<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11024" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11024?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-23T00:22:56+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="41990">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1db14ae555ffb05fc8e515a17468ee35.pdf</src>
      <authentication>cc849880ed4d2ced082427baa58ace1c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34789">
                  <text>.·

SPECIAL ON
BULK: lANK
IN.SIA.LLATION

" und

.1'

75 n· n h

Band
concerts
Thesday

Hansel wins Preakness race - Cl
It's the year of the locust for Gallia,
but not Meigs • Beat of the.Bend • B-3

.,

Along the river ............Bl-7
Busiaess..................- ........01

Comia.........................Insert

Page Bl

- Electricity Continues To Be The
Most Costly Energy, DOE Says
In Its a.nnual ·forecast of representative
average unit coats of five residential .·
. energy sources for 1991, the Department of
Energy estimates there
be a slight In·
·crease over 1990.
The five energy sources are propane, '·
natural Q!ll. electricity, No._2 heating oil, ·
, and kerosene, DOE uses the flguree In Its
,.. Energy Conservation Program to project
costs of operating cQnsumer appliances ..
The agency prescribes teat procedures "for
.the determination of the estimated annual
operating costa and other maaaurea of
anergy conau'mption for certain consumer
products."

.

I

Inside

'

- '

..

Clusrled ..... ~................. Dl·7
Dtatbs..,........_ ....................A4
Ed.ltoral.............................Al
,,fai"II ....... - ......................Dl-8

Initial chicken flying contest held 20
years ago at Rio· James Sands· A-8

•' .,SpOrts ..............................c •.7

Showers likely. high 111 mid-70s.

Weather ............................ A-3

will

•

·'

Vol. 28, No. 15
C41pplgll1ed 161

Middleport-Pomeroy Galllpollii-Polnt Plea~ant,

19, 1991

15

s..tlon•. 111 Pog••

,

A Multlmodlo Inc. NOWIPIII&gt;I&lt;

Dr. Dorsey named Rio's 18th president
TEMPERATURE'S RISING· Steve Eva115,
a sophomore architecture student at lbe University or Cincinnati, sits next to a row or mirrors
on campus tbat ;were beinR used to beat water in

..

''

the foreground. The thermometer at right shows
the WJ!ter bas reac...ed a high Thursday or Just
over 115 degrees on tbe partially overcast day.
(AP)
·
.
.
.
.

, f:lectrlclty continues to be the most
costly, anergy source at $24.15/MMBtu.
That!S'Up $1.16/MMBtu from 1990.
Propane \1!88 listec! as $9.74/MMBtu, No.
2 heating oil $9.30/MMBtu.

Thunderstorms greet Northeast ·
residents; South still hot, humid
By The Associated Press
Thunderstorms greeled residents
of upstate New York early today as
a band of rain and clouds moved
somhward al\)ng the East .Coast,
replacing hot, humid conditions
with cooler air on the way.
Rain also fell early today in
parts of Washington state, Oregon,
Idaho, Montana, and throughout
the Great Lakes region.
The band of rain was expected

to bring an end to a penod of
unusual beat and humidity in the
No~t
·
In the Southeast, hot, !tumid
condititions were expected 10 continue today, with scattered thunderstorms likely in parts of Louisiana,
Alabama, North Carolina and
Georgia.
Thunderstorms also were forecast throughout the Ohio Valle,y. :
High tempemtures today were

expeqed in ihe 50s and 60s in the
Pacific Northwest, the Northern
Plains and upper New England; the
70s in ce~tral, Califol'jlil), the Rock-ies and the Great Lakes region; the
. 80s thrQUghout the Southern Plains
and the middle Atlantic states; and
-in the, 90s and.over I00 across the
southern tier, 'from Arizona to
Florida. '
I
The high for the nation Thursday was I03 at Palm Springs, Calif.

Dems, civic group locked in redistricting battle

'
,
.:

-,
,
•

j
,

COLUMBUS, O~io (AP) The Ohio Democrallc Party h_as
a~ed the Ohi~ Elections ~mmiSs1on t~ scrullmze contnb~llon and
spending records from Ohifl8!1S for
Fair Represenllition (QFR), 1t was
reported today.
.
. And, The (Cleveland) Plain
Dealer said, OFR has asked the
Franlilin County Common Pleas
Court for a temporary restraining
order to block the electiOns commission from acting on an elections.
complaint filed last month by
Democrats.
The Democrats claim OFR is a
phantofl1 group op.erated by the
Ohio Republican Party 10 influence
redistrictin$ of state and federal
legislative districts.
State GOP Chairman Robert
Bennett is president of OFR, but
Republican~ ~y the corpomtion is
an independent entity created to
study and monitor ·reapportionment
The Democrats had asked OFR
officials to voluntarily provide
them with contribution and expenditure records, but lawyers for Bennett declined.
The original complaint was filed
by the Democrats o.n April 22
alle~ing OFR was soliciting $1.6
milhon, much of it illegally, from
corporations. The Democrats .fur-

ther allege that OFR bas violated
Ohio election Jaws by not ptoperfy
fi~ng as a political action commit:
tee. ·
.
Gene Pierce. a sDOkesman for

Propane
'

-

RatrlAND·aonLE

· DR. BARRY M. DORSEY

GAS

7.42~251'1

'.'

•CHUICH
'

·

•GRAIN DRYING
•
•COOliNG
•HUT YOUR WATER

'

PLA~E
PIC)PANE GAS GIYIS ·you MOlE fOI YOUI MONEY

•IUSINES$

''.

·1
I" -

•

2500SQUAREFOOTHOME
·SOMETHING B.G .·
IS HAPPENING! ·

Super May Savings!

.t} .~

This home used only 525 gallons of propane gas from Sept.
5, 1990 thru April 10, 1991 - ·That is for heatin·g, wat'r
heating, cooking and clothes .drying.
*Propane at an average price of 94.9$ per gallon.
TOTALCOST
ONLY
You Can't Do All That With A Heat Pump
'

IAL

'

CONVERnBLE

. CAVALIER I.S.

.$10,495

Rebate• included in price.

' •AUTO

::~;LL EQUIPPED s8 4 88

Normal Tank Installation
With 200 Gallon
Of Propantt
Only

'
WANT IELIAIILin ,,.,:
and SEIYICE??'
'
I

I

'298.00 Plus.Tax

.Normal Installation Includes 50 Ft. Of Copper Line

'~l1991 FUU SIZE SILVERADO
MEW ...r

CHEVROLET PICKUP

.

..,. •••• tilt, cttiiM ....... - · ·

\J'~
ONLY •$13,229
"Mfg. Rabatet included lri price.

Jim Cobb
)t,.

1991 CHEVROLET

OFFEI ENDS JUNE 30, 1991

CORSICA

S8999

· have led her 10 work at the mines.
This year, the Cooperative Education ~ at Ohio '\]niv~ity
is prov1dmg 165 engmeenng,
industrial technology and computer
science students with the opponunity 10 work at off-campus companies while still enrolled with the
university.
Since the CO-OP program
began at Ohio University in 1986,
students have completed more than
600 "field experiences" and earned
just over $2 million, according to
Michael T. Bila, tho university's
· coopentive edtratioo coonlinltor.
Oov. George Voinovich bas
laimed May 19-2S "Ohio
vo PdliCadon Week."
o, a 1987 graduate of
ten wortlna with tbe Soutllem
Ohio Coal Co. wbile completing
course work for her bachelor's
degree. She has wOiked for the COil
company for lbrec qlllltaS.
Guzzo described het work as
maintenan~:e ensineering - such
asbot::.ring let up, tear down and

CHEVROLET -OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-GEO, INC.
992-6.14

ATHENS - Plenty of students
work their way through colle$e, but
only one woman at Ohio Umversity is working in the coal mines of
Meigs County.
Toni Guzzo, a senior from
Westerville, Ohio, majo.ring in
mechanical engineering, said that
practical engineering experience
and a chance to earn enough money
to pay for her college expenses

Wesrervllle South, alllnatea quat·

'

301 lAST IWN

Student works in mines
to learn engineering

*Remember The Price Of Propane Is Going Down

1'991.' CHEVROLET

1991 GEO MORO

•

ea.oo
·

S

inequities among districts.
State Sen. Robert Cupp, RLima, introduced a bill Thursday
that would implement the Joint
committee's ~mendations.
. The cuntnt state IIChool fuDding
formula
is beln.l. ~;t.Jlenged in ~
Rifte Jr. said, '
'
, Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, pulled arate Jawsuns· niCd bv ~ dove,.
.lhe bill from an expecred vote Iat Jlmd school dillrict.,the South·
weet.
. ......
em Local district in Perry. Cotinl)'.
''A lOt of poople ll)isundenltllld.
He said Friday the measure also
They
think diis fonnula we have is
~ ~ exilllined to detennine l,f
such
a
bad formula," Riffe said.
it changed the balance of utility
"Keep
in
mind not too many years
rcg!llatory Jaw instead of sticking
ago
the
Ohio
Sup~e~~~e CoiD'I ruled
solely to its intended purpose of
this
formula
we
now hav~ (is) concompliance with federal air pollustitutional.
So
we're
not looking at
tion reJIUlations.
a
formula
that
is
just
so ... bad as
Riffe offered his views on the
coal bill, school funding and a vari- where people are just outraged
ety of other measures during a about it
''I think ·that they have a right to
news conference.
He ' did not outline a new file suit. Maybe they have reason to
timetable for action on the coal believe that it's changed in the last
proposal. It would provide tax 12 years since 1979. I don't
credits of SI per ton of Ohio coal know.''
On other mauers. Riffe:
burned by utilities that already use
it, or switch to it bX Jan. I, 1995. . · -Said the state needs a compreCredits originally had been pro- hensive recycling program. He
posed only for utilities that would would not rule out any proposals,
have had to install cosdy anti-pol- including deposits on beverage
lution equipment known ~ scrub- containers.
bers 10 continue 10 bum Ohio coal
-Would not speculate whether
in compliance with fedeml Clean the Republican-controlled Senate
Air Act requirements.
would try to insert into the state
"I've asked different ones, does budget bill a proposal from Gov.
an)lbody know the cost of this bill? George Voinovicb to turn state
They said the cost or the bill was liquor stores over to prlvare businever discussed in the committee,'' ness. A separate Senate bill to
Riffe sai'd. Unofficial estimates accomplish the conversion is pendhave pegged the price at $20 mil- ing in the House.
-Said he would seek re-eleclion.
Riffe said that long-rerm school tion nex! year to the House and the
funding changes proposed by a Speaker's post he has held for a
House-Senate study panel amount- record 16 yean.
ed to a first step toward solving

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) · House action on a bill that would
give tax credits to utilities for bum. ing Ohio's high-sulfur coal will be
delayed until the cost of the measure is ·determined, SpOakor Vern

;

•HOME

Dorsey's appointment comes
fo!lowing a _year-long ~b ~ a
l.
JOmt committee ,or the umvemty
In announcing Dbrsey' s and community college bOards of
appointment, University Board trustees.
President Paul B. Mutzig praised
"I am honored .to be· the next

By JULIE E. DILLON
Tlmii-Sntlnel Staff

HEAT YOUR
.

·'

the appointee's "leadership skills in
legislative relations, pul;lllc relations, and budget and personnel
functions.
· "Dr. Dorsey comes to us from
the position or deputy director or
the Council or Higher Education of
the Commonwealth of Viriinia,"
Mutzig said, ''where his responsibilities .won him the conlidellco of,
~~&amp;:.~ti ~e and academic leaders

president of the University of Rio
Grande," Dorsey said Friday. "As
both a state-supported two-year
community college and a four-year
private institution, the univenity is
unique in American higher educalion. It is a model partnership that ,
might well be replicated in other
states.
"The University historically has
been a major educational and cuitural influence in southeastern
Ohio," Dorsey added. "It hu an
important mission - to improve
stUdent access to higher education
aild provide a quality education
program. I hope to build on this
mission and 10 inrnase the institu-

tion's visibility throughout ihe
region and the state.
"Although it will be difficult to
succeed Dr. Paul Hayes, who has
sei'Ved the university so ably for so
many years, I am gtateful for the
many expressions C)f suppon from
board members and the instilu·
lion's various constituencies, and I
look forward to beginning work
there later in the summer," Dorsey
concluded.
A native of Shelby, N.C.,
Dorsey received his bachelor or
arts degree in political science from
Wake Forest University, -a master
of arls degree in international relations from The American Universi-

ty's School. of International Service, and his doctoral degree in
higher education from the University of Virginia.
Dorsey was I!SSistant to l)le president and assistant professor of
political science at Radford Uni-krsity in Virginia, where he orga:
nized the school's first Office of
Student Aid, before his emP.Iayment with the State Council for
Higher Education in 1973 as assistant to the director.
In that position, he was responsible for the council's internal budget, personnel ,and support services.
He later advanced to associate
Continued on A-3

Riffe wants closer - Annual Southern awards assembly held
look at coal bill

•

r.•

'• '

Jim Cobb

ONLY

..,

OFR, said the corP.~ration had
offered til share its daia-with others
but said the law protected Ot;:R
.from disclosing its -·corporate
rec:ords.

RIO GRANDE - The deputy
director of the State Council of
Higher Edtteatioil for Virginia has
been chosen the 18tl! president of
. the liS-year-old University or Rio
Grande. He will also serve as president of the university's sister institution, Rio Grande Community
College.
Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, of Richmond, Va., will succeed the retiring
Dr. Paul C. Hayes as Rio Grande's
chief executive officer. Dorsey will
assume his new duties around Aug.

.
POMIIOY, OHIO

' lonpall equi)liiiOIIL
\ Guzzo ilthe only female among
the six Ohio University-students
cunendy worldng at the mines.
Going 300 feet underliJ'OUIId is
Coetlnued aa A·3

R1

--~

·k

RACINE· The 1991 Southern
High School. Awards Assembly
was held Friday afternoon at tbe
high school.
Followin~ the processional,
"Pomp and CircumstaDceS," by the
concert band at ihe high school,
Junie ~OIP)IIIlllllloltlldont """"
in 1he PletiP 'of AtlOIJancc. . ' ~~
• Jennifer Slllifb ,. ,u *OJnized
as valelt~toriao of' the clus or
1991 _. Jitnod Ciide - rocos·
nized u lllutatorian of tile class.
SJI!ltb 1bo ,_ved by a~ in
Sc~ence, Mathenuldcs and BnJ!i•h.

Circle received key awards in SCience and Malbcmatics.
National Honor Society students
recognized were Jarrod Circle,
Jason Circle, Shannon Counts,
Mica 1ones, Jenny Lisle, Norman
Matson, Cheryl Pape, Heather
Roush, Jennifer Smith, Robyn
Stc;~ut1 Jan Williams and Shelly
Wlnebr'Omet.
• Receiving the Presidential Academic Fitness Awams .were Noririan Mallon, ~~· Jenni(er
Smit_h. Sha~il911 -'l!lti,~~Y ·
Llsle, Chclyl
liild I:.or'i ...
Andy Baer received the Boys
Atlllete or the Year A111ard and
Junie Beegle was the recipient of

,_pe

-ww.

the Girls Athlete of the Year
Award. Beegle also received the
key award for Activities.
Jarrod Circle and Cheryl Pape .
received the 1991 Army Scholar
and Athlete Award and Todd
·Grindstaff received the United
Stales Marine ColPS Distinguished
Athlete Award. Shelly Winebren·
ner was the recipient of the AIIAmeican Aware! and Cheryl Pape
and John Hoback were av.enled the
OHSAA Scholar Athlete Awards.
, W)11ners of the Citizenship
Award were Norman Matson and
Shelly Winebrenner. Matson was
also recognized for his participation in Buckeye Boys State by

------------------~

PICNIC HELD· Melas Couty families
served by Gallla-Melas Read Start programs
were treated to a picnic at the Geaeral
Hartlnaer Park In Middleport last week. An
estimated 40 ramBles attended four picnics beld

Tuesday t1aro•1h Friday. Pre-schoolers a ad
their families were treated to entertainment
from the Sbrlnen Citnnu of GaUipolis at eacb
picnic. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

_Op·tion restored in House
ver~ion - of biennium budget
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmes-Seatlnel Staff
POMEROY -Continued funding
for the Options for Elders pilot project, a program of in-home care for
the elderly, was included in the
Democratic version of the state
budget dlat passed the Ohio House
of Representatives Wednesdaf.
Meigs County Is one o nine
Southeastern Counties participating
in Options for Elders. The pilot
proiJ'Illl il ~ 10 provide • ·
viceiiO semor cltizenl so that they
can remain in their own homes
rather than go to a nursing home
for care. Nearly a hiDidred ~Z.
Countianl are now receivina
•
tance through OptiON.
.
The budpt version lbo included contiJiualloll of the cunent level
of funding for multi-pu!JlOIC senior
facilities wldlno chmlge in lhe way
the funds are distributed.
It had been proposed in the
Executive budget that a single

appropriation or block grant in a
In speaking or her effortsltowanl
ciecnued amount be made 10 fund s.etting funding re_stored for th~
activities or senior centm.
Opuons for Elders propam. Rep.
. This single
'on would · Abel said that she feels 11 is vital to
replace separate •
funding Jl'OVide in-borne care to senior citifor Alzheimer's are, housing zens who do not qualify for the
assistance, transportation, home state's expanded Passwrt program.
delive~ meals, independent living
Under Gov . George V.
assistance, senior Yolunteers, and Voinovich 's proposed budget the
community ·care coordination ser- options Jl'Ogranl has been targeted
vice, an action considered counter- for ~uced funding this year and
productive 10 service delivery by phased out by 1993.
Meigs County Council on Aging
AJ for usmg a block ~ fund.
Exec uti YO Director Eleanor ina of Senior Facilitiea JII'CIIl'll!ll,
Rep. Abel said that she strongly
'I1Iamll.
Fundllti for the Optiona for opposed the P.lan. "Such a plan
Elders and tbc Senior Citizens would have sltifled the reSJlOIIII'biHfacilllies were only two of the ty for determining funding levels
changes In the Democratic version for these [X'Ograms away fiom the
of the IWe badpt that will bel!efit stahl and ISidng local governments
Meigs Coun!f, IICCOI'dlng to State to pick up the cost," Rep. Abel
RepresentattYe Mary Abel (D- said.
Atheils).
"Local a~encies would have
That version is now in the 1\ands been com~ung against eaeh other
of the Senate where f..-dler cltanges for money that would become
are sure to be m,cle before final inereaslngly scarce," she continued.
actioo on lbe bucJaet for lbe bionniThe House vasion, aeconling 10
'1111 which sllrtl July 1 is taken.
Continued oa A-3
.

e·

'1

.

American Legio~ Drew· Webster
Post39.
.
,
Jennifer Smith received an
.award for perfect attendance during
her four years of high school.
Students recognized for receiving scholarships were Jennifer
Smith, Holzer Clinic Selene~
Scholarship and die Ohio Board ot
Regents Scholarship; Jason Shain,
Hockin&amp; Technical College Scholarship; Cheryl Pape, Ohio Unjver·
sity James D. Euler Scholarship;
and Jolin Hoback, Clirls Harmon,
Jari Williams and Jayson Cotlner,
Ohio University Creed James
Scholarship recipients.
Continued on A-3

Ohio's AG
wants to
change law
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Attorney General Lee Fisher
wants to strengthen state law to
prevent the reporting of the names
of sexual assault victims.
Fisher said Friday aftA:r a speech
10 a statewide crime victims' conference that Ohio law already
allows a rape victim's name to be
suppressed during a trial.
''I'm in favor of going even further," Fisher said. ·He said he
would suppon suengthening Ohio
law to make it illegal to reveal the
name of a rape victim "except in
extraordinary circumstances.'' .
"If we stan reporting rape victims' names,--tbat would be negative," Fisher said.
.,
Fisher said a change in the law
may be needed as a result of the
Florida case involving William
Kennedy Smith, the nephew of
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
Smith was charged last week
with raping a woman at the
Kennedy estate in Palm Beach, Fla.
Three news organizations The New York Times, NBC News
and a Florida tlibloid publication,
The Globe - used the name of the
alleged rape victim and were followed by other publications,
including The Columbus Dispatch.

Crown City man
killed in accident
PROCTORVD..LE - A cro.m
City man was killed early Saturday
momin~ after he was thrown from
his veh1cle on State Route 217 in
Lawrence County.
Gregory L. Nichols, 30, was
dead at the scene following the
accident around I a.m. Saturday.
Accordins to a report from the
State Hishway Patrol, Nichols was
eastbound when he went orr the
right side of the road. His pickup ·
l!"UCk came back onto the road and
rolled several times, throwins
Nichols ou1 of the vehicle. The
report stated that a conttibutinl
factor to the crash was unsafe
speed.

funeral arrangement&amp; are beina
handled by Hall Funeral Home,
233 Elizabeth Street, Proctorville.

.

""

-

�. ...

. - ... ... .

.

. . ...

. .

.., . .

. ..-.- ....

..

.

. ..

.

,.,

-- ~ ·- "" -

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

•

•

•

"

ComnleDf

and perspectiveJ

..

WASHINGTON - Iraa il a
llllion tbllt bll•pd ... - iJm llld . . . .lioD IIIIC'Iigl'os the
ra.: .. Gulf- bat- of lbele is
IS clanploas l i b biiJnd of diJIIOmacy it iJ now deploy1ng.
Although lrln bas .won poiDll for
heJninR Iraqi~ it is Mpged
ill 1-"'secret" war apinilt.lraq
desig•ed to like over that Arab
· CJ)UIIuy. This new ~.:lht be

'

II2S Third Aw., O.'lp ' , Ollie
(l.t) .MI-!HI

ROBDT L WING&amp;Tf
P-l' 'rr

Ezu•dn ~

1

· ·~ labeled

PAT WBft&amp;M«tp

..••2'
rtl)l'llibet'CI~ ••
. .
.
.'

.

'

vullud diplolll

for tho.

way Ina piiiiiiO liaiJd • expand. ed tmpire 011 dJe
•.. of its for·

o.ce...... •

mrrrM!.

;

_,._II_ _ _~

AM ........ oltlH. _

. .

dJe een-

ter is lraoiaa Pal. d''t Jftsbrmi
Rafsllljaai.
WilD ..... I f!VerD·
LETTERS OF OPIHION.,. wrl
. 'l1lolrIUo-IDIIII that II a bocbtd of ' IDOdcr·
kill«. Allloltonore•~oetl..,..._ . .
aoUd .
,....,...• .,.,....,._No ~ wtJ k po.•lllb ... Loftoralll"""' .,. 10
lieS" COUIIId by botll 1111: llcapa
1
••
• and BUlb administralians. RafsanAmerltaft'Ntwlpllp8'hiii11'-A• d ....
•

I

~\

'

...

-.

•

1'~

~·

""

liP._
_.,.,...,.,.lli'M_oU

I

• . 1

'

"""",
.
.
.
ad-..........
........-.
.
.
.
,
.
1'-..__.._.a.. ....................
~

""

J

~~~~.~~ha~
lrlaian hllmlc n!1iJ111 iR Bllhdad

Commission~ _~uoyed ....... ·· "· ~=:=~

movement
of
handgun
•
' """..
:

··~

.

' .· . "

ILI&amp;JU

....

in the p ..: ... He

..,,.....,...,.._,1;1~.~-c;~

Mey 11,1111 J

'

'

I

-

-

demo-

~:e~~t or tho lnlqi peop~e n Shiii,
the briDd or 1s1a1n dw llllkes up
fuDy 95 peu:ent or lnln.
Two of Shide llllnl's most holy
cities, Najlf and Karbala, are iD
lnlq, aad Ifill has always wanted to
wrest conuol of them from tbe
oppositioli Sunni lleet JIIJt Seddam
Hussein and his predecessors

~~f.:!i1JJi lmows t1111 pllcing a

Shiite puppet govcmmeat in Iraq
would achieve more tbu one

Pr/.11-w not oaly project Ira-

nian power and illflucace, but
would also fulfill the deathbed
wisb or the AyiiOII•iJ Xhomeini,
who long wanred 10 llmCll southern

~afsanjani virtually has a gov-

ernment-in-exile ror .the task. Aya•
tollah Mohammed BaJa Hakim, a
top lsJamic Ieadel in Iraq. would be
tapped 10 run lnlq, and bas been an
Iranian puppet for some time even helping Ifill plot Sa«klam 's
overthrow.

U.S. illtellipnce erimMes IUJ·
&amp;al Hltil Ills fielded • lllllly •
5,000 lnlqi penillu. .aing aad
lrliaiag theiD, ud senclin&amp; them
acroa die border 10 blnle. Many

were taken prisoner during the
eight-year war between Ifill and
Iraq, aad converted 10 the lflllian
side. .
The Iranians have every reason
10 IUIJ)OCI they can carry out this
plan with impllllity 1nd hardly a
peep fnlm the Amr:ricu govemmear. wllicll 1011111 10 be 111 a perJIIIIIIIIool'• mWd wiiCII it coma
10 ,. •• willllnL Tile w..ca!Jed
IDi •
IS F\ hk•Jl BUill hu Sl)ied
~ CJI of 1111: ~ regime
of Praidenl RafsanJIB I and his
~~in~· .'\yaiOIIah
~ IChlm~, Inn s supreme reliIJOUS autborir;y. They continue 10
dcaounce tbe Uni~ States, to
lnUI ad beat women for dress
code illtixdoas, 10 1orture and execute poJitii:II gpponentl and countnuc:o tbo
of Western
0

-

0

iliill&amp;

"•• .......
'

'

'

\

.... / . I

lnJq -

Dr. Do •:se•\1J ..._

I' 1 : ~ I l

•

Sunday, May 19
MICH. '

.

,, ,, ,
;

, , ,, , .

1

~

:

·

~

•

.

~~70° • • "
'""I

·

'

.

~

' "
Columbus 71•

I I

~

:

swearinllhll "the Ulliled

States will eventually be ftut on · '
trial"- aad then vowe4110 {,allide '
by ... the path or 1m1m Khl,xnolni."
The support aad stoking ol Shi- ·,
ite rebellion in southern Iraq bella I
almost immediately after tho tr.S.-. ·
led victory
· Irlq. On Mitch -'"
3, the head
Innian "s : ~• ly&gt;
of El'pelll in his Friday PnitW JIIOcllimild: "The people oflili[- •:.
lake
of this oppci4u.lly~'
10
..

W. VA.

...

:r:st

~

~os SRabr iS
Too SIPW-

.

lit'* ,
a SCYeD-day waillnf
far . . J&amp;l d' I
W 4 pallet"
to a-duct aN •v·-t clleck~,......,i-.ba:;41s-,_; e· , •iiCWds. .•

Plil:i'

= w.:
. - '
J

.II!M!y _.

''ft:!..U,~~ l

.
: "I lllillt

1

p~O.,..-- '
&lt; &lt;11• '*iiOhkl: ce In

1!11

:;z:: .,~

led • wlllllll •
'
this COIIIJtiy
fWlliD WI~ IJ liD .....
~ said. "I lbillk dill tlil twl 1):. I ..,., .:t
111

. . .raid.......

,C...minjm ... , _ . . .

dlew fara..

I

'

dclwa G8 il,'' .

y

'tl fll

tba

-- "J

h,ll., ...... by-·=~

I % ...... _ a-'l=fl'l

llllflllll!IL

~·

'

"•

to

1ntdlaul"=-

all people enJ· oy the same things in life:

.. . . . . c....... of*""iaa2Cf•
VlolaiOrl flea Dear Fred:
...
a11Wiimlllll penalty oflix flltlllffaa:.:.:: a $1,000 fine,
•,
I have read - a or your ani: Capini acbowledges tblt 1111:
•
bllbealless dian effeetnc in
cles in the paper and I wisb you
p)rt bceauae 1 peraon can leplly boy anc1 possess a semiautomalic
would be mote serious with your
. ~ outlide cny limits.
wrltina than you are. 1 like your
Ho
·
I'M!,_IS pcrilinina to lbe biJtory
~~= :.:..:;.~."'t 11 :C.~ 11 ·.gr~hal
OCibeiOwn llldcouatybulicanoot
ls bans.
, • ,.
·
. --.-DB
• underaland how you could be so
''I lhinll: people .-c ........ a Jllll cC..a ill alheh more JUlislie
ridlculou m101111 of your storic:t
w.ay," Canjzzj said.
• ·
• .
•.
. aad 10 serious Ia atherl.
•
..,..
To llllko it very plain you •
:
'
,
, -.
. .
not very censisiCDL You should

=

tbe

fetters tot~ e~or .

-rs

.

.~:~~~:...,~i~ni~CN!IIMi"'•.
'
P·il·.-.
'
·
Not
: Tlle 0"3' • • =tn it illeDI 0.,..
-i•.-.atir •
ia

When I fint stanecl writing anicles for the Sunday Times- Sentinei. I had several objectives in
mind. First of all I wanred ID eonvey a different impression 10 the
readcn othel' than what one would
!IOfJIJally read.
First of all I wanted to write

=

:.!:,~~£:di!~-:'~~:c=~
rather

a ICIJ', To

this
statemen&amp; all~~:,..,: open

could receive recognition ror theit
adoptive names. These individuals
are as proud of their names as
Geor~c Voinovich is when he is
called Governor, As to the "Miss
Meip" CODieSI, it was desi'gned to
give an .unlllllll animal a distinclive name.lmlgine, if you will, an
animalaoinB dJIOugb life without a
name.
The lettelll of Gayle Price and
the writer· should give you some

==-~i =~w:r~.:a~:,.~~~ m~=~~~~
\ Jiw PI 1 •
•
ol.._ plaao diauws, problems I• tbe if ....,
have oue or them in
;'Full Co""'" II JJ!!tmlg A111rlc11'1'--: • . mpc\1 v:JI::Jaf!."' ~ ·Middle Bast. delths of ehildmJ or yu:i"
as a companion. They
dill 1iU1J lllout nidalame family and
or every eonspiden anylime.
•: DelrEdirAr. ~ "
:'
. CGiapal 'ilclllll•qby ~ e•u.-llll&amp;cowCotUator percciv.ablctypenlnCYriynewspaAs~serioussnbjectl,thewrirer

::

.

~

t

.

~~

..

,

accidents

-JIY

;I=
·
•,
lltW-

=•

As.__.,

S....,

lila.,.._·.,

:t;.;"

~ndf.

just~
. ~like

llile:t:
·~,~t.• ' 'fa'[ '

£•

r •,

fW~~:l

t I • ac,.w '

liiP )'011 10 nl

d your cour p

· CJ!npou enacled "-. secoJi41
larjtsl tax increase i• hillllry·

'•

bj.ac•

_..,~oltb~Pruidlll
.._ t BiaenAbower's
-.Nate..___,
Ike . - .
WIWDda!", and
dlti ,
. Sllhlla
Y14 ill Wasb•_np.on,
lndlqC*IPl•r•·to•••
"'

•

been cons1stent in my choice of
topics. This is due iD jlln to expert,
CIICCI ericountemi durin&amp; my lifetime. I have been eiposed to
nwnerous illdividaals and situalions I consider important. As the
saying ioes• "Variety is lbe spice

~~~ ~~~~
~Y~~artieleswbicll-

-·--

The niekMne COIIIeSt was written so that tbCie important people

jects.

I. Slurpin1 can be a dangerous
babiL
2.HowtosealcMt.Rushmore
in lluee~leuons.
3. Liability insurance in Tijuana.
Mexico.
,.,::...~.
. Is in the automobile

S.Thelifest11eofMarlcTwang.
6. Mating habits of the

OniJiutan.

7. How to form your own busi-

I

where pennypinching is revered as
apasspcrt 10 heaven.
Both quickly Cllablishrl reputalions U pietistic Baptist deacOns,
who diSapproved or prollipcy
demanded excellence. Both were
smart men ~ho refused to "suffer
fools gladly.
Both ':,:"~~~wer brokers
for their
·
bolaes. Both

and

s.....!!'!:i,u_. :=::::r:.:e:ctt.!•!tocs~

. .1

•

could have written Stories of his
the following sub-

out. I have not experiences on

•
JftCI'rN M!Nif.ecl
ol race. creed
New I' S • ,re . at1i1iadon.

