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                  <text>By The Bend

The :D aily Sentinel
Brenda Hudson of Meigs High
School and Missy Harris of Eastern
High School recently earned t)lree
college credits participating in the
one week American Free Enterprise and Leadership· Conference
·conducted at the University of Rio
Grande.
Hudson and Harris joined other
students from throu$hout the state
learning about busmess and.free
market economics.
Ohio business leaders and a
small number of college and university instructors make up the faculty for this conference which has
now been conducted for 21 consecutive years. While students learn by
listening to business leaders, they
obtain "hands on" experience by
participating in one of six competing firms. The companies design,
produce and sell a product. In addi·
tion each company selects its Economics Quiz Bowl team, the economic issues debate team, sponsors
speech and essay contestants and
produces a Free Enterprise skit
Corporations, foundations and
individuals fund students scholarships which include food and lodging as well as transportation.
According to Jerry Gust, Direc-

byBob Hoeflich
Tennis, anyone? Probably. Ten- races. Those artimals really travel.
nis elbow, anyone? Probably not
Remember, that' s at 2 Saturday
The Rev. James Seddon, pastor afremoon.
of the Middleport First Baptist
Church, Tuesdar at the Meigs
And here's something you can
County Fair explamed that he is a look forward to.
victim of tennis elbow. Seems to
Walt Manley, taking in the
me that you would get tennis elbow Meigs Fair Wednesday, said that
from playing tennis. Not so, Rev. he' s already getting ready for
Seddon reports. As I und!lfStand it, Christmas . Last year he used
his problem came from operating a 21,540 lights to decorate his home
computer. Medication and physical for the season. This year, he's
therapy for a couple of weeks are heading for 30,000.
·
required to correct the ailment and • The home is located on Route
who needs that?
681. You get there by traveling
Route 7 to Tuppers Plains, turning
The congregation of the Middle- right at Keebaugh ' s Restaurant ,
port Pentecostal Church is doing a and going out681 about one mile.
great job in handling the parking
Incidentally, in 1991 Walt had a
and traffic at the Meigs County fractured left leg when it came time
Fair. Seems like they have such a to decorate for Christmas . Last
tough job since most everyone year, he had a· fractured right leg.
wants to park right on top of the Both of the fractures were 1he
midway and the hot weather proba· result of accidents that had nothing
bly makes the job worse. I men- to do with his home lighting activi·
tioned to Mr. Nottingham, one of ties. However, he was on crutches
the workers, that it seemed like the both years when he put up his
congregation had a pretty hard row lights and that would be a bit of a
to hoe.
handicap. Maybe this year he'll
However, he only smiled and skip the fractured lej: and placeindicated that it isn't all that bad ment of the 30,000 lights will be
and commented that working the just a tad easier.
fair gives him an opportunity to
At any rate, many of us will
talk to a lot of nice people.
look forward to a ride past the
Now I call that a most positive Manley home come December.
attitude and strangely enough I
believe that his attitude is shared by
If you have been living under
many others doing the work under the impression that carnival workthe direction of the Rev. Clark ers kind of come and go, it doesn't
Baker, pastor.
always work that way.
-Wednesday was kiddie day at
Bob and Addalou Lewis of the fair and the rides on the midPomeroy grow such gorgeous way were really on the go. As
dahlias every summer. However, always, the carousel proved to be a
this summer the plants haven't . most popular ride with children and
been all that cooperative. When adults. Carousels just seem to
the counly fair rolled around, maintain their I!J'peal, don't they?
Addalou had hoped 10 enter some
It's interestmg to note that Joe
of their dahlias in the flower show. Westfall who was operating the
They had but one bloom so entered carousel for the Bates Brothers
that solitary flower in the competi- Amusement Co. Wednesday has
tion. The pleasant bottom line is been with the amusement company
that the loner did win a blue ribbon. for 23 years. Eighleen of these
Mrs . Lewis is one of the busy years have been spent with the
members of the Meigs County Fair carousel at this year's Meigs CounBoard.
ty Fair. Joe, a resident of Canton,
does somewhere around 30 fairs
I've only caught a few glimpses every summer. .
of the draft horses at this year's fair
but they seem to be such beautiful
One of the nurses at lhe Veterartimals. Before the fair is over, I'm ans Memorial Hospital booth, Rae
hoping to give them a better look- Gwiadowsky, suggests that everying over.
one drink plenty of liquids due to
And, by the way, I can't stress the heat at the Meigs County Fair.
enough the error that was made in She says you can dehydrate quicldy
the printed schedules for the fair in the hot weather which has been
showing the quarter horse racing to prevalent during the fair. The conbe at 4 p.m. this Saturday. The rac- cession stands will love you for it
ing will get under way instead at 2 It'll keep you healthier and that
p.m. and as usual, I'm sure you can means you can keep smiling.
look forward to some ..exciting

--

.

j;

~· ..J.

'l

BRENDA HUDSON

Ingredien~s

MISSY HARRIS

tor of the American Free Enterprise
and Leadership Institute, student
evaluations indicate extremely positive reactions. "For example,'' he
said, "the srudents' outlook toward
business, profits and the work of
people in business undergoes a
tremendous change. What srudent,s
have learned about business watching television sitcoms is replaced
by a realistic view ·of the people
who not only work hard in their
businesses, but who also contribute
many hours to community services.
Many students also report that the
conference provides them the information to focus on career choices
and planning for college.
Rob Hatfield, a junior staff
member with the conference, and a
student at the university of Rio
Grande said that a statement by
Edie Robinson of Gallia Academy
High School in Gallipotis is typical
of studen.t relations. She wrote "I
feel this week has been one of 'the
best_experiences of my life and will
conunue to affect my future."
··
According to Hatfield, analysis
of this year's conference results are
almost completed and preparations
are underway for next year's conference.

of successful child rearing

Dear Readers: I am on 1'/lcation,
but I have left behind some of
my favorite columns that you may
have missed the first tim£ around. I
hope you enjoy them. -- Ann
I.Anthrs
Dear ADD Landers: So · many
times while reading your columns
these past se.veral years, I have
thought about the things I missed
from my own parents. Here are a
few things they did not do for me.
They didn't let me do whatever I
wanted, whenever I wanted -- until
I was old enough ·to handle my life.
They didn't shower me with
things, things and more things. For
some reason, they didn't believe it
served any useful purpose.
They didn't pass up an opponu-.
nity to teach me the value of money
and the benefits (both physical and
moral) of hard work.
They didn't try to tell me what
friends to choose or which career to
follow. They decided I was the best
judge of that.
They never failed to listen to me
when I had a problem, nor did they

Brewar family joins
The Brewer family reunion was
held recenOy at the home of David
A. Brewer in Stiversville with 42
attending.
Pray er was said by Jason
Gibcaut who was a descendant of
.
Jane Brewer G1beaut
who was I he
daughter of Adam Brewer. Dinner
was served at noon before the pic.
mcThose attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Eric Dorjnon, Nicholas and
Kaytian, Evensville, lnd.; David A.
Brewer, Portland; Marilyn Beall,
Columbus·, Mrs. Rita Garrett and

refuse 10 give me sound advice when
I asked. And when I didn't want
advice or help, they didn't offer it
They didn't try 10 spare me the
pain of malting mistakes when I was
trying to grow up. Atlhe same time,
they left no doubt about their love
forme.
So often, when I read the sad
letters in your column from
C?nfused, unhappy, overindulged
kids, I end up wishing more parents
wouldn't do for their kids what my
parents didn't do for me. God bless
'em. •• LOVE MY FOLKS
DEAR LOVE: From your description, they have earned your love.
Thanks for sharing.
Dear Ann Landers: At what age
should a female stop sunbathing with
absolutely not a stitch of covering
from the waist up? Please answer in
print and settle an argumenL .. SIX
IN SARATOGA
DEAR SIX: In what country?
Co-ed bathing in the nude is
acceptable in certain cities in
Europe. Naked from the waist up
is OK for females in other European
Public Notice

cities. Generally, in the United
States, both tops and bottoms
are required for girls who
have reached puberty. (Age doesn't
count anymore. It's a matter of
"developmenL")
Dear Ann Landers: Our 3-yearold son is healthy, happy, welladjusted and very precocious. The
problem is that whenever I tell him
to take his nap, pick up his toys or
eat something be doesn't like (he
hates all vegetables), the boy inflicts
pain on himself.
For example, last week, he bit his
lip until it bled. He also pulls chunks
of hair out of his head. Today he
banged his head on the floor because
I relieved him of a sharp knife he
took from the kitchen drawer.
This child has a baby sister 6
~onths old. He is so jealous of the
ht.~e girl I ~. not leave him alone
With her. I d like some advice on
whether to spank the boy or simply
put him by himself... R.Rl..
DEAR R.R.L.: Your opening
sentence contradicts the rest of your
letter. A child who bites his lip until

Public Notice .

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1993, Los Angeles
Times Syndicate and
Creators Syndicate"

Public Notice

(Continued from P~~ge 7)
Columbia ........................ 7.39 Olive....................... 13;478.74
Aooiotance Fund• for 1194. · Lebanon ........................ 10.02 Orange ......o............ 10,698.67
Thou revenue• are Leiart...............................5.02 RuU•d .................. 11,383.81
Sllom ..................... 11,647.32
~::~hf: bni~':'~i"au::= g:~~g;::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~ Salisbury
................. 8,221.64
d M
RuU.nd ........................... 8.64 Sclpio .....................10,593.26
an
anogement
lind
are.
Sal
only eotimatoo ol the
em .............................. 8.84 Sutton ...................... 8,695.96
amount of revenue that Sallobury ........................ 6.24 Total ................... $131,757.00
could be received by Melgo Sciplo .............................. a.04
LOCAL GOV'T REVENUE
Cou ty
sutton ............................. 6.60
ASSISTANCE
................. $57,256.00
F.:;lo~ing Ia • complete TotalocALGoii;i'i:tC:oOO% COunty
Townahlpa ............. 42,942.00
breakdown olthe pro[ocled County ............... $175,676.00 Corporallono
......... 42,942.00
revenue: PERCENT:
Townahipa ........... 131,757.00 Total ................... $143,140.00
County ............................ 40% ;&lt;&gt;
[f" ratlono ..... -;!~91,71 5110.7,00
VILLAGES:
0 1
00 Middleport
Toowna hi po ......................·
............. 16,05.85
- -~ '' ~ ........................
VILLAGES· •
Pomeroy ................ 13,840.21
~~~~~/'' p~~s~~~vyi ike~ a~ ~r~~~~
~ta'::~-~~~~::::::::::::::::1=
MPoiddmeleproyort .............s4'21,224675.2t82 Rocine ...................... 4,465.97
' .
VILLAGES:
................ ' .
RuUan.d.................... 2,872.82
~~a~ I, gllumtus; ~rd a~ Mrsd Middleport .................... 38.aa =-~lned .................. 1:·m·~ Syracuae..................5,067.14
y e os(;. ater or ; ~
Pomeroy ....................... 32.23 Syr:,~ ; ................1 •547·33 Total ..................... 142,842.00
Mrs. Jason Ibeaut, Jane an as- Racine ...........................10.40 Total • .............$..1·315•757
·00
TOWNSHIPS:
· &amp;.''
...................
·
'
·
Bedford .................... 3,688.72
mane , Pt. Pleasant, W·Va ..· Mr· and Ruuan d...........................
vo
TOWNSHIPS:
Cheoter.................... 5,268.91
~!~·a~i;_h~~ ~~~d~~~ ~~~~Y· ~!~'f.~.~-~.::·::.:·:::::.:·::::1·00~~~ Bcedhfotrd .................. 1161,316116.93
Columbla ................. 3,173.41
'
.
.
TOWNSHIPS:
eo er .................. ' '58 Ltbanon ................... 4,302.79
8.
Columbla ................. 9,736.84 Letart ........................ 2, 155.69
Fitch and Brandon, Long Bottom; Bedl d
Tisha Jane Drown, Columbus;
or ........................... 58 Lebanon ................. 13,202.05 Ollve
......................... 4.392.97
Ruby Brewer, Long BoItom; Jean-. Cheater ......................... 12.27 Letart........................6·614 ·20
na Beegle, Racine; Harolci.-Brewer, L.1, . - - - - - - - - - L - - - ,
r---.:,_
Long Bottom; EJUI)lll-Lo'ii Brewer,
Reynoldsburg; Rodney Beegle,
Debbie and Ryan, Portland; Christa
.
Brown, Lancaster: Elizabeth Stitch,
Lancaster; Mrs. Emma Watson
Bess, East Liverpool; Mr. and MrS.
Larry Close, Water Tavern; Ella
Mae Brewer, Eloise Anderson, Ray
Anderson, all of Belpre.
The afternoon was spent visit·
ing, taking photographs, taking
walks and playing children ' s
· games.

-

.~ · io·· r
'f..• .,

I

PUBLIC NOTICE
Following Section 5715.16
ol the Ohio Ravlaod Code
the changea In valuation~
have been I'Ompleted In the
county lor tax yMr 1993. ·
The changeo In vtolualion
will reflect new conotrucUon ·
lor Melga County.
Valuoo may be vi-ed ot
the Molgo County Auditor'•
Office "-eon the houro ol
8:30 and 4:30, Monday
through Friday,
Nancy Porkw Campbell
Meiga County Auditor.
(8)2011c

Call Sentinel
992-2156

SATURDAY
WILKESVILLE
The
Wilkes"ille United Methodist
Church will have a chicken and
· noodle ice cream supper Saturday

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA Weaver reunion Sunday at W~st
Virginia State Farm Museum, Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Picnic lunch at
12:30p.m.
·

1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY ,
One owner, auto., overdrive, air cond., AMJFM
casseHe, tilt, rear defogger.

.

Automatic, AM/FM casseHe, tilt and morel Good,
clean car.

Inside
Along the river """'"'""Bl-7
Business!Farm............... D1·8
Classified ........................03-7

Country music? Make mine heavy
metal, Kevin Pinson says .....;.. B-7

Entertainment '"""'"..- .. B-7
Deaths ....- .......................A·S
F.d.itoral .......
Sports..... _ ...- •• ~ ...- ....Cl-6
Weather. _ ..............- ....... A..l

-·-·----..A-4

Soiiiii_J. HIP lo •ld.ao..

I.

Vol. 28, No. 25
&lt;;:opyrlg~ted 1193

1-4 Section 184 P.gea
AMuldmedla Inc. n-poper

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Gidllpolls-Pol.n t Pleasant, August 22, 1993

A call to stop the viOlence
State Planned Parenthood chief reacts to abortion clinic shooting
early Friday at the Olclahoma City
By USA CORNWELL
airport in connection with the
Associated Prl\!iS Writer
CLEVELANn..- The shooting shooting.
of a doctor outside an abortion clinShe was later charged with
ic in Wichita, Kan., illustrates a attempted frrst-degree murder and,
frightening trend that must be at a hearing in Olc.lahoma City,
stopped, said the national president waived extradition to Wichita.
'o f the Planned Parenthood Federa"Stopping the intimidation, the
tion of America.
harassment, the violence, the tyranPamela Maraldo said Friday that ny of the anti-choice minority is an
the shooting of Dr. George Tiller extremely pressing agenda for all
emphasized the increasing dangers of America," Ms. Moral do said in
raced by clinics, their staff and a speech at the City Club.
Ms. Maraldo said the shooting
.their patients.
. · ''What kind of society allows an of Tiller and the slaying in March
c;xtremist agenda to tum a clinic of Dr. David Gunn outside a Penihat provides badly needed health sacola, Fla., abortion clinic under.
care into quasi-war zones and char- line the need for laws to protect
acterize murder as a form of politi- clinics and those who seek access
cal expression," said Ms. Maraldo. to them.
She said Planned Parenthood is
A woman who had participated
in an anti-abortion protest outside · lobbying for the passage of legislathe clinic where Tiller worked tion protecting the freedom of
access to clihic entrances. She said
allegedly shot him Thursday.
Rachelle Renae Shannon, 37, of the proposed le$islation would preGrants Pass, Ore., was arrested vent anti:aboruon protesters from

getting close enough to clinics to support peaceful, nonviolent intercommit violence.
vention at clinics to save lives," he
The strategy of the anti-abortion said.
groups now is to target doclors, and
Ms. Maraldo also said contin-umore of them will be hurt or killed ing violence against clinics is using
without such a law, Ms. Maraldo up badly needed resources.
said.
Money that could go to provide
The Rev. Joseph Slovenec, lead- health care and education to an
er of the northern Ohio branch of estimated 5 million people served
the anti-abortion group Operation annually by Planned Parenthood is
Rescue, does not believe the pro- going instead for clinic defense,
posed legislation will stop vio- she said.
lence.
"Clinics are having to buy bul" It will just increase viol~nce," let-proof vests, hire security
he said. "What it will do is to force guards, and pay for cleanup after
the moderate majority of pro-life chemical attacks when they should .
supporters to get out of the move- be helping patients," she said.
ment for fear of being convicted of
Planned Parenthood affiliates
a felony for just talking to someone operate 922 clinics nationwide that
ori a sidewalk. That will leave the · provide medical and educational
pro-life movement open for services.
takeover by the lunatic fringe."
Slovenec said Operation Rescue
does not condone the shooting of
Tiller or any act of violence.
"Our offi~ial position is that we

Feds plan
to appeal
•

~ pumpzng

decision
COLUMBUS (AP) - Justice
Department lawyers said they will
appeal a federal judge's decision
allowing a coal company to finish
pumping untreated water from a
flooded southeastern Ohio mine.
The Justice Department will me
the appeal on behalf of the federal
Office of Surface Mining in
Columbus and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dan
Schrum, with the Columbus mining
office, said Saturday.
"We believe there's imminent
harm to the environment, and that's
why we took action," he said.
The gbvernment will file the
appeal with the 6th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Cincinnati
sometime this week, Schrum said.
U.S. District Judge Sandra
Beckwith ruled Thursday that the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. could continue pumping water from Meigs
31 mine into two creeks.
Her order prevented the U.S.
EPA and the mining office from
stopping the pumping of about 1
billion gallons of mine water into
the creeks and some of their tributaries.

.•'

Public Notice

from 4-7 p.m. Public invited.

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TupCOOL VILLE - Bethel United
pers Plains ·VFW Post No. 9053 Methodist Church, homecoming ·
will hold a dance Friday from 8- Sunday. Basket dinner 12:30 p.m.,
11:30 p.m . with music by the afremoon servlce at 1:30 p.m. with
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Public Rev. Robert Sanders, speaker. Public invited.
invited.

James Sands recounts Gallia County
high school football exploits - B-5

Orange .....................3;486.19
RuUand .................... 3,710.19
Salem ....................... 3,796.07
Salisbury ................. 2,679.58
Sclpio .......................3,452.~
Sutton ...................... 2,934.17
Total ..................... $42,942.00
(8) 20 1tc

Community Calendar
SUNDAY
CARPENTER - Dr. Olen Watson of Jam pica will speak at the
Mt. Union Baptist Church near
Carpenter on Sunday at 9:45 a.m.
Public invited.

Meigs County livestock sales- D-1

A 'peachy'
contest at
. the 130th
Meigs fair
-B-1

Public Notice

CLASSIFIEDS!

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.

~.•

it
out
his head and bangs his head on the
floor is neither well.adjust.ed nor
happy. Punishment is not the an·
swer. Take the boy to a doctor for
evaluation. Your pedialrician can
direct you.
.
Gem of the Day: Bores are people
who, when they were children, were
not listened to or were not
interrupted.
.
What's the truth about pot,
cocaine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed
and downers? 'The Lowdown 011
Dope" has up-to-the-minute infor- mation on drugs. Send a St!/f-addrt!ssed, long, busiMss-siu envelope
and a check or money ordLr for
$3.65 (this includLs postage and
handling) to: Lowdown, c/o Ann
lAnders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 6061 i .0562. (In Canada, send
$4.45.)

f"

HOLD ON • Brittney Heunsely (left) and Jennifer Harris ride
a mini roller-coaster Tuesday afternoon at the Meigs County Fair.

.., 1.1111

Friday, Auguet20, 1993
Page-10·

Students attend enterprise conference ·

Beat of the Bend...

Suncl a\

SPECIAL VISITORS - Fred L. Dailey,
director of the Obio Department of Agriculture,
center, and deputy director, Mark Ust, Columbus, spent Friday viewin~ the Meigs County
Fair. Both worked the jumor Sale livestock riDg
for a time Friday eveniDg after touring the

barns and talkiDg to the young people earlier.
l:fere they stop for some ice cream with Meigs
County Fair Board President and livestock sale
auctioneer DaD Smith just before the sale. (T-S
photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

Rhodes, Riffe to be
honored as Fellows
next month at RG
RIO GRANDE - Two of
Ohio's most influential government
figures - former Gov. James A.
Rhodes and Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives - will receive the
University of Rio Grande's highest
. honor during a Sept. 17 ceremony
on the campus.
Rhodes and Riffe will be inducted as Fellows of the University, an
honor the University's trustees
voted to bestow upon the veteran
political leaders a1 their recent
summer meeting.
· Rhodes and Riffe were chosen
for the honor based upon their significant contributions to the state
over the years, explained Dr. Barry
M. Dorsey, president of the university and Rio Grande Community
College.
"These two individuals have a
long record of public service not
only to southeastern Ohio, but to
the state," Dr. Dorsey added. "Separately and together, they have
worked to make Ohio one of the
most progressive states i9 the
nation in all areas from education
10 economic development.
"Both are fmm believers in the
concept of a well-educated public,
and tllrough their leadership; all
levels of the educational system in

Ohio have made &amp;l'eat strides," he
continued. "Therefore, it is appropriate that our institution honor
Gov. Rhodes and Speaker Riffe for
what they have accomplished for
all Ohioans."
As Fellows, Rhodes and Riffe
will serve as informal advisers to
the president and become t:Jniversi- .
ty Community Emeritus members,
enabling them to use university
facilities and participate in commencement exercises with the
trustees. In addition, their names
will be engraved on a permanent
plaque that honors the 12 persons
who have received the Fellow desi,nation since the award was established in 1980. Rhodes and Riffe
will each receive a certificate and
medallion noting the date of their
installation as Fellows of the University.
Rhodes is llle only man to have
served four four-year terms as governor (1963-71, !975-83). During
those years, he worked actively in
launchin$ initiatives for t.dncatinn,
job creauon, infrastrucrure and the
growing senior cftizen population.
Prior to becoming governor, the
Jackson County native served on
the Columbus Board of Education
and was later elected city auditor,
mayor arid state auditor.

•I

HEIFFER GIVEAWAY - R!lchel ChapmaD was the wiDner .in
the Heifer Giveaway sponsored by Farmen Bank before the 4·H
Junior Fair Llvestpc:k Sale 111 the Melp County Fair on Friday
nlrht. Pktured with Cllapmu and Br•ce· Rieed ot Farmen BaRk 11
Dairy Princess ~d Warner.
·

Record ·crowd hits.
Meigs County Fair
Friday, say officials
.

One-day receipts
down from '92 figure
ROCK SPRINGS - The live·
stock sale bam was filled, the mid·
way was packed, and the people
parking cars were searching every
place for yet another space as what
was predicted as a record crowd
attended the BOth Meigs County
Fair Friday nighL
While gate receipts through Friday were down about $1,800 over
1992 figures, fair personnel said
gate reeeipts are not a true indica-

Water grant program .
aids Pageville, Racine
PAGEVILLE - Clean water.
. It is something many people

take for granted, but for many
Meigs County residents, coping
without clean water is daily part of
life.
However, some households in
Meigs County may soon be able to
get water as residents in the
Pageville area of Meigs County
and the village of Racine become
the primary beneficiaries of a
$4 29,000 water and sanitary sewer
grant.
The grant, from the fiscal year
1993 Water and Sanitary Sewe~
Competitive Grant Program, was
receive~ through the Ohio Depart·
ment of Development's Local Government Services Office.
The grant will be used to supply
water service to 69 households in
VERNAL G. RIFFE Jr.
Pageville, according to a press
awards and citations for what one release from State Representative
state newspaper has called his Mark Malone (D-94th, South
"untiring efforts for the people of Point).
Many of the households in the
his district and the state."
area
are served by cisterns and
A member of ihe Democratic
water
haulers because of possible
National Committee and a number
groundwater
contamination.
of public service Organizations, he
The
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
is the president of Vern Riffe InsurWater
District
will
extend its lilies
ance Inc., New Boston.
Both of the Fellow recipients · into the area to provide the water
have maintained strong ties with service.
The village of Racine will
Rio Grande, and each received
honorary doctorates from the insti- upgrade its water treatment system
tution after serving as commence- and install meters throughout the
community as recommended by the
ment !~Jl!:akers in the 1980s.
The public is invited to the con- Ohio Environmental Protection
·
·
vocation, which will be held in the Agency.
The Water and Sanitary Sewer
Christensen Theatre of the Fine and ·
Performing Arts Center beginning Grant Program funds improvements to community water and sanat2 p.m.
itary sewer ~.ystems, with priority

JAMES A. RHODES
Since leaving the Statehouse a
deca4e ap:o, he has devoted himself
to private business and his own
firm, James A. Rhodes &amp; Associates, a Columbus-based real estate
research and development service.
Riffe, a lifelong resident of
Scioto County, has represented the
92nd District in the House since
1959 ami has been the speaker
since 1975. He lias held office as a
representative, and as speaker,
longer than anyone in Ohio legislative history. He is chairman of the
House Rules Committee anlf is an
ex-officio membeiof all of the
chamber's slanding committees. He
is also vice chairman of the LegisiB.tive Service Commission.
During his career, Riffe has
been the recipient of numerous

given 10 appticants .with documented health and safety inadequacies.
Meigs County Commissioner
Manning Roush commented Friday ·
that he would be traveling to
Columbus Monday to pick up
county's portion of the grant,
approximately $268,000 for the
TP&amp;C-Pageville Project
"I think (getling·the grant) is the
greatest thing ... for the people of
Pageville," Roush said.
"Many people have no idea
what it's like to live without
water," he added.
Racine's share amounts to
$156,000, said Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Thorn ton said the village will
use the grant, the largest reeeived
in village history, to upgrade its
water system.
Thornton said he is meeting
with Governor George Voinovich
Monday to discuss the grant.
Thanking those who worked
long hours for the grant, Thornton
said the village of Racine will benefit.
"We plan on applying for more
grants," he said.
"Without these kinds of grants/
communities in southeast Ohio
wouta oe hard pressea to aaaress
problems that exist with their water
and sewer systems," commented
Malone and State Senator· Jan
Michael Long (D-17th, Circleville).
"These kinds of improvements
are essential to the growth of communities, and are necessary to the
pverall health of its citizens," they
added.

I

1

'

tion of attendance.
This year 143 membership tickets were sold and 4,640 season
tickets. In addition thousands of 4H, girl and boy scouts, FFA and
FHA, and VICA members with
exhibits had passes as did buyers to
Friday night's sale and entertainers.
Gate reeeipt figures through .friday, listed 1992, then 1993, were
as follows: Monday, $10,295,
$9,415; Tuesday, $10,794,
$13,150; Wednesday, $11,600,
$12,834; Thursday, $13,590,
$10,585; and Friday, $19,035,
$17,075.

l

)

'-·

j

�Pomeroy Middleport Owllpolla, OH Point Pleuant, wv

Pig• *t2 Sunct.y Tlmee Sentinel
•

.Senator questions fair
• Ia t•IVe oversig
• ht
I egis

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Aug. 22
Ar.cu-Weather• forecast for daYtime conditions and high
MICH.

!Mansfield

•

ja1 o I•

PA.

• IColumbus ja3o I

W. VA.

Sunny Pt. C:/oudy
V~.t Assodllted Press

GrapNC&amp;Net

Cloudy

!01993 Accu-Wea!her, Inc.

Weather .
Soutb·Central Ohio
Sunday. mostly sunny. High in
the mid-80s.
Extended forecast:
Monday through Wednesday

Monday and Tuesday, a chance
of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the 60s. Highs in the 80s.
WedneSday, fair. Lows in the 60s.
Highs in the 80s.

Point Pleasant man
critical after ac~ident
POINT PLEASANT - A Point
Pleasant man is in critical condition
at St. Mary's Hospiial in Huntington after a two-vehicle accident
'Friday morning on Jericho Road.
Charles C. Damron, 20, of Poi~t
.Pleasant was listed in critical con_di'lion Saturday •moriting, according
10 a hosjlital spokesman. Damron
. :UOOerwent surgery Friday after
bein transported by HealthNet
'froJ Pleasant Valley Hospital fol'lowing the 6:30a.m. wreck.
,
A passenger in Damron s
vehicle Curtis B. Yanko, 18, of
Point Pleasant was listed _in good
,condition Sat~r._ l!lO!JliRg. He

was treated at PV H ~tore bemg
uansported to..St. ~ s Hospttal. f
~ E. Ltz Sayre,. 40, 0
P~nnt Pleasant was kiD~ m the acctdent. Sayre, an obsteblcs nurse Ill
PVH, was on her way to work
when the wreck_occurred. .
.
Funeral semces for Sayre wtll
be held at I p.m. Sundar at CrowHusseU Funeral Hom~ With Rev. AI
Earl~y _and Rev: Lou!s A. ~ussell
offic1atmg. Burial will .~ m the
Smith ~h~pel C~metery m Leon..
Shenff s offictals reponed details
of the accident are incomplete and
t!te incident is still under mvesugauon.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
senator appointed by the General
Assembly to the panel that oversees
the state fair is looking forward 10
the job but questioning the need for
such legislative inv9lvement.
Sen. Ben Gaeth, R-Defiance,
becam e a member of the Ohio
Expositions Commission as chairman of the Senate Agriculture
Committee.
A section of the new state budget made the chairmen of the
House and Senate agriculture committees nonvoting members of the
fair board. Dwight Wise, D-Fremont, is House chairman.
''This is a new assignment.
Quite frankly, if I'd known it was
in the bill I would have done everything I could to have it taken out
because I don't think we have the
qualifications," Gaeth said in an
interview last week.
Gaeth was boin and raised on a
farm, but acknowledges he is not
an avid fairgoer: He tries to attend
as many of the ten county fairs in
his Senate district as lte can.
"By virtue of chainnanship of
the ag committee, what qualifica·
tions do we have on lending any
expertise to running a Slate fair?"
Gaeth said.
At the same time, Gaeth is anticipating what he expects will be an

·
intereSting learning-experience.
' 'l' m down here to serve in .any
capacity that the legislator~ feels I
should serve in. I'm going to be
very dumb on my fust meeting. ~ut
I'm looking forward to meetmg
with that group," Gaeth said.

Open registration set
RIO GRANDE - Open registration for fall quarter classes at the
University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College will be
Monday, noon until 6:30 p.m., in
the E.E. Davis Technical Careers
Center.

Come See Our
Large Selection of

DIAMONDS

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Audrey
Patterson, Rutland.
Friday discharges - Edwin
Cozan, Racine..

Announce dairy judging results
POMEROY • Results in the
dairy cattle judging were
announced Saturday.
The fii'St place winners in Halsteins· were Roy Holter, spring
heifer 'calf, senior yearling heifer,
junior two year old, live year old
calf, best three females, junior best
of three females.
John Robinson of Shade lOOk
blues in winter heifer calf, spring
heifer, three year old cow , four
year old cow, and herd; Tricia
Davis, Pomeroy in fall heifer calf;
Ben Holter Pomeroy, in summer
yearling heifer. and Richard
Koblentz, Pomeroy, in winter yearling heifer.
In Ayshires, Christopher Parker,

RESERVE CHAMPION RABBITS- Home National Bank
purchased the Reserve Champion Rabbits from Ryan Kaurr for
$100 at the 4·H Junior Fair Livestock Sale at the Meigs County
Fair on Friday night. Pictured, front, Ryan Kaurr. Back, Bunny ·
Princess Christie Cooper, Bunny Prince Jeremy Cowdery, Tom
Wolfe and Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre.

Squads respond
to five calls
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services responded to five calls for
assistance Friday and Saturday
. morning. Units responding include:
AND
Friday - I 0:44 Pomeroy and
RICHARD DREYFUSS,
Rutland squads to Rutland for
EMIUO ESTEVEZ IN
' Audrey Patterson who was transANOTHER
STAKEOUT PG13
ported to Veterans Memorial Hos1. pita!; 7:37p.m. Middlepon to Page
Street for Pauline Hudson who was
transported to VMH; 9:55 p.m .
Middlepon to High Street for Paul
Clark who was transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 10:35
p. m. Rutland Volunteer Fire
. Deparunent and Pomeroy Squad to
Macomber Hill Road for a fourwheeler accident. Darry Bryan was
transported to VMH prior to transport to Grant Medical Center via
Grant LifeFlight
Saturday - 7:24 a.m. Pomeroy .
10 Page Street for Mary Walburn
who was uansponed to VMH.

Sbeep judging
results •listed
POMEROY - Rex Robinson,
Coolville took one grand and two
reserve champions·with his Suff?lk
sheep exhibited at the 130th Me1gs
County Fair. .
.
Robinson's grand champ1ons
were in ewe, two YCW:S ·and older,
and his reserve chamJliOns were m
ram ·one year and under, and ewe,
one' year and under two. In two
other classes. Robinson took blue
ribbons.
.
Rebecca Ann Scott, Langsville,
had the grand champion ram, two
years and over, and also took a tint
for her lamb ram.

,)l~ruEl,
YE~ABUSHl0'1895
Ohio Valley SymphonySeason nckets Now
Available.
Call 446-ARTS

For Information
Balcony Now Open
Morrlo and Dorothy Haldn•
Ariel Theatre
426 2nd AvL, Galllpollo, Oh.
Call 446-ARTS lor more lnlo.

Local ,·

August 22, 1993

..--------Tri-county briefs.;...·- - -----..Police probe four wrecks
Deputies stop two for DUI ·
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriff's deputies apprehended
two men for driving under the influence early Saturday mmting.
Jailed for DUI and left of center was Paul R. Lambert, 27, Middlepon; taken in10 cusiOdy for DUI and no operator's license was
Dale R. Lucy, 22, 460 First Ave. Lucy was later released on a rule 4
summons.
·
Local authorities jailed two others between Friday night and
early Saturday morning.
·
· Jailed were ADen B. Cooper, 45, 3504 Upper Bellbrook RC?Sd,
Bellbrook, Friday night by the Gallia Meigs Post of the_State Highway Patrol for a municipal court ordered 3-day comm1unent for a
previous charge ofDUI, and James B. Walker, 20, 5546 State Route
7 Saturday morning by deputies for disorderly conduct by intoxica·
lion.
Walker was released after posting bond.

May jewelry theft reported

Remember the good times
with ArtCarved: ·

.

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man reported Friday that a !Jng
, was s10len from his home sometime in May, Gallia County sheriff's
deputies reported.
.
Lonnie W. Thompson, 313 Spruce St told depuues that a gold
and diamond rin~ worth $1,50010 $1,7~ was ~len . .
In another incident. a man told depunes that h1s vehicle had been
vandalized Thursday.
Roy Jones, 295 Fulks Road, Crown City, reported that someone
took a shock bolt and plug wires from his 1976 Honda while it was
parked at the the Gallia County Emergency Medical Service, State
Route 160.

·-·..
.•-

GALLIPOLIS - A man who was arrested Friday for driving
under the inf14ence reported that his vepi~le was st_olen while he
was in jail, according 10 Gallia County sheriff's depuues.
William G. Adams, 2401 Blackburn Ave., Ashland, Ky., told
deputies that his 1987 Chevrolet was left on State Route 279 after
his arrest. When he went back to find it later Friday, he told
deputies it was gone.
.
.
Deputies investigated another theft reponed Fnday.
Rick Little, manager of Super Amenca, 601 State Route 7, told
deputies that Thursday night someone took a box of 400 lottery
tickets from the counter of his store.

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Some resvictions m•w spply.
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Hit-skip accident probed .

Tawney Jewelers
422 SEC'OND AVE.

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(USPS 525-Ht)
Published e~h su,day, . 12S Third . A~e. ,
Galllpolil, Ottio, by the Otuo Valley Publishing
' Company/Multimedia, Inc. Second cllu post·
age paid at Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Entered 11
second clw maillna matter at Pomcro)', Obio,

Po5t OlfJCC.

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businesses offer special benefits and discounts
when you make purchases for yourself and show
them your SBC Card.
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Basket Delights
Bastille
•
Bernadine's
Bob's Electronics
Brittany's
,-Brown's Market
Brunicardl's Music
Cart's Shoe Store
Charlie's &amp; Com.pany
Cliffside Golf Course
Dalley Tire
Dairy Queen of Gallipolis
Fantastic Sam's
Fruth Pharmacy of Gallipolis
Gallipolis New Car Dealers
Haskins Tanner
Headquarters by Juanita

Image Callery
Jack &amp; Jill's
Knight's Department Store
McClure's Restaurant (Gallipolis)
McDonald's of Gallipolis &amp; Henderson
Michael Ann's Floral Boutique
Mourning's Office Supply
My Sister's Closet
Ohio Valley Bank
Put On-Shop
River City Farm Supply
Shoe Cafe
Sideline Sports
Skyline j.anes
The Steakhouse
Tawney's Jewelers
Thomas Clothiers

IAftGAIN MATI•IS SAT • • SUN.
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Member: The A.,ociat~ Preu, and the Ohio
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No subscriptions by mail permitted in areu.
where motor carrier service il ava.i.llble.
The Surutay Timet-Sentinel·will not be rr~:pon­
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Rates Outllde County
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Member FDIC

'

.

•

RUTLAND - A Middleport
man was seriously injured Friday
night wben he was ejected from his
motorcycle, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol reported. .
Derry D.- Bryan, 36 ,' 37662
Leading Creek Road, was transported by LifeFlight emergency
helicopter service to Grant Medical
Center in Columbus. A hospital
. spokeswoman reported his condition as serious Saturday morning.
According to the accident
report, Bryan was eastbound on
McCumber Hill Road (Meigs
County Road 4) in Rutland Township when he failed 10 negotiate a
left curve and lost control. The
motorcycle struck an embankment
and ejected the driver. Bryan was
no wearing a helmet.
No citations were issued. The
motorcycle sustained heavy, disabling damage and was lOwed from
the scene.
A Long Bottom woman was
cited for failure to yield following a

POMEROY - Four wteeks with
only light or moderate damage and
no injuries were investigated by
Pomeroy Police Thursday and early
Friday morning.
At 4:51 p.m. on West Main
under the bndge, the 1987 Nissan
driven by Jessica Jewell, 22,
Pomeroy. struck, the rear of a 90
Nissan truck driven by Matthew
Erwin, 21. The accident occuned at
the
the two attempt-

GVFDputs out fire at Dale's
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis Volunteer Fll'e Department Friday morning put out an electrical fll'e at Dale's Smorgasbord, 630
Upper River Road. '
The fire, which caused $150 damage, was caused by a short in an
electric m010r. Two trucks were used and 17ftrefighters responded.
It was the 183rd a1ann of the year.

Object thrown at vehicle

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Deputies examine theft

SBC CAN HELP!

ALBANY - Several items were reported stolen from an Albany
man's garage on LeMaster Road.
Ed Smart, Crabtree Road, repo~ a trac~ draw bar, a comealong floor jack gi'ease gun fencmg tools, wtre stretchers, a battery charger and iorch head w~re stolen within the last two hours.

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Alleged sh_pplifter apprehended
GALLIPOLIS.....:
_ Gallipolis police issued a summons to a
woman Friday for allegedly shoplifting at Revco, 308 Second Ave.
Summoned was Kate M. Springer, age not reported, 509 Second
Ave.

Woman cited for DUI

GALLIPOLIS -Deborah L. Chevalier, 39, 110~ Neigh~~
· Road, Gallipolis, was cited early Saturday momm¥ for _drivmg
under the influence and driving left of center, the Gallia-Me1gs Post
·
of the State Highway Patrol reported.

Police cite two for DUI

ENROLL NOW!

.

GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis police cited two between Fnday and
Saturday morning for driving under the influence
.
Cited were John M. Watson, 43, Route 2, Saturday mo~ng for
DUI and left of center and Jeffery A. Montgomery, 30, fnday for
Continued on A·S

Fall Quarter Begins Sept. 27

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE

.--------,
1

AVON

1
I

two-vehicle accident Friday morning in Chester Township, Meigs
County, the·patrol reported.
Zelda F. Weber, 84, 48330State
Route 248. was westbound on S.R.
248 when she pulled from a stop
sign at the intersection of S.R. 7
Continued on A·S

1

To Buy or To
1
receive a Brochure I

: Call 441·0263
1
To Sell
I Call 44 I ·0263

ed to come onto West Main. TI!cire
was light damage to the rear' of
Erwin's truck and to the front end
of the Jewell car.
At 5:17 p.m. tile can driven by
Latishia Price, 22, Middlepon, and
Kevin Siders, 37, Midd1epon, collided. The accident occurred on
West Main St. Police said that
Siden pulled from a parldng lot in
front of Price. There was damage
Continued O!l A-5

WHAT'S IN YOUR

GALL~OLIS- A man's vehicle was dented Friday when
another driver threw an object 81 it. Gallipolis police reponed.
William M. Abbott, 897 Blazier Road, tofd police that a driver
followed him from State Route 7 iniO the Long John Silver's parking lot. Silver Bridge Plaza, and threw an object 81 his vehicle, denting the right rear side.
Abbott said the vehicle had been trying to pass hiin on State
Route 7 N., but had been unable to do so because of heavy ttaffic.
Mter throwing the .object at Abbott's vehicle, the driver crossed the
Silver Memorial Bridge in10 West Virginia.

·Man seriously injured
in motorcycle accident

26 Woel:l.................. ................................$45.50
.5 2 WoeU........................................ .. .... ....$88.40

SPRING VALLEY PUll GALLIPOLIS, OH.

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ROCK SPRINGS - Deputies of the Me1gs County Sh~nfrs
Department are investigating a hit-Skip accident late Fnday mght at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
·
According to a sheriff's department repOrt, a 1990 Mercury,
owned by Rita Radford, RocksJ?rings Road, ~as parked in the field
on the Crew Road side of the faugrounds behmd the county ~arage.
. According to witnesses, a Toyota pickup truck hacked mto the

left-front fender of Radford's car. The driver of the truck reportedly
got out and looked at the damage and then drove off.
Charges are pending.

lo

Only from Ohio Valley Bank

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

1

Pomeroy, took all three fii'Sts in the
show: His blue ribbons ~ere for
cx h1b1Ung the best fall he1fer, dry
cow and dam and daughter.
In Jerseys, Leland Parker and
Family took first places in fall
heifer calf, spring yearling heifer;
senior two year old, aged cow, dry
cow, best three females, herd, and
junior best of three females . Margaret Parker took blues in dam and
daughter, aged dry cow and summer yearling heifer.
Both the grand an\1 reserve
champion in Jerseys and Ayshires
were shown by the Leland Parkrt
family. In Holsteins, the grand P.ld
reserve champions were showr by
the John Robinson farm.

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•

.,•- Vehicle stolen from jailed man

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming aU five
numbers selected in Friday's Buckeye 5 drawing , the Ohio Lottery
said.
The Buckeye 5 numbers were-!,
2, 16, 18, 19:
In Pick 3 Numbers, the winning
number was 603.
In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
number was 6489.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
£684,711.
There were 235 Buckeye 5 tickets with four of the numbers, and
each is worth $250. The 7,599 tickets showing three of the numbers
are each worth $10, and the 79,769
tickets showing two of the numbers
arc each worth $1.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
S!,28!;268, and winners will
receive $443,413.
Pick 4 Numbers players
wagered $278,292 .50 and will
share $79,500.

August 22,1993,

Woodland Centers, Inc.
A Privale, Not for Profrt Agency Working
Hard to Serve You in
Gallia, ,Jackson, and Meigs Co!!nties.
Woodland Centel'l, Inc. Ia fundlid In part by the
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�'"'August22,
'
1993

Commentary

August 22, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4

Oklahoma Democrats differed on
A Dlvialoa. of
~INC.
8lS Third An., Gallipolls, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992·2156

ROBEIIT L WINGETT
Publisher

HOBART WILSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW

Executive Editor

Coatroller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters arc subject to editing and must be signed with
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personalities.
'

Powell's like Ike
•
In some respects
By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The general had charm and command presence.
No one knew if he was a Republican or a Democrat, but the Democrats
were in office so it was logical for him to run as a Republican. But would
he run? Was he interested?
That was Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1951. And that's Colin Powell in
1993.
Like Ike, Powell has the makings of a formidable presidential candida·
cy, if he's interested.
The Republicans have plenty of potential candidates but they're all
politicians - senators, governors, former cabinet members for the most
pan- in an anti-politician era. They carry accumulated baggage and bear
the scars of old enmities. None yet stands out from the crowd.
Powell stands out. If he has a public enemy, no one knows about it.
And he's a clean slate, like Eisenhower was. No one knew how Ike
stood on the issues, so no one could disagree with him on them.
A few months after Truman inherited the presidency in 1945, he told
Eisenhower that he would gladly bequeath the job to him. •'General, there
is nothing you may want that I won't 1ry to help you get," Truman said.
"That defmitely and specifically includes the presidency in 1948."
.
Eisenhowe'T declined, but in 1952 he allowed himself to become the
candidate of the Republican Pany. The.GOP, out of office for 20 years,
hungered for victory and lacked anyone with Eisenhower's charisma.
Colin Powell, of course, may be a Democrat, out of sync with Republi·
can thinking. And, of course, he is not a hero of the stature of the five-star
liberator of Europe in World War II.
But he is widely admired. If Clinton looks strong as 1996 approaches,
the Republicans could fmd Powell irresistible.
Born in Harlem, the son of a seamstress and a shipping clerk, both
immigrants from Jamaica; educated in public schools and at the City Col·
lege of New York; a non· West Pointer who got his start as a ROTC cadet;
the winner of the Purple Hean and the Bronze .Star during two tours in
Viemam; America's top military man at the time Saddam Hussein was
humiliated and Kuwait liberated: It's a dream political biography.
He demonsttated administrative skills - and a mastery of Washing·
ton's ways - as adviser to Ronald Reagan and George Bush and as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Bush and Bill Clinton, who once
considered asking him to serve as his secretary of state. &lt;
"Powell is a nonpartisan figure who can appeal across party lines,"
said historian Gary Reichard of Florida Atlantic University. "He is articu·
late and he proved his loyalty in the way he has conducted himself since
Clinton came to office."
Powell's lack of partisan identification could be an advantage. Ross
Perot showed the appeal of a non-politician.
·
Powell opposed Clinton's idea of opening the military to homosexuals
but did so in such a way as not to lose Clinton's respect or his own.
"He is·a better politician than Ike ever was," added John Mueller, a
political scientist at the University of Rochester. "Powell understands
politics, has a good feel for it. He understands the political atmosphere,
what kinds of things are possible. He resonates moderation, compassion
and toughness."
As a Republican candidate, Powell would draw strong support from
blacks, who now constitute an essential, and the most loyal, component of
the Democratic constituency.
"I can' t imagine any other .black person in American life who would
garner more white suppon," said Alonzo Hamby, an Ohio University his·
tori an.
But pitfalls exist. Sometimes military leaders look diminisHed when
they trade in their uniform. The Persian Gulf commander, Norman .
Schwarzkopf, lost some of his heroic stature in civvies, giving television
interviews to plug his autobiography.
Powell is retiring at the end of September. As a civilian, Powell will be
less able to avoid expressing opinions, and opinions are divisive. He's
being paid a reponed $6.5 million for his memoirs, and .they're bound to
raise some controversy.
Tim Blessing, director of the presidential performance study at Alver·
nia College in Reading, Pa., said Powell's best bet, if he has political
ambition, is " to virtually disappear," to go abroad on a humanitarian
task, or take a college presidency, and stay off television. "If he gets
down and dirty with Bob Dole or Jack Kemp in New Hampshire, that
would detract from his image."

budget plan

political capital to tate a couraWASHINGTON - During the several special-interest hit lists
cliffhanger vote on the Clinton
Taking on Otlahoma' s inost . geous stand, to vote for the budget
•
budget plan, Rep. Mite Synar, D- popularpolitician-111ddefending plan.
In 'o ne private meeting with
Olcla., was on the House floor with the least popular (Ointon) - may
tears welling up in his eyes.
McCurdy ~ Brewster, ICCOJ'ding
" I was ashamed to be an Olclato sources, Synar illustrated the
point by scribbling three numbm
h0!1Wl congressman," he laier told
on the bact of a naJ*in: 53, 7l 'and
staffers. ' 'That was the first time in
75. These were the winning mar15 years."
gins registered by the three men
Synar was "ashamed" that fellast election. In the general eleclow Democrats in the state •s congressional delegation deserted
tion, Brewster romped with 75 perClinton and voted against 'the $496 wind up costing him re-election cent and McCurdy .with 71 pen:ent.
billion "deficit-reduction" pact- next year. But Clinton counts Synar but Synat eted out a 56-percent
age. Synar implored them to stand as one of his most steadfast allies. win. In the primary, Synar won
their ground. But in the end he and which is much more lhan can ~ with only 5 percent in a runoft.
White House Officials felt Olcla- said about Rep. Bill Brewster, D- Synar was the one who should be
homa Democrats buclcled in to Sen. Okla., and Rep. Dave McCurdy, D- cowering; he was tangling with a
David Boren, D-Okla., the state's Okla. They were predisposed to ~ y;bo_won every single vottowering political figure and Clin~ support Clinton - as they had.on mg precmct m the state.
ton anlllgonist, who opposed the an earlier vote - but feared incurAs he lobbied Brewster and
plan because it didn't go far ring the wrath of Oklahoma public McCurdy, Synar sought to paint the
enough.
opinion, which Boren was helping decision as one of those litmus-test'
Synar has been accused of being to galvanize against the plan, votes that can make and break
overly exuberant and even impetu· according to conifeSSional sources. careen, according to sources familous, but no one has ever accused
"When Boren came out against ill:t' with the discussions. Synar rnhim of not standing his ground. In it ... we certainly understood lhe dlcted that the superambitious
fact, he's made a career out of liv- consequences," one White Hi&gt;use McCurdy would forfeit his chances
ing dangerously. He's taken on all official told us. "It's very hard for of attaining a leadership position in
the heavyweight special interests: a member of Congress to vote the House. For his part, Brewster
tobacco, the National Rifle Associ- against a popular senator who gets was warned that even though he •s a
ation, big oil, insurance companies, a lot of po$itive preSs."
·
member of lbe House Ways and
ranchers. This has earned him lauSynar believes that Brewster Means Commitiee, a vote against
rels but landed him at the top of and McCurdy possessed enough Clinton might mean getting frozen

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

. 1 HOPE

'(OU'R.E Nat'

S'NooPINc;

IN 'Tt\E fiL.E$ .

AGAIN'?

'WHAT POE$'

IRS

THAT SAY?•

August is a curious kind of
month, not quite the end of summer
and not quite the beginning of fall.
If August is schizophrenic in calen·
dar location, it is single-minded in
temperature. August is hot! Brow·
mopping hot.
So in August we still refuse to
give up our love of exercise and
boldly accept August's summons to
a wide range of STRENUOUS
activities: lazing in a tree-shaded
hammock, snoozing on a grassy
bank while a fishing pole bobs
floating down the river oil a tir~
tube, picnicking at the beach and
gently hoisting the one potation
that made this nation great - a
frosty-cold glass of homemade
lemonade.
'
But August is a special time for
two other exercises. One is bone·
soothing for older follcs. The other,
alas, is gender-restrictive. Each
exercise has been enshrined in at
least two songs. While it may be
true that the "Old rockin' chair's
got me," follcs still enjoy "just a·
sittin' and a rockin' ali-day."
Ironically, the gender-restrictive
exercise requires even less physical
exertion. Who would you fmd but
males "Standin' on the corner,

of his cello-playing friends would
come over and give open-air concerts, a(tended by 50 people. Now
THAT's a J,Xl!Chl
~ut m81~ly the porch was for
senous rocking. He and his neighbors would sit and roct and watch
and rock. They watched fueflies
a hit song by North Carolina's The sum~er storiJis and railbirds
O'Kaysions).
sirollmg bact from one track to the
Last week, two reporters wrote other. Really titillating, huh?
feature stories about the cultural
. Nobody was mentioned as a
values of both exercises . USA gut-watcher or stare master Today's Craig Wilson's encomium that's how the Washington Post's
''In Praise of Porches" featured a Phil McCombs described a daily
drawing of a country man sitting lunch break exercise by constrocback in a rocking chair. "Perfect tion worters in the nation's capital.
place to watch the world go by," "Stare Master," said the headline.
added the subhead.
"Every day at noon, they -sit and
Indeed it is, but a rocking chair watch their dreams go by." At the
makes it more perfect. That salubri· top of the page was a six-column
ous interaction between porch and picture of two attractive, leggy
rocking chair is even confirmed by women, passing a gamut of conWilson when he later described a struction workers, some somber
lovely apartment in Saratoga some smiling, but all of then{
Springs, N.Y., that he rented. A ogli~g.•.fantasizing, hoping and
porch wrapped itself around two of scrubruzmg.
the apartment's three rooms:
times change. Such a pic"Shortly after I moved into that tureHow
would not have been printed
apanment almost 20 years ago, I 20 years ago without feminist
picked up four rocking chairs at a protests. (Thirty-five years ago, I
barn sale."
His porch was so large that one wrote a column, "Why Negro Men

Chuck Stone

Dy NEA, Inc.

·

.•

in general a person in a position of
trusL
. Who would have thought thai
the legislature would have to tackle
die issue of consensual sexual rclationships between a reacher and his
or her student? You'd think that
common sense would dictate that
this type of activity was unaccept·
able, and wrong. But now, the legislature will have to do that because
the current law does not apply to
those in a supervisory position over
our children.
Justice Paul Pfiefer, who wrote
for the majority in the ruling, indicated that :he sihce the law did not
spe11-out th at such relationships
were forbidden, that the conduct
was legal. The issue was brought to
the forefront due to a teacher, who
ha1'Is f rom 0 ttawa County, who
fostered a relationship with a student at the high school where he

T o d a y ··n hi.Stsuoch asr
. scyout !eadem, coaches, or
.11
.
By Tbe Associated Press
.

on the case
indicates that tlie teacher met the
girl in question and began having a

Today's Highlight in History:
One hb dred
n
. years ago, ~n Aug..22, 1893, author, poet, critic and wit
Dorothy _Parker was born m West Bend\ N.J.
~~5~: 1 d. ' ·
! ng a~ s Kmg Richard III was tilled in the Battle of
n
Bosworth F1eld,'endlng the War of the Roses.
.

?"

Like Big Legs.·') For centuriew
men have objectified women,.
reducing them to the lowest com:
mon denominator of physic:alitY,.
Even with Ph.D.s, M.D.s aad
M.B.A.s, attractive wome~
walt into a room and the machdl
~ven ~bido will ~ their cogiii•
tive geruus.
In those intervening 20 years
three things have happened: Sexli:
al-harassment laws are being
enforced, lawsuits are being filed
and women are increasingly occlJ.
pying the higher rungs of power. '
~n Washington, D.C., if you
whistle or make salaciously snide
remarts at a good-looting le$gr
woma11, she could be a Cabmet
member, an off-duty police officer,
a member of Congress or a news~
paper editor who can assign a story
on sexual harassmenL
.
. What solves the ocular problent
ts to s1t on your front porch in a
rocking chair, watch the pretty
young ladies pass by, sip your
lemonade and be thantful that God
created man and woman in HER
own image.
.·
Chuct Stone is a syndicated
writer ror NeWJpaper Enterprlsl!
Association.

can

young

Summer is almost over, which
Soon to come before us in the
means that, to the joy of many par· legislature are some very interestems, school wiD be back in session. ing pieces of legislation that wiD
So, parents, we had better get ready impact many if not all of us. Some
to deal with the expense of new
school clothing, parkin!! problems
at the ball games, and m general,
the hectic pace of the commitments pieces deal with banking. In fact
of kids as they begin to wrap-up one piece deals with the unautho·
the summer and mate preparations rized mooring of boats at privale
to resume their srudies.
docks (who said government was
How many of you remember the boring?). But due to a recent Ohio
first day back at school? Didn't ·Supreme Court ruling we'll have to
thin~s seem simpler then? You wrestle with an issue of trust, but it
didn t have to worry about taxes. may not be what you're thinking.
You didn't have to worry abOut a
The Justices ruled 6-1 that the
mortgage 0~ missing a~ payment. relationship between a Ieacher It seemed
like such
a Simplefor
time.
· a position of trustwish
it were
as simple
meI or th ose m
and a srudent was not addressed in
today, but I have chosen to serv~ in the current law that prohibits sexuthe legislature, and with .the JOb a1 conduct by /:pie with su""""comes
some
deciSions
· mary aut!torlty
· ..·•
decisions
that tough
some may
not like
sory or di ~c1p
o.ver
while o.thers may be tickled t~ ?thers. Thts would not JUSt be limdeath that! made.
Ited to teachers, but also people .

Ieft~~~-~~y, Aug. 22, the 234th day of 1993. There are 131 days

&amp;?Ji.: ~

·

·'·.

watchin' all the girls go by" (a hit
song by the Four Lads) or would
proclaim to the world, "I'm a girlwatcher, I'm a girl-watcher" (also

Rep. Mark Malon·e

~-

sars

·The August ·pleasures of the season

Things were easier when we were

-·

of upcoming health-are negotiations.
• Synar also pointed out that in
Brewster's district, one .out of
every three families is going to Jel
a tax break. and only 590 are JIOIDJ
to get a tax increase. "This is like·a
5,000-to-1 better proposition for
the ~ty of the _PC!lllle." he told
Brewster. 1be savmgs for McCurdy's district were lea dnmatic.
The White ltouse feels it was
bettayed by Boren, Brewster anel
McCurdy. Even Synar argued tl!at
the administtatioo had met most of
the delegation's biJgest demands
- deeper spendmg cuts and
removal of the Btu tax, Jilting Clinton would be like welshing.
Having marshaled all these
arguments, there was still some
simple arithmetic: Boml's 80 ~­
cent-plus approval rating baci
home. ''McCurdy and Brewster are
panicked over what B~n did,'l
said one Otlahoma observer.
"They are afraid of the power ~
has to dictate what's gomg on ill
the state."
"We discussed the pros alii
cons of the package,"
McCurdy. "We never asted. (Boren) •to
vote one way cir inolher. We want" ·
ed to find out how be was going to
vote because it had an impact on
our decision a5 well. We're a cloSeknit delegation." Boren disputeS
that his vote swayed either man, ·tl'
that they probed whet:hc-z he would
be willmg to soften some of his
rhetoric to make a yes vote mor,F
salable bact borne- as some ~
gressional sources have claimed.
One Boren ally iii the Olclahoma
delegation believes he and his colleagues deserve sympathy, not
scorn. In addition to the Boren fl!Ctor, this member believes the prolilems are traceable to last year's
cam{'Bign. "Tiley wrote Otlahoqlli
off m the campaign," he sai41
"After the campaign, we told tbtrii
not to veer to the left because Y9U
can't govern on a 34-state strategt
That was the error in the begfu,
While working on another piece
of sensitive legislation earlier in bi.s
career, Synar himself summed p'p
the sttategy he adberes to in public
life: "If you don't like fighting
fires, don't be a fueman ... and if
you don't like voting, don't be' a
congressman.''
Jack Anderson and Ml~hael
Blostein are writers for Unlt~d
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

EDITOR'S NOTE....!... Mike Feinsilber bas covered events in Wasb·
ington since the Johbson Administration.

Berris World

••

tauftttle bac~d

