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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

'::~~~~, SCC\\~lA-~£~s·

Television
Viewing

0

•

FRI .. JUNE 26

l~lld

Q Reor rar~ge

~

fsT VPI D

~006

•

the

of

I I I 1I
1

0 NL YN

WR A B N

I

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l' I' 1 1

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L -l.._l.

e

iiJ Scoaby Doo

@Up CioN
11J1 New Zom&gt; Sloreo
6:35 ()) AndJ Orlflllh
7:00 ~ D 11J WhHI ot Fortune

/
"\

t..O~G

()) Cit lnlldt Edlllon 0

MocNtll/lolwer
NtwtHour O
()) II Married ... Wllh
ChlldrenC
II§) liD JooPor&lt;IJI 0
ilJ) Ill Star Trek
liZ Ill Entertalnmenl Tonlghl
Slereo. !;I
iiJ Moco,.., O
@ SportaCenhk

THESE SQUARES

NORTH
• Q J 10 8

BRIDGE

r--

Stereo. O
()) II Mlml't FomiiJ
II§) liD Wheel ol Fortune 0
liZ Ill famllr Feud
at Ill 1 Star Stereo
@ Major League lllteblll

s~~~

acrolttlre
8:00 (2) II 101 MIUOCk Matlock
for his

misconduct to a district

oltOmorJRI Stereo. C
()) II ()) D Family ir.-s
Urkel sues

Carl tor causing

tho death ol his pot lA)
Stereo. C

I!) (!) Wolhl~ WMk

Rtvlew Stereo. &amp;:;1
®l 1D IIJ e H!!!!)'woocl
Olme Stereo. Q __
ilJ) Ill A""'""''' Moot

In

W1nted A teenage runaway
is wanted lor murdering the
family lh.!!. took him in.
Stereo.~

i1J Murdi&lt;, Sho Wrote 0

, at Crook ond Chan

aPnmoNewtO
8:30 ())Cit ())II Stop by Step
Frank and Carol work to
merge their two families

together. (A) Stereo. 0
crJ (!) WoM . , _ wStereo . C
II§) Gil iiJ"Ill

SIJ What
9:00 &lt;2l D t!]) Auoonoble
Ooubte Kay decides to press
charges of date rape against

Andy Cromyer. (A) Stereo.

li CJ I]). Dlnouura Fran
relinquishes her household
dutfes lor a talk-shOw }Ob.

(AI Sloreo. J;!

(!) (!) ... Ttlilntl

Willi Dlvld

Frost A conversation with
Academy award-winning
ae1or Anthony Hopkins.

Stereo.

\'IORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
DID YOU KNOW
T HAT I CANDO

T H IS 15 KEVIN C05TN ER,
SCRATCH ING H ISARMP IT.

1 MPER~NATIONS"

I

C

IIJ"IID MOVIE:
'Another Pllr of Acea: Thrat
ol 1 Kind' CBS Frldlt.Night
Movie (2:00) Stereo. L,l
illl Ill Slghtlntlt The

II§) ID

R IG-1 LITTLE'S
GOT NOn-&lt; tNG IV
WORRY .ABOUT.

.,

9n
t AK Y2

go to a restaurant where
they catch their own dinner.

.K
•

+AKQJ109l2

,. ,.

Vulnerable East -West

Dealer. South

Sout•

Today ·s c!1che 1s ·· Look before yoo

lt IS often wnlten that more
contracts are lost by the wrong play at
tnck one than at any other single
tnck There IS an excellent way to cut
down your errors at tnck one Work

J+
&gt;+

Wrst
Pass
Pass

NarU11

Pass

Pass

ON HER NERVE PILLS,
NURSI E

I'LL CHECK
TH'

5

ROOM,

Cover t'-e East -West cards m the dt ·
agram Agamst your contract ol hve duck the ace . When :WUln had to IOSf
clubs. West leads the diamond long two heart tncks. he was one down
How would you try to win ll tncks"'
If Soulll bad paused beforo play1ng
South opened wtth a strong . artifi - from the dummy at tnck one. he

Cial and forcmg two clubs. North 's two maght have noticed dummy's great
diamonds was a negat1ve response rluh canis. He should have ruffed hJgll
After two natural b1ds. South guessed at tnck one and lben led the spade
well not to pass over three no-trump . a kang. Let's assume il is won by East
rontrart that probably would have and he switches to a heart. Soulh wins
lost the first s1x tncks
wtlh the ace and leads a low trump U&gt;South ruffed the daamond kmg wath ward dummy Eventually he w..U l!"t
the club two and then sat back to con- mlo the dummy with a club, thus galnsader the problem - too lale' Eventu - mg access to the spade winners on
ally he cashed the dub ar-e. hopmg to which to throw his heart losers.
drop a smgleton e1ght Then he led the
~ikn •rr umtrd to Jftd ~~ qws·
spade kmg However . West sagnaled IIMS 10 Ptrll1p Aldrr". m carP Ill ltd" W a ; yer
with a high ~pade to show an even "f'lill!oy c.aa llr •ASftf'fld Mly ~ IW culaoNi
number . so

Ea ~ t

@ 1M..,.,..UEJIIIIS

had no mdrnallon to

ACROSS

39 Opllc
co'ftnngs

t Thrllty

42

7 Flower

lr~tottd

45 Nowtce

11 Bacterium

46 Llnguogo

12 Fac11

outlb
4i THter-totttr

14 Senstd with

tongue
15 Loan shartl

51 Jokld

53 Shipworm

t6 Guldo'o high

54 Ltll ..t
55 Glrtot oonv

note

56 Forotlul

penon

maleriet

1 Inevitable
outcome

2 Aolutl

31 Actr"sParton•
33 Aircraft pari

3Bior

35 Young ttl

5 AI right onglto to tNp

consltlltlon
4 Obtalnld

36 Elplollvt
(tbbr.)
37 Hill dwtlltr

6 Sholl
7 Ta1 agcy .
8 Clrculor
g Crou

38 Emit coherent light

lntcrtptlon

20

13 llrtl. ln

22--llrat

muthroom
llodrld

18 Prttalngly

BERNICE
RF:DE OSOL

-...

""'-

32 Ad~tiCPiil to

348ollntl

llrlllgJ

ilJ)

~'Your

~'Birthday

IOWI!Id

....

11 Solllllllct

...

Jun• 27, 1992

You could expertence no tabl e Im provemen ts 1n your mat enal art a1rs m the year
:"JnPttd Your acqui:itlto ns mtght not be
·1' rol~o ' , ,, II they shou ld be S1gn1 f1 CJn t
,

!1,

·1~ 1

!if

I

CAN CE R (June 21 -July 22) II YOl-' luld
yo uro;PII 1n need of a sma l l but urgent favor today go to a friend you recentl y
hel ped Th ts individual is eager to fmd a
way to balance accounts. Know where
to look lor romance and you 'll tiM 11
The As tra-G raph Mat chmaker 1n sta n11y

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don't

42 Bdu•lrn 111
43 &amp;,eo~
44Aiclllllct-

bsrtnen
16 Book ol

Robortlon
10:30 (!) Ntwt

TAURUS (Aprii2G-Mor 20) Your possibrhties lor personal gain lootr; encouragin g today. AlthOugh what you generate
m rghl not be large, it Could still amount

to something significant

GEMINI (MIJ 21-Junt 20) You 'll be bel·

feel you have to carry all the we1ght today whe re a dilftcull dectSIOn IS co ncerned Your male could have sugges-

ter equipped to handle assignments ol
a menial nature than lasks that demand
physical prowess today. Do the head
work yourself and delegate lhe muscle

110ns wh1ch m tg ht resolve th e problem

work to others

\

lloratllyllll

47 Appoor

m MOVIE: Dote Wllh on
AnaeliPGI (2:00)
iiJ Roy llrldbury TliMttr
a AutUn E...,..
a= Mojor luguo IIIHblll

41 r.. root
50 OkhtrOIU

town

52 Nolot

ILl

11 :00 [2)11 ()) • ()). II§) Ill
oe o Howo
(!) NtWtWitdl
tp1 18 AIHrllo Hoi Storao.

~ MOVIE: Mugay't Olrtt IAJ
(2:00)

CELEBRITY CIPHER.

at C~ lnd CIIIH

a Sporta Tonight
llllllltmon
11 :30 (!) Donnlt Mllltr
I!) Alive TV Sterl. 0
WeN~
ce
'Dirll Ju
• Ctlmt
Tlme AI!!! PNM Tlme
Slaroo. II!. ·
aM-Yfino
IIJ)Iordtllown Sttreo. 0
11:35 (2) e 0 Tonight Show Wllh
JIJ LAno 511'!2· 0
()). Chllra_ L,l

aeMMIId ... With
Children Q

12:00 ()) 11 Donnie illle Lovo CoooiiCllooo
llll Nothvlllo How

POMEROY ~ Meigs Coumy is
sitting in the middle of approximalely S 14 million of highway
constructtan work, says John
Dowlei, deputy director of District
I 0 of the Ohio Dcpartmenl of
Transportation.
The improved surfaces will be
great when constructioo is finished,
bul until that ume, motorists will
have to endure and allow more
time when traveling any of the
major roads leading from Metgs
Coumy, Dowler advises.
State Roule 7 from ncar Tuppers
Plains to Belpre, 7 from the Meigs
Coumy Ime 10 Kanauga, and U.S.
J3 from the Meigs County line to
the south Alhcns cily limits arc, or

will be, under construction thi s
summer, according 10 Dowler.
Two multi -million dollar projects arc currently underway on 7
between Meigs County and Parkersburg, W.Va., wilh a second project tO begin later in the construction season.
The Shelly Co. of Thornville
began work in April on a $6 mil lion resurfacing JOb covering 6-1!2
miles from the Washington-Athens
line, south almost to Tuppers
Plains. This project calls for grindmg off lhe existing pavement, joint
repair and asphalt pavtng. The
completion date is Nov. IS.
Shelly &amp; Sands Inc., Zanesville,
is conLractor on the second major

rcsurfactng projecl a~eady underway on 7. This $5.2 million proJect
starts where 7 and Sllllc Route 618
divide, west of Belpre, and continues for approximately 3-1(2 miles
lo the Belpre corporation limit.
Work will also continue cast on
618 for approximmely 1-1/3 mtlcs.
Compleuon date Ofi this job ts June
30, 1993.
Both of these jobs on 7 al so
include bridge repair. On the Shelly
&amp; Sands JOb, the west bound bridge
over Suue Route 339 was closed
this week to trafftc. Vehicles are
being detoured down lhe exit ramp,
across 339, and back up the onramp 10 7. The bridge will be
closed about 45 days. The east-

1Aiebmy Qpf11r ~- . . ~ ..... q!JGI 110111 D'f' fMioue IIIJOPII. p.- .-.:1 ~
Eidl...., 1n 1t11 Cfllf* • .,.,.. .......
a.. • ..,.._

r_,·.

. N' S H
N

LURHB

I H A H

PZAOHA

GZJJLDHO
OWINGZJ
V N J J

IIIIDPNO

l I 0

l I 0

r

R P Z R

TLAH

TLAH

R P Z 8

N

Z T .

TLWHAD .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All comedians have an euerutal cnoklneu if

lhey're funny at Ill ." -

Jerry Seklteld

bound bndgc tS rc stncted to one
lane.
Later thts summer, 7 from Eastem High School to Chester will be
resurfaced by Shelly . This 4-mile
project will coSI $511 .503 . The
contractor has not announced when

work w11l slart, but lhc completion
date is SepL 30.
Shelly &amp; Sands began work lhis
week on lhe resurfacing of 33 from
the south A1hens ctty limits
through Shade, 10 lhc Meigs County line. Completion date on 1his
8.7 -milc project is Aug . 31. The
contract price is $619,246.
Two bridge proJects on 33 m
Athens Counly are nearing completion. Bolh bridges, located approxi-

A major honor
OU recognizes Dr. Hugh Davis

A Multimedia roc. Newspapet"

POMEROY ~ Dr . Hugh H. Davis of Pomeroy has been designaled as
Oluo Uruversuy s most accomplished alumnus of the past half century in
tbe field of Classical Languages.
In recognition of his accomphshments, Davis was presenled a Significant Achievement Award from tbe Ohio University College of Ans and
Sciences at the Third Annual Departmental Award program held recently
atlhe umversity.
The presentation to Davis was made by F. Donald Eckelmann, dean of
tbe College. It was one of 10 citations authorized by the College of Arts
and Sc1cnces 10 recognize alumni of significant achievement The awards
are made from a pool of people nominated by alumni, faculty, and/or students. Dean Eckelmam chairs a small commitlee which malres the selecuons afler reading the nomination forms and studying tbe supporting
ma1enals.
."Since lhe college has valid addresses for almost 20,000 living alumni,
bemg selecled IS mdecd an honor," said Joyce Z. Kohan, assistant dean
for adminisuation.
DaviS gradualed from Ohio University in 1932 and was an instructor in
tbe College of Arts and Sciences in 1936-37. He earned the Ph.D. degree
from tbe Universily of Cincinnati in 1950. Defore that he traveled twice to
Italy . tbe first time as a scholar in residence in Rome, and the second time
as a member of the Army counter-intelligence.
He began his regular teaching career at Fordham University and from
1953 until 1975 was professor of classics at leMoyne College. During his
academ1c career he wrote numerous anicles and reviews, establishing
himself as a noted scholar in the area of Latin literarure palaeography, tex tile criticism, and church history.
In 1946 lhe Italian government bestowed upon Professor DaviS llle
Commenda of the Order of the Crown of Italy for his public services,
including his organization of the Mostra della Seultura Pisan~ del Trccento (Exposition of the Plsan sculpture of the 141h Century) in Piza tlml
year.
More m:ently Dav1s lent his assistance 10 officmls at lhe Smilhsonian
Institution who were bafncd by lhe iconography and Latin inscription of
(Continued on A-2)

Experience
keys choice
offest music

MOST ACCOMPLISHED ALUMNUS- Dr. Hugh H. Davis of
Pomeroy was recently recognized as Ohio ~Diversity's most
accomp~shed alumnus of the pasl half century m the field of Classical Languages. He displays a citation presented to him at a recent
College of Arts and Sciences reception. (T-S photo by Charlene
Hoenich)

Voinovich
will welcome
Riffe's ideas

•

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-S.ntinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS ~ Pat Black
often !ells her husband. Dr. Edward
Black, lhal be spent 42 monlhs in a
'" musical twilight zone" while he
sezved in the Navy during the Vietnam War.
·
"Whall heard stateside is differem lhan what he heard." she said.
Maybe that's why he enhsted
her help in selecting and reconling
tbe songs that will be played atlhc
River Recreation Festival July 4.
Dr. and Mrs. Black, wilh lhe aid
of a paper about music of lhe Vietnam era by Terry Anderson at lhe
Department of History a1 Texas
A&amp;M University , rined their
e•lell.'live album collection and the
collections of friends to find the
perfect Vietnam Era songs. During
the festival, a DJ. will play the
tape made by the Blacks and inlerview Vietnam veterans from the
Slllge in the pari:.
"We tried to find a representation of those (songs) that the people
mighl be most familiar wilh," Dr.
Black said.
Dr. Black , a licensed professional clinical counselor with
Althof &amp; Associales in GalliP.Oiis,
is no stranger to music . While in
college, he played the local coffeehouses of Richmond, Va., with a
friend and even recorded a Pepsi

WAR MUSIC - Pat Black and her husband, Dr. Edward
Black, a Vietnam veteran, discuss the proctss tbey used for selttling music representive or the Vietnam era. Tbe songs they have
chosen wUI be Jll&amp;yed July 4 in the park during the River Recreation Festival. (T-S pholo by Kevin Pinson)
commercial as part of a radio contest. Now he often uses his guilllr
and music writing ability as a form
of therapy for some of his clients.
'"Music can have a real healing
value," he said.
Dr. Black served wilh lhe Navy
from 1967 through 1968 aboard lhe
coastal gun support ship U.S.S .
Cone. He said he enlisled when he
was 18 years old arid spenl a tolal
of 42 months outside the eontinen-

·'

mately midway between Shade and
Alhens, are being replaced. A new
bridge has been conslructed beSJ.de
the old bridge al lhe larger of the
spans, and traffic continued uninterrupted during construction. On
the smaller span, one-lane traffic
regulated by Signal hghts is being
maintained throughout construc tion. Contractor on bolh spans is
DGM Inc., Beaver. The combined
cost for bolh is $812.457.
U.S. 33 wtU be closed 10 traffic
at the site of the largest bndge
shortly afler the Fourth of July,
probably on July 6. The closure
was originally 10 have started June
22, however, ODOT officials delermined that to bes1 serve motorists.
the closure should be postponed
until after lhe July 4 holiday . The
closure is cxpecled 10 last 15 days
and is necessary so workers can
connect lhe new bridge wtth exisl-

ing pavement.
The deck replacement of a lhtrd
33 bridge. this one at Darwin in
Meigs Counly , wtll start th1s week.
This job wtll be done by ODOT's
own workers. The bridge ts expeeled 10 remam open to traffic during

construction
Resurfacing of 33 from Kerrs
Run 10 lhe Pomeroy-Mason bridge
IS likely to begm in the nexl few
weeks. This is a joint venture with
Tom Mayle &amp; Sons Consuuction,
Barlleu, and Shelly. The proJeCI
cost if $177,579 and the comple tioo date is Aug. 31.
State Route 7 from the Mc•gs
County line 10 Kanauga is betng
resurfaced by Shelly. Work on dus
projccl began last week and one way traffic will be necessary dur mg mo s1 daylight hours as work
progresses. Two-way traffic will
(Continued on A·2)

Teacher guarantee
first for Ohio schools

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Starr

3t Ut!IIIIOCitalul

Jack Palance explores lhe
myth of Billy tile Kid, walks
tho streets of Dodge City and
looks at Annie Oakley and

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Try to
parttc rpaT e rn fun ac11vrttes today thaT
challeng e you bolh mentally and physically You 'll en toy tesTing your bodtly
skrtt s as well as your bram power
PISCES (feb. :ZO.M1rcl'l 20) Small detarl s could be of greaTer Significance
than usua l today espectally tn a cnttcal
m alter you·re attempTing 10 fina lize . Dot
every ""i"" and cross every "' t."
ARIES (March 21-April 111 You'll be
acuTely aware of the shortcomtngs ot
o thers today , but your companions
won 'tlind thrs annoying . If you do offer
cntictsm. iT wrll be taken lor whaltl is construclrve and well-mtentioned

21 $kilt
26E-

30 Stnlng

(!)

for you

,...don't...
23 Rec:lnecl

171'1111-•
28(-

mlllltgtndl
Statto ol Mind
ollht Wnt

CAPRICORN {OK. 22-Jan . 1SI) If you
p l an 10 mak e an rmporTant change today . do so one step aT a t1m e. ra ther
Than all a f once Tht s wtll reduce your
prooa bil1ty lor err or

$ltYe

21 FeiMMne

MI•IIl'

each oltlor. (A) Stereo. 0
\ljll ()) D 20/20 Sloreo

perfect tor ,-ou Mad $2 plu s a tong . sell ·
ad dr essed. st~ mpP. d envelope t o
M atchm aker . c10 th 1S newspaper P 0
Bo~ 9 14 28 . Clevela nd OH 44 10 t -3 428
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) A b1g op po rlu nlty co ul d come m a ra th er small pac kage
torlay espec. 1ally when you re deali ng
w1t h fr1 ends Someone ,n vo tved m a new
ven tur e may be mterested 1n hav 1ng you
partiC ipa t e
VIRGO (Aug . 23- Sapl . 22} For bes t re sul1 s tod ay . don·! broadcas t .,.our amb itious mten t1ons prema turely Ta ke pOS IIIve measu res to br1 ng I hem 1nl o bemg
and speak only after you ve accom plished your des1res
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Fa1th 1s pred ica ted upon the dep th o f your bet1e f 1n
wh at1 s etth er unseen or un fu lftlled Pos l!lv C th1nkmg could wor k wonder s l or
you today
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nav . 22) You re not
ap t to delibe ratel y seek com petlttv e 511 ua ii Ons today. bu t . by the same token.
you ·re not l1 ke ly to dodge th em either
Once 1n til e race . th ough . you 'll t ho r ougllly enjoy t he event

-·

10 Tratd
t2-or

murder of a merchant pits
blacks and Jews against

1eve al s wh1ch 51Qr1 S ar e roman11G1IIy

....._

The World Almanac ®Crouword Puzzle

Wild Woat ahowo. (1 :00)
i1J Tho Hltchhlkor
at On Stage
a world Ntwt
IIJI700 Club WHh Ptt

ASTRO-GRAPH

Pass
Pass

dummy

Slereo.
i1J Swtmp Thing Stereo. 0
10:00 C2le IIJ low 6 Ordtr The

GIVE ME
TWO DOlEN
OF THEM
YALLER
SUGAR
BALLS,
SILAS

Pass

J NT

Opomng lead t K

(A)

Mil SMIF NEEDS A RE-FILL

r.....

out your plan before you play from t h e ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - '

26 Lobor org.
29 lndlotlncl

illllll H - V1dto A coup1.

tJJ096 J
• 84

• • K 32

By Pbllhp Alder

postulalecl. Slorao. 0
o Berond Roollty

Mickey lifts some goodies
from the slora.{R) Stereo . C

.Q 10

Early thought,
late victory

existence of a vampire cult is

9:30 ())Cit ()) 11 lllbJ Tolk
Maggie goes to jail alter

+A.6~3

•J

11 Sections , 100 Pages

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 28, 1992

Meigs at center of $14 million in highway work

1-U-t%

SOUTH

17 Son ol- t 9 Thotch palm
20 Como out
22 Celogorlts
25 Racket otring

121 Naehvllle Now Stereo.
a Larry Klnt1 u..1
11J1 Sclrec:row ond Mra. Klnt1

BARNEY

Vol. 27, No_20

Copyrlgh1ed 1992

EAST

WEST
• 9i 4~

PHILLIP
ALDER

leap "

(L)

risks disbarment

-

• 76 4
t Ri 4 J

E"ocopeo tGI(2 001
7:05 ()) llevo~y Hlllbllllet
7:30 (2) D 11J J-r&lt;IJI Q
(!) Mojor Looguo IIIHblll
Chicago WMe Sox at New
York Yankees (L)
()) Major looguo IIIHblll
())Cit Entorttlnmont Tonlghl

Mostly su11ny with highs 75-80.

PR INT NUMBEt:lEO LE rTEII'5 IN

• 76

Atlanta Braves at Cincinnat1
Rods (LI

Along lhe river .............. Bl -7
Business/Farm ...............D 1-8
Classified ....... ................DJ-7
Dealhs ..............................A-3
Editorai ................... .........A-4
Sporls ............. .... ............ Cl-6
Weal her ...... ....... ..... ......... A-2

Comp lf're tt, e chuck le q"uoted
b y t,ll ong '" tl\e moutng words
yov develop from step No 3 below

SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
, _.,
Embody· Poise- Riser · Zealot- PROMISE
The coach oj a kids soccer team was having a hard
ltme mspmng team spirit. Alter a rousing defeat he
gatned lheor attention when he said, "Winners make a
comm1tment while losers only make a PROMISE .·

I!) (!)

Ttilf MtAr g~~~
£.0AFING J

Fred Crow pays tribute to Dr. Thomas
Morgan, noted area physician- A-4

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETIEIS
TO GET ANSWER

(ii Nlghl Court C

tMS'

the Fourth, James Sands says- D-2

C-1

Inside

A 1942 Victory Parade overshadowed

-B-1

A jamous comic made this
comment concerning cowboys: "Movie cowboys mystify
me. How can they jump off a
porch root and onto a horse,
and still sing in a--- --- voice?"

9 Moneyllne
11J1 MOVIE: King Kong

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EVENING

PEANIJTS

leners

WOlD

tal United SUites. During thai time,
he said he on ty lislened to Anned
Forces Rlld10 and received no outside news sources. So he was really
surprised 10 return home from lhc
war and find the country in social
upheaval because of the war.
"I was absolulcly startled that
that was going on," he said. "I
lh ought I was jusl doing my job
and everyone was behind me."
(Continued on A-2)

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Wriler
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
Voinov1ch says he will listen 10 any
spec1fic proposal offered by House
Speaker Vem Riffe to balance 1he
stale budget and avoid $370 mil lion in spendmg cuts planned for
July I.
He commen1ed through
spokesman John Meyer on Friday
after Riffe said lhe governor should
delay the cuts, whi ch would hit
Oh10' s state-supported colleges and
universities hardest.
Voinovich said he mu st make
the cuL~ to help eliminate a $520
million deficit in Ohio's budget for
the fiscal year which startS at mtdnight Tuesd.:ly. The stale is required
by law 10 have a balanced budget.
Meyer said Riffe has mentioned
increasing UU&lt; es on the weallhy, but
" ha s never put anylhing specific
on lhe table."
In other developments, E. Gordon Gee, president of Ohio State
University, said the cuts would
devastate his institution in many
areas, even requiring a surcharge of
$5 to $10 on football and basketball tickets.
Gee said the university also
would have 10 abandon efforts to
host a debate this fall between lhc
presidential candidales.
The university's state subsidy
would be cut by about $40 million
as part of lhe governor's plan to
order a $224 million reduction in
(Continued on A-2)
.,,

RIO GRANDE - The Universtty of Rio Grande is lhe first institution of higher education in Ohio
to put a warranty on the competency of graduates in its teacher education program.
Rio Grande's "Beginning
Teacher Reliabiluy Pledge." which
was adopted by the university's
board of trustees al iL' June meeting, guarantees lhat graduates will
meet established performance standards in the classroom. The university will provide assistance to lhe
teacher and 1he employing school
district if a ll'aduate does not perform at a sausfaciDry level.
"The warranty is an expression
of Rio Grande's confidence m lhc
graduates of ils education program." satd Rio Grande President
Barry M. Dorsey. "We promise
that our graduates are of htgh qual ity and are able 10 1each successfully. If nol, we will work to remedy
DR . G. MICHAEL MILLER
the situation .
" lncreastngly , the excellence of and arc ccrttfied through the Uni our education probrrnm graduates is versity of Rio Grande 10 teach after
being recognized throughout Ohto fall quarter 1992. The program may
and lhe Appalachtan regton," he be activated for any graduate not
added. "By adopung lhts teacher meeting eslablished performance
warranty program we arc lclling standard s in h1 s or her first two
the world lhat we have a fin e pro- years of teachmg. Application for
gram and lhat we swnd bchtnd our lhc assistance phase of lhc prugram
muSI be made by the teacher's
graduates."
Dr. G. Michael Miller, as,. stanl supervising prin cipal to Rio
profe ssor of educalion a1 Rio Grande's Dean of Educauon.
The College of Education will
Grande, drafled the warranty proprovide
perronncl to review the sitposal and based his resear ch on
'uation,
aid
lhe teacher and principal
programs conducted at olh cr
an
planning
a program of assisschools throughout the nation. Curlance.
and
offer
consultation and
renrly, a diverse group of colleges
professional
services
to h01h the
and universities offer warranttc s,
1
r.acher
and
lhc
principal.
including such large well -known
A unique feature of Rto
institutions as the University of
Grande's
warranty program, Miller
Virginia and such smaller instilu n
plaioed.
is that the program guar uons a s Doane College (N cb.),
antees
a
gradualc
's knowledg e in
which reportedly inttialcd lhe idea
the
area
in
which
he
or she i s ccrti of a warranty .
ftcd.
Miller said he became famtliar
"In this respect, our warranty is
with the program al Texas-based
gcr than other anslllution s'
sLion
Sam Houston State College in the
warranly programs," he said.
mid-1980s
According to Paul Lloyd, dean
""When I wro1e 1he origtnal
of
the College of Education , serinvesugatory paper, I wanted 10
vi
ces
available through the promake sure we weren't getting into
tnclude on -s ite visits to
gram
somelhing that was beyond us,"
observe
the teacher, as well as
Miller said. "Apparcnlly, schools
teacher
parucipation
in wor~s hops .
with quality programs similar 10
courses
and
direcled
studies.
ours have been very successful in
"'The BTRP provtdcs a guaran offering the warranty. Sam Hous tee
of assistance in ca..'ie a Univcrsilon State issues diplomas 10 about
ly
of
Rio Grande graduate does not
450 education majors a year, and
perform
al a satisfactory level ," he
over a period of years, !here have
srud.
been only two complamts about a
"Frankly," he continued, "'we
graduate's competency in the classwouldn"t
make lhis kind of guaranroom .
"The professional literature tee if we weren't sure our graduates
reveals similar results at other qual- could do the job in the first place.
ity schools," he added. Miller noted With lhis action, we go on record
that he found instirutions with war- expressing our confidence in
ranty programs already possess rig- l.hem."
"We have such confidence in
orous standards for teacher educaour
graduates," Dr. Dorsey added,
tion.
"'!hat
we lhink Dr. Miller, who will
"Our education majors are preeoordinale
lhe program, will be as
pared for lhe classroom," he said.
lonely as the proverbial Maytag
"If a school district hires a student
repairman."
from Rio Grande. it will be getting
Approximalely 500 of lhe Unia competent person, someone who versily of Rio Grande's 2,000 sruwill do the job."
dents are involved in leaeher eduThe BTRP applies to all begincatioo programs.
ning teachers who graduate from

,,

�~

~

•

L

nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

June 28, 1992

wv

Weather
Sunday , mostly sunny with
highs 75 to 80.
Ohio extended forecast
Monday through Wednesday :
Fair Monday. A chance of showers
Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs
mos~y 80 to 85. Lows 55 to 65.

Voinovich will ...
(Continued from A-1)
outlays for colleges and universities. Tbat' s a 1 percent slash on top
of a 7 percent hit they took this fis cal year.
Gee also mentioned a possible
tuiti on boost next year of between
9 and 9.S percent. The stale would
have to lift an existing 7 percent
cap. Riffe said raising the cap to
about 9 percent is possible, but no
decision has been made.
Gee also said that if the cuts go
through, Ohio State will have to
sell or lease property on or near its
main campus, end support for its
public radio and television stations.
close the University Press and halt
services for the public.
Voinovich plans bud~et reduc tions totaling $370 milhon which
would force many state agencies to
mal(e cuts of 20 percent or more.
Voinovich outlined the cuts
before and after Democrats in the
Legl61amre refused his request to
mcrease tobacco and alcohol taxes
to erase $125 million of the deficit.
He plamed election year jitlcrs
among Democrats for the defeat of
his plan.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg. sa1d
Voioovich should wait severa l
months to see if the economy
improves before deciding whether
to Impose cuts.
''We don't have a deficit yet.
The (fiscal) year hasn't even started," he said.
Revenue forecasts cited by
Voinovich might be wrong , but
eveti if they arc right. there still
may- be time to balance the budget
late~ this year, Riffe said. He said
past budget adjustments always
come several months into the fiscal
year.

Meigs ...
(Continued rrom A-ll
resume after work hours. The projecl completion date is Aug. 3 L
The project cost is $664,938.
Two bridges on 1 in Meigs
County, near Middleport, were
recently reopened after major
repalr. PBS Construction Inc., Mineml Ridge, was contniCtor on both
bridges. The contract called for
repair work and concrete deck
overlay on both spans. A third
bridge, this one on State Route 124,
approximately two miles south of
the State Route 248 intersection, is
also included in !his job. The conuacJOr is currently worlcing on 124.
Completion date on this project is
June 30 and the total cost is
SI68.SIO.

Chairman Patnck Sweeney, DCieveland, declared it to be out of
order and the committee voted 1211 to uphold that ruling.
The committee later adopted an
alternate restriction offered by Rep.
Donald Czarcinski, D-Toledo, that
forbids usc of public money for an
exercise room.
"I feel that they can have one if
they can have someone else to pay
for it." Czarcinski said.
Sen. Richard Finan. R-Cincin nati, assistant Senate president, sa1d
the House action was "much ado
about nothing. There was never any
intention to use any public money
to build any gymnasium on the
Statehouse grounds, anyway. ''
"We bad only said that 1f private funds were available to have
that kind of thing over there '"
1995, that' s something we m1ght
take a look at." Finan said.

Correction
GALLIPOLIS - The Tribune
reported June 23 that Lori Shane
told shenffs depuoes that someone
damaged the rearview mirror and
windshield of her 1989 Chevrolet
Ca mara RS . The car is actually
owned by Eunice Shane. The TribUM regrets the error.

MOVING ON - A farewell party honoring
Mark and Leesa Murphey who are moving this
weekend to Rocky River was held Thursday
night in tbe Grace Episcopal Parish House. Tbe
couple came to Meigs County rour years ago
wben be accepted tbe job or administrator al
Overbrook Center. During their time bere both

Mr. and Mrs. Murphey have been active in communily affairs. Cline Dailey, lefl, organist at
Grace Cburch where Mark was choir director,
extends best wishes to lbe couple. Murphey bas
been employed as administrator of Oak Ridge
Nursing Home in Westlake.

Comments draw Byrd into dispute with colleague
By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Call me
Irresponsible, the old song said.
But not on the floor of the Umt ed Slates Senate, unless you want
to get into a good old-fashioned
shouting match.
The Senate's senior Democrat.
Sen. Robert Byrd, uncharacteristically told a colleague to "shut Ius
own mouth" Friday during a frac.
uous dispute that erupted after
Byrd said a third senator 's state ments were irresponsible.
That quarrel arose shortly before
Byrd apologized for unrelated
remarks he made Thursday questiomng whether the United Slates
should continue to admit immi grants who do not speak English.
'"I regret that in the heat of the
moment I spoke unwisely," said
Byrd. D-W.Va., who as president
pro tempore of the Senate is its topranked member.
The comments capped an acri monious two days during which the
Senate s1alled over a Republican
anempt to revive the proposed bal anced -budget amendment to the
Constitution.
The logjam was broken late Friday when Democrats and Republi cans agreed to hold votes. likely to
kill the amendment for the year, on

Experience ...
(Continued from A-1)
Dr. Black sa1a that when he
returned stateside at the end of h1s
tour he was confronted by peaceful
anti -war demonstrators. He said
that he immediately went into a
restroom. changed into civilian
clothes, folded his uniform and
threw 11 into the Charleston River.
" I didn't talk about it for 16
years," he said.
The music of that era played an
important role in the war, Dr. Black
said, but the war played an equally
important role in the music.
"Music is an expression of what
is happening in our society." he
said . "(The war and the music)
interchanged very evenly. Music
was a socially acceplable form of
dissenL"
Dr. Black said he believes Operation Desert Storm didn't mfluence
music as much because of its
length and also because a large
majority of the pubhc supported
the effort
"There was no social rift, " he
said. "There wasn 't that much of an
anLi-war faclion . Everyone was
behind iL"
He also said that today's music
doesn't follow the same trends as it
did 20 years ago. "It seems 10 me
the music wa' a lot more closely
related to what wa s happenmg
then," he said.
His wife agreed. "The (Vietnam
era) music really reflected soc1al
conscience."

June 28, 1992

Riffe hunts
for answers
in fair pact

ouse panel bars plans
for Senate exercise room
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The House
Finance Commiuee has recommended for passage a bill providing the final $34 million needed 10
finish lhc C&amp;piwl Square rcnovatiorl project
The panel changed lhe measure
so it would include a ban on use of
public money for building or operation of an exercise room that may
be considered for lhe Senate Building, which is being refurbished
along wilh the Statehouse.
The prohibition was included in
a bill !hat would reauthorize $1.2
billion worth of previously
approved state construction projects and make a series of corrections and changes in the current
state operating budget
Addition of $34 million for the
Statehouse renovation would bring
tile project's cost 10 $87.7 million,
which is $13 million higher than
original estimates.
Ron Keller, project coordinator
for Schooley Caldwell Associates,
associate architects on the projec~
said the $13 million represented
changes in the scope of the work
rather !han cost overruns.
"There have been a couple of
things added to this project that
cost a lit~e more," Keller said. He
said one such item was construction of a sub-basement for equipment storage below an atrium connecting the Statehouse and the Senate Building.
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R-Wooster,
initiated debate over lhe exercise
area Friday by proposing an
amendment that would have prohibited any physical exercise faciliues. whether privately or publicly
financed. 10 be included in the project
One room in the Senate Building, which is next to the Statehouse, has been identified for possible future use as an exercise area
"Go out to the Department of
Administtative Services, their new
computer center, and you will find
there was a plan to put an exercise
facility in there as well. Tbat was
axed ... and I think that's the public
policy that should apply to the
General Assembly as well,"
Amsllltz said.
His amendment lost when

. '

Tuesday or Wednesday. That will
clear the way for consideration of a
524 billion aid paclcage for Russia
and other fonner Soviet republics
that President Bush and many top
lawmakers support.
Before that deal was announced.
Byrd got mto a dispute with Sen.
Hank Brown, R-Colo., a supporter
of the balanced-budget amendment.
Brown had criticized excessive
government spending Thursday. He
si ngled out the Senate Appropria -

tions Commlltee, which Byrd
chairs, as "the most irresponsible
appropriations committee in the
history of our republic.' '
Byrd fll'ed back Friday, saying,
"I think that is as irresponsible a
sta tement as I have ever heard in
my 34 years in the Senate."
And he went on to read aloud
from a June 15 letter Brown had
se nt Byrd aslcing that the appropri·
ations panel provide him with mil lions of dollars for special projects

Carleton College Trustees
to award scholarships
SYRACUSE -Carleton College Trustees voted to awand a total
of $3,000 in college scholarships
for the 1992-93 school term when
the I26th annual meeting of the
board was held last week at the
Syracuse Mumcipal Building.
There arc 18 applicants for
scholarships, it was announced.
Applicants must be legal residents
of Syracuse to be considered.
In other activity, officers were
re-elected. seven members were
renamed to tcnns on the board and
a five-members Scholarship Selection Commlllee was selected.
Robert Wingett was re-elected
as president; Milton Roush, vice
president: John LISle . se&lt;:retary and

in Colorado.
In JUmped Sen. Alfonse
D'Amato, R-N.Y., one of the Senate's most combative members. He
accused Byrd of violating a Senate
rule that forbids senators from
accusing each other of "conduct or
motive unbecoming a senator."
Byrd, a virtuoso of the Senate's
often-arcane rules, denied that.
And there ensued an ex ttaordi ·
nary shouting match between the
two senators that saw Byrd tell
D'Amato at one pomt. "Would the
senator shut his own mouth to let
the chair rule" on D' Amato's
accusation.
The chair ruled that Byrd had
violated no rules, and Senate
debate resumed in its usual deco -

Kathryn Crow, treasurer.
Elected to new three-year tenns rous manner.
on the 21 -member board were Marcia Karr, John Sauvage, Emmogene
Hamilton, Larry Ebersbach, Dana
Winebrenner, John Lisle and Rick
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Ash. Ms. Karr. who al age 101 is Friday night's Ohio Lottery selecstill an active member of the board, tions:
was unable to be present as were
Pick-3 2-8-1
Sauvage and Ash.
Pick-4 0-8-9-7
Appointed to serve on the scholBuckeye 5: 1-16-21 -27-37
arship selection committee were
The Super Lono jackpot was $4
June Lee, Brooks Sayre, Wingett. million.
Lisle and Roush.
Attending, in addition to those
previously named, were board
members Larry Fields, Milton Varian and Don Houdashelt.

Ohio Lottery

--Area deaths
Nellie V. Krebs
POMEROY - Word has been received of the death of Nellie V.
Krebs , 63, Chillicothe, fonnerly of Rutland. She died on Saturday , June
20, 1992 following a brief ~!ness_
She was born Oct. 24, 1928 in Ru~and, to Roy and Viola Harris Tillis.
She was a_reured restaurant owner and operator.
SurviVIng are her mother, VIola Tillis of Chillicothe· her sons: Charles
E. "Biff' (Ruth) Krebs of Albany, Kevin L. (EiizabCth) Krebs of U.S .
Route 35, _and John E. Mahaffey of San Diego, calif.; her daughters, Mrs.
Ted (Nellie) Mclemore of Columbus, and Judith M. Rodwal of Chillicothe; four sisters, Mrs. Elwood (Mary) Rinchan and Mrs. Carl (Ruth)
Bower , both of Chillicothe_. Mrs. Wayne (Esther) Kennedy of Middleport,
and Mrs. Meredith (Goldie) Radcliff of Circleville; five brothers, Curt
(Conme) T1lhs of Kmgston, David (Dorothy) Tillis and Amos (Ruth)
Tillis, both of Chillicothe, William (Naomi) Tillis of Pennscrcck, Pa.. and
Jonathon (Wilma) Tillis of Reedsville: a sister-in-law, Kathleen Tillis of
Ru~and; six grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Charles 0. Krebs, on Oct.
31, 1991 , and by a brother, Shennan Tillis.
Services were held Tuesday in the Ware Funeral Home, with the Rev .
Raben Isaacs officiating. Burial was in Kirkland Memonal Gardens in
Point Plcasan~ W.Va.

COLUMBUS (AP) -House
Speaker Vern Riffe said Friday that
he wants an investigation of a propose d contract to rename the
Celeste Center into the Pepsi Entertainmem Center.
Riffe, D-Wheel ersburg , was
asked at a news conference about
reports that the name of former
Gov. Richard Ce leste would be
removed from the center.
"That's
wrong.
We
(Democrats) have never taken Jim
Rhodes' name off of anything," he
said, referring to a fanner longtime
Republican governor.
"I don'tlike it. Never in my 34
years here have I heard of anything
like it," Riffe said.
Pieter Wykoff. fair spokesman,
said Celeste's name would stay on
a plaque on the building but it
would be called the Pepsi Entertainment Center and will be listed
that way on letterheads, advertising
and other documents.
Under the five-year, $2.8 million conttact, Pepsi would have the
right to place signs on the center,
mcluding a prommcnt. illuminated
sign atop the building that could be
seen from nearby Interstate 71,
Wykoff sa1d.
The conttact has been signed by
the Ohio Expositions Commission.
It requires approval by the state
Controlling Board. which will consider it on Monday.
''I'm sure the Controllin g Board
will look into it," R1ffe said.
Meanwhile, the conttact continued to stir controversy among fastfood operators who could sell nothing but Pepsi at their faugrounds
locations If the contract were
approved.
McDonald's, Wendy's, White
Castle and Donatos. were lobbying
members of the controlling board
to reject or change the contract.
They all have exc lusive deals with
Coca-Cola.
Wykoff said Fair Manager Billy
Inmon was meeting Friday with
representatives of some of those
companies.

Richard D. Schoonover
MARlETT A - Richard Dean Schoonover, 72, 808 CILftor St., Mariena, died Friday. June 26, 1992 in New Matatnoras.
Born April29, 1920 in Rutland, son of the late Tenner and Freda Lillie
Schoonver, he retired from Peabody Barnes in 1980. He was a member of
the Moose Lodge in Marietta and was a U.S. Navy veteran of World War
II. He had resided in the Mansfield area before moving to Marietta.
Surviving are his fanner wife, Gertrude Fields Schoonover of Mansfield; two daughters, Sandra Bernhardt and Patricia Dean, both of Mansfield: a son, Richard Dean Schoonover II or Mansfield; five grandch ildren; and four brothers, Bob Schoonover of California, and Jerry. Thomas
and Charles Schoooover, all of Rutland.
He was also preceded in death by a sister and five brothers.
Services will be Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. in the Ontario (Ohio) Home of
Wappner Funeral Directors, with Pastor Terry Zerby officiatmg . Friends
may call at the funeral home Monday from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
Memonal contnbuuons may be made to the Richland County Ameri can Heart Association.

Couples apply for licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The followin g
cou ples recently applied for a mar riage license in the Gallia County
Probate Court
Ezra James Sheets, S I, 424
Hubbard Street. Gallipolis, and
L1sa JoAnne Gray, 20, 424 Hubbard Street, Gallipolis: Douglas
Scott Fogelstrom, 27, 42 Chilli cothe Road. Gallipolis, and Shari
Denise Branham, 30, 42 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis; Claude H.
Daniels, 64, 74 Court Street, Gal lipolis, and Shirley Chapman, 48 .
17567 State Route 160, Ewington;
James Randall Adkins, 37, 83
Homewood Drive, Bidwell, Joanna
Lee Sexton, 39, 83 Homewood
Drive, Bidwell; Roger Dale
McClelland. 35. Lot 23, 118 Quail
Creek Ext., Galhpohs, and Janet
Faye Beaver, 38, Lot 23, 118 Quail
Creek Ext.. Gallipolis; Ralph
Richard Martin. 28. 1067 SR 141,
Gallipolis, Leanna Jo Nibert 23,28
Lucky St., Cheshire;
Alex Wallen. 24, 30 Evans
Heights, Ga llipolis, and Stacy
Anne Callihan, 20, 63 Kristi Drive ,
Bidwell; Todd Hamilton Simpkins,

THE OFFICIAL SHOE
OF THE MICHAEL
JORDAN FOOT.

~
R

BANKRUPTCY
614·221·0888

LW.CENNAMO

(Continued from A-I)
A ma-J.Of···-----an hiStorical mural in the Museum of American History. The scholarly
explanation which he furnished them elicited recognition from the Smithsonian.
Several years ago the nauve of Pomeroy retired and returned to his
family home on West Main Street. Since re111ming be has staged exhibits
of rare books and manuscripts and has been active in community cultural
affairs.

ATTORNEHHAW
8 East Broad Street, Svite 900
Col1mll1s, Ollio

LOCAL CONSULTATION
992·6417

In Pom~~oy With
ATTORNEY D. MICHAEL MULLEN

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Air Jort111

NEW SHIPMENn

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26, Route I, Box 367B. Gallipoli s
Ferry, W.Va., and Deidra Cloe
Litchfield, 35, Route I, Box 367B,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; Edward
Eugene Howard II, 24, 1926 Chestnul Street, Gallipolis, and Tabatl1a
Lynn Watson, 22, 1926 Chestnut
Street, Gallipolis;
Harold Dean Dillon, 18. 336
Bladen Road, Crown City, and
Stephanie Louise Blake, 18, 15293
Hannan Trace. Crown CHy; John
Clayton Jeffers, 18, 416 Teens Run
Road, Gallipohs, and Tina Ann
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Perot qualifies
for Nevada run

wv

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A3 ..

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Area man discovers
there's beauty in Bali
By MAX TAWNEY
GALLIPOLIS - I one had the
good fortun e of spending seven
days on one of the most beautiful
islands in the south Pacific, BaiL
I almost did not go there
because there was a $50 entrance
fee . But my sister Ruby had been
there and she told me it would be
the best $50 I had ever spent. She
was rightl
When l landed at the airport, I
talked with the custom agent who
was young and very polite . I asked
him what hotel he recommended .
He said if I would wait 20 minutes
he would take me into Denpasar.
which was 10 miles from the airport. I got on his motorcycle with
him and he took me to the Nu sa
Dua Beach Hotel.
He stayed with me for the next
few hours and introduced me to aU
of the people who worked at the
hotel. He told them to be nice to
me, and they were .
The next morning four of the
workers took me on a tour. We
stopped at a rice field where they
were thrashing rice by hand. They
insisted that I try my hand, and
when I did, they cheered me and
laughed at the way I thrashed rice.
Next we went to Monkey Island
where there were 200-300 mon key s. There wa~ a sign there, but I
couldn't read it. I fed the monkeys
pean uts and after one bit me, someone told me the sign cautioned visi tors about feeding the monkeys.
The next day two young fellows
came to my room. Excitedly, they
told me to get on their motorcycle.
They wanted to s~ow me something. They took me out to a large
fi eld where there must have been
200-300 people . About 10 men

were bUIIdmg ·a structure about 20
feet tall and they were having what
I would call a funeral. They placed
f1v e bodies wrapped in five layers
of white cloth in the structure, then
set it on fire . No one cried, but they
went through some sort of grief
that I can't describe. When it was
over, they had a b1g feast. There
were tables loaded with all kinds of
food . It was like a large family

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) Texas billionaire Ross Perot has
qualified for a spot on the Novem ber ballot as an independent presidential candidate in Nevada and inslance.·'
He referred to th e behavior of
Alabama.
doze ns of drunken Navy and
Dale ErqUiaga. elections deputy Marin e Corps avia tors at the Las
to the Nevada secretary of state, Veg as convention of the Tail hook
said Friday that "he's on the ballot Association, where stnppcrs parad- as soon as he pays h1s $250" ed. pornographic film s were shown
tiling fcc, said .
and night sq uadrons rang up alcoThe qualifying came as no sur- hol bills of $7,000 per room durin g
prise to Perot's Nevada supponers the three-day gathering.
who turned in nearly 50,000 signa Garrett's resigna ti on ca me a
tures. State law required only 9.392 week after he acknow ledged he had
for placing the undeclared indepen dent candidate on the ballot.
"It's not really an earth-shatter ing thing," said Perot state coordi nator Tom Johnson of Reno . "It
would have been earth shanering
had he not been qualified."
Perot has now qtu~lified for bal lot spots in a total of 18 states and
is awaiting verLfi caMn of petitiOns
in 9 others.
IHf I \II R ;1\H•Rflf
Ms. Lau said clerks in 13 of th e
Sl&lt;Hc's 17 counties have vcnficd
lffip. ,1fA1 -r.=C?!''
14.299 signatures.
ONIIVIIliiiG SIIOW 7:30
The signatures had been turned
ADMISSION SI.SO
in June 4 after a 90-day campaign_
446-0973
In Montgomery, Ala., meanwhile, Secretary of State Joe Camp
sa id his staff had verified that
enough people had signed petitions
for Perot to put him on the Nov. 2
ballot as an independent candidate.

COLONY THEATRE

When someone dies, they are
wrapped in these layers of cloth
after herbs have been spread over
their body . This helps preserve
them and helps them from becoming odorous. They never bury one
person. There must be three before
they have the "bum-out'" and feasL
They took me in one home to see a
man just before burial, but they
hadn't done a good job with the
herbs. The air was rank. Maybe he
had been around longer than some.
It's not uncommon to see ladies
talting a bath in the small streams
and ponds. There is nothing private
about it as it is a custom.
There is very little crime in Bali.
No one locks their doors. They are
happy and friendly people, but
very few tourists go there because
of the enttance fee .
When I was preparing to leave
Bali, all of the people at the airport
gathered around me and wanted my
autograph and a picture of me with
them. I felt like Elvis Presley . As
my plane took off I could sec every
one of them waving goodbye. They
waved until I was out of sight. It
made me feel good.
I would love to return some day
to thi s beautiful Island, but it is too
late in the day for me now - l'm
almost 80 years old .

been present in one of the hospitality sui tes ncar where the all eged
abuse occurred. but that he saw no
improper conducL
And amid charges of a possible
cover-up . Garrett was forced to
request an independent probe after
Navy investigators fruled initially
to in clude an affidavit alleging he
had been in the area.
In a scathin g report issued in
April. the Navy's inspector general
charged that th e servi ce's senior
leadership had known for years
about raucous behavior at the annual convention but had done nothing

•'

'•

WELCOME TO BALI - The red carpel was out for Max
Tawney. as he arri_ved at the airport in Bali. Here. Tawney is piclured w1th some a.rpurt employees before he heads to his hotel in
Denpasar.

. HARVEST TIME- Takin~
hme lo help, Max Tawney joins
in the thrashing or rice during a
harvest in Bali. Bali is an island
in the south Pacific.

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Hurchins joins
Angus Association

Chrwkmd Operq on
Toor VocGiists

Richard 6
Maurtvn Gqylord
Sat., July 11, 8:00 p.m.

PATRIOT - Paul Hutchins of
Patr10t is a new junior member ol
the American Angus Association
Junior members of the assoc,atJo~
arc eiJgJblc to register cattle with
the group and take part m AAA sponsored show and other national
and regional events.

7
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2nd A.... Golllpolto, Oh .

Gall 446 -ARTS fot' morslnfo

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52 WeeU......

It's important to me to be directly involved in
the education of my children. As a member of
the GCS family, I've always been a part of my
children's education.
""Gallia Christian School is a parcnl-run school,
providing a Christ-&lt;:entered, [amily aunosphere,"
says parent Michael Langona. who also serves on the
GCS Board. 'The teachers, while maintaining high
academic standards, foster a family -type closeness
with students and parents."
Gall ia Christian School offers a ttaditional curricu-

!urn of both college preparaJory and geneml course
studies for students in Kindergarten through 12th
Grade, with emphasis on high academic achievement.
strong moml ~tantlards and spiritual values.
For information about our programs, or to receive
an applicatioo for tbe 1992-1993 school year, call
(614) 367-0306or (614) 367-7475.

