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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

....
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FRI., JUNE 18

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Court reinstates Reynolds - Page C-1

lour ocral!lbled words btlow to form four simp!. warda

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Happy
Father's
Day

GHAGEL

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SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Gotten • Couch • Jerlcy • Mostly • COUNTRY
Wife to husband, "It says on the cover of this
catalogue if we don't make a purchase they'll give our
address lo every catalogue company in the COUN·
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Dealer: North

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family

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of George Bernard Sbaw'a
characters said: "Well, sir, you never
can tell. That's a principle in life with
me, sir, If you'll exc... my bavin1
such a thing." Maybe Sbaw was a
brid£&lt;! pLayer; maybe not. But if he
wu, be would probably bave found the
solution to today's band.
Cover the East-Weal cards and plan
the play in six hearts. Weal leads the
diamond jack. Without much confidence, you call for dummy's queen,
but East coven with tbe king. How do
you continue'
Norllt's three-heart rdlld wu aglf'!SSiW. South bid what be thou(lbt be
could make.
U tbe trumps are 1-1, tbe contract is
easy. So, after jack, queen, kin&amp;. ace of
diamonds, you should cull tbe heart
ace and play aDOther trump to dummy's king. (U you played a heart to tbe
kinK and a heart to tbe ace, you woold
go down with this layout.)
When you - tllat West bas a paranl&lt;!ed !rump Irick, you have to be
able, to discard all three of your ella-

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Bul if be bu the
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chance is to liDd Eat with queen
doubleton of da
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tbe dummy IIIII lineae your 10. Nat,
cull the dub ~a, brlngiDc down
East's q__ Finally, en. to dummy
with a spade IIIII 11111 the dlllll. discardint! all your diamond ._., West
ruffs tbe lut dub. bul thai is too Late
to defeat you.
u Eat bad bad three hearts, you
would have bad to ........., thai Weal
bad ~· doublelm of ehtllr-

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Carol. Frank and 111a family

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MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
~ AL.L. Ll6 KIDS

MY UNCU: HARL.EY, THE

AT CUR SCHOO L .
TONORROW.

N\ASICIAN, 1"3601N6l0
DO H l"3 ACT..

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thll , , _ ot a new plant.
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6ET HIM TO MAKE: THE:
PRINCI~L DISAF'Pf.AR~

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BARNEY

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ASTRO-GRAPH
' oman11cally perlocl lor you Mai l $2
pl us a long , self-Bddressed . stamped
envelope to Matchmaker . cto thts
newspaper . P.O . Bo:.: 9142B . Cleveland ,
OH 44 101 -3428
CANCER (JUM 21-.luly 22) Good
things could be com.ng your way lod&amp;'J ,
provided you let friends do for vou what
you would do lor them ill he roles were
reversed _Be a gracious recipient
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) Generally speak ing, condlllons are favorable for yOIJ today, but your greatest benefits are likely
to come from a par1nershlp wit~ someone with whom you ' ve been previously
JuM 2a, 11112
involved.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sepl. 22) A well-deSltuauona you have been unable to· lined, amblllous oblecllve ~as an excelcentro! this past year might make a dra- lent cnance ot being 1\Jifllled to yoor exmatic .turn tor lhe better In the year· pectatlons today. However , you will
ahead. They could make!! a happier llle have to earn what yOIJ hope to analn .
tor you both materially and socially.
LIBRA (hpl. 23-0cl. 23) Try to devote
GIMIM (Mar 21-June 211) TrNt today' s as mucnllme as possible today to acllvhappenings p1111010J)hleally and you Illes you truly enloy. You need a break
could be a IUCC8I8 wlll1 minimum e"ort . from mundane and traditional routines.
You might even oow aaadl tor a new SCORPIO (Ocl 24-llow. 22) C~angeo ,
trlendahlp that Ia worthy of culllvallon. wlllcn could prove benellclolto you may 1
Know - • to look lor romance and be In the offing today. You're not apt to
you'l ftnd lt. The AstrO-Gr.p/1 Matcn- have direct control over developments,
' mallor Instantly reveals wit len atgna are but you 'll like what transpires.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

::o:::..
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec:. t1) Your
greatest asset today is your ability to
project a moderating Influence over
your involvements. It's the type of force
thai can bring harmony to dissension.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22--.lln. It) Your fi.
nanclal trends look e.-tremety enoouraging today and, If you appty yourHif,
profitable results are likely - whether
you 're buying or selling.
AQUARIUS (.laft. 20-f'lll. 11) An lmpor·
tanl objacllve can be achieved today
lhroug~ some shrewd poflllcal meneuverlng on your pan. let your Intuition
govern your mode of action.
PISCES (Fill. 20-Harcll211) Dellrable
rotulls are likely today - ~ you llow
with IIWnla rather than anempt to dOm·
inate them. let nature run !Ia coune.
ARIEl (Milch 21·Aprtl 11) Try to In_valve yourself today with frllndo
·sllmulate your thooghl proc 11111 A .
very beneflclal exchange of !d-. could 1
.be In the offing.
•
TAUAUI (April 21H1eJ 211) Put lor1h 1
your best effort today; lndivtdiMIIa who '
ere in the poaltion to INke "*''lS liMiterlally ...,er will be lootclng lor wroyato ,
reward you. The coml**lion could I
be generooa.
·
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12 Sectlona, 92 Pages
A Multlmadla Inc. Nowop.oper

Meigs County
parties plan
to reorganize
POMEROY · Meigs County ' s
two political parties will re-organize this week, and it's likely that
both groups will have new leadership.
Meigs County Republican
Chairman Richard E. Jones wid
The SIUiday Times·S~IIliMI that he
has "advised the Meigs County
Republican Central Commiuec thai
I will not seek !he position of chair-

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
will soon have a new . on e-s top
agric ultural building providing
one-stop access to !he resources of
three U.S. Department of Agricul ture agencies (ASCS. SCS and
FHA) and !he Ohio State Universi ty Cooperative E•tension Scmce.
Approximately 45 people
anended a groundbreaking ceremony held Friday at 6 p.m. at the site
between !he Galloa County Junior
Fairgrounds and the Ohio Valley
Bank offia on Jackson Pike. Fred
Deel . Gallia County Four-H Extension Ag ent , delivered a short
address.

The facility w1ll help meet an
1dentifie&lt;l need for a central meel-

ing room throughout !he year and
will help promote cooperation
between various agencies serving
rural and urban clocmcle, according
to Friday's address.
"Such a faciloly has been discusse&lt;l in Gallia County for more
!han a decade.'' Deel said.
"Until this point in time. the
right conditions were never able 10
be met in order to make !his a reality. The vision and foresight of !he
Gallia County Agricultural Center,
Inc., Board which includes William
P. Smith, chairman; Phil Pope,
vice-chainnan; Frank "Buz" Mills
Ill, sccretary/trea~urer; Ray Hughes
and Gary Roach, along wilh the
strong support of many individuals
m the community have turne&lt;l the
Continued on A-3

Final grinder pump installed
for Rutland sewage project

•

YUCK! - Karen Sprague, left, and Brenda
Wilson, both of GaUipolis, unload refuse at the
Gallipolis Upstream Pubtic Usc: Area. The duo
colltcted refuse: during the fourth annual Oblo
River Sweep. Area groups and individuab, with
tbt coopenttion or area b011ters, participated in

the sweep. AI leut out 20-loo dumpster was
filled with trash collected from tbt Gallia Comt·
ty bank of tht Ohio Rlvtr. A simil•r sweep
scheduled for Raccoon Creek was postpoud
due to bigb water. (Times-Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
RlJILAND - The $2.5 million
sewage treaUnent project was completed last week with the final
installation of grinder pump systems at Rutland residences and
businesses.
The rreatrnent plant was put into
operation in January and the past
six months have been spent
installing Lhe 305 grinder pumps
which feed sewage into the main
lmes flowing into the plant
According 10 Sandy Smith. project manager. the plant is currently
averaging a daily flow of 25,000
gallons but is equipped to handle
twice that much.
Dye testing of the liquid coming
into !he plant IS hemg done to be
sure that runoff water is not going
through the pumps.
The final inspectoon by the
Environmental ProteCtion Agency,
the U. S. Corps of Engineers, and
the contractor, En~inccrin g Assoc iates, Wooster, woll take place on
June 30.
For the past several month s
everyone has been paying a standard rate of $16.12 a month . Bills
mailed out thiS week, however, will

renect water usage. Based on that
the minimum sewer charge is
$21.50 for 2,000 gallons of water
used with $4.50 for every thousand
gallons of water used !hereafter.
The rates will bring in approximately $8,200 a month in n:venue
with $4,200 of that to go toward
debt paymenl The balance will be
used for expenses of operation,
maintenance of equipment and a
fund for replacement of equipment.
The village borrowe&lt;l $500,000
from the Ohio W81Cr Development
Fund on the projcct. The other project money was in grants of
$1,493.297 from the EPA and
$617.000 from Issue 2 monies.
The area served by the new
sewage system lakes in the com·
plcte village of Rolland and
extends up New Lima Road to
White Hill Road, down Route 124
10 Happy HoUow Road, out Salem
Strcctw !he top of Lasher Hill and
out Depot Street to beyond the corjXJration lines.
Work on getung a sewer system
began more !han 15 years ago but it
took un~l 1990 to get grnnt money
to move forward on the project
Ac11181 construction began in May,
1991.

Weinberger seeks speedy Renovation of old Holzer Hospital begins
trial on scandal charge for new $2.4 million apartment complex

Sterao.

10:00 I])

Shoemaker, Phil Pope, Buzz MiUs, Ray Hugbell and BW SDLitlr, (baclt:
row, from left) Fred Deel, Tim Massie, Mike Hucbes. Larry Bess,
Rob Massie, Tim Woodward, Harold Montgomery, Ed Vollbona, Kail
Burleson, Rick McCarty, Patty Dyer and Dorothy Toler. (T -S PlloCo)

.-----------------------------------------------~

Republicans elcQcd several new
central commiueemen in their
recent primary election. They are:
Brenda Roush, Bedford Towmhip:
Debra Chevalier, Nonh Chester;
Patty Ann Pickens. West Chester;
Janice Young. Nooh Olive; Dmlcl
Larkins, South Olive; Robert F.
Snowden, Rolland Village; Charles
Barrett, Jr., West Rutland; Cecil
Stacy. Salem Township; Bernard
Gilkey, Middleport 4; Harland
Wehrung, Pomeroy I ; F. Joseph
Stobart. Racine Village; Demie E.
Hill, Racine.
Gary Phillips in Bedford Township will be the only new Democratic central committeeman. He
wiD replace Edith Leach, who did
Continued on A-j

17 Shah- -1

t.30 (I). (J) e labp Til&lt;
Maggie leela left out when
James tNma up with 1

illl.

GROUNDBREAKING - Approximately 45 people attended a
groundbrtaking ceremony for Gallia County's new agricultural
building Friday evening near tbe Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds.
Shown taking pari in tbe ctmoony are: (rront row, from left) Paul

man."

(2 wdL)
141111wllln
dance
t581uncler
18 Noveltl Urla

20

Editoral ............................. A4
Sports. ............................ C 1-6
Weather ........................... A. 3

Officials break
ground for new
ag building

._,_11

tQl

PHILLIP

Deaths............... -................ A 2

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 21, 1992

+KJIIl

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Along the ri ver .............. 81 -7
Business!Farm ............... D1-H
Classified ....................... 03-7

Vol. 27, No. 20
Coppri;hlod 1992

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Inside

•
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$PRINT NUM8!R(0 LETTERS IN
THE Sf S UAR!S

• oecB&amp;NewaO

OkoobyDaa

f~f;Y

New developments in Meigs County By Attorney Fred W. Crow - Page A-2

"Have you ever noticed,
'one eldel1y woman said to her
friend, "thai you have to get old
before anyone says you look

the chuck le ouofed
.
•
•
•
•
•
.
by f1lhng in the mtssing words
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Mail coach robbery probed by postal
officials in 1864 - Sands - Page A-6

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...........

11

By JAMES ROWLEY ,
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Former
Defense SecreW}' Caspar Wein·
berger wants a speedy trial on
chalges that he lied about tbc IronContra affair. but his lawyen fust
want to~ !he Ul prosecutor from IIylllg !he case.
Defense lawyer Raben S. Bennett told U.S. District Judge
Thomas F. Hogan on Friday thai he
would move to disqualify prosecutor Craig Gillen because he's a
potenlial witness.
Bennett's comments came as
Weinberger pleaded innocent to
chalgcs that be roncealed !he existence of copious notes he took in
1985 and 1986 during discussions
about !he Reagan administration's
etrons to free American hostages
in Lebanon by selling 11111s to Iran.
He also is ~ with lying to
Congress by denymg that he lmew
about a 1985 anns sbipment to lntn
befcxe it oo::wred and Saudi Arabia's pledge to donale $25 million
10 help arm the Contra rebels in
Nicaragua.
Hogan tentatively scheduled a
Nov. 2 trial dale after Bennett
assured the coun that he did not
plan 10 file extensive pre-trial
motions. The judge said the date
was "optimistic, but we will
allt.lllpt 10 keep i L"'

Bennett said Weinberger, 74,
wants a speedy trial because "!his
Bl KEVIN PINSON
is a II'CIIIendous cloud over him."
Tames-Sentinel Starr
Wei~. publisher of ForMs
GALLIPOLIS ·For 15 years the
magazine, 'is a public figure; his old Holzer Hospital between First
livelihood depends IJII his maintain- and Second Ave. on Cedar St. in
ing his reputation," the defense Gallipolis sat emP.ty. But seven
lawyer said.
weeks ago the bUilding's owner,
Bennett said he would me fewer Attorney Ronald R. Calhoun. sold
than 10 pre-trial motions, but the structure 10 the First Holzer
among them would be a request 10 Apartments Limited Partnen, who
disqualify Gillen because "he is an plan to renovate it and turn it into
essential witness in !his case, he is housing for the disabloo and retired
a player in this case."
persons 55 years or age and older.
Among other things, Weinberg·
Tactic Construction, Inc. began
er is charged with making false renovation work May I on the $2.4
statements to Iran-Contra prosecu· million project, called First Holzer
tors during an Oct. 10, 1990, inter· Apartments, and hope to have it
view by denying that he took completed by March I, 1993. The
delailed notes about the anns sales project is financed by the Fanners
during discussions with President Home Administration, a divisioo of
Rcapn o- other top officials.
the U.S. Department of AgriculGillen was one of !he question- twt, and will consist of S4 units, 12
ers and confronted Weinberger of which are two-bedroom.
with a statement by an unidentified
Each apartment will consist of a
informant that !he fanner defense separate bedroom(s), bathroom,
secretary had kept relevant notes and a combination living room and
about !he Iran-Contra affair.
kitchen . The one-bedroom units
Weinberger still denied that he measure 600 square feet. The
kept notes, the indictment assened.
building will also have two elevaLater, Weinberger made avail- tors, a recreation room and a sepa·
able to prosecutors I, 700 pages of rate laundry facility on each floor.
notes that he had placed in the
Library of Congress, where they Calhoun estimated the rent would
approximately $4SO a month,
were kept under his exclusive con- cost
but would be subsidizoo.
trol.
Art Winer, a general partner
with Arthur Howard Winer and

AssoCiates Management. Inc.. said
his company is involved in a "IOta!

rehabilitation of the buildmg from
stem to stem" and that everything

BEING RESI"ORED • 11te l'aatde rJl tile old
Hober Hospital fac:laa Ji'int An•• Is ill the
process ot bdnl rulond to ill orlpal COIIdi-

hut the shell will be new
Continued on A-4i

•"•tae•t

iion. ne bulldiii1 wiD be used u an
compln: for the disabled and retired ptr11011s
once renovadon Is complete.

�Page-A2-Sunday Times Sentinel

June 21, 1992

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

Mine squads will take part in contest

------Area deaths
He was born April 9, 1928, in Hogsen, W.Va. the son of the late
Thomas Jackson and Gertie Meeks Persinger.
He was retired employee of a Baltimore, OH., paper mill.
He was preceded in death by three brothers, one half-sister and four
VINTON - Services for C. Worthy Bright, 82, Rt. I, Langsville
half-brothers.
(DanviUe), who died June 17, 1992 in Dade City, Fla., were held Saturday ·
Survivors include his wife, Wil ma Allen Persinger of Apple Grove; four
at I p.m. in the Danville Holiness Church. The Rev. Rick Maloyed officidaughters, Brenda Kitchen of Havenport, OH., Wilma Eisman of Canal
ated.
Winchester, OH., Connie Persinger of Carroll, OH., and Shirley Russell of
Burial was in Danville Cemerery.
Baltimore, OH .; four sons, Emm itt Persinger of Lancaster, OH ., Sheridan
Pallbearers were John Hersman Jr., Jim Hersman, Gene Hersman,
and Alan Persinger, both of Balumore. and David Persinger of Newark,
Robert Hersman, Paul Meadows and Tom Meadows.
OH.; three sisters, Ina Burris of Lancaster, Inda Steele of Thornville, OH.,
Arrangements were by lhe McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
and Mary Hall of Apple Grove; 16 grandchildren; five greatgrandchildren; and two step-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted Monday, 1:30 p.m., at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with the Rev. Charles 1..ce Baird and the Rev. O'Dell Bush
officiaung. Burial will follow in the Beale Chapel Cemetery in Apple
• JACKSONVlll.E, Fla. - Joe Monon Carr, 74, of Middleburg, Aa, Grove.
Friends may call the funeral home Sunda y from 7 lO 9 p.m.
died Thursday, June 18, 1992 at Jacksonville.
• He was born on Dec. 5, 1917, son of the lall: Walter Carr Sr. Neither
'is mother's name or his place of birth were listed.
; He was a retired Fcrd service manager.
• Survivors include his wife, the fermer Blanche Moore, a fermer resiaent of Rio Grande; two daughters, Betty Fout of Groveport and Diane
VINTON - Emma Wilson Reynolds, 85 , 523 Mount Olive Road.
(Jill of Columbus; two sons, Eugene Carr of Middleburg and Randy Carr
t?f Ogden, Utah; 12 grandchildren and eight gre.al-grandchildren; and one Bidwell, died Friday, June 19, 1992 at the home of her daughter, Wilma
Mount
&amp;rother, Walter Carr Jr. of Columbus.
Born Nov. 19, 1906 in Elliou County, Ky., she was the daughter of the
; The funeral will be Tuesday at II a.m. at Myers Funeral Home in
ate
Asbury and Anna Adkins Wilson.
~roveport The graveside service will be at I :30 p.m. at the Calvary BapSurviving
are her husband, William Reynolds, whom she married Sept
ust Cburch cemetery in Rio Grande.
I,
1926
in
Elliou
County; a son, Emerson Reynolds of Bidwell; four
: Friends may call the funeral home Monday from 2 lO 4 p.m. and fiom
laughters, Mrs. James (Maxine) Hudnell of Sturges, Mich., Mrs. Richard
7to 9 p.m. The family may be reached at 1-836-5163.
(Avonell) Mount of Bidwell, Mrs. Jack (Wilma) Mount of Bidwell, and
Mrs. Jeannette Dmy or Springfield; 18 grandchildren and 23 great-grandchildren; and a sister, Effie Holland of Selma, Ohio.
Services will be Thursday at II a.m. in the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with the Rev. William E. Curfman offictating. Burial will
be in Vinton Memorial Park . Friends may call at the funeral home
Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.

C. Worthy Bright

Joe Morton Carr

mine rescue event. The Meigs No.
31 squ ad wa s runn er-up in last
year's event.
In the bench men's contest, 17
competitors will take a written
exam and compete in a time d
"bench" test, during which benchmen must try to fmd malfunctions
programmed into a self-conlalned
breathing appamtus.
.
The mine rescue contest wtll be
on June 25. The henchmen's an d
events.
This year, 21 ennies fiom seven first aid contests will be on June
different states wiD compere in the 26, followed by an awards banquet.

POMEROY · Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs No. 31 and
Meigs No. 2 mine rescue squads
and henchmen will compete in the
II th annual Ohio Valley Mine Rescue Contest on June 25 and 26 at
the Belmont County Fairgrounds.
The contest is sponsored by Post
No. 6 of the National Mine Rescue
Association and includes mine res·
cue, henchmen ' s and fir st aid

Emma Wilson Reynolds

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - At
least one teddy bear, plastic children's pools and countless tires and
plastic jugs were in the tons of
trash removed from the Ohio
River's banks Saturday by volunteers.
Ohio River Sweep organizers
said there were more participants
- and less trash - than in previous cleanups of the river' s nearly
2,000 miles of shoreline.
"Every year we hold the Ohio
River Sweep, we're finding less
and less trash 10 pick up, which is a
very positive sign," said Jack Maurer, a spokesman for NeviUe Cherni~al Co. who was at a Pittsburgh
~ near Three Rivers Stadium.
· The theme of the fourth annual
siveep is " It's Worl::ing."
. Bob Owen of Ashland Oil said
there were more than I ,000 particiIJilllts in a seven-county area covering parts of Kentucky, West Vir.
ginia and Ohio.
. " Participation looks up about
30 percent over last year," Owen
said. " We 're very pleased."
: He said about 250 people turned
out in downtown Cincinnati.
Jeanne !son, a spokeswoman for
the Ohio River Valley Water Sani-

tation Commission in Cincinnati,
said another 250 volunteers cleaned
up three other sites in Hamilton
County.
"It's more than just a one day
shoreline cleanup," she said. " It's
really a public awareness campaign
lO help raise awareness of the general public about the liuer and the
debris that cluuers the shoreline."
About 400 people participated
in the Pennsylvania counties of
Allegheny and Beaver. Volunteer
Troy Bogdan found cardboard from
exploded ftreworts in Pittsburgh' s
Riverfront Park.
"Fireworks are nice, but with
this litter you wonder if they are
worth it," he said.
The park also yielded several
automobile tires. But Betsy Mallison, a spokeswoman for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources, also reported
that the river sweepers are finding
less and less tra.&lt;h every year.

UPPER RT. 7
KANAUGA, OHIO

Group seeking
82nd Airborne vets
:GALLIPOLIS - The 82nd Air
bOrne Division Association is looking for any veterans who served
wilb the 82nd, according to a press
release from Shirley R. Gossett,
nl(lional membership chairman.
The association will hold its 46th
witual convention August 21-24 at
V4lley ~e. Pa. For mern bership
or.convenuon information, contact
GOssen at Airborne, 5459 Northc.-! Pl., Dayton, OH, 45414 or call
(513) 898-5977 .

I;ottery numbers
'

·:CLEVELAND (AP) - There

w~re five tickets sold numin~ all

fi)re numbers drawn in Fnday
n~ht's Buckeye 5 drawing, and
each winning ticket is wOrth
$ ~.000, the Ohio Louay said.
.;Here are Friday night's Ohio
LOucry selcclions:
B0:Ckeye5
-14-9-19-24-33
:(four, nine, nineteen, twentyfopr, thirty-three)
Pk:k J Numbers

:3-4-8

·(three, four, eight)

Pli:k 4 Numbers
~-9-3-7

(five, nine, three, seven)

The same was true in the
Louisville area, wbere an estimated
1, I00 volunteers worked at nine
sites.
"After three years I'm seeing
less trash and a different kind of
trash, " Jefferson County sweep
coordinator Bud Schardcin said. He
said he saw fewer large appliances
than in past years.
In Huntington, W.Va., about 60
people gathered at Harris River.
front Park to help pick up trash.
Site coordinata Judy Rule said that
was about twice as many volunteers as last year.
A barge with a crane picted up
the bags of traSh gathered by the
volunteers.
" We have to live here. If we
don 't keep it clean, we're hurtin Q,"
said volunteer Tracy Fricke, 30, of
Huntington.
Some volunteers dido 't suck to
the water's edge.
Todd Gregory and II of his

Like af{OOd ne1ghbor.
Stilte Farm is there.
Stale Farm ln&lt;; ura nCI' Compa n €'S
1

Home

Oll · c e ~

Oloom nqt o n

ll l• n oo~,

1987 Ford Tempo 4Dr.
NADA PRia $3425
$
GAWPOUS MOTOR CO. PRICE

1995

1985 Mercury Grand Marquis 4Dr.
$

NADA PRICE $4625
GAlLIPOLIS MOTOR CO. PRICE

299 5

1991 Chev. lumina Euro 4Dr.
NADAPRICE$12,275
GALLIPOLIS MOTOR CO. PRICE

$101 995

Gallipolis Motor Co.

friend s took out four boats and
cleaned up the shoreline of three
islands in the river near Louisville.

236 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
446·3060

1 - F-2
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TAl COUNTY DISC ......2,000.00.
FORO REBATE..... _ .....

~~=

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••• trad•ln•f

446-4517

IND.

South-Central Ohio
Sunday , mostly sunny. High in
the mid-60s.
Extended forecast:
Monday through Wednesday:
Farr through the peri~ . Highs

NEWARK, NJ. (AP) - A for·
mer Exxon sec urity guard and his
wife were charged with kidnapping
the president of the oil company's
international division. One investi·
gator said there was no indication
the executive was alive.
Arthur D. and Irene Jacqueline
Seale were arrested early Friday by
FBI agents who followed a trail of
telephoned instructions and ran~
notes.
They were charged with kidnap·
ping Sidney J. Reso, who disap·
peared April 29 on his way to
work. His car was found idling at
the end of his driveway in an
up scal e ne ighborhood w es t of
Newark.
The couple had not told police
anything about Reso' s whereabouts, and had not used his sale
return as a negotiating tool, said an
mvestigator close lO the case, who
spoke on condition of anonymity.
Reso has not been heard from
since he disappeared.
"We fear they don't have their
ace in the hole," the inves tigator
said.
The Scales, both 45. were
charged with kidnapping and ex tor·
tion . They appeared before U.S .
Magistrate Donald Han eke , who
ordered them held without bail
until a bearing Monday. If convict·
ed, they could face life in prison.
Both were un emplo ye d and
lived with Seale's parents in north·
central New Jersey.
Officials read statements Friday
and declined to answer questions.
"At this e&gt;tremely sensitive
point Mr. Reso is still being sought
and the investigation is contin u·
ing ," U.S . Allorney Mi chael
Cherto!T said.
Seale warted in the 1970s as a
police officer in Hillside, outside
Newark , and in the 1980s as a
security guard at Exxon, officials
said. They offered no other details
of Seale's employment at Euwn.
A complaint ftled Friday by tile
FBI gave this account:
Soon after Reso 's di sappearance, officials found a ransom note
demanding that Enon pay mill ions
of dollars for his return.
Subsequent phone calls and let·
terS included details about the disappearance that only tile kidnap·
pers would know. In some cases,

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MIDDLEPORT · The Roger
McClelland fined in Middleport
May or' s Court for operating a
motor vehicle while under th e
influence of alcohol or drugs was
not Roger McClelland, Jr., 36.

vision of such a facility into a reality ," Deel commented.
The building will provide facili ·
tics for educational progmms in the
area of agriculture, home ec onomics and other disciplines for
youth and adults .
Land for the building was
donated by Bob Evans Farms Inc.
"Th e commitment by Bob
Evans Farms, Inc. , to provide th e
land whi ch this faciltty will be
located on , will offer more than
JUSt 'space'. It represe nts an inno·
vativ c community project with
everyon e pulling to gether to
accomplish a community goal. It
offers a prime location for the people of Gallia County to obtain the

Meigs ...
Continued from A-1
not seek re-ei&lt;X:tion to the committee representing the new precinct.
Democratic Party Chairwoman
Mary Hunter said Friday that she
also anticipated a change in leader·
ship for that party following its
organizational meeting on Thursday . That meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters Hall in
Pomeroy.
The local GOP's organizational
meeting, meanwhile, will be held
in lhe Common Pleas courtroom at
7:30p.m. on Tuesday.

h .&lt;\N"'4UGA
"'n ..

Officials said the Seales weren't
connected with any environmental
group.

? --

,.,, . ,,,,.~

.

IT'1t'l

.

Fll~ SAT~ SUH.

. COLO\l · .
•

•

~;7"'J.,;nV!!.III P •Ill

,g4~....~~~

~~·

r\

READY FOR CONTEST - Employees lbe
Foodmarl
218, Rt. 71218, GaUipolis, examine lbe entries before seledillg more
lhan 40 prizes Saturday morning. Winning ticket numbers are
posted in the store. The event was held in conjunction with the
slore' s first anniversary. From left to right are: Gloria Medas,
Phyllis Fife and Mall Knopp. (T -S photo.)

Jay Caldwell
Accounl Ereculive
Libby Hole~ Suite 100
444 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(614) 446-2125

1-800-487-2129

0 jjicia/s ... _c_o•_ti_nu_ed_r_ro_m_A_-1_ _ _ _ __

case.

•

Contact:

MIOWl DOUGlAS
IN

•

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FRI. THIU IHUIS.

services needed by the rural and
agricultural community . It provides
a large meeting room under the
same roof and it offers the ad van ·
tage of one-stop service 10 the citi zens of Gallia County, " Dee I
added.
"Thi s facility which we are
breaking ground for today will be a
symbol of the pride which the people of Gallia County have in their
community," Dee! concluded.
Some JI'Cparation on the site has
already begun. According lO Deel,
construction is expected to be completed in December.

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DISCOVER • M.C. -VISA

the caller.; played prerecorded messages into the telephone.
A prerecorded phone call Tuesday directed agents to a note
instructing them to package millions of dollars in used $100 bills
in a laundry bag.
A series of n~es Thur sday
e ventually directe1! agents to a
phone booth in the northern New
Jersey town of Peapack. There, the
drop-off team recetved a call from
a pay phone in the nearby shopping
mall, which was under FBI surveillance. The FBI would not say why
it was watching the mall.
FBI agents waiting there saw a
man wearing rubber gloves make a
call from the pay phone, and trailed
him a1 he drove away.
The Seales were arrested at a car
rental agency in Hackettstown. in
northwestern New Jersey, after
Mrs. Seale drove there lO pick up
her husband.
A search of her car turned up
four laundry bags similar to the
o nes requested by the callers, two
pairs or kitchen rubber gloves, a
pair of license plates, a 1985 directory of home addresses of Exxon
e xecutives and three .38 -caliber
bullets.
After Reso 's disappearan ce,
a uthorities said his wife, Patricia,
received messages from a group
claiming to have kidnapped Reso
and calling itself the "Rainbow
Warriors." Green peace, the international environmental group
whose vessel the Rainbow Warrior
was sunk in 1985 by French securi·
ty agents , denied any part in the

"

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Temperatures today were·
expected lO be in the 60s in most or
New England , the northern Midwest and northern Plains· in lhe 70s
in much of the North~t, central
Plains and Appalachia; in the so~·
in the Mid-Atlantic states, southern
Plains and much of the Northwes~
in the 90s from th e Southeast to
California ; and in the IOOs in
southern Amo na and Southern
California
·
The high for the nation Friday
was 108 at both Borrego Springs,
Calif and Prestdio Texas
.,
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·

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trees, said Joseph R. Broyles, president of Indianapolis Water Co.

Kansas.
Tcmadoes also touched down in
Oklahoma, Texas and Colorado.
Large hail feU throughout the MidW. VA .
west. Thunderstoon wind gusted to
75 mph at Wichita, Kan., and 100
mph at Cleveland, Okla.
Although
damage
was
widespread, there were no reports
of injuries Friday. Six people were
killed in storm -related incidents
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Wednesday, and another person
died Thursday.
C1992 A.ccu-Weather, Inc.
In Indianapolis, days of Storm ·
related erosion caused a section of
earthen canal bank to give way Friin the 60s Mon~ay ana tuesday day, knocking out the city's main
a nd in the mid-60s to mid-70s source of water and prompting offiWednesday. Lows in the 40s Mon- cials to urge residents lO drastically
day and Tuesday and in the mid- cut down on water use.
40s to lower 50s Wednesday .
The canal bank was weakened

Two are arrested in
kidnapping incident

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INSURANCE

. APPLE GROVE, W.Va.-Sheridan L. Persinger, 64, of Apple Grove,
died Friday, June 19, 1992, following a short illness.

MICH

CAROLL SNOWDEN

Grace Weber

By Tbe Associated Press
It will be parUy to mostly sunny
today, but the temperatnres wtll be
a btl cooler.
. Around the nation
Ram fell Saturday m parts of the
storm -battered Midw es~ as well as
the Northeast
S bowers were reported early
Saturday m lndianapohs and skies
were threaterung over much of the
rest of the Midwest Rain also fell
in Boston, ~d showers were forecast to conunue along the Northeast
coast today .
On Friday, the Plains were bat·
tered by a powerful storm system
that 10uched off tornadoes, dumped
softball-size hail and lciUed cattle in

Accu- Weathe~ forecast for dayt ime conditions and high temperatures

a

· POMEROY - Donald R. Kronenberger, 71, a retired Goodyear executive, and his wife, the fermer Noami Johnson, formerly of Meigs County,
"!ere found dead in their Akron condominium on June 13, the victims of
carbon monoxide poisoning.
According to a report in The Plain Dealer, a neighbor had mistakenly
left her car running all night m a gamge direcUy below the couple's bedroom.
· Mr. and Mrs. Kronenberger were winter residents of Naples, Fla., and
spent their summers in Akron. They were members of the Westminster
Presbyterian Church and Fairlawn Country Club. Mrs. Kronenberger was
a member of Akron Women 's City Club and Mr. Kronenberger had
retired from Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. where he was vice president
and treasurer.
They are survived by a son and daughter-in-Law, Donald R. and Susan
Kronenberger of Marietta, Ga; a daughter and son-in-Law, Susie and Paul
Segal of San Francisco, Calif.; a daughter, Nancy Neill of Philadelphia,
Pa., and five grandchildren.
Mrs. Kronenberger is also survived by a brother and sister-in-law ,
Theron and Mary Lou Johnson of Racine, a sister and lrmher-in-law, Virginia and Wayn.e Carpenter of BelJI'C, and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral servtces were held Wednesday at the Wesuninster Presbyrerian
Cliurch with Dr. Paul F. Bauer officiating.
Mr. and Mrs. Theron Johnson, their son, Don Johnson, PorUand, and
th~ir daughter, Virginia Wheelez, Wheelersburg, auended the services.

Sheridan L. Persinger

Sunday, June 21

call

STATE FARM

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannan of Middleport have
received word of the death of his sister, Gmce Weber, 75, of West Union ,
W.Va.
She died on Friday, June 19, 1992.
Arrangements were pending at press time.

Temperatures to be a bit cooler today

OH 10 Weather

For insurance

Lois B. Riley

Sunday Times-Sentlnel~age-A3

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

Dayton

Donald Kronenberger
Noami Kronenberger

GALLIPOLIS - Lois B. Riley, 76, form erly of Addison, di ed
Wednesday, June l7 , 1992atEmerald Hill,, Calif.
Born Dec. 18, 1915 in Addison, daughter of the late J. Harrison and
Anna Belle Berry, she was employed by the Men County (Calif.) Schools
for more than 40 years and had served as principal of the Hopeland
School.
She was a member of Delta Kappa Gamma, the University Women's
Club, the California Teachers Association and the National Teachers
Association.
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Carl (Diane) Neustrand of Springfield,
Va.
Services were held Saturday in Ukiah, Calif. Burial will be Tuesday,
Junc 23, 1992 at II a.m. in Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire, under the
direction of the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wctherholl Chapel, Gallipohs.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the American Dia·
bctes Association .

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OH~olnt Pleasant, WV

June 21 • 1992

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17 pay-per-vlew ;c&amp; fl,
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many channels? The fact of the 1111ter is,
no other form of TV broadcast can match
what Home (able can Delver!
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH__,J)olnt Pleasant, wv

June 21, 1992

Commentary and perspective

June 21, 1992

Page-A4

Weinberger's indictment renews Iran-Contra
A Dtrtai011 of

. IW'J'hlrd A.., GoiUpoU., Ohio

Ill

c- sa.. p

(614) 446-l34l

.,, OWo

(Q4)9U-ll56

ROBERT L WINGETI
PllbllUtr

HOBART ~N JR.
Eucutlnl!dltor
A MI!MBI!R of The Associaled
· NOWJpopot Publilben Auocillioa.

L
~...

lDd lk A."ma1i&lt;M

LI!'ITI!RS Of OPINION ore weloome. '!bey sboald be loa 111oa
: 300 words. All lell&lt;!rs ue oubject to oditin&amp; l1ld must be lipod witll
. name, llddn&gt;u and klepbone number. No ...U,oed letRn will be
. publilbed. Letkrs should be ia &amp;ood taste, oddrasia&amp; a-_ aac
pmonlliliea.

Traficant says he was
'just doing his job'
By THOMAS J, SHEERAN
Associated Pras wrmCLEVELAND - Three yem ft80, Rep. lames Tllf• w• igoolal pokical advice by going to the defense or the 111111 aJDviceod • die NIZi dl:llb
camp guard "Ivan the Terrible."
TOday, his pasislel'lt claims !hat John Demjllljuk milbl- be "I-"
were bolstm:d by !tJCent developments in tbe cue..
· The four -tenn Ohio Democrat says his wort wa Ill J*l of being a

c~~think I need to feel vindicalrd," 'l'ralialllt said. "I -

WASHINGTON - In the war
of nerves leading up to this week's
indictment of Caspar Weinberger
in the Inm-Contm scandal, the dra ·
malic backstage maneuvering escala!ed when pm8CCUtors tried pitting
former Secretary of State George
Shultz against Weinberger.
~ was a surface logic in trying in capilalize on the antagonism
between the two former Cabinet
members, whose foreign policy
dispu1es flared frequently during
the Reagan years. But this eleventh
hour gambit - described by one
obmver of the cze as prosecutors
trying 10 "leverage" Shultz against
tbe former Pentagon chief failed.
"The clear implication is Shultz
can buy bis peace if he sells out
Weinberger," according to one
soun:e familiar with Shultz's siruatioo. "Shultz said (to prosecutors)
we've Ud a lot of flghts, but Cap is
an bonest guy."
Sbulu b1mself has acknowl ·
edgal being ··a subject" of the

-

comers as a corporate official in
responding to subpoena requests
for information. In other words,
could they dredge up evidence
showing a past pattern that Weinberger was guilty of more than an
oversight in forgetting to turn over
personal diaries, the overwhelming
majority of which dealt with nonIran-Conua material? Shultz was
said to have attested to Weinberger's honesty.
Prosecutors also presented
declined comment. Sources close Shultz with what seemed like a
to Cutler told us about recent ses- smoking-gun note prepared by one
sions between Shultz and prosecu- of his aides, which appeared to
wrs that illuminate how aggressive- raise doubts about Weinberger's
ly Iran-Contra prosecutors were credibility during the Reagan
looking for a scalp, but how in the administration. They were hoping
waning days of the investigation it to comer Shultz into stating that his
see med to some observers they old nemesis wasn't trustworthy.
were shooting at anything that
Shultz pointed out that the note
moved.
dealt with a simmering dispute
Shultz was grilled about his preReagan days with Weinberger over the interpreration of a foreign
treaty, not with Weinberger's
when they both worked for Bech- integrity, which again Shultz steadtel. He was asked, for example, fastly vouched for.
whether Weinberger had ever cut
It wasn't enough to derail a fedinquiry, although he hasn't been
subjected to the withering scrutiny
!rained on Weinberger in recent
months.
Shultz's attorney. Lloyd Culler.

By Jack Anderson
and

Michael Binstein

€ltlt, ~...... WO!tni4Gijt·,...~

HuuoE

•c..

jusl

doing my job."
·
·bl:mjanjuk. a 72-year-old retired autoworm from sdlwNt Oeveland, is a~ing his death sentence befon: tbe l5lldi s...tmt Court.
Tile Ubainian-bom Dernjanjuk contends he W1IS 1 vicam of mi"*"'
identity.
During the flrst two weeks or June, Israeli ............ «iiCalal dae
might be some doubt about the identify of "hill." a U.S. 1M "'' COifl
initiated a review of its exlnldition ordll' apin\1 Demjeljuk.llld die JustiCe Department said it uncovCI'Cd documcuu it Ud sill% 1978 Mlllilbl
hdp the defense.
· Tralicant was a sraunch supporter of Demjmjuk's cWm5 of u.- Ia•
idCntity. It was a position that often llroQgln TraliciDt aio i"" He 11!a1
fcfum$ such as "60 Minutes" and the "Donahue" show 10 defend Demjlllljuk.
; ''I felt abused and accused," said Traficut. ''The out penon IIIII
aq;uses me of being an anti-Semite, I'm goiJIIIO puDCb lbl:ir ·- !ipls

out..,

:Dem)mljuk wasn't a constiwent of ~·s. Bllll'rllial;lt ~ pcoYounptown-area distnct accepted his WOit for DemJMijut.
· "If I felt !his man was wrongly accusc:d, IIIey uuda...OO." be Slid.
"They at least didn't hold it against me."
.
. .
.
·Herb Asher, a political science professor at Obio Sla UDMaily, said
T~ICII!t's involvement was unusual boomse of ils IIIISiliviy.
. ~'Often on issues Cl' individuals lhal~n very OOUbovasial. "' ;;leas or
Cell~ will shy away," Asher said. "ln IIIII scmc. ~ Tnficain s involvement was somewhat smpising lwa!R be didn't have 10 do
p~ in his

ie·

:Traficant said his intmst had nothing 10 do wido his oq •••" IS a
miverick. In 1989, he questioned wbetber tbe CIA mew of a tbn:at
aDiDSt doomed Pan Am Hight 103 in 1989. ln 1990, be~ ilnDer
NIP rocket scientist Anhur Rudolph. who was dmicd tCXilli) 11110 die
Uliited States. Known for his fist-pounding !itiDICiil!lltS em CJpinl Hill,
he once called Congress ··a damn house of political pmwi'I*S "
:And while Mahating County sheriff in 1983, be SIM • 'ally ddido"'tudo:d.,..:d
himself in federal cowt - even though be is not ala'W)U lpi•m l'aleral charges that he accepted bribes from orpUzal crime. The trial eadld
with the unusual sight o( jurors hugging bim m tbe awalbiw ar:ps.
TrafiCIIIt's intmst in Demjanjuk emcrgal from a Cwpiri HiD wisil in
1989 by Demjanjuk's son, John Jr. The yooqer Dem. . wa bavinl
trouble getting anyone to tislel'l to his allegation IIIII Wmwpm wiJbbdd
evidence !hat might help his father.
Traf1C811t told Demjanjuk's son that if his review oooviucal bim that
Demjanjuk was the person who ran the gas chamber Ill Tldllinb. be
would tell him. "I think your dad should be e•oaad"
But TrafiC8llt said he felt everyone had a rigbt ID be heard. evo:n lbouP
his aides advised him not to get involved.
• "He truly is a man who stands up for wbat be beJie&gt;eS. regadlcss
w11ether it's politically COI'!tJCI," Demjanjuk Jr. Slid.
, ••
..
Trafocant said he became convinced !JemjiD)Ik WISII I ,.., wbr:n
shown U.S. government documents that Demjln)lk SlljijlOIIDS foond in
trash in Washington. They called into quc:sbOO the ll'Slimony rl a WCDes.1
ap.inst Demjanjuk at his ettmdition bearing.
.
. "I began to believe in my ~ ~ was not lVIII," Traficanl said
• TraflCIUit desigJUlted Dem.J311Juk s son-m-law, Ed N'ISbnic, IS a &gt;oluotrer invesllgator, helptng hun olltaln Eastern European atdli-lbal miAM
help the defense.
. . .
· "James Tnlficant's involvement has been a lnath of m.b u., tim
cise," Nishnic said. ·'He has played the key role in spite of all the risb,
the political pressure."

Berry's World
.

:CJ :-

"This is a two-part question, Mr. President. When did Barbara last bake
cookies and what kind were they?"

eral grand JUry this week. from
returning a five felony count indictment against Weinberger on
charges that he lied repeatedly
about his knowledge of the lnmConua affair and concealed extensive notes that allegedly dealt with
the biggest scandal of the Reagan
administration.
"If (Walsh) can get Weinberger,
he can reuoactively resum:ct his
reputation, and then justify 5 1/2
years and $30 million," one c1o9e
observer of the case told us.
"That's how he's thinkin~. Tedtnically, he's been given 1 liule bit of
leverage because of these notes.''
The nor.es consist or I, 700 pages
of daily scribblings at the Pen tagon, which have been housed in
the Library of Congress and are
now at the center of the prosecution's contention that Weinberger
withheld evidence. When his case
comes to trial, however, a long
parade or Pentagon offiCials will
testify that Weinberger pvc strict
instructions to cooperale fuUy with
the independent counsel'soffice.
Walsh' s feelers on a plea-begain deal were shot down by Weinberger's attorney, Raben Benneu.
but indicate how frantically pro!e·
cutors were looking for a Hail
Mary !hat would redeem the highly
controversial probe.
The stage was set for the indictment after Weinberger rebuffed
Walsh's plea bargain deal. Weinberger had a chance to plead guilty
to a misdemeanor of withholding
information from Congress in
exchange for testimony implicating
former President Reagan in a broad
conspiracy. Weinberger claims he
has no damaging infonnation on
Reagan.
The reply was unequivocal from
Weinberger's defense attorney,
Robert Bennett: ·'With all due
respect, Judge Walsh, we'll go to
nuclear war. There will be no pleas
in this case."
Weinberger's fate may tum on
whether a jury believes his faillD'C
to tum over the diaries was intentional or inadvenent and just how
incriminating they read.
Jack Anderson and Midiael
Binslen arfe syodicalecl
nists for United Feature S}'lldl·
cale, Inc.

rol••·

New Meigs developments
Rupe, the stam surrounding the
slighting of Meigs County in the
prison fiasco ceases to abate. To
say thai there is an angry citizenry
in the COWlty is putting it mildly.
1'he!e have been many suggestions
on how to get the State or Ohio to
realize the amount of dissatisfaction which is now prevalent
Before roo long the radio audience of Meigs County will be privileged to bear a new song which
will bit the airways shortly. The
lyrics to this song were wriuen by
Mike Roberts to the tune, .. Hang
down your head, Tom Dooley."
The following are the new words of
the first verse of this song:
"Hang down your head, Meigs
Counry, Hang down your head and
cry, ltaug down your head Meigs
Ccunry. And kiss the prison goodbye.-

Assisting Mike Roberts, who
wrote !his vcnion, are Alan Hamm
and Jeff Morris. Jeff, whose nickname is ''Tbe Doctor", is our
bomeiDwn recording artist. This is
bi.s lint Meigs County top 10 song.
Alan Hamm's Meigs County
reconling studio has had several
biu iD the past, although not as
111111)' as Motown out of Detroit.
All three of these talented men
are rising stars in the music industry .
The music and lyrics
desaibe and show the hurt feelings
that Meigs County has because or
the Meigs County Prison fl~o.
In addition there have been
many voices who have expressed
binemess towards the State. One
very respectable citizen, whose
name I will not reveal, gave the
suggestion that the County or

Meigs should secede from the State could contain many fresh fish and
of Ohio and form a new State or provide exclusive sites for homes
and camps for relaxing. ConsiderMeigs.
able landscaping would have to be
done but the results would justify
the expenditures. This would he the
fi.rst exclusive Meigs State Parle
There are other pussibilities of
My friend, whom I shall call
Financing
this new state but the
Rupe, stated that this can be done
four
mentioned
above could be
provided the proposed State of
Meigs get its approval from the sources of income. It would take a
Federal Government (act of lot of money to get this new State
Congress) plus the State of Ohio off the ground.
When you have a new governpassing a bill authorizing this
change. It appears that the major ment you would need a governor,
obs tacle would be getting the two US Senators and at least one
Congress to add the new State or congressman. It would be suggested that each township, plus one
Meigs to the other 50 states.
Another gigantic problem is person from Pomeroy, Middlepon,
whether the State of Meigs would Syracuse, Racine, Rutland and
have sufficient resoun::es to form a "Wolfe Pen" (Charles Sayre territonew government. It would talce a ry), elect one person from each
lol of money to make this change. area to form a new State legislaSome suggestions in fmancing this ture. Consideration should also be
change would be as foUows:
~ to township trustees as mem#I) Establish para-mutuals for
Rupe, what would you think or
Frog racing. There would be no
question that this would draw heav· adding other counties to this moveIly from all parts of the US in this ment and all counties south of
Franklin County be invited to join
unique event
in
the newly created State of
#2) The new state could legalize
Meigs.
Quite frankly, Belmont and
the sale or Meigs County Green
Noble
counties
should be eliminalwhich would bring in considerable
revenue for the new state. Howev· ed for obvious reasons. They got
er, the writer is skeptical about this the gold mines (penitentiaries) ,
and considerable opposition would Meigs County got the shafl (Noth·
result to this program. There is no ing).
If Meigs would go it alone,
question it would be a money
where
would the boundaries be?
maker, nevertheless this is a possiSome
of
the expens agree that a 20
bility.
foot
deep
by 20 foot wide moat be
#3) A new state lottery.
excavated
on the current bound#4) Obtain Federal monies and
restore the old Letart gravel pits aries of Meigs County and filled
into exclusive Parks and Camp with Ohio River water. Toll brid~es
sites. The lakes now in existence could be erected on the Meigs

Fred W. Crow

County side and all out of State
users would be charged for ingress
and egress. There would be no loll
for the Sate of Meigs residents. A
few cannon erected at the toll
bridge entrances would be appropriate to keep all infidels md undesirables out of this State.
Several of our leading citizens
have. indicated that they wwld sign
pebbons to be given to the govrmment for the formation of tbe new
State of Meigs. ln order to impress
the State of Ohio it will be necessary for quite a few voluntl:eiS to
get these petitions signed by our
Meigs County citizens.
The governor has a teptesaltative coming to Pomeroy this Thtnday to discuss our cunenl lli'Oblems. It is reported that Mike
De Wine, in person, will be the
State Representative to !his meaing. It is suggested that as many
Meigs Countians auend this meainR to let Mike know about the
penilel'ltiary bombshell. If we let up
on the pressure now it will be a
Meigs disaster for any future state
projects to he located in this county.
Rupe, this is serious. Pleue give
your. immediate attention and help
m thiS matter.
Carry on.
Editor's note • LontHi•e
Attorney Fred W. Crow is die
contributor of a weekly colw••
for Tbe Sunday Times-Seldlul.
Readers wishing to app._d, aiticiu or comment on MIJ swbjed
(e&lt;cept religion or politia) are
encouraged to wrile to Mr.
Crow, in care oftbis llfWSplptr.

