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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

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------Weather
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·Meigs announcements-1\•
Friday, April .5, 199t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Local news briefs
•

Methodistl to hold clothing drive
The Meigs United Methodist Cooperative Parish will hold a cloth- ·
ing drive Apri1 .8 and 9, with county residents and cit;izens of the Soviet
Union benefitting.
·
All the clothes you have to give will be accepted Monday from 9 to
11 ·a.m. They should be. brought to the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church at 112 E. Second Street.
The CooPfllltive Parish will son and size ~lothes and keep a sufficient stock to meet anticipated needs of Meigs County residents.
Excess clothing will be given to the First Assembly of God Church 'in
Athens, which will pl!Ck and ship it to the Soviel Union.
The Athens chureh has a goal of sending SMOO boxes of clothing
to Russia. They have. an agreement with the Soviet Union that each
box may contain a copy of the Bible, printed in the Russian language.
. The Rev. Roger Grace, director of the Cooperative Parish. said, ·
"Here is a chance to make room .in your house, assist the needy people
of Meigs County ·an~ help the. people ·of the Soviet Union know the .
love of God and recetve Hi$ wrttlet) Word"
·
· For additional infolliUUion. please contact: The Rev. Don MeadowS,
pastor of the Pomeroy United Methodist Church, 992-5788.
- ·
·

Farmers eligible to serve on council
Eligible farmers in Athens, Meigs and Vinton Counties are invited
to become nominees for the Farmers Home Adminislralimi (FmJiA) .
county committee, .actor(ling to FmHA County Supervisor David P.
Urwin.
As a result of the 198S Farm Bill, two of the three members of the
FmHA county committees must be elected. The third member is desiganted by the FmHA countl office in determining .the eligibility of
applicants for certain tYpes o FmHA loans.
Generally. farmers who are residents of these counties are eligible
to become nominees for the FmHA county committee. ·
"FIIJlllers in these counties, serving on the commi!tee, phiy an
important role .by assisting in the process of loan applications· and
reviews," Urwin said.
Nominating petitions must be returned to the FmHA county office
by May 19. Additional information and application forms for thoJi.CL
who are interested in becoming nominees for the county committee are
available at the FmHA county office, 102332 Albany Road, Athens,
Ohio ·45701, or by calling 592-6621.
•

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day. The ttusteeS request that in the
Dinner danee planned
Plans have been fmalized by the future flowets that can be hurig on
Middlepon Arts Council for a din- the monument be puchased so that
ner and dance at the Feeney Ben~ mowing may be done more effi- ·
.
nett Post No. 128 of the American ciently.
Olive Cemetery clean-up
tegion in Middloport on A)J!il21.
Music will be provtded by ·
U,e Olive Township Trustees
George Hall and tickets ,are $28 a will begin cleaning the cemeteries
couple. Tickets may be iJUfchased aftel: W..tnesday. AnyOne wishing
at Mick's Bilrber Shop in Pomeroy, to keep flowers should have them
Kings Service Star and the Dairy removed by that date.
Queen in Middlepon. Tickets also Clean-up date unounced
Salisbury Township will be
may .be purchased by mailing payment io Mary Wise, 522 Sou'th . cleaning cemetery grounds after
April 15 and those wanting tQ save
Third Ave. in·Middleport.
The roast beef dinner will begin flowers and. other items should
at 6 p.m. an&lt;! reservations are due remove them by that date. The
by April16.
.
·
ttustees request that in the future
Sutton Cemetery clean:up
flowers that can be hung on the ·
The Sutton Township Trustees monument be purchased so that
request that all old flowers be mowing may be dolle fqr efficient•
'
removed from cemeteries in Sutton · ly.
"Township before mowing begins Flame Fellowship to D!eet
on Wednesday.
The Flame Fellowship Chapter
Chester Cemetery clean-up
will meet Tuesday •at 7 p.m. at the
Chester Township will be clean- senior citizens center in Pomeroy.
ing cemetery grounds after Hersc~el Fac=er. Nitro, W.Va.,
Wednesday and those wanting to will be the s
er. The public is
save flowers and other items invited to attend.
should remove them l&gt;y We(lnes-

Daylight.:. continued from page 1
The United S tiltes took up the
concept late in lhe war when Presi- ·
dent Wilson, on March 31, 1918,
signed legislation rromoted by
Robert Garland o Pittsburgh.
. However, it was repealed the following year.
'
In the United States the practice

Stocks

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Revival announced

c:. :..;..,.

was revived in World War II, and
in 1966 the Uniform Time Act provided for the first nationwide
observance of daylight-saving lime
during peacetime.
Dunng the energy crisis of 1973
.and 1974 the nation went to daylight-saving time year-round to
conserve energy, but standard time
was reinstated' late in 1974 for the
four-month winter period with the
fewest ~tours of daylight.
· Assignment to the Transporta- •
tion Department of responsibility
for administering the time law
·dates 10 the days when time zones
were of importance because of the
need for publishing standardized
railroad. schedules.

Am Ele Power ......................2.9 1/2
The Eden United Brethren in Christ Church near Reedsville will
Ashland Oil ....................:... ~ 1 118
hold revival services Monday, Aprill5 lf!rough Sunday, Apri121. Rev.
AT&amp;T ... :... ,................ :..........34 5/8
. Bob Wiseman wiD be the speaker. Special music will be presented ancl
Bob Evans .............:.............. 20 3/8
the public is invited. .· .
·
Charming Shop ... :................ .i4 5/8
City Holding ................. ;...... .14 1/2
Fedllfll( Mogul... ................... l5 3/4
Go&amp;lyearT&amp;R ...................,.23 1/4
Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold a blood pressure clinic at the
Key Centurion ,,....... :..... ;..... .13 3/S
town house from 10 a.m. until noon on Tuesday. Members will have
Lands'
End ...........................2~ -1/4
potluck dinner and meeting following the clinic. All members are
Limited
Inc . ....... ,........................ 28
urged to auend.
Multimedia Inc. ....................73 1/2
Rax Restaurant ............................. 1
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/8
Several inquires have been
Shoney' s Inc ........................ .16 3/4 . received by the Meigs County
Star Banli: ............. :...:., ................22 Sheriff's Department inquiring
Helen Eblin
late Charles c. (Chuck) and Bessie . Wendy
Int'l. ................ :....... 10 1/4 about a company making calls
Lanning Kennedy. He was a retired
Wonhington
Ind.......... :........24 7/S about water testing.
Helen D. Johnson Eblin, 75, of maintenance worker at Phillip
Wqlf Pen Road in ·Pomeroy, died Sporn Po\rier Plant in New Haven,
. Meigs County Sheriff James M. .
unexpectedly early Thursday, April W.Va. He was a veteran of the
Soulsby advises Meigs County
4, 1990 at her home. She was a World Warn Army Air Corps and
consumers that all village water
homemaker.
.
a member of the Eli Dennison Post
systems. along with Leading Creelc
She was born in Bradbury on 467 American Legion ill Rutland.
COJ!Servancy District and Tuppers
Investigation is continuing. into Plains-Chester Water District conJuly 15, 1915, the daughter of
He is survived by his wife of 43
Everell and ·Geneive Russell. Lam- years, Margaret L. Kennedy, a one-car accident on County Road duct all required testing for their
.
bert. She was a member of the Zion Pomeroy, a dau$hter and son-in- SO in Olive Township.
customers on a monthly basis.
According
to
the
Meigg
County
Church of Christ, the Harrisonville law, Pat and K:evm Aicher, ColumAccording to Soulsby. n&lt;ine of
Chapter of Order of Eastern Star, bus; a son, Perry Kennedy. , Sherifrs Department. a 1969 Ford, those who have called his depanFernwood Garden Club and the Pomeroy; six grandchildren, Burt, owned by Roger Murphy of Tup- ment have indicated that they have
churcli'sCircleofHelpi!lgHands.
Jake and Maggie Kennedy, all of pers Platns left the roadway and had their water tesred by the comSurviving are her husbancl, Pomeroy, Drake, Grant and Brian went over a 50 foot embankment pany in question, so it is not known
i)n Thursday.
Henry D. Eblin, Sr.; four sons: E. Archer, all of Columbus. ·
exactly what type of tesing might
The driver of the vehicle has not be done. Soulsby reports that the
Ray (Betty) Johnson, James W. . Besides his parents he was pre(Zorra) Johnson, Larry G; (Gloria) ceded . in death by a brother. · been located, but Murphy has company may be selling water soft.advised the depanment of the name eners.
·
·
Johnson; and Kenneth A. .(Debby) Emmett (T~bby) Kennedy.
Johnson; five stepchildren: Henry
Services will be Saturday at 1 of an individual who borrowed the
Soulsby r~ports that the coun- ·
(Heter) E!)lin, Jr., Gerald (Linda) p.m. at the Birchfield Funeral vehicle. Deputies. howe¥er, were ty's water systems assure him that
Eblin, Harley (Jane) Eblin, John Hom.e in ·Rutland with George unable to locate the driver as he the required tests are done and
(Shirley) Eblin and Shirley (Don- Nash officiating. Burihl will be in had moved from his Tuppers Plains appropriate measures are ·taken to
address.
.
aid) Jeffers; a brother, Gene (Ann) Miles Cemetery.
ensure that the public's drinking
Light damage was sustained to water is safe to drink.
Lambert; five sisters: ,Mrs. Carl
Friends may call at the funeral
(Ruth) Mourning, Mrs. Bym (Eliz· home on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 . the vehicle and charges of failing to
abeth) Vaughn, Mrs. Harley (Mar· · p.m. and on Saturday before the maintain control are pending
against the driver.
.. .
, garet) Haning, Mrs. Cecil (Jo Ann) service.
Gillogly. and Mrs. Mary Grover;
In lieu of flowers donations may
19 grandchildren and five great- be made to .the Meigs County Man arrested on petty
Meigs County Emergency Medgrandchildren.
.
Chapter Qf the American Cancer theft charge
ical
Services responded to five
Besides her parents, she was Society, 236 West Second .St ..
calls
for assistance on Thursday.
Terry
Rhoades,
18,
Middleport,
preceded in death by her first bus- Pomeroy.
At
3:47 p.m., Pomeroy squad
was arrested on Wednesday
band. Joseph R. Johnson and a son, Elmer F.. Bat"rd
went
to
Pomeroy Nursing and
evening and ,charged with petty
Joseph L. Johnson.
Rehabilitation
Center for William
· Funeral services will be held at'
Elmer Franklin Baird, 60, of theft in coMection with the theft of
1p.m. on Saturday at Ewing Funer- 8849 N. State Route 7, Cheshire, a Pioneer stereo from a vehicle at Hughes, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 7:21 p.m.,
a1 Home with Bob Punell official- died Friday, April 5, 199.1 at Holz- Smith-Nelson Motors in Pomeroy.
ing. Burial wiU be in Miles Ceme- er Medical Center, following a
According to the Meigs County · Middleport squad went to Logan
Sheriff's Department, Rhoades Street for Mary Siders. She was'
·tery.
brief ·illness:
··
Friends may call at the funeral
He was an employee of the admitted to entering a vehicle at taken to Veterans. At 10:44 p.m..
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora- around midnight last Friday and Middleport squad went to Page
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday.
tion (Kaiser) where he had been removing the stereo, selling the Street and took Mabel Baughman
employed since 1957: He was a stereo to a Middleport man who in to Veterans.
Don Betzing
member or the Cheshire F&amp;:AM tum sold the stereo·again. Deputies
At 1:19 am. on Friday, Rutland
. · ·
Siloam Lodge 456 and attended the traced the stereo back 10 Rhoades.
squad went to Nichols Road for
Don. L..Betzmg, 82,. of 32666 Campaign Baptist Church.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby Roberta Carauthers. Carauthers
Rose Hi~ m Pome~y. dted ThursHe was born March 8, 1931 in reports that Deputy Scott Trussell . was transpOrted first to Veterans
day, Apri14, 199~ at hom
. e follow- - Gallia County, son of the late Ora ancl Investigator Robert Beegle and then to Holzer Medical Center.
m~ an extended tllness. He was a and Gail Halfhill Baird
,
conducted the investigation and . At.5:12 a.m., Rutland squad ·went
reured bread salesman for Holsum
He is survived by hiS wife, Bon- filed the charges.
to Main Street in Rutland for
Bake'1: and a fonner employee of nie Litchfield; two sons, John Baird , Rhoades will !!ppeat in Meigs Roben Snowden. He was taken to
theOhioPalletCo~pany. ,
· ,of Houston, ·T exas and Steven County Court on Wednesda'y.
Holzer Medical Center. ·
He was born 10 Chester on Baird of Thurman; one daughter,
October 12, 1908, the son of .the Mrs. James {Deborah) Schmoll of
late Pete and Emma Cole Betzmg. . C~eshire; three grandchildren,
He !lttended the Hemlock Grove Zachary Baird, Lauren and Jamie
Christian Church an~ was a 50 year Schmoll; and two sisters, Dillie
member of Roell: Spnn$s G~ge.
McCormick of Gallipolis. and Mrs.
·a·en. H•rttnuer Pkwy 79 JIICklon Pike 3114 Ealt Mllln St. .
He ts S!lfVtved by his son, Jerry Kenneth (Della) Casto of Orient.
GALLIPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY
qanl Atkins of Carrollton, Ga.: a
One brother, Wayne and two ·
1114-4411-3837
1114-912-1248
1114-992-11292
SISter, Fteda Mil~ of Pomeroy: a sisters, Francis and Flossie,.precedbrother, Roy Betzmg, Pomeroy. a ed him in death.
·
·
.
· Funeral services will be con- ·
. , .grands~n, Jason - Sheet.s of
Reedsville and ~everal nteces, dueled 4 p;m. Sunday at the
nephews, great-meces and great- . McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
nephe~s. .
•
' Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with
. Bestdes hts parents.• h~ was ~re- Rev. Roland Wildman offiwiating.
SUNDAY, APIIL 7 ONLY!
ceded tl'l d~ath by .hts ft.rst Wtfe, Burial will he in Gravel Hill CemeM!ldred Smtih Bewng; his ~~d tery. Cheshire.
.
wtfe. Ruth Gosn.ey Betztng, a
I;riends may call at the funeral
brother, and ~ SIS~rs.
home on Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m.
Funeral servtces .wtll be held on and 7 to 9 p.m. Masonic services
'
'
'
ThrH toppings, chocolate and vanilla frozen dessert
Monday at II a.m.~ Ewm.,Funer· will be conducted 8:45 p.rp. Satural Home. Burial wtll be'" Hem- day, by the Cheshire F&amp;AM
. top,..l with whipped creme and a chtrry served in
lock Qrove Cernetay.
Siloam Lodge 456 John N Roush
a tall glassll
Friends may call at the funeral Master. ·
•
·
•
bome from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Sat.
:'
urdaY IIICI 1 p.m. ~ 9 p.m. on sun'
SPE~IAL SUNDAY, APRIL .7 THROUGH
day 111d uoill the brne of semce on · VETERANS MEMORIAL
SATUIDAr, APIIl 13,. 1991
M~:..., K
d
Admitted Thursday: William
liCIJ
enne y
Grueser. Pomeroy; Cora Woodard,
·
Pomeroy; Tracy SimPkins,
Chlrles D. (Windy) Kennedy; Pomeroy; . Sarah J,ane Congo,
1/•
6S. ~sen Run Roa~. Pomeroy, Racine; Laura Ruth Arnold. Mid~~~~·l~~~~ dleport; William R. ' Hu$hes,
IS% Lean Ground Chuck. Ground Fresh Daily
filion Cetller foiJowing a .er ill- ~e.:~and Man- ~se St~rs,

Blood pressure clinic slated

Fair Sunday and Monday, and
chance of showers and thunder~ storms on Tues(jay. Highs. will
range from the mid 70s 10 low so;
Sunday and Monday. and in th~
70s Tuesday. Overnight lows wilt ·
be m8inly in the SOs.
t

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Friday night and
· Saturday. with a low FridaY night
near SO, and highs Saturday near
80.
' '
Ohio eXtended roreca8t
Sunday .tlrougb Tuesday

Worldwalker...

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75 cents ·.

Reds open season Monday - C-1

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worldwide trek at the Meigs Coon-~•

Out in the
real world
fot a visit

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to pay a $2.50 fee fix a patch and a
$4.50 fee for a medal. In order to ' ty Public Library in Pomeroy onreceive the awards. you must walk Saturday at 3 pm.
~
.the trail. However, the hike is not
•
required to attend the ceremony.
~
Registration will· ~t undei'Wa:,: . Plck-J ·
Pick-4
"
for the "inaugur&lt;!l" hike at 9 a.m.
975
•
4 .
525·
"'
. and the ceremony will begin at 10
a;m. Visitor.sare e11coura~ed to
Cards .
:
tate a sack lunch. Camp Kiashuta
Four of beans.
•
is located on Scout Camp Road
Jacli: of clubs.
":
(Chester Township RO;td 112), off
Jacli: of diamonds.
:·
Route 248 near Chester.
Ace of spades.
1
Meanwhile, NeWlllan will make
Ticket sales: $51,99 5. Payoff.•
a slide and rum presentalion on his $48,260.
•

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Former Gallipolis resident was ~ctim of
Titanic disaster in 1912 • James ~ands • A-6

Lottery numbers

Page B·l

FOR

1 SALE

Buy One Parfait Sundae
Get One FREE

Hospitq.l news

Char

POUNDER ...~ •••••••••• only $169

~e ~as bom in Ru~and 10 the ~~~~harged Thur~day: N~cy

. FRIES .......-................-•••• Only $289
WITH MEDIUM
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NDftiiNG ltDRKS
UKERU88BR ·

Easter Egg Hunt reset for 2 p.m. ~oday in
Hartinger Park - Beat-of-the-Bend· B·6

.. . Vol. ·ze, No. •

Mlddleport.....P~meroy-OalllpQIIa-Polnt

. ' ' CoPJFighleci1H1

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BUIIQess.. - ....·-··--· Ql

Clalllllecl&amp;....- ............ 02-7
.Deaths..... ~ ...... ~ ......... /\-5
EdiiDrlat..... _ ............... A-2
Farm............... ~...........~ 01·8
~rts......._ .......,........ Cl·il
eatber
A-4

···!"·•···· .. . :.......

•

T1111J11rlitpll:ill~bn

I

I

,,..,.~s

lllllilit ll'ICiiCrl... llingllt-... tnt

~ qualily ,_money CIIIIJI¥
• Mali USA

o Wilin'UiilfWICI' (ftCk in"'**

....

• EMyon.Eaoyorr.
• Exlniliglit-wlighllorfltigua rultlloiCI

By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel StafT

• U'lllnld ..:I uullhlbll

• Qna.potol injiCtiCn ITIOICIICI: ICiltCirl- Pill
Tllic:k 1111 .... I ,_...lniiCI: ililtbCiiCIII I '

o

-pailtl

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. 11 IO'Itlono. 132 Poa••
A Multlmedll Inc. N-opeper

Pleasant, Aprll7, 1991

Mobile ·unit allows more
service.to area· children

Only ~ll100'10ltllldlf I'IAitllr10ftll

8uttrJn Boot olin )IOU . . . . . . . . . . .

POMEROY- A. new mobile
classroom unit allows Gallia-Me~
Head Start to provide pre-school
services to bOys and girls in rural
areas previously not served by the
. progmm. .
'
h' h
The "RV-type" untt, w IC
arrived on site in late 1990, is.used
in both Meigs and Gallia Counties,
spending the first two weeks Qf
each month in Meigs County and
the second two week period in Gallia County.
·
AlthOuJih Head Start is a federal

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• Riplllr:»•.,.l', • • on Walen• ._, n1
mal 1111
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1•
• Allo e I FECit~ tq:H:f"My hiOP•• ·

SUGAR
RUN
MIL'
L
S
·
180 MULBERRY
.
POMEROY

program, funding for the mobile
unit comes from stare sources.
According· to· Meigs County
Head Start CQor&lt;.linator Carol
Yo'ung, the state funding for the
mobile unit allows tt.e program to
reach into the "far corners" of
Meigs County, serving pre-school
children and their families in Portland, Reedsville, Tuppers Plains,
and Danville, which are areas Head
Start has been unable to serve in
the past because of their remote
locations. .
In all, the state-funded mobile
unit serves 36 families. The unit is ..
in Ponland 'BIId Danville all day.

..

with ·a morning class and an afternoon class at each stQp . .ReedSville
and Tuppers Plains use the unit f~r
a half day each.
:
The childr.en are transported
from their homes to the JDObile unit
by a separate van, so patentS are in
no way responsible for 1ran~rling
the ·students to and from the 'class·
room."
While on the unit, preschoolers
get the valuable "classroom experience" portion of the program,
which includes socialization slcills
and other preschool-type activities.
In addition to the classroom
(See MOBILE, page AS)

AVE~

"'·2115
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ROADSIDE CI.:EAN-UP • You know It's
spriag whe. work crews can be spotted alona
th hig!lways pickinl up debris and aarba1e.
ROJifr Holm8D of the Melp Coonty Litter

. ··Uert

Control Provam supervisors two his y'outhful
workers 111 they clean up an area near the biter·
section of Union Avenue and the Route 7 bypass.

·Miftgs·~·ctemt::.·
up:even~·11lftnned.
,
.

ty Litter Control Prognun.
By CHAIU.ENE HOEFLICH
KeMy Wiggir)s, project dirccTimes-Sentinel Stair
tQr,
repot!S
that a work crew super·
POMEROY - To make Meigs
vised
by
Roger
Holman is out most
County more attractive through
everyday
picking
up debris and
clean-up and beau!ifiGBiion projects
garbage
which
has
been strewn
is the objective of several spring
along
township,
county
and state .
events planned by the Meigs Coun-

1987 DODGED

31.8 V-8 engine, 46,000 mll•a. auto. trj!ns.,'
extra clean.

·

$649 5

highways; as well as public parks.
He said that supplementing the
clean-up work or the local Litter
Control crew are employees of the
Ohio Department of Transportation.
(See MEIGS, page AS)

Living history group brings
'Union soldiers' to Gallipolis
.

1

4 ap. trans, AM-FM ceuette. aport stipea. run• great.

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$5290

.

1985 FORD BRONCO II

$5400 .
1989 CHEV. 510 PICKUP
$6400"
1986 MAZDA PICIUP SES PIG.
$3995
1·9 89 NISSAN PICIUP
I
$6400
Htte.
little
1985 FORD IANGEit PICKUP
S3750
4 apd ..
good.
~ 988 NISSAN PICKUP
I
$4995
MARK'S ·AUTO SALES
Auto.. AM·FM
atereo. nAnning
boerda. clot~ Interior. Extr• clean . .

6 ap. trana .• A/C,IIkenewconditlon.

l!)d. trent, •ir
Sharp

c~d., AM-FM
tn~ck.

·

CII-

rune

AM-FMoMIIt18,

rear

992-3011

60S General Hartinger Parkway ·

Middlepcut, Ohio

"If you didn'r shop Mark'•· you paid ·roo 'much."
HOURS: Mon.-Thura. 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Fri. 9:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
·
Sat. 9:00 a
1:00 p.m.

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ca District Executive John Pinkerman; Park
District Board Membera Lloyd Blackwood and
Jim Pape; Shade River Forest Maniger Jim
Milliron; and Meigs C11unty Wildlife OITicer -:
Keith Wood. (rimes-Sentinel photo by B.rian J,
Reed)
·
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ishment will.
.
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ll's all in a weekend's work,
according to Dave· Gloeckner of
Racine, a member of the 91 st.
GALLIPOLIS. - The town
"Seeing history hap~ is entersquare will ring out with the so.und
taining,"
Gloeckner satd. Whereas
of gunfll'e and bugles next weekend
people
may
not want to sit down
as the ftrst (lallia County recruiting
and read a book about the Civil
and training camp is held in GalWar, they wiD come out to see relipolis.
'
tests.
'
epactments.
April 12-14 will hold a number
.. And the members of the units
In
addition,
there
will
be
day-to·
of unique even.ts for the area,
get
something out of it, too. They
day
activities
of
the
Union
Sol. beginning wi h 'a camp regislrati()ljll
get
a .weekend with the family, . By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
dier's
camp
like
mail
and
pay
affects construc1ion plans for the
· and ending St nday aftemoon.
c.alls.
ration
issue
and
company
away
from
telephones~t~ome
peo$2.2
million waste water colleCtion
Times·Sentinel StafT '
Members t r the 91 Ohio Volun.
ple
wiU
bring
motor
homes
for
the
·
drills.
and sewage treatment project for'
I
· teer Militia (n activated) will camp
And if .the weeping and dying · wife and ldds, he said, but many of
RUTLAND - While a Rutland the Rutland area.
in the cily I ark with as much
That was the word Friday after•
authenticity a~ possible - from the , contest doesn't peak your iitteres~ them camp out "roughing it" for Area Sanitary Sewer District will .
the
weekend
and
its
authenticity.
may,
b
e
the
court
!'lartial
and
punnoon
from Patrick O'Brien, the
not
'be
organized,
that
in
no
way
food they eat to the wool clothes
project attorney.
On Jan. 31, Rutland Village
"This is a family oriented
filed a petition requesting formagroup.." Gloeckner said .
lion of a sewer diStrict to adminisHe joined the 91st re-enactment
ter the project.
gro'up about a year ago, and has a
Last week. however. thill petispecial interest in the War between
tion
was dismissed after Rutland
the States. Visiting his grandmothHUNTINGTON, W.Va. -The
er, Qloecknet saw first hand items Tri-State Veterans Employment .
belonging to h.is link ~ith the "!ar - Committee is recruiting employers
discharge Jlllpers, a JNSIOI, cartndge ,and service providers for the th~d
box, a canteen, the. medal of the annual Veteran/Employer Job F811',
Grapd Army of t11e Republic, and to be held May 8, at the Veterans
paperS of the Society of Union Vet- Memorial Field House in Huntingerans.
.
ton.
.
Having family in the Civil War
In a cominuing effon to provide
is not a prerequisite for joining a employment relatelj services to trire-enactment group, but Gloeckner state veterans. this year's event will
estimates about half of the unit has encompass pre-employment acti vidirect' ties to it.
.
ties for veterans only from 8 a.m. to
· Outfitting a re-enactor can be noon.
Booths will be provided for
costly. Gloeclcner said - the clothes
alone can run nearly $400. Then organizations and agencies to
there's the weapon - another $400. showcase services which "'ay
And, the group is not just for men, assist veterans seeking employ'
the ladies g~t involved, too. They ment.
.From 2 to 6 p.m., employers are
wear period cbstumes and prepare
authentic food. And the)' have the invited to participate in the largest
'
big part in the Weeping and' Dying · job fair in the area. Last year :S I
employers atten~ and hired 109
contest
Gloeckner said thai can prove to veterans in unskilled. skillecl and
be a funny moment at a camp - professional positions. This year
after the initial "dying" of the men the committee will be less restricfolks, the women take ovei' weep- tive to allow more employers to
ing and wailiJII, and sometimes cat attend. Current job openings are
preferred but not required.
fighting over one man.
Any veteran, employer or serThe
events
of
the
camp
are
open
'UNION SOLDIER' -Tom Meteall of Gallla Count;rls one or a
vice
provider interested \n attendto
the
public,
,GloeCkner
spid,
and
number of Uvlna blltor;r IJ'OIIP memben wllo will be In tbe Galing
should
contact Tom White at
people
are
e!ICOWIIed
to
\top
by
'
lipolis Clt;r ParkrAr.rU 11·14 11 )11ft of tile' 9llt Volunteer Ohio
the
Gallipolis
Job Service, 446and
'see
the
eventi
and
di!lCUSS
any
Militia (reactlvtited • Eveoll at the e~mp Iff free and open to tbe
interest in joining the unit they may 1683 .or Jim ·Fitzwater at the Point
public.
·
have .
Pleasant Job Service. 67S-2770.

Sewer system construction not
jeopardized by lack of distric_t

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the.y wear.
History can be fun - and this
8f9up of re-enactors will show both
the serious side to the Ci vii War.
and the lighter side. There will be a
number of competitions during the
daytime, including a flapjacks, uniform and one that always proves
interesting, weeping and dying con·

Veterans' Job
Fair set May 8

•TRUCKS•

Cloth Interior. aport Wheela. eliding.
rear window. Check It out.

1 TRAIL OPENED • A rlbbon-cutt1n1 c:eremony was held oa Saturda;r at C101p Klashuta near
Chester, opeoin1 a three·mlle oatare trail blazed
by the ClviHan CoDSerVIIdoo Corps and orcbestrated by the Me'"'· County l'!lrk District Board.
rictured cuttlaiihe ribbon are, 1-r, ·Special
Speaker Steven Newman; Boy Scouts or Ameri-

I

By LEE ANN THOMPSQN
Time-Sen tine! Staff ··,

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Aloq tbe rlver;. ..--.81·8

8UTTONUR

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SUP ON.

Squads make 'five
Thursday runs

2

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Search continues
for driver of car .

McClure's Family lestaurant

Inside
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Comics.........."............ Insert

Sheriff issues
consumer advisory

--Area deaths--

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Sunda'•

cODiiDued 1rom page 1
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ViUage Council met in special SCS·
sion Tuesday night and came 10 the ·
unanimous conclusion that the cost
or organizing and maintaining' a
Sewer District would be "cost prohibitive."
O'Bi;ien said that establishinJ a
sewer dJstrict would require hinr:tl
a full-time director,~a ing boaid
members, and renting flee space.
''That wollld raise the onthly user
rates that£-e are tryin to keep loll'(.
(See SEWER, PIRe AI)
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Commentary and perspective

April 7' 1991

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Honors course available
this summer at URG ·

Aprll7, 1991

r·TV comtnerciaJs_·:________Fr._l!d_w._._cr._vw
FoJ;'lUnately, I am on cable TV

A Dlvlllon of

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. . .,,.,..._,=·- :

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·as Third Ave., GaUIJIO!II, ·ohio
(elf) . . .234!

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Ill Court$&amp;.•, Pomeroy, Ohio
(114) llilz-215&amp;
.

RO"ERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
'HOBART WILSON JR.
Execullve Editor

PAT WlliTEBEAD
AMiatanl Pnbllaher-ConlroUer

A MEMBER ol The Ualled Preoalnlernatlonal, Inland Daily Pr011 AIIOCil· '
tlon and the Amerttut Newtpaper PubUsht'fl AuoctaUon
·
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LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leas tb;an 300 wonts :
~ . Ions. AU letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with naine, addreasand
·' telephone number. No unstrned letters wDl be pubiJ.shed Utters should be In
' good tute. addr••••• a.•11•~~l1Ua ".~
-1

Backstairs at the
White House
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...

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Wbite Ho~¥e Reporter
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automobile or have prehistoric smiles and cOmpletely thrilled that
mOIISIMS fall on your C81'1 Strange, ' the Red Baron would honor he(
hundreds of commercials .that isn't it?
. with his presence. Now I as1c you,
appear each day. As 'a matter of . Thes,e commercials, however, is it normal for the manufacturer of
fact, there are so many that you did attract my attention. I never a product 10 present this image to
sometimes wish that you ha,d not heard of the Isuzu before that tiJ!le, the public? Woul&lt;! anybody purtumed an your TV. Recently, there Therefore, the writers of these chasing this pizza expect to have
have been several of them I know advertisements must have had peo- Red as a bouse guest? I assume the
. would clusify as bizarre or just pie such 8s myself in mind.
. . company making the pizza did not
plain lousy.
Probably the worst script for a expect Rupette 10 go out and purAlthough all of the products · commen:ial is.the one where there chase a month's supply of pizza as
advertised are good products, nev- are three i!nponant business e~tecu- a result of this ad . If you do,
ertheless, one wonders why and • lives ·at a meeling who coounence Rupette, you wiD be a candidate for
how the writers of the TV ads ever throwing mud at each other. Why the funny fann.
•
thought that these COD)mercials in heavens 111111e, Rupe, would anyRupe, I tried eating .one of the
would be appealing 10 the public. I one go to a meeting with a brief- Red Baron's pizzas and it was
stlppose ~you would have to say case loaded with mud, much less . good. Red. however, did not show
that if the TV ad was so preposter- toss it at random toward the other nor did I expect him 10 call on me.
·• ous the viewer would become executives. This commercial was; I If he had, I would hav.e probably
interested for curiosity's sake. ·
suppose, to show that the Uttl C!&gt;r- called 911. In the alternative, I
For example, lsuzu had two TV poration was not guilty of mud probably would visit Rupette at the
commerc\aJs. 9Jie w_as the showing slinginJ sucb !IS iis co~peti~on funny farm.
. .
.
of 1ts vehicle mvolvmg a swann of · was dOmg. Thts a&lt;tverusmg ts a.
Fmally, I was watchmg last
bees. These bi:ll:s were let out in the take-o(f on the old pie-in-the-face · Sunday when the Grey Poupon ad
air causing persons present 10 run cemcdl act used in the old Harold · appeared. Imagine yourself riding
and jump in the lsuzu. The ad Lloyd s time. The writer realizes in a luxury car with a chauffeur
claimed that the Isuzu held more that.there is always a ~h when driving and another luxury car
· individuals than any other car and some person JetS a pie in his face. drove beside {ou with the passenfor some strange reason none was But mud??? Again •. the idea is ge,r asking i you had any Grey
stung by the bees. The other ad was weird but it does attract attention.
Poupon and then you attempt to
one where prehisiOric monsters feU
Another example of weird ads pass it 10 the man in the back seat
from the skr. and off the roofs of would be the Red Baron's commer- of the other car. This commercial
buildings striking the Isuzu. Appar- cial on TV. On the tube there is a was in several different episodes
ently the idea was that the Isuzu picture of a lady who is eating her and the men in the vehicles were
had a st~onge.r body than oth.er ~ed Baron Pizza. Suddenly, enter- attempting to pass the mustard to
autQmoblles 10 handle the prehis- mg the room through a back wm- one another,
·-- - IOric monsterS.
dow is none other than Red Baron
In one of the· scenes, the bottle
· Now, I ask you Rupe, whete in himself. After giving het a red rose falls to the ground smashing the
the heck would one encounter a he sits down and they munched the Grey Poupon due 10 ihe inability of
swarm
of bees when driving an floodies. The gullible hostess is aU the passengers 10 pass it from OnC&lt;
·
and as any viewer knows there are

: · WASHINGTON - Presid~nt Bush does not mind sharing his
!U1J!Ored limousine with. reporters. But there is a condition. They have to
·go jogging with-him first .. That's the payoff.
. '
· ·· ·
' ABC-TV's Britt Hume, AP's Rita Bearilish and'Gannett•s Jessica Lee
were invited by Bush 10 join him in his limo after they ran with him for
about 20 minutes.
.
· They a)J cover the White House on a regular basis. Other reporters
have had the same privilege when they jogged with Bush in the Washington area
· Lyndon Johnson used to see repa1m on the sidelines and invite them
ln10 his lead car for a ride 10 a speechmaking site or back 10 the White
House. In thai respect, Johnson and Bush have a lot in common.
· llush iS defmitely not a loner 1ilce some of his predecessors. He is still
enjoyi'ng the afterglow of being elected president and takes delight .in
walking the corridors, popping into offices, and catching up on the gossip.
: BuSh is lilce LBi in other ways: He listens to White House press secre·

·asked and 10 see how his spokesman is doing; he tunes in on State Depart~
inent ~keswoman Margaret 'l:utiler when the going gets rough in the
!liplomatic field. . ·
·
·
.
• Johnson got stenographic transcripts shortly after press briefings.
!&gt;ometimes lie would read them at lunch at the price of indig~tion. He
also wanted his aides 10 write the names of reporters who aslced a specifiC
question. And when he didn 'tlike the question, Johnson would not spare
the expletives.

10 the other.
·
I can't imagine in my wildest
dreams that any person would roD
down his window and ask the passenger in another car whether he
had any Grey Poupon. In so pass- ·
ing it 10 hif!~. the _odds of on«? ha~­
ing and u~1ng thts prodiiCt tn hts
· auromobile would be about one in a
million. The odds would be even
greater passing the Grey Poupon to
the passenger of the other car.
There would also be some risks
involved if you asked the wrong
persop. You might be answered by
someone teUing you to get lost or
what is, more likely, ·what is Grey
Poupon? You may get another
answer to the effect that.ul do not
have any Grey Po upon but I have
some Mail Pouch." .
· · Ridiculous? Nol according to
the makers ~f this t\roducL It happens all the time or so they would
have for you to believe.
·
Not all commercials are bad and
some olthem are exceptional.
Within the past week, I went 10 a
grocery .store to purc~f!Se some
Grape Nuts cereal. Wh1le attempt- ·
ing 10 locate this product, I spotted
a cerel\1 named Nut and Honey.
Some of these commercials really
get 10 me. I purchased a box of Nut
and Honey in addition to the box of
Grape NuiS.
~
Nearly every breali:fast cereal
produced advertises with th~ per- ,
son eating the product beComtng so
excited that she or he acts like a
different person. Really., the com·
mercials are getting so influential
that one is tempted to change cereals each week because of the advertisements.

~
ilesereved fCIJIItatiOII for secrecy. ·
.
·
; He has sent national security affairs adViser'Brent.Scowcroft on ~
111issions to Clliila.and the.Middle EJst and probaJlJy other pla.ces ~will
.lWt be knowo·untll they are· ferreted out of the Nalonal Archtves m y~
to come.
• ·Scowcroft made a roasi to the Chinese officials at a banquet in ·his,
'(~
'onor on his trip 10 Beijing in 1989 that he lived 10 regret. It was in th~
4ftennath of the brutal crackdown of the student uprising in the Chinese . aiSTI!i"' ..1 ·.
caeitaJ ·and Scowcroftrook a. swipe at China's critics in the United Slates. ·
: When his recent secret trip 10 Saudi Arabia leaked, State Depaiunent
¢porters mischievously asked whether Scowcroft had made any roasts at
King Fahd's palace.
.
; The President and Mrs. Bush are addicted 10 exercise and are dedicated
1.0 getting their share of it daily, regardless of the official demands on their
time.
.
A group of conservatives are
~ The first lady' swims a mile nearly every day in the heated outdoor pool calling for a national test for highin the backyard of the White House. She also .often plays tennis with long- school seniors beethat wilghlmedasi;U'e
J1me female friends.
wh~t ~y have
n tau t unng
. Bush is a jogger and lilces 10 play golf and tennis. He calls up cronies theu high-school.years. ~IS purpose
on CapiiOI Hill for a game of paddle ball in the House gym. Bush had 10 IS 10 g\~ the IUibOn a 1cind of psy~ow down some of his physical activities during the Persian Gulf War, .. ch~!l'tetrte, score card;
.Amen~ans don t know how
but he is making up for it now.
•
they're domg," says Chester E.
Finn Jr., an assistant secre!&amp;r)' of
education in the Reagan admmisb'ation. "They get these misleading
test
results in whic;h every scores
•
about average. It's as if the teachers went to smile school."
Not in the black community.
t&gt;ear Gallia . County Parents, will benefit, then consolidation is
Average
students, e~peAdministration and School Board the answer. However, cutting pro- cially males,black
sco~ below Finn's
~embers:
grams is not the answer, because it national average. Very few teachrobs us of a changC" IQ__truly enjoy
in predominately black schools
:· We are seniors at Kyger Creek what is supposedly the" !Sest years ers
regard
their instructional residency
High SchoQI, and we 'are concerned of our lives. Even though the signs · as a "smile
school."
fbout the lack of consideration (or along the road say, ''Together for
"Looking at the achievement
lhe students of the Gallia County · Children", are people really acting
Local Schools. Even though the in the children's best interesp . data, the dropout rate and other
indicaiOrs," says Milwaukee board
~ecision of the B~a~d will not THINK ABOUT IT. Nobody
member Joyce. Mallory, "made 111e
i.ffect us, we believe 1t IS every stu- seems to care what the students as1c
myself, •Are black
boys inher.
Oent's right to receive a quality have 10 say, only ·the money that is
education and it is the adminisb'a- being saved: ,
We are proud of Kyger Creek
lion's place 10 make sure students
&amp;et the (lasSeS they need· and want and our faculty for the effort they
10 take.
have made to help the Sludents. We
~ 'Parents who do not vote for the believe deep down inside other stuWASHINGTON - In Miami,
ppcoming bond levy are cheating dents in Gallia Count'y feel the where drug-related rip-offs and
their children and grandchildren of . same way about their schools or murders are back-page news, the
in' education that one must have in they wouldn't be so quick to say no death of just another drug dealer
r to succeed in this world. to consolidation. Parents who want can often go unnoticed. But Ramon
hour our four' years of high their children to graduate from
Arturo Navarro, 41, was not just
•choo, we have been deprived of their Alma Mater should think another dru~ dealer. He was the
classes thai could have been bene· twice about putting !heir children's
government s star witness in the
futures in jeopardy for their own · case against two co-defendents of
licial to our futures.
• _ Some of the elective classes that selfish pride.
Manuel Noriega
.flave been cance!led are Latin,
DON'T BE SO QUICK TO
His death in a mysterious car
Sociology and Psychology; these SAY NO TO CONSOLIDATION!
wreck on Feb. 27, should have
classes were cancelled due 10 the Find out· the facts! Attend the
been a setback 10 the prosecution,
deaths of Fay Sauer and Adam schoolboard meetings; .they have
but it was the defense lawyers who
Kiahel. These programs were not them to infonn the parents as to ··.mourned the loss. They had built
replaced in order to save money. what's going on. We haven't got
their case around discrediting the
Accounting, shorthand, Business much time until May 7. Teachers
star witness, which wasn't tough to
English, ,and Business Math have are always tellil)g us to use our
do. Twenty days after Navarro's
.. .,een cancelled because they are time wisely, so parents, make the : death, the prosecution won its case
:cl)nsidered to be vocauonat sub- best of your time, get infonned as
against the Noreiga cp-defendants,
jects, yet the College Pre~ stud~nts '·to what' s going on.
.
Brian Davidow and William Sal· . .W!Io may be mterested 10 tak1ng
The reg1stered voters of Galha ,darria$ll. Tl)ey were convicted of
.. :(!lese classes 10 further their know!- .. County will have \he ftnal say as to
consp1ring wtth Noriega to trade
·edge and capabilities are unable 10 whether a new school will be buill
arms 10 lh~ Medellin drug cartel in
'cto so.
or not. Please find out the facts
Colombia in exchange for cocaine
l .Also some of the Gallia County before you make your final deci- intended for the United States.
•Schools have classes and clubs that sion:
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The prosecution has initially
!the others don'L If our education is · There is an informational meet' .. planned to put Navano on the stand
:consideled 10 be an Equal Opportu- ing Mon. April 8; 7 p.m., at Bid- ; to testify that he had witnessed
·nity Education - then why aren.'t weli,Porter. Be there!
meetings o.n the arms-for·drugs
:the same classes and lTV offered m
Codette Barry
deal. But the defense was ready to
·all four high schools?
.
· Danielle Scott show taht Navarro was less than an
: we don't necessarily agree wilh
Allison Mcguaid
all-American boy himself, even
:consolidation, but if,our children
' . ·Kyger Creek High SChool
during the tillte he was.a paid infor•
·
·
Cheshire. Ohio
mant for the govemmenL
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:.,arents urged to attend board meetings

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Death of. drug~case witness a mystery

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The U.S. Attorney's Office in
Miami admits that in the weeks
leading up to the trial, Navarro
started 10 look less and less useful
10 the prosecution. In fact, on the
day before his death,' Navarro told
Miami private detective David
Ward that· the government no
. longer needed him.
The defense lawyers w'bo lost
their case are understandably ·skeptical about the fact 'that Navarro
drove his BMW at .a high speed
into a wooden fCI)CC in a suburb of
Miami. Navarro had plenty of enemies who might have wanted him
dead. ToxicoloiY· reports found no
drugs or alcoliol in his system.
EVCII more curious is the statement
of a witness who arrived at the
scene mOments after the accidenL
The trial of Davidow and Saldarriaga was the prelude 10 Noriega's trial. The two were charged
with conspiring with Noriega 'in
March 1986 to give 1,000 M-16
auromatic weapons 10 the MedeUin
cartel in exchange for more than
·600 pounds or cocaine. Navarro
had been in on the deal and then
turned government witness. But..._
defense lawyers say his venion of
the deal didn't stand up.
If Navii'I'O'I testimoney 4idn 't
· sour the jury, hia criminal activities

'

while on the government jpayroll
would have. "the jury would have
hated him. He was sleazy, cold and
arrogant ... he would screw you one
way or the other," said Fred · - - - - - - - - - - - . .
Salazar, a Miami private investigaNavarro was under investigation '
lOr who iailed Navarro.
·
by the Internal Revenue Service for
"He was a serious embarrass- · $200,000 in back taxes he allegedly · .
ment 10 the government because of owed. Miami police were investi- .
the ireatment they had· extended gating a repott that Navarro bought.
him, and how he had abused it," his BMW with cash after hesaid Richard Shaprstein, who was pawned siOJen jewelry. .
Davidow's attorney.
Despite Navarro's escapades, by
In 1988 and 1989, the govern- the time the trial roUed around he ·
ment paid Navarro $50,00010 work had been paid $170,000 as a govon a drug sting operation against crnment infonnant and had been
Cohimbians. According 10 private gh:en immunity from prosecution ·
detective David Ward, someone twice. The taxpayers even paid the
close 10 Navarro later claimed that $5,000 for his funeral. Sharpstein
he had bf(lught in a load of cocaine calls it, "the greatest free· ride since ·
for himself during the sting.
the fifst m?nkey weQt iniO space."

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

Today in history

'

By Ualted Press Internatioaal
Today is Sundar. April?, the 97th day of 1991 wil!l268 10 follow.
The moon is in Its laSt quarter.
The nloming stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Men:ury and Jupiter.
Those born on Ibis date lUll under ihe sign of Aries. They include mis·
sionary St. F!8flCis xavier iii 1506· .

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Recruiting weekend.lets
students see all offering

· IN HONOR . LOCAL TROOPS • Tltilllp banal in tbe Gas
Plus stadon In Tappen Plabts 8lld is covered with ilpatures or
local residents ·ror t1taR serving In the Persllll Gull. Ginnie Hlaes,
left, and Manager Cindy DurSt, right, were largely respoulble for
the sign, wblcb featares yellow ribbons with the names or au Tuppers Plains and Reedsville area Gulf servicemen. It 'also notes
:when they arrive home. A slmUar &amp;ign stands outside tbe station,
listing names of local service men uufwomen.
· ··

RIO GRANDE , Ellen E.
a writing instructor at.
Firelands College, Huron, Ohio,
will ~e part in the Writers and
Writing Conference at the UniversityofRioGrandeon Aprill9-20.
Behrens will conduct a ftction
reading at 3:30 p.m. Friday, April
19 in Wood Hall as one of the
many activities planned for the
conference.
' The conference is co-sponsored .
by the English faculty of ·Rio
Grande's College of General Studies and Liberal Arts and the Aipha
Allpha Lambda chapter of the
Sigma Tau 'Delta English Honor
Society; The conference will

The group is asking the assis-

tance of anyone knowing of a grad-

area 10 notify
them of the date. The secretaries
have a limited listing or current
addresses and help is needed.
The secretaries are: Bidwell.Porter: Donna Broyles, 85 Locust
Street, Gallipolis, 446-2071; Vin·
ton: Opal Payne. Rt. 2; Vinton,
388,8661; Nonh Gallia: (58·69):
Diane McCarley, Rt. 2 Box 48,
Vinton, 388-8319; North Gallia
(70-79): Jean Petrie, Rt. 2,.Box.
208B, Vinton, 388·9771; North
Gallia (80-): Joe Moore, Main
Street, Vinron, 388-8321.
uate living out of the

s~T; ~:~ ~8 ~~!tr~~-~;

lagher was among those deployed-:
10 the Middle East with American: 1
military forces that participated irt;
Operation Desert SIOtm.
•:
An aircraft armament system( •
specialist, is bomebased at Nellil£ :
Air Force Base, Las Vegas. Nev. • :
· He is the son of Cuddy a"&lt;t ·
Mary E. Thomas of Gallipolis.
•:

ATTENTION!.
PARENTS, EDUCATORS &amp; COMMUNITY MEMBERS
There will be an informational rally at tho
Bidwell-Porter Elem•tary School an
Monday, April 8, 1991, at 7:00p.m.
. Anyone Interested In what ls .going on with
Gallia County Schools Is welcom,. there will
be a slide presentation to Introduce you to
the-details of the now proposed GaUia
County High School. Keynote speaker will be
Mr. Charln Brown from t"- State
Departm•t of Education •
Another rally will be hold In the .South end
·of the County at a later date.

.

; faii:l for by:
Together for Children

RIO GRANDE - Guitar virtu- newly-founded music education::
oso Matthias Stegmann will con- program at .the University of Rio :
clude the 1990-91 season of the Grande since 1990. He is presenti&gt;';
Especially Music series with a 2:30 . pursu1ng a mas.ter's d~gree iO:•
p.m. performance on Sunday, April musi~ history while performing jlt:
14 in.the Christensen Theatre of the central and southeas!ern Ohio. , • •
For ticket prices and other infl)r~ ·
F'tne and Petfot'ming Arts Centerat
mation, contact the Fine and Per-;::
the University of Rio Grande.
Especially Music is a satellite .forming Arts Center at 245-5353,
presentation of the Valley Artists ·extension 364. The roll-free numi·
Series, the organization which ber in Ohio is 1-800-282-7201. • •
exposes regional audiences 10 the
newest stars on the musical and
theatrical scene.
Stegmann wiD replace the previ- ·
ously announced Robin Huw ·
Bowen, whose perfonnance was
·cancelled. .
Pickup and
Stegmann is a native of Munster, West Germany, where he
Delivery
began playing the guitar at 12 and
. gave his first concert appearance at
17. In 1986, after several years of
at 7:00
study with,Werner Kammerling at
!For tht Early Riser)
·.. '
the Conservatory of Music at
Colqgne, where he earned his bachSame or Next
.,
elor's degree, he and his family
emigrated 10 the Uniltid States.
Day Service On
Stegmann now teaches guitar it
laundllred Shirts -.
Marshall University and has been a
(DoM on Site)
l)lember of the faculty of the

CARDINAL

DRY CLEANERS

r---------------A~

A.M.·:

A.

... Tuxedo Rental .,
Wure the oaly \
· 4ryelll..,l wlthla SO ··
. •llee of 811111, Mtltt 114 .....
thlt"
offtrt thee 11rvltt1.
..

c••••,..

&gt;
-------------Ohio River Plaza -.
-

..

-~

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GAWPOUS, OH.

&lt;

446-·495

••

MATTHIAS STEGMANN

• ;,

.

explore writing through fiction,
poetry and drama. ·

Behrens received her bachelor's
degree from Denison University
and her master's in fmc arts degree
from Bowling Green State University's Creative Writin' Program .
She has published facuon, poetry
and factual articles in numerous
publications and is currently at
work on a novel set in the midwest.
For more information about the
conference, contact Yvonne Head,
conference director, at the Universily of Rio Grande, (614) 2455353, extension 374: The toll-free
numberinObiois 1·800-282-7201.

Applications qccepted by board

POMEROY- Meigs County.
Board of Elections Director Jane
Frymyer reports that applications
for absentee ballots are now being
get a feel for college-level soccer , accepted at the board's office on
with an outdoor game.
' Mechanic Street in Pomeroy.
''The key.IO a successful admis· According 10 Frymyer, those applisions program is a campus which
offers a number of activities, both Dil'orces; dissolutions
. in academics and out of the class·
room," said Mark Abell; executive · sought in Meigs Court
POMEROY - .Divorce actions
director of admissions. "Students
have
'been filed in Meigs County
are in sea~ch of a number of things
when they are selecting a college or Common Pleas Court by Celia A.
university of attend, and with Hite, Middleport, against John C.
diversified activity such as Scott's Hilt, Middleport; Martha L. Wisesoccer weekends, we are hopefully •man, Middleport, against Evan D.
meeting the needs of prospective Wiseman, Rutland; and Marjorie
Sfalcianos,' Shade, against William
scholars."
More information can be E. Sfakianos, Shade.
An action for dissolution of
obtained by contacting the Admis. sions Office a! the University of marriage has been filed by Otis
Rio Grande, (614) 245-5353, ext: , Ray Vanmatr~. Middleport and
Kimberly Marlene Vanmatre ,
208.
Wellston. '
·

In its annual quest. to attract
prospective students to the Univer•sity of Rio Grande. the office of
admissions .does more than attend
college infonnation nights and conduct on-campus lOurs,
One of the different activities
planned by the office is a weekend
for students wishing 10 attend Rio
Grande and atso play soccer, a circumstance that works out cQnve. niently for admissions counselor
Scott Morrissey, who is also
URG's soccer coach. .
The weekend exposes studentrecruits 10 campus life by boarding
with soccer players, practicing with
them and learning about the campus and the soccer program, Mor-·
' rissey said,
·
"The main purpose is 10 attract
the best players I can,J!et them iniO
the school for a weekend and have
them meet other recruits," he said
during a re.cent outing . "Most of
these kids are here for the rourth
time and I assume there is some
interest on their part about coming
here. I've become pret~y excited
about these weekends because
there is a lot of interest in them,"
That weekend, students from
central Ohio and West Virginia
were on camrus. and accompanied
by Morrissey s players. For ~'8ft. of
lhe time, they were busy ms1de
Lyne Center, practicing moves and ·
sharpening offensive and defensive
skills.
,
Morrissey has coached the socCl:r team since 1989 and was
named the Mid-Ohio Conference
Coach of the YCIIJC for his work iri
the sport last fall. The 1990 campaign was lhe soccer team's fust
winning season in severallears. 1
Another auch weeken for •stu-I dent-rccruill hu been plallned ror
April. Wellher permilling, Morris' '
....v c•irl ,.fl11lt\nto 1"ill he ljhle to

.

•

Behre~s.

OF SOCCER AND RIO GRANDE - · As one or several programs to atlract students to the University of Rio Graade, the uni·
versity's admissions office plans a ~ekend. every wiater "and
spring for prospective students interested in playing on the school's
5occer team. Seen above are some high school soccer players scrim·
maging with members or the Redinen kicker .team in Lyne Center
during one or the weekends.
·

His wife, Anny First LL KatllUinc L. Hanson, is the daughter of
Thomas X. and Vema X. Danieii·,
of rural Rt. 3, Bidwell. .
!•
In 1978, he graduated from: :
Carlisle Senior High School, Pa.,• : ,
and r;eceived a master's degree in:•
1989 from Troy State University.::
Dothan, Ala.
•:
·
· ·,

Guitarist to close series·~~

Author, instructor to
visit URG cQnjerence

What black students don't need_'·_;_C_h_uc_kS_ton___,..e

Letters to the Editor

The exen:ise ia conducted every .
other year 10. train ·Alaska-based
forces to employ and sustain com-•
bat ~IS. · ·
He is commander at·Fort Wainwright, Alaska.
.
The soldier is the son of Charles
K. and Janice J. HansOn of 2504 'N,
Michigan, Rosw~. N.M.

VINTON - Officers of the North
Gallia Alumni Association met
recently to finalize plans for Jlle
annusJ banquet 10 be held Saturday,
May 25 at North . Gallia High
School on State Route 160.
The doors will open at 5 p.m.
for registration and visitation. Dinner \Viii be served at 7 p.m. Regis.. tration fees are $8 per person and
must be .turned into the secretary by
May20.
.
.
The North Gallia Alumni Association consists of graduates of
Bidwell-Porter, Vinron and North
Gallia High Schools. Several classes are planning reunions 10 be held
in conjunction with the banquet.

per.)

enUy bad or inherendy dumb?"
There is a myth fostered by merall-white school extolling white
itocratic fanatics that d•e abandonTo find the answer, Milwaukee supremacy.
has set up two "African-'American
But Americans cannot have it ment of standardized test scores
Immersion Schools." open to all both ways. 'They cannot seek to somehow lowers standards. ·That's
students, but designed specifically establish national standardized tests sheer nonsense, Does anybody serifor young black males. Students that ipso facto relegate the average ously believe that the most prestiwiD get heav,y pedagogical doses of black student to a second-class gious college~ and universities
black . ~isiOry lind tiie black ~estalt existence while seeming 10 conf1m1 would lose applicants if they no
taught by black males servmg as the controversial psychometric the- · longer required SAT scores? ·
role models.
Before we can talk about an
sis of Arthur R. Jensen of the UniOther' locations are following versity of California that blacks are honest meritocracy, we've g()t to
suit with African-American Immer- genetically inferior.
level the playing f~ld to the point
sion Schools.- Baltimore, Dade
Standanlized tests are a perpetal where students of all ethnic backCounty, Fla., New York City and reaffirmation of the awesome grounds are at least educated to
Washington, D.C. Black educarors achievement gap between wliite stand on the threshold of accessiin Baltimore claim that their all- and black students. That's why I bility 10 a meritocracy.
·
black classes are already showing propose a four-year moratorium on
This means that this nation must
immediate results in lower dropout aU standardized or nom-referenced 111obilize its resources 10 narrow the ·
rates and slighdy higher test scores. tests. Instead, schools would use gap in which 45 percent of the
But most Americans deplore qiterion-reference tests. These prison inmates - l!ut only .3 percent
this sly rCSI,IrreCtion of "separate · measure the same cognitive abili- of the college population - are hut equal." I heartily ooncur. That ties, but they do not compare the black. males.
which we call a rose;. by any other pupils' achievement levels to a
The sooner. young black males
name would smell as sweet, and national noon thai is based as much 1 are taught how to cope with
that which we call an all-black on white upper socio-economic Sta· democracts diversities, they soonmale school extolling black male .' tusas it is on predictive valid!ty.
er they will take their place in it as ·
pride. would reek as putridly as an
productive members.
;, ·

:!~· and air in~t opaa-

·planning annual event

· (Editor's Note: Long-time
Pomerc;ty Attorney Fred W.
Crow, Jr. Is a frequeqt conO'IIIu·
· tor or columns ror the Surtday
Times.SetttineL R1Gders wishing
to applaud, crldcize or comment
on any subject (excepi for politics
or religion) are lnvhtd to wrltlto
Mr. Crow itt care of this newspa-

••

CAPT. CHARLES K. HANSON
Army 'Capte Charles K. Hanson
has participated in Arctic Warrior
91, a training exercise fo( the
defense of A1aslra.
It provided an arctic environment for a major land battle
between two larfC conventional
forces in the state s interior, air-toaround operations in suppon of the

North Gallia alumni

There are others too numeroUs
10 mention. Whether ~e like it or
not, we are influenced by commercials. Enough said, Rupe, but don't
believe everything you see.
Carry on.

