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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohl~

BORN LOSER
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TH.'J~ GOAAEtT...

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Television
Viewing

- - - - - - ldl ..

Sunday

UMI

tk1
b&amp;low to fc3rm fou r simple WQrds

SUPEUR

EVENINQ

8:00 (l) • lilii IIIII \111111
~Ill ~News

(]) Vkt10 Power

T~l5

PENCI ~ ERASERS ARE

STUPID

E~ASER SMUDGES

EVER'fTHING ~

SPOILED 6'1' EXPOSURE
TO ULTRAVIOLET L16~T OR
OZONE IN T~E AIR, SIR .

T~ERE 'S MYPROBLE.\1
MA'AM .. M'f ~EAO 15
SPOILED FROM SITTING
TOO CLOSE TOT~E
WINDOWSILL .

AN ERASER CAN EVEN BE
SPOILED 8'f LEAVING IT
ON A l,IIINDOWSILL ..

(

I
1----TI---r.c-1'--.-1,-;-oil~ ,

Professor to graduating
law
students :
'When
previously asked a legal
questiOn you could honestly
say 'I don't know.' Now you
can say, wrthout hesitating,
'It - · --·--. "'

EDGUF

~

Racing Acroaa America
Black-Eyed Susan from

Baltimore (AI
131 Wo~d Today
aJ1 Rln nn nn, K-9 Cop
Stereo. Q
6:051ll Bevorty Hlllblllloa
6:30 (l) D 0 NBC Nowa Q
(!) !llvod by tho Bell
(JJ Ill Clllll ABC Ntwt C.
(I) Wild America Siereo. Q
Squoro Ont TV Stereo

L_J_~~L_~~-

VENAID
7

I' I I 1 I

8

The elderly gentleman left the bank shaking
his head and munering out loud. "I remember when
the signs in the bank said, "Next Window Please." Now
they read, ' NEXT BANK I' •

I1J MtcNeii/LO
NowaHour Q
Morrlo&lt;L Wllh Chlldron

- --·- ·- - -··"

IJlCI

OJ 1111 Joopordyl c
Generation C

~ Gl

I

•

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0

Montreal Expos at Atlanta

Bravos (L)
8:00 (l) D 0 I Wltnooa Vldoo
Oswald's shooting is
examined; authorities tape

schoolchildren. (AI (1 :00)
Stereo. C
l!l MOVil!: Whc Ia tho Block
Dahlia? (2 00)
(JJ Ill Clli!J Family Monoro
Urkel helps Car1 catch a
bunch of vandalizing Q!!l9
members.
Stereo ._L,J
(I)

(Rj

11J Waohn~ Wook In

Review Stereo. C

~ 1111 11:11111 ntanlc:
Trwllurt of tile Ooop M
international crew embarks
on an exploration of the
sunken ship to retrieve

never-before-seen footage of
the wreckage. Host: Walter

Cronkite. (1 :00! Stereo. Q
l!llll Ame~o 1 Moot

PHILLIP
ALDER

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Players come up with a myriad of
excuses for erro~. ~1 didn't see your
discard, parlner. The light is "' bad."
Today's hand occurred in a Welsh

r DIDN'T KNOW
THAT WE. c;AN'r
BE: SEEN W 1'11-4
THe; NAI&lt;EO
E::YE •

-..vE 6ERM ~ -"S&lt;E
EXTREMEL..Y
5\IAI.l- . WE'RE

so e.MAL.L ...

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return. Stereo.

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TH' CHAMPEEN GOSSIP

h1m to behave like a macho
animal. (R) Stereo. C
(I) 11J Air Fon:o OnT: Tho
Pl•n•• a. the Pr11kttntt II

Stereo.

"""

IN THIS CORNER -MY SISTER ZONIE U

NOW II

IIIII Dlncaouro

Robbie's pal Spike convinces

QVA. w...J
~

Q

Ill Anclonl Socrtll
of tho Bible Religious

~ IIi) ~

scholars and scientists share
viewpoints on stories of the
Bible through re-enactments
and intriguing evidence.
Host: William Devane. (2:00)

I

tournament. Most pairs went down· in

Sl:X

Pass
Pass

p..,

Pass

6 NT

PaM

Pa"
Pass

n~lrump,

West leads the diamond
jack. You win and cash the A-Q ol

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 - 500 r&amp;ee
5 - - lht
ground floor

«

9 Research

491nstanctt

Fastln'iJ

period
46 Dolly

room

53 TrH

54 Member of

15 Motel owner
17 HSBI unil

(abbr.)

18 ~able writer

primiUva
community
~6 AFL·57 Whlri
58 ActreuGarr

19 Young hare

21 Renown

Vale student
24 56, Roman

23

27 El -, Tuas

59 Actor Murray
60 DlrscUon

61 Sound from a
ken nul

29 Cooled
32 Aaport
34 Prim
36 Sorer
37 Stroot
38 W1tch over
39 TV antenna
4t

Antwer to Prfttoue hll..

42 Wide shoo
alll

OOWN

1 Hlpbonll
2 Bsnb•ll

ttlm number
3 Uons' hom11

4 River In

~r

6 Seaport In
Italy
7 9-lhlptd
molding
8 CcU&lt;t91

Alllkl

9 Dll

5 Ang•r

10 Pty on•'•

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 201 Guard

against the inclination today t o make
things more difficult than they are . This
tendencv could be rather strong . and it
will impede your progress

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be very,.,.
!ective toda-y regarding social invitations -you m1ght receive There's a possibility you may get involved with a
crowd who could make you feel very
uneasv

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) II you
feel compelled to work on tasks you find
distasteful today , your performance I S
not apt to be impressive Beller set
them aside until -you ·re in a better lrame
of mind.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-J..,_ 19) Abide
by the will of the ma,orit-y today_II you
don 't those you're iniJOived wilh might
gang IJP on you , and you could end up
defending an untenable position
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 19) Be on