GALLIA CHRISTIAN

ScHooL

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WlS"f

In h1 s resignation letter. Garren
ins isted he "nei th er saw nor
engaged in any offensive conduct"
nt the gathering of the Tailhook
Association
President Bush accepted the resignation in a statement emphasiz ing that "sexual harassment will
not be tolerated."

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FRI. SAT., SUM.

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Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admisswn - Nettie
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Friday discharge s - Veda
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Outcry prompts Navy
secretary's resignation
By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON - An outcry
over reported sex abuse at a rau cous aviators' convention last year
reached the military's highest echelons with the resignation of Navy
Secretary H. Lawrence Garrett Ill .
In keeping with Navy tradition
that a ship's captain accepts
respon sibility for all that occurs
under h1s command, the Navy's top
civilian leader stepped down Fn day.
In a letter of resignauon to Pres ident Bush, Garrell said he took
full rcspons1bli ity for the " leadership failure which all owed the
egregious conduct at tl1e T31lhook
(convention) to occur 1n the fir st

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�June 28, 1992

Patrol probes two-vehicle accident

Page- A4

CHESTER - The Galll a-Mcigs Post of th e State High way
Patrol investigated a two-vehi cle accident on Pine Grove Road in
Chester Township Friday .
According to the patrol, a veh1cle driven by Charl es A. Cunnin gham, 16, Pomeroy , and one driven Charles E. Yost. 38, Racine, collided after meeting in a curve. Both vehicles were apparently left of
center. the patrol reported.
No injuries were reported, the repon stated.
Both vehicles received heavy dam age .
The acc ident is still under inves l! gation. No citatio ns were
issued.

FBI ignorant of Syrian's link to terrorists
825 Third A•e., GoiUpo lls, O hio
(614) 446-2J4l

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(6 14) 992·1156

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Pobllsber
HOBART WILSON JR.
Eietutlve Editor

PAT WHIU HEAD
AssblMnt Pu bllsber-Controller

A MEMB ER of The Assoc1ated Pre ss. and tht: Am encan
Newspaper Publi&amp;bers Association

LETTERS OF OPINION ar( we lcome. They sho uld b• l"s than
300 words. All lette rs are subject to editing and must t.e s1gned wnb.
name. address and telepbone number. No unsig ned le tters will bt
pu blished . Letters should be in good tas te. add ress1ng 1ss ues , not
person ahlies.

About Dr. Thomas
Morgan, et al
The news thai Dr. Th omas Morgan. Ch1 cf of Staff , Depanmen t of
Surgery, Holzer Medical Clinic is leav mg the area came as a bombshell to
this wri ter. I have lcnown Dr. Morgan lor a considerable penod ol um e.
Most of 1t has been in a nonprofessional wa y.
In 1975, through a routine ph ysical examination g1ven by Dr. Oscar
Clarke. it was discovered that I had a lump in the prostate area. Dr. Clarke
refe rred me to Dr. Alonzo at the Hol zer Medical Clm1c. Dr. Alonzo was
confident that the enlargement of the prostate was ind icative of cance r.
So, as a result! was scheduled for a needle biopsy at the hospital .
The biopsy showed no cance r cells. Dr. Alonzo insisted that the onl y
true way to determine thi s matter was to have a surgical biopsy per·
formed. At the sc heduled umc my good fncnd , Jack Carr. wheeled me in
to the operating room. A major med ical operation was performed by Dr.
Alonzo. entcnng through the stomach and cuttmg 1nto the lum p. A spec ime n was removed and se nt to a laboratory.
For so me strange reaso n it took seve ral days for the res ults to be
know n Sure enough, I had a mahgnancy. The major problem facing me at
this tim e was whether to have the lump removed or the enUre prosta te
gland. For my readers who do not know, th is re moval causes unmcdiatc
impote ncy .
As soon as my origmal surgery healed . Dr. Morgan came onto the
scene. I can well remember Tom Morgan co mmg in to the room and say•ng. "Fred Cro w. you arc a damn fool if you do not hav e the Cntlfc
prosLltc removed."
Thi s came from a man wh o was not •n volved in the surgery Tom
removed any uncena.inty I had in my mmd. Had he not arnv cd on the
scene l m•ght have attempted to do otherw ise .

WASHINGTO N - Ha1dar
You ssef- a Syrian intelli gence
offi CJ al who a llege dly bankro ll s
terrorist activities through narcotics
trafficking - came to Washi ngton
last September. By some accoun ts,
he was csconed around town more
lik e a d•gnitary than an outlaw by a
member of the FBI' s ow n anu -ter ronsm untl.
Kris J. Kolesnik, an aide to Sen.
Char les Grass lcy, R·lowa, first
in formed the FB I of the mystcnous
v•s•t. But th e FBI 's res ponse
proved even more myste rious.
In ste ad of ac tin g on the tip ,
1-; o lcsnik claim s the FBI fu st
dcn1 ed the all egation. then tried to
dJScrcdH him and his sources.
Ko lesn ik had repeatedly come
ac ross Youssef' s name in connec tion with ht s ycars· lon g probing
1n10 int ern at ional terrori s m.
Kole snik and others becam e con vmccd that Youssef fit the profil e
of a "Yasser Ha1d cr," wid ely
dcscnbed in press reports as a te rrorist fi nancier.
A Jul y 199 1 Lo nd on Tim es
piece claimed Bri t•sh au thorittc s
track ed fu nds for an aborted 1986
plan to blow up an lsrac il airlmcr.

llyin g from London to Tel Aviv, to
an acco un t ow ned by a Yas scr
Ha ider at the International Bank of
Crcdtt and Comm erce in Lond on.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
In anoth er inc1dent, terrorists who
kidn apped a Greek business man
report edly demanded that the ran som be deposited mlo the same
London BCCI bank account
Aft er pass in g on th e tip , a
mo nths-long strug gle ensued , pit·
tmg Kolesnik and a Virginia doctor, who was one of hi s original
sources, against the FBI. Ultimately. Kolesnik took his case to the
Justi cc Depanment, whose public
inleg rit y sec tion is invesligating
whether the FBI properly handled
the case.
In an April 14 intefVlew with
Ju sti ce off •c ials. a tran script of
wh ich was obtained by our associ·
ole Dean Boyd, Kolesnik states :

"Thw response was th ey didn 't
know who Haidar Youssef is. they
vehemently denied that any FBI
age nt was escorting h1m around,
and they can ass ure us that if he
came in the country, that he did not
mee t wi th any governm ent people."
Days later, Kolesnik says the
FBI informed him that " Lhcre's a
lot of Haidar Yousscfs. thcrc's a lot
of Haidars, the re's a lot o f
Youssefs and we ju st can't track
dow n th e guy yo u' re talkin g
aboul. "
Koles nik then put the FBI in
touc h with his sources. One o f
them was Vir gmi a res 1dent Dr.
Richard C. Fu1sz. wh o charges that
Youssef personally tried to have
him kidnapped in London . In
recent years, Fui sz gain ed
widespread media attention over
explosive documents he prov ided
to !he Ju sti ce Department about
Baxter International, one of th e
world 's largest hospital suppliers.
The documents indicated that in
th e laic 1980s Baxter may have
have illegally tr~ed to evade th e
Arnb blackli st by se lling its facilities in Israel in order to bui ld one in

Fred W. Crow
Thank God for Tom Morgan , I have had no further ev idence of cancer
smce that date As Tom Morgan stated. you m1ghl not have got al l of 1t
and rt would hav e spread through the entire body. I have counseled many
other cancer patJeJHS since that ti me, rcmembenn g wha t Dr. Morgan d1d
for me.
I was in Holzer Medical Center for apprm imately 30 day s and had a
lo t of time on my hands. On th •s one day I visucd S:lrah Porte r. moth er of
!l dl Porter. my fo rmer law partner.
On this occas ion a lady housekeeper stopped by and asked me, " Mr.
Crow, why arc you here?" I answered, I was th ere for a sc' change. Her
next sta tement was that she did not know that this type of operation was
done at that hospital. Yes, I said. they do. After I concluded my v1 si1 with
Sarah . I left the room. The lady was wai ting for me. She asked. "Mr.
Crow . rs you a he or a her''" I looked at her '" a dumbfounded way and
answe red. "I am a he." She was hav mg tro uble detcrrn1nmg whether I was
a femal e before or after my operation. I should have explained my answe r
10 th is Lldy but. unfortuna tely. I d1d not. A pparcn~ y I v.as too surprised at
llC'r

quCS II Ofl .

The no t story also happened whil e I was '" HoiNr Hosprtalm 1975.
At one Lime the cit y of New York was ha v1 n ~ C.\ lfcmc fin anCia l di ffi culty. so I fel t that It was 1n ~r c best rn te rcst of New York Cny to help
them ou t fi nancially. I obt.a.incd a pint Slt:C coni.Jtnc r and pu l a hole in the
top for loose cha nge. Everyone who vJSJtcd me was rrqu1rcd to put m
some coins or do llar bil ls.
When I left the hosp1tal I had a c q u ~rccl S 15..10 '" change depoSi ted m
rh rs conWJncr. This money was se nt 10 th e ma yor of New York C1 1y.
Would yo u kno w that 1 rece ived one o f the Tl i C C ~ t lctlcrs f rom the u ry

governm ent thankm g me for the contrihulJon . Acluall y I was hc ing facc(Ju us v. hen I mailc.d Lhc muncy to the ma yor I h;td egg all over my L1cc

"hen I rccc•vcd th is reply.
Mur e pr i.son news
I

suppose yo u have read lh al the good c iti ze ns of Nohl c co unt y arc

oi~Jcc u n g

sucnuously to one of th e pnsons sncs bc mg

Cou nty.
Accord mg to the news releases. pc llli ons wil l he

l iK ~IlcrJ 1n

Noble

u&lt;&gt;cd in an assau lt on hi s character .

Hut a f1g ht betw een th e other
guys works to Chnton ' s advantage.
" It ' s obv ious that th ey 've got an
Jlmo&lt;; t obsess ton with one another.
anti I' II lei them play 11 out." he
sa•d from the sideline.
All of !h al ma y prove an apt
kcy m1tc to the cn nvc ntt nn ~ u mmc r ,
Dcmoc r:t ts to nom mat e Cl111ton m

July , Republicans
s t ~ nc d

by at least

I,(X)O Noble Coun ti ans opposin g the prison conslrucllon rn i'ioblc County
Also. one of OUJ leading ct tJ ze ns rccc tvcd a lc ncr fr:1 m the go vernor
ctll ng the reason the pri son was not go tn g to h&lt;' located 1n Mctgs Count y
was that 11 was too re mote.
Rupc . th is IS the first tim e th is C;4.C u sc h;Hl hc cn gtvr n The pn so n
should be located 111 a remote arCJ due to ~rc laut hal b s guards would
be needed there S1 mp ly speak1 ng, if the pn son sr Jcs arc locrtcd on real
cslalc located rn or ncar Cities then addJL Jonal guards would ha V&lt;: l&lt;l he
employed for L.hc protcctlon of Lhc Ctt ilcns
Drd yo u al so know that Se nator Ncy IS also a membe r of the State
Con troll rng Board'' Furthermore, ~r e board cow uls lire expendi ture ul all
moneys for all st.Jte projects. Thi s hoard ts as powerful tn !he st...:.tt c govcrnm enl as the House Way s an d Means Com mJLt cc rs '" Congress. Also.
tt1crc was a news rcl c.asc m lll c The Co lumbu s Di-;patch tn wh tc h .Scnntor

to

ra11l y Bush in

Aug ust. indepe ndent Perot to stage
ht" own show , with tt mc, fo rm ;md

.\c ning to OC announ ced

Ru sh keeps say• ng that he JSn 't
ready 10 Llckl e hi s opponents yet.
It 's Lhc latest tn a SC fl CS or not·yc t
campa1gn tJmcLlhlcs he's been scl trn g al l ycc~ for confroma tion wi th
h.s challengers anct wrth I he De mocmt•c Con gress.
One dcaclltn c wa &lt;&gt; h•s Sta te of

Ed itor's note· Lon~ - 1ime Altorney Frod W. Crow is the ccmt rihu lor of a weekly column for The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Readers wishing to applaud, criticize or comment on an y subject (except religion
or politics) are encouraged to write to Mr. Crow, in ca re of this newspaper.

Today in history
By The Associaled Press
Today is Sunday, June 28, the I80th day of 1992. There arc 186 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 28, 1914, Austrian Archduke Francis Ferdinand and hi s wife,
Sofia, were assassinated in presen t-day Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. by a Serbian revolutionary- the event which triggered World War I.

"

Three-vehicle wreck reported
GALLIPOLIS - No injuries were reported after a three-car at
the junction of State Route 7 and Clay Township Road 4 Friday
around 8:25a.m.
According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrul, a car driven by David E. Smalley, 32, Huntington,
W.Va. was northbound on 7 and stopped to make a left tum. A following vehicle, driv en by Rosalie G. Secore, 48, Crown City ,
stopped behind Smalley's car.
A thud northbound car, driven by Sonya Cardwell, 20, Crown
City, failed to stop and struck the rear of Secore's vehicle. Secore's
vehicle was then pushed into the rear of'Smalley's car.
Damage to Smalley 's 1983 Dodge Charger and Secore's 1992
Plymouth Voyager was listed as moderate . Damage to Cardwell' s
1986 Pontiac Trans Am was listed as heavy and disabling.
Cardwell was cited by the patrol for failure to maintain assured
clear distance.
The patrol arrested Harold B. Rutt. 19, Stale Route 218, Scottown, early Sarurday morning on charges of OWl , no seat belt and
driving left of center.

Deer-car wreck reported
ADDISON - A Pomeroy man's car sustained light damage in a
deer-ear accident on State Route 7 in Addison Township Saturday
at approximately I am.
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol .
Jeffrey B. Shank, 37, was northbound on 7 when he slnlck a deer
with his 1988 Pontiac Bonneville.
The deer continued on.

Deputies investigate crash
BIDWELL - Larry E. Laudermilt, Jr. , 27, Rt. l Vinton, told a
sheriff s deputy early Saturday morning that while traveling cast·
bound on Morgan Center Road , he swerved to avoid hitting a deer
and stuck a tree off the righl side of the road. Laudennilt suffered
only minor injuries. Damage to the front end of his 1978 Chevy was
reponed as disabling and heavy. Laudermilt was charged w•th OWl.
Sheriffs deputies also arrested Neal D. Bonecutter, 19, Union
Avenu e, Pomero y, early Satu rda y morning on three counts of
aggravated assault, carryin g a concealed weapon and disorderly
conduct .

Man arrested for rape
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipoli s Police Department arrested
Irvin Lattimore, 37, Augusta, Ga., early Saturday morning for rape
and public intoxication.
Also arrested early Sarurday morning was Michael L. Sisler, 27,
Mount Lake Park, Md ., on a charge of DWI and driving left of cen·
tcr.
Police investigated one wreck Friday afternoon. According to the
acc ident report, a vehicle driven by Nina R. Kirby, 24, Kelley
Dnve. Gallipolis, attempted a left-hand turn onto State Route 7
from th e parlcing lot in front of Shoe World and Subway and struck
a vehicle driven by Susan M. Knapp, 18, Leon, W.Va .• who was
attempting to make a right tum from the northbound lane. No
injuries reponed and damage to both veh•cles was reponed as moderate. No citations were issued.
The GPO also issued the follow ing citations: Felipe E. Beach, no
age given, for no operator' s license early Saturday morning •. and
Heather C. Davenport, 18 , Seneca Drive, Pomeroy, for no Jail hghts
Friday night.

th e Un ion econom ic program last
J:m. 2R. one was his February dec lara tron of cand •dacy ror a second
1crm . one was 1he March 20 date he

Walter R. Mears
se t lor cll :JC un cnt or tile economic
pl:rn th:rt li irln ' t Jl"" · " From the
(by af.tcr Lhat, tf tt must be, the batt le~ is JOII1Cd," !lush sa1d .
Bu t more than two month s later,
1n Da ll as. he was say1 ng " l am
rc·ady for ~1c bat~ c tha t lies ahead
... I have never fel t more flfed up."
" You haven' t heard one negauvc comment against either of the
Jwo peo ple that wan! my job, "
!lush told oil refinery workers in
Ne wark , Cal 1f., on June 18. "And
you' re not going to hear on e until
ma ybe the middle of August. !Jut
!hen you arc. because l know how
to fight."
Discla •m crs notwithstanding ,
Bu sh acc used Cl mton of advocat·
ing a mn ss ivc tax increase, and
sLipped at Pero t by say ing that glib
talk wo n'! make up for a lac k of
spcc if•c proposals. He did not usc
rhcir nJmcs .

That was before th e Bush cam pa•gn team tac kled Perot as a tcmperamcnLl l tycoon with a pattern of

investigating his foes. ci ting published reports as evid enc e, callmg
him scary and parano1d.
Bush said in an ABC inte rv1cw
that if reports Perot had investigated him and his familv were true. " I
do n't thmk th at 's particul arl y
American.''
Perot said they weren't true, and
sa1d such rcpons were part of a
d irty trick s campai gn comnlls sioned by Bush in the fi rs t place.
The White House dismissed U~at as
Perot paranoia.
With that as prelude, th e battl e
Bush said he ' ll unleash in August
should be some show
Perot' s prev iews invol ve th e
mi ssing spec•fics to go wuh hi s
promises of action to create jobs,
revive th e econom y and curb th e
deficit. Hi s timctahlc keeps changing, too.
Reminded on NBC's "Toda y"
show last week that he' d sa id on
May 5 "Sec me in 60 days" about
a dcficu reduction plan , Perot dismissed the deadl inc.
"Y ou ca n c.pcct a dc1 ail cd
deficit rc du cuon pl an wh en I'm
ready ," he said. " I am an en gineer.
I follow the old carpenter 's rul e:
measure twi ce, cut once. I'm not
goi ng to send out a bunch of bu zz
word s like you normally sec."
He'd said on Aprli 10 th at he
could cut the deficit without break -

ing a sweat, wi th cuts and revenue
increases he later d1sca rdcd as
based on bad advice.
Pero t also co mplai ned th at
nobod y was pre ssi ng Bush for hi s
dcfJCil plan . and called Uuu a double stan dard. " When he has a
detai led rlan, I' ll feel tremendous
pressure to have mine," he S.1t d .

Power outage hits Pomeroy
POMEROY - Nearly 200 Ohio Power customers in the Spring
Avenue and Laurel Cliff areas of Pomeroy were without electricity
for about seven hours on Friday.
According to Ernie Sisson, local Ohio Power manager, at about
3:45p.m., several treeS slid off the s•de of a hill on Spnng Avenue
into some high voltage lmes, causmg the ou~e. He specula~ \hat
!hey were trees which had been weak ened m Wednesday s h311
stonn. Power was restored at appro xunately 10:30 p.m.

Bu sh doc s have n plan before

Co ngress. Rcmr ndcd of that in
ano th er T V i nl crv 1cw. Pc ror dt \ mi ssed ll as bills that " al l gol shot
down "
"We're worktn g on rhis :md we
will have it fo r the Amcncan peopl e month s before Novemb er,"
Perot told Larry Kin g on CNN.
" Everybody wants plans. plans.
plans, plans," he comp lained at a
ne ws confere nce Thur sday in
Anna po li s, Md . " .. . We 've got
plans all over th iS country. What
we need is some oc tion."
Will he have a campai gn pl atform and SLltcmcnt of principles"
" Absolutely, absolu tely." Perot
told King. " When it's done."
Challenged by Republican Pany
Chai rm an Rich Bond for proof of
his claim of GOP dirt y tricks, Pcro1
smd he had enough to talk unll l
midn 1ght. He gave none.
" I wil l wail and wait and wail.
And at the ri ght ti me and the n ~lit
plac e, I' ll do 11. " he sa1d.

Burglary, shooting probe continues
LONG BOTTOM - The Meigs County Sheriffs Department
continues to investigate a shooting and apparent burglary at
Lawrence· s Grocery near Long Bonom late Thursday .
According to Raben Beegle, mvesugator for the department.
Howard Lawrence, 69, owner and operalor of the store, was in critical and deteriorating condition at Grant Medical Center m Columbus on Saturday morning. He was transported there by LifeA•ght
late Thursday after being found by a customer. Lawrence was
bleeding from 'a head wound, which was later detennined to have
been caused by a gunshot.
The incident has been dctcrnlined to have taken place between
7: 50a.m and 8:20p.m. on Thursday, and _an.yone at the store after
7:30 is asked to contact the department to 3ld m the mvesugabon.
Beegle said that several individuals had been questioned regarding the incident.

EMS units answer calls
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Services units
answered nine calls for assistance on Friday and early Saturday.
On Friday at 10:26 a.m ., the Middleport unit went to Lincoln
Heights for Nettie Boyer. She was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At II :08 a.m .• the Syracuse squad took Marjorie Cunningham
from Water Street to Veterans.
At 12:23 p.m., the Racine unit went 10 Stiversville Road and
took Viole! Brewer to Veterans. At 5:45 p.m., Syracuse was sent to
Second Street. Albena Hubbard was taken to Holzer Medical CenIer. At 6:20p.m., Racine went to State Route 124 for Donna Ross.
who was ttans~ncd to Veterans. At 6:35 p.m., Rulland unus went
to County Road 3. Carl Ricard was taken to Holzer. At II :06 p.m.,
Racine went to Bucktown Road. P J . Hill was labm to Holzer.
At 1:43 a.m. on Saturday, Syracuse went to College Streel for
Irene Parker. She was taken to Veterans. At 2:20 a.m., Syracuse
went to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Herb
Roush, who was taken to Veterans.

Independent counsel hunts cads

Ncy was dcscn bCd as the swmg vote tn dccidmg how State mon te&lt;&gt; ~uc

used '" SLllCprojec ts.
Ru pettc. I feel that JS the reason why Lhc pemtc nuary sllcs were sc k&lt;l ·
cd. Tile governor' s office apparcntJ y had 1Ls ann twi sted 111 Ulc dlH:rtJon
towards Nob le and Belmont counties. We now learn that Senator Nc y "
going to usc his innucnce to hel p Mc1gs Coumy ge t somethi ng out of th JS
mess. I hope I am wrong but this is hkc clos in g the barn door after the
horse escape s.
When l hear these words. Jt rcm mds me of th JS so ng, "I seem 10 Jhmk
I've heard th• s song before." If it turns out to be wrong I wlil pe rsonall y
shine Governor Yomov1ch 's shoes and also Senator Ney's. Bul. Rupe, the
buildin g of two miles of new .s tate h1 ghway (connecto r) betwee n state
hrghway J3 and 7 docs nO! counl.
Carry on,
In God onIy we trusl.
Frod W. Crow

Syria. Baxter JS curr entl y under
Justice in vcstigauon in connectiOn
with all eged violat io ns of federal
anti -boycott laws. FuJSz . a former
Baxter ex ecutive, asse rt s tha t
Yo usse f oversaw the Syrian mihta ry offic1al who negoti ated the
deal with Baxter.
Accordin g to Ko lscnik . u wa s
not unti l last November that the
FB I fin all y sat dow n and ful ly
int erv iewed Fu1 sz and ano th er
source . In th e meantime, th e
Kolscnik affid av it says the FBI
mounted a campaign 10 discred it
both him and FuJSz.
" From Octobe r to Nov ember
16th (the FBI) had been attcmpong
to discred it me and Dr. Fuisz about
thi s information , tellin g everyone
that th ere was noth ing to it. They
kept teUing them ... tire guy was\l' t
here. They sa1d the same Lhur g lo
the press. Now, at no time did they
tell me th at. "
Gra ss lcv has roi scd the subject
during the' conflfmation proceed in gs of both th e Auorncy Cicncral
and the deputy Attorney General in
recent months. On March 24, f'D I
offi cials belatedl y viS ited GrassIcy ' s staff and co nfu med that
Youssef had indeed been Ill Washington . but they had fad c.d 10 come
up wJt h an y answers on who l11 s
Washington tour guide was
Was th •s a case of m1 stak en
idcnt 1ty or a botched effort to
dece ive"
Steve Hooks. of the FB I' s congressional IJa JSon offr cc told us.
" We have conflfmed thai lh ere
was somebody ... there was a fel low m here by th e name of Harti:JI
Yo usse f. bu l th at 's a comm on
name and we're not so sure that the
desc ript io n that we have is the
exac t description that the se nator's
office has.··
Fuisz cl aim s that the v1 s it w::Is
related to the release of Am erican
hostages from Lebanon last faU. a
deal brokcrcd by Uni1 cd Nations
and Sy rian offJ cials. He has even
told the FBI that when Youssef left
th e Unit ed State s to ret urn to
Frankfun , he carried wi th h1 m three
bl ac k tru nk s - ostensibly laden
with cash.
Copyrighi, 1992 . Unrlcd Fcalurc
Syndicate, Inc.

A preview of coming attractions
A P Special Cor respondent
WAS HINGTON - In prev1ews
of comt ng cam pat gn attract ions .
President !l ush talks of launchmg a
f1e ry rc-c lcc tJO n offe nSive in
August. while Ross Perot prom ises
a bluep rin t fo r eco nomic act io n
whenever he's ready.
Bdl Clmlon has campaigned for
a week to promote his revi sed cconomJc game plan. Sucking to hi s
suhicc t put lhc De moc ratic candi date 1n the fi ne pn nt duri ng th e
angry feud over Perot's cla•m that
Republ 1ca n di rty tric ks arc be ing

Few form s of cntcrtainmcnl arc
os agre&lt;&gt;ablc and amus mg as watc h·
•ng zealots wal11. around facts that
don' t fi lth en formulas and precon ceived not•ons. The pohucal oncn·
lat ion is melcvan t. Whateve r the
music, the shimm y is the same.
Ri ghi now. the hard ri ght is out
of son.s because one of their own
was mdi ctcd by Iran-Contra indepe ndent counsel La wrence Walsh.
Former Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein berger was charged with
five counts of obstructi on. perJury
and makin g false statements. The
case IS based on his own handwritten notes, wh1 ch we re donated to
the Li brary of Con gress in 1988
and onl y rcccntJy discovered.
Acc ordin g to the prosec uto rs,
the notes show that Weinberge r
repeated ly lied to them and to congre ssional investigators about his
know ledge of illegal arm s ship ments to Iran in I985. Weinberger
opposed the sales, but he is suspec ted of co nspiring in a covcrup
to proteCt his pal, Ronald Reagan.
The fac ts, of course, will be
dec ided by a jury. But 10 Cap 's
conservative soulmates, the verdict
•s already in. The special prosccu-

••

lor •s trying to " crimmalizc policy
differe nce s. ' · opined Th e Wall
Str ee t Journal. " Weinberge r' s
indrctm cnt (is) based on a lapse of

Joseph Spear
memory, " growle d columni sts
Rowland Evans and Raben Novak.
It 's un derstandable that a " 70-plusyca r-ol d fo rm er offi cial may be
mistaken when aslr:ed to recaiJ one
or two factoi ds ," wailed columnist
Ken Adelman .
The teeth grind and the mind
fantaSizes about parting their skulls
just lon g enough to insen a few
fragment s of truth - repealedly
lyin g to inv estigators is hardly a
" policy difference" and meetings
with ~•e president, attorney general
and secretary of state are not "factoids" - but the ire quickly fades
and a worry remains. Nothing
would please these chanlcters more
than th e abolition of the independent counse l' s office. Will the
indictment of the aging Weinberger, who has always projected an
ima ge of probity, be the instrument
of destruction ?

The opportunity is coming. The
law which created the office is up
for renew al in De ce mb er and
Republicans would like to abrogate
or se verely amend il. So in coming
months, you are likely to be subjec ted 10 a snake dance of lies, dis·
tortions and sophisms. Some of the
most abominable:
The independent counsel is a
political tool employed by
Congress (evil Democrats) to harrass the executive branch (angelic
Republicans).
This is fatuou s non sense. Th ~
prosecutor was a Watergate baby ,
created to resolve the conflict that
arises when the executive branch
invesligates itself. Independent
counsels are appointed 10 probe
high-level mischief - not by
Congress. bul by the couru at the
behest of auorneys general. Edwin
Meese III requested the appointmen! of Lawrence Walsh, not
Cong~m.

Walsh has wasted $30 million
and succeeded only in nailing a few
minor flayers.
Bul. There have been 10 successful prosecution s. including
Reagan's National Sccurily Chief

John Pomde&gt; ter and the woui&lt;J.bc
Napoleon, Oli ver North . Their convictions were later thro wn ou l by
Reagan -appointed jud ges on th e
grounds that their 1mmum zed tcsumony before Congress had bee n
used again st th em. That's
Congress '. stupidity, not Walsh's.
Another thin g: The special prosecutor 's worth should not be measured by numbers of convicti ons. It
is designed to keep our democracy
safe from ethical vacuums Iike Ed
Meese and usurpers like Olive r
North. How do you put a pncc tag
on that inestimable service"
The independent counsel deters
people from workin g for the government.
Try to imagine an hones t person
about to tak e a governm ent job
who pau ses and says, " Wa it a
minute, thi s indepenclcnt counsel
thing is frightcnmg and I think I'll
reconsider." It 's nonsense. Principled people have noihin g to fear;
scoundre~do .
.
In other words, the independent.
counsel might be a cad repellent.
I'll take a dozen and you can keep·
the change.
,
(C)l992
NEW S P A PER ··~
ENTERPR1SE ASSN .
•

Sunday Tlmer-Senllnei- Page-AS

Local News in Brief:__, Funding will assist area school districts

June 28 , 1992

II. Dlvlalon of

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

RACINE - A contribution for
the operation of the Me1gs County
Chamber of Commerce/Economic
Development Office was made by
Racine Village Council at a recent
meeting held in Council quarters at
star Mill Pari:.
Council also approved a reque st
of the Rac ine Emergency Squad for

the village to bu y and install a new
electrical box at th e sq uad building.
The Meigs Co un ty Emerge ncy
Medi ca l Sc rv1ce wi ll pay th e
monthly bill for elec tricity once the
new box has been mstalled. u was
reponed.
Memb ers were remmded th at
sealed bids for th e old tanker truck
chasSIS will be opened at the July 6

mcc ung. The mmimum b•d IS
$3 ,000. Approval for the purchase
of matenals to repair village equipment was give n to Glenn Rize r,
street commiSSioner. ArrangemenJs
we re made to purchase liability
insuran ce fo r th e brush truck that
th e Racin e Fi re Department has
leased fro m the Oh1o Department
of Forestry .
A contract for cleaning , caulk·
ing, and paintin g the e. terior of the
annex building was given to Gary
John son . The village will furni sh
the pain t.
Again compl aints were heart
abo ut dogs running loose, and
the station also closing at lun ch agai n owners are reminded that
ume, noon to I p.m. The Gallipolis dogs are to be confined. No ac tion
Ex am Station is located at 134 was taken on a request from Ron
Third Street in the VFW building.
MJII er for a trader variance and a
Appli ca nts should contact the request from Sandy' s Video for a
Gallipolis Patrul Post or the exam one- hour parlcing limit sign in front
stauons to dctcrnline the tim es that of her business was tabled.
various tests arc g•ven.
Acco rding to Lt. Woodford.
these changes are necessary to provide beuer service in conjunction
with a pilot program that will eva l·
uate the feasibility of operating 16
full time stations in th e state of
POMEROY - The Meigs CounOhio on Salllrdays.
ly License Burea u will be closed on
The examination stati o ns at Friday and Saturday in observance
Athens and Chillicothe arc takin g of Independence Day, according to
part in the pilot program and will Deputy Registrar Sue Maison.
In additi on, Maison announ ced
be open Tuesday through Sa turday
new
hours at the offi ce. effec tive
beg inning July 7.
Wednesday. The office will be
ope n Monday, Wednesday, Thurs·
day and Friday from 9 a. m. to 4
p.m.; Tuesday fro m 9 a.m. to 7
p. m. and Saturday from R a.m. to
noon. The new Tuesday hours are
the re sul t of a state ruling which
A new bridge has been constructed shortens req uired evening hours to
next to the old bridge at thi s site. 630 p.m.
Th e closur e is necessary so th at
MalSon stated that she woul d
wo rk ers can conne ct th e new operate unul 7 p.m. as a courtesy to
bridge with existing pavement. local customers.
DJM, In c., of Beaver is the contractor on the $8 12.457 bridge project.
On th e Shelly and Sands res ur fac in g projec t, s ubcontracto rs
in cud c PDK Co nstru cti on of
Pomero y; Bunn Constru ction of
Ohio, Marietta; Boca ConstructJ on,
Inc., Nor walk ; Watikcr and Son,
Inc .. Zan esville; Barbour Co mpa ny , Lebanon ; and Deitering Landscaping . Leipsic.

Examination stations
change days of operation
GALLIPOLIS -Effecti ve Jul y
6, the State Highway Patrol Exami nation Stations at Middleport and
Gallipolis will change their day s of
operation, according to Lt. Roben
J. Woodford Gallipolis Post Commander.
The Middlepon Station w1ll no
longer be open on Monday. It will
be open on Friday. beginning July
10. The hours of operation will
remain the same, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The station closes from noon to I
p.m. for lunch. The MiddlcpQft
Exam Station is located in the cfty
bu•lding.
The Gallipolis Station currently
open Monday and Tuesday . will
change their days of operation to
Tuesday and Wedne sda y. Th e
hours will be 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.. with

License bureau
slates closing

ODOT details summer
improvements to U.S. 33
SHADE . By the end of August,
U.S. Route 33 should be a smooth
rid e fr om th e south Athens cit y
limits, through Shade to the Meigs
County line, accordin g to John
Dowler, deputy director of District
I 0 of th e Ohio Department of
Transportation in Marieua. Shelly
&amp; Sands, Inc. of Zanesville plans to
begin work this week on the 8.7mile project. Completion date for
the $619,246 job is August 3 1.
Traffic will be maintained.
However, a bridge on Route 33,
approximatel y midway betw ee n
Athens and Shade will be closed to
traffic, probably on July 6. Official
detours have already been posted.

sa id. All the kids, both county and
c ity, arc D.A.R.E. kid s, Mudd
added.
Our way of showing unity is by
mviung the city D.A.R.E. students
to participate in the parade w1th the
county D.A.R .E. students, Mudd
commented.
The Ga llipolis Poli ce Depanment will have a table set up in the
City Park July 4 from 10 tLm. 10 I
p.m., Patrolman Wayne Swcene~.
the Gallipolis Cit y DAR .E. offi cer, reported.
Swee ney , who invited all hi s
D.A.R.E. kid s to sto p and say
"hello", will be selling DAR .E. !shirts and sunglasses.

Engineer's candidate attends seminar
GALLIPOLIS - Joseph Leach.
candidate for Gallia County Engineer, recently participated in a
Campaign Management Seminar
by several groups at the Nation wide Training Center on U.S. 23
north of Columbus.
The seminar was designed for
candidates for public office and
their campaign teams and was lim ·
ited to 40 participants.
Sponsoring the program were
the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation,
National Federation of Independent
Business, Ohio School Boards
Association, the County Commis:

s1oncrs Association of Ohio and
Nationwide Insurance Companies.
Bipartisan candidates. in cum bents and political newcomers were
includ ed in th e program wh1 ch
in cluded presentation s from th e
sponsoring ag enci es on iss ue s
important to them.
Brad Ecken from the American
Farm Bureau al so serv ed as a
resource person . He presented a
computer election simulation . .
Leach said , "Any candid ate
would have benefiled from th e
seminar and be better prepared to
serve public office wben elected."

~e
~

I! s the s1 mple way Ia an swer
any queStl()n S abou t your
lam1ly 1nsu rance prorec11on
And 11 s Ire€ C&lt;1 ll me

CAROLI
INOWD~

A...

Olo.

L111 E' a (}fXXJ 11€'191"100"
Slare Farm 15 rnere

Slate Farm 111Sui'BI"Ce Cam pa n ~
HcroP Qn1Cf!5 Blcu"rlu''gl(lrl IIIIO()S

It's time you got that watch out of the
drawer, and back on your wris t
where it belongs 1
Let our ex pert watchmaker at
Pa ul Davies put you
back in the running.

g;rm~

~~
. .....

•o• Sttond ~ """'
Otlllpolll. Olllo

446·'"'

DEB

AGreat Start.
1

CHESHIRE - State Route 7 wiD be closed for approximately
30 minutes at 8 a.m. toda¥ at the Gavin power plant so that Ohio
Deparunent of Transponauon workers can place a pedestrian walkway over the hi~way.
No delour will be provided during the closure. Only emaxency
traffic will be allowed to pass.

STATE FARM

of Time?

D.A.R.E. kids uniting
for July 4 holiday
GALLIPOLIS - Kids from th e
Gallia County and Gallipolis Cit y
school di stri cts' D.A.R.E . pro ·
grams will com e toge th er for
Fourth of July parade.
Ac cording to Deputy Richard
Mudd, county D.A.R.E. officer, the
Gallipolis City D.A.R.E. students
have been invited to participate in
th e county D.A.R.E . program' s
parade floaL
DAR .E. stands for Drug Abu se
Resistance Education.
The Gallipolis City Schools and
th e Gallia County School s each
have their own D.A.R.E. officer.
We' re trying to show that there
aren' t county D.A.R.E. kids and
~ itv D.A.R.E. Icids, Deputy Mudd

s1o n of the fudmg should only be
the begmnmg of the soluoon to. ~e
fu ndmg problems fac mg O h10 s
sc h.?&lt;Jis.
.
.
. What we .tried to acco mplish
w•th House Bdl671 was to pr&lt;lYldc
som e •mmed •atc help for th e
sc hools facmg the m~s t dlfe Clf·
~ umstances n~ ht now, Abe l sa1d.
But th1s hmued amoun t of fund mg cannot solve all of our fundmg
problems. Thclcg•slaturc needs to
con tinue exam ming poss•b•hues of
refor ming our whole sys~em of
school finance."
Abel sais that for th at reason.
the btll includes perm anent language that creates a formula for the
prov •s•on of additional funds in
eac h budge t cycle. The fun d mg
wil l be made in a one time , lump
sum pay ment to be distributed to
the distri cts in Au gust. Quic k
action on the bi U was required by
language in the budge t bill that
would have allowed th e funds to
revert to the state foundation basic
aid program on July I.

Running
Out

. POMEROY - The Daniel Rose family reunion will be held at
the horne of James and Karen Werry near Morning Star on Coun
Scree! Road on Sunday. Information is available by calling 9492746. All family and friends are invited,

State Route 7 to close briefly

million fund wa s created tn the
state budget to address madequacy
and ~ n equi t y in fu nd ing among
Oh 1o s school d•stnCIS:
.
Lncal school diStriCts tha t wdl
rcce1ve o•d mc lude Eastern Local,
($152,949) and Me1gs Local
($105,969) in M~ig s Coun ty and
Galhpohs City Schools ($58,3:\4)
'" Galha County .
.
Abel cautJon cd that the prov•·

Council donates to development office

~ i ghthawk "

PORTLAND - Fortner Ponland resident Julius "Bud" Gluesencamp is hospitalized at St. Ann's Hospilal in Westerville, Ohio
43566. He is the former owner of a store and dairy bar in Portland.

L

assista nce to th e state's poo rest
school distri ct.
"The Se nate ag reed thai the
House came up with a good bill,"
Abel said. "We were abel to concur
wi th Se nate changes because the
intent of providin g aid to the poorest districts was protected."
Substi tute Ho use Bill 671, cospo nsored by Abe l. wil l chan nel
fu nd ing to 218 low wealth school
districts across tir e Slat e A &gt;SO

Rose family slates reunion

Ex-area man now hospitalized

!I

PO MEROY _ Three school
districts in Meigs and Gallia coun·
ties will benefit from new state legislation, designed to protec t Ohio's
poorer diStricts.
State Re p. Mar y Abe l, 0 Athens, said on Fri day that the
Ohio House agreed with minor
changes to the legislation , crafted
by a group of Southeas tern Ohio
leg islators. mcluding herself. that
wi ll provide immediate financia l

2295 00

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• Proven twin&lt;rlindcr en~inc packs plenty of powrr
• Convenient and reliable electric starter.
•l...ow-maintrnancP ff•atures include CO igni tion . ma in tPn ann•-frPr
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Dr. (overton, a Board Certified Dermatologist,
brings this skin related medical speciality to the
Mid-Olio VaHey.
CaD now for an appointment.

Holzer Clinic
Dermatology
446-5513

�Page

A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 28, 1992

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

.----Ohio Briefs:-----, Convicted cop killer eludes
OSU experiments join shuttle

COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State University researchers have 16
experiments on X-ray crystallography on boaid the space sbuttle
Columbia. The experunents will enable the researchers to study the
growth of DNA and prorein crystals m zero gravity.
"Wilen you 1ry to grow crystals on mOiher Earth, the order IS n01
ideal. but wben crystals grow with zero gravity in out_er spac_e. II
improves the order," said Ohio State chemistry and biochemislry
professor Muttaiya Sundaralingam.
"We are using space as a tool to get better crystals." said Bnan
Bwldtan, a graduate student in X-rny crystallography. .
.
Scientists will be able to beaer understand the three-dimensional
suuctwe of such biological molecules as DNA, ribonucleic ac•d.
protein and enzymes as a result of the exoeriments, Sundarahngam
SBJ(l

The infonnation can be applied when inventing drugs to combat
such diseases as cancer and AIDS. Burkhart said.
"It is possible to design drugs to ue up the enzyme and block the
acuve Site and by doing that, it can block or dimintsh effects of the
disease," he said.

Jury to ponder shooting case
CIRCLEVILLE (AP) - A Pickaway County Common Pleas
Cowt jury begios deliberations Monday m the case of a man who
was fatally sbot while playmg cards in the defendant's kitchen.
Bennie Lee Jones, 27. of Williamsport, admitted he shot 29-ycarold Richard Dawson of Reynoldsburg as they played cards in Jones'
house on New Year's Day .
Jones was charged w1th aggravated murder. If convicted, Jones
could be sentenced to 20 years m pnson or to a life sentence with no
parole f~I at least 30 years.
.
The defense didn't call any witnesses, but I ones· attorneys said
Friday that the shooting wasn't planned or analyzed. They sa1d
Jones killed in a fit of rage and should be conv1cted of the lesser
offense of mwder with a sentence of 15 years to life.
Judge William Ammer refused to reduce the charge
Jones' attorneys said Jones was jealous because hiS w1fe, Eleanor
Renae Jones, fonnerly was married to Dawson.

Athens attorney answers charges
COLUMBUS (AP) - An Athens lawyer has told an Ohio
Supreme Court disciplinary pane I that h•s legal secretary took
advantage of his trust m her and embezzled $200,000 from coun
accounts.
Claire M. Ball Jr., 50, a fonncr state representaUve. was charged
with professional miSConduct mvolvmg II cases in Athens County
Probate Court. He denied he was mauenu ve to hts law practice.
" In hmdsight, you wisb you did things different," he said during
an eVIdence hearing Friday. "I WISh this had not happened. But I
had no reason to nusuust her. "
His secretary, Sue Haggerty, has been found guilty of five counts
of theft for embezzlement of money from estates Ball handled. She
was placed on probation. Ball wasn 't charged.
Ball acknowledged that Ms. Haggerty did bookkeeping and par·
alegal work f!J' him and on some occasions even s1gned coun documents. Ms. Haggerty had been an employee of Ball's for 18 years
but was fired on the day he said he found out about the thefts.
The panel will make a recommendauon to the 26 members of the
court's disciplirtary board on what acuon, if any, should be 13ken
against Ball. The Ohio SuJreme Court will make the final deciSion.
The maximum penalty would be loss of his hcense to practice law.

Court sentences Chesapeake man
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- An Ohio man was sentenced to
10-to-W years in prison after he pleaded gu•lty to second-degree
sexual assault m a case involvmg an 11-year-old grrl who saJd sbe
was raped in a cil)' park.
Lafe Haynes, 37, of Chesapeake. entered his plea a.1 pan of a
deal wuh prosecutors.

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON - A man who is
accused of gunning down a police
officer with an assault rifle after
officers stopped his truck was sentenced to life in prison Fnday.
The sentence imposed on Karl
Ray Vultee Jr. by a three-judge
panel means he won't be eligible
for parole for at least 69 years.
Montgomery County Common
Pleas Judge Walter Poner said the
panel found that because Vultee
had a mental disease or defect. he
lacked the capac1ty to confonn hiS
conduct to law.
Porter sa1d that factor outwe1ghed the aggravating circumstance of k.illmg a peace officer, an
actJon that could have resulted m
the death penalty.
Vultee. 34. of Xenia. was

Federal law requites electriC
utilities to cut sulfur dioXIde emissions by 40 percent to 50 percent
on average over the next I0 years
10 reduce environmental damage
from acid rain.
Sen. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville,
said at the hearing that for every
JOb saved at the Gavin plant, there
are about six spinoff JObS.
Ney is author of a bill that provides tax credits for In s!a llmg
scrubbers.
Roxanne Groff, Athens Coumy
C'Oillmissioner, urged the mstalla tion of scrubbers, saymg the region
would never be able to recover any
job that it would lose

that she believed Vultee was mentally Ill and showed symptoms of
paranoid schuophrema.,
.
Fnends of Vultee s said he
heard voices 10 h1s head and
believed hts movements were bemg
tracked by peO]Jle wllh computers.
Police sa•d the shooting
occurred after Vultee found he had
been locked out of his motel room
when motel operators d•scovered
he had been keepmg a dog there .
Vultee returned to the motel, shot
the lock off the door, then fled 10
h1s truck before the officers
stopped h1m.
Police allege lhat ~s Wha1en
stepped out of ~·s police crmser
behmd Vultee s truck, Vultee
turned and fired .a revolver and then
an AK-15 sem•automauc assault
nfle throu~h a shdmg rear ~lass
wmdow, w1th two bullets striking
Whalen m the head. Beane was hit

in the lower body by bullet Cragments, but was able to return fire
Vultee wid _the Judges he
believed that police had abducted
hiS g1rlfnend and were out to get
him when the two officers stopped
his pickup truck.
"I never meant to do anythmg
that 1did," he said.
R1chard Skelton, one of Vul ·
tee's attorneys, said his client· s
account of the shooting shows that
he was suffering from delus10ns.
"He was parano1d . He was
obsessed. He thought everyone was
out to get him," Skelton tJld the
judges.
AsSIStant Montgomery County
Prosecutor Mathias Heck Jr. said
Vultee knew what he was doing
when he killed Whalen. He sa1d
Vullee methodically fired three
shots at the officers from his
revolver, then picked up the assault
rifle and fired off 20 rounds.
"There is absolutely no sen tence too harsh, too severe," Heck
told the judges in urging them to
Cleveland, 9.9; Cleveland Heights, impose the death sentence.
panel sentenced Vultee to
4.3; Euc lid, 4.6; Lakewood, 4.3; lifeThe
in pnson for aggravated murParma, 4.9; Columbus, 5.7; Cincin nati, 6.7; Elyria,IO.O; Lorain, 10.4; der, 10 to 25 years on each of three
counts of felonious assault, three to
Toledo, 9.6; Youngstown, 12 .6; five years for flccmg and eluding
Dayton. 9.6: Kenering, 3.5: Mansfield, 9.6; Canton, 10.8; Akron, and 90 days for cnmmal damaging.
In addition, he was sentenced to
8.5; Warren. 12.0.
three years on a frrearms specification.

Adams maintains high jobless rate
COLUMBUS (AP)- Adams
County's May unemployment rate
of 16.5 percent was the highest in
the state for the month. the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Semces
sa1d.
Franklin County had the lowest
JObless rate for the month at 5.0
percent. bureau figures showed Fnday.
Among cities with populations
of more than 50,000, Youngstown
had the highest jobless rate m May,
12.6 percent, while Kettering had
the lowest at 3.5 pen:enL
The county and city rates are
unadJUSted, meaning they do not
take mto account seasonal adJUSt·
ments m employment
The statewide and national
unadJUSted rates for May was 7 2
percent. The adjusted rnte for OhiO
was 7.3 percent and the nauon was
7.5 pen:enL
T.hc county rates:
Adams, 16.5; Allen, 7.2; Ashland, 6.8; Ashtabula, 11.9; Athens.
6.8; Auglaize, 6.2; Belmont, 7.8;
Brown, 12.1; Butler, 8.2; Carroll,
10.9; Champaign, 7.2; Clark, 6.7;
Clermont, 6.9; Clinton, 7.0;
Columbiana, 10.2.
Coshocton. 8.4; Crawford. 11.4;
Cuyahoga, 6 4; Darke, 7.6; Defiance, 5.6; Delaware, 5.6, Erie, 6.8;
Fairfield, 6.7: Fayette, 9.7;
Franklin, 5.0; Fulton, 9.8: Gall13,
10 2; Geauga, S.S; Greene, 5.6;
Guernsey, 15.5; Ham•llon, 5.1;
Hancock, 5.6, Hardin, 10.3; Harrison, 13 5; Henry, 8.6.
Highland, 10.4; Hocking 10.2;
Holmes, 5.1; Huron. 11.2; Jackson,
7.7; Jefferson, 8.7, Knox, 7.0;

Lake. 7.1; Lawrence, 7.2; L1cking.
6.5; Logan, 7.1; LoraJn, 9.1; Lucas
8.8; Mad1son, 5.9; Mahoning, 9.3;
Marion. 8.4: Medina, 6.8; Meigs,
12.8; Mercer. 7.8: Miami, 6.4 .
Monroe, 15.4; Mon1gomery. 6.3.
Morgan, 10.0; Morrow , 8.7;
Muskingum, 9.7; Noble, 11.5 ;
Ottawa. 9.2; Paulding, 7.0; Perry.
13.4; P•ckaway. 6.3; Pike 10.4 :
Portage, 6.7; Preble, 7.0; Putnam,
7.4; Richland, 8.4; Ross, 9.6; Sandusky, 8.5; Scioto, 10 2; Seneca.
10.3; Shelby, 7.8; Stalk, 7.9; Summit, 6 8; Trumbull, 10.0;
Tusc arawas, 9.4 ; Union, 5.6:
Van. Wert, 8.3: Vmton, 11.8; War·
rcn.''6.6; Washington, 8.0; Wayne.
7.0; WJlllams, 8.5; Wood, 6 5;
Wyandot, 9.6.
The rates for cities of more than
50.000:
Hamilton. 9.7: Spnngfield, 7.9;

Rodgers E-Z Ride

Along the River
Baptist

Builders

worked together to
erect this portion of
Hope Baptist Church
on Saturday, June 20.
Teamwork is an integral part of the Baplist Builders' volunteer program.

E-Z RIDE 8 E-Z PAY
I4I9 State Rt. 7
Gallipolis, Ohio 4S63I
Near Kanauga Drive-In
6I4·446-0736
VISA
MasterCard

Buckeye Baptist Builders put it together with fun, teamwork
not sblled laborers, juSI dfrlicated
By JIM GLAUNER
Times-SenliDel Staff
people with IWO bands and a will to
MIDDLEPORT - Good bdp lS wort together.
'"Ibese are Christians who love
hard to find, and quality wort f~I a
the
Lord.
and they JUSI jump 11 the
low price is a rare commodity tbese
oppoounity
to (build)," said Harry
days. But the Buckeye Baptist
Stallings.
a
retired
paslDI' and chairBuilders, a group of cbiU'cb-buildman
of
the
Metro
Columbus Baping Southern Baptists, will do linttist
A5.'l()Ciation's
Baptist
Builders
class work for free - and have fun
Commiuee.
while they're at iL
On Saturday, June W, more
The Baptist Builders have
members throughont Obio, volua- than 65 Builders from 10 diffetent
teers who sacrifice their time and Ohio Baptist churches, including
energy to help COIISUUCl Southern members from tbe Columbus
Baptist churches. Most Buildr:n are Metro and Musldngum Valley

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Dtocounted
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UP TO

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0
SLEDGEHAMMER - Ed Keler, Ba[f are, •••wn awa, at
the roof of Middlepart's H~ CDrU. 0. SamdaJ, JUDt
~. more thaD 6S 8ucb~
Bllllden fUiutftrrd tlleir time
to help amstruct die d11ud. Aho " - left, ..e Bob Ltatz, Powell,
and Carl Pryor, VIDc:eaL

Rebate on Regal

But Art Gish. an organic farmer
from Athens County, said spending
$800 miU1011 to save jobs is unrea·
sonable.
·-why are we spending this
money to save 1,000 JObs 7 We 're
asking the wrong questiOn. Alternative jobs should be looked at ...
alternative energy conservauon
should be taken into consideration." Gish said.
'Those who oppose the scrubbers
contend that 11 would be better to
reduce pollution at Gavin by
switching to low-sulfur coal from

BAP.TI

other swes.