=:w.::r.=.'U:., w r; I:Q':i:i. - - r. ,rc:;:-,.r:*••
....
5

*"Rfll'l iiiipola. facti Mil 11:

As you~

bell

Fred·w. Crow '

ness with no down parment.
So you see the vanety of serious.
'soojeciS that could have beeo ,thrust :
on the readers. It is quite evident ,
that very few or them would possibly enjoy my stories on tbcie 1111b- '
jects.
.
'
I am sorry !hat I bumped Sarah
Oversueet. It could have been
worse - it could have been Jack ' ·
Anderson. I am certain that the
Sunday Times-Sentinel can. find .
other space for these prominent :
columnists. Rupette, I appreciate your writ- , , ·
ing. The constitution gives you this :
right. However, not all P._COple
enjoy the same things in ·life. So, ;
Rupeue, keep reading and pcdlllps;·,
one day you will understand my :
stories.
'
Carry on. , i
Fred W. Crow ,.
(Long-time Pomei'OJ Attoney·•
Fred w. Cniw is a conlrl•tar or
columns for the Suncll!y Tlaes- .&lt;
Sentl•el. Ruders 'IJis .. l•l tu •
applalld, crltlc:lze or com-. on
any Mlbjett (except for poiiCkl or , .
relllioa) are tiiCo.ragtd tb write",:
to Mr. Crow in care ot dill newspaper.)
~

Congress should investigate Sununu

ucr~':!~s~fi·atzt . ::-~~ a
5 •t; :lliiCII!tb
~ 1 1• will 11 b... , yc!lo cDIIt;Ct~- !Ill• _

deftCit *'Y koat. line ad

would
house

Slop

;. As one of your =[$11, I w.c Sllfbili!ca;C ~·
,lllf: · -esallolll rro_. ud skunks.
• n . . . delicil by $100 lliiiioD eo· aD;_r \"CIJI' ... ...,.. • 1110 advallllp
pqssi&amp;le to ilia'1111 ,_. co•~ diM ...a of $320 biDkJD
of Crop cww sbn wu diliult01 the fael tbll for every_. ciDIIIt . 19!11 aJoM; Ccillpta Pl""ece dll . ina. I ClliiiOt imlaine Gayle Price
lhll Congreulllllliled IIIII,.. n"'clli MtiD·•·_. wd tid wriU. 011 the aibject ol obmts.
inewtuait'-ie
ldl . .
llibtrl,_., Jadtol,..•ldzblyillleJiil""t
iOg by $1.78.
....,Gif*'1s.. to a
Itt·' ...s "''ukt devOie your time 10
1eponed. the "ndpt tid
S2S4" 'bmlo•: ud- COJS~
• J 11 wl!kl will~~~ 1111: viewer
aie a slJam.
j[llhyed-ll!t Oraam·lt~a ' ali itlliD&amp; to a bcaer slllldard of
~: To ' put it blundy ·l:~= dekil Jlfdllalv .:r . . all otlilr lift~~. r
eamp1aill tbM
f e s s c:onncd tiJo
.tr.ll I I _ . ..., _ . •
" 011 . .
,our coiiiiDD kepi
'
andtbelltWI•rf• 'l'lllf ; IUh C'IJ Y~
JaniiOv...,.t'sarticlofrom
AI a-11
Apillll'Gowlll". llllillprlnlld.
. us we should 10 IIG81 wid!
tir Hdeficil redDction J:IIICbat" .W... llilll ........ •••••
.
v,lhich included IU incteuu lor
l!ave dais at)&amp; itlllill Den Rupcae:
.
e,Cry Ama-ican IMrMM wellad IJ
today, aut bleaR t 1!11 ~
ga the deficit JJDdi:r CIIIMniL . . itl ,_A Rill
C:.....
the_y
·I
"""" o our
liiCOIIIC 10 llliCI.
· iai-TP w Jill
1111- 'f
: In the name ol cldlcit NdJII ca. awiJ llltes 1114 wu UJ defkit
tljCy enacted the M&lt;aad . . . . tu 1J
.cr ttl, we will all
inereue e-and eben=•
I
be Ia "'&gt;'. VII'J serious aoullle ,
·
,
around and incll&amp;sld
VWJ-. 1 lqt_JOIIIO give -.e
As Ill old lhCl aapaeaioll puiS
SJII billion- Pl""ina die
coua IHOdliUII-inlpaniM-.y. it: Preaid"t lush wu a dollar
to a new JeCmd.
Tlrik 'fUll.
Ilion IDd a day late in orderiaa
It was die ell I ea ease ewr of
''
.. I'Mrictlaal 011 bil dlief of mCf' I
. false advertiaina. Aad, u .-,.
Siaeady wiid-~yalllllr pet4inMjoga
demonstrlled when tiJcy 1 O)ed
Ricbad wuadi
A eoopwiilonal aullcommitlce
Ojamm-Rudman and dJe other 101111/tMalde liJOUld llil bold '-iilp to defertrois on spend ina, Conpell naver
n..!Iipollr, 01J1o miRe tbo hleill of 1o1m Sununu 's
intended to reduce the deficit or
poaaible violations of a federal
C\'lllllah mflll' •· 11
P.S.If ~ aeed- ....._ edlicllaw in · armed IJII'vieca
~urge you in die •

_

_ _......;.
.'.
•

ground; ,~ Mom didn ' tlike (Jhc
mine work) at first, but I had to
make money for school."
Despite talk of closing 1he:
mines to meet federal clean air
standards by 1995, GllZzo said she
is not overly concemeds~~boul her
own
f~ture with the coal company
weeks:' she said. ,
. .,
When she is not underground m because few changes are expected
one of the two comJ,&gt;any-operaled to occur before she graduates in the
coal min.es. Guzzo 1s worldng at sprin' of I992.
" I m more worried about the
either the general offices or the
people
who work underground and
coal preparation p!anL
don't
know
anything but working
One of only four women works
there,"
she
said. ''They make a ·'
ing underground at the mines,
decent
living:
I don' t know wha1
Guzzo said she had to work hard ·to
they
are
going
to
do if the mines '
earn the respect of her co-workers.
She said her parents used to
worry about her working under-

like "walking into a' di{fetent
world," Guzzo said. "E~dling is
mechanical and high-tech.
Guzzo said the time she spends
underground depends on her
assigned project. "Once I was
underground every day for six

Showers likely

PASSPORT

Associated l'fess
AND I.D.
. Showers are likely across sou!hem Ohio as an area of low pressure
moves east along the stationary
Ready In
front in Kentucky. Mostly cloudy .
Coatinued from A· I
will be the rule across the
.~.·-------- skies
5 MINUTES .
remainder
of the state. Sunday
Rep. Abel, increases revenue for Conservation ptvisions. Rep. Abel .
with a chance of showers.
the state's General Revenue ·Frind said thiU protecting jobs and pro- along
Highs
on
Sunday will be in the 60s
and uses the money to funll pro- viding ·adequate p~k services for in the north
424 SECOND AVE.
with 70s in the south.
grams threatened in the Governor's recreation motivared the House to
Suns.et tonight will be at 8:42
GAWPOUS, OH.
Executive budget proposal.
res10re ODNR funding.
p.m.
The largest share of the House
According to Rep. Abel. the
budget is an additional $245 mil· House budget creates additional
lion more than !he Governor's rec· revenue by closing !IX loopholes in
ommendation fo~:ary· sec- sales lax and for lmge oorporations.
ondary and higher
·on. Fund, Plans to eliminate vendor discounts
ing for Basic Aid was increased by for small and medium size retailers
$81 million in the House version who serve a lax coUection function
and programs that were restored for the state were also done away
include Career Education, Pre-Ser- wilh, Rep. Abel concluded.
vice Teacher Training and Aides
for Special Education ud Teacher
DevelopmenL The school building
assistance l'rogram was increased
by $20 million.
8:00 A.•M. • 11 :00 A.M.
"We reprioritized the $50 million that the Govemot had set aside
AT
for equity because we were in risk
of losing several million doUars or
Federal assistance for Vocational
Education, Adult Ba5ic Education
385 Jackson Pike
· and programs for Educationally
OFFERING:
Disadvantaged and Handicapped
Gallip,lis, Ohio
children," Rep. Abel explained.
•
Stocka
,
She said that the General Assis•
Corporate Bonds
tance program of the Depanmen1 of
: Call For An Appointment :
Human Services was reslructured
• U.S. Treaslll')' Securities
:Weekdays 9-11 am, 1 -3 pm •
but will continue 10 serve more
• Mutual Funds
than 1,000 people in Meigs County
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• Insured Tu-Frte
if the House version is adopted.
Mllllldpal Bonds
New rules proposed by Rep. Abel
will also allow recipients to work
• Insured Money Market
and keep a portion of their income
AeeoUDts
before they lose assistance and
SPONSORED BY:
• IRA't
medical benefits.
American CaJKer
The House version also provides
Contact:
Society••Gallia
for increased funding for the
Department of Natural Resources
County Unil,
STAN EVANS
to restore programs in Civilian
Holzer Metllic•l
Ubby Hotel, Suite 100
Haber fliiliit.·
444 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Oblo 45631
By The

.•

PHOTOS

O'Pti.On

•
•

·TAWNEY STUDIO

,.••.•..••••••..................•,

··Juau

who--·
!W.t'r~"ln lllt:I!J-&amp;;:
'i:. ............
u: a•
Ida wifl. s.a.
11M ·
~..

_

..
'

•

HOLZER CLINIC

TheU.S.a-'-~Ndlk ..ladj.Jm."&lt;Mid!MIIIcl

Brady,
tt11o aied

Student...__c_on_i_in,....ued_rro_m..;.A_-1_

SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1991

~ ;".:.:'.!NC::,::::;:";w.~q...:,~t.,
•
.. ' • . . .: . .
1inai1JdleS .
'
,,
.,
• lbe bill --nmlliaftlrb • .............._

Continued from A-1
___;_'------

Sunday Times Sentlnel-Page-AJ

FREE SKIN
SCREENING CLINIC

need IIICiile)' ripl...,.

't'heiiiiiUlRis~

I

Lottery numbers

IMansfield I.71 • I

IND.

I

director or the council. with munity College. established in
responsibility for the orglllizarion 's 1974, Jll'(lvides Jwo-year associate
external relations, student aid and degrees in nursing and several
fedaal programs. He also oversaw areas of technical study.
In addition to its main campus
special pf9jects for the council
from 1980 unlill990. wben be was in southeastern Ohio, llie university
operates two-branch campuses in
named deputy director.
Tbe State Council for Higher Japan.
Ednc;alioo oversees Virginia's col. leges and universities and is similar
ill function to the Ohio Board of . CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
the selections Friday night in the
Regents.
.
.
Hayes has served as president or Ohio Lottery:
Rio Grande since August 1986. He Pick 3 Numbers
was also the university's president
9-7-3
from 1977 unlill983.
(nine, seven,~)
The university, founded in 1876, Pick 4 Numbers
·
,currently has 2,000 students
4-1-1-1
L----4 enrolled and offers four-year bach(four, one, one. one)
elor's degrees in education, liberal Cards
arts and general studies, mathemat2 (two) of Hearts
ics aud science, and business, as
4 (four) of Clubs
wen as a master's depee in class·
K (King) of Diamonds
room education. Rio Grande Com,
Q (Queen) of Spades

Aeeu-Weather'

Jack Anderson .
and Dale Van Atta
APologists for Rafsanjani, who
is often described as "pragmatic,''
explain away his acrions as a need
to placale radicals.
For a leadet trying ro walk a fw
line, Rafsanjani' s rhetoric is lbout
as subtle as a Scud mialile. Durinl
his AP,Jil 12 "Friday Prayer Sermon, • Rafsanjani sl.-14 the
United States for ita billie lgliasl

Pomeroy--Middleport~al55po55s, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

FasT,

• DAYTON- A llllional Wlilinl paiod rar the !lllrChue of hanllpiJs
is an idea wbale time hu COIIII, llilyla city ofticiaf wbo pjorwceaecla.bu
on assault wJ:aPOU in Dayroa.
·
·
..
·
'
City QwrmilfDAII TOll)' C.zzi llid a 'IJII1inf"pefiod woaJd belp
i'educegJIII-Idadc!Ntbs, ... it-.'&amp;IJ ICII
,
" "We.can't olrviouly 111p evay cdllliwl Ina JIIDI:llulnla pa,"
Capini said. .... IIIia will Cll.,_ G8 1111 irk' &amp; of pciCiplf 'IJiao Ia II
~vdly••
a ptriodolllan '! •FilS r·aga•usa·

IL"

1111

lfiiPIJics 011 his side: Up 10 60 .......

iT'S a Bal.atfCeP 'f~~T.
G~e'S HeaRT iS Too

.·

4'::~..:!:.';::;

Afl•

Iran hopes to expand its empire to Iraq

A Dltlol•• ef

,.

PeJi

'
••

~--------~------------------~~~&amp;:

~mfhar ._.nius - i.adinel

BOBAR'I' WWION Ill ·

Mey 19,1991

•

l D.C., lfler nceeasful

ltiDII u
guberUtorial Scrooges in 1 1111e

re~
or~tical
for~"===~c:=r.

ill&amp;lllitude of tbe Teapot Dome
and W.~~~rp~~ n"';'•l? . .
But dlcre. the IIDiilaribllll!d.
Adams, a dtscendiJit of !he family
that ga\'e 1111 two presidents, was a

;I

I I •

·~

.

Chuck Stone·'

piiJU!P'd, Ieabod Cnne-tbin rustic.
Taciturn in llyie, be appliecl that
bail to fJSCal...atn. Ptiliticllly, he
- a 11111 dc •
wodCecl quiet~t:seahower to cast the
Plrty in a more moderatemold.
Sununu, on the other hand, is
portly,
peqd.. I
y, beshort•temis a reaedonlry -lboull'IJO dcpel to the
rf&amp;bt ill Allill the lful!.
0.. 'IJOIII4 tbdk that Sununu
woalclletllal-. wpe JeCOiec ·
lioll ol tilt r • 1ar the &amp;II 6am
.,_ or _. a pramJnent pmtecoator. Maybe, In the cll!rk
c:capooll of Suuau's ethics, be
. . . to liiiJb . . . diltinction
1J11ween Adlms ICCCI'tiAI val!llble
lifts (irJCIDIIinllbat iilfaiioul vieuindullriallst,

...,.law

"2~~
II elolr.
Mid SW11mm ma, .._ Will , d iL
B• aull'a -saM• B-.ta of
' Ill
•• ..., ....... ICtld
•C'dii:MitJ CIPricllllllllll
1111' I I Cl II 1W1 llba lbo¥e
a .......... a.lylar I'M!I'OI' people widJ loMr IQs.
How elM c:u Suaunu justify

-rl!ISI, tiJo tlailld Slllllllld Cll!lda formally "t'blh'ed dJe Nanll
APirlCIII AJz
Comlllllld.
.

~ f5110.00fb • ...
Id
--'0111 for ~ entire

w.._.

Dele••=
\ •J

• S'&amp;.7'1'Wl . . . , . . , _

stllDl

w-

continuedtromA-1
An·nual····-------.

·.Other key awards were presented to Bt:ent Rose who received the
De Kalb Award for Agricultural
Education. Receivina awards in
Industrial Arts were Eric Lawson
and Troy Rife.
.
Receiving keys in Social Studies
were Shelly Winebrenner and
Jason Circle. Mica Jones and Jennifer Smith received the Ohio University History Awards. Donnie
Spaun received the Work Study
Award
Kerry Porter received the award
for Home Economics and FHA
awards went to Joyce Pickens, who
also received the award for Business Education, Elizabeth Wolfe,
Mary Roberts and Valerie Patterson.
Mayla Yoacham received the
key awards for Vocal Music and
Dramali;s along with John Hoback
·in Dramatics and Kevin Layne in

PfO be death

GLOUSTER, Ohio (AP) Police are investigating the death
of a resident assaulled on a street. .
Dispatcher Bobbie Warren saJd
· be" so ght for ques
a suspect JS mg u
tioning.
·
She said Donald McNaughton,
35, was attacked about 1 am. Saturday in the northern Athens Coun·
ty village and later d11d of h1s

Vocal Music.
Michael Kincaid received the
key award for Fo':lli~n Langua~e:
Students receJVJng recogmuon
for appearing on the honor roll
were Sherri Bales, Junie Beegle,
Jarrod Circle, Shannon Counts,
Lori Crow, John Hoback, Jenny
Lisle, Norman Matson, Cheryl
Pape Joyce Pickens, Kerry Poner,
Jere~y Rose, Jennifer Smith,
Robyn Stout and Shelly Winebrenner. Recognized for four year
achievement on lhe honor roll were
Jarrod Circle, Cheryl Pape. Jennifer
Smith, Robyn Stout and Shelly
Wiilebrenner.
Commencement exercises for
the 1991 class will take place
tonight (Sunday) at 8 p.m. m the
high sch9&lt;&gt;l gymnasium.

Weather

he
as
• ••
die ••
.

I

DOHUK, Iraq (AP) - Iraqi
troops ab.andoned some checkpoints around the provincial capital
of Dohuk on Saturday and with,
drew from the city, a move that
• could speed the mum home or tens
of thousands of Kurdish refugees.
Also, the fust 10 members of a
U.N. security force arrived in Iraq
and were 10 travel to Dohuk on
Sunday, said Bernt Bernander, the
U.N. coordinator and special represemative in Iraq.
About six miles east of Dohulc,
however, IriiiJi uoops late Friday
fJred aotomauc weapons at a U.S.
Army Iielicopter near the eclge of
the allied security zone, llid U.S.
Army Maj. Susan lves, a
spokeswoman for tba allied forces
in northern Iraq, 11le belkclpter did
not return fire and was not bit in
the lhinl such incident chis montb,
authoriliea llid.
Ives said the coalition forces
would protlll tbe incident to the

rrav.~ Oea. John Sha-

likasbvlli, lhl COIIlllllllder or allied
fol'tls, aald lfler a meetina with
IJaqi LL Oen. Abu FDa Slblr !hal
the pillJw:k fer Dobuk Will I step
forwll'!l- f1ut nat aJOII8h. .

-·

- ·•

446-5773

-CARDINAL.
DRYCLEANERS

--~-----------

A
A

·

Delivery
Open at 7:00A.M.

(For tiM Enrly Riser)

6

· Same or .Ne1t
Day Service On
laundered Shirts
IDont on Site)

A

(614) 446-21l5
1-800-776-4691

Pic_
kup ond

Tuxedo Rental

We tre fke ..,,

Extended foreciiSt
Monday througb Wednesday
Generally fair and warmer
through the period. Highs mostly in
!he 'ii'Os Monday and in the 80s
Tuesday and Wednesday. Lows in
the 50s Monday and Tuesday and
in the 60s on Wednesday.
South-Central Obio
Sunday, showers likely. The
high 70 to 75. The chance of rain is
60 percent.

•l'f•lelllrt wlfhl• SO
Mlllt of 811111, Mel11
11. M11on Co••llee thlt

offert the11 ••~leea.

-------------Ohio River Pla'za
GALUPOUS, OH.
446-949~

·--·
·
.r-.....;,-----------....,.---=:--:=---'"1

A G•ft
I for the
· Man.

of the Yard

Iraq troops withdraw
from around Dohuk

==•and

mined.
In 1906, tho Federurl Boys' Cubs, fmaonner ol the Boys' Clabl of
AMici, .............4.
. · ~aw.at, c.tila r 111ttlbt Enwaawq Quoca Aa. wbicll clmbliUtd
• r1 q110111filt imiiiipll a ina lbe u.s.
In 1935, T.B. L1w1 ~. 111tter laJown 11 "l.awmlee of Arabia,'' diad
ill lagllndlollowiJJiaiiiOIOicyclo crasiL
II 1943, ill u addiUI to die U.S. Conpea. Brillah Prime MinUter
Olurdlill JJkldled hll COUJIII)''s run lliJIPOft in the wsr .,hn

'

injuries.
She had no further information.

who

Today in

ATHLETES OF THE YEAR- Junie Beegle and Andy Baer
were the redpients or the Female and Male Athletea of the Year at
Southen High School durlna the au•ual awar.ds ceremony at the
hip achool 011 Friday aftenoon. Commencement exertisea will be
held this evening (Sunday) at 8 p.m. in the gymnasium.

Give your dad the answer to a greatlooking lawn - a Lawn-Boy mower.
Lawn-Boy mowers feature the
·
. powerful Lawn-Boy two-cycle
engine built for easy starts
long fife. From mowing
wet grass to close up-front
trimming, a Lawn-Boy is
just the ticket. So. give
your dad the ticket to
• a beautiful lawn buy him a
Lawn-Boy.

SALE Plla S299.9S

13'....;~1

DIAMONDS
Colored Gemstones

45th
A11n hte rsa rv
SALE

OUR LARGEST
SALE EVER!

STOREWIDE
SAVINGS!

WEDDING
BANDS
14 Kt. Artcarnd
design · or ploin

boillh.

AlliEDUUD

UPTD

WATCHES
Our entire selection
of famousbroncls, lulova.
Pulsar and Stiko.
Gin y- faYGI'ile
graduate o wolch
and Son.

20°/o OFF 20°/o OFF
CULTURED
PEARLS
Iiiio..,~
Chodlor,....,. .,..
....... I: .....
t .....
,_ .....,UIIily.
20°/o oFF

"""...

LOCKETS
CROSSES
PENDANTS

ChOoto lr• 14 It IJII4

olorliot sll"' ...,. toW ·
lflltol

REDUCED

20°/o

OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY OF DIAMOND
ENGAGEMENT RINGS, FASIIION RINGS,
GENTS liNGS, AS WEll AS PENDANT
AND EAIIIINGS ARE NOW IEING Of.
FliED AT- 20 TO 50% RfDUCnONS.
AlSO IEDUCm AlE OUI EHnRE UNE OF
GENUINE COlORED STONE JEWElRY TO
INClUDE AU NATURAl IIITHSlONES.

SAVE

20°/o-33°/o

14 KT GOLD
CHAINS

RINGS

..., ...... "...

AU men's and ladies'
stone rings rtdU&lt;td,
Star,
Opal, lindi,
lllack Onyx, Jade. fn.
tin stltclion - Lasting gilt ideas.

16, 18, 20and24 inch
falhion chains availabit in ,.... chtiict of
Dozd 10 . . , from,

Discov• lht feting of
owning real gDW•

50°/o OFF SAVE20°/o

REMOUNTS

.... "r- O!llololo4

.... ""' ""*' ....
we'l rolodioot !Mot Into
loowtlhll ...... 'on4orm
"""' -lop. Snt Now.

PIER ED
EARRINGS

lwwy -loot I• tho store
rMocH. Nothing hold
ltock. '4 KT, Gf, IS, allal

••if9·

20°/o oFF ·

20°/o OFF

L21ZPN

•

ALL GlnWARE

R&amp;G, FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

992,2164
Po_
...oy, Ohio
The Store with "All Kinde of Stuff"
For Pate. -Stllblee. Large &amp; 8mal Animllle. uwne &amp; Oerdene .

399 W• . _

- ·-

20 to33°/o
OFF
ew

Sets
flaurlntl
. •.!twill lolill
•A53 Woodwnrt I t - •PIIINI •••• llf "
tfwta, llaa, Shit' ec,_ P111 .1111i PIIICIII
.............. 81111

•NoriWin lodtwtl

...----IOCiefV
..... --·~

'

.

�•

"'

'

..

. .

.

. ..

.~

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

~··;