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Both you end
your mate snoutd be ol the same mind
guard in career situations today;
·
today where important domestic Oecla possibility you might experience
lily 18, 11112
sions are concerned . II one decides
position from several unexpected
something without the consent ot the
sources. Be prepared to adjust.
You'll have the edge over your opposi- other, a rumble could result.
•PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch :!0) it's
tion In competllive arrangements In the · VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22)' Usually, en- not to Olscuss your Ideas
year ahead. However, you'll still have to deavors ot a mental nature are your cup
earn your viC1orles; they won't be of tea. However. your powers of con - ' ual who has
with others
awarded without a contesl.
centration might not be up to par today, concepts. Let this
TAURUS (Apr/120-Moy 201 You're not and small mistakes are likely.
independent thinking.
likely to be com(ortabte today operating LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Don't op"" . ARIES (Morch 21-April t9) Be '""''""
in close proximity with forceful individ- your wallet today to a friend who tradiat this time you don't become lnv.lived I
uals. A clash ot wills could result. Tau- tionally never repays. You don't want to
in a tricky financial arrangement
rus, treat )"OUrself to a birthday gift. help reinforce this indil'idual's bad
could demand a larger cash outlay
Send tor Taurus' Astro-Graph predlc- habits.
you than you had anticipated.
liont tOf' the year ahead by mailing SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Don 't put
$t .25 plus e long. solf-eddressed.

~~~~;~~;~;:~~:ri·~~~:~:;

•

sher•
11 Boxing
conteat
1&amp; Epic poom

20 Skip ....
22 L1n91r
24 Futuro
U.Ba.' eum
25 Yl•a- (by
word of
mouth)

-n-+-+--1
...r-+-1--1

t;1

-+--+--1

2611ongoou
28 - orongo
30 Nttdlo CIM
3I Profound
33 HlflowHn
bl•or•u•
35 Shew plainly
40 Friends
43- nous
U LuiiCioUI

Many commun 1ti cs arc asking
for income or sales tax increases to
improvement poli ce and fire

CRASH!- JefT Cook, 12, examines a hole in
the Third Avenue side of Womeldorff and
Thomas True Value Hardware. According to a
report from the Gallipolis Police Deparlment,
Kent M. Hollenbeck, 41, of Gallipolis, pulled
from the municipal parkin~ lot, failed to recover
from the turn and crashed onto tbe building. The

wreck happened around 11:30 p.m. Friday. Hotlen beck, uninjured in fhe crash, was cited for
railure to control, driving under the innuence
and leaving the scene of an accident. Hoi/en beck's 1990 Cbenolet sustained heavy damage.
JefT is the son of Bob and Susan Cook, owners or
the store. (Times-Sentinel photo)

Ohio's director of' development
Jakeway to visit Meigs County
By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Sta/T
POMEROY - Meigs County 's
eco nomi c dev e lopment team I S
making preparation s to welcome
Donald E. Jakeway . D~CCior of tltc
OhiO Department of Development.
Jakeway will spend most of 1he day
o n Friday, May 22 tourtng Meigs
businesses and meeting wnh offi ciJls.
Aecordtng to Mctgs Counly
Ec onomic Deve lopment Director
Paula Thacker. Jakeway is responsible for prom01ing and planning
program s 10 a ss ure ec onom1 c
growth, crc&lt;Jting and rcmining Ohto
jObS. and providing ICChntCaJ USSIS·
Lance to various olhcr state dcpanmcniS. local govcmmeniS and pub-

ltc/private organizations. He als o
enco urages expansion of minonty
bu siness enterprises.
This will be Jakeway's first" " '
10 Meigs County since he JOt ned
th e Voinovich admini stration in
199 1.
Jakeway wtll be accompantcd
on hts visll by Regional Develop ment Director Elizabeth Schaad ;
Nan cy Hollister. Director of the
Governor's Office of Appalachia;
and John Ventures from ihe Ohio
Ocpartmcnl of Industrial Relations.
Jakeway w1ll speak a1 a cmcred
luncheon at ihe Meigs Counly 1'\Jb/i c Library at 12: 15 p.m. School
offictals. retail merehants and bust ness representatives are encouraged
10 ancnd ihe luncheon . Gi lmore' s

COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP) - A
growing number of young people
from lower-income famili es may
be unable to afford a college education even with a state grunt to pay
pan of the tUition . ihc chancellor of

1hc Ohio Board of RcgcnLs sa id.
Chancellor Elain e Hairston
offered ihaT assessment after iclling
1hc htgher education panel that
almost $3 .5 million in available
Slate aid 10 prospeclive Sludcnts

. . . .........."'•.

·'--·-:

~

....

47 Tunnll player

9:30 lilii ChHrt C
IIIII Baby Tolf Romance

-n-+-+--1

explodes between MagQ!!

and James. (Rl Stereo. 1.,1

l!liiD T~ol &amp; ~rror The

Nulttt

4e Locolo
110 Diving duck
~I Noblomon
52 Cut
55 Sandwich
typo/abbr.)

·--

imprisoned men, Roger

Coleman and Terry
McCracken. may be seriously

changed by overlooked
evidence and false

(0:30) Stereo.

0 Swamp Thing
10:00 (!) Nowa
ljillll IIIII 20/20 Stereo

al'mHu-c

Tho Hltchhil(or
Ia On Staao Stereo.
131 World iiowo
Qll 700 Club Wllh Pot
I[)

Roborllon

10:30 (!) Mojor Looguo Be-ll
Chicago Cubs at Son
Francisco Giants (L)
(I) IJ) Mrt. Fonwtck Wont to
Woahlngton During lour
terms l·nCongress, F8nwlck
sets a high standard lor

atllics and Is the Inspiration
.or the hcnoroblo Lacoy

Davenport. (0:30) C
I[) Roy Brtdbury Th.aror

•

C loud _~ . Hi~-: h in

-~

mid KOs.

15 Sections, 138 Page•
A MuiUmedia Inc. Newspaper

wou ld go unu sed thts year
Ms. Hairston sa1d she was con cerned by 1hc unu sually larg e
amounl of money lcfl un spent in
ihc $60 mtllton Ohio Instructional
Gram program .
"My sense is that we arc seeing
a growing gap bccwccn the capacitv of the lowest income familtcs to
pay for college. And even with ihc
grantJn g of the awa rd Ihe y arc
mtss ing enough fundin g 10 be able
to achieve a co\l egc education ,"

tions fair.
Among the school 1Ss ucs
- In Wes t Cheste r in suburban
Cmcinnali, voters will be asked LO
approve a $54 mtll ion bond issue
fur the Lakoia School DiSUJct. The
money would fund a new high
sc hool. 1wo clemcnlary sc hools. 34
cl ass roo m add itio ns and o ther

Oppone nt Sand y Se verso n. a
mother of three chtldrcn and fur mer teacher. said ihc dt s1I1c i should
have two smaller high schools
" The y don't know whai i1 ial: es
to run ihis large high sr hm l.'' she
said.
- Voiers in Duhhn , a Columbus
suburb. will dCCJdc on a $50. 3 mil lion bo nd iss ues to build new
sc n10 r. middl e and eleme ntary
schools. and an additJon 10 another
clcmcn1ary sc hool.
Spokes man Stephen Anders on

1mprovcmcnts.
Supcriniendcnt Thomas Hayden
said Lhc money would help solve
cro wding cau sed by the dis Lri ct's
50 percent growih St ncc the mtd- ~a id the di stri c t mu st prepare for
19R ils.
3.000 stud cnl s tn kind crgancn
"We feel ti's not only good for 1hr o u~h thJrd -g radc who will be
the kids, u' s good for the taxpa y- movi11 g up through the sysLCm. The
ers, " he ~ud .
Cnntinurd on A-2

State says figures wrong,
but results OK on C-sections

COLU MBUS. Ohio (AP) She said whtle ihc pcrccniagc of
The Dc partmcnl of Hcalih satd Fn- C-scctions in relation to all births
cby ihat tncomplciC Ohto statisucs dropped tn Ohto in 1990. the num used m a national study of Caesare- be r of Caes arean s in c reased to
money.
In Eucltd , volers in ihe Cll y of an btrth s correctly tndi catcd a 40.237 from 40.1 60.
.. Th.~ ~ ~ncr c a sc in perc entage
c.'.K00 will decide "Whether to limtt shgq.~wnward· ~f\'~!!1 . .
Smiih,
the
dcpartmcni
\
Donna
r
c~ultci!
from an increa"ic in overall
co uncil members ro f1vc con scru
stati
stician,
said
Lhc
complete
fig
btrths
10 167.950 from 164 .894,
t1v c te rms of two y ea r s eac h
ures,
obtained
from
birth
cenifi
Ms. Smiih sa id.
The y'll al so vo le on whcih cr 10
She satd the departm ent ha d
I1m it the mayor to three terms of catcs , show a decrease to 24 pcrccnl of all births tn 1990 from 24.4 received several calls as a result of
four years each.
the mix -up , mostly from lhc news
"I think it makes it JXlSsiblc lltal perccnl in 19R9.
A nalional report iss ued earlier media . ' ' The f1 g ur es were no t
a good. hard -worktng person ... has
no alrcr nativc but to stop ," Sfl!d ihts week by ihc Publt c Cuizc n 's wrong, they were just inc ompl ete,·'
Councilman Bill Ccrvinick, in hi s Hca/ih Res earc h Group lisiCd a she satd.
Publtc Cuiz en. :t Ralph N:tdcr
third year in office. ' 'I'm not sure d ecrease in Caesareans in Ohio to
25
.7
pcrccn1
tn
1990
from
25.9
per·
organi zation m Washin gton , D.C.,
that' s correct.' '
re poned a national Caesarean rat e
Teacher Kathcnn c Lawrence. CCni tn 1989.
Ms_ Smith said Puhil c C1ti ze n of 22 .7 JX:rccnl.
who helped put th e 1ss uc on tl1 c
It sa1d Neva da le d the nati o n
hall ot. sa td she docs n'l wanlt o used fi gures that omill cd infant s
throw anyone off Lh c counctl. She horn to famili es on puhlt c a s~ 1 S · wnh 31.7 pcrccnL
said term limilS would make clcc· tan CC .

Jo Ellen Diehl Yeary named
Meigs baccalaureate speaker

JO ELLEN YEARY

POME ROY · Jo El len Dt e hl
Ye ar y, se ni or at to rn ey with
Co lumb1J Natural Rcsourcn, Inc.,
will be the bacc ala ur ea te ~pc ak cr
lo r ih c 24th annual Mctgs Hi gh
Sc hool gradua uon on Sunclay. Ma y
24 . at 4·30 p.m. tn ihc Larr y R.
Morrison Gyrn na.s1um. A 1972 gr:tduatc of Mctgs Htgh
Sc hon!, Yeary IS the dau ghter or
i'-1r.s. l!la Di ehl , Po meroy. and former Meigs H1gh Sc hoo l pnn c1ra l.
the late Jame.\ Diehl.
Yeary rCCLJ VCd a bachelor or
arts deg ree from Mari etta College
tn 19 76, and her jur :.., doc torat e
fr om Ca pital Uni vc r\ 1\ )', Co lum bus. m 19RO.

She was crn pln ynl ;1-; a clerk for
Ju dge Earl E Stcphcmo n, Fo urth
/J tstri ct, Court of Appeals of Ohio
lor a year ~fo re joinm g Columbia
Gas Transmi ss ton Corp . tn 1981.
She worked as an allorncy with
Columbia Ga s Transmi ss ion unlil
19 H9 when she was pro moted to
th e posit1 on of scn1or attorney .
Yearly currcmly serves as presi de nt of the Board ol Direc lors of
Famil y Scrvt cc of Kanaw ha Val Icy. Inc. She ts a member of the St.
Anthony Church where she sings in
th e chotr.
She and her hu sband. John . have
a son. Ph!li p. They rc:-.1Jc 111 Soulh
Charleston. W. Va.

Th e OIG pr ov td cs gr anl s of
dependt ng on
famil y size and tncomc . to he lp pay
th e tuition of studc ms from famJ It cs earntng le ss ihan $27.000.
About 80 percent of the rcc tptcnts
att end public universities, and 20
pcrccnl independent co ll eges.
Some money normall y is not
used because students wh o arc
notified ihcy arc eligible for graniS
s ub sc quc n~y fai/10 enroll.
Ms. HatrSIOn tra ced th e $3 .5
mtllion lcfl over this year partly to
studcnls being unable to finance
the remaining cost of their educavar y ing amount s,

convictions of two

~ntlficotlons

Ihe river .............. R1-7
Business/Farm ............... D1-8
Classified ....................... 03-7
Dealhs ............................ ... .A.l
Ediloral .... .........................A4
Sports............................. C 1-6
Wralhrr ........................... A-2

o,;hc said.

l.

lng eerd1

-

will cater th e event. Reservati ons
required, and mu st be made to
the chamber office (~92 - 5005 ) by
Wednesday. The cost ts $8.
A meeting wilh local el ec icc/
officials and business leaders &lt;H the
chamber's offices m Pomeroy will
follow Lhc luncheon.
Jakeway and th e de velopment
lc:tm will spend the altcmoon vtStitng bu sinesses ihr ough o ul the
counly. mcluding Midwest Steel tn
Pomeroy, Faccmycr Lumber Com pany in Middleport. and Harri s
Fanns in Portland .
Jak eway will
v1sit th e
Raven swood Bridge before cam p/cling ht s firsl vtStt to Meigs
Coumy .
arc

dcparuncms , roads, cemeteries and
parks . Oih crs wo uld prov ide
money for seni or ci ti 1.ens, social
service agcn cic" or programs for
the m cn~tl ly ilL
Not all ballot ISs ues in volv e

$3.5 million in state tuition aid unused

4e Pack of ploy·

developmental milestones
reveals the dynamics of &amp;arty
physical, social and
emolional growth through the
f1rst year (1:00)

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

p.,

balanced 23-24 points. He converted to U the spades are 3-2. _you have 12
"' no-trump just in case the trumpo tncks. And 1! West has ktng-fourth of
were breaking badly and they had 12 spades, he can be squeeud m the
tricks elsewhere - what should have maJOrs.
been a prescient decisiOn.
With the actual distribution, how
Aller l.lle bad heart break came to 1does East defend' If he rises with the
hght. the declarer saw that he needed spade king. you have three spade
three spade tncks to gel home. "It was tricks. II he ducks his king, you win
late in the evening - one gets lazy and -.;~ the q~n a~d ~vert to .hearts,
rehes on the spade finesse." But when g1vm.g West his trick 10 the swt. Your
the finesse lost and the suit broke 4-1 U tncu are two spades. lour hearts,
he went down.
· three diamonds and three clubs.
However. the contract is Rllaran(i) ...,..._..,. iNIESia .YM.

footage of an infant's

yourself m a pos•llon today where an assoc•ate whose abilitieS are not up to
your standards is empowered to dictat e
your course of action

Pass

South's first two bids described a ,queen

IUl Discovering the Firat
YHr of Ufl Dramatic

stamped envelo pe to Astro-Graph. clo
this newspaper . P.O . BoK 9t428. Cleveland , OH 44101 -3 426 . Be sure t o stare
your zodiac s1gn

Eoot

hearts, but East discards a low dia- teed . At trick lour. lead a spade to the
mond. How do you continue?
ace and a low spade back toward the

Beyond Rtollty
all Nuhvllle Now Stereo.
a Lorry King Uvol

ASTRO-GRAPH

tncluding a pro posal to limit lenns
of clcciCd officia ls in a Cleveland
suburb .
Th ere arc 250 cducation-rcullcd
issues on ballots across the state.
The Ohio Department of Educauon
considers that num ber about average.
Voters 1n suburban Cincinnati
and Columbll&lt; will face lwo schoo l
hand issues each worih more ihan
$50 million , while ihosc tn a
Guern sey CouOi y sc hool dJSirtci
wtll dCCJ dc whether 10 approve a
pr ope rly tax levy of nearl y 17
mills.

'------------...J

abductions and other
evidence ol UFO visitations

are examined. Stereo.

well as other local referendum s,

Opening lead: t J

Stereo. []

I[)

I

2 NT
4"
S•

lllllll Slglitinga Human

FROM CLABBER FA LLS- -

CO LUMBU S, Ohto (AP) Ohioans going to Lhc polls June 2
w1ll decide school money issues as

I

hBSil

. , . 93

W..t
Pass

a major-suit small slam. But one play· :
er, who failed in six no-trump, ha&lt;
only himself to blame.
Cover the East-West cards. Against

13 Angsr
14 Numero -

(Season Finale) Nathan Is
overjoyed about his coach's

YOW COUL..D Ll5E
THE liN II 'Nr?RD
IN A FAMit...Y
COMIC.

I

Soutb

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Ohio voters will decide
school issues, term limits

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Vulnerable: North.SOuth
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

their new cartoon ideas by

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12 In - of

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SOUTH
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Buddy Two people are
pr&amp;'.'&amp;nted from developing
power-hungry weasels.

WEST

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Wanted A louisiana parolee
kills while trying to rob a

poliliclan. Stereo. r:;1
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all Crool! ond Cho11
a PrimeNewa Q
8:30 (JJ Ill (J) Ill Roooy ond

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Inside

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, May 17, 1992

NORTH
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llllll Sur Trok: The Nut
EntortB'fnment Tonight
Stereo. C
0 MocO\'vor Stereo. Q
@ SportoCenter
131 Monoyllne
11J1 Seo World All-Sur Lone
Sur Celobrotion Petrick

Vol. 27, No. 15

Copyrighted 1992

r--=~--------.

BRIDGE

- C-1

•
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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

(I)

Texas. (2:00)
7:051ll Addams Family
7:30(l)D 0 Joopordrl C
(!) Now It Con Be lola"
(l) Ill Enterlllnmont Tonight
:&gt;tereo. 1;1
Ill D Mamo'a Family
~ 1111 Whool of Fortune Q
~ Ill Family Foud
all Be o Sur Stereo.
@ Mojor Looguo Beoeblll
ill
131 Cn111flrw
7:351ll Major Loogue Beoeblll

Pomeroy Alumni Association offering
scholarships- Bob Hoeflich -Page A-2

B-1

Unbend - Known - Fatal · Extend · NEXT BANK

00
The Jefferson•§
(JJ IJinaldo Edition

Duffy and Marie Osmond
celebrate the cultural ·
heritage of the Tuas Hill
Country at Sea Wor1d of

Crown City High School had one
graduate in 1920- James Sands A-6

PR 1NT NUMSEREO lETT ERS 1
IN THES E SQUARES

~

1111 ~ Ill CBS Nowa Q
Ill Andy Grtffllh
ilJ Scooby Ooo
Q]) Now Zom&gt; Stereo. Q
6:351ll Andy Griffith
7:00~D 0 Whoolof For1unl

Pine Bluff cops 117th Preakness

Dean top
Gallia fair
attraction
this year

f o~r

(L)SquoroOneTVQ
I1J Roodl~olnbow Q
l!liiiJ Full
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75 cents

ClAY I . ,OLLAN

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PREVIOU S SOLUTION " There's not a helicopter pilot anywhere th1t
not spr ing-loaded to tlelp somebody." - (KNBC pilot) Bob Pettee.

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PREPARING FOR BOATING SEASON -Many arl'll boating enthusiasts were busy Saturday preparing for fhe summer
boating season. Here, Oleo Neal or Point Pleasant, W.Va., sands
the deck or his houseboat in preparation for a new coat or fiberglass. Neal was working on his houseboat at the Gallipolis Boat
Club. (Times-Sentinel photo)

"Our highest gran/ only pays a
IHtlc over $!,300. Thai 's less than
our av erage tuition. even lit our
co mmunily co llege s, whi ch ts
aboul $ / ,600 to $1 .800. and our
univ ersit y average is about
S2,RIXl ... she said.
" Tho se htgh tuilion s simply
rcnccllow Sia/j: support, hisiOrical ly, for hi gher ed ucation in Lhc state.
Money ciihcr comes from ihc stu den! , or the slaiC. or a combination
1hcrcof," Ms. Hairstoo said .
The $3.5 milli on. like oth er
money un spcnl by governm ent
agencies, now wtll be avatlabl c for
o1hcr purposes.

ATTF.ND SATURDAY RALLY - A contingency of Meigs County union members
attended a rally in Ravenswood, W.Va. Saturday in support of United Steelworkers of Ameri·
ca Local 5668. Richard Trumka, lnternalional
President or the United Mine Workers was
expected to join the group in Pomeroy, hut a
delay forced him to arrive in Ravenswood. The

~roup

pictured, made up or members or tbe
UMW, USWA and other local labor movement
supporters, traveled by convoy to the rally
which was expected to draw 8,000 to 10 000
union members from !be local area, as weil as
Virginia, Kentucky and Michigan. (Times·Sen·
tine/ Photo by Brian J_ Reed)
:
J'
·~---

�..

.page-A2 Sunday n.mes-sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport l".a!Upolls, Ott Point Pleasant,

wv

May 17, 1992

May 17, 1992

Sunday, May 17
; Accu-Weathe,.. fora:aiSt for daytime conditions and high
MICH.

•

IToledo I 79° I
PA

IMansfield IW I•
INO

W VA

Snow

Ice

Pt Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

C1992 Aeeu- Wea rnw. Inc

Weather
Monday through WedneSday:
Fair and wann through the period. Highs in the 70s Monday and
be tween 75 and 85 Tuesday and
Wc&lt;inesday. Lows eac h day in the
50s.

. South-Central Ohio
. Sunday, considerable cloud i_ncss with a slight chance of show·
crs and thunde!litonns. High in !he
mid 80s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
· Extended forecast:

Concerns prompt state
to halt prison furlough plan
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) iaw enforcement concerns and
possible risks to communiti es
prompted !he slate to discontinue a
~oli cy of releasmg prisoners on
'wb· or three-day home furloughs.
qffi cials said.
"F~rst, although Ohio 's record
ill regard to this program •s vinually unblem1shed . clearly there is
always a risk to the community m
~ch a program," Lt. Gov. Mike
f&gt;cWinc said.
: "Second , over time, the program became a negative management tooL And third, it was very
~xpenstve to administer."
: Some pnsoners who had
received furlough s were se rving
Ctfe se ntences for murder, The
~olu mbu s Dispatch reportc&lt;i Satur·
t!ay.
· De Wine and Reginald Wilkin ~on , director of the Deparuncm of
Rehabilitation and Correction, said
friday the pol•cy was dropped after
extensive deparunental review.
Prison spokesman Richard Hall
said he could not estimate !he cost
.ol the program, staned in the mid' 1970s.
' "Any inmate can apply for the
:home furlou gh. There· s a whole
: burC&lt;~ucra tic process behind it, a lot
of perso n hours in vo lved," Hall

=

OUI ahead ol it earlier today.
The f1001 will pass lhrough the
SWe Sunday night and somewhat
co.:Jb air will reiUm behind it for
the arty part ol the week. As much
as~ inch of rain may fall by
Monday IIIOOiing.
HigJls Friday ranged from 68 at
TolcOO to 81 at the sou!hem end of
the swr.

Around tbe nation
Rain fell in several East Coast
cities early Saturday. It was cloudy
or foggy across most of !he rest of
the United Slates.
Friday night, the front produced
strong thunde!litorrns over pans of
So uth Dakota, Colorado. New
Mexico, Wyoming and Nebraska ,
spawning several tornadoes. No
mjunes or damage were reponed,
though a lightning strike started a
forest fire in western Wyoming's
Bridger-Teton National Forest.

Mayors find audience for old
complaints about federal aid Voters ...

•I Columbus I 81 ' I

:Showers T-storms Rain Flurries

By Tht Associated Press
The National Weather Ser.1Ce
forecast beauttful summerhk~
weather for the rest of the ..·ed.tnd
in Ohio.
Highs today w1U tn the lo"' &amp;0&lt;.
A cold front tS expected w l&gt;nng
clouds Sunday. Although the lront
itself probably won 't reach the
until tonight, some scanerod shovo ·
ers or th understorms could break

The furlough, an unsupervised
pass to sec a relative, was granted
only to pri soners who had diS pla ye d excellent behavior for at
least two years.
Prison records showed that more
than 159 prisoners were eligible for
home furl oughs in 1987, but only
II were granted 48 -hour releases
last year. None had received fewe r
than three furlou ghs. and one had
received 2J
Eight of the 11 had been sen tenced to life in prison. The Dtspatch said.
Hall said thr ee of the II had
been pardoned or paroled . Th e
remaining eight in the 22-poson
sys tem were notified of the new
policy Friday.
Local law enfoncement offi cers
were to be notified each time a
prisoner was released.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ra'
Flyn n, Boston 's combative DemOcrauc mayor. was makmg a f.1m.iltar plea last week as he w~ iJit
halls of Congress seeking aid f(&gt;'
C1t1es. The d•fference litis time, he
says, IS people were paying .a!Wltion.
''I've been commg here for
years, " Flynn sa1d. 'Tve never
been more frustrated - but I've
never been more listened 10."
The shnnkmg share of frdenl
money flowmg to America's cilics
has been a complaint of mayors f(&gt;'
most of the past dozen rem of the
Reagan and Bush admm•Slr3lioo&lt;As the riots in Los Angeles
focused the nation· s auouioo oo
the profound problems of lht: cili&lt;s,
Flynn and other mayors found
themselves wnh an unexpected
opponunit y to spo tligh t thl
decline.
Accord 1ng to the C .S. Confer·
ence of Mayors. direct federal aid
to cities has declined 65 perc.eot
since Ronald Reagan took offn in
1981 . tf adJusted for inllatioo.
In eight maJOr program aras
cited by the mayors , the level of

Lottery numbers
CL EVELAND(A P) - Two
8 uckcyc 5 game tickets have all
five numbers drawn Fnday oigbt
by the Ohio Lottery and an: each
wonh $1OO,OOJ
Here arc Foday ntght 's Ohoo
Lonery sclecuons:
nuckeye 5 Numbers
II. 12. 18. 21.34
(eleven, twelve. eighteen. twCJIty-onc. lhiny-four )
Pick 3 Numbers
l- 1 '

(three, one, live)

Pirk 4 Numbers

3- 1-0- 1
(three. one. wro. one)

lclaal aKI fell from $23 .7 billion
JD 1981 to Sl4.1 billion in !he current ftscal year. Under President
Bush's tJfoposed budget for ftscal
1993, dle number would decline to
SIll btllion.
Had lite oro£rams been main·
I3.0if.d at the rate of inflat1on since
1981, lht:y would now total $37.3
btllJon_

Fo- New York, !hat would have
Jml'iikd an addit.iooal $3.9 billion
thos year, Mayor David Dinkms
figu=

Th understorms over southeast·
ern Sou th Dakota produced golf
ball size hail, while thundemorrns
over ce ntral Nebraska produced
wind gusts to 58 mph at North Plat·
Strong thund ersto rm s also
dumped hail over parts of Oklahoma and Kansas. There were
showers over the southcm Plains,
western Lou •sia na and eas tern
·1cxas. Showers were scattered
along the Fast Coast from Florida
to New Jersey

laid off staff to meet its bud geL
" We arc at the point ei!her !he
levy passes or this will probably be
the last year for the school dis tric ~ " she said.
Opponent Sherwood Bauman of
Claysv ille sa1d students deserv e
money for a good education but
said !he sc hool board should have
dealt with budget problems earlier.
" It's a perfect example or government's ment.alily of the way to
get out of debt is to borrow more
money ." he said.

Sakm Townsh1p was omitted
from infonnation
rdeased by the Metgs County
Sht:nfrs Department.
Also aJ the scene were Ru~and
3lld Wilksville emergency crews.
unm~nuonally

. POMEROY - Charles Blake, 89, of Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilit.atJon Center, fonmerly of Apple Grove, died on Monday, May II, 1992. He
was a laborer.
He was born on December 3 I , 1902 in Oklahoma, the son of !he late
Foster and Sara Markley Blake.
Surviving are a son, Roven Blake of Columbus; five grandchildren:
James Candy, Tabatha, Andrew and Chad Blake, all of Columbus; and
two great-grandchildren, Jason and Brittany Blake of Columbus.
He was a member of Drew Webster Post of !he American Legion the
YFW in Mason, W.Va., and the DAVofPomeroy.
'
Graveside services wiD be held on Monday at II am. at Letan Falls
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home on Sunday from 7 p.m. to
9p.m.

COLUMBUS - Anna Mae Han, 65, Columbus, died Satunday , May
16, 1992, at her home.
Born in Mingo County, W.Va., to the late Hiram H. and Edith Mabel
Jenkins Ferrell, she was a homemaker and afflliated with the Church of
God.
She is survived by: seven sons, Roger W. Cleland, Johnny S. Cleland
and Edwin K. Cleland, all of Columbus, Ronald E. Cleland, St Cloud,
Aa., Larry L. Cleland, Pomeroy, Thomas L. Cleland, Cheshire, and Floyd
H. Oeland, Rutland; 12 grandchildren; two great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Also surviving are: four sisters, Lucille Topping, Pomeroy, Viola
Edmonds, Columbus, Mary Damelfe, Jackson, and Marie Clonch Carbon
HiD; two brothers, Johnny and Steve Ferrell, bo!h of Columbus. '
In addition to her _parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
Yemeer Han, two ststers, Genrude Welch and Beulah Brown and a
grandson, leremie Boyd Cleland.
'
Services will be held Monday , May 18, II a.m., at the Birchfield
Funeral Home in Ru~and with Pastor Paul Taylor officiating. Burial wiU
be in Wright Cemetery.
Friends may call24 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. today at the funeral home.

ANNUAL
YIELD

Aa:ording to the Senate Banking. H011sing and Urban Affairs
Cootminee, sone S26. 7 btUion was
lllllluiltd in foscal 1980 for assisted bousmg, mc luding new consttuctioo. wbstantial rehabilit.ation
.00 rent Sllbsidil:s. In 1991, the figure """ S8.5 billion, a decline of
tDDrt than 80 percenL

wday.

Charles Blake

Anna Mae Hart

loasing

POMEROY - The Salem Town'h•p Volunteer Fire Department,
3lld 1101 the Scipio Township VFD ,
awsrd a1 the scene of !he hunting
faulity near Salem Center on Sat-

CLIFI'ON : Elsie Jane Dennen, 70, of Clifton, died Fnday, May 15,
1992, m the Rtverstde Methodist Hospttal, Columbus, Ohio.
Born Jan. 16, 1922, in Mason County, she was a daughter of lht: late
Samuel J. and Olivia (Gibbs) Roach. She was also preceded in death by
her husband, James Bennet~ Sr., who died in 1966; a sister, Goldie Blake;
and step-granddaughter, Tammy AUensworth.
She was a homemaker.
Surviving are a daughter, Sandra Hoffman of Clifton; two sons, James
H. Bennett, Jr. and Samuel J. Bennett, both of Clifton; two stepdaughters,
Patty Allensworth, Mason, Mar!ha Bealer, ChiUicothe, Ohio; sister, May
Wamsley of Clifton; two brothers, Melvin Roach of West Columbia, Floyd
Roach of Fares~ Va.; special friend, Emma Rogers of Letan; 10
grandchildren, nine step-grandchildren. and severnl great-grandchildren .
_The funernl wiD be Monday, I p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home
wtth Tim Vaughn and John Elrod officiating. Burial will be in the Suncrest
Cemetery, Point Pleasant
Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday, 6 to 9 p.m.

IC.

"'In my city alone, had urban
.,tt:sm:em merely been kept at its
1980 lrvel. we would have
rettMd 533.7 billion dollan more
during tbt 1980s," Dinkins said.
Money for subsidized housmg
isn"t ClUllfd a. direct aid to cities,
slncx il flows in different and more
COIIIpliaUd ways. But it too has
lttD IIWUd declines in tenns of
lbe new fami lies that can be
aa:aumodaled yearly in subsidized

Correction

Elsie Jane Bennett

Continued from A· I

district now has about 1,800 students in high school.
Parent Pat Johnston opposes the
issue, saying money would be
wasted on e•panding an elementary
school while building a new one.
- The Rolling Hills School District in Guernsey County in eastem
Ohio is asking for a 16.95-milllcvy
10 generate $2 million a year to
meet expenses. 1loe levy would last
for five years.
Treasurer Kay Kasper said the
district has borrowed money and

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
Minimum deposit of $2500.00 is rcq uircd for tlus 23 month
cerhfi catc of deposit. CD IS ro mpoundl'd d.11ly "' produce
annual yield . There is a substanlial pcnillty for tmly withdrawaL

Marjorie Manuel

TOLL FREE

446-2631

1-800-468-6682

POMEROY - Marjorie Manuel, 70, of Maple Street in Syracuse, died
on Fnday, May 15, 1992 at her residence. She was a housewife and a former employee of the Meigs County Health Deparunent.
'
1loe daughter or !he late Francis and Lillian Johnson Moore, she was
born onApri113, 1922 in Meigs County.
·
Survtvmg are two daughters, M!li. Mitchell (Jeanie) Allen and Mrs.
John (Jantce) Ltsle, both of Syracuse; six grandsons: Brian Allen of ChiUtcothe, Mark Allen, Jason ADen, Todd Lisle, Scott Lisle. and Travis Lisle,
aU of Syracuse; and a cousin, Mary Elizabeth Graham, Gahanna.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in dca!h by her husband, Herschel Manuel, and a sister, Frances Moore.
Sbe aaended the Asbury United Methodist Church in Syracuse.
Funernl setvices wiU be held on Monday at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home m Pomeroy wuh Rev. Wesl•y Thatcher officiating. Burial wiD be
in Letan FaDs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Ohio Valley Bank
M l'mb1'1 FDIC

Hospital news
\'tltrans M•morial

FRIDAY ADMISS ION S

LARGE SELECTION

'one.

GALLIPOLIS

JACKSON PIKE

RIO GRANDE

FRIDAY DISCHARGES - Ellz - ~...............,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,....~

&gt;belb Wdl.

said.

__

(

:Divorces sought
POMEROY - Divorce acti ons
have been filed in Meigs County
Com mon Pleas Court by Dixie Inez
Poner, Rutland, against Thomas C.
Porter Belle Glade, Fla.; and by
:Teresa' Lynn Alderson, M1ddlcpon,
: aga1nst Danny R. Alderson, address

-

~:-.- _\

NO WITHDRAWA L NO NERVOUSNESS

NO WEIGHT GAIN

WRITTEN GUARANTEE

Ph.. 4U-2327

AYI.

IN ONE NIGHT!
RADISSON HOTEL
1001 THIRD AV£.
~

;.4
'•

r-:::H,::O~W:;A:,:;:R,:;;D:__ _~L;:I::;Z~-.J==7=:00=-=8=:=DO=P=.=M=.=::!..1

LOSE
1GHT!

~mol my throog~ lhrs f~,e ol ftypnosrs ptogram Mo~t

~XOPit "~ alltnd we~! sutler a11' wrtt.lr~w~l! Anti
vo• lll'rll SHill si!IDkrng by tht end or tMsenmr
wn~1

nm

10~

QOI to tow-oot ewn me cost ol

Cl~a~~~~~

yt.!l\

tor oM montft htn rl yoo ~a 'If Sllt(lketllor
,o. u~ ~mno out ~emtn~r ~nd w~lk oot itS •

llflmintnl •onmoker Yoo wrll see l ~r~ ha,~~en to
ovtr IYt\, ol 1~0~ "M Jl1ernl Don flak! an~ 1
word tor t~-alltn4 100 SH lor y(kjiSlll Yll4! Mil Ofl

our wrintll '''''"'"· fret illlmt!Unu lo ~

HO'IIild M fltmrnQAAmc Stmtnar tl )'OU t'l'!r start

smO':tfiG

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.
SE
MINAR: 8:00P.M.
REGISTRATION:

i

How1rd 11 . fll•l"'f"l Growp NypMIII II

"' .... ,,,.",.;" ,,.."''"'' ,,.

Howl&lt;d • . ,,..,., ... AIIOCIIIII
HfiUIOiil PfiJffllft 1111 1Mvt I 85~
IUCCIII flfi ·OYtl 20.1lll ClleftiS lla'+'l! ~10,(1!(1

Then there's !he annual reunion
of !he Pomeroy High School Alum ·
ni Association.
That event will be held at6 p.m.
next Saturday night in the Meigs
High School Cafeteria.
The association is offenng
sc holarships so let me tell you
about them ftrst. Available is the
Charles S. Gibbs Scholarship
which wiD be awarded to a graduate living in lite Pomeroy area only,
entering the field of education
either at the University of Rio
Grande or Ohio University. The
Bob Roberts Scholarships-two
a.-e usually given depending upon
the CD interest-will be awarded
stnctly on academic excellence.
They will be awarded to a child or
grandchild of any Pomeroy High
School graduate.
Applicants for the scholarships
should send a transcript, a short
resume or letter stating where they
plan to auend college, why !hey are
applying and a recent photo. This
information is to he mailed to the
Pomeroy Alumni Association, P.
0. Box 202, Pomeroy.
Tickets to the banquet and
dance can be handled by mail also
at !he same address. Price is $12
and you should send your maiden
name, if applicable, and the year of
glllduation alon~ with your money.
For local alumm, ticlcCIS are on sale
at !he Swisher and Lohse Pharmacy
and at Francis Aorist
There has been some confusion
about class photos. The official
word is that the color photos will
be taken immediately after lite banquet and they, as usual, will be
talcen in the Meigs High Gymnasium.
Gilmore's or Pomeroy will cater
this rear's banquet and music for
dancmg will be by the Party Factory.
Now, hopefully, that tells you
everything you wanted 10 know.

Gal&amp;p.IK,OI.

TUES. IIA Y 11

'""~ '''" ••

by Bob Hoeflich

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 Third

''""" '''"' ""' ood
111t0lli"1 .

Beat of the Bend. ..

Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored
granites . Whatever your requirements may be . complete
satisfaction is assured with Rock of Ages .
Open Mon ., Tues., Thurs . &amp; Fri. 9 :00a.m . 'til4:00 p .m.
Other Hours by Appointment- 593-661111 or - b-.&lt;.s.l7

· unknow n.

THROUGH HYPNOSIS-YOU WILL EXPERIENCE IT!
WRITTEN GUARANTEE

ag~rn

Becornc a nc: w ca ble
subscr1ber. or tf you re a cu rrent
subscri ber add a new se rv1ce (l1ke HBO or The D1sney
Channel), before May 24 th and you r ftr st rnonlh 's se rv 1ce fees
w1l l go d1rectly to our local schoo ls as a tax -deducltblr cJona iiO'i
Just ca ll now and mentiOn this offer We II sc hed ule your tree
mstalla!ton or add it1ona l serv1ce con nection - anolher bonu s of our
CABLE + YOU sc hool carnpa1gn When we connecl your new
serv1ces . we II ask you to make ou t your check to Your Local School
System

Free connection and a tax-deductible
donation to local schools ...
WileR you add it all up,
now's the time to get cable TV!

hpertt•c• U! Gift agrit ol hie to~ yOU
IO~!

8u1g all or ~~~ lrrends-voo all ~~~ slllp !lllll ll'll
l)!fm~nentl1rltOnemmrru tent t~ smmr leeltt!Q
grtar BrtnQ all ot yDUr cr,arrllt$-¥011 wlln t Hell

t•em Jlter lbe st~ · nllr

81111G IS MAll IRIEIPS IS I'OSSIBII SIOPSIIGKIIIG ~PlHH ~
HOWIId M. Ft.mlnO 1nd Atl«llltl

P.O. BoJt 5SI1
Colonlll Htlgnlt, VA 238M

WI All 1111 Jilt ..... ··1UT' ' WI An Tlllllll
Wt Oll'l&amp;lli s.--tu Tt Dllhl rrlf'M

BRING AD FOR BONUS

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COMPLETE
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It 11~y !It lilt bnt dinc:t roo II ~vtr llavt ro lOS! WI IG~I
PfRIAIEIIl YN ~rr yDI \ttl ol ~rrtrnq w rt~tlilStr~
S~~Um'

leMn to 'JURI-Off yoor

sweels. s1ar,a ~ g.usy. hlftl
ovrr-ur~r

u~me crnu~

IOOd~ ~(llj

I 1e.1rn to

tor

110~

1041 wrllltawt lilt Stmrnar rttru•td rel.tJtd

anclm CDIHlOl ol I'OU' ~l)lll!trre
lnl 1~1! 1Ollf!- f" II grl • W!lnfl GUIAAITII flo
lll'l'lltt~na to~ lloward MIlemnlll &amp;Assoc Stmuur rl ,ou
mr need re~nloramrt~ l

SEMINAR: &amp;:DO P.M.
REGISTRATION:

wv

Sunday Times--Sen line!

Page-A3

--Area deaths-- Lawmakers office records subpoenaed

Cold front will move into Ohio this evening

OH IO Weather

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

CALL
CABLEVISION

ATTIND BOTH II.INAfiS
FOR ONLY ISS "lltiOII

Upriver way, members or the
Racine Ruritan Club are delighted
with their first fund raiser which
was a recent yard sale at Star Mill
Parle. The new club raised almost

5E Nr QR CrTrlEN OrSCOUNT'
1~or •lfrd •dh Ol her Ooscounll
ChPCl CUh Muler&lt;Ar!'l 'o'tU
Pltf'll'f or PtrkrnQ

f Ho.,ll'l ftemlnt I Auoc 1"1

$700 with their first cffon. They
want to thank not only the good
customers but residents who were
so generous in their donations of
merchandise. It all worked ,
according to Mary Ball, a club offtccr. Mary is the one wi!h that fantastic penmanship . She recently
wrote lht: names on the eggs for the
Good Egg Trees at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The 150 anniversary of Grace
Episcopal Church wiU be observed
ne•t Sunday, May 24.
Services will be at II a.m. wi!h
a luncheon to follow. Those active
in the observance have invited former parishione!li, fonmer ministers
and relatives of founde!li to return
to Pomeroy for the observance .
Also they are seeking letters from
individuals formerly associated
with the church. The leaers which
are to include favorite memories of
the church will be read during the
observance.
Nationally know Johnny Paycheck will be appearing at Poston
Lake next Saturday with music
starting at I p.m.
Tickets are $10 in advance and
$12 at the gate. Pr~s will benefit the Federal Hocking Athletic
Fund and Am vets Post 76, AthenS.
If you're interested in tickets, you
can call 662-255 or 592-9907arca code 614, of course.
A ftnal reminder. Seniors at all
Meigs High Schools who haven't
yet turned in a photo for The Sentinel's graduation tab, you have a
slight reprieve.
Photos will be accepted oq
Monday anytime before 4 p.m. at
1loe Sentinel offtce on Coun St. in
Pomeroy. And don't forget, please
put your name, the name of the
school and the name of your parents oo !he back or the photo.
This may be a quiet weekend,
but look out. Next weekend should
really keep you hoppin'. Meantime, do keep smiling.

WASHINGTON (AP)- A federal grand jury investigating the
House Post Office is demanding
office expense records of the Ways
and Means Committee chairman ,
two other lawmakers and the for·
mer sergeant-at-arms.
Subpoenas made public Thu!liday provided the first indication
that the grand jury wants to scrutinize records of House members.
Until now, indicnnents and convictions focused on embeulcmcm and
drug sales involving House Post
Office employees.

The grand Jury sought stx years
of vouchers for goods and services
submitted by Rep. Dan Ros tenkowski, D-IlL ; Reps. Austin J.
Murphy and Joseph Kolter, both DPa., and former Sergeant -at-Arms
Jack Russ.
The subpoenas, which covered
!he six years ending April 15, also
sought information on Slllmp allotments for House members.
All told, the grand jury tssued
f1ve subpoenas: one each to th e
three members' offices; one to
House Clerk Donnald K. Anderson

Space Shuttle Endeavour
lands safely in California
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. (AP) - Shunl e
Endeavour landed in !he California
desen wi!h seven astronauts Satur·
day, ending a triumphant spacewalking mission in which three
men caught a massive satellite by
hand.
Endeavour touched down on the
concrete runway at 1:57 p.m. PDT
Commander Daniel Brandenstein
released a red, white and blue drag
chute that billowed behind the ship
and helped slow it down.
'"Welcome to Caltfornta, and
congratulations on a spectacular
and historic flight, " Mlssion Control' s Jim Hal&lt;ell said.
Endeavour circled Earth 141
umes and logged 3,696,019 miles
during tiS maiden voyage.
About I00,000 people were on
hand to see Endeavour make li S
first landing at !his Mojave Desen
base , the touchdown si te for all
new shuules.
NASA eagerly had awaited the
return of the $2 billion Endeavour,
!he replacement for the destroyed
Challenger and the rtrst shuttle to
be equipped with a drag chute .
Brandenstein released the chute ,
which is 40 feet in diameter, upon
touchdown . The chute trailed 87
feet behind Endeavour.
The chute is intended to reduce
the distance the shuttle rolls by
1,000 to 2,000 feet, letting the
orbiter land on shoncr runways in
an emergency. It also is intended to
keep the spaceship on course in
case of a blown tire or steering
problem.

Title money sought for
handicapped children
POMEROY - The Eastern
Local . Meigs Local. and Southern
Local School Distri CLI arc cuncntly
preparing Tnle VJ -B Flow Thru
Projects (Education or the Handi capped Act) for !he 1992-93 school
year.
The funds , as explained by
Joyce Thoren, local district coordi nator, arc made avrulablc to expand
and improve se rvices for preschool handicapped children and to
help with the education of handi capped children in Meigs County.
Residen ts may have input in to
the local proposals by contacting
Mrs. Mary Price at Ea1tcm Local at
Eastern High School, 985-41 59;
Anthony Perry for Meigs Local at
Rutland Elemenllll)'. 742-2666; or
Mrs. Thoren for Southern Local, at
Southern High School, 949-2611.
from 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m., May 26-29.

AfY..~~

Before descent, the astronauts
had trouble closing one of Endeavour's two cargo bay doors. There
was no indicatioo the aft latches on
the port door had secured, and the
crew had to try again to drive them
down .
Endeavour's crew of six men
and one woman set a number of
records during the nine-day voy age, which began May 7.
The mission featured four
spacewalks, two more than any
other shuule flight, and the world's
first three-person spacewalking
te&lt;1m . The !hree satellite cau:hers
spent 8 1/2 hours out in the open
ca rgo bay, surpassing the U.S.
record set by the Apollo 17 moonwalke!li.

for records of the three lawmakers
and Russ; and one to Sergeant-at·
Anns Werner Brandt for records of
his office. Brandt replaced Russ in
mid-March.
House Speaker Thomas S.
Foley, D-Wash., said U.S. Auomcy
Jay Stephens reduced the request
during negotiations with House
lawyers, but he d1d not reveal the
changes. The speaker told reponcrs
lite House will be "fully complymg
with the U.S. attorney's office .''
The subpoenas represented the
latest setback for !he House as an
institution and for Foley.
Disclosure of the subpoenas was
forced on Foley by Republicans ,
who won overwhelming passage .
by a 324-3 vote, of a resoluuon to
release the information.
The Republicans were incensed
that Foley kept knowledge of the
subpoenas secret for a week and
!he speaker was forced to apologize
oo the House lloor for not informing GOP leaders earlier.
In mtd-March, Foley caved tn to

Republican demands that the
House eth1cs commmee pubiJCile
names of all current and forme r
members who wrote overdrafts on
thw House OOnk accounts over ]4
month ,
Late last month. the Hou"'
voted 2!&gt;1-1 l I agamst a Foley rc"'luuon to force a COtJil test of a subpoena for records on th e House
bank Instead. tile House passed a
Republican re10lution to comply
~ llh the subpoena. by a Jusuce
Dcpanmcnt special counseL
The House as an institution is
rcelmg from thousands of check
overdra fts by membe~. a modem
record of 55 retin:es and the defeat
of SJevcn mcurnbents so far m pri '
mary elec lions_ All those defeated
were Democrats. mcluding Kolter.

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�May 17, 1992

Commentary and perspective

May 17, 1992

Page-A4

LBJ's Great Society should get more credit
AD!miODol

eru-tC.
Ill CGurt SL. Pomeroy. Oblo
(614) 99l-ll56

815 Thlnl A,., Gallipolis. Ololo

(614) 446-1341

ROBEJIT L WINGI.TI'

....

~

HOBART WilSON Jll.
EZKutln Edhor

PAT WHJTEIIEA.D
A - · t ""bllsloer-Coatrollor

A MEMBER of The A"ociat&lt;d Pnn . and lhe American

Newopaper Publ"ben """"'alloo.
LETTERS OF OPINION .,. . . . -. Tbty sbould be leu than
300 W&lt;&gt;rds All leD&lt;n .,. subject to editiJI&amp; and must be sicned wilh
name, address and ttlepbon&lt; aumber Ho uasicaed !etten will be
publisbed. Letttn. 'boukt be in cood tuU:. addrus.ing issues. not
personalities

Letters to the editor
Negative resu/J
For the past several months.
1here has been a rumor regarding a
high school girl who reponedly has
AIDS .
' The Meigs Count y Healtll
Departmenl n w-sing staff has boen
comacied frcquen~y wttll l1le fears
of other students, parents, Leaehers
and concerned cioz.ens.
There is NO proven case of
AIDS in any lrenage girl in Meigs
County.
I, Norma Torres, nursmg dlrecwr of the Meigs County Health
Depanment, have spoken with die
girl's parents, and have seen a
physician documenled NEGATIVE
rcsu It from her AIDS te!t.
There can be no crueler ruroor
than this and unfonunately if tile
rumor does not subside. l1le fam ilfs legal counsel has advised a law
su11 for slander/defamation of dlarJctcr.
To the best of our knowledge.
ttle Center for Disease Control in
Allanta records Metgs County as
h~ving had three cases of con fi&lt;med AIDS in the past five
ycars .. .. all are now doo'&lt;lsed
AIDS is a non -discrimmatory
disease that adults are at risk of
contracting. Unfashionable as it i.!i,

the only swe way to avoid contraCting AIDS is abstinence from
sex, especially if you are unmarried. Condoms have a high failure
nue. so thai idea of "safe sex" is
only .. illusion.
You don't "catch" AIDS by sitting nut to someone at school, or
shaking lwtds. or using the same
restroom. or eating with them in
die cafeteria.
If you have not been monogamous. lake a free AIDS test. It is
aoonymous and all results are kept
confidential. Contact the Athens
Planned Parenthood agency for
more infonnalion (593-6979).
AIDS toests should be repealed
every six months if you continue to
be sexually active with more tllan
one partner as it take six months
fr · die HN antibodies 10 be found
it the blood.
If any further information is
needed, please call the Meigs
County Health Depanment, 992(Li]f, We have wriuen information
that IS very educational
Nmna A. Torres, R.N., B.S.N.,
M.S.Ed.
Meigs County Health Depanment
Pomeroy

WASHINGTON - Days before
Los Angeles exploded, an unemployed AppalachUI!l coal miner was
charged with murder in the fatal
poisoning of his 3-year-old daughter. What's the connection between
the biggest urban riot of the century
and a Kentucky murder charge?
The coal miner's name is
Tommy Fletcher, and it was his
humble house in the Appalachian
foothills 30 years ago that Lyndon
Johnson used as a backdrop to
unveil his war on poveny.
On April 24, 1964, Fletcher was
38 years old and was scraping 10
suppon a large family. He had been
out of work for two years. Before
being jailed recen~y. Fletcher lived
in the same tar-paper house that
Johnson turned tnlo a Jaunchmg
pad for the Great Society.
At the time, Lady Bird Johnson
wrote Fletcher, saying that he had
" been chosen to illustrate the
human toll the declining mining
industry had taken on these
Appalachian families."
Dan Quayle and Marlin Fitzwater seem to be the only two government officials who are wtlling to
disparage the accomplishments of a
program that, however nawed.
worked with stunning and long-

: Ttte May mecung of the Mason
P:ssociation for a Clean Environment proved most mteresting and
cduc aoonal.
The speaker. Attorney Richanl
Sahl1 , e.ccut1v e du ec10r of the
Ohio Enmonmcntal Council. with
1\jlich 125 groups m Ohio are affil iJted , followed ht s shon talk w1th a
lengthy question -and-answer peri od. Among the fi~t quesuons was
one concernin g the Ga vrn Plant
scrubbers.
_lntcrcs un gly eno ugh, smce
some in our area seem to think all
cl1vironmcnt.aJislS are actJ vists who
think alik e. th e 0 E.E. chose to
f AVOR SC RUB BERS AND
JOBS FOR OH IOAiiS as overall
hen c fiL s v s the wnce rn for wei-

land s.
When as ked 1n dctall about
Hou se Bill 592 and the sohd wasle
dtstri ct' s plan to 1mpon approxim~t e l y 17 times the waste our area
prod uccs. those prese nt learnod a
criti cal ptcce of 1nformauon. HB
.192. '" Se&lt;: uon 343 -02F. provides
the OPPOR TUN ITY FOR DIS TRI CT S TO BAN OUT-OFAR EA WASTE DESPIIT INTERSTATE CO MMER CE LAWS .
l itis " somcthmg MACE members
have told township trustees. solid
wasl c board members, our coun1y

comm iSSIOners during the Jong and
tedi ous drafung and re vis ion process for approving our dtslncl plan.
It 'sc unous thai those who are Jlllld
10 read th iS im ponan t Jaw did flO(

know about, or perbaps chose to
ignore. St.ctioo 343-02F.
The essence of Sahli's address
was that it is time we prevent pollution in Ohio. He cited a study
released last summer by the Institute of Social Studies in Durham,
N. C.. which !2IIUd Ohio the 49th
worst state fa&lt; air pollution. 49th
worst for toxic waste, and 45th
""l'"l for waru pollution.
Ohio indUSiries put more toxic
chemicals into the air we breathe
than any other sure in the country.
save ono:. We need a new approach
10 prow:ting the quality of life in
Ohio and that approach can be well
defined: Achieving meaningful
pollution PREVENTION is the
principle environmental challenge
of the day .
This environmental challenge
can be done witll no threat to new
JObs. Many other nations and states
are well ahead of us . Mas sachusetts. for example, has had a
progressive law in place for more
than two years. Sahli said, "It is
ume for Ohio's political and business leaders to stop acting as
though we were l1le last generation
thai wiU inhabit this planet.
" It is time that citizens in Ohio
look their children m the eye and
talk about the future quality of life
'" th iS state and what they, thcmscl ve.s. intend to do about it." he
concluded.
Mrs. Charles E. Holzer. Jr.
Gallipolis

Berry's World
"1

House cleaning with memories
Rupe, have you ever done any
house cleaning?
Maybe you are like I am and
haven't done too much of it. However, this year I thought that I
should have my house cleaned and
with the help of Mary Hendricks
and Evelyn Wollford, I have managed to get a good part of 11 done.
Rupette can sympathize with me.
First of all I am Jiving in a house
with at least I ,500 frogs to du st.
The two ladies who did this work
completed this job after two days
labor. You can now walk into my
house and find that the frogs are
feeling better and so am I. Most of
them will smile at you on request.
In order for me to clean the
remaining part of l1le house 11 was
necessary for me to go through
many drawers and shelves to examine items which I saved over the
years. Most of them are mementos
of travels or evenls that have happened in my past.
For example, I usually collect
match books which remind me of
places I have been . Among these
matches arc several match -books
from Caesar's Palace and C~rc u s
Circus of Las Vegas. These two
hotels contain two of the casinos
which I visited on this trip'" 1990.
Nearly every form of gambltng was
exhtbited at these places.
For example, there were tltou sands of slot mach1nes takin g in
any amount of coins ranging from

five cents to $1. There were the
usual poker. rouleue, blackJack,
dice, keno and many other gambling devices. To walk through one
of these establishments took a considerable period of time.
On our plane trip cnroute to Las
Vegas. there were two prize ftghters seated near our entourage. One
f1ghter, Tony Tucker, was a heavyweight who had fought and was
knocked out by Tyson. To my
knowledge he_never fought _again.

ANSWER :
K"'-VlSN'T

PECID£\) ."

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

BaRBaRa!

Group favors scrubbers
Dear Editor·

lasting precision for the poor.
failed and some of what we did short-lived. So his aggressiveness
But it is Johnson, a ghost from worked. and you can 't be that sim- on the legislation was for political
th e past, who has become front- plistic only if you ' re a partisan reasons. But he did, beyond that.
page news In the fortnight since seeking cheap political advan- have a premonition of an early
death bocausc it ran in his family. I
tage."
Johnson lived and governed think the right question is. did he
with abandon. a boundlessly ener- not run for a second term because
getic leader who winded men half of his fears that tte might not surhis age. "He would wake up in the vive. I think the answer to that is
morning and before you had your yes. He didn't think he would live a
fust cup of coffee he would talk to second term, and he was right,
I0 senators. He just had a bound- probably."
"All the men m my family have
less entllusiasm for the challenge of
died
young," Johnson remarked to
names engulfed the City of Angels. the day," said Moyers.
fellow
Texan James Wrigh~ then a
Johnson was in fact a ghost who
Even before his election as preswas haunted by ghosts- including ident, Johnson harbored dark pre- congressman from Fort Wonh.
Johnson wanted to make life
hi s fear that tte faced an early death monitions about his health. When
better
for plain people. As a teaeher
and had little time to see his he suffered a massive coronary and
he
had
seen the plight of rural Hi.!ireturned to the Senate, he took to
dreams to fruition.
panic
children
in the hard-scrabble
The Quayle-Fitzwater remarks carrying around a small card ,
country
of
southwest
Texas.
touched off a scorching political resembling a driver ' s license,
As a young congressman, he
debate about the war on poverty which he would pull out of his had insislcd that agricultural proand the president who propelled it
pocket and proudly display to show
grams be extended to black farm
Two men who observed John- thai he had recovered. He called it families. When a little town in
son up close were former aide Bill his cardiographic certificare.
south Texas refused burial for the
Moyers and fellow Texan and forJohnson saw his presidency as a
body of a young Mexican-Amerimer Speaker of the House Jim race against the clock - against can slain in World War II, Johnson
his health, against the rising resentWright.
arranged for the remains to be
When asked how Johnson ments of blacks, against Congress
buried with honors at Arlington
would have replied 10 the Quayle- and even against his own health.
National Cemetery.
Moyers explains, "He (JohnFitzwater rebuke, Moyers told us:
Johnson could have summoned
"I think he would snort, chortle son) moved with great rapidity on
his own Willie Hortms of his time.
ana say that's politics as usual. the 'Jreat Society because he knew Wright recalls pointing out to JohnHe'd say some of what we did that any presidential mandalc is son on a plane trip that Texans
were fraying over court intrusion
into their affairs. Johnson reply
was, ''I'm not going to demagogue
on
that issue." Wright relalcs what
~'\?K,
Johnson said next:
&lt;l fHOI.IS3ND
"There ' s a little colored girl
named
Helen who brings my coffee
PoiNTS oF l.iGHT!
to the (Senate) Majority Leader's
office every morning. I'm not
going to have to look away when
she comes in fa&lt; being ashamed of
something I've said."
Wright and others thought Johnson was in too much of a hurry to
get anti-povcny programs Slaned .
They suggested he slow down .
That's when on two occasions
Johnson confided to Wright a paranoid belief that he would die
young.
·y.
As a metaphor of the Great
Society, Tommy Fletcher may be a
failure. Even as the names in Los
Angeles are extinguished, a political prairie fire is getting ign1ted
over how to deal w1th urban Amer ica. That blaze will be harder to put
out than the first.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsttin are columnists for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The other lighter, Mark llreland,
was a leading co.tlcndcr in the welterweight division. He has fought
several times since. We saw him

Fred W. Crow
work out at one of the casinos and
he was mo st impressive. These
prize fighters were accompanied by
a tra1ner whose name I cannot
recall. Then there was another large
arena where book was made on
horse racing from races televised
all across the counlry.
One evening I saw Redd Fou
perform. He is now deceased. The
Redd Foxx I saw in the night club
was entirely different than the one
you saw in the TV series. His language was so vulgar that it was
embarrassing . All in all thts trip
was very difrerent from any thing
th at I had seen before. One final
word. The pnce of a room or a
steak dinner is as low as any place
1n the U. S. I would lilce 10 think
that this is bait to get the suckers to
gamble.
I also had a match book cover
fr om Muirfield Golf Course at
Columbus. Last year I attended the
Professional Golf Association meet
at that course. The way those pros
hit that ball makes a person envious. Muirficld is a beautiful course.
Another match book was from
the Hyatt in Columbus where il
costs $12 valet park.ing and $100
for a room per night I stayed there
once but vowed that I never would
again. But this week I am planning
to atlcnd the Ohio State Bar Convention in Columbus and would
you blow I am staying at l1le Hyatt
That is here the convention is held.
Ney Carpenter once said. "the flfSI
time you are not at fault, but the
second time you have no one else
to blame hut yoursclt. n
Finally, I had some old matche.s

from when I visited the Greenbrier
at White Sulpher Springs, W. Va. ,
at the state banking convention .
There arc so many fine memories
from this place but we do not have
space for me to describe them. Suffice to say, the ponrait of Eleanor
in an evening gown was taken at
the Greenbrier.
Also, among my memorabilia I
found a clipping from the Colum bus Dispatch pertainin~ to the
death of Victor "Bo Bo' Dorris.
"Bo Bo" played on the Ohio State
Football team and was an all Amertcan high school baseball player.
He was batting when I was pitching
for the OSU freshmen baseball
team.
On that occasion I hit "Bo Bo"
with a fast ball which was going in
the vicinity of 95 mph. Apparen~y
that pitch caused "Bo Bo" to be
gun shy and he never played varsi ty baseball again. Please forgive
me "Bo Bo," it was not intentional.
On the subject of pitcher's
wildness. Middleport high school
scored 14 runs in one inning with
the benefit of one hit. Either "Ike
Neal or Art Lewis got that one.
Rupe. guess who was pitching for
PHS?
There was one match book from
the old Neil House in Columbus. In
the early days the Neil House and
Deshler Wallick Hotels were the
places in town where the alumni
and fans gathered after the football
games. There were many memories
of Saturday night parties after these
games.
In my bathroom there were at
least 10 red poppies which I have
kept for the last 10 years. Katie
Raub Welsh always sells me one
for the American Legion.
There w.ere two or three frog
key rings, a deck of cards, a pocket
mirror, emory boards. four or five
long ties, (cravats), all of which
have frogs on them. I almost threw

them out. I have accumulated too
much clothmg consisting of shins,
socks, pants , suits, shoes, etc . 1
never ltkc to part wnh anyth1n g,
but I have succeeded in reducmg
the amount of clothing in my closet. This cloth1ng will be given to
some charitable organizauon - No
yard sale, Rupc.
. There was one pin labeled "Go
Big Green at ttle Tangerine." This
was obtained at the Tangenne
Bowl in December, 196~. Ohio
University and Rtchmond played in
thiS game. The Richmond team
won by a score of 49-42. It seems
that whoever had the ball last suc ceeded in making the final score.
Carson, my son, played offenstve
center in this game notwithstanding
his in juries.
Another pin said "I am not perfect but parts of me are excellent."
There were assoned knives, a key
nng from the President's office at
the White House, pens. a small
mtnor, a Blue Streak Cab chip and
goodness knows what else .
Now the question is. Rupe, what
am I supposed to do with most of
these mementos? You guessed
nght, Rupe, I will probably put
them hack where I foWid them and
look at them again next year.
Edgar Alben Guest wrote the
following: "It talces a heap o' livin'
in a house t' make it home; a heap
o' sun an' shaddcr, an' ye some times have t' roam; afore ye really
'preciate the things ye lef behind;
an' hunger fer 'em somehow. with
'em allus on yer mind."

.----Local briefs----. .Judge O'Brien fines 37 in Meigs County Court
Wilburn endorsed by COMPAC
GALLIPOLIS - The United Mine Woriters. District Six, Coal
Miners Pohtical Action Comminec (COMPAC) recently endorsed
Ga llia County Board of Commissioners candidate James Wilburn.
Babe Erdos, UMW A staff representative, wrot.e: "We know that
you will bnng hard work and dedi cation to the people of Gallia
County and that you will represent the best interests of woritmg
men and women ."

Wilburn ts seeking the Democratic Party nomination for the Jan.
l scat of the board of commiss ioners.

Dust control program to resume
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Highway Depanment will
prime Alice and Dodrill roads bcgmning Monday, weather allowmg.
Also, the annual dust control program will begin on various
roads m Cheshire, Morgan , Huntington and Springfield townships.
County Engineer James Baird ask s that motorists be cautious
when traveling these roads. The matcnal placed on these roads is an
asphalt petroleum liquid product which requtres two to three days to
se t up as an improved hard asphalt surface.
Those who must travel these roads are asked to travel at slow
speeds to minimi1.e pickup and spraying.

Special board meeting planned
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Local Board of Education
wtll conduct a special board meeting Monday, 6:30p.m., at the
board office at 230 Shawnee Lane off Ohio 160.
Board members will discuss Channel One educational programming for River Valley High School and ttle recall of one secretary.

Four jailed overnight
GALLIPOLIS - Four people were placed in the Gallia County
Jail overnight. Jailed were: Craig D. Durham. 31, Vinton, arrested
Saturday morning by the Gallipolis Police Department on a charge
of disorderly conduct by intoxication. released on a summons to
appear in coun: Donna E. Peek. 46, Vinton, Friday morning on a
commitment for driving under the innuence and no operators
license; Michael Lee Rossiter, 23, Gallipolis, Friday morning on
municipal coun order for corruption of a mmor; Lee Edward
Bloomfield, 33, Gallipolis. Friday evening on a municipal coun
bench warrant for aiding and abening.
The following people were cited overnight by the Gallipolis
PoliCe Deparunent Danny R. Lear, 32, Gallipolis, squealing tires
and operating under suspension; Mary M. Cox, 34, Gallipolis, failure to display valid regislr11tion; T1mothy D. Clickenger, 17 , GaiJirolis. reckless operation.

Patrol probes two-vehicle accident
CHESHIRE - Two vehicles, one a Gallia County Sheriff's
Department crutser, sustained light damage in an accident in
Cheshire Township Friday around noon.
According to a repon from the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Deputy Howard D. MuUins. 54, Crown City, was
pulling from a driveway wtten his cruiser was struck in l1le rear by a
pickup driven by John F. HcisleU, 29, Cheshire.
No inJuries were reponed and no citations were issued .

B&amp;E's, thefts probed
POMEROY - The Meigs County Shertff's depanmenl reports
that the department has investigated several more incidents of
breaking and entering and theft.
Wanda Randolph of Reedsville reponed that a vacant house had
been enlcred, and that the suh)CCts went through the cabinets. Nothing was reported missing. This is believed to have occurred between
Sunday and Thursday. Enlry was made by removing two k.itctten
window panes.
Charles Shmn of Ravenswood, W.Va. reponed that sometime
between Monday and Thursday, a trailer that he owns in Meigs
County was entered, and a radio/cassette player was stolen.
He also stated that the hasp on the outbuildmg lock had been.
removed, and a cham saw and gas grill were stolen.
Lawrence Bowling, Portland, reporled on Thursday that he had
been gone for two days, and when he returned, he discovcred the
dead bolt on the rear door had been pried off.
A ponablc table saw, a router, hammers, a ri ne, speakers. crock
poi and torch head from a propane Ulllk had been taken
David Reed of Reedsville reported that on Wednesday. someone
took a boat motor and bauery from his boat. moored at Sugar Camp.

~WHO

WILL

8£: 1)\t
G!)~ST

HOST

fOR C~SONS
t.AST St\0~? "
~""-~

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Sunday. May 17. the !38th day of 1992 There are 228 days
left m the year.
Today's Highlight in Hislory:
Two hundred years ago, on May 17, 1792, the New York Stock
Exchange was founded by brokers meeting under a 1ree located on what is
now Wall Street.
On this date:
In 1814, Norway's constitution was signed, providing for a limited
monarchy.
In 1875, lhe fust Kenwcky Derby was run at Chwchill Downs in
Louisville. The winner was Aristides.
In 1938, the radio quiz show "Information, Please!" made its debut on
lhe NBC Blue Network. .
'
In 1938. Congress passed the Vinson Naval Ac~ providing funds fa- a

two-ocean navy.
In 1939. Britain's King George VI and Queen Elizabeth arrived in
Quellec on the flfSI yislt to &lt;;ana&lt;1a by reignin~ British sovereigns.
In 1940,11le NaziS occupied Brussels, Belgmm, during World War 11.
In 1946. President Truman seized control of the nation's railroads
delaying a threalened saike by engineers and trainmen.
'
In 1948. the Soviet Union recognized the new state of Israel.
In 1954, lhc U.S. SUJRIIIC Court issued its landnwt Brown versus the
Board of Education of Topeka, Kan .• ruling. declaring that racially segregaled public schools were inherently unequal.
In 1961, Cuban leader F'Kiel Castro offered to exchange prisonetS captured in the abMive Bay of Pigs invasion f&lt;J" American heavy tractors.
In 1973.the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities opened Its hearings into the Watergate !ICandal.
In 1978, women were included in the While House honor guard for the
first time as President Carter welcomed Zambian President Kenneth

Kaunda.

BANKRUPTCY
614·221-0888
LW. CENNAMO

and costs. 30 days suspended 10 10.
opera tor 's lice nse suspend ed for
one yea r. one year probatiOn , no
operato r 's li cen se, 30 day s su spe nded to 10 da ys in jail , concurrent w1 th DUI charge, $1 00 and
costs. one year probaoon. left ol
cen ter, cos ts only .
Juli a M . Cremeans, Reedsvi lle.
speedin g, $20 and cos ts· Terrv
Watson , Pomeroy, DU I, s)so and
costs , three days m J311, operator's
hcensc ~ u spendcd for 90 day s, no
operator s ltccnse, three day s in Jail
concurrent With DUI , S7 5 and
costs; Ange la Warne. Manetta.
speed, $15 and costs; Leo Hurlow ,
Crown City. speed, $23 and costs;
Gary Nutter, Gallipolis, unsafe
vehicle, $5 and costs; James P.
McCloud , Middleport, failure to
stop, $10 and costs: Ralph Hall,
Pomeroy, DUI , $350 and costs,
three days in Jail , operator's license
suspended for 90 days, upon enrollment and completion of the RTP
school, $150 of fine and jail t1me
will be suspended, Jane straddltng,
costs only.
D ~ nicl J. Field s. Hanford .

LOCAL CONSULTATION
992·6417

DUI. one year probauon . spccdiDg
COSl.S onJy

Joh n Chcvollc r. kcc diV ill c
DU I, SI&gt; month' 1n Jilll , suspended
to 10 days, '\450 ond com. prob;,
uon of one year, opcr&lt;J tor \ hu.: n-.•r
suspende d 10 liJ da" ) 4 \IJ and

prob:.won ul

CO)L\,

()f;t: year . r &gt;I ~er £l

t or 's ll cc n&lt;&gt;c \ W.[)c nd cd lflr r,nt.:

yea r, no ope 1at t' ' \ ltLllt 1 .u
m ont h~

&lt;.. u\ pl.: ru b lt () lf1

curren t wnh DLJ , )

J(;It

POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souslby reporled
1hat on Friday, deputies arrested Ban Edward Thomas of Middlepun on a warrant from Athens. charging him with attemptmg 10
pass a forged check in the amount of $316.69 at the Athens County
Kroger store . He was taken to the Athens County Jatl.

motor

v c htL·Ic .

) 5() and LO'. L'. [Jfiu

$350 and costs. three dJy , 1n Jail ,
opcroltlr's license suspended lor 'J(J
da ys, one year pro bau un, upo n

enrollment and completion of KTP
sc hool , S150 of the fmc and the Ja&gt;l
t1me wtll be suspended. left of center. cosls only.
Forfeiting bond s were Steven
Quille n, Middlcpon. scat be lt vtolatton , S4 0, and speed , S65;
Lawrence Schuler, FL Wnght, Ky.,
scat belt violauon, $40.

Sonya's Country Kitchen
949-2324

RACINE, OH.
Sonya Wolfe - Owner

ATIORNEY D. MICHAEL MULLIN

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could, to pass the savings on to yout
Most styles ava ilable in chotc e of
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R&amp;G FEED AND SUPPLY co.
399

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992·2164

lor,...,

Pomeroy

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RUTLAND FURNI
742·2211

1

gla.\ E. Hc\.\00 , .Vlan u w Llliurc tc t
drive 1n mad:.c d l arH.'\ ~ ~ H dnd
cosls; Mark Clark. Pomuor IJLI ,

ENTER THE
LAWN-BOY

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on e year proOa tH&gt; n. )lr ,ll fJ J•rJ, r1
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WEDDING RECEPTIONS
CLASS REUNIONS
BAR-B-QUES
RETIREMENT PARTIES
Let us help you in the planning of your next
get-together and be a guest at your next party.
We'll do it all from the set-up to the clean-up.
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"Catering At Its Best"

ATIORNEY-AHAW

8 East Broad Street, Suite 900
Col•mll•s, Ohio

W Va , fatlure to control , $25 and
costs; Ernest Moon, Barboursville.
W.Va., drug paraphernalia, $50 and
costs, forfeiture; James M. Sm1th.
Rac tne. speed, $23 and costs:
Rand y Ebcrsbach, Racine, DUI .
$3 50 and costs, three day s in Jail .
upon enrollment and completion of
RTP school, $150 of fine and Jatl
time will be suspended; James D.
Lester, Langsville. resisung arrest.
costs. 30 days in jail suspended to
two days. one year probation , miShandling a fireann in a molOr vehi cle, 30 days in jatl, suspended,
$100 and costs, one year probation,
James D. Le ster, Langsville ,
reSISting arrest, costs, 30 days in
jail , suspended to two days, one
year probation , mishandling a
fuearm in a motor vehicle, 30 days
in jaJI, suspended, $100 and costs,
one year probation ; Russell Mead·
ows, Middleport, DUI, stx months
m Jail, suspended to 30 days. 5450
and costs, operator's license suspended for one year, one year probatiOn , alcohol counseling , no
operator's ltcensc, $100 and costs,
30 day s in jail, concurrent wllh

Thomas arrested, charged

Todafin historY--~-----------QUESTION:

PO MEROY - Meigs County
Co urt Judge Pat m k H. O'B ri en
fined 37, while two others forfeited
bonds last week.
Fined were: Phil1 1p M. Scot t,
Rutl and, speed , S23 and cos ts;
James P. Wells, Long Bottom , seat
belt violation, com only; Tan ya L.
Blackford. Shade , sea t belt viola tion , costs only; Paul Jeff Grady ,
Racine, domesti c violence (2). 30
day s in jail , suspended to thre e
days, costs, one year probation. 60
days suspended to five, costs, one
year probation , restraining order
issued.
Mark Kime s, Racine, DUI,
SI ,000 and costs, six months in jail,
suspended to 30 days, operator's
license suspended for one year, one
year probation, alcohol assessment,
drivmg under suspension, $1,000
fine concurrent with DUI , costs, six
month s in jail, suspended to I 0
days concurrent with DUI; Gregory
Sellers, Portland, seal belt viola tion. costs only ; Judy L. Pugh. Gal lipolis , failure to yi eld, $10 and
costs.
Michael Conley, Por~and , scat
belt violation, S20 and costs ; Kail
Knapp, Langsville, failed to display
valid regi stration, S10 and costs;
John S. Mcintosh, Heath. duty status record not current . $47 and
costs; James McKclley, Reedsville,
speeding , $2 1 and costs; Mark
Ttmney, Pt. Pleasant , W.Va .,
speed, $29 and costs; Paul T. Van
Cooney, Shade, seat belt violation ,
cost s only ; Steven T. Erwin ,
Pomeroy, seat belt violation , costs
only ; Pamela L. Vaughan.
Pomeroy, seat belt violation : Den ni s S. Marcinko, Tuppers Plains.
scat belt VIOlation, costs only.
Tina Chevalier, Racine, operating an un safe vehicle. S I 0 and
costs: GretaL. Triplett, Middlepon,
speeding. $22 and COSL\ Denms S.
Marcinko, no muffler. $5 and costs:
Steven Sellers, Racine, DUI, 54 50

Carryon.

Editor's note - Long-time
Attoraey Fred W. Crow is the
contributor or a weekly colum•
for The S..day Times-Seatinel.
Readers nhlneto applaud, criticize or COIDment on uy subjed
(except religion or politics) are
encoura1ed to write to Mr .
Crow, In care or tbls newspaper.

Sunday Ttmes-Senlinei- Page-A5

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

RE CO.

Toll Free 1·800·837·8217
Stale Route 124 In Rutland, Ohio ·

•

t

�Pag&amp;-A6-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

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

Crown City High School graduates one in 1920
.f •

E

l:

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - The graduation
exercisesforCrownCity High School
were held in 1920 on April 15. The
location was the Crown City Methodist Chwch, the
speaker was Rev.
C.H. Morrison,
and the class mono
was:''Tonight we
launch; where
shaU we anchol'?"
Despite the fact
Crown City offered adequate instruction in the
grammatical ans, there was a stight
problem with the motto. There was
no "we" just an "1 01 as there was only
one graduate in the Class of 1920 Minnie Agnes Wells.
The previous year there had been
five graduates (all women): Florence
Cofer. Mary Cofer, Iva G. Lanier.
Lettie Halley and Mynle Waugh.
In addition to the sennon, there
was a play. smging, instrumental
music and the oration by the only
graduate. Miss Wells spoke on the
subject "DctenninaLion". Teachers
at Crown City then included Professor A.L. Dillon and Miss Dyer.
Other news from Crown City
during the spring of 1920 included:
complaints about the conditions of
the roads, the rescuing of rabbits, the
draining of a fish pond, an outbreak
of influenza and a runaway cow.
William Lanier, in his regular
column in the GaUia Times, reported
under the heading, "Sportive Bovine",
that S.D. Halley's cow, which had
been kept inside all winter, went on a
rampage when turned out to graze.
It happened on a Sunday morning
and "for a time the cow had everybody in town who happened to be out
on the run or up a tree."
"Men and boys raced wuh her
through the streets and out on the
hills until many of them became
exhausted and fell by the wayside.
Gates. bars. and fences were gone

through, under and over as though
they were made of matches.
Mar.;hal Lewis met her in the
m1ddle of lhe s~eetand displayed his
police badge, thinking she would
surrender, but she bowed her back,
lowered her head. gave him a merry
laugh and passed on by.
AI one time the villagers thought
the cow was going to swim the river
and they began to come down from
their places of safety, believing the
worst was over. But she turned her
head from the n ver and stancd for
another raid on the town. By th1s
time, scvcml men and boys concentrated their forces against her and she
was brought under subjcctioo. Mr.
Halley thinks he w1ll continue to keep
her in solitary confmement until she
becomes more docile."
The fish pond that was drained
was on the old Jenkins farm across
the Ohio River. A number of curious
Crown City folk rowed across to
observe men wading into a now shal low water pond and grabbing IS pounders w1lh their hands. The pond,
which resembled a lagoon, was about
35 acres in the sum mer but about95
acres in the spring. The task of building a drainage ditch from the lagoon
to the Ohio River was given to Johnny
"The Human Muskrat" McMasters.
J .A. Fulks, the owner of the Jenkins
land in 1920, wished to tum the lagoon mto a field.
It was a great day of reJoicmg
every spring when the county "road
drags" made it down to Crown City
and people could get their automobiles out.
Just a few weeks earlier, Mr.
Llln,er, writing in the Times had referred to the roads leading out of
Crow n City as lhose "mac-a-dam
roads". He made the trip on horseback but still had ~uble navigating
all the ruts and bumps and places
where the road was completely
washed out.
In March of 1920, most of the
schools and churches in Guyan

Meigs to get priority funding for program
I

POMEROY - Health -rel ated
agencies and institutions in Meigs
County will have the opponunity to
receive up to $ 10,000 in prionty
funding for programs aimed at
reducing infant mortaluy in th e
March of Dimes Central Ohio
Chapter Grant Program.
Meigs County was selected for
the opponunity to receive priority
funding because of the area' s high
infant mortality rate, 16.7; and the
low percentage of women who
receive prenatal care in the first
trimester of pregnancy, 57.19 percent.
The Man:h of Dimes and the U.
S. Surgeon General's goals are to
red uce low birth wc1ght to not
more tban five percent of all live
births, to reduce infant mortality to
no more than seven per 1.000 live
births, and to increase to at least 90
percent the proportion of pregnant

women who receive prenatal care
in the first tnmester.
Funding is available through a
March of D1mcs grant for programs
that work to reach the se goals .
Grants arc awarded based upon an

Claims shooting
was an accident
PAINESVILLE, mio (AP) A man accused of shootmg hiS be st
fnend has told police 1hc sloy mg
was an acctdcnt.
The News -Herald of Wil lou,:h by cited a s tatement g1vcn by
Quentin Scott Nichol son '"
Painesville police detect ive Dcnms
Sake after the April 23 shooung of
Ernest Champagne.
" He was my friend ," NiCho l·
son. 18, told Soke. "It was an acci dent when the gun went off.
" (Ernest) had been pulling the
trigger and it didn't go off. But
when I got the gun and pulled the
trigger, it did go off," NiCholson
said.
Champagne, 21, was sl101 once
as he and Nicholson watched a
movie . Prosecutors hav e sai d th e
shooting was intcnuonal Nichol ~
so n's trial is to begin June 15
before Lake County Common Picas
Judge Marlin Parks.

applicauon/evaluation process. The
fund ing period is from Jan. I. 1993
10 Dec. 31, 1992.
A copy of the grant guidelines
and application may be obtained
from the March of D1mes office,
486-5243 before July I.
The mission of the March of
Dimes is to improve the health of
babies by preventing birth defects
and mfant mortality through community services, advocacy.
research and education.

WOALDWAAII
FIFTY YEARS AGO 10DAY
MAY 17

1· g. 4·2

I

FHEE

Sou rce "2 194 Days 01 War,' W H Sm1trl

•Trophies and
Engraving
•Watch Repair
Since 1933
CelebrBting 59 ye•ro of

eervice

Tawney Jewelers
GaiDportS

GALLIPOLIS - Monday, Aug.

3 through Saturday, Aug. 8.
Be sure and mark those dates
down on your calendar and plan to
attend the 43rd annual Gallia
County Junior Fair.
Fair board members are excited
about this year's fair, including
Danella Greene, program co-chair·
man.
According to Greene, the Sklar
Arabian Horse and Exotic Animal
Fann, a new exhibit, will be set up
in the grass area between State

Route j5 and fair buildings. The Dean, Shelby Lynne, Martina
show includes a petting zoo with McBride, Tallahassee Freight and
Llamas, parrots, Rhea, wallabies, Magic Mike Winten.
Vietnamese potbelly pigs, Emu,
Dean was recently named as
and horse rides. Returning to the Best New Artist of the Year and
fair are the pig races, along with received Song of the Year awards
duck races.
during the Country Music Awants
Despite rising costs, Greene and ceremonies last month. McBride
board members are pleased with will be opening for Ganh Brooks
the entenairunentline-up this year. when he goes back on tour some"We're doing the best we can as time this summer.
a board to offer entertainment for
Winters will be roaming
$5 and not raise admission," said throug~out the fairgrounds perGreene. "Even with our budge~ I forming during the fair.
feel we have a lot to offer."
"We're lucky to have Billy
Entertainment for the fair Dean," pointed out Greene. "Enterinclude the Inspirations , Billy tainers prices are shooting up.

409MAIN STREET
PT. PLEASANT, WV.

HOURS:

Sun.: 12 Noon·5 P.M.
Man.·Sat. 7 AM·S PM

I~SPECTIO\

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
(All Brands).

The Inspirations

Gospel group offers 'inspiration'

Sa1111 Day Servkt

All Parts htra
Includes: Cltanlng. Oding,.
Adjustments, Greasillg.

TUESDAY, MAY 19, 12 NOON ' TIL 3

• Factory Retail ...........................
Less Saver Pac Discount ............ - 2,245

113,204
1

10,959

Less htra Savings ....................... - 600
$10,359
Less GM Rebate ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• - 750
1

9,609
Less First Time Buyer Discount ..... - 400
1
9,209

Less Our Discount ..................... - 559

BUY NOW FOR •••

$8650

$8650
Above national averages on
districtwide scholastic
achievement tests!

$8650

\

BRYSON CITY, N.C .- Who
are the Inspirations?
They IIIli a group of young men
from Bryson City, N.C., whci sing
all over the country. They sing
gospel songs, songs of gladness
and inspiration, from whence
comes their name.
The group will bring their voic·
es to the Gallia County Junior Fair
on Tuesday, Aug. 4 at 7:30p.m.
In 27 years of singing, the Inspirations have sung in almost every
state in the Union. When they

come in stage to sing, they sing.
Members include Martin and
Myron Cook, Archie Watkins,
Tror Bums. Mike Holcomb. and
Eddie Deitz.
Although the Inspirations sponsor and promote the ~est gospel
song festival in the Umted States.
the annual Singing in the Smokies,
most of their work is done on the
road. Since they began to sing in
1964, they have traveled two million miles, wearing oul seven
motors in their bus, and have sold

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Shelby one did a double take upon hearing
Lynne. 22, one of the most talked- it AJ; a single it only reached numabout singers in Nashville these ber 38.
days, will be perfonning at the Gal When CBS realized its Shelby
lia County Junior Fair on Wednes - ~old mine, they rushed her back
day, Aug. 5 at 7 p.m.
Jnto the studio to make an album
Her charisma is enhanced by her that radio wouldn't back off on .
lo ve of light jeans, no-nonsense The result was Tough All Over.
Stage demeanor and a voice as big She hated it.
as the Grand Canyon.
"There were very few things to
Lynne's debut, Sunrise, was a like on that album," she admits. "I
powerfully staik emotional record hardly bad anything to do with it"
that was amazingly enough, too
So along comes, Soft Talk.
hurtful for radio programmers who Although still not the definitive
like their country upbeat enough to Shelby Lynne, it's certainly a giant
seU their adveniser s products. Co· step in the right direction. Now
produced by Billy Sherrill, it fea- Shelby's in there with eclectic
tured an incredible version of artists tike Rosanne Cash and BonAoyd Tillman's 1948 "I Love You nie Raitt Lynne's voice is mixed
So Much It Hurts." That one song right up front
along is enough to raise a lump in
Best of all, Lynne ~If is satanyone's throat. The rest of the LP isfied and e&gt;tited about the record.
was almost as dramatic. especially She sounds self-assured, but the
the single, 'The Hurtin' Side" that hurt is there, startlingly evident in
cut through the bull so quickly that that soulful voice. It'll always be

Outstanding band and vocal groups!

*Tax and ntle Fees are extra.
CHEVROlEI'

Paid lor by the
Citizens' Committee lor the GaUipolio City Schools.

"AU proceeds will be put toward
paying off the loan," sa1d Greene.
The loan was taken out for the purchase new electrical systems , construction of the sheep bam. and the
building of a new roof oo the commercia! building, she added. Tallahassee Freight will be on hand to
perfonn. There is a $3 admiss10n
fee.
Junior fair board members are
also getting in the act and hav e
scheduled activities for Youth Fun
Day on Aug. 8. Events include tri -.
cycle races, pig calling contest.
cow chip bingo, and a teen dance .
The numbers are increasiqg ,

says Greene, refernng to the youth
exhibits and show (XIljects .
"The fair gets bigger and better
every year," she added.
Anyone having questions conccm mg the fall can contaCt Greene
at4464612. exL 256.
Tickets for the fund raiser can
be purchased from the following
board members: Gary Roach, president; Garry Fellure, Paul Shoemaker, vice prcsidem; Tim Massie, sec·
retary; Sk1p Meadows, trelSIIfer;
Bob Howard, Greene, David Mjlls,
David Graham, Bill Kuhn, 9ill
Burleson, Kenniso~ Saunders.
Eugene EUiou, Rodney Alderman .
and Carlos Wood.

-

there for her enure career.
"The accident," as she calls it,
happened in 1986 when she was 17
and her sister, Allison, was 13. It
branded that hurt in her voice for
an eternity, lor it was then that her
violent and drunken ex-Marine
father killed her mother and then
himself.
She was close to her mom. the
two of them even thmkmg about
going out as the first country mother/daughter duo before they heard
The Judds on the radio. Then their
world fell apart_
The father bad been abusJYe m
the past toWards Shelby . The moth er knew enough to leave h1m . But
he showed up one fateful nigbl and
that 's when the sisters heard the
shots from the dnveway.
She now lives with her sister in
a house in Nashville. She has her
good days and her bad days. She
wants to put the past behind her but
the subject keeps coming up. Interviewers keep asking her about iL
Has she finally come to grips
with this awful ~th?
"I usually do n01 talk about that
in interviews . But I guess you
could say I bavc."

The elevator that tiftcd him from
one level to the other was the "New
Faces Show" at the 1991 Country
Radio Seminar in Nashville. Competing with nine other young acts
for the attention of America's most
influential radio programmers,
Dean brought the house down. Better still. he put a face and a personatity to the voice that could then be
heard across the dial singing "Only
Here For A Little Wbi le."
Dean followed his breakthrough
single wilh the No . I hit "Some ·
where In My Broken Heart." Now
he's back with his second Capuol
Nashville/SDK album, Billy Dean.
"I think the 'New Faces' exposure was probably the most crucial
point-maybe e9en the turning
point-in my career," Dean says.
"The people in radio are bombarded by the record labels who say
that this or thai artist is gomg to be
the next b1g thing . But the 'New
Faces Show' gave radio the opportunity to sec for itself."
Even though "Only Here For A
Liule While " seemed to have
already run its course on radio ,
Dean's appearance gave it new life
and it quickly soared to the No. 2
perch on the charts.
In Billy Dean, the smger deftly
explores a gallery of emotional situations, and he co-authored five of
lh c songs. Just as in his earlier
works, Dean favors here songs that
arc probing and contemplative. His
"I Miss Billy The Kid,' for example, is not only a fond-but also an
iron1c- look backward at the days
of childish mnoccncc and cerla1my.
"S1mple Things" and "Small
Favors" both extol and savor the
JOY that res1des m the ordinary fea tures of life.
In "On ly The Wind," Dean
chroni cles the kind of emotional
reassurance that can endure only so
long. "I Shoulda Listened" is a case
study in self-reproach, while "You
Don't Count The Cost" revels in
love so strong that it ignores all
impediments. "If There Hadn't
Been You" is a grateful recognition
of the ennobling power of love.
"Daddy's Will " becomes Dean's
immensely moving tribute to a
father who inspires by determination as well as deed.
On the lighter side, Dean romps
through the story of a ne'er-do-well
who always manages to be in the
right place at the wrong time in
"Hammer Down." And he rounds
out the album with a hard-driving
salute to hobos, cowboys and all
the other mythical types who are
"Gone But Not Forgotten ." Musi cally and thematically, Billy Dean
is an extracl'dinary achievement.
In spite of the "New Faces"
association, however, Dean's
movie-star face has been a farn1liar
one on Music Row since the early
1980. That's when he moved to
Nashville from his native Florida,
soon after winnmg a Wrangl er
Starsearch talent contest.

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OLDSMOBILE

GENE JOHNSON
• Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer •
(614) 446·3672
1616 EASTERN AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Shelby Lypne

NASHVll.LE, Tenn. - Martina
McBride is unique. She is genuine.
She is talented. She is country .
Very few people are '"na turals" at
what they do. After experiencing a
live petformance or hearing her on
tape, it becomes obvious that Mar. tina is a natural.
McBride will be performing
Saturday, Aug. 8 at 9 p.m.
Raised on a farm in rural
Kansas, MaJ1ina has a pure country
background. She began performing
for crowds at the age o{ 3, singing
in chlD'Cb. She came by her power.
ful voice early on, sin,ing and
playing keyboards full-ume with
her parent's band by the time she
was 10. A popular local band, this
gave Martina the oodet to perform
and explore her own penonal Sl)'le
of singing.
In 19&amp;3, atl6 years old, Martina
entered a talent search called the
"Dodge Trucks present Wf3JigiCI'

Country Showdown". After competing with over 300 contestants on
both a local and state level, she
earned the honor or representing
Kansas in the national fmals held in
Nashville, Tennessee. While she
did n01 win the finals, she got her
first taste of Nashville and knew
she would return someday to pursue her career. After singing for 12
years professionally. she feels that
day has come.
Traditional country is the music
closest to Martina· s heart. Being
taught Hank Williams, Ernest
Tubb, Merle Haggard and gospel
classics by her dad arc among Martina's fondest memories. Her out·
loot and attiwde are mature for her
23 years, yet she possesses a youth
and enthusiasm that is fresh and
exciting. After one tisten, it is clear
that she was meant to sing country
music. She loves il and sings it

from her soul.

' I

,r

Billy Dean
Always fascinated by music,
Dean had learned to play the guitar
while still in grade school. By the
time he was 15, he was writing his
own songs. He got his professional
start playing weekends in his
father's band. Then he went on to
work the club and hotels along the
Gulf Coast .as a solo act.
To suppon himself in Nashville,
Dean formed a band and began
touring, often opening shows for
such slars as Mel Tillis, Gary Morris, Ronnie Milsap and Steve
Wanner. When he could wedge it
into his schedule, he concentrated
on songwriting. Ultimately he concluded that he would "lose his
place in line" if he didn '1 spend
less time on the road and more time
in town dealing with the ba1ic real ·
1ties of the music business.
That decision led h1m 1n10
singing and acting in commercials
for McDonald's, Chevrolet, the
Tennessee Department of Tounsm
and dozens of other accounts
Nashvdlc's love alfarr wllh the
"traditional'' country arti sts dunng
the late '80s kept the more pop-on·
ented Dean from gctong the hear ing he merited. But the delay also
gave him additiona1 u~c to pcrfc.ct
his craft Eventually, h1s songwnl ing and singing caught the attcnlion
of publish er/producer Junmy
Gilmer. Gilmer secured h1m a
songwrillng contract with EM!
Mu s1c and then a recording deal
with Capital Nash ville/S BK
Records.

Dean's first album, Young Man,
was released in the fall of 1990. By
this time, Dean had had songs cut
by Milsap, Randy Travis, Shelly
West and Les Taylor. Not surpris·
ingly, then. five of the ten songs on
Dean's fllSt album are his own.
One of those songs is the
achingly poignant "Somewhere In
My Broken Heart." Dean had
already done one music video (for
"Only Here For A Little While"),
but the video script for '"Somewhere In My Broken Heart" gave
him the opportunity to sbow his
acting kill since it called for him to
porlray tht: actions in the song
instead of simply lip-synching the
lyrics. The universality of both the
music and the video convinced
Dean' record label to "work" the
song in the adult contemporary as
well as the country market.
Dean· s tall, rangy good looks,
his bell-clear voice and the subjects
he smgs about combine to make
h1m an artist of exceptionally wide
appeal. In Billy Dean's music, life
""' t a series of hooky tonk and
bedroom crises- it's a steady procc~s of discovery . Some of the discoveries are funny, some are
painful. But they all contribute to a
richness of the spirit And they all
linger in the listeners' minds, long
after the melodies have died away.
"I want to touCh on every emotion a person goes through." Dean
says. And he docs
Dean will be performing at 9
p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 6.

Martina McBride is pure
country; performs Aug. 8

Second overall :1mong 34 districts in
Southeastern Ohio on 9th grade state
proficiency test!

Nationally recognized Key Club and
History Day participants!

two million records, which earned
them a gold plaque from Canaan
Records as the fu:st gospel singing
group to sell more than a million
recordings for Canaan_
Chart songs are cornmoo for the
lnspiralions. Tbcy have sa:n 62 of
their songs make the cbaru in The
Singing News, the magazine voice
of gospcl music. They were vOilld
the most popular sin~ng group in
gospel music six limes in The
Singing News Fan Awards_

Out of tragedy comes art: Lynne

K-12 Art, music and computer
curriculum!

SEOAL leader in athletics .. .'91-'92
Boys Basketball League Champions!

Sawyer Brown, for example, was
$27.500. and Ronnie Milsap was
asking $22,000."
Visitors are getting a good deal
for $5 . Gree ne also sta ted many
fairs are charging for admission
and then chargmg extra for grandstand entertainment.
An antique tractor pull, a new
attraction, will be held Aug. 6 at
7:30p.m.
Prior to the fair, a fund raiser
will be held from 8-11 p.m. June
27 at the fair ground to help raise
funds to payoff a loan that was
taken out a few years ago, according lD Greene.

was a star.

HALLEY'S
RESTAUUNT

Oztr Schools
Make
Sweet Music

May 17, 1'992

NASHVILLE, Ten n. - One day
Billy Dean was just an alluring
voice on radio. The ne~t day he

James Sands is a special correspondent for the Sunday TimesSentinel. He can be contacted by
writing: Jim Sands, 65 Willow
Drive, Springboro~ OH 45066.

LOOKWBATWE
DO...
•Ring Sizing
•Remounting
•Watch Batteries
Installed Wlu1e You Wait

By KRIS COCHRAN
Times-Sentinel Staff

' npc '."

)

r-"-

-

next season when the nlbbits get

364 JACKSON PIKE - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Section B ·~

Billy Dean, CMA's New Artist of
the Year, to perform at Gallia fair

FRUTH PHARMACY

'

Gallia fair features top entertainment, new attractions

DUILT IN 1914 -The former Crown City school building was
erected in 1914, and did have a high school for about two decades.
The 1920 graduating class was Minnie Wells. Other news of the
spring of 1920 centered around cows, rabbits and lish.

Puo!ishers Inc

Puzzle on Page D-2

OTHER DEALERS MAY
CONFUSE YOU •••

,

Township had to be closed because
of an inOuenza epidemic. In several
households every member of the
family was down w1th the disease.
Fortunately the 1920 epidemic was
not nearly so serious a'\ the one in
1918. Note too illata few infants died
of the whooping cough that winter
and spring.
As to rescued rabbits, it seems that
some Crown City youngsters saw
some baby bunnies floating by on a
drift pile. There were at least 60 of
them that had been put out into the
river after a heavy rain. The Crown
City boys rescued the rnbbits, took
them up in the hills, and turned them
loose.
According to Mr. Lanier: "The
boys are already talking about the b1g
'ro und up' they arc going to have

.

Along the River

But here is the straight
talk- you can"buy a
1992 Chev. 5·1 0 Short
Bed Pickup at
Gene Johnson Chevrolet·
Olds equipped as follows:

*

Fighting intensifies on
me southern Soviet tront as the
ground firms after the sprmg thaw :
Germany 's Army Group South
1 attac~ me lzyum sa11ent and east of
Kharkov. halting the Soviet oHensive
In the ~diterranean. A~ 1s planes
fly the hnal misstons ot an intense
week- long bombing campaign
against Brii!Sh air and naval bases
on Malta that has causod heavy
losses Of1 boltl sides

422 Secoad Ave.

May 17, 1992

Martina McBride

l,

'
'

�Times-Sentinel

May 17, 1992

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-53

Burt Reynolds is a class act
..

EVENING SHADE. Ark . (AP)
· -Snazzy sweat sui1s that say
"love and luck, Burt" are !he laiCSI
lOken in a long-distance love aff8lr
between this tiny community and
Bun Reynolds.
Reynolds, star of the CBS Sll ·
com "Evening Shade,' donated 70
specially designed wann-up suits 10
members of 1he junior h1gh and
senior high basketball teams.
"He's one of a kind, defm11el y a
class act," S31d school Superimcndem John Walker.
.
Reynolds adopted the p1 c.

po pu lar show began . He was 1he
key noiC speaker at last year's gradua uon and has promised to vi sit
agaw.
He gave suppon and r«:ipes for
1he .. Evemng Shade Cookbook ,"
wh1 ch gencraled nearly $250,000
m profus. Proceeds will help pay
for a sc hool gymnasium and audi t o r~ urn 10 be called the B uri
Reynold s-Linda Bloodworth ·
Thomason-Harry Thomason Gym nast um .

The Thoma so ns
· Evenmg Shade."

produce

' luresQue town of 397 when hi s

SEWING CLASSES
4 SESSION CLASS
MAY 19, 21, 26 &amp; 28
7p.m. 't~ 9 p.m.
OPENINGS STILL AVAilABLE

Call446·2202

PAMELA HARBOR and COREY SEULEAN

Harbor-Seulean
TODD KIMES and

RACINDA FRALEY

Fraley-Kimes
RACINE · Ms. Racinda K. Fraley and Todd M. Kimes announce
thetr engagement and approachtn g
mamagc.
Ms. Fraley is the daugh1er of
Ms. Judy Musser, Pomeroy, and
Charles Musser. Le!MI, W.Va. She

is a I983 graduate of Meigs High
School.
Kimes IS th e son of Mr. and
Mrs. William T. Kimes. Racine. He
is a 1987 gradua1e of Southern
High School.
A June wedding is planned

COOLVILLE - Mr. and Mrs. Crown Point majoring in elemen·
James Harbor, Coolville, announce tary education.
!he engagemenl and approaching
Seulean holds a bachelor's
marriage of their daugh~. Pamela degree in pastoral lheology from
Dianne, lo Corey David Seulean, Hyles-Anderson and is a youtll
Crown Point, Ind., son of John mmister. He operates a bus min·
Seulean, Westminster, Colo .• and istry in Chicago.
The opn churth wedding will
Debbie Neeley. Napa Valley. Oilif.
Miss Harbor is a 1989 graduate be an event r:i May 30 314:30 p.m.
of Federal Hocking High School at the Gospel Bap1is1 Church in
and is presendy a junior a1 Hyles- TOICh with Pastor Gerald Wilson
Anderson Christian College in offiCiating. Friends are inviled.

Rollins- Pearce
lUroc. 1988

GAll!POUS - Dan and Helm
Rollins of Gallipolis announce !he
engagement and apptoaching marriage of !heir daugh~. BtliDdi Lea,
10 Brian Kenneth Pearce, son of
Dave and Bernetta Pearce of BidweU.
Miss Rollins is a senior 81 Kyger
Creek High School.

NATHAN TIIOMPSON and REBECCA RIFE

Rife-Thompson

DINA FOLEY and RRIAN EBLIN

Foley-Eblin
GALLIPOLI S - Mr. anti Mrs .
rvliiL.trd \1 . Folcv ~mnoun c c the
ar proac hing ma-rriag e of th c Jr
dau ght er, D1na L. , to Hr 1Jn A .

Ebl 1n, son of Mr. and Mrc.. Harl e- y

Fhltn

The open church wctldmg will
be held May 30 at 5:30p.m. a11hc
Church of Jesus Christ of LallerDay SainL&lt;, Stale RouiC 160.
A reception will follow a1 Holt day Inn.

Stone-Soulsby
REEDSVIL LE · Wilk1m J
Slone and Car la J Su ulshy .
Ree dsv ille. ann ounce their
i!pproat:hlflg marnagc ~·1 ay 23 al
4.30 p.m. a1 the KccJ svillc Un 11e J
Mcd10di s1Church w1th Rev D e~ vll l

Dailey officiating.
The pre-nupual music will begin
al 4 p.m. and a reception 1n 1he
church social room will follow lhc
ceremony.
All family and friends arc invilcd to aucnd

Kiwanis club to host meeting
GA LLIPO LI S · The Gall1 pol.s
KJ \A,:.I Il i S Club wlll hosl til e ann ual
K 1· Ro -!.1 mc ct1n g o n T uesday,

r-.hy

l\}.

:1crord1ng to Gail Bcl vdk .

K1 wa1n \ prc sidcnl.

The

t~ vc nt

will be held a1 (i racc

p m. All members of Kiwanis
L1ons. and Rotary clubs are invited
to atl end .

Mary Ellen Withrow, Treasurer
of the Stale of Oh10, will be the

MIDDLEPoRT · Mr. and Mrs.
William B. Rife announce the
engagement and approaching mar·
riage of tlleir daughter, Rebecca
LyM, to Nalhan C. Thompson, son
of Mr..and Mrs. H.C. Thompson,
CoolviUe.
She is a 1984 graduate of Meigs
Hi~h School and currently owns

and operates Classic CuiS by B«:ky
m Muldlepon.
He is a 1982 graduate of Federal
Hocking High School and is
employed a1 Middleton Doll Company.
The wedding will be an event of
July 18 at5 p.m. at the Mlddlepoo
Churth of ChrisL

Credit check
Allhough the Fair Credit
Reporting Act requires !hal a credit
bureau give an individual no more
!han an oral or wriaen credit history review, many bureaus will go
beyond !he technical n:quiremeniS
of the law . They may furnish !he
same computer-gcncnw:d compilauon of faciS !hal they give banks.

GALLIPOl.IS - Gallia Acadany
High School Class ol1982 is planning its 10 year reunion for the
wrrtend of August 7.
1be following classmates can not be Jocatr11· Terry Adams. Moo·
ica Angelo Day, Tuesa Beaver;
Thomas (Mike) Belcher. Melinda
Brumfx:ld, Teresa Bumeuc, Scott
Bush. Debor.lb Coot. Lynn Dnun·
mond, Brian Hunler-Eberbardt.
Darlene Shortridge Fencll, Kenneth Gray. Gregory Gallagher,
Dmna Houck Clark, James King,
Terri lCing Kelley, Todd I.ockhart,
Gina Lowery, Don McCallister.

retailers and other companoes !hal
subscribe to !heir service. An indi·
vidual who bas been denied credll
on !he basis of negative mfonnalion from a credil bureau can obtain
!his review wilhout charge willlin
30 days of the denial. Otherwise.
!he fee typically ranges from $8 to
S12 for such a credit check..

NO DOOR TO DOOR

SALESMAN HERE!
If you are one of the millions who have seen adjustable
beds on T.V .... Loved the idea but were hesilalllto call the
the 800 number for fear a salesman would come to your
door. .. Well you were right.. ..
Not only will you &gt;ave but you can If)' Fle•·A-Bed
a1 your local dealer before
you buy .

Holsinger-Freeman
REEDSVILLE . The open lawn
wedding_of John Alva Holsinger
and Apnl Lynn Freeman will be
May 24 at 2 p.m. at !he Holsinger
reSidence on Success Road, off
Route 7 near Tuppers Plains.
He is !he son of Alva and Grace
Holsinger, Reedsville, and the
grandson of Russell and Leona
Cline, Rae ·

ALFRED, N.Y. John
William Hoffman, son of Mr. llld
Mrs. Carl Hoffman of Gallipdis,
was !he recipient of !he Harry J.
()dink Menu ial Awan! in Caarnic
Engineering presented rtcauly 11
the Alfied Uni\USily Honors Coo'IOC&lt;Ilion.
Hoffman, 1 graduate of Gallia
Academy High SclllOI, is I sophGIIlOie cmunic enginrmog map in
!he School ol Enginemng alld Sciences ar Alfred.
The Odink Award is giYCII to I
srudcnt in good acad&lt;miC sunding
who bas !hown OIII.SUIJiding ability
in e•perimenution in laboralOr)'

Rees, BiD Reily, Sbeila Roac:h.
Jimmy Rohci1S. Lisa Kay Roush.
Betty RlljiC, BiD Saf!CIII, lisa
Shue, Marc SHI:tey. TI!Dera
S' &amp;&amp; Jtci6
Kdly Smidt.
TCI&lt;SI Sqa- SL Clair, Ric:bard
Sude U, Gary SUWUt. Margie
Tury,lo&amp;:c lJMMj••. Dee Trucsdcilc Ba:s, .Ira V.-z., .Jary W•·
rea, T.....,.
limit West.

s..-.

DrnpW••'

w--.

If...,._ ._ carua ldtftsscs
for lhe!IC
c:wra:t Sbari

BuJdull 11 446-0437 or
Nancy Milwad Gl ' • at 446-

PlyaWr:
927L

FLORIDA'S BEST
VACATION VALUE
JUST GOT

PATRICIA LANDRUM

BEllER!

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IM3EDOIAWIII,.. fJ'Y

cour.;cs.

Flame Fellowship
meering Monday
1'000 PLEASANT, W. Va., ship will mee1 al Fort Randolph
Terrace in Point Pleasant Monday
a1 7 p.m.
Speaker will be Georgaoo
Schad. pn:sidcnl of Flame Fellow.'ihip lnlem3tional

••,
Sidewal• Sale
FRIDAY • SATURDAY - SUNDAY

and Marlha Holsinger, Reedsville.
She is the daughter of Joe Ann
Freeman, Los Angeles, Calif., and
Ronald and Tammy Freeman ,
Racine. Sbe is !he granddaughter of
Clarence and Evelyn Freeman.
Racine.
A reception will follow !he ceremony.

FREE VIDEO TRANSFER
high grade tape.

FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WILL COME
INTO YOUR HOME AND VIDEO YOUR
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DELUXE
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SERIES 178

WELLSTON · Patricia Gale
Landrum and Ronald Edwin John. son announce their engagcmem and
·:approaching marriage.
The formal wedding will be
_held Sawrday, Sepl 5 at6:30 p.m.
·al the Hope Uni1ed Methodisl
'Church , Wellston.
MISS Landrum L&lt; the daugh!Cr of
LaNclle and Jim Landrum. She is a
1988 graduate of Wellston High
·School and a 1992 graduate of !he

American
Classics.

LnJov 1he look and stvle ol
cLbs iCcanvas Tre10rns
:\v;ulable massorted color

tnm s. and lealhertoo Step
1nto an Amencan ongmal

TWIN SIZE

Nvlitc

49~
...

52995 c.... 54595 loat!Mr

THE SHOE CAFE
lAFAYETTE MALL
GALUPOUS, OH.

Richard Dysart
returns home

·cettles elected co-chairman
· NEW YORK · Kalhryn Geules,
"a sophomore a New York Universily, has been el«:ted co-chairman of
lhc Alumn1 Scholars of NYU for
':We coming year.
The scholars are chosen as
cntcnng fres hmen for acadcm•c
: e.ccllencc and leadership qualities.
• The program encourages each stu: den! 10 undertake independent
:study and acquainls eac h scholar
· with the m!Cllecluallife of the Uni ·
. vcrsily and New York City lhrough
· lecwrcs, thea1er outings and u-ips.
: A study u-ip abroad is taken each
: year during imercession.
.

.

~

TRAVEL ADVINftRI'S

MO,ORCOACB
June 12-14

*Full-day excursion to Put-In-Bay
and Kellys Island, touring and
lunch
*Tour Historic Sandusky aboard
Bay Area Trolley Tours
*Merry-Go-Round Museum and
Wlleswood Country Store
*Tour the harbour towns of Huron
and Vermillion
*3 meals with Brunch at the
Showboat Restaurant
RESERVA110N DEADUNE MAY 22

15 YEAR WARRANTY

FLQ~~-000

Morgan honored

;i

Landrum-Johnson

Deperll Galllpolla &amp; Po.,.roy

Bring in any type ol 8 mm film and we will 1ran1fer up to 50 feet of
film onto VHS Tape.
We have blank video tapn available for purchase, or bring in your

NORTHUP · Mrs. Barbara R. Gallia Academy High School and
Nelson of Northup, annoonces !he IS enlis1ed in the U.S . Marine
engagement and approaching mar· Corps, 2nd Marine Division, and is
riage of ber daughter, Stephan.e suuioncd in Camp Lejuene. N.C.
The wedding will be held June
Diane, 10 LCpl. James V. Lucas ,
20
at 2:30a.m. al the American
son of Ms. JeMy K. Lucas of GalLcg•on , Gallipolis.
lipolis.
Miss Nelson is tile daugh1cr of
!he late Edgar S. Nelson . She is a
student at Hannan Trace H1gh
School.
Mr. Lucas is a 1989 graduaiC of

COLUMBUS - Sally Morgan,
daugblCI r:i Carl and Mildred Wm·
ttn of Galli.a Coun1y, was honored
recently for her accomplishmcnls
in !he nursing field during a "PartrailS in Professionalism" ceremony
at The Ohio SLate University Hospitals.
Morgan is a clinical nu~ specialist and provides care and assistanCe to trauma and general surgery
patienls.
She is a graduate of Gallia
Aademy H;gh School.
Awards were presented 10 staff
nur.o:s, clinical nurse specialisiS.
managus and administrators who
ha.e completed re.=rcll. published
anicles. or lllllde presenrauons out·
side !he University communily in
the past year.
Universily Hospilals is a 963 bed
educational . research and
and RONALD JOHNSON
patiall care hospilal specializing 1n
cardiac care, organ l!anSplantation.
rehabilitation, !he neurosciences
University of Rio Grand with a and women's services.
B.A. degree in Mathemallcs
minoring in Computer Science. '
Mr. Johnson is llle son of Beverly and Wil Johnson of Kingston.
N.Y . He is a 1981 graduate of
Marietta High School and a 1990
AUG USTA . \l31n c (AP I graduate of !he Un1versi1y of Rio Richard Dysart, who plays falherl y
Grande, wilh a B.S. degree in Elec· altorncy Leland ~l c i\Cn llc on
Iron ics. He is currently employed al " LA. Law," rct urn ~d to a r1 vc r
Bob's Elecu-onics. Kanauga.
where he frollicked as a boy 10 help
rid his horoc1ov.11 of a dam .
Dysan lOOk 10 a boa! Thursday
ncar the Edwards hyd rocl cc1nc
Lasl year tne alumni scholars dam, which has blocked !he Kenvisited Venezuela. In January !hey nebec River smce 1837
"We used to swun out Lhcrc m
toured llaly and will travel to Egypt !he summemme. dodgmg !lie pulp
in 1993.
Membership in the Scholars that was still commg do~· n . A li1~e
Program is renewable annually . dangerous, but the water was nice
Scholars are ex peeled to mainwn a and clean,'' said Dysan. who grew
3.5 GPA and to do volunu:a worl:: . up on a farm in !he area.
The actor spoke on he half of
Geules, who is majoring in art hisconservation
and sponing groups
wry. is currently work.ing at The
!hal
wan1 18 more miles of !he ccnFrick Collection. Henry Clay
Frick's pnva1e art collection locat- !ral Mairx: wa1crway opened natu ·
ed in his former residence. She will rally. They say rem oval of !he dam
intern at the Huntington Museum would re s10re natural ~ pawning
areas and rccreaiJOflal opponunuics
of An !his su mmer.
upstream .

LAKE ERIE EXTRAVAGANZA:

guest speaker.

Hurry, Do
If Now!

IU~r

JOHN HOLSINGER and APRIL FREEMAN

Robert MI:Cmaic1, Jmcue Mar·
t yn, Tiu Masten. Bea Meek.
Jonath•• O"DeU. Jody Plymale,
Loreaa Pvwdl. Sac: Price, Mark

The Point Pleasant Flame FellO\\'-

Un•l«i Mc1hod1SI Church at (, ] 0

own, unused

1

GARS classmates sought

Award winner
\

Nelson-Lucas

p1111uate of
North Galtia Higb School, has
enJigod ill the u.s. Army.
An opal dudl wc:lkling will be
hdd II 2 p.m. J..: 7 II the French
City lbpria Oum:ll, with Pastor
.1o1m Wood oa;. iwic
A"'' 1•i• will follow the cercmooy iD the dudl fdlow!hip ball.
Mr.

322 Second Ave.•446·2202•Galr.polis

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 AM to 6 PM

Tick Tock•••
Time Is
R~gOut!

~

SPRING FASHION
SAVINGS!
Ordf&gt;r rrom nu..- biR Spring Book,
our nih'~' Sprin~ Sak Catalor~:
til' an\ currrnlh activr
JCft.nnr~ ( ·aialoK-

At your neighborhood
JCPenney
Caralog Sales Center

Take $15 OFF any order of $75 or more in Men's, Women's or Children's
Apparel from the JCPenney Catalog.
• Come in for a free copy of our lalest Spnng Sale Calalog'
(while quanuues las!)
• 2·3 day delivery
• 24-hour ordering 1-800-222-6161

Win A Beautiful Picture Frame

'•

in NOW and reg1stc:r to w1n one o( 25 FREE pdUre frame~
Drawina will be held May 23nl
Th~ first 25 norm•s dfYI'I'o!n rtctiw an 8 X 10 CoiJQgt- PICrMr-t Fmmf'
that IHtu~tifolJy dtsplays uwn of _)OUr fmvriit plwtol. No pNTCitasf' nt"anan.
(Cff'll!

COUNTRY IN DiE OZARKS:
Deperta Gdipolia &amp; Par,.oy

JCPenney Catalog

July

6-12

*Sl Louis Archway, Bass Pro Outdoor
World and Uncoln's Boyhood
National Memorial
•Dinner cruise on Table Rock Lake in
beautiful Ozarks
"Tour Silver Dollar City and Eureka
Springs and lhe Ozark Countryside
•See the Shoji Tabuchi llusic Show,
Ray Steavens, Baldknobber's Hillbilly
Jamboree, Louise Mandrell and

Tanya Tucker
• Great Passion Play plus 8 meals
Included
RESERVAT10N DEADUNE JUNE 6

JCPenney Catalo~ Center
29 Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis, OH. 45631 .
Phone 446-3525

Good for $15 off your next
Catalog =rei order of $75
or morei
· before
June 6th, 1992.

~ M1

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OFF;

GaUipoHs, OH.
446·6446

HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

OWMAN'S

70 PiDe St

Gallipolis

446-7283 or 1-IJ00.4.58.6844

CALL TODAY!

1·100-172·2292
'

I

•

�OH~olnt

Pleasant,

wv

May 17, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

OH~olnt

Pleasant, wv

Summer enrichment
prof?ram slated at URG

Names in the news
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - To the
strai ns of " Born to be Wild," a
black-clad Gov . Ann Ri chards
climbed aboard a Harley-Davidson
she accepted on behalf of the state
to promote safe dri vmg.
Richards - who didn't ride the
motorcycle - said during Friday's
ceremony at th e Capitol that the
manufacturer delivered th e bike
after she saw a Harl ey and
remarked she'd like to "do someth ing kind of jazzy" when she
turns 60 next year.
''I'm just happy I didn't see an
alligator or a javelina," said
Rochards, who wore black pants, a
black shirt and a large silver belt
buckle for the occasion.

LAURA BREWER AN [) TOMM Y LONG

Brewer-Long
Mr. and Mrs. Rabat S. Brewer
of Point Pleasant and Mr. and Mrs.
Forrest L. Long of Galbpohs Rrry
are announcing the engagement and
upcoming manuge of their
children. Laun Sharon and Tomm'
Lee_
.
The we&lt;lding, 10 be performed
before irnmediare family, will be
May 23 at the Olurt:h of Jesus
Christ of Lana-llay S31111S in Gallipolis. The open recep~m for
famil y and friends wiU be held 111
the chwch multi-purpose mom at

5:30 p.m.. lollowmg the ceremony.
Laura IS a 1988 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School and Mason
Cotmty Vocational School. She IS
an employee of Fruth Corporate
Warehouse in Point Pleasant
Tommy is a 1986 graduate of
Pomt Pleasant High School and
Mason County Vocational School.
He is an employee of Ohio Val ley
Publishing, GaUipolis.
They will reside at the home they
ha,·e remodeled m Pomt Pleasant

Dr. Villarreal re-elected
COLUMBUS - Richard Villar
rea l. MD. Whedersbwg. was reelected Ninth Distria CounCilor at
the Annual Meeung of the Ohio
State Medical Assocm1on. held
recentl y on llaytoo.
As D1strict Councilor. Dr VIl larreal will represent Hodofl!! vonton , Pile, Jackson. l.k1gs. GJIIia_
Scioto and Lawrence counues at
meetings of the OSMA Council.
whi ch ac ts as the assonauon's
Board of Trustres.
A native of Harlingen, Texas.
Dr. Villarreal received his BA
de gree from the Uni,•ersity of
Texas on 1951 and recci,-ed his MD
degroc from the Nauonal Vruvcru ty of Me.ico, Mexico Gty in 1957
before compl etin g post-graduate
work at Rabat B. Green Hospital
in San Antonio. Texas and at
Columbus Stale Hospital
OR. R. VILLARREAL
He currently is rncdJcal lfutttor
of Shawnee Mental Health Ccnrer of the Am encan Medical Elecin Ptxtsrnouth and mamtains a pn- troence phalographic Association
vate practice m Wheelel'liburg in and past president of the Scioto
psychiatry. neurology and clec- County Medical Society.
troeneephalography.
Dr. Villarreal has al so bee n
Villam:al is liS!OCialcd woth SC\' - active in hi s commun1ty , having
eral profess iona l organ1za11ons served as president of the board of
including the American Ps.-chl31nC dorectors of Good will Industri es ,
Assoc iauon, the Ohto Ps~'C hi3InC
and as a me mber of th e Soc 1ety
Association, and os a fcuOw of the County Board of Mental RetardaAcad emy of Psychosomatic
tion. the Southern Tri-Count y MenMedicone and the lnlallaloonal Coltal Heahll and Reurdation Board,
lege of Psychosomaflc MtdK 1nt. and the Ponsmouilt Area Cham ber
He is also a past rounc1lor at -large
of Com mcn:c.

Minnesota Fats hospitalized
NASHVILLE . Tcnn 1.-\P o Mmnc sota Fats. the sharp- shooo ng
billiard ""tzard. "'as m cnt.Jc3.1 condwon fnday after suffcnn£: t rre~:u­
la r heartbeat and shonn.; ss ~o f
bre&lt;tilt , a hosp•tal spokesrmn ,;ud
Fats, whose real name " Rodolf
Wa ndcronc. was m Lhe tntcnsn·e
care unn at Vandcrt:ult Lnn r rsu.,
Mcdtca l Center , sa•d ho;; p11JI

spolo.esman Wayne Wood.
Fats unde rw ent knee surge ry
May 5 at the hospitaL Wood sa•d
he was not sure ho w soon afte r-

ward th e hear t irrcg ul a n11 cs
occ urred_

Wood said doctors had thought
on Friday that Fats had suffered a
he art attack but tha t assess ment
was changed after evaluation .

ROT~~ DONATION • Bob Hood, (right), viet presiMnt of
the Gallipolis Rotary Club, presents GaUia Academy Higb Sdlool
tea&lt;her Kathryn Bennett, (left), with a donatioa for GAHS Newsbowl Project A program of the Social Studies Deparllllenl, Newsbowl was a competition involving 90 students; quizzing the stu·
dents on current events. Tbe donation was used for prius recognizing Newsbowl winners.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
SUNOAY
POMEROY - The Me igs Jumor
and Semor High School Bands will
present concerts Sunday at 2 p.m.
A homemade chicken-noodle din ncr will be held immediately fol lowing the concerts and the cost is
$3.50.
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie BuffIn gton will preach at the Naomi
Baptist Church m Pomeroy Sunda y
at 10:45 a.m. The public is invited.
GALLIPOLIS - Nouce of radlfi cation meeting for contract agreement between UAW Local 1685
and Federal Mo gul will be held
Sunday at 10 a.m. at the Holida y
Inn in Gallipolis .
SYRACUS E - There will be a
chi cken barbecue at the Syracuse
Fire Department Sunday beginning
at II a.m. Cost of the dinners is
$3.75 and desserts are extra

RACIN E - Rac in e Village
rr.cc-~.:~ scs-

DAY

Savings Throughout
The Starel
Additional
. Our Already
'~ Prices I

.EURNITURE

Spurlock-Belcher
PATRIOT - MI. and Mrs . Jerry nacle, Oak lUll , w1ilt the Rev. Roy
Spurlock announce the marriage of Allen officmun g.
their daughter, Kimberly, to TimoThe bride is employed at llean thy Belcher, son of Mr. and Mrs. land Corp ., Jack.son.
Wendell Belcher of Oak HilL
The groom is employed at Jack The ceremony was held March 7 son Corp ., Jackson.
at the Old Country Church TaberThe couple resides in Oak Hill.

MIDDL EPORT - C hri st ine
Noll , Pomeroy , and Raymond
Stewart II were united in marriage
during a double -ring ce remon y
March 27 at the Gallipoli s First
Church of God Chapel with Paul E.
Voss officiating.
The groom is the son of Ray mond and Donna Stewart, Gallipolis.
Given in marriage by the
groom's father , the bride wore a
white satin dress and carried a bouquet of white carnation s tipped
with aqua and white and aqua ribbons.
The groom's moth e r was an
anendant and she wore a royal blue
dress crepe dress with a white carnation corsage.
The groom 's fath er was be st
man.
During a reception at the home
of th e groom ' s parent s , guest s
enjoyed a white cake decorated
with pink rosebuds. The cake top
was also used during the ceremony
of the groom's parents 30 years
ago.
The bride is a graduate of New
Haven High School . New Haven.
Mich . She is a certified nursin g
assistant at Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center.
The groom is a gra duat e of

'

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~
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HOME OXYGEN SERVICE

uc,,,,,,, N111lf•l lu"/1" F11 N1111 U11"
24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE-7 DAYS AWEEK
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP
1·800·458·8844
446·7283
GALUPOUS, OH.
3RD &amp;PINE ST.
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il
f
Amerlflorol '92
Columbus, Ohio

OOG '"

l'

ment fts purchase warrantt
though! and r;u•dance S...
wll•l you Duy VIStl the monument dealer who ha a complete display, and who can
detign a personaJizea monument to ll•rmonize with itt

turroundlngs.
We n..e the experience. We
h..,. the complete dlspl-r.
Your purch- is ~!«ked by lite

•trotlflfSI monument gu.,.,t•

DISPLAY YARD
STATE RT. 180
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
PHONE 398-8103

Her "Saturday N1ght at Seven"
has sold well . Her father died in
1974.

SAVE

20·50%
ON FINE JEWELRY
•since 19S9•

TAWNEY JEWELERS

It' s not often that an event of thi s magnltude occurs so close to home ... and
Peoples C hoice members will have two opportunities to experience this
once-in a lifeume celebration

0

Peoples Choice complimentary continental breakfast and valet
parking prior to departure

0

Deluxe motorcoach transportation

0

Two-day admission to Ameriflora '92

0

Overnight accommodations at the Radisson Columbus North
including a welcome reception and dinner
'

i ~t~:l
1 .:~· ;

... ,._

O

. . .·ssq·.q·. . ·

Deluxe breakfast buffet at the Radisson

0

$25,000 traveler's insurance

0

Luggage handling

0

Peoples Choice escort Mary Fowler

.

Thi s is a first-class tour at a very affordable price. Cost per person: $185 Double
$174 Triple, $163 Quad, or $210 Single. There is an additional $25 fee
'
to non-members. A $50 deposit is required to confirm reservations.
join us as we set sail to discover Columbus and the '92 Ameriflora Celebration'
For reservations or informaton, please contact Mary Fowler,
Peoples Choice Coordinator, at (304) 675-1121 .

MEIGS COUNTY

VINTON , OHIO

knew.''

Celebrating 59
Years of Service!

June 9 and 10, 1992
and
August 12 and 13, 1992

MONUMENT CO.
JAMES A. BUSH. Mgr.
PHONE 992-2588

LIMA , Ohio (AP) - Joan
Benny wasn 't sure her book aboul
growing up the daughter of Jac k
Benny would sell . There was no
daddy -bashing in it .
"That's why 11 tool&lt; me so long
10 get around to writing the book,"
she said Thursday . " I thought _
who 's going to buy a book about a
nice man and a happy family and a
nice life?''
Unlike the scathing scribbliogs
of Pally Davis, daughter of former
President Reagan; Christina Cmwford, daughter of loan Crawford ;
and Gary Crosby, son of Bing
Crosby, Ms . Benny calls her dad
" lhc kindes t, nic es t man I ever

DARE
NO - Recently Deputy Richard Mudd or the
Gallia County Sherirrs Department apprehended four students
from North GaiUa Higb School to be honorary D.A.R.E. members.
Pictured are Brooke Lieving, Christie Ratliff, Kathy Hager, a nd
Dobbi Saunders with lleputy Mudd. The girls worked with Deput v
Mudd in the D.A.R.E. program a t Vinton Elem entary. The
ll.A.R.E. program lallts openly with stud ents on drug and alcohol
awardeness.

-:::::::::::/

LOGAN
DISPlAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

Joan Benny unsure
about book sales

&amp;!!?~/

Ob/IIIMblf /OtUy

IIOIIUMENTS ARE OUA ONLY
IUIINEII. NOT A SIDELINE.

Me igs High School and is aucnd ing the Universny of Rio Grande
where he is a member of the Tau
Kappa Epsilon Fraternity . He is
employed with the Kroger Company in Pomeroy .
Following a wedding tr ip to
Kentucky the couple re sides in
Middleport.

1!

Notning you buy will evert»

.a permanent as a lam&gt;ly monu-

HONEY
BAR-B-qUE
tiDCKEN IS
COMING TO
POMEROY.

(CHRISTINE) STEWART U

Noll-Stewart

BOWMAN'S
; HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY~

RACINE - The Southern Junior
High choir will present a sp nn g
program Tuesda y at 7 p.m. in the
h•g h sc hool gy m. Public mvitcd.
Jeff Arnold director.

MONDAY
RACINE- The Racme rTO will
mee t Monday at 8 p.m. at the elementary sc hool to recognize outgomg officers and to elect new offi cers for nex t year. All parc nL~ or
guardians of students encouraged
10 allcnd.

Council wiU meet in

MR. and MRS. TIMOTHY (KJMD ERLY) BELCHER

~

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Regular meeting
of Drew Webster Post No. 39,
American Legion, will be held
Tuesday. Dinner at 7 p.m. Meeting
at 8 p.m.

POMEROY - Revova l at the
Calv ar y Pilg rim Chapel, Route
143, Pomeroy, will be held Tuesday through Sunday at 7:30p.m.
mghtly. with Harry Miller and fam il y. Pastor Vic tor Roush invites the
public.

Mistaken heal th
advice magazine
could be dangerous

MR . and MRS . RA YMONil

1

~3

,• -·

&lt;tio ~-

AMERI FLOR/\192.
II'.I! Q-I(AS CUilllfAI!QN 0' OI~OV(IIY

Peoples Oloi&lt;e is • division or the Peoples Bank or Point Pleasant, Point Pleasant, WV. Member FDIC.

gram. to be co nauctea Mo ndays
through Thursdays fr om &amp;: 3011 · 30 a.m . 1n An nive rsa ry Hall ,
wd l ualue the ans. social sc iences
and language arts to inslruct and
cntcrtam the chi ldren.
Supervised hy L1 nda Mill er.
ass1stant professor of Edu cati on.
1hc program will offer opportuni liCS for visual, auditory, psychomotor and t.act.ile experie nces. Acl.i vi·
ues wil l be pro vided hy professional, pre-serv ice Rio Grande students
en rolled 1n the Co llege of Educain
tiOn . A $10 rcgistrauo n fcc is
rcqu1rcd and enro ll me nt IS o n a
f1rst-come. f ar st-sc r vc basis. To
NEW YORK (APl - A health reg iste r, contact th e College of
advice item in the June Glamou r Ed ucat ion at (61 4) 245 -5353,
magazine IS erroneous and could be ex tension 328. The toll -free num dangerous 1f followed. the maga - ber m Ohio IS 1-800-28 2-7201.
llne said roda y
In an article on health and pre£ nancy, the magazine suggested tak '"&amp; boric acid Sill baths or .. you
can take 500-mg bone ac1d ublelS
.. three umcs a day wnh meals.· ·
Bu1 Howard Greene. a
spokCSOWl for the magaZine_ sa1d
bo ric acid tablets should not be
ingeslcd. "It should have spec !lied
that boric acid capsules shou ld be
1nserled vagmally th ree wncs a
da) _"he saod.
The maga11nc pu1 out a statemcm \\'anung: readers no1 to mgcst
the t.ablcts and S-aid_ " If you aCCI dentally ingest bone aCid orally,
call your &lt;kx:tor or po1 son conLrul
center immcdtately · ·
The arucle appears '" the June
1ss:oc of Lhe magazmr. wh.Jch wcm
on sale at ncWSSl3nds Monday
RIO GRAI"'DE - An ennchment
program for area stud&lt;niS enrolled
in grades 1-6. w1ll be conducted
1his su.mmer at the Univer~1ty of
Roo Grande
The program. slated for June 8
until July 3. wtll offer the studenlS
a cwriculum of classes and acuvl ties designed to enhance the creativity of the students _ The pro -

TULSA, Okla (AP)- Evangelist Oral Roberts, who has already
put his City of Faith medical com plex up for sale, may have to sell
off other parts of his ministry to
retire more than $40 million in
debt, an aide says.
Mark Swadener, chief financial
officer of Oral Robens .University,
sa id in Friday's Tulsa Tribune that
only non-essential parts or the
school would be sold.
Robens built his empire largely
through contributions, which have
dwindled in recent years. Ministry
officials blame scandals involving
such evangelists as Jimmy Swaggart and Jim Bakker.

'i

MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
Burkett Barber Shop in Middlepon.
Social tour and uadin$ session at 7
p.m. precede the meetlllg. Refresh ments. New members welcome.

RE EDSVILLE - Th e Eastern
High School Mu sic Departm ent
wi ll present its annual spnng con cert Sunday at 3 p.m. The public is
1nvited . William Hall is director.

POMER O Y - AMV ETS w1 ll
mee t Monday at 7 p.m. at Sm1tt y' s
1n Pomeroy

Mrs. Helmsley will share an 8foot-by-6-fool cell with one other
prisoner in the camp, just 35 miles
from the Greenwich home that was
th e focus of her indictment on
income tax evasion.
Mrs. Helrnsley, who appeared as ~
a queen in magazine ads for her ~:
hotels, was convicled in 1989 of evading $1.7 million in taxes by ..
billing personal expenses, such as renovations on the Greenwich .
home, to her companies.

,,

soon Monday at 7 p.m. at council
chambers at Star MiU Part.

RACINE - The Southern H1gh
Sc hool chorr will present its spring
concert Sunday at 2 p.m. at th e
ln gh sc hool gym. Featured will be
a medley from the movie "Beauty
and the Beast" as weU as a collec tion of pop songs. "Top 40." Public
invited . Jeff Arnold, director.

the .,king

SALE

..

Meigs County calendar

Now •s /he /lme 10 Ultct 1
f1mily monument. Perpetu1tt.
lor all lime, rno memory of
/hose you love. Our knowle&lt;lflf
and txper;ence are youl'! for

MAY

DANBURY, Conn. (AP) Hotel-queen -lUrned -federal -prisoner Leona Helinsley has new digs not far from husband Harry and
their Connecticut mansion .
Mrs. Helmsley, 71, who is servIng a four-year sentence for taX
evasion, was transferred Friday to a
minimum-security prison in Dan ~
bury after a month at the Federal
Medical Cenier in Lexington, Ky.,
pn.son spokeswoman Lisa Austin
said.

Sunday Tl mes-Sentlnei- Page-85

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422 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

THE SHOE CAFE

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

,I

I

�Is, OH--Polnt Pleasant, WV

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

11, 1992

==================~~

Lawmaker who's an Eddie Murphy
look-a-like to appear in Murphy movie

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

Sliding fee sale. No one refused servkes bB&lt;aun of inabllty to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

Ranked

Numherl

)

In May
GLENN and JACKIE GRAHAM

CoDllumer
Report.

Anniversary to be observed
NORTHUP - The children of
Glenn and Jackie Graham of
Northup, announce their parent's
40th wedding anniversary. They
were married on May 18, 1952 at
Asbury Methodist Church.

JAZZ 3000 Men's and Wom1en'f

\

VINTON - David and Judy
- Kennedy announce Lhe marriage of
their daughter, Robin Smith, to Sgt.
John Sayre Jr., on March 14 at
Faith Gospel Church, with the Rev.
Wiltiam H. Cochran. grandfather of
the groom, officiating the double
ring ceremony.
The bride's father is the late
. Ozie Smith, and grandparents are
James 0. and Beatrice Bush and
Verlie Smith and the late Clyde
Smith.
The groom is the son of John
and Brenda Sayre of Point Pleas ant, W.Va., and the grandson of
William and Sela Cochran and Guy
· H. and Clara Sayre of Point Pleasant, W.Va. He is a 1986 graduate
of Point Pleasant High School and
- is currcnlly a sergeant in the U.S.
~ Marine Corps.
The bride, escorted by her stepfather, wore a gown of while satin
w1th ruffles from wrust down to tl1e
. tip of the train, and puff rufned
.: sleeves. The bodice fearured pearls
.. over lace and satin. She carried a
·· bouquet of red roses. cascading
with baby's breath and red, white.
and black lace ribbon. Her head
piece of netting veil extended down

••

Hendricks-McKinney
ot

Smith-Sayre
her back.
Ma1d of honor was Becky
Meade. Bridesmaids were Misty
Smith and Melissa Sayre. They
wore red dresses with puffed
sleeves and earned a red rose with
black baby's breath and red, wh1te.
and black nbbons.
Flower girl was J dl Bush.
cousin of the bride. She wore a red
dress with puffed sleeves and carried a basket of rose petals.
Best man was John Sayre Sr.,
father of the groom. He wore a
black tuxedo. red cummerbund and
tiC, and a red rose. Sterner wore hiS
Marine uniform, and Bowen wore a
black tuxedo, red cummerbund and
tic. Groomsmen were S. Sgt.
Lloyed Sterner and Wcs Bowen .
L'!!ners were Jimmy Bu sh and
Ward Smith, uncles of the bride.
Both wore black tuxedos and red
cummerbunds and ties.

Ring bearer was Ashton
Kennedy, brother of the bride. He
wore a black tuxedo with red cummerbund and ue.
Regi stenng guests was Becky
Smith .
A reception was held at th e
church reception room.

..

bow at the s1de the waosl. Ashley
Banrum was flower girl. She wore
a rose satin dress with cream lace
overlay. The attendants carried
p1nk roses and the nower girl carned a basket with pink petals.
Best man was Barry Chapman.
Rutland, and usher was Travis
Hendricks, Pomeroy, brother of Lhe
bride.
The bride's mother wore a rose
satin two -piece suit. Her corsage
was of cream colored baby roses
tipped in pink.
A reception was held at the Old
Amencan Legion Hall in Middlepan.
The bride's table was decorated
with pink bows, bells and a silver
candelabra on either side of the
seven tiered cake which featured a
fountain, four stairways, pink roses
and a porcelain bride and groom
topper.
Andrea Wise registered guests.
and Sharon Stewart, Kelly Lc1gh
Stewart and Darlene Bartrum
served at the reception.
Following a wedding trip to
Burr Oak Lodge the couple rcs1dcs
m Middlcpon.
The bnde is a 1989 gr•duatc of
Meigs High School and is
employed wnh Classic Cuts 1n
Middleport
honor. She wore a wine colored
The groom is a 1984 graduate of
sati n st raog ht fnting nocr length Meigs High School and is
dress acccnLCd with sequins at the employed with Leading Creek
top. Bridesmaid was Becky Rife.
Conservancy District.
whose dress was tea-length with a

MIDDLEPORT - Sheila Hendn cks and John McKinney were
united in marriage during a double
ring ceremony a t the Rutland
Nazarene Church April 25 with
Paul Taylor offic1ating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Hendricks. Pomeroy.
Music was prov1dcd by Jane
Wise. piano. and Kombcrly Batey,
soloist during the ceremony.
The church was decorated with
a unilv cand le wah roses around
them.' two bras" candelabra. and
rose and cream colored bow s on
the pews.
G1ven in marriage by her father.
the bride wore a Vtctonan -stylcd
gown of tvory satin and lace. The
v-cut back was accented wilh cascades of pearls strcammg from the
lace neckline. It featured a charcl·
length train attached under a lace
and satin peplum w1th a satin bow.
She wore diamond earrings "bor rowed" from Becky Rif e and a
black ony&lt; ring which belonged to
her grandmother, the late Wanda
Stewart. She carr1ed a bouquet of
cascadmg roses. babies breath and
fern. ivory ribbons streamed from
underneath and were tied in lovers
knots.
Beth Birchf•cld was maid of

MR. and MRS. WILLIAM LINSCOTT SR.

Golden anniversary observed

ANNUAL
· YIELD

6.00%

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE

Mm1mum depoSit o( $2500.00 is required (or th1s 23 month
ccr~fi ca te of dcposll CD is compounded daily to produce
;1nnual yiPid. Th{'rt~ i5 a su h ~ tant1JI pe-nalty f0r early withdraw.11

TOLL FREE

1-800-468-6682

446-2631

Ohio Valley Bank
Ml•mbt•r miC

JACKSON PIKE

RIO GRANDE

ARE YOU GE I tiNG TIE BES,.
POSSIBLE SERVICE AND
PRICE ON YOUR
BEARING AIDS?
COME IN AND SEE!

'
MR. and MRS. JAMF'.5 (JOYCE) MARRINER JR.

I
MRS. RORERT (AMY) SPRINGER

Aker-Springer
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MIDDLEPORT - Amy Lou1sc
Akcr and Robert Lee Springer were
mamed April 17 at the First Baptist
Church in Roanoke . Rev. Charles
Ward and Rev. James E. Baucom,
Jr., the bride's brother-in-law , offi ciated Lhe ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Tommy A. Aker,
Roanoke.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs . Robert L. Springer, The
Woodlands, Texas. Mrs. Springer
is the fanner Janice Zirkle of Middleport
A program of wedding music
was performed by Kaye Young.
organ, Bill Kinzie, violin, Von
Moody, trumpet. John Cannon.
trombone, Charles Krause, tuba,
Paul Huffman and Cindy Wilson,
vocalists. The guest book attendant
was Robyn Jamison.
Escorted by her father. the bride
wore an ivory satin gown uimmed
in alencon lac:.e and seed pearls
with a sweelhean neckline and a
cathedral-length train. She wore a
veil of French illusion attached to a
headpiece of ivory satin r?settes.
She carried a bouquet feaiWlng offwhite dendrobium and cymbidium
orchids, roses, freesia and bridal
ivy.
Deborah Baucom, Wanaw, Va.,
served as her sisrer's honor atteq·
dant. Bridesmaids were Jennifer
Barker, Roanoke, cousin of the
\)

Pickens-Marriner

,, .

bndc. AliCia Carey, Charlottesville.
Kim Filer. The Woodland. Texas,
sostcr of the groom. Robin Thomes,
Nap les . Fla .. T1sh Thompson.
Memphis. Tc nn , Kristen Tubbs,
Gray. Tenn, Mary Beth Waters,
Roanoke. and Chnsta William s,
Martinsville.
The groom's father served as
best man . Groomsmen were Aaron
Emery, Newark. Larry Fizer, The
Woodlands. Texas, brother-in-law
of the groom, Tim Hoffman. Hickory. N.C., Marc Lewis, High
Bndgc, NJ ., Mark Ludvigsen, Pottersville, N.J .. Brct Perkins, Plain
C ity , Jeff Springer, Hou sto n.
Texas. cousin of the groom, and
John Springer, The Woodlands,
Texas. brother of the groom.
A reception was held follow1ng
the ceremony at the Patrock Henry
Hotel.
The bride i.s a graduate of Cave
Spring High School and the University of R1chmond. She IS a
teacher at Western Branch Primary
School in Chesapeake, Va.
The groom is a graduate of
Voorhees High School in Glen
Gardner, NJ .. and auended Marietta College. He tS currently
employed by Allstate Insurance
Company in Virginia Beach.
Following a wedding uip to
Kiawah Island, S.C., the couple
will reside in Chesapeake, Va

GALLIPOLIS - Joyce Ela1nc
P1dcns and James S. Marrmcr Jr ..
were united in marriage March 28
at 1hc Lighthouse Assembly of
God. w1th the Rev. Wilham Adams
performing the double ring ceremony .

The bride is the dau ght er of
Ruby Yarrington of Altamont, Ill..
ami Shelby Pickens of Racine. She
IS a graduate of Southern H1gh
School and attends the University
of R1o Grande.
The groom " the son of J1m and
Charloue Marriner of Crown Cuy .
He IS a graduate of Hannan Trace
Elementary and attends the Univer Sity of Rio Grande.
The brid e wore a long wh1t C
satin gow n that featured a ma.n dann collar. The bodi ce and
sleeves were accented with lace ,
seed pearls. and sequins. The skin
flowed 1n 10 a cathedral tra in,
tnmmcd with lace and accented
with cu t-out motifs. Her veil was
allached to a wide brim, satin hat
decorated with silk nowers and
seed pearls.
She carried a cascade bouquet of
silk gardenias, white miniature carnations. Mauve sweetheart roses
and ivy. ·
Maid of honor was Va!erie Patterson of Racine. She wore a tealength gown of mauve satin and
carried a Colonial bouquet of
mauve roses accented with blue
forget·me-nots.
Best man was James S. Marriner
Sr., father of the groom. Ushers
were Jay Pickens of Racine, broth-

GALLIPOLIS

236 E. Main Stv 2nd Floor
992·5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday·Friday
Closed Thursday

414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
446·0166
8:30 to 5:00 Mo.day·Friday
8:30 to 12 Sat1rday
Closed Thursday

ALSO: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, &lt;hdlkolhe, logan &amp; llcArlftur

CLEMATIS VINES • CREEPING PHlOX
ANICE VARIETY OF

cr of the bride: Robcn Rou sh Sr.
of Alexandria, Va., and William
Westen of Woodbridge, Va .. both
uncles of the groom.
Registering guests was Katrina
Anderson, niece of th e bride
P1anist was Ruth Williams.
A rccepuon followed at the Elks
Lodge. The four-tiered wedding
ca ke was baked and served by
Augusta Welch of Lewisburg, aunt
of the groom. Serving the buffet
were Cathy Bostic, Nancy Hoke,
Glenna Snyder. and StephaniC
Stover.
Both arc employed at Little
Caescrs and they reside in Rio
Grande.

I
!
I

•AZALEAS
•RHODODENDRONS
•DWARF LILACS
•NEW HOLLIES
•A NEW LOAD OF
EVERGREENS

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 ~il 8 p.m.
Tuao.·Wed.·Thuro.· 9:30 'til&amp; p.m.
Sat 9:30 111 5 p.m.-Sun. 1 ~il 5 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS

.M

t'orthup.
They will be ce lebrating the
occasion by spendmg a weekend in
Columbus and visiting Ameriflora
'92.

POMEROY

PERENNIALS

MR. and MRS. JOHN (SHEILA) MCKINNEY
MR. and MRS. JOHN (ROBIN) SAYRE JR.