'
· For all his ·aJlPC81:.80ce of openness and affability, Bush ¥s a well

--In the service-~
. .:::. ·

RIO GRANDE - Students . Both summer scholars and conenrolled in the two divisions or the tinuing HP students can enroll in
Honors Progr!lnnt the University the ·special honors courses chosen
of Rio Gtande will have the oppor- from the ceneral educa~on curricu~ty to coatin~ ~ialized study lum for this summer.
thts summer wllh two four-hour
"As a member of lhe summer
courses.
Honors Program, you wiD begin 10 .
The classes are also open 10 all learn the indepen~nt yet supportstudents, explained Edward R. ive learning environment that charSofranko, Ed.D., director of the · acterizes the HP." Sofranko said.'
Honors Program.
"Summer honors students have lhe
The university currently oper-. chance 10 expiore issues and topics
ates the Associate Honcn Program of cominon interest With professors
(AHP), which requires students 10 and continuing AHP students, as
select spetial honors sections of well as giving you a g!Jj)(! place 10
general education courses during develop your intellectual indepentheir freshman and sophomore dence m a context or support.
years.
· "It's also a chance 10 meet other
''lbese courses emphasize quali- students both continuing and new,
ty rather than quantity and encour- and 10 help organize field trips and
age students to think, write and events that aren.'t always strictly
express themselyes with clarity," academic," he continued. "In the
Soflanko said.
.
fall, you'll already have a place on
· The University Honors Program campus where you know people ·
(UHP) consists of special topics and where pe&lt;&gt;ple kno~ rou."
~~nars fQr J'!"iors and the prepsFor more mformauon on the
rauon of a semor .thesis or research Honors Program, coniact the OffiCe
. project All HP students participate of Admissions at Rio Grande, 245in their own campus organization 5353, extension 208, or Sofranko at
and take ~art in academic and extension 257. The lOll-free num- ·
social activtties, Sofranko said.
ber in Ohio is 1-800-282·7201.

. 1 also liked the "Energizer''
commercials' which shows a little
mechanical rabbit beating a drum.
The rabbit quite frequently interferes with the filming of other commercials with the remarks, "s!ill
going, still going."

tary Marlin Fitzwater's briefings to find out what questions are .being

.

Sunday nmee Sentlnei-Page-A3

cations will be accepted until noon·
on May 4 for the May 7 primary
election . .
. In addition, new voter regisb'ations will be accepted until Monday. April 8. According to Ohio
Secretary of State Bob Taft, anyone
who hasn't voted' in four years will
need to register and anyone who
has moved or changed t~cir ·name
\Viii need 10 update their file with
the board before Monday. ·
According to Frymyer, the
board will offer extended hours on
Monday, The offtee will be open
from 9 am. until9 p.m.

.,

.,

Star named
strong~st . bank ..
in Ohio
MONEY .Magazine's March issue listed Star Bank as
Number ·one in Ohio within the 98 U.S. "superaafe"
banks. Pulled from Veribanc'a list of 1,800 Blue Ribbon banks, the publication chose the top two in each
state. Veri bane's Blue Ribbon banks have asaets of at
least '60 million and meet atrict standards for equity,
profitability, liquidity and problem loans.

REWARD
OUR POLICY
Find us a
competitor's
unexpired dry
cleaning coupon,
bring It, to us and .
receive an
additional &amp;" off
. their
coupon.

({\

DliiE ·

\1) CLEA~EIS
"Slnca 1 ~110"
.

----

STAR BANK

'•

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Ptge A4

Sunday Times sentinel
.

Ponieroy-Middlepo'r t-Galllpolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

.

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• t .

....

BARBERTON, Ohio (UPI) - One of the three hostaacs killed
Thursday by aunmen in a Saalma11o; Calif, elCCIIODics is a 1971 B•·
bel1on High School padlllte who wu just IIUSfemd back 10 work II
· the slllre.
!.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Scc- international relief effons stemHis mocher, Jackie GirO!(. :said that when she first heard reports
Jetary
of State lames Baker pre·
ming from the Iraqi civil war, offi.
about the Thunday shooling, she was relieved because her son; Jolm
·
cialssaid.
pared Sallllday for a return visit to
Fritz, had just been lriiiSfared from the SIOJ'e,
.
.the Midrlle East to renew the peace
At Newpon Beach, Calif., PresiBut Friday..sh\: received a ldq,hone call from Fritz's wife, Gayle, to
process
an!!
assess
a
growing
IraQi
dent
Busb said he had asked Baker
inform her lhat he had been tnlilsfared back .and was among the dead.
refugee
crisis
along
the
Turldsh
to
meet
with Turkish leaders "and
Fritz was38. ·
,
~.
visit
the
border area (willl Iraq) to
••it was devasta~ng,' ; said Garon, who now lives in Lo$ Angeles.
tlaker,
whp
;,isited
the
regiop
assess
the
refugee situation and
" As a ~nt. you can't.even fathom anylhina lilce this happening .!0
repon
back
to
me."
·
less
than
a
month
ago;
will
meet
yourchild."
· .
.
with
Tulkish
leaders
81111
get
a
6rst·
.
Baker
will
also
confer
with
Garon said her daugluer-in-law believed he was killed during the
hllld
look
at
the
lraqi
refugee
situa·
Bush
in
Houston
on
the
first
leg
of
bunt of gunfiJe lhat followed a police rusb ·into the Good Guys declion
on
the
6rst
podton of the jour- the trip.
IrOnic sun. Fritz was a salesman.
·
ney.
Bush sai!l U.S. Air Force tranS·
Sheriff's deputies stormecl the store where four gang members held·
Tens
of
thousands
of
Kurds
and
port
planes will begin dropping
41 hostaaes in a nine-hour ordeal, killing time of the gunmen afler
supplies
of food an!l other humaniother .refugees have fled Saddam
· they began shooting hosrages. Three hostqes, however, were also
Hussein's armies into Turltey and tarian assistance to refugees and
killed.
•
•
· civilians in war-tom norlhem Iraq,
Iran.
Sheriff Glen Crai&amp; said a gunman who killed two hostages was shot
State Department spokeswoman
" The human tragedy unfolding
to death. The lone surviving gunman, who was wearing the bulletproOf
Margaret
Tutwiler
said
Baker
also
in
and
around Iraq dernlllds immevest, killed the third holtage, the sheriff said. ,
·
· will visit JelUiaiem, where be will diate action
on a massive scale,"
Craig said the gtmmen were V~nese 111d belonged to
con!luct
negotiations
on
Tuesday.
the
president
sai!l. ''At stake are
the noiOrious and violent Oriental Boys JIIIJ. However, the sheriff said
The secretary also will visit Cairo, . not only the lives of hundreds of
lhe attack appnntly was riot a "SIIIdioDed Pill !IC!ivity." ,
ESYJII. and Damascus. Syria. in his· thousands of innocent men, women
· ''Appareqtly, police nllde the decision it wu best 10 go.in and II')' to
search for a Milldle East peace an!l and childnin, but the peace an!l
force tlleir hand. As far as we can tell; he.was ldlle!l when police
is expccte!l to return tO Washin&amp;ton sec uri'¥ ot the gulf."
.
stormed the builcling.••
IICJ[t
Friday.
DID'!Dg
a
meeting
with
members
Fritz's gran4pii'Cnts, Betiy and James Daly of Barbenon, also
•'The purpose of this trip is to of the Hispanic business .commu(\1leained of the deaih Friday.
.
see
if we.can bri.ng the parties clos- ty, Bush said about the Baker triP.
"It's so heanbreating," Betty Daly said "Theze are so many bad
er
together,"
Tutwiler said.
to the Middle East, "We don 1
ones on the stm:t and then for somebody lite (John) to have their life
Baker
also
was
expccte!l
to
visit
want to miss an opportunity to
· soatchehway by one of them, you just can't imagine." ·
•
Geneva.
Switz~rland, to discuss
move
forward on the peace proFritz moved to the Sammento 111burb of Auburn 10 years ago and
cess.''
,
began working for GCxx!Guys about 18 months ago.
.

•

--~Area
.

"I think·it's a mission with an week's trip is being rnade becsnse
inning of hope ... but 1oon't of progress. if any, fro ~!..,aker's
that we're on ihe verge of previous visit to Israe1....,~'"'and
having some deal, ••. he said.
other counlries in the region.
Administration officials, who
" This is 'yet another step in his
aske!l not to be i!lentified sai!l step-by-step process," Tutwiler
Balcer will not visit Jordan, a counsai!l. "This is an effon .to continue
try ihal refUsed to ·back the allied to take a!lvaritaBe of what we all
'coalition agaillst Saddam Hussein.
agree is there, a win!low of opporThe trip is unrelated to effons tunity'. All have agreed and nOhe
now under way to free U.S. an!l · that I am aware of have sai!l how
other hostages being hel!l in long that window would exist"
Lebanon, the officials said. But
Tutwiler sai!l Baker woul!l be
they a!l!le!l ihat Baktz woul!l bring willing to see Palestinian represcnup the hostage isiUe if he also visits tatives "if thete is such a request."
Syria cluring this trip. Officials di!l The secretary di!l meet with Palesnot say whether Syria would be on
tinia~ representatives during the
Baker's agenda. ,
last trip.
.
Tutwifer said Bush .arid Balcer
Baker is also expccte!l to take
feel thll "another trip wiD be help- up the iss~e of Israeli settlements in
ful in this process" following the the occupted West Bank.
"We continue to view such
secretary's Mi!lclle East visit last
month "an!! ihat it is imponant if ' activity as an obstacle to pesce and
we are to II')' an!! like advantage of to current efforts .to revive the
the window of opponunity ihat all peace process,'' Tutwiler said.
believe exists.''
" We have been tol!l in the piiSI ihat
"It also underlines our commit· the Israeli government woul!l have
ment to work actively to promote to approve expan!led settlement
pelice an!l real conciliation among activity an!l that no decisions had
Israel, the Arab states an!l the heeq ma!le by the govemmenL We
Pal.estinians," she said.
trust that that is still the case.''
Tutwiler woul!lnot say ihat next

Columbus Zoo
The ICiult Isam cobra grows to
about4 feet.
WiDael said if the Slllke got out
into the zoo grouncls, there have
been enouaiJ freezes· siac:e March
23 to kill tbe reptile.
.
Win1tel said although a cobra
can prOIIuce venom as, 1000 as it is
bom, the 1ize of the snake lleter·
mines the IIIIOUIIt of venom it oan

~

..

Zoo officials· say they have
)lO!Il'ed bleach into drain traps to
kill the snake, if it tries to drink
from one. Handlers~so have
scalded the walls and f1oGn 10 kill
the replile if It ia hilliDJ in a i:rack
or crevice.
.
"I think it is allcctlllliltelihood
thai i t ' s = dead," be said.
He ia
people will .. ovwly concerned that somedlill&amp; deld1y
ia lllllllin&amp;.aauD ill ........ Obio. ,
''1 don't think the 'concern
shoul!l be that great," he said.
Becsuse cobras are not native 10 .
the area, it shoul!l not survive. '

I

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::
WEATHER MAP • The northern Rockies will be cool and
•;cloudy with mouatala AOW and satltered showers in loWI!r eleva. :11ons. The Southwest will be fair and warm. Trxas wiD have a good
:~hance or stroaa tllunderstorms. The Great Lakes, Southeast and
·...t Cost will be partly cloudy and comfortsble. Cloudiness wUI
·~lnaer in nortbe111 New Ellglalld.

A warm·Ohio weekend

peratures .,;ill grace Ohio through
: . Lois of sunshine an!l mikl ICIII· Sunday.
••
High pressure was anchore!l
••
along the Atlantic Coast an!l will
· move little through Sunday. This
wiU allow skies to remain vinually·
clou!l free. .
.
Temperatures will be warm with
highs expected from 75 to 80.
They were starting out warm
early Saturday morning, with read·
ings in the 50s. Win!ls were southw~st aroun!l10 mph.
It will be clear Saturday night
~ and sunny Sunday, with lows of 50
to 55 and highs of.75 to 80.
Etll'ly Sat= morning, high
pressure wu
red over the Car·
oliDII and· exten!led to Ohio. A
cold frollt wu from North Dakota
•
to Nevada. The hip pn:uure wiU
':
move little duouJ!! Sunday while
O..Wttll ........................... Cent•
p.tYMr ................................. ....IO
the col!! front will reach a Min'
lltiiiiiLI: CliiPr
lint. .
'

•• By United Prell Iaterllltloul

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.......-.
... .

~y ................................. IS C..to

•'

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)'lo oubl&lt;rlptlou by maD por!ftlnfd ta

IICIOII-Coknf'&gt;
Ohio weather

.-eas wheN mot• earrter .mce 11
a'VIUobl,.

ne Iunday 11mn·lftllnel w111not bo
~IIH lor ldVU. pa)'IMIIII

.·
~·

·:

.

'

IMILIIJT? :••PI'IOIW

DuY•r ................................. MUt

... 1110111111 •••••••••

••

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.....

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - A ed "conspicuous gallantry" as he
solider-hero of World War I has
crept on his hands an knees .toward
become the first biack !lesignated ihe enemy machine gun ftre, inspir·
to receive the Medal of Honor, the ing the men of Company C to fol·
nation's highest award for valor, low.
,
Pentagon officials sai!l.
After successfully. destroying
The announcement Friday came
ihc machine gun position, •Stowers•
nearly 73 years after ·Cpl. Frecldie led his squad on an auack against a
Stowers, a South Carolina native second enemy !lefensive-trench
who is dead, led' a charge under line, when he was "gravely
heavy fire to capture an enemy
wounded by machine gun ftre," the
position in the Champagne-Marne Anny said.
sector of France.
But in ihe kind of heroism that
· ., The 1\-rmy, which ma!le the earns a soldier the Medal of Honor,
announcement said President Bush Stowers pressed forw11rd, helping
will present the award to Stowers' · his company capture Hill 188 and
surviving sisr,ers at a White House causing heavy enemy casualties
ceremony April24. .
bc;fore he died.
Details were sketchy on the path
Stowers'. regiment, the 37Jst
ihat Stowers' recognition followed. Infantry,,was awarde!l the French
The Pentagon faid that the Army in Croix·de Guerre with.Palm for its
1988 ordered a research effon to service.
detennine whether there ha!l been
The Army was outspoken in its
any barriers to black soldiers in the praise of the fallen hero . The .
medal process.
posthumous citatton reads in part:
Army officials discovered in " Cpl. Stowers' conspicuous gal·
1988 or 1989 that Stowers had lantry. extraor!linary beroism an!l
been recommended for a medal. supreme devotion were well above
But for unexplained reasons, the and beyond the call of !luty, follow .
medal was never besiowed on the ihe ftnest traditions of military serfallen IQI!er.
vice and reflect lhe utmost credit
While few !letails were available on him and ihe U.S. Army.''
about Stowers' upbringing or perBut for many years, ihe U.S.
. sonal life, the inci!letit that gave military followed a diffeten! tradi·
rise to the medal apPears to have tion, failing 10 recognize the steady
the potential for a screen~y.
devotion of blacks who have served
Stowers, the Army saa&lt;l, exhibit- in the military since the Civil War. ·

.
'

David Tawney. of Tawney Jeweler•
Inc .• h11 dellgned another aouvan~er
coin of the Old French Cll'{l Now
available 11: Tawney Jewaleralnc .. a1
oz. pur• sliver coin repr11entlng ·thl
Mttlement of Galllpollaln 1790, and
tha blndetend in the park. repreaente,
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tlve elf Qalllpolla todly.
Theae prooflikl colna ere available
In 1111ed plestlc or 1 bllutlful PfiHn·
tetlon ce•· Stop In at Tawney's Inc.
10 you can own a pi- of history.

•

SUllllay,IIIIUiy. Hiah ,_ 80.
M_,llnti.. WaJtll''
Fali Moaday ancl Wedllelday
and I CUtce of lltowen Taelday.
HIJIII in the mid 70s to Ioww 101
Mcnelly, In die 70a Tuesclay and In
the 50s and lower 60s Wedtitiidly.
Low• in tbe 501 Molday llld Tuesday lid Ia die 401 Wtd I M.f. ,

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Space observatory set for launch

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TAWNEY JEWELERS

From 1Mi-tt4e. lbe United Sta._
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not been talcen seriously and wac : languishing. Jones said Sessions
agreed ihat resolution of many of ,
the comp!aints hac! ta1cen too long. .
·In the Rochon case, the former
agent won more than $1 million in •
pay and benefits '!luring his lifetime, an!l the FBI agreed to an
exhaustive in1Cmal inquil:y.
The FBI also hiS been ,under fire ,
from Hispanic agents. In 1988, a ·
federal ju!lge in Texas ruled that
Hispanic qents bad been Systemat• '
ically denie!l promotions and •'
given the most lwMdous and least
rewarding assignments. '

'

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•

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before · his· parents
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GALLIPOLIS COIN!

By United Presa IDiel'llltloDal

•

four counselors, ihe Utah Women's
Clinic, Planned Parenihood, and an
unnamed woman who is pregnant.
U.S. District Judge J. Thomas
Greene is scheduled to hear an
ACLU motion Monday to expedite
hearings.

First black awarded
highest honor for WWI

i•

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IL. ... ,

SALT LAKE CITY - The
Civil Liberties Union has
filed a federal lawsuit challenging
the constitutionalitY of the Utah's
strict new anti-abortion law. !
The suit was filed Fri!lay in O.S.
District Court on behalf of 10 ·
physicians; seven religious leaders,
Ameri~

NATtONAL WlA'TMEA FOI!f'ECAST FAOM 7 AM 4·1-il TO 1 AN 4-1·91

'

ACLU files suit over
Utah anti-abortion law

group representing the black
agents, 'who feel that racial discrimination remains a serious problem
at the agency.
The agency is particularly sensi·
ti ve. about the issue because the
FBI is in '(large of investigating
civil rights compliints.
Also, the unrest among black
FBI agents occurs while Sessions is
consi!lering !lisciplirlary action
against 11 agents implicate!! in
years of racial harassment against ·
Donald. Rochon, a black ~Jent who
won a major discrimination case
against the government last August
The FBI sai!l Sessions listened
to oomplaints from the black agents
"over minority recruiting, promotional opportunities an!l pending
equal employment opportunity
complaints.''
FBI spokesman ThOinas Jones
said "it came- to the atteation of
Sessions" that black ·q ents were
consi.!lering a lawsuit. He then
aned to meet with as ~Y of the
black agents as possib~,
Jones sai!l, "He wants 10 assure
the black agents that he is doing
everything within his pilwer to
ensure there is, in fact, equal
opportunity for promotions in the'
FBI workplace."
Jonet. sai!l Sessions assured the
black agents who had filed equal
employment opportunity com·
plaints ihat "they will bC receiving
expe!litious han!lling and resolution.''
o
Many of the black agents are
reportedly upset the complaints hall ·

deaths---

••
Mel)lorial contributions may be
~n H. Sneed
: . . opentions ~IIICI'. •
•
LETART, W.Va . • Aaron H. . He is Survived_by two sisters, rnade to the Meigs CQunty branch
•
Sneed, 75, of Lela!1, w.vl.. died Lisa Oallaway of Belpre and Mrs. of the American Cancer Society in
•••
'
i\pril3, 1991 at Sebring (Fla.) Care Tony (!udith) Gage of Malverne, Pomeroy.
•
Center following an exten!led ilJ. M.; his granllm~. Myrtle Tat·
ness. He was a retired security ofli- tenon of Belpre; his pdfather,
•'j .
cer for .the Libby Owens Glass Homer McCoy, KingwoOO, W.Va.; Ralpb L. Morse
I
an aunt and uac:le, Bettie and
Compan
. POINT PL£ASANT • Ralph L.
.Bom.m
:t· Pike County, Kentucky, 1an!l
olm
:
HeLenton, Belpre..
Morse, 68, of Point Pleasant, die!!
he was a son of the late Roben and
was preceded in death by his Fri!lay, April 5, 1991 at his home.
••'
Arinda Hurley Sneed.
granclfather, Garland Tatterson; a He retired from the C&amp;.O Railroad
••
Surviving are his wife Rose grandmother, Edith .McCoy; an!l a with 17 years service and Kaiser
•
Sulkowaky Sneed; four sons, David brother in law. iiiiiOtlly Galloway.
Aluminum with 25 Years service.
•
Sneed of Lorida, Fla., Rober!
Gravesi!le ~erv_ices will be on · Born May 11. 1922 in Norfolk.
.j
Sneed ofDade City, Fla., Jack and . Weednesday at 11 a.m. at.Rocldan!l Va.. he was a sOn of Leola Lane
I
BiB Sneed ofMassiDon, Ohio; four
emetery in Belpre with Rev. Morae of Hunliitgton, and the late
daughters, Irene Col of Gallipolis, Mark,McClung officiating.
••
WJ. Morse. He wu· a member of
Blanche Dube' of Sebring, Fla.,
Friends may call at White· Trinity Unite!! Methoilisl Church
•
Pauline and Betsy Sneed of Min- Ethri!lge Puneral Home in Belpre an!l a World Warn veteran.
•
nesota; folD' step-sons, Jim GoOO- on Tuesday from 2 p.m. 10 4 p.m.
Additional survivors include his
•
win of Florida, Jaclc, Jerry and Dan an!l7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
wife, Mabol Smith Morse of Point
Pleasant: a daughter, Carol Faudree
Goo!lwin of Charleston, W.Va.; Fl
B Bail
one brother, David Sneecl of &lt;;ross
ora •
ey
of Proctorville, Ohio; a son,
••
Lanes, W.Va.; two sisters, Emmie .
MIDDLEPORT. Flora B. Bai· ~tephen L. Morse of Point Pleas•
Blllllcensbip of Wooster, Ohio.and ley, 89, of ~d!lleport. died Friday, ant; two borthers; Harol!l of Buder,
Meadie Long of Longbottom, April 5, 1991 at her residence fol~wrence of Mounclsville;
•••
KEYNOTE SPEAKER • l•Worldwalk"
mid-1980~1 walldng ,II'IIUDII tilt wor.!d, ent:~~~~r·
Qhio&gt;. 2l .grandcllildren. 2 great· lowing an e~tencled illness.
.~~
aged those in attenclance to use lbe trail for !loth . •
aulbor and Obio native Steven Newman was the
be
Monday, 2
grandchildren; several step- grandShe wasboni July 13, 1901 in
the physical rewards and the personal growth · •
. p.m. at Willco:(en Funeral ijome,
,keynote spealcer 011 Saturday at the grand open•
chilr
.e w~ preceded iti deaih by a Glenwood, w :va•• a daughter of with Rev. Steven Dorsey officiatthat can come from communing with nature.
ing
or
a
new
nature
trail
at
Camp
Klashuta
near
••
the late Joseph and Mary Morrison
•
(Times-Sentinel photo by Brian J, Reed)
Chester. Newman, wbo spent four years in the
brother, Woodrow, and a sister, Tbomas. A homemaker, she ing. Burial will be in Kirkland
•
·
Tinie Bowen. ·worked in several restaurants iti · Memorial Gardens.
Friends
IJUIY
call
at
the
funeral
Services will be con!lucted I Middlepon. She was a member of
•
home,
Sunday,
2
to
4
p.m.
and
7 to
p.m. Sunday, at Casto Funeral the Metgs County senior citizens.
Home, Evans, W.Va.. the Rev.
Surviving are a brother, Forrest 9p.m. .
By United Press International
Brazoria County, and the Brazoria United States enjoye!l rather pleas·
John Icenhower officiating. Burial · Thomas, Glenwood; three grand..
The already-soaked Texss ~ ·County coQflhouse also was shut ant weather Friday. About 50 high ;
foUows in Hopewell Cemetery • Mt. children, Sue Russell, Middlepon,
received more rain Saturday as tor- · down.
.
temperature recor!ls for the date •.
AltoF, '!f.Vda.
.II af
Thomas M Russell, Mason, W.Va. Elmer F. Baird
rential
thunderstorms
continued
Heavy
rains
that
began
over
nen s may ca
ter 2 p.m. and FloraneD Banks, BrownsmiUs,
were eiiher brOken or tied
l
CHESHIRE • Funeral services
Saturday at the funeral, and up until N.J.; seven great· gran!lchildren, for 'Elmer Franklin Baird, 60, of poun!ling pans of the Lone Star much of the area Thursday also
servic~ .time on ~lmday.
seven great- great- grandchildren 8849 N. State Route 7, Cheshire, State where ·nooding forced tbe were blamed in a Montgomery
1991 SCHEDULE
~~
will be con!lucted at 4 p.m. today at closings ·of schools, banks and County ~k that killed three peoan!l several nieces and nephews.
·
· . pie and injurecl three others.
FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET ~'
~ric L. Tatterson
She was preceded in death by the McCoy-Moore Fune~ Home, offJCe buildings.
,
ThunderStorms
poured_
rain
over
The
San
Bernard
River
was
AND GUNSHOW
BELPRE • Eric Lee Tatterson, husban!ls Tliomas Jones and Ben Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis. Browqsville and Corpus Christi, reponed out of its banks near BraH.
Bailey,
a
daughter,
Eulnh
Lee
Burial
will
be
in
Gravel
Hill
Cemea..
,C..IIIy Jlllliw
35, of Munster, Ind., and formerly
Texas,
!luring
the
morning
hours
zoria,
an!l
.the
National
Weather
Francis,
three
sisters,
time
brothers
tery.
Cheshire.
of Belpre, !lied April 4, 1991 at
•'·
GIUiPOUS, OliO
He is survive!! by his wife, 'Bon- Saturday. As of Satur!lay, some Service said the Gus!lalupe River
Loyola Me!lical Center in May- and two grandchildren.
sections
of
Teus
had
received
at
Victoria
rose
15
feet
in
five
U.S. ICMnl160 &amp; 35
Services will be conducte!l nie Litchfiel!l Baud; and a son,
wood, m. following a brief illness.
more
than
9
inches
of
rain
and
no
hours
and
was
at
flood
sl$ge
Fri
•
Monday,
I
p.m.
in
Fisher
Funeral
Stephen Baird of Thunnan.
12, 13. 1' lntldt &amp; Oullide •..
He,was born in Parkersburg,
day.
,
Pallbearers will be Phil Bair!l, relief was in sight.
May 10, 11, 12 lntldt &amp; Oullidt
W.Va., the son of Garland and Home in Midlllepon. Burial will be
A tornado Fri!lay· apparent.l y • Among the heaviest rainfall FriBetty (McCoy) Tatterson of Mun- in Riverview Cemetery. Friends Marvin L~ Baird, Marvin R. Baird, tore the roof off a Semce Mer· day were 4.8 inches recor!le!l at
June 1,, 15, 16 lntldt &amp; Oullide •'
ster. He was employed at Kember may call at the funeral home on BiD McCormiclc, Marie McCoy an!l chandise store but cause!! no Brownsville for the six hours endJuly 12, 13, 1' Imide &amp; Oootside
Ronal!! Fraley.
Financial Services as a computer Monday after 1.0 a.m.
Stpt.
13, U, 15 lnsidt &amp; Outside ''
injuries at a mall in Lake Jackson, . ing at 7 P·ID· EST Friday. At Hous· ·
~1.
11,
12, 13 lMide .&amp; Outside
40 miles south of Houston. Funnel ton, 1.6 mches fell during the same
Nov. 1, 2, 3 lmide &amp; Outside
cloucls spawned by the storms were period. .
reporte!l in Angleton an!l
Over a 24-hour period ending
LorJl"•l Flea Marlwa in S.E. Ohio
Brownsville..Some Ang~ton busi· Fri!lay night, 9.8 inches of rain ·
UIHI IIIW MANAGIMIIIT •
nesscs were closed bccaflse of the were measure!! at Victoria, Texas,
$ai!l
by
ldephone
from
theJohnson
jlTQCedure
to
prevent
the
"ben!ls"
. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
lOllS: • - .-6 ,...
·.'
(UPI) - A $61 7 million space Space Center in Houston . "This after Wearing low-pressure space- rains an!l floo!lwaters were threat· and more than 8 inches at Palacios,
" ' - 1'14114S-SU7 or
"
ening some homes, authorities said. TCltiiS.
·
suits later in the mission.
observatory aboard the shuttle happily is a very boring mission."
(6141 446-4120
"It &amp;ets to be a problem ·when
Elsewhere, many parts •of the
Indeed, flight director Charles
They also lowered Atlantis's
~tlantis passed an exhaustive
we
get
Ibis
much
rain.
It
just
accu·
t.074-step cbcckout Saturday, set· Shaw ·sai!l the lear:s first shuttle c.a bin air pressure from 14.7
ling ihe stage for launch Sunday 10 flight is one o the most trouble pouncls per square inch to I0.2 psi mulates," said Angleton police
·
probe the nuclear fires of the .most free on reconl with no major prob- before beginning an exhaustive officer Frank Sanchez.
'
High
wincls
flippo!l
an
unoccu!ems repone!! since launch from check-out of lheir $2 million space~olent bodies in the cosmos.
, As the shuttle saile!l over the the Kennedy Space Center early suits to make sure they will be pied trailer bouse in Angleton,
where residents sai!l flooding was
· s,ouihern Unite!! States !luring its Friday. The mission is scheduled to ready for action. ·
If all goes well, the two shuttle the worst since Hurricane Alicia in
17th orbit Saturday, co-pilot Ken- en!l Wednesday with a landing at
fliers will spend six hours in 1983.
~ took time out to chat Edwards Air~ Base, Calif.
Floodwaters force!! schools to
With ORO also in good shape,, ·Atlantis's cargo bay Monday test"'tith schoo!. children as part of an
close
Friday in Houston 111111 neilrby
teur radio project, provicling an Cameron and Apt, .both 41 , com- ing equipment to move astronauts
.on the progress of the 39111 mander Steven Nagel. 44, Jerry an!l equipment from one point to
Ross, 43, and Godwin, 38, spent another during constr-uction of
mission.
1151'011 YOUI
· "Everyihing is going very well most of ihe !lay ,prep~~Cing for a NASA's planne!l space station
HEIILOM
with the Gamma Ray Observatory spacewalk by Rosg and Apt on Freedom.
While the space walk was not
tpJd we look very good for (launch- ~onday, the fmt such excursion
ing it) tomorrow," he told one by American astronauts in more schedule!! until Monday, Ross and
than five years.
Apt planned to stand by Sunday in
excited student
They made no mention of astro- case problems developed with the .
Operating Atlantis's fragile
robot ann, astronaut Linda Goowin naut Manley ''Sonny'' Carter, who · Gamma Ray Observatory.
But no such problems were
planned to release ihe l7 1/2-ton was killed Friday in a 'Commuter
firm
':'ORO" satellite into space at 1:58 plane crash in Georgia that also expected and scientists were eager· Innerspring
p. m. EDT Sunday to accomplish .clairiled the life of fonn.;r Texas ly anticipating potentially revoluthe prim-ary goal of the five-day . Sen. John Tower. But Shaw spoke tionary data on quasars, exploding
Mattress
flight; kicking off a two-y~ pro- for NASA Saturday when he sai!l suns an!l other violent objects.
including a massive energy source
ject to stu!ly the hottest, most vio- Caner was deeply mourned.
"For those of u~ that were lucky near the center of Earth's Milky
lent an!l exotic objects in ihe uni'
•
lnltallf
enough to have our lives touched · Way galaxy that may be a vora·
verse.
Panpert
i Ai!le!l by astronaut. Jay Apt by Sonny's, I think we were very cious star-eating black hole.
Plctum Wille
aboard Atlantis, engineers at the fortunate indeed," Shaw said. " He Astronomers ca.JI it the "great
You Walt!
Go!ldard Space Flight Center in was a swell guy, a good co-work.er .annihilator."
Qreenbelt, Md., spent Saturday ... and there are a Jot of us who are
morning radioing 1,074 comman!ls not probably dealing with it as well
DON'T LET YOUR FAMILV
The GRO satellite was on the .
tO the boxy satellite, the heaviest as we could and I'm one of them.
HISTORY FADE AWAY!
· minds of several students who
Bring your OrigiMI pllotogrepho to
I 'II miss Sonny quite a bit."
ppyload ever carried by a shuttle, in
talked with the astronauts Saturday
us lor F- aon .. lt-n oncl H11tests to make sure It will work
Early Saturday, Ross and Apt as
mom . No obllgotlon. of cou-.
part
of
the
Shuttle
.
A
mateur
properly on its own.
·
donne!! their airtight helmeis and Radio Experiment, or SAREX. Qne
See tlw profeawnou or ...
; "Everything Iooli:ed great. No breal)led pure oxygen for about an
student
aslce!l
Cameron
to
justify
problems whatsoever," Douglas hour. to pill'ge their bodies of nitroshuule program.
~oome, GRO program manager,
gen in a standar!l pre-spacewalk the"I
guess if we ha!l to boil down
424 SECOND AVE.
"••
the mission to one goal, that goal
GALLIPOLIS . OH .
would be to take steps to continue
to ex~lore our universe," he said .
•'We re going to do that by !leploying Gamma Ray Obser-vatory,
:
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
.
which wiD look outward to things
l responded to eight calls for assistance on Friday and Saturday.
that helped create and shape the
, . At 12:51 p.m. on Friday. Rutland squall went to Salem Cemter
beginning of our universe and we'D
i for Beatrice Rhinehart, who was transported to O'Bieness Memorial
l!o it wiih experiments ... ihat look
Hospital. At 1:31 p.m .• Racine sqUid went l!l Cherry street. Colter
inward to the building blocks of
Hayman was transponed to Vetenuts Memorial Hospital. At 7:02
life."
p.m., Mid4lepon squad was dispatched 10 Overbrook Center for
. After ORO's release, the astro·
Mabel Ba~ghman. Baughman was taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hosnauts will turn their attention to
pital. At10:56 p.m. Racine squad was sent to County Road 35. Paul
Monday's planned spacewalk, the
James Powell was talcen to VeteranS, Atl0:58 p.m., Pomeroy squall
ftrst
by U.S. astronauts since 1985
went to East Main Street for James Hammen. Hammen was taken to
when,
appropriately enough, RoSs
Veterans.
completed
. the secot:td of two
At 12:18 a.m. on Satur!lay, Mi!ldlepon squad went to SouiiJ
"
extravcllicular
activities," or
·· Third for Ernest Wells, who was taken to Veterans. At 1:07 ·p.m.,
E
VAs,
thai
also
were
devoted to
Middleport squad went to Beech Street for Elmer Blair. Blair was
spaee
cons
!rUction
methoos.
·
taken to Veterans.
·

Cobra missing from · FBI promires more meetings with b~ack agents
WASIDNQTON. (UPI) - FBI . ling a message-on the FBI's inter·
director William Sessions met pri- nal communications circuits invi.l·
vately with 200 black agentS 10 dis- ing black agents from across-* .
. cuss racial issues that have prompt· country to Washington to discuss
ed lawyers to consider a discrimi- . their grievances.
Two closed meetings were held.
natiori lawsuit against the nation 's
In a statement, the FBI said, "The
crirne..ftghting agency.
Sess.ions, calling the meeting · !lircctor was hopeful that the !lia"candid, very helpful and ex1leJJie· lo$Ue will assist in avening a law·
ly proouctive," agreed Friday to swt, but emphasized that it was not
hol!l funher meetings to !liscuss a condition of the meetings. Funher
cliscussions are planned."
·
other concerns of the black agents.
The unprecedented meetings
O.nly 4.7 percent of the FBI's
occurred after Sessions learned a 9,875 agents are black.
group representing all of the FBI's
Several a~ents, and a!lorneys
460 blac~ agents had been !lis• . considering filing a discrimination
cussing the Jllll!Sibility or a class·' . case, said ihey did not wish·to talk
action racial discrimination suit, a publicly about the m~tings.
.
spokesman said.
The group of some 200 black
A m(!.jor Washington law firm agents met Friday morning in subreporteclly told the black agents urban Alexandria, Va., with Ses·
they ha!l a credible case 10 take 10 sions and one of his top ai!les, FBI
coun.
.
Deputy Director Floyd Clarke.
Sessions responded·by transmitIn the aftcmoon, Sessions met at
FBI headquarters with a smaller

•

Aprll7, 1991 ;

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Baker departs on·newest
Middle East·peace mission

Ohioan among hostages
killed in California
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�Pomeroy~ddleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Aprll.7, 1991

Page-A&amp; Sunday llmee Sentinel

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survivors but list very incomplete,
Mrs. Stewart's address. 48 Avenue
Kleber, Paris. Hope. F.P. Homan."
A.A. Stewart was the son 9fR.L.
Stewart, a lawyer and newspaper-;
man, :.vho had come ·to Gallipolis
around the ·time of the Civil War.
A.A. s'tewart was in the insurance
field in Gallipolis and must have done
quite well as ill 1886 he built one of
t11e fmest houses in Gallipolis at Islandside. WhenheleftforNewYork.
.
his sisters took up residerice there.
A
part
rA
this
llouse
ln.
the
1000
block
of
Fint
Avenue rA GalSte:.vart made most of his money in
was
bullt
A.A..
Stewart
in
1886.
Wbea
Sti!Mit
moved his
lipolis
New York in the lithogJWhic busifamily
to
New
York;
Flavia
and
LIUan
Stewart
lived
here. Mr.
ness with offiCes in both New York
Stewart
was
one
of
the
1513
persons
who
died
when
the
Titanic
and Paris. In due time he had invest- .
sunk
in
1912.
·
ments in other concerns with the likes
of the Astors and Guggenheims.
,
The house that Stewart built in
..
'
Gallipolis was referred to by the ?De of the boats and ~ey ~ed him on the nearby Califoinian was asleep ·
delay¢ the sos being relayed to
GallipolisJoumalof'Au~st4,1886,. If he was not gomg w1~ them .
·
as "a Gallipolis .Palace' . The archi-,.
~e Iaughe&lt;_l and Sald he had on a other vessels, was unknown to the
tectural style was called Queen Anne prevtous occaSI?n been upon a boat Titanic's crew.
Stated one survivor: ~·rust be· ·
and it was the fustofthatstyle in the thatwentmto.anicebergandsm~he;d
fore
the Titanic plunged downward,
Old French City.
the ~w ennrely off and that thiS
t!Jere
was an awful wail. Maybe the
It was later in April, 1912, that ~~IOn w3:5 not nearly so ~d. but
re¥zation
that the Titanic could sink
Lilian and Flavia Stewart opened up said you kids had better sllck tocame
all
at
once."
the mail ill their Queen Anne home get'!er. !f.~ started down ;the deck,
A.A.
Stewart
was remembered
that they learned what had happened S8YII),g, I II ~you later.
1
by
his
sisters
Flavia
and Lilian with a
to their brother. It was a letter from
, There . s every evidence that
.
tombstone
marker
which
can be seen
one of the survivors of the Titanic. neither at thiS nor at any subsequent
in
the
Mound
Hill
Cemetery.
"As you know it was his custom tune up to the lea~mg of the last boat
to sit lip late; it was an exceedindv was tJ:tere much, if any, fear at all of
cold night on deck and few of the the disaster, the confiden_ce of the
· passengers were there. Undoubtedly passeng~ tn the unsinkabihty of the
&lt;
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Frihe went after dinner into one of the boat bemg absol~te. I can fm~ no
day's winning Ohio Lottery numlounging rooms to read, as we know fUrther report of him af!Cr that
bers:
he was dressed when the accident
Fro~ ~e oth~ Stories that carne
occU!ell, for he wemto his srateroom out of thiS disaster It seems that most
Pick-3: 410. Ticket sal«!s:
$1,489,671.50.
Payoff:
to get his overcoat. Afterward he of the crew had repeated!y ~sured
$988,641.00.
stopped at the door of a Mr. D.H. the _Passeng~ ~~ the.Tnamc was
Pick-4: 2259. Ticket sales:
Bishop, who says Mr. Stewart called uns_illkabl~,a fact ~many people
$278,090.00.
Payoff: $127,900.00.
to him that the ship hed stnick some- ~lie~ed nght to the ume when the
Cards:
Queen
of hearts. Four of.
thing and for him to come on deck Titantc ftnally went doWI_I. It also
clubs.
Ten
of
diamonds.
Jack of
and amuse himself. He went out on seem~likelytJ:tatrescueshipswould
the starboard deck and found Mr. and make It to the Titanic befo~ the latter spades. Ticket sales: $57,307. PayMrs. Harder. who
for sunk, The fact that the radio operator off: $19,170.

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~ Dunlap's firth grade science classes at South· .·
western Elementary. He spoke about the impor-

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LESS 1OOfo 68.50

taut rot, electricity plliys in our lives today.
Walker used a working Jlllldel to deJDODstrate .
bow electricity is produced. He also supplied the
classes with booklets concerning the wise use of
electricity and safety.
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141

•

SPRINQ SALE
APRIL .11 thru APRIL 15

Milwaukee school
names local student

Dead,
. 4 Hurt ..
ito repeat on Rip
..~ Grande stage. '

"lOWEST CHEMICAl PRICitiG OF THE 1991 SEASON"

'

EGG HUNT WINNERS - The winners of the American
Legion AuxiUary Easter Egg Hunt in the ten-years-old or older age
:::·group were: (I tor) Sarall Meade, Adam Kingery, and Samantha
·• Meade. In tbe background is Junior Miss Poppy Stacy Kingery.
~

~

• RIO GRANDE - "Four Dead,
"our Hun ill Two-Vehicle Crash,"
•n original comedy-drama by
· ~Iifton Spires Jr. of Wellston, will
be presented in the Christensen
Thealre of lhe Fine and Performing
.(ns Cenler at the University of Rio
(frUI4e on Prlday. Avt'it 12 11

tm.

.

I

Buy any aboy•ground pool and receive mainta·
nllnce equipment and-your choice of solar cover ·
or chemic;al peck FREE of ctt.rge:

•t

·• A second performance is to be
~ in Morton HalllllrOitiO'Uni·
~iiy on Thursday, April 1,8 ai 8

~.m.
1 "Four

Dead, Four Hurt" deals
with the reaction of a small town
Ohio newspaper staff in the wake
~~ a fatal ttafflc accidenL Because
bne of the survivoo is a powerful,
wealthy woman who once sued the
newspaper for libel. the staff siiiit·
~les to overcome its feelings
HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
flward the woman. be compassion. 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
.
!!te to the other survivors .and still
objective ill its news cover.llemain
'
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age.
'
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~ The play, a selection of the Play
· 'eadillg Circle at Rio Grande, was
tirst produced at Rio Grande in
~broary 1990. The author was the
'
TRUTH- Roaer
of
day, April 12 at 8 p.m. in the Christensen The·
(ecipient of a citation from the
Oak Hill, seated at right, plays Merle Martin,
atre or the Fine and Performing Arts Center.
~io Senate and the play was dis·
sole eyeWitness to 11 fatal traffic accident, wbo · Flanking Chtlnnell, from ten, are Tammy Litter;us sed in· an article appearing in
reveals what be knowS to tbe staff of the Clay
al, Sooth Webster, as reporter Jamie Bernard;
253 WIST 111111 ST.
392 PID ·ST.
~tor and Publisher.
: Spires, who is editor of WellCoqnty News, a lktlonal small town Ohio newsTeri Rowan, Gallipolis, as columnist, Wanda
POMIIOY,
45769
paper, in "Four Deail, Four Hurt in Two· Vehl·
Betts; and Mark Latture, Stockport, as photog.
ston's twice-weekly ne~spaper,
The Sentty, will direct both t)le Rio
cle Crash,"
orilinal rA
comedy-drama
be
rapherCleteMa;:o:n~.--------~==========:t:::'!.1!4·446·3051
staged
at thean
Univenlty
Rio Grande ontoFritrande and Athens presentaUOns of
;
.
P!e play. The 14-member ca,st confists of student and commumty perIOnners.
·
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The largest defense contractor, which
~ Admission to the Rio Grande
Army
Friday picked a Boeing- recently suffered wben the Navy's
.~uction is $2.50 for the public
Sikorsky
team over McDonnell A-12 littack jet program was called
~ flee to all Rio Grande students,
Douglas
and
Bell Helicopter to off, and South Korea, which had
faculty and staff. For more infor-.
build
the
next
generation
of attack- led the fll'lll to believe it would get
mation, contact the Fine and Perreconnaissance
helicoP.ter,
a deal a lucractive deal selling F;l8s,
forming Arts Center at 245·5353.
potentially
worth
$34
billion.
reversed Itself and went to com~tension 364. The toll-free numThe decision was a blow to petitor General Dynamics for ·the
ber in Ohio is 1-800-282-7201.
·
I
McDonnell Douglas; the nation's F-16.

GAWPQUS, 0- 45631
'

'

t '&gt;t&lt;

. i:},t
f
y ii Jih •
~ . EGG HUNT WINNERS - The winners ·or tbe American
• Legion Auxiliary Easter Egg Hunt in the riVe- to DiDflo!fllrs-old age
,.. group were: (I to r) Ladoana Meade, Nicholas Mulholand and
Justin Meade. Ia the background is Junior Miss Poppy Stacy
. ,;; Kingery.

hio children talk with shuttle crew
'
• SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio
PI) - Students at University.
hoot near Clevel.and are to have
opportunity .Tuesday to talk to
•lstronauts in the space shuttle cirling Earth. ·
- '
'
The students at the Shaker
:Jieights school are to be spend 10
l"inutes talking with the astronauts
•s part of the Shuttle Amateur
Jadio Experiment.
Ten scnools throughout the
4Jnited StaleS were selecied to par:JCipate in the project. The l!niyer~ity School sntt~ents will ~ msider
3heir own space sh11ttle Simulator
~·centennial,'.' a full-size perma~ replica of a NASA space shut-

te

.

6 AND 12 FO.OT WIDE

..GREEN GRASS •••••• ~ ••••••••••••••!Pe.~-z••• s349
12 FOOT WIDE - 3 COLORS

H£AVY OUTDOOR TURF •••••• !.~~rP.~. S695

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175 N. 211d AVE.
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(614) 992-7028

MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

•••r

:

Your Bankfn~...

\'

INGELS CARPET STORE

Wo aro proud lo announct to .Ur
. Farmers Ia'* cUttGIIIofl that wo
have Cincinnati Rods laseball
Tichts available for lho ontirt
season plus a ·JICifking pass In tha
stadium. lot .. hOlp with your
noxt trip te Cincinnati to IH tho
lig lod Machino 'In actiOni Call ·
for IMtails.

l. Farrne~s
.8 an k ....,,..
·~----------~--------------~-·~
( FB
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111111SJIICOB

·

_. ·The NASA Lewis Research
:{enter amateur radio c_lu~ will
::.ssist during the commumcatton at
f :l2 a.m. Tuesday .through the use
~f their repeater locate4 at the
:J/ASA Lewis Visitor Center in

• . 915-UU

·I!

%Jcveland.,hom

.
RAIII01117
Mt-ml... fDI(; TIPPIIS PlAIIIS, o•o

•.
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People w1th
e or car ac:anen will· be able to listen to tbe
' .
if
'
J
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communicati9n by setting their dial
to 147. 19~ MHz, NASA said.
·
NASA said all five crew memDc:rs are licensed amateur radio
operators, including Marine Lt. C6.
Kenileth Cameron. a 1967 graduate
of Rocky River High School near
Cleveland.

LAIGE

DIAMONDS - '
ILL AT DISCOUN'I
. . PIIGS.
CONTEST
- Pictured are tbe wlnnen of Shoe
· World's Easter coloring contest. From ten are first pia~ wlnoer
Stepbanie Creme11as, store manager Pt~Ul .Hale, 11nd tb1rd plate
· wlnaer K11tby Zieske. Not pictured is second place winner VaneliSil
Williamson.

WI WIU 1101 II UteiiSOLDI

Tawney Jewelers
422 bd

aw..•G..IIpolls

Coloring contest · ~------------~----------~
Heard about
winners named

GALLIPOLIS ..:.. Shoe World
recently held its first Easter color~dtermB;tthecollegetobeeii· ing . contest. Winners were
g1ble for d;le lisL
. Ste.phanie Cremeans, first place,
Vanessa Williamson, second place,
.and·Ka!hY Zieske. third~·
The entries, ..'!Vere Judged on
Wednesday, Mlirch 27 by War.ne
Benson, general manager of Hills,
Chuck Givens. loss prevention
manager of Hills, lind John Raird·
en, o~ and managcr of Subway
CINCINNATI (UPl) - A . in Gallipolis.
The several hundred entries
Cincinnati firefighter has been
were
judged on brightness, neat·
charged with selling cilcaine and
ness
and
originality. The pictures
two Cincinnati Jl!llice offJters have
were
distributed
10 schools in Ohio
been charged wtth grand theft.
.and
West
v·
·
·
.
. All three. were arresled Friday
Shoe Worwould like to thank
following lengthy investigations.
the
schools for their help and for .all
Barion E. Smith, 22, a threeyear veteran firefighter, was arrest- the children that partici~.
ed after being indicted on five ·
counts of aggravated trafficking in
·crack cocaine.
He was accused of selling
i
cocaine five times in the last tluee
months at a suburban Lockland
JACKSON - Jackson City
apartment complex.
Library recently announced it will
In a separale case, John Hebe- hold a Spring Concert, to be prer
mann, 4 7, a 20-year veteran sented on Sunday, April 21 at 2 .
Cincinnati police offlCCI', and Lany p.m.
Nungesler, 47, ·a 15-year veteran of
The Ariel Trio - Karen Elliot,
the force, were arrested and Wendell Dobbs and Laura Snow will entertain with baroque music
charged with grand theft.
The two police officers were 0n the bassoon, flute and oboe. The
· apprehended after they were seen concen will last approximalely one
loading lumber intO aU-Haul vehi· ·hour, with a IS. minute intermis·
cle in a s1011ge ~of a Swallen's sion. Refreshments will be served
department store on the west side during inlennission and at the end
··
of Cincinnati, according to police of the concert.
"This
concert
will
be
a
delight·
investigatorS.
· The arrest of fu:efighler Smith, ful ending to our celebration of
along with II other people, cli- National Library Week," said Mar·
maxed a three-month undercover §aret Cochran, library direct?r .
'We invite evel)one to come m,
investigation into a suspected
cocaine dealing operation in Lock· relax, and savor this beautiful
music."
land.
For more information, call the
" .We're not finished by any
library
at 21164111.
sense of the imagination." Lock·
land Police Chief Don Blum said of
' the investigation. "If we had m~ cion ill the probe. .
•'A report was made a couple of
funds, we could probably bave IQO
indictments.
· days ago by the police deptlriment
Cincinnati Fire Chief Bill Miller to my staff, it was a courteSy from
said police investiJators had one department to another," he
informed him earlier tn the week said. "No other firefighters are
that a firefighter was under suspi- involved to my knowledge."

Running five minutes late
because of low clouds over the
Kennedy Space Center, Atlantis
blasted off with a thunderous roar
at 9:23 Lm. Friday, ending a fourmonth launch hiatus with the ftnt
of three shuttle launch.es planned
over the next·eight weeks.
As the shuttle sailed over the
southern United States during its ·
17th orbit Saturday, Cameron took
· time out to chat with the fust group
of school children at another
school, providing an update on the
~of the mission.
'EveMhln.a: il going very well ,
with Oanima llay Obaervatory and
we look very aood for tomorrow."
. be told one Cl!Cited lllUdenL

.

.,

o•
swcnoN OF

SEE

RAPID R-EFUND?

Put Amerb's Tax THm to IJt'Odr ftN you!
POMROY
GlLLIPOUS
611 EAn IWN n.

SKONI I SYCAIIOIE

Jackson Library
'to host concert

OUTDOOR CARPET
SALE

. LET US ,.ELP · .
TAKE YOU TO TH
.BALL GAME •••~•••••

may be purchased by mailing 'payment to Mary Wise, 522 South ·
Third Ave. in Middleport. .
·
The roaSt beef diiUier will begin,
at 6 p.m. and reservations are aue;
by April 16.

Qiamo·nd
Solitaires

•

Boeing-Sikorsky win helicopter deal

We have just received
over 700 square
yards
.
. of
outdoor carpet. Come in
•
now for the best selection
and the .best price of the
year.

MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
Music will be provided by ·
been finalized by the Middleport · George Hall and tickets are $28 a
Arts Council for ll dinner and dance couple Tickets may be purchased at
at the Feener Bedhett Post No. 128 -Mick's Barber Shop in Pomeroy, ·
of the Amencan Legion in Middle· Kings Service Star and the Dairy
port on April21.
·
Queen in Middleport. Tickets also

Firefighter,
police officers
arrested
•

"UP TO 'A $400 YAWl"

o•o
,
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_
61 992_5724 .

VINTON- Charles E. Kelley,
Vinton, was recently named to the
winler quarter's dean's list of the
Milwaukee School of Engineering.
Kelley, a business lllld computer
systems major, earned a minimum
cumulative grade point average of
3.2 and compleled a minimum of
30 total credits by the end of thc!f

'

dance planned by group

GALLIPOLIS - Jennifer
Yo11ng, of 246 Debby Drive, Gal·
lipolis, haS been sclecled to receive
the i. PaJe Hayden Memorial
Scholarship at Miami University
for the corning academic year.
Young, an entering freshman,
was selected on the basis of superior academic and personal merit .
from 4,000 candidates each year:
This year, more than 1,700 students
will receive scholarship assistance
which totals more than $1.8 million.

OPEN SUNDAY 9:00 A.M.-6:00P.M.

'

of children. They learn by imitation. Also never refer to medicine
as "candy" • youth might take yi&gt;u
liteJally.
----- .
- keep a one ounce bottle of
syrup or ipecac on hand for each'
child in your home, in case lou
need to induce vomiting.
• keep the numbers of your local
poison control center, f8(Dily doc·
tor and hospital emergency room
posted .near your telephone. Make
sure everyone in your home knows
how to report an emergency. If
your child ingest a poisonous st~b­
stance, call one of these professionals immediately. Do not attempt til
induce vomiting or otherwise treat
a victim until you have consulled a
professional and receive proper
advice.

Miami student
gets scholarship

Monday thru ·Frldey, 15 DeVI A Week-Cloaed Saturday

Located on b.
at Cent~nary, Ohio
· Jilt Min fnm Goll...ls, Ohio
Pit 446-7039
.

'

Flll'ililure polish, aspirin, lip- ing abilities into accouill
• store harmful prQducts away
stick, mouihwash, motor oil, these
are just a few of the common from food. If you stote them near .
houlcllold products tllll pose • poi- food, childreR will be more likely
soning bawd to children, accord· · to think of them as food.
ing to Jackie Graham of Northup, · • keep harmful products in their
Safety coordinator for the Oallia' original containers for two reasons.
First, labels often list inl!l'edicnts in
County Farm Bureau.
•
To help prevent poisoning. of case someone ingests die product.
children in your horne, the Gallia Also, if you store prodJ.ICts in conCounty Farm Bureau and the tainers like beverage bottles or
National Safety Council offer these . food cans. a child might mistakenly
tips for controlling home poison think the product is edible.
· . if you use a dangerous subhazards:
• store all potential substances stance when a child is around, keep
out of children's reach;·or use safe- the child in your sight at all times.
ty latches or combination. locks to Many pdisonings actually occur
.prevent children from getting into while the product is being used and
cabinets and drawers within their a child has been left unattended for .
reach. When storinJ substances, a brief moment.
take children's climbmg and crawl• never take medication in front

'

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.resident among ·
Titanic~s victims
GALLIPOLIS - ~ British
luxury liner Titan it of the White Star
Line, on its maiden voyage from Liverpool · to New
·
York City, struck
an iceberg about .
9S miles south of
the Great Banks
of Newfoundland just before
midnight on
April 14, 1912.
Oflhe rnorelhan2200pcnons aboard,
about 1513 died, including millionaires John Jacpb Aster, Berijamin
Guggenheim, and Isador Sttaus.
The· ship had been proclaimed
unsinkable because of its 16 water•
tight compartments, but the iceberg
punctured five of them, .one mbre
than had been considered pOssible in
any accident, and the Titanic sun!l; in
-less than 3 hours.
: . The shockwaves created bY this
•great ttagedy hit Gallipolis later that
:week when it was discovered that
:Conner Gallipolis resident A.A. Ste·
wart had been a passenger on board
the Titanic.
:· Stated the Gallipolis Daily Trib•une on Apri117, 1912: "A.A. Ste·
:wart, brother of Misses Lillian and
;Flavia Stewart of !stand Side, ·this
•city, was·a passenger on the Titanic
:and his name does not appear on the
jlist of l)le saved. Mr. Slewart has
•been in France all winter with Mrs.
;stewart, his daughter and pdchil·
•dren, whom he left there to take pas:sage on the Titanic. He is a man of
;large means with important interests
. tin New York where he resides. The
rprincipal man in his office sent the
following this morning to Lilian
•Stewan.
•
;
"Brother not ·reported among

•

'

nmes Sentinel-Page-AT

Poison prevention center
offers tips. ·
•.

·. Fo~me~ Gallipolis
By James Sallds
Special Correspondent

Su~day

Don't MISS our

"f Chick Dav.

Monday, May. 2, 1991
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100 S.R , Heavy Breed Chicks plus
50 lb. Purina Chick Starter Med·... , .

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WITH TERRIFIC DEALS ON 1
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···AIE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
•WHEEL AUGNMENT

·R&amp;G FEED&amp;: SUPPLY CO~
399 W. Main - Pomeroy - Ph. (614) 992-2164

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1011 ,.n - '·
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OWIBS
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The Store With." All Kinds Of Stuff"
For Pets, Stables, Large and Small
Animals, Lawns and Gardens.

FAMILY FlOCK

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,. page-A8--Sunday
Times Sentinel
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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant, WV

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: Aprll7, 1991 :

·Along the River

,MeigS Clean-Up... (FromMEIGS, pag';;i) •

...

