
rings and blllyhoo just so much The Bulls lee the Irony of the
The German assailant who
·~sbowlime."
..
silllllion and ulute Riley for wlw aaacked Selos told polil:e 110 want: BveniUilly, the Laken ~ted . was ccrtalnly • shrewd marketing ed to help GraC regain the No. l
a. wan1, a Clldly 11ttle CJaUOII that move.
ranldng - and that Ia expected to
lfJsc:ribed their quest quite sac·
When . he re&amp;iatored hi a pel . happen in 'Paris or at Wiinblcdon IS
cincd~
word, Riley decided to take no long as Grar doesn't Jose in tho
: "
"
cblncea. II made ICIISC to plotecl early rounds.
~:~=~
11 so much ·thlt he 'himlolf, just in~ a really special
Tbe k;:~;t of Selea has
tho WMl as a U.S. trldo- tam CIIIID aJona.
prompted
Open gfftci•J• ill
·mark. Tllaf 11111111
who ·
That'• why when he took out reinforce security. There will be
1110111 an T-tblrll,
or bill . the trademark on "three·peilt,'' searchel of IIIJOCialllli eaterln.l the
hu to pey him for the privilr.se.
Riley allo Jqlllered ''four-ward...
grounlf&amp; and bodyJuardl
be
PQIICd .,. the play&lt;aw' c~. But
);

JUMBO ROLL

2. ·S

-

Section

:Tigers, Yankees among
:·major leagues' winners

R.C.
COLA
PRODUCTS

'

'irillU!1- ~etttin:lll

•

20 PK. 12 OZ.

.

.·

23,1113

Pleaunt,WV

officials Said the measures will be whelming favorite again this year,
discreet.
bidding to ~oin Bjom Borg as the
"We' re not going to turn the only players of the Open era to win
stadium into an armed camp," said the French three years in a row.
"It's no guarantee I'm going to
assistant tournament director Herve
· Dutreil. ' 'The tournament is, above do great at the French, but if I had
all, a. great festival of tennis. ••
to pick a way to get ready, this
' The party will go on without would be it," Courier said after
Andre Agassi, who pulled out this
week with tendinitis in his right
wrist - an injury that could also
keep him from defending his Wimbledon title nex:t month. The Las
Vegas showman, who lost in the
rmai · 1990
99
s ID
and I I, has always
been a crowd favorite in Paris.
· "I t•s true that Agassi is the darling of the leen-~ and-his victo'o
ry at w· bledo
him
·
1m
n t ~gave
another dimension,' said tournament d'-tor Pa'"'ce Clerc "bill
uu•
'his absence will not undermine the
tournament"
The fans will also miss oldtimers John McEnroe and Jimmy
Connors, who lost in the first round
last year and have more or less
retired from the game. McEnroe
will:be working stricdy IS a television commenlator this time.
With 15 Grand Slam titles
between them, net'ther McEnroe
nor CbMors ever won the French
but they always generated oxcitement whenever they walked en the
cOW1.
.
That's not quite tbe case yet
with Courier, who assumes a no. 11011101111 appu::ch on court and an
aloof poltw'll off it S~ might
c:al1 him borilll or lmlpbl, but no
one can queat10n his ftiiless, inlcnslty llld rnentaiiOUglma.
Courier lost only one set last
yw In Parla. beating Petr Korda in
straight sell in 1 one·lided final
and delighting tho crowd by
....... ·the trophy with a speech
In FrenclLHe •laiU "' tbacnvP-t.

,

pounding Goran Ivanisevic 6-l. 62, 6-2, in the Italian Open fmallast
Sunday.
'
. Even though he lost his world
No. I ranking this spring to Pete
Sampras, Courier is clearly the
superior player on clay.

�•

.

. .

-

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

Page C2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

In NHL plllyojjs,

May. 23, 1993

May 23,1993

day nighL
, shot from the top !'f th«: right ~irde o~t b~ the time Taylor scored the
Taylor, a 16-year Kings for- beat Toronto goal•e Felix Potvm on Kmgs msurance goal. ~ Maple
ward, and Kurri , who won five the stick side at 1:26 and gave Los Leafs h~d l!'5t two?~ theu top scorStanley Cups with the Edmonton An~elesa4-2leadthatheldup.
ers toeJecllonandmjury.
Oilers, helped give Los Angeles a
'They're coming out to start the
Dave Andreychuk , who has a
2· 1 lead in the Campbell Confer- period on the pow~r play, they're l~am - htgh_ 12 playoff goals, ;as
ence fmal.
looking to get even m the game and ejected mtd~ay t~rough the trst
Game 4 is tonight at the Forum.
when we can score one shorthan~· 'J)enod for. htgh-suckmg de_fen~Wilh Luc Robitaille in the edit's certainly ~oin~ to tak~ a lit- man Charlie Huddy and cuttmg hiS
penalty box to start the final period, tle bit out of thelf sruls and gtve us fac~ . Th~n cen_ter Peter Ze~el
Taylor picked up the puck along a little lift," Taylor said.
stram~ his neck m the srune penod
the boards at center ice. His slap
Toronto w~ already down-and· and did not return.
•
•
•

. T~ere wasn 't any of the rowdy
ftghung that marred the JitSt two
games . But Toronto • s Doug
Gilmour, who tangled with the
Kings' Marty McSorley in those
games, didn't last until the final
buzzer.
He was ejected with two minutes remaining on a misconduct
penalty.
"We just can't take penalties
lik~ we did. They're patien_t and are
taking advantage of aU thett opportunities,"he_said.
.
.
b the G eater Columbus Rowing
Then, as 1f to convmce himself,
i .r n about coachin novice Gilmour said, "This wasn't that
_ssoc auo
g h ·• bad of a game for us. We were not
~~ school rowers, Barth was esl blown out of it." .
:. 1 said I'd come 10 the first
Score-wise,- no. However, the
.· , h
'd "I
Maple
Leafs were outplayed from
_
1
meetmg, .e sru ·
was .Peas
the start.
antly ~ur~nsed . The b~.anng of
The Kings grabbed the momenthe~ki~ ·~~ery rna~. 1 · g tum early on goals by Rob Blake
h e u.. n crew IS we comm
and Kurri for a 2-0 lead in front of
1
e.~~~:'Ii e:w;cited b Upper _ 16,005 towel-waving fans wbo had
Arl'
.. f Y ·
Y
'd never before seen a third-round
mgton
ormmg
a
team,
sat
. the
J -C
N ak h0 h 1 ed playoff game at the Forum m
ean ooper: ov • w
eP
Kin s' 26· ear histo ,
s~ th~ Du~lm tc;;'m tw~ Y~l:lgo
lum·s ~venth ~of the playY' en ~r aug t~!~- 0 "!e an offs shorthanded at 9·26 of the
mterest m
. .!~ gaves us
•
·

Dublin rowers rare breed ln area until UpperArl1ngton
gets
team
·
·
h'

COLUMBUS , Ohto (AP) blown away,': Klemek _said.
The Dublin High School rowing
Klemek srud he dectded to form
team had the water and the boats. a team after watching Dublin prac'But until last month, it lacked one uce.
ingredient vital to any crew: an
"! thought, 'Why can't we get
opponenL
that started?"'
Dublin had the only high school
Klemelc contacted the Greater
rowing program 10 the area, but Columbus Rowing Club and the
that changed when Upper Arlmg- . Ohio State University ~rew, which
ton senior Christopher Klemek, l&lt;?3ned Upper Arlington's team an
who had never rowed, decided it ctght-person boat.
W.th
was ttme for a Golden Bear crew.
• ou1 the he1P of lh e rowt·ng
His search for interested students club, Ohio State and the parents of
began wtth an announcement over hts new teammates, the team never
the school's public address system. would have gotten launched, Kle"I was e:w;pecting maybe 10. mek said. The team gets no help
Fifty people showed up . I was from the school system.

Sports deadlines posted
The Gallipolis Daily Trtbune ,
The Daily Sentinel, the Point
Pleasant Register and the Sunday- •
Times-Sentinel value the contribu·
tions their readers make to the
sports secnons of these papers, and
these contributions wiD continue to
be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winter
sports lS the last day of the NBA
Fmals.
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.
These deadlines have been instituled to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos back from the
photography stu&lt;(io of choice and
· to give the staffs the opportunity to
publish these sporls photos and
arucles during the appropriate season for that sport. ·

Klemek satd he enJOYS IS new
sporL
. .
.
ou can. fm,~ ~firute challen~
10 11 • . be satd. _ It~ a spon whe
tcchn!,ue dommates over brute
force.
The boys crew an~ t~e girl.s
squad both began pracuce 10 Apnl
at the Greater Columbus RoV&lt;mg
Club. ~e girls: t~ ~eady ~~
beaten tts Dublm nval m a scnm
mage, Klemek sru'd·
James Ba.rth, who c!ewed at
Ohto State, IS the teams coach.
Barth also rowed for Marietta High
School, a crew with a
IJ'adition. When he was

:·x

"Trust me for all your ·
life insurance needs...
permanent, tertn,
universal and
retirement''
CIROLL SNOWDEN
3e2 Second Awe.

Galllpolll, 011.

Photle 446-4290
Ho•• 446-4511

1

"Every day Barry does something, even when he' s not hitting,' '
Baker said. "Whether it's throwing, defense, or something. That's
~.~e·s the best player in base-

second period was the IOOth ~lay_off goal o,f hts career. He JOined
teammate W~yne Gretzky as the
only players m NHL htstory wtlh
100 or more playoff goals. Gretzky
has 103..
. . .
Rookte Ale:w;e1 Zhamk _sc ored
the go-ahead goal for the_Kmgs on
~ power play that made tt 3-2 late
m the second.
Gretzky's assist on _th e play
ga~e hi~ three for the scnes, bu_the
trails Gtlmour m playoff scormg,
28P,Oints~26.
That s what cut the momcntu!"," Toronto coach Pat Burns
satd. "They outmuscled us, they
outskated us and they outscored us.
We have to fmd a way to get back
because I think this club has proven
right now t()at they're better than u~
in certain occasions." :
Toronto fought back from a 2-0
deficit with a pair of goals less than
two minutes apart in 'the second
penod
G'tlmour
·
. IOth p1ayo~:'f
scored hts
goal 011 a power play at 15:15, and
Ken Baumgartner netted his first
playoff goal at17:04.

SAN
(AP) Barry
won't aslc for a day
off. L.isten to him talk, though, and
.it seems he wouldn't turn down an
offer to do so.
· "He'll geta day off lllrMonday,
because we don't play," Giants
manager Dusty Baker said after
San Francisco pitchers Bill Swift
llnd Rod Beck combined on a
three-hitter in a 3-0 shutouf of the
Cincinnati Reds on Friday night.
"It (a day off) has never been
my o(ilion," Bonds said. "Whenever they want to give it to me,
they'll give it to me.
'
Why was a day off for Bonds an
issue after such a tidy game?
Because, for only the second
time this season, Bonds went hit:!ess in four at-bats and failed to
·reach base.
; His-average dropped to .411 .

UALITY CAR

.

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~

V-8, New car Trade
Loadedl low Miles I

SALE PRICE $7,785
•1,000 DOWN '180 MONTH

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Like a good neighbor, State Farm is lhere ..

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84 Mercury Wagon ...:.......................... *1995
89 Chevy Caprice .. ~ ............................. 56999
90 Ford Escort .....................................55990
Only 37,000 miles.

,

Memphis Queen sets
mark
at Scioto Downs
'•
• COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

.

Memp!lil Queen equaled the track

(ecord fiX three-year-old pacing fil-

lies Friday night 'in winning the
Sso,aoo Sclll'lett O'Hara 'Pacc at
~cioto'Downs in 1:53 3-5.
• Memphis Queen, driven by
!')avid Miller, won for the fourth
time in sill starts, defeating Towner's lm ..e by a head and paying
$7.80, $3.40 and $3. Towner's
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ihird-~ Spicy J J paid $5.80.
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Sports briefs
F'OOibiU

: KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -

lCanlu City Oliefllinebacker ber-

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iict 'I1tonw, the NFL 'sliCk leader
Ole put four 111110111, qreed 10 a

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River Park Hospital
Services
Outpatient
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.

2415 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

'

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restaunmL

in the fifth by getting John Kruk to
hit into a double play. Reliever Mel
Rojas pitched two-hit relief for his
sillth save.
. Danny Jackson (4-2) allowed ·
four runs and seven hits in 6 2/3
innings, sb'Uck out five and wallced
two.
Cardinals 10, Pirates 8
Visiting St. Louis blew a 7-2
lead as Lee Smith allowed home
runs tO Orlando Merced and Lloyd
McClendon, then won on pinchhitter Gerald Perry's two-run single
in the 11th.
Each bullpen allowed si:w; runs in
the final sill innings - as the Cardinals loaded the bases in the 11th
againSI Paul Wagner (1-1) ahead of
Perry's two-out single.
Les "Lancaster (3·0) pitched a
scoreless lOth for the victory
before Mike Perez worked the l ith
for his first save.

1

ineljgible to play
~oops at Ohio State

• An1NCAA investigation turned
hp 16 other recruiting violations,
the soprce told the newspaper.
. Flint. a 6-foot-5 guard-forward,
is ex~led to begin the ·process of
selecting another school, the newspaper said. Amon~ his final choices
lvere !he University of Cincinnati,
Nevada-Las Vegas, Arkansas,
louisVille aod KenbJcky.

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91 Cadill~c Sedan DeVille

'All Payments lased On 60

Page

1
1
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1
1

to rule Flint

; CINCINNATI (AP) - The
1-!CAA on Monday will rule
-Damon Flint ineligible to play at
:Ohio State and free him f~m his
~etter of intent, a newspaper reported today.
• The Cincinnati En&lt;tuirer cited a
l!lurce it did not identify.
.. Jim Leon, Flint's coach at
:Cincinnati's Woodward High
-school, declined comment on
Flint's eligibility.
: O~o State last month reported a
recruiting infraction, which purportedly involved contact at an off-

ED

Eric Anthony on a groundout.
Marlins 5, Cubs 3
Right fielder Junior Felix nearly
cost Florida the game by drawing
a flyball in the top of the etghth,
then broke a 3-3 tie with a two-out,
two-run horner in the bottom half.
Benito Santiago singled against
Paul Assenmacher (1-1) with two
outs, and Felix followed with his
suth home run.
Trevor Hoffman (2-1) pitched
one inning at Joe Robbie Stadium,
and Bryan Harvey pitched a scoreless ninth for his 13th save in 14
chances.
Expos 6, Phillies 2
Ken Hill won for the flfSt time
in four starts, allowing two hits in 6
l/3 innings at Philadelphia.
Hill (5-0) gave up both runs,
walked six and struck out three,
worlcinp; out of a bases-loaded jam

, . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
.-

(strikeouiS in 8 2/3 innings to set a
;hew career strikeout record for the
' :Boilermakers with 223.
·~ But Smith loaded the bases in
: the ninth and was pulled for relie.vler Doug Kelly. Kelly hit Hoosier
Dave Snedden with a pitch, allowing
a run to score. Dan Zanolla
1
rielieved Kelly and aUowed a walk
to load the bases for Braughler.
Zlnolla (4-5) took the loss for
l'liritu6;:C0111inx in rrom shortstop·
~giving up Braughler's horner.
• Chris Koehler (7-2) picked up
the win for Indiana (38-20).
• Minnesota's R)'l!l ufebvre was
~-for-6 Friday mght, including a
toto homer to lead off the garne ·
and an RBI double in the eighth, as
ihe Gophers defeated Ohio State
Jl-2.
• Minnesota (43-15) set a school
iecorcf for most wins in a season,
topping last year's 42-21 record.
• Andy Hammerschmidt (8-2)
picked up the win, pitching eight
Jhutout innings and !etiring 19 of

State Farm life Insurance Company

and two outs in the lOth and retired

;or
the, Ohio
State-Indiana game
. Saturday
afternoon.
:. Purdue (36-21) led 9-1 after 8

®

Braves 4, Mets 2
New York lost Dallas Green' s
first game as manager of the Mets,
their 19th loss in 24 games. Green
was hired as the Mets' 15th manager Wednesday night after Jeff Tor·
borg was ftred with the team in last
place at 13-25. '
Greg Maddux (4-3) pitched a
six-hitter at Shea Stadium, struck
out five and walked none in his
fttst complete game with Atlanta.
Eric Hillman (0-2) gave up four
runs and seven hits in five innings,
walked three and struck out one.
Pllllres 3, Astros 2
Derek Bell tied the game with a
two-run bomer off Doug Jones (1 3) with two outs in the ninth, and
Guillermo Velasquez drove in the
winning run in the lOth at San
Diego.
Rich Rodriguez (2-2) relieved
with runners on second and third

.slam in the bottom of the ninth Fri,ilay capped a 10-run inn in~ for
.Jndiana as Lhe Hoosiers defeated
'Purdue 11-9 in the Big Ten base:ball tournament playoffs.
:· The Hoosiers mel Ohio SLate
:'Saturday aftetnoon. The Buc~eyes
·lost to Minnesota 11-2 Fnday
:nighL Minnesota played the winner

1l/2 innings, thanks to strong pitch-

INSUIANCI

passed ball by Joe Oliver. They got
their third run on ..Matt Williams'
run-scoring single in the eighth,
upping his NL-Ieading RBI total to
39.
" We gave them a couple," said
Belcher (1-4), "but if you don't
score, you aren't goin~ to win."
The Reds, after wmning seven
straight games, are now 0-S on this
road trip and have lost seven
sttaight road games.
"When you're hot, you're hot,
and when you're not, you're not,"
said Reds manap;er Tony Perez.
, "We could have won this game a
week ago."
Swift (6-1) won his sixth
sttaight start. He allowed just three
hits - two in the flfSt inning and induced the Reds to ground
into four double plays. After -the
second inning, the Reds failed to
get a runner past flfSt base.
In other games, Los Angeles
blanked Colorado 8-0, Atlanta beat
New York 4-2, San Diego beat
Houston 3-2 in 10 innings, Florida
beat Chica$0 5·3, Montreal beat
Philadelphia 6-3 and Pittsburgh
beat St. Louis 10·8 in li innings.
Dodt~ers 8, Rockies 0
Ore! Hershiser waited a long
time foe a game like this.
He hadn't pitched a shutout in
81 starts since June 25, 1989, the
year before he underwent reconstructive shoulder surgery. Finally,
on Friday night, he put one together, pitching a five-hitter to lead the
Los Angeles Dodgers over the vis·
iting Colorado Rockies 8-0.
"I'd like to get them more often
than once evC?: four years," Hershiser said . ~ It's almost like
Haley's CorneL"
Hershiser (5-4) struck out seven
and walked none, getting his 24th
career shutoul in 258 starts and his
second complete game this season.
"I'd come close twice this year
already and didn't get it," be said.
"But I felt good about my stuff
tonighl"
'

the last 20 batters he faced.
Chris Granata (6-4) lOok the
loss, allowing four hits and seven
runs oyer S 113 innings.
.
OhiO State (39-17) spoiled the
shutout in dte ninth. Reliever Brian
Mensink walked Milce Repasky
and then hit Brian Mannino with a
pitch. Tony Khoury_ and ~ark
Chonko both htt RBI smgles m the
ninth, making the score 11-2.

:;.... Man Braugbler's two-out grand

tmg by Jason Smith. Smiih threw II

CAlL ME.

Bonds ' " something " Friday
night was a nice running catch
against the-waU in foul territory in
the left field corner on a ball hit by
Chri~ Saho. It came with one out
and a runner at first in the foUrth
inning of a 1-0 game.
"Your hands get tired, your feet
get tired, but that's all pan of it,"
Bonds said. "I've always believed
it doesn't matter how tired you are,
you stiU tnight go out there and do
something.
"I'm here for dte duration, just
like my teammates.''
~
The Giants are making daily
strides towlll'd sLaying in the race
for the duration. Their seventh
sttaight victory put them 1S games
over .500, their best mark at this
point in the season since Lhe division-winning team of 1971.
"The one thing I like is we're
talci~:dvantage of other teams'
and not making many of
mis
our own," Baker said. "I don't
care if we win 9-8 or 1-0. It just
depends on what the opposition
gives you."
The Giants were given two runs
Friday night, one on a wild pitch by
Tim Belcher and another on a

:~n~iana, Minnesota defeat
Pur~ue, OSU in tournament

You Can Afford
1989CHEVY
CAPRICE CLASSIC

Sunday nmea sentinel

Giants blank Reds 3-0; Pirates· beat Cards 10-8 in 11 frames

".

Kings hand Maple Leafs 4-2 loss to take 2-11ead in series
By BETH HARRIS
INGLEWOOD Calif. (AP) The Los Angeles k ings expect to
score power-play goals Getting
two goals with only four ·Kings on
the ice agamstthe full -strength
Toronto Ma le Leafs is a different
p
10
s 1Jj1 felt very good," srud Dave
T 1
h al
'th Jari Kurri
c!;;~~P':.:a. :enb~~s· two short:
handed goals in a 4-2 victory Fri·

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

Life with

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Inspired by the phenomenal popularity d the
Super Mario Bros'" Video gam&lt;, Brooklyn~
favorilt plumb&lt;rs - Mallo and LUigi -are
puled 1nto a hidden dimension wlltrelhty
must bailie &lt;ISht-foot-taH Goomb,!s, dtidly
firebal~ and a aeud lizard king. In order to
5ave a prln&lt;ess, e pendant and lift as wo
know ~on this planet

:

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~Pk:tum'

Touchstone Plctum'

1
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Mikey

M1chaol J fox stan IS e fonntr cf1ild star
reduced to scrotchlng out e liVing IS on
agent to e &lt;llenttle ~no-talent kids,
' until h&lt; 'discovtrs' allltk con artist
named Mgte wllo tries to pte;k h•
po&lt;ket, and ends up PfOVII1S she &lt;an
act h&lt;r wf'l out ~ Of1Y situation ! end
Into big tim&lt; success.

Walt DISM'(s Classic

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.

- IN

Aeb&lt;cca D&lt;Momay Sblrs as hotshot
&lt;nmlnaldtf&lt;ns&lt; attorney JtnnWer
HalntS, a tough, &lt;onlidtnt and ~I
IIIW)tr wllo os about to mtet h&lt;r matd1
1n David GreenM (Don Johnson), a
&lt;horming and manipulatlvt pia'lboy
&lt;harS&lt;d with first degree murder.

What•s

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htr from obscurity to the heights of stardom i1
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Totally hlp end city slick, Pouly Shore
Stars IS a college studcnt from L.A.
named Cnwl, wllo trades the c~

tor the counlly and winds up lhovtlin9
his speclol brand ~wit In the pastoral
heartland When he's Invited by a
fn:sh-scnbbod co-ed to spend
fhonkstilng on her fam11y's form.

Thrtt tllh-centwy witches (Bette Midltr,

Sarah .ltssQ Parker, Kathy Najimy) . . i1 tor
e deY1I d 1 lime as they brew the perfect
potion tor c:cmcdy and advtn!IR when
they arc c01$Rd up In present-day Solem,
MlsNdlusctts to llliflllther vow to steolthe
youth rrom ell the clildrcn In town

Tht Ions- scquc\ to the 1987
comedy hit starring Rlchar&lt;l Dreyfuss and
Emilio Estevez, this aU-new caper finds
the two Seattle dettctiYa ,.locating to
a posh cornm101;ty and Pltl&lt;ndins to b&lt;
father and son while fMiing out •
key witness In a mob trial •

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Pltrlck $weyzt SIM11S I 111111-limc
wllo opr1ngs li! kids from their
ro.ttr en hcma and tal&lt;cs to lht ~&lt;led
on a""* eo&lt;nty advt~ IIIII
bll,..,. .... from hood 10 sood and
pellmiiiMincts.
~

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' PlctiRs and opcnil'l!ldola . . Mjectto dWifO &lt;II cltlldon- nocict 'Whlrtle&lt;Jihd by llw, II'Citrl\ IIOpildoltlcf lccNing
d tiCh plcturt IIIUII , _ •ICIWCI*II • Chedt..., thoiiN &lt;II Cllltllt
sclllCUing ilfontolltoll lllrOUf1out the IUIIIliCf.

-riot..,._

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.•

hgt C4 Sunday nm• SenUnel

for~ Bob

day, June S at Stanley L. Evans
Memorial Field at the University of
Rio Grande.

YOUTH BASEBALL WEEK DECLARED - The GaDia County Commissioaers prod•bned the week or May 30-June 5 as Youth
BasebaD Week in Gal~ county. The highlight or the week is the
June 5 Bob Evans Yoath Day at the University or Rio Grande's
Stlnley L. Evau Field, where the Reds Dream Team pme will take
place. Shown are (L-R) Oblo Valley Athletic Association president
Randy Finney, Gallia County Commissioaers Harold Sannders and
Kenneth Farmer and Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department
director Tom Hopkins.

-Area sports briefs:~
GABS spring banquet Thursday
RIO GRANDE'~ Gallia Academy's spring spo!15 banquet has
been scheduled for Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Buckeye Hills Career
. Center.

Memoriallinkfest Saturday
· POMEROY - The third annual Meigs Band Memorial Golf
Classic wiD be held at the Meigs Golf Course Saturday with a tee
off time 818:45 a.m.
The tournaJDeDI wiD be amixed scramble with a blind draw. The
fee is $45, which includes lunch and beverages. Golfers will ~v~ a
chance to win a new car for an hole-ino(l!le.
This yesr's honoree will be veteran teacher and coach Jim Vennari. Fot more informalion about the tournament you can caU the
Meigs County Golf Coune at 992· 6312.

Softball tourney slated
IRONTON - There will be a Oass C and D double-elimination
softball tournament on Saturday, May 29 and Sunday, May 30 in
Ironton.
.
The enll'y fee is $65.
'
For more infoimation, caU Calvin Hankins at 1-533-9163 or 1532-9564.

Linkjest set for May 3L
JACKSON -The Jim Gallagher Jr. Junior Golf Clinic and
Tournament will be held 11 Fairgrcens Country Club between Jackson and WeDstoo on Monday, May 31.
For further information please call 614-286-5049 or contact Jim
Riepenhoff a1 Riepenhoff Distributing, 330 E. Broadway SL, Jackson, Ohio 45640.