~~~~

Family Planning
It Makes Sense...

. "What can.'. say?" E~ans asked
w1th a laugh, I want hom lD play
me one day as chai~ma~.of th e
Appropnauons Comm:uee. .
The lawmaker won t stand tn for
theactor, bur he will try hts hand at
actmg as one of 40 Pennsylvanta
lawmakers chosen as extras .~or a
conwcsslonal party scene. !n The
D1sUngmshedGenlleman.
The f1lm ts about a con man
played by Murphy who gets elected
to Congress, then gets rehg10n.

By ANNE McGRAW
Associated Press Writer
HARRISBURG, Pa . _ Rep.
Dwight EvartS just wants to get a
new state budge! passed before the
June 30 deadline. The questions he
gets these days have nothing to do
with spending or taAes.
Evans, a Philadelphia Democrat,
says reponers keep aslang if he'll
stand in for Eddie Murphy in a
movie the actor is filming in Harrisburg.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel---Pag&amp;--87

Bring in your hearing test and price. We
will help you compare!
Just like any medical decision you make,
you should have the most information
available to you.
We are offering a second opinion.
Call for an appointment.
AUniversity Trained Audiologist will
discuss your Hearing Aid options.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs .
William Henry Linscott Sr., Mont·
gomery, Ala., were honored on
their 50th wedding anniversary
w1th a reception given Marth 28 in
St. Bede Catholic Church Parish
HaH by their children and grandchildren. He is originally from
Racme.
Children in attendance were
Juanita Gran! and her husband.
Charles E., of Montgomery;
Wtlharn H. Linscon Jr., Ctncinnati;
and Lynda L. Kimble. Denham

435 SECOND AVL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446-7619
TOLL FREE: 1--80G-967·EARS

VEnRANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
MULBERRY HGTS.
POMEROY, OH.
(614) 992·2104

•Flowers (Silk &amp; Dried Only)
•Wedding Invitations •Napkins
•Reception Items •"Unity Candles
•Cake Tops
•Bridal Books, •Feather Pins
•Toasting Glasses, Servers
•Ring Bearer Pillows
•Large Selection of Garters
(NEW: Music Garters)
•Bridal Hose •Lace Gloves

Come Ill Alfd See My Latest 111
Weddi"l Acceuori11

infonnauon call 441- I 516 or 446Sunday, May 17
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County 4889.
Historical Society board meeting, I
Monday, May 18
p.m.. at St. Peter's Episcopal
THURMAN - Thurman Grange
church; presentation of History
Day winners by John Lester, 2:30 meeting, 7:30p.m., at Grange Hall.
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Regular month·
ly
meeting of the Gallia-JacksonCENTENARY - Songfcst at
Meigs
Board of Al cohol, Drug
Centenary United Christian
Addiction
and Mcnutl Health SerChurch, 7 p.m.; singing by Clark,
vices will be held at 6 p.m. at
Green and Shorts Families.
Woodland CenterS.
BIDWELL - A songfest will be
Tuesday, May 19
held at Prospect Baptist Church,
VINTON· Ladies Auxiliary
l :30 p.m., featuring Lhe Short FamUnil 27, American Legion monthly
ily. Everyone welcome.
meeting and election of officers.
GALLIPOLIS - Mission family 7:30p.m.
Steve and Debbie Wolford and
GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio Valso ns. who serve through the
"Wings of the Morning ProJect" ley Amateur Radio Club meeting at
from Zaiu, Africa, will be the guest Mound Hill, 7 p.m . Repealer fre speakers at Groce United MethodiSt quency: 147.06.
Church at 8:30 and !0:45 a.m. and
IRONTON - Lower Ohio R1vcr
at 6 p.m.
Valley Basin Chapter No. 8 mcctGALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Val- mg at Lhe Briggs-Lawrence County
ley Lodge 536 at Crown City will Library, Ironton, from 6:30-8:30
hold their family reunion picnic at p.m.
0.0. Mcintyre Park, sheltcrhousc
GALLIPOLIS- Lafayette White
2. Masons and families welcome .
Shrine meeting, 7:30p.m.
Bring covered dish.
GALLIPOLIS - Exodus Quartet
will perform at 7 p.m. at Elizabeth
Chapel Church, SR 218. Dan
Reaves will deliver the message.
GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Support Group meeting, 7:30 p.m . at
New Life Lutheran Church . For

On Wedding Invitations

P.9l'I'S POSIT- P.9l.TCJ-{
1462 Sailor Rd • (614) 388-9311

449 JACKSON PIKE • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
On U.S. Route 35 just West of Junction 160

MR. and MRS. BILL (JULIA) WISEMANDLE

Couple to celebrate 51 years
BIDWELL - Bill and Julia
w,scmandle will celebrate their
51st anniversary on May 31.

They have two daughters. Jean
Wray and Jo McGraw. both of Bidwell.

White·Westinghouse
Air Conditioner On Sale
Three Days Only! !

GALLIPOLIS - OperatiOn
Lifloff meeting, 7:30 p.m . at
Columbus Southern Power office

ONLY

RIO GRANDE - The Bob
Evans Farm will swing into summer with two days of outdoor
music June 20-21, during the 14th
annual Country Music Convention
at the farm in Rio Grande.
Visitors to this lively event will
sec some of the region's fine st
over $1,500 in prize money. Pre Iimmary contests begin at 12:30
p.m. Saturday; the stage is open
beforehand for any compeutor or
visitor wishing to play.
The farm opens at8:30 a.m. and
admission to both the farm and Lhe
Country Music Convention is free.
Registration for the weekend
competition is 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Saturday; competitors' entry fees
are $2 per event and $5 per band.
Categories include flattop gwtars,
banjos, fiddles, and mandolins .
Competing bands will present both

NEW YORK (AP) - Mikhail
Baryshnikov is returning to the
New York City Ballet as a guest
dancer.
Bljryshnikov, 44, was a member
of the company in 1979.
In June, he will dance in three
performances of George Balanchine's "Duo Concertant" and
three performances of Mark Morris' new solo work, "Three Preludes," ballet officials said Thursday.

vocai and instrument.a.l selections
for judging. Competition is open to
all ages.
An informal Jllm session will be
held at Lhe farm's shelterhousc fol lowing the competition; a square
dance will be held from 8-10 p.m.
Sunday the stage will aga1n
open al 9 a.m. for playing. and
cloggers are welcome to JOin the
musicians on stage at t2:30 p.m.
For more information on th e
Country Music Convention or the
farm, write: The Bob Evans Farm ;
P 0. Bo&lt; 330; Rio Grande. 45674,
or call 245-5305.