But John Sayers, a coal miner
from Glouster, said miners have
earned the right to keep !herr JObs
by setting production records.

He said it has been difficult for
miners to keep up their morale but
they remain efficient and productive.
AEP officials said on Wednesday the utility is upset with a
PUCO order separating the Meigs
County mines from its plan to clean
theplanL
The utility said if the order
remains, AEP may revert 10 its initial poposalto use low-sulfur coal
from out of state.

1992 BUICK CENTURY$
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5

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Mtetorhatlny
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1992 lUlCK RIYIEU
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June 28, 1992 ·

team of Buckeye

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aVirlable For complunentary catatoo call or wnte

Every llem

Section B

Auto • Rentals

[1\fOY a Qule1 escape to Kiawah Island Discover our 10 miles
ol seduded beichfs With pnvately owned V1llas cot1ageS &amp;

SIIICt 19SJ, 59 Y•n ltrwlll1 tile hlllk-

~imts - ~entitttl

TEAMWORK- A

... only the chozmt
homf's &amp;villa1.1

Farmer feels ·
scrubber cost
is too much
ATiiENS (AP) - Elected offi.
cials testified in favor of mstalling
sc rubbers at the Gavin power plant
to save 1,000 coal mming JObs, but
a farmer said It IS too costly to keep
those jobs.
The Public Utilities Comm•s·
sion of Ohio opened hearings
Thursday on whether Amencan
Electric Power Co. should mstall
the polluuon-reducing dev1ccs at
the plant or buy cleaner coal from
out of state.
Installing saubbers at the Gavm
plant would cost S800 million.

accused of shooting and killing
Officer William s. Whalen and
wounding police Lt. Randy Beane
on Man:h 21. 1991.
Vultee showed little emouon
during the sentencing. He nodded
10 fam1ly members m the courtroom as he was led away m handcuffs.
"I want everyone to know that I
have been trymg smce 1989 to
have my son committed to a mental
mstituuon, and it was impossible to
do because of the way the law is
wnuen today," Mary Vullee, the
defendant's mother, S31d after the
scntencmg.
''I'm glad they're not puuing
h1m in the chair, but I hope he gets
some kind of help mentally," she
added.
Dunng the trial, clinical psy cholog1st Kathleen Burch testified

death penalty

19,990

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BAFI'IST WARNING SIGN ·Tids lip lllnUd pm rlly of
thr more tbaa 65 Sotadlen Baptists worklat oa Micldleport's
lfopt Baptist Chard 011 Sllbuday, J - 21-

areas, worked on Middleport· s
Hope Bapist ChurdJ a1 570 Grant
SL What began as a mission Sun·
day scboo1 in the Middleport home
of Rev. Bobby Elkins in 1976 will
be a completed cburcb by late
August, according to Hope's pas·
tor, Rev. David Bryan.
Stallings said a church usually
takes 2 1/2 to tbree months to
build, but his voluateers can com ·
plele a lot in me day. "Peqlle want
to come, !bey want a quality job,
and they rome to work." he saJd.
The crew finished walls. spaces for
windows and doors, and the beuer
part of the roof 00 Saturday.
The volunrecn come from all
walks of life, bul uoilc to perform
one job. "You have people here
from aD kiDds of voeatioos, • said
Bcya -ntc, just JOIIDgClbcr and
did iL" Brya e&amp;jitW the church
wiD cost lllout S100,000, and he
said the BapiUt Buildcn saved him
m&lt;rethanda
The Builders tliOiled on Saturday from about 6 am. to SUDdown.
at about 8 II' 8:30 p.m. However,
they feel the long day is wooh sacrificing lime IIIII labCI' for others.
" (Hope Baplisl Cbun:b) just said
they needed help today, so me and
my son came down to g~ve them a
hand," said Vincent's Earl Salyer,
after helping secure part of the
church roof.
Like Salyer, most Builders
blow something about church building, but professionals, like
elcl.1ricians. pllmbrn and coocrete
poun:rs. must be ltiml to do more
NJDpler 1iUL
FOI' tbis reason. mosl Baptist
B~ duthts ~K simple, saving
time and money . "We don't get
into any real elaborate work,
because we doo 't have the skilled
people," said Sonny McClure,
chairman of tbe Local Baptist
Building CanmiuccTbe few skilled laborers who
wm: rm- the Buildm do 001 stand
0111, aa:onlilg to foreman Dale Patterson or Westerville . He said,
"There's probably two or three

(carpenters) out there, but they
wouldn't tell you. They just fit in
out there with everybody else."
The workers must fit m with
each other, because the Baptist
Bwlders need teamwork to get the
job done . Almost every Builder
works in a group, and when
Stallings first became mvolved in
the Baptist Builders group, he real IZed teamwork is an mtcgral pan of
organizauon. He said, "I worried
about the first (church). I said,
'How am I gomg to get that many
people on the job?' But it all comes
in place. It all works real easy.
Amazmgly, 11 doesn't take much
organJZaUon."
Part of the reason things go so
smoOihly for the Builders might be
because they enjoy working witll
each other. Terry Traxler, grinding
two-by-fours with an electric saw,

d1d 001 seem to mmd tile work at
However, the Baptist Builders '
aU. "It's DOl hard," he said. "We're reach extends heyood the construehavin' a lot of fiDl."
lion of local churches. Of the six
Melissa Patterson, Dale Patter- chun:hes the Columbus Metro divison's 13-year-old daughter, said Sion has erected in its three years of
the wort is tough, espa:tally smce existence, one was bu1lt in Costa
n begms a1 6 a.m. Bu1 despite all Rica this February. The Columbus
the nail-pounding and lumber-lift- Builders also renovate low-income
IOg she did, Patterson sa1d she housmg. "''d like to see us do more
enjoyed the work..
of that in our inner-c iues," said ·
If carpentry is fun , then fun Stallings.
means frammg, hammering, lifting
Both low-mcome housmg tenand sawing for Gene Gangloff of ants and Baptist churchgoers would
Vincent. Like other volunteers, like to see more of the Baptist
Gangloff joined the Baptist Bwlders. Their combination of toil
Builders when they helped build teamwork and fun seems to attrac;
hts own church, Lighthouse Bap- dedicated workers who do quality,
USL
mexpens1ve construction. "We
The program centers liS acbvity have such a good time and accom on a local level, seeking voluntee~ plisb so moch m such a hurry, that
through rommwlity Baptist chiUCh- all a person has to do is come once
es and dealing exclusively with and they're hooked," said Stallings.
local bmines!es wbmever possible. " We have a great program, an
mspiring program "

'•.

..

___ . .
BUZZSAW AFTERNOON- Cuttiag twu by
fours on bis day off is no problrm ror Terry

Traxlrr or Johnstown. "It's nol hard," ht said
"We're bavin' fun."
·

�June 28, 1992

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

Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs County calendar
SUNDAY
RACINE - Descendants of the
late Albert and Eli1.a Hill will have
their annual family reunion at Star
Mill Park on Sunday with a carryin dinner at noon. All friends and
relatives are invited.

POINT PLEASANT - Descendants of Sam and Melvina Birchfi eld will hold their family reunion
Sunday at Harmon Park in Point
Pleasant , W.Va . There will be a
basket dinn er at noon and fri ends
and relatives are invited.

RACINE - Th e 1992 Thiess
famtly reuniOn committee will
meet Sunday at 2 p.m. at 01' Ferry
Landing Park , Racine, to discuss
final plans for the July 12 reunion.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County Vetera ns Se rvice Commi ss ion
wi ll meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Ve ter ans Serv ice Offi ce in
Pomeroy.

LONG BOTTOM - Darren
Smith will perform Sunday at 9 30
a.m. at the Mt. Olive Community
Church in Long Bottom . Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the public.
POMEROY - Pomeroy United
Methodist Church will have a
carry-in dinner Sunday in th e
church social room at 5:30p.m.
Meat and beverage will be provtd ed. Past minisrers, Rev. !annes Corbitt, Marietta, and Rev. Don Meadows, Portsmouth, and Mrs. Janice
McGee , widow of Rev. Robert
McGee, will be guests.
GUYSVILLE - Camp Meeting
"92" at the Evangelizing For Jesus
Worship Center, 18901 Metcalf
Road , Guy s ville , will be held
through Saturday with special
singing and preaching each service.
There will be two services each day
at noon and 7 p.m.
ERIC KEMPER and STEPHANIE VARNEY

and is empl oyed by Pt zza Hut of
Gallipoh
Mr. Kemper is a 1992 graduate
o f Galha Acad e my High School
and is employed by Vi 'ra Furniture
of GaUipohs.
Wedding plan s arc mcomplete
at thi s time.

POMEROY - Band praeuee for
Me1gs Hi gh School Band (includ tn g tn comin g fr eshm en) will be
hel d Monda y from 9 a.m. to noon
at the htgh sc hool band room .

RACINE - Plans have been
finalized for the Fourth of July in
Racine.
A flag raising ceremony will be
at 9:45a.m. at the high scbool with
parade beginning at 10 a.m. Partici pants in the parade should be at the
high school for line-up by 9:30
a.m.
The firemen will stan sellin g
chicken dinners at II a.m. and food
will be available for eat-in or carryout.
The athletic boosters will have a
pitching machine from II a.m. to I
p.m .. a foul shooting contest at I
p.m., a volleyball tournament from
1-3 p.m., and a punt, pass and kick
competition at 3 p.m.
All of these activities will be
held at the park.
At 12:30 p.m. there will be a
llag raising cen:mony at Star Mill
Park with members of the American Legion, Ruritan Club and Parle
Board participating.
At I p.m. the youth league will
have a homerun derby for the children .

The ftrernen will have the "Any thing That Floats But a Boat Race"
at 2 p.m. at the boat ramp, and mud
wrestling at the park at 5 p.m.
A kiddie tractor pull will be held
on the basketball court at 4 p.m.

Address ------------------------------

Age _______________________________
Sr. Division (7th grade- Graduatin g Senior)
Jr. Division (l si grade - 6th

MICHAEL MARTI N and

ANG ELA

~- Rf.EO

Freed-Martin
REE DSV ILLE- Announce ment
tS mad e o f th e eng age ment o f
An gela Dent se Freed to M1c hael
Jay Mart in
Mi ss Freed ts the dau gh ter of
Mrs Charlotte Lmda Wilson Freed,
· Parkersbur g, W.Va .. an d Robert
Ear l Freed. Bel pr e. She ts a !9X7
graduate of Be lpre lh gh Sc hoo l
and is currentl y attc ndm g The Oht o
State Un1 vcrsi1 y maJonn g 111 sooal

work and mmonn g tn soc tology.
Ma rttn is th e so n of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Marun , Reedsvtllc. He
ts a 1 9~9 graduate of Eastern Htgh
Sc hoo l an d ts c urrent ly attendm g
The Oht o Sta te Unt versity maJOrmg tn mec hanical engmeering.
An o pen c hur c h wedd1n g ts
planned for Sept. 12 at 2JOp.m. at
the Porterftc ld B a p~ st Church .

Dobbins-Wintz
Mr. and MJ&gt;. Harvey Burnette
of PaiTIOt, OH. announce the engagement and approachtng mar riage of thm daughter, Dc bbte, to
Bob Winll, son of Rabe n Wm11 of
Charleston and Eve lyn Stonestreet

Author tries to
keep a low profile
BANGOR , Mamc (AP) - Horror author Stephen Kmg is having a
- horrifi call y tough ltme keeping a
low profil e tn tht s qui et ce ntral
Malnc cHy.
Last year, a Texas man broke
into his home claimm g Kmg had
plagiarized a character for hi s book
" Mi sery."
Now , a Ca lifornia man ts parked
downtown - a court order keeps
him away from King 's house and
office - claiming King killed Beatie John Lennon.
Steven Lightfoot, 28, of San
Francisco, has a statement across
the rear of his van: "Photos prove
it's Stephen King, not Mark David
Chapman, getting John Lennon 's
autograph. No joke, folks. ' '
Bystanders weren' t impressed.
·' After all the things (King) has
done fo r th is commun ity , come
on," said Chri s Ruhlin of Bangor.
'' He should know that no one
apprec iates what this guy's say ing."

of Pomt Pleasam.
Dcbbt e ts employed at Shoney's
tn Pomt Pleasan t. Bob is employed
at Hardmans in Point Pleasant
An outdoor weddlllg wtll be held
on July II at 630 p.m. at the home
of Cec il and Sue Wt sc of Mercerville, OH .
TI1e coupl e will res tde in Potnt
Pleasan t.

Travis Saunders
enlists in Army
Travis K. Saunders, of Galltpo lts. son of Carl and Linda Saunders.
recently enlisted in the U.S.
Army 's Delayed Entry Program
(DEP), and will reponed for acti vc
duty June 12.
The 199 1 Galha Academy grad uate will take basiC and advanced
mdividual training al Fort Leonard
Wood, Mo. He has chosen the postlion of heavy construction equip ment operator as his military occupational specialty , and has volun teered to serve a four-year tour of
duty.
Sgt. 1st Class John Locke of the
Gallipolis recruiting station assisted Saunders in his enlisuncnt.

WEDNESDAY
C HE STER - Chester Garden
Club will hold a famtly picmc at
the Karr cottage with Dorothy and
Horace Karr as hosts on Wednes day at 6:30p.m. Around the table
discussion wtll be held savmg the
earth as well a' an auction of garden related ttcms

The Gallipolis Rotary Mile will
be held on July 4 at 10 a.m. The
mile run will begin at the Shake
Shoppe on Second Avenue and
eontinue to Court Street onto First
Avenue and end at the stage.
The run is open to all boys and
~ 1rl s beginnmg first grade of th e
t ' 92- 93 school year thro ugh

seniors graduating in 1992. All participants will receive a free t-shirt.
Tropht es will be awarded in
Scmor Div ision and Jumor Oi vision for boys and girls. For more
mformation contact Brent A. Saundcrs at446-001 8 or Ketth McGuire
of 82 State Street or phone at 4468606.

and trophtcs wtll he awarded.
An auction will be held at stx
p.m. with proceeds going to the
Ruritan Club and Star Mill Park.
The Meigs County Fair Queen
wi II be announced and crowned at
6:30 p.m. on the stage at Star Mill
· Park.
Country and western music will
be provided at 7 p.m. by Rocky
Mountain Bluegrass. Parkersburg,
W.Va, and Ivan , Howard and
Friends.
Fireworks at 10 p.m. will end
the day.
Acttvittes on -going throughout
the day will be craft and food
booths , puppet shows, tractors
shown by the newly formed Two
Cylinder Club , blood pre ssure
checks by the Racine Emergency
Squad, a sports and card show at
the legion hall, information by the
Meigs County Park District, games
for the kids, a dunking machine
and a penctl sketch artisL
Those attending the day' s festivities are encouraged to bring along
a lawn chair.
Parking is avrolable at the park,
the field behind the par, and at the
Racine Bapusl Chun:h parking lot.
Restroom facilities will be avail able at the park and at the firehouse.

Juli e Fi sc o, daughter of Or .
Donald and Patricia of Gallipolis
recently attended the first annual
Close Up Oh 10 Leadership Camp
sponsored by the Ohio Center For
Law-Related Education (OCLRE).
The four day residential camp
was held at Canter 's Cave Camp
ncar Jackson , for students in grades
four through six and was attended
by over 100 students from throughout the state of Ohio.
During the camp student parucipanls were involved in opponuni ti es that helped build leadership
skills, foster self-confidence. and
emphasi ze good citi zenship. I he
summer camp program was spe cially designed with activity-based
workshops and social activities that
motivated, stimulalcd, and inspired
campers to become effective leaders and better citizens. As a unique
feature of leadership camp, htgh
school counselors taught all workshops and sess ion s and guided
campers through recreational and
leadership activities. OCLRE and
its co-sponsors, the Ohio Statc Bar
Association, Attorney General Lee
Ftsher, the American Civil Liberues Union of Ohto Foundation, and
The Supreme Court of Ohto, arc

pleased to sponsor a summer educauonal opportunlly that helps
Ohio 's young citizens build leadershtp and citizenship skills.
OCLRE will be conductin g
Close Up Ohio Leadership Acade my for students in grades seven
through mne at Capital Uui versity
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 1-800282-6556 or by writing to OCLRE
at P.O. Box 16562 , Columbu s,
43216-6562.

On dean's fist

:Horizontal &amp; 'l!micaf!
'Too rwuk?'Ioo Long?

Bring Them Into
Our Store... No
Matter Where You
Bought Them.

Three students from Galltpolt s
have been named to the dear 's list
at Mmmi untversll y, Oxford. for
the second se mester of the 199 11992 academic year. Jill K. All en,
MIMOIIAliRIDGl APPROACH ON
80
Grape Ave; Thomas S. Moul there will be a Mi ss Wtlkesvill e
GARnllD AVE. PAIIKIISIURG
ton, Jr., 421 Third Ave and Je nni fe r
Area Queen Contest There will be
MOII.·fll. 9·1;
L. Youn g, 19 Debbte Onvc ha ve
separate contests for four and five
all
achieved
a
3.5
grade
pomt
ave
rSAT.
9-5:30; SUII. 1·5
year ol~s . second and third graders,
age
or
better
for
th
e
seco
nd
founh and fifth graders. and sixth
se mester.
graders. Call Pam East (596-2124)
for practice dates and details. Girls
arc tncluded from Vtnton a nd
Salem Center.
At I p.m. there wtll be a vanety
show for anyone who lik es to
entertain others . Call 669-5646 or
669-331 I to register.
992·6249
Refre shments will be provided
by the Community Building Group.
They wtll be se rving sloppy JOCS,
hot dog s, chips, pop, popcorn and
500 N. SECOND ST.,
homemade pies.
All area queens are invited to
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
partt ctpate tn the parade . Anyone
who would like to bring their noat.s
and area fife departments are wel come. Children cspcctally arc In vit ed to par~ c ipate.
Reg tstrau on for the parade wtll
be in fro nt of the firehouse between
CWSES AGES 3·11
930 and II a.m. on July 4.

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
MONDAY • FRIDAY, JUNE 29·JULY 3

REJOICING LIFE CHURCH

" ADE IN AMERICA
SALE"

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GlLliPOUS
414 Seco... lve., 21111 Floor
44Hl66
8:30 to 5:00 Mo•day.friday
8:30 to 12 5ahrday
Closed 1l1rsday
.

ALSO: Jarkson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chllkothl, login &amp; McArthur

BOOTS, BELTS, JEANS, SHIRTS, TOPS,
APPAREL, KNIVES, ETC.
JULY 1, 2 &amp; 3••••WED.·FRI.

Wamsley-Simpson
Joee Dale Wamsley, daughter of
Doris J. Wamsley and the late Charles D. Wamsley of Point Pleasant,
became the bride of Michael
Bowers Simpson, son of Betsy
Simpson of Savannah, GA and Dr.
Richard Simpson of Gallipolis.
The ceremony was held May 30
at Whitfield Square m downtown
htstoric Savannah , GA.

The bnde wore her mother' s
gown of ivory taffeta and lace . She
carried a bouquet of spring flowers.
Ashley Ntcole Wamsley of Gal lipolis, niece of the bride, was the
maid of honor. Robert M. Simpson
of Williamsburg, 'vA, brother of the
groom, was best man.
The couple now resides in
Staresboro, VA.

Wedding policy
The Su nd ay Time s-Se ntinel
regards weddmgs of Galha, Meigs
and Mason counties as news and is
happ y to publish weddin g stories
and photographs without charge.
How ever, wedding news mu st
mee t general standards of timeli ne ss. The newspaper prefers to
publi sh accounts of weddings as
_soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
e dttion , the weddmg must have
taken place wtthin 60 days prior to
the pubUcation, and may be up to
'6 00 words in length. Material for
Along the Rtver must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the date
of publication.
Those not making the 60 day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be

WE OFFER

Amusement
park seen on
'Today' show

MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL B. SIMPSON

publi shed with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial department from 1·5 p.m.
Monday through Friday al 4462342 .

THE KEY

SAND US KY , Ohi o ( AP ) Cedar Point amuse men t park 's ce lebration of l 00 year s of roll er
coaster ridin g has received national
att enti o n th ank s to NBC-TV's
" Today" show.
Part of Frida y's show cam e
fr om th e platform of th e Mea n
Streak , whi ch park officials say IS
th e wo rld 's tallest and fa stest
wooden roller coaster.
Cedar Point in stalled its fir st
roll er coaster. the Switchback Railway, in 1892, eight years after the
wo rld 's fir st roll er coaste r was
introduced at Coney Island in New
York.
The park now has I0 coasters,
the most of any them e park in the
world. Park officials say the Magnum XL-200 is the world 's tallest
steel coaster and the Mean Streak ts
th e fa s tes t and tall es t woo den
cooster anywhere.
The park got almost eight min -

Th e w e ll -tra in ed s taff a t
Veterans Memorial Hospital offers you the key to excellent
health care in your home community setting.
At Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital - there is a
complete range of health care services available to yo u and yo ur
family.
Whether you have a routine problem or a life- threa tening situa tion, look to Veterans Memorial for health help .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive

Pomeroy
992·2104

ut es of li ve ai r um c on th e
" Today" show , as we ll as promotional shots throughout the week.

Glenn Close
to film sequel

HILTON HE

but love 1'o e to Work.
Play"
·• Indoor/Outd
• Nautilus E 00' Pools
• Rest
Qurprnem;R
• Van dauranusar!Patio Bacquetba/1 Ct.
er Meer T _ ar
ennts Cemer

(614) 992-3614

HILTON HEAD ISLAND

u a famtty monu-

HILTON HEAD RESORT

ment liS purcha54l warr111t1
thought and gutdance. S..
what you buy. ViStl the monu·
ment dealer who flU a com·
plete display, Slid wno can
aeStQn a ~rsonaliz~ monu·
men/ to harmonize wttn Ill
surroundings.
we have the ex~flence . Wt
nave the complete display.
Your purchase is backed Oy till
sttonQtSI monum.nl gu.,.,.,.,
otlllinlble today.

VACATIONS

THE FI:\EST HO\-IES &amp;
\ lU.AS lSL\:\IJ \'\'JDE .

'te recreation faCJiittes than
More Free on-s\e x on Hilton Head Is land
any v1lla camp
d Tenn1s
.
, 6 Ltghte
Courts
• Qcean Vtews
Available
• 2 Racquetball
• 2 Outdoor Pools
Courts
• 1 IndoOr Pool
• 2 Paddle Tennis
• Hot Tub, Sauna &amp;
Courts
Steam Bath

····-··········-·-····--··················---I!IOIIUMENTS ARE OUR ONLY
BUSINESS. NOT A SIDELINE.

~~ • Frrr Color
l~~IL Brorhure
~ · ~ -----.1~

at beautiful beach
Private beach~r~~~las available starting
~~$:~~!eek. Daily rates avatlable
we·re On Stte

LOGAN

2

Call

Hilton Head Four Seasons,
1-800-845·3800 Of 803-842-9101

VINTON. OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
STATE RT. 180
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
PHO"'F ,88 -8803

w. Davison. B.l.C

N-21625

Inc

• Free Tmnls

~~ •Golf
® -~ Dlsrounts

• Weight/Exercise Equipment

DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDOE
JAMES A. BUSH. Mgr.
PHONE 812-2888

Middleport, ON.

VACATION
RENfAI.S

Four Seasons Centre

MEIGS COUNTY

D
290 Nort• S.co1tllve.

Now is the time ro utect 1
family monument. Pttrpetuatt,
ror all time, rne memory ol
those you 101'8. Our know1«1Qt
and u~rience are yours lor
the uklng.
Nolh•ng you buy will el'8r t»
~s ~rm.,ent

AD ISLA

You DE
No, sc
'Forth
SERVE
IT!
ose Who lik.

EMPORIA, Kan. (AP) -Glenn
Close wtll be back in Kansas this
summer to film a sequel to the
highl y rated TV movie "Sarah ,
Plain and Tall, " the movie's producer says.
The ac uess wtll reprise the rol e
that earned her an Emmy nomina·
ti on in 1991, said Bill Self of
Wtlliam Self Productions in Los
Ange les. Close played a Maine
woman who helped raise the chil dre n of a widower, played in the
o r~ g ina l Hallmark Hall of Fame
pr ese nt a ti on by Chri stopher
Walken.

MONUMENT CO.

CLOSED SATURDAY, JULY 4TH

cena m parts of the country, " SaJd
magaz tn c spokeswo ma n Patge
Powell.
Va nit y Fltlr used a simil ar wrap·
per last year wh en its co ver di spl ayed a preg nant Dcmt Moore in
th e nude.

MR. and MRS. JOHN
(APRIL) HOLSINGER

9:30 A.M. TO 12 NOON

20% OFF ALL AMERICAN MADE GOODS:

Sliding '" sale. No ont refund servkes ••se of lnaUity to pay.

NEW YORK (AP) - Interview
magazine is going under wraps for
its July tss ue - to conc eal th e
cover showmg actress Drew Banrymore stretched out nude on a lawn.
" Our newstand consultants satd
we could have problems with it in

Bible Classes, Crafts, Refreshments,
Games, Praise and Worship

Celebrsle lhe 41h 11 Dsn'1

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

8:30 to S:OO Mo•day·friday
Closed Thursday

Window Blind
ALTERATIONS
&amp; REPAIRS

were Gywnn Freeman, California,
sister of the bride: Tamm y Freema n, Raci ne, step-mother of th e
bnde; Wendy Harmon and Amber
Cummms.
Flower girls were Darlene Freeman. Los Angeles, Calif., sister of
the hnde and Enn Harman, Racine.
Gues ts we re reg istered by Seva
Cline, cousm of the groom.
A rece ption fo ll owe d at the
home of the groom's famil y.
A three t;ercd weddi ng cake was
baked by Vicki Gtllilan, cousin of
the groom.
Th e brid e ts a grad uate o f
So uthern Htgh Schoo l and the
groo m 1 s a graduate of Eas tern
High Sc hool. The groom wil l
a tt end the Un tversi ty of Rio
Grande thts falL
The couple rcs tdcs m Btdwell.

Drew Barrymore bares all

Gallipolis Rotary Mile set

Local student attends camp

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

POMEROY
236 E. Malll St.. 2nd Floor
992-5912

~radc )

I,
parent/guardian
of the ahove named participant hereby release Ihe Gallipolis Rotary Club, City of Gallipolis and Gallipolis
Chamber of Commerce from any and all liability for
damages/injury/dealh Ihat may result from the parlicipation in the 1992 Rotary Mile.
Participants are to meet wilh their entry form atlhe Shake
Shoppe, 2nd Ave., Gallipolis at I0:00a.m. in july 41 h.

Wilkesville announces July 4
activities; contests, parade set
WILKESVILLE - Wilk es vill e
will have a Founh of July parade at
II a.m. with prizes to be awarded
m seven categories: pet parade (any
age , on leash and under control ),
three-five year olds (tricycles, wag ons, etc.), bicycles. three and four
wheelers, costumes, floats (cars,
trucks, old cars, etc .), and horses.
Prizes will be $15,$10 and $5.
Followin~ the parade at 12:30

REEDS VILLE - April Freeman ,
Racine , and John Holsinger were
united marriage during a double
ring ce re mony May 24 at the
Church of Christ on Success Road
with Rev. Joseph Hoskins officiatIng.
Th e groo m is the son of Alva
and Grace Hols tnger, Reedsville.
The bride tS the daughter of Ron
and Tamm y Freeman , Racine, ar d
Joe Ann Free man , Los Ange les,
Cal if.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bmle wore a whue lace dress
with a swee theart neckline of brocade. She wore a ve il o f Fre nch
tllu ston attached to a lace gathered
head piece. She carried a bouquet
of pastel colored rose buds.
Th e br ide' s moth er served as
matron of honor and bridesmaids

Name _________________________________

TUESDAY

Racine gears up for July 4

Varney-Kemper
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs .
~ Danny
Varne y of Bidwe ll ,
- announce the engagement of their
daughter Stephanie M. Varney to
Eric S. Kemper , son of Mr. and
MJ&gt; . Samuel Kemper of Bidwell .
· Ms. Varney is a 1991 graduate
: o f Gallia Academy High School

RUTL AND - The Rutland Garden Club wtll meet Monday at7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Jam es
Ntc ho lso n. The program will be
" Herbs for th e Kitc hen " and
"Roses."

Freeman-Ha/singer

GALLIPOLIS ROTARY MILE

0
0

Sunday Times-Sentlnei- Page-83

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

·1·800·845·7017
.

U.\CASTER llOORT

R E N T A L S

�Page 84-Sunday Tlmes-sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

.

June 28, 1992

r-~~~~--~~~~~~~------~~~

I

I"'""Jun~e
28;,;,;,;,,
19;.;..92_ _ _ _ _..;.;;Po;;.;,;,;;;,mer,;,:,.oy.;,;,;;,;;Mid~dlep.;.;.;.ort~Gal;;;:;.;;.llpo;,;;;.;lls,O;;,;.;..H.;.;;,;;Poin~t
Pl,;;;;;;easa;,;,;;.nt,w;,;.;..v_ ___;,;,sun....;day-Tim-es_sen-tlne_I-P_..age--.85

'

AND

KAHN'S WIENERS reg., bun size, Jumbo •.•••.•..•••••..•••.••.••• .ltb. pkg. •1.21
BIG RED SMOKIES ........................................................... LB. PKG. •1.99
HILLSHIRE FAR
SAOSAGE...........................................tb. 81.69
FRESH SAUSAGE
s ,
BRATWRUST, BEEF BRATWURST, ITALIAN ............ 1.89
8
'S BACON .................................................................... ttb. pkg. 1.59

A family owned and operated supermar"ct,
offering the best of servrce, qualrtv and :Y~ C L'. to
the people oi our co mmunH\

A Cardinal- Affiliated Supermarket

JUNE 21-JULY 3, 1992 10 A.M.-7 P.M.

Dl

'

Y BEHIND VAUGHAN'S
0 PEARL S'R

•Cookout Thursday 8 Friday II A.M.-8 P.M. (Hamburger or Bratwurst and Drink lor Only 81.00)

KAHN'S

1.29

8
BOLOGNA .................................................. t2 oz.

KAHN'S

(While Quantities Last)

••
BOYER'S
CHOICE

DELl SELECT

LUNCH MEAT ...................................................•I. 79

FROM IRE DELl:

4 ROLL

Spaghetti
Sauce 3ZOZ.

CORN DOGS .......................................................81.89
UH 'S BOLOGNA................................ttb. •1.59

PACK

DELUXE CLUB

Charmin

Bologna ................................................. ab.

s1

49

KAHN'S GERMAN, GARLIC &amp; BEEF

2

49
8
Bologna .................................................lb.

BUlB'S
SHOWBOAT

Pork ·N·

Beans •

5 oz.

12 PACK
12 OZ. CANS

Lotsa
Pop

Asst. Flavors

2
8291

8
Pickle Pimento ............................. lb.
Bam &amp;Cheese Loaf ................. lb.
Pepper Loaf

89

:oney Loaf............................................ s3n

Diapers

99
8
Baked Ram .......................................lb.

Store

2

3

99
8
Broasted Chicken ...................a pc.

38 MEDIUM

IN STORE DEMO
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
JULY 2ND &amp; THIRD

'•

THURSDAY:BRAT11URST
and
ITALIAN BRATWURST
FRIDAY:
BIG RED SMOKIES

1.39

8

5 LBS. OR MORE

LB.

8.99

8

5LB.PKG

LEG QUAR,.ERS

49c

5 LBS. OR MORE

BUY·N·SAVE

24 LARGE

GROUND CHUCK
ClOPPED SIRLOIN PAftiES

Old Fashion or

Bounty
els

Fourth of July
Cookout Specials!

LB.

GROUND CHUCK
5 LBS. OR MORE

SJ. 39

LB.

COUNTRY S!YLE RIBS
5 LB. PKG.

6.99

8

GROUND BEEF
10 LBS. OR MORE

99C

LB.

ENGLISH S,.EAKS
~"

FAMO.Y PKG.

BONE IN NEW

sI.99 LB.

YORK SftiiP SftiK

3.89

8

LB.

�Page-86-Sunday-Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

June 28,1992

June 28, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

'

r I

COLUMBUS - Eric Jones , a
senior at Ohio State University
College of Dentistry, was recently
awarded the Dr. A. R. Weprin
Clinical Scholarsh1p.
Tills award is given in alternate
years to one selected OSU dental
student or Case Western Reserve
student for outstandmg technical
and clinical ability. The award was
presented to Jones by the Dayton
Chapter of the Alpha Omega Dental Fraternity at the Meadowbrook
Country Club in Dayton.
Jones was accompanied at the
reception by his parents Harlan
Dean and Shirley Jones of Gallipolis.

\

\

'(

I"

ERIC JONES

Robot takes a test drive
By LEE SIEGEL
tell Rocky IV its targets, but the
AP Science Writer
robot matk its own decisions on
PASADENA, Calif. - NASA how to reach each spot.
observed the 25th anniversary of
It placed a miniature seismomethe Surveyor moon landers by sim- ter on tile ground, then rolled a few
ulating a planned Mars mission fcct and scooped up sand. Next, it
with a small, six-wheeled robot that rolled to a rock and unfold ed a
scooped up sand and furiously spear-shaped rock-chipper, which
hammered a rock.
battered th e rock like a jackhamFriday's anniversary was used mer, producmg a freshly exposed
to demonstrate how "new technol- surface for a sensor to study.
ogy will a1d us 1n tom orrow's
But the robot refused to budge
exploration of other bodies in the when engineers tried to sw 1tch
MR. and MRS. SCOT (LORIE) WEST
solar system," said Edward Stone. from semiautomatic operation to
d ~rector of the space agency' s Jet Simple remote control. Te!ev1sioo
Propulsion Laboratory.
cameras and other news med ia
The $ 1.2 million Rocky IV eq uipm ent interfered with the
VINTON - Lorie Lee Mathis employed by Chi Chi 's of Lancast- weighs on ly 15.4 pounds and mea- rover's radioed commands.
sures 14 1nchcs tall, 24 inches long
"We have a little com mum caand Scot Leon West were united in er.
and
I
5
inches
wide.
It
has
S~&lt; 5llons
blackout," sa1d Arthur Lane,
marriage on Sunday, May 24, at the
The groom is the son of Mr. and
inch-diametcr,
motorized
wheels
manager
of tile rov er demonstration
home of tile groom's parents. The Mrs. Joseph West of Vinton. He IS
and
is
equipped
With
a
television
proj&amp;L
"Thankfully
. Mars has no
ceremony was officiated by the a 1987 graduate of North Galila
camera.
TV
stations."
Rev . Lloyd Fry.
H1gh School and a 1991 graduate
Controll ers used computers to
The bride is the daughter of of the University of R10 Grande.
Mrs. Shirley Byus of Tampa, Ra., He is a teacher with Southern Local
and Gene Mathis of Kno.vdlc. Schools.
BRING US YOUR
Tenn . She is a 1988 graduate of
The couple res1de in Logan with
OLD PHOTOS!
North Galila High School and is their daughter , Alexandria Rae.

MR. and MRS.

Nay-Furman

u1descent seq um s and seed pearls
over Veni ce lace. The basque
wa istline held a full sktrt adorned
with mat ching Ven1ce lace
appliques falling to a chapel-length
train.
The head -dress was an
appliqued comb wl!h sdk ro ses.
pearls, Iridescent sequins and JJ
chapel veil of illusion tul le. The
bride carried a ca"ade bouquet of
wlutc roses, ilhcs, Eng liSh ivy, and
baby's breath.
GALLIPOLIS - Walter reun1on,
Sunday, June 28
Ma1d of honor was Chnsune
Saturday, Jun e 27 from 10 a.m . to 3
GALLIPOLIS
Schwam
Fami
Beebe of Springf1eld. Bndesma1ds
ly singing 7 p.m . at tile Elizabeth p.m . at 0.0. Mcintyre Park Shelwere Sara Nay and Deborah leWIS,
terhouse I.
Chapel
Church.
siste rs of the bnde. Bardstown.
Ky ; Chrisune Furman Kharasch
GALLIPOLIS - O'Dell famliy
RODNEY - The Scioto Hills
and Mary Furman Mathias. sisters
reunion,
Sunday, June 28 at 4 p.m .
of the groom. Forest Park, Ill., and BaptiSt Camp Staff of Wheelers Olympia Fi elds. Il l.: and Amy burg . w11l be ministering at the at 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park.
Wes t Madcnberg. Charlotte, N.C. FaJth Baptist Church at 6 p.m. The
GAL LIPOLIS - Cal Sanders
They wore iridescent midnight blue camp is headed by Gary and Nancy reuniOn, Sunday , June 28. all day,
Storm
with
a
qualified
staff
of
ta ffe ta tea- length dres ses with
workers providing able assistance. at 0 0 . Mcintyre Park She lterswcct hcarl ne ckline and short
house I.
Public IS invited to attend.
pu ffed slee ve s. They earned cascade bouque ts of ivy, roses, dcl (Items for the community calGALLIPOLIS - Tractor pull
phmlums. hiles, and baby's breath.
endar
appear two days prior to an
(anuque and classic) at tile Gallia
Steven Madenberg. Charlotte, Cou nty Junwr Fairgrounds, spon- event. Tl~ty musr be received by
N.C. was best man. Groomsmen sored by th e Buckeye Hills FFA rhe Gallipolis Daily Tribunr in
were Dean Kharasch. Forest Park, Alumni Association; weigh 1n at advance for publication)
Ill.; Stan Krolikowski, Naperville. noon, pull at 2 p.m. For more inforIll ; Kevin Richards, Columbia.
mation call 988-4211 or 988-3981.
Md.; JJm Sal isbury, Shorewood,
Il l. : and Pat Sullivan. HICkory
Tuesday, June 30
Hills, Ill.
GALLIPOLIS
- Mary Kay CosThe groom wore h1s A1r Force
rnCilcs before-and-after portJoho at
"Mess Dress" tuxedo. The grooms7 p.m at th e Stowaway on Second
men and latllcrs of the bride and
Evans, organ 1st
Avenue. Door prizes, all welcome.
The bndc was escorted to the groom wore black waistcoat tux e- For more mformat!On call 1-R00 alt er by her father. The hndc and dos w1th iridescent m1dni ght blue 407 -0498.
groom gave flow ers to their par - c umme rb unds and bow t1 cs. All
ent s. Followmg the song, the umon aucndant gentlemen wore whttc
Reunions
of the couple was formally blcssc;.l rose boutonnieres .
CHESHIRE- Bradbury reunion.
The dmner reccpuon was he ill ot
by their parenLs
Suncloy. Jun e 2R at the Kyger ComThe bride wore a designe r gown the Holida y Inn, Harvey . Ill.
OFF
munuy Budding , I p.m . Bnng table
of ca ndleli ght bndal saun fcatunng
The couple 1S res1dmg m Lppcr scrv\C C
a scatloped swee th ea rt neckl1nc . MMlboro , Md.
•Traditional Tapestry, burgundy &amp;
Large saun sl&amp;vcs extended to the
wri st adorned with pearls and a
aeam, tight bock. reg. $1025 (1 only)
beaded mset of Ven ice lace . The

CHES lllRE - The First Bapust
Church of Park Forest, Ill., was the
setting for tile May II double-nng
wedding ceremony of Suzanne
Elizabeth Nay, Upper Marlboro,
Md. and Kenneth Andrew Furman,
Upper Marlboro, Md. The Rev .
Jane Moschenrose of Faitll United
Church of Park Forest officiated
tile ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Roben and Mildred Nay, CheshJIC.
The bride is a 1983 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and 1s
continuing her doctoral degree at
the University of South Flonda.
She is employed as a assessment
specialist to the FAA until begmning her internship in clinical psychology at Bay Pines (FL) VA
Medical Center in September.
1992.
Tbe groom IS the son of R1chard
and Ruth Furman. Park Forest. Ill
The groom IS a 1980 graduate of
Ri ch Ea~t High School and a 1992
Ph.D. from the Umvers1ty of Sout h
Florida. He is flnishmg hiS Internship in clinical psychology at
Andrews Au Force Base. Washing ton, DC. He wlil be employed as
an Alf Force psychol og ist at
MacD!ll Air Force Rase in Tampa.
Flonda begmn1ng Sep tembe r.
1992.
Mu sic lor th e ceremony was
provided by Dean Kharasch, key·
board and vocalist : and R1c hard

1

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Gallipolis, OH.

FURNITURE
GALLERIES
CORNER SECOND AND GRAPE
GAWPOUS, OHIO
446-0332

CHESHIRE - George R. and
Marjorie A. (King) Moody of 283
Roush Lane, Cheshire. will celebrate their 45tll wedding anniversary on Monday, June 29.
They were married Ju ne 29,
194 7 in Roseville, by the Rev .
Ernest D. Bartlett.
They couple has thre e sons,
Charles of Cheshire, Rick ey of

Gallipolis, and l1m of Lake land,
Fla.; and two daughters, Kathy
VanderMark of Syracuse, N.Y.,
and April Stinson of Cheshire .
They also have 15 grandchildren.
Mr. Moody is a rewed AEP
employee of 35 years .
Mrs. Moody is retired from
Cox's DepL Store, after 15 years.

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NEW YORK (AP) - After
three years playing opposite Don ald Trump in a romance that might
have been called "Will He or
Won't He?" Marla Maples is movIng to Broadway and a role in
·"The Will Rogers Follies."
Maples is making an Aug. 3
debut playing the role of Zieg ficld's Favorite in the Tony Awardwinning musical, said her publicist.
Chu ck Jones. The show currently
stars Mac Davis.
"S he's been working her tall
off, and d1d a series of auditions,"

Homeownership: the American Dream
Dy PAT COCHRAN
Southeastern Ohio
Board or Realtors, pres.
GALLIPOLIS -Mos t adult s
understand tllat hom cownership is
an excellent mvestment. Rarely has
a stock or commodity offered the
steady appreciation found in real
estate. For the 59 million home
owner households in United States
how ever, it is much more than an
invesunent.
Tbe practical benefits of owning
a hom e arc far outweighed by tlle
pride and security that buying
brings. Being part of a community
and creating a home environment
of your choice are the main reasons
that first time buyers take that step
into ownership.
Tbe right for Americans to own
ccal property was important enough
to be included 1n tile U.S. Constitution. Now ,200 years later. 64 percent of all U.S. households hve in a
house with their name on the deed .
For most, thctr home constitutes
the lar gest investmen t they will
make in their lifetime.
Homeownership is cons id ered
to be th e American Dream, and
cons1dcnng th e benefits that

Shows support
MIAMI (AP) - Philip M1chael
Thomas, co -star of the old TV
series "Miam t Vice," went to federal court 10 show support for Alex
Daoud, a former Miami Bea c h
mayor who's on trial on coJTUpllon
and racketeering charges .
"Nothing but good thou ghts,
babe," said Thomas, tllrowing his
arms around Daoud's neck in lhe
counroom Friday.
Thomas said he was a longtime
friend of Daoud's, but he refused to
comment on the case and later
slippctl away.
Since the NBC series was can ce led. the 43-year-o ld actor has

congress has developed :or home owners. the dream also becomes a

financial blessing.
The deductibility of mortgag e
interest encourages homcowncrship
by allowing buyers to reducc.e tax
liability, thu s mcreasing net
mcome. However, th e other advantages to home ownership shou ldn't
be overlooked:
• The
equity that owners accumulate is a
source of substantial future income.
Home equi ty increases as the market value of the real estate increas es and as the mortgage debt is
redu ced.
• Monthly house payments can
be designed either to grow with the
buyer's income or to remain basically the same over time. With
adju stable-rate mortgage, buyers
can begin their payments with a
low interest rate that will increase
or decrease in line with the &amp;anomy. With fixed -rate mortgages,
owners can make the same princi pal and Interest payments at the end
of thirty years that were made in
th e flfS t month. Considering that
1n come is likely to increase at a
steady pace,owners with a fixedrate loan will see their housing cost
decrea se as a percentage of debt .
• At the end of the loan term , the
homeowner can hvc w1th out any
house payment while owning a
valuable asset that can be passed to
other gencrauons.
The 40 percent of all buy ers
who arc lookmg to purchase their

first hom e sometimes find the process overwhelming at the start By
findtng a helpful REAL TOR at the
beginning, first time buyers will
find tllat searchmg for a home and
followmg it tllrough to closing 1s
one of tile most enjoyable experiences of their lives. Whether a
buyer wishes to live in a singlefamily home or condominium, tile
price and selection of homes in
Ohio is hard to match elsewhere 1n
the nation.
With interest rates as low as
they have been in decades, many
first-time buyers are taking this
opportunity to purchase a home,
especially since no one can predict
how long rates will remain stable
or how high or low they will go.
Low interest rates,after all, arc the
driving force of tile nation's real
estate market, as shown in thi s
e&lt;ample: On a $60,000 mongage
with a 10.5 percent intere st
rate,principal and interest is $549 a
montll At an 8.5 rate the payment is
$461.40-a difference of $1,051.20
a year or $31,536 over tile life of
the loan.
Whether you're searc hing for
your fu~t home or looking to move
up to a larger, more expensive or
retirement home,enlist the services
of any one of tile 90 members of
the Southeastern Ohio Board Of
REAL TORS to assist in the pro cess. Any one of us will be glad to
help you realtze the Amcman
Dream.

Jones sa id . "It's a grueling process, and tlley decided they wanted
her in the show . The work paid off.
She's excited."
Maples ha s appeared on the sitcom "Designing Women" and m
the movie " Maximum Ovcrdnve."
PORT HURON, Mich. (AP) Terry McMillan is trying to catch
her breath after a 20-c ny publiCity
tour in JUSt 24 days for her bestse lling book "Wa1ti ng to Exhale."
"I don't think I can keep thi s
pace," said the Port Huron native.
whose novel was No. 5 this week
on The New York T1 mes best-sell er list. ''I'm really not used to
being so celebrated.
"A t first it was fun, but now
I'm JUSt getting very, very urcd."
Her novel , about lour black
women in th eir m1d - to latc -30s,
has sold 220,000 copies .
"The women in thoi s book arc
really fabrications," sa1d Ms.
McMillan. 40 , who now lives in
San Francisco. "If all the things
happened to me that have happened
to those women 1 would be 1n a nut
house."

GALLIPOLIS - Ronald W.
Coverton, M.D. has JOined Holzer
Clinic. thereby offering Dermatology in the tri-county area. Dermatology, the medical science of skin
fun ction. structure or disease, is tile
most recent specialty added to the
clinic's growing list of services.
Dr . Coverton received his bach·
elor's from tile Univemty of Virginia and earned his Medical
Degree at Columb.ia Un1versity
Co llege of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City . His Dermatology residency was completed
at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center 111 New York. He has ,:11.
practi ce d Dermatology in New :_.;;,_,·
Yorjc. and Virgmm.
'
Dr. Covcrton is certified as a
Diplomate of the American Academy of Dermatology and 1s a Member of tile National Medical AssocJation ami the New York State
Medical Society . He is a native of
Richmond , Va.
The Doctor IS an&lt;ious to get
acquainted w1th the community and
offer his medical special ty on a
local baSIS . For appointments or
DR. RONALD COVERTON
further information cal l446-5513.

••

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Open Mon., Tues., Thurs . &amp; Fri. 9:00a.m . 'til 4:00p.m.
Other Hours by Appolntment-693-651$1&gt; or 44b -~.s;a

Anniversary to be observed

M1ami, running the Miamiway
Theater, writing songs and working
on f1lm deals.
He has been romantically linked
to D10nne Warwick.
Daoud, who once had a bit pan
on "Miam1 Vice," is charged with
using hi s office to extort favors
from city contmctors and others in
exc han ge for his support on building projects.

by Burris and Barca·lounger

$99

MR. and MRS. GEORGE (MARJORIE) MOODY

remai ned active around the real

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s175

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memator for CNN and former news.

CHAIRS

OVER 150 CHAIRS

SALE

CEDAR CHESTS

leaders of 1he abortiOn ngh ts and
anti -abortion movemcnlS
Ellerbee. 47, is a form er com -

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

--oNE·OF·KIND - •

SEVERAL BEAUTIFUL

anchor, also will fea ture nat1ona l

MI SSOU LA, Mont (AP) Garth Brooks. who se w1fe IS
expecung a baby gHI. says he
would coos1der retmng from mu s1c
if he thought hiS daughter needed
more of his time.
Speaking about his co untry
mus1c career and 1mpcnd1ng parenthood , he sa1d. " If one of them
suffers because of the other. u' s
going to be musiC tllat suffers I'm
respon sible for what thi s child
gives and takes to tile world, next
month nnd 40 years down the
road."
Brooks, whose hits include "No
Fences" and "Rop111' the Wind,"
was in Missoula for a concert Fri day.
Hlis wife, Sandy , is due to give
binh nexl month.

425
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back. reg. $1399.·--····-·----'599
.C:amel Back Floral. reg. $1050.- 1599
OVER 35 MORE ON SALE

Pcir lladt Tallie lamps._.. _____,eadJ 239

The liv e, one -hour tel ecas t ,

STUDIO

CLEARANCE
SALE

SOFAS 20%·50%

NEW YORK (AP) - TelcVJ
s10 n wrncr and report er Linda
Ellerbee has invited a few women
to join her on TV 10 talk about
abortion : National Pub li c Radio
correspondent N1na Totcnbcrg.
New York Times columniSt Anna
Quindlen and U.S. Rep . PatnCJa
Schroeder, D-Colo.
The new s special will au several
days after th e U.S. Supreme
Court's forthcom1ng abortiOn ru lmg. cable TV's L1fct1m c network
announced Fnday The ruling is
expected Monday.

$1495

Gallia County calendar

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

Names in
the news

-&lt;opy Sptdtd2-517

They are the parents of Charles
A. Duncan of Northup, Phil J. Duncan of Reynoldsburg, Mr s. Ron
(Alice) Cowden of Worthington,
and the late George A. Duncan .
They have seven grandchildren and
one great-grandchild

People in the news

Mathis-West

MR. and MRS. NAY FURMAN

JACK DUNCAN

Golden anniversary observed
NORTHUP- Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Duncan celebrated tlleir 50th wed ding anniversary on June 14 with a
family dinner, and a drive to view
the sites and schools where they
had taught.
They were married March 7,
1942.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-87

Clinic adds Dennatology
to area medical services

'

Receives award
f

wv

Occasion.

•

If you are planning a wedding, then you should
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�June 28, 1992

LUCKY LEAF

'

CHERRY
PIE FILLING

STORE HOURS

21

Moftdoy tltt:u Sunday

Sports

~hnes -

jentinel

Section C
June 28, 1992

~)··C

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298 SECOND ST.
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LUCKY LEAF

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
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MR. BEE

POTATO

CHIPS
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I CAN'T BELIEVE TillS!- Neither could the rans, who shared
Jim Courier's reelings during his third-round match against Russia's Andrei Olhovskiy Saturday at Wimbledon, which Olhovskiy
won 6-4, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 to oust the top-seeded Courier. (AP)

JI....

Olhovskiy posts win over No. 1 seed Courier

VIETTI

HOT DOG

By STEVE WILSTEIN
WIMBLEOON, England (AP) - Jim Courier's
Grand Slam quest ended Saturday at Wimbledon
with all the finality of an overhead smash and all the
shock of the most outrageous upsets in tennis history.
II ended 6-4, 4-6. 6-4, 6-4 on the Centre Court
grass against a Russian, No. 193 Andrei Olhovskiy,
who grew up playing on plastic and wood 10 become
the first qualifier ever 10 beat a Wimbledon top seed.
Th e end came suddenly in the third round after
Courier's romps through the Australian and French
Opens, the world's No. I player falling to a man who
lost in the flCSt round of his last fow 10umaments.
II came, appropriately, on "People's Saturday," a
day of fe stivity devoted to commoners in T -shlf!s
instead of the elite ticket-holders in blazers and nes.
ordinary tennis fans doing the wave and dancing by
the Centre Coun seats.
- "Life is life," Olhovskiy said, betraymg not a
trace of surprise at his feal.