(From MOBILE; page AI)

• experience, a home visitor spends
WigginS reports th8l in addition means that haulers and others are.
• 1!11 hour and a half witll the child
to those clean-up crews, several . · turned away.
·
imd his or her family during the
cbmmunity grouP! 8le participating
Wisgios, who seryes on tbe
:week. This home visit includes pro·
in tbe Mbpt,A·HiJIIWIY prog{am. multi-county Solid Waste Manlgergramming in education and health,
Th81 means that the group or orga- ment Dislrict, advises that an appli,
.parent involvement in child devel·
nizalion lakes on tbe respoosibility calion for an emergency permit ID
~opment, 8!1d social services.
· .of cleaning two miles of highway. raise that limit to 300 10m per day'
i: Gallia-Mei~s Head Start, a
Attractive signs will be erected has been filed, but as yet; not·
1&gt;ranch
operauon
of
Woodland
that portion and the received. He suggested that ·anyone·
d!'Signating
1
tenters, Inc., employs 11 home
orga$alion panicJillling.
·
wanting 1D use ~ Gallia County :
~visitors, three of which are con·
Other events planned include landfill, call abead and make an ·
:nected with the s.tate-funded pro- /
Recycling Day, set for April 13, appointment, 388-9740.
·•
;gram. Those three home visitors /'
Earth Day, April 21, and Arbor;
, Clean-up Rural Ohio Week, April
•Penny Dewhurst, Angela Manley
21-27, and the Ohio River Sweep, Day, April 26, both fall within·
:ind Linda King • dedicate their
June IS.
·
Clean-up Rural Ohio Week. Wig.-7
time solely to serving families in
Recycling Day will be held at ~ins is encouraginj; all citizens ~
the mobile unit's service area. In
the Kroger parking lot in Pomeroy, mcluding boy and girl scouts, 4-H
'addition, these home visitors pro·
from § a.m. until noon . As . clubs, garden clubs. and churches
vide programming for children on
explilincd
by Wiggins, many items to pl8n clean-up and beautification ,
the mobile unit. Mona Ervin acts as
can
be
recycled
tbus savinJ valu· projects across tbe county. The pro.
the mobile unit's driver and the
lall!!fiii
space.
These mclude JCCI manager ,pointed out tbat the·
able
4river of the van that transports
beverage
cans,
aluminum
and bi· Meigs CountY Litter Control office
children from their homes to the
metal,.
tin
cans,
glass,
clear,
green wiU bave alimited number of white'
mobile wtit
and
brown,
newspapers,
tied
in pine seedling l;fCCS to disa:ibute to
ON THE ROAD ·at ·Gallla·Melgs Head tbelr families In are•• previously unsened
, 138 families participate ui Head
bundles,
plastic
jugs,
liter
botdes,
groups who.want to plant them; · -Start program hlis bit the road. This new mobile because of distance. Here, Home VisiiDr Angela
Start in Meigs; For those children
corrugated
cardboard,
copper,
· Again this year Meigs County'
unit, purchased with state funds, 11llows the pre· Manley is pictured at the uait In Tuppers Plains
who live closerto the Pomeroy
brass;
8luminum
siding,
batteries,
will
be participating in the Ohio '
scbool program to serve eligible children and witb her class.
area, classroom services are. pro·
and radiators. ·
River Sweep which is scheduled:
:Vided at Head Start's Meigs Coun·
.
"·
·
Wiggins emphasized the impor· .for Saturday, June 15. This is an; ·
fy .office, located in the Meigs Mul· · accept three year olds w.ho are
tance of .recycling noting that the annual cooperative project of The·
·lipurpose Center on Memorial about iO be four. and five year old
y
'
'
.
_
.
.
•
landfill situation now. is. critical. He Ohio River Sanitation CommissionJ:
Prive. In th81 situation as well, stu· children who are too young to
.
'I' said that with the recent closing of Departrilent of Natural Resources,:
dents are transported to the facilitY begin kindergarten. ·
the lan-dfill in Mason County, U.S. Corps of Engineers, and Divi··.
by a program-operated van.
·
The Head Stan program gener· .. _
_ '
•1J'.J.1
· .
W.Va., Meigs County's haulers sionofLillerPreventionandRecy.;
• Participation eligibility is deter· ally runs from September through
·
•
must use the landfill in Galli a cling.
mined by using the Federal income April, and registration applications
Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS
--.
Thursday,
May
2.
(Pine
and
Olive
County.
This
faCility,
be
said,
has
a
Wiggins
explained
that
Meigs:.
guidelines, and the program is tar· are now being accepted. Informa· City Manager Dale lman recently Streets, Neil Avenue to Silver maximum daily limit of 128 tons, County is bordered by 57 miles of;
geted to four year ,olds. Young stat· tion can .be obtained by calling announced that this year's the Bridge Shopping Plaza, First and the situation now is tiQit the the Obio River, the banks of which'
ed, however, that the program does Young at 992· 3088. • ·
. city's annual cleanup will be from Avenue, Ohio River to the city lim· landfill is reaching that liinit need to be cleaned. "In so many:
Monday, April 29 through Friday, its.
around noon each day. which ways, we all enjoy the benefit ~
May3.
The foUowing items will not be
which the river provides; bere is•
"The cleanul' provides Us all accepted: tires, yard clippings or
_
_
our chance to join hands and give.
with the opportunity to do our leaves, or household appliances,
something in return in_cleaning up·
spring cleaning and maintenance, including hot water heaters, washVeterans Memorial Hospital .
lhe river front, promoting recrewith the end result being a more . ers, dryeu, stoves, refrigerators, . FRIDAY ADMISSIONS , Ellen · ation and improvmg wa«::r quality,".,
attractive city." ·
etc.
Young, Racine; Colter Hayman,
commented Wiggins;
·,
The cleanup schedule is as folRecycling of aluminum, metals, Racine; Maybelle Baughman, Mid· · "Volunteen are needed," said;
lows:
glilss and paper, as well as com· · dleport; Ruth Powell, Middleport.
the cleanup project director, and'
WARD 1: Will be picked up on
f
d
d
b
·
·
gJ
FRIDAY
DISCHARGES
•
Ora
those willing
help are
·
posung o yar e ns 1s stron 1y
call
thisasked
year to•
1-.
. 63 60.to Again
Monday, April 29. (City limits on encouraged.
992
Citizens may drop off Sinclair, Robert Candaday, Robert
Garfield Avenue to Court Street.)
recyclable items at Riverview Sheley, Ethel Lambert, John Lam·
shirts will be given to those volun-;
WARD 2: Will be picked up on R
· De 1
be
teeling in the cleanup work. Trash·
ecycling at Gallipolis ve op- . n.
bags and gloves will be provided:
Tuesday, April 30. (Court Street to mental
Center. ,
Pine Street, Third Avenue to the
Alt material is to be set at the
and there will. of course. be adult·
Ohio River, First Avenue.)
·curb line. Material must be pre·
. supervision for participating youth:
WARD 3: Will be picked up on
POMEROY • A marriage in ~i= ~~ai he is available: ·
Wednesday, May L (Court ~treet pared for easy handling. Bundled
tree limbs will be accepted. eitr. license has beeng:ted in Meigs to talk to groups or to .provide a_:,
to Neil Avenue, Third Avenue to officials
ask the full cooperation of c ounty
· Probate ourt to W'll'
I 1am ., video, in calling for volunteers to,,
city limits.)
citizens to have their trash set out c ec1·1 F'10 k, 23 , M'ddl
·
1
epon,
an d. . "help create a cleaner, healthier,
WARD 4: Will be picktl!l up on
by 7 a.m. the morning of the day of Paula Suzette Olkawski, 23, Mid- Meigs County."
;
'
NOTED JOURNALIST SPEAKS -Ike Pappas, eorrespon.
Scheduled
pickup.
.
dleport
_
The
Litter·
Prevention
and
~ecy-;
dent ror CBS television news from 1964 untU 1987 and now .
cling Program is funded by a grant'
bead or his inm produc:tlon company, discussed his eX)Ierienm
TUC
(FromSEWER,(iageAl)
fromthe0hioDepartmentofN81u-:
as an electrOnic jonroalist at the Medla Appreciation Day ban·
ral Resources; Division of Litter
quet Thunda:r •t tbe Ualveralty of Rio Graade, attended by 50
The cost factor was the most nor only the entire village but some The Environmental Protection · Preventiol) aild Recycling, as well•
area jouraalists and media reptesentatlves. PappiiS, who began .
important thing in the decision," areo outside the v-illage, the Meigs Agency bas commiaed $1.S million
as local county' SIJilllllll .
bis career as a New York radio reporter In 1958, recently
commented O'Bril:n.
County Commissioners earli&amp; gove imd llllOiher $617,000 has been pro·· worked as a correspondent covering the Persian Gulf War for
According to Sanily Smith, vii· · . permission to those working on the vided through Fedtral Issue u. ·The
tbe Fox network and oUered Insights on tbe difficulties of
!age
~lerlt ·and .-oject manager, an
project to lay lines along the county $300,000 will be borrOwed from
reporting from tbe war zone.
·.
.
.
of'the Counci) members, Steve right-of-way outside the village.
the Ohio Water Development
Jenkins, Steve Lambert, Jerry
· Attorney John Lentes who has Authority at a low inlbest rate and
Black, Floyd Cleland, and Vicki ·rcp_resente~ several. residents who will be repaid over a 15 year period
Filik, and Mayor Ja,mes M. Fink a~ res1de outside the village ,and who
from the monthly user fees paid by
well as.O'Brien were in accord 01'! have opposed ~oing into the sewer the property owners. , .
1
the dects1on to disli)ISS the petition system, adv1sed . F~1day that
'
to form the sewer district because whether the CommiSSIOners gave
•'
of the cost. The sixth member- of permission to lay those lines to the
GALLIPOLIS :- Thomas J. Wiley, 26, Lawson, W.Va., was
Council is Judy Denny but she will village o~ to the J&gt;ropose~ s.e":er
arrested and incarcerated for driving under the influence by the Ohio
•
not ~e a seat until Tuesday nighL · ~UICI will ~etermme the JurisdiC·
•• State Highway Patrol.
She will fill tbe vacancy of David bon of the Village.
Sharon L. Glenn, 29, Rio Grande. was arrested and incarCerated
POMEROY-· In Thursday's edi· ·
•
Wilkes
who resigned when he . · Lentes said, howeyer, d18l there tion of Tile Daily Sentinel. the
for disorderly conduct after a warning by the Gania County Sher·
moved from the village.
IS a federal law wh1ch g1ves the
iff s Department.
name of Kenneth E. Riggs; Jason
Smith
pointed
out
that
from
the
EPA
the right to ·regulate and force
Tony Cruz, 19, Gallipolis, was arrested an4 incan:erated for disRiggs' father, was omitted from a
slllndpoint of Council, formation of people .wbo are within 200 feet of paragrap_h stating that Kenny
orderly conduct by intoxication by· the Gallipolis Police DepanmenL
a sewer district was certainly desir· sewer hnes to hook on.
'•'
Riggs, Jason Riggs' brother, was
John M. Myers, Gallipolis, was cited for operating a motor vehiable
because
lit
would
have
He
further
empbasizcd.that
Rut·
cle
while
intoxicated
by
·
the
GalliPolis
Police
Depaninent.
·
occused
in a civil suit of "conspir· ·
•
relieved vHJage officials of the land Vi.llage officials have always ing wi!J! the defendants" to keep
Charles A. Stover, 22, Crown City, was cited for weaving course
responsibility of handling all the been wdlmg to cooperate and talk the whereabouts of Victor Will's
•
and operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated by the Gallipolis
,,
'. Police Depanment ·
details of setting rates, billing and about tbe problems, but that they . 'body unknown. ·
general administration.
have been "put under the 81!tl" by
Re~na L. Legg, 25, Southside, W.Va., was cited for no operaWithout a sewer disl!'ict being the EPA.
tor's license imd operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated by the
Gallipolis Police DepanmenL
·
·
formed, Smith indic8led that those
. Witb the dismissal of the petilOK Gold
duties will be assumed by village tion to organi;~;e a sewer district,
POMEROY • 'A civil suit has
.
'
.
officials and current employees. there _was no need for a public heBr·
been filed in Meigs CounJY Com·
Mystic
Sbe said that the cost figure of ing scheduled to be held Monday
mon Pleas Court against Karen
~utheran
,.
operating a sewer district had been morning so that has been canceled.
Weaver, doing business as Weaver
Gold Lance Cla$s Rings
•• MEIGS-GALLIA • The third
ponion of the monetary offering estimaled at approximately $50,000
According ·to O'Brien there 8le
Decorating in Marietta, by James
1;.mual gathering of the Scioto Con·
will be given to Lutheran Social a year.
.
still about 12 propeny owners all
and Linda Diddle of Racine. The
·'·
·lerence Women of the Evangelical .Services, Southeastern Ohio Min·
"For the good of the village and outside the villiul:e of Rutland who
suit in the amount of $7,896.90,
:Lutheran Church in America
.so as not to add that $50,000 to the are objecting to hooking into the
aUeges that weaver misrepre~ted
istries.
:(ELCA) will be held Saturday,
422 Second Ave.
her relationship with a Manella
- The highlight of the afternoon burden of those on the system, it system.
,!Jipril 13 at the First English
Despite that the project will
furniture store while performing
Gallipolis, Oh. •
session will be the appearance of was decided to go without organiz:l-utheran Church, 220 N. Colum·
t , IIIII I . t• Gold Lanc1 Inc
interior decorating semces for the
Kristin Huffman, Miss Ohio 1990, ing a sewer district, • Smith com- . move forward, he said, noting that
,
:t!us SL, Lancaster.
at. the regular meeting of Rutland ' Diddles.
and talent winner imd runner-up in mented.
· Women representing nearly 3Q
the 1990 Miss America contest
She further noted that the Envi· · V1.1lage Council Tuesday night, · ~~;:;:;;,;;;;:~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,
congre~lions in the Scioto ConferFor information or for luncheon ronmental Protection Agency does conuacts for the cO'nsUuction will
ence wtll come together under the
·
reservations, contact Jane Hart at not require that a district be formed be awarded. .
theme of "Becoming: S~wards of · (614) 653·5129 or the reservation and Engineering Associates have
All but ~3~.000 ~f the cost of
i-- God's Creation."
the $2.2 m1U1on proJCCt bas come
chairtnan of each Inca! ELCA COD· indicated one is not needed
The day will. begin with a coffee
grcgation. All women of Lutheran ·
Since the project encompasses to the village in the way of grants.
hour and registration of 9 a.m. The
congregations and guests are invitRev. Lawrence (Bud) Myers, pas- ed to attend.
tor of the First English Church. will
give the opening devotions at 10
~
1 a.m. Janet Grueser, Logan, presi1 dent of the Scioto Conference
•, Women of the Evangelical Luther• : an Church, will conduct the busi·
:ness session and preside over the
'day's events.
The morning program will
emphasize tbe theme and the proEQUIPMENT· SALES • RENTAlS· REPAIRS
rgram, "Waste Wise," developed by ·
"Complet11 Uldlt:ll Equ/pmfnt For HomeiJII•
Aid Association for Lutherans •
~AAL) will be introduced. This
, program is to help ·individuals and
! .families learn how they can bencr.
YOUR CHOICE
Anylze23"1o
' ;
' ·care for the environment. A special
ar wklit, M"long
ALL'SIZES
"love offering" and gathering of
-personal care items will be given to
VInyl Mini Blinds or
· Outline Quilted
four shelterS for abused women. A

.;
'•

~

"·/M ()bile unit...

#

'

~intts • jenthttl Section

B
"

Aprll7, 1981·

.

. -·

·Job shadowing allows Students
:to see the 'real workingj world'
\

By LEE ANN THOMPSON
Times-Sentinel Starr
_
CHESHIRE • Wbat's it like in
• • the real world? To be out tbere,
-~ earning a living, day in and day
- 1 out? Th8l's what a group of Kyger
-- Creek High School juniors llDd
• ' seniors got to experience recently
-., when they "shadowed" local busi·
· ·ness men and women.
, _ The 72 siUdeniS who participat·
' . ed were expected to use the day as
~ng experience, and had to
· · • do much pn:paration before goiqg
· ' ' to the Workplace.
.
·. ~ · iob Shadowing, also called
' mentoring in some circles, began
· with ·one small group of students
last year, and bas blossomed into a
project for an juniors and seniors at
· - the C11esbire school. o
•
ir
Five teams of students took part

Galll7nolz·s pla'ns· cle'an' U.n
Week Ap.n"l29. )·l ay 3

~A

•

in the 'program which had no real.
geographic limitations. It sent stu·
dents to Glllia, Meigs and Mason
counlie$, imd some had been scheduled for Huntiogtoo and
Clwleston.
The team concept came about
through aa Ef{ective Schools Grant
which began as a teacher as advisor
program, grouping up to 17 stu·
dents in ·a classroom and replacing
the home roOm concept, accordinf!
to team leader Con me Bradbury.
Bradbury was ·the {irst teacher in
tl)e program at KCHS. ·
Since that small Start all junior
anQ senior students have been
included, as well as an additional
four teachers - Sandy Forgey, Larry
Marcum, Ardith Maynard and Jan
Safford.
•
· Students were required to
research a cateer interest in a num·

ber of aspects • job prospects_, succe8sful on the job.
salary, education needed, related · Some chose traditional jobs •
occupations, working conditions secretarial, nursing, vetennary ,
child care, banking, pharmacy.
and the advantages and di$advan·
Others had more unique choices
tages of Jhat choice.
Then, out into the field to see like sports medicine or high tech
flfst hand tbe workplaces wbere careers in CDID\)Uter·rela'tcd fields
and engineenng. One yo11ng
they showed interest
It gave students a chance IP woman is looking toward a career
explore the career fields, and made in the Marine Corps, and will enlist
them evaluate tbat choice, Brad- this fall.
. Juniors who took part in the probury said. • .
~
-While most students found it a gnim said they art anxious to conpositive experience, some were not tinue with job shadowiJ!g next year,
as happy, wbich may have been and no11e plan to change career
influenced by the. wOikers' attitude r!Cids, only places I() observe.
Job shadowing allows students
and willingness to let the y'oung
· people take an active role in the to see what's available in the .inar·
day, not just be a passive observer.. ketplace • to get an idea if this is
the field for them or n.ot. It affords
It solidified the selection of
them tfle ·opportunity to ast ques·
career for many of the participants,
lions
and flnd out from the experts
giving them a greater zeal for eduwhat
it's
an about.
cation and what it
take to be

IN THE STUDIO • Kyger Creek Students StepbaDie Scott and
Stepbaaie Spurloek spent tbe day rec:ently at Lear Pbotograpby to
learn about careers in photography. Here they are pictured with
Randy Houdasbelt of Lear Pbotograpliy.

Hospi"tal news..

Marriage license

· const
Sewer

.

;

v

'

ti"on...
·

-.

juniaa.IUHlselliors. Here ~be w,cwki •t the Mac·
latosb eomputer wjtb Tribune. start _membtr·
Krls Cocbran.
,
.
.· ·

Local brief--~.~ --.

.

AT G~VU'( • LearDJII about atreet:~ln enaf·
aeering and power maupment, KCHS stu·
·dents spent Ute d•y at the Gavin plaot. Pictured

are stadeah Phillip Bradhry and Cr•iR
KlnRery; Gavin employee Reb Bellar, and stu·
dents Brian Colemaa and Neal Pryor.

•. Lawmen arrest 6 overnight

Clarification

'

to gather informl!tioo on arrests and · been ''put to bcid" II' placed 9n the
firefighting during the past 24 press, I had time to ask questions
hours.
about the job and wh81 it takes.
,
, FollOwing that, I observed Kris
Reporting credibility is also
.! :! GALLIPOLIS · Kyger Creek
•: -, High School students got.a little CoChran design a page of the daily impOrtant, and Lee Ann Thompson
: • , taste of the real working world as paper, and typed in the hospital explained how that reputation is
· ~·and kept. Factual accounts,
·,' ·tbey "shadowed" !J)embers of the · news for the day's local page.
Just
before
lunch,
a
verdict
came
with accuracy and without personal
recently.
• ~ ·t business community
'
•
in
on
the
Pamela
Smart
murder
prejudice • that's llow reporters
.:.
Job shadowmg IS a program
trial.
She
was
the
New
England
become
trusted for informabon th8l
;.; designed to give -students a chance
.'
• • ' to learn more about the careers they school ieocher 'accused of conspir- affects us.
ing to have her husband of less than
I believe my day at tne Daily
: • are considering.
•·
The participants are interested in . a· year murdered by her teenage Tribune was educational al)d has
helped me make another step
-. a diverse range of 'carcers: For lover.
Moments after the guilty verdict toward a journalistic career. I had
~ · instance, a large number of stu:
dents explored health-related fields, was read 1 and seen live on Cable considered journalism as career.
while others expressed a desire to News Ne1work, the.UP! wire ser· . . But while this may ·not have been
become fashion designers. truckers vice had the story coming across the most eliciting day in news
almost as fast as il was on televi- reporting, it gave me a better
imd fwteral directors.
I chose an exciting day at the sion . "breaking news," it is called understanding of how ne\IIS is gath·
ered and presented to the public .
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. While in the business.
, One of the most important
(Heather Hudson is a student
there, lleameii a lot • from the size
· of a column of newsprint, to how .resources for a reponer is a "con- at Kyger Creek High Scllool and
· important news contacts can be.
tact" or a knowledgeable person took /Hirt ln. the Job Sll(ldowing
During the course of the day, I who can be relied on for good · program, sptlllllng the day obse"'"
• · • was allowed to "run the bear' with information.
lng,tht sliif/ of the GaUipolls Dally
, reponer Melinda Powers • that is .
When the day 's product had Tribune.)
: going to the j!olice and fire siations

[•

::.
...

J udg"!-ent SOUght

..

sgg ·

~

women's .conference set

TAWNEY
JEWELERS INC.

_....,.

alowma-n, .
HOMECARE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC. -..

$99

5.88

I

VInyl Vertical Blinds

~SO.
Twin.bid!.
hll, a-. from 'till.
f&gt;otttottr
Ill will cot1Dn
1 :==~11~idll3r"io48'-ride....7.8111012.88 .Camp.
IIYiollolylos. No..,._
dilcounlt ljlply.

•
j

I

'"

I

I

UY·AWAY
,· lOW
10 HOLD
OUILOW
DISCOlin
1991 PIIGSI

---·-

• HOME OXYGEN
• WHE£LCHAIAS ·
•ltOSPITALIEDS
• SHOWER STOOLS

QUtjiiOfking

GAUPOUS

'

HAIIIP~

•
•
•
•

• UFT CHAIRS
• WAUCIIII
• OIAIE1II: Ill F "S
• OSTOMY

WE BILL MBIICARI&amp; O'n811UIWtCI ial wiu
THIRO &amp; PINE ST.

Handpainted Beclsp,eads

446-728

:TIIIOOB.........fnom 4.44 -..,1M! IIIWIWI. ....~. !I.IO.....IJolrUI
LOWER LEVEL
.
FIRST FLOOR ·
I
SHOP DAILY: 8:30 A.ll. TO 8:30P.M.; SUNDAY, 12 NOON T05 P.ll.

3rd A - l 8111 SlrMI, Downtown Huntington
~S22.o305

..

r.- 0---- a;.--

.•

.....
liii20Yo0ff
=·- . . ·
.... .
I OnllllmAI- Price - ........Mil ,
FREE PARKING

'ICUCNULIO-U '
COP-NTLA~AWAY .

'

·-

_

.

_ . ..... - .

VAUOT1tRU4111111. ...,,._.,_...,,

By H&amp;ATHER HUDSON
For tbe Times·Sentinel

•

•

AT THE ARMORY ·Several students Cbose
to look into military and maiatenance aareers In
the recent job shadowinR program or Kyger ·

•

Creek High School. Hert,1st.SGT Floyd Muncy . .
is pictured w_ith students . Robert Gilmore; : ·
Danny Cox and Brian Colburn.
•.
'

.

With
Barry's
problems,
major
strives
to
riihfwrongs
:
Left
'
I
r
'
'l

'

.

By TERESA SIMONS
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) -When 69 blind vendorS' sought help from
the District of Columbia's new mayor, they got more than they hnd .
:· I ever
received from former Mayor Marion Bany; they got concern.
bI
But
weeks later, Mayor Sharon Prau Dixon has yet to give the ven•
dors
a
penny
of the more than $620,000 a federal judge says the city
•• !
should
pay
them
to compensate for a Barry crony's screw-up.
I•
The
~ is typical of the many problems facing the 47-year-old
•'• ,•• savvy corporate lawyer, whose reformist pledge led her to the mayor's
• ofrlCC nearly 100 days ago.
,
.
Soon after she toOk her oath of off'lCC Jan. 2, Dixon·found that Barry
•• I
? "
had left more than a ·drug conviction and reputation for womani:zin~.
•
•
He
also left phones thst didn·' t work. computer systems that weren t
•
•
compatible, empty personnel files and, worst of all, a C'lty that was flat·
••
out broke.
.
·
D' •
••
Now it's not just the blind vendors who are knocking at 1xon s .
•
door for money she doesn't have.
.
•
The
city
is
entangled
in
numerous
lega!
baules
stemming
from
the
•
••
Barry administration, such as the one filed on· behalf of mentally ,
retarded persons who ~hoke on their food because there is no one
•• . around
to l!elp them, or the ;one filed ,on be~f of cJ,lild welfare recipi·
•" t:... ems, inclu.ding an 8-year-old at St. EIUabetb s Hosp•tal who was found
clim!&gt;ing into a ttaSb can becauSe he thought he was worthless and
wanted to lle thrown away.
·
.
·
t
Says
Dixon:
"When
I
walked
into
the
mayor's
office
on
my
first
,li
day they told me the good news. I was the mayor. Then they told me
the bad news. I was the mayor."
·
Despile the ~blems, the charismatic Democrat can note a number
•
of victories, chief 1111011~ lbem, bipartisan congressional suppon for an
additional $100 millicn m-lieu-of-taxes payment to help the city cope
with whal wss a $317 mjllillll bud&amp;e&amp; ahonfaiL
Dixon and the COWII:il are now negotialing an agreement to make
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th rest of the gop in the roughly

$4

billion budget through salary

f~z~. staff reductions, other spending cuts 'and a cigarette. or hotel

tax hike.
·
.
_
Dixon also aPJlWS 'to have obtained the .confid~nce.~f residents ~at
change, indeed, IS on the horizan. Sh!~ viSits semor cmzens at a cny·
run home, runs to raise money for breast can&lt;;er tr~tn~en\, pops m
unannounced at city offices, and mugs it~up ~1-eviS\On m an attempt
to bring big-league baseball back to the c1
...- •
over and over and over
· "Yes, we can. Yes, w~ will," she
again
·
Still, there are critics, most unwilling to go public with their com·
plaints.
·
, ed
.
.h
.
be
Her relationship is perhaps most stram .w1t coun,ci1 mem rs,
whom she openly criticized during her camprugn and With whom she
now often differs.
· ..
de . .f
Many i:ouncil veterans stjll view her with skepticism, won nn~ 1
she and her staff
capable of managing a city of 609,900 ~pulauon,
doubtful that she ~ fulfill a climpai$'1 prom•se rec~n~y rellcrated to
cut 2 000 mid-level management poS!Uons from the cny s bureaucracy,
and de:ermined not to be a rubber.stamp like they were during most of
the Barry regime.
.
.·
.
..
.
'til ·
Council Chairman John Wilson ·said that m a private ~ecung WI
his colleagues "They came in saying, '(Arc) the (Washmgton) Post,
Mrs. Dixon a~d Congress running this government, or do we get a
sa ?" '
'
·
YCouncil members, wbo must make a rmal vote on next year's bud·
get in the coming week, say Dixon has called for a plan based on unrealistic expectations.
. ·
. il Ire the 7 000
They say it is not like1f:!81 the pnva~ sector w I h
•
youth Dixon wants to cur
a summer jobs program, that Congress ·
wiD dish out an additional $200 million next yw, or that h!Jndreds 9f
homeless pe&lt;SOtts who wiU lose shelter beds can be moved mto publiC

are

.

housing.
,
.
.~
w·;·cuts .~ut no more taxes? I m not sure you can do 11 that way,,i
1 son sa• .
,
Publicly, Dixon says, "Yes, we cati. "
,
Priv81ely, scurrying across .town in a sedan she traded for Barry'J
limolisine she knows that people wiU wait only so long. ''That's pert :
' of my imPatience. 1know you have to strike soon.''
·
- Once she has the budget behind her, Dixon plans to focus her ener•
gies 011 an economic development plan for the District, which has lost
bUsiness to neighboring communities.
'·
But Dixon also is insisting that business leaders hire the youth to be ·
cut from the city jobs program this summer.
•
· "I think they're going to do it," she said. "We b!lve to be the ones
to ride rough-shod. We have to be the ones to urge them. Let' s put ii
that way,"
:
Dixon is demanding ~Iter police protection, .and ~as ordered· offi:
cers to ~et away from thelf desks and on to the en me-ridden Sll'eetS: '·
· "With a police department th8l has more pohce r,er cap1181han any
city in the cowtUy, our expectations must be-higher. ' ·
"
• ·
And, she is beginning a push for a set formula by .which the federal
government would pay an annual sum in lieu of taxes on federal build;
ings and prQperty it owns in the District:
,
"When 1 went to Wall Street I discovered th81 our bond rating is
just one level above jlink bonds. 'Yf!Y? Because we lack a fair and ~:
dictable federal payment fonnula. '
·
- ,
·•
Dixon is far from providing an the answers to the DisUict's profl..
!ems. But for now, her constituents and outside observers are stiU Coml;
paring ber favorably toller predecessor, who held office for 12 years. ·
She iJ "like 1 breath of Fresh spring air from the mountains of W~
Virginia," Sen. Robert Byrd, I&gt;-W.Va., said after the Appmptiations
Committee YOied for extra funding for the District last month•
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Page-82-Sunday Tlmes.....sentlnel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,
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_, -Weddjngs--

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Aprll7, 1991

I

'W-

....

-Anniversaries--· ••

For That' Special
Occasion ... ~ ·· ·
Special occ8aionnequire apeilial pre·
peratlon•. If you ere planning a wet~·
ding, arinlvers•ry or prom, 1han you
thould come sea us at Hailklns-Tan·
'
ner.
Y.ou will have over 1 90 etvltl of 1' ";
adoa to choo~e from. We hiUI8' a large
selection of the latnt atvlea and com·
pllmeritary acceAorles for thl' WI)8Cial

DCCIIIIon.
QUality Forinalwear at Aflor...lt Pri'"GROOM TUX FREE.Wini .. OR
MORE l.N WEDDING ~AR'N

Sheets anniversary .observed
·

Nelson pled-ges
NEW CONCORD, Ohio Robert NeJson has pledged mem;
bers6i.P to the Mace Social Club at
Musldngum College in New Con·
cord, Ohio. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert I. Nelson of Gal·
lipolis.

UD graduate classes
begin at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - The Uqjversity of Dayton Graduate School of
Education will hold a coffee hour ·
on Thursday, April 25 (rom 4 -6
p.m. at Anniversary Hall on the
Univenity of Rio Grande caml!us
l for those interested in registenng
•for l'raduate education classes.
1AdYJSing and registration for third
1term will lake place at this time.
. Clilsses are held at the University
: of Rio Grande and will begin April
• 26 and end July 27.
.
: Faculty membefs (rom UD will
! be available to answer questions
• and assist with registration process.
: For more in(ormation, please call
; Paul Lloyd Bldle University of Rio
' Grande at (614) 2A5-5353.

·----------------! ' 'MAkE IT ARULE...

ton, cousins of the bride were floW·
ergir\s. They won: pink !IJld white
flowered dresses and carried a
small wicker basket with rose
petals. ·
·
Jurj Darst, Gallipolis was best
man. Groomsmen were John Sip·
pie, Gallipolis and David Newber·
ry, Rio Grande, brother of the
bride. Chris Newberry, Rio
Grande, brother of the bride was
junior lfOOIIISIIIan. Ringbearer was
Blaine BIII'IICll, Marietta, cousin of
the bride. He carried an ivory salin
pillow wilh tbe gold bands
auac~. . .
.
RegiStenng guests;were Lon
Coen and Lena Coen, sasters of the
groom. Valerie Bernard, Pt. Pleas·
ant, W.Va..~dKentWalker,Jack·
son provided the music, .
. A dinner reception followed in ·
-the church basein_ent. . .
The..couple will ~de m, Oahu,
J;tawau were PFC Coen IS sta· :
bOned.

}1/u/it&gt;l!t::';, /; :,

employed bY the Gallipolis Developmental.Center as a psychology
assistant
'
· The groom is a graduate of St.
Albans High School and is self~
employed .in auto repairs and sales
in Gallipolis.
The couple resides in Gallipolis. ·

...

Hicks, ringbeiiQ'.

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Work Decorating Magic With WCJIIpap4tr &amp; P-AINT

.

A reception was held at the El
TorGrotio.
· .
, The llri.de is a graduate of John
Marshall High School, Marshall
University, and the University of
West Vqinia College of Graduate
Studies wj~ a mas~s degree in
Psychology. ·She 11 currently

.

WALLCOVERING

SPR~NG

206;,
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COLORS

.

MR. AND MRS. VERNON (BE'ITY) EVANS

--

'

•ISO differem sryles
e11le very laresr kxlks in Fashion Formalweot. · •
~2 riejruomr&gt;erbund wlors
'
•Cornplete line of formal acressuries-'shoes. cane. top hat. !llovcs
•Experr fi11inJ: and service. ·
' - . .......,... . .. - . -.

.

#.:.,~:!'::'

$2500

50 lbs. and hu kepi it
off tor over 24 years.

Book }~Ollf ruxt·4.!tt l~arly . rht:

srylc:s :tlw ~l}'S g,o fir~t.
No deposit is rguired so
in ctnd make
yoilr Sl:lcl'tion rud11y.

I

992~6173

Wedding
policy

' The Sunday Times-Sentinel
·regar\ls weddings of Gallia, Meigs
:and Mason counties as news and is
'happy to publish wedding stories
;and photographs without charge
• However, wedding Qews must
meet genenil standards of timeli'ness. The newspaper prefers to
'publish accounts of weddings as
.soon as p&lt;\ssible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
-edition, the wedding must have
'!llken place within ,60 days prior to
.the publication, and may be up to
:600 words in length. Material for
· Along ihe River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4.p.m., prior to the date
· :or publication. .
• Photographs of eithet the bride
•or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired Photographs may be either
,black and white or good quality
' color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality phowgraphs will
not be acCepted. GeneraU y, snapshots or instant-devetoping pllocos

""I'

•
"I'm lollng weight ll.ke

never before:·

'

OUrNewPanon.. Ciaolce®

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Mlmbtr

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2.

You'll get mora food choices with Level
Two. yet mainllin a moderate weighLioss. This
plan alvn you the structure you need with the
resurta you want.,

"Our members are ecstatic:•
F-Mc~&lt;

ANa Oirtetor

_,_

"lt.'l the ilmplest Weight
Watchers program ever:•

Connie Commuters

A'iiiShltiQn fee ........... $17.00
Ft"t -~ "" ..........UJll
. ' , A'iiUiar Prto ............... $26.00

3 • Level Three allows you·to eat more food,
and the widelt variety of food, whUe stiU moving

......

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FOR

I

If you are really motivated to lose weight,
Level One is lh~t pllll for you. It's a little more
structured. But you'l see amazing results.

Pat Pnrce-Minln

fI .,

ntf••• PI

Dllf...

"Believe me,·t11e results
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I

JOIN

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Gwtndol')ln Smi1!'1

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You11 get more than
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...._...,.,'"'·

&amp;.:..~*: o:.o.l'..rt• • mu-.f l tlf t~ ,. ,,.,.n nn ttli: fU. ti!IN iiN"·-*illl
C"onn.: Coawulleh Mil la.h•u11.\J ,.,,!of n,.M.... . l'lt•lbt
1n jlllll
)'00' '-lit, jUMo'OIII --.MIIh

"*" ..

.

editorial department from I to S
p.l)l. Monday through Friday, at ,
(614) 446-2342.

1 .•,

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can for further lnfonnatlon.

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Till
T~~t~.,

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Wed., Th••·
tit 6:P.M.
til S P.M.

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t;V'ou.'rt: 1n•l1i.rfleu.,

Ads

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HOLZER CLIN•C

Ce{e·6rate Spring

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July 31 • Auaust l, 1991
. Tour Highlights
*Louise Mudi'tll ill Coacert•
•Deluxe MotorcOach ,Tranlpo~tion•
•AccommodatiOIIs at the Opryland Hotel•
•Grand Ole Opry-&lt;)pryland•

VALLE.Y HOSPITAL

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CaiToiiF,..

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STEPS!

AT·WORK MEETINBI
Lose weiQht·where you wort
Weight w,tchen; will sat up a meeting for
you and 16 of yoor fellow employeet.

GALLIPOLIS
ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
·
Tue: 7:00p.m., Wed: 9:30a.m.

.

are not of accepllble quality.
Questions mtl)' be diftll:ltd 10 die

YOU SAYI $14.00

...

Now only $36.99 each

.

!1::£

J'H.IJ"'UI :tl'

11011111,
MON.-lA!. 9.10-S
fll. , ,,, .•

~-g~-.

Thiveners celebrate 50th
ui:Cr:

"Weight Watchers~ knows
what you expect-from a
weight ·loss plan!'

TUXEDOS PRICED FROM

;' 'SI¥t 2o•1o

SUNSHINE

39080 HOBSON DIIVE
_... . MIDDLEPORT
I OHIO
.
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MEIGS, CARPET
&amp; DECORATING CENTER .

VISA

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GOING OUT "Of'
BUSIIISS SALE

•Any book or p•ttern.
•Any fabric and border.

wear.

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PoMERoY • Vernon J. and
'I
......
unfortuaatellt,the.•eme l.s n't
Betty Carman Evans, Route 33,
true for.lnounttnge. o()ur '.
,·
Pomeroy,
will celebrate
50!1)
wedding Bflniversary
with.their
a recep· . · ..,_.., 20% Remount Event
".'i
tion on Saturday, April 13 from 2.
·
makes it possible for yqu to
2 DAYS ONLY ,
tQ 4 p.m. at the Old American
rastyle your diamontls or to
Legion Hall on South Fourth Street
TUES. I WED.
fln.d a place tor
in Middleport.
. your loose
.
The couple was married April
lPIIL 9 &amp; 10
stones.
•
'11''
,.
12. 1941 by Rev. J.P. Miller at the
SAVI UP TO
!hi'{
.....-·
Bradbury Church of Christ. He
5o·~
.
retired from Conrail after 33 years
''
0.
of service.
.·
r•
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They
are
the
parents
of
Janice
MR. AND MRS. HOWARD (RUTH) THIVENER
Evans, Pomeroy; Mrs. Wayne
.j
(Jayne) Graham, Leon. W.Va.;
MONOGIAM-G
J:aJAae
Mrs. Ted (Joyce) Morarity, Lan!
.
.
•
....COICIAVIIIUI
• .....
,caster; and Keith (Donna) Evans,
ANI APPAIIL
nrt, 1e as married April 5 Bloomington, ru.
·
sc STAR mm
GALLIPOLIS • Howard and
!941
They
have
six
grandchildren,
GAWPOUS,
0.0 45611
Ruth (West) Thivener of Gallipolis,
¢elebrated their 50th wedding . The hav~ twO daughters, Mrs. Tonya and ~hrist&lt;?pher Graham, ...__....;.;16~1~4;..).;."'.;.';.."..;.'.;.~;,;;...._ _.
(Jharon) Neal of Grove City Leon, ~. Va., TraVIS and Shannon . anniversary, AprilS with a SUfllrise Jerry
and
Mrs
Johnn (Canc!ie) Hood of Moramy, Lancaster: and ~ngela ,-.-,-~--.._,....;:._ _.,...::._._ _..__...,;;',;;':..~·':.•..,:..~-....;..,:-'"'_ _ _":'\"OP:....,.,....-~
celebration at the First Baptist
Gallipoiis;
seven gr~chil· ~ll_d Jeremy Evan~•. Bloommgton,
~ ,
r:
Church with family .S friends.
dren, Cynthm, Jason, ·Valarie and
· The couple requests that gifts be
' · '~' .f · 1
• '
T~mmh!teal; Wendy, Mendy and omitted
.
-:'"_:,
t. '
Lindy - ~ .
J''~

•

_)

· The,Bosrille knoj\'s rhor looking good ~- ·
. ~:in$ wirh Fashion. We have oneofrhe lar~t
and mosr mmplere sele(tions of ruxedos any·
where. This year. set yourself aporr from rhe
pmm crowd by seleC~inA your ruxedu from
the- Basrille, your leader in Fashion Fprma1·

r, ~

i

. Couple to observe anniversary_...-

.GALLON

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LOOK YOUR BEST AT THE PROM

.,:J.
~·
.:

$9!9

\!

All THE NATIONAL BRANDS!

/(lJ/J/JJ'

· ·

~.

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Billups in Ironton.
The couple has five children,
Mrs. Jerry (Connie) Lilly of Neva·
da, Ohio, Mrs. Ronnie (Anna) Pol·
lock of Bucyrus, Mrs. Nolan .
(Wanda) Thomton of Patrioi, Mrs.
Steve (Phyllis) Miller of Gallipolis; ·
and Philip Jeffen of Nevada. Ohio.
The~ also have 14 11f8Ddchildren .

'"

· Aaendil!g tbe couple were Kel· ·
ley Hi~)[a, matron of honor;
Tammy Breeden, maid of honor;
Lisa Bannister, brides maid; and
Sara Hicks, flower&amp;irl; Jeff Steger,
best man; C. W. Breeden, usher;
Randy Stover, usher; and Joey

.

AHANDY·.
TOOL·

· SCO'ITOWN - I{everend Jessie
and Elizabeth Jeffers of Sconown ·
will celebrate their 50th anniver·
sary with all ojlen house, from I to
4 p.m., April '14 at IIi~ home .of
their daughter, Wanda Thornton,
on Hollow Road near Mudsoc:
The couple was united in marriage on Aprill6, 1~1 by Silas

:O~~t~lilon. &amp;Fri. .tl I P.M.! Tut~., Will. Thur. &amp;·Sat. tllS P;M.

Albans.

-·

Ul WANT.ADS.

I

GALLIPOLIS • Sherry L. Bree·
den and David H. Sanson )llere .
united in marriage April 6 in the
Christ Lutheran Church, Mozart,
with Pastor Ral)lb W. Dunkin offi·
ciating the double ring ~ny.
. The bride is die daQahter of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl L. Ifreeden of
Mozlrt and die groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ridl8ld Sanson of St.

GALLIPOUS ·Mr. and Mrs. H. Shato in Gallipolis. ·
Milfred (Gail) Sheets celebrated · They are tbe parents of four
their 50th wedding anniversary, SODS, David and Jeffrey Sheets of
Columbus and :Lrle and Michael
Jan. 23.
Sheets
of .Gal1ipolis.
. The couple as married by ]olin,
.

Jeffers ·open house, Apri/14-

Breeden-Sanson

·}ojewberry-Coen
·

GALLIPOL · • Janet Lynn
Newberry and Dan Alan Coen
were united in IIUilriage Man:h 3 at
the French City Baptist Church,
Gallipolis. with Rev. David Bryan
Sr., officilling the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Steve and Kaien Newberry of Rio
Grande. The groom .is the son of
BiD and Ruth Coon of Oallipolis.
Given in marriage by her father,
Steve Newberry, the bride wore a
long ivory, Sllin gown with pearls
and lace trim and accented with
ruffles cascading down into the
cathedral length ll'llin. _She carried a
bouquet of mauve, pink and blue
dried flowen with lace and mauve
'ribbons.
Cami Smith, Bidwell was
matron of honor. Bridesmaids
. were, Amy Brumfield, Gallipolis;
Teresa Hqhei, Gallipolis and Lisa
Ehman, Patriot. They wore tea
· length mauve dresSes and~ a
bouquet of mauve and blue dried
flowers.
Joanna Newberry, Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va., and Courtney Smear, Day·

REV. AND MRS. JESSIE (ELIZABETH)JEFFERS

MRS. DAVID (SHERRY) SANSON

MR. AND MRS. DAN (JANET) "COEN

IECOND AVE.
441·Ge88 .
01/1'

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pl~unt,

Page- 84 Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Aprll7, 1891

New clinic staff addition Meigs health department offers natural disaster tips · ~
nAtural
mo~
~w
boo$tS pediatric staff to 7 ~~;Jua1/odawy

HEINER'S OLD FASHIONED

1

(S undad
.Healy)this
o.,..,.. .... ann y as or1
Day in member cou~ltie_s of the
Wo_rld Health Orgamzauon. The
~e•gs C~unty Health Department
18 observing the day: .
The thell,'e Eor World ~ealth
Da_y 1991 IS Shou~d Disaster
Slrike- Be~! .Th~ World
Heal.th Orgamzauon mtC?n~s _to
spotlight the ~ures thal _mdiv•duals, commwiiU~s. and nations can
~e _10 prevent disaster-inflicted

GALLIPOLIS .- Diane L.
Alk!ns •. M.D.. is now practicing
pediatrics at }Jolzer Clinic. The
addition of Atkins lirings the number of Holzer Clinic pediatricians
to seven.
·
AtkinS ~ived ller ~-medical
edtJCalion at Paciful Lutheran University in Tacoma, Wash., and at
the University of North Dakota at .
Grand Folts. Her M.D. was c.ned
at the University of Wisconsin
Medical School in Madison. She
did her internship atlhe Univmity

· IRJllllCS and ~~-

The Meigs County Health
De~artll,'ent h!IS_ released the fol·
lowmg informauon 10 educate the
o{ Wisconsin Hllspilal$.
public on natural disasters.
Afler working as an emergency
Floods and flub floodS
department p11 sician in Wisconsin
Floods~ a natural occ~nce
and Iowa, A:kins completed her
along the nvers·of the Amencan ·
residency in pediatrics at
waler system. Floods begin' when
CharlesiOn (W.Va.) Area Medical
soil
and vegetation in. a particular
.
. Cenler.
area
cannot absorb ram or melted
DIANE L. ATKINS, M.D.
Atkins was granted board certi_snow. or wbe_D waler runs off~fication by the American Board of Claire, Wis., and Xavier Hospital the land so qwcldy that it cannot be
Pedialrics in 1991. She is also cer- . in Dubuque, Iowa.
tifiCd in advailced cardiac life supHer husband, l.en, works in
PQft. pedialric !ldvance life support, sales witl! the West Bend Corp.
advanced trauma life support, The Atkins' have relocaled to Galnepnatal resuscitation, and pedi- lipolis from the Charles10n area.
atric code 1-2-3 proiOcol. She ~
Atkilis will be seeing Patients a~
had le8Cbing Cllperience at the Uni- the Main Clinic in Qalfi~M&gt;Iis, as
versity· of Wtsconsin Medical well a• other clinic locauons. To
School, SL Mary's Hospital Medi· schedule an appointment, call 446cal Center in Madison, Wis., 5371 in Gallipolis or 992-2188 in
Sacred Heart Hospital 'in Eau Middleport.

...

dihevened by the
chaqnels or
w n ponds and likes cannot contain exce~s water. Some floods
occur dunng the rainy ~n. or
when h!lavy rains caniM by severe
weather storms fill river basins
with more water t·han they can
~odate. Olher flOQds, called
nash floods" because of their sudden and unpredictable occurrence,
are caused by heavy localized rain.fall.
Flood season is generally April
through Sepcember but floods may
occur pt lillY time. Flood forecastS
and warnings allow ·people in ·
threalened areas 10 jhepare, the~"efore, lessening the damage they
incur by the flOOd. Forecasts and
~illgs along major rivers,can be
Issued days lo weeks before the
ex:pected flood peak. On Slllllller
rivers, the forecasts and waminJS
can only be givc:o hours 10 days m
advance of severe fiO&lt;idings. This
is !w:at- lbe basins of the snW1er

lt is also 1mJlOr18DI 10
the ; .:
·
•
followmg te.rms: a fl_ood !"~tch ·• ·
refers 10 pc:lSSible flooding Wllhin a •
~ designaled !'"'~-.and a flood ·
!"arrung re(~ 10 IIRmment flood. 1 •
mg or flQodirlg that hu already ~

rivers fill up
quickly thrui
those of lhe map nvers.
Flash-flood waves IIIOYC ll high
speeds. They an: powerful enough
10 tear out trees, wipe 0111 bridp,
and destroy buildings. Waves can
reach the height of 10 10 20 feeL
Flash floods occur oflen on small
streams. Wa1er levels rise uickl
leaving liuie time betwe~n fir;i
deleetion of flood conditions and
the arrivsl of the flood water
·

been~

.

- For more infonnaaon ~
disasters and what to do In the
event o~ a natural dlaflef, con~t.
the Me•gs County Health Department at 992-6626.
00

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· ~~tiJ_(J~
~~//.

Evening dinner set.

'@eJ,/IfP'!

...

MYour Profeslionol Full Service/eweler"

.

POMEROY - An evening din·
ner will be held at 'the senior citizens cenler in Pomeroy on Thursday from 5-6:30 p.m. The cost of
the dinner is $3 per peqon with a
Many
of.her
friends
from'
Pt.
Pleasmenu of oven baited chicken
GALLIPOLIS • Bes~ Wilant.
w.va.~were
in
8llielldance.
,
llllllhed potaiOOS and p\.r gree~
htlm, ~ resident of Pi'*rest Care
Clara
W.
Filson,
99,
a
life-long
beans,
slaw, biScwt and beverCimler, *braled ,her 103rd. birth- friend of Mrs. Wilhelm, 'attended age. Piecole
will
also be available at 75
day. Ma!ch 31.
and
shared
memories
with
her.
cents
per
piece.
Following the dinHelping her celebrate were
Others
in
attendance
were
Polly
ner,
music
will
be
played by Junior •
Genelve Thonijlson and Marlene
and
C'.arl"Babe"
Adkins,
Maxine
I
~nd
Rita
White
AI
Windon and
Slusser, owner of Carolina Lumber
..yalters,
Tiny
Holstein
anll
~y
Ward.
The
pgblic
is invited to •
Co. Bessie was the .first secretary·
Pinecrest
staff
members.
attend.
.
.
for Carolina Lumber•.50 years ago.

Bessie Wilhelm turns 103

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WATER or OIL

•.

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STARKIST TUNA
6112 OZ. CAN

LB.

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i:
.r,
'·•
•'·

•

LB

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...

~-~

LB.

12 OZ. CANS

l·'

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.-Through ·Saturday, April 27
G.RAND PRIZE:

· GOLD MEDAL"

OSCAR MAYER

:Bologna •••.•.••..••..'!" $1

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··FREE .GROCERIES ·

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Leg Quarters •••••.'!.49(
US.DA CHQICE BONELESS ~EEF .
$. 79 ..2f$.1
1
Chuck
.
R
oast
.......
.
.BUC.KET
.
.
$
. . ...
. 249
24 PACK CASE
, Cub~ .Steak .•...•• ~·; • .·· . · US~A CHOICE BON~LESS BEEF . . $ 99 ROYAL CROWN
· LOUIS RICH _POUND ~OJ.L .
.
$ _11 9 R1beye Steak.•...••~ 4
PR.ODUCTS
Ground Turkey....
.
MR. TURKEY
· · -.
. ·
$4.
9
9
i BUN !IZE or R_EGULAR .
. ft .. (
rW1eners ••••·.~ ••••••t!~ •• 7 9·

•••
'• ·•

••

.Sign
Up
To
Win
.

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CHICKEN .

~:

Discover

.

Whole ·Chicken ••••'!. 49~

~·~

Visa

'

GRADE A

1'

Mast• Card

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•l••

e Appreciate ~~ur Cuctomersl

.

•..,'

•••
••

We have mw~ one of Ohto's foremost antiQul dealers into
our store forfNo days witb al11ge selection of Antique Jewelry. Watches. polls, Qu1lls, GI1$SWire, Sterling Silve- and
Much More. Don t miss th1s chance to purchiSe a one-of-tktnd keepsake. Th1s 11 the Slle you've been waaing for- 2
Days Only '" Pomeroy, Ohio.

SERVICEMAN VISITS - Specialist Eddie Cox, a U.S. ser· ·
viceiDID from GaWa County, recently visited 'lritb tbe ltudents at
Southwestern Elementary. He expressed biJ tbanks to the stud,nts
ror wrltlllfl letters and told them tww important mail eaU was to ·
· .those In the servlee. Eddie recently returned from his tour or duty
In tbe Persian Gulf area.
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- Fr1day, April 12 &amp; Sat., April 13

113 Court
Pomaroy, 011.
992-2054 .

$219-

{.

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. 28 OZ. BOX

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SALE

.-.-.~

. BANQUET
FRIED CHICKEN

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.'•. ..

.t (

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.79( ·

.-:. ..

ANTIQUE

...

·· FRITO'S

•••

EST ATE
J~WEL,R Y - AND

.

·REGULAR s1;39 PKG. ·

.·.' •

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59(·

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298 SECOND .ST.
·· POME-ROY, OH.
PRICE_S EFFECTiVE APR. 7 THRU APR. _13, 19.9 l

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Next Year, Worry About Your
Tan Line Instead Of Your Bank Line!

STOJIE HOURS
~ndQy n.r... Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
. APRIL 12th-13th ·

SPECIAL FRIEND • Helplq Bessie Wllllelm, (rl&amp;ltt) celebrate
ber 103rd birthday on Marcb_31, was ber lolllllme f'riend Clara
Filson, (left). Mrs. Wilhelm Is a resident of Pinecrest Care Center.

20 OZ. LOAF .

·'·

SHOW AND SALE

•

BREAD

•

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•

·~-

••

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••••••

~OMPLETE
SET
OF GOLF
CLUBS
.
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·FLOUR.

79

s LB~ BAG

•

(Purchased From Meigs (Jolf Co.ursa) .

DRAWING SATURDAY, AP;RIL
2.8, 1.991. ·.
'

KRAFT
-...
MIRACLE WHIP ....
.

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Congratulations to the .
.Ne~ Owners of the Meigs
I Golf Course ·-

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32 OZ. JAR

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$169

I

(formerly Jaymar Golf Oub) .
PA~L SIMON.and PAT O'.BRIEN

OPEN YOUR 199.2
PEOPLES BANK
·vACATION
CLUB
.
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jC•t Out A•d lu 161 N1wlg ·
·R•••dtl•d M•l11 Coli

c.,,,.

i

OPEN HOUSE ..

·, .

,{' .

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•FREE GOLF
... ·•SNACKS
eENTERTAINMENT

'''• '
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773-5514

·POIJifT PLBASANT
•

.878-1121

882·2135

MEMHRF.D.J.C.•suartANnALPENAL1Y"FOREARJ.YwmtDRAWAL•F1RsrPAYMENTOUEAPRIL8,liKII

'

INTERSTATE FROZEN

FLAVORITE
BORDEN'S

.•

2
_Orange _Juice •• ~·.~.L. $1 9
KEMPS
i •
' .·
oz. 99.(
:Pr•ngles.................
. Ice Cream •••••••••••• $• 249
I

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6:7.5

r

• S QUART PAIL

BANQUET
.
oz. s9('
.
;Tomato JUICe ....c::.. " . . TV ·Dinners •••• ~0;~2.~~
:STOKELY'S

•

•

46

WE CAN AUTOMATICALLY DltDUCT
VACATION CL1JB PAYIIItlft.'81'0R YOUR ltiiPLOYEEs

,

'.,.' '

'.'

. ATTBJIITIOJif BU8J111B88 OwDRS/IIAKAOERS:

NUBAVBJif

Bananas •...•.•••• !·~.·•••

•'

l:~Op.m.'til??

You Jl'alce 49 PCI.JIIllerltB And The Last One Is On Us

MMON

•

-

2°/o Milk •••••••••!!L~•• $149

•s, •5, •10 and •20 Clubs Avaii~ble ·

PEOPLES ·BANK

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'( Sunday, April 7, 1991

t

, •1, •2,

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89&lt; .

FRENCH
FRIES
200Z. BAG

3/$1

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l:&gt;-J:
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USDA CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

RUMP ROAST ·

$2'29.

LB.

..

STORE HOUI5
Monday thru Sunday
. 8 AM-10 PM
•

. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH
•.' ,

"'
,. USDA CHOICE

CLOROX BLEAC.H

79(
•lellleAt,_.,.s..v•

. GAL
.....

I.., Cilt••• ·

, . . . . l),lttl

DOMINO SUGAR- 32 oz.
JAI

:a~$16·9
. .le.l .l i"t .......
..,c.t....

Supor , ...

7 tin .... II, \991

BEEF ROUND
ROAST.

$229

ll.

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Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

. Page-86-Sunday Tl~ea Sentinel

'

DAR .introduces new members
.

.

tlie cfiM!Ier' s trip to Blenncrbas&amp;et
Island, J&gt;arkmburl, w .va:, for the
May ~· Lunc:h will be served
at the bisUlric 8' ma I et Hotel
before liking the boll trip to lhe
island IIIII a tour~ the .-ion.
Cblpla' membcn will lito J*'·
ticipate aa 00.1: ma for .lhe opening day of Our House in May.
Plans have been made io present an
8Uibenlic French flag for usc at the

GALLIPOUS - French Colony
Chapter Daughters of the American
Rev,olution held its regular monthly
meeting ~atljl'day, March 16 in the
dining room of the Grace United
Methodist Olurch.
Mrs. John 1ackson, regent,
opeiled the meetiag with the DAR
ritual and welcomed 17 members
and two guests. One of the l{!lCSts
for the day was speaker, Dr. Bany
Thompson, University of Rio
Grande professor of Anthropology.
His topic was ''Native Ainericans An Antbrot?Ological View." ·
Hostesses for the day were
Donna Waugh and Ida Thompson;
Mrs. Jackson welcomed four
-new members that have been
accepted for membership in the
French Colony Chapter Daughters
of the American Revolution. They
were : Carolyn Haner, Christine
Rife, Angela McKee and Annclisc
Summers. Any female. 18 years of
!lge Or older, that has proof of their
ancestiy to a Revolutionary War
soldier is invited to a monthly
mceting of this ~and CJ!.Plore
the possibility of pming the DAR.
· Those interested can contact ..
Mrs. 1aclcson at 446-7339 or Mrs.
James Roush at 446-4274. Because
of interest expressed by members
at this meeting.. it was determined
that a Children of the American
Revolution (CAR) Chapter might
be feasible in Gallipolis and is
being looked into.
Also discussed were plans for

Be~t
\

of·

By

Bob
Hoeflich

the Bend..

'

··calendar

'

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SUNDAY
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
CHESHIRE -The Gubriel Quar- school. All parents and teachers are
tet will perform Sunday at 7 p.m. at urged to attend.
-.
the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
POMEROY - The Disabled
· Church in Cheshire. Special
p~c~ing by Michael Flash. Public American Veterans and Ladi'es
Auxiliary WiD meet Monday at 7
IS mvtted.
p.m. at tbe hait..at 124 Butternut
POMEROY - Popcorn Sunday, Ave. in Pomeroy. Refreshments
Hillside Baptist Church, Sunday, wiD be~
10 a.m. Everyone will receive popTUESDAY
.
com and suckers.
POMEROY • Tbe Ohio Eta Phi
LOTTRIDGE - The Lotttidge Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Community Center will have a wiD meet Tuelday • 7 p.m. at die
.smorgasbord dinner, Sunday, noon Meigs County Public Libttn&gt; in .
to 2 p.m., Cost is 45 for adtl1t and Poinerpy: Fair Ida for the JR!IIiUJII
$2.50 for children. Public invited.
book must be turned in at that time
·
as well as reservations for
:: MIDDLEPORT. FirsrEB
·a list Founder's Day. Officcn wiU be
: ~burch in Middleport will
onn . elected.
. .
..
·the cantata, '1be Day He ore My
"
·
RACINE - The Racine High
:crown" on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
::The church is located at the comer School Class of 1961 will. bold an
·of Sixth and Palmer.
.
organtzabonat meeting for its 30th
·
·
·
class reunion on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
:: POMEROY - A 12-step AA at Southern High School. AU local
:meeting _will begin Sunday at 7 class members are urged to attend.
.p.m. at the 1TPA offtce 117 West
RACINE • Racine Lodge No.
:~econd St. in Pomeroy.
461 F and AM will meet Tuesday
...,
at 7:30p.m. AU masons are invited •
· to aucnd.
·
MONDAY
CHESHIRE • Women Alive
RACINE - The River Valley
wiD meet Monday a1 7 p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Clulihouse. There will Herbalists will meet Tuesday at 7
be a devotional spcam and Becky p.m. at the home·of Connie Hill.
Pasquale will demonstrate sweatshirt decorating. Refreshments will
PORTLAND - The Freedom
be served.
Gospel Mission Church will have
BEDFORD.- Bedford Township revival Tuesday through Saturday
Trustees will meet Monday at 7 at 7 p.m. nightly Vlith Rev. 1unior
Conger from Stndyville, W.Va.
p.m. at the town haD.
Pastor R.G. Willford Sr. invites the
CHESTER - Tile Cl\ester PTO public.
.