~~~~s~~asre~:=nT1i~

.

•'.

.

parent, to you and me).
. ·•
The teacher/coach plead mit
guilty in the case, and up the judi:
cia! ladder it ivent. Not until.it
reached the Ohio Supreme Court
did we learn of the swprising pp
in the Ohio law.
• .~
It seems that more and more in
tod~( s world, we have !o pass
addiuonal laws to insure our chitdren's safety. We did it by passing
a bill to allow school districts tb
expel students who rate guns intO
school. Now, it loots like we'll
have to pass a law that spells-oil!
(for a very small group) the accept~·
able boundaries reprdlng the truit"
ed auth~ties of our children. .. •:
. It km~ of makes you wont!Cf
JUst What IS M.P,peniog to the world
when these thmgs occur. You'cj.
thint that someone who is dealillg:
with children in a position IX au('
would have 1M common sense not:
to engage in this son·of activity.
However; now the legislature wi!~
have to set about the process o{
amending the law before we aft'.
faced with another such situati~cl
If ldcb can't paniciplte in activi~'­
witb adult supervision without the
threat of physical or. emotional:·
1
~llfl!l· O!IJ' society just isn't doin~'
11

man was then charged in 1990 with
sexual battery.
He .was subsequently indicted
under the Slate law that forbids sex- It's job.
things were· so much· easier"l
ua1 rel~ons if the offender was a
person m loco parentis (that's a .~11 we were younJ, weren't .
person acting (temporarily) as a
'1.-;

rw
Jl

Charles Alexander

Sunday Times Sentinel-Page A5

,.----Briefs...

:;;;..
- - - - - - - - - - -. A r e a d e a t h s - - - - - -

OUl

ning."

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Ple881nt, wv

Continued from A-3

Casby Meadows Jr.

"""

CHILLICOTHE - Charles H. Alexander, 76, VA Medical .Center
l&lt;i:hillicothe, died Friday, Aug. 20, 1993 at the VA Medical Center.
'
!·j Alexander was a retired coal miner and a World War II U.S. Army vet·

. G~LIS - ~y ~eadows Jr., 7~. 1$ Portsmouth Road, Gallipolis, owner of Empue Funuture Co.; Gallipolis, since 1946 died Sarur·
day, Aug. 21, 1993 at Holzer Medical Center.
'
~.
Born
Nov.
8,
1917
in
Gallipolis,
son
of
the
late
Casby
and
Opal Wal·
· 2" Born Feb. 11, 1917 in Point Pleasant, W. Va. to the late Charles an4
lace
Meadows,
he
served
with
the
66th
Army
Air
Corps
in
the
Eurcipean
!Mae Lambert Alexander, he was preceded in cjeath by his wife, Fronia
Thel!ter
?f
World
War
n
~d
was
a
life
member
of
VFW
Post
No.
4464,
1Ann Alexander.
Gallipolis.
He
was
also
a
life
member
of
Gallipolis
Elts
Lodge
No.
107
bir He was also preceded in death by one daughter, Sarah Alexander; one
and
a
24-year
AA
member.
,
,
-!lster, Sarah Nance; and two brothers, Carl and Bill Alexander.
Surviving are his wife, Betty Thomas Meadows; two sons and daugh-·
Survivors include four sons, Charles (Karen} Alexander, Port Austin,
lets-in-law,
Casby "Sit:ip" and Karen Meadows, and Tom and Tina Mead!Micb., Sam (Rayette) Alexander, Willowood, Jerry (Kathy) Alexander
ows,
all
of
Gallipolis; two grandchildren, Mitch Meadows and Emily
!Port Austin, Mich., and Tom (Cheryl) Alexander, Columbus; one daugh:
Meadows;
five
stepgranchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Eddie (Marie) Edel·
•Itt, Delorse (Paul) Baldwin, Willowood; 15 grandchildren and 15 great·
blute
of
Gallipolis.
.
';grandchildren.
·
In
addition
to
his
parents,
he
was
preceded
in death. by a grandchild
~·· ·services will be I p.m. Monday at the Willis Funeral Home. Burial
Cas
by
Meadows
IV,
8lld
by
a
sister,
Josephine
Thompson.
'
!Will be in Rife,Cemetery. Veierans Of Foreign Wars Post 4464 will have a
Services
will
be
1
p.m.
Tuesday
in
the
Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral
trave side flag presentation.
Home. Burial will be in Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Friends n\ay call tOday. from 7to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
funeral
home Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
...
A military flag presentation will be made by VFW Post No. 4464.
Pallbearers will be Casby "Mitch" Meadows, Tom Burdette, A.E.
Thomas Jr., Jewell Campbell, Eddie Edelblute and Forrest Clark. Hon·
~ VINTON - James T. Brewer, 83, Dexter Road, Dexter, died Friday, orary pallbearers will be Dick Bowman, Blib Lisle and members of the
Tri.County Group.
A.ug. 20, 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant
.
:o: Born June 13, 1910 in Wolfe County, Ky., son of the late James and . . In lieu .of flowers, donations may be niade to the Arthur G. James Can·
!!tile Ratliff Brewer, be was a retired pipefitter and a member of the Pip· cer Hospital and Research Center, in care of Ohio State University
Columbus.
'
&amp;fitters Local No. 162, Payton.
!fe was preceded in death by his wives, Irene Hauon, May Johnson
llilrewer and Lillie Eclcl&lt;;s, and by four brothers and !WO sisters.
· ,. Surviving are a son, James (Brenda) Brewer Jr. of New Haven, W.Va.;
uree daughters, !rna Jean Faulkner of Covin$ton, Ky., Mrs. Robert
{lloanne) Perry of Campton, Ky., and Brenda Maines of Portsmouth; sev·
4tal grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren; and
POMEROY- Charles Harry Murray , 74, Mulberry Avenue ,
a.brother, Ray Brewer of Milford.
·
Pomeroy, a manager of Columbia Gas of Ohio for Middleport and Ironton
-~ Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
from 1?42 U?til 1?78 and a one-time member of the Pomeroy Board of
~inton, with the Rev. Natham Kingrey officiating. Burial will be in the
Education, d1ed Fnday, Aug. 20, 1993 at Holzer Medical Center.
iol!iles Cemetery, Rutland. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday
Bo~ Aprill2, 1919 at Pomeroy, son of the late Otho B. and Ada H.
:ftt&gt;m 7-9 p.m.
Leifheit Murray, he was a 1937 graduate of Pomeroy High School. A
::.i,
World Wm; U Navy veteran, he was a member of Drew Webster American
Le~ion Post No. 39, the Bradford Church of Christ, the Masonic Lodge,
Umted Commercial Travelers, the Bowhunters Club, the Ironton Lions
Club, the Lawrence County Business Club and the Coonhunters Club.
Sll!"'iving are his -,vife, Margaret Hensley Murray; three daughters and
~i! RACINE- Mary May Hysell, 78, Racine, died Friday, Aug. 20,
SO!JS·m-law, AnnaL. and Ron Russell of Tyler, Texas, Charlotte and
,t~93, at Holzer Medical Center.
' .,, Born June 8, 1915, in Middleport, she was the daughter of the late Wilbur Rowley Jr. of IrontOn, and lyfinada and Jack Simms of Gallipolis·
a son and daughter-in-law, Charles "Chuck" and Debbie Murray of
"tjlomas V. and Ida Grace Hysell King.
.
•. Retired from the Meigs Local School .District, she was a fifth·grade Albany; 14 gi3lldchildren and 22 great-grandchildren; and a sister, Cbar- ·
loue Young of Columbus.
~Chef and a member of the Forest Run United Methodist Church. In
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with Pasl!l;ldition, she was a graduate of Ohio University and a member of the
to~ Derek Stump officiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
~.~tired Teachers Association.
.
Fnends may call at the funeral home Monday from 5-8 p.m.
.
~ ~ Survivors include her husband, Victor Hysell; two daughters and sonsMilitary
graveside
rites
will
be
conducted
by
Drew
Webster
American
1)\.- law,.Grace and Gene Chaney and Koste and Saleh Eldabaja, all ·of
Legion Post No. 39.
~acine; two sons and daughters-in-law, Dr. David and Janet Hysell of
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Bradford Church of
Oxford and Dr. John and Barbara Hysell of Midland, Mich., and nine
Christ
or the American Heart Association.
~dchildren.
·
' Also surviving .are three brothers, Charles King of Pomeroy, Robert
itlng and William King, both of Middleport, an&lt;!. several nieces and
~ephews.
·
.
·~ She was preceded in death by an infant brother, Thomas King.
~ · Services will be held Monday at 3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with burial following in Beech Grove Cemetery.
MIDDLEPORT - Mary E. Walburn, Middleport, died Saturday, Aug.
c · Friends may call Sunday from 5-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
21, 1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
.
port
Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·

DUI, weaving and no operator's license.
Police cited four others Friday
Cited were Se3!1 B. Hughes,
2201 North Main Point Pleasant, W. VL for failure to maintain an assured clear diStance ahead·
Glenn F. Wroczmslt:i, 28, Huntington, W. Va., for left of
~~Y P. &lt;;!art, 24, ~305 L~ln Pike, for driving under suspenSion, and Bnan D. Shriver, 18, Vmton, for improper passing.

22,

cenW:

Calf reported shot

. ~SONVILLE - . A black angus calf belonging to a Harnsonville ~ was shot four times between 2:30 and 4:30p.m. Friday, according to a report from the Meigs County Sheriff"s Department
.
·
The calf,, belonging to Harold Graham, State Route 143, was
found dead 1n the pasture approximately 100 feet off State Route
143.

..

Quarantined dog stolen

James T. ·Brewer

· ROCK SPRINGS -William Dye, Meigs County Dog Warden
reported Thursday that someone broke off the lock on the door of
the pound and stole a doberman that was under quarantine. .

~

~

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

Charles llarry Murray

ORmNTATION
AND
OPEN ROUSE

Mary May Hysell

River Valley
High School

Monday, August 23
6·8 p.m.
Guest- Speaker:
"The Original Mike Smith"
Motivational Speaker
Public Is Invited!

Mary E. Walburn

~Miner .J. Kerns

' .)'' •': •· ' 4

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(.~~~:, ~·¥.f ;;,;~~}\IS~,'~~; 8~{Ripley; :~.V,a., .die4 Fri. '""r' 'n.lli. ,...,, 19.9&gt;. at .Ciderilai'e Nursmg Home m Ripley arw an extended illrtess.
' · ·
·
· ·'
Born May 14, 1908, in Mammoth, W.Va., he was the son of the late
:Qlmlalia and Lucretta Good Kerns. A farmer and former Bible school
,!jjacher, he was affiliated with the Church of God.
r. Survivors include his wife of 61 years, Bertha Wiseman Kerns of Rip·
I.ey; a son and daughter-in-law, Jus~us and Ann Kerns of Point Pleasant,
'?N..Va.; three daughters and sons-in-litw, Robert and Helen Pauerson of
~w Cwnberland, W.Va., Clareoce and Evelyn Freeman of Racine and
~ymond and Justava (Nuzum) Allison of New Cumberland; 11 grand·
aflildren, 25 great-grandchildren and one great·great-grandson.
Also surviving are two brothers, Alvin Kerns of Oregon and Dale
.lf.erns of Alabama; one sister, Melba Kerns Knight of Florida, several
IJi.eces and nephews.
&amp;, He was preceded in death by six brothers and two sisters.
~·, Services will be held 2 p.m. Monday at Vail Funeral Home in Ripley
~ith the Rev. Creed Pursley officiating. Burial will follow at the Miner
Kerns Cemetery in Leroy, W.Va.
.. , Friends may call from 4-9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Wrecks
...
...
··

Name winners
POMEROY - Winners in the
Meigs County Fair Matching Fund
Association give-a-way awarded
$300 in a drawing at the horse harness racing Thursday.
Tictets were given to everyone
entering the grandsiand and after
the third race the wiooers of cash
prizes were drawn. Winning $25
were David Coen, Guysville; Carl
Casto, Dorothy Chaney, Cris Wray,
and Clara Humphrey, Pomeroy,
and S. Evans, Michigan. The $50
prize went to Jim Batton, Ripley,
W.Va.

Mary Elizabeth Sayre

Continued from A·3
i6 the right quarter panel of the
POINT PLEASANT, WV - Mary Elizabeth "Liz" Sayre, 40, of Point
Siders 1986 Mercury, and to the
passenger side front of the 1984 Pleasant died Friday, August 20, 1993 at Pleasarit Valley Hospital.
She was an obstetrics . nurse at' PVH, a 1971 graduate of Gallia
Pontiac ·driven by Price.
Academy,
a graduak: of th·e Rio Grande School of Nursing and a member
" At 8:16 p.m. Charles Landers,
of
the
First
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis, Ohio.
6~. of MinersviUe hit a yellow post
Born
February
15, 1953 in Gallipolis, Ohio, she was the dau(!hter of Dr.
011 the Kroger parking lot when he
Oscar
W.
Oarke
and
Susan King Clarke, both of Gallipolis, OhiO. She was
twerved to mi ss a grocery cart.
preceded
in
death
by
a granddaughter, Vanessa Lynn.
Jlhere was light damage to the 1979 ·
Surviving
are
her
husband, Charles "Eddie" Sayre; two daughters,
Ford truck he was driving.
Tammy
Elizabeth
Sayre
and Carrie Sayre, both of Point Pleasant; one son,
i; Friday at 12:47 a.m. on the
Jimmy
Sayre,
also
of
Point
Pleasant; two sisters, Mrs. Richard (Susan)
Marathon lot on West Main Street,
DeAngelo Thompson, 16, Siei0, · Gahanna, Ohio and Mrs. Steven (Jennifer) Clarke-MacKessey,
Pomeroy, driving a 1991 Pontiac Greeley, Colorado.
Funeral services will be held I p.m., Sunday, August 22, 1993 at the
owne&lt;J by Shelly Barrett, Letart, W.
Va. backed into a parked car Crow-Hussell Funeral Home with the Revs. AI Earley and Louis A. Busowned by Steven Steinhart and sell officiating. Burial will follow in the Smith Chapel Cemetery.
Visitation was held Saturday evening at the funeral home.
being drivCJ! by Jason Stewart, 18,
both of Middleport There was light
!lam age to the passenger side of the
.Steinhan car and none to the Bar[!!tt car.
m Thompson was cited for no
I)Jlerator's license and improper
backing.

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~~ccident ...

Continued from A-3
~to the path of a northboimd vehi·
&lt;cl~ driven by James A. Radcliff,
(!,I, 42570 Tucker Road, Coolville.
J • No injuries were reponed. Rad·
c~ff's -vehicle sustained light damage and Weber's sustained moderate damage. Both vehicles were '
'\fjven from the scene.
t!
p_One vehicle sustained light
~mage -in an accident mi Third
1~onue Friday night, Gallipolis
l!lllice repofted.
' Christina Dawn My!lfS, 19, 212
!~ird Ave., was northbound on
~~ird Avenue when Jobn J. Aliiron, 81, 132 Portsmouth Road .
baclced out of a driveway, striking
apd dalfiaging her vehicle.
11,Ailiion's ·vehicle was not dama8,rcl. Myers' vehicle remained at
tlljj scene.•
~ No injuries or citations were

Pd. for by Drug FrH School Grant

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Editor's note: Names, a1es
and addresses are printed as tbey
appear on official reports.

12 OR 20 GA.

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Monday &amp;Friday td 8
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Saturday tl 5; Sun. 1~s

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PHONE (304) 675-2988
NEW STORE HOURS: MONDA Y·FRIDAY, 1:30 Alt-8 ""
SATURDAY, 1:30 -s ""i SUNDAY, 11 ~""

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, POINT PLEASANT
I

(,

)

�Rab tshow

MARKET SHOWMANSHIP - Mithele Gl!ess and Rebecca
Scott were selected grand champion market lamb showman and
. reserve champion showman, respectively, in Tuesday's Meigs
County Junior Fair Sheep Show. Sbown are, from left: 1993
Junior Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre, Guess, Wool Princess Christy
Drake, Wool Prince Jonathan Avis and Scott.

Court news--tion.
Common Pleas
Thomas D. Hodge, 22, 626
GALLIPOLIS -The following
cases have been ~recessed in the Third Ave., Gallipolis, was fined
Gallia County Common Pleas $50 plus court costs for no opera·
tor's license.
Court of Judge Joseph L. Cain:
Richard N. Patterson, 24, Route
Dwayne Boster, 221 Texas
I,
Crown
City, was fined $50 plus
Road, Gallipolis, was fined $250
plus court costs for attempted gross court costs for driving under sussexual imposition. He was also sen- pension. He was also sentenced to
tenced to 18 months in jail, sus- 30 days in jail, suspended, and six
months probation.
pended, and three years probation.
Bond was set for Dennis BlaclcAngel L. Vance, 2122 Turkey
Run Road, Cheshire, pleaded guilty ston, 37, 123 Fourth Ave., Gallipoto theft and was fined $250 plus lis, at $1,000 with 10 percent
court costs. She was also sentenced secured. He is charged with domes·
to six months in jail, suspended, tic violence.
A charge of passing a bad check
two years probation and ordered to
against Daniel J. Polcyn , 1631
pay $3,170 in restitution.
Bond was set for Tony Ferrell, Johnson Ridge Road, Gallipolis,
7635 State Route 7 South, Gallipo- was dismissed.
A charge of passing a bad check
lis, at $1 ,000. He is charged with a
against
Richard Layne, Gallia Mel
probation violation.
A divorce was granted to Kath- Estates, 381 Buck Ridge Road,
eryne S. and Gary R. Colvin, 239 Bidwell, was dismissed.
A charge of llespassing against
Cora Mill Road, Gallipolis.
A divorce was granted to David Donald Copley, no address, was
N. and Lisa R. Swain, 452 Cox dismissed.
A charge of domestic violence
Road, Crown City.
against
Jack E. Pickens, Jr., 650
Mullicipal
Garners
Ford Road, Gallipolis, was
The following cases have been
dismissed.
processed by the Gallia County
A charge of no operator's
Municipal Court of Judge William
license
against Douglas C. BrafS. Medley:
Rhonda Hogan, 28, 41 Lincoln ford, Cardwell Road, Thurman,
Ave., Gallipolis, was fined $450 was dismissed.
A charge of domestic violence
plus coun costs for driving under
the influence. She was also sentenced to six months in jail, with all
but five days suspended, and six
months probation.
Paul Meadows, 64, 279 State
Street, Gallipolis, was fined $50
plus court costs for a charge of
DVI reduced to reckless operation.
His license was suspended for 45
days.
. James M. Dent, 40, 270 I First
Ave :. Huntington, W.Va., was
fined $450 plus court costs for
DVI. He was also sentenced to six _
months in jail, with all but three
days suspended, and a 90-day
license suspension.
Jackie Johnson, 24 , 2012
Chalham Ave ., Gallipolis, was
fined $100 plus court costs for no
operator's license. She was also
sentenced to six months probation
imd her license was suspended for
30 days.
Annette D. Slater, 18, Elkview,
W.Va., was fined $100 plus coun
costs for shoplifting. She was also
sentenced to 30 days in jail, suspended, and six months probation.
Marvin Miller, 30, Vinton, was
fined $100 plus coun costs for public imoxication.
Gerald K. Day, 21 , 179
Williams Hollow Road, Crown
City, was fined $50 plus court costs
for disorderly conduct by intoxica·

SENIOR CHAMPION AYSHIRE- The Leland Parker Farm
had the grand champion ayshlre dairy cow in the senior division or
the Meigs County Fair Open Class Dairy Show Thursday. Shown
here are, from left: Chuck Parker and Dairy Princess Krist!
Warner.

Beef class winners announced
pion heifer, Windy Hills Cattle
ROCK SPRINGS - The first Farm.
·
place winners in the open class
Any
retognized
breed
beef catlle show at the Meigs
Spring
heife~ calf, Windy Hills
County Fair have been announced.
Cattle Farm, Pomeroy' and Co Dins
Angus
.
.Hill, Reedsville; spr.ing
Spring heifer calf, Windy Hills Spring
yearling heifer, Windy Hills Cattle
Cattle Farm, Pomeroy.
' Farm, Pomeroy and Michael
Limousin
Coolville; junior yearling
Winter heifer calf, senior heifer Pullins,
heifer,
Sam
Langsville; wincalf, summer yearling heifer, junior ter bull calf,Scott,
Sam Scott; cow-calf
yearling heifer, and winter bull
Sam Scott
calf, C&amp;M Limousin, Little Hock- class,Non-registered
beer females
in g.
Spring heifer calf. Lakeview
Simmental
Farms, Reedsville; Walnut Lane
Spring heifer calf, Windy Hills Beef Farm, Coolville; summer
Callie Farm, Pomeroy; junior yearling heifer, Walnut Lane Beef
heifer calf, Robert ·Edward Hoff- Farm, Cooh•ille; junior yearling
man, Long Bottom; junior yearling heifer, Walnut Lane Beef Farm.
heifer, Stephanee Hoffman, Long
Bottom;· get of sire, Stephanee
Hoffman; grand champion heifer,
Stephanee Hoffman; reserve cham-

POMEROY - The following
were winners in the Meigs County
Junior Fair Rabbit Show which was
·held Tuesday morning. Judges for
the show were Vicki and Kevin
Bogan of Sabina.
Showmanship
.
Old Pro - Jason Ervin, Amy
Smith , Cheryl Jewell, Christy
Cooper and Jenny Clifford.
Yearlin~ Showman -Jeanie
Newell, Kristin Brown, Linzie Nottingham, Misti Musser and Stephen
Grueser.
· Novice Showman, 13 and over
- Kindell Brown, Susan Grueser.
Stacey Cotterill and Peggy Hetzer.
Novice Showman. 12 and under
- Ryan Kauff, Billie Jo Welsh,
Ann Kauff, Stephanie Burdette and
Billy Soulsby.
Grand Champion Rabbit Showman -Jason Ervin.
Reserve Champion Rabbit
Showman :,...- Ryan Kauff.
Breed Classes
American Fuzzy Lop: Best of
Breed, Senior Buck- Jason Ervin.
Californian: Best of Breed,
Junior Buck- Peggy Hetzer; Best
Opposite, Senior Doe - Christy
Cooper.
Champagne D'Argent: Best of
Breed, Junior Doe - Ann Kauff;
Best Opposite, Buck - Ann Kauff.
Checkered Giant: Best of Breed,
Senior Buck- Rebekah Karr.
Dutch: Best of Breed, Senior
Buck - Christy Cooper; Best
Opposite, Senior Doe - Amy
Smith.
Dwarf Hotot: Best of Breed,
Junior Buck - Joseph McCall;
Best Opposite, Senior Doe Joseph McCall.
English Angora: Best of Breed,
Senior Doe - Joseph McCall.
Flemish Giant: Best of Breed,
Junior Buck - Ryan Kauff; Best
Opposite, 6·8 Doe - Billy Souls-

py.
French Lop: Best of Breed,
Senior Doe -. Rebekah Karr.
Holland Lop: Best of Breed ,
Senior Buck- Jason Ervin; Best
ODposite, Senior Doe - Jennifer
Clifford.
Jersey Wooley: Best of Breed, .
Junior Doe - Joseph Mccall.
Mini Lop: Best of Breed, 6-8
Doe- Billy Soulsb&amp;neBest Opposite, Junior Buck- · Karr.
Netherland Dwarf: Best of
Breed, Senior Buck -Kristin
Brown; Best Opposite, Semor Doe
- Kristin Brown.
New Zealand: Best or Breed,
Black Junior Doe- Joshua Roush;
Best Opposite,,Red Sellior BuckJoshua Roush.
Palomino: Best of Breed, Sellior
Doe -Amy Smith; Best Opposite,
Senior Buck- Ann Kauff.
Rex: Best of Breed, Junior Buck
- Stephanie Burdette; Best Opposite, Senior Doe- Odie Karr.
Satin: Best of Breed, Senior Doe
- Cheryl Jewell, Best Opposite,
Senior Buck- Cheryl Jewell.
Silver Fox: Best of Breed,
Senior Buck - Ryan Kauff; Best
Opposite, Senior Doe - Ryan
Kauff.
Silver Martin: Best of Breed,
Senior Buck- Sarah Clifford.
Cross Bred: Best of Breed,
Junior Doe - Jeallie Newell; Best
Opposite, Senior Buck .- Holly
. Griffith.
Best of Show- Joseph McCall,
Jersey Wooley; Best Opposite Christy Cooper, Durch.
Market Pens
Grand Champion Market Pen Jeanie Newell; Reserve Champion
Market Pen- Ryan Kauff; 3. Ann
Kauff; 4. Jeremy Cowdery; 5.
Susan Tobin; 6. Rebekah Karr; 7.
Bryan Cowdery; 8. Stephen
Grueser.

SUNDAV PUZZLER

against Roy E. Jarrell, 34, 661
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, was dismissed.
Editor's note: Names, ages,
addresses and other information
are reported as available on
court records. All newsworthy
actions will be publisbed without
exception.

J

•.

PRE·SCHOOL
326 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH.
MARY CAROLYN WILEY, DIRECTOR

Now accepting registration for
children ages 3, 4 and 5
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL

(304) 882·2318 or 992·5779

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IJJOI'e investn~e~Jt choices
Available by appointment in Gallipolis,
Pomeroy and Rutland to personally assist
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Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-4
ACROSS
1 Pass, as time
7 " - Chaae"
12 - meringue pie
17 Swill
21 Figure ol
speech
22 Frighten
23 Gel up
24- ol Capri
25 Therefore
26 Sour
28 Worthles8 matter
30 Sharon Stone
Him
32 "The Two of - "
33 Finish
35 Baker's products
37 Walks unsteadily
39 Retain
40 Strike
41 Latin conjunction
43 Antlered animals
45 Undergarments
47 ~lord · ID
48 Countenance:
visage
49 ChOir voice
52 Face part
54 Allen Funt
raquasts
56 Detested
57 Ran away to be
married
5~ Pedal digits
61 Sacrad Image
62 Oodlee
83 Insect eggs
84 Printer's measure
68 Goll mound
67 Unused
68 Painful
68 Streep ID
71 NlceM880n
72 At a distance
74 Epic aea tales
76 Promptly
77 Tiny
78 SopranoKanawa
79 Europeans
.8 1 Make lace
82 Animal hide
83 Tardy
84 "-Lake"
85 Pismire
87 Writing

Implement
89 Prisoner, e.g.
90 Firecracker
92 Club obligation
94 Act
95 Eateries
96 Public storehouse
97 Refund
99 Goal
100 Above
101 Drunkards
102 Vehlclea
103 Shade tree
105 Fragile
107 River In Italy
108 Individual
110 Church service
11J Banana .113 "Straw - "
114 Engllth tavern
115 Spielberg 10
116 Corned beel 111 Yellow ocher
118 Base
120 You and I
121 Walking stick
122 Sultan of Swat
123 Sicilian volcano .
124 Arrow
126 Gymnastic feats
128 Twirls
130 Mixes
132 Extremely
terrible
134 Demean: degrade
135 Jog
136 Conjunction
137 Commemorative
disk
139 Weary
141 Martin ID
142 Rodent
143 Seed covering
145 Hinder
147 Additional
149 Halll
152 Thrae-toad sloth
153 st-Ing
mechanism
155 Strlctnees;
severity
157 Transaction
159 Exists
160 Words ol
understanding
162 Urged on
184 Fanatical
166Ta-n

168
169
170
•
171

want
Remains at ease
Fragrant
oleoresin
Empower

DOWN
1 Actual being
2 Detroit player
3 Early morn
4 Fruit seed
5 Strike
uncenny
7Swayzel0
8 Perform
9 Young salmon
10 lroquolan
' indians
11 Repullllll
12 Note of acala
13 Bitter vetch
14 Dairy product
15 Willows
16 At no time
17 Evergreen tree
18 Equally
19 Waterway
20 Triad
27 Narrate
29 Expelled:
exCluded
' 31 Presley 10
34 Olgnlly
36 Playlet
38 Condiments
40 Chapeaus
42 The Four44 Blemish
46 Sluggish
48 Doom
49 Doctrine
50 Choice pan
51 Concerning
530bserva8
55 ...,. garde
56 "Come Blow
Your-"
58 Guard
60 Chair
62 Diving bird
651nsane
68 Dirt
68 Distance measure
70 Propheta
72 Cognizant of
73 Schoolbooks
75 Opening
78 Slid

a

77 Thin cracker
79 Tradaa
80 Ignores

82 .. - of a Woman"
83 Seagoing -.a!
84 Declare
86 Hyson
88Bom
89 Dwell•
90 MexiCan colna
91 Short lackela
83 Climbing deYICe
85 Avoids
87 Bold
98 Cloth measure
f02 Johnny104 Temperate
106 At praent
107 Football kiCks
108 Fat
110 Small ruga
111 Tranag..-d
112 Frog
114- Canal
116 "Mf!d About
You" st.
117 Stalk
119 Court order
121 Chleego 122 Disturb..,_
123 Sp.nllh artiCle
125 Decorate
127 Tantalum aymbol
128 Draw tightly
128Laud
130 Span
131 Sarcasm
133 God ol love
136 Command
138 Lawful
140 Wipe out
143 GOld symbOl
144 Limbs
148 Looea garment
148 Ardor
150 MusiCal
Instrument
151 AnglO-Saxon
slave
153 Crimeon
154 Soak, aa ftiX
156 Edge
158 Guido's high nota
161 Eatrada ID
163 TV's Hutch: lnlla.
165 Rom111 gocta
187 Rlvwln Siberia

;Aloilg the River

1rinwt~$enti.w Section

B_

I·=~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;ua~;u~;;~;·;1;~~·~

;Contest makes for a 'peachy' time at ·the fair
3

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'

.:Home economics experts otfet
~tips on
use of a favorite
fruit
.
..
.,

·,

By CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
Times-Sentinel Staff

ROCK SPRINGS - Things are
probably peachy-keen if your
. friends describe you as pretty as a
; peach with a complexion that's all
peaches and cream and some refer
to you as one peach of a person.
• But it wasn' t that frame of refer, ence that brought.peaches to the
1 Meigs County Fair.
,
It w~ a program called "Home. made P1es and Country Fare" by
' the ·Meigs County Extension Service and was a combination of a
peach pie baking contest Sponsored
by Veterans Memorial Hospital and
; a ·cooking demonstration.
Being a popular time of year for
' peaches, Cindy Oliveri, Meigs
, extension agent, and Becky CuJ. bertson from the Gallia County
Extension Service, gave tips on
new uses of the fruit which usually
winds up as a dessert.
" Turning the hill stage into a
;;kirchen for an hour, the two agents
demonstrated unusual ways to use
·,peaches - like making pickled
~ peaches or using them in a main
"course chicken salad.
They also gave Lips on selecting
and preserving peaches noting that
they should have a creamy yellow
color. and be flf111 but not hard. As
for the blush on the peach, this usu-ally indicateS variety, said ..Culbenson, who also suggested care 'in
· handling because peaches are
known to bruise easily.
She said that peaches are a good
source of fiber, low in calories and
are easy to use and preserve. To
remove the skin, just plunge 'the
peach into boiling water and then
cold water, the agents advised, and
the skin will slip right off.
Sprinkling with lemon juice will
:

\
"
"
keep peaches from .IUI1ling brown,
accor"!ng to Olivt:rJ.. . ·
While the' IS P.i~ m ·lhe competitian wer~. befng judged by 'Cuibertson and, Joan Corder, Oliveri
served up: samples·of the peach
foods they prepared.
It turned out to be delightful
stand-up luncheon for· ihose who
ventured onto the stage. There was
the delicious chicken salad served
in pita pockets, tasty spiced peaclies, cinnamon peach meringues
filled. with fres.h peaches, and a
peach tott topj)ed with whipped
cream. Delicious.
As for the pies brought in by
Meigs Counties for the contest,
they were judged on the basis of
appearance, taste and texture. .
The winners were Marilyn
Spencer;1AIDg BOttom, fiiSt place,
a $15 prize; Brenda Kennedy,
Pomeroy, second place, a $10
prize, and Donna Jenkins, Rutland,
third place, a $5 prize. ·
Recipes to Share
Peachy Cobb Salad Pockets
Ingredients: 1 1{2 cups lettuce,
torn in pieces; 3/4 poullds of chicken or turkey, cooked and diced, 4
slices bacon, two peaches, peeled
and slices, 1{2 cup plain yogurt, 1
teaspoon mayonnaise, 1{2 teaspoon
mustard, 1 teaspoon blue cheese,
crumbled, and 4 whole wheat pita
pockets.
Combine yogurt, mayonnaise,
mustard, and blue cheese. Mix
well. Salt and pepper to taste. Combine.lettuce; chicken, bacon, peaches and dressing.
Slice open the top quarter of the
pita pockets. Sruff with salad mix- .
ture. Serves four. ·
._ ,

.-

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'

Speedy Pickled PeacheS
Ingredients: 1 29-ounce .can
peach halves, 1/2 cup sugar, 1/2

cup .cider vinegar, 1 shori cinnamon stick and whole cloves.
. On the day before or up to one
week ahead, drain peach halves,
reserving 1 cup syrup. In medium
sauce~, combine ~ed s~.
sugar, vmegar and l:innamon suck.
Stud each peach half with three or
four cloves; add to mixture. Over
medium heat, heat to boiling,
Teduce heat to low and simmer
three to four minutes. Cover and
refrigerate. Serve with poultry,
meat or fish . Makes eight servings .
·
Cinnamon-Peach Meringue
Ingredients: 4 egg whites at
room temperature, 1/2 teaspoon
cream of tartar, I cup of sugar, 1{2
teaspoon ground cinnamon.
Combine sugar and cinnamon.
Put egg whites in deep bowl and
add cream of tartar. Beat until
foamy, gradually add sugar mixture
on tablespoon at a time. Beat at
high speed until. stiff peaks form.
Rub a bit of meringue between the
thumb and ·forefinger to be sure
sugar is dissolved.
Spoon about one-third cup of
meringue onto paper lined balcing
sheet
Bake in preheated over 250
degrees until firm and delicately
bro,wned, about 50 minutes. Turn
' oven off. Leave meringues in oven
for one hour. Fill with sliced fruit
or ice cream and top with fruit.
Hard meringues can be stored in an
air tight container for several
weeks. Makes a dozen.