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John McEnroe, who sometimes seems larger than
life, will be Olhovskiy's opponent in the round of 16
after dispatching David Wheaton, a semtfinalist last
year, 6-3, 6-4,6-4.
McEnroe, unseeded, blunted the No 16
Wheaton's serve and baffled htm with his famou s
assorunent of touch volleys. If McEnroe can do the
same and continue to control hi s temper against
Olhovskiy, the former three -tim e champion will
reach the quarterfmals for the fmt time since going
out in the semis in 1989.
Everything else on thts lovely summer's day
seemed perfunctory, even three- um e champion Boris
Becker's struggle 10 beat No. 73 Bryan Shelton, 6-4,
3-6,7-6 (7-5). 7-6 (7-5), and Andre Agassi's 6-3,7-6
(7-5). 7-5 win against Derrick Rostagno.
Defending women's champion and No. 2 seed
Steffi Graf had an unexpectedly tough time beating
No. 76 Mariaan de Sward~ 5-7, 6-0. 7-5. but No. 3

Gabriela Sabatini and No. 6 Jennifer Capriau won
eastly in straight sell.
Courier's loss was not because of any letdown 10
effort. nor by any flurry of errors on his pan. He had
no need to feel embarrassment, and he ex pressed
nooe. On this day, he si mply cam e up against a good
player who tran sfonn ed him self, through some sort
of mental magt c, toto a great one - a combination of
Mi chael Stich and Stefan Edberg - for one glorious
match .
Wielding an overSIZed racket, Olhovskiy btl th e
sweet spo t on nearly every shot , serv ing deep and
hard, pulling away volleys with authority, fluidly
covering the court and anticipatin g almost every
return.

This from a player who had no credentials to get
here other th an the three mat che s he won 10 qualt fytng rounds for one of th e 16 open spots. He barely
won the last of tho se three , the final one coming with

a 9-7, fi fth-ser defeat of No. 250 Mario Tabares.
When Courier, stolid and strong as ever, upped
the pressure and whacked the ball harder, Olhovskty
reacted coolly, changing th e pace to suit himself.
mixing touch volleys and lobs wtth ripping groundstrokes.
"He rose to the occasion on the big points,"
Courier satd. "Some days you win, some days you
lose, and some day s it rains. But it didn't rain. He
really looked effortless out there . ! got outplayed."
Courter typically didn't show much emotion on
the court or afterward , say mg only that he was disappointed not 10 have gone funhcr here rather than losing the chance to become the first men's Grand
Slammer since Rod Laver m 1969.
Instead, Courier said hc'lltum hts focus unmediately to the Olympics, which will be played on his
preferred surface, clay, in Barcelona, then go for the
final Grand Slam event, the U.S. Open.

Cincinnati bombs Atlanta 12-3

GROUND

Tomatoes ................~~.... 49c

CONCENTRATION is the word or the momeot ror America's
Lori McNeil during her third-round match against Russia's Natalia
Zvereva Saturday at Wimbledon, which Zvereva woo 5-7, 6-4, 7-5.
(AP)

At Wimbledon,

S~EAK

BALLARDS

VICTOR'S SMILE- Germany 's Steffi Grar flashes her pearls
shortly after winning her third-round match against South Arrica's
Mariaan de Sward! Saturday at Wimbledon. (AP)

CINCINNA11 (AP) - The hothilling Cincinnati Reds, led by
Chris Sabo's three-run homer ,
rocked Charlie Lei brandt for seven
runs in the first two innings and
went on to drub the Atlanta Braves
12-3 Saturday.
The Reds have won the flCSttwo
games of the NL West's showdown
series to pad thetr lead over Atlanta
to three ~ames. Cincinnati has won
four strrught by scoring 38 runs, Its
best offensive streak of the season.
The Braves, who ca me mto
Cincinnati on a 21-3 roll , have lost
consecutive games for the first time
SIOCC May 25-26.
Ctncmnati has blown out the
Braves early in both games. Glenn
Braggs' first -inning grand slam put
the Reds in co ntrol Friday night,
and a bases- loaded single by Hal
Morris gave them the first -inning
lead again Saturday.
Lcibrandt (6-3) also gave up
Saba's three-run homer in the second, putting the Reds in control 71. The left-hander allowed five htts
and three walks in I 2/3 innings,
his shortest appearance of the season, to lose for the fiTS ! time since
May 3.
Jose Ri jo (4 -6) allowed thre e
run s on s1x. hils over s1x mning s

~

0

i:I

0

...
&amp;.
c:

8.:I
0

0

...0

'tl

c:

~
Gl

Q.

~
Gl

c:

0

and figured in the early offense
with a double and RBI single.
The Reds hit Leibrandt hard
from the outset. Bip Roberu lined a
single and Barry Larkin doubled in
the first. Leibrandt chose to walk
Braggs and load the bases with two
out, setting up an interesting confrontation with Morri s.
ll was Morris ' first game agru nst
Leibrandt since the left-bander hit
htm with a ptlch April 15. breaking
hi s right hand . This time, Morris
lined a 1-2 pit.eh to center for two
runs, and Braggs continued home
when first baseman Sid Bream

botched the relay throw for an
error.

RiJO had a double to set up the
Reds' decisive seco nd . Larkin
drove in the fmt run by hitting into
a force ou~ and Sabo lined his sixth
homer with two out, se ndin g
Leibrandt to the showers.
Rijo had a run-scoring single in
the third off Alejandro Pena , his
fir st RBI of the season, and Joe
Oliver hit a solo homer to start a
two-run sixth off Marvin Freeman
that made iti0-3.
Mike Stanton gave up a sacrifice
ny to Oliver and an RBI single to
Dave Maninez as the Reds reached
their season scoring high in th e
seventh.
Mets 2, Cardinals I
At St. Louts,' BtU Pccota's double with two outs in the lith inning
Saturday scored Dave Gallagher
and gave the New Yorl&lt; Mets a 2-1
vtctory over the St. Louis Cardinal s.
Gallagher drew a walk from Lee
Smith (2-3) with one out, stole sec ·
and and scored when Pccota lined a
3-2 pit.eh 10 center.
Mets reliever John Franco (6-0)
escaped a two on and two out situation in the lOth and pit.ehed a perfect lith for the victory.
Donovan Osborne, trying for his
flCSt victory since May 23, worked
the first nine irmings for St. Louis.
He allowed four hits, struck out
four, walked none and left despit.e
having retired the last 15 batters he
faced.
The · Mets' Sid Fernandez
allowed five hits in seven innings.
He struck out eight and walked
three.
Rangers I0, Tigers 8
At Detroit, Kevin Reimer and
Ivan Rodriguez hit home run s on
consecutive pitches, capping a six-

run second mning and leading the
Texas Rangers pa st th e Detroit
Ttgers 10-8 Saturday .
Rafael Palmeiro hit a two -run
double and Rodriguez had an RBI
single as Tex as scored four umes in
the first inning. After Detroit got
two runs in its half, the Rangers
opened a I0-2 Iead in the second.
Jose Guzman (7-5) won despit.e
allowing four runs on 10 hits in six
innings. Kenny Rogers got the last
four outs for his ftfth save.
Mickey Tettleton , who earlier
had an RBJ grounder, hit a threerun homer in the eighth 10 make it
10-8.
Kevin Rttz ( 1-3) had another
poor outing, giving up seve n run s
on seven hits in just t 2('. innin gs.
Ritz has a 7.36 ERA m six starts
this year.
Yankees 8, White Sox 7
At New York , Charlte Hayes'
RBI single off Bobby Thigpen wtth
two out in the ninth tnning gave the
SCORES ON ERROR - Cincinnati's Glenn
the first inning or Saturday's game, which the
New York Yankees an 8-7 victory
Braggs
(left) slides home safely past Atlanta
Reds won 12·3. Braggs scored on an error by the
over Chicago on Saturday, snap catcher Gregg Olson. who waits on the throw in
Draves ' firs! baseman. (AP)
ping the White Sox's stx-gam e
wmning streak.
The Yankees. who rallied from
an earl y 5·0 dcfictl. start ed th e
game -winning rall y when Don
Mattingly sin gled with one out off
Scott Radinsky (2·5). Danny
Tartabull followed with a walk and
one out later, Thigpen relieved.
Hayes then won th e game with a
cla1ming h1s mnoccncc.
"The USOC then takes over the
By BERT ROSENTHAL
sin gle up the middl e.
This week, he was perm1ttcd to process of cntenng him in th e
NEW
ORLEANS
(AP)
The
Tim Burke ( I - I) pitched tw o
exec utive committee of track and compe te in the U.S. Olympic tnals Olymptcs," Greenberg said.
innings for hi s fir st AL vtctory.
" I thtnk th e USOC will do what
ftcld's national governmg body at Tad Gormley Stadium, after
cscapmg a ba.scs-loadcd jam in the
being clea red hy th e Supreme we suggest," Greenberg said , "and
voted
unanimously
Saturday
to
top of the moth. The game took 3
su pport Butch Reynolds ' bid to be Coun . Nevertheless. th e IAAF has forward th e names to the IAAF .
hours, 53 minutes to ftnish.
threatened to extend Reynolds' sus· But I think the IAAF will reJCC t
The Yankees tied the score 7-7 a member of th e U.S. Olymptc pension, because he defted ill ban.
htm , under the rul e in whi ch it
team
at
Barcelona.
m the eigh th when Andy
"Ou r position at the IAA F ruled Buteh meligible.''
However, Frank Greenbe rg,
Stankiewicz, who hom ered an
Counc il meeting in July will be that
The USOC EuYutive Commuinn ing earlier, hi t a two-run doub le pres ident of The Athlellcs h1 s behavior was proper and he ran
Congress, said he didn 't think the
tee wtll discuss the matter at a regoff reliever Roberto Heman del.
world governing body , The Inter- on ly under co urt order, wht ch is an ularly scheduled meeting at Indi national Amateur Athletic Fedcra - American right, and he should not anapolis today.
uon, would approve an entry by be further suspended ," G rcenberg
Reynolds, whose suspen sio n
said.
Reynolds.
expires Aug. II , two days after the
Greenberg also said the Exec u· Reynolds' fifth -place fi ni sh in
Coac h Chuck Daly knows a Itt - th e 400-meter trials Friday night tive Committee approved on Satur- Olympics, has said he will take his
tic more than that about his first qualified him as a alternate for the day two resolutions concerning case as far as possible in trying to
maintain llis spo1 on the team .
opponcnL
Reynolds.
I ,600-meter relay .
" Right now I'm going to
"Their speed could bother us,"
"I don't sec how he can get crcOne will be to c•plain to the Barcelona, but if I'm not chosen to
he said. "Our size should bother dentialled, I don't sec how he can IAAF that Reynolds "was only fol ·
run in the relay. I guess I won't
them."
get into the athlet.es' vtllage, I don't low in g the law , that he did not go run," he said after the 400 final .
The Cubans will be playing see how he can get a competitor' s out as a renegade," said Green ·
"Hopefully , I can compete."
thei r second game in just 16 hours. number." Greenberg said.
berg, a lawyer from Philadelphia.
They faced Canada at 8 p.m., PDT,
The IAAF suspe nded Reynolds " He was und er co urt authoriza Saturday, then must return for their for tw o years after he allegedly tion."
Sports shorts
noon conte st again st th e United tested poslltve for ste roid s at a
The other was ''to support him
GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) St.ates.
meet in Monte Carlo in August 10 his efforts to become a member Denmark , a last-minute substitute
The Americans know they arc 1990.
of the U.S. Olympic team" by sub· won .its f11sl ~aJOr soccer champi:
expec ted to win every game and
Revnold s, the world record - mitring Reynolds name 10 the U.S. onshtp, stunnmg world champion
win btg. But Johnson said the play- holder and 1988 Olympic silver Olympic Committee on the list of Germany 2-0 in the final of the
ers must avotd pulling too much medalist in the men's 400-metcr track and field qualifiers for the European Championship on goals
pressure on themselves .
dash. has been fighting th e ban , Games.
by John Jen sen and Kim Vilfon.

Tournament of the Americas to start today
By BOB BAUM
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - For
the leader of the "Dream Team,"
the experience was better than he'd
dreamed it would be.
A beaming Magic Johnson, carrying an Am erican nag, led the
U.S . t.eam onto the coun Saturday
for the opening ceremonies of the
Tournament of the Americas.
" You dreamed of what would
happen but it was better than the
dream by far," he said. " It was a
great experience. I had goosebumps all over me and then with
me holding the na g I had even
more of a charge.'·

The crowd, which had politely
applauded for the nine other countries in the Olympic quahfytng
competition, cheered wildly when
what most consider the best basketball team ever assembled walked
onto the noor for its first public
appearance.
The Americans, minus Patrick
Ewing who has a dislocated right
thumb, make their debut toda y
against Cuba, a team the U.S. play ·
ers know little about.
"A ll I know about Cub a is
th ey've go t a scruffy-looking guy
running the country who smokes a
cigar," Charles Barkley satd.

TAC votes to support Reynolds'
bid to run with U.S. Olympians

�•
Page--c2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

~.n

June 28, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

the strength of Braggs' grand slam

Cincinnati downs Atlanta 7-4 to increase lead in NL West
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - It was
no secret tbat Glenn Braggs had
never hit a grand slam. The River-

front Stadium score board was
telting everyone.
The scoreboard flashed a list of
Cincinnati Reds' grand slam lead-

crs when Braggs came to bat in the
first mnmg Friday night with the
bases loaded. Braggs' name wasn't
there.

15

The Reds' most muscular hitter
had 41 career homers. none with
the bases loaded. His latest chance
was at a decisive moment in a big
game - the opening of a threegame series against Atlanta for
leadership of the NL West.
Could there be a better moment
for grand slam No. (?
''Afte r a long drought, that
never comes to your mind," Braggs said. "When I came to bat, it
was on the scoreboard. It did come
into my mind for a flash. But I said,
'No, forget it.' "
Now he won' l forget it.
Braggs pulled a hanging curve
from Steve Avery over the left·
field wall, pulling the Reds on
track for a 7-4 victory and twogame lead over the Braves . The
one swing blunted Adanta's charge
- the Braves had reduced the
Reds' lead to one game by going
on a 21-3 tear.
By winning game No. I, the
Reds are assured of no worse than
a first-place ue when the se:ies
ends. They've been atop the division every day this month, and will
stay there for now .

Thanks to one pitch.
"They hit one ball hard and that
was it, " Braves manager Bobby
Cox said. "A hanging curve. One
bad pitch.''
Avery (6-6) seems to have more
than his share of those when he
pitches at RiverfronL The left-hander is 1-4 lifetime with an 8.04
earned run average at Riverfront
Stadium, where he made a rocky
major -league debut in 1990.
"For whatever reasons, I've not
had much success against these
guys arc a~ainst Braggs," Avery
said. "That s the way it goes."
Braggs is II for 24 (.458) with
three homers off Avery .
"I don ' t know why ," Braggs
sai d. "He's a tough pitcher. I
always see m to hit him well."
He hitltim well twice in hi s first
at-bat.
The Reds loaded the bases on
three infield singles. Avery s[lllck
out Chris Sabo, giving himself a
chance to escape trouble if he could
induce a double-play grounder
from Braggs .
Avery tried to get it with a fast·
ball on his second pitch. Braggs

pulled it just foul in the left-field

comer.
''It just kind of hooked,'' Braggs said of !he near miss. "Usually
when you hit one long foul like
that, you end up walking back to
the dugout with the bat on your
shoulder. ''
Two pitches later, with Avery
ahead in the count 1-2, Braggs got
the bat off his shoulder. Avery tried
to get Braggs to chase a low curve.
Two problems intervened: the ball
didn't curve much, and it wasn't
very low.
"I still haven't been able to fig·
ure out what it was, a slider or a
curve," Braggs said.
That's how bad it was.
" It didn't have much bite. Just a
(See NL bn C-3)

To each his own...
home Is a special place.

jt.~~

Puckett's contract woes hottest
issue on Minnesotans' minds
By MARK NEUZIL

•

a firsl-inning grand sbim ofT Steve Avery in Friday night's game against NL West contender
Atlanta, wbicb tbe Reds won 7-4. (AP)

SOMETlfiNG TO BRAGG ABOUT
Cincinnati tbird base coacb Sam Perlozzo con·gratulates Glenn Bragll5 af'ler tbe latter cracked

ScorelJoard
Shcltldd.. SUI Diq:o, .320; W. ctm:. San
francileo, .]14.
RUNS - B1881o, Houston, SO;
Gwynn, San Diego, SO; Honda, PillS burgh. 47 ; T Fernandez, S&amp;n Diego. 47,
Gnuom, Montte.~l. 45; Pr.rldletnn, At ·
!anti, 44; Sheflield, San Diego. 4];

In the NL ...
EulerwiM.,.Won
W L
Prt.
PiusburJh
..41 31
.~
SL LouiJ ..
... 35 J6
493
Oritfi&amp;O·
....... 3S 37
436
New Ycd ...... ......35 38
479
Monb'UI .......... 33 36 .47&amp;
Pruloddplu&gt; .... . .32 31
457

Team

Westffn Dlw\Aon

CINCINNATI. ...... 42
Atlant.1
41
S.n Die&amp;o
39
San Francilco ..
11
HOUlton . .... . .... .32
l..o~ Anaetr:~ ... . .... 29

28

Rdx:rta. ONONNATI. 43.

Gl

"

6

6.l

6.5

'

J\

&amp;lO
569

2

}4

534

~ ~

18

4M

95

41
39

438
426

\1 S
12

Frkiafs scores
(),all" 3, Prulodelplti&gt; 0

CINCINNATI 7, Atlanll4
Mmtrul 6. PinaNtp 2
SLl...ow. 4, New Y&lt;d. 3

San Dieso 6, San FRnaJCO 2
I..D:I Aztadea 6, HOUilOn 5

I!

NATI (RJ.jo 3·6), \ :05 p.m
New yon {Fernandez 6- 7)

CINClN

II

SL Lwu

(Osborne 5-4), 1:U5 p.m
Pb.i.ladelplu1 (ComO. 1-0) 11 Ouugo
(R..ni"I\IWUI 0-0), 4·05 p m
PittJburgh (RoiJuuon 2 0) II Monuu\
(Gardner 6- ~). 1·]5 p m.
Houston (Willianu 2·0) n Loc Ansele. [Kev111 Grou 3- 7), 10:05 p.m
s~n Francuoo {Swlfi 6-0) at San Otego
(Den e. 6- S), 10·05 p m

Today's games
1\aa bu'lh (fornhn. ](}..3) at Mont.ru.l
mm!t~ Q. \ ).

1:35pm
Adanu (GI1v:ine l l- J ) 11 CJNCINNA n (lklcher 7-6), 2·13 p m
New Yon (Schourcl; 1·3} 11 St. l..nus
{0\tva!Q' 4-]), 2 15 p.m
l'tuladdpttia (Schill.u'!&amp; 6-4) 11 Oucaao

(Cubllo 5-4). 2:20pm,
Jlourton (Bl1ir 0-2) a! lo• Angeles
(OJed• J..4), 4:05p.m .
Sin FranClltO (Burteu 5· 4) II San
Dl~go (Smunan 2-2), 4 :0'1 p.m.

In the AL ...
DMIIott
W L
Pd.
.....44 28
611
..43 29
.59?

[Uil'l'ft

l

Tum
Totonto .
Baltimon: .
Milwaukee ............ 37
New Yori ..
. ..]5
Botton....
. .... 33
Detn:nt...
.. ... ..... 34
CLEVELAND .... .. 28

~29

)"]
31

.486
478
4M
.334

36
39
4~

GB
I
6
9

95
10 5
H.o::,

WHttrn Dhlalon
43 29
597
• "QU.bnd ..
Mutneaot.a
... .41 3 I
569
: .. !fc1u ......... :: ... .40 35
.53J
Chic1go......
...... 35 ]5
.500

.,

..31 41
• ~uJe ............... 30 4)

431

411

11
I 1 -~

4(18

I35

.... c.womia ..

Kanau City

-..

.29 42

l

1

Friday's scores
Tmmto 6. CLEVELAND I
8Mon &amp;, Mihnutcc 4
Baltimme 6. K.atwu Ci1y S
OUcaao 2. New Yart: 1
Odroit 4, Tex.u 2

•·
•, '
,

•• ·

Sheffield, Stn Dieao. 53 .

'r'orll , 50; Gant, Atlanta, 46; Pend.lelOn.
Allanta, 46: McGriff, San D1t gn , 46 .
Dnnm. Ouugo, 44.
HITS - Pendleton , Athnu. 93 :
Gwynn, San Dlcco. 90: Sheffield . San
DlCBo. 811 ; Knlk, Ptu.J.ddpha, 117, OWlt an , Ptu.ladclph ia, &amp;4 : VanSlyke, PHU ·
buJih, 8 ); T. femandc:r: , San Die1o, 8J

DoUBLES - Duncan, Phiadclphla.
10, VanSlyke, Pi\\lburgh. 20: B1ggJo.
HooRon, 18, W.U.ch, Mmuul. 18; Fin ky, HOU&amp;ton, 17; W. Clad. San l"nno.loo, 17: Pmdld.cr., A.tl~~t~l.l. 11
TRIPlES - D. Sandm, AllAnta . II :
Finley, llous~a~ , J(}, Buller, Lo. AllgclCI.
7, Allcea, SL Lou!.a, 6; De.Shic:ldl, Mon trul., ~: 6 are bed 111'\lh 4.
HOME RUNS - Sheffield San
~eao. 15 : BMds. Pituhur&amp;h. 15': Me Grill San Diego, 14; Dallllon, Philadel·
piua, !2, L Walker. Mon~. II : Mau
W•lliama, San t'ranc~. 11, hndiel.oo.

lAND, 30; Polonia, California, 26; R.
HendCIIat, Oakland, 26; Andmat, Ba.lrimore., 2A; Lsuch, Milwaukee, 23; Rainca
OUc.aso. 21; Knoblauch, Minne&amp;oll, 20. 'tr
PITOUNG (9 deru\oru) - Juan Guzman, Taron.Ul, 10.1, .909, 11]; Muarm1,
Balumo~ ~-2. .800. 2.45: Krueger, Min·
nesot.a, 7-2, .TIS, 2.83: Acmins. SeauJe,
10-l, .769, 3 .35; McDowell, G..ic1go, \().
3, .769, 3.33, JI!Tlle: Moms, Toronto, 9-3,
750, 4 22; K. Brown, Teus , 11-4, 733,
194.
STRIX.EOliTS - Clemens. Boston .
108: Ju1n Guzman, Toronto, 96; Pera,
New Yori, 85: K. Brown, Tcua, &amp;4: Me·

Don1 ld, Baltunore, ?6, Appltr, K1nn1

C1ty, 75, N1gy, Cl£VELAND, 74.
SAVES - Ecltenley, 01kland, 25;
Aguilera, M1nnesota, 22; Ohon, Balli ·
more. 20: Jeff Russell. Teus, 19: Mont ·
gomc:ry. Kmus City, 17; Thigpen. Chie~ ­
go, 16, Rc.t.rdon, H01tcn, 15 .

Transactions
Baseball

All.anu.ll

They played Soturdiy
ALlanU (l..e.1hraru:h 6-2)

RBI -

Daulton, Phil.adelphu, 53, Murny, New

T e•u. II; Tc1tleton, Detroit, 17: Belle.
CLEVELAND, 16; Fielder, Detroit, 16;
C&amp;MOCO. Oakland, 15.
STOLEN BASES - Lofton, CLEVE-

Minnelllt&amp; 4, Oakland 3
Califoma I 0, Seaule I

STOLEN BASES - Gnuom, Mon ·
ua.l., 37; DeSiueldl, MD1111eal. 2A; lank ·
ford, SL Loui&amp;, 21: L.ewu, San Franruco
2fr, G.nl, Atl&amp;nla, 20-, Robau. CIN"QN:
NA TI, 20-, 0 . Sanden, AUama, II.
PITCHING (9 dectltons) BWhfad, CINCINNATI. 8· 1. &amp;X9, 2.18,
TewluiNry. St . Louts. 8-2, 1100. 2 02.
Ginine, Atl1n11, 11 · 3, .786, 2.68 :
Swmdcll, ClNCIJIN"ATI, 7-2. 778. 3 01.
M~an, Chic.so, 7-2, .ns, 2.94; Tom·
lin, PltUbw"R,h, 10.3, .7fh, 3.0 3. LeffertJ..
San Diego, ~- S, .MJ. 3 49
STRIK.EOL"TS- Cone. N~w York.
126: Smolu. Atlanu. 104. S Fernanda .
J'k., Yoli., 99; Dn,bcir; , PiWbufih. ~ 5; G
M1Jdu1, Chtclso, 84, 8 . Hu n!. San

Dttf,o, 83; lkne. S..n Dleso 79

SAVES - chulton, CiNC.!NNATI.

ll Lee Sm.tlh, SL LouU, 17: D Jone.s.
llounon . 16. MilCh William•. Philadtl ·
ph1.1 , 15; Myen . San Diet,o. ]); Werre·
l ~ nd, Monlr eal. 12. Dtbble, CH•lCIN
,\ A TI , II, Fflllco, New Yod., II

American league
RATTING - R. Alomar, Tornnt n.
344. Pud:etl, MiMcaOU, .1]1 ; Molitor .
).i d wau..lee, .325; E. Manine.z, Sc.anle.
3\4. Sordid. Odland . . 312: Harper.
Mu\neaclll, 309; Wmfidd, Tc:ronto, .304
R UNS - P\!d:ell, M1nnesota. 54.
Knoblauch. Minncaou. 52; M•dt. Mm
nuou, 51 ; Phillip•, DeLroil. 50: Mcfi ·
\litre., O.kllnd, 49; E. Mutancz. SenUe.
46; Mol..il£ll", Mil...-•uker:. 46
RBI - MeG~. Oill111d, 62, Fi dd ·
er, Detroit, 60; Pucktu. Minneaot.a, 56.
Frym1n, DelrOil, 47. Devere&amp;ul . Ball!
more, 47, Thomu . Chtcago. 46 . Juan
Gon:ulet, Tun , 46. And~non. R1I U·
more, 46; Caner. Toronto. 46
HITS - Pud..e!t , M tnncsota. ~q ,
Mack. M.inncaou, &amp;6, R. Alom.u, TtwUl ·
to, 84; Fryman . Dc1ro1t . 111. R.er!'·
CLEVELAND. 83. S1crr1 , Tc us . 3.
Molitor , Milwaukee. &amp;3
DOUBLES - !I:~ U. ~rw Yorl.. l&lt;l . E.
Muunu., StatUe, 2l Joyner . K•nua
Ci1y, 20; Reuner , Tc ln . 1~ , Jelfene1,
Kanna C11y , 19, MatungJy. '.lew York .
19, Youlll. Mllwaullec. 19
Tllli"'I..ES - Anderton. Rali.UTiort, 6:
Or.veruua . Rahtmore. 5. R Alom a r.

Toronto, 4: Wh.ue. Torontn. 4. Puck.en,
MlMCICK&amp;, 4. \ J •~ ucd With 3
HOME RUNS - McGwm:, Oilland,
25. Deer, Octr oi\, 21. Juan Go:ualez.

Amtrlnn Wgut

CALIFORNIA Al'iGELS -

Ma ced

AlVU\ D1'1'11, fmt ba.Jcmm, at wl.iwen for
the plll"p(»e of g•wrng him his uncoodll!Cflll rel.c.ate. Ad.1v1Led John Moms, wtfleJda, rrom !.he 15-dty disabled lill
KANSAS CITY ROYALS- Signed
W1Uy Joyner, firsL bnem1n, to a lJm:e.
year con !nCI e1 ten!10n S1gned hmea
J'"ltuley, p1tch~ r. tn 1 ~nntuct and u ·
11gnede h1m to the Roya i! of the Gulf

Coast Lugue.
SEA TILE MARl~RS - Agreed

LO

!UrnS wnh !Job Wolcott, ptt.cher

N1tlonai1Aague
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Sa11 Francisco OianL! pnher, wu.hdrew
tw •ppc:al of 1 fw r-gsme I U5peru!on and
undudOK&lt;l rtne levied for h1J rol e m a
bench-dearing inCtdent 1t1 1 g.tme on June

BRAV ES
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Acttnted
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an1polt1 of the Amenc1n Anoc, atHlrl
Opuoned Mall St.J.;n. ou~ftcldcr. to lndt

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The
hottest issue in Minnesota isn't
Ross Pero~ the environment or the
plight of !he inner city.
. Instead, people at wa1er coolers,
dmner tables and bait shops across
the state are buzzing about how
many zeros should show up after
the dollar sign on Kirby Puckett's
next contract.
" It's the single biggest player·
related item in the II years we've
done the show," said Dave Mona,
who co-hosts a highly-rated sportS
call-in radio program on wecoAM in the Twin Cities. One-third
of Mona's callers want to talk
about Puckett, he said.
The Minnesota Twins ' center
fielder is playing out the final season of a three-year, $9 million deal.
He was negotiating a new conD'liCt
wtth owner Carl Pohlad until both
sides broke off talks a month ago,
much to !he chagrin of the masses.
Both sides say negotiations
wo n't resume unlilthe season is
over.
Puckett is one of the most popular athletes in Minnesota history ,
and the notion tbat he might take
hts shaved head and .320 career
batting average elsewhere makes
many fans nervous. Mona said his
callers "are 90-10 in favor of signing Puckett at any cost"
One caller urged Pohlad to pay
the 31-year-old Puckett "a million
dollars a year for life."
Many people are blaming
Pohlad for the impasse. The 77year-old owner reportedly rejected
a five-year, $27.5 million conD'liCt
last month after Puckett and Twins
ge neral manager Andy MacPhail
reached a tentative agreement
A few angry fans called Marquette Bank, which is owned by
Pohlad's company, to complain.
Dave Hurley, a spokesman for the
bank, said the callers are directed
to lbc Twins' offices.
MacPhail called the fans'
response "predictable" and
" healthy."
"If they didn't care, if they had
apathy, then I'd be concerned," he
said Tuesday. "They love the guy .
He's so popular."

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Auto Club

Pohlad has declined to comment
about the situation, but MacPhail
said: "I don't think he's very
happy about heing painted as the
vtllltin. Nobody talks about all the
good things he's done, like keeping
the team in Minnesota and winning
two championships."
Puckett has received more
standing ovations since contract
talks broke off than he had in his
first eight seasons.
"I've always had a good relationship with the fans," he said,
"but this is kind of overwhelming."

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Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--C3

Toronto downs Cleveland 6-1
to push Guzman to lOth win
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Juan
Guzman, already 20-4 in his career
says his best is yet to come.
'
"I know I'm getung beuer. My
control's better. My slider's better," G~zman said Friday night
after gmng up two mfield hits m
etght scoreless inntngs as the
Toronto Blue Jays beat the Cleve land Indians 6-1.
The 25-year-old right-hander
won his fourth stratght stan and
tmprovcd to 10-1 on the season
while lowering his ERA to 2.13.
He struck out six, walked none and
limited the Indians to a bunt single
and an infield single, both by Alex
Cole.
He was headed for hi s fir st
career shutout until his back tightened up, forcing manager Cito Gaston to tak e him out after eight
mnmgs. Bob MacDonald pitched
the ninth, yielding Glenallen Hill's
RBI single.
In two career starts in Cleveland, Guzman has pitched 15 scoreless innings and surre ndered four
hits.
"I'll get tl (the shutout) someday, because I keep getting better,''
he said. ' 'I'm going to keep work·
mg."
The Jay s, wmners of three
straight, backed him with thre e
home runs. two of them by John
Olerud and one by Dave Winfield.
Cleveland lost its sixth in a row,
matching its worst streak of the
season .
Olerud hit his stxth hom e run
for a 1-0 Toronto lead in the sec·
ond.
That was the only mistake by
Jack Armstrong (2 -9) until the seventh, when he got him self in trou·
ble by walking Olerud and throw ·
in g wildly to fir st on a pickoff
allempt, letting Olerud go to third.
Kelly Gruber hit an RBI smgle ,

NL action ...
(Continued from C-21
lazy curve," Avery said. "If I
make !he pttch where I wanted to, I
probably get a better result I want ed to throw it in the dtrt. and I
didn't get it there. "
The re st was anti(limactic.
Tom Bro~ening (6-5) allowed
four hil s over seven innwg s,
including Brian Hunter' s two-run
homer in the seventh after the Reds
had gone up 7-0. Rob Dibble
pttched the final two innings, givmg up an pair of runs.
Elsewhere in the NL it wa s
Chicago 3, Philadelphia 0: Montre·
al 6, Pittsburgh 2; SL loUIS 4, New
York 3: San Diego 6. San Fmnctsco 2: and Los Angeles 6, Houston

went to third on Candy Maldona- tng Leius to third. Ch uck
do 's single and scored on Pat Bor· Knoblauch then 1111 a sacnfi cc Oy
dcrs' single.
to put the Twin s ahead 3-2
Winfield and Olerud added conBanks (2- 1) gut th e wtn for
sec utive home runs in the eighth, Minnesota, gtvmg up six hits and
Wmfield' s 13th and Olcrud's sev- two run s in s1x inntng s. Mike
enth. Devon White tripled and Moore (7 · 7) lost his fourth stratght
scored on Roberto Alomar's stngle for Oakland, allowing eight hits
off Steve Olin in the ninth.
and three runs over 7 l/3 innings.
Armstrong matched his career
Red Sox 8, Drewers 4
high with mne strikeouts.
At Boston, Jody Reed snapped a
"I didn't make too many mi s- l -for -23 slump with a two -run doutakes, but when I did, they capital - ble as the Red Sox ended a sevenIzed," Armstrong said.
game losing streak.
. His worst move probably was
Reed 's hit was part of a five ht s attempt to pick off Olerud, who run, fifth -inntng outburst for the
has only one stolen base thi s year.
Red Sox that featured four straight
" He's not even a runner." Arm· doubles. John Dopson (4 -3 ) scatstrong said. " I should have been tered seve~ hits over six innings
thinking about gelling a double before lcavmg with a stiff back.
play, but I was hoping to catch him
Ron Rob1nson ( 1-3) took the
flat -footed. It was a prClly bad loss.
decision to throw over there ."
Orioles 6, Royals 5
At Ualumore, the Orioles used
Co le was caught stealtng after clutch hitting by Mike Devereaux
his bunt in the first and was left to overcome a four-run defi cit.
stranded at second aftcr be beat out
Devereaux had thr ee hits,
a single to short in the fourth. Right including a two -run single in the
fielder Joe Carter robbed him of a sixth mntng that broke a 4-4 tie.
third hit with a diving catch of hi s
Todd Fro hwtrth (2-0) faced th e
line drive in the seventh.
minimum II bauers in relief to
Elsewhere, it was Minnesota 4, ptck up th e win. Royals' reliever
Oakland 3; Boston 8, Milwaukee 4: Rusty Meacham (4-1) was tagged
Baltimore 6, Kansas City 5: Chica- for four hi ts and two runs in I 2/3
go 2, New York I; Deuoit 4, Texas mrung s.
2; and California 10, Seanle l.
White Sox 2, Yaokfi's I
~
At New York, Robin Ventura
htl a so lo homer in the ninth off
Twins 4, A tbletics 3
Minnesota used power, defense John Habyan (3 -2) as Chicago won
and a little luck to tighten the race its sixth straight.
Ktrk McCaskill (5-6) held the
in the American League West.
Yankees
to one run on three hits in
Homers by Greg Gagne and
eig
ht
innin
gs. Tim Leary held
Brian Harper, a pair of defensive
Chicago
to
a
run on three hits in
gems by Harper and Kirby Puckeu
and an error by Oakland's Mike seven innings.
Bordick helped the Twins beat tl•e
Tigers 4, Rangers 2
Athletics 4-3 Friday night and pull
At
Dctron.
Tony Phill ips had
within two games of the divi siOn
three hit s, in cludin g a homer, for
leaders .
Puckell chased down Rtckcy tl1e Tigers.
Btl I Gullickson (9-4) gave up
Henderson's leadoff hit to the gap
si.x
hits, walked one and struck: out
m the seventh and threw perfectly
thr
ee
in seven innings. Texas
to Gagne at seco nd to nail the
swncr
Todd Burns (2-1) gave up
speedy runner.
four
runs
on six hits in four-plus
Harper. who hom ered tn the
innings.
fourth, mad e a heads- up fielding
Angels 10, Mariners I
play in the sixth when Bordi ck' s
At
Seattle,
J 1m Abboll pitched a
grounder bounced off the le g of
six-htttcr
and
rookie Chad CurtiS
pttcher Willie Banks and caromed
hit
two
homers
for California.
toward the flfst-base line. The MinThe
Angels
took a 2-0 le ad in
nesota catcher made a lunging ,
the
second
mning
when Curtis hit a
bare-handed grab and threw Bartw
orun
homer
off
start er M1ke
dick out.
Bordick's botched ftelding play Walker (0-2) The rookie also
capped a fiv e-run ntnth for Caltforin the seventh was also ptvota l.
After Scott Lcius singled and nia with a thre e-ru n shot off Enc
was sacrificed to seco nd, Shane Gunderson.
Abbott (4-9) won hi s second
Mack followed wtth a grounder to
straight
game after losmg five m a
second that Bordtck booted. allow row
''"d
eight out of nine decisions.
tog Mack to reach salely and mov -

RETURN IN PROGRESS- America's Amy
Frazier returns a shot from fellow American
Mary Joe Fernandez in their third-round match

at Wimbledon Friday. Frazier beat Fernande1.
to move on to the fourth round. (AP)

At Wimbledon,

Stich, Frazier third-round winners
By ROB GLOSTER
WIMBLEDON. England (AP)
- Three quick sets for Michael
Sttch. Another routine victory for
Stefan Edberg. Only three games
lost by Pete Sampras.
It 's summertime, and the liv ing
is easy for the lop seeds at Wtmblcdon . The once-feared grass courts
seem to have gone soft this year.
Exhibit A: Defendmg champion
Stich needs only 85 minutes to
cru.sh Magnus Larsson 6-4, 6-1, 63.
Exhthtt B: Edberg, seeded second, hangs around for only 94 min·
utcs while ovcrwhelmtng Grant
Stafford 6-1,6-0, 6-2.
Exhibit C: Sam pras, th e fifth
seed, clobbers Scou Davis 6-1 6-0
6-2.
.
.
If things kee p goi ng the way
th ey did on Friday, the All England
Club may have to start calling its
tournament Wtmpledon.
"I'm a b•t surprised. I thought
there mtght be so many more
upse ts," Samrras said. "Grass is
dcfin•tcly a surface that can go
cahcr way, and obviously the top

players arc playing really well."
Is ll the lack of ram so far tl11 s
year' Is it a wtdemng gap between
top players and the also-rans &gt; Is 11 .
as Pat Cash com plained, that the
grass is higher thts summer&gt;
Or is it JUSt that guys ltke Suc h.
Edberg and Sampras are so good?
" I just got on a roll, " Sampr:"
said . "I was returntng rea ll y well
and pass ing really well and serving
really b•g, and once I got on that
roll I wa s rea lly loo se and JU St
played really good tenniS."
Monica Sclcs, the women' s top
seed, al so breezed into the fourth
ro und Friday. wmn•ng ctght or ~~e
final n1ne games to defeat Laura
Gtldcmcistcr 6-4.6-1.
But not all the seeded player s
had such an easy umc. Ftvc seeds
were ousted, matching the number
knocked out in the first four days
of the tournament.
An in jured Mary Joe Fernandez
lost 6-3, 6-3 to Amy Frazier in an
all-American baltic. Fernandez.
seeded seventh, strruned a muscle
tn her ri ght hip when she fell tn th e
stxth game of the match .
Also clim•nated was lOth -seeded Ankc Huber. who los t 6-2. 6-1
to Yayuk Basuk1 of lndon csta.
Three men' s seeds - Brad
Gilbe rt, R1chard KraJICek and
Alexander Volkov - lo st third -

5.

round matches.

Expos 6, Pirates 2
At Olympic Stadtum, Dennt s
Martinez beat Pittsburgh for the
first time in four decision s this season and made a perfect suic ide
squeeze bunt.
Martinez (8-6) gave up two
runs, five hits, struck out three and
walked four before being lifted
after si•-plus •nntngs. Zane Sm•th
(5 · 7) lasted only I 2{3 innings and
is winless in nine starts.
Cardinals 4, MeiS 3
At Busch Memorial Stadium,
Felix Jose's bases-loaded single
with one out in the ninth lifted St.
Louis over New York. Jose's two·
run homer in the fifth started the
Cardinals comeback from a 3-0
defictt.
Geronimo Pena smgled with one
out m the ninth off Jeff Innis (4-4)
and stole second. Todd Zeilc and
Ray Lankford then walked before
Jo se singled to (en ter through a
drawn-in infield.
Lee Smith (2-2), the fourth St.
Louis pitcher, worked a scoreless
ninth for the victory .
Padres 6, Gianl.l 2
At Jack Murphy Stadium, Cratg
Lefferts canied a oo-hiuer into the
seventh inning against hts former
team and Darrin Jackson drove in
two run s as San Diego sent San
Franctsco to tts fourth straight loss.
The Giants ended a streak of 33
consecutive scoreless innings when
Cory Snyder hit a solo homer into
the second deck with two outs in
the seventh for the f~rst hit off Lefferts (9-5 ).
Giants starter Bud Black (4-2)
gave_up four runs and eight hits in
five mmngs.
Dodgers 6, Astrno; 5
At Dodger Stadium, Eric Davis
hit a lie-breaking double in th e
eighth inning as Los Angeles beat
Houston.
John Candelana (I -I) got the
last ootm the eighth for the victory
and Roger McDowell puched the
ninth for his IOtb save .
Reliever Rob Murphy opened
the eighth by striking out Brett Butler, and loser Doug Jones (4 -5)
gave up a two-out single 10 Mitch
Webster before Davis doubled on a
3-2 pitch.
Cubs 3, Pbilties 0
At Wrigley Field, Mike Morgan
pit ched six-hit ball for 7 2/3
innings and Luis Salazar drove in
two runs with a homer and a single .
Morgan (7-2) won his seventh
stratght deciSIOn.
Salazar singled home a run in
Chicago's two-run fourth and hit
hi s second hom er in the six th
against Kyle Abbott (0-9).

Gilbert, the 13th see d, wa s
defeated in fiv e se ts by Wall y
Masur and KraJtCck, the li th seed.

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Allslale~
&lt;\ll•l~ l..l· ln,urou" r· ( " ornpsno

lost 111 ltve sets to Arnaud Boctsc h
Volkov. seeded I 5th, lasted only
l our se ts aga1nst qualifi er Hcnr1k
Holm .
It wa s a long day for Krajic ek.
who apologized for ht s co mments
m a Dutch radio mtcrvicw that "XO
p&lt;:rcc nt of the top 100 women arc
lazy. fat ptgs" and that they should
continue to get less prize mon c):

than the men at Wimbledon .

'

RECYCLE

YARD WASTES.!

BOLENS - 5 H.P.
Chipper/Shredder '
• rurm hr:llltht''- IC"~vc~. hru ~h
1!\ll l &gt;.ilu.,hlc l.~rld,L:tr!n g lfHt k h
,![ld c!lfllj'•h] fll:Jll"f!:!l'
•

~· Hie Tllll u lh

hl l rrt·r

1.1 ~,~··

111.11\"rl,l l h\ 1h c h;!,l! lull

• "HP .tnd

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'-l l r , !ll i flll'II!-'Hll"~

• ll w.1hlc .111 ~lt't"lt•lll, l rutl!nn
• \\) \1l )\I · ) [)()\\ \

II' \\('I\,( ; \\Il l ,\H I I
In qu,di llcd

1 u'i•'!ltl"l '-

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~~·NDEN~v
I

150 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis
446-7826

,.~

,~
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1

SALEI 3 DAYS ONLY! JULY 1st·2nd·3rd

Save 20°Aa On All In-Stock Carpel,
Vinyl Gray Seal Paint and Wall Coverings

1985 Mercury Grand Marquis LS 2 Dr.
Air, leather Interior, powt!r aeat, po-r windowa, power
door lcx:ka, lilt, crulae, caaaortte, trunk rel-e, wire wheel
covere, V-8, vinyl top, delay wipero, rear defogger, 79,000
milea, extfll clean.

uG:~j:o~:;:~~~$c~1.~:c. PRICE $4595

Gallipolis Motor Co. Inc.
MEIGS CARPET AND DECORATING
CLOSED SIT., JULY 4TH

992-6173

HOURS: MON.•SAT. 1:30·5:00

B·lD

O'DELl'S LAWN &amp;
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¥X0~ 1 R~~)T\~Z!5~
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---

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Friday. Here are this year's campers. (T imesSentinel photo)

SENIOR CAMP ENDS -The Gallipolis
Area Basketball Camp's senior session for students entering grades 9-I2 this fall, c~ncluded

:•:

236 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 614-446·3060
See Scott or Ralph

Sheets
Moa., T1es., Wed., Fri. 9·8 or Tll1rs. &amp; Sat. 9-3
'

�Page-C4-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

June 28, 1992

June 28, 1992

DEFENDING CHAMPION - Derending
All-Star Sprint champion Frankie 1\rrr will race
at K-C Raceway Tuesday ror the lOth annual

$175,000 Outlaw Sprint Speedweek night at tbe
Chillicothe area 3/8-mile dirt oval.

On third leg of series,

K-C Raceway to host Speedweek Tuesday
ge l closer to the hub of area
spnnt car racing. Kerr, the defending champion, had the earliest post
ma rk of off1cial entries, but will
have his work cur out for him with
a long liSt of fin e competition.
R roo kc Tatn cll, 20, of San s
Soucr . Australra , shipped h1 s ri g
w11h two compl ete race cars. 24
fro m across the state will JO in the ex tra whe els , four win gs , three
all -star field entered for thi s year 's engines , and plenty of spare parts
event, promising one of the largest 0 11 May 10 from Sidney, AustrJ!ia,
bu t as of June 10, he and his fath er
fi elds eve r fo r a Specdwcck event.
Among the entries arc the origi- were at port in Califomra wai ting
n:!l "Outl aw" an d flf st-cver Ali- for the longshoremen to unload hrs
Si ar champr on, Bobb y Alle n of vehicle and cquipmenL
He will be jomed by fe llow
ll an ovcr , Pa. A ll en h::ts won more
co
untrymen
Gary Bra z1cr and
th ~m 600 fc~H urc s 1n h1 s c~l rcc r and
Kerry
Madsen
.
w"s the 199U Knoxvil le N3tronab
CR A reg ular Joe Changose of
Champ ron.
Phocn i,, Ariz .. will make the trip
H~ w1ll be JOined by thrcr other
i\II ~ S tar Cham ps Franlue Kerr of
cast along with many other out of
Fremont, Joe Gaertc of Roc hes ter. st.ate entries. including a large confl h ' d1ffcrcn t winners have VISited Ind. 3nd Terry Shepherd of War - tin ge nt of th e "Penn sylvani a
lc· tnrv b nc 1n fiv e different m cc~. saw . Ind .
Posse ," the name given to touring
Kerr, fonn erly of Scl rngsgrovc, Penn sylvania stars.
~ ow lrn g of SharonVIll e .
ll .lff v Garrel l of Centervil le. Jim Pa., move d to Fn:mont last W\IH Cr
The tenn "Outlaw" came about

Ry SCOIT WOLFE
T-S Correspondent
CHILLICOTH E - Ohi o' s
fas tes t 3/8-mil e dm oval. K-C
Race way, will host the third leg of
1 lhi o' s lOth annual Outlaw Sprint
Speed week Tuesday.
The seven-day scnes has drawn
nearl y 50 entri es th us far, includmg
l' ntn cs from Australia and as far
v. est as Ari zona.
The ser1cs be gin s tonight at
'v1illstrcam Speedw ay in Fmdlay ,
1hcn moves to Orrev1lle and Buckc'I'C Speedway Monday; KC Tues·
rl.1y: Att1ca Raceway Park a1 Attica
1\' cdncsay: Sharon Speedwa y at
Ha rtford on Thursdav ; fr emont
&lt;; pcc dway on Fflda y: and th e
bmcd Eldora Speedw ay m Rossburg for the $10,000 final e on Sat·
urday, Jul y 4.
In th e sprwt di vision thi s year.

:-.l rc r of Pi ke ton, b son Duk es of
Frndlay and Todd K:mc of Powell
hav e been lhe b1g winners, illustrating th e great represe nt ation of
dnvcrs that have VI Sited KC durin g
the year and ~orea l competition that
has taken pi JCc .
These fiv e dri vers, along wuh
lhc KC reg ul ars and local dn vcrs

to

as JV boys basketball coach and
two as a varsity assistant ~fore he
was named girls coach in 1986. In
two seasons, he turned around a
program with a losing record to
post a 23-20 slate. One of Small ey's players, Ann Bannttz, came to
Rio Grande in 1988, where she was
Mid-Ohio Conference Player of the
Year in 1991, served as team cocaptain in 1991-92 and became the
second-highest scorer in the program's history.
Smalley went to Bowling Green
State University in 1988, where he
obtained his master's degree in
education, specializing in athletic
administration. During thatllme, he
was assistant coach of BGSU' s
Mid-American Conference championship men's team, which participated in the second round of the
1989 NCAA ToumannenL Smalley
joined the staff at Morehead State
in 1989 and served three seasons a.'
an assistant to women's coac h
Loretta Marlow.
With the departure of seniors
Bamitz and Kathy Snyder m addi tion to some freshmen from last
season's Redwomen squad, Smalley said he has about six players
coming back in the fall, but is con-

wv

Saugers, walleyes, white bass abound in Gallipolis, Racine pools
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weekly fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Nawml
Resources:

of talent is an addiUon to the pro
gram," he noted. " We have a few
good prospects on hne. The way
things are looking, there are qune a
few quality players out there, and I
feel we wi II fi II out the squad and
have an exciting year."
The Red wom en were 25 -7 in
1991 -92, the best record yet in the
prognun.
"Coach Foote d1d an exce llent
JOb With the program, so there arc
some big shoes to fill ," Smalley
said. "I plan to conunue the tradi tion established here."
Smalley is married to the former
Margaret Evans of Rio Grande, a
1984 Rio Grande graduate and cur·
rently a student in the University of
Kentucky College of Law . The
couple plans to relocate to Rio
Grande from the Morehead area.

Ohio River
In the Gallipolis tail water, jigs
and minnows can be used to take
sauger s and walleyes. Surface
plu gs are best used fo r l a kin~

hy bnd stnpcd bass averaging 14
inches. Use ni ght crawler s or
chicken livers to take channel and
Oathead catfish.
In the Ra cin e tail water. use
green and whil e t W! Slcrs to take
sa ugers and white bass.
In the Hannibal tail water. mght

carp and sucker s prese nt in the
entire length of the river. Channel
ca tfish anglers have the best suc·
cess in the area from Da yton to
Cmcinnati.

RUSH RUN LAKE - Usc
worms and larval bans to ta ke
blucgill s averaging ri ve to se ven
wche s. Try the Oooded umber
ar eas to take largemouth bass
Small crank baits, stick baits, and
jig and pig combinations work well
for bass anglers .
Central
HOOVER RESERVOIR Anglers should uy using bass minnows or surface plugs to take large·
mouth bass from the upper end of
the reservoir. Use small worms sus·
pended beneath a bobber to take
bluegills ar the dann . Deep pockets
in the creek below the dam are
good hiding places for bass and
catftsh.
O'SHAUGNESSY RESER VOIR - Use soft plastic baits and
four-inch rubber worms fished in
shallow water in the coves south of
the Home Road bridge to take
white bass. Night crawlers and
chicken livers fished along the bottom at night produce the best
results for taking channel catfish.
Crappies can also be taken on rubber worms or live minnows ftshed

crawlers and minnows fis hed near

the bouom can be used to take catfi sh up to 30 inches.
Southeast
LAKE WHITE - Bluegill are
abundant, but of limited quality .
Channel catfish range m siZe from
10 to 24 inches and can be taken on
traditional baits. Largemouth bass
average 10 to 19 inches, and
saugeyes average 19to 23 inches.
JACKSON LAKE - Sunfish in
the 243-acre Jackson County Lake
average six to nine inches and can
be taken on larval baits and small
worms. Brown bullheads average
10 to 14 inches and can be taken in
· ~.
the same manner as channel cat• :: fish. Bluegill and largemouth bass
"&lt; ,.. fishing arc rated fair.
!ii*:
Southwest
GREAT MIAMI RIVER - The
river provides excellent small mouth bass fishing from Sidney to
·"*" Hamilton , especially m the area
BBIBS TOURNEY CHAMPS -These golfers were part of the
below low-head dams. There is an
quartet thai won Ibis year's Big Brothers/Big Sisters Golr Tourna- abundance of rock hass, bluegills,
ment, held earUer Ibis month at Cliffside Golr Clurse. From lef'l to , . - - - - - - - - - - -...-----~--~-'1
rigbl are Fred Burde1le, Charlie Huber. Doug Frey and Jeremy
Spencer.