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SVLSDfall
.
registration set

.. ,

ADRIANE B. EASTMAN
-

Senior center events announced
GALLIPOLIS - Activities tnd
mcnunt the Senior Citizen's Ceoter for the week of April 8 tbrough
Apri112 are as foDows:
'
MONDAY APRIL 8
10:30 a.m. -'Aerobics with
Christy Wilcoxen
11 a.m . ....,. Short subjects "All
Aboard"
1 p m -Chorus
· 'n)ESDAY, APRIL 9
10:30 a.m. _ STOP/Physical
Fimcss
.,.
11 a.m._ Birthday Party
12:30 - Video Matinee "Old
YeDer"
·
1 p.m. _Learn &amp; Do workshop with Jurrie Reynolds, making
apple wreaths. Cost is $3. Register
by calling 446-7000.
1-3 p.m. _ Medical Form
Assistance offered by Holzer Modical Center
. WEDNEsDAY, APRIL 10
10:30 p.m._ Crochet c·ircle.
Noon _ 3 p.m. _VITA Volun1
T
teer ncome ax Aide
1-3 p.m.- Cards
.
THURSDAy I APRIL 11
10:30 a.m. -Aerobics with
Christy Wilcoxen
. 10:45 a.m. -Bible study
I p.m. - Hero class
FRIDAY, APRIL 12 ,
· 10 a.m. - noon; 1-3 p.m. - Art
and Craft class with Jan
· ·