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SAMPLING THE FOOD - Gettin~ to taste
the food prepared ror a demonstration IS balf the
fnn of watching it being prepared. Here, Cindy
Oliveri, left, assists in serving Janet Venoy, her

daughter-in-law Brenda, and granddaughter ::
Megan at the Meigs County Fair nutrition pro- ; :
gram.
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Fair's flower show
awards family affair
fo~ Dean,
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr

JUNIOR WINNERS- Abbie Chevalier took the junior reserve
best of show for her artistic arrangement and Lisa Stethem, both
the best or show and the bortlculture sweepstakes rosette at Tburs- .
day's nower show at the Meigs County F81r.

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ROCK SPRINGS - Many of
the blue ribbons winners at Thursday's flower show at the !30th
Meigs County Fair were all in the
same family - a mother. her
daughter and her granddaughter.
Betty Dean; an outstanding
arranger over man'y years, took
both the reserve best of show
rosette for an artistic arrangement,
but also the horticulture sweepstakes award for her outstanding
specimen collection.
1-{er daughter, Melanie Stethem,
won three blue ribbons in the. artistic arrangement classes, and three
more in the specimen exhibits.
Mrs. Dean's granddaughter,
Lisa Stethem, in the junior division, took the same awards as her
grandmother - the best of show
and the horticulture sweepstakes. ·
Both Mrs. Dean and her grandmother won the same awards at the
fiiSt fair flower show held Monday.
Yesterday's show was judged
by Marian E. Hendricks of Orient,
an accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs.
In artistic arrangements, Janet
Bolin of.Rutland, took best of show
with Evelyn Hollon of Racine taking the special nature, art and
industry rosette.
Winner of the rosette for reserve
best "f show in the junior division
was Abby Chevalier.
Artistic arrangement classes carried out the theme '"On the Midway." The blue ribbon winners

Stethem .

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were Melanie Stethem in the classes 4-H, The Flower Show, and
S~nior Citizens Day. Betty Dean
took the blue in The Parking Lot,
and Evelyn Hollon the blue in
Commercial Display which, also
won her the nature, art and industry
award.
Janet Bolin took the blue ribbons in An Afternoon of Racing
and Ride the Scrambler classes,
with Twila S. Buckley winning the
fiiSt place in A Day of Sunshine.
Both blue ribbons in the junior
artistic arrangement classes were
won by Lisa Stethem. They were
· Warm Day and Merry Go Round.
· In the horticulture division the
winners were Alice Thompson,
Pomeroy, gladioli; Melanie Steth ·
em, flowered dahlia and large yellow marigolds, crested and plumed
celosia.
In the rose classes, Pat Holter
took a blue for a peace rose, Betty
Dean the first for a white rose, a
red rose, a pink rose, and one of
another color in hybrid teas. In
floribunda, the winners were Alice
Thompson for a yellow, Betty
Dean for a pink and another color,
and Pat Holter for an orange blend.
In miniature roses, the blue ribbon
winners were Lisa Stethem for bne
stem and one spray. She also too1c
blues in the jumor horticulture division .for a large dahlia zinnia, a
large marigold, and a display of
roadside material. Betty Dean had a
special educational display of herbs
which won another blue ribbon for
her.

ROSETI'E WINNER - Evelyn Hollon of Racine was the win-ner of the special nature, art and industry award at Thursday's ~ •
Meigs County Fair nower show. Her pop art arrangemeat in the
class Commercial Display featured rope, styrofoam, a pop bottle,
painted scotch broom, and a single fuschia red gladiolus.

• Mutual Funds
• Tax-Free Municipal Bonds
• Self-Directed IRAs
• Government Securities
• Common Stock
• Personal Retirement Investments
• Business Retirement Investments
• Unit Investment Trusts
john .C. Miller

Se"ror btvntmtnl Co~ulto1tt
Ba11c o.te Stcttrities Corporatio"

Call for an appointment or additional information:
593-6681 or 1-800-677-4994.

Bane One

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Securities
Corporation

SDOW - Winner of the
of show In artistic
design at Thursday's fair Dower show was Janet Bolin or Rutland.
Her arrangement featured split palm, fantail willow, some vine,
golden ralntree pods, and glorlosa daisies.
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BANKEONE.

Mm1ber NA50 and Sip(

BANC ONE SECURITIES CORPORATiON is 11ol11 ~~~· mtd lfiDit tJ/1/11 iiii!CI"w'u it wwkn tJIIo iltJbll a,., 11111 DbJit4rimu a/, or P""'"Uid by a btld,
srt 1101FDIC iiUttrrd. a"d i11IIOIH ;,.,rrt,.tlll riW, illtltulillf pouiblt loa (1/;ri•rifKIL tO 1993 BANC QNE CORPORATION

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DOUBLE WINNER - Betty Dean, left, took both the reserve ·
best of show in artistic arrangements and the horticulture sweepstakes awards at the 130th Melp County Fair nower show slaged
Thursday. Here she Is presented rosettes by Marian Hendricks or
Orleat who judged the fi0111er &amp;bow.
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NOT AN EASY TASK .;..,. Appearance, taste and texture were
the considerations when the 15 p•es entered in tbe peach pie bak- · .
ing contest were judged. Here, Becky Culbertson, left, home eco- ·
nomics agent for Gallla County, and Joan Corder check out the
entries to come up witb the winners.

,

�Auguet22,1993

OH-Polnt Pl•unt, WV

Woodard-Saunders
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MR. AND MRS. ROY SIDERS

Champer-Siders
·-·-·

MR. AND MRS. BILL BREWER

Barry-~rewer

RIO GRANDE - Maggie Barrj
and William E. Brewer III were
· united in marriage at an outdoor
··. 'ceremony July 4 at the home of the.
· "· groom'SJ!B!:CRIS.
• ·' Maggie is the daughter of James
and the lille Lucillie Barty of Thorman. William is the son of the late
Bill and Linda Brewer of Rio
Grande.

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Wedding policy

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· Maid of honor was Tammy Hacris, sister of the groom.
The bride wore a satin gown
emblazoned with pearls and lace.
She carried a bouquet of satin,
pearls and lace.
The groom wore a white tuxedo
with tails trimmed in powder blue.
A reception followed with a
double heart cake wedding.

The ·sunday Times-Sentinel
regards wedding of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. 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
Thlli'Sday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
of publication.
Those not making the 60 day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photograplts of either the bride .
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories is
(lesired. Photograohs 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 acceptable quality.
All material submitted for publication is subject to•editin$.
Questions may be 'dtrected to
the editorial department from 1-5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

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-FALL
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Letterman. rounds up first guests
NEW YORK (AP) - David
Letterman will kick off his Late
Show on CBS with guest Bill Murray, the actor-comedian who also
helped launch Letterman's Late
Night on NBC more than a decade
ago. And thanks to serendipitous
scheduling, both programs will be
aired the same night.
CBS confirmed Friday that
Murray and musician Billy Joel
will be on hand for Letterman's
Aug. 30 premiere at II :35 p.m.
EDT.
.
An hour later; NBC, which is
telecasting Late Night reruns until
Conan O'Brien takes over the show
Sept. 13, will repeat that original
kickoff p_rogram featuring a much

younger ~tterman and Murray. It
ftrSt aired Feb. 1, 1982.
Then through Sept. 10, NBC
will rebroadcast the first two weeks
of the old show.

MR. AND MRS. PAUL MULLINS

·Moore ..Mullins
VINTON - Paul L. Mullins Jr.

OR

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD BREWER

Lively~Brewer

RIO GRANDE - Launi Loualla
' Livelr
and Richard Lee Brewer

ris, sister of the groom.
The bride wore a white satin
were joined in marriage at an out- dress accented with pearls and lace.
door ceremony July 4 pedormed at She carried a bouquet of satin, lace
the groom's parentS home.
· and pearls.
'
Laura is the daughter of Larry
The groom wore a white tuxedo
Lively of Vinton. Richard is the with tails, trim.med in powder blue.
son of the late Bill and Linda
A reception followed with a
Brewer of Rio.Grande.
double heart cake wedding.
Maid of honor was Tammy Har-

Secor-Mitchell

GALLIPOLIS - Tammy Secor
and Mark Mitchell were united in
marriage in Wevertown, N.Y.
.,
August7.
Mark is the son of Norman and
Bonnie Mitchell of Gallipolis.
Tammy is the daughter of Kenneth

HCA River Park Hospital Outpatient Services now provide a full
range of cost-effective treatment programs designed to meet your
needs. Flexible hours make it possible to get help without disturbing
work and family commitments.

I
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15% OFF
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HCA
River Park
Hospital
Outpatient
Services

~----------------------1

7.415 jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant,WV 25550

--------------------------------WOMEN AND HEART·DISEASE

.
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...-•
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. Sponsored by Holzer Medical Center
You are cordially invited to attend any or all of these free events. Please call us at 446-5313 for
any additional information. We look forward to seeing you!
•

Women's Health Month Calendar of Events

1
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THURSDAY
2

' FRIDAY
3

Speaker. C8r1ene Thompooo, Ph. D.
7 p.m. Ariel Theater
Recopllon to Fallow
Muaic by EdnaWMeloy • - -

6

Health Screenings
Choleslerol &amp; Blood
Pressure Clinic
OHILLCO Days Provided
by Jenkins CNnlc, -

&amp; Heart
Disease•
~anne

Mlze, M.D.

14

p.m.

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21

Health Screenings

15

~~Blood Pr•ureCink:

Meigs Co.

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Senior Center
...

Blood-·

Heahh Screenings
~&amp;

Clinic

28

29

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Gallia

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IT'S NOT TOO LATE!

Hey, all you 2nd Shift or Night
Owls, new !ate 3rd Shift League
on Thursday nights 12 midnight·1:00 A.M. to whatever time.

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Self-breast examination tecbniques wiD be.taught to area high school students during the month.

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Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Wednesday

Mixed
Mixed
Sunrise
Men
Women
Women
Men
Men
???
Women

Meeting
Meeting
StartMeeting
Meeting
Meeting
Meeting
Meeting
Meeting
Start

6:00
8/22/93
6:00
8/23193
9:30a.m. 8/24/93
6:00 .
8/24/93
6:00
8/25193
8:00
8/25193
6:00
8/26/93
8:00
8/26/93
12-1 :00 a.m. 8/26/93
6:30 .
8/27/93

FREE BOWLING TO LEAGUE
MEMBERS
AFTER MEETING

25

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MEETING AND $TARTING DATES ARE THIS
COMING WEEK •

Thursday
Thursday
Friday

. Fairground

24

446-4222

WINTER 1994
BOWLING LEAGUES .

T~ursday

on Sunday. Sept. 19)

23

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TRI·CITY LANES

CALL NOW!

I11~:,~;~p~&amp;~P'o:od Day
Pr'elkn C6inic

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LAFAYETTE MALL

COME IN AND SIGN UP OR

17 I Hea,nh Screenings 18

16

'Women and Stress"
James Altho!, Ph,. D.
B088ard Ubrary
Refreshments served
Nl:30

22

Co. Apple Festival
MoblleUM

27

11

ll3allllia, Jackson &amp; Meigs

446-5313 lor details

Holzer Medical Center, French 500
Refreshments Served

1

SATURDAY
4

10 IComrnunitv CPR

Wellston, Ohio
For details C813B4-2t 67

13

THE SHOE CAFE

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7

AIR LAND SHARK
FOOTBALL

1993

•

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CALDeRA % PLUS
TRAIL

NOW FORMING

Ohio River Plaza • Gallipolis • 446·9495

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Gas station clerk who fended
off robber credits MP training

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reg.uim: length coats, deep purple purple ribbon, and ivy on top of
·
saun t1es and cumberbunds and lace tablecloths.
The cake, baked by Kal)dy
bo~tonnieres of ivory tulle, a single
spng of purple statice and ivory · Nuce, was white with white icing
nbbon.
trimmed with ivory scroll designs~
A reception followed at the A tulle bow with purple statice
chll:fch. !he center display was a topped the cake.
-After honeymooning . in
while bud bath with alabaster
doves and live flowers decorated. Charleston, South Carolina, the
Table were adorned with a candle, couple resides in Patriot, Ohio. .

W.

Day and Evening appointments are available.
Call675-3389 or 1-800-992-91(X) ru&gt;w for a free, confidential·assessment.

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MR: AND MRS. LARRY SAUNDERS

Heart walk slated for Oct.16

Services for children, adolescents and adults include:
• 4 and 6 week Intensive Programs
• Individual Therapy ·
• Christian Counseling '
• Family Education Sessions
·
· • Marital, Family &amp;r. Group Therapy '

I

appliques, lrridescent sequins, and
seed pearls. The sleeves were
padded at the shoulders, opening
into shetr cut-outs with satin gathered and pointed at the top of the
hand creating the illusion of an •
elbow length satin glove.
·
The sheer back was adorned
with a row of satin covmd buttons
from the neckline to the waisL The
waist featured a large satin bow
topping the cathedral length removable train. The train began at the
waist and flounced forward. BOih
the dress and train were trimmed
with Victorian lace appliques. The
bride wore an ivory satin Victorian
hat with a ,waist length veil and
blusher of glimmer tulle. The hat
featured seed pearls and iridescent
sequins on floral appliques.
The bride's bouquet consisted of
ivory roses, stephanotis, lilies of
the v~ey ~ purp!e s~tice w!th
cascadmg spngs of tvy, 1voty nbhon, and ivory glimmer tulle in a
hand held brass plated tussie
mussie holder.
The bride's attendants wore tea
length deep purple satin gowns featuring a key~holil back and slightly ·
puffed short sleeves; The dresses
featured high collars curving to the
front into a sweetheart fitted
bodice. The sleeves and basque
waistline were adorned with ivory
lace as well as curved ruffle falling
from the back of the dress below
the waist. Each girl carried a lighted brass votive 'candle holder
trimmed with an ivory lace doilie
and deep pur)ile ribbon.
The groom wore a black double
breasted spencer waist length coat
with a tuxedo shirt featuring a
cadette collar. The cross tie and
cumberbund were black. The
groom's boutonniere was a single
ivory rose with ivy and a loving
heart penny.
The bestman and ushers wore

and Lois Secor of Wevertown,
New York.
CANTON (~) -: A gas station leaving behind allllut aoout $50.
To celebrate the occasion there clerk who used a .tollet plunger .to • Stark County sheriff's officials
will be a reception for the couple at fend off a would-be robber credits •continued searching for a suspect
First Baptist Church in Gallipolis, his military police training for his Friday.
·
.
August 28 at 7 p.m.
' quick thinkin,.
''I knew 11 was either defend
myself from him or he would do
;)11 hatever he wanted to do," said
Sam Bowman; who hit his assailant
~\ 614·221~
over the head with a "plumber's
friend" during · the Wednesday
~.J...~L. aNNAMO .
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia
The American Heart Assoc•a- nightrobberyattempL
.
County American Heart Associa- tion works to fight heart disease by
Bowman said he "!as counting
ATTORNEY AT LAW
lion is sponsoring a Hear!- Walk to funding research,as well as, com- money in the office at the Certified
be held Oct. 16.
rilunityoeducation progrllllls con-· ·Oil station as the bandit was breakIEMIBiwd ... e,l t,
dueled right here in Oallia County. - ing in.
SUite toO
Participants will walk 6.2 miles', Gail Pohlman, Gallia County
"I heard him coming through
Columbue, Ohio
for pledges: Mary Harrison, of Schools nurse, has been instrumen- the window," he said.
1 ·100-111 OLAW
Holzer Medical Center and Dr. tal in placing educational kits, free
Bowman said he grabbed the
(UOO 186 OSU)
Barry Dorsey, president ofthe Uni- to schools, with teachers in that· plunger and swung it at the robber,
versity of Rio Grande, are serving _ system.
who dropped most of the cash and
as co-chairmen of Proceeds will · For more information contact started fighting. Bowman said He
benefit the American Hean Associ- Dr. Barry Dorsey at 1-800-282- continued to strike the man, who
ation.
7201.
shouted, "I give
and. fled,
. .. . up!"
.

There IS help available, here in your community..

SLACKS :

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marriage at the groomts parents
home in Metter, Ga. June 12. ·
Paul is the son of Leamon and
Betty Mullins of Metter, Ga. and
the grandson of Willa Mae
Spencer. Formerly of Vinton, he is
a graduate of Metter High School
and is currently a Cpl. in the U.S.

Army, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Judy is the daughter of Elllas
and Annell Brown of Portal, Ga.
She is a graduate of Statesboro
High School and is a member of
the Army National Guard, Portal,
Ga.
.
The couple will make their
home in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Are you troubled by emotional problems?
~ Is substance abuse hurting your f~mily? ·
Are you concerned about y~ur chil~'s changing behavior?

SUITS :

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Rio homeroom

;
· Fourth grade
.•
Ann Moody
:
Room 12
~ · Kara R. Adkins, Dustin C.
~ Beach,' Brandon S. Bentley, Aaron
:• R. Blain, Douglas R.. Blake, B~~ ~on S. Carroll; Duson E. Caudill,
; James R. Durbin, David Jy Finney,
~ Timothy W. Fisk, Jessica D.
: Hamilton, Garrett B. Harrison,
• Robert E. Jones, Jason K. Martyn,
• Shannon N. McMillin, Allison St.
:, ·McNemar, Kristin A. Meyer, Jenny
;. Beth Miller, Andrea R. Neff,
~ Joshua D. Perry, James ~· Plan~.
• iennifer M. Plantz, Angmette R.
: Rippey, Samantha K. Scarber~y
• and Tami Marie Taylor.

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WOMEN'S 1

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and Judy A. Moore 'o)lere united in

: KICK-OFF .
SPECIALS!

.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Eleven-year-old Ian Lundman's
·life slipped away as he lay in an
diabetic coma in his home, with a
Christian Science nurse jouing
notes about his condition and his
mother praying at his bedside.
i
Four years later, the boy's death
: has thrust the Christian Science
• Church into an unwelcome spot: light. A jury this week returned a
: $5.2 million wrongful death judg~ ment in .a lawsuit brought by the
;: hoy's biological father, and a judge
• ~aid Friday that the church may
: face additi~ punitive damages.
• : The damage award was the ftrSt
: or its kind against the Christian
• Science Church, which teaches that
;: prayer and Bible reading can cure
;. iII ness and are incompatible with
~ medicine.
:
•'We're just asking that they be
• held to the same standards as any
; other parents are under the l~w."
; says Rita Swan, a former Chrisuan
S Scientist who founded an organ1za'• lion to advocate .for children's
~ medical care after her son died of
: unb'eated meningitis,
; : Jurors awarded the damages
•• Wednesday to Douglass Lundman,
~ tan's biological father, who left the
'- ~hurch in 1982. He had sued the
~ ~irst Church of Christ, Scientist;
: lhe boy's mother and stepfather,
~ Kathleen and William McKown;
~ lhe nurse; and three others afflliat;: ~d with the church. Criminal
~ eharges against the McKowns were
~ 6ismissed.
~ • Doctors testified .the boy could
J have been saved up until two hours
~ ~fore his death May 9, 1989. He
~ had been ill for four days, culm•Enatil)g_in .unconuollable vomiting.
" ~ unnaung.

Sider of Bidwell.
The wedding was officiated by
James E. Farley. The maid of honor
was Sunday Turner. The best man
was Tim Champer, brother of the
bride.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.

CARDINAL DRYCLEANERS

"'c.Verdict sheds
riight on church
.~ and its beliefs
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GALLIPOLIS - Cindy Champer
and Roy L. Siders Jr. were united
in mllfl'iage July 17 at the Chapel
HiD Church of Christ, Gallipolis.
Cindy is ·th~ daughter of Gary
and Shirley Eisnaugle of Gallipolis.
Roy is the son of Roy and Connie

...••'·.'

POINT PLEASANT - Tonya
Lynn Woodard and Larry Edward
Saunders were joined in marriage
at Good Shepherd United
Methodist Church June 25 at 6:30
p.m'. The double ring ceremony
was officiated by Reverend R.C.
Browning with musi.c provided by
vocalist Mark Thompson,
Tonya is the daughter of Arnold
and Naomia Woodard of Pt. Pleasant. Larry is the son of Earnest and
Arbutus Saunders of Mercerville,
Ohio.
The church was decorated in a
Victorian theme with three brass
candelabras holding fifteen ivory
candles and unity candle holders
accented with ivy garland. The center aisle was adorned with ivory
glimm~ tulle draped frOm pew to
pew and 8ccented with 1lllle bows.
A white aisle cloth was laid with
the rear of the aisle roped off by
ivy and tulle.
Guests were registered by
Leshia Saunders, sister-in-law of
the groom.
The bride was es.corted by her
father and given in marriage by
· both her parents. .
Matron of honor was Sheila
Wood, Gallipolis, sister of the
groom; maid of honor was Susan
McCoy, Ravenswood, W.Va. ; and
the bridesmaid was Jodi Miller,
cousin of the bride, of West
Columbia, W.Va.
.
Best Man was Allen Wood, Gallipolis, brother-in-law of the
groom; groomsmen and ushers
were Randy Saunders, Mercerville,
brother of the groom, and Ivan
Brumfield, Mercerville.
The bride's gown was a Joelle
designed by Zure. The ivory satin
straight gown featured a high neck
trimmed with pearl beading and a
sheer cut-out sweetheart neckline .
The bodice and long sleeves were
adorned
with Victorian floral
,

TRI·CITY
972 EAST MAIN STREET
JACKSON, OHIO
216·10Wl·2695

LEAGUES ARE
NOW BEING .
FORMED!
HOURS STARTING
AUGUST 2ND
Mon., Tues, Wed., Thurs.
5:00-10:00 p.m.

Fri.·Sat. 5:()().Midnight
Sunday, Noon-9:00 p.m.
•35 wee~s of League Bowling
$1.50 Per Game
•33 Weeks of League Bowling
$1.90 Per Game
•Third Shift Late League
$1.50 Per Game
•Senior Citizen Leagues
$1.50 Per Game
•League Discount for Open
Bowling $1.50 Per Game
•Special Group I Events
Rates
•Apple Bowl Tournament
•Nine (9) Pin Tournament

Sign Up Now

�nm..

Sentinel

22,1993

1993

OH-Polnt Pleeunt, WV

I

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV
.

Gallia calendar of events
Sunday, Aug. 22

Preston - Stout
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Dee! of Vinton and Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Preston of Gallipolis
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage · of their
daughter, EliZabeth Mae, to Brian
Patrick Stout, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Stout of Bidwell.

GINGER GILLIAM AND RONALD DENNEY

Gilliam-Denney
GALLIPOLIS - Ms. Karen Kincaid of Gallipolis and Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Gilliam of Gallipolis
·announce the engagement and
approaching marril!ge of their
daughter, Ginger Kay, to Mr.
Ronald Landon Denney.

Ronald is the son Ms. Linda
Denney and Mr. John Fox of Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will
be held at the White Oak Baptist
Church, Nibert Road, Sept. 4 at
6:30p.m.

The wedding will be at the Trinity United Methodist Church in
Porter on September 4 at 6:30p.m.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed. A recep tion will immediately follow the
ceremony, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Stout.

Meigs calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the eaten·
dar.

RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
Tuesday a~ 6:30 p.m. ·at Star Mill
Park. New members welcome.

SUNDAY
CARPENTER- Dr. Olen Watson of Jamaica will speak at the
Mt. Union Baptist Church· near
Carpenter on Sunday at 9:45 a.m.
Public invited.

I don't know if members of
. Pomeroy Village Council have had
any reaction to their action this
week in regard to garage and yard
sales, but I've heard some.
As I understand the proposed
legislation, residents sraging a yard
or garage sale must Sl!cure a permit
. to do so and.must pay a $10 fee for
· the permit wliich will allow the
: purchaser to hold two such sales
. annually. I understand there are
also some regulations about listing
sale items aild so forth.
Complaints that I've heard suggest that council is really invatling
the priyacy of residents in s~tting
regulauons on what they can ilo in
their own yl!fdS, or garages. The
objectors also state )hat yard srues
-are a method of recycling and they
· ' feel they are giving the villa~e
·enough money through the permiS., sive auto license fee and the village
income tax without getting
·involved in a yard sale permit fee
"and government paper work.
·· Personally, I' m with the com. plainers. To me, yard and garage
•sales are just a tad below Mom aild
apple pie, a good American past
time which benefits the buyer as
' well as the seller. [[ you object to
' the legislation then I su$gest that
you let your village officials know
before final action it taken. That's
the way "the system" works, I
_think.
~
Probably, the move to regulate
~: the sales was brought on by a
.': minority which seems Iff perpetual• ly have a yard sale underway. Cer; tainly. the council can come up
~ with a way of regulating the operations without creating a problem
~ · for residents who.might hold such a
; sale once every blue moon.

VINTON - Norma Jean Oiler
·and Carl Weston Polsley Jr.
:announce their engagement and
·upcoming wedding.
: Norma is the daughter Mr. and
:Mrs. William Oiler of Vinton. She
·is a graduate of North Gallia High
:School and attended the University
·of Rio Grande. She is a member of
:Fellowship Chapel Church of Yin-

ton and a Habilitation Specialist at
Middleton EstateS.
Carl is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Polsley Sr. of Gallipolis. He is
a graduate of Gallia Academy and
employed by Shell Chemical as a
mamtenance mechanic.
The wedding will be held Sept
3 at 7 p.m . at the French City Baptist Church.

: She says junk cars are classics;
·neighbors, city feel differently
FINDLAY (AP) - A woman
who appealed her conviction of
violating the city's junk car ordinance was charged with the offense
again.
"I figured sooner or later they'd
come back after me,' ' Marie
Reichenbach said Friday. "I guess
it would have surprised me if they
had not."
The city this week charged her
with illegally storing two inoperable cars on her property - a 1976
Pinto and a 1981 Ford Fairmont.
The city prohibits outside storage
of inoperable vehicles for more
than 30 days.
If found guilty, Ms. Reichenbach could be ordered to remove
the cars.
"That's really all we're after
here," Assistant City Prosecutor
Don Rasmus sen said. He said
neighbors have complained that her
cars are a nuisance.
Ms. Reichenbach said the Pinto
is a collector's item worth about

$4,000.

She was convicted last year of
violating the same ordinance and
was ordered to remove the Pinto or
beiailed.
Ms. Reichenbach, a paralegal
who acted as her own lawyer,
appealed to the 3rd Ohio District
Court of Appeals in Lima. She said
the law violated her right of privacy and was unconstiwtional.
Her conviction was overturned
in April 1993 on a technicality. The
appeals court said the city's law
was vague.
Ms. Reichenbach said she

believes the court said the law was
unconstitutional. But local officials
said the ruling did not overturn the
city code.
" We've had people fight us and
win before, but that doesn't mean
we stop applying the law," Rasmussen said.
City Law Director Dave Hackenberg agreed. He said he has
oblllined convictions under the law,
despite t.hc controversy over Ms.
Reichenbach's case.

HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the townhouse. Bring snacks. All members
attend.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Elections will hold a
special meeting Tuesday at 9 a.m.
to certify the validity of the petitions.
Miracle shot
•
HONOLULU (AP) - It stands
as one of the miracle shots of golf.
In the 1983 Hawaiian Open ,
lsao Aoki of Japan was on the fair~ay. of th~ 18th hole needing a
b1rd1e to ue Jack Renner for first
place at. th~ end of regulation play.
Aoki did even better. He hit a
wedge shot of 128 yards which
rolled into the cup for an eagle and
a tournament victory.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch ,
Bruce Wolfe who is employed in
the flashy show biz operations at
Disney World in Florida came
home a week or so ago to prepare
his Midnight Cloggers for their
show at the fair this week.
Right after the presentation on
:. the hill stage Wednesday night,
: Bruce headed back to his job at the
~' Disney attraction.
:

William Sprouse and his wife.
Maria, of Wallingford, Conn.,
;•carne in for the Meigs County Fair
;·and it was Bill's fll'st time at the
r; fair in 32 years. The last time he
= was there, he was 16 years old and
~ worked at a job sellin$ sno-cones.
. Bill and his wife VISited with his
... Mother, Mrs. Mattie Ball, and step&gt;'.father, A)len Ball, a patient in the
~ Holzer rehab unit; his sisters, Bar&gt;bara Stahl and Lmda Jones of
; Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . Darrell ··
, (Wanda) Sellers of Portland, and
:~ with his brother, Mr. and Mrs :
••·:charles Sprouse of Middleport.

So bring a spouse, son or daughter, business
associate or just anybody wanting a cellular
phone With you to Cellular ONE before this
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MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Volleyball
practice for girls in grades seven
and eight at Meigs Junior High will
.begin Monday at 3:30p.m.

Oiler-Polsley

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REEDSVILLE - A tent revival
will be held Sunday through Aug.
31 at 7 p.m. near Eastern High
School on Route 7. Rev. Joe
Beasley, Fresh Oil Ministry, Vincent, will be ministering. Special
singing nightly.

NORMA OILER AND CARL POLSLEY

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POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.- .
Weaver reuniqn Sunday at West
Virginia State Farm Museum, Point
Pleasant', W.Va. Picnic lunch at
12:30 p.m.

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Zoning Commission will
meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at th e
Reedsville Fire Station to receive,
consider and inact a zoning resolution.

CELLULAR ONE®
FREE!

COOL VILLE - Bethel United
Methodist Church, homecoming
Sunday. Basket dinner 12:30 p.m.,
afternoon service at 1:30 p.m. with
Rev. Robert Sanders, speaker. Public invited.

Or Visit One Of Our Authorized Agents.

. :; Let's backtrack to last week: end's reenactment celebration of
·.Morgan's Raid held at Portland.
~: Susan Bush.and hpr husband of

NATE COMMUNICATIONS

'

Crichton (Ballantine)
By The Associated Press
2. "The Pelican Brief," John
Here .are the best-selling books
as they appear in next week's issue Grisham (Dell)
3. "The Firm," John Grisham
of Publishers Weekly! Reprinted
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4: "Jurassic Park," Michael
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(Ballantine)
HARDCOVER FlCTION
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. I . ''The Bridges of Madison
Sidney
Sheldon
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J::ounty ," Robert James Waller
6 . "A Time To Kill," John
(Warner)
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· 2. " Without Remorse," Tom ' Grisham (Dell) ·
7.
"Congo,"
Michael
Crichton
paney (Putnam)
(Ballantine)
· 3. "Like Water for Chocolate,"
8. "All That Remains," Patricia
Laura Esquivel (Doubleday)
Cornwell
(Avon)
· 4. "The Streets of Laredo,"
9.
"Sphere,"
Michael Crichton
Larry McMurtry (Simon &amp; Schus(Ballantine)
ter)
• 5. "Vanished," Danielle Steele
(Delaconc)
; 6. "The Client," John Grisham
{Doubleday)
: 7. "The Night Manager," John
)e Carre (Knopf)
• 8. "Pigs in Heaven," Barbara
Kingsolver (HarperCollins)
; 9. "Honor Among Thieves,"
Jeffrey Archer (HarperCollins)
~ 10. "A Case of Need," Michael
~richton (Dutton)

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VINTON

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Galllo County Dloploy Yord
1fi5 Moin St

Joy 6 JCHIMo«e, Mar-3818603

"

Columbus came to Penland-for the
celebration and to visit Susan's
grandparents· ancestral home.
Susan and her husband spent some
time with Portland residents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gayle Price.
Susan's mother was the late
Helen McDade Bush. Helen's parents were Lucy and Wardie
McDale who spent pan of their life
in the Old Portland area. Susan's ·
father was Gen. George,Bush, one
of the survivors of the Bataan
Death March of World War II.
Lucy McDade's Mother was
Henrietta Williamson Middleswart.
Henrietta Williamson's Father,
James Williamson, owned Buffington Island at the time of Morgan· s
Raid in 1863 and Henrietta was
born on the island. At the time of
Morgan's Raid, Henrietta was a
small child and tradition has it
among h~r family members tha~
she sat on General Morgan's lap
while he headquartered at Ponland.
Henrietta was the only living survivor of Morgan's Raid at the time
of the dedication of the patk and
monument at Portland in. l933 .
That was quite an event. There
were 2,000 people on hand and the
governors of Ohio and West Virginia were present for the ceremonies.
James Williamson also had a
daughter, Eva; a daughter, Florence, and a son, Clay, all who
lived through the raid. It is aid that
Florence nursed Major McCook
while he lay wounded after the battle.
Eva married Captain Ritchie
who owned and operated the packet boat, Valley Belle. The Ritchies'
owned a fine home at Old Portland
and irt their declining years owned
a home on Ann St. in Parlcersburg.
Capt. Ritchie built a board walk
from his home down to the river
and almost daily walked to the
river to watch the boats. Capt. and
Mrs. Ritchie had a son Charlie and
a daughter, Lilly. Lilly married
Mack Price.
Clay WiUi31)1son married Mona
Pr(ce and stories passed down
repon that Clay remembered how
slaves escaping from Virginia came
to their farm in Ohio where they
hid in the stables before moving
on.
Henrietta Williamson married
WilHam Middleswart and 'their
children were Lucy, Henrietta and
Jessie. Lucy married Wardie
McDade; Henrietta married Van
McDade, and Jesse married George
Crow.
.
Wardie and Lucy McDale died
before Susan Bush was born. Susan
had read about last weekend's cele·bration in the Columbus Dispatch
and carile back to Portland to renew
childhood memories.
·
So the summer's shot. Schools
are geared to open for the new
year. Some of the kids might not
like that. On the other hand some
parents probably have another reason to keep smiling.

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Melge County DlopiiiY Y11d Near

byJlmSa"ds
Special Correspondent

·by Bob Hoeflich

GALLIPOLIS - The Martin
·Workman 1amily reunion will be
Tuesday, Aug. 24
held at the VFW Flinn, off of 775
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter
from 1-6 p.m. Dinner will be at 1
No. 450 will hold a grand visiJ&amp;tion
p.m. Bring a covered dish.
by grand patron Joe ·Biazcr at Past
GALLIPOLIS - Providence Matrons and Patrons night at 7:30
Mission Baptist Church, Teens Run p.m. Officers wear formal auirc.
Road, will host Pasuir Melvin Rock
.Revival
as the morning speaker and Jim
POINT PLEASANT - Crusade
Lusher to present a sermon. Luncil
for Christ under the big tent, Route
will be at noon.
2 North, Krodel Park, Aug. 23-28
at 7 p.m. Diffcrent .spcakers and
GALLIPOLIS - Isaac Myr
gospel singing groups nightly. The
family reunion, 10 a.m. 11ntil da
e.vent is sponsored by Meigs-Gal. Shelterhouse No. 6, Raccoon Cn
ha-Mason Counties Crusade for
County Park. Potluck dinner.
Christ team. The public is welcome.
CROWN CITY - Kings Cha
Church wUI observe its homeco
ing at 10 a.m. Special preaching
the Rev. Bob Thompson a
Matthew Henry. Special singinf
the Singing Shafer Family. Db
NORWALK, Calif. (AP) is at noon.
Superior Court Judge Dewey Falcone is unlikely to forget his fli'Sl
. CENTENARY - Cente
case: The defendant showed up in
United Christian Church will
court naked from the waist down.
Rev. Donnie Johnson to presr
Convicted burglar Toriy Grimsermon and special singin;.
ble, 40, had been completely nude
p.m.
in a holiling cell Thursday when
the judge ordered him to get
VINTON - The Vinton ·
dressed for a hearing on his request
Gospel Church will hold a l'""'
for a new trial.
opening with Sunday school .,: 1\ •
But he showed up in cOurt weara.m.; dedication service at 11 11 m. ing "only an orange top with no
with Rev. G. Bryan Johnson to pre- bottoms," said Deputy District
sent the sermon: and a sermon prc.- Attorney Diane Cressner.
sented by Rev. Dean Kuhn at 7
"I didn'tlook," she said Frip.m. Public invited.
day. "lfoun.d it very offensive."

Half-naked in court

. ELIZABETH PRESTON AND BRIAN STOUT

Gallia Coun football flourished in the '20s

Beat of the Bend...

Monday, Aug.l3
THURMAN - Thurman Grange
wiD hold a meeting at 7:30p.m.

.4111f,U '

IITIUI

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57HiS5 ,,_7761 tiJ-m6

LOWILL

196-1569

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791-4!41 516-1il5

~

Football played by Gallia County
schools (not including Gallipolis)
beg&amp;!! about 191S when Centerville
Hig~
School
formed a team.
Actually, football
hadbeenplayedin .
Centerville on a
. regular basis since
the 1890s but not
as a school sport. .
The Centerville
teams from 1890 to 1915 were indepelident teams made up of all ages.ln
1916CentervilleplayedOalcHilland
Rio Grande College among others.
About a game played at Rio
Grande College that year, it was said
about the Centerville team that they
were the "cleanest, spunkiest little
team around."
Competition between Centerville
and Rio Grande College continued
until about 1920. In 1919 Centerville
even .held the oollege team to a score~ess tie- thanks mostly to the puntmg of R.ltymond Allison, who later
went on to star at Rio Grande College.
The Centerville field, which was
described aS a very good field, was
east of the village and belonged to
Mr. Beman.
By 1920 Cheshire and BidwellPoncrhadfootball teams but Centerville was still the best high school
team in the county. Professor Redmond, Centerville's coach, used the
passing game to humiliate old rival
Oak Hill 27 -O that year. .
Cheshire introduced the county's
first cheerleader, Foster Little and
Bidwell-Potter had the first bornecoming fora county school team. On
No'vember 12,1920 Centerville
spoiled the homecoming by winning
27-6.
From 1921 to 1923 Bidwell appears to hav~ been the bestiearn. The
PirateS even beat Point Pleasant iwice
in that era.
The fields were not yet in great
shape as in 1921l&lt;night, the Bidwell
fullback, fell in a hug~ hole and fractured his hip. In the early 1920s foot·
ball was the second mostpopillarfall
competition.
Coming in ftrst was the debate
league. AU 10 Gallia County high
school~ in 1920 had debate teams:
Cheshire, Bidweli-Po}'ter, Centerville, Pine Grove, V into\J,RioGrande,
Cadmus, Crown City, Gallia, Hilton,
Mercerville and Yellowtown, but
only three (Centerville, Cheshire and
Bidwell) had football teams.
In 1924 and 192S Cheshire had
strong teams, beating Middleponaild
Pomeroy as well as fighting a very

strong Otauncey team to a ~ tie.
In the mid-1920s there were football t.cams at MeJCerville, Vinton,
Rio Gr.inde, C.enterville, Cheshire,
Cadmus, Crown Cit}' and Gallia.
Vinton aild Gallia switched to
speedball, which was invented in
1921. A soccer ball was used on a
football field. If the ball was on the
ground it had to be !ticked, but if a
player caught the ball in the air, he
could throw it, punt it or drop !tick it.
In 1926 and in 1928 Rio Grande
High School had undefeated teams,
even beating Gallipolis in 1928. Perhaps the most interesting rivalry of
the 1920s and 1930s was between
Cheshire and Mercerville.
·ThetwotearnsplaYe&lt;Janumberof
6-0 games during this era, one of
which was played in Gallipolis during the Fall Festival.
In 1934 Bidwell became the ftrst
county team to play football at night
The game was at Gallipolis before a
huge crowd. Whether they came to
·see the lights or the fights was a
debatable question.
In 1933 a big fight broke out during the Gallipolis win over Bidwell.
By the late 1930s it became increasingly moredifficultforcounty schools
to field football teams so from1939
to 1941 six man football was played.
Theiewasnofootballinthecounty
schools from 1941 to 1949. Six man
football was brought back in 1949
and was played to 1951 when eight
man football was introduced. About
1954thell manfootballwasbrought
back.
The dominant team in the early
1950s wasRioG11111de.1beBiuemen
went from 1952 to 1957 without losing to another Gallia County school.
In 1955 and 1956 Rio Grande had
back to bacli: 6-1 seasons behind

Grande. The Bluemen were dominant in county
league play in the 1920s, and from 1940 until the
late 1950s, once going six years without losing to
·another county school.

Dallas Garber.
· The fli'St year they lost only 10
McArthur and the second year they
lost to .Eastern. Consolidation and the
creation of football at North Gallia
aild Kyger Creek in 1956, Southwestern in 1957andHannanTracein
1958led to thedemiseofRioGrande's
dominance ofcounty footbl!ll . though
the Bluemen did manage to tie foc the
title in 1958.
The last year for football at Rio
Grande High School was in 1960.

The record was 1-5. The last win
came 52-0 over Hannan Trace when
Paul Wicldine scored 6touchdowns.
The era of Rio Grande's dominance
of Gallia county football had ended
and the Kyger Creek era had begun.
By the way, Rio Grande High
School was closed in 1961.
James Sands is a spetiai corre·
spondenloftheSundlyTimes-Senlinel. His address is: 65 Willow
Drive, Springboro OH 45066

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4 " Women Who Run With the
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5. "Reengineering the Corporation," Michael Hammer and James
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6. "Listeninjl_ to Prozac," Peter
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9. "The Way Things Ought to
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RIO GRANDE 8LUEMEN - One of the last
teams to play football for Rio Grande High
School is pictured above. Paul Wi~kline (No. 19)
was the star the fmal two years (1959 and 1960)
that there was higb school football at Rio

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·.. • ~beginning ~~ ~7th y~r of epuoitlon'l ~erv!C!e ,to Gal! Ia,.Meigs &amp; Mason Coun11es (Aug. 23)
• Has grown Y"riY too~~ .•tiAdellll'ln gradH,l&lt;5-12 · .
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* ,Ia claii~IY&lt;:hrl...., y•rnorM:tlniJmlnatlonallri'lts cuiTiculum
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to collegel llkl Akron University, Bob Jones
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�P"-11 B6 ~nday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, QH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

; August 22, 1993

August22,1993

\

'Tecumseh!' lives in southern Ohio hills ··
i

ReYiew
By LISA PETERSON
TJmes.Sntlllel stair
CHILLICOTHE -. It's rich in
history. It's action packed. It's a
love story. And it's in Southern
Ohio.
tecumseh/, the tale of one
man's struggle to anile the Indian
nations a~ the white invasion,
still packs a punch for audiences
today. The drama has been SUCnded by over one million spectators
and yet the Sugarloaf Mountain
Amphitheaii'C n- Chillicoche still ·

draws a full audience - even on a
Monday perfonnance.
The lir$1 shots are fired by
Tecumseh and his older brother
Chiksi.ka during an ambush on
'frontiersman Simon .Kenton's
scouting party. And from there the
story unfolds.
Prisoners are taken during the
ambush, which necessitates fUrther
contact with whites. As prisoners
are exchanged, violence erupts and
a vengeance is held by Indians and
whites alike. ·
The plot encompasses th~

Names in the news

CARLENE THOMPSON

Nationally recognized author
to speak for women's month
GALLIPOLIS - West Virginia internationally published writer of
native and nationally published mystery shon stories, commended
author Carlene Thompson, will· be Ms. Thompson on her talent for
the featured speaker for Holzer blending her hometown into her
Medical Center's 1993 Women's novels.
"We are delighicd to have Ms.
Health Month celebration kick-off
Thompson
accept our invitation to
event
be
the
kickoff
speaker for Holzer's
Thompson will speak Septemcelebration
of
Women's Health
ber I, at 7 p.m. in the Ariel Theatre
Month.
Through
her experiences as
in downtown Gallipolis on "Importance of Positive Thinking to the daughter of a physician, a college professor and a noted author,
Achieve Good Health",
Thompson combines her experi- as well as someone who knows our
ence of being raised in a doctors' community, she is uniqueiy qualifamilr and her talent for writing. fied to address the imponance of a
She ts a former professor of positive attitude to a healthy
English at both the University of lifestyle," said Bridget Phillips,
Rio Grande and Marshall Universi- R.N., staff nurse on PACU and
ty. She completed under"aduate chairperson for the event
Special events sponsored by the
study and earned a Master s degree
from MarshalJ University, and her Holzer Medical'Center in recogniDoctorate in English from Ohio tion of Wof!len's Health Month, are
State University.
scheduled throughout September.
Thompson •s works i~tclude a The spealcers, dates, subjects and
mystery suspense novel, "Black for locations are all published in a calRemembrance" published in 1991 endar that aw-s in today's Times
arid "All Fa!J Down." She is now Sentinel, to clip and save for referworldng on her third boot.
ence throughout the month.
In an April issue of Charleston's
The event is free and open to the ·.
Sunday Gazette Mail, columnis! public.
John Su~er, an award winning and

Preseason football tops week's
list of most-watched cable shows
Br-Tbe AssOciated Press
· 4. Baseball: Atlanta at Cincin·
Ratings for the top 15 programs
nati (Sunday, 8 p.m.}, ESPN, 2.6,
on basic cable networks as com2.44 million homes.
piled by Nielsen Media Research
5. Saved by the Beii '(Tuesday,
for the week of Aug. 9-15. The rat- 5:30p.m.), TBS, 2.4, 2.28 million
ing measures the percentage of the
homes.
6. Saved by the Bell (Wednesnation' s 93.1 million TV homes .
tuned to the program. Each iatings
day, 5:30p.m.), TBS, 2.3, 2.18 milpoint represents 931,000 houselion homes.
· holds. Day and start time (EDT)
7. Movie Short (Friday, II :45
are included in parentheses.
p.m.), USA, 2.3, 2.11 million
I. Football: Preseason - Buffahomes.
Io at Kansas City (Thursday, 8
8. Movie: Friday the 13th VIII
p.m.), TNT, 3.6, 3.35 million (Friday, 10 p.m.), USA, 2.2, 2.09
homes.
million homes.
2. Football: Oakland at Dallas
9. NASCAR Auto·Racing (Sun(Saturday, 7:58p.m.), ESPN, 3.1, day, 12:30 p.m.), ESPN, 2.2, 2.06
2.91 million homes.
million homes.
3. Movie : Praying Mantis
10. WWF Monday Ni~ht Raw
(Wednesday, 9 p.m.), USA, 2.8, (Monday, 9 p.m.), USA, .2, 2.05
2.58 million homes.
million homes.