The benefit gan)e, which will
pair off members of the Dream
Team against the American Legion
Lafayette Post No. 27 team, is
designed 10 provide financial support for the county's various summer leagues, which involve up to
1,200 youth annually.
.
In conjunction with the event,
the Gallia County Commissioners
and Gallipolis City Commission
have declared May 30-June 5 as
Youth Baseball Week to reoognize
the efforts of the players and their
coaches.
.
Among those :fanizations to
be hooored that w
are the Ohio
VaUey Athletic AsSociation and the
Gallipolis Parks &amp;: Recreation
leagues, which involve a toeal of 95
teams.
A number of activities have
been scheduled around the game,
for which a $2 admission for adults
and $1 for children will be charged.
Children appearing in uniform will
be admitted free.
A card show will be conducted

May 23, 1113 -·~

Evans benefit game

in Lyne Center from 10-11 a.m.
The show will allow for a set-up of
25 tables and admission will be $1
for adults and SO cents for children.
For dealers, a charge ofSIS for
one eight-foot table will be
charged, and additional tables will
cost $10 each. More inf01111111loo on
the show can be obtained from
Randy Finney at 446-6637 or
Rusty Sauliders at 446-3779.
A luncheon will be held at the
Bob Evans Farms Shelterhouse
from Jl: l5 a.m. until noon, followed by an address by a guest
speaker. Organizers of the event
wiD announce the spemcer later.
An auction is set for 12:15 p.m.,
with Steve McGhee tentatively set
as the auctionecl'.
The team wiD adjourn to the Rio
Grande baseball f~eld following the
auction, and the speaker will
address the audience at 1:30 p.m .
The game begins at I :40.
Throughout the day, food
booths will be set up at the field
and youth games will be beld prior

·•

-~

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--.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, .O H-Polnt Pleaunt, WV

Dream Team, Legion pair off
GALLIPOLIS - Plans are
moving ahead for the fifth Bob
Evans Youth Day Baseball Game
and its related activities on Satur·

'

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I

"""'\

to the benelit conteSL .
·The day's activitieS wiD be preceded on Friday with an open
reception for Evans at the Holiday
Inn stiKiinJ at 7:30p.m.
Comm1ttee chairs for the day
include Finney, Bob Evans,.
Tommy Meadows, Nancy Crossen
and Jewell Evans, Charlene Kilgo-

...'

•••I

'

re, Ed Bertich and Ron Toler, and
Tom Hopkins. Ray Matura, Ed
Mollohan. Mike Myers and R•y
Lieving are among the OV AA .·r
members assisti"g with the activi· · : ·

ties.

.

. '·' '

More information on the event
can be obtained by contacting · ·. ~
Finney at home or at446-40I2. · · ·'

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Ladies' softball league slated
CENTENARY- The Ladies' Slow-Pitch Softball League,
sponsored by the 0.0. Mcintyre Part District, will be held on Tuesday and Thursday evenings at Raccoon Creek County Park starting
June 8.
.
The entry fee for the league, open to all participants at least 18
years old no longer involved in high school sports, is $125 per teani. · ·
A $3 out-of-county fee wiD be c!Wled for each non-Gallia County
player. The deadline for roster sub1111ssion is Wednesday, May 26.
There must be at least five teams for the league to exist, and no
more than 10 teams wiD be taken.
For more information, call 446-4612, ext. 256.

GABC dates announced
GALLIPOLIS -The GaUipolis Area Basketball Camp will hold
two weeks of instruction, one for boys and one for girls.
The boys' session. designed for students entering grades 4-8, wiD
run from June 14 to June 17. The girls' session, for students entering grades 4-12, Will run fnli!IJune 28 to July 1. Both sessions wiD
be held at Gallia Academy High School from 1 to 4 p.m. each day.
For the boys' session, the cost is $SO if the fee is turned in oo or
before June 7. After June 8, the fee is SSS. For the girls' session, the
· fee is SSO fee if it's tiii'IIC4 in before June 21. After that date, the fee
is $SS.
For more information, contact GAHS vanity boys' coach Jim
Osborne at 446-9284.

by Upper Arliilgtop enrolled at
Ohio State.
On.a. wall of the pro shop is a
p!ague thal reads: "The Ohio State
Umversity Golf Courses. Colle·
giate Home of I ack Nicklaus. The
Greatest Golfer To Ever Play The

Game."

Nicklaus went on to win the
NCAA title in 1961, two U.S.
Amateur championshi
18 Grand
Slam events and 71 kiA tourna·
ments.
~ also shed the weighL
But the list of professional.stars
with a Buckeye pedigree doesn't
end with the Golden Bear.
There is Tom Weiskopf, winner
of 15 tour events including the
British Open and now, like Nicklaus. an accomplished c~ archi·
leCL

John Cook won three times last
year on tour, was third in earnings
with $1,165,606, and WIIS runnerup in the British Open and PGA
Championship. ·
"There's history there," says
Joey Sindelar, who has won. more
than S3 million on tour since lead·
ing Ohio Si* to a national clanpiooship in 1979.
"Nicklaus is the best who's ever
played, Weiskopf had one ~f the
best swings ever and Cook tS one
of the best modern player's. It
wasn't just a shot in the dark with
Nicklaus landing there. He was fol·
lowed by a lot of greai plarers."
Six-time PGA tour wmner Ed
Sneed, senior tour players Dick
Rhyan and Jerry McGee and others
such as Clark Burroughs, Greg

l.adehoff, Brian Mosg, Chris Perry tracks because it's so rough. But
and Ted Tryba also left their mark that only helps you funher down
the road."
at Ohio State.
Scarlet has hosted the women's
As the list groW$, the challenges
increase. Ohio State, battling the NC,t.A tournament 12 times and
year-round programs in the Sun hosted the men's tournament eight .
Belt, is the last northern coDege to times - more than any other
course in the country.
win the NCAA title ( 1979).
This week, it will be the site of
The women's team, which has
won eight of the last 15 Big Ten the NCAA Central ReJ.ional golf
tides. has upheld its end of the tra- tournament. which w1ll include
dition.
teams from Texas, Arkansas, HousFormer Buckeye Meg Mallon, ton, Oklahoma State and Ohio
who captured two major champi- Slalll;
onships two years ago, won the
LPGA 's Sara Lee Classic two
weeks ago~
Rosie Jones, Karin Mundinger,
NOW OPEN EVERY SUNDAY
Cathy Gerring and Cheryl Stacy
Gates Open at 11:00
have all played or ll'e playing on
tour.
Races Start at 1 P.M.
Gerring, on hiabls from the tour
No' elcohollc bav••IJN.
after an accident at a tournament
Not reeponelbla for
or
two years ago, is a volunteer assistant coach with the OSU women's
accklanta.
team.
.
For ..,. ilfonnallo1 cal:
Some. members of the men's
and women's teams were drawn by
388-9617 388·9300
the Nicklaus' legacy. But almost as
.
im)IC)rtant is the Scarlet Course,
annually se.lected by major golf . - - - - - - - - - - publications as the No. 1 college
course in the country..
.
It was~ in 1932 by Alister MacKenzie, who also drew up
the plans for Augusta National.
"If you can play Scarlet, you
can play any place in the cOuntry,"
said Therese Hession, in her first
year as the women's golf coach
after 1'2 years on the LPGA tour.
"Your stroke average might be
higher here than on some other

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ATHENS

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - One of vous. I didn't know w.hat to
the nation's best freestyle skiers is .expect."
She comes from a skiing family
a 15-year-old high school freshman
·from suburban Richfield, but and has been skiing since she was
.because of her success, she may five years old. But she's the fust
not be living in northeast Ohio member of the family to be a competitive skier and has made major
.
· much longer.
' Sara Spanninger says she wants sttides in two yean of taking part
to get on the sport's North Ameri- in IOUTnaments. ·
She said she's better in aerial
can and World Cup circuits and to
competition
but likes moguls bet·
reach that level; she may move in a
ter.
"There's
more pressure in·
couple of years to Killington, VL,
moguls
(basicaDy
bumps of snow
where sbe can train regularly durlhal
are
built
uo)
and
you go faster
ing the cold weather months while
down
the
she
said.
"Aerials
attending school.
·
are
not
as
tough."
~ past winter, she went from
Skiers go over jumps or manthe Akron area to Holiday Valley,
made
snow in the aenals and do
N.y., evety weekend from Decem;
several
things. There are basically
· early April to train. The trav·
two
kinds
of aerials - inverted,
d off, as she finished eighth
which
requires
flips, and upright,
rail in aerials at April's U.S.
which
includes
difficult
maneuvers,
frees~le skiing champtonships in
but
no
flips.
Breckinridge, Colo.
.. _
Asked wh$' she rose so high in
"I'm pretty
she Sllld of
her performance. 'I was really ner-

!'-r.l&gt;Y·"

two years, shC TCS_PI?flded, "Lots of
Some homes try to separate
hard work and tnllrung evety week·
you from the environment
end. I trained from 8:30 a.m. to 3
Our homes make you a
p.m. evety Saturday and Sunday at
partofit
Holiday Valley. I trained on
moguls basically. We don't have an
CaU today for more Information
aerial site."
.
Sbe also got some major-league
. T
help last summer at a camp in
1\JIJiala,qh~~
J
·
Mount Hood, Ore., where one of
Li 'llti: turcs,
her coaches was Olympic gold
'-._
Inc.
medalist Donna Weinbrecht.
Mort choil:tslllllb for ,;IU, tiring.
Spannin11er says she can feel
herself getting better all the time
P.O. BOX 614
and thinks her goals are within
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
reach. "I might have a ~lly $ood L - - -·.;.1-400-4,;;;;:~58;;.·.;.;9119;,;110,;."_ _..:.o.t
chance ifl stay with it,' she said.

.~ -WRE~THS·N·MORE •
Craft Supplies and Handmade Crafts ·
Open Sundays 11:00.6:00
Handmade Wreaths $15- $20 • $25

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By STEVE WILSTEIN
Snowflatra GYP
Colored Lace
Straw
left sboulder blade and her spine,
A..t.Colora
•
AP Tenail Writer .'
Wreaths
"Monica Seles' reign as No. I in said after her arrival in Vail two
Small $4.00 Bn. Mauve &amp; Peach
women's tennis. is about to end, weeks ago that at least two muscles
$1.19up
Large $7.50 Bn
$3.75 Bn.
achieving the aim of the man who were cut. 1bose muscles, be said,
affect her left-handed Serves and
stabbed her in the back.
Bird
Birds of · Spanish'......-~
Seles, who became the yOIDigest ·overheads, as weD as het two-hailded
groundst:rokes.
top-ranked tennis player in histoty
Nests Lge.
The Worlds . Moss I~·~
"The worst would be that she
in 1990, officially Withdrew from
the French Open and Wimbledon couldn • t come back, but I think
.__9_9-_E_a_.___. L---99'-a_nd_U..;p-J 99• Pkg.
on Tuesday and opened the way for that's extremely unlikciy," Steadher a•sail1111t's favorite, Steffi Graf, man said. "Sbe has shown a lot of
progMSS the l8st few days. I ~
to regain No. I, as be had hoped.
' This might have been a Grand think that I'd look for the end of
Slam summer for Seles, a season of the. summer."
If that schedule holds, 'Seles
tdumphs building on her brilliant
'Loctdacl lilekll Tri-County Spo1t1
sui:cesses a year ago and her win at.' mi$bt be ready for the U.S. Open,
( - l o ...,_,County Falrgrou"*l
whtch stans August 30. Seles won
~ fiTSt big championship this year
Point ...._nt, W. VL 304-175-2988
her second consecutive U.S. Open
in AUSII'Ilia.
Stora Houra 9:»1:00 M·F: SaL 9:30-6:00
Instead•, with the French and last'year.
Wimbledon wiped out by the coonside attack in Germany, she surely
will lose her No. I ranking .after
one of those major championships
- ·at least until she recovers.
·While Graf, now top-seeded in
The Art of Entertlllnment
Paris, and another potential No. l,
Afantu SancheJ Vicario, play 11
Roland Garros· starting next Monday and· at Wimbletfon starling
Juqe 21, Seles will continue to
recuperate at a spons medicine
clinic in Vail, Colo.
"The withdrawals were not
TI-AIIIO
unupected," WTA executive
ons' CoMWIIGIII&gt;!!.WCoM~
director Gerard Smith said. "I
•100 111111.
power •IIIPP
guess we all had hoped that there
Aigi1i1o
cont ot.CF CoM
was an o~~tside chsnee she might
-·-F'-UI..,S.
~ in lirile Cor Wimbledon, But
p¥en that. it's gnss, and given the
facl thlllhe pobiiJiy won't have a
lbt of time to practlee, I'm not at Ill

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ller third
Fiench dtle a year qo and
tho' finll • Wimbledon. where she
104' to Orlf, and those points will
now como off bet computer flllk.
inl. Her Australian Ooen win in
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. Pill toaaher the ldnd of ..... with
stnlllger aves and better wlleys
anf overbeada, that would have
mide her a l'avorire to win bolb the
Pdnch and Willlbledon. DUJIIe Ill
"he(. tltlel, . . . . . . . tnly ~ be
jult eareriDJ her prime. Now llcr
J.larauit of the rare Orand SJam
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Swimming lessons scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp;: Recreation Department
announced its swimming lesson schedule for this summer.
Session I, which will run June 7 to June 17, will be followed by
Session 2 (June 21-July 1), Session 3 (June 21-July 1, evenings
only), Session 4 (July 5-15), Session 5 (July 19-29), Session 6 (July
19-29, evenings only) and Session 7 (Aug·. 9-19).
The classes are Parent· Tot, Tweeners, Beginners, Advanced
Beginners, Intermediate, Swimmers and Adults. All classes will be
held at the Gallipolis Municipal Pool, located on Ohio Avenue
across from the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
The fee is $IS per person per session. For more information, caD
theP&amp;R office at446-1424, ext. 37.

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The tt'ophies dominate everything
in:tbe house that Jack builL But 1101
in the way they were intended.
, At the already cramped pro shop
at Ohia State's Scarlet and Gray
Courses, trophies are everywhere
- on the floor, stacked in corners,
holding doors open. They've never
seen velvet or polish.
In a corner, makeshift shelving
sags from the weight of dozens of
trophies. ,In the of(~ee of men's golf
coach Jim Brown, four Big Ten
team championship trophies ·sit
atOp an old bookshelf, collecting
dust.
'No one pays much attention to .
the; clqtter. Tradition is important at
O~o State, but 1101 as imponant as
the next trophy 10 be won.
·
golf pro~ has as much
tradition as any m the country,"
sail! Brown, whose teams have finished fiTSI or second in the Big Ten
ai r 20 years that he has been the
golf coach. The Buckeyes were
second to Wisconsin just last weekend.
.
.
Ohio State, coai:hedeby Robert
Kepler, won the men's national
championship in 1946, back when
college golf was the end of the line.
There were few teams, and only a
few players had the where~ilhal to
t.urn pro and travel around the
t;ountry hoping at least to break
even on expenses.
For all intents and purposes,
Ohio State became a major player
in ·~olf on the day in 1960 an over·
~~Jght pharmacist:s son from near-

hill:"

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Sunday nm• Sentinel-Page C5

On Ohio State's golf scene,

raur

/fltNkl l(l.J1XLt.•".'t""· -

ln .
_.,_

Pomeroy--MiddlepOrt Gallipolis, OH Point.Pleasant, wv

Mey23,1993

·-·--

DEHI.

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Upper At. 7
ICMauga, Oh.

70

SJ60

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Plo1111r 'ftuclc Alder 8p Phil
utr lllecllon ol Plonrrr Ampe:
QH H10 IChlllt x50 Wilt $181 .
QH toll 31 Wilt X 31 Wilt $89.85

- Cuatom Installation
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Sentinel

·

May23, 1993

sixth because of tightness in his
right elbow. Bielecki had surgery
on the elbow last July.
"It was just scary more than
.anything," Bielecki said. "I threw
a 1-1 breaking ball to Cecil and I
felt a bum, kind of like when I hun
the 11111. What they thiqk happened
is that I tore adhesiOns or scar tissue, which is normal. The ligament
is fine. They'D take some pictures
(X-rays)tomorrowtomakesure."
The Indians scored four in the
. flr.st_ against Bill Gullickson (1-1)
on 'c.los Baerga's RBI single and
Treadway's two-out, bases-loaded
double down the line in right
"That one on the line was a big
hit,'' Baerga said. "That ~ves !IS
three runs and rnakes n a b1g
inning."
Fielder homered with none on in
the fowth, a towering drive into the
upper deck in left field estimated at
430 feet. Belle, however, 'responded in the bottom half with a shot to
nearly the same spat, two pitches
after Baerga had hit a.sacriface fly.
. The Indians made it 7·1 in the
fifth when Felix Fennin hit an RBI
double, bluffmg a bunt before slapping the ball past Fielder 81 first.
The Tigers rallied in the sixtll,
scoring four nms on RBis by Kirk
Gibson, Skeeter Barnes, Milt
Cuyler and Phillips, but Cliff
YOUIIJ blanked~ over the last 3
'2{3 innings for his first career savo.
Cleveland added two in the sixth
on RB!s by Fermin and Junior

5.

..

•

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Tbe
Detroit Tigers began to get uneasy
only after the scoreboard sbowed
Cleveland ahead 7-1 halfway
through the game. · · ,
· .
"If a pitcher doesn t have h1s
best stuff, we're going to get him.

Albert Belle mllched 'IW! CIIW'
high with four of Cleveland's IS
hits, including hil 14th home nm,
and Jeff Treadway got the Indiana
started with a three-run double that
capped a four-run first inning.
· Cecil Fielder homered for the
Tigers, his seventh.
"This is the first game we've
been out of in a IOO(!: time, which is
a good sign," Phillips said. "They
just OIKJ)OUnded us today."
The loss stopped Delroit's three·
~tame winning streak. Cleveland
1mproved to 11·7 at home, compaued with its 6-18 road record.
Mike Bielecki (4-3) won it,
yielding tbree runs llld five ~IS in
five innings before leaving m the

Kent, Ball State win to head
into MAC baseball title game
KENT, Ohio (AP) - Kent won
two second-round games to
advance to the Mid-America Con·
ference tournament championship
held Saturday in need of two wins
against Ball State to capture the
title.
The job may be easier for unde·
feated Ball State, which needed
only one win in the double-elimi·
nation tournament for the title.
Ball State advanced with a S-1
win Friday over Western Michigan
· while Kent beat Central Michigan
~and defeauxl Weslem Michigan

54.

In Friday's fllSI game, Trnis
Miller hid a tournament JeCOOl 13
'strikeouts and Ryan Beeney hit a
grand slam home run as KCIII belt
Centtal Michi .
Miller (8-f&gt;broke the tournament record of 12 slriboutS set by
Central Michigan's Mike Brecht
against Weslem Michigan in 1981.
Jeff Siler (2-2) took the loss for
Central Michigan ..
Beeney hit a home run in the
fifth after Kent loaded the bases on
an error, a walk and a single by Jim
Arnold. Kevin Zellers hit a solo

home run in the sixth for Kent
In the second game, Tony
Christopher scattered six hits to
improve to 7-3. The loser, Rob
Krueger (6-1), gave up duceeamed
runs, 1111tching the number he had
allowed during the regular season.
Kenny Reed bait an RBI single
for Ball State in the third, a nmscoring sacriface in the fifth and a
two-RBI double in the seventh.
KenJoncshadanR8Isinjlefor

~

Milwlllbe (Eiollod 4-S) al Bd......
(Valalloola 1-3),1:3S p.m.
OUJmd (Welcb 41·]) 11 Oi.CIJO (Al·
v ... S.0).2;~,
Califarni1 V1lera 1·3) 11 Toua

Butcio J)hoW L Pd.
P!Wodclph;. ........... :z&amp; 12 .1110

GB

Moo-L. .............23 11

.S61

5.5

(Qooanrill 2-3~ I:OS p.m.

St.l.aW .......... - ... .21
o;,.ao..................:!ll
19 .
FJomda ................... 11
·New Yadr: ..............13

19
19
:Ill

.S25
.SI3

(!laMoer 3-:l).loOS p.m. •

23

.&lt;187
.439

7
7.S
8.S

10.S

26

.333

14.5

(Bama~.3.

- • NHL playoffs • -

.sso

S..IMto ..............11 23
Colondo ................12 30

s.s

9.S

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10
16.S

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u. Ant&lt;&gt;:

Tbey plaJtd Saturday
loblna!IIN.Y.Idadcn,7:3Cip.m.

Toclay'spme
Tcnma 1t LDI Allfll-,1 p.m.

Friday's scores
f1ao;doo

Friday's score

Loc ....... 4, '!'...... 2;
lea lot.da &amp;aiel :Z..l

4

.452

·

s..w. (Plomlna ().0) .. Kana, c;,,

·

.674
.!511

~Jn.

New York (lt:oy 41-l) 11 Boman

Wtlltra Dlrilloe

San FnnciJco ....... 29 14
Atlmta ................... 25 11
.................22 . 11
CINCINNATI........19 23
LocAnpleo ...........ll 22

S. ODc;ao 3

MOIIday'a p111e
N.Y . - . , W...boal, 7:30p.m.,

6, l'billcldpllia 2
Allda4,W.WYook2

if-

Sl.l.ouloi0.-1(11 inn.)
Son Fo
-1. (]!o/"aNNATI 0
Loo Anp1oo I, Colando 0
S..Dioto,3,llooll&lt;ln2(10inn.)

- • Transactions • Basebllll

Tbey played Saturday
(~4-4),1o0S

p.m.
CNCNNATI (ltijo S·ll at S... ftan.
cilco (Black 3-0), 4:05 p.m.
Manueal (D. Martinez 2-S) at
St. J..Oui&amp; (O.bomc 2-1) at
(Walk 4-3), 7,()5 p.m.

OULANO ATHLETICS: Plooad
-lokOwUe, fiat bu8Mo, 00 . . 1:1olay diablod 1111. lbcallod Joe s - .
r::;.r-T-&lt;!d.Paailio:Coaa

.

f'iiUbu.r&amp;h
.

Chi;aao (Hibbud 3- 3) at Plonda
(MWno 2'1), 7:0S p.m,
t.londo (Homy 'Z-4) ot Loc An....
(Noaoio 2-3), 10oOS p.m.
"Houatoa (Drabek 4-4) at San Diqo

BA1TLE MAltiNElt.S :,R.ecaJted
Dave Raina. pl\chw, &amp;am nbabiliwtion

auim

1

in JICUonville of the

Sou.....

(llaMs6-3),10oOSp.m.

11!XAS

....-.
TORONI'O BLUE JAYS : Activated

Chi(:aao (Ctuillo 1-1) at Florida
(A!mmon&amp; :1-4~ I :!S p.m.

Jock-~.- lhoiS.day ...

- - 4-4),
at Philoddphia
(MWJtolland
1:3S1·0)
p.m ..
SL Laail (Oilvue~ 1-1) u Pin•bw'J.h ·
(l'aalin :1-4), I :lS p.m.
Atlanta (Avery 3-2) 1t New York
(~ )..1),1 :40 p.m.
Cal. .do (Blair 1-0) at Loa AnJelel

s... Oicao

1bW lilt. Sclftt WoodJ Will11rN, piicb~R,
10 SyncuMt!l.thlllnumutird Lelp.

.

CINCINNATI (Smiley t-6) at San
.......... (B"*"' 7-11), 4:0S p.m.

--

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T-

W• L

l)oao0. ..................-2:1

IS
11
19
19
21

llootYook.-.........23
....................22
T_. ..................22
Mi!.... -.............17

·

CUIVBUNil..- ..17 2S
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Pd.

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2.5
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.S37
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.405

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9

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16

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Oollulol ................. l6
M
. . .............. 16

II
20
22
22
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CJ!F

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17

.590

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.411
.476
.421
.410

~ports

OI!RS: ""'-""" .....

1olm RuueU. catcher, hu deued waivea
.... ,.;u join ............ u bullpon

Today's games

(R. 2-l), 4,0S .....
"""""" (Swindoll 4-4) "
(liillnd ().2), 4,0S ......

J...,..

A..-klal..n•e
BOSTON RED SOX: Siano&lt;!
Bilb.We, pilcbK, 10 I _..,., OCIUnCl
1nd IUiped. him to Fort Mym of the
OulfC..u.a-

Attain• (Smaltz. • -3) at New York

~ (lti-2-2). 7~1'..... .

. ·By NESHA STARCEVIC
samples, The IAAF can ov~le
STIJlTGART, Germany (AP) the Kenyan federation and re1m_ It sounda like 1 marquee field pose a four-year ban.
f!lr a track meet. lastead, it's the
The problem of Krabbe, world
lineun of doping cases facing the chumpion at 100 and 200 meters,
spon'"s governing body.
has returned to haunt the IAAF.
·• dopina., on
The IAAF council opens a AlreadY c t··-A
""""" once "'
duee-day meeting in Stuugart Sun- a technicality by the JAAF arb1traday, with Kauin Krabbe, Butch tion panel last year, the German
· 1
as suspended ag31'n
Reynolds and John Ngugi on the spnn er w
.
agenda in connection with their bthisterol
time for taking the drug cleou
.
drug--lated disputes.
·~
B th ,__ •·A-a'on •····
.' The meeting a. lso will hear
ut e vuman '"""'"
.......,
the
ban
.
from
•our
years
to
-pons on the ~
lions for the cut
"that Krabbe one
·~
·
·
·
as
world outdoor c ampionships, year, mamtammg
w
which will be held in Stuttgart not guilty of a drug violation but of ·
•'unsportSIItalllike
conduct.'
• 1 a1
Aug. 14-22.
'
·
f
While the problem of doping
The ruhng stems rom a e~
persists in occupying the attention loophole - the German federanon
of the International Amateur Ath- did not have provisions for out-of·
letic Federation, the threat of a competition drug testing at the time
boycott of the championships has Krabbe wu tested.
receded. The IAAF and the manThe ban on Krabbe expires on
agers of top stars bave agreed that Aug. 13. If the decision is upheld
medal winners will receive cash by the IAAF, which is by no means
awards - less than the athletes . certain: Krabbe would be eligible ,
wanted but enough to avert the ~ run m the world championships
threat of a boycotL
- but only in the relays, which do
The doping cases of ReynoIda, not require qualif1C31ion.
of Columbus, Ohio, and Krabbe
If the IAAF rejects the finding,
have been around for a while, the case could be referred to an
while new ones keep popping up.
IAAF arbitration panel for a· final
In the latest twist, Russian bur- and binding decision.
dler Lyudmila Narozhilenko is · Reynolds, the 400-meter world
seeking the reversal of a four-year record holder, has served out his
· ban after her estranged husband doping ban of more than two years
and coach said he secretly gave her for allegedly laking steroid&amp;. But he
steroid&amp; out of spite because she
had left him for another man.
Ngugi, the five-time world cross
country champion, had his fouryear ban lifted by the Kenyan federation earlier this month. The
1!188 Olympic S,OOO-meter cham·
pion, Ngugt was suspended when
he refused to take a drug teSt at his
farm in Kenya . .
The runner is a soldier and told
oflkials that Kenyan military regulations require that an .officer be
present during the taking or urine

t*

.Z..4) "T._to
1:35 p.m.
1-2) It Ill~

Coueae ·

:1-5), 7,()5 p.m.
. . . . (lC . . . ().()) It EaftMI City

.

IAffllr~"-·:GS~...

Today'oaamea
.::=
or rJ.li'.":If)~.

111

(I'~ 2-2)

(If. y- 0.21. I :33 p.m.