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

~

Page-A4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH

-Area deaths-

Ex-Gov.
Robb faces
drug probe

Theodore Deeter

. ~=Jh':ctanaelical United

May 19,1911

COOLVILLE - Theodore
Funeral services will be held on
Emery Deeter. 71. a resident of 373 Monday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Lottridge Rd .• Coolville, died at his Home with Carl Hicks offJCialing.
home Saturday May 18 ,1991. fol- Burial wiU be in Gilmore Ceme•
lowing an extended illness.
!ely.
RICHMOND, Vi; (AP) -VirHe was born February17,1920,
Frien may call at the funeral ginia State Police are probing allein Coolville, son of lhe la!e Abner home frail p . to 4 p.m. and 7 gations of drug use by Sen. Charles
and Alice Lee Barrows Deerer. ·
p.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday.
S. Robb while be was governor ol
'He was lhe retired owner of the
Virginia, a police spokesman said
today.
HilltOp Seryice Station and Resll!u- Robert H (Jack) Massie
rant, Coolville, a Conner ttuck driv- ·
.
•
Police launched their investigaer. chaner member of lhe Coolville
tion after a former beauty queen
Emergency Squad, Coolville.Fire
GALLIPOLIS -· Robert Harold made allegations about Robb on
Deparunent. and former fire chief (Jack) Massie; 72; 3413 State nationalr.elevision last monlh. state
of Coolville.
· · Route 141, Gallipolis (Centenary), police spokesman Charlie' Vaughan
He is survived by his wife, Eve- . died Friday in HolzCr Medical Cen- said.
. .·
lyn Cunningham Deeter; two sons, ter. He retired from lhe custodial .
Tai Collins, a former Miss VirJack Deeter, Belpre and James staff of the GaUia County Court- ginia-USA from , said she had an
Deeter, Coolville: two daughters, house after 17 years of service and affair with Robb, 51, while he was
• Donna Schul, Little Hocking and attended Mina Chapel OIUrch.
governor in 1984.
Dianna Domigan. Coolville: 10
Born Sept. 30. 1918 in Green
·Vaujhan said state police would
grandchildren; four great grand- Township, Gallia County, son of look into aU aUegationS of possible
children: three sisters, Madge Nel- the la!e Raben W. (Bob) and Arna criminal offenses that have surson Ghant and Virginia Warren, Brown Massie, he married Hazel faced about Robb's activities. .
both of Columbus and Rose Bick, Randolph Walters, who survives,
Asked if state police would look
INTERSTATE PILEUP- Firemen walk
Friday. The c:baln-reaciioo accident was Hpect·
Gahanna. He was preceded in death on Oct 24. 1942 in Middlepon.
into allegations that Robb used
from
the
$Cene
of
1 rush-hour pUe 0 p on Indied
westbound lanes dOlled until early Saturday,
by his parents, one brother and one
Also surviving are a son. Jerry cocaine while governor, Vaughan
anapolis'
south
side
that
Involved
more
than
40
(AP
Laserphoto).
grandson. .
.
Leon Massie of Gallipolis: a said, "Anything that indicates a
cars
anll
lrucks
and
Injured
at
least
22
people
Funeral services will be held 1 daughter, Florence Emogene criminal allegation. ••
.
'
.
p.m. Monday at the Whir.e-Biower Kingery of Gallipolis: two stepFuneral Home with Rev. Charles daughters, Mrs. John (Rachel Mae)
Domigan officiating. Burial will be Saunders of Gallipolis, and Mrs.
in Coolville Cemetery.
Lawrence (Clara Belle) Beaver of
Friends may call at lhe White· Columbus; seven grandchildren,
PALM BEACH, Fla. (.AP)- cy and a Palm Beach nightspot,
The Palm Beach Post first employment agency for. m:ords on
Blower Funeral home after 4 p.m. seven great-grandchildren and two Police and prosecutors on Friday police confirmed Friday.
reported the records search Friday. Jean Saba. a Kennedy estate houseSunday.
great-great-grandchildren: and a sought credit card, taxi and airline
Police have asked for airline
.
.
The obstruCtion of justice inves- keeper.
computer
records to determine tigation is focusing on police
In lieu of flowers. the family sister, Hazel Williams of Spring- records 10 trace Kennedy family
Authorities also were seeking
requests donations be· sent to the field.
·movements the weekend of an whether William Kennedy Smith, claims they were misled when lhey bar tabs and charge slips for E.R.
.l)nerferlh House (serving patients'
He was preceded in death by aUeged rape at the Kennedy estate. charged with sexual battery, Flori- went to the estate and asked to Bradley's Saloon, The Post-said.
.fa'lnilies adrnitled to the Ohio State three sisters.
Police are investigating a possi- da's equivillent to rape, changed his speak to U.S. Sen. Edw;ll'd
The alleged victim met the 30University Hospital). The address
Service$ will be 1 p.m. Mooday ble obstruction of justice after a 29- flight plans after police began Kennedy, Smith's uncle.
year"-Oid Smith, Kennedy, and the
is 190 King Avenue, Columbu.s, in the McCoy-Moore Funeral year-old woman claimed she was investigating the March 30 inci- · On March 31, police say they senator's son, Patrick KeMedy, a
Ohio, 4320L
·
Horne Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipo- -sexually assanlrcd by a member of dent.
were told lhe Massachuseus Demo- RhOde Island s - Jepiesentative,
lis, with the Rev. Alfred Holley the Kennedy clan.
State Attorney David Bludworth crat was not borne. Later they were at a nightclub called Au Bar the
'
officiating. Burial will be in Ohio
The Palm Beach County state declined to comment Friday on the told he had left Palm ·Beach. night of the alleged rape. The ··
Bobby L. Hagerman
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends attorney •s office has subpoenaed investigation. A police source, who Kennedy actually left the com- newspaper did not explain ·why
may call at the funeral borne from records from American Express, asked not to be identified, con- pound April I.
authorities are seeking records for
' GALLIPOLIS - Bobby Lee 6-9
p.m. Sunday.
.
YeUow Cab, an employment agen- firmed for The Associated Press
Investigators have asked an Bradley's.
Hagerman, 56, of GaUipolis, forbearers will be Ferrell
that the records were
being sought.
&lt;
merly of Chesapeake. died Thurs- andCasket
Merrill
Johnson,
Gary
Bane.
-day, May 16, 1991 at his home.
Ron Canaday. Tom Moulton and
He was born Sept. 8. 1934 in Tony
Beck.
'Chesapeake, the son of the late Lee
-Taylor and Ruby Ransbottom Ernest F.. Wh1"te
By MARCIA DUNN
dishes that are stacked in incubaSpangenberg's pampered brood and seven astronauts.
Hagerman. He was self-employed
AP Aerospace Writer
tors. The Pyrex dishes are clear so will be the fust jellyfish to fly ih
Most of the flying jellies 'carpenter and a stone mason.
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. Spangenberg can keep an eye on space.
2,028
- will .~ polyps, an early
·. . He is survived by six sisters,
GALLIPOLIS - Ernest .Frank (AP) .- In a NASA llloofl,IJ!ITY .. the.ac;tian inside;· .. , ·
·~ ·• ~ -~-The' Els\erri Vi[ginia.MedicaJ. form attached to underwater sur~ Delta Mae Phillips, Eureka, Mary
White, 61, of 1928 1/2 Chestnut eight miles from. lhc launch pad,
''The jellyfiSh just love them,'.' School researcher wahts to see liow
· •Shields. Hillsboro. Shirleen Boggs St., GaUipolis, died Friday, May 17 biologist Dorothy Spangenberg she said. "I check them every day Aurelia auriia, or moon jellies, faces. They are 'itbOut' lhe' size of
and Juanita Miller, both of Fon ,1991 at Pleasant VaUey HOS,Jlital, dotes on 2,478 tiny jellyfish bound to make sure they're happy and in develop in weightlessness. They !he lead tip of a pencil.
Tbe 450 others will be the ·more
, 'Pierce. Fla.• Pauline Shields. !'ee· Pt. Pleasant, W.Va .• followmg a for space next week aboard the good shape."
mature into a free-swimming form mature, pulsating 'ephyrae, which
i bles, and Evelyn Adkins, Rush, brief illness.
shuttle Columbia
How does she know they •re in five to six days on Eanh when have Jl11Vity receptors to maintain
: Ky.: one brother; Merrill HagerHe was born Jan. 3, 1930 in
That's her prime crew. About happy?
.
iodine is added to their water, mak· r)irecuon and balance. Spangenberg \
: man, Marion; his former wife, Gallipolis, son of the late Jessie 22,000olhersareon standby.
"After 30 years, rou know," ing them ideal candidates for will examine them after the flighl\J.
• Shirley Hagerman; and 34 nieces Monroe and Irene Lucille Queen.
Spangenberg needs a fresh batch she said, laughing. "It s lilce koow- Columbia's nine-day flighL
to see how much calcium is lost in
: and nephews.
He was a formerly employee of of jeUyfiSh, at just the right stage of ing your child."
The first group of 2,478 jellyftsh the receptors, contributing to scien:
He was preceded in death by the City of Columbus and owned a development, for every launch
Spangenberg beamed as she will be loaded into Columbia on tists' knowledge of human calcium
~ one sister, Velma McCall.
•
landscaping company in Columbus attempt She has enough for eight sbowedoffhermenagerieFriday.
Tuesday, 17 hours before sched- loss. in space.
r • Funeral services wiU be beld 2 for several years. He attended the tries: !he fusl is Wednesday morn\'They're the best little jeDyfiSh uled liftoff, in plastic -bags and bolIt takes four to six months!for ,
•: Jl.m. Sunday at Schneider Funeral Churc,h of Christ in Christian ing when Columbia is scheduled in tbe world. You can't find any ties. They will be moved from a
ephyrae to reach the final develop: Rome with the Rev. Raymond Unioo.
.
for liftoff.
better jeUyfish," sbe said. "I went middeck locker into Spacelab - a mental stage, the fii!Diliar blobby
; Bragg. Burial will be· at lhe Union
His is survived by bis former
The young creatures, uanspon- to a conference and I didn't find · laboratory module in the cargo bay form koown as medusa.
:· HillCemetery.
wife, Juanita Kay Evener of ed from her own laboratory .in Nor- anyone wbo pays more attention to -once the shuttle reaches orbit
Astronaut Tamara Jemigan wiD
•,
Calling 'hours were Saturday at, Columbus; two daughters, Vicki folk, Va., fill covered casserole their jellyfish than I do."
Also on board will be 30 rats inject
iodine into the water of less
~ the funeral home.
Swint of Columbus and Sandra
than a third of the polyps in· orbit
~
.
Allen of Reynoldsburg; one son,
and videotape their behavior.
i Roscoe HoUon
Frank. White of Columbus: a speThe experiments involving
( MIDDLEPORT . Roscoe Hoi- cial friend, Jen Denny of GallipoJernigan
will be duplicated the
: Ion, 96, of Scout Camp Road in lis; six sisterS. Hazel ~ontgomery
same
day
on
some of the ~roxi­
1 Chester, died Saturday, May 18, of C~own C11y, Franc1s Hyde of
mately
100,000
moon jelhes left
J 1991, at Overbrook Center in Mid- Harnsburg, Pa., ~uby Mon.tBy
JIM
DRINKARD
human
rights
and
weapons
policies,
calm
Congress'
anger.
behind
in
Spangenberg's
Norfolk
• dlepon following an extended ill- . gomery, Gmce MuUins, Ruth WdAssociated
Press
Writer
two
senators predicted Friday.
A
Republican
on
Cranston's
laboratory.
: ness. He was a school teacher and a , l!='t and ~da Pilcher! aU of GallipoWASHINGTON (AP)- Pres!Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., Foreign Relations subcommittee,
Spangenberg staned stockpiling
. farmer
lis; and SIX grandchildren.
dent
Bush
will
lose
his.
battle
with
said
he
would
introduce
a
resoluSen.
Frank
Murkowski
of
Alaska,
polyps
in 1989 for the Spacelab ~
;
B~ oo March 4 1895 in JackHe was preceded i.n death by
Congress
over
renewing
favored
tion
disapproving
most-favoredagreed.
mission, then scheduled for mid: son County, w.Va., he was the son one brother; and~ Sl~ters.
trade
status
for
China
unless
he
nation
trade
status
for
China
and
"I'm
tcUing
you,
in
my
opinion
• of the lar.e James and Mary Casto
Funeral serv1ces w1ll be con- takes quick and fmn steps to sbow forecast passage unless Bush can you're going to lose it unless you· 1990. She didn't dare stop breeding
when fuel leaks grounded
I Hollon.
dueled 1 p.m. Tuesday at Wau~hdispleasure
with
Beijing's
find
a
way
to
deal with China and come up with some specific actions Colwribia last summer and delayed
U.S.
! ~ Surviving are a son, Edison Halley-Wood Funeral Ho~~ ~1th
to get the attention of our friends in the flight; an epidemic could have
(Evelyn) Hollon of Racine: a Rev: Alfr~d Hol!ey offiCIItmg.
S
COO
S
China,"
Murk~wski told Richard wiped her out
.- daughter-in-law, Virginia Halloo of DunaJ w11l be m Mound Hlll
.
Solomon,
ass1stant secretary of
Polyps begat polyps that begat
Columbus: a special daughler-in- Cemt:terY.
polyps.
and on 11 went and on it
statefo~EastAsiaandthe.~ific.
law. Opal HoUon of Chester; a sonFnends may .call at the funeral
1
,
"Chma
seems
to
be·drifUng
furgoes,
at
least until Columbia gets
in-law, Arthur Barr of Middleport; home on Monda~ from 6to 9 p.m.
ther
away
instead
of
being
more
off
the
ground.
It's the most jeUytwo sisters. Darma Morris'On of
PaUbearers wtU be Bob. ~us.
By
JAMES
ROWLEY
._
could
also
go
llirectly
to
the
responsive
to
our
concerns."
fish
Spangenberg
has ever had and •
: Pomeroy and Martha Clonch of Roger Montgomery, DaVJd Lilly,
Associated
Press
Writer
Supreme
Court
Murkowski
said.
His
comments
more
than
she
imagined
she would
' Pomeroy: 15 grandchildren: 34 James Montgomery, .Gary Montreflected
a
widely
held
WASHINGTON
(AP)
The
appeals
panel
!emporarily
view
on
need.
; great-grandchildren; and 14 great- gomery and Frank Wh11e.
Lawyers for The Washington Post left intact its stay of lhe conr.empt Capitol Hill that China, since the
The overflow hasn't diminished
; great-grandchildren.
are studying their legaf options order issued by Superior Court killings of demonstrators in the her jelly appetite.
·
•
'
Besides his parents, Mr. HoDon Gene F. Yost
an
appeals
court ruled that one Judge Richard A. Levie. who is Tiananmen Square area two years
after
"I
reaUy
enjoy
this
work,
and
I
) was preceded in death by his fust
· of the newspaper's reponcrs must presiding at the civil trial. The six ago, has grown worse instead of really like these animals," she said.
POMEROYGene
F.
Yost,
67,
: wife. Shirlie; his second wife, Eva: of Syracuse, died Friday, May 17, disclose a confidential source or go officers claim they were unfairly better.
"I can't wait until these. animals
• an infant sister; a daughter, Opal 1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospi- to jail.
·
made scapegoats for the failed
In addition to allegations of come home from space." ·
: Barr: a sister, Grovia Diehl; two tal. He was a dairy fanner.
, The newspaper's lead attorney. "Operation Caribbean Cruise" human rights abuses - lhe deten.
: sons, James and Delmer Hollon;
Patrick
J. Carome, said he was anti-drug operation, whicb pro- tion and trial of political dissenters.
He was boot on June 17, 1923,
· and a grandchild.
·
the son of lhe late Charles R. and "surprised and disappointed" by duced far ·fewer arrests than had use of slave labor and repression of
i He was a member of lhe Meigs Maaie
Friday's ruling that Linda C. been anticipated. _
,
· Tibetans in panicular - China has
Theiss Yost
·
I County Farm Bureau and the
The officers' trial, which is in been accused of selling nuclear and
He is survived by his wife, Wheeler must obey a trial judge's
I
missile technology to Middle EastMary K. Foster: three daughters, order to disclose who gave her recess. is to resume Monday.
!
is Maggie, 1st
The appeals court upheld ern countries and stealing U.S.
Nancy Circle of Racine, Mrs. Sam secret plans for a failed 1986 drug
Levie's fmdings that Wheeler had technology and software. In addi(Manha) Bartrug, Warrentown, raid.
Ave.
The District of Columbia Coun waived any claim of confidentiality tion, there is concern over China's
Va., and Mrs. Kevin (Susan) Shap(USP III-I•)
pard, Racine; one son, Charles E. of Appeals decision upheld an - by disclosing to two U.S. Park building a huge ltade surplus with
Publ~ho&lt;l•arh Sunday, 8251'hlr&lt;l A....
(Nita) Yost, Racine: two brothers, April .24 contempt-of-court order police officers that she obtained a the United States.
Gallipolis. Ohio. by thP Olllo ValloyPub·
David Yost, Racine, and Raben ,that Wheeler be jailed for refusin~ secret handbook outlining the drug
In remarlcs on the Sena1e floor.
PIHse call
llshlng Companyt Multlrnedla. Inc. Serond cla11 postagt' paid at Galllpoll1.
Yost of New GaUilea, Pa.; and a to make the disclosure in the civil raid from Police Chief Isaac Ful- Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole,
Ohto •~ · Enterf'd as second class
446-0621 or
sister. Carolyn Kucsma. Lake trial of a lawsuit brought by six wood, then the assistant chief.
R-Kan., acknowledged the dif(icul' malltnl(' maner ar Pomeroy. Ohio, Post
police officers.
The six whir.e officers claim that ty ofwinninll renewal of trade benPlacid, Fla
Olflco.
446-6625.
Carome,
who
represents
both
Fulwood,
.who is black. manipulat- efits for Chma.
·
He
was
a
member
of
the
First
Mrmhi'r: The- Associated Prt-ts, In·
Baptist Church in Racine, Masonic the newspaper and Wheeler, said ed an internal investigation of the
land O.lly Pre-ss Afsodallon and the
Ohio Newspapt"r Allot'latiCII, Nattonal
Lodge 461, a past president of the he would spend lhe weekend study- raid to shift blame onto them
Advertlllng ReprNentatlvP, Branham
Southern Local School Board, a ing the decision and take "a \oery because of their race.
Newspaper Sale-s. 733 Third Ave-nuE',
Fulwood has denied in a sworn
member of the Tuppers Plains- hard look at what our next step is. ••
New York. N&lt;'W York 10011.
Tbose options include a request deposition that he gave the handChester War.er District, a member
SUNDAY ONL"Y
FAMILY PRACTICE
that
lhe.panel or lhe run nine-mem- book to anyone.
of
Racine
Orange
2606,
and
a
more
811118CRJPnON RATEII
than 50 year member of lhc Meigs ber court rehear lhe case. Wheeler
BJ CArrier ar Met• Rnle
On(" Wef'k ............. .............. 90 C~nh
County
Farm Bureau.
an• Y•ar ................................. 116.80
Funeral
services will be held on
SINGLE COPY
PRICI!
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at Ewing Funer·
Sunday ............. .... _................ 75 C~nt s
. .
·-·-·· ---·
. . .
al Home in Pomeroy with Rev.
Steve
Deaver
officiating.
Burial
No subsCriptions b)' m•n permlu~ In
' arHs where motQr carrier !M"FVIC'E' 11
wiD be in Greenwood Cemer.ery.
available.
A Masonic !ervice wiU be held
'.
on Monday at 7:30 p.m.
ThP Sunday Ttmet·$ff)tlnpl wUI not be
. r~ponslble for advance paymrnts
Friends may eal1 at the funeral
r madt' to carr1f'rs.
)
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
MAIL l!ltJIIICIItmONS
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday.

: May 19, 1991

Pomeroy4...Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A.5

EMS 'just doing their jobs'
helping county residents
By MELINDA POWERS
Tlmes-Seotioel Starr

. "Our job is to deal with everyone else's life and death situations." EMS Director Bob Bailey
GALLIPOLIS - A car full of says.
teenagers spins out of control over
an embankment, spilling its preServing county for 12 years
cious cargo out onto the roadway.
They arrive to 'tend to serious .
The Gallia County EMS Station
injuries and take those in need to has been in existence since 1979
the hospital.
· and serves more rhan 400 square
A lllte-night blaze rages through miles wil)lin the county. With 15
an empty warehouse and needs the full-time workers and 20 pail-time
hands of dozens of fuefighters to employees, lhe EMS offers expen
extinguish it
medical knowledge alan~ with kind
They are at the scene to suppon words and caring faces m times of
the fuefighters and to be available emergency.
should anyone gel hurt.
AcCording to EMS records, the
An elderly woman has no means station will soon make its 30,000th
of transportation, but needs to get run - nearly one run for every
to the hospital for an emergency X- person living in the county.
ray.
After spending two afternoons
They arrive to transport her, and with a crew at the station, I learned
to offer a few kind words to make a great deal about the 'EMS profesthe .experience a little less uncom- 'sion and the type of people who
fortable.
choose it as a career.
.
The:t are the personnel of the
Mark Wens, the station's public
GaUia County Emergency Medical relations man, is a certified EMT. '
Service and they were recently rec- While being able to write press
ognized during the National and releases and do interviews, Werts
GaUia County EMS Week.
also is able to splint a broken leg,
1 Although their ambulances draw
treat a burn or administer heart
a lot of attention with their loud medicine. Wens• wife, Lisa, is also
sirens. these workers quietly do an EMT and warted lhe same shift
.:their job wben they are needed the as her husba,nd.
most
Randy
Lytle, a family man with
.,

.
Investigators trace Kennedy family movements.

two young daughlef11, also warted
those days. His biggest concern is
that people in the county know that
the EMS is a quality operation.
"We have hired seven new full·
time positions during the year," be
said one slow aftemoon. "We have
more qualified, weU-ttained peo,pte
than ever. Things have changed.
The station on Jackson Pike
houses five f'ully-eqllipped ambulances (cidled ''Units") and one rescue truck. Each unit is fullystocked with bandages, splints. different types of medication, syringes
and intravenous equipment ancl
oxygen systems. And all but one
urut has a $15",000 bean monitoran imponant piece of life-sustaining equipment.
A living area, fully-equipped
kitchen and sleeping quarters also
are built into at the station. The
EMTs and medics work olie 24hour shift. then have two days off, ·
and essentially live at the station
during their work time.
·Slriving to educate public
Besides going to car accidents
and helping at house ft.res, the staff
of the EMS goes out into the county to inform residents about their
service.

STANDING READY_: The Gallia County
Emergency Medical Service station on Jackson
Pike houses five ambulances and one rescue
"Our ultimate goal is to get
everyone in Gallia County to know
how io contact the EMS and know
what to do when they get hold of
us," Lisa said.

.

The EMTs and medics visit ele·
nlentary and high school classrooms, give lectures on fire safety,
panicipate in drunk driving semi·

truck for use in the eounty. According to statio&amp;
records, the EMS will make its 30,000th ll'ua
sometime this week. (Times-Sentinel photos by
Melinda Powers)
'

nars and even teach children at
local day care centers about basic
rust :iid.
The two afternoons I visiled, the
squads were only called on one or
two runs. The EMTs and medics
seemed anxious for something to
happen as they relaxed - and
waited- in the living room.

Don't laugh: jellyfish in space new research tool

Chinese human rights violations i~k
senators; Bush urged to take action

j

·
AppeaI
rt t eII reporter
to reveal source or go to J·a ·t

LOST

Black Lab, name
area,
red ·coHar.

:::.:::============= ·ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Consider your ·family.
Consider pre·need funeral planning.