· By The Aasoclated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - James
Brown probably feels good.
'The soul singer compleicd 2-lfl
years of parole Friday, but still
faces five years of probation from
his assault conviction.
Brown, 60, served two years in
prison for threatening police officers with a shotgun and leading
them on a cbase through South
Carolina and Georgia.
While on parole, .Brown was
required to talce substance-abuse
treatment and cl- any CQJ!Cens or
trips outside the country with
parole officials.
.
He did so well that state officials ~ill ask a judge next week to
loosen the terms of probation so
Brown can repon monthly instead
of weekly, said Beth Allain, a
parole board spokeswoman.
· "He's already shown he can
handle that intensive supervision,"
she said.
Brown is working on k campaign against violence, especially
youth violence, keyed to his new
song, How · Long?, Brown
spokeswoman Unda Ware said.

Shawnees' attempt to 'retain theif
territory, a grand scheme endan·
gercd by a younger brother's lust
for power and a love !hat could
never be. These tribulations are
sre"eped in a rich heritage and
Tecwnseh's love for his people and
their land.
The drama is enacted on a
three-sided amphitheatre with eight
stages from where canoes are
launched and ba!lles - complete
with cannon and musket fire - are
waged on foot and from horseback.
'The scenes are accentuated with
original mpsical scores composed
by Cherokee descendent Carl T.
Fischer. and steeped in tradition

stopping only to exchange smiles
and sma!J talk with Akins.
"I hope we're still friends,' ' she
told him.
He responded: ' ' I thought we
always were."

grossed more than $25 million, an
astonishing amount for an independent film that cost only Sl.S million to malce, but his higher-proftle
foUowup, Kof/c4, fizzled.
"It seemed fitting somehow,"
Soderbergh said about Kafka, a
fantasy ftlm based on the life of the
19th century German author. "I
mean, I'd made one film that I
thought nObody would see that a lot
of people went to see; and I made a
film that I thought maybe a lot of
people would go 10 see that nobody
went to see.' '
"These things even out," the
30-year-old director said in an
interview published in Friday •s
Dally News of Los Angeles.

.' "

Lilli SILICftON

.

"

-NASHVILLE, Tenn. -

"-.

Grand•
Ole Opry_ performer Bill Carlisle
was in critical buntable condition
at Baptist Hospital after quadruple
coronary artery bypass surgery.
Carlisle, 84, is expected to
remain in intensive care for several
days, hospital officials said Friday.
Carlisle, a singer-guitarist, suf- ·
fered a bean attsck Aug. 11. He ,is
the oldest performer on the 68year-old country music Show.

·.
Rock of Agea ottera you a choice ot 6 different colored gra•·
nHea. Whatever your requirements malf be, complete satllfac:,·
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' ·
Hours: 9:D0-4:00 M~T·Th·F. Others .l)y appointment. :;:
593-6586 or 448-2327
.

SAN FRANCISCO - A Iawsuit .involving romance novelist
Danielle Steel and two magazine
writers who plan to write her biography will remain secret for at least·
10 more days.
Superior Court Judge Stuan Pollack met Friday with attorneys for
S t Martin's Press, which plans to
publish the bio, and the lawyer for
Steel's 15-year-old son, Nicholas
Traina.
Pollack then vacaicd his May 13
ruling that sealed the lawsuit, but
kept it alive for 10 days so Steel's
auomey can appeal.
Lawyers fot St. Martin's Press

claim the suit is designed to thwan
the as-yet-unwritten biography.

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS 352 Thirtl Ave.
Ph. 446·2327
Gallipoli1, ON:,
11 UI
lli!RN
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I

DOYLESTOWN, Pa.- Phyllis
,
DiUer wasn'tjoking
duringPhiladela recent . .------....:.-------------------------~
appearance
in suburban
phia: She was appearing in coun.
A Bucks County production
company sued Diller, 76, for
$32,000 after She abruptly canceled
10 shows at the Peddler's Village
Dinner Theater in .l988.
Diller ended her 12-show run
after two performances, citing doctors' advice. She had suffered a.
fainting spell.
Richard Akins, the production ·
company owner, said he was fon:ed
to refund money to more than
2,000 ticketholders and pay
expenses.
In court Thursday, the two sides
reached a settlement before Diller's
attorneys presented their case.
Diller left through a rear door,

TOWN .HALL MEETING ,

WHE~E:

·

Pomeroy Nursing and RehabilitatiQn Center
36759 Ro(ksprings Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

WHEN: Wednesday, August 25, 1993
TIME: 5:00·7:00 P.M.
TOPIC: ·Is There ANational Health Care Dilemma?...·

KIPLING SHOE COMPANY'S

ANNUAL TENT SALE

5TH

·.r "':: 0. . . -

CHAMPION OXFORD

r-

-'

----·~

They Feel Good~

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON -. Some call them
. the forgotten warriors of forgotten war.
··But retired Marine Jim Snyder
· artd other veterans of the Korean
War remember.
"It's time other peoRle knew
·'about us," said Snyder. ' We had a
' lot of casualties there."
· ··Snyder, of Dayton, has spent the
· last four years - Ionge• than his
tour of duty in Korea - campaign-ing to build an official state memo:: rial dedicate4 to Korean War veter-

a

.~

ans.

Hewon.
,
Organizers plan to build a
;: memorial on a bluff in Ri verbend
-: Park overlooking the city and the
· Mad and Stillwater rivers.
:: Engraved on the three walls of the
..: memorial will be the names of
:. Ohioans killed in Korea as well as
·: the U.S. soldierS stilllisicd as miss:. ing in action. About 1,764 Ohioans
::: died in Korea; more than 8,000
' : U.S. soldiers are listed as missing.
· • The memorial will include the'
~: figure of a soldier carved into a 12-~ foot-high piece of granite. The
:·. memorial will be ringed by flag:· poles flying the American, South
-' Korean, Uniicd Nations, Ohio and
:; POWMIA flags.
•• :Snyder said organizers chose
: Dayton as the site for the memorial
• ~ause of the area's military and
• aviation combat heritage, signified
by Wright-Patterson ,Air Force
.ijase and the U.S. Air Force Muse-

urn. The Korean War was the first
war in which jet planes flew in
combat.
The site was dCwcaifl;d July 19,
b~t.backers &amp;!ill ~ve some fundrrusmg to do.
··
So far, they ha~ raised $60,000 .
toward the $2SO,OOO they need. If
all goes as planned, ·!he memorial
could dedtcllt~d' by September
1994, Snyder S81d.
.
The Korean Wai began June f5. ,
1950, when 1ro0ps of Commurustruled North Ko~ attac,ked. South
Korea. The ~:f· w'!ich mcluded.U,S. and ru Nattons troops,
ended with a truce on July 27,
1953
. 54.000 American
I .. More thad
so diers were killed.
Sny~. 62, served 14 months ill
Korea. He was at the 13-day battle
at the Chasin Reservoir.
He said a visit to the memorial
likely will be an emotional experienc:e for veterans and the families ·

of~:~~~&amp;:~:n~~~\vho

lost SOmeOne in the Korean War a
place tO go to see !hat so~e has
recognized them," he said.
About four years ago, Snyder
and other veterans were swapping
war stories when they deeided it
was time to build a memorial.
Their initial plan was to devote the
memorial only to Dayton-area veterans of the Korean War.
"But we started getting a lot'of
calls in from other parts of Ohio
that they would like to have their
loved ones mentioned in this
memorial," Snyder said.

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Sunday, 12-6 pm

J

.
(EDITORS NOTE: Lucasville
to the Dation means tbe site of a
long and bloody prison riot. To
tbe residents or the southern
Ohio town, Lucasville mealls tradition, patriotism and caring
neighbors.)
·By SUSAN SCHWARTZ
Portsmouth Daily Times
LUCASVIU...E (AP)- The old
tombstones lean a little now.
They have a special style absent
in the shiny, solid gravestones populating the rest of Lucasville

Cemetery.
Alice Barker threads her way
through them, pointing out the
graves of the Lucas family,
founders of the town.
''That's Robert Lucas," she
says, pointing to one. " He was the
son of John. He was the Governor
of Ohio, Qnce, and Indiana, before
he moved here."
Next August, it will be 175
years since John Lucas platted the
land that would later become
Lucasville. The historical society.
for which Barker is the librarian, is

· . Fo~\mc;»re
. information
call 992-6606.

Bob Cyrus or one of her other favorites, hoping I will"see the light."
But the twang which characteristically accompanies couiltry music
affects my ears like fingernails oq a
chalkboard.
I always defend th~ attacks by
telling Mom her songs are alJ about
the same thing: "My man/woman left
me lind broke my achinglc!lealing
bean and alJ I have left in my life is
my dog/pickup truck/case of beer."
I !lddcd to my mother's disappointmentacoupleofweeksagowhen
I was assigned to take pictures of
Tracey Lawrence's performance at
the Gallia County Junior Fair..
~ credentials got me right in
frotit of the stage. where I hurriedly
tonk my required pictures and then
got out of earshot. Not that I'm puttingdownl..awrence'stalentsoraj)ilities, I'm just allergic to steel guitars
and banjos.
Mom was llabbergasicd to hear I
didn't slick around to enjoy the show
· or meet .pe rising country star back· stage.
Heck, until hecanieouton stage,
I thought Tracy Lawrence was a fe. male.

Oallipolis City Park gives comin11;nity
coherence
WO!l'.
.

•

side of
river

,
new in town, something
.•that
·
capture my atten' ;tion
Citr Park.
: I've noticed that tt changes
•hands through the day and night,
l!elonging to nearly everyone at
;one time or another.
• Early in the momiitg, the park:Cront benches hold a few people
J)angling lunch pails at their sides
-and sipping coffee from thermos
:Cups . .
: _It becomes filled periphemlly
1h.-ough the day. Children play
games in the lower corners near the
fiver and only a few adult strollers
ven!ure into the wide green area
between sidewalks.
• Eventua!Jy, as the afternoon gets
.Jen!~Y· benches begin to fill.
time evening shadows
:!trtltch over the downtown area,
in their late teens and early

- Shrine First Vice Pretldent Charles .Jones,
Ullion President NIDa Butcher, Sbrlne President
Gordon Flsber and PlaDtMauger Bruc:e,Gratr.
BACK ROW (left t 0 · h )
p
1M
rt'
t
enonne
anager Chuck Woods, Shrine l'bird Vice President
W.R. "Dick" Brown, Shrine Secretaryfl'reasurer pan Henderson, Shriner Bud IJarrison,
Umon First Vice President H.W.Jfanson and
Union Second Vice President Bud Rhodes (Tribune photo)
·

.11 · · .
h
ucasv,z e: a przson to some' orne to most

Confession time.
an acquired tastt.. I sbamefully con- ever got along without iL
Beneath this calm exterior and fess that in early adoleaccnce I was a
For the past 10 years, Mom has
:· :iMocentface lies the heanandsoul Top 40 lislener who thought metal been patic:ntly waiting for me to
:: ;of a headbanger.
was just a buneh of disorganized "come 10 my senses" and convett to
.; • For those not in the know, a noise.
a fonn of music responsible for the
::: :"headbanger"isafanofheavymetal
When I cnteied high scb!x&gt;l, GrandO/eOpryand/feeHaw.
:: · :'music produced by bands such as band bUs trips weie aoundtiackcd by
I hope she is a very patient
::: :AC/DC, Metallica and Guns 'n' a large boom box blaring the metal woman.
:: ;Roses.
1118S1m of the day - 1udas PriCSl.
·.; . Orwhatmymothercalls,"those
--,
·, :pokey-looking people who scream
yell."
· , Heavy metal fans are a species
: ·Of people who can only tolerate
: •M1V between the hours of 11 p.m.
•' ·~ I a.m . .on Saturday, during
' ;'lleadbanger' s Ball. We're the ones
: wilh a closet full of black T.Shirts
~ ·t!Dd ripped jeans. . ,
: • '.~ ,9( ~mirror 1111! idols. by.;,
eanng olD: bait long and mv*ng
: 'in leather products.
Others, such as myself, aren't
quit,e as obvious. We buy the occa-_
Mom is disappoinicd thatl have
, sional concert T-shin. but our hair is MOtley Crile, Def Leppard. •·
not chosen to be like almost everyshort and the only ·leather item we
. Enough listening. sessi~ns one else in Southern Ohio and join
. possess has a buckle and keeps om aaincd my ear and I was able to ptck the coontry music flock.
, pants up.
up the subt!e DUBD&lt;:CS of melil that ,
She tries regularly to c'&lt;invel'\
And we are circulating right ntm-f~ fail to notice.
me. I've Sllffered through several
: under your very noses.
· Like beer • once a taste bad de- Country Music Televisioa videos and
1have to admit, heavy metal 'is \!eloped,lcouldn'tonderstandhow I Jon car tri where she .Ia Bill

twent.Jes have rul~ the stdewalks on the way. to
~I ve n~ver
and Side streets of the square for at ~anything qwte like t!'e Fnday
mght parade of cars that cm:les and
least an hour.
They take over, clustering circles the b!ock. I us~lly P.ass
around cars, lying on hoods, listen- ~ugh glancmg from stde to Side,
ing to speakers that thump out wtde-cyed.
bluesy beats and distoned guitar
But l am fascinated by the
licks. On Friday and Saturday amount ofb~ the place sees. .
nights they drive and drive around ·
Not all ~lty parks are pa1d .so
the block State 10 Second to 'Court .much. attentton. My hometown CIIY.
to First I have no idea when they park m Buckhannon, W. Va., was
leave.
only used; for scout camps.and couBy morning all is quiet. A piece pies needing a good place to neck.
of corn husk and a few cigarette
Recentlr. thanks largely to my
butts might skit along the parking Dad ~ho IS B'!ckhann~n·s street
slots, but the area is mostly clean. commiSSIOf!er, m~~ !n the park
Visitors ~ave filially gone for a few · has been reJU";'e~~· ~t s the ~e
hours and the park is snoozing, o~ many acttvtttes, .tncludmg a
wrapped in morning mist.
ptck-up basketball g~e that never
In July a couple was even mar- seems to end. .
ried there, right outside that little
Dad s~metJmes got a tender
piece of architecture I call ."the look on h1s face w~en .my mother
Parthenon" because it resembles a. or I played that Jont Mitche~ song
Greek temple. I'd never want to "Big Yellow Taxi," where she
e1tchange vows in a place that pub- sings, "They paved paradise and
lie, but it was interesting to see two they put up a r.arking lot. "
wtio did. ·
Once while that 'album was
· Truth be told, I understand little spin':t be told me about a jungle
of what goes on in your park.
of w
downtown that had been
I do not know why people stop leveled and paved to become Buclcthere iri the morning, presumably hannon's city patting lot in the
· ·
1960s. He used to play there as a

Frefreshments
.
~erved . following
· the meeting.
Pleas~ join us for
this Important
evenln9 which will
cover lssu~s
covering our
health care future.

•

MAllY MORE STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM. ••
TOO MANY TO LIST... ALL AT GREAT SAVING$1
KIPLING SHOE CO.

L·

SHRINER DONATION -Members of the
Gallipolis ShriDe Club met Monday with Federal Mogul Corporation maitagement and mem·
bers of autoworkers union local #1685 to accept
donatioos
·
• $2,~. Each year since 1990,
tota6ng
the management has matched the ullion's donatiOII. The fii'OUps have douted a total or $5,000
in the past four years. The money will help fund
the Shrine's crippled chil!lren and burn hospitals. Pictured are: F~ONT ROW (left to right)

"

looking for volunteers to plan the hostage hung· from trees and fence
celebration.
posts , · Hundreds of residents
Technically, Lucasville is not a showed up for a pmyer vigil and a
town. II has never been incorporat- memorial.service for a slain guard.
ed. Situaicd in the rolling hills near
The town never asked for the
the Scioto River, it is a pan of Val- prison, Barker says, although many
ley Township.
residents found the attitudes of the
For many residents, the history city newspapers at the time insultof the town is twined with their ing.
own family histories. Barker was
''The newspapers acted like the
born in 1918 in the house across state had lost its mind to put the
the street from where she lives pri son here .••• she says. ''They
now. She is the fifth generation of acted as if they thought we were
her family to live in the area. Her ignorant. My gosh, we're only two
daughter and her family live just hours from Columbus or Cincindown the road
.
nati
" This used to be a busy place,.. j!i~~"!"~~"!"!~.~o~~'il
she says, gazing from the sw,inging
chair on the porch of her Victorian
home. "But not any longer."
At one time, Lucasville was the
center of a strong farming community, where farmers would buy '
•
their goods on credit and pay off
their bills at harvest time.
• A thriving tie yard employed
1" A]nmlnum
some of the residents. Others could
Horizontal BUnds
catch the passenger train to
Portsmouth to work in the steel
59x42" 73x50"
mills or the shoe factories.
Lucasville is a friendly town
68xs~·
72x50"
that always stuck together, Barker
71 x72"
72x64"
says.
··
• 'During the Depression, we
didn' 1 have the means to go
places," she remembers. "We had
· Each
to find our own amusement. We
used to build a fire on the river
bank, and we'd sing and talk. II
was a different time. r don 'I even
remember taking a radio.
"This is a caring town. People
' try · to help .... We look after our
town."
That aspect of Lucasville is still
one of the town's most striking
qualities. During the April riot at
the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility · at the edge of town,
IIDIDRIAL IAIDGE ,t-ACH Dll
reporters who descended ·on the
GAARIWI AVE., PAIIKEAIIURQ
area repeatedly mentioned the supMON.·fRI. 9·9;
pon network that seemed to exist
among residents.
SAT. 9·5:30; SUN. 1·5
Hundreds of yellow ribbons in
sympathy for the guards held

child, getting lost and pretending.
I think that's why my Dad has .
made the Buckhannon park a priority since he went to work for the
city. He's rebuilding his past in a
way that future adults in Galljpolis
may never need to - because the
park is one place left intact for peopie to conQ!;(:t with their memories.
Some can say: "I have sold vegeljlbles here. At ni~ht, I have talked
politics with old friends."
Others may remember: "I have
held my sweetheart's hand and told
secrets here that no one will ever
find out. I have sat to watch the
moonlight ripple on the Ohio for no
reason at all."
Likewise, the park wears a loved look indicating that people
have been there, that the ground
has been trod by brothers, friends,
great-grandmothers.
·
And I catch glimpses of an
entire culture spreading its roots
withirr the block between State and
Court Streets Second Avenue and
the Ohio Rivir.
James Long is a starr writer
ror Ohio Va_lley Publishing.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

"

K·SWISS
SURF &amp; TURF

Organizers lobbied the Legislarure to designate DayiOn as the site
for the state's official Korean War
memorial.
.
Snyder said many Korean Wat
veterans did not talk about their
experiences after ihey returned
home.
"'They went back to their jobs,"
be said. " It was just something that
happened in their lives and they
just didn't talkabou~it,',.
Allan Spetter, associate history
professor at Wright State University, said there was liUle. fallfare for
returning troops because the war
ended in a draw. ·
. .
' " The Amen'cans t'nterpreted t't
as·a victory because it saved South
Koiea." said Spelter. "Bt¢ the war
ended ... where it staned. And we
suffered a tremendous number of
casualties."
"
·

"

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Sports·

"iimts- .tentinel

Section

C

AuguSt 22, 1993

In the majors,

Indians, Tigers, Yanks,
Mariners among victors
BOSTON (AP) _ Sandy' Alomar scored the goTiters 4, Athletics 3 - At Detroit, Alan Tram·
ahead run on a throwing error by reliever Greg Harris
meU singled home the go-ahead run in the seventh
in the ninth inning, and the Cleveland Indians
inning after an inteQtional walk to Cecil Fielder, and
roughed up Roger Clemens and beat the Boston Red
the Detroit Tigers beat the Oakland Athletics 4-3 SatSox 10·5 Sawrday.
urday.
For the second sttaight day, the Indians scored the
KeUy Downs (3·8) retired the forst two batters in
winning llln on a B&lt;;&gt;ston error in the ninth inning.
the seventh before Travis Fryman dqubled. Fielder,
The Red Sox have lost nine of 12. including eight of
leading the mal'ors with 103 RBis, was walked and
11 on a homestand that ends Sunday.
Trammell spoi ed the strategy with a single up the
Clemens struggled again, giving up fove runs and
middle.
Fryman ~it a two-run homer, his 17th, in the third
:seven hits in six-plus 'innings. He has not won since
Jul 21 d · 0-4 'th 8 00 ERA · hi last fi
after Mike Mohler walked Tony Phillips. The Tigers
Y • an IS '
WI an ·
· m s
ve
made it 3·1 in the fourth when Rich Rowland dou·
single in the fourih inning or Saturday's NadonOUT PLAY -Kansas City catcher Mike
MacfarlaDe
lays
the
leather
on
the
New
York
al League game in New York, where the Yans~he three-time Cy Young Award winner, who has
bled home Trammell.
Yankees'
Mil\e
Stanley
after
Stanley
kicks
up
kees won 3-2. (AP)
never fmished a full season with an ERA above 3.29,
, Bill Gullickson (10-6) gave up three runs on six
some
dust
at
the
plate
foUowing
a
Mike
GaUego
has an ERA of 4.08 this season. His record remained
hits in seven innings.
at 9-10.
·
JQe Beever, released by Oakland on Aug. 15 and
The Indians won their fifth consecutive road
signed by the Tigers before the game, pitched a
. game.
,
scoreless eighth. Stann Davis, who also pitched for
AJomar Jed off the ninth with a single, and scored
the A's this season, worked the ninth for his first
when Harris (6-4) threw Wayne Kirby's sacrifice
save.
bunt over the heads of forst baseman Carlos Quintana
Yankees 3, Royals 2 - At New York, Scott
and second baseman Scott Fletcher, who was backing
Kamieniecki extended his home wiMing streak to 12
up. The ball went into the right-field foul area for a
straight decisions Saturday as th e New York Yankees
two-base error.
beat the Kansas City Royals 3-2.
One out later, Carlos Baerga singled to score
Mike Gallego had three hits for the Yankees off
By RICK WARNER
Seminoles also must overcome a league tide. The Wolverines should
Kirby. After Albert Belle was hit by a pitch- the
starter Mike Magnante (0-1), including a tic-breaking
AP Football Writer
hazardous schedule that includes have an explosive offense led by
fourth Cleveland player hit by a pitch in the gameRBI single in the sixth inning. Gallego also made two
Alabama wants back-to- back non-conference games against Tyrone Wheatley, who ran for 235
Paul Sorrento doubled for another run. Candy Malsensational defensive plays at shortstop.
national championships. Florida Kansas, Miami, Notre Dame and yards and three touchdowns against
donado foUowed with a two-run single.
Kamieniecki C9-4) gave up two runs and five hits State would gladly settle for its Florida.
Washington in the Rose Bowl.
~ight innings to improve to 8·0 at Yankee Stadium first.
"No one will be able to say we
Bill Wertz (1- 1); who allowed one run in lhree
Texas A&amp;M may lose .leading
innings, was the winner. .
season.
The Crimson Tide, coming off a ' backed into it," Bowden said. "If rusher Greg Hill for several games
On Friday night, Cleveland won 7-6 when Belle's
Paul Assenmacher got one out in the ninth and 13-0 season capped by a Sugar we end up doing it, it will be with a because of a summer job SCIIIIdal,
groundet went under the gloves of two infielders,
Steve Farr fmished for his 24 th save.
.Bowl vic lOry over Miami, will try great ballclub."
but the Aggies have plenty of depth
allowing two runs to score with two outs in the ninth.
With the score 2-all in the sixth , Bernie Williams to become the fust school in 14
The Seminoles' most dangerous at running back and a fine quarterBob Ojeda allowed four runs and nine hits in fivedoubled with one out, extending his hitting streak to years to win consecutive national weapon is quarterback Charlie back in sophomore Corey Plillig.
19 games. Williams moved 10 third on a groundout titles. The last teams to do it were Ward, who broke the school's total
plus innings for Cleveland in his second start since
Miami and Syracuse are expect·
coming off the disabled list. Home plate umpire
and scored when Gallego dumped a single into shal- Bear Bryant's Alabama squads .in offense record in his forst year as a ed to battle for the Big East title,
Larry McCoy appeared to be applauding as Ojeda
low left field for the go-ahead run.
.
1978-79.
starter. Ward, a point guard on which may come down to their
left the mound in the sixth inning.
Mariners 5, Blue Jays 2 - At Toronto, Ken
"If we work hard, we can be Florida State's basketball team, is showdown Oct 23 at the Orange
Ojeda was injured in a boating accident during
Griffey Jr. hit his 34th home run, leading Dave Fh5m- back in the big dance," cornerback an elusive scrambler, a good passer • Bowl, where the Hurricanes have
.spring training in which two teammates were killed.
ing and the Seattle Mariners over Toronto 5-2 Satur· Antonio Langham said. "The moti- and a cool leader under pressure.
won 51 in a rciw. Miami has a new
The Indians scored twice in the first on an RBI
day and leaving the Blue Jays tied for forst place in vation this year is to rel,leBt"
"Charlie is like a vapor," Bow· quarterback, Frank Costa, but that
d thro · g error by catcher Tony
the AL East.
·
Florida State's mouvation is to den said "Just when you think you could be a good omen. All four of
· 1 by B 11
smg
e
e
e
an
a
wm
Fleming
(9-2)
gave
up
two
runs
on
e1'ght
h1'ts
1'
n
Pcna that allowed a second run to score on Belle's
finally win a national title that has can reach out and grab him, he's the Hwricanes' national champiseven innings. Seattle won for the seventh time in
barely eluded the Seminoles the gone."
hit They added a run in the second on Alomar's run·
onships have come in odd years
scoring single.
,
nine games.
past six years. Although they've
Despite the departure of All- with aforst-year Starting QB.
Boston, which got a sacrifice fly from Mo Vaughn
Trailing 4 ·2, the Blue Jays loaded the bases with
finished in the top four every sea· American defensive ends John
Syracuse has .an established star
in the fust and an RBI single by Tim Naehring in the
none out in the eighth on singles by Rickey Hendeeson since 1987, the Seminoles .have Copeland and Eric Curry, Alabama at quarterback. Senior Marvin
second, tied the game at 3 in the fourth 011 a run·SCOT·
son and Devon White and a walk to Paul Molitor
always come up just short, twice has a good shot to win consecutive Graves was the nation's second·
ing single by Fletcher.
finiJshfinf.g Fleming.
'
losing to Miami by missing last- championships. The 'Tide, whose leading passer last season, leading
Sorrento's sacrifice fly gave Cleveland a 4-3 lead
e Nelson struck out Joe Carter. Reliever Erik
second foeld goals.
23-game winning streak is the the Orangemen to a 10-2 record
in the sixth, but the Red Sox scored twice in the botPlantenberg gave up a run-scoring groundout to John
This year could be different, nation's longest, has a favorable and No. 6 fmal ranlcin~.
· tom of the sixth on RBI singles by Billy Hatcher and
Olerud and retired Tony Fernandez on a grounder.
though. With a strong cast reblrn· schedttle, a quarterback (Jay BarkNotre Dame lost nme players in
'Vaughn.
Daye .ste.wart (8·7) gave up four runs on three hits
ing from last year's 11-1 team that er) who is 17-0 as a starter and a the NFL draft, including quarter·
over SIX mnmgs. He struck out fl:v-e and walked SIX..
finished No. 2, the Seminoles are brilliant all-purpose player (David back Rick Mirer, fullback Jerollll:
Kirby's RBI groundout with the bases loaded in
the seventh tied the game 5-5.
Brav~ 6• c.ubs 3 - At Chicago, Fred McGnff
the consensus preseason pick to Palmer).
.
Bettis and tight end lrv Smith. But
Notes: Indians desi~ted hiuer Reggie Jefferson
~d ~ki~ Javier l.oJICZ hi! two-run homers on the
win it all.
"I think our offense should be the Irish return seven starters from
exteruled 'hfs"fiitting m'eak t6 l7 games· wtth a-~ ~c..e~ghth-!JIIIIngSaiW'day,~ymg the Atlanta Braves .to-- ··· - "Naturally; being NO: ·t -puts better than last year," coaeh Gene a solid dcfense; lllld-may-u-se· some
and-inning double . ... Clemens' five strikeouts
a 6-3 VICtory over the C~cago Cubs.
.
.
more pressure on you," coach Stallings said.
of their blue-chip freshmen, includ·
pushed his career total to 2,013, moving bim past
The Braves, who traded the San FranCIS~ Gl~ts
Bobby Bowden said. "But we've
Other top contenders for the ing highly touted quarterback Ron
Catftsh Hunter into 42nd place on the all-time list...
by 1 112 games ~d had lost t':"o slralg.ht gomg mto
been there before. We know every- national title include Michigan, PowIus.
Belle has 97 RBis, but only two in his last 10 games.
the game, were loSing 3-2 entenng. the e1ghth.
one will be gunning for us."
Texas A&amp;M, Syracuse, Miami,
Graves, Ward, Wheatley and
... The last time Clemens and Ojeda faced each other
J~ff _Blauser,. who hqmer~ earlier, walked to o~n
To win the national title, Florida Notre Dame, Florida, Tennessee, San Diego State's Marshall Faullc
was in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series, when
the mnmg agamst Jose Bautista .and Ron Gant fhed
State will have to overcome the Colorado and Nebraska.
are among the preseason picks for
Ojeda was pitching for the New York Mets. The
out.
.
loss of six defensive starters, most
Despite Penn State's entry in the the Reisman Trophy. Faulk led the
Mets won in the lOth inning when Mookie Wilson's
Dan ~lesac (0·1) reheved and ~cGriff hit h!s
notably Butkus and Lombardi Big Ten, Michigan is the clear nation in rushing the past two sea·
grounder roUed under Bill Buckner, and went on to
fourth Pitch onto the left-centerfield bl~ach~r~. ~IS
Award winner Marvin Jones. The fa~orite to win its sixth straight sons as a freshman and sophomore.
.win the Series .... Ojeda, who started his major
28th home run of the season 811d lOth smce Jommg
league career in 1980 with the Red Sox, had never
!he Brav~s. An out later, Terry Pendleton beat out~
10!\eld. hit and I:opez greeted rehever Shawn Boskie
before faced Boston in a regular-season game. ...
Clemens has an 18-3 career m~k against Cleveland,
w•th hts !'ifst major-league home run.
. .
but haS three no-decisions against the Indians this
Marvm Freeman f2-0) struck out the s•dl; m t)le
'year
seventh and Greg McMichael worked the nmth tor
·
his ninth save.

In pursuit of national championship,

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Pre-seasonfave Florida State
to play Kansas in Kickoff Classic
By HOWARD SINER
NEW YORK (NEA) - Going
into the 1993 college football sea'son, head coach Bobby Bowden of
Florida State is the man on the
spot. He knows it, too.
' Bowden has yet to win the
national title even though FSU has
been the pre-season No. 1 pick in
three of the past six years. So the
63·year-old coach faces mounting
pressure to finally guide his talent·
cd bunch to the top.
"I'm just trying to do better,"
says Bowden, one of the winningest coaches in the history of
the sport. "Whatever we've done,
I'd like to do better. I still haven't
· won the big prize yet."
The Seminoles, who were the
runner-ups to national champion
Alabama last season, have finished
. in the top fove ever since 1987.
Once again the early favorite to
go all the way, Florida State will
open the '93 season against Kansas
in the Kickoff Classic Saturday.
The game will be played at Giants
Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
Bowden has two big strings
going. He's the only major college
football coach ever to win at least
10 games in six straight seasons.
Alsp, his Seminoles now have won
an NCAA-record eight bowls in
consecutive years.
· Florida State went ll-1 in 1992,
losing only to Miami, 19-16.
FSU went 11·2 in 1991, losing
only to Miami, 17·16, and Florida,
14·9.
In each of those losses to
Miami, last-ditch field goal
attempts by the Seminoles feU wide
right. So diil FSU's chances for the
bigcrown.
,
· "You know," says Bowden, "if
I could take one play out of last
season, we might have been nation·
al champions. If I could! take two
plays out of !he year before, we
would have been national champi·
ohs.''
He adds: "That's about as close

y.

·as you can get and not get iL"
Even so, "Saint Bobby," as
he's known to the faithful in Talla·
hassee, Fla., has the soul of a win·
ner. His total of 227 career wins is
second among active coaches; Joe
Paterno of Penn State leads with
247. Bowden has the all-time best
winning percentage (.781) in
bowls. His post-season· mark is 12311.
Bowden says: "I'm still reminded constantly, 'Well, you haven't
won the national championship.'
That's true. Now as far as ealing at
me and really worrying me·, it
docsn 't. Maybe I'm odd or somethin~ .

. • I wake up in the middle of the
night sometimes, wondering why
we didn't beat Miami and how that
game got ·away. But I never wake
up saying, 'Oh, my goodness, I've
never won a national champi·
onship .' That just don't bother
me.''
Florida State's more immediate
goal this season is to repeat as the
champion of the tough Atlantic
Coast Conference. And to win the
"state championship" of Florida,
which may.be tougher.
In his 17 years at Florida State,
Bowden has a better record (15445-3) than the seven previous FSU
football coaches managed in 29
years. But he's only 9-8 vs. Florida; and, of all things , 5-12 vs .
Miami.
Under Bowden's reign, Florida
State has grown up. This season, it
plays the most difficult non-conference schedule in the country:
Kansas; Miami (at home); Notre
Dame (in South Bend, Ind.); and
Florida (in Gainsville, Fla.).
"That's three top 10 teams and
anOther top 20 team," says Bowden. "A lot of people are picking
us .No. I, and I hope they're right
Jlut we oon:t have a No. I sched·
ule. Most teams don't pljly power·
houses out of their conference.' •
Fortunately, FSU will play at

Jor~. in response to a quesfather, James Jordan, on iuly 23
By JOHN DIAMOND
LEESBURG, Va. (AP)
outside Charlotte, N.C., and she tion, said he had given no thought
Michael Jordan, in his fiCSt public asked reponers to respect that wish. to his views on gun control in the
appearance since the slaying of his The conference room was packed wake of his father's shooting death.
The Chieago Bulls star also said
father, said today he and his family with camerilmen and reporters who
he
hadn't thought about the upcomwere coping well in the aftennath had been told Friday night that Jorong
NBA season, which he said
home in 1993 against some of its of the ttauma.
dan wottld discuss the case.
woul\1
have been the case even had
hiading ACC rivals - including
Jordan, smiling from behind
"We're fone. My family is pret·
there
be~n
no family tragedy. He
North Carolina State, Clemson and ty strong," Jordan said. "It's tough dark glasses through most of the
said
he
it
was
his custom to spend
Georgia Tech.
for any family to swallow - not I0-minute conference, said the supthe
summer
relaxing.
·
Experts say Bowden has recruit· just mine. We're moving forward port of his friends had been helpful,
doing
fine,"
he
said.
"I'm
"lm
ed the finest group of new players with our lives."
but even then he couldn't resist a
in the country, including the
Appearing at a news conference quip, adding, "Jim Thorpe took $5 doing really good." .
He said if he hadn't been feeling
nation 's best young kicker, Scott before the start of the Rose Elder from me." Thorpe, a pro golfer,
Bentley of Aurora, Colo. He's Invitational pro-am golf touma· laughed, as did everyone else in the up to it, he would not have attended
the two-day tournament
expected to plug Florida State's ' ment in suburban Washington, audience.
"This was a situation to see
D.C., Jordan was in a light-hearted
Jordan looking at the older athbigF.est gap.
'Pressure is on his shoulders," mood and joked with some of other letes around him, said it was good how how well I could mingle once
Bowden admits. "No doubt about athletes in the audience.
to be around elder! y citizens at a again with the public," Jordan
Elder opened the conference by diffkult time. He singled out for- said. "llcnew I could mingle with
it But he seems to be the kind of
· my friends.''
kid that thrives on that. to be honest saying Jordan had decided to take mer NBA star BiU Russell.
no questions on the slaying of his
with you."
Reisman candidate Charlie
Ward, a senior quarterback, will
lead the wide-&lt;Jpen shotgun offense
again. He was the ACC Player of
the Year in 1992 and the Orange
Bowl MVP. Flanker-kick returner
...•
Tamarick Vanover, a sophomore,
adds to the razzle-dazzle. He was ·
the ACC's 1992 Rookie of the
Year.
"'":f,··~
.·i ;
"We just try to do what it takes
to move the football," says Bow·
den, who is known as a gambler on
offense. "If we have skill, we're
going to try to use it. If I had a
t~'
•
~
guard who could ~ass, I'd use a
guard-around play.'
Bowden is uncertain about this
year's defense. He lost fove defen·
sive stars in the early rounds of the
NFL draft. But junior cornerback
Corey Sawyer is still at FSU. He
led the ACC in 1992 with seven
interceptions.
One key to Florida State's sta·
bility is Bowden's staff. "Most of
the success we're having is because
we've only lost one coach in the
last eight years," he says. Bowden
delegates authority and keeps his
distance from the players on the
field.
erected Jut week, are Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recre·
RACE TO START SATURDAY- The Gal·
ation
Department director Tom Hopkins, Holzer
lia
County
portion
of
the
Unity
Savings
Tour
of
"I still feel young," says BowClinic
public relations director AI Alderfer and
Southeast
Ohio
will
start
Saturday
near
the
Galden, who is planning to coach for
Ohio
Valley
Visitors Center executive director
lipolis
city
park
on
Second
Avenue.
This
race,
several more seasons. "I'm still
Kim
Sheets.
(Times-Sentinel
photo)
the
second
or
the
three-race
series,
is
sponsored
having a good time. I don 't want to
by
Holzer
Clinic.
Standing
under
the
banner,
sit back."

GALLIA COUNTY BAILS TO TRAILS

'LZER CLINIC CRITERI
AUG .ST '28

.

'·•

�•

'
•

· Page C2-8unday Tlmn Sentinel

'

.

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Auguat 22, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

In NL affairs,

J

'

.

Reds rallied to beat the Montreal
Expos, even if it was only the
Reds' second win in 10 games.

"It was nice," said Sabo, who
homered in Friday night's 4-2 win.
"Lately, when we get behind. we

just fo@."
·
The Reds had taken the lead in
tbe fourth on Saba's 16th homer,
off Gil Hemlia, who allowed seven

hits in six innings. But this time,
after the Expos had gone ahead 2I, Cincinnati ganged up on Mel
Rojas (4-8).

ALL·STAR TOURNAMENT CHAMPSThe Middleport-Racine ''Black-and-Blue Crew''
All·Stars captured the Middleport All-Star
Tournament recently by defeating Alexander 9·
1. Pictured are (front row, L·R) Jeremy Smith,
Donald Gobeen,ltlcbie Wamsley.Jn the second

row are coach Kenny Guinther, Wes McClure,
Eddie Sarver, Ryan Martin, Paul Pullins and
coach Steve Burton. Ill the third row are coach
Max Laudermlll, Jessie Maynard, Gary Stanley,
Jeremy Hill, Chad Burton, Shawn Dailey and
.
coach Alan Crisp.

the save. Jeremy Hili pitched the
mid-innings as the uio combined
for 12 strikeouts.
Mid-Rae bombed Pomeroy 204
with Hil posting the win and Don·
aid Goheen posting the save. All12
Meigs playezs had hits and an RBI
in the game. Stanley fanned 14 and
also had a home run.
In the semifmals. Racine defeat·
ed Alexander for the first time 8-7.
Maynard had a home run a~d ~e
winning hit in the seventh mnmg

Indians use last at-bat to edge
BoSox 7-6; Jays among losers

The Reds and Expos, who have·
lost eight of their past 12 games,'
gave each other an unearned run.
(See NL on C-3)

Mid-Rae All-Stars top Alexander to w~~ tourney

The Middl~rt-Racine "Black, lllld·Biue Crew All-Stars captured
r the Middleport All-Star Touma·
ment recently by defeating Alexander 9-1 in the tournament championship.
The Mid-R;tc crew began with a
10-0 win over Point Pleasant as
Jessie Maynard picked up the win
and Gary Stanley picked up the
save. They combined for IS strike·
outsandgave .upjustonehit.
Logan defeated the All-Stars in
the second game of the round-robin
affair despite outhilling Logan 10.
8. Ryan Martin was 4-4 in the
game, and Stanley had a home run.
Mid-Rae came back to defeat ·
Jackson S-3 with Stanley picking ·
up the wip and
Maynard
posting
.
.

a..........:..............65

Bollim&lt;n .. .......... :..65

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EulemDI•Ialon
T. .
.
WLI'd.GI
l'lliladelfhia ..........71 44 .639
SL LaWJ ...............69 53 .566
9
~ ................64 59 .520
14.S
a.......................61 6t .500 17
Pitllboqh ..............51 65 .472 20.S
l'l.ada ...... .............52 70 .426
26
NewYodt ..............42 11 .350
3S
Weatern Dl"lllon

s.. Fnnciaco ........81

An-.. . . . ..

Atlama ...................74

"""'""' .................64
Loa
61
CINCINNATI........6t

1.S
t7
19.5
21
35.5
36.5

.602

.525
.504
.492

s.. Diet• ..............46 77
Colondo ...............44 77

.374
.364

Friday's scores

We.tern DIYlllon

. ~50

.S2S

3

Texa1 ............... ......62 59

.512

Scaale .............. ......60

.496

4.5
6.5

6t

Califomii. .............. .ss 66
MmneoOia ........ ..... .S2 67
Oakland ........... ..... .Sl 68

.455
.437
.429

n.s

13.5
14.S

New Yorlr.7,Kuuu Cily 2
Seaalo 4, Torm~ 1
Oakland 7, DetrM 6
CIJNEI..AND 7, B01ton6

for the Mid-Rae All-~ tars. Goheen:
posted the save, whtle Robertson.
suffered the loss:
.
·
I~ the ~hamp1onshtp game, Paul:
Pulhns pllched a great game to .
stave .bff Ale~ 9-1, .as he went:
the dtstance m a super_Jor perfor-:
mance. He had ~ven slf!keouts and ,
aUowed lhree htts. Jesste Maynard :
and Gary Stanley were nam!'d ·
Most Valuable Players for the WUI· :
ners. D.K; Robertson was named :
Alexander s Most Valuable Player. .

Milwaukee 7,Calilomia 2 (10 inn.)
O.l) at 801t.on

Tbey played Saturday

Seattle (Flemina 8-2)

(lluby8-7).2,20p.m.
.
Florida (llammo&gt;od 10.71 at s.. fun.
ciaco (Sandoraoo 0.1), 4:0:5 p.m.
DH: New York (Hillman 1·6 tnd

lat• t-0) " Cal&lt;ndo &lt;Ons llaDia 1O.t2
ond Hunt ().~5,1!5 p.m.
""''2-8) ot CINCINNATI

:OSp.m.

. f.ol AnpJel (Amcio 9-7) Ill SL l..cms

(Urbonl0.£),1:0$ ~'"'
Philadelphia (Mulholland 11 · 9) It
"""'""' (llnbo:k 7-14), s,O:! p.m.

Today'sgames
Lol An8~• (R. Mudnc I·B)
l..ouia (Tawklbwy 13-7), 2:15p.m.

SL

It

11

.fbiladelphia (Rjven 11-6) at H~

(Kilel:l-4); 2:35_pm.
New York (Fernandez 2-3) at Colmado {Boaalfield 4-8),3:05 p.m.
Pitllbu.rah (Cooke 7· 7) at San Diego

{B&lt;moal3-f),4 :0:5 p.m.
Florid• (Rapp 1-4) at Stn Fnnci.aco
(Bwlu:tlti-5),4:05 p.m.
Atlant1 {Smoltz 12-9) &amp;l Chicago
(Guzman 11-7), ! :OS p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dl vilion

.577

(Soewutl-6),1:35 p.m.