New Shipment Just Arrived!
Living Room Suites in Stock

fident that recruiting will fill the
remaining slots on the roster.
Before accepting the Marietta
job, Foote signed one new player,
Stacey Riner of Sidney, to the
team. Ritter was a statisucalleader
in basketball at Houston H1gh
School, and competed in this year's
state track meet, where she d1d a
"tremendous job," Smalley saJd.
"I'm very pleased with Stacey
and to get a player with her caliber

1

All at pnces so low you won't beheve your eyes .

beneath a bobber.
Northwest
CHARLES MILL RESERVOfR
- Very good populations of whi te
and black crappies averaging e1ght
lO I I mchcs are present. Fi sh in
areas with fallen umber or sub merged brush piles for best results.
Largemouth bass averaging 12 to
19 inches ca n be taken m these
same areas.
NEW LONDON RESERVOIR
- Th1s Huron County impoundment has good numbers of small mouth and largemouth bass. Fish
along lh e shoreline areas whr eh
contaJn vcget.auon beds and reefs.
Very good numbers of walleyes
ave ragrng I} to 24 rnches can be

taken by trolling or anllrng crank
bai ts or mght crawler rigs.
Northeast
AT WOOD RESERVOIR Usc night cmwlcrs, minnows, rubber worm s or oth er soft plastic
baits to take largemouth bass averaging 12 lo 23 mches. Fish in deeper water ncar the bottom to take
saugeyes and channel catfish.
HIGHLANDTOWN LAKE Usc larval bails or mmnows suspended beneath a bobber to take
crappies and blucgills. Channel cat·
fish average 16 iiJChes and are best
taken during late evening or early
morning hours. Largemouth bass
up to seven pounds arc harvested
from thIS lake each year.

Hew 1992 Nissa• Se1tra XE

New 1992 Nissan Truck
New design , 134 HP engine, 5
speed , rrore power than Toyota
or Ford.
1993 at a 1992 Payment

13871 . 4 door. automatic. air, tilt.
cruise . cassene, rear delrost.
HURRY!

SPECIAL ENDS 712192

$16900

$16261 Mo~~~

.

I

Sunday Times-Senlinei-Page-CS

Ohio fishing report

Rio Grande names '82 graduate
as Redwomen basketball coach
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande has chosen a
1982 graduate of the institution to
coach its women's basketball team
this fall.
David E. Smalley, former girls
co ach at Warren Local High
School in Washington County and
assistant women's coach at Morehead State University, will succeed
Doug Foote . Foote, who compiled
a 65-29 record in three seasons
with the Redwomen, is becoming
men' s basketball coach at Marietta
College.
Smalley becomes the sixth
coach of Rio Grande's women's
team since it hecame a varsity sport
in 1970.
"Actually, it's kind of a homecoming," Smalley, a native of Peebles, Ohio, said about acccptin~ the
position . "I've been in vanous
coaching experiences, but I'm
excited to be back in the area, on
this campus and close to friends
back in Peebles. I've toured the
campus to familiarize myself with
everything, saw some familiar
faces , and am very happy to be
back here."
The 1978 Peebles High School
graduate, who received a bachelor's degree in health and physical
education from Rio Grande, played
one season as a member of the
Redmen junior varsity basketball
team under Bob Leith, and one
year as a varsity player for Art
Lanham.
Following graduation, he was
employed as a 1eaeher and coach at
Warren Local, serving one season

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

!

New Early Anlerican 2 PL
Living Room Suite

$19995

DAVID E. SMAU .EY
·.· ...
· .·.... .·.. ..·.·

36

Months

NMAC Lease payment figured lor 36 mo., plus first month
payment plus lax, Iitle &amp; acquisition lee down, 15,000 miles

'

per year.

'

as a result of racers who did not
want to belong to a particular racmg organization and its restrictive
rul es. These drivers wanted to race
with unlimited rules and therefore
became known as "Outlaws".
Over $175.000 IS paid out during Ohio's Outlaw Sprint Speedweek and fan s have learned to
schedule their vacations, pack their
campmg gear, or just hop from
hotel to motel along the trail. The
caravan of rigs, haulers and fans
will mvade each track starting Sunday, June 28, at Millstream in Findlay, and ending with the $10,000 to
win finale at Eldora in Rossburg,
OH .
KC Raceway IS located on U.S.
23, south of Chillicothe on Blaine
Highway at Alma.

VINTON RACEWAYS
MID·SEASON
SUNDAY, JULY 5

. . . "," .. &lt;.;. ..

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\ $169

.,

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ol Ment fOf ou1slandlng performance Ill sal8&amp;,
parts, service and cuslorntf utlsfaeticn.

CHEST

95

- S19. Retai
S69.9S

,-.-~ SAVE 580

,,

Double points for all drivers. larger trophies.
Dash for Cash for kids 10-under
($40 ·$50 possible purse). Car giveaway.
Free gift for 1st 40 drivers.

Spoasore4 ia ,.,, llr Ap,.laclliaa ftre,
Pt. Pleasaat
For liON iafo.: 388-9617 - 388-9 300

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CAPTURES SECOND- The roursome of Richard Hal't, Paul
Dovyak, Carl Hoffman and Chris Pines (L-R) captured second
place in this year's Big Brothers/Big Sisters Gotr Tournament, held
earlier this month at Cliffside Golf Course.

1986 OLDS CALAIS
~ .romJ ' •C Jo'

5

"'''&gt;

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198SCHRYSLER LeBARON

1987 COLT VISTA

-,p

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1987 PONTIAC GRANO AM LE
V(,

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9 oo CARS, TRUCKS fl VANS PRICED TO SELL

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French City USSSA softball
Team
W
Sideline Sports . .
... ... 7
C&amp;D Trucking ... .... ....... .... ..7
Country Carry-out ............... 2
Rebels .... ..... .. .............. .... .... 2
Old Brick Tavern ........ ......2

L

0
2
6
6
7

Wednesday's scores
Old Brick 18. Country Carry-outS

1OTO CHOOSE FROM
V-8, auto, lilt st..m~

_,.,2!:

auho -~. rw. 1'1,

Thls week's games
Tuesday - CounLry Carry-out
vs. Sideline (DH)
Wednesday - Rebel s vs. Old
Brick (DH)
Thursday - C&amp;D Trucking
vs . Country Carry-out; Sidelin e
Sports vs. C&amp;D Trucking

FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

AMIFM Stereo

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

1985 NISSAN 4x4
V8

a·· 1•11 c ru ·~e c,rr •eo
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POINT PLEASANT, WV.

133 PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
614·446·2532

(304) 675-1675

locally owned and operated by Herb Smith for the
past 15 years.

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

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PlYMOUTH VOYAGER

S£ r pa ssen&lt;:Jr ' .l u tomat c

V6

Old Brick 16, Counuy Carry-out2
Thursday's scores
Srdclinc Sports 8, C&amp;D Truekmg 5
Sideline Sports 9, C&amp;D Trucking 7

ROBERT M. HOllEY, M.D.
'92 PONTIAC
AMSE

tr;~ de

TAKES THIRD -Taking third in Ibis year's Big Brothers/Big
Sisters Golr Tournament, held earlier Ibis month at Cliffside Golr
Course, was the quartet or Bill Medley, Ralph Sibley, Ed Sorranko
and Bob Medley (L-R).

Tuesday's scores
C&amp;D Trucking 20, Rebels 0
Rebel s 12,0ld Brick II

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Mtlst Of Our Used Cars Come WHh A 3 Monlh/3,000 Mile W1rr1nty

�Page-CS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 28, 1992

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

'

·O'Brien new record holder in decathalon
By MARY FOSTER
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Dan
O'Brien g01 a jumf on Dave Johnson and the rest o the field in the
decathalon, setting a first-day
world mark of 4,698 poiniS.
And while O'Brien was sizzling, Butch Reynolds was fizzling.
Reynolds, who notched big victories in court to get him a spot in
the Olympic trials, couldn't complete his comeback, finishing fifth
and missing a spot on the U.S. 400meterteam.
The long-awaited - and muchhyped - battle between 0' Brien
and Johnson saw O'Brien soar
ahead on the first day, taking a
504-point lead over Johnson who
finished ftfth with 4,194 points.
Meanwhile, Reynolds blamed
the long legal struggle that forced
repeated postponements of his
event and left him emotionally
drained for his disappointing race.
"It's taken a lot out of me, "
Reynolds said of the controversy
surrounding his participation in the
!rials. "There was too much pres-

sure."
Danny Everett. th e 1988
Olympic bronze medalist, blazed to
victory in 43.81 seconds, the fastest
400 ever in the United States. It
was also the second-best 400 in
history, trailing only Reynold' s
world record of 43.29 at Zurich,
Switzerland, in 1988.

Steve Lewis, the 1988 Olympic
gold medalist, finished second in
44.08 and was followed by NCAA
champion Quincy WatiS in 44.22.
and Andrew Valmon in 44.52.
Reynolds, after a fast start.
faded to fifth in 44.65 .
Reynolds did not qualify for the
team in the 400, but did qualify as
an alternate on the 1,600- meter
relay team. Coach Mel Rosen will
decide whether to use Reynolds in
the relay in any of the round s at
Barcelona.
It is unlikely, howev er, that
Reynolds, still under suspension,
will compete at the Games.
The Athletics Congress. th e
national governing body for track
and field, plan s to submit the
names of all qualifiers to the U.S.
Olympic Commimee by July 10.
The USOC will enter the names of
ail American athletes with the
Barcelona Organizing Committee.
TAC president Frank Greenberg
said Friday he would submit
Reynolds' name to the USOC. as
ordered by the Supreme Court. The
USOC will consider the situation at
a regularly scheduled executive
committee meeting Sunday at Indianapolis.
" Right now, I guess I'm going
to Barcelona. If I'm n01 chosen to
run on the relay team, I won't run .
I'm tired," Reynolds said.
Prior to the race, officials of

Area sports briefs_____,
Swimming lessons available
GALLIPOLIS - Swimming lesso ns are still available for
enrollment through the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department.
Available are Sessions II (July 6-16), III (July 20-30) and IV
(Aug. 3-13). Each session runs Monday through Thursday of that
given week.
The progression of classes offered are begmners (six years old
and older), advanced beginners, intermediates, swimmers and
advanced swimmers. Participants in the latter category must be able
to swim 500 yards continuously using four different strokes.
The cost of each session is $15. Early enrollment is encouraged,
as there is a limited number of swimmers permitlCd for each sesSion.

For more information, call the P&amp;R office at 446-1424. ext. 37,
or the Gallipolis Municipal Pool 31446-DIVE.

Hartford LL to sponsor tourney
HARTFORD, W.Va.- The Hartford L1ttle League will sponsor

a 16-team , double-elimination baseball tournament to run from
Wednesday, July Ito Monday, July 13.
The registration cost is $45 per team and two regulation baseballs.
For more infonnation. call Re• A. Young at 1-(304)-882-2434 .

ACS linkfest set for July 11
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County unit of the American Cancer Society will hold a state-qualifying golf tournament on July II
atl p.m. al Cliffside Golf Course.
Dinner will be served for golfers after their play. Prizes will also
be awarded to teams in the men's and women 's divisions.
The tournament is a scramble format where golfers may pick
their own foursome . Players must have a verifiable handicap, as
teams will use 10% of the total team handicap. The wmning men 's
and women 's teams will advance 10 the state championship at the
Fi restone Country Club in Akron for the Amencan Cancer Society's OhiO Division Golf Championship , sponsored by Allstate
Insurance.
Entry forms will be available at Cliffside Golf Course. For more
mformation, call the Galha County ACS off1ce at446-7479 .

track and field 's world governing
body. the International Amateur
Athletic Federation. reiteralCd that
Reynolds would not be permitted
to compete a1 Barcelona, regardless
of his performance at the trials.
Reynolds. the 1988 Olympic sil ver medalist, was suspended for
two year s by the IAAF , after
allegedly tes ting positive for
steroids during a meet at Monte
Carlo in August 1990.
Smce then, Reynolds has main tained his irmocence, and has been
fighting for reinstatement
He took his case to the U.S.
Supreme Court, finally winning
approval last Sarurday to compete
in the !rials.
Reynolds won his first-round
heat and his quarterfinal heal, then
finished seco nd to Watts in the
semifmals.
In the decathlon, O'Brien's big
start included the best mark s
among 25 competitors in the first
three eve nts. He opened with a

By BRIAN J , REED
Times-Sentinel Starr

-.

.

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...... y
t,,

CLOSE AT THE FINISH -Dave Johnson (10) of Missoula,
Monl., and Ricky Barker (138) or Olney, Teus, slrelcb loward the
finish of the men's 100-meler decalhalon Friday at tbe Olympic
track and field trials in New Orleans. (AP)

Miami U. names replacement
for assistant AD Kevin Purcell
By AP, Starr Reports
OXFORD - Miami Umversity
appointed Pat Ryan on Friday an
assistant athletic director. Ryan, 27,
had been a graduate assistant for
the University of Indiana football
team.
Ryan , of Hyannis, Mass .. was a
starting offensive lineman for the
University of Colorado from 1984
to I987, and was elected to the second-team All-Big Eight in 1987.
After graduating from Colorado
in 1988, he became an administra'tive assistant in Colorado's athletic
department before moving to the
University of Louisville to spend a
year as assistant promotions director there.
He went to Indiana in 1989. and
worked with the offensive line
from 1990 and 1991.

He repl aces Kevin Purcell. who
lcfl in May 10 become assistant
basketball coach at The Citadel in
Charleston, S.C. Purcell, formerly
an assistant to Ohio University
men's basketball coach Billy Hahn,
was a phys1cal education inslructor
at the University of Rio Grande
until 1986.
While at Rio Grande, he was an
assistant to men's basketball coach
John Lawhorn and helped to guide
the 1984-85 Redmen 10 the District
22 Championship, which marked
Rio Grande's first appearance in
the NAIA Nationals since 1954.
Purcell was also track coach at Rio
Grande. He is married to the for mer Stephanie Ross of Gallipolis,
daughter of Edie Ross and the late
Merlyn Ross.

Football camp dates slated
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipoli s Area Football Camp. for all
area boys entering grades 5-8 th is fall , is sched uled for July 27
through July 30 at the Gallipolis water treatment_ fields.
The camp, which will stress fundamenta ls. w1ll be held from I 10
3:30p.m. daily.
Registration fees are $35 if turned mbefore July 13 and $40 after
that date. Registration forms may be p1ckcd up at Gall ~a Academy
High School or at the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recrcat1on offiCe in the
Gallipolis Munic1pal Bu1ldmg.
.
For more information, contact Galha Academy football coaches
Brent Saunders at446-3354 or Malt Bokovuz a1 446-2399.

Softball leagues organizing
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recrcauon Department
is sponsoring two fall softball leagues - a co -ed league and a
women 's league - to begin play on August.
The games will be played on weekn1gh!S at the Ted Perry Memorial Fields. In both cases. the entry fcc 1s $125 per team . For the coed league, there will be no fewer than six and no more than 12
teams in it.
To get a team roster or league rules, contac t the P&amp;R office at
446-1424, ext. 37.

Your Paint HeadqUarten

I

I

I

9.88;GaJ.

lnlerlor. one

I

.

By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
County Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD

GALL !POLlS - Foliar diseases
of Tobacco probably were the
number one problem of the week.
Angular leaf spot is a bacterial
disease distinguished by the presence of a yellow halo around a leaf
spot. Similar bacterial diseases
have been referred to by various
names, including, wildfire, blackru-e, fieldftre, firing and rust.
Angular leaf spot is most prevalent following wet conditions.
Wildfu-e and angular leaf spot can
be controlled by preventive treatments of streptonycis in the plant
bed. Some pathologists believe that
the use of streptonycis is nOI practical in the field. We have sent plant
samples to the University of Kentucky this week. Some of the leaf
tissue has so much brown leaf spotting that the leaf appears ''rusty". It
may just be a severe "angular leaf
spot" infestation. but we are looking forward to the U.K. response.
More than the n01mal number of
manganese toxicity problems are
also occurring in local tobacco
fields . Manganese toxicity occurs
on acid soils. The problem often
takes place in fields thai have a ph
of 5.0 following a heavy fertilizer
use situation.
Control of Colorado potato beetle has become a major issue, as
many home gardeners no longer
find "sevin" to be an effective
insecticide for their control. Better
results are being reponed by using
products containing Thiodan
(cndosulfan) or methorychlor. The
Bug Buster, a front-mounted unit to
vacuum Colorado potato beetles,
was demonstrated at a farm near
Wooster recently. Before and after
reductions being similar to those
usually achieved with insecticides.
The Northwest Ohio Graded
Feeder Pig Sale on June 18, featured some 450 head of graded
pigs. The average price per hundred was $48 .17 on an average
weight of just under 45 pounds for
a per head price of $21.50.
The monthly water inventory
report for Ohto for May 1992,
showed our region of Ohio at 115
percent of normal for the month of
May. Our region was the only area
of Ohio with above average rainfall. Despite heavy recent rainfall
the "Palmer Drought Severity
Index" still puts our area into "mild
drought" category. This index takes
into account precipitation over the
past 24 months.
Often we get 10 thinking about
our nearby area and lose track of
what is going on elsewhere. Due to
drought conditions in much of
Ohio last year and lack of winter
snowfall for precipitation, hay
yields are greatly reduced for both
years. Ohio hay stocks are down 64
percent from a year ago. A~d ~e
outlook isn't good for replerushmg
the supply in 1992.
The Ohio Agricultural Statistics

I
I

Lumber • Supply Co.
312 6th Street. Point Pleasant.

wv

Phone: 675-1160
'Everything to Build Anything·

Flat Latex WaD Paint

Section D

~~.

I.

10.99
4" Paint Brush
The btg job brush tor clo-11yourseU palnltng wtlh tate:r/

oll palDIJ. (P3974)

One Gallon

tion, Drew Webster Post of the
American Legion , Pomeroy/Middlepon Lions Club and the Trinity
Congregational Church, where he
serves as president of the church
council and as a member of the
Trinity Choir.
Musser serves as the chairman
of the Pomeroy Downtown Revitalization Project and tS a member of
the Strategic Analysis Team for the
Meigs County Vocational Educationa! Planning District
He and his wife Dottie have a
son, Steve, who li~es in Walkenned, Germany.
Harrison is pan-owner/operator
of PDK Construction Co. in
Pomeroy, for which he has served
as president and currently serves as
corporate secretary. He served for
six years as a member of the Ohio
Contractors'
Association
MBE/EEO Committee.
For three years Harrison served
as president of~ Big Bend Little
League Association. He is a member of the Drug and Alcohol Abuse

.
1

1'

•'

BRUCE FlSHER
Committee at Me1gs High School,
and IS ahout to begin h1s third year
as varsity hoys · basketball coach at
Meigs . He is a member of the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
Tbe mission
"The board's activiucs will center on the needs of the communny
and ways that Farmers Bank can
handle those needs through our

PlllL HARRISON
products and services," Schmoll
said. "We're going to evaluate the
bank's involvement in the community and issues such as possible
products that the bank could introduce.''

Schmoll said that the bank will
also look at customer involvement
m the community. and base future
appointments to the board on that
basis . Farmers Bank hopes to

Service reported a record-low
252,000 tons of hay on hand in the
state on May 1, 1992. Record
prices for May renect hay shortages in much of Ohio. While the
state's hay crop is rated fair to
mostly, yields on fmt cuttings are
lagging behind normaL
Repons from Ohio State Uni versity faculty indicate the crop is
up to two weeks behind in growth
and yields on harveslCd fields have
been as much as 50 percent below
normal. Alfalfa production is
slightly ahead of other hay at this
time.
Farmers are already expressing
concerns about hay supplies following last year's drought-shortened harvests. Nationally, hay
stocks are up 1.6 million tons
above last May and 11.1 million
tons over May 1990 stocks. However, Ohio Stale farm management
specialists advise farmer3 to hold
off on any purchases until they
have a beller idea of what the
state's later hay cuttings will yield

GALLIPOLIS - When it comes
defining food safety, two terms
are getting a lol of attention.
In the 1950s scientisls measured ·
c lements in parts per thousand .:
Using the technology of the day, :
any smaller concentrations were :
deemed to pose little threat and
since they couldn't be measured, .
they were considered nil or zero.
Consequently, The term "zero:
tolerance" was established . The·
zero reading on traceable residues :
in parts per thousand set a bench - :
mark for food safety.
.
Technology advanced. Parts per ·
thousand gave way to pans per mil- ,
lion in the 1970s to pans per billion
today . Other research has rein - :
forced that concentrations at these :
levels pose liule. if any risk.
Moreover, scientists have dis- :
covered that questionable com- :
pounds are not only present •ia :
commercial fertilizers and pesticides; many occw nalwally wilhin
food through the normal growth ·
process . In most cases chemical .
traces occurring naLurally far out -:
weigh residues placed there via ·
farm application . The fa ct or the :
maner is that almost all food no
matter how it IS produced contains
traces of these elements
Since co mpounds arc prescnl .
"zero tolerance " can't fully
describe whal we know about food
today. Since the clemcnL' are present in lr3CC amoWJts and research
substantiateS nsk generated at these
concentrations is negligible, a new
term , "negligible risk ." could be
to

CONSIGNMENT BUSINESS - E•erylhing
from used clothin' lo wall hangings are available al Emily's Attoc which is located al 102 Easl

Main St .. Pomeroy. The new business is operaled by Lori Ledsome who aceepls all kinds of
articles for sale on a consigomenl basis.

Clean air rule draws fire from legislators
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
law .
Associated Press Writer
Under direct pressure from Pres WASHINGTON - New feder- idem Bush, the EPA departed from
al clean air regulations are coming earlier draft proposals to answer
under attack by critics who claim concerns voiced by business. The
the rules could allow businesses to agency agreed to allow businesses
significantly increase the amount of wide latitude in making operational
pollutants they release into the changes - including using differatmosphere.
ent production techniques and difThe Environmental Protection ferent products - without having
Agency issued the regulations to obtain new state pollution perThursday, saying the aim was to mits.
allow businesses some ••flexibiliMany small businesses would
ty" and reduce costs while still be exempt from the permit requiremeeting requirements under the ment altogether and in other cases
I990 Clean Air Act.
states would be allowed to issue a
Rep. Henry Waxman. D-Calif., general, or blanket permit covering
accused the EPA of caving into similar, but small pollution sources.
Critics charge these modificapressures from Vice President Dan
Quayle's Council on Competitive- tions, especially the one providing
ness, which had argued for months for production changes without a
that the requirements should be new permit, will allow businesses
made more nexible 10 case the cost to increase pollution w1thout adeburden to industry.
quate state and publi c oversight
"Clearly, environmental policy- and lead to technical violauons of
making in this administration is the federal clean air law .
taking place at the Council on
"Polluters can write their own
Competitiveness," Waxman said in tick ets" under the permit modificaa statement
tion provisions in the EPA rule .
The EPA rules, which for said Waxman. one of the principal
months have been the subject of authors of the toxic and induslrial
intense debate between the agency pollution sections of the 1990 bill .
and the White House, outline when He called it a ·'massive loophole ...
businesses must obtain state pollu- that invites widespread abuse and
tion control permits under the 1990 massive emission increases" with-

.

ARMY SURPLUS • Mrs. Walter Wilson Is
tbe OWiler and operator or Wilson's Army Surplus, located on Peach Fork Road near
Pomeroy. The business sells only genuine miU-

•

appomt members to the cornmiuee
from alI areas of Meigs County as
well as Gallia County and Mason
County, W.Va., where many of the
banlc's customers ltve.
Among the 1ssues that the bank
hopes to address through the new
board are downtown development
and teaching customers to deal
with economic problems in the
community.

By KIM HARLKSS
Farm Bureau
Organizalion Dil'fttor

OUI publi C reV ICW.

Senate MaJonty Leader George
Mitchell , D-Main c, who was also
heav1ly in vo lved in cra fung the
1990 le gis lat io n, said th e rul e
"fa ll s sho rt of what th e law
requires" and may be overturned
by the courts.
The Sierra Club. a major environmental group, complained that
under the rule many small factories, paint shops. auto body shops
and electronic firms would not
have to have penmts at all.
Larger companies could "p lay
an elaborate shell game" because
th e rules allow busin esses to
··trade" emissions within different
parts of the same factory or facility.
sa1d Blakeman Early of the Sierra
Club.
The EPA said the rules were
aimed at providing businesses " the
ncxibility to change their operations quickly without havin g 10
obtain permit revisions .' ·
"This rule will enable us to
obtain the environmental benefits
of the new Clean AIf Act a1 the
least cost to American business,"
said William Rosenberg , the EPA's
assistant admmistrator for clean air
and radiation.
The 1990 law requrres businesses to mccl new clean ai r require-

:-_Outdoorsmen
flock to area
surplus store
POMEROY - If you are an
outdoor enthusiast then look no
further than Wilson's Army Surplus, located on Peach Forie Road,
just out of Pomeroy, and owned
and operated by Mrs. Walter Wilson.
The business originated in the
garage of Mrs. Wilson's husband
but quickly ouJgrew the space. A
(Continued on D-8)

JOHN MUSSER

Safety level
prompting
consumer
questions

Attention focuses
on tobacco disease

Last hurrah for Bird may come
as Olympic eager in Barcelona

Carolina

A Meigs County native, Fisher
is a member of the Middleport
Board of Public Affairs, and a
member of Heath United Melhoclist
Church in Middleport. He was
a·former member of the GalliaJackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol.
Drug Addiction and Mental Health
Services, representing Meigs County.
He is a member of the Ohio
Funeral Directors Association and
the National Funeral Directors
Association, as well as a licensed
insurance agent, representing Forethought Life Insurance Co. That
company specializes in pre-need
funeral planmng.
Musser is a partner in the insurance firm of Downing Childs
Mullen Musser of Pomeroy, a
member of the Indepe~dent lnsurance Agents Assoctauon and the
Professional Insurance Agents
Association.
He is a member of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce and
the Pomeroy Merchants Associ a-

Farm Flashes

Byrne named Nebraska AD

UNCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Bill phone and basketball coach Danny
Byrne, athletic director al the Uni- Nee in person, both of whom had
versity of Oregon, was named Fri- supported Nebraska assistant athday to succeed retiring Bob letic director AI Papil&lt;. for the JOb.
Papik was not included in the
Devaney as athletic director at
trio of finalists. which prompted
Nebraska.
Byrne's appointment must be protests from several NU boosters
approved by the umversny's Board and some coaches.
Byrne said he and Osborne. who
of Regents.
is
on
a fi shing trip. talked about
Devaney ends his nearly 30-ycar
issues at Nebraska and
athletic
reign as athletic director w1th his
national! y.
retirement in January .
" It was more sharing of inforNebraska has six assistant athletic directors but no one other than mation than anythmg else," Byrne
the athletic director 10 coordinate s;ud. "We talked about the advantages of stability and staff, and I
the program .
Other finali sts were Iowa State told him I'm all for it. We also
athl etic director Max Urick and talked about why he supponed AI
Ohio State associate athletic direc - Papil&lt;. for athletic dinector and how
tor Bill Myles, a former Corn - that isn't going to happen and how
he would support whomever is
husker football assistant coach.
Byrne , 47 , has been athleti c named athletic director here."
Byrne said criticism by some
director at Oregon since 1984. He
athletic
boosters about the choice
su id he would run the Comhuskcr
at 136, a single stroke back.
of
finalists
by the search committee
athletic program like a busines s.
And Funk's effort could hav e Hi s main objectives include prob- didn't worry him.
been better. "I feel like I left a few lem -solving. communication, goal"It show s interest of the fans
out there," said Funk, who missed set ting and ri sk management. and support in th e program here,"
four putts of five feet or le~sThose tenns arc not often associat- he said . "It 's good that boosters
Waldorf also shot a 67 on the ed with major college athletics, he want to be a part of demwns. The
old course in the nonhero suburbs said.
only danger is when they feel th ey
of New York City .
Byrne said he talked with foot - should make the decisions."
Couples birdied four holes in a ball coach Tom Osborne over the
row and five of six in a 67 that lifted him into a tie for fourth at 138
with Bill Britton, Gteg Kraft and
Australian Steve Elkington.
Briuon shot 67, while Kraft and
Elkington matched par 71.
career, but hasn't S3Jd that it' s over.
By BERNIE WILSON
Despite h1s strong performance.
When asked if the Olympics
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Even if
Couple s said he was "nowhere he returns for one more season with would be his last compeuuon, he
ncar playing like 1 was before the Boston Celtics. Larry Bird's replied, "Nope."
Augusta.
Olympic coach Chuck Daly said
last hurrah could come with the
· Tm still a little rusty" from a US. Olympic basketball team .
Bird is in good shape.
three-week break shortly before the
"He's playing well. He's gotte n
The Celtics may be too old to
U.S. Open .
win a fourth NBA championship a lillie sharper every day . He 's
"Tomorrow is a big day," Cou- during the Bird era, however much learned how to take good care of
ple s said . "To play good in the longer 1t may last.
himself," Daly said .
British Open, I need to play good
Bird's back held up through five
The Olympics are another story.
here, so that makes tomorrow an The U.S. team , made up of NBA days of pracllCC and scri mma ges at
important day."
players, is expected to wm the gold UC-San Diego. He'lltest it in com Frost. whose last victory came medal at Barcelona.
petition on Sunday when the Amerat Greg Norman's expense on a
"It's prcuy exciting," Bird said. ican s play Cuba in the I 0-team
birdie from a bunker on the 72nd "My career's winding down and Tournament of the Americas at
hole in New Orleans two years ago, I'm getting to play with some of Portland. The top four team s will
scored one of his five birdies on a the great players in the world. It's advance to Barcelona.
chip-in at the sixth hole.
hccn a great oPJXlnunity. · ·
At 35, Bird is the oldest member
He saved par from a bunker on
Recurring back problems forced of an Olympic team that al so
the 17th and took the lead alone Bird to miss 37 games last season includes Magic John son, Michael
w1th a wedge shot to three feet on and another five in the playoffs.
Jordan, Pa1rick Ewing, Charles
the f mal hole.
After the Celtics were eliminat- Barkley and Clyde Drexler.
It was. he said, his flf'St 36-hole ed by the Cleveland Cavaliers in
He and the other NBA players
lead sin ce the victory in New the Eastern Conference semifinals, got their chance when the InternaOrleans in 1990. And thai triumph Bird said he would announce in tional Basketball Federation voted
was very much on his mind going September whether he'll be back in April 1989 to allow professioninto the final two rounds of the for a 14th season. He keeps saying als to play in international competichase for a $180,000 fust prize.
he· s in the twilight of his NBA tion, oncludin~ the Olymp1cs.

By BOB GREEN
HARRISON, N.Y . (AP)
David Frost was in the lead at the
halfway point of the $1 million
Buick Classic, but was hean ng
footsteps from th e four feet of
Fred.
" There was nothing heroic
about 11. Not very e"11mg ." the
South African Frost said after a 68
broke a five -way tie for the top and
staked him to sole control of lhe
36-hole lead .
Frost. who completed two trips
over the rolling hills of the Westchester Country Club m 7-under-par
135, was one shot ahead of Fred
Funk and three 10 front or Fred
Couples.
"We're only two Fred s out
here," said Funk , a 16-year -old
former coach at the University of
Maryland who scored the fu-s1 victory of h1 s PGA tour career 1n
Houston earlier thi s season.
"They call him Boom Boom, "
Funk said. referring 10 the nick name g1ve n th e Masters champion
by his fellow tounng pros m reco~ ­
nition of his vast length off the tee.
"They call me Poof PooL"
But that's not the only handle he
carries, Funk sa1d.
"Some of the guys think I look
a llltlc like Greg Norman; you
know, the blue eyes. They call him
The Shark. Me, they -call The
Guppy." sa id Funk, who rank s
!35th in driving distance.
Funk, however, missed only one
of the tiny greens and one fairway
in a round of 67 thai put him in a
tic for second w1th Duffy Waldorf

CENTENARY - A men 's round-robin softball tournament will
be held on Saturday. July It and Sunday , July 12 al Raccoon Creel
County Park.
Each bracket wmner will play in a doublc-climinauon tourna ment on July 12. Trophies will be g1vcn to each bracket champ.
Sponsor trophies and T-shirts will be g1ven lo the top two overall
teams.
The entry fee IS $90 per team and the team· s balls. Each team is
guaranteed at least four games.
For more information . call 446 -7538 or 446 -0223 before
Wednesday, July 8.

10 Year Warranty

,.. .~

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-~

\

POMEROY - Three Meigs
County businessmen are the first
members to be appoinlCd to a new
advisory board just formed at
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
Bruce Fisher, John Musser and
Phil Harrison will join the bank's
compliance offtcer, Donna
Schmoll; executive vice president
in charge of lending, Bruce J.
Reed; and bank director Ferman
Moore on the Farmers Bank Advisory Board, a committee designed
to aid the bank in its community
service efforts. Other members will
be appointed at a later date,
Schmoll said.
The members
Fisher is the owner and operator
of Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport, pan owner of the Middleport
Department Store and Mill Street
Book s, both in Middleport, and
part owner of Racine Depanment
Store.

FrOSt leads Funk by one
stroke in Buick Open

Softball tourney slated for July

jentintl

Meigs County businessmen
appointed to advisory board

Sandhill cranes almost
nonexistent in Ohio
Jecl in which habitat uses by herons
arc being studied. Taxpayer contributions to the Division's non-gam e
and endangered wildlife fund are
used to fund heron research in
Ohio.
"We are looking 10 see how
these birds are using West Sister
Island and what size trees they usc
for nesting. We know, for example,
that the types of trees on the island
be1ng used by the black-crowned
night herons are disappearing and
we would like to know how they
arc adapung to this change,"
Shicldcastle said.
Herons are migratory, although
some great blue herons spend their
w1n1ers in Ohio . Most, however ,
migrate south in October to winterIn g grounds in the Gulf states and
Central America. They return to
Ohio to nest beginning in late
March and early ApriL
Herons are one of those few
colonial nesting birds. They are
wading birds that primarily feed on
fish and frogs. They fly with their
necks tucked in toward their body.
Cranes, such as the sandhill and
the whooping crane, primarily feed
on seeds and aquatic invencbrates.
They fly with their necks extended.
The yellow-crowned ni~ht
heron is also rare. The only nesung
sites of snowy egreiS and liule blue
herons are found on West Sister
Island. While some of the herons
rookeries can be readily observed,
others arc on private property and
often out of public view. For those
who have yet to sec their first
heron rookery. a local bird watching club, Audubon Society Chapter or Division of Wildlife office
ca~ offer information.

~hnts -

June 28, 1992

meet -record 10.50 in th e 100
meters, followed with a long jump
of 25 feet, II inches, a perso nal
best of 54-5 In in the shot put, 6I0 1/4 in the high JUmp, and ran the
400 in 47.92.
The best previous flf'St-day score
was 4,677, by Britain's Daley
Thompson at the 1984 Olympics.
"This is what I wanted to do,"
O'Brien said. "I pulled away and
that will make my job easier tomorrow."
Brian Diemer won the men's
3,000-mcter steeplechase finals in
8:16.56, Daniel Lopez was second
at 8:16.87 and Mark Croghan was
third at 8: I 6.88.
The men's 5,000-meter Olympic
team IS John Trautmarm who had a
winning time of 13 :40.30, Bob
Kennedy 3113:41.22 and John Grcgorek at 13:42.20.
In the women's 10,000-meter
finals, Lynn Jennings was first at
32:55.%. Judi St. Hilaire was second and Gwynn Coogan was third.

By JOHN WISSE
Division of Wildlife
OAK HARBOR, Ohio (AP) Some species of nesting herons in
Oh1o often arc confused with the
rare and endangered sandhill crane .
Only two pairs of sandhill
cranes are known to exist in Ohio,
but the state seems to have plenty
of the herons.
Heron rookeries - the name
given to a colony of nesting water
birds - can contain up to 15 to 20
nests or more . The rookeries are
scattered across the state, but
prominent ones are located at Indian Lake, Grand Lake St. Marys, the
Ohio Power Recreation Area,
Hoover Reservoir, Killdeer Plains
Wildlife Area, West Sister Island,
and near th e Cuyahoga Valley
National Park.
The West Sister Island National
Wildern ess Area in Lake Ene's
western basm contains the largest
number of herons. According to the
DiviSion of Wildlife, there were
I .400 nesting pairs of great blue
herons, 1, 24 0 pairs of black crowned night herons, 1,000 pairs
of great egrets, and 10 pairs of
snowy egrets observed on the
1sland last year.
" I believe people are fascinated
by the heron's stately manner and
the way they hold themselves .
They are very graceful, big birds
which often get people's attention.
We have a number of rookeries
scauered around the slate, but most
are in the Lake Erie marshes
region," said Mark Shieldcastle, a
Division of Wildlife biologist.
Shieldcasde has spent the last
decade st udy ing herons 1n thi s
region. The wildlife agency cur rently has an ongoing research pro-

Farm/Business

r
'

: At Olympic track and field trials,

.

lary Items aad seems to be quite a bil wilb
campers, scouts, bunters and ouldoor enthusiasts. Pictared with Mrs. Wilson is ber son, Tom,
wbo liSSisls in operaline the busioi'SS.

ments by reducing toxic em1ssions
and releases that contribute to
smog. Under the rule states issue
pollution control permits and the
EPA monitors state programs to
make certain they comply with fed eral rules.

used.

DIANE C. KINDER

Kinder among
OSB graduates
ATHENS - Diana Carsey
Kinder, loan counselor at Bank
One of Athens, recently completed
her seco nd year of ed uca tion to
graduate from the 39th annual Ohio
Sc hool of Banking, sponsored by
1hc Oh10 Bankers Associauon .
Kinder is a graduate of Meigs
H1 gh School and of R10 Grande
College.
Kinder was among more th"'
200 banker-students completing th e
course at the week-long session.
held at Ohio University from June
14to June 19. The school, designed
as a professional development program, offers banlccrs an opportuni ty to enhance their sk ills in all
areas of bank operations and management
Scwnd-year srudcnts participate
in a computerized banlc simulation
program. Student teams, confronted wily typical bank problems, are
req uired to make management
decosions based on a computer-simulated model economy. The tum
decisions are then analyzed, and
teams are ranked by performance.

Terminology 1s drawing battle line s. Seve ral special interest
groups suPJXln "zero tolerance" as
a key term '" food safety regulalions . Other s acknowledge the
improbability or any food being
1o1ally free from chemical com- .
po unds They suppon "negligible ·
ri sk."
:
The issuc needs to be resolved :
beca use technology is pushing nil :
to smaller levels. Sc1entiSIS will ·
soon have the ability lo measure ·
quantities a' small as one~unintil­
lwnlh (one '"a billion billion
paris). At this level . "zero toler- :
ance" would be ridiculous.
Will supporters of "zero toler- .
ance " decree anything as totally :
sarc? Arc consumers concerned ·
about compounds m trace amoonts
past pans per million ' How little of
something is too much'

New dress
shop opens
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
has a new dress shop - Amy's
Dress and Da1.2le Shop.
Located upstairs of the Village :
Florist Shop on Ohio 325 in Rio
Grande, the shop offers a wide
selection of custom and customorder dresse s and specializes in
dresses for young girls.
.
Soon. according to proprietor :
Amy Rupert, the shop will carry a full line of men 's formal wear.
:
In addition, Amy's Dress and :Dazzle features crafts and wedding ·•
items mcluding garters, wedding ·
albums and wedding video box .'
covers.
.;
Business hours are 10 Lm. to 4 :
p.m. on weekdays and IO Lm. to I·
p.m. Saturdays.
:

�Page-D2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

wv

June 28, 1992

June 28, 1992

1lnrddown to Grape, then proceeded
over to Second, and up Second to
Grace Methodist Church, where the
parade ended.
Partictpaung were. police, ftre
trucks, State Highway Patrol mcludmg awu~ary, atr!31d wardens, medical untts, scouts, theGal!Ja Academy
band and several floats.
The Vtctory float was a truck w1th
a g1gannc wooden ·v· 0n that float
were the queen and her pnncesses
Joan McKenzte, Mary June Richards
and GlonarmaFostcr. Wrote the Tnbune of the Mootz Bakery float "Of
real beauty was the Mootz float-a
IJ'aller decorated mstlverand red and
blueJaSSeis---;mdthegold-cladStarue
ofltberty wasblondeAIIce Wheeler
Two whtte-unifonned coast guardsmen stood wtth nfles at the from of

"S ptnt of 76" and the Moore Sound
U.S. Anny lieutenants stood at the truck wtth Roger and Ronald W1l·
s1de of Miss Wheeler.
hams and Peg Thomas.
H W. Wethemoltsponsoreda war
In conJuncuon w1th the V1ctory
bond float that had Uncle Sam on 1t paJllde was a trammg event for etaTheRedCrosshadacoupleoffloats, zens on how to idenufy U.S planes,
as did the merchants of the town. The how to fight mcend131)' bombs, how
Daughters of Amencahadapatnouc to keep mt~131)' secrets and how to
float and the oil oompantes spon- use gas masks.
sored a float that staled m b1g letter
A good place to have seen the
"Save On Rubber". TheN~' Aid Vtctory PaJllde woold have been m
had a floal w1th acot on 11 and there frontoftheFontanastore. The"Boss"
was even a "VICtory Garden" float
sold soft drink and 1ce cold waterThere were a number of trucks m melons Fontana's specialtzed m
ll1c parade mcluding seven from ll1c frutts, vegetables, tobacco, candy,
Keener Sand and Gravel Company. spaghettt,rnacaroru,sauces,tmported
Each truck bore a wond that when put Ohve Oll, grated cheese and candles
together made the sentence. "IndusFonuma was born m San Quirico,
try's Contribuuon to the 1942 War Lucca, luily He came to Amenca m
Effort" Also m the PaJllde were AI 1898 After stays tn Chtcago and
lngenck and W L. Robmson as the Cleveland. he settled m GaUtpohs
ll1c floa1, wbtle two khalci-weanng

The soil survey can help you
By WENDELL TOPE
Earth Team Voluntl'fr
GALLIPOLIS - The mtenm
sotl survey report avatlable at the
Galha Sot I and Water Conservauon
D1strtCI IS available to you when
you have concerns that anse while
butldtng homes when crop fteld
problem s anse and many other
quesuons that need answers
Soil Surveys can help planners
horne buyers, and developers deter
rnme SOil related hazards or hrnttaltons that effect horne st ies They
can help land usc planners select
SUitable Sites for housmg or onstte
sewage dtsposal systems Farmers
and others can be asSISted wtth

detcnnmmg the suttabtltty and lirnttaUons of sotls for crop producuon
livestock fact~ues land fiUs recrc auon areas and many other related
thtn s These arc JUSt some of the
reasons why soil data IS needed.
Man) peorte assume that all
sot ls are more or less alike They
are una~~oare that great differences
tn soil propcrues can occur wtthm
e'-e n shon di stances Soils may be
S..':lS0&lt;\311\ WCI or SUbjtXl to noodmg the:· ma) be shallow to a ll3rd
r:m or bed rock They may be too
unstable 10 be used as a toundaMn
for butldtngs or htghway s. Hard
: lay sotl or wet s01l make poor

bases for sepuc tanks Floodmg and
other hazards arc Indicated m sml
surveys.
Sml surveys helps to detennme
the suttabiltty for plannng commer·
Clal forest and lawn trees Soil survey mforrnauon can be used m creatmg lawns and recreation areas
such as ball fields fishmg and water
supply ponds. So1i maps can help
m makmg lay outs and mamtenancc of public parks ptcntc areas,
golf courses cabms and other faciltucs. Through the use of conservation planntng, pnvate recreatton
areas can also be planned and
developed through the Soli Conservauon Semce wtth the help of sotl
survey mfonnauon
Conservauon of land and water
resources IS an trnportant part of all
land uses. The maps and soil
ed mto the clmtc today
.. As long as they are here we descnpuon m SOil surveys can help
will find th e energy 10 keep these m tdenufymg spec lfic mfonnauon
doors open,·' satd Anne Reed , a Sml surveys can help m tdentifytng
spectfic conservauon problems m a
spokeswoman for the Mtlwaukee
gtven area Wtth these spectftcs
Clm1c Protecoon Coalmon.
there can be no rntstake thts data
Clmtc supporters also hned the
helps to gtve accurate measures on
entrances of other c~mcs open Satbow to reduce eroston, sedimentaurday
tiOn, subsidence, shppage wetness
Last weekend, more than 2,000
and other hazards that may occur
abortion nghts and anu-aboruon
on a steep htll stde. If you have a
acuvtsts demonstrated at three of
slippage problem or other sotl
the CIty'SSU CJmtCS.
On Fnday, about 200 abortiOn related problems you can call the
nghts supporters formed a human local soil and water offtce and they
wtll asstgn personnel or a soli sciwaU to protect a medical clime that
to answer your quesuons.
entiSt
houses the office of a doctor who
perfonns aboruons The clmtc has
bee n a frequent targ et of recent
BRIDGE
protests
MISSIOnanCS 10 ll1c Prebom IS 1D
ns second week of a planned stx
week protest agamst Mtlwaukee 's
PHILLIP
aboruon clmtcs The demonstrators
arc under a Judge's order not block
ALDER
entrances or harass paoents

SPACE CENTER, Houston
An astronaut aboard the
space shuttle Columbta mopped
up the mstde of a smaU chamber
early Saturdar where a bubble
burst mto bril~ant water droplets
dunng a phystcs expenmenl
Phys1ctst Eugene Trinh late
Fnday used sound waves to
rnantpulate the glearnmg drop to
research surface tens1on and other
flwd dynarntcs.
" Actually, there's flu1d everywhere," he srud before cleanmg
It up "We managed to really
splatter thts drop."
The five-man, two-woman
crew ts conducting a host of SCIenufic experiments and undergomg medical tests on the effects of
(AP) -

ACROSS
1 Ceremomal

7 Deep sleep
12 EJOCIIn a 1e1
17 Vast throng
21 Drug

22
23
24
25

Extra
Anger
Poker stake
AbduiiD

26

l1sten to

28 Scoll
30 AquatiC mammals
32 A11ernate word

33 Cratty
35 Quarrel
37 Or09on s capital
40 Gmger 41 Prtnter s measure

BERNICE
BEDE OSO L

TAURUS (Aprol 20-May 20) You m,ghl
NORTH
+Q J 10
'I'AK74

~'Your

~'Birthday

Be atert1or ways to generate add itiOnal
mcome m the year ahead Somethmg
you re presently 1nvotved 1n could produce a prol1table spm·oH

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)11 you blend
June 28 1992
fake advantage ot any opportu nd 1e s
you get rn the year ahead to br o aaen

you' knowledge base The more you
know th e oetler your chances to ad
11ance m your chosen held o1 endeav or
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II your
emotion s dommate your Hlmk1ng t o day
11 could 1mpede your suc:ce s':l In ':, ltua
t1ons wher e you apply your log1c I here
su its shOu ld please you Cancer treat
yoursellto a tJ1rthday qdt Send to r Can
ce r s Astra Graph predtcl 1on•, lor til e
year ahead by ma1ilng $1 25 plus a long
sell addressed stam ped envelope to
Astra Graph cJo tn1s newspaper P 0
Box 91 428 Clev eland OH 44101 3 428
Be sure to st ate your zod1ac s1gn
LEO (July 23-AUQ 22) In order l o r a
partnerShip to he eflect1ve today the
burdens as well as the rewards must
be shared Imbalance 1n e1ther area w1 ll
weaken th e unton
VIRGO (Aug 23-S.pt 22) An obtec t vP
!hal 1S S1gn1f1cant to you rl1Qt11 not be
1mportant to tMse you II be nvolved
w1tt1t oday E1ther operate 1noependen t
ly or worM
out
somP l'p'pP
11
compromtse
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl 23) 11 your pr o r
t 1es aren t m order today you m gt11 put
too mucn effort on mean1nq les s obtec
11ves and only a mtnrmatthr ust on rt1 ose
w1th men!
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) It s OeSI
not to tak e rtsks today m S1\ua t1o n s that
1f they don I come out nght could prove
costly t o you as wen as o ther s Opera te
along tradt!I Onal conservar tve 11nes

SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Doc 21) Tcy

your mtu1t•on w1th your logtc today you
could add an ef1ect1'ole d1mens1on to
your th ought processes Use all your
g1ft s MaJOr ct1anges are ahead tor Can
cer 10 the com1ng year Send lor Can
cer s Astro Grapll prechct1ons tOday
Ma11 S 1 2 5 plus a long sell -addressed
stamped envelope to Asho -Graptl cto
th1s newspaper

P0

8o~~;91428 Cleve

land OH 44 10 1 3428 Be sure to state
yOur ZOdiaC Sign
lEO (July 23-Aug 22) Even 1! you re 10
\IOIIJed commerc1ally w1tt1 fn end s t oday
make the retat1onsh1p the pnor~ty not
your mater~al des1res

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22) II you are
prepared to change tactiCS as developments d1ctate an ObJective that s Important to you can be achteved tod ay
ltBRA (Sepl 23-0ct 23) You are tdea onented today and what you conce•ve
co uld be supenor to your usual
thoughts However be sure to wnte
your 1deas down so you won t target
them by tomorrow

SCORPIO (Oct 24-NOY 22) Two cewardmg developments cou ld occur to
day tn 'fOUr 1n 110ivement s w1th others If
you handle lh1ng s properly 'p'OU should
be able to l ake advantage of both

45 Mephtstopheles

4 7 Concermng

+Q9
WEST

EAST

+K 42

"J 8 2

tQWB
+A6l
SOUTH
+A 6 3

+7 5

South

I NT

Pa "&gt;s

,.

l'tortb

East

3 NT

Pass
&lt;\II pa ~

Stitches keep
the contract intact
For the ftnal c l tche of the week we
1n t1me sa~·es

nme

Whoever dreamed up t hts saymg must
have had a particular love three -no
trump con tra ct s There s not mu ch
poml tn ro nce ntratmg on wtnmng mne
tncks wh en you are playmg tn four of

or

a maJor

the East West cards m the d1
agram Aga mst your contr&lt;~ct of three
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Doc 21) no trump Wes t leads the spade nme
You re no t l1kely to have any trouble and East covers dummv s card with
tmdmg solul to ns to cnt1ca ltssues to day
Your problems t1oweve r m1ght come
hom deC1d1ng whtch ones to use Don't
overanalyze

Cover

the ktng How do you plan to knit a
nme-tnck sweater ?