5

188

25-Pint Dehumidifier

GALLIPOLIS · Lions. Rotary.
Kiwanis meeting at Grace Un lled
Methodist Church.

00

Whno-Westtnghouse
Energy Savtng

Convention set at BEF

Baryshnikov
returns to NYC
20% OFF With This Ad

Smeltzer's Nursery

Gallia County calendar

amateur musicians compete for

IN HEARING

Springs, La.
The couple's grandchildren and
great-grandchildren are Greg Grant
and his wife. Tammy. Debbte Co&lt;
and her husband, Craig, Ang1c
Reed and her husband, M1kcl. Lacy
Linscoll, Jeff Kimble and his wife,
Sonya, Susan Kimble, Ashley Kimble, Cory Linscott, Rachel Grant
and Allyson Co&lt;.
The celebration was auended by
125 relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Lin sco tt also
renewed the marriage vows.

BOB and ALICE TIIOMPSON

Anniversary to be observed
Texas; Mary (Thompson) Mitchell ,
POMEROY - Bob and Alice
Glen
Falls, N.Y.; George C.
Thompson, Pomeroy, will celebrate
Thompson,
p, 11eroy; and Fredertheir 50th wedding anniversary
ick
R.
Thompson.
Racine. The couw1th an open house reception May
_
ple
has
five
grandchildren
.
24 from 2-4 p.m . at the Rock
Those
attending
arc
requested
to
Springs Grange Hall on the Meigs
bring stories and memorabilia from
County Fair Growlds.
the couple's life and times. It IS
They are the parenLs of Louella
(Thompson) Roush, Houston. requested that gifts be omitted.

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If you are planning a wedding, then you should
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You will have over 190 styles of luxedos Jo choose
Irom. We ha~e a large selection of !he latest styles
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106 Mort~ St&lt;olld Ave., Mlcldleport, 0Wo 45160
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17 1992

HUNT'S
CATSUP
24 oz.

STORE HOURS

MoPiday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

(

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. O'H.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., MAY 17, THRU SAT., MAY 23, 1992

FRANCO AMERICAN

Spaghetti·O's
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MACARONI

Sau

s1

Section C
May 17, 1992

Pine Bluff comes from middle to win Preakness
By ED SCHUYLER JR.
BALTIMORE (AP) - Pine
Bluff, whose tr:tiner, Tom Bohannon, thought he deserved a second
chance afler his failure in !he Kentucky Derby, made the most of it
Saturday , ovenalcing Alydeed in
the deep stretch and winning the
Preakness.
Pine Bluff. sent off as !he lukewarm favorite at 7-2, made sure
there would be no Triple Crown
winner !his year, shooting down the
middle of the stretch under Chris
McCarron for !he victory.
Kentucky Derby winner Lit E.
Tee was never in serious contention.
McCarron got the mount on
P1ne Bluff because Craig Perret,
who rode the coil to a fifth-place
finish in !he Derby, opted to ride
the lightly raced Alydeed.
Casual Lies, second in the
Derby, fmc&lt;hed third in the field of
14 lhree -year-olds while Derby
third -place finisher Dance Floor
came in founh.
Alydeed never was worse !han
second after passing the finish line
the first lime and took the lead with
a half mile remaining.
Midway through the stretch, it
looked like he was going to win,
but then Pine Bluff, who had
moved into third with a quarter
mile tn go, would not be denied .

Pine Bluff, who races in !he colors of John Ed Anthony's Loblolly
Stables, carried 126 powlds aves I
3/16 miles on a track labeled fast in
I :55 3-5.
In beating Alydeed by three quarters of a length, Pine Bluff
returned $9, $5.80 and $4.40.
Alydeed, who finished I 1/2
lengths ahead of Casual Lies, paid
$7.60 and $3.80.
Casual Lies, lhree-quane" of a
length ahead of Dance Aoor, was
$4.20 for show.
Lil E. Tee, ridden by Pat Day,
finished fifth.
"A !01 of people are giving !heir
horses the benefit of the doubt."
Bohannon said of the fact !hat six
horses !hal finished behind Lil E.
Tee in the Derby came back to
challenge him in the Preakness.
·'They like their horse s and
want to gi vc lhem a second
chance .''

Pine Bluff obviously deserved
!he opponunity.
It was !he first Prcakness victory
for Anthony, a 53-year-old
Arkansas lumberman . It was the
second Prealcness victory for the
37-year-old McCarron , who won
with Alysheba in 1987.
The Canadian-bred Alydecd was
making his debut in Tnple Crown
competition. in only !he fifth slart
of his career. He had won the one-

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s

"I don't know what happened
but he was coming on at !he end, "
said Shelly Riley, the owner-tr:tiner
of Casual L~es . "The Belmont
should be good for us.' '
The I 1/2-mile Belmont Stakes,
the fmal ra:e of !he Triple Crown
scric..~ . wiU be run 1unc 6.

the Prc.akncss winner's career cam·

In the majors,

FORCED OUT- Oakland 's Harold Baines (3) is rorcfd out at
second base by New York shortstop Randy Velarde in the rourth
inning or Salurday's American League game in New York, which
the Athletics won 6-3. Velarde's relay throw to first base was nol in
lime. (AP)

ings to$ I, I74,108.
" I had JUSt as much confidence
going into !he race as I d1d gomg
into !he Kentucky Derby," Bohannon had srud a couple days before

!he Derby. "I only hope everything
goes all right."
It went well enough so that
Rohannon could call this hazy cool
Saturda y " JuSt a great day."

HEADED FOR FINISH - Pine Bturr (lefl), wilh Chris McCarron aboard, heads down the home stretch wilh Alydeed (cenler) and
Casual Lies in contention during Saturday's Preakness, which Pine
Blurr won in I :55.6. (AP)

Minnesota, Oakland notch victories
CLEVELAND (AP) - John Smiley struggled to his third straight VICtory and Kirby
Puckeu homered as !he Minnesota Twins beat
!he Cleveland Indians R-6 Saturday.
Minnesota won for the six th time in seven
games. Cleveland has lost six of seven.
Smiley (3-2) benefiled from eight early run s
and lasted seve n-plus inmngs, allowmg fiv e
runs and I I hits, walk:ing none and sinking out
three. He is 3-Q with a 3.32 ERA in May . after
going 0-2 with a 6.84 ERA in five April starts.
The Twins. shut out !he night before, supplied him with eight run s m the flf Sl four
innings, but he needed help from three relievers when Cleveland scored three runs in the
eighth. Rick Aguilera got five outs for hiS lllh

Minnesota scored four in the first. all
unearned because !hey came after Annstrong
threw wildly to first on Puckell's sacrifice
bunt Kent Hlbek had an RBI groundou~ Brian
Harper doobled home a run, and Randy Bush
and Pedro Munoz hit RBI singles.
The Indians committed two errors on one
play to give !he Twins two more runs in the
second . Wnh runners at second and third ,
Puckeu h1t a grounder thai ricocheled off shonstop Mark Lewis, and 1hird baseman Craig
Worthington retrieved !he ball but bounced !he
throw past the catcher. Lewis has made 15
errors in 34 games.
Jeff Reboulet drove in a run w1lh a double
in the third, h1 s first major-league hit, and
Puckett hit his sixth home run leading off the
fourth.
The Indians scored sin gle runs oo Paul Sorrento's groundout in the second. Lewis' sacnfice fly in lhe founh and Thomas Howard 's
double in !he fifth . They added three in the
e1ghth on Tom Edens · wild pitch, Tony

Pcrczchica's RBI doubl e and Ale. Cole 's RBI
groundout
Athletics 6, Yankees 3 - At New York,
Mark McGw1re hu a two-run double and Jose
Canseco followed with a two-run single as the
Oakland Athletics rallied for five run s in the
fifth inning and beallhe New York Yankees 6~
3 Saturday.
Ron Darling (3 -2) pitched in New York for
the first time since the Mcts lradcd him 10
Montreal laS! Jul y 31 and got th e victory
despite allowing three run s and five hits in 5
2/3 innings. Denn1s Ec kers ley p1tc hed !he nmth
lor h1s 14th save in 14 chances.
Tim Leary (3-3) dropped to 3- 161ifetime in
Yankee Stadium and 0-9 in 10 career starts
against Oakland. Leary walked six in 4 2/3
innings and threw stnkes on JUSt 43 of 88
pitches. He gave up six runs and three hits in 4
2/3 innings.
Mariners 7, Blue Jay s 6 - At Toronto,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a three- run homer in the
seventh inning, rallying the Scaltle Marmcrs
past !he Toronto Blue Jays 7-6 Saturday .
Griffey's sixth home run of !he season came
against Dav1d Wells (1 -2) and landed in the
second deck in nght field. The drive gave the
Mariners their frrsl lead of the game at 7~ 5.
Dennis Powell ( 1-0) pnched I 1/3 mnings
for Lhc win. He gave up a run in th e scvcnlll
when Pal Borders hit a pinch -double and
scored on Roberto Alomar's singl e.
Mike Schooler got the lasl three outs for h1 s
seventh save of the season
Wells relieved with one out in the seventh
and a runner on ftrsL He gav e up an infield sin gle. Hamid Reynolds' sacnficc fly and a single
by Edgar Martinez before GniTcy connccttd.
Red Sox 3, Angels 0 - At Boston, Frank
Viola worked out of two hasc s-loadcd Jam S m
seven scoreless innin gs and earned h1 s fi fth

consccuuvc vi ctory Salurda y as the lloslUn
Red Sox shut out the Cahfom1a An gels 3-0 for

the second game in a row.

Viola (5 -2 ) allowed only four hit s, but
walked five while slrikmg out three. It marked
!he first time V1ola has walked five since Sept
5. 1990. when he was with a1c New York Mcts
and pitching in Pittsbugh.
Greg Harris retired !he Angels in order in
!he eighth and Jeff Reardon took over m !he
ninth for h1s seventh save of the season and
334th of h1s career.
Julio Vater. (2-2), acqulfed from !he MeLs
on April 12, had his streak of 13 scoreless
innings snapped . Val era allow ed SIX hit s,
struc k out seve n and walked five, two intentionally, in seven innings.
Following Roger Clemens' 3~0 v1ctory on
Friday night , Viola strugg led, retiring the
Angels in order m only the f1rst and third
mnmgs
California loaded the bases in !he second on
Rene Gonzales' two -out smglc and a pair of
walks, but Viola ended the threat by gCLL mg
Gary D1Sarcina to ground into a force play .
W1th one out in the fifth , DiSarcina and
Luis Polonia singled. They advanced on Chad
Cums' grounder to short , but were stranded as
third baseman Wade Boggs made a divmg stop
to h~ left and threw out Junior Fcli&gt;.
The Angels loaded the bases again in the
sixth on an error by first baseman Scan Cooper
and two walks. Viola preserved !he shutout by
retiring DiSarnna on any to shallow left.
The Red So&lt; broke a scoreless duel in the
f1fth on a two -out single by Herm Winning ham, a stolen base and Jody Reed's line single
to left
In the sixth, Phil Planucr w;~ked, look second on an infield out and scored as Cooper beat
oul a hit to short and DiSarc1na threw wildly to
first for an error.
Winmngham led off the seve nth wJth a d o u ~
ble. took lhrrd on Reed 's ny to ngh t and scored
on Jack Clark 's sacrifi ce ny

Indy 500 test of mettle for veterans, much tougher on fledgling drivers

u.s.

Amer. Cheese. . 12 oz.

race.''

Jack Annstrong (1 -5) lasted I 1/3 innings

32 oz.

COUNTRY LEGEND IND. WRAP

Bohannon's immediate reaction
to Pine Blutrs VICtory was simply.
"He's a good horse. He ran a good

and yielded six runs. only one of them earned.

HEINZ
KETCHUP

99
$ 79
2°/o Milk. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
89(

!here."

Speakerphone, ridden by Jo Jo
Ladner, who had won stakes at
Pimlico in his two previous starts,
took !he lead shortly after !he break
and held it until Alydeed look it
away at !he half-mile pole.
Dance Floor. who had drawn the
disadvantageous No. 14 post. much
to !he chagrin of trainer D. Wayne
Lukas and co-owner Hammer. the
rap star, was founh for much of !he
trip before mov1ng into second
under Chris Antley approaching the
quarter pole.
He could gel no closer and surrendered third to Casual Lies, ridden by Gary Stevens.
Lil E. Tee was sent off as the 41 second belling choice. He was
the first Derby winner nO! to be !he
Preakness favorite since Sunday
Silence, who won both the Derby
and Prealcness in 1989.
Completing th e order fini sh
after Lil E. Tee were Technology,
Agincoun. Dash for Dolly, Careful
Gesture, Fortune's Gone, Big Sur.
My Luck Runs North, Conte di
Savoya and Speakerphone.
It was th e third victory in five
starts this year and SJX!h win m 12
career ouungs for Pine Bluff. The
first money of $484 ,120 boosted

save.

l4J5 OL

Strawberries.........La.

mile Derby Trial Stakes al
Churchill Downs !he week before
the Derby.
Roger Attfield, Alydeed's train er. said he felt that the horse could
carry his speed fanller !han a mile
and Alydeed did just that in an
admirable performance.
Lynn Whiting, !he trainer of Lil
E. Tee, said before the race he
thought Alydeed didn 't have the
seasoning to win !he Preakness. It
turned out !hal perhaps !he Derby
had taken too much out of Whiting'scolt
"He was fighting the track,"
Day said of Lil E. Tee. "He was
back a good ways farther !han we
wanled to be. He ran up into conienlion on !he backstretch but probably used some of his firing power

90

By GEORGE ROBINSON
NE W YORK (NEA) - The
lndmnapo lls Motor Speedway is a
track that eats nedglings for lunch.
The 500 Mil e Race is an event !hat
tes ts e ven ils mo st sea soned
drivers. Do the new guys know
what they're getting into'
" I had never seen a racetrack
thi s fast anywhere before ," say s
Eddie Cheever , 1hc 1990 Indi anapolis 500 Rookie of !he Year,
who had driven Formula I cars for
a decade. Indy's rook.ie award goes
to the top newcomer to the race.
Speed s of 200-plus mph arc
generated on !he Brickyard' s 2.5mtlc oval, which is always an eye·
opener. espec iall y for drivers new
to the race .
Th en there's !h e drama of the
premier Indy car event.
" It 's a bil ovcrwhelmm g,"
offers Scoll Pruell. who shared
1989 Rook1c of !he Ycar honors at
the lndJanapolls 500 with Bernard
JourdaJn . "There's so moch excitement in the air. So much energy.
So much happening."
This year's C.1.Citcmcnt takes
place on Sunday, May 24. ABC TV will show !he three-hour race
live. The front-row starters: Roberto Guerrero, Cheever and Mario
Andreui. Defending champ Rick
Mears qualified for !he ninth spol.
Guerrero (m 1984), Andrcui (in
1965) and Mears (in 1978) were
also RooKies of the Year at Indy
when !hey made their debuts in !he
race.
Four newcomers to the race
qualified for !he ftrsl eight rows in
1992.
Since !he award began in I 952,
only one newcomer to Indy has
ever won the 500 !he first lime out:
Graham Hill in 1966.
Ironically, Hill wasn't chosen as
Indy' s Rookie of the Year by the
panel of Speedway officials. U.S.
Auto Club honchos and media people who make the award . Jackie
Stewan was.
" Hill never passed a car all
day," IT3Ck historian Bob Laycock

recalls. ' 'Stewan led !he race for Indy 500 is a daunting experience.
When Pruell first heard the
40 or 50 (of !he 200) laps. had the
race in the bag, !hen with 10 laps to announcer's traditional command
" Gentlemen. stan your
go h1s engine died on him."
engines"
- he fell a burst of
The Indianapolis 500 JUSL!Sil 't a
adrenaline. "I swear my hcanbeat
race geared to first -umers.
"There really isn't anything tn was 190, 200 beaLs per minute." he
prepare you for coming into thi s recall s. " Ju st lh1 s overwhelming
place unl ess yo u have had other rush."
Cheever goes 1nto every aut o
races on ovals,'' says Cheever.
Even that doe sn ' t help much. race wil.h a personal cou ntdown . a
Pruen claims: "Indy is a lot differ- set of self-imposed guidelines w1th
ent than Michi¥an or the other which he gradually closes h1s mind
ovals we run on.·
to everything but the car and the
track. At his first Indy 500. hi s
Qu1tt simply, it's fasler.
That's why USAC offers an on- countdown " went ha)WifC. ..
He adm1ts, "I was completely
cntauon program for Indy 500
agog
with all the things that were
newco mers . Pruclt says, "They
on. I had a haid lime just getgomg
~1ke all !he rookies, give !hem four
ting
into
the car."
or five days by themselves and let
Fonunatcly
for both Prucu and
them work themselves uo to (the
speed of th e tra ck ) in a more Cheeves. by the ume !he four legs
re laxed environment. There's peo- that precede the start of the 500 had
ple there to ask questi ons. who can gone by, !hey had settled down a
biL
give you pomtc,.."
Their first Indy race turned into
On the other hand. Pruett VIVid ly remembers a momcnl in orienta · a learn ing cxpcncncc for b01h of
tion when he was going aroond the them .
" Never try to mak e the car do
track at 185 miles per hour. ' 'I'm
something
that it's n01 capable of
thinking, 'Man, I have to go anolh ~
doing."'
caurions
Cheever, who
cr 40 miles an hour faster' There 's
started !he 1990 ra:e 14th and fin just no wayt"
Even rook..ic orientation docsn ' 1 ished eighth. "You don 't take big
prepare you for the Roman clrcus steps; you have to gel the car to
atmosphere of the Indianapolis work ."
Pruett, who began !he 1989 race
500 . That starts with qualifying
17th
and finished lOth. says: " I
runs.
learned
a I&lt;X about making the best
Cheever was nabber gastcd by
his first experience qualifying for of your car, whatever the condi!he 500. " I have never seen anoth- tions may be. Through !he course
er tr:tck put so much emphasis on of 500 miles, !he tr:tck changes a
qualifying," he says. "There were loL you're trying to keep up wi lh
200,000 people there, and every !he changes in your car.
time someone went out there. it
" Well, there' s a lot more to the
was a big show."
race !han people see.'·
Prucn says !hat his rookie quali Most of all. Pru ett lea rned
fying experience was even harder patience.
!han the race itself. "You have to
After all, he says . " It' s 500
go out these and run hard for four miles."
laps and put !hem all IDgether and
Preparation impossible
make !he field," he explains.
'There really isn't anything to
This year, Guerrcro took advan - prepare you for coming into thi s
tage of his experience to win the place.'
Defending champion Ri ck
pole position with a record average
Mears is a four-lime winner of the
speed of 232.482 mph.
For a rookie on race day. !he IndianaiJ(llis 500. He won in 1980,

l984. 1988 and 1991. Mears was
nam ed Indy' s co- Rook1 e of th e
Year 1n 1978 when he made hi s
dcbul in the race.
RJCk Mears
Debut jinx'
For a long umc , says Liad: his·
tonan Bob Laycock. the lndi,1nopoIJS 500 Rook1e of the Yc:rr aw:ud
was thought lO carry &lt;J j mx .
In fa ct , only f i vc winn ers of
Indy's award to tts top newcomer
have gone on to win the race later
in their careers: Pamellt Jones. Jtrn
Clark. Mario Andrctll. Mark Donohue and four -tim e c hamp Rick
Mcar'i

J tmmy Daywalt. th e seco nd
Indy Rookie of the Year, 10 1951.
retired from racing prematurely and
died of cancer. Larry Crockett, the
1954 rook1e honoree, was killed the
follow ing spring at Daytona lh s
Ind y successor, AI Her man , wa'i

never ran another r&lt;X:c, and McRae
never returned to the lndianapolts

Motor Speedway.
More rccc n!l y, Jim Ht c krnan
( 1982) and Bil ly Vuk ov 1ch Ill
(1988) were killed al other ra cetrack s. and 1980 Rooki e of th e
Year T1m Rochm ond d1 ed of AIDS
later killed in an acc ident, as was
Roberto Guerrero ( l n4) was
1958 rookie George AmiCk .
Other Indy 500 Rook 1es of the nc:uly killed in a racmg acCJdcnt a
Year had liulc succes s after thc1r few years aflcr hi s Indy debut
Sco tt Pruett , who won the award
brief moment of glory.
m
19H9,
was surprised to learn that
" Denny Z1mmcrman (1 97 1),
so
few
Rooki
es of the Yea r have
Donny Edmunds (1957), Graham
McRae ( 1973), Bill Puterbau~h suhscquently gone LO win the Indy
(1975). Jerry Sneva (1977) - noo c 500.
" I hope I'll be numhcr six, " he
of th em enjoyed much suc cess ,··
says Lay cock . In fac t. Edmund s s.&lt;Hd .

f:ASTERN WINS SECTIONAL - Eastern's
softball team, led by Pam Doulhill, boosted ils
overall record to 11-2 overall by claiming a 10-4
sectional championship victory over Southern.
Eastern wiU play Monday in tbe dislri&lt;t at Wavery High School at 5:30 p.m . against the winner
of the Peebles-Manchester game. Pictured are
(front row, L-R) manager Brandi Reeves, Heidi
Nelson, Jessica Radrord, Andrea Dillard, Shelly
Hendri&lt;ks, Rachel Hawley, and manager Jessica

Karr. In the middle row are Jaime Wilson,
Kathy Bernard, Penny Aeiker, Amy Redovian,
Aime Friend, Jessica Chevalier, Missy Harris,
and Marilyn Kibble. In the back row are Carrie
Morrissey, Tabitha Phillips, Amy Well, Lisa
Colden, Lee Gillilan, Michelle Donovan, Becky
Driggs, and Sharon Baker. Absent were Julie
Rime, Doulhill and assistant coach Don Jackson.

�: Page-C2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

May 17, 1992

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

aucuon held pnor to the contest
will go to benefit the Gallia County's youth baseball program a
.
summertime activity involving
approximately 1 400 children
·
.
Helm s, who began hi s caree r
·th Ill Reds · !966 11 peak
wt
e
m
'WI s
,at
ah luncheonthto beB hbciEd '"theF~heltcr -t
ouse on e 0
van s .trm a

R1o Grande. The luncheon begins
at 11 ·30 am
d H 1m ·
~ d t~ s pc~k· anb 1 c 51215 3e0xpecld. an
.
e ween
12: 45 p.m. Following his 5
h
the auction will be c nd .. ~ .1•
o ucucu unu
1 p.m., and the arne to be 1 ed
g '
Pay
on Stanl ey L. Evans _Memorial
GFic ld at th e_ U ni vers Ity of RIO
rande , bcgms at 2 p.m . Youth

ga mes will be played start"111
g at
nooHn. l .
.
f
.
e ms ts a nativ e o Evansville
lnd and came to the Reds or Wli '
. 1:· f 11
g .·
za 10n o owmg se vera 1 years m
the farm
· .
.
system. The Infielder s
first full season with lhe club saw
him nam ed the National League
Rook.ic of the Year. He played for

·

Ho uston from 1972 unul 19 75,
Pittsburgh in 1976-77, and spent a
single season ·Ill Boston in 1977
WI
. .
.
before coachtng With f exas In
1981 82
· ·.
.
The fust player to hn a home
run out of the then -new Riverfront
Stadium, Helms was elected to lhe
team' s Hall of Fame in 1979 and

By JOE KAY
C INCINNATI (AP) - Terry
Mulholland has changed with lhe
cal en dar .
Th e Ph iladelnhia Phillies left &lt;
han_erwem0-3mfiveAprilstarts.
d
en d mg the month with a 7.2 8
earned run average. He didn"t last
longer than seven innings or give
:· up fewer than four runs in any of
his starts.
It' s a new month and a new
Terry Mulholland.

He allowed JUSt f1ve smglcs Fri ·
day night to beat the Cincinnati
Reds 8-0. It was his third conscculive complete- game win and the
first Phillics' shutout.
TheERAhasdroppedto4 .61
and the confidence has soared.
" The way April went , I was
looking for anything to tum lhings
around. What I'd been doing really
affected me mentally," said Mulholland (3-3) . "I'd make a little
mistake and it would get to me and

Gallia Academy tennis squad
places two in district netfest
PORTSMOUTH - Eric Hoffman, Gallia Academy's top singles
player, fimshcd lhird in lhe sectional tournament at Portsmouth last
Friday, and doubles partners
Nathan Miller and Mark Notter
: Ji{th to advance 10 !his week's dis. lrtct-regionals, to be held at Gahanna Friday, May 22 at 10 a.m.
Hoffman was number three out
of 48 sectional players in soulhern
Ohio in singles competition while
Gallia's doubles squads tied for
fifth out of 32 squads. The MillerNotter tandem defeated teammates
Adam Betz and Ryan Brenneman
to advance m !he tournament.
Only the top five finishers in

each event moved to the district·
regionals.
It is the first time since the late
1970s GAHS has sent as many as
three players 10 !he district-regionals.
Mike Eachus was eliminated in
!he sectional quarterfinals, finish ing sixlh toone of !he tournament's
top seeds. Chris Chestnut also
made it to the quarterfinals last
Thursday, but was elimmated Friday by one of the tournament's top
seeded players.
Minford advanced four players
to the district-regionals to lead all
sectional teams in that category.

Marcelo killed in Indy practice
By MIKE HARRfS
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Rookie Jovy Marcelo of the Philippmcs was killed in a crash during
practice Friday, the first driver tn
I0 years to die at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway.
Marcelo. one of more than a
· dozen drivers trying to find enough
: speed to qualify for !he lndianapo. lis 500, sustained head and chest
· '"Juries and was pronounced dead
at4:35 p.m. EST after being taken
by ambulance to Methodist Hospital .

The accident occurred as Marce-

lo was accelerating after a warmup
lap at I 72.328 mph. He spun driv·
in g into Tum I on the 2 In-mile
oval and smashed into lhc wall.
The 27 -ycar-old dnver didn't
regain consciousness.
He is the fust driver fatality at
Indy since Gordon Smiley was
killed instantly in a crash during
qualifying in 1982. A spectator was
killed by a Oyin g tire during the
1987 race.
Marcelo is the 40th driver and
65th person to die from injuries
sustained at the speedway smce it
opened in 1909.

Scoreboard
Tnu (Ryan 0- 1) 11

Baseball

(9~cs

1- 1), 2.35 p.m.
Cilifonua (V .Jen 1-1) at De. too (\'to·
Ia 4-2 ), 3.05 p.m.
BalLLmon: ( Md acln 2 -2) 11 fh 1r1 go
{Md lowcll UJ ), 7:05 p m
Detroit ( Ald red 0- ) ) at Ka nau \tty
(Go ~on 0--4), a 05 p m.

IntheNL...
E.uttrll Dh·illon
W L
Pet

Tum

..23 II
2!

15

.676
600
58 3

Mu nlfell

15
14

19
18

441
4:JM

l'tuhddphu

14 19

424

Puuburgh
S1. loulli
New York

2! 14

Ci'ucaso

GB
21

(Dopsm 0-0). 1·OS p.rn

''

Oa.i.Jand (S tewan 2-3) at _-.; ew fur l
(CadUCl 2-3), I JO p.m.
Setu.lc: (JohnJOO }.]) at Toronto (Kq

15
1

Atlanl.l .

17 20

459

35

How ton
Los An gde:a

15 20
II 20

429

45
65

35~

Today's games
Ctllfornll (Langs ton 3- 1) a t Boston

J

"

W rstrrn DlvUilon
S.on Fun ct8i:o
I'I 15
55 9
San[hego
18 17
514
ClnclnnatJ ___ HI 1 l7
.sot

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

Mlnn~l (f1p1nl 2-4 ) 11

l Wnt.and

(Anrutronal,...), l :J5p.m .
Baltimore (Mclhuld 5-0) at Ciu cago

That makes Mulholland their
acc and stopper. He prefers the for mer title.
" Generall y, you're a stopper
when !here's a losing streak going
on," he said. " I hope the other
four guys go out and do what I've
been doing . Then there's no need
for a stopper. Wed all have 20-win
seasons."
He stopped a three-game losing
streak Fnday at the expense of

OU Bobcats beat
Ball State 7-1
KENT. Ohio (AP ) - Andy
Mayrc scored a run in the second
mning and drove home two more in

the founh as Ohio University beat
Ball State 7-1 in lhc second round
of the Mid -American Conference
baseball tournament Fnday.
Mayrc, who had walked to open
the second , scored on a ground out
by Brandy Cowart. Mayre 's tworun doubl e in the founh capped the
scoring for Ohio U. (33-21).
Ball State (23-27), losing its
second game in the double -eliminati on tournament. scored its only run
on a sacrifice ny by Ken Reed.
Chad Young, who had singled
behind Mayre tn the second and
scored on a double by Scott Haber·
berger, had an RBI single in the
third , as did Greg Stover. Brian
Perry drove in a run in !he fourth.
Doug Mlick.i (7-3) went !he dis tanc e for th e win, while Ja son
Cosby (2·6) was handed the loss.

Tens (Wm )- ) ) at M.Uw wka:
ro 2 3). 8:05 p.m.

Monday's

Tom Browning (3 -3) couldn't
usc that as an excuse. He' s been
hca1thy, but JUSt
·
hasn ' l pnc
· hed
11
we ·
The left-handcr gave up six hiLl
· three ·pus
I mmngs
. .
an d f.1ve run s m
F"·day . He ' s fa1·1c d to r.•ach the
seventh inning in five of h1s last
•·rt s. an d has wac
t hed h.IS
seven s~
ERA
to 6 03
soar 1 h · bee
· th
contro
·
b
as
n c mam pro ·
Iem. Browning usually gets ahead
In I he coun t • th en t eases ba tters
· 1 bard er rme p11c
· hes . Hc·s bee n
will
fallin g behind too much, forcing
him 10 put the bail over the plate.
" I went too deep in !he count to
too many guy s," he said.
Former Red Mariano Duncan
had one of !he hits off Browning.
"I JUSt saw something that I
don't see too often - Browning
getting behmd," Duncan said. "As
a hitter, there's nothing hcncr than
being at 2-0 because then you're
going to get your pitch to hit.
That's what happened tonight."

"New
Officesamegood
neighbor."
"My new olftce
means I can befler
serve your ta m rly
1nsurance needs
Call or drop tn
any urne ·

p

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Gollipol1, Olo.
_
Phone 44!&gt;-4190 .....
Home 446-4518 Ill ·: .
l •ke il gooa ne,ghbor.
S1a1e Farm

•S

•' •' •·' ,,~

... ,, ... , (} 1•

"' ·•·' , .,, •. cn ~[ld'1 , .. ,

r· •- [i 1n.;~ ·1q r ~n

, l·no•';

"'"'

fUll SIZE

VAN

,~,,.,

C.li!OOlUI 11 New Yott . 7 30 p m

4, Mmlrtll 2

Xtttk at BOilOO . 7 3~ p m
Oa.U&amp;nd at 81ltimore. 115 p m

St l_I'IU lJ 7. HooSI.Otl 5
Sew Ynrt: 4. lol An~ele:a I
fl. u:a go ~. S111 FranctKo 3

Tu:u at Otvtland, 7:.JS p.m.
Mi..l waukee at Detmt, 7 3S p m
K.anau C1ty •• Chicaan. 8 05 p.m

They played Saturday
Philad rl phla (Branllr y 1 1) at
Clnr1nnatl (llrkhrr l -4), 7 : ~ p.m.
San Otego (Ham t 1-J) 11 Pmshurgh
(Walk I 1). ?:05 p m.
Montr u l ( Mart1n e~: 2·4) at Atl an ta
(A~c:ry 1·3), 710pm
St Lou11 (Q] , ~Irts 1· 1) at ll ou~ton
(Pon ug a l ) .1), M05 p m
Ne w YeO (I;emandd. 2-3) at l.o! An ·
gdcs (CUJdJC.llh 3-2) . 10 ()5 p m

PHll!burgh

11

(TrrnJ,n 4-Z), 135pm
Montrca.l (} L.ll ) Zl 11 All1n1.1 (G iavUJe
f, . J).

2 lO p m.

Philadelphia (Brink 0-0) al C in cin nati (SwlndrU l ·l ), 2: 15p.m.
St Lo 11i1 (DeL eon 3· 2) at H ou~Lun

(J l.uniJch 2-4) , 2:35 p.m.
New 'r'oci (Youni 2· 2) 11 Loa Aro gclcs
(M.irt.inez 1- 1), 4.05 p.m .
Oticago (MOfgan 1-1) 11 San fnncu ·

Bolton Ill. Cle"t'land Ill, ... , ~ lkd

J.J
Confn~u·r

'

..... .23 ! I

676

Toronto .. .

~

... .. .. 23 12

.676

NewYarit ........... 18 16

.529

001\(lll __ .... ' ......... 15

16

.484

S.5
7

Milwaukee .... .... 0

17

469

7S

.441

U

....1'1

IU

WMtern [HvllkMt
Chicago.. .. ........... 19 13
Oai.land .............. 20 15

.594

Cllifomia ..... ..... II 16
~otl .. ......... 17 17

.529
.500

.57 1

5
2
)

I:~~~: . . . . . . :· ::::~ i~ :~f ~:~

• Kmaaa City ......... 10 23

.303

'

r .... ~,. - R~Wt.m" Piu..hwgh , 1 35
p m.
Wednesday - Oticaao 11 EdmMton.

9 Jl p.m.
Thunday 7 35 p.m

Frl4by - Oucaao 11 ErlmM ton. 9 35
pm
S aturday - Plnaburgh 11 8 o1to n.
7.35 p.m.

Transactions
Bosketball

LOS AN GELES U\.K.ERS -

h ~.tt~d ­

ed the ennlii Cl of Jerry Weat, geneul

Tbey played Saturclly

rn•n •F ·

Oakland (barling 2· 2) at New York

(Ouz__ ...

MlniW!IOU (SmlltJ l-1) at Cltnlanu
(Otto l.J), l:l~ p.ln·

Foot bull
National Footbaiii.Aaaut
GREEN BAY PA CKER S - W•ivod
AlJaJ Riu, rwvting bad .

/

.

A.l.'\.

'92 OLDSMOBilE
NINm
•.. ,. ' ,," ..EIGHT
,,.., ,,.

. ......

,_

flf' l lflt J l 'l! •At ,! ' .A~ '.0 ,
&lt;A{\I!H&gt;&lt;iiiMII
l oMA I 'lfl~l !lMI IHl'fH '

~

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AtlfiWAI-&lt;1 l Til
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YOUR CHOICE BRAND NEW '92
OLDSMOBILE CUTWS SUPREME
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BRAND NEW 1992
SILVERADO 4X4 PICKUP

, ,~,,~

$)'4'9'aa '-,._-,.,

4 W h!!el d"¥C S•lverildO
li M FM c .1 ~~
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fJ
51\; el m i i !O I ~

r .s

..-Area sports briefs
CMGA tournament today
GALLIPOLIS- The Cliffside Men's Golf Association will
sponsor !he Cliffhanger Cup today at 9 a.m. at Cliffside Golf
Course.
The tournament wd I consist of two-man teams, which may
choose players with handicaps of 15 or lower and 16 or above.
These teams will play mne holes each of best ball and altcmaung

~ entry fee for CMGA members is $5 and $20 for Cliffside

members not affiliated with CMGA . The fee covers carts, pnzcs
and the 8 a.m. breakfast.
Female members are also welcome to play in the tournament. but
!he ladies division will be separate from the men.
Rlr more information, call446-GOLF.

1 1\l

MUVIHI

rnw

1

·

I oi'I .. JNAI f'A

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~~

luuuny ,,...,1 llo!llf.od rlldoa l
'"P' l M f M ~au Delay,..,~ ,~
P r10nr Inc • • lMde&lt;l'

sn,988

- ---

TO,. PEDEN OISCOUNT.....-tlt'.l6-'

SAVE
1

2204

~~~( 6988
5

10 IOCNS

lllM8'

advanced !he runners to second and
third before Carlos Baerga hit a
two-run single.
Cleveland added three in the
seventh . Pinch-hitter Felix Fermin' s bases-loaded squeeze bunt
against Mark Guthrie made it 3-0.
and Mark Lewis greeted Carl
WilliS with a two-run single.
Fermin, an excellent bunter. was
able to surprise the Twins with his
squeeze bunt in the sevenlh inning
because he has 10 hits in I I career
at bats against Gutl1rie.
"I'm sure they had those slats,
too," Hargrove srud. "They know
what he's done against Guthrie. I
thought I'd give him one swing .
see what he could do, and then try
the squeeze. The double play was
sUII a possibility there. We needed
a run out of that situation. Then we
got the base hit (by LewiS ) that
broke it open."

oatwa
IS!h ANNI VER SARY RODS

THE BIG BEND CITIZENS BAND RADIO CLUB INC. WOULD
LIIE TO THANI THE FOLLOWING BUSINESS
ESTABLISHMENTS FOR MAiliNG THEIR SIITEENTH AIINUAL
COFFEE BRElll ON MAY l, 1992 AT THE MEIGS COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS ACOMPLETE SUCCESS.
POMEROY

2::-::
1

M ~c_:

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Lambert's Insurance

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$19.99

SEMI·AUTOMATIC 22 RIFLE.
TUB FEED. 17 SHOT
~mington

~

II

357 Mag Ammu nrt1 0n
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MARK 11 .2 2 SEMI-AUTO PI STOLS

en .

12

5P£CIAL PURCHASE

MIDDLEPORT
Quality Print Shop
Pooplo• National Bank
Bahr Ck&gt;thi8rs

Mi&lt;iJiaport Trupluos
Vaughan's Video Shop
M&gt;ddlaport Dopt. Store
Johnson's Variety Sture
Locker 219
Foreman &amp; Abbon
Cia ssic Cuts
Hudnolls
Oai ty Quean
Tn-County Foro, Inc.

Prescription Shop
Servistar
Dan's Boo! Shop

"WHITETAIL II"
BOW PACKAGE
Hunter

Rt'le aSII!'S

Fruth Pharmacy

Rawling -Coats-Ftshe r Funeral
Homo

Cttgo Gu Plu•
Valloy Lumber &amp; Supply

DO W. SIGHT. GLOV[
ARM GU A ilO . OUIV[N
TA RGE T. 3 ARR OWS

PRO RELEASE t•JC.

Ingels Fumitufll Store

s.....

$299 99

~min~ton

FOXFIRE II
150 LB.

~­

RUTLAND
Rutland Dept. Store
Jo's Country Sto ru

Rudand Fum•turv
Morns Equipm8f'll

$24.99

LAL Tiro Bam
5 Points Exprvss

Koobau!jl'a Shako 511oppo

TP. Gononol Storo

B.P. Station

Citgo Go• Plus

SPECIAL PURCHASE

ACID·WASH
T·SHIRTS AND
SWEATSHIRTS!

CHESTER
Gaurs Market
Ridonoora Supply
Chostor Quik Stop

Bourn Lumbar

La ny's G IOC8I\'
Batra Matkot

-

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1-800~~;;~0417 f~.~ .!'1

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Citgo Gas Plua
Bomarn Ful!.z. Attny
Farmers Bank
Mullan. Attny.
Whaley's Auto Parts
Jolf s COIT)'Ou!
Sugar Run Ashland Sta!Ion

Sugar Run Mill
Fo111st Run Block

Summarliekfs Raslaurant

1992 S-10 TAHOE BLAZER 414

$)6,488 ..t~ ~Ylt!D

- §}~

......

- ,_•.,. "'' "-'

0' Dell Lumber

Krogors
Pleasen Restaurant

Truo Valuo Hardware
Ebofs CitQO Gu Plus

.......'

$29.99

Farm Marl&lt;ot

L9ga:r Monuments

Koebau!jl's ol Chostor
Ridonou rs TV

BRAND NEW
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$24.99

2· i pc t.Aec GJ t CJc: '

Powe!rs SIJ~r Valu
Crow &amp; Crow, Attny.'s
Clalk' • Jewell)' Slorw
Grow's Steak House
Portar, Uttle, Sheets &amp;
Lenhts, Attny.'s
O'Bnon &amp; O'Biien. Attn(•

Pomeroy Flower Shop

Racine Gun Shop

4 Jl v 6 lAnoe Nl'-'' P""'"'

~

Subway
Offico Se1Vice &amp; Supply
Anderson's
K&amp; C JOWIOity Store

Buttons &amp; Bows
McDonald'•
Fabnc Shop
Swisher&amp; loh!l&amp; Drugs
R&amp;G Faed
Dauy Valley
Ewing Funeral Home
Tho Daily Sonbnel
BankOno
Downing-Chtlds·Mullitn
&amp; Musser Ins.
Oavrs &amp; Quick&amp;! Ins
G&amp;J Auto Parts
Francis Florist
Gravely Tractor Sales
7-33 CaiT)'ou!
S!oty &amp; Stoty. Attn(•

hlll·l

SJ194

e-•ec••on•c Mll h lfan§l91 ca&lt;,&lt;&gt; ,w

sions, according 10 the paper. was
Tyson 's policy of giving hundrC&lt;is
of thou sands of dollars worth of
personal gifts to King.
The New York Post reponed
agents also were looking into
somelhin~ called "Project Zorro."
whi ch Kmg reportedly used as a
slush fund. Sources were quoted as
saying lhe promoter would not tell
even his own accountants what !he
disbursements were for.
One accountant, former King
(See PROBES on C-4)

B,nocuiJrS

YOUR CHOICE

Hawl&lt;'s 76

11)0

:11•, r I HJ~t

Solberg said the agents subpocnaed "some material and some
members of Don King Productions
in connection wilh their invcstigation."
The New York Daily News
reported that lhe IRS was looking
into King's practice of paying forcign fighters, a token portion of
their purses in the United States
and the rest in !heir native country
as "foreign rights."
Also under examination as possible income tax or gift tax eva-

t:asco·

0

TUPPERS PLAINS

1111.

BRAND HE
'92 CHEVY S·l 0 PICKUP
f ...CTOOY MSAP............ H, ..... J;011r.!

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funny."
Minnesota entered the game
with a five-game winning streak
and a major league-leading .US
average. Cleveland had lost five in
arow.
"'Charley really has taken a big
challenge and has met it," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove sa1d.
"He grows wilh each ouung."
Loser Scott Erickson (2-4) gave
up two runs and four hits in 5 1/3
1nrtings, striking out five and walk ing five.
"He was lousy." Kelly said .
"Let's face it He had a bad night.
He was wild, mis sing here and
missing there. I don 't want to say
wild . He was mtssing the stnk c
zone by a little bit - 3-2,3-2, 3-2 ,
all night "
Erickson got himself in trouble
by hitting Junior Ortiz leading off
the fiflh. Kenny Lofton reached on
an infield single, and a sacrific e

.. ,'..A'
, .- '-"'

PRICES IN EFFECT
TILL JUNE 1ST

f &gt; ·.,!

5 POINTS

SAVE

Amerlca'o Lo-t Prlcod Plckupl
1o TO CHOOSE FROM

Boston's defense limited Brad
Daugherty, who had 28 points in
Cleveland 's I 14 -98 win Wednesday night, 10 II in Game 6, while
Larry Nance was limited to SIX .

"Rum Runner
C&amp;D Pennzoil

11 0

'&gt;t lllllllllli~ll

lf , .., PI

(borne).

• . ( ,f

' ,AV l N {,&lt;,

'---'--------"

fl

June 12- Riviera Country Club, Lesage, W.Va.
June 19 - Sugarwood Golf Course, Lavalette, W.Va.
June 26 - Portsmoulh Elks Club, Portsmoulh
July 10- Sandy Creek Golf Club, Ashland, Ky.
July 17 - Lavalette Golf Club, Lavalette, W.Va.
July 31 - Bellefonte Country Club, Ashland, Ky . .
A site wiD be chosen for Aug. 7 if mterest dictates 11.
From !he field, !here will be 65 golfers chosen with scores ranging from 55 10 76. In addition. several awards, tneluding Goller of
!he Year and a Most Valuable Player award for each age group, w1D
be ·ven.
.
~entry fee is $18 for golfers mlhe 13-15 and the 16-18 yearold age groups. and $15 for golfers in _!he 10-12 year-old age group.
For more information, call Ed Wtlgus at 1-886-5491 (Fatiiand
High School) from 9:10-10 am. and 11-11:30 a.m. or 1-886-8910

f' u• ~l'

L()cllpml'n L (j!OoJ[l I ll

-·~

988

Pitt aburgh at Ho1 tnn.

Moy lO

~

-~ ~ ~-

I

Edmonton 11 Chtc•ao.

N1tklnal Bukelball AMorlallon
NBA - Fmc:d John St.ada, New Yark
Knicb guard. s ~ .ooo for a flap nl f(IU) in
I sun~ 00 M•r 14 . Fined Phil J.chon ,
Chiuao Bu lla co. ch, $ 2,500 for com ·
menu oo offioaung fol1oW111&amp; a pme on

Ne• Ymt l, o.k.land 2
BOilOII J, Califomia 0
Seattle 2, Toron10 I
c-.ve~and !, Mln.-ot• •
Baltimore 2, Olicap 0
Milwaukee 7, Texu 3, I0 inninp
Detroit 8, K.anau City 2

~ .: ~"~~:::~:~;~~;•;;:~~~'"

$13 988 .
. ·: : · ,

BottOtl at Piu.abur8}1 . 7 35

Vlonday 8 JS p m

9.5

Friday's scores

(Lu.ry l · 2), l::Wp.m.
Seattle (Pid:er 0-0) at Toron1.0
mm 5-0), I : ~ p.m.

IILMIP '

$13 988

'92 CHEVY CAPRICE

They played Saturday

p.m

c

0~, ,..~ ,

EdmonLOn at Om:ago, 83~ p m

Gil

7

BRAND NEW 1992
S-10 TAHOE EXTENDED CAB
~ ('&lt;J1', ' IHO!nl 'r\ ft'i'll •,t •'ll l llJ illl)('l

' .•. '"'" ' .. ' " ... ,.., '• " ' ""'"
,. " "'~'
' . '"'""" ' '""'
,,.,"',.. ,,...."'"''
' ... ". .......

Conrerrnce finals

[utrn~

.,

ACHIMS.

'92 BUICK REGAL SEDAN

Future games

Baltimcn

GUND AMS,

BUI&lt;K SITIAIKS,

llftlftllll '

OlDSMOIIU

NOTE : lf lhc Eu1em C m!cta1ce flllal
game. a lcsa , G amtc 7
of the Weru:m Conference rmal will bo::
moved lo Sunday . M.ly Jl

Tod.ay -

agency would not divulge the
nature of the investigation.
The agents stayed at King ' s
office for about an hour. Two
newspapers reported that !hey confiscated computer disks and finan cial records, but a spokesman for
the promoter said nothing was
removed from !he building.
"Nothing was taken,"
spokesman John Solberg said. '"No
computer disks and no documents
were removed ... and they had no
search warranL''

tournaments.

V h f ,1tuw ec u• p m en r qrn u p a " li M fM r.'l~&lt;, tur'1f.
P S p 11 l .tllv .,.,11&lt;'(•1 •

92 POmA(

"" ""' '"'

lmts mdl 111 five

the AL. ..

[)euoiL ..... ........... I ~ 19
Cltntand. _ __ IJ lJ

..,., .

NHL playoffs

Houston 11 ~ilade.lptua , 1 ]5 p m
St. Lou.- 11 Atlanta, 7 40 p m
New Yolk 11 San Diego. 10 05 r m
OUcaao 11 l.o~ Angek:a, I0 ] 5 p m

Tum

'"

ON ALL NEW

"

1010\IUI

Dlv"lon
W L
Pel.

UP TO 48 MONTHS

,,,. $7988

., ' ...

Confnmcr nnal1
Today - Botlon al Clr vr lan d. 2
p.m.; New York u Ch.Le~ go. 4 30
Tuu day - \ Jt ah at Pon hnd. I 0 )0
pm
fo'rklly - Ponland 11 Ul.&amp;h , Kp.m

Monday's ~:ames
Cindn ...u al Monlru~ l : ]~p .m .

In

3.9% FIXED RATE FINANCING

They played Saturd•y

co (Swllt 6-0). 4.35 p m

By HAL BOCK
NEW YORK (AP) - Don
King's boxing empire, already
, rocked by !he rape conviction of
Mitt Tyson and a stream of affi·
daviiS questioning !he promoter's
finaucial deals with the former
heavyweight champion, now has
e&lt;me under the scrutiny of lhe FBI.
Two agenu all!)C8red at King's
Manhattan townhouse Thursday
" in coonection with an ongoing
investigalion." according to bureau
spokesman Joe Valiquene. The

PROCTORVILLE - The lOth annual Tri-State Junior Golf C ircuit has announced the followmg dates and locations for iL&lt; summer

f'rktay's score

Futurr games

Today's games
San Dtego (Il enu 3 ] )

:\UA playoffs

nnal•
L\.ah at Portland , l JO p m

do it all yourself, and all of a sudBy CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - If any· den a five-game losing strcalk is a
one tn the Cleveland Indians' rota- six-game losing streak."
Nagy (4-2) matched a career
tion qualifies as a stopper, it's
best with a six-hitter, his fifth . He
Charles Nagy .
walked none, SITUCk out throe. and
Consider:
let
Minnesota runners reach scoring
- All four of his wins have
position
only once.
Slopped Cleveland losing strealcs.
He
rebounded
from two bad
- His 2.21 ERA ranks him
outings
in
which
he
yielded a total
among !he American League leadof
23
hits
and
10
runs.
One of those
ers..
was
at
Minnesota
last
weekend.
- He"s !he only pitcher on the
Even so, the Twins lhought he
staff wilh more !han two victaies.
- He owns all throe of !he Indi- pitched better when they roughed
him up a week earlier at the
ans • cootplete games.
Metrodome
than he did Friday
But even a 5-0 shutout of the
night
in
Cleveland.
Minoesoca Twins on Friday night
"It was obvious that he had betwasn't enough to convince Nagy
ter
stuff last week," Twms mWJag that he's !he best pitcher in town.
'"There"s 001 a No. I pitcher on er Tom Kelly said. "'It sounds
our staff. We"re all too young for absolutely ridiculous to even say,
that," the 25-year -old Nagy said. but he threw better in !he Dome.
"" You can"t put that kind of pres- We hit so many at-'em balls
sure on yourself. You do that, tonight, it was getting to be
you"U go out lhinlring you have 10

Golf series dates announced

01Jcago ( ..iaddul 4- 2) 11 San Franct.S co (l:lurhll 2 I). 4 05 p.m

ters.

" Their whole team played well
defensiVely," said Craig Ehlo, who
had 13 points, I I m the fust half,
wh en Boston built a 62-53 lead.
" When one guy plays Dwell , it
rubs off and the others do it They
shot very well as well and th ey
stnpped us."
The Celtics-Cavaliers scnes has
not featured lhc same physical play
displa yed in !he other Eastern Conference semifinal between Chicago
and New York. which is also head ed lor a scvenlh game Sunday.
The closest thing to a face off
occurred at 2:19 when Bird and
WII~am s got into a shoving match
at !he free throw line as McHale hit
a jump shot from the top of th e
key . Williams was called for the
foul , Bird missed !he shot and the
game continued without incident
" The trouble w11h !his series is
lhattt' s hard to dislike Mark Price.
Daughtcny , Ehlo or Nance, ..
McHale Sllld. "If we were playing
lhc Knicks. it would be a different
stnry, because !hat's how they play .
It would be k.ill or be k.iDed."

!here

TOM PEDEN IS OUT TO BE THE NATION'S
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WE'RE ALSO OUT TO BE WV'S #1
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~:ames

HUNTINGU
SUING SPECIA~_

FBI, IRS begin probes of King's boxing empire

1419 St. Rt.
Gallipolis, OH.
Near
Drive-In

r.-; ~ v u

ing it as high as 35 points late in
the game.
Gelling to Game 7 is familiar
territory for Bird, McHale and
Parish, who have helped put the
last three of 16 NBA championship
banners in the Boston Garden
!'afters. Over the history of !he fran chise, the Celtics are 17-3 when
!hey play a seventh game, including 3- 1 on the road.
· Tve hcen in a lot of do or die
situations in my career," said
McHale, who wound up with 22.
"We're not ready to die. We're not
ready to go home for Lhe summer."
The only other Gaune 7 played
by the Cavaliers was in 1976, a
first-round victory over Washing·
ton before Cleveland lost to the
Celtics in the Eastern Conference
finals. But most of Cleveland's current roster was playing in elementary or high school.
'"We've done a lot of Game 5s
in the first round, but !his will be

our first Game 7" as a team , sa id
Mark Price, who had 14 points and
five assists.
John Williams, who led Cleveland with 18 points, said he expected today to be " a dogfight again ."
'' We know that if we lose, we
go home, and .if they lose, they go
home ," said Williams, the only
player on Cleveland's front line
who was close to his playoff average of 14.
Chalk it up to Boston's renewed
defense, which limited lhc Cavaliers to 38.8 percent shooting. well
off lhe .530 pace they shot lhrough
lhe first five games.
''Our big guys did a good job
clogging !he middle. We did every thing right, " said Reggie Le wi s.
who led Boston with 26, including
10 each in the first and third quar-

Cleveland records 5-0 victory over Minnesota

TOMMY HELMS

Per Day

=

Boston continued to build on
their lead in lhe second half, push-

On the strength of Nagy's six-hitter,

SJ6 &amp; SJ8
446-0736

By ED GOLDEN
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Ce lucs got what !hey wanted, a
seventh game against lhe Cleveland
Cavaliers in lhe Eastern Conference semifinals.
With Larry Bird scoring 16
pouns and 14 assists in 37 minutes
lhc Celtics beat Cleveland 122-9 i
Friday night to force a final game
at Richfield Coliseum on Sunday
afr.emooo.
. "'I wouldn't want anybody
m a b1g game than Larry Bird,"
said coach Chris Ford. one of many
who spoke for Bird, who left
Bosloo Garden without commenl
Bird. in his first start since April
3, had 10 assists by halftime.
mcluding four passes that led to
Robert Parish 's eight points, helpmg BCSIOO 10 a 34-22 lead after the
fLISt quarter.
'"Larry has lhe great ability to
pass the ball. and he got lhe Chief
Into the game early," said Kevin
McHale, whose 16 points in the
second quaru:r helped Boston to a
62-53 halftime lead

else

UROLL

Mmne:aoY at Toron to, I )5 p m

San D•ego 9, Puuburg.h 2

until I 1:30a m. At th at ume, he
will depart for the lun cheo n an d
auc (I on. .
.
AdmtSSIOn 10 the game IS S2 for
d 1
d Sl f
h"ld
F
a u ts an
. or c 1 rcn. or
more 1nfor mauon co ntac t Tom
Ho kin s at 446- 142 4 or Rand
Finf.cy at 446-401 2
y
·

dugout to assist, and se rved as
·
·
f th
· th
Intenm manager O e team m c
f
1989
d
f
h
0
summ· er
an
orH 1 ·e
d
f
th
rem am cr o
at season . e IS
· pnva
· te busmess
·
now engaged m
.
H 1 ·
·11
k
e
ms
appearancewi
mar
·
th
t.
fa t d.t.
e con 1mua 100 0
ra 1 IOn
established in 1989 when the
Dream Tearn staged Its
· "•LISt be neoit
c
f
h
·
bl
r
the
game hor c anta ed causes.
·t
· n· ·
past, t e game an t s acuvuics
h
dra
h '"bl
ave
wn sue no~ e guests as
Reds broadcaster Joe Nuxhall, forme r Reds pitcher and current
Wilmington College baseball coach
Brooks Lawrence, two-time Heisman Trophy wmncr Archie Gnffin ,
and former WSAZ-TY sponscastcr
Bob Bowen .
Organizers of the game hav e
scheduled a number of activities
surrounding the event. and ar c
arranging with officials in Gall ia
County and the city of Gallipolis to
declare the week of June 1-7 as
Gallia County Youth Baseball
Week.
Helms is expected to attend a
private dinner at !he Gallipolis Hol Iday Inn on Fnday, June 5, from 67:30 p.m., followed by a publi c
reception, also al !he Holiday Inn ,
from 7:30-9:30 p.m. On Saturday. a
ba se ball card show under th e
supervision of Randy Finney will
be held in the Lyne Center gymnasium at the University of Ri o
Grande from 10 a.m . until 4 p.m.
He lm s will be at the show and
avmlable for autographs from 9:30

another hobbl ed team . The Reds
hav e lost their las! three with an
offen se slowed by m;·ury.
They got J·ust two runners to
second base Friday night against
Mulholland, initating manager Lou
Piniclla.
" We were a dead team ," he
sa id . "Maybe we were feeling
sorry for ourselves. I don't want to
hear about it anymore. Injuries are
no excuse."

(1Lbb1rd 4-2). 2:35 p.m.
Detroit (Leuer 2-1) u Kan u s f'11y
(Crublcu ) -2). 2 ) ~ p m.

Frld~:~y's scores
Phlladrlph ial, C inclnnaU 0
A tbnu

Mdwa u ~ e e

grow into a Joss."
No such problems now . He' s
give n up JUSt fiv e runs in his last 27
innmgs and keeps getting better.
'' It goes to show you !hat if a
guyhasconfidcnceinhimsclf,
even if he 's 0-3 , he can reel off five
or six in a ro w," manager ;,·m
Frcgos1 said.
The Phillies could usc !hat. Mulholland is their only healthy stancr
at the moment. The rest of the rota 110 0 consists of relievers and rook ICS.

wv

Celtics hammer Cavs to force Game 7 today

r~::~~i~e~~~~i~fF~~~:~~

Phillies blank Reds 8-0 with Mulholland's arm

lddleport-Galllpolls, OH- Polnl Pleasant,

In the NBA playoffs,

Dream Te~m benefit contest slated June 6; Helms as guest

· GALLIPOLIS Tommy
Helms former player first base
coach ~nd interim man'ager of the
Cincinnati Reds, will be the gueSI
at a benefit baseball game between
the area Reds Dream Team and the
G 11 · r p N 27 A
·
a lpo ts ost o.
mencan
LegProcion eedsteam froon Sathturday, Juned6.
m e game an an

May 17, 1992

M""mVidoa
Vtckof'o Craftl
Pici&lt;Ains Hardware

Maton Fumiture

See Scott or Ralph Sheetl
Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. 9-6 or Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9-3

Gallipolis Motor Co.
236 S.CHtllwe.
G•lllpolis, OlliG 45631
Pl. 614-446-3060

RACINE
W.td Cross' Sons Gro .
Home National Bank
Wegnefa Hardwaro

SYRACUSE
Exxon Station

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Bob'a Ma11!ot
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M

r,·~-r,i.county
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~ ss.99

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MASON, W. VA.

SWE

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Sport

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Shop~- ~
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NEW STORE HOURS:
MONDAY-FRIDAY, 9:30 Au-8
SATURDAY, 9:30 AM-5 PM
SUNDAY, 11 AM-6 PM

PM

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POINT PLEASANT

�Page C4

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

May 17,1992

Federal probes .. ·------------:--:::-

PRIZES AWARDED - The golfer wbo gets
a bole-in-one on the par three, No. 9 bole iu uext
weekend's Meigs Band Memorial GQlf Tournament can ride home in oue or these three new
vehicles. The first golfer to score an ace on number nine wins his choice or the vehicles. From

left to right are George Harris of Smith-Nelson
Motors in Pomeroy with a 1992 Grand Am, Bob
Ross of Tri-County Ford in Middleport with a
1992 Ford Ranger XL T and George Bush or
Don Tate Chevrolet, Olds, Cadilliac GEO in
Pomeroy with a 1992 Corsica.

(conunued from c. 3)
comptroller Joseph A. Maffia,
knew enough about the disbursements to ftle a series of affidavits
charging the promoter with mis handling Tyson's money.
Maffia's latest affidavit, filed
Wednesday with the New Jersey
State Board of Control. the state's
licensing body for boxing, said
King repeatedly ordered Tyson to
pay sanctioning fees for his fights
. that were well beyond those
required by the WBC, WBA and
IBF. According to the documen~
King directed sanctioning pat
ments of $350,000 for Tyson s
fights with Frank Bruno, Carl "The
Truth" Williams and Buster Douglas.
In each case, Maffia said, the
legitimate sanctioning fees were
well below that fi~ure - $285,500
for the Bruno fight, $236,500 for
Williams and $319,000 for Douglas. "This resulted in WI overpayment of approximately $209,000
by Mr. Tyson," the affidavit said.
There was also a $100,000 sanctioning fee to the WBC for the
Tyson's flfSt ftght with Razor Ruddock, even though fees are routinely paid only for champion ship
bouts and that was a non-title ftght.
Maffia also said Tyson was
charged by King for the cost of
maintaining a corporate apartment
in Manhattan, a house in Las Vegas
and an apartment in Los Angeles.
Bills included $3,595 in monthly
rent for the New York apartment,
$5,295 for Lhe cost of a new telephone system in the Las Vegas
home, swimming pool maintenance
and neighborhood association dues
for the L1s Vegas site, and telephone, electricity, cable television
and maid service for all three properties.
Other Maffia affidavits, ftled in
connection with pending litigation
between Tyson and his former
manager, Bill Cayton. detailed
questionable deductions made from
Tyson's purses and reported consultant fees of $50,000 per fight

paid to Kmg's sons and $100,000
per fight paid to King's wife, as
well as a $52,000 per year salary
paid to King's daughter to serve as
president of the Mike Tyson fan
club.

King's response to Maffia's ftrsl
affidavit was a press release claiming the document was "ftlled WI~
lies, fabrications and half-trUths,
charges the accountant den1ed
v•ll&lt;--.ntlv.

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1991
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1990 Honda Accord LX
4 door, 5 speed, air, AMIFM, 5

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1991 Nlssan KIC
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4

local trade.

(This article was written by
Michael Hoeft of the West Virginia Department of Natural
Resources• Wildlife Resources

IS LOW IS

$7 777

Section and appeared in the
March special fishing issue of

Wonderful Wut Virginia maga·
zint.)

(loaded). Only 48,000 miles,
tan.

NEW GEO
PRIZMS

Redman passes Adams
to gain win at Skyline
By SCOTT WOLFE
T -S Correspondent
STEW ART - Despite a lOthlap controversy, Harold Redman of
Ty ler Mountain, W.Va. in the
Young Wireline-Leroy Riffle
Excavating #28 passed Racine's
Bob Adams Jr. at the midway point
and went on to claim the 2S -Iap
Late Model feature here at Skyline
Speedway Fnday night.
Adams, who was second for the
third week m a row, won the modified A-main, Benny Thieman
claimed the Sporuman feature, and
Rick. Venham the Street Stock fea ture.
Shooting from the pole posuion,
Adams, in the McDonald's of
Pomeroy/l.D. Drilling/ Five Points
Express #ASS took command of
the Late Model main for the first
10 laps, fending off charges of
touring outlaw dirt star Delmas
Conley and Harold Redman.
On the lOth lap, Redman and
Conley made contact in turn four
wllh Conley sp1nning into th e
inf1eld. Conley was put back in
second, while Redman was signaled 10 go to Lhe tail, a decision
that sparked a very heated con frontation below the nagstand
between Redman and track personneL
After a IS-minute delay. th e
problem had been resolved; Redman won the protest and eventually
the race. Meanwhile, Conley was
assigned the tail on the restan.
Dave Nutter drove a great mce
to finish thtrd, followed by Larry
Bond's Whaley 's Auto Parts car,
Bill Childers, Andy Bond in th e
McDonald's #10, Dan Murrison,
Racine's Scott Wolfe in th e
McDonald's/Precision Automouve
car, Steve Lucas and Conley.
Adams won the first heat over
Nutter and Conley, whi le Bruce
Dennis took the second heat over
Bobby Mosser and Ken Riddle.
After a few skirmi shes in hot
laps. on ly four mod1ifcds were
ready for the feature, but they put
on a good show. Adams was the
winner over Kirt Graves, Allen
Hibbard and Tim Smedley.
Adams took the heat wuh Hibbard second.
Benny Thieman made it _a .clean
sweep in the Sportsman dov1soon,
claimmg the heat and the feature
over two-lime runner -up Aaron