;

II

IOWA ITATE: 'Nomad 0... Smilh

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U.S. Rt ~0 Will of Coolville, Oh.
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - The
WHERE THE SALE NEVER ENDS ·
increasinJ influence of Far Eastern
and Slav1c cultures on the Ameri1917 0e4p
&amp;....ssm
can diet is sending more people
ltlt OW. Colin&amp; On..---SS37S
into forests in search of edible
ltlt .... Sooln 2 Dr..--.-SS450
fun~P,. a botanist says.
1911.,..... ~ ..... ..., __ ,$2175
'If you understand fungi as a
lttl a.. Slonr, 5 ..... PS, "· $5175
food source, ·you realize a store
1911
VI, - . ... $1120 '
isn' t the only place wHere you can
lt16
Woo Iloilo, - --.$995
find it," said Martha Powell, a
ltlllan Pkbp. tooAo4 PS, PI - $4290 ·
Miami University botany professor
lt16 hN ~ ..........__ $3190
and avid fungi h\)llter.
'"' rt,.ollll A..w. ............ $5200
Wild mushrooms add subtle Oa...,a..ry ..... '*·Mni'•·~$99S
vor to main .dis!les and sal~ds, a,
1911 rt,.olllll....
$3290
"can· be· cooked ·as ·main dishes
1917 Dt4p 600: 4
52945
themselves, Ms. PoweU said
ItU JoN 1.- lltr,.41yl, 4 ........ $171S
"You can just fry them up in.~ · 1916....., ....... s.... al; lill.. $1150
little garlic butter ~ eat them,
'"' Dt4p ... 4 Dr. . . - .-51151
she said. "There 1s a mushroom
IN6 , .... 6001,
• - 54191
u t r..,....Asl.twAs.--5219
which grows all over ca.mpus
which I have made myself SICk on
,.,............ As ... " - -.... 5429
S.. u...IT...... AS LtwAs.--$50
by eating 100 much."
Wlllon looltloil ... - ..........,_ ,_..,$169
But inex~rienced mushroom
pickers need to be careful not to
lo4..,. 111-ol--··- ..··-·---540
5&amp;11 T.... ..._. I• Goto.--..-5..5
harvest poisonous ~un.gi, she said.
hi2Ja ....._______$695
Some poi~ vanetles can cause
6d6RoiT.... .._.._ _ _ ,$127S
liver damage and even death.
.
"A lot of people who get po1·
ALL CARS WORH THE MONEY
soned are looking for halluci~o­
. 187-3224
genic mushrooms,' .' she sa1d.
"Recently, there has been .a turn
back to this." ·

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~
~
'i'
•

Red, 4 Dr., aii', stereo, alum. wheels.

Pan

Ohio Leadership Institute
Ohio Leadership Training Camp (Ohio LTC)

~

1989 CHEV. CORSICA.--------$4177 $92

7 Peas., auto., air, 11areo.

10-.

~

Price Pymll•.

1985 DODGE CARAVAN LE-------$3976 $98

N1daul Hockey 1M...
.
HARTFORD WIIALERS: Ana........,
\hat Jrtf Jacbcn, udlcanl C&lt;ilch, .... AI"
.a,...t
h - , ceadl and athlalic
Supooi«Srat&amp;

~

DRIVE·A·LIRLE SAVE·A·LOT

.

Hoc:key

f1&gt;oiJ'~ ~) • a.BVJ!LANI)

"It's Worth rile Drive"

Diesel, 2 Dr., 4 apeed, air, white, very clean. .

X...,Cily:l,-1

at Tau

Auto., P.S., 351 modified, low milS, one ownllr, garqe
kept, previous owner's n8me upon request. Beautiful truck.
Six months, lllx thOuund mile warnnty. ·

Loaded!

Siped tim McMillan,lineba&lt;tc&lt;.

r

1978 % TON TRUCK

1977 JAGUAR XJ6-------·---S3967 $137

Loop.-·
'
TAUPA BAV BUCCANEERS :

.

'.

Y·&amp;, 5 speed. Very nice .car.

GREEN BAY PACKERS : Sianed
1..... Willil.lin•b ' •,
I:AN~AS CITY CIDEFS, Apad 10
ICn'ftl willa Dcrril:t Thamu.liniNcker,
an • ..-of four one-,.ear CODinell.
MINNI!Sai'A VOONGS: Sipd Eric

.... Yodo (Jol. 'fila 2-1) II hiOO
s-3).1oOS,...
.
OIIIIIIHI (II. Wiu 3-2) 11 Chwaao
(111*1-2). 1:05p.a.

•"--·---A

, 4 Dr., auto., air, low miles.

BUCKEYE LAKE-· A variety with submerged strucwre such as
of game fish are available to sport brush piles, stumps and fallen trees. .
anglers. Most popular this time of . GUD..FORD LAKE - Channel
year are crappies, .channel catfish catfiSh exceeding 25 inches can be
and largemouth bass. Hybrid taken at night fishing w.ith ni~ht
striPed bus up to 10 pounds may cmwlers, ·Cut baits and chiCken liv·
be taken as well. Try fishing ers along the lake bottom. Lar~e­
around shoreline cover, boat docks mouth bass can be taken on spmand near the mouth of Honey Creek ners, jig and pig combinations,
and other streams.
worms·or minnows fiSjled from the
Northwest
shoreline areas. These same fishing
HURON RIVER - A good spots also provide good opportuni·
population of smallmouth bass can ues to take black crappies averagbe found from Milan to Lake Erie. ing seven to 13 inches.
Fish the decp:r holes below riffles
Lake Erie
with soft craws for best results.
In the western basin, walleye
Fish in the lower
of the river . arid smallmoutll bass fishing have
from Fries Landing to Lake Erie been good to excellent during
with cut bait llld night crawlers to favorable weatller conditions. The
area from Ruggles Reef to Vermiltake channel catfiSh.
LAKE LA SU AN WILDLIFE ion the area around Kelleys Island,
AREA - There are 13 lakes open and the reef complex are producing
to fishing Thursday through Moo- some of the best walleye aciion.
day, except state observed tiOli - Rocky shoals and the reef complex
days, on a limited basi.s. Speci~ also offer the best fishing for smallregulations apply to fishmg on th1s . mouth bass averaging 13 to 17
wildlife area in Williams County. inches. Walleye anglers are prim!"The hikes primarily offer some · ily drifting weight·forward spinexcellent largemouth bass aQd ners, but trOlling deep-diving cranlc
bluegill fishing. Much of !he fish · baits will likely produce beller
results.
:
ing is caleb and release.
·
. Northea$l
In the central basin, smallmouth
LEESVILLE LAK£ -:- One of bass fishing is mted excellent at the
Ohio's -premier musk1e lakes, Conneaut break wall at depths of
anglers have had .an OPI?Onumty to 15 to 2S feet. Anglers arc using jigs
take trophy muski~s we•ghmg '?ver and minnows to take these fish . A
. 20 poilllds. Spmner bwts and Jerk few walleye are, being taken ncar
·baits fished over th~ weed beds the bottom at depths of 50 to 60
during sprinj! prov1de the be~t feet at the Fairport Harbor using
results. Crapp1e f1shmg op.portu~l­ trolling spoons.
ties are rated exc~llent F1~h w1th
minnows beneath bobbers m ar~

Soulbell5t
WELLSTON CITY RESER·
VOIR - Fishing opponunities for
brown bullheads, bluegills, black
crappies, sunfish, channel catfish,
walleyes largemouth bass are rared
good to ~xcellenL Check with the
area bait dealers to determine when
and where fishing action is best.
WILLS CREEK RESERVOIR
- Flathead catfish up to 3S P.Ounds
are taken each year 1a1ce wide and
from the tail waters below the dam.
Limited boat access to the reservoir
has resulted in the growth of a
quality largemouth bass population.
Following high water releases,
saugeyes are a))undant in the tail
waters. Crappies averaging 10 to
16 inches can also be taken m the
tail waters.
Southwest
ROCKY FORK LAKE - Use
minnows fished a1 depths of six to
IS feet around drop-offs, extended
points llld submerged structures to
take crappies up to 13 inches.
·Night fishing is the most produc·
tive for flathead and channel cat·
fish. Use uaditional baits fis~ed
along the bottom near the shorelme
for best results;
PAINT CREEK LAKE - The
tail water pool provides excellent
fishing for channet and rtathead
catfiSh. Areas with flooded tim,ber
produce good fishing action for
crappies measuring up to IS inches.
Jtocky areas in llld around the lake
vide good opportunities to take
gemouth bass.
· Ohio River
In the Greenup Pool, anglers are
mainly catching channel and flat!lead catfiSh on chicken livers and
minnows fished near the boaom. .
' In the Meldahl tail water within
700 yards of the dam, anglers are
using crank baits and Rapalas to
lake smallmoutll bass ive"'lling 12
\0 18 If}. ioches. EarlY: morning or
evening is the best t1me to take
hybrid striped bass up to 21 mches:
!; In the Markland 1'6ol" near Ciocinnali, nigbt crawlers and spinhers are being cast ~d ~e confluencc: of tile Great ~~ R1ver
for white bass avcragmg 10 to 13
inches. Use chicken l~vers to take
flathead catfish llld stnped bass.
:
Ceatral
·
. , OAKTHORPE LAK;E - . ~Y
· of the largemouth bass m th1s Fwrfield County lake average 14 to 20
inches and offer good f1shmg
Opportunities to the shore angler.
;:Fish with minnows, crayfish or
1':!bber worms near the deep drop.offs along the western side of the
~ate. Crappies and sunfish also
~ffer good fishing opportunities.

1985 NISSAN MAXIMA----•--·--..$3707 $89 .

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

4
:~
7

o.t1tn4 12, 00.,.0 II
r.... "- OHtamia 4 &lt;Jo inn.&gt;

j]1l'"'

license.)

'was awarded $27.3 millY?n in dam- action llld apologizes for~
ages last year by a U.S. Judge. The ry comments about the federation.
IAAF rejects the jurisdiction of the Reynold&amp;, who won the 400 meters
coun and refuses to recognize the at the world indoor championships
judgment or pay Reynolds any in TIXOilto in Man:h, has refused to
money.
do so.
The IAAF has uu""""""' to sus ·
Under the IAAF charter, an ath ·
~Reynolds again or sue him for tete can be suspended for. "bringibel unless be drops hfs le1a1 'ingthesportintodisrqlute."

Loaded!Loadedl

.,

(Juae 5 &amp; 6 are Free Fishing
Days in Ohio when Ohio resljlenl~ may riSh wilhout a riSbiDg

1986 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC BROUGHAM••$4867 $127

BUFFALO BILLS: Siancd PhU

T.-oii,Mi
or2
Mil.-9,8-3
-7.NootY•U

J:-.',._., 6-1)

~esources:

.

Silver, 4 Dr., auto., air, loaded.

No-lF_I._

Frlday•a scorea

CllllwiU

. · COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - '
Here is the weekly fishing report as
provided .by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio DeJiartment of N81Wl11

Brewers !1, Orioles 3
Kevin Reimer bit the fii'St grand
slam of his Career, and Milwaukee
roughed up ace Mike Mussina to
win in Baltimore. The Brewers
stopped a three-game losing streak
and sent the Orioles to their seventh loss in 10 games.
Jaime Navarro (2-3) improved
to 8-1 lifetime against the Orioles.
Mike Mussina (5-2), who had won
five straight decisions, lasted only
three innings, matching his shortest
outing in S3 starts.

.

•

Walleyes, largemouths, bluegdls
abundant at Wellston reservoir

1991.

1'986 CHRYSLER LEBARON GTS--·----52121

College
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
NCAA accused the University of
Pittsburgh of IS recruiting violatims in rontb&amp;ll and one in basket·
ball, and the Big East school
planned to Coopeiate wi\h investigators.
.
Athletic director Oval Jaynes
said 1S violations against the foot·
baD prognun were self-reported by
Pitt last May, some u violations
llld others as poasible violations.
The school said staff members
under former COiich Mike Goafried
llld former athletic director Edward
Bozik bro1re NCAA rules by giving
players money, meals llld clothing
llld giving recruits limousine rides
and deiWle hotel rooms.

FOOibllll

I.S

_,
1

CUI1II!IAND 10, Doaoit,

Tbq played Sacurday

Ohio fishing report

Low miles. Loadedl Loaded I

briefs

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

Outdoors

pinch hitttr 81 the SkyDome.
· Morris (2-4) bad been out with
tendinitis in his shoulder. He gave
up two runs on· five hits ill seven ·
innings, StruCk OUI five and Walked
none. Jim Deshaies (S-3) was the
'loser.
'
Royals 2, Mariaers 1 1
•
Phil Hiatt hit a two-run homer in
the seventll inning, Jllllying Kansas
City over visiting Seanle.
Hiatt bit his founh home run
after Hatvey Pulliam led off by
reaching on third baseman Mike
Blowers' error.
·
Randy Johnson (6-3) had
pitched 20 straight scoreless
innings until Hiatt's homer. In
Johnson's last start, he took a nohitter into the ninth at Oalcland.
· Chris Haney (1-0), who bea!
Johnson with a one-hiuer last Sept.
22, gave up six hits in 7 2/3
innings. Tom Gordon pitched a bit·
less ninth for his first save since

.

exror by Jones as Kent eliminated
Western MicbiJillll.
Ken Reines (0-1), the loser in
relief, intentionally walked two
batters in the ninth to load the
bases. The lead runner was out at
ho me on a fielder's choice and
Beeney scored the winning run
from"sec:ond when Jo.nes' thro~ to
first for a double play went Into
field.Farson (2-0), wbo gave
right
Bryan
. .
one hit in I 1/3 hitless mnmgs
0 relid'ifo:t the win.
· Bill ohr had a two-run homer
in the sixth for Western uu.hl-".
.._ _ .

NATIONAL LEAGUE

1'11-... . .. . . ...

into the eighth, and A's manager
. Paul Sorrento's sacrifice fly.
Tony La Rossa was ready to give
Detroit leads the majors with . Hendenon the rest of the night off.
266 runs scored, an average of 6.6S
"Tony told me after the seventh
per ~e.
.
.
inning, 'If we don't score, I'm
' You need as· many runs as you going to take you out,''' Henderson
can, because the potential is always said. "All the time, I'm slUing in
there with that offense," Cleveland here, just sitting baclc, waiting 10'
manager Mike Hargrove said. "It's see what is going to happen. (La
just sitting there, peiCOlating."
Russa) then told me, 'Hey, you
On a big night of home nms and come bac1c out here, you might get
homecomings in the American tohiL'"
League, Oakland edged Chicago
Raaaen 6, Aaaels 4
12-11, Texas tolllled California 6-4
Juan Gonzalez hit his second
in 10 innings, "Boston beat New two-run homer of the game with
York 7-2, Toronto defeated Min- two outs in the lOth inning, and
nesota 11-2, Kansas City stopped Texas defeated visiting California
Seattle 2-1 and Milwaukee beat
Gonzalez is tied with Alben
Baltimore !1-3.
. Belle for the major league lead
A's 1~, Wblie SoxlJ
with 14 home "1!11· He had his 11th
The game was over for Rickey multi-homer }lame, setting a
Henderson and the &lt;&gt;akland Athlet- Rangers record.
ics. AI least, it sure looked that
· Dean Palmer hit his 13th home
way.
run for Texas. Tom Henke (4-1)
"I'm sitting in here in the club- was the wimer.
house with my shoes off because I
Red Sox 7, Yllllkeesl
was out, •' Henderso'n said. • 'If
wade Boggs went 4 for 4, but
something happened, tllough, the Boston 'spoiled his return to Fenmanager said, just stay around and way Park by beating New York.
I'll let you hit"
John Dopson (3-2) held New
Not only did Henderson wind York to one run in seven innings.
up hitting again, he wound up win- He fanned eight, twice escaping
ning the game.
bases-loaded jams with strikeouts.
Henderson hit a three-run homer
Blue Jayall, Twins l
in the eighth inning, then hit a twoJack Morris won in his return
run triple and scored in the ninth, from the disabled list llld Toronto .
rallying the Athletics over lhe hit four bome runs to beat MinChicago White Sox 12-11 Friday nesota.
night at Comiskey Pad:.
Darnell Coles hit a three-run
The White Sox led 10·4 going homer, the first by a Blue Jays
,

::7~~==:=~ · IAAF·at odds .with Reynolds, Krabbe, Ngugi

- • Baseball • Tt.rn

In ongoingjeud,

OrtiZ and another in the seventh on

~ May 23, 1993

•

Belle, Treadway push Indians ·to 10-5 triumph over Tigers
Even when we get belt, we score
five nms." Detroit's Tony Pltillips
said FridaZ,::~ht after the Tigers
fell shan,
' g to the Indians 10.

--

/

'

SEE RICK
TOM MlllfttAn,
GUY SAYRE oa TICER SURE

%·80

64·~673

�OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

May23,1993

•

,Farm/llusiness

Birdhouse built as memorial to veterans largest on planet

unique, something i~volving lar'est birdhousilin the country.
ments. ;,I wanred to get something
wildlife.
· 'It was built as a monument to involved that's living. L!~~.~~
So on the east shore of Lake those wbo served and died in Viet- could do that by using buUJJUU&gt;&lt;;O. : ·
Ca!ca•ieu they eieCied a 120.foot- nam," says Lake Cllarles business- On the site."
tall condominium for purple mar- man Gene Dolan, one of those who · What resulted was a 120-foot
tins, which officials believe is the led the effort to build the tower and talltowec of S1ee1 rods, similar to a
complete a latefront part around it. television broadcasting antenna, •
"It was originally erected right made from a surplus Air Force :
after the Tet offeriJive" in 1968.
radar ante1Ul8.
At the time, nothing involving
Hanging from the tower's arms
Vietnam was popular.
are 46 castles with a total of 1,116
"It was so unpopular to build a nesting compartments for purple
· By BIIJ. SCHULZ
- Like most owls; spotted owls do
monument
to those people that we martins.
Aasocialed Press Writer
not build nests. They use the tops
decided
to
build something
During the five months they are ·,
If there's one animal causing of brok;en trees or cavities in the
un~ue."
Dolan
says.
in
town the martins provide a flymore commotion than any other in trunks of diseaSNI trees as places to
•
There
are
plenty
of
shafts
of
ing
circus, particularly in the
the United States these days, it's lay their eggs. They roost in '!Ill
steel,"
·
h
e
says
of
II!
any
monuevening
as they soar over the lake. :
the northern spotted owl.
·
trees to huntoc seek warm sunshme
. It's a creature that doesn't orcoolshade.
·
•
understand it's the centerpiece of a
The birds pte:( on rodents, such
feud between loggers and conser- as ffying squurels •. rat~ and
vationists about the future of the · gophers, but also eat birds, msects
old-growth forests of the Pacific and reptiles.
northwest it calls home.
Spotted owls mate for life. The
The nonhero spotted owl is a female lays her eggs in late Match
medium-sized owl, chocolate or early April. Usually she lays two
brown wilh white spots on its body or three pure white eggs which
feathers and white bars on its tail. It hatch in about 30 days.
has dark eyes surrounded by iawny
The male does most of the huntfacial disks.
ing, bringing prey home to the
.Its preferred neighborhood is female who tears 11 up and feeds
Congratulations to
douglas fll or mixed fll and pine the young.
.
.
forests of trees 200 or more years .
It is at this time when owls are
LARRY THAXTON •.
old. It lives in these forests from · most vulnerable. Few animals prey
southern British Columbia, Cana· on adult spo~ owl.s, but the ~~
He is Salesman of
da, south to San Francisco Bay. In homed owl1s considered a maJor
some of those areas it is rare. .
predator of the young.
·
the Month of April
It uses trees of different sizes
The young owls spend the sumand different ages foc different pur- mer practicing to be grownups and
at Gene Johnson
poses.
by September or October they are
Chevroletoff on their own.
By BILL SCHULZ
.
I:.AKE CHARLES, LA. (AP)When the people of Lake Charles,
.La., decided to erect a monument
to their Vietnam veterans, they
decided they wanted something

·

Section·D
May 23,1993

Austin Powder donation aids SIFE
in trip to national
contest
this week
.
.

Spotted owl .centerpiece of feud
between loggers, conservationists

WHAT IS IT? ..;. Harry Bailey Cll Pomeroy found this dead fish
whidl resembles a smaU shark Ia the Ohio River. Bailey said the fish
was more than three feet long and weighed approximately 15 to 20

In the Open
By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel $taft

Beware of hitchhiking sharks

Don't be afraid of the water.
office, District 7A, Ponsmouth, at
Most of us have heard occasion- 1-353-766&amp;.
al advisories cautioning people to
avoid eating certain fish species
from the Ohio River, but what if
the fish want to eat the people?
On April 15, Harry Bailey of
Pomeroy found '!hat ~ ·!0 be
small sand shark m the Ohio River.
PLANT il3
KANAUGA,
The fish, whi.ch was dead,
UPPER RT. 7, JUST PAST BURLILE OIL
washed up by his dock on tile river
near Minersville where it was spot·
ted by his son.
· Bailey said the fish was more
than three feet long and weighed
approximately IS to 20 pounds.
"I've never seen anything like
it," he said.
However, Bailey said the fish
"We Denver and Spread Llaaemne"
resembled sand sharks he has seen
in Florida.
Bailey showed Meigs County
•Mason Sand
•Top Soil
Game Protector Keith Wood a photograph of the suspected shark.
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
Wood, in tum, showed it to several
•Pit Run
•Shredded
other ofricers who said "it looks
like a sharL"
•Drainage Gravel . Top Soil
Wood speculated the shark may
have "hitchhiked" its way up the
• •Pea Gravel
•Straw
Mississippi and Ohio rivers.
Now I don't know exactly hoW
•Drainage Tile
a fish hitchhikes, but I do realize
•Culvert Tiie (all sizes up to 5")
some animals can be carried from
place to place in water used as bal•Block and Mortar Mix
last.According to Wood, th'IS u.
·probably not the fust time that 1M!
animal has hitchhiked its way

Congratulations,
· Larry Thaxton

LETART CORPORATION BIIKBDPICY
OH.

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

~\ 614-221~8
~.J..-'J..\L. W. GNNAMO .
ArrORNEY AT lAW
8 E1at aro.ct strwt,
Sulte800
Columbus, Ohio
11001110LAW

(1-1100 811 0529)

for purchasing vehicles ·from him last month.
Gene Johnson Chev.·Oids. offers an excellent
selection of new , Chevrolet..Oidsmoblles and
previously owned cars, trucks and mini vans
plus convenient financing and award-winning
service after the sale

S14,99s
Stk. 1475

3.8 V6 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., AM/FM stereo · cassette, air
cond .• bucket seets with console floor

1.o·w

j~

P. driver seat, rear defroster, extra
cle~n.

low miles.

WAS
$14,885
Stk. 1474

••••
1113 FORD tEMPO GL 4 DR.
4 cyl. eng., P. steer., P. brakes,
auto. trans., AM/FM stereo
cassette, air cond., lilt &amp; cruise, P.
windows &amp; P.locks, P. driver seat,
rear defrost,' 9',000 miles. Extra
clean. Stk. 179
WAS
$11 ,495IPICIII.

1•1 •mcK RIIAL 4 DR.
eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., AMIFM stereo, air cond.,
tilt &amp;
....
cruise, P. windows and P. door locks,
lour-wheel disc brakes, rear
defroster, low mites. Extra clean.

70Pinelt.

$11,995
Stk. t478A

lOW
6 cyl. engine, power steering,
power brakes, auto. trans., air
cond., AM/FM stereo cassette,
speed control, rear defroster, lull
wheel covers, good tires. ,
WAS
.

1

S2,D9s IPICIAL 8

Brlftlln ,.our belt deal on a New Car or Truck aaad we
will tr,- to ateet or, Beat the DeaL
POR A COOD DEAr...
SEE BOB ROSS or .JACK ROUSH
' Our Service Department Ia Open Mon.-Fri. a.s; Sat. a.12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. a.s; Sal a.12

--~

- , ........

--

,,

-

.. ·'-·'-,

:lMiddleport. Martech Is a steel fabrication and weldiog busloess.
:!Plans caD for its apaosloo into commercial and resldeotial plumb~lng and a wholesale piumblnasupply business. Here Marshall's
:.•son, Bob, who Is employed with the company tor the summer and
,. wiD return to c:olle!Je In the tal~ works on a piece of equipment.
.

Martech Industries sets
~p shop in Middleport
Tlmes·Sentlnel Statr
"
• MIDDLEPORT- A former resiHent of the Bend ~ who left here
for a job in the city about five years
ago has returned and opened up
~op in Middlepon.
'• Manech Industries, owned and
~pera~ by Bill Marshall, estabJished a Sleel fabrication and weld·
1ng shop ncar Chicago several
years ~o. He is now in the process
l!f movmg that business to the foriber Cwr Plumbing ~uilding on
~outh Second Avenue in Middle.I

Rockport" walking shoes get you off to a fast start. They
have the exclusive Walk Support ~tern" to stabilize,
energize, and support every step. Plus, they're lightweight,
comiJrtable, and ready to go.
Rockport~ You should be in our shoes:"

NEWEST • Bill Marshall Is In the process
~ or moving his com)1811y, Martecb Industries, located ill Chicago to

•

-

pon.
~

.

Marshall says he has job con&amp;acts from numerous states and
)wiD be manufacturing·and shipping
producll from his Middlepon shop
¥.ound the oountry.
He also is hoping to capture a
. part of the local market. His
promise Is work of high quality at
the riah~ price.
t In addition to fabrication and
welding, Marshall Is movlna Into
iommordal and residential plambJng. Besides actually offerina the
fCTVlces, he plans to go Into whole·
tale 1Upply diltrlbutlon sometime

In tile._ future.

1 After gelling his business eatab-

..bed here, Manhall uys that he
to.put in cquipmeDliD 11111111·
Jlc~ antifreeZe llld wladlllleld
Yi&amp;Shin&amp; fluid. He plans nadonal

distribution of those produc~ from
h
ere.
Recognizing the necessity of
supporting the local economy, the
Manech owner says that anything
he can purchase 'here, he will,
because his interest is in bringing
growth to his home area.
·Marshall worked for Kaiser
Aluminum for 18 years before
moving on to Binningham Steel in
Chicaao. From lhece he went with
a construction company, and then
struck out on his own in ·a ''pickup
truck with some welding equipment in the back". That lead to the
formation of Manech Industries,
Marshall said.
Most of the employees at his
Chicago business came from the
Mei~Mason area. Many left their
fam · bile while they went there
to work. Marshall's plan Is to bring
thole employees back to their families. ·
He currently has two full-time
indlhree part·time workers In the
Middleport opcndon. Next~ he
hope110 have the six or eight left in
Clilcaao back in the Bend area as
thai pllm clOIOS down.
Marshall Is concerned about
economic development here and
· hopeiiO help with programs ICIIed .
to Mlilt Ill! all bulmessea sncf bring
in new indullriel.
·
·
.
. •

100% AWARD WINNERS- These business representatives accepted 100% Awards In
rec~~g~~itlon of their businesses' contributioos to
worker safety at Tuesday night's Industrial
Safety Awards Banquet al the Holiday Inn in
Kanauga. In the front row are (L-R) Joe Leach
(Gallia County Highway Department), Joy Nickels (Carl's Shoe Store), Phyllis Mason (University of Rio Grande), URG president Barry M.
Dorsey, Loretta McDade (Wiseman Real Estate)

and Larry Boyer (GaUipolis Daily Tribune). Ia
the back row are Ponney Cisco (Buckeye Hills
Career Center), Larry Walen (Bureau of Work·
ers' Compensation), Ted Adams (Holzer Clinic),
Matt Willis (WiUis Funeral Home), Andy Traw·
ick (Ohio Power-Gavin Plant), Roy Garey
(Comfort Air), Ron McDade (Columbus South·
ern Power), Heny Hatfield (Columbia Gas) aDd
Fred Staley (Sparkle Supply).