S&lt;tuth doesn I have enough strength

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 19) A lillie for a two.oOJer -one re sponse hence hts
one no·trump btd North ha s an easy
self 1n t11 c1ed pressure could enhance
your rndustnousness and produCtivity
today Don 1 be afratd to tackle two
task s Simultaneously

ra1se to game (Wlth a natural system

tt ts hard to reach

f1ve or st x clubs t h&lt;'

Iauer basiCally depending on the
AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob 19) Two close spade finesse 1

not to dtscuss rssues todav that you and
yPur mate v1ew dttlerently One or both
ol you could beco me e wtr emely

panion ship today D•v1de your t1me between them both so no ones feelings

aggravated

get hurt

tr~end s may be blddtng lor your com-

Seemg

three spade tnrks landmg m
hts lap South won the ftrst trt ck w1th

actuev1ng your ob tecHves However 11
there tsn t anyth1ng m 11 for you you re
not hkely to try ver-v hard

llctpate can be dealt wtlh eftecllvely
Make a 11st and ehm1nate dilemmas one
at a ttme

pad your agenda a bJt

110 Planet
111 Item ot property
113 Narrow flat

114
115
116
117

118 Cry
120 Roosevelt 10
121 Turkish reg1ment

122 FrUit of the p1ne
123 Allowance lor
waste
124 Walked on

132 labor
134 Speechily
135 Peel
136 New England st
137 Bend
139 Tidy
141 Equally
142 Morsel
143 Addi110nal

69 Anton ID

149 N Y lime
152 K10g of Bashan

74 Endures
76 Tree trunk
77 Bone of body
78 Teutonic deny
79 Freshets

153
155
157
159

81
82

160 Roman tyrant
162 Summon forth
164 Babyloman hero

Far
Vapod
Goes astray
Note ol scale

84 Urge on

166 Lookmg glass

85 Insane

87 Part ol Bl T

168 Blunt end
169 Doctnne

89 Procreate
90 Rumor

171 Scotti Sh cakes

94 Btrd s home

JOngg
5 The sweetsop
6 Jumps
7 Stallone ID
4-

8 Harvest goddess
9 Shallow vessels
10 Mountatn nymph

11 Walked
unsteadtly

13 In favor of
14 Solemn vow

1n sleep
147 P1ntail duck

92 AdOitional

88 Encountered

measure

Burst

145 Breathe loud ly

Ha~r less

86 Press lor
payment

stone

12 Wonder 10

R U linkup
locatmn
Gu1d0 s htgh note

170 Thock
DOWN

95 Renovates

1 Dand1es

96 Apparent

2 Sem 1-prec1ou s

A-2

3 Japanese

board

68 Take one s part

Hawanan wrealt1

Page

15 Declares
16 AI that place

17 Possesses
18 Runntng

19 Dull, tmpasstve
20 Cyhndrtcal

27 Rodents
29 Uprosing
31 Sun god

89 Brimless cap
90 Lassoes

Public Notice

Townah1p lor 1913 Regular

meetmv will •l•o be condueled 11 thio dmo.

(6) 21, 211, 30; (7) 1, 2, 3, 5, 6
Btc

42 Smalt amount

44 Super 46 Bank transaction

Zeus

50 Kettledrum
51 Down pref1x

130 Made efforts to

53 Caudal
appendage
55 DuvaliiD

133 Cnppled
136 Shooting star
138 Chatter
140 - ot

Leave
Toll
Clement
Insect 09g

68

Ptece for

one

69 Tendon
70 Encourages

72 Jet lorlh
73 Mollol1es
75 Desk 76 Pummels
77 Rants
79 Pasttme
60 Dtnner course

82 Founded
83 Spamsh hlle
84 Squander

my s queen

However

East

knew

Free Adult Talk Line
1 7l4-662-7'J37
L1ve Ona On One

I!) 11R . . . .API.. INTE....._ AIM

J

ring
Blseurt

Lost
Danville area, Sorrow
Phllly white blue taca, 2 whlla
stoek1ngs
Reward,
614-742
3054

Yard Sale

Hollow Road,
Road Rutland

ott New

Lim•

IIams
Porch uta, block houu bah1nd
Laurel ChH Church, July 2 &amp; 3

Gallipolis

Out Ot t'lurman On 279 Shtrley
Arrowood, 614-682-1163

B

Old marb1e5 toys comic books
lanterns, pictures and lurn1ture
Osby Martin 614-992 -'H4 t

Standing timber will pay ta1r
pnc11s call Jorry Runyan 614

992·2687

July 3rd &amp; 4th 91im to 7 Randy
Boston rHidence, S R 681 near
car wash, watch tor signa, muht
family All with a wlda range of

Wedna~ay
July
hi , 315
Mechanic StrMt In back ot
tlrahouH
Avon
c!Oihlng
dishes, mlac

6 Family July 12,3rd g 00-5 00
Furnllure, Ratrlgarat«, Stereo,
Clolhast Odds Ends, V2 Milt

Air Conctrt1onera, Etc 614·256·

1238

Used Mobtle Homn , Call 614·

446-0175

Unci salt$, good cond opened
or unopened 304-882 2079
Wanted To Buy

Junk Aulas
Ca ll

Wilh Or Without Motors
Larry Lively 614-388·930 3

Top Prices Paid All Old US
Coms, Gold Rmgs, Silver Coms,
Gold Coins M T S Coin Shop
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis

Employment Services

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

R1ck Pearson Auction Company

11

auct1on
serv1ce
Ucensed
166,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia 304
113-57&amp;

$350/Day Processing
Pt'lona Order~ I P.apla Call You
No Erpenence Necessary

lull lime auctlonatr complete

Help Wanted

31S.733~062

Reward otfarad lor Information
o r return or 2 female whitt
Husll.y puppJes stolen from our
larm June 2ts1 614-892·!5144
David Mora

129 Mark to shoot at
131 Sounded a horn

Endearment

143 Myself

Black &amp; wh1te lemala bobtail kit
len 614 992·22HI
Cull Beagle pup, blk &amp; whitt
female mak11 good rabbit dog ,
!rea !o good home, 304-675-

2592
Free Pupp1es Raccoon Ro.1d
Gallipolis 614-441·0417

German Shephtrd &amp; psr1 Cotllt
1 yr old, 304-61S-4475 or 614·

146 Verve

House Cats Only. t Male, 2
Females 7 Weeks Old, Hall
Himalayan 6t4·446-4922

148 -

Aeglslerad

144 Kmd of collar
Braeden

150 Wild plum
151 Sailors colloq
153 Morrow lowe or
Remer

154 Piece out
156 Abstract be1ng
158 Theater stgn

July 1st, Sanders Onvt Gil
llpolll 9-4 Anllqut Cradle,
Baby hems, 10 Speed Bike Lote
01 Cto!has And Oddt-N-Endt!
Moving
July 1 3, 8-4 203
Kln1t0n
Or1ve ,
ott
Founh
Annua ftn &lt;M"fiin, antiques,
home ml er/or

446-8950

Rott Wallar To
Gtvaaway Mean, Great Watch
Oog 614-446-8089
Strawberry plants tlve ~arlt!lu
37906 SA 7 Pomaroy Ot1 614
985-4257 June bearers and ner
baarc~r5

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlly

11

Help Wanted
JOBS AVAILABLE

(Salanes range batwaen $50
$385 Weekly) Full Of Par1-T1me
Due to the high coal ol factOfy
space,
InSurance,
worker a
componsa!lon and other companr, expenses, many com·
pan as can uva thousand! ol
dollars In producHon lima wltt'l
people assembl1ng very s1mple
products al home for them
Spec1al sk1lls or 8)1;penence not
needed because lnstruct•ons
and matertals are sent to you
Atte r you comptata work send
11 back tor payment Tl'le more
work you do the mora you earn
Just 20 45 mmutaa a day work
tng at home you can earn some

11

Help Wanted

very 1mpress1va wa~as Kreger
Publlshmg has a hating of a
·nrlel 'I of different worl:. that

aulls both

man and women
Best ol all you work when you
want (One company Is paying
$342 00 per w.. k to assemble
simple plant hangers.) For more
lniOfmaUon and a F~EE listing
oYer 60 companies pruanllw
I
, wrtte to Krager Publish·
I
lothrop St , OHMH
MA 02180
Krager
does requ1re $3 90
lor
and handhng lor
hsllng
can not be lilted
wtlhout postage and h.and lmg
Allow l-4 days

men! spoke swoman Margaret

Tutwiler reaffmned on Fnday that
the U S rntlttary was ready to
ass1st m rche f upe rauons m Bosma
tf asked by the UN and 1f a cease
ftr c holds for 4B hours Nauonal
Scc un ty Advtscr Brent Scowcroft
dented that a U S .llfltft was trnrnt
ncnt

B~ ,act of Congress the f1rst Thurs

day

In

May

11

Help Wanted
Areas 1 Shirley

AVON 1 All
Spur1 ~04-67$-1429
Exper1ancad flat bed dnvers for
Interstate operallon,
appro•
500 mil' redtas steady hauJ,
home most weekends, top pay .
good equipment Mull t.. 25 yrs
of 8 ,. wt1h 3 yrs vanhabla OTR
•eKpertanca
wtlh COL ht:ante
solid dthrlng record &amp; work hts
lof'1 Must pass road test and
drug screen Call 800-22i--6658
tar aelalls
Experienced techniCian needed
send resume to
Baz ~3
Pomeroy Oh1o or ull 6 \4 992
2174 for appotnlmenl

Help want ltd to nil A Yon all

IS

National Day of Prayer

11

Help Wanted

Gaiiii· Ma1gs H..d Start A D1v1
slon Of Woodland Canters Inc
11 Now Aecapllng Appl1c11 1ons
For The Posi11on Of FINANCE
OFFICER Appllunts Must Pos·
HSI Bachelor 1 O.gr.. In Ac
count1ng IRatatld Ftald Ex!en

lt\'8 Knowlldga ot I A~&gt;jllty To
P.rtorm Com~utarilltd Financial
Oparat1ons
lnlmum 3 Y81rs
Expenenca Superv1s1ng Fm•nc111l Funchons oF A Fede,..nw
Funded Grant Program Apphc41!11ons Can Be P1cUd Up AI
Wood land C.ntars, Inc 3086
Stall Roule 160 Gallipolis Ohio
45631 For Add111onal lntorma
11on Call Gallla-Me~gs HAd
Start .a.l 614-446-«;';111 Bet .... n 8
A W And 4 PM M-F Woodland

------------------~---------------------'--•'='='='~='=='~=4==4~=3=~==~~---~~ls~E08AA
Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Canaday ReaJty
446-a~16J~Jdrut
HOMES FA RMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631

iii$

t:Sl
. .. _
.,..

~' "" "" "

AUDREY F CANADAY. BROKER
MARY~. FLOYD

LINDA G SKIDMORE
REAL TOR 379 2686

REALTOR 446-3383

165 Diphthong
167 Hosp asst

ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN
COMPUTER REPAIR TECHNICIAN
COMMUNICATION ELECTRONICS
TECHNICIAN

437 Gr•nt StrHI, Middleport,
June 30 , July 1 I 2, 9 7

,..,.,.. __

.... -·~~--·
pll-•••,
SIMP• ~ anrluldttt

Row .r

AU Yard S.t11 Mu~ Ba Paid In
Advance O..dlln. 1 OOpm lha
day betore the ad 11 to run,

Sunday lldlllon- 1 OOpm Frld•y,
Monday
Ssturdty
Baehan

edition
Road

10 OOa m
In

front

of

STEP BACK IN TIME! THE ABOVE TURN OF THE
CE NTURY SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL OLD
HOME PROVES IT ONCE WAS ONE OF THE MOST
ELABORATE HOMES IN GALLIPOLIS IT COULD BE
NOW WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION IF
RE STORING A VINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM
CALL US FOR A TOUR OF THIS ONE AND MAKE
YOUR DREAM COME TRU E 163 000
NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL- SPLIT FOYER DESIGN
HAS 4 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS. LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA. EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM GAS FORCED
AIR FURNACE. CENTRAL AIR COND 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE $65,000
LOOK AND COMPARE - 3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS.
CO MB INATION KITCHENilJININGIFAMILY AREA WITH
FI REPLA CE LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE. CONVENIENT
LOCATION JUST OFF AT 35 THIS HOME IS A
BARGAIN AT $58 000
JUST USTEDI TWO YEAR OLD FRAME RANCH WITH
BRICK TRIM ON LARGE LEVEL LOT HOME
FEATURES CHERRY KITCHEN CABINETS, SNACK
BAR 3 BEDROOMS , 2 BATHS . 2 CAR GARAGE
ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP PRICED TO SELL FAST AT
$57,900

Racine, Oh

Hill ruldtnca, July 1, 9-7 46i60
SR t2~ Raclna, just below town
llmh ~om• targ.,. ctothlng

11

Help Wanted

r=:P~A~RT~T~IM=E~
Census-type
1nterv1ews
For the Harns Poll
Make your own hours
Eves and Weekends
ConWct tn -person
IntervieWs for 8 10 week

1H Matlctl Sltap, IIK.,

firm Salary based on

.r/. ltHrYafl.. atl

for thts naltonal research

446-2206, Mutllys tin
Frtdays, 9-S.

mtervtews conducted EOE

4th . . . .

Call1-800-637-6508

Carport a ale, July 1, 2 3, t- 1
RUehle rHil:Mnca, Tyr" Blvd,

stud; tn Galha County Area

......

BE JOB READY IN 12-18 MONTHS
ELECTRONIC SERVICING
The Adult Education Center
Tri-County Vocational School

FlrahouM, little of tvtrything

print• ~· .-,mn
IY...wt.fw•farilatltl

Saper Spedtl

Call1-800-637-6508

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

In Memory

In Loving Memory of
Evelyn LOUISe
Spencer
1can nol say &amp; w1ll not
say you are dead
you're JUSt away
W1lh a smtle a caress
&amp; a wave of the hand
You have wandered to
a better land
Sadly mtssed
by famtly

The Adult Education Center
Tri-County Vocational School

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

abbr

2

TRAIN FOR FOOD SERVICE JOBS
Cooke, workel'8, and manage,. needed lor
re1taurant1, 1choola, hoophala, nul'8tng homeo,
unlveraitiea.
CATERING
Start your own buaineu with mintmal1nve1tment and

Yard Saia, S.t, half mite out Rt
87 w1tch for signa

161 Unch ID
163 lattn conJunction

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
42'Yo MORE COOKS NEEDED BY 2005

COil

Back yard patio ula, loll oi
crllll:s little of tverytt'llng, ra1n
cancels Won &amp; lues 2812
Meadowbrook Or Not Respon
slble fD• A(:cktents

Th ree 1t1ttens, hiler tratnad
rs.ild)' to go, 614-992-3717

CHANNEL MARKER RENTALS
Nri Myrlla loadt
Now ..... rtsnalllls

h1 s ace know1ng he had cut declarers
commumcat10n an the sutt With no

U N dtplomats sa td the 15rnember council, whtch has scheduled closed consultauons on the
Iss ue Monday, mtght authonze a
rntiitary operauon to secure the atrpon fOr atd ntghts Or escalate liS
pumshrnent of Scrbta They dtd not
elaborate
Boutros-Ghalt also htnted that
U N peacekeepers would be wtth
drawn tf the ftghtmg contmued
The Secumy Council had approved
of eventually sendmg I ,100 peacekeepers to protect rehef shtprnenLI,
but co ntmued ftghtmg prevented
thw deployment
Bosnta's U N ambassador,
Muharned Sacnbey, urged the
Sccunty CounCil 10 authonze "relattvcly hrntted au- acuon" agatnst
Scrbtan posmons, arullery and sup-

127 Matden loved by

48 Competent
49 Room

56 A sststant

means" lO del1ver humanuanan

atd

republic IS nottnvolved
Although Bosma's Serbs have
satd th ey would unilaterally stop
ftrmg on ctvd tan uugets and put
thCir guns under U N superviSion.
arttllcry fire conun ued sporad1caUy
Fnday from Serh htllstdc postuons
overlookmg SaraJevo
I here was also no stg n Fnday
that vtctous ftghung between Serb
ftghters and Mushrn-lcd troops of
the Bosnian government was about
to cease 10 the strategic DobnnJa
suburb ncar the atrport
In Washtngton, State Depart

125 Exp1res

128 Cullery pieces

58
60
62
65

2644

&amp; Vlclnlly

112 CIVIIIn1ury
114 Grahly

121 T&amp;J Mahal stte

July 1-2, 9am-4pm children anfl
adult cklthlng, twm bed m1sc
S.cond hoult, 334 59 Happy

Announcemenls

guard

122 Vehicle
123 Poston ID

am bHQie, brown &amp;
black on n..::k l t-oa nur
Hoback Ad • Racine 614-94~

Found

Wanted to Buy

Don 1 Junk 11 1 Sell Us Your Non
Working
MaJOr
Appliances
Color TV s VCR a, Microwaves

July 1·2 2ml Wast on S R 68'1
Old end new IIams clothing
dacoratlng Items 6l4-992 5083

7

3 Announcements

9

FQund Bleck Gray Tiger Striped
Young Cat Around Lrncoln Pika
And Graham School Road, Gal·
llpolla 614·44M312

Clerk parking lot, 31)4-1)75-1256

110 Alter-dinner
candy

38 Coal Daughter
40 MediCinal plant

FOUND red nylon Jackar at ball
!laid, 304~75-1133

Amelhyol
Patricta c.IIIWay, LOST
wldlamonda nllr Tudor

46686 Guthrlt Rd.
Coolville, Ohio 45723
(614) !185-3860

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Lost &amp; Found

6

PUBUCNOTICE
Tho Boord of Truol- of
Orongo Townohlp will hold 1
Public Hearing July 6 ot
6:30p.m. 11 the homo ol tho
clerk, Patricia CIIIWIY lor
tho Budget ol Drongo

1 16 Patnful

34 Annually

Yugoslav rcpuhltc of Bo snta Herzegovma and S31d that ' further
measures arc therefore reqUired'' w
open Sarajevo's auftcld
"Whtle g1vmg pnonty to peaceful means, the European Co un ctl
does not exclude th e usc of rntluary
means to achtevc these hurnanttan ·
an ObJecUves,' the st;ncmcnt satd
Dtplomats, spcaktng on co ndt uon of anonyrntly, satd Gennany,
luily , Belgmrn and the Netherlands
tns1sted the community adopt a
stronger Stand agamst the VIolence
than had been contatned tn an earltcr dralt
U N peacekeepers m Sar~cvo
have demanded that a cease-ftre
hold for 48 hours before th ey arc
wtl~ng 10 begm rcltef llights
In New York, UN Secretary-Gen
eral Boutros Boutros-Ghah on Fn-

pi y hnes He wrote that such acuon
''would allow for both the effecuve
delivery of emergency reltef and
the ccssauon of barbaric shel~ng ' '
Bosma had asked earhcr for rntl
ttary tntervenuon and atr stril::es
Serb troops have blockaded
Sarajevo's atrport for nearly two
months as pan of an attempt to
crush Bosma-Herzegovma 's maJor
lly Mushms and Croats, who voted
to secede from Yugoslavta tn
February
Serbs oppose mdependence, and
many want thetr own Serbian
republtc ltnked to Serbta, the domina nt republic tn the new. small er
Yugoslavta
More than 7,000 people have
been killed tn the fightmg, half the
captuil's 600,000 strong populauon
has fled and food, water and
medtcmes are runmng out
Serbta IS wtdely blamed for
fornenung the Bosntan Cl\ tl war
But Serbian PreSident Slobodan
M1losevtc on Fnday asserted hiS

-

108 Malice

36 ltghls out•

co ntmumg v1olen cc m the former

day gave the Serbtan forc es 48
hours to halt thetr mthtary offenSive tn SaraJevo or the UN Secunty Counctl would seek "other

I.

97 Learmng

117 Goddess ol
diSCOrd
119 Benaltl

Jy to take a convoy of load and
mcdtcal sopphcs mto SaraJevo
The EC statement prepared by
the leaders' atdes, con demned the

I.

95 Requne

1 11 Puts on one s

7,000 dead smce Muslims and
Croats tn Bosnta·Herzegovtna
voted to break from Yugoslavta 3
months ago Cut off from the outstde world, some of SaraJevo's
300,000 restdents have resorted to
catmg grass and leaves to sumve.
In Sarajevo, U N spokesman
Abdel Razak satd today that U.N.
observers saw the Serbs w1thdrew
some of thcu tanks from around
Sarajevo's atrport on Fnday, but
they were sull shel~ng ClVI~an targets
Arttllery fire was exchanged for
about three hours overnight tn
SaraJevo between the ctty's Mu shrn-led defenders and Serb Irregu lars postuoned m the surroundmg
htUs Heavy shellmg began at dawn
and conunued sporadically dunng
the day.
French Hurnan11anan Atd Secrc·
tary Bernard Kouchner arnved m
Ltsbon today to address ll1c leaders
m closed sesston He was m Bosnta
two weeks ago trymg unsuccessful-

.-

91 Occurrence
93 Bodily feelings

98 L09al maner
102 Doom
104 Adam106 In music. high
107 Brag

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-03

I.
.

3 Announcements

hand entry rematmng, S&lt;tuth could wm
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fob 19) Take ARIES (Morch 21-Apnl 19) Conversa- only etght trtcks three spades. two
pams today to be e~rra prudent 1n the I IOns w1th close fnends aren t ltkely to hearts. two dtamonds and one club
If only South had been wtlhng to
management of your resources tram tnclude 1dle chatter today There are m
the ttme you wake up II you star t out m d1cat•ons that 1deas ol eJ~treme conse- cast off one spade tnck he would have
an e xtravagan t lash1on you mtght not quence could be eJ~changed
purled five club tncks m return South
be able to hrt the brakes 1n Hme
TAURUS (Aprol 20-Moy 20) ThiS IS a should have made the unusual play ol
PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20) You d oe good day to re--evaluate your present wtlhholdinc hts spade ace at lrtck one
w1se not to have too many 1r ons m th e cash poSit tO n and put your hnanctal
Suppose East returns a spade S&lt;tuth
tire today 11 you altempt to do roo house 10 order ln - deptll analySIS could
wtns In the dummy and dnves out the
muc h you m1ghl depr1ve eacll endeavor revea l neglected opportumttes
club ace He sttll holds the spade ace
of the a tt en t1on 11 requ•res
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) You could be as an entry to the established club wmARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Do no1 lcea l very res!IBSs and easily bored today ners, and the contract comes home
an endeavor that a fnend takes very se· tf you do not have a vanety ol activities
With two overtrtcks
nously tn a fnvolous fash 1on today
fr om whtch to choose Don't be afratd to
Make an etfortto see the Stlu a110n from

ventwn on Earth
Astronauts have kmdlcd ftres
on three other shuttle fltghts,
usmg ashless filter paper. Aarnes
travel half as fast m space as on
Earth and glow a cooler blue.
CombustiOn sctenusts are
especially mterested m smoldermg, a weak fonn of burnmg wtthout names that can develop suddenly and raptdly mto a fullnedged blaze
The plasuc foam smoldered
for about five rnmutcs- 25 mmutes less than planned - before
gomg out Pnnctpal mvest1gator
Carlos Femandez-Pello, a professor of mechamcal engmeenng at
Berkeley, satd 1t appears not
enough heat was applied because
of an eqUipment dtsplay problem.

the spade ace and led a club to dum

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Beon g PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20) G1ve ao- enough to hold up hts ace When the
mah~ r~ally
m otP&lt;ated
today
wtll mestl c matters top pnortty tOday Cur ·
club mne followed East wenl m wtth
strengthen
your
probabtllt 1e5
tor
r ent problems as well as those you an-

Three - Island
Compelen 1
- garde
Falsehood
Vase

83 Rational

Hy Pbtlhp Alder
turn to A sttt ch

Trade

71 T1m1d
72 F1reptace part

Openmg lead • 9

105 Bureau part

107 Stretsand ID
109 Goal

130 Enthustasm

62
63
64
66
67

+KJ1081 2
Vulnerable Both
Dealer North

102 He followed N1xon

103 Unused

54 Gtvers of g1tts

61 Conduct

+42

100 God ol love
101 Shut up

126 Glassily
128 B0910

59

'1'63

97 Thinner
99 Golfer s need

48 Lanaed
49 Sedate
52 Blemosh
56 Dwelling
57 Separated

'I'Qw ~;

• J9; 3

June 29, 1992

43 Pterce

&gt;!&gt;It

t A K 76

. 98 7:&gt;

extended space travel
The 13 -day Spacelab Otght,
NASA's longest shuttle mtsston,
bcg:lll Thun;day and IS due to end
July 8.
Earlier Fnday, astronaut
Lawrence Delucas set ftre to a
ptece of polyurethane foam , 3
mches long and 2 mches m diarn eter
The plasttc foam smoldered
mstde a sealed, flame-reststant
chamber after It was heated etectn cally Sensors tn and around
the foam measured tts tempera turc
More ftre expenments are
scheduled wtth other matenals,
also m sealed chambers The
research ts destgned to enhance
ntght safety and llllpfOVe fue pre-

Answer to Puzzle on

you r pals perspec t1ve
e,pe'tence both success and se tbacks
m you r mHter1at alla1rs today Your pow
ersot acqu1stlton are good but you may
not tully el!.p iOityour opponun rl t€S
GEMINI ~May 21-June 20~ You II be a
sttong l1n1 sher today but your se ll tm posed slo"" star ts mtghl prevent you
tr om accompl1Shtng everyth ng you nad
ent1C1pated dOing

DyMAUREENJOHNSON
Associated Press Writer
LIS BON, Ponugal - The European Comrn unuy , m a draft statement, today called on the Umted
NatiOns to take rnthuuy acuon tf
necessary to secure reltef fltghts to
Sarajevo, the war -stncken Bosman
captuil besteged by Serb forces
The proposal carne after the
Unttcd Nauons set a 48-hour deadlme for Serbs backed by Serbtan·
dornmated Yugoslavta to stop
shelhng the Clly and htnted at usmg
rntlttary forces to protect planned
reltef fltghts.
The draft statement was constdered by the 12 EC leade" who met
today to co nclude thetr two-day
summu A unantrnou s vote IS
rcquored for approval, wht ch was
expected later m the day
The statement also srud the EC
wanLs Serbia expelled from mternauonal orgamzauons a move urged
by Washmgton
F1ghtmg has left more than

SUNDAY PUZZLER

39 Wile ol Zeus

ASTRO-GRAPH

agamst a tree down over the hill that
was making cootaet w1th a ~ve electncal wue It was the groaning of
Hazl1tt that lead Agenore and Tnus
down thehtU. The two came mdirect
contaCt wtth thewtreandwereelectrocuted.
"Boss" Fonuma's gnef was not
yet complete as, one year from the
~te of the Vtctory Parade of 1942,
Aldo Fontana was killed m the North
Afncan carnpatgn. Ida later married
John Cooney and moved to Nash ville, Tenn and Columbus became
an attorney m Coiumbus After
"Boss" retired m 1954, he moved to
Columbus to live w11h hts son It was
there that he died m 1962. He 1s
buned 10 St Joseph Cemetery m
Columbus

Shuttle astronaut mops up chamber

Arrests follow abortion protest
MILWAUKEE (AP)- Pohce
arrested more than 50 anu-aboruon
protesters who lay down or kneeled
m front of an abomon c~mc Satur
day
The demonstrators , many of
them children, ran across a street
toward the cltmc and collapsed at
the feet of police officers lmmg the
entrance. Some tned to crawl
through the officers' legs
Ftfly-one people, mcludmg 15
children, had been arrested by rntd·
rnornmg, satd poliCe Lt Susan
Edman
More than 400 abortion opponents , led by the nauonal group
MtSStonanes to the Prebom , sang
hymns, prayed and marched wtth
Signs outside ll1c butldmg
Nearly 400 cltntc supporters
locked arms oulstde the Summit
Women's Health Organtzauon , the
target of a mass protest a week ago.
to ensure women have access At
least four women had been escort

FonlaDa eventually opened a frwt
stand in the RoedeU bulldmg, where
he rerrwned unull954 when heretired and moved to Columbus
He mamed Ameha Buonamtct
whose family was also m the frUJI
busmess m Gal~pobs. To the umon
were born four children: Columbus,
Ida, Roy and Aldo. Roy was killed
when he was only five He was run
over by the street car m front of the
Mcthodtst Church. Also livmg wtth
FonlaDa was a nephew Agenore
Buonarn1ct. He was tragtcally kiUed
when he and Tuus Robinson tned to
rescue Pohce Officer Hazlitt tn back
of 200 Fourth Avenue. Hazlitt had
been sent to that locauon to mvesugate what ne1ghbors had called llickenng hghts HazltU had bumped up

wv

EC calls for U.N. action, v9ws new sanctions

The Fourth stood aside for 'Victory Parade' in Gallipolis
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - In 1942, Gallipo~s was qwet on the Fourth of
July. It was one of the few times that
residents of the Old French Cuy let
the anniversary of
ll1c s1gnmg of the
Declaraaon of Independence go by
Without fanfare
The pnmary reason was that the
town put all Its
energ1es mto a
V1ctory Parade which was held on
July 9.
Unlike most Galltpohs parades,
the V1ctory Parade fanned up at the
mtersecbon of Thtrd Avenue and
Cedar Street The route followed

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Call Mon-Fn
10 am 3.30 p m
1-800-367-8516

Nurs1ng

INDUSfRIAL SE'J'J'ING
$1,500 SIGN-ON BONUS
AmeriCan Occupahonal HeaHh Management
Inc , a leader 1n on s1te medtcal care, ts seek1ng
nurses to prov1de quality occupational health
care to the retumtng steelworkers at Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp

11 you are an RN wtlh 3· 5 years expenence m

Emergency. ICU or tnduslnat Nursing. and

are look1ng for an excellent career oppor1un1ty

Amencan OccupaiiOnal Health Management can
offer you personal and career sahslactton as an

occupational heallh nurse In addthOn to the
&amp;~gn-on bonus, you will receive an anractNe
salary and compel11tve benel1ts
Oual1f1ed tnd1v 1duals should
send resume to Karen Davis ,
Human Resources Manager ,

AMERICAN OCCUPATIONAL
HEALTH MANAGEMENT,
INC ., 1052 Maple Drive,
Morgantown, WV 26505. An
Equal Opporlumly Employer
Amer&lt;an Clcntpalonai Health M.1nage100n\ lr&lt;:

CAMP AND FISH IN YOUR OWN BACK YARD -AND
WHEN YOU f&lt;RE TIRED OF ROUGHING IT WALK
ACROSS THE PASTURE TO YOUR VERY
COMFORTABLE J BEDROOM 2 BATH RANCH HOME
FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE NICE KITCHEN 2
r.AR r,ARAGE APPRO X ?4 Ar.RFS N•AR r.ITY
CAPTIVATING VIEW- J BEDROOM 2 BATH RANCH
HAS 1800 SO FT LIV ING AREA FAMILY SIZE
KITCHEN HAS NEW DISHWASHER SN ACK BAR
LENNOX HEAT PUMP I ACRE LAWN $60 000
CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - APPRO X 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOM E NICE COUNTRY
SETIING $39.500
845 SECOND AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS - 2 STORY
VICTORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENflY USED AS A4
UNIT RENTA L WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE $48 000

..-

PRIVf&lt;TE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME
INFORMAL FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN AREA.
BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM. 4 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS ONTO DECK ON SECOND
FLOOR FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM.
WOOD BURNER IN FAMILY ROOM 2 CAR GARAGE 7
ACRES $115 000

COUNffiY AT ITS BESTI LUXUHIIJ&lt; 1 1 FI~~:~R~~~~
BRASS AND LEADED GLASS "'"'T • r..'
WINDOWS, ITALIAN TILE IN
STEREO INTERCOM SYSTEM, 8
S 3
BEDROOMS. 2~ BATHS FAMILY ROOM FORMAL
DINING, EQUIPPED KITCHEN. FIREPLACE
EXCEPTIONAL PROPERTY!
AT LAST APLACE TO BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME! 2
ACRE BUILDING SITE IS ON PAVED ROAD HAS
ELECTRIC GAS AND PUBLIC WATER AVAILABLE
CONVENIENT LOCATION. RESTRICTED $11000
RESIDENCE AND MOilLE HOME PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNffiY HOME ON APPROX
23 ACES BACK PORCHES 2 Cf&lt;R GARAGE 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
MOBILE LOTS All PRESENTLY RENTED
EXCELLENT LOCAT ION CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS
25 ACRES -HANNAN TRACt ROAD $15,000
101 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD $29 000

NE~

CONSTRUCTION - 2 ACRE SITB

WOULD YOU UKE A BRAND NEW HOME? BUILDER
WILL BUILD THIS HOME ESPECIALLY FOR YOU ON 2
ACRE SI TE CALL US FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO VIEW
BUILDING SITE AND HOME PLANS

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

Page-D4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
Help Wanted

11
CNI..

Ship

Job•

Help Wanted

11

11

Hlrlng-

12000/mo. Summer/yNr rouna.
Bartenct.r.l Ca1lno Workara/
Gift Shop' Sllell Tour Guides/
Me. Free traveL Hawaii/ C.nbt.an/ S.hamn/ Europe. No
hp. ........ry. 1-206-136-7000

E1t. 1117N2. Refundable Fu.

O...lllc Ttchnlcien: Challenging
And Rewarding Posllion Aa

Pan-Time

Clinical Diet Ttch·
nk:lan In Long lern Cart. Duties
lnelucM: Developing Nutritional
IIMIIments And Care Plans.
Some Trnel May Be Required .
PoUwliYII For Full-Time. Apply In
Perton Ot Send Resume To :
Scenle Hills Nursing Center, 311
Bud! Ridge Road, liidwell, OH

454114.

Help Wanted

11

PARK RANGERS

WANTED: Full time oHice worker to work In
a utility office In Meigs County. All phases of
secretarial skills will ba required; some form
of accounting degree Is a must. Pay Is negotiable, full benefits package Is oHered. You
must have office experience, Computer
skills will be required also. Lifetime employment a possibility, If the right parson Is
found. Please reply to The Dally Sentinel,
box 7290.

11

Help Wanted

Rio Grande Police O.partment
Is Accepting Applications For
Par1 -lime Help. Apph~tion s
~ay Be Picked Up From 9-3
Monday 'Tnru Friday, At lhe Rio
Grande Municipal Build ing.

Game
'Wardens,
Security
Mainlenanca, Etc . No Exp.
Necessary For Into Ca ll 219-7ti9-6649 Ert. 8710 9 A.M. To g
P_M_7 Days

wv

June 28, 1992

Help Wanted

Stale Approved Nursing Assis tants_: For A Reward!~ Job At a
Oua l!ty Nursing Feclhty, Please
Stop By For Appli cations At ·
Scenic Hi lls Nvrsif19 Canter, 3_11
Buckridge Roa d, Bidwell, Oh1o
Or Calllit4-446-71SO

11

Help Wanted

WE ' LL PAY YOU lo lyJM Namas
•nd Addresses From Home !
$500.00 P111r 1000. Call 1-900-8961666 ($1.49 Min118yrs.• ) Or
W rite: PASSE • 339, t61 S. Un coln wa~ , N. Au ron, IL 80542

18

Business
· Training

14

Bandt wanl.cl, accepting audiUon llplll etlar 4:00 PM. Arnle'l
Spotts LAunga, Gallipolis Ferry,

Ralr alfl
Now!! !Southeutern
Buslntst Co llega , Spring Veil eX
Plaza. Ca ll Today, 614-446-4367 .1
Reglstera!lon 190-0S- 12748

3114.f7W78G.
CRUISE SHIP JOBS

Hiring
-12,000/Mo.
Summer
!Year
Round. Bartenders /Casino
W~en /Gift Shop Sales !Tour
Guldn !Eic. Fret Traval. Hawaii
/Caribbean /&amp;.hamal rE~o~rope.
No hp. NeceiSII')'. 1·206·7307000 ErUSIHN2 . Rtlundable

'MORE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
'HIGHER PAY
'MORE SECURITY

lledlcaii:Y Trained Persons with

••c
..n1punclut1 lkllls to compMile tnaurance enms tor national paramedical firm In your
aru.. Apptcant m~o~st lab pride
· In their rtlilblllly • skills , hive
an tfficltnl ear, snjoy flexible
~~ I dnlrt to urn part time
Income. S.nd l'landwrltlen reply
to ASB Mtdltut, Rt. 3, Bo• 229,

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

' Night Managw: Fast Food Res·
- tauranl, bparllmCI Prelerred,
· Full· Time, lnaurance Available ,
· Send Rnume To : CLA 225, c/o
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third Annue, Gallipolis , OH
45631.

Registered
NurH NHdld lo provid• In
horne personal ea,... AIIIS!I·
and planning tor adult
ptychiatr6c paU•nt1. Not to el eeed 17 t'lratwk. Salary negotiable . WV IQnH required .
PrH18fl C.nte~- 213 Valley
Oriwe, Point 1-'teasanl, Wll
ZS550. 304-675-2361. AA-EOE

mem

Overbrook Ce nler, lhe areas newes l and linast
Sk1lled Nursing Fac1lity, curren lly ha s employment
opporlunit1es l or CERTIFI ED OR TR AINED
NURSING ASS ISTANT S
Come l or a vis 1t , talk Ia us abou! you r experience. and we will ta lk to you ab o ut our wage an d
benel it prog ra m wh 1ch be gms at $4 60 per hour
PLUS experience com pensatiOn offe red in what is
truly a 'S l ate 01 The Art "' Nursmg Facility. II you

are intere sted

SALE ... Otfers 3 bedrooms , 2 baths. hea t pump
beauttlul wood floo rs tn 1t.-1ng room and k1tchen
1 4 acres more or les s GIIY schools and lois
more aw 'ners would Ill&lt;. ~ an o Her
$79,500

ranch home with la rge great room, form al dtntng
room and tull~ equtpped knchen Other leatures

LOCATION. Outstanding pdtential on thi s drive
thru carry out Great location along St Rt 35_3

Include a fenced back ~a rd and ove rs1 zed 2 car
#509
garage Priced at $54 .900

bedroom resu:ie nce included in sa le Lots ot road
frontage Will inclu de inventory and equipment

Aegltltttd Nums: If Interested
A Polll1km To Utilize Both

CUrdcal And AsNsamenl Sk.ills,
PINN Stop By : Scenic Hills
Nursing Canter. This Quality
Nursing C.nter 11 Located AI'
:111 BI.ICkridge Road, Bidwell,
Or Call 614--446·1150.

DON'T SETTLE FOR A HOUSE JUST TO UVE
IN ... From the moment you step into the large
fo~er ~ou can · teet· your

family living in th1 s

classtc Formal llvtng room , dtn1ng 1oom . sunnf
k1tchen . very hvable tamtl~ room . 3 ntce bed·
rooms plus 2 full barhs Storage galore tn lhe

230 ACRE DAIRY FARM - O'Jer 100 acres of !ti lable ground , 70 acres ot pastu re. 2 barn s, dairy hou se
and milkmg equipmenl . several othe r butldtng mclud 1ng a 3 bedroom ranch with fu ll basement and a 2
bed roo m renta l property. 1 pond . 1 m1le o tt R1 7 tn Me1g s County on a blacl&lt;.top road
$179 .000
•233

large attic. 1 car garage . lull ba sement It thai's
not enoug h . 1n town conventence
lt609

21

Business
Opportunity

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

HERE'S A DEAL! ! Buy belore July 14 , and
Sellers wt!l pa~ $1 ,000 towards you r hnanCing
points Thts very n1 ce 3 bedroom home really
needs no 1ncentiii{IS to sell . bu t the owners want
It SOLD I Located 1n Pleasan t Valley EstatA~. thts
home has a new roo! . now furnace/cen tr a l atr ,

A NICE STARTER HOME OR .... A quiet place to
re t1re 9 74 acres ol la nd , 3 bedroom home w1th
l&lt;1 rge ntcc ly decorated kt tchen, 2 car unan&lt;~ched
ga rage .

2 ce 11tng fans .

lenc; tng a round most of

land &amp; mo re Pn ced to sell.

#710

at $5990011

~27-tiONLY

Waltr... mu11 be experienced,
apply In person Muon Family

Ant, Mason, WV.

WOLFF TANNIN G BEDS
New Commer cial , Home Units ,
From $199.00_ l amps, LDhons ,
Accassor ies. Monthly Payments
Low As $16.00. Call Today FREE
NEW Co lO!' Cat alog HJ01).226·
6292

297 Kelley Or., Gallipolis, Ohio
45ti31, lelaphone 614 -446 -3385,
Price: $52,000.00 _ Living Room.
3 Btdrooms , Fam il y Room, 1
And 1!'2 Bathroom s, 1 Ca r
Guage, Brick Front Witn Ceda r
Siding .
All elec, 3 bed room , 2 baths.
dining
roo m, great
room .
calhedral c• 1llng. ell c cond , Ap·
pte Grove near Goodyear plan! ,

Must sell Ia settle estate , 2
houses, 512 First St &amp; 12 Walnut ,
botF'I tor $17,500. Three cemetary
tots, l&lt;lrland M•morlat Gardens,

Wanted eomeone to lear down
Old hou.. tot' material , 304-675-

XI•G

J04~7S.1708 .

Happy Ads

AFFORDABLE BRICK RANCH • Very nocc 3
bedroom home o tte rs much more than mo st a1
this pnce. Large living room with fireplace . tormal

Lordy, Lordy
Dunay Boy is forty

He's far away
Bit we wish him joy
Oa this special

birthday.
Kappy Birthday, Dan
From the old
folks at home.

Thursday, July 2nd, 1992
At 7:00P.M.
Consignments accepted Thursday
Noon til 5 p.m.

Isaac's Auction House
Mike
Leve wift, kids
&amp;I

Happy
Birthday

35?
Dad, Ang1e , Sa brina ,
Charlene, J e remy

Jackson St., Vinton, Ohio
Sat. July 4th
There will not be a Antique &amp;
Collectible Sale.
Our monthly Antique &amp;
Collectible Auction will be
July 11th, 7 p.m.
There will be some music
the 4th of July from
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
For Information:
Call Auctioneer: Finis (Ike) Isaac
388·9370 or 388·8880
Lie. &amp; Bonded

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-LETS
OCTAVE
LASTLY
NEPHEW
LIZARD
DIFFER
RELATE
SILVERWARE

dining room with china cab1net . eal -tn kt tc hen ,
d en, plus tull ba semen t w1th tnm1ly room ~nd rec
room Very prtvate backyard w tth tn -g round pool
and la rge pat10 2 car garage. gas heal and
cen tra l a1r Newer root Pnccd to mo.-o qu1cl&lt;.l~ at

.

'11

$79 900

. 709

and front &amp; rear docks for relaxing and enjoying
the qu1et. almo st country atmosphere . Call loday

OWNER SAYS, " MAKE AN OFFER!"' FOR

' · l-8

The man kepi waving al the new
waitress who was standrng across
the room . She waved back lh1nk1ng
fhe man was rust b e 1ng lriendly.
Finally the man approached her and

asked, "Would you give us some SIL.
VERWARE ?"

10

see tht s one owner home

Pnce d at $59,500

•512

STARTERS, 11 ha s all ol th e essc ntra ls 1n c!udtng

a ...ery reasonable pnce tag 3 bedroom r a n ch m
a conven 1e nt locatton 1ncludes livtng room . tam

RIO CENTE R EST AT·ES -. Butld your homo
:1mong lhe tr e-e s on one olthe.sc scm •-secluded

dy roo m. ea.Hn k1tchen and ba th Nowc r G1rpe11n
n osl room s Heal pump w11h cP.n tral aH La rge

lo :s t mile we st ol R1o G raf'Kie Lo ts range m stze
! ro m 2 S Jere s to 5 acre s Rcstnchve co .-cnants

!Ia ! lot w11hn1

2 rrul ns

o! town Pr1 ced at $4 2, 000
~500

l o r you r prot ~11 0n Pnces ra nge from $6,500 lo r
2 5 acre s1ze lo $ 10 300 tor sele ct5 acre parcel
C ounty w.11cr ."IV.1II.'! Die Call us lor more 1ntorma ·
l iOn

1 237

BEST UTILE RANCH AROUND · Take a look
and you'll be sold on thr s spotle ss 3 bedroom . 1

NO AUCTION SATURDAY,
JULY 4th
Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer
614·245·5152
Lie. 3516 and bonded.

whou Forty!
Happy Birthday,

SERENE SURROUNDINGS The road ends here
at thts 3 bedro om ranch with large family room

112 bath bnc k w11h one car anached garage No!
ta r I! om town on a dead e nd slf ee!

The pr tce JUS!
•502

$ 48.500

AFFORDABLE HOME IN GREEN TOWNSHIP !
IF YOU WANT COUNTRY .... 139 acres w'th

P 1c 1ure yours e lf 1n th1 s 3 bedroom ranch located
1n a bm1ly onented ne1ghborhood th at your ~~.ids

lrwt tree s. grape &amp; berry Ytne s and an updatod 4
bP.droo rn house Puacetul and qu 1e1 and aHord
able pr1ced at $47,500

DOE S A LARGE LIVING ROOM w1lh

.1 ~ 1 onr

I1H pi.1CC &lt;,p,y_ , o~ws ~ll ch r)n . l ull basemen t suurd
0 00 0 ? W ro d ~o w e have tt1c hom e tor 11 0u
L or :11.--.d •ust r'l.nu tcs !rom town Yo u will il lso gP t
c •·n tr.! l.l tr ', 1 m1 lin ed ced m close ts e ~t r .'l lrlr!J"
· 111111 y room .1n d all al a .-cry a l tord!lbll' pr1cc
~ .t~) CIOO C,111 lor you r showtng l o d &lt;~ y 1
# /04

WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORDAB LE PR ICE ?
!h al you can move nght 1nto? Then yo u ncr.d lo
I&lt;J ke a loo ~. al th1 s beauty

Large ltv 1ng!dm1ng
room corn btnallo n , ntce k ttchcn w1th lau ndry
;:m!a

willie-vet You wlillik o the con...enren ce to shop-

#30 1

ptng . ho sptta l . e tc H ome oilers formal hv1 ng
room, !am dy room. lflrge ca l tn k1td1en, 1 1/2
VERY PRIVATE &amp; WOODED! Perfe ct se tttng to
en 1oy 1hts newly cor1 struc1ed log horn e Largr.
tronl porc h to er110 Y coo l sumrn et brcc zAs . a ;
uacove woodburne r and he&lt;H1h to warm your

lo w 1 n h ~r ro. t r.'lW s and ~ou ca n tul!t ll your home
CJ .,..'l~ ; r' s dr eam

$29 .900

#6 13

~ 0 ACRE FARM GUY AN

TOWNSHIP- Wrlls

Run Roa d &amp; St Rt 2 18 Beaut1lul home Sttr 16
1 .1cres !1ilab le 65 acres lenced Appro x 2.000

a

lb!&gt; to bacco ba se M1nera l ngh ts

Some

11 mbC'r

1 5 17

85 ACRE FARM ALONG RACCOON CREEK
Co mp lm e w1 lt1 2 barns , 2 p o nd s a nd a very nt ce
brt c ~ ho me

Compr1scd mostly o! prl!'. lurf! and
tillrlble .'lcreage There's a 2.000 lb to bii cco
ba se and good spr 1ng 3 bodroom r,ome 'N1!h lu ll
ba se ment and 1 car garage E•tra 2 em de
tached garag e also Ou1et a rea 1n Green Sct ·. uo ls
$120000

car gnrage Ca ll tod.-;y to O'tew tht s

•n2

AFFORDABILITY AT ITS BEST! O.Jistanding
h ome afld vtew a1 an at1o rd ab le prrce Low matn -

sq It ol comlorta blo lt.-mg space 1ncludrf19 3
bedr ooms (room for 4th ). ve ry attra cttve co untry

renance bnck &amp; v1nyl home fP.atunng

J bOO -

room w11h ptne cet l1ng. newly ftn·

r o om s. 2 bath s. ltvmg room . dmmg room . lamtly
room and large kttchen It that' s nol enough , add

tshed fam tly roo m and 2 1/2 bath s La rge 2 car
g arJge w1th ov erh ead storage Appro x 5 year~

a n.-er 1/\ew. 2 car garage and satellite dish You
c an't pa ss th ts up at on ly $49 .900
1618

k1tch en .

11.-mg

o ld $89.900

, 2 11

WHERE GRANDMA USED TO LIVE!! Cle an 1
1/2 story home along Route 7 oHc rs tots o l
charm 3 hedroom s, t1rcp lace. dtn1n g room and
full ba semen t aro JUS! som e ot thP te a!uros 1 66
acres mcludes 2 car ga rag e and ba rn New g&lt;'ls
lu rna ce In stalled re cently a lso Bcau11lul nver
l"u~ w to en 1o y from the shade at the m.w lc trees
Pr 1cvd .1t $5 9.500

01Jts tandtng ba rn tor 1obacco ca tt le ho rses
som e bay s w11hooncrele Concrete drtvP. thr ough

Goo d water supply' $60.000

•=•

2

sou l on th os r. cool w1 n\cr n1gh ts App10 x 2,300

3 be dr oom s and 2 bath s Newly patn ted

ce •l1 ngc, &amp; r xtc nor Combtne th iS low pr1ce W1th

bath s and

NO MAYBE'S . NOT EVEN PROBABLY. Undoub1edly the Bes t Co untry Vtew aroufld PE R IOD! Every limo ~ou dnve tht s st retch o t road ,
you m&lt;lrve l a t how beaut1ful and well kept the
am~ ts lmag 1ne own1 ng nearly 7 acres. perched
on a kn oll , o verlooking the Bob Evans Farm at

A 1o Grande! What a pleas ur e t1 w ould be to wake

up each morntng EnJOY watchmg !he horses and
c anle graze EnJOy

an

outstand 1ng sunset every

evon tng Older 2 bedroom home and pond to e lude d Fence d Call Dave l or m ore 1nlormat10n

• 209
HAMBURGER BUDGET? STEAK TASTE?
Tllefl tht s 3 bed room ranch beauty tS lo r yo u
Large ltVIIl g room wllh l1 replece, den,large f a m tly
room o r dtntng room . nu::o k1tchon . 20 )C 40
1nground pool . large barn . storage galore plus

6 190 acre s. mil You wt ll not !1nd more lor your
money Pnced a t

$69.000

# 6 1?

EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL BUSINESS •
G reat potenttallor m ost an y rype ol bu siness
T ht s 3,112 sq It building most rece n ~ ~ brought
tn $500 00 per month 2 bedroom apartme nt
overhead Butlding could be transformed into
res100nua tpro pcrty .-ory eas 1ly Pncedat$80.000
Run a bu srn es s below and liv e upstJtrs 11 2 10

" 202

WE HAVE SOLD. SOLD. SOLDIII

WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!!!
RFAL F5 Iru'E 1I'C
446-!£44
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446·9555
Carolyn Wasch- 441·1007
Lorena McDade - 446-n29
Sonny Garnes - 446·2707
B. J. Hairston - 446-4240

;( br City Sc hools, SJ~OtMo. Plus
Ul ililies. Ralera nc e And Oaposit
614-446-4447.
Bri ck, 2 bedr oom bes ide Post
Ottica Henderson, WV. 304-6753331, 8:00-5:00, $275. moflth
piiJ S $1 50. dopos1!.

2 bedroom tr ailer, $l7Si mo plus

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hillorical Area Corner lot · 816
Main 51. Pt . Pleasanl , W. \Ia .
Completely Ranovaled : 2 Full
Baths, 3 large Bedrooms, New
HVAC , Naw Carpel. Available
June 15 &amp;14·446-2205.

11 7 12

2 houses Lewis S1, PI Pit, 304675-2691 or 675-5709

Vending Route : Local. We Have
Thl Newest Machines, Malt:ing A
Nice Sleady Cash Income 1·
900-653-8363.

304-516·2809.

new stdlng and tS newly redecora ted Gre at bu~

41 Houses tor Rent

Nice effic iency cottage, unique
and beau11lul, J04 -6 7S&lt;o0 42

31 Homes tor Sale

PRICE REDUCED $2 .000!!! Remodeled 2·3
bedroom home located one mtle tram town ts
ready to move tnto New furnace , new roo!. new
ca rpel and much mo re Larg e tlatlot Ctty schools
Pnced at $36.000. tt's easy to atford 1
lt215

Rentals

Restaurant Equipment Taylor
Soh Serve Freeze,_; 2 Door
Freezer; Step-In Cooltr; Ice Ma chi ne ; Display Freezer ; lable.
And Chairs, Misc. Eqllipment
6t4-245-9033.

Real Estate

omc.,

5

Financial

!NOTICP
OHIO IJAlLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do businau with people y01.1 k no w, and
NOT lo aend money thf ough the
mall unlit you ha'le in'I&amp;SI Iga1ed
the ohr ing

OVERBROOK CENTER

Taking 1ppUcaUons !Of certllled
nur~Jng uslttant at the Chamber of ComrMreeiEconomlc
On.
:105 Main 51. Wid
Juty 1 from 1 :DO PW 1111 !!:00 PM
Apply In penon wlcertilicalion
&amp; kltntlfk:atfon. PIHH direct
Dhone calls to Rodney Ball 11
kiMBERlY QUALITY CARE . 1-

Nice mobile home space avail able, call Mu , 1-600-837-3238

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
vlililles, 614-99 2·3257.