.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
-··· ~

CREMEENS

j

On• Y.. r .................................
117.84
~~~~-· Ooly

Six monlhi ....... ................... ..... S24 .70

DallJ-·m:i'ONI

·-·c..r

MAIL l!ltJIIICII

13 w..a .................................. l:l1.84
2fi WHic! ......... .. .. ..... ... .. ... ........ IIU6
!!2 WHicJ ....... .... ... ......... .......... . 184.76

• - OllloNe COtolllr

13 w..u .,........... ................ :...1:23.10
26 W..U ............. .. .............. .... IIS.50

52 w..t . ................................ . 1111.«1
~

FUNEIAL CHAP.L .

Falls to death
FAIRFIELD. Ohio (.AP)- A
man feU 10 his dcalb Saturday from
a.water tower in this Buller County
City.
- The incident is still under inveStigation and lhe name of lhc victim
was withheld untillhe family could
be no'i(led.

75 GUPI ST.

446·6333

"Our Family Serving Your Family."

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

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

(104) 675·1675

"Is that the 'Batphone'?," they
would ask the dispatcher when the
telephone would ring. hoping tlu!t
the emergency hotline was beckOning them to an-accidenL
· "No" was usually the reply and
disappointed faees would replace
hopeful ones. It became more and
more apparent that these people
wanled to help, and considered the
chaUenge of helping an person in
need invigorating.
Having such expertise on how
to care for another human being
might make one proud or egoistic, I
thought. But after watching the
staff work around the station,
washing out the garage bays or
doing yardwort, I realized that they
weren •t interested in the glory of
hclt&gt;inR son~eoi!e - they were· ju!ll

····-·---.

It's Your Insurance, ,l
Weuldn' I You feel Better
With Our Name On It? :

.'

Choosincan insu111nce •aeney Is often ~

a difficult decision. ·usuo!ly lh!rt's 'no
way you con evalutt! the service you will I,
receive.

One exception is AAA's Insurance .

, . A HELPING HAND - EMTs Joy Thomp. son (left) and Mark Werts help Freida Rifrd into
the ambulance on the .way back from an X-ray
. appointment at" Holzer Medical Center. Riffil
'

Aaency. UA lnsuranu is •

thanked the two for their klod words as they
transported her back to Sceoic Hills Nursing
Home.

nlnte you un rely on for all
you want in 1n insurance

can our Sol"

" Roprnenta~vo,

Angie, today
fat dotail1.

·Bonefishing exciting pastime .
,

By BUI Schulz
,
Associated Press Writer
r When President Bush llikes time
off to go bonefishing he's after
. .one.of the fmest fighti~g fishes in
the ocean
11 "It's ~tterly shocking the first
ttime you encounter the fust run of
the bonefish," says guide Philip
"Flip" Pallot of Homestead, Fla.
1, "They're capable of melting the
drag system on sophisticated tackle The 're capable of a sustained,
ll~inte~upted run of up to 100
yards. And It almost doesn't matter
what kind of pressure you put on
the fish- he's going to make that
:·fmtrun."
The bonefish's beauty is in its·
a~ce and its fight It's defiHely not something ~ gourmet
ook would prize. ·
The fish runs 36 inches and
longer, and a good·sized one in
Piorida waters will go 13 pounds or
lnore.
:: "They're extremely silvery fish.

~

very hard to see in the water
They hve m th~ warm shallow
because their sides act as giant mir- water from Miamt south throughrors and reflect the bottom over out the Flonda Kers. You fish for
whi(.:t rhey swim," Pallot ~ys.
them by e1ther wading or gomg out
So an experienced guide doesn't m a shal!ow:draft bo~t.
h th
look for a fish - he looks for a
A. gutde IS e~sential to teac . e
shadow - which is fairly visible rookie and prov1de a second pau of
because most booefish hang out m eyes.
.
8 to 18 inches of war.er.
Bonef1sh are bottom feeders. '
When you catch one, make The mouth IS on the bottom of the
some pictures and tum it loose.
pomted snout. They eat crusThe meat is full of bones taceans, mollusks, shnmp, seathat's wbere the name comes from. . worms, m1~nows, small. eels,
"Each of those bones has a little almost an.ythmg they can pick ~P
hook at•the end of it, and so if you . fro!" or ~1g out or. the bottom. Its
were to eat it. you would eat a bone the~~~a~gt~es the~ rw~~·
that has horrible, pointed hook on haU en YthP. 0~lnbreaksee thm
it," PaUot says.
s ow water, e1r ~
e
The meat is•oily and strong tasl- Sl!l"face. y.'hen theu: tad breaks the
ing, unlike the light taste and tex- , surface, dm fordh~r to keep ,rheu ~alture of saltwar.er fish.
·
ance anh . IS . 10bg PkOSJtldonf, 'the.~
Florida bonefish are the biggest wave t etr ta1 1 ac an or •
·and smartest m the world. They are Pallot says.
.
.
.
usually several pounds larger an.d
Use h~e ban, such as shnmp,
are harder to catch than the1r crabs or sliced conch.
cousins in the Bahamas and around
the world, Pallot says.

446-o•n

@

360 Stc:antl •••.

'

.~Iems.

t•'

"The Republicans are gunning
~tor us," he said in prepared
•«marts for a dinner speech at the
hio Democratic Party's annual
nner. "And they've already made
clear that they will wage the
me kind of nasty. negative and
• ean,spirited campaign that has
• ow become lheir trallernarlc here

l

Ohio."

He referred to GOP c110paign
tici against U.S. Sen. Howard
tzenbanm in 1988 aod former
hio S.Crewy of State Sherrod
~Ill, who - • ~t-eleellolt bid

·r:l911.
tbe!tepab&amp;Ms slid
How.d Hu.......e! W..lllft

n child I*IIC!I'UIIY. Ia 1990,
llid iblt Sllelrild Browo wu
oo dntp. Aad ill 19P2,1bey'U
bably IIJ IQ&amp;IobD Glenn is
ft 011 ethics,'' Glenn llid.
~· Olenn ·infallda 10 lllk a lounh
~YO 111111 MlU ytlr delpite

~ elhlct lllvlldpdm~ hlwlvlnl
:.tim I!IW ~_.•n.ltnOWJI

as the "Keating Five." They were
accused of trading influence for
political donations from former
savings and loan owner Charles H.
Keating Jr.
.
After a 14•month investigation,
the Senate Ethics Committee in
February concluded that Glenn
used poor judgment in his relationship with Keating 'but didn' 1 break
any Senare rules.
Glenn said that except for the
years his parents died, the past year
was "the worst single period of my
entire life. ••
"For the first time in my career,
·my honesty and integrity were
called in14&gt; question. And that was a

very bitter pill," he said.
Glenn said he felt vindicated by
the committee's conclusion.
• 'I've always regarded your
fairh in me as a sacred trust, and I
want you to koow that I will never
betray that trust - not for money
and not for anything else,·' he said.
Glenn said the Democratic Pany
must be united in the election year,
whether its members are conservatives, liberals or moderates.
"When we fight and bicker
among ourselves, when we snarl
and spit and question each other •s
motives, the only ones wbo win are
Republicans," Glenn said.

AGENCY

;

GeiH)MIIis •

CHECKING INVENTORY- Mark Werts checks the inventory ol his medication box that is kept in one of the ambu~nces.
Tbe units are also equipped witb on-board oxygen systems, miravenous equipment and a beart monitor.

I

NEW
EMERGENCY ROAD SERVICE
CONTRACTOR FOR. '

•

CROWN CITY, OHIO
HALL'S AUTO BODY "
AAA SOUTH CENTRAL OHIO

360 Se~bnd Ave,, Gallipolis, Ohio, Ph. 446-0699

r625

Now ~

- ~ ·Serving

Phone: 256·1058 (24 hrs.)

Olenn expects 'nasty' campaign on ethics
. : COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) \).S. Sen. John Glenn on· Saturday
sei the tone for what could be his
Cou~hest re-election campaign by
indicating he expects harsh Repub• )ican attacks focusing on his ethics

INSURANCE·'

I

.Jr.)~j

HOMECARE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC.

EQUIPMENT- SALES • RENTALS· REPAIRS
"Completfl Uldlcal Equipment For Hotllf UN"

Galli a
County!

'I
•'

.'

I'
I

'

As a Carrier dultr, we make it
our job to proylde you wltll the
hllfler efficient helt pumps for
your total indoor comfort. From :
heatiJIC and coolina to air
treatment. we use our years of
ti)Jirience and quality products
and services to desian 1 home
comfort system you can be
comfortable with. Let us install
a hiah efficient heat pump so
you can feal better inside.

~

We're The Inside GuyS: '

• HOME OXYGEN
• WHES.CIIAIAS

•

•liOSi'ITAl BEDS
• SHOWER STOOLS

• AllUL TDW'ERS
• Lin CIIAIRS
• UHOEAPAOS ICHUISI • WAUWIS

• 8EOSRIE'COMMODES • DIA8&amp;1li: SUPPUES
• PATIEHT LFTI
• OSTOMY

WE BILL MEDICAIIt A01HEIIIIUIWICI POll YOU
THIRD &amp; PINE ST.

.

GALLIPOLIS

Orman Hall Inc.
1317 OliO ST.
PT. PUISAN1', WV.
675·1177

�....

..

~

~

--~

....

_.,_, _ _

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

_...,_,_

..... ..
~

\,;_-- ·

---., ....

~

~

~

:

.. age-A6-Sunday nmee Sentinel

..

.. .. .

~

~

~

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

May 11,11191

May19, 1991

l&gt;rug trafficking-targeted in Cleveland Public Housing area .

: CLE~ (AP) - .Since a
new admJDIStratlion With ,u.s .
P efense Department.expene~ce
took &lt;;&gt;ver the public housinJ
authonty 10 the Clev~land area a
year ag.o. drug trafficking has been

ing out here and did I want to security as priorities, the CMHA
CO!De. I agreed to come for.?&lt;J days more than doubled its security
an_d that was a year ago, Allen force from about SO a year ago to
satd.
.
.
. about 11 s, Allen said. About half
,He SBld a. reVJCw of the authon- are sworn law enforcement offiCers
ty s ?Perauon~ made clear ~at who patrol, carry a gun und can
I~creasmgly targeted.
secunty for. res.•dents was lacking m~earrests.,
.
An ~ltpanded . Cuyaho~a as drug dealing inc:reased.
You can 1 erndiCate drog deal~etropoh~ HouSID$ Authonty
. There was also a lack of ~ooper- ing, but you can beat the visibility
pohce secunt~ fore~;: mcludes an auon betwee.n the auth(!nty and down and you get them out &lt;;&gt;f our
undercover urut, eS!&amp;IIIished eight Cleveland pollee, Allen wd.
doorways so the old people m the
rhont_hs ago, which .conducts
"Some of these people living in high rises are not afraid to go out·
~eiU.ance and drug sltngs at the · the high rises have nic~ ~urrouQd- side ':? the bank and the grocery
progzes.
mgs, a~ceptable co~d111ons and store, he S8jd.
. MHA has some 12,000 hous- everythmg, but they re scared to
Ms. Freeman also created a
mg umts and 22.000 renants.
de;ath of the drug dealers," Allen fo~-member special investigations
' Claue Freeman, who earns a said.
.
.
unll to handle undercover drug
reported $120,000 a year as C~
With improved maintenance and . assignments and fraud invesligaduector, came to the agency m
·
May 1990 from the U.S. Depart.pent of Housing and Urban Devel.
opment She previously was deputy
assistant sec;reiary in personnel in
ljle Defense Department
I Cecil Allen, CMHA director of
administrat.ion, WIIS a 34-year
l)efense Department em11loyce,
mostly as a civilian adminlSIJator.
Who retired a few years ago.
. ~ "We saw each other one time at
a luncheon. She said she was com-

USI• nnh·'' ,'"'~

rts •

lions.
·
The man who heads that unit
requested not to be identified in
this rqlOrl, since much of his work
involves undercover drug stings of
armed deaJeiS.
." We have access to the vacant
umts, whicb allows us 10 set up
what we call a perch, or a surveillance post, where we can observe
and video tape and gather the information we need for a subsequent
arrest," he said.
· " About 50- to 60-percent of the
people being arrested in our decoy
sting operations are suburbanites;'·
he said "AhoutlO
aciUally
are CMHA
of
ihose
·
are
10

suburban areas. They'll come into
LenaJacbon,_Cltecubvedirector
an estate looking for an established of Lakeview ~Sidenl ~ent .
crack house."
Fll'ffi Inc., said drug ~g seems
He said information gathered by to go oo nightly ..there, JUSt w~ ~f
undercover agents has helped ti!e Cuyahoga River and the City s
police conduct drug sweeps most mghtclub h~t spot kn~wn as The.
recently at the Bellaire , King Flat;&gt;. ~he 58!d buyers mclude peaKennedy and WoodhiU properties.
pie m limoUSines.
"There are residents who come
But she ~aid the f~equency of
out and clap their hands that we're arrests seemu~gly has mcreased IQ
finally doing something when they two or three mghtly.
see this activity That's the impor"We can already see a differtant pan," he said
ence," she s_aid. " We used to have
Even so, drug dealing remains people hangmg out on the comers.
commonplace at public housing They are no longer hangmg out oa
projects like Lakeview Terrace, · those corners now because they ~
where ·since 1985 some 600 resi- feel the pressure from our secunty
dents have been given authority to department and from CMHA
manage the 834
police.

briefs-Riffe defends school (unding formula --Ohio
Patrol to crack down on DWIs

'
·, COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) step toward
solving inequities
House Speaker Vern Riffe Jr. on among districts.
Friday defended the stare's school . Sen . Robert Cupp, R-Lima,
funding formula under challenge in mtroduced a bill Thursday that
two counties and suggested there would implement the joint commitmay be too many school districts.
tee's recommendations.
The current state school funding
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, also
said ~had no timetable for action fonnula is being challenged in sepon a bill to protect the coal industty arate lawsuits filed by the Clevefrom effects of federal pollution land school district and the Southregulations. He said costs of tax em Local district in Perry County.
credits in the measure had not been
' 'A lot of people misundmtand.
determined.
They think this formula we have is
Riffe told a news conference such a bad fonnula. Keep in mind
t~at long-term school fupding not too many years ago the Ohio
changes proposed by a House-Sen- Supreme Court ruled this fonnula
are study panel amounted to a. f~rst ·we now have (is) constitutional. Sc;&gt;
·

--Local briefs---.

,.

Man cited in 2-car wreck-

GALLIPOLis -A Crown City man was cited for driving left of
center following a two-car crash on State Route 218-Friday.
Carl C. Stapleton, 47, Roure 2, was cited after he drove left of
center and struCk an oncoming car. According to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs post of the State Highway Patrol, Stapleton was southbound when he struek the second car, driven by Gary R: Bryan, 17,
of Crown City.
Neither driver was injured. Stapleton's passenger, John W. Stapleton, 43, of Crown City, and Bryan's passengers, Donald L. Ratcliff, Jr., 16, and Dale E. Finley, 17, both of Crown City, were also
unhurt.

AP

t1990J1.54
F 1.48
:
'
M 1.30
A 1.22
M1 .21

tor ,.,.,.,c. only ·

J1 .18
N1.13 AG.98
J 1.18
00.97
A 1.13 '91 J 0.15
S 1.11
F 0.88
0 1.03 · M0.90

ODOT tries
kindness'at
construction
'
locations
'

Deputies arrest 2, probe vandalism
GALLIPOLIS- James D. Grooms, 24, of Hazelwood, N.C.,
was arrested and incarcerated for, unauthorized use of a vehicle by
the Gallia County Sheriffs Department.
·
.
J*sE.U. 1'ravis, 20, of i\rk., was arresred and mcarcerared for
auto larceny by the sheriffs department
·.
.
The sheriff's deparJment is currently investigating a report of
vandaliSill. Pat Spencer, of Route 2, Gallipolis, reported that an
unknown person or persons had ~en out the windows i!l an unoccupied house nearby, as well as tried to enter a storage trailer.

.

'

l AKRON, Ohio (AP) - . What if
motorists tried being nice to each
other in highway cohstruction
$feas?
' It's a novel idea, and it might
just work.
: Playing fair and taking turns
underlie an Ohio Department of
Transporation eltperiment with a
I ' late merge" program. The idea is
being tried on a conslnlction-tom
~egment of Interstate 77 between
€anton and Akron.
Signs erected under the new
"late-merge" 11rogram instruct
drivers approachinJI a construction
llrea to stay in thev lane until just
before the road work actually
begins. Drivers then take turns,
moving one at a time into the open
lfllle and throu~ the consuuc:tion.
, Typical! y, m areas without the
signs, drivers move into the open
lane as soon as they're warned of a
closing ahead.
, "Especially in heavy traffic, the
idea is people aren't driving that
fast, and (with the new system)
tjley wiU merge a lot smoother and
the flow will be faster," said
Mohammad Khan, a traffic
research engineer for ODOT.
In addition, under the usual system some drivers zoom down the
lane that eventually will be closed
then cut in fro'n t of their more
patient counterparts as the lane closure actually begins.
The !are-merge sysrem is' aimed
at relieving so111e of the tension
such maneuvers can provoke.
"Everyone thinks that road
building is all engineering, but the
ftrsl thing you have to deal with is
human psychology," ODOT
spokesman Michael CuU said from
Columbus.
Last week, camera crews videotaped motorists headed north on
Interstate 77 between Belden Village and South Arlington Road.
Camera crews will return next
week to see how the experiment is
going.
"We look at it this way: How •
many people are gelling through to
the crossover, bow. many per
hour'!" Khan seid. "U that number ·
improves ... thea we'D say,' 'Well,
maybe somethina has impoved.'
He said he could giw no indication Friday how the experiment
wasgoinR.
A siJiillar 11e111 il Uled by the
Pennsvlvania
oC Trans'on In ~1iDiiiiiiib Dia'ict.
~Aboll BeiCOII 1cUnlllqiOited Friday that tbe Ohio tell is
baed on die Piltlbqrgb model.
Cull said lbo _prog!'IID was not
expensive, s1ntc d mostly invohed
moving ..-1 signs.

False alarm probed
REEDSVll..LE - The Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated a false burglary alarm at Reed's Countty Store at 9:16p.m.
.
.
on Friday night
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the department will ask
• the telephone company security officers to check the computer files
: and try to ascertain from where the call was made.

: Domestic incident investigated

1

LANGSVD..LE - Meigs County Sheriff's deputies were called to
~ the scene of a domestic dispute on Friday ·night. The victim in the
: incident declined to file charges.
·
• It ~ noted timt the assailant had )eft the residence before offi• cers arrived. TIJii'l)ctim was taken by private vehicle to Veterans
! Memorial HosPftal for U'eaPilent of possible fractured jaw.

a

:Pontiac reported stolen ·

' CHESTER - Jim Sheets of Gallipolis reported to the Meigs ·
: County Sheriffs Department that his 1991 Pontiac Gmnd A~ was
• stolen from a residence on County Road 25 m Chester Township.
The vehicle was discovered missing at 11 p.m.

Meigs squads answer two calls . .
POMEROY • Two calls for assistance were answered by umiS of
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Friday.
At 12:23 p.m. on Friday, Syracuse sq~ went.to College Road. ·
Gene Yost was taken to Veterans Memorial HospiLal. At 2:23p.m.,
; Racine squad went to Bucktown Road. Margaret Elias was taken to
Vererans.
.
.

I

1

Notv•••

$aoo

Now...

$1600

You Scr"e

_:'5o~.
No..,...

, $400
Yoo

McAR1HUR - 1be Ohio Gamecock Breeders Association has
appealed a judge's rulinJ that 700 roosterS seized from a VintOn
County cockf~ghtlast weekend be destroyed.
The group on Thursday asked the 4th Ohio District Court of
Appeals yesterday to review the ruling by Vinton County Common
Pleas JUdge Michael Br1111e.
Brame ruled Wednesday that the roosters seized at the cockfight
were contraband. He ordered the stare 10 destroy them in a humane
manner.
Tbe association wants the appeals court to order. that the birds be

LOGAN - Authorities are st~ll unable to identify ~ woman ·
whose body was found more than three months ·ago in rural Hocking Co:f, Sheriff Jim I ones said Friday.
He · all autopsy report.1 indicate no conclusive cause of death.
The body was ?oimd Feb. 2. Iones said authorities believe she
had been at the site for three 10 four weeks.
The woman didn't have any identification with her, and her face
was sevm:ly dec:om~ Speci&amp;Usts at Ohio Stare University have
been unable to ideo~ her~ dental work.
Iones said authorines are wainng for a forensic specialist to do a
clay constructive model of the woman's face. He said it should be
done by August

Two are-killed in
Saturday plane crash
CONTEST WINNER • Oblo Valley Publllbln( Company
reporter Mellllda Powers presents James L. Oliver, FaJrfleld.Cen·
tenary Road, Gallipolis, a $50 Savillp Bond cerdftcate for beiD&amp;
named one or lbe two winners in a rec:ot'nlclmame' contest sponsored by Atty. Fred W. Crow, Pomeroy. Crow contributes a week·
Iy column to tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel. Tbe otber $50 S.villas
Bond winner was Annette Johnson, also or Gallipolis (78 Spruce
Street). Sbe could not be present for tbe picture.

Detroit to ·Myrtle Beach
interstate
could cost $8 billion
.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A proposed four-lane il)~tate
from Detroit to Myrtle Beach, S.C.
could cost up ·to $8 billion, with a
·quarter of that cost in West Virginia, a state official said.
The 700-mile interstate would
follow the current route of U.S. 23
in Ohio, U.S. 52 in West Virginia
and North Carolina and U.S. 220 in
North Carolina. It would merge
with Interstate 77 in. southwesrern
Virginia. A new stretch of highway
would be buill in South Carolina.
Feasibility studies are being
conducted, West Virginia Division
of Highways ·commissioner Fred
VanKirk said.
·
"It wouldn't happen for four or
five years, but it's a possibility,"
he said.
VanKirk said $2 billion in federal money would be needed to
upgrade West Virginia's section of
U.S . 52 to interstate stan'dards or
$1.2 billion to make the narrow,
winding road into a four-lane highway.-

.. '

FRIDAY ADMISSIONS
Howard Damron, Pomeroy; Bmest
Wells, Middleport; and Ethel Cave,
Columbus.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES - Ora
Ellis, Carl Fin~ . Zelia Taylor,
and James McKCIIZle.

(!)

·stateFann

Sells

-~

Life

~·ll!f!!;:..
~

HU Ill !IMAit

7: 10,i: IO Dl'lll
SAT( SUII AATI IIUS
1 : !0 .3 : 10
IUIIU I• J

7 :00 ,9:00 I'J,I, ILY

m••n

M0¥11

STOllE

... CDlD
".::!'\

\I I \ I \ III ._II
""'"!,!;
1

IQS(AI\K

5AT/~N
.,.,_mns
I.OO .J .OO

Mm 1~1
t••-. ~·-­
tl)l; ! ll(; SOO!f! "WILD jj(AUS CAN 'T 8£ all()l(N "
' 81 ll !tJ RilU 1, "WT AIDUT 101"

FRI., SAT., SUN.
KEVIN COSTNER
Ill

CAIOtl SNOWilN

DANCES WITH
WOLVES PG 13

,.,,., ., lhird
AYI. &amp; Sh1o S1.
llollpollt, Oh.
Phooo 446·42.0

446-1088
Due to the ltnath of lht show only
one movie per ni1ht will be shown.

Non. 446·4511 '

81111 Form Lilt lnouronce Company
Homo 011a: Bioominglon, Mllnols

.,o.oO

~200

' 5.00

MONEY

2o.00

Sa"• •Joo

·s·A·L·E

, EVERY ITEM HAS BEEN MARKED DOWN. ·
THE MORE YOU BUY, THE MORE YOU SAVEl

You Save 'J()Oo

If you need money to pa~ off your cr~dit cards, take
a.vacation, buy new furn•ture or appliances, a boat,
car or RV to remodel -or for any worthwhile
' purpose, SEE Us!·

8TORI HCIUM:
Daly -1:30 a.m. to e p.m.
Sulldly - 12 noon to ap.m.

\ HURRY BEFORE THE SALE ENDS.

STARB
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA~

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

"':b. •'
............

25 COURT STIHT
. 446·0662 '

'
•

.. ,.
,

.J

-·~ -

I·

422 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

1NSURANCI

f/~""Cttw

V.HO (IICl

TAWNEY JEWELERS

STATI FARM

FRI. THRU THURS.
JODIE FOSTER, AllntOIIY HOPKINS

"''·""' •.,"I~-~'::l

SAT / SUit MTI ItUS
J :ZO, J :OO

30°/o-40°/o
ON WEDDING lANDS

COlONY THE A Tfll

U .OO IAKA!N. ll lliMT fU($111\W

IUYIJtlll'uU

SAVE

vcterans Memorial Hospital

U ,OO IWGAIN MT I!ttES SATUUJ I SUNOAJ

FII IOAl t hF'II Tlfi.JUDAYI

•

Hospital news ·

011( lV(NIIIII SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
441-0123

SPRING VAll fY CINFMA
446 4314

U.S. Sen . Robert Byrd, OW.Va., said he doubts lin interstate
will be built "because of the cOst
and because it would require I~is:
lation overriding a longstandinJ
prohibition on Cltpanding the interstate highway system.''
However, Byrd said he is trying
to get $1.2 billion in federal funds
to e~pand tl)e ellisting U.S. 52.
Byrd has funneled millions of
dollars in highway money into
Appalachia through his position as
chainnan of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

-Two

RAVENNA, Ohio (AP)
people were killed Salurday when
their lirpllne crubed 1011th of the
Portage County Aitpor1, said Cadet
Michael Russell of the State Highway Patrol.
Their identities were being withheld pending notification of nextof-k.in. No one was hurt on the
ground, he said.
Mark Chinn of Chinn Aviation,
a flight school at the airport, said
the plane crashed in trees 1 mile
south of.a runway.
· The plane's origin and destination were not known.
·

•

C.:,u:'

·I

·.

Appeals ruling

Identity still unknown

Man cited in crash
GALLIPOLIS -A Middleport man was cited for fail lire to control Friday after the car he was driving struck an embankment of
State Route 554.
Mark T. Shrivers, 24, of County Road 5, was cited after he
apparently lost control of his 1986 Pontiac Fiero in a curve. According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs post·of the State Highway
Patrol, Shrivers was westbound and drove off t,he right side of the
roadway. He then apparently lost control, came back across the
roadway, and went off the left side of the road. His car then slid
tluough a fence line and down an embankment
He was not injured in the crash.

COLUMBUS - 1be State Hiahway Patrol announced it would
set up a sOilriety checkpoint in northwest Ohio in an effort to con- '
1r01 drunken drivina.
The checkpoint, a the intmccliOn of U.S. 20 and Ohio 64 about
s l1)iles north or SWIIItoa in Fultoa County, was scheduled to be in
place from 10 p.m. Friday to 2 a.m. Saturday, patrol Capt. Chatlie
Ireland said.
" U.S. 20 has been a high accident area involving drunken
.
drivera," Ireland Slid.
Dri~ of all vehicles passing through th~ checkpoint were to be
interviewed by ptUo)l 1m0pen, Ireland SBld. Those suspected of
driving under the influenCe Would be given further tests, he said. .

auctioned. ·

. ODOT's District 10 roadeo will be held at the ODOT WashingtoQ C~ty G~e on State Route 26 on May 20 and 21. County
compelllions begm at 8:30 a.m. on Monday and continue at 8:30
a.m. !~Y· "ffle district finals will be at noon on Tuesday.
Diatrict 10 mc!udes Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, N:oble, Vmtoo and Washington counties.
The lnlek ~eo is an obstacle course consisting of six layout
probl~ms, su~ulahng maneuvers operators often make during snowplowmg duues. Only operations personnel who nonnally drive
du~p.lnleks ~ allowed_ to compete in the roadeo. The volunteer
partiCipants will have thea choice of an automatic or standard transJD!ssion, single:ule dumplnlek with an II foot plow. Participants
will have ren nunutes to·complete the course.
· Compe~tions include county, district, regional and state levels.
The statewide con rest will be Sept 11 at the Ohio State Fairgrounds
in Columbus.

50 Million Dollar ln!lnt.ory Must Be. Sold! ·!

i Ch•tt dlllll

I

MARIETI A - The Ohio Department of Transportation will

'

:

expect because transportation,
building and other costs would
remain.
A House ·vote on tile coal bill
was pos1p011ed Tuesday, and Riffe
did not offer a new timetable. He
said legislators first mUSt determine
the cost of tax credits in the measure for u£ilitics that burn the
state's high sulfur coal.
"I've asked.different ones, does
anybody know the cost of this bill.
They said the cost of the bill was
never discUSSC!I in the commitree,"
Riffe said . Unofficial estimat~s
~ave pegged the pnce at $20 milhon.

s~sot a "~" for highway personnel - but these cowboys
will be steenng dump trucks inslead of broncos or brahmas

·Sale Starts
Sunday, May 19!

Department Store

we're not looking at a formula that
is just so ... bad as where ~ple
are just outraged about it,' Riffe
said.
" I thirik that they have a right to
file suit," he said. "Maybe they
have reason to believe that it ' s
changed in the last 12 years since
1979. I don't know."
There are 612 local school districts, and Riffe said that is too
many.
''I thirik we could do with half
of that I think it's tlme to'be taking
a serious look at it," he said.
However, he doubted· whether
consolidation
would save as much
1
money as some advocates may

ODOT to sponsor "roadeo"

Formerl·y
HECKS
Discount Stores

0

Sunday nmea Sentlnei-Pege A7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pl••nt, WV

SILVER IRIDGI PlAZA
446-9300

SPIItG VALLEY OfFICE
446-1399

'

'

�.

----~

......... . .

..

..

..

.

t-

......

..

..

Page-AS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

..... ...

~

...

...

,

•••

.,

•

•

~

••

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

wv

•

May 19, 1991.

~!. Along

Bar exam altered; four lose law licenses

1989 LEAP WAS TOPS • The International Chicken Flying
. Association sanctioned ebicken nytng contest beld at Bob Evans
• Farms in Rio Grande began In 1971, Tbe aU-time record 'leap'
was ln1989, by Judy, wblcb new 542 feet, nine Inches.
By Jamn Sands

~ Chicken

flying con~est
; at Rio Grande began in '71
...

GALLIPOLIS -· "Build it arid B's trainer S~rWood Costen of Pt
"theywillcome!"Theywhowillcome Pleasant unveiled anew strategy. He
are the offspring or "ghosts" of such entered c.hickens t!Jathad never flown
• athletic greaiS as
outdoors. Said Costen "I keep them
: Lois .
Laid,
wild;'they never fly outside until they
: Mildred, Lola B.,
get to R.io Grande. Lola B., named
: King Hewk, Blue
after a 90 year old womanJtook off
LickSpecial,Judy, ;. .
from the 10 foot high roost and made
Go!den Neck, and . 16
; · •
it over two fences before coming to
Chicken-0-War, ·
·
rest. Both King Hewk and Lola B.
all of whom were
were lis,ted in the Guinness Book of
past contestaniS in
.
World records.
Bob Evans Farms "Chicken Hying
In 1980 a drizzle kept the crowd
Contests." "Build the field and they down. ·The winner was Hag City
will .come, but apparently not this · Biddie at only 193'3".1twasin 1981
year.
that "the chicken of all chickens"
Just when Gallia County became came. TedGiannoulas, 'The Famous
the chicken fly ins hub ofthe world is Chicken" flew onto the feathered field
shrouded in mythOlogy: Farm boys by helicopter. There were records for
had been practicing this art for many attendance (2500) and entrants (261).
yearspriortothe time (1971) that the Atone point ''The Famous Chicken"
flfst official chicken flying contest bied to enter the flying event and
was held.
.
with Bob Evans' SteiSOn hat on at
The winner in 1973 was Lois Laid that The former 31so took a liking to
who flew 163' 2". In 1974 it was Egglizabeth Beakie Cackle, the
Citation winning by a beak with a mascot from 1976 to 1990.
distance of a paltry 54'. There was a
S&lt;ime new events were approved ·
: heavy wind thai year. One chicken andsanctionedbythelCFAfod982.
'~ ran "afowl'' of the rules when it flew There wasroostercrowingand the40
I 76 feet, all of which were backwards.
yard chicken dash. In 1983 someone
: That was Mildred. A bantam weight bied to enter a pheasant again ·and
entered by Channel 6 in' Columbus had to be led off by the sheritf,That
'andnamedHarryReasonerfaredlittle was the year the Blue Lick Special
better. The early contests (up to about steamed its way to a winDing 214' 3".
;. 1974) were held on Father's Day. It The winner was from Londonderry
: was then moved to the week after or ooe of the suburbs commonly re·
• Mother's Day where it has been ever fe!Ted to as Lick Skillet. Ohio. Mi·
,• since.
chael Jackson and Boy George flew
In 19761van Gavva of the Soviet in 1984.
Union was a special guest He pre·
In 1985 Jim Cooper won as the
sen ted Bob Evans with a silver teapot "most outrageous trainer". Other
andabottleofvodka,Mr.Evansgave contests included best matched
Gavva,wh'o was the agriculture atta· chicken · and trainer, rooster
• -~ che to the USSR embassy in Wash· crow(humanandfeathereddivisions),
; ington, a Stetson haL There were best chicken legs (human entrants
; about 300 spectators, about the ~e only) and egg toss (also resbicted to
• ~.number that had attended prevtous homosapiens).BiliDanceandLinda,
~ ' meets. It was reported that 75% of all the winners in 1985 arid 1986respec·
::the chickens signed up 'failed to get tivelyJcarneupabout60feetShonof
•.their engines started and had to be the record.
: • disqualified. That is to say they re·
·The 1987eventdrew2600specta·
• fused to fly and not even a plunger to tors and 231 chickens. The chicken
: the. backside was sufficient motiva-' legwinnerswerefromJackson(Angie
: • tion. There were 102 entrants and the Potts and Eric Lloyd).ln 1988 Miss
• winner was Lynda from West Bend, Chickie wasTmaKinneyandin 1989
; Wisconsin.
it ·was Stacy Callahan. On a nice
'
In 1977theJapaneseinvadedRio · spring day in 1989 Judy beat out
: ·&lt; Grande as King Hewk:, a Japanese Camo Flaus, Lorenzo Noodle, and
: • black tail bird won. Perfect weather Wild willie to set the ICFA record
• · brought out about 1100 fans.
with a flight of 542' 9". The current
: !: It was in 1979thatLolaB.setthe worldrecordholderis"Sheena"who
t ·!:World mark for chicken flying , It flew 630'2" in 1985 at
j ~ :Stood .for about a decade. Lola B. . Parkesburg.PA. Thel9!j()ICFA win·
~:Dew 300' 8", a mark that was not ner was Golden Neck who flew 278'
" "cracked" until 1989. In 1979 Lola · 4". .
,.,

&lt;

t

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The son of a fanner Ohio Supreme
Court justice is one of t1uee people
losing their licenses to practice law
because their scores In a staie bar
examination were 8!1eced. ·
Uoyd Odom Brown Jr., 34, of
Cleveland, was listed in documents
re.Ieased Friday by Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer following a review
of score tampering after a 1986 bar
exam.
Brown's father, Lloyd Brown
Sr., was appointed to a vacancy on
the Supreme Court in December
1971 by former Democratic Gov.
Jobn J. Gilligan. He· served until
January 1973.
Also revoked was the license of
Thomas Nick Cozocar Carr, 64, of
Canton. He is director of the Stark
County Board of Elections.
Peter Thomas Marino, 69, of
Cincinnati, listed by the court as
administrator of the Hamilton
County Veterans' Services Commission, also lost his license. ·
Moyer said the licenses of two
more applicants were suspended,
but that the suspensions were being
held in abeyance with a stipulation
that they take and pass the July
1991 exam. If they do so, their
licenses will be reissued, Moyer
said.
Their names were.not released.
A Franklin County grand jury
investigated the 1986 test scores.
Last week, the jury said it confirmed criminal conduct in the
alteration of at least five of nine
scores called into question.
Moyer noted that the investigation showed some of the' applicants
did not pass the test but that they
had passing grades.. Other disc rep-

,

...

~

GALLIPOLIS -Columbia Gas
of Ohio, Inc., hard hit by record
warm temperatures, earned oqly
3.5 percent return on equity in
1990, well below .the 12.3 percent
allowed by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (PUCO).
Columbia reported earnings of
$8,968,660 in a filing with the
PUCO today . .
For the year, temperatures were
17 percent warmer than normal,
almost twice as high as the previous warmest year on record. The
fmt quaner of 1991 also has been
unseasonably warm, causing yearto-date earnings to reflec.t the
reduced demand for natural gas.
"Even if the weather in 1990
had been normal, our earnings
would not have reached the allowable le:vel," said C. Ronald Tilley,
chairman of Columbia Gas of
Ohio. ''These sub-par earnings are.
consistent with projections we
made last year when our last raie
case was decided. The ongoing cost
of providing excellent service to
customers and the need to continu-

Divorces,
dissolutions
processed

POMEROY · Actions for dissolution of marriage have been ftled
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Barbara L. Knapp,
Pomeroy and Kail L. Knapp,
Langsville, and Jane Stewart and
John Stewart, both of Pomeroy.
Divorce cases have been filed
.: by Marty E. Dugan of Rutland
' against Ruth A. Dugan of East
, WorceSiel', N.Y.; Terry Bell, Port·
• land, against Carla Bell, also of
; Portland; and Dorothy Mae Sands,
• Portland, against Keith Lee Sands,
Portland
.
Divorces have been granted to
'
James Bailey l'rom Celia EDen BaiPOMEROY • A marriage
ley and to Deanna F. CoalS from
license
·has been granted in Meigs
Heinz F. CoalS.
County
Probate Coun to Steven
A 'dissolution of marriage has.
Bradley
Donaldson, 29, Long Bot·
: been granted to Terrill Joseph
tom,
and
Sally Ann Yates, 20, also
McNickle and Wendy Jane
of
Long
Bouom.
• McNic:lcle.
b

Marriage
license issued

It

ination procedures to make sure
that the tests are not tampered with
in the future.
The Suprellie Court, in its entry
on Lloyd Brown Jr., said it concluded that his essays were not all
graded and that be "most likely
wolild have failed the examination
had all of his essays been graded'' ·
The court said it concluded thai
the scores of both Carr and Marino
were less than the minimum or 270
and that they failed the examina·
tion.
.
,
Brown; Carr ana Marino may; '
take the exam again if they choose.·
They must file and application and:
an examination fee no later than
May 28, the court said.

.

.'
'

t'inies • ientinel

.

8-

Section

.

May19,1991

Gallipolis band marches ·to .its own drummer

•

•

'

•

School bus accident near McArthur
Friday sends eight to area hospitals
McARTfruR, Ohio (AP) - A
school bus was in a three-vehicle
accident on a highway Friday,
sending ei!!ht people to hospitals,
the State Highway Patrol said
Seven people were treated at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
Athens and released, nursing supervisor Eileen Davis said. One person
was treated at Medical Center Hospital in Chillicothe and released,
nursing supervisor Brian Towler
said. Most of the injured suffered .
minor cuts and scratches and no
one was admitted, the hospital officials said.
The accident occurred shortly
after 2 p.m. on Ohio 93, about five

miles south of this southern Ohio
city.
.
.
The pal;rol's Jackson post said
the Vinton County School Disbict
bus had left McArthur and was
headed to Dlllld&amp;s carrying children
home.
The patrol said
. . six to .eight. chil-

ally invest in our distribution sys·
tern in Ohio require adequate levels
of revenue."
.
Tilley said that the company's
ongoing cost containment pro·
grams have helped keep
Columbia's earnings from being
lower than those reported today.
Over the past two years,
Columbia invested some $124 million to -improve and expand the
delivery of natural gas service in
Ohio. That included adding 46,000
new customers around the state.

•

•

dren were on the bus at the time of
the accident. Several already had
been dropped off at their homes.
The accident remained under.
investi!!ation and no charges had.·
been filed Friday evening, the·
patrol said.

To Honor Those Who Have Gone Before
Is To Inspire Those Who Fo,low••••

•

•

.'
'

''
;'

..•
..'
·,
'.

•,

.••
t
I

a

LOGAN MONUMENT
VINTON. OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
STATE RT.. 180
JAME8 A. lUSH. MGR .
PHONE 388-8103

NOW OPEN
IN POINT PLEASANT
.

. '

WARNER·
HEATING &amp;COOL NG

•

·'

.

CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN CENTRAt'.ond
SOUTHIA8TERN OHIO
COIIVINIIIIJ CIIDIT TIIMS AVARAIII - 1T1 CAnY OUI OWII ACCOUNTS
VISA MASTEIICARO AVAILABLE
.

•

·~

•

Servl•e s..t~ellf 0~1• Fer 0ftr SO Yean ..·

•
•

•

GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia A!=ademy Junior and Senior High Bands have
served as goodwill ambassadors for the Gallipolis City Schools for many years.
During tbe 1990-1991 school year, the instrumental ·music department hlls enjoyed one
·o f iiS best years ever with sigqificant accomplishments, ratings, and awards.
The Gallia Academy High School Marching Band won !the Class A
championship at the PickeringtOn and Athens marching band contests and qualified
for the OMEA state 11,1arching band finals for the niJlth consecutive year. The band
received an ExCellent (II) rating at state fmals. State Superior (I) ratings were earned
by Lisa Milliron, Field Commander, and the percussion section. The band also was
selected to represent Gallipolis by marching in the Walt Disney World Parade of
Characters in Orlando, Aa., in November.
Gallia Academy High School held its first annual band show in October,
featuring the Gallia 'Academy Junior and Senior High Bands along with the Nonh
. . .
Gallia High School Marching ~and.
At the OMEA District XVII Senior High Solo and Ensemble Contest,
instrumental events earned a total of 36 Superior. (I) ratings.
The High School Symphonic Band received straight Superior (I) ratings at the
OMEA District XVII Band Contesi in March, extending its streak of I ratings at
district contest to 17 conseCutive years. The band also received straight I ratings at the
OMEA State Band Contest in April for the third .tirtJe in the school's history and hilS
received overaU I state ratings eleven of the past sixteen years. ·
At the OMEA District XVII Junior ~ig!J Solo and Ensemble Contest,
instrumental cvents.eamed a total of forty-five Superior (I) ralin~

;•

•

•

-

~···

1'

'

•

•
••
•·,
•
•

•

.•,

·,
•,
•'

WI,.I

SUPBREFnC

.

balance in the street maintenance
fund which had receipts of
$4,412.55 and disburgsemeniS of
$10,112.55. Also showing a deficit
balance was the mini-golf fund,
$5,407.80· with no reciepts and
$3,430.58 in disbursements.
OthC!' funds with receipts, disbursements and balances listed
respectively included: fire equip·
ment, $75, $936.34, $32,232.24;
fire truck, $16,705.48, $1,105.50,
$107,242.65; ODNR waterways
safety $500, no disbursements,
$3 ,500; economic development,
$791.95, $1,385.79,$4,256.06
Public transportation, $6,996.20,
$13,00~.48, $23,449.92; water system Improvements, balance,
$37,209.55; water, $12,812.89,
$14,157.04, deficit balance of
$12.82; sanitary sewer, $11,122.81,
$11,960.44, $1,285.79; swimming
pool, $750, $2,384.54, deficit balance, $5376.15; cemetery, $780.36,
$3,018.40, deficit balance,
$3,740.21.
Water meter trusts, $390,
$723.65, $20,257.98; arts council,
$964.27, $755.55, deficit balance,
$253 . 77; ARC Housing, no
receipts, $1,870.54, $859.78; Issue
2, no receipts, no disbursements,
$1086.75; .Revolving Loan·
$917.45, no disbursements'
•
. $46,436.17.

the scores.
The tampering occurred while
Frank D. Celebrezze, a Democrat,
w&amp;S chief justice. Beneficiaries of
the grade-fixing were reponed to
Miller as being associates or rela ·
lives of JXOI!Iinenl Democnus.
Celebrezze was defeated by
Moyer, a Republican, in November
1986.
Miller, a Republican. appointed
Jack Elam, a Democrat, to conduct
.the investigation to avoid appearances of political favoritism. Elam
said the investigation was thorough
but will be reopened if new evi·
dence is found
Moyer earlier said the Supreme
Court has started a review of exam-

Columbia ,Gas hard hit by
warm temperatures

I...
.~ ;Financial report released
••

, ,. MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
: "' Village had a balance of
. • : :$284,203.47 in all funds at the con' elusion of business on April 30,
according to a report by Clerk·
TreasliRir Jon Bilek.
Receipts for the month totaled
$145,927.78, while disbursements
• totaled $114,432.29.
Balance in the general fund was
$31,718 .16, with $88,708.82 in
reciepts, and $30,620.03 in disbursements . The safety fund
• showed disbursements
of
·$16;664.26 and income tax disbursements of $2,304.60, with nei·
ther fund showing a balance.
There was a $10,540.83 deficit

ancies were not liS clear-cut,
involving multistate examination ·
procedures and, in some cases,
ungraded essays, he said.
Moyer said that of the other four
applicaniS whose exams Wert} questioned, their scores did not affect
their pass-or-fail status and that the
court took no action.
The chief justice said Friday's
actions were consistent with a
belief that the integrity of the bar
examination is important not only
.to the applican!S but to "the legal
profession and all citizens who use
legal services in Ohio.''
Franklin County Prosecutor
Michael Miller began Investigating
in May 1989 after receiving evi·
dence that indicated tampering with

.the River

•

.

PATRICIA MILLS

Mills promoted
GALLIPOLIS'· Patricia A. (Pat)
Mills has been promoted by the
executive committee of Ohio Valley Bank in Gallipolis to the position of investment officer in the
funds management department.
. Mills, who has an associate
degree in accounting froiD the Uiii·
versity of Rio .Grande, has been
with OVB since 1980. She will be
directly involved in the daily
investment(lf the bank's excess
funds, as well as assisting with the
management of the total investment
portfolio. Additionally, Mrs. Mills
will provide intetest rate information to public units, and certain
other customers regarding special
time deposits. Prior to her promotion, she served as manager of the
bank's CD Department.

Case dismissed
POMEROY · A dismissal has ·
·been filed in Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court in the case of
Robert W. Shaver versus Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education.

Boy Scout
sign-up Thesday
·TUPPERS PLAINS ·Sign up
for new cub scouts and boy scouts
wiU be held on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
St. Paul United Methodist Church
in Tuppers Plains.
~I

,.

.

Ifyou're replacing
your old cooling

important components in your heat
·system, the '1\-ane
pump. Plus 2 years
XL1200heat
on parts.
pump makes it a
You'll also apprebreeza. Because
ciate the attractive,
theXL1200
sturdy cabinet,
Weathertron•beat pump pro- .
WeatherGuard" top, quiet
vides super efficient summ(U'
operation and, should you ever
. cooling-and winter heating.
need one, our specially trained
Which means you'll eJUoy
·
servicemen.
enel:'gy savings all year 'round.
Cut the cost ofcomfort with a
The '1\-ane XL 1200 also
'Irane Weathertron• heat pwnp ·
comes with an exclusive man... America's 11 selling brand.
ufacturer's 10 year limited
Call us today.
wan-anty on both the compres- Financing
TRANE"
sor &amp;IJ.d coil-th,e two most
. available.

__

, ,_.................. "·

..JI'REE ESTIMA'I'U ~
· We S..W. AU MilforB....... Of .........nt

WARNER

ciMFORT
A .'iSURE.D
&gt;11111 l'fJ"'f1'01AtliJ

OAK HILL ROAD
CHESTER, OHIO
985 4222

AppsJachlan Power joins
in bringing ths message

·"'··..........
...............

HEATING
&amp; COOLING
122 VIAND STREET

POINT PlEASANT, WV
675-7254

Gallipolis Junior High's
Syniphonic Band makes its
mark in school's history
The Seventh abd Eighth Grade Symphonic Band received straight Superior (I)
ratings in Class A competition for the first time in the school's history at the OMEA
District XVI Junior High Band Contest on May 4. This marks the fifth consecutive
year that this band has received straight! ratings at district contest (all previous·ratin~s
were in Class B.) Junior high bands have oow earned Superior ratings fifteen of the •
past seventeen years. Two years ago, the band was selected by taped audition to
perfonn at the OMEA and North Central MENC Professional Conference in
Columbus.
Much of the credit for the success of the Gallia Academy bands must be given
to !he band parents and boosters orgahization. Along with raising much needed funds
for the Aorlda trip and other travel expenses, they have provided moral support for
students and directors alike for many years. The band program ·could not function at
its present level without the dedication and enthusiasm of the band parents and
supponers.
The Instrumental music· dcparunent will pn:sent its annual spring conq:rt on
Tuesday, May 21, at 7:30 p.m. in the high school auditorium, featuring the Seventh
and Eighth Grade Symphonic Band and the High School Concert and Symphonic
Bands. Admission is $3 for adulls and $1 for students. The public is invited to come
and hear the products of this successful year.

.

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

Tlmes Sentinel

DONALD CRAIGO 8lld BILLIE STEVENS

Lutz-Ours
RACINE • Ms. Pam Lutz, employed at Tri-River Marina in

Bickle-Lee

~.

; RIO GRANDE • Mr. and Mrs. Grande, with Rev. Bob Kuhn offi:; Danna R. Bickle, Rio Grande, are ciating. A reception will foUow at
~ proud 10 announce the engagement
the home of the bride's paren1,1.
~ and aJ!PR*:hiDg marriage of their
Miss Bi&lt;:tle is a I 991 graduate
::: dau~~tet, Lisa Renae, to Paul of Gallia Academy High Scbool
..; Dav1d Lee, sori of Mr. and Mrs. and Buckeye Hills Career Center in
• William Lee, ViniOn.
tlie Diversified Health occupations
~
there ceremony will be held program.
: June 29, 1991 at 1:30 p.m. at the
Lee is a 1986 graduate of North
:: calvary Baptist Church, Rio Gallia High School. ··

Racine, is announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
her dlllgbter, Rebecca Dawn Lulz,
10 Scott Alan Qurs, son of Edie
Hubbard and Raben Ours.
Miss Lutz is a senior at South-.
ern High Scbool and Ours is

Pittsburg, Pa.
The wedding will be an event of
Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the home of
her mother on Manuel Road in
Racine. Friends and relatives are
invited 10 attend.

Stevens-Craigo
GALLIPOLIS • Donald Ray
Craigo Jr. and Billie June Stevens
announce engagement and
app!oaching marriage.
Miss Stevens is the daught of
Mr. and Mrs. Roben L. Stevens ,
·ProciOrville.
Craigo is the s&amp;n of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Ray Craigo Sr., Gal·
'lipolis.
Miss Stevens' is ·a graduate of
· Fairland High School. She attended
Huntington Junior CoUcge of Hunt·
ingwn, W.Va. and holds an associate degree in Computer Operations

and Medical Assistant. She is
employed at Holzer Medical Center.
Craigo is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and is
employed at Holzer Medical. Cen'ter.

There will be an open-church
wedding, May 25, at 6 p.m. at
Graoe United Methodist Church. A
reception will foUow in the church
feUowship ball.
The couple will reside at 46
ChiUicothe Road, Gallipolis.

RiCUNEIS

2 FOil

IUJ OIH IICU. .
GET OM fl&amp;

Sua. Rtl. 1249.95

DEAN FLANERY and KELLY KISNER

Kisner-Flanery
GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald L. Kisner of Gallipolis
proudly announce the engagement
and forth coming marriage of their
, daugh~r. ·Kelly Kay, to Douglas
· "Dean" Flanery son of Mr. Douglas
D. Flanery, Scottown, and Grace
A. Davis of Pbeoniit. Az.
·
Miss Kisner is a ~duate of
Gallia Academy H1gh School
attends Uni:versity of Rio Grande.

She is an Elementary Education
major with a concentration in
English.
Flanery is a graduate of Hannan
Trace High School and is se..Ving
in the U.S. Air Force, stationed at
Kadena Air Force Base, Oltinawha,
Japan.
·
.
·
A June wedding is being
plilnned and the couple will-reside
m Otinawha, Japan.
.

,........

KELYINATOR
NO.FROST REFRIGERATOR FREEZER
oOnly 28' wide
I

•14CIJ. h.
total capacity

Sigman-Stobart

-&lt;'

E::

_: RUTLAND • John Sigman,
and Harry S10ban Jr. and
ary, Carale, Darla, Evelyn, and
aith, Monaca, Pa., are announcing
e engagement and approaching
r!!larriage of their parents, Mary
~;

~

r .. .

.

•Energy Save&lt;

Sigman, Pomeroy, and Harry Stobart Sr., Racine.
The wedding will be an event of
June 15 at 2 p.m. at tlie Rutland ·
Freewill Baptist Church in Rutland.
A reception will follow the ceremony.

sw~ch

·Two lull-width
lldjullable sliding

M ..
l•ful.·wldtll c:ritper,
c:ovar makes 3rd

~~

~~

·Steele-Snodgrass

~· GALLIPOLIS • The .children of

:jandy Steele and Tommy Snod·
:;arass announce the approaching
.t~arriage of their parents at their

....

li

~-.

shtlf

--Wedding po~icy

~ The Sunday Times-Sentinel

:~gards weddings of Gallia, Meigs

;;ind Mason counties as news and iS

:happy to publish ~edding stories
-and-pho(ograJ)bs Without charge
~ However: wedding news must
•meet general standards of timeli·
: ness. The newspaper prefers to
:J&gt;ublish accounu of weddings as
-soon as possible after the event.
~ To be publisbed in the Sunday
:edition, the weddin11 must have
&gt;taken p1a:e within 60 days prill!' to
•the publication, and may be up 10
•600 words in lenl!lh. Material for
~eolong the River must be received
by the ediiorial depanm_ent by

Thunday, 4 p.m., prior to the date
ofpublication.
Photographs of either the bride
. or the bride and groom may bti
published with wedding stories if
desired Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, biUfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, map·
shots or instant-developing photos
are not of aceepllble Qllllity.
Qllcstions may be directed to the
~ditorial departlnent fronl 1 to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614) 446-2342.

~Reeds

announce ·.
··birth of twins

EARLY AMERCAN
.
.

LIVING ROOM

home on Crouse-Beck Road.
The open ceremony will be 2:30 ·
p.m. Saturday, May 25, 1991 and
will be foUowed by a reception.

; POMEROY • Bruce and Rita
:Reed, Pomeroy, announce the birth
;or twin sons, Jordan McKenzie and
rJustin Thompson, on May 4,
• The infants were welcomed
~orne by half-brother, Kristophcr
Jenkins, age seven, and brother,
Tyler, age two.
·
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
'and Mrs. Theodore T. Reed Jr.,
tPomeroy. Paternal grea~and·
mother is Mrs. Theodore R Sr;
' Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Goble, Gallipolis.
tMaternal great-gran-dparents are
rMr. and Mrs. Lewis Hughes, G~­
' lipolis, and Mrs. Kelsie Gobi~; R1o
!Grande.
.
N
•

·SOFA •LOVESEAT •CHAIR
ALL3
PIECES
12" High x 18" Wide

. Wbe~. you like being placed
m the postUon tt not, undoubtedly
, as you move through life you are
probably going to become a role
model for someone • and who
knows • maybe even for a goodly
number of people.
Every day you are affecting the
life styles of people around you.
They either like what you do and
what you are • or they dislike it.
Hopefully you are putting out some
pretty goO&lt;! vibes which will have a
· positive effect Qn others.
. James Diehl, retired Pomeroy
H1gb · School and Meigs High
School Principal, obviously was
one of those ~ople who had a
great deal of mnuence on those
around him. There have been so
many positive comments from resi·
dents and former ~dents alike on
how he influenced and affected
therrlives.
Roben L. Springer now of 35
West Isle Place, The Woodlands,
TelUIS, writes of his early days in
Pomeroy and of Mr. D1ehl. He
says:
"In mid-1960, I left Pomeroy ·
and Pomeroy High School in order
10 both relocate to northern Ohio
with my .parents (Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Springer) and to attend Marietta
College. Now, as an officer of a
major U. S. corporation and as a
member of the Board oflJ'rustees of
Marietta College, I look back to my
· earlier years in Pomeroy with great
fondness and appreciation.
"More specifically, I can now
. look back and appreciate those who
helped me. High school principal
and friend Jim Diebl gave me time,
• personal coaching, and lois of
:. advic.e along the way. I believe
:: that I owe him a great deal.
•• Just yesterday, I learned to Mr.
·: Diehl's death and I am deeply sad·
;dened. Yet at the sap~e .time, I
,. know of his contributions toward
~ my development and to the person. al development of so many others.
I remember his laughter and his
·. strict advice. Both were .always
provided Y.et caring was always
presenL
Jim Diehl was a great person
and his family should be very
~ l::'~.!'f him and his accomplish·

, ' Would you believe that this is
·lhe year of the locust for Gallia
:-~ounty, but not Meigs?
· That appears 10 be the situation
•Jor the cicadas (locusts) which
: come every 17 years. The locusts
·will not be all over Ohio at the
''Same time and the line changes at
:]he Meigs-Gallia border, believe it

t'·

,.. ~ddison,

ssaa

Juot -

at lhll lon1Mdc t.goinl
•Pilaw Anno o()oop Tullld S.CU

ofullySIOntdond·-Tnm!HI&lt;o
11 • "SMna 1n1o SptlnQ" 5aWIO•
E-.nt Yau Shoutdn1 Mill!

AMERICAN
FLAG.

:Coin club to meet

! .The OR KAN Coin Club will
1neet Monday Ill 7 ~..Bwbtl
)larber Shop in Mi
Socil1

FREE......

lliour and trading IICII on will be
Jleld and refreshments wi)l be
· lerved foUowing the mcednt· New
)ilemberS arc weJcomo to ,attend.

·~~··,.NO PU~CHAR
NICUIAAY

,,

I

•

-

....

.

. .....

..

..

. ~··

i

••

;

.

By
Bob·
"

.

Hoeflich
or DOl 'Meigs County bad locusts
in 1982, and is not scheduled this
year • Gallia County is. Tbere will
be some ovedaps but not enough 10
worry about accor:ling 10 the Meigs
Extension Service Offtce.
\

1991 has a good start on being
one if not tbe hottest year on
record. But you can handle that.
All you have to do is keep your
cool and keep smiling.

•

..

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

,• If yoil are a Pomeroy Person,
· perhaps, yl)u will be interested .in
·:.the ~ial designed, limited edi·
tion Christmas ornaments which
•are being sold by Bank One in
:Pomeroy over a five year plan.
' The flfSt edition, last year, fea·
lUred a drawing of the Me1gs Coun~
ty Courthouse, certainly a unique
,building • the background color of
the ornaments is blue. The 199 I
edition is red and carries a very
, authentic drawing of Remington
' House, which most of us know as
·; the Hotel ~n. The hotel, also as
most of us know, burned several
yearsago.
.
• Selling the ornaments isn't a
' htoney-maker for the bank - money
, raised goes 10 community projects.

\

,..~

~.

... . .

., -

~

~.

wv

..

GALLIPOLIS • Twenty-two • a1 histone lilndmark.
Carson, Geraldine Reed, Amy
members and guests of French
fl. business meeting was con· JIIC:bon and Bill Matthews.
Colony Chapter Daughters of the dueled during the bruncheon by .. Harmon Blennerhasset and his
A!Derican Revolution recently Regent Mrs. John Jackson,.Mter wife settled on the wilderness
made a trip to his10rical Blenner· s~ conducted the ritual, she offi· island in 1798 and built the manbasset Island in Parkersburg, W. cially welcomed' three new mem· \ sion and estate. It accidentally
Va.
bers into French Colony, Angela burned in 18ll,leaving no traces
The group started the day with a McKee, Anneliese Summers and of its graceful, semicircular Jines.
brunchcon at the restored Blenner· Mrs. William (Wilma) Brown. However, archaeologists rediscov·
basset Hotel. They were givelt a They were accepted for meml;ler· ered it's foundation in 1973 and
tour of some of the rooms by Kin· ship because of proof of ancestery through careful historical and
seem Villers, sales manager of the to a Revolutionary War Soldier. architectural research, the mansion
hotel. M~. Villers pointed out the Mrs. Paul Clay read !lie President has been partially recreated.
hotel was built in 1889 by William General's Message and .Mrs. . Quring the 1760's the famous
N. Chancellor, a prominent Park· Charles Wood read the National Delaware Indian Nemac.olin made
ersburg businessman. The hotel Defense Message. Guests for the the island his home. It was also vis·
was
fully restored
in 1986 and era.
the
~sphere
is of the

---

...

.

.. .

-' '

..

.

CHESTER ·The Chester Vol· ·
unteer Fire Department will have
its annual chicken barbc:l:ue dinner
on.May 27 at 11:30 a.m. A J)ltrade
will begin at I p.m. The public Is
invited.
Wliibnan.
The nex1 scheduled meeting or
French Colony is at the home of
Regent, Mrs. Jackson, for a Flag

JesSJC~·~a~;~;G~e~o~rg~e~R~od;ge~
'r~s~~~~-=~:[u~Pog~htl~·
~:k:gJ:UC:h:~:·~:an:·Mrs~·:V::i~~P:~:· .
X of France,](
sent the program.
-

-

'TIL 8 P.M.

SUND~ Y NIGHT

Ail MERCHANDISE IN WAREHOUSE
AND/OR ON DISPLAY WILL BE
PLACED ON THE PUBLIC MARKET
FOR.RELEASE THIS SUNDAY.
PURCHASES MUST BE PAID FOR BY CASH, PERSONAL CHECKS, VISA, MASTERCARD OR AN ACCEPTABLE CIEDIT APPLICATIONS.

HOUR

0

/o OFF

.

.

SALE

-

$650,000.00 WORTH OF FURNITURE AND FURNITURE RELATED ITEMS!!!!

.

·

~....;_.;...__..,.,.:::.::::.:.:;::..::.=:~:.::.:.:~;...:;..::.:::.:.:.:.;:;;.::=.:=;..;;..;;.;;;..;;~;;;;...;;.;.;;;;.;;...;..;..;.;.;;;....;;.;;.._;.....;.,;,..;....;...:---=-----:--.

DNTTES &amp; DNNG ROOM

BEDROOM SUITES

BASSETT HUTCH,

4 PIECE
OAK FINISH

Not

6 Chairs, light pine,
Country.

s•:::AY $24995

•::::~ S12 5J97

Not

PINE DRESSER
HUTCH MIRIOR

Not

I.CAID SOUD Oll PEDESTAL

TABLE, 6 CHAIRS ,

S7::.,S39997

13499.95
S149ft07
SUNDAY
7 •

N.t

. BUNK lED

S6497

TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS
Not

FINISH
SK.PER'S BID

••::::u $21997
TABLE 6 CHAIRS
................
S2=.::, S89997
lASSEn Oll fiNISH

, _ ...It

Not

&amp;

s~':i~AY $ 19 99 7
N.t

5 PIECE .DIOOM •
oa• &amp; alaC• ronilh, las""

OAK FINISH CHINA
o..s ...n.