, AMONG SPECIAL AWARD WINNERS - Barry M. Dorsey
(left), president of the Univenlty of Rio Grande, accepts a special
award from Jay Caldwell, president or the Gallla County Chamber
of Commerce, in recognltioa of the University's operating for
3,775,200 boors without a lost-lime injury from Feb. 3, 1983 to Dec.
31,1992, at the Industrial Safety Awards Banquet TueSday night at
the Holiday Inn in Kanauga. Also winning special awards for multiple years without a lost-time accident were Ohio Power Cq.
(1,460,435 hours from Oct. 26, 1990 to Oct.l6, 1992) and Buckeye
Hills Career.Center (512,760 hou:-s from April IJ, 1989 to Dec. 31,
1992).

',l

~ By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

V6

WALK INfO
ROCKPORT® FI1NESS
HEADQUARTERS.

HSk\f.Mk~~~~

HOLZER CLINIC TEAM • Front • Mary Bays. Second row Patti Bartoa, Uocla Cox .Third row • Dottle &lt;&gt;rabtree, Edle Legg,
Jane Hess and Sharon Cuadllf. Fourth row • Mary Roush, Kathy
Nibert Marilyn Smith aodVIi'gloia Burke. Plfth row • Lynn Matheney, Carol McDaulel and Mary Kropka. Not pictured • Bev Dillon aDd Barb HopkiDS.

'II,

WAS

oFNe [)emon8tration

GALLIPOLIS - The IS Medical
Transcriptionist at Holzer Clinic
are celebrating Medical Transcriptionist Week. This week recognizes
medical language specialist as
imponant members of the health
care team.
The Holzer Clinic team is all
female with an accumulated 262
years of experience. One member
of the team - Virginia Burke - .
has 53 years e~perience as a Transcriptionist
Working for more than 70 physicians and 20 other professionals, io
23 specialties, these ladies transcribed over three million lines in
1992. They averaged in excess of
180 lines per hour. In the fustlhree
months of 1993 they are on target
for a record year, with more than '
700,000 lines transcribed.
Their work includes outpatient
clinic and progress notes; radiology
reports for Magnetic Resonance
Imagery (MRI), X-ray, Ultrasound,
Mammography; Pathology repons;
and general correspondence. Even
with the volume they have, the
medical transcriptionists' !?ride
themselves in having the fimshed
transcription completed with in 48
hours.
Priority transcription is completed immediately. "We have a
great team of transcriptionists,"
~d Mary Kropka, med1cal records
manager. "They are hard working,
dedicated and very easy to work
with." Members of the team along
· with years of experience are: Patricia Barton,2(); Mary Bays, 24; Virginia Burke, 53; Linda Cox, 9;
Dorothy Crabtree, 33; Sharon Cun·duff, 3; Beverly Dillon, 20; Jane
Hess, 16; Barbara Hopkins, S;
Edith Legg, 13; Patricia Matheney,
2; Carol McDaniel, 22; Kathy Niben, 20; Mary Rolish, 20: and, Marilyn Smith, 1.

',.'

• ••

· shift, tilt &amp; cruise, P. windows &amp; locks,

Get Out &amp; Go!

oAechargelble Baltariea
o[)IIIIU 1tbl11 for Car

'

V6 engine, P. steering, P. brakes,
auto. trans., air cond., AM/FM
stereo cassette, tilt and cruise, P.
windows &amp; locks, rear defroster,
extra clean. Like new, low miles.
WAS

tonmouth", was found near Gallipolis. He pointed out that the
water mocassin is a species not
native to this area.
First a poisonous water snake
and now a shark?

olndaOrfOutdoor Use

.Medical transcriptionist
important part of Holzer Clinic

1111 FORD -rAURDS IlL 4 DR.

Wood recalled several years ago

--

ldent and director or maautacturlng for Austin
Powder, made the donation to SIFE members
Becky Winebrenaer and Chuck Moore, while .
Larry MtCorkle, far .right, of Austin Powder
observed.

jects," Winebrenner said. "While
"We see SIFE and the American
we recognize that working AmeriFree
Enterprise and Leadership
can taxpayers are tired of rising Conference
as· strongiy tpositive
taxes, we are also concerned with factors helping
to influen~ young
the associared losses of individual people to take advantage
of Ameri·freedom, dignity and libeny."
ca•
s
opportunities,"
.
"We are also working with area . "Austin Powder is .proudheto said
hllJK
schools to help convince students the University of Rio Grande S
to stay in school," added Chuck · team,
We are fonunate to have the
MOore, a second-year team mem- Rio Grande
College
ber. "We're w!Wking to reduce the and universityCommunity
in
our
region
makdropout rate, and to inform students ing it possible for our high school
and parents how to go to college graduates to attend college nearby
even if they think they can't afford and
at very low cost."
to go. Our team worked with VinMoore and Wioebrelinez will be ·
· ton County Junior High School and
joined
by eight other team memwe plan to continue that work in bers, including
Nancy Arnold,
the future."
David
Banks,
Lisa
David
Sam Hatley, vice president and Fernbacher, Greg Brown,
Hargett,
Eric
director of manufacturing for
Mori
and
Eric
Leach,
Masonori
Austin Powder, congratulated the
team on its suce:ess in the regionals. Toole, president. ·

'

Larry would like to thank all of his customers

that a water mocassin, a poisonous
snake commonly known as a "cot-

While you boaters look out for
snakes and sharks. how about keeping an eye out for your lifejackets.
· The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources' Watercraft Divisi!Jn
suggests you inspect your boat
before each trip to ensure the
required safety equipment is on
board. In addition, ODNR recommends you know how to use your
safety equipment and let passengers know where safety items are
stmd.
.
The ODNR also caut1ons all
about boating at night. If you plan
to operate your boat at night, y~u
should remember that the J;Kla~ 1s
required to have proper naVlgauon
lights. The kind of lights depends
on the type and size boat you are
opttating.
Be sure check on what lights are
needed on your boat before going
out at nighl Also, check to make
sure they are working properly you may want to carry e~tra bulbs
and fuses 10 make sure you don't
miss any · sharks or water
mocassins.
For more boating information, ·
contact' the ODNR Watercraft

•·' SIFE DON~TION- Austin Powder Co.,
Mc4rthur, donated to the l!alverslty of Rio
~rande SIFE team to help expeoses for its trip
to the SIFE national competition this week in •
Kansas City, Mo. Sam Hatley, far left, vice pres-

Oldsmobile.

north.

Biltlry PoWered Sc~oter

RIO GRANDE - For the second oonsecutive year, Austin Powder Co.'s Red Diamond plant at
McAnhur is helping the Uni.,.ersity
of Rio Grande Students in Free
Enterprise (SIFE) team fund its trip
for national competition in Kansas
City, Mo.
The SIFE chapter qualified as a
finalist in the regional competition
April 13 in Atlanta, Ga..The team
leaves today for the nationals,
which open Monday.
Teams throughout the nation
have been generating awareness of
deficit spending and the high cost
of the natjonal debt, four-year SIFE
team member Becky Winebrenner
said.
"Our. presentation in Kansas
City will include our 'taxpayer be
angry' and 'cut spending first' pro:

MILLIE MIDIOFF

Midkiff accepts

new position
POMEROY - MiUie Midkiff has
accepted the position of retail loan
specialist and loan officer at Bank
One's main office in Athens.
She will be responsible for
VISA and Overdraft protection line
of credit applications and for providing loan suppon 10 the indirect
loan department and the .Athens

offlc6&amp;.

.

PreviiJillly a loan offiCer and comanager or the Pomeroy branch,
Midkiff has been with the bank for
26 years.
She is a 1967 graduate of
Pomeroy Hiah School and a graduate of the Oliio School of Banking
where she won an award for her
second year project.
She Jaidel Iii the Pomeroy area
wilh her husband Cecil, and children, Courtney. 18, and Canon, 11'

.

'

.

t

CARING FOR CONSERVATION- Mead W!)Odlnds, Soil
and Water Coa.-vatioa DlstJ lets, and the Ohio VaHey Resource
Conservalloo aod Development ConneD distributed 9,000 "Show
You Care'' CGaMrVatlon IICtivlty.llootJets to·aU GaiUa County first
&amp;nden. Last ;,ear 8,000 lloatfetl were distrlbuled. ShOWD In the
photo, frGm left, ire Skip Rd•inscer, RC&amp;:D coordioator; Eloise .
Eallert, RC&amp;:D Couadl FortltrJ Committee; and Wayne Lash- . '
brook, Meld Woodlaadl. AU SCS pr01rama aad aervlcea are ·
otrered on lllCIIIdllcaUalulllrJ Hill wltlloal reprd to race, color,
aatlooal orJain, reUatoa, NX, qe, marital 81111 or halldlcap. ,

NEW MANAGER- Jack
and Linda Claxtoo of Athas,
owners of Memory Gardeos,
recently named Linda Kirby as
general maoagor of the Ohio Val·
ley aad Meigs County memory
Gardens. Kirby, who Is fro•
Parkersburg, W.Va., bas prni·
ous management experience Ia
cemetery management aad ...
been honored for top sales in
West Virginia. Sbe also has family service experience in the cemetery industry. Kirby . can be
reached at 446-9298 (Ohio Val·
· ley) or 992-7440 (Melp Cllunty).

�.

..

'

May 23, 1993PubliC Notice
locked on n aano!MIIon,..

· Public Notice
ell-lOr of the Ohio
.,.,..,._. of Tra...,-.
lion, Columbuo, Ohio, ... 111

=Nollie,

,.......

.

Plana and IF 1 llcaUona
In the Dopaof T..naportation aiod the
OIWIJft file

Rate

Words

Days
I

15
15
15
15
15

3
6.

10
Monthly

oflloa of the Dlatrlct Dapu1y

Over 15 Words

$ .20
$ .30

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

21- BwiDe~l Opportunity
22- Moaey 1o Loaa
23- Prof. .ioaal SenN:ea

$ .42

$13.00
$1.30/day

$ .60
$.05 / day

57-

MwiulliUitrumerill
58- Fruiu &amp; V""tahleo
59-- For Sale or Trade

I \!;\! "'i 1'1'111"'
,\ I I\ I ~ II tl 1,
'I" ...

32- Mo~ile Homc.a for Sale
33-- Fum• for Sale
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
34- Blllina• Buildil)fl
charged for each day as separate ads.
Js- Loto &amp; A&lt;..a«e
,--:::,..------1 36- Real Eo1a1e Wooled

Waatecho Buy

Lh•at.oek
Hay &amp; Gr;in
Soed &amp; Fertiliser

Hl\1"\1&gt;

11- Help Wanted
12- Situalioru Wanled
13- lnauranee
14--: Bwioeu Training
1~ Schoola &amp; I n..truction
,,.:._ Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Milcellaoeou.~
Ill- Wanted To Do

4- Giveaway
5- Happy Ado
6- Loat and Found
7- LNt and Found
II- Public Sale &amp;
Auelioa.

9- Wanted 10 Buy

Truck• fol' Sale

42- Mobile Ho111• for Rent.

Vu" A 4 WD'•

43- Farm• for Rent
44- Aput1111:n1 for Rent
45- FuraMbed. Room•
46- Space for Re; t
47- Wanted to Rent
48-- EqWpment for Rent
49- r or Lei.te .
51- Ho..,.bold Good.
52- Sp&lt;&gt;rlia« Good.
&amp;3-Anliq54- Mi1c. Mercb.ndile·
55- Buildi"' SuppU..

74-MoiDreyeleo
75-- Boatl &amp; Moton for Sale

76-: AulD Porto &amp; A«·euoriul
77-- AulD Repair

Ca•piat EquipJHol

~ Cea.eral Haulins

86--o Moi.Ue Home Repair
87- Upboblery

PubliC Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
REQUEST FOR BOND
PERMIT NUMBER
[).()201
MINING YEAR: Ava
DATE ISSUED: 11130183
Crown City Mining lncor·
poraled Ia requ .. ting a
Phase II bond releaae lor
8.4 acrea affected by the
aloremenlioned coal .mine
and roclamallon permit
locatad in Soclion 28,
Gu.yan Townohlp, Galllo
County. Reaolll ng and
Mtabliahment of vagalation
wao completed in Sap·
!amber 111113 in accordance
with the approved reclam·
ation plan. $10,500.00 bond
it on depoalt, of which
$7,350.00 Ia aough I to be
raleaaod. Written Ob·
lactiona, com menlo, or
requeale lor a bond releaaa
conference may be
aubmitted to lhe Chief of

section ATH-13·4.25 on
State Route 13 and other
various routea and aocUona
by upgrading signa and
pavement marking at
railroad cro ..ln!P.
.
Bidding 11
Bidding on thia project Ia
r•trlcted to Disadvantaged
Bualneaa Enterprlaea
(DBEa} certified u DBEa In
accordance wllh the Sur·
Ieee Tranaportation Unllorm
Relocation Aaalatance Acl
o119B7, and 41 CFR, Port 23
and qualified to bid with
ODOT under Chapter 5525
of tho Ohio Reviaed Code.
The Ohio Deparlmtlnt of
Tranaportation hereby noti·
lies all bidders thai It will
allirmativaly lnaura than In
any contract entered Into
pursuant to thla advar·
tiaemen~ minority business
enterpriaea will be aHorded
lull opportunity to submit

objectiana or requesla for
bond releae conferences

muat be filed wilh the Chief
within 30 claya alter the last
dale of thia publication.
MAY 9, 16, 23, 1993
'--------r·
Public Notice

1.--_:::..:.:......:..:...;..;__

.lhe Oivi.ion of Reclamation,

Building H, Fountain
Square, Columbua, Ohio
43224, Alln: Terri HuHord, In
accordance with paragraph

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
May 7, 1993
Contract Sa!Mlagal Copy
No. 11$-510
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
STPGOOOP (32}
NHG-00011 (31)
Sealod Prapo..la will be
received ot the office of tho
director of the Ohio
Deparlment of Tr.,a-

portlltion, ·eotum~•, Ohio,

until 10:00 a.m. T....m.y,
June 8, 1993 lor im·
provamanta in: Athena,
Gallia, Hocking, Mei.t!•·

tiea,

O~io

for improving

bide in reaponae to thla

invitation and will not be
diacriminated agalnal on.
the grounda of race, color,

DlraciOr.

J.,.Y Wray
alar Of Tranoportallon
!lay 23,30, 1993
Dll

Public Notice
ATIEHTION: ALL VINTON
WATEA CUSTOMERS
.Gallla ~ly llllrel w..
Mr Aaaoc. It teldng o- tha
VInton. Wator Syatem, aa of
June 20, 111113.
The following It an edvloo,Y on Gallla County Rural
Water'a policy for !oandllng
ol past due accounts.
1. II you racalva • Final
Notice on an occounl you
have 5 doya lrom the date of
lha notloalo either aanla the
accounl or mob mang•
manta to aaltla the - n l .
2. Alldellnquanlaccounle
mual be paid by 4:00 p.m. ol
the 5th day.
3. Any accounl not porld
will be· locked and • $25.00
reconnactlon lea mual be
paid before ..vice Ia ,..
ato red.
4. No paymanlo received
all8r4:00 p.m. ollha day prior
to acheduled lock off, will
kaap lha accounl from baing

thlo projacl hava bean
predetermined •• required
by law and are sat forth In
the bid proposal. "The d!lla
. aet lor completion of this
work ahall be sat forth In
the bidding propoal."
Plana 1111d apeclllcatlona
are on file In the
Departmeni of Trana·
portatlon and tha oftlca of
the Dlatrict Deputy Direclor.
. JERRY WRAY
Director of Tranaportrotion
MAY 16, 23, 1993
_.
PubliC Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF

TRA~PORTATION

Columbua, Ohio
May 14, 111113
Conlract Sella Legit! Copy
No.IWSO

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Seolod propoaala wll be
recallled at lha olftoa of the

ACROSI
·1 Corky pn
"Murphy Brown"
6 Baker's products
11 Mine excavation
16 Acc:umulale
'21 Uncanny
22 City In Florida
23 Shoshonean
Indians
24 Plaster of 25 Wooden vessel
26 Fnidrlc - ·
28 Bivalve mollusks
30 "Raising-"
32 Liquid meaa.
33 Yea, to Carlos
· 34 Female d35 Female Sheep
36 Ache
37 The Lion
38 Decimal base
40 Grates
42 Yellow ocher
43 Transported
wllh delight
44 Cavil
45 Be in debt
47 Public

66 Near ·

COLLEGE GRADS SAVE AN
NEW 1993 'DODGE DAKOTA .

Pi. YMOUTH SUNDANCE

Taylor
Discount . · 492

List ......... $9152
TaylOr
Olscounl , .. . . ... · 375
Rebate ...... · 1000

r:.t-'-~

5

Sport,
r, cassette ,
cast wheels, sliding
window , tach.

NEW 1993

CHRYSLER LeBARON

NEW 1993
DODGE SPIRIT

Rebate .· 500

SALE
Automatic, air, till ,
cruise, cassette.
List .. , ..... $14 ,137
Taylor
Olseeunt . . , . ... · 1,138
Rebate ... , . . · 1,000

10,999

5

NEW 1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER
List. .. $1 7 ,760

7,777

Taylor
Dlscounl· 1,561
Rebate . · 700

V6, automatic, air . cas·
sette. tilt . cruise, luggage
rack , 7 passenger .

~,...,&lt;c.

SALE

15,499

5

$11 ,999

r:.t-'-&lt;c.
.,

s12,999

~

anti 75 lnkl; lhatJOe

North 4 chalno lo WilliaM
Undaay'a (nor or lann..y)

.......

67 Ordinance
6~ Erased: prinllng
70 Warmlh
71 Youngster
72 Limb
74 Locations
76 River In Scolland
77 Dlfflcull
78 DiminiSh
79 Victorious
82 Place oppoSite
84 Directed al target
85 War god
86 Alp

88 Follows Aug.
89 Land maaiure
90 Roam ,
92 London's river
94 Unnecessarily
98 Detest
99 Search tor
100 Oaneon or Koppel
102 Showers of
frozen crystals
t03 Alao
104 Fed. agcy.
105 Mast
106 Homage
108 Depot: abbr.
109 Hypothetical
!orca
110 Bond nemesis
111 PerceiVI! by touch
112 Funny picture
114 Hurricane center
116 Peer Gynt's
·
mother
117 Followed
119 Beer Ingredient
120 Piece tor two
122 Hebrew prophet
124 Dulch - disease
125 Reveal
126 Places lqr
worsl)lp
128 Title o1 respect
129 .. _ ol the
Ce!ltury"
131 Rachel or Sell
132 Simian
133 Melba135 Circle part
138 Informer
139 Flying mammals
140 Fleur-de- 141 Rubber tr86
142 Malden loved by
Zeus
143 Sliver symbol
144 "- Side Story"
145 Downy duck
147 More compelent
149 Guido's high note
150 Earn
152 Rlverb1111k
154 Pie variety
156 Monsters
158 Omnl,lor one
159 African antelope
. ' 180 Choral

=i

REVDLUnONARY
NEW 1994
CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

I*I•Umt

1 Sumptuous' meal
2 Eagle's nest
3 lrrltete
4 Agave plant
5 Dress border
6 Muscular
7 Receives wllh
favor
SCheer
9 Louise ID
10,Cul de11 Shoulder wrap
12 Heavy volume
13 Harvest goddess
14 "Magnum, -'' ·

15 "The Greal -"
16 Wash cycle
17 Sunburn
18 Alternative word
19 More mature
20 Bar legally
27 Dentists' org.
29 Hawaiian wreath&amp;
3 1 River laland
36- Springs ·
37 Tibetan priest
39 Memorandum
40Lease ·
41 Seasoning
42 Leaked lhrough
43 Foray
44 Collection ot
tents
46 You arid I
48 Rullllan weight
49 Winter vehicle
50 Stop
51 Apportioned
52 Go In
53 Spring flowers
55 Slumbers
56 Lifeless
57 ClasSify
58 FiniShed
61 AwiiShlng
63 Enlreaty
64 AI this place
66 "Slormy -"
. 10 Hurries
71 Mosl docile
73 N.J.74 Plnlali duck
75- preview

115 "-of Eden"

116 Sublle emanallon
118 Chair
119 Damages
121 Civil dlaorder
123 Note ol scale
125 Conflict
126 Church part
127 Ught 15th·
c;entury helmet
129 Stage play
130 Ardent
131 Existed
132 Helped
· 13401oceM

136 Irritates
137 Shoreline
139 Phi- Kappa
140 Hold on property
144 FiniSh llrat .
145 A Gabor
. 146 Male sheep
147 Suitable
146 Lowe or Morrow
149 Par1od ol time
151 Concerning
153 SpaniSh article
155 River In Italy
157 Proceed

594-3528

Commltolal, Unlto,
From 11-~ Lollone,
k
I C IN.
Paflli61111
t - lw 111.00, Coli Odor fltEE
NEW Color C.t81og. 1~482

11f7.

.

RealE state

ectuca-

31 Homes for 5811

thiS newspaper is subfed to

SUROICAL
PERSONNEL

the

to MvMise ·;my preference.
limiT a!ion or Ciiscrimlr.atlon

Cortlllod
Oparatlng

Child coro, my home,

-

27

·MUll Bo Atria

214-38J.3111.
HOUSE INSPECTOAll .
No Exp. - • r y . u:r To MOO
Wldy. Will Train. Cll 211-'/tlto
11141 Errt. Hmlt. I A.M. To I P.M.

.,,,

...
.,.
...

To

Employment Serv1ces

7Dop.

Cortlllod
lng Room Toch·
nlclaM For FuU·TIIIIII POIItlon1.

114-441-1111.

••

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•

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.

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... .••

"'

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~·

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.

........

,.

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-

The family of

..,..... COHJ
wish to thank everyone
lor the food, floral
arrangemeots and their
kindness, during the
Illness and death of our
loving husband , and
father. Speclallhanks to
the nurses on lour East
lor their bovlng care.
Also thank·you 10 Rev.
David Varney for his
comforting words, ad
Angle Halley lor her
beautilul singing. Spelcal
thanks to McCoy-.Moore
Funeral Hom,. Katharin.a
Casey and Family ·

1 famlla . _... 1 famlla Bluo
Horrlor, l .t W41-13a. '

Mlko4eU'a

Dlal~bulor Opportunhy

lndopandOnt t~bular For Dlolrlbullng
Polato Chlpo And Rlllloil
Snick Fooda Aro For Solo In
'l'ho Gcrllpolla, Alltono, Eaol
Uvorpool1 Rl-. Ran.-,
Eotobllahod

Mlud Colllo Pupa To OIVOOWIJ,

Cllll Bot-n 12-1 114-211-1114.

3 Killona, 7 Woo~1 ~. 1

ng., 1 ·Co11oo,11wal 15111

Slaubonvrlla AIM.

4 Yoor Old Port Colla, Part
S.moll. To lasMIIte Who Uwe
On Form. GrNl Wlll'..:• Ell·
collont Walch Dog, •
711

MUll Bo Flnanclollr 81- With
Storw Daar Dlllvwj Explft.nc•.

5 Full • - Collie Pupa, 3

111100, Z F811l1100, 4 112 MonlM
otcl, Molllar I F - Full
Blooded. 11t 441 1132

old-

S

Public Sale
&amp;AuctiOn

5 pufltll~ __Part Shephercl &amp; ~ 304 • • 1017.
•7 -

·-

Adonlbla

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CHRYSLER

' &gt;~­.,,

P/ymou/17

t • ...•

.~

.
•

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...,...

The family of

Mi•o H. Wollcer
would llka to axprMI
their appr.cl.tlon lor
all the care and
concern given by Dr.
Godlewak~ Dr. Ponce,
Dr. Shaw ud tha
nu~ In dlallala at St.
,Joaaph
Hoapltal
during her lllnaaa: W•
would alao like to
thank the Tuppera
Plains, Syracuse and
Pomeroy aquada for
all the runa thay made.
A .Paclal thank• Ia
given to Rev. Grate,
Rev. Sydenatrlcker
and tha Bl~&amp;ell
Brothera during the
time of our 'loss.God
Blase all our family,
friend&amp; and neighbor&amp;
who aant food, cards,
end Jlowera. Your
klndn••• will always
ba 1'1111111tbaracl.
Hulband Mlrvln
Walker, Ruth, Allee,
Miry a nil families.

The lainlly ol12yr. old

...lg.

. - , prlco
lllgh7 dolannlnOij by olzo of -n, 114-

MW72l

Caro,,Tu~

And Much

/Toddlllra 111 • tl 1227.

L,ancaolot, OH 43'130.

11'!11100, 114-?82-;mz.

LANCASTER .fAIRFIELD
COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
_Equal OppotlunHr Employor

Or Port~lma, Clll llarto I"J4.441.
0121.

WIN glw plano • • Cl,.. In my
-llW48f,
.. Apple-..

wv. -

llrg1 NdwDDd dicit Oulfh aklna

-·--··

"'
· Homo
lonJr.-Raci'!"L
Ofrlo Nlllonol
41771.

31 Fl. Trallor With Ao..,._or 1'.·
Stove, 114-251-t3'11.
loolllllul-- . . . lol In
Rio Orondo. I OCIIad II 101 '

Rklga Avo,.., -

CMipuL ,._

b

1d

bloclr 11om

oossa, 11vtna

mlng
........
tully
Yanl · - odCI .....
I!Jm.
.,dll1lno-.
- lui - ...a
IMuiH. 11tiiN3n
bath.
. _ la ......

-wHha--monl . -ld lllr - . . i

F1nancial

Town ot Ha- II occopllnl

lnlo oddftlonol

or an
Prloa Ia 143,100.
Ownor ftMnclt!g-lrlo to Jho
right buyer. IOIIauoi lnqulrloo
on)J'. 114-'IIIZ-3H3.
aportmorrl.

application •nclfor ra•umn for

aumdllr youth ouparvlalot. Tho
lob
wilt
I -ko.
,._
willlool
be 4lo ·
I youth
rang.
1ng In agollom 12 lo 21 rr• o1a.

21

Business
Opponunny

~ Lol, Rural W.lor, Nolont
INOTICEI
Korr Aroa, toi,OOO. Good
OHIO VAUEY PUBUSHINO CO. Laoellon, 111,Ul .,., Or 114-s.nc1 1a r - c1 - . au. - n r l o thol rou do - . tWIIII.
,..lalor'o
~'_P.O. 7, wllh poopla
k - , .....
COUNTIIY HOIIEI/ACAUOE
Hartfonl1W!! ~ On n1111 te fDr NOT to Hild monoyt~h lho
. .
IM a p p l - t t - , June 1, moll uniN you han ln-lplod Extnr LatgO Coni
11112.
On 17.1ACnallll.Wlih
IM oltor1nj).
1110..- ; 4 12,1100 -hlr
AI- - . 2 111
LatgO
· Producla
. No PoriJ - · AI On 4 Aoroo 1111.
Elpertmc.
HI A
1P'J,I -RuM
1140,11110; 110 1111. Sol! -~~~~ Sloniired 1110 Wllh 1om. :10 ...._ 11111.000·

Plclr up

o1 -

Thun.

rou

-bla

To:
Hill-.

llolc 11,

=
Donna--· It1

- . z .........