Quixotic Quayle vs. achieving April

bulbs that Is
supPosed to last up to 20,000 hours?"

"Say, Is that one of thos8

...•

fHIW

Our vice president may be slowwitted, but querulously quixoti c
Quayle twned a presidential campaign comer when he dissed television's most famous single mom,
Murplly Brown.
Until his 'denunciation or
defenseless Murphy Brown, the
Busll-Quay Ie campaign had been
SIUct in • holding panem.
Wbal one of Quayle's speech
wrill:n tlix:overed Murpby Brown,
lite media and the eleciOnlte were
caught up in a new parlor game
Clllcd .. fllbily VllillllS."
The Dllional debate iiCIII Quayle
oo a roll Next &lt;10p, the Southern
B~ Convention. This group,
wbidl was founded becall9e of irs
dieblrd commitment to slavery,
teeeived Quayle with all of the
fooi-Siomping, hand-clapping
mimi- of a counllyside revival

.........,

"Moral values are what lhe
American people care about," he
Knltdlccl And lbat automaticallv

ing pioneers, like April Harris, who versity of North Caiotina at 011pe1
struggled against the odds, not sil- Hill ti{ll'ed the scale.
ver spoon-in-the-mouth leeches
"I m going to major in the
like Dan Quayle. He had every- biomedical sciences," she IDid me.
thing in life handed to him by "'I plan to do research. Medical
wealthy parents, including his cow- school is a possibility.
"I've afways. WOited bard. My
ardly manipulation of non-&lt;:ombat
mot her sometomes worked two
military service.
still wanted to know, "Whose val·Poverty-slricl:en immigrants, jobs. I study at home aboul 3 hours
ues?"
build ..,,
inspired by the American dream, a week. I don't let
Cenainly, no1 those of a black, raised large families wbile waking so I also study in sc
. You have
18-year-old single mother, April torluously long hours in sweat to plan just right"
Harris, by Quayle's old maidish shops and 1D the fields.
Any favorite television sbow?
standards. Except for age, work
Het
answer will freak out Dan
the only green field Dan
experience and race, Harris is a Quayle ever worked was the golf Quayle. "I lite M:*J.eBrown,"
real-life version of Murphy Brown. coune.
she said with a soft
A front-page story in the
Yet, with all of biJ 1811ClillloIn a compariJon of high-school
Raleigh News &amp; Observer on her wort, Quayle's trilliantly mediocre nious hustling about flmily Yllues,
audacious academic success record comes nowhere near April Quayle's preachmenll do bavc a
whicb appeared below a lead stor:Y Harris' 3.9 grade point average, poinl Over the lasl2.5 ,.... flmiheadlined, "Quayle renews 'f81Dl- N81ional Honor society, yearbook ly values have indeed II'Oded.
ly' debate" - provided a cam- editor and senior class president.
But has Murphy Brown' a one
paign defming montenl.
well-publicized,
bom-otll-of-wedAll of ilachieW)((, mind you, while
lock
baby
caused
the moral
Uninten=, dlat front 1111e this teen·age black mother was
also recapi
American histo- raising her 2-year-old son, Kelland. Armageddon envisioned by the
Duke University admitled her, quaggy Quayle?
ry. America was built bv trailblaz- hnt • fnll orhnbmhm fmm 1M IJniexcluded unwed mothers, gays,
blacks and folks who believe that
Jesus dug racial integration.
But a Newsweek cover story

Chuck Stone

::r

Sunday Tlmes-SenUnel Page A5

,.---Local briefs!--.- - - - - - - - - - - - . , Storms cause canal wall
Star Bank buys 28 Cleveland offices

POMEROY - Timothy J. Thompson oF Beech Grove Road in
Rutland has been cued to Meigs County Court for failure to file an
accident report Follow in~ ii 2:.\0 a.m. accident on June 13.
According to a rcpon From 0Ie Mcig.' County Sheriffs Department, Thomas was nonhlxmnd on U.S Route 33 just outside of the
Pomeroy corporation limit when he applied his brakes to avoid a
deer. His vehicle slid olf !lie rmdway and hit steel piling, tearing orr
the rear bumper and almost stnkmg the DeMoss residence. He
failed to stop. He has hcen cued to Meigs County Court

Board to hold special meeting

Thefts, vandalism reported

GALLIFOLIS - The Gallipolis City Board of Education will
bold a special meeting June 24, 6:30 p.m., at the administmtion
building on State StrteL
The board is meeting to discuss fmancial and personnel matters.

Patrol probes three-vehicle wreck
POMEROY - No injmies were reported resulting from a threevehicle wn:ct at the intersection of Ohio 7 and Flalwoods Road Friday al approximately 9:50
According to a rerat
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Srate
Highway Palmi, a rmhbound VIII, driven by Jeanette M. Radford,
44 Racine, was northbound on Ohio 7 and slowed to make a left
t.;... A following nortbbound car, driven Carl G. Sauvage, 23,
Pomeroy went lefl of center to avoid Radfml's vao.
sauva8e·s car struck struCk the rear of Radfml's van and then
struck die left side of a southbound car. drivm by Melvin S. Henry,
49. Pomeroy.
Damage: 10 Sauvage's 1983 Buick Skyhawl: was listed as moderate. Damage to Radfonl's 19115 Chevrolet Astro was listed as lighL
Damage 10 Henry's 1979 Mercury Cougar was listed as heavy and
disablin .
Sauv!se WlL'l cited by the parrol for failure to maintain assured
clear distance.

c

Man cited in crash
lUPPERS PlAINS -A Racine man was cited following a onecar crash on Ohio 7 in Orange Township Friday around 2:55 a.m.
Acrording to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol,
Jobn D. Coleman, 38, was rmhbound m Ohio 7 and lost control of
his car on tbe wet roadway. His car slid off tbe right side and struck
a guard rail.
.
Coleman WlL'l uninjured. A passenger, Lois A. Wamsley, 33, sustained minor visible injuries but wa tiOl treated, the patrol reported.
Damage to Coleman's 1982 Pontiac Bonneville was listed as
moderate.
.
Coleman was cited f«Y driving Wider the influence and failure to
control

Deer-car wreck investigated
GALLIPOUS -A Springfield woman's car. sustained light
damage in a deer-a~r cdlision on U.S. 35 m Gallipolis Township
'I1Ilnlay lWOUlld 9:50p.m.
.
Acrording to tbe Gallia-Meigs Post of the Srate Highway Patrol,
Laura A. Plln:e1I, 20, was eastbound on U.S. 35 when she struck the
deer with her 1986 Dodge 600.
No injuries were reported.

ReedsviUe attempted theft probed
REEDSVILLE - Meigs Coouty Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported on Satunlay that his department continues to investigate the
attempted theft of two mowers from Reed's Counay Store in
Reedsville on Friday.
Acrording to Soulsby, a neighbor beard a lawn mower at 3:50
a.m. and saw two subjects trying to load one lllOWel' mto the back
of a· pickup tnd. She was unable to get a desu ipion or the sul&gt;jc:cts before they saw her and ned tbe scene.
The secOld mower WlL'l found pushed bdtiud the ~ building.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the sheriff's office.

By Tbt Associated Press
A canal supplying ma;t or Indianapolis' water collapsed from
storm-induced erosion as the Midwest was battered by another puwerful storm system. Most of the
City's residents were urged to drastically cut back on water use.
The storm also produced tornadoes and large hail Friday that
destroyed crops and killed cattle in
Kansas.
About two-thirds of Indianapolis' 750,000 residents were affected
by a water sbottage after a I00-foot
section of the canal's earthen bank
collapsed Friday. Water was available everywhere, but the pressure
had dropped dramatically in most

POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported
Saturday that two subjects in a brown car drove away from
Gilbert's Station near Middleport without paymg for SIO m gas Iatc
Thursday.
Trudy Rees of East Letart Road rcpurted to the department that
sometime on Wednesday, two 12-inch pots or flowers were stolen
from her father-in-law's grave at Letart Falls Cemetery.
Soulsby also reported that a van owned by Debbie Toundas or
Rock Spnngs Road was one or three vehicles SJWl!Y painted on the
weekend of June 6. Four mailbo&lt;es were also damaged in the incident, which was reponed earlier in The Daily Sentinel. Two juveniles involved in the vandalism arc to appear on criminal damaging
charges in Meigs County Juvenile Court.

areas.

Meigs EMS units answer calls
POMEROY - Five calls for assistance were answered on Friday
and Saturday by units of Meigs Emergency Services.
On Friday at 3:29 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Holzer Clinic.
Katherine Felder was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 5: 18 p.m.,
Middleport squad went to State Route 554 For Muriel Spires, who
was talcen to Holzer. At 7: II p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Cole
Street for Angela Fields, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 9:56 p.m., Chester and Pomeroy units went to State Route
7 and Flatwoods Road for an auto accident. Michelle Schultz and
Tara Congo were taken to Veterans. Melvin Henry, Ivan Powell ,
Greg Savage, Jeanette Radford, Jessi ca Radford and Don Ellis
refused treatment
On Saturday at 4:20a.m., Rutland unit went to New Lima Road
and took Glenna Yarbrough to Holzer.

'.

Court news

Police make arrest

GALLIPOLIS - Police made one arresl, flied one citation and
answered two complaints Friday . Ella Mae Mateny, 27, Second
Ave., Gallipolis, was arrested Friday night for assault and disorderly
conduct by intoxication.
Dorothy Cavins, 29, of Vinton reported to pulice that she had
forgotten her purse at the Welfare Offlce, Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Friday afternoon and when she returned she found that someone had
turned it in, but her money was missing. She estimated that about
$157 was taken.
Greg Day. 30. Third Ave .. Gallipolis. reported that someone
broke the glass out of the back left side door of his 1989 Ford
Tempo Friday night
Police also cited Charles L. Mulholland. 20, Rt.l Dexter. for
open container Friday night.

ROBERT M. HOllEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

Sheriff investigates theft

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

GALLIPOLIS - Sheriff's deputies answered a complaint early
Saturday morning from Wendall Unroe, no age given, of Rt 2 Gallipolis. Unroe reported someone stole his 1989 maroon Ford pickup
from a party he was attending on Hannon Trace Ridge.
.
Mitsy Davis, 29, of Vinton reported that a male aquamtance
entered her home univited Saturday morning and refused to leave.
Phyllis Caldwell, 30, also or Vinton, was present and told deputies
that the man assaulted her.
Deputies made two arrests between Fnday afternoon and Saturday morning. Anderson Messer, 41, or CmcmnaLI was arrested Fn day afternoon for D.U.I., pussesion or marijuana and not wearing a
leal belt and James U. Barry, 43. of Rio Grande, was arrested Satur'Y morning for domestic violence.

CLEVELAND (AP) - AI least
37 witnesses are expected to testify
in the $1.25 million lawsuit med
against Srate Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson, lawyers said in docummts fila! during a pretrial hearmg.
Judge Lillian J. o-ne of the
Cuyabop County Common Pleas
Coun is to preside over the suit,
wbicb was filed by former state
employee Elisabelh Tschantz. The
trial was scbeduled to stan July 20
and was expecu:d 10 last five to 10
days.
Ms. Tschantz flied the lawsuit
against Ferguson in 1987. She said
he used his pngtion as her boss to
coc:n:e her into the sexual liaison
and to pressw-e fellow employees
to donate to his political cam-

Ferguson's lawyer, Henry A.
Hentemann, said Tschantz, "an
aduiL had a consensual affair with
(Ferguson) from mid-1982 until
sometime, either April or June, in
1985 when (she) decided to terminate it because she found another

widespread in several states, there , •
were no immediate reports or :
injuries Friday . Six people were ::
killed in storm -related incidents · •
Wednesday . and another person :;
died Thursday.
:.
Hail, as big as softballs in ·:
ploces, smashed wllldows and dam- ·:
aged vehicles as a thunderstorm •
passed through Wichita. Kan. At :
least six tornadoes were reported to •:
pulice and the weather service.
:•
Officials estimated crop damage : '
in the millions of dollars from hail .
and wind that ripped through ceo: •
ual and south-unna! Kansas.
"'You can't tell the differen ce •
between a field that was cut with a :
combine and one that was cut by •
the hail ," said Dave Studebaker.:
manager or the Farmers Co-op :0
Grain Co. in Haven, Kan.
•:
Thunderstorms also developed · :
Friday across parts or Teus, Okla-: •
homa and Missouri, the upper Mis· : :
sissi ppi Valley, the Ohio Valley · :
and the East Coast, the Nationa~ •
Weather Service sal(!.
•·

The canal bank was weakened
when strong thunderstorms earlier
in the week uprooted several large
trees, said Joseph R. Broyles, president of Indianapolis Water Co .
Water gushed into the adjacent
White River.
Indianapolis Mayor Stephen
Goldsmith said officials wouldn't
know until late today when full
water service would be restored.
..•.
"We've finally stopped the water Marriage li«- issued
coming down the canal, so we can
POMEROY · A marnag;:
begin repairing the wall."
license has been issued in Meigs
Gov. Evan Bayh ordered all County Probate Coun to Kevin
downtown state government offices James Roush, 32 , Mason, W.Va.,
to close down at midday because or • and Paula Grace Horton, 27, Midlow water pressure. and other dleport
oFfice buildings closed down as
well because restrooms were unus· Dissolution, divorce pnxxsscd " '
able. City offlces remained open.
POMEROY - An action for disc .
The 8.8-mile canal carries water solution or rnarnage has been flied
from the White River to a pumping in Meigs County Probate Coun to,_
station. That station now ts pump- Ronald L. Dailey. Pomeroy, and
'
ing water only From au&lt;iliary Kathy L. Dailey, Pomeroy.
A divorce action 11&amp;'1 been grantwells, Broyles said
Across the Midwest, crews ed in the court to Gregory R,
worl::ed to clean up after the bursts Hockin berry and Katherine Sue :
Hockin berry. al so known as
or thunderstorms and tornadoes.
Although
damage
was Katherine Sue Kidd.

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON A VENUE

Thirty-seven witnesses expected in Ferguson trial
Ms. Tschantz's lawyer, John
Duda, told Ms. Greene he will call
at least seven witnesses, including
Tschantz and Ferguson and two
mental health consultants.
Ms. Tschantz "suffered extreme
emotional distress due to the sex on
demand relationship with (Ferguson) and his fund-raising activities," Duda said in the statement
accompanying his witness list Fnday.

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to collapse in Indianapolis . ..,

Rutland man cited after mishap

CINClNNATI (AP) - Star Bank NA says itll&amp;'l completed the
pun:hasc of 28 Ameritrust Co. branch offices in the Cleveland area
for about $16 million.
The deal completed Friday was part of the merger of Ameritrust
with Society Corp.. which was announced in Mardi. The bnlnches
were to open under the Srar name today.
Star previoosly bad thn:e offices in the Oeveland area. among its
204 banking offices ia Ohio, Kenrucky and Indiana. Its parent 1s
Star Bane Corp. or Cincinnati. a $7.7 billion holding company.

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POINT PLEASANT, WV.

Tschantz's emotional problems
were not created by the affair with
Ferguson or her fund-raising activities on his behalF.

(304) 675-1675
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man.''

Hentemann listed 30 potential
witnesses for Ferguson, including
Dr. Donald J. Weinstein. who Henle mann said will testify that

mBurdan.

Autumn

In ~ew Lfnglan~
SEPTEMBER 26- OCTOBER 2, 1992

paigns.

Our New England tnp Is scheduled for the pe&lt;'ok oF the colorful full foliage season! Our Four-day 'home a~
From home· wiD be the exduslve ccmmunlty of Hy.mnls. M.illachusetts, home of the Kennedy Compound
and Memorial. From here we'll embarl&lt; on a tour of the Boston area. take the boat trip to the resot islard ci
Martha's Vmcyard, and travel to l'rovlncetown on the tip oF Cape Cod to soak up the atmosphere cre.1ted by
the sidewalk artists and picturesque sand dunes. To top It all off, we'll be treated to a lobster bake with aD the
trimmings! Then It's on to "l'limotll Plantation', a living museum depleting the town of l'tym::&gt;oth as it was
dwing colonial days, and Plymouth Rock. wl1ere our forefather&gt; first touched land. We'll also visit the Helitage
rtantaUon at Sandwich. M.machusetts.

Hospital news
Vetmms Memorial
FRIDAY ADMISSSIONS •
Geotgr: Rowley. PotDerlly. and Carl
Asbury, Ubaty. W.Va.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES · Mae
MciUk.

Steelworkers to
know results of
physicals this week
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
- United Steelwuten Local5668
mem'lers will know bythis week
the teSUIIs of physical exwns conducted on all workers eligible to
tetum 10 Ravenswood Aluminum
Cotp., a ..non leader said
the physicals were required
under the new COUll act betWCCII the
oompmy md lite lllion. which had
been off the job in a bincr labor
since November 1990.
Local presidenl Dan Stidbam
said Friday he hasn't been told how
many of die 1,700 worten p8S3al
die CJ•ms, wbicb were COIIIplett&gt;d
II mitlweel:.

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FourTrax' 300
Rt'&lt;'OIIUIM11drod

onty for Iiden 16 f'.W!I and oldrJ .

The 93's are on the way; a few 92's are
left - Whey They Last.

$3350 (OUT THE DOOR)
The Honda FourTI'llX' 300 will tackle the toughest chores and
have enough left to carry your tackle.
• Wide-ratio fivNpeed uansmission with ultni·iow first
gear and reverse.
• A282cr Four-stroke engine is powerful and reliableC'"Verything you expect from a Honda.
• Triple drum brakes are powerful. tightweighl and
fully sealed for reduced wear.
• Convenient electric starter with auxiliary kicksiJirter.
• Made in the U.SA
The Foulfrax 300. Weekday worker. Weekend companion.

RIVERFRONT HONDA

Pre-tour recepHon o Valet parking o
Deluxe rnotorcoach rransportaHon o 6
nights hotel acc:omodadons, lndudlng
four In Hyannis, Massachusetts. and tv.&lt;&gt;
In Pennsylvania enroute • 9 meals: 4
breakfasts and 5 dlnners, lndudlng a
dinner-show and an authentic New
England lobster bake • Slght:seelng
tour d Boston • AII-dly boat blp and
tour ol Martha's Vineyard • Sl~ltseeln~
tour of Cape Cod and Provincetown •
Slght:seelng tour of Plymoud1,
Massachusetts. lndudlng ·I'll mouth
Plantation" and Plymouth Rock. and
Herlta,ge Plantation In Sandwich • All
taxes. tips and baggage handling
included • $25,000 travelers lnsutanee .
• E.scorted by Peoples Ololre
Coordinator, Mary Fa-Mer

$575 double; $560 tripe: $545 quad.

S625 single

Because our New England trip i&gt; pria:d
at cosl with no marl&lt;-up. there i&gt; a S25
fee for non-membe"'To confirm your reservation. aS 100
per-petSOII deposit Is required by
August I . AMI payment Is due by
September I .

For more Information or reservatkns,
please contact MMy Fav.ter. Peqlles
01ace Coordinator. at the l'ooples Bank
olllre In l'olntl'teAsant at (304) 675-1 I 21.

UPPER RT. 7 KANAUGA, OHIO

BE ARI!SPONSIBLE RIDER.II!member. ATVs can be twanlous to operate. For
your saf&lt;ty.llway&gt; - • helmet."!"' proiection and protective clothing, and never
ride on po...t surfaces or public roads. Honda ff!COmmends that all AlV nders.Iake
a trUiing COUl!e and read their owner'• manual thoroughly. For safety or tratnm£
inlonnatioo. caD the AS! at l-IIID«7~700.

l'eoples Cboke. Choice tJiM!I opportunities and cboke llnaru:YI benellls for~ 50 mel - . .
l'ooples OlOire ts a dMslon d the Peoples !laM ot Point l'leasanl, Member FDIC. Members II'IISt ma1n1a1n a
$10,000 minimum balance In a Peoples Bank savings accounL certlllcate of deposit IRA or arry rnmbtnallon
thereof. Sub:st.tntl.ll pmdlty kx early wfthdraWill of retiiiCdtes and IRAs.

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Page-A&amp;-Sunday Times

Pleasant, WV

June 21, 1992

Along the River

Section B-·

~huts - ~tntiattl

June 21 , 1992

Hours of quilting provides years of enjoyment
100 quilts for other people.
1915.
The grouP originally met in tbe
Money raised by doing quilting
homes of Its mtmbers but qwckly for others has resulted in the purFOREST RUN · Every Tuesday grew too large to meet in !bat sillla- chase for the church of carpet, a
and Thursday a group of ladies lion and began meeting in the freezer, refrigerator, a new door,
from the Forest Run United church ~ment At times, IWO to curtains and a folding chair truck,
Methodist Church, as well as ladies three qwlts are stitcbed at tbe same as well as providing donations and
from other churches, gather at the time. Although the group officially contributions to the Meigs County
church to quilt They've been doing or~anized in 1983, many ladies Cooperative Parish, the Meigs
this since January 1983 and since quilted off and on prior 10 tbat, ever COWII)' Senior Citizens, Cine-Sera,
that time have completed almost since the church's construction in tbe Coats for Kids program and
By,JULIE E._ DILLON
T1mes-Sentmel Staff

spon sonng c hildren at church
camp.. The quilters have also fund·
ed _Pamtmg of the church and the
refmiShmg of the church pews in
the sanctuary .
. Th1s p~t Thursday, rather that
Just meeung to quilt, the quilters
thought it would be nice to honor
those for whom they have quilted
by havmg a quilt show of their

own. Approximately 50 people
attended bringing with them their
completed quilts as well as other
quilts holding sentimental meaning
or passed down through family
generations. During the show each
quilt was displayed with a brief
presentation g1ven .
Members of the quilting group
include Kathleen Scou, Mary Belle

Warner , Edith Sisson, Carolyn
Salser, Mary Nease, Mary K.
Rou sh, Mildred Arnold, Marcia
Arnold, Jan e Harris, Rosemary
KeUez, Jonetta Davis, Juanita WiH,
Erma Roush , Leah Nease, Carrie
Grueser and Virginia Davis. Severa1 of the members are over 80 years
old butafl' still actively quilling.

SERVED AS HOTEL AND STAGECOACH STOP · In tbe
Civil War era Ibis building in Centerville serves as a hotel and
stagecoach sto'p. The mail coach driver also u_sed this ~•cil!ty· It
took tbe mail man two days to go from Oak H1U to Galtipohs and
back.

Mail coach robbery probed
by postal officials in 1864
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS · During the Civil
War the mail coach to Centerville
arrived every Monday, Wednesda y.
and Friday about noon. The coach
lert Oak Hill at 10 .·
a.m. and arrived at
Gallipolis by 6
p.m. On Tuesdays,
Thursdays, and
Saturdays, the
mail came back to
Oak Hill from Gallipolis after stops
in Rodney, Rio Grande, Thurman
and limes. People living at GaUia
Furnace, McDaniel Crossroads, and
a few other places only got mail once
a week.
Many times me mail coach had to
lay up over night or be delayed.
General Cox of me Union Army told
about how he got passage on the mail
coach. It had to leave Oak Hill late
because of me lateness of the train to
Oak Hill .
"Night fell soon after we began
our journey, and as we were pushing
on in the dark, the driver blundered
and upset us off the end of a linle
sluiceway bridge into a mud hole. He
managed to jump from his seat and
hold his team, but there was no help
for us who were buttoned m. Tile
mud was soft and deep, and as the
wagon settled on its side, we wefl'
tumbled in a promiscuous heap mto
the ooze and slime, which completely
covered us."
Cox fl'lated how they made their
way to a farmhouse so as to scrnpeolf
the mud. In shon order a number of
the curious had gathefl'd around to
see a "real life" general .
Stated Cox. ''The people must have
formed some amusing ideas of military personages, and we found at
least as much spon in being the
menagerie as they did in visiting iL"
Cox pushed on to Centerville
where he spent the night in the Centerv ille Hotel. That panicular building is probably the one that still stands
there today, itdaung back perhaps to
about 1850.
It was also during the Civ il War
that Centerville became the sllc of
the "'great stagecoach mail robbery ."'
On September 6, 1864 the mai l
coach from Oak Hill to Gallipolis
was so filled with mail that there was
no room for passengers. When the
coach reached Gallipolis it was dl s-

covered $15,000in gold coin mtended
for the First National Bank of Gallipolis was missing.
According to the driver, the only
one on the coach that day, he had
hidden the gold coins under his seat.
He covered the coins with bags of
mail. The driver told that he left the
coach on! y once and that was in
Centerville where he changed horses.
The driver therefore concluded that
the theft must have occurred in Centerville.
In fact the dri vee remembered
seeing some strange chanlcters get
off the train in Oak Hill. He said he
saw other strange men ride up on
horseback and join the fItS! "'strange"
group. Witnesses in Centerville reported seeing a number of strange
persons hanging out around the village. Some even concluded that these
were Confederate spies and that it
was Confederates who had robbed
the mail coach. In facuhe several furnacesclose 10Centerville were known
to have hired some Confederate
sympathizers. Then too perhaps the
robbers were deserters from the Union
army, as many of them "hWlg out" in
th·. hi Us of southern Ohio.
One histaian wrote: "Great excitement prevailed and people were
afraid to venwre out at night for fear
of being attacked and robbed by these
outlaws who could so successfully
stage such a robbery .
In short order a det.ecti ve was
brought in by the U. S. Post Office
Department and the bank that owned
the gold. Much to the surprise of
many residents of Centerville, no
Confederate raiders were found, nor
had any renegade band of outlaw
Union runaways turned up. Instead
the detective exuar::ted a confession
from the driver who admitted that he
had buried the gold coins in a money
bag near Centerville and was just
waiting fa- the right time to dig it up.
Peace of mind was restored 10 Centerville.
Incidentally, one of the drivers of
this mail route through Centerville
became famous as a soldier. He was
Richard Blazer, who was given the
task by Gen. Sheridan of wiping out
Mosby' s Raiders in the Shenandoah
Valley.
james Sands is a special correspondent for tbe Sunday· Times
Sentinel. His current address is:
james Sands, 6S WiDow Drive,
Springboro, Ohio, 45066.

PART OF NEW APARTMENT COMPLEX· Tbis section or
old Holzer Hospital, located on Cedar Street is heine remodeled

and will be part or an apartment complex in downtown GaUipolis.

Renovation ...
Continued from A·l
Winer said it will take a lot of
work to bring the old building up to
par. "Whenever you have a histori cal srrucwre to deal with, there is a
lot of work to be done, it's just the
nawre of the beast," he said.
Besides repairing the deteriorated outer posts and replacing or
rl'pairing vandalized windows, the
crew also had to do a lot of environmental work. But Winer said
the work wa:;n't a surprise. As is
the case with any building built
prior to the 1940s, the old Holzer
building contained asbestos that
had to be removed before fl'Storalion could begin, Winer said.
Only 34 parking spoces will be
avrulable for the 54 units, but Cal·
houn pointed out that aU of me resi dents will not need cars.
'They (the residents) won't have
to have a car, they can walk 10
almost anything they want or
need," Calhoun said. He explained
that th e apartments are within
walking distance of the library, a
supermarket, theater, French Art
Colony, Ariel Theatre, and two
churches in the downtown area.
Calhoun said the old portion of
the structure, on the comer of First
and Cedar, will be completed by
the end of the year. He added that
the building's front wiD be fl'Stored
to its ori~inal condition.
"It w1ll certainly improve the
looks of that area of Gallipolis and
create something useful while
maintaining the value and beauty of
the old historic portion of First
Avenue," Calhoun said
Calhoun said that Winer and
Associates Bfl' the fourth company
to attempt to obtain the old Holzer
building. The first attempt was by
the late Panw Bastiani of Gallipolis who obtained all the necessary

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POSTAGE STAMP ·This quilt, belonging to
Alice Wolfe, identified by its postage stamp pat·
tern, was stitched by quilters at tbe Forest Run

United Methodist Church. It contains over 8,000
)KI5hlge stamp sized squares.
LOG CABIN QUILT -This log cabin pattern
quilt belonging to Mary Wise, Middleport, bas
been featured in quilt shows at tbe Dairy Barn
in Athens and at the Dayton Quilt Sbow . It
/

RENOVATION PROJECT UNDERWAY,
The original Holzer Hospital building on First
Avenue and Cedar Street in GaUipolis (pictured
on right from tbe rear orr Second Avenue) is
being renovated ''from stem to stern" according
to Art Winer, a general partner witb Artbur
Howard Winer and Associates Manltgeme,nt,

belonged to her grandmotber and was featured
as the September phOio on the 1'192 Dairy Barn
calendar.

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Inc .,
Tbls structure and tbe newer
units or old Holzer, ldt, constructed in tbe
early and late 1950s, are being converted iato a
new apartment complex for disabled or retired
persons SS years or older. Tbe ·original Holzer
structure is expected to be completed by tbe end
oftbe

approvals from local , state and
national government officials, but
was shot down in 1982 when the
FHA rules changed and President
Ronald Reagan put all private
financing on hold. Two other
attempts were made, but the companies never followed through .
Calhoun said Wino- and Associates
spent the last four years obtaining
all the necessary approvals before
beginning the pro)CCL
Wmcr said he hopes to have the
building ready for an open house
and ground breaking ceremony
sometime in July. Applications for
residence are now being accepted
at Anhur Howard Wincr and Associates Management, Inc., P.O. Box
HXXl7 , Marietta, OH, 45750 or call
(614) 373-6111 for ma-e information.

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DAIRY BARN QUILT . Tbls quih belongillg
to Rosemary Keller, Chester, bas been featured
at tbe Dairy Barn in Athens during quih shows
there. It dates from tbe early 1970's. Mrs. Keller

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shu-ed it with others durinl the quih show sponsored by tile C)110Urs of the Forest Run United
Metllocml Cburdl 011 Thursday.

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ROBBING PETER TO PAY PAUL • This
quilt, featuring a pattern known as Robbing
Peter to Pay Paul, is owned by Mary Wise or

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Middleport. It c.ame from her mother's family
aud has been featured in the Daytoa QuUt Sbow.

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Hometown welcomes home
former hostage Anderson
LORAIN, Ohio (AP) - Fonner
hostage Terry Anderson returned to
his hometown today to thank those
who kept a vigil for him during his
nearly seven years m capll vlly m
Lebanon.
"I' m very happy to be here
IJccause it gives me a chance to say
thank you to a lot of people, a lot or
people who showed concern and
worked hard for me dunng those
years," Anderson said at a news
conference.
" We (hostages) heard from time
to time when we got a little bit of
news in there about your efforts.
and it always cheered us.··
Anderson, 44, chief Middle East
correspondent for The Associated
Press , was to auend a private
reunion later today with relatives
living in the Lorain area 30 miles
west of Cleveland.
An uncle, Edward Jon es of
Westlake, and three cousins Leila Arden of Avon Lake and
Eileen Perusek and Jim Anderson
of Lorain - remain in the area.
Terry Anderson's sister, Peggy
Say, was unable to mend. But
Anderson said he expected to see
" about a zillion cousins and various assorted relatives.' '
Anderson's fiance, Madeleine
Bassil, and the daughter who was
born shortly after he was kid·
napped, Sulome, accompanied
Anderson.
On Sunday Anderson will be the
grand marshal at a Father's Dav

parade through Lor:un , where he
was born. Anderson moved 10
Batavia, N.Y., at age 7.
Ms. Arden said Fnday that she
was looking forward to the family
reunion in this blue-collar Lake
Erie community of 75,000 residents.
"'We have held these reunions
before, but this year it will be especially nice because Terry will have
the chance to come," she said. " I
just hope that it can be a relaxing
and private time For him ...
Anderson was abducted from a
Beirut street March 16, 1985, and
was released Dec. 4.
The hometown "Free Terry
Anderson Commiuu" headed by
retired newsman Jack LaVriha
helped keep Anderson in the spotlight during his captivity, holding
ceremonies on the steps of Clly
Hall to mark Anderson's binhdays
and eac h anniversary of the kidnapping.
"We accomplished what we
aimed to do, and did everything
possible to be pan of keeping the
awareness alive," LaVriha said.
" That was the promise I made to
Terry's father."
LaVriha was a high school
classmate of Anderson's father,
who asked LaVriha to form the
commiltee a few weeks after
Anderson was abducted. Anderson's father died while he was a
hostage.

1111kDon but tile owner would lilte to identify it.
Tbe quilt was shared durin1 Thursday's quilt
show by tbe 1adlei or tbe group at the church.

FIRST HOLZER APARTMENTS· Tatic Coostructl011, Inc"
began work on an apartment compln wblch extends from First
Avenue to Second along Cedar Street in GaUipolls. Tbe compleJ!
will contain 54 units for disabled and retired persons 55 years or
age and older.

EMBROIDERED QUILT · Margaret Blaet·
tnar, Pomeroy, band embroidered tbls quilt
which was stitched by the qullters at tbe Forest

Run United MethodiSt Church. Mrs. Blaettur
bas embroidered ~al quilts wbicb sbe lovingly gives to members ofber family .

CEASAR'S CROWN • Dating from tbe 1840SO's, this quOt, owned bJ Mary Wise, bas been
featured In tbe Dayton Quilt show. It 'lrll8 orlal·
nally from ber aunt's ramUy, tbe Frost family.

Sbe displayed it, along witb two other qallts
from tile Daytoa sbow, at an Informal qaDt show
by ladles of tbe Forest Run United Metbodlst
Cburcb.

Puzzle on Page D-2

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JACOBEAN GARDEN QUILT • Tbls beauU·
fully Cl'llfted quilt, known 1111 a Jacobean Garden
QuDt, wu created by E8tber Frecker IDd Henri·
etta Bailey. It ns displayed durlna1blll'lllly'•
:lluDt show at the Forest Run United Metbodlst

Cllurdl. Quillen from tbe cburcb bot:ted
sbow to recop1Je mose for wbom they ban
qaDtld. 1k q.UIIn uw c:omg.~~ almolt 100
quDIIIIKe tbiJ Glpalpcllu I

�June 21, 1992

Times Sentinel

June 21, 1992

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

Sunday Times-Senti nei-Page-83

Classie sounds to fill Arze

CONNIE SAUTERS and TODD CUNDIFF

Sauters-Cundiff
POMEROY • Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Saulers, Pomeroy, announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughlel, Connie
L., to Todd Cundiff, son of George
W. Cundiff and the !ale Viola Irene
Cundiff.
Miss Sau1ers and Cundiff are
both graduates of Meigs High

DAISY HAGGY and GREG SATTERFIELD

Haggy-Satterfield
RACINE - Walter and Nellie
Haggy, Rutland, announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Daisy Mae,
to Greg Satterfield, son of Pastor
James Satterfield, Racine, and the
late Voland Satterfield.
Miss Haggy is a I 989 graduate
of Meigs High School and is
employed at Pomeroy Nmsing and

Rehabilitation Center.
Satterfield is a 1985 graduate of
Southern High School and is
employed with Roger Nease
Farms.
The open church wedding will
be an event of June 27 at 2 p.m. at
the Mt. Moriah Church of God in
Racine.

School. She is employed at Oh10
Va11ey Bank in Gallipolis in the
operations department. He is
employed at Federal Mogul, Inc.,
in Gallipolis, in engineering.
The open church wedding will
be an event of July 18 at I p.m. at
the Syracuse Nazarene Church.

Morimoto-Kennedy
BIDWELL · Mr. and Mrs.
Bernie Kennedy of Bidwe11,
announce the engagement and
a~ching manriage of their son,
Tony Mark, to Yuka Morimoto,
daugh~er of Mr. and Mrs. Hiroaki
'! Morimoto, Japan.
·,
Miss MorimoiO is a studenl at
the University of Rio Grande
majoring in Art Education, K-12.

Mr. Kennedy is a student at the
University of Rio Grande majoring
in English, with minor of Political
Science.
The open wedding will be held
July 12 a16 p.m. at the Bob Evans
shelterhouse, Rio Grande, with the
Rev. James Patterson officiating.
The couple will reside in Rio
Grande.

Bentz-Nitz
Nit.z, Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an event of
June 27 at 2 p.m . at 309 Wetzgall
Street in Pomeroy.

Local student attends
OCLRE leadership camp

I

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-

JENNIFER TAYLOR and MICHAEL BARTRUM

Taylor-Bartrum
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy, announce the
engagement and approaching mar·
riage of their daughter, Jennifer
Laurie, to Michael W. Bartrum. son
of Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Bartrum.
Pomeroy.
Miss Taylor is a graduate of
Meigs High School. She is presently enrolled in pre-physical_ therapy
classes at Marshall Umverslly.

Banrum is also a graduate of
Meigs High School. He is presenting completing his final year at
Marshall Umversity where he will
receive a bachelor's degree in spe·
CJal education.

The weddmg w1U be an event of
June 27 atl·30f.m. at the First
Baptist Church o Middleport with
Rev. James Seddon orficiating.
Music will begin at 1 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS • Katie Bailes,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Jack
Bailes of Gallipolis recendy attended the frrst annual Close Up Ohio
I Leadership Camp sponsored by the
Ohio Center For Law-Related Edu1
1 cation (OCLRE).
' The four day residential camp
, was held at Can~er's Cave Camp
· near Jackson, for students in grades
four through six and was attended
by over 100 students from throughout the Sta!C of Ohio.
During the camp student participants were involved in opportunities that helped build leadership
skills, foster self-confidence, and
emphasize good citizenship. The
summer camp program was specially designed wilh activity-based
workshops and social activities that
molivated, stimulated, and inspired
campers 10 become effective leaders and better citizens.
OCLRE and its co-sponsors, the
Ohio Stale Bar Association, Attorney General Lee Fisher, the Amcri ·
can Civil Liberties Union of Ohio
Foundation, and The Supreme
Court of Ohio, are p~ to sponsor a summer educational opportunity that helps Ohio's young citizens build leadership and citizen-

Day camps set
GALLIPOLIS - The 0.0. McinPark District's Tiny Tot and 1·
II Day Camps will continued
through June 26 at the Raccoon
Creek County Park from 9 a.m. to
2p.m.
Fee for each camp is $40 per
child. Anyone interested who did
not pre-register may register at the
part Monday morning between
8:30-9 a.m. or contact the district
offiCe at 446-4612, exL 256.
tyre

MONICA BRADFORD and BILL HARRINGTON

Bradford-Harrington
RACINE - Leon and Terry
(Bradford) Jordan, Pataskala.
announce !he engagement of their
daughter, Monica, to Bill Harrington, son of Duane and Bonnie Harrington, Avoca, Iowa.
She is the sranddaughter of
Clarence and Ruth Bradford,
Racine, and Kathryn Oliver,
Reynoldsburg, formerly of
Pomeroy. She is a graduate of
Walkins Mtmaia1 High School in
Pareshla and a 1992 graduate of
Graceland College in Lamoni,
Iowa, with a bachelor of arts

degree in elementary education.
He is a 199 I graduate of Grace·
land College with a bachelor of aJ13
degree in elementary education,
physical education and coachina.
He is employed as a fifth grade:
teaCher in Ham burS,. !OWL
The wedding will be • Mill (If
July 11 at 2:30 p.m. at die Relqa·
nized Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saims, 840 Rosehill
Road, Reynoldsburg. The ceremony will be officiated by her uncle,
Kel Weller and his brother, David
Harrington.

ship skills. OCLRE will be con ducting Oose Up Ohio Leadership
Academy for students in grades
seven lhrough nine at Capital University from June 29-July 2. Further information about OCLRE or
future summer Close Up Ohio
Leadership Camp information can
be obtained by contacting OCLRE
at 1-800-282-6556 or by writing to
OCLRE at P.O . Box 16562,
Columbus, 43216-6562.

By EDNA WHITELEY
GALLIPOLIS . There'll be a
weallh of talent shaped by decades
of training on sta~e at the Morris
and Dorolhy Hasldns Ariel Thealre
at 8 p.m. JW1e 27. The Fontana Trio
- pianist Leslie Petteys, violinist
Reed Smith and ce11ist Suzanne
Barber Veiga - will play a pro·
gram of pops and light classics.
Petteys and Smith have Doctor
of Musical Arts degrees and are on
the Marshall University faculty.
Veiga pursues that degree at the
University of Kentucky. Their long
lists of individual achievements
seem to indicate that if their part·
nership clicks- and it seems to_
they're formidable.
Although ensemble names
sometimes reflect mere flights of
fancy, that is not the case here. An
interest in the role of women in !he
arts prompted !he lhree to choose
the name of famed Renaissance
painter Lavinia Fontana, one of the
earliest successful female artists.
Two of the artists have performed at the Ariel before. Petteys
appeared with flutist Wendell
Dobbs, a Marshall colleague, last
October and Smith has been concertmistress of the Ohio Valley
Symphony since last December.
Light classics, not a uue musical

Trustees to meet
SYRACUSE · The Carleton
College Board of Trustees will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. All
members urged to attend.

Rife family reunion held
GALLIPOLIS · The families of
the late Raymond and Virgie Rife
met June 14 at the Shrine Club
House on Bulaville Pike for the
second reunion with 58 present.
Eileen Elliot asked the blessing
on the meal which was enjoyed by
the following: Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barthalow; Kevin and
Charles Lee Barthalow; Eileen
Elliot, Faye Spencer, Mable Shively, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rife, Mr.
and Mrs. Merch Rife; John Mullens; Karadawn and Troy
Barthalow; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Elliot; Mr. and Mrs. Ted Flood;
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rife; David
Lee Rife: Mr. and Mrs. John Hopkins; Brad, Nick and Jeff Hopkins;
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Rife, Ciara
Rife, Dennis and Shawn Rife, Sara
Summers, Roben Steinbeck; Mr.
and Mrs. James Steinbeck; Karen,
Todd and Sara Beth Hill; Mr. and

Mrs. Joe Rife; Mr. and Mrs. Kimberly Hall; Amy and Dustin Hall;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Myers; Nicki
Myers; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Steinbeck; Brittany, Breanna and Brett
Steinbeck.; Bruce Elliott; Ray Flannagan; Hollie Beth Johnson; Carita
Gardener and Jeff and Chris Rife.
Following the meal a birthday
cake was presented to Ted Flood
by Jim and Barb Steinbeck, and
Happy Birthday was sung 10 all the
Junc birthdays.
The oldest member present was
an Aunt Mable Shively from Lancaster and the youngest was Brett
Steinbeck, son of Ralph and Tersa
Steinbeck of Rio Grande.
The one traveling farthest was
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Elliot of
Newcomerstown.
The next reunion will be July
17, 1993 at the club house in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.

Community Calendar items
appear IWo days before an event
and the 'day that event. Items
must be received weD In advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

or

SUNDAY
HOCKINGPORT · There will
he benefit for Tom Chutes formedical exJ?Cnses Sunday from 2-8:30
p.m. with round and square dance
from 8:30 p.m. 10 midnight at the
Reynolds. Bluegrass, country and
gospel music. Nl bands welcome .
Hot dogs, sloppy joes, cake, pic,
coffee and pop wiD be available.
MIDDLEPORT - All fathers
accompanied by a son or daughter
paying re~ular admission prices
will be enutled to lhree free games
of miniature golf at the Middleport
Park 'n' Pull in observance of
Father's Day.
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington, Gallipolis, will be guest
speaker at Naomi Baptist Church in
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:45 a.m .
Public invited.

MASON COUNTY · The West
Virginia State Farm Museum will
hold its 12th annual Pioneer Days
on June 27 and 28.
Activities will emphasize West
Virginia pioneer life, and include
an old-fashioned wheat harvest,
blacksmithing, corn-grinding ,
woodcarving, quilting, spinning,
weaving, basket-weaving, soapmaking and broom-making.
The Country Store will feature
local crafts, souvenirs and icc
cream . The Country Kitchen will
serve cornbread, beans, hot dogs
and pie.
On June 28, at 9 a.m., Rev .
Louis Russell will conduct services
in the one-room schoolhou se.
LuAnn Hussell will play the pump
organ and direct the singing. There
will be a hymn sing Sunday at 1
p.m.
Admission to the State Farm
Museum is free, and it is located
north of Point Pleasant, off Route
62.

LOTTRIDGE - There w;ll be a
benefit for Scott Gilbert at the Lot!ridge Community Center on Sunday at 1 p.m. Gilbert is a member
of one of the bands that plays at the
center on the weekends. Bands will
begin performing at 2 p.m. and
refreshments will be avallable.
Public invited.

Anniversary open house set
COTI1.E, W.Va.· Mr. and Mrs.
Bert F. Rainey will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary with an
open house hosted by their children
on Saturday, June 27, from 1-4
p.m . at the home of their son,
Tony,ofGallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
They were married June 27,
1942 in Gallipolis.
Mrs. Rainey is the former Coral
L. Bootie Yester, daughter of the
late Henry and Ollie (Northup)
Yester. She is homemaker.
Mr. Rainey is the son of the late
Amy and Anna (Roush) Rainey. He
retired from B&amp;O/C&amp;O Railroad
in 1982 as a track supervisor alter
more than 42years of ~ice.

They are former restdents of the
Gallipolis Ferry/Point Pleasant area
and are currently residing in Cottle,
W.Va
Mr. and Mrs. Rainey arc the
parents of five children, Connee
Rainey and Kitty Rainey, both of
Vienna, Va.; Patsy Ross and Tony
Rainey, both of Gallipolis Ferry.
W.Va., and Tim Rainey of
Craigsville, W.Va They have five
grandchildren.
The couple asks that gifts be
omitted:
Those wishing to send cards can
mail them to: Box 115, Cottle,
W.Va, 26207.

MT. UNION · Mt. Union Bap·
ust Church will hold a gospel sing
and potluck dinner Sunday featur ing True Gospel Sounds. Dinner
wi11 be at noon and singing at I
p.m. Public invited.