2 bedroom , AC, washer -dryer
mo
plus
lumlshed ,
$200
utilities, rei &amp; dep , 304-6754674.
2 BR fu rnished or unfurnished .
Ca ble, air_ Ourlooking Ohio
Ri'ler, Kanauga . Clean &amp; quud
Foster 's Mobile Home park. 614446-1602.
Housel rai ler lor rani, SR 143 in
Ohio, 304-882 -2904
Nice 2br, Mobile Homa, 8 Miles
Down Stale Route 218, Reterenc•s &amp; Deposit ReqUired, 61425Hi251.

44

Apartment
tor Rent

I bedroom apl , QoOd location ,
t01 S11lh &amp; Ma m S! Newl y
remodeled with new •ppliances
Utilities not Included, deposit
required, )04-&amp;75 -71]1 or 67S5936

R1 . 1&amp;0 Norti'l, 3 BR, like r~ew
coflditlon, $38,000_ Call lor appo intment 6M -3S8-911!i ot 388·

,,,

3 room house hJII basement , Lol
601150 , Camden Ave. IH ,OOO.
304~75-771"t lea'le message

Sma ll1 BR. apt. 7 Court St., Gallipol is. Kitchen with stove,
refrigerator, S195 Jmo ., utilities,
deposil , referencss. No Pet s.
614-446-4926

Wa sher And Dryer $17.68 Waek. ,
Bunk Bed Complate. $6 29
Week, 4 Drawer Chest $312
Week , Rec liner $5 24 Week ,
Sola And Cha1r $10 l8 Weelo.

.,. . L 1

~~
ll.1l

PICKE NS FURNITURE
NewiUud
Household furn ishing 112 mi
Jerricho Rd . Pl. Pl easant , wv.
ca ll 304-675-1450.

f

Good Used Relrigerator
Sa lt, SlOO. 614446-1,-56.

Air Conditioners, Relrigeralors,
Orytr &amp; Washer, Color T.V.,
Microwave, 614-256 ·1 238.
Mahogany twin bed•, complete,
tih new, »4-675-2019.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNtlURE li2
Oli'le St ., Gallipolis . New &amp; Used
furnil v re, ha aters, We stern &amp;
Work boots . li14 -446-3! 59

52 Sporting Goods
Wincheslar Modal 97 S h ot~ un ,
0~ Military Gun, VG C, Seri ous
Inquiries Only. 6t4-24S-S82l.

K"P Trying We're In And Cui
A.IOI, 0t Slop By AI : 2310
Eo~s lern
Avenue
lOa m lCJ

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
~Ft. Ca~~t-lron, White Pon:-'ain
Bathtub, 2 DroJ&gt;In L.a•alories
Wltl'l Fixturee And Count..-. 114446-8263 P.M

bk:yele, hand
condition , 16C

10p.m

53

&amp; Plastic Septic
Aerallon lanka . Ron
E'lans Enterprises. Jackson, 01-'
1-800-537-9528 .
,

Antiques

Buy Of sell . Ri'lerine Antiques ,
1124 E. Main Street , Pomeroy.
Hours : M.T.W. 10:00 a.m to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6 00 p m
!i14·9Y2 -2526

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 lot hardboa rd siding, ~iflyl
Siding , wrought 1r011, Drown
carpel ,
shutters ,
totdin~
stairway, tr~.~ek tool bo• . 40 '
mower lor Gravely, )04 -675 -

4004
1987 Original Wolf! Tanning
Bed, 20 Lamps, 30 Min . Digital
Timer, Safe Key Lock S~ tem
Home Or Comm Gr cial Usu. EJ ·
ce lle nl
Condi tion
Asking ·
$4 ,000 . II YoiJ Use The Best ,
This Tanmng Bed Is For You
For More Informa tion Call 614 ·
446-8922

:ro,ooo BTU Westinghous.
Heavy 01.1ty Air Condi t ioner, E• ·
ce!lent Cond 1hofl, $200 No
Checks 614-446-4922
5 Piece Living Room Suite ,
Rocking Chair , Wood Frame
W11h C'u9hions. $150 . 614-256 1306

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

D. C. IIIII s.lu, lie.
Camelbu19, Inc. 45719
Spooalimg n Pole
Bund1ngs.

DesiQned to meet your
needs. My size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundrnds, even Thoosands

ol

Dolla~ .

Local Sales Representative
DONNA CRISENBERY
11366S.SLRL7
Gallipolis, OH.
PH. 614-256-1633

Real Estate General

BLACKBURN REALTY

Furnished
Rooms

FIJII House Pr ivaleges $150/Mo.
Inclu ding Utilities, Plu s Deposit
614-361-700t.
Rooms for rent - week. or monlh.
S!arting at St201mo. Gall i a Hotel.
614-446-9580.

.( ;~dlij~,di&lt;&gt;, &lt; &gt;h11l

Sleepln!l rooms with cooking.
Also trailer space. All hook -ups.
Call aner 2:00 p m , 304 -77J S651, Mason WV.

PIHJill' ( (ll I )

46 Space for Rent
Country Moblla Home Park, Rt.
JlN ., under new managem•nt .
Lois , $85 ; home renl als , $235 ;
614-992-2167

I Vl~

I

i I(J - ()()()H

ltlllll','

Retail Or 0 11ice Spaca AYai lable.
l afayelle Mall. et4-446 -4222

47

Wanted to Rent

\
Merchandise
51

2 BR apartments in Middleport,
newly remodeled , low u1il11ias,
no pets, $220 per month,
deposit r!H11Jired , 614 -992-2381
day s

3 Piece Bedroom Svita, $100.
614·256· t657.

For

Wedge Apls, 506 Burdalle 51,
Point Pleasant, no pets, 1 end 2
bedrooms, J04-675-20n attar
5:00.

2 Rooms &amp; Sath, Downstairs,
Claan,
No
Pats ,
Quiet,
Reference And Deposit Requ ired . 614-446-1519
2 Bltdrooms, Upst airs Apartment, Unlvrnisl\ed, No Pels.
li14-441i-2583

Household
Goods

51

GOOD
USED
APPLIAN CES
Washer&amp; , dryers, refrigerators ,
ranges . Skagg!l Appli ances, 7ti
Vine Street , Call 614-446-7398, l ·
800-499-3499 .

Small lurnlsh9d el11ency apt,
private, ex1ra nice, good loca tion _304..{;75 -2083 or 675-6689

45

Ilon Av 11lablt Also . ti14-446-182:il

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Comple te home lumist1mgs
Hours . Man-Sa t , 9-!i 614 -4460322, 3 miles ovt Bu la'lille Ad
Free Dalivtry

Household
Goods
Dfle bedr_oom ept, lg living
room , ut llniea paid, $250 . mo,
304-li75-3968.

New Shipmen! Same Prlcee
New SKS Rll~s . Wl1t1 Ace...
SOfin, $115. Jennings All Stnl
330 Pislol s, New $105 . AmmiKII-

CASH
AND
CARAV
Relrigeralors Start ing At $399
Rec liners $149, 2x6 Bunk Bed s.
$99, Dinatta S.t With 4 Padded
Chairs $129 . OPEN Monday
Thru Saturday iA. .M To 6P.M.
Closed On Sunday. LOCATED : 4
Mil ts Off Route 7 On Route t41,
In Centenary, 114 Mile On lincoln Pike.

2 bedroom
tn
Middlepor1,
$200/mo., 614 -992 -6637.

...._ 3 bedroom housa, lull
basement, all eJec, cily wralar.
Mit acre land In Pt. Pn _$40,000
Wrlla PO Box 369 , Pt . P11asan1 .
WV 25550; giving nama , ad dress and phone no.
Hk:a3 bedroom uctlonal Mom e.
2 bsths, dining, liv!ng room &amp;
ltmlly room wltlrap)ace . 1.9
acru, may consider lrad• lor
larm or acreage, Somenrille
R•ally, 304 -lir&amp;-3030 Of 67S-3431.

Alii' Yw Fo\ilil~ IT

I)IDN'T ~001&lt; il~ 1H1~
~~~GNYIIII1oo~ IT OfF?

Furn ished Apt l bt, $235/Mo
Ultlit ies Paid, 607 Second
A'lanue, Gallipolis . 614 -446-4416
Arter 7p.m.
Graciou• living. 1 and 2 bed room apartments 11 VIllage
Manor
and
Rlverslae
Apar1menll In Middleport . From
$t96 . Cal1614·992-7787. EOH.

52 Sporting Goods

VI'RA FURNilUAE
614-446·3156
Rent -2-0wn

Clean unfurnished 2BR apts ,
no pets , New Ha'len, W'V, Mid dlepor1 , Ohio, trae heat , li t4 -992Oe luu tb r, 2 Car Garage , CA ,
First Ave , Ga llipol ia, S2851Mo.,
O.posi1 &amp; Retarences, 614 -256t529

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Page-05

Household
Goods

51

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICE S AT JACKSON
ESTATES, ~36 Jack.soo P1ke
!rom $192/mo Walk to ahop &amp;
movies_ Ca ll 614-446 -2568 EOH

land Fo r Sale: Porler Are a &amp;
lower River Road, On Land
Contra ct . 614 -1117-3044

VI9W or call us al (614 ) 992-6472. and lei us show

Oh..,

Thre e 2BR apartment and
1500h . commercia l space, could
e~ s 1ly b8 4BR, 2 bath houu
WHh apartment and commercia l
.
614-992-7481

Miss Pavia 's Day Care Ce nter
Sate , attordable. ch•tdcare M-F
6 a.m. · 5 .JO p_m Ages 21?- 10
Bet ore, alter sc hoo l Orop· 1n s
welcoma lit4 -446-6224 New In·
!ani Toddler Care, 614·44 6 ~24'7

a par1 ol a responstve ·
canng team of professton als , sto p by tor an tnl e r -

EO f

Thousand s On Stnl
BU1Id1ng s Factory D1scoun1s
Oepo&amp;ll For1eits, Odds &amp; Ends:
1,200 To 18 ,()()0 Sq. Ft . Will
O&amp;ll'ltr a~.~anttti&amp; S Limited . Bob
614 -44&amp;-012 t

7&lt;81 .

1n becom1ng

333 Page S1reet. MiddlepM. Ohoo 457 60

s .a ...e

2bdrm apts ., tO(el el ectric , ap·
plianc..
turnlshtd , 1a1mdry
room tacllitles , cioN to s~::llool
In town _ Application• available
at : Vlllagt Grettfl Apt.s. 149 or
call614-992-3711. EOI-i .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

.5 13

•706

KIT 'N ' CARLYLE([ b) L.rry Wright

Apartment
tor Rent

Lawn Mowing , &amp; Odd Job s
Reasonable . 614-4~6·1859

SELECT THIS SPOTLESS 3 bedroom , 2 bath

DOGWOOD

Business
Buildings

34

Wi ll care tor the elderly in their
i'lomt, send Inquires Ia p_ 0
Bo1 312, Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

you that all nurs 1ng homes are not alike .
In

Georges Portable S.aw~~~~o6 1
haul your tog s to th e m1ll jvst

Interior, llllt"r•or &amp; root pa 1 ~ 1 ng
wasn down house &amp; Ira !let$ l:l
Vfl experience , free eStim ates
references, l04 -6l5 ·270B

"Special Care for People Who
Are Spec1alto You"

Ripley, WV 2521'1.

614-245-5887

Have care_ in m~ homo lor Invalid , Ra cme area. expelienced
care. nasonab ta, 614 - 9~9 · 2381

The Adult Education Center
Tri-County Vocational School
Call 1-800..637-6508

F•.

ced In Play Area _ Aeterenc es
Rodner A1e a Call
Ava1labte

ca ll3 04 - 675 - 1~57

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
BROADEN YOUR HORIZONS
ADD WELDING TO YOUR CURRENT
SKILLS!

Wanted to Do

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

W1ll Babysil In My Home Fen-

Ea.y Work! E:.eellent Pay ! AsMmble Products AI Home. Call
Toll F,_, 1-800~67· 5566 , E.1t.
313.

June 28, 1992

Household
Goods

Big S.vlnga On All \linyl &amp; Carpet In Stock. $5.00 Up . Mollohan
hmllvre, 614-446-7444 .

MIS.~
GIVE US ACALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN SELLING YOUR HOME.

Real Estate General

71/ood 1\fa{ty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446·1066
Allen C. Wood, Reahor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446-0971
Mooe Conlerbury, Reallor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Reallor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor - 446-2027

WINDSOR STREET, Plant Subdivision - 3
SA ranch Wlth 1/, baths. kitchen , LR, full base-

KARA STREET, 2 437 A Mil. ranch otyle
home offe r s 3 BRs, 2 bath s, LR. kttchen , HP

ment wloulstde entrance. gas heat.

a nachOO &amp; unattached garago

Two Story White Frame , 3 Br , All
Appllatlces , Mulberry Stree t.
Chuh ire , 614-31i7-nJ7.

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
t2• 1i5 On 1.62~ Acres, Addison
Pl kt, Newly Ramodellld , Total
EJ.ctric, $16,500, Negotionable,
614-446 -3088 Altar Gp.m.

home omus "'
•
move tn riglt away.

·

1969 Shullz mobile home, 12160,
2 badrooms. 9J.12 porch, underpenning•. 2 AJC , e1e cond , 304812-2611

1864. SEClUSK&gt;M-11 you

19SS Wind so r Mobile Home,
14175 Completely Furn ished,
Like New, Wtlh 40Ft. Patio
Located
Johnaons
Mobile
Home Park. 304-... l-4356
t986
14 15.2
Forrul
Pari&lt;.
mobllet1ome, 2 porches and un dtrplnnlng,
$9500,
080
LOcaiMI in Pomeroy Mike Oh lirtgtf, Albany . 614-698-41g2 .
1989 Redman l4 X 10', 2 bed rctOm, 2 bath, large clos•t&amp;,
ctn!fal air, gu appliances , el cepl electric hot water , 614-992S802 art•r 5pm or Jane m...
sage al 614-667-68n .
t9g,
Indies
House ,
2x64,
Electric, 4br, 2 BalM , 1990
Friendship 28170 4br, 2·112
Balhs, 614-446-96&amp;2.
Available July ,st. 't h7'0 3br
Mobile Home, On 3 Ac:rn , 8
Mlln From Town On 218. Wilt
COnsider L11ld Contra ct For
Appointment : 114-JIIB-9946.
Ntw lx8 bam typa bldg $400.
t978 Regent, all electric, 3 bedNOms, undtrpennlng, 8xl6 fl
deck, 304-t7U413.

1819. MOBILE HOME JUSt at !hQ 8dQe of town
Situated on _56 acre wtltl a laf99 block garage.

BRs. bath, large carpet . Well kept .
want to

JUS~ ~at a

war Dy

HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553- 11 rooms, 4 badrnorn s,
? baths , \tving room, dining room, 2 kitchens -one in

!'&gt;

basement : almost

3 acres . lruit trees.

cellar,

garage

and

s1orago build,n g CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEE 11 !

RED u(ID

IN GALUPOLIS - BRICK HOioiE- 3 bad•ooma, livtng
room . ktt chen y • ~ ~rn ipn
baS&amp;ment wttl
slo rBge room .

1 /1 beth , finishec
.lity room . and t

tn-ground ool

anc

a slofll90 buildtng MAKE AN APPOINTMEN T TO SEEII!
1984 DOUBLE WIDE MOBIL£ HOME Only - 24•50.
3 b&amp;drooms, 2 baths FA Elactnc heal PRICED TO
SELL
HOME AND 2 ACRES M or L - 3 bedroom s, 1 ba th ,
l tYing roo m , kitcl'1en, fireplace, and unfintshed
ba seman!. PR ICED AT $36 ,500.

LOCATED ON LINCOLN PIKE - 3 badrnoms. liVing

room. kt! chQn , family room, batt1 . new carpet, slorago
building, ';, acre M or l. CALL TO SEE!'
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Locaiod on Rt 1
(E u reka ) , JO'x36' b lock building with storage t.n
basement. 70 II . fro ntage on Rt. 7. Lot runs to Ohto
Rtver. Was used as convenient mart. DRA STI CA LLY

REDUCED . NOW ONLY $34.900.00
FOR SALE - 40 a cre farm located 8 miles on State
Route !41 on Lin coln Pike. The hom&amp; h11 7 rooms
an d bath . There is a bam and other outbuildings. Also
a farm pond and tobacco baae

LOCATED IN GALUPOUS - Vino S1root - 4 rllflial
units, good inc ome property

Ca ll

for

minutes from

town.

MINI FARM ... You want a farm with B very ntce
ol de r home. this one has b9en nrcely remo deled . 3 BRs . LA . kitchen,. barh, large OOck,
garden s. frutt trees . bernes . approx . 50 a
wooded- Call Rut:h for deta tls
the edge o f tow_
n . Thts ho me leatur~s. 3
bedroom s, bath , livtng room , kttchen , dtntng
room and a lull basement. Five minutes to
downto wn

$203 . OHIO TOWNSHIP - 53 h acres, mora o r
less . \lgry n1C8 ranch sty~ ho m~ o fla rs 3 or 4
bedr ooms . L R, kitchen . bath . full basement.
c arpet deck. garage, stding . Tobacco base and
tobacco bam . Additional land.

1173. SELLER WANTS TO RELOCATE Nice mtnr farm for the family. 3 BA home
offers 2 baths . LA , DR. lolchen and o ther
extras . Owner says bnng us an otter
2 4'x32' garage

IU3 .• 800 BLOCK SEC. AVENUE - Homo
has a lot to o n9r, 3 BAs. L A , kJtctu;m, DR. unat tacl'1ed

heated

garage

and

workshop

Convenient to shopp1ng

1142. $35,9001! _- WHY PAY RENT? - .Ranch
style home on SA 160, 3 BR s, LR, kJichen,
bath, attached garage, 100x300 lot

a"
1150. CORNE R LOT S - Very nrca home o"ers

3 BAs , bath . tutctum carpet. fire placa. 1 car
detoc hed gara99

t246 PRIVACV SEEKERS LOOK AT nilS
ONE I _ LAI'II" 1oQ homo can be p&lt;~rchasod162 acres of 2 acres Tin home ort.rt 4

BRa,

3 bath s . equtpped kilchen , LA. FA , 2
!\replaces. heal pumlcent. atr {backup sys18m),
overstz9d 2 car aMach9d g&amp;rli!Q9 FronU.ge on
Rao:;oon Creek
1146. OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
TO $33,9001 - Olde r home witf'l lots of
potenttal k&gt;cated tn town JUS! a few blocks from
all stores_ Home o flers LA. DR. kitchen. 1'},
baltls. 3 B~s. gas h&amp;el . lef98 attic

t235 .
LET YOUR IMAGINATION TAKE
OVER with this large home_ Smtated acro11
from GAHS this ho me ofler1 5 BR1, o4 ba1hs,
kttchen . LR , 16J16 FR . II you want extra room
th iS IS the 009 for you .

1697. NICE HOME , EDGE OF TOWN. LOTS
OF POSSIBIUTIES- LR , kilchen. DR. 3 BAs,
ba th , laundry . Pnced lor beginners . Green

School
on S&amp;COnd Ave . walk to slore , ch u rch , school
and shopping. 2 sto ry home offers kitchen, LR ,
DR . FR , 3 BAs. 2 bath s, gas hoot , central aJr

1733 . EXTRA NICE MOBILE HOioiE FOR
SAL£ - "86 Holly Par'&lt; 1072. 2 BRo. LR.
kitchen , OR , central atr and lo ts ol extra
features .

1161. LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - Alii bnd&lt; . 3

amy living, home otters 3 BP:s, LA, eat-in
kttch &amp;n , nK:.e carpet. attached ge.raga .

TO HAVE SOME RENTAL
PROPERTY? This prop•~ is loc ated on

1510. WHITE ROAD - 20 acres , mil , vacant

Lincoln Sl. and otters 2 units. Call tor more
details and price

$20 .000

t578. LARGE FARiol - 386 oc"' mil. 55• 110
bam , 3 ponds. tobacco ba•. Cal for detail a.
t596. KLICKER ROAD - Lo1 oonlalno .824

tank on pro~~-

BAs, LFI , kitchen , bath, full basement, gas
torcad air, altached gaf899. city schools.

land, approx

1 mil e !ro m Charo laiS lake .

INVESTORS - 4-Pl£X lor oele .. good incomo.
eac h unit has 2 BA s, LR. kitchen &amp; barh . CaU
tor monJ tnf ormation

rnn,

1114. S21,000 - Jlots • older home . Bldwel, 3
BAs. ba~. Ll=l. ktid'lan, wortr.shop and garage
1512. 101 ACRES MIL, Guyon Twp ., vocont
land. !pnng on property_ May help finance tJ
quahfiad buyor
OUPL£X FOR SALE...in city, range and rolrigerator tn each unit sta ys, city utilities. Good
invastment property.
1506. 78 acu• mil, Sugar Craak Vacant land,
water tap on property Small bam.

1161. BUILD YOUR OWN BUSINESS HERE

33 Farms for Sale

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Romey Village II. Call

Fairfield Vance Ad . and Wilson Bostic Rd .
Beautiful ptaoe to bulk:\ a home

- Lot app rox 200 w.200 , located on SR 160,
Hanerville are a

61 •ere country t1tate with

for more inlormation .

1264. 2.4 ACRE TRACT - COMMERCIAL

1172. UNCOLN PIKE - WELL KEPT HOME 3 BAt, 1 ~ bath s. equrpped k itchen . LA.

SrTE - L.ocated on Upper At 7 acro11 from the
new shopping cenlar.

t758. PAffiiOT AREA. 0 UI01 nooghbo.t.ood,

1279. 17 .5 A.
Perry Twp , Symmes Creek
bot1om land . some htll , tobacco ba se. S9 .000

1513. 5 ACRE LOTS . Green Towmrllilp,

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

bnc k ranch o tte rs 3 BRs . 2 baths , lR . large
oal-ln krtchen. a!1adled gnrJgA , gas heal , CQtll.

1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THISIII - loca1od

distance to schools and stores . Priced at 516,000.00.

pond. Vinton. Cotonl•l term
house newly mnodetld . 2 large
blml, summ•r houu, garage,
studio, hunting cabin. By owner.
Aganll welcome. Dan Bla ck,
614-388·8210.

35

AREA --Conventa nt lo HM C and shopping,

1662. IN TOWN LOCATION close to pool and
golf . Large 2 car unattached garage . well kept
home o ffers 3 BRs . bath . LA. DR. ktt chen,
move rn rig, I away

acre m~. water tap and septic

HOUSE IN GALLIPOLIS - 3 rnomo and batll, walking

displ ., LR. large bath wllaundry , gas heal .
cent. air. cetltng tan s, large fenced backyard
for tt-.8 Kids or pels.

1154. NICE STARTER HOME -located jusla1

more

inloi1Tiation .

t731 . CALL AND ASK ABOUT ME - l"m a
very ntce home rn town and my owne~ are
offanng ma at a good pri ce . Attractive
ki1chen, dmtng area. OW, o.-en. range ,

tS40. GET cu£V IN FRONT OF TH~
FIREPLACE _ Attractive home offers _3
BAs, bath. kitchen , 12)(2 4 famt!y room Wtth
fireplace and hving roo m wtth fireplace
Situated on ~ . 12 acre, ml1 , approx _ 10

PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES, SR

ci ty utilibes, gas heal and cen t rur

yourself . have a p~vate cookout, walk
B fishing spot or JUSt an,10y natura, then don t let th1s
one get away. 4.5 acres. mil. 3 BAs. bath , LA ,
DR. kttchen, access to boating on AaCC?on
Creek, Oty schools. Call Ruth for more datatls

1974 Duka 1•h&amp;5, 2 Bedrooms,
Furnished, CA, Und•rpinning.
Besl Otter. St~--446-0782

1ga2 Windsor 14x70, 2 bedrooms, CI A, tolal ele c, underpanning, mtg by Zimmer Corp ,
9J20 trealed wood por ch. 8x20
alumn
awning
&amp;
railing
wl scrolls
mig by OurabUIIt ,
14111i ba'r n Slyle bldg, tr8a1ed
wood, everything e1c cond ,
mu st sell Immediately, one
ownar, 304--67S-!i14!i

BAs , LR wlhrepl ace. equtpped k.Jt c hen , full
basement.

$3 3 OOO _ GREAT STARTER HOME localed
naa~ to Wfl or SA 141 , LR . eat -1n kttc 1'1en , 2

Room With Eltpando , Kit chen,
Dining Room, Belh, CA. Total
Windows,
Electrlc,
Storm
Sfl ,500. 614-319-2464

BACKYARD - Very n!Ca all bnck home offers 3

·

14170 axe cond, 3 bedrooms on
prlv.1te acr• , major appJIJnces,
lois ol •JCtras, Appla Grove,
$.14,500. 304-576-2783.

1814 Shultz 65xl4 2br, li'llng

t190. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN

1662 IN TOWN LOCATION closa 10 pool and
II La
2 car unattached garage, well kept
go · 'B" • BRs balh LA OR. ki1chon,

t4x10 1974 Kerwood 3br UndarP'nning $3,500 Good Condi tion
B\JI Needs Some Repa ir. li 14 245 -5679.

attache4

I

, deck , parttal basem&amp;nl .

1675. EXCELlENT INVEITUENT PRO·
PERTY - 4 SAL£ • 3.4 ACRES, MIL. in 1M
City ol Gollipolia. Fronlo on VoniOn Sl , Neal
Avo. &amp; SA 180 (Iormor oilo of U&gt;ck ulo).

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Galll

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel
liiAJDAILY Q~1)

J.'

\J~

PUZZLER

~C.® WORD
l,.:J
'V GAM I

"C

q•

Edited b, CLAY R. P O L L A N , - - - - - - -

0 words
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
below to make 6
simple words. Print letters of
each in ils line of squares.

63

61 Farm Equipment
KUBOTA
Salas, Pa11s, Service
HURST TRACTOR SAlES
28 HP • WO $6995 ; 20 HP. WO
$5,995, Route 7 North, Marlena
6t4-374-4151
New HOlland hay bine, New Hoi·
land supet n1 torag• harvester
Gehl 95 grinder millf. 304-21342tS.

VA C 0 T E
I

I

RILDAZ

I

FRI 0 EF

1-.:_--=~===~=~~~=~:~e~==~9=~-~~~~~:. ;yvould

'

I8

93'7·2018.

I

you g1ve

us

O.'i~

]1)4..

1982 Chevy Caprice, Air, Cruise.
No Rust, NMdl Paint, 305 Engin•. N1w Exh1ust, EKcellent Interior, $1,000. 614-441..0830.

•

Transportation

~/ rGtu1-

JU U26
Clark Chart/ Rd
~

4&lt;1(i

{Jll,{!(l

$638. LAKEVIEW LOTS: Chot~ lots wtth spectacular
vtsw. You will want more than ons. Oak, maple, dogwood
and evergraen trees make this a suburban paradise. Also
lots fronting on White Rd. Easy aceess to all out lots and
subdivision lots v ia Lakeview Court on approved
township owned and maintained road. Utihtios avatlable
REDUCED PRICE.
VACANT LAND MAJOR SUBDIVISION KNOWN AS
"LAKEVIEW ESTATES"
Lot11 : 2.25 ac. MA.. Pnco $! 5,900.

19ti7 CLASSIC MERCEDES 2501985 Mercury Cougar, PSI PW,
S, collector value betwHn AC, Cragar spun aluminum
$5,000 to $1,000. Muet 1 _. 1
whuls. Very Sharp! Ami tmr V..fi,
...,
.,,500, 304-675-50111.
$2375, 614-949-2045 or 614-9491185 Pontiac eooo $1,200. Bl4- 2871
441..0731.
ton truck, utility
1~::_:c:..:c__:-:-:-::-::---­
1980 Cutlass,
1986 AudiSOOO S 1 Owner, Extra
decent shape,
Clean,
Fully
loaded,
All
Sentra, ex·
Maintenance, R.c:ordl. &amp;M-388$27'00 ; 614·
8760, 614-388-8240.

Lot 12: 2.348 ac.

MIL. Pnce $21,900 .
Lot 13:2.348 ac . MIL Price $!5.900
OUT LOTS FOR SALE ...
Lot A 5.322 m~- $32,500
SUBDIVISION LOTS TO SHARE y, OF ELECTRIC
INSTALLATION- WATER AVAILABLE .

some

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
develop from step No. 3 below.

Golden Re1rr1ver Pups 614--'467t23.

:&gt;P Magnum 450 Wel!lht Bench

61 Farm Equipment
WHAT ABOUT ME? I'm a th,.e bed1room
ranch Sitting on a 72x150 fenced in lot I have a
one car attached carport plus a 12'x15' stor·

age

building

and

more. Within minute• of
!IH me today. low

Holzer Hospital. Call lo

3&lt;1s.

M52

HAPPY HOLLOW RD. -Is this I and 112 story

with

basement. 3 bedrooms, 2 and
112 bath, lamoly room. hving room, ~Iehan, laun
dry area, skylight, satellite system, covered
porch , r,aat pump , central air, 12'x12' building
and mucn more. Call for deta~s.
1425

log home

1382

...._..
~~ .

QUAUTY HOME - Owner baing translomKI
out of area. 5 BA. 3 baths, in-ground 20x40

pool. Beautirul~ docorted. Call now.

M54

TWO HOMES ON 14 ACRES - Thai'• nghl.
you get two homes. one having 2 big bed rooms, 2 batha. new ftreplaca, new furnace
and atr corKhtioner. Vinyl sK:Iing . Other having 1
bedroom , bait), laundry, ~ving room &amp; kitdlen,
50lC60 bam , tobacco base, new fence &amp; tie
house and much more . Call for mora info .

STORY"SRUN
7 year ~d home with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. 2 car
garngo , 3J acru, bam ard !lheds. As1Ung ~

SPRING VALLEY AREA is lhla opacious
tmmaculate ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 balhl,
huntly &amp; cining room on level klt Also large
deck. You need to see this one.

1464

1

PRICE REDUCED! To $49.900 on this
3
bedroom vinyl sided home wilh 2 baths, lrvmg

rm .,

dining nn ., family rm ., den, heat pump,
central air, baooment , 2 barns and much more.
On 8.2 acres Jnl1 Call t&lt;X1ay tor appointment.

U26

BEECH ST. - Appmx 24 acres With a beaut1ful
two slory colonial home overtooking Pomeroy
E~ecutive style home with lonnal entry, larnily
room wltireplace, formal dtntng room,
basement has rec . room with stone fireplace ,
in-ground pool , 2 car garage . Many more
amenities. Reduced to a k:tw price of St 39 ,500.

1413
NEW USTING. SPRING AVE. •• this 4
GALUPOUS CITY - Is whera you find lhio
a.nractJve and well maintained home wilh
fenced 1n backyard, a lum. siding, two
bedrooms. one bath, a large encloead back
porch for !hose warm aummer nights or •nioy
the central air Alao a one car garage with
storage and much more. Call tor more inlo.
LO&lt;..ATED AT LAUREL CUFF- This home ts 1n ·Perfect
C ondrtroo· A 1988 S kyline 24 )152 has been very well cated
lor' Features 3 bedrooms . 2 baths. central an. lrrcplaco ,
1nsulat1on. appliances &amp; skyhght ASKING $29 900 CAL L

On~ $48 ,900.

1444

TODAY· MAKE AN OFF ER•

LARGE PRICE REDUCTION
One of lhe best farms and modem country
homes in the arva. Mother is not lett out either
- 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, powder room and a.
new 22'K26' family room . All cedar wood with
balcony and more. For Dad - larve modem
bam Wlth stlo and fe eding eqUtpmOOI. n 5
Acres rich bottom and. lush pastur&amp; and good
lances. You n&amp;&amp;d 1o act now to be involved in
this year's Basic Tobacco Quota o f 14,669lbs.
forvear 1992
1436

56

Groom 1nd Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming, AU breeds, etylea
l1m1 Peil Food Dealer Julie
Wlbb. Call 814-446-0231
Alrtdl._ Pu,., AKC Regiater~ ,
4
Monthe
Old, Excellent
Bloodline, 1150. 614·256-6413 .
MC Reglelered BuaeH pupa , 1
"'"• old, M1 had llrll ahota,
ex1r11 nlc•, l'125, 614-667-68111 or
814-M7·38MI
AKC Regislerlld S.agle Pupa,
Wonned, Shot• Star1.c:l, $50.
C1N Sieve, Cays, 614-446-•Un,
Or 114-256-11518 Anytime .

BNglt puppies, 8 mo old, full
blooded, $2S. Nch, ewenln91 at·
tlf' 4:00PM 304-895-3911.
Oow• And Plg.on1, Several OittetM'IIKinde. 814-361-JWI.
Orlgonwynd Cattery: CFA Persians I Sl1mue Kitlen•. 6144415·3844 A her 7:00p.m.
Easter Bunn'" In June, al10
...., for 4-li I Folr projocto
""'415-11'7l after 7:00PM.
Fish Tank, 241:1

JKbon Ave.

Pofnl: Pt.Nnt, JCM.4175-2063,
,.. Uno Troplcol tlol\ 1 blnlo.
llnlrnolo ond ouppt111.

1986, ti14-446-0070.

614-446'

1988 Pontiac 6000, $3,500. t986
Mercury Marqu", $2,900. 1986
Dodge 4x4, $3,200. 1!NI6 Buick
Slty Hawk, $2,021. 1985 Olds
Della 88, $2,300 . 1986 Olds
Clart, naw moiOf, $2,995. 19i19
C.tfl'lller wagon, $3,000 1983
Forcf. R1nger XLT, $2,595 1988
Pont•ac Bonneville, $4,995 t985
0yn1Sty, $4,995. Scotlys Used
Car, New Hlven, WV. 304-882-

RIVet Road, Gallipolis 614-446-

9971.

'

72 Trucks lor Sale
1967 Chevy Pick-Up Stap Side,
400 Small Blocil, 4 Sp.eed, EJ ·
cellent Condition, $3.000, OSO,
614-446-a093.

~ . • ~~Condition,
1915 S-10 Long B.c:! PS, PB,

Topper, Good Cond;tlon, $2,l00.
614--379-2932 .

New gas tanks, body pans, one
ton !ruck wheels radlaiOI's
l l~ot mats, etc . o' &amp; R AUio '
Alpleyo, WV. 304-312-3933 or 1~
800-27'3-8585.
Topper

~~~It,

79

For Small Shortbed
like New, St5o. 614-446-

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

19'1-1 Self contained 24 h
per, $2,200. 3D4-675-2S49.

cam-

1988 told oUI Coleman camper
$2,400. 304-675-4064
•
22 rt Airstream lra~eltrailer , 614·
245-9146.
35Ft Trave l Tr•iler, Paril Model ,
Naw AC, New Awn ing, $3,995 ;
•26rt . Motor Home Fullyo Equipped, 20 ,000 Mil", $8,995 . 614446-1102.
For Sate Or Po.. lble Trade· 2
Motor Homes, Both Good cOn.
dillon, low Milee, 614-368-9081,
614 -388-8230.

81

Home
Improvements

81

Home
Improvements
Com·

Oa~tis
S.w-Vac
Serv1ce,
Georges Creek Rd. Parts, supplies, pickup, and dell~ery 614·

82

Qj?

!/il:at-?'U.a/

Cur11S Home Improvements
Years Ellper ience On Older &amp;
Newer Homes. Room Additions,
Foundation
WOfk,
Rooting ,
Kitchens And Baths. Free Estimates! Relerencas, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 614-367·0516.

~.

(/

Home
Improvements

Hick's Roofing: Free Estimates •
Phone: 614-388-8964

All types masonry, brick, bloclt 446.029&lt; .
&amp; stone Free estimates. 304Will build patio covers , decks,
nJ-5052
acrMned rooms, put up vinyl Septic Tank Pumping $90, Gallia
siding or trailer skinlng . 614· Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackson, OH 1-800-537-9528.
BASEMENT
245-9152
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaranReal Estate General
tee. Local raterontes turnlshtd
Free estimates. Call collect 1614·237-0488, day 01 night
Rogers Basement Waterproofing
rf'"'/
.

:_;j/ . .

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

/) CR

~ Q~k

RESIDENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS. COMMERCIAL. FARMS

..,. I

23 LOCUST ST

•

Residttnti;j l
or
comme rci;~l
w1rmg , new sarvice or repau s
Master Licensed electr !C!iHI
Ridenour Electn cal , WVOOOJ06.
304-675-1786

fallen your Hallet
with aHant fld

CREW RD. -Is lhis unlqUQ contemporary with
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, family rm . dintng area,
hvtng rm . and kitchen . Two decks all way
around house . Full bas.ement and more. Onty

pump. cont. ail, 40'x30' pole shod. Alllhi• and
mora on 107 acres ml1 . Only asking $59,900.

1423

MEIGS COUNTY

hvmg, dtning. family rooms, nab.tral gat heat.

cantral air. Askino $7~ .900 .

1424

NEW LISTING ON FRANK RD. - A partoal

BEAUTIFUL All BRICK HOME !11\Jai&amp;O c.1
50 acres mt1 with 3 bedrooms, ltvmg nn ., dming
and tamdy rm ., 3 balhs and lull basement Heat

FLATWOODS RD.· VER Y NICE Bnck Ranch Hom e w1th 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, large glassed m llvtng room wood
burnrng lrrepiaco &amp; attached garage "A B"EAUT'Y OF A
HOM E" rn an 1deallocanonl Askrng $49.900

pump and central air, 2 car attached and 4 ca.detached garage. A•kon~ $1 24,900.
1412

HERE"S A COZY UTTLE 1 FLOOR FRAME HOME lo

•,, .

ca t£ld on Welch Town H1ll Features a fireplace , new vtnyl
sr drng ne w w•nng , added msulatton and a fenced yard 2
bedroom s w1th 2 1ots mce front &amp; side porches ALL FOR

$24 900

A NICE VACANT LOT· of 60 11 100 on Ma.n Stree t 1n
Pomeroy Many uses such as ya rd sa le sr te . produce
stan d or possrblo small tra1ler s1te O NLY $1 ,900 USE

YOU R IMAGINATION'
HERE IS YOUR CHANCE · To own a ~ e ll established
Busrness Burldrng localed rn Ch ester lndudos eqwplment
and has tree gas to lac11ity CALL OUR OF FIC E FOR

1 fiOOf fram e home w 11h 2 bedrooms . N G F A lull base·
ment w1th utllty &amp; gmage lndudC"s appliances, cable hook
u p. and an a n•c all on paved str eet ASKING $19 .900

Call today.

1462

HEW liSTING - Ranch style home. three
badrooms, tam 1ly room . extra mea s•ze lots,
hardwood floors Home ts well butll . Rudand

sunroom, dintng room u well as spacious liv·
tng room and charming kitchen . MultipM clos·
ets, firapla~ wfttl inserted woocl&gt;umer. Mat

pump, and double attached garogo make lor
11\/erytling you should need. Hom• eill on OYer

4 acrvo with otock&lt;&gt;d pood and 1 - dotachod
garage. Ploaso call today. $87 .500
1461
NEW LISTING - OWNER REALLY SERIOUS -Wants house SOLDO! I Asking $25,000
lor thta apectout o lder 2 atory home , 4
bedrooms, large dintng room , living room and

' 1453

COUNTRY HOME And within minutes of Holzer Hospital.
lleautilul home with 2X baths, 3 badrooms.

la11J8

kitchan and dimng room. lol9 of c loset
~ . large lh•ded porch, detached garage
and storaae buildino. All this and lot!l more

including 4+ ocm. Reduced $3,000

WE NEED
LISTINGS IN ALL
PRICE RANGES

REDUCED I OWNER WANTS TO SELL IMMEDIATELY I

REDUC ED TO $25.000
NOW IS THE TIME FOR BUYING &amp; SELLING PROP·
ERTVI THIS IS THE PLACE • CLELAND REAL TVI
LISTIN GS URGENTLY NEED ED TO FILL THE
DEMAND OF OUR BUYERS! FOR BEST RESULTS
CALL OUR OFFICE TODAY I
HENRY E. CLE LAND ..... .................
... ........ .... 99H!91
TRACY BRINAGER.................... ..
......... 9411-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL........ ..............
. ........... 9411-2660
OFFICE .............................................................. 992-2259

Rus ~ gll

0 Wood

81okef/Owner
Eve~ . 446-4618

Pal rick A. Cochun
OfUce Manager

Phyllis L. Miller

SaJt1 Av-nl

Martha Smith
Safos Agent

Eve. 448-8655

Evt. 2SIHI36

Evo. 37V· 2651

Ch•ryiLemley
Meigs Co. Agent

Evo. 742·3 !7t

J . Merrill Carter
Broker/A~nl
Eve. 379-2184

Cathy A. Wray
Sftles Agent

e... 446-4255

Tammie OeWit1
Sales Agent
Eve. 441 -1514

Mowrey 's Upholstering Mrvic·
1ng !11 county are. 27 yNrs. The
best rn turmture upholstering .
Call 304 - 675 -41~ tor tr .. Htlm ate s

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

C:=Jl

VIRGINIA SMITH . BROKER,3 88882fi
DIAN CA.ll.t.HAN. REAlTOR, -~fi- 6806

EUNICE
NIEHM. REAL
REALTOR
....0n2
·1997
RUTH BARR.
TOR ~4&amp;DEBOOAHSCITES. REALIOR.446 ·680&lt;
LYNOAFAAlEY, RE.AlTOR,HS·MIOfi

. . .j

~~-~

MICH AEl Mill ER . REAL TOR, 446·6806
PATRICIA ROSS , REAl TOR, 2~!.-9!i7!i

J.W Construction Room Ad di1ion&amp;, Roofs. Decks, Skiing
And All Types Ot Exterior And
Interior Painting Will Give Low
Brd. llc•nsed. 614·245·5491.

JET

Aeration Motors, repaired. New
&amp; r•bulll motors In stock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800537-9528.
Ron'a TV Service, spedalizlng
In Zenith 1tso servicing mos1
other brands. Houu calls, also
some appliance repairs . WV
J04~76-23gij Ohio 614-446 -2454.

8!2. DEUGHTFUL All BRICK BEAUTY an E~ Bird &amp; call on thiS home . Localed In •lovely

~mood . 3 be&lt;rooms. counlr," klctw:tn, comlortlble LR, family rm .. lull dMded basemeri w/outslde
OJtry. 1 ac mr1. Kyger cr. 9Chools. Sptc &amp; Span Inside

oul

1780. CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD plus convenlenl
1o shopping, hospital , e1c. Lovely hOme oilers 3
bedrms., IOichen, tamly rm comb., 2 bathS, anachad
garage and ln-{P'oond pool The lol backs liP to a

OFFICE 992-2B86

wood&amp;d 11'&amp;1 ard onars pnvacy

1608. READY FOR OCCUPANCY - NAnONAl
REGISTER: Vlclorlan, 8)1Callenl condition Down by
the Ohio River In GalipOiis . Ott Very elegantlum-ol·
the-cenluf)' home. " bedrm. 3 baths. ltrrary, usefu l
attic and co~IEHe basemenl 5 !!replaces. gas heal
wt1h central air, garage Romanik: ga.zebo. patios ,
baauUiully landscaped All lovingly mainta ined .
Polentlal bed and bf'aaldast or remain residential

1785 . POINTS OF PERFECTION around
gra c10us home located In an exclUSIVe area E-.-,~en

total rooms wtth three bath'ooms Foyer 'Nith open
starrway, largellvtrwJ room with woldKJm~ llteplaOB,
!annat dinng room, glUnnel Kitchen, family room and
garoo room shale an open !replace Solarium wllloet
1(0\J enjOy Foi.H' Seasons Four o~ersiled bedrooms.
Master bedroom has cathedral ca1Hng. whir\XJOI balh
and beautiful arched windows First noor laundry
An ached 2 car garage Two heal pumps wtth biiCkup
5 441 Ac mil H you like rndt.riOOallty yO\Jr name can
be on the matlbOx Qual~red Buye" only

11ld

- ~~;;~Q~S7NES~~,OF ~~~t~''Q~~~« h:~~~

I

Income Lo~efy rest home plus separale ltvk'lg quar·
Licensed lor 10 residents. All 1umnure and
equlpmtnt lnclu~Cl. also 2 bedrm. Fairmont home
wlgatdafl
IU'Id lumture.
te~ .

I

1803. If A HOME OF HIGH STYLE and low makl-

205 North Second Ava.
Mlddi!IPOrl, OH
ROCKSPRINGS ROAD at FLATWOODS RD. • TerniiC

Locatron · A 2411 48 Skyline Home sttting on 1 114 acr~ Has
a g1ganbc lrvtng room. dimng area. mce cablf"'I:H~ 1n kltchen .
3 bodrooms. 2 baths. a nice bacio; Sitting porch. and a small
storage building Would cons1der trad1ng lor a smaller
home in to wn
$48,500

1772 HIDDEN TREASURE - SUrprising~ low prb
of $110,000 More 11lan 5.000 sq 11 ot living space
and large rm s throughoul This wel l constructed
home oMars o4 bedrms ., 2 balhs . upper and k&gt;wer
Uving. 2 \!It fireplaces, lanwly rm . bullt ·ln khchen
wrbatbecue, 2 cat garage. 1st lloor \au!ld!Y

WILLS HILL RD. - A small home that can be bought as is
or owner wrll fimsh Has a cathedral re tltng , large hv1ng
room. dimng area. kJtchen. one bedroom . uttl lly area. New
heat pump . mostly dry walled All new w1rtng and plumbing

$33,000 finished

WELCHTOWN RD. • A 2-story frame home wtth 4 3/4
acres Ha s a newer coal and wood turnac:e lor cheaper
heating, and a famtly room , dtmng room. and 3 bedrooms.
comes w1th range . refngera1or. washer and dryer

1814. l ARQE COMMERCIAL
on
Route 2 . 2 bedrm. apt . on 151 floor. Possble 3 more
apts. Mobil home nctuded n the sa1e .

lenance ~In your r~ure, consider this 4 beci'oom
CapE Cod bricJI: home Home IS sluated on 2'/. aetas
and has HlOO sq. 11. o4 ltvlng ~acu
1803. NEED A STORAGE BUilDING 1o store your
recreational ~ehlde s? ThiS metal building Is 361144:1
and Is snuated on 2'/, acres wtllch jOins a large body
ol water thai hU access to the otllo River.

..,..,...

r

K30 . EXCEllENT APARTMENT BLDG INVEST·
MENT: Good money maker IN TOWN . Large apt
bktg. wMh 3 lwo bedroom apiS , 2 one bodrm apts
plus a conage wth two apanmerliiS . This property has
been wei maintained Redlced price.

1804. ENJOYABlE TO LOOK AT, lun to lt\le In, his
!Jiac&amp; lor lamltt e!Hrtairwnert n a 31Jnlrun recreaOon
room wllh large llreplaoe, 3-i ~room, spacious
screened In pallo of! kl1chen This home awans you
llfKI yOOf !amity. n artldpaln yom neods snualed on
11C. rM

$23,000
ROCKSPRINGS RD. • An older home that has been
completely drywalled downs tarrs Has an enormous li\11ng
room wtth 2 bay wmdows , a beautiful k rtchen &gt;Nith an ISland.
a drn~ng room, 3 bedrooms. wrttl large &gt;Nalk-ln closets. a
mce stone fireplace, a wraparound porch , and many out·
buildings . s1tt1ng on 1 112 acres of land
$55,000

1162. FOUR

HOME, 2: BAlMS - Roomy

ranch home located In the country. E.Xlenslve wott
completed as lolo'N3 · new Thermo All:stde windows ,
sewrlty door'S . steel sktlng, heavy root, ~ - . ceramic

BEECH GROVE RD. • You'll love thos 3 bedroom . 1 t/2

tile entry e11tended Into the kit chen, 161153 Geck.
walks and pad . See lttls home and slop

story home, the house has a cistern. well , Wllh LCCD wa_ter
be1ng Installed Home rs Sitting on appro)l 2 acres of mce
REDUCED TO $20,000
lay rng land

Uti'~'
1805. PRICE REDUCED ... This 3 bedroom br1ck
ranctt home ts weleomhg you to er10y the ~
pleasuros ot comlor1 and design . H heal, celt. air,
llruplace. 2 car garage , appliances. Home I! sllu.ted
on 40x150 lot and h.&amp;s 1836 sq n. ol ltvlng space.
Home Is pertocttr balanCed lor oomlort.

$10.750

IBIS. LOOKING FOR A QUALITY HOME IN
GALLIPOLIS? 7 room home, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths .
living room, kHchen-dlrWng combined, luK basement
wllllamity room. gal1lge 20x2-4, gr11t k:ocallon. walk ·
lng distance ol city pool Cal lor more details

19H R1nger XlT V-6 , 5Spd,
42,000 Bed Liner &amp; Rails, AMIFM
C.Nelle, PS, PB, Excellent
Condition, $5,500. 61~-446-4292 .
1911 Ford Com1nche pick up, 2
wMel drive, 3,000 miles, $9,000.
304~7~718.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
1978 Fot"d Van, elc body, $1,500
304·576-4037.

1 ~c~;~

Van E-150,

1982 Full Size Btazar, high
miluge, runs good, $1100, 6141984 Ford 414 Bronco XLT, lull
siza, black, loaded, sharpest In
arN,
$5,995.
304-615-1731
lnrtime.
1984 fOI'd Con~. Van , E11cellen1
;; ~~ilion, low Miles, 614·2561986 Ford Rangar 4•4 , S speed
XLT, loaded, STX pkg lift kit,
naw tires, Ulrl nice, $4 ,100.
304-67&gt;2260.

1986 Toyota 4~4, extended cab.
topper, •rtra 11res on rlm1, e• cellent condition, call after 6pm,
814-m-5181.
1917 S-10 Bl•nr Sport Package,
Loeded, Good Condition, &amp;14388-9081, 614-388..S:Z30.

74

Motorcycles

lot• chrorM, 4 o.,.r, good cond,
$2,300.304-882-3453 1Hert :OO.
1m V1m1h1 400 Strw4, New
~:!J Bettery, &amp; C.rb. R11l
Condition, 814-379-.2927.

1982 Y1m1h1 750 CC, Bnt Ot-

ter.:&amp;14-448-0782.

tN4 Honda Sib,. 700, good
co~, $950. 304-578..2803.

1781. KYGER CAK.. AREA - 3 bedrooms. 2 baths
rand! horne aOO catpOt'l , outbuildings, garden spot 1

POMEROY· MAIN STREET· View ollhe River · A 2 Slory
homew1th 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths , one car garage , and tu ll
basement The hou se s1ts on 21ots and has cen tral arr
Was $25,000
REDUCED TO $20,000
RUTLAND· UNION AVE. · Wanr to hve close to schoolrn
a mco communrty Well here rs a ntee 3 bedroom home w1lh

2 ca r garage

FOR ONLY $32,000

WILLS HILL RD. - Need a burldrng srte or a tra1l er s110.
Wale r and electnc 1s available anC the lan d lay s ntce and 1s
$4,000 an acre
partly cleared or all cleared

ac. nvt. S2•.ooo.