-rr..

DIA SuDDIIoo. 10 -1111.110.-; All 01,.

EniWiopl

,GIIIIert TrowllrW1•

OH 48133:

.

Wllhln
G...,.
•-

ot Alo

3 -

Coli . . Con-

~ Vonclng Route: 11,200 A
Wool! Polontlol. M,.l Soli. , . - , noll
For AI
t1oro In-Ion. ~
Uflt.
4II-7I3Z.

·

on May 23rd.
What'would have
been her 72nd
birthday.
God grimt me the
Counge to change
tlle things I can
change. The Serenity
10 accept tllose I
cannot change, and
tlle wisdom 10 know
the difference, But
God grant me · the
Counge not to f[IVt! .t
up on what I think Is
right even though I
tllink it is hopeless.
We wish you wen
here to see the
nowers bloom and
tlle sun shl,ne. We
miss you as much
today as we did
when God took you
Home In November.

lpnoyei'S: cards: beautiful
lnower'S: gifts of rood 111111
lm•Giiey: 1111d .ror tbelr
to tbe runeral home.
Gallla ·
Co.
IEmltf'll!D&lt;y ~ squad ror
promptoess 111111
lemlc:ler&gt;cy. The lloOton
nurses of
Room.
1:•::~':'"%
Moore
.,,ft...,
IHc&gt;me ror their· klndnesa.
to tbe VFW POflt
for tbelr services at

In Memory

Memory of
Frt~~~cls

lown-.

Will do
cull~
• hodaOO. -ldo
odd
}oM, $1.00 por hr. :lOW.,.
.

The family of

Municipal ·aldg,

L

(ROJ) S~•ver
TwoyM111hll
IPIIllad alnce that aacl

took him home
hla will.
But In- '-II he

Happy Ada

5

PUIZLEI

I11VItth atlll.
uwtherold

Jaws.OtiTJ 6 VJrall,
JOM &amp;: 8DI,Jud7-&amp;:
.......,., Bedty, Sola aild

lgattJng I'OUfh•
1111 hllla too lw'd to

daqllter-Ja.Jaw.DIIe
&amp;: Joy, Roaer &amp;: Jlllle,
Kn &amp;: Lilli, Brothir
111d Sliter-Jolin &amp;:

simple words. Print letters of
eoch in its li~e of squares.
Sixty, you say?
Time surely does
fight us. It •ems
that our youth
gave
in
to
arthritis!
Your "quiet"

YL~PME

~

' ·1 ".'

I
I 1 I 1_:_,1~~

Birthday

FERWUC

I gotcha!!!

3

I
I·

I

June 19, 1975

S L.C UME
Is 1· I I I
WHORGT
7

I I I I 1

L E MY E R

I
·

I

The old timer said to his
friend, "I thought my new
group insurance plan would be
just fine until I got sick. When
I went to collect my benefits, 1
found out I couldn't unless the
. ·"··· was s1'ck.
•••••
•

WIIIDonel ·.
•

Baby· Look At You
Now!

Cathy Ann Davis

Grandclllldrft IIIII

lor tha 4 of you.

® ::::

the .6 scrombled
0 Rearrange
words below to make 6

Mildred,

Parry. Thll • • Ollled

s

S© "\\4t\

- - - - - - - Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN-------

Loveud

remembered by
. Huband·Aibert,
Dauabttr aDd Sou-In·

THAT DAILY

.

'

'l

.

'

oo'ilno Iron so·.u· build:
Ina
dh
111'112'
WlU ColO, For Ek!orfr Lady In "'n"~ building, Jocmod MciQf,;ih ·
Hor - · Doyo On)J', e14-l71o Ad., uti oW SR33, I mlloo Nofth .

Expart..od: 1.-.237-4842
lnaxporloncod: 304-137-2788
USA Truek
. EOE .fiJF/OIV

Tbe famUy ot

2

3 roam cott..,., full t ltMellt,
101150 lol, eo.-. Awo.
114,1100. 3044711-7771 . . .

batho, lui · - · wllh -

HuJTIAM1 W'1

wllifles to lbonk
friends for

114~

m ·ge.
31 poro o.,_loo_, .... COL, 3.4111Cf'111,, 44124. 3bdrm.., 2 112
114-el7-7.
•

Smlio)''a Molol

_...JonTlloo I

• ...22113
. . , .. nice,
no.ooo.
tM-M
,,..

Wonting: 1o1&gt; driving truck Jocoi,

10 ~.M., 2 P.ll. &amp; I P.M.

who set
flowers, cerd8, food,
pnye111 or helped In
way during her
hospital atay and
her death. · Your
klndneaa
11
appreciated.

3-

.

Wontod Elc.I"M.a&amp;-1288.
To Cloon: - · ·
Otllcol,

'!Uoodoy -May :zs, 1113

to thank

Soc-

2 lllho, llool Pump

Will Bobyaft In My - · Hoar Ina ....
tumlalrod,
porch,
- -Irani
-·
-•
0-EilnwllaiY-.Ful tloillj

card of Thanks

would like

lnlont
p,...

lnt.,.tod ·c .nclldlln May Coil ..,_,. /Se-. Age • Collocl AI 1'14) Ml41122 0. 8224.
Sulomlt Your A-me To: Por·
IORnol o-rtmant, LANCAS.. Tri.Siala Tr• Sorvlaa. Topping,
TEA FAIRf:IELD COMMUNITY Trimming, Fooclng, Ao,._al,
HOSPITAL, 401 N. Ewing Sb'HI, ~ump ~-F~ ~

2124.

Donn• lllther

1183 Clayton

-

ear.. Coli Ua For A Vlaft.

lloro.

1+4, EIIM34

1

oppo,untty ca!ls.

Mlaa Paull'a Doy Cllro Contor 1 16x32 lng""""' Poor. ~
- k Wool ot HMC On .locbon 614 311 tool honlnp.
Plko M.f I A.M. -6:30 P.M: It 111110 Clayton Socd-, Cluatlly And Exporlonco II Tho pump. dtdl, three ll•.droom, two
11 CoMom For · Yow Child'a
bolho, locotod . , lo4 In -

kldo, 114-ta-

Jeffr•J S. Holler
would llka to expreM
thalr alncere thanks to
thl people of llrllga
County w!oo gave their
aupport and frllndahlp
durlr\g the trllll. AIIO
to the staff of llrllga
County Sheriff Dapt,
and Melga County
Proaecutar'l
omce.
-We would alao like to
thank all the family
and
lrlertda
who
allowed their aupport,
Juclg~; Crow 111d hla
atalf; and the cltluna
who .-vad • jurora.
·A apecllll thank . you
for the dadlcatad work
of
Mllga
County
SlwHt: Jim Souldby,
County
"--or John
!Ant... Mllgl County
Alalll ProiiCUioF :
Chuck Knight, and
B.C.L agent John

Mlloo
In A

dog, 112

Klli-1114-311'J1.7ll0.

to the mill iuat

haul your logo

Dachahuncl, 112 - . . . . -

...... dog, -

intormM ll'lat all aweYingS

advertised In this neW!paper
are avallaDie on an equal

coii:IOW1JI.1ll7.

Tako Tho Rood To • loom To Drlvo Howl

- - Chlclur -114172.

~

auranco, Sick Child
lion Rolmburoemonl

.

Onrv- Port•IM s.wmlll, don't

lloluod CommunHy ot 40,000
Aaaldlnto. Our Bonolllo Pock·
~ lnctudoo Paid '"- ott
DOntal And Vlllan Rolmbu,..:
monl, Horrfth And, Uto Jn.

Giveaway

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
aa. . ertlsements tor real estale
whiCh Is In vM;J,I allon ollhe
law. Our teaders are hereby

Commertcal, Aooldonllal, Slovo:

YMr That Contltl Ol Generel
And -lilly Sorvlcaa, In·
poliarll And Olitpotlont Servlcaa,
lnd Tho l.ltoal Loporoocoplc

Anr l.Kolod 25
SOUthooot 01 Columbuo

4

•

oligm, or any inlenllon to
mrtl':e any suct"l pre!erence.
limitation or discrtmtnallon.•

- 1 Mllnto-, Pol~
Yard Wor1c
-LJoht
· Haulng,
W
Gunora
Clolllod

We Perform 1,000 Surgtrill Per

w.

card ot Thanks

sex familial status or natiOnal

DUo To TM Expanalon 01 our 4282.
Surgary Dopartmont, l.lncostor EIA TREE SERVICE. To~g,
.falitlokl Community -pltolla Trimming, Troo Removal,
Sooldng=ncod Operating Trlmrnlnii. ~roo Exdmatool I
Room "111 IteM Nu,... AM 31'J1.715i'Aftor 4p.m.

Procoduno.

•

bMeCI on race. colOr, rellgkm,

Atlon

Sl:rMI, ChMt•. S21hr., maalalncludod, Muy Dompoay, 614-IJI5.

Room TKhnlclant

FIELD
J -.y

Federal Fair HousingAci

ot 1968 wnieh makes MiMegal

AoglolorOd Nunoo

. ...•

SERVICE PROFUIIIIHAL AWARD WillNER

WOt.fFT..-NO liEDI
-

All1eal estate advertising 1n

•

ilnrlgr Till! Is',

.

rtalrl lo KCOpl or rojocl ony or
. . apf&gt;llcollono.
.

·

'

1222.,

tM llllga Soli onc1 Wllor Con-!oi'r Dlolrk:l olllco, 3310'1
Hllond Rd., Pomoror, Ohio
41711 or by rrhonlng 114-1112•
1147. Applicolfona 1111 dlro by
June 7. 1113,. We riHrv• tM

.--.

.,

eo.;;

Video &amp; te~ bualn rn tor
Mia. Woltl Ianning Sotlour lnqul- only. ~·

llon opaclolilt. Appllcallono oncl
lob -pelon 1111 ovalllbla ol

• ,•

STATE ROUTE 13 AT 33 &amp; 550 ATHENS

_.ng environmental

--Ill .

Trmtna. ~..!"· /:::;;.'t
AvolQ. 1-.87·1- (24
ponr

-loft Dlatrlct 11 cumnlly

J-•

DOWN

Eacol 1 -

'l'ho llalgo loll oncl WlrJor Cern-

laaa than
oppralaed nlua.
TERMS OF SALE: Tanr

namesakes
78 Evergreen trees
80 Force onward
81 Scottish cap
83 Write
84 High cards
87. Sharp reply
89 WHhout end
90 River In Germany
91 Tori Spelling'~
dad
92 River duck
93 Dispatched
95 Love to excasa
96 Dtaconriected
97 Alpine aong
99 Moved rapidly
101 "YankeeOandy"
105 Appear
106 Healthy
107 Defeat utterly .
111 "-House"
1'2 Pasleboard
113 Tidy.

. MEOICAL IILUNO .

Became A l.oo8l UcJJIIL For
Nlllonll ~ Do
Elec:trontc a.lilftl PICIC
...

appllcollono lor •

'

Great selection in stock including
Duallys, Club Cabs and 4x4. All
priced to sell now!

port-~. 114-

Tl1 · - • Coclcor
...nlo~ ..,..., 30W1JI.
Jlllaftor 3:30 PU: ·

aaldcounty. Thanlllamounl~
of land baing oonvayad It-·
21.71-.
-·
REAL

lion OroUncll~coll collocla~

-5301, plNOO
START IMMEDIATELY! Elm Up Jar llpm. I
To 1100/Wk l.lballna Poolcordo ....,trying.
From Home. 1M -v~r Own
No Ouoloa. Coli 1-ICJO. 18 wanted to Do
'1110.7377 (11.48 Min 118 Yro+) Or
Wrfto: PAASE -33X, 1111 S. LJn.
colnway, N. Auronr,IL 80542.

-lnlrrg eMir, 114.fl3 IOSI.

Page 331, Daed R-.la Of;

~

3.5L 24 valve engine,
anti·lock brakes, dual
AIR BAGS, all power
accessories.
NOW HERE!

coiiO.

meet,,,, ue reiO, '~'"'·

claodol.-dlnVolurlla1~

77 Lange

In -lng A/C. I E-rlool A

bac...

SouthMal _,.,: thanoa
South 11 dagroaa Eeat 3 1111li'K.&gt;percantonclateofa...:_
chalna58llnlta;than01North
wllhln lhll1y (30).;
18 dagr8aa Eul1 chain and day1.
.,
70 M!lb to the Eaot line of
D. Toy~aikl 100 _ . Lot No. 375;
Sh . .H of Gallla Coull"'~
lhatJOe on ..ld Eut io1 line llay 23, 30 and June e, 11111l'
Soulh 41 chains and 30 Hnda
•
,::;

composition
161 Brag -

Wlrntad: M-...nca , _

Llllonlnal Nuhvllll
-ring _ScouT I Nollllvlllo
-orll TV cmr moklng FREE,
Sltt.Jallon
ono ouclftlon vldoo, Wod, . 12
lily 21, "'7:00 Pll, Holiday Inn,
wanted
Oolllpollt. B~ng
co"'
· · Jlllftor
lreybooid
or lnlor-lan on llobf 11n1dlo buill
ocapalll,
NO banda,
NO pllono
ewer Ma:rqe chMt, IIOid 1t lue&gt;

. . . _ 4 110111111 Old cuOcl Oil-o l - · 1 War·

Buslneaa
Opportunity

Fui-Tlrno Poollon, ~loriCOd

Eaar

For--

..,.

21

HalpWanted

SINGEAlll Country, Goopol &amp;

138, JIIIIIUII, Daed Reoonl1
of Gallla County, Ohio.
"'~
FURTHER EXCEP11Ntr
lherMutand thwefJ-12.211:
a-oonvayadloOIIIoAIWJ'
ooiUarlaa Company by daa!C
of-.llnVolunla143,PaQa_-_
534, Daed R-.1• of Gal.,-.
County, Ohio.
ol"-donrij';
IItle, rala,..ca It noada ID"

The old timer said to his friend, "I
thought my new group insurance
plan would be just fine until I got siCk.
When I went to collect my benefits,
I found out I couldn't unless .the
WHOLE GROUP was sick."

Sentlnei-Page-03

PliCIIIMy. K~Of ....,
villa No-, T.V. C... Moldng PlentOponrl. .....
FREE, One~ Audftlon VldoO Rn sme To: CLA
c10
Qal...
W - y,' llay Zl, At 7 P.M.,
llpollo
DillY
Tribune.
135
Third
Holkllr lnnL Oollloplla, B~ng A - OalUpolll, Oil Ql:ll.
Back.Up ....-•· OUftor,
KIJilOOrd, Or Acapolll, NO
Iondo, NO Phono Collo.
.