MENUS
Monday, April 8 - Sausage
links, tater tots, spinach, biscuits,
~~~:wed apples.
·
Tuesday, April 9 - Roast
beef/gravy, whipped'potatoes, succotash. cole slaw. d!JmFr rolls, ice
cream and cake. · :
Wednesday, April 10 Chicken and noodles, Italian vegetables, beets,
bread, chocolate •
I
.
,-.

dessen.
. .
Thursday, April 11 -Ham.·
and scalloped potatoes, ~re,eit.:­
beansl tossed salad, bre:ad,

pu~~y. Ap~il u ·-

BBQ

hash browns, peaS, cOle slaw,

hnn ~·

pears and cookies. ·
.
Please make resprvations by.·
calling 446-7000 beiOn: 9 a.m. on
the day you wish to attend.
'·

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nw""

_

Jutt 1 Uftl• dCMflh c11n
r~:N • let J brud In ttw

WANT ADS

'' .
Your homt' ... your
automobUe. ; .your peace
of mind...

~

Protect them all through AAA •
Insurance Agency with our
Multiple Line Discount.

446-0699

IMurance Agency ·
360 Stcond A....
Gatlipolil, Oh. 1 ,

:·.;

446-0699

.

CHECK OUR WEDDING .
SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES.
WE DO CUSTOM WEDDING
BOUQUETS.

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SPIING VALLEY PLAZA
JACIISOII PIIIE-GlLLIPOUS, OHIO
PHONE 446·2134

.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
HOOD
FAMILY SHOES
210 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY. OHIO

992-6264

R~

..........~:aa
........,_.............. .

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•• ~

SBC GRADUATES· Pictured are IJ'IIduates
or Southeastern Business College following cere·
monies at Grace United Methodist Church.
Front (L toR} are: Vicki Bradsbaw, Pam Davis,·

Sheila Triplett, Belle Pnlcyn and Melanie
RolHns; Back: Carol Pitchford, Sandi Cole, Eliz·
abetb France, Angela Spangler and Malt O'Dell.

. GALLIPOLIS - Ten graduates
of Southeasu~m Business College
received degrees and/or diplomas.
durihg grad~atiQn ceremonies
March 25 at tne Grace United
Methodist Chltrch, Gallipolis.
Guest speaker was Dr. Walter
Stowers, a resident of Gallipolis
and graduate of Maishall Universi·
ty, He is a retired educator having
served Gallia County for several
years and is currently employed by
the Ohio Job Services, Gallipolis.
The invocation and, benediction
were-given by Darrell Yeag·er,
assistant minister of the· First

. ·GALLIPOLIS - Annabelle
Sisson was TOPS best loser of the
week when members met at
Cheshire Baptist Church on April
1. Janet Thomas was KOPS best
loser.
.
Catherine Little led the TOPS prayer. Pledge of Allegiance was
led by Emogene Johnson. Katie
Curfman led the TOPS pledge with
tbe J{OPS pledge bemg led by
1anet lbomas. .
Helen Trout read a verse'entitled
"Seasons of the Heart," and an arli:
cle entitled "We Are Survivors."
A new contest entitled "April
Showers" began April I and will
end Apri129: ,
'
Members wno lost over Easter
were Mamie Stephenson, Barbara
Cohner, 1an Snider, Edith Gardner,
Annabelle Sisson and Janet
Thomas. Each received a gift and a
cenificate.
On March 25, Edith Gardner,
weight recorder•. announced that
Janet Thomas was KOPS March

Nazarene Church. and current stu'Receiving diplomas were: Vicki
dent at'SBC. .
Bradshaw, medical office secretariStudent of the Quarter Awards at; Carol Pitchf&lt;Xd, data entty spewere presented to Joy '(hompson cialist; S~di Cole, data entty apefor summer qliarter and Bene Pol· cialist; ancl Sheila Tripleu, medical
cyn, Student of the Quarter for faD.
office secretarial.
~resident 'of SB~. Robert O Graduates rece~ving degrees and
Shtrey. ~ted 1!5SOCI8te '!ep-ees · diplomas, but not ID attendance are:
'?:Pam Davts, buSiness adm101~- Betty Bush, ~sUe Ray. Darla
uon; Angela Spangler, ~xecuuv_e Roush, Angela Shuler, Meli~sa
secretanal; .Melanie Rollms, ,bust- Snyder, Cheryl Wolfe, 1ulie Spm:s
ness admmtstrauon; Man 0 Dell, and Dixie McDonald.
duel degrees in business adminisProviding music was Mrs. Martration and ~icrocomputer/dat_a kena Crum of Pt. ,Pleasant, W.Va.
· proeessm~;_EI.izabeth France, buSI- A reception followed, with the
ness admm~snauon; ~ Belle Pol- SBC Student Senate attending the
.cyn, execuuve secre~.
refreshment table and serving as

'

REV. WILUAM HULME
weD aa the HMC Volunteer Chaplain staff, are welcome to attend.
Hulme ~uests that aU participants
bring a Ptble. Registtatmn inay be
made by contacting the Department
of Chaplaincy Services at the Holzer Medical Center (614) 446·5053.
The registtation deadline is .Tuesday, Aprl19.
I, THE HOLY SPIRIT
I saw what he waa doing
Stayi_n g out all night.
Orinki.ng up his paycheck
Doing what wasn't right.

Angel Beck turns 10

S12''

Tawney Jewelers

z ·l 446-141&amp;1Biil
URGE SILECnON

l

l
I
l
I
1
l
1

PAT'S POSIE PATCH.
FDI YOUI PROM GARTER
A CHOICE OF EITHER BLACK OR WHITE LACE.
ALSO, a CHDIQ OF MARIIOU COLORS.
(Such as Black. White. Emerald. 'Royal Blue,
··. Teal. Fushia,. Pink. Red. etc.)

$

4
loys, don't forl't yO..r Wrist Corsaaes or Nollfllys for

lqular S6 .......;...... ll'&lt;\\ll,GP.'IR'ln............. NOW

1 y - fa•orlta· fGI.
1

Girls, don't forl't loutonnloro for your fcrworlto 1uy.

I

SILK ANP DRIED FLOWERS ONLY!

I

1462 Soilor It

311-9311

Vinton, OH.

'--~---------------------------~

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY
Custom Fitted Dentures lri One Day AI Our Teays Valley Office
· ByOur Professionals And Trained Staff.
Made In Our Dental Laboratocy By Quallfted Technicians.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-926-002~
For AD AppolDtment or IaformaUon.
Our Regular Service Is Available At AU OJ]Ices.
. SAn DAY SERVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS!

DENTURES START AT

$134 PER DENTURE!

SMAILADDrriONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

West~~-

·

Virginia ~I Serrice
William V. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.
58311 DAViS CllEEK ROAD
WV•n&amp;-4132

•

· Thsm.o st ·

1his year AM has planned two very special tours to New
England and the East Coast. Join us this suinmerfor the best

of New England!

, .

·

SPECIAL FEA11JRE
"POPS BY mE SEA"
The BosiO'I Poos Esplanode Orchestra!

Tour Ill - Aucust 15-22, 1991
Hosted by Donna Murphy

•
SNag •• salt. No_,.,..... ..........

*Roundtrip Deluxe Motorcoach Transportation
*New York City &amp;. Broadwa)' Show
*Boston, Newport &amp;. Hyannis

• ... and 1110re!

•

lily .. JIIIY·

Tour 112- Auaust 17-20, 1991
Hosted by. AVII Ora!Joudy
*Roundtrip Air on USAir
*Boston, Newport &amp; Hyannis

PARENTHOOD

PO.IOY1
216 E. M St. 2nd Floor
..2-5912
.

Rock of AgOI oft~~r~ you a choice of e dlffw""'t colorocl
granltaa. Wha~ your roqulr-nta may bo, comploto
lltllfactlon Ia •-rod with Rock of Agoa.
Wlnt• Houra: Opon Friday 1:00 a.m. 'til 4:00 p.m.
Othor Houri by Appolntmont-183-11111 or 441·2327

GAWPOUS

414 S.Co.lll An., 2nd floor
446..0166

•30 te 5.00 lllondar·frldoy
Clelolllhun•y
. ·

lt30 ... 5.00 .n.,.frlclay.

.,..... . . . .
1130 to 12 Satu...,

STANLEY A. SAUNDIIS MON.ItnS

C.... lhundar

I I •M

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SSt !ltlnlln.

·BOB BENCE, KENDRA WARD .

.' 1

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. f'

I spoke to his soul
About hi a habitual sin.
Items for th~ Cnmmunlty cal· dancihg tnd door prizes.
endar appear iii the newspaper
What about your family
two days prior to the event, and . LEcTA - Lecta Christian Union
Wanting you to 'come in1
on tbe day or it, Notices for the Church .will have guest speaker
I said don't they count
calendar should be ·received sev- Rev. Miles Trout, 7 p.m. Sunday.
More than any drink?
eral days in adV.nce to allow ror
MONDAY '
pubDeation.
. · ·
How long will This go
.
SUNDAY
.
GALLIPOLIS_ OAPSE meets
Before your really sink?
CHESffiRE - Gabriel Quartet Monday, 7:30 p.m., Washington
I told him about Christ
sings at Old Kyger FWB Church, Elementary cafeteria: Election of
And how He can tave.
Sundar. 7 p.m. Church is located officers.
on Stmgy Creek at Cheshire.
How He C:an deliver
Preaching is by Michael Frash.
TUESDAY
From the alcoholic crave.
.
.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
I left it up to Him ·
GALLIPOLIS - Fust Presbyten- Extension Homemakers meet Tucs-·
As I do with everyone;
tn Church dedication _ceremoni~s, , day, 10:30 a.m. at First Presbyteri·
7 p.m. Sunday, featunng Itm Hil- an Church for installation of offiTo count the coat of sir
dreth ofColwnbus.
cers and judging of cultural
Before this sin ia done.
exhibits, Craft creators of projects
0 Ro~~rl 1.. Horpe,r
GALLIPOLIS • Songfest 7 . in past year welcome. Poduck and
3/23/ 91
p.m., Sunday, at Bell Chapel Ariel visit in afternoon.
1
Church ·with Sacred Trust Singer,
lhe Representatives and Biars Fam- r--... -----~----------~-----------,
ily.
- ~ - GET YOUR O~DER IN TODAY AT... .

best loser. TOPS best loser of the
week was Katie Curfman. Catherine Litde was KOPS best loser.
Each received a certificate and a
gift.
CENTENARY · Centenary
· Christy Ramsburg led the TOPS .
United Christian Church· will have
prayer. Pledge of Allegiance was
the Copley Singers and Donny
led by Janet lborilas. Katie Curf1ohnson, Sunday at.7 p.m.
man led the TOPS pled~e. KOPS
pledge was led by Cathenne Liule.
. BLACKFORK • Gallla Sub Dis"When Daffodils Are Out" was
trict Missionary meeting, April 7,
resd br, Helen Trout. A program
2:30 p.m. Union Baptist Church,
titled ' Easter Around the World"
with Rev..RobcnJackson.
was presented. by Annabelle ·Sisson, Catherine. Little, Emogene
'JACKSON- The 12 anniversary
Johnson, Virginia Voight, Helen
dance of. the Wagon Wheelers
Trout, Jean Mullins, Belinda Dean,
Square Dance Club
, AtBil 7
Edith Gardner and Katie Curfman.
from 2 to 5 p.m. on Summit St.,
'
SJI(&lt;Cial lady contest was won by
Jackson, with national caller, Kevin
ANGEL
BECK
Edith Gardner. A new special lady
Robinson of Lexington, Ky. There
contest will begin April I and end
will also be relresliments, round
June 24.
Anyone wishing information on
GALLIPOLIS Angel
TOPS may call Janet Thomas at
DIAMOND EARRINGS
367-0274 or Helen Trout at 367- Michelle Beck, daushter of James
and Kim Kemp, celebrated her lOth
7233. .
birthday March 26.
- Angel celebrated with a birthday/slumber party. Helping celebrate were friends Ashley Lloyd,
Jaime Vansickle, Jessica Clary,
Breezy Roberts, Nick Hall, 1osh
Halley, Candice and Samantha
Mooney.
.
Sending gifts were grandparents
IOIID
W.Va. The album is all instrumen- Hollis and Fern Mooney of Mertal and spotlights Ward on ham- cerville, Doris Beck and Usa Beck
Mo1nted In 141 Gold
mered and mountain dulcimers, of Gallipolis . Grest-grandparents
and Bence·on lead and rhythm gui- are Viola. Mooney of Clippers Mill
. tars. The duo[s producer. Jim Mar- and Lyla Waugh, Crown City and
422SICONDlVI.
tin, added extra spice to several . Wayne and Ethel Kemp of Vinton.
GlWPOUS
tracks by playing .cello, tuba or · Angel is fourth grader at Hanbass parts, and songwriter ' Mike nan Trace Elementary.)
.Blackbumjoined Ward on one cut
with his rhythm guitar.
.
Kendra Ward and Bob Bence
are also releasing an extended
length compact disc titled Way
Down Yonder. This 60-minute
Compact Disc contains all the
selections from Down Yonder, and
six additional tunes such as, "WildoCHJUanAN 01011
' OIIAPflNAn
OIIOOM'ITUX
woo&lt;) Rower" and "Orange Blos•IILL ILAit
• · •ROilRT WAGNER
FREE
.,..!liRE CAIIOIN .
FOR PARTY OF
som Special." It will be available in
•TUXE008 IN ITOCK AT ALL nMll
Sill OR MORE
. late May.
FRI. 1:30 A.M.· 1:00 P.M.
Down Yonder is available at
MON .-TUEI.·WEO.·THUIII. 6 lAT. 1:30 A.M. - 11:00 P.M.
select record stores nationwide, and
at all ~rformances by Ward and
Bence. It is also available by mail
froiD Upcreek Productions, Rou1e
1, 31032 SR 325, Langsville, Ohio
45741, and from Martha Ward,
1515 Upcreclc Road, Bidwell, Ohio
45614. .

OF SOUTIIIAm. . OHIO

'.

ushers.

Local .music duo
release new album·
GALLIPOLIS • Kendra Ward
. and Bob Bence, a locally based,
internationally-known uaditional
fold music duo. have just released a
new album, tit)ed Down Yonder.
The album features 12· favorite
American .tunes, including "Dueling Banjos," "Wings of a Dove,"
"Old Rugged Cross" tnd the title
uack, "Down Yonder." There are
also two origUtaJ cuts on the album,
"Lillie's Lullaby," written in honor
of Ward's grandmother•. and ''The
Tf.vo of Us Waltz."
This is the fourth album by this
popular couple, Mid between
recording projects .they devotes
full-time to traveling tnd performiog across the countty.
Kendra Ward ,and Bob Bence
will be appearing locally at the
Gallipolis River Recreation Festival on July 3, and at the Ohio Valley Dulcimer Festival ori July 20
and 21.
Down Yonder was recorded during the fall and winter at Dry Ridg~
Recording Studio' in St. Albans,

GALI1POUS- The Contino- . tub: i&gt;f Religion; professor ar the
ing Education Committee of ihe Divinity Scliool, the University of
Volunteer Chaplain's Aslociation Chicago; professor at Lutheran
of the Holzer Medical Center School or Theology, Chicago; and
announces dieir
in teminar Lutheran tutor at Oxford Universion "Job and su'ferin!'l;here is ty. ~ '
'
•
He is a member of the Assona·
God When It Hurtt~ pastoral
counselin~ and the Biblii:al chmc· lion of Clinical Pllitoral Educators
ter Job wtD serve u the focus of and the American Association of
the presentation, to be held on Pasunl Counselors.
. Durin I his presentation, Dr.
Thursday, April 11 from 8:45 a.m.
Hulme will speak on ''The .Onleal:·
to 3:30p.m.
Regtstralion will begin at 8:15 · How Pastoral Counselors Become
a.m. ·
·
oerensive,M "The Arllumcnt: How
Pasunl Counselors Become Com- ·
Aceordin~ to the Rev. ))onald
1ohnson, chairman of the Volunteer bative," "Psalms in the Night How .
Chaplains Association Continuing Pastoral Counselors llecome
Education Committee, the keynote Instruments of tbC Spirit" and ''The
speaker will be Rev. William E . . Theo~hany: Now My Eyes See
Hulme, Ph.D., immediate past pro- Thee.
He has written several boqks
fessor of Pastoral Care and Counseling at the Luther Northwestern including, Slresl Mana&amp;cment (or
Theological Seminary in St. Paul, Ministen, Pastoral Care and CounMinn.
seling, Your Pastor's Problems,
Rev. Hublte received his B.D. and PaaiOral Care of Families.
Several of Dr. Hulme's books.
from Evan~elical Lutheran Seminary and hts Ph.D. from Boston will be a~lable to seminar particiUniversity. ~ received the 1oseph pants for purchase.
• ·
A. Sider Award for Theological
Registration is limited, so an
LeadershiJ.&gt; at Trinity Lutheran immediate reservation is recomSeminary m 1987. Some of Dr. mended. The cost of the seminar is
Hulme's pa$1 professional experi- $20,· which includes morning and
ences include: Chaplain at Ftirview afternoon coffee, lunch and a cerHospital in Minnespolis; professor lifteate of attendance. Members of
at the Texas MediCal Center. lnsli- the clergy .from ·Tri-State area. as

·· Confidential Servi~:es:
·
Birth Control
V.D. Scraening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

'

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_Community calendar

SBC holds gradu(ltion ceremonies

TOPS, KOl'S hold meeting·

Call Our .Sales
RtprHtntative
Angie .Today
For Details.

.

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Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-87

Chaplain's association event slated

Make Your ·Wedding Complete.
D.J.'s Candy, Cake &amp; Crofts'

WILLOW WOOD - Regi$11lltion for kindergarten in the
Symmes Valley Local School Disltlct wiD held at the school ~
where the child. will attend sc
in the faD.
'
. Those registering for kinder·
garten mUSI by 5-years-old by Sept.
30. Kindergarten·is required before
entrance into the first grade.
.
Symmes Valley #2 (Waterloo)
will register May 7, Symmes Valley #3 (Sconown) wiD register May
8 and Symmes VaHey #1 (Mason)
will regtster May 9. The time for
eac}l will be from 9:30 a.m. to 3
p.m. Parents must bring the child's
1mmunization record, birth certificate and JOCia1 securit)( number to
the ~sisnlon.
The schdDI nurse will be.preSenJ
to cheek immunization records and
birth certificates. Immunizations
required by Obio State Law are one
messles, one rubella, one mumps,
four OPT and 3 polio. The birth
cenificate of birth froma hospital
will not be accepted. A birth .certificate can be obtained at the county health department in whicb th~
cltild was born.

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GALLIPOLIS - Adriane
Bresbea Eastman. 23 months,
r=:atly competed in the Tiny-Tot
Divilioo of 1be Miss Sunburst USA
beapty ~at in AJhland, Ky.
Sbe 11 lhe daughll:r of Brent and
Teresa Basttnan of Gallipolis. S~
is ala lhe J!IIIIlddaughter of 1im
and Wlllldil Warren of Porter and
Bob ud Sheila Eastman of Oal· lipolis.
She was second runner·up in the
· beauty, poie and personality category, 811~ first runner-up in Miss
Photo&amp;eruc.
She received the title of Miss
. Sunburst USA Queen itl the com ~
posite beauty category, which entitles her to compete in the state
finals in May. ·
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New Spring Clothes
Charles Scott
Act I
Leslie Faye
Oleg Ccassini ·
Jessica Howard
.

OLYMPIAD PA.IIlTl,CIPA.N'fS
deprtment at North
Scbool recently· particlpated In
tbe annual Sclen" Olympiad Portsmouth Clay High Sc:Iiool.
NGHS .won awards Iii: A ror Anatomy; Pbyslcs Lab; Ptntllahalon;
Scrambler IDd Chn~lstry Lab. Pictured are: J&lt;;neeUng, Lusher
·Mayo; Middle row: Casey SllltOII, Melndy Qlake, Julie Stapleton,
Martha Stapleton, Cbris WaDis and Anj~ela Cantrell; Bilek: Larry
Halfhill, Jo1h McCarley, Kevin Wray, Radney Smith, Ryan
McCarley JUICl Greg Ward. Not pictured Ia Jell' Gillman. Teachers
ud coaches are Steve.Saunders and J-es OUer.

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

1~1

Eastnian wins
iSunburst titles

POMEROY • Doa't forget, last homos 10 ~ way for 1 much
Sunday's postponed Easter egg needed biallwiY imprOYtme!DL
hunt bas been rescheduled for 2
·Tbe MGM-Farm City area in.
p.m. today at the Hartinger Park in Pomaoy also loots arange these
museum.
Middleport. Sponsored by the . days Iince ill c!OIIing. Closing of
Other chapter plans include Middleport Community Associa- the busiMa tbere really is creating
entering a float in the Annual lion, the hunt wilf feaiure 1,200 quite u eyesore for 'lhii community
Fourth of 1uly Parade, to honor plastic eggs with one dollar inside and d\is will get cons:isll:ntly worse
tel!thers tbat have tau~ht in the. of each. There will be two special as the suuc:tures remain unoccu~
ono-room sehoola in Oalllil County. . eggs, a gold and a silver, and these · pied. 19 anyone thinking about
Prior to 'tbc business meeting, wiD be worth $50 tnd $25.
~? And is there a danger froni
the .President General's message
There
will
be different areas """.abe tuks used aroiUid the establishWIIJ read by Pat'InJds, the 081iontl designated for the various age ment in the Farm City qlCT81ion7
defense IIICISIIIC - read by Mar· groups talting put in the hunt with
jorie Wood ud devotions were prizes beinl! pro.vidcd by merA senior .chorus is again being
given by Carolyn Haner.
chants, OIJIIIll2alions and individu- organized aa l a part of the Ohio
. Following committee reportt, als from both Middleport and State Fair Bod you're invited to
Mrs.1actson reminded mamben of . Pomeroy. MitdJ Meadows is serv- take pan. Tbe seniCI' group will
the upcoming Apri113 ptonthly ing as. chairman of the event. ,
perform sill times a day for the last
meeting with guest Speaker, Mrs.
1
live cllll oftbe fair, Aug. '13·18.
Paul Clay. Her 10pic 1r.;ll!Je Qhio
Third time a eltarm? ·
To talte pan you mutt be 55 or ·:
waterways. Also on bud for the
Mary K. Holter is boJiing !"at order llld ab!IIO walt thaw miles a
mceling Will be 1olul Lester cooidi- the adage rinp true for lier smce day. Musk tclecdonl wi11 include
nator of Spec
. lal Prolf!IDI
. s in the. on Marib 8 sJ:ic fr!ictum1 the same sing-a-long flvorilei, Broad~y ·
Oallipolis Citv Schools.
for the tbirt\ liiiiC at lhe result . show tunca. llpiri~ IIICI J!llriotic
Lester wiW'be reeognizcd as the ler
of
a
fall in Pomeroy. Mary~~ foot~· ~ infDn:naUOn and
chapter'snomination for Ohio taken
to St. Josepb. Hospual m an IIIJPlli:alion wnle Senior Olorus,
Society Daughters of the American
Parkenburg, W.Va., by the Syra- Scott Underwood, Director, PO
Revolution Teacher of the Year cuse Emergency Unit and fortu- B~ 653, Marysville, Ohio43040. '
Award. He will inlroducc some of nately her daught~r and grud·
his students that ~ in the daullhten, Sbaron Riffie and Gretta
During ·one of my numerous
annual History Oay COntest, wbo Rfflie were able to be on band to absences from the community,
wiD JRSCDt a few of their skits tbtt help Mary K. throug~ the ordeal. Ro~cr and Mary Gilmore did get
were ~ted in the contesL
Sharon was on a vacabon from her their Pomeroy restturant open and
WO!k at. Lalr:in and Greu_a from are doing well in the E. Main St.,
OhiO Uruverstty w~ere she~ a stu- location which was completely
dc_nt. . Anyway, Mary K. ts ':!OW redone to accommodat~ the new
driving~ desptte."her ha~dicap restaurant. The fC8UIID'IIIIJ has been
and naVIgatlng her wbeel chair and planned for a long lime and I heard
walller is able to get the bouscwo~ tnother nBII)e or IWO that it was to
done. Mary K. senda along a b1g be called. However, Roger and
~to evCI)'one for their support Mary settled for Gilmore's in the
- v1sits, ear~s. phone calls - she end since ihey have buill a reputareally apprecuucs you:
tion in food ihrough their catering
serviee over the past few years. So
You have to admit the E. Main they went for the established ntme.
St., - Nye Avenpe section in
· Pomeroy looks strange what with
the demolition of the Roedel building and the razing of several nearby

GUEST SPEAKER· br.Barry Tlnllt..,a, (rtpl), Alllllropolo. gy pr~eB~r· at the Unlvenlty vlltlo Grande, - tbe liMit apeak·
er during the monthly meedng nr the Freacl1 ColDDJ Chapter
.Daughters of tbe Amerlcu Revolution. Pictured with Thompson is
Mrs. Jobn Jackson, regeaL ·
·

Apr117,

April 7, 1991 '

I'll. 446~1117

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111,

*... and 1110re.
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Call or stop by(/!} today!

IMJ.IPOLIS

OL

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�---

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -

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suio .·

bel!tnt stude11ts in the district. Holding tbe
·check are lint row: 0 to r) Brady Swain, Terri
McClellan, Zacbary Pohlman. Back row (I to r)
Robyn Warren, Wend! Watsoa, Eric: Biars. .

with ClltCC:r while' his divon:ed Jll'l'·
en11 fouabt each odlet over trealinll
him wid! bolistic: or conveatiOnal
medical
· es
·
Yurt ~died It his home in
Highland, Utah, early Friday morning. He will be buried Monday.
The young boy was diagllosed
with bone cancer a year ago, and
after the dia£nOSiS his {'Brents
agreed he would be 1realed m Utah,
. Cillifomia, and Mexico. But after
doctors a the Mayo Clinic In Min·
. nesota told his mother, Trudy
.Oicou, treatmeDt included amputation of Yuri's arm IIIII shoulder, the
legaltul8les began.
Yuri's father, 1erry Oweas'; who
lives in ~y. wanted the child
to be !lelled by a San Diego physi·
cian who uses holistic treallllents.
While couruoom battles raged,
tbe cancer spread 10 Yuri's heart
and Junai.
.
Sometime Into the proceedings,
a doctor testified the delays in
treatment were tbrealllning Yuri' s
cbances 10 survive. Fol)(lwing tbe
hearing, I udge George Ball if
ordered that tbe boy immediately
be taken to Primary Children's
Medical Center to be evaluated.
But it was 100 late. Doctors said

the ·boy was too sick to undergo

court.
"It's really a. great prograr_n
a spotesJillln, 1udge because the guardian•s only role IS
·
Ballif said he was grieved by 10 look out far tbe incerest of tbe
Yuri's death, saying he hoped his child."' said John McN811111'8, stale
last days had not been 100 painful. . tuvenile court administrator.
'We're all sayin!! why didn't we
Many·are ni:Jw questiooing why get (a guardian) m there, but the
the child wasn't hospitalized soon·
~ program is not as visible
mthe adult setting."
·
cr. when .doctors said he )lad a
· The 1990 Utah Legislatm'e earligreater chlnce for survival.
er this year voled down a bill that
"We can't mess around with
'Nould add the program to adult
this anymore ... we've messed
around with it for a year," said
courts.
Meanwhile, both of Yuri's PI!'·
Randy Kester, the attorney for
eniS, wlto divorced over three yc&amp;ls·
Yuri's mother in his closing
ago, liave joint custody of two , ·
~ before the boy was ordered
to the hospital. . ,
·
'other children, ages 10 and 12.
·.
A program cunently in place in ------~ ·
,.
state juvenile court provided for
guardians to be appoinled for chil·
dren, but it is routinely used for .
'
children who ·need to be removed
••
from their homes because of
•
alleged abuse. neglect or abandon•
ment.
Many believe cases sucb as
•
. Yuri's prove a need for such a pu~·
gram to be expanded to disuict

.,~ugh

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McClure's Family Restaurant

Scholarships deadline Apri/12.
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RIO GRANDE- A deadline of
Eligibility for the Community
April 12 has been set for applies• College ~rru:'sfer Student (Junior) .
lions for four ,scholarships offered scholarship IS commumty college
at the University of Rio Grande by sophomore status in the · ea of
• CI b
I' :
· ·
Y r
·
· w
. the Uruvers1ty omen s u .
app Jcauon. and .Jumor class status .
The scholarships are the Mary for the ftrS! q~er awarded. Stu·
Lewis, Mary Christensen and ~ents applymg miSt havea cumulaDorothy Hayes scholarships and llve GPA of 3.0 !II' above. .
the Community College Transfer
Ail scholarships are available to
Stndent scholarship, according to both males and females. Scholl!'Rio Grande's Financial Aid Office. sh1ps IRI awarded ~y t_be Women s
Eligibillty for the Lewis, Chris- Club ~ ~ availability of fundtensen and Hayes scholarships is mg. ~pphcatJons, and f~. inforjunior class in the year of applic:a· ma_uon! may ~e obtamed, 10 t~e
lion and senior class in the first U!llverslty of R1o Grande F~ial
quarter awarded. StudeniS applfing A1d Offtce, 245-5353, extens1'?n
must bave a cumulative PPA o 3.5 218. The toll-free number. m Ob1o
or above.
.1s 1-800-282-7201.

l
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showz'n·
g.
'Y ,
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Gene the rarny
P ~o· mz'se ,· scz'entz•sts .say
1 ,

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By REBECCA KOLBERG
UPI Science Writer
BETHESDA, Md. (UPI) ,Gene lherapy piolieers reponed fur·
thet progress Friday, saying that six
months of trailblazing treatment
appar~ntly has suengthened the
imll)une defenses of a 4-year-old
girl stricken by a nue genetic disorder.
,
Dr. Michael Blaese of the
National Cancer InStitute said he
was "delighted at the way things
are going" wiih the Ohio girl, who
suffers from an inherited immune
system defect similar to that which
afllicted David; the Texas "bubble
boy."
Appearing before a National
lnslilutcs Health advisory panel,
Blaese, who led the research with
Dr. W. French Anderson Qf the
National Heart, LunB and Blood
Institute, said the first officia·J
attempt at gene therapy so far
appears to be "a 'partially su~essful suacegy." · · .
. ·
While it may take another two
mooths or more 10 see ·if the therapy fully reconstitutes the child's
immune system, preliminary data
indicates "tho. patient's immune
function seems to be ,improving,"
BlacSe said.
- "We bave seen positive benefits
so far, but we still have a long way
to go, We want til make sure it
doesn't bave a down side as well;"
he added.
TestS found that tbe girl, whose
name bas not been released, had a
striking increase in her ability.to
make cenain disease-fighting antibodies after her treatmenL In·'addi·
tion, the child's level of key
immune cells called T-lymphocytes
tripled, rising to nonnal for the ftrSt

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814-992-6248

- .People in the news--.
By UDited Press International
haircuts ." Jagger has been in
McENROE GETS CAMERA . Atlanra with Emelio Estevez filmSH T ·
b
E
. Y:. · ennu ace Jl! '! ~c '!roe ing the role ·a "vicious guy" fof
, '
d1d h1s Sean Pena JmJtallon m a the movie "Freejaclc;"
Hong .Kong bar early Friday. by
scuffling with photographers.
McEnroe was in the bar talking to
GORBY SYMPS IN HOLLY·
two women after losing in the first WOOD?: b Hollywood full of
round of a tournament in Hong Mikhail Gorbacbev sympathizers?
Kong's Kowloon tourist disuict. ~~~Dmatl,vcebairmanm.ediacn'l1Cf.theL,MB::4i!
0
When McEnroe, mnrtin• a leather DVH
jacket and USS
cap spot- Research Cenler, says movies such
ted the ph~~hers
pic· as ''The Hunt for Rec! Octol)er,''
tUIC8, he grabbed for a camera and two HBO productions titled "By
demanded lhe film. He was refused Dawn's Early Light" and "Red
~ then went into a rage. accord- King, White Knight," and televiing to newspaper reports. No one ~s·~h~~s..~~;!';~dal~f~~
was injured.m the row but the shownpro-Gorbachev bias. "When
Hong Kong Standard ran a front- are these folks in Hollywood going
page picture of McEnroe,who~ . to waie up?" Bozell says. ·~Maybe
w1fe, actfess Tatum O'Neal, 1s · a trip to the Baltic Republics, Geor·

GALLIPOLIS

POMEROY

514-448-3837

514-91!2-8292

2. FOR 1 SALE

SPECIAL SUNDAY1 APIIL

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1ritttt~ "' ~tntintl Section ·C
April 7, 1991

· Red Sox 4, Orioles 1
WASHI]I{GTON (UPI) Danny Darwin retired the ftrst 12
hitters and J acl( Clark sQCked his
fifth home run of the exhibition
season Saturday to lead the Boston
Rect Sox past the Baltimore Orioles, 4-1, in a game at RFK Stadi·
ilm.
The Red Sox and Orioles meet
again Sunday in the nation's capilal. The games are being viewed as
a measurement of Washington's
interest in baseball. The city is
among six competing for one of
two National League expansion
~that will begin play in 1993 .
• After opening the game with
JOIIf perfect innings, Darwin sur; '.
:rendered, a sharp single; 19 Glenn
Davi$ to start the fifth inning. Dar· ,
win, 5-1 in Grapefruit League play,
gave up three hits and one earned
run in six innings.
In the sixth inning, Mike Devereaux sent a· Darwin pitch against
the left·field mezzanine for a home
run.
Clark's home run in the eighth

inning gave Boston.a3·1 lead.
Dave Johnson, 0-3, was the losing pitcher.
· ·
Brewers 3, Cubs 2
CHICAGO . (UPI) - Robin '
Yount' hit a two-run single in the
ninth inning Saturday to give the
Milwaukee Brewers a 3·2 victory ·
over the ChiCago Cubs in the exhi-

ther::e~:~~~~N~~=:
bition season finale.

never had a winter off, hittinj! a field scats in the frrst i!ining:
sol'o homer, hi$ fifth of sprmg
Milwaukee tied the game 1-1 in
training , and s.c oring on Mark the secqnd on Spiers' solo shot to
Grace's sacrifiCe Oy. ·
suaighl8way center field, talcing
Sandberg, the National League · advanrage of the 23 mph southwest
·
home run leader with 40 last year, winds.
drove a 1·0 pitch from Brewers
Chicago went ahead 2-1 in the •
starter Don Robinson into the left third. With one out, Sandberg sin·

the final twO outs for his first save.
•
Trailing 2-1 in the ninth, MilHOLLYWOOD, Fla. (UPI) is cruiserweight, though he has
off.
That
includes
Sunday
night.
been willing to move up as an
waukee's Greg Vaugh" led off Former heavyweight champion
with a double off Dave Smith, 1-1, . Larry Holmes begins hiS comeback Holmes said if Anderson lasts opponent for name heavyweights.
and advanCed on Bill Spiers' bunt at age 41 Sundar, night against longer than five or six rounds. he .· Anderson wa~ George Foresingle. Spiers stole second, and ~oumeyman Tim • Doc" Anderson will reconsider his p~s.
ma11 's fourth comeback victim in
Holmes will be paid $200.000 1987. He lasted four rounds and
bOtb he and Vaughn scored one out m his first fight in three years.
later on Yount's single to left cen- . Holmes last. fought Jan. 22, for the scheduled 10-round bout, helped propel Foreman to his AJ-11
ter to go ahead 3-2.
· 1988 when he was knoclr.ed out in · which will not be televised. Ring· 19 title shot against champ1on
The Cubs hild runners at second four rounds by Mike Tyson in a side tickets cost $250, and include Evander Holyneld. Anderson, who
a ~rfonnance by Holmes, singing will cam $10,000 boxed in an eltb.iand third and one out in the ninth, title bout
but NaYBR'O got rookie Gary Scott
Holmes, a grandfather, said he With his pop music group, at a post- bition against Holmes last Novemto ground out to Spiers at shortstop has. a a four-fight plan he hopes fight party in the same hocel as the ber in Jacksonville.
and suuck out Joe Girardi on a will get him ·a champiOnship shot bouL
Holmes concedes that Fore·
Anderson is 25 -13 with 13 man's success is one of the things
-called third s.trike.
· next year. But he S81d if he looks
Chicago's Ryne Sandberg bad in any one of those appear- knockouts against an unifupressive that led to his own comeback. He
returned to Wrigley Field as if he'd ances, he will call the comeback list of foes. His natural weight class believes a Foreman victory over
Holyfield would set up a Foreman·
Holmes title bout next year,
, Holmes says another reason for
hiHomebackisaloveofd~esport.

.

Bodine and Marlin earn front ~ow
spots
.
DARLINGTON, S.C. (UPI) Geoff Bqdine and Sterling Marlin,
driving Juniqr Johnson, owned
Rords. will start Sunday's Tran· .
. Sou\h 500 in the front row,
Bodine earned the pole Thursday with a qualifymg lap of ·
161.085 mph and Marlin will start
on the front row for only the second time in his career. He will start
from the outside position after
qualifying at ·161.085mph on the
1.366-mile ttack.
.
.
Bodine is in his second year
with Johnspn, and Marlin his first.
Marlin, 33, admits driving for
Johnson has given him .more confidenee. · .
·
"You know you've got everything you need," Marlin' said. "If
yo~ need somEthi.ng, it's never,

.

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PHONE 448·1113 OR 441··744 I

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HALLANDALE. Fla. (UPI) Bluegrass at Keeneland, Ky.
:
Shoot to Kill, which went off at 17·.
II was the ·first win in. sev911
1, took the lead a 16th of a mile startS for the Son of Emigrant, wll!J
before the finish and rolled to an . is owl)ed by Clyde D . Rice and
upset victory in the $200,000 Pre- · trained by his wife, Linda Rice. -.;·
view Slakes at Gulfslream Par~
. Shoot to Kill ran third most Qf
. The race had set up as a prep for the race, dropped to fourth in t~
the Kentucky Derby for Cah11l stretch, but went four horses wide;
Road, a full brother to Unbridled, jumping in front just inside the
who won the Derby a year ago.
16th pole and winning by a
But Cahill Road ran fourth and
Shoot to Kill had set the pace in
fifth most of the race Saturday the Florida Derby under W1gberto ·
before finishing third. When the Ramos, but faded quickly to fifth . ·
Fappiano colt began to make a Linda Rice said she had been
move under jockey Craig Perret. he "struggling to get him off the
got uap~ on the rail and was lead."
never able to come free.
She said she used a wire bit on
" He's green, he didn't like get· him for the first time in the Preling pinned down there, ' ' Perret view and it seemed to work.
said. "He doesn'tlik~ geuin' mud
She said her instructions to
in his face."
Ramos were, "Don't be on the lead
Trainer Scotty Schulhofer did or don't·come back."
not say whether he would run . She was non-committal about
Cahill Road in the Kentucky · whether she would run Shoot to
Dciby, but Perret said there was lit- Kill in the ,Kentucky Derby, and
tie doubt he could run the Derby did not know where he would race.
disrance of 11-4 miles.
"I'm not sure . There are so
The current favorite for the many races," she said
Derby is Fly So Free, a stal!lemate
.She said might run him in the
of Cahill Road. Schulh~fer, who Arkansas Deroy, the Withers or the
uains both of them, sa1d .Fiy So Lexington nexl.
·
Free will run next Sl!turday in the

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car as a 1eenager it 'was the profession for him. •
"I uSed to come over here and
help my daddy," he said. "I can
remember when the old garage was
down here in the fourth comer, and
when they opened up practice, it
was a good seat to watch that
fourth comer.ll was rough and nar·
row and somebody'd always bust
that wall right there in front of the
garage."

TranSouth 500 auto racing lineup
.
Auto Racing Lineup
By United Press l!ltemational
' TranSoutb 500
AI Darli!lglon, S.C., Apri16
(Listed with driver, type of car,

U.S .., Mexico -and Cuba
qualify for Ecuador finals

Wml DAftOI CBDII CAID.

Our well-trained, experienced staff stands by year-in and year-our
ro help you with any healrhcare problems. And s,llould serious injuries or
critical illness warrant more specialized treatment our staff will arrange
helicopter service.

VETERANS MEMORIAL ·HOSPITAL

"I'd hoped 10 have a win by this
'Well, we can't afford it,' or 'Let' s
wait 'til next week.' I{ we need a point, but we've run good enough,
new car, they build a new car. The and that's what's importanL"
· Marlin has finished in the lOP 10
stuff is there." ·
Havlng that type of bacl\ing in three of the ftrSt four races this
makes Marlin comfortable instead · year, missing only because of a
of nervous and the bew ·team is blown· engine last montli at Rockingham, N.C.
everything he hoped it would be.
"It would have been neat to
"They're down to earth, but
they're aggressive and work· so have gotten rriy first pole he{e at
hard " Marlin said. "That's what Darlington ," said Marlin, who
knew the first time he drove a race
you've got to do.

and qualifying speed.)
· 159.342. 22, Lake Speed, Pontiac.
1, Geoff Bodine, Ford, 161.939 159.3~1. 23. Morgan Shepherd,
mph. 2, Ste.rling Marlin, Ford , For(!, 158.112. 24, Mickey Gibbs,
161.085. 3, Ernie Irvan, Chevrolet, Pontiac, 158.087. 25, Jimmy
161.027 .. 4, Ken Schrader, Chevro" Spencer, Ch1.wrolet. 157.838.
let, 160.927. 5, Harry Gant ,
26, Dave Mader Ill, Pontiac,
Oldsmobile, 160.659.
6, Alan Kulwicki. Ford. 157.651.· 27, Terry Labonte,
.
160.444 : 7. , Dale Earnhardt, Oldsmobile, 157.625. 28, Bobby
Chevrolet, 160.245. 8, Brett Bod· Hillin, Oldsmobile, 157.222. 29,
to receive a harsher penalty. Many ine, Buick, 160.026. 9. Darrell Ted Musgrave, Ponti~c. 156.~16.
·By United Press Jnternadonal
. Boxing
expected him to receive the lralian Waltrip, Chevrolet, 160.021. 10, · 30, Richard Petty , Ponuac,
Former world heavywei·g ht league's maximum drug siispen- Michael Wallrip,Pontiac,l59.657.
156.507.
cbampion Larry Holmes begins his sion of two years. The minimum
II, Davey Allison, Ford,
comeback at age 41 S,unday night suspension is six months.
159.652. 12, Mark Martin, Ford,
31, Chad Little, Ford, 156.263.
in Hollywood, Fla., against·jour... lntemazionale overwhelmed 159.554. 13, Ricky Rudd, Chevro32,
Joe Ruuman, Oldsmobile,
neymllll Tim "Doc" Anderson in Bari 5·1 to move within one point
let, 158.894, 14, Dale Janeu, Ford, 156.040. 33, Dave MarciS, Chevroh,js first fight' in three years; of fJrst-J&gt;lacc Sampdoria in the ItaiHolmes last fought Jan.· 22, 1988 ian fust division. Sampdoril!. plays '158.827. 15, Kyle 'Petty, Pontiac, . let, 155.714. 34, Bobby Hamilton,
158.622.
'
Oldsmobile, 154.900.-35, Rich
when he was lcnocked out in four at home Sunday against Cagliari
16,
Rick
Mast
,
Oldsmobile,
Bickle Jr.. Oldsmobile, 154.900.
rounds by ,Mike Tyson in a title and should manage to restore its
'
158.604.
17,
Bill
Elliott,
Ford,
36, Jimmy Means, Pontiac ,
bout. Holmes, a grandfather, said three· poini lead. In other other
158.479.
18.
Rick
Wilson.
Buick.
154.108. 37, Randy Baker, Chevro.he has a four-fight plan he hopes matches, Fiorentina tied Juventus
158.474. 19, Hut Stricklin, Buick, let, 154.002. 38, Bill Meacham,
will get him a champi&lt;!nship shot, 1·1 and Roma drew 1-1 with Lazio.
158.260. 20, Derrike Cope, Oldsmobile, 153.574. 39, H.B. Bainext year. But be satd 1f be looks
The three matches were played a
Chevrolet.
158.117.
ley, Pontiac, 151.181. 40, J.D.
bad in any one of those appear- day ahead of schedule to give the ·
21,
Rusty
Wallace,
Pontiac,
McDuffie, Pontiac, 150.009.
ances, he will call the comeback three Italian clubs still involved in
off.
European compc_tilion an extra daifiy
... Gunmen firing $SS8ult rifles of rest before Wednesday's scm· 1- "
from the back of a pickuJ,I uuck nllls . .
Friday night killed Thailand's lOP
... Arsenal defeated Sheffield
amateur bolting official and one of . United 2·0 10 move e'ght points
his· bodyguards in what was . ahead of i:lcfendlng cltantpion Liv·
believed to be an underworld 8ssas- erpoql in tbe·Englilll flnC divilkln.
sination, Bangkok ·police' said. At With six maachel remaining, Arse'
.
least 12 other people, including · naltoolt a giant step toWIInl win·
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad and The U.S: had four.
five policemen, were wounded in ning the Enalilh leape CIOWII for
Cesar Torres scored for the
Tobago (UPI) - The . United
the incident.
the secoad dine In thnlc liC8IOIIS.
Americana
In the seventh minute,
Soccer
.
. .. Reigning cham~ Bayem States, Mexico and Cuba have but 1tirge Teledano tied the score in.
Diego Maradona was disquali- Municll difeated VfL
hum 2·1 qualified far August's world youth the 78tll minule.
finall in Ecuador.
fied for 15 months by the Italian to break nwo·ca- lolin&amp; atreak. soccer
In the second match, host
Tbe
learns advanced following
league because the Argentine star whil league leader FC KaiserTrinidad
and Tob&amp;IO needed a
tested positive for cocaine after a slautem cruised to a 2.0 victory Thunday_nlaht's'flnal DIIIChea in draw to c:Unch the third llpOt for
March 17 malch. The !ape's Dis- · over Bayer Uenlin&amp;ellln tbe Vo'llll· · the CONCACAP ZOne. In tbe flfSI Ecuador, but lost 1·0 to Cuba.
ciplinary Committee suspended ern German firat dlvilioa. Kaiser· mardi. Mcdco fouabt from a pi Cuba elided with two points and
Maradona until June 30, slautem baa 34 points and leads down to earn a 1·1 ilraw qaiut the · 1'rlnidld and Tobqo one.
. 1992.Manldona. 30. WUIIIJIC'Cted Werder Branen, a f&gt;O witlner over United States: Mexico flnlabed
with five points to letld the lfOUP·
'
.
·
HCtlba BSC Berlin,lly twd.

s

Tl-f$. MANUFACTURED BY
P215/751x15 "'"42.90
P225/751x15"'"45.25
P235/7Sitx 15 '""•6.19
·

if I can recapture something ;···
Holmes said.
. Holmes, who has residences
Easton, Pa., ind Jacksonville, saill
money is not the reastJn he is eo111;
ing back. He said he has millions of
dollars in _real estat~ holdings
because he mvested wJSely dunng ·
his boxing career.
.
Holmes said he is in shape for
the fight and expects to come in at
230 pounds, about 15 ove r the
fighung weight of his youth . He
shows no sign of the huge belly
that has helped make Foreman
famous all over again.·
.
Holmes was heavyweight cham:
. pion .from 1978 unti1 ·1985 and
came within. one . victory of
equalling Rocky Marciano ' s

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P2151751x1 S •••.••• 26.50
P2251751x15 ••..•-27.00
P235/7Six1 S ........ 27.50
P165/10til3'..... 34.91
P175/1Dix13 ..... 35.15
P115/75b14 " ...37.96
P195/751x14 .".31.67
P20517Six14 '""39.14
P215175b14-"40.14
P205/75b1'5 - "41.72

banner durinl Sliturday's exhibition pme between Baldmore and
Boston at RFK Stadinm. (UPI)

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Shoot to Kill wins

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TOO!
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"Boxing has been very good to
me. I have no complaints, and 1 heavyweight record of 49 fights
want to come in there now and see without a loss.
•

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WEIGHT LOSS.

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comebac.k zs• fior· real,·H olmes says

7 THROUGH

AT FORMU-3

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gled, stole second and reached third won the series 6-3.
The Cubs, who finish ed the
on catcher Rick Dempsey' s throwCactus
League season 15-17, will
ing error. Sandberg then scored on
open
the
season Tuesday against
Grace's sacrifiCe fly to left. ·.
the
St~
Louis
Cardinals, while th~
. · The game mlilked Milwaukee's
Brewers
travel
to Texas for their
fJrst trip ever to Wrigley Field and
on
Monday, Mil- .
season
opener
was the ninth moeting this ~ng
waukee
ended
spring
training with
.
betw~ the two ballclubs. Ch1cago
a 12-20 marlc.

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'1/4 ·PCUJNDER .............. Only
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, gia, the Russian reptiblic, etcetera,
would be the eye-opener they obvi·
ously need." He goes on to say that
CATTY KITTY: Kitty Kel· Hollywood ~as ignored Ronald
time in her life.
ley's unauthorized biography of Reagan's .w mt in ending the Cold
Tests also showed the child's Naacy Reaaan reportedly Slarts off War.
genetically corrected cells are pro- wit~ a zinger. Simon &amp;. Schuster
ducing a vilal missing enz)'!lle for has been trciting tbe book like it
up to 40 days lifter each treatment, was a cliSSined national ;teeurity
and levels of that enzyme il\.,her maller but '11111 Wuhington Times
blood currently are about 10 tiiil't$ says the
SCIIUIICC· tbe book
higher than befqre therapy started is: "Two entries on Nancy Rea·
on Sept. 14.
gao's birth cenifiCIIC IRI ICCIII'8fe
Although the experiment - her aex and het color, Almost ·
involves a rare disease, Anderson ' every other icem - been invent·
has said if it works ~enctic tech· ed." The book also claims RoDikl
niques might usher m a "inajor Reagan wasn 'I at
hospital with
new revolution in. medicine," pro- Nancy when their daugtuer Patti
viding cures for everything from was bont'because he was visiting
cancer to AIDS to bean disease.
another woman.
·The proposal underwent more
than three years of review to
JAGGER ON VANILLA
address concerns that such experi- ' ICE'S HAIR: Mlck Jauer fears
ments might be unsafe or could contemporary music is suffering
lead to ethically questionable from a lack of creati~. "As
anempls at genetic engineering.
much as I admire new
bands
So far, no serious side effects like the Black Crowe&amp; (who sound
have been seen in the girl or anoth- · much like tl!e Rolllnc Stones) or
er 9-year-old girl with the same whacever, they seem to be coming
disorder who started gene therapy from some son of time zone which
at the NIH Jan. 30. A third' child I vaguely remember," Jagger told
might start 'similar therapy jn the the Los AJigeles Times. "I find it
next -few.months. Blaese said. .
son or interesjing but we've seen it
all before. I'd prefer to see some•
Every person has about 100,000 thing that is either new and differ. genes, which con!!lin the blueprint ent or at !casta mixture of things."
. f?r everything from eye ~olor to Jagger, whose Rolling Stones emu· ·
d1scase nsk. Gene_therapy mv.olves lated black blues singers and
mserung_ genes w1th ~orrect m~or-. ·;. Chuck Berry in their early days.
mallon mto cells wah defecuve ' plso cited Vanilla Ice's version of
genes, or putting m new genes that the Stones' ·classic "Satisfaction"
\
c~ insuuctions for production of
as being ·imitative. "It sounded
d•sease-fightlng substances.
mostly like the Rollin~ Stones," he
Also m January. a team headed said. •'I have no objection if he
by. Dr; Steven Rosenberg of the wants to do the song but if I were
Nauonal Cancer Insutute launched doing a rap version of someone
. the first effort to use gen~ lherapy else's song; 'I wouldn't (rely) so
to combat cancer. Two pauents sur- much on somethinc that was done
fering from a deadly type of· skin 25 years ago. You should do it with
. P155/IOixU ....... 22.25
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undergone ueatment.
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Emergency Room Services are availaE!e 24 hours a day to provide
aro~nd rhe (lock care.

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ll, 1991

SATURDAY, APRIL

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topped with whipped creme and a cherry served in
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:Red SoxtopOrioles; Brewers edge Cubs

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Utah boy dies of cancer amid·legal tug of war
An 8-year-old boy bas lost a battle

KIWANIS GIPT- The Gallipolis City
Schools Academic BOQSters recently received a
check from tbe Kiwanis Club of Gallipolis for
funding or academic programs and pro.iects that

•

Aprll'7, 1891

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ROBINSON VIEWS AC110N • Bahlaort maaqer llraalr
Roll'- wllchri frGa die U.Ut dlll'llll Sltvdu'• eldllllldoa
.... batA. . die Orlal11 1114 .... Red 'SOli at RlfK Stadlulla '

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P_ag.e . C2-5unday Tlmes SenUnel

Pomeroy ...ddleport Gallipolis, OH Polm Plsnssnt, WV

Aprll7,1991

April 7, 1991

Penguins edge Devils 5-4 to .even Patrick Division series
By UDital i&gt;.-a:sbllerudoul
Rookie Jaromir Jagr kept quiet
aflt:r his goal at ·8: 52 of ovenime
Friday night lifted the Pittsburgh
Penguw to a S-4 bolpe ice vicully

carried lbe puc:t from lbe rizht C«·
oer to lbe frollt of !be net and lif1l:d
lbe puck over ptender a.is Terreri for his fira goal of lbe playoff
stlies.
'

. ''Bolli teams l'1li'I!J Ill i as wdl
as you un compete in a bocltey
~ I was so hiiJpy ..._ it_.
1n. That was a grealsoal by lbe

tid.' •

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ov.er tbc New Jersey Devils,
"He~'s
Jagr, wbo sec=
· ak1 very linl e
•
hplayBob
•L. • . .· }l~~O:&amp;:
evening the lealnS' l'alrick Divisioo er• UIC
Frw!isb, wouldn I talk 10 lbe media
Johnson said of the 19-yeai'-old aflu lbe vicbxy.
semifmals • a game apiece.
· ~·d already said everything · Jagr. "He held it and held. it, and " • '• 1 thought tbe young fellow
tliat ncedcd IQ be !!lid onlbe ~.
Terreri went down and he put it made an outstanding 111011e 10 lbe
Jagr, lhe Penguil!l' fJJSt-round upstairs. ObviouSly at that time or · net;" New Jersey Coach Tom
draft choice from Cbeclloslovatia the game it'sa big goal
. Me Vie said of Jagr's pl. "It was
a.great goal. Btit we ~enough
chances to win four or five boctey

gaanes.", .

\

across

.

=e-:,:::._~

· The victory saved lbe f'en&amp;uins,

the Patrick Division cb81Dpions,
from facing a trip to New Jersey
down 2-0 in tbe best of seven
series. The Devils won the fust
game oflbe bea-d-ICVal ..nea 31 oo WK-.....tay nighL The series
will move 10 New Jersey for Game
3 Sunday night 1W111 Game 4 Tnes-

daynigbL

.

. "II WOiild bave been~ 10 win
that hockey game," MeVie said.
was never a moment dur- ·
ing that gamc thai I didn't bdicve
that we wcrcn 'I going 10 win that
IKx:key game. We wac bringing
ro them, taldDg it ro lbcm.
"It would have been wonderful
going home 2-0. We've just got ro
keep going, we've just sot 10 .keep
playing lbe way we'n: playing."
'l'bC pmc Wall back IDd forth,
with neither tam ever baving Jlljft
than a =~oat lead. John
Marl tag '
lbe mt two gaUl
for lbe Devib, llld Bftllldln Sbana·
han and Alexei Kaaatonov each
added gollls.

'"There

it

- -~~· - ·.

Soain wins U.s~ f~eestyle title ~:

lbe Canadicns f~e a 2-0 lead in
their Adanls Division semifinal
saics wilb Buffalo. The 1bin1
in lbe saics is Sunday in B:.E:.
Carbooneau broke a 4-4 lie when
be grabbed a pass from Mi~e
McPhee at lhe side of lbe Sabres
nctllld put a bac:kband drive into
the short c:omer at 18:39 of the.
lhird period. Montreal's Stepl)aile
Rieber had tied lhe score 4-4 at
9:51 of.the third period .when he
fued a SO· foot .slap shot into lhe
BuffaloneL

Kevi.D Steveu, Panl Coffey, · tbe best-of-seven series at one
Pbil Bourque and Troy Loney game each. Game three of tb~ ·
1t01ala Pilalup.
series u Sunday mH.uonL 0n
..Ws jllll oac of those lhin4s tbe pme-winner, Janney carried
wberc you jnst keep banging m lbe puct inll Had'old's zone, drew
lbele and JOG mate an if lbev'n: the defenders to him and passed
goioa ID Jill a 11011 JOG-" lbcm
tbe slot ~o Neely. The
- . t il.," said Palpins goat"""'" winger sconld from 20 feet on lbe
Tom Barrasso, who bad seven edge oflbe right cin:le, puning lbe
saves in ovatime. "fm just glad it puck just inside lhe rigbt posL
didn't bave 10 come down to lbat
· Cautiews S. SilkS 4
for me."
.
At .M onttal. Guy Carbonneau
· In olhu first round games Fri- scoil:d with 1:21 remaining to help
day ni&amp;IU.· Washingt(Mi stu Out 1be
· New York Rangers 3-0, Boston

'

Sports brief

•
\

.I

•

.
-f~

"

' .. ,

1 Swoons
7 Fabutoul king
12 Bo•es
17 Lights oUt!
21 Yearly
22 Juicy berry
23 Doctrine
24 Eye MIOI'ously
25 .Ariny oil.

NISSAN

RIGHT ON
THE MONEY .
RIGHT NOW

26BIIn*h
28 Sleep clescei•l

30 Keep
32 Spielberg alien

33 Brim
35 Bank treniiiCtlon
37 lroquolen Indians

38 Shadow
40 - Alberl ·

NEW 1991 NISSAI SENTU

41

eonc.ntng

43C~acy

45Temporary
-.s
47 Dogleg

480Hawlaa

' 4 door, automatic, caiMtte, tilt wheel,

power .taerlng, pin .tripea. cullom
wheel covera, 1 100HP engine, fully
equipped. #3362.

Mo.t
inclaaa _ 134 HP 5
apeed, tinted glaaa,dual mirrora, ck,th
interior. cerpet, pow• brakea, 1400 lb.
payload. #3409.
•

$178!~.

$142!!.

ONLY

ONLY

49 Soap520oorhandle
54 Continued story
56 Beet animal
57 Purify
59 God of love
61 South African -.
Dutch
82 Frame of mind
83 Arabian gull
84 Myeell
68 And 10 on: abbr.
67 Edge
68 Groan
89 As far as
71 SailOr: COllOq.
72 Fencer's sword
74 Hulk78 Appearanoe
.77 Wheel tooth
78 " - Cld"
79 Causee to flow

EXTRA CLEAN LOCAL TRADES
SAVE ... SAVE ... SAVE~ ..

SAU

.,., Mo.

87 Chevy Cavalier 2 cloGr, cassette, retl ........:.......:.. $2495
S41
86 Ford Mustang Automatic, custom whttlt ...."""""~....................... SOLD
85 Buick Century Automatic, air, tilt, cruitt.....:L........$3295 ,-~, "S82
88 Pontiac Grand Am 2 .._,automatic. air.........:.....,................SO~
87 Plymou!h Reliant Wagon, automatic, a;::.:..:......$4795 . S99
87 Nissan Stanza GXE Air, ca•sttt•, loadtd .................................:SOLD
86 Dodge Van 15 pau., aUto., air, litw miltt................... $5495 $130
87 vw Jetta Gl 4 Dr., automatic. air, ctllletta..... s_s 99 5 S132
87 Olds Calais 4 daor, automatic, air................................$5995
S132
S133
86 Plymouth Voyager SE 1 pass, automatic. air.:... S5995
88 Mazda King Cab Air, rastttte................................... $6495
S133
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89 Dodge Daytona Air;stti'ID, 12,000 mil"""""'""J6995
$152
86 Olds Delta 88 Brougham Fully laacltcl............... $6495'
88 Chev'y S-1 0 Auto-tic, air, casseftt, lopper .....~....... ..S7 4~5
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S174
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ES Automatic, air, catMtta .........$9495 •S191
90
Da

out
81 .Damp
82 Clilzen of Latvia
83 Scorch
84 Inheritor
85 Tl!otle hOidl!lg

Office
87Houl8hold
89 Alpect; angle
90 Hal82 Son of Adam
114 FIICis

•
82 Tardier

DOWM
1 ''The - Guy"
2 One oppoeed
3 At hOme
4 Knot
5 Higll
8 SaiHng Yellllll
7Uagnawm

990b...
100 Milk ln ·Pafls
101 CorrOdes ..
102 Boone, et al
103 Hearing organ
105 Mend
' 107 BuniiiO
109 Commere1818
110 Simon -'- (game,
111 Viper
113Lag part
114 Sesame plant
115 Struthers 10
116 Smaller number
117 E.-yone
118 At present
120 HOJIP. aul.
121 Domeatlcate
122 Oepoeit of
sediment
123 Metal tube
124 Shoot out
suddenly
126 Walel bands _
128 "full - Jacket" ·
130 Salad garnish
132 Mud
134 "Pretty·- All
In a Row"
135 Winglike .
·. 138 Italian river
137 Genua of birds
139 Fee
141 Thomas 10
142 Tattered cloth
143 Spar
145- taland
147 "Family-"
.• 149 Adherent of:
suffix
152 Thet thing
153 Capital of Texas
155 Barks
157 Declare
159 Nagallve pretlx
160 Gaaeoua element
182 Surgical thread
. 1&amp;4 Approaches
168 Come Into vieW
189 Ms. Ferber.
189 Wear away
170.Shlllong Is Ita
capital
171 Form Of
IHurglcal
prayer ,

•

symbol
8 Feci. agcy.
9 Fresh-water .fish
10 Separale
11 World-

12 " - Efsawhel e"
13
14
15
16

Through

DIIUU
Sell to cqnsumar

Re*tlng change
17 2.000 lbs.
18 GriHHh 10
19 Gratify
20 Hunting dog
27 Spilech
29 Plerci!d
. 31 Negative prefix
34 "Gentlemen Blondes"
36 Not one
38 Exert to the
utmost

40 Escaped
42 Ms. Gray

44 Ripped
46 Old name lor
Tl!alland
48 Kind of collar
49 Speechify
50 Foot lever
51 Article
53 Two of two
55 Mr. Paeino
56 Saturate
58 Realm
60 Flat-bottomed
boat
62 Debatable
65 Moray
88 Speck
89 Brown, as bread
70 Monsters
72 Heroic events
73 Or-out
75 Prectoua stone
78 Ambassadors
771ntone
monotonously
79 Dlspalc:he8
80 Breaks suddenly

.

83 Seat
84 Clues
88 Drink ~OWly
88 Scold
89 unadorned

90 Entreaties
91Peru93Un,......."""ly
95 Prairies
97 "Happy-"
98 "MIIjOr -"
102 Time gone by
104 Tear
106 Shorl expreaslon:
abbr.
107 t.'8831M''Bd
d~tlonol .
108 Consecrate
110 Trade lor mo!IIIY
111 Pertaining to
the Alps
112 Wander
114 Papeete Is Its
capital
.116 falsifier
117 Verdi opera
119 Court order
121 Former RuSSian
ruler
122 Antlered animal
123 Father
125 Jog
127 Early morn
128 Sea soldier
129 Happy
130 Ust
131 Montana's capital
133 Lamb's pen name
138 Out oi dale
138 Irritates
140 Flat
143 Greek letter
144 Josip Broz
146 Health resons
148 Hall: prefix
150 Oman.
151 Playing CB{d
153 Collection of
facts
154 Bow
156 Sp. woman
158 Soak, as flax
161 Running
163 Neon symbol
165 Samarium
symbol
167 Sun god

is Peter

HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) game, their series lead and perhaps
Boston pulled a surprise before
To the aartford .Whalers' dismay, their big opportunity to ~hange 1he game when it was announced
history ~ps repeating itself. .
lbeir fortunes. Afterwards, rather th;ll forwards Bobby Carpenter,
· Trying to avoid fu:st-round elim- tl)an being al)le to savor success, Vladimir Rusicta and Janney had
ination from the playoffs for the · they were involVed iri gloomy post- all been added to the lineup. Car.fifth sttaighl yeat, lbe Whalers had mortems. ·
pcnlt:r' s return was tbe most unexa chance to ialre a 2-0 lead in their
''I bad a breatcaway that could pected - be underwent surgery in
best-of-seven Adams Ui vision have made it 4·2," recalled Pat Decembtr for a sbllllt:ted lmeecap.
series with the Boston Bruins.
Verbeek, chastising himself. "I Janney and Ruslcta both bad anlde
Instead, IIley let up in the fmal thinlc that would bave really taken injuries.
period Friday night and watched the wind out of lbeir sails. Instead
The sellout crowd of 14,448
Cam Neely scpre t'he tying and the came back."
roared when Carpenter, Rusicka
winning JoalS to cornplele his hat
r'We didn't play: with confi- and Janney statM onto the ice for
triclc, givtng Boston a 4-3 win and dence throughout the whole pre-game shooting.
a 1-1 tie in the series, which g·ame," said teammate Kevin
"The presence of !bose three
resumes Sunday night in Hartford.
Dineen. "We had been playing ¥UYS skating in lbe warmups didn't
Only once in their eighl NHL well in the first couple of periods ... just give us a psychological edge, it
playoff series have the Whalers but we held back, we might have gave us a boost," said Bruins
swept lbe fJI'SI two games. Winning been toO conservative.''
coach Mike Milbury. "I didn't teD
these opening two games on the
In the Bruins' locker room there our players urilil6 p.m.''
road would have made them over- was relief instead of regrets.
Carpenter and the Bruins coach·
whelming favorites.
"We feel a lot better about. our' .. es repeatedly had claimed his next
As Boston's Craig Janney lielves after this win," said Neely.
game would be next season. The
admitted, "If we had lost, it might
"We were just determined to do deceit was intended to disrupt lbe
have been over."
·
whatever it took to win this game," ' Whale~s· strategy, but Verbeek
Instead, the Whaler~ lost the -said defenseman Ray Bourque.
said it ba~ little psychological
impact.
·
''That l)appens all the time,
guys coming mand out of lbe lineup," be said. ·

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipoli'a

95 Young shrubs
96 Grentt ute Of
971-lld partly

the Stiintey Cup ptayotrs. Goalie
Siderklewlcz (30). (UPI) •

.Whalers·'·big opportunity lost

Neely

ACROSS -

•

JI!EELY SCORES • Boston's Cam Neely (8)

.SUNDAY PUZZLER

Academy High School Tuesday,
beginning at 7 p.m. according to
David Carman, presidenL

..

scores agalmt Hartford during Friday's 4-3 vic·
tory over the Whalers. It was the second pme or

TIM FAULK

Boosters Club will meet Ill Oaiiia

American Bowling
~ongress leade~s

..

..

career, said the vic:IOry gave him a
confident feelingJoing into summer training..
·
"I real good coinpared to olilet:
years," be said. "I'm usuall'):,
burned out at this point in the ~son, and tbat's nof the case this
year. I've lalcen lime for mt;:lf
afrer CICh contest and I feel
h,
so I know my summer ttaining)s
importanJ

'
•
•
fl.
h
·
h
d
l
'M
.. ajor .. g t sc e u e· - .go~.~slljsg~ry

Athens Honda Cars

Boosters to meet

i-

.

At New York, Don Beaupre
,..__ ...
· ·
_ _ , 35 sbols and ... _ r...;-•,..,._
the final of the $375,000 Estoril
..............,....,.
E1'ghth-see·k.l
0 pen m
. L'ISbon, Portugat . He' II
c·JCcare
tl'1
~ Serge1' Bruguera
t goals firom Dino""'
'
of
Spat'n
de'ea••d
th1'rd-s··•ed
y Miller IDd Michal Pivmb 10
'' "'
~
pl~y
seven I b -seeded Karel
even their l'alrick Division am- Andrei Cbesnokov of the Soviet Novacek of Czechoslovakia, who
nallerics with lbe Ranaas • ooc Union, 6-4, 2-6, 6-3 to qualify for topped countryman Marian Vajda
game each. t:t was Bce•'IJ'C'S tbinl
7-5,6-2.
shutoul .in lbe last nine days. The
loss marked the first time the
Rangm have been sbut out in 137
games oYaill and lbe fint lime in
THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE
the playoffs since a 2-0 toss to
WBCOMES
. Pbilade.lpbia on April 16, 1987.
Game lbrec of 1be series is Suilday
in New Jersey.
4, WllaJen 3
TO ITS.. SAUS STAFF
At Bostm. C8ID
broke a
lie by sroring bis third goal with
Tim Invites all His Friends
3:22 remaining. lifting lbe Bruins.
to Stop in and See Him
Neely, who had tied the game at
11:49 of the third period, scored .
the final two goals off )IIISie8 from
Crail Janney as lbe Bruins squared
I·Sf4·1S55
A'IIIIIIS

a...-

-- •

. W.PARK, Colo. (UPI) on the Lower Alan Phij,ps coune.
.- · Lane Spina won his fifth career The n:sident of Reno, Nev., alsp
U.S. freestyle skiing Iitle Friday won lbe World Freestyle Cbamp1when he took the ballet crown at on·ships ballet title in mid-Felml·
the U.S. Freestjile Championships ary.
at the Winlt:r Park Ski Resort.
Spina, who finished second in
Spina, 29; c:ollccted a combined the Worfd Cup ballet standings for
score of 29.50 for his two routines the fifth time in his eight-year

r----------------------.
I

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Leaders in the 88th American Bowling
Congress National Championship
Tournament (through Apri14):
REGULAR TEAM
, I, ~ob Bailey's Pro Shop No. I,
Madison, Wis., 3,379; 2, Woodwyk
Auto Sales, Hudsonville, Mich.,
3,356; 3, Nadeau's Pro Shop, Las
Vegas, 3,318; 4, Team USA, Kirlcwood, Mo., 3,314; 5, Cave Springs
Lanes, St. Peters; Mo., 3,310; 6,
Lodge Lanes No. 1, Belleville,
Mich., 3.298: 7, Up Your Average
Pro Shop, Elk Grovq, Village, Ill.,
3, 296; 8, Cha111pion's Pro Shop
No.2, Hamburg, N.Y., ·3,2,55; 9,
Mr. 900 Enterprises II, Anafieim,
Calif., 3,249; 10, Lodge Lanes No.
2, Belleville, Mich., 3,246.
BOOSTER TEAM
1, Lewis Mariqe Supply Inc., Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla., 2,974; 2, Melvin
Brandon Np. I, Detroit, 2,858; 3,
Greater Richmond Bowling Association Boosters, Richmond, Va.•.
2,853; 4, Firstworld Travel, Minneapolis, 2,825; 5, Charloae Bowl·
ing Association No. 2, Chartoue ..
N.C., 2,810; 6, Missouri Travelers,
Braymer, Mo., 2,783; 7, Hebron
Lanes, Hebron, Ind., 2,774; 8, Clio
Bowling Arcade, Clio, Mich.,
2,767; 9, Kinder Construction Co. ,
Mary Esther, Fla., 2,762; 10, Minneapolis District Bowling Associa·tion, Minneapolis, Minn., 2,747.
DOUBLES
1. J Johnson-D Nadean, Las

Vegas, Nev~ 1, 505; 2, M Myslinski·M Jacobs, Chicago, I, 484; 3, D
Cardweii-S ·Salzman, Studio City,
Calif., 1,483; 4, A Temp-B Haney,
Phoenix, Ariz ~ 1,475; 5, K Forst-J
Forst, Naperville, Ill., 1,460; 6, B
Jawor-B Go ike, Belleville,. Mich.,
1,457; 7, B Learn·B Himmler,
Ton~anda, N.Y., 1,432; 8, R Harvey-B King, South Bend, Ind.,
1,431; 9, D Kerlcstra- M Graczyk,
Chicago; 1,430; 10, J Silvestro·R
Bures, Willoughby, Ohio, 1,427.
SlNGLES
1, Marie Graczyk, Chicago, 822;
2', Bret Faulkner, Milwaukee, Wis.,
819; 3, Bill Daniels, Allen Park,
'Mich., 813; 4, Tim Caldwell, Dallas, Texas, 804; 5, Michael Peters,
Moline. Ill.. 800; 6, John Reinhl!fl,
Farmington Hills, Mich., 796; 7,
Ernie Gazdag, Woodhaven, Mich.,
792; 8, Mike Steinbach, Chicago,
787: 9, Doug Davidson, Versailles,
Ohio, 783; 10, Billy Smith, Austin,
Texas, 782.
All-EVENTS
I, Mark Graczyk, Chicago,
2,196: 2, Dave DeWeerd, Allegan,
Mich., 2,194; 3, Bob Learn, Jr ..
Tonawanda, N.Y., 2,181; 4, Mike
Steinbach, Chicngo, 2,167; 5, Kyle
Yarter, Albany, N.Y., 2,157; 6,
Tim Caldwell, Dallas, Texas,
2,156; 7, Jeff Mraz, Akron, Ohio,
2; 150; 8, Pat Stefanik, Hamburg,
N.Y., 2,146; 9, Jimmy Johnson,
Las Vegas, Nev., 2,)37; 10, John
Forst, Naperville, Dl., 2,130.

Milbury had no regrets ahol!t
the ploy, saying, "I promise I'll go
to confession.''

-

· May 10 at Davenpo
' rt,· Iowa _
·~ y Vnltcd Press Interaatlonal
· (c;cterendiDg cbamplon) ·
c-Michael Nunn vs. James Toney,
· April 7 at Ho11ywood, Fla. - !2, IBF middleweight title; cLany Holmes vs. Tim Anderson, Michael Carbajal vs. Domingo
10, heavyweights.
.· Sosa. 12. mF,Iight tlyw?ght title.
April 7 at Las Vegaa, Nev. May 16 11l Allanbi&lt; City, N.J.Eddie Cook vs. Diego· 'Avila; 12, Tony Thornton vs. Mcrqui Sosa,
bantamweights; Vincent Phillips 10, micldleweigbts.
·
June 1 at :Palm Springs, Calif:
v~. Mike Johnson, 10, junior wel- c-Terry Norris vs. Donald
terweights ..
Aprill2 at Cartagena, Colombia Curry, 12, WBC junior mid- . c-Myung Woo Yun vs. Kajkong dleweiRht title; c-Meldrick Taylor
P G
· 12 WBA It
. Danpbootalhai, 12, WBA light fly- · vs; L ws
arcJa, . '
we terweight title.
·
weight title.
.
· .
·
June 3 at Las Vegas, Nev.- cApril 11 at Albany, N.Y . - .
Kevin Pompey vs. Santos Cardona, Virgil Hill vs. Thomas }learns, 12,
12, welterweights.
' WBA light heavyweight title.
June 28 at Las Vegas, Nev; April 11 at. St. Joseph, Mo. Alex Stewart vs. Danny Wofford, Mike Tyson vs. Razor RuddOck,
10, heavyweights; Ricardo Cepeda 12, h'~vyweights; c- Azumah Netvs. Sylvestre Castillo, 10, feather· son vs. Jeff Fenech, 12, WBC.
weights.
lightweight title; c-Julio
• April 12 at San Antonio, Texas junior
Cesar
Chavez
vs. Rafael Pineda,
- Mike Ayala vs. Lee Cargle, 10, 12, WBC and IBF
junior welterbantamweighiS.
weight
title;
c-Julian
Jackson vs.
April17 at Toronto - Modesty Dennis Milton, 12 WBC
midNapunyi vs: Barrington Francis, dleweight title.
·
12, banaunweight.
·
April 18 at-Atlantic City, NJ.
- · Bruce Seldon vs. Oliver .
McCall, I0, heavyweiJ!hiS.
April 19 ·at Atlanuc CiEN.J.
- c-Evander Holyfield vs.
e·
Foreman, 12, world heavyweig 1
title; Jorge Pacz vs. Lupe Suarez,
10, junior lightweights; Tommy
Morrison vs. Yuri Vaulin, 10,
heavyweights. ·
April 20 at Atlantic City, N.J.
- c-Prince Charles Williams vs:
James Kinchen, IBF light heavyweight title.
.
April 20 at Atlantic. City, N.J.
.- Riddick Bowe vs. Tony Tubbs,
10, .heavyweights.
April 28 at Masan, South KOJU
- c·Myung Woo Yuh 'IIS.'Kajlcong
•
Danpbootathai, 12. WBA light fly·
weight title.
May 2 Ill Atlantic City, NJ.Tony Martin vs.lrish Micky Ward,
10, junior welterweights; Junior .
Jones vs. Jose Luis Vega-Gill. 10,
. bantamweights. ·
May 4 at SL Martin - c-Gilbert
'Dele vs. Junsuk Hwang, 12, WBA
junior middleweight tide.
May 9 ill Newark, N.J . Alfred Cole vs. Nate ·Miller, 12,
cruiscrweights.
·

y~

for ·me. "I'm going 10 train hard
. and stay focused on the 1992 Wigter Olympics. It's my ultimate~
10 win the gold, and I'm going :lo
bard 10
· that oat "
~
work
8tlalD
g '
•
Jeff Wintersteen of Lakewooct
Colo., rmisbcd second wilh 1 score
f
_.._,_ N'... B
f Bcllc
o 28·80, ,.,1111&gt; lw. ass o
vue, Wash., was !bird at 26.75. ' •
Winteraleen fmishcd ninth in tbe
World Cup ballet standings Ibis
season and said he was disappoint·
ed he didn't win the title Fridivy.. '
... I skied 10lid andjumJI:CC! well,
· but I was disappoiniCd I didn't give
it a little more to win it all," said
Winterslt:CD, who alilo placed second in last season's U.S. cbampi·
onship!l in Winter Parle. '• A second
is nothing 10 be ashamed of, bul j
made a few minor mistakes which
kepi me away from the rop SJXlL' '
Bass, who finished seventh in
last year's U.S. Freestyle Cbampionships b~llet event, said it felt
good 10 pcrfonn two solid routin~.
.•
•
•
•
•

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•,••

·,' •'
•
•••

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p

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Ha\en't you done without abo longertQUgb?" · .

BAUM LUMBER

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Sunday Tlmaa Sentinel-Page

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.·

Peg1 C4 SUndly Tlmn Sentinel

Aprll7, 1991 ..

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

•

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-CS.·.

Aprll7, 1991

Brewers' Sheffield rip~ front office·again

Thomas·returns to Detroit
lineup~; Pistons romp, 101-82

'

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI SPQI'ts Writer
Gary Sheffield, who repe•!Mly
has blasled die Milwaukee B~ewers
front office in past seasons, bas
staned in again.
. Still upset over being rined
$1 ,000 for not running 11 routine
wind ~t drill foUowing II CaciUS
League gwne lasl month, Sheffield
ripped Brewers General Mallllger
. ' Hmy Dallon.in an in~erview published Friday in the Wisconsin
Stale Journal.
.
.· ·
. "(Dalton's) ruining the team
and he's going to keep ruining it
because as far as I'm concerned, he
don't know too much abOut this
game, '' Sheffield s&amp;id of Dalton,
in his 14th seasoo as Milw11ukee's ·
GM lllld who has worked Z5, years
in baseball managemeaL
Sl)Cifield, a nephew of die New
Yort Mets'. Dwight Gooden, has
created controveny ever since he
arrived in Milwllukee in September
1989. He ·led the learn in hitting
with 11 .294 average last year, but
canied a grudge toward Brewer
management all season.
. She(field, who committed a
team-high 25 enon last year, start·
ed his rift with management last
..
spring whea dley asked him 10 ~
extra infield practice. He fel.t he
was being singled out unfairly.
Then when die Brewers shifted him
the Americall LeiiJIIe Ali-Siar leam .agala Ril
from shortstop to third base last
HELPS PROMOTE ALL-STAR GAME·
summer,
will be helping baseball rus coanect
April, he again blasted the ~earn.
Besides having his b8ncls full wllh managinglbe
wllh the 1991 AU·Siar lickels lhroUJb lhe new
Sheffaeld also is said to be fed
three-time American Leeague champion OakMCI
Frlet~ds &amp; Family Sweepslakes. Tbe game ·
. STUBBS SI'EAL8 SECOND • Cllleqo's Ryat Sudbefllelpl
Tony
La
Rossa,
who
will
manage
land
Athletics,
up with the Bre,wers for trading
cmr MlwMbe'1 llrDidlll Stablll lifter Stablll ttole sec:oad base
will
be
played in Toronto. (UPI)
Dave Parker to the California
Ia li"rrddJ'I alllbldoll co 1. . Itt ~llwaakee. (UPI);
Angels in February and releasing · officer who was working at the
t:hicago White Sox anil DelroiL He added two hits for the Asttos lind
outfielder Milce Felder last week.
niJ!htdub. State District Judge A.D. hit just . 223 this spring lind was Brent Mayne had a two-run single
Both were friends of his.
for the Royals.
Aiios rescheduled the hearing for · bothered by a sore shollider.
'When informed of Sheffield's
At St. Petersburg, Fla .. Joe
June 7. If there is an indictment, it
In exhibition ac1ion Friday:
statemems, Dalton said he isn't in
will take place on that date.
At Winter Haven, Fla., Dickie Carler and John Olerud hit back-todie business to make friends.
The
~,leveland
Indians
Thon
broke· a tie with a two-run beck homen in die sixth inning 10
"Players don't have to like die
announced
'first
baseman
Keith
in the eighth inning to lift give Toronto a 3-3 tie with St.
double
.. JUtADBNTON, Fla. (UPI) become a free agent 11 the end of general manager or the manager,"
Hernandez
will
undergo
back
Philadelphia to a 6-4 victory over Louis in a game called after six
Dalton said. "All they haye to do is
Pilllllwp cemer fieldor ADdy V• the seuon.
surgery Monday at New York' s Bosion. Ricky Jordan hit a solo innings because or rain. Pedro
. Slyke Sllardly llpccla W.year
In COIIDIStiO the Bonilla negoti- play well."
Hospital for Joint Diseases. Her- homer in tlie game, which was Guer~ero had two hits and an RBI
In other news Friday, Boston
contriCt oteulc!e JIIIQIJedly wonb ations, Van Slyke's conu.ct was
nandez has nQt trained this spring called after eight innings to allow ·for lhe Cardinals.
pitcher Roger Clemens, anested
$12.6 million, wllicli would make scUied without fanfale.
At Sarasota, Fla., Robin Ventura
and he's expected to remain in the the Red Sox to meet a travel dead·
him the Plneel' hial-' Jllid play"We wanted to lip Andy all along with his brolher after a Jandrove
home a pair of runs with a
hosPital up to a week.
. .
line.
er.
..
alona,' • ' said General Manaaer uary incident outside a Houston .
single
and double as the Chicago
In addition, the Detroit. Tigers
At Kissimmee; Fta., Craig Big· The ox.WOO tU:el effect next lM!'Y DouJhty. "We didn't do this nighiclub, had a scheduled court
White
Sox took.a 6-1 win over
waived 16-year veteran outfielder gio reached base four times with
hearing postpOned.
.
y~ and runs throaah 1994 but beciu.sc of the Bonilla situation...
·
Minnesota.
Twins starter Allan
Clemens and his older brother, · Che\ Lemon. The three·time Amer- three hits and a walk and drove in
niither. the Pirales nor VID Slyke
"The mliD thing was that it was
Anderson allowed fiVe runs and 10
ican League all-star compiled a
runs to help Houston to a 7-3
~vided any other dellils.
·
· done in &amp;ood faith. Andy has a · Gary, were arrested Jan. 19 for .273 lifetime average with the two
hits
in five innings. · .
win
over
Kansas
Oty.
Jeff
Bagwell
..... .
,,
aggravated assault on an off-duty
' According to the Pittaburah competent ageDL"
·
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Zane
Pless however, the pect includea a
The Iader remark might be read
Smith and three relieven combined
S7SO: 000 sif.!inl boau for thia u a criticllm of Bonilla's agent,
on a seven-hit shutout 10 give J'itts·
year and~ for llllriea of $4 Dennis Gllllat.
burgh a 3~ victory over TCXM. Jay
The alaaina of Van Slyke
nlillion 1n 1992, $4.6 million in
Bell drove in a J?air of runs and
1?93 and $3.3 millioll in 1994.
1hould be reauuranc:e to other
,
Mike LaVIiliae smgled and ttipled
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI)- Rijo (14-8 , 2.7(_) ERA) and Norm World Series injury; lacking in left- for Pittsburgh.
• Van Slyte carrenlly II in the Pilata ~ the team will make a
fi1111 year of a tJne..yw, $5.~ mil- scrfGul dan to 1r1ep playen from Manager Lou Piniella says the Charlton (12-9, · 2.-74 ERA); handed power; owner Marge S.chou
At Fon Lauderdale, Fla., Scou
Cincinnati Reds still have much to league' s best bullpen headed by creates disharmony with her pernuliOn _..:a t1ta1, at die liiDe of 11i1 j~ to llrprlllldDeti.
pitched six scoreless
Sandenon
,
. ·
slaninJ.
him the Pirates'
• I laid when Andy siJlled his prove after last·year's World Series "Nasty Boys" Rob Dibble (11 rious ways.
innings
for
die
New York Yankees
NEW FACES - . .RHP 'I;.ed
saves) and Randy Myers (31
blghelt peid player. · ·
lint COAUICl widllll that he was sweep oftheOaldalld Athletics.
to
post
a
2-1
victory
over Triple-A ·
The Reds. shed their label as . saves): solid defense anchored by Power only real addition; more
. Over the· wfnter, pitcher Zane the comentone upon which we
·
importantly is who will reJ?lace Col11mbus affiliate.
Smith lianed a four·y• c:Onnct could build, and that bas not underachievers, gained from fmish· shortstop BarrY La!irin.
At
L!lkeland,
Fla.,
Rob
Deer
starter
Danny
Jackson,
who,sl&amp;lled
ing
second
in
the
National
League
WEAKNESSES
Outfiel,
d
er
valued at $10.6. million, and Cy chanled today," lllid''l'resldent
delivered
a
run-scoring
single
in .
with
Chicago
Cubs.
·
·
West
from
1985-88,
by
starting
last
Eric
Davis,
lhe
team's
best
player,
Y.ouna Award winner Doaa CariBIIF..
the
ninlh
inning
as
the
Cincinnati
OUTLOOK
Of
the
teams
season
on
a
lear
aod
staying
on
tojl
·is
still
not
fully
recovered
from
Drabek won a U. 3 million con·
VID Slyke came to Pittsburgh in
that swept a World Series, four Reds and Deaoit Tigers played to a
•
tiact in arbilfltion.
April 1987 with catcher Q:ike stnl,ight through October. Piniella
made it to the series the next year 1-1 tie in a game called after 11 :
: Risht fielder Bobby Bonilla LaVIIIiereandpi~~Du~ . claims the 1991 Reds will not join
three repealed as champions. innings by mutual consent.
and
recently rejected a $16 million, from the St. Lou11 Clltdmals rn baseball's list of one year wonders.
At West Palm Beach, Fla., the :
Only twO teams - the '63 Los
four- year deal and is ellsible 10 re111m for catCher Tony Pena.
•
·
"It wun't a fluke," Piniella
SCUffle
game
between the Montteal Expos .
1
0
Angeles Dodgers and '66 Orioles
said. "This is a good little ballclub.
Braves was canceled
and
Atlanta
- flopped the next season after a
We play with intensity. Weexecute
series sweep. Piniella knows what bec10se of rain.
well Defensively, I think we exeit takes, having played on die last
cute better t11an IDybody ill baseHONG KONG (UPI) - Tennis team 10 win back-to-back champiball. We led die National League in
hitting, and we were se~ond in 'star John McEnroe, famous for his onships. ·what he'll need is a
SPRING VAll f Y CINfMA
fielding. This wasn't a fluke."
tantrums on the court, got into a healthy pitching staff and amore
44b 4~74
·served three seaions as the teiun 's
Last season the Reds held an 8 scuffle in a Hong Kong bar early aggressive offense.
I
: CHAMPAIGN, 1\'t. (UPI)Cleve Bryant, head coach II Ohio offensive bacia coach. Under his 1-2 game lead in the NL West by Friday over a different kind of shot,•
tutelage. Patriot backs were second Ma¥ I 5 and PinieUa is hoping for a ·a newspaper reported.
Uni~ty the pUt 1iJ1 I~ I •11, has
in
in rushing in 1982 simdiar start in 1991.
After crashing.out In the first
tieen added ro die Um.nity of IDi· andtheledleague
the
NFL
on
the
ground in
"I think it would really send a round of the Hong Kong Salem
.,. foodllll coiChina fU!I:
great message to the rest of the Open, apparently McEnroe was
• "He has an extensive back· 1983.
Bryant then served as head footlia roberts
division if we got off to a great sharing his sorrow with a group of · ju _
pound and wiU be an immediate
ball
coach
11
his
alma
mau:r,
Ohio
start," he said. "It'd be 'we're here U.S. sailors on leave from the USS
c:palriburor ro our offeaslve develUniversity,
from
1914-1990.
to geL the job done again."'
Midway at a bar in the colony's
OJJ!Mint." IUinois Athletic Director
The odds are against the Reds, Kowloon tourist district
and Coach John Macltovic said Friwho are trying to repeat as world
Two photographers spotted
day. "I have known Cleve for a Bell sidelined with
champions
for
the
ftrst
time
since
McEnroe
chatting with a pair of
11$11ber of ye111 llld feel fortunate
knee
injury
~- tu,fikJJ£'
the
1977
IDd
'78
New
York
Yanwomen
and
started snapping pic· ~ he was interated in our posi·
.
CHICAGO (UPI) - George tees.
tures, according to the Hong Kong
"The Yankee learn ·was a little Standard.
011! !VINING SHOW 7:30
: · Bryant repllccs Tim lWtncU. Bell was 1 late ICfltch. from the
ADMISSION $1.50
Ch~.
Cubs
lineup
for
Sablrday's
older
club than thiS," said Piniella,
McEnroe, who reportedly does
tim lasl month took an assistant
446-0923
exhibition
finale
against
the
Milwho
played-on
both
those
New
not
drink
alcohOl,
made
a
grab
for
$:hinl position with the Tampa
waukee Baowen beca•ne of inOam· York learnS, but who hasn't run out one of the 1;8J!leras and demiDded
~Jay Boc:caneers.
of rinJ fmgen. "We (Reds) have the film, the report said. On being
•: Bryant WIS a IIIIDdout quarter- mation in hillcfttnee.
Bell, who hit .3SS this sprin&amp; two players on our roster who are · refused, he flew into ·a rage, the ·
Ohio UniYCI'Sity in the !ale.
with 17 'RBI, was over 30 )'CUI old. That's iL This is · newspiper said.
eantinl Mid-AI-.ic:an Con- aod led the
The Standard ran a front-page
Player of the Year honors expected io 111ft in left field Satur~ a young lllllclub. It's stiU a hungry
ballclub.
picture of McEnroe, sporting a
lit '1968. He was drafted by the day.
"I think the biggest thing we leather jacket and US S Midway .
A team official &lt;SUd Bell's knee
l)lnver Blll!ICOI in 1969.
• Followlns a brief career u a would be diained and be would be have going for us is this is a confi· cap, sitting next to a woman at lhe
.
~ c:onsulllllt,
entered ready for Open~ Day Tuesday dent bunch of athle1es. When you bar.
LAWN It GARDEN
win the rust time, you know wl)at it
According to 1he newspaper,
Cardinals.
cciacllina aldie hilb IC
level.in apillltlbe sa.
nrACnMS
-McEnroe's new-found compamons
One of three he apnu sipcd takes."
Ollio. He mowed 111 the Univenity
Yard ·Min h.s r«ltfu'lfQ wNt C~U•hty
STRENGTHS - Hard-throw - joined the argument and police
this winter by the Cutil, loll wu
fQUipmtnt SMuld be, i-ngltlftred !rom
cJNordl
CaiOiina for faar - lhfground up for po\Wr, ptfform1nce,
• Ia 1912, B.,- moved DDIO the bothered l ..t sea1011 by vision ing startina rotation centered were called in to defuse the row.
comfort And YIIUI. YO\t CI'IOo~ I!'It
JQe'w B.IIJland Pltriou, where he £':lema, appearinaln one game around World Series ,MVP Jose . No one was injured or arrested in
riiodel bftt su.t@d 10 )OUr nHds 12, 14, or 18HPrnocttftwttr. c:hO!Ct'Of
••
the
incijlent,
the
paper
said.
Au&amp;.
23
to
Sept.
8.
.
,.
t:un•ngdKU. 7·spHdorhydrmt•tiC

I

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I

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Pirates sign Van Slyke to ·
$12.6 million extension .

•
f;

PIPPEN PASSES OFF • Chirago's Scottie
Pippen passes ball between heavy tramc in Fri·

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CLEVELAND (UPI) - Going
~ into' spring npning, the Cleveland
.Indians' won~ered just what they
could expect;out of Albert Belle.
: No mattjlr how optimistic the
' Indians were about the strappmg
: outfi~lder, however, they never
could have imagined Belle going
on the-power tear that he did for all
of spring training. Belle hit ~0
· home runs w1th 26 runs batted m.
• compiled a .896 slugging percent' age, and hit .328.
• Now, the Indians wonder how
long he can keep it up.
- "I'm sure (fans) think I'm going
• to hit 50 or 60 home runs or something like that," Belle said Friday
as the Indians went through a
workout at Cleveland Stadium.
•"The home runs are going to
. come. The key is to go up there and
.not swing for the fences."
· Belle always has been able to -hit
the ball a long way, but his troubles'
• away from the field have kept hliD
from reaching his potential. His
difficulties culminated last year
when he broke up a bathroom at
AAA Colorado Springs and then
entered the Cleveland Clinic for a
. 10-week alcholism treatment pro'
.
~~fore his powerful spring
training, the Indians weren't count. ing on much from Belle, but now
_they plan to bat him fourth and
~tart him in left field.
. "He gives us power1 there's no
• question about it," sa1d manager
John McNamara. "If he continues
to improve, you can put his name
fight there with the Cansecos,
McGwires and Fielders. I think be
has a chance to suprise a lot or peopie."
.
· Belle's 10 home runs were one
short of the Cleveland spring training record of 1I , set in 1954 by

Boxing
The Nevada Supreme Court
reversed a I 989 jury decision and
Rudy Regalado. While. the Indians until his club haS 40 players on its ordered a new trial in the m.u lti·
million dollar lawsuit filed by the
went on to win American League major league roster.
Las
Seanei,
a
hard-throwing
reliev·
Vegas Hilton attains! boxing
pennant that year, Regalado was a
promoter
ButCh LeWIS. The Hilton
er,
has
a
sore
back.
The
Indians
bust in the big leagues.
·
plan
to
option
him
to
Colorado
charged
Lewis
broke his contr8ct to
· But Belle has been productive
Springs,
b\lt
a
club
cannot
option
stage
a
heavyweight
title unificawith die IndiiDS in the past, and he
tion
bOut
an
in
jured
player.
at
the
hotel
when he
is a streak hitter capable of carrying
staged
a
fight
between
Michael
a club's offense, as he di'd all
Spinks
and
Gerry
Cooney
in
spring. For him, just having a
NJ.
State
supreme
Atlantic
City,
chance to play basebal1 after all
court justice Charles Springer ruled
he's been through was all he want·
the 1989 trial judge made . a
ed.
revenible
error when he prevented
"I had
work cut out for me
testimony from a stale official who
. this spring,' Belle said. "I had a
said Lewis told him he intended to
lot to accomplish, a lot to prove.
NEW 'YORK (UPI) - Dallas " take Spinks out of the Hilton
I've been very fortunate to get a
Mavericks
forward Tarpley was series." Spinks, Cooney and his
golden opportunity and toOk adVlln· suspended indefinitely
by the NBA former manager Dennis Rappaport
tage of it."
Friday for violating his after-care ll{e co-defendants with Lew1s.
The bij!gest question facing
Gall
.
Belle now IS how he will deal with substance abuse program. .
Tarpley was arieSted for driving_
P.J. Boatwright Jr., executive
the lOugh times, the 0-for-4 days
that every player suffers through. under the influence of alcohol director of the U.S. Golf AssociaThOse were the kind of things that March 29. It was his third violation tion, died Friday at a Morristown,
N.J., hospital after a bout with canBelle could not handle in the past, of the after-care program.
His
suspension
was
ordered
by
cer.
He was 63. Boatwright was
but he and the Indians are confident
the
ASAP
family
treatment
proexecutive
director of the USGA
he will be able to get" through the gram, which runs the NBA anti·
since
1969
and helped run lhe U.S .
tough time~this year.
drug program. Dr. David Lewis of Open.
The. Indians plan to watch him the ASAP program met with TarpHockey
closely , and while McNamara ley Friday hefore ordering die susMontreal center Denis.Savard
doesn't mind a player being angry . pension.
·
was
fmed $400 by NHL vice 11fesi •
about striking out, he doesn't want
Tarpley
has
not
played
since
dent
Bryan O'Neill for spitt~ng on
Belle to let it distract him the rest
suffering
a
kilee
injury
last
Novemor the game.
.
an opponent during a mel~, in the
"I have never seen hin\ do any ber. He had violated the .NBA's final period of Wednesda• night's
policy in October of playoff g~me against 3uffalo ..
of the things he's been noted for. anti·abuse
1987
~d January of 1989. Tarpley
Savard was ejected in the third
breaking things up in the' dugout,
that kind of.thing," McNamara was stopped· for speeding last year period pf the Canadien 7· 5 view- ·
said. " He's going to have some but' the NBA did not consider the. ry lind fined an aurorr .tic $100 for
down tim~, there's ~o do~bl,~bout incident a third strike against the gross miscond .ct penalty.
1t, but we re here to help h1m.
. league policy.
Tarpley was the Mavericks' O'Neill called the · Jtoma.tic fine .
In other news Fnday, the Ind1·
fmt-round
draft choice in 1986 out "inadequate" and ided the $400
ans placed pitchers Rudy Scanez
ftne.
· and John Farrell and ftrst basem~n of Michigan.
Keith Hernandez on the IS-day disabled list. Farrell , who. had ar~
surgery, and Hernandez, wh~ w1ll
· have back surgery, are cand1da1es
for the 60-day dis_abled list, but. a
player can't be placed on _that hst

hlnsmisSIOnl, .a.whftl stttring, plu\
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"BAGGERS OPTIONAL"

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•

. _ Sports briefs_

12HPI~I~C~/~

You can My ••6ye to your criCiitors and ltiAs forner.
We hlln dtveleplll a pr. .am that will an'altlt yPU to
IWII your ownltusilless without quitting your job. Start
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1

,,

•

•

McEnro'e has
bar
H on. g K ong

.....

day nighl's basketball game between the Bulls
and Spurs. The Spun won, 110-107. (UPI)

Belle says power surge can continue

•ail•

slee~ing witn the enem~

~

.

Piniella says Reds have lots to prove

Former QU grid coach
Bryant joins Illini staff

.

.

.
Isiah Thomas returned to the remaining lfter a 9~ spurt that fea- lhree-pointei.
Spun 110, Bulls 107
Deaoit lineup after a 32-game lay- tured a pair of basJcets by Jolm SalAt Chicago, David Robinson hit
·
off and looked as though the only ley.
four
free throws in the r.nat30' sec;"
Minnesota
answered
with
silt
thing missing was some wear on
onds
10 help die SID Antonio Spurs
straight
points
10
cut
the
lead
to
83his meakerS.
thomas $cored 15 points' and 73 but the Pistons went on a 12-1 overcome blowing a 21-point lead.
dished out 11 assists Friday night sutge that stretched their lead to All five starterS finished in double
figures for the Spurs; 49·24. Sean
and the Pistons beat the Minnesota 95·74 with 2:08 lcfL
Elliott
led San Antonio with 25 .
.
In
·
other
games
around
the
Timberwolves 101-82 fer !heir fifth
poinJs
with
Robinson adding 24
league,
Portland
stomped
OrliDdo
straight victOry.
.
·
and
Terry
Cummings,
19, allowi.ng
115·98,
Cle:veland
beat
Charlotte
"'fbere' s nobOdy saongcr men·him
to
surpass
t!le
15,000-pomt
104-101,
Indiana
topped
Washingtally than he is," teammate Bill
Laimbeer said. "Now it's more ton 117-103, San Antonio nipped mark in his nine- year career.
.
mental than physical, but it takes a Chicago 110-107, Utah downed Jazz 93, Mavericks 87
At
Dallas,
Karl
Malone's
31.·
great mental tliughness to be able Dallas 93-87, Houston escaped
points
helped
Uta)t
hold
off
_a
_
sur
~·
to put aside what's wrong anll play Denver 126-120, the LA Lakers
prising
Dallas
effo~
to
off1c1all~
•
routed Miami 108-87, the LA Clip·
like he did tonight."
elminat
the
Mavencks
from
the'
.
·
Thomas had surgery JID. 29 to pers handled Seattle 109-90, and
playoff
chase.
Utah
~tayed
withi~
11::
..
fuse three bones in his right wrist. Golden State conquered Phoenix
game
of
Midwest
DIVISIOR
leading:
•
He was allowed to return to action 118- 101.
· San Antonio. The Maverick~':
Trail Blazers US, Magic 98
after a Friday examination in H@t·
M.t OriiDdo, Fla., Terry Porter learned Friday that .1earnmate Roy: :
ford, Conn., by Dr. Kirk Watson,
sco~ 13 of his 29 points in Pen- Tarpley, had been suwended indef-:
who performed the surgery.
"It didn't hurt, but I noticed it land's third-period scoring spree. inilely because of his most recen~~
.
.;
was real weak," said ThomaS, who Porter, one of lhe NBA's most pro- DWI arrest.
•·,
shot a conservative 4 of 7 from the ficient three-point shooters, hit all Rockets lUi, Nuggels 120
At Denver, Vernon Maxwell :
floor and sank 7 of 8 free lhrows.
four attempts in the 29-9 burst to
scored
45 points, including eight ;
Thomas wore a soft splint to assure the Blazen of their ninth
three- pointers, ro lead the Houstoq
protect lhe wrist, but claimed that it consecutive victory .
Rockets to their 16th win in their.
dido 't hinder his performance.
Cavs 104, Hornets 101
"I made every play I wanted to
At Richfield, Ohio Craig Ehlo last 17 games. The win kept Hous::
make tonight," he said. "I was scored 22 points. and sank a free ton tied with Utah for second place
aware of it, though. Every time I'd lhrow with 23.6 seconds remaining in the Midwest Division, one game
pass or shoot, it wasn't the same.
· that give Cleveland the lead for behind San Antonio. Michael
"It isn't easy to put something good. Darnell Valentine added 16 Adams scored 41 p_o ints to lead
like that in the back of your mind points to lead the Cavaliers. Danny Denver, which lost for the 11th
:
because it's always in the front of Ferry and· John "Hot Rod " . time in its last 12 games.
Lakers
108,
Heat
87
"
your mind.' But it felt good to be Williams scored I 5 points each as
At Inglewood, Calif. , Magic
back out there competing."
Cleveland won.their fourth straight
Johnson
scored 20 points in three.
Piston Coach Chuck Daly was home game and raised their home
quarters
of work to lead the Los:
also pleased with Thomas' 3 3· mark against Charlotte to 6-0.
Angeles
l..akers.
Johnson ~arrmyly ,
minute performance.
Indiana 117, Washington 103
missed
a
tnple-double
wuh mne.•
"It looked like he hadn't lost a
At Indianapolis, Reggie Miller
assists
and
nine
rebounds
in ~~
beat, conditioning-wise," Daly scored 22 points and Vern Fleming
minutes,
sitting
out
the
fourth
quarsaid. "Isiah's ID amazing athlete. added 2 I 10 help the Pacers clinch
ter.
The
Lakers
won
their
fourth
in .
You know, he has only about 50 an NBA Eas1em Conference playa
row
to
keep
pace
with
the
divi;•
·
percent mobility in die wrisL"
off spot. Washington closed within
sion
leading
Portland
Trail
Blazer~
~;·
The Pisrons, who trailed by two 86-83 with 11:05 remaining on a
points at halftime, went ahead to Ledell Eackles layup, but Indiana whom they trail by 2 1/2 games. •·. "
'
stay during an 8-0 run early in the extended its lead to I 00-87 with
Continued
on
c-6
...
,.
third quarter. Joe Dumars and 7:15 left o{i a George McCloud
·,
Thomas each scored four points in
the spurt that put Deaoit ahead 57·
53 wilh 7:10 left in the quarter.
Detroit took a 72-65 lead into
the final quarter and Stretched its
advantage to 83-67 with 8:05

j

f

..

.,

..

•

.\

�'

Page

C6 ·sunday Times-Sentinel

•

I

April 7, 1991 •

April 7, 1891

Pomeroy-Middleport-G'alllpolls, Ott-Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday
nmes-Sentlnei--Page-C7
.
.

Pomeroy-Middieport-Galli polls, OH-Point Pleasant, wv

•

Marathon~r · takes

Houston PGA event rescheduled for October ··:
"··----- -

.

THE WOODLANDS, Texas·
(UPI)- Hesvy rains over the last
two days forced offcials Friday to
postpone until October the $1 million Independent Insilrance Agent
Open. .
.
Officials determined that even if
the rains stopped. the course would
be unplayable Saturday.
The tournament will still be
played, taking · advantage of an
open date· on the PGA Tour Oct.
23-26.
._.
The IIAO also will put on a
$100,000 scrambleSumlay willi 48
ptar~rs.
. .
.
.
We dec1ded rather than JUSt
play a 36-hole event or go to Menday, we'd make PGA Tour history," said IIAO spokesman Burt
Darden: "Obviously, another cons1derauon was the Masters (next

.

•

I

moved some 1oo1e coral when lllk·
they 'will be heze. We may 11&lt;X
ing ·bia sllnce in a hazard in that the same foreign players, but r
tournament; w.u eventually ,dis- . think we'll bave many of the tOp
qnalilied
.
stan."
· ·
The scramble also will be ·teleTile rainout also hurts the tour·
vised by ABC.
.
nament, whicb is losing its title
The rainout was the second sponsor. HGA oft'lclals wen: bopsince Houston became a PGA Tour ing to use this weekend's event to
sJOp in 1946. The 1966 Houston try to lure a new sponsor.
e\lent also was wiped out by rain
"We're still talking to !CVeral
and replayed later that year.
potential sponsors," Danien said
Last year's e~t was a 54-hole
"Obviously, we'~ diappointed, but
tournament after one ·round was 'you don't apologize for something
rained out
you can't control, and the weather '
' "The odd thing is when .we · is something we can't control.'' ' ·
changed io this date (three years
· Darden said ihe HGA would not
ago), we looked 'at a 20-year study know the financial impact until
and the weather actully was better after the October event
for this weekend," Darden said. ,
He said the October tournament
will be an. $800,000 event and
"many of the same players say

weekend)."
Fony,eight golfers will play a
three-man scramble for · tbe
$100,000, winner-take-all eVent at
the Tournament Players Course.
"With the rainout and
rescheduling ... the tour playc;rs
have generously supported the
Houston Golf Association by
agreeing to participate in a special
television event," said' HOA executive director Duke Butler. .
The toyrnament was to be
nationally televised (ABC) Satur·
day an~ Sunday .. On. Saturday,
· ABC w1ll show. h•$hltg~ts of '!le
198811AO and live mterytews w~lh
several players. Paul Atinger w11l
call the Colorado golf professional
who phoned the PGA Tour on a
rules infractions. he sa!' in the
Dorai:Ryder 91J1ln. Azinger, who

I

!Thomas... _c_on_ti_nu_ed_rro_m_c_-s_ _ _ _ _ __
CUppen 109, Supersonics 90
At Los Angeles, Olden Polynice
; scored 21 points and Ken Norman
; carne off lhe bench to add 20 ppints
' to lead the Los Angeles ClipjJers.

.

!Non-union
!umpires will
:start season
I

I

.

.

.

,

NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Negotia1lions between the major leagues
1and the umpires' union broke off
, Saturday ud the league presidents
:announced they are prepared to
1~ the ~ Monday with non.
. umon umJIICCS.
:. A joint statement is$ued by
·Amencan Leauge President Bobby
Brown and National Leauge Presi·
,4ent Bill White said talks ended
•:after 111 "UJIIIIX:elllllb ultimatwa:.'
l'aturday . morning by Richie
;~Dips. negotiator b the umpires.
' Phillips' ultimatum was riot
, .~n:vealed, ud he was not immedi::..Ciy available for commenL
,. . Phillips filed an unfai~ labor
.ptice charge Tuesday agamst the
•,AL and NL, claiming they' plan to
:';loCk out the umpires from working
:'legular season games if-no contract
:,agreement is reached The contract
-:between the Major Leauge
;-umpires Association and the major
:leagues expired Dec. 31.
the league presidents said the
•:umpires were offered a one-third
~:increase in .,gular season salary
vand $ 2~ percent increase in the
~post· season pool.
.
~
"We hope that bargaining can
~resume agam soon ana this unfor1.natue situation can be promptly
nsolvcd," said Robert Kheel,
•negotiaiOr for the majot leagues.
•: According to the leagues' state; ment, beginning umpires were
: offered $57,500 per year and senior
•'umpires $155,000. Under the old
::conbact, beJiinning umpires made
•:$41,000 and senior umpires
t•$105,000. The increase in the postf-season 1)001 would add up to anoth~:er $15,000 in salary.
,
: An umpire earning $117,000
;.under the old contract·would earn
' more than $170,000 under the new
::contract. the leazues • statement
•: said. The urn_Pires were .al59 offered
increase 10 the two-week vaca' tion during the season.
' The two sides met Thursday in
:. Pbi1adelpltia and FOO.Sy and Sat.ur: day in New Yort withouneachmg
· agreemeot. Phillips retomed to his
:•f Philadelphia
offace
after the Satur·
.
.
· • .day mommg
sess1on.
.·
: · The complaint Phillips filed·
•, Tuesday charged the leagues wlth•1 held the umpires• April wage
; installment payment. Kheel said
~ the payment was withheld 'because '
~ Phillips refused to promise 'the 60
•• unionized umpires would work
, opening day:
. I

Los Angeles, 29-45, won their
fifth-straight at home and sixth
time in their last seven outings to
maintain slim playoff hopes. Seatde,. 35-38, snapped a three-game
home win streak, losing their .thirdstraight on the road .
· ·Warriors 118, Suns 101
At Oakland, Chris Mullin
scored 27 points and the Golden
State Warriors broke a 10-game
dry spelfagainst the Phoenix Suns.
The Suns, who had .~on tO-straight
against Golden State dating back to
Jan. 19, 1989, were withoui swingman Dan Majerle (numbness in left
leg) and starting point guard Kevin
Johnson (pulled right hamstring).
Second leading scorer Tom Chambers left the game with back
spasms midway throught the first
quarter.

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Pe'e one kid.- one of his own. Pete· .
Rose was released Friday from a Rose II, 21; is trying to follow in
halfway house; but the tai-nished his father's footsteps to a major
baseball legend still must perform league career.
Just last weekend, the younger
three more months of court-ordered
community service and remain on Rose was traded from the Balli·
more Orioles farm system to-the
probation.
·
''I just want to get my life back ChiCago White Sox farm system.
on track," said Rose, who cele- The scouting report on Rose II is
that while he is a very slow runner,
brates his 50th birthday April 14.
Rose, baseball's career bit lead- he boasts a couple of his father's
er with 4,256, spent the past three characteristics - - a keen batting
months in a Cincinnati halfway eye and !!On-stop hustle.
While Rose II plays minor
house as part of his sentence for tax
league
baseball this spring. Rose
fraud. Before lhat, 11e was confmed
Sr.
will
continue teaching gymnasfive months in a prison. ·
tics
until
school is out in eatly
After a quarter,century living
the higlt life of a baseball star, June. Then. he will finish hiS ~­
prison and halfway house· life dated 1,000 hours of community
dropped Rose to the depths. In service at a Cincinnati boys club
prison, he was regularly strip- early this summer.
In mid-summer, Rose plans to
searched, worked as a welder and
painted fences for 11 cents an hour. move to ·Boca Raton, Aa., where
In the halfway house, he scrubbed his w.ife and younger children
sinks, emptied waste baskets and already are living. Rose, a native of
slept on a narrow steel-spring bed. Cincinnati who has already sold his
"It's going to be great to sleep Cincinnati hoine, plans to open a
in a comfortable bed tonight," restaurant in Aorida, where he can
Rose said as he left the halfway also play golf year-round.
Rose's incoine mainly comes
house for th.e last time.
But Rose· also said he's been from autograph shows - he schedelevated by: his court-imposed uled an appearance Friday night in
duties 9utside lhe halfway house- Birmingham, Ala;. - and from
teaching gymnastics ·to Cincinnati broadcast sports talk programs. He
school children in several inner- resumes a daily baseball commentary show on a CinciMati radio stacity elementary schools.
"I like working with kids," he tion Monday, the opening day of
said. "1 try to get them to bust their the season. Rose Said lle intends to
chops and have fun. 1 enjoy it It's watch the Cincinnati Reds' season
fun forme."
Rose is especially interested in

l)peDCr pn television.
Rose, who during his playing
and managing career delighted
reporters wit)J hours of non-stop,
free discourses, now severely limits
his comments to the press. The
embarrassment of slipping fro_J!I .
hero to convict has lllken its toll.

CENNAMO

ATYCNHtEY·AT~"

~ PoWt!"
~ ~tum
•••

·and Cuba have qualified for
Augull 't world youllliQC:Cel' finals
·~ in Ecuador. The teams advanced
.; followin,g ThursdiiY night's final
;. matches m the' CONCACAF Zone.
~ The United States and Mexico
' drew 1- t. Mexico finished ·with
five points to lead the group.
I,

'

'

KanluCity
Chie~ao

... 14 13 .5!9
..,•.. IS 14 · .517

10:35 p. m.

Baltim..O

..... 14 14

.SOO

Califomil
...... 12 '14
. ..... It ll
Oakland
Texu
....... tr 18
1 Milwauke8
... ll 20
TotenlO
....... 9 18
Dolmit
......... 8 21

.461
.#1
,379
.354
.333
.:rl.6

A.pril8 .;.... La&amp; AnJclcl at Vancouver,

. APrif 1,0 - Lol Anr;elcut Vancou·

vu, 10:3~.5
, .m.
'
.
1.-A- · 11- Vancouvch1 Lot An·
8""'• 1 :3s p.m.
.
1-April 14 ,...... 1...a1 AJ\aclCIIIl Van"'"""·~
J.·A - 0· · 16m:
- Vancouverat.Lo1An8ola. I : ~!p.m.'

. Nadonal League
.....16 9 .640·
Pit~
..... IS 11
.sn
St. Louio
...... IS 11
.sn
Atlanta

SmJ&gt;ioio
Sm Frmdloo
New YOlk

,

,·

....... 14 1l
.... 14 II

.

Moo-'

.560

.. IS 12

... 14 14
...14 11
12 16

.....
,,,,lt

"" c~
fbjled..Jphi•
S.P~ft4quad

-1~

'J1-, 8

1·Apri112-EdmtD"" "Cala"Y·

9:35p.m.

x-Apri114 - C.....,. otl!dmotttott,
8:0S p.m.
,

aame. c:ount In llandJnp.

9 : 3~ p.m.

NATIONAL
BASKETBALL
ASSOCIATION
Eutem Conrerence
Atlantic Dl•lsloo
1-B01tm

Loo Allaotco 4, California 2 Moo-'

.

l'ortland (AAA) vt. Mmn....,, Fort

My-. Flo., l2:05 p,n1.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
· . WElGHT CONTROL

....... .SS 19
y·Odloit
..........47 'l7
y·Milwaukee ......44 30
y-Atlamo
.......... 31 35
y·lndian• .......... 37 37
Cl...W.d ........ .'II 47
Chulatto
..........23 52

~va: H~,Kiaaimcc.

BOIIOil Yl. Baltimote, W~ahinp,
D.C., 1,35 p.m.
•

y·San ~tonio .....49 l4
y-Houston ...... ..48 2S

.671
.657

y·Utah
Orlando

.657
I
.361 22 l(l
.356
23
.277
26
.:157 30 1/2

301 Main Street

.

Dalla~ · ............ 26 41
Minn'"ota
.......23 50
D&lt;nveoc
.......... 19 lS

Pltbburaf'l w. New Jersey
(Serl• Uod I· I)
April3- New Jeney 3, Pittsburgh 1
AprilS - Piusburgh S, New Jersey 4
April1 - PiUiburah 1:1 New JmCy,
7:45p.m.
.
April 9 -Pittsburgh at New Jersey,
7:45p.m.
·
Aprilll - New Jmcy at Piusbwgtt,

y·P...W.d .........56 18
y-LAIAitm ...... 54 21
y-1'1tacnilt
........so 24
' y~oldCil Stlte ...... 39 35 '
Seattle
............ 35 3&amp;
LA Clippen ....... 29 45
Sacramento .. ..... 20 .52

U.U..oli7,VV~I03

ISert• llt&lt;ll-1)

Apri13 -NY Ranp 2. Wuhing·

llouotati26,Do.mori:W

1-April [5- Wuhington aL NY

1

April II

Sa.n Antonio at Minncaoi.a, 3:30p.m .
Seattle 1t Denver, ~.m .
Sacramrao at LA uippan. 9 p.m.
Phocnill.atLA LU•.10:30p.m.

J: -Aprill3 - 8011011 11 Hartfo~,

•'

7:35p.m.
ll·Aprill.S -Hard'ord nBoston,
7:35p.m.
.
Montreal .._ Buffalo
(Moolml leodllorl•l-4)
Apri13- M...-.17, Bul!a!o 5
·Aprils -M...-.tl,Bul!alo4
Apri17- M...-.1 ot Bul!alo, 7:05
p.m.
Apri19 - Monuea1 ot Bul!alo, 7,35
p.m.
,
ll-Aprilll -Buffalo at Montteal.

..•.•'
,,

"·

p.m.

AprilS - Sl. Louilat0ctroit,7 :35

p.m.

"•

8:35p.m.

):

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WIJI'O (AAA).
Toromo - Outrialncd wtfielder
Kenny Williaml to S)'!'IC\ISO of ln~.ema ­
tional Lcaaue (AAA).

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Thomu; waivoci guard JoT.l Lons.
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Cleveland - Placed fLfll bueman
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A Quqlity Manufactured
Window. All Vinyl 7/6"
Therr)"lopaneThermobreak.

PARKERSBURG, W.VA. 26101

BylJnlled Pnu lnlernatJHal
Bueball
Atl&gt;nt&gt; - S;p.l aotfioldet 01Willon 10 al1linor-leap cmlrlct and 11aipcd him to Richmond of the lntt:rna·

p.m.

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

AUTO
UPHOLSTERY &amp; RESTYLING CENTER ·

Friday Sports Transactions

-1-Jartford aLBorton, 7:3.5

Sports briefs-

CAIOLL SIO"DIN

· Cor- of 1IIW Alt. &amp; State St.
~ .. 011.
l'hone 446-42f0, Homt 446-4!11

ITAfl PAlM

A

unuaaNtl

•

scare farn1

CALL ME.

lnsut.ancc &lt;A,mJlanic:'\
ll•1mc Ottkc!'i: BlouminJ,~tun . lll inui:oo

ball.

"We just want to say 'thank
you • for dropping us back the
ball," Fried said. ''We are really
proud of those guys."

•''

•

Like a ~o&lt;lll neighbor, State Farm is Jhctc.

'

at OUca&amp;o, 3:30 p.m.

Portland at Dallu, 3:3"0 P."'-

a.....

SEASON•ALL
.

.

Philadel~

8011on .,.. Hutl'ord
IS,..l•llod 1-1)
Apnt3 - llu&lt;fOid 5.
2
April !S- 8o&amp;tat4 , Hartford 3
April7 -BOlten at Hanford, 7:35
p.m.
Aptil9 - Bost.on at Hu\1'ord,7:35

sent to the troops in Operation
Desert Storm.
They wrote their names and
address on the ball but never
thought they would see it again.
When it returned to Columbus, the
ball had messages from the troops
- "This foolhall has crossed the
Atlantic Ocean and has been used
in the wastes of Saudi Arabia.''
"Go Bucks,'' "HQ, 2nd Air
Assault BDE," "JOist Airborne
DiviSion, " and "Strike" also were
written on the ball.
,
The students hope to be able to
find the person who returned the

&lt;I

'

Sunday Games

CleYoland ll Ow-lotte, 2 p.m.

Adams Division

p.m.

.'

New JCI'IC)' at Milwa\lkeo, niaht.
Utah at HIWIDI'lo ni.Jht
,
Goldat State .t s.ctlmento,' night

•

r'O~ •••

Zvereva upsets
.
Novotna "'
tournament

Sahtrday Games

B""'"otOd.ondo,ni&amp;fo.
lnd1lnt • Adiata, nJiht.

Ra.ngen, 7;35 p.m.

Windows And Doors! ·

•

·

Doln&gt;it "New Y..t., niiiO-

Aprilll - Wuhingtcn at NY
Rqem, 7:3.5 p.m.
. x-Ailri113- NY Ranp at W~ahmstm.1:35p.m.
,

The Warmth
In .With·· Sea=~n~·A~t~r~~
Replacement

TOPS PUR SPECIALTY·

Goldr:rlSli.ta ttl, PhoorWL 101

ton. 7:35 p: m.

Let Us Help You Keep The Cold Out And

1310 OAKHURST ST.

LAIA1t•IOI,M;m.;l1
LA.Clit&gt;ocn 109, S.all !10

API!J1-NY Ransen at Wutii.na·
lea. 7!05 p.m.
April9 ~ NY Ranpn at Wuhing-

''.

35 ·

Dolmit 101, Minn01111 82
San Ant..no 110 Chicaao 107
Utoh 93,1lo11ao 11

NY RtniH'I va. Wuhlng;ton

======

.479 20 1!2
.391
Z1

Portland liS, Od.anda98
Cl...W.d 104, Owlate 101

boqh, 7:35p.m. ·

Point Pleasant

.756
.720 21/2
.676
6
..527
17

Friday Results

1-April13 -Piaab\qh at New Jcraey, 7:4S p.m.
1-ApriJ IS -New Jeney al Pitll·

''PeQple come to me
for good rates.••
they
formy .
Good
service.

COLUMB,US, Ohio (UPI) Three Ohio State University stu·
dents were surprised to find that
they the football they had mailed to
U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia last
December had ended up on the
doorstep of their apartment.
"No postage or anything - it
was just there wedged between the
screen door and the door," said
Adam Fried of Cleveland heights.
"Maybe whoever delivered the
ball'was goirig to slOp by and say hi
or. something and W\1 weren't
home," Frie!l said.
Fried and his nximmates -Andy
Gross of Lancaster and Tom Nigro
of South POrtland, Maine, said they
decided to send the football· to the
Middle East after hearing that
recreational equipment was being
collected in the Columbus area and

I

.:l78
x-dlnched dlvblon lllle
y-cllached plo)On berlh

hours before the actual race tinie.
always aiel.
·.
·.
And just like maDy able-bodied
In the 1989 N_ew YQrk C1ty
ease.
.
·
. , runners. Kaplowitz says sbe hits ~· Koplownz ~ herlelf
"I really believe the only real · the "wail" at about 21 miles.
11 .the ~ of a~ druf buy
difference with. me and mainstream
"That's when I allow every· gomg clf?wll m Harlem ud fe111118
America. is mauer of _pace and thing that's happened that dey- . for bet life. ·
Slride. I get things done, JUSI aliUie all the people, all the handshakes,
"It was like walking into tb.e
differently, a little slower.''
all the goodwill - I stop for that twiligbt zone. Wba1 got us 011t was
There could hardly be a disease one mqment and let it all in. And we met a man who bad done tbe
more incompatible with running that's what carries me for Jhe last marathon 10 years before and be
marathons than multiple sclerosis. five miles."
got us sale passage to a fast-food
The chronic and often disabling
Those final miles are covered restaurant.
neurological affliction "short cir- long after the. sun has set. Race
"He lite~y ne~otiated for ?UT
cuits" the central nervous system officials and thousands of specta· . safety. We walked mto somet!'iog
and strikes its viciims with often tors are gone and numerous crime- we were not supposed to walk mto. . .
overwhelming fatigue. ·
riddln blocks remain to be negoti- Everywm else that we had been
When Koplowitz began training ated.
before, our marathon numbers
for a marathon in January 1988 at
"There are times when we've counted for some!hing."
nge 40, she stfid;" l knew from the had flashlights looking fqr the blue
Because ~f the encount~r,
beginning it was what 1 was going line up in the Bronx an4 we've marathon off'tcials ~ _Koplowltz
to do. "
.
depended on lhe gang kids to get us to consuler not runmng m 1990 or
"I couldn't go farther than two from block to block," said taking . an . alternate route.
blockS. Gradually,) built myself up Kaplowitz, who has friends meet Koplo!vuz bristled.
.
.
to a half mile, lhen a mile and then up with her at various points. "The
_"People who are different 111
I did my first race. By the middle kids f.BSS us from one gang to the t~1s country are forced to run
. _ -"
· e!l'ough alternate routes in their
of August (1988), I had done a half . next •
marathon."
As she nears the fmish line the hves. So, I got a hold of the
MS also played havoc with overbead clock nowhere in sight, Guardian Angels (neighborhood
Koplowitz's balance.
. Kaplowitz said her friends have to · patrol group) and IIIey were abso''I took Afro-Brazilian dal)ce ''wake up the clock keeper 'and he lutely deligh~. ~~Y piqked '!'up
classes to get some of my rhythm
at the last 10 miles.
back. I took aikido classes, which
is a martial art, and that taught me
how to get up after a fall. And I
played pinball to establish · my
hand-eye coordination . These
things over a period of time
worked."
¥ter ~veraging 40 miles~ "!eek
dunng f1ve months of tr!IIIIJDg,
Kaplowitz takes her metal crutches .

Football is returned to
students from-Saudi Arabia

Pacific Dl•lslon

,1:3.5 p.m.

(FORMER WOOTEN'S LOUNGE LOCAnON)

---

...........48 2S
.......... 26 46

FlntRound
' (belt-al'·•n.)

·patrk:k Division

•

.

.743
.63.5
I
..59.5
11
.521 161/2
.lOO
18
.364
28
.306 32 1/2 .

WLPcLGB

NHL Playoff Schedule

(J04) 675·1675

Gil

pride in fini~hing last

''It's a way of reminding the world
we have a disease, we're nota dis-

WASIDNGTON (UP!) - For
the past three Novembers, ·zoe
Kaplowitz has taken longtr than
anyone to follow a blue line 26.2
miles long tJuouab New Yen City
in wbat bas .become one of the
world's premier marathons.
Her last-place times, ranaing
from 191tours and 15 minutes to 21
houi's and 35 minutes, are a source
of pride for the life-long New
Yorker who was diagnosed as having mllltiple sclerosis 15 years ago.
' 'I'm somewhere in Blooklyn
when the pack passes me and it's
always a thrill to see them go by,"
said Kaplowitz, a cheerful woman
· with a hearty laugl), wl)o begins the
race sev\lfal hours before the official starting gun goes off. "I've
been ~sed by some of the best.
"I m not In it for the lime. I do
il for the personal satisfaction."
This weekend, Kaplowitz and
. an estimated 250,000 other vic:tims
of multiple sclerosis will enter
races in 250 U.S. cities in the thirdannual Super Cities Walk. Distances range from 7 miles to 15 ·
miles. Last year's walk rais'Ca'$.14
million forMS research and treal·
ment
"I encourage everyone with MS
to come out and be visible," said
Kaplowitz, who was in Washington
promoting the event before return·
m~ to New York, wblll'e s!le ·will
jom about 8,000 other entrants.
to the New York City Marat~on
starting line at 6 a.m., nearly f1ve
·

Western Conrereoce
Midwest DIYision

Lol Anples VI. Califomil, Anaheim,
Colli., 4:05 p.m.
·
' OUland vt. San Fnncilco, San Fnn- .
cuco, 4:05 p.m.
.
San Dieao w . Seattle, Portland, Ote.,
10:3.5 p.m.
(ond W.lbiUoo .....,.)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

.130

y'Chica~o

Fla., I :OS p.m.
,
St. LciuJ. "'· Atllnll, l.Ooimlle. Ky.,
l :lOp.m.

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

......... 54 20

Central DIYislon

Cllrveland VI. Cincinnlti, Columbus,
. ~ 1.:05 ~- ttl·
.

'

1'&lt;1.

y-PIW.;deiphia ..... ..41 33 .554
.,
New Yc:D.• ....... JS 39 .473
19
Wubinat&lt;&gt;n ......:n 47 .364
:r1
New Jersey ....... 23 Sl · .311
31
MiAmi
...........22 53 .293 32r/2

at Atlanta, ppd.• rain

. AprU7

L

W

OO!udi,SonFnndlooO

AprilS - Wultinpn 3, NY
Jton&amp;eaO
·
•

WE'VE MOVED!
MAIN STREET
LIQUOR

:r:.trn~..-y

(All Thn.. EST)

N'ewY&lt;D(AL)l.Columbw: 1
CinciMili 1, D«roit i
Pitubtqlt 3, r .... o
C)ti&lt;aaa Al6, Minnea&lt;u 1
Cbicq;o (NL) 2, Milwaukee 1
S..alo 7, S.. Diq,a 2

FAMILY PRACTICE

~.

· ~-Aprill6-Edmce141'tnC.Jaay.

11

Toionto 3, StLouis 3, 6 innin&amp;l
Pbiladelptla 6, u......
HOUIIoo 7, IC.anu1City 3

•

lldm..,_, 9,35

April I 0 - Calpry 11 Edmortlon,
9:35p.m.

Friday Results .'

wltll
D. MCHAEI. MillEN

va.ldnlalltoa

Apriii-Calauy at
P"'·

aam• all;d 1ama qaJnst
non-mljor leaaue tum• ~o not. '
41

C&amp;lprJ

(F.dnt-ladl-1-t)
Apri14-Edrnoot&lt;la 3,Catpt,-l
April6-l!dman1at • CalauJ, 1:05

p.m.

.llS
.SOO
.483
.462
.45 1
.429
.407

.....12 14

. - Loolulgol..

.

.560

...... lS 16

Cbiaao

Denve_r. .

Tlie United Stalel, MexiCO

Apri16 - Vancouvc 11 Loll An plea.

10:35 p. m.

........ 16

HOIIIIQt

IO~ilraMayS

~ ..-:11 qlinll tJIIJ@Ily in

1

s

.600

.600

!2 .S71

.

·''

... 18 12

S..ule

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.

,667
,645·

.,.1S 10

a-land

Pt~~n~roy

ATYORNEY

Smytlte Division

ton I

briefs-

ul

. New Yc:d

...

.

'· Soccer
:· The South Korean Olympic ~ team defeated the U.S. national
~ team 2-1 in Pusan, South Korea.
,o Keun-1ae Lim scored twice for
~ South Karel. including the winner
~ two minutet after Peter Vermes
· bad tied the score in the .68th
• minute. Tbe IB8IDI Will meet again
~ Sllllday (San.. aigllt in U.S.) in
ream then will

~...

f

LOI Alllll- ... YIIICOUW'er
(Vancou ... ._......_ 1·1)
Apri14-Vaooouvor~LooAna""'

Pet.

W L
.. ..20 10
···---20 II

B01tm

POMIIOY, 992-2090

bm

r
~Sports

(AU 11m• KSI')

American Loaaue

3S6 S. High S~.,'~olu:e:ll~~t, 011.
LOCAL CONSULTATION
KNIGHT, ..UN LAW OFFICES,
In

.1.~1\pril
St. Louil atDet:roit,
8:05p.m.
.
1·AjrU16-D....tiutSLLouil,
I :JS p.m.

BJ UIIIOd ...... loUrnollonal

614-221 ..0881
LW~

J"-

MAJOR LEAGUE
ExmBmON STANDINGS

.BANKRUPTCY .

Rase released from halfway ho.use

UP AND OVER PASS - Indiaila Pacer center Rick SmitS nips
ball between tbe outst.retcbed arms of Washington's Jobn
Williams, left, and Haywood Workman, right, during Friday's
NBA action at Indianapolis.lndiana .won, 117,103. (UPI)

•te
I

'

HILTON HEAD, S.C. (UP!) Eighth seed Natalia Zvereva upset
No. 4 lana Novobla in straight sets
Friday to move into th~ semifmals
of the Family Circle Cup tennis
tournament.
Second seed Gabriela Sabatini
and No. 3 Aranllta Sanchez-Vicario
also won their quarterftnal match·
es, while rain suspended play in tbe
third set between top-seeded Marti·
na Navratilova and Leila Miskhi.
Zvereva, ranked lSth 'in the
world. pasted II« ttrSt win over an
opponent ranked in the Top 10
since early 1990. Novotna entered
the tournament ranked sixth on the
comr,uter.
• For me; I'm just amazed
because I haven't beaten any of the
top 10 players and !.didn't think I
would," the Soviet said. ' adding
that the slower clay courts have ·
given her an added measure of confidence in the toW'IIIIIDent
Zyereva jumped out to a 5-2
lead in the ftrst set before Novotna
.battled back to tie it 5-S. Novotna
broke Zvereva's'service to take a 65 lead. but Zvereva broke back in
the next game to force the tiebreaker. •
Zvereva broke Novotna's service in lhe seventh game of the second set to take a 4-3 lead and held
on for a 6-4 victory. Zvereva will
face the winner of the NavratilovaMeslchi match .
Meskhi surprised Navratilova
. by taking the first set 6-4, but
Navratilova carne back to take lhe
second set 6-2. ·
·

............-RON NAPPER
REGIONAL MANAGER FOR
_
PRECISION
IHOOTDfO EQIJJPMENT
.
. (PSE)
.

An ln·Store Bow Hunting/Archery Cliftic
on April •4th lrom lZ noon until sroo p.m.
Ron is a N.F.A.A. Certified Archery Master Instructor.
He will be showing the latest in high,Jech, high -performance
-Bows and Bow Hunting Equipment and
share his knowledge on
topics such as Bow Tune, Arrow Flight Problems, Broadhead Flight,
Etc.... Much More ... Plan To Be There...

will

. name in travel.

BasketbaU
.
The doctor who oversees the
NBA's drug.and alcohol rehabilitation program ordered Dallas Mavericks forward Roy Tarpley suspended indefinitely following his
latest arrest for driving while intoxicated. Tarpley has been und~r the
supervision of Dr. David Lew~ f(_lr
, the past three years and t~u ~s
, Tarpley's fourth suspens~on m htS
five years with the Mavencks.

(flAWAIIJ

... The New York Kni.cks sat
.guard Mark Jackson bas droppeil
his grievance with, the NBA Play·
ers Association ~garding the twogame suspension and_ fine he
received from the team tn Febru·
ary. 1acks011 reportedly !Ost
$43 ()()() in salary, but the Knicb
said, the loiS in pay was modified.
The Knicks made the announcement to refute_a publi~hed report
saying new team prestdent Dave
Checkell• bad JeSCiilded the fme.

Visit two of Hawaii's molt popular islands· Oahu
&amp; Maul. Oahu is home to Honolulu, Walkiki Boaclt
and Pearl Harbor. On Maul, enjoy the dazzlina
· suiiJets and beautiful beaches.

Two-Jsland Tou.r to

·oahu &amp; Maui
June 19-27, 1991 • Hosted by.Kelly Murphy

POINT PLEASANT STORE!

Umtrld SfJIJCI a-..ai/Qb/1.
Callor
AM

SUNDAY, APRIL·14, 12 NOON· 5 P.M.

310 SECOND AVE.

LDCATEDNIX\'TO IPIOH COUNTY PAIMIIIOUND8,.POINT PLIAIAHT, WV • PHONU75-2811

' 448-DIII

U WUIIIIIIfl'_,.

,,

.

. -·

,

�,
•
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleaunt, wv

!age CB . Sun,day nmes't.-sentinei

Lyne Center schedules ________.
RIO GRANDE - The activities •recreation
Saturday • 1-3 p.m., college
schedule for Lyoc Center is as follows:
recreation ·
·
Gymaaslum hourS
Sunday, Apri114 • 1-3 p.m.,
Sund!ly - 1-3 p.m., open recre- open ~reation; 6-~ p.m., college
ation; 6-8 p.m., collcge recreation
recreauon
Monday - 5:30-f p.m., college
Pool hours
recreation
Sunday- 1-3 p.m., open swim;
Tu~sday • 6-8 p.m., college
6-8 p.m., college swim
.
·
recrealion
Monday - 5:30-7 p.m., college
Wednesday - 5:30-7 p.m., colswim
·
lege recreation
Tuesday .-6-8 p.m:, college
· . Thursday· 5:30-7 p.m., college
recreation
·
swim
·
Wednesday - 5:30-7 p.m., colFriday • 5:30-7 p.m ., college
lege swim
. :l'bursday - 5:30-7 p.m., college
swtm

· Beebe ranks
'Edward J. Berklc'h, and Marcum. Others
in nation's top
"adoptinl'' a player this spring are: Dr. Michael
Moore, Mr. Mark A. Walker, Dr. Lawrence J , ·
20 in Ill event
Yodlowsld Dr. Daalell{. Whiteley, Dr. J, A.

SUPPORT RIO GRANDE BASEBALLERS
• Fourteen area businessmen and professionals
· • have adopted various members or the 1991 Uni,,' versity or Rio Grande baseball team. Three or
.. ' · the individuals are pictured above with Rio cocaptains Bob Young and Darrell Marcum and
Coach David Oglesby. Left to right are Frank
Cremeans, Young, .Bob Eastman, Oglesby, Dr.
~:·,

'

1

deL~erens,

'

?:$ampras, Rostagno advance to semis
.

H~ATHROW,

Fla. (UP!) been scheduled to meet MaliVai
The top seed had been unhaDJly
'.''Seco~ seed Pete Sampras and No . . Washing!OD in quarterfinal pair- . when he was called for a double4 Demck Rostagno won !heir quar- ing following the Agassi-Adams fault to go down love-40 in the
''!erfinal matches at the $225,000 match.
sixth game of the second set. He hit
'Prudential Securities Tennis ClasBut just as Andre Ajssi was a forehand long on the next point,
' sic, while Andre Agassi 's match . beginning to get a little ot under allowing Adams to even the score
·· 'was suspended by rain. ·
the collar, Mother Nat
cooled at 3- 3.
·
Pete Sampras defeated eighth him off. The 1989 Prudential · In the next game, Agassi was
·,seed David Pate 6-3, 6-3 to SCI up a champion had just wound down again triefly at odds with the chair
; semifUial encounter with Rostagno, from his second dispute with the after one Of his forehands was
-:_who ~ No. 6 Jimmy Arias, 6-1, · chair umpire when the rain halted called out, giving Adams a. 4-3
lead.
· ·
· ·
:64. Third-seeded Brad
Gilbert had play.
"
.
.,
•
'•.

a

.

~

GALLIPOLIS . • Kathleen
Beebe, daughter of Larry and
Sharon Beebe, has earned a spot In
. !he·nation's top 20 Division college runners following two recent
performances over El!st.
Miss Beebe ran In the Brooklyn
1/2 ma,athon in Brooklyn, N.Y.,
and placed first in the ·19 and under
age division with a 1:43:25 effort.
She also ran for Hunrer College
.of New York City in the Eastern
Collegiate Athletic Association
indoor track finals held at Bowdoin
College in Brunswick, Maine.
Beebe placed seventh in the SIC
with a arne or 18: 46.
.
The ECAC includes Division ill
colleges from Maine to Virginia

-~ Farm/ Business

'

· ~rlday - 5:30-7 p.m. , open ·
swiDI
.
· Saturday- 1-3 p.m., open swim •
Suoday, Aprll 14 • 1-3 p.l)l. ,
open swim ; 6-8 p.m., college swim •

,.,

,.

--

April 7, 1991

--------~---------·---------·----

.

•"

Stock Market slightlY
down-during past·week:
•

Home athletic events
Today - baseball tloubleheader
vs. Centtal Stale, I p.m.
MoDday - softball doubleheader
vs. Walsh, 1:30 p.m.
· .·
· Tuesday - baseball doublehead- •
er vs. Urbana, 1 p.m.
:
Saturday • baseball double- :
header vs. Tiffin, I p.m.

'

..

NEW YORK - The stock
w.hicb .waited all week for
the unemployment numbers, went
. up and down and finished Friday a
lit!Ie lower than where it started
Monday.
The market advanced strongly
Tuesday, but suffered offsetting
losses at the begiMing and end of
the week. The other two days the
market went nowhere, but with a
lot of activity.
The Do~ Jones industrial average declined.27.72 Friday to end
the week at 2896.78.. For the week,
· the Dow dropped 17.()8, or less
than I percent
·
Broader market indexes like the
New York Stock Exchange Composite index and Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index set records Thursday
before dropping Friday to post only
. marginal gains for the week. S&amp;P's
500- stock index rose 0.14 to
375.36 and the New York Stock
Exchange cOmposite index climbed
marke~

••

•
·I

l T~ree new emp,loyees Joi~ Turnpike st~.D.:.;t·.,
STEvE MCGHEE

RICK TOLUVER

'
GALLIPOLISTh.roe
; new emp~rrs have joined 'the
business
or Turnpike Ford in
Oallipolls, 8CCO!ding to John Sang,
·: owner and general manager of the
; dealenhip.
Rick Tolliver and Brian Ross
are two of the newest sales representatives for the company. Tolliv-

I.

We're rOllin&amp; out lhe sa..ioas on

jttditttl Section
•

rn

BRIAN ROSS

er, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., two years at Gene Johnson Chevro· worked for six year's at Ptlt Hill let before joining the crew at Turn.
. FOrd In Middleport before joining pike;
''Three
quality
folks
have joined
ihe staff of Turnpike. Ross, of
our
staff,
and
we'd
like
to invited
Point Pleasant, W.Va., previously
their
former
customers
and
friends
worked as an exte~.
to
come
and
visit
them
at
Turnpilc:e
Steve McGhee, of Gallipolis,
·. will become the new business man- anytime," Sang said.
· age{ at. Turnpike. McGhee spent

0.36 to finish out the week at selling.
. . .
205.66.
The market closed mixed in
Advances led declines 1,170- .heavy !tading Thursday. Some
772 an\ong the 2,207 NYSE issue.! · buying came from the hope the
traded during the week. Weekly Federal Reserve Board might cut
Big Board volume totaled interest rates and some. selling
930,269,360, compared with came from pogram tradiq.
7()1,719,620, the prior week and
On Friday, the government said
with 719,984,Q20 a year ago.
the unemployment rate jumped 0.5
The market opened with a big percentage point to 6.8 percent in
loss or 32 points in light trading Man:h. At firSt the market rallied,
Monday. Arlalysts blamed profit but then it swiftly sank.
taking and weakness in technology
"This was a treadmiU market,"
. issuesforthedeline.
•
· said Donald J. Wagner, vice presiBut Tuesday the market racked dent of Dain Bosworth Inc. in
up a 63-point gain, propelled by Omaha. "If you left Monday and
program. trading, falling interest came back Friday, you'd see there
rates and strength in retail stocks. was a lot of ttllding action but not
The rally was the biggest since much happened."
Feb. 11, when the market jumped
" The week was dominated by
71 points.
speculation 11bout the unemployAl!hougl! analysts though! the ment numbers ," said Hildegard
market was poised Wedneday for Zagorski, market analyst for Pruanother run at the 3,000 mark, the dential Securities Inc. in New
Dow feU 18 points in heavy trading York. "When ll:!.ey were released,
due to profit !alcing and ·program
Continued on D-8

_,

Owtns-Corninc pink FiberJLts' insulation
lilantic truckload We. When you dol
pink Fiberpi insulation, you•n mate your

cumfonablc

·

·

INSTANT REBATE

•

•

.

James A. Mullins, Tom Wiseman,

James E. Morrison, Dr. Gerald E. Vallee, Bob'
Evans and Dr. David Carman.

'

Aprll7, 1991

••
3 1' 101 z US" • 88.12 sq. ft .

•

-·

~

..

.·

$11.99
- 2.00

Instant Rebate

$9.99

NetCost
3 1130 ' z :13" • 1315.12 sq. ft.

PIES . EIT

•••

$19.49'
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..

TIM SLONE captured Grand CbampioD Galli&amp; Couuty Preview Heifer Class honors durlug the 1991 cattlemen's J!SSOCi!ltlon
show.

$17.49

Net Cost

..
' •
••
....,. _•

Op~.~ Ste~r, Heifer_Show .~i~~er_s named

6 1141 ' z liS" .,. 4~.96 aq. ft .

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~·

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81 ' 411 z 23"

'

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=75.07 sq. ft.

. $17.19
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' ---·

$15.19

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'

Judge for the event was Dr.
, By Edward M. Vollbora
rom Turner, Professor of Animal
County Eomslon Ageat, .
Science and General Livestock
Agriculture &amp; C.N.R.D•
Judging
Team Coach at The Ohio
GALLIPOLIS - The fJrSt annual
·State
Univ~y.
Oallia County Cattlemen's AssociOrand Champion Preview Steer
ation Preview Open Steer and
went
to Keni Andrews from RusHeifer Show was held recen!ly at
sellville,
Ohio. This honor carried
the Gallia County Junior Fairwith
it
a
leather
banner and a $600
grounds. Some 65 ·animals were
premiJpn.
Reserve
Champion went ,
entered from four states.
10 Shanna Warrington of Findlay, .
Ohio. Third overall went to Tavis
Shane of Fostoria, Ohio. Fourth
' .
•
overall went to Sonny Gaddis of
•
•. - GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Mount Gilead, Ohio.
• Bank of Gallipolis was among the
In the Oallia County Only Steer
Class
the top five places were: 1st
winners at this year's Buckeye
Jim
Baughman;
2nd Lori Atha;3rd
' Marketing Awards ceremony held
Jim
Baughman;
4th Adam Clatk;
' · at the conclusion of the Ohio
Bankers Marketing Conference . and 5th Jason Butler. The top three
in the Oallia County Only· Heifer
·, held recently in Columbus .
•
OVB was recognized for its' Class were: 1st Tim Slone; 2nd
KERRI ANDREWS, Russellville, Ohio, claimed Grand Cham·
1989 Annual Report in the print Bobby Crisenberry and 3rd Kevin
pion
Preview Steer honors during the 1991 cattlemen!s association
Maniri.
~;~~tegory, which featured the b1censhow.
The first annual Oallla County
• tennial of Gallipolis. The 'report
featured an 1814 map of Ohio on
Continued on D-8
the cover along with pictures of
different time periods during ,the
city's 200 year history. Gallipolis is
the third oldest permanent settle, ment in the Northwest Territory.
.
. . I " ,.,
The Buckeye Marketing Awards
.·
By Connie White
The form asks for a biographical
competition honors the creative and
GALLIPOLIS - br. Jack Bailes
Soil &amp; Water Conservationist
summary and specific details about
., effective use of bank marketing · has returned to his optometric prac- · - 'GAbLIPOLIS - One of the the nominee's farming operation,
' and public relations. Entries this tices at 110 Mechanic .Strcet in
many challenges faced by toda_y's conservation techniques, over!tll
year were a! an all time' high Pomeroy and 250 Second Avenue
farmer is to make a good livmg management plan and efforts to
according to commiuee chairman in Gallipolis after service on ~ctiye
from the land while protecting it educate others. The application
: - Judith Bardo of Piqua.
duty with the Air Force Reserves.
~
·
1da
deadline is May 1. Five area win·
ro~~~e~fworkJ~~eihe soil . ners will be featured in the Ohio
bl.
"a.rmer and will be recognized at
.
can malee I hIS va 1ua e resource "1h·e F·arm Scl·ence Reva·ew 1-n
.
more ·vulnerable to erosion by the
win and rain. To ensure that there September.
• •
will be fertile farmland and clean
One of' the five 3 rea finalists
waterways for years 10 come, Ohio wi,ll be selected ,as overall Ohio
•
fai:rpers are increasingly adopting winner and be entered m the
curities.
•
BySTANEVANS
methods which conserve soil ·and national awards program, sponEver since a landmark case in protect surrounding streams, lakes sored by the National Endowment
: ~
GALLIPOLIS - Why arc tax·
: free municipal securities of all kinds 1819, in which Chief Justice John and wetlands.
" . for Soil and Water Conserva_tion. .
· •tax,exempt? The reason is quite · Marshall oflhe Supreme Court ruled
for . the plaintiff in McColloch vs.
; -simple. The law
Maryland, !his doctrine of reciprocal
: .stemming
immunity has been upheld. In 188~ who are doing an exceptional job
•. from the U.S.
in Polloch vs.Fanners Loan and Trust
' Constitution and
CHICAGO (UPI) - Spring
Company and again in 1916, 1928, of protecting soil, water, wood' the Supreme
lands:
wildlife
and
other
resources
may
turn a young man's fancy 10
1937andin 1965, thisissueofimmu, Coon's interpreon
the
land
they
farm.
thoughts
of Jove, but it sometimes
nity of state and local securities from
; lations for more
.
has
another
effect on couples who
federal taxation was upheld in the
• than 160yearsThe
program
is
coordinated
by
·
own
their
own
home.
.; has specified that
Supreme Court.
the
Division
of
Soil
and
Water
More
often
than not the effect
: the federal government cannot tax
Conservation
of
the
Ohio
Departcan
be
classified
as ~pring CleanMoreover, in 1913, when !he
state and local· govemment securimen!
of
·
Natural
Resources
ing
and-or
Fix-up
Fever.
f~rst income tax law was passed.
• lies.
Congress
m!lde it clear that "mterest (ODNR), and sponsored by the . Ifyour home is lilt.e ours, the Jist
This law is based on weUof things that didn't get done dur·
upon obi!Jations of a stale, territory Ohio Farmer magazine.
1 knownjloctrineofconsti!Utionallaw
The
awatds
program
gives
cred)ng
the winter will easily fill a pag~
or
any
political
subdivision
thereofis
known as reciprocal immunity, which
it
to
!hose
fm:mers
.oo·
farm
famiof
a
notebook.
w~oUy
exempt
from
gross
inconle."
mc;ans that state and local govemlies
wllo
go
the
extra
mile
in
male:Things
you had planned tO ~o
The
IRS
has
upheld
this
ruling
ever
menrs cannot.tax the federalsovemin~
conservation
a
part
of
their
on
a
"cold
winter day " are still
since.
men~ and the fedelal government in
dwly
lives.
It
also
helps
to
spread
wailinf
for
that
:•cold winter day"
In
the
last
few
months,
demand
turn cannot tax state OF localsovemthe
conservation
message
to
other
of
wh
ch
there
never seem to be
1
for
tax.free
municipal
bonds
has
menrs. Wilen you buy U.S, governfarmers
and
!he
general
public.
enough
for
such
projects.
increased
due
10
'!he
fact
thai
many
ment b'C88ury bills••&amp;onds or notes
Application forms are available
I've often proposed that if it is a
individuals an: Iookina for ways 10
you cannot be taxed on thai interest
from
the
Oallia
SWCD
office
husband-wife
project, another hus·
lower
their
fedaal
income
tax
liabilincome by the llillll or local goverrl=
located
in
the
Spring
Valley
Plaza
·
band
and
wife
should do it. Neverity.'
' menL Lltewillc, Y!hen you buy the
or
from
the
Ohio
Farmer
magazine,
!heless,
my
wife
and I tear Into a
(Mr.
EY811811aalnvatmeat
: miJIIicipalsecwilies, you cannot be
1350
W.
Fifth
Ave.,
Columbus,
painting
or
wallpapering
job with
broker far Tile~ C•p811Jin
: wed by the ~ government or
Ita
Gallipolis
olllee.)
OH
43212.
fervor,
and·
maintain
that
tervor
Cot
: ·your intereat i!tcome from those se-

ovp wins award

Dr. Bailes resumes
practice in area

1

$10.41
- 2.00

'
••

·•

$15.40

Net Cost

Ed GHian

$17.40
- 2.00

-11-

Point Pleasant, wv

LORI ATHA earned Reserve Champinn Gallla County Steer :
Preview Class honors during the first cattlemen's associatio11
show.

Farm Flashes Gallia ·Cattlemen's Association Preview .

KRAFTFA~E

••

JIM BAUGHMAN claimed Grand Champion Ga111a County
Steer Pre.vtew ClaSII honors during the 1991 cattlemen's association show.
·
·

. . Money Ideas

•

h (!
Or
Nomlnatlons
Soug
t
• awar d
r.v!ltJOD

Conse

.

Municipal Bonds·

~9s~'~t£~~~:i?:~£t~rl~i~~

i

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-·---.

Growing flowers
By Wendell Tope ·
Earth Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - When we think
about growing flowers, the ones
Grandmother once grew were !he
most beautiful of all, so when uying .to remember the kinds they
were, .I can only remember the
perenmals.
. .
.·
. One such as delphmJUm which
she called 1&lt;\fkspurs, and there were
holly hocks, da1s~~s, chrysanthemums, flox, day hhc_s and numetous herb~ of all vaneu~..
Oro-:vmg perenmals IS perhaps
the eas1es1 of all nowers 10 grow
for they take the least car.e and
after
from th 0
· grow year
year
elr ~
} root system or seeds. The spec1es
of flowers are the most popular of
our garden P~!lts and .can be grown
somewhere m all lawns and .land
scoops. They can be used for years
as accent flowers, border plants,

at le8SI five m'inuteS.
Take wallpapering for instance.
After the pauem is selected, which
should take no more !han a couple
of ·months and visits to at least a
half-dozen stores, you're ready 10
begin the job,
Well, begin may be 100 strong a
word.
First you must assemble the
re~uireq materials and decide on
whtch side of the room to start, and
you choose a comer. That brings
up a rule of physics which says two
solid objeets cannot occupy the
same space at the same time.
Humans are solid objects, and
trying to fit both of us into the
same corner with a strip of wet
wallcovering is not the easiest
thins to do. While one of us stands
on a ladder and holds the driWin•
paper, the other tries to posiuon 1t.

'

,.,..~----·

background plants and cut flowers.
. ·Perennials colors range from de!icate pastel blues, whites, lavenders
to deep solid colors in violet, indi·
go and mild red.
· The perennials have some spc·
. cifie cultural requirements~ They
arc acceptable to Ohio's climat~.
Perennml s . s h~uld be. planted m
loos~. well dramcd SOJI and dlfecl
sunlight for opumum nowermg.
The ph of t~e soli ~hould be close
to neutral •. 1f !101 hme should be
added to br:ang 11 to near (7.0).
'Dei'Cn,dmg on !he. type nowers
there 1s usually an abundance of
blossoms from .June thro.ugh
s te be MOST t ypes Prod
· ep m r.
• uce
t~o separate crops of flowers 1f
~1ven proper care. The garland
arkspur are the most popular. They
are the most hardy and are used for
Continued on. D-8

It's clean-up. ,. . ,.fiix-un
time
1'

a

~

BOBBY CRISENBERRY won Reserve Gallla County Heir«
Preview ·Class honors during the recent cattlemen's association
sbow at the Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds.

' .

on the wall.
Eventually, the effort succeeds
the first strip has auached itself and
the air bubbleS· have been worked
out. We step back to survey our
handiwork and give two thumbs
up, thinking, " Hey, it wasn't really
that difficult or frustrating after ·
all."

·

The second strip goes up much
easier, and the third and the founh
and soon.
If you can get past that rtrS! one
without killing each other, you're
on ·your way. Not only have you
saved moner by doing it yourself,
but you wil learn 10me lessons in
cooperation and suppression of
frustration.
Well, I goua run. I believe it's
.warm enoush to sit on the deck and
think, just think, about our next ·
project.

�.Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Poln~ Plea~ant, wv

.Page-02-sunday Times-Sentinel

.

April 7I 1991

.

.

:Sen. Tower dead in crash
•

'

'

' BRUNSWICK:, Ga. (UPI) way at the jetpon. Glynn County
Fedml investigaUXS anivcd Satur· .Police Cbief Carl Alexander said
day on the scene of an airplane . there were 110 survivors.
.
A mor~ was set up a nearby
crash lhat tilled former Texas Sen.
-!ohn Tower and 22 olher people, elemcnla!y IChoolllld investipacn
:One of ·them an ,astronaut, Friday from tbe FAA and tbe Nation•!
.neat Glynco Jetport
·
Trllfllc Safety Board were en route.
The probers from !he National . In lAJs Angeles, President Bush
~ransportation. Safety Board bepn called Tower's death "a tragic
[their inquiry into the crash of a loas."
'twin-engine commuter plane as
"I slaited with Joh11 Tower in
:oflicil!Js used a nearby elementary politics in Texas 30 years ago "
schoOl as a morgue for the victims, Bush said, •'and ·we became friends
:which also included One of Tower's then and we remain friends until
)laughters.
this vezy moment It's vezy sad."
' Glynn County officials did not
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., who
· ireleased the names of those killed succ6cde4 Tower is Senate Armed
:in the Atlantic Southeast Airlines Services Coflllllittee chairman 111c1
'crash Friday, but NASA officials at led the fJght against his nonrinatio11
:the Johnson Space Center in Hous· as defense secretary, said he was
· :ton said the victims also iilcluded "deeply saddened." Nunn was the
·astr0118Ul Sonny Carter.
·
rarget of criticism from Tower in a
~ · Tower, 65, a Republican sena10r . new autobiography.
"for 24 years whose nomination as
"America has lost a {'lltriOt,"
-defense secretary was defeated in Nunn said in a swement m Wash1989 am~d controversy over his ingiOn. "Senator Tower's Jove of
pmOOal hfe, was Q"aveling with his · country and belief in a strong
daughter, Marian, ,35, en route to national defense characterized his
SCI! Islalld. Ga.,. for a pany for his many ,years (If distinguished oublic
~~'boodk,Po"li~u~..A Per· service. ... He fought for fl:eedom
'!"'"".an
.
Mem01r.
and worked diligently to make the
Hts ~eath came only one day world more secure."
after ht~ former colleag_ue, ~en.
In a message to the space shilllle
1ohl! ~CIIIZ, R·Pa., ~as ltilled m a Atlantis, which was launched earli·
co~ISwn between ~s plane, and a er in the day, NASA's mission con·
helicopter
over, a Philadelphia sub- ttol said• "It is with deepest re.,..t
urb
.... . c'
that we ... must let you know that .
Mananne as~ano, a Federal astronaut Sonny Carter died today
Aviation
Adminimation in the crash of a commuter aircraft
spokeswoman in Atlanta, said 20 .., We are all gieatly saddened. We
passengefS and a crew of three will miss Sonny."
were on ASA Flil!ht 2311, a twin·
. The president said Carter, 43,
engine turboprop headed from Warner Robins, Ga., who flew
Atlanta to Brun"swick. Atlantic aboard the shuttle Discovery in
Southeast is a commuter carrier 1989, "served the nation well imd
afftliated with Della Air Lines.
his ex~erience will be sorely
The plane crashed and burned missed. ' about 2:50 p.m. in a wooded airpurt
Jeanne Johnson, a spnktswornan
about 2 to 3 miles short of a run· for Tower's office in Dallas, said

·'
I

l

April 7, 1991

..

'

Wblte House cabinet meeting with President
Bush. Tower was tben Secretan' of Defense-designate. (UPI)

•
Classi 18

Frank Manning, a private pilot,
flew over the scene JUSt after the
crash.
.
"It didn't tear any trees down at
all," he said. "It went sttaight in."

'

•·

Ncrtlae Ito Mroby ,....., th-'
1M underlitJMd flt.d In
C.• No. 11,11111 ..,pllco·
tlon Ill 1M Common Plell

You'll Come Up Aces With

PUBLIC AUCTION
Ncrtla~ lo hereby given by
tho Boord of Educotlon Of
Oollll County Locol School
Dlotrlct thot llld Bowd of
Ed-tlon on May 4. 1811.
It 10:00 o.m., wdl offor 11
public ouctlan, 11 tho old
'
Bldweii·Portor Elo-ory f----~-----4---...,.;
Sc,h09l, on Route #11114.
wut of Route #180, Porter,
Ohio, miiCIIIIn.Ouo ltamo
8
Public Sale
not IMibll by tho dlotrlat.
Tenno of tho 1111 ore ceoh
&amp;Auction
end tho Board hereby ,..
11rv11 tho right to rljeat any

·The Classifieds

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - .The Court. Probate Dlvlolon of
City Council, paving the way for 011111 .County, O!llo. for on
Chief Daryl GaleS• return, voted to ....., to ch•- 1111 no- to
w.ugh.
goro court to light the Police ComSaid opplfcatiOn · will be
miasion 's decision to temporarily hoord In Mid Court, II 10:00
relieve him in light of the Rodney A.M.. ontholthdeyof Moy,
It 1M Oolllo County
King beating.
.
. 1911,
Prwt.te
loculi St.,
The ~oo by the council Friday Ollllpollo,Caurt.
Ohio 411131.
means Gates could be back at the
HAROLD LEE STARKEV
or Ill bldo.
helm of the 8,3QO.member police APRIL 7. 1a91
,FARM AND HOUSEHOLD AUCTION
Boord of Education
forte by Mooday.
firm
Machinery and Household Items: Havinc sold
of tho Oollll County
The council, after a four-hour 1 cant or Thanka
firm
Mill
to his new home. Keith Bolin has decided
Locol Scllool Dlotrlct.
cJoaed..door meeting, voted 10.3 to
Jewell Saunclaro, Tr11oure&lt;
to liquidlte most of his farm equipment and many
MAR. 31;
have the city aaomey aeet a SupeDuri111 the illness of APR.
household items.
.
7, 14, 21, 28
rior Coun order compeUins the
our loved one we thank
. Saturday, ,April 13, 1991 at 10:00 A.M.
Police Commiasion to rescind its
those who stayed with
DIRECTIONS: From Athtnsluve Rt. 33 Soulht1sl (lorri•
action removins Gates.
son Brown Hill on Co. Rd. 21 &amp;ao to Co. Rd.l9 on to Co.
him at th~ hospilll.
2
In
In talting its action, the CQIMiis· ·
, .Rd. 69tor I mi eon riallt From Albany. takt 681 South to
In the midst of o.ilr
C0. Rd. 69 (Old Cot's Store). continuinc 5 'miles on left.
sion violated the state's open meet·
sorrow at her daath we
IN MEMORY OF
i!lg law and left die city vulnerable
EQUIPMENT: Allis Cllalme;s HD 5 track loader, 1982 Chev. Cita·
wish to express .our
CURTIS JONES
to a lawsuit by Gales.
_
tion
w/89,000 miles, Cockshut tractor w/3 pt. hrtdl arllj ltve .
thanks and appreciation
Who Left Us
As Jlll!l of its plan 10 counter the
power,
2-two bottom plows- I·3 pt. &amp; I pul type; catle load·
to • ttl1tives, friends,
April 4, 1984
ing shute on wheels, 2 rUN corn planter, Fergusoo cuHivat~n, 2·
. COI1UII1S8ion, .the counc:il in·-~....... to
Pastor James Pltterson
wheel trailer, gravity wagon bed, heavy duty lann wagon, ma·
He left us but we
ask Gales to sign a release waiving
•nd
nellfibors
for
the
nure spreader, 3 pt. scoop, 3 pt. 12" post hole augel, gqin·hay
remember
so
often
h~ rights to sue the city over bis
kindness
and
sympathy
elevator,
3pt. 6' blade, pipe frame dune buggy, gas power water
temporary leave.
of that sad dey. We
pump, space heater, tire changer, 36" Fold riding mower, 200
they
have
shown
us.
For
' ' It sends a message that the
, had to say
bales of hay, lms &amp;lms of hand tools'.
·
the prayers, food, flowCity Council did not~ with die
goodbye. but we
·
MOTORCYCLES
including
Honda
XL
100,
Honda CX 500, &amp;
tiS, visits and e~rds.
Police Commission s action,"
Honda 125.
·
·
have
not·
forgotten
Also to lcCoy Moore
' Council President John Ferraro said
HOUSEHOLD &amp; ANTIQUE ITEMS: Good Maytag wringer
him.
Fune111
Home.
Dr.
Ar·
washer,
sew1ng machine mcabmet, stereo, Hoover sweeper,
after ~e vote. "Ther acted irre·
Sadly missed by
nold Sittler. nursina·
B&amp;W TV, Tappan microwave. fans, antiQue pie cupboard,
.. !fODStbly. They besmircbed a pubsona &amp;. daughter.
flalwall cupboard (no doors), chifferobe, . hand st~ched
staff 4th floor East. CCU
he servant who workecl. 42 years
•
GATES SPEAKS - Emballled Los Angeles Pollee Cblef
mother &amp;. father,
Quilts, nice pressback rocker, rug loom, glass front cabmet,
and
Clark
Chapel
, Daryl·Gatti II belelsecl by reporten aa be emergtt from speelal · with the city of Los An,e1es with
brothn,
alistwa,
corn sheller, com jobber, and the list goes on,
8n impeccable record. ••
Church.
•
• cloled-door tntetlng of tile clvlllao PoUc:e CommilsiOD after lie was
Colle Early &amp; Look A1011nd.
of friends
·placed on ao Involuntary leave, (l:IPI)'
·
Neither Gatel nor his attorney
The family of Mervin
Refrtslllnents Available
were available for comment
.
· (~horty) L Erwin
Not Responsible for Accidents
In Memory Of Our
TERMS: Cash or Positive 1.0.
In a separate action, the COUncil
voted 9-4 to give the Police ComParenti, KATIE WIL·
. AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY
;. .TOLEDO (UPI) - The Ohio Dana Tomes, Marshall.
miasion $150,000 10 continue its
SON. AprH 22. 1971
The family of Mar614-698-72311ate evenincs - 594-3780 days
and
HOWARO WILUniversity newspaper, The Post,
Feat.u re writiaa - Lynette investigation of departmental operable Haffelt would
SON, April 12, 193&amp;
ations and policies.
~as named tl!e·best all-around stU· · Kalsnes; Michipn State Universi·
like
to express our
Nora Jordan. Ada
dent newspaper Saturday by ty; Anderson Jones m. Ohio Uni·
That )lrobe, as well as six others
appreciation
to
the
Eeoterde
, Vln81 Lee
Region 4 of the Society of Profes· versity, Mat Kelley, Kent State by various localllld federal agenfriends,
neighbors
University. ·
.
ctes, was prornpled by the March 3
~ional Journalists, while a former
and relatives for the
Sports writiDg -Jeff fletcher, · videotaped beating of King.
Gallipolis · Daily Tribune intern
SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 199.1
l.n
Loving
Memory
Of
l:aptured a writing award.
OU; Adam Benson UM, Robert
, The 2S·year-old parolee was left
flowers, food, cards,
DOVLE .T. HUDSON
wtth numerous skull fractures and • telephone calls and
• The Post won the ·Mark of Fouch, Marshall.
Who·palled away
Duf to health lr: Dill is h.avinc' his sheds &amp; house
Bell DOD-daily newspaper other injuries after he was struck
.Excellence Award given to college
memorial
donations
one
yeer
ego
April
9,
clelned
out so Will sell his collection at fileics Co.
'ttudents in Ohio, Michigan, West The Collegian. University of Tole- more than· SO times with batonl by
1990.
fllilfound.
So thtN will be plenty of parltinc.llli St. I
we received d!l"ing
Virginia and wesrem Pennsylvania. do; The Parthenon, Marshall; The, a .~ of offteen after a brief pur.
Itt.
33
N.
of
Pomeroy, Ohio.
the departure of our · It has been one long
swt inJhe San Fernando Valley.
J&gt;ost Associate Editor Michael J. Guardian&gt; Wright Stile University.
ANTIQUE
OR
COLLECTOR'
S ITEMS: Quilts, p1e ~ale, straighl
year alnce God
Mapzlne, non-Rctlon article
Four offteers are awaiting trial
~hearer, a Tribune intern in 1989,
beloved • father and
.
razor
·
Wade
&amp;
Butcher
Sheffield;
iron kettle , Wagner Pat.
called you home.
was recognized for editorial writ- - Jennifer Aylsworth, KSU; ' on assault charges in connection
husband.
Feb.
18,
1902;
kettle
&amp;
stand,
ox
yokes.
apple buller stirrer,
Not a day ha1 gone
log.
.
Robin L. Daugherty, KSU; Joan with the case.
dinner
bell,
bell,
yokes,
cheese
boxes,
Oilers,
school desks,
A
special
thanks
by without you In
"There are two issues here: One
: Also cited as best in their f~elcls Smith, KSU.
cupboard,
child
s
wagon,
1ron
skillets,
1ron
tea
kettle, milk
my thoughta. All the
to the friends who
Best all-around 11111a:dne is that even Daryl Gates is entitled
cans, "!Ilk bottles, cream separator. buggy heaters. paper
were the University of Toledo's
joy end love you
roller, f1ddles.
~·-•
to due process," Councilman Zev . assisted iri the meJ'he Collegian as the best non-daily · The Burr, KSU, S....,..,. wUSuiiiGU,
1h1red
with me ere ·
TRACTORS
~ OC.: VAC Case tractor w/side mounted
· Yaroslavsky said. "By the same
Jlewspaper, and The Burr, Kent University of Detroit-Mercy.
morial service, in
now mamory,
mower, walkmg plow, Little G1anl corn sheller radialor lor
.State University's magazine.
Spot aewa pllotosraplly _
token, we have lost sight of the fact
the home and to the
Farman M.
'
treaeured 10 deer.
·: The journalist organization held Michael Kennedy, Maishall; Iini that there is a controveny swirling
Wocids
Funeral
GUNS: Miss. Anns Co. Olimpee Fal~ 12 ga., Savagearmsmodel
dear,
we
One
day,
its regional convention in Toledo Criswell, Ohio State University; ~round this depanment and city and
65M:22 Wm. magnum RF. only w/Weaver scope; The Marl1ri F1·
will meet again .
Home for their help
.a.tring the weekend.
Patrick Schneider, Maraball. Horl· we have got to get 10 the bOttom of
reanns Co Model 989 M2 • cal. 22 l.R.: H. R1chaids New York ·
Whit
a
wonderful
and words of com·
: ''The quality of the entries was orable mention, Jon Hancoc:k, Mar· it."
·
· ·
·
Pat Feb. 8 &amp; Mar. J3, 1881.10. ga.H2266; OJ. Mossburg&amp;Sons
that"wll
be.
day
· ·
·City Attorney James Hahn said
fort in our time of
gucstanding and we coogratulate all shalL
Inc. 151 Mlbl22 LR only; Raven Anns Model P-25 cal. 25 auto.
Sadly mlaaed by
·
N!49450:
Ivy Johnson's Viking 67 22 gal. HA4659.
Feat11re . pbotograplly ' _ · Gates llld his attorney have indicat..1tudents who entered the competi·
sorrow.
Wife, Nadine
MISC. Lots of hand tools (shovels, rakes, sickles. ,scythes,
Jion," said Ray Marcano, director Criswell, OSU; Jeff Wilson, OU; · ed they will agree with the counPitchforks, handsaws, hammers &amp; etc.(, ladders, log chains,
Terrl" Cavoli, KSV; honorable
cil' s pl_an. _Both sides will he in
:y f the region.
wheelbarrow,
wheelbarrow beds, lawncart, Lawn Boy
• The winners will now compete
3 Announcements
lion, Michael Kennedy, Marshall.
ICCking an otdct for
mower, truck toolbox, metal building. Craltman rotollller.
ijor a national award given by the
Burnside wood or coal stove, kerosene heater storm doors
Hahn said it is likely a judge
'Jociety of Professional Journalists, . Sports pbotosrapiiJ- Jon
electric
mot~rs, . rims . tires, hubcaps, tra1ler toonge, electric
:lhe country's oldest and largest Hancock, Marshall; Todd Burns, will ape to the deaf berweCn the
wrench,
p1pe VICe, t1re .changer, dolleys, chain saws, reel
• J
Marshall, and Patrick Schneider, council and Gates. Ooc:e.that h8p.
)ISOCiatioo of joumalists.
mower~ porch sw1ngs, wmd chim.es, wr~nger washers, metal
ou.
pens, Hahn said, die Police Comlawn &amp; loldmg wooden cha~rs, camp cot,. fishing poles
• Tile winners are:
Televisioa
feature
Lisa
miaaioo IIIUilllill ,vow: ora whether
books, recoids, record player, picture frames treadmill 3
., Edltarlal writing - Michael J.
Kick,
OU;
'Larry
A.
Frurn
Jr.
and
ID
1Ccept the court orc1er and only · .
wheel
&amp; 2 wheel bicycles, White. Mountain ice cream feerer
J1he1Rr, Obio University; Doug
&amp; lots more too numer~us to mention.
.
Randy Comm, ManhaiJ; Mmhal1.
t11en can Gates JeiUI1I 10 work. If
University of Detroit; Robert Detroit-Mercy;
Radio feaho'e
University
.
o
f
th
·
·
f"
Come one. come
hw
lool~n1 f'or
Kick, OU; Jeff Uss
e commtuton optS to tght on,
b, Marrblll Unive11ity.
OWNER:
;:, llelllll-aroand newspaper and Dave LogsdOn, Marshall.
~~~~to COUtt on
Allen E. Dill Sr.
'.!'he Po.tl, Ohio University.
R1dlo sport Dt'l'a - Diana
The ciecilion to place Gates 011
Cash
;:. CollliiiD w1 ldlti - Chris Rice,
Marshilll; Many Leach, Mar· an involuntary leave ·incensed the
Refreshments
Manhall Uniwnity; Blair Lovern,
In-depth rec-, _ Jennifer council; with il majority of its
Posltlre I.D.
Ohio University; Doug Jones, Uni•
·
•-......
ws
.....
menaben
denouncing
Mayor
Tom
~ofDetmiL
J. Bou, Msu.
,..,..., .,,.. Bradley IIIII his Police Commission
' DAN SMITH
~ SJIC)t HW1 - Pit Sanders, Mar· · Btad Williamson, Mlnhall; Brent
iiii4J(iiiMwa for baati1 removin the
:thalf; Chris Stadelman, Marshall; Ang1.in and Steph_anle Ray, Mar· chlefliom offic:e. y
Auctioneer
g
1
lamea (JICk) Bailey. Mlnblll.
Ohio *57-61-1344
shall
'I1Ie ICtion lllo 11l1ired the UIU8!·
I•-clep&amp;l npord., - Adam
W. Va.l515
Tribune Jenerll assi-nment 1y divided ""''l'il inll ,. n-q~'ll
JICIIIOII, UidYiftity f1l Mieblgan; reporter Melinda Powers 11 a for. . the mayor'• poW« 11111 tbe authori·
614·949·2033
'1Jie (OU) Poll; PAT Sanden ~~~~ . mer campus staff reporter for the 1y of tbe,canmillion, ICIIinJ up an
. "Not Rtspoftalble for
•
Ohio University Post. .
·
extraor4inarY power play
I