GB

.569

Toronto

Teua (Ryan 5-"'l) at Baltimore (McDonald 9-11). 7 :OS p.m.
.

Chica&amp;a {Belcher 1-2) at Minncaou
(B.W 8-7), 8:~ p.m.
Milwaukoo (Novoa ~2) 11 Califomia
(Holz.anet 0-0), IO:OS p.m.

Today's games
&lt;I.I!YEI..AND (lCnDa 5-3) at lloatat
(Sde 6-2), t:05 p.m.
Kanau City (Haney S..S) It New Ywk
(Key 15-4), t '30 p.m.
Seattle {Botio 6-7) .t Toronto (Guz·

man9-3),1:35p.m.

Montrnl (Dennis Martinez 10...8)
CINCINNATI (Ayala 5-S), 2:t5 p.m.

PeL

1t

TEXAS RANGERS: Acbvaled Clwl;.
Lcibrandl. pitcher, from the 1!5-day &amp;..
ablod Lilt.

1990 Dodge Splrit:..._1126"-

National Luau•
CINCINNATI REDS: Acquired
Thomu Howanl, oudicldcr, from Cove·
land to comp1e1c 1bo deollhat tent Rlftdy
Millig•n to the Indi1n1. Placed Willie
Greene, infielder, on the 15-dty diJabled
lilt Clllcd up Brian Kodlia1, i.nfiolder,
frOm Chmanoosa, or tho Soutbom
Lea ....

au.... (Mcllowoll t9-7)

· u (Doohaicoll-111. 2:05r.m·

..:.. * Transactions * BasebaU

1990 Olds Calalsi __l12600.,.
4 Dr., Auto., Air, Low Miles!
1990C~vyS·10 P.U.__I1

5 speed, ShQrt Bed, Uner

:tD···-•

Football
National FootbaU ~ue
DAU.As rowaoys, Wa...t o..w

198901dsCut.Sup. SLI17700.,.

Lucu and GMJ Roo4, wic&amp;o nw:aivon;
ED. Jacbon and Tony K.mody, NMina

backa; Allh Luther, offonaive lineman;
and Cuey Oamb)le., 4efen.li.-vc lineman.
Dl!Tl{orr UONS: Silnod Tim MdCyer, com.crback. Placed Michtol Cotar,
linobacJu:rr, oq 1he n.tr"Vo-pta·Jically unablo-to-pafaan lilt. Waived John Dmbv,

lineboc&amp;r.
'
KANSAS aTY CIDEFS: Sipod Bor-

.....
ry

Word. rumina hick. to •

lmo-you con·

NEW YORK GIANTS: SiFod Jumbo
Elliott, offcnalve tactlo, IO 1 throe-year

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Sian.ed
Lalie O'Neal. dcfcruiWI end, 10 a tluoo-

3 GMC SI~ERRA

1991 Ford Festlval _ _s9S"Al'IO .. 2 dr.. Clean I

·4 speed, auto., overdrive, 4.3 V-6 engine, slid·
lng rear window, bedllner, AMIFM stereo, A/C
and morel
·

4 d-., Auto., Air, Low MHesl

6 cyl., ~ dr.• Low Miles I

Monthly Payments Based
Upon 11,000.00 Down Or .
Equal Value In Trade-In
and Balance Financed Thru
Lending Institutions.
Taxes &amp; Fees Not Included

ycu CQ'ltract.

WASIIINOTON REDSEINS: Placod
JeJCrYe.

Nadonol Hoc:ltoy .......
PmSBURGH PENG~S : Named

5 speed, ov~trdrlve, AIC, power steering, Rallye
wheels. Rebate Available.

COASTAL CAROLINA: Named

Mike Musaina, pitcher, &amp;om the 15-day
diubled !Ut.

Shawn Stinson uailtant aporu infonna-

BOSTON RED SOX: Pl•ccd Joe Hesketh, pitcher, on the 15-day dilablcd lisL.
P'llrchascd lhe contftet c:4 Emt~t Rile1, in-

DUQUESNE : Name4...Mtria Sl11er
wcmen'• us:iJtan\ vallcyban CGKh.
EASTERN KENTUCKY : Named
Robert Epp1 men'• ani.Junt bu.kctbaU

fielder, from Pawtucket of lhc Intcmaticnal Leagu~
CAUFORNIA ANGELS, Pbcod Hilly

COME IN AND CR.ECK·OUT OVR
YEAR·.END PRJC.ESf

Colleae

·

tion.

UST ONE! 1993 GMC SONOMA

Hockey

McSorley, ddenscrnan. to an offer lhcct.

American Leaaue

With the Expos leading 2-1 in
the seventh with two outs, Marrero
booted Thomas Howard's ground
ball. Then he threw wide of Rojas,
who was covering, allowing Juan
Samuel to score from second.
"We should have been out of
the iimin~ if we malce the routine
play,'' smd Alou, who blamed both
Marrero and Rojas. "First the bobble, then the throw late - then the
pitcher was late."
Costa, who thought he threw
away the game in the sixth, was
surprised thtll Reds manager Davey
Johnson let him bat in the eighth
with two runners in scoring pOsi-

'1989 Dodge Dynasty u.s ISO"_,

~T~~nancd Many

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: ActintcJ

there.''

6 cyl .. 2 dr. Sharpl

Wai-ved Clwekie Duk•, iunainJ Net.

ticn dim:!«.

coac:h.

I

1992 FORD CROWN VIC.,ORIA LX 4 DR.
VB eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., auto. air
cond., AMIFM stereo cass. w/JBL system,
PW, PL, dual P. seats, dual air bags, antilock brake system. instant clear windshield,
rear' defrost., leather int., cast. alum.
wheels, 10,000 miles, extra clean, like new
company official's car, tin &amp; cruise.

SAII;.SAVE-SAR

1193 FORD THUNDERBIRD LX
3 .8 V6 eng ., PS, PB, auto. trans.,
Climate Control air, AM/FM stereo
cass., tih &amp; cruise, P. driver seat, bucket
seats w/console, PW, P. locks, rear
defroster, cast alum. wheels.
WAS $16,008

Now

cllllr . . - lhDwniOIII
ta m1t11 .._. laP lhl .w m1d1111
.-

Ill

New 93 Chrysler

· Automalic • V6 • Air •
Windows • Casse~e • Cruise M•ua

Club Cab • V6 •
• Air
• Tilt • Cruise • cassette N•129

Automatic • Air • Power Windows •
Power Locks • Tilt • Cruise H•314

I--$:-:-13~99::....:9:.....,;R::.:.::~=:::...:•+---,.$,...:...1~3 9~9~Ait~er~~$1~8, 99 9
New 93 Nlssan Sentra

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.

14,495

8

1 6L 16 Valve Engine • 5 Speed
• Rear Defrost 114281

I ' ~'Wu

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GXE !.Air •cassette • Tilt • Cruise
• Power Windows &amp;Locks #•211

5

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*EXTRA HIGH TRADE ALLOWANCES*
Brine In your bellt deal on a New Car or Truck and we
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FOB A GOOD DEAl. ...

SEE TOM MILSTEAD or BOB ROSS
Our Service Department is Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8·12
• Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8·5; Sat. 8-12
New Hours in Sales Mon.-Fri. 8·7; Sat. 8-3 p.m.

~~========~==~I

AWARD-WINNING
SERVI:E
CHRYSLER SERVICE
PROFESSIONALS

. 1993

NISSAN AWARD
OF MERIT

1991

a 1992

•

"I thought he was going to
pinch hit for me," said CosiO, who
doubled down the left field line. "I
was glad he had confidence in me,
and I was glad I came through.
That's the hardest ball I've hit
since I've been here."
Cincinnati starter Jose Rijo had
just completed a double play in the
sixth. malcing a behind-the-back
catch of a ball hit by Larry Walker
.and throwing to first to double off
·lohn VanderWal.
:· But then Darrin Fletcher dou:bled, Moises Alou walked and
·Mike Lansing singled. Fletcher
:SCored easily, and when Rijo failed
·io back up third 'base, Alou also
:scored when Costa's throw
:bounced to the backstop.
: "I can't tell you how it felt
;1\'hen I threw that bali," said
:fosto, who was malcing only his
~iccond stan in left field.
·: "I icnow I don't have a cannon
:Qut there, and I lcnow I'm not going
:so throw out many guys - espe{ially Moises Alou. I should have
~st thrown to second base.' '
·• But in the eighth, Costo doubled
:mHal Morris and Sabo to make a
;,J..inner of reliever Jeff Reardon (3·
4). Rob Dibble pitched the ninth
for his 18th save.
·: Rijo, the National League
Strikeout leader, fanned four in
Seven innings to reach a career high
of 178, two more than he had for
tile Oakland A's in 1986.
: "Anytime you have a one-run
tead off Rijo late in the game,
you're supposed to win," said
felipe Alou.
: Rijo allowed eight hits and
walked three.
: Elsewhere, it was Los An~eles..

3, St. Louis 2; Chicago 6, Atlanta
3; Pittsburgh 7, San Diego 6, and
Florida 5, San Francisco 4.
Doclgers 3, Cardinals 2
Just when it looked like the St.
Louis Cardinals were about to
knock another game off Philadelphia's lead in the National League
East, nearly everything that could
go wron~ did.
Leadmg the Los Angeles
Dodgers 2-0 with just two outs to
go Friday night, the Cardinals faltered. The Dodgers ended Rene
Arocha's shutout bid, but with
relief ace Lee Smith on the mound
one out later and pinch hitter Henry
Rodriguez in an 0-for-21 slide at
the .Plate ail seemed safe in St.
Lows:
But Rodriguez beat out an
infield RBI hit to the left side, and
Tim Wallach added a run-scoring
single for deciding run in a 3-2
win. Bret Butler began tlie inning
with a triple and scored on Jose
Offermllll' s groundout.
• 'For 2 112 hours we looked
good," Cardinals catcher Tom
Pagnozzi said. •'In 10 minutes, we
undid everything.''
Meanwhile, the Phillies rallied
to beat Houston and transform a
potential seven-game lead to nine.
· Gre~ Jefferies, who extended
his hittmg strealc to I 7 games with
a homer and a run-scoring single
for the Cardinals, was disheartened
by the loss.
"I've seen it all," he said, heading for .lhe videotape room instead
of the clubhouse. ''I'm leaving."
Even Hall-of-Famer Red
Schoendienst, a Cardinal coach,
was stunned.
"In IllY S1 years in the game,
I've never seen one like thtll," he
said.
Smith (2·4) allowed two hits
and a walk to talce the loss. Todd
Worrell (1·1) worked a scoreless
eighth and Jim Gott the ninth for
his 24th save.
A happy band of PbiUies got the
word in Houston, where a basesloaded triple by Kevin Stocker
erased a 4·3 deficit and gave them
a 6-4 viclory. But there was no celebrating .
"An eight-game lead with seven
games left is a comfortable lead,"
Phillies manager Jim Frcgosi said.
"But we have a lot of games left so
we can't afford to be comfortable."
Cubs 6, Braves 3
Rick Wilkins drove in the decisive run, then Jose Vizcaino's two·
run single capped a four-run seventh inning for Chicago.
Atlanta took a 3·2 lead in the
seventh on Sid Bream's run-scoring pinch single off Mike Morgan
(8 -11).

Randy Myers worked the ninth
for his 36th save as the Cub s
snapped Atlanta's nine-game road
winning streak . Reliever Mike

·.~-.,.~

Chrome Package • Cassette • Sliding
Rear Window • Stripes 114360

5
""""·-=.....,.. ·r.

.

action.~. ~(C~on~ti~nu~ed~fro~m~C~-::!_2)_ _ _ _~--------

· Tim Casto doubled in the game
winner to redeem his throwing
error, but Expos first baseman
Oreste Marrero had nowhere to
hide after committing two errors on
one ball.
"We're not trying to win the
pennant here, but we've got to rearrange our program," said Montreal
manager Felipe Alou, perturbed by
the Expos' sloppy play. "We
didn't have a .lot of sense out

4 Dr., 4 cyl.. Air, Auto.

1991 Pont.Sunblrd l£_1164oe_,

Matt Elliott, center, on injutcd

Oakland (Van Poppe 4-3) at Detroit
(Hollon J-5), 2,35 p.m.
Milwalolkco &lt;N•vuro 7-9) at California
(Mignne ().()), 4:1!5 p.m. ·

.

NL

4 Dr., 5 speed. Low Milesl

Nollanal JaahlbaU Alaodollan
WASIIINQTON BUU.t!TS: Traded
the lia,hu 10 Caand MeR-. forwltd, 1a
lhe Mianuo1a Timberwotv.. fot Tim
Bunoup.. fwwud.

at-

Tcua (Brown 9·9) 11 B•ltimore
(Rhodoo l-21t:35 p.m.

Nice I

1989 Pont. Grand Am-1126"-

BasketbliU

Balbniote 10, Tex.• S

2 Dr., 4 cyl.,

Rice and Joshua Murphy. Standing teammates
are Brandon Johnson, Jessie Ward, Kris Ferrell,
Jeffrey Ward, Ryan Russell and Donoald
Denny. Behind them is coach RaDdy Rice.

VINTON 8-BALLERS- The Vinton B·Ball
basebaU team took r.rtb in its league and fourth
in tbe Gallia County B·Bali Tournament in mid·
July. In rront are (L·R) Matthew DePue, Tad .
Browning, James Nickels, Dustin Ward, Riley

1989 Chrys.le8aron..._l114"-

DIITROIT TIOI!RS: Aclivlled David
Wella, piichcr, fran tho J!i-dty dil•blod

ClUcap 4, MinnCIIc&amp;a 2

ll&lt;:kaon ~).1:15 p.m.
K.antu City (M1p.ante 0.0) at New
Yodt (Kami..Uodti 8-4), 1:30 p.m.

Atlanta {Merckci 2·1) u Chicaao

llalhaway, pilchlo', ..,lbo 15-day diaabloil
li«. n::b'Oic:tivo 1q A._ 17. R,cglled Mut
Holz.m•, ~.tram V&amp;nDOU.Wil' r1 tho
Paoi.fu: c.ut Leap.
liot.

Chicago,........... ......66 S4
Kanan City ...........64 58

Cl..EVEUND (Ojed;~

Flod4a3,S.. Fnnciaco4

Tum
W L
TOtlliiU) .................. 71 52
New Yort .............. 70 53

Dctroit. ...... .............63 61
CUJVELAND ...... j7 65
Mllwallbo ............ .49 73

5
5.5
8.5
13.5
21.5

&lt;a......
9-toJ. H&gt;Sf""·
Ookland (Mohler -4) at Deooit (Gul-

ft»l•.wptri• 6.~4
Loa Anp1oa 3, Sa. LaWJ 2
Pillsbwah 7, s.. Diea• 6

-..t

.533
.501
.%7
.40Z

Tbey played Saturday

aue.ao6.Ad.,..3
aNCNNATI4,Manboa12

~2-:1),

.m

57

Friday's scores

.664

41
49
51
60
63

S~&gt;

By ROB GLOSTER
lost seven of 10 games on a home first-place Blue Jays' ffve-game
BOSTON (AP) - Is the ghost stand that ends this weekend, raJ- winning streak.
of Bill Buckner haunting the Red lied in the eighth.
The New York Yankees beat
Sox?
Hatcher's leadoff homer off the visiting Kansas City 7-2 to move
Boston had an opponent down light tower behind the left-field within one game of the Blue Jays
to its last out in a Icey game, only to wall, his ninth, pulled the Red Sox in the East. The loss dropped the
have a.ground bail snealc past an within 5-4. Two outs later, with Royals three games behind Chic&amp;·
infielder to allow the winmng run runners oo first and second, Quin- go in the West as the White Sox
to score.
tana singled to tie the game and beat Minnesota 4-2.
This time it was the left side of Valcotin followed with another sinBack in the East, .Baltimore
the Red Sox infield that failed to gle.
·
moved within S 1(2 with a 10-5
stop a grpunder, not fJI'St baseman
Reggie Jefferson homered and victory over Texas.
Bucimer. And the opponent this hit a two-r\m double for Cleveland,
Johnson (13-8) aUowed one run,
time was Cleveland, not the 1986 which has won four straight road struck out 11 and walked one ror
New York Meu.
games and four in a row against his seventh complete game of the
But the result was similar.
Boston.
·
· season. He leads the majors with
Albert Belle' s roller went under
Andre Dawson singled in the 226 strikeouts.
·the glove of third baseman Scott fourth, doubled in the sixth and
Jay Bu~ner drove in three runs
Cooper and then skipped past doubled in the eighth for Boston to with.a homer, a single and a sacrishortstop John Valentin with two ·give him 2,601 career hits, moving fice fly as the Mariners .won for the
outs in the ninth inning Friday him past Steve Garvey into 57th sixth time in their last eight games.
night, resulting in two runs and a 7- place on the aU-time list.
Pt11 Hentgen (14·7) gave up four
61ndianswinovertheRedSox.
Elsewhere in the ALit was runs. lhree earned. on seven flits in
Valentin, who .was charged with Seattle 4. Toronto I; New York 7, seven innings. He is 5-6 at home
the error, had singled in the go- Kansas City 2; Baltimire 10, Texas this season.
ahead run as Boston scored three 5; Oalcland 7, Detroit 6 and Mil"We just couldn' t get anybody
times to take a 6-5 lead in the waukee 7, California 2 in 10 on base tonight. Plus, Johnson just
eighth.
innings. ·
kept throwing strikes," Toronto
''It was one of those balls where
Mariners 4, Blue Jays 1
thrrd baseman Ed Sprague said.
l had to go a long way 10 my left
. Randy Johnson gave the teams "The guys were having trouble
l1Jid I probably should have let Val · chasing Toronto in the American picking balls up, and I think he
get it. The play should have been League East a big lift.
threw harder as the game went
made and it wasn't," Cooper said.
Johnson pitched a lhree-hitter as on."
"It's very disheartening. It would the visiting Seaule Mariners beat
Yankees 7, Royals 2
have been a big win for us."
Toronto 4-1 Friday night to end the
(See AL on C-4)
Pinch•hitrer Jeff Treadway sin·
gled with two outs in the ninth for
Cleveland. Pinch-runner Kenny
Lofton stole second and Carlos
Baerga was intentionally walked.
Both advanced on a wild pitch.
"It's unbelievable. In this game,
you never know," said Baerga,
OUR SHOWROOM IS
who scored the winning run. "I
thought it was over, knowing
Cooper had the bali like that. I
stopped to see the ball and then I
started to run, and maybe he got
confused."
Valentin said he was helpless on
the Belle grounder.
"That play's not my play .
Coop's ~ot to try to get to ail he
can. If it s my play I need to charge
that baseball," he said . "It's a
tough play but it should have been
made. As Coop went to grab the
ball, I no longer saw the ball any
more.''
The Red Sox lost for the eighth
time in 11 games.
"It was the wild pitch lhBt set it
up. We threw the wild pitch and
1911 fOlD MIPIII
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didn't malce the play," said Red
Hac~Wactc, 4 speed transmission,
5 speed trans., black, ......
Sox manager Butch Hobson. "It
stereo, cream.
117.37,., ...
1106.51 ,., ...
was a very tough loss for us. We
batded back at the end and so did
they."
· Jerry DiPoto (4-2) pitched the
final I 2{3 innings for the win. Jeff
Russell (0-4) was the loser.
"You're always hoping for
something to happen, and it hap'
pened," said Cleveland manager
1911 FORD 1UIPO
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Au10matlc 118f11mllaion, air
Mike Hargrove.
control, til wheel.
conditioning, wMe.
Billy Hatcher homered and Car174.17 .....
1107.37 ......
los Quintana and Valentin had RBI
singles as t~e Red Sox, who have .

:

Scorel1oard
- • Baseball • -

Sunday

In AL activity,

Reds come back to.beat Expos; Phils hike lead; Giants stay put
By TEllRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Chris
Sabo liked !be way !be Cincinnati

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Stanton (4-5) took tlte loss.
Marlins S, Giants 4
Rookie Jeff Conine's grand
slam highlighted a five-run eighth
inning, and Florida ended a fourgame losing streak.
Reliever Mike Jackson (5-S)
allowed consecutive singles to
Chuck Carr, Walt Weiss and Bret
Barberie, malcing it 2-1. Reliever
Jeff Brantley walked Orestes
Destrade to load tlte bases with one
out.
Reliever ¥att Turner (3-4)
picked up the victory.
Pirates 7, Padres 6
Lonnie Smith's tWO·OUt RBI
sin~ie broke a tie in the eighth
inmng, and visiting Pittsburgh
handed San Diego its sixth straight
loss.
Kevin Young drew a walk from
Mark Davis (1-5) to open the
eighth, and advanced on a sacrifice
before Smith got his decisive hit to
left. Carlos Garcia followed with
his fourth single, and Jay Bell
added an RBI single for his third
hit.
Mark Petkovsek (3-0) went 1
113 innings for the victory.

UI

-·

Sports briefs
Football
CINCINNATI (AP) - RuMing
back Harold Green ended a 28-day
holdout by signing a three-year
contract with the Cincinnati Bengals worth at least $4.1 minion.

Walt Disney Co. gets into bowl
scene with game slated for 1995
· ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - The suade a majority of NCAA Divicompany that deals in fairy tales . sion I college presidents to support
now wants to create a football a national championship game.
game that's every college fan's
Two years ago, the presidents
fantasy.
voted to reduce playing and pracWalt Disney Co. has offered to tice seasons for all sports. Coaches
stage a postseason football game , and the established bowls have also
that would cap an eight-day festival resisted the idea of a college
and crown a national college cham- "Super Bowl" or any playoff syspion in January 1995. ·
tem to crown a national champion.
The Disneyland Classic and the
Some schools might like the
surrounding hoopla would lure financial prospects of the Disney
49,000 visitors, who would spend plan, however. Each school playing
$125.5 million, Disney planners in the championship game would
said Thursday at a meeting of local get $1 million. The other 105 Divibusiness leaders. That's about $5 sion I schools would get at least
million less than what the 1993 $75,000 each.
Super Bowl generated in Pasadena.
The plan envisions a week of
"It's a great concept," said sports, academic forums, music and
Charles Ahlers, president of the art, with a big game climax in Ana·
Anaheim Area Visitor &amp; Conven - heim Stadium, home of the Los
tion Bureau.
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·
First, though, Di~ney must per- Angels.

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Page C4 SUnday Times-Sentinel

Auguet 22, 1813

Sports Probe

..

.

•••

Mended Mattingly leading push for AL East crown for Yankees
By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the world
of sports:
• What's behind Don Mattingly's revival as a hitter?
There's something more to it
than just the way he's swinging the
bat, according to the captain of the
New York Yankees. He's got Pennant Fever.

"The pennant race has helped
me, to tell you the truth," says
Mattingly about the red-hot battle
in the American League East. "I
think us having a good club again
-it's been very easy for me to
motivate."
He admits: "I don't like saying
that because you should always be
ready to play. Yau should alway~

WINNER'S ClRCLE- Pictured In tbe gold·
en winner's circle wbere only tbe winner can go
is Mucb More Better, owned by Ray Newbart or
Marietta and driven by Ron Newbart. Tbe borse
set a new track mark as it raced to the r~rst place

be motivated to play. But this year reducCd his power.
over the past 10 years," says Mat·
it seems so much easier with our .
Now it seems that Mattingly is tingly. "I've tried to give them an
club being in a position to make turning on the ball once again with honest pcrlonnance, day in and day
some noise."
much of his old authority. If his ou~ And be able to live with that
For a decade, ~ttingly, ~2. has back still bothers him, it doesn't when I walltaway from the field."
been through losmg years wtth the show.
• Who thought the " Damn YanYankees. But .he was putting up
"I feel comfortable," says Mat· kees" would return In 1993?
Hall of Fame numbe~ in th~ mid ~ingly. "I h~ve n!&gt; complaints physDon Mattingly says he did. And
1980s. Then a back ailment mter- tcally at th1s pomt I feel good up so did others in p1n stripes. ·
fered with his swing and sharply there."
"To be very honest," Mattingly
Mattin$1Y is one of the game's explains, "I think quietly, in our
smartest huters. But he's no longer own way - from the very beginthe man of 1,000 stances. He set- . ning, from spring tnlining on _ we
· tled down this season.
felt like we had as good a chance as
"I'd been making so many anybody. We felt like we had a
changes over the past couple of good club."
years," he says. "You can never
Which is why these Yankees are
find the rhythm or the groove you starting to display their old-time
want if you're always trying to confidence. Not to mention their
make a change.
depth, resilience and intensity,
"Also, Rick Down has helped
"With ihe race the way it is,"
me a lot- OW" new batting coach.

spot In the rourlb and lbe 10th races ror threeyear-old colt and gelding pacers to take tbe tro·
plly, sponsored by lbe Lambert Insurance Agency.

River Valley Colt Circuit winners posted
By JULIE E. DO..LON
Times-Sentinel Starr
ROCK SPRINGS - Twelve
races wen\ presented on the sched·
ule for Thursday's harness horse

racing at the _1993 Meigs County
Fll!l for the River Valley Colt Circwt.
The first and seventh races fea·
tured two-year-Qid colt and gelding

POLE CLASS - Rita Brown is pictured here as she works her
way through tbe poles during tbe. open horse show at the Meigs
County Fair on Wednesday evening.

AL games' .•. ccontinuedfromC-3)

trotters. Georgia Chief, owned by
R&amp;R Newhart and Mike Vlasach
and driven by Dave Morgan, fin- ·
ished fJrst in the fJrSt race. Second
in the ftrst and fJtSt in the seventh
was Arnie's Bay, owned by Jackson L. Wentz of Vincent, with
Brian Weaver the driver. Second
place in the seventh race was taken
by Over Score, owned and driven
by Michael Swatzel of Little Hocking. Arnie's Bay won the trophy
sponsored by Sugar Run Flour
MiU.
Hopeful· Score, owned and driven by Don Spencer, Vincen~ raced
to the winner's circle in both the
second and eighth races for twoyear-old colt and gelding trotters.
Those wins awarded Spencer the
trophy by Sugar Run Flour Mills.
The second place spots in both
races was won by Over Pride,
owned by R&amp;J Caudill of Circleville and driven by Brian
Weaver.
· Don Spencer drove Try-Five
Eagle to the winner's circle in the
third and ninth races for three-yearold colt and gelding pacers to take
the trophy by Lambert Insurance
Agency. The horse is owned by
Fred C. Boyd of Vienna, W.Va.
Tucson Prince, driven by Tom
McRoberts and owned by Ben Foster of Waverly, won th e second
place spots in both heats.
Much More Better, owned by
Ray Newhart of Marietta and driven by Ron Newhart, raced to the
first place spot in both the fourth
and lOth races for tllree-year-old
colt and gelding pacers to take the
lrophy by Lambert Insurance
Agency. Don Spencer drove Lord
Tinsel, owned by Douglas, Parker
and Burger of Columbus, to the
second place slot in both races.
Name It Something, driven by
Terry VanRhoden and owned by
R.R. FuUer of Newark, saw herself
in the winner's circle after both the
fifth and 11th races for two-yearold filly trotters. The horse also
took home the trophy blanket by
General Tire Sales. Bitta 'Pride,
owned by Pauletla McCormick of
Jackson and driven by Ralph
McConnick, won the second place
spot in the fifth race. Second in the
lith race was Nattie's Girl, owned
by Barbara McCartney of Freeport,
and driven by Robin Gree.
The sixth and 12th races feawred two-year-old fiUy trotters and
saw Royal Ruth capture the winning slots in both heats. She was
driven by Bryan Weaver and is
owned by J. Asher of Columbus
and R. Asher of New Holland. The
trophy was sponsored by General
Tire Sales. Terry VanRhoden drove
JH Final to the second place spot in
both races. She is owned by Harry
Hanshaw of Charleston, W.Va.

Fernandez (15-6) walked two
and struck out four en route to his
lOth victory in his last 13 starts.
Scott Erickson (7-15) lost for the
fifth time in his last six decisions.
Tim Raines' broken-bat infield
single in the seventh inning scored
Lance Johnson with the go-ahead
run to snap a 2-2 tie.
Athletics 7, Tigers 6
Mike Aldrete keyed a five-run
fourth inning with his first career
grand slam, and visiting Oakland
then held on to beat De!roit. The
Tigers rallied for Jour runs in the
ninth . .
. Bobby Witt (9-11) snapped a
stx-game losmg streak. He allowed
two runs on four hits and five
walks in 5 2/3 innings for his first
victory since July 2.
John Doherty (10-9) started
strongly for the Tigers, then collapsed. He gave up five runs on six
hits in 3 2/3 innings.
Brewers 7, Angels 2
John Jaha hit a tic-breaking solo
homer in the lOth inning, and Cal
Eldred (13-12) J?iiched a six-hitter
and struck out mnc as visiting Milwaukee stopped a four-game losing
streak.
Greg Vaughn added a three-run
homer off Joe Grahe as the BrewSports deadlines
ers broke open the game in the
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune, lOth. Jana's one-out homer was his
The Daily Sentinel, th,e Point lOth this season and the first off
Pleasant Register and the Sunday Steve Frey (2-3) in 47 1(3 innings
Times-Sentinel value the contribu- since Aug. 18, 1992.
tion s their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers, and
Crossword Puzzle
they will continue to be published.
However, certain deadlines for '-1":-T::-r=r=-t-=
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and related articles, from Thall '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. The deadline for photos and related articles
for basketball (summer basketball
and related camps fall under the
spring and summer sports deadline)
and other winter sports is the last
day of the NBA finals.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need to gel their photos back from
the photography studio/developer
of choice and to give the staffs the
chance to publish the.ie items in the
appropriate season for those sports.
Domingo Jean earned his first
major league victory, pitching
seven innings as New York beat
Kansas City at Yankee Stadium .
Don Mattingly's two-run single
and Danny Tartabull 's two -run
homer in the seventh broke it open.
Jean ( 1-0) gave up five hits,
including home runs by Gary Gactti and Felix Jose. Tom Gordon (84) ·was hurt by control trouble.
Orioles 10, Rangers 5
Mike Mu ss ina, back from a
five-week stint on the disabl ed list,
turned in a strong performance as
Baltimore won its eighth straight
home game. Gary Redus had two
homers and Dean Palmer hit his
24th forthe Rangers.
Cal Ripken homered and drove
in four runs for the Orioles.
Mussina (1 2-4), who had not
pitched in the majors since July 21,
allowed only six hits and three runs
in six-plu s innin gs. Charlie
Leibrandt (9-9) allowed five runs
in 3 2!3 innings.
White Sox 4, Twins 2
Alex Fernandez pitched five-hit
ball over eight innings for his 15th
victory, leading Chicago past Minnesota at the Metrodome.

,

f

on Page A-6
-=T':'1-::T::"'

He's
stayedfor
with
He's been
very simple
me.me.
He hasn't
been
too much mechanics. It's a matter
of trying to stay inside the balL Hit
the ban hard."
To many New 'York fans, Mattingly typifies the old Yankee uadition. His quiet dignity and no-nonsense approach to baseball echo the
style of Lou Gehrig and Joe
DiMaggio. No wonder so many
New Yorkers are pulling for him to
finally ·get a chance to play in the
World Series. .
"I've just tried to be myself

Meigs golfers
open season
The Meigs golf team, under the
direction of coach John
Krawsczyn, opened their season
this past week at the Lancaster
Southeastern Invitational held a
VaUey View Golf Course.
The Marauders finished second
to Marietta for the second straight
year in the 12-team tournament.
Marietta, which finished with a
309, was foUowed by Meigs (320),
Washington Court House (321),
Jackson (333), Chillicothe (334),
Sherida!l (338), Alexander (339),
Athens (341 ), Lancaster (346),
Miami Trace (355), Huntington
Ross (359) and Logan (360).
Adam Krawsczyn fired a twoover-par 73 to wm co-medalist
honors with Darcy Trimmer of
Washington Court House. The
youn~er Krawsczyn' s round was
highlighted by a chip-in eagle on
the 255 yard par four ninth hole.
He played the frrst 12 holes one
under par.
Other scores for Meigs were
Reggie Pratt's 80 (good enough for
a lOth-place individual finish),
Jason Hart (83), Ben Ewing (84)
and Brad Anderson (94).
The Marauders dropped a dual
match Thursday to Athens 169-171
at Riverside Golf Course In Mason,
W.Va
Ewing continued his solid play
with a 40 for medalist honors.
Senior Brad Anderson in his first
year on the team fired a 43. Jason
Hart and Adam Krnwsczyn added a
44, Reggie Pratt a 45 and Jason
Taylor a 54.
Other members of the Marauder
golf team are Jerrod Douglas, Jerod ,
Cook, Travis Grate, Matt
O'Bryant, Mike Franckowiak and
Joe Hill.
Meigs ( 10-2) will host Gallia
Academy at the Meigs Golf Club
Thursday.

says Mattingly. "It's hard to take
anything for granted. We've ~a.·
tried to focus on ounelves: It 1 a•!
day to day grind that we're in rWfl~
now. Each game is a big game lli.,;

us."

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plea..nt, wv

1893

'

POMEROY- Twelve r~ces
were featured on the schedule of

. By JULIE E: DILLON
Times-Sentmel Starr

.,.

Area sports tiri·ef:s

·!"

GAHS golfers to start play Monday · :. ·
GALLIPOUS -JUnior David Wrigh~ with a foui-day score of •
330, capwred pre-season medalist honors as 14 Gallia Academy
candidates qualified for the 1993 golf team last week.
'fll.e Blue Devils will open their new campaign at Athens Mon-

day'Other members of the 1993 squad , therr
. quali""ft
.,,.1g scortA and
grade in school are Jamie Bun:ham. 334, senior; John O'Brien, 341,
junior; Eric Rodericlc, 347, junior; Ryan Canaday, 391, fieshrnan;
Rand Clark, 399 sophomore; Chris Mullins, 402, junior; Josh
Cook, 402, sophomore; Chris Smith, 408, freshman; ~ Long,
411, freshman; Cory Wilson, 418, sophomore; Jason Ratliff, 422,
freshrnan,Jason' Halley, 4.30. junior and Jason Coburn, 476, freshman.

AREA CYCLIST -Jason Frecker of Pomeroy was one ·or lbe
riders competin&amp; this put week in the motocross event at the
l\ofl!il!S County Fair. Fredcer had a good run and finished second in
event. Earlier this monlb, Frecker competed in tbe Loretta
Amateur National Cbamplonsblps held at Loretta Lynn's
vu••• Ranch In Hurricane MiUs, Tenn. Frecker placed 12th overall
tbat event, placing hlllh against hundreds or competitors l'rom
ecr'OSS lbe nation and a lfeld of 42 qualifiers In his particular dass,
85cc 12.-13 year old division. Frecker, sbown here in true fOFm
15 feet In tbe air, rides out or the Albens Sports Cycle shops In

BBYFL conditioning Tuesday
SYRACUSE - Any fifth- or sixth-gmde sbldent who has not
signed up for the Big Bend Youth Football League may do so during conditioning sessions which will be held Tuesday through
Thursday at the Syracuse ball field from 6to 7:30p.m.

fl.tbe'!ll.

•

September softball tourney planned • .~ ;'
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis Parts &amp; Recreation Department
win sponsor a two-day men's softball tournament set b September
11 and 12 at Ted Perry Memorial Field.
The fee for the double-elimination tournament is $65 per team
and is payable to the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department,
518 Second Ave., Gallipolis, 'OH 45631. The tournament pairing
drawing wiU be held on Sept. 9.
To register or to inquire about specifics, call the P&amp;R office at
446-1424,extension 37, from Sam. to 5 p.m.
·

· •
' ·•
,
•
: •
•

City bass tournament planned
GALLIPOLIS- The fifth annual Gallipolis Parks &amp; Re=ation
Bass Toumament has been scheduled for Sept 18 and Sept 19 at
the Gallipolis city park front's public use area on the Ohio River.
The two-angler boat team event will be conducted on free se)ection of partners. Flights consisting of 40 boats win be sent off at ISsecond intervals starting at 7 am. each day. Each team will have ,
eight hours to fiSh.
Flight assignment will be assigned on a frrst-come, fllSt-serve ,
basis. The postmark date on submitted re~istration fonns is the
determining factor. No team may sign up until Aug. 23.
The entry fee is $70 per team, which includes ~"big basS" con·
test There rs a guaranteed purse of$2,000, with $1,000 as the gmnd
prize, $500 for second, $300 for third and $200 for fourth.
•
To register or to inquire about specifics, call the P&amp;R office at ••
446-1424, extension 37.
.
•~
•'

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Sentinel Page C5

Friday ' s harness racing at the
Meigs County Fair.
The flfSI and seventh races featured the Ohinco Pacing Series as
Ty VanRhoden drove his horse to
the flrnt place spot !J1 the fJrSt ra9C
and although he fuusJ!ed second m
the seventh race, he placed first due
to interference on the track. Misty
Prince. owned by Fred Morgan Sr.
of Zanesvine, and driven by Fred
Morgan Jr. , finished second in the
first race. Lu Qre, driven by Earl
Owings and owned by Edward
Henry Blum of Laurelville, finished fJrst in the seventh but placed
second.
Blackberr.y Jam, owned and
driven by Walter Young, raced to
the winner's circle in both the second and eighth races of the Ohillco
Trotting Series. He took home the
trophy blanket sponsored by Middleport Department Store. Little
Bet trotted to the second place
spots in both heats. She was driven
by Robert Ogg and is owned by
Bertie R. Hash, Newark.
The third and ninth races of the
day featured three-year-old filly
pacers and saw Easter Oirl ~ to
the first place s~ in the third and ·
second in the nmth to take the trophy by New Haven Supermarket
She was driven by Ty VanRhoden
and is owned by Ralph W. Mallett
of Lewisville. Bryan Weaver drove
Cmon Bess, owned by Richard
Householder of Junc~on City, to .
first place in the ninth race, but in
the third race she placed thln1 after
· finishing second because of interference. Crown Time Adieu, driven
by Earl Owings and owned by.
Esther M. Crownover of McArthur,
placed second in the third race after
finishing third because of the interference.
Three-year,.old filly paee!S were
featured in the .fourth and lOth
mces as Tower Ridge Sassy; driven
by Ron Newart and owned by Dean
Fleming of I,owell, paced to first In
. the fourth. In the lOth race she fin.
ished frrst but was placed fourth
because of interference. Sha Hill,
owned by Richard Householder
llllji driven by Bryan Weaver, finishW second .in the fourth race. In
the I Oth race, Pomeroy resident
Roger Spencer s.aw his horse,
Colleen Falcon, driven by his
nephew, Don Spencer, place first In
the lOth race after finishing second
becau~ of Interference.·Jellybean
., Kid, driven by Terry VanRhoden
and owned by Diana Lynn Malone
of Waterfo!d, finished third in the
lOth but placed third.

E~stern Express, owned by
Byron R. Johnson of Croton and
driven by Terry VanRhoden, raced
to the winner's cirlce in both the
fifth and 11th races for three-year·
old fdly trotters to take the blanket
trophy sponsored by parry Queen
of Middleport. Shamrock Kate,
owned by J. Asher of Columbus
·

and R. Asher of New Holland and
driven by Bryan Weaver, captured
the second place slots for both
heats.
.
The sixth and 12th races of the
day featured t,hree-year-old filly
trotters. Dancy s Dream, driven by
Ron Newhan, and owned by UrsuIa McGaha of FreePOrt, trotted to

the winner's ciltle both beats to
take home the .trophy blanket by
Dairy Queen. Absinthe Score, driveri and owned by Raben Ogg and
V. Cross, took the second place
spot in the sixth~- ~nd m the
.12th race was Hop1 Hill. owned by
E.,C. and L. Crownov~ and driven
by Earl Owings.
·

race and was present·
track record In lbe
ed a trophy for lbe fastest time l'rom The Daily
Sentinel. Pictured are Cberyl Kulaga, summer
intern at The Daily Sentinel, and sulky driver
·
Ron Newhart.

NEW TRACK RECORD- Much More Bet- .
ter, owned by Ray Newhart or Marietta and
driven by Ron Newhart, raced to tbe first-place
spot In lbe fourth and 10th races ror three-yearold colt and gelding pacers Thursday anemoon
at the Meigs County Fair. The horse set a new

LOCAL COLOR MAKES GOOD- CoUeen
Falcon, owned by Roger Spencer of Pomeroy
· and driven by his nephew, Don Spencer, placed
first In lbe lOib race or lbe harness horse races

at the Meigs County Fair Friday anemoon. The
three-year-old r.ny pacer was one or four horses
in lbe race. ·

593-8697

6MONTH
WARRANTY ON
MOST CARS

Athens' Largest ·
Used Car Selection

AMI RZI
IN niKII

n•'-'•"•-·•

!HI ..... ... 1, ltS.OO

77ft.
..... ... 1,ns.ooo
1t•140wal ... 1,495.00

'!JAI'e

PilUS

INGROUND OR ABOVE GROUtiD

· .": :.....\· -·

Sunday

I

Spencer-owned filly among winners in Meigs County Fair harness races
iD

In the AL 'East, New Yodt haJ::
been in the thick of things for ~
of the summer ~ along wuh••:
Toronto, Boston and Baltimcn. ·; ·
"The club you have to look at ;1;.:
Toronto," Mattingly says:.~
''They're the world champions:;;
But it's really going to come dowi·' ·
to who plays the best Anybody ~
get hot. I like our team."
•:1
• Wby has George Stelnbrennei--~
been so quiet for so long?
~
Back from suspension, Bos ·••
George didn't force his way infb;"
the spotlight right off the hat. '~
: ...

' l l l l l l l l l - • •,

~SMm..-...PI.TII-L!.ACWM

SU'JIJI1 til' ... •n, W 'fl. "IIU1n, rlVI

FRII IOLAR COYIR

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC.
1.973 Pk!dmont Road · HufltinQton , WV

-,~,:

. ·Phone: 304-429-4788 Mon.-frt . 9:30-5:00; Sat. 9:30-2:00

NOTICE OF REVALUATION TO
GALLIA COUNTY PROPERTY OWNERS
In ~ompliance with an _order ~f the Tax Commissioner of Ohio, the reappraisal of real property 1n Galha County is complete.
~roperty owne~s may call the Gallia County Auditor's Office .or partipipate
1n

~ugu8t 22,

,..

Hatchback, 4 cyl., 5 spd., air, AMIFM

cruise,

.

•sa w.o.

OPEN SUNDAY
FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE

12·7

Informal Rev1ews to learn the appraised value of their properties.

Property owners may call to receive the new appraised value of their properties, along with limited information about the valuation.
Those wanting to view their property record card may come any time on
. the above schedule.

1986 CADI~( SEDAN DtVIW

'1.13 mo~.1=;:.::~~

AUGUST.23 THROUGH AUGUST 27
446·4612 ext. 217 or 218
•TELEPHONE CALL·IN SCHEDULE
Monday·Frlday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

1989I'ONTIAC. GRAND AM LE

4 dr., auto., Blr, rear defroster, p. wtn. &amp; P'ewter

MON.-FRI.

9·9
SATURDAY
1917 DODGE CARAVAN II
, automatic.

10·5

6 Month
Warranty On
Most Cars

•INFORMAl REVIEWS SCHEDULE
AUDITOR'S OFFICE
COURTHOUSE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. - 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Property owners who wish to discuss their real property valuations in more
details with an appraiser may attend an informal R.eview Session.
·.·.
The property card will be available to the public any time during b~siness ·
hours after the week of August 23 to 27.
RO~ALD K. CANADAY

GALLI A COUNTY AUDITOR

J,

I

·

�'

P-ae C6 Sunday llmes Sentinel

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point

August 22, 11K13

Ohio fishing report

~~!~~~~!:~A~e~~J?~~!?m~s. ~!!!.ston ~.eser~2n!~}?a~~. use

In the Open
By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

New twist on an old concept,
politicians and dunkings
Once .again Meigs Countians
lost out on a golden oppOrtunity this time a chance to dunk Con·
gressman Ted Strickland at the Boy
Scouts of America dunking booth
a1 the Meigs County Fair.
Strickland was scheduled to 18ke
his place on the hoc ... er, wet scat
from 7-9 p.m. Friday, but the
Democrat rookie from Lucasville
was a no-show.
During the week of the fair,
local and state politiCians and officials participated in the duJiking
booth - raising plenty of money
for the scouts (For instance, for
some strange reason, the line of
y!)un~sters queuing up to dunk
Juvemle Judge Roben Buck even
rivaled the line for the Twirl-nHurl).
· Tune for a disclaimer.
The several times I have met
Strickland, I have been impressed
by his enthusiasm and open conge·
niality. He seems to be a genuinely
friendly, down-to-earth son of guy.
During the time Strickland was
scheduled to appear, people even
stopped at Strickland's booth or the
Democratic Patty booth wanting to
thank bim for helping with the
flooded mirie situation at Salem
Center, but I can'i pass on a chance
like this to poke 'a little humor at
our elected representative.
In other words, Ted, don't take
this personally... or even seriously.
For some time, perhaps as long
as 20 seconds or so, I pondered the
possible reasons why Strickland
dido 't show up for his engagement
with the infamous booth of dunking. Here are my conclusi~ns:
FirSt, perhaps some veteran congressman told him that participat·
ing in a dunking booth is essentially an un-congressmanlilce sort of
activity.
•Soaking your congressman
before he soaks you • is not the kind
of irony you want to implllnt in the
minds of your constituents.
·
Second, an army of scientists
has proven that participation in
dunking booths leads to participation in other un-congressmanlilce
activities (demolition derbies and
uuck pulls for example).
While the image of our con·
gressman driving a Volvo-smash·
ing monster truck down Pennsylva·
nia Avenue has a cenain appeal, it
is an image we, as southeastern
Ohioans, want to avoid at all costs.
Actually, people in Washington,
D.C., would be shocked to discover
that most people living between
Philadelphia and Los Angeles do
not drive monster trucks on a regu·
lar basis.
Third, there was a possibility
that former congressman Bob
McEwen may have .found out about
Strickland's proposed dunking
booth exploits.
Strickland. you may recall, narrowly defeated McEwen in a oar·
ticillarly close, nasty contest last
November.
.
I'm not saying McEwen 1S hold·
ing a grudge •. ~ut, one can eastly
imagine 'Smthn Bob (perhaps

Sports briefs
Golf
KENMORE, Wash. (AP) Dave Stockton birdied $e firSt four
holes and settled for a 7-under-par
65 and two-shot lead aftel the
opening round of the $500,000
GTE Northwest Classic.
Stockton, after a nine-stroke victory at Park City. Utah last week,
led by two strokes pver Richard
Rhyan, Dale Douglass and Bob
Betley. Tied at 68 were Doug
Dalziel, Dick Hendrickson, Calvin
Peete and Bob Brue on the 6.455·
yard, par-72 Inglewood Country
Club course.
Tennis
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) Petr Korda beat the rain, Byron
Black outlasted it and Andrei
Medvedev escaped it to advance to
the semifinals of the Volvo International.
The match between No. 2 l van
Lend! and No. 10 Andre Agassi
was suspended after a 5-hour rain
delay. Agassi led 5-3 and was serving for the first set.
Black, of Zimbabwe, beat
eighth-seeded Australian Mark
Woodforde 6-3, 6-3 to advance to
his first semifinal in an ATP event:
Medvedev of Ukraine, defeated
Jonas Svensson of Sweden, 7-6 (8·
6), 1-6, 6-4, and fourth -seeded
Czech Korda advanced with a 6-3,
6-3 victory over Stefano Pescosolido of lialy.
Cycling
HAMAR, Norway (AP) Rebecca Twigg set a world record
for the 3,000-mctcr individual pursuit at the World Championships.
and Australia set the best time in a
team event.
Twigg won the gold in 3 min·
utes 37.347 seconds, beating the
3:38: 190 of Jeannie Long&lt;&gt;-Ciprelli
of France in Ocwber 1989, for her
fifth world title.