KYGER CREEK · A reunion
for descendants and friends of
Elbert and Della Gillilan will be
held Sunday at the Kyger Creek
Power Plant/Club House beginning
at noon.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
Church of Christ will hold Vaca·

RACINE • Antique and small
engine club will meet Monday at 8
p.m. at Southern High School.
RACINE · Racine Church of the
Nazarene, Vacation Bible School,
Monday lhrough Friday, 6:30-8:30
p.m. for ages 2-13. "Set Sail With
the Saviorn is the theme. Pastor
Tom Gates invites the public.

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY
Custom Filled Dentures In One Day AI Our Teays Valley Office
By Our Professionals And Trained Staff.
Made ln Our Dental Labomlory By Qualified Technicians.

For All Appointment or Information.
Our Regular Service Is Available At AU Offices.
SAME DAY SERVICES 01'1 REUNE8 AND REPAIRS I

DENTURES START AT

WEBSTER and IITHEL DEWITT

Anniversary to be observed
BIDWELL· Webster and Ethel
•\! wil1celf9rate
Jllll1versary on
.

.

They were married on Father's

Day in 1942 by the Rev. H. M.
Smith in Gallipolis.
The coup!~ resides In Bidwell,
and they have two sons, Carl of
Bidwel1, and Larry of Gallipolis.

HARRISONVILLE · The Har~
risonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the townc
house. Three-month birthdays will
be observed with a poduck dinnrz.
Nl members are urged to attend.

RACINE • Revival at the Pentecostal Assembly, Route 124,
Racine, will be held Wednesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly
with Rev. Jim Barrouse. Pastor
William Hoback invites the public.

$143 PER DENTURE!

SMAIL ADDmONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVlCE

Welt
VIrginia Dental Servlee
WUII•m V. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.
1031 llJAARIER STREET
306 ~lu Bldtl. Chll1tnon • 343-295&lt;

POINT PLEASANT - Denver
and Velma Parsons, Vero Beach,
Fla., and Point Pleasant, W.Va ..
will celebrate their golden anniversary Friday.
They were married in Gallipolis
by a justice of the peace on June
26. 1942.
They have four children, Joe
and Sandra Parsons, Belmont,

W.Va.: David and Linda Parsons,
Vero Beach, Fla.; Billy and Kelly
Parsons, and a daughter, Lisa Par·
sons, Jacksonville, Fla. They have
eight grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
A cookout will be held at the
Point Pleasant Moose Lodge on
Route 2 on June 28 at I p.m. with
all family and friends invited.

RODNEY and PEGGY

ROBERTS

Couple celebrates 25 years
GALLIPOLIS · Rodney and
Peggy Roberts were surprised with
a celebration of their 25th wedding
anniversary on May 2 at the First
Presbyterian Church and was hosted by family members.
. They were married May 6, 196 7
m Gallipolis, and have resided

GALLIPOLIS - Tom White of
the Gallipolis office of Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
has been selected as Loval Veteran
Employment Representative of the
Year for 1992 by AMVETS
(American Veterans of WW II,
Korea and Victnarn ). Department
of Ohio: The award was presented
during the the 47th Annual
AMVETS Convention in Cincin·
nat!l on June 13 by Carl Price, US
Department of Labor, Veterans
Employment and Training Service.
Local Veteran Employment
ARCHIE and BETTY MEADOWS
Representatives (LVER) are
assigned to employment service
offices to coordinate veterans
employment and training programs
GALLIPOLIS · Archie C. and
Betty is the daughter of the late by providing technical assistance,
Betty M. Meadows celebrated their Christopher _and Edith (Kingery) monitoring and evaluating local
35th wedding anniversary at their Btars, and IS employed by the
home on May 26.
Holzer Medical Center as a shift
The couple were united in mar· supervisor in the central supply
riage by the Rev. Tyler Mooney on department.
The couple has three sons,
Sunday, May 26, 1957 at his resi Henry of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
dence in Gallipolis.
HACKENSACK, N.J . (AP) Archie is the son of the late Archie Randall of 29 Palms, Calif.,
Rhythm
and blues singer Wilson
Henry and Ruby (White) Mead· and Ernie Crown City, and they
ows, and is a commissioned have two granddaughters and one Pickett pleaded innocent to aggra·
vated assault charges in sideswipDeputy Sheriff in the state of Ohio. grandson.
ing a pedestrian. He said the pedestrian did not hear him honlc
Authorities said Pickett, whose
hits include "In The Midnight
Hour" and "Mustang Sally," had
a blood-alcohol level more than
double the legal limit when his
truck suuck the 86-year-old man
on April24.
Picken. 51, was released on his
recognizance after appearing
before state Superior Coun Judge
Bruce Gaeta.
He told reporters aJterward that
the pedestrian. Pepe Ruiz, failed to
hear him honk and walked into the
side of the truck. Ruiz was hospi·
tal ized and recovered.
Pickett still faces charges from
May 1991 of driving his car across
the lawn of his neighbor, Mayor
Donald Aronson.

Wilson Pickett
pleads innocent

TUESDAY
POMEROY · MADD meeting
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Health
Recovery Service Office, 101 112
A Second Street, Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY ·Jeanne Owen will
present a program on aerobics at
the Meigs County Public Library
on Wednesday. Two sessions will
be presented. The first session, at 2
p.m., is for children age preschool
through the lhird grade. The second
session, at 2:45p.m., is f&lt;r children
age four and over. The presentation
is offered free of charge.

Couple to celebrate 50 years

Celebrates 35th anniversary

RACINE · Vacation Bible
School, Racine First Baptist
Church, Monday through Friday, 9
a.m. to noon. Team Up With Jesus
is the theme.
RACINE · Racine United
Methodist Church, Vacation Bible
School, Monday through Friday 911 :30 a.m. daily. Ages preschool
lhrough sixth grade. Son Mountain
is the theme .

DENVER ud VELMA PARSONS

there for 25 years.
They are the parents of one son.
Bnan, and one daughter, Lori .
Rodney is the owner of Robert.s
Construction Co., lnc.
Peggy is a hous ew ife . They
attend Fa1th Community Chapel
Chun:h.

White honored by AMVETS

tion Bible School, Monday through
Friday from 9: IS am. to noon for
ages three through the eighth grade.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-926-0025

gallery

MR. and MRS. BERT {B0011E) RAINEY

Meigs County calendar

Pioneer Days
June 27-28

CIUTING SENIOR POUUITS THAT WILL
LET THE RUL YOU SHINE THROUGH

term, has come to mean the less
complex works of classic composers, pie~es that are popularly
called easy lrstemng. From thrs category Fonl~n~. will . play
Mend~lssohn, s .. On Wrn~s of
Song,n Lehar s Merry Wtdo~
Waltz and P. I. Tcha1kovsky s
Trepak from 'The Nutcracker."
The second half ~ reserved for
pops. Fontana may s~..fond memorres wrth Rnodgers My Fun~y
:falentrne,
K~ehler-Arlen .s
.. st~rmy Weather and Her~ert s
Ah. Sweet "1ystery ~.f Ltfe. For
the Irish they_ II eiay When lnsh
Eyes are Smtlmg.
. .
Fontana ts ~he se~ond tn the
Touch of Classrcal senes. Anyone
who bought the series has tickets
for thrs event and the July I I coneluding concert that features Cleveland Opera stars Rtchard and Mau·
reen Gaylord. lndiv!&lt;'ual tickets are
avarlable at Peddlers Pantry or can
be purchased when the theatre
opens the mght of the concerts.

office activities pertaining to veterans programs and recomm e nd~ng
Improv ement s and corrective

actiOn to local off1ce procedures.
LVER 's also arc responsible for
maintaining contact with community leaders, employers, labor unions,
training providers, service
providers and area veteran organizations to promote employment for
veterans.
In presenting the award, Price
stated that several of the procedures established by White for the
local office are being implemented
in other offices lhroughout Ohio. In
a depressed economy such as veterans face in southeastern Ohio, these
internal procedures are used to
insure that veterans obtain the maximum amount of employment and
training related services available
through the Job Service office.
White is a life long resident of
Gallia County and ha s been
employed as an LVER in the Gallipolis office since 1979, serv in g
veterans 1n Ga11ia, Mei gs an&lt;!
Maso n countie s. He belong s to
American Legion Post 27, Viemarn
Veterans of Amenca, Gallia Coun·
ty Veterans Assoc iation and is
member of the Gallia County Veteran s Service Commission Tom
and h1s wife Margaret and son Eric.
reside on Graham School Road.
ln accepting the award, White
recognized the assistance, cooperation and dedication of the Gallipolis Job Service staff in scf\'in g veterans in what is less than ideal &lt;XO ·
nomic conditions.

News notes
HEAD TO NEW MEXICO • Tbree scouts from Boy Scout
Troop 200 of Ga!Hpolis will be going to Philmont Scout Ranch in
Cimmaron, New Mexico. The boys will leave July I and spend 12
days on the trails. They will pan for gold, pack mules and learn
different aspects of mountain camping. On tlte trip out and back
tbey will stop at various Air Force bases and museums. Pictured (I
tor) are, James Standish, Bob Magnussen and Jnsb Blacksmith.

MR. and MRS. RALPH MCKENZIE

68th anniversary observed
POMEROY • Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph McKenzie observed their
68th wedding anniversary June 18.
They were married in Gallipolis
by Rev. R.E. Dunn. They have one
daughter and son-in-law, Addalou

and Robert J. Lewis, Pomeroy; one
granddaughter, Carol Dun~ Akron;
one grandson, David Lewis,
Pomeroy; and lhree great-grandchildren, Robbie and Eric Durst,
Akron, and Nildta Lewis, Pomeroy.

Holly's Dolly's sponsors
Little Miss Firecracker '92
RUTLAND - A coniCS! to select
Little Miss Firecracker 1992 will
be held during Fourth of July activ·
ities in Rudand.
·
The contest is sponsored by
Holly's Dolly's and is open to any
Meigs County girl between the
ages of ei~ht and 12.
There rs a $5 entry fee and dead·
Jine for entry is July I. To enter
call Holly Williams at992-2834.

Partie ipants will ride in the
Fourth of July parade in Rutland on
a float which will be _provided by
Holly's Dolly's. Judgmg will follow the parade.
The winner will receive a cer·
tiftcate to H~!l;'s Dolly's as well
as a crown,
, fresh-walel pearl
bracelet and a trophy. Runners-up
will receive jewelry.

Cabbie whose dentures
stopped bullet is all smiles

Begimng in th6 1840s, commer·
cia! whalers hunted gray whales in
their breeding lagoons along the
Baja California coast and later in
their northern range, reducing the
eastern Pacific stock to a nearly
fatal level.

OCEANFRONT CONDO

2BR. 2BA Luxury with Pn·
vato llceor*onl Bai::ooy. Pool.
KitChen Clo6t to EverylhfrV

By DON MITCHELL
Associated Press Writer
DENVER
Ignatiu s
Nwandilibe isn't sure if he will
ever go back to driving a cab, but
he !hanks his lucky dentures ror
giving him a second chance at life
after he was shot in the mouth during a holdup.
"I guess you could call them
my 'bullet-proof coat' I would be
dead if not for the dentures,"
Nwandilibe told reporters Thursday
at Denver General Hospital.
Nwandilibe, 47, was shoe Monday by a teen-ager he picked up at
a hotel near Stapleton International
Airpa1. He said the youth ordered
him to stop the cab and demanded
money. Nwandilibe said after he
handed over $60 to $70, the teenager told him 10 get out
The gunman then asked for the
keys and placed the gun to
Nwandilibe's temple. Nwandilibe
turned his head before the youth
pulled the trigger and was shot in

Lhe mouth. The attacker ran and has
not been arrested .

Elliott

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�Page 84 Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

June 21,1992

Sunday nme......sentlnel Page 85

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, WV

YOUTH TALENT SHOW
JULY 3, 1992. 3 to 5 p.m.
Name or Perrorm er! s)/Group: - - - -- - - - - ---Grade in School (1991 -92) : _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Name or Person to Contact : - - - - - - - - - -- !'hone No. of Contact Person : _ ______ _ _ _ ____
Solo or Ensemble (''lo. in group): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

DOCENTS HONORED · From ldt, Donna
Broyles, Pat Glass, Mary Skinner, Ronald Cal·
houn, and Saundra Koby, were all honored as

HONORED • Following her presentation on
hostessing techniques during the French Art
Colony's recent luncheon, Kim Sheets, (left) Is
pictured with three ladies who were honored

SERVING THE FAC ·Taking a moment to
thank three of the many docents for tltelr time
aod service to the French Art Colony Is Patt
McLaughlin, (left), FAC program director.

RECOGNIZED • These individuals were
receutly honored during a special luncheon at
the French Art Colony ror the served to the
FAC. From left are: Donald Thaler, Trustee

during the event. To Sheelll' left are Beth Cherrington, Trustee Emeritus; Jan Thaler, trustee;
and Lola Mae Suiter, historian, (seated).

From left, are E~zabetb PbiUips, Kay Cameron,
and Lee Lee, who were recognized ror their services.

Equipment used in act: - - - - - - - - - - - -- Length of act no longer than 4 mmu tcs
Deadline for Applicauon : June 27, !992
Send To:
8rvrrly Dunkle
84 Locust Street
Gallipoti'&lt;, OH 45631 , Ph. 446·0076

integral parts of the French Art Colony during a
recent reception.

Note: We will not have auditions thi' yrar. If we ~·t too many ap-

PAC volunteers honored during luncheon

plications we will have tu uo;t tht rif\t 110 apply 2•t lirst chancr to
perrorm. Participant&lt; will bt nutilitd "''"practice tim&lt;.

GALLIPOLIS · A special group
of volunteelli was honored with a
luncheon/recognition ceremony at
the French Art Colony Saturday
recently. Guests included FAC
doceniS, board members, and olher
volunl.eelli.
"DoceniS are an integral part of
the French Art Colony," said Patt
McLaughlin, program director.
"We would not be what we are
today without them. They enable us
to keep our galleries open on week·
ends and to offer a warm welcome
to guesiS."
Docenrs honored, followed by
ye&amp;lli of service, were: Micki Calhoun (21). Gladys Grant (21),
Dorothy Hartley (21), Ermalie
Straight (21), Betty Irvin (18),
Mary Mossman (16), Elizabeth
Phillips (16), Lee Lee (15), Mary
Warehime (15), Eva Mills (14),
Kay Cameron ( 11), Pat Glass (9),
Dawn Rupen (7), Mary Skinner
(6), and Donna Broyles (5). Also
honored were Lola Mae Suiter, for
her ye&amp;lli of service as volunteer
historian, and Beth Cherrington,
trustee emeritus.
Kim Sheets, Ohio Valley Visitor's Center director, presented a
program on hostessin~ techniques
and described the attnbutes of !he
Ohio Valley. The luncheon was
organized by Saundra Koby and
Jan Thaler, whom McLaughlin
described as "the backbone of !he
French Art Colony."
Other volunteelli who contributed to the luncheon include Manha
Cornett, Micki Calhoun, and Alice
Orr.
Anyone wishing 10 volunteer or
10 learn more about the French Art

Panel recommends OK for
Depo-Provera injections

Colony can do so by calling 4463834. Ail FAC programming is

offered through the support ot the
Ohio Arts Council.

'·

PRAcriCE MAKES PERFECT. Jan Fraree, RNC, Is pictured
instructing rather-to-be Andy Fisher, on tbe basics ror inrant CPR,
·during a previous class conducted by the OB Nurses at Holzer
Medical Center.

•Sales, Rentals,.
Repairs
• Wheelchairs
• Hospital Beds
•Canes &amp; Crutches
•Commode Chairs
•Walkers
• Home Oxygen
•Bath Safety Aids

• Urinary/Ostomy
Supplies
• Insurance Claims
Processed
(Medicare &amp;
Medicaid Accepted)
•Attends and Chux
•24 Hour Service
•Free Delivery

iDin• IIIDaaJiaallln•IDII• lnaa.
565 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

446·2206
"Strwl•t nt A111 Ftr Our IS Ytlll"

Anesthetist, who wtll be on hand
for discussion and to answer any
questions.
A new film, "Epidural Aneslhe- Love" and "Tennessee River" sia in Childbirth", recenOy released which hit No. I on the country
by Miiner·Fenwick, will be pre· chariS in !he early t980s - and "I
viewed.
WannaBe With You Tonight" and
Following the program, a tour of "Lovin· You is Killing Me."
the OB Department will be con·
The three filed a breach of condueled.
tract lawsuit Thursday in Davidson
Because of limited space, any· County Chancery Court against
one wanting 10 attend the June 28 Scott Tun, who owns three music
program should call 446· 5030 10 publishing companies. They ' re
make a reservation.
seeking royalties and permission to
Other programs scheduled for break contracts with the compa·
the summer include Elaine Mathe- nies, according 10 court papers.
ny, B.S., certified by the lntellll!·
tiona! Lacllltion Consultant AssOCI·
ation, to speak Aug. 30, on "Breast
Feeding, Advantages and Hints foc
Success". More details on this
fuwrc program will be announced
later.
GALLIPOLIS - The family of
the late Stroud and Nellie
(Swindler) Houck gathered Sunday
June 14, at Raccoon Creek County
"THANK YOU VIETNAM VETERANS"
Park for their annual reunion.
Two births were reponed since
1992 River Recreation
last year's reunion. Joseph Paul
Absten was born Oct 30, 1991. He
July 4 Parade Entry Form
is the son of Charles and Karen
(Fowler) Absten . Zachary Wayne
Name : ___________________________________
Slyman was born Sept 19, 1991.
He is the son of Mark and Martha
(Prose) Slyman .
The marriage of Michael Robert
;:~roup or Individual: ---------------~
Fowler and Dena Holley on April
11, 1992 at !he Gosepl Lighlhousc
Type (Float, march) : - - -------------- - - - - - Chun:h was reported.
The oldest person present was
Anna Prose. The youngest person
Number of participanrs: - - -- - - - - - -- -- was Erin Cavinee. Coming the farDeadline ror entries is June 29, 1992
lhest distance was Farrel and Betty
Houck .
Parade begins at II a.m.
The following att end the
For more information call tbe Gallia County Chamber of
reunion : Farrel and Belly Houck,
Commerce at 446-0596.
Springfield, Loren Houck, Da yton, Carl and Virgm1a Troll er,
Co lumbus,
Palli, Chad,
Drew and Erin
and

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Wanda Cavince, Gahanna, Lee and
Nellie Houck, New Albany, John
and Sharon Miller , Crown City,
Larry Shong. Bidwell, Mary Syrus.
Eileen and Robert Donnally, Pluma
Shong . Anna Prose, Chancey and
Frances Houck, Bryan, Natalie and
Al ex Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Caldwell , Stanley Fellure, Frances
LeNoir, Charles Lee and Noreda
Houck, Kara Marcum and Todd
Ragan, Gallipolis. Tonya and
Madge Shafer, Scottown.
The 1993 reunion will be held
Jun e 13, 1993 at Raccoon Creek
County Park Shelterhousc #S.

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Johnson 111 Gall1poils at 446-0902.
In Pomeroy, call Mtlbe Midktff at'
lJ92-2133. And 1n Rutland, call joan
May at 742-288R

BOSTON (AP) ~ Nicholas
Daniloff, a journalist held by the
KGB for two weeks in 1986, will
take over next month as head of
Northeastern University's School
of Journalism .
Daniloff, who has been on the
university's faculty since 1989,
will preside over a department with
500 undergraduates and 50 graduate students, the school announced
Friday.

ER PE
'

• FLXcJ or i\diLL'&gt;Iahlc Rate

They said they were last paid
royalties for the songs in Septem·
ber 1991.
Tun could not be reached for
comment Friday. A woman who
answered the telephone at his home
said he was not there and hung up.

trial and renal cancers. As a birth
control agent, it inhibits the production of the hormone
gonadotropin. preventing ovula·
tion.
Because Depo·Provera is an
approved drug, some doctors do
prescribe 11 as a conuaceptive. But
that is outside the drug's labeled
use and such docto!li open them·
selves to some legal liability.
The question before the ffiA
was whether the drug is scientifically linked to breast, liver orca·
vical cancer. The advisory panel's
findings are not binding, but the
FDA usually follows the advice of
such panels.

Families attend
annual Houck reunion

FANTASTIC SU

• As little as 5%Down Payment ·

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ~
Randy Owen. Jeffrey Cook and
Teddy Gentry of the country group
Alabama sued a music publisher,
claiming they have not been paid
royalties for four songs they wrote.
The songs are "Lady Down on

GALLIPOLIS . The Obstetrical
(OB) NUilies at the Holzer Medical
Center will present another in their
continuing series of classes, free
and open 10 !he public, on Sunday,
June 28, at 3 p.m. in the French
500Room.
The subject will be "Coping
With Child Birth: Choices of Anes·
thesia."
Coordinating the meeting will
be Robin Pasquale, and Diane
Allen, both certified in inpatient
obstetrics by NAACOG, the orga·
nization for Obstetric, Gynecologic
and Neonatal nurses.
Two speakers will be featured
during the Sunday afternoon pro·
gram, according to Pasquale and
Allen. Ther are Teri Cunningham,
R.N., Pennatal Nurse Educator
who will speak on "The Stages of
Labor", and Graham Stanley,
: CRNA, Certified Registered Nurse

HAVE A GOOD DAY,
DAD!

992-2104.

People in the news

OB nurses announce
special program, tour

Emeritus; Micki Calhoun, Dorothy Hartley,
senior docents (21 years or service); and Mary
Beth Cherrington, Trustee Emeritus.

The caring, well-trained healthcare staff of
Veterans Memorial Hospital wishes you a
happy Father's Day. May it be the best ever.
Please remember that your hometown
hospital stands aready 365 days a year to
provide excellent healthcare for you and your
family.
We're only a phone call away. If we can assist
you with any health problem give us a call at

CLOGGERS PERFORM • Mikki Casto's Country Ctoggers of
Point Pleasant, perrormed at Ameril'lor.a' as part or America'.s
Showcase presented by Wendy's lnternatHJnal on June 13. Amen·
ca's Showcase presented by Wendy's Intemat~?oal will.bighlight
over 50,000 non-professional performers durmg tbe sn month
expo.

By RlCHARD L. VERNACI
Associated Press Writer
ROCKVll.LE, Md. ~ An advisory panel is telling the Food and
Drug Administration that a drug
providing women three months of
birth control protection per injec ·
lion is safe and effective.
The Fertility and Maternal
Health Drugs Advisory Committee
voted unanimously Friday to
approve Depo·Provera as a contrnccptive after a day of testimony
from the public, the manufacturer
and !he government
The drug, manufactured by the
Upjohn Co., is approved for use in
!he United States to treat endome·

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PHONE 446-3525

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�June 21, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH~olnt Pleasant, WV

Page-86-Sunday Times SenUnel

June 21, 1992

Daughter takes the stand; Jay Leno wishes driver well

McClure appointed director to Rappers' anger reaches politicians
new Ohio Universi program
By DAVID BAUDER

beinR listened to a lot more closely

now!•

Associlkd Press Writer

ATHENS - Athens business
woman Mary Ann McClure has
been named director of the
Women's Business Resourte Program at Ohio University, a new
office established by a grant from
!he U.S. Small Business Administtation.
The project is designed to promote shon- and long-tenD development assistance for women-owned
stan-up and developing businesses
in seven Southeastern Ohio counties: Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Morgan, Perry, and Vinton.
In particular, McClure said, the
office is targetin~ services toward
"underemployed' and unemployed
women who want to stan businesses.
The new program provides free
counseling and training courses in
business marketing, accounting,
licensing and registration, businessplan development, and employee
management. McClure will teach
!he classes at sites in the counties.
McClure also plans to establish
memor relationships between new
and veteran women busim:ss owners in the region.
McClure currently is meeting

a

MARY ANN MCCLURE
with prospective business women
in Peny County. In the fall, she'll
tum her attention to Meigs, Vinton
and Athens counties. Next winter,
she'll hold classes in Jackson
County. The program will reach
Gallia and Morgan counties next
spring.
''I'm finding that working with

economic development in rural
area is very challenging, because of
the fact the population is so spread
ou~" McClure said.
McClure said she has been
encouraged by the interest shown
in !he program. She is advertising
the project's services in area newspapers and libraries, and through
chamber of commerce organizations.
According to McClure, initial
funding for the program will last 16
months, after which time the U.S.
Small Business Administration
may extend funding for another
year.
McClure, who is pan-owner of
an accounting and tax prepamtion
fum in Athens, joined the office on
a full-time basis in May. The projec~ one of six established throughout C Ohio, is based in the College
of Business Administration's Management Development Division.
McClure graduated from Ohio
University in 1973 with a bachelor's deF in sociology.
She ts available for individual
interviews with interested business
women. She can be reached at 614593-0474.

If Sister Souljah, Ice-T and
other rappers are the new politicians of young black America, prepare to have your ears singed.
- "I'm 'bout to dust some cops
off ... Die, pig, die," fee-T sings in
his song, "Cop Killer."
- "Who's that behind the trig ger? Who do you figure? A (expletive) nice nigger. Ready to buck
and rip (expletive) up. I've had
enou~h. I just don't give a (expletive), ' raps Tupac Shakur of Digital Underground
- "George Bush is a terrorist
... White teachers will never teach
black kids how to survive in America, because black kids gotta compete against white kids, and white
people want their own kids to
win," Sista' Souljah raps.
Largel{ because of the shocking
images o Los Angeles riots in !he
wake of the Rodney King verdict,
America is listening more closely
to the angry music produced by
inner-city youth.
Rappers have become the leadm for a disaffa:ted young generation of youths who believe the system has failed them.
Democratic presidential contender Bill Clinton criticized Souljah for being "filled with hatred"
after reading an interview in which
she was quoted as saying: "If black.
people kill black people every day,
why not have a week and kill white
people."
Police groups this week called
for a boycott of Time Warner Inc.
products to protest the release of
'Cop Killer." Three national
record chains this week pulled the
album from shelves.
The theme of "Cop Killer"
isn't panicularly new. Rappers
N.W.A. incensed authorities two
years ago with their "F- Tha
Police."
"What N.W.A. was saying was
basically everything that happened
in the Rodney King trial," said
Marcus Logan, a 22-year-old producer of mp music from New Yorlc
City's Brooklyn. "The words are

Day camp at
FAC June 22

CLINIC CEREMONY - Sbown atlbe ribbon
cutting dedication or the Holzer Clinic's Occupatioaal Heallb, Sports Medicine and Rebablli·
tation Center are: (front row, I tor) Dr. Dan
Black, Physical Medicine; Carol O'Rourke,
President of lbe Gallipolis City Commission; Dr.
Joe Sudimack, Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation Chief Medical Consultant; Dr. J.
Craig Strafford, Clinic President; Joan ADduson, Physical Tberapy Supervisor; Robert E.
Daniel, Clinic Administrator; (back row) Frank
Titus, Legal Counsel for tbe Oblo Bureau or

Workers Compensation; P.D. McGreedy, city
commissioner; Rev. AI. MacKenzie, St. Peters
Episcopal Church; Dr. David Miner, Occupational Medicine; J. Timothy Betz, (obscured)
director or the center; and John Cunningbam,
rehab center supervisor. The Rehabilitation
Center, located at Fourth and Sycamore In Gal·
lipolis, is now serving the medical needs or all
area employers, workers, and albletes as well as
those in need or any form or physical, occupational, cardiac, pulmonary or speech therapy.

What are fathers made of?: a gem
Dear Ann Landers: The "Gem
of !he Day" which appeared in your
column '" !he Los Angeles Times
last February was an excerpt from a
heartwarming tribute to fathers I
have carried in my wallet for 44
years. Your readers might enjoy
see ing the entire piece. It was
wn ucn by Paul Harvey.
My wonderful father died during
heart surgery, when I was 18
years old. I found this essay and have
cherished it all these years . It helped
allev iate my grief and it may help
others. Please print it. ·· S.C.S.,
ORANGE. CALIF.
DF:AR S.C.S.: Thank you for
Ictung me know where !hat Gem
came from. It is my pleasure to give
the author crediL Here's a shonened
vcrs1on of !he piece for Father's Day.
with pe rmission from my good
fncnd , Paul.
What Are Fathess Made Of?
A father is a thing that is forced
to endure childbirth without an
anesthetic.
A father is a thing that growls
when it feels good- and laughs very
loud when it's scared half to death.
A father never feels entirely
worthy of the worship in a child's
eyes. He's never quite the hero his
daughter thinks, never qmte the man
his son believes him to be -- and
this worries him, sometimes.
So he works too hard to try and
smooth the rough places in the road
for those of his own who will
follow him.
A falher is a thing that gets very
. angry when the lint school grades
: aren't as good as he thinks they
should be. He scolds his son though
he knows it's the teacher's fault
. Fathers are what give daughters
· away to other men who aren't nearly
: good enough so they can have
: grandchildren who are smaner than
anybody's.
Fathers make bets with insurance
companies about who'll live the
: longest. Though they know the odds,
: they keep right on betting. And one
: day they lose.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1991, u.. An&amp;.t ..
n..., Syndkale ....t

c......nsyndl.-

I don't know where fathers go
when they die. But I've an idea that
after a good rest. wherever it is, he
won't be happy unless there's work
to do.
He won't just s1t on a cloud and
wait for the girl he's loved and !he

ch1ldrcn she bore.
He'll be busy there, too, repairing
the statrs, oiting the gates, improving the streets, smoothing the way.
What's the truth abour pot,
cocaine, LSD, PCP, crack. spud
and downers ? "The Lowdown
on Dope" has up-to-the-minute
inforrtllltion on drugs. Send a stlfaddr&lt;sud. long, business-siu
envelo~ and a check or money
orda for $3.65 (this includes
postage and handling) ro: Lowdown,
c/o Ann l.onders. P.O. Box 11562.
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
CaNUla, send $4.45.)

SBC summer registration begins
GALLIPOLIS - Registration 1n
now und erway at Southeastern
Business College for the summer
quaner slated to begm June 29 w1th
both day and evening classes
offered.
Two year associate degree programs, approved by !he Ohio Stale
Board of propnetary school regiStration, are offered in !he fields of
Business Administration . hccutive
Secretarial,
Microcomputer/Data Prncessing,
and Accounting. D1ploma co urses
are available in Secretarial. Medi cal Office Secretary, Data Entry

Speciali st. and Security Officer
Training.
SBC has flexible class schedul mg. Students may attend morning
or evening classes, or a combmation of bolh sessions. This allows
students to work full time and
attend classes full time. Financial
a..sistance is also available for students who qualify.
Contact the admissions office by
phone at 446-4367 or by letter.
Regular office hours are 8:30 a.m.
to 5:30p.m. daily. Special appointments may be arranged during the
evening hours and Saturdays, 10
a.m. to I p.m.

DR. JAMES CONDE
Is announcing the closing of his
medical practice at
155 N. 2nd Av. in Middleport, Ohio
Effective July 15, 1992
Medical record will be transferred to
the physician of choice upon request.
1wish to thank my patients for their
support and wish you the best of
health in the future.

GALLIPOLIS - Children now
have the opportunity to explore
dance, drama, ceramics, sculpture,
and more for just one day. The
French Art Colony is accepting
one-day registrations for AnQuest
'92. Tuition is $11 a day, or SSO for
the entire week.
"Most kids are really busy during the summer," said Patt
McLaughlin, FAC
prognun director. "Our one day program gives children an opportunity
to try ArtQuest for a day. It's like a
taste of the ans instead of a full
meal."
ArtQuest '92 will take place
June 22-26 at the French Art
Colony from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Campers can register by calling
446-3834, or at 8:45 a.m., June 22
at the FAC.
AnQuest '92 is sponsored by
Carl's Shoe Store. All FAC programming is offered through the
suppon of the OhioAns Council .

Like those messages or not,
experts suggest Americans should
at least listen. Bitterness ova- treat-

LAFA YETIE, La. (AP) - Victoria Reggie, who is engaged to
marry Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
took the stand to defend the bu si ·
ness dealings of her father, who is
on trial on bank fraud charges.
Longtime Kennedy family confidant Edmund M. Reggie, 65, a
retired judge, is among f1ve defen·
dants accused of defrauding nowdefunct Acadia Savings and Loan
in a scheme involving more than
$20 million in loans made in 198586.
Federal prosecutors say Reggie
lent investor Gilbert Beall and
another man $2.95 million each
from the bank on condition that
they each invest $1 million of the
money in Louisiana Bank and
Trus~ also in Crowley.
Miss Reggie, an attorney for
Acadia, testified Thursday that her
father didn 't coerce Beall into buying stock in the bank . The bank
wasn't in dire straits and Beall was
thinking of buying it, she said.
Beall is the prosecution's key
witness.
After the session, Ms. Reggie
said Kennedy, D-Mass., has been
giving moral support to her family
but has no plans to anend the trial .

ment by police officers and hopelessness about the future spills out
in the music, along with a plea for
self-suffteiency some see as sepa·
ratiSL

MONTHLY SELECTIONS - AddaviUe Elementary recently
announced its two May Student or lbe Month selections. Chosen on
lbe basis or good school citizenship were primary student CeceUa
Goett, daughter or Tom and Margaret Goett; and Intermediate
student Nick Smilb, son or Mark and Jenny Smilb.

BHCC students rank
first in HELPS/TOPS
RIO GRANDE - The Buckeye
Hills Career Center Community
and Home Services Chapter of the
FHA/HERO has been notified that
they received first J!lace in the state
for their HELPS{fOPS project.
HELPS stands for Home Economics Lends Parent Education
Support and TOPS stands for
Training Ohio's Parents Successfully.
Therese Penick and Kim Lester,
both from Gallia County, developed a program designed to prevent child abuse. They took information they received from guest
speakers to make their own Jlresentation. These guest speakess mcluded Debby Stokes and Amber

Nichols from the-state ~ent
of Health. They presented mformation on "Parenting for Peaceful
Families." Another guest speaker
was Luwana Holzaphel, a social
worker from the Jackson County
Department of Health and Human
Services, who discussed chtld
abuse.
Both ladies compiled all this
data and made a program. which
they took into the home school's
GRADS classes and Marriage and
Family classes. They provided teen
parents and future parents with
ways to control their emotions in
order to be better parents and not
abuse their children.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
Sliding lee sale. No one refused mvkes because of lnalllllty to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
POMEROY
236 E. Main St. 2nd Floor
992-5912
8:30 lo S:OO Monday·Friclay
Closed Thursday

GAUIPOLIS
414 Sewnd Ave., 2ad Floor
446-0166
8:30 to S:OO Mo•day·Friday
8:30 to 12 Satarday
Closed Th1nday
ALSO: Jack50n, Chesapeake, Athans, Chdllcotha, Logan &amp; McArthur

RIVER SWEEPING - The River Valley
High Scbool Key Club was one or many or1anizations participating in tbe Fourth Annual Ohio
River Sweep held Saturday. Here, the group
picks up litter atlbe Gallipolis Upstream Public

Use Area. Key club members said styrofoam,
like the kind used in cups and fast-food containers, made up the single largest component in the
refuse they removed from the river bank.
(Times-Sentinel photo by jim Freeman)

RACINE , Wis. (AP) - Dave
Schneider thought it was a joke,
but "Tonight Show" host Jay
Leno convinced him it wasn't.
Schneider, a pardlyzed race car
driver, said when he checked his
answering machine Tuesday, !here
was a message from Leno wishing
him luck in future races. "At ftrst,
I thought it was someone pulling a
joke on me," he said.
Schneider later discovered the
message was prompted by a letter
his girlfriend sent to Lcno about
three weeks ago.
He said Leno told of getting a
letter from someone who "has the
worst handwriting on Earth," that
he couldn't make out the wnter's
name, and that he just wanted to
say hello and wish him good luck.
He said he plans to write Lena
and send a few pictures of him and
his new race car, a 1988 Pontiac
Fircbird Formula. Schneider lost

CINCINNATI (AP) - Dangling a condom from his mortar.
board seemed like harmless humor
to a University of Cincinnati ~du ­
ate. But it has cost him the JOb he
was planning to stan Monday.
Tom Budzik, 23, of Shadyside,
also perched a stuffed parrot on his
shoulder at his graduation ceremony last Sunday. He was featured in
a graduation story in The Cincinnati Post.

He said students should be able
to celebrate as they plessed, even
though university policy prohibits
inappropriate decorations on caps
and gowns.
On Friday, he was summoned to
the Great American Insurance Co.
office in Cincinnati and was ftred.
Budzik said.
" The company said that I
showed total disrespect for authori·
ty," he said.

Officials at Great American
Insurance Co. could not be reached
for comment Friday night or Saturday . A telephone recording Saturday said the offices were closed
and did not offer another number to
call.

ll!oat you love. Our knowledge
e11t1 experience are yours lor
the liking.
Nothing you buy will ever btl
. , pem~M~~~nl., alwnlly rnonumBnt. Its purchase warrants
thought and gu•dsnce. SH
wh11t you buy. Vls•t lhe monument dealer who hilS 1 complete display. and who can
design a personalized manu·
ment to harmon,ze with ill

Sunday, June 21
. MERCERVll..LE · Pastor Jessie
Jeffers will speak at 10 a.m., at
Dickey Chapel Church, along with
Jl,ev. Johnny Harris. Rev. Junior
Birchfield will speak in the afternoon. Basket dirmer a noon.
CENTENARY · Centenary
'ted Christian Church youth
7 p.m. nightly

McGiJire.

Monday, June 22
THURMAN - Thurman Grange
meeting, 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS · Divorce Sup-

pon Group meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
New Life Lutheran Church. Call
4464889 for more information.
GALLIPOLIS - Galtia Academy
Marching Band practice begins at 9
a.m. in the bandroom, for the July 4
parade. Those unable to attend
should call Rod Tolliver at 4463212 between 8 am. and 3 p.m. or
by sending in the absence form
found on the back of the band summer schedule.
Tuesday, June 23
CHESHIRE - Cheshire OES
regular meeting, 7:30p.m.
RIO GRANDE . Open Gate
Garden Club meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Ann Day, Deeni e
Drive. Program: Wheat Weaving
by Liltian Thomas.
(Items for the communiry caltndtu ap~ar two days prior to an
event. They must be received by
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune in
ad.anct for publictJiion)

installed some hand controls in a
Ford Pinto and began racing in
1985. He said he won rookie of the
year honors that year.

Names in the
news
Farrell, who starred in

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Mike
Farrell says his trip to Iowa for the
annual Donna Reed Festival for the
Performing Arts is like coming
home.
" I was born in Minnesota, SQ I
feel like a neighbor," Farrell sald
in a telephone interview from
Denison, Iowa, the binbplace of
Miss Reed.
The week.long festival in honor
of lbe late actress features workshops for students and aspiring
actors .

the tele-

vision series "MASH," is married
to Shelly Fabares, who played Miss
Reell 's teen-age daughter on "The
Donrut Reed Show."
Plnell, 53, srud he dropped in
OllliOIDO of the workshops Friday.
"It's so terrific to see such
unbridled enthusiasm," he said.
"The people are open and willing
and interested to talk to someone
who has had some luck in the busi-

ness."

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lor 111 tiriHI, rne memory ol

Gallia County calendar

me use of his legs in 1977 when he
broke his neck diving into shallow
water.
He went to a driving school,

SUPER NICE SELECTION OF GREAT
USED VEHICLES!

Condom display costs graduate a job

MERCERVILLE · Revival at
Big Four Church June 21-27 at
7:30p.m. Singing Monday and
. Tuesday will be the Short and
Terry families. Speaking Monday.
Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday
will be Brother Clodus Shepherd;
Wednesday will be Charles Johnson. Pastor Charles Lamben invites
the public.

-

Sentlnel~age-87

Sunday Times

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

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PATRICIA E. HUDSON

On dean's list
ELKINS, W.Va.· Patricia E.
Hudson, a third-year Davis &amp;
Elkins College student majoring in
psychology and minoring m titerature, earned a 4.0 grade point average for !he 1992 spring semester,
and has been named to national
dean's list at D&amp;EC.
Hudson, the daughter of Mrs.
Robert Greene, is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School.

obralnallle today.

1992 DODGE SHADOW

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Love the child ... train the child ...
teach the child.

1992 CHRYSLER LtWON
5·15 . 4 J tller V6 . a1r autOI'I"Ialte

At Gallia Christian School, we have a
unique philosophy of e{!ucation, based upon
Biblical !rlnciples. We believe the first step in
e{!ucating a child is to love the child; the
second, to train the child and the third, to
teach the subject matter.
Gallla Christian School offers a traditional
curriculum of both college preparatory and
general course studies for students in Kinder-

garten through 12th Grade, with emphasis on
high academic achievement, strong moral
standards and spiritual values. And above all, ~.
with emphasis on love. Because when a child
feels loved and Is trained In Christian truths ·
and behavior, greater learning tales place.
For information about our programs, or to
receive an application for the 1992-1993
school year, call (614) 367-0306 or (614)
367-7475.

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�Page-88-Sunday Times-Sentinel

lis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaUl

June 21, 1992

PARAMOUNT

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SLICES
32 oz.

STORE HOURS
Moftday fhru Sunday

(

8 AM·lO PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. (}H.

CABANA

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Sports

~imts- ~tntintl

Section C
June 21, 1992

Supreme Court lets Reynolds run
By AUSTIN WILSON
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - World nnn!-holder Butch Reynolds won a
last-ditch appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court on Sanirday and got permission to compete in the 400-meler sprint at the Olympic trials.
"I'm going to kick some ass now," said Reynolds, who is under international suspension for alleged steroid use.
He then exchanged high-fives with his agent, Brad Hunt
"It's the ri~ht time. It's my time,'' Reynolds said.
Meet offic1als postponed the stan of Sanirday's 400-meter qualifying
heats while they explained the Supreme Court ruling and discussed possible consequences of running against a suspended athlete.
Meanwhile, The Athletics Conference, governing body for track and
field in the United States, used the delay to ask the full Supreme Court to
overtwn the ruling by Justice John Paul S1evens.
Track's international governing body (IAAF) suspended Reynolds for
two years, accusing him of failing a drug test following a meet in Monte
Carlo in August, I 990. The suspension is scheduled to end on Aug. 12,
three days after the Barcelona Olympics end.
Reynolds claims the urincj, ~les got mixed up before they were tested and that he has never l1f" any performance-enhancing drug. He has
run in five meets under a series of court orders, meeting the qualifying
standards for the Olympic trials in one of those meets in San Francisco.
The IAAF has threatened to suspend any athlete who runs against
Reynolds. One interpetation says the entire U.S. Olympic team could be
suspended for taking part in a meet that included an athlete under suspension. Another view is that the suspension would apply to anyone running
against Reynolds in the 400 meters.
On Saturday, Stevens overturned a ruling issued Friday night by the
6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.
"The IAAF' s threat to enforre its eligibility decisions - no matler
how arbitrary or erroneous it may be - by punishing innocent third parties cannot be permitted to influence a fair and impartial adjudication of
the merits of applicant's claims," Stevens said.
His ruling came less than two hours before the scheduled stan of quali-

fying in the 400 metcrs.
It was the third shift in Reynolds' fortunes in Just over 24 hours.
The 6th Circuit said Friday that Reynolds could not run. That ruling
overturned a decision by U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Kinneary, who
said earlier in the day thai Reynolds could compete in New Orleans.
When the 6th Circuit overturned Kinneary, Reynold~ said he wouldn't
appeal to the Supreme Court. He changed his mind Saturday.
"We were all very disappointed and very exhausted last night,"
explained Mimi Dane, an attorney for Reynolds. "(But) Butch is innocent
and he's not a quitter so we went forward."
In the 6th Cucuit ruling, Judge Eugene E. Stier Jr. said Reynolds could
not show thai he would suffer irreparable hann by being excluded from
the trials, because the IAAF had already said he would not be allowed to
competc in the Olympics in Barcelona
But letting Reynolds run could harm other athletes by eliminating them
from the learn, Siler said.
"Moreover, although the court does not condone the threat by the
IAAF to disqualify anyone who might compete against (Reynolds) in preliminary competitioo, nevertheless, that is a possible adverse effect upon
other competitors," Siler said.
Siler acknowledged that he is a dues-paying member of TAC and
offered to stcp aside, even though he said he did not feel it would affect
his decision.
The IAAF said Friday that it would consider extending Reynolds' suspension beyond Aug. 12 for competing while ineligible. However, that
appeared to hinge on whether Reynolds continued to press through the
courts for reinstatement.
Reynolds has a $12.5 million damage suit pending against TAC and
the IAAF.
Sources in the IAAF said that if Reynolds were cleared to run, officials
would hold an invitational meet in Mexico City or Narbonne, France,
after the New Orleans competition to serve as the 400-meter trials .
Reynolds would not be invited .

REYNOLDS TO RUN - Butch Reynolds, the world 400-meter
record bolder, leaves tbe practice rteld for Tad Gormley Stadium in
New Orleans Saturday witb a security escort following tbe Supreme
Court's granting a stay allowing Reynolds to compete on tbe
Olympic trials. (AP)

On eve of Olympics,

Doping scandals, -court battles rule track scene
By STEPHEN WILSON
LONDON (AP) - Five weeks
before the start of the Summer
Games, the Olympics' showcase
sport appears in tunnoil.
Doping scandals, court battles
and scheduling disputes have domi nated track and field in the buildup
to Barcelona.
The controversies raise questions about the accuracy of drug
tests, the enforcement of suspensions and the ultimate jurisdiction
over the sport and its athletes.
Two superstars, 400-meter
world record -holder Butch
Reynolds and world sprint cham pion Katrin Krabbe, are making news
for trying to beat drug charges
rather than trying to beat their best
times.
The Reynolds case has challenged the authority of the sport's
world governing body, the International Amateur Athletic Federation.
Reynolds, suspended by the
IAAF in 1990 for alleged steroid
use, turned to U.S . couns to fight
the ban. In Columbus, Ohio, on

Friday, a fedclal judge cleared him
to compete in the U.S. Olympic trials this weekend in New Orleans,
but an appeals court quickly overturned that decision and upheld the
ban.
Less than 24 hours before his
races were scheduled to begin,
Reynolds announced thai he would
not appeal the case to the Supreme
Court and was dropping out of the
meet He and his attorneys changed
their minds (see Supreme Court
story above).
The IAAF, whose arbitration
panel recently upheld the ban on
Reynolds, has vowed to keep him
out of the Olympics and threatened
to bar any athlete who runs against
him.
" The IAAF sees (the court deci sion) as challenging the competence of the ruling of an international sports body," said IAAF
general secretary Istvan Gyulai. "II
ts a decision which may lead to
chaos ... This might lead to the suspension of all U.S. 400 meter run -

ners at the Olympic Games.''
Krabbe, world champion in the
I00 and 200 meters, was banned by
the German track federation for
alleged manipulation of urine sam ples - only to be reinstated when
the federation's legal panel found
no evidence of wrongdoing. The
case will be heard by the IAAF's
arbitnltion panel June 27-29.
"We are very, very upse~" said
Primo Nebiolo, the IAAF presi dent. "We are a family and this is
as though our children have
become losl When something like
this happens, we must stop and say,
'Why did it happen?'
" We have to face the problem
and say, 'Was it education? Was it
a problem with the rules? Why
have they fallen into trouble?' For
us, this is a tnlgedy."
"We love and respect athletes
like Katrin Krabbe and Butch
Reynolds and it hurts us that they
are in trouble,'' Nebiolo said. "It's
like when one of your children
rebels against you. We are sad, but

we have an obhgat10n to respect
our rules. The rules are the rules,
and if we don't respect them we
can't move forward."
The stability of the IAAF is
being tested by the Reynolds affair.
Gyulai said the issue boils down
to who should have the authority to
govern the sport and enforce its
rules.
"Should a court in Ohio have
the highest authority in athletics?"
he said. "What would happen if
the jurisdictions of all 200 member
federations challenged the IAAF's
ruling?' '

The IAAF's stance on Reynolds
has the backing of the International
Olympic Committee. The drug lest
was conducted a1 an IOC-accredited laboratory in Paris.
"I believe the Reynolds case
was perfectly well treated by the
IAAF and I support their actions,"
said Prince Alexandre de Merode,
chairman of the IOC's medical
commission. "I believe we have to
be firm and strong in our decision."