"""'ld ....

____

I

•

'

Per.son•l !'fOperty of thllall

.

• 1

·

==

Examine our
"two-step" mortgage
before you buy.

.•

' .
)
'

\&gt;

--

to...,, -

Mr. and •rs. Van ·

Employmrnt ')crvJCPS

.

~

Help Wanted

11

Alj.~MEER:

r ,

IDIIIH IOCIIIIpola In Cbo•pl.on.DriJIIILThoOIIToSIIII Folr
IIMI '"llf 101111 CIHIIIIJ'IJit lh!IWI. It lptcilllit In loon. ·

....,.UII'IacL IGIIId•tmtlll*d pjp IIIII ...... cot-out
IIIli tltt....-of lltla•

·ll,.lft

.. 'e:Cf"'*='.•, . '=Z'ftl:
..........
f:,tt"=,.....

-rill

EXT 1122.

-~~~

w-..-3-· .

Sorvlco for oorvlco
lnci"*Y. 111111 be In 1711 ••·
· ~
ner, EOE.
Sindt...,hono
.reauml 1Dman-.
Bpx
P3 ..,. ol Point Ploo..,t Roglo..,, 200 Ueln St. Point Pleau"t,

WY:IUIO.

AIION I ,All

A-1

I Shlrtoy

........ 30W'/IIo1421.

.

C:..ory Solw PIOtllo Wontod.
I!IJ!rlonoo
Cal 114...
4tt41WcDI~14 for lntorvloW oppolnt·

p,.-.

-·

c

EARN _ . . . , PER WUK
PU!'WHl lOOKS AT HOME.
CALL l-e!H73-lll40 EXT. 81111.
~rlenoed uln people wantod. 114-!112·11140•

lnotruotor·Sout-torn CAc Is
now ecceptlng :l"lle~~tlone for
highly mollvot
po.....,. to
tuch liVIng, economiMI and
'"'_ploymenf
1klll1
to
"TIIANSISITIONS Progrom Po,.
tlolpilt11". Mull hovo ~ yoor
baihtor degrH, low level of
written
1M
oral
com-m..-lonl oldie, good or·

Qlfl!lltlonol oldlto, 1011

HOUSEHOLD I -.c:EUANEOUS: Mliqlle 1---. old

rnahogln;

kitchen cttblne~- ahlllatoba,
21iair 'llble, lable
I lour chUa, two Ice ct11111 chUa, old baby buggy, Bolton
roc:loa-, oak drop leal table, two maple bedl; lllld&lt; and while
Til, collee table, Clhah, Iron bado, lqur drawir metal file
cab1na1. metal bado, MWWig inac:hlna. 314 btd. 19:000 BTU
gas heater, aodus, old stone jars. gla~. laney pony
sadde; iamps, books, picture tramea, iSJta.ol,plc;turai, lnano,
canning jare, aeveral new meat pii!Wt, ..,_e, movie
projector and 1C1118n, cream..,,. ..,., lowtt'chaire, 1980
model fofd rear window. pluo mudl men.. .: . , . ·

AUCTION CONDuCftiD.BY

RICI Pllllllll
·- .

dlo-

ca.

toil 0811 for oDDOinlmont, 3041n E.O.I. •••••·

IIITELLIGENCE

boor-.

us

J088.