.

accompanied by Pat Robertson)
stalling confidently toward the
dunking booth, with a five-pound
wad of one-dollar !&gt;ills ... and Nolan
Ryan.

Here is the weeldy fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
WELLSTON CITY RESER·
VOIR - Use larval baits fished in
shallow water around vegetation to
lake bluegills and sunfish. Fish at
night witli traditional baits alpng
the bottom to take channel catfish.
Use iop watet lures, small ~inners
or plastic , worms when fishmg for
largemouth bass.
OHIO POWER RECREATION
AREA- The many small lakes on
this area hold good numbers of

top
LAKE LO.RAMIE - Small wa!er batts, Hopkins ~ons and
worms. or ~&amp;tVa! bai~ work best buck tails to take hybnd stri~
when fishing for crapptes.· ~lers bass in the tail_wa~. Use 1111ht
may also wan~ to try small J•gs or crawlers and chicken livers to take
minnows fished in brushy areas. stripers. Fish in the evening with
Tr}' fiShing around the rocks along b~ baits or plastic worms when
the east and west shorelines or the fishing for largemouth bass.
woody areas in channels and tribuNortheast
taries to take largemouth bass.
BERLIN RESERVOIR - A
Ohio River
4Q..inch minimum length limit is in
Much of the fishing action has effect for muskellunge. Troll large
produced catches of channel and imitalion baits around weed beds or
flathead catfish, freshwater drum, above submerged structure. Crapcarp ~d bass•. Anglers should u~ pies average about nine ~nches m
cut batts or mght crawlers fished length and can be taken m deeper
along the bottom to 18ke catfish. water on minnows suspended
Night crawlers also work well for beneath a bobber,

pared baits or fish fOrnlula may be
the best offering. for largemouth ·
bass this time of the _year. Small
larval baits or fly-fishing gear can
be productive when fishing for
bluegills. A free user permit is
required to fish, hunt or camp on
this recreation area.
Southwest
C.J. BROWN RESERVOIR Walleye abundance is high. Troll
crank baits at depths of· 10 to 18
feet near the dam for best results.
.Use soft craws, night crawlers; or
cut baits to take channel catfish up
to 12 pounds. Bluegills and crap·
pies provide fair shoreline fishing

'

"Livestock .sales/

Section D
August 22, 1113

'Farmers Bank and Savings top buyer

Vaughan's Cardinal buy~
top Meigs fair steer, hog

.

.. '

I

'

$2, R&amp;G Food; Aly111 Holrmon. St-'o,
were purchased by Mead Paper for Whcek,
By KATIE CROW
Home National Bartk; Lali~ Parll:cr, $2, Home
$260. The animals were owned by Noticaal 81111:; Jonnil.,. Goqkjn, 12.30, Wedm
T·S Correspondent
·ConauuciJ.on; 'Nicolc White, 11.70, Patti PJ'"'
Smith.
ROCK SPRINGS - The largest Barbara
Liltod aM tell«, price pU4 lftcl buyer, in lhat P&lt;mcroy; a.,;. Bmint:;,!l.60, F,_'•IIIOk:
single buyer at the annual Meigs . Older for the •.J.e.
Cluod Hu\obud,l2.10.
NoliOOil Bonk; !..,.;
Harrit, 11.70, Southe:l ltem Equipmont; Ca.trie
County 4-H-FFA Junior Livestock
LAMBS
Sh..,., $2, a.,..,., Fultt; lohoolhan IU-y.
Sale held J!'riday night at the Meigs •
::.,~d:'ddi:bampion, 114 , Riv.,.. 1:1.10, Bemud FWIZ;'Sucr w.-. 12.20; Mood
County Frur was the Farmers Bank lido Food Mart OU&gt;d City lee ... Fuel: Rcbcceo Paper. S~evo Kauff, 11.70. Jt.~denour Suwt~ ;
!.oou&gt;o Pum, $1.90, Home N1110111l Bonk; Cltil
and Savings. Company, Pomeroy· ~~ ~.~:;"~:
:;~ lude,12.50, Tri.c-yFMI; Guyo.-,St.!O,
Tuppers Plains, having purchased sn..1 Jbi!rl: l!da - . $2.50, Herald oo oond Holtor u.-,., Shmel..-,$1.7b, Fanl&lt; ~
SteVe Kautr, St .l!, PIJIMI''•Iank; t..aw
26 animals. In 1990 tile Farmers Gu: Shlnnool!zuip~ 1:1.90, Butlt Ooe: Towny mean.:
Pill&lt;«. $1.70, v......,. MomorillllaooiW; t...,.
.
C
''"'"·
12.60.
Vqhln'o
CaJdmal; ltobecel Scott.
nk
d
S
Ba an avmgs ompany was 1:1.90, Obio Valley Phanbin&amp; ~nd Heotins: Whit- RildUe. Sl.7S, Clalt:r AJri -Kiilli W~a~­
the top buyer for eight consecutive ney Kur, $2.90,1! .... Lumber, Michele au.... "'· $'2, Samm&lt;rfidds; B&lt;Uy - · $1.50, lloloC&lt;.
$!, Tri-County -~ Shoonooo l!zuiFJ. $3, Fruth Clinic; loldUII Fnncio, $1.70. Maao c-.tyllu
years.
Pbumaer: loot~lltaa A¥il, $2.30. Kropro: K&lt;lly Association; Oinaer Holcomb, $1 .60, Fannei'•
Second largest burer was Home llaltm, wo. WillWoJ Loaiaa: Mcrtcly au.... Bonk;Sherry Bwllo, $1.70, Ridm""' Boalc GU;
Tate Chovratet;Mi.c;yn Ervin. SJ. Mellin fnncil. 11.60, Fort111 Run Roady Mil;
Nau.onal Bank
· • Ractne• Syracuse • $1.90,
YeouserDm
Fonn
Supply; Mi~hoel O'Noil, $2.20, Christy Rjley, Sl .S5, Omeral Cmtractina. PaWt·
having purchased 24 animals. In Fumu'• Bonk; Micbole aue.. $2, J&lt;ft Womu in g and Sandblasting; Jeultl Btrtnm, $1 .S5,
Lumber; Adam Sande~, $1.80, Fannon
1991 Home National Bank was the btourutce: r ....., 1-, 12.10. BUdWcld F......t O'Dell
.
g
-le
bu
.
yer.
Home;
Adam
Sh.,..,
1:1.40,
Dan Swiahor Aoh· Bulk; Jennifer GoeaJ.ein, Sl.3S. Fanners Bank;
largest Sm
land; Jontic Drib, $110, P_.ollutk; ltolther Lclli&lt; l'ltltcr, 11.90. Bia BcM PoodWul; Ouiity
The ll!"and champion Steer was Doiley, $2.90, Vetcrono Mornoriol Hoopilll; Coop«, $1.60, Banlnl Fultz; 0,.. Bodte, Si.(O.
Dliley, $2.SO, Home Notionol Bonk; Jud,e Fred w. Crow m. Smith and Aaocia&amp;M -ad
Purchased by Vaughan's Cardinal, • Heothe&lt;
Mqhan Avil, $2.25, WhaleJ'• Auto Pam:; St.acy Oria SrJ:~.itJ1; OlriJ Jude. $2.65, Bmwd FWu.; JOih.
MiddleJ19Tt, for $4.20 per pound, Wilioa. ll.to. l'llu _ ..,of Athau: Kaoy Hager, $1.75, Fumcrs Blink; Shane Junet, $1.45,
I t ear at the annual EMri.
~25. J.w.o COUD&lt;Y Livatoct. Ripley: Hcnld Service Company; l.lnf lildtie, 11.!~0,
up'S1 .._..._
uum as Y •
Son EfVin,
$2.25,.Wboley'oAuto Po&gt;U; Shelly Howthomc Louin&amp;: Lori Hum. $!.45, Mam"1
Meigs County 4-H-FFA Junior Fair Povicb, n. uo ~~2. Bonk One: Smorgaabord; Wcafey Sanden, 51.70, f•cemftr
Producll; Thom.. McKay, $1.70, Hoiftc
Livestock Sale.
Slq&gt;hoonie '"""· 12.
...,. Roury Forest
National 8 11\k; Amanda Wheela', $1.10., ~
·
mal
wet
'
ghed
l,
Club;
l!da
Honis,
$4.20,
Oil
ond
On;
235 ,lun11ltan Avii, $:1.10, $210 Ridootour Boale G~t; Bonk:'""'" McKar. SL7o, u- NatiouliiOolt;
The ani
Walliamloa, $1.45, Part., Uulo _, Sheeu
pounds and was owned by Jason J,..;eBucll,IJ,BwOttc;RWBifrin&amp;cr,l2.25. Stacy
•
Las
•
fo
Pat O'Brien; Whitney l:arr, $2.60, MeDona:ld' s: Auome)'l; Orca Burke. St.SO, w... ec.-ucPullins.
I year s steer went r s... EfVin, $2.SO, Fonne&lt;'• Bmk; Bnnt Dhoo, tion; Me\iua Guea, $1.60, Tri Coant1 Melli;
$3.20 per pound.
12. Volley Lumber: A&lt;hley "'~"'· $2.10, W&lt;Jom Nic:holu Ddwillcr, $l .SO, faJm&amp;a But; Ouiaty
Cltdll]r c...p.
on&amp;lnletion; Alhle)' Hap, $2, Home National Riley, St75, hvin'• ow.
V aug han •s Card'ma1 a1so pur- · 'CBonk:
Maey Fnncil, $2.lO. Huppo Landoc:•pina: cr, $1 .90, Fulc.z and Wamor Auom.,.; Chi.d
chased the grand chainpion hog for · B'l'"" Wood, 1220, ludae Robert Buell; Micbellc Wbeel«, $1.7S, Ridenour Boalo Ou; a...t bud, Downina Otilds Mulloo - a $10.7·5 per pound. The animal was o'NaU, s:~.so. Birchlicli Funeral Home; lolqhan Carrie
Shcldl, $1.SO, Fryo'1 Pilla lftd 0. Tu.;
o:.vned by Aric Patterson and t:L\'o.'i"~~ta~~RW~i!i'.f;: Chad Wheeler, St .SO, -Amy Wolfe. Aoooatmt
weighed 238£ounds. ·Last year's sz.1o. Home N11101111 Bonk: S11cy Willon, n. and Linda Warner, Attorney; Mani:liShMU. $1.60.
Whlley'o·Auto Puu; Amity D;aon, ll.lS O'Dell Fn.k c...._,; Betsy - · $1.50, Koillt Oil·
hog SOld for $ .50 per pound.
·
Lumber; Stephtnie ,_, $:!.SO, Bonk One; Kaey er' • Deer Shop. ·
POULTRY QorJ&lt;.,... ooll)
The grand champion lamb was Emn, 12.20. V•ul!l'on'• Cl&gt;dirlal; Shown Dailey,
Mille Guu1, O.C., S!OO, McDon•ld'l of
$2.30, McDonold •: Shown Dliley, $2.10, Oal·
Purchased by Riverside Food Mart Upolil
Tobocco Jnd.C...dy; Amity Dixon. $2.25, Pomen&gt;y,llo.........t
Sm;th,
and City Ice and Fuel for $14 a Pumor'• Bank: Maey N.Uy, $2, H.... No~ooll R.C., $260. Mood l'lpor, Konitido Klolt, $tiD. Mo.
11 P&lt;mcoroY. Dliloy, m. Mt:baoMary Fr~ndl,
$2. Home
Bonk: Donold'•
Pound. The animal w.eig'hed 126 Bonk;
ald'o: Mdiln IWI:, $90. c...lo'o CltiW CaM;
Bryod Wood,
$2.10, Riuo
AuiONotioall
Sl101; Midtael
pounds and was owned by·Macyn O'Nail,$2.to,Xropn;RO..eyNally,$2.Fumcr'• Odio Em. $ 1 0 5 , - - Blln '"·
Bob Hatrm.., 110, Tri Cou.nt1
Ervin. Last year's lamb sold for Bw;CJuDtyDnlte,$2.F
......
"•Bmk;M;cbdlo Farmlll'l Buk;McClain.
$10. )ldloniW'~ Canie
Billoll,$2.10 llolzaoC!iok;
s.ialt Rouoh, $2.10, Jlloo11; $9.50 a pound
Sprina Hill Fum; Pauy N.Uy, $2, loon Wulfc; M.._ $15, Mdloaald'~ 8 - Salldt, $1.5,
The reserve champion steer was Amattds
12.10. Linda Womer, Auomey; side Hill~ x...ao -·mo. Bd .....,.,
B
d
Food!
d
Slflhlloulh,
$2.10,
a.- G11;
Aari Service;
Elolne ~Mcm'sSm pbaft.
.
purchased by Btg en
an Putmon,·Jl.20, Ridonour
Albon Saloer,
.... Nlilta.~~~. V..JI.•a CoNI·
for $2 a ~ound. The- animal 1110, Heme National Bank: AlbiD s.r....nto. •nal; ,John
Collina, R.C., 12. Bit ..... F.......,;
'
h
d
1
30
d
d
·
as
Home Natioail Bank; Jcaica Janey, $3, Williams
WCtg e ,
poun S an W
Loalioa: JenicollnOy, $2, Porter, Utdo ond BJ. Etvin, $1.30, McDonald'~- Calawoy,
owl)ed by John Collins. Last year stt.~,A-eyo;PauyNally,Sl.F....',Bmk: $4.40, Midw:r Maoblne; Anita Calawa~ ~1 . 15,
y• teer ld 1'or $1 95 a pound
Kelly Dalton, $:1.25, s- lnlunnco; B11n1 Dixon, Home Nlliat Bonk; Chrio R..., $1;10,
S S
SO '
•·
'
$2.60, Swioher ond Lohle; Melody Law,..co, er Lumber. Joe Brown, Sl, FtftBert Btnk;
Big Bend Foodland also pur· s1so. o.. N...r. Tn&gt;&lt;tins: Adam sh-. $2.90. Jeromoc Calawa7, $1.05, SUJU Fwl F1oar MW;
chased the reserve Champion hog Whole( I Auto Porto; Amond• Upton, $2.60, Brian Hol'fman, $1.075, Snoulrer'a F'• and. W..
·for $8 a pound.· The animal ; Mead
Piper; MllthewEvano, $2.6S, Norri•· ty; Marvin Edwuda. $1.05, Home Nau.ond Benk;
Northup Doda•Chryaler·Plymoudl; Mauhcw Joey Dillon, U.OS, Horace and Dorothy Xan;
of Mill·
weighed 243 pounds and was Ev~n~,$l.'!O,Fn&gt;dW.Cmwlr.,Fn&gt;dW.c..wm '""' Clilwoy, $!.06, WII!'Oiey
dleport; Alex. BtoWn, Sl, Farmen Bri.; Chanc::e
wned
by
Kayla
Gibbs.
Last
year's
'ond
Fred
W.
Crow
IV:
Tyler
lohnoon,
$!.10;
O
Home National Bank; Tyler Joluwon, $l.SO, Home Watson, $1.10. Whaley's A\J\OPanl; Robert Heft'.
animal sold for $3 a pound.
Nolionll Bonk: Noon~y Nally, 12.30. 1Mn ·, Gluo man, $1.10. Baum'• True Value; Ryan Buckley,
The reserve champion lamb SOld Service; Elaine Pwmon, $~.2.5, Soyre Produce; $1.10, Swilhor oond LOhoc; Julie B,.wn, $1, Fmn'or $9 .25 a pound, up from $7.50 a Jomie
Hupp, 12.20, Poor Boyo Fonn Semc&lt;: "' Bank: ldf Rankin. lt.CW: 0.... Apl Ser·
11
Melody Lawrence; $2.30, Farmer'• Bank; Jared vice; Lacey Buntin~o S.ll5,ltiMnM&amp;r'• BOUle
pound last year, was purchased by Hupp, $:1.10, Fumer"o Bonk; Miohello O'Noil, Gu; Josh Ervin, $.9S, Fanner' a B•nt: David
40, Frutl:
er.m...., MicheDe Bi11•U. Sl.!IO, Rankin, $.82, Wataon lol&amp;in&amp; and TNckiai;
Burlile Oi l and Citgo Stations. The 1:1.'
Willilml
t..uina: J...U.Hupp. $:1.25.Ken Rill', Tyocn R- $.17. Judae Fnod W. CIOW m. Smlilt
and An~ttel Aocountina; Alban ROICw $.12.
animal weighed 112 pounds and CellularOnc.
HOGS
.
was owned by Rebecca ScotL
~a:r:.:u~·;;.;A,;.~·s'~~-A~
Pricoallsted ... per pound.
·The grand champion pen of rabAric: Panerton. ·Qiand Cham£!:::, $10.75, County Livutock; We&amp;l'?'. Karr, $.17S. Cheater
Cudinal; Elylll ~.
e Otam· Aari Somoe; )...,.y Buct~oy, $.125, Home Nobits was purchased by Gene Wha· Vau~'•
pion, $8, BiJ Bend Foodlutd; Al)'lon P•llCinon, donal Bank; Li11 Hoffman, $.79, Tri County
ley and sold for $400. The animals $1.90, Valley Lumber; Arlo P•ttmon, $1 .60, Mu~ Billce Pooler', $1.60, Factm)'Of Lumber;
Bank; -Andrew Rollins, $1.75, Fanner'• Randall Burke, $ .8 1, Tri Caunty Moat; Laura
were owned by Jeanie.NeweU. Last FamMt's
Bank: Alr- Pat..,.., $1.10, Bonk One; Andy Brown, $.8S, Trl Count,. M;cat; Qlastit)' Jllde,
year's pen of rabbits sold for $380. Rcod, $1.70, McDonold'o; Gory Cooper. $1.90, Sl.2.5,loymor, Froonklin Pic=, $.175, vowa,.
Home National Bank, Racine- Riv~ City Farm Supply; Sherry Burke, $1.70, M.....W Hlll)lital; luait Pierce, Ul, Scca ln76; Oinaer Holcomb, $1.80, Downina, •urante or AlbanY; Brandon B~:~ckloy, $ .175,
Syracuse, purchased the reserve Hawk's
ChUck, MuUon 1nd Muuer In1urance; Nicole Homo lluional Bank; James Ch•pna•n, $.90,
champion pen of rabbits for $100. White, $1.60, Norrii-Nonhup Dodso; Bobby Meip Motel; Kim Pierce, $.IS, D1nicl Noech;
Koulf, $2, Krops; Tn.U Lodwick, Sl.IO, Tri· Jeremy Hupp, $1, Farmers Bank; Ja~ica BuThe animals were owned by Ryan Counl.y
Mcau; Al)'Ua Hoffman, $1.70, Randdl rinp, $.875, Rivu Cit.y Flllll. Supply.
Kauff. Last year's pen of rabbits Roben1; Bobby K1uff, $1.60, Mel Weese ;
RABBITS (Prke por pen)
Jeanie Newell, O.C., $400, Whaley'• Auto
M~tdlcw JUitice. $2. Dr. Dou&amp;].u Hunter; Stacy
sold for $230. ·
Wa~~m. S2.SO, Bak•md Son~ BQuipmeru; Cbria:
Ryan Kau ff, R. C. ~ $100, Home National
In the poultry division the grand Barrinacr, $1 .60, Birehfid.d FuncftfHome; An· Pans;
Bank; Ann KaufT, $60, Birchfield Funeral Home;
RolliN:, $1.60, Holter Htiltoin&amp;; Jflhnathan
Jeremy Cowdery, $70, H001e National Bank; Su·
champion chickens were purcllased drew
Hagerty, $2.75, llymar; Molils• Oul!lll, $1.40,
Tobin, $95, Home National Bank; Rebekah
by McDonald's for $500. The ani· Fmked Run SpotUm1n's Club: Maubew Junice. nn
Karr, $225, Peoples Bank; Bryan. Cowdery, $140,
Bank; and Stephc {irucset, $195, Farmcn:
mals were owned by Mike Guess. $2 Bank One; Kay Hunt, $2, Wh1ley's Aulo Fannm
Bank.
...
Part.
;
Kay Hunt, $1.90, H1wk'116; Amanda
The reserve
chickens

=

GRAND CHAMPION LAMB - Rlvenlde
Foodmlll1 and City Ice and Fuel purchased the
Grand Champion Lamb from Macyn Ervin for
$14 a pound at the 1993 4-H Junior Fair Live·
stock Sale at the Meigs County Fair .on Friday

I CarS,

'i!imt•- $tniiattl

evenlbll. Pictured, front, Macyn Ervin; Bac~,
Art Hartley Jr., Terri Pattenon, ~ger, ~all
·Queen Stephanie Sayre, Wool Prm~ess ChrlS!J
Drake Wool Prince Jonatban AviS and Obto
Di~r of Allricultuie Fred DaDey.

s-

...r-.. . _

u,....

IN '13 'fllliiZE
VII ¥·1

r..-.

Automatic Overdrive, V-8 Power, Air, PIS, P/8, Tilt, Cruise. Power
Windows, Power Locks, 4 capt. Chairs, Sofa Bed, Aluminum Running
Boards, Rally .Wheels, Indirect Lighting, Premium Wood Package. Fun
'"""""

/

Raised R~f1 J-8 Power, 10' Color TV, Air, Automatic Overdrive, PIS, P/8,
Till, Cruise, ArwrM cass, PNJindows, Power Locks, 4 ~- Chairs, Sofa/Bed,

~lli~;:·-0.~~

'15,811

~I

Ill-

'

.
,.

ty Fair on Friday ni11ht. Pictured are Pork
Princess MeUssa G!l~ Fair Queen Stephanie
Sa'yre~c PattersOn', ~JI:,':,iban and Michl
Kln11
orva111han's

....II_

II '131111111M

m.WPEIIP

2 Dr. Sport Coupe, P/8, 5 Sp. Manual Transmission,
Custom Cloth Bucket Seats. Steel BeHed Tires. ·

PIS, P/8 Sport Mirrors, Tinted Glass. AM/FM Stereo,
Reclining Bucket Seats, Well Equipped I

SiNerado Equipment Group, ~r Cond~lon, Split Bench Reclining
Seats. PIS. Pill. Till, Cruise. PM'Indows. Pllloor Locks. AM/FM
cassette, Chromeo Rear Step Bllmper, Deep Tinted G~ss. Ral~
Wheels, Loaded!

GMAC Fi~t T""' IJuter
Allowancs (it liiautod) ..... -1400

~;!fo%Wi9oii&lt;•
• • • • • •·• · ~1;i~ •
Tam Perkin Drsc.... .......... -SlOlT

Tam- Disc................ ·S992

uu•~~

988

Doc Fees. OMMlll!d'

15 488

aan"Mn

GRAND CHAMPION POULTRY
McDonald's or Pomeroy, Ravenswood and Rip·
ley, purchased the Grand Champion Poultry for
$500 from Mike Guess at the 4-H Junior Fair

'
Livestock
Sale at the Meigs Couoty Fair on Fri·
day night. l'ictured are Roscoe iod Saudee Mills
with Mike Guess.

IIIIIIIGPIITW: IIIII AII
Anti-lock brakes. Steel BeHed Aadial Tires. AMIFM
Stereo. Power Door Locks, Well Equipped.

4.3 Liter V-6, Power, PJt Condition, PIS, P/8, High-back
Reclining CIOI!1 BUCI&lt;et Seats, Electronic Tailgate Release, Rear
Window DeloO!Ier,frlt, Cruise,DelaY Wipers, AMIFM Stereo.
p235175Rt 5 Aiilsed White Letter Tfres. Aluminum WheelS.

Automatic, Air CondHion, PIS, P/B, AMIFM Cass .. Tin,
Cruise, P.Windows, Pttloor Locks, Pttlr1ver Seat, Rear
Window Defroster, Aluminum Wheels or Custom Wire

Wh~ C~ers, Lood:~

uu..J1

..J17'988

li51Piire..... ., .......... $21,039
0/lfionPk&lt;;Orso
.............-S/0110
-1800
Facrol)'
Reba~ ..............
Tam llul1n Dose......... ·$2.35r

.

Title Fees extra. Rebate

in sale

of new vmicle 111ted where

'on

1 888

S

1

IAIEW1

Jut Jlty/lil'l #I- Ill, '111111, 1111~ Ill Ill &amp;IIIII fll lulu.
Til flEE 1·18-lll·lfll • 411·1111 • lll·llff •lff-1141.
• Taxes.

GRAND CHAMPION RABBITS - Wha· -, ty Fair on Friday night. Pictured are Bunny Princess Christie Cooper, Jeanie Newell and
ley's Auto Parts purchased the Grand Cham pi·
Fair Queen Stephante Sayre. Back, Bunny:
on Rabbits for $400 from Jeanie Newell at the 4·
Prince Jeremy Cowdery and Gene Whaley.
H Junior Fair Livestcic:k Sale at the Mei11s Coun·

credil'. Not

'

M11day ·lltlniJ 1:111

IIUQl:llll:l
1errors.

' .
GnNn CHAMPION STEER- Vaughan's
Cardinal or Middleport purclialled the Grand
Cluultplou Steer ror $4.20 a pound from Jason
Pullins at the 4·H Junior Fair. Livestock Sale at
the Mel11s County Fair on Friday niaht. Pic·

'

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tund, front, Jason J.&gt;blllus.lJack, lion Vaughan,
Beef Prince Jeremy Calaway, Beer Princess
Anita Calaway, Michl King and Teresa King ·or
Vau11ban's CardinaL
'

DAIRY SWEEPSTAKES- Pictured are
dairy sweepstake wiDDers announced before ·the
start or the 4-H Junior Fair Livestock Sale at tbe
Meigs County Fair on Friday night. Front, 1-r:

Krisd Warner, Nancy NaUy, Beo Holter, Chris

Parker and Tricia Davis. Back, Mike Parker,
advisor, Chuck Parker, Paul Smith and Ed ·
Holter, advisor.
,
•'

�!
OH

August '22, 1993

Point Pl....nt, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH , Point Pleeunt, wv

Auguat 22, 1993

8

::-8--:-Lo-=st~&amp;:;.,:F...;o-=-und;.;.:..=l.:..7=='t=•=rd=SI=Ie==

Lost &amp; Found

,....,.., Duo" Ia lol 01 Food l'ound: Pua TvDo On Eaolorn ""
ew ~~eww. On • - ... 11r1ve, .......,,~
·

-Coif

Public Sail

8

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnhy

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

8

&amp; Auction

SUndlly nm• 9entlnel Page D3
11

Wentld to Buy

Help Wanted

::f.'~O~~\':"ti•

=

Cmzhtl ... hold Or &amp;toteol ,., ,.,,. 01 , .........
I~~. . Etc. a.liol A - 1 114 241

l'ound: Very Vacot 4 tomly Yanl 1a1o. 2m Jowott
HouNI,
AiMIIdontllr, ~=..,;;;..,:.~~=--=-:- :~.Town Ad, A"ff 8'17,
l.oel, lrowMnuttHiolor wtlllln All&lt; Far Jonlco Or To"Y, It-t: ALL Yonl 8oloo lluol Bo Pold In
- · DEAOUNE: 2:00p.m. At. 112, tml - h o1 Ambf-,
Bta lloor tat. Th_,., llowanl. 441-1114.
t11o doy tiolora tho od lo to Nn. 21ot
&amp;
22nd.
Fumhlh,
St4-441-0llll.
:..:·-~f·J.
Lool: ....... top af lwMIIy ldltlon • 2:00 G.m. t~en~. carp~~~, w.,_hllr W1 dmq_.. Aucltlert . . ,._ 111111=:.
Kenol aut.n Ad., r14.fll1407, Friar. .._.W .utlon • :00 I lift, and mort.
IUo ~Ohio 11t 3411112.
p.m. Soturcloy.
~ Md furJIItur., no
--------..:..--------~--...;.--.,...-...:.--------,-1-loneewryFJI.Iot,
lom too torgo or toa - •· w11
buy
ono
_
pioao
or
oomplote
-'••••• clefellle.
•·
A
l
t
o
Co&lt;Qrj.J::
a
' 6ALU,"• ... oltho
. Ill~
- . 114-:111 1111.

· PHILLIP

ALDER

CHAMPION PERCHERON STALLION. _;
Grand and Junior Champion Percheron StalUon
was awarded to Bill James at Monday's draft
bone show at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured

...'".. ...
••••

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.r. ~&lt; .

i - .. •

•••
--•••

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-BigBend
Foodlnd purchased the Reserve Champion
Steer trom Jolm CoWns for $2 a pound at the 4·
H J..-lor Fair Livestock Sale at the
Coun • ty Fair on Friday

By Pbiiiip Alder

••

~~~~!~;~~m~a~nager at Foodland,

J.

•

The defense
was farsighted ·

Beef Princess Anita
my Calaway, Fair Queen
John Collins.

Beef Prince Jere·
Sayre and

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I;., ...
I

Bridge can be such a frustratlnl
game. You see a deal !bat seet1111lo fit
Into a particular category-. You make
what you tbl!lk II the tutbook play,
butltlddenly your solld·lookla&amp; bOUle
of cardJ collapses. On tbla deal your
play wu 'WI',OIIISome players In ·Mauritltll at the
Bridge Federatloo of Alia and Middle
Eut Cbampionablps bad that feelJna:
after totlay's deal. Only one fOIIIId the

• , •. 1

Cover the Eut and South baadl. De1--''•• apl.lllt live diamonds, you
Ield the IJI&amp;de ace: ~even, nine, two.
How do you C!)Dtlnae?
Eut'1 reepoaae of one ao-trump
showed - In theory - a atrona epade
ralle. TbiJ milled two !IIAyen. Welt
bid a bopelea pme. And South deeld·
ed to take 1111 each-way bet. Perbapa
fiYII diamonds ftllld make; perhaps It
would be a cheap ucrlfice. .
After Welt cubed the lp&amp;de ace, bla
natural reactloa wu to lwitcb to the
ace and another trump, tryin&amp;to atop
~pade rulls In the d~y. But tbla
play caltll!d South no .pain.. He woo
trick three In band, liD-' the club
jack. cubed the club ace, ruffed . a
club, retumed to dummy with a spade
ruff and dllcarded bltr two Dll!jor-ault
l01ers oil dummy's club wbmers.
K.P. llalbran from, Sri Lanka
fOUDd tbe kllllnl defetlle. At trick two,
~ led a -.!spade, allowlnl dum·
my to ruff. After ruffin&amp;, declarer
·played a trump to band· Baakal'JD woa
. with the ace and
a tb1rd 1pa~.
Tbe trick bad to
but DOW dec:Iarer wu
In the dummv. He

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• ll'" ·•

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.:' -· .
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~- .-

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For Sale
Porter Methodist Church
by sealed bids. Bids will be
opened 30th Sept. Res~rve
right to accept or reject any
and all bids. For more
information call: 388;8684
or 388-8543

Announcem ents

r-

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG -

-Y'

.
.
~ Concesszonazre

'

!::threatens to
•' ~·sue state fair
•

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) : ·Several concessionaires at the state
• fair are accusing fair officials of
: · 'falsely advertising last year's atten: dance at 3.4 million when less than
.. --half a million people paid 10 attend.
;·
Alaskan artist Gary Kremen said
' he will file a lawsuit this week in
: the Ohio Co~ of Claims. He said
• others may join the lawsuit
National fair industry publica·
tions reported fair officials' atten·
t
dance figures of 3.4 million, which
would have made Ohio's fair the
''I largest
in the country. It was later
•• determined
that less than 460,000
paid to attend.
·
•
Last month, fair officials esti·
•t mated 1993 attendance would
•
• exceed 800,000. Fair officials now
say it could top 900,000 by the
: time the fair closes SWlday.
Kremen said he spent $1,800 to
get to the fair and exhibit his 62foot painting of Alaska's Prince
William Sound. He said he would
not have rented exhibit space had
he known the true attendance fig·
ures.
.
"These people are playing
games," he said Friday. "They say
they are the biggest, and then we
• find out once we get here they are
not''
Russ Rauch, the fair rental man·ager, said he never made any
; · promises.
• - " No way," he said. "That is
absolutely not true. I tell all our
i people here that we don ' t talk
: about attendance. I've been in the
• fair business too long to do that. ' '
•
Fair Manager Richard Frenette
said he has been honest about
; attendance.
•
" I can't answer for (Rauch), but
we don't solicit anybody by auen' dance," he said ... And' anybody in
: · ·this industry knows that those fig: · ures were exaggerated. That's why
• · -we are going back to telling the
: . ' truth:·
:
Kremen circulated fliers 10 con.cessionaires Thursday night asking
• them to meet 10 discuss attendance.
: . "About 15 people anended the meet·
• .ing.

.

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Agreat deal of personal emphasis may be
focu sed on improving your financial lot in
life in the year ahead. When you stop merely thinking about it and start taking actions,

thai's when things could begin to happen.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today when dealing with subordinants leave them room to
use their imagination and make their own
Monday,Aug. 23, 1993
decisions. If your directives are too e~~:actmg, they won't comply with them. Leo, treat
Conditions that have a direct affect upon you rself to a birthday giH. Send for your
your materia l well bei ng should sh.ow Astra-Graph predictions for the year ahead
marked improvements in the year ahead . by maili ng $1 .25 and a lo ng , sell -

Both luck and ambil1on will help you gain addressed. sta mped envelope to Astra·
your aims.
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 4465,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22.) Sell-doubts are New York. N.Y. 10163. Be sure to stale
your worse enemies today and they must

your zodiac sign .

be dealt with in positive ways or else you VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sej&gt;t. 22) When you quit
could easily lose any momentum you gen- waiting for things to happen today and
erate . Major changes are 8head for Virgo begin to take positive, assertive action , only
1n the coming year. Send for your Astra- then will your depression and self-defeating
Graph predictions today . Mail $1 .25 and a thoughts begin to leave.

long. self-addressed. stamped envelope to l1BRA (!!ep1. 23-0ct 23) Be very carelul
Astra-G raph . cJo this newspaper. P.O. Bmc
4465 . New York . N.Y. 10163 Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.

are aggressive or dictatorial when dealing
with others. you are apt to evoke reactions
you won't li ke. Treat associates with the

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You hav e same considerations you expect
excellent leadership qualities today , but SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Instead
you might use them only a's a last resor1
1nstead of expressing them in all situations.

of going out of your way to help a fnend
with h1slher problems today, you might pre-

SAGITI ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) It you're tend you're totally unaware of them and go
not a good 11stener today . you could be

yourown.way. Lateryou'llregret yourploy.

aski ng for problems , because you'll hear CAPRICORN (t;lec.
only what you want to hear and little else.

2~ ·Jan.

19) Being

drawn Into another person's complicated

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Treat aflai rs might leach you

a quick lesson

fnends 1n your usual considerate manner. today. You won't bjli caught off guard a secbut be very careful tha t you 're not taken and time.
.
advantage of aga1n today by someone who - AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. ·19) A valued
d1d a numOer on you in the past.
relatiOnship could require extremely diplo·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) In order to ma11c handl ing at th1S time . Even though
ach1 eve important ObJB CI1ves today . you this association is prec3rious, kindness can
must rema1n focused on your targets at all help mend the misunderstandings,
11mes. If you deviate even bnefly. you could PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If pro perly
get way·ott cou rse .
used. your deterrriination. cOuld be a very

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your judg- valuable asset today If misused, there is a
ment IS l1kely to be a bit sounder tl1an per· chance you might persist with something
sons w11h whom you·u be mvolved today. unproductive that should be scr8ped.

Unforlunalely. however. you m1ght not ARIES
believe th1s yourself.

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Today 1f

(March

21-Aprll

19)

Overindulgence could play havoc with your
yo~

.,"YSiem today. so m'ake up your mind to fol·

work 1n fits and starts you will severely min- tow common sense health procedures. The
1mize you r producti'JIIY and errectiveness. temporary pleas ure of elCCesses Won ;t

What you'll do. you'll do well. but you m1ghl equal feeling good.
not do enough of it.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Domestic situ·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be very care· ations might irritate or frustrate you more
ful today how you treat associates . If you than usual today owing to a lack of patience
show partiality in any form . It might cause and to!erance. Developments won't be as
someone who presently thinks you 're a baQ as.you'll make them out to be.

'

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good guy to lose respect for you.
GEMI!'II (May 21-June 20) You're not likely
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It's very impor·· to be too trusting today of persons you do
ta~t today that you pace yourself properly not know too well . If you 'need assistance

'
'••'

than you should. If you do. it'll negatively
affect your overall perlormance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Ex~ell enl
judgment on your behalf will be required

als you know and like.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do not .use or
deplete funds today for frivolous things you
have earmarked lor something serious

today , because there are some situ ations

you'll need later. Once they've been spent,

•

.

•

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'

Don't take on more tasks or assignments with something special, deal with individu-

~

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where you should be a bit of a risk taker they could be hard to replace .
I

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Old,
jlood Wotch Dog; Modlum
Slzld, Mlxod Dacl To Good
Homo In Country,'l514-2C5·584D
BllwMnD.D.
Smelt pall Pomoranlon, good

-·pol

e7We41.

The Card Shop
ball cards supplies Comic
.Sooks 10 a.m.·9 p.m. Mon.· Sal.
· .403 2nd Ave. GallipOlis, OH
446-1414

for older.,.,....,, 304-

&amp;wool, lwll old, lomolo, puppy,

omoll mlud
brMd, 101 - · &amp;
-lng.
-.e75-7881.
Ta good hamo, 2 tomato 112
Auatrlotlon Shepard pupplos.
304-t1&amp;-3841.

Thank . you RICHARD

ssssssssssssss

RODERICK

for buying

my 1993 Market Hog.
Chad Slone
'

Furniture ,on The T

'

1984 Buick Century 3.0 L
V-6 Cream four door iri
good condition $1 ,200.00 Call 446-3498

Just ~rrived,
Semi Load of Furniture at
Unbelievable Prices!

Wanted! Farms to Sell
Raccoon, Perry &amp; Walnut
Townships.
Qualified Buyers! Needed
immediately! Please contact
Judy DeWitt; Century ?1
Inc.
Big Bend Realty,
Russell D. Wood, Broker.
441 -0260 or 446· 7101 .

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NOW IN STOC

•

SUITES....................Starting .At 5299°0

14-2 PC.
OCCASIONAL CHAI,RS ....................549°0·s89°0
SLEEPER LOVES EATS ••••••••••••••••••• ~••••••••5269°0
SOFAS •••••••••••••••••••••••~•••••••••••••••••••••••• s22soo
RECLINERS.........................~................5 169~0
3 PC. SUITES.........·..................~...........5399°0
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WHILE THEY LAST
Quantities Umlted - So Hurry- Sold Cash

Notml
1-11-IS
• 7
.A75 1
• J 71
• A Q J IS

•

•

I

THANK YOU Union Stock
Yard of Hillsboro, Ohio for
purchasing my 1993 G.C.J .F.
Market Steer.
Wade Caldwell

AIR CONDITIONING
CHECK-UP
Inspect Hoses. Freon
Pressure, Clean Condenser
Fin
PARTS and FREON
ADDITIONAL AS REQUIRED
'
$24.50 .
SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
446-2285

Homecoming - ProvideJJc e
Missionary Baptisi Church Teens
Run -Road Sunday 10 am Melvin
Mock Speaker · Special Singers
Lunch at noon Jim Lusher-Speaker
afternoon Everyone Welcome

•

&amp; Carry Basis

Minor blema, Some Just Overstock.

)

•

· Call .446·2342
or 992·2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

-

Wanted to Do

18

nlt!!UY- =~All OUr ........

-

Or cc u1oe.
lat8
o1
Jlloio
llorkot- _....Ed ........

ao.
2

·

.Itt I I

.JI2

.KUS

U2

tAS
.KI

.10742

.

.QIO

- . Wol:uy-

""'* •• lol

Oon,
Willlllng

PAIL IIDUW

•u•

Color

ar. miNed and

•u

tKQ10184

loved v.-ry much.
Yo11 w.-.. such a

Vu!Derable: Both
Dealei': West

- t i e.

Nortll
Db!.

Pill
Pill

Openin1lead: + A

Eu1

I NT
Pill
Pill

Love U.
Your family

prayers, ftowers, cards,

phone calls and food. We
esplcially thank Or.
mora, Or. Simon, Batty
Martin, and Pleasant. Vailey
Hospital Starr. Th• Rev.
OIIMy Cobum, Rev. Emle
Perkins and Waugh Halley
Wood Funeral Home. We
appreciate your conHnued
raye,. In the daya ahead.
Mey God Bi881 You All
Children and
Grandchildren

446-8554
Thank you Harold Saunders
for buying my 1993 Fair
Steer.
Bryan l . Brumlieid
River Valley F.F.A.

1987 Citation 18'
Fiberglass boat. Open
Bow 130 HP In/Out

Tim Caldwell

Rising Stars 4-HClub

Make your Sears
Charge payments at

Pt.
W. Va.

Western Auto in
Pleasant,

LAYNE FURN ITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR ........ .......... .............. .'76
FIRM .......................................... •aa
EXTRA FIRM ....................... ...... '98
ORTHOPEDIC
KING SIZE SETS ...........'350 &amp; UP
QUEEN SIZE SETs'....... '275 &amp; UP
BUNK MATIRESS.............'46 &amp; '89
BED FRAMES .. ,.......... ... .'25·'35·'50
MON. THRU SAT. 9·5 PH. 446-0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE
FREE DELIVERY

The family of
TRUSALE.
CARRUTHERS
would llka to expr•u
our alncer• •
raclatlon to tha many
lrlenda,
nelghbora
and ralallvea who
Mnt food, flower•
and lent aupport
during the
and
lou of our lov.-d - ·
Special thank• to
R•v. H•fner, Eva_ &amp;
Don
Carruthers,
Marian Chlo
and
Robin Schltller..
Slnc•ra!y,
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Cacll
N•w•ll, Opal Baker &amp;
Elmer Daniels

epp-

Thank you Danny &amp; Kim Westmoreland
or Westmoreland Family Care Center,
Mason, WV and Chef's Galley,
Gallipolis, Oh. for purchasing my 1993
Market Steer at the Gallia Co. Jr. Fair.

_

Uo \'our - .

Mojor
TV'o

Appl.._,

llolrigorot«o,

'-&amp;:~. ~~~-..

A National Marketing

llloi-....

~--=- Ampa,

JI

D'eAuto Porto ond Solvogo,

:t=l"* .... ltsucia.

Junk ..,., any condltlars, 1114182·71&amp;3.
Wo!Mod otondlng tlmbor, top
IJik:M paid, !roo ootlmotn,
loonoed &amp; - - logging,
*'4-111-3011 ar • '"'·
W.nlod lo bur- ....... uud c...

C&lt;IIY--

T--lo~ln

...... Ho
Own
- .. Roho.

1011.

114-2fll.

--Ring ..turof 11110 -or, 114- -:- - - - - - - - 11 Help Wanted
.aa,

1 Cerci of Thenks

We would like to
L --:, ------..,.-_--II
bad to l01e a heart or club trick for one thank ev..-yone Who
helped. In any way
delellle.
during the recent
trea-clY that atruck
our family. The
food, CMda, frlende
who e~~hcl, flow.ra,
thoughte, prayer'•
and everything haa
juat , been o'ler·
whelming. The only
thing w• Clln eay Ia
THANK YOU from
Many thanks to M/M Mike
the bottom of our
McCalla Gallipolis Tob. &amp;
hearta. May God
Candy for purchasing my
bleu and keep you,
1993 GCJF Market Steer.
you'll never b•
Kelly Caldwell
forgotten.
All m.-mbere of th.THANK YOU
Pitul and Brad Durst
HarOld Montgomery, ,county
family
Commissioner lor purchising my
1993 4th place tobacco project at
the GCJF.
Th• family or THELMA
Kelly Caldwell
SCHOONOVER wlah to
expreoa oti'r oincere
appreciation to who
Southern Auto Sales
extended their sympathy
and klndneea 10 the 1081 or
OUR LOT IS FULL
our
(llOthar
and
Come in for
glllndmother. We want to
thank everyone who
"GOOD DEALS ON
remembered us with

GOOD WHEELS"
701 2ndAve.
rGallieons, OH

--·-~ontlquo
lqueo.

,._ .......

. In Memory Of

on hla 8tlt blrthc;lay
August 22, 1813. You

SOOTH
.QS2

. . . . . . . . . . 1Dr: a tied •GMW~~rw..- ~

- - culd
IUmlon. Rloertruo

In Memory

EAST

WBrl'
.AJ 1015

$5950.00 446-4477

how you deal with a frie nd today 1n an
invo lve ment where the expenses are
shared. This is an extremely sticky area

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Financial trends where a problemcould erupt.
are m1xed for you today. Your probabililles SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Today il you
lor acqu1si tion look ve ry good in some
instances. wh1le your possibilities lor loss
are also strong 1n others. Be careful

Giveaway

111111 Chow Dog, 3 YMra

3 Announcements
·. Fair on' F:riday night. Pictured, front, Kayla
Ant por!!OII w - -pormloolon
Gibbs. Back, Kevin Eastman, Foodland, and
troipUolng an tho
or
Pork Pridcess Melissa Guess and Fair Queen
Nlxlno on WhhM Hltf Rei In But•
lend will tio --011.
Stephanie Sayre.
• OIRLSUI UYEUI 24 HAS IDAYIII
and others where you should be very con- TALK ONE ON ONEI , ___
AsTao.aaAPH
servative .
aeta lilt. to04 t3-M/Ioln. Bo 11 Yra. Proool Company,
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) A close friend's IIOH31o0115.
feelings might be hurt today if you fail to
show him/her the same coo peration this Uvo 24 Haura /Do!ltl Tolk To
-llul Olllalll 11100 110.07711
person has consistently shown you in the Ext. 8048 ,13.M Pot Min. lluot
BERNICE
Bo11Vr&amp; PIDNII Co.I02-f31·
0115• .
BEDE OSOL pasI.
Sunday, Aug.22,1993

Big Bend
l l"oodland purchased tbe Reserve Champion Hog
• "· for $8 a pound. from Kayla Gibbs at the 4-H
: ,. " Junior Fair Livestock Sale
at the Meigs County
.

.

4

THANK YOU
Elks Lodge #1 07 for
purchasing my 1993 GCJF
Market Steer.
Toni Caldwell

~"::.":b........, Thru .

n

7:GIPMjj

w--.

BRIDGE

•
with him are Horse--Prince anil Princess Kyle
. Ord and Jamie Erwin. A mare, Dot (not picturecl);'oWiled by James, also ·captured Junior
Champion ¥are. ·

, , , ,

Help w.ntlcl

11

mn...

IP
The family of Morris

Rucker Neal wish ro
uprr:ss their deep
apprr:ciario• · tO all our
rrdatives, neighbors and
rie•ds for the Prayers,
visits, the food, flowers
and canis daring the loss
of our beloved hiuband
and father. We arr: very
thankful to Rev. Harold
Gracewell a•d Rev. Steve
Fuller for rheir consoling
words and for being wirh
us. We arr: mo•l gratefol
IO Fred, Joan,
Wood for their services
a•d to the organist and
singer. To the nephews
who served as c/JSket
IN.artrs, we thank you. To
· those who sent monetary
gift&lt; to the Shrine
crippled children a•d
barns Hosp i tal i•
memory ofour loved one,
we si•cerely thank you .
We app reciare your
com;em and thanks sO
milCh to each of you.

a•••

/

T011 , _ Pold: All Old U.S.
Ccilno, Rl~ llfvtr Colno,
ColnL II.T"'- Coin Shop,
111 A-uo, Ooltlpollo.
Wlnlod to buy: uud -lo
homee. 114 441 0171 ,

LOOKING FOR A REALTOR (SALESPERSON)
To mov.- up to Managem.-nt and run a local
Real Estat.- Office. Hire your own
Saleap.-opl.-. You will be the Main Person In
•this Agency. H lnter'ested, I wpuki like to Talk
to you, ONE TO BE SELECTED. ALL
INQUIRIES STRICTLY CONRDENTIAL
Write down your Real Elltal.- e~~;p.-rl.-nc.. and
something about yourself. Send to: CLA 282
c/o Galllpolla Dally Tr1bun.-, 825 3rd Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Employment Serv1ces
11 Help Wanted •
AYONI AU ...._ ollnl

IIIOMY or want • aarwr, elthlr

_or 1«10..Ia
llorttvn.
GII. . ·-

10-otora-To
S.M T!&gt;ra 6 Olllo For Chrtotmoo,
.No Con=Or Dotlntfng, .
.,_ KM
c.tllloty 114~.

11111'11

·Cordl,.l Fnr~t~W ~.T.R.
DrfVota - i d "" • ...
......,
In HUII'Icono, WV, muot
. hon
O.T.A . .....,_pullIng o nn tnler, iaad otortlng
par, lolo
oaUifNI*d, lluo
~ Blue Shlokl, Inc., otop oil
pay, ley ower PIV. brukdown

1,..

Research Company
will be conducting a
rf!search project In
the community In the
fall . If you . quality,
you would be paid
for your · time. If
Interested
1·800·
486-1542 •

Registered Dletldara
Local Nursing Home requires services
of
I
an Ohio Licensed Dietician. AD should
be experienced iri assessment of
geriatric patients and familiar with rules
of documentation for Medicaid and
Medicare. Hours are flexible, 20-25 hrs a
month. For more information, Please call
Linda Briggle, Administrator, (S14) 992·
6472 Overbrook Center, Middleport, Oh •

.-1

~~~~ l r---------HE_L_P_W~I-Irr_E_D_________

Child .,.,. -

=

1or ohlft.