~~~~\'~::, S69.997

••;:AY $39997

Not

MASSIVE HONEY PINE
litPMthii,DHrDNIIw,
lhltciiMirror, , ...,. Chest

Not :~~.~5

ns

$139997

CHAISE RECLINER

MAnRESS &amp; 101
· SPRING
.AZTEC FULL sn

llw or lrowa.

Not::~~:~

$39997

• - or ta11p1 ploW.
Not

CHIROTONIC QUEEN SIZE
llultf . .tilt_

''::::,$44997

Not

llue cower.

......k ...lc •ddl•
......... ltr. .

Not

••:;:AYS39997

Not

cc•n.

IDni Set

S799.
95 $29997
SUNDAY

TERMS OF SALE
6 MONTHS SAME AS CASH FINANCING

wm APPIOYID CIEDIT $300 MINIMUM
FREE DELIYEIY
NO UYAWAYS

SALE IS FOR 8 RQYRS
SUNDAY, MAY 19, 1991

'':::::,$38597

BIG CHAISE SWIVEL
ROCKER IICUNERS

OllHOPEDIC liNG SET
I p1rW

.
•.
•3::::u S19997

FLEXSTEEL WtiG RECUNER

STERLINC FULL SO
Not

17::::uS29997

SWIVEL ROCKER

1..t1111lc Chlro Practlc .
Not

S29997

.G MAN'S WAll REClNR

lostlllic ~ llld••
Not'•l=::,

.

Chesterv~ ··
· barbecue dmner
•
• ·
slated. May .27
:
·
:

included
Carrie Ingels, J~n
Christine

- EMPIRE FURNITURE SAYS SELL FOR 8 BIG HOURS
~

--

Sunday Tlmel Sentlnei-Page-83

DAR takes trip to historic island

'

""';..·· MIDDLEPORT • Mr. and Mrs.

lege. She is employed at the Ohio
avid St. Clair, Coshocton, are Regional Office of State Farm in
1111nouncing the engagement of Newark.
iheir daughter, Toni Renee,
Kitchen is a 1987 graduate of
wark, 10 Edwatd E. Kitchen Jr., Meigs High School and will gradun of Patricia Kitchen, Boca . ate in May from Muslcingum Colaton. Fla., and Edward Kitchen, lege.
~dd!eport. . .
, ,
The wedding wiD be an event of
,_,.._Miss St..Clair 1s a 1986 graduate Au~ . 3 at the Canal LewisviUe
~ R1ver V1ew H1gh Schon! and a · Unued Methodist Church
r 1990 graduate of Muslcingum Col·
·

....

.

St-Clair-Kitchen

•'
••

,~

I am pleased to pass along
another tribute 10'Jim Diehl. My
; only hope is that somewhere along
' the line, ~me of the many people
· who had such high regard and
; respect for Mr. Diehl, let him know
., their feelings.
-. The bottom line is sbould you
have a person or persons wbom
you hold in high regard, don't be
backward. Speak up and let these
people know • they will be as
pleased as punch to know that they
are offering some positive influ·
ence as they move through. Call it
"Flowers to the Living" or what
you will • but do acknowledge
,these people and their influence
··while they are still around. .

GLIDER ROCKER

EI&gt;WARD KITCHEN and TONI ST CLAIR

......... .

~-

Beat of.
the Bend.~

REBECCA Lurz 8lld SCOTf OURS

.

. ......

May 19,1991

May 19,1991

-. --Engagements--

USA BICKLE llld PAUL LEE

_

No/1199.95
SUNDAY

LAMPSBUY ONE
GET ONE

FREE

$44997

'.

�•

I

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolle, OH Point Pl1888nt, WV

Page 84 Sunday nmes Sentinel

May19,1991

- -_Weddings. ---- --Anniversaries-- Meigs County calendar

Schenavar-Mollohan
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.- Diane
Mary Schenavar, daughter of Griffin and Mary Boggess and the late
' Stanley I. Schenavar. and Thomas
Jeffrey Mollohan, son of John
Thomas and Helen Mollohan, were
united in marriage Milch 23, 1991
at BeJiemead United Methodist
Church, Pt. Pleasant. W.Va.
Dr. Eddie Gandy officiated the
double-rio~ ceremooy.
The bnde was esconed to lhe
altar by her step-father. Matron of
honor was Melody McKnight,
friend of the bride. Bridesmaids
were Victoria Mollohan, sister of
lhe groom, and Angela Ridenour
and Suzanee Smilh, bolh friends of
lhe bride
The flower gul was I ulie Mollohan, cousin of lhe groom. Ringbearer was I onathan Mollohan,
cousin of lhe groom.
Best man was Gred Swisher,
friend of the groom. Groomsmen
were Jj)aniel Mollohan and Philip
. MoJiohan, bolh brothers of the
groom. Thomas E. Schenavar,
brolher of lhe bride was unable to

I
•!

serve as a groomsman due to lhe
military service in lhe Persian Gulf.
A special candle was lit in his
honoc.
A scripwre reading was·presented by Rev. Jim McCilne. Music
was provided by Jim Fugate. Angel
Ridenour and Paula Elkins were
soloists.
Registering guests were Debra
Harlow and Marine Miller, friends
of lhe bride. Hostesses were Sue
Howerton, Polly Norris', Cindy
Smith and Melissa Wykle, all
friends of the bride.
Aowers were placed in front of
the sanciuary in memory of the
bride's father.
The bride's maternal grandmother is Ettie! Beckner of Pt
Pleasant, W.Va. lhe groom's
maternal grandparents are Gerald
and Evelyn Lumbard of Barboursville, W.Va. His paternal
grandmolher is Mary Kail Mollohan, Gallipolis. .
The couple resides in Barboursville, W.Va.

MR. and MRS. TRUMAN (SUE) BURNE'ITE

Couple celebrates 25 years
GALLIPOLIS - Truman and · Mr. Jay lWJ Jr., and Earthel Hall
Sue Burnette will celebrate !heir · ofCheshire.
.251h wedding anniversary MaY. 21,
'J'he couple has one daughter,
1991.
Billie Jo Erwin and two grandchiiTruman is the son of the late dren, Courtney· Sue and Justin
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Burnelte Sr.
Erwin of Wellston.
Sue is lhe daughter of lhe late
.
.

Norris' celebrate 70 years
POMEROY • Ross and Marie
Norris, both residents pf the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rellabilitalion Center, wiJ1 observe !heir 70th
wedding anniversary Monday.
Lifelong residents of Meigs
County. lhe couple were married
on May 20, 1921. For many years
they resided in Letait Falls and
then in 1958 moved 10 Syracuse.
Mrs. Norris Is 87 and her husband
is 91.
The couple has five · children,
Carroll Norris, Syracuse; Virgil
Norris, ML Vernon; Mrs. Richard
(Margie) Weaver, Keystone
Heights, Aa.; Mrs. Jame's (Opal)
Belz, GalliJ)Oiis, and Mrs. Karl

(Eleanor) Kloes. Syracuse, along
with many gnmdchildren and great·
grandchildren, and several greatgreat-grandchildren.

CBS' Simon returns
NEW YORK (AP) -Newsman
Bob Simon, captured and held by
Iraqi forces during lhe Gulf War,
wiU rerum 10 Baghdad to repon on
lhe war's aftermalh, CBS said.
Iraqi officials gave Simon per·
mission to make lhe trip earlier lhis
week, lhe network silid He will be
!here rol- a week galhering reporiS .
for a July 4 special.

:-

ESTABUSHED 1895

1 DAY

THE
ARIEL THEATRE

PROCESSING

presents ...

ON SLIDE FILM

By

wiU appear in February. This much mance. There are discounts f
covete~ t_itle was bestowed upon seniors and siUdents.
or
lhe choir m Llango~n. Wales dur·
The companion performance
mg the Internauonal Musical group Espec 1'all M · s ·
E'··-~~·
enes,
......woo. They .e lhe first male may be• purchasedywilh·us1c
a i:ombined
chorus 10 recejve lhis honor. Their ticket for addilioDai savin
'v'
~onnance ":ill be another high- the lhrifty shopper 7 exc.'tn81 m~
li$hl of the Series as they perform a grams. Valley Anists Seri~.
w1de range of secular and sacred cially Music Series began in ~
musiC. ,
as a joint venture between lhe forThe fmal performance of lhe mer Rio Granpe College and T ·•
Series will be in March and fea- County Community Concen
lUreS Waldo's Ragtime Orcheslra, a ciation. Perrormances are in lhe
ten piece ensemble. which plays fmc and Performing Art Center 11
authentic arra~gements rrom the the University of Rio Grande,
ragllme era. DII'CCtor Terry Waldo where the design of lhe tlieater
has come to be recognized as one makeseveryseata"good"seaL
of the _top perfonniilg entertainers.
Nearly 60 workers are sellin
h1stonans and producers in the memberships throughout Galli!
country.
.
_Mason, Meags and Jackson
Volunteers, who are currently ties. For information about tickets
sellm$ uckets for .lhe series, have and lbe name and phone number of
had difficulty deciding which pro- . lhe nearest worker contact drive
gram.is really lhe ~eature since the chairman, Jan 1ba1Cr at 6l 4-446quahty. of the enure sen'es. 1·s so 4425 or conn1e
· McNer1·m at the
excepnonal.
The
cost
for
lhe
enure
·
U
·
·
f
R"
.
.
mvemty o 10 Gran de • 1- 800sequence for an adult ,IS $30, less 282-7201, toll free in Ohio or 614lhan the value of any smgle perfor- 245-5353 ext. 364. ·

Names in the news

LOS ANGELES (AP) '- Masha
' Kalinina, lhe Soviet Union's fllSt
' beauty queen. is learning lhe hard
way about lhe drawbacb of going
HollywoodWhen she met with the Hollywood pga in hopes of lauDching a '
movie career, she first had 10 ql8h
tabloid repons of an arrair with

,.

••

.'

Flowering TrHS, Shrubs,
Azaleas, Rhaclodtndrons and
Hally Trtts.

Hubbard's Greenhouse
SYRACUSE. OHIO

992-5776
Optn Daily 9·5; Sun. 1-S
•

j.

There'sno

{~',,,_

I
1

a.IJAXA' ~"'Ls•
the Nst 'Fwnlv Hain:IAterS•

...._.........
o.t IIIYIIIUU
GAWPOUS, OliO

.

I .

I

We hope _your visit was educational, helpful and entertain~
ing.
We loved having
you.
Thank
'
.
you for your loyal and continued
support.

(Mi\

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

Veterant .,.,_ ... Hospital

. . _'C?

11 5 E. Memorial Drive .
Pomeroy
992·2104

THE FRUSTRATIONS
OFA COP
To meet a fearlen man
Who has no r•pec:t for life.
Who i1 quite unpredictable
To pull a gun or knife.

ON YOUR HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATION

To maet a prejudiced man
Who hata1 one of another

race.
Who doa1n't need a motive
To shoot you in the feca .
To meat an indifferent man
Who
doeen't believe in
Chriat.
The toul he doesn't value
Your death no ncrifice.

People in the news .

To meet a da1parate man
Out of hi1 rational mind.
Ready to pull the trigger
At any fearful 1lgn.
To m..t a wicked men
Who i1n't living right.
Who hean't mat the Savior
And ia looking for a fight.
C&gt; Rolwrr L. Harpt•r J/ 25/91

Confidential Servlcea:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
· Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

~~&gt;,_

6.

446-WIS

•

TAMI .ROSSIGNOL

-,

-12

e

,.

•

IJ

1

T4ank you for your visit with
us on May 12 when we staged our
annual Open House in observance of National Hospital Week.

Family Planning ·
It Makes Sense ..•

need to /.'~ -«rqQ;Ij.'l
pay $25 or more for a great hairctJli-'£:!S~ .....
95 1
At Fan~tic SaJ!I'S. you11 get an l_, _,.,
'i'.,.,J
expert cut, tncludtng a shampoo, con- ~;.-:~ ,~ '"/
ditioning rinse and complete style- :- ~~'::::t!_'J.
everything you expect from an ex- I:~ •
''7
pensive salon. except the price.
I:~
495 I
\00 don't need an appointmen~ l "-'.,., .
lie,.. . f
we're waiting for you now.
"-.................... ~ · -l ,~t,(,
c:);).~ ~ .......•
-,..__lf:-,•• f

.

THANKS!

. I'

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - ·
Rock 'n' roll star Jon Boo Jovi got
little attention last week during a
visit to lhe country music capital.
He spent several days here with
singer-songwriter Billy Falcon.
They spent several nights visiting
lhe Bluebird Cafe, where Nashville
songwriters play their tunes regularly.

AT. 2. lOX I. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 41131
WORK . 441-7310 • HOME 441-U31
lit. 7 - Oelllpolie '

I

Complete Line of Vegetable
and ltdding Plants,
Bloaming and Foilage
Hanging losktts, Fruit and

I

•

-

to Gallipolis from Tampa, Fl.
where whe was employed by a long
established design studio involved
with commercial and residential
new construction and renovations.
Ms. Rossignol says she is enthusiastic about lhe opportunity 10 help
area residents wit)l their furniture,
floor covering and wall covering
needs in addition to advising on
changes in their homes or offices.
. Tope Furniture Inc. has both
Tope Furniture Galleries and
Lifestyle Furniture Showcase in
Gallipolis.

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRINI SEASON

DIXONS TO PERFORM • Geor~ and Charlotte Dlxqn, evan; gellsts, .singers and musicians, Will be hold lag revival at the
; ·~tomeroy Church of the Nazarene Wedneday through May 26 with
• .services at 7 p.m. alghtly. Sunday services will be held at 10:45
: a.m. and 6 p.m. Pastor Thomas G. McClung invites the pubUc.

~ ~, 1{-,·iC.,..

,

Tom Tope, manager of Topes
Furniture Inc .. is pleased to
announce the recent addition of
Tami Rossignol, ASII) to their
staff.
.
Ms. Rossignol received her BA
in. interior design from Iowa State
Univ~ity in 1982. She completed
the ~uirements fa- the professional designation of ASID from lhe
American Society of Interior
Designers in 1986. ASID is 10 interior design what CPA is 10 accounting. Ms. Rossignol is licensed as an
interior designer in the state of
Ohio 81 lhis time does not

~

BE SAFE, VIDEO FOR PERMANENT RECORD.

u..-

FLORAl SHOP 843-5178
PORnANO. OHIO
3 MILES FROM RAVENSWOOD BRIDGE

54110 ST. RT. 124

I.

FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WILL
COME INTO YOUR HOME AND VIDEO
YOl,IR POSSESSIONS.

imagine it,"
Kalinina, 19. said Thuraday. "He is
as old as my falhet."

HARRIS FARMS &amp; GREENHOUSE

MARKET 143-5193

Open Men. &amp; Fri. tY 8 P.M.; T-., Will,. Thur. I Sat. til 5 P~

We have blank video tapes available for
purchase. or bring in your own. unused super
high grade tape.

"r canoot even

HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m.-7:30p.m ..
Sun. 12 noon-7:30 p.m.

•'

Bring in any type of 8 mm film and we will
transfer up to 50 feet of film onto VHS Tape.

Mikhail QabUev.

-

CONTAINERS FURNISHED

'
,!•.

FREE VIDEO TRANSFER

.

RU'{L~ND -_The Ver~on "Whiteman's God" through misXlaudl Indian Fam1jy, mternallon- s10nary work on Fort Berthold
JIIIY known Arickara-Manda.n Reservation on North Dakota's
gospel singers from lhe "Dakota Missouri River. The Indians' great
Badlands" will appear in person on grandfathers, Cine Feather and Lit:ruesday at 7 p.m. at lhe Rutland .tie Soldier, fought in Custer's BatChurcb of God.
tie in 1876 at lhe Little Big Hom
: The couple is from lhe Original River in Montana serving as scouts
JGaudt Indian Family !hat was seen for the U.S. Calvary. Lewis and
on Sunday morning gospel televi- Clark spent lhe winter with the
sion shows. They perform vocally Arickaras, served as a guide and
;md insuumentally in close family interpreter for the expedition across
barmony and appear in full native the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific
lndian costumes.
Ocean.
• The professional instrumental
He has served as a senior associhack-up for the ~roup includes ate pastor of one of America's
ltcoustic piano, smogs, synlhcsizer largest churches-end holds a divini·
and electric bass guitar.
ty degree from Candler School of
l A music ministry began for this Theology Emory University in
family when they were won to lhe Atlanta, Ga.

THURSDAY 4 p.m.-8 p.m.
SATURDAY 8 a.m.-12 noon
MONDAY 4 p.m.-8 p.m.

I

SPECIAL

l

PICK YOUR OWN
STRAWBERRIES

The Indians are coming
to Rutl~nd Tuesday ·

•'
l

as vice president of the National In school, she is a member of lhe
Honor Society, is vice president of National Honor Society and tile
his senior class and is a member of Student Council, and served as
Hi- Y. A Scholastic AU-American Held commander for the band. She
for three years. Fields has been has been an employee or Johnson's
active in the community as Biddy ·Supermarket since September
League coach and as a volunteer 1989.
for lhe Special Olympics. . .
She plans 10 major in nursing.
He plans to major in nursing.
The Mountain State ScholarStanley is lhe daughter of Don ship, established in 1987, is given
and Avalee Swisher, and Bob Stan- annually wilh preference 10 stu·
IH or Ruine, and will graduate dents from Mason, Jackson, Wood
from Poinl Pleasant High School. and Roane eow~ties.

•

VERNON and BETIY KLAUDT

I

eoun:

•

place for his essay on his pioneer ·
great- great-grandm~ther Letitia
Cherington and in 1989 Christian
Scott won first place for his ,essay
on Jefferson Scott, one of the
founders of Adamsville.
Each year students have worked
with l)oth Mrs. Bennett and Mrs.
Evans to fmd and use lhe sources
needed for this projecL
Plants, who is a chaner member
of First Families of Gallia County.
1s also a member of the Gallia
County Historical/Genealogical
Society. He will be honored locally, along wilh participants in the
Annual History Day ~ontes~ at the
Society's regular meeting at 2 p.m.. ·
Sunday, May 19 at the Episcopal
church. The public is invi~.