HOT DAY- Hepalhelete Jamie McNeair o( BuiTalo, N.Y ~tow­
els orr in !be beat after tbe women's 100-meter hurdles at lbe
Olymr.ic trials Saturday at New Orleans. Temperatures at Tad
Gorm ey Stadium, where the trials were held, reached 92 degrees_
(AP)

Courier, Seles face chance to score double Grand Slams at Wimbledon
By STEVE WILSTEIN
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Scandal and intrigue, drama and
politics, a bid for history and a
forecast of rain: It's time for Wimbledon again.
A first-ever double Grand Slam
·by
ilnd Monica Seles, winners of the AUSIJIIIian
and French Opens, could die on the
fickle, merciless lawns of the All
England Club, where neither has
ever gone beyond the quarterfinals.
They can't expect much help
from the weather. A year after the
wettest Wimbledon in 114 years,
the off-and-on showers expected
this week could mean low, skidding balls that don't favor their
swing-from-the-hip styles.
Yet, even the tantalizing
prospect of those two young baseline bashers beating grass -court

top"see!lnilin::ourier

naturals S1efan Edberg and Michael All England Club routinely buys
Stich or Steffi Graf and Martina back Centre Court tickets from
Navmtilova would serve as a mere some longtime owners for up to 15
sideshow to other shenanigans on times face value, then sells them to
the minds of Wimbledon's blue- COfllOrate clients al 19 times face
blazered and blue-blooded patrons. value - about $1,700 a seat for the
All eyes will be on the Royal men's final.
Box at Cenlre Court to see whether
Wimbledon officials, of course,
tennis buff Princess Diana, deny any wrongdoing, calling the
embroiled in reports of suicide practice a "white market" that
auemp!S and marital discord, will protects ordinary tennis fans and
appear as usual sans Charles, who their access to tickets, at the same
prefers his polo pooies.
time raising money fer British tenWhile the gossip-mongers whis- nis by selling some tickets 10 those
per and the tabloids shout, there no wiUing 10 pay more.
doubt will be plenty to say about
If rumors and innuendos don't
the hubbub over an alleged Wim - enliven The Championships, as
bledon-run ticket black market that they are called with an air of sucled to a formal complaint to the cinctness and snobbery, a lusty
European Community Commis - political protest mighl
SIOn.
Seles is engulfed in no less a
The complaint by the head of a controversy this year than last,
spans marketing group claims the when she skipped Wimbledon,

Women's baseball during World
War II focus o.f soon-to-debut movie
By LOUINN LOT A
LOS ANGELES (AP) - They
played six days a week, plus doubleheadoo on Sunday. They had to
play hurt unless injuries included
broken bones. Sometimes, they
only had enough time to rub the
sleep out of their eyes, get off the
bus, put on their uniforms and play
ball.
They were tough.
And they were girls.
"Boys today, they get a hangnail and they can't play," said
Alice "Lefty" Hohlmayer
McNaughton, who played six years
on the All American Girls Professional Baseball League.
The former Keno sha, Wis .
Comets pitcher and first basewoman is rehving some of the good old
days of women's baseball as a
movie about the AAGPBL, "A
League ()f Their Own,'' debuts this
month.
The league, which lasted about a
decade, flourished in the 1940s
when many major leaguers including big names like Jo e
DiMaggio and Ted Williams were called off to World War II.
In an interview from her San
Diego home, she kept an eye on the
television as the Padres lost 4-2 to
the Braves, and an ear to the telephone as she regaled the era of
women's baseball.
"I remember playing five doubleheaders in five nights," said the
67-year-old left-bander. "I pitched

two games arid played the rest at
flfSL H

McNaughton, Hohlmayer then,
was a junior at Ohio State. She was
playing for the Fink &amp; Heine Meatpackers in the 1946 world soflball
townament when she was spotted
by a girls league scout.
"They asked me if I wanted to
try out," McNaughton said . "I
didn't need to be convinced. At
$80 a week, I was the highest paid
rookie .••
Dozens of scouts scoured the
United States and Canada for the
best softball players and by the f ITSt
year of the AAGPBL in 194 3 there
were four teams. In the following
year, the league expanded to 16
teams.
At riJ'St, the game was more like
softball but pi!Ching distance was
expanded and baselines slre!Ched
until they nearly matched the
men's. The states of Michigan ,
Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinoi s
fielded teams.
The women's league wa sted
away when the war ended.
"We just ran out of ballplayers,
the real good ones," she said. "We
didn't have a farm system to count
on ."

By the time Lefty Hohlmayer
joined the league her team was
playing 110 games per season.
Players were making $65 to $125
per week. Expenses were paid and
the meal per diem was $2.25 a dny.
The only problem was a team

roster only had 15 players and no
minor leagues to call for reinforce·
ments.
"We played every day and were
pretty tired at times," she said .
"We had to play hurt and the only
time off we had was a rained out
game. Or a fogged out game, when
someone hits a high nr, and it di sappeared in the clouds. '
She said her adJustment from
underhand to overhand p1tching
was not too difficult
" As a lefty I a! ways had a curve
in my de~very. Overhand? I loved
that," she said.
In her last year as a pitcher,
McNaughton was 17-11 with a
2.02 ERA. Her personal best
included 42 consecutive scoreless
innings. In fielding she can boast
21 putouts in one nine-inning
game. She said she was the only
woman to get a hit off Hall of
Farner Satchel Paige in 1948 in an
exhibition game where she earned
$100.
Were the women more genteel
ballplayers?
"Well, we weren't supposed to
scratch ourselves," she replied .
"We were not supposed to be
cussing, but things slipped out at
times.
"If a girl slid into you with her
spikes up, well, she ~ot nailed next
ume she came in. I d slap her out
real hard with my glove when she
came to fust base."

claiming belatedly and, to some, Wimbledon victories, one runnersuspiciously, that she had painful up and one semifinal all combine to
shin splints . Seles. 18, now faces make her a formidable challenger.
demands from Croats thai she take
Gabriela Sabatini, No. 3, isn 't
a stand on the civil war in likely to intrude on their party
unless she can reach back to the
Yugoslav Ill.
The top-ranked woman player serve-and-volley style she adopted
and No . I seed at Wimbledon, so surprisingly in her 1990 U.S.
Seles is an ethnic Hungarian from Open victory. Oddly, she lost either
Novi Sad in the Yugoslav republic her nerve or verve to keep up that
of Serbia hut ha~ refused to discuss strategy, and hasn't won a Grand
Slam event since.
the civil war.
None of the other top women
She has lived in the United
States since 1986, is believed to be can seriously be considered a
seeking U.S. citizenship and has threa~ though the beauty of sport is
asked the Women's Tenn1s Associ- always the possibility of an upset.
ation to list her officially from Martina Navratilova, the No. 4
seed and nine-t1me Wimbledon
Sarasota, Fla.
champion,
is 35 years old, rusty
There IS little ev idence that
Seles feels strongly about anything from lack of play and coming off a
other than winning, changing her shocking second -round loss to
hair color and style from time to 64th-ranked Linda Harvey-Wild in
time, and being her own woman in a gra..s-court tunc-up Navratilova
the fashion of Madonna and 1920s had won 10 times.
Arantxa Sanchez Vicario (5)
tcnnis star Suzanne Lenglen.
and
Jennifer Capriati (6) and Mary
Winner of the Australian,
Joe
Fernandez (7). all have had
French and U.S. Opens last year,
errat1c
years, punctuatmg some
plus the fir st two Grand Slam
events this year, Seles has made no cxcellcm play with matche.' of sclfsecret of her deSire to add Wunblc- desuuction .
Courier, similar to Seles in predon's championship trophy to her
ferring
to whack shots from the
collection.
baseline
and approach the net ooly
"I am going to go in differently
on
short
balls, has a great opportuthis year to Wimbledon and not JUSt
nity
in
1enns
of timmg - his own
be satisfied with a quarterfinal
loss," she said. "I'm thinking, hey, and his opponent~.
Attempting to become the first
I can go till the end."
Graf - No. 2 seed. defending men's Grand Slammer since Rod
women's champion and the last Laver in 1969, Courier's at a peak
Grand Slammer in 1988 - is the m confidence, playing with a sense
most likely to stop Seles. Graf's of inviOlability that could over·
preference for low balls, her slice come his shortcomings on grass
backhand, superior approach shot.s while his challengers arc filled with
and confidence on grass after three doubts.

In Courier's half of the draw,
three -time champion and threetime runner -up Boris Becker looms
as only a minor threat. Becker,
seeded No. 4, has had thtgh and
hamstring injuries that have
plagued him since last year and
kept hun out of the French Open
In the other half of the draw,
two-time winner and No. 2 seed
Edberg last week suffered a defeat
much more surprismg than
Navratilova's when he was beaten
1-6, 7-6, 10-8 by Japan 's Shuw
Matsuoka, ranked No. 81.
Edberg's sudden loss of his
killer instinct could set up as an
easy target for Stich. the defe nding
champion and No . 3 s.ed, who
recently won a rune-up on grass m
the Netherlands.
If any out~ider is gomg to crash
through to the final , it would likely
be among th e btg young servers
such as former U.S. Open champion Pete Sampras, Wayne Ferreira
or David Wheaton.
Sampras. though . has doubts
about his own chances.
"Initially, I felt grass was a surface that was good for my game,''
he said a few days ago. "Most people th1nk that. But to wm on grass
you have to break serve, and that's
something I haven't dooe that well
the last couple of years."
Sampras suggested the men's
draw would be more unpredictable
than in the past because of Becker' s problems, Edberg's inconsisten cy, the pres sure on Stich to
repeat, and Cooner's ine~perience
on grass.

Houston edges Los Angeles 1-0;
California downs Oakland 10-0
HOUSTDN (AP) - Eric Anthony's run-scoring
pinch single with none out in the bouom of the ninth
inning gave the Houston Astros a 1-0 victory over
Los Angeles on Saturday, sending th e last-place
Dodgers to their ninth straight loss.
The losing streak is the Dodgers' longest since it
dropped nine straight from Aug 'lfJ. to Sept. 5, 1987.
Since moving to Los Angeles, the Dodgers' longest
losing streak is 10 (August 1961). The 1944 Brooklyn Dodgers lost 16 in a row.
Gonzales led off the ninth with a single. Nter a
walk to Ken Caminiti, Roger McDowell relieved
Orel Hoohiser (6-5).
Anthony bounced a single to right and Gonzalez
collided with catcher Mike Sciascia at the plate after
beating the throw from ri~ht fielder MilCh Webster.
Reliever Doug Jones (4-4) pitched one inning for
the victory .

Angels 10, Athletics 0 - At Anaheim, Cahf.,
Julio Valera pitched a four -hitter for his second
shutout of the season as the California Angels routed
the Oakland Athletics 10-0 Saturday.
Valera (4-5) retired 22 straight batters following
Harold Baines' tw(}-()ut double in the first inning.
The right-hander allowed three singles in the ninth
before ending the game with a double play. Valera
walked none and sU'UCk out three.
Gary DiSarcina and Gary GaeUi hit home runs for
the Angels.
DiSarcina's solo homer in the fifth and Gaetti's
three-run shot in the sixth came off Bob Welch (3-4).
Welch had defeated the Angels 10 straight times
since losing to them on April I0, 1988. He gave up
four hits in six innings.
The Athletics had beaten California 24 times in
their last 30 meetings.

�~age

C2-Sunday llmee Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasanl,

Scorehoar·d
Motilor, Mil•.W.C. 71: Wllllidd, Ton»
w., 16: R. Alomu, Toruu.o. 7S; Cma,

r....,w. 1s.

DOUBLES -

--

.m
.om

........, ________ ]0 ]3

.476

Gl

I'd.

. New Vall ·-·---..11 ]j:
, ,..., t \ '": ... -----.29 33

.4$3

CINCINNATI_ __ ]9 2:5

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.5$2

Jj
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11
12

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.-419

Friday's Sa&gt;res

~j:pt..l''t ' ,2

........... i _,.;, 1

..w.a l. &lt;lNCINJifAn 2. 1oirminp
N.w YGik -4, St.. LJuil 3

-~IMAqdotl,l2 .......

:

"'r.TIUPI..ES
17. -

Andaraan, Baltimote, 6;

.DDverea\11, B•IUmon~, ~;

.470

t.o.Anplicll .. _, ___ ..2ti l6

~Win~

VIZibln , t'lticlp. f7; Jeft'cri ... Kansas

.S76

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s.n~ ----- --11 :w
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Suttle ,

Clly,lO; YQUlt, Milwsutec. 19; lte:imc:r,
Tcua, U; MutiDaJy, New Yotk , II ;

TW L
f'lj 5 ... ,_ .. ______ 31 ll
• Sa..
Clti&lt;oJo..--···-····32
JJ
l..aitil _ _________n ll

.....

~brtinc&amp;,

23; Hall, Nn Yod., 23; Jo)'DU,

. In tbe NL ...

'

1!.

....

s.. lliqo J. " " - 2. 10 ;,.

Puckett. Min·

- - .. 4; 9 ani tiod •ilh l

HOME RUNS - ~Oakland ,
23; Doer, Detroit, 21 ; lu•n Gonzda,
Teau. 17; Bolle. a...EVEL\ND, 16; Tetlldoa, o..ui1, IS; u.aY., 8~ 14;
Cu\cr, Tanno,l4.
STOU!N BASI!S - J..dtoa. ClJ!VE •
lAND, 29; Liluc:h, Mil••llkoc., 23; I
I' 1 CII.,QKimd,~~.Bab:i ·
more. 21: Pokmia, Cali!omia, :J); Ru-,
OUcqo,lO:~ ....... ~ .17.
Pl1'0!!NO (l....,.;om) - han au,.
man, Tormto, 1-1, .119, 2.41;_A~.
Scallle., 10-2, .Ill, J.IJ; Muaina, Ba!ti ·
moro, 1-2. .100. 2.44 N•IY· CLEVE·
LAND. 9· 3, .1!10, 2.20; MeDowell .
Chicap. 9-J, .7SO, 3.5-4; Jamie Morris,
Toronto, 1-3, .727, 3.17; K. Brown ,
Tuaa, 9_.., .692. 3.33; a.mcn., Bmlm.,
9-4, .692, 1.76; Sutcliffe. Baltimore. 9....
.692, 4.09.

STJUKEOUI"S - Oanea1,

Ba~ton,

104; J~n Guzman, Tmmto, &amp;5; Pl::rtt,

lboy ployod Saturday

"·-WI.

IM--:I-4)"a-..,
s- Diqo lj&gt;.m.
(LdrcrU 1-4) 11 San Fran. cllco (BIM£ ~ J), J p.al.
Oil:ap (Maidla i-6) It PbiJMdphi.t
0'
6-C), 7:11S
7

_ . I"'"'- ~I " l'ltt.O""ab
i!ooillt S.l). Hl5 p.m.
'•""'

Now y .... ·~
""'· 69:
aJ!VEUND,
" '
t.k.Dowdl,
Oliap,
Appim,IUnasa

"''·
R. · -Oa.kland,
67.
SA61;
YI!S
- Ed:enley,
23:

rn-_

Bai~Dcn,. 19; Apila:a, ~
II; Jefr Ruuc.U, TC1u. II: Montomcq, K1n1~1 City, I~; Resrdon ,
ottoa, 15; Olia., CLEVELAND, I" ;

1.1 ,

l

-.(A_..,S-S).l:top.m.
SL lo.W (fcwhbury 6-2) It N1w
Jwt &lt;YOUDI 2-5). 7:10p.m.

TO&lt;by's gam..

C1tiloaao (BoGie 5-l)
Ot&lt;- ~" l •ll p.m.

tt Philldelphia

. ..........

~

CD.

Murine:~:

7-5)

II

Pitta -

..... (J. M. Robin.Jq 1-0).l::rl p.m.
L . LoW. (Chid. 0- 2) tt New York
~

June 21, 1992

Gene Johnson Chevrolet-Oids-Geo

fielder, to

Pu11aod

o{ lhc PIQfie

~

YORK. YANI.HES - Placed
Je.e. Bsr6c.ld, wtfi=lc'n, c. 1M IS-4ay
d:Wbkld lin R.eeaUcd Pat l.dly, ICICCIDd
bucman, fn:m Colu:mbol d 1bc law.nationa.l Lc.I'JC.

_......,.

CIDCAOO CUBS - Optioaed
x.._ Wllboa., IIUtf'ialdlr, ta low. rldlll
Amcries.a Auoeiatioa . Rcuncd R.ld.
W"likim., mlda, bam Iowa.
LOS ANGELES IX'M)(JEJtS - Actintod Eric O.Yis, outlidcla, ID:a tbe cblab.l.od liA. Dclipaud l.a.l o...&amp;k, out-

:c::

........_..._,,b

MOimUW. EXPOs
"""
Calderon, oat5cld., oa lhe IS-day dil-

s..m. ...

•bW liiL Rcanad Mia
tf • • ,
•nd Bnu Bam... pitcher, from l.adi•n•polil ol the Americaa AuocialiOG.

-=

Sent Joo1thso H11nt, pik:ha, to ladi·

---

YORK MET'S - Sipod J Popoff 111d Chri• Bc:IJ, pitehen, ud
Jltn .. Mlowi.a, IOCQ:Id - - . "' • mi-

PI11'SBURGH PIRATES - Pl.aced
Viamt.e Palacio~ , pitebao. oo the IS-dly
dibbled lin _A di nsod Bob wIlk. pU.ch·
ICI, from the diaabicC till

1986 Jeep Grand Wagoneer
Come see this one - no rust, no
excuses. Power seats lett &amp; right,
full power, 4-wheel drive. New
Blazer trade •

1986 Buick Regal limited

FootbaD
NaUoul FootWII.Aapt

BaebaD

cmCA~~ - Placed

Mike Huff. outfidder. OD tbe U-dly diaablcd tilt ft!OUMiiva 10 June 17. ILcullod
F.aaciMn BeiU.. ahortlwp, from Vmoou-

1986 Olds Delta 88 Brougham

""' "-&gt; Doom, £rio .... eun;.
Real, wicll: RIDI!'::inn.; BraDODd Md:lin·
ton. dct'CIIIM: h«k. IOd Phil ScMa, Nil·

.........

2 Dr., extra, extra nice. Full power
and only 50,000 miles. Don't miss
this one- new OlciS trade.

ONCINNAn (Rijo 3-S) 11 ALiuu.•
' (lliciDcti 1-3). 2: I 0 p.m.

:.In tbe AL. ..

.........

~ "-

• •• , .

_
~
.600

W L

*··- - -- -19 26

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&amp;&lt;.ICID. -·--·-·······32 J\
&lt; Ncw~act ..... -.......Jt J4
~

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
$395

~-- ·-·-······]() ]6

&lt;l..EVELAND ...... .21 l9

..531
..501

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4..5
6

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.511

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.. : Saak·--··· ........19 31
Calill:nil _ .. .....1.1 37
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9.5
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II
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5J6

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415

#

V-8, auto., topper, new S-10 trade.
Priced Right

S...DaySenkt
All Ptrts Ellrl
llldllllts: 0.. ll'i' Ollftg.
ldjushnlllts, Greasing.

TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 12 NOON ' TIL 3

FRUTH PHARMACY
364 JACKSON PilE - GAlUPOUS, OHIO

FridaJ''S Jron:s

1991 GEO PRIZMS
.,S IN STOCK"
Mileage starts
at 8,000 &amp; up,
Priced

S.W.I.~O

.. •

1986 Ford XL Pickup 150

(All Brands)

.917

. Mil--*- - ··-·-· ··]4 ]()

.

Gl

a..tm-\0, New Yuk 1
a.£VEI..AND S, Mil..u.kce J
I-Cirrll.T-to4
T - 4. lkll&amp;aD I
Dec.oit I. Chit:~'-:" J. 13 Ltlf1UIP
OrltliGd 12, Califomla 8

1

~T=~·NG AT

POMEROY- Carol McCullough or Pomeroy had a hole-in -{Inc
on Sunday, June 14 an !he par 3, 130·yard fifth hole at the Meigs
County Golf Course.
McCullough used a 4-iron to card her fi!SIIICe. Playing in the
same foursome were her husband Ken, san Steven McCullough and
David Anderson.

Southern football camp Monday
RACINE - Soulhem High School will hold a foolball camp
from Monday, June 2210 Wednesday, June 24 at the Southern football field from 9 a.m. to noon.
The camp is for all students entering grades 4.6 this fall.
Coaches, players and former players from the area will insuuct
lhe campers on offense, defense and special team techniques. Other
topics that will be covered include motivation, self-discipline,
sportsmansltip and teamwork.
Players auending the camp should wear tennis or turf shoes,
shorts or sweatpaniS and aT-shirt lndJviduals from any school district can attend.
Cost of lhe camp is $20 and the fcc includes a camp T-shirt.
Checks should be made payable to lhe Southern football program.
If you have any questions you can contacl Southern varsity head
cooch David Gaul at985-3945 or 949-2611 .

Swimming lessons available

$

7999

GALLIPOLIS - Swimming lessons are now available for
enrollment through !he Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department.
Available are Sessions I (June 22-July 2), II (July 6-16), III (July
20-30) and IV (Aug. 3-13). Each session runs Monday lhrough
Thursday of that given weelc:.
The progression of classes offered are beginners (six years old
and older), advanced beginners, intermediales, swimmers and
advanced swimmers. Participants in the Iauer category musl be able
10 swim 500 yards continuously using four different strokes.
The cost of each session is $15. Early enroUmenl is encouraged,
as there is a limited number of swimme111 permilted for each session.
For more information, call the P&amp;R office al446-1424, ext. 37,
or lhe Gallipolis Municipal Pool at446-DIVE.

WE HAVE GREAT WAYS TO SAY

20o/o

field said. "I have to commend
him far having a good defense."
Holyfield came back from a
suth-round cut over his right eye.
the first of ltis career, to take the
deCISion in a largely uninspired
performance by both fighters that
at limes had the crowd of 15,000
people booing at Caesars Palace.
He did manage 10 impress at
leas! one ringsider, however, who
had the closes! view of the champion· s performance in the ring.
"I think he can be champion as
long as he wants to," Holmes said.
"'I think he's g01 a 101 more going
for himself than a lot of other
champions."
Holmes, bidding 10 become the
oldest fighter to hold !he heavyweigh! title, fought admirably at
times but simply didn'l do enough

Hole-in-one recorded

tone paint. Rare V-8 engine. Must
see to appreciate.

HOUSTON Oll...ERS - Mcm::ld FtW.
8\llh, defc:o.tivc laiamt.. to liad.d.cn
COich 111d R.ich1rd Smit.h, liaebac:keta
coach., UJ ...W.at orlfalliYe liae OM.ch.

OFF
1988CHm
5·10 PICKUP

1988 CHEY. CELEBRITY
STATION WAGON

Sholl bed, lopper, air condHionlng, 5-.peed,
only 211,000 mlleo.

RGBA meeting Monday

Auto. overdrive, V-6, air, ~Ieaia, one owner.

New Wllgon ll'llde.

RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande Baseball Association will
hold iiS regular meeting Monday at 8:30 p.m. at Rio Grande Elementary.

Meigs AHA linkfest Thursday
JAZZ 3000
Mon. It Fri.
8:30 Ill 8 p.m.
Tuea.,-Wed.·Thura.
8:30 'Ill 6 p.m.
s.t. 8:30 ~II 5 p.m.
Sun. 1 '1115

~

Juat tradilcl. We sold it new. PHw Premium tlrM,

aqulpped wllh lir, tilt. cruloa, AM-FM atereo w/...
oen.. Fomlly olacl 6 prlcod right

Na-.. lA"&amp;""
BAmNO - l.rv.k , Pb.tild~ l ph t • ,
- .166; v.....,., - · . J~ 0.,....
s- lh~p. .])1; McGriff, 5111 Oi~.o •.
m; McOcc.. Se Fnneuco, .322; W

454
S.S. PICKUP

4 DR. SEDAN

We sold H new. Only 7,000 milea.
exira nice. See h NOWI

n ia

11'uly

I

Out. s. Ft
F- .JJ6.

317;

ar-.. Ola-

Bond• . Pi.~llbv.r,t.., " 7;

RUNS -

o.,m.s.n'-ot6&lt; T. .........._...,
DUp. .U; aa-... Murtiea1, 4 J; Bigio.

Houto.. •J: ~ . l'tululelph ! l, 41 .
p 0
Ad.u,..O..
Ul - Daal'-., Ptulldelplm, 51 ,
SMifidi, S.m 1N:to. 41; Mwny, Ne•
Ycd, 47; PaacllctoG. A. tbnll, 46; Me Grift'. S. ~ .t6; Gam, At.lall\ll , .. 5.
._.pI
'41
JUTS - &lt;f-.ren. S111 Dic1o. 11 .
P 'h= Al.l.all&amp;l, 16; Ink. PbU.dd·

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s. DWco. .,., l)w, .

cu.,

11; Vm!lyh , Pitu·

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20; V..Slyke., ~. 2). W. Clad,

S..

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17;

....... -

Ptadldoa. Allanll. I7.

16&lt; """'- Cbia"" •••

Wllllld. ~ 16.
nJP1.D - D. Sandal, Al.lanu. IO.
FiUqo,
I; Alir:a, St. L-it, 6;
Bulla, t... Anp., 6; Oft'erm.~n . LM
Aaaela , 4; Odlaieldl, Montre.tl, 4;
Gr-. Qicqo. 4: Wanwaifta, !an fnn .
ciooo. ~ V..!lyb, p
4.
JK&gt;WE 11Jkt Piu.bw"p,
1~: 16:Gitf. s.a Diqo, 14; ShdfM:ld.

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11 ; Pm
A&amp;I.na, I I.
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I

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0... A--.10; 0 . Slllllal, AU....
,.;.....,CNaNNAni•.
nTCHINO
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..al9.l.03:

GlnriM, Ahb. 11).3, .769, 2.91;

Tmn~

1i1,. ~ 9-l, .1SO, 1.11; Swinddl.
CINCINNATI, 6--2, .7i0, 295; T-tabaly, 5l1Arlil. 6-2. .1 iO,l~; Leibnndl.
All.mLI, 6--l• .1i0, l .4l; Lcrfe:ru, San

"'....... ...... !.,

c-.

~l!TS New York.
103; 5mab, A.~ . 94; s . fem.ladez,
New Yd. M; Dnbd:. Piwbul)b. 71;
~ o-.. t..c. A.a . . .. 74: Beet. San

u;.., n a.-

s.. DWco. n

SAVES - 1.- S.Udt, '-. t..a.a., 11;
01ar1to11, CINCINNATl. 16; D. Jc.e.,
no--, 15; Wilda Willil.ml, Pbillde.l·
...... !~ 11,_ Su [);ooo. 13;
tiNCIJttATl. II ; W...r.-t, Woabe.J,
11 .

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MW•oc•.

lAmHO - Pvck•l.
. JM; ~ • .3!1; l. .........
T.Jlt;

.335;!.--

Molil«. Mll•s..-. .326; WiAfielcl,

T~.3n:..-.nr

• .305.

RUNI - ..cbtt, Yiu•Gia, 51;

-.

46· ln+'·r+

~ 45:

41: -

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m, 4S;

Ootload.

CarW. Tc.miO.. 41 ;

41.

_
...

MOWER
SALE

18 HP Cub Cadet 44• Ded ................53495
17 HP Cub Cadet 44• Ded ................~895
126 Cub Cadet w DeG ................... 51295
1250 Cub Cadet 42· Dedi ................. 51495
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POMEROY - The Mei~s County chapter of lhe American
Heart Association will hold 11s annual heart fund golf tournament
Thursday at noon at the Meigs County Golf Course.
T&lt;e-{!ff is scheduled foc I p.m.
The 10umarnent was posiponed las! week because of rain.
Regislrlllion fees are $42 for club members and $50 for non·~ ~ f~l of the ·IOurnament will be ~ four ~ team
~ble. with a blmd draw far teams. Reg!Stral!on fees mcludc
green fees. can. a hot dog lunch, and a barbecued chicken dinner.
Gifl certificates of $300, $20 and $100 wdl be awarded to the
fi!S~ second and third place teams respectively. A calcutta will be
held just prior to the tec-{!ff.
.
Prizes for closest to the pin, longest pun and mos1accur.ue drive
along with door prizes wiU also be presenled. Pelrons mterested m
playing '""Y register atlhe Golf Course or by calling the cOI!fSC at
992.6312.

1991 FORD XLT LARIAT

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RACINE - A Pass. Punt and Kick competition will be held on
Saturday, July 4 at Star MiU Parle in Racine .
The competition, open 10 children ages 5-12, has an entry fee of
$5, with a plaque being awarded to lhe winners. Entry forms can be
picked up al Southern High School.
For more information, call949-261L

By TIM LIOTI A
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP)
- Curtis Strange reached 7-under
before being knocked out. Mark
Calcavocchia made it, too, only 10
be brushed aside.
Jack Nicklaus was whipped,
Tom Watson bealen. Nick Faldo
was sent up a tree.
Only Gil Morgan traversed a
safe and narrow path lhrough the
beckoning bogeys and bad places
called Pebble Beach . He has
reached the point where everybody
else is asking how long he can stay
on course.
"There are going to be some
bogeys out !here and you have 10
understand thai," Morgan said.
"You're going to make atleasl two
bogeys and thai's if you're playing
good. ••
Morgan is playing better than
good.
Taking advantage of the morning calm, Morgan made su birdies
and shOI a 3-under 69 on Friday 10
move 10 9-under after 36 hales of
the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach.
''If Gil continues at that level of
play, look at all !he records that arc
going to be broken," said Ray
Floyd. who moved into contention

Jackson, Wissler
OSU's top athletes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Basketball standout J•m Jackson
and volleyball star Lei sa Wissler
have been selected Ohio State's
male and female athletes of the
year by a panel of athletic department adminislraiOrs and coaches.
Jackson, an All-American as a
junior who will forgo his senior
year to play in 1he NRA, won the
Jesse Owens award. The guard-for·
ward from Toledo led the Buckeyes in scoring with 22.4 points per
game. He helped the team to a 26.6
record, 1he Big Ten Conference
championship and a spot among
the fmal eight teams in the NCAA
tournament.
Wissler, a senior from Wasilla,
Alaska. led the Buckeyes will! 21
solo blocks and was second wilh
1()() total blocks and 366 kills. She
helped the Buckeyes to a 30·4
record, a Big Ten championship
and an NCAA final four appearance. She was honored with the
Suzy Favor award.
The selections were announced
by Ohio State Wednesday.

GM Progrom Car. 1-only al lhla prlco. Anll-lock
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ACS linkfest set for July

CIIEVROIEr

•

GEO

•

OLDSMOBILE

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County unit of the American Cancer Society will hold a state-qualifying golf tournament on July II
all p.m. al Cliffside Golf Course.
Dinner will be served for golfers after their play.
The 10urnament is a scramble format where golfers may pick
!heir awn foursome. Teams will use I0% of the lOla! team handicap.
The wiMing men's and women's teams (only women's teams will
use lhe handicap) wiU advance 10 the state championship al the
Firestone Country Club in Aleron for the American Cancer Society"s Ohio Division Golf Championship, sponsored by Alislate
Insurance.
Entry fonns will be available at Clilfside Golf Course. For mere
information. call !he Galtia County ACS office at 446-7479 .

Softball tournament dates posted

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GALLIPOLIS, OH.

GAGE - There wiU be two United StaleS Slow-pitch Softball
Association tournaments - a men's Class D&amp;E state qualifier and
a women's Class E fast chance qualifier - scheduled for July 25
and 26 81 the aid Southwestern High School .
In addition, there will be a men's and women's open 10urnament
on the same days.
The entry deadline for these IOWTl8lllents is July 23.
Foc more information, call Ed Caudill at 245-5919.

Next Gallipolis cage
camp Wednesday
GALLIPOLIS -This year's
Gallipolis summer basketball camp
for youths en1ering grades 9-12
wiU run from Wednesday, June 24
10 Friday, June 26.
The session will be held from I
to 4 p.m. from Wednesday through
Friday.
The cos t of the camp is $45
before June 15. The firsl 30 !hat
register will get a free instructional
video worth $19. Paying a $15 preregislration fee will make the balance due on the Monday of the
g1ven camp.
The sessions. wltich will be run
by GAHS basketball coaches and
players past and presenl, will be
held in the Gallia Academy High
School varsity gym.
For more infonnation, contact
G AHS boys basketball coach Jim
Osborne al446-9284 .

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Promoter Bob Arum and Finman JOine4 Holmes 011 tbe podium
at the post-fight press oonfm:n:c 10
urge a fighl between the lwO aging
boxers for whal Arum said woold
be the seniCI heavyweigbl championship of the world.
Holmes, who earned $7 million
for the fight, refused to canmiliO
the bout But he showed be badn "t
iosl his setJ9C of humoc when asUd
what be would have done diff.muly 10 beat Holyfield.
"If I could have done anything
diff&lt;=1t in the figh~ I M&gt;Uid have
fought this fight in 1980," he said.

.
:
:
·
:

:
·
.
·
:

refused to speak to reponers after
his round.
Faldo was 2-under when be hit a
ball in a tree 10 !he right of the 141h
green. He climbed up the tree but
could not find it He made 8 and
wen! on 10 shoot 76.
While qualifier Andy Dillard
birdied me 18th oolc 10 be second
at 138, Floyd, the 1986 Open
champ. charged into a tie for third
al 140. Wayne Grady shot a bogeyfree 66 and was also at 140.
Floyd matched Morgan's 69,
but Floyd played in the more dJffi cult afternoon conditions.
"I am playmg better !han I've
ever played in my life, at any
time," said Floyd, who was bolh·

ered last monlh by back pmbl&lt;ms. :
"Every day since Monday l"vc :
played bener and beuer. I really .
had my timing IOday and I feel tcr-:
rifte ...
Gary Hallberg, Britain"s Colin :
Montgomery and Anders Fors- :
brand of Sweden were 11 14 L
After a day and a half of lml- :
qui lily, the winds kicked up and :
temperat ures dropped, leaving :
Strange and balf the field wilh u ·
ornery golf course 10 play only :
hours after Morgan played 11woup •
vinual stillness.
:
No player has ever been 9-UIIdcr :
after 36 holes in the Open. Mor- ·
gan's 36-hole score is one sb&lt;x sby :
of the lowest halfway tolaL
:

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RACINE - A double elimination co.ed voUeyhall tournament
will be held on Saturday, July 4 at Southern High School.
The tournament wiU be limited to the fii'SI 20 teams and is open
to all ages. Seven players will be allowed on each team and only six
can be playing at one time. The entry fee foc the 10umamen11S $35.
Entry forms are available at Southern High School. The winner of
lhe tournament will receive T·shins.
For more information, comact David Gaul at949-26 1L

lUMINA EURO

wilh a sa:ond·round 69.
Morgan·s two-round total was
three shots better than any of the
other 155 golfers in !he field and
one shot away from the 10-under
figure !hat no one in Open hislor]l
has ever put on a leader board.
The golf course laid a big num ber on Strange, who was second
after !he f~t round. Playing in the
late afternoon, the two·time Open
champion was undone by the
greens and lhe cold windy conditions, making five bogeys and two
double-bogeys during a 77 that
dropped him 10 shoiS bock.
Nicklaus and Watson missed lhe
cut Calcavecehia took bogeys on
seven of the final 12 ooles and left
the course only after chucking his
ball into lhe Pacific Ocean. Strange

10127 CHilliCOTHE PIKE
JACKSON, OH 10

Co-ed volleyball tourney set
1992 CHEVROLET

Holmes said . "Evandcr fought a
smart fight and didn't tire like I
thought he would.''
Holyfield, who earned $16 mil lion for the his lhird title defense.
ran his =ord to 28-0 and kept the
undisputed title he won with a
third-round knockout of James
"Buster" Douglas in October
1990.
But just as he did againSI Foreman in !heir April 1991 fight,
Holyfield was unable to seriously
hun or pul away Holmes and once
again left !he ring with questions
unanswered aboul how good a
champion he really is.

Morgan leads after two rounds in U.S. Open

Punt, Pass and Kick slated

1991 CHEY. 5·1 0 TAHOE

But il was not unUJ he was cut
by an inadvertent elbow late in !he
sixth round that he began showing
movement which frustrated
Holmes and won some key rounds.
"When he got cut is when he
staned going outside and it made
lhe fi~ht much easier," said Holy·
field s lrainer, George Benton .
"Before that, he was making !he
fight too hard for himself."
Two JUdges had Holyfield win ning the fight 116-112. while a
lhinl had il 117- I I L The Associated Press had !he champion ahead
118-110.
"He dJdn't follow my plans, "

in the eyes of lhe three ringside
judges.
Fighting much of !he early fight
off the ropes and in th e corner,
Holmes crashed some good right
hands 10 the head of Holyfield, bul
could never put logether enough
punches 10 take control.
"He wasn't fighting like the
challenger. he was fighting more
like !he champion," Holyfield said.
"He wanted me to take the fighlto
him."
Holyfield obliged in lhe early
rounds, banging away at Holmes
an !he ropes and generally gettmg
!he better of the exchanges.

Phillip~,

~ TCJIIOIIO. 41 ;

Ul - -

H.ryl
Ullited O.U.tity

USED

e'. Martmu. S..ltle, of2;

..... Mil• I

... "

O'DELLS .

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page C3·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt Pleasant, WV

.--Area sports briefs----.

2 Dr., one careful owner, ,full power
seat • windows - door locks, two-

~

Lo. Aapl• (llcabiM ~) at JJou..
.... (JIIm} 1-6). 2:15 p.m.
S.. Dieto_C0reJ HanU 2.· 4) a1 S.n
f'nDcilco (fwifl'-&lt;J) , 4-65 p.m

By TIM DAHLRF.RG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Evandcr
-Holyfield may finally be ready to
take an someone his awn age.
• Holyfield shook off the fi!St cui
&lt;Jf his pro career Friday night 10
dJspase of lhe second 42-year-{!ld
challenger to his heavyweight
crown with a 12-ra und decision
aver Larry Holmes.
The most unkind cut of all,
however, may have been lhe reaction to Holyfield's win over the
ancient Holmes.
In a workmanlike performance
much like his battle against another
elder statesman, George Foreman,
Holyfield did just enough to win .
But once again he failed to impress
as a great heavyweight champion.
" It shows Larry Holmes had
more than llhoughl he had, '' Holy-

"BARGAIN CITY"
Aloboaj !Jeo.k 8ett~l

c-t

June 21, 1992

Holyfield defeats Holmes to retain heavyweight crown

IS

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MILWAUlEE BIEWEls -.....,
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MlNNESOTA TWINS - Activstcd
Donnie HiD, infielda-, &amp;am lhc IS-.d•r
diablod till Optianad Jd'f Rcbr:da, in-

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June 21, 1992

II,WV

BJ SCOTr WOLFE

-s

T Carrespoadeat
STEWART- Visiting Street
Stock driver Darrell Dodd D'lliled
Rick Venham for the first
laps.
then moved into the lead and never
l~ hick en route 10 a $300 victory in the ftrSt Jim Lanbam Sueet
Stock Memorial Race Friday nigbL
· Coolville driver Andy Bond
claimed the Late Model victory.
Racine's Bob Adams Jr. the
U.MP. Modilieds and Jim Bolyard
llle Spcnsman main.
.Dodd SWted the night by setting
fast time (15:67), then battled to
secood behind Venbam in the dash.
Trimble's Roger Dunlap held off
former champ Harold Pickens in
the ftrSt heat 10 set the stage for an
eiciting feature.
: Venham got the jump on the
!tart and ducked to the inside.
while Dodd waked to find his way
~. After racing door-to-&lt;loor,
Dodd finally passed Venham on
·lhe sixth circuit, working his way

m

Childers, Bobby Hill and Dan Mor- Don Kerr The neu o•!ifiol sao.
rison
will be the July J. $1 .000 10 will
Racine's Chris Diddle in the U. M.P NatiMals &lt;:YaiL
Pomeroy McDonald's-J.D. Drilling
Jim Bolyard w•tlluood cbal155 did a fine job in his first ro~CC in lcngcs from ocarly cou,._. io tbl:
Late Models with a quick change field. OOlln the cal 110- r;or by.
rear~.
and Bolyard clanned dr &lt;krtrml
Mossor won the heaL
flag . For most of tile nee Jell
Adams swept the U.M.P. modi - Wood !ned cvay inc:IJ ~ doc nd
fied divisioo with a 15:46 fast time. to get by Bolyard buJ..,. a win in dash and hiS third straight ccssfuL Finally. Wood *ifled lliP
feature win.
and KeVIn Ha,.gN cW• g I BolFraziers Bottom, W.Va. dnver yard; Aaron FlemiJI&amp; slipped by
Jim Wilson, winner of the heat. led three can; in two laps .-1 .,. 100
the ftrst four lours, before Adams challenged Bolr-nl, ._ at
faslipped iniO the lead. The next five ish Fleming sealed ror • dase !&lt;:C ciltuits saw Rick Williamson make ond and Wood was dlinl a1a11 or
it a three-wide battle for the top Haught and Ed Vmham
spot. an exciting charge that ended
Bolyard and H1Dpt ....,. Ill&lt;
only when Wilson blew a tire.
heats.
Williamson and Adams resumed
There will be 110 mc:inK Ibis Frithe dual with the wave of the green, day, June 26 at SkJ1iao as ..however. three laps later the two Darrell Willie Jays c1owtt a touched and Williamson spun, as clay swfacc. The U.MP. Nwi h
Adams raced to the win_
modified race will be July l . .-1
Ray Plants was second, Hubie July I 0 will be die $2,000 10 will
Hatfield third, Alan Hibbard and Bob Adams Sr. Mamial for Soper

*'

Mossor. Adams, Diddle, Johnson.
Childers, Hill, Morrison, Cozad,
Willard, McDanieL
UMP modifieds
Fast time - Bob Adams Jr.
15:46
First Heat - Adams, Bond,
Donn Kerr. Hubie Hatfield.
Second Heat - Jim Wilson.
Rick Williamson. John Burdeue,
Alan Hibbard, Geoff Curran.
FEATURE - Adams, Ray
Plants, Hatfield, Hibbard. Kerr,
Burdette, Williamson. Thad
Mankin, Ron Williams, Geoff Curran.
Sportsmaa
First Heat - Jim Bolyard, Jeff
Wood. Aaron Fleming. Donnie
Dobson.
Second Heat - Kevin Haught,
Benny Thieman, Kenny Tuttle, Ed
Vanham, Roben StaCkpole.
FEATURE - Bolyard, Heming, Wood, Haugh~ Venbam. Thieman. Dobson, Dick Grimm, Tuttle,
Jeff Snively.

SUMMARY
STREET SlOCKS - Jim Lanham M&lt;:morial
Fast time - DamU Dodd 15:67
Dash - Rick Venham. Dodd,
C:o'iiO, David Hackathorn.
Fint Heat - Roger Dunlap,
Harold Pickens, Todd Wolfe, Eris
Miller, Lou Wesu:rmeycr.
FEATIJRE - Dodd, Venham,
Casto.
Dunlap.
Pickens.
Hackathorn. E. Miller. Wolfe,
w..tenneyer, Miu:h Brunton and
Ralph Gardner.
Lat~ models
Fast time- Bob Adams Jr.
13:52
Dash - Andy Bond, Larry
Bond. Bruce Dennis, Adams. Chris
Diddle, Bobby HiD.
First Heat - Bobby Mossor.
Billy Childers, Kenny Johnson,
Dan Mooisoo, Roger Co2llll.
FEATURE - Andy Bond,
Bruce Dennis. Larry Bond.

A Commentary
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Seotinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Few people in
academia, be they teachers of
mathematics, the sciences. English
or physical education, question the
imponance of being prepared.
A society that doesn't adequately prepare its children throughout
their school years will pay for such
negligence later in crime, growing
welfare rolls and a proliferation of
adult basic education courses.
The same applies to baseball
and softball.
In Ohio. there are 62 junior high
softball and 55 junior high baseball
teams, but in southeastern Ohio
there are only two such softball
programs - Bartlett Elementary
near Bartlett and Warren Elementary near Vincent (both in western
Washington County) - and only
one baseball program - General
Sherman Junioo;High in Lancaster.
This stands in stark contra'! to

year.

Team
W
Sideline Spons .....................6
C&amp;D Trucking .....................5
Country Carry-out .............. .2
Rebels .................................. !
Old Brick Tavern .................0
County l'nmcutor Brent A. Saund~rs In addltioo to getting iustructlon in game fundamtotals
and partidpation in various cootests. Prizes for
th~ various cont~sts were provided by Carl's
Shoe Store, SideliD~ Sports and Tb~ Shake
Sboppe, au or GaDipolis. (Times-Sentillel pboto)

Iipolis Area B h&lt;' ' c ,., _;..;.r
,
b~ld for stmkats -iiq; co , .... au fall,
rondudocl Friday wid! 9S rw f ";
ill - dance. At tbt camp, lllq ian ltctmes ,._
Marshall _ ...., ~ s..lt E...s, Gallilt

PRINCETON, W.Va. (AP)The basehalJ ....ttl will I
be.
him as a piu:her witb a lifeb8e
record of I ()1}-50. boa . - ~ Doa
Gullett's fonde&gt;t m""""'it:s...,
while wielding a bat.
"Pitchers lW: I ) tal: - - -ling ... said Guiica. ...., -.at b
the Cincinnati Reds IIIII New Ytri:
Yankee! in the 19705..
"I hit one borne lllR, alii i l in the playoff• apmt Pimi&amp;P,"
he said. "It was a bi&amp; Will for
me.''

ketball Camp, which concluded last week at
Soutben1 Higb Sc:bool. Here Bunoa passes out a
rew autographs to some of his rmoly-made raDS(Times-Sc:ntinel pboto}

federal judge allows Reynolds
to compete in Olympic trials
field in umdon.
"The IAAF sees it as challenging the competenCe of the rulin~ ol
an international spc:ns body . It IS a
decision which may lead to chaos.
What would happen if the jurisdictions of all 200 member federatioos
challenged the IAAF's ruling? This
might lead to the suspension of all
U.S. 400 meters runners at the
Olympic Games."
Reynolds, the world record
holder and 1988 Olympic silver
medalist at 400 meters, was suspended for two years by the International Amateur Athletic Federation in August 1990 after he tested
positive for steroids following a
meet in Monte Carlo.
Reynolds has twice been granted coun orders allowing him to
compete. The latest order expired
Thursday.
The IAAF has said if Reynolds
competes in the trials at New
Orleans, which stan today. adtlett:s
runnin$ against him would be suspended. Thai could Cost the Ameri cans a 400-meter team at the
OJ ympics in Bartelona.

Gullett. who left die Reds to
play for the Yan)zoes...,., is t.:l
with Cincinnati IS a [li• l+t'5 aU
thanks to a rontacl be lllllle ilt New
York.
"I was out of baseball " 1980 througb 19119... Gttiicll said.
"About I 987-88 , I mel (cartat

horns~~

Rals manager) Lou Piniella at an
oltHimcn game. He was in broadcastmg and scouting then, and he

askd wby I was not bact in the
poe.
"He thought it was a waste I
was 1101 in there." Gullett said.
'"When he came to the Reds, he
lilted 10 poople in the fann system
liloua &amp;dling me bact in.
"After I got out of baseball, I
tbnu&amp;N I'd want to get back into
""ef'4D as a pitching instructor."
he aid "fl's tronit that I get back
widt tbl: team I ftrst signed with."
Gallett is with Cincinnati •s
mdni= 'cape affiliale in Princeton
this week Ill work with pitching
JMOSjltUS. He ~ throughout the

minor Jeagoes working with other
Cincinnati farm reams.
Gullett said he didn't regret
signing a free-agent contract with
the Yankees after piu:hing for the
Reds in the I 976 World Series.
"I looked at it as a business
decision," Gullett said . "At that
point. the Reds were not offering
multi-year contracts. I felt I had 10
think or security for my family. If 1
bad to do it over, I'd do it again."
Gullett's major league career
spanned from 1970 through 1978.