- · _,... • owntnao.

=:ri:~::,

12 &amp;'K

ELECTRICIAN
:.=':W.ap:~ngo

.!.....~ .

Kno:Aidg• 01 ~1,

-

w....,. ._..,._
410
¥oil
Dtotri!Malars
Equtp.
.-. N; Al\cf oc Mcularw,

= : .: :;.

Mculor llortora With 111 Vol
Control,
Contn:l
AIO EYH -- PnndA"::,1

~.J: 1 dgo

01 PLC'IIo lloolriublo. - -

On Socand- Thlnllhlll. Pay
Aolo t't0.11 To 10.15 Dopondlng
On Expartonco. 11 tnt-ocr.
, _ Bond ~tM. . To: Ttuo
P1111busy Company, P.O. lox
U1, Woll-. Ohla 41182, An
AAIEEO Emplapr.

FLATIED
DRIVE~niiMI
Frataht c.nt. . hu on tunffy 1or llotbod tho! lo
MCOncl to nonel Do. you own
,.... own traotoi? Hon yau
thaught obo:.l buying yaur own

~=wl!t :::.ng.u:

=:J

Conllnat tocfoy ot
1.10C)o1211222 and aak for Tim.
WE HAVE rr ALLI

In? Tllon coli

OoUio -llolfll -

llloll Hu
lmmocllato Dpalllngo For Buo
DriVota hMituto Buo
llegtnnlng Aoto 01 Por
lo ...10. ApjJiconlo With Couss-!
~~~erelal DrtYir'a Uce11M Pnfer.
. reel. Appflcotlono Con Bo Plcllocf
Up AI WoodiM:I eont.ra, Inc.
For AddnloMt ln1ormotlon, Colt
IM 111 IIJlll, 1:00 • 4:00, Mono
dor • ,_,_ Oolllo -Molal Hood
IIWI, A Dfvlolon 01 W'oodlond
Conlot,lo An AA IE EO Empf~or.
Gallo ........ Hood llort Hoo An
1m-lot· Clllonlng In Oolllo
Couuuty Far II Fomlty Sorvlcoo
AIR. ~~ MUll P . ••
An
~- - In loclfll
Work IAololod Flold Hold A
Valid Drfnra IJconoo. Tl:o

11r1-·•·

-toto

The Gellla-MIIIge Community Action Agency Ia
currently looking to hlra a HoUHing
Rflhabllll811on SpaclaHtlt to flU a poaltlon wllh lha
Bld-11 Houalng Program. Thtt candldalll ehnuld
have four (4) yure experience In _houalng
conetrucllon, preferable houelng rehabilitation"
whh HUD or other government funchid programe;
aupervleory experience In houelng tradea, and
.-neltlva to the n..da of low·lncoi!MI famll....
. current ulary echedule.
Salary Ia baNd on th•
Send niiUIIMI to: RON CRAWFORD, Gaiii•Melga
CAA, 8010 North -State Route 7, Box 272,
Cheahlra Ohio • 0 "20
'
...., •
The Gallla·Melga CAA Ia an equal opportunity
employer.

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate
openings
for
registered nurses to work In
Special Care Unit. Full and part.
time positions•
. Salary commensurate with
experience. Exellent fringe benefits.
Contact:
Rhonda Dailey,
Director of Nursing

lloglnnlna Roto 01 Pay lo $1.21
lilt. For Addhlanol lnformotton,
Colt s~-111. 1:00 • 4:00,

115 E.

Stall, A Dlvlolon 01
Woodland Conlon, lo An

614·992·2104, Ext. 213

llonllaJ • Friday. Galllo • llotao
Hood

~EO~r~
MANUFACTUAERES

REP NoRop Ta
-c.tl On -nto In Your AroL
Hltfl lnailiiiO Polontlol. No
Travof Or . 111-1 Soteo. 1·214tloMI .rowotry Co. -

~'»811.

-

!Col'- · Hofp Wllh
And Occilllonof
HeM ..am gg,

,_Chi -~

-•ork
I111Yelttlna.

ProlitTod.'Pay Noaatloblo. Good
Jail Fot Doim STudoftl, Apart.

. - Wllls-fn· Working ~
~nd A - Ta: CLA 214.
clo Ooillpofto Doltv Tribune, 125
Thlnl Avos:,., Oolllpotlo, OH
41131.

need• II 2 cuhlerl, eapertenc.
~~~Locket, Lotout,

Pout-Time.

Clorfcoi.Polnt

-no

---·0-.
.
1-... -111-., _ Company 1o

part-tlnso • - • hOip t a - Iii

I mulll PIIWii . . . . . Fledall
~lolly

_

.... ...,. 11111'111

1n "" -tono, K , _

ona

,_.._.pariOdo, Muothovo

•-'"':co
Ing •

dooltng - worko toflot or -hlor

· mp oneltaee

for

eccunt• OMh

"'Illridllna.
Muol tio - te tytJO
40 WPM ond ho" oxpart-

WI , . _ . oomput- Good
- - Md vortoelellltlo a -·

Rotolo 7_.,..., Only- oook·
1!'1 poll-tlnlo oppty.
ltind dotoitod ...... - ·
lng ............ lab hlotory
,.
Point
_
n
i
x~~=
11-1'1; :100 lloln
P1

't, WY 2UIO E

ADA.

Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~~~::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::!
Post-baccalaureate Program Coordinator

.
I'
Position: Post-baccalaureate Program Coordinator
(Han-time, Grant Funded through August
1996, whh possibility of renewal)
Available: August 17, 1993
Salary: $13,000·$15,000
Minimum Qualiflcationa: Master's degree preferred.
Bachelor's degree and some graduate work required.
Two to four years work experience in education
administration necessary; work with undergraduate
minority students preferred. Ability to work effectively
with dive~se racial groups _ essential. Excellent
organiza1ion and oral and written communication skills
necessary. Familiarity with biological sciences and
medical school curricula helpful. Good personal and
academic skills desirable. Basic work proceasing
COflllUter skills if!llorlant .
Delldline: Credentials, fdrmalletter of application, and
list of three professional references must be received
by August 30, 1993. Send to VictoriaS. McFadden,
Office of Human Resources, Ohio University College
of 'Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall West,
Athens, Ohio 45701 . (614) 593·2546.
Ohio \,Jnivershy Is An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative
_Action Employer

\

�Ia, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Sentinel

-=

- 11• w.nt1c1 to Do

-'

; .,J

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

- -=

31 Homes tor Sale

31 HomMior Sale

_,__:LondConlrod.

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

:V~d.":~

--WI-W

-..IUglll .......
... ~ ~~ Aaald•nllll. liM:

.... 271, C.lf t14 341 ......
UU New a l1dloom Home. 1112

Ook~-

al0.21 llonii'IIY
441-1113 .... Or ft4 114 4101
Allor 7 !'.II.

A.OOO. 114-441-1:1&amp;2.

...

-

P-. -

t4,000,

14'dl' 2 loti-

Control
Air, Pordl,
~
Cloon,
· Dryer,

room, llrick, 1 1J2ml o11
SondhiA Rd, .,.. old, 1112 .......
-room, 1 0 - $77,100.
J04.C71.1210.

'~

-:

: '

• ·
:

~

2bdmL oport"'""'" In
=~. dopoolt I YIUIIIoo. (2)
POmeroy, 12~ 1210; tr~U.r ._

For ,....., need roonwm.t. to
lhlrli 3 bednaom tl'llllr, no
~. no ~~~~~-. ~ $1!10
2 · · - Unllilled mobile nwwlll .."y,114-1124MI.

·,ou do --poaployoukMwond
1101'
monoythrough tho
ttt0lf uniM you ho.. ~~-lgllod
tho~
'
Lllelll ...,. Phone - : St,200
A W.... Po4ontlll, Prlcod To
W.1act 4117132..

pto,:-=,

-

' w.... Po4onlllil.- Sotl.1-

-

MEDICAL BlLUNG

Your OWn llicomo llou

Fall,_ AI Homo, OWn B....

,.,•• Dolly, DoUNnlood.
F- Dohlllo, :112-:IIWIOO, Ell.
2117.
\._lclloog Roule: For Solo.
Strong, Bolld Cloth BuolnMo.
High ,.,..., Local Lactllone.
NeW E•dprneut. 1100 214
Yond.

Real Estate

31 Homes lor Saki '
2 ballroom houM, lull ~'

mont. 104-111-1481.
3 hdrooma FR, Attached
~ 2 ,.;;, Building sno,
Gardin Routo 160 Aroo, ..2,!00,
114-388-1108.
3 lldrooma, 2 81th&amp;, 2 Car AtOlr~ga,

t.cMd ·

Outbuilding,

Bldwoll Portor School - · 114-

3111'7504.

All real estala advel'11slng In
thiS newspaper Is subject to

the Federal Fair Housing M

olt968 which makes n llegal
to advertise •any preference,
Imitation or dlscrlmlna11on
based on race. cobr, religiOn,
sell familial stalus or national
· origin, or any lrftntlon to
make artJ such preterence,
llml1atlon or Qlsalmlna11on."
Thi s newspaper wiP not

knowingly accopl
advertisements tor real estate
which ts In violation Of the
law. Our readers are hereby

lnlonnod lhat all dwellngs
advertised In this newspaper
aru available on an equal

.

a-a

.

·~1*·
2bdrnL .,..... tcitll eleotrlo, .,.

UNKIND
TAVERN
FESTAL
WOODSY
ISLAND
HEIFER
TELEVISION

Fum.._.

[ffl I iGJ!

. 107

llooond, Doulo&gt;ollo, .,.,. loth,

UtiiMioo Plld,. t114111o. 114-4414411 Aftor 7 P.ll.

Real Estate General

'·

i•
$115.84 por inonth, now 14' wldo

mobUe home, lncluelee delivery,

rent.

..........

·-

Aoro Flot, $7,000. Call Aftor 5
P.ll. 114-441.f114.

1

Yard Sale

Yanl Salt (Estate of lhotla Halll
611 s. 211L .... Mllklleport, o. •••••• 3 ..,
Stpta•lltr Ill. I 2111111 t:OO •·•· -6:00 p.-.
1972 Norris Mobile Home 12'x 61'. Lot 58 x
96.25, K~chen table and chairs, 2 beds, rocker &amp;
Chair, refrigerator, automatic Maytag washer,
singer electric sewing machine, book case, 2
drawer filing cabinet, metal utility table, roaster
oven, misc. ho.usehold nems, books, pocket
knives, electric fans, tools, electric lawn mower,
weedeater, metal shelving and many more nems.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

HUTCHINSON AUCIIONINC.
ANTIQUE AUOION
SUNDAY AliGUn 29 AT 10:00 A.M.
ALBANY OHIO
PREVIEW 1:30 a.BI. DAY OF AUOIOII
45 •illS east of Chillicothe
Located 11 miles - • • of Athena Ohio. Take US
50 &amp; 32 weal and exit onto 50 weal towards
McArthur Ohio. Auction Ia a quarter of a mile on
the left. Signa posted.
Out of ~tate Checks require a bank letter for
acceptance.
Oak 3 pc. bedroom au ite; two ornate oak
highback beds; two atepback cupboards; two oak
curved gla11 china cupboards, one with clawfeet
and lions heads; oak highboy dressers; oak
dreners w/mirrors; 48 ln. S roll top desk; 4 tin pie
aafe; 2 door bookcase; 2 door oak wardrobe;
wuhatanda; Reppert atone jara wlfreehand;
donaghho jars; Jackson county court houaa jar;
freehand jars: ·so other atone jars and juga;
pottery, roHville, weller, hull art, van brlggle, two
am. rookwood vaaea; oil lampe 2 northwood
carnlvai piece•: and many unlisted Items. See full
ad in Augull 23 Antique Week.
1T~nma: Cash, check, or traveler• checks w/poaltlve
10. Food available. Clean modern facility
w/reatrooma. Smoke !rae environment. Other
consignments arrlvlitg to late to be advertised.

luctlo-r Mark Hutchl111an 61•·698·6706
licensed
ancl 8oncltclln Ohio
&lt;
ludnt .. Partner Frank Hutchinson
61.·592 ..3.9

.

NEW FREE QUALITY HOMES IQQK SHOWING NEARLY ALL
LOCAL REAL ESTATE LISTINGS, IN COLOR, IS NOW
AVAILABLE. PLEASE STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR VOUR
· FREE COPY.

, ......... Rt 1!...- ... Ctydo
Iowen, Jr 304-I,.,.:D:I&amp;. ·
.....
on for
Royllwn
Rd,
......,.blo notrlol-. county
water, Information mailed on ,..
quell, :J04..1'11.12A, piMM no
olnglo wldo trolloro.
l.oto
• otructlon

DON'T IIIII SEEING THIS HOlE I EXCELLENT
OF NEW LOCKS AND OHIO RIVER ARgl.. OVER AN
ACRE'LOT WITH INGROUND POOL. LARGE PATIO
AREA. 3 8EDROOI,IS, 2'/, BATHS, MASTER BEDROOM HAS PRIVATE BATH AND DRESSING AREA.
FORMAL LIVING ROOM W/FIR,EPLACE , FAMILY
ROOM W/FIREPLACE, RECREATION ROOM "
EQUIPPED KITCHEN, NICE FORMAL DINING AREA,
CEN. AIR COND., ATIACHED GARAGE, MUCH MORJ:I
CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS
EXCEFTIONAL HOME.

Rentals

41 Houses for Rant

YOU DON'T GIVE UP CONVENIENCE FOR PRIVACY
HEREI ROOMY TRI LEVEL .. HAS 9 ROOMS .. 3
BEDROOMS.. 2 1/2 BATHS.. LOTS OF KITCHEN
CABINET SPACE .. DINING ROOM .. FAMILY ROOM,
OFFICE OR DEN .. WOODED LOT.. APPROX. 5 MILES
. FROM CITY. . RIVER VALLEY SCHOOLS .. ADDAVILLE
ELEMENTARY.. OWNER IS RELOCATING AND HAS
PRICED THIS HOME FOfl QUICK SALE!

2 Bocfroom With Qarogo And
Btumet.t. lAI• or Storao- On
II. Rt. 141 $310/11a. Dopoolt And
Roforoncoo, 114-4411-11518.
3 Bodroomo, 2 Balha, FI!OI
Avonuo, GoUipolla, Wotor, s-r
P1ld, $37!51Mo. Re,.,.ncM A•

Exc. Victorian wMe marble lop oval table, cherry wash
stand w/double lowel bar, fancy oak washstand, Hi
Boy oak chest , several oak dresser's, sma.ll laney
walnut 3 drawer chesl, jelly cupboard , round oak
pedestal dining poker table, square oak lable, oak
knockdown wardrobe, childs oak desk. primitive grain
bin, several trunks. laney one drawer stand walnut, 2
liar stand, oak hat rack, primitive childs chair, oak coat
rack. 2 primitive slools. early cone boHom rocker, old
mahogany stands, library table, spineH desk, S4 B&amp;H
Brass oil lamp wlfrosted shade, roseville and hall
polery, several stone crocks, jars, and jugs, some
w/writing. toy clown noise maker, fancy bicycle bells,
several nice casl iron p ieces, boxes of nice glassware
including carnival. cranberry, and a~ glass. boxes of
old china and collectibles. old cast iron lamps, several
nice quilts, old piclures and frames, boxes of old
christmas lights and dec oralions , silverware, old
remington knife w/she alh , several guns, and many
more old ~ems .

..

Car
One owner; 19n Volkswagen Rabbh good running
condition

From

the

at the Cafe.

Mustard• Auctio• Service
JCI!cllson, o•io
Pre1to1 Mu1tarcl luctlontar
614·216~5168

Apart.-o,
553
Socond
Avonuo, Qalllpollo. OH 45131
Youc:horl ond Corllfk:oloo, Hud
Approvod. Equol Houolng Opportunity.

Nlcoly Fumlohod Aport.-,

1 br, nut tD Ubrary, p1rtdng,

'.

COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM RANCH SETIING ON
APPROX. 10 ACRES. EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH AMPLE
CABINET SPACE, SIDE PORCH, 2 CAR GARAGE.
LAND SUITABLE FOR GARDENING, PASTURE.
LOCATED IN ADDISON lWP. $52,000.

CITY DWELUNG- CO'l:f TWO BEDROOM HOME. HAS
LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS ON THE LAWN. EAT·
IN KITCHEN WITH NICE CABINETS. COUNTER TOP
RANGE, BUILT-IN OVE.N. BACK PORCH. $28,000. .

3 Bod100mo, Uppor R - 7,

o.po.tt,

8,.......188, Or814-44U885.

3br., full baMment, 1 blth,
,.,.rencee, S400 .depo.tt,
$400Jmo. 304-175-1743 or 8755155.

•

control hoat, olr&lt;.'!'loronco ,.
qullod. 114-441.0.,..

Avalloblo ooon, new 3br. homo,
rot. I ~. no polo. 304-8755162.
Nlce1 2br, hou•, AppJe OrO'Q.

HIDEAWAY . - BEAUTIFUL WOODED AREA, .
SURROUNDS THIS PROPERTY. 1984 SCHULT
MOBILE HOME .. 14'X65', 1'/, BATHS. DECK. 24'X24'
GARAGE. APPAOX. 18 ACRES. $211,000.

304..,75-1761 or 175-tUT.I ohor

5pm.

5

~·

·
,

'.•

.·•

llanoi'

and
.......,.
Apartmonlo In lllddloport. From

Coil__..

EOH .
llldclloport,_ Ohio, - h 81., 1
room
on10ionoy
fumlohod
opo~~~~ld, rot. a
$30~

3 BEDROOMS, 1'/, BATHS, FAMILY ROOM IN
BASEMENT HAS FIREPLACE,DOOR FROM FAMILY
OPENS ONTO LARGE WOODED LAWN. CARPORT. IN
THE
BUT NOTTOO FAR OUTI $&lt;47,900.

Real Estate General

One
bedroom •partmtnte,
1225/mo. I..,_ utRHioo, $100

•

I)CHlll:

L.

I B\FB HE\Ln
205 Norlh Second AYB.
Middleport, OH
. MIDDLEPORT· Shady Cove Road· 1 1/4 acres of ground
with a 2 bedroom mobile home, tf1at looks good Inside. Some
furniture stays. Property goes to Leading Creek, so you can
fish Isler this ye«, maybe.
ONLY $12,000
HARRISONVILLE· A very well maintained mobile home. A
1984'111ree bedroom Nashua home. Sits on a 1.42 acres and
comes witf1 an equipped kllchen.
CAN BE YOURS FOR ONLY $25,500
PORTI,AND- S11v.-.vtlle Road- Great starter home, renlal,
or weekend get away. A 2 bedroom 1 bath one story home
setting.on approK. s acres.
$48,500
POMEROY· Brick ' StrHI· In lown- A cute and cozy home
one possible 2 bedrooms , also 2 baths, beautiful deck,
ceiling tans. Would be a greal rental or starter home. $25,000

112~211.

1112. LOCATED IN CITY OF GALLIPOLIS -

Et,.ECIANT ALL BRICK BEAUTY - Two story nome,

tull basement and garage has a great deal to offer.
Designed for great IMng. First ~oor has formal entry
with open stairway, formal living room with fireplace,
formal dining room, cl1o!Jy cablnalo Uno the wall of the
extra large kitchen. Breakfast I'QOm a,nd powder room.
Second noor offers ·four bedrooms and bath.
Bedrooms are king size, c8rpet over hardwood flOOrs,
bath has all new fb:tures and Love Tub. Buement has
huge fa'mlly room, w/fireplace, bedroom, exercise
area, laundry room and storage room. This home Is of
supero quality as 111a plumbll1(1 has been 18placed. All
new wall ·covering , beautiful new carpet throughout,

new windows Installed. Spaciloua kHchen .wfih cherry
cabinets, Island for Jenn-Air Range. Only a privata '
lllowll1(1 Will deciOo the voJue Is hare. call VIrginia L
Smllh 448-8106 01388-8826.
. !

,)' . . .

1117. IIAI&lt;I A DEAL- 24K65 mobile home. 2.4 oc.
m/1, 2 car garage. Immediate possession or mue an
Ollel. 388-6625. $25,000.

gracioYI hon!8 localed In on axctustve ...a.
total rooms with tl'lrae batl'lrooma, rover entry with
open stairway, -.rge living nil. iN/Wbtp, formal dining
rm .. gourmal kl.. family and gamo rm. shale an -n .
fireplace , solarium, 4 oversized bedrooms. Master

.

'.

Spoolow 2 bodJVOm Cl(llo, - ·
poling, rongo, rolrlgorllor,
homily otmoophoro, on ono
..,Ono~
. EOH. ·3711 or
•• como
- y. Lou!lond Apto,
.. eth II,
Haven, WV.
.; lt.,_ood Apo~- lo ,_I
occoptll1(1 IP!Iilcollono to ron!
' . ond
·-~
ror lhoEquol
hendicoppod
tho olilorfy.
Houolng
• Opportunity.

CUSTOM BUILT BRICK AND FRAI!E RANCH. NICE
KITCHEN/DINING COMBO. , LIVING ROOM HAS
. AREPLACE; 2 BEDROOMS, LARGE LAWN. LOCATED
IN PICTURESQUE RURAL AREA. VERY AFFORDABLE
AT$46,500.

1,; &gt;45
.,t• ~~

·1

...

~

Furnished
Rooms

Roomo lor ront · - o r mOnth.

:,;-:,:.~· Gallll~ll. '

i;

Slooplng roomo wHh ooolclng.
Aloo trollor ~·All -...,..
Call after 2:00 p.m., *"'~
1•
- • ·5111,118- WY.
;.

~ . Wantld to Rant
Wonting to ront· 2 or s bod,_,.

Real Estate General

lion, protor privoto·Hl1in!~e!14-~421, If .. _ ..
: · IMve 1ftM.USJ1 on ntiChln&amp;.
.
•
•

...•

l •

NEW USnNGI Family Neighborhood! Come
see this brick ranch convenienlly localed in
town. Features include 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths , eat-in kitchen &amp; full basement with
family room . Gas F.A} 1ea1 and cenlral air. 1
car garage and slorage building. Situated on a
90 x tOO lot Priced at $77,500. Call today to
~

bedroom has cathedral . ceiling, whirlpool bath and

beautiful an:hed wlndowll. Fl"t lloor laundJY, base·
enclosed porch and 2 car attaChed garage.

~~

OWN YOUR CORNER OF SPRING VALLEYII
Located on the corner of old Sr. AI. 35 and Oak
Drive. this well maintained ranch offers 3
bedrooms. 1 bath, large living room and familY
room, cozy eat·in kilchen. Need slorage or
work space? This home offers full unfinished
basement with outside entry plus a 3 car
garage. Close lo shopping, banks and the
hospllal. How can you nol afford 10 own your
comer of Spring Valley at only $72,900? Call
Carolyn todeyl
1813

~

SOMETHING VENTURED, SOMTHING
GAI.NEDI Own your own body shop and towing
business plus family rental units. Body shop
offers 28 x 34 bay, t8K34 bay and 12K26
office/lobby with bath, plus 6 car carport.
Owner states 'AAA towing contract will go with
the property. 14K60 family renlal units include
1985 Redman offering 2 bedrooms. 1 t/2
baths. nice kilchen and living room. Antoher
t 4x70 t985 Redman offering 2 bedrooms, 2
bath (master bath has whirlpool tub), large fully
equipped kitchen with Island, double ovens.
dishwasher, range, cantril air. 47 wooded
acres overlooking 111e river just 2 miles soulh of
111e dam. The possibilities tor 111is property are
limllless. Priced at $74,900. Call Carolyn lor
additional infonnation.
1800

,

A.O. Smtih Pormog- 0..
wotor hoot00:1 lagol,
uood. 3rnoo. Stay Rno .aftner, $100 -. 304-17J.1011.
VI'RA FURNITURE
,
114-44141118 Or
'10 DAY SAllE AS CASH
OR RENT.;.QWN (NQ OEJIOflfT)

"*""11-4428

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought iron Toblo W/4 Cltolro;
fon Bock Rooking Cho~ 818;
Q a - - Woy'o t1211.00 •

-om

~
,.

-~~~n lion Sol $11, Fun
111
Ouoon 1141 lot; 4
Drawer
$44.11; Cor Bod'o,
~ Bunk lod'o, Pootor - · Full
• Llno 01
v-

TIRED OF CITY TENSIONS? Move lo the .
counlry and enjoy 1111s smilll 6.5 acre farm and
business potential. 3 bedroom home in good
shape throughOUI with basement and vinyl
siding. 1602 lb ..tobacco base, 36x40 barn has
been remodeled lor small business , cellar
hOuse. 8x12 storage building, rural waler, black
top road. come see. come buy at $65,000.
1101
12 Acraa juat off ol Jackoon Pike. Located
just beyond Spring Valley area. Lays nicely,
mostly pasture ground. $29.900
1203