~~~995 NOW SJ v.u
1987 OLDSMOBILE DELTA
88 ROYALE BROUGHAM

owner.

1992 Dodge Shadow

NINIDEIGHT

Fleming. Kevin Haught was third,
followed by Raben Stackpole, Jim
Amick, Gene Johnson, Rick John son and Butch Owing.
One of last week's winners
Nolan Miller claimed the street
stock hea~ however, Rick Venham
the winner of the second feature,
held off his charges late in the race
to claim this week's feature win.
David Hackathorn placed third
ahead o[ Don Casto, Todd Wolfe,
Eris Miller, Roger Dunlap and
Mitth Brunton.
Skyline will host Lhe ftrst event
on the Skoal Modified Challenge
Series this Fnday. May 22. paying
$1,000 to win for UMP Modificds.
Skyline will host the STARS
Late Models on May 29, paying
$2,000 to win. Already, some of
the top names in dirt Late Model
racing have indicated they w1ll be
here [or racing in Lhe Oh1o Valley
that weekend.
All other divisions will race on
each of those special night&lt;.
Gates open at 4:30, with wann ups at 6:30p.m. and racing at 8
p.m.
SUMMARY
Late Models
FAST TIME: BOB ADAMS ,
JR. 13:78
FIRST HEAT : Adams, Dave
Nutter, Delmas Con ley, Andy
Bond,
Steve
Lucas.
SECOND HEAT : Bruce Den nis , Bobby Mosser. Ken Roddie ,
Larry Bond .
FEATURE: Harold Redman,
Adams, Nutter, L. Bond, Bill
Childers, A. Bond, Dan Mumsson,
Scott Wolfe, Steve Lucas, Delmas
Conley, Ken Riddle, Bobby Moss cr. Kenny Johnson, Lou Hubbard.
Sportsman
HEAT: Benny Thieman, Aaron
Fleming, Robert Stackpole. Kevin
Haught.
FEATURE: Thieman, Reming,
Haught, Stackpole. Jim Ami ck,
Gene Johnson, Rick Johnson and
Butch Owing.
Ump modilieds
HEAT: Adams, Allen Hibbard,
Kin Graves. Tim Smedley
FEATURE: Adam s, Graves.
Hibbard, Smedley.
Street stocks
HEAT: Nolan M11ler, Roger
Dunlap, Rick. Venham, Don Casto.
FEATURE: Vcnham, Miller,
Hackathorn, Casto. Todd Wolfe,
Eris Miller, Roger Dunlap and
Mitch Brun10n.

Now'7650

SI99S

KANAUGA- The Ohio River,
the first route for settlement of
West Virginia and the state's most
important aquatic resource, has
been the life blood of of many who
have lived and worked on the nver
throughout thelf lives. Wtlltam H.
Reynolds of Kanauga is one of
those people.
In the 1800s, his grandfather
settled on an island near St. Marys.
Bill was born on a shanty boat on
the Ohio River near Moundsville m
1910, and he spent the first 16
years of his life on the Oh1o. His
family, including his grandfather,
moved their home up and down. the
Ohio following work opportumtJes
and devoting much time to fishmg.
Each spring the river rose _and
remained high for months at a nme,
allowing shanty boats and other
commercial tranSponation 10 move
up and downstream. During the late
spring when the river fell, shanty
boat owners would choose a place
to "beach" their horne .
The adjacent riverbank owner
often uaded a garden spot along the

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) £lob Juday drove 1n three runs as
MIChigan State built a 10-2 lead
and the Spartans survived a late
ra lly by Ohio SIJite to take a 10-7
vic tory and eliminate the regular season champion Buckeyes from
the Big Ten Conference tourna ment Fnday.
The Spartans (3S-18) put togeth er a IS-hit attack against three Ohio
State pitchers.
Michigan State advances to
meet the loser of Friday's second
game between Illinois (36-18) and
Mmnesota (38-19) in Lhc double elimination tournament at Ohio
Slate's Trauunan F1eld.
Juday h1t a two -run homer as the
5 rartans buill their lead to e1g hl
runs wuh a four-run eighth.
Steve Johnson had four hits and
drove in two run s. while Craig
Mayes had two hits and drove in
1wo runs and Alex Gagin scored
thn:c runs and had two hits.
Stu Hirschman (10-3) went the
first seven innings, allowing six
hi ts while st riking out five and
walking five and giv ing up two
runs.
RBI sing les by Mayes and
Gag in in the first gave the Spartans
a 2-0 lead, with Johnson and
Mayes driving in runs 111 the third
to make it 4-1 . Juday and Johnson
drov e in runs with hi ts in th e
fourth.
Ahead 6-2 going into the eighth,
the Spartans p1cked up two more
runs on Juday s two-run shot and a
pair of unearned runs.
But they needed almos1 all of
them .

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cleaned for cutting in10 buttons .
Life on a shanty boat was not all
work. Bill and his brother had fun.
During the summer, they would
turn over a wooden boat in the
water and get underneath, breathing Lhe air trapped under the boat
as it floated down the river. When '
ever an unsuspecting river traveler
approached Bill's hom e, they
(See REYNOLDS oo C-6)

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several miles long . Mussels were
collected from dawn until dark
using a brail and a boat equipped
with a "mule" (an underwater sail
- a board under the boat that
could be rotated to catth the current and pull the brail downstream).
The mussels were steamed open,
the meat removed for sale to hog
farmers, the pearls removed for
sale as jewelry and the shells

Buy both Auto and

1987 PONTIAC

BONNEVIWSE

riverbank: for help in the fields during the summer and fall. The river
provided fish and mussels, which
the boat owners sold to residents of
nearby towns.
Sport fishing in those days
included trot-line fishing, hoop-net
fishing and seining. There was not
enough leisure time during the long
work days for most people to try
the less efficient pole and line fishin g. The fish were either consumed
or sold live to a retailer located on
a boat dock at every little town
along the river. Retailers hauled the
fresh fish inland by horse and
wagon on a daily basis, often tracting ftsh for goods when the buyer
did not have the 10 cents a pound
asking price. Commercial passenger and freight boats also bought
fish .
Because of river nuctuations,
most of the bottom was washed
clean enough to support abundant
mussel populations. These mussel
beds were up to eight feet thick and

Michigan State
hands Ohio
State 10-7 loss

ALPINE
GlrA.-IyMI

(loaded). Extra clean, low miles,
54,500, gold.

WAS

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-CS

Reynolds among last of Ohio River's commercial fishermen

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL -Bill Reynolds of Kao~u~a
brings a portion of hi&lt; hoop net nearer for some up-close repatr m
his back yard. He is one of many whose life is tied closely to the
Ohio River. (Rod Snow photo)

CHEV•..IJLDHID.-GEO
one-inch spurs. Doug holds his turkey, weighing
17 pounds with a 10 l/4-ioch beard and ooe-iocb
spurs.

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

• Purtlw! aSupper IIIOiftrfrom
January 1- May 31,1992 and
mal. no payments l1lllil Octobet
• Pay rt~completely by October
1992ud pay no inte...t.•
• Ask about our Total Prolertion
Guarantee. You provide usual
maintenanee, WI c:ower fuU
ropain free for two Y''"- No
queoti0111 asked.

DO
: DOUBLE KILL - Doug Jenkins and DJ.
Jtnkins killed turkeys on April 30, the fourth
day of the 1992 turkey hunting season. DJ., left,
holds his 19-pounder with a 10-inch beard and

May 17, 1992

...,,,

e~

Rerenrron

• Over 7BO Colors
• Mrtdew re srs1.1n1

....,

SATELl iH

REVOKES LICENSE .James Oiler, 11, revoked the
pilot's license of Ibis 19 Illpound tom, which posessed a
10-incb beard and I 112-lnch
spurs, in Huntington Township
Saturday morning . ..Jiler holds
the 12-gaugt 1100 Remington
shotgun he used to accomplish
the feat.