Sports shorts

Junior golf
posts dates, courses

June I9 - Sugarwood Golf
Course. Lavaleue, W.Va.
June 26 - PonsmootiJ Elb
Club, Portsmouth
July 10 - Sandy Cnd Golf
Club, Ashland. Ky.
July 11 - Lava~me Golf
Lava1elle, W.VL
July 31 - BeUeloolle c.-ry
Cl ub • Ashland• KY·
A site wiD be chooen b A.&amp;- 7
if mterest dictatts iL
From the ficld. tbcR will be 65
golfers chosen wi1h !lllrCS . . . . .
from 55 to 76. In additim iiCWDI
awards. including Golf~ or llle
Year and a Most Volt"'* Playa
award for each ~ ~ will be
given.
The entry fee is S18 b l'llfas
in the 13-15 and the 16-IB ,..-aid
age groups, and SIS for £1 Ym io
the I 0-12 year-ohh30 pbtlpApplications mUll be tUill:d 10
the Tri-State Junior Golf On:.il,
P 0 . Box 945, l"roauniilc., o.io
45669. no later thaD 6 p.a. c:a lk:
Wednesday ptttalin&amp; eat:l wed's
mau:h.
For more infQI1Uiicm, call Ed
Wilgus at 1-886-5491 (Faitlud
High School} from 9:10-10 a.m.
and Il-l 1:30 a.m. or I m 1910
(borne).

Open Every Sunday,
Absolutely no elco~olic
bmrages. Not rupoui~le
for losses or acciduh.
For more inforrnati01 call
388-9617 or 388-9300
Getes open et 11:00 e.m.
Races start at 1:00 p.m.

Cllllllnt 1D Gil.. c:..untr. .. ,Ice Je

JIN'

...., ...... •r1 n I ' 111 o.111o, J8Cbon
MCI lllllae Countt. In Ohio. IIIMon lind
1 I 1011 CountiN In W. V..
ForluttMr Jntol'lr.llon COIIbtct:

cw..

4

Tuesday's scores
Country Carry-out 7. Rebels S
Sideline Spons I8. Country Carryout 12
Wednesday's scores
C&amp; D Trucking II, Old Brick 0
Diving
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mark
Lenzi scored a perfect 10 and Kent
Ferguson overcame two previous
failures in the U.S. Olympic diving
trials to earn berths on the 3-meter
springboard learn.
. . . •
Lenzi and Ferguson will JO'"
women's springboard compebtors
Julie Ovenhouse and Karen LaFace
at the Barcelona Olym!lics in July.

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the ones around Portsmouth .
advance to the regional and state
tournaments (Portsmouth Notre
Dame, for example. won the DiVIsion IV regional baseball IItle
before losing to Toledn Ottawa .
Hills in the state semtfinals m late
May} on a regular basis without
benefit of a Jun•or h1gh baseball or
softball program .
.
How much better can vars~ty
diamond teams 10 Galllll and Me•gs _
Counties play tf the seventh- and ·
eighth-graders who want to play ,
baseball and softball other than m.
the summer get the same attentiOn
that they get for football and bas• ·
ketball?
The answer will appear at the
ball park and in the win column.

MODEL

baseball - the way it was played
back when I was a kid, the way it
was played wben I was in the game
and the way it is now. This is an
ever-changing game," he said.
Charboneau now spends most of
his time on his school, where former Indians Tom Candiotti, John
Farrell, Doug Jones and Mudcat
Grant have belped with instruction.
Current Cleveland catcher Sandy
Alomar and Toronto third baseman
Kelly Gruber will take part in a
session later this year.
" We have indoor token batting
cages. private instruction batting
cages, indoor and outdoor pill:hing
mounds. We only started it last
May, but now we have Astroturf
and are building a new addition.
It's been a lot of fun," he said.
Charboneau said he may be
attending more camps similar to
the one at Tri- Valley.
"I really like doing camps like
this and would like to just get in the
car and go all over the state doing
them," Charboneau said. "I like
getting out working with kids like
. ..
th IS.

'

COMIII - ·

naments.

nmes-Sentlnei-Pag~

admission is charged), when the
weather tends to be more con ducive to fans' spending a late
afternoon at the ballpark.
The facts that most parents are
about half an hour from completing
the work day when these games
start (usually 4:30 to 5 p.m .
because of the Jack of lights at
most fields) and the players·
friends are at home having
dinner/doing homework/playing
video games (not necessary in that
order) contribute heavily to this
lack of fan support. Also to be
blamed for the Jack of fans are rites
of spring soch as lawn care, cleaning the backyard grill in time for
the family reunion, eu:.
But some area reams. especially

progrnm to keep alive their interest
10 diamond spons at the critical
time when they need lO D'llin their
changing and still-growing bodies
to retain and improve their skills lO
become better winners at the varsity high school leveL
If that can be done, how many
more can play well enough to be
accepted into college baseball and
softball programs on scholarship
(even if it's a partial one) - or
beyond - if the weight of a school
distnct is put into helping them
impruve their talents in addition 10
the experience Pony League and
pre-varsity league softball prov1de'
True , every school isn't finan cially capable of spon"lt~fi junior
high baseball and/or so
• especially when admission prices are
rarely charged at varsity high
school diamond games because of
minimal attendance. The presence
of few fans occurs even during
tournament games in May (where

'

Honrncilla
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP} series
Puwlua Mamer, $8.60. surged past
Tmte Gcnllemcn in the final furlong lltd won by a length in the
S45,000
turf allowance feature at
PROCTORVIllE - n.: 1001
Hollywood
Pn
annual Tri-Statt: Jwlior Golf Omit
bas anROIUICed die followitl&amp; dRs
and locations for its smnw:r .__ r----------~:::==~:::~=-----,

He said that if Kinneary granted
Reynolds' request. "We would
have to weigh Butch's rights
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} - A
against the others...
~ judge today allowed Buu:h
The IAAF has suspended all
Jieynolds to compete in the
athletes who competed against
QJympic trials in New Orleans this
f'l'Ckend, giving the sprinter anothReynolds in meets in San Francisco
and Hohndel. NJ.,last week .
6' court victory in his eflon lO beat
Alkalay said if Reynolds com It; suspension over alleged steroid
peted
in the Olympic trials and the
II'Je.
IAAF
suspended those who raced
: U.S. District Court Judge Joseph
ltinneary also prevented track's
against him. the only avenue of
world governing body from susappeal could by the International
PJIDding other competitors who run
Olympic Commiace and its presiasainst Reynolds and prevented
den~ Juan Antonio Samarach.
~ court cases from being filed.
Kinneary scolded the IAAF for
- Kinncary said Reynolds estabtrying "to hold the entire American
illhed dial he would be ilreparably
Olympic team hostage against an
Jfarmed if he could not compete .
unfavorable decision from this
1:k judge said that concerns outcourt"
weighs any harm other runners
"While it remains possible that
tOay suffer by being disqualified
the JAAF and its members will
f9r running against Reynolds.
attempt - and may even succeed
:• The judge said his order pre- in rendering various American
1}inting new cases "is essentiJII to
athleteS ineligible for participation
jJrorect this court's jurisdiction to
in the 1992 Summer Olympic
proceed to final judgment in the
Games, !hi! court finds ... the IAAF
tfaUt:r before it, and to secure the
rule underlying the threat to be a
mpect due this court .•
grossly unsavory method or enfoo:.; The Athletic Congress, track's
ing its tmti-doping rules and &amp;VOid&amp;)iverning body in the United
ing intelfcreoce in its affairs by the
Reynolds contends that an court and odlers. •• be said.
Sou:s. filed a notice of appeal this
appeal heard by the IAAF was a
ifb""mtiOOIOOIID.
IIYiimiNG
- Reynolds was in New Orleans sham. The IAAF bas refused to
.Ad not immediately available to tate pan in the proceedings before
lOW DISCOUNT PRICES
Judge
Kinneary.
WnmenL
FREE
"It seemed the court was r3lber
• "Based on the coun order. I
s
1ao of pool ckemico b
tiink 1 am obligated not to com- infuriated at the IAAF snubbing its
wirh any inground pool
ll)iml on either Butch's panicipa- nose al Federal Coun," Altalay
invoic&amp;d thil month. sse '!~!:':!
of chemicals with any alu- ~
tion or conscqUCfiCCS may occur to said "Based on the way thai wen~
minum obove -gro"nd
oiher athletes who participate." we're preparing to go to the Sixth
pool
qid Frank Greenberg, TAC presi- CircuiL
TAC -'"""•t Frank Greenberg
dl:nL
; "The IAAF is disnppointed with teStified !;; ~bus that his
nization
"is
on
the
11Je decision," said Istvan Gyulai,
acnr.n1 JeCrCWy of the lnlemalion- dilemma" bccatlse it is bound by
al ·Amateur Adlletic Fedelation, the staJuteS to protect the rights of all
world governing body for traclt: and athletes.

By ROOD AUBREY

Lansford, Dave Stieb and Dave
Righetti. He still remembers
"hanging out in front of the concession stand all day in your uniform waiting for your game to
start. The biggest thing about playin~ then was just putting on the
umform and showing up. Participating is the big thing in youth
leagues."
Charboneau left the majors
because of back problems and said
he learned durmg a comeback
auempt that his interest in playing
had waned
"I went down to play in the
senior league a couple of years ago
and played for the Sun City Rays. I
hit well and I thought it would be
fun
to go back , but it wasn't,"
C&amp;D Trucking 13, Old Brick 4
Charboneau said.
Now the closest thing to pro
Thursday's games postponed
baseball b Charboneau is the oldtimer's games in which he plays at
This week's games
Cleveland
Stadium and other major
Tuesday - Rebels vs. C&amp;D
league
parks.
Trucking; Old Brick vs. Rebels
"It's fun for me to play ball
Wednesda1- Country Carrywith
the guys I grew up watching
out vs. Old Bnck (DH)
and
see
all of the different styles of
Thursday - C&amp;D Trucking
vs. Sideline Sports (DH)

"I have a 10-year-old daughter.
Dannon. who's on a 10-and-under
boys traveling team and she's a
pretty good hitter. She's hitting
about .850. Tyson, my 12-year-old
son, just got interested in baseball
this year and is doing well," he
said during an appearance at a
baseball clinic at Tri- Valley High
SchooL Charboneau now runs a
baseball school in suburban Cleveland.
He grew up in Santa Clara.
Calif., where be played with future
major leaguers such as Carney

Sports shorts

Ex-Reds hurler remembers his biggest hit

.::. SPEAKING WITH CAMPRRS - Former
·-olllo Sate basketball player Jay Burson llp4'•k•
:.ntb participants in the Southffll Tomado B&amp;

for themselves by concentrating on
the 1,600- and 3,200-meter runs lO
improve their endurance. Infield ers. especially second basemen and
shortstops, and outfielders can
work on that quick first step in the
100- and 200-meter dashes and
stretch their legs in the hurdles.
Relay reams are good opponunities
to exercise teamwork. But as good
as these things are, there's no substitute for playing balL
With this in mind is it any wonder the only player from southeastern Ohio in the last 20 years currently on a maJor league roster is
Kansas City pitcher Jeff Montgomery? For those who haven't
heard of him. the Wellston native
and Golden Rockel standout played
his college baseball for Jack Cook
at Marshall University before being
signed by the Cincinnati Reds.
The point is, only a select few
such as Montgomery are able to
make it that far with no junior high

French City USSSA softball

: Southern Tornado Basketball Camp participants

•

other sports such as basketball,
football, cross country. track and
even wrestling, which are offered
in some school districts at the
junior high leveL Basketball is
offered in practically every school
district at that level, and the
schools that have varsity football
also have junior high football.
As a result, most seventh- and
eighth-grade youths who participated in Liule ~ue baseball and/or
Pee Wee sof
a few years earlier now find themselves waiting for
the stan of summer vacation before
Pony League or pre-varsity Jeagoe
softball can give them the chance
to be Jose Canseco. Rickey Henderson or Nolan Ryan for an afternoon or evening. While they wai~
thel have only track to exercise
therr athleticism during late Marth.
April and early May.
There's nothing wrong with
baseball players participating in
track. In fact, pitchers can do well

Charboneau's school chance for 'youths to sharpen skills
DRESDEN. Ohio (AP) - Joe
Charboneau had his moment of
glory in the major leagues but says
he misses his Little League days
the most.
"I miss playing in the league
from when I was a kid more than
anything about the game," said
Charboneau, who earned the nickname "Super Joe" and wrote a
book with that title after winning
the 1980 American League Roolr:ie
of the Year award with the Cleveland Indians. but never had another
season that came close to his first

JUNIOR CAMP CONCUJDilS - Dr &lt;W-

Sunday

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

Dearth of junior high baseball, softball hurting SE Ohio youths

Adams, Bond among victors in Lanham Memorial Race
through traffiC to oecwe the win.
Following Vcobam were Point
Pleasant's Don CasiO, Roger Dunlap, Harold Pickens. David
Hackathorn. Eris Miller, Todd
Wolfe, Lew Westermeyer and
Miu:h Brunton.
In the Late Models, Bob Adams
Jr. set fast time ol 13:52 in his V-6
powered Chevy. but finished founh
on the dash behind Andy Bond.
Larry Bood in the Whalef's Auto
Parts car and Bruce DenniS. Staning the feanue in this ooler, Larry
Bond jumped brother Andy, but
Andy chose the faster inside line to
lead all 25 laps 0( the main.
Bond's McDonald's of Athens.
York Construction-Ken Fought
Used Cars-Rayburn Cbassis was
fast everywhere on the track.
An 18th lap caution didn't give
runner-up Bruce Dennis the opportunity to pass the flying Bond.
Larry Bond was third. followed by
Bobby Mossor, Bob Adams Jr.,
Chris Diddle, Kenny Jollnsoo, Bill

June 21, 1992

Ext"' low mllea, t owner.

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

Page-C6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

wv

June 21, 1992

Farm/Business

Ohio fishing report

Jigs most effective on spotted bass in Ohio River's Racine Pool

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Here is the weelcly fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of !he Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Ohio River
In the Racine Pool, anglers
should use white or chartreuse jigs
10 take spotted bass. Chicken livers
and large suckers fished in the
stream confluences work best for
laking flathead catfish.
Use gitzits or rattletraps fished
in the embayments near the L1_ttle
Hocking River in the Bellev1lle
Pool 10 lake largemouth bass up to
20 inches. Jigs and twister tails
work well when fishing for sauger.
Use night crawlers fished near the
bottom to take channel catfish
averaging 20 to 25 inches. In the
tail waters, use 14 or 12 ounce
green and white twisters to take
walleyes, sauge!ll and white bass.
Southeast
VETO LAKE - Good numbers
of spotted bass and largemouth
bass are present. Night fishing during summer with traditional baits
has produced catches of channel

catfish averaging eight to 12
pounds and flathead catfish up to
35 pounds. Nearly 600 Christmas
trees are present in this lake to
serve as fish attractors.
WOLF RUN LAKE - Opportunities to take largemouth bass,
channel catfish and golden rainbow
trout are rated good to excellent.
Locate submerged structure, such
as Christmas trees or brush piles
which serve as fish attractors. to
improve angling success. Larval
baits and small worms work best m
taking bluegills and sunfish.
Soutlhwest
GRAND LAKE ST. MARYS
- Large numbers of brown bullheads averaging nine 10 12 inches
are present. Use night crawlers
fished along the bottom during late
evening hours for best results. Fishing at night witlh soft craws, cut
baits and prepared baits also works
best in taking channel catfish up to
15 pounds.
LAKE LORAMIE- Try fish·
ing around boat docks, lily pads
and shoreline brush to take large-

mouth bass up to four pounds. Use
larval baits and worms in these
same areas to lake bluegills.
Central
DELAWARE LAKE- Fish
with minnows around deep droperrs containing stumps or other
cover to lake crappies. Night fishing along the boltom with night
crawlers and cut baits works best
for channel catfish.
HARGUS CREEK LAKE Cast surface plugs or rubber worms
to areas with floating vegetation
during early morning hours to take
largemouth bass. Cut baits, night
crawlers and chicken livers work
best for taking channel catfish
when fiShing along the lake bottom
from shore during late evening
hours. Use larval baits and small
worms fished beneath a bobber to
take bluegills.
Nortlhwest
BRESLER RESERVOIR Drift, troll or balloon fish during
summer when fiShing for walleyes,
which avent¥e 14 to 28 inches and
are present m good numbers. Fish

Osborne unhappy with Nebraska's
finalist list for Devaney's successor
By STEVE KLINE
OMAHA. Neb. (AP)- University of Nebraska football coach
Tom Osborne says he disagrees
with the choice of finalists for the
school' s new athletic director. but
he will support whomever is chosen.
"Once the decision is made, we
get behind it and make it work,"
Osborne said Thursday. "I plan to
coach as bard as I can this year."
Osborne had backed assistant
athletic director AI Papik as the
replacement for retiring athletic
director Bob Devaney.
But UNL chancellor Graham
Spanier said the finalists are Bill
Myles, Ohio State associate athletic
director and former NU assistant
football coach, Iowa State Athletic
Director Max Urick, and Bill
Byrne, University of Oregon athletic director.
Several regents at the univelllity
rallied around Spanier in his disagreement with Osborne.
"I think that anybody who realizes the way things are organized
knows the football coach does not
run a univ ersity." NU Regents
chairman John Payne of Kearney
said Thursday.
Four other regents told the
Omaha World-Herald that they
backed Spanier's conduct in the
search process. Spanier came to
Nebraska in November 1991 from
Oregon State University.
"We're talking about a chancellor dealing with a program. which
is part of many programs at the
university." Rosemary Skrupa of
Omaha said. "And if you undermine his authority, you undermine
him as a chancellor." she said.
Robert Allen of Hasting s.
Nancy O' Brien ofWaterloo and
Don Blank of McCook also backed
Spanier.
Papik was out of IOwn and not
due back in Lincoln until Fnday .
his office said. There was no
answer at hiS home telephone number and he did not return a message
left Thursday at his Lincoln office.
When Papik d1dn ' t make the
final c u~ ·'naturally that was disappointing to those of us who backed
AI ," Osborne sa1d.
Osborne said he did not agree
with Span~er on this issue hul he
was not saying that Spamer and the
sean:h commiuce were wrong.
"I just see 11 from my angle and
there may be a beuer pcrspcco ve. · ·
Osborne said.
The presidelll of a major athletic
booster group had said there was
friction between Span1cr and
Osborne. NU Touchdown Club
president Dan Hergert sa 1d
Osborne would leave the university
within a year 1f an outsider is hired

to replace Devaney.
Spanier and Osborne downplayed Hergert's remarks.
''We may not necessarily agree
on everything, but he (Osborne)
understands that only one person
can make the decision," Spanier
said Thursday after he announced
his list of ftnalists.
"We understand where we're
both coming from on this. We're
working on it together," Spanier
said in Ogallala, where he was
touring the university's Cedar Point
biological station.
Spanier said the three fmalists
will be interviewed this weekend
and Devaney's replacement will be
named next week. Supporters of
Corn husker athletics will rally
behind the new athletic director
once h1s decision is made, Spanier
srud.
But Devaney said the chancellor's list of candidates isn't final.
Devaney and some athletic
boosters were upset Thursday that
Papik, the lone internal candidate,
was not among three finalists
named by Spanier.
''I'm going to try to get that
straightened around," said
Devaney, wbo is retiring in January
after 30 years at NU, including 25
as athletic director.
Devaney said he would ask
Spanier to grant Papik an interview
as a finalist. Asked if that meant he

wanted Papik to have a courtesy
interview. Devaney said: "Hen no.
1don't need those."
Osborne said he had five more
years of good coaching in him and
he had no plans to leave NU. His
biggest concern is to taiic with the
three finalists about their views of
continuity in the football program,
Osborne said.
Osborne said be wants to know
for the sake of his staff members if
a new athletic director would want
to bring in a coach from outside
Nebraska when Osborne leaves. He
said his assistant coaches such as
Frank Solich have a right to know
if they have a chance to become
head coach someday.
The bead coach also said that he
does not expect to ever be athletic
director at Nebraska.
Osborne said he wrote to the
search committee assuring its
members that he was not backing
Papik to hold the job for himself.
"I agreed to sign off and never
be athletic director," he said he
told the committee in a letter.
He said that the situation had to
be kept in perspective: "It's not
life or death."
Devaney, who was Nebraska's
football coach from 1962 10 1972,
led the Cornhuskers to two national
championships in 1970 and 1971.
Osborne took over as football
coach in 1973.

Muskingum College pole
vaulter aiming for Olympics
WASHINGTON
COURT (before the championships), I had
HOUSE, Ohio (AP) - Chad convinced myself that I was beuer
Thomas says he may have won the than the other competito!ll.''
Thomas has won two Division
NCAA Division Ill pole vault
championship before the competi- III indoor championships to go
tion even started.
with his outd&lt;Xr title.
"It never gets old," he said.
Thomas' coach said the vaulter
would need a record-setting perfor- ·'Every time I've won i~ it's been a
mance lO win, so he went lor Lhe little more exciting. The competid1vis1on record of 16 feet 6 mches tion is getting better each season,
on a practice run and cleared it.
which pushes me to perfonn much
"I think when that happened , better."
Thomas competed in two other
peo ple staned taking me a little
more seriously," said the Musk- events in the Division III meet at
ingum College junior, a native of Colby College in Maine.
Washmgton Court House.
He set a Muski ngum record
"I t psyched out some people with a long jump of 24-7 1/4 that
and put pressure on me to win it I gave him thrrd place in the even~
wasn'l worried so much about and he finished lOth in the 100where I placed . I was more con- meter dash with a personal best
cerned w1th what height I cleared." time of 10.77 seconds.
Thomas broke the record when
"My goal was to be a national
he cleared 16-7 1/4 on his fifth try. champion in all three events," he
"When I started practicing, I said. "I wouldn't have been surtold my dad that I was the best prised if it had hapr:ned, but a lot
vaulter " at the national champi- of pcc&gt;ple didn't think that I could
onships, Thomas said. "In other do1L"
championships, I've gone 1n with
Now he's got a new goal '"
the idea that someone else might be mind.
better than me. But in the last week

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along the shorelines and near the
sunken island to take blue~Us. Balloon fishing late at n1ght is a
favorite technique of channel catfish anglers.
CL£AR FORK RESERVOIR
- Try fishing near submerged logs
and stumps near the shoreline for
musldes. Trolling laJge crank baits
around shallow weedy areas in the
upper half of the lake is also a good
tactic for taking muskies. Crappies.
largemouth bass, bluegills, white
bass and channel calf!Sh also offer
good fishing opportunities from
boat or shore.
Northeast
LADUE RESERVOIR- Slow-

ly troll deep-diving crank baits to
take walleyes. Largemouth bass
anglers should use minnows or
night crawlers and fish in areas
with submerged cover and noating
vegetation.
CLENDENING RESERVOIR
- This lake is one of northeast
Ohio's best for largemouth bass
anglers with good numbers of fish
averaging 12 to 23 inches . Try
using surlace lures during periods
of peak feeding activity. Also try
using small artificial baits, rubber
worms or minnows at various
depths 10 locate suspended fish.
Lake Erlt
Walleye fishing is rated good in

the western basin with many fish
taken averaging 13 to 17 inches.
Anglers are trolling deep-d~v~ng
crank baits or casung and drifung
weight-forward spinous tipped
with night crawlers. Best areas to
try are the reef complex, F-Can,
southwest of Green Island, east and
northwest of Kelleys Island, the
Toledo Shipping Channel and tlhe
area around West Sister Island.
Smallmouth bass fishing is rated
fair with most fish being taken
from the Kelleys Island area and
other nearshore areas. Anglers
should use leaded hair jigs or soft
craws fished along the rocky bottom at dejiths of six to 12 feet.

Akron park pond can handle more kids - Shy
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - More
than 2,600 children accompanied
by 1,000 adults took advantage of
Firestone Metro Park's youth fish·
ing program last summer, and a
parks official hopes that number
will continue to grow.
"We can handle more pressure
(from additional fishing) witlhout
any problems," said Keith Shy,
.operations director for Summit
County MetroParks.
Little Turtle Pond at the park is
stocked with panfish, bass, golden
trout, rainbow trout and channel
catfish.
Adults can auend with children
as old as 15, but they are to be
spectators rather than participants.
Tagged fish will be released,
and those catching them will
receive silver dollars.
People who accompany the children are apt 10 receive a great deal
more, Shy said.
"The look on a kid's face when
he or sbe catches a fish is worth a
thousand dollars," he said. "That's
my source of joy in this program .'·
"The fish are there fo:r the Idds
to catch, including catfish weighing
at least nine pounds. I'm sure of
that because I put them there, '' he
added.
Shy says much of the program's
success can be credited to the
Akron chapter of the lzaak Walton
League, a conservation-minded
group.
"They've done an awful lot.
They're dedicated people delermined to make the good memories
of therr childhoods the good memories of thousands and thousands of
other childhoods," he said.
A cane pole can be rented at the
park for 10 cents a day, although
anglers are encoura~ed to bring
their own gear, and bait can be purchased for pocket change.
"We'll do all we can to make
this a positive experience for the
children as well as the parents,"
Shy said. "We have provisions for
the handicapped. and those parents
who contact our office will be able
to make arrangements to transport
their child to the edge of the fishing

area.' '

The supervised program continues through July. Unsupervised
fishing, again for children only, is
permitted from Aug. I to Sept. 15.
MetroParks hopes to expand its
fishing program for children to
other areas during the next several
years, and the Ohio Division of
Wildlife is expected to start a program emphasizing urban fishing
next year.

Shy said he intends 10 do all he
can in getting such programs under
way because he wants young people to have the same chance to fiSh
that he did as a youth in Grove
City, south of Columbus.
.
"As a kid, I had the opporturuty
to fish and I'd like to see all kids
have the same opportunity," he
said. ''They need to know that
there's more than pavement out
there for them."

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COMING UP:
One of the computer industry's biggest events of
the year begins
Tuesda~ when the annual PC expo opens in New
York, w1th more than 75,000 people ranging from
manufacturers to hackers expected to attend.
Additional insights into the economy's direction
are due

Wednesday, when the government reports factory
orders for May and the nation's automakers report
10-day sales for mid-June; oo
Tbursday, the government reports weekly jobless
claims, fll'SI-quarter gross domestic product and oorporllle profits; on
Friday, it reports May personal income and spending.
TICKER:
The company that puts a chicken in every pot
wants to add a fish. Tyson Foods Inc., the nation's
large31 poultry pllducer, made its first foray into the
seafood business, acquiring Arctic Alaska Fisberies
Corp. for $202 million; while Russian President
Boris Yeltsin was burning up fuel touring the United
States, C011oco lac. was busy trying to find more in
his homeland, where it announced the development
of a new oil field; Northwest Airlines, which instigated a frenzied rush to buy airline tickets with a
half-price sale a few weeks ago, tried to limit the
fmancial bleeding with a I0 percent fare increase that
wasn 'I immediately matched by its biggest rivals.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The ty has asked PUCO to reconsider
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. is !he rate increase request.
responding to a lower than expect·
. The number of employees tered rate increase by firing some mmated will depend on how many
employees and asking others to of those eligible for early retire retire early.
ment accept the offer during a 60The utility said Friday the Pub- day period beginning Sept. 1,
lie Utilities Commission of Ohio CG&amp;E spokesman Steven Brash
made miscalculations and technical said.
errors in its decision to reduce its
Brash said !he cost-&lt;:utting mearequested rate increase.
sures are not intended to pressure
About 500 of CG&amp;E's 5,450 the state to grant all of CG&amp;E's
employees will be affected, compa· rate requesL
ny olftcials said.
"If the full rate increase had
CG&amp;E said it has also ended been granted, IllS doubtful that we
new hirings since PUCO last would be mavin,!! in the direction
month allowed CG&amp;E only $I 14 that we are movmg now. I C3DliO(
million of its requested $204 mil- say there would have been no costlion electric rate increase. The utili- control measures,'' Brash sai4.
"This is an action that we have to

Money Ideas

Bane One

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS- The shareholders
of Key Cenwrion have a reason to be
pleased. Bane One is a top perf&lt;rmer
and its stock a consistently rewarding
investment
· lt'snottoohard
convincing someone that Bane One
is one of the banking industry's SU·
perior performers;
the company's
record is simply
unmatched by any other large bank·
ing company. Consider, fo:r inslllnce,
that Bane One has recorded an increase in its earnings per share in
each of the 23 years of its existence.
No other banking company among
the top 25 in tenns of asset size can
boast about a string of annual earnings increases longer than six.
Also, consider that the company· s
return on assets (ROA) has exceeded
the I% level in each of the 23 years.
In fac~ tho company's ROA has
averaged 1.40% over the last fire
years and 1991's ROA of 1.56% was
the best in the company's history. To
put this in pclllpeCtive, the average
~OA of the 65 companies analyzed
in our Bank Performance Review
(ilPR) last year was only 0.91%
: Finally, when looking at Bane
Qne's record, we note its overall
position in our annual BPR which
rnlks banks according to five differ-

take in order to meet our financial
goals of the corporation.''
The utility told the PUCO on
Friday of the cost~utting actions,
commission spokeswoman Stacie
Gilg said. The commission takes no
position on those actions, Ms. Gilg
said.
Much of CG&amp;E's requested rate
increase was due to its costs of
cooverting the unfmished Zimmer
nuclear power plant in Moscow,
Ohio, to a coal-fmed planL CG&amp;E
and two other Ohio utilities Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. and
Columbus Southern Power Co. own the $3.6 billion Zimmer plant
It began producing electricity for
customers in March 1991.

operation. Many oiYices along with Uhe computer
room, a conference room, and a records keeping
room occupy that noor. This is the omce or
Bank Presldenl Paul Kines, pictured bere conrerring with Bruce Reed, execulive vice president.

OPEN HOUSE TODAY • VIsitors at the
Farmers Bank open bouse loday from l lo 3
p.m. will have the opportunity lo tour the COOl·
pletely renovated buDding. The seeood floor of
tbe Farmers Bank building, once having olrke
rentals, is now totally ulillzed In the banking

ent measures (profitability, asset
quality. capital strength, earnings per
share growth, and management/net
interest margins) is consislently
among the top six since we started the
BPR back in 1986. There is no other
company that has consistendy ran1cW
even among the top 15 during this
difficult period for banking c001pa·
nies.
How have the Bane One share·
. holders been treated during this time
period7 Like Kingsl There aren't too
many bani:: stocks that have done
better. In rae~ among the top 50
banking companies, there is only one
other that has provided a higher total
return 10 shareholders over tlhe last
five years and only four others that
have a better total return over the last
10 years. (Most of these companies
were lurnarounds.)
Quite simply, Bane One's fundamental as well as its stock performance record have been, and continue
to be, at the top in the banking industry. It is the company's consistently
strong perfonnance record that makes
it one of the few "core holdings" in
tlhe banking industry.
If you own Bane One stock or will
evenntally own the stock through the
Key Centurian buyout, our recommendation is to hold Bane One stock
for the solid long term growth.
(Mr. EvtmSisan Investmenl broker ror The Ohio Company In Its
GalUpolls omce.J

Houdashelt to open studio
in Spring Valley Plaza

1-4 ,..., ooto., '" P!l,

. · .a:z lf'fr'..

sion has ended.
That group, the Business Cycle Dating Committee
of the Nauonal Bureau of Economic Research in
Cambridge, Mass .. scrutinizes volumes of statistical
data ranging from savings rates to boxcar loadings,
measured over many months.
The committee has said nothing since April 25,
1991, when 11 pronounced the expansion that started
m November 1982 had ended in July 1990. That 108month growth phase was the longest ever recorded.
Marc Archambault, a spokesman at the NBER
said that as of Friday, the committee hasn't formed
any plans to meet. Still, he said, "all eyes are soo of

Cincinnati utility cutting work force

LAFAYETIE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

WV'S LARGEST CUSTOM VAN DEALER

.,

in a row.
A Federal Reserve regional survey released the
next day portrayed a slowly improving economy.
Although no single area stood out for strong growth
and some areas, notably the Northeast, appeared to
weaken, the Fed's conclusion was mildly optimistic.
But confusion was injected Thursday, wben the
Labor Department reported only a marginal drop in
weekly unemployment benefits claims. That suggested that businesses, despite their rising optimtsm,
remain extremely reluctant to hire more workers.
Further, the government said the nation's trade
deficit leaped 10 nearly $7 billion in April from $5.6
billion the month before, the n:sult of a large increase
in imports and decline in exports.
Although the report chronicled activity nearly two
months old, it suggested a disturbing trend that
reflected an economic slowdown abroad, which
would lead to lower sales, production and employment levels in this country.
Nonetheless, there is a widespread expectation
that the group of economists who decree the peaks
and valleys of U.S. business cycles will convene
soon 10 announce the nation's ninth postwar reces-

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-.

By RICK GLADSTONE
AP Business Writer
Like delectives dustin~ for finj!erprints and
archaeologtsts combmg a dmosaur dig, economists
have been fmding only bits and scraps of evidence to
piece together a story.
That story, as seen in both statistical and anecdotal
reports about the economy this past week, suggested
that the recessiOn of 1990-91 is really over, with no
hazard of a relapse looming. But there was no
emphatic, incontrovertible proof.
"There were clear pieces of news," said Kathleen
Stephansen, senior economist at Donaldson, Lufkin
&amp; Jenrette Securities Corp., a large Wall Stteet
investment firm. "But I must say that generally
speaking, we've continued to have cross currents,
which makes the picture difficult 10 assess."
The nation's automakers helped set an optimistic
tone on Monday, reporting a further advance in car
sales for early June. On Tuesday, the government
embellished the victure by reporting that consttuction
and housing, wh1ch had shown signs of faltering earlier this year, strengthened in May. In addition, May
industrial production improved for the fourth month

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More evidence shows that recession is over

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material in the heel lor salter landings. Bladoojl basketball
shoes are buih to lost.

Section D

: GALLIPOLIS
Randy
The studio will be located in the
1-joudashelt, former manager of offices that previously housed Lear
Lear Photography, announced Photography. The studio hours will
Thursday that he will be opening a be Tuesday through Saturday 10-5
pho10graphy studio in the Spring and every Thursday evening until 8
p.m. The phone number is 446Valley Plaza.
The Image Gallery will offer the 7494.
Dale Lear, owner of Lear Pholatest in portraiture for high school
seniors, children and families. tography will lie managing 4-D
Wedding photography and copying Productions, a local company that
of old photographs will also be specializes in marketing services
available. The first day of operation and the production of instructional
videos.
will be July 7.

Business
woman files
lawsuit

GALIJPOLIS- Martha Huestis,
president of WHY USA Mideast,
Inc., a flat fee brokerage, is suing
the parent company, alleging the
company fraudulendy induced her
to enter into a reJional franchise
agreement, according to the publi·
cation, Business First . Huestis is
the daughta of Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Evans of Gallipolis.
Huestis, who is the former
mayor of Uhe Village of Riverlea ·
and a Greater Columbus Convention Center board member, said
Gregory Hague, founder of WHY
USA Development Co., of Scottsdale, Ariz., hid important facts
from her, including that his Ohio
broker's license was canceled in
1981. Hague's broker's license was
canceled in Nov . 1981 because of
complaints.
Huestis' lawsuit claims she has
sustained unspecified operating
losses and other injuries because of
the misinformation. Huestis agreed
to pay $450,000 for the eight-state
regional franchise and has made
payments of$75,000.
The lawsuit seeks compensatory
damages of not more than
$650,000, punitive damages of at
least $250,000 and three times the
undetermined actual damages. The
complaint is pending in U.S. District Court in Columbus.

Milk production down
WASHINGTON (AP) - Milk
production during May in the 21
major producing states totaled 11.2
billion pounds, slightly lower than
production last May.

MYSTERY FARM· Tbis week's myslery
farm, reatured by lbe Gallia Soil aod Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to parllcl·
pale in tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Jusl mail, or drop off your
guess lo the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Obio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,

45631, and you may win a $5 prize from lbt
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telepbone number witb your card
or letter. No telepbooe calls will be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to lhe newspaper ofriCe by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, the winner will be cbosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County rarm will be featured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
Dislrict.

Shell Oil selling mining operations
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) reserves of about four billion tons .
- SheU Oil Co.'s coal mining subShell began producing coal in
sidiary, which operates seven coal 1977 at its R&amp;F Coal Co. mine in
producing complexes in West Vir- Ohio. Since then, Shell Mining has
gmia, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio and grown inlo one of the I0 largest
Wyoming, has been tentatively coal producing companies in the
United States, with sales of 27 milpurchased by an Illinois company.
Zeigler Coal Holding Co . of lion tons in 1991. It also operates
FalfView Heights, IU., will beeome export-import terminals in Virginia
the nation's fourth largest coal pro- and South Carolina.
Frank H. Richardson, president
ducer if the transaction is fmal1zed
and chief executive officer of Shell
as expected in October.
Oil, said th e sale will enable the
Terms were not disclosed.
When the purchase is complete , parent company to ooncentrate on
Zeigler officials said they will have oil and natural gas production.
Zeigler is a private company
annual sales in excess of $1 biUion,
annual production of about 40 mil- 1hat has been mining coal since
lion tons and recoverable coal 1904. The company was purchased

by Houston Natural Gas in 1973
and subseq ueml y sold to private
1nvestors in 1985.
. "This acquisition presents a ternfic opporrunity," srud Michael K.
Reilly, Zeigler's chairman and
chief executive officer. "Zeigler's
only business is coal mining and
marketing. The addition of Shell
Mining Co.'s outstanding people
and mining properties would make
us a major player in an industry we
know very well. "
Zeig ler purchased of Old Ben
Coal Co. in 1990 and produces
more than t5 million tons of coal
annually. It IS the natiOn 's 15th
largest coal producer.

ASCS crop certification
deadline set June 22
GALLIPOLIS - June 22 is the tory. If there are not bases and one
final date to report 1992 crop of these crops are being raised, a
licreages There are various reasons repon will give history to establish
why a report must be filled.
a base in the future .
. If your farm is signed in the
If it is impossible to visit the
!992 Feed Grain and Wheat Pro- county olftce by June 22, you have
~ or !he CRP program, a ~ two options:
must be filed by June 22. Th1s is
(1) Call us before June 22 and
true regardless if crops are planted we will place your name on our
or not planted.
register and set up an appointment
: If your farm has a heat or corn
(2) You can file a "late acreage
base and none of the crops are reP.C?rt" anytime after June . This
being raised, normally a report by will requtre a farm visit and a
June 22 will protect 1992 base his- minus charge of $17.

·'

FUTURE FOOD. MART· This construction slle at 431 W.
Main St., Pomeroy, wdl become lhe Riverside Food Mart in two to

three weeks, weather permitting, acrordinlt to ronstructioll OYer·
seer Max Johnson.

�June 21 , 1992

June 21, 1992

Times Sentinel

Once dismissed as a lightweight,
Yeltsin now rides high
By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - From the
White House 10 Wichita, he fell the
warm embrace of Americans at all
levels this past week. For Boris
Yeltsin, it was not always Ibis way.
Not long ago, he was seen as a
dangerous radical, a threat to the
Bush administration's carefully
clllfted sttategy of supponing thenP.resident Milihail Gorbachev and
opposing the l'ragmentation of the
Soviet Union.
Gorbachev was seen as urbane,
trustworthy, predictable and a
known quantity. Yeltsin was seen
u W.C. Fields with an accent, a
heavy drinker and a political
lightweight.
· Bu~ as Yehsin set out for home
Saturday, he could contemplate
with relish the contrasts with his
finlt visit 10 WashingtOn three year.&gt;
ago, a uip defmed more by his relationship with Jack Daniels than
with George Bush.
As recently as a year ago, the
administration still had reservations
about Yeltsin, a wariness that in
retrospect seems all the more
remarkable given the way Kansas
fanners fawned over him Thursday
after his boffo performance amid
the bureaucrats in Washington on
Tuesday and Wednesday.

The contrasts with his September 1989 visit could not have been
more pronounced.
The Washingron Post described '
that visit this way: "That he
(Yeltsin) could stand up, let alone
be engaging and sound urgent.
seemed a linle miraculous. It
wasn't just the two hours' sleep he
was going on. It was the amount of
Tennessee sipping whiskey he had
knocked back overnight. Vodka,
okay. But Jack Daniel's black label
in the land of the free? Yes, and a
quan and a haJJ of it 100. This has
been conf1111led by those who saw
the bottles."
During that period, eight months
into his presidency. Bush was of
two minds about Yeltsin. On the
one hand, he was a member of the
Congress of People's Deputies. On
the other, he was a rival of Gor·
bachev 's. Bush played it down the
mtddle, agreeing to meet with
Yeltsin but only for a "drop by"
lasting a few minutes and only after
withholding the invitation until the
last possible moment.
By last year, Yeltsin's stock
here had gone up considerably. h
was elUICtly one year ago Saturday
that Bush received Yeltsin in the
Oval Office a few days after the
one-time provincial Communist
bureaucrat was elected president of
the Russian republic, then still pan

of the Soviet Union.
Bush welcomed Yeltsin more
warmly compared with the 1989
visit but made clear during his public remarlcs Gorbachev was still his
"main man'' in Moscow.
Indeed, it's hard to exaggerate
the degree to which the administtation was working to suppon Gorbachev and the maintenance of the
Soviet Union during that period.
Bush and Secretary of State
James A. Baker lii were condemning independence movements
everywhere, in Ethiopia and
Yugoslavia, for example, because
they were worried that 10 do otherwise could fan nationalistic flames ·
in the Soviet Union - at Gorbachev' s expense.
It was not until last August that
reservations in Washington about
Yeltsin evaporated . When Yeltsin
defied the coup-makers in
Moscow, becoming the focus of
opposition to a return 10 power by
hardliners, Bush led the cheers
when the pro-democracy forces
prevailed.
·
"I must say, in terms of respect
level, I will join others all around
the world, not just politicians or
elected leaders in saying that he has
shown tremendous courage. I think
he will have a well-earned stature
around the world that he might not
have had."

11

Bookfng PttOitol

ACROSS
1 Mal&lt;atnto
leather
4 Garden herb
9 Grumpy as - 14 Gear tooth
17 Newswoman
Sylvia 19 Excuse
20 In Itself
21 Of the
countryside

24 Outcast, once
25 Spanish city
26 Something lrom
the past
27 Poetry Muse
28 Inventor
Whitney
29 Unhappy late
3 t Briny
33 Aee
35 Mal de 36 Footless
creature
38 Stuck-up
person

40 Electrical

41
43

45
47
48
49

unn
Christopher
Reeve role
Pupils'
playtime
Vacuum tube
Exam
"For - Jolly good ..
Uncontrolled
anger

50 Guy
5 t Hard to find
54 Employ
55 Vapor: pref
57 Excavate

59 Premed sub;.
60 Victory
6t Sandwich
condiment

64 Forty winks
86 Extended in a

row
69 Enthusiast
70 - lander:
money
72 Gun sound
73 River dirt
74 - Plaines, IL
76 Ridiculous
78 Cupid
80 wu worthy of
82 Sound of pain
83 Propelled Ia
canoe)

84 "Hawkeye
State"
86 FDA's mother
87 Stan's pal
88 Kill (a llyJ
89 Nag
92 Actor Dillon
94 " -

-which
will live in

infamy"

95 Sailor
96 Musical
composition

97 Coupd'99 Phony doctor
101 Faucet
102 Took it easy
104 Do needlework
106 Surgeoo's
knife
108 Small boy
109 Marc's love

110 Auto workers '

org .
112 Steel girder
1t3 Amphibian
1t5 - Kerns
!" Maggie
Seaver")
1t71n case
1t9 ·PBS series
122 Indian lrlbe
123 Raise crops

124 MOtown
126 Arrival

128 Officeholder
who wasn 't
re-elected

131 Was aware of

133 Therefore
134 Anecdote
collection

135 Writing fluid
136 Glass coNee
vessel

139 Cadlddlehopper
141 Commandments

142 Descendant
144 Tea cake

146 Egg-s~aped
148 Nimble
150 Hair rinse

15t Make a speech
152 Summer TV fare
Somet~mg

to

smoke
154 Hearing organ

155 Wrote down
156 Play
157 Conce1t

6 Comedian
Caesar
7 Wading bird
8 Lounge9 Spring month
10 "Where have
you- all my
lile?"
11 First name In
mysteries
12 - - live and
breathe
13 Loner
14 Liqueur
15 Your and my

16 Kelsey!"Frasier
Crane")
17 Lucid
18 Assistant
22 Military
command
23 " - Doone"
30 CIA's
predecessor
32 Sediment
34 Suitable
37 Painter of
ballerinas

39 Tie

130 Repair

153

ice cream

41 Church group
42 European river
44 Came to rest

46 Of the ear
47 Golf hazard
50 Deep ravine
52 Film-festival
city

53 Word wllh
rearranged

letters
Suggest
Daisy Talk Idly
Not
domesticated
61 Famed

54
56
58
60

racehorse

62 Ignorant
63 Bravery
65 Highland hal
66 Falsehood
67 Flatter
servilely
68 Musical
program

69 Initial
71 Chicago area
73 Condition
75 So-Peep's
- animals
77 Botlom line
79 Add sugar to
81 Baghdad's land
82 Ancient
85 " Llghtsi
Cameral - !"
87 CA city
89 Worked the
garden
90 Finale
91 KrlllY 93 Unspoken
96 For men only
98 Fort Worth
och.
100 Car lor hire
103 Author or

1~0.

tt you art lemall, retired

Of'

wklowed, and need. a home,
plua decenl PIJ, tor living wbh
sn etdwly woman or If you
know aomeone of this detcrlpt Jon, Cit! 614-688-2714. Keep

2

3 Announcements

Public Nollce

9_ Wan1ed
Buy
_ _1o
_
...;_._I 11

See The Country And a.t Ptld

Whitewater R.ttl~, Wnt VIr· Good IJHd Mototlud Extr·
Nn And Gauley Rlvart. cycle. 614-446-31211.
glnlt't
On Saturday, June 27,
Call Todty For FrM Broch~o~rt. 1· Standing tlmblr, wiN PI)' t.lr
t992, at tO:OO A.M. Tho 800-83l-RAFT. Drift-A-Bit, Inc.,
pricll, call J..-ry Runyon, 1514Homo Notional Bonk, Third P.O. BoK 885, Fay.tta\lillt, WV lm-2687.
St, Racine, Ohio will offer 25840.
Uttd Moblit Homea, Call &amp;14tor aate at Publk: Auction on

PUBLIC NOTICE

tho Bonk Porking Lot tho 4
Giveaway
following:
:;-;;::-;--:;--;::::--::--::--.
1890

Dodge Grand
C a r 1 y a n
SE
1B4FK44ROLX161526

1987 Ford Mustang LX 5.0

2

hl.y, must cut,
Rayburn Road, 304-175-1422.
2 kiHans, 7 wkt old llrnala
llgar, mala black, 304-675-1296.
hlda

of

Utlr tFABP41E6HF2t4527 2 Young doga, mala O.rm~n
1!161 Ford Muotang Mach Skapherd and malt Gennan

1

d

Dr.

428

cu .

in.

IF02Ftnt2t

Excof 4 Dr.
KMHLF2tJ7JU3374761
1i84 Chovrolot Piokup
2GODC14HSEtt102U
11181 Hyundli

1878

T1ru1

Camper

Shapherd/Eikhound,
30711

304-iU·

1 WHk Old Khttnl, 3 All Black
&amp; Wtllta, Litter Train~,
ntd.
614-44&amp;.3603, O.y.: 614-446-

w..

02011.

446-4175.

Want.d To Buy: Junk Autos
Wllh Or Wllhoul Molors. Call
larry Llvaly. 614-388-9303.

Top Prlcn Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gotd Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
15'1 S.Cond Awenua, Gallipolis.
Would like To Buy Nonworidng
Walh"' I 0ryeN
Maytag, Whirlpool,
614-446-2M4.

GE, HP,

s..;,. Only.

Employment Services

BNutlful ITIIII cat, neutered,
,.allrlandiJ. 614-446-4063.