~

~~~t~~;:::~

:::07,.". A~120~ ":.::;r:·~

;. U.OO. 2 Locatlono ·Booldo ;\uto

loce1tlon wllh
river 11ontage. Three bedroom, 2 balh home
could be rented or adapted to your business.
Call for more Information and appointment to
see. Priced at $45,000.
1503 ·

Auction Or 4 lllloo Out 141.

,

•

0pon IA.II. To ll'.ll. llon .sot.

••
•

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolo homo lumloh'.. Hourw: ~at. N . ,,......_
•. 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
Froo DoiiVery.

Surrounded by nature· Large mature stands
of oak. hickory and other hardwoods along with
beauliful flowering dogwood lrees help mak
111is homes~e off Rl. 588 outstanding. 2 acre+
lol offers seclusion from neighbors (while still
having some) but is localed only a mile or two
on good roads to Spring Valley area. Ideal
localion for thai dream home · you've been
wanting to build. $27,900
1502

uu - s CUoltion It" Cor·
duroy Couch By Bull
, UIOj 1 Rocl-, SID, Rockor
• Roell- $71: au- 8lzod

•
'

"Mr. Fix h". Large 2atory horne, 3 bedrooms, LA, for·
!nal dining room, kltc!hen, bath. Anached garage and
comer lot. Walk to school and shoppil1(1.

.

GO INTO BUSINESS.. With a lillie know how and a lot ol
lniative you can become an Entrepreneur (Business Owner) .
Own a Saptic Tank Service 11181 has been in business lor 29
years. ·comes witf1 a 1978 Ford Faoo wi111 35,200 actual
mHes that has,_ radials, new paint job, 2 yr. old pump, new
hoaes and 3 porta Johns. Serves - a l cotJntles.

wtth lots of storage space,

'
car garage
-•hop
01
above. A very well
bulh home. These hoi'nea are hard to find so call

Including a

apa~monl

Wilma today tor a lllowlng.

tree--·

1844. NonCE CONTRACTOIIS ~ Buy one and got 2
Yes. they need wort&lt;. $10,000.

ses.ooo

11711. BIIALL ,ARII CLOSE, IN - Nest, clean and
cozy 1o whallhll2·3 BA nome is wllh LA, DR, kHchan.
bath, 1 ca1 garage, one Oulb~lng. ""' oil fumace.
CIA and new roof. 48&gt;&lt;32' bam for animals. hayloft and
workshop. Call Eunlca N~n\ tor appt.

1117. SIIALL HOllE ON SR 1554 - 2 Bedrms .. ba1h
&amp; garage, large lot. St3,000

w'

w ...

,,

,;·'·',:~

IIIDDLEPORT·IIImlllon SlrHI· Lookir1g for a nice home in
lown, on a quiet ·~~t. This 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 slory home·is
just the one. ~ has a lot of hardwood ftoors. ftreplace, 2 lUll
balhs, 4 porches . SHs on a corner lot and the home is wall
cared tor.
$32;000

VAI:II'fLAID

lond.
-.VACANT LAND - ,Sprtngfleldl'wp. 591&lt;r·
as mJ1 across from Holzer Hospital. Great loca1841.

-The remarkable spa-·

ctous hOme with view of the county. ttallan tile toyer,

cat- ceilings with balcony, 3 BR. 2'/• bat11s, llvtl1(1
room whh woodburnlng Areplace, equip. kitchen.

FLATWOODS ROAD- ApproK. 4 1/2 acres with a great
laying building slle. TPC waler available and electric
available. Almost ready to go,Just nelda you .
$12,000
RUTLAND· MAIN STREET· A vacant lot with clly sewage
and watar available. Nice lor a mobile home, ale.
$5,000

W.ter Bed With 811: DniWIIII

• a.tow. ·~2810.
- - n ciorpoto, Rt. 7 N. 114: 441-11144, lx12 Cllrpol $80, VInyl
....41Yd.
.
~

POMEROY· East Second Street· Dead End Streel· You'll
need 10 see to appreciate 111is 2·3 bedroom . 1 1/2 ~ath : 2
slory nice starter home. ~·s walking distance to stores, but
in the heart of town. Could be used for small business
at this location. Make an offer.
$2t,OOO
MIDDLEPORT· S. Third Avt.· You need to see .this one . A
beautiful home Slarmg with 3 bedrooms, a large dining room,
2 nice fireplaces, an open staircase. partial basement, all
wrapped In low maintenance vinyl siding and·pricad
·
.Make' an O(ler. ·

and asphalt circular driveway.
Call Wilma at 245-9070.

REDUCED

lake. 73 acres mit of rolling land, clean and
mowed with a bit of woodland, 8 ac. ot lakes
m/1. This property nas many opportunities. Its
present use Is a paid fishing lake. Great tor a
church camp, camping grounds or subdlvl~ .
182$. VACANT LAND - CloSe ln. 5 aCJes rolling

'

POIIEROY PIKE·Near Sallabury Elementary School· A
nice level lot with a 2 bedroom. one story home. Has a dining
room, 'front and rear porch, part basement, and storage
building.
$21,000

18711. HAVE A BEAUTFUL COUNTRY ESTATE
- Build your dream nome overlooking a large

. LOVELY 3 BEDROOII RANCH close lo the
city. Hal fenced In
Must see to

Long Road frontage.

breakfast room has a lg. window, stereo speakers
througho.,r, brass light fixtures and much more. 2 car
anached garage, attic storage , 2 acres m/1. This
house Is maintenance free of best quality. Make your
appointment and see It you donl agree.

NICE FARM WITH EQUIPMENT, mo511y nat to
, rolling land with 45.69 acres. 30x.50 barn, ra"" pond
and other outbuildings. Priced In the 60's. Call today

ror an appointment lo see this one. 245·9070.

tion for large homes on a hill.

1831. LAKEV1EW SUBDMSION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO BUILD - 2 to 5 acres more or less.
Drive to White Rd. to Cherolals Lake Or. to
Lakeview Ct. onering 2 nat to rolling lots, a varIety of tl811S ano beautiful view of 1118 lake. All ·
amenities avallabte. Rural water, underground
etectrldty, aerator systems acceptable .
Restrictive convenants apply. Close to Holzer

and·snapping.

..72. STATE ROUTE 110 - 3 ac. lot m/t,
St5,000.oo. Charolals Hills.

MIDDLEPORT· Broadway St.· You'll nee~ 10 see this
gorgeous home in town but on a large lot having 4 spacious
bedrooms. 2 baths. lamjly room. dining room . built·ln
dishwasher, 3/4 basement, deck, garden spot, carport,
storage buDding and low maintenance aluminum siding. All o(
this priced right lo sell.

...

In' town location- Good neighborhood. Deep
lot 2 bedrooms. t bath . living room , dining
room. eal-in kilchen. Won't find many at 1111s
low
pr i ce .
$34,900
11208

IllS. OLD FASHION CHARM - In town locallon lot

Merchandise

r

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY Over
$1 ,200 per monll1 income Is produced from this
five unit apartment building. Good location in
lown. Good rental history. Very nice lot with
accesss 10 back alley. $39.900
11201

POMEROY· Mulberry Awn- This 8 room home has 4
bedrooms, dining room, family room, and pretty kitchen. Has
some beautiful woodwork. french doors, fireplace· will1
bookohtlves on either side, and a bey window. Also has a lull
basement, 1 113 balhs. and newer vinyl siding.
$48,000 .

room tor garde~.

,
,

right lor a young family or a retired couple alia. Make

an appt. to see. can Eunice Nletvn today 446-1897.

Priced, $40'S,

1777. 30'1 - Very nk:e neat clean, 3 BR ranch home
wtth LR, DR, eat-In kitchen, bath, new roof. Plenty of

SPRING VALLEY ·SPLIT LEVEL. Very
attractive and well kep1 home located in well
established Spring Valley area offers your
family these features: .3 bedrooms. 1 t/2 beth,
nice kitchen with breallfast nook, living room,
family room and attached garage. Also
includes nice covered patio, fenced yard. gas
heat and cenlral air. Convenlenl to everything I
$79,900 Call Cave Wiseman lor an
appointment!
1215

1823. IIRS. CLEAN UYES HERE - 3 BR noma with
small acreage. Close In, LR, eat-in kitchen, IQ. FA,
bath, 1 c. garage on 5 acres mil. This home Is just

1813. REDUCED - 3 bedroom, 2 balh 1anch noma
located on •J, ac. mil In Addison Township. Carpon,
Elec. H1. pump and cenl. air. Rivet Valley SChools.

Household
Goods

'
CITY BOY, COUNTY GIRLI Here's a house
that will satisfy both. Wi111in walking distance to
downtown, this home's location is great. While
at 111e same time it's located In a quiet locaUon
backed up by acras and ~eras of woodland.
Large 4 bedroom homa with over 2100 sq. ft.,
2 1/2 baths , living room , dining room , eat-in
kilchen &amp; family room . Screened in porch,
large palio &amp; above ground pool. 2 car buin-in
garage .
Good
s torage
$91 ,000
11217

.

,.

Real Estate General

~ j. -

MLS .

1713. !!RICK RANCH - SHuated on t ·""· 1M Uppe1
Rt 7, close to Slioppll1(1 Cen!OI'. Thla home fa..... 3
. bidrooma, 2 full ~aths, kftchan and Olnlng atea, 2
bedrooms, utility room, family room, kitchen 6n base.
mont, 3 cor and a 1 ca1 detached garage. can
ror more lntorrniiiOn.
·

aecurhy c:tepoen, no peta; I'M-

1~

- . , ......, 1n - · ond good oond~

s~l

·~

OFFICE 992·2886

.

~-

•

•

~ . Vt. ((;/md

~=::;;:============::.

.

1873. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land

~:·:\;.:t-~:;:-r:-. . :,~:
··.=

=, .. :·,

im:BEAUTIFUL SPACIOUS DOUBLEWIDE on an

acre lot. Owner has reduced and wants sold and ·
wants someone to make an offer. Has 2 car detached
Won, laSt long so dOn't hesttate to cal Wilma

•c::-c.,_·c.

lays well. Older 2 story nome with 4 bedrooms
and buildings. Home In need of repair, 117 ac.
mn. cau lor location.

nee. WHITE OAK RD. location. 30 acres m/1
vacant 18f)d with timber, mineral rights, good
&lt;oac1 frontage. SOma cteaJed land. sa.ooo.

home. with 3 bedrooms , 11/1
room, full basement wl1h family
18x36 lnground pool. You need to see

105. BUILDING LOTS ON ADDISON PIKE. Call
1 at 245-9070.

18110. WELL BUILT HOME within city limits. Brick 3
BR. 2'/• balhs. 2 car garaga wilh woJI&lt;shop aboYB. can
Wilma 245·9070.

iiiirR~1CT on lhls 3 bedroom
home In "'" city.
stlopplng center and
downtown anta. Call fol an appointment 11 245·9070.

1813. NICE BUILDING LDTS lor that special nome at
a great price. Within city limits. C.au todaV for a view.

245-9070.

'

•' New 0111 Fumhure: TaW. l
~· Cllolra, Cl.rioo, Curvod Olooo

WE NEED LISTING'S!!!
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·9555

Loretta McDade· 446·7729 ·
Patrick Cochran· 446·8655
Dan Thomas·379·2902

': Chino EIC. Rl- VoRoy Ook
~· FumKure, 01a,; Cf'Mk Road,
" Clolllpotlo, Ohio f4.441.1311.
~
PICKENS FURNITURE
,•
NewiUHCI
r' Houoohold fumlolllng. t/2 mi.
~ .lorrlclto Rd. Pt. Pl-. WY,
~ ooll304-111-14!10.
.

446-3644

Tractor
4 year old 20 HP 60" cut I H cub cadet lractor Ex.
condhion
·
Terms: Cash or local check out of s tate checks need
approval.

114--441-1100, Qr Write 111 Holzer

&lt;

•

Antiques, car, cub cadellraclor 20 HP guns
The eslate of Eleanor Schiek has been moved from
Point Pleasant W. Va. to Jackson Ohio.
lhltaa Thursday evening Aug. 26th, 1993 al 5:30p.m.
Lacatlaaa AI the edge of Jackson Ohio. Take US 35
west from Jackson lo CR 84 exit, turn righl and go up
hill, signs posted.

'

Fum- ~. t1U.
UtiiMioo pl!ld, 101 Four1h Avo,
Qalllpolte '814~-11 .... 1
-:· ~ p.m.
&lt;:·
Orocl- ,!Mng. I ond 2 bod... • room apor1- ot YUioao

qulrod. t14-441~113.

441-3449 L.olvo Mo-go.

t
•·

•

W.nlod To Ront Or ·auy: Audn
Coupio Soou . OUIOI Troller
Spooo, Phono: 114-446-2301.

Secluded Country Slitting,

••

..

Wantied ·

·Will Bo Avolloblo:
Minutes
From

•

,·

Real Estate

S400/Mo. Plu• S.curtty

RA.
A!OI Ho1Hr .Apo~m.~tol Firat
And Co&lt;lor 11, Dolllpotlo.
Sonloro, Dloo-, I Hondk:opIIOcf. FIIHA Income Rollrlcto:t,
Ronia Boood On . ...
Hau••hold Income. Allllllancu,
Corpot, On-Sno LouJidry, A/C.
Rioldont Po,o Eloctrlc UtiiMy
Only. 1'1101 Hotzor Apon.-o
AN Ooonotl For Qo.
euponcy. For lntormotlon Or To
Roquoot An ADIIIk:ollon Coli

•·

Trollor Lot For Solo, 114-251IMI Allor 5 P.ll.

36

, Dfn•~l
Hondlcoppad,
Incomed Roitrlctoo,
a·1100,
Hoillfl1(l

? ·! Oiltaortunlty

.._._

MUII•~u

Commwclol Building For Solo
0t LMM, 331 Beooild Avenve,
Phone: 114-146.;522, 10 A. II. To
5P.II.

~

tJIt' .•• I

INWUIWI .....-rtU

Buildings

1~

l

-~IICt.U

Business

34

complolo 101-up, otdrtlng, llop8

New Lazy Boy sofa, like new large chesl deep freeze,
micro wave oven, boxes of new crock pols, dishes,
kitchen appliances, boxes of new linen, large amount
of costume jewelry and much much more!

DEB!

more. A house divided agalnsi Itself
needs another TELEVISION!"

SERVIa MAKES THE DIFFERENQ

A!OI Holllor Apo~-. 5113
Soconcf A-uo, Avolloblo
, For OccuDoncY, 2 Bod- - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - • uono, ~. lliifrlgonotor, AC.
Real Eatate General

!

Modern

BIRTHDAY

Last summer our four kids did nothing but bicker_over which program
to.watch on TV. One evening my husband stormed, "I can't take this any

-'.
1
'

Antique•

Happy
Birthday
Joyce!

1br. apart- In .......
pteMIIlf, ...,.,.... Of unru,•
nloltod, -r oloM,,. pota. J04.

·
fumlohod,
roomfldllloo
- t o ......,
oo11o0t
114 ue nu
In town. ~- ...noblo
YllioaO ~d';:;o;; AIJio. Ml or
1 Bod-.. Untumloltod Apor1· ot:
_,., 11... l Rofrlgonlor, No OOU 114-II2-371L EOH.

ESTATE AUCTION
Happy Ads

Apartment
tor Rent

.•'

.owortunlly basis.

5

44

,.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

8

tor rent, cloee 1o.tawn, $l'lhllo.:

114-112·1333.
.
1 1 2 lodrooml Fumlohod
~"*"·
In
P-ror.
Rotoronco a Dopoott, No Poto,

Real Estate General

831-8125.

7

tor Rant

$100 Dopool~ 114 44Wt1l
1bdrm. oporl"*" In P-roy
for- · 114-112-1151.
.

Rd, t 1 - .
dopooit I YIUMioL

•nd I month• ta:

INOTICEI
OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Apartmani

44

liMa, $111Mo WM1r hMihntJd,

"'*'"A-.

·: • L11e111 - - Routt: SI,2DO A

-

ICIIIO homo, 2 bodroom,
t20 A... Donlpollo. $325
·
....7lraol!
4411_
_ pold ~-

Con
IIDdl w.. OfDor
HUe
Oft Conlw
'1 • 1
a
Plu 11-f I A.ll. -I:JO P.ll. •
Cluollty And
lo Tho
r1 ca-m For YOII' Clllld't
Col Uo For
lnlllnl
noddlerw 114 ut em. ,_,
ch a alara llohool Age 114-MI-

---ndo
to- . . .
•
•
:

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rant

2br, ott - · Aollton Upfond

Olylo
houM. 4 b 1droom, 2 tuM MIN,
lorgo Lll, .._. wlotono flnploco,

Opportunity
-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

104-t~.

-lilA ·- '""""

Iorge ltlld!on, Ioiii ol cotilnoti,
kilr corport. JO'x40'....., oilling .. 2.1 ..... liOo.alfulry landiC'pld, on New Lknl
Rood RYIIoild, Ohio, Loodlna Creek W8terand Clble avallcolilo, -1112-~.
COUNTRY HOliES/ACREAGE
1224.
. EJtra Lorgo Contompory Homo
On 17.a ACno 1M. Wllh 2 Bomo,
Wonlod
do-_
bobroiiiJ,.
"" Pool, 2 Pondo, t111!.000 ; 4 Bod" - oton
R_In_
, _ Homo, 2 112 . .tfto, lo.'ll"
lltlocllllnM old, 114-JIIZ4iai
Par1y Room, AM On 4 Aoroo JilL
I'MO,OOOj 110 AcN· MIL Fann
With 1om. • 111o111o. tt~1ooo;
10 11/1. $30,000; All UT Tho
Financial
Within S lllloo Of Rio
Orondo • CIIH Bill Cannoll AI Donna Bummoro R":.~
For MOr. lnforllllllon. 11421
Buslneas
1211.

1993

2 bod-. loootod In Ho....!!!, ~L t2f5fmo. + utHitloa.

7

- p-··

wv

Carolyn Wasch·441·1 007
Sonny Garnes·446·2707

on Honeysuckle

~

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. t2
011.. 11., Qalllpollo, Now I Uood
H tumH- hootoro, - - ~
~ Wort&lt; boolo. 1114-446-310.

53

Antiques

• IIW or ooll. R - Antlquoo,
• 1 112'4 E. M•ln llnot, on Rt. 12_4,
• Pornoroy. HouN: II.T.W. 10:ou
• ,a.m. 10 1:00 p.m., lundlr 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-112·288.

. w~h new

, furnace and siding. 4 bedroOms . Call Wilma at

POIIIROY· Looking lor e great piece of rental property?
Here'a 3 rentals. The top apartment has 2·3 bedrooms and
for $300 a month. The bottom apartment has 3 rooma
and rents lor $275 a montf1. Then tf1ere Ia an efficiency
apartment 1181 r.,. lor 5150 a montf1.
LET TliE RENT MAKE YOUR PAYMENTS JUST $27,000
llllka an o11w
DOTTIE TURNER,Ikckar ..................................... lt2·11812
BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................... 112-3058
DARLJNil! STEWART ............................................. H2-t381

SANDY
IUTCHEA--·······································....112-5371
JERRY SPRADUNG..................................... f.lll4) 112-34.

245-9070.

-.NEW Lf8TII40- Now SbOdroom 1anch on 10.5
acrea, new home &amp; large bam. Needt just a small
amounc or flnllhlng WOJk do!W. Owner must sell. Call

Wilma 11245-9070,

Frooll on 1110 ..rkel • Nice lot In lown thai Is
j)llcod to soli. ~11070 '

1,

NEW LISTING- 4 bodroom ronch- INn 4
~ old In lho AID Oron&lt;lo wltl12 ocroo. Col for
an oppolnlmont to ooolhll
onvtno_245-0070.

ho?'"

''

NEW LllnNo- Ho.. your own buo"*a ol
homo In tllll ntco bklg. lo&lt;iiiOd on • nice l1lghwoy wlh
plonty at porklng opoco. Hos on oportmont abovotha
busl""' olio 212 bedroom mobllo homos lhot you
con ront for Oldro lncomo. 01881 buy, coltodoy 2459070.
ltllfl7
LISTING- Wllntll1(1tO build IIIII hon you
hlrle -Y' dl88morf ol? Just on o4 N~.ooQ
Rood, 7 1Q1"S wolllng for you. Don1 dofoy cal ~r.g()70.
....

NEw

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,

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Sentinel

OH Point

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That Intriguing Word GQme with a Chuclcle t:~.:.==·-

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~,CLAY

I. P O L L A N - - - - - -

Rearrange the 6 ~erambled
words below 10 make 6
simple words. · Print letters of
each in ill· l.ine of squares.

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,.,.

Real Eltlte General
1"' ford P'ISO 4 -

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e;;@
t;:Ji
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... Appillr! __

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Ltvestock

N; Hlda

~171.

Troller,
Good Cand~~-:
114-3N-2171 CoH
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11lngo Or L111e In E

Rill good,

1117 Flborg-11' 81d - · 130

t:t~,

open - 1:30,
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440.:4471
31188 Doya•

, a, 310 TraM.

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AutoPinaf.

1111 C._vrolol
Aulomollc, Ay,
Laodwlll7,ow. I14-44UIOII.

Borola,

Sol:

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Acc:euorle' .
4 Eogle QT Ill,. 4 11~ 11-,
30,000 miiH,
304o7l'WIOII.
BudQol Trontml•..... Ulwl l
roiMll~. alltvpae, atirtlng at M;
OWIIIr '

2213.

Thia unfinished ~

a dead-end street wHh a year round view of the
river makes this conleflllorary ranch a "must see".
remodeled kitchen features cherry cabinets,
lcenter island wHh JennAir range and setving counter
highly
organized
storage
areas
and . ·
laforementictned "View". The grand piano-sized livirrg 1
. roorn'dining room corrbination oHers a woodt&gt;urrrin~J
lfirepl•ace and "that view". The cozy den and mastel' 1
lbErdrc•om share "the view" as well. You will ap~&gt;reciate 1
2 full baths and 2 car carport of this very
i
home. Better call today. The price· just $89,000. 1500
Wiseman Real Estate

814.241-1117, "114:-37'8-

,.

t:l~~~ua. Approx 2 ..,,_

ONLY 125,0011-

1

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 4•6·9539,

ON BEHALF OF TEAFORD REAL ESTATE, WE
HOPE YOU ENJOYED
FAIR.

0

Real Estate General

WE NEED YOUR USTINGSI
WE CANT SELL IT UNTIL YOU CALLI WE -

•

NEED LISTINGS
BRUCE TEAFORD

BROKER
HOME PHONE:

HOME PHONE:

HOME PHONE:

Merchandise
WATER LINE SPECIAL: WI Inch

2GO PSI .,1.116; 1 Inch ZOO PSI
ha.IO; Ron Evana Enla,.,...o,

Jackson, Ohio, 1.a.537-0528.

RuSsell D. Wood, Broker..................446-461(1
Phyllis Miller...................... ...... ........... 256-11 ~
J. Merrill Carter.................................379·211M
Tammie Dewitt ... :...................... ....... 441·15{ 4
'
' .
Judy Dewitt ......................................441·0262. '
Martha Smith ................................... 379·265~

1-800-585-710
(614) 446-7101

.

Cathy Wray.................. .................,. .. 446-42~

446-3644

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

_

BLACKBURN REALTY

HENRY E. CL£1AND.-992-6191
TRACY IRINAGER.--949·2439
SHERRI HART":.___ J4H357
E.CLElAND IJU92-6'191
KATHY CLELAND.-.."·99H191
O.FFICE.... , ____"992·2259

HillY RiFFLE
Jll IIU
SAlfS ASSOCIATE SALES ASSOCIATE

(114) . . . .2

..'

Sitting Pretty Setting

m

118. RACINE AAEA - 26 gorgeoua 1101111 to IMlild tiM!:
homo you alwayo wanted .. Call il you're thinkin;g.
aboul building.
·
ONLY S14,8GCt

,,..,lor
•14-

11 ft. llnole ule trallar,
houlng lorm equl_,.,

54· Miscellaneous

a bod Couclt tn. 114-

With

1G7. EAGLE RlllGE RD. - Beautiful white brick, 3,
bod~pom, 1'bath homo. Approx. 1 ac~ . Fuly lnsulat
ed.
ONLY $45,000:

61 Farm Equipment
247-3111.

Colli"" -

111 HP Outb :urd Motor And

1112 Dloaol Chenlla,...,....,.
nlng eond.,
" 1112 Trano Am, PW, PB, Pl. •Tift,
; ~~T·Tapo, Awl P,OOO, 114-441·

114. THIS IIITI The one you've bNn looking lo;
l..oc:Nd in Midct._P.Ort With e~~~oy ...:eat 10 pari&lt; an&lt;l
downtown. Beautiful loti. 3 bedroom• and 1 ball\.
Nice location. Very nice prloel Call today!
•..
·
ONLU35.ocM!_

1D. RIVERFRONT
badroom,

I I I I I I ·1. I I· I l
Couch $SI, Chair $'11, Atcllnlr

01dl CUIII...

1m 11 Ft.

-a.-... .

j.

54 llllc:ellaneoua
Merchandise

onglno, 1400

' SIQO.IJ04..4...1732.

I' 1 1 r r I' I' I' I' 1' I
3

2

drlve,

011&lt;1~'1'1... . ·

1m Clnlnd Prl• Ponlloo a.Ooor,

Frultal

woo. 304-171-2241•

Doolgo Arto..loodr ........

• lor GOOd; -

~Moe,-.._

t::li

*·•

113. SYRACUSE- This 3 bedroom, 1 bath homo io,a
parted ttal18r homo. 1~/, car garage. Full ba•mont;:
Hal pump, Yinylliding.
'~
ASKING $42,50!0

Completa the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
• you develop from step No. 3 below.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

.,200 ,,.__.,,., ·

2110.

4 0 0 - l T...... R...
IIH Or WIM T.- For
Aul:....tlc, Gaocl Running C.,
IU Ul 1111.

whiol

'••

IO

Improvement•

.......
wlporaf!.L, p.b:, · - · dolay

,_,

--r.D::--;O~W..,.S_Or--Y-r--tl

REFEHI
9
1
1• 1_ 0 I_ I_ I_

'

82 ' Plumbing •
Helling

Home

~Cillo·~-- 84

t:'\...
•w m • ~A"':
IM-Ja

Vegetablea

e·u.

81

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•In- ..Ztr-......... -"-··wv

AiillIllOut,
- .
ti,OOO,
t1t
ICII.....
an,tllwl.

SUII·IUW ·IU-Ii

&lt;l

MotorHomH

Home
lmprov-.nentl

llon'a TY lervlce, opw:lolblnol

..,. a.:.:r.::· ~

olgn_W_,._.

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-

81

..

'W Oldl CfAIIIa · ·prenw. lit,
Coli ..... Iii-,, aooo.-~
Klmboll
Splnol Dllno, Hill - · ~ . . - . AI 1 P.ll. All '10 a.y Co•dw. nooo. .,..
.....
.,100,
aalllng . . - - .
. . . . . . . 11.- 2114.
led.
Calle
AI
On '
• llorltna
All Can4 P.M.
1m 01dl CUI- s . _ VI,
Splnol Conaole plano. Wontwl
IUio, l2300. ~.
.-tow ma. or 114 ' " . , ...

I

earn.,.,.,

71 .Auto. tor Sell

Fill -

Last summer our four kids
7
1 1 1 1 did nothing but bicker over
1
_ _ _ _ _
which program to watch on
TV. One evening my husband
I N l AD S
stormed, "I can't take this any
1---r;._io:o..;.;...,.l---,lr---rl--t
·more.
A house di~ed againsl
8
.___._I__...1__.__.__...__. itself needs another ...:........ !"

79

75 eo.t1 l Mj:ilo,.
tor Sill

Tt Jn:,portdltun

Al-~ocll-lpaolol

58

if

71 Auloe for Sill

-.~·-­
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llualeal

-'FkJr...T..'o--lly.

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ttaylGraln

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,,.._21112. . '

r

OH-Polnt Pleaeant, WV

1).7, . . . llllilll onol wolw4, 1311,~

lnlti'UIIIIIItl

I

KUDINN

.., _____ _

51 Fallll Equipment

1'111.- ..... -

22,1993

514 Second Avenue
· Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: (()14) 446-0008
Ranny Blackburn, Broker

•

•

••

•••

• •

..••
..-.

'RUTH GOODY, ASSOC. 446-4445/

~

.,
"

~--..

••
••
·•
.,

;~

.

379-2684

Cindy DrongowskL ............... ..........245- ~Z
Equal Housing Opp.ourunily

Q
REDUCED! Skinner Rd· B!!autiful,
modern contemporary home with 3
bedrooms,. 2 baths,. enclosed sun
· decking, Includes
!IIp~;~~~~cEr~f:unfireplace,
wood &amp; electric
5 acres with swimming pond
ASKING $79,000

ATTENTION FIRST TIME HOME ~~E~~
121 Gavin StiMI· Nice homa otters 3
kitchen, FR, bath and laundry room,
aiding, nice yard. .
·
·

...

':••

CITY UVINGI On a low tralftc llrMt. Very
kitchon complete with applianc.a, living room,
family room, 3 bodroomt, 2 bathe, launclry
room. One bldro&lt;im 8!Mirtment indudld. 1551
Ktng
a eoor
srovo Uoad
1
...
_ wood
1125,
Swimming
~
3'111' Whh All

'Mt wf .,..,

well maintained 7
1 1/2 story . frame home. 4
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, newer 2 car
garage. front porch, heat pump/C.A.
LCC water plus well, fireplace, patio,
. worll shop, shed and caller area. 1.079
·. acres.
ASKING $43,900

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

a

gl- doora, triDII plpa, 1450.

446·1066

304-llHm.
davfco, tuma all your
lloctrlcol OUIIoll Into a phone
locka. For lnformollon, phono 1·
21H41-at47.

Picnic Ta- For loi!O&lt; o.r.!'!'
Trutld 2d'• I' SIS; 1' •. ~. ,
Oravitv Wood Splln• 1400, ,,...
317-'1112.
R•llotlc oar tlaroo _ . , omp,
10 warta, lib IWW1 145, 114-lt2·

•

I~IE.ot~TE P08SESSIONI oiO'x40' 3 car
clalached matai garage wllh concrete ftooring.
One ttory 3 bodroom home with ""ahar/dryer,
ooma furniture, appliance• lnctuded. Tractor
with lade, plow, bush hog included. Call today!
1531

Allen C. Wood, Rea~or/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reattor/Broker·446.0971
Mose Canterbury, Reattor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor-256·1745
Tim Watson, Reahor-446-2027

CLEAN! NICE SIZED LAWN! I WITHIN
MINUTES TO HOLZER HOSPITAL!
3
b•dtoom ranch hom•, ona c•r attached
garage, lalge living room, kitchon, dining a-.
bath. Large covered front
Call today!
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
1558

rrch.

:1314.

ROVOI OU lillmborohlp lor Sale:
H fnlwaatwl carr 101-1'13-11611
Aller 1:30 P.ll.
Stroller, bobybod, wolkor, hiGhchoir, ... · awlng,llt11e grrta
Mk:UV llouM vanlfy MI. 304-

army
·~·
ehloment combat

camflluga, new
boofe, trM
borlla. 11om Somarvlll1'11 _ bv
Bondyvllle PoM Olflco. F""""(.
Sun, 12:110pm-41:CIGI&gt;m, olhln
daya &amp; hou... -~-1111.
SUrphl!l

-·

Wlt.r Bed Uhe New, 1300,

Phone: • A.ll. .. P.ll. 114-:ml-

WATER

STORAGE

Abo¥1 And -

"'·

Wooa !RJ.a{ty, Inc.

London Fog C.., Ul!o - · Antlqw C.mer•, 114-441·1!30.

ae

'·

ftct I I rlel1

1150.

~ "D'

..

~·

••

Real Estate

Some Chlmlcoll, Nowll Unor,
Ulwl 2 - . . . Sial, 114-:IM-

.
TANKS

Ground FOA

Ajijiiovod For Potable Water.
Ron E..,. Em•-· Jock·

-·Ohio,,_ 53'7-llal.

Wot.FF TANNING BED$

New Commercial; Homl Unlt1,
Ftom Sllt.OO~c Lalionll,
Ace .. riM.
t"l~•
Law Aa SII.OO, Coli Oday FREE
NEW Color Cotalog. 1 - 2t1Vl'.

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE-

2

bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 decks, 1, 1f.i! acnts mora or I•••·

REDUCED· CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TODAYIII
OLDER HOME, 4 bedroomo, living room, dining room,
kitchen, family room, located on 1.8 acres. PRICE IS
REDUCED.CALL SOON ..
HOME FOR .SALE located at Rodney- 3 bedroomt, 2
baths, ~ving room, dining room, kitchen. can for more
i'nfonnalion.
VACANT LAND· 1 t/2 acres more or lou. Water &amp;
. Electric availablo. Located on Buckridga Road . Price
$6,000.00.

USTING- Located on State Route 141 , city
CALL ABOUT THIS ONE.

4 bltht, 3 bodrooma (ba-t could ba utld
for 3 badroomt lloo), living room, cinlng room,
. kitchen fully aqu~= Latga patio and deck. ·
Pond. MUll - ·
nice!
RANCH HOME with_~~~~~
with patio door.
living room, 2

1-800-585-7101

Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meel your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10.COLORS

A HOME OF THE PAST! Beautiful older 2
llory home, 4 largo badroomt, den, dining
room, living room, 2 bath•, laundry and moral
Beautiful o.k woodwolk throughout! Nice view
of rlwr. Stocked pondt Mulll- 1•
15412

FREE ESTIMATES ON

Ill

NEW UST1NGI PRIVATE, SMALL MINI FARM
WITH AN AFFORDABlE BUDGET! 8 112
acrea more or 1111, bam, &amp; other bulldlnga. t
ttory home could ba utld as 2·3 bedrooma,
kitchen, Nving room &amp; moro. N - ooma TLC.
Call today!
1512 .
FIVE (5 ACRE) LOTS! Road fronlllge With
aach lol On• lot has pond aloo &amp; nice location.
Within minutaa of hospital.
1540
o10 ACRE FARM!· Fencing, bam, 2 story vinyl
sided homa With 3 badrooma, lamily room,
~vlng room, bath, .celar house, 1 car detached
garage, county water plua drilled well. Within
short diltanca of GaUipolla.
t526
COMMERCIAL BUILDING· 58 Olive StrHtPI8oantly utld at warehouse, approximately
3,90G eq. ft. t6' front door. Call for more
detaila.
1525

5 ACRES I POND is tho oaning for this

attractive home. Approx. 8 years old with 3
bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, 2
batht, laundry room. Storage building + mobile
homo hookup. Priced upper S30'o.
1554

Chwyl Lamley-..... _,,, .....................742-3171

NEW USTINGI HOlE I 10 ACRES- Salem
Twp.-- 2 IIIOry hom• with 5 badriloma, baih,
iving room, cining room, kilchon . Bem &amp; mite.
other builcingo. $40'1.
1510

Cannelburg, Inc. 45719

Gallipolis, OH.
PH. 11H56· 133

NEW ON MARKET! NEED A LITTLE EXTRA

ROOM? Take a illok at thil nawer brick l'lnCh.

NEW USTINGI 111.75 ACREs- $38,000.00
well &amp; ..ptic on property, Pi.ttu,. &amp; woodoid
land. Olderdwellng. Call formo,. detahl
1581

D. C. ltlll Silts, IIC.

11366 S. Sl. AI. 7

12 PLUS ACRES! Good homesite road
lrontage, county water and alactric available.
County echool•
••
1542

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-1100·114-1GI6

=

~

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINQI
THE FREE QUALITY HOMES BROCHURE AT SOME OF
THE LOC.IIL BANKS, RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKm,
MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.

'

IMMEDIATE POISESBIONI 49830 ~~
Rldga Road-- 1 112 ttory brick/vinyl
homo with 4 bodrooma, bath, tamlty room
dining room with built·ln hutch, kitchen,
room, newer he•t pump., Building With fruit
cellar. Approx. 2 "",. I•Wil, additional moblr.
home hook-up.
' 1572

lvlnti

BUILDING FOR SALE- Approx. 6,900 sq. fl.
located on Uncoln Pike at' Centenary. Call lor
detab.

NICE FLAT LOT- 314 acre mn with 1988
mobile home in vary good condition. Priced in
tha 20's. Call Ruth for details.

CHEVY·OLDS BUILDING· 420' front on
Second Ava. and 62' frontage on Grape.

RODNEY VILU.GE tl3 bedroom ranch, living room, kitchen with
buitt~n cishwaohor, family room, bath. Neat &amp;
tidy! Low $40'a
1574

1G22 BLAZER ROAD- 3 or 4 bedrooms,
room, launcjry area. Newer roof, larQe'
do filched building/garage used at a b~ :
shop. Call today for complata listing!
~68 •
.

(POMEROY) ~NCOLN TERRACEIII Thia
home has Iota of charactar 111d the lady of tho
~~hetlota of good taote when It comet to •
\~ •...,.ing. lfa a 2 1110&lt;)' homa Wilh 3 big bad-.
rooma, nice ai..cl living room and plenty of
__.in fraldtchon and cinlng ..... Full b..., .
RHint andl•rge lttic. Roof jual2 yro. old. Take
•look lor only $24,900.00.
1522

-.

SPARKUNG RANCH! Cozy 3 bedroom ranch;
style homo, bath, living mom, kitchen, Nil·
buemant With second unfinished bath. 1 ear•
carport. Vinyl aiding, intarlor of hou.. juat:
rocantly paintad. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I •
1531 :
APPROX. 45 ACRE FARM- Within mlnut.ie' ot
hospital. Just oH SA 160 2 bodmoms hom•
with bath, 2 silos, pole barns, plus ...erat
buildinga' and sheds. Fenced pasturo. Call Joi
moro details.
15+1 •
PRICED REDUCED TO S42,5GG.OG Mow into'
immediatalyl 652 Second Ava. Excallont repair,:
2 bedroama, ivlng room, dining room, kitctitn, •
baseman~ large lot. Oft otn~~t parking.
t51'2 ;

'

'

RIVER ,FRONTAGE I Over 2 acres and rarj~h !
~~· holl)e. 3 ·bed~ms, bath, laundl)' roorfl, :
hvtng room &amp; kitchen . Paved drivaw~yl ,
Immediate Posseuion
1544 •
•
OWNER HAD THIS HOME iiPECIALl'Y '
BUILTII 1984 14'x70' Mobile homo 2
bodmoma, 2 batha, living room, dining a'r8a
kib:han. Ftont enctotld porch, Qfrdan tub•·lii
ON FRANK ROAD- A partial IIIIIch on 1.034 . 11111atar batl. Dtlllch,cl garaga Wt'ltr ovartread
ac. mil with 3 b~roome, 1 112 bathe, living ·atorage. p!tnty of apace with 3.6 acNu mOFI ·
room, clnlng room and ldtchtn. Ono car garega or laoa arid plonty of 1n.0t traaa.
1552
attached, ~ only $52,000. c.r lodey 1523
IMMEDIATE
POIIEISIONI RIVER
FRONTAGE! $25,000. 2 bodroom homo with
bath, living room, kitchen &amp; approx. 1 1cro
Ia~.

tsQ

MAIN STREET RUTLAND 122,00G.Oa Ranch
home With new.r carpet In 2 bedroom a, living
room, dintng room. One bath 1 car detached
garega, outb~lding, lot approx: 46' x 183.5'
1583

Fleetwood Mobile Home, 14x76, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, utility room, central
air, newer heat pump, buill in hutch,
sterio, covered patio, fenced yard,
storage building, 3+ acres In 1\1 country
setting.
•
ASKING $27,000

t• x 7G MOBILE HOlE AND LOf.f Priced in
tho lower $20's. Call for more dttailsl Won'!
lut long I
'
1565.

'.

schOols, doublawlde, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air,
garage, two outbuildings and an above ground pool.

Posl Buildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundrads, even Thousands
of Dollars.
Local Sales Representative
DONNA CRISENBEAY

GRANDMA NEEDSIIOMETHING IMALLER I
4.8 acrat &amp; a 3 bodroom Schult Mobile HanNI
complete with appUancaa Including wal!her &amp;
dryer. LA, kll, bath w/gllrden tub, ar.ctric
buiding wlconcrolalootlng com crib. Excellent
pi- to build a now holM. Cfoaa lo hotpltal
and now 35 bypaoa on/oil romp.
1434

LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE AND
QUIET... lhla could bl it, 49.66 acl8s, Andrews
Rd., 8 yaar old hoiiMI with 3 BAs, 2 112 baths,
LA, DR, FR, heat pump, 2 car garage plus
24x48 detached garage. Approx. 43· acres in
hay•

RACINE· 1+ acre with ·2 story frame
home, 4-5 bedrooms, 2 baths, garden
area, fru~ trees, barn, garage, beauty
shop, 1971 12x65 nlobile home rented.
1 bedroom apanmen't. Unique, large,
well kept home. .
ASKING $46,000

·.•
::
,·,.
::
· •.
''
_:
·:

•

•!

RACINE- Sharon Hollow Rd.- Approx.
20.05 acres . 40x28 hunting cabin
~urrounded by turkey &amp;·deer. Grea.t
hunting location. "Hunting season will
be here soon I"
OWN YOUR OWN SITE FOR $17,000
,:!:!EDUCED! JUST OUT OF
J'OMEROY- SR 7 2 story home w~h 3
. .
.
bedrooms, bath , paneling, carpet, C/A, TR 24G- .1n Bedford Tow~sh•l?· 115+
t:arpon, basement. utility room, 3+
acres vacant ground w1th 3·4 orl &amp; gas
actes,nice large settln.g porch, well •· ~ells on the property. All the mineral
.maintained.
NOW $28 BOO
nghts are reserve~. Th.ere. are no
' ·
buUdings or mtneral nghts Included. •
ASKING $29,1100
REEDSVILLE- Success Ad· 1 . ~+ acre
oJ nice laying land. Would mak ·nice
ROUSH LANE-1+ acre
,Jlulldlng site. TPC water available. CHESHIRE·
2
bedroom Mobile home,
with
1970
ASI(ING $8,!5011
Block 1 room efficiency, 2 a~ditional
trailer hook-ups, great rental
~EDUCED! SYRACUSE· 2 stor.y
,
·.frame home with 2-3 b9drooms, bath, investment! Mobile home &amp; efficiency
utility In kitchen, paneling, carpel/Vinyl ille both currenUy rented.
ASKING '$24,900
·flooring , gas FA heat. Includes 2
, porches, carport,. shed, garde!" space
NEW LISTING! LONGBOTTOM·
· ~ 21018,
!
NOW Dewllts Ruo Rd. : 1 acre with one floor
frame home w~li 3-4 bedrooms, one
ASKING $19,1100
bath, newer bottle gas fumace, drilled
..·•j
shed &amp; wood sht!f.;.
well,
BASHAN' RD- 8+ acres with 12x65
•
~¥&gt;KING $28,900
ll!oblle ho'me &amp; older house, 2 septics,
lPC water, FANG &amp; alectrlc BB heel.
REDUCED! NEAR RACINE- 7+ acres
ASKING
$23,000
.,
with 1988 Redman Sectional, with
15x35 addltion, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
i ' WE'D UKE TO THANK ALL WHO
garden tub, doubla sink, fireplace,' new
STOPPED BY TO SEE US AT'JHE
heat pump/C.A. , bulh In hutch &amp; wet
' · FAIR. WE APPRECIATED YOU
bar, extre rental trailer.
''GMNQ US SOME OF YOUR TIME
·Now $42,900
· AND SUPPOR'I'III

•

38.50 ACRES mA naar Tycoon Lake..28.5 A. in
Raccoon Twp. and approx,. 10 A., in Huntington
Twp., homo on property offers 5 BAs, bath, LR,

1021 SECOND AVENUE· Vary nice home
oHars 3 BRa, LA, DR, Kitchen w/range, refrig ..
washer &amp; dryer, bath, gas heat, cent. air, 2
firaP,Iac:eo, soma naw carpal, unattached
garage. Shade tnraa. Callloday.
·~;J·'···'.·.

kitchen, new fumace, wood burning stove,

siding, oome new carpet. Bam on property.

-

.

ft...._ ,..,~~

•

.·•·'· ',, .. -;,v
.k~

CITY UVING· Come in and liik at this extra
nice homo. Equipped kitchen, FR, LR, DR, ges
fumaca, cent. air, FP, patio, wol1&lt;shop.

ATTRACTIVE HOME AND 1.U6 ACRES IN
THE
AAEA ... homa offars 3 BRs,
blth,
full baoament.

..,.,.....
OFFICE + a rontal apartment?
250 Sec. Ava. Nice office downstairs and
apartment and storage up . Conveniont to
banka and ~ping.
DRIVE· 2 BAs, 1 bath, LR, kitchen,

gas haat, city watar, used 'its rental property.
$29,000. (886) .

.

, JOHNBON RIDGE ROAD- ADDISON TWP ..•
386 ocre finn, 3 ponds, tobacc:o baaa, 44x100
bam with concrota floors. May consider split
(578).
OWN YOUR OWN BUSiNESS-Fiesta Grande
on St. Rt. 35. Well llllabllshed, laundromat,
oloo go11 with business.
•

Cl .

NICE TWO STORY TOW!f. cto..
to grocery and shopping. Home offers 3 BRs,
LR, DR, FA, 2 batht, gas haat/canL air. Nawty
l!ldono front lawn.

BE THE FIRST FAIILY IN THIS NEW HOME
3 BAt, 2 batha, LR, kilchen, ges hea~ cant. air.
CAll for mo.. detaill.

GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE
· INTERESTED IN SELLINGYOUR HOME

\

,.

�.

Plge 08 Sunday nm• Sentinel

Pomeroy llddleport

, August 22, 111a;

..

Quarter
horse racing
results

Clinic will expand facility
GAU.IPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
Inc. Ills lliiiOWICed plans 10 ~
its1ecbon.County branch cliniC
The clinic's Board of Dilecttn
appoved 111 uplllSion l"uposal in
concept and appointed a project
team to develop plans, arrange
financing engage a contractor and
oversee the cOIISii:uction of expanded facilities at its South Street clin·
ic in Jackson.
"We are considering adding
approximately 10 000 sqwm: feet
during the next t:i to 18 months,"
Robert Daniel, the clinic •s adminis•·

trator, salCL
" It is primarily an increased
dcmalld for occ~.,ational medicine,

physical therapy and rehabilitative
that has ma~e thjs ne_w
expansiOn appropnate, sEatd
Daniel. "It is our i~tent to prov· e
the space, the equtpment and e
staff needed to fully meet he
health needs of the business and
industry ofJackson County.
"It is our desire to have a fullfledged, state-oMhe-art Occupa·tiona! Me&lt;Jf~in~, Physical '):bcrapy
and Rehabih~&lt;?n _Center tn Jack·
son Countv - surular to our rehaservice~

·

USDA failed ;lcreage·options
'
·
By LISA COLLINS,
GalliaASCS
County Exet~~tive Director

QALLIPOLIS • In times of nat·
ural disaster from drought or other
conditions beyond the producers'
coil ttol, farmers are concerned
about replacing lost income. They
are also interested in receiving
planting credit for the lost crop to
maintain their production history
and protect crop acreage bases for
participating in USOA commodity
programs.
· FAILED ACREAGE: Producers

must file with their county ASCS
office before physical evidence of
the crop is destroyed. There is a
nominal fee charged.for a field
d visit
.
to inspect the planUng an canng
of the crop, and to verify disaster
conditions. This fee is refunded
once the disaster is verified in the
field.
PLANTING CREDiT: Fai'mers
who have crops that have been
damaged so that they cannot be
harvested (failed acreage may
apply for planting credit Failed
acreage is considered planted for
history credit. The county ASC
committee will substantiate the disaster and determine the planting
credit,
Parficipants In the I 993 Feed
Grain and Wheat Program ha've
until August 31, 1993 to revise
their report of acreage,, destroy
crops and reclassify their crop for
0/92 and/or disaster eligibility.
DISASTER-AFFECTED
FARMERS (ANY CROP)
SHOULD REVIEW THEIR
OPTIONS WITH THE ASCS
OFFICE AT 446-8686. REMEMBER ·APPLICATIONS SHOULD
BE FILED PRIOR TO HARVEST
OR DESTRUCTION!

bilitation eeau:r in Gallipolis," he:
added.
.
The last eq~~nsion Qf the Jack·
son County bnacb was completed
in 1990, providing about 9•.000
sqwue feet of space 10 substantially
i~prove its~ andlsoopc of~­
vtccs. At that li1lle, room for additiona! physicians was provided, .as
wen as the addition or JIUI1IIIIIO&amp;fll·
phy and physical therapy services.
Just last year, tile clinic further
expanded ,the space allocated for
phy~ical therapy and ldlabilitative
servtc~.
. . .
.
Darnel said the cli01c ts commtt·
ted to providing the best heaith care

of land adjacent to the Jackson
facility with the intention of being
able to expand 10 m~t the need for
comprehensive bealth services," he
'd
sat.
.-----------,

'I he
Oltit 1
Com pun)'

•
•
•
•
•

Stocks
Corporate Bonds
U.S. Treasury Securities
Mutual Funds
Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
• Insured Money Market
Accounts
• IRA's

Yn, 811.00 dawa wllh appraved cra,_t ... you can
buy aow! S.a a aow - aur lnvaatory Raductlan .
lala 18 gaiDg atraag. We are ••••• larward Ia 14
madals! Please balp us ta claaa. our 'lot C-ldown Ia "14" Models. BURRY 0111.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Archives today released
thousands of documents relating to
the 1963 assassination of President
Kennedy, including classified files
from the Central Intelligence Agency.
Expens were hoping the documents would help answer nagging
questions, including whether Lee
Harvey Oswald had any ties to the
U.S. govemmenL
Thousands of documents,
including files from the Warren
Commission, investigative panels

Rid, one local owner; full power. Must
be aeen to appreciate!

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

1988 OLDS .
CUTLASS 2 DR.

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

•

e tg

•

We sold It new. Low miles, new Qlds.
trade.

ree

1989 PONTIAC

GUNDAM

•

Burgundy 2 Dr., air, auto., lady driven,
new Olda trade. Don't min this one.

BEST FRIENDS - or all the animals, they say tlie dog Is
man's best f'riend. Here, 6-year-old Matt Krawsczyn or Pomeroy
and Sbllo, an 8-year-old golden retriever, prove that dogs can also
be a boy's best f'rlend. Matt and ShUo were contestants in the pet
shuw at the Meigs County Fair Friday.
··

1990 PONTIAC
GUND PRIX

Buy 2, Get a 3rd Free!
Show off your favorite photos in beautiful KODALUX ColO&lt; Enlargements.
They're great to give, and great to have and now for a limited time. when you
buy 2 at regular price you get a 3rd Free. Come in today!

1988 FORD
CONVERSION VAN

Appues tO an~ 1nree same· IIZe. aame·li nish enlargemtnts, 5 " ~~:7 " up ta 16" 1124" maae from

negatives. slides or prints. 12"x1 8" and 20"x30" Poster Prinll not included.

Ask for Details

..

·'

•

Fully loaded, locally owned. Great for .
Games &amp; Trips. T.V. Priced to selll

TAWNEY STUDIO

"People who believe the agency
did it are paranoid, and naive !O
believe that they would be stuptd
enough to leave footprints," said
Roben Blakey, a Notre Dame_law
professor who served as staff director for the 1978 House Select Committee that studied the assassination. Blakey, who studied volumes
of CIA documents, concluded that
there is " no smoking gun there."

alone, kiUed Keonedy with a rifle
from his perch in ·a sixth-floor window at the Texas School Book
Depository in downtown Dallas.
Since then, however, numerous
conspiracy theories have surfaced,
revolving around whether Oswald
was the lone gunman and, if he
was, whether he might have been
acting at the behest of the CIA, FBI
or organized crime. .
Commissions that have studied
The Warren Commission con- the assassination over the years
cluded in 1964
acting have had aq;ess to the CIA files.
0

-

•

Dragging and diving operations
in the Ohio River just above Racine
were continuing late Monday
morning for the body of a possil:!le
drowning victim.
About 6 p.m. Sunday evening
four Racine young people were in a
boat on the river when one of them,
Todd Grindstaff, about 20, reponedly lost his balance and feel into
the river when the boat was rocked
by waves c_reated by a passing tugboat.
Others reportedly in the· boat
w·ere Roy Lee Bailey, Dawn
Shuler, and Nicki Beegle. After
Grindstaff fell overboard and did
not come back up, the other three
went 10 shore 10 get help.
Bob Byer, director of '!te Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service said tha~the call at the station
was received at 6:11 p.m., that the
Racine unit was dispatched, and
was joined at the site by units from
Ravenswood and New Haven,
W.Va. Also called in fer: assistance
were the Syracuse and Pomeroy

units.
In the water for several hours
Sunday night searching for the
body were divers Dana Aldridge of
the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
ment, David Hoffman, Middlepon
Fire Depanmeot, and Richie HunL
The diving and dragging continued until after midnight and then
was resumed early this morning.
Divers at the scene this morning
are Aldridge and Kenny Byer of
the Middleport Fire Department.
Both Racine and New Haven emergency units are back on the scene
along with personnel from the
department of Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby.
Byer said that the river was shut
down last night until afler midnight. He said the Coast Guard has
bee.n "tremen!lously cqop.eraljve .
insofar as regulating the barge traf.
fie" while the search continues.

•
•

,

•

BOY SCOUT RECOGNITION. Adam Whit~, ten, or Pomeroy
Troop 249, was selected as Meigs County's 1993 Boy Scout the
Year, an_d Ci!e~~er .Troop 235 was _named the .Boy Scout Troop of
the Year. Accepting the trophy on bebalr or the troop was Pat Clif·
ford, a~istant scoutmaster.

Petitioners try to keep Demjanjuk in Israel

4 Dr., tilt, crulae, stlf'IO. New Lumina
trade. Priced to Sell!
·

KODALUX Color Enlargements ·

and congressional committees.
were released at the National
Archives. But it was the unveiling
of 90,000 pages from the Central
Intelligence Agency that attracted
the most attention, since many of
the CIA•s records bad been secret
until'"ow.
"I think that there will be a lot
ot· interesUng information," said
James Lesar, director of the Assassination Archives and Research
Center. "There will be plenty of
information that will be of great
interest to researchers."

Rescuers search river for
possible drowning victim

1989 OLDS CUTLASS·
SUPREME S.L.

Jay Caldwell

1 S.CUon. 10 Paw- 35 .., ..

AMuttimedla tnc. Newtpeper

JFK assassination papers released

Just tnldld. Showroom new. Full power.

Contact:

GALLIPOLIS · Patricia Silvers
is 'a pennanent cosmetic technician
and assistant manager for Personal
Touch Family Hair Care Centres.

KOthlux
,, _, .........

Low ton!pt 66. Tbubdenlonas.

T......,y, blgh Itt mid-80s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 23, 1993

1989 MERCURY
MARQUIS LS

I

was office supervisor for Columbus
Southern Power. He bad been with
the power company for 18 years.
He was president of the Gallipolis
Kiwanis, a Webelo Leader, served
on the Troop 200 Committee, and
was on the Board of Trustees at
Grace United Methodist Church.
The family will reside in Marietta.

STORMY

Vol. 44, 110. 12

MultiiM&lt;jl•lnc.

OFFERING:

Joins Parkersburg staff

y~hile in Gallipolis, Standish

Page4

•

Clarification

PARKERSBURG · The Parkersburg
Women's
Center
announces the appointment of
William L. Standish as Director of
Office Operations for the Parkersburg Center and its satellite offices,
effective Aug. 2. The Parkersburg _
Women's &lt;;:enter is OB/GYN facil- :
ity that serves West Virginia and
. southern Ohio. Dr. Standish
received his education from Otter·
bein College, Bliss Business College and Ohio University in
Atheos.
Standish, his wife Dee, and their
three children have been residents
of Gallipolis for the past seven

Pick 3:
6-0-3
Pick 4:
6-4-8-9
BuckeyeS:
1-2-16-18-19
(Saturday)

for.~ec~':=t=~n:es

Account Executive

JOINS STAFF • Jeannette
Farthing, Huntington, W. Va.,
bas joined the beauty salon
staff or Lissa's River View, Gallipolis.

Ohio Lottery

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1992 JEEP
COMANCHE PICKUP
5 speed, air, Rid - Rid - Red. New
Silverado trade.

JERUSALEM (AP) - Oppo- and that he served in the Sobibor
nents of John Dcmjanjuk's release death camp in Poland.
said they will do anything they can
Demjanjulc, who was extradited
to prevent him from leaving Israel, to Israel in 1986. has maintained
even if it means changing the law.
throughout his trial that .he was a
"I'm already speaking with victim of mistaken identity.
members of parliament from the
Betcer said he hoped the process
left and the right," Avi Beker, a would buy enough time to change
spokesman for the World Jewish the law so Demjanjuk would be
Conifess, said Sunday.
retried.
Petitioners have beeo given until
"We want the ~arliarnent to iniSept. 2 10 find new reasons to keep tiate a motion saymg the law dealDemjanjuk, 73, in Israel.
ing with Nazi criminals should be
Israel's Supreme Court last more flexible ... in matters of extramonth overturned Demjanjuk's dition and double jeopardy," he
1988 conviction and death penalty, said.
citing reasonable doubts be was
That won't be easy.
'
"Ivan the Terrible," a sadistic
Eight high court justices and the
Nazi guard at the Treblinka death attorney general have already reccamp.
·
.
ommended against a new trial, citBut the court said there was ing the dimger of double jeopardy
convincing evidence he belonged and saying the case has already
to a Nazi unit that helped kill Jews dragged o,n too long.

The auomer general also said
the U.S. extradition order was only
for Demjanjuk to stand trial for the
Treblinlca charges.
Efraim Zuroff, a spolc:esman fer:
another petitioner, the Simon
Wiesenthal Center of Los Angeles,
said the ceoter would address double jeopardy by introducing evidence that Demjanjuk was at other
concentration camps not mentioned
in the original trial.
Avraham Cassrier, a lawyer representing eight survivors of Sobibor, said he would continue 10 ftle
appeals until Demjanjuk is retried.
A statement from the Justice
Ministry said that an appeal like
Cassrier's - which seeks to convene a panel of judges in place of
the eight that have ruled against the
retrial- is theoretically possible.

OIDO STATE FAIR WINNERS- Numerous
Meigs County 4-H members took their projects
to the Ohio State Fair. Coming back as winners
in 1be competition there were these boys and
girls. Recognized at Youth Night Saturday at the
Meigs County Fair ror their project work were,
left to right, f'ront, Chris Krawsczyn, natural

resources; Heather Well, pork council tray;
Melissa Neutzling, Tobacco and You; and back
row, Vincent Broderick, foods; Debra Frost and
Denise Shenefield, clothing; and Kyle Ord, wbo
took a first in tbe state In the pole bending competition.

1990 PLYMOUTH
LASER
2 Dr., auto. tnlnL, new Chevrolet trade.
Priced to Gol SH Us Rrstl

'

CLOSE.OUT SPECIAL!
*3.3 Liter V-6 Engine
*Cruise Control
*Rear Defogger
*Delay Wipers

1992 Chevrolet Lumina Euro

'

1992 Olds Achieva 4 Dr.

- 4 DR., Stock I PM 1061

*Inflatable Restraint System
*AMIFM/Cassette
*Power Windows
*Tilt Wheel

Hurry, It won't last long.

99 5

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1

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1992 Olds Oera 4 Dr.

s

1992 Olds Royale 88 4 Dr.

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power door locka, -'um whHis.

C.panAt -

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"

CBEVROI.El'

513,995

.

• .GBO

•

1616

Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

See Don Carter, Bre~ Epling, Marc Carman, Hoyt Mullins, Greg Smith

446·3672

I

.'

'

I

. GIRL SCOUTS RECOGNIZED • These girl
scouts and their leaders were recognized at the
130th Meigs County Fair Youth Nl1bt beld In
the show arena Saturday night. Tbe recoplzed
group included Iert to right, front, Vicki Nor·
man or Letart Troop; 104, outstanding Brownie
.scout; Melissa Holmaa, Middleport Junior
Troop 1039, outstaodln&amp; junior; Bethany Cooke,
Pomeroy, Cadette Troop 1115, best cade,t te
exhibitor; and Rebecca Houser, PCHDeroy Troop
1271, who tied for OIJistandlng Brownie scout.;

back Michelle Bissell, Rutland, outatandlng
cadetle, who also accepted the award for best
cadetle troop; Terrie Houser, Pomeroy, outstanding Brownie troop leader; and Pam Johnson, leader of Middleport Junior Troop 1276,
tbe outstandln&amp; junior troop, tbe best overall
best fair b!Jotb, and tile reclpleut of the revolving trophy ror the overall best trnop In Mel15
County. Not present- Rachel Taylor, of Mid·
dleport Troop ll76, who received the best
junior exhibit award•

OUTSTANDING 4-H CLUB MEMBERS·
· Elizabeth Donie, ien, and Kelly Grueser were
bonored at tile 1993 ontstandln&amp;4-H club members durlu&amp; Youth Night at the Meigs County

Fair, Here .they accept clock trophies rro~;~~
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Couuty Extension Agent.
They were also presented S100 savings bonds.

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