thanoalouth71112dag,_ll~~~§~~;~~~
Eaat, . . _ 111a road. e

-

11

Help Wanted

~~~~~~~~~~~·-A,.:;:

n-,

l.o lbaodONIIaundan el U!l!~
11r deed of - . 1 In Vollllll.i\~

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM· LETS
EMPLOY
CURFEW
MUSCLE
GROWTH
MERELY
ROLLER
WHOLE GROUP

Pw; ' ,

Sunday nmea

SINGER8l Country( Ooo.C:,And

mania.
,
EXCEPTINGtheriOUIIIJd...
.__.1'0111 4 oon-MA

...•

~~
,,

f:·

Chow rn.Uon

ToGol114-441o,..,

~ ·

NEW 1993 DODGE DIESELS
Power windows &amp; locks. V6
au10malic. a•r. cas sene
List .. ...... $16,821
Taylor
Discount . ... .. . · 2,322
Rebate ....... 1,soo

Next,
10,000 Gollona,
suo
per 1000.
Next, 40,000 Gallons,
$2.10 per 1ooo.
Next, 40,000 Gallon•,
$2.30 per 1000.
Above 100,000 GaH0111,
$1.50
1000. 100,000 Ga~
lona, 284,95.
Fire Dapari!Mftll are nol
charged lor emer1"""y ter.
·
May 23, 111113

11

cot, good
moueer, 104-1714777. . ·

_,.or

filii,. __.,

..

SNAFU® by Bruce

Collco

p i - of beginning, oontalnlng H laaa.
Sublool lo al lagal . . ..

Crosswo,rd Puzzle Answer on Page C-4

49 Transaction
50 Cut ol meat
51 Pawl
54 Wild plum
55 Slender
56 Harm
59 Opp. ot WSW
60 Val
62 Upend~
64 Succor
65 Hosp. altendant

List . $11,991

t.o the Southaaot comer ol
Nld lot; theMe Wut 21
chains and 25 Unlla t.o the .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Minimum w-ee ratea lor

.slorehouses

NEW 1993

NOTICE OF SALE

By .trtue of 1n 0n11r of Pub5. Any - · that .. . lc Sale laauad "' the Cornlocked wll ,_In IDciJed mon PIMa Court of Galli•
unrll the fallowing buolnaaa
In the caaa of
d!ly after the - • hu
Plalntlf, w .
baenl. AnMIIIedy
~n., ..........by her
.-·.-·-·
C. llrdlllald,
bNaldng a loOk 01-111 "~"'
upon • •udg
wllh a In any - - - I
...d ad, baing
can be pro-.lad In . Caaa No. AoCV.f, In Ulil
da,_ with the Ohio Ravlaed Court, I wll .,_ lor eata at
CodL
the !rent door of tha Court7. Any -unt that Ia houM In Ga.polla, Galtla
aattlad with • checlc, and the County, on the 2tlh day of
chock Ia returned, will be Jilna,1993,at10:00Lm.,the
IDciJed off unUI the cllack Ia. following Ianda and paid In lull, p1Ua .110.00,... monto,looatadlnthavlalnlty
lurnad chaok = a n d of Route 1, Chaehlre, Ohio. A
$25E.oo raconnactlon ·.
-.ptetelagal• crlpUonol
11act1w 1-1-110 ·
lhlr raal•latela aalollowa:
Wotor Rotaa
Situate In Sactlon No. 4,
Flri~2,000Gallono,$5.31 Chaohlra TOMJOhlp, Gallla
per 1000, $1o.75 MlnlmUIII. Counly, Ohio: beginning at
NeX1,2,000Gallona,$UO 1ha SoulhwMI Oorrl•ol100
per 1000.
'
acn .Lot No. 375; theMe
NoX1,8,000Gallono,$3.10 North44ollelnaand .. llnlla
par 1000.
lotha-Wof . . _roed; .

PubliC Notice

(F) (6} ol Reviaed Code Monroe, Morgan, Noble, or ·national origin . In
Section 1513.16. Wrillen Vinton, Washington Co~n· conaldaralion lor 111 award.

RELEASE

I

-4.1- HoUHI for Rent

Public Notice

Public Notice

Auto. for Sale

Public Notice

4

Public NOtice

Public ·Notice

Public Notice

tram baing chlrrged.

10:00 a.m.
Tueeday, .luna I, 11113
tor lmptouaa:enteln:
Galla, Hocldlng, u.Jga,
Monroe,Wash
VInton,
.
Coundaa, Ohio
~-IIIPDII'O'II'¥
..
lng varloua and
a Uana 11r hwbloldal .,..,.
"1ha • • Ullor aampla
lion of thlt - ' ! lhall be ••
... .forth In the bidding pro-

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

,

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

'

-

�- ..... ..... ••.• •.. ·-· .. ·-'&lt;1· •.
•

•

nmes S.entlnel

·•
1993

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

42 Mobile Homes

Apartment

44

.·torRent
,. . ~tlj;fl~L , "TMI' M•Y h~.,D S•~•Y
9\11 b• Y•'-' ~~II...J...
1"1\ot
Of f N I N .. ~·tt A f j.•\IJ'E it. b UlL

...,""E

/'If "fou fl. 0'461&gt;D tl\l;. ~

Household
Goods

51

for Rant

2 btdr. . .. ......., 1110 Mobile
...... lol. ........... ._...

2 lldiOOI'I'II.t AddiMn Area,

-01100 I Dopoell Aoqulr..t.

·-~

... 'lltlue . . . . For . . 080

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV'

54 M!scellaneous
Marchancllse

54 Miscellaneous

.
Ina.__
$31,_
Dno~·~.
115,1-

·uu Konmoro lw•por wMo l'&lt;lrtoltiO -~~~ _..,.,
$40,114-211-1131.
$30,114411f-1131.

tr.h,

--..rIM 441 1127.

';~~Table, f{ha•e. MaG.
I
m. Alllll PJI.

""

--

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

- , ....
-homH
· ·..........
"" up
lo
bllw•n AIMnil:

2111

"" potlly -

Wfl.lr"'l

• -

II¥ tEA. Inc.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

41 HOUHS for Rant

Lot .._od On Slll'f
Run RoM. IIIDhV II.IC

S Bodroom llodom Houu Juot
OUtoldo OaiiiPC&gt;IIo C11Y UmHo, 44
114 4111211 Aftwl P.ll.

1 -

Tonk IN P - 2 car ~
12x1:l btonolan Buln Can h 1
P droom Apu1ment Or Hooked
Up Ao Extra. On To Tr•lor, ,.._
ltlng $11,C!OO, Call 114-387-71!56

Allor 4 P.M.

.3 ·Announcements

715 Cllrk Chapel Rd.
Bldwel, Ohio
(G '\ I Bidl • Pori« nl)
Phone (114) 388 a&amp;7a
$6.00 Per Pole

NO LIMIT

Ole ctlane: Tae

...... lalal-.c,lbi*IIH 1,2
lull botho,lo""*r IWII, Olan,
!!!I dlltia. . . .,111,500. loclhd

......... pork Pt. Ptt, _.,..

11111 or I1S-17te- 5:30 Pll.
10 Act1Je. ON. Two ·Btl' oom
T,.._, Fw a j, 1Wo Por*, 114~-. ......
tl'wop, $37,500.
"o«'blllride
mobile
homl

~r.=:art

_ _ _ _ _..;,..._ __
1
1•

11112 14ll71, Z BR, 2 both, CA.

l1ftl~ 11171, 3

2 b1 droom furnlahed mobile
homo, :104-671-4112.

-

160

_.., 1•1 ...... pal 554
lntwHcllon .. a.rk
eup.l AcNtcl. Turn right
Mel drlva -oxiiMtely

olr

... .._ -1114&amp;.""
a

---ortobo
ftiOI'td. prtoe I J 11'1 no IMcf

N. u,rtlllltlch
AYIIIIbll D11t1:
5129 thru 615;
7131 thru 817;
817 thru 8114;
112B thru 1114.
Call fer R111r1181ion

-r.
P•li.
Air CondHionlna, OoDOoM
Comjllot~

·· No Polo. Cal
+ -Utllltloo.
Portdllfl.
1
P.M. 1M ••one
0no bodroom . •portmonto,
· lrtOktdoo utHitloo, S100

= ....."'

446-2206

oa.lpm.
Bpoc- 2 bodroom ~pta, ..,..
pOling,
......
rMtgonttor
lomllj otmoolif\o.., 011 oil~

come br

10Acre Lake, Bank

Rehab Programs
When you lfll!ll up with
~. JOII ttom up with
SUcatul Ont af tht nation\
!otgtol plllvidool al phJIIaol
Nhabllbllon ......... hoo

Located on 50 W. towards McArthur at
Hutchinson Auction Inc. Inside space
25.00, outdoors 15.00. Antiques,
collectlbi!!S, and many other Items. Call
Mark at 698-6706 or Frank at 592-4349 to
reserve space or come and pay when you
set up.

3 Announcements

nSBERMIN'S ·
F18hlng Lake, Live Bait 1111d Tec!kle, Picnic
Suppllea, Snecka, Picnic Area, Barbecue Grllla,
Playground. Overnight Primitive Cemplng.
Stocking w•kly with Catfish,

an netting new oppottunlly

avllillble II Holzer lll!lcll
Contor Roholll- IIIII,
Holzor llodlcol Cat;to;. ·

Thil .... tiltll pooltlon ln101pnog,.m dovolopment lltd
lilllon to 3nl porty piiJIIIa
and .... ,....... Oultlfl.
tlllottl lltoludo Olptritnoo In.
....... ltldlor .... - ... .

-

111111

Thank you for your cooperation
The Cemetery Tru:sta.~s

interested in learning to drive over-the·
road, come visit our representative:

,

46 Space for Rant

Smiley's Motel
1-64, exit 34

.

Phillip -

· 30f.11W8111.

1fT Wanted to Rent

USA TRUCK'
EOE - MIF/DIV

.

Affordable Family Homes by "CREST"
Ranches. Cape Cods- Two Stories- Split Levels- 81-Levels

r,lerchand I Se

May 23 1:00 To 4:00
LoCIIted At The MlldOWI

Subdlvlllon In Thl Plalnl,
Ohio on Connett Road
130,100.00. ........ _

-L-----~-~~C~u~s~t~o:me=:t'~S:!a~tl:!·s~fa~ct~io~n~ls~·!O~u~r:_:Go~~·~'--"'":'___..,!!"'~.,~':0~,:••::!!::__J
'

IW.rno
HPGIIaon
-rr.~­
Wotl P
T!.ftll:
And P - Oo.... AI f&lt;it '

~-. "ti.::""'"'otor -

0G1i1, 2
, IIIII; IIi-rotor
Uke New, Aderct'=
: 30'"

Eleclrla Rongo $11· 10,000 ITU
Air
· ttii; 11,000
ITU Air-Cond-,
$210;

-~·~~ ·

'

"

$75;

PH. 446-7699 or 446·9539

Cube

Both 141. 114 ' " 1706.

FAIII EQ.PIIINT Alii TOOU

-•nc\.

~0r ~~o~ttOIUI
WI-., Ill, CoU . _

.a.

f

Tool 10100. Flto
Plck.Up

For Solo- UR ~lr tOr lnvolklo,
$250, 114-1112·7:152.
For Solo: t.orae Wood Oolk, 5
Dn. . . . Call-411-"lll13.

=lor

Trucko, Two

III;Molal$11,114-44f.

t-.

Silo

looo
.

Truck
ttte 1 fl. bod.
$71.0!1. :104-1'111-1110 ollor llpm,
or--1117.

For So!e: Ono 6 R. Hll -

ea., Runo Ooot!1 1. C

___

C1i11

Wooa ~afty, Inc.

AKC . ~~

Laloroolor
ROioie- """""'"' 6 Wooko,
Sholo, WcoronOd, BNut
. llui Pupo,
Elcollont TomPOI'"IIIt, $2$0,
114-112·'11117, (Ook Hill)
AKC: C:ockoo Sponlol Pupploo
For lolo, 614-l'll':ma.

'3 2 Locust Streel, Gallipolis

¥orr good Ajoy octoiiJm ""'"
cJH .qulpuwnl, Ml, 132 lui·
temut Avenue, Pomeroy, 1141124529.

_......,..._AvlilollloU•
cluolvliJ ot Rite lllcl i'ltonnocy.

'lllo ..,. . ., to dlol.

446-1066

Allen C. Wood, Rea~or/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Rea~or/Broker-446~71
Mose Canterbury, Reattor-446-3408
Jeanette
Realtor-256-1745
lim Watson, Re:altolr-446·2

Pug """""'"' Actorololo,

1'0110110IHiool
1om
Your PuPPJ.
1221, llolo $300, 114-

aGeneral

,,N

0

homo on Beech Sl. near olom.

sdlool. Big L.R, ooHn kit., 3 BR

on .8 """ m.1. Thill homo hu 3
BA, lg. oot•ln kit. ol Clblnots, LR, tooth, lui boml. Wlglr.

wlhttrdwqOCI nooro, bolh, lui
bsni. w.)&gt;orllol bath, FA gas lur. R8Ciiotly ltatlolod. BG.f'A fum.
t car ottachod1 go._. Appl. &amp; - -· Enc. COipOiod
lJncloipilced ot $34,900.
pordt Garden &amp; lawn. Mid 3Cl'l.
SHADE - Locolod on 3 ocroo m.1. L.R, OR-Iel. coii'l&gt;o, 5 BAo, 2
bathl, FA, den, utlt rm., callar, gwage. In ihiSO's.

NEW LISTING· 16 acres. more of less, Double wide
home, the land boiders on Rac:c:oon Cree~ In Peny Twp.
CALl. FOR. APPOINTMENT.

POMEROY - Mulberry HelpNs nuteh styli, 2·3 BR, bath, L.R, kit.,
lg.gorago, lo""'d yard, low ullllioa. Low so·•.

HOME FOR SALE IOCIIIod at Rodney · 3 bedrooms,
baths, living room . dining room , kitcllen. Call lor more

Low malnlonanco stone hOmo. Good condition. 3
BR, 1'/, balh. CkJsa to town. S22,0CXt
SYRACUSE One iloor plan, 3 BR. 2 btlhs, L.R, OR, kit., 2 car
gmgo. Clooo to pool ..., park.

information .

a

VACANT LAND· 1112 acres more or leas, water . 9leclric:
available locallld on Buekridge Road Price $7,000.00.

a

FOR YOUR CONVIENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

MIOOI.EPOAT - 2 Apartmenl houoo. UptilaliS 2 BR, balh, L.R , lcl.
Down 2 rooms, laundry om., garage. Good lowestmant .
HEMLOCK OROVE Cn&lt;i iloor pion, 3 BR. 2 baths, L.R, OR, kit.,
located on 1 ocreln COUI'IIoy •ltlng. S34,UOO.
MINEASV1LLE '- BloCk Commercil.l bullcUng wi•,doo sq. fl.,

1~94·1~

a

O...ruotlan
- · Wlllo'o
ciiolomBlloto
fott.
Pilnilna •VIIIoblo
Book Si- 411 il.in 81, Pt. Pit.
:104-61J.61133.

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINOS PICK UP
THE FREE .OUAUTV HOliES BROCHURE AT SOlE OF
THE LOCAL BANKS, TETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS,
MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.

=:.::concrete floor, eldra llorage btdg., 10 mtnutes hom

o..
-r.

vety 12ltp
- Koltlor
118122 onglno, W'
aut, loato;y tiH t .. nor. S1,300.
- · -..111-2102 oftor 1:30 Pll.

WE'RE BUSY WITH PEOPLE WHO WANT TO BUY.
DO YOU WANT TO SELL?
IF SO, CALL US FOR RESULTS!

__
--toto

o..v o t y - - .........._ eza aond, :104-175-1101
-4:110PII.

Jill HILL

Konmoro 4.5 Amp -

lloto
Sogo, $125.

·-:IIIII.

52 Sponlng Goods

,

1-800-585-7101
(614) 446-1101 .

r-.

-11........ . . .:::a·.......

Anliquoo,

1124 E. ll•ln 81root, on At. 124,
Pomot OJ. . _ , II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to t:OO p.m., Sundly 1:00
lo 1:0!1 p,m. IM-tll2·2121.

. . . _ llpn I

John OoiiO

-~

=~....:

OFFICE 992-2886
e ...u tnat•lar the NAF

llon"o Work Ponto I Polr,
Sla: ~~ !!.:_Eoch Or All For
$31,1M41W4WZ. '

llloo. Vord I Hot-hold ......
Roc. Momo olio. 30M~42.
. . _ 31" cut ~- ,_n
~r. lrlaae I str.tlon en-

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE ..

dttfOn. :

0111 IM II! '132l

0Vo1 llraldod rug, S20; 2 TY
tllondo, $1 I 140; bod. $15; olr

tioottor. 540; 114-1112-2311:

"-'-' Rlclng - · I HP, 34

"""'Cut, $100 114-25&amp;-1111.

•

Nol responsible for aceidenll or lost iltml.

•

''•

7 in Tuppers Plains, Ohio. This is

=·

l!ortololo tollot, llko now U7;
kM .,_r cuotoln. $15;
1
t - - ' · Ill; 114-!192·

' FRESH PINE MULCH
: FOR SALE .PLUS .
FIREWOOD
STICKS &amp; STONES
Gary •her Olho Milellell
. 388·a120 - 446-6783

the personal Property of Evelyn Sedgwick. She no
longer needs a large home.

lAIR'S MEAT
PROCESSING

•Houn.oltl•

u.s.D.A. Choice tn.pecllld

Green . coldspot 17.1 cu. Ft. Frostless refrigera10r,
Green Sullllly 30" gas range, coffee and
tables, .
recliners, hidabed, Zeneth color TV with remote, 3 pc. '
bedroom suile, chest of drawers, Kenmore washer and
dryer, breakfast set, bose Cllbi~t. slereo wlrecord
player, 8 track and radio, stands, lamps, misc. linens,
beds, vanity dresser w/beni:h, chiffrobe metal cabinet,
misc. dishes, pots, pans and eleclrical appliances.

eoo

·• Aatl•u• or Collector'• lte•••
Gate leg table and 4 cliairs, rocking chair, rose back
lelephonc stand, quilt, hump back tnmlc, table, set of
qwriors and elegance, fme royal china made in Japan,
pitchers, cut glao;s, and knobbies, buffit and mise'

i

dishes.

'

•llllsc.•
Slep stool; eleclric Sears Ice Cream freezer, small
boom box, Coleman lantern and siOve, boob,
window fans. chower Stool, porch fwniture, alum.
step &amp; exlension ladders, 110 air condilioner, Echo
string lrimmer, push mower, wheelbarrow, hand tools, •
air compresser air grease gun, jacks &amp; ect.

.•..,.

.

- . , and a cult gioOQBibread l'irnmed. 1 112 Jtory home

o11

--46-1441

can: 388·9370 - 399:9aao
Uc. &amp;Bonded Ohio, Inc,, W.Va. t1030

~

FREE~ER IEEF SALE
• Whole Sldel•• $1.41 ...

MEIGS COUNTY
Cheryl Lemley .......................... 742·3171

Did - · pt- potont
.......~1900, p;ott! htlr .....

__.... .

1117,
twou1
-2m
· booko
rp.
mptuo
.oo. 114
·

.. ,.·-:' ..
o W'"' "

,... llllllr Uood Whoot Choir,
t':'~i;·
Or 614-

Notlonol Ooag.. phlc 1171 tlw

Auctioneer: Finis "IKE" Isaac ·

~

205 North Second Ave:
Middleport, OH
PORTLAND- nyou're laaloing fur that summer 11omB on
the
wa'W gOt it. One 111 two bedtoom larm house
has , _ windows. 2 - garage, 2 barns, and an old
dtio:lul'l -lil1inll on appox. 13 acres, wi.. 20 to 25
tlllble...,..
ASKING $150,000

~no 11hp, ~-1171.

DUE TO .EMORIAL WEEKEND. '
REOPEN
1Sl SATURDAY, JUNE 51 1993

Sat. May 29, 1993
·10:00 A.M.

n-.

RlfTl.AiiD- New Limol Rood- Sjwi•tolo~ 3 112 ac:res in
with 3 bedtooms, 3!""ches Mel equipped kitchen which
has bean tame c'a'

d.

FORMERLY $28,000

·

s211,soo

POMEROY· .,... SL -Need a lot fur a mobie home or a
- ? Arlhe and ot the otreet is a large lot just
Wldng fur you withal utiities ...........
$7,000
HARRISONVILLE- RL 114- This approllimately 5 year
old 24 X 36 building has p11111iously been a cllurch but
aJUid toe used lor many other ~- With a 1973 14 X
10 mobile home will a70 ft. adcilion. Three or possible 4
bedtooms, 3 wiobv air condilione!S. 2
on 2.6 acres.

BEAUTlFUL BRICK &amp; 25+ AC. Home
conolots of 3 BR, FR, 1Y. bath, LA, kit 20 X
40 inground pool wlbath house, 10 X 20 brick
shed. Energy efficient heat · pump. 1 car
anached garage plus additional 24 X 48 ·
garage. Call today lor an appo intment

Callh • Pltltl" ID ...,......tilly Y.f.W.
. . . . ,.., ............ lcdlilllll . , ......
.

*r af 1141118

location. Wcn't lasl too long at this price!
tt521

.

' 1513

100
a
141 .
elooy
brick ·style home. consisting of 3 BR, 2Y, bath,
LR , DR, 2 car garage, FP &amp; more .. Approx.
1200·1300 lb.tob. base. Call lor more tnlo.
1514

3 BEDROOM, 1 112 BATH LOG HOllE on
Brumfield Road with 24' X 48' bam and 2 other
building• on 10.8 8C111s for $48,000.00. 1527

''

' FREEZER WRAPPED l
.QUICK FORZEN
Cal lor .......lntmMII to
h..,. your beef, porlt ot
: eheop ..
cut,
• wr.ppod Mel quick

_..torod,

: '

frozen.

247 EVERGREEN ROAD! - IIIIIEDIATE
POSSESSION! - Start ~ng today. Thie. 3 .
boclroom hOlM with batlo, kitcllon, living room ·
nHdl a fomllyt Owner has raplacod roof,
lumace wetar hooter and mo"' within tho paot
couplo ~I-ars.
Como and - ·. F'ric:od $20's.
,.
1515

: WE Wll.L HAVE YOUR
PORK HICKORY
IIMOKED IF YOU

DESIRE.
446-7457
K111RoiiCI
Korr,ONo.
,John Pope

,llllnager

NEW LlSTINQl 110 ACRES, ADDISON TWP·
Ideal location with PTivacy. Older 2 bedroom
mobile home with expando. Paottally wooded,
pond, fenced. Call today for more iniormabon .
1551
NEW LlSTINQl SUPER LISTING Ill Log home
with appro1imately 28 acres with the option of
. purchasing additional 60 acres. 2 Story with 3
bedroom s, 2 baths, spacious k[tchen &amp; dining
area Forced air natural gas haat produced from
gas well on p;opertyi
· 1550

'•'
•'
'

NEW LISTING! 5 ACRES &amp; POND is the
setting lor this attractive home. Approx. 8 y~Qrs

old wlih 3 bedrooms living room dining room
kitchen 2 baths taund'Y room. Storage building
· + mobi• home hool&lt;-up. Priced Upper $30's. ·

Gertrutle loW•... P.O. A.

•••" ........,,..,k. o•ao t5t26

YOU ARE NOT QOlNG TO BELIEVE THIS
PRICE! READY? $29,900. Wilt buy this 2 story
older home and 6.69 acres, Home consists ol3
bedrooms. nice kitchen with PLENTY ol extra
cabinet space, living room, dining area or
family room, bath, 2 utility rooms. Detaclled 2
car garage, older barn , and more. Good

NOW AVAILABLE AT S25,000

RACINE- FMiily N s led for this 1 112 story, 3 to 4
becftoom wi1h 4 porches. 112 basement, dtntng room,
tam1y iOGI'I and a sma1 ooodotoiding. Good oized lot

w.. m.sio

111 FOURTH AVENUE! Levellenced in back
lawn. 3 bedrooms, kitchen &amp; dining room, living
room, bath and laundry room . App6onces ,
washer &amp; dryer included. 1 car anached
carport Priced in the $30s.
tt545

mower 12 HP w{33" high vac. and

· ••• S•ltlt-._......, o•io
'1M4 ••.,. 515

'

Size lultcaee, Very

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Public Auction

Russell D. Wood, Broker...... ~-4618
Phylila Miller .......................... 256-1136
J. Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2114
Tammie Dewitt ....................... 441·1514
Judy Dewitt.......... ,.............. ~ .. 441.0262
Martha Smi1h ........................ 379-265t
Cathy Wray ........................... 446-4255
Cindy Drongowskl ................ 245-9697

t-t4)--t

b •
15; . - · - ·
111;114-'lC~

Antlqun

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

IOicMn cabinet, $20: chair, hO;

Block puu 01 od rifle lor lllo or
tr..to,tM---6212.

ta•a praciHaca at IM'IIIH.

·

f'OIIE!IOY - Nlco brlclc raoch POMEROY - Rook Spolngo Rd.

MIDDLEPORT

CUnooli
Nutrition Add
-BodJ
fo!ittiilng Amino
BUitdlng, wolahl ond Ill

Canlotor V.C, Eott,.

A1Cfl1111r I.IIM. . .HII 18

.

SYRACUSE - SR 124 Ponnut- &amp; siding homo wllh ollrul
.Bsm1., an . garage, trailer lot to rent,. acrtl m.1. Priced lo IIIII!

uno, 1 . _

Ruet,l100, 114-251 t855.

'
Air CondiiJonll. 1.000 ·~. !'b-.

,...,.,.,.

Fomitloo,lf4.211.1001 •

•

·-·--

Tonk And 81ond for
F - Goo, (loOd Col-o, No

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., Oolllpotlo.-. Uood
lumHon, hootOII,- I
Wotlt-Lf14.441.3111. .

Snapper riding
grass PBtc!ler.

.Real Estate General

·· Coli 114 441 GZ3t. .
AKC loolon Tonto. Pupo,
llocko, ' ·~~ 1 ..... 4

F-lur coOl, Sooro, oiDI M,
llttto ton tlpo, $33,

-lno

llh - · Plote With hH 1111. :
Allor IP.II. Or ~ lloooogo. ·• .

ou...ntool .\ppt-.
'II llltOOI, -GIIIM!Oilo, 114-

Loc8ted on St.RL

Ooolor.•:

Caolt8r.,...,

a- - -$110, 114-261-1224 AIIIIIP.II.

ehapli,tiO , ~.

- - Roo-blo Ollw. 114-

":J

8

.

AKC Aoliolllod

PuP S To

S100. Phono: 114-ZM-11121.
Sprtngo lor luU olu bod, gcoool

Computing
1
-lllgllli~
Rogiltw, WIN·
Con-

Wltlrlpoat
Wit- Ccl
Whlrlltoal D;yw • :
T.Y. c - Ill; AI Sold Wlh

Bur or Mit. - n o

~

Pop Caoo, -

Trane.l1.200, fM.JIM444.
~·
14 Inch Stol.Stoo1 stntr;' •
$30• .14 - . . . . . , Cablnot, ta•

WE WILL IE CLOSED MAY 29.

Public Sale

0
I

.

..... 14. lool,l41, -.zsat..

Goods

PI: 614·592-4310

Houn: lleft..... 1U.tiiS

,. .

Apotl-d

· LWINGIIIM REAL ESTATE·

•

:::'J.i:.~;la~

tllolo with'

HoUiehold

OWNER: Robert MldldH
AUCTIONEER: Pat Sllarlda•
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

• 1 .... , . . . . . . . . . '" 'IfNI ... , 7 '· ....,. •

.....

Aefrlgentor, While, :a: Door, Ill;

a-,

........

VINTON, OHIO

several handmade comlorters, qui~lng frames, old
wood highchair, butch1r block table, 18Ciionai sola,
coffee table, metal double bed, exercise bike, 2
Maytag wr inger washers wlsquare tubs, 2
refrigerators.
TERMS: Cash or check wlpoaitive ' J.D. Not
responsible for loss or acc:id1nts. Food will be
available.

GRAND OPENING .
OF OUR MODEL HOME

..

....... wv.

Fori.Aiae

49

IOISEIIOI.I

'

R. A I. FumiiUN. .._, UNCI, ..,..
tlquoo. lumloltlllfll.
:J04.71H341.

COUch I Choir, Good Condlion.

11WIIr.1'JIII.

w-

Good
0111 - - · S15, · -

2 complete sets driving harnes~. 2 complete sets of
work harness, liorse drawn cu~ivt~tor. horse drawn
disk, horae drawn manure spreader. 3·2 wheel horse
sulkies,· pony saddle; bridles, 4 horse collars,
Sunbeam clippers, Winchester 97 t 6 gauge shotgun,
colleclion of pocket knives.
•

NEWLAND ENTERPRISES, INC.

.,

coii~GW75-1450.

~otor

31"112" -

'

NOISIIQUIPMINT

VA • FHA. FmHA • HUD~od
FM&amp;-T£1 Nlll
litE:

hold htmlohlng. ' 112 mi.

c
- !llglt choir tlblo.
ta. IM44W171
.

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SAlESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AYE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

ond · S..~or Pol 5053.

~ t!,

toro, Rio · OH Call IM24S.fl21.
sTEEL BUILDINGS. FIICiory
s... On: 241124, 30140, 40d0,
Riding ......,., 11 ILp., 31 Inch,
500010!1 eau - · Dolo
Qrnomllk $350. 114-4!1-1102
114 1111!20.
Sovoral polr of · hoovy Real Estate
. . . . . . . .n•ohod, l .50
polr,fl4.1112-3711S.
.
Sho
, I Ft. Counlertop,

For...._. an ; ccr1lon chair, red

J'

Massey Ferguson 35 1951 Tractor w/1100 hours, MF
dynabalance 7' mower, 2 Bush Hogs (~th wlstump
jumpers), 10' Springtoolh, JD 10' transport disk, JD
290 pull type corn planter, 3 seclion spike tooth drag
harrow, MF 314 plows, MF mounted hay rake,
lnternalional 2 bottom plow, MF mounted hay rake,
New Idea manure spreader, pull type disk, 3 pl. post
hole auger, fuel tank for house, New Holland 24' hay
elevator Wlelectrle motor, 2 chain saws, Sears
rototiiler for parts, Homelite water pump, lnt'l cub
cadet wheel weights, 2 gas tanks (one on stand),
bench wlvise, table saw, kig chains. Lincoln 225
welder, Craftsman 180 electric welder, mechanics
tools.

Hurricane, W.V.
Experienced: 800-237-4642
Inexperienced: 304-937-2788

Presents

.....

0

Jontclto Rd. Pt. P I - , WV,

f ..u., kilo "" ront. eount'l,.~~ 53

Robert E. Midkiff will offer the following items at public
auction. Directions: From Rt. 33 al Shade, take
County Road 44 about 5.5 miles to County Road 46,
turn right on Blackwood Road, less than· 1 mile farm
on left, watch for signs.
·

Tuesday • May 25, 1993
10 a.m., 2 p.m. &amp; 6 p.m.

Reg. ~12748

.... ,

Condit-.

3Blayiolo
Spud 'IItty
-·
"f... Srllrtl"'
Good
$10,114 4~813.
kif

$100, 30K11 ........... ' PrMil .
$250, 1 - Llnlll, 111711 OliO •
'ian S700 f'lnn; 1tlll- ...: I

PICKENS FURNITURE

1700

tiful c:otlage and kx:alian.

AKC .._.od . _ Tomer
far Olucl- only, 114-1112·

•

30JW11-4012.

A - f o r - · - or month.

ling. 2 mlloo Plont,- -

""l'l ::

~ Olilo Phone: I

. EVENING AUCTION
Thursday, May 27th, 5:30 p.m.
Shade, OH

If you are an experienced driver or

(614) 446·4367

1113 Gto;goo Ciook

Ali 114-.,..NIID.

&amp; Auction

Take the Road to Success
. Learn to Drive Now!

·Southeastern ·
Business
College

-hoo.

Ook l'umlttn: T.- l
Chon,
CUrved Olooo
Chino Calolnoto, .... Caooo,
Etc. Rl.- V.U.. Ook F-on.

Equll Oppailllllly Elrflloror

8

SUMMER QUARTER STARTS
.. JUNE 28. CAll 446·4367

Vlnrlln -14.41.

$11; ..... 10 ........

10 .......

Rulli.. brown, pd ftodblred
coucn, u:a aoriil, coM $300.

Starllna ot f1;!0/mo. Oolllo Hotol.
114-4411110.
stOiplllfl roomo wtth cooltlng.
t..liOI' - · A l l ... ,..
Coil 1a. 2:0!1 p.m., 304-Tr.J.

poe•

Get Your College Education
from Southeastern Business
College To Answer Ads
Like This.

lhlalwt ear.te, Rt. 7 N. 114oo
- -... 11.12 COipot .... All

-

311tqo- 1111" bOp. tz$;1 . . . , .,

441-1311, FI00-4... 3411.

FumiShad
Rooms

...., .._,wv.

lid.

mnotint 111t1

we need your SUDDI)rtl CO!"'••r hllplu); k)caltfl¥.
tlroquhd.
cooperation to conti 1ue1 In.Ntum tar ,_.knawtldg•
and elqllllloe, we oller I highefforts. All flowers must
ly COft1llllllvo llllry and bonremoved form the ground
lilt
Including i1w·
ltoiiWdonllllvi .....,.,..
later than two weeks
.... piWICriplion drug ....
Far ....,. lnl01111111an, pll•o
Day and live flowers Clll or Mild your ,.._ to:
Corponlo Ricnlitor, 1-100nd shrubs must be maintained 177-1231, AtlllbCirt Cor·
pantlion, 112 S. Honloy Rd,
the family.
Cllyton.IIC.13105.

NOW .
HIRING
GRADUATES

Yk:ii'~ f,r'f~";;l. ~

LAVNE'I FURNITURE
..._ l\tmlohlnaL
HoLD: lion 811, N. ...........
0122, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo
F- Doilftly.

.

- · $31;.U n l - OU.Yolw
$31, Coo plor Ill, 114 2511445.

100-4-...
Complolo

no

Nice 6 """"'· 3 bedtOO!II COtlllge locallld with frontage
on BLUE LAKE in Clay Twp. Galia County. •;,. acre,
Boat, FISh and enjoy lhe lal&lt;a. You MUST see this beau-

_ , . . ..., tiO; Eloctrla 01

APPLIANCES

......, blolqjround . pniiiiM.
FomlllriJ wlh tho rthab

io1we,~rer,

F/SH~G/1

Alii•.

USED

~~oohlgoil!l.n,

woH•...,...nlynwbtlitg,

....r

OPEN ALL NIGHT EVERY FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY NIGHT
Children 8 and under Fish Free with paying
edull 3'/• miles from VInton, Ohio on State
Rt. 325.
Phone 388-8176 or 388-11252. Cloll8d on
Thursdays. -

Laurtond

... polltn1 oviiUIIlonl •

36 lb. Tag Fish.
.
$7.00. TWo Pole Limit.
NO LIMIT on fish.
Fridey Night,"Sat. &amp; Sundar.
Open1 B AM 11112 Midnight