304-1,.. _1,.1-.,_H_e='Ip_w,.,...a..,n,...ted_,..-5106 after 7:00PM.
"Ont Day Diet" Ia Exploding In
The Homo National Bank Cuta, Cuddly Kltlenal •. 14 To Billion S lndusiry. Dtetrlbufor1
r-rvoo tho right to bid al Choote From. Colort: wfB, Sll· Headed! Commlnlon1 And
lhe 1111 or to remove any ver &amp; Gray, Tlger. 814-:Z56-l793 Ovanldn Paid WMkly. Markel·
lng Plln And Fr.. lnformatton
Item from the 1al1 at any Leave M11s.ge.
Pack, 1-8CJ0.3111-841J1.
Umo. Tho Homo NaUonal

aleo ruervea lhe right lo

rolootony or all bldo.
(6119, 21, 24,26 41&lt;
Public Notice

cut '"" tor llrowood,

Female Aultrallan

Shephard,

$35010ay Processing

Good Watch Dog. 614-3~2798 .

Four adorab!. puppi.., p11rwnlt
warw purabrM, 1i2 BMala, 112
Sptnltl, hlka. old, 614-ei2'.Q19

ahar5pm.

Phone Ordaflll Paopla Call You.
No E1perlence Nec.uary.
315-7'3H062.
-Munson Tranaportallon, Inc:•

FfM Kllta,. AI The Groom

Prol...lonaiJ.... ExShop In Centenary, stata Routa perienced OTA Driven. untt"'ld:
Ml, G.llllpolia.
DlgnHy And R-. Other
Ben~tllt: Comtonablt Earning
FrM Puppl•: Raccoon Road, Po4.,llal
'Eltcolltnl
EqulpGallipolis. 814-441..()417.
mentl&amp;sy To Dtfve •s.curt
Company!OrNI Customef BaN
Hoy At Rodney. 614-258-1413.
Wanted:

PUBUCNOTICE
BUDGET HEARING
Tho Board of Trvo- of
Lotort Twp. of lllofgo C...nty
wHI hold Ita onnuol lludgot
Meodng July 6, 1112, 7:00 1'\ltO mala khtana to giveaway,
P.M. Budget for fiocol yoor 614-992·2023.
baglnnlng Jonuory 11H13 will
be proporocl. All rnl-ta
Los1 &amp; Found
oro wolcoma. (614) 247- 6
3125.
;:-Foun:::::"d,-L.o;-;dl;:"oo:-;J':'oc':'ktC::-"A:-:I"CYO'a"":rd
Aleo regul1r mHting will

"friendly People "SSt.ty First
"Par And llonUI For Ex-

perlanea. It You Ara Looking For

A Slablt Enwlronm.nt Where
You Can Enjoy The Independence Of Orlwtng, The Comfort
Of Onll To Ont Ma.lllglment

Ar.cl Ap~J..::lallon For Your
Talent, T • Come To Munson
Proud, Progru:lve And Partk:ular. It You Oua:lfy, Call Today

Sale, 538 Hilda Drive, &amp;14-44&amp;-

3384
be ho hold immocllatafy fof- ;-;:;;:;-·"'CC'= ::-:-=-::::--:-klwing budget lnMdniJ.
LOST on Bethel Rd , Blk Angus
Board of Trua....

William D. Gratham
Chriotoph• T. Woflo
Oon R. Hill
Joyce White, Cl.-k

21 11&lt;

Cabin"
104 Bridge feat
105 Corridor
107 Verify
109 Wine-bollle

1~7121J.

bull calf, 3CM-ti75-2130.

"AVON" ALL AAEASI

1111'11 wfth Ul. You'll lov.: the
company. 1~992-8358 .

loM Of ShMn llrgt Engllah
BluaUck, 90 lba, bfk &amp; whitt
~k1M 1 _5 Yl'l old. A.c:tbont 1

Cruise Ship Jobs, Hiring·
$2000/mo. SummerfYNr round.
Bartendar&amp;ICulno Work.,./Gift
ahop. S1tllfTour guld .. tlle.
FrM
lrawel.
HawalliC.ribbNniBahlmaiiEuro
No e•p. neeuury. 1·206·7367000 111. 1898NI, refundable

yr okt vtclnlty C.r.on Farm,

Maaon, Juna 8, REWARD, 304--

1182-321111.

Announcements

s:nre J'?ur

t.o.t : 2 coon hounda lost t.t·
w•n Bald Knob and ~Mdavllla,

814-lm-3690.

Itt.

Yard Sale

O.ll'ollfY Plfaon Mutt Be Nut,

Truetworthy, Good With Public,
Able To Uft . Salatpenon, MuM
Be Abla To Deal wtth The
Public, A.b.. To Handle 'Mth
Monay
And
Paperworil,
Prutnttble At All Tim•, Apply
At Vl'ra Fumhura, In Centenary,

stopper

t 11 Bandleader
Lawrence113 European
country
tt4 Type or
lettuce
115 7th president
116 Diva's aolo
118 "Inner - "
120 Dizziness
121 " - Bower"
(Judith Light)
122 Collide
123 Amusement
t25 English

814-446-3156.

Drivara Halp Wanted: Cowanant
Transport

All Yard S.l• Mutt a. Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the
day before lt1e ad Is to run,
Sunday ~Ilion- 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
-.clition
10:00a.m.
Saturdly

university
Fru Adult Talk Ll01 .

1·714-662-10:17
Ona On One.

u~a.

Myrtia Bnch Re110r1 Vac.llon
Rantala, Ouanfront Condos,
HouAkttplng
Included
lndoorfOUidoor
Pools
Whirlpools , Saunaa, Lighted
Tannia Courts, Pulling Grt~ens .

Golf Pack•~.rllabla. Fr ..
Brochure : 1

8

S.lectlons. Ctil Vantlon Natwork U.S. And Canada 1~
136-8250 Of 305-566-2203. FrM
Ranta! Information 305-563-

M,Otllo &amp; Wnl VIrginia, 304-

We would like to
take this
opportunity to
thank everyone tor
all thalr help,
klnd ness and
consideration
during the death of
our husband, lather,
son, brother and
grandfather.
The Family 01
Bob Sc;hoonovar

The Elmer Proffitt
famdy would like to
upress our thanks and
gralitudt to neryone
who visited sent

llowws, tool canis,
and prayers In 01r time
of nitd: W:!J'reclate

Ewing's h

Homt,

Rev. Kenny Iaker,

frank Clela"!'1 Flol't!Ke
Allams, Ec.. nubltanl, &amp;
Ta!fti!Y fer thtlr sptclal
IH aitd klnclntss. God
81m eadt ont for
mln!stw!ng to u.
Genlo_n_

Bmer&amp;

"Loldlng

auction

service.

A lady nMdlng a home to llw•ln
with an elderly woman, only
light hNith care and houaework
,.qulrad, with p1y, 614-Hl-7016
or 614-&amp;85-3805.

A Northend, Columbus Ohio
Web Printer Ia Loo«lng For 2nd
And 3rd Shill Department Pll'·
10nal. Mult Hava Experiance In
Camara, Stripping And Plate
Mtklng Open~tlona .
S•lary
Commansur~ts
With
Elperlencs. Excellent Baneflta
With A Large Well Est1bllahed
Co. Send ffnume To P.O. Box
554 Wntervllle, Ohio 43081. All
Rapllu Conlktentlal. E.O.E.

Uctnnd

Wldemtyer'a Auction Service,
Rio Grinde, Ohio 614-2.5-5152.

ATIENTION II

Wanted 10 Buy

Portrwlt Studio Openlnga
Studio lhn~er
K·Mart Pot1r111t 9tudloe Are
s..klng Matur11 lndlvlduala
With: Protnalonalltm, Exp
WorkJng W IP\.Iblk:, IMirHI In
Photography /Children. Phoeo
Exparfanc. A Plua. We Offer:
Ptld Tn~lnlng &amp; Banellte. P... N
Bring Drlverw Ucen.., Proof Of
Auto Jnsur~nes, And Soc. S.c.
C.rd To lntervMiw. Call Pltricla
At Our HO To Sclhldutl An Interview Appolntmant 1~~2·
6313 EJ:t. 2454. EOE.

Complete HouHhotd Or Eatelaal .-ny Type Of Fumltwe,
AppUanc", Antlqut'l, Etc . .-110
Appr1l11l •vailabla! 614-2455152 .
Old marbl.., to)'l, comk: boob,

lanltrnt, pfetuNt and lumllura
O.by Martin, 8M-91J2·,...1.
'
Antlqu":
Fl,.plactt l.. nl\11, Vk:torl.t.n
Fumlturt, Bookca..., Side
Board1, llghl FlxturH, ArchltiiCiur-~1 llama, AnHque Pool
Tsblll. Wooct.n Nlcklll Ant~
quet H'IO Central Parkway,
Cincinnati, ONo 45210. !13-241·
29115.

Wanted

1

To

/Deadhead

1-8DQ...W~394.

773-578&amp;.

9

IUn~dlng

"Pak:llna.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Put10n Auction Company,
full tlmt aucHonMr, compllle

Card of Thanks

"Single Plly 1a-22 C.nts
"Higfl Mlluge Bonue Mills
"MOle! layover

3421 lor dlr.ctlona.

Tima
SN!ra
Untta
And
Campground Mamb.rwhlpa. rn ..
tress Still, Chupl! WoJ1dwlda

1

'Min. Ago 23

• Team Pay 27--211 C.nls

Misc. tala , WMk ol June 22nd,
hay baler, .om. clothing, ucalllnt Suzuki 1100, full drttl,
$815 · •nd much more. 52221
Aya Ao.~d oH 681 East. 614-667-

8-5653.

!1586

'School • 8 Mos. OTA

Gan~g• Nil, 315 Condor SlrHI,
Pom..-oy, ttarts Friday, Juna 11J,
anda June 30

Buy

1

Card ot Thanks

Wa wish to think all
al our lrlenda,
ralatlvea and
neighbors lor
vlsltationl, cards,
llowaraand
telephone c;alla
during J1mea
Mason'• tan daya In
Holzer Hoapltal. A
apeclal think you
all t~ray•ra baing
olfa
In hl1 blhaH.
Alao 1 1peclal thank
you to Dr. Alonzo,
Dr. Walker, the
eac;ond lloor nui'MII,
tec:hnlc;lant 1nd Ill
who In any way
make hll day mora
comlortabla.
Mr. and Mra.

Card of Thanks

ELBERFELD
Wllheo to expre11 Ita
thank• to all who
remembered u• with
their vlaiU, prayere,
cardo, food, flo-ra
and other tok1n1 of
eupport during her
longlllnHI 1nd
paealng_ Allo th•nka
to tha doclo,. and
nur- Ill v.ter•n•
Memorial Hoephllt 1nd
Exlanded C.re Unil
Speclalthanka to
Flaher Funerel Home,
Rev. Kakh Rader and
Rev. Sharon Hauorlllln.
Raymond "P&lt;de"
Elberfeld and

Rt.58e, Gelllpolll For 8 &amp; 10
Y11r OldGirla. 61.-446-7901J.

BUILDING MAINTENANCE SU·
PERINTENOENT

TM Alhlna Ment•l Hunh Cenl.rw, Ia S..klng Applicant• For
Tht Poslllon ot BuildinG
Maintenance
Supa~lnttndtnl .
AppUetnts Must Have A Minimum Ot 2 112 Ytll'l Trtlnlng OtExperlenee In Combination ot
Building Melntenanct 4 Build·
ing
MalnleNncl
Repair
(Ef.ctrlcal, Plumbing, C.~ntry,
Muonry, ShMt Willi, Ptlntlng ,
Plastering
Steam
Ftnlng ,
Rtfrlgtralion, Hettlng a UM Of
Auortad Hand /Power Tool• &amp;
Equlpmontl. Show Expononco
In UN 01 "Equipment UNd For
Cart &amp; Malnltl"'lncl Of Exterior
Gro:Jnda. ktul Candidate Will
Be Able To O.monttrate Suptt'·
vlaory !Admlnlstretlve Prlnelplel &amp; Techniques (Writing
EmP'oyee haluatlona, Etc.). In·
Control,

Blue

pa~Md

away ona
vaotr .,.., Juna 1at.

Print

11192. E.EOIAAP EMPLOYER.
Drivers: KLLM 1 Inc. ctnclnnatl ~­
Twmlnal It Aadlng Equipment ·::
And Lona Heul Driven Whh
RICMI 'tractor Trt~ller Ex- ·
~- Call 1-i00-i25-5556, ••

llondoy-frtday.
Part-Time

"""'nd

AI

Chrtltrnu

Tltt
World
Demonstrator. Receive 1300 Of
Chrietrnaa. lt~MY~s With No In·
VMtmenl. For More lntormatkln :
Call tM-371-250:2, Alao Booking
Part lee.
EARN UP TO S9.DOI1-IRI
Join America'• NIWMI Home

C*'nlng Comp1ny. Opportunity
For AdY1netment Into Manag•
rnant locally. Flexible Oayllme
Hourt Mon-Fri. It You liave
Good Work Habhs, Reta,.ncn
And Own Trtn~portiUon, Call
WorkEnda,. 2 To I P.M. f14·388-·
11565.
bpeO.OO.d nat bed drlvtn1 tor
lnterattte operation,. appror
500 mill rlldLia, steady haul,
home moll WNklnda, top pay •
good oqulpmont. Mu" bt 2S yrs
at 101 wHh 3 yrw vtrillab.. arA
e.1perlence wtth COL liceiWt,
aoUd driving record &amp; wadi hi•
tory. Must pau road tell and

drug ICfMfl, Call 800.228 6658
tor a.talla.

Flltbed Company Drlwera With
Needed • Paid MIIH &amp;
UfWHulth lneuranet - Alder &amp;
Bonua Program• Pro!fidedPrafllf SIMI I Aluminum Colt
Experilnce C.ll1-800-3i5-351D.

COL

Home

Pa111..

H11

0p4N1lngs For Damonatrators.

No Cadi lnwHimant. No Service
Chaf'Ott. High CommiukH'I And
Hoet ... Awards. Two C.lak&gt;Qs,
Over BOD llama. Call HI00418

4675.

Tho cloy God
homo,
It broko our hNrlt to
loeoyou,
But you did not go
llono,
A pllrl ol ue w..t with
you. Tho day God
cllla.d you hom11,
A million dmo• -·ve
crlocl,
Hlovo could hon . you,
You never would h•v•
dlocf. We think of you

often
You're In our thoughll
10

todlly,

And momory il ono ~
dooth con't take
ewoy. Your momory 11
ourkeep11k1,

With that wo'll novor
God hll you In Hlo
kooplng
WE h1ve you In our
h..t.

Soclly mloeod by wHo,
MllrglreC, Cltllchn,
Grandchllchn, olotlr
Miry, and relad-.

FUN IN THE SUN!

You Art Young. NRSS HI•
Ope-ning• For 5 ShllJI Sitlf·
Motlvtt~ Voung Aduhl 18 And
Ovet- For FuB-Trme Or Summer
Jobe Making S20D To $400
WMkty. Wa Ort..- An Erpen11
Pllld :1 WHk Training Progr1m
Whh No Experlanea Nec.... ry.
Tr1vll Wilt To Colotldo,
Wyoming, MontW, Las Vegas,
Nevada, for Summer And Te.11s
Loulalanna, And East Coat For
Wlntll Stsrtlng Today. Altum
Tranapor1atlon
Gaursntlld.
MINgtmtflt Position Awaillbll
Within e Monlhl. Commlulon
1-'tus Cuh Mel Trip Bonuus.
i=Of' ~rtonNI Interview S11 :
T.,..a MUllan At The Eeono
LodQa. On Tunday June 23rd,
11 l.M. To 7 P.M. Only. No
Phone Calle Ptaau, Par.nls
WelCome Atlntarvlew.

Gallla-Melge Head Sta/1, A Dlvl•lon Of Woodl•nd Cent.,., Inc .,
I• Now Accepting Applications
For The Followfng PosiUone : ,
Gallla County: Subsltluts Bu•
Drlver, 1 Mllgs County: Sub- ·
.thule Bus Driver, Appl~ntl'
wtth
Commercllll
Ori'olett
Ucen11 p,.ferr.d . Applications'
Can Be Pk:klld Up At Woodland
C.ntM, Inc . For Additional Information, Call Oallla-Uelg•
HMCI Stan AI 6~6-6674 Bet·
WMn 8 A.M. And 4 P.M. M-F.'
Woochnd Centert Ia AI\,
EOEIM.
H1rrts Steak Hou.., 324 Main
54 Pt. Pn, now taking ap- •
pt{catlona, plNH apply In per- · :
tort .

1

Card or Thanks

We wleh to thank all of
our friende, nalghbore
1nd relatlvulor all
their klndne11 1nd
coneldaration during
the death of our lovld
one,
DELCE FORTli.
Alltha carde, flowe,.,
food, money, lhoughll
andp,.yerawere
grutly appi'ICillled.
A Spacial Thllnka to
the ltaff of Piae~ant
Valley HoopH1~ Wlllll
Funeral Home, AI
Han10n, Chllrlae
Luoher and Chril
Slotw•rt, Marlyn Wilcox
and Heidi C•ruthere.
Byrdoll F - Farnlfieot, ·

Dorothy lllk• F1111111M,
Ellie King, Bonnlo 8mlll

2

In Memory

IN LOVING MEMORY
OF
THOMAS C.
McKINNEY
ON FATliER'S DAY
WHO PASSED AWAY
DECEMBER i, 1991
Otten our mindl go
b.ek to Dec. 9, ti91
end what h meant to
loett you, no one will
aver know.
We think of you 10
often. You are In our
thought• lodey;
And memory II on• gift
of God that death '

pert.
God he• you In hil

keeping;
Wo havo you In our
heano.
Sadly mlolld by hl1
wHe, 10ne, daughfare,
gr1nd10n1 an
granddaughter

In mamory of
RICHARD "JAKE"
SNODGRASS.
Tho final yoor
Dlddy'olfte
W•• hlnlud flllocl

who passed rtNay oa
December 12, 1990
• Born on Junt 20th

r,.d.

Happy Ads

#1 Dad

1-80~

The world is full of
wonders
Only a father canteach.
You pointed to Ihe slars
And showed us
howIo reach.
Happy Father's Day
Rtck, D.J &amp; Brian

MaNger: Mull Have
BookkHplng And er.dlt Exparlance. Send Anum• With

Reftrenen To: Controllar, P.O.

Bo•l34, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

LARGE PRICE REDUCTION OF lt4,000.00One ol !he best Ianni and modem country
homea in the area. Mother is not left out either
- 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, powder room and a

IN CITY - 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch close to
city. Pool, t car garage, 1 car catpoll, big lot,
central air, and more. Asking $50s. Call today

lor details.

now 22'll26' family room. AH cedar wood with

f455

balcony and more. For Dad
bam with lilo and leeding

- laf9' modem
equipment 115
Acr.s rich bottom and, lulh paatunt and good
fences. You need to acl now to be ifwol'vecl in
this year's Basic Tobacco Quota ol 14,669 lbt.
lorvear 1992.
1436

Loved and sad~ mlutd
By Thl Famdy

audl patience once

We knew tho .,d
cfooe.
Dooplto our ll·dntou
and our grtef,
We nev• felt moro1e
HI• zest tor IH• he

bohlnd
In Ill he did and opoko;
And ovon now, I IHI

don't

I• Memory of
Harley A. Smith
01 Father's DGy
Poppy,

8

lrY ·

pump, lncf double oltlc:hod moko for
IWrything you lhould nMd. HDI'M litl on over
4 ecroo with aiDckocl pond ond Iorge delochod
goraga. I'!OCIIO call today. $87.500.
f46t

.,,..

'

sll(t yo• wut to
God, but still
with us

GALUPOUS CITY - Ia whent you find
attractive and well maintain.d home with
lenced In backyard, alum . siding, two
bedrooms one bath, 1 large enclosed back
porch for
wann summer nigl)ta or en;oy
the c.nlral air. Also a ant car garage With
storage and much mora . Call for more info.

ihoH

Only $48,900.

1444

MINI FARM - Near Crown City ~.. 1Y, story
home with 4 bedrooms, kitchen and living

Its beu

remtmber

A Iough that llllocl
room.
Mlooocl by cllluslhjoro.l
Connie, ""'""·

aaapecious

lng ttlOctt lrtd t:hltmlng ltitchon . Mt,jliplo cloo·
olo, fi,.ploce with lnNrtocf woocl&gt;umer, hoot

POMEROY AREA - Cl\aoactar. style. country
chann . This home has i1 all. Older home ,
completely refurbished has 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, wrap-around porch , several buildings.
Situated on approx . 1 adn 1 f2 acres . Rock
Springs Road. Price toduced to $55,000 . Will

lako MH lor down payment.

1345

NEW LISTING. SPRING AVE . is lh 11 4
bedroom, , bath , 'NOOd and brick ran ch 'With
family room, dining room, den, full basomenl,
fireplace. and gas hot waler heCit, bllller s
pantry, •nclowd front port:h, ~autifui bow
window w/window war and much morlll . Only
S32,000. Call loday. It won'l last long Rl that
prlce.
t445

A GEM IN A FINE SETTING - Tho
bocfroom, 3 both homo also hla family room,

room. t car detached garage, ohop building
and ohocf. AN on 17 ec,.. of wooded ground
Asking only $35,800. A good buyl
f.428
4 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, jacuzzi, pool and

CREW RD. -Is this unique con tempomry With
~ ~rooms . 2 baths , fam1 ly nn. dimng area.
hv•ng rm . and kitchen . Two decks a!! way
around house. Full basement and more . Only

$56,900 1427

FARM ON LONG HOLLOW ROAD - TillS
home haa 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, living nn./,
dining rm., kitchen , weened front porch , heat
pump, cent air, 40'x30' pole shed. All thi s and
more on 107 acnu m/1 . Onty asking $59,900

1423
NEW USTING -

Ran c~

•tyle home, lhroo

bedrooms , fam ily ro om. extra n1ce stza lo ts,
hardwood Ooo rs. Home is well buil t. Ruhnd

area. Asl&lt;ing $35,000 .

1458

much more. Ctoea to lown. See one of our

Mnn1nv

Father's Day.
Wt tnlu Y"'
Lo¥1 yoo doarly I

cour.geand

I have to try to
why the
took you away;
~sllry lo be more
Ike rou Ia everyway.
1'1 try to lte as
aad Ulderstaad
so kind ud over
t~e bad II aD; tb
only to
I min yoa rean•rlag
me lhat all will tur•
fine; and that Its
1ot as ltad as I moke It
my mind.
I miss when you
smile and your eyes
s~ulnt almost shut •d
t~e way you hod
head to say hello,
olher stuff.
B1t1 you told me that
lOS his OWl plan
we are 1ot to
dedsloas of

5

In Loving
Memory of
Jack
Rathburn

a.mroom, dinilg room u YIMII

gloom;
But oeo 1 man with

Aug. 26, 1938·
March 6, 1992

- --

Crtdll

pllfn.

I

Howard A.
Browning, my dad

home, non-tmok..-, rtiiNOCII ..
,.qulred, 614-992-3542.

Sadly missed
Sons &amp;

Val, looking bock,
CIUI't rtellt
I hurd him
compllln.

Whon I laugh et •loki.
So whon I think of
todly

In loYI1J9 Memory of

alonal Orlv..... You'll Gat 25
C..t.,..l. To Start, Grut
81n1fite, Molt WMkenda At
Homa, And Rock SOlid Job
Security. Min. 3 Vn;. OTA Elp.

Help Wanted
c;::;h,:::ld-:car=.:-:tor~1-:y::..::,:-:.:::,d;;;;ln:-:m;;;;y :

In Loving Memory
of Our Dad,
Claire C. Boso
on Father's
"You are gone,
you wHI never be
forgotlen."

• Fathtn DGy Junt 21st

him moat

TRAVEL THE USA I
Slar1 A Prolltable ClrtJtr While

Truck DriveN, Am~rlcan Pr-'·
ct.nt Un11, Thtl ln-Hou• Car,.., For A Fonune 500 Company,
Hu Openlnga For Top Profts-

Fot hi Patriot ott.,. Oualhy
Truck Driver Training In Only 8 Your Futu,. I• Here.
WNkt! Call 1-800-388-1150. 2781. Otpt . AE-17.
Flnsne111
Aultlance
For
Quallt*l Appl~nts .

State APPfOVed Nursing Aaal•
tsnls: For A Rewarding Job AI a
Quality Nu,..ng Facility, Pill•
Slop By For Apptleallone At:
Scenic Hlua Nurslne•'!L.311
Buckrldga Aoed, 8
I, vnlo.
Or Call f14-rt46-7150.

11

In Memory

lnotud, ho

plrl;

P.M. 7Deyt,

Help Wanted

Far An Exdtlng Opportunity,

cannot take away.

':
A

Man1gamant

Your memory io our
keepuke;
With that we'll never

Elm Fuii-Tlme Par Working

FomUleot

'

In loving mamory of
ourdNrhusband
1nd lather,
CHARLESL
BISSELL, on
Fatllar'• Day, who

A..d~ Knowtad(le Of BuildIng
1 And ..rna A Valid
Driven Lletn•. Send State Of
Ohio AppiiCition And R11ume
To Atllent Mental Haith Center,
Athena, Ohio 45701-4261, A.Hn:
Hum11n Anowcea. Cloalng
Oate For ApplicaUon June 211,

Frillndty

Drivers Go To Work Immediately
Roadrunner DlstrlbuUon Servlcu, Inc. TN- 1-800--&lt;l44-6147.
TX·1.&amp;00-28Soa267
11-8CI0-8n.
5468 Compelltlvs Pay New Con·
ventlon~la
Medical !Otntal
Ntcatlon Etc .. S6gn On Bonu1
EOE.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

BabyaiUar In My Home On

vtnloty

Whh a.natlta And Growth Into

REMEMBERING ON
FATliER'S DAY
RALPH ALLBRIGHT
GARLAND WILUAMS
ERNEST E. BAKER
We milo you, Dad, and
alnv- will.
You left a place n&lt;H&gt;ne
can till.
are are other Dade In
tha world we know,
But you ware ou,. 1nd
WI loved you 10.
Mlued by Family

Help Wanted

BacurHy

AVON I All ArNe I Shlrlll'f
Spaera, 304-171-1429.

Is S11klng A.saanlva, Dynamic
S.llepeople To Worll fn The
Highly -rdlng Weight lou
Fleld. AI Saln CounHiors.
CombiM lnaldeiOPJtalde S.ln

In Memory

Wardene,

Malntanance.L Etc. No hp.
Neea ... ry. t-or Into Call 211781J-M41 Ext. 1710 I A.M. To i

WEIGHT LOSS
Centera

IM-i85--4485.

Oem11

11

Help Wan1ed
PARK RANGERS

Ezeell•nl
P•r.
Blneltta,
Tr•neportallon,
407·212-017,
Ext. 571. 9a.m.-10p.m. Toll
Refunded.

PhyelcJ.nt

N.-d truck driver with tractor
trailer •xl*'i~ne~ , local hau•,

wv

11

Help Wanted
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

toytngt

"Uncia Tom's

126 Impress
127 Copier
aolutlon
129 Algerian money
130 Released
132 Actress
Verdugo
136 Paint layer
137 Feed the k~ty
138 Always
140 Spiked club
143 "- - Clear
Day"
145 - -Magoon
147 Coach
Parseghlan
149 Musical job:
slang

11

304-t7J.I131, 304-t71-2885.

CMh.

DOWN
1 - pudding
2 Mother Gynt
3 Social mlsfll
4 "Bring home
the-"
5 Topped with

Help Wanted

Hiring SliM Aspn~~natiYM For
Houoo 01 Lloyd, F'" Trtlnlng l
Sarnpe Kit. No lnwiiiiMnt, c;o,.
tooling 0. Dollvorlng. Now

.---------------------------------------,1 50E2t35754567
The term• of th• aale lfl

L.....-------- Answer to Puzzle on Page A-6 ----------'1

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleaeant,

Gtorgla

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
ANTIQUE AUCTION

Tuesday, June 23, 7:00PM
LOCATION: DA.V BUILDING. Rt. 35 By-pass &amp; 5th St. in
KanaugaAcross river !rom Pl. Pleasant. W.Va.
FURNITURE: Sellers type kitchen cupboard, Eastlake
dresser, wicker chair, 6' church pew. small oak table , oak
sideboard , 42" round table, seed company adv. bo1, Mission
oak baby bed, Mission miJSic cabinet, blanket chest (groan
paint), brass bed. wmut youth bed, oak school desk, pme
trestle table, gossip bench, C roll desk wlpigeon holes, oak haD
trH, sowing rocker, oak dresser, primiive table wldrawor, oak
rocker, large oak hmed mirror....
ROSEVILLE POTIERY: t5' Zephyr Uly e-. f5 1&lt;2' Whhe
Rose vase, 13' Moch orange vase, Snowbarry baskel.
Fo&lt;glove console bowl, other pieces in Dona!ello, Capri,
Elperimanial, Bleeding Heart. AU pieces in good rondrtKlO ....
MISC. ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: old milk bottles (I
ambctr), 4quart glass buller churn, Occ. Japan pes.,
granieware, glass tumbler marked Erie A.A., old adv.lins, CNii
W111 isms to Include books dated 1862·1865, Abraham L11coln
iamily picture, sov. nice pes. of jewolry. apple cookie jar, Wan
ware pes, cast iron pes., old ptclures &amp; prints. Jlower basket
quilt, stone jars, old marbles, J. P. Combs stone ware stnng
holder, Hull pes., sev. pes. depression glass, Carnival, Fenlon,
collectors plates. McCoy pes .. Griswold skillets &amp; katlles,
mantle clock, apple poaler, pr. wooden shoes wladv. for
Woodan Shoe Beer Co., Jewel Tea s&amp;p, lg. Lance cracker jar,
gun rack, t 2 gal. stone crock. kitchen Iems, old wooden bo~es
old d~hes , linens, prossed glass, Gookls glass, wool carttng
brush, butter mold, many more small""'....
THIS IS ANOTHER FINE OFFERING Of ANTIQUES &amp;
COLLECTIBLE ITEIAS MUCH MORE NOT LISTED IN THIS
AD!
FOR INFORMATION. CALL:

agents today.

f.456

NEW USTINGI COZV, COUNTHY HOME And within minutaa of Holzer Hoapilal.
Beautiful home with 2Yr baths, 3 bedrooms,
large kitchen 1nd dtnirlg room , Iota of closet
apace, largo lhadocf porch, dolaohod garago
lind ato~ building. All this and lots more
induing 4+ ICIWS.
1446

CLOSE TO TOWN - 4 bodrooma, 2 baths,

,..... UND AND LOrs-....,

living, dining, famity rooms, natural gas heat.
l&gt;lnlral air. Asking $74,900.
f424

NEW USTINGI- BUILDING LOTSIII

NEW USTING - Owner being transferred oul
ol area. 5 BR. 3 bath, in-ground 20x40 pool.

4 Iota baing each approx. 1 and 1/3 acrt,

county water availabNa, road frontage along SR
554. Cal today tor mo111 inlonnationl
1441

OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL - Nice iovol
building lot 100X150 on O.bbio Drivo . City
ldloolo. City water and oowaga. cal today.
f431.
S1

WOODED ACRES in Southwntom

~od1

area. Al,..adf hat water tap. Six miles

Beautifully doooraled. cal now.

1454

BEAUTlRJL ALL BRICK HOME situated r
50 acresiTVl with 3 bedrooms , ~ving nn., dining
and 11m~y rm., 3 batho and luH basemonl Hoot
pump and central air, 2 car attached and 4 ca•

detached gonoga. Asking $124,900.

NEW LISTING - OWNER REALLY SERIOUS - Wonlo houso SOLDIII Asking $25,000

ACREAGE- From 1 to 5 ocrwo in city odtoolo.

lor this spacious old•r 2 story home, 4
bedrooms , large dining room , ~ving room and

Rall:rictad. Rural watar available . GrHn Twp.

f417
NOT RESTRICTED • Mobilo homo or homo
rNdy OCOMQO on atalo higl1way in city ochoola,
~unty

water and eeptic already there . Call

today.

f.411

Roocooo Townahlp ........80 ecru .......... $35.000
Roocooo Twp............ .... 70 ICI'OI........... $45,000
Harrieon Twp ................81 .:rea.. ,,,, .. $21 ,600

Huntington Twp .............62 oc,.o ...........S25,000
Huntington Twp........82.i3 acroo ...........lt7,600
Huntington Twp.. .......... 12acrot.......... ..$t0,700
GEORGES CREEK RD. -t . thcru mil witf1
approx. llO' mod lronillgo. Reocfy lor you fo
build. Aokilg only $5,500. Col today.
Mil
aTY SCHOOLS- 10 ac11t1 ol vacant land.

Convoniont locabon. Aoking on~ $20,000.

f.441

VACANT LANO - Lot 19 Charolalo Lake
Eotato. 2.083oc-.a mil lor St6,500.
Mota

ki1chctn. Wilkin clooet Cai!Dday.

t-113

U12

f421

to Rio Grandt. cal Now.

BEECH ST. - Approx . 24 acres wilh a beaulih.JI
t'NO story colonial home over1ooking Pomeroy
Executive style home 'With formal entry, fam 11y
room w/fireplace. formal d1n1ng room,
~asam•nt Mas rec. room w1th stone fiAiplace,
m-g~~nd pool, 2 car garage . Many more
amentbts. AedUC*f to a low price ol $139,500

' f453

PRICE REDUCED! To 1-411,900 on this nice 3
vinyl lided home with 2 batlto, living

bedttlOctt

rm ., dining nn., family rm ., din, heal pump ,

central air, baMment , 2 bams and much mora.
On 8.2 ac:Aill ~ - Cell today lor appointment.

e426

NEW USTING - WHAT ABOUT ME? I'm "
thrM bedroom ranch sitting on 1 721x150l
tenc»d in lot I have a lone car attached carpor1
plus a 12/x15 storage buildi_
ng and mora .
Within minutes of Holzer Hospttal. Call to sat

mo today. Low 30s.

f452

NEW USTIHG: AUtfOST ZACRES OF LAND
with a 14x70 3 bacfroom mobile horM for only
119,600. Col now
f.4a
SPRING VALLEY AREA io thia lj)lcious
1mtnoculoto ranch with 3 boclroomo, 2 batho,
lomly &amp; ~ ruom on levol lol AJ10 largo

dod&lt;. You

m -lhl• OM.

1464

Russell D. Wood
Broker/Owner

HAPPY HOLLOW RD. - Is lhio t and 1/2 stury
log home with basomen~ 3 bedrooma, 2 and

1/2 bath, famUy ~ . kving room. kitchen, laun
dry area, skylight, salellile system. covered
porch , htat pump, central air, 12'x12' building
and much moro. (;all for dotal&amp;.
t-125

STORY'S RUN ROAD
7 year ok:l home wtlh 3 bedrooms, 1 bath , 2 car
garage, 33 eteros, bam and shodo ~sl&lt;ing only

$45,000.

1406

MAIN ST., RUTLAND - Ia lhit attractiv• 3
bedroom ranch 'Nilh bath, kitchen, dining room,
end living room , 2 car atlached garage.
fitwploco, goa hoat. cantrol oir. On~ $45,500.
M03.

J. Merrill Carter

EM. 446-4618

Leslie A. Lemley, Auctioneer
614·388-8075

Wt
mlny01
· Love your dai!S~'"I

U..std r. llll4tcl St. of Oltle
trJA/ CW w!,.,., ID
CoactssiN St. . by b.A.V. O..ltr 5
NOT RlSPOHSIILI FOR lCCillllm OR LbsT PROPlRn
AIR CONDmOHlD IIILDINGI
111ANKS FOR NOT SMOIINGI
. ,,

••

�Page 04

32

Help Wanted

11

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

Sunday Times Sentinel
Mobile Homes

32

for Sale
' " ' - lo in11111 12 -lona
12' X 110' mobllo homo, $1500,
ol priYooy - · 304-e7S-11102 II OBO, 114-8112-2380.
no .,...ltlw .......a•.
ShuHz 15114 2brk Uvlng
\!II To 21.1 ten11 Pw IIIIo, Ptuo 1flll
Room With Elpondo, HciHon,
hnof~o Over 100 Con-. Dining R_,, Both, C&amp;, Toto!
11onoto On Ordor. Owner Electric,
storm
Wlndowt,
Oporolon, 10 Conti Por IIIIo, IUOO.
IM-37W414.
No UD- feM, No Aolacotlon.
Col V.rnon llllllng Co., Inc., 1182 SchuKz 1oh70, all •lac, 2
Lourono, sc 1--7272 Or bedi'OOIMo uc cond, mutt btl
1xl03tl2
mow.ct, 304-815-3554.
W.rcod: Drummer For e. 1987 P4necrwk 14x70, 2 bedtobllalood Counlry And 50'• room, 121.20 trNtld wood front
Rock Band. II... Be Familiar po«:h, hoot pum~. 304-576-2118.
Wllh ~a~;~·l\'
191111 A•-• O.nvlll•• 141n1
-•
Anyllmol .
2br, Total Eloc:l"", "oduc:oa
Will ..,. for tho llldorty In their ~rico! Coil 814-367-ctt39 Anor
homo, lind lnqulroo to P. 0. 5p.m.
lloll3tZ. Pt. P-nt, wv 25550.
1991
lndiM Hou .., 2x6C,
Eloc:t"&lt;h
4br, 2 Bothe; t911C1
Situation
FMndt lp 2Bx70 4br, 2-1!~
Bathe, 6t4-44&amp;-5M)62.
Wanted
RopoHOoood Doolbl _ _ , 5
Eldortr Man Homo With
Nuroo Aid Coro, Par $600/Mo. Alfallable Only $1,000 Down.
Repoeeeued Slngl•: 31 Avail·
114 448 3040.

14

rn'tr."'

Business

er.ctn. eou 1-*'0-5811-

8

Avoltoblo. Roctnor A10o. Coli
IK-24UIII7.
GlorgM Pon1ble S.wmlll, don't

Opening:

Uy

Buildings

41

Save T~uAndt On St•el
Buildinga. Faotory Ol.counts,
o.-n Forto~~~ Oddo l Endo.
\200 To 18,uoo Sq. R . Will
o.llvw Ouantlti•• Umited. Bob

6~T.!t .

Acreage

S2,aoo for tote on Happy Hollow
lane-W1t1r,

road

&amp;

lltctrk:.

$2,450 for camp 1h11 It 91U
Benet. • uti Ill lee. 304-571-2894.

wuh-nhauMlirollonl.12
, . exp•Mnce, frM ntlrn~~tu..
,. ..... K:el, 304-17&amp;4708.

Lnm llowlng, &amp; Odd Job&amp;,
114-441-185i.

IIIIo Poull'o Dor Coro Contor.
Solo, oftordablo. chlldc:oro. ll.f
I a.m. • 1:30 p.m. Apa ~10.
8af0111, der M:hoal. Drop4fw
IIUIC gme. 1111 448 1224. New n.
fant loddW Ca,., ...........227.

SU Small Lown Core, Wood
Elling inc:WM. •~m
Wll Do Ho&lt;_IM ... ng, SS/HOUI,
IM-441-0731.

Financial
21

Business
Opponunlty

!N011CEI
OHIO Yoi.LLEY PUBLISHING CO.
l'fCOI"rMnda thlll you do bu-'-

, _ wtth ~ YOl.l know, 1nd

NO'T Ia -

money ttwoogh tho
mall uniW you hllv. lnvntto-ted
tho offorlng.

A Buol- Oppo"unltv : Will

Your Employer Give \'ou A

tlG,OOOIMOnt~ AIIH? $1,000?
$200? Give YourHII A A1IH. I
Can Show You How. FNe lnfor~
rutlon. f35 lnwNtmenl. C.ll

Aoc:«clod
- - · 1.aQ0.21111·
021.

ROUTE: Got Rich
Quldt? No Wort But Wo Hov. A
Qood, SIMdr, A-.blo, Busl·
Wan' Loot. 1-i00-2&amp;41363.
VEHOfHO

Vending Route: Local. We Hav•
'11M N - lloc:hl-, lloklng A

-

Stoodr

IOO-t!IU354.

__

-4 bedroom, 2 bltha, 114 VIand
St, $350. mo, l'lf l dap or will

2 IR fwnlshed or unfumi&amp;Md.
Coblo, olr. 0..-ing Onto

..... 304 ...511-1728.

River, Kanawga. CINn I qu'-t.

Footor'o llobllo Homo pork. 114441·11102.

And 112 Balhrooma 1 Car
Gorogo, B""k Front WHh Codo•

tr/

23 LOCUST St.
446 • 6806

From Gallipot!s, Take Rt. 141, Turn Leh Onto
Rt. 775, Turn Right Onto Patriot Rood.
Watch For Siqns.

Pub fie

Houoo For Rln1 Or s.ll On Lind
OontriiCI For 137S/Mo. Rodney
Ylflogo 11-14
- - Far Solo: 3br, 1 Both, AI·

O.rage, All t.*!ric, Will

$3501mo 114-

441·1358.
IEAUTIFUL H0US£ FOR SALE
Corner Lot · 816

... In St. Pt. - " '· W. Vo.
Complltlly Renovated: 2 Full
llllthl, 3 L.orvo Bodroomo, Now
HVAC, fMiw Carp.t. AvalllbM
Juno 15 l-:t2o5.

be. ccnd., 3 BR, 3 both, LR 1
DR, FMP, heal
cov•rea
docft, pllllo. SandhU Rd. 304-

pumr,

1171-1251.
liovtng: lluol Sell! 3br" Gorogo,
Larp FtAced Yard,
LocM~.

~cell.,.l

In O.k Hill. 614-182·

t554.
Rent.. Prvperty: houM and 4
mobl .. homM on approxlmat•Jy
1121cN. Good location, good
oonctHJonc •llfllallmototy 11000
per manlln lnComl. Wll Nlum
lnveltment ... lhlln 5 yNrl.
-lblo flnonc:lng. NHIIYin, ~-anytime .

32

Mobile Homes

ts prtc:.d lor lrrmt~J~le
sate 3 boam., balh, hOI hoot, corpoil . AjlproK. 3/4 o1
1765. RIO GRANDE - Home

an acre. BeautliJI trees anc1 spot to buld a new home.

Located on SR 35. S30,000.
1736. COIIIIERC!Al or RESIDENTIAl - LAND
lo cation. Eastern Ave .
Opportunity to combine hOme and business. Ohkl
River frontage. Very nice 3 bedrm . home
wlappllancea, ful bseme~. Thls Is a money making
pruj)OSIIon. Cd lor Jlllpolnlmonl.
CONTRACT -

Sof a And Cha1r, End Tables, CoHee Table, Tv,
Sewing Mach 1ne. Chalfs, Old Trunks, Relrigeralor,
Speed Queen Dryer, Elactrrc Sweeper, Hoover
Apartmenl SIZe Washer And Dryer. Dre sser. Bar
Siool, Chest Of Drawer, Krlchen Table And 4 Chalfs
Nighl Stand, Recliner Chair. Pl allo rm Rocke• '.
Enl ertaiment Cen l er, Book Shal l , Full Size Bed ,
Bunk Beds . Anlique Oak Dresser. Glider, Rod&lt;ing
Chalf, Na1l Kegs, Prcnte Table And Benchs, Folding
Bed , Fans , Lamps , B.b. Gun. Key Board Computer,
Silverware, Old Rad10. Adam Compute• W/screen ,
Prinler, Keyboa rd. We edealers . Picture Frames ,
Anlique Picture Frames. Jewl ery, Chi na Set From
Germany. Corelle Ware , Mirror s, Book Self, Rose
Glass Lamp , Cry sial Pitcher, Soundesign Stereo, Ice
Tongs, Milk Cans, Roll1ng P1n, Quilling Trunk,
Assorted Dishes, Asso rted Glassware, Pots And
Pans, Electrica l K itchen Appliances , Whal·nots,
Assorted Bed Linens, Siep Ladder, Old Norton
Motorcycle With Parts, All Kind Of Hand Tools,
Wooden Boxes , And Much Much More.,
Lots Of Misc. llems Nol Listed

011 ~.m Actoo1 ~~­
Pike.
Remodotoa, Toto!
Eleolilc, " ,100, Nogollonoblo.
11t 111 3011 After lp.m.

tm Froodoon 1Zd5. All otoclrlc,

..,..,1«1

rettgontor, olr c:ondlllonor,,
pooch, cur·
lotno.
Good oondHion.
31!W1W101 ofter epm.

"*·

IIIII Dub 141111, 2 Bodrooml,

CASH

POSITIVE I.D.

Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer
614·24S·S1S2
Lie. 3516 and bonded.
Not Respo1sihle for ocddents or loss ol

cr•• ~-::piMing. IL..----------------1

F~, ..

-Oflor.

EATS

by Bruce

lliddlopOit,

54

(5)

.. :=

-.~E

~'f..':.o::::'f

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 386·8826
DIAN CALLAHAN, REAllOR, 44HI06
EUNICE HIEHM, REAL lOR, 146·1887
AUTH BARR, .REALTOR, 146-0722
DEBORAHSCITES, REALTOR,446-6806

531--9528.

I ,.terence. 304-882-

RCA 25-lnch color TV, larg•

eabiMt model , 160. Alto llrge

0M I two t»drvom aptt . tully

mod•l RCA aweo
record play•r-rtdlo, playa all
speed• and stzn of records.
C.ll Hoellichll, 614-192-5292 at·
ler 5pm.
catHnet

fumlohod, Ill IIIIIHI• poic/, 10nt
weekly or monlhly, ld11l for

conllructlon

wort•r1,
downtown Pomeroy aru, 614·

m.eoot or 114-1112-3501.
apt tor Alnt, 304--

S.E.L

tound tech, •tereo
wll ...nlabla, 2 speak•ra, $100,

One baodroom
IJt-2211.

uc cond, 304-a82-31112.

Wectot Apt1, 506 Burdett• St,
Polnl Pleuant, no pet1, 1 and 2

Sign•: Portabl• llgh1ed sign
$29Q; Non-Lighl•d S25i. FrN

bedrooma, 304-675-2072 ahtr
B:OO.

l•ll•raldtlllvery. Plastie l•tters
$-47.50
box.
1~00-533-3&lt;153
anytime.

Furnished

Sllll I B••ma: ThrH: l2'x 19 Fl.,
ThrM : 12..x10 R ., $375; Behin.
Th• C.b Tool Box, $50. 61~-

ln3. RIO GRANDE HOllE OR INVEST-MENT ~ 3
bedrooms, 2 slory, 1t/2 bath, partial basemet11, tty
walar anc1 sewer. Deep lot. 8Six170'.
177'1. VINTON CO. FARM: located on SA 160.

Aeslora!M 3 be«m., bOck home wibasement . Abo I
11mt Academy mobile home has 2 bedrms ., kl.,
clnlno area. lR and balh, bam w~alls, tool shed,
ct-kken house. 50 ac. JTVI. Mostly tllable.

on-

hNf-

home . Loveto; new caiJMII, range, washer ana dryer,
1~ c• garage. Naill and clean home local&amp;d 507
Sycamon~

51. $26,000.

..,a_

ffl2. HIDDEN TREASURE - SU!prlolngly low pofc:o
ol SlfO,OOO. MOIO thon 5,000 oq. n. alllvl'lg.,.,.
and targe rms. throughout. Thts wal oonstruded
home oflera -4 bedrms ., 2 balta, 14JP11r and lowtl'
!lYing, 2 wb flrepfacos, family nn ., bult·ln ldtchon
2 car-· lsi fl&gt;or laundiy.

boon ...

---prk;o.

IIC .

n&gt;'l. $24,000.

1609. READY FOR OCCUPANCY - HAllONAl
REGISTER: Vlaortan, &amp;Kcefkml conc;lllon . Down by
tho Ohio Rlvor In Gollpollo, Oh. VOI'f oiegJu&lt; turr&gt;ol·
~ntury

1787.