1754. SEClUDED COTTAGE FOR TWO - 2
beorooms , large LA. lull bath, eat ·l n kHchen . 2
porches, new rgpalrs have b&amp;en made to mak~;~ If*! a
oomlor1able home . $20,000 .
t660 . REDUCED $25,000 - 2 or 3 bedrms

kit

rango, rei, sunporch, lull basement and garage' woli
tnsulaled. V'l8w ol Ohio River
1786. KYGER CRK. AREA - 3 b9drooms, 2 t&gt;alhs.
randl hOrne and catp041, outbuildings, garden spot. 1

ac. nvt ""'··""'·

MIDDLEPORT .. A commercral corner burldrng w1th appro~
2800 rtqi.Jare teet Could be 2 stores or one large store Ha s
one bath and close to l ree City park1ng
$37,000
BUNKER HILL· II you want a large larm wtth pMaq . here
Il lS A 173acre fa rm with appro~ half tillable Ills all fenced.
with appro11 40 acres haVtng new fence Has a pon d, 2 or
3 streams . b1g red barn , equrpment shed , and other out
burldings The home has 3 bedrooms, and tr ee ga s to hc.J t
$69,900
with May trade lor smaller home
WillS HILL ROAD · A 2 acre srt o w1th a large pond .
overlookrng the 5th hole of the golf cour se. water and
$12,000
electriC available Beautrlul must see

WAS $30,000

home or investment 3 bedrooms, bath. ltvtng
room, urility room, kildian . Greallocabon .
1797. NEED A SITE TO BUILD A. HOME? loc.aled In
Raccoon Township , cny "' Cttool dlstrkt , all utllllles
available , septic already on property . located on
lllacklop rd . Nice quiet se nlng, greallocallon

1782·783. SELL BOTH HOMES AS

A
located in Spnnglield
Township. 2-2 story homes, could be used as

PACKAGE DEAL

rental or pnvate home.
1765. RK'l GRANDE - Home Is prtced lor trrrnedlate
s.ale 3 beonn .. bath. has hoal . carpor1 1\pproll. 314 cl
an aae Beaut~ul trees and spotlo buWd a new home
Located on SR 35 $30 ,CXXl
1736. COMMERCIAL or RESIDENT IAl - LAND
CONTRACl - Prime locatron Ems lern Ave
~ortunily to combine hOme and business. Otuo
River frontage . Very nice 3 bedrm. home
wlappl~nces . luM b5eme~ 1his is a money making
proposlton Cal tor appoirlmonl

t760. 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOME. I bartl, lllrnly room

1110. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR RACCOON
TOWNSHIP? Neal, dean ~lnyl Sided 3 bedroom

M1d carpOO Thl!l hOme has had 1 lo1 at lander kiWig
care and Is ready lo mo~e lAo SateNHe dbh and
equ~ and 2 slor&amp;ga bulldlngg Pnc.d low S40a.

hOme wttr, 2 baths, living room, dining room, ldl chen,
laml~ room aoo Ltlllly. Appfo11 . y, .tcre tofTOUnded by
trees Good country safllng Clo!le to UnNenlf)' ot Alo
Grande.

lmme&lt;lale

1781. NICE TO COME HOME TOIII Brick ranch In
quiet Mlgt'borhood wtth 2-3 BR. ell-In ldlchen. carpel. 1'/, baths, fuel~~ fl&amp;at . AC, shingled mol. cupon.
full basement,c»y schools ()0 1 ac M.t. C11llor loca. 50's

$25 ,000

WILLS HILL ROAD .. A large modular. wtth an addrtron on
the rear . Has 9 rooms . 4 bedroom s, and 2 baths Has a heal
pump, 2 acres ot nice laytng land. and an older garage Has
a spectacular \llew of the go lf course
$49,000
WOLFPEN ROAD .. Pomeroy-A 1975 12)1651ota l electrtc
Monte Carlo mobile home w1th 2 bedrooms , 1 bath wtth a
20•50 barn Slhtng on approx 35 acres of land Will oonstder
a land contract with $6,000 down at 10% mterest tor 15
years at a monthly payment ot $310 .57
$34,900

-Very
t71i2. REDUCED
nice 3 BR, 2 blltt. , moc:kllar (V!ndalo) whlllarge LA,
DR . kHchen wlbrtlk1Ul room, exceptionally large
tam!ly room, enclosed patio ott 18'136' !!lwlmmlng
pool, elec. tuma.ce. NC, ret , DIW, !bpOSal, range,
(~ . oven), Hrep•ce and woorf)umer, 2 c.&amp;l garage
on 1 acre f'TV.I W()()(J)umer heats Wllole hou!MI .

POMEROY· Osborne Street .. A 2 bedroom, 1 bath . 5 year
old home wtth vtnyl siding, ctty water and sewage, and a
20x20 s torage bwlding on a 83x90 lot. May buy on land
contract w1th $3,000 down at 10% Interest for 15 years at
a monthly payment of $170 88
$18,700

t7!S. GET OIUCI&lt; IIORE WHEN YOU BUY THIS

IN!. REDUCED 10 $15,000- R~- propoily.

1971 Blj1 11' OJ*! Bow Boal,
110- HP Mercrulser, VO, Equlp-

mtnt, Oood Condition, 13,900.

614-245-55115 Allor 6P.M.

t1,500,
Aftor

BOATERS
J.9. Marini S.....lc. ,._ Mer·
cury Englnll k1 Stock. P1rt11 I.
AcC4!110f'iH In Stock, F1doty
Trelrwd Strvlce. 81&gt;4-256-8160.
Pt111ure boat wl 50hp motor,
1ra1Je.r, 2:-6 ganon t1nkl, lite

jiCkMI, 614a985-440i.

lOis ol st0111gEI arM It , also . lealures 1 2 bdrm., 1
bath apartment o~er a 2 car garage Cal tor an
awotntmeR to see tt'ls lrterestllg horne

1801. COUNTRY AT ITS BEST - 73 aat1 m1j af
belu1Hul rollng IMd, al fanMbtl, with 4 a=. holM
11. baths , ell-~ klldlen, LA. ~. FR, fu1 be
new 'umec. , wlncklw AJC, alum. Ulng. AJso 111ga
an.xss· rn11at bam snd 2 car garage. TW • took
!OdltY.

.. 75 R-E·O-u-C ·E- Dtt LOVELY 21'I70' "FRIEHD-

tor Sale

Sp.m., 1!4-44&amp;-70!r.

po~ssion

175.9 COMMERCIAl BUILDING ... HOME ... APART·
MEHT... all olthls ln one bufde or real eslale. Thtl
pmpefly Is K&gt;clt ed on a COOl8f' lot vrlllh property ra.v.
1ng the rtvar as h boundary. ThiS llome hu • grMI
ooat 0( potertlal u • ttorne or ofllc:e 3pa01. 11: IMhna
3 bdtm . l i', ballls. !amity room. buemenl: wm.", :w,

'*.:

75· Boats &amp; Motors

1981. K1w. Jet Sid 150-2,
Good CondHionL Call

1811 lOCATION ... lOCAOOH ... lOCATION ... Succes.s ol a bu'"'ne-ss Is locatiOn This commardal property has 158J150 o1 space lOCated on Eastem Avt.
Occupying tNs property ts a ~ bly. blodl: constructed
car wa sh For more ootalls on prtce and equlpmert
call 446-6806

17S3. HOME · CABIN &amp; RIVER BOTIOM mHN'Iooh ·
1ng QtVo RIVe r. l3 7,000 3 beOtm . ranch. lull tlvlded
bas81T18rlt. 11; oatllS, oolldlng. ca-,

ST. RT. 7·Appro~ . 16 acre s of land w11h an 8 room 4 bdrm ,
larm f1ou so Located near the Eastern H1gh School

18.S All11 ski bolt/ treUer, 75HP
motor, 17 ft. liblrgllts, 114--985425e.
.

114-46

Upholstery

Home Remodeling, Vinyl Siding,
And Overhang. 30 Yea~ Ex perienced . Fru Estimates! 614·
446-092:c'c_·_ _ __ __ _

6t~-9358 .

1980 Honda CA 10 R Good
Shipe, Prlctd To Sell. Call Bel·
w..n 8-8. 614-379-2894.

A GEM IN A ANE SETTING - lhis
bedroom. 3 balh home alao 1\as tamdy room,

kitchon Walk in clowl CaM toda,.
1987 Forest Park Mob1le Home 14 x 701 10 acr e olland.
Largo garage 2 carports. 3 bedroom s. I bath, ce ntral a w
Localed on S R 124 going 1nto Rull&lt;~nd 1 CH ECK If OUT 1

1458

67

1989 Dodge Ram 150 V-6,
Aulomstle, Air, AMIFM Stereo,
43,100 Miles, Runs like New!

1917 Hartey Oavktaon Sport Iter,

area. Asking $35 000 .

'

ADDITIONAL DETAILS'
NEW LISTING· SPRING AVE .· A GOOD STARTER HOME

t-rick ranch on 1.03 Ac m/1 wilh 3 bedrooms,
1 /'1 bath, living room, dining room &amp; kitchen .
One car garago attached As.k1ng only $52,500.

379-2278Anr!ima .

11107 . BUILDING LOT -40J:1 50 In rJiy lmils Tttb lot
has a 2 Gar biOClo; garage 25x39 alreadyo 011iol. Pnce
121 .SOO

3

$56.900. 1427

Too Ll111e. Basement C.. anlng ,
General Wort( , Any Kmd! ·614·

1806 . NEED A LOT TO BUilO ON In dly llrits? Ttls
lot is -40x1SO and has all utllll~t on tot Priced

992-&gt;0n.

0445

W• Oo Hauling Anytime ,
AnyP'atl , No Job Too Bi9 Or

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

$26,000 unfinished

85 General Hauling

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Real Estate General

.

446 •6806

84

Car1er's Plumb ing
Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446·3888

.t.t? f'1?)

'\::::Jm.tl/J;

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-07

1917 Ford Ranger XlT, V-6,
auto., PS, PB, AC, emttm 11er.o,
long bed, litMrglue topper, duel
tanb, $47$0, 614-992-5872.

pnce.

FARM ON LONG HOLLOW ROAD - Thos

Building
Supplies

Pets tor Sale

1987 -~lymouth Turismo, Good
Condrlton,
$2 ,000;
1988
Plymoulh
Reliant
Station
Wagon, Real Good Conit1on
$3,600 lil4-256-6251.
.

;::. :;_.~

CLOSE TO TOWN - ~ bedroomo. 2 baths,

0T.I!.

1987
Plymouth
Sundance
A~:~tomatrc, Cruise, Trlt, 63,000
Mrles, Real Good Condition
$3,200; 1986 Niss.an Pkk·UP
Good Condition, $2 200 614256-6251.
'

bedroom, t bath, wood and brick ranch with
!amity room, dining room, den, full basement,
fireplace, and gas hot water heat, butlers
pantry, enclosed front porch, beauttlut bow
wrndow w/wmdow ~at and much more . Only
$32 ,000 Call today It won't last lonQ At tnat

home has 2· bedrooms . 2 baths, living rm./,
dming rm., kitchen, screened front porch, heat

Upright h ..nr, good cond,
$125 Bumper pool &amp; card table
combinaTion, $t80 304 -4Sfl.1n5
or304-67S-t2t6

BUILI:NHGS: hciOJy
D11coun11, O.poetl Forfiets,
Del* I End1, Save US, 1,200
To 20,000 eq. fl . limtted Supply
Must S.ll By 8130.192. 1114-446-

1987 Plymouth Reliant 49 000
Milel, $2,500: 1!Wa ' che~y
Sprint, 46,000 Miles, $2,500 614256-6913.

Home
Improvements

81

wv

1986 Forcl R1nger Club Cab, PBI
PSI AMI FM, $3150. Comn w/
lighted running bo1td1, new
tool box, new glass topper, tr..
wl truck! 6,4-949-2045 or 6M·
949-2m .

PiHeburgh paint sale now In
prog,.ss. Ceiling peinl $8 99
gal, exterior whl(e lalu $"13 99
g11. Burp~~~ seeds 5~ oM. Parnl
Ptut, 241!. J•cll.aon Aw•. PI Pn ,
)04-8 75-4084

STEEl

Budget Transmissions Used &amp;
reburlt, starting at s99· front
wheel dri~e starting at $149 00
6t4·245-56n, 6t4-3n. 2263
·

1985 Chevy S-10, R.c:l, 2.5,
Electronic Fu.. Injection, ~.000

A

New Whirlpool sir condition.,,
7500 BTU , Av•ry Goegtein. 614·
912-6830 .

DkK:k, bf'iek, MWif ptpea, wmdowa , lintele, •tc. Claude Win·
t«a, Rio Grande, OH Call 614·
24S-51:Z1.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1967 Monte Carlo low mlle;Q";
$6000 lirm, 614-992 -3470.
'

1981 Ch•vy 4l4, Radto SUck,
Rebuilt Trans, &amp; Hubs. $1,195.
614-44&amp;-4141 After 6 P.M. Or
WMilends.

New VCR , $200 , anUque
wardrobe , $500; old coin
money ; girls' bk:ycte &amp; scooter,
$.2!5 tor both; 614-992-6102
anytime.

55

76

1969 314 ton Chevy tor parts
350 motor, 4 spd, new fires'
$250. 614·367·1760.

1977 CMvrol.t ~4 Ton 4 WO
~uto 1 Air Tift, CruiM. RNI Good
t;onC~Itlon, S1,450. 614-446-8158.

$45,000 .

KillS FLEAS!
Buy ENFORCER FIN Killers For
Pits, Home I. Y1rd. Guaranteed
Efl~~:tiYe! Buy ENFORCER At·
Browns Tn.rstworthy Hardware,
Slate Route 160, D~ell, Ohio.

PCX-20, 28M Compallb~. W1t h Monitor .lnd Prmt er; Apply 2C Wlt n AcciiiSsories
814-446-9364

Two 1990 Yamaha Jet Skfs And
Herc~l i es Trailer, In hcellent
Condrtron! 614·388-97ll6

1987 Muda RX7, Cruise, Arr ,
Power Sunroof 5 Speed SS 200
614-256-1270. '
' '
.

G~ Clean Used Car, Uppeir

1459

KillS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
Flea Killers tor pets, home &amp;
yard. GuarantMd efleclive 1 Buy
ENFORCER 11: Baum True
Value Store, 11 West Main
Street, Ch..ter Oh. &amp; Valll)l
Lumbllr &amp; Supply Corp., SSS
Peril str..t, Middlepon, Oh

Tandem

1g86 Ponlia~ . Grand Am , very
good condtllon, rwtw paint,

Shop Kenny'e Auto Cerrter For A

VINTON VILLAGE is thts well built brick home
with 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, laundry room, lwtng &amp;
cining room, kitchen, 1 car attacnad garage
Large walk-in attic, n1ce pat10 and L·shaped
trent poiCh and mo111. RoWced to $49.900.

Gravely rkilng lawn mower, SO"
cut, Ma than 3 years old , top ol
the line Gravely, $l500 lirm , 614992-5l20.

Swinlset lor sale, good cond t·
tlon. 35, 614-992·741'6.

614-446-

1989 314 ton Chevy FOR PARTS,
350 motor, 4 spd ., new tires.
$250. 614·361-7750.

Real Estate General

Pt1atlc And Medal Cvlv•r1 6 lncn
Thru 60 Inch ln Stock . Ron
Evans, Jackson, Ohto 1-800!37·9528.

614-446-7479,

1992 Volvo 940, black! camel
le1ther in~erlor, 111 opt ions,
1,194MI., nght side damage
$15,250; 19911nfinitl G-20, beige/
ba~e lelther inlerior all oplloos, 16,530MI., front' damage,
$5200; 1985 Corveua, srlverl silver leather lnteriOI', 43,491MI.,
minot" right fronl damage,
$6500; 614-949-2600 until 5pm
j14. g,.9-2544 after 5pm.
'

:z•.oao

20112.

:ti;'

81

199'1 RS Camaro, V-8, loaded ,
red, T-Tops, $11,600. 304-675·
4331.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Mth Weights. Brend tfew, 2 Nln- HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIOE: 4 HCN"se Goouneclt Tr1i11r:
Rteognrzed Sate And Effective Good Condition, C.n Be Used
lendo'e With M•ny Tapes. 614·
By U:S . Center For VeteriMry FCN" C.ltle 614-245-8640.
1464441.
Medicine Against Hoot!, Round
Electric l WhMI.ci Scootere ln- A Tapeworms In Doge And Cats. 8Ft . John Deere, Fertlllur
ltoor..Wdoof, ...w I Used. Uft Av11lable 0-l·C At J 0 NORTH SprNder With FHd 8011 And
On1 E1tra S. .d Boz, In heelChairt. Bowman's Homecar• PROOUCE 514-446-1933.
lent Sh.l~! Good Tires. 6M· 256514-446-7283, 1-800-458-68-14.
HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE · 651il.
Recognized sate 1 ett.cU~e by
FREE INSTAlLATION
U S. Center for v.. erinary Brushhogs, can deliver, 614-843SWIMMING POOLS
Only $799.00 Buulil~ Above Medicine •gains! hoolt , round, &amp; 5216.
Ground 11x3'1J4 Pool Includes : tapeworms in dog!ll &amp; cats
An..- Deck, Fence, Ladders, Av1ilab1e 0.T-C at R&amp;G Feed &amp; Fannall M and Farmall H trac lo,... 1i7'9 hall lon Chevy
Supply. 614-m-2164
Etc. 0o,;'1 Bel ..ve It? Call BPI
plckup. l04-675-6452.
1~~8-1923
Know wh.t happen• 1o llus &amp;
tkks when spreyed with HAPPY Ford 4000 TractCN' With Raile,
On H•al~r For l~routld Pool. JACK OROPOEAO FLEA·TICK B1111~ Mowing Machine, $S,400,
MIST? Tl'leyo drop deld! For 600 ~ord Wlltr New Bush Hog,
C.ll &amp;14-388-971i9.
$3,100, 1M2 l6h. Stoclt Treller,
dogs &amp; cs1s. Water b.tsed
Gene1ie
NutritIon
Products SOUTHERN STATES. 30... 1'5- $2,195. 614·286-6522.
letturlng Amino Ac1d Body 2780 .
John Deere Combine D• L•ul
Bulldlng1 weight toss and tat
bum• rormuiall . Avallabfe ex· Poodl• puppl.., loys end Milken Vacuum Pump 425 Galelusively at Rile Aid Pharmacy. te1cups, AKC, 1110 miniature lon MUll Tank Compreuor,
Boll, &amp; Yeters. 6\4-245SchnauzN and edult dogs, 6l4·
Ttt. sale way to diet
667-l404.
Gibson Alr4WNp,
btu
well atf cond, $100. l04.a82-

Services

tor Sale

1980 4dr Grand Prix; 1916 Ford
4-WD Coneldering Ofte~ On
1955 Chevy 2dr H1rdlop. 6t4446·B243.

lll!l!!llll
Merchandise

Power S.ata,' AMtFM
Cuutta. l.olded! All Blaek
~.000 Milas S6,10G. Call Pal

1989 Pontiac Firebird FOI'mula
red w/gray lnl•rlot", T-tops, .tli
power acuaories 41 000 miles
$8,500. 304-67S-Tzs6 or 675:
4636 evenings.

• 2B

Pets tor Sale

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Royale

3752.

LETlERS

56

Ohismobile

1988 Olds Toronaao

Lo1 C 5 acres m/1 - $27,500

PRINT
NUMBER EO

;4 Miscellaneous

Autos tor Sale

$2100, 614 -992-3663

2.l Locw..rt Sr

1985 Bulcll Skyhawk, Auto . All
Power, New Ttrea, Brakn, Exhaust System, Good Condition ,
$1,495 ; Als.o 2 Push Mowers, $40
E•ch. 614-446-8158.

Autos tor Sale ·

f:IIJUd

Galltpofu , Oluo 456.1 1

1963 Mercury Lynlt, $550, 614-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

st.,..;

~

/?,a,rh (l[[i rt

28, 1992

Brougham ~~~ AC PS PB 1&gt;W

lttdwtll, ()l.,o 45614

M2~814 .

71

June
71

Real Estate General

L-....L-L--...J...---IL-.......L__Jthe room . She waved back thinking
the man was just betng friendly
Finally the man approached her and

AL T E E R

Hay tor All, round blln $20 .

sq.,..,. bar._, S:Z. up .

Ma1" O[[ir'

1981 Oldsmobile Cutlass, 350, 4
Bar,.., Black Wltr, M1rroon In·
terior, $1,450. 614-446-7812.

Hay &amp; Grain

Pr•mlum Allalf&amp;r'Gt11u, rollg
$25. Morg1n Farm, Rt. 35 304-

Low Cholesterol 8Mf Gal·
loways, (OI'.o Cowsl Oren 60
To 62'4 Live Weight, 7 Seven
Bulls Thla Yeare And last. Takt
Now Or Pick-Up Oc1ober. Gal·
lowayo Place, 1459 Scenle Drive.
Vinton, IU4-388-8SI2.

1178 Mercury Cougar, new parts
and new Urea , tairlyo good
shape, needs minor work. Make
ottar, 614·882-2383 01' 614-992·
3336, mual Mil.

Sot,.u Wntern M11W: 14 hands,
genne. Brvke to h1me" &amp; taddie. 1600. 814-387-17&amp;0.

63

ll~tetlocil H1uling: Anywhere,
Anytlme. Ruaor"ble Rates.
Triple Creek Trucking, Chuck
Will lamt, 614·245-6096.

I

rust, 304-675-68i4 .

3 v..r Old Mart, Broke To Ride,
GMI:Ie, $500 Firm. 614-37'1-8885.

Livestock

ft.

460 engine runa good, bodr has

4p.m.

64

28, 1992

Real Estate General

Autos tor Sale

1g74 Lincoln Marti IV, vary yood

For S.la, &amp;14-44&amp;-a271 Call Alttr

tach.

June

1986

G~dlng

11'5-31160.

Counly Ovolo , 304-937~011.

1----r::~6 ~~.::.....;.~~~.,::
7 :.,.---l The man kept wavtng al the new
.
.
.
.
.
waitress who was standing across
1

71

New Holldand hay baler ; Dodge
dump lrucil, lr1ck l01der; gas
welder 614-367-7'031.

l ast Ch•n~ to INN tobacco
July 1 d•adline, Morgan's Farm
will pay 25 eent1 tot" M..on

HE P WE N

Livestock

10 YNr Otd Big AQHA

Freellf Beef, Halt 01' Whole,
Grain Fed, 614· 256-6$18.

S AL L T Y

wv

OH-Polnt

ROCKSPRINGS ROAD • Pomaroy· You need to see
inside to ap~reciate - A 2 bedroom, 1~~8 Baron mobile
home with screened in porch, carport stntng
acres of beauttfulland. Perfect location .

on

appro11 . 2
$:24,900

DOTTIE TURNEf!, Broker•.......•.....•.•.......•..•...... 992-5692
BRENDA JEFFEH$•..•....•. ...........•..•.•.................992-3056
DARLINESTEWART..•......•............................. ....992-6365
SANDY BUTCHER .•....•............. ...... ................. ...992·537!
SHERYL WALTERS Cheohlre ............................367-042!
JERRY SPRADUNG .................. .•. •.........(3041 882-3498

1.8 ac. fM (180' lront~g~) wlln 14'x70' O.kWOoel
Clim~ mobile hOrM with 2 BAl. Ul, cell·
lngs, ktlchtn (olk cablne11) with dining 11111, 2 luH
balhs, utility room. elec. HP, CIA , 1 car garag~,
Otltbldg. PII0110r p~ 1M' bolting on IO'Mir 1&lt;1g1
ot property on the rtwer. Thll propecty ~ In A-1 concatlon. Cal to see .

1787, PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND: L•nd 11ya
wei. Otder 2 slcwy bnclt: home wt1h 4 bedrooms and
buUd• . Home In need~ repair. 121 ac mtl orr SR
35, cioN to Pine Cr9St Nursrrg Home.
tn3. RK&gt; GRANDE HOME OR INVEST-MENT - 3
bedroOmJ , 2 story, 1112 bath, panlal bllsemeot. dty

water and MW81. Deep lot. 851x170'.

rrestty plir1ed 3 BR ranch wttn LA, kitchen wldl\itg
atva. range, ret., 1112 t.th:s, elec. 88 1"1&amp;11 , 14/C, plllo
carpon, .00 !run trees k1 exoeleft condllon. $40s.

SHIP" OOUBLEWIOE RANCH wlh 3 BRa, 2 bltN.
l RIFR. DR. illlchen wlbar, rMg~, OW, utlltr' raom'
eiOC 11P. CIA.. llreptace, vtnyl akalg, ely 8Cholla on
acre rn11

.8

1776. 10·12 ACRES 0111. BEAUTIFUl ROI.LIHQ
lAND. can bo purchased II lolon: 1, 2 leta
wooded. 2. 3 acres (1 ac . wooded and 2
cleared) . 3 5 Acres cleared •nd 4. Tolllllla'Ugl 01
I O. t 2acres M!t.. $35 ,000.

sa.

tna.

UNIQUE 91-LEVEl wlh 3 BRI , 3 bathS, brtdt
and alum !ildlng . kftchen (eheny Cllblnets) wll:l'l
Clln•ns, lamny room (llrepllce), ullllly rm . LA.
!Cfter-.d In Dtck porcb. 2 c ga.rage oo 4 •cs mil.

MUST SEE II

1779. VINTON CO. FARM: Located on SA 180,
Reslorable 3 bedrm , bl1cM t'lome wibuemeol Allo 1
1979 Acaoem~ mob ile ttome hal 2 bednns ., kl.,
clning 1roa, lR and bath, bam wlstds, tool lhld,
dlidlen house, 50 ac rM . Moatlylllblll .
1777. HANNAN TRACE SCHOOL$. Cozy 3 8R
ranch , wHh LA , DR , eat·ln ldtc:hln, t beh, lwa
outbldgs Fuel ol heat, new root on .5 .c. R\1.

�Pag~8-Sunday 11mes-Sentlnel

June 28, 1992

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

Reds sweep
Atlanta, hike
division lead

Martin Marietta stock rises in uncertain day on Wall Street
By CHET CURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - The slOCk market was mixed Friday in an atmosphere of uncerta1nty about
prospects for the progress of the
economic recovery.
Trading set its slowest pace in
more than five weeks.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials slipped 1.60 points to
3,282.41, fmishmg the week with a
net loss of 2.94 points.
Advancing issues JUSt silgh ~ y
oulllumbered declines in the daily
tally on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Big Board volume carne to an
estimated 154.44 million shares as
of 4 p.m. EDT, down from 182.31
million in the previous session and
the lightest total since a 149.83
million-share day on May 18.
Interest rates have dropped of
late in the credit markets. In Fridafs activity those markets were
quaet and ttendless, leavmg yields
on long-term Treasury bonds at
around 7. 77 percenL
Among Big Board slOCks, Digital Equipment lost 1(2 to 34-1/2.
Olivetti of Italy said Dig1tal had
signed an agreement to acquire a
stake of almost 10 percent in
Oliveni.
Bank issues, one of the market's

Federal National Mortgage climbed
1-7/8 to 59-5!8 and Federal Home
Loan Mortgage was up 1(2 at 377/8.
Martin Marietta rose 1- l/2 to
51-3/8. The company raised its div Idend and approved plans for the
repurchase of as many as 8.2 million of its shares.

best-perfonning groups in the ftrSt
half of 1992, were mostly higher
again. Citicorp gained 3/4 to_211/4, trading at new 52-week h1ghs;
BankAmenca 1-1 /4 to 45; Chem•cal Banking 7/8 to 37-1/8; Chase
Manhauan 7/8 to 27- 1{2, and J.P.
Morgan 1-7/8 to 56.
In the mortgage-finance sector,

British Petroleum's American
depositary receipts were up 1/8 at
48-1/2 in active trading, leveling
off after a 6-poinl slide Thursday,
when R.B . Horton resigned as
chairman and chief executive.
Symbol Technolog.es fell 3-1/4
to 18-3/8. In a statement il sa1d was

U.S. banks voice support for project
stock scandal said its top Indian
official was taking a leave of
absence.
On Friday. he became the fourth
top bank official in India to go on
leave as the government invesu gates the $1.1 billion scandal, the
worst in the history of India 's
financial world.

By Tbe Associated Press
MOSCOW - Some of the
biggest American financial instirutions said they would sponsor a
retail banking project in Russia,
where many people still prefer to
store their rubles in mattresses.
The Russian-American Bankers
Forum said Friday it would also
help Russia develop a market for
government securities and an interbank market to handle big money
transacuo ns electronically. The
Forum IS an umbrella organization
for central banks and private fman cial institutions.

PARIS (AP) -Fearing that the
deadly "mad cow" disease may
spread to humans, France ordered
32 over-the-counter drugs containing caule tissue off the markel.
The Health Ministry commu nique announcing the withdrawal
Friday called the move " preven -

BOMBAY, tnd1a - A British
bank w1th Indian branches that lost tive."
hundreds of millions of dollars in a
Bovine

Outdoorsmen ...

Spongiform

Encephalopathy, the so-called mad
cow disease, is an incurable and
fatal brain ailment that strikes cat-

issued in response lO negauve mar- some analysts reduced their ratings
ket rumors, the company projected on the stock.
Sequoia Systems, another Nasan increase in second-quarter profdaq
issue, dropped 1-1/8 to 8-3/4.
its over results for the first quarter.
The
company said iiS earnings for
Lotus Development, traded in
the Nasdaq over-the-counter mar- the quarter and fiscal year that end
ket, dropped l/8 to 18 -1/4 . The next week would fall significanlly
stock fell 5-5/8 points Thursday short of the peak estimates on Wall
after the comput.cr software compa- S1ree1.
The Nasdaq composite index
ny said its sales and earmngs for
dipped
.32 10 547.88. At the Amerthe secood quarter will fall short of
ican
Stock
E.change, the market
expectations.
Microsoft. down 2-1/4 Thurs- value 1ndex was down .11 at
day, fell another 3- 1/410 66-3/4 as 374.04

TOKYO (AP) - Shareholders
bellowed "You fool!" and
"Quit! " at the president of a scandal-ridden bank and demanded that
Japan's largest telephone company
do something about its plunging
stock price.
But most of the 1,824 Japanese
companies that held annual meetings Friday pushed through their
agendas in about 30 minutes, giving stockholders little chance to
comment on a year of poor profits,
tumbling slOCk prices and frequent
scandals.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Suprem e Coun today gave states
sweeping new pow er to re stric t
sions of a Pennsylvania law mak mg abortions more difficult to

obtain. But, by a 5-4 vote, tl1 c coun
said sta tes may not outlaw all abortions.
The court fell one vote shan of
overtum•ng its landmark 1973 Roc
vs. Wade ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.
"Though abon10n 1s conduct, ll
\!TIT

'' The reservations any of us
may have in rcaffuming the central
holdmg or Roc arc outweighed by
the explication of •ndJvidualltberty
we have given combined Wilh the
iorcc of stare decisis," O'Connor
sa1d.
Stare deci s is, Latin for' ' the
decision stands," is a judicial doc -

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
614-992-2136

'-

"

R/5

Automatic trano., air cond., AMIFM

399 W. Main

Pomeroy

Th• Store with "All Kinde of Stuff' lor Pels, Stables, Large and Small

Animala, Lawns and Gardent.

1 sr Anniversary
Sale Continues!

$

8888

drive, air bag.

SUPPLY co.

AND
992-2164

1992 CADILLAC BROUGHAM
V-8, loaded, rear wheel drive, only $
f

24 76 3

5,000 mlleol

and will opuote rrom tbe parish!s-{)ffices on
Condor Street in Pomeroy. Here, parish volunteers Mary Bowles, Betty Reibel, Helen Partlow
and Mae Young sort some of the donated items.
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed)

SHOP PREPARED • Tbe Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish will open ''The
Parish Shop" on Wednesday, offering clothing
and household items at thriO shop prices. The
new shop will replace the parish clothing bank,

DON TATE'S

1991 CHEVY CORSICA LT
aterao, bucket 1eat1, front wheel

·"

R&amp;G FEED

IT'S NOT OVER,
TILL IT~S OVER!

Parish Shop to open Wednesday
8y BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Changes m the clothing bank
operation at the Me1g s United
Methodist Coopemtive Par1sh arc
des igned to beuer serve JLS patrons
and increase the number of people
se rved .
"The Parish Shop" will open on
Wednesday, offering clean used
clo thing and househ old items at
mcxpensive prices. It will operate
from the second floor of the parish
headquarters on Condor Street m
Pomeroy. Hours of opcralion w1ll
be the sa me as the cooperativ e
par1sh office, Tuesday through Fn day from 9ao II a.m .

The shop was recently remod eled. thanks to the cfforLs of two
Un ued Methodist work camps, and
local volunteers. Walls were built
and new carpeting install ed, and
more work is set for completiOn in
the ncar future.
The clmhmg bank was origmal ly designed to provide free clothing
10 needy familie s, accord1ng to
Rev. Roger Grace, director of th e
parish. He sa1d that the changes
were made hccausc pride prevents
many needy families from laking
advantage of the se rvi ce Most
needy families would prefer to pay
"ya rd sa le" price s for clothin g
ucms, as opposed to acceptin g a

.----Local briefs---.
~ :!':"'~-

~.

-

-~ .-

•

-·
-

-, '
!

Automatic, air cond., Y-6,
power windowe, crulee,
much more. CM532.

,,,

•rw 1992 GEO METRO
NOW ONLY..................... $7509.00

., Addltloouot $400

1992 PRIZM

~·, oi&gt;

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f

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'&gt; To d

t ,,

4X4,

5.7 V-1, Ilium. w.-,
• • 1dr lrim, tit I crul11, AMIFM

- · two-tono pllln~ P. win. I lockJ.
118RP.....--......................$1t,505.00

NOW ONLY..._ ........... $17,751.00

nma auy.r ., Acld!Uonot$400

'

The Middleport Rec rcauon Department will offer sw1rnmin g
lessons, session II, at th e Middleport Munic1pal Pool at General
Hartinger Park 'on Monday, July 6. The price of the _lessons will _be
$12 per child, or if more than one child from a family w111 _parllc•pate, $10 for the second and $8 per child thereafter. The um es of
the lessons will be as follows : Sw1mmcrs (Advanced only) , 9 to
9:45 a.m., Monday through Fnday; Intermediate, 10 to 10:45 a.m .;
Advanced Beginner, lito 11:45 a.m.; and Beginners, 5 to 5:45 p.m
Lessons will continue for a two-week period. For s1gn up and
add lUonal information, contact the pool at 992·2177.

AM!FIIallroo, run.

Five hurt in two-vehicle crash

Auto., lllr cond., cruln, puloo wlp-

111u1 bl..,

•

IISAP............................... SI5,85t.OO
NOW ONLY................ $13,498.00

IISAP................................. $18,262.00
NOW ONLY........... ......$15,999.00

~. Much more.

Five people were tran spo rted to Veteran s Memonal Hospital
after a two-vehicle crash at the U.S . 33 ramp from Ohio 7 Saturday
at approximately 10:15 p.m .
According to a report from the Gall•a-Mc1gs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, a car driven by Shawn P. Price, 18, Long B0110m,
atlempt.cd 10 turn left onto Ohio 7 from the U.S. 33 rnmp and was
struck by a northbound vehicle on Ohio 7 driven by Debra J. Tillis,
39, Rutland. The vehicles slid off the right side of the road and
Price's car struck a guard nul, th e patrol reponed.
Price and two passengers, Robert M. Bauer, 19, Long Bottom ,
and Jerry L. Hayman, 19, Pomeroy, were lransported to VMH by
the Gallia County Emergency Medical Semce.
Tillis and her passenger, John M. Roush , 21, Rutland, were also
transported to VMH.
.
Price, Bauer and T11lis were released after bemg treated for
minor injuries. Roush and Hayman were held for observation, a
hospita I spokesman reported .
.
Damage to the front and left-rear of Tillis' 1991 GMC Safar• van
was listed as heavy and disabling. Damage Ill the front, top, bonom
and right side of Price's 1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo was also listed as heavy and disabling.
. .
A brake defect in Price's car was listed as the contnbutmg fac10r
in the wreck.
Price was cited by the palrol for driving under the influence and
failure to wear a scat bell.

I

WhHe DI•mond ell1erlor, Y-8,
lelther -lng.

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl
991 CHEVY

r··"
Tc.

I

NOW ONLY..................$12,311.00

lfrlt92 CHM EXT. CAB PICKUP

''"

II:

' :.pr·ed
·trrr':-· d j, " 1 1rr1·r, ·d
S1 102700
1•1

$12,990

IISAP...............................$12,0102.00
NOW ONLY................. $1 0,851.00
tat Tlrnollupr., Addl1lonal $4011

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl

1992 CHEVY S-10 PI(KUP

Swimming lessons offered

4X4, 5 opeod tr.,.. bright red,

Ful podilod vinyl root, gold oma_,llll on lea- -ng, Doloo
Iloilo-. c.cttt.c otylo.

mtrroro, P. locko. Why will!?.
118RP. ...............................S20,na.oo
NOW ONLY................$18,499.00

Automatic,
air conditioning.
HURRY!

v--. ..... "-· •
oond., orutoo, tilt..-. Nice.

IISRP................................. $13, m .00
NOW ONLY................St2,589.00
lot Tlmolluyer"" AcldlUonat $4011

~

1992 OLDS. CUTLASS SUPREME

992 CHM WMINA SEDAN

Nd tuto. Irina., cruiM conlrol,
llr cond., P
. loclls, lift whMt, Y-1, Int.,.
mn.ct wiPM'I, arton:IMMI.

.,... AIWFII CUHlll, crulM, otoc-

A special meeting of the Meigs Local School Disuict' s Board of
Education will be held Wednesday at5 :30 p.m. at the Board of Edu cation meeting room to consider finance~ a11d other business. The
meeting has been called by the trcasun:r of the hoard, Jane Fry

1992 GEO TRA&lt;X!R COIMRTIIl!

o.m.t

--"" ,,

$11,990

4 Door, air concltlonlng. 5 opood
tr .... , 4 cyt. Depondllbto
IISAP........- ............... _ ...$11,115.00
NOW ONLY.... ............ .$1 0,126.00
Ill limo lloapr., • I ....... 1400

Competition blue, 5 opeed trona,
AM'A11Weo, llir cond., uve gM.
IISAP. ................................... $8380.00

Meigs board to meet

~

1992 CHEVY LUMINA
8 Pa11engers. automatic, air
cond., AMIFM stereo, cruise,
tilt, V-8.

In au cx uaodmary move, Justice
David H. Souter, who did not wntc
a se parate opinion in the case.
spoke Irom the bench after O'Con nor announced the court's ruling .
"To ovcrule (Roc) would subvert the court 's lcgnimacy beyond
any reasonable question," he told a
courtroom aud1cnce. " Ir th e court
were undermined , the country
would also be so ... Roc has not
proven unworkable in pr..1cti cc."

i'

P.O. Box 339
Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783
614-667-3161

79 90

opinion.

uinc aimed at g1v1ng stability to the
law.

.

P.O. Box 626

so,.

Tu~sday, hi~h

in mid·

1992 CHM FUlL SIZE PICKUP

4X4, I opOICl trone., lllvwldo trim
lllr oond. orutoe • Ult, AWFM ·-~
Ilium. whoak, P. wlndowo •loolta.

4X4, u v--. 5 opood - · · 1ro1t
whlto..
IISAP......................... - •.$12,117.1111
NOW ONLV.••• _._ .....$11 ,749.00
111 nmollupr ., Addllctnal$400

M8RP. ................................St7,1CML.OO
NOW ONLY................. $15,673.00

I, itlssle Fret Slles and Smite
2. FriiMiy CNIIIIU5 Slaff
3. Awar4 W'Innlnl Senke Departmelt.
4. Conven1111 on Sift Fnondnt

s. "'-•""" Ctlt1111111 s.tliadlon

The court upheld these disputed
prov1sions in the Pennsylvania law :
- Women seeki ng abortions
must be told about fetal development and alternatives to ending
their pregnancies. Abortion rights
advocates call the information an
" anti-abortion speech."
- Women must wait at least 24
hours after recc1ving that mformation. The high court had struck
down as unconstitutional a similar
walling-period law in 1983.
- Doctors arc requi red to keep

detailed records, subject to public
disclo sure. on each abortion per·
formed .
- Unmamed g~tls under 18 and
not supporting themselve s arc
required to get the consent of one
of their parents, or the perm1ssion
of a state JUdge who has ruled that
the g~rl see king an abortion is
mature enough to make the dec• sion on her own. The court prcv1 ·
ously had upheld similar laws 1n
other states.
But the court struck down. by a

5-4 vote, proviSIOn ol the Pennsy lvan ia law th at requ1rcd marncd
wome n in mos t cJ:-.cs 10 tell th c1 r
husbands about th en pl;_tns for an
abonion.
The rul1n g, conta mcd in f1ve
separate opin1ons by a fra gmented
court, furthcr eroded Ihe landmark
Roc vs. Wade rulmg that 19 years
ago established ahortion tt.s a fun damental constitutional nght .
But today' s decison dH1 not
exp l1 cllly overturn. or cvc11 ahan llon . the 1973 rul~ng .

RAC steelworkers return
to work following dispute

~' '
. i ·~ '

Route 7

$

docs not foll ow that tnc state JS
cn tll led to proswbe it in all
instances," Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor sa1d in the court 's main

992-2136 For More Information

211 Wast Second Street

Tonighl, cloudy. Low in Ihe
mid 60s.

1 Section, 1 DPages 25 eenlt
A Multimedia Inc. Newaoaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Monday, June 29, 1992

so ~

&amp; Savings Company

Automatic, air cond., 4 door, AMIFM
otereo, bucket oeato, rear delogger,

218887

abortions, as it upheld most pro vi -

F:tt•tners
.Member F.I)J.C.

Kicker:

CopyrlgMed 1992

Purina.

Your Bank fnli(e: ...
. .a * .....a

8-9-16-22-26-33

Page 4

Court falls one vote short of outlawing abortions

•4 Nights Lodging •Presley's Mountain Music Jubilee Theater
'76 Music Hall and The Albert Brumley Show
(Include• 6 Meata and
•Lowe's Music Show Featuring Loretta Lynn
Top Country Muaic
Entertalnero)
•Mel Tillis Theater Featuring Mel Tillis • And Much More
Deposit of $50 by July ~eservallons to be paid In full by July 24.
at

981
Pick 4:
1178
Super Lotto:

Vol. 43, No. 40

For tUI /-.red.s . Ill a.l! IJ.lR\'' ,J
J!l'~ th .mJ ,'m-h.,!l• .:1

AUGUST 11·15 - 0 little Nashvillen BUNSON, MISSOURI

Call Joanne Williams

Pick 3:

===-=

~e .

The Farmers Bank Invites All Its; ~~
:- ~-ii~~~~
Customers To Two More Fun Filled Trips

(Contined from D-1)
new block building was constructed and now houses any army surplus item you might want with the
exception of weaponry.
The surplus outlet sells only
genuine military items inc luding
combat boots, jungle booLs, shins,
jackets, camouflage articles of all
types, sleeping bags, trench coats,
rain ponchos, duffel bags, ready to
eat meals, gloves, socks, blankets.
canteens and much more.
The items sold ar c lo ca ted
through ~overnment sou rces and
much of tl coming from the south.
Mrs. Wilson says 11 has taken a
while lO find JUSl the right SOllrt:eS
to provide her with what her cus10111etS wan!.
According to Mrs. Wilson. the
business seems 10 be a htt wtth
hunters, campers. scouts and out·
door enthusiasts.
For funher information on articles available at Wilson' s Army
Surplus. contact Mrs . Wilson, or
her son, Tom Wilson, who asstS LS
in the operauon , at992-7093.

Ohio Lottery

6. Owner Referral Bonus Prill) ram
7. Unadnrtlsed Strvlte Spetials
I. Aller HIIUis Senkelkop Off
9. 1'nflllonal Collision Repair
1o. rr.. Estinat•
I

•

handout, Grace sa.td.
Prices will range from a dime 10
$2, Grace said, but in an attempt Ill
clear out excess inventory, the shop
will offer clothing for $1 a bag for
the fi rst few weeks of opcrauon.
According to Grace, the shop IS
open to anyone, from the "poorest
to the n che st perso n in Mei gs
County." He emphasized that the
parish would continue to offer free
clmhmg on an emergency bas1s to
needy families, those families who
have suffered losses (such as house
fires), or who have been forced Ill
leave their home s be cau se of
domestiC disputes.
Proceeds from sales in the shop
will be used for its operation,
Grace said, and any excess proceeds will benefll the many out reaches of the pansh. Eventually,
Grace said, the parish hopes to hire
an employee to supervise th e
shop's operation.
In the meantime, "The Pansh
Shop" will be staffed by th e
parish 's team of willing United
Methodist volunteers. Betty Dean
of Chester, who served as the coordinator for the clothing bank, will
co ntinue in that capacity for th e
new operation.
All 1t.cms offered in the shop arc
donated to the pansh, and Grace
said that donations will still be
accep1cd, allhough he urged all
donor s 10 wait until mid -July to
bnng ilCm.s in. He also stressed the
1mportancc of calling the office
before bringing in donations, since
the office is not always open to
accept the clothmR.

Sale of new homes
down 5.6 % in May
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sales
of new hom es fell 5.6 percent in
May, the fourth stra1ght decline
that left sales at their lowest level
in eight months, the government
said today.
Although sales rose in the
Northeast and South, they dropped
elsewhere, including the steepest
plunge in nearly 10 years in the
West.
The departments of Commerce
and Housing and Urban Development said sales of new homes
totaled 501,000 at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate, down from
531 ,000 in April to the lowest level
si nce last September's 499,000.
Many analysiS had expected an
advance of about 4 percent.

•

8y MATI HARVEY
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) Hundneds of Unit.cd Saeelworkcrs
today ceremoniously marched back
to their jobs aft.cr a 20-month labor
disput.c
with
Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp.
Family members and union supporters watched as the marchers
chant.cd "Union, Uillon" and
"Scabs ou~ union in" as they went
inside the plana gate lor the f1rs1
time since Nov. I, 1990, when their
previous conlracl with the company
expired.
"This is grca~" said [rvinc
Greathouse of Spencer, a 30-year
employee. "We're glad to be back.
We just hope everything goes OK,
now."
Workers clutched boxed lunches
and talked about their most recent
shift as they stood in line to punch
the time clock.
"Everybody's excit.cd about re establishing jurisdiction in the
plant," said United Steelworkers mtemational Vice President George
Becker.
Union officials carried a banner
that read, "One Day Longer,"
referring to a vow by the 1, 700
union members to outlast I ,300
replacement workers hired m
December 1990.
The last of the now-fired
replacement workers were seen
lcavmg the plant at 7 a.m. Some
made obscene gestures to show
their bitterness at losing their JObS
because of the union sculcmcnl
"I kind of felt like it was my
job," said replacement worker Rob
Hill of Gallipolis, Ohio.
By then, union supporters were

already wawng at me paam
entrance to grcctthe St.cclworkcrs
State troopers dott.cd the plant
boundaries on West Virginia 2. No
violence or disruptions were rcJX)r·
ted.
Among the wcll-w•shers a1 ~1c
gale was L~thcr W. Weatherholt, a
union plumber from Parkersburg
who had come to the gate 10 watch
the rerum of h1s father, Luther J.
Wcathcrho II.
"It is dcfinit.cly a vie1ory for
unions everywhere," said the
younger WcathcrholL "It's a shame
the economy has driven people Ill
do such low-life things. If the
economy was righ~ there wouldn't
be any scabs."
The union's contract with
Ravenswood was scheduled Ill be
signed later today in Charleston.
The t.cntative sclllcmcnt was announced May 27.
"We're glad to have the situation
behind us and are now looking
forward to offering a quality
product at compeouve prices,"
Ravenswood spokesman Pat Gal lagher said today.
The Steelworkers took out a fullpage advertisement today m The
Charleswn Gazelle, Point Pleasant
RcgJstcr, and other newspapers Ill
salute the union workers. "V1c10ry
at Ravenswood for all working
people. Solidarity Works '" the ad
said.
The dispute m the Oh1o Riv er
town of 4,100 had closed businesses and divided families with a bit·
tcmcss that won't soon heal.
The
St.cclworkcrs
aargcted
Ravenswood Aluminum's customers, and many took their busi -

ness ctscwhcrc, mcluding Lhc huge
Stroh's Bn:wcry. Ravenswood
Aluminum's sales dropped from
$701 million m 1989 to $491 million last year, according to coun
documents.
The Steelworkers also turn ed a
spotlight on the activities of fugi tive financier Marc Rich, an in ternational metal s trader wanted in the
United States on charges of racketeering and consp tracy.
Media reports have linked RJCh
to Ravenswood Alum mum, and the
union focused on Rich "to get h1m
to usc h1s influence to get that
company to deal with us
honorably," Becker said.
1l1c turning pomt for the
Steelworkers was an Easter
weekend
shake up
on
the
Ravenswood Aluminum board of
directors. The newly formed board
f~rcd Boyle and hired a former
general co unse l of the National
Labor Relations Hoard to resume
conl!act talks.
"Somebody brough1 th1 s about
(because)
the
Ravenswood
managcmcm was not willing to get
rid of the scabs," Becker sa1d.
At the end, R1ch issued a news
release laking credn for the se ttl ement
When the new agrccmc m was
announced , Ravenswood was days
away from defaulting on a $71 mii IJon debt payment
The company wa.' fanng an added $100 million liabiln y for back
wages 1f a judge 's pendmg decision
upheld a Nalional Labor Relations
Board rul1ng 1hat th e company had
engaged 111 an Il legal lockouL
W1thout a scuJcmcnt. the banks
~ id. there would tx.: no cred it.

One killed, 300 injured
in California earthquakes
YUCCA VALLEY , Calif. (AP)
- Desert residents. many without
water or electricity, rode out
unnerving aftershocks overnight to
two powerful earthquakes that
mjured more than 300 people and
killed a child.
Sunday 's quakes - one of them
Califorma 's s tron~cs t in 40 years
- opened a 43-mtle fi ssure in the
dese rt , buckled highways, caused
fires and hcavil) damaged dozens
of hom es. Yct another quake shook
the Las Vegas area this mornmg.
Ce ntered cast of Los Angeles ,
the JOlts were felt in Phoenix and

La'l Vega". People in New MexiCo
and [daho reported .;;w&lt;Jy1ng blmds
and water sloshin g 10 sw tmm1n g
pools . There was no maJOr damage
1n the Los Angeles area .
"I was m bed, an d 1he whole
lhtng sraned shak.mg, ll JlLSI kept
shakin g and shakin g. I gra bbed
ahold of my dog , 1t was the onl y
th1n g I could think of." Kurt
Schauppncr, news ed1tor of lhe H1 ·
Desert Star new spa per 1n Yuc ca
Valley
The Califom•a lnstllulc of Tech nology m Pasadena co unt ed hun ·
Continued on page .I

It has been reported to The
Daily Sentinel that Eric Heck
and Burl Kennedy, both 1991
gradual"' of Meigs High School
stationed at 29 Palms Marin~
Base in Calirornia, were awakened early Saturday morning by
the earthquake that shook that
part of Calirornia. Nobody at the
base wa.s injured by the tremor
according to Heck's mother.
Heck in lhe son of Mike and
Susie Heck, Pomeroy. Kennedy ls
the S&lt;ln or Perry Kennedy, Har risonville.

Pomeroy police have busy weekend
Two accidents, a possible breaking and entering and several incidents mvolving juveniles were
investigated by Pomeroy Police
over the weekend.
At 4:41 p.m. Friday at the intersection of Main and Court Sttccts
Kellie Anne Truelsen, 21, Bashan
Road, Racine , driving a 1974
Chevrolet owned by Bessie Priedel,
backed from a palking place into a
1977 Ford truck driven by Kelly
Marcinko, 18, Pomeroy. The car
driven by Truelsen struck the front
left fender of the Marcinko !ruck.
There was light dama~e to the left
front quarter of the Priedle vehicle,
and to the left front fender of the
Marcinko truck.
Truelsen was cited for improper
backing.
Guy Shuler was charged w1th
DUI and failure to maintain

assured clear distance followin g an
accident at 12: II a.m. Saturday at
the intersection of Nyc Ave . and
East Main Sa. Shuler , driving a
t9R 5 Plymouth owned by Jan
Roach , stuck the rear of a car driv en by Ryan Davi s, 18, Athen s.
when it stopped for a signal light.
The car driven by Dav1s and owned
by Alice Johnson, Alban y, had
light rear end damage . There was
no damage to the Roach car.
Richard Hamilton, Sr ., who
rcs1dcs m the Village Green Apartments reponed that somcume
between Thursday and Sunday, his
apartment was entered and his
father' s watch valued at $1,200 and
$500 in cash were taken. He said
when he returned home Sunday he
found the door unlocked and the
items mis sang . The incident
remains under invcsugauon .

•

Several juv enil es have been
cited 10 Meig s Co unt y Juvenile
Co urt by Pomeroy Pol icc on
charges of brcakmg curfew, trespassing , and dJsturbmg the peace .
At I :0 1 a.m Thursday four juvc ntles were arrested on Spring
Avenue and on Friday at 3:38p.m.
police again responded to Spring
Ave. where mvesugauon continues
into a possible assaull. Two juveniles there were charged with
assaull.
Friday, police responded to a
call at the Donna Young residence
on Old Chester Road, Pomeroy, A
dog owned by Tim Davidson had
reportedly broken loose and
auacked her pet lamb, killed her
tame rabbit, and fought a neighborhood dog. Police called lhe. dog
warden and the dog is confin!XI to
the Meigs County dog pound.

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