All

~ IlEA,

Nlaftt(U4)'WI-2515
o., (6141991·5347

.:lldy"Swint fMIII, Jo,r .DNibfeh tl
(6l4)

114-4~47

'

'

·PUB·UC AUCTtON

Saturday.. -4or.t• 13. l'9$t•. to:ao AM
··• 't ,;

.!' loCition:
'600 Block First Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio· 45631.
Dae to remodtliri&amp; and l!Pdtitllll. the followilll will
be sold:
·
·
Sollie- oak ..cUitneb. :t anhque free-standing book shelves
!!/adjustable shelves,"3 corner book shelves, metal double
faced boO~ shelf, 71dlll brown storage building. oak over·
hea~kllllhen ~abinet. desk, several.bulletin boards, appro11·
matl!y 20 'Setrelarial thaws, work ar.ea desk. computer ta·
l\le, one larp lot.ol~ an.d·8'counter IQPS.wooden t'lpewnter
stan4 exlrYnicnftlc.e'desk W~ltyping stand Oched, $everal
ma~ilu!'bolders, 8 plex·ilass:doors w/oak fpme &amp;locks,
one .1ol1.of usf!(l carpet, cjlaUo se~ ,(ilntKiozed aluminum
w/IJiassifQP,I.a~d'wnbrella, children's tabl~ and chairs, and
othe~ miscellaneous items.
l£11t.4:ASH
:.,.
Sele bJ Request of
Samuel L losurtllemorlal Library
· Boanl "' Trusteu

-• Lee Johnson
. ' AUCliONEU
·Crown: Cfty, Ohio·

7'13-5785

MASON,WV

ota. Hiring. Colt II) 105112- Ell. K-~N.

llcl S111'r

JGmrOutllel\ Doa,81.1R
(1141 U&amp;-UI5

LOCATED ON BEALE SCHOOL ROAD, 112 IILE
OFF fiT. 21t GALUPOi:Js·R~WV~
WATCH FOR SIQNS.
SELUNG THE PERSONAL PROPI8.1J OF :ni.E
LATE SADIE HENRY. ' ·

OI!!IInod ond creltlvo. WInto,_
~•

·~FOR

11:00 A.M.
THURSDAY,
....,..
.... .

llorllyn

-'1111

!&amp;.!i:4~.::=..
MOBEt.QRYAJIO,..;O..TACT:-

~Jho'::. P=~
735-81117
All

·==?:·.

·'

to ordor. Fot Info. 1
AVOI( •

MERLIN WQQQFROFF .

,.
'II ........,ucld Nveralo•rd winllinc cii$J1iPtUt ltlvo

Nol

' c.h or Cfioclc wilh ll. . .
TERMS:
Not Roapon&amp;ibll For Aaidtntl or Lou Oli'Nt*\1. ,
l.lconlld &amp; 8antlod in Ohio, KllltUCitJ,Ind Wilt Vlrtltitt&amp;

PJIOnl 256-6740

llol Responsible
. ' fOF 'Accl.dents ot Loss of Property

•
'

• Reel Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

full lim• auctlonH.r, complltt ....__ _ _ _....;_.;...~--------...1
auction Hrvlce. LlcenMCI OhkJ,
W.., Vlrglnlo, 304-J'73.87815,

Wodomoror'o ·Auction s.r.tco, ....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
f!lo
Grondo, Ohio 114-241-1112.

6

PUBLIC SALE

10:00 A.l., SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1991

Lost &amp; Found

$100 .REWARD
For Lost Dog .
' Woultl .oppreciafe in·
formation. Nc.nt it

.NIIIO. Fllllllle Mala·
mule, silww !P'DY color,
yeJIOWI eJIS, Ytry shy,
not ill t1111pBIII.
Weighs about' 70 1K.,
11 mos. old. Wtoritlg
block nylon collar with
IIGIM plate ond od·
dress.
Cantad Gregory
lloGtright 915 ·4211
• or Debbie Boatright

IOCATIGI: llorttl Ill TJW~~~ Pili,., 0111o. 1M 111utt 7 to first
111111 to tlllltlft on ' IIIII ..,._,. WATat Rll SIGIS.
FAll IQIIIPIEIT: Mosser ferp111 150 di.... trlttar with n.,
flres. No. tZ Massey ferausotl hey bll•. 5 ft. bush hOL two 14 inch
bottom plows, boom p..._ cultiptektr, 10ft. boom sprayer with 125
&amp;Ilion tenh ,with new nozzles. .3 pl. P.T.O..seed spreoder. Rosso 4
wheel hey rlke, 12 yr. AJ. Paun 2,000 lb. cltlluclles. correl panels.
leed bunlors, mineralloeder, 14 ft. hllf w11on n., wcod, automltic
held pte. 100ft. carrupled drim I!'.Pfl 3 hp toller, J,D. 141 hey .
beler, 6 ft. 3 pt. scraper blade, AZU Moline lrector, t969 4 wheel
'11"'1 Dodge pickup. snow bleclefur pickup, I 972 ford one ton touch.
McCulloch chain SIW, drum ,_er, disc. contour htirow, -rIa·
hHff posi~Joie diger, 300 &amp;lions tuel tanh!, riding llwn mower,
also mi1cellanoous tools.
'
MIIQUD: 15 t1 20 hand hewn blm ~~ wheat cradle. tlot
oPOrll!d &amp;lift!lslone. (ni&lt;:e( oell 5 9
lining !able reliiiShed witl&gt;3
chals, mllble bltt ~ dn"'" dnAor with mimi. dictionory st.ld with
didionory, lldill' ftp top wnting des~ J)lihted hlllllble. bmt bed with
one ral (nicel restored cane bedled s9fl wilh 11111chng chair, upnght
hand cranked ·""'"" player, plene!. stone jao&gt;, ~nile doo.CIIe trees. •on
111111 scoles with waahls. piano lloGI. vatint gloss ftowlf - ·
HOUS810Ut Blanket chest 12!0tling chint st\ Sean IOOOsty~ row,

ina macltine. cedar clolhes ~ pemted 011&lt; stor111e cupboerd.leather
top atllee llld and tlllles.
nh Mr. &amp; Mrs. chill'S. Sim·
mons hide-Hied lqueon), new piece chin' "'"" plttbm rocker, ,.;,
pie llin&amp;te bod. bor sloals. lll•ie bedroom suilelbookcue heedboltl, lri·
pie

Angus

~

cit~):;

'¥&amp;¥'
Wfi(::r

...

"

Vou'vti Come A

LONO

Bobyl
HAPPY 311th
CINDY MAYNARD
WAV

L~ri.

30 years have gone
. by alnc:e the Good
Lord gave you life
And I thank Him Ill·
a,y clly th1t you
are my wife.

HIPtf SOt~

Dave

Happy 30th

· Birthday
· Mommyl
,-··

Mloaft

1.975
and seclusion
forth is
home. 3baths.
living room, lamily room, formal diniog, master
bedroom w/dressong room, walk·tn closets, secur,
rty system and so many more amenrt~ too laree
to mention. Located wHhm the citY of GalliPOliS.

·

c

•29M

0

··--·
··-

JIIEAL, NIAL ·~·~NE~A;L;·I;JIIT~~~~~;;'R;II:E~I;~;.

'niii•Ye. . at

•

ESTATE AUCTION

:
.~~
~ ~ ~~ · .

HOlE + 70"ACRES Ill
OVERLOOKING OHIO RIVER
J ~ story older home, part1aUy remlJIItiled. 3 bed·
4 bedrooms. 1\! .blllts. above ground poot•od . ,,' rooms ~ving rliom, bath:'Som&amp;mar-le tim·
much, much more. 'In fact. ,.another small1touse •,, Jler.:Piicedl'beiOI'i $4MOO.OO.
•2119·8
that could be U!eths 1'11111111. Small and tozy Z • •, 0
· •
r
bedroom and bath, k1tclten. livina room, dmint ~
area. Both tor less thin $70,000. Call tad ay loran ,
,
appointment.
•2900 ,:,
.

.

1013 Virgina Street, Ravenswood, WV.

v••, I.e-•·
•••,

,,

oh:. :'

.

(1141 31le.IZI7 DICIC
11141 3111·1731 DAN
WE SILL THE

Oueu What
"Poor Boy"
tur•id Fortfl

,,,,

b~:;,;.;~r':~·. ~- . . ~' . SPACiOUS 2 STORY BRICK .H()IE

Herolord. I steer · 600 lb. l't An &amp;Us ~ Herolord,
lUIS: 20 1111111-1100 Reminatonoutomotic,Costmen err rifte.lfe·
minRton 22 sinlle shot
'
·
Terme: Cnh. Latter of Credit. AIIII'OWd Chock
OWNER-JODY IELOEN
Paot

,,

.

~ .tk,'_'f ·~

m... "*""·
ches11. miscellenous item1
150 squore \Jiles 1orchard.suss, 2buls · 6001b.. li

CAmf-~AY:

Ads

~~\·-~'
~&gt;tij ).

"""'port

915-3921

h . . . ._

.

.
AUCTION
.
THURSDAY, AP,IL 11, 1991
. ' AT 7:00 r P.M~
·. .

b-.

10:00 A.M.

!i:f·

1

St-.

PUBLIC AUCTION

:u'

.

-y

:Fonner Tribune intern w.ins writing honor

=·

signs.

.

NOTICE

o-n,

nod mill,
Wllllom Rouolt, 3CI,C·T13-1207.
Wanlod to buy, stondlng timber,
lob Wllllomo I SoM "114-112· 11441.
W.nlod To Buy: JUI)k Aulae
Wlh or without motoro. Colt
Lorry Llvoly. et44111ot3Q3.
W.nl

'*"·

Public Notice

men.

ns.

·
I! gal: stoat iar A.S. Ham1•on. Greensboro, Pe.: 2 gal. stone
1
Yard Sale
tar, T.H. Kapper Mfg., Green!bqro, Pa.: I gal. jar, Flaminon.
Greensboro, ~·.:i larae brown lnill!hrte stone ilr, Olher stone
tars. DaiSy IJPISS chum, alass churn, rolling!, pin,
lanterns, McGuffey speller and rlld8i, rail razor, kids' books,
Pt.PIIIasant
strailht ruor\Jewelry, coffee IJinder, wood pollia masher.
m1lk ,boltles wnh name, chalks, tin heal dol~ picture frames,
&amp; VIcinity
Qu1nmg lnm~, gray stone jar, Wagner cast iron waffle iron,
Ouo Ia wiling my homo, I wll
mealliimmer, copper boiler, spider, sad iron, alass Tom Ro,
hovo 1 yord on Lion-Iodin
asted Peanut jar, com cutter, old ••ssware, 111by creamer
Rood It F.orrnor Stophonlplocl. ·
Frldoy, April I I Slturday, April
aThnG sugar, Cljl glass, berry dishes, milk aJassware, Seth
6.
· ilDIIs cloc~ lngr~~m docks, mllllll clocks, Seth Thomas
weight clocks, 1&amp;fus ~led Indian ptcher With smaH and
larae Jlasses, milk aiaas oil limps, golden wheat dishes,
Gallipolis
Frankl111. Roosevelt planter, grMft deprBSSion ,raas. ,yellow
&amp; VlclnHy
depress1011 alass. blue dtPIISSIOII glass, pin~ deprBSSion
ALL Yord Soloe MUll h Pold In
Klass. Ho1111 Laualllin dishes, sa~ sellers; ir~h diSh, Virginia
Ad¥1nco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
Rose bowl, Enallsn iron stone bowl, Little Women books,Tom
tho doy bora.. t1to od II to rvn.
Swift
books, wooden egg crate, chum dasher: metal beds,
Sunday odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frtdoy.
odllon • 2:00 , old comforts, 3 gal. stone jar. small library table, Victorian
...,... Slturday.
sola, crown doll,,lrunks, spittoon, coal and wood cook stove,
Coca-Cola thermometer signs, kerosene lamps, cigarette
8itntao Solo: lllondoy 411,
. l\llodoy 4111, Wo-day 4/10. g.
thennometer s1gns, drop-leal table, pictures, baskets, Len·
13 Church
8~11. ·
ker arook Farms ~ pt. milk bottles, treadle sewina mach10e,
upo~Jo-.
ato,.., •
ord8, . c:ablnelll, Metve1, , som.e metal kid's toys, Andrew pt. milk bottles, rocking
challs, 11on. kettle\ pot, Sesson clock, kraut cutter, glass ba·
lrt&lt;idlng; coueH a - . @nt dOole, mloc. - • ·puoh · kets, Aladdm.lfmos, New Haven kitchen clock, and much,
qlolhlng, iilctu,.o,
much more. '1
""'"""~'~~·
.
HbtJSEHOLD AND MISC.
Milvlng Soli: April 8 • e (Man,
17\l
cu,
It,
chest
freezer, dtshwas~er. swirl bar stools, coffee
!Moo) Fumburo, ,.~, · table, medicine cabinet.
cha,in saw, wall fan, b1rd cage, oil
Q.ds, dlahee, ..c. M•nr
healer, black and white TV s, aius display case, Cypr~s
llbUMiwld h-1 2 mlleo hril
~rtor on Whbo Ooll R""!',_~ ,
clocks, Silverware, galv. tub, what-nots, diShes, llree dolls
l!o- on rlghl, W.tolllar organizer cabi!!el.1 drawer filing cabin It Coleman huler:
typewr~er; sweeper, clocks, II! hp new deep well pump,
Vory Lorge Flrolllmo Yord Iolii
hanging liallt fixture.' kitchen appliances, k~itting stand,
Old teo at Korr. ADrll Slh thru
hend tools, wall rack. picturM, mirrors, bird feeders, and
llllh. Fumhu,., (Aif ldnUI ...,_
much, much more.
guo
curtiiM, conning
Eats ·
' Calli
Positive 1.0.
)at-. clothing. - - ,_...,.,
1hampooer, wwl~ rMChlne
OWNER.
MR.
AID
IRS.
DALE
SMITH
whh coblnot. Too MUCII Too Lilli
So-hlng For Everyonol All
IARUN WEDEMEYER. AUCTIONEER
Must Go!
•
614-245·5152
Lie. 3615
Not
hsponslbl~
for
Accidents
or
Loss
of
Property
8
Public Sale
Auct1on E.v•ry Slturday Nifhtlt 7:00 P.M. .
&amp; Auction
· Now Book1n1 Auction$ II Year Long;
~lck Poorson Auction compony,
.Sprina 1nd Winter
.
·

~

Another witness, David
Burkhart said he saw the plane
nose-dive into trees. He said it
looked as though wind had flipped
over the plane.

:

Froln Gallipolis, tab Rt, 141, tum left onto Rt.
tum ri&amp;ht onto Pltrlot lloJd. Watch for

~IITIOUES AID COlLECTIBLES

TOWER DEAD - Former J!eoator Jobn
Tower died Fficlay In an Atlandc Southeast Air·
lines cotninunter plane crash at Glenco Airport
in Georgia. Tower Is shown Feb. 9, 198!1 at a

&amp;

388 1011. No S~ndar C.ll1.

....... TioUnd. ~
brown I whlll. Lot- l,lorcll

t51f1 on Aolllnovlllo Rd. 1 US In- '
II,_CIIan. 114-SeiMI7 or 3119335, REWA~D.
.

c.., ...

C..IIIOit

Sm1th.

-

,

Loot: Dorman Sh f cl-llkl 1

Public Nolle»

Wanted to

Cot ........ hi • Down. 114-

Plrt

The turbopiop missed a cluster
of mobile homes by atiout 100
yards. No one was injured on the
ground and no $IIUCtUres were hiL
The weather was clear 81' the time
of the crash.
'
"It turned up on its side and
went into·a nose dive," said James
Griner, whose horne is near the airport. "I told my wife it's going
down and I'm going to it I I~
for any caSualties ... if there was
anyoody I could help, but there
· wasn't apy;" ·
·
,

Council paves way for ·return

"'14 -~---·

.._, """"" Pel
ald.
Whllo. Miwoio to: luoJ. lidwen VlnlonA,.._I14-...,14

H'.~==-~
=:.~·
LOST: 1llle do&amp; port ......._ .

heard • explosiOn.

Griner said emergency crews
anive within five minutes, but the
plane was engulfed in flame and
crushed into 'an unrecognizable
lump of metal.

8

s·

• she was told by the FAA that
Tower was .aboard the plane.
Tower's offtee said Clrlier he had
been schednled aboard the flighL
"Senator Tower's office has
received confirmation from the
FAA lhat Senator John Tower and
his daughter, Marian, boarded the
. plane en route to Sea Island this
afternoon." Johnson said by Ide·
pbooe.
W'llnesSes said the plane apparently e~perienced problems shonly
before,11 c~ Some said they

Pomeroy.:...a.Jddleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleellflt, WV

___,_

. SATURDAY, APRIL,1·3
10 A.M.

Sllllna lilt personal property oHIIa lata Dtlmer and
Jtpie Alt1111dtr located In lortll Ravenswood. 1
block 11ft Itt. 61, behind United letAodiat church. .
SIIIIIS posted!
.
,
AllliQUES.COUECTIBLES: Victorian marble top dresser. •
several handmade QUiHs and qui~ tops, 2 j•cQuard cover·
lets. I red/wh1te dated 1884, mce; comforters, STONE JA~S .
- H2 William &amp; Reppert, Greensboro, Pa., Jas HamiKon,
Greensboro, Pa .• H4 Donaghho plus several ,others un·
marked: New Haven Ion1drop reaulator calendaHiock, Waterbury metal case mantel clock, Jennr lind lull bed,·chest
and dresser, pie safe. rouall; wicker plint stlnd &amp; bird cage.
Yale loc"'. Coca-Cola bollle thermometer. postcards wllh ·
stamps back lo 1909, dtiltfs sled, mohair sola with 2 match·
ong chairs, e•bllent cond~ion: RCA Victrola w~h records;le·
mth floor radio, Me Gully 111ilers, baskels,camel back trunk,
1111 wall cupboards, Hoosier cupboard, 1011 only;crocks,very
old magazmes, newspapers, Children's boolls &amp; advertising
calendars, very old sheet music. iron pots, advertising sogns
&amp; tins, small copper kettle with san~ . handmade dollies &amp;
dresser scarves, wood lard buckets, old p11nts. pictures &amp;
frames. leather photo albums. brass floor iamp, glass &amp;brass
Oil lamps, puules. large wood vise, wood planes, chalkware,
oak clothes rack. very · old Christmas ornaments, Homer
McFarland parnting plus many other antiques and collecil·
bles too numerous to ment1011.
MiSCELlANEOUS: DeWan 10" radial arm saw. Craftsman
griil'der with 111e HP motor, collection ol brace &amp; brts, Crafts· .
man shop nc, Llwn Boy lawn
pipe dies, ~" bench
vice, npl pipe cullers, older
Kenmore washer &amp;
dryer. never used: older model
, never used; num·
, erous hand
·
, wood
. ladders. one
; desk&amp; ·
., nens.
,,' color

NEW flRI LISTING!
4fl ICIIS o0Hand mdudinf,twO detltlopecf home

RIO GRINDE AREA
Remodeled 3 bedrt10t11 very attractive home in·
eludes full ba-ant, approx, 30 acres land that
borders Raccoon Creelt. Small wooded lot. pas· ,,
lure land, tobacco base and good s~e barn 111'
good condition. Please can lor more details! #2901
•

BEAT THE RENT RACE!!
"Woth this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remodeled, vinyl
s1ding, storage buolding, 1~ acres plus e•cellent
garden area, Tobacco allotment Raccoon Town,
shop. Unbeatable price. $29,000. Call today!
.
H2195

$iles. One, 1919 mobile home 14'x70' purchased
by Pll!SIIlt owners. The ot~er home silt has elec·
trio, runailtll •aler anrt.aerobu:.,septic &amp;ystem all
in&gt;place. rarm consiSts of appwx. l'1 l1llable
acre!,. 15 pastur&amp;acres, 17acres or woodland, to,
bacco base and stockiid pond'forrecreatlon. Let
us show you thls,"One.
N2901

.HILLS ~

SOUT

REAL ES-rA
,.E~"INc·
.
..
738 2nd AVE. .GALLI POLIS

JUDY

DEWlTT. ~8ROK,ER

J . Merrill Carter ........... .. ....... .. .. , .. .. ....

Cathy Wrey ... .. ...... ..•,. ....... ..................

....... : .. ;. 446·81,47

379·!184 '

14UGD.OO :·

·

3 bedroom. vinyl sided 111nch. I ~ baths, full di·
vided basement, iaree covered garage, approx. II
acre lawn. City water and sewage. Call today lor a
private showing'
112197
"

~

..

i/

3.~Nif REIIJAl tDIPLEX!

CONVENIENCE!
Only a lew blocks from church, school and shop·
prng. 2 story briCk home situated on ,644 acre in
Gallipolis. 3 or 4 bedrooms, 21uil baths, nice living
r.oom -nd a large eat-in k1lchen. Call today lor_ap·
pomlment.
.
. 11%181