~RIME

-~::r•llll
1M
ISltep, IIC.,
446-2206, ....,....

hom. . -4 bettm., 3 bllh5, lbrary, useful
attic and COf11)1ete buemeft. 5 fireplaces, gu heat
wtl:h ctntral air. oarage. Romantic gazebo , patios,
beautlfuny landscaped. All lovlngty malnlaln&amp;d.
Pofertlal bed and brea)dast or ntmaln reUtantlal .
1786. KYQER CRK. AREA- 3 bedrooms . 2 balh!i,
ranch homt and cwport, outbulld~. garden spol. 1
IIC. n&gt;'l. $24 ,000.

OEVELOPMENT LAND: Lond lays

Z BATltS - Roomy
home locatod In lho oourcry. Elt1...,.. wor1t
C0f1"4'1eled u folows: new Thtnno Afllkle windows,
118Wrlty dooro, ...., --.g, hoov)' root, kit., c:oromlc:
tile entry el1ended tnto lhe ldlchtn, 18x53 deck,
cemem walks and pact See this home and slop
- . . , obowlloJO .
LAKEVIEW LOTS : Cholet lots wllh
tpeetiiCU'- view. You &gt;MI wwi mort thin 0n1. OM.
mapla, dogwood Uld IVOrgrMn · - ...... lhlll •

1631.

subulb.n para•. Also loti lrortirQ on Whla Rd.
Easy accesa to al oY: tote rd 5UbdMslon tots vii
LaKeview Cour1 on approved township owned and
malnlalned road. Utilities av-ailable. REDUCED
PAte£.

SUBDIVISION LOTS TO SHARE 1.6 C7f El.EClRIC
INSTAUATION. - WATER AYAI.ABLE

Route 2. 2 bednn. ipl. on 111 floor. Poubl&amp; 3 more
~S . Moble homa lnduOed In lhBial&amp; ..

17tS. VACANT LAND - Oft 51. At 160 dose lo
town. 10 ac. mil. S4lduskln tor 1 hill~ home. lilllles

tval6able .

..,., COUNTRY AT

1Cr01
belutlful rollng land, al larmable, wfth 4 BR homa,

"*"

1675

17.... VACANT LAND w/some lkrber. Chec« INs
out Clay Twp _45 ac. IM .

1101 . A GOOD BUY AT $27,000. E - . 2-3 BRo, t
bllh, LA, "'·In ldtchon, ~ -.,.111, gu ""'-· t
outbldg_30'11~' "'lPPit on S.58oc:. 11&gt;'1.

LOVELY 21'X10' "FRIEND·
OOUBLEWIDE RANCH with 3 BAs, 2 boths,

R.£.~)-~J.C.£ · 011

SHI~-

1776. 10·12 ACRES 11/L. BEAUnFUL ROLLING
LAHD, can be purchased as follows : 1. 2 acre•
wooded; 2. 3 acres (1 ac. wooded and 2 aau

family room, eneloaed paUo ott t8'x36' swtmmtng
pool, elec. fum.ce. A/C, All ., ON/, cllpolll, nlriQII,
(c:ll&amp;e. oven), flrepilce lind woo&lt;llumer. 2 car g.atii08

cteared) ; 3. 5 acres deared and

area, rwQio, rat, 1112 ~.elK. 8B hN.t,AJC, pallo

. In ........... - , S4111.

lion. Caito ....

1731. UNIQUE BH.EVEL wlh 3 BAs, 3 bolho, brick
and alum . sktlng, kKchen (cherry cabinets) wfth
dlnetlt, family room (fireplace), utlltty nn ., LR,
screened In back porch, 2 c.

1/ ·29

garage on C IICI. rN1 .

MUST SEEII

1n1. HANNAN TRACE SCttOOLI. Cozy 3 BR
ranch, wflh LA. DR , eat-In kitchen , 1 balh, two
otJI)fdg:l. Fuel ol t.at, r.w roof on .5 ac. rM .

1712-1713. SELL BOTH HOMES AI A PACIVIQE
OEAl locoted In Springllold To....,_,. 2-2 llory
hon'IM, coUd be uted u r.rlall or prtvMe tane.

I

TOWNSHIP? Neal, ctetn lflnyl atded 3 bedroom
hOme wMh 2 baths, IMng room, clnlng room, kll:ch&amp;n,

lamlly room am utilt)'. Jwrox. 'h acniUrrourded by
trees. Good country seti"'J. Qosa to University of Rk:l
Grinde .

Goods

1193. BAICK RANCH: Sluated on 1 oc. IIIII Uppor
Rt7 c:loHia ~"'l C.nlor. Th~...,.. ,..,._ 3
bed...,., 2 lui bollll, klc:hon lind dll*'tr .,.., 2
bodrooml. U1llly 100m, family room, klc:hon In - .
mont. 3 ear QIIOQO and 6 cor detached gorogo. Col
lor more hfom\11ton,

IN

-mont

BAI..LIPOLII"P 7 room homa, 4 bedroomt, 2 bathl,

K21 . ~RICE REDUCED: Groll homo IMfur·
ng3 I!Gm., bolh, ldc:hon, lfvfng ..... with opp. 1,000
oq. n.ollfvfng ..,.... c:.o tor opp. Plfood n 1f11120'L

110&amp;. PRICE REDUCED ...Thlll 3 bodroom brick
IV1Ch homo it~ you 1o ~ l h o plluum of comfort and dta9t El . t.at, oenl. llr,
~. 2
oppllo.-. Homo • llituotod
on 41l1tt50 1o1 end 11u 1138 oq. n. or lfvfng .,.,..
Homo • '*"""1 - - t o r c:omtoot.

1103. IF A HOME OF ..GH ITYL£ Uld tow ,_.

1108. NEED A LOT TO BULD ON In dty - -

ltnanct II In your IUIUN, ~ thtl C btGoom
Cape Cod bttck ho,.,. . Homt tl .-uat..:t on 2'1. ICf'N
Uld hU 1900 oq. " - ollfvfng -

·

1103. HEED A STORAGE BUft.OINQ to otoro your
roc:reollc:nal vo-.1 Tllll - • bttldlng to 38148
1r11 11 lflullod an 2X ..,... wltl:ll JON o torvo body
of water U'lll hu .aoMa to lhl Ohio Rtltr.

1104. ENJOYABLE to look II, tun to live In, hll
..,... ,.. futly · - n l l n ....... """" wtlh llrvo firoploc:o, 3-4 ~. lpldouo

..... nod 1n polio o1 · TNo homo · - rou
ond your llllllly. I 1~11 y o u r - · - on
I IC. 11&gt;'1 .

'* - ·

kU )I 40x150 and hal all utiNIIea on tot Prtc.ci

$10,750.

11110. lDC&amp;T10N II THE KEY TO 1t111 NTOAY
HOllE -od on Flrll A -. ~ bdim., 1:4 boh,
tomlly 100111, lvlng 100111, buomont, ll'ld 1
bctm., bolh, llldlon. lYing room, cot11go on lal. Homo
.. llltull:_. on • comer lat. Clllor ..-. appo/diiM..

1107. BUILDING LOT 40llf50 In c:11y lmill. This lot
hOI 1 2 cor block 2SK39 atrea&lt;lj on kit. ~llco
$21 ,500.

1611. 1Hfl HOllE II LOCATED ON 1 AC. 1M tolna 2 or 3 - . . , . with flllllly 100111, ldtc:hon bolfl
t:lfllool, lorgo ........ building. Thlo homo to ..•.,.,.:
lolonl homo prlood In tho $30'o. Col for -

1111. LOCATION... LOCATlON.... LOCAOON... Suc·
oeu of • butJneu It 1oa11on. no comm.rdal property has 158x150 of IPIOIIocaled on Eallem Avt.

'178S. RIO GAANDE - Homoloprfeodfor-o

Oocupying this proporl)' • I ~ boy, biod! c:c:miNciOd
Cll Wllfl. For more clllllfs on prtco lind tqulpmoni

Clll H6 680ft

1110. FRANCES JOHNSON'S OLD FARM tor Ilia
211 Ac. 11&gt;'1. $16.000.
.

40 gal flah lank comf)l•te $125.

Chovralot huck bed llnor S&amp;O.
304~82· 2236.

Wovsn

Carpet lN!her Wortt Belts, Car·
Mall

Bag•, New Uathar For Sal• 115
Or Both S20. 614-256-1512.

6mo. old miniature Schnauz•r,

KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
Flu Klllorl for poll, homo &amp;

CHO ICEOF10COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildir. and

6 wMk old 1om11o P•klno..
puppy, bl~&lt;:ult colorod, wormed,
S200, call 614-843-5287 ....

y.rd. GuarantHd tffectlve! Buy

ENFORCER It o Boum Truo
Valu. Store, 11 West Main
StrMt, Ch•sler Oh. &amp; Valley
Lumbor &amp; Su~ply Corp., 555
Pori! Stroot, Middleport, Oh .
KILLS FLEAS!
Bur ENFORCER Fleo Kllloro For
Pet1, Hom• &amp; Yard. GuaraniHd

Effoc:ltvol Buy ENFORCER At:
Brown• Trustworthy Hardware,
Stoll RoU1o 1110, Bldwott, Oh io.
New home grown cabbag•, S5 •
crat•, bring own eonlalnar, 514·
247-&lt;~m.

~d

Electric 3 Wheeled Scootwe In·

glrt'e bicycle and ICooter, $50
for both; 814· V92· JII90 anyUm•.

Hom~e~ra

~"""'""'

antique

=Ia"'uv-g

PH 61'2""1633
'

..- ""'

56

SCRAM·LETS
IMMUNE
PLUCKY
BATTLE
ZYGOTE
UPROAR
HORRID
OPPORTUNITY

Spm.

AKC Bo~:er pupe, $115, 614-7422218.

AKC roglatorod
B•tt•nhauo
Sh•phard puppi...
roody to go Juno 211h, 614·37111465.
AKC
Roglllorod
LAbrador
Aelf111ver pupJMu, shota I

German

Pets for Sale

ScotHsh Terrter t.ma~
pupptea,
•hole, wormed, paper
1.
1 lrled S2
1
AKC

"
' 501N., IS WM-nl ·
ASCA AagiS1er.d Au•trallan
Shephard
Puppies,
Ready
6129/92 Vtt Ct.ck~. 1 Fit'll

Yocc:lno Glvon, $125. 614-441·
1610 Coli Aftor Dlrll.

ANSWERS

6524 .

of Dollars.

DONNA CAl ENBERY
11366 S. St Rt 7
Gallipolis, OH.

poporo-$50, without popon·
k", only to good homo, 614·
Jll2·3802.

friendly, good w 1 kldo, cham·
pion blood line, $200, 614-992-

Package Dea s. Save
Hundreds, even ThousandS

local Sales

AKC Regialered n.d ma,. Chow,
1 112yeara old, very playful, wtth

4 t.mal• kHiena, 3 Himalayan, 1

Buildings.
Destg
. ned Ia meel your
needs. Any size.

other blby lt•m•. 304-675-4548.
Bowman'•

s......;.I!.Zing .111 Pole

57&amp;-2444.

Partian, CFA Reglslerad, 8
wHko otd , 614·&gt;12·3144 '""
7pm.