424 S.Ctnd An.•Gallipolis

Mason seniors net URG scholarships
RIO GRANDE - Three Mason
County high school seniors have
been awarded hall'-tuition as recipients of lhe Mountain State Scholarship offered at the University of
Rio Grande.
The students are Michelle Lea
Butris, Point Pleasant; Glenn
David Fields Jr., Letart; and Mikka
Lu Stanley, Point Pleasant.
B'urris, lhe daughter of Stephen
K. and Christa Jane Burris, will
graduate from Point Pleasant High
School, where she is a member of
lhe band, track and Future Homemakers of America. She has been
recognized for her work wilh lhe
Mason County Malh Team and is
active in her church group and in
soflball.
Burris plans 10 major in malhemalics at Rio Grande.
Fields is the son of Glenn D.
and Jacqueline G. Fields and will
graduate from Wahama High
School. He is a member and !ICrVed

..

· Tawney Studio

Special occaaionllraquire 1pacial pre·
parat!ona. If you are piDMing a wed·
ding. annlvena,Y or prom. then you
1hould come aeii us at Haaldna· Tan·
ner.
You will have over 190 atyla1 of to •·
edo1 to chooH from. We have a large
selaction of the lateat atylas and com·
·ptimentary ecce11oriea for thia apeelal
•occaalon.
Quality fonnalwtar at AHarllablt Prktl.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

Ass!

.

.

ICODA LUX

For That Special
Occasion ...

Robinson launches fall season for VAS
GALLIPOLI~ · Valley Artists
Senes has exc111n~ plans for lhe
1991-~2 season begmmng w1th the
beauuful and talented, Sonya
.
Robmson.
.
.
.
Ms. Robmson 1s ;an awst
e.xtraordmary who handles the ~10hn w1th gr,eat skill and ~reauvuy.
playmg eve~mg from J8ZZ 10 the
classiCS. Rob•nson, w1th ber backup
musiCianS, will appear on September 22, Sunday afternoon and Will
add another facet to the_I 28th
Ema~c1pa11on Cel~bral!on m Gal~pol~A former Mf~lack
1ca:. _IS_ a nauv~ o
~a " ·
pnvm¥ M1~s Da1sy, the
Pu,htzer. Pnze wmner by Alfred
~ryV1alls, IS Artisthe.secoSerind perfTheormla~
sor _. ey
t
es.
P YIS
set m Atlanla. and ~nters around
the warm, fnendsh1p between a
·wealthy southern lady and her
chauffeur ~f more than two
decades.
Th1s performance at lhef
'ty f Ri Grande ·
·
Uruvers1
o o
IS part II
!he nabonaltour
"Choir of~ World" lhe Oh'
State University Men's 'Gtee Clu~

NEW HAVEN, W.VA. •
Revival at New Haven First
Church of God through Friday
with Rev. Rick Weaver as the
evangelist. Services begin each
evening at 7 p.m. Special singers
on Monday will be lhe Solid Rock
Singers, on Tuesday lhe Children
of God, on Wednesday L.arrY and

Sunday

South Centra
honors Bum arner

Co••••lty Caleadar lte•• DciOI'CJ Turley, on Tllunda:,: ~
Victory Singers, and on ~nday .
appeu' two d8J11tefore - tl'St
Tommy
Scyoc. Everyone IS we!-:
ud tile day ol daat eftllt. 1-.
come.
·
• • be receiwd well Ia adftllte
to
publlcatloo Ia tile cal·
MONDAY
•
elldar.
MIDDLEPORT • The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday "
SUNDAY
HARRISONVILLE • Garden Burkett Barbers~ in Middlepod;
traclllr puB wilh speed sled at Sci· Social hour and lnldiDS session I I i
pio Township Volunteer Fire p.m. pm:ede lhe meetlllg. RefreshDepanment hi Harrisonville on ments will be served. New mem:
Sunday. Weigh-in at 12 p.m. Pull hers welcome.
slartl at I p.m. Classes consist of
RACINE - OAPSE 453 will
900 lb. under and over: 1000 lbs.
meet
at Soulhem High School 011'
under and over; and 1100 lbs.
Monday
11 7 p.m. to vote on con!
under and O'W:r. RefieshmeniS will
tracL Unioo mem~ are urged 10
be available.
attend.
POMEROY - There will be a
TUESDAY
12-s~ep AA meeting oo Sunday at7
TUPPERS
PLAINS - Sign up
p.m. 81 lhe ITPA office, 117 West
for
new
cub
scouiS
and boy scouts
Seconds~ in Pomeroy.
will be held at S1. Paul United
POMEROY • The Unity Methodist Church il! Tuppers
Singers, directed by Sue Malheny. Plains on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
· will be presenting a ~ II lhe
POMEROY • The Veterans
Zion Church or Christ on Route
Memorial
HOspital Women's Auxf13 on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The
iliary
will
meet in the conCerence ·
Jpublic is inVited 10 auend. ·
room at 1.:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
·POMEROY • The Meigs Scholarships will be selc:ttcd. · ,
Genealogical Society will meet
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Church
Sunday at 2 p.m at tbe Meigs
of
the Nazarene will be in revival
Museum.
with Dr. J.W. Lambert Tuesday
lhrough Sunday. Evening servcies
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff- begin
at 7 p.m., except Sunday,
ington, Gallipolis, will be the guest
when
services
will be held 81 10;30
speaker at the Naomi Baptist
a.m.
and
6
p.m. Rev. G leon
Church on Stmday 81 11 a.m. Rev.
McMillan
invites
lhe public.
:
S.I. I ackson invites lhe public 10
•
attend.

-re

MR. and MRS. THOMAS (DIANE) MOLLOHAN

•

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt

.._lfri.fletP.M.
le . ....
Sonolor 12 ,. s , ...

s.t.'

--J

ncan AYII!Aal it~ .

Brlialcartll Mule,
Crlmbl .. Records,

Tbe Stowaway aad

Peddler's PulrJ.

iiC

•

.
SPEAKER • Evanae·
list
Neece of Mishawaka,
Ind., will be spealdag at the First
Cburcb of God, Sunday, May 1!1·
· U durln1 revival services. be has
served as Cburch of God Pastor
for 30 years; and as a full-time
evangelist for more thaa 10
years•. He has preached in hun·
dreds of loeal church revival ern·
sadet aeross America. He bas
strved 11 aatlooal ebairman of
tile Churdl of God Pastqr's Fel·
lciwsblps, and also of the Associa. thll of EvanplisiS of the Church
otGod.
1\

Sliding f• scH. No -

FRUTH .PHARMACY OF GALLIPOLIS
COME IN AND SEE OUR WIDE SELECTION OF

GIFTS~ FOR .

NfJIJIII link• beca•

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

GRADUATE.

OF SOUTHEAmiN OHIO

POMEIIOY:
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5.00 Monday-Fridoy
Clostd Thursday

- GAWPOUS
414 Second An., 2nd Floor
446-0166
lr30 to 5.00 Mondoy-Friday
1130 to 12 Saturday

CloHdThU1'141iy

AlSO; .-...~ Cluiap1ab, Att.nt.. o.•colht, i41n I

,,,I

McAttltur

iP.YOUR

For Assistance Ask For Carolyn little
I

Gift '-o· ~ Consultant
WE ACCEPT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS

FRUTH PHARMACY, Rt.
•.·

'

•.

3~, Gallipolis, Ohio" ,

..

�•

J/-

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

I

,.~

Page-86--Sunday nmes

-

...

~

.. .

....

.'

-

riel to celebra~efirst anniversary
with a 'Galaxy of Stars' May 31 .

LONG SERVICE • Sne Stoue, bead of the Medical Records
Department at Veteraas Memorial Hospital, war presented a
chime dock by Adm.llllstrator Scotl Lucas m recogniti• o1 ber %5
years or continuous lwll-tlme service during ceremoaies bekl Frl·
day as a part of National Hospital Week.

tosether wilh the; West Virsinia
Opera Theater, Tbe Charleston
- Symphony, the Ft. tauderdale
Symphony and in a series of
recitals in the Florida area. Judv
has just completed appearances
with the Huntington Chamber
Orchestra and the West Virginia
Symphony. They will be joined by
piani'st Alice Eaddy, who has
served with every major chorus in
the Charleston area over the last
several years, including the ·
Charles1011 Civic Chorus. the Mes·
siah Oiorua and the West Virginia
Symphony Chorus. They will be
performing selections from "The
Sound of Music" as well as other
songs.
The second portion of the pro·
gram will be devoted to patnotic
music performed by Piper and The
Second Century Singers, the resi·
dent ensemble of the Soldiers and
· Veterans Memorial Auditorium in
Newark, Ohio. Like the Ariel, the
Memorial Auditorium is an 1895
opera house that is being saved fot
restoration. They will be singin~
"Battle Hymn of the Republic, '
"American Trilogy," "Testament of
FMedom" and others.

-

....

~

/

'
Mly HI, 1Qt1;

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-PoJnl Pleaiant, wv

The Ariel Tbeatte is presenting
a gala "Galaxy of Stars• Friday,
May 31 at 8 p.m. to Celebrate the
first anni~ersary of the hiSIUic the·
atre •s §rand re-opening. The
evening s entertainment is being
sponsore() by The Ohio Valley
Bank and Bob Evans Farms.
"Reaching the end of our first
run year of operation is quite a
milestone,» said Ariel Artistic
Director, Lora Lynn Snow. "We
feel it is appropnate to throw an
all-out celebration to mart the
occasion and we have a cast of
stm to help us do it"
Headliners of the evening •s
eNertainmelit include vocalists Jon
&amp;:. Judith Cavendish,' singer/songwriter David Piper and the Second
Century Singm and ''The Profs" a
jazz quartet made up of faculty
members from Ohio Universio/. All
of the perfonners are familiar to
Ariel audienceS having made solo
appearances or with the Ariel's
own Obio Valley Symphony.
From Grand Opera to Broadway
and poys, Jonathan and Judith
Cavendisluegularly entertain audiences to high acclaim. The
Cavendishes · ha've performed

...

The fmal pooion of die lli'DI!l'BIII "
will be given by "The Piois"f;an
ensemble made up of professors
from Ohio University's School of
Music. Richard Syracuse, piano
and David Lewis, clarinet h~e
both soloed with The Ohio Valley
Sympbclny on the Ariel stage. Guy
Remonko, ~n:ussion is principal
percussiomst with the OVS and
Dan Clark plays )lass. They will be

re:Sl:

----

...

......

playing selections by Gershwin,
Kern, Brubeck and others.
Although the Ariel's seats arc
utmnely comfOdlblc, the "Profs"
performance is guanntced eo bring
cverron~ to tbeir feel before tbc
cvenmg IS over.
A rccepeion immediatdy follow·
ing the coacert will be held ill •
. Masonic Lodge. TickeiJ for ~e
gala event me $10 llld inc:lude &amp;be
concert and the
~
wards. Tickels are a ·
11 ~·
dler's Pantry, Brunicardi Millis);
Criminal Records and the SIQYf:
away Restaurant. For more infciro
mation, call the Ariel office at~
ARTS.
.
·
:, :

Pomeroy-;-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

'

lt .. .,:
~

·:!!

VOLUNTEERS • As li part or National Hos·
pital We_ek, omcers ohlle Women's Auxiliary at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, were given special
recognition for their contributions to the bospi·
tal in ceremoaies beld Friday afternoon: From
the -left :wearing corsages, gifts or. the hospital,

TWIST '::
.. Whitt

· ~·

THE SHOE CAFE

•• •

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis.

PINS • Presented pins In recopltioa of five 1e1n ol continuous
ruU-time service to Veterans Memorial Hospital during Friday ceremonies, a part of Nadonalltospilll Week, were from, left to right,
T8111111y L. Ball, Minnie L. Rizer and Cindy D. Crump, and back,
Karen Roush and Frederlek R. Thompson. Hospital Administrator
Scott Lucas. r~ht, made the presentations.

are Carrie Kennedy, correspoodinll secretary;
Louise Bearbs, volunteer chairman; Betty Sayre,
treasurer; Helen Hill, recodlog secretary; Libby
Fisher, vice rresldeot; Jessie White, president
and Hospila Administrator 'Scott 1-ucas who
highly commended the.organization.

McDaniel receives

Training
·You To
rain Your
Pet.•. .

;' .{'i

L

DOG
OBEDIENCE
CLASSES

BRIGHTEST STARS • F1yina bigh In the Gallipolis City Park,
a banner reminds area residents ol Senior Citizens Day, Tnaday,
· May ll. Thb year's t•eme is "Ohio's Seniors: Our Brlshtest
Stars." The ptll'poae of Ws special day Is the celebrate acini, aad
recognize the COIItribadoas ofolder Ohioans; to remind the aeneral
populatloa or die lacreasiq ~ce of senior dtlzeos' roles In
communities; ud to acknow
often forxOtlea elderly persons
wllo may be bo1ubouad, live n nursing bomes or live alone.
Activities at the GaDia County Senior Citizens Center begin at 11
a.m. with entertainment and awards.

MERCERVILLE • Plans for the
1991 Mercerville/Hannari Trace
Alumni Dinner have been finalized.
Doors will · ~~~ at 4 p.m. with
di11ner beginnmg at 6:30 p.m .
Guest speaker will be Jams M.N.
Davis, former Gallia Academy
principal and graduate of Mer·
cerville High School.
· Prizes will be ~ven for different
categories including the Traveling
Trophy to the most BW:nding in any
oneclasa.
.
Dinner will be $10 per person
and reservations can be made by
calling 446-0127 or 446-9533 or by
sending your reservations to Mar·
garet Byers, Route 2, Box 75, GalOpolis.
·
Entertainmept for the evening
will be by Kevin ScotL He wiU be
playing music from the 50s, 60s
and 70s, beginninf at 8:30p.m.
Entertainment chwrman is Scott
Swain.
.
ThoSe not attending the dinner
are invited to .the dance for a
charge of $2 each.

••

Call
446-1864
SHERRY ROBERTS
Certified Trainer

UPCOMING ARIEL PER·
FORMERS • Joa aad Jlldy
Cavendish will bl! among at
''Galaxy
or Stars," at the Ariel
THURMAN
Thurman Theatre 8:30
May 31, In
Grange will meet at the Grange honor of tbe p.m.
theatre's
first
Hall at8 p.m.
aoaiversuy• .

Gallia County calendar
(llemsfor Ill~ coflllriiUiily calendar
ap[)ttlr tWo dllyr prior to 1111 "''nt.
They 11111st 1M ~Yulml by lilt Gal·
lipolis DaUy Trlburtfl in advanc•
for publkalkln)

SUNDAY
.
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
Historical Society will meet at tbe
Episcopal Church, Sunday. Board
at! p.m. and the program, "History
Day," begins at 2:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS · Evangelist Bill
neece of Mishawaka, Ind., will be
speaking at the First Church of God
in revival services Sunday, May
19-22. Services being 7 p.m. nightly Special singing and nursery ser. vices will be provided.
GALLIPOLIS · Pentecost Sunday will be celebrated I 0 a.m. and
!i p.m. Sunday, May 19 at Calvary
Christian Center, 434 Jackson Pike.
Celebration includes a drama of the
origin and meaning of Pentecost
and a meal following.

Cas11al Outdoor Furniture

,.....,....®.c.rtFiarwden. . .
AI~Wialler I!VICktr

SPRING BASE
ARMCHAIR

SPRING BASE
LOUNGER

LOVESEAT

HIGH BACK...'85
LOWBACK...'75

$159

1169

GUDER

•

,,,~,

. 1our
·Heart's
Desire".··

'

/

GALLIPOLIS • The Job Bank:
has many qualiri!ld applicants 50
years. of age and older to fill job ·
needs.
.
As society changes to include an
increasing number o{ older people
the focus wiU be on mature Amen·
cans. This presents a chall~ge and
an opportunity to utilize the talents
and wisdom and tbe experience of

.

the older worker.
.
Call the Job Bank at 446-7000
to discuss your employment needs
with a counselor at the Gallia
County.Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Pike.
The Job Bank is open from 11
a.m . to 3 p.m. Wednesday and
Thursday and Friday from 7 a.m. to
3p.m.

LAY-AWAY
NOW

Sale!

.
39 9 .

$.

0.. IRIDAL REGISTRY
Couplts ngistertd:
Kelley Hemphtll •
Joseph DeCa mp
Kem Hemphill - Bob Hood
Ltsa Henry- Steve Waugh.
Wendy Simms..;.. Enc Russell

.

.

We know exactly what lhey
want in a wedding or shower
gift. We up·datc !heir list as
gifts ate purchased. ·
Visit us when shopping for a
gift. We'll help you select th e
gift that the bride really wants.
We'll gift-wrap it. We'llsend it.

Aga:;e!

•

· g~
1614) 446-7733

Need for older workers increases
1 .

Reg. S599t "Bountiful" A qtJalnt, countryinspired, stenciled cedar chest that will keep
her cherished memories safe. In a distressed
pine finish , Measures 45x18'hx24"H. ·

404 Second Avenue
446·1147
01
, Ohio

•

FLOWERS
FOR MEMORIAL DAY·
• GERANIUMS •
MIXED •
•• POTS
•

SMELTZER'S
NURSERY
. 449 JACISON PilE • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

TO HOLD
OUI LOW
DISCOINT
1991 PIIOSt

.

ANT A SPECIAL

Sale!

$425
'

DECORATE WITH

Sale!

BALLOONS!!

SECURITY
TUB RAILS

• •

FREE DELIVERY WITHIN 5 ·MI.
For Assistance and Prices
Call Carolyn Little 446.~6620
Mon.-Fri. 9-6

1 199

Custom Fitted Dentures In One Day AI Our Teays Valley Office
By Our Professionals And Trained StaJT.
Made In Our Dental LaboratorY By Qualtfled T"hnlclans.

·.·.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-926-0025
For AD Appointment or Information.

.

•Carpet
•Interior Design
•Fine furniture

II

•Fino Wall Covering•
•Window Treatment
448-0332
I)

•

~~!~!~WEI ON TUI

ant .,., 1tldt proot

lll:"' ...

5831 DAVISCREEK ROoiO

·wv. 7!1-4t32

,_ ..

performed. by

......

THE MARSHALL
UNIVERSITY

........
.. CIII

IIICIII

•CIII

I

I'

OPERA FOR YOUTH
PROGRAM

..

WOIIelil'tl flfl d

t •M ; ftMn • ..., .....
CNCIIM
pl..ld 1. . .

$134 PER DEN'nJRE!

A CHILDR EN'S OPER{\

c:Onetrwdlon

..................
..............
,......
pr9¥_..

;rao

= -==-·-·.;t~
..._.,~~~~~~;;;;;~"·;-;jc:'d
~-'..

1'""'1 ""..., ''CfOM

SAME DAY 8ERVICJ!:8 Ol'f DUNES AND REPAIRS!

West~'-.
VJrpnla DentaiSer.tee
WUD1• V. BeU. D.D.S., lno.
-

,

...,. ..,..., m "'"

SMAIL ADDmONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

FURNITURE.GALLERIES .

SAFETY IATK SEAT WITH

Our Regular Service Is Available At AU Olftces.

DENTURES START AT

Corner Second and Grape St. 111 Gdpola, Ohio

FIUTH PIIAIMACYI ~64 JACKSON PilE, GALLIPOUS, OHIO
MONIIY·SA'IUIDAY 9 A.M.-9 P.M.; -DAY 11 A.M.-I P~M.

~

$

Mtuicians of Bremen }) -

11

.. S11• to choolt lrom
l!r-~.

I

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

.... 16151 "CIIall" With a hand- •

...

tiiD 11111'GT tiMt

presents ...

.

Vln'fl Coeted 1\0f'to

~--=/!
--:j

l

Ariel Thearre

ot_.

RAISED TOILET SEAT

I'

The

ltunly
rlilo to help peooon
gottlng·in Md out of bothtub

Stondotd model lito modern tubo.
ch•ome hloll. oNmbltd tlv,'" high •
ll'"wldo.

· 25 YEARS • Doris Wood.yard, a m_ember ?' th-; nursing staff at
Veterans Memorial Hospttal, recetved tb1s cbtme clock from
Administrator Scott Luca~ during f~iday afternoon's Nali~nal
Hospital Week.ceremonies tn reco~ntlion of her 25 years contmu·
ous, full-time service with the bospttal.

$425'·

decorated front that mimics a
dn:iwer chest, this cedar-lined
chest has a soft, cottege.c:Ountry
style. In an antique maple finish.
Measure·s 4;2x11x24V.o''H.
Other Styles Anllable
Starting On Sale At Only

r

BATHROOM SAFETY AIDS

.... $6251 "Endearment" Handdecorated with hearts and nowers,
this cherry finished country chest
offers 5.6 cubic feet of cedar-lined
storage. With carved base details.
Measures 48x17x21¥.''H.

.PARTY? ~ -

. '

Wilson, Linda R. Holter, Sharon K. Pratt, and
back, VIrginia B. Mkhael and George Hoffman.
Another 10 year employee, Laura Harrison, was
unable to be preseat due to illness. Fifteen year
employees wiU receive service pins, eacl) set with
a diamond. Those employees are Rk:hard Warn·
er and Isabelle Couch.
/

3 SEAT GUDER..122U&amp;

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS · St Peter's Epis·
r copal Churchwomen (ECW) will
meet Monday, May 20 at noon for
luncheon and a business meeting.

TEN YEARS • Employees with 10 years of
continuous, full-lime service were presented
pins, each set with a ruby, durin&amp; ceremonies
Friday at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Receiv·
· . iog the awards fro'm Hospital Administrator
·. Scott Lucas, wert ~eft to right, rront, Teresa A.

'

Save 30-40% on these beautiful
hand-decorated Lane® Cedar Chests .

Shown: Norifakc's ROTHSCHilD

Alumni dinner set

For Information
/
On

'

-";;::~~.:; Scout award

LONG ·BOTTOM • James
McDaniel, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Lute McDaniel, Long Bouom,
recendy received. his Eagle Scout
Award in Court of Honor Ceremonies held at the Syra~use
Church of the Nazarene. Tho Eqle
Scout is thO highest award in scout·
ing with only two percent of Boy
Scouts achieving the honor.
McDaniel is a junior at Eastern
High School and· is a member or

. "·. '

r-

J

....•..

.

your foot.
...._

/

''

insoles contoured
to the shape of
Four widths
to choose from.

I

Sunday Tlme~ ntl nei-Page-87

Friday, ·May 24, 8:.00 p .m.
Tick ers: ' 5 Adult, '3 Srudenr

1111111'1 fteft·tllp rub•
twct~t....

. A SAfETY WITH SlAt

WITH lACK

I . Sllln lATH sn

NO tiCK liST

··~1••1

....,,.

Phone 448-2208
• 5615 Jacklon Pille · OalllpoH•• Ohio

. ..

' T i(kc rs avai lable:
Peddler's Pantry. Brunica rdi Musk ,
The Stowaway and Cri mina l Records.

I

�----------~ ~

ports

'irimts "" ittttintl Section

•

C

May 19,1991

-----

--

Hanset·ctaimsvictory in 116th Preakness

STORE HOURS
Mo11day .tltru Sunday.
8 AM-10 PM

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP RaciD&amp; Writer
BALTIMORE (AP)- Hansel,
the beaten favorite in lhe Kentucky
Derby, redeemed himself in
Sf!!a~hing fashion Saturda_y by
wmrung the Preakneas at Pimhco.
Hansel, who fmished lOth in the
Derby two weeks ago, was in
complete command through the
stretch run of the I 3/16th mile
race, which was timed in I :54;
Kentucky Derby winner Strike

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EffECnVE MAY 19 THRU SAT ·MAY 2

the Gold never was a factor and for
the 13th straight year, there can be
no Triple Crown champion.
·
"At his best, he should be
competitive with tbese horses "
trainer Frank Brothers said befOre
therace.
·
It wasn't decided to send Hansel
to the Preakness until Tuesday and ·
the colt did not arrive at Pimlico
Wltill1 :30 a.m.' Wednesday after a
14-hour van trip from Chicago.
Corporate Repon and Hansel
battled from the five-eighths pole ,

until the quarter-pole, wben Hansel
oookcharge.
'
Corporate Report, who was
ninth In the Derby, fmisbed second,
ahead of Mane Minister, who also
was third in the 1 1/4-mile Derby.
Hansel, ridden by Ieny Bailey,
won by seven lengths. Corporate
Report, ridden by Pat Day, who
won the Preuness last year on
Summer Squall. was 2 3,14 lengths
ill front of Mane Minister, ridden
by Alex Solis.
Olympio, the second betting

MIXED

Fryer Parts ••••••• ~!~ .• 49&lt;
FRESH

ChiciCen Breast •••.iB~ :$ J3 9

choice to-favored Strike the Gold,
was another half-length back.
Strike the Gold tmished sixth,
beating only two horses.
Hansel, owned by Joe L.
Allbritton, paid $20.20, $10.80 and
$8. Corporate Repon, owned by
W.T.Young and trainer D. Wayne
Lukas, was $11 and $6.40, while
Mane Minister, owned by Trudy
McCaffrey and John A. Toffan,
was $5.80 to show.
Explaining the last-minute
decis1on to enter Hansel in the
Preakness, the 44-year-old Brothers
said, "I discussed it with · Mr.
Allbritton and we decided he·
deserved another chance. We still
have faith in the hor.se.''
. Hansel certainly justified that
faith on a cool, breezy, overcast
Saturday.
·
"I knew going into the ftrst turn
when I had to tug on hitil to get
him off the pace, he was goini to
run big," said the ·33-year-old
Bailey, riding in his second
Preakness.
Bailey had Hansel third going
past lhe wire for lhe ftrst time, with
one mile left. He was still -third
behind Corporate Report and

Olympio arolind the tum and into race. Mane Minister got ·three
the backstretch.
.
points for third and now has six.
Those three maintained that Corporate Repon's five paints for
order to mid-backstretch, and second ties him with Best Pal.
Corporate Report still led Hansel . The point leader after the three
with a half-mile to g0 . Best Pal was races gets a $1 million bOnus. A
third and Olyrripio fourth at that horse must complete all three races
point, with Strike the Gold sixth.
to be eligible.
In lhe final llli'n, Hansel moved
Hansel, winning for the fourth
to challenge and lie took the lead time in six starts this year and for
away from Corporate Report 1the sixth in 11 career races, earned
approaching tl)e quarter-\)Ole.
$432,772 and \IOQsted his bankroll
In the suetch run, 1t quickly to $1,244,106.
became clear Hansel would win the .
Hansel had earned his Derby
Pleakneas. ·
favoritiSIJ1 by winning the Jim
A disappointed Chris Antley, Beam and Lex in. gton· hand,icaps
who rode S~ the Gol\1, said the impressively. Then he came alp flat
Derby winner was pinned on the in the Derby and Brothers wd he
rail all the way and "he didn't get a stiU doesn't know why.
fair chance anywhere. He'll
the
The trainer said there appeared
Belmont"
.
. to be nothing physically wrong
The Triple Crown fmale wiU be with the son of Woodman - and
the 1 1/2-mile Belmont SLakes on there certainly wasn't anything
JWle 8.
wrong with him in the 'Preakness,
Completing the order of finish the second for Brothers.
in the Preakness were Best Pal in
It was the second straight year
fifth, Strike the Gold, Whadjathink . the Derby winner failed in · the
and Honor Grades.
Preakness. Last year, Unbridled
The victory was worth 10 points finished second to Summer SquaU.
in the Triple Crown challenge for
Derby winner Sunday Silence
Hansel and tied him with Strike the won the Preakness in 1989', but
Gold for first place in the points failed in the Belmont

will

'

FLAVORITE

Lunch Meats ••••••• !~.$}39
ECKRICH FRESH ITALIAN SAUSAGE or

$ 99
-R1beye Steak ••••••••• · 4 .·
US~ A CHOICE .BONELESS BEEF · . LB.

,

Bratwurst ••••••• ~•• ~. $J99

'$2
59
Cube St-eak •••••••••••
BUCKET

.

tB.

ICAH~'S

W1eners ••••.••••••••• !B~.
ECKRICH

$

WINS PREAKNESS - Hansel, with Cbrls
W. Antley holdin1 tbe reins and celebratlag,
crosses the finisb liae to win the ll'th ruanial

·

Pepperoni •••••••• ::!~... 99&lt;

of tbe Preakn• Saturday at PlinDco Rllc:eway·
in Baltimore, Md. Hauel, a lllll·•lnute lddltlon
to tbe fteld, ?rOD by about 5 112 lengtU. (AP)

Gallia Academy to face Rock Hill
in first-round district play Monday
•J

FLAVOR,TE

i

2% Milk •••••••• ~~ •• $1 59

'

Il
I

'

GRADE A

II

Med. Eggs •••••• ~~:. 2 /$1
•

'

'

FLAVORITE

Ice Cream ••••.••••·:::~ •• 99(

oz.
. Ies ••••••••••••••••••
Pr1ng
.

JIF

.

6-7.5

.

.

·

Michigan's Matheny receives
thiril-team all-Big Ten honors

R. C.
PRODUCTS

BANQUET

•
. oz.
99
Peanut Butter.~~~!·•• Sl Cream P1es•••••••••••••
.

14

.

GROUND
CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

.

DOMINO SUGAR.

' ~~· $159 '

.... Ol1lw lt ,._... s.p. VahJ

.... .., lllln s.t••, 25, 1991
llllllt 1 . .

c.t•••

fll

MORTON SALT
'

26 oz.
• BOX

10(

Geool Gilly At ,_••• ~II' Val•
GOIII Mil 19 thrv s.t. May 25, 1991

l.inJit 1 ...

Cult-·

CLEVELAND (AP)- Andy thethirdwithhissolohomerun.
Hawkins pitched five and &lt;inc-third
. Twins 4, Tigers. I
shutout mnings in his Oakland
At Detroit, Mich., Shane Mack
debut and Dave Henderson hit his and Kirby Puckett each hit 1\ome
major league-leading lith home runs as the Minnesota Twins sent
run as the Athletics beat the Deb'Oit to its eighth straight loss by
Cleveland Indians 3•0 Saturday.
beating the Tigers 4-1 Saturday.
Hawkins (1·2) gave up three
Mark Guthrie (3-2) gave up one
hits, walked one and struck out two run and five hits in six innings for
before leaving with one our in the the w.in. Rick Aguilera, who
sixth.
·
worked two innings for his seventh
Joe Klink, the A's fourth save, loaded the bases on three
pitcher, worked one and one-third walks in the ninth, before Alan
scoreless innings and Dennis Trammell hit a fly ball to end the
Eckersley finished the combined game.
four-hitter.
The Twins took a 1-0 lead in the
Charles Nagy (1-3) yielded ftrst inning off Frank Tanana (2-3)
_ ~nws.andsill;.hits. .,.
.. .on Puckett's fourth homer of the
Oakland sCor'ed twice in the . season. .
.
first , Rickey Henderson walked
Brian Harper started the Twins'
and stole second. and Ernest Riles three-run second with an infield
was hit by a pitch. Dave Henderson single. Kent Hrbek walked, and
then grounded a potential· double- Mack hit Tanana's 1-0 pitch into
play ball to third, but secQnd ., the le[l-centei.field stands to make
baseman Mark Lewis' relay sailed · it4-0.
'
into the dugout, scoring Rickey
The Tigers scored in the bottom
Henderson . Haro!~ Baines of the second on Tony Phillips'
foUowed w1th an RBI smgl~.
.
sacrifice fly .
Dave Henderson made 11 3-0 m
Mariners 4, Yankees 1

$1690
.GROUND BEEF
10 ll. PACKAGE

$1490

I I

II

'

'

At New York, N.Y., Pat Rice
pitched five and two-third scoreless
mnings against New York in his
major league debut as the firstplace Seattle Mariners beat the
Yankecs4-l Saturday.
'
New York extended its scoreless
streak to 32 innings before Jesse
Barfield led off the ninth with a
pinch bonier. That's the longest
shutout streak against the Yankees
since 1968.
Rice was brought up Saturday :
from Calgary of the Pacific Coast
League and took the spot of Scott ,
Bankhead, who is sidelined with
shoulder stiffness . Rice allowed '
two hits, struck out three and
· walked none.
Ru S a
't h d
d
two-thlrd wi~f~g~ ean~woM~~e .
Jackson finished.
,
'
Scott Sanderson (4·2) gave up
four runs and nine hits in six and
two·third innings.
·
Ken Griffey Jr. had three hits
drove in two runs and robbed Matt
Nokes of an extra base hit with a
leaping catch in the fourth inning.