• E~ c cli (' n! C otnr

EAHTH

Sf AnON

BDh'l
ElecltDnicl
Upper Rt. 7-Galnpolis

SAVE $3°0
~~~y

$15 20

GALLON

PRICES GOOD THRU MAY 31, 1992

CAROLINA lUMBER AND SUPPLY COMPANY
HOURS. Monday-Friday, 8 am-5 pm; Saturday, 8 am-12 noon

312 6th Street

675-1160

Point Pleasant, WV .

-

�Page-C6-Sunday Times--sentinel

May 17, 1992

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

Reynolds and the Ohio .. .

_cc_o
nti_n
ucd_fro_m c_-Sl_ _ _ _ __

would launch Lheir trap. The river
!raveler would see the overturned
boat floating down the river and
typically anempt to retri eve it.
When Lhey touched the boat, Bill
and his brocher would scream from
underneath the boat, scaring th e
travelers out of Lheir wits.
Bill's grandfather raced horses,
which he kept on the river in a
floaling bam next to their home. At
county fairs, hone racing was the
main attraction, and most of the
local farmers entered their best
horses. BiD's grandfalher appeared
to be just like any other farmer
when he arrived with his "race"
horses and bet against Lhe best m
each county.
Life on Lhe river changed drasti cally in the late 1920s and ' 30s
wilh the industrialization of the
Ohio River valley. Steel mills ,
chemical factories and expanding
cities dumped Lheir wastes inlD Lhe
river. Construction of dams
stopped Lhc natural cleansing process of the annual river flu ctua tions. Loss of Lhe numerous natural
riffles resulted in a decrease in the
river's dissolved oxygen.
Silt, no longer washed away by
high Oows, coated the river bouom.
Fish kills were common, and the
water was white with dead fish.
Mussel populations declined to low
levels. Commerctal llshmg and
mussel brailing was no longer possible. Bill and his family changed
wilh the times and took jobs in fac tories and on commerical barges

Lhat operated year-round.
The fish population changed to
include only Lhe most pollution-101era nt species, such as carp and
bullheads. Populations of sturgeon,
many species of suckers, catfi sh,
bass, musky, walleye, paddlefish
and minnows either disappeared or
decreased grea~y .
The new industrialized lifestyle
provided increased leisure time and
demand for spon fishing opponunities. New law s limttmg the dis charge of wastes into the Ohio
River empowered agencies such as
the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources (DNR) to require
industries and ci ties to clean up
their emuent.
During the 1950s and '60s, wilh
improved water quality, Ohio River
fish populations began to change
for the better. Some desirable spon
fish species such as sauger, walleye
and white bass mcreasen, and spon
fishing became popular, especially
immediately below dams, where
the faster flow s kept an adequate
amount of oxygen m the water and
attracted concentrations of forag e
fi sh such as gizzard shad and minnows.
The new big dams also acted as
barriers to seasonal upstream fis h
movements and "natural" collectIng spots for fish at cenain times of
the year, further en hanci ng their
spon ftshing potential. Fish popula·
ti on increases in pool type species
also occurred with improved water
quali ty and were a reflection of the

•ncreased pool cnmonment created
by the large dams . Bluegill , crappic, largemou th bass, catfish and
other typical lake species mcreased
m these areas.
Increases in commercial fish
species such as ca tfis h, carp and
buffalo prompted CNR to permit
com mercial fish mg. One of the ftrst
to get a li ce nse, Bill Reynold s
fished for 22 years until the commercial fishery was closed in 1989.
He made hi s own nets and
fished about 15 nels every day
between May and October. He constrUcted concrete holding tanks on
his property along th e ri ve r. Bill
so ld his fish to live fish hau lers
who re sold them to commemal
pay lakes. He caught as many fish
the last year he fished as he dtd th e
first year.
Commerical fishing was closed
because chemical co ntaminants
above the safe levels were detec ted
m catfish and earp. A public health
advisory warn ing against th e
human consumpti on of carp and
catfish has been in effect since
1989. Most of the se contaminants
are thought 10 be carried in the fine
clays and silts of the Ohio River
which arc deposited in Lhe deeper
and slow water areas of each pool.
Rarely can these contaminants ever
be detected in the water, but
because they are concenlrated in
fatl)' portions of the body, contaminants accumulate throughout the
life of an Ohio River bottom-feed -

ing fish to levels much higher Lhan
that found in Lhc water.
The DNR collects fish for contammant analysis and monito~ fish
po pulation s in the Ohio River
ann uall y. Increased developmen t
along this imponant waterway still
poses potential threats to the fishery resource, and the Ohio River
requ ires constant atten!ion by Lhe
resouce-protec tion agencies.
Bill , now 81 yea rs young, is
raising goldfish for bait in hts own
backyard pond along the bank of
the Oh1o River. He stays abreast of
current conditions and would like
to sec contamination levels drop in
commercial specie s. He and hi s
wife plan to spon fish Lhis spring
for trophy-size catfish, walleye and
musky near Point Pleasant in the
Gal lipolis pool of Lhc Ohio River.
Sport fishing on Lhe Ohio River
for sauger, white bass, northern
pike, hybrid striped bass and black
bass has grea~y improved over pasl
years. Anglers are succ essfully
year round in the Ohio and espectally below the locks and dams .
Bank fishing access to the Ohio
River was improved by the recent
ope ning of Lhe Ohio River Island
National Wildlife Refuge and by
purchases of the Ohio River shoreline (Greenbotton Wildlife Man agement Area, for example) by the
U.S . Fish &amp; Wildlife Service, Lhe
U.S . Army Corps of Engineers and
the DNR.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is Lhe weekly fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of Lhe Ohio Depanment of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
TYCOON LAKE - Fishing for
bluegill, crappie, sunfish, large rnoulh bass and channel catfish is
rated good or excellent. Channel
catfish averaging five to I0 pounds
and can be taken during evening or
early morning hours . Bluegills
average seven inches and can be
easily taken from shoreline areas
using red worms or wax worms.
WELLSTON CITY RESER VOIR - Black crappies arc modcrate! y abundant and average eight
to 10 inches. Multiple-year classes
of walleye are prese nt with and
average size of 12 to 28 inches.
Conditions for laking channel catf,sh, brown bullheads, sunfish and
largemoulh bass are rated good to
excellent.

Soulhwest
CAESAR CREE K LAKE Fish the shallow, woody areas to
lake bluegills. Check for upstream
movements into the lake oibut.aries
to fish for white bass. Try fishing
the 10- to 20-foot drop -offs and
humps ID lake largemouth bass up
to four pounds.
OHIO RIVER - The Meldahl
pool in Clermont, Brown and
Adams counties offer good ftshing
opponunitics for largemouth bass,
spotted bass, crappies and catfish.
Try fishing in the backwaters of
White Oak, Red Oak, Bull sk in ,
Eagle and Ohio Brush creeks for
best results.
Ce ntral
RUSH CREEK LAKE - A
very large population of largemouth bass is present in thts lake
which is located two miles east of
Rush•ille on U.S. 22. Try fi shing
in areas with shoreline cover and
vegetation. Use minnows or night

craw lers. Try using larval baits or
red worms to lake bluegills up to
n1ne inches . Large numbers of
crappi es are prese nt, but a verage
six to se ven inches.
INDIAN LAKE - Fish in the
channels and areas wilh vegetation
to take largemouth bass, which
average 12 to 18 inches. Use minnows and small jigs around shore!me areas to take crappies. Ntght
fi shing is productive for taking
channel catf1sh . Try the South
Bank area and fish at night ncar the
bridges wtth mumows 10 take wh1te
bass, which average 10 to 14 inches.
Northwest
CLEA R FORK RES ERVO IR
- Muskies ave raging 30 to 45
mches can be taken in this Richland County lake. Try trollin g large
muskie baits 10 the lower half of
the lake and through shallow water
areas where the lake bouo m 1s
humped . Fish the shoreline w1th

spinner baits or divtng plugs to take
largemouth bass.

MYSTERY FARM - Tbis week's mystery
farm, featured by tbe Meias Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participale in Lbe weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm 's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to lbe Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl .,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a ~5 prize from the

'

desp;cial 89,999
1988 tOYOTA PICKUP 4 WD
Power steeering and brakes, 5 speed
transmission , short bed with bed liner,
rear step bumpr, chrome styled wheels.
Good all season tires. Extra clean

WAS $5995.00

. . i'........
......
i11!! ...., . . -- i
f

.. .(

~.

I(

•

r --fJI'

.

5,495

Now 8

PW, P~

cruiH,

Ill~

AM/AI c..-

1990 DODGE
DAYTONA
2 DR.
4

cyl., cruiee &amp; tilt, AT,

aette, on• local owner. PS, PB, AC, one local

Wo told now, 5th Ave. owner. We aold new,
25 ,000 milee.
trade.

10,900 511 400 510 00

5

56
4 cyl. engine, power steering, power
brakes, auto trans, air conditioning, ti~
steering, cruise control, AM!FM stereo
cassette, P. windows &amp; door locks rear

NET WORTH - Kanauga resident Bill Reynolds puts the linishing touches on this hoop ntt used commonly lo catch ~hool• of
various fu;h in the Ohio River. In the early years of this century,
commercial fiShing was big business before the advent of riverside
chemical plants and st~l milk. (Rod Snow photo)

V6, PS, PB, AC, PW, P~ V8,PS , PB,AC,PW,P~
cr•ise, tilt, AMIFM eas- cruioe, tilt, AMIFM caooette, 25,000 mileo, utte, 28,000 mileo,
Immaculate cond.
immaculete cond.

V6, AT, PS, PB, AC, tlb,
AMIFM radio, new tiru,
45,000 mileo. Red with
cloth Interior.

1990 OLDS
CUTLASS
CIERRA S

1991 OLDS
CUTLASS CALAIS
4 DR.

A--l, PS, PB, AC, crula• &amp; 4 cyl., AT, PS, PB , AC,
Ult, AMIFM radio, 3i,OOO eruloo &amp; Ult whool, AMIFM
mllea. Nice clean car,

radio, 191,000 miles , char-

whlll! wlrod lnl

coal wlrod lnl

800 s7,1 00 sa,600

1990 DODGE
GRAN
CARAVAN

1988
1987 DODGE
PLYMOUTH
RAM CHARGER
GRAN VOYAGER
4X4

V6, PS, PB, AC, PW, Pl, V6, PS, PB, AC, cruise
cruioe, tilt wheel, AMIFM tilt, AMIFM cauette,
tone paint.
caaaette. One owner.

SJ 0,300 9,200
5

1989 DODGE
D1SO
PICKUP

1989 FORD
F150 PICKUP
XLT LARIAT

V8, PS, PB, AC, 4 new 6 Cyl., 5 Spd., PS,
tlroo, red color, AMIFM AC, cruise &amp; 1111, PW,
radio. One local owner. locke, two-tone paint,
48,000 mlleo.

9,600 sa,600

5

VS, PS, PB, new lireo,
opoke wheels, 40,000
miles.

6 100

5

1987 FORD RANGER
PKKUP
4 cyl .,
truclL

1979 MUSTANG
V6, 4 spd. trana., aunroof, 54,000 miles.

5

1,400

1985 CHEV.
CELEBRITY 4 DR.
4 cyl., AT, PS, PB, AC,
good lr..aportation.

5

1 940

1981 OLDS
CUTlASS 4 DR.
V6, AT, PS, PB, AC.

5

1,200

1980 SUBARU 4X4
STATIONWAGON
4 opeed trano., AC.

5

1,400

1978 FORD F2SO
PICKUP

5 opd., topper, nice va, AT, PS, PB. rune good.

5

1,800

1991 CHEV. SIO
PICKUP
Black, like 1 new truck.

5

7,500

1979 FORD FISO
414
Bl•cll wlwhlt• ro1d whHI•,
, . . RWll.,_, 351 VI, AT, PS,
PD.

5

3,100

Chrysler's 1st National Mini Van Sale is going on until June
22nd, with up to $1700.00 Discount on certain vehicles Plus a
$500.00 Rebate on all vehicles. We have 21 in stock. We have a
good selection of Ram Tough Dodge Trucks in stock - D50,
D150, D250, W150 and W250 4X4 - gas and diesel. Plus, the
Dakota Two and Four Wheel Drives - with $500.00 to $1500.00
Rebate.

SEE JACK ROUSH or BOB ROSS
Our Service Department is Open Mon.-Fri. 8·5; S11t. 8·12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-12

See Larry Pierce, AI Durst, Morris Sheets, Pete SomerviUe,
Tom Sprague or Mike Northup.

·NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE
Upper Rt. 7

446·0842

By WENDELL TOPE
GALLIPOLIS - When properly
harvested, no doubt alfalfa is our
most valuable forage crop, but in
some rare cases orchard grass is
classified a close second.
For horses, mules and a few
other animals requiring less protein, the grass is a safer feed 10 use
because of Lhe protein fac(.(J". Especially horses, cannot digest feed
that is high in p-otein.
When harvested at the proper
Stage of growth, orchard fP'8SS carries nearly a perfect ratiOn. The
only Lhing it lacks is some of the
minerals so essential for digestion.
At seeding time farmers should
take a second look at grasses.
Grasses have their advantages as
well as disadvantages. In our area
orchard grass excels, in producing
an abundance of forage when harvested at the proper time.
It makes good ensilage as we II
as cured hay, because Lhe stems
and blades hold less water. This

Farm Flashes

We have two 1992 Dodge Dynasty Factory Programs Cars, Two
1992 Dodge Spirits, One Plymouth Acclaim, Two 1992 Dodge
Shadow 4 Dr.'s, One 1991 Chrysler New Yorker, Four 1991 Dodge
Dynasty's - These are all clean, well equipped vehicles with
balance of factory warranty. We can and will deal on these
vehicles.

Brtnc Ia your belt deal on a New Car or Truck and we
wllltl')' to meet or Beat the Deal.
FOB A GOOD DEAl ..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to tbe newspaper otr'tee by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In cast
of a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery .
Nut week, a Gallia County farm will be fea tured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Orchard grass excels in this area

1990 CHRYSLER 1990 MERCURY 1989 CHRYSLER
LEBARON 4 DR. GRAN MARQUIS NEW YORKER
LANDAU
SEDAN
4 DR.
V6, PS, PB,AC,

1989 CHEV.
CORSICA
4 DR.

1rimes - jentinel

Section D
May 17,1992

Theme of past week:
Shrink or Find Sanctuary

At Tycoon Lake,

Bluegill, largemouth bass fishing rated tops

Farm/Business

Gallipolis, Ohlo

enables farmers to harvest either
for bailing or ensiling when spring
comes . Often times farmers run
short of good quality forage in late
winter so it is nice 10 have a good
early crop of orchard grass to take
up the slack.
Our soils here in South Eastern
Ohio are especially adapted to Lhe
growing of all grasses, with
orchard grass the most productive.
It will withstand periods of dry
weather better than other forage
crops and also winter freezing
seems to be no problem.
Check with your county agent
and get his instructions on Lhe correct time 10 harvest and how soon
after harvest 10 fertilize and spread
lime. Orchard grass needs some
lime but does not require as high a
P-H factor as legumes. The amazing Lhing is most aU livestock prefer orchard grass and alfalfa
because of the sweet flavor. It carries slighdy more sugar Lhan alfalfa, and properly harvested orchard
grass carries almost as much pro-

tein as alfalfa.
Again, I must say our soils here
in soulheastem Ohio are near perfect, and Lhe weather is ideal for the
production of grasses and legume
crops with Lhe limited number of
non erodible acres. We must utilize
every available acres of land we
have in Lhe production of soil sa ving crops. Nolhing fills this order
better Lhan grasses and legume forage crops. Alfalfa and grasses are
the final answer and this is as it
should be. There is no crop that
wiU produce as much nutrition and
at the same time save as much soil
from erosion as grasses and
legumes. They can be rotated in
such a manner that they can produce an abundance of forage in
spring, summer and fall wilh hay or
ensilage for Lhc five winter months.
Always be on the alert for bloat
after turning eatde on early spring
grass and alfalfa. -30
Wendell Tope is a guest
columnist for tbt Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation Districl .

Changes made in traditional
extension office staffing May 1

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
Gallia County
Extension Agent,
Agriculture
GALLIPOLIS - An estimated
one and a half million acres of com
were plan ted in Lhe first week of
May in Ohio. Weather conditions
finally cooperated 10 provide good
planting wealher.
Locally, this week has been a
different story with last weekend
rainfall building up soil moisture.
Soil temperatures at the Jackson
Research Branch at4 inch depth on
bare soil had a maximum ol 61 F
and a minimum of 51 F for the
week ending May II .
The summer 1992 editioo of the
O.S .U. Farm Management
Newsletter is available at the County Extension Offu. The cover article titled "Farmers and Lhe Ohio
Sales Tax" covers several questions
Lhat farmers often ask. The article
speUs out Lhat agriculture is exempt
from Lhe Ohio sales laJ&lt;, but nol all
property used in agriculture is sales
laJ&lt; exempt.
The buyer can only claim
exemption (on an exempt item) by
filing a Unit Certificate of Exemption or a Blanket Certificate of
Exemption with the retailer. In
Ohio, Lhere is no"sales I8X exernp-

tion number". This is commonly
misunderstood, with many farmers
giving their Federal Employer I.D.
number or some other random
number just to get out of the store.
Call or slOp at Lhe county extension
Office for a free copy of the
newslelter.
Saturday, June 6, will be the
first day for the new Chillicothe
Farmers Market. The market will
feature 100 percent locally grown
produce. Growers who wish to sell
must be a member of Lhc Southern
Ohio Fruit and Vegetable Growers
Association. For more information
on the association contact Carl
Cantaluppi at the Piketon
Research/Extension Center (614 289-2071).
Plans are being fmalized for the
annual meeting of the Gallia County Cattlemen's Association. This
year's meeting will be Friday, June
19 starting with a carved roast beef
buffet dinner at 7 p.m. at the Holiday Inn. Dr. Tom Wagner, Edison
Animal Biotechnology Center, will
give a shon preseotation about animal biotechnology and possible
applications 10 cattle.
Advance tickets are requested
and may be purchased at the County Exlt.llsion Office oral the offtee
of Allan Boster, D.V .M. After a

long , hard spring this will be a
good evening out opportunity.
Starting on May I some changes
were made in the traditional exlension staffing. Hal Kneen, extension
associate agent, with primary
responsibilities in Meigs County
will be helping _witll Horticulture
related subje ct matter in Ga lli a
County.
During the next few weeks, he
will be in Gallia County on Tuesday. He will concentrate on lawn
and garden questions with a special
focus on the commercial vegetable
sec!Dr. In return, I will be assisong
in Meigs County with some of the
more traditional crop and hvestock
in1erest areas. During the nex t few
weeks, I plan ID be in Meigs County on Friday. The telephone number for Meigs County is 614-9926696 and Gallia County is 614446-7007.

By RICK GLADSTOI'iE
AP Business Writer
Even If the recession is ovcr, u
was still a week of retreats by a
range of companies Lhat see sanctuary and shrinkage as a parual solutton 10 the pam of a slow economy.
Olympia &amp; York , the once mighty landlord that has reshaped
urban skylines on hotll sill!" of Lhc
Atlantic, sought bankrupll, coun
refuge for a swalh of its vast proj&gt;crly empire, paralyzed by more
than SIS bilhon •n debt and the
slump in commercial real estate
demand. The company has been
seeking to seU some assets to pay
debts and please skeptical lenders,
but Lhat wasn't enough.
Exxon Corp. abandoned Lhc Los
Angeles region, the world's smgle
biggest market for gasoline. and
announced I ,000 job elimmations
in its domestic petroleum operation. The global oil giant called Lhc
moves pan of a broader SU11tegy to
pull back from activities where it's
not making enough money.
General Motors Corp ., suuggling to reduce bloated manufacturing operations, disclosed it was
abandoning 13 of the lead ing
automat.er's 20 basic car frames.
That news, disclosed by GM Chairman Roben C. Stempel 10 secunties analysts a week before the

Money Ideas

Construction
likely to rise
By Stan Evans
GALLIPOLIS - One of the
strongest sector.; through the f U"St
quaner was housing, as low mortgage rates, Lhc prospect of a tu crcdu
and Lhc warmest
weather recorded
since the 1890s
spurred activity by
home buye~.
Wc suspect that
some of thi s
strength came at
the expense of Lhc
second quarter as home buyw.; and
butlders g01 an early stan 10 the spring.
However, any slowdown should
be temporary as m&lt;ngage rares begin
another move down ward as the year
progresses.
Also, another flurry of activity
will likely result from an actual passing of a taX bill with credits for ft~­
ume home l&gt;uyers. The non-residenttal construction sec !Dr is much
weaker and continued its slide.
Still suffering a hangover from
corn men::ial overbuilding, this secta
is expected to remain weak despite
stepped-up spending by the government on public constructioo.
Recent prices oo olher local stocks
are: AEP 31 1(2; AKZ043 l/4; Bank
One45 l/4: Bob Evans 171/B:Chrysler 18 3/8; Ford 42 l/4; Ctty Holding
20 1/2: GM 39 1/4; Goodyear 73 5/8:
Star Bank 36 1/4; OVB 39.
!Mr. Evans is an Investment
Broker for The Obio Company ia
their Gallipolis offitt.)

annual shareholders meeting ,
marked the lll05l specific delails ro
emerge yet about tbe company's
future prock1cL plaDs.
Tbe large number of frames ,
known .. plalfonns, has been coosidered a key IQllOII why GM lags
competitors in redociDg vehicle
development Cl05tS IIIII tbe umc it
takes 10 bring a Dew car to mat.L
GM's North Amoian aod!l!D()Ii•e
opentions lcm S7 billion I&amp; yu-.
Ecmcaic dutlloanl:
The wce.tly li•y of swistic s
from Lhc goowmtlll portr3}ed at
econ omy of moderately ristng
prices, bcallby iooC&amp;SLS in shopping and improved demand for
America's IIWiufactwcd goods .
This Sl&gt;ggcsaed 10 a IUilber of pn-

vate economisu tlw the Federal
Reserve bas Ocxihlity 10 CUI inlaest rates funba ia case tbe umid
recovery from ,.. tseiot• fallln
The lll05l !ICnllinizal numiJer of
the ~ed: WIS tbc Labor Departmmt s rqJOrt tba •ODI'•tu pnccs
rose only 0.2 ptraJII iD AJril substantially below the o.s pettat~ rue
in March and 0.3 paant rise in

Fehruary. 1bll c~w,,,..,., t:Ob:t:iM
that an ioormc:d appecilr for goods
and 5elwices was ••erg iDiblion,
the feared syndrome of spiraling
prices.

As of Friday tbe Fed bad llllldr
no obvious roowe 10 rase aalit, but
so me economists speculated a
change CXIUid come DCXt Tuesday
when m imponatt Fed poliqmaking conmi!w COJt&lt;DCS.

c-itoc•:

More shareholder fireworks

could fly at an nual meetings for
American Air lin e parent AMR
Corp. Wednesday in Dallas and
General Motors Corp.
Friday tn Lafay ette, Ind ... .
DetrOit's Big Thrtt and their counterparts from Japan will confer
Monday in Chicago, the second
Installment of their politically
charged summit in Tokyo last January .... Economists will be scrutinizing the government's ~pons on
April housing start s Tuesday,
March trade deficit
W•dn•sday , and weekly jobless
claims Thursday.
Tickrr:
The company that tells customers "don't leave home without
11 " has bee n telling merchants
wbere those customers go. Chargecard giant
American Express Co., pressured
by Slate authorities, agreed 10 quit
proY~ding mformation about cardholder spending habits and
lifestyles to markele~ wilhout peoples' permission .... Hasbro Inc_
will be doing its pan 10 narrow the
trade defiCit with Japan by pun:bastng the Nomura Toy Co. for an
undisclosed sum .... Coca-Cola
Co. Lhinks it can beat the real thing, :·
rcponedly asking its ad agencr to ·•
concoct a new slogan .... Un1ted
Prtss International worke~ praytng for a muacl e to save the
bankrupt news service may have
found 11. Evangelist cable-television entrepreneur Pat Robertson
agreed 10 buy UP! for $6 million.
He pledged not 10 com(J"onlise the
news report's integrity.

EARN STATE FFA DEGRD:S- .la5oa Buder, len, aad David
SpiiJ'Iod, juiars .a H••u• Tnu Hig~ Sl:bool, will receive the
Slate Ftt~ Fanatn ol A•• iu Dqrft in Production Agriculhlre 011 J - It M T1w Olbo Slatt U•ivmity, Columbus. Some or
t~ir projrds ;.t.k bftl altlt, hay, con and tobacco. Buller is
the- ol Ami ud Ed Betltr or Crowo City. Spurlock is the son of
Brenda liild Earl Sp..tod. also or CroWD City . Tom Pope is FFA
advisor.
.'

Smith completes auction
course recently in Missouri
GLOUSTER · ~l&lt;:ogs County
nauve Jobn E. Siruth. of Route 2,
Glouster, bas JUs:l returned from
Kansas City, Mo .. .,.here he suecessfully compld&lt;d the COUTSI! m
auctioneering and aucuon uks
management .u Mruoun .~uwon
School.
He n=V(l(j his diplom;l and Lhc
honorary title of Colorw:l along
wtth men and auueo aucooncr"
throughout the Uniltd Stues.
fie part•c•patcd 10 scll.ng

numerous public auctions 1n
Ka~ City and nearby communitiCS in Missouri and Kansas.
Subjec ts covered Included
an11que auctions, livestock, furm ture. business liquid ation s, real
estate, rart com. auto, machinery
general merchandise, all types of
'state aucuons, and the rapid fire
chant of the toOOcco auctioneer.
He 1s curren tly serving his
Jpprcnuccshtp under Dan Smith
Auctioncui ng of Ranne.

•
•
•

FmHA guaranteed loans
available for rural housing
GALLIPOLIS -Lawrence E.
Bess, county supervtsor, Farmers
Home Administration FmHA),
reported Friday F'!'HA can assist
low and moderate 111corne familtes
obtam conventional ftnancmg
Lhrough the use of Its new guaranteed rural housmg program.
.
Thts program helps prospecuve
home buyers ovcrco'!'e two of tile
most common barners to home
ownership; down payment and
monthly mortgage costs. Loans can
be made up to 100 percent of market value and amonized over 30
years at a reasonable fued interest
rate.
The maximum adjusted income
limit varies depending upon the
number of persons in the household . For example, Lhe muimum
limit for a family of Lhree persons
in Gallia County would be
$30,700 per year. For a family of
four person~. the limit would be
$34,150. The 1118ltimum loan limit
under Lhis program is $67,500.
Loans are made in rural areas to
finance the purchase of a new or
ex isting modest hom e. Modest
housing relates to the loan limit
rather than square footage limitations. Rural areas include open
country or communities having a
population not in excess of 10,000
I

•

or not in excess of25,000 provided
it is not a metropolitan statistical
area.
Applicants must demonstrate
repayment ability and acceptable
credit history in accordance with
agency guidelines . The list of
approved participating lenders
under this guaranteed loan program
can be oblained from any FmHA
Office. FmHA is required 10 act on
the completed application package
from the lender within 10 days.
More information on Lhe program
can be oblained by calling the Gallia County FmHA Office at 4468688.

..•
'

'•

CHARLES L HIVEI..Y

Walburn, Hively retire
from OVEC on May 1
CHESHIRE - T-.ro cmplo,us
of Lhc Obio Valley El«tric COIJII)-

BEF common

Freewlll BaptJst Church. He and
hu wtfe , Wanda, reside at 570
ration ·s Kyger Creek Plant in Johnson Rtdgc Road, Gallipolis
Cheshire rcUml May ,_
Walburn joined oVEc in 19ss
Retired are Chlrtey L Hively, as a guard in Lhe personnel departmainteni!IC&lt;' nmtanic B, and Ray- ment and in 1959 be transfcmct to
mond L. Walburn, instnlmcnt the labor department as a laborer
mcdllnic A..
In 191•. he transferred to the
Hively jliDcd OVEC in 1957 115 formance department as an inslruI Jeborer in the labor dtt* bDtilL
mem mechanic helper. In 197S he
In 1966 he uansfcmd 10 dlr mia- was p~omo_ted to instrument
tenance department as a mainte- mecbanic C; m 1980, to iiiStrllmcnt
nance dqaubtilL In 1968 he wz mecbanic B; and in 1985, to instnapromoted in main• nww:e ... , tonic mt.nl mecllanic A.
C. In 1974 be was promoted to
Walburn is a native of Mason
mail'lll:ll3Jltt me • t.r B.
County, W.Va., and he served in
Hively 1 native of Nonbup, the U.S. Army from .19S2 to 19.54
served in the u.s. AnDy from 1951 He 1s a member of the P""'·- ·
-··-uy
to 1954. He is the pastor .u the Cbun:h of the Nmrene, Welbwit
Campiign l'nlewill Blpis! Clourdl and his wife, Miry, reside • 639
and 1 member of the Old tc:yl"f GuMS~ ~

•'

...
·'·,

••
··,

::.

::
'•

II:

i:
:

,•

pa: ·;

stock is authorized
for repurchase
COLUMBUS - The board of
directors of Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
recently aulhorized tile repurchase
of up to 500,000 shares of Bob
Evans Farms, Inc. common stock.
The liming of purchases and
actual number of common shares
purchased will depend on market
condilions.

RAYMOND L WALBURN

NOVEL WAY TO ANNOUNCE - Wben that blessed event
happens, there's now a novel way to annountt il Addalou Lewis or
Sprmg Ave~ Pomeroy, bas started a "Special Delivery'' yard decoration business. Her live foot colorful wooden stork can anaoun~
to the world that "il's a boy", "it's a girl", or " it's twins" wbtn dis-

played on the lawn. Lewis delivers and sets up tho stork for a &lt;by
at S7-SO plus a mileage charge, and il can be ten in pia~ for an
additional $5 a day. Mrs. Lewis, who crratod tht stork, can bt contacted at 992·2924 or 992-6971. She's pictured here with her
granddaughler, Niki Lewis.

,,

:•

.; :
:::

..

:1:
·1•

:::
·~

.: ,

·,•

·,' ''.,
..t:l

]~
......

r'

�Page

02-Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

11

Public Notice

18

Help Wanted

May 17, 19!12

WV

tor Sale

Gtorgoa POilabto SowmHI don'l

haul your ?oao lo lho mill lull

Tilt11

01 ...
100, 304o675-7611.
•--AI--~
... ar.r ,
$' ".,_ .......
2 houHo In Mlddlopott. Law "' AnoP Dotlvotyl Coli....--__
NO - n po~ment bocauu ... 11111 lOng '-. zklnjj ptleo
DRAMATICALlY - , -"'
btlow propat~r voluo duo to 12,7!10. 7::1M-.JD All ·• 1:Jt.
owner moving oul of 1rU. 111 I ·. - PM, "M BS J4a.
person with money WINSI
t

Give pilna -.one In my homa
to
bllcllnnera,
advanced
studente ~ eduna. Atao teGh

cording I 1-ng. H lnlor·
eatod, plo- cafll14·11112·!1403
Public Notice

PUBliC NOTICE
County and one vacancy
The llgh.... _ . , . , ula5o In lhiga County.
Gollla I I ., " 'a a-d n... appoin-lla wil ba
ol Alcohol, Drug Ad ' II
Ia tha Bawd by the
and llenlll Haelh lei ol
County Cam·
Ia appolnllad by lie Dlr 1cl ar
..._t.dlft
of the Olllo Dep t Ml of
Menlol Health (C _ . , .
lot'laM), 1M OlreciDr Oi ...
an eppllcation
the County

- ,.,.,ncao,
tfterlpm.

eo••• ,.. •••

In G111fa, JocboR Md

yr. old). I

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

Holzw lh ~~~ C..llr for
all your 11oM ond eBort ill
r-llingiiHIN=

Divialon of ow •

·

day "Natlonol Nur. .a
Dey"
We would like to
say thanks to aU the
family and friends of
ROBERT CUNDIFF
or all of the kind
nd generous things
you did In our time
ol sorrow.

15 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agee 2~10.

Before, after IChoot. Drop-lnt
welcome. 114 446 8224. New In-

Thank You,
The Cundiff
Family

Thnks to all for the

care, prayers,
flowers, cards,
during my
hospitalization at
Veterans Memorial,
Pomeroy and

Riverside
Methodist,

COlumbus.
ELOISE STILES

CARD Of THANKS
The tamlly of LULA
BARNES wlahu to
thank V"ICiory Chun:h,
the mlnlatera, the
alnger and her ecco,..
penlment end all of
the contribution• of
flowera.
We would alto like
to thank everyone
who attended the
lu nerel aervicea. We
feel thia wee e won·
derful tribute to her.

3 BR, ' btth, new
woodbumlng ftrtplace. I

Business
Opponunlty
INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.

...-y-

HEAl.nl UNITED
IIETHOOIST CHURCH
. . _ . .... for
IIUII..DMl
El£CTRICAl
-- of:
M'AOVEIIENTS.
HEAI.nl utiTED
IIETHOOIST CHUACH
3411 South Third SlrMt

'Campolhlva
Emplo yme nt Services

Ouollllod

AleiMIIIP.O.
10641Galipolla, Ohio

The family of MARK
BEEGLE expre . .ea
thank• and apprac:l•
tlon to all of you who
ahared In any way
during Mark'a Ulneaa,
hoapitalization and
paning.
Special thank• to
Chaplain Marge Cut·
ler, Dr. Beect. nuraee,
aida and 1taff Ill Sl
Ann'a Ho•pllal and
Ewing Funellll Home.
Vary apecilll lhanb
to R.v. Jamea 0.11
and Rev. Roger Glwce.
.nd the many ret.
Uvea, nelghbore and
trlenda who At with
ua, 1ent ttowere,
brought food. donetiona to variDul charl-

tlea. Gldilon ..._,...
BlbiN, and M81ated
In

meny diHerllll

waya.

.

Paul, E.llaan &amp; Nield

Wehing Your Phone Call ll Enloytble Full Or Po~·TI.,. Jol&gt;
Dlopio~ Cllrlatmu Or Dtcor
And Ill
Home P1rtiM No ln-

vaalmtnl. Collocilng Or bOil-·
Pnv Eam Up To 30% Comml•
alon • Eam A Trip To Hawolll
R-lvo F- -hlnclaa By

Hlnn.Cia'*&amp;
W.fii'Rolllll

Vandlng Route: Local. W• Have
Tha Nawaat Maehlnu, M•klng A
Nice Study C.ah ln.:om1. 1-

Counlty Home, Soncf H• Rood,
8 rooma, 2 bMh8, 5 .ere land,

Puppies lo giwuway, Britlany/Baaglt, »f-6~1.
Rabbits. 304-675-5551.

6

Lost &amp; Found

llodical Capr Clootl
llodlcal - d Conaopon·
Lost ' ~ In Rio Gro- Bilek Mnce S.rvlee hu opportunity
And Whl1a With Brown And •nilable at I Polnl PINNnl
Bladr. Face. Hu Collar And lllodloal lacllly lo phoiocop)'
While Aaa Collar On _ Answws
To kame: · Wimpy·. H Found, -leal toCO&lt;do. Po• limo doyo
In P1f - . Tralnlr~~~
. , _ Call 614-24~. 114- 24
JMO"idld:. Clerical Dr mHlcal
245-&amp;152.
otftce
expwilnce
l'lelpf~o~l .
F~d : Bible on road near Rol- Pl .... CIH 1-801)..352.0635,

304-f7W!i)?.
WANT£0, EMERGENCY REUEF
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
WORKERS Noodtd AI A c..,.
munttr Group Home For Per·

(GIIUP"O'ItiBidwell). High School
Oegre•i:a~•~td Drfvar'a UcanM
And
Driving Recard,
Good Commun~Uon And Or·
anlutlon Skilll, Punctual And
bit To Work Aa Po• Of Aloom

RAHGERS
Manual, Including Spec~ Found: black I whb tlf'fiar, Gomo PARK
Wonlano,
Socurttr
liuliona, plu. aal of small dog, hu brown eoltar, llaintana,..&lt; Elc. No Exp.
Pomeroy vM:inity, 11C-ti2-3489. Hoeoouty. ..,, lnlo Call 21~
liNMII"Eii. 8710 II A.ll. To II
LOSI : white, tarnatt dog. brown

p.II. 1 Doyo.
pateh on 1811 eyW..; black.
milt. ~· while eMil, Mi• Hill Pllrt-tlme cue m~nagertteachtr
fw OaaJaiH lnd~o~~tria, Pt.
Rd ., R.c1ne.
Pleaant.
Dearea requlrlld.
lost : checkbook, K-Man In GU- Some trawl. lend rnume to
Iipolis, or Pomeroy vicinity, ,.,_,.nal, 1005 VIrginia Ave.,
Eliubeth Farrar, pluM Nlum, Hunllnglon
WY
257114.
important papers anek:aaad, 614- IIMcliiM' Moy 22. EEO, IIIFIYIH,
1185·3954.
JTPA ...Jning.

Lost: mans· anvu, brown I
whfte, ~ at 1uedon by
Pofnwoy Home I Aula , ......a,

7

Pain dma

~

lltore mer·

fl ..
wti1Hn15 lllloo Of lluot
Oolllpollo.
Work you'N own day
hou&lt;o. No -

OliOII.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Big Yard Sale: 1275 TMM Run,
1 llila ott AOUia 7, Friday &amp;15,

S..turday ~16, llonday. • lo ?
Uwn
Mowen.,
l=umttwa,

sw.. p~~r.

i

Roqulrod; E1ptritneo Worltlng

PereoM With W.nlal
AlltardiUon And Developmental
D111bUHI• p,.farred. Hours: ld

With

Sehodulod/Aa Ntodod SolofY'

$4.50/Hour. Send A11urne To

Cocllla Baker, P.O. Bo• 804,
Jackoon, OH -0. Doadllno
For Applleo'""' 81211112. Equol
Oppottunhy Employor.
WANTEO: Full.mmt Uetnood

PracUeat N.... Fot Two Community Group Homn For Per·
aont wtth Oevalopmentll Di•
abllll... In GaUia County
(GI IIIpoli&amp;llldwtll).

Hours : 1·

DP.M. OR ~11A . MJ3.9 P.ll.
(R...IH) ThUfo; 12-&lt;IP.M,

FrUS.I/Sun!Mon; lncludll 2Hour WMkly Staff MHUng; Or
ld Olherwl" Scheduled. Curren!: lPH LkanM (Interim Parmh
Acceptable),

OOPNESINAPNES/Or

Sltlt

Board Approved Training, Y11id
Drtnr's UcenM, Good Driving
Record And WUUngnea To
Dtt.. In congntad Trt~ftle

Good Communle~tlon
And
OrganiZIIIon
SIUIIs,
Punctual, And Abla To Work M
Pan Of A TNm Required; E.J:.

AI'HI,

All Y~rd S..l•s Mlllt Be Paklln
Adnnce. OEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day bator. tM ad l:a 10 run.
Sundly edition • 2:00 p.m.
Fridoy. lloncloy odMion • 2'00
p_m. Sa:turdly.

Otst.a,

Car

JotMr

!loulh Hoe-ck, -

Oolhn,

time

. -. Non.,.._._
ury. Send name, Mklrw•.
phono: lo ICC 51e PO Box 23

Yard Sale

Po•·Timo Poroon HOurly •
CommluJon Rat1ll SaJu llluat
Bo Fulbto, Sond CU.

pileonlt: 51211112. Equol O,por·

3 Announcaments

I unity Employer.

..._..ry,

IIIII&amp;

Bid ,. Malflodlal Church
7:00 p. Nightly
llay 22, 2t, 24

.,_,t.

;tl

SpeclallltliPtlU HlghUy

11

WHO PASSED AWAY FOUR
YEARS AGO, MAY 16, 1988
My Father's way may twist and turn,
My heart may throb and ache,
But in my soul I'm glad I know,
He maketh no mistake.
My cherished plans may go astray,
My hopes may fade away,
But &amp;till I'll trust my Lord to lead
For He doth know the way.
Tho' night be dark and it may seem
hat day will never break;
I'll pin my faith, my all in Him,
He maketh no mistake.
There's so much now I cannot see,
My eyeslghfs far too dim;
But come what may, I'll simply trust
And leave It all to Him.

He.lpWanted

aEDIW

1UISCIIP11011ST

:.~-,:1

t!

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

..... 'II

...

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

Wanl:ed:
FuUallme
UctnMCI
PriCtlclll NurM IDr two community group homn tor pareone wHh devtlopmlntal di•
ebUh•
In Galllll Counly

llpollo/Bk?woiQ. Hou"'' I·
or •11aml3-lpm (rotaiH}
,... 12-tptn, Fri/Sai/Sunlllon;
1ndi.d.O :1-ho&lt;or w11kly oloH

Aov. Colvin lllnnla.

HASKELL
BLOOMER

~*fane~

Working Whh Person
With Mental Rtterd•tion And
DINbilhi. .
118, c/o Galllpollo Dolly T - . OMaloprnantal
825 Third Awo Galllpollo, Ohio Pratarred. Salary: $8.001Hour, To
St1rt. Send AHum• 'To Cecilia
45631
Biker, P.O. Box &amp;04, Jackson,
OH 45640. O.adllnt For Ap-

IN LOVING MEMORY OF

Uppal 3G'a. Bomorvilll - J ,
:104.. 75-30:111 "' 11W431.
M.ad baook Drive. ana floor
P'fln, 3 beclroona, khchen,

Ftom $199.00. LompoL l.oilono,
Acceaorln. Monthly t'ayments
Low As $18.00, Call Today FREE

- -, 1250 Dopooll. 814-3117·
- . 11'14-36l-7110.
l.ty Nmodaled 2 t.droom
huM, in Addison Hsld• Tart.
·~4. 114-11112·1225.

Ike efftc:ilnc:y cottage. unique
ltld btouiltu?. 304-175-41042

~
~

I

446-4511

meeting; or 11 otMrwiM
echedu"IMI. Curr.nl: LPN lleanM
(lntarlm Permit 1Cceptabl1),
OOPNES/NAPN£91 or Sla1e
B01rd approvecl training , v11id
drlvtr's 1-... good driving
~ I wllllngntu 10 drtva In
congnted ll'lfllc lrlll, good
communication and org~nlza­
Uon Nlllla, punctu1l, and 1ble lo
woOl; 11 pan of 1 tNm required;
experec. woftl:lng wllh per·
10n11

whh mental retardatlon

tnd dlvetopmenlll diubilitlea
prer.rr.d. s.tery: $8.00/hour, to
ltlrt. Send NMUM lo Cadlll
Baker, P.O. Box 804, J1ckson ,
Ohio 45140. Deadline tor A.p-

plieonlt' 51211112. EOE.

417 s..IArt., Galpallo

New Htnn eru Brvecf Run
ANd, priced rMAONibte, call

Real Estate

lor lnlormallon --34611.

31 Homes tor Sale
lui

Temporory
Services

ELLY

Situation
Wanted

btiho, ?amlly
gorogo, OCto lot,

4 L j """'· 3

room,

pooiL

Somarvll&amp;e HMtty, 304-t1S-3030
Of' 1575-3431.

10 ICrtS, 3bdrm hOUM, ~m,
utility building, 1mi. trom Mid:dlaport . Handyman 1P8dll, tow
lwanlits, 216-195·2399.

Rl. 2 Nonh, 3

17 A_ MIL 3m I From GlillipoUs.
Cor Cod Hom1. 3 or 5 8r'1 LR.
D. . K11chen, 81th. Full a...

mant, CA , B1m, C.raga. lmmadlattd Posseukln dM-44&amp;-

Vinton a,.a, 12 aeree ot 01k
timber, 2 bedrvom, all Mectrk:
Owner, 114-:?81-9001.

01157

t tndlnerenl
15 Hebrft monlh
I0 8f1dge term
14 l(lnd of mattwlel

19
21
22
23

CIII'IOeSUI'II
City 1n Ne¥11d•
Ash 1T1p
WhalebOne

-

24 Model
1fi IOod ol

86 110 MCOnd'

er Monotonovs. dul

119 Rubbw tree

._joining Polnl • - llntondna • 1101.• "" J - -- -11!1

A---

lnjj To

~A

aii .

IFioiZioaoi-

Kanl"'*f So . . ....,.

'3 c"""
Monlh 101

·~-

99 Fu.tener
101 Remained

28 Sleoflp6ng
29 Old name 101
I oky&lt;&gt;

Bound
32 Consumers
33 North ~mer ~an

J()

rail

103 Evatu•t•
104 bpklslwl
105 Btl ot ,.,.

106 Ptoceed
t07 RoberlsiD
1~ Br• IIUCICSenl)o
I 10 P•cel ol '-ond
I I 1 9~_., deity
112 tid()

34 hplre
35 Blrdl . bea~ t

tt3 RIM and tall

37 Part!

1 15

39 YoungSi er
40 EICI.pllll
41 r Usjt18f
~2 AcTual

Hypolt.ll~

"'""

---

IBR_oc_ _ _

Unl-,

of Plio - . -

·

.

48 War god

47 ShoclPing area
4! Olslurbance
S.0 lllsplrll 811
S2 Heal
S3 ElllotiiO
Nobtflman

57 UK PrlncMS

lXI Hot crou 121

CobtMf

I t'~

Close by

126 Ritionlll
127 ~· tNt Hme
128 "Gentlemen

.........

I JO Cr".v&amp;tl
132 ()epefted

Sfl Medicine po&lt; 11oo
S9 Oblloat loo

l3l WMYing m.ctllne
t34 Madem ·s

&amp;0 Mother

counterpart
13 5 Abound
13 7 TUfnt 1round

82

S.Mball !lt l

64 Ship bo tlom
&amp;6 Sodtum symbol
88 I(VII J Ill

., ,_.,

"""

139 Wooden 'IIMMII

140 Run Milt)'

tosn.r

11 H__,._, wr. . tht

1torehoUses
75 Lllnded property

146

n Appoftlon

M«&lt;ltenane~

148 J.ckltl ~~ ·
tSO~Inrlll'lk

1S2

M•eanwv

153~1

as wriii Bn

15" Brother ol Jacob
1S6 QlllahofM f\II MI

157 RMM!nt ., . . .
158 II In detll

'

.........
..,_
ae w1111e -

to v•1twun;

ttw.....,
.,.,_
., """""'on

111Goltl
20 StumbN

109

25 Want

112 foott.ll ....
I 13 ThoM p.!pl
,,. Aelh
ltl5c..r
1111 Shlldow

......

27 Rented
2! Pertorm•

. .CIWitiDn

120

40 llblflt8

t23~ruftl

41 ·· - SIPglthe

·~ ·c-

..,-·_

-

eon. on ...

45 Smlll r~tano

121 Hllr'VISI

47 CateMr '• gtowoa

,,..._

49 Woody ptant
1 Sholl bottomt

133
,,,.._

diU~

54 Or•t lJioe
59 Mllehlet : hUf1

eo P•tner
~

Endeawor

15 Young boy.
81 8Msl d burclen

89 Fllhar

70 Restoration
7:1 Aodl:l

14 Mllh t•m

· ~

131PIInlf
138 Cut* mftll'
140 , .... -.ppar1l
14 I Wild ,..,..
t42' Blr~r• Nlrnl

able in Southam &amp;

Central Ohio. Chooaa
houri. Oli:M Na-

Business
Training

BOGGS AUCTION

,... ~--&amp;11nC1 .......

...

New and u..ct Merchandlaa.
E....,.,.ing for everyone. $125 Drawing .
Cuh or Check with propr I.D.
DoorPrlzu
Auctioneer David Bogga, Lie. No. 4596
Gatlipolt., Ohio &amp;14-446I it:enaed end bonded In State of Ohio
:Mot NllpOflaibt. for eccidenta or loaa of property.
JFe • Mlllla auction, houaahold auction and l•rm
-alan. Hauling aarvlce ovallabla.
Building For Rant (great for yard aalea,llu
merbla. .. Celltor detalla~

missed by wife,
Virginia and children.
---~~---- --·

$35 . 304-675-1224.

W•t•rbad
euper
~Sie 1
headboard, 6 dr1wen,
IG
r1ils, good cond, $150. 304-57'8-

2962.

Whirlpool harvest gold atova
con1inuous

cleaning,
$225.
080. Whirlpool frost lrH while
19 tu ft ralrlgarator w/ Ice

PICKENS FURNITURE

P.M. Sunday 12 Noon • 5 P.M .
Movia Posl•rs Wanted, Lobby
At 141 4 Mtllt Oft At . 7 In Cen· Carda, 1·1hHis. Dwight 312·266lanuy.

Sat. May 30,
AM1992
10•• 00

lmo.IM-446-20'19.

~..:::. ; :..~~;, l5ft r·

Located at the Carmel

I

Alit•
Cliolmen wo 4~ 11.2oo.
V.A.C. Cue MOO. Maney Htrrla
Pony $450. 711 dloc: 3pl $450.
Bhp BIIQga new onalna $250.

1-800-537-gs28.
E•cartiM bike, $25, 814·992·

U.M. Church

Rac'lne, Ohl'o,
To con s ign ca ll :
C . T C h a pman 949-2932
Brent Ro s e 949· 2744 or
Rev. Kenny Baker 949· 2229 .
C .T and Larry Circle are gathering
Pot Hole from around the county &amp;
township rd . to auction off .
Watch for ad next week in
Sunday Paper.
Dan Smith ·Auctioneer

614·949• 2033
&amp;

Licensed
Bonded in favor of the
states of oh·lo
W.Va.

&amp;

IL.-------------------.J

2428

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

• •

1151, ll..on WV.

46 Space tor Rent
40148 building tor r.nl: S..lur·
day thru Thursday. 614-446-7750.
Commercial Spt~ca To Rent In

Oak Hill, 1,100 Sq. Ft 614-446·

Country Mobil• Homa Park, Rt.
33N., under new managamanr.
Lots, 185; home rental•, S2l5;

FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE

IN CITY

State Route 7
Near Ohio

lf7 Wanted to Renl
Hlc:a, cloan 2 or 3 bad""'"'
houet, preftr private alltlng,
114-992·2428, ,.... mllllgl 11
noanaw.-.

GALUPOUS CITY - Ia where you find thio
attractive and well maintained home with
ftnced in backyaro, alum. Siding, two
bedrooms, ona bath, a largo oncloM&lt;I back
porch lor those wann summer nighll or onjoy

To $48,900 on thia ni~ 3
bod11&gt;0111 vinyl oidld hoiill wlfh 2 baths, IMng
nn., dining nn., !amily nn., den, heat pump.

the central air. Also a one car garage with

On 8.2 acteo mil. Call today lot oppantmo~~

lflaloll-1 Contract lor the Purchaaa ol •
. . , . . _ dellad Dec tmbw 11, 1111.
lllolllla ..._, 1M Folrmont14x12

Second Floor Apirtman1 For

new Ieneta. Large bam in good cond1tion,

FinE -uracturad Houelna Cracllt Corporation haa

o1

ad .,. dHcribad mobile home atd rolatad
rita ond -iona beceuaa 1M Buywe have
3 3 t ~in the - • ollhl t.z.lllnelllltMnl oontract.
Sdj rt ID the Bupr'a right ID cure 1M dalaull(a) on
. . - e e l , tha mobile home end l'lllllad ..........
.ad
•ai-o, Firat lllllnuf-ed Houalftg Ctacll
CGcparaFion will oonduct • pub??c 11111tion of the ffloblla
proi*IJ purcheHd under 1111 ralttll
ifll' &gt;onE contracl the
will ba hold •t Jl111
Homa Solea, Ill Orab, Ohio 11 10:00
A&amp; - ..., 71, 111112.
n. - - bid Firat lllllnulacturad Houlling Creel!
CwpwAo• wil Keaplla lii,OOO. Firat Manufactured
""' Je CMclt Cotparallon r_,_ ... rlglll to nlecl
_, bid at Pile .... which II daenla lnaclequar. ~rat
•
I t ad Hauling CMclt Cotporatlon ,... . . the
..... bidet Pile .....
-,... bid (unlau Firat lllllnufacltrad Houalng
a.11 CWponllotlla t1w hiai?Mt blddarl wiU ba Prt•bl•
ito 01 . . . equivalent !Mtafora accaplebla to Flrll
X
I 'I"IIUiouling Clalll Corporlllon.
- l a d part111 may contact: Judy Prllcholla,
A 1 11 11 io"' Co ot&lt;lltlllorBo,Ara t 11111nu"~banltradNHoualng
~ CGrpordon, P. 0.
x 135 , y, ew Yorli
1·2212.. ' 5 L • 1 .-333 t•n

••II

1443

River Plaza
Call 446-9786
or 992-6637

115 ACRE FARM
BASIC TOBACCO
QUOTA 14,6611 LBS. FOR 111112111- A pluo for
any lam&gt; foday. SIBil h~ghway, rulal walor, liko

, ..

Atlractive and neal 3 bedrooms,

mol8. Only $43,100.

Ft. Dac::ka, L..v•IIB, HNted
Ctelr Span Rl. 32, Jackson,
Ohio. 711-1113 ..732.

Bq aa on Contract: Cecile A.. tanh i and JohMy 8.

7

ranch style home 'With carport, nice yard and

Only $48,900.

c

:.::r

3
.':;.... sun •. In·
cluda lox Sprtng And Mtl·
3

OPEN : 7 Days A Week, 9 A.M. · 6

Al10 trailer sptce. All hook·ups.

LN11: L.A., One B.A., Bath,

Kllchen WI Slov• I Ratrlg.
Wtt•r Fumlthed. No Pt11. Cor·
nor Second &amp; l&gt;t"'!,. Gtlllpollo.
mo. Por IIDnlh; uopooll R•

qulrod. Coli 614-446-4241, 114448-2325, Or 814-4411-442.1.

storage and much mora . Call tor more into.

f444
7

51

Household
Goods

40' Hot Point Whhe S.II.CINn·
lng Range. Excellent Condition .

814-446-31145.

5 Pe. Dining Room Set, $20.00

C.ll 814-245-g504 Afl•r 4:30P.M.
Air conditioner, electric cook
stave, athool deakt, i1wn
mo. .re
for
parte, other
hou11hold Item•. 614-eU-l756

5

Happy Ads

PRICE

BEECH ST.- Appro•. 24 acres With a beautilul
two Sloty colonial homo ovonooklng Pomorny.
Executive olyle home With lom&gt;al ontry, family

cenbalair, basement, 2 bama and ~uch more.

room wlfireplace . formal dining room,
basement has rec. room with atone fireplace,

26

in-ground~·

BUDGET MINDEDI
$28,000.00 buyo this neal remodeled 3

18'x65' si lo, unloader, elavalcrs, modern

oyotem. Beautiful tann aaning. Largo 01ghl

garage . Needs tender loving care, good

room house, modem in avery way. Four

badroomo,

full balhs. Now family room,
'2211261 with btloony. "'"'' of oodar. This .... n
oH. This nooda to MN aoon as tobocoo baaa is
two

appointment.
1436
BEAUTlFUL ALL BRICK HOME oiruatad on
50 acres mil with 3 bedroom•. hving nn., dining
and family nn., 3 baths and full ba""'"onl Heat
pump and oontnal air. 2 car attached and 4 car
detached gal1&gt;')8. Asking $124,900.
1412

~LAND

AND LOTS---.

NEW USTINGI· BUILDING LOTSIII

2 cat garage. Many mora

romenibte. -ICed to a low pnoe ot &amp;138,500.

1413

bedroom home on over 1Y, acras in Raccoon

Township, baautilul grounds. Can today! 1431
ON THE RIVER!
1.4 acrat and 2 badtoom home wilh 3 car

involved. One of our batter farms. Call tor

Merchandise

inveelment property. ean now! $13.000.00
1438
MERCERVILLE AREA!
3 bodfi&gt;Or11 home with laiJIO oal~n kltchen, also
la~g&lt;~ laundty area. Anachod 1 eat garage,
cellar house . Comes with 1 acra of ground.

S..O lhisl $24,900.00.
1432
NEW USTINGI- TAKE YOUR PICK
You can pu~&lt;haN Ph11 19B3 Schull Mobilo
Home with 4.8 acres or owner will sell

soparaloly epprox. 2 acre lot Wllh metal
building and bam. Mobile homo consisto of 3
bod11&gt;01111, living room, bath wlgardon wb and
all appliances. CioN lo Holzer Hospital. 1434
PRICE REDUCED $58,1100- 3 yr. old homo
with great room, 3 bod11&gt;0r11s. 2 balho. ~Iehan
with chefl'l cabinolo. Heat pump and oontral
air. 2 car garage.
1405
7

4 lots being each approx. 1 and 1/3 acre .

counly water ava~ablo, road fronlage along SR
554 . Callloday lor mol8 inlonnahonl
1441
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL - Nice lovol
bu•ldmg lot '100x150 on Debbie Dnvo. C1ly
odlools City walar and oowago. CaU today.
1438.
31 WOODED ACRES 1n Soulhwoslem
Schools a111a. Already has water lap. Six miles

1428

Restricted. Rural water available. Green Twp.

PUBLIC
IUC!ION

1417

SOWARDS RIOGE • 47 acres mn with 3
bedrooms, 1'i, balh. brick homo with ?amily
room. din~r~g area, iving room. ldtcllon, one car
garaga. 10122 patio cedar hnod cloaats and
mora. Only $57.900. Call lor more into. N22
1aracwr..

lmlll. _ . 01114 - · 6 piiSI back chailt. marilla top V&lt;llrian
- . ...nd 11111 &amp; 4 cllai~. mahogany dlak, ltlttty lillie,
"*"''Jany lillie &amp;6 - back chilli,
aaitllatoBia.pboio"d Pllnled. ~--poinle&lt;f. Pancyi11&gt;n bed.
llliQICChol""""'"""
IeWing machine. 2pc. Moha&lt;living
10DnsUI18ionqwaarllnm.Zpc:. mape bed11&gt;01111uite,large blanket
.na\ mlljllo-.5pc....,; dOl otto. sola. recli,.., RCA c:o1ot TV.
~ 8 &amp; WTV. li&gt;ILtway bed. So"" Ccld $pol refng&amp;flil&gt;r.
SellS Cald Spol18itlg8tlllo". Ja' electric range. 36"
p.-. sot d Homer Loughm china (Pnscilla pottem). Fon"ia
Anllica'l po111m _ , 50 pi8CIIS. &amp;quare call8 plate, II&gt;Und call8
jlld. ...,-,d disl1. 1/( 7&gt;. builor d1sl1. ~ With aNOr,
~111j1U111111oit.
111111U1pieca, Vlfginillloae
..,. IIWI told piola. Fi11 King, Htouql.lln, muo w....
D 1, · ~-&amp;eNtlyblolsanlJmllloit,cabl:otgo....
111ti11ut olllr pellltfiS. r ..ta, Fenton, 11111 Ol
8rlfW 01um .... """ ...... q~... gllfln-. ijue &amp; whiPo
I , . . , , . , ocfllopof. bllllls. tmaloer. magazine IICil, fon, G
.E.
ll:llli, ciWI - .IIIIO!illat.lawn ,_IOid much more.

...,.ant ••

•
•

•

.•'
. .
.

•

•
••

-·-and

-and

Happy Birthday,

JANET S.
JEFFERS'
BIRTHDAY

'

l

building. AJI this and lots more induding 4+

acres.

N4&amp;

IN CITY SCHOOLS is th1s attrn c t111 e ranch

7

Nea( Crown City has 1Y. stoty

room . 1 car do?achod garage, shop bulldinv
and shod. AM on 17 a&lt;:reo of wooded ground.
Aslcing on~ $35,800. A good buyl
1428
NEWUSTINGI
ONE ACRE AND 1101111£ HOllE with 12'&gt;&lt;24"
addition of 2 roomo. Complete~ lumiohod. A
great place to
houtekuping on a
budget. You
went to 100 thio .
$12,000.00. Cell
1440
Russell D. Wood
Mom, we wont to
wlah
you a vary
HatiPY Birthday atd loll
you how much you'ra
loved on thla eptclal
day and enry day
throughoul the y-.
From your eon
deught•, Dale Tribl~le I

I -

And within minutea of Holzer Hospilol, t....utilul
home will 2 :.S baths, 3 bedrootTt s, large kitdlen
and dining room, lots of closet space, largo
shaded porch, detached garage and slorago

I
MINI FARM

•r
aiCI PEIISOI AUC'nOI CO.

ElliE WATTERSON, SHERIFF, COMMTTEEMAN

around house. Full basement and more. Onfy

home with 4 bedrooms, kitchen and l1v~ng

ADCIW.N C:OJIIIIVCDD

FOR EUL.AH WORKMAN ESTATE

Situated on appro )I . 1 and 1t2 acres. Rock
Splingo Rood . Asking $59,900. WMI take MH
lor down payment
1345 ,
CREW RD. - lo thio unl&lt;lJO conlamporaty with
3 bedrooms. 2 batho. family nn. dining area
living tm. and kJtchan . Two docks all way

You're looking
fine at 29!
ShtWJn6 Annelte
Love Y,.,
&amp;

-hor.

ERNIE WATTERSON, SHERIFF, ADM.:

baths. wrap-around POrch . several buikfinas.

Baby.

'"=

..,.,--

countty

charm. This home has it all.
home,
completely r~~furbished has 3 bedrooms, 2

lnd

-·

furnishings.

For Lease
Comm-lol Building, 12,000 Sq.

FOR AhtfA LOUISE SHERMAN

Sadly

home

Call alat 2:00 p.m., 304·773-

y.,...,

'"""'·oak

•
•

He made not one mistake.

9580.
Sl..plng room. with cooking .

RT.35

_.,m._,-

153 ltlltM ,_.
155 CMidNft Cftr

·-

And pain it 1111 He'll mlllra.
Through Ill the WIY, tho' darlliD tM,

~=~':ZIt $120/rno. Galli• Hotel.

I

SERVICE

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

by the mist wiiiiHt

Complet•

Newrueac:t

EVERY FRIDAY 7:00 P.M.
Cclnalgnment Tabn day of aale from 10:00 to 6:00.

r(;-==~~:::

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION

t8hp riding lawn

114-992·2187

lllaauliiUI Sollols Dlk kitchln Cllbinal original finish will slag glue
,.,. ,. 11&gt;p. - 1 cupbolld. wash stend, 2oak drosan original

SP101

147 Make . . .
1489Md

CompUI• Contultant With lndYitry Experience Can Provide
Suppolt To lour Company Or

14

LAYNE "S FURNITURE

Oliva St., Galli poUt. New &amp; UHd
furniture, h ..ters, Waatem &amp;
Work boots. B14-446-315t.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

2125.

LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER
ONCUftN AVENUE Ill POINT PLEASANT, WV.
liE ESTATE OF THE LATE EUL.AH WORKMAN I
liE PE11S0HA1. BELONGINGS OF ANNA LOUISE
SfiERIIAN PLUS IIJCH MORE WIU BE SOLO.

l.MrnlftQ

151

114-446-()3110.

:"":.111

Condhlon, call Evening•: 614-

mower $900. Garden lawn 18hp
9 078
m_r,,:Z00.31M-8 5-3 .
2
Air
condhlonoto,
oloclrictl
SWAIN
~
rudy
for
hook·up,
114-11411AUCTION &amp; F\J RNITURE. 12

Hourt : Mon-S1t, 9-5. 614-4415Lofoyel1a Mall: 2 Room &amp; Belh, 0322,
3 mil•• out Bulavllle Rd.
117SJMo. 2 Bedroom•, 2 Bath•, FrHO.Iivery.
t4$4001101ft'm1010. Dopooh Roqulrtd. 114·
441·7733,114-446-4222.
Nice sofa $60. Tan apeecl bike

Modern 1 Bedroom Ap1t1mant,

lype huer, uMd one y..r, 61411411-3014 """ epm.
11111 ROd CliiJ)tl, Voty Good

Saturday, May 23, 1992 ·1 0:00a.m.

131li'MII~

144

$11111. Caiii14-11112·77B1. EOH.

8

1 old ,.tr~pra~or, runs good;
•xtnt liD bicycle; small chest

7398.

Kenm01e dryor, heavy duly
Qr.clou. living. 1 and 2 bid- plus, 4 years old, very good
room lparlmenta at VIllage cond., 614·949·2833
Mtnor
tnd
Riverside

At&gt;artmanlo In lllc?c?laport. Ftom

Refrigerator Llkt New, Harvut

Gold, $250; Retrtgtrttor Side By
Side,
Coppertone,
$175;
Refrigerttor Advacado, OrHn
GOOD USED APPLIANCES• Frott Frta $150; 20' Eltetric
Washare, dryers, refrigerators. Rang•, Uke New, $150; Ken·
rtnge• . Skaggs Appliances, mort Washer $95; Whirlpool
Uppar River Rd. Besldl Slone Washer, $05; Skaggs Ap.
Crest Molal. Call 614-446-1398, pllancas, We Have Mo¥4id To: 16
1 sa• • 9 9-3499
Vln1 Street, Gallipolis, 1514-446_·_~
____ _·- -- --

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Sentlnei- Page-03

ACREAGE - From 1 lo 5 acres in city ochoolo .

ttl~

121Ctlm
127 eo.-.

S3 StitcheS

7P.U.

54

Household
Goods

Household
Goods

to Rio G10r1do. Call Now.

A; . . . . . .

"'-""

s

Ulllhloo Pold, 114 448 4416 AHor

e.a

31U..._
33 Wlnl ... vehk*
38 Go by ••••
l8 fabtlca.llld

122

FurnlaMd Efficiency t20 Four1h
Avenue,
GeiHpolla. $185/Mo

PUBLIC AUCTION AHD CONSIGNMENT SALE,

_.-. -le

1 ..

14 At.:t..u Gllbett
1~ SI\Mtt tree
16 Qulddy
1T OrlldoUI

t:J ReyiiiO

52 Soup

u

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

-end..,-

., Ga.,.,..
..._

94
10
91Kn:ldi:OIIilll
17 Mothlr ol Apollo
100 U.tlnow 10
102 M8nCI wttlt DIJIII!RI
10&amp; Uhcllrpounct

12 SloiCCOf

81 lmlt81M

U S Pose lor portrait

e1 Musk:

8 Two-toed &amp;loth

9 Shellllll'l

s.e.u.s

73 Public

71

5 Pedal ••tuwnltllrl
6 Teu1onK Getty
1 Permit

. """""

H I Europe-., ltnch
143 District k'l

lf"'bDD

17 . , . .

""'......,

70 MOC*
71 " Warrled Chlklrlllfl ' '

__
.

76 l .m.tum
71~ ..

Fumlltted apl: CAtCH, ulllltin
pd. Prlftla, quilt. l1.w46:2602.

49

41 Houses tor Renl

Columbul Day

1 19 Nft0111¥e

2

11000 Of PUIUC AUCTION

......,.,

ll l Jog

u P11tl orm !

s~

of ocean

..u

1r1a,

Re nt&lt;: !s

llft ... lntenance And Problem
Solvlllg. C.W. Cltlrk. B14-3"n2111.

Immediate work. Supplamtntal llall &amp; home
care auignmenta avail-

·

·bh DR.. -.cJS.

71

10ut....tng

....al ...
lht
Me..
-'::;·S Inc.,
u&lt;, 2Q•, M
lhlll

304-675- IL---Fr_ltitri..;r..;s,_9_-s._ _..t

8

lofOto7p.m.

nso

111111
IIIIo, .. .
Rolling Am. ~¢ 9 J
•
1001&gt;50 Ead1. ..

OOWII

oaplltl
95 StM POSt
1)8 Moo.Jnt81onl ol

Ohio

Ylnton,

.

1"15-2J22.

W-

Row ..! goH courHs,
privata pool. Spring rates
av-"'•· For lrtlonnatfol
lllld/or rtstnatlon,. cal

,.,.. - .

~' ..rw. ""·

""---·
-r...
._
Loto In Goillpol?a ,..,. • -

Organlzalk&gt;n. bporlonct Wllh
DOl, Wtndowa, UNIX ~worka
And llo.l Bwtlneu Software
lloaolollzlng
In
Socurily.
lfpgredle, Training, Prrtanta-

IWs To '31P•1t.
lPN's To '21r.lt.
RRT's To '22 Pwit.

nished,

51

Fumlat.d Aptrtm•nl, 1br, nan Dining Room Table, Naw, 6
lo Ubr1ry, ptlrklng, cenlrlil heat, Chairs, 2 ::xtr1 LNvM, 614-44,lir, ,..fwencea. 1!114-44e-0338, 1408.

Roome for r1nt . weall or monll'l .

Now
rt11rvallons
lor sprilg ond summer•
51Hps 6, ovtrloo~ng
OCIIIIP, liT' ltsl...-1

- - Lono, 10-nc• ,.
..- . -~2103.
J ...,_, lrollor mooUy lur-

7

illblo.~

159 MIX
l60 BllllerO shot

ShfiOnO Is Ill

91

• • .,.., "•ller

Apanment
tor Rent

Nice 1 BR, tumlstled kitchan,
2 BR .,.nmento In Mldd'-"· cerp.tlng, Wiler paid. Deposit Housahold tumlshlng. 112 mi. maker, $250. 080. 304-675- 18f1 boll, motot, 1r11ler $1 ,600.
Jerricho Rd . Pt. Pleasant, WV,
~polo 140. "" blko s2o. 304·
MWIJ rMtOda5ed, tow ulllltlat, toqulrod:I14-448-IMI.
4894.
call 304·675·1450.
no pete, $220 par month,
!1660.
dopoolt roqulrod, 11Hi2·238i NJc. one BR unfurnished apt.
Aanttl SurpiUII dolhlng, attrt·
dtyo
Range, r.rrlg. tum'ad. Water,
~~~v~,..,.!:2P1::~; ::::
VI"RA FURNITURE
!llttil&gt;aa pold. Oapoeh roq"od .
52 Sporting Goods
2bdrm. lfllllf', $200 plua 114-«1-4345 after Sp .m.
BARGAINS GALORE!
304-273-1615 eoo1 o1 call lokon
utllhloo, depooH, lbdrm. duplox,
614-446-3158
Ruger Redhawk, 44 Mag; SI.W from bill. No dN.tel'l Pl.....
1bdrm. apartment, no pets, One bedroom apt tor rant, 304686, 357 Mag; S&amp;W 659 1 mm. s.m Somorvllf•"• eamltaua•.
$225, UUIIIIeo Incl., d-H. 114- 175-2218.
LIVING ROOM: Sofa And Chair $350 Each, 1600 For Any P1lr,
11112-2211.
$179 And Up; Coffee And End
OM bedroom ept partly f~o~r­ Tablll $79 And Up; Swr~el $900 For All Three. 614·245-1504 :.~ r.::'~n ~:.!!'!Z:\:
Ahar 4:30P.M.
niMed, 304-175-1972 alttr 5:00 Rockers $79.
Sondyvll?e
on1eo, Fri. 511 "·
Sun Noon..p..,
:OO PM.
Pll.
AntiqueS
DAKOTA DnEAII
HOMEs
On• bedroom tumlshld apl, BEDROOM, Bunk Beds $99 53
Drawer Chest 01 Bl n· A t1
5'10 M 1 51
Jeftenon Ava.
$200. plus (2x6); 4 4.95·
.
Twin
Mattress
If
IVIf
"
ques,
an
'
~i~,'~.~~~~4~~o;1Lo'
ttac:trl~1 304-4175-2406 btloro Draw.,.. $4
Pomt Plaasan1, WV.
199 Sol.
FumtatMNI tplrtft'Hint aval..bla s,oo PM.
Buy or sell. Alv•rlne Antiques, Blooming olzo plonlo for eolo.
by
WMk
wflh
cooking
DINETIES : Wood Bar S1oois 1124 E. Main Strael, Pomeroy. 814-1112·2095.
ptlvllog•. !104-882·25611.
45
Furnished
$14.95 C26'·l T1bl1 And 4 Padded Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
Concfllo &amp; Plosllc Se~llc
Chairs $129.
p .m., Sunday 1 :00 lo 6:00 p.m.
Rooms
614-Q92-2S26 .
Tonko,
Jot AorollonJackson,
Tonko. 01-1
on
Ev1n1 Enterprises,
CHANNEL lWIKER RENTALS

lor Rent

35 Lots I Al:..age

5

2 Aooma &amp; ltth, Downstairs,
Clean, No Polo, Quill,
Roforoneo And a.-h R•

42 Mobile Homes

Anawer lo Puzzle on Page A-6
8.4 MistAkes

,em.nc. ,...

'

n.o...nc~a.
1a1t 1M •• -ca
Endo·
..l Coli -

=·

Apanment
for Renl

.-mg

'[L__::=S~U::::::N::::::D:=A::::Y=::P::::::U=Z=Z:::::L~ER=--.Jj.
ACROSI

houla,

t~· no lnmct. pets, 614-192·

I
Coonawcla? l,,_ - .
Solo. :10140, To - - .
lnjj Fadcwy AnoP n.

mll11 11otn Pl. Ptl,

111 brick, 3 bedrcaaa, full
baHmlnl wlfamllyroom, 2 ctr
go~ on ana oc10, ahown lw
1
ntrnent only 304-ell-32411
a ar &amp;:00 PM.

2btinn.

.-poet~

.......

Buildings

Twa Pcplor Httghto Acldllon, beaut~

!2 Pur1flet

12

uhhamia"-d

Business
7

3Q4...175-1'l46.

In Kygor C110k School
liJIIII:rtct Vou Pey Eltclrlc.

NEW Color Calolog. 1-800-zztl.
:
dlnlnv
and '""':lc~·­
6292.
rvll.. Aa1tty,
3030 or
flnanc:log .........
115-34:n.
,_~
monlh,
any "" 22 Money to Loan
Need otter, 2123 Sprue. Awt,
Uo,_y To Loan
compWe ldlchen, bet ment:, lola l n - - . 1..aoG-238-9759, Open From 9 gtrt1go, Somerville RooKy, 304- owner llntnctna at - - ,.,
monthbolyoall-. ........
615-3030 or 175-3U1.
A.ll. To 10 P.ll.

aona With O.valapmenlal 01•
abllltln In G1lll1 County

lingsvina, Yay 10, 3Q4...61S..48n

34

3QO.

aflor

- . . on S1nd Hill Rood, 2
bMi mns, garage, rat, $250.

J

June15 l1t t41 2201.

Holdlr111 A Homo Porty Or A
8oo1o Par?y. CaH 814-446-112111,

B11gll, Malanle,
Bruce &amp; Jeaak:a

8401.

ComplolliJ - - : 2 F'*
Bllho, 3 J.-. Bod,_, HVAC, Now Carpol. Ani,_

Ntw Commercial, Home Units,

Clrc ..vllle, OH 43113

DodgePianF.W. Dodge OMaion
1115 Dublin Road
Colutabue, Ohio 43215
- . . ........t bi-.o
tnay aecure coplee ol .,..,..
paead Conhr:t Dacu-la
Ito• lbe office of the
Archil8ct on II• following
baia:
1. Copill of the Project

For by and

!IJ;!m.

68 tere country ...... with 1ttl MilD lllr"a, Z . . . .
pond. Ylnlon. Colonlol ?ann SfT,JI»MOr howe newly ,.... cd1led. 2 a.rge
Ull II ....,_. ..........
bamt, aumm. hou-. garege,
lludlo, hunll"'l cabin. By -""· l
ld • I • 1
Agentt welcome, 3'%. Dan Mobill ~ GN11 f , X
Bftc:k, 6'4 388 8210.
llany AI -,_ .... Acto, 2 bedroom lrt1llol, deck, 0.. ,..,_. CliP 1 • •

3114-4115-3171 oflor 3'00PII.
VENDING ROIITE' N- Equip- In -n Point P...,nl, WV. coli
ment, 50 Locations. GNal In- 3114-e~ b t l - 1:00 All
como, $5,500.00. 1-800-93:?-111119 ond 5:00 Pll.
Ext.l7.
llacloan ...... lhrtlt bad-,
now Uchon, btth, utllhy """"·
WDLFFTANNING BEDS

TEN BEIDW
23519 US ROUit 23 South

Gollipolla, Ohio 45631
(614IU6 112011

huabend, Ruaael.

Vending For Tha 21tt Century.
Pay Pt\ones !lor S.le. 1~226-

»H7~1109

ifJS.3431

~

44

qu?NCI.I14_.441-1511.

hDme tor ,.nt In town,

1300 month pluo dopooh.

-.

~-~~~=m.i'iiat~

800-9~5-0354.

Diltrlcl M1nagar

11a11t T. Epli~itact
423 Sec'nd Av•ue
P.O. 8oa 1064

Steffel; eon, James;

Apply In

Or Send Resume To:

omc-ol:

Loved and aadly
miaaed by Yom, Ruth

All'!:'!:'
· llalllpollo

wil
ba ,...;,ad at .,. office of
lie Archi1ec:t unli Thuracley,
..... 21, 111112 at 2:00 P.M.
Bidl r I CI had lfllr ..a liM
will not ba KCapt.d. Biela
will ba - a d 1ft privata
&amp;Haion. Bidding r•ulta
may be t I ad by Ch..ch
Tnn- aftar bid -lng.
Propa•td Connct Docua
...,.. fflay be uotninad at

,;•

lncanllvH

15 Upper Alwtr R01d

45&amp;:111~5141446-1201.
Seolad lump Mill bida

The - l y of STELLA

And

TEN BEIDW
Ohio RlvooPiazo

SiclliiKI

6l4-696-1293

SAUNDERS wenta to
thank all thoae who
.... of auch gNat help
to ua during her lit....
and deeth. Thenka to
Paator
Conn and
Paa tor Alvla for their
vlalla and conaollng
wotda, to oil our churdl
family and to Brenda
Pollard for her bMutlful
alnglng, Bill Uoyd'a
mualc and tha ..,Ieee
of FNCI, Joan and Gene
Wood. Alao thanlla to
tho Scenic Hilla Nunlng
Home ataff, to 1M nura•• on 4-Waal, Holzw
Medical Centw and 0..
VaiiH. Thanb to oil
who vlaltacl, aant can:Ja,
brought food and
prayed for ua. Spedol
thank• Ia Penny and
Paula .~eM.
Jean and PU Pullna,
e.twla Seunclan,
Jan.- w. Seunclan,
Gl•llddtll:f •• lnd
Gnoll..car.ndchl-

~ON

6og ID Oowiooge ond
Sp ICiftCitiOI• pnp lid by
lloll&lt; T. Epling, Archiliact·

BARBARA CURREY
L1ll us 5 V18rl

Wogoo

Benefit•

II" p rt, Ohio 45710

Loving Memory of

~·
:t l!llil

,iiliitil:-,_

1113-G!II.

home,

133'Mo. 114-441-4706 After 8

5711
porch, central hHllalr, etowe, I J;;d;;;;;iiii;;t;;;;;;;;bWijiNiiiil
- . 811 Ill! •
Attantlon! Styling Salon For tofriG-or, Appro Grovo, 304- I'
Sala! Prime l.Dcafion. Cell 114- 575-2145.
448-4803, 114--4355.
Appto a., .. u Hundr.d• of Comptn• NMd 3' 'aom 1 garage, city •••· 33 Farms tor Sale
Home Workers OuarentMd In- . - lo .a, flnanclnjp
come. Easy Worlt.. Rueh your ava~s-rvll?a Raolly, a Acrn W/2\'r. 0111 - .
or 17W431.
nam• •nd AddrMI S.A.S.E. 110 3114-e
38~1 2 Bllho, 8oft~, tnd $1.00 lo; D • A Supptlao BEAUTlFUL HOUSE FOR SAL£ Buloalngo,
Co!tar,
Dopl. C PO Box 1443 Fakl&gt;om,
Wl1h!WII- reno ....,._,
Hlolotiool
Conw
!AI
....
Oh 45324
Main St. Pl. ,...~...1 w. ¥a. Canle. l - - . c l.

IMTATION TO BID
Notioe .. r;nn

In Memory

Fuml-Anll

2 llory

..,.. • dopoolt roqulrod,

Galllpolla, Doposlt Roqulrod,

=--

reeomrnanda th1t you do ~­
lllls wtlh people you know, tnd
NOT to 1and moner lhrougn the
m1ll unlil you hne lnveet:lgttld
the ott.rtng.

Announcements

::l2·

32211.

21

Of CORI IBUft ily

Public Notice

2

m-5354.

Financial

btd-.

3 Bedroom HouM, 2 Mil•• From

ar, _,. ,_

a,.-~tw

GaHipollo And Galllpollo dlapon, 814-11112-418&amp;8.
· 114-446-1817.

~-

X:..~~

-~

2bdnn. mobl.. hom• In Mid-

-

~C..WA., IAII . .
Tbnough Oott, ...... . . _
0!75.
lila Schttltz, 1klll, I

1..,

2 B.droom Home For Rent,

,

-F----z
1._

11115 -

11137.

!?'J -

~. n:=~.·. ppl"::::: -.
Dial••-:;, , ) S'
T.V.,.._
!:
. Bilow lluon City, caJt 304Dtyoo: 2 • -

..... 17, 111112

Boa

-mtnl.

Pant Toddler Cart~,l14-44&amp;-e22l

•••llera .nd would weica.. llllnori1y. conaumw •
...... "ffllliconta.

H23

toom, clnlnvtoOmllomlly """"
combination; td1chon, utlllly
room, all one level, coveNd
patio In btc:k, ptlviiCJ ?anco,
gartlgo, ohown by oppolnlmon?
only 304-t75-1238.
3 llodrC&gt;Dtn, btth, _,.,,
dlnlr~~~. lull
pot&lt;:IIH,
datachad garogo, fruit 1-o,

Homt1, Good Loca·
614-446-1171111, 814-1192·

l14-!192~ 3'187

-

11180 IUCic?y Mllll Z ...... . AI

brick nlntenanct frN OW, CA 15dD paail. lllil - "'
home, 4 bedrooms. UMII living Part.r. C. IM •
•• • Ht

Solo, olio-. chlldcartl. ll.f

¥...,.

~"'
cl•na on the aa.ff el

old,

all

Mlae Pault'e Dly ea,.. Cenlar.

414 Su and Avenue
P.O. Boa SIC
Gllipolia, Oll45Gt
Gallia County, two
l•l=:-: 441 3CQ:2
n..
d .. atrlvlng to
claa ulat In Jecuon
Mainllln I bolenced ,.,.

Card ot Thanks

(20

,L

.

2021 MatquaHa Avo, B Jl'

lully lnautH, 114-192·71i72.

llolga Counlill (10 , ..
-~ CUINIIIIy,-cy ula5o on llw a - . 1 -

1

1851.

Tr.J.5775.

lAwn ,_,., and odd Jobo.

ol Alr:ahol, Drug • ' ' "on
and llenlll HNth . . . . .

•ent.IUon

114-1141k1014

Lawn ~~ • ?rimming,

1/J

O.orioold"'l

ltldrm. tri--llvel houH, 1 yra.
old, ~15/mon. , S350 dapoalt, 2 Mobile
P
Mtll St., Middl•pof1, Ohio. lion. CaM

""' R-.
""~
- Maol.
- J ....
bt- Out
-

ment, gas hMt, Union AYt., ~,:J.~;.
S22,QOO, 30'-7'73-5962 or 304- IM-441..QI11.

home. 20 yura experience,

).ad Gd•J•cban M•la• ao.d

s.m-(4 ppchl

992-3187
2 oloty, 6 r0001, btih,

will tau cora ol oldoriy In thO!r

-·-by

~D'b,:~·c::; ~~~

'* - •-

Hive room In my home tor -'·
detty malt! or fern.le, couniry
limoopharo, plonty of TLC or

Public Notice

44

for Rent

RIVIf.
P!Citma. Rtfotonco Roqulrod. 2 Bodroom Troller, Fot Ron! On
RUlli, Galllpollo. 304-417&amp;-511JII.
- • 1 e, l-1243.
a.ctnn. ...,.. In Rutland 2 bedroom, 121&amp;0, 1112 bttho,
~mo.
plua lltillti• &amp; AahiDn Uplond Ad, 101lumlohod,
~. Nfer8f'ICII raqulr.a. no lnakfe pels, 1185. ptus
utiiHin, f?OO. dopoaH. 304-175a..cty Ju,. lnl, 114-992-7503.
40118.

In 20'o, 107 l..ocuat St. H;,d;. 1500 C1?? -

call 30WJS.1i57.

42 Mobile Homes

Z'lledl eu:: Hou11, Down Rt.7, 3

2 bedrooms, corner lot priced

Sunday Times

Pomeroy-MI

4'1 Houses tor Rent

32 Mobile Horna

31 Homes for Sale

Wanted to Do

May 17, 1992

Broker/OWner

. 446-4618

home sitting on .80 of an acre . Ha s lamily rm
and dining rm. combo, llvmg rm .. 2 bedroom s.
lg . bath, custom built kitchen w1th o 3k cabinet s.
ba sement has large bedroom on ground level
Beauti ful mtenor and landsca ped grounds.

good garden 8188.

1415.

CLOSE TO TOWN - 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
living, dining, family rooms. nawral gas h..t.
oontlal air. Aslcinv $74.900.
1424
NEW LISTING • LOQ HOME ON SR 1
overlooking the river. Uving rm ., kitchen, 2

bedrooms, bath. Asl&lt;illQ &amp;25.900.