fNturtng
Building, ootlghl loll ond tot
burner lormufu. Avallabl• n·
clualvaly al Rl• Akt Pharmacy.

~~~~~~;~':.\';'W·~~s.6~: ThoHflwoylod~'" ---

1112-2786.

TO

_...... ..

a

Moclc:lnollglllnot-.
........,
U.S . Cant• tar v.tertn.f
topowarmo In • coti.
Avolllblo O.T.C II R&amp;G " - ' •
Suppty. 114-1112-2164

Know whll happens to fiNI l
Uekl

when&lt;TrZll ...

h HAPPV

JACK DR
AD FlEA-TICK
MtST'? Tlwy drop c&amp;.dl Far
dogs I c:ata. w.ter t.Md.
SOUTHERN STATES, 3104-8152780.

Moxlc:ln Fontllll .,._, $25
patr, 614-94~2526.

Stl:R.A.JlA-~t~S ·-~~

A very wtse psychology prolessor
once told me to be very alert because
it was often hard to distinguish
between life's hard knocks and the
knocks of OPPORTUNITY.

p.apera, 614-'742-3034.

Real Estate General

Real Estale General

Real Estate General

wardrobe, $500;

Plttaburgh paint ula now In

progrooo. Colling point S8.99
•xtertor whlf• lat•x $13.99
ExcerciM W•lght Machin• For gal,
gal. Burpee 1Md1 50% off. Paint
Sal•, Brand New, $375. 614-441· Ph•, 2415 Jacklan Ava, Pl. Pn,
0311.
304-875-1014.

32 locust Street, Gallipolis

446-1066

1 OU Slovt, IM-446-4211'.
1t37 WattrfiUI bedroom aulte;

tuu llza taroe four poater bed,
r:omplolo1. .rr-r wlh mirror
...., ..,.., oloof, ~ OBO. m&lt;al loft; DoOI&gt;I ooft dlnlntl , _ Ill: oc:lld oak
doublo podoolat tlblo wHh 2
,__ I cholro, bought II
$3000, "'" lofll1500; ptuo olhor
tumHwt, kJtchtnwl,. lleme,

Allen C. Wood, ReahoriBroker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReahoriBroker-446~971

Mooe Canterbury, Reahor-446·3408

VALUE • ThE MOST SPACE FOR YOUR
MONEY - And tho10's just no comparison lo
th1S ... 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, large living room,
d&lt;&gt;n , large family room or d1ning room, 21l1t40
1ng10und pool, laryo bam and IMVeral build·
ings, althis ~Ius 6.t90 acres, m~ . Roady lor
you to move mto for onty $69 ,000 . Dial that
phone now!
1617

WOW II - Did r.ou really think you could bU'j a
3 bedroom, t ~. balf1, "brick" homo lor under
$50,000? Well, you can and tl's only about 4
miles from town. Located in ~ E:JJiet &amp; friendly
nei9hbomood, this would bo a great plae&amp; 10
start houS8ksoping.
ts02

ACnVE~~~

Lotge living room, large ltilch1r1 with Nlin9
area, 3 nice size bedroom&amp;, 2 balha. Plua
spaco lor lomorrow'o growing family . 26116
unfinished family room . Added leaturoo include
nice covaf'(Mj patio, anached 2 car garage. All
1t1oso located in GIMn Township on 125 acros
at an affordablo plice of only $59,000.
1615

Jeanette Moore, Reallor-256-1745
Tim Watton, Reahor - 446-2027

Tupperwa,., ..c. All excellent
oonctHion, BK-1112·ml.

25" Rca torvo - - .......

olon, old bul good, 180; conoolo
4op. RCA roc:ooO pllyor, 140:
Pf1oM Bob Hooflk:h, 114-1112·
5212 aft• 5pm .
30" .a.c; ra~. refrtpralor, enttnalnment •end, Flnnall Cub
tractor, 304-171-1311.

Amln11 Ff118Zir, 28 Cu. Ft.
....... Hoopitll Bod, 114-4464221.

~

S.Yingo On Afl Vinyl • Cor·
In Sloc:k. 15.00 Up. lloliohln
umHIH, 8,...,.,.1'144.

Ct11na catMMI, bufteland dlnln;
tetMe.

IN GALUPOUS - BRICK HOME - 3 bod100ms,
Uving room, kilchon with dning o111a, t X bath, finished
baMmonl with lamily toom, bath, utility room and a
slorage room, 2 dacl&lt;s and 17'132' in~nd pool and
a storage bUilding. MAKE AN APPOINTMtNT TO
SEEIII .

MIN!gany.

Hondwan

!tOO. £11VIrlon Chino-· iof
1- $200. :J04.175.4!i41.
GOOD

USED

dryer~.

B5
ACRES FARII ALONG RACCOON
CREEK -Complete with 2 barns, 2 ponds and
a vary nica blicl&lt; home. Comprised mosUv of
pasture a nd tillable acreage. Thera's a 2,000
lb. tobacco base and good spring. 3 bedroom
homo with full baMment and t car garage.
Extra 2 car detac hed garage a lso. Quiet area
in GIMI'I Schools. $120,000.
t202

HOW IIANY nMES HAVE YOU SAID.... I
v.ish I could afford a homo ovo~ooi&lt;Jng tho nv·
or" Now you canl Only $49,900 VoiD gal yoo a
river view, low maintenance home featunntg 3
bedrooms, 2 baths , living room, dining room.
family room and 2 car garage plus satellite
ash. Yoo can't affoid nollo bU'j lhisonol 1618

AFFORDABLE HOME IN GREEN
TOWNSHIP! - Piclu,. yourooll in lhis 3
bediOOfll """"' localod in a family orionlod
noi\1lbot1lood thol your ltido will loYel You Ml
li!&lt;o lho tX&gt;rwenionoo mohopping. hospital, ole.
Homo offoro formal living room, 1amily mom,
laryo oal~n ltilchon, 1&gt;I balhs and 2 cor
garage . Call loda)l lo view thia home.

123:1

APPUANCES
r•h1gera1ort,

""""'""

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME - 2800 sq. ft. of living
space, 3 b4Kirooms, l h baths, localed on 10 acres
and bordors Raccoon Crook. Gtoon &amp; Gallipolis
ochools. CALL NOWIII

Steck
Type
WntlnghouH
W.-1Dryor.l14-14e-231l

OOdrooms, living room, kitchen, bath and a family
room , bedroom and bath in basement. Two car

SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., &lt;l.olllpallo . Now &amp; Usod

garage sod fenced in backyaid . POSSIBILITY OF
LAND CONTRACT FOR QUALIFIED BUYER WITH
DOWN PAYMENT.

HANDLED WlT1f CARE
Pridetul oJder home with oonvantenl in -town
location , lovingly m•intained by par1icular
ownrs. This 3 bedroom, 2 story 11oma has front
and rear porches, a 2 car detached garage,
gas fla furnace and central air. Priced to Mil al
$49,500 .
ts to

11184 DOUBLEWIDE IIOBILE HOME Only- 24x50,
3 bedroom•. 2 balf1s . FA Et.ctric: hoal. PRICED TO
SELL.

AFFORDABLE BRICK RANCH - 1/ory nica 3
bedroom home offers much more !han most at
this prica. I.Brge Jiving mom v.ith lireplaca, for·

twnHure, hNttrt, W"tem &amp;
Work boo4s. 814-446-315i.

YI'RA FURNITURE
114-146-3158

CASH
AND
CARRY
Rolrlaorotoro Sllrtlna At $319,
Aoc:llnon $141, 2d l!'unk
$11, Dlnolto Sol With 4 P
Cholro $121. OPEN: llondoy
Tt1N hlurclly IA.M. To 8~. 11.
Cf9Hd On Sundoy. LOCATED: 4
Mft11 Off Rout• 7 On Aouta 141,
In Clnlenary, 1/C Mile On Un-

!:.:i

Sponlng Goods

Rio Grondol!rMroly. -

·

'

HOME AND 2 ACRES M or L - 3 bedtooms, t balh,
living room, kitchen, fir•place, and unfinished

basornonl PRICED AT $36,500.
lOCATED ON LINCOLN PIKE - 3 bedrooms, living
room, kitchen, lomily mom, bath, now coipOl, slorago
buijdng, Y. aero M or L CAlL TO SEEII
HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553 - tt 10omt, 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, Jiving room, dining room , 2
ldtchent - on• in b~tement; almoet 3 acres, tn..~it

nos, collar, garage and aiOrago building. CAll FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE I.
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - loc:alod on Rl. 7
(Eu,.ka), 30'x36' block building with storage in
bosornonl . 70 ft. frontage on Rl. 7. Lol runs lo Ohio
River. Wao usod ao convonient ma~. DRASnCALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $34,900.00.
FOR SALE - 40 acto form loco*' 8 mioo on Stato
Route t ~ 1 on Uncoln PQ. Tho homo hao 7 rooms
and both. Thera io a bam and olhor oulbuildingo. Aloo
a lann pond and loboc:co booo.

53

units, good income prop•rty.

Antiques

Call

for

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Roa&gt;oy V~llgo II. Call
lor moJO lnlotmalion.

.,, ,,..,.,.11,

Pric&amp;d ID move quickly al $79,900.

t709

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE lliY
OUR TOLl FREE NUMBER

t.aao.tN-tOie

and den or olfico. Professionally landscaped
large lot, ingroond pool and 3 car garage. Coli
for additional information and your private

viov.ing.

1614

DON'T BE LATE II
Call

now for an appointment on this very

anractive l story colonial in Spring Valley.
Porlecl tamily home in a groat noighbomood.
This heme boosls 4 bedrooms, 2% balf1~ laJge
lamily room, living room , ('lining room , eat-in
ltitchon v.ith TV room oft ol it Plonly ol slorngo.
Patio and deck.fn back lor outdoor fun. Priced
to sellal $87,500 .
t213
TIRED OF APARTMENT UVING?
Step up to homoownorsll lor just $12,000. ldoal
for the single per10n, this 1 bedroom, 1 bath
home is

located m Eureka and offers off strMt

patf&lt;ing and a small siDroge building.

1504

COUNTRY PURE l SIMPlE - Introduce
your children h:l the joys of country life and out·
doors fun in this 3 year old 3 bedrooms, 1:4
bath homo on 4 acras 11111. Yoo'll opp111Ciate lho
2 car attachod garage and lull basement A lol

LOTS OF LOTSI - We have 9 lois in Planlz
Subdivision that have ah kinds of possibilibes.
All utaities_available. Gr&amp;at location for apart-

of housa for $49 ,500.

man! buildngs.

1214

FINALlY A STARTER HOllE YOU DON'T
HAVE TO FIX UP!I-You 1lllilt ,_10- f1io
3 bedroom with """"'lly iVplacod myt ~
rool and gun.ring, plumbing, 200 amp. olodric
sorvico and now gas lumaco. La~ge !amity
room , 2 full balf1s, conven,..llaundry mom
and pnvate pobo . Thto opportunity is only
m1nu1es from wn on St Rl 141 . Cily schoolo
$45,500.
N11 .
STAGE A COIIEBACK rn

lhio

partiolly

renovated 15 room, tum of the century home
located only 19 miles from town . 4-5

bedroomo, hugo living mom and dining mom
nice kitchen plut canning kit:hen, r.ma~alad
balf1 . f car altachod garage with mud - . ,
larye utiliiY room . N1co la100 lol in quiet'
oomrn..mity. Limitless possibilities for ontr

$38,000 .
11100.
WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOME wmt0UT A
BEAUTY OF A PRICE?
Then lhis 1968 Falnnonl T - . . (t4x70)
is lor you. LoJge lniing room, dining 01118 with
buil.fn buftot, lotgo mootor bedroom wilh 111J11..
in d&lt;&gt;sk and dnossor, 2nd bodroom, 1orgo ....,
W&gt;lh gardon tub. EndoMd loundry .,.. with
now Whi~pool wasMrlllld dryer. o..dooroHoro nico decl&lt;. OOflCftl1o blodt - .... IJIId
and storage building. l.ocoll d on • ranloldlalcw
movo lo your own lol. Ollonod at a prieo thot
can'l be beal. only $15,500111
1610

WE HAVE sew. sew. saD''!

~-

-~--

-

-

---

~=-:-'CO

WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!!!
RFAL FS UUE II'C

more

54

1 'lou!!g Aoallllrod Blocft ,.,..
QUI lUll.. 1Jtort EqlllpiMUt:
llolloo, .... h Roalotlr, CoM, Poo c-, lloltO Oft•.

mal dining room with china cabinet, eat-in
kitchen, den, plus full basement with tamily
room and rec . room . Very private backyard
with inground pool and large patio . 2 car
garage, gas heat and central air. N•wer roof .

inlonnation.
HOUSE IN GALUPOUS - 3 1001111 ond balf1, walking
chtancolo ochoolo 1nd slo..s. Pric:od ol $16:000.00.

Miscellaneous

area. Fonnal living room and dining room,
family room, 2 kitchens, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths

LOCATED IN GAlUPOUS - Vino Stroot - 4 ronlal

c~~ 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m.

Merchandise

R7i. BUILDING LOTI- t',( oc. IIIII on 1 comolol '
o1 Sill• Aouto 3251r11SholonRoltl. 1.7 ... lnom

WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE OF CITY POOL - 3

Now lhlpmoni S.mo Prlc:oo:
SKS Rlfloo, With Ac.,...
_..., $111. Jonnlngo All St•ot
310 Plolall, No• $101. &amp;mmun~
lion Avoloblo Afoo. IM-44S.tl22
KHP )'ly!ng Wo'ro In And Out
Aiel, Or ltop It AI: 21 Eoolorn
A-ue. 10o.M.·To 10p.m.
Sol ol Nort-om goff clubo.
~-· 3 PW. 1150.304-

nlonnlllon.

~onSR36. $30,000 .

AffiNTlON EXEcunVESII
Everything you noed and then some v.ill be
round horell l APproK . 2,736 sq . " · of living

HOu- tumllhlng. 112 mi.
Jor""ho Ad. Pt. Ptllllftl, WV,
coil 304-175-1450.
A, &amp; I. Now, Uoocl ond Anlklu•
furnHIH, ll11on, WY. 304·7'r.J.
5341.

Bw or ttll. Al.,.,lne Antlqu.•,
1124 E. Main St,.at, Pom~roy.
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. Ia l oOO

...._3 boctm., both, .... """'· CllpOII. AjlproX. 3/4 ..
II'IICN. BeaullultfMI and IPQIIG buld I hiW homl.

'

PICKENS FURNITURE

52

!lYing room, ldtCIHol&gt;dtr*&gt;g comblnod, lui
wlh tomly """"· aorogo 20Jt2~. gnoolloallon, Wlfk.
lng d....... of city pool Col lor mo10 ·

Nutrttlon Product a
Amino Acid Body

71/ood t_R,g..a[ty, Inc.

Household

coln Plkl.

1115. LDOKINQ FOR A

4-pc:. living room •ull•, $100;

Gena~~

Cannelbull). Inc. 45719

Pets lor Sale

AK.C
RegiS1er.d
Minatur•
Plt-..char, blk I I an, 1 tamale, 2
mal••· ready logo 6124192, 304·

otyl.. .

lams P
Food Dealer. Jull•
Wabb. Call 614-446-0231.

D• C• Metal SaltI, IIC,

R-...-Jled .... 1 etfw:llw by

b, NfA '""

Real Estate General

Wll- And Dryor 117.58 Wook,
Bvnk Bod Comploto, SB.2i
Wloft, 4 Dro- CIHolll 13.12
Wloft1 ~oc:n- 15.24 w..k,
Solo """ Choir 110.31 Wook.

1712. REDUCED $35,000. Good starter I"'ItM or
lnvellmanl . 3 bedrOOm, bath, ltvlng room, dining
room. utllty room, klk:hon . Onoollocollonl

1110. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR RACCOON

2316.

614-446-7283, 1-ICI0-458-6844.

Rent-2-0wn

1797. NEEO A SITE TO BUI.O A HOIIE7 Loc:otod tn
Raccoon To~~m~hlp , clly achool dlsti1Ct, al utlllllel
avallabfe, sep11c already on property. located on
blldd'l' rd. Nk» qulat oottlng, groaliocollon.

22,000 b4u Gibson air cond,
$200. J04-475-t424 or 304-882·

door!OtAdoot, Hiw &amp; UNCI. Uft

Wanted to Rent

1-800-648-1923

614·9'l2·n82.

Chairs.

47

Ground 1Qx31x4 Pool lnelud•s :
Fill•~ O.Ck, F1nce, Laddara,
Etc. uon'1 Bell•v. It? Call BPI

56

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
All brHda,

Stat• 304-175-2780.
HAPPY JACK TRIYERIIICIOE:

r~=~=~~~===-F-========~

Pets for Sale

Groomin~.

0~

IIOO-Iflt-:14n.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Camplll•
homo rum~·~c·
Houro: llan-S.ot, w . 8
0322, S ..._ out Bullville Ad.
Froo Ooflvory.
t .8 ac. ""' {1110' tronlogo) wtth t4x70' ~
Cloulc mobile homo wtlh 2 BAs, LA, - . , c:of1.
lngs, klchen (oafl Clblnloll) with clnlng .,.., 2 ful
balhl, utility room, elec. HP, CIA., 1 car garage,
outbldg. Plooolor plcricftlng or boafJng on - r odgo
of prc:porty on tho lfvor. This proporty !lin A·l c:on&lt;l'

1716. GET MUCH MORE WHEN YOU BUY THIS
tros!Oy polnled 3 BR roncf1 with LA, ldtdl6n ~

20 x 9 lobaceo planl bed, call

7/4-7/llm·
7 2S-i/l;

1/1-1/S. I IS-1/27;

11Vt. REIJUCED TO »6,000- RIYettlonl pn&gt;potly.

on 1 acre nv ,1. WOO&lt;t:lumer heals .note ho\111 ..

675-4153.

© l!l'l ~

0

range~. !Uaaaae Appllanc:ea, 71
Vlno St-1 ~in 1,...,...73111, 1·

-4 . TOial acreage of

10.12 acres MA.. $35,000

tell lr ama Mperale. 9ft aal•llltl
d1sh wllh Unidan eontrola. a304·

p.w Tool l..al1har B•n. &amp;

56

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
oo BNUt 11u1 Abov•
0 n IY "1111
•
·

20x48 ft g,..nhouu trama with
fana ahu1t•111 a blower or will

Antique Trunk, loom
Ruga, 614-367-1224.

245.-.21.

Merchandise

Crib, Highchair, stroller and

S/30-6/6; 6/6-6/13;

Welhlrl.

LRIFR, DR , kllchen wlbar, range , OW, utility room,
etec . HP, CIA, ll"'l'laee. lo1nyl ~ .city schools on .9
aero mil

171&gt;2. REDUCED 110,000. QOOD LOCAllON - VOI'f
ntoo 3 BR, 2 blllha, l!lOWIIr (Vr.dllo) 11'90 LA,
OR. ldldlen wsbte&amp;kfast room. exceptionally llrgt

Merchandise

'- l-o
~

v.t..._,

•

tor
"-ddc:lne apina1 hodl. round ~
tape•orme
'" doal
&amp; alL
Avolllblo Q.T.(;
il Soulhom
U.S.

Block, brlck, sewer pipes, win·

d
11 t I
t Cl d WI
ton,
ro
Gnnde,
ows,A n e I, • c. OHaucatt
• 614·
n-

54 Miscellaneous

Coneret• &amp; Pll•tlc S•ptlc
Tanka, Jet A•ration Tankl . Ron
Evana Entarprl. ., Jack1 on, OM
t.-.l).m-!1528.

51

Lot12: 2. 318 K Mtl.. Prtce $21,g()l).
Lot 13: 2.3&amp;8ac. MIL Prtee $15,900.
OUT lOTS FOR SALE...
Lot A5.322 m1 -132,500.
lot c 5 acres JTVI- $27,500.

M14. LAROE COMMERCIAL BUILDING on Stale

___. ..~ 11
Center

&amp;l4-l7't-l&amp;87.

Merchandise

VACANT LAND IIAJOA SUBDIVISION KNOWN
AS "'.AKEY!EW ESTATES"
Lot 11 : 2 25 ac. MA._ _Prk:e $15,900.

wei. Older 2 story brick home wtlh -4 bedroorTI!I and
bttlkllngs. Homo In need ol rwpalr. 121 ac. n1ll 0!1 SR
35, clo91tlo Pine Crest Nu~ Home.

54

Miscellaneous

~s,H
11Mse4atn .. l¥~

...._.

bedrooms, large LA. lull bath. eat-In kbchen. 2
pon::has, new repairs have been made to make ttls a
comlort- home. $20,000

ranch home and carpon, oulbuildng9, garden spot 1

H•ppy
Jack
Trtv.nnk:ldrt;
A-...... n~-- to • eftedtwe by

1'\o-u

114-112401. INwt meutgt l

17S.. SECLUDED COrTAGE FOR TWO - 2

1711. KYGER CRK. AREA - 3 bedrooms . 2 blllhs ,

1763. HOME • CABIN I FUYEA BOTTOIICJIIAMM·
ng Of*&gt; River. $37.000. 3 bodrm. rart:ll, lui llvkled
bas 1"'811!:, 1 '~ bllh, bulking. Cly.

... -tell-····

priYIIt ,..L ~ l'llos
• ....... hr ........ lol

Nice, clu.n 2 or 3 bedroom
houH. pnflr prf¥olo oolllngl

lnsulaled. Vktw ol Olio RNer.

bedrms., 1 bath, LA willnlplaco, dining rm., bttll·ln
kit, tst lloor laundry, bock poltfl end fu! b-monl.
Deep kit wlh ertty from lilly. Bel you'llavl !, too.

Aololl Or OH!co Spoco Avolloblo
Lofoyllllo ..... 614-446-4222.

SIMPs 6, tnth ....

1860. REDUCED $25,000 - 2 or 3 ~rms ., kl.,
range, Alf ., suflXllth. lull basemen! and oara~Je . Wei

1110. REDUCED 145,700 - In lown loclllon, 2

Loll, $85; hom• rent all, $235:
8*"2·2187

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

1630. EXCELLENT A~ARTIIENT BLDG. liVEST·
MEHT: Good rnonoy mokor IN TOWN. t.orvo opl.
bldg. wth 3 1wo bedn&gt;&lt;&gt;rn opts.; 2 ono bodrm. opll.
plus • oallogo wlh IWO - n i l. Thll propotly hoi

and t&gt;eauurur arched windows. Arsl ftoor laUndry.
Altachod 2 e a r -· Two
wllll ~5.4-tl ~- tWI. 11 you lkllndW~allyyourNIIT'II can
bo on ths mdx&gt;K. auatlllod Bu)'ers orly.

1741. Mfllllt.EPORT ANYONE? - $23,000 wll buy
this mepttonally nice 3 bednn., 1y, balhs, 2 llory

Cauntry Mobil• ~arne Pari., Rt.
33N., undar new m~nagament.

w-....

lotal rooms with thnle battl'ooms. Foyer wlh open

......y. largo lYing ..... wlh woodb&lt;J!Mg flropfoao,
foonal d'*&gt;g room. iP&gt;urmol ldtchon, f.mty 100m lrKI
game room shMo
flnlpfoce. Solllfum wit 1o1
you 91l)o)' Four Seasons. Fow ov&amp;r!Ued bedrooms.
t.wlor bedroom hu Cllho&lt;hl cottng, w1111&gt;oof bllll

Spa C8 f Or R enI

· CHANNEL MARKER RENTA15
lid Myrtle ltadl
New ..... riHfYaliatls

- · BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN wflh c-.nt
lncomo. Lc:voly .... homo pluo
llvl'lg - ·
lef'l. Licensed for 10 re.lldents. AU furniture and
oqulpmont lncfllded, 2 bodrm. Falnnonl home
w/Ofllden tlm and fumfture. 3 ac. nv1 ..

----------

•••o.
-

46

1802. CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Neal clean
c:o110go one"ng 2 bodrms., t blllh. good lnaulallon,
metal lklng, newly d0cC&gt;r111ed, f outb&lt;J ..tng, tjMden
llpOI, 1.61 IC. IM. Hool&lt;up lor mablla homo. fhls Is lor
mo end "'1 gal. Groallocollonl

W

rlpool
ash•r &amp; .... 7 •r,
Condition, Both: $200

"I gal my start in the laundromat business
B Ulid Ing
Solar AMI For t6x36 ln-Gtound 55
by w1nning these on a game show!"
Pool . 614.JII8-91fi9.
Supplies
Roome tor
rent· we•k
or month
91oml
at 1120/mo.
Galllo
Hotot.. 1-------;.._--~---------~
I ,-.....,.....,.-...:..:..__,-__

Stooping 100mo with coaklnv.
Atoo 1,.11., opoco. All hook·u~o.
CoN oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·7'r.J.
IMI5t, Maoon wv.

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 24S-9S7S

Whl

Good

3040.

br'
..-:104-18.2-2568.
whh
cooking
prtvlllg•.

•1

LYNDA FRALEY, REAL TOR, U6-6806
MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOR,~I-6806

Merchandise

Pintle And M•dal Culv.t 6 Inch

Rooms

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THl DIFFEREN(E

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Thru 60 Inch In Slack. Ron
Evant, Jackson, Ohio. 1-300-

North Fou11h St. Mldcllepon. 2
lA
rum~
lpilr1ment.

45

54

Merchandise

lng fumlohod, ullllfl• lnc:!udod.
304-87H5113.

=-"

wv

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE® by Larry Wright

1 bedroom trail• AC, everyth.

Real Estate General

Prtme

1785. POINTS OF PERFECTION around lhls
waclous home located W\ an exclJstve lf81. Eleven

aopoil. and INit -

Thursday, June 25, 1992 AI 1:00 P.M.
The Personal Property Of The Late Violet Cox
Household, Antiques, Collectable And Misc.

for Sale

In

CHOICE NEKlHIIORHOOD plus 001111-nl
to ShOpping, hoepllal, etc. lovely home oHtl'l 3
bedrms., ldtc:hon, fomly rm. COII'b., 2 boths, • garago end In-ground pool. Tho lot bockl up to a
wooded...,. and on... pmacy.

clfuction

81&amp;-1201aft• 5:00PM .

bedroom

~mo., IM-HZ-1137.

112. DEUGHTFUl AU BRICK BEAUTY- Benor be
on Eorty Bini &amp; cot! on thlo home. LOCifed In 1 lovely
nolghbolflood. 3 bodioorno, COUliJY klc:hon, oa"*&gt;rt·
lble LR, llmlly rm ., fufl dMded buemerf w/outsJdl
erlty. 1 oc. IM, Kygor Cr. ochaok. Sp1c &amp; 5pon 1re1c1o
'out.

non. so·s

unat1eched garag•.
G.nln~l ak gaa heal, new c.rpMI, aJ)P'ianeee, riding mower,
tot5,bot!. tor o~polmmont 304·

tfletoric., AIM

Cf?

.
RESIDENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL · FARMS

full basernent,cly schOOls on 1 ac . M!\.__Cai!Of loal·

20120fl

Rln1

/?

\::!)J'lUb'l,. ~ (;;) ~k

1711 . NICE TO COllE HOME TO Ill llrldt JOnd1 In
quiet nelgl'tK!mood wkh 2-3 BA, •111-Wl klchen, earpel, 1y, bllhs, lUll oil ...... -.c. sfio9ed 1001, Cllport.

) b.clroom remodeled hom.
outakM GalllpaUa chy llmha .
fl.-.nch doot-. hugh approx

~

..dl ~

today.

Slclng.

2

SNAFU ®

Apanment
for Rent

1325111o. Ptuo Soc:urlty O.paoit Reference And o.po.tt A• Centenary ArM Or Rio Orinda:
qulrocl. ll4-448-t518 .
Nloo 2br Stove, Rofrigorolor,
And IJIIIHioo. IM-441-&lt;Im.
Wollr Fumflhod. No PotLHou11 trailer tor ,.nl on St. Rt. 2 BR oportmont• In lllddtoport, 123Mio.IM-448o8031.
newly remoda~. low utllhi••·
143, 304-182-2804 call 1nytima.
no plllo, $220 por march, Fumlohod A... ~~ I23Uio.
In the country, ga• tuppll.cl dopaoH roqulrocl, IM-992-2311 Ulllllloo Paid, OUT lloc:ond
trom well on property, chy dayt
A*'IUI, Galllpolla. 114 US U11
water, Columbu1 and South•m
After 7p.m.
2bdrm. apt1., 10111 tlec:lric, ap- J ::--:-'--::-.,..---..,-,:-;-...,..
- r . BK-111!1-3113.
pllancu fumlahtd, llundry On!Cioue living. 1 and Z bedroom tacllhles clou to Khool room apertmenle .t Ylllot
Apanment
In town. AN!IciUon• nallable Manor
and
Alvema.
al : VIllage ·orwn Apte. 14lil or AJ)IrUnent•ln Middleport. From
for Rent
c:olll14492·37f t. EOH.
$1M. C.lll14olll2·771t £Ott
2 bedroom apt, $350. monlh all BEAUTIFUL A~ARTIIENTS AT Lorv• Fumlohod Eflfclonc:y
utiiHI" po!d, no HUD, 304~75- BUDGET ~RICES AT JACKSON Aportmont, LAIBR, KHciHon,
2722.
ESTATES, 531 JockOon Ptu Dlno111, Both, Conirof Nool, Air
A•daconted.
3 bedroom apartmenl In Mld- from $1t21mo. Walk 10 •hop &amp; Conditioning,
moviH . Call 814-«6-2518. EOH. Phone : 814--448-2602..
dloPG", Bt4o992·3187.

IX balhs, oll·ln ldtcnon, LR, OR, FR. lui buomont
new furrece, window AJC, alum. sklng. AJso larQi
87Y.x55'
bam and 2 caJ gar~ge_ Take a 1oo1&lt;

3004.

'1!1'1 Kel.., Or., Qalllpolia, Ohio
45&amp;:11, Tot.,.hono : 114-448-3385,
Pr6c.: $52,000.00. Uvlng Room,
3 Bedroom., Family Room, 1

44

Apanment

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Fumllhld apenmenl avallabl1

counlry hom• In

loll Marquen• Av., 5 yr• okj,
Ill brick ~T~tinl•n~~nc:e II'N
~. C bedrooma, email living
room, dlnlngroomJtamlly room
comblnaUon, lUtcheR, utility
rbom, all one t.v-.t, cov•rt&lt;l
P.uo In back, privacy t.nc• ,
g.n~p, shown by appointment
only 304-475-1231.

eono-

2 Roomo A Both, Oownotolrt,
No
......
Qulol,

Real Estate General

wooded arM, 4 miles from Otdo
Nnr wllorv• block bldv. good
~ small buelneat, cht wal•r,
f\11 b o - . $311,000. 2.71
IICt'M, 30 t -

June 21 1992

for Rent

cto..,

&amp; A ctl

Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson
614·698·6706
Licensed and Bonded in Ohio
Assoc. Frank Hutchinson
614-592·4349

1-«J0.22&amp;-

44

for Rent

3 Blldroom MobiiO, On Soc:ludod
lot, CA, ClaM to Golllpotlo,

Real Estate General

Public Sale

Ovt ol State Bvr.ors l!ltaJo ~tiYo bank
lottor ol tr. .llot dtodi DC&lt;opllllco.
Not rospaulblelorloss or a&lt;ddoats.

Homes for Sale

a bldroom

2 bedroom trailer O.IIIJ)OIIa
Fonry, WV. 304-171-4044.

Nice motN,. honM 1pece naitabl., c.ll Max, 1-a00-83~3238.

Oak two piece breakfront cupboard; orig . blue paint
crock cupboard with one door, cupboard is wood
pinned ; bakers cupboard ; oak secretary; oak
sideboard; walnut Queen Anne slyle bedroom suite
with lull bed, chest on cllest, and mirrored dresse1, all
have bur l walnut fronts; 6 piece art deco slyle
bedroom suite with matching twin beds, vanity,
drosser, chair. and bench, all havo or;ginal stenciling;
oak llatwall; oak filing cabinet; oak highboy dresser;
oak harvest lype table with pull out extensions;
washstands with towel bars; ladies drop front desk;
oak dressers and other dressers ; platform rocker;
laney walnut stand and other stands; recmd cab1nets;
spinnet dllsk.
SMALLS AND COLLECTIBLES: Oak calendar
store regulalm clock ; oak wall phone ; 72 p1eces of
Narumi Occupied Japan china set with FNC in a
wreath : star wood barrel churn ; Donnaghho jars and
other slone jars and JUgs: b lue and whrte granrte pan ;
dovetai led copper piece , ca mbridge and othe1
glassware pieces ; Redco 2 gal. oil can; aladdin lamp
and other oil lamps; glass churns: Billy beer and other
beer cans; blue crock bowl and others; old post cards;
old scrap book ; hook rugs ; wheat crad le ; old cameras
Baby Brownie , Rolls , Agfa, and a few others; bottles
Lyd ia E . Pinkham 's, Capit al SWCo . Col., HK
Mulford, Swidler an Bernstei n Chicago, Ryan botll 1ng
works; pictures; other misc. ~ems .
Appro1imately 50-75 pieces of furniture and olher
consignments arriving lo lata Ia advertise . Food
available. Preview at 8:30 a.m. day of auction . Cal l
alter 6 p.m . for more information.
Cash or God! wit~ pashlvoiD.

Real Estate
31

for Rent

rwcently
rodoc:orotod, carpal, 101 &amp; dop,
no pata, 304-4175-$162.

houM,

L.owr Alnr A01d, On Land
Controc:l. 114-111?-3044.

SUNDAY, JUNE 28 at 10:00 A.M.
Located II 111'1es West of Atheu, Ohio. Take US
SO &amp; 32 West •d exit Olto SO West tawanls
McArthur. Audia• Is a 0..-ter of a mile 01 the
leh. Sigu wll be posted.

Cooh ......... 1·

C.totog.

bedroom

Apartment

Llind For S. ..: Porter A,.. 6

ALBANY, OHIO

Acc.Mt"-. Monthly l"'lyrMnll
t..w Ao 111.00, Coil Todoy FREE

c-

Mobile Homes

llpoll•. $160/Mo. $100 llopooH.
614-441-3670, IM-148-1340.

ANTIQUE AUOION

WOlFF TANNING BEDS
New Commerclal, Homt Unlle,
1;1om $1111.00. LAmpo._ lDIIon•,
NEW
IRS2.

42

Houses for Rent

lbr Hou.. Fumi•Md locriled
AI : m RNr Third Avenu•, 0.1-

2

44

HUTCHINSON AUOION INC.

Country

Homo, Fer Full Coro Eldorly,
Wllh Prlvlt• Room, 12 YNra
Exporlouc:•. IM.Z!Ie-10111.
lmorlor1 oxiOrfor &amp; roof poliCing,

Reuon~bla.

:::-~~ 21th St-. 1350. pfUI
' 304-t7$.3311.

Business

35 Lots &amp;

Mobile Homes

III- - - - - - = = = = = U = : O : " = = = - - - - - ,

haul ,.... taao to liMo mill julll
coil :J04.1Jt.tl57.
Hive

42

Houses for Rent

for Rent

Rentals
34

_

Witt Bai&gt;voH 1n 11r Homo. Fonoedl In Plly A,... Aer.rences

41

wanted

O.J. WhKo Roo.~, 18 Acroo
Training
S500 on ~ut&lt;hoo• ~ric• Of Any IIOIIIIy Woodod Wtlh A BMutl:
New Home At EllA Home Can- lui Building Sho. Nlc:o Love!
AeCqln
Nowii!SouthNIItem t•r, ar-t Selection, Free S.t-Up Drtv.way,
Aural
Wal•,
· - Cotiogo, Spring Voll•y And Dollvoryl Colt 614-772-1220.
Eloc:t""Hy,
And
~Sorvlc:o
Piau. Call l*Y· .,. . . 436711
AvallabMI. 3 112 MIIN From Hoilloglll-lon llfi0.46.12111B.
U111Hr trolflr, IIIIo lor ioodlng Zit' Ho.pital, Slt,ooo. &amp;14--44-6garden tractor or C wheeler. EJ:. 4127.
coltont c:ondHian. 304-182·2811.
__;,.;.__.:...,_
18 Wanted to Do

----------1

Real Estate

New 811 born typo bldg $400. Want~ To Buy: Lot On A Stal•
11171 R0111r11, oil oloc:t"", 3 bod- Route NNr Qalllpolla. 114-446roomt, undlrpennlng. 8x 16 ft 112011.
dock, 304~75-5413.

-g•.

abMI Onty $500 Down With Ap-

36

for Sale

•zeo.

12

Mobile Homes

June 21, 1992

446:E44

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·9555

Loretta McDade- 446·7729
B. J. Hairston- 446-4240

Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007
Son Games - 446-2707

�Tlme&amp;-Sentlnel
56

Pets for Sale

OH-Polnt l'lea18nt, WV

61 Fann Equipment

What's .a dltfvlnl about tM
130 ' 3 Poin&lt;
Hoppy Jock 3-X lloo collor'l I Jolin o-. Modot
Good Conworkall Contain. NO synthltlc H"ch, PS, F -1856
·
pyrothroldo. For lo cotol diUon, C.IIIM-446SOUTHERN STATES :IOWT3KUBOTA
2780.
Sa• Part. S.rv~

58

HURST TRACTOR SALES

$!,~

ROU1a 7 North, Mariltta.
814-31'1-4151

Oak Tomato SI•IIM. 4ft, 5fl. lift.
18 Inch Grade Stlbl 614-448- New HoUand hay bini, New H~·
1060, 2 111111, Wol1 01 GoUipollo land auper 'n7 forage harvutar.
On Rt.141.

STRAWBERRIES· You Pick, Wo

Pick.

Contalnen

71

Autos for Sale

1888 CtMv. C.vaW.r, PS, PB, AC,

1i64 Sulek El1ctra 225, 4 doof,
Tewkablry
Barber
Shop,

1981 Mereury Lynx, 42,000ml.

71

....,.,.-,-,-,-:::--:---:::-~=
Pomeroy, OH., I14-992·59U.

:za HP 4 WD $61195; 20 HP 4 WD 1972

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Autos for Sale

Transportation

Exctlttnt
ahor. 402 Cran..cam. 304-675381 •
Monte Carlo.

4dr, 114~37 Aft• 1:3Dp.m.

w.. up Ml, top c1v.d ln. runs
good, 1!50; blu. flberglaM
truck tor, fits Doditi O.kola
4'x'8', pa d $700, taka $350, 1\4-

nallonll tractor tNC:k, $8500 for
both, 114-JIIU:MI.

1fJII Chevy 112 Tan Pk:k-Up, a
Cylinder, 3 Speed, Runa Good,
$1oo. 614-256-1321.

0411-2038.

1981 Chewy 4ll4, Radio Slick,
RlbuiH Tra,., I Huba. S1,89.!1.

Livestock

614-440-4141 Aftor I P.M. Or
Weekend1.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Lives loc k
61 Farm Equipment

3 YHr Quart., Horw, Make Sor·
rail, $500. 614-446-M56.

2 Inch Ga Wallt' Pump; 18Ft.

4 Hollteln Sprlngert CloH Up,
614 448 4053.

2198.

2 row cultivators, hly wagon
8•16, P'ow, dltc, grader balde,

many ott.r Items, Cub tractor

wlattlchemanta, tobacco plants.
304-«li"M-23211.

hit h

ood

•""l''• 304-675-356G
pt
c • g or
shajMu $250.

675-1730

Fann gat•. Mad gat•, tMd
bunke, 304-895-3571 Of 114-247-

2445.

S© \\4U N\- ~ £tf'6"

GAM I

1987 Ford Chlrtot Conwettion

0

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words below to make 6
simple words . Print letters of
each in Its line of squares.

1989 Chevy 4•4, Air, AM11=U
c.a..tte Cenlury Topper PS
PB, Hhch, 5 Spd, And Morel
5.5LOOO MIIH. Very Nicol $9,100,
o.•.o. 11...48--1970.

Angu1 And Chi-Angua Black
Bull•.L Reasonably Prlc.d. Slate
Run nrms, Jackson, Ohio, 614286-5395.
Last Chance to INM tobacco
Julr 1 dNdlln•. Morvan's Farm
wil psy 25 ctnll or Mason
Counly Ouola, 304-937--2018.

One :ZBOtb. I'M Tamworth Mr·
vic• boar, $100, 114·985-3565.

74

1978 Kawaaakl LTD.t. 1000 Lot a
01 ChronM, $800. Yhone : 614·
258-6692.

1911 Honcq Goktwtng . 614-256-

&amp;687 Ev.nlnge.

1915 Dodge Pr c F t tor 314 IOn
otekup, loodod, good

1982 Yamaha 750 CC, Bnt atlor. 814-4*-0782.

3004.

1985 Suzuki Madura 1200CC V-4,
W.llr Cooled, Shaft Orlw, New
Tir11, Excellanl Condhlon, 614440&lt;14911, 814-448-311:14.

1985 Ranger V-6, With Air, 4

Sfllld

O.ord~vo,

$2,615• 1180
Font F-100 I Cyllnctor, 4 S-.
12,000. 114-44&amp;-77'17, ~~
11341.

1984 JMp Cl'teroha, PS, PB,
AM/frll , Runs, NHds Work,
~ 650 614-~6-1507

•••

.

"'

1984 JaiU Gl

.

D~,

1990 Pontisc LIM11na. AC, PS,
43,000 mlln. 54800. Very CINn.
304-458-1S42.

5 Speed,

$'1,250; 1969 VW Bug, $650. 614367-0'106.

1934 Plymouth Thrlsmo
Sale. 114-446-0614,

FarguMn T-30 Tractor, Good
Tlrn, Same N.w Parle, With Or
Without Brush Hog, 614-388-

F

or

90 Ford Probe GT, 2.2 turbo,

5sp.,

adjustable

MetaiUc

Mldn!aht

auepenalon,

Bh•,

air,

1HI Bronco II, 4WO, slr1 5

cond"""'·

lplld, uc:oltont
18900, 114-112-1713.
1111 Chevy S-10, 4 Cyl, • Spd,
BIKk, OrMI Condition, 40,So0
1111-. Poy Off: $1,200. Un&lt;ll

114-388-1220,

cr\Hst, till, PDL, PW, power
Nit, trip computtr, powtr mlr·
rort, Alpine CO, only 291(, . .
king 111,000, f14..949-2534 Of'

1:30p.m.:

614-62-3671.

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·a

Lincoln Town CarL 1977, Excel·
lanl Condition, Ralph

8113.

How•.

I
I1----r:?~l--rl--,l--,lr-1
l
ZTOGYE

76 Hondl 50014. Runs &amp; looks
good. $550. 304-576-2056 before

A very wise psychology professor
once told me to be very alert because
,..- -0-P-U_R_R_A_'Iil was often hard lo dislinguish
-~-T-...;...r.:--r-r--1·between lila's hard knocks and the
knocks of ...........
1 B
1-·

II

19

II

•·

Aft•r

:30p.m.: 114-388-8831.

I II II II

I I

I

1---r:R-:-Qr:-0:-TH_Tl_RT""--1
0

Jackaon Ohio, 114-28e.5M4.

1182 Ford EcoUnt Van E·150,
189&amp;. ~7$-2218.

Shop K..,ny'e Auto C.ntsr Fot" A
Good Clean ua~ Car, Upper

1181 Bronco II, XLT, Asking:
$4,200; 19U Bronco II, XLT, Aa-

River Road, Galllpolla, 614-446Q971.

Motorcycles

1912 Chevy 5-10, V-6, 5 apd.,
$1,1100, Flrm. lf4.2q.sse4.
~ truck cemper, ••PI 8, 1111
conlalnad, wtll ... ...,.... •••
$5,000. or bell offlr, 304-895-

•

•

•

•

.

•

81

Home
Improvements

All typoo muonry. brick. block
WD, AC, Onco Owner, 114-446- &amp;
aton.. FrH •Umat... 3041121 For Dotty 01' Cia~.
773-M52 .
1989 Allro Van AT 8,000
BASEMENT
$13,500; 11111 Comoro AT,
WATERPROOFING
$4,500, Both Excellenl Condi- Unconditional lifetime guanntion, 114415-2510 ,lft., 4:00p.m. tM. local r•'--nc• fumlahad.

I
I1-:--T~1--,.,.1~--r-1.,--1-r-11

0

21

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

2o30pm.

15Ft. Fibergla• Fishing Boat

With N.w 7 112 HP Motor &amp; New
Sell. 114-311-0507, 814-367-7800.
19A. End Boerd Motor 8011
With Trailer, Good Condition!

Hng.

Of'
night.
Wat.,proo-

111111111111

-

- . ·...-·-

'&lt;

~ .

C~naday
Realty

F"""""lon Work, Rooilng,
KltcMnt And Bltha. FrH E.l-

446•3636

tlm.tt~l Aelertlhell, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 614-367-0518.

Hlck'1 Rooting: F,.. Ettlmatnl
Phone: 614-381-81M4.

ANY HOUR

J.W. Construction. Room Ad·

ditlont, Roota, Dackl, Siding
And All Typt1 Of EXI.,lor And
Interior Pafntlng. Will Give Low

Bid. Llcenstd. S"-24$.5071.

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-100537-9528.

Rolioblo

Wollpoponng, Com-

merclal And A•ldential .
"Fne Estimates
"Eiperienud
"'uallty Work
6'14-44&amp;-7n9.

Ron's TV Service, llpiClalizlng
In Z.nUh 1110 MrVIclng most
other brands. HouN calla, also
some applilnc. rep.~lra. WV
304-576-2398 Ohio 614-446-2454 .

260 Chevy tng . All •qulpmMtt .

Exc.llenl condition. $6500. 304·

l73-2Q24 after 5pm.

opw~ bow, 180

Sopek Tonk Pumping $~LGotllo
Co. RON EVANS ~NTER...,tSES,
Jaeklon, OH 1-800-637-9528.

J.S. lhrlne Servlcti New Mar·
cury Englnn In Stock. Parts &amp;
AcceuoMM In Stock, Factory

Trained S.rvk:.. &amp;14-256-8160.

Will bulkt patio covara, deck•,
scretnld fOCirM, put up vinyl
•ldlng or trail• •lrtlng. 114-

Auto Pans &amp;

Accessories
llcldoOI TroOIIftllulonl , UIOd

: :l"""'~
l~Jf

T

Home lmprov.mants:
bperience On Oldw I
Newer Homaa. Room Addltk&gt;fts.

1984 1i: 112ft Checkmate Aluder.

76

~-

~-...-

v..,.

BOATERS

Real Estate General

. ' ' . .*"
,,•·c.

Cur1le

$2,000. 614-245-5152.

SS, loll of •draa, excellent
condftlon, leu thin 17tlrs., 614H2-t098 .... 5pm.

klngo 18,000. 114-441-4731.

FrM HtlmM11. Call COUld 1·

614·237~, d.ly
RogaN a..ement

A.arttlon Motors, rtpelred. N.w
&amp; r.U.In motors In ltock, RON

for Sale

C.'-brtly,

Sunday

YEARNING
FOR
A
BEAUTIFUL OLD HOME
TO RESTORE? LET US
TAKE YOU ON A TOUR
OF
THIS
BEAUTY
FRONT ENTRY HAS
BRIDAL
STAIRCASE,
REAR ENTRY HAS A
WINDING
3
STORY
STAIRWAY THAT TAKES
YOU TO WHAT ONCE
WAS THE SERVANTS
QUARTERS ON THE
THIRD FLOOR. THERE IS
A BALLROOM
WITH
MARBLE FIREPLACES,
UVING
ROOM
AND
ENORMOUS
DINING
ROOM. KITCHEN AND
STUDY ON THE FIRST
FLOOR.
SEVEN
BEDROOMS ON THE
SECONO. MUCH , MU CH
MORE. YOU WILL HAVE
TO
MAKE
AN
APPOINTMENT TO SEE
ALL OF THIS HOME.
ONLY $63,000.

JET

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1990

wv

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

1987 JHp Chtrok•, 5 SpMd, 4

CUPKLY

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Services

Von, 65,~ mll11,_""" kyt.,
good concmton, I81W, &amp;14-11926326.

- - - - - - - E d i t e d by CLAY R. POLLAN

cond. me

9 Cowa, 10 C.lna, I Chi Bull,
$10,800. Coli 614-388-1352.

ddleport-Galll

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Gehl 15 grinder mlnr. 304-273421$.

63

Electric Hay Conwyor, And 3
Point Scoop BueUt. 814-371-

nznn

June 21, 1992

WOlD

1973 Cor'latla convar11ble WI lk·

Provided.

245-5'171.

THAT DAILY

tn hard top, $9000, 614-9492893.

Opon 8-1 M-1', S.1 1-5, Ctoood
Sunday • Taylor"e Berry Pilch,
Karr Rd. 61~4415 8612. Or 614-

4 h B sh u..... 3

72 Trucks for Sale
1850 lowboy trailer~ 1m lnlw·

1992

June

245-1152.

&amp;

Nbuln, 111111ng 11 $99; lront

82

whlll drive 1t1rtlng at: SMt.OO
614-24~ 114-1192-12113.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

COUNTRY AT ITS BESTI LUXURIOUS A FRAME. HAS
BRASS AND LEADED GLASS LIGHTING, ANDERSEN
WINDOWS, ITALIAN TILE IN FOYER, BUILT-IN
STEREO INTERCOM SYSTEM , 8 ROOMS, 3
BEOROOMS, 2~ BATHS. FAMILY ROOM, FORMAL
DINING, EQUIPPED KITCHEN, FIREPLACE ,
EXCEPTIONAL PROPERTY!
CONVENIENT LOCATION ON STATE STREET IN
GAWPOUS - 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 .
L.SHAPED RANCH ON JAY DRIVE- FEATURES NICE
OPEN KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM ARRANGE MENT WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL LIVING ROOM, 2
CAR GARAGE. NICE VIEW OF THE SURROUNDING
AREA FROM THE POOL DECK. COVERED PATIO.
LOTS OF HOME FOR $58,000.
NEAR HOLlER-HOSPITAl- SPUT FOYER OESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR , FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCED
AIR FURNACE. CENTRAL AIR COND. 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE. $65,000 .

ANOTHER AEDUC110N ON THIS BEAUTIFUL HOME!
The man ol the family win toel comfortably "'99"d "' thos &lt;
story pine contemporary with 4 BR's 2 1/2 baths , equipped
kitchen, fireplace, bay '!Yindows &amp; ~?&amp;semen I al_l,on 3 1/2
acres You've admired 11 for ak&gt;ng 11me... NOW 11 s time to
call it HOME! REDUCED TO $99,900

I
TAKE A DIP IN THE
FOR COMFORTABLE
FAMILY UVING 4
, 2 BATHS, NICE OPEN
FAMILY ROOM.
KITCH N ARRAGENMENT,
BEAUTIFUL BRICK FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM.
SECOND FLOOR STUDY OR HOBBY ROOM .
ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP. 2 CAR GARAGE, 7 WOODED
ACRES, CONVENIENT90CATION .
845 SECOND AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS - 2 STORY
VICTORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENTLY USED AS A4
UNIT RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVE LY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE. $46,000.

C..r1er'• PlumtHng
Fourth and Pine
Gallipolla, Ohio
614-441-3888

SR 124 CloH to Rutland- FOR THE DAD WHO LIKES
TO TINKER IN THE GARAGE! 1987 14' 70 Forest Pari.
Mobile Home w/3 BR's, HUGE garage w/compressor, t-Ho
17 x 52 carports &amp; a tronf pordl . Home in very good
condition-has had excellent care Located on 1 10 acre in
mcc area $29,000

NEW LISTING· LAUREL CUFF- THIS HOME WILL
KNOCK DADS SOCKS OFF! Thai's OK cause thiS
lu sc1ous brid&lt; ranch wi38R"s 1s lulty carpeted . Includes
appliances , heated finished 2 car garage, penna stone
hrepiaoe. CIA, fenced yard, oollar, storage buikting, in
house mlercomr 2 baths _.approx __ 16 acres_ TOO MUCH
TO LIST. YOU MUST SEE!!' Askmg $83.900
NEW LISTING- LET OAO START HIS OWN BUSINESS!
In this commercial Buikting located on Mam St1n Pomeroylocated close to foot of the Pomeroy/Mason bridge 1800
sq it. 4 BR apt. upstairs. ASKING $33 ,000

NEW LISTING- TELL OAD TO GO FISHING &amp; CAMPING
on th1s approx 3_78 acres ot vacant ground 200' frontage,
1100 length. tOO' RIVER FRONTAGE. $5,000 per acno.

79

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - AP PROX. 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME . NICE COUNTRY
SETTING. $39,500

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1M1 V.W. Cam'* Van, New 85
Point, Eocot.., Condl11on,
$1,2110 Or 011or. 6~1- Wa

General Hauling

Do Heullng Anytime,
Anypaac., No Job Too Big Or
Too LHtla. B.........m Dunlng,
.:.n, Kt. ·dl 114-

1Q08,

TWO YEAR OLD FRAil£ RANCH WITH BRICK TRIM
ON LARGE LEVEL LOT. HOME FEATURES CHERRY
KITCHEN CABINETS, SNACK BAA, 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP.
PRICEO TO SELL FAST AT $57,900.

1WT Dodge, 380 rnolor, ncM-

1101 concll!lon, 1112-21114.

owning. 814-

21FI. Cobra Chevy Yoior Homo,
lolded, $5,000; 1N51QO Hondl
S1;o100, 0.8.0. 614-388-11901.

1203. otto TOWNSHIP- 53&gt;1 aenos, mono or
klss. Very nice ranch style home offers 3 or 4
b$drooms, LA, kitchen, bath. full basement,
carpel. deck, garage, sid1ng. Tobacco base

and lobaooo bam. Additional land.

f6W. NICE HOME, EDGE OF TOWN, LOTS
OF POSSIBIUTIES- LR. ~!chon, DR, 3 BRs,
bath, laundry. Priced for bGginners. Green

School.

1731 . CALL AND ASK ABOUT ME - I'm a
vary na home in t.wn Md my ownr111 ~
oHaring mo al • good price. A kilchen, dining araa, OW, oven, range,

displ .. LR. laovc&gt; bath wllaundry, qas hoat.
cent. air, ceiling tano. laovc&gt; fconcod backyard
for tho kids or poll.

t540. QET COlY IN FRONT OF THE
AREPLACE - Anraetivo homo oftors. 3
BRo, bath,
12X24 lomily room W1th
fir.pi11C41 ond living room With firoplaco.

lei-.

Situaled on 1.12 acre, m", approx. 10
minu•• from town.

LET YOUR IMAGINATION TAKE
OVER with thi1 large home. Situated acrose
lrt&gt;m GAHS thio homo offaro 5 BR1, 4 baths,
kitchen, LR, 16x16 FR. It you want al&lt;lra room
lhi1 is the one for you.

1751. .PATRIOT AREA. Oulal ~borhood,
noy flYing, homo offoro 3 BRo. LR, oot-ln
lci1ohon, nrc:o carpet o1tachod go-.

•

I !ft.~.

Real Estate General

HENRY E. CLELAND ...........................................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER ............................................94fl.2431
JEAN TRUSSELL ..............................................94fl.2e60
OFFICE...............................................................992·2251

Real Estate General

B11YE~RS!!!

TO $33,1001 - Older homo wilh lots ol
potantlolloc:atod In !own juot a fow blocb !rom
all ator... Home olfera LR, DR, kilchen, t~

batho, 3 BRo, goo heat,

SECWIION- H you wont to )uot got owoy by
your10H, hov. o privlllo cookout, wal&lt; to a ftolt·
ing opal or juot onjoy noturo, thin don't let thio
ono got owoy. 4.5 ocroo, mil, 3 BRo, bolh, LR,
OR, lcilchon, occooo to booting on Rocooon
Croak. city IChoclo. Col Rulh lor .,... dotllo.

laovc&gt; attic.

1733. EXTRA NICE MOBILE HOME FOR
SALE - '88 Holly Pori. 1(&lt;72, 2 BRa. LR,
kitchen, OR, central air and lots ol extra
leaturu.

1235.

1662. IN TOWN LOCATION clo.. to pool on&lt;l
goff Laove 2 car unattached ganogo, well kept
ho,;a offers 3 BRs. bath, LR, DR, kltci1an,
move in rifjlt away.

Real Estate General

WHEN IT COMES TO BUYING &amp; SELUNG
HOMES...BE SURE TO CHECK FIRST WITH THE
" BIG DADDY" OF REAL ESTATEI HE'LL HAVE A
DEAL THAT WORKS FOR YOU!
HAPPY FATHERS DAY
FROM CLELAND REALTY, INC. I

It 46. OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE

1172. UNCOLN PIKE- WELL KEPT HOlE
tonced yard.

Real Estate General

LOOKING FOR KC SCHOOL DIST.7 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 .
SMAJ,L WORKSHOP AND STORAGE GREAT PRICF
.OF $49,900.

$8 500

LISTINGS!!!

l

1246. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
ONEI - largo log homo con bo purchooad with
162 ""'"' or 2 ICIWI. Thio homo olloro 4 BRo.
3 batho, oquipped kltehon, LR, FR, 2
1183.• 800 BLOCK SEC. AVENUE -Home finoplaceo, hoof pumlcont. oir (boclwp oyllom),
has a lot to offer, 3 BRs, LR, kitchen, DR. unat- oversized 2 car anached ga111g1. FPJntage on
tached heated garage and workshop . Raoooon Craek.
Convenient to shopping.

- 3 BAs, 1Y, baths, equipped kitchen, LA,
attached garage, deck, partial buement,

f1 73. BELL£R WANTS TO AELOCATt Nioo mini lonm lor tho !amity. 3 BR ii&lt;&gt;IM
olloro 2 botho, LR, OR, lcitclt.n ond other
extr11. Owner aays bring us an otfar1
24'x32' II'-·

CAPTIVATING VIEW- 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH
HAS 1800 SQ. FT. LIVING AREA. FAMILY SIZE
KITCHEN HAS NEW DISHWASHER. SNACK BAR,
LENNOX HEAT PUMP. 1 ACRE LAWN. $60,000.

LOW PRICE OF $26,000. MAKES THIS PROPERTY A
GOOO INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY. 3 BEDROOM
HOME PLUS GARAGE APARTMENT. LOCATED IN
CITY.

DAO THE HUNTER· Coulduseth1s 1 fiOOf home with 2.81
acres w1th small shed located in Portland as a hunting
cabin ... or jusl a place to get away from it an! ASKING

1180. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
BACKYARD - V.ry nice oil brick homo olloro 3
BRo, LR wlliroplac:e. oquippod kitchen, full
balamanl

PLEASANT VALLEY EITATES, I A
U
AREA -Gonvonl•nt to HMC and lhopping,
brick ronc1t oftoro 3 BRo, 2 botho, LR, largo
oat~n lcitdton, otlodlcod garago, gao hoo~ cenl
l.ir.

In Gallia County
Wiseman is a House Sold Word!

Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.
Since 1943

446-3644
MtMI FARM-You _,II lonm with I vory nioo
older homo, thio 0111 hu boen nicely ramodoled, 3 BRa, LR, kltchon, both, lo1QO dicit,
gardens, fruit troea. borrioo, appro&lt;. 50 o.
woodod. Call Ruth lor dotallo.
INVESTORS - ~PLEX for oale... good Income,
oaeh unll has 2 BRa, LR, lcitchon &amp; bath . Call
for more information.

1154. NICE STARTER HOME - Loc:atod jul1 at
tho odgo ol town . Thla homo looturu 3
bodroomo, bath, living room, k~c:hen, dining
room ond a full baYmont. Fivo mlnutoa to

downtown.

-•"
'

-

.•,

.~

f181. laCIRANDE BOULEVARD- All brid&lt;, 3
BRo, LR, ldtchon, both, fuM bailment, goo
fon:od air, altlcltodgo-. city.IOhoolo.

Uncoln St. and offerw 2 unilt. Call for mar.

CORNER OF 8R 141 AND GRAHAM
SCHOOL ROAD - 2 or 3 BRo. both, lcitelton,
LA, cen!nll air, attached gorago. Prteod lor ftrot

details and price .

time homeownen.

WANT TO HAVE SOME RENTAL
PROPERTY? This property ia located on

•
•
••

1150. CORNER LOTS- Vory nice homo oftoro
3 BRo, bolt, lcitchon, carpet, ftroploc:o, t car
dotodtad goroge.
DUPLEX FOR BALE...in city, rongo on&lt;l rafrig·
erotor In HCit unit otoyo, oily utilitioo. Good

lnvntmont property.

IIOetl.l HOME )uot ot tho odgo ol town
lituolod on .56 ocro wilh a 1o1Q0 block gorogo
oily utilioo, gao hoot on&lt;1 cont. olr.
'
KARA STREET, 2.437 A. MIL, ranch otylo
homo olloro 3 BRo. 2 botho, LR, kitchen, HP
oltaehod &amp; unottocltod gorago.

--.••

Note: This could be your best opportunity that has come along in
a while to sell your home. Call for a No Obligation Market
Analysis today!

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�Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Farm Flashes

District 6 Holstein Show
is scheduled June 27
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN,
Gallia County
Extension Agent, Agriculture
For tbe Times-Sentinel
GALLIPOLIS · June is Dairy
Month!
Congratulations to all dairy
fanners who produce a top product.
A current promotional slogan
encourages everyone to "Bring
Home Real Dairy Freshness."
A reminder to attend the District
6 Holstein Show that wiU be a pan
of the Gallia County Junior Fair
Activity Day on Saturday, June 27.
Several other activities for the
whole family will be going on during this second annual event. A
feature article in the recent issue of
"Cooperative Concepts," a monthl y
publication of COBNSelect Sires.
is tilled "Hard Working Cows Hard Working Family - A Productive Partnership." The article is
about the operation of a Meigs
County Dairy, the Hamm Valley
Farm. A special congratulations to
the Hamm Family for being selected for the feature article.
The ne&lt;t time we gel into a
drou~ht situation, I have a couple
posstble solutions. I could either
schedule a vacation day or a Hay
and Pasture Day activity. Both
have been successful in bringing
rain this year. The Hay and Pasture
Day that was canceled earlier this
month has beeo rescheduled for the
Jackson Research Farm location on
Monday, June 22. Equipment
demonstrations for both hay and
pasture situations will run front 3-5
p.m. and a repeat session from 6-8
p.m .. Plan to attend!
Cattle producers will want to

attend a Thursday evening. June 25
event at the Lawrence Bur&lt;leU fann
just off of Route 325, north of Rio
Grande. The program focus will be
on Forage systems at the Burdell
farm . This will include the "Ag
Bag" silage system, production of
summer annual forages, manure
handling and utilization, Barley
production and feeding, and other
related topics. The Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District wei·
comes your attendance.
Vegetable producers will want
to attend lhe Thursday evening,
June 25 , Twilight Vegetable Tour.
This year's tour will be held on
Adams Road just off State Route
338 between Racine and Letart
Falls. Host sites will be Adams
Farm, Clifford Hill Fann, O'Brien
Farm and Sayre Farm . Several
OSU specialists will be on hand. It
will also give everyone a chance to
meet Mr. Hal Kneen, the new
E&gt;tension Associate AgenL
Blue mold activity in southwestern Kentucky is involving both
Burley and Dark Tobacco . Cool,
cloudy, wet weather has caused a
"Blue Mold Watch" to be in effect
in both Kentucky and Tennessee.
Prevailing winds can be e&gt;pected
to move spores from current outbreaks in a northeasterly direction.
"Ridomil" label restrictions regulate how the material may be
applied. The label prohibits the
supplemental applications of
Ridomil after transplanting unless
the material was also applied preplant. This is probably a good year
to get in a good position to react if
the blue mold problem occurs.

New wheatgrass is legacy
of dead Soviet scientist
WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
for grazing that could
resullm more pounds on sreers and
more money for cattle produc~ is
the legacy of a long-dead Soviet
scientist.
Seeds for the new wheatgrass
were donated to the Umted States
in 1936 by Nikolai lvanovich Vavilov. a Russian germ plasm pioneer
who died in a Siberian labor camp
in 1943, according to the Agricul ture Department.
Called Manska, the wheatgrass
is being released by the department
and the state agricultural experiment stations of Nebraska and
North Dakota.
Tests have shown that cattle can
digest a higher percentage of for·
age from Manska wheatgrass than
from the popular Oahe and Slate
vaneties grown in the central and
northern Great Pla ins. the dcpartwheat~rass

n1 cnt said

protect the livestock populations of
both nations," said JoAnn Smith,
assistant secretary for marketing
and inspection services at the Agri culture Department.
Screwworm outbreaks were
reported in southern Me&lt;ico in January and in northern Me.ico, about
200 miles south of the U.S.-Mexico
border, in late April.
"USDA is dispersing 130 million sterile flies weekly over the
infested areas, and Mexican officials have stepped up surveillance
activities throughout the country,
especially in the outbreak areas,"
said Alex Thiermann, deputy
administrator for international services with USDA's Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service.
"Rapid response to the situation
has resulted in a dramatic decrease
in the number of cases being
fo und. " he said 1n a recent news
release. "However, we know by
previous experience we may find
additional cases within these areas
for one or two more life cycles of
the screwworm ny...
Before screwworms were eradicated from the United Statcs more
than 25 years ago, they caused
losses to U.S. cattle producers of
millions of dollars annually.

The increose in digcstiht ltty,
though less than 5 percent , could
cause cattle to gatn almost a halfpound per day more on Manska,
said Agricultural Research Servtcc
plant gcneucist Kenneth P. Vogel.
"In 30 days, these steers could
gai n an c. tra 15 pounds," said
Vogel, who works at the ARS
wheat , sorghum and forage
research unit at Llllcoln. Ncb.
Certtf1ed seccl grower s can Sorghum sold at discount
Argentma recently sold 60 ,000
obtai n Manska founda tiO n seed
tons
of sorghum to Mex ico at a
from the Bismarck Plant Materials
Center run by USDA's Soil Con- reported discount of $8 per ton
se rvat ion Serv1c e in Bismarck, under U.S. sorghum , say U.S . trade
N.D. Commcrctal seed should be experts.
The United States had heen the
available to farmers by 199\.
sole sup pli er for the past three
years of Me.ico ·s sorghum import
Promised $1.4 million
Me xican officials have promtsed requirements of more than 3 mil$2.5 million to rear and di sperse lion ton s, according to a rece nt
sterile screwwonn flies to combat ISsue of Agricultural Trade Highrecent reinfestations of th e li ve - tights put out by USDA's Foreign
Agricultural Service.
stock pest m Mexico.
"Argentina' s sorghum export
"Mc&gt;tcan and U.S . offiuals arc
av
ailability
is at iLs highest level
determin ed to eradi ca te sc rew SIIICC
the
ITild-198(};,"
It said.
worm s rrorn M exico in order to
l'ARKERSRURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
June 13, 1992
STOCK STEERS
74 .00-90.00
300-undcr
76.00-~9.00
300-500
(J9 00- 8 I. 00
500-700
800-ovcr
59 00-69.50
STOCK HEIFER S
300-undcr
62 00-8100
300-500
63.00-8 1.00
500-700
60.00-75.00
800-ovcr
50 .00-56.00
STOCK BULLS
100 ~ under
70.00-91.00
300-500
71.00-91.00
500- 700
56.00-70.00
Slaughter Bulls
45.50-61.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
475.00-930.00
Bred Cows By#
44.50-64.00
445 00-570.00
Bred Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
42.00-50.50
Hij!h Dressing
34.00-42.00
Utility
Canner &amp; Cutter
27.50-36.00
VEAL:
78.00-85.00
Medium
74.00-80.00
Good
LAMBS :
55.00-62.50
Feeders
45.00-105.00
Baby Calves BH
50.00-69.00
HORSES cwt
HOGS:
30.00-38.00
200-250
25.50-35.00
300-500
24.50-31.00
Male Hogs
!3.00
Pi sBH
N~ SALE SATURDAY, JULY 4th.

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

June 21, 1992

Agriculture's positive role in the government
Submitted By Patty Dyer,
District Conservationist
GAI+JPOLIS - Good crop producuon os an effective environmental substitute for native vegetation.
Plants, whether improved or wild
are nature's anti-pollution devices:
They remove carbon dio&gt;ide ... the
major greenhouse gas .. .from the
atmosphere and replenish it with
oxygen. They absorb nutrients
from the soil. Well-managed soils
filter percolating water and trap
nutrients, holding them for Dlants
to absorb.
An acre of corn yielding 150
bushels per acre of grain produces
appro•imately eight and a half tons
of total biomass. That acre of com
also:
-Consumes 10.5 tons of carbon
dioxide.
·Releases 7.5 tons of o&lt;ygen
and takes up 200 pounds of nitrogen, 85 pounds of phosphate (37
pounds of phosphorus) 200 pounds
of potash (166 pounds of potassi um) 50 pounds of magnesium and
25 pounds of sulphur.
Consumers need to understand
that the role of fanners as crop producers makes them stewards of the
land, water and air.
Pond problems
Are pond problems driving you
out of your favorite fishing hole?
Judging from the number of
phone calls I have received over

the past few days, the al~ae and
cattails are invading thts year.
There are some fairly simple tried
and true solutions to these prob·
!ems. The most common solution
to algae problems is the application
of copper sulfate at the rate of 2. 7
lbS/acre foot of water. "What is an
acre foot of water" is likely your
next question.
To obtain an estimate of acre
feet calculate the square feet of surface and divide by 43,560 square
feet per acre then multiply this
number by the average depth of the
pond (typically figured as 1/3 of
the ma&lt;imum depth). A pond
which averages 100 feet wide by
150 feet lon11 and is 9 feel deep
equals approxunately one acre foot
thus would require appro&lt;imatel y
2. 7 pounds of copper sulfate to
elimmate the algae.
If cattails are the problem then
your options are basically hand
pulling the cattails to remove them
or applying a herbicide. Common
herbicides for cattail removal
include Diquat and Weedtrine D.
As always when selecting a
herbicide, read and foUow the label
directions and observe any restrictions such as waiting periods for
water usage lbllowing treaunenL
If you have additional questions
relating to your pond or pond problems call 446-8687 and we will
attempt 10 find an answer for you.

weeks of coverage. Bargainers
from the Senate and House hope to
craft a compromise ne.t week.
Bush says both measures are too
expensive, and he also objects to
so me permanent changes in law
that would make it easier for peo·
pie to qualify for e&lt;tended benefits
in the future.
The president backed a Republican alternative, offered by Senate
Minority Leader Bob Dole of
Kansas, that would have provided
up to 20 extra weeks of coverage
and would have added an assonment of tax cuts that sponsors said
would help spark the economy. The
Senate rejected it on a voice vote.
But in view of the high unemployment mte and his low standing
in the polls, the president may be
loath to veto a measure that helps
large numbers of out-of-work vaters, Democrats suggest
The Senate bill would provide
an extra 33 or 26 weeks of coverage, depending on how bad unemployment is in each state. The program would last until March 6, but
it would be phased down to fewer
weeks if national unemployment
dropped dramatically.
The $5.4 billion, six-year price
tag would be financed by boosting
taxes on people who collect some
lump-sum pension payments and
on some CllJ1lOI1!tions, partn~hips ,
securities dealers and thrift institulions.

Russia gets help from
U.S. farm specialists
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
specialists in the development of
wholesale markets are being sent 10
Russia to help modernize its foodmarketing system.
"This technical assistan ce "
designed to help Russia set up an
efficient system of post-harvest
hand! ing. storage and wholesale
marketing and distribution of food
products," said Agriculture Secre-

3-4-25-27-33-40

Kicker
6-7-0-5-5 -7
Pick 3:
5-9-l!
Pick~:

.

.\-1oslh". clear ton icrhl. Low
near 50. Chance of rai n 40 per·
rt'nl on Tuesda)·.

2-2-J-J

•

Yot. 43, No. 35

NO·TILL CORN • No-till corn offers many benefits. It protects lbe soil rrom erosion, adds organic matters to lbe soil, main·
tains moisture through the bot dry summer, and corn belps clean
up tbe air.

SIE:RRFI
ATruck To Be Proud of ond APrice You Can Uve With.

1992
PICKUP

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Radio

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$1 0,500

Copyrighlod 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO - Some members
of the American Medical Association want doctors to post their fees
in the waiting room so patients can
do some comparison shopping.
Competitive pricing in aU other
businesses results in lower costs,
delegates from New England say in
a resolution up for consideration at
the AMA's annual meeting, which
began Sunday.
"If a patient wants to know
what the doctor's fee is, he or she
has every right to lrnow," said Dr.
Herbert Rakatanslcy, a gastroenterologist from Providence, R.I.
Many patients don't learn a doc tor's fees until after they've walked
in the examining room or emergency room door. And hospital billing
is a quagmire of cost-shifting and
thinl·party-payer contracts .
The proposal wiU be considered

by the AMA 's 434-member House
of Delegates sometime during the
policy-making meeting, which runs
through Thursday.
The resolution wouldn ' t be
binding on the AMA's 292,000
members, but it would carry the
innuence of the nation's largest
organization of doctors.
The resolution's sponsors note
that health-care costs continue to
rise, consuming $650 billion annually, or 12.5 percent of the gross
national product.
They say consumers need to
take more responsibility for the
cost of medical care, and doctors
need to be more aware of the cost
of services.
The resolution says the AM A
should encourage the posting of
J:liCCS by doctors. hospitals,labora·
!Dries, pharmacists, medical cqui!}ment suppliers and related professionals.

Dr. Marian C. Craighill, an
alternate delegate from Massachusetts, said so me doctors
object to the proposal. "People on
the delegation were concerned that
this IS dentgrating the doctor patient relationship," she said.
Michael Donio, director of projects for the People's Medical Society, a non -profit consumer group,
said his orgamzation urged the
posting of prices nine years ago.
"You wouldo 'l believe the hue
and cry that went up from medical
professionals ," he said from the
society's Allentown. Pa., headquarters. "They said, 'What are you
trying to do?!' Now , suddenly,
they're entertaining the idea."
Rakatansky said that the resolution could have a limited effect,
since many fees arc negotiated in
advance by health maintenance
organizations or insurance compaContinued on page 3

CLEVELAND (AP) - Homeless shelters are jammed, business
has doubled at free clinics and the
demand is strong for jobs in a lowpaying county work program.
About I 02,000 General Assistance recipients had their benefits
cut on April I. The cut was the second since Oct. I, when most recipients saw their monthly check fall
from $148 to $100.
As the April cu10ff neared, some
of the county's welfare officials
became worried about violence
from irate recipients and gave
employees special crisis training .
"We had thought our workers
would be overwhelmed and there'd
be more confrontations," said
Gwendolyn Hill, deputy director of
iocomc maintenance . "But it was
so quiet around here the first pan of
April, we were shocked."
The latest cut eliminated th e
stipend entirely for si• months each

133 PINE STREET
614·446-2532
Locally owned and operated by Her-b Smith for the paat
15 year• .

"Ratalned valu. percen19 baMd upon tM wl6ghted avenge or IM MSAP or 3, 4,
1nd 5 year old compil'lbl~ .quipped whlclll compuM agatMI auction price ar
1-eported In I he ~ Q85-1 Q90 Jlnuary 6uUIII at the N.rbl.ll R..Mtch SIM:It Boot.

tary

and explanations given of aU lbe departments at
tbe bank. Refreshments were served to tbe
approximately 200 people in attendance.

OPEN HOUSE • Farmers Bank In Pomeroy
beld an open house Sunday for l~e public to
view lbe new renovatloas. Tours were conducted

Representative says his beating
was the result of pent-up anger
By JEFFREY BRODEUR
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A state reprc·
sentative beaten by three black men
ouL!iide a movie theater says he was
a victim of the frustration felt
across the country.
"There is a lot of hatred, anger
and frustration out there," Rep.
Michael Fox, R-Hamilton, said
Sunday. "It was a random act of
hatred and racial violence. They
were not striking out at Mike Fo&lt;,

,..,, ~·" "llh ''"'""'" .
rnu ldHrlt " '

'V.~

,.,,r,

runona

upco...,~l

• HYdrostatiC dr11·e a1 ail able on
select models.

d«lo.

S.S. checks to be delivered
Social Security checks for 42 million beneficiaries will be delivered on July 3 although Social Security offices will be closed.
"While that Friday is the date that federal offices are closed for
the Independence Day holiday observance," said Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in Athens. ''The U. S. Postal Service will
deliver mail as usual on July 3." Beneficiaries who have direct
deposit will also have their July payments deposited on July 3.
Supplemental Security Income recipients will receive theu
checks on the ftrSl day of the month.
"Anyone who has a question about Social Security chock delivery or deposit should call our office at592-4448," said Peterson.

HONDA
Equipment

A'ailable OnlY Through Your Authorized

Soapbox derby deadlines announced

Honda Power Equipment Dealer.

Boys and girls who plan to race in the Meigs County. Soapbox
Derby in Middlepon on 1uly 4 should be aware of upcommg deadlines and events, according to Derby Director Charles Neutzling.
Weigh-ins and inspection of vehicles will begin at 8 a.m. on Sunday, with trial runs to begin at noon.
Those I'IICQS who haven't modified last year's kit cars must do so
before the Sunday activities begin. Those modifications take
approximately an hour, Neutzling said, and he is wilting to answer
questions regarding the modifications. He can be reached at 742-

Riverfront Honda
KANAUGA, OHIO

UPPER RT. 7

the man, or Mike Fox, the state legISlator. They were striking out at
Mike Fox, the white man."
Before they beat Fox, 43, one of
the men asked the 18-year lawmalcer if he remembered Rodney King.
Four Los Angeles police offi cers were acquiued in April of
assaulting King. Riots broke out in
Los Angeles and across the nation
protesting the acquittals.
Fox said the assault occurred
about 10:15 p.m. Saturday as he
and a companion made their way to

,..---Local briefs-_____,

• Honda mo11ers convert to
mulch . bag or Side discharge."
• All models feature our easvstaning Honda OH\' cornmcrual
grade en~es .

3030.

...

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

....

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...

'

EMS units answers seven calls

.

.. '" ,...... ·•· . ..

Meigs Emerg~y!Services units answered seven weekend calls.
Continued on page 3

......... , ......... .......,
" · , , .... . ~~···

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

,

crew from Athens County cleaned lbe riverfrolll
near Hockingport. Here, WildHie OfrJCer Keith
Wood gives last minute instructions to a group
of volunteers working at the Ohio River access
lacility at Forktd Run State Park. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J . Reed)

New programs help recipients
of General Assistance cuts

GAlliPOLIS, OH- 45631

First, the producer could not meet
program requirements because of
circumstances beyond his or her
control. Second, the county commission must find that a "good
faith" effon was made by the producer to meet the requirements and.
third, that no time limitation for
accepting these sales documents
had been established.

A Multlmodla Inc. NewaDII-

RIVER SWEEP • Over 20 tons or trash were
collected in Meigs County oa Saturday, as over
300 volunteers from various organizations participated in tbe Obio River Sweep. Crews
worked in Pomeroy, Middleport, Racine, Syra·
cuse, Antiquity, Long Bottom and Reedsville. A

Smith's GMC Truck Center

Edward Madigan.
"Such a system will be an
1mportant component in the federation 's continumg progress toward
developing workable fr~. markets
and a stable democracy, he S3ld
recently.
Four teams of specialists will
come from the private sector and
from USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service.

1 Section, 10 Pogn 25 cento

Monday, June 22, 1992

AMA considers resolution
urging doctors to post fees

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Group accepting late wool applications
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Committee wishes to remind producers that the
original filing deadline for 19391991 wool and mohair sales documents was March 2.
The committee will accept latefiled applications only 1f the producer meets certain requirements.

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Page4

Democrats hope to rush
jobless benefits bill to Bush
wASHINGTON (AP)
Democrats in the House and Senate
hope to devise a compromise
e.tension of jobless benefits quickly aod ship it to President Bush
before thousands of unemployed
Americans lose their coverage ne&lt;t
month.
The Senate dismissed warnings
of a Bush veto and approved its
$5.4 billion version of the extra
benefits on a voice votf Friday .
The Democratic-written bill would
allow people who exhaust their
regular jobless coverage to qualify
for up to 33 more weeks of pay ments.
Without the e. tension, people
using up the standard 26 weeks of
unemployment covemge after July
4 will get no additional benefits.
About 300,000 Americans e&lt;haust
tile basic coverage each month. The
payments avtrage $170 a week
nationally but vary by state.
"Unless we take ... action on
this bill within the next two weeks,
there are going to be no emergency
benefits for hundreds of thousands
of long-term unemployed workers
across this nation," said Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas.
Unemployment hit an eight-year
peak of 7.5 percent last month ,
with 9.5 million Americans looking
for jobs.
Earlier this month, the House
approved a $5.8 billion measure
thal would provide up 10 26 extra

Ohio Lottery

Braves win
final game
against Reds

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I

I

the entrance of the General Cme mas Northland 8.
"Someone said 'Sir,' and I
turned," he said. "He asked ·You
remember Rodney King?' and hit
me at the same time. As I turned,
he was coming."
Columbus police coniiiTIIed the
attack. Ofllccr J. Johnson said three
men fining the assailants' descriptions were arrested for questioning
shortly after the beating. They were
not charged in the attack because
they could not be identified as the
assailants, Johnson said.
Fo• said the two other men
joined in the beating and continued
hilling and kicking him after he
fell.
Fo• said he attempted to crawl
into the crowded theater lobby as
his companion, who was
unharmed, called police.
"I was literally crawling for
help," he said. "But nobody would
help. None of the employees would
come out, and it took them a heU of
a long time to call 911."
Fox said a theater security guard
dido 'I come out of the lobby to slOp
the beating.
A manager at the movie theater
declined to comment on cinema
security policy. There was no
answer at the General Cinemas
Corp. headquarters in Newton,
Mass.
Fo• said the three assailants ned
when four moviegoers came out of
the building.
He was taken to Riverside
Methodist Hospital, where he was
kept overnight for observation, said
KJtrl Bailey, hospital night administrator. Fox said he was released
Sunday after being treated for a
broken cheekbone, swollen left
eye, a few loose teeth and several
cuts and bruises

year. General assiStance depen dents , usually those ineligible for
other state and federal welfare programs, are still eligible for $111 a
month in food stamps.
More than 1,800 people have
found jobs or job tratning with the
new Cuyahoga County Work
Preparation AI temau ve program.
and another 150 arc being placed
every day, officials said. The orogram, funded with $3 million in
county money, has room for 4,200
people.
Mark Armbruster. d~rcctor of
the Cleveland Foodbank , said th e
organizatiOn's dtslribution s for
April and May increased 8 percent
over the same period last year. An
c.tra 97 1(2 tons of food went to
food pantries and soup kitchens
around northeast Ohio.
General economic condJtwns
arc at least partly respo nsible for
the increase. he said.

WELCOME HOME • Former hostage Terry
Anderson waves to the crowd as be rides in 1

In Cuyahoga County 's shelter
program. up to a dozen people a
night during Apnl blamed welfare
cuts lor putting them on the Slrttt,
said Lisa Thomas, who oversees
the project Health Care for the
Homeless.
That number has since tapered
off, to f1ve or less a night, Ms.
Thomas said . She theorizes that
many have managed to find shelter
with family or friends .
Requests to f!ll prescriptions,
once paid by GA medical, have
incre=d 500 percent, Ms. Thomas
saJd.
At the Free Chnic of Greater
Cleveland, said hecutive Director
Many Hiller, patients who oru got
prescriptions for non-chronic illnesses through GA can no longer
get them filled. He said the clinic
has seen a slow but steady increase
in the number of patients.

parade in Lorain Sunday. Andersoa was bora 111
lbe city west of' Clenlud. (AP)

City honors Anderson with parade
LORAIN -The Free Terry
Anderson Committee has ended
nearly seven years of work by staging the biggest parade in the city's
history .
Anderson served as honorary
grand marshal of Lorain's International Festival parade Sunday,
watched by an estimated 80,000
people who lined downtown
streets.
The celebration marked the end
of the committee formed shonl y
after Anderson , a Lorain native,
was abducted from a Beirut street
I

by terrorists in 1985 while he was
working as chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated
Press.
Anderson was held longer than
any other Western hostage in
Lebanon, almost seven years. He
was released Dec. 4.
"It's been a truly wonderful
day. It's been a great homecoming," Anderson said at a receP,'!on
following Sunday's parade. 'It's
more than I could have imagined.
Everybody has been so warm and
so loving that I don't quite i.now
I

.

what to say.
:
"You said there were 80 ()()()'
people out thele? I ihinlc I wa~ 10:
every one of them. and they a11:
waved back."
•
Antlenon rode near the fnxa o{:
the oarade in an OllCD conveniWe,
accompanied by his fialtc;ee
Madeleine Bassil. and lbe d"'l' '
who was born shortly after btl ~
kidnapped, Sulome. They lbea
WBICbed the rest of 1be tJh0.11o-. '
parade from a reviewma l1lild 01!:
the steps of City Hall.
.&gt;
Colllillald o• ,.,. 3
~

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