Eastern to play Latham Western
in D~IV district tourney Monday

Min:

24 PAll 12 OZ. CANS

In the tblrd inning of Saturday's American
League game against tbe Indians in Cleveland,
wbicb tbe A's won 3·0. (AP)

Oakland hands Cleveland 3-0 defeat

ond Unioto district upper-bracket game,in Monday's
datebook, as PQrtsmouth (22·7) wiU take on Athens
(15· 7) in the opener at 2 p.m.
.
·
Two other pitchers - senior right-hander Scott
Besco (5-1, 0.50 ERA) and senior southpaw John
Jenkins (4-2, 2.52 ERA)- are said by Redmen head
coach Wes Hairston (Tom Hairston, a Gallipolis resident and former Gallia County l.ocal Schon! District
superintendent, is his WlCle) to be equal in talent.
They_ may see some action out of the bullpen if
De~est falters - an unlikely prospect, according to
Hairston.
.
' ·
DePriest is also one of the top hitters for the Pedro
nine, as his .425 batting average, eight home fWlS and
32 RBis show. Also swinging lteavy lumber llild/or
flashing lightning for the Hill is Besco (.4SO, four
HRs, 21 stolen bases), who also plays some shortstop, first baseman Doug Stambaugh (.390, four
HRs. 25 RBis) an4 returning centerfielder Todd
Knipp, a sophomore who injured his left wrist earlier
in the season while sliding on the basepaths and bad
h1s cast removed on Wednesday. Though it remains
to be seen how well he has recovered frorit his injury
he will bring a .455 average, two homers and . IS
steals into the &lt;listrict's ftrst round.
"We're )'atient with the bat, and that comes
because we re experienced," said Hairston. "We hit
strikes, are inclined to hit and run and put lhe ball in
play, and because we like to keep infielders moving
we try to be a disruptive influence on the pitcher." '
Maldna contact - Making contact is something
Brett Wilson's Blue Devils have done quite a bit of
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
this year, a$ lhe hitting marks of Ryan Young (.509,
E11$les of Coach Dennis Eichinger
113 RBis), Davis (.386, three HRs, 16 RBis, seven
COL~US, Ohio (AP)- Here's this year's
claimed their fli'St-ever Division IV
doubles), Ryan Smith (.333, 16 RBis), Tony Cana·
1991 all-B1g Ten baseball team, as selected in a vote
sectional
championship Thwsday
I day (foUt HRs) and Rob Skidmore (13 RBis) show.
of conference coaches Friday:
by
posting
a 3-2 victory over
night
In addition, the Academy has stolen 45 of 58 (77.6%)
First team - I.B-Jeff Monson Minnesota·
Racine
Southern
to earn a bcrtll in
of the bases it has tried to take, which has helped in
2B-Tom O'Neill, Wisconsin; SS: Brelit Gates
the
district
tournament
at Athens
part to push this senior-laden squad to come-fromnesota, and Mike Smilh, Indiana· 38-Tim FlSnnelHigh
School,
where
the 12-7
behind victories on more than one occasion.
ly, Michigan; LF-Dan Ruff, Michigan· CF-Mike
Eagles
will
play
Latham
Western
On the mound, Skidmore, a converted first base·
Stein, Northwestern; RF-Matt WaJdi Ohio St:
(8-10).
.
man who can come to the hill from his shortstop
DH-Ken Tirpack, Ohio St; C-Mike Dtuant, Ohio
Ironically, the last time Eastern
position,
is the ftrst to provide relief. Fonner reserve
St.; P-Scott Klingenbcck, Ohio SL, and Dan Jones,
claimed a sectional crown (Class A
player
Brian
Hurt,
Brian
Roberts
and
Ryan
Young
. Northwestern.
.
at that time) was in 1986 and 1987,
comprise the rest or the bullpen picture.
Second team - IB-Andy Fairman Michigan·
when current assistant coaches'
Behind the plate, backstop Rod YOW1g had better
2B-Mark·Merila, Minnesota; SS-Phil Hollis, Pur:
Eddie
Collins and Brent Bissell
start having flashbacks to the second inning of the
due; 3B-Bubba Taylor, Ohio St.; LF-Dave
on the team. Collins· and
starred
MeiP. game, when he limited the damage to the Blue
Scheitlin, Purdue, _and Larry Sutton, IUinois; CFBissell
furthered their careers at
Devils' cause by throwing out the Maraudets' Gary
Ryan Lefebvre, Minnesota; RF-John Kopfer, MinRio
Grande
Collep. Collinl was a
Adams at second base in a steal attempt after Meigs
nesota; DH-Dave Barrett, Purdue; C-Joe Perona,
Class
A
all-11110
._mdllle
had scored the game's first run, because Hairston
Northwestern, and Sean Mulligllil, Illinois; P-RusE~
,..IOIMWIIellllllllly
sel Brock, Michigan, and Brett Backlund, Iowa.
.. promiacd to uae hls ~ean~'s speed whenever be geu
about tailing over tbe reins of tho
the chance. J)avis can help by doinJ twO thinas Third team - IB-Bubba Smith, IUinois, and
Eagles early in the year, but Jlllde
making convincing throws to fi(St base thst wiU keep
Kevin Goins, Indiana; 28-Jeff Anderson, Ohio St;
the decillon that thiJ It wlw he
the greyhounds close to the bag and making quick
SS-Mark Loretta, Northwestern; 3B-Byron
wanled
to do. Hilleadlnhlp. dllci·
delivenes to the plate that give Rod Young more
Bradley, Indiana; LF-Kcith Klodnick, Ohio St.;
plinc
and
tow-the·lllll'k IPJII'OICh
time to get off a quick, strong and accurate throw to
CF-Danan Hughea, Iowa; RF-Craig li\obcrtshaw,
was
one
of
the inped!enta !bat built
second base or third base while not sacrificing
Purdue; DH-Jeff Ramey,lndiana; C-Mike Matha
winner
this
year at Baaem.
strikel.
eny, Mk:biJID; P-,.Tim Smith, Ohio St., and Jason
"I
was
very
happy, of coune,
The rest of tbe pk:ture - Lower:bracket action,
Pfaff, Michigan,
.
that
we
won
the,ICCuonal,cspecialwhich wiU talcc place on Tuesday, May 21·, will fea(Matheny, 10n of Jerry and Judy Matheay or
ly ror ciur senlon," he laid. "We ICl
ture
Thornville Sheridan (15-8) vs. McD~;rmott
Reynoldlblll'l,ls tbe IJ'IDdiOD or Almer and Edna ·
some tCJala 11 the beginnlnl of the
· Northwest (9·10) at 2 p.m., and Greenfield MCClain
Matbeay, and of Warren ud Luella Keerer; all or
.
season. One of thole WIS 10 win.the
(23-4) vs. Wellston (22-6) at4:30 p.m.
Leon, W.Va.)

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel StaiT
GALLIPOLIS- Galli~ Aca~emy's baseball
team, making 1ts first entry mto district tournament
!"=lion for the ftrst time in 20 years, wiU seek to boost
Its 12-7 record. when the Blue Devils play Rock Hill
(17-!i)- a 4-0 victor over Ironton in last Tuesday's'
secuonal -on Monday at 4:30p.m. at Unioto High
School, near the Chillicothe Correctioruil Facili!r.
The last time the Blue Devils were in the district
tournament was in 1971, when cmrent GAHS boys'
b~k~tball coach Jim Osborne led the French City
mne mto th~ Class ~ district finals against Greenfield McClain. The T!Jers. down 3-2 going into lhe
bottom of the seventh mning, tied the game at 3-3 in
that frame and _eventually won 4-3 in 10 frames.
Larry DePriest, a senior strikeout artist and four·
year sW"te_J: whose 6-2 record (not 7-2 as was relayed
to the ~nbc Wednesday by Ironton Daily Tribune
sportswnter Jim Walker) is said to rest on an effecuve fastball and curve, .is scheduled to be the Redmen's $tarter. He ~ill face Clint Davis (1-1), the
starter who wasn't mvolved in the decision in last
T~~y's eight-!nning! 3-2 victory over Meigs in the
D1y1s1on II sect1o~al .m spite of chalking up eight
strikeouts and tunung m a walk total of zero in seven
. and one-third innings on the hill. This wiU be the sec-

Cabbage ••••.••••••• ~~ •• 19&lt;

rr•s GONE - T11at's wbat Oakland slugger
Dave Heudmon (left) Is ulidoubtedly tblnldng
after seudiDg Ibis C11arles N..,- pltcb int!J orbit

.-

sectional championship. The other !Ory lane at the sectional, ovcrcom .
goal was to act a winner every day mg Tornado Andy Bacr' s sensa•
no matter what happened during lienal pi !Ching.
Senior catcher Jason Hager ~!IS
the season. We wanted to be good
one of few in the area to nave tiie
sportsmen.
"Of the two goals, I am the most insid,e track on Baer's pitching.
proud of our behavior on the f10ld. Hager had two key hits in the EHS
As far as winning ball games, loss at Syracuse and two more in
everyone on the team contributed Eastern's regular season win at
to our success . Everyone was Eastern.
In the clutch Hager came
important in their own way.
"I want to thank my wife for through again, this time driving
supporting me and our decision to home Tim Bissen with the winning
return to coaching, and my son run in the eighth inning Thursday.
Senior members of the team are
Dane for waiting uJ) for me each
night when I got home. I want to Chris Adams, Aaron Wilson, Matt
thank my two assistant coaches for Finlaw, Jason Hager, Mark Murphy, Jerrod Barber and Mickey
an oulltlllding job.
"From the coaching standpoint, Bauer. Junior team members •
the deserve all the credit for ow include Tim Bissell, Michael
succea. Ow fans were just great, Smith, Brad Powell, Rod Newespecially all the mothers...! don't some, Wes Holter, Mike Newland
dilnk they missed a game. Thanks and Kyle Fausnaugh. Sophomores
are Scotty Baker, Chad Savoy
to the fatheJS a!Jo.
wl would like 10 thank the facul· Jeremy Buckley and Matt Michael:
,IY and staff for their support and Freshman team memben are Tyson ,
concern for our student athletics, Rose, Pat Ne.wland, Randy Kaylor,
the admlniatration for their confi· Todd Marcinko, Jared Ridenour •
'•
dcnce in my abilities and also for and Bill Bat~.
Game. time for the Eagles is
their support."
A t&amp;am effort was what put Tuesday at 4:30 at Athens High
Eastern over the hump and Into vic- School.
·

'

�May 19,1991
P~~g1

Pomeroy lldclleport-Gelllpolla, OH Point ..._,t, wv

C2 8un111rnmu tenllnet

May 11, 1111 •

1:'::1.::•• 'l:: t·._.J.a.r~t~~m~die bull. 111
Wilkin:Da:e•;;::
'*·

IIIIL11

~ side ~·

l•d..

JunLeylanchaid.

by
. ~ widr Allan11 le"'in
5-3.
.
~

"AU I could lhiat about was
111o1e 30 n - I had lett on baJo
in lhe Jut fo
" B
said.
ur games,
ream
Bream said he expected 10 be
lifted for a pial:b-hiuer after Paller- · aleA-baadcr, WlltCdJuslice.
"I looted over·at,lhe dugout
jusroutofbabit," Blum Slid.
•
"Sid was one or my favorite
j11ayen wben he was II Pittsburgh
buf lhll'sllll over now. He's 011 tbC

=

Pilllea 11111111« • 1ole bMJy mined' a diving catch

ands~ .t~~:!,&gt; ,Ctcl.~. .~~

·~-...
,_ ·~
ry.allowilll.tbn=eruns:slxlli!*
~he woa bis fourth -i&amp;h' deei·
ston.
Allrol5, Cardiull4
Eric YeldinJ's RBI sin&amp;le
capped a two-nan eigblh innin1 as
Hous~ ended a f~-pme losing
~belling SL. Lows II Busch Sra·
dium.
•
..
. Casey Ca!'daele s run:swrmJ
S!Jigle off reliever Lee Srruth (2-2)
tied the score. Candaelo wenr 10
second on the ~ow 10 lhe pla!O
and ,scored when righr fielder Felilt

ca Ytldln&amp;'slinllr.

1111 D *1'= (1-4) wu the win·
ner.
n·&amp;eel,CubaO
Dickie Tllan's rua-scorins sinlie willl two 01111 in lhe 16th inning
lifled Pblhddph!r over Chicqc at
Velll!IDS Sladium.
Dale Murphy opened the 16th
wilh a sinJle and advanced 10 second 0111 blOop sinale by Ricky Jor·
dan. After Qlilrlie lfayes slrill:k out
and Sreve Lake flied out, 'Thon .sin·
&amp;led 10 riJht-center off Les Lan·
easter(0-1) 10 score Murphy.
Tommy Greene (2-0), the fourth
Philadelphia Dileher, worked the ·

last four mrungs for the vtctory.
Expos3,Gianll0
. RhealllieveedrM~~~UISL
.aC oar· a' wll10d
pliC
ow .._, . ·

0

~reakscorelessueaalbanlnlh ,

mrung and Larry Walker 8Med a ·
two-run ~er as Moa.._rreal beat .'
San Franc:uco II CaMind r.t. '•
Rick Mahl.er and twp Bxpos .r
relievers com billed 011 a ~lliatl' · ..
with .Barry Jones (2-1) picking up
the vJCrory. LaCOIS fellro 1-4.
Me~ 4, ~I'll J. .
Frank Vtola puched a _stx-lliuer ··t
as New York bell Los AniiGies-! .. !
Darryl Strawbeny. It was illeMelll •·,.
thin1 sJraight .win and fifth ra aeven '
games on !herr West Coast alp.
. •,

SIWlllin&amp;- Bwa b.B~
bcmlldlbrlliflle 10 _ . . . . . ,
"l'¥1: neVa' baeD I pin;Hin«. .
A..fieLti. COt by Maddrlet
· I've never billa pldat il," .._. · in twO
a 1~- ill 1111 . . said. "Tbat was my tina Ji ;'Halt. an4 ur. Jtadl-' "Nast) BO;i1
homer in my caner.
·•
1 plrclled CICI&amp; of lhrull ia lht last
. "And I doll'r evca remember rwo bmiap.·Jtancly Mycn {l-1)
getting any bits off Hurar ill •1. gave • - bit iDif one Wilt ill 1
career. I'm sure I haYe, bel&amp; I a t,, 13 ....,., .s !tab l)lbblo C'UClr..
remembctlhem.''
'·•.
'' out tow IIIII Wllllld&amp;wo illl.,a.eo
. Obvioosly, Ilia
previous iapaUte 10 lO•for-,10 Ia: ~ .
hilS oft' Hurst clidn't -....-o~ cum
an lmP,fCUioD. No. S U4 No.. 6'•
.,.._ twa of ov... wu 1111*
SUJIC did.
.
·. ·
lllllifylq to ......... l'IIIIIO•w
'' liurll (4·1) hadll't 1*-., I ;· ..................'lali4Jai1S
• ,' homer ill 33 imillp .S llactJr't Jaa " lll'allad all 1 1• · •.
a~ since Jat Au&amp;- 26111 H ~·
--s. · 01
ton, winnina hillasltnU . .... · -~ ..
sions. A pllr of sin&amp;lelby M tr• ' - JIW.)' ~I )Jr ar. lht . .
Dwx:an- who encled up,_. ....._ fan w11111, bell lOt . . . . . MYlliiL
hilS - ._all' !be Reds ~ ~,~ 1
. Aint.
.
· oft Hurst throiJIII dle&lt;f!ltl:ti!ia · lti Tl II* IIIIa 18 I lat.
illllinp.
. .
. • :'
Tile 1Ift
ocr ,.. ""'

row:

5

•

a

•

•

•

•

••a
5

, , ,. ' . :

,

Scoreboard

k.

e

Dublin hu ·'-r's· .
--4· •:
....
' h.:-..1- . . ., ., .,......,......,..., ·

.oWo'(.,. ·- .

Eul DIYIIIoD

b:;:

1..t
'

...--

..

,

.,:.:r.:·

'

'

r

,l

:PURE

. AND

Il
I

•RESISTS PEELING
•MILDEW ~nd FADE RESISTANT

'i
~ I

I
41/l
41/l
71/l
I
I

SIMPlE ·

REG. PRICE

'18.20

W L
........... 21 14

S..nle

Pet.

OUlud
........ 20
T••
·...........
16
......... 16

14
14
~
IS
c.Iifomlr ......... 18 17
Minnelola
....... 18 17
Krmro City "' " " 13 20

· Friday's finals

Seaalo t, New ymt 0
Balt:im.me S, Cili!crnia I

ctow.land II , O:ilrnd 6

T!e~~2~!~~y

Mil-

Minrwma atDcuail.1:3S p.m.

r ........ Otlco... :Z:3S p.m.

Milwallkoe "Kauu CUy, 2:35p.m.

BGIUI:I II Tau, 3:05 p.m.

" " " ' "

Pd.
.647
.606
.S29
.486
. .486
.4S7

GB

11/l
4

s 1/l

s 1/l
61/l.
GB

Sra Diqo ........ 16 19 .457
'"'"'" 13 20 .3~
Sral'ru:cilco ...... 12 23 .343

3

'

Hatchback, 2.2L EFI engine, 5 speed, power

!

st•ring &amp; brakes, AIR BAG. 113272

$

*

. I
:

17

I

I

I

·.

·XE, 4 dOor, allllln*. CRiiscJ, till, power steerllt't brill#, llnltll ..... PI'* lllirroq. 36

. M'G. III.I

......... 17 16

1

5
7

..,..... S:oi ~.. .331.
RUNs-DoSbioldl, lda:uul, 26; fMc.
Gt!fl', Sin~·· 2A; ~. Pltibdcl-

»:

pltia,
Bor:illo, PiUIIJ:uah. 22;
k'l'hompton•.San Franciaco. 22; Smd,baJ. Clticqo, 22: V111Siy0. PIUibw&amp;h,
22.
'
RBI-Waut. Sramncilco, 33;

42; S:muoi.LoaAnploo,42; , _ St
LouU.41.
DOI181.ES--J- St LouU. 13: Boalllo,
Plaob:qi:. 12: IIMoaio. Ciocim&amp;li. II:

1 -Ad..... llls.dlllrf, Cl:icaao,

9.

TIUJ'Il!S--Ca:: - . 4· TG·

wynn. San Jlleto, 4: Pelder, Sra ~.
ca, l; LGaau.lcrE. aou-n. 3; TFemandcz, San Dielo, 3.

HOME RtJPa..:-MhchcU, San Franc:ilco.
10; FMoOrifr, Srn Dioao. 9: o.--.
Chie~aa. I; OBeJL Chicaao; I; Jobnaon,
New Yolk, I; Waut, San Fr.ncilco, I.
STOL,BN BASES--&lt;:alanon, New Y....,
22; DoSI:ieldo, Monuoa1. 16: Ni""- A:·
lr:tll, 13; on.an, Monu.l, 12;
CoJdoron. -...:I.IO; OSmitlt, St
LoW, 10; Robmu, San Diqo, 10.
PrrCHINO (4 docilionl )-llManilu:r,
Loa Al:plot, 6-1, .BS7, L72; A~"'f· A:·
lr:tla, S-1 , .133, 1172: Smiloy, Pi........
.5·1 , .833, 354: Viola, New Yar:k, .5-l,
.133, 2.12; ZSnUII:, PittlbwJI:, S·l, .833,

4.5: Gllvine. Adlnta. 41 : 4 arc lle4 w\lh
39.
SAVES-LcSmith, StLouis, 11; Dibble,
Cincirmllti, 10; O.Smith, Chicago, 9; Lef·

fer\1, San Die8o, I; Franco, New YOlk, 7:
MiWilli!mo. Plliladolpltia. 7.

Stanley Cup finals
Plttsbur&amp;b vs. Mlnnesoca
WedntiUy,MayU
Mim-. 5, Pitubwah 4
Frldlf, Mayl7
Pi.tubu~Jtl 4, Minnaou 1 1 MriCIII Lied J. J
Svndoy,MayU
PialbuJab at Minnclota, S:OS p.m.

NBA playoffs

Friday's fiDals
~7,Srallie&amp;o3

Pbi1rdelohir I, CI:U:qo 0. 16 inninp
Allonll 9, l'illlbuoah!

-S.SLI.Guil4
New Yodt 4, Loa AI:.... 2
MoalrW 3, ~ fJOncioco 0

p...,-. .333: 1 -Sti.Guil, .331: TG·

STRIKEOUfS-Gooden, New Yodr:, S4;

PeL
.548
.S4S
.515

Cincinnati

Le••

Bene~, San Oiqo, 4.5; Rijo, Cincinnttl,

Wesl Division
'1\' L
Adanll
...... ..... 17 '14
Loa Anplor ...... 18 IS

. National

BATI'ING (90 1t b:lr)-mlmrio,
Cinrirmari, .367; DUo. HoultOn, .360;
f'Mc:Oziff, Slli Di.o, '.339; McGee. San

2.15.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eas! Division

·OR GIMMICKS

nil. I; Jcltulull. Tuu, I.

26: Kzut. Pl:ilrdolpl:ir, 2.5: Baniila. Pitta·
bwoh. :14: 1al:oooa. ~ Yodt. 24.
H11'5-'!UwJm. Sra ~· 46; Waut.
8111 Fnncioco, 43; FMcOriff, S111 Dioso.

Mawa-7,1WouCily S, IOiMin&amp;&amp;
.Ts•6, ·8 allm.4

W. L
Plu.b:qh .......,. 22 12
Now Y..t ........ 20 13
SL LoWa
.......... 18 16
17· 18
Plliladelpha ....... 17 18
Manboa1
.... ..... 16 19

STlUlCI!OUI'S-Rr"'- r ..... 63;

Cllmcn, Bo.tat, Sl; RJotu.m, Se~ulc,
Sl; Mcllooo.U. Cltiooao. 48; Cu:diold,
~. 4S: Gtnta.IC.,.. City, 4S.
SAVI!S--DW'nd, TOfOdto. 12; Rwdan.
- · 12; l!ckasley, Orklrod. 9; Mont·
,......,., Krao:: City, 9; Hrrvoy, Cali!Ol'

Caldoluo, Mcmii'Oiol. %7:1,-. Atlmlr,

SeluloatNno YOlk. J :30 p.m.
Colifomi.t rlllahimDto. I :3S p.m.
Oakland It Cle\oeland, 1:3S p.m.

$15.20

1.000, 2.10; Flllloy, Coliromil, 6-1, .!S7,
3.86.

GB

.600
$88
1/l
.533 21/l
.SI6
3
.SI4 .
3
.514"
3
.3~
7

Today's ea111es

fino._=

'
•

Conference sem1flnals
FridaJ, May17
Dccmil. tt7, Bolton 113, or. Jlrdroit winl

seria4·l

Conference naals
(Best-of-seven)

Tboy played S.aturday
N•w Yin (OulinJ:I-2) II Loa Anpl'"
(lleld:« ).&lt;), 3 p.m.
Moanal (Boyd 1-4) at San Fl'lnCilco

(8wUu 2-l). 4,05 p.m.
San Oicc.o (PCUDCWI 0.1) atCinciMad.
( - _ j :J.l), 7,os p.m.
ctUcaao (Bodcie ~)at Philadelphia
(Co• f·l), 7,ol p.m.
Piulburtl:
J.O) " A~~ao~~
(OkviiiO S-2), HO p.m.
HOIIIUIIl (Hcmandll&amp; ()..2) at St. Louil
(B.SnUd: J.l), 8,ol p.m.

SaturdtJ, Mayll

L.A. Laktnat Portland, 3:30p.m.
Sun~J, Maf It

DetroJt •

Otic:•ao. 3:30p.m..

cr""""

.- .;.

·.. agg····~ . •

,.

Today's camos

Piaaburah atAtlan\1, 2:10p.m. ...
s~ Dicpat Cineinn1d,l:t' p.m.

fl4n miley rll'll ~~epa Jilchial,

Houaonat St. J..ouil. 2:JS p.m.
New Y._ttLol AnacJ•,4:0S p.m.
• Montreal al San Franaaea. 4:05 p.m.
Chie~ao at Philadelphil, S:OS p .~

'·'I wu hei!Wlt 1111rit. I diitn'r

;ha'r=~IC~:riO~~=~=
'Whii O
"liCI

de," Filippi lllid.
reaDy ~ plldllf IIIId IIIII
helfl eyt I Joe. '~'!!ire's not IIIIlCh c
daltJ lla1e11'1' . . . . . .
•. '
·~But "'Zf11 lila bar ID 'l it

.625
$83
.oilS
.oilS
. .387
.31S
.37S

C
.
lo
' ic•
r
• •

the,..._

avu'illl"
. . . . hid her dou\lat

12
IS
17
17
19
20
20

'

I've

, When S~ llat Cll llal JIIII*Iems Filippi ts quiclr &amp;O ofter
advice.
·
••Jessi is very paticat witll
Theresa," Deal said . .''Owe of ·.
Jcssi'slll'allfrlas a c"th- il
involwmelll'Willllbe pW I Ifill

·""""" 20
T - . ·-·-.. 21
Dcvoi1
......... 16
Ma...... 16
o...trod
"""" 12
B . - _ ..... 12
New Y..t ...... 12

Mb
(l'uaa2-2), 1:15 p.m.
"-\alo (S..., ~ ot Now Yodt (s.ndor~a~+l),l:lOJ:
'
OUlud (!Ia ' 0.2) "Clewllnd
{Nol)ll -2), 1:3S p.m.
Toiodto(Key 5·2) at Chic.lao (Hibbard 21~ 7:0S p.m.
Crlif...,. (Finley 6-1) 1t B~""'
(J.M.IIobio.., H~ 7:lS p.m.
(Au""' H) u twuu City
(S.Davil 2-4~ S:OS p.m.
Baaan (C.rmcm 6-.()) at Teu.t (Roacn 2·
3), 1:3S p.m . .

l

to. ~llllicatt. ' llicl, "You . . ,.

.

GB

I

SALE PRICE

10 have a ltl d CGifidcnce 11 pitciL
I Ded how ID t:ap1 wiib 1llo
beftl wuld. And .. pan of dae
bearin&amp; world."
"She c:ommlllliciiDtJ well,'' raid
Deal, who drodlltt of Sllli·
ley's JIJWIL rp as ooe dill rauldn't 1
be CMII:IIIIIC. "SIIe'a I . . . ,....
er. She's not Fill 111 10 out. driR ·
and pilclla peifoet..., lilt •'II
keep us in
Htr whM!'
g~ GD ~~~e. mo w
bat&amp;m. She's not aa ouwpca
·
pi~her, butlhe aera it ovenho

plalc...

Pet.

Minnot... l,o.,...itl
OU..,oS,T-3

r

the aix-root-rour.Snrilot 1181 .

season, sbo is die "'••• acb' . ..
pirehef. 'ThiOiiab 71 inainp., $111)0
ley; has a 2.42:nA ad' 4S ada- .
ouiB.
· ..
Deal said Smiley Iw llad ~
problem CGPinl wilh playill&amp; ~ty IIOflba1l
'
' $iniley, who cu rud IJpl 1M
doasn't necc110 use lip laJIIIII

)

.I

, •• .

~~=~~'

~=~

l
I

~ clllf. Jeul RJllpi • I •
1 jj!•, *ied•N, I •ltiday lli&amp;k4llll · FM ~ itJ1 die llllller oaoDavls Ia abe RCOIICI Ian!WI oi'Jirlet1,hel.,. SmileY IIDaup various "'J:a-llitl IIIII'.._ f6llelp11oat cll7 lflalat'tN~ilh 'I L pe .-eat Rlverlroat Sladlum WWcll tile
jlmo sfb',1 r;0111 ,
hilfca~er,..,. P-3.
Redl-7-3. (A.P)
•
"A catcher is I pitcher' I Ilea
friend.' Dublin COICil Bry~~~ Dctal.
said. "They communicare

woU witlaout lla'rlaa
•hoar.
..........___Jauie·' It

L

West Division

r..l
1(

.

W

1

..:tai'1lli
. . -~··.....
" • .
'at ..
'
...._
.A.-._..an.hn
· y lfl
flo •
.J'.IIIl\IWP,M dae . , _ 101&amp; 10
CAUGHT IHatJNDOWN- The Reds' Erie Da¥11 Is caqht lu
l..u.,,!) I
~)
IJ
die
~I
II
.._
~~
,
·
1Uihlon
..ta II llniiDd aacODCl alter Su Dieto first buemn
7

.1141
·

r4-0,t.ooo.
......, ~.t.CIW,
2.Y~; ~ - ·
1.62; a-., r .... 4-0,

AMERICAN LEAGUE

." He .got it swre4," De-- ~ ._..,. ., •
·' · '
· ' · ··.
said.
. '
'"'1 h ~~TillY'- ptldu. ~··
;,..j
lililly Haottwllld D • 1111 !t iia'tkrf._ ·c,-..,.: · , · ..
loWed lbo In T{ wl* I
IIIII • . IIMw••• II 1M NL il wu
Hlil Molrll!lc 'I f 1111111 wldt ,Jlu ' 1•t.~Mml 3; Nlsd I·
tit lhe san 3-3.
·• ~: Dlr&amp; 1, OicL_ 0 lll 16 !pl-~~;
·tdanl&amp;et Ore&amp; liddocla,.. . .;· ~ 5.-IL . 4; " " ' .
.;
,
· .
.
.., 1.111.• •'" 2; IIIII Malna13,
.
Sal? '•l'O. ·
. •
:
· • •
,, . • ll/l!i#I,PII'ilta3 .
5141
lllll·holile nm illd
.
.
• ~ .. ,, ' ~is~... PlltAuiJh Plnre,
..lsn~n•co•
didl'iMIIIIII,.....
~~-v·
~~ · r~ ·.. ; ; • Tllttillra'wen~l7-G.,....
I "'llrrr.'J 1a JIIUI'IJ'IICe
·~ .... tu , ....,&lt;=~
· ~ ~·;~o: · ~~- AI ', lhafint
DVBLIN,
·~ Thaf ,..... Jd J'IIId llliD sip a a
coe-rcllioe llil ui a] 'I It f.' rr- ..,...,, wldl daa · AUaau

:·

up I0 runs, six of them euned, and
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
10 hits.
The Indians loaded lhe bases
CLEVELAND (AP) - Brook
Jacoby homered and drove in four · with two outs in the third 011 a dou·
runs as the Cleveland Indians ble by Mart Lewis, a walt and 1111
picked up where they left off infield single. Riles bobbled Carlos
againsa Oakland, routing the Ath· Baerga's hard ground~r for an
etror, Chris James followed with a
letics 11-6 Friday nighL
Two weeks ago, the Indians gor two-run single and Jacoby hit an
40 hits in bearing Oakland 20-6 and RBI single.
In lhe fourth. Baerga hi! a two15-6. Cleveland' then lost eight· of ·
run
single and James had an Rl!I
· lhe next nine games before contin·
single,
finishing Moore: Jacoby
uing its assault againsr the Afhlet, ·
then
hit
!lriscoe's
second pitch into
its wid! I I more hits.
the
left
field
sears
for hiS second
Nearly 37 percent of lhe Indihome
run.
James
drove
in a teainans' runs dais year have come in
record
nine
runs
in
the
Indians'
20·
lhe three big vicrories over Oak·
6
win
at
Oakland
on
May
4.
land. Cleveland ended a four-game
The A's scored single runs in
losing srreak, while the loss
dropped the Alhletics inro second the flfSI on Jose Canseco's saaifice
place in the American League fly, in the fourlh on Terry SteinWest, one-half game behind Seat· bach's sacrifice fly and in the seventh on Dave Henderson's RBI sinlie.
Jacoby's RBI single capped a gle. Riles had a sacrifice fly in the
four-run rally in lhe lhird, made eighth, Henderson doubled home a
possible by a two-out Crror by ·Ibird run in the ninth and Harold Baines
baseman Ernest Riles. Jacoby then · had an RBI single.
Cleveland scored once in the
capped Cleveland's six·run fourth
with a three-run homer off reliever rrrs.t on Lewis' RBI single.
In .other games, Seattle edged
John Briscoe. All 10 runs in the
New York 1-0, Texas beat BostOn
two innings c:ame with two ours.
Tom· Candioui (5-1) gave up 6-4, Minnesota downed Detroit 8three runs on II hits in eight 1, Chicago topped Toronto 5-3,
innings . It was the first time in Baltimore beat California 5-1 and
eight starts dais year that he Milwaukee defelled KansaS City 7Sin 10 innings.
allowed more than two runs.
Mariners 1, Yankees 0
Mite Moore (5·2) lasted only
Sure,
it's stlllllge 10 see lhe Seat·
three and two-thiid innings, giving

Jlol, ..,..