1410

Chel)'llemloy
Molgs Co. Agent
Eve. 742 -31

Patrick A. Cochran
Office Mantger

Eve. 446·86~5

t.ch
'

-· .... . . . . . . ..... . ......, _

... _·-- ·- -

$59.900. 1427
HAPPY HOLLOW RD. 1s tt.a1 and 1/2 Oioty
log home with basement 3 bedrooms. 2 and
112 bath. family 100r11. livillQ room. ki?chan. laun
dl)' aroa. skylight, salallito syslam . covorod
poidl. hoat pump. cantllll air, 12'ol2' building
and much mol8. Call lor detais.
1425
7

FARM ON LONG HOLLOW ROAD - Thie
homo has 2. bedrooms, 2 baths living ""1
dining nn., kltchen. sc.- lroni poidl haai
pump, cant air. 40'1&lt;30" pole lhod. All Pilla and
more on 107 acraa11111 . Only asking $59.900.
1423
NEW USTING. SPRING AIR - Ia 1hio 4
bedroom, I bath. wood and brick ranch with
family room, dinillQ room, den, lull baaemonl_
fireplace, and gas hot water M•t, butler'•
pantry. encloaod front poi&lt;h, baau?iful bow
window wlwindow ,.., and mucll more. Only
$32,000. Call today. II won, lao! long at thll
price .
J . Merrill Carter
BrokerfAgant

Evo. 379-2184

1446

�Page-04-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel
B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

54 Miscellaneous

LOCATION : 114 Autumn Hill
4 miles SE of Rio Grande and 1
Gallipolis along St. Rt. 35 .
I
35) Watch tor signs.
TRACTORS : 1981 Ford
1971 Allis Chalmbers 175

56

10 Gil. tlth tank, llaht• &amp; llfttr
ayatem, loti txtrnl a lropiul
fiah, IXC. fair protect, $80. IM-

1-800-548-1R3

NutrtUon ProdUCis
fuluring Amino Acid Body
Building, •lght loss and tat
bumtr tormulu. Anllab~ u clualvtly at Rllt Aid Pharmacy.
The ..,, way to diet.

Ganuia

low hours;
I
WD-

Good uNCI Broyhill living room
auha, 3 artra chalr"', like naw, 1

FARM EQUIPMENT:
Holland dolly wheel
mower; 24" bale I
Bush Hog mmoAr·
disc; JD 3·14"
blade ; 350
TERMS:
are licensed

Llrge chair, 81'-Jt2-2'UM.

.,.,.o,

KILLS FLUSI Buy ENFORCER
FIN Kilton. tor poll, homo &amp;
yard . Guar.nlled ettecllvel Buy
ENFORCER at Btum True
Vatu.

Slott,

11

Wftl

Main

Street, Ch•ter Oh. 6. Valley

Lumbar &amp; Supply Com., 555
Parit StrHI, Middleport, Oti.

E. HAMRICK
Sale conducted by:
REAL ESTATE AND
AUCTION COMPANY
513 382·7793

KILLS FLEAS!
8t.Jy ENFORCER Fl.. Klntrl For
Pets, Home &amp; Yard. GuanniNd
EHacllva! Buy ENFORCER At:
Browns Trutlworthy Hardwtra,
Slat• Roula 180, Bictw.ll, Ohio.
Klngslza watarbed. 12 drawer
double ptdltlal. U ka new.
Ros.mlrrorad hNdbolrd. 30f..

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., MAY 23, 1992

10:00 a.m.

Located approL S11dtslro. Rodnt, Olio from St. Rt. 174
toke Co. Rd. 21 (Bash• R.I.) to Cannel Rd. Watch lor
auction signs.
"Antique or Collectors Items"
Marble top dresser, high back bad, dresser, wood
ironing board, booksheW, Rev. Hicks large desk, oak
office chair, oak table wipull out leaves, double brass
tubing square bed, hand crank corn sheller, wood &amp;
coal cooking stove wlwarm ing oven on top, Iron
skillets, sausage grinder, R.W.Kirk, corn jQ_bber,
rocker, stands , chairs, Iron pot, Jelly &amp; tlmall
cupboards, white treddle sewrng mach ine. high boy
chest, metal single bed, dresser, wall mrrror, oil lamps
&amp; lanterns , &amp; etc.
" Household "
3pc. bedroom surte_
, baby bed, wardrobe. Hardwick
gas range, four lull stza beds, warm morn1ng coal or
wood stove, dressers, chest of drawers, m1sc . pots,
pan s &amp; dishes.

" Mise"
t Jot roug h cui cherry &amp; oak lumber, Dog &amp; dog
house, 5 roll barbwire. pile concrete blocks , cement
lawn benches, books, books &amp; more books , his book
Jrom hrs minister worl&lt;s, step ladder, misc. hand tools,
lawn cart, rotc tiller, green acres rrding mower, prle of
lance posts, saddle, Stihl &amp; Wright chain saws &amp; Etc.
"Tractor, Cattle &amp; Etc."
9N Ford tractor. bru sh cuner, t cow &amp; ca H, 1 cow
not Jresh, &amp; 3 tall calves. trarler, rabb11 cages .

Owners: Rev. Carl &amp; Maxine Hicks
Dan Smith • Auctioneer
614·949·2033 Ohio Lie. #1344
John Smith • Apprentice
Auctioneer #SS18
Refreshments by Carmel-Sutton
Churches
Terms of Auction
Cosh with positive ID.
Announcements by uudioneer toke
predidence over printed mutters.
"Not responsible for ucddents or
loss of property"

Pub-fie
dfuction
Saturday, May 23, 1992 at I0:00a.m.
At 309 Fourth Ave. GalnpoUs, Ohio
Across from Galha Academy High School
The personal property of the late
Lenna Brumfield
Household, Antiques, Colledable
and Misc.
25" Color TV. So fa a nd Match rng Chair,
Fruitwood Cot1ee Table . Duncan Phyte dining
table with 2 extra le aves lyre shaped legs with
matching 6 charrs. Duncan Phyfe But1et,
Duncan Phy1e Chrn a Cabrne t. S tep end table,
occasional table . 3 swrve l rocker like new, pair
candlestick lamps , Has sock , hand stitched
quilts, 3 pc . bedroom su rte . Sea r s co ldspot
upright freezer, auto . washer and dryer, 14 Cu .
Fl . Frosllree refrtgeralor freezer, Frigidaire
electric stove, Maple krtchen table with 4 chairs.
20 Gal. cast iron kettle, spider, Eureka upright
sweeper, wicker potty chair , clocks, pictures ,
hanging lamps, bed linens. milk glass items,
assot1ed knick knacks , Jewelry box, jewelry,
vanity stool, two bood Gibson air co ndrtioners,
Kitchen cabinet base, lawn cha~rs. step ladder,
rolling pin, pots and pans. occupied Jap.an S &amp;
p Shakers, Electncal K1tchen Appliances,
Shaler 23 Karat Deer Vase. Shafer 23 Karat
· gold Pink vase, Valmont china Royal Wheat
P~cher. Prism Lamps, large wall mmor,
· assot1ed glassware. aprons, luggage. towels
and washcloths, Fenton ware, Table flatware,
wooden base hurrican lamp, use carpet. and
much, mucn more.

EATS

CASH

POSITIVE I.D.

Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer
614-245·5152
Lie. 361 5 and bonded.
NOt Respoasiltle for accidents or loss of property
'

'

Saln Psrta Service

HURST lRACTOA SALES

28 HP 4 WO 16995; 20 HP 4 WD
$5,995, Routt 7 Nor11'1, Msrlena.

614-3'111-4151

3855,

19!11 John 0.... llodol B, Alllo W1nted: Us.ct lawn Garden
Chalmera, H.D. 6 Dour, Hyatar Farm Equipment Duy1 Sell ,
Eloctrle forti Lift. 614-446-23$8, Trada, Alao R.,.lra And Tun•
Ups. Farm Tractor Supply, 614-

285 MF Tn1ctor, Whh load11,

$9,650; 180 IIF Wllh Loodor,

=·.e;:o·

S2,m. &amp;14-286-ssn.
Chatman H~

Allie

Tr11ek

T~·:ko. S3~~

o.a.o. 325 Amp. Gu Walder
1825 O.B.O. 614-367·7031.

Cadet pulling 1r11c1or,
winner, &amp;14-'Jit2·3020
..v.ninga, 614-992·33'4 days,
OallleWiber.

Cub

proven

Farm~ll Cub 'Mitl Cutllvators
Billy Mowlf, 1 Row Tobacco
S.ftlf, Main Line ROiotillar,

Tobacco Framn, 614-388-9680
Ahar6P.M.

251-6040 Stale Routa 1, South,
Gallipolis Ohio.

62

wanted to Buy

I "w'"a_nl_od.,....lo-,lu-ao-:"'ro"'bo_«_o:,.q_u_ol,....o,
Gallla County. 814-446-2109.

63
e yNr

Livestock

liN!. 114-446-3025.

71

OPEN HOUSE

Autos tor Sale

SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1922
1 P.M.-6 P.M.

"'"· body good. 1600. 614·9493080 after Spm

home with ~inyl siding. dry water and sewage
amd a 20X20 storage building on a 83X90 lot

Middleport, OH

Routo7 North -In front of Baum
Sul1dlvlslc1n. Follow signa.

1871 Marc.dn Benz, 280 SE,
naedt minor body work, naar
mint Interior, 614-992-TJT.J or
614·992-7938.

POMEROY·OabornoSt·2bdnn, I balh, 5 yrold

205 North Second Ave .

5j)m

~m Olda Stallonwagon, good
condlllon, ntfl ..1 Michelin

"'"'· $1100 OBO, 114·11112·5530.
WTt Malibu Claaslc, 2 dr. 75%
thow room condiUon. Low
mlln. $2995. firm. 614..g92-3481

t 225

Phone: 614-379-2784

Ask For

JeH, 814-371-2611.

441-9752.

Want Mlton County Tobacco
quota wtll pa~ 25 cenla (now)
par lb. Morgan'• Woodlawn

198!1 Buick Skylark, V-6, loaded,
hklh mlleaga, moving l must
uTI. $1250. 614-24S-S003, IHVI

mn••'ll•·

ONLY $29,000

HYSELL RUN ROAD-II a k•IChen w"h lois of
cabmets 1s whal you need, th1s home IS tor you
It has 3 bdrms . a large kitchen and a large living
room Comes w 11h 314 of and acre and a patio

Sllirloy Loeber will btl your hooleot to
you
through thio oxocullve home. Thlo grocloua lnlerlof
INiurN a oplrol otalrcuo ond tho mater btldrhu o droooing room btloldoa a lull both. Thlo Ina
h011o hu a 22x44 ln11round pool, oil 011 21\ "-tlluf

MIDDLEPORT-3rd St-11 you need lo be dose
the school this is the house tor you Thts house
has 2 bclrms.large living room and newer wall tv ·

POMEROY.Oak St·A t 112 story frame home
that has one bdrm down and 2 bdrms up, dining
room , lorced air gas furnace and 21ots .
t226
$13,000

8"111.

Plnboll llaehlno, $375: Gordon
Wagon,
$75:
Homol~o
Chalnuw, $100 ; Puah Mower,
$75. 614-245-Si71l
Plutle And llodol Culvon llnc:h

Real Estate General

EAGLE RIDGE·Approx . 40 acres

MIDDLEPORT-Walnut S1·A largo 4-5 bedm&lt;lm
home with 2 112 baths, basement. and one car
garage_ This home comes wi th 2 lots . fenced
back yard , 4 porches. and hardwood noc)rs .
• 121
$47,000

_ol

which about20acres aretillabkt. Has a bam WJth

hayloft and equ1pment shed Public water and
electric avail _Man~ great buikling sites and water
lor animals. Possible Ownm financing
1202
$30,000

$8$, 304-415-18811.

Reconc:lhloned
wnhal"'
clryert, NC:h $100 lnd up.
MrV~

&amp;

w.

all makll. TM WasMr &amp;

Dryor Shoppo. 614-446-2944.

Sean Lawn Tracter 12 HP 1700.
00 Uk1 New 614-256-1267 Ahar

7:PM
Signs: Portabll ctwngaabta 111·
1•r signa and latlan. FrM
delinry. AAA Signs, 1-800-!33·
3453.

Hora's an olar thai doeon, """"' along vary
oftan Vary nico homo cloM t&gt; lown. 3-o4 bedroom~. tl/2 baths. 3 car gorago with aper1menl
ov&lt;rrlleed for oxtra inc:oml. Nowty carpel8d.
$63,000 .

PIUCED TO SELL..
N1ce 3 Wdroom llome localld on
SIIML
Haat pump, family room, dod&lt;.
noig,bortrood City ochoofs. Cal loday tor
. lo tion
1712
1n
rma
.
'.~.. ..,..,~~·
' ,. '"'},·~:='
'f~&gt;®·""
·.·' -·'

~

~uipmenl , 304~75-3818 .

Pets tor Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brMda, ltyl...
t1m1 Pill Food O..lar. Julie
Webb. c.u 614-446-0231.

2 Pomaranlam puppiH, 1 black,
1 rlddlth, 304-iiS-3926.

labrador
shota I
AKC

R-ul.tarad

2780.
Whlit'l ao dltfarent abou1 the

Happy Jock H lloo eollor'! h
wori&lt;al Conlolno NO aynlhotle
pyrothlolda. For dogt I cotal
RIO Food I Supply, 814-1112·
2164

nice 2 bedroom

t112

NOW$1 ,

POMEROY-Rt 143-A plaai to ra1se a family in
th1s ranch --3 bedroom home wirh fireplace, 2
baths.detadled 2 car garage, af!d 12 acres with

pond

RACINE·Fomlly Needed· For this I tl2 story. 3·
4 bdml home with 4 porches. half basement.
room , family room, and small ourbuildir'IJ
lot
ot 26

1134

AODlSON-Honeyauckle Drive- Could be used
tor rental or a nice starter home . 2 bdrms. fresh ly
painted inside and out. new septtc, new wtrtng

0121

HAYMAN ROAD-A t98B
mobile
home that is 14X76. Has 3 bdrms, 2 barhs , new
heal pump, metal utiliry bu•ld&gt;ng , a t2X3 2 oov·

$24 ,500

\

ered patio, a bUilt in stereo and comer hutch .

EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBtUTtESU
Located in hi!ll traffic oroa on 51. Rt. 7 witl1 80'
lronlage and tBO' deep. lncludas a residence
with 2 or 3 busino10 roomo &amp; 2 mobio hornet.
DriUed weN and 2 oeplic tanks. County water
available. Owner ia very anxioualo sell. Asl0'1g
$54,900 , but would coooidor any raaoonablo
oner.
1203
UNDER AFTY, REALLY NIFTYII

kitcllon $45 .900 .

1712

DOGWOOD DRIVE ... LOVELY HOME
FOR SALE
Olton 3 bedrooms, 2 batha, heat pump, boauti·
rul wood lloon in iving room and kilchon . t .•
acres, more or less, city schools and lots more.
OwnBB would likB an onor.. .. $79,500 . 1706

MIDDLEPORT-Russell St·Great Neighborhood-In lawn ltving wtlti country sett1ng . A 3
bdrm . t ll2bathhomewtthafullbasement. one ·;
car garage and a large lot 1163
$56,000 ·.

II condition and price count, thia 3 bedroom,
1112 bath brick ranch w~l be your first choice .
There are beautiful hardwood flool'l and an
anached one car garage with automatic door
opener. Act quickly - the price is $A8,500.

1502
FOR STARTERS....
has al of tho o..-tiall including a vory ,...
oonable pnca lag. 3 badroom ranc:h in a &lt;OO·
venianl loct~tion include• living room, fami~y
room , eat-in kitchen and bath . Nowor carpet rn
most roomL Hoot pump with central air. la'IIO
flal Jol within 2 milos ol t&gt;wn. Priced to soli at
$42,000.

It

\
1

1167

$5,900

start a FARM Th1 s 55 ac has tts own bams.
pond and jree Gas. wtth alec &amp; water avail

#232

$32,500

C HE STE R-Co Rd 25-0n 25 acres th1s home
s1ts on about 2 llal acros wtlh 3 acres ttmber
House 1s gorgeous w1th 3 bdrms . b1g kitchen,
dm1ng room. and large hvmg room Recently re ·
modeled Full basement 1217
$56,900

central a1r, Lenno~ pulse GFA furnace, one car
garage. equipped kttchen . fence m backyard.

Right In-and lake over a
waH established business. the Wesrern Aulo
Comes with all stock, store fixtures . and a 2 story
commercial building Ha s potenta1l tor 4 apar1 ments upstairs Great potential for success

$125,000

and a basamenl DON"T LET IT PASS YOU
BUYI&gt;
t143
$39,900

MIDOLEPORT-Uncofn SHook al rhe pnca on
th is 3-4 b*m , 2 story home on a nice street . Ha s
mamtenance tree siding and a Slorage b•J&gt;Ichng

hallway has baauliful oak railings. Has 3 b&lt;tms .
-ISO

1603

$63,000

HAYMAN ROAD·Longbonom·Appro• 112 :
acre ol land w1th 1973 Schultz mob1le home ·
that 1s 12X65 Has2bdrms. woodburner, PGFA :
turnace, central a1r . and rents lor $250 a month ·

HEMLOCK G ROVE-Approx 43 acres W1tlllru1t
orchard . grape ~me s. workshop area. shed tor
cqu 1pment. basemen!. equ1pped k1tchen . drn·
1ng room and Ander son w1ndow s

$54,000

1176

located dose to the park and pool also 1nduded
1s an e)(tra trailer lot.
J186
$28,000

$133,000

e

ST RT 7-Appro'- 16 acres at lc~nd w11h an
room 4 bdrm . farm hou se located near the
Ea stern H1gh School
•178
$30,000

POMEROY-No Down Payment-O.Vners will
FLA TWOOD ROAD·Appro• 4 112 acres wuh a
q rcat lay1ng bu1ldrng ~ 1to TPC water avail &amp;
l' lt~c tnc av;-111 Almos t ready to go . JU St neods

carry a 2nd mortgage on this 2 story home on a
good street. Has a large family room . som e
hardwood floors, 3 bedrooms . and a dining room
V1nyl siding lor low ma1ntenanca.

you

$12,000

1200

$24,000

roomy
room
bdrms, and 3 full baths. Modem kitchen w1th
cherry cabinets. conan countertop , d1shwas.her.
1sland work area. Family room w1th skyhghts.
cath!Kira l ce•ling s. pcact'1treo doors and w1n
dows , 2 car garage and basement

"88

$79,900

VACANT LAND
MIDDLEPORT-Cole
'"'Y wi!ll kepi I 112
story home with ~inyl stdt ng . 2 bdrms. FANG
furnace tull basement w1lh shower, and 2 full
baths

.

tt SJ

$29.900

POMEROV-S 1 Rt 124-3 1/2 acres w1th electr 1c
on stlc ;1nd water and gas avatlable 1233

ONLY $4 ,200
POMEROY·Hysell Run -Hunters Dream 7 1!2
acr es ol wooded land on a nrce black topped

rood

1182

$7,500

AACINE -Applegrove Dorcas Rd -53 acres of
!;mel w1 1h 2 sup 11c systems, 2 wells and one wa ter

lap

SMAll BUT SNAPPY
EKcaplionolly clean ond unclutllrod 3 Wdroom
ranc:ll. No holloy-do projects haro. Don't miao
this one - call for an appointmont today. You
won't boliovo tho prica ol $37,;oo.
t505

REEDSVILLE·Rigga Croat Monor·A spacious
splillevel 5 bdrm home with 2 tull baths. one car
garage, woodbumm. Perm a Pane windows. and
a family room
110g S59,SOO

story home th at 1s on
approx . 3, acres. 11 has 3 bdrms. 2 baths he a!
pump.andwoodburnor Somelandllli;Jb lr. Would
be graat place lor hunt1ng

0127

--- iiliiDi:Eii:oiiiT-2

POMEROY-Do you noad a LARGE hom•or 11
couktbe4apartments _Th1shousehas 15room s,
large hallways, encbsed Irani porch, one car
garage, 4 baths . and 4 kitchens has a newer
turnace and roof. Was recently redecorated
Possiblility of some owner linanclng . $48,000

lots and a one story homo wtth
7 rooms . Has 3-4 bedrooms, hugo living room,
floored atllc, lron t porch. and a partly lanced
largelot.
11 53
$25,500

well and LE!ading Creek waler being mstalled
Home IS sitting on approx . 2 acres of n1oo lay1ng

land.

111 t

$2 5,000

story home with 3 bdrms_ 1 1/2 buths. one car
garage, and a full ba .ement Tho hou se s1ls on

2 lots and has centrE ' a"

11 28 $25,000

24·Aim,ost 4 acres of nice
laying lawn and garden area with a 4 bdrm home
that withtn the last 8 yrs has had a new r~ot.
siding, cabinets, furnace, windows, satellite.

I

tor

$6,500
POMEROV-Rt143 Approx 4 acres a t land w1th
utiiiii!!S ;--tv:11l Great homes1te
$6,000

wtth a groat vtew then we have the place lor '(OIJ
On tht~ 6 77 acres you can butld your dream
home There water and elec aval

•187

$17,500

POMEROY-Hysell Run Ad-Two ntce tay 1ng 2
acre lots The se would make beautilu! home sties
111108
$6,000

MIDDLEPORT-Powell S1·2 one acre lois lo-

garage, fiKtures, and plumbing in bath.
1155 $42,500

lRJEAL

POMEROY -At 143·Approx 5 acres of land
lh."'l tuture home Ut1ilt1es are available

MIDDLEPORT ·II you wan I pnvacy near row"
Ro1d-You'll low thas
3bdrm, 11f2storyhome Thehomehasa astcrn

1

ALL FOR $30,000

t:AGLE RIDGE · Approx 7 ac ot vacant groun d
Mo st 1s hayland and has great butld1ng s1te water
and elec IS a~a1l ONner w1U ftnance wl mason ·
1101
$10,500
abte down payment

dining room. newer one car garage. A large

VACANT LANO
19. t4 tcrot localed on Jacl&lt;son Pil&lt;o. One oil
weR iMiich payo royalties. Ownor wiU ooll with or
without mineral rigllll. ASking $17,500. 17011

MIDDLEPORT-VIne St·This home could have
3-4 txhns Ha s dishwasher , stove, refng . di S·

pos.al , and tireplace. All rooms n1ce SIZe. Sits on
21enced~al to1S
lt3t
Was $38,900
NOW $36,000

4~-3&amp;1~
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446-9555
Loretta McDade- 446-7729
Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007
'
B. J. Hairston - 446-4240
Sonny Games - 446·2707

$11,000

MIDOLEPORT·Hi slo nca l look~ng corner store
Has 5 apartments up and another slam down
S ta n your own busmess Has lois ot room &amp; has
an 1noome Buy Busmess . Equ1pmenl . Stock, &amp; :
bwld1ngs tor $159.900 Of Bwldmgs lor

$47,900

TIRED OF APARTMENT UVING?
Slap up lo hc&gt;moownorshfor ju1t $12,000 . Ideal
lor tho singla per10n. thrs t Wdroom, I bath
homololocalad in Euralia and ol!on on street
pori&lt;ing and o MlaiiiiiOrago building.
1$04

RIO CENTER ESTATES
Build your homo among tha troao on ..,. of
!11oto 10111i-Mcludod lot1. t milo well of Rio
Grande. Loti rango in lizo from 2.6 ocroolo 5
acral. Raatrictive covonanto tor your protoclion.
Pncos range from $6,500 lor 2.5 acra liza to
$to 300 lor soloct 5 aero parco!. County water
available. Cal uo for moro inlorrnation. 1336.

With ·:

pat10 doors . huge shd1ng metal doors for easy
s torage of camper or boat. Has sewage, water,
and electriC
# 174
$17,000 .

SYRACUSE-4th St-Need an extra inoome? You
can have it ~if you buy th1s 4 Odrm . 2 bath. Duple.:
IIIDDLEPORT-Beoch Slreet·Bl T (Beller Look
Twice) at this 2 story home sitting on a largo
corner lot Look at the extras thai it has to otter.
·a new 2 car garage. Lennox pluse_turnaoe. new
siding . and roof_ It has a large ltV!~ room . 3
bedrooms, t 112 baths, equipped krtcMn w•ll1

;

a 24x40 me tal butldtng wtth a deck and sets of ;

#183

a large bath, utility room &amp; a kitchen loaded w1th
cabinets Has a 2 1/2 car garage , Aluminum

and 1.8 acre yard .

,'
'
'

RACINE-Ir s tn c Oh1o Rrvor Loc ~ House and 22 ·
cam psiteS and room tor more , 3 apartments . 4
hotel rooms The campground has lots at nYCr
trontJgc
1179
$162,000

MIDDLEPORT-High St· Thos 3 bdrm house has .

OON'T SETTLE FOR A HOUSE JUST TO
UVE IN. ..
From lha momenl you olap inlo tha largo ,.,..,
you con ,..,. your lamily living in !hit cialllic.
Formal living room. dining room, IUM\' kilchen,
vary Jivablt family room, 3 niot Wdrooma p1u1
2 lull balho. Storago golora il lha largo aftic, t
car gorogo, lui basoment "!haro not anous;&gt;.
in k&gt;wn oonven~.
HOI

1234

thor1 distance to town. lull basement, large

$20,000

NEAR RACINE ON THE RIVER-An acre

E-•

UNIOUE STARTER HOME
the m~l starter home .
Th" octagonal shaped homo offers a doHor1111t
noor plan. 3 Wdroom •• 1 bath (plumbing tor
wcond wr basement~. living room and lomlly
room. Wooded lot Dead ond slroel doso to
town . POO&gt;d lor tho budge! minded at $44,900.

READY TO BUY7 ...
Ownoro aro Ready lo Solll.3 Wdroom homo,

#147

&amp; grey water d1sposal S howers and bathroom ~
real ly close, also tlas lronlageon raccoon Creek ,

12X60 mobile home sitting on 126X200 lot It has
a nioo porch and small outbuilding WAS$ ,5,000

LANGSVILLE • Co. Rd. 10 · Appro&gt; . 2 acres
wllh 12)(65 trailer with porch . and storage build mg.
$16,000

BPUT LEVEL
ThrM lwoll that pRMda """" tor teparata · - ol family IMng, y.t conlliuad
givos spoot with o good lraflic ~· 3 bedroomo, 2112 balha, dining room, living room,
al!iciont kitchen and largo L-thopod lomiy
room . Heat pu"1J, oonlrlll air, 2 car gorago and
oloroge buiking. locMad in Cloarview
Subdr~ision. Cily ochoolo. $611,500.
MOl

Not your average run of

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY
Spaciou1 1BOO sq. ~- homo 111at haa baon woll
maintained situated on a 1.3 ac .. , m/1, lot.
Home oHen 3 bedrooms, 2 fuU baths, tonnaJ
dining room and rully oqu1ppod kitchen with
newer appliances. Heat pump, 2 car garage.
Outdoor living is entoyable on the aundeck or
on 111o boat dock. Call Sonny today lor your
por10nal viowingl
1711

to start your own bustness in Langsv1lle? It's a
n1ce building on appro• I acre lot. Has water.
sewage und reslroom Burlt to sta te reguattons

AACCOON Creek·A mce camptng lot wtth elec

ACnVE UFESTYI
LBrgo livrng room, largo kilehon with Nting

Fish Tank, 2413 Jaclcaon Ave.
Polnl Pleaunl, 304-41175-2063,
full line Tropic.! tiah 1 birda,
small animals and auppl•.

Throo (3) Chow Chow pupploa,
lull blooded, 614-11112.. 340
WMI't H dlffiNr« 1bout tM
~ Jaek 3-X lloo eollor'! "
II Contalno NO oynrhotle
pynothroldL For dogo I -~
SOUTHERN STATES 304-815-

$49,000

I!A:CIPIE-A com,me1rcial2 story bnd&lt; bu•kling w.th
4 apanmants upSirurs Has a grGal renral potential , or put your own business downstairs and rent
the apartments upsta irs_Has 3 lots
t212

mlnlatura

3404.

POMEROY PtKE·Chester·A one Slory home
wrth new s1dl ng . newer roof. newer double pane
Windows , newer wtrtng. and plumb1ng Has 5
rooms, 2 bdrms and ooe car garage on appro•
112 acre of ground
at146
$25,900

#192

tMack/sllver achnauzer puppy, 3
moa. old, hat 181 HriH ol
aholatwormlng. 614-7112-3013.

Pood.... toya, INeupa, lito
1dults, AKC, alto mlnla1ure
Schnauzers. Coolville, 6,._..7-

FOR A COMMERCIAL LOT? JuSI

lor a boar dock

'tS t

AKC Lab pupplu : attots, AKC
papers . Cho1ca: yellow, black,
choco111a. 614· 286·2376.

. POMEROY·llncolnS1roet·A2-3ba&lt;toomhome
with upper &amp; lower rear porch &amp; utility room

new oak cabinet s

GaHipolis, OH.
PH. 614-256-1633

56

.

(

#189

MIDDLEPORT-Rutland

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON

245-5121.

LOO~ING

o tt the ma1n streot You really neod to check thi s
one ou t Located on Th1rd Street. M1ddlepor1
Has an tncome
1145 $10,000

CHESTER-Oak Hill Rd·The pertect place lo

LOCATION -LOCATION- LOCA110N
Ask anybody! "Location is most important whan
solection a hano.· Hon&gt;'o o 6 room homo on t
aero with a groat viow or tha rivor and only 5
mWaa from town. Includes 3 bedrooms, firapiaal, lull ba90man~ garago and bam. Pricad
al $59,500.

Cannellu~. Inc. 45719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meet yoor
needs. Any size.

Block, brick, Hwlr pipes, windows, lintels, ale . Clauda Wintart, Rio Grande. OH Call 614·

$48 ,000

•116

0185

LET NATURE BE YOUR GUIDE
To this country home on 13.9 ocru Pri'lacy,
tour bedrooms, lam~y room and one car
attaclled garage ora just tomo of tha foaturao
that you will onjoy. Priced at $47,500.
tSOt

D. C. •tal Salta, lac.

Building
Supplies

need rental property? This home has 2 bedrooms, 1bath. city water and sewage, and FANG
turance.
$7,500

',,-.

/

55

ment.

$t4,000

space for tomorrow's growing lamly.. 26xt6
un!niohed lamdy room . Added faaturo1 includo
nice oowrod patio, attached 2 car gorago. AI
thaoo locatod in G,_ To...,ohip on 1.25 acnot
at an afkndoblo price ol only $59,000.
1615

Studanl LPN boob, uniforms &amp;

DONNA CRISENBERY
tt366 S. StAll

1s
loaded w1th character-it has open sta1rway, oak
baseboards. crown molding, ardl doorways.
comK;e boards . fi replace. and handmade ~ 1 tchen
cabtnets Has 3 bdrms. 1 1/2 barhs . fvtl base

area. 3 n1ee s.ze bedrooms, 2 baths. Plus

U&amp;.Q!I65.

Pa&amp;l Br.ildings and
Package Deafs. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars.
Local Sales Representative

CHESTE R-Oak Hill Road· Spacious L1vingina
beaut1lu l country sett1ng -A 2 story home with 4
bdrm s. t 112 ba ths. tam11y room . ~~nyl sid1ng.
small barn. full basemen! and tree gas on ap·
pro• 27 acres of !arm land _ 1230 $64,900

l1v1ng 1n town, you m1ght wanllo take a look at
th1s 3 bdrm 2 bath home w1th largetam1ly room.
l1replace. finished ba sement and glassed 1n
porch on approx t 112 acres 1231 $45,900

Could be a nice starter home or rental property

This thiN bedroom, 2 balh linCh localod in
Centorvilo ia aboot u mail-.:o fnla a o
houso ba. You Ml IIIIo tppNCialt the
soparalo miUIIIIr auile and the gonrgo largo
onough for- cora pluo all tha bi&lt;M, !Dolo and
loys you own. Bonar cal mday. $54,;oo. I50f

ANAU.Y A STARTER HOME YOU DON'T
HAVE TO AX UPII
You wil """" to ... this 3 Wdroom with re&lt;»n·
1y roplaood vin)1 tiding, _
roo! and gunenng,
ptumbmg. 200 amp •ectnc servtee and new
gao lumace. LBrge tam~y room, 2 fullbaths,
oonvenient laundf)' room and pnvata pabo. Thll
opportunity is only minutes !rom town on St Rt.
t•1 . City sdlools. $45,500.
1111

lazJ. Boy Tlll•rw, 1298 Eac:fl,
Wh1la SuppU" Last. Womeldortf I Thomas Hardwar.. 614-

Vttamastar EurciM Bike, S1S;
OP Rowing Machine, 125 Call
614·2~5-950~ Aher 4:30P. M.

Very stately home in Charolait Hill Lako
Eslateo olloro a oomlollablo wey ol ita. Largo
spaciou1 rooms includo 3 bedrooml, dolllllt
oat-in kilc:llon lamily room with vaultad ceilng
and bricl&lt; n~ce. and 101110 IMng room.
loads of winclowo tako lull edval1tage of tha
460 It of taka frontage. HUGE lui walk -out
basamonl cloubla1 living opaoo ~ .-led. 2 cor
garago plut garao- door antoanca lo balamont
workshop . MaintanancelrM axtorior oliowa Y.O"
loisuno bmo 1o walch lha goooo grocofully glido
•n and out of lhe lako or go ai1•H that lunkor
bass in lha taka. 52 loot trealod doc!&lt; with olri·
urn doors off master suite, as well as family
room. alto onhances tha g""'t lake front
locatron . $157,900. Serious buyers only! 1220

PRE I I t 6 PRAtnCAL

HorN

12

$29,900

LONGBOTTOM·Bashan Rd·ll you re bred ol

LONGBOTTOM-Hayman Road· Thts mtni -larm
has approll. 7 acres with a 5 yr_old modular It
has 3 bdrms. 2 baths . tamt!y room, wet bar.
garden balhtub.lireplace. ISland 1n kttchen . heal
pump. and summer kttchen Land 1S fenced

POMEROY • Bunernu1 Ave-Jus! srarting out or

LAND CONTRACTIII

Power UTO
Mow•,., $895; !!!i HorHpower

Naw

t

0141

NEED ASMALL BUSINESS BUILDING? wanl

Radkl
Controlled
HIROBO
llmlt.d Stnlttla ZX Hellcoptar
Cornu Completa Only 20 ~ln.
Flying lima. Valu!MI AI f1,200
Selling For $725 Firm. 614-2455380.

M(

$14,500

~~;Qi~7o: Sl·Tht s 2 story house

Real Estate General

..

Thrt1 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Evana, Jac:kaon, Ohio. 1-800537-m&amp;.

Reeling we~ht Hnch wftly &amp;
laog curt MttchiMf'tll I '"lght

11:114

ranoo

-

11001.

Ov.r 200 Ft. SpOt Raila 2 Plua

$50,000

#11 3

REEDSVILLE-CoRd SO· Appro&gt; 45 ac:ros of

lumber S...oned Wild Ctwry
6 Poplar Alto BaN Board,
Cuing Door Jama. 1514-446-

Poota $200; AKC Chocolalo Lab
Puppy, 4 w..u. 1300. 114-448-

shakamachme . 4 freezers . 1ce cream mad1 me
deep fryer , ace machme. gnll and more Appr o};
1 aae lot along a state rout e

Ftnanc1ng available . w/Oown Payment Thts '
restaurant sea ls 38 1s well established ,lully
equipped, new centra'l a1r. attractive d1n1ng room , :
good gross sa le l1gures . mce storage bulld1ng ,
truck parktng Owner pr eparmg to rebre busi· :
ness and 3 acre s $92 .000 or Bus1ness and 1 II
2 ac res
at 234
$65,000

n1ce IJ ymg land Approx . 2 acres tillable, 10 ac
pastu re . 35 acres limber. Water and electriC
dVil llilblo
#237
$25,000

•nV.Vnu need to see this
brick
home Has 3 bedrooms, large living room full·
basement, and a one car garage.
$34,900

round tab .. (36" diarM!ar1 whh
two chair~, S15; 30 x 38
boo«case,
$15, rad~tareo
eonsola with buulllful wood
eablntt, $50. Chartenll Hoeflich,
614-992-5292 attw ~-

Magic Chef waah« I dryer; OE
auton'IIIIC dlthw.ahar; Gibson
tr.eur; 614-W2-41340

HAVE YOU EVER DREAMED OF OWNING A
RESTAURANT? This business" equopped w•rh

•

1981 Thund1rbird, tair cond.,
St,OOO or bHI: after. 614·256-1143.

HIM Buick Rtgal, fllbullt engine

Real Estate General

1n hutch , 4 tx:lrms. , 112 baths. wraparound
porch. 3 fireplace . and b1g Ia!

attar 5pm.

&amp; tranamlulon, 2 door, auto,
$2,100. 304..715-58!10.

Realatlfed Angus Hallara, 614·

MIDDLEPORT·S. Second-A large older bnck
home with a big living room . dJmng room w1th built

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker....................... 992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS.................................992·3056
DARUNESTEWART................................992-6365
SANDY BUTCHER ............. .......................992·5371
SHERYLWALTERS,Chashire................ 367-0421
JERRY SPRADUNG ................... .

1982 Sublru Gl St. Wagon 5

old reglttsred Llmousin
bull, 11700, 614-985-4268 attar

'-

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS, Some '-"'"'" .

Transportation

Spood, Air N - C.llbor, $300.

Farm, Rt. 35, 304-937-2018.

615-3288.
living room couch, upholttar.ci
In grHn and balga, $60; amall

OFACE 992-2886

Real Estate General

1968 Dodge 01111 GT, 360 engine
lull riel c.m, road lifttrl, go;d

KUBOTA

61 Farm Equipment
11' double 1111 c.rt, 10' John
OMra tr1nsport dltc, 7" Bueh~ t.fu1f1hog, IIC. Cond., Belt)'
Olin, Sum,.., Road, 614-985-

Livestock

May 17, 1992

Wsnttd : Calves To Raise For

Phone: 614-286-SD-44.

$&amp;,650; 15 IIF Wllh Buah Hog,

Hair dryer, 1100; big .,...., button phoM bnnd new, $40;
$wo, 814-!192·111!10
anytime.

s·

•

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

Ba .. ra, Mowolfs, &amp; Hay Binda,
Plowa, Disks, Com Plsntera,
Manu,. Spr..ders, Saedara,
Orilla And Cultlv11or1. Other E·
qulpmenl
Howe's
Fann
Machinery,
Jackaon,
Ohio

l&amp;U after 7:00 p.m.

SWIMMING POOLS
Only S'IM.OO Booldltul Allovo
Ele. Oon1 Bollovo II? C. II BPI

63

For Sala: New Holland Rake,

FREE INSTALLATIOH

Ground 1113114 Pool lncludM:
Finer Deck, Fence, Laddwa,

61 Farm Equipment

Dngonawynd C.Uery: CFA Peralan Slarneta kintna. &amp;14-446-

388-8305.

45.

•

Pets for Sale

------

Merchandise

AUCTION
Tractors - Farm
Saturday, May
Beginning 11 :00

May 17, 1992

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

cated in a mce neiQhborhood with aty water and
sewage available. Could be usod for your dream

home. Buy one lot lor $7,000 or boll1 lor
1123
$12,000
SCOUT CAMP RD-Cheator -30 acres ol land
With nice building SilOS . Has pasture acers and
wooded land . Also elec &amp; water avail.
• 228
$14,i00
LANGSVILLE..()a Rd 10.Approx. 2 aaeo ol
beautilul bonom land Water and aloe avaH . A

POt~EiiOY:WC&gt;ft,;an R·aod··A 1975 t2XB5 ., _
ral alae Monte Carlo mobile homawith 2 b&lt;tm s,
t bath with a 20X50 bam ~tlln on appro• . 35
acres ol land, wiU give you plenty of room to
e•pand
$43,000

TUPPERS PLAJNS.MtM St-A 4 bdnn ranch
with a large lamily room. Also has 2 big lots an
outbuilding, and a patio . The house is well insula!ed, lreshly painted , new root, vinyl ~ding, and

new carpet. LAND CONTRACT.
.157

building wilh 2 businesses downsta~rs and ap prox . 23 rooms. and 10 baths on the 2nd and 3rd
floors . Could be converted tnto apartments

" t8
$34,900

great home site or mobikt home site.

MIDDLEPORT-Nor1h Second-A commerc&gt;al

$45,000

~

I

MIDDLEPORT·Brownail A.,.A nearlinle 3bdrm
home with basement and garage _Home oomes
Wlth equipped kitchen and central a1r.
1214
$24,000

1169

18,500

POMEROY-Johnaon Rood-A 2 acre parcel of
ground that d1d have an older house. Walor and
elec . is available. Great for building a home or
11
·..-.~
a mobi~ home site .

n

�Times-Sentinel

71

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasant,
Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

76

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Autos for Sale

for Sale
motor wllrtlllr 304675-1879 after ! ·OO PM.
M1rcury

Real Estate General

1960
81rbour
16-V:Z
Mahocany Run... ·BcU1 wltM 50

HP Jalmscn out beard $4,250. 1·

Services

304-522-6240, Hwntlngton.

RESIDENTIAL· INVESTMENTS · COMMERCIAL · FARMS

:

B1

Home
Improvements

;: 198S Honda Shadow 500. 11,000 614-i92-3481after 5pm.

.;. Mlln, St,45G. Call 614-24S-9504
BOATERS
' A
- ::
"":-r-::4:;::30;c-;
P.:;-M_. -----:----:-:- I J.S Marine Sarvlce, S.rving All
'1- 4,
Your Boating N1eds, Part5, Ac"' 198S Oldt Flrenu, 5 lpMd, air, C::QSOriu, Two Cyc le 011 And
~ •ml tm ttereo. tilt whMI, 614· Service &amp;14· 256-6160

Barnen

Homa lmpro\lementa.
Addllions, Garages, Palnttng,
Rooting.
E•periancea,
Raasonable 614-446-856a, 614·

~ 1987

Olds Cullaa Sl1111 $2,700.
... · 1i87 Con\ltrslon V1n F-150 TV

• 4 coptalno cholra, CB bock·-;
~ mokoo lull olzo bod ii,~. 1183

76

1m

•m

•Lk
~

Gtaur tutt

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

m•ss•~ 304-67~6n

al11 St,OOO. 1986
Sl&lt;w Hawk Sl,9aa. 1984 T·
lrd St,IOD. Scohya Uaod Cora,
Haven, WV. 304-882-37!2.

•
""

23 LOCUST .ST.
446•6806

Real Estate General

Sulfll1slng~ low

priCe

S door, low mileage, on floor shift,

'iEciUcED. ""·""''·

..li luggage rack, quad 4, blue, 304-

"' 61'&gt;4370 1her 6:00

•..; 1990 Dodaa Oynuty, Blue With
$7,800. 614_.46--7665

·' e.tllent condttlort, tow mtleaga,
~ call 614-992-1'175 after 5pm or on
~· WMkendt .

~ 1991 Z-28 auto 5.7 blue, loaded,
- 22,700 mlln, $13,000 firm ,
- $2,500. below rstall, . 304-ti75:: 2332avenlngs.
J •

,. 3 Volkawagon B11tlts lor par1s
• or !111 wp. 3 jwnk BHIIu. Home
• made car lrtllar. $900 tor all.
~; 614-992-3481 after Spm.

·•-----------'-----: 72 Trucks for Sale

: 1971 Chavy 1 ton, V-8 , 4sp., low
·· mileage, very lilfle rult, good
: tlr.. , 6l4·992-:i'192.

RFTRFAT - Owner financing &gt;'ill1 doy, , p&amp;yment, appro11 7 m1les fro m Galltpohs . Ideal location .
Excellent conditto n . ove rlooks Blue Lake and Raccoon
Creek. 23 It travel 1rat ler, sundeck, rural water, sapllc
sy stem, and olec tnc f1shmg , boatmg , huntmg or just
ralmung
1584

Down SR 7 overloo.,.!ng
the beautltul
1
Brlck and vinyl spill 3
bedrms, 2 balhs, lamll~ rm . 2 car garage. sale111te
and components Thts hom e Is clea n and
comlortabte Cozy LA, OR, Mit . city schools Take
this tine otter

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

REGISTER: VIctorian, ucettent condition Down by
tM Ohio River In Gallipolis. Qh ., Very elegant turn-at·
the-century home 4 bedrm., 3 baths, ltbrary, uselul
afhc and complete basement. 5 llreptaces, gas heal
with central air, garage Romantic gueiKl, pallos
beautllulty lanclscaped All lo\llngty 1natnfalned
Potential bed andbroakl .-l.SI or remain reSidential .

1736. COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAl - Prime
location. Eas1em Ave Opportunhy to combine home
and business Ohio Alwer lrontage Very nice 3
bedrm home wlappllances, lull basement Thi s ls a
money making propos~lon Call lor appointment

COTTAGE FOR TWO - 2

bedr~oms, large LA, full bath. eat-In kitchen_. 2
porches, new repal.-s have been maoe to make thiS a
corrlor'lable !"lOmE! $20.000
1717. PAillE DEVELOPMENT LAND: land layo wen.
Older 2 story brick homt wtth 4 bedrooms and
bulklngs. Honw In need ol repU' 12t IIC. rn'1 Ofl SR
35. cbse to Pine Crest NurtlnQ Hom&amp;

~-----------------­
. 1981 Ford F-150 plckiJp 300, 6
~ cyl,
3 speed, transmission
, wl ovardrlve, AC , 304~82 - 2741 or

" 882 ·2582
.,_
.. 1983 Ford Bront:o, new paint,
"' aluminum wheels, 3" body lift,
"11200 llret, $4500, 614-992-6li23

•~i' L1

S-10, 5 speed,

-4

PRICE REDUCED ON THIS
SPRING VALLEY HOMEI
Super ne1ghbomood. great locatton Colomal 2
story home offers 4 bedrooms, 2i', baths, formal
lrv1ng room and d1ning room, den and large family
room. Storage shed Extra large lot. Reduced to

"" gin. nNd•

$87,500'

2'313.

·~·------~-----------

1975 Ford Econohne Van, enwon, body good
:: $800 or tnde tor automallc:: ear
... w/air, 304-675-5413.

·' 1m Chevy

Suburban 4 wheel
"' drive, 350 rebuilt engine, body
: fair cond, Pt. PI! V.F 0 304-675~

REAL VALUE. 3

bednns. vinyl ranch . L.R, cllnlng area, ldfehen, bath on
llrsl 1\oor. Divided basemenl w/ol rms , ramlty rm ,
storage, laundry . wane: area , 1f2 ba th and outs ide
enlry Covered deck. carpol1 aoo garage Garage has
220 eledi1C to wor!l. on ca r and truCks 112 acre rru1
...,-lth be;w!Uul trees Lot city wt ;hlle s City schools

-1$6,800. 304-895-3658 lor full In·

..&amp;

1707. DON 'T OVERLOOK

\~lbBtAN

$391100.
1786 . KYGER CR AREA - 3

bedroom~.

2 baths,
ranch home and ca!port, outbuUcllngs garden spot I
ac rn/1 $24,000

baths , Central Atr , Ftreplace, apphances .
tn sulabon Really nice home currently set up

and balh, blm w/11111, tool, shed, ctit:;l{en houae, 50 ac. m1. mostty tMlbll .

REDUCED- BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME - 2800 eq.
ivlng space, 3 bedrooms, 1il baths. located on to acres
and borders Raccoon Creek. Green and GallipoliS
Schools CALL NOW!
renled lot.

Owner wants th is SOLDI ASKING $29,900 Maka an oHerl

1101. A GOOD BUY AT 127,900. EurokA .. 2 ·3 BAs,
1 bath, LA, 11Hn ktk:hen. 112 bsml , gas tumae.,
oulbkig, :JO'l14"1ppmX on S.88 KTet m1

REAL e,1/\TE. ll\C.

·

1750 HANDYMAN SPECIAL- MAKE OFFER. Land
contrad You 11 go back N11ime II you live 1n this largo
2 story hOme , J bodrms balh kit , dlnmg rm , ullllty
cellar Bam w1approx 3/4 ot an acre

t~ 1f7'8

Ford boJI
van,
1981
.,.Phoenix PonUac, 614-742-2445,
" 9am-9pm

room , kitchen , family room, bath , new carpet, slara~

Ing area, 2 lui baths, u1111y rm . elK. HP, CJA. 1 car

building, ~. acno M or L CALL TO SEE II

garage. outbklg Place lor plcnk;klng or bOating on
lower edjJe of property on the rtYer. This property B In
A· 1 oondiiOO Caito see

MlilDL.EP.OR'f· Gront St.· A VERY CUTE 2 story home
wtlh 3 bedrooms, now sh1ngle root newer N G. furnace &amp;
hot water heater, full basement , carpon, shed wltack room .

1671. FOR YOUNG COUPLE OR COUPLE WHO

lanced lot GREAT LOCATION I Home needs a lew reprurs
Owner Will accept reasonable offer ASKING $34 ,900

ARE YOUNG AT HEART - You can IIIIard this J-.4
BA rand'\ wlh lR, MHO klchen, balh, rei., ranga,
FA, gu hMI CIA on ooeaaw Mil.. Cal lor more Info.

OWNER IS ANXIOUS TO SELL THIS COMMERCIAL
BUILDING· Located on Main St. 1n Pomeroy Features
large display w1ndaw wtth showroomloHtce space Large
rooms upsta.1rs w!beautlful vtew of tho nver ldeallocabon
for someone starting a bustness wnh a little tmaginatJon 1

NEW LISTING· HARRISONVILLE· 28 289 acres ot va·
cant ground. Asking $16,000

bedroomS . utllly room, 1amily room , klc;:hen In bUe-

,

..

RIVERFRONT

POMEROY· I 1/2 story home on Umon Ave 3-4 bedrooms, carpet &amp; wood floon ng , fi re place . fron t stttlng porch

1715 GET MUCH IIORE when you buy lhts

ASKING $14,540

lreah~

paWltec:l 3 BA ranch wtm LA , k!tc::hln wlrh din .,.,.
range ref . 1'1. bllhs. etec:: 88 heal, AX:., 1M 11'811 ,
patio and CllpOr'l In u.oalenl oordllon .CO's
17:11 TREES, TREES AND MORE TRE£Sfl 12 ICt·
es rTV1 Also 2 BR home wllh grNt room , Urepllca,
knchen, Dath , patio and rQ bac::kyard

THE HOME SELLING SEASON IS HEREI WE HAVE
POTETIAL BUYERS COMING IN EVERYOAY...SOME
WANT WHAT YOU HAVEl UST WITH US TODAY I WE
NEED LISTINGS TO MEET THE DEMAND OF BUYERS I

----cc~

4•4 , 11.110., AMif'M,

klcnM.

..u:aaa. stereo , lift kit , new tlrat,
..t 55,000 miiH, 6,500 or best oHtr;

·· 1990 Ford Ranger, 5 ap. , Olftrdriwe , 1tlll under Ford warranty,
tharp truck, $5,995 C.ll 614&lt;1&lt;46 -7604.

2 baths living room, dimng room . 2 kitchens- one m
baaam~t; almost 3 acre a, frurt trees, cellar, garage and
storage bu1ldmg. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEEIII
SALE - 40 acres lam locato&lt;l 8 m1los o" State

We
Do Htullng Anytime,
Anyplace, No Job Too Big Or
Too llllll BDimlnl Ct11nl~,
G11naral Work , Any Kind! 6t •
3N·2218 Anytime.

t181 . NICE TO COME HOME TO!! I B11Ck ranch In
qukll rMHgtborhood wtth 2-3 BA. eal·ln kftchen, car·
pel . 1/, balhs. fuel otl tteat ,.,;; , stir-..;Md roof, catpall.
lull bas&amp;m&amp;nt . ~ SChoolS on 1 a.c. t.IJ\. Cal for loci·
1100 5(J"I

UpholStery

Mowrsy'1 UpholeterinQ llfvk:·
lng lfl county lf'M 21~- The

belt In tumllw. "'
Iring
Call 304-t'T5-41M for tr.. IS·
tlmat•

30H7S-1788

Real Estate General

Realty

·Cil
-..........-

iii$

446-3636Jt~,

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROilER
LINDA G. SKIDMORE
MARY.I,'. n.oYD

HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTI ES
25 LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS. OH IO 45&amp;31

Rl!:I.LTOR 446-3383.

REALTOR 379·2686

CAMP AND FISH IN YOUR OWN BACK YARD AND WHEN YOU ARE TIRED OF ROUGHING IT
WALK ACROSS THE PASTURE TO YOUR VERY
COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HOME. FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE NICE
KITCHEN, 2 CAR GARAGE APPROX 24
ACRES. NEAR CITY.
'
.