Rece1ve a Jiosdivel:UII ftow from the rental tn··
come of this newly CORIIructed complex. Each
umt consists of one ·bldrtltlm, lurmshed kitchen,
living room. bel/1. Vinyl siding. Low maintenonce.
Call today.for more ._ils!
~~~~~~
TIRED OF YOUR LAIDLORD7

·
SPACE FOR SALE!!
Approx. 36 acres, Recently reseeded, fenced,
pond. Majority of acreage IS tillable and partially
wooded. Call lor p11cea and locatiOn!
H2192
·,

Stc~ ol rent?-then own this cute little 2 bedroom

home silulled O!LII olarncre. Large bath, stor·
oge bulklin1and·room to expand as rour lomlly.
does!-eau todiY! !'rice reduced - $22,900.00. .
'
f
ftll4

.'

'
. YOU'LL KNOW THIS IS AGOOD BUY!!
When you see thiS well taken care·ot mobile home
nestled on 2 e~res more or less of lreed sur·
· roundings! Private setting. 2 bedrooms, livin&amp;
room. bath w/garden tub and eat-in kHchen.
WON'T LAST LONG! $14.000,
112115

sctiiC SPLENDOR
Eiill frame and lllnt l*tllet IIICIIId et Charola11
Hills Lalit, btltlllMy lll1lllal on ower 2 ~ 3
bedr011111, . , . ... .
family-·
full lilltmd. Jtcll . _ rlllil. Atlldltd
It • ....ralllt.w llf• . Atruly .......,
wllh alltaltllltaiiXIMili.
Cllltl

=

'

..

· Dan Carter ...... .............. ............... 446~8434
'
'
'
• ~RICE REDUCED $2,000

.•

~

Sam Hoffma .... ~.-·.· · ··--· · · · · · ······••• • i••• 878·2449
Patti Hawi ...~~.. ........ ..;,.,., ...... .•.......•• : 448-1967

44&amp;..-ue ·

..

... I'"

·'
Jeannie Tolllv..-:..:.: . ............... .. ..:...... 44W008

Tammy DeWitt : ................ ; ......... ...... . •41-070:;l4

'
THE "REDMAN"
localed at SR 35 near Rio Grande. Busmess onlv:
includes compte!~! inventory, pool tables, julte box,
· equ1pment and other busmess chattels. Lease 1n·
eludes a 2 bedroom apartmeni to assist wrth
monthly rent. Possible owner financing. Call now
lor an appoontment at this super o~pQ.rtunrtx.
:
N2899

-

'·

=... . .

REDUCED!

$9.000

:Apprli,l. il.!i acres situ1ted at Rodney Pike. Rural
water ava1lable. ~ nicll'lev•l pi8C8 of land. Call to·
day!
N2174
•
•
011. HECK!
COllE ON I BUY .E.I'ION~V $5.900.00
I need umeoworlt. but whQdo ¥111! lllfiiCI. Nice
lor, 2bedrooros, UVI!Itloom, and mora. Call t!)day
'lor att eppointmt111!.
· Ul26
THE VERY BEST
.11 you:ra looking lor altome in I super ne1ghbor·
hood. tlose to'hospltal and other convantences,
this :i bedroom., Zbath home reflects top QUality
throu&amp;flout UvrtK room w~h fireQIIct. kHclten,
newstorage buildinL beautifully landscaped in
back. Many more extras. You must see toappreci·
ate.
·
·
' *2191

.

16 ACRES lORE/LESS
Located 1n Hwtlinaton TownshiP. 12 acr.es m.'l
$7,000; • acres mil. $3,700. '
110007
YOU CAll B~AG ABO.UT THIS
GorPGUs brick home 1ust as soon • you take one
look, you'D be solei, 3 bedrOOIIII. forltllldininaand
livona rooms. 3 baths. tamliy 100111; ltlllttt!UIPPtd
kit~hen, 2 car praae and sePIIIII Z4'a31' aar·,
aee. pond, prmte settina. ExCeiJIIonllly nice
. home wlllt a lot ohmenibes plusover 4 ICrtt. Cttr
scbooll.
• 12157

..

�..

•
15 PEPSI MACHINES, loell!'d In
ond - · County.

•

OIUII

-... -

14ft FI~IUI -

., TNIIw In c:.ntry
w/Qo- lpoO.:- Oollan TD
or Lind Controct. hc-21&amp;-

.::&amp;
33 FMnt tor Sell

Wa~

ta

r.nt

2 badroom hou8e

or " "
' " - In Point Plto..m.
111111
hove lllove a rlflta-or.
30W7W7'I2.

Merchandtse

51

Chov.

SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 13
Olivo St., O.Uipollo. Now &amp; UMd
fum~..., hMioro, Weotom a
WQrlo booto. e~st.

on1r ..-.ao 8ayor Vtndlng,
1179 114'8t2·
21154.

boot with

PIG.

bofy for 11le,
hNda motor 1nd tranemlalon.

Bur or ooll. _ .. . Antlquoo, o1collonl In ond our 1300. F,_ 1179 Fonl Erplorwr t.lf lon
1124 E. lllln It-, Pomoroy. At. 7 noor llldd~ot go :1112 tRICk ~1 250. Acow ground woll
Houro: II.T.W. tO:OO o.m. lo 1:00 mllw on coumy Rd. 3, [lldlng · end moolla home, ..,1500. 304·
P•'"•• 8uodar-f :OO
1000 p.m.- Crook Ad.
.
S'IW-2108.

~2525.

•o

~::::::=====--~--~-------

========~R~t~a~IE~-~at!!·~~~=======1~------~R=H~IE=8tat=re~Ge~n~·~~~~----~--

Housahold

3 DK
9otld

2803.

OFACE RaE FOR LEMI on
2nd ,.., 0 ., ••• Qooo to
c:-_1_2_

-to.Coprlco
v ""'om

.2000.00 por

- - l U l l 4 houro 1 - " 111111 ... , loy !lor 111. llolgo
County ownw onOvlng oul of
11110. Will ... ~llco buol- lw

.GOOds
fNIIwood To-_!1.21_;_1
Ook Tobie, 140• ..,...111-

--·--- . ....

~-·-AI~
t rc riled, elr . . r p:;aj

111u,............

-

· No.
,_
,...

:am•u•• ....,.

-

00 .LN01fiOHS
'00 1.N0100HS I s6u!lll

,l,~~

lllti!W ~ 18111 p81U8WWCX) pu8 PJ8~ 001
!lu!M S8M I i46nola 8SOq .\w 'Sil81S

-

l'fione ... ..

NEW LISTING ...: THIS HQI£ SPARKLES and oilers 3_bed·
rooms, 2 baths, cozy fam ily room w1th fireplace,fullyeq~1pped
kitchen, 16x32 in-ground pool. 2_car garage. located tn a lo·
vely area just minules from Gallipolis. Call to:lay for ue&lt;•"' ·

PIOfESIIOIIIl MaV~ IUDS . . Jlfrll Ill

,l,QOI:J'Id

IIIli MOJJOWOII!IUn 110 lnd I ~ 8S!M eq

-

\

)J.N/'IQ

u•'n""
sJHou

:'

VIRGINIA IMITH, IROIIER. 311·•:011
DIAN CAUAHAN. «EALTOR. 211-1211
EUNICE NIEHII. REALTOR. 441·1117
RUTH IARR. REALTOR. 441-0722
DE&amp;..ll!t-H ICITJI. REALTOR. 44U801
• . LVND;t. FRALEY. REALTOR. 441·1101
MICHAl!. MIUIR, -OCIATI. 44Hiol_-

'

RESIDEIITIAI.. IIVESTilNTS - COIIlRCIAI. • FAllS ,

esfel pu8 S8lJ81BIW Auaw 411M p911Y ·
pewees qof MBU a uo lt88M ISJY .lw
5131-rt'lliDS

.

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

36

Help Wanted .

11

18 wanted to Do

)lenW--to

,._.,.Advwt..,.

M i l - - Uno of

__ ......__,.,

lng-toBmh
""-In
!OW lmnu• It 1M t'nrr ....
Eom _ . , - - Sot
Ff'lendly .Swulca lrom a YNr
Old AAA-t Cuoo. . or. No In-

t!r!ng,

E • A TREE SI;RVICE.
Trllootnlng,
· I
Trim~. Tr•
FNO Eotlmateol
31~
.
-

tildor

tilled,

roccwted. Pomeroy, .Middteport,

Cholltlre .,.._ 114-.-, ·~

tor_,

Ita', o.,u...

•m
-__
' r •'""
r-on
11 Help Wanted
.,...._ond
i========:;
.

-=·-.. . --Of
with
...,........,..

't tlr

............ A~ ,. . . . ca.

_

L_1.::tJr:!.t:r.~

..... _ , ..... \NIIM'IoM ...
_,..._~'--

::.~

...........

,:,::
•AJ1o"C
-1.0 1117712..

~-euon,.,.,,

Fof: llr. u,...,.

-

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

-

b;rlnprr.

oiiOnO _ ...:ling - -

........ 25 ln. ,., wi. lo P. 0. llol 1012. Golllpolll, OH 4~ .
5o1oo llolp Wontod: In - ,
SOIII Eaporloo101 Noe-rCIIIM 141 3115 lw lntwwlow.

_

.......... to ...... down two pine

1- ond houl lhwn -r. 11424W241oaor S:OO.

.,..,_ ..........
400

componloo
tMChcut . . . . c.ll for I~
· ruardlcl . - - .. S1
4S:IO,Ut. 31.

downtown,

114-

41 HOUSH for Rent

_. ...,.....

LOCATION. VALUE.- REDUCED PRICE: SPACE- Everything
is here ll ac1e m/1 Kner Creek school distlict, paved road,
3·4 bedrooms, 2~· baths, family room w~h fireplace and

from StWmo. Wolk to ohop a
moviH. Coll814-446-25418. EOH.
Efficloncy apaotlmont lor 11111.

much more. Call for details.

No pet,, De~lt •nd referwnc•
ooqulrod. 514-441-4879.

Ftnanctal

PltaSint Hill Convalescent Center is eurrtntly accepti ne applications for Ohio licensed R.N.'s tnd
LPN'·s. Ten and twelve
hour schedulilll with
every other weekend
off is available. This
is 1 unique employ·
ment opportunity to
serve the needs of
others while havi111
your personal needs
as an employee met
throueh a hilflly competitive Wll' and be·
nefit packlp. Please
call Barb Lone. D,O.N.
at 614-289·2394 to
schedule an interview
or send a 11sume to P.
0. Box ·334, Piketon,
Oh. 45561.

21

OpponunHy

.,

''

NOTio-...--.
_..... . . -=. .
IIIOTICEl

OHIO VALLEY FUIUIHIHG CO.
Ncam•nda tMt ~ do-....

uwm: .

Manor

Apotlmonto

$111. Coli 114-1112·

•

Pootly fumlolood

- - S h o p lw ule. 5
- - · llofn
Point

81-.

.

Calor Cotaleg. , . - - . -

WOlfF TANI.NG IIED8

,._ Cuuua••clll, Home Unlta.

-'c

....oo.=I&gt;IAolloM,
Ia MM.
1j1Miltl

.._ Ao $11.00, Coli ioc11Y FREE
NEW Color Cotolog. 1~·
t111.

23

2 bedroom In Ono bodn&gt;Om, ou~oble for
ovollllbo Olngle.
or couiJII,,pl .. dt~~
artd r1fwrwnc.. 1\110 pete•.

i

NEW LISTING- Fix it up and resell -or rent out this 3 bed ·
100m home. Large lot. Paved street
·
11327

811-4023.

lor Rent

epl, upolllro, ouMporeon, $200. pluo

....,.,.. onct dopolot,

for -

ot-Ic,

[

Spol-ly elun 3 roo.. ond
both
ground "-· IIOYI l
rwtrltien~tor tumlahed, private

CMD CM1. 11111 ACOIIITIIY man - You'l
liM chlnn and uma•ICt pillS prllltite and litiiUut"
llrick 3 - IIIICh- lor lilppy lifinl, t._ . OIIV
- · I ~ biU.. 'llu~ ""'~ rm. wl--inllirol*co.
liocOup
foorowo:e and eloe hell pump w/CA, ollli:hed prlle,=leiK
w/ r door bricll boon. illlfDvnd """ w/pnwKy
•
ond -rlly lilhli Pr-lofltiOo Plf'S hc.olllnd.
I
ill See it now!
•
iAif Vl£1 LGIS-' Choi:tlols w/spectocullr vitw. You
will Wlnt mort lllln ooo. Ool; IIIIPie. oloJ-cl tnd - 1..., """' l h i l a - - Al!a lob '""""• on Whit
lid. For lui parti:ollr~ eoll ill - ' -

in;::

.......,_1 - .,.. ""·-

"""·-

LIVE CLOSE TO NATURE- 39 acres m/ 1wilh mobole home, ·
ut&lt;lity butkhng wilh eleclric. barn. You need to see thiS one
be'ore tt's gone. Call today.
11314

811-4510 orB75-1112. .

=..

~

· BEAUTIFUL SEmNG - And this 3 bedroom, 1 bath a~d
family room home. Also large building on. 1.390 acre 1n c1ty
:schools . Call f9r more information.
11320

.

"

R.N.'s

14

Business
Training

""'
'""' -.u-..em
lu:llnrca
Sllllna Vrlter
~.

"'""'· Coli Todoir, l14441 4317ft
l!oglol-lon fi0.05-12lll8 . .

18

Wanted to Do

Mo.. v - No T~ To 11g Or

......... lrll • ::.: :dlllll.
Wlp ~II• Ar... 1142St

IIIEDIATE OPEl lNG$
CRITICAL CARE
SUPEIVISOR
7:00 A. I .-3:00 p.I.
CRITICAL CARE STAFF
IUISE
11:00 P.l.-7:00 U.
EXPEIIEICE IEOOIRED
OAK HIU COIIfUIIn
. IEDICAL CEIT£1
350 ClllrloHt Art.
Oa• Hill, ON. 45&amp;56
&amp;IZ-n17 ht 213

Real Estate
,,

, Homu
for Sale
'
.

.

Unlumloholl 2 bedrOom apll
lOcated ~hind Holur Clinic o
Wnt Ylrglnlo, '250. per
614-441-5111 or &gt;141-5179.

1811

Thera is a strong likelihood thai you
may establish objectives In t)l8 year
ahead thai you would never have dared
to aim for previously. In addition, what
· you'll attempt to do Is achievable.
Mal Clllan:ll 21·April 11) Take time
to evatuete the consequences today belore _...ing your mind. especially
when addreSSing your· boSs. Even H,
you 're righl, you may lose by prOVIng
your point. Aries. treat yourself to a
birthday gift. S4ln!t ll&gt;r Ariel' AslroGrapll predictions lor the year by
malting S1.25 to Aatro-Graph. c/o this
111!WSP8P8". P.O. Box 91421. Cleveland.
OH 44101 -3428. Be sura lo atale your

.£1 USIIIC- • fiiAIIIItOUSI w/2 -~ LR,Iuel oi hell
..t-in liltloerl. bsooL, cily sc- w/loc. 01/L Prietil in 40s.
Ceo also lit pun- with lddtilnll 12 "'"· This _,ry
C1i1 !109 be S&lt;ib&lt;lifided H ~ liuyorJ reqlit$( Molioll- pod

LEO CJuiJ Zit A... 22) II you treat a certain soo.-.,., in a ~ing onanner rather than as an equal today. you
could lose an admirer. Speak up. not
down. lo others.
YliiGo CAIIII· 21-hpt. 22) You're likely
to be generous wflh your personal belongings toda\'1 biOI think twice before
tending something that isn't yours.
U8RA Clepl. 2S-Oct. 23) FM1ity harmony Is likelY 10 Pr811llil today wllere
larQ8f Issues are concerned. Howewr,
a llara.op is likely 10 be over something
very trMal.

Apaortmont

avolloblo

for 2

or 3

oonlllrucllon workoro 304-812·

olso. •

2588.

Roont• tor rent • WHit 011 month.
Slortlng 11 $120/n)o. 0.11111 Hotll.

.
&amp;looping roomo wKh
81~tl80 .

aooklng.
AIIO trlller 1pace.".AII hctoll·Upl.
Call after 2:0(1 p.m., 304·713-

NSt,MoaonWV.

--.c

'

SCOIIPIO COct. :M-Now. 22) If you
speak badly about another based on
hearsay today, you may lat8f regret H.

Think

how

paned

CS"

{ Cozy3 bedroom home·on
lawn. This HI story
'·home witlt fuH baemetd ha more roam thon you m1ghl
• ttttnk. llrae eat-in kill:hen with IOids and Ioiiis of c1blnet
' space,laraeltvill room and 2 btlhs. Second kitchen area_in
• basement also. Covered f)lllo. carport 1nd IIJO(I stora.-. NICe
; 11ver view also. Walkina disllnce to town. Gas heat wKh cen·
•123
• lral air. Price reduced to $39,900.

•

,.

Rio village. plus
,
i . rm.
wbf~.
kitchen. What else
you
Alovely l~rge fam1iy 1m.
with wbfp, and utility room 1n
. Shdong glass doors
to back area. ThiS house has been well matnlamed and os a
well tnsulated home. Large 1 car garage and loads of storage.
Call for appOintment today.
·

:

WI~EMAN IUL ESTATE

GREEN TWP. - Is This brick and vinyl s~ed ranch wiltt 3
bedrooms, balh, kitchen, living room-with fireplace. gas heal,
1ural waler. Alllhis and more on .73 of an acre mil. Call for
appoinlment
. '
NZ82
NEW LISTING - City property only $16.900. 3 bedroom
home. Could be good rental investment or starter home.
'
..
. n33

#124 ACRES M/l FAll "~h 4 bedrOOI!tS, 2 baths. livintrm ..
din in~ and kilchen wilh some farm equopmentlocated on lm·

~-A·

~

NEW LISTING- live m one and rent othe1. Modern 4 bed·
room home plus garage apt. Nice garden area.
•331

D ·OUR HOME To THE
SPRING COLLECTION

Y2r
I ..

NEW LISTING- I lit story ''STARTER HOUSE", 2 bedroom:
1 bath. 36 Chillicothe road. Partial baseement. $25.000.
3 BEDROOM BRICK. Situated on 1 acre. 5 miles from Gallipolis on Bulaville Road. Kyger Creek School DIStrict. 1.440
sQ. ft. Priced ih t~e 60's.
'ilOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A2 story Ira me double
located on Secor1d Avenue, Gallipolis: 4 rooms and bath
downstairs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs. Call today. .
BEDRoOM BRICK RANCH. 51tuated on 5.5 ac1es, w1thm
view of the Holzer Hosp~at 24'!36' barn presently_beonl
utilized as a 2 cir garage and stora~e. 2other outbutldmgs.
QUALITY HOME wrth many amen~lie~. 2full baths and 2 hal~
baths. den. folmalliviOg r.oom and d!mng room. 2 WBFP. en
tertaonment kilchen ... QUALITY THROUGHOUT. ·

l-4

·-

NEW MODlJLAR HOME. Family room, dming room, 3 bed·
r~oms. 2 baths. s~uated on 1.54 acres m/1 in Olive Townslllp.
Look at thiS one today. Asking only $49,500.
8309

2 8EORODM HOllE LOCArEDhOII bWAth
. TSO.NthR~~sed
L' ·ng room dining room kite en, a , WI e

1 :~ritand back porch with 1.9 acre. Call for more tnfo_r-

mation.
·
·
ted
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON - 6 rm, house loca
along Main St Rent or five in. Presently glossong $2.100.00.
Buy now for $14,000.00.
GI£EI ACRES_ Two lots. !large level home site. 140 fl.x
14~ It, city water. Green School. Goo:llocatton. Pr~ced light .
at $10.000.00.
TWO IEDIOOIS. 2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen
and utll~y room (1 ,012 sQ. fl.) condommtum. GOO? lOC~­
TION choose your carpet color and MOVE 1)'1 HOW!. Call for
more' information.
•
NEW LISTING: 10 acres, Perr~ Twp. Some timber. Buy now
for $10,000.
.
U ACIU WITHIN THE CITY Of ~LUPOLIS situ~ted olong
Garfield ~vi. Site indudes 2 butldtna lots w/c1ly water,
sewer. Buy now for $30,000 or purchase house wKh lot fo1
$15,000. .

11121. PltCIIOUCED: Gotll 311,
booll!.lilohen.lo. ... with a.,.. lotiO ,.It lmas-. Calllor
llifll. l'riced ~ '"' SlOt..

you would leel H thiS hap.
to you.
,
SAGITTARIUS CHow. 23-0ec. 21) There
is a POS$Ibility lhat you may be too ••travaganl for your own good !Oday. This
won't be evident In anything big you•g
do, while those little ways of -ung
money could prove di-trous. .
zodiaC ·sign.
'
, CAPRICORN CDec. 22-MI. tt) OirecTAUIIUS (April. IP ; •1 This~ no... a
11- that you give to yliur family today
good day to
religion; Ilion t 1•~•
cOuld coniuM them; you might tel lhem
1y tllet you or your~ will resolve
to do one thing ~ expect them to do
tho
schol8ra have been unanother. You muot be prtciae.
- t o INIItle lor hundtoodl of
AOUAIIIUS ,....._..,. 11) If you atWT?I ~ 21..,.. •1
""" 18
tend a gathering today, don't m8ke
you deln'l know very wei may try lo lmcompany secrets a topic of cool.. 11poae Oft YfJ1Jf good natunt tOO., by retlon. Tllllre it a IIOIIibiNty tllal you
questing _.hing of you IIIII you
mighl let something out of the bag to
-*' nor dare ask lor 11 the ..- were
the wrong 1*10"·
r-IIICI- Be prepared. '
P!SCES CFell. ., "r ell . .,) If yow
CAMCEII (olune 21-.llrlp 22) Before you
lriends wan1 you lo become inYOived in
accept as IICI tho words of another. if
something
thot you feel ia too rich lw
mlgnt be Wise to analyze ..,., II being
your·-· Clon'l be Maid lo beg off tolaid as well as determine this lnciivldday. It's better 10 be !IOid then btoke.

-Ia
same-

month.

EOE

· ual's bask: moUves.

April7,

U24

I

entrance, p1i'klrta and porch.
Ercollliill nolahborhqod, 304-

Professional

services

'

WALNUT TWP. FARII - Enjoy country living ' .·h tillable
land pastu1e and woodland all lncluded 'on Itt" ••1m of approximalely i6 acres. Nice tobacco base. Home has two bed·
11302
1ooms. living room. donong area, kitchen.

304-111- 1

2151.

oqul_.r.t-.-VEND.

fig ....... L.w

·

- , - 4 - .7070
-,, v• ... _

-

'lENDING ROUTE: For SOle.
· 91~, MUd e..h bue:lnetl.
High trolflc, locoiiOc:ll-. -

llconthlr

• EOH.

::!:-::::·--------I
4'2 Mobile Homes
Smoll ono bodr_, rumlohod .

· 30W71-Cm.
Pn11n - · A-lbuoln... for
..... 114-1112-1003.

$11.00 Coli Todlll FREE

Atver•~
lll~,!.;rlrt. ffofn

and ·

In

Here is a lovely 3 bed!oom, 2~ bath, splot
living and dtmng rooms. full
iia~•A!.e''~,..~~~c-~:fii~"!,~~-:~ sepa1ale woodbu~ner. 18x36
central air. All this and more on over \7
lnr- ,~•ti1l• and appointment loday:
11296

vm-.

11

1'00111

'-1 Yondlna Route For SOle,
ChilD.- loll OU!cldr.·• -

-Aa

CITY SCHOOLS- This 1s o~e you have lo see. A5 bedroom,
3 bath vinyl sided ranch w1th fam1ly roam, din ina _room, full
basement Lots of room 12x20 and BdO decks. Atllh tsand
more on ·1;s wes m/1. Call t.-lay fol you1 appotntment

'

Alllv'a a.otn Uo* Ratldlnl• Cucuwn•~. ln-rlill, E I I - I c-lotion. Phono: 114-

WOLFE TANNING BElli. Commere._. llome Unit•.
From
$111.00. ~po-l.ol- -

.

WOODLAND DR. - Owners have purchased another home
and wants sold this nice starter home 01 fixel·uppe~ with 3
bedrooms, family room, utility, unattached garage .
Open to oilers.
*279

od

tho

-

MUIII.

. 4''

11315

Business

_ _ ,..._

Spacious. attractive home with
3 bedroom, 2
,
room. ltvinR and .dtninR room.
bceakfast area.
pump central a1r.w/electnc or propane
gas furnace backup. 1900 sq. fl. MIL liv1n11rea. P.art11 lba·
-sement B1g home and 20 Ac. mil_

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS- 12.9 acres mil located in Che_shlre Twp. Ap'prox. 700' road frontage, good home s1te Wtlh ~;lS
Rural water available. Agood buy at $16,550.
HUNTER'S DELIGHT - 60 acres of -beautiful huntlnn
grounds. Woods are easy to get lhrough and have trails al·
1eady there. You might even wanl to put your cabon he1e.
Posgbie land contract Call today.
11311

175-1144 ollor s:OO.PII or""'"
ma11p

•.._r:t

Jif

Rentals

Hive"poroonln
mr homo, 11 ,..,. ••porlonoe,
Altzhllmwo -.otod, 114-11~

.. . -llwM; _

to

~building $250/mo.

tw4PII.

•
• -· _...
No.......
~­ lllooo Po..... 0., Cono" Coiotor.
PtwwltUI
S.fl, aftonlrble. chhclcanl.·11-F
-.oltod- · llololn
NE'WTOH
111'0.
CO., ~' I Lift. • 5::10 fi.M. Ago! 2 ·10.
. - t11 t11
..
.. llnlp-lno
u al:come.
IZM.
1121.
Q2137, - · - ··

c:onrr.cr.

ooii:JOW75-ttl7.

FULL OR PART-TIIlE!

083 Third, 2br, •••her &amp; dryer,

conven~nt

3tor -In Countr lot.olo To
Aint, , _ ., Llilcl
IM t41 W\ a,_lp.m.
BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 531 Jocbon Plluo

01Drglll Poltabte Sawmill, Qon"t
hlul ,..... lo tho mil 1..r

IIAKE IIIORIIIONEY

ca· 11111ra.

· Wanted

Wanted to Do

18

Real E8tate

I

WE HAVE IUILDIIG LOTS in ~ney Viilaae II. Call for.more
information,
&amp;I ACRES 1/l Ill 01110 TWP. Fronlite on St. Rt. 7 ~ilh
some timber. Priced II $10.000.
7! ACRES MOl£ OR LESC located inOhio Twp.The property
has some timber. Call for more informatian

S~OI' IY OUII OPPICI POll ACOMPLETE
· IIIIOCHURE OP OUII LIITINGS.

- Neat3 badlliom. 2 balh ranch style home
· one car ottached gareae. maintenance flee exte11or w~h a
"just righl" yard. Askmg $39,900. $33,500.

mt

PRICE REDUCED. - Owner wants a sale! Due to poor halth.
this owner has redued this 3 bed1oom home with 26'x32' de·
tached garage to $25,900. Rutland Village, close to school.
·
.
NZ54
. NEW LISTING - JUST WHAT "EWE" HAVE 8££1 LOOKIIIG
FOR. ·to5 acres mil Wlltt·mobile home, nice f11m buoldongs a~d
ponds. Approx. 65 ICrtl is fenced and re.tdy ior sheep farm .
Check this 1111 out Portland 11ea.
NS37

�'
Page-O~unday

Pomeroy-Mid~leport· ·Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Times-sentinel
~

D&amp;S

Peta for Sale·

61 Farm Equipment

IIM4.
SI,DtiO or -

=-.

.=21N.

WILL COME TO YO. IISIDING 01 YOUI
PlACE
-LO.YMENI
.

m

f 11
&amp;

--·
-u~F.,..
C"
Ford Ne•
~lnCf

-Aw ' ~~:1fnonc~
b'la, Cro. &amp; 1oM, JICii·

..-..· ..._ Com PlaUr, 1 raw

Supplrrc,

12 .......

~....

.... OH 11t -

=

I .IIJI.

\

54 Miscellaneous

cOw. ond

ttB,OOb.

404-4111-911011.

.Admiral oldo by· ildo awoodo
rtfrlgorotor

$150.

P1ooPII

r---------,
TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE

oultlpoo

216 East Second St.
POMEROY, OliO
(6141 992~3325

Jaungar couch, 1100. GOaCf
cond: 114-441-1;130 ofllr 4:00.

lfu11-

TallaooO .-ter ume •• new

I I I ( I j l I d'l I I -..
POMEIOY-Yery · nice 2
bedroom wtlh full besemenl,
.carport, nice lard, close to
Ron Evan• lntet'Pf~M 1, J8Ck..
..,n, OH HIOD-537-Ial.
playground. $ 4,000.
TUPPERS
PLAINS - Beau·
Cniwtord'• Grocery, Hendii'Mit,
WV, for rental,
csothee
bful 3 bedroom, 3 bath, full
$3. per garment; otoo now
finished basement, two 2·
regular army cemoun.ug..
car garages, on 5 acres. You
Duncan PhYfl oofo I dining
must see this to apprecoate
room HI, · E"xc. aond., I misc. : ij_ $115,000. .
.
antlquoo.lt4 4411 220t.
POMEROY - 2·3 bedroom,
For Soto Picnic bbtH $80.00 I
. funy carpeted, 2 large sun·
up colt lOr -~~~ 114-tii2-IIIS,
decks. built'in kitchen. This
luve..,.....ge.
is a cute home. $14,500. .
For IIIIa: Air ~";:a UOid
IIINERSVflL£ - 3 bed·
1•• t,.n 2 rnontha.
114rooms, 2 baths, full base44t·1S11,30M71o4:1111 :
ment, new roof in a frrendly
For 8 ...: Full F1fur!M1, Slzo
heilhborhood
Only $15.000.
Wedding QOM\ ( . - _ Slzo:
POMEROY - 2 houses for
24-21) Olio 1pllon, Vldthe pnce of one. 4 rental
SI-, and ChOIIIf !-ongl!l
Trlln, Y Nee- Uno, With Loot I
unrts. Thrs is a really good
Soquonco, 4oldng Prtco: $271.
buy_
for only $25,000.
814-441-7140.
IIDDLEPORT - Price re·
For lllle: llelrlaorotor, In good
duced - Owner is very
oondhon. 114-284al.
anxtous to sell. large bu·
Four· Prom d l l - with OCo
siness buildong, full base·
-orloe, 11- 3L7,18,20, _,.
men!, possible rental un~.
only onae, 0111 mer 3:00 814This investment should pay
Jit2·3t30.
•
for
itself. $15,500.
Frlday.Soturdoy, Jeane $5:00,
SYRACUSE - 3 bed room,
Jun Jackoto $20.00. Poagy.
Olrolaml, Dovl.o, IC!It RodfOiil
mostly carpeted, large laCs,
Rd. Athono, OH.
'
one floor plan, storm doors
and wirldows. $19,500.
Gr1vely 1r.ctor, tlr cond,
Maytag auto wuhor, WOCIII fur. , EAGLE Rl DGE - In the
NICI, CIIMnt mi._, 304-t'llc6untry, very pnvate, newer
5162.
white brrck wrth 3 bed·
Kenmore portable dlatrwwhi::c,
rooms.
family room, 2 baths.
lpiCI NYOr, UOid 2 ,...., Ill·
$65,000.
e.alenl condition. 111.00. JM.
UCIIIE -Very beautdul3
675-4331.
bedroom, tun finoshed baseKtrOI~Inl .......... PO Nett.
ment, family room, fenced rn
eM-311-11513.
patio.
large yard, satellrte
KorOHiio hlotor, bollr cradle,.
.
dish,
2
car prap. S4B.OOO.
doy bod, old
:104 .818
AduH Olo-bfe Olo,.,._ Cooo
tOO • Special Price S2t.l5. Col
Rondy, 304-871-3182.
Concroto &amp; p i - oopltc tonko,

r

r

tlon _ In· Commti'cl•l

.

3~~

''"'*·

.

Round BalM In the
245-5598
' .

fJ:.• '

\'

. ....~. """"*...

AS&amp;~- 446-2174
111&amp;111' .P.

rr.om

ISSOC. ·t4&amp;..1383

RESIDEN'l1AI.COIIIIIIo ••....-••-"......,""""''""'l~...,;•IIALIS•~~"- ·~·-

.

---·-f£li i .ol

ii

.

IULAVILLE ROAD - EXCEllENT lOCATION ONLY 5.MILES
FROM CITY. OVER AN.· ACRE ·LAWN. 3 BEDROOM. 2 BATH
HOME HAS NICE OPEN FLOOR PLAN. KITCHEN HAS ROOMY
SNACK liAR, DISHWASHER, ANDERSEN THERMOPANE WIN· ·
DOWS, EL£CTRlC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE.
THIS IS AUNlBILT HOME. PRICED BELOW MARKET VALUE
AT $59,000.

DEXTER - llave you ever been in a BARN STYLE HOME?
Now's your chance. Sits on Chree secluded acres. but only 35
minutes to Athens, 30 minutes to Po,meroy or Gallopolis. It's
two story w~h a basement' and loads of wood decking to
watch the approach of summer. Only 2 years old.
.
.
. .
$56,00.00

PERFECT FOR HORSES -PASTURE AREA IS LARGE EN·
•OUGH FOR RIDING RING. MODERN 3BEDROOMS, COUNTRY
KITCHEN, FAMILY ROOM WITH WOODBURNER. 2 CAR CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE. OVER 9 ACRES. $49,900.

WE NEED LISTINGS!
. IF YOU WANT YOUR PROPERTY
SOLD
GIVE US A CALLI

DEXTER - I 'h story older home on town. Ha.s noce french
doors and loads of. potential. 3 bedrooms and bath. Bay win·
dow in living room.
·
$19,500.00
RUTLAND - One story ranch sotting on 6 acres. Sounds
nice' let us show you what this property has to oHer. Has
carport· and garage plus extra storage building.
·
$44,000.00
· SALEII TWP.- Appx.60 acres of vacant land with 2B tillable
and balance in timber.
$24.000.00

BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY SETTING - NlCE 3 BEDROOM
RANCH HOME ·HAS FORMAL DINlNG ROOM, FUll BASE·
MENT, 3 CAR GARAGE, LARGE TOBACCO BARN, EQUIPMENT
BUIL,DING. APPROX. 56 ACRES. $60,000.

HENRY E. CLELAND .................... 9112-819'
JEAN TRUSSELL .. ... .. ... .. . ! .. .. ........ 949-2880
JO HILL ,.. .. .. .,....... ............. .. .....:.•. 998-4488
OFFICE ......... .. ... ..... ...... .... ........ .·.•.• 992, 22~9

TAVERII WITH EQUIPMENT - 2 STORY BUlLOING HAS
APARTMENT ON g(CONO FLOOR. lARGE GARAGE REAR OF
BLDG. DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS, EXCELLENT BUSINESS OP·
PORTUNITY. CALL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS.
·

Roar Eatata Ganaral

Roar Eatste General

PRIVATE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES SURROUND
THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME. THE COMFORTS.OF :
THIS HOME ARE ENOLESS. 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. FIRE-'
PLACE IN LIVING RO.OM 1'/000BURNER IN FAMILYROOM. 2'
CAR GARAGE . AVAILABLE WITH 3 OR 9 ACRES.
••
$30,000 - FRAME RAN CH WITH BRICK ON NICE lEVE ~
FENCED LOT: 2 BEDROOMS, LARGE KITCHEN AND LIVING •
. ROOM, UTILITY -ROOM! PRiCED RIGHT FOR QUICK SALE.
. ' .:
•
• ·:
:
,•

:1183 Or~~nd Prtx, neede mot.
mol. $1,000;
·11184 Colt .... ...... ~·
·corb.
1183 Tar. N.·cub., ..--; 1111 Banlcudl,
:~ bnokll, h~;
,lHO Pont. Yont~ro CoL Cir,
.$2,100;• , . Ford eo... N•aolled, SIGO; 11111. Fori!
-• - wllft, t1,:loo; 1114
llano ....- J400· 1985

.·

. Honda CLX

...

STEP BACK lN TIME! THE ABOVE TURN OF THE CENTURY
SKETCH OF TlllS BEAUTIFUL OLO HOME...PROVES ITONCE
WAS ONE OF THE MOST ELABORATE HOMES IN GALLIPOLIS.
lT COULD BE NOW, WlTll SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION.
· IF RESTORING AVINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM , CALL US
FOR A TOUR OFTHISONL.ANO MAKEYOUR DREAM COME
TRUE!
FARMS AND VACANT LAND
25 ACRES- !'!ANNAN TRACE ROAD. $15,000.

...
v

·aun

Sen w/mOt.

·- ... bolono

Pll).

lurkoy

20

. .--.

Available
DALE E. TAYlOR ·

r

175-lt:U.

gy,n.1 .
·Allrll
-;

VtP
Condo tight,
com
. oc1ot11

20-21: $421 pluo dopooll, tM-

-· a
3111-21:11.

.,......
blot oilor.

-~'l:o. '"

-. .

114101.

or

i 14185 NIMI.n
,000 eech, , ...

.C-o 24K olr, oharp, NSt,250 flm. 1155 Oldo
· 43K $2,800 ftnm N-dHvon, 114. d~nn,

1184 Hondo Accord LX, high
•mil•, 12500, 61W87-3021.

'

'·1184 Trono Am, lAw 1111111, T: topo, PSc.!'_B, PW, AMIFII Co•
. IIIIo, U,ouo. 814-38U2Jit.
..

.·en

: 1110 Cull- $2,400. 1151 MorMarq•• ...5110. . 1117
•
Horizon $2,3110. ,11171
.t
304-8~

seao.

1151 Porolloc Orond Prlr,
. I onglno, lut_..lc, olr,
i - - player PS, ........ I

114 311 IIBioftor Sp.m.

POIIEROY - RT. 7- Approx. 18 acr~ of land , LCCD water
&amp; electric available. Will SEll ON LAND CONTRACT
$20.000

1192-3129

R.

A. 'Val' VALENTINE

4411-9872
OFFICE 992-3325
lruct , ......... .,..,
l

lt

I

f.

1'

.d tj

i • I ,
I

I

L

'

•I

•

QETAWAY IETitAT - Ol!ner financin1 with down JIIY·
ment. IPPIOI. 7 Illites 11om GlllipOlil. ldellloution ..heel·
lent condllllln, 111rlaolls lluel.lke and • - CrHk. 23
11. trmi trdtr. ~ rural water, IIPitC syllem, end
lleclric filllln' boltlll, flunling_Gf justllfalint
11514
VACAIIT LOT - J2 ACIE - r..oc.tld I 111111 distance oil
Stale Highway 5541t Eno. On Eno/Vinlan liNd. Grlllpflel
lor a new ltomeGf mollilt I!Ome.Price reduced ID$1990.00,

,,-......

torsare

. _ lolondor 110, M

....... rr,ooo. ~ - .

1• 20 ft. Poutuen hat. 1NI
·q HP
Moler. Coif 304.
.
'1117110 Hondo. Uko - · $110. tl'ftlolltilol ar - . . Volklwoac&gt;n
3 ·•
·•·...h
oprlngor,
fi11o.111
Sll
t•• lliud
V
•·-·ld 79' Campers &amp;

Jot•-•

uro

·1200 -

.

Llko · .... • boilarY.
lAw
ml~. a.- kopl.
$2,100.010. 114 4414114.
1111 Yamaha Y....,, 11,000
mlloo, 1200 CC, $2,100. 114-2111704.
~~,..-,,..-,,----,-.,...-,.,
11M Hondo,_ fourtru 4x4, SSO

CC,814-441'nll.

LETART - lllinltn•c• free hteriQr - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 3 sittong porches, and a dining room. Nice big level
yard. Fenced area wilh barn for animals, and a little house
for children. Price was $42,500. REDUCED TO $39,900

.

54 Mlstellaneous
.•'

Merchandlae

r=: ::r:l,........ lully.,.oqul.t
tl fl.

raof,

'

1 owning.

m-

PRIY~CY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONE!
log home can be purchased with 162 acres or
acres. This home offers 4 BRs. ~ baths,
equipped kitchen, lR, FR. 2 foreplaces, heat
pump/cent. aor !backup systemJ . oversrzed 2
car attached garage. Frontage on. Raccoon
Creek.
'

noedo. Any olzo.

poa1

'

bl-...n;oe

~Df,. ...

• •· Save h"no: )dl;.
even thouundl of

loc..
,

doll oro.

SolillloprlllllloliYI

DONNA CAISENBEAY
E.S.A .. lox 111
Gallipolis. Ohio &lt;lll31

BRENDA JEFFER$ .......................................... 992-3056
DARLINE STEWART ...................................... .. 992-6365
.SHERYL WALTERS .. :.......................................
. .. _.367-0421
-

Jltl614·?56-6511
•·~

.I IU ACRES, HAIRISONlWP. - Home on ·
property with 3 BR, beth, LR. 'kHchen, FR.
large bern. ,

YOU AlE LDOIIIII FOR Newer aU brick home ius! five minutes from
·downtown. 3 BR&amp;, 3 bellll, !Jell room.llmily
room, 2 car attched garage, heal pump/cent.
air, city utilities.
"

NEW LISTING- KIIIEON OR. - Ranc'l style
home, 3 BRs, bath.LR, kHchen. full basement.

All REIIODELED AIID WAITING JUST FOR THREE BEDROOII HOllE near ·town with 2
YOU -Five minutes from town on St. Rt. 5&amp;8. baths, eQuipped kitchen, lR. FR.Iull basement
Very nice home offers 2/3 BRs, LR. kitchen, 2 car garage, gas heat/c ent. aor.
.'
bath, new vinyl silfrngand insulation, city utrli·
ti~s and city schools.
IOOIIY HOllE +5 acres m/ 1~ mobrle hoflte
NEAR GAGE.. .. Perry Twp. - 26.624 acres located at the edgeoflown . ~ots of extras. Call for
m/1, barn and 2 springs on property.
~~taols.
.
•

OWNER WILL FINANCE DOWN PAYIIENT! ~
lovely 2 star¥ heme in countrv. 4 A.' ' Ia
country kiltheli, OR, 18•24LR, 18x20 master 20 ACRES,IIORE OR LESS, HUNTINGTOIITOWN·
•
PRICE REDUCTION .... $49,900.- Located on
BR with skylight· and ~ass dOQrs lo de"k, 2 .SHIP - OWNERS lAY HELP FIIIANCE QUAL· Second
one block from grocery and
baths, lull besement. vonyl srdlng. Srtuated on IFIED BUYERS- Ranch style homeoffen3 BRs, · downtownAve.,
shopping.Thos home oHers 3 BRs,
7 at:res more or less on Slate Route.
LR. kitchen. beth. Newer bern 15.x24. CaR for lR, kitchen, bath, basement,
gas heal, cily
IUILD A' IIEW HOllE II@ PUt YOUR IIOBIL£ more information.
.
. utilllies . ldeal for the older couple who want to
HOllE HERE - 29.8 acres m/ 1vacant land. CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE IN VINTON, 28x32,' walk and be close to park and shopping.
Fronte1e on St. Rt. 160. Rural water avarlabfe. concrete floors. 220 electric service, forced air fuel · AFFORDABLE LI'IING... $31.000 - 3 BRS,
$16,900,
•
oil tumace, two 7019 overhead doors, one wafk·in I 'h baths, LR, kitchen, DR, gas furnace. car·
VERY IIJCE WCH SIYLE 11011E LOCATED ON door.
.
pet, 24x24 unattached garage, just outside of
SfAlE IT. 110: 3 BRS; LR. kitl:hen w/tange, re·
,
town.
fliii!IIIOI 01tecarattached garage.IOOx300ft. 13.2 ACRES, IIllNEAR IEIGS liNE Ill$19,900- HOllE AND 1.686 ACRES. MI Lin
lot
'
Older two story home w~h vinyl sidin&amp;. Storm
wrndows- Two small barns.
Springfoeld Twp. Home oHers 2 BRs, LR,
$32,000, EXCELLENT STARTER HOlE - 3
.
kitchen, bath.
8Rs, LR, klll:hen, bath. laundry, attached gar· VACANT LAIID·ON IT. 588 CLOSE TO TOWN
age.
. - l'ofice building site.
36.5 ACRES 11/l- CLAY TWP.- Frontson
Friendly Ridge. $18.000.
KIISTI DRIVE - A". bli~k ranch style home, 3 2.4 ACRE TUCT .._ COIIIIERCIAL SITE IIRs, Ill bllhs, lll·on krlchcn, formal dontng, located on Upper Rl. 7 across from the new · ATTENtiON HUNTERS - 35 acres· in Clay
Twp. Small frame house on property, 2 water
12•30 LR,w/FP,IIIached gerege.
shopping center.
,
. taps. $15,000.
' .
$9,500- 17.5 ACRES VACANT IAIID-Petry
J ACilLOT FOIIALE - Located along SR twp., S~":" Crt!t!k bottom lind. Some hill.To·
IlEAl NOIITH IIALUA H.S. ..:. 211! acres m/ 1,
1&amp;0 ill Charallil Acr•
.
becco
.
Morpn Twp. Ftlnk Wild Rd. - $17,500.

Real Eatate

Rear Eatate Gana"'l

OPEN .HOUSE
••
'

.

'.

2:00-5:00 SUN., APRIL 7th
u

'

~

-lont
1m

Dodgo 23 fl. lllnl - . oiCIIont coridltlon,

Located 200 First 4ve., Corner of Grape St.

'

ATTENTlON l NVESTORS!I! Nicehome located on
town on 2nd Ave., owner has moved to a new
home'and wants this one sold. 3 BRs. LR. Kol. ,
oR, bath, garage: Prrced on the. 20's.
$25.000 - Approx. I acre along Sl Rt. 5B8 '
(400 H. of frontageJ. Small home offers2 BRs.
bath, LR, kitchen, mobile hoi!U! pad on prop··
. .. •.

•.

•.

5 A'CRE LOTS FOR SALE..Green Twp., city
schools, Fairfield Vanco Rd. area.

.
$45,000 -: $T~ RT. 588
3 BRs, kitchen. LR. FR. part besement veru
home.
.
' 1
OWN YOUR OWN FAST Fo6D BUSINESS.
lotated on ~l. 35. Call for delaols.

Very elegant VIctorian 4 bedrms •• ~ b~ths, l!brary,
completed baaement with built-In kitchen, family fm.
w/WBFf' and bath. Potential Bed and Breakfast.

ql

11692

UAIIIHII' IW ISIA11
........, ...........JJ9

(?/J~a/~.Mlh:

44.6-6106 I

..

•

•

.•

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

. - _ Coli. Aonnlo :n&gt;o&lt;ntcin,
304otiiiWI13.
•

00111 LOOK AT THE PIJCEII ~It wll shock you
to see lhll you can still own a home for $33,500.
You will find this 3 bedroom, vinyl soded ranch rn
Centenary close to the convenience store.
Smaller, remodeled room perfect for sewing room
or nursery. Master bedroom has been remodeled.
One bedroom sl~l needs remodeled . Detached I
car garage. ·approx. l' acre. Cijy schools. ACT
NOW!
•100

Real Eatato Ganaral

Real Eetate General

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL- We heve a 1.74B sq. ll3
bedroom, 2 bath home located in a destrable
neipborltood. This comfortable home has a large
sunroom, garage, 100xl60 lot. New on the
market. $59,900.
11403

RIOGRAIIDE -Very attrective,
in Voltage ot Rio Grande on the
best lot in Rio _Grande. Completely remodeled, 3
bedrooms, llvmg room, dininll room , eat·in
kotchen, all redecorated very nicely. Full
basement. Several Dlitbuildings and garoee. Grill
yard and &amp;arden spot $54,900.
jj200

DUTCH TREAT - Be1utiful2 story Dutch Col01tial
on 3.5acres, m/1. You'll hnd everythinll here from
acozy family room to four bedrooms, 211 baths
and an in &amp;round pool. Perf~ lorgrowingf~mifies,
Priced at $120,000.
1502

IUT
- Very Rood localt01t
along 325 just south of Rio Gr1nde. Here's a
deluxe
for the beginner. 3 bedrooms, 2
baChs. Very nice kitchen, living room, femily room,
partial basement. Country surroundini)S. City
schools. $42,000.
/1220

U&amp;.ooon-

GREAT BUY FOR
Very nice home for
starter fam•y or income property, etc. 3
bedrooms, larae living room. _
eat-in kijchen w~h
nice cabinets, I bath and sep1rate ul"ity room.
Nice flat lot Convenient location.

•us

ALIIOST COUNTRY - Happy lv11g starts here in
thos well·cared for three bedroom brick ranch.
There are 2~ baths, a 2 car garage and a large
healed workshop for the ~raltsrnan in the family.
Take a look today. $64,000.
Jl507

LITTLE RANCH AROUND ....; Take a
' be sold on this spotless 3 bedroom,
with one car altached ptage. NoC
town Oft a dead end street. The price justM~ . uuu

HAPPILY EVER AFTER - Is how you'll Uve on this
3 bedroom. 2 bath home featurong a large great
room, formal doning room and separate master
suite..,Entertaining continues outside in the above
ground pool. Priced al $59,900.
•504

LDOICS CAll BE DECECYIIGI - Believe if or not,
thrs home has 9good size rooms and 2lull baths. 3
bedrooms and I bath on the main floor and I
bedroom and bath rn the fud basement. Eat-in
kitchen. family room. storage room and lar~
utility room . Forced air heat and central arr.
Screened-in porch and attached l-ear garage.
Taslefully decorated interior and attractive
landscaping. This home is defrn~ely worth lookinf
.t! S55.ooo.
.
no ·

'

$22,5001 - This A·frame home offers 3 bed·
rooms, I ll baths, LR, kitchen with stove and
refrigerator, electroc heal, part basement.
Hannan Trace School District. .69 acre.

erty.

Make us an offer, but have your money ready because they
really want to sell! Very well cared for 3 bedroom home that's
ready to move into. Recently redecorated, has a beauiWul
stone fireplace. large dining room aM full basement ..Large.
2 car garage. Walk to town. Quiet sti~. $57,000. U02

tm Alrotroom Tronl Tl'ollor,
-Hton, - ....,.
tllnod, AC, t3,-. 114 441 3411.

RACINE - ACRES - Acreage - Areage - Approx. 26
acres ol land. Has approx. 6 acres tillable. Great place topul
a home.
$14,500
.
' - Asecluded cabin with approx. 3acres and all
ROUTE
248
on one lloor. Has a wrap·around porch. 2 bedroom s, large
open livong room and kitchen with knotty prne·on wallsand
ceiling. Approx. 10 yrs. old.
•
$26.900

.,
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
, FREE ESTIMATE on
·,

LR. kitchen. citJ, ut~itoes.

Wat-

;

luilingo.
Deolgnod to
vour

121.0110, 11\ LOTS, Chestnut St., 2 BRs, bath, lAY IE

....... ........
..
::rr-

Motor Homes

BOWMAN'S RUN ROAD - Atorhomt by Alta - Big open
kitchen and Jiving room wijh cathedral ceiling. A balcony
bedroom overlooking loving room, 2 other big bedrooms. Has
a full basement with utility room and workshop. Approx. 10
acres of land with 2 caves and.an above g~ound pool.
$79,900

Spooclllillng in Pvte

j

-

IAIIMINf

TUPPERS PLAINS -limbtrp! Rid .. - Newer ranch type
home with 6 bedroilms, family room, 2 kitchens, drningarea, ·
2 car garage, enclosed porch, and a nice big I.B5 acre lot.
Has asatellrte dish, atrium door, 3sets of slifhngdoors,and a
front deck. ·
IIA~E YOUR APPOINTMENT TO SEE TODAY $61 ,900

Connolbu!g. Inc. &lt;lV1111

IIINI FARII - located on Bulavrlle-Porter
Rd. ...i. 13.44 acres and a nice one storv hom~
wflt 3 BR~ 2 baths. LR, kitchen, FR, Or, carpel, ·
oil and electric heating, 4 car unatta ched me·
tal garage, bam, approx. 4 acres fenced pas·
ture. ·
.. :

Home
Improvements

WATERPROOFING
thru
wlndlhlold, lfli ........, 2 teo
.......fl!mlehod.
I\IO!M.'
. .._. .......,_
_ ....... _
... pull ~~~-oover *'- ., 1rllllf, . . , . . - . - , dol'
~-~­
.. night •

2111.

1 -

81

MIDDLEPORT ~ llain Street- This home has nice size
rooms. 4 bedroom. 2 story home wijH wrap·around porch,
full .basement. Srtting on a 501100
lot
$28.000
.

D. C. Metal Salts, Inc.

1

......

111. Crall--.~
w. •
Good Coi M1n. ...-,. ....._
1711.
-14 ...... .,..., .... loot,
10 .......,. trolly
IMiar ......... ll.

LANGSVILLE -ST. RT. 124- A2 story, 4 bedroom house ·
wilh a I car garageand a cellar: Nice s1ze yard . Comes with
·above ground pool that is still in crate.
$18,900

EASY LIVING~ In this4 year old 14x60Sunnybrookmobile
home. II has a cathedral ceiling ff dimension and alaundry
room with shelves for storage, equipped krtchen. two bedrooms and I \0 baths. It is beautiful and in new condition.
price was $14,000.
NOW $12,500

Real Estate General

--'--

WE NEED USTINGS
H.U.D. Homes

75 Boals &amp; Motora

lllDDLEPORT - 21ots. and a one story home wrth seven
rooms. Has 3 to 4 bedrooms, huge living room, big doning
room, newer one car garage, and four frreplaces. Also alarge
floored attic, front porch and a partly fenced large lot.
$36,000
\

- ·Tho_..,

.._ 1lfiDOint-·
...., ...
I,,_,
gun, go,..-

HOME 992-88.92 .

Tr. fii.IM~t, P11i;, 1985

ACREAGE - ROUTE 218 - MOBILE liOM[ liOOKUP. ,
BARN, $28,000.
.

THIS COZY COTTAGE IN EUREKfHAS TO BE THE BEST BU,Y
ON THE MARKET! 3 ROOMS PLUS UTILITY ROOM AND BATH.
JUST REDUCED TO $6,500.

ElectriCal •
Rofrlgtratlon

OFFICE 992-2888

--nt
·Arl• lkolnt, tt,200· 1m oa•·

101 ACRES .:... HANNAN TRACE ROAD. $29.00.0.

ROUTE 218 - LOOK FOR A NICE SITE FOR ANEW HOME?
HERE'S ONE~' APPROX. 31 ACRES, LARGE BARN. SEPTIC
TANK, RURAl WATER TAP. $28,000.

84

';:j,

114-3flll.9062.
· 1814 Fonl Tempo, outo, good
:condhlan, $2,~. 014-t46-1211.

78 ACRES -~DAD FRONTAGE, TOBACCO BASE. OHIO TWP.
.
EXCELl ENT BUY AT $32.000.

Improvements

. .$710; 1117 -

~7711,

67 ACRES- ROUTE 325- 3 BEDROOM HOME,2 BAR1:4S.
NICE lAND! $38,000.
'

Homa

81 -

······-- ...

POIIEIIOY IIUIMI Build-

o.,.._

1::10 PM,~ C -

flol.!.':h

Cemp«al .
Motor Homat .

--------~Rn~I~Emm
__e_O.~-,.-ra-1--------l

vov-r:

j

--.p

1913 Kowo01111 l!lfl.l.~/::1

drtve, ex:cellft' concl,

1887 Fonl F........ FuR bod :::::o:-'-:o;;:':'-'-'; ::,.:---:-::--plck•up truck. Sfondord, 57,000 1887 KltiO ~r.; vary
mllll. condllonl SUOO Good condition, aotl oftor I p.m.
llnn.I14-448-IOQ.
614-IIH085.
·

iflc -

2 bUstness ul)ils, 4 ren·
Ill apartrnen1s, all in luH opera·
seo.oo, .._rrc
$50.00 814-112-11107.
liln. $55.cm.
RACINE - Large business
Mlnn Kola 718MX _,..
building with 4 rental umts.
1rolllng motor tncl
bit.
tory. Brooding rollbna. - This would be a nice invest·
35f7.
menl $45,000.
POIIEROY - Larae 4 bed·
room house. Price reduced.
Owner is real anxious 1o sell
Quockly. Good condrtion
home. Full basement, hot
weter
heat:
efficient.
AtCondltiOMd......,..,
Guarontood ~pi ..,lei lot
$26,000.
ol mokll,
NEW LISTING - UCINE
Dryor 8"-114 4411 11144.
- RIVERFRONT PROPERTY
Solo or trodo lot car or trucfl Of
Fully set up mobole home
equal voluo, IBII Tulbo lAzor
silting on I acre. This is a
Compulor, wloo- prlntor and
great fishong and relaxation
progrorno, a~.!'.ft 3
spot. A good buy at.only
.
111-nod Planed LuOibor,.Doot . $15,000.
........ Cooing, .... loinl, ....
NEW LISTING - SYRA014 ... - · lfter .........
CUSE - Fully ·furnished .
Nicely Ia kt!ll care of duplex.
SUrpl..~ ..... Donlor!. .._..
2
large lOis in a nice loca·
Cornaunougo,
•'"" •
o.oro1o aa. .-. - londnllo
lion.
$30.000.
-~f~,llll,lun;llaanllvlngroom tulte, beiGe a-d
cond,
J1ryer

-r

1171 Ponlllc. 4dt. 11C11n, AC,
72 Trucks tor Slle
PM'I, cruloO. tiH, looko good- 1111 Camoro, AS, lluo, 21,000
ruM~· Sill. 441·1140 or 111 mil", 1 ower, auto, 1lr, 11n '14 - - plolo.., I IMICI, olr,
!!!-.-~
~.~.......
cKI:;noor;=;;n:=:O.::.=---;:;;-::·::-:----:-· ! cruloo, AIIIFM 01oroo co-.o, fllit o ~
..,_
-·~•32.
~~- eo
~o&lt;.a 1 ut0
pb
tnonk ,.,....._ 11,11115 or .
• ,. - rntrO
1111/mo. ttc..MW7m, 814-446- 1981 c:hovy, 1 ton,
SIO
•~. tift, $1100. 414-112~
.
1104.
motor,
,...,
•
.,..
lon,
1tlt Eecon GT, exc. cond., 111 St,IIO, 114-441-17lllolor lp.m.
;~•· . 27,000 miiM. 114-M~· 11?2 Ford ·Trucfl,
body •
-~ 8510, 114-1$2-5771
or t4
·
11111 Hlo- 4 DlfM
lrlfCk. -Hon. llfM, now ~.... SIOO. 114-441·
OSOI.

Herdt.

RN.eonabi•'Prteee. Steve Davia Hay for Sale. Clover
Family Puro Broda. 814-852-~9.

D. BUIIIIIIIWI ·

RACIIIE -Vacant lot wrth cijy sewer,electric. water and gas
available. Great for home or trailer. No messing wrth septic
tanks or drilling wells.
$10,000.00

..,.Uti

I

MotorcycleS

Dutoo Boaro, Eacoir.nt Roputo·

446•3636

FIVE-PONT$ - ~autilul brick home with full basement
How often have you said "That's what I want"? WE 'tiAvE IT:
This home hes been well taken care of. Three bedrooms, 2
baths and gorgeous yard.
$69,500.00

lfl"

......
W.torl~l
Goad
FO&lt; Trowolng.

MM. lollio!onl ·140 htt. ,.. wolt

. Realty

•o

Ill .......

-

C~naday-

SYRACUSE - ITS ADOG LONGER!! It has been reduced
so low that now rl is a real jewel. Nice level lot and close to
grade school. AI this price you can fi• it up or tear ot down.
ONLY $9,900.00

·-Yon,
-ron. -=

lt4-2511-8zn.

:;,~·:"·~;;~- .

POIIEROY - This home is just waiting for you. Bl·level in
good condilron 2 car garage, J.4 bedrooms, equipped
· kitchen, central heac and AI C. Has ~sown basketball court.
3'h acres of beautiful land that can be all yours. Close to town
(n a very destrable area.
$6'9.900.00.

1171

S$, $500 114-112-

19lll -

1244.

Sunday Tlme&amp;-Sentlnei-Page-07

1m Chovy WlncloW Yon ogood
conctHion, Family or CilUiOii
Uoo. Cal Aolll14-441-- .....
lp.m. .

StS2 ofllr lp.lrl.

v..

Real Estate Ganaral

Luxury Liner, I Dro¥0. 4 "'llhto,
$229/oouplo. Hotel ·Paid, No
Glmmleb. Tl~k... Goad 1 Yoar.

44

Calvt~o,

Real Eetate General

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

A CARIBBEAN ILDWOUTI
We Over Bouaht CNIM~
Florldo to Tho BOhomoo..,~ a

304.a~ 11111' 1':119 . .. .
1188 C.tllt Suflremt, 1 own'er
~000 Mllll, ~,300. e14-24S: 1111 Codlllac O.Vtllo, 2-dr,
13,000 mU11, ex.ceH1nt condl·
1818 - ·, .4 lipOid, bluo, lion, 21 pluo hlahwoy mltoago,
100 oort $1,150. 1 11=
,000
::..:;fl;:.:lin::.·:,.::'*:...:G'4::11-::2301i
:=:,~o•;:~ n;oc~o
711, fM.441.1104.
I,

loki All.

~ratmjc!N. 16UAw.- 1975-1991

3control
ton olrBryam
-unn. ~yno•
~1 PI"'

tieS Trons Am, gray, t~opo. 1110 CoiMnl Rl, v..fntauto,
4«1,000 mllel, one owner, atwtrtt
garogod,, novor lh onow. 8,.. loodod, whlo Ill/rod
lrlor,
441457t
7.000 MillO, ~od,_!i,IOO.

Ill optlon8-L.!XI 1M I Ill

2 Dynomork Rldlna u-., 10
HP, 38 Inch cut, 1300 -h. a
Rototllloro, 3 V2 HP, $110 HOI!.

814-«WMI.

79

Autos for Sale

Holland 7 n hlylllno. Now
fl.......
Holland
3 pl. ~John
-oooro
··
Oohl grlndor-mhlot.
·41111 toiok-dor. 304-273-4215.

·MerchandJae·

. foct candhlon $415. I . . . . . .
68&gt;13.

71

•

--tlmo,3-11145.
"M;;w round Mr baler 1200 ~
lliOiilnooy, At. 124 • ...,..... a,aoo. lot of AC 1&amp;" flvo
ROIIII, 'laban, OH 114-al-- looiiORO
plowo ooml mounted
111«.
SilO. JD 11" lour bottom ploWs
$150. 12 ft land loYOior.
3GW7UIIIO oflor 1:00 Pll.

246·61&amp;2

11 Pllow Of

'Q uality Stock, lllull
It~.

.. bolorl, ...... atlw f
roiodv -I!WYI .. Form

_

951

IFNO

Uood F- Equipment:
0.. 10 Uood n.i:l- to

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...... ..-.,.. =AC"--.;:n...,_7 .....
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·n
L1vestock
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C ...-. ,C:
271~

-and

· 114-441-

Auloa for Sale

tUM Chovollo 88 pe~l only
$850. Cloev~ 4114 4 lpd.,
$1500 · 11111 Clloviflo Blick, 350
'L old otyll rally. 114-441onorlpm.
•

"''""'yo,

.. ' - fi!O'I· -Ilion, .-.

Doulolo ko-nl Hammond ....
wWt
'Ulan lind

AKC ISooftopd, .....,.., 1 112

v-ro olcliltiholo, - - ·
11+21114L

Pont c.m

-

71· Autos for Sale

ten. car ballor. duot ulo, 1100
urm.
, ,, 1114433.

knpiiiMIItl. Buy,

=~311 Jtp

-----.

n

Rog. 2 Y, otd Anguo Bull for
~··· e~1241. .
- • •.
'

i!'
:"::':l:·o!OM:OO- - -Wilf-.114-!===::::....-

Musical
AKC ng'MtMd Pomtnn~

Llveatoek

63

w.t o.JU
, IM~I-t777;
ww._,_,.
..

4010 ,..... Traator, 12,7llj 100 tiMiora l

lnatrumants

(Extra Char941 If Over 20 1\i!ilea)

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

Livestock

63

ollnt'o Fom~ui~1 .1A. 31,

wor1o, 011 01 1o tt,300. _..,,..
3n1.

W.nted: lla'- oh'aaaiMa T-cup
Poodlo lot Olud • ..,.... Coh
1141121341.

520.00

81 Fann Equipment

11141 2N Ford INOiarc.~•.!!!.•

441-7313.

20 mile radius of llo Grandt

61

56

AKC .-ny SP"nlolr 11
old, with konow I
- . clooopl MUll _.II 114-

Includes Oil Chan. I Flltei;
Greasing; CW Transmltslon,
Power StMrlng, lr'*e, Wlllllshleld
Washer Fluids I DlfferMitlal.

April 7, 1991

Aprll7, 1991 ·.
Trd1Lportatron

PetsforSale

s AKC Colle pupplu. 10 WMU
old.l14 ltiJ.. ..
.

OIL CHANGE SERVICE

'.•

'

318-1126

PLENTY OF PRIY~Y - You'll be surprised at
how much privacy this home offers while still
being within 5 monuteslrom everything, Very well
ma1ntained country style ranch also offers over
2900 SQ . II. of comfortable livong space. Large
country kitchen will ·allow your imagination plenty
of room to do many things with, formal dining
room, formal hvinJ. room wrth fireplace, very
·attractive den w~h another fireplace and
hardwood floors. 3-4 bedrooms wrth space for
additonal rooms to be finished .with lrtlle cost. lots
of extras including screened·in porch, 1erage,
parkrng for 3 cars plus wbtkshoparea, siGfageand
·more. Thisisa very nice hon.eand must be seen lo
be appreciated fully. Over $100,000.
11212

.

216 ACRE. 11/L. FARII - Buildings co~s isl of 2
barns and complete set up for mobile home. 55
· acres crop. 50 .acres pasture, balance in woods
and misc. are.~ . Some timber value. 1200' m/1 of
desirable road lrontaae with ru11l water line. ·
Excellent area .to build a home. Tobecco ba..
located on Gage·Patriot Road. For sale at
$B7,500.
11307
2.122 ~CRE TRACT OF LAND located on Graham
School Road.less than I mile off St. Rt 141. Good
building srtes! Sellet' w~l provide use of existing
crossing adjacent to 2.122 acres w~h buyer
providinll mainlenace. 4 miles to Holzer Hosprtal,
6 miles to Glllipolis by way of St. Rt. 141. •
Surveyed descriptiOn. $12,000.
130$

Ft•E COUNTRY HOllE ...,. Here is as file 1 home
as you'll find. Very quiet and peaceful sellint
large spacious home with very large comfortable
rooms. Qu_ality burtt brick ranch feiCures 4 farae
bedrooms. 3 full baths. 2 frrapfaces plus indoor
BBQ. l~rge kitchen with dinette plus formal din ina
room wrth hardwood lfoors. Full, partially finished
basement, overs~ed 2 car carage. Huge
wrap-around deck, inground pool and 40 acres to
romp around on. Over $100,000.
M201
OWNERS WANT IT SOLD Ill - Patriot lislins. Brick
home offers 2 bedrooms, I bath, large livinc room
wnh place for woodbumer. Eat-in k~chen. large
· lot. I car carpo~ . Priced at $40,000.
1221
lNVESTIENT PROPERTIES 011 STATE STREET This is your opportun~y to purchase 6 rental
properties near downtown that consistently has
100%.occupancy. ThiS is the first~me on lheopen
market In many years. ~nerall~. the properties
consist of a tract ol 4 sin life famtly houses, and 2
,duplexes lOcllled on comer lots. M ~is impos~bte
to provide all the benefrts..inan ad, please call for
complele information.
M
flEW LIST! fiG ...., Need alot of bedroom space, but
don't have a lerge bud &amp;at? Here's a4 bedroom on
alarge lot wnh carden sp1ce. Several oulbuildinp
and porches. Priced at $37,000.
~217

eN
.ea. d L'.1st•·tng~ Ill
•••
Wiseman Real Esta·t e
(614) 446-3644

David Wiseman, Broker, 446·9555

.

LORETTA McDADE, 448·7729 CLYDE B. WALKER, 241·5278 B. J. HAIRS'I:ON, 448·4240

�.... ,.
Page DB Sunday Tlme~ntlnel

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

/

Aprll7,1891

Ohio ~ottery

Career
Day activities

Pick 3:039 .
' Pick 4: 8169

are held

'

Cards : 5H, K·C
5-D; 4-S
Super Lotto

20.21~27·2~39·45

'

' 248595

StOCk market. ••__;;Co;.;;;ntul.:;.;:.u::;;;ed:.!..:fro..::.::m::..:D~-1--­ Galia Cattlemen's...

Meigs County Agent's Corner·
I
(

ANGELA FORSYTHE, Sardinia, Obio, won Grand Champion Preview Heifer honors during the 1991 Gallia Cattlemen's .
Association Show at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds.

. TAVIS SHANE or Fostoria, Ohio captured Reserve Champion
Preview Heifer Honors during the first annual GaUia Cattlemen's
Association show.
.

they were some pretty poor num-

. Philip Morri.s was second, off Cattlemen's Association Preview
1/4 to 67 3/4. American Express, Open Steer Show was sponsored
Zagorski added, "People were which faces intensified competition
the local cattlemen group with
looking for the Fed to case before in the credit card market, was third, by
the
financial cooperation from the
noon. When the Fed didn't react, off 1/l to 28 3/8.
following
local businesses: chamthe traders and programs moved
IBM Corp., which has again pion Farms; HollyBrook Farms;
in" and the market dropped
entemt the body competitive lapShe thinks the Federal Reserve top computer market, was fourth, Ohio Valley Bank; Citizens
Springtime is a good time to WalCh
By John C. Rice
. National Bank; Ohio Valley Visifor swarming termites, Term.ites Board, which manages the nation's down 1 1/4 to 112 5/8.
County Ext. Agent,
tors Center; Gene Johnson Chevrotake an estimate $2.5 billion bite money .supply; is waiting for the
Agriculture
Citicorp was fifth, up 1 1/l to 16 let; Ohio Valley ·Foodland; Norris
out of U.S. pocketbooks every inflation numbers - the producer l/8 . ·The bank holding company Northup Dodge; Star Bank; GalPOMEROY
Chemicals year. Last year termites were found price index and consumer price will
offer holders of irs Visa and .
Recalled ., Altention! Benlate in 600;000 homes.
tndex - which will both be Mastercards the)owest prices for lipolis Stockyards Company; PJ'f
50DF, Benlate 1991DF, and Tersan
Signs of termite infestation s released next week. "If inflation is many products bought with its
1991DF, manufacrured by DuPont, include swarming of winged adults lower, the Fed could ease'' the cards.
.
have been recalled, It is not to be · in the spring (March , April, May, money supply, she said.
.
AT&amp;T, which Is p~sing its bid
sold or used.
·
Gene Seagle, ~hnical research for NCR Corp., was also active
June), or .autumn months (Septern- .
All dealers and =stributors are· ber, October), mud tubes over the director for Grunial &amp; Co. in New falling 1/4 to 34.
'
to stop sale of these p ucrs. Any· surface of foundation walls, mud ' York, said, ~ 'The market wa~
On
the
American
Stack
one in ~sian of th products protrud ing from cracks between marking time, waiting to see if
·sbould rettirn them to the point o( boards, and hollow sounds from · (Fed Chairman Alan) Mr. Exchange, the Amex Market Value
COLUMBUS , Ohio (UP!) index fell 1. 70 to close Friday at Gardeners feel flattered when a
purchase for a full crediL
infested wood when tapped with a Greenspan would lower the dis- 363.41, up 4.21 for the week.
hummingbird visits their flowers.
These products may contain the screwdriver or lcnife. Adult winged count rate or the ·Federal funds rate, Advances
led declines 448-383
The trick to attracting the tiny
herbicide attazine. The spraying of "swarmers" are coal black to pale but the Fed has already given die
among
the
1,002
issues
traded
for
birds
is planting nectar-rich flowers
benlate or tersan could result in 'yellow-brown in color, about ?De-. market some goodies.''
the week.
that
are
tubular or trumpet-shaped
plant injury. However, the l~vel ?f fourth to three-eighth of an mch
The Fed lowered the discount
Amex
volume
totaled
in
shades
of red or orange.
and
atrazine that may be contamed m long, with four wings about equal rate - the rate at which member
70,893,976,
compared
with.
benlate and tersan poses no human in size and easily detached. TheY. instituti()ns can borrow from the 56,399,745 traded a week earlier Some· common plants that lu·re
health or food safety problems.
are sometimes found around win- Fed - in February and December. and 80,654,380 tradlid in the same hummingbirds include bee balm,
DaiJ)' Producers and Refunds ... dows in large numbers.
nicotinia, petunia, salvia and trum"
"These haven't been factQred into week a year ago.
pet creeper.
Dairy producers should be able to.
the
market
yet,"
Seagle
said.
Fonunately, termites feed slowCorp., which invested
"Hummingbird gardens don 't
get a refund of the 5 cents per hun- ly 'and there is no need to panic.
Federal f1111ds are the overnight in· Amdahl
the Unix software system, led . take a great deal of planning,'' says
dredweight chect-off. Contact your Usually, termite control is ajob for reserves banks lend each other. The
the Amex actives, rising 1/4 to 15 Jeanne Youger·C()ma!y of the
ASCS office for form 1026.' The the licensed, certified, commercial Fed buys or sells government secu- 7/8.
.
'
Home Horticulture Center at Ohio
qualifications are I) you don't pest control operator since the rities to malce the Fed funds rate go
The
National
Association
of State University . "They can be
i nclude milk production, 2) you homeowner seldom has the train- upordown.
.
Dealers composite index, small and easily managed with
have a farm plan filed with Soil ing, experience or equipment to
Additionally, a stronger dollar Securities
which
set
a record Thursday, species planted according to their
Conservation Service, and 3) you perform the job effectively.
should aaract foreign investors into advanced 13.50
to end the week at · growing habits."
fall within the guidelines on highly
Deal only with a licensed, reli-' the U.S. financial markets, he said. 495.80.
The following steps to planting ·
erodible land.
·
On the trading floor this week,
. able pest control firm having an
· The ASCS doe8 not have com- established place of business and a Pepsico was the most active issue, . - - - - - - - - - - - - a hummingbird garden are 3!1apted
plete details on this yet but you good professional reputation.
dropping 1 to 33 1/4. Pepsico hit its
Uranus, discovered by Sir William from the book "Theme Gardens,"
should check on it. This could · Minimum Wage Changed ... high of 35 during Wednesday's Herschel on Mareh 13, 1781, lies at a by Barbara Damrosch:
mean $400-$1,000 for some pro- The Federal and state minimum tniiling but fell on what apPeare&lt;t to distance of 1.8 billion miles from the
- Plant a mix of annuals,
ducers.
·
wage has increased to $4.25 per be disappointing earnings expecta- sun, taking 84 years to ·make its cir· perennials, shrubs and vines to proLook Out for Termites , . hour as of April!! 1991 .
cuit around our star.
duce blooms that attract the birds
tions.

Spring is a good time
to watch,for termites

bers.' '

scrubbers,
AEP advised

Farms; McGinness-Stanley Agency; Larry Miller, BP; Wiseman
Agency; Toler and Toler; Evans.
Catde Company; Bob Evans Hid·
den Valley Ranch; Brown's Mar- .
ket; Bob Evans Restaurants; John- .
son's Mobile Homes; River City
Farm Supply; Alan Bosier D.V.M. ;
The SteakhOuse; Carter's Plumbing
and Heating; L &amp; 1 Grocery; and
.Southern Hills Real Estate.

Hummingbird ·gardens
said easy to grow
from spring until late summer. It
may take more than one growing
season for newly· planted shrubs,
vines and perennials to produce
abundant flowers.
- Design the garden so :slier
!Jiants form the backdrops for
shorter ones and creeping ,Plants
receive room to grow.
~ Arrange plants .so that some
flowers bloom in each section of
the garden throughout the growing
season.
,.,
- Choose a sunny location. It
prod~ces the most flowers .
- Provide strucrures, such as a.
trellis or fence , for vines to climb

delltl Ia b1S Art l8Dd Art 3 c~ completed the exhibit as a part
or their project requirements. Pictured with Mr. Slavin (and the
heads) are students respllnslhle ror the exhibit, which can be seen
in the fr011t or the build mg. . .
.
.
~

Those starting a hummingbird
garden will need to rei y on annuals,
Youger-Comaty says. Annuals provide a variety of flower colors
immediately and throughout the .
~rowing season. Annuals also fill .
m around permruient plants thai lire
slow to grow.

Nontoxic pest controls offer alternatives
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) more and more requests for nonAn Ohio State University pest-con- chemical controls."
trol specialist says homeowners
He lists the following methods
need not depend on pesticides to control pests:
alone to control indoor pests.
- Carpenter ants. Eliminate
BiD Lyon says some infestations high humidity, poor ventilation and
. can be prevented with non-chemi- moisture problems in the home,
cal substitutes.
·
especially in basements and crawl
"These alternatives result from spaces.
increUed concein from the possi- Indian meal moths and flour
blo effects or·pesticides on people weevils. Avoid long-term shelf
and the environment," Lyon says. storage of large amounts of grain
"Our Extension Service handles products, sach as cereals,. cake

mixes, flour and bird seed. Either
buy grain products in small quanti.
ties; store them in screw-top-lid
conUiine~ made of metal, glass or
plastk; or keep the ire!lls in a frcez"
cr. ·
- Crickets. Keep 11\wns well·
mowed and weed-free near homes,
especially in late summer when
· ket num .....
L--a peale• Trun
· JNuu
.L-·bs
cnc
around a homes perimeter, keeping
. the siding
branc hes from touc hmg
or foondation. Crickets are sll'Ongly

attracted to night lighl~ so use ycllow porch lights designed not to :
attract insects. Repair holes and
seal cracks on the outside of the
home.
-Fleas. Keep pets and pet-frequented areas clean. Thoroughly
vacuum rooms regularly. To pinpoint "hot spots" and help you
dec'de
1 whether to app1y pesuc1'des,
use a goose-necked light over a nnn
·
.-·
of soapy water to collect
adult fleas

'

overnight. Or, wear white socks the evening, close up the hole.
and walk through areas you suspect However, don't seal the opening
are infested. Fleas will jump onLQ between April and June. This may·:
the socks, which mQkes them easier trap young bars inside. Wait until ·
to see.
bats have raised their young or
-. Bats. Repair all outside · completely left the home to close
cracks and holes. If bats have taken . their access.
up residence in an attic or other
S ·
part of the home, seal all holes .at
- qutrrels. Use live traps to
Re.,.;r
the roost but the largest one, which catch invaders.
.
..- all holes in
should be left open for several the attic, m screens, along caves
Trim
days. Then, afrer bats have left for and around
h the foundation.
· .
thtree branfc es provtdmg access to
eroo ,

.

turned out for the first anuual Easter eu haul
Community Association.

•

symptoms to nutrient deficiencies among all transplant produters. So
in the plants, Namet!J says.
· ·opportunities exist for home-garWhtle most ofthiS year's garden den transelants to become infected.
transplants won't.be Infected with This is shll a minor concern in gar·
the ~uus., gardeners can e~sur.e they den transplants, but it's something
don t brtng home the dtsease by people must be aware or to prevent
choosmg only healthy transplants it from bect;Jming a major probat the garden center, he says.
!em."
· "Most home-garden Ul!Dsplanrs
The key to keeping the disease
are grown m greenhouses m north- out of the ~arden is avoiding transem states," Nameth says. "!OO':e's plants With virus symptoms,
\tttle chance gardeners Will fmd Nameth says. Symptoms include
plants shipped from the South, stunted and ·bushy growth bronze
which are most likely to be infect- leaf color and blackened stems:
ed.
•
.
Leaves of infected pepper plants
"But th~ di~ attacks many ofren contain ring spots.
crops and 1~ Shll not well-known
In the South, the virus mainly

Yogurt snack could open up new milk market
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPij - A
yogurt snack being developed by
food scientists at Ohio State University could open a whole new
market for milk products. .
"We're ialking about a dried
version o~ fruit-flavored yog,urt,"
says Davtd J. Dzurec, Jr. "This
product will be shelf-stable and
make a healthy snack."
Dzurec introduced a prototype
of ~~ he calls a "semisoft, partially dehydrated, fruit-flavored
yogurt food" at the National Confcduc:e on Farm Income Enhancemall sponsored by Ohio State in
~He's pleased with initial results,
but aay1 additional research is
needed before the yogurt roll-up
can be commercially produced.
Dzuaec's process takes yogurt, a
fermenred milk produc~ and dries
it 10 a moisture level that doesn •t
allow harmful microorganisms to
arow. The dried yogurt is then
roBed ind shaped for ~kaging hence the nickname ' yogwt roll- '
ups.''
The dried yogurt could also be
· sold u filling . (or bru,ld'ut bars,

.

'

confections and desserts.
The closest thing currently on
the marltet to Dzurec's ~fried yogwt
is either the dried fruit roll-ups or
yosurt-covered fruit markered by
several companies. Neither product
has ·the same nu,tritional and marketing qualities as the dried, fruitflavpred yogurt, he says.
"Yogurt is already viewed as a
healthful food.' That's one reason
why its market has taken off so
much in the last several years,"
Dzurec says. "What we' re doing is
taking those healihy qualities,
adding the convenience of no
refrigeration and !he fun 'taste of

About I 00 gallons of milk would
be needed to malce 400 pounds of
the product. And because milk supply is strong, the new product
wouldn't be competing With traditioital dairy goods.
The fact that lche yogurt roll-ups
are shelf stable would also help the
marketing process, Dzurec says.
Manufacturing could take place
when and where milk is in ready
supply and ihe final product
shi~ped to domestic or foreign populatton centers.

a_ble bacteria In the human digeshve system.
Dzurec1s prototype is a basic
dried yogurt product with ·an
acceptable texture and flavor. The
flavor was enhanced by adding
sugar and fruit flavorings. He's
stored the product up to four
months under refrigeration with no
decrease in quality.
,
But
before
dned
fruit
yogun
is
1
teady for the market, Dzurec neeifS
to answer a few more questions.
He says additional tesis must
confirm that the product will not
Like cheese, the yogurt roll-up harbor microorganisms that cause
is a c:onc:entraled form of milk. But food poisoning. Shelf life also
natural fruit.
unlike ~. the only lhina talcen needs ~ teating.
.
"This product can be an allema- out of the mllk for disposal is .
Dzurec wants to experiment .
live to snacks that ate less healthf'" water. Nutritious solid nutrients, with several different ways elf dryand be ''fun' enough that lhe picki- such u calcium, c:arbohydrallls ~ ing and pacbging the product. And
est kid will stiU enjoy iL In a way, protei~( lftl retained.
different flavors also need testing
it's amazing nobody else has devel· Other favorable characteristics by consumer taste panels.
oped such an idea. But liuit drying of yogui111'C1 ~ retained, Dzurec
"I'm confident that the product
and yogun production lftl two dif- !lays.
.
is basically rcadJ for consideraPeople with lactose intolerance tion." he says. "What's lefl is the
ferent manufacturing processes.
Food processors doni nor111ally can digest the ~ ·product even final tuneup In terms of flavor and
think of them together."
thous6 they can t stomach other markelina and more thorou&amp;h safeYogurt roll-ups would be a JI!IC· milk Jm!ucli. And yoaun products ty testing to make sure we haven't
tical answer to the dairy indllllly's may also contain antibacterial missed any potential health· consearch for new l'lilk m.arkets. ptupMies tlul help control undesir- .cems in the processing plans."
. '( f

attacks •to)la.cco and peanuts. But in
the Midwest, tomatoes and their ,
relatives - peppers, potatoes and
petunias -are most susceptible.
Other common garden plants hit by
tomato spoiled wilt vuus include
impatiens, chrysanthemums and
begonias.
· ~'If you stick a transplant with
the virus in the ground, the plant
will tum brown and die," Nameth
says. "The plimt will also serve as
a source of infection to other
plants. It's just best to just look
over transplants at the garden ccnter and choose the healthieSL"
It's unlikely the virus will travel
· between plants without the presence of thrips, even if the plants are
in close contact or touching,
Nameth says.
" While I would avoid suspect
transplants, I wouldn't hesitate t.O
pick other plants in a flat if they
look health)','' he says.
"If you ~re still concerned about'
the transplants, consider asking the
store. where they came from." .

Last year, six fields of commer- •
cia! tomatoes were tested by Ohio
State researchers. Five of the·r~elds
were Infected with 'tomato spotted
wilt virus at rares of 2 percent to 6
percent. Nameth estimates thai the
overall rate of infection for processing tomatoes was lower last
year than in 1989,
"We think southern growers
were more aware of the disease and '':
shipped us a lot fewer su'spect .. 'i i
transplants," he says. "Growers
also controUed thrip~ much better.
If the trends continue, we can go a
long way in preventing the disease
from spreading."

.

EGGS FOR EVERYONE • No ciae watt away empty hallded
from the ea bunt SUDd'J. Tbe Iuter Bunuy (lreuda Johnson)
was there to see to tbaL Here two yeilr old William Landers orPomeroy sets hll eglrom tile butllly. .
· ·

Twenty-four·bour time is widely '
used in scientific Wttk throughout the.
world, In the United States, it is used;:

,also in operations of the Armed ·
Forces. In Europe, it is frequently ;
used by the transportation net'I\'Orksin preference to the 12·hour, a.m. and ~
p.m. system. Wlth the 24-hour system,~
the day begins at midnight and Is des-;
ignated 0000 through 23~9.
'
'
Growing.~ . _c_o_nt_in_u_ed_rr_om_ o_-1_ _ :.__,.:.-- - -::
'

\

,,

i

'

•

'

By Charlene Hoeflich
Sentinel Jl!ews Stall
Sunday's weather was
perfect for an egg hunt. . '
It was warm and sunny and the
mud in Middleport's Hartinger
. Park where the hunt was held had
dried up-well almost. The mud
was the reason the hunt had been
postponed from Easter Sunday.
Hundreds of excited youn~sters
gathered in the park for the Middleport Community ~iation's .fust
annual ~ter egg hunt.
· ·
After the sound of the siren.at 2
p.m. the more than 1,200 colorful
plastic eggs hid in the grass and
around the playground .equipment
were quickly found and swooped
up by; .the boys and girls in a grand
•

LOOK WHAT I GOT! r Tlaree year old Cbll'lull Stauley,
'diUibler or Cindy Stanley, Middleport, round two eus rqr Iter
basket at Suday'• eu h•t apd at Hardapr l'lrll Ia Middle- .
port. ODe I.'ODtalned a dollar biD, aaodter a lift w dflcale.

CAP£ CANAVERAL, Fla.
Two Atlantis astronauts
who saved ll $617 million astronomy satellite during an emergency
spacewalk Sunday ventured back
into the shuttle's open cargo bay
Monday tO complete testing of
space station construction equipmenL
.Wearing $2 million spacesuits,..
veteran shuUie flier Jerry Ross and
crewmate Jay Apt floated out of
Atlantis's airlock about 11 a.m.
EDT for their second ,spacewalk in
as many days, a scheduled six-hour
exercise to test ways of moving
people and equipment about in
weiahlleasness.
.
With commander Steven Nagel,
co-pilot Kenneth Cameron and
robot arm operator Linda Godwin
looting on from Atlantis's flight
dec:t, Ross llld Apt quickly got to
work, breaking out tools and
preparing to set up a 48-foot'monol'ail uact along one side of the
shuttle'• wao bay.
They then.planned to ride along

..
- - - r~•

rush to fill their baskets and bags.
Each of the eggs contained a
dollar bill. and some also included
a merchandise or food certificate.
All of the money and certificates
were donated by Middleport and
Pomeroy merchants.
Finding the golden egg which
was worth $50 was Chuckie Shamblin of Middlepon. Carl Buckley,
'!lisa of Middleport, found the silver
egg worth $25. A third prize of $20
went 10 Rhonda Hoover who correctly ldentified the bunny of the
day-, Brenda Johnson. .
. Middleport firemen were on the
scene to assist with the community
activity . They roped off sections
for the various age groups, hid the
eggs, and helped with kid conU'OL
·.•

Atlantis astronauts
begin 2nd spacewalk
(UPij -

.

cut js flower arrangements. They blooms per plant. Try and get t!le •
blossom in June and again in plants in pots which makes it much ;
September and grow to three to ea sier to plant. The c ontainer ~
four feet high.
·
should be removed and the plant·
Casa Blanca a beautiful white, _.set shallow so the top of the ball or'
Oiveden Beauty a bright Blue and soil is at the soil level after the •
Sapphire a dark blue and Bellajon- plant is set. Once the plant is set,
na are plants to consider the plant· waier it thoroughly. If the weather .
ing. These plants also, flower on turns dry, water often so the toots
stems three to four feet tall.
never get dry. If possible water'
The Pacific hybrid delphinium during the day, so the leaves will ~
should be considered in every become dry before night' Fertilize ~
perennialglll'den.
with a 10-10-10 mixture monthly,
P)anrs ~hould be purchased as during summer months. .
.~
soon as they become available in
Before f~eezing in fall, mulch
early spring. This assures one gel· the plants with saw dust. Never use:
ling the desired type and best quali- Maple leaves, because they decay
ty pblnt needed. Also, this assured fast and create molds that cause 110.·
the sooner the plants area planted . roots to decay. If leaves of any kind\
they will become established. This are used be sure and remove them ~
ensures earlier flowering and more in early Mlirch.
.;

or the Middleport

More than 1,200 take
part in Easter egg hunt

Gardners have a·new reason t.o practice safe gardening at center .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) the tomato spotted wilt virus sp~ead
Gardeners have a new· reason to . to this year's ~ection of garden
practice safe selec1ion ·at tile garl!en transplants, says an Ohio State Unicenter. It's the. tomato spotted wilt versity researcher studymg the disvirus - a disease that stunts and ease.
kills more than 100 types of vegBut Steve Nameth thinks tests
of recently collected plant and
etable and flower crops.
The tomato spotted wilt virus insect samples from several Ohio
became a ~lern in the Midwest greenhouses will show a small
in farmers tomato fields in 1989, presence of t!le virus in facilities
costing producers portions of their that handled Southern transplants.
crop's value. The virus arrived via Test results will be available in !are
infetted transplants of commercial spring. ·
tomatoes shipped from the South.
The tomato spotted wilt virus
· Tiny insects called thrips spread has appeared in garden transplants
in previous years with researchers
the virus.
,
So far, little evil:lence.exists that wrongly attributing the ,virus'

COLUMBUS, Ohio : American
Electric Power Co. is getting plenty
of advice concerning its .decision
on whether to install scrubbers or
switch to low-sulfur coal at the
GavinpowerplintnearGallipolis.
·Most of the advice: Install
,
bbers.
scruThe
decision has statewide, significance because 14 other coalbunting plants, producin' 63 percent of Ohio's electricny, soon
must also decide how to meet
requirements of the federal Clean
Air Act, starting in 1995.
The j(lbs of about 1,200 Ohio
miners may be at stake in the initial
decision, although AEP warns its
M · C ty m· e that ~ovides
e'$s oun
Gavm's
coal maymclose or other
reasons; even if SCI'Ubbers are chosen.··
·
. .Under either option, electricity
rates likely will increase as the uti!:
ities pass cenain compliance costs
to customers.
Manufacturers use half of OhiogCilelllted elecaici!}', which ineans
prices of their products prob~bly
'wlll lncreaae,lhe said.
AEP
earlier this year it
was leaning toward a switch to
Wyoming coal, whicb it described
u the iruJsl cost-dTtcicnt option. It
projected the cost of operating
Gavin at about $170 million a year
with acrubbers; $115 million with
out-of:sW.e coal.
But last week, Ohi.o Consumers'
Counsel William Spratley took
· OXQO(I1ioD wiiJl wllat lie termed 11
· Oatiecf'f,ll~ that did not allow
fully for. emisaions Credits that can
be earned with scrubbers.
·He asked the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to convene a

indlca::l'

·

'

'

1 SIIOllan, 1G 1'8g• 21-ta .
A Mulllmedll Inc. tlssu 1p _rp~! ,

•

. u~se

continuedrromo-t

on:

'

•

.e
SHANN.\ WARRINGTON, Findlay,,won Reserve Champion
Preview SteeV' honors during the recent cattlemen's association
sllow at,the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds.

Low tOnight lo 60s. Chance Ot
raia 70 percent. H11h Tuesday
n1111r 80.
·

Kicker

Page.4

'

'

the track on small electrical,
mechanical and manual carts that
may be used during assembly of
NASA 's space Sllltion Freedom to .
move people and equipment from
one pmnt to another.
Later, both astronauts were
scheduled to take. turns .riding on
the end of Atialltis's 50-foot robot
arm to gather data abOut the performance of the fragile space crane.
The shuttle tilers planned to reenter Adantis's airlock around 4:35
p.m. to close out the 15th space
walk in nine missions.
Ross and Apt puUed off the fllSI
U.S. spacewalk m more than five
years Sunday when lhey.tloattd out
mto Atlantis's open payload bay in ·
an emergency bid to free a stuck
antenna boom tllat derailed the
launch of the giant Oamma Ray
Observatory sarellite. .
.
' Not knowing what 10 expect,
Ross reached over and shook: the
boom, which imme&lt;!ialel).' swung
free to the delight of mission con·
·trollers in Houston

hearing on the issue. The PUCO :
.cannot dictate AEP's decision, but;
can reject or modify J?~S to recov-:
er costs. The commtss1on has not.
responded to Spradey's requesL :
But Ashley. Brown, a PUCO.
member, testified before House:
committee that importing
coal Crom:
the west is risky because ofh
t e.
potential for future ·cost increases.:
He said the best utilities could do is•
break even on out-of-stale coal but:
they can .m.alce money on prudent:
equipment investments.
•
Gov. 'George Voinovich all buC
endorsed scrubbers, promising to:.
preserve ml ners' jobs and·keep.
electricity rates as low as possible;
But the governor said, "y./e want io
hear what they (AEP officials'"'
want to do, and we will try to belp:
them."
'
'
..
Several hundred coal miner•
from southeast Ohio demonslratect
at ·the Statehouse for scrubbers last;
week. They were encouraj~ed by.
Rep. Jerry Krupinskt, D·:
Steubenville, and other members of.
.a special House committee that:
likely will recommend legislatlorr
to help utilities install clean coat
technology.
:
AEP said the Meigs mine maybe doomed because of high produc.'
tion costs. The company said:
Meigs produces 50 percent coa•
from m1!1ing a mix~ure ~f nJC!c and:
coal while other mtnes m Ohio set:
. cl~r to 70 ~nt ~·
·
The sea~ 1tsel,f IS not a very
f!ood om;. II s a ~~Jh-cQst opera;;
h~; that s'bulcally the PI'Oblem,
S!lld ~d ·~oney, AEP el~U·
tt~e vtce prestden~. The Metgs
m10e produces ·6 mtlllon tons of
coal a year.

a

Voinovich wants more
input into edu~ation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Oov. Gccqe Voinovich announced
last week that he in~ds to play
more of a role in educating the
youth of the Ohio.
.. He coul,d be finding out .this
week if he will get that added
authority when the House Educa·
tion ·Committee sits down Tuesday
for hearings on a bill that will grpnt
the governor power to appo101
members to the state Board of Education. The committee will tlso
hear a mcasure·that to eliminate the
whole board.
.
·The 21-member state board of
education is independently elected
from e8ch congressional district in
the state. This same board appoints
the state su~nlllndent of schools.
Voinovtch has argued
recently
.
'

that he has no control over the
future of pilblk eilucitlon in Ohio.
Now that current state auperintendent Franklin Waller has decided to
step down, the governor sees this
as a perfect opponunity to change
. the make-up of me board. '
House Bill 72, sponsored by
Rep. Joseph Koziura, D-Lorain,
would reduce the number of sp«s
on the board to nine, with each
being appointed by the ~ovcmor.
House Joint Resoluuon 2, IJIOII·.
sored by Rep. Wayne Jones, D~
Cuyahoga Falls, wants· to eliminitc
the entire board and replace it with
a single ~tor of education also ·
named by the governor. Thia measure is an amendment to the Stale
constitution, and if approved by lhe
legislature, would need to be ratified by Ohio voters.

--Local briefs--_,
Middleport man hurt in wreck
A ~ddlepon man was inj~ in a motorcycle wreck Stm,daY at
8:20 a.m. in Salisbury Township on S.R. 124, about half a mile east
of milepost 16, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State ·
Highway Patrol.
.
Troy R. Qualls, 21, of 30420 McElhenney Hill, was taken by the
Patrol to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where he was treated and
released for bruises an4 scrapes.
Qualls, riding 1980 Honda 400, was heading east when he lost
control in a right-hand curve and overturned.
·
He was charged with DWI, cited for not wearing a helmet and
having plates belonging to another vehicle on the motorcycle. ·

a

Co'stanzo.-to speak to PTO ·

John Costanzo, the Meigs County School Board's Elemen~~ry
Supervisor, will be the guest speaker at !he Riverview Elementary
School's regular PTO meeting on Monday nighL Costanzo will discuss Ohio's statewide resting and diploma system. ·•
·
.
The meeting will get underway at 7 p,m., and a movie and
babysitting will be provided for children in attendance.

Lester transported to prison

Bobby Joe Lester has been transponed to Orient Correcti~al
facility to begin serving a sentence recently tmposed by the Me1gs
County Common Pleas Coun.
Accordins to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Lester
was sentenced on charges of receiving stolen property and gJand
theft.
·,

Movies announced
'I'hll movie for S.wn!ay at the Meigs Couqty Public Library will
be "TM HoruuJ Who Tholighl Ht Was a Raccoon". lt will be
shown at the Pomeroy Libnlry at2 p.m. on Saturda'- and at the Middlq!Ofl branch on Monday ll 7 p.m. All local chtldren are inviteil
to attend the free movie.
.
' .

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