todor.

llh 81, Now Ho.... wv.

MARKETER ·

FLEA 111RKET
JUNE 4, 5, AND 6 9·5 p.m.

!10 pOlO; 1M-

........... EOH. 30WIW?II or

Help Wanted

0000

Sm..

'::.%

Mandlrr-Wocmoodlor~rt•r

3 Announcements

00~

flo.
qulnd. 1~ Allor lp.on.

45

Announcements

BR Unlumlohod
RongoJ.. ___RoltiL

Pomoroy. 2 bodroom,
- · ,.ootorldryw
upo, S1~:~r "· ouy

--61113.

.

114-.115 4148.8fter 5plft.

One bedroom apt. Fuml1hed,
~- cloon, no pOlo, 3114-6'111-

GGCiib.U, PolwcOJ vicinly. IM--

TAKE A KID

ond P.rogo, oloO WID --upo,
dolloOit I ,.....,_ roqulr..t,

Ono
Apott.-t.
lono - pjoyldlcf,

J

'/.mile.

Fishing Only.
Open from
Sunrise to Sunset.

-

-••
2both
apartment•
In llld'lrrart
I
Pomlroy, eQUipped ldlcheM

CONDOS

11

A._

- - .liVIng. 1 ..... 2 ......
,_. •pott01 YIUoao
. ._
ond
Apotlmontl In lllddloport. 1202. Call I'M - IM'. EOH.

FOR RENT.
CHANNEL MARKER

~1171.

111 d cauu, 2 lllllta, !II hut

on;l

goo,

-. .............
.....
llimiol1lld, _ ,
ln1own.
--~-··­
..,
,._. a - Alii•· - or
EOH.

42 Mobile Homes ·
for Rent ·

.,.., call

---·lid

....... -

Ad,

Rentals

I1NI~ I b d =ao, 2 llotho,
WBFP. gu hoOI ond lllr - .

Bass, Crappie,
Blue Gill, Rock
Bass"&amp; farm
raised Blue
Channel Fish.

Roybwn

-..by,

for Rant

Ro,_.or, Dop.H, Ror.r.n.
- Roqurlod. $375/l!o. 114-371- ..11 114.ft2.m1.

reu ~n•ble NMrldloiw, county am.
..._, lntanr•..on mailed on ,..
Two Bodroom q.-, ~5253. ptuoo no SmoH
~- Stovo And _go,.tor
....... ... lion.
Fumlohod, Do1ol OU liNt
lice eon- Lot At Poll CIW· $211, Socurtty Oopoolt And
Rafw• CII NMcttd. Available
-Or T,.do WUI
Soli For Juno
1o1, CaiiiM-188-0871.
13.00o
Fe&gt;~ s-hlng
Of E'1l;li Yoluo, Or UvoOiock.
Two ' ' oum In Rutlond,
114-ZM-1431.
~
and rer.r.ncn ,.
qulrwd, no polo, col 114-'1112·
2861.

1- __. -

FISH·N·FREDS

on

thO

Apartment

7 Room For Ront, Call Allor S P.ll. Ook Hill, IM-4414131
.........
In OoJMpollo: 3 BodiDOIM 1
&amp;oth. Alr Condltlanor, Slo...

Lola l ... go "" ...... c....

Olructlan

In

wtth ottr-....•--·

.......,..,57'1

aao.

lj . " ·

LAf'.JL..,

O.Uipolle ~ 1 bl droom, . .
utllltloo pold _ .....
rnonlh,
·or
1'1141112.

-.r

BloCk, Iorick,
plpoo, win" - · Untolo, ole. Cloudo Wln-

..,--.

Canltruallan 11ze '*11111 I IOW1
Hondio,
Allor I P.ll.
Or t.oo.. - g o . ~­

o-

Building
Supplies

ConDRU d 1e 14 CDiqnollllif And

Sunday

Petsrorsa..

56

Rllnbow ... IPif lllonth8 otd W\udehllld vliOf' IDr 41-11
Wet.-i All Attaet.mente, Chln,. l40, caiii'M*IIZ-3441. eon o.u.., :104 s:zt 1450.

;~........ Condlion.

CotaOI• picnic -

..._.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Merchandise ·

.

..

•

23,1993

·------ -----Fit--..
...
......
---·--54 lllscellanaout
. Marchancllte

VI'RA FUAII'IURE
114 441 1151 Or 114 441 . . .
'10 DAV BAllE AS CASH
OR REHT4.0WN (NO DEPOSI'I)

IOW75-1011.

May

·~

VACANT ACRE~I Over 12 acrea Cheshire
Twp. Good home Iiiii.
1142
NEATI llDY! A SPAAKUNQI Cozy 31iadroom
ranch home, bit... livjng room, Ml~n 'kitchen,
bath, lull baNment with NCOnll bath unlln·
!shed. 1 car .....,rt. lrnmedato poiiOIIion.l
1531

1554

PRIVATE!· $43,100.00· Nice home , 3
bedroomo, 2 batho, sevoral leet ol cabinet
space ln kitchen, compllto with appliances
inducing dishwasher. Living rtiom and laundry,
2 acrt tawn. Oversized.,.. car garage. Energy
efficient electric heat pump with central air
conditioning.
1534 ·

· CONSIDER REASONABLE
OFFER!- Quality built 4 bedroom ranch style
home with fantastic view of Ohio River. 2 ~
baths, basement has finished family room.
l!ituato~ on 1 acre lot with paved drive.
Ponuoroy a..a.
1528
(POMEROY) UNCOLN TERRACElll - This
homo has lots of character and tho lady of the
house has lots of goocllasto whon it comes to
remodeling. It's a 2 slooy homo with 3 big
bedrooms, nice sized living room and plenty of
space in the kitchen and dining area. Full
basement and large attic. Rool just 2 yrs. old.
Take a look lor only $24,900.00.
1522
RIVER FRONTAGE! Over 2 acres and ranch
. ltyle nome. 3 bedrooms, bath laundry room,
living room &amp; kitchen Paved drivewsyl
Immediate Posseuion
1544
SALEM STREET- Good investment property,
older 2 story consisting of 3 BR, bath, FA and
mora. 3 sewage and water hookups on
property. Call lor mo111 info.
1511
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
RIVER
FRONTAGE $25,000 2, Bedoooms home with
bath, living room, kitchen &amp; approx." t acre
lawn.
ON FRANK ROAD· A partial brick ranch on
1.034 ac. mil with 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths
living room, dining room and kitchen .

on. c;a;

garage attached. Asking only $52,000. Call
today.
1523

NEW LISTING! OWNER HAD THIS HOllE
SPECIALLY BUILTtll 1984 14' X 70' mObil&amp;
home. 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining
area, kitchen . Front enclosed porch, garden
tub. in master bath. Detached garage whh
· overhead storage. Plenty of S)lace wlth 3.&amp;
areas more or less and plenty ollruit treeL

1552
PRICE REDUCED TO $42,500.00. MOVE
INTO liiiiEDlATELYI 1152 a-nd. A Excellent repair, 2 bedrooms, living room,
dining room, krtchen, baiement, l!lrge lot. 011
••• pari&lt;ing.
1512

fOR MORE INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS PICI UP THE FREE QUAUlY HOMES BROCHURE AT SOME
. '
Of lH~ LOcAL IANKS. R.DAIL STORES, SUPERMARKOS, MOTELS AND RE$TAURANTS.
.

�'

'----" rsge D6 Sundly Tl"'" SentinelAutos for Sale

71

........
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57

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PI

- - ' - - 4 ~• . ,... All I w 'I ei,IOO; 1111 llonl. 'f, .... -

.,.. lulall louuw;__. LoMIM,

Nogolloblo, IM 2Y 1141
1111 seom.y ~~ ~.
K......:l Stereo
•110·
114-2Ys1XS.
'
• '

..........

-

n

13 GOO miiM,

11\Wi--a.(),

114slt2saool,

Anllque llll -

Oolo"t::

:.,::,..::"':::-!::.____,...,...--'-::=
C.W' tie

Far -

F~k-up.

74

- . Ale,

1111 ToycCa C,..S, k -

0. Thldo: 1111 Fonl

collonl oondtlon.
)UR. IU 411 3117

4•4, 1 , . _ . llolor, Olhlr
WGrtr, 1110
Horlmn,
N1 0. AI Far Good
: S3,IGO Far All 114s
2liW1'I7.

-lo

.

Trucks for Sale

75 Boa1s &amp; Motors
for Sale

Motorcycles

'

1N1 Yollllha 400 SIIMI Blko,

Good Condlll!!o1 Runa G!MI
$310,114s441-1-.
1M2 !llllhl Ha,.., 110, Now lot,
tory, Runo And lookl Uu t)11~,
1Wo
loll
Holmolo

1111 Ford Ranger XLT 4 CyiJrt.
Aoldng 12,SOo.

AuuNfll.

1,_ 4a4, 1871 Ford Fs110

... _,.
, ; ,, lw

,_

-·
1m

Qrond Prb,-

Milchlna Fuel - ) $200 E11111s
Ing:
114sfaa.m7.

I

4

IIIII Ford AI-. XLT. Supers
cab. 111. Y.f auto., ~&amp;, ' -·

1112 Chny Ss10, Taho, Elcals
..... Cond~loft. $7,1410, I1Wf2s
7332.

.., 30Wlls21113,
tloll,-.

M - T.......

114s317s7300.

'-" aor

441-.

F450, 4a4 3$1
~-=·"· angina, $1,800.

C:

Estate Gineral
58

Fruits&amp;
'i"a gellblas

==-·14--2771 ..
j

-

I

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER,.,.,,"',,.,. 3U 8821
DEBORAH scrTES, REALTOR.- ,,,..,4 .. 6101
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR-,eeoeee-..,4 48 1808
MICHAEL IIUER, REALTOil,,,, ...,441 11108

NEW FREE OuAUTY HOMES BOOK SHOWING HEARLY All
LOCAL REAL ESTATE LISTINGS, IN CO~QR, IS NOW
AVAILABLE . PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR YOUR
FREE COPY.

=-.,-- ...--....

----.... AII ... IMia-

jiiiiiiiL ,..,
..... •

.... ...... 1 • 2
........... 1117
05 ,.
1ln

_,._._
-

........

...... 30Wlls-.

SPRING VALLEY SPUT LEVEL.
~ allraclive and well kept home located in wen established
Spring Valley area allan yur family established Spring Valley
allan fOUl ~ these felliUres: 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
nice kitchen
breakfast nook, ~'ling room, tam~y
room and attached garage. Also includes nic:e covered patio,
lanced yard, gas heat and central air. Convenient to
everylhingl $79,900 Call Dave Wtseman for an appointment

W"rseman Real Estate
446-3644
Real Estate General

------Ei:E;4~
--..-.-__.............
·-..... . ..

I

-

s.-! - - - n d 417

-.. :-"1.-r..r...;
..

992·2259

2 ..........
' ; \ 2 ..

~-~?
.,....

•

.. -

...- .........
.........
,, . . ,,,
..

:. c..aCIII.-.1111 •• •10.
:ll •

IMPRESB?YE BRICK RANCH OHIO RIVER FROM THE FAMILY DINING
ROOM . FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM AND liVING
ROOM. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, MASTER BEDROOM
FEATURES DRESSING ~OOM AND SLIDING DOORS
LEADING TO PRIVATE P"TIOIPOOL AREA. EQUIPPED
KITCHEN HAS SNACK BAR. THERE IS AN INTERCOM.
ATIIC FAN, LOTS AND LOTS OF CLOSET SPACE,
ATTACHED GARAGE, MUCH, MUCH MORE. C"LL
FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS HOME SOON.

-

1832. FAIILY

HOME

with -

,_, lo

3 E,.._

9.P,R,E-A.O Q.U..T. 4 bod!ooml, balh, llil, DR, LR.
lam. rm.. 1st 11oo&lt; badrm. &amp; up.
front and
bad&lt; porch. NU basomenL allllche&lt;l garage. I ao:.IWI.
REDUCED $42,500. MAKE a;FEif.

"

.. .. .

Home

This Homa Wll M..S ASS Your Needa with 3
badrooms, large living room with fireplace. 2
balhs utility room nd nice kitchen . And it is
only yrs old. Very nice home located only
minutas from town. $51,000
1703

4

Ciao- Rllpalr, Froo
PlcksUR~ Daii=Y: Go argoo
CrMk
'114 141-0214.
Froo EaiiiMIH On Docke, Par· - · Wood Wllfklng, 114s441,

me.

-'"'lzlna

Ron'a TY Borvloa,
In Zenhh aroo -*'na 111C11i1
olhor brondo. -

-

...... _

co'lo, OliO
NDOlra. WI/

304-fTI.Z~II Ohio 1~24114.

Septic Tank P•..,.na 180~,Qallla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,

1818 While Oak Rd. location 30 acres, m/1,
vacant land wltimber, mineral rights. good road
frontage some c:learad r..d. $26,600.
STONE EXTERIOR HOME ALSO HAS STONE
FIR~PLACE IN FAMPLY ROOM WHICH IS
CONVENIENTLY JOINED WITH KITCHEN, AND DINING
AREA PRIVATE PORCH FOR WARM WEATHER
DINING. 3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, LARGE FORMAL
LIVING ROOM. ATTACHED CARPORT, BONUS LIVING
OUARtERS FOR FAMILY OR RENTAL .IN DETACHE[J
GARAGE APT. REAR OF HOI.JE. AGENT OWNED.
$79,500.
NEAR RIO GRANDE COLLEGE ·
REDECORATED 2 STORY HOME .. NEW
COVERING. NEW KITCHEN CABINETS ... NICE
REAR OF HOME. NICE COLORS
FOR AN APPOINTMENT SOON .. HOMES I
I
"RE IN GREAT DEMANDI (AGENT OWNED.)
•NICE COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX. 10 ACRES ' LARGE LIVING ROOM, EATsiN KITCHEN, AMPLE
CABINET SPACE, 3 BEDROOMS, DEN. 2 CAR
GARAGE, KYGER CREEK "REA. BETTER CALL
• SOONI $52,000.

;;;;;:;;;;;:;: Home

town.

ID stores, church and clinic. Owner wants lo
sell and is willing ID listen 1D any good ollar.

1705

I

arac-..·o Home Aapalr,
RoofinG, RemcdiHng, Oidia.
Etc. F"Ne &amp;1.11111111•, R.-...

84

'

ON
P2KE, One ol
the few homes in the a11111, lhis brick ranch
offers features ~ke large family room wilh
stone fireplaca, 3 bedrooms, 1 11 2 baths, lull
basement and 2 car ~arage. Also la19e lot wllh
fruit trees . central arr I more Spring Valley
area location. $7i,900
1800

Services

241stlS2.

--=:;:;._,

OWNER SAYS IIAKE AN OFFERI3 bedroom
2 112 bath cloublewide Situated on 1.59 acre
lot. Large delached recreation room connected
by a breezeway. new floors &amp; noor coverings,
new paneling, newer electric forced atr
furnace. 2 outbuildings, 2 car carport Also, an
additional trailer pad wilh warar, electric and
· . Prload at $55,000.
1701

,

aiding "' trallor oklrtlng. 114-

.'

1885, OLD FASHION &lt;;HARM, In town
location tor "Mr. fix 1r Large 2 stono home. 3
bedrooms LR Formal dining room, kit, bath.
Altached garage,and corner lOt. walk 1D school
and shoppong.

I':,C

HARD TO FIND,
HARD TO BUYI· Every
day someone wants creek frontage, well now
we have "' Lovely older home located on 13
acres, m/1, with 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs, living
room, large eat-in kitchen , sitting area and
additional room to fit your needs. Several
storage buildings and lot for mobile home.
Enjoy the creek, hiking or just sitting on the
back porch. Call Carolyn lor additional
Information. Priced 111 $74,900.
41802
Vahte:The Moat Sp- For Your Money.
And there's just no comparison to this ...3
bedrooms, 1 balh, large living room, den, large
family room or dining room, 20 X 40 inground
paol, large barn and several buildings. all·lhis
pluo 6.190 acreo, 11111. Reacly lor you 1D move
into lor only $59,900. Dial that phone nowl

41805
Jay Drives A Family Nlllghborhoodl· We
offer lhis home wilh an excenltnt floor ~ian­
zoned areas for dining, entertaining, leisure

dme and sleeping . Among the features : 5
bedrooms, 2 112 balhs, large family room,
equipped kilchen, ~.,;.::~'..room and dining area,
and outside accom
lions for just kicking
back and relaxing. City Schools. $88,500 t400

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Over
is produced from
.
Untl apartment bu~ding . Good locatiOn
1n town. Good rental hisiDry Very nice lot w1th
access to back alley $59,900
1206

per

LARGE LOT, Large House for $24 ,9001 3-4
bedrooms with potential lor more. Close to
grade school in Vinton . Call Carolyn for more
details.
41804
CLOSE TO GAVIN &amp; RIVER VALLEY
HIGH SCHOOL I 3 94 acre lot, 11111, located on
a blacktop road. Water ava1lable Perfect lor
mobile horne. Lot has been surveyed Nice
country vrew. $12,000
1214
BECOME ONE WITH NATURE, Nesde your
home among the traeS on this 24.672 wooded
lot, mA. A 32 X 32 barn with loft has already
been built for you. eleclric and water tap If you
want privacy, here Is where you need to bu11d .
$27,000 .
180

FRONT STREET, VINTON, 2 bedroom. 1
ba1h brick home with kitchen. living room,
laundry room and large walk on attic that could
be converted into 3rd bedroom. Nice covered
front porch and large petion, a one car garage
and more.
1300
20 Acre~ on Rodney H~ll, Located on
Jackson Poke ust berond Spnng Valley. Prime
building location. Trues. view. $27,500 1204
HERE IT IS...JUST WHAT 'ntE FAMILY
WANTSII Cozy, spotless. elean and al 1he
room you need Lovely 4 bedroom hone, wilh
an exceptional master bedroom· coz~
fireplace, city achools, pool, located miRutes 1o
IDwn. Call for price and appointment
1700
RIO CENTER ESTATES, Build your home
among the trees on one of these semisecluded Ioiii. 1 mie west of Rio Grande. Lots
range in size from 2.5 acres to 5 acres.
Restrictive covenants for your protection.
Prices range from $6,500 for 2.5 acre siza to
$10,300 for select 5 acre paocal . County water
available. Call us for mora information. ' 1237

We Need Listings!!

Will build roomo,
patio 00put
....up
, -vinyl
··
ocr....,.

1173. PRIIIE DEVELOPMENT LAND- Land
Says wei. Older 2 stcxy home with 4 bedrooms
and buildings. Home in need ol repair, 117 ac.
11111. Call lor location and price. Wa119r. Sewer.

1141. SUBURBAN BEAUTY- The remarl&lt;able
spaciaus home with 1riew ol rtMt County. llalan
liSe Ioyer, cathedral ceilings wi1lt bllcOny, 3
BR, 2 112 baths,iving room wit1 woodbuming
fireplace, ...,.,. lli?cfal, blealllasl room ha&amp; •
lg. window, slllreo apaal&lt;8111woughoul, bntss
light fixtures and m!ICh mora. 2 - atsached
garage, a1tic """'tJU, 2 aaes "'!'· T?is house
is malnllner.c.J free ol baoS quali?r. ...,... your
appointm91'1t and - wJ!IU don1 agrw.

NEW LISTING·Look While You Cook·
Dogwood In the spring and a yeer round view
of the river just add to the charm of the
remodeled kitdlen in lhis contemporary ranch
home in 1he city. You wil fall in love wilh the
cherry cabinets, JennAir range and ceramic
tile countertops. The living/dining room
combination oilers a woodburning fireplace,
built-in bookcases and a marvelour vew as
well. There are two full baths and a two car
carport
convenience. Better hurry on
lhis one.
at $11,000.
1500

Jec-,DH1~37.ft21.

71 ACRES 11111 wilh large bam .

- . 2 ,.. old. 7

~

S1500t.1011. -.n, 110;
1185-3..1ovonlnga.

YociAIM

S •h•n, OH

1883, Nice famUy home wilh plenty ol space
for everyone. 3 BR's, 2 baths, lui basement.
Nice lo~ 160 X 150. Within walking clstanc:e ol
shopping center. Has been reoenlly remodeled
with new insulated windows and central air
unit Cal Wilma Williamson at 245-9070 for an
appoin-.t

'*

CIOl- 111114 PDIH'Po

Davfo -lng ?7achlna And

PLACE TO BIJILO. 2 TO 5 Acrea more or
less. Oriw 1o While Rd. to Chan&gt;lai~ LaM Dr.
to l..aklwiew Cl Oltering 2 llat to rollong Iota. a
variety of nes and beeulilul view ol the lake.
All amenities available. Rural water,
underground electricity. aerator systems
acceptable. Reslrictive covenants apply. Close
1o Holzer and shopping.
41872, STATE ROUTE 16Qs 3 ac. lot m/1,
$15,000.00. Charolais H~ls.

1811 - lmmaculall home jus? recently
redecoratadwilh , _ carpe~ wallc:overing •
Insulated windows and llir cond1ion unit. 3
BR's, 1 112 balh, lui basement Must see to
appreciate. Cal Wilma Wiilwnson 81 245-9070
anytime to maha an appc&gt;O&gt;tmenL

11211

·--111122hot
.......
9 . . . .Iori,

Two

-··----·

#e38-LAKEYIEW SUBDIVISIONs A CHOICE

.. flml EcJslpmenl

!WI Btaranl 2111 lraller,
cMIUI modll, AIC, fully equippad, 304475-1421, 17&amp;-AII.

;s

1188, VACANT LAND- Springf;eld Twp. 59
ac. 11111 acroas !rom Holzer Hospital. Gloat
loc:lltion lor large homes on a hil.

'2:5 1 JC~

. ..

campers.
Motor Home•

79

omCio
LOCUST ST .
Gl\t.LtPOL.8, -0 ·15611

, 41825, VACANT LAND-Close in. 5 acms
rollng land.

STEVEN SGT. SWORDS..,_,,_,,, ,_,245-5101t
WILMA WILUAIISON, AS50aATE, •.,.245-1070
JAMES WILLIAMSON, ASSOCIAT£,,..245-8070

S. . 8p!,es

=~·--

VICIIIT WID
41871, HAVE A BEAUTFUL COUNTRY
ESTATE, Build your c1raan home overtookin;
a large lake. 73 acres m/1 of rolling lao)d, clean
and IIICMICI, Wit a bit o1 woodland, 8 AC. ol
lakes mil. Tlis property ~as many
CIIIPOf'lnllies. Ita prusent use Is a paid fishing
lake. Great lor a churdt CMip, camping
grounds or subctvide. l..ong Road Frontage.

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR,.,., .,....,..24H!I75

S?ol ......... - · -

I

---..

81

EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR._,,,,, ....,441-1n7
RUTH BARR, REALTOR ..._ .. ,,,,,~.,441..Q722

- '" .... , .

...

446•3636

11115 Dodae pl!:J~ura:··· 315 .....
f4100,
s2144 Ofter

PROFESSIONAL SEIYIQ MAlES THE DIFFERENC£

~

372s3113or1~1.

Realty

1179 Ford

I ::IOIIII-I:OOpm. 7Pon-Fit

.
IIlii 3$1 Clowlond Cl,
T......,.loalon $2111, 114--.
11501, Allor 1 P.?7.

'*

Canaday:

1117 Nloaan 2 WD King Cab
plelwp. deluu Clp, cuetom
..- . $4,400. Good cond, 171-7121 belorei:OD PS7.

41848.MAKE AN OFFERIIIonlhis
lovely 3s4 'BR ranch home wilh eatsin l&lt;itdlen.
LR. FR. 2 balhs, Elec BB heat, ub~ly nn. , and
storage bldg. on 1/2 acre m/1. This property
could be used an a 4 BR home or a 3 BR
home wlbearty salon. For appointment call
Eunic:e Niehm 448-1897.

....

·~2171

11173 Flbatform 11 Fl. SklsWih 185 HP lleoCf wr, 110 114s

.,.,~· -· V4-.~' .

" " - Truck. ... ......,..
Parl&lt;lna
Lol,

..,

18 112 l't. 110 With Troller • 1 Tal.._o Back 01-, 1 . _
Canopy Top &amp; Cwtalna, Boa !'liN SID Ford Plcloup .,TI,

Real Esta1e General

C.biOvlolon

.......

Accessories

•-ant

31)4s7'1Wt!O,

11115 WinMs.10 nuca. ,...
Ford illfltolde TNCk. 1117 Fon?

_,.

Auto Parts &amp;

76

1111 Chrlo Croft, 1811, M4 hp Inboard
• outboord - · .....
IIII Hondo CR:i.!,lllll KX250; 1
- II'IIUar, low houi'IIL $7,200.
1110 Hortoy Do
aa,
304-t'll-3143 ..... 1:00 PM ..
34H358.
IIIIIZ ~I KX 121, 010 19M 8 - Runabout With 10 Cer dolly, ,_ point; , _ .......
a11apt, S800
aclnd, 12,200. 304 ID-:142I.
HP Mo10ury 0Utboan2, 114s44&amp;- Urea,
3712.
Finn, 114sJII24110.
1tt2 KllwuSd loyou 300, Excols
Jot Ski, Supor Je~ 2 ChMiy IIIICk S.ck bUm!*', $11
1on1 COntlllon, Vary t - Yomoha
Y11ro Old, Exceo'-'1 COntlllon, -h.IM*Zslllt.
!lllaoge. 13.300. 114s388s87114.
Call 8Ms44HI738.
=·~ tanka, ona ton lruCio
lie. D RAuto, Rl-. WI/. 304s

Qs

eao anir

.

..

=~23=·~1=99=3~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Po~m~e~roy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

' C91!7o ~.aMNII T.-_ Coo IT 'ft. Te,GOO 97....... To :::..:~
miiM Laeded. OOocl Condlllon $1.11i ~pnalilta. 1...........131.

II IIIDunoS,
• . . . . . PLIIildw,

RIPM

-

.

'

23, 1993

12 Trucks for Sale

~· ........ 1?00, ~;;;;;;.!, -iloii.',_ .-.

.... ~~- Cow O'an. IMido I
, _ ou.ta.aMU..I'M
418 DIG.

-~-- ,
Mil

Gil.

OH-Polnt Pleesant, WV

Auto&amp; for Sale

71

....

.....,.

p)xl

-- - --- -

.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555

as General Hauling
Ec-y Wiler lllnrlco. Up to
gal. doliv«y. - . ...

2000

lomo, ...... ..., ...... - ·

304sl'll-7121.

446·7729
B.J. HairstOI• 446·4240
Patrick coc•r••·446-8655
lad•·

Real

Caroly•

·1
So••Y Gar•es•446·2707
Da• r•o•s • 379·2902

Real Esta1e General

Real Estate General

•11.
OF PERFECTION surrounds
lhis graciouo horn8. Lacalad in an exclusiw
area. 11 total nns., wi1lt 3 baths. toyer enlfY
with open stairway. Larva iving rm, w!WBFP.
formal dining rm., gowmet IIi., lanttly I game
nn., share and open fireplace, solarium, 4
oversized bedrooms. Master bedroom has
cathedral ceiing, wh~ baSh and ?leaujful
arched windows. First lloor laundry, bosas:1ent
enclosed parch and 2 car attached garage.

"Wdntment.

....... ,._,_
-...:•·-.........

;

J Fa;
a 1010 Trldor
. . - ; MF 1M M,2IO; 7PF 210

._

PRIVATE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDI!aG REDWOOD HOME.
FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN~~ BEAUTIFUL FORMAL
LIVING ROOM AND
OM, 4 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, LARGE STl jV~OBBY ROOM OPENS
ONTO DECK ON Sl ~D· FLOOR. FIREPLACE IN
LIVING ROOM, WOOD-BURNER IN FAMILY ROOM. '
CAR GARAGE, 9 ACRES. $125,000.

~HOME

- L - - of SR 35.
wlh now tmprov-. Lovoty
llhoul. naw doCk. roo! 3 y - old, 2
-..s.,LR, IIIl nn.,lll., •"*'1011 lhlnl poo:ll,-

'"t"i"""

. . . _.... now c:orpol li

41857· MAKE A DEAL· OWner wants action.
Just on the market 3 bedroom, -1 bath, porch,
2 car garage. Nic:e modular 24 X 64. Rural
water. 2.4 ac. 11111. Make Ofter.

1782. FOUR BEDROOM HOllE, 2 BATHSRoomy ranch home loc:llllld in the country.
Extensive WOik complelad as lollows. new
Thermo Ahide wit tdows, $8CUrlty doors, steel
siding, heavy rool, kilehen, ceramic tile enlrY
extended into ldldlen, 16 X 53 c?ac:k. cement
and pad . See lhis home and stop
ala &amp;where.

nn. or lludy ftb-n••·

10iiiCEO:

MIDDLEPORT, Two story frame home
wilh 3 bedrooms, balh, newer repairs around home such as
wiring, kitchen &amp; bath. New electric heat pump. Includes
dshwasher, disposal, fireplace, central air, attic spece, cable
hook up, on llpprox I acre. Nice home good loc:alionl
ASKING $49,900 (May consider reasonable oflef!)

...........
-.
' ,... -.--.
--4
....,_GIS,
:... =.-.,.::
.............
=r=: .,...,..::s,,.c

.-..
•-

I ~~~- 414, Ill.

K

.. - · 1:1. ......

Clft -

'::I

_ , ..., - · $100; Ill.

REDUCED! SR 325 DANVILLE, 92+ acre farm with mobile
horne !hat has additklns includes woodleleclric heat, carpet
&amp; paneling, fireplace , LCD Water, cellar house. barn ,
garage. Nice laying land that includes harland, pasture &amp;
woods. Paved road, quoel, peaceful country setting .
REDUCED TO $70,500
NEW LISnNGI POMEROY· 3 bedroom Ranch Style home
on small lot near IDwn. Includes lull basement, central arr.
woo&lt;t&gt;umlng fireplaoe, I car garage. "SKING $25,000

.....
-. ........-s

-

INdl ....... 1300;

NEW LISTING! RACSNE, 1919 Claylon 24 x 40 sactional on
lot of approx. 72 x 72. Close to shopping &amp; schools. Home Is
very well kepi features 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs, eleclric heat
pump/ central air, small front deck, all blinds &amp; curtains ,
ceiling lan, cathedral ceiling, Tappan range· &amp; refrigerator,
separate ut~ity room , plenty of cabinelll &amp; ber In kilehen. A
VERY CUTE HOMEIIneludes shade 11881ASKING $35,500
NEW LISTING! POIIEROV, Bunker HHI I Pooch Fork Rd.
araa 136+ 7 acres of vacant graund, 2 produeong oil &amp; gas
weRs w1th royalties. Also has a very old house on property.
ASKING $48,000

41877. ntREE BEDROOMS, two baths,
cloublewide situated on one a0111 more or less,
plus two car garage close 1o Rio Grande. can
today for more details.

PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES , LARGE
HOME of(ars 4 BRa, 2 baths, kitchen, LR,
FR, gas fumaca, fillilplace, ce~tral air,
attachod

1fr77, HANNAN TRACE SCHOOLS - Neat

$28.000

and clean 3 BR home with LR, DR, eat-In
kitchen, s.m, fuel ol heat,,_ roof.

1110 EUREKA- Nell and ...... 2s3 bedroolll
house wi111 LA a..;, kildlen, belh. gas
1umac:e range an&lt;l'oulbui?ding . 30' X 15'
IIP!IfDI. On 5.88 · m/1 $20's.

ranch

41885- COUNTRY UVING, You will like lhla 2
BR, 2 balh Kajen MH wrlh eat-in kitchen, gas
heat, LR, on 112 acre m~ $25 000 Bonus·
OlderMH..
'
.
•

WE NEED LISTINGS!
IF YOU WANT YOUR?IOPERn

RIVER FRONT LOTSI Many to choose from located in
area• of Longbollom and SR 338 Racinel Various
llzaslpricesl Summer Is fast approaching ... cal tOday 10 get
1he lot of your cholc:el

~

,...

, 7 use
-

... •..

k:.-..:. ..;·,~ ~

•az,

.lUST LOYB.Y 1112 14' X 70'
Red..., llo2lle Hollie. 2 '*"-•w. master
bechom IMfY talge wl ball. l.oeda ola~.
2nd badooom ltl1d balh, ~ing LA., lilt.,
w/Oak Cllblneta. Celpet lb ,_, Dec:ka Mel
awninga. Rental lot haa m811)' plants Mel
lloW*ing - ·· This io ..,. good buy. ,
•

HENRY E. CLELANI) .........................................H2..01t1
KATHY CLELAND........... ................................... H2..0111
•aER ........................................... Ht-2431
TRACY BRIN"
SHERR! HART ._................ .,.,...................,........ 742,2257

GIVE US I CllU
.. '---....:..:.;~:.;;...;:=;...._,--'

..__"

....... REDUCED TO MI,IOOslll Lovely 3s4
BR ntnclt home willl Ml-in ldldlan, LR, FR, 2
balho, Elec B8 heat, Utif. RM and siAiraga
bldg. on 112 acre 11111. Thia prapo~ could be
UMCIM 11 4 BR home or 3 BR home wiiiNuty