EXCELLENT FLOOR PLAN- SUNKEN UVING ROOM
WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING, NICE KITCHEN,
ATRIUM DOORS OPEN INTO SUNROOM FROM
FAMILY ROOM, STUDY. 3 BEDROOMS, 2il BATHS,
FULL BASEMENT, PARTIALLY FINISHED, SMALL
BARN/GARAGE, OVER 7 ACRES . MOSTLY PASTURE.
NICE HOME, NEAR RIO GRANDE, WORTH THE
MONEYI

COUNTRY AT ITS BESTI LUXURIOUS A FRAME HAS
BRASS AND LEADED GLASS LIGHTING , ANDERS EN
WINDOWS , ITALIAN TILE IN FOYER, BUILT-IN
STEREO INTERCOM SYSTEM, 8 ROOMS, 3
BEDROOMS, 2il BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, FORMAL
DINING, EQUIPPED KITCHEN, FIREPLACE,
EXCEPTIONAL PROPERTY!
CONVENIENT LOCATION ON STATE STREET IN
GALUPOUS- WALK TO DOWNTOWN SHOPPING,
CHURCH AND SCHOOL 3 BEDROOMS, 2 STORY
HOME HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM, EAT-IN KITCHEN , BASEMENT. VERY
AFFORDABLE AT $35,000.

NF.N CONSTRUCTION - 2

~CRE

S ITE

WOULD YOU UKE A BRAND NEW HOME? BUILDER
WILL BUILD THIS HOME ESPECIAUY FOR YOU ... ON
2 ACRE SITE. CALL US FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
VIEW BUILDING SITE AND HOME PLANS.

AT LAST A PLACE TO BUILD YOUR DREAM HOMEI2
ACRE BUILDING SITE IS ON PAVED ROAD. HAS
ELECTRIC, GAS AND PUBLIC WATER AVAILABLE.
CONVENIENT LOCATION , RESTRICTED $11,000
JUST LISTEDI
GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTY! LARGE LOT WITH
TWO MOBILE HOMES PLUS A 28X28 SHOP GARAGE
WITH ELEC., WATER &amp; AIR COMPRESSOR ALL FOR
ONLY $23,5001

NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL- SPLIT FOYER DESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR, FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCEO
AIR FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR COND . 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE 565,000

RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOME PARK - VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACES . BACK PORCHES 2 CAR GARAGE 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
MOBILE LOTS . ALL PRESENTLY RENTED .
EXCELLENT LOCATION CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.

, 41 on UncxMn P1ka The home has 7 rooms and
There 11 a bam and other outbudd1ngs AJ10 a farm

pond and tobacco ba98
BRICK HOME - Localo&lt;l 1n Bulav1llo Road - 3
~~~room, iving room, ki!chon with d1n1ng area, 1 bath
room, and a 2 car gerage una nacho&lt;! TV Satal~to
01 ,.~,.FOR APPOINTMENT
HOME I ACREAGE IN WALNUT TWP. - 2 bedlroo1ms l

....._ ,.,

~

PRIVATE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD
HOME. INFORMAL FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN
AREA. BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING fl()()t.l AND
DINING ROOM , 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
LARGE STUDY OR HOBBY ROOM OPENS
ONTO DECK ON SECOND FLOOR. FIREPLACE
IN LIVING ROOM, WOODBURNER IN FAMILY
ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE. 7 ACRES .

Wving room, kitchan and bath House remodeled 11
ago, &amp;IK1nc, b hea~ 76 acres m or I With tohacoo

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
IN GALLIPOLIS - Vlne Street - 4 ronla
good lncom&amp; property Call tor more 1nforTT1atton.
ni~~~~ IN GALLIPOUS - 3 rooms and bath, walk1n1

n

!o ochools and stores. Pnced a! $16,000.00 .

HAVE BUILDING LOTS m Rodney Vollage II Call fo
tnformabon .
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TR~ .·,
OUR lOLL FREE NUMBER
'-IV'0-8Q{ · 1(1'6

HENRY E. CLELAND.............. .......
.. ..... 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER................ .. ..................... 949·2439
JEAN TRUSSELL .................. ..................... .949·2660
OFFICE......... .. .......... ... ........... .......... ... .. .... 992·2259

IS
loelled on Flnl Avenue 4 bdrm . 1;, bllhs. 1amlly
room IY~ room, basemOrt. and smal1 ~ . bath,
living room oonaga on lot Homt ts slua led
on 1 comer lot Cal lor an I(&gt;PO!rt!TI8fl1.

-.; 713-5722 after 7:00PM.

HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553- I I rooms, 4 badrooma,

EXCELLENT CAMPING SITE· Longbottom- I acre ol
ground along the nver $8 ,000 CALL FOR DETAILS '

~~~--~~~~~~

,; .1881 Chev C1,.1atom Conversion,
.. (114 ton 45,000 miiH, t~,.~uy •
., quipped, lmm1culata eond, 304-

with lamily room, bath, utilil"' room . and a
l ~~~::i'.~~
room, 2 decks and a t 7'x32' in-ground pool and
WITMIN WALKING DISTANCE OF CITY POOL - 3
badrooma, liv1ng room, kitchen, bath and alam•ly room ,
bedroom and bath tn basement. Two car garage and
foncod 1n backyard . POSSIBILITY OF LAND
CONTRACT FOR QUAUFIED BUYER WITH DOWN
PAYMENT.
HOME AND 2 ACRES M or L - 3 bedroom a, t bath
living room, kitdlon, !replace, and un!ms11ed ba98mont
PRICED AT $36,500.
LOCATED ON UHCOLN PIKE - 3 bedroom, !ovin1

upper

mert 3 car garage and a 6 car det!KMd garage Call
tor mo"'f' ""''~t\00 .

Real Estate General

j Wheels,
Brake~
Exhat.~s1 ,
J Rot0ft1 _Shocka, Hadlo, 80,000
J MU ... w,.500 814-245-5978 .

,

GALUPOUS -BRICK HOME - 3 bedrooms, livin~
room, kitchen with d1ntng area , 1:t1 bath, fin1shed
oiDrage building MAKE AN APPOINTM~NTTO SEE III

Rl 7.dOSe to Snopplng c.rter Ttft hon'Wt t111ures 3
bedrooms, 2 lull baltw. klchen and dlntnQ area, 2

4413-3644

: 1m Ford f · ISO 4xol, New Tires ,

Real Estate General

STEP BACK IH TIMEI THE ABOVE TURN OF THE
CENTURY SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL OLD
HOME PROVES IT ONCE WAS ONE OF THE MOST
ELABORATE HOMES IN GALLIPOLIS IT COULD BE
NOW WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION IF
RESTORING A VINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM.
CALL US FOR A TOUR OF THIS ONE. AND MAKE
YOUR DREAM COME TRUE. $63.000 .

Real Estate General

CHECK THIS OHE OUT TODAYI FOR ONLY $15,000
YOU GET 4 ~, WOODED ACRES WITH A 3 BR , 1:&lt;
BATH MOBILE HOME AN EXCELLENT BUYI

25 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD. $15,000.
101 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD $29,000.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

...... .

1989 Ford A1roatar Mini van,
·(utomaUc transmlstion with
~•rdrtve, amttmtcatNne, tiN ,
.air, crul11, ..c cond., 814-992·
J:76!ilattar 7pm.

~4

Allen C. Wood, Reahor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446.0971
Mooe Canterbury, Reahor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Raaltor-256·1745
Tim Watoon, ReaRor - 446·2027

$I 5,000 .. Make an offer I

•• .2313.

:lJ 1987 Dodgl

446·1066

~~~:.~. 814-U&amp;-4431, Or 614-

ntiS HOME IS A PICTURE OF
lakan care of 1986 Sl&lt;yline 24 x 52
Loealo&lt;l at Laurel Chff 1n Pomeroy features

'*""'

ac

o;

87

LOOKING FOR KC SCHOOL DIST.? VERY NICE
FRAME RANCH WITH FULL FINISHED BSMT. HOME
HAS 3 BR'S AND 1~ BATHS, NICELY DECORATED
WITH OVER ONE ACRE LOT. BASEMENT HAS LARGE
FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, OFFICE SPACE,
SMALL WORKSHOP AND STORAGE. GREAT PRICE
OF $52 ,9001
$6,500 NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING
WOULD MAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.

w.t&gt;ar. 2 baths, range, rei . covered trort pon:h, back
decl&lt;. 2 cor garage, 24'x28 corpon, oi&amp;C. H P.
ar on 1 ac. m1 Must seerl

011

We
Do Hauling An~lme
Anyplace , No Job Too B g
Rnldenllal
Of
com marc: lei Too lillie B1Mment Cl..ninj'
wiring, nn aervk:;e or n,clra. G.,_.t Work, Any Kindl 61 ~
Muter Ucenaed eltct clsn. 371-2278 Anl"lme
Ridenour Elactrical, WV000308,

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - APPROX 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME. NICE COUNTRY
SETIING. $39,500.

1697. OOUBLEWIDE RANCH WITH 3 BRS, klchen

17i3 BRICK RANCH:

85 General Haull ng

CAPTIVAllNG VIEW- 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RAN CH
HAS 1800 SQ. FT. LIVING AREA . FAMILY SIZE
KITCHEN HAS NEW DISHWASHER SNACK BAR
LENNOX HEAT PUMP 1 ACRE LAWN . Seo,OOO.
'

area. lR

LA. calflOdrll ceiino&gt;. klcl&gt;en (oal&lt; - - ) wllh din-

304-

: lnsulattd, PI Pit V F 0 3D4-61'5-

Locust Street, Gallipolis

be...,..,

the rear. RedUCAid

range. ret . sur'4XHt:h . lull basement and garage Well
Insula ted V19w of Ohio River

j 675-1176.

•"" ..,.-::-:---::------1
1974 Chevy Step Van l50, tully

1n

t&amp;&amp;O REDUCED S2&amp;,000 - 2 or 3 bedrms , kit.

" ~:e-::---=~--cc-~

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

32

lor bull-

PROPERTY - 1 8 ac. mil (180 ft . frontage) wln
14'l70' OlkwOOd Clutle moOUe home with 2 BAs.

.. 8iJI Af'lar 7 P.M.

:;..13

LOCATED ON 2nd AVE. -

TO

- Cond, PS, $3,500 Finn. 614-446-

·~ tdrmallon

We De · 81~ And Cement,
Palloe, Porctt., Oriveoye,
Sidewalks, Garagea, Elc . 25
Yura Exptrlenc:., Free E..

I

~ 1987 S-10 Pick-Up Automatic Air

Chevy

Wood ~a[ty, Inc.

9pm.

ness ott~ or nell! ciMn home 2 bectms., LR lg
dlnlna rm., I&lt;IUipf&gt;ed ldldlen, lull
Polf&lt;YlQ

'~

~i 1984 Ford Bronco, tor uta
· $2,800. or trade for truck, 304~ 4S8 ·1793

85 General Haullng

Real Estate General

8.n

log

.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Real Estate General

rooms wtth three bathrooms Foyer with open
stUway ~rge 11'1/log room '1111th wo~mlng llrep~
formal dining room gourmet kitchen. tamlly room
game room share
open llreplace Sowtum will lei
you enlov Four Seasons. Four oversized bedroo=h
Master oodloom has cathedra l ceiling, wtl\rlpOOI
and beautHul arched windows First lloor laundry
Attached 2 car garage Two heal P\JW4&gt;' wlh backup,
5 441 Ac nvt n you tlke lndlvldual~y your nama can
on the maibox . Quallled Buyers ooly

1n1. VINTON CO. FARM: Local&amp;d on SR 160
Reslotlbta 3 bearm., br1d: home w!basarMflll /AJtO a
1979 ACidemy mobla hOn-. has 2 bedrms , kl . tin-

.., $2800 304-882-3430 or 304-882-

84

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-07

845 SECOND AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS - 2 STORY
VICTORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENTLY USED AS A4
UNIT RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE . $46 ,000 .

Real Estate General

, 2758

.~ 1J9l

614-446-3888

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

eonditlon

drl~a .

.

bedrooms, 2 story, 1'/, bath, par11al basemen!, city
water and sewer. Deep lot as·x t70

~ ~~~~~~~---­
.._ 1979 Ford Ranger F-150 4x4, 351

Bluer 4- wtl"l

Carter's Plwmblng
Fourth and Pine
Galllpotle, Ohio

_.:.&lt;~·

- l04.GT5-7297 or 575-1247

~- 1988

Healing

sa

• F600 Flat red $1,000. 1981 Otds
, Om~ga 40, does not run, S7S

exce!lenl

&amp;

tn3. RIO GRANDE HOME OR INVE STMENT - 3

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

: 1979 F·150, 4 WD $1,000. 19n

~ auto.,

Plumbing

~otal

11i0.
1765 RIO GRANDE -Home
priced lor Immediate
sale 3 bedrm bath, has heat, ca!p0f1 Approx . V. ol
an acre Beautiful trees and spot to buWd a new home
Located on SA 35 $30.000

245--'11!2.

t78S. POINTS OF
around this
raclous hOme located '" an exclusive area. Eleven

VACANT LOT 92/100 OF AN ACRE-&lt;lWNER
FINANCING. Great place to,bu1ld a new home (a Dream
Home) or place a tra1le r on 1s lot. The Rural Water
System and Elactnc Serv1ca ts avwlable at the property.
270 teet fronlage along Eno·Vonton R~ad.
t69t

'

82

Will build patio eovwa, decks,
ICrHned rooma, p1,.1t up vinyl
tiding or trailer sklr11ng 614-

Real Estate General

ol $110,000 More than 5,000 aq. n. ollivlng space
and large rms throughoul . Thts well construc18d
home ol1ers 4 bedrms , 2 balhs, upper and lowtr
Hwlng, 2 wb fireplaces . !amity rm.. built-in kitchen
wrbarbewe, 2 car garage, 1s11101.)r laundry

1160• . READY FOR OCCUPANCY - i&lt;A-r10i&lt;...C

~ }961 Olda Cutin• Caiola, 4

.,. 1990 Geo Prizm hatchback, ••·

l-800-

Jaekaon, OH 1-100-637~526.

... t.aadedl Excellent Condltton!
~ }4,900. 814-446-4225, Allor &amp;p.m.

.I

Atr1Uon Motora, repaired. New
&amp; ,.buiH moloro In stock RON

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

tn2. HIDDEN TREASURE -

Home
Improvements

weeding, call IM.fi2-6314, 9am -

S.plllc Tank Pwmplng $90 Glllla

Unconditional Ufallme guanm111 local rala11nc::•• tumlshld
Free estlmatu. Call collect 1614·237-&lt;&gt;488, day or night.
Rogart BtMmanl Walarprooflng

81

Home
Improvements

JET
EVANS, JACKSON, OH .

" 1187 Olda Dono 88, Vinyl Top,

..

I'll~.~

RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 446-0722
DEBORAHSCIIES, REALTDR,446·6806
LYNDA FRALEY, REAL TOR, 446-6806
MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOR, 446-6806
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 24[,-ISIS

537-9528.

~

•: Blue lntaMor, Air Condllloning,
~ PW, PO, AMIFM CtauNe, 31,300
~ Mlln,
Excellent
Condition,

•

..

81

J.W. Conaiructlon. Room Ad· G - Crook Rd. Porta, 1119dH!or., Roolo, Docks, Siding pll.. , pickup, and dellve,._. 814-And All Typoa 01 Ezlwlor And 446.0294.
"""'"' Palming. Will Gl-.. Low Total llwn care, 18 (11t time
Bid. Licorwed. J14-24&amp;-5076.
special}, lnclud• mowing &amp;

EUNICE NIEHM, REAL TOR, 446-1897

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

.. Ford Ranger 4x4 S2,euu. 1088
"' Dodge Vi811
82 000 mlln Want to buy ex.c mobile home
~ $3,000. 11115 Ford F-150 $2,300. tires , 7•14.5, call and leave

• 19115 o~ Dono 88 l2,595.
j CJI .llop oxc cond l2,895.

fi='}l

-;a ,IIi

Home

Ron't TV Service, apecllliling
In Zenith aleo •rvldna moa1
Foundollon Wort&lt;, Roofing' othlr brandt. HouN catTt, also
Khchane And Batha. Fr.. ~ """"' appllanco ropalro. WV
1ima1MI R•ferancee, No Job 304-676-23118 Ohio 614-441-2454.
Too Big Or Small! 614·367-GSI6.
O.vle
S.W-Yac
Service,

DIAN CALLAt1AN, REALTOR, 446·6806

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt

Curti• Home lmprolfem•nte.
Ytul Experienca; On Older &amp;
Newer Homte. Roam Additions

446~316 .

"\ 982-6$28 Clll 1h• 6pm

17,1992

Improvements

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

.

1976 Baja Ski Boat 85 HP
JoMnaon outbolrd Runs QOOd
Need• uphoilfery work r1so0

"'I .

•

May

17, 1992

rr.1' .J# ~ ,a~
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THl DlfflRENCt
\:::I?'IZt{A; ~
ak.te
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388 ·8826

614--24&gt;5677. &amp;14--992-6293.

n

May

B1

Budget TrantmluloM, Ut.ci &amp;
rebuilt, 81arting at $ft; front
WllHI drin lflrtlng •t $148 00

14ft alumn V-bonom ~t. 9.8 hp

WV

..

Motorcycles

'i7r
Ford Ranger XLT Short bad
'1fW'hatl Solid Body, Newly
:OVerhauled, &lt;408 Engine, $1,600
;Jtrm 614 -256-6357

tf78 Suzuki 75005 , good tlrH
•IPd chain hcapllonally c lean,

pso, BI4-98S-3581.
~1186

Hondl 250, touf wheel.,,

~ grul . 304 -m-5284 or 773-

Kll. THIS HOME IS LOCATED ON I oc .., lealur·

SYRACUSE - This lovety hOme Is located on 1 streel rhAr otters
plenty o1 prlvacy Vou wtll tall In IQ\je wl1h lhll .t BR hOuse that
also has LA. OR kH , balh , FR wllirepl.ace . utlll1y rm 2 car
garage, lnd large back ctedl Some &amp;ppllanc&amp;s &amp; curtains &amp;
cnpes stay Must ,..e to a,wrecllllel Call lor appolrtmenttoday!
61\I.B N :tmttl r.

~aah p1id tor Harley Oavid1on
:Jnd Indian motorcycln 1n&lt;l
.,.r1a. Any condition. E\lenlngs

1780 CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD plus convenlenl 1o
5 hopfl tng hospttal. etc Lovely home otl&amp;rs 3 bodrms
kit lamlly 1m comb 2 bathS, anached garage and
1n-ground pool The lol ba cks up to a woodod area
and otters puvacyt
1638. LAKEVIEW LOTS Choice lots wtth spectacular
11lew You will want more than one Oak, roip...
dogwooel aM evergreeen trees make I hila IWUcbln
paradise Also lots
on Wt&gt;Me Ad LakeMw
Cour'l on
aOO maltt&amp;lnld

lJS-5086

:.:s

Boats

~

&amp; Motors

for Sale

~

~

wARRAH"Tr'J
GALLIPOLIS - Ranch style
&gt;Ntth J BA LA , OR 1"/, balh
new carpet , 2 car garage . central air, lanced yd E•cellent

""~""""'

HEMLOCK GROVE - Ranch
type home on 1 aae lol, 3 BR ,

BOATERS

Guinnt Mercury Marina Service
1hreury, Mariner, Marc11.1lser
111111 . M1n:ury certified
lie, We come to you 614·

5...

-6i1'1.

·~

::: Real Estate General

Rare Opportunity
To Buy 1'h Story
Frame Home &amp;
Outbuilding on
00 aaes, Income
rom 2 gas wells,
Jree gas for home
located near
Racine.

Ella Mae Grant
Realtor
1·887·4793
I

2 baths, LA, OR, kU . deck,
potch. uti bkJQ Pr1Ced to sell
~ULB E AR Y HTS

- t tloor
rand'! With 2 or 3 BR. Lfl. kit
bath, uti rm . 1g garage . all
fenced In Low utllhles 1/ery

oood""""'
SHADE - Family home on 3 5
acres tM . 5 BR. LA OR. kfl
FR. 2 r&gt;atns . den . uti rm . ce'tar, I car garall9 HaW -way belween Pomeroy &amp; Athens
Exc:ollonl prlco
SALISBURY TWP. - &lt;4 acres -

$7,000

MIDDLEPORT - 2 Af:lt housa ,
up 2 Bn. bath, LR. ldl Down,
stu diO type wllh ktl &amp; bath
Good nwutmenl
MIDDLEPORT - 2M A.ve
Ex tra nice home 2 tenced
lots. 2 car gar. 3 BR . t 'A balh.
uti nn .. lu61 basement Close
to all rHK:essiUes Cal today
tor appl Prtced r1ghl New

•

BOck Cape Cod home that has 1 lrlendty home' ... •
atmosphere It lealures 4 bedroOmS , 2 baths, lYing'
room wnh tVeplace alec heat pufT11 and cent. air, .
1800 sq 11 Loca1 1on ls ovamoking lhe Ohio ~
Rtver snd a large lake type body ot water aaplnlng
property boundaries Space Is 1 36~8 metal buklng.
Perted !Of someone lhll haS e bUSi"eSI and flMdl I
large •orage • u Plus. a 1•l24 bu~ that could
t:.e used tor 1 showroom or a !m&amp;H apartmE!nl , ·
Cal !Of more details
•~+

-'

.

tnl . BEAUTIFUL RANCH HOME slua1ed on 2~
acras In 1 quilt telling In Twin Pines Slbdvlslon,•
Home laatum 3 bedrooms , 112 batl\5, utllty
tMng room. din~ are~. kitchen, full basenwi, 1 car

THE
I own Cort 3 bttdrm ranch,
rm , 1/o bath! $37.000

anach&amp;d garage -

rool

room:

·I

COI

d&amp;IIICh&amp;d gorago.

1760. 2 OR 3 BEDROOM, 1 Nih , Jiving room, family
Mlelle dlah wlh equlpmenl $40

roorv.

SR 12&lt;1 - IUnernllla Commerdal property. 4 .000
sq n concrel• block bldg
Coukl be uiiHzed tor v~us
buslneSS8S Many extru

t731. CALL AND ASK ABOUT ME - I'm o
very ntol horne in town and my ownara .,.
oWonng mo at a good prico. Anracwo
kitchen , dtnlng area , DW, oven , range ,

displ., LR, lo~ bath w~oundry, goa hoo~
cenl air, ceiing fans, largo lonced backyard
lor tho kids or pals.
1113. GOOD 1"-TOWN LOCAllON - .kJst a
block from g1000ry otorw . N.c. home oftoro LA ,
kilclton. BRa, bath, fargo lront por&lt;:h.

tt562. STOPit New on 111• marl&lt;ol 3 BR homo

DANVILLE - 1/ , acres rTVI , 1
story. 2 BA bath . LA , kn
Priced tor quidl: sale Low

1802. Q.OSE TO RIO GRANDE: NNI clean roltage

Teens
SCIPIO TWP

Ill.

11662 QUALIT'I-LOCATIOII-SPACE: Quoltly lo

aw

1767. FOR SALE OR TRADE: llrtct&lt; ranch home lea·
tumo 3 D&amp;&lt;Wooms. 1'It balhl, buemenl, and 1 c.v
garage SltJAted on 0 816 ac;. rTVI . Owner wlltrade lor
honw In the country

404--428-3207.
V.mah• 400 dlr1 bike1 powerful.
wlli'l ulna, good tnape , 304-

lng 2 or 3 bedrOom -Mih tamlly room. klchen, bath.
CO\I&amp;nld carport , iarve Sloragt buldlng ltD home II
an excelenl slarter hon-. pi10&amp;d In the $301. Call lor
mora ntonnatlon

onerlng 2 bedms , 1 bath, Qood Insulation, metal
siding, newty decoraled, 1 outbuilding, garden tpOI,
I 61 IC. rn"'. H~ for l'n()bjla home . Ttillt tor 1M

4 '/, acres -

$8.500

&amp;

my gal Glullocallonl

1714. 10 AC. FARII local &amp;&lt;I In Hontaon To""""" ~ •:

room house, ~lnyl sided, glas.sed-ln lront PDfch. • 4
~CrM.-.d In bade porch, M\lerll trull trees, tabiCCO : •
bua , 2 bl.ms ean tor details.
...

in town. K~chen , LR, DR, largo 2 car garago,
gu heat oontral air Call tor mora dotaila.
1126. $2&amp;,100 __ Evana Ho1ghts, 3 BR, LR ,
kitchen. bath, lull baoomont.
Ufl. MEIGS CO ., 240 A.. m~ . Bodford and
Choltar Twp. Old original log homo With
addition oddtd. Drilled woll, county wa.. r
availablo. Haa _ , ownod by ..,. ftnllly for
• gen...lion•.

- SA 124 , 1us1 outside Syracu10 vmage limits.

m

This roomy ranch type home hu everything you could
for
and morel You wtt find 3 BR, 1 bath, LA . Ml·ln ldlehen , lam rm.

b - . 2 cor OlriiO" Tho buomerllhlll 1 roc. nn., kl, L&lt;ty
nn. AIOO, lhol8 aro -1 1001111 - klchon, balh, I.R, [)A, 2 BA .

Lottofcto-IA ~llalor .. ond4.5-IMOI'Inductod 1n Is poclUIOO. Excelert home. Tills one won! lui tong. Pitted
11110.

'"'.quiCk

1782. PACKAGE DEAl.« BUY SEPARATE
1783. 2-2 STORY FARII HOUSE: Locatld In
Spflngtleld Towmh.,, good lot slz• Clllltordatda
11•1. OVER 2112 AC. OF GOOD DEVELOPMENT
LANO lfT1Jroved site, 1250 g~~lon IIJ)Ik: tank on property, quiet lOcation , clo• to UnNardy ot Rio
Grande Fr011s on bltddop rd., uua• aval..-. c.ll
lora sho~

1733 EXTRA NICE MOBILE HOME FOR
SALE•- '86 Holly Pori&lt; 14x72, 2 BRa, LR ,
lcilchon, DR, central air and lots of extra

To'HoiiPfiil, ....,..riont location, 3

teatunoo.

bedroOm vtr?jt sldld ranch homl , oood 1o1 size . ..,.,.,

1203. OHIO TOWNSHIP - 53 /, ac111s, more or t142. S35,VOOII _- WHY PAY RENT? - Rancn
loaa. Very nice ranch otyla home oftors 3 or 4 style homo on SA 160, 3 BRa, LA, kitchen ,
badmoms, LR, k1t&lt;:hon, bath, lull baoemenl, balf1 , anacho&lt;l gartJO, 1001&lt;300 lol
carpet, doclt, gersgo, sidong Tobacoo base
and tobacoo bam . Additional land.
1540. GET COZY tN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - Attractive homo oftoro 3
1246. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
BRs, bath, kilcllon, t2x24 tan11ly 100fT\ with
ONE I · Largo log homo can bo purcha sed W1th
fireplaco and living room with flraptace
162 acrea or 2 acr.a Thill home otfers 4 BR s
S1 tuatod on 1.12 acra,mll.
3 batht, oqUippod k1tchon , LR , FR ,
t235 . LET YOUR IMAGINATION TAKE
fi~t~places,
pumlcont. air (backup system).
OVER With this Ia~ homo. Situetod across
oversiZed 2 car attached gomga Frontage o n
from GAHS th11 home offers 5 BAs .. 4
Raccoon CrNk.
balhs, kitchen, LA, 16xt6 FR. It you want
1245. WOULD YOU UKE TO GET OUT BY
axtra room this ta1he one tor you.
YOURSELF? - Thia could ba tho place ,
boau~ful log homo o"oro 4 BRa (maotor
1110. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
bedroom haa o firoplaco), t ~ ball1a, LR w/FP, BACKYARD- Vory nloo all bnclt home offers 3
kitchon, dining room, FR. Sacond old homo on BRa, LA w/firoploco, oquippad kitchen, lull
property 112 5 acros, mil
basemonl

"-1

2

t173. SELLER WANT TO RELOCATE - Nioo
mini tann lor lie family. 3 BR homo o"or• 2
batha, LR, OR, kltl:Nn ond other oxtnta, 24x32
g&amp;nlgo, al!Qv"1jround pool, tobaoco baao .
t510. WHITE RO•~Q 20 acres , MIL,
vacant land. Ar.-0\)~ miles lrom Charola ia
Lako. $20,1A~~

1208. RIO GRANDE AREA- 2.67 acres m~ .
lovely 2 slory homo with 3 BAs, 1~. baths,
kilchen, LR. Ideally loca*l near new h1~way.

t512. 108 ACRES MIL, Guyon Twp.,
vacant lond, spring on property May holp
finanoo to CJJolifio&lt;l buyer.

1578. LARGE FARM - 386 aero mA, 55xt00
bam, 3 ponds, tobacco baoe. Call lor dotails
1697, NICE HOME, EOGE OF TOWN, LOTS
OF POSSIBILITIES- LA, ki!chon, DR, 3 BRs ,
bath, laundry. Pticed for begrnner'

Green

School.

1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THISII - Localed on
Sooond Avo., wd&lt;ID siDre, clourch, school and
shopping, 2 story home oftora ki tchen. LR. DR,
FA , 3 BAs, 2 batha, gas heaVoontral aor
t161. LaGRAHDE BOULEVARD - Ali i bnck, 3
BRa, LA, kitchen, bath , lull ba seme nt ga s
torco&lt;l air, attachod gerage, &lt;&gt;ty schools

1154. NICE STARTER HOME - Localed 1ust at
the edge of town Th1s home featurea 3
badrooms , bath , hvtng room. k1tchen, dm1ng
room and a full basement F 1ve mtnutes to
tbwntown

1146. OWNER HAS REDUCED THE
PRICE TO $33,9001 - Older home with
lots of potential localed in town just a few
blocks from all stores Home offers LR.
DR, kitchen, I /', baths, 3 BRa. Goa heat,
large alto:.
1759 NICE HOME LOCATED IN PATRIOT
Ouiol nooghborf1ood . 85xt72 lot. 3 BR.
balh, LA, kitchen, nw:. carpet, attached
garage w/open9f

t200. GREEN TWP. PORTERBROOK SUBD.,

Willi VERY NICE RANCH - 3 BAs. LR,
kilchon, bath and ha~. 2 car gamge, firoplaca
1114. $2t,OOO - 3 lots + older homo,
Bidwol, 3 BAs. bath, LA, ki!chan, worl&lt;shop
lllld garage.
MOBILE HOME 1ust at tho o&lt;lga of lown
!lltuated on .se acre witl1 a Ia~ block garage,
city utilities, gas heat and cant. arr

1150. OWNER HAS GIVEN THill HOllE
LOTS OF CARE - 3 BRs, bath , kitchen, LR,
fireplaoo , I car unatlocho&lt;l gorago.
1228 - .t8 A. MIL (Hollatt Dllloll Subd.l Along Racooon Croak Groat tor a IIIObllo
homo. La~ pino tr90t on 3 sldot .,.. CARMEL ROAD - R10 Grondo , _ - 5 lots for sale $6,900 oaclo Call lor dowla -.1
du-ections

J,111V SJQ.OOO 00

1771. 111-12 ACAEI 1111. BEAUTIFUL ROLLING
LAND

can be !lvklld also lfld purmllld •• tolows

12aau-. (2). 3 ,....(t ac. woodtdlnd2
aca. - ); (3) ~ aco. cloarOd, and (4) lololac10ago
oiiD-12 acns IM. $35,000

tni. BUILDING LOTS ... .2Y, ae mJ1 on 1 comer lot
oft Slate Aoula 325 and Sh.non Road. 1.7 mil !rom ·:
Rio Grande U.Wenlty Roolrl&lt;l&amp;d lois. cal tor pr'co. ••
I

•

�Page 08

Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel

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

May 17, 1992

Ohio Lottery

Cleveland
Cavaliers
advance

Super Lotto:
4-11-23-27-32-42
Kicker:
1-7-6-4-7-1
Pick 3: 479
Pick 4:8105

Page 5

Vol. 43, No. 11
Copyrlghlod 1ti2

RECOGNITION - Veterans Memorial Hospital Admioistrator Scou Lucas presented these
nve employees with five year employee service
pins duriog ceremonies held io the hospital cafeteria Friday afternoon to wrap-up activities or
National Hospital Week. Receiving the awards

from the left are Ruth McGrath, Rosemary
Young, Sandy Sargent, Sherrie Roush and Sue
Zirkle, aU or the hospital's nursing starr. Others
to receive five year pins later are Kay Cullums,
Jeff Jones, Barbara Hatf'~eld, Pa~cia Dent, Jane
Hul!\nan, Clara Young, Linda Jones and Orenda EIIIOII.

LONG SERVICE - Fifty-five years of service as employees or Veterans Memorial Hospital are represented by these three employees pictured receiving awards f'rom Scoll Lucas, hospital administrator, Friday afternoon. From the
left are Bobbie Hobsteller, wbo received a clock
for 25 years or sen ice; Connie Tucker and Belly
Curfman, each receiving diamond studded

I
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department's top conservationist says farmers have been
given farr warning that unless their
land is protected from erosion they
risk losing their farm subsidies.
Wilham Richards, chief of
USDA's Soil Conservation Service, says the agency is ready to get
Iough with farmers who are not
"actively applying" conservation
plans to their highly erodible land.
Until this year, the agency has
largely been educating farmers
about the law and helping them
adopt conservation plans. Bul an
envuonmental research group has
c001plained that the agency loolted
the other way when it found farmers in violation.
Now, an mtemal agency document also raises questions about the
low number of tracts of land found
not 10 be properly implementing a
conservation plan.
A national team of agency officials found that fanners were not
actively applying conservation
plans on one out of every 6.8 tracts
of land, while field employees had
reported a noncompliance rate of
one oot of every 61.7 tracts.
The report also said there is
potential for fraud if agency
employees are declaring land to be
in compliance if a conse rvation
plan is actually not being applied.
Agency officials, howev er, say
they have no evidence of actual
fraud.
Richards released the stud y to
The A ssoc iated Press on Friday,
but 10 an interview defended his
agency's strategy in implementing
the law. Approxtmately 1.2 million
farmers and 135 m1ilion acres of
highly erodible land are affected.
The law requires farmers with
highly erodible land to be actively
applying a conservation plan to
their land accordmg to a sc hedule
approved by the agency. The plan
must be fuUy implemented by Dec.
31, 1994. Those who don't comply
with the timetable risk losing their
farm subsidies and other benefits,

including crop insurance or farm
loans.
In a May 5 memo to state conservationists. Richards said the
agency must send a clear message
to fanners that they are expected to
carry out their conservation plans
and those who do not will be
reponed to the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service.
That USDA agency is responsible
for deciding whether a farmer is
eligible for continued subsidir.-&gt;.
"Eligibility for benefits or other
personal considerations must not
enter into our technical decisionmaking process or override our
professional judgment." Richards
said in the memo, obtained by the
AP. "We need to better identify
producers who are not actively
applying their plans."
Ken Cook, v1ce president for
policy at the Center for Resoun:e
Economics, an environmental
research organization, said the
agency's study verifies his concerns that f1eld offices are uoderreporting potential violalions.
''The deJXU1ment is goin$ as far
as saying there mighl be potential
fraud," Cook said. "The directive
that's been sent 10 the field as a
result of this study really provides
some exuaordinary instructions to
them - not to take personal views
into account, to be honest and to
have integrity.
"It points 10 the fact that there
were massive abuses of the law last
year, and now the agency is saying
so itself." Coolt said.
Richards, however, notes thai
the law required farmers to change
the way they care for their land.
"We're talking about a very
comple&gt; change in the way people
operate land," Richards said.
"We· re talking about moving from
an age-old histaic culture of clean
tillage and plowing the land to the
new technolo~y of residue management (mulch10g the land) ... and
that's a major cultural change. And
it's happening faster than it's ever
happened in history."

Senate approves legislation
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate has approved legi slation
thai would require the Farm Credit
System to repay the federal government the S1.3 billion it borrowed
silt years ago.
Sen. Palrick Leahy, D-Vt., satd
the Farm Credit System would
repay, with interest, all federal

assistance it received.
"The 1987 farm credit refonns
worked," said Leahy. chainnan of
the Senate Agriculture Committee.
"The Farm Cr«iit System is now
solvent and it its time to begin
repaymg the money used to bail it
ou t in 1987."

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
May 9, 1992
STOCK STEERS:
90.00-152.00
300-under
82.50-104.00
300-.500
67 .00-8600
500-700
62.00-67.50
80().over
STOCK HEIFERS
82.00-115.00
300-under
75.00-85.00
300-.500
68.00-83.00
500-700
59. 5().64 .50
800-over
STOCK BULLS:
85.00-117.00
300-uoder
78.00-95.00
300-.500
65.00-80.50
500-700
53.00-68.75
Slaughter BuUs
4
50.00-950.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
47.00-58.50
Bred Cows By #
450 00-630.00
BredCowsBH
Slaughter Cows:
51.50-53.15
High Dressing
45.50-48.75
Utility
35.00-4 1.50
Canner &amp;: Cutter
VEAL:
85.00-91.00
Oloice
77.00-85.00
Medium
80.00-85.00
Good

LAMBS:

Light·Blue

Feeders

Baby Calves BH
HO({SES CWl

Ponies

62.00-68.50
62.00-66.50
85.00-260.00
52.00-61.50
38.00-50.00

Miss., ~din~ recent report
He said so1l accumulate&lt;l as far
as 10 feet back from the grass
hedges in a yearlong study.
"It was fenile soil thai would
have been lost if it had been on
unprolecte&lt;l couon fields," McGregor said.
Soil losses from May through
September averaged 14.1 tons an
acre on grass -hedged plots that
were ulled, compared to 24.4 tons
on plots with out hedges. On

employee service pios. Tioa Neigler wiD receive
a ruby studded 10 year employee service pin
later. Numerous employees were on band for
ceremonies honoring employees receiving
awards and refreshments were served by the
Nutrition Department. Ofr.cers of the Women's
Auxiliary, tbe hospital's volunteer unit, were
presented corsages on Friday.

World wheat trade down
WASHINGWN (AP) - World
wheat trade is projected at 102 mil lion metric tons for the current
year, down 5 million from the previous year, despite increased
import demand from Eastern
Europe, the Middle East and
Africa,
A decrease in imports by the
former Soviet Union and the
Republic of Korea will more than
offset the increases. says the Agriculture Departrnenl's May report
on the world grain siluation.
"The European Community and
Canada will stan the year with
large carry-in stocks and the
prospect of continued high production levels," the report said.
"Additionally, Australia's crop is
expected to rebound substantially

Missouri advances
to stage II
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department has
advanced Missouri to Stage II and
Hawaii to Stage IV in the eradication program for pseudorabies. a
disease of swine and other livestock that usually causes death.
States advance from Stage I,
preparation, to Stage V, signifying
pseudorabies- free status. Stage II is
conuol. Stage III is mandatory herd
cleanup, and Stage IV is surveillance 10 ensure no infec tion
remains. Stage V is Bf;hieved when
a state completes one year in Stage
IV without finding an infected
herd.
At presen~ 10 states and Pueno
Rico are in Stage I; 16 are in Stage
II; 3 are in combination Stage II III; 14 are in Stage III; six are in
Stage IV . One state. Maine , is
pseudorabies free.

untilled plots, the losses were 0 .7
tons With hedges and 1.3 tons With oul hedges.
_"We plan to measure runoff lllld
soil loss from the couon test plots
for at least lwo more years, ·'
McGregor said. "As gaps in the
hedg_es fill in, we expect more
pondmg of water uphill from the
hedges, more complete depostUon
of~ sediment in.those ponds and,
poss~bly, less _sediment and water
leav10g the fields. We also are
comparing other types of grasses
for use as hedges.··

A strategy for success in the
years to come wiU center mainly on
a person's ability to be flexible and
accept challenges, the president of
Marshall University told the 363
graduates of the Class of I 992 at
the University of Rio Grande on
Sunday.
With the future in a constan~y
changing world becoming more
uncenain, "our best bet is to keep
growing through education," Dr. J.
Wade Gilley told the graduates at
Rio Grande's !16th commencement ceremony. "Always make
your next move the kind of move
where you will be able to take
advantage of the opponunities and
challenges that will arise."
Dr . Gilley. who assumed th e

E

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pen Very un ay,
Absolutely no alcoholic
b
N
'bl
everages · ot rupontl 8
for loues or accident!.
For more information call

crop."

R

aces

"The economic lunnoil we have

experienced in the United States is
an example of the change m the
world economy," Dr. Gilley
remarked. "Our standard of living
has been slipping as a resu lt of the
economic sleight of hand going on
around us. All of this economic

388-9300
11:00 a.m
•
start al 1:00 p.m.

COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER - Or. J .
Wade Gilley, president of Marshall University,
urged the graduates of the University of Rio

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UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL - Students at
Riverview School in Reedsville got a chance to
experience nature firsthand on Friday, at a Natural Resources Field Day at Forked Run Slate
Park. Here, Chrissy Smith, Amber Church,

jeremy Marcinko, Jeremy Reed and ~ason
McCartney introduce themselves to a fnendly
black snake, as ODNR Naturalist Lynn Barnhart supervises.

Friday. when students and faculty
spent the day at Forked Run State
Park near Reedsville.
A "natuml resources f1eld day"

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2913 Pltdrnoot Road. Hont~~gton . WV 25704

:104-429--4718

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
•

Auto. trans., 4 wheel
Independent suspension, 4.3L V-6 engine,
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step
bumper,
AMIFM
radio.

VALUE

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(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304) 675-1675

133 PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
614·446·2532
Locally owned and operated by Herb Smith for the
past 15 years.

break that blackou~" Bowen said.
"We arc not going to be hurried
by anybody," Bowen said.
The negotiations were recessed
on Wednesday. two weeks after
they resumed in Pittsburgh follow ·
in g the ouste r of former
Ravenswood Ch1ef Executive Offi.
ce r R. Emmett Boyle . Under
Boyle's management, the company
had not met w1th the union since
July 1991.
Steelworkers spokesman Gary
Hubbard said he expects negotiations 10 resume by Wednesday . He
said the company "wanted time to
assemble some backgroond maten -

s1des. But we're hard at It without
the assi stance of mediation ·'
The labor di spute began when
th e un ion' s con tract expired and
Ravenswood hired more than 1,000
replacemem workers w perfonn the
1,700 S!Uiwor\;crs' JObs The company has contended thai the union
IS on strike. The Steelworkers say
they have been locked ou t of the
plant.
In his speec h. Bowen repeated
the union 's freq uent vow that Iiley
w1ll nO\ work alongs1de those who
were hued to replace them.
"If there ts a priority in ncgotiallons, that is Number One." Bowen
said .
al. .'
"One thin g for sure is 1hc scabs
"T hese have not been easy
ncgotialions. · · Hubbard said. will be out and Unlled Steelwork "There arc difficult ISSues for hoth ers Local 566R w11l walk 1n,"
Bowen SHJd

gave boys and girls the opponunity
to experience first hand the wonders of nature found (literally) in
their own backyard.
Student s were tak en by bus
dircc~y to the park Fnday morning,
then spent their entire school day
there, ate breakfast, lunch and a
snack under the shade trees. and
enjoyed nature from several unique
perspccuvcs. Throughout the day.
the emphasis was "hands on".
Participants from the Ohio
Department of Natural Reso urces
mcluded naturalists Lynn Bamhan
and Cheryl Hambcl : Reid Caldwell
and Randy Wachter. managers of
Strouds Run and Forked Run State
Parks, respectively; Brenda Sams,
District Watercraft Supervi sor ;
(Continued on page 3)

HOMETOWN HEROES - Four members of
the Tuppers Plains community were honored on
Saturday by the Tuppers Plains VFW Post for
their contributions to the community. The pO!;t
held its Loyally Day program on Saturday. Piclured, 1-r, are jay Ellis, Past District 8 Commander of American Legion, who was the program 's

keynote speaker; Pal Hall or the post 's auxiliary; Rose Carr, who Sfrved as hostess for the
event ; and llometown ller&lt;l&lt;'S Viclor llahr, Red
Carr and Iva Upton. Rev. Sharon Hausman,
pastor of the Chester, Alfred and Sl. Paul's
United Methodist Churches was also honored,
but was unable to attend.

Lawmakers, challengers run in new districts

s.u..a ' .....

..........
•AftDMlnc:

•fA(M

By MARTIIA RRYSON HODEL
Associated Press Writer
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va . Negotiators trying to rcsol ve the
18 -month -old labor dispute at
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. will
resume their sess ions tlu s week fol lowing a break to " reg roup ," a
union official says.
The week -long break in the contract talks " was needed for both
Sides," said United Steelworkers
Dislrict 23 Director Jim Bowen.
"Many complex ISs ue s
remain,'· Bowen said at a Saturday
rally for the 1,700 members of the
union who have been off the job at
Ravenswood Alum1num smcc Nov.
I, 1990
llolll s1dcs had agreed not to dtscuss details of the nego tiation s.
" and lllere's no way we're going to

Riverview students visit state park
"Up close and personal."
That's how you could describe
the experience for the student body
at Riverview Elementary School on

$19,895

OPTIONS:
New ElkiiCed V6

Grande Sunday to be adaptable to changing
times. The university issued diplomas to 363
graduates in ceremoni.,; on the college green.

Steelworkers say negotiations progressing

NEW 1992 S·15
4 DOOR

NOW

A Multlmedl• Inc. Nawsoaoer

chaos is symptomatic of the
changes taking place in the world.
"Those who will provide global
leadership in the future will provide their countries with a betLer
standard of living, and I hope that
leadership will come from th e
United States," he added.
Dr. Gilley urged the graduates
to continue learning, be nexiblc,
face the changes occurring around
them and in their chosen professions, and be poised to take advantage of opponunity whenever possible.
"I hope you will have an important role in charting our nat10n 's
co ur se in the uncertain years
ahead," he concluded.
Continued on page 3

388-9617 or
Gates open at

Named regional forester
WASHTNGTON (AP) - Eli.-..beth Es till, currently associate
deputy chief of the Nauonal Forest
System, has been named regional
fore ster of the Rocky Mountain
Region.
"Beyond her experience and
abilities, Elir.abeth Estill is also a
trailblazer in her new assignment.
She is the first woman regional
forester in the 87-year history of
the Forest Service," said Forest
Service Chief F. Dale Robertson.
He said she is a trained ecologist
w 1th a background in recreation
and land management, and brings
nwly two decades of experience to
the Rocky Mountain Regional
Forester job.

presidency of Marshall m August
1991, said the standard commencement address examines the kind of
world graduates will face. But in
the four years in which RIO
Grande's graduates have been in
sc hool , the world has changed so
radically in political, economic and
technological terms that i1's impossible to predict what d~e world Will
be like as it prepares for the 21st
century.

I

from last year's drought-reduced
The European Community is
projected to expon 21.5 million
tons in 1992-93. up 500,000 tons
from 1991-92 . Canada's export
projection of 23 million tons is
down l million tons from 1991-92.
Expon potential for the United
States "would be constrained by
low carry-in ~lOCks and production
levels," the report srud. It projected
U.S. ex pons at 32.5 million tons.
down more than 2 million tons
from 1991 -92.
Production in the fanner Soviet
Union will be greater than last year,
the report pred1cted, reducin g
impon demand.
"S teady growth in China 's
wheat consumption since 1990 is
projected to result in imports of 16
million tons during 1992-93, up
500,000 tons from 1991 -92," the
report said. Yugoslavian impons
account for most of the mcrease.

0

1 Secllon, 10 Page• 25 cenla

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 18, 1992

Flexibility is key to success,
MU president tells Rio grads

USDA ready to get Asian hedge helpful in saving topsoil
tough on farmers
VINTON RACE WAY
WASHINGTON (AP) _ An
ornamental grass hedge from Asia
can save valuable topsoil from
being washed off fields Agriculture Department researchers have
found
"J~st one row of the grass Miscanthus sinesis held back about 45
pen:ent of the soil nonnally lost or
eroded from cotton tesl plots last
year," Keith C. McGregor, an agricultural engineer for lbe Agricul tural Research Service in Oxford
•

.\1ostlv cloudv . C hane~:()( show ·
ers. Lu~ in lht mid s o~ .

BANNERS GO UP - The new "Wekome to Pomeroy" banners,
purchased for Main Street in Pomeroy by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association were hung for display Saturday. Twelve or tbe banners were p~rcbased with proceeds raised from tbe annual fashion
show of tbe association and a $500 contribution from Bank One.
Pictured are raul Cline as he bangs one of the banners, assisted by
Susan Clark, president of the ~ssociation, and Scott Dillon, a member or Pomeroy Village Council.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Incumbents and challengers will
run in new d1 stricts Jun e 2 to establish bat de lines for what may be an
all-out war 1n the fall for con trol of
the Legislature.
In most races, Incumbents arc
scekmg re -election . In the House,
there arc 18 non -incumbent races
for nominations.
Democrats have held the House
for 20 years, but that could change
thi s year. House districts were
realigned by the state Apportion ment Board in a way that gives the
GOP its best chance in years.
Republi cans controlled th e
board 3-2 after the 1990 election of
Gov. George Voinovich and Secretary of State Bob Taft. who are
members by law.
They joined GOP Senau: President Stanley Aronoff of Cincinnati
to weaken Democratic strongholds
throughout the 99 House and 33
Senate districts .
Speaker Vern Riffe and other
Democrats are challenging the new
di stricts in the U.S. Supreme Court
A decision is not expected for
mond1s, and a lower court ordered
the elections to proceed.
Democrats control the House
61-38. House members serve twoyear terms. and all seats are up for
grabs.
Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg, who heads the

House GOP Campaign Committee.
sa1d the party w1ll f1eld a slate that
can hold GOP scats and gam the 13
needed to win the House.
Riffe predtcts Dcmucrm w1ll
keep control. hut admits 11 IS ht&lt;
b1ggest challenge in his IHyears as
speaker.
Republi ca ns have a 2 1- 12
advantage in the Scnau:. where 17
~ca t s are al stake . Senators se rve
st.1ggcred. four -year tcnns.
"Rea listi cally, our goal is to
hold our own," said James Tilling,
strategist for Senate Republtcans.
But Senate M1nority Leader
Robert Boggs, D-Jefferson, sa id
Democrats have a shot at recapturing conuol. Thineen of the 17 seats
at stake arc held by Republican s,
making them more vulnerable.
Boggs said Democrats have candidates who will campaign aggressively to point out failures of lhc
Senate's leadership.
The new House districts paired
25 incumbents, mos~y Democrats,
in the same dislric~ fon:ing one to
move or step down.
Eleven House members are not
running for re-election. That is not
an unusual number; 12 didn't run
in 1990.
Some are stepping down for
other reasons.
Minority Leader Corwin Nixon ,
R-Lebanon, said 30 years in th e
House are enough. Rep. Cliff

Skeen. D-Akron. bowed out after
bc1ng placed in the same dtstrict
with Rep. To m Seese. D-Akrun .
Skeen IS being treated for cancer.
Rep Paul Mechling. DThornv ille. yie lded to Rep. Mary
Abel. D-Athens , after they both
wound up 1n llle new 78th DIStnCL
Other House incumbent s not
seek ing re -election 1nc lud c Reps.
Larry Man ahan . R-Dcfiance;
Robert H1ckcy. D-Dayton ; Fred
Deering, D-Mon rocv dlc; Robert
Clark , R-C hardon; Joseph Sccres~
D-Scnecavlile. Judy Shee rer, DShakcr Heights; and Dean Con ley,
D-Columbus.
Rep. Richard Cordray. R-Grove
Ci ty. IS le avi ng the House to run
for Congress in the 15th Congressional D1smct.
And a soccessor to replace Rep.
Russ Guerra, R-Englewood, who
died in April. will be selected.

In two House drst&lt;lcts
DemocraLs oppose each other f~
pmnary nominauon. Reps. Suzanne
Bergansky of Cleveland and Frank
Mahnic Jr. of Garfie ld Heights are
runnmg 111 the new 15th District.
Reps. Ronald Gcrberry of Austintown and Joseph Vukovich of
Youngs town co mpete in the new
65th.
Three dislricts have Republican
and DemocratiC incumbenLs seekmg nommat10ns. They arc Reps.
Terry Tranter. D-Cmcm nati, and
Dale Van Vyven , 1..-Cmcmnati, in
the 32nd; Reps. Wayne Jones, DCuyahoga Falls. and Tom Watkins
R-Stowe, in the 46th; and Richard
Rench . R-M1lan .and Katherine
Walsh. D-Ober! in, m the 63rd.
In the Senate, mcumbents arc
scck mg re-election in all hut nn•
race. Twelve Republicans and four
Democrats seck new tenns.

Pomeroy wreck reported
Gregory Willett of Pomeroy was charged with improper backio
and no insurance coverage followmg an accident on Mulbe~
Avenue early Friday eve ning.
Pomeroy police reponed that WiU eu was backing from the Yard
at 142 Mulberry Ave. mto the sueet and struck the vehicle of Keith
Riggs, Pomeroy, which was parked in front of 143 Mulberry Ave
There was light damage to the left side and door area of Ri ;
1986 Buick and to the right side rear of the WiUeu 1979 Mertury~s

'

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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