,

.B•IIIS'aenwl)'a,WJ!ralle"" II ,. _...., ••, ~IIMMJ,...spcU.
·
· ;. tJou --Ilia fblllilit iii t1in1

IWI!'O a( W

I

1*8 Ill d'llullcil '

bcr• Afllir evecy PitA slle'U 111p
bet arad loc* •• 1 Sill .... 10

conceallllle a lcM ...e MCI loot.

II'OIIIICIIO rea

are."

Deal raid aa laleld pop • pre. .
tenll lhc 11101t prvbltmt f« Slli·

Joy.'

~~ta-·-

lrr

•

SALE PRICE
REG. PRICE

'15.60

better.

"Whar's great is dill everybody
wrote us .off when we were 0-6,"
Mariners manager Jim Lefebvre
said. "I knew we'd bounce bact.
We were mad when got off 10 lhll
stan, but we never got down."
The Mariners, behind Randy
Johnson and Bill Swift. won !herr
fifth sJraight game. 'This is the lat·
est they've eva- been.in rrrst place,
lUld the win put lhem seven games
over .500 for just the second time.
· The other rjme c:ame in 1982.
"I'm happy we're in first place
for a day, but it's only May. We've
WINS CHAMPJONSIDP- The McDollald's co-ed volleyball
got four monlhs 10 go,'' Johnson · team ended liS season at 14·3 after clalmiug tile 0.0. Mcintyre
said.
Park District Volleyball Leacue and the Park District's tournament
Seattle slipped one-half game
champlonsbip •.In the fronl row are (L·R) Skip Jolmson and Marcus
Oil Stain
past Oakland, which again got
Geiger. Standing are Shannon Huston, Brenda Wilson, Lori Ptn·
13.49 gal.
pounded by Cleveland. Two weeks
nell, Robin Shaver and Kareu Sprague. Teammates not pictured
·
are Missy Kitcben and Dat Klingler.
ago, the llidians scored 3S runs on
40 Iiits in winning twice in Oak·
· Deck Stein
land, and rhis time they got 11
16.95 gal.
more hits.
Johnson (3-3) gave up three hits.
and struck out 10 before leaving
after the sevenlh innin&amp; willa stiff.
ness in his lower back. Swift fin·
STEWART - Driving the But- Drilling #55 .
ished willa one-hit relief for his
lin
Chassis, Whaley's Auro Pans·
rtfth save.
Diddle also came home second
Tim Leary (2-3) lost despite Facemeyer Lumber number 10 in the fast car dash.
allowing just three hits in eight and from Albany, high-flying Larry
In the Late Models, Bobby
OLYMPIC
Bond drove 10 his second vicrory of Davison posted fast time over a
two-third innings.
·
Waterguard
.
lhe season with a prestigious win in field of 28 cars, set.ting the stage
Rangeu 6, Red Sox 4
Multi-Surfare
Kevin Reimu got three hits and the fourth annual Earl Hill Memo- f~r lhe fast ear helmet dash. Jack
or Wood Clear
drove in two runs as host Texas rial race II Skyline Speedway.
Boggs claimed the dash over Bob
.
Racine
driver
~ob
Adams,
Jr.,
beat Boston for its fiflh straight
Adams, Mike Balzano, Wolfe ;.
m lhe McDonald's IIA55 crossed Davison and feature winner Larry
victory.
S9,99 gal.
Kevin Brown (3·3) gave up nine the line second ahead of national Bond.
39.99 5 gal.
hits in six innings before three driving champion "Black Jaelc"
Delmas Conley, Andy Bond,
Boggs
of
Grayson,
JS:y.
Next
across
OLYMPIC
relievers finished it. Jeff Russell
Greg Carpente~ and Mark Banal
th~ line was Bobliy Davison, Mike
Mildew Cherk
.got two outs for his eighth save.
won the heats.
Greg Harris (1-S) was knocked Balzano, Tye Long, Kenny John.
Phil
Davis
of
Gallipolis
won
the
Multi-purpose Wash
son and Mark Banal of Imperial, Sportsman A-main .
out in the third inning.
Pa., with Andy Bond, and Scou
Brewers 7, Royala 5
Racing continues next Friday at
Dale Sveum ·had Ill! RBI single Wolfe in the Anderson's Home 7:30 with all five classes. Coming
during a four-run rally in the ninth Furnishings-Ebers Gulf and LotiO July ;! will be lhe third leg or the
VIne"'·· ''"'"'
from Racine, respectively, fol· Outlaw All-Ohio Sprint Speedweek
Gellipolio
446·1278
inning, lhen hit a two-run triple in 1114
.
· at Skyline for the All-Star Circuit
Mon ·Fri. 7 · 6:30;
the Hlth as Milwaukee won at lowing them.
Sot. 7-CI:
10-9
Bobby HiH:-of Greenwood, of Champions Sprint Cars.
Kansas City.
.,
appropriarely
won
the
W.Va
Reliever Mark Davis (0-1) was
rile loser. Chuck Crlm (2·1) went Semi-Late A-main in the memory
one and one-lhird innings for lhe of his fathu, claiming the win over
victory and Julio Machado got the Racine's Chris Diddle in the J.D
last out for his first saw.
.
Twins 8, Tigers l ·
At Tiger Stadium, Scou Erick·
son (6·2) won his sixth srraighr
stan and sent Detroit to its sevenlh
consecutive loss.
Junior Ortiz doubled off Bill
Gullickson (4-2) in the fifth and
WILL MErT
WILL BOWL
scored on Greg Gagne's single,
giving Minnesota a 2-1lead.
LADIES TRIO
6:30 pni
7:00 pm
TUESDAY
White Sox 5, Blue Jays 3 ·
May 28
May 28
lEAGUE
Craig Grebeck's two-run double
broke an eighth-inning tie and sent
6:30pm
7:00 pm
Chicago past Toronto at Comiskey
WEDNESDAY
WEDNESDAY MIXED LEAGUE May 22
Pari&lt;.
May 29
'The White Sox loaded the ~ses
against Mike Timlin (3·1) on two
7:00pm .
MEN'S TRIO • 6:30 pni
walks and an error by shortstop
THURSDAY
May 23
May 23 .
Rene Gonzales, and Grelleck doulEAGUf
bled off Jim Acker for a 4-2 lead.
Carlron Fisk added a sacrifice fly.
6:30 pm
SUNDAY . ADULT-JUNIOR 6:00pm
Donn Pall (1-1) piic!)ed one
Muy 19
May 23
lEAGUE
inning for the victory.
Orioles S, Angels 1
Ben McDonald beat visiting
Lanes available for a church league or any
California with a six-hitter and
Mike Devereaux got three hits,
industrial plant or organization that is
stule three bases and scored twice
KIPLING
SHOE
CO.
·
.
interested in forming a league.
for Baltimore.
McDonald (2-2) has won twice
against the Angels this season. He
has .a 10.12 ERA in his other
games.
. .
Devereallll. singled imd scored in
the rrrst against Scott Lewis (1-4).
Devereaux singled, stole second
and scored on Dwight Evans'. single in the third.

Bond, Hill, Davis claim wins
at Skyline Speedway Friday

. S~YLINE. LANES
SUMMER LEAGUES

.Taylor's
Berry
Patch

'

.,.... die NlM'I

tle Mariners in rrrst place. But is
lhat any weirder than abe way the
Cleveland Indians are whipping the
Oakland Athletics?
An intriguing season got even
mDf\1 interesting Friday ~ghi when
the Mariners rook over the 10p spor
in the American League West.
They did it willa a 1-0 victory in
New York, coupled wilh Cleve·
land's 11-6 clubbing of Oakland.
The Mariners have never had a
winning season in lheir 14-year
hisrory -and after opening Ibis
season with sill straight Joaes, it
didn'tloot lite it would get much

STRAWBERRIES

iho~l I

•HIGHLY WASHABLE
•WATER CLEAN·UP
•SPATI.ER·LESS FORMULA

wv

Jacoby's lumber leads Tribe
to 11-6 rout .of Athletics Friday

Bi-~~~~;' b.~!P!!~~:fl.C~~l}o
7-3
vic.~ory
over
San
Diego.
.
;
J::*'...:!:
A.P~ Wrt . . •· . 1111 .. , anat oltWr 1·7
CINCiNNA'TI..(AP) -01 - BJ'IUI didn'rlilla 1111 ocldiiJ;M - . _._
hPJ ...
11YOI'-"1 IIlia a
Bruce HunL
· ·
•eJri-.
BJ'IIIll,wilbjclatfiwlllirallela. ... tIe.-,.
.122 &amp;Yera1a tlail 1011011 , ...-r.
""Wa .._'lW •ll:incl·of
called upoaiO piarh hit ill ... lblll · c I
11 .._ I ca • 10 .s
inning Friday~ widl 1M 111b a IWiiQh " l.ildoch W.
Cincinnati Reds ·
Saa Diqo "'AIId 1 waai 10 11row 1nace i
3-0:
bad -fklenc8 lie could win iL
Hurst bad bcal n 1 fw 111 drll He' 1 batII Ollt most coaslateal
poinr, allowiDJ jut a plir of Jia.. . pitcUI', ucl !bat's the auy you
gles. And he'd had litiM trOUble• Willi oa die IIIOIIIICL"
willa Brt&amp;P iD die Jllll- 1
, . Tile 1event11 m.ma - · r any
had a .14lfliferime I\WIJIC
11ore pleataar diu lilt lixlh for
the leA-blader
,
.• Hunt. He pw C1p 1 cae-oullliDJic!
One lwinl CJ.e~~C~ all r1r11.
111 Joe Olivtr ad a double 10 Bra&amp;·
Bflllll hit a finl-pilch a- 10 &amp;•· OreJ Maddux relicvccl and
start a w-.
. . rally in die lixdl, Harcbct llir a JII)UIIdlr 10 1«cwd
then dooNed 10 • up lhc Ill' 1 ta • 1'1111 ,.._, ....._ dllvw
run an illniDJ Jacr u lhc Reds Ill· . llc.e wu 1110 lila 10 Jlltlirrt r•
lied for a 7-3 vicaary.
ner llrrJ Llrtin. l&gt;IIICIII diu

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

$12.6

$49°

0

OVER INVOICE .

As you know,:car Buying is Serious Buslness. It lnvolves serious money.

Perhaps you've been putting off buying that new car or truck you so
seriously need. Weijo, now ... Thanks to a serious new Pricing Policy at
Turnpike of Gallipolis ... You can. buy any new Ford car or truck for *49
Over Invoice. This is not a sale ... Not a special promotion ;,. But this ts
.now the every day low price ... Only at 1\lmpike of Gallipolis: •49 Over
Invoice on any new Ford car or truck. Invoices are posted on all new cars
and trucks, so shop Turnpike of Gallipolis when we're open or closed and
check our exclusive low pricing.
· Why Pay More Somewhere Blse?
49 f)VER INVOICE ••• :
THAT'S 1'HE PRICE EVERY DAY AT TURNPIKE OF GALUPOLIS
lt'a No Wonder Turnpike UndeneU. Tlloae Who Won't Be Undersold!

.

..., . ,. en.,.,..........

f .

OPENING EVENINGS 4-8
SATURDAY 4-8

i

CAROLINA
AND SUPPLY COMPANY

KERR RD.- GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

614-446-8692
245-5178
'

"\
I~

.

·I

•

'

At TUftaplke 01 GeDipoDI, We An 0?1111 Oat ror Au 1'be BallnHL
'49.00 OYerlnvoloe, l'fwJ DQ, E•wtl .Dq, Eve17 De~

·'

.'

.'

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv .

- Page C4 Sunday Times Sentinel

May18, 1881

OH-Polnt

Detroit bumps Boston from.NBA .playoff scene with 117-113 win
By HAllRY ATKINS
. AP Sports Writer
'• AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)
- They used to play games filled
with passion and hate: Now the.
Detto1t Pistons and Boston Celtics
·have ·gleat respect for one IIIOther.
And the games somehow keep getling bettec and better.
: The Pistons, lrying to become
• only the third team to win three
: consecutive NBA championshi~.
; ~ot an eight-point lift from Isiah ·

'fhomas fn overtime Friday night
and ousted the Celtics 117-113 in
Game 6 of the Eastern Conference
semifinals.
Detroit, makinf ill fifth consecutive lp}a!W m dJe confermce
finals. will Opal apinst the Bulls

in Chicago on Sunday a1Umoon.
The game was tied at 105-105
after reauJatioo and BOIIOO toot a
quick four-point lead in overtime.
Then Thomas too1c over, lllthough
he claimed to be aided by divine

ioeeneatioo.

Thomas, who finished with 17
points, began his crunch-time run
by banking in a three-pointer as the
24-second clock ellpired. He had
two more baslre!s llld a free throw.
all at the expense of Boston rookie
Dee Brown, in overtime.

:Hunters bag
~ 5,008 turkeys
:in Ohio in 1991 ..
•'

By JOHN WISSE
DivisiOn ot WildHfe
• COLUMBU.S (AP) - Ohio's
: 14th consecutive record turkey
: hunting season showed the comin• ued success of a long-term restora; tion effort by the Division of
•Wildlife that began in the 1950s.
: Hunters killed 5,008 wild
; turkeys during this year's spring
• hunting season Aoril22-May 11.
: Following a ?ailed attempt to
•stock: the birds in southeast Ohio by
: releasing 1,400 farm-raised
; turk:eys, the division released wild
· turlceys that were trapped wid! nets
: in West Virginia, Kentucky, Texas,
· Alabama, Missouri and Florida
. from 1956 to 1963.
: Since the early 1960s, wild
· turlceys have been l1'8ppCd in south: east Ohio counties for release else:·where in the state. These efforts .
•brought Ohio's wild turkey popula~ tion from a status of extirpation
' dating from 1904 to a modem-day
:record population of more than
:40,000 birds.
; The state •s first modern-day
• turkey hunting season was held in
: nine counties May 4-7, 1966. Not
; until 1976 did hunten take more
·.than I 00 birds when 139 turkeys
were l::illed during a two-week
sprin~ hunting season held in 14
, counues.
; -Following a slight decline in the
: 1977 turk:ey season harvest, hun~
. have since set new harvest records
; annually since the 1978 hunting
' season. In 1978, there were 147
: wild turkeys k:illed by 1,711
' hunters during a two-week season
: open in 18 counties. This year,
· more than 26,000 people hunted
, turlceys during a three-week season
open in 38 counties.
Last winter, Division of
Wildlife personnel trapped and
relocated ~2 birds to Fairfield,
: Licking, l\shtabula, Lorain,
• Mahoning, Portage, Coshocton,
• Perry, Washing10n and Clermont
counties.
.·
Srate wildlife offiCials say they
, are evaluating the addition of sev; era! more counties to be opened to
1 turk:ey hunting under a five-year
: strategic wildlife 11111118gement plan
· developed in 1989. Among the
: counties un4er consideration are
: Medina, Warren, Lorain, Wayne
' and Morrow.
'I

.__ :Northwestern,
:Ohio State win
, COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) • Middle relievers don't usually get
: decisions and pitchers don't
: get hits. Northwestern's Tom
t
• proved differently at the Big Ten
I Conference tournament
: Sandt pitched five innings of
relief for his third win or the season
and had three RB!s on two doubles
, as Northwestern eliminated Indiana
10-6 Friday.
Host Ohio State beB.t Minnesota
15-5 in lhe day's second gllme.
,
Northwestern (27-27-1 overall,
1-1 in the 10umament) and Minnesol8 (35-24-1, 1-1) will play in
today's first game to decide Ohio
Slate's championship series opponent, also scheduled for today.
Indiana concluded the season at
38-23-1 , 0-2.
Northwestern too1c 2-0 lead on
Joe Perona's first-inning hotller.
Indiana scored four runs in the
lhird but die Wildcats tied it 4-4 ·in
the bottom of the inning.
Sandt's fifth inning double. gave
Northwestern a 6-4 lead. His double in the seventh, and Bill Koeh 's
two-run single, highlighted a fourrun inning for a 104 lead.
Sandt (3·6), wbo relieved starter
Jason Wallace ' in the fourth,
allowed two ru~ on four hits and
two walks and sti'uck out seven.
SbortsiOp Mark Loret18 relieved
Sandt with two on in the ninth to
preserve the victory.
Bob Scafa fell to 3-4.
Ohio State's three-year starting
quarterbac!c', Greg Frey, had two of
the Buckeyes' five home runs and
fiveRBis.
, Trailing 3-2, Ohio State (50-11,
,;2-0) scored six runs in the second ·
as Dean Mueller h1t a two-run
homer and Frey hit a lhree-run shot
to chase Minnesota starter John
Lowery (8-4).
, Frey's sillth homer of the sea· ·
)1011 a two-run shot m the seventh,
save Ohio swn t4-3 lead. Keith
Xlodnick llld Mite Durant added
in the dlird and ninth.
~ Smith's l011pat pitching
butiaJ of the ....... elaht innings,
improved bim 10 10;4.
.
Ohio State, w1nner of nme•
~aaiJhl games, has never won ~
Big ten rourunent In five JRVI·
Ous appeamnces clalin&amp; 10 1982.

s:::l;

a

1'01

' . "··.

In Memorial Tournament's second rmma

Perry shoots course record 9-under-par 63

But it was the three-pointer !hat injuries to key players. lhroughout
broke the Celtics' hearts, wiping the series, made up 1n emollon
what they Jacked in hMithy'bodies.
out their hard-earned lead.
In
Game S, the Celtics oven:~~~~e an
"Somebody Ht:d. I d!dn't ca!l
1
8-point
lead only to see the Pisbank," Thomas §Ud. "I was basi·
tonS pull out a ll6-111 rictory in
caDy trying to get it UP on the rim. I
was tryin'g to make the shot, but Boston Garden. In Game 6, the
God p1cked UP the ball and put it Celties uailed by 17 points late in
the third quar1er but refused to give
in."
in.
The Cellics weren't buying any
"I gue~~s these last two games
of that. But they clearly appteciattd
wol!ld
have to rank as two of the
the fact that Thomas was gracious.
be~
~es
I've ever seen in .the
"Even though Isiah said his
NBA;"
Detroit
Coach Otuek Daly
th!'ee-poilitet was all luck and no
.§Ud.
.
.
skill, you don't have to tell IJie
lloston
gu8rd'
Brian
S)law
called
that," Ed Pinckney said. "Those
things just happen. He .hit a real . Game 6 a miaocoSm of everything
tough shot down the stretch. He that has happened to the Celtics
just csme through for them. That's . this season.
"It was a heckuva season, and
what tliey expect or him. That's his
we
went down with a fight," Shaw
job. He did what he had to do to
said.
"We just came up a little
win the game. He took over."
short
and
nobody should feel bad.''
The two teams, bod! plagued by

(

~--~------------------,1

Don't Let Graduation
Mean the ,End
. To Your
Health Insurance

'I

I ,

,.

. I '
I '

I •

I '
I '
I '

I,
'I '
I

: I

;:
:;
1:

You've worked IJard for

tbat dlploma.·So doa't let

an uaneressary gap In In·
surance coverage get in
your way.
Whether you're coming off
your parent's plan, finishing
a student plan or waiting for
coverage through a new em·
ployer. a Short Term ~edical
plan from Time Insurance is

; 1,

the answer. Time's easy and
affordable coverage plans
were designed with your
specific needs in mind. The
benefits are excellent, there's
a choice of coverage periods,
and the policy can be issued
right-on the spot. Don'l take
chances with your future call us today.

1

I

By The Associated Press
1
SeeiDg double
1
' 1' ASHLAND, Ohio - If your
1!opponent slams you against the mat
1 : • in wrestling, you could wind up
• ; seeing double for a spell.
.
: I
Opponents for the Ashland Unii 1 versity mal squad have that prob'l
lem conSialltly. In die past season,
; Ashland had no less dian three sets
1 . of twins competing. They were
1 • Brad and Brian Pence, Don and Jon ·
I Jones and Greg and Gil Donahue.
1
"We searched constantly for
, [' ideas on how we could use them to
, 1• our advantage," head coach Tim
t 1 Linder §Ud.

i

I

SAllY WilEn, A~ENI
992-6641
115 EAst SECOND
POMIIOY, OliO

.'
i i
. .

Four Flags over St. Bonnie
ST. BONAVENTURE, N.Y. , The flags of four nations fly at
I ~Reilly Center in St. Bonaventure
.. University.
•
.J~e0 fll!&amp;..of the United States
rs joined by
towers
: Canada, in tribute to the many
j Canadians who have competed for
~· the Bonnies over the years.
,
Recent additions were the flags
· ~ . of Sweden and the Netherlands.
'lir•Two freshman forwards, Tobias
t: "Hauff of Stockholm and Pieter
Hemelaer of die Netherlands land,-e(! spots on the St. Bonaventure
~basketball roster.

•

hlghes'fana

PULLS DOWN REBOUND - Detroit lrontman Dennis Rodman (10) palls down oue or bls 13 rebonnds In the secom ball or
Friday night's NBA Ea&amp;lern CODierence semlftnal pme qaiDst visiting Boston at Auburn Hills, Mlcb. The Pistoas won 117-113 In
overtime to remon the Celtlcs from the NBA playoff acene and
earn the right to take on the Chlcaao Bulb In the Eastern· Conference fiDaJs. (AP)

i"' -

A

Ho••

.

Ewin1 f1111nl
Porter. Little, Sltttts &amp; Lentz, Allys.
3 &amp; 1 lcCiarts F1111ily lest.
K&amp;C.Itwllers
Home Entert1inin1
l.tpr lonullllflt
Grn•ly Stln &amp; Service
Wlleley's C.rs
Forest Run Block
511111' Rill lill
TIIford Rutty
lick Slrllt v'ldeo
· Pim Hut
Dnis-Quickel, Inc.
Limbert. lws.
(
AndtrSOn's Furniture
Video Touc:ll
Subway

lcDontld's
• City·Loan
G&amp;J Auto Parts
Po..roy Flower Shop ·
Ho1111 &amp; Auto
Hood Shoe Stott
Brop~ &amp; W•ner, Iris.
O'Dtll lnlbtr
J&amp;l Sports Shop
MIDDLEPORT

·

1 ,

'

'

'

C.D. P1t1nzoil

Fivt Poins E1111r11s

lorrls EaliPIIIIIIt
Rllllnll Fnlllrt
Clllrllt't Video
IWOII, W. VA.
...'sllarht

MAIN DOOR PRIZE WINNERS

3. • 80.00
4. MYIIMY Prll•

Kehtl Stout
CMI!y 8_.berry
'Lay loy"

A. L

~~~~~~~~~~~

tt.hmt~n

Disc, 1 Row Cultivator, Potato Plows,
Grader Blades, regular and heavy duty
Seeders, Fertilizer Spreaders.
Over 50 Good ·Used Farm Tractors from
15 HP to ·ao HP, clean and field ready.
B~ckhoes, Dozers, Skid Loaders

IOO's OF USED ITEMS
SEE ALL THIS AT

At North Randall, Ohio, four
Gloves posted a driving threelength score to win the feature race
at Thistledown Friday.
The Florida-bred three-year-old
covered the six furlongs over a fast
track in 1:13:4-5.
Ridden by Omar Londono, the
filly paid $10.80, $6.40 and $2.40
in the field of six.
Shadowroll rallied for second
pla.ce, a neck in front of eve nmoney favorite Dream Drifter.
Shadowroll returned $3.40 and .
$2.20, while Dream· Drifter paid

·JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
CENTER
St. Rt. 35 West
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
Phone 446-97J7 or 446-0813

A list of

$2'.~0.

features
as long
as your

A crowd of 3,432 wagered
$492.064.
.

BAHAMAS

WE OVERBOUGHT
o

"'

o

o

o o

~

0

o

o

o!t!

0 0

I

0

ar111.

•

...

GAS RANGE

:

1:!;

OLD CUSTOMERS
BUY A NEW
GAS RANGE
AND RECEIVE

FREE

.I

2· CYLINDERS OF GAS
WHEN NEEDED.

·RUTLAND ·FURNITURE
,.

Lone lotto!"-l Ohio

Pomwoy. Ohio
C•rdlngton. Ohio

~~~~~~1!;;~::.2~·~

AND

BOTTLE GAS

GEOIGE GIATE • Manager
STATE ~OUTE 124
742-2511

RUTLAND, OH• .

---·-

Good putts
;
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. .; Wayne Levi, the PGA Tour .Player
.. of the Year for 1990, S8ld his sue!!! cessful season came about because
iii of improved putting. ·
.
"Early in I990 I was. pu~gs~
poorly it .was embarrassmg, Lev1
&lt;fi said. "But I changed my swmg a
.,.. little and also got a different model
putter. It brought on a dramatiC
, change and I started sinking putts
left and right"
Levi won four tournaments and
·had total earnings of $1,024,647
1 which earned him second place on
the dollar list to Greg Norman.
~

And Receive FREE
2 Cylinders of ,Bottle Gas

"

Trivia
.
NEW YORK - A sports trivia
· • •question lhat surfaces frequently is
t;,_ who was the third baseman in
Jit he Tinker-to-Evers-to &lt;:hance
~hicago Cub infield in 1980?
t~ That was die celebrated double•:Play unit which inspired s~me
~ . famous light verse by Franklin P.
1
'- ;Adams.
.~ ~' The answer is Harry Steinfeldt,
~;!who played for the Cubs for 13
l· )econds.

Blame tbe horse
NEW YORK - Athletes in all
~:;sports often have to tak:e v~r~al
. .abuse from disgruntled fans smmg
~ ;'n the stands.
~;• Joekeys on losing horses fre~ ·~uently heaf it frQm unhappy gam~ l'bters s1anding at the rail.
~ • The star rider Eddie Delahous~. saye was talking about that with a
·I"' reporter and had a plaintive obser·
~ vation.
~
"Why don't the fans yell at the
'• horse instead of the jockey?" Dela.~ houssaye said.
·

Buy A' New

•

I t - F1r1itUrt

1. •1eo.OQ
2. •100.00

•

•Complete Line of King Kutter Equipment
•Rotary Mowers 4, 5, 6, 7 &amp; 10 ft.
•FM Mowers 4, S, 6, 7 ft.

I

~

Sandy Cbi Chi
PONT£ VEDRA. Fla. - The
~~ ability to get out of trouble, espe·
~l cially sand bunken, helped Chi Chi
~ Rodriguez win three tournaments
1
• while earning $129,788 on the
~ Senior PGA Tour in 1990.
.,1
Rodriauez was the best bunker
~ player 011 the senior tour. making a
•. successful recovery 58 percent of
~ the lime.
.
•:
"I have always been a good
~; sind player;: Chi· Chi said, "but I
:. am now putbng better as a semor
•: than I ever did years ago on the
: regular
10ur "
'
•1

'

.
''

..••.

!.l

.

•

Rhodes Scholar
!II.' OBERLiN, Ohio ,- The old
\~ .

l ll~ .

• Headlamp-on
. -Reminder
• Rear Window
Defogger
• Air Conditioning
• Remote Control
Mirror
• AM/FM Stereo
w/Seek/Scan
• Tilt Wheel
• Cruise Control
• PQwer Front
Disc Brakes
• Door Pull

Handles
• Soft-RayTinted
Windows
• Body Side

Moldings

• Pulse Wiper
• Bumper Moldings
• 2.5 Liter Tech-IV

Engine

1::

.

Ridenour's Supply
Summtrfield's
Clltster O•ick Stop

RUTLAND

.NEW SHENNIE FARM TRACTORS

State horse raCing results
COLUMBU~. Ohio (AP)Pennsylvania invader TLC Mindale
was the fastest qualifier in Friday
night's four $10,000 elimination
for die Scarlett O'Hara Filly Pace
at Scioto Downs.
The $50,000 final will be next
Friday, May 24.
TLC Mindale won in 1:54 45,
just a fifth off the Scioto track
mark:, and paid $4.40, $3.20, $2.60.
The other elimination winners
were the Canadian filly Big
Bloomer ($3.00), Start Dialing
($2.80) arid Shady Daisy ($2.20). ·
Handle: $465,724. Attendance:
5,512.
Tblstledowu reaults

"I'm a.little surprised to be at
139 and be six back," he said. " .I t
was one of those rounds when I
kind of turned a 62 into a 68. I certainly had the opponunities today.
But 1t's one thing .to have a chance
and another to do 1t. And he (Perry)
did iL"

Spring _Sale

:.··,
••
,. ·~

I. P. Service
T.P. Gtnml Store

Gaul's Itt.
Rl"-ttr's JV
lelllltlllh's of c...,.,
FIVE POINTS

CloSe to all-time mark
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. College football attracted the second highest attendance total in the
1990 season.
The figures, released by the
NCAA, disclosed that 36,560,247
spectators witnessed the games
played by 673 four-year college
teams. Of that number 533 were
N:CAA meiiJ...~S.
, .. The 'ali-fiilte record was set in
1984 when the paid anendance was
36,652,179. It wa.s the year the
Supreme Court struck down the
NCAA television plan and permitted unrestricted televising of the .
games.

1989 Memorial winner' Bob Tway
at five-under 139.
Nicklaus , who designed the
Muirfield Village course and has
won the Memorial twice, didn't
expect to lose ground with his 68.

f

TUPPERS PLAINS
CHEstER

proverb about a sound mind in a
sound body came true for Jesse
Malldn of,Oberlin College.
Malkin, a mediocre student
before enrolling at Oberlin, took up
cross-country running as a freshman. In four years he won four letters. His grades improved dramatically.
Late in' 1990 he won a Rhodes
Scholarship, the first for an Oberlin
student in more than 15 years. ·

By RUSTY MILLER
lowing that with birdie putts of 20
AP Sports Writer
and 25 feet . He hit a 2-iron 222
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP)- Kenny yards from a bad lie to six feet
Perry wd, "I never saw so many from the pin for another birdie at
balls go in the hole." Neither had 15. Then he capped it off by hitting
Muirfield Village Golf Club.
a six-iron 208 yards for die hole in
A non-winner never higher dian one at 16.
50th on the money list in four years
Perry had pulled out a five-iron
as a pro, Pet't)' torched the course on the tee, just as he had when he
for a record nme-under-par .6p Fn- parred the .16th on the way to an
day - including a hole in ~ ~pening-round two-under 70. Then
the 16th hole - to build ~ ~ ~caddie, Andy Lano, spoke up.
sttoke lead through 36 holes of the
'"He said, 'Yo~ can get there
Memorial Tournament.
with a six,' " Perry recalled. "So I
Perry .called it die best round he §Ud, 'Give it here.' "
. ·
had ever shot. There was little reaHis retired father, who rode up
son to dispute the 3()-year-o\d Ken- with him from his hometown of
tuckian.
. Franklin, Ky., was in the gallery
The 63 brok:e the course record when Perry's shot hit the front of
of 64 shared by seven golfers. The the green and rolled 20 feet into the
round included four birdies and the cup. !i was his third ace as a pro.
ace on the back and four birdies
·Perry's 63 left him at 11 -under
and a bogey on the front side.
133.
"Rounds like that just happen,"
Chip Beck shot a 66, the secPerry said in trying to explain it ond-best round of the day, to move
''You can't go out there and say to eight-under 136.
you're going to shoot a 63 and Y?U . " I don't think there's a player in
can't go o~t there and say you re t.he. world who would not like to
going to shoot a (i9. It's just some- win here because of what the tourthing that happens."
.
.
nament i~ and wbo staned it," said
Perry's round began w1th .h1m Beck. .
making birdie