aalon. Check Ills buttl
.

JI••O/F-FSC-E"'!.."''"..
" ..
'"..
"'......
.....
.................:.,"'..
" ..
'"..
"'· "·
"'..
"'..
"'.."..
"'.."..
'"..
"'..
" ..2..' 2..2•51-'
.. -

•

SOLD

. . . PIIIZE ~SCKAGE FOR THE YOUNG
MMLY • 3 BR with LR, Mlsin lcllchen, bath
gas ,_, new raol, aiding, laftced..ln yan(
........ built -in ..... clshwaaher, clspoaal.

IT'S HERE! THE TillE TO BUY I SELL IS NOW! CALL US
TODAY FOR ALL OF YOUR BUYING?SELLING NEEDS Ill
WE NEED L78nNGSfl
I:='~ T,=

fiEADV FOR lOME COMFORTABLE COUNTRY
UVING - •NEAR THE CITY? 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
HOME HAS FAMILY ROO._. WITH FIREPLACE, 2 CAR
ATT"CHED GAF'eo·I 'J"OCKED PONO, C"BIN
BESIDE POND IS ~ • - ·ROUTINGS. APPROX. 24
ACRES. FENCE"'"."" I URE, NICE PLACE FOR
HORSES. CALL FOR AN AFf'OINTMENT. WE LOVE TO
SHOW ntiS PROPERTYI

.•

.

-

. I ..

..

CITY UVING , Come in and look at this
extra nice home. Equipped kitchen, FR,LR,
·
an, gao heat. city water, uaod aa rental pm· DR, goa furnace, cont. air, FP, patio,
rooms, 3
1y, baths, LR. kitchen ,
pert)'. $29,000. (888)
workshop.
years old.
• . . NICE FLAT LOT, 314 acre mn wilh l988
WOODS MILL ROAD -3 bodoooms, bath, LR. RACOON ROAD- 3 BRa. balh, kllchen, din!"G mobile homo in very good condlion. Priced
kitchen woth range and refrigel'lltor, bam wttl&gt; room, 2 112 car unaltllched garage, beaualul in 1ha 20'o. Cell Ru!h·lor c»tails.
horse stalls, 27acru
(1053) wooded U """"'·
ATIRACTIVE HOME IN VILLAGE OF
' ANORAMIC VIEW OF OHIO RIVER QUIET COUNTRY SETIING FOR A
cENTERVILLE , Conveniently locatad,
IPLENDPD HOME, -'II briok nanch, 2.374
ownaro have dona work to make lhls a mmP
balh
VALLEY - 2,484 oq("~_!!~ 3LBR,R~FI}~ 8, ~ ecreo11111, 4 BRa, 2 baths, large kitchon, 2
fortable home.
buikii
covered porchea, c?ac:k, heat pump, 2 car
great room oombO .......~.
ell around houoo, hoat pump,
ngs on gantge
31 ACRES MINUTES TO TOWN • Nice
property. Too much property to advar11•.
.
•
homo on p~perl)' laatures.3 BRs, bath, LA,
Call.
71 ACRES m~ . Up Craek Road, Moraan lWp., kitchen, bam, tobacco base.
FOR SALE - COAL nPPLE wllh ell
3 BR home w11h balh, LA &amp; kisohell, 4-bulklings
•
loatlng faciitiel . 1,687 ft. rivetfront Call
on property.
·
tor morecleleifa.
ISVESTDRB , R - Ro..:t 40 "-mil
LOT FOR SALE ON ST. RT. 160, NORTlt
BEAU11FUL HOME LOCATED C:O.
moolly wooded. $160 per mon\h income'
=.u~l ESTA,!ES - Approx. 3/4 acre, mn.
11
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD - S81,900 - 4
from mobile homo pada.
' .. " apol r a home.
BRa, 2 baths, equipped kHchen, LR, FR, OLD CHEVY OLDI BUILOING 4,., front
c•-~L RO•" _ 4 mo·. N. of R'ro Gran~-.
heat pump, central air, 2 car athlched
'
' ..v
..._..
'"'
""
aoage, 21015 with houoa.
on Second Ave. lnd 82' lronlaga on Grape.
Approx. 24 acras of aurvoy~ vaccnt land.
1
~lor now home. $19,000.
JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - AODIION
Road, Green TWP. - 368 ac.. filnn, 3 pond&amp;, tabacco
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 mn, 248
... OO, vacant lot on K~cker lol
base, 55x 100 bern, with concrete flooro.
frontage along SR 7 juat across from Ohio
Twp.,
M&amp;)l conaider apNL (578)
River Plozo.
' electric, water I MP!ic on

I

.-

ATTENTION
121 Gavin S...,t, Nice homo
S BRa,
LR, kitc~an. FR, bath &amp; laundry nn. , al1e011
oidng, nice yard.
'
EVERYTHING FOR ntE FAMILY -3BRs
balha LR DR FR 2 lireplaces ~eat
•
~ .,.iund
Call for more Into.

z

Pool.

NEAR GREEN ELEMENTARY SCIH04)l,
Well ma011ain~ home offers 3 BRo.
k1tchon, bath, 2 fireplaces. olactnc
cent atr and 1.12 acres mn.
BUILDING FOR SALE .... approx.
sq. ft., located on . Lrncbln Pike
Centenary. Call lor detarls .
I.IMACRE8+70XI2SIETAL
BUILDING _..,lppod w111t ldtchen, balho;
olfloo, ale. Greet buoinao •
PIKE ITREET •- Formerly TIMIUre ·
Houae Ceramics. 2,060 oq. II. balh,
kitchen, 10lc52 moblla home uted •

reniltl.

LOOKING fDR .A PLACE FOR
BUSINESS? • SA 160
-'!&gt;pmx. 200'lll!OO' lot All

�~

PeG•

D8 SUnday Times Sentinel

... ·'

Pomeroy-lllddleport-GIIIIpoUt, OH-Polnt Pleaunt, WV

May 23,1993

Farm Flashes

Knicks

Field trip produces insights
into cattle grazing procedures
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
Mr. Jacobs also manages the
Esteasion Agent
K74 Ranch which is a major force
Alrlculture &amp; CNRD
·
m the Hereford breed. The Jacobs
GALLIPOLIS - Home looks annual volume of 600 cow calf
good after a lhree-day visit to Okla- pairs, 3,800 spring/summer grazing
homa this week.
stocker, and 3,000 fall grazers. All
· I was a part of a small group this with only two cowboys and 26
from Ohio to accompany Mr. Bob Utes. Some ranchers are measuring
Evans to the cattle producing profit potential by reducing the
region of Oklalloma to study how overhead cost. Tires represent
they ate using grass· to produce machinery investment and overbeef.
·
head cost The unique pan of this
· The original focus of the trip ranc~ is that they are. doing "cell"
was to auend a field day program grazmg. This is a modification of
81 the Noble Foundation in south- wh&amp;l we know as "intensive grazern Oklahoma at Ardmore . The ing."
foundation, fo~nded_ by the la~e
On Wednesday of this week,
Lloyd Noble, oil busmessman, m there were 3,800 stocker cattle on a
the early 1900s, now has assets of 300-acre cell. They would be in
over $350 million dollars.
, that field only two days before
Each year the foundation spends moving to the next field and would
about 5 percent of their assets in pass back through that area 'after
research, education and consults- the grass has rested and grown
lion. A big part of their mission about 40 days. ·
incl~des free co~sultation on ~arm
The l)igh density stocking rate
and ranch planrung and to ach1e~e . and quick movement may offer
tlleir goals. Most of thelf work IS some opportuniiies in our ilrea.
done within a 100-mile radius of
·
Ardmore.
The thiJ:d moming,JNas spent at
The demonstration farms owned Oklahoma State University in Stillby the foundation now are focusing water. Many of the Animal Science
on matching cow size, milk flow professors reviewed their work
and forage production. One unit is with the Ohio group. An exciting
producing their own bulls in an concept that we heard throughout
effort to make a unifonn herd to fit the week was the feeding of a very
their forage system .on that ranch. small amount of high protein supThey are working with Gelbvieh, plement feed during the low forage
Angus, Btaham in the "composite." quality part of the season.
Their pastures are different from
According to Oklahoma State
ours by including many species in professors, performance is limited
the mix. ·Each specie con,tributes to · during the low-forage quality seathe season production by being the sons because intake is limited. By
"best" at some lime in the season supplementing one pound per day
oi- under some weather condition.
of a 38 percent all natural pellet or
At the N&lt;&gt;ble Foundation we cube, producers are able to "net"
were also able to learn more about $24 additional income per head.
the double crop system of grazing This is only fed when the forage
rye and "Red River Crabgrass." All protein drops below 8 percent I am
of the Noble Foundation efforts are sure this has some potential in our
toward showing farmers how to region; but we need to take a closer
retain more of their farm income as look at the mineral balance. This
profiL
program is known as the "Oklahoma Gold" program.
··
The second day was spent at the
Bill Jacobs 'Ranch near Sulphur,
I would like to share my experiOkla. Some Hereford breeders will ences with farmers in Gallia and
remember this 12,000-acre ranch as Meigs counties. I w&lt;&gt;uld be availthe Taylor Ranch and the role that able for Farm Bureau Council
it played in solving the dwarfism · meetings, Grange meetings, etc.
problem several years back.
Call if you want some details.

Acreage measurement
service now available
By USA COLLINS
GaiUaASCS
GALLIPOLIS- Do you have a
field in which you are uncertain of
the exact acreage? An accurate, ,
timely report of acres is required to
comply with program requirements.
"I UNDERSTAND THAT AN
INACCURATE
ACREAGE
REPORT COULD RESULT IN
PAYMENT REDUCTION OR
LOSS OF PROGRAM BENEFITS
... " This statement appears on the
acreage report that you will file
with the ASCS office for 1993.
If part of a field,will be planted
to one crop,. and the remainder of
the field planted to another crop,
you may want to consider request·
mg a measurement service. For a
small fee, flags may be set before
planting, or we may measure the
acreage after the crop is planted. If

a spotcheck fmds that your acreage
esumate is not accurate, you could
suffer a payment reduction.
All payment reductions made
last year could have been avoided
with a measurement service. Measurement service costs are small
when compared to the potential
loss when a farm is out of compliance.
Would you like to have a copy
of the aerial photography for your
farm showing the cropland
acreage? The ASCS office maintains aerial photography for the
entire county which is available at
a nominal charge. Each year the
county is flown and color slides are
printed which can also be reproduced. For additional infonnation
on aerial photography and measurement services, please contact
the ASCS offiCe at 446-8686.

sures for fishenncn and women_ As
of today the stream is stocked anq
is doing quite well after nearly four
years of excellent management and
hard labor. Bass numbers are growing. In short time the Junker size
will be showing up.
Folks who drive the hi41hways
near Raccoon Creek and vtew the
stream as they move along its edge,
may observe many places where
uees are growing along the shore
line. There are also many places
where tree limbs and trees have slid
or fell into the wate'r. Many places,
trees were intentionally left on the
banks for good reasons, including
helping 10 stabilized the banks.
Raccoon Creek can best be utilized for one of its main purposes

MYSTERY FARM· This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil aad Water
Conservation Distric:t, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessin1 the
farm's owaer. Just mail, or drop off your 'guess .
to 'the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or the Gal6polls Daily Tribune, 825
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you

may win a $5 prize from the Ohio VaHey Pub·
llshillg Co. Leave your name, address and telephone number with your card or letter, No telepbooe calls will be accepted. All contest entries
should be turned In to the aewspaper office by 4
p.m. tacb Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner wiD be cbosea by lottery. Next week, a GaUia
Couaty farm wiD be featured by the GaiUa Soil
and Water Conservatloa DistricL

Roberts named
district manager
NEWTON, Iowa - Dick
Roberts, Gallipolis, has been promoted to a district manager for the
Vernon Company..
Robens has been with the Vernon Company since 1976.
The Vernon Company, founded
in 1902, is the leader in the specialty advertising industry with ove(
$56 million in sales in 1991. The
fitm manufactures exclusive lines
of calendars, sign$, advertising specialties, cutlery, wearables, business gifts, and writing instrumentS
and markets them as sales promotion, incentive, and premium products to businesses.
•
WINS TROUBLESHOOT CONTEST • For tbe tbird time in
four yean, students from Backeye Hills Career Center In Rio
Grande bave woa tbe AAA/ChrJsler Troubleshoot State Flaals,
beld May 14 In Dayton. James Stewart and Darren TUley, Ohio
Champions, will compete in tbe Natloaal Finals Ia Washington
D.C. in June. They will be aeeompaaied by their instructor, Doug
Crabtree. The contest involves 15 teams of two studentS eacb, who
initially competed wltb 1100 .students statewide on a written test.
The state flaal II a bands-on competition where the studeats
attempt to repair Identically "bugged" Chrysler vehicles agaiast
the clock. The team tbat repairs the vehicle In tbe shortest amount
of time, combla~ with a blgb wrlttea test score, wins the state
chilmploasbip. Tbere were two teams from Buckeye Hills Career
Center in the state finals. Tbe second team, Charles Williamson
and Michael Burtoa, placed fifth in tbe competition. Their instructor is Randy McKianey, wbo comj)eted in the AAA/Cbrysler Troubleshoot in 1978 as a studeat of Doug Crabtree. Left to right are
Doug Crabtree, instructor; James Stewart, co-champion and Darrell Tilley, co-champion.
·
.

5074
~uper Lotto:
9-11-14-18-35-45
Kicker:

which is hatching and growing fish
for those who like to cast their
hooks and Catch a Junker now and
then.
Another reason for protecting
the streambank is to provide
nature's .bounties of wild flowers,
plants of various species, wild animals that il!habit the shore line and
tree limbs. Many species of animals and wild flowers thrive 'along
the wooded shores. The animals
prefer the wooded shore line to
raise their babies. They make needed shelter by diggins dens for their
young. Many wild plants also need
shelter and water to grow their
beautiful flowers and seed pods to
generate new growth for the com'
ing year.

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Weaver promoted
CHESHIRE • Roger M. Weaver
has been promoted from Associate
Engineer to Perfonnanc~ Engineer
in the Performance Department
effective May 11, at the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Plant. N. H. Tarr, plant manager, made the announcement.
.Weaver joined OVEC in 1992 ·
as an Associate En~ineer. He is a ·
graduate of West Vlfginia Institute •
of Technology with a bachelor of
science degree iri mechanical engineering. He resides in New Haven,

w

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. . An Anny veteran of the Korean War, Baker worked for Excelsior Salt Works prior to joining
Sporn in 1974 as a utility man. He
has been on diS~~bility leave since
1980. B'aker is a member of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Olurch
an~ enjoys fishing and oil painting.
He and his wife Aiadine have three
daughters, eight grandchildren, and
two great-grandchildren.
·

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•

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1'993 PONTIAC GRAND AM,

70s.

•

Vol. 44, NO. 18

MutUmedl1lnc.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 24, 1993

1 S.CUon. 10 P"'IH 25 a.~ta
A Multlmecl• Inc. Newopeper

Meigs graduates told to
'learn from your mista~es'

•

song, rain is going 10 come. Thin~s abOut the P.ast 13 years of educaBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
will p:o wrong in our lives that will tion descnbing it as the "foundaSentiael News Staff
"Determine to continue in the wash us down and out of our tion for the rest of oilr lives". He
face of adversity, learn from your wate~pouts. B_ut we've got to be said that the past four years have
misfortunes and mistakes, don't JUSt hke the llsy-bltsy spider. prepared the class to "step into the
rest on your accomplishments, and We've got to get up, sh;Uce it off, real world" and that success now
.and let the sun dry us out.. .. :.and depends on personal effort.
love and trust those in your life."
Principal Fenton Taylor preseniThat was tile advice .of Meigs . stan out again," said Gannaway.
ed
the class to Larry W. Rupe,
Lambert's advice to the graduLocal Superintendent James· Carpresident
of the Meigs Local BOard
penter SUilday aflei'nOOD to the 154 ates. was_ to set their goals high and
of
Education,
who gave diplomas
graduates - of the Meigs High never g1ve up. He quoted from
to
the,
graduates
as Carrie Elizabeth
Gabriel Heatrer, "Mere longevity is
Sehoo!Ciass of 1993.
Tl!e baccalaureate speaker told a good thing for those whO watch Bartels, secretary, read the class
IMPRESSIVE SITE • The 154 Meigs High
Co-valedictorians, Kevirr Lambert and Allison
the graduates that "life after gradu- life from the side lines. For. those roD. Heather Marie Franckowiak
Schoolarlllluates Ia their maroon and gold caps
Gaanaway, led tbe graduates into Larry R.
who play the game, an hour may be class vice president, gave the sym~
ation isn't always easy".
and goWDs liaed up outside the school Sunday
Morrison gymnasium for the commencenfeot
a
year, a single day's work an bol of graduation after which the
"You may not be as independent
afternoon In preparation for the processional.
program.
band played the alma mater,
or malce decisions as easily as you achievement for etern1ty ."
The co-valedictorian talked "Maroon and Gold" and the recesthink, • he said. Comparing his
retirement in 111id-June to the graduation of the seniors, Carpenter
referred to both events as new
phases of life with challenges.
.He told the graduates not to be
surprised if one¢ they get the things
they want now, they fmd .they want
, more or different things. · "Each
new experience we have brings
about new learning whether we are
looking for it or not," said the
speaker who congratulated the
graduates on their success in completing high school.
There was standing room only
in the Larry R. Morrison gymnasium for the 25th annual baccalaureate and commencement exercises.
The processional was led by CO'
valedic!Orians Allison Gannaway
and Kevin-.Lambert .to music -by the Meigs High School Band under the
direction ofToney Dingess.
WilHam C. Toundas, one of the
graduates, gave the invocation and
Randall Curtis Johnston, class president, the welcome. Introductions
were by Abby Ruth Blake, class
treasurer. The Meigs Band played
"Incantations" by Smith and the
Chorus sang "It's So Hard· to Say
A. TIME FOR FUN • There's always time for a lillie fun even
Goodbye to Yesterday" by Alan
wben
tbe occasion is as sefious as high school commencemeat.
Billingsley.
From the left, Paul Vaa Cooney, Charles James, Christopher
In her valedictory address, GanSwaD¥J11, and John Martin, ~ome ofT with their way or saying ''we
naway compared graduation to a
made It!"
little spider looking up a waterspout and not really knowing
·
what's going to happen.
She based her comments on the
f~iliar verse about the "itsy-biJsy
sp1der that went up the waterspout.
Down came the rain and washed
the spider out. Out came the sun
and dried up all the rain, And the
itsy-bitsy spider went up· the spout
again."
"Right now we are like that little
~ROCESSlONAL - Southern Hlgll Schon!
make tbelr wriy to tbe stage at the beglaaing or
spider
looking up the waterspout ·
' 11emors ended their hi&amp;h sehool career at Sunday the ceremony,
It's
a·Jong
hinnel with light at the
nigbt'sarlllluation.ceremony. Here, SHS seniors
end, and we've just got to know
wha('s up there. And after today,
we are all going 10 stan up our different waterspouts. And the truth of
the matter is that just like in the ,
ByJ]MFREEMAN
· Hill recalled events which have panofwhenyouwereourages."
_ S.entinel News Staff .
affected her life and those of her
"Americans are no longer
Stxty-one Southern H1gh School classmates,
threatened by communism. We are
senigrs ended their high school
"In the year of 1986, we came now worried about things such as
careers Sunday at a graduation cer- together as a class for the first the North American Trade Agreeemony marked by the absence of time," she said. "We learned how ment, which will make' it even
Superintendent Bobby J. Ord who to compete against others as a more difficult frir inexperienced
apparently suffered a light heart group •• rather' than amongst our- _people to fmdjobs." .
allaCk late last week.
selves.
·
Turning back to the class Grace
Prior to his invocation, Rev.
Since entering high schQOI, the concluded, "I wish you all the best
Roger Grace dedicated the ceremo- world has been changed by the fall of luck in your future whatever
J.
ny to Mr. Ord who i~ recovering in of communism and the Persian course you choose to ~e. I hope
, A FINISJUNG TOUCH • Gelling the cap on just riWlt so that
a Columbus hospital. Teacher Gulf War.
- to see you all at reunions later in
•I stay~ In place isn't easy sometimes. Here M~igs graduate CourtCarla Shuler then read an address
"Now that our senior year has our lives and be surrounded by
n.ey Rrggs, daugbte.r of Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Riggs of Har- ,;
from .Mr. Ord comme~ding Grace come to' an end, we are faced with some of the most successful people
riSOaviUe, gets a helpmg hand l'rom her mother.
who IS leaVIng the Racme area thiS many challenges for the future. We I have met in my life.''
summer.
are forced to ~o our own separate
Diplomas were handed out by
Grace kickedpff the commence- ways as individuals and no longer Southern Local Board of Education
'
ment address bY' quoting an African as a class. We, the class of 1993, Member Gary 0 . Evans.
saying: "It takes an entire commu- welcome our new life and whatever
The choir sang "Till we Meet
nity to raise a child."
the future may !!ring," Hill con- Again" and "May Your Road be
"All of us must share the eluded_
Straight and Narrow.''
A Tuppers Plains man was
responsibility,'' Grace said.
.In conuast, Valedictorian Todd
·
-lcilled Saturday afternoon when his
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ~y to include 2,000 West Virgioia
Grace then recalled a story Grace focused his address on the
motorcycle went off the road and - A strike by the United Mine m10ers workmg for Huntingtonabout a child whose mother was future.
struck two trees, the GaiUa-Meigs Workers against coal operators based Ashland Coal Co. and Arch
·Post of the State Highway Patrol threatens job security miners are Mineral Co.
granted one wish upon his birth.
Borrowing a line from "Star
··
reported.
'.
She wished that everyone would Trek: The Next GellCI8lion," Grace
seeking, a spokesman said.
. A strike against Peabody HQid.love him always, he said.
said his fellow paduates have ihe
Dennis R. Ireland, 53. State . :'.J think the tragedy of a strike 10g Co. subsidiaries earlier lhis
Route 7, was eastbound on S.R. 1s not only the human cost th8l falls year end~ with the 60-day cdn~
The child was loved by all and option "to 1o where no one has
· received every pleasure 1te wanted, gone before.
·
681 in Bedford Township when he on the employees losing their tract extensux'l.
·
went off the--right side of the road wages, but1t's even more~ if
but never returned the love, Grace
Grace pdinted out that' liome of
A stumbling point in resum·
while negotiating a left hand curve. we lose custoiJlers," sa1d Tom ilej!otiatlons remaihs jobs.
said. After the child grew to matu- the people in his class will be getThe motorcycle then went over Hoffman, a spokesman for the . uruon and companies cannot~­
.rity, his selfish .ways soon got the ting married in the hear future,
best of him and he auempted to end joining the armed forces, starting
a small embankment and struck B~wminous Coal Operators Associ- on what percentage of new Jobs
two trees. Ireland, who was not an~. _
his own life.
work or continuing on to college.
. should be granted to IDiion WOfk.
Interrupted at the last moment.
"NCI matter what each person
wearing a helmet, wu thrown from
W1thout our customers we ers.
•
··
he was given the chance to make has planned 10 do with his or her
the motorcycle. It is unclear at can-'t provide jobs," HolTman said.
"What the coal industry 'hu
what point ejection occurred. The
another wish, Graee said. The man life at this J?!.lint, I can almost guarThe
~ has,1~t -4~ min- been doing is taking profiu '"t
wished instead of receiving love antee that 1f they want to be suepatrol cited unsafe speed as the ers on strike In IU!IIOIS, Indiana and UMWA metllbers have mated lild
frOm all, he would be able to love cessful, they are going to have to
contributing factor.
West Virginia. The suike bel!an using them 10 Cllllle jobs for IIOIDCThe body was transported to May 10, a week afler the expiration one else, while tbo worken wjlc)
. all, he said.
•
' work hard"
·
· "It is not in being loved, but in · Facing die audience, Grace said,
·Ewing .Funeral Home. The motor- o~ a ·c_ontrac! e)! tension with th_e ~rea~ thole profits are leflllllldloving that life is at its fullest," ·~11iis class of seniors will be going
cycle sus~ned moderate, di•bling B!tummous Coal Operators Assoc1- 1ng ·1n tho unomplo~ment Hne "
Grace cilncluded.
&lt;&gt;ut into a wotld gready different
damage
and was tOwed from the auon.
.
'
:_
·
.
UMW spokesman Jtm Groaafcht
In her address, Salutatorian Julie th&amp;llhe wOrld most of you were a
scene.
REV. ROGER G'"CE
The strike was expanded Tues- S81d.
·

SHS graduation held Sunday

Man
killed.in
accident

.

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Trees serve .vital function
By WENDELL TOPE
Eartb Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - It is ever so
important that trees be allowed to
grow and be maintained along the
shore line of Raccoon Creek and all '
Olher streams, both large and small,
for several reasons.
There is no single thing that prevents soil erosion like tree roots.
The older the trees the better the
roots can accomplish their job in
preventing soil losses along the
shore lines and cultivated fields .
- As I have written before, Raccoon Creek has two purposes. One
is routing rain water to the Ohio
River and two is the production of
fish, of which there are several ·
species that provide excellent plea-

0 hip Lottery

defeat
Page4

'

'

N

446·2282'

Motorcycle
strikes trees,
driver ejected

Officials say strike
threatens job security · : .

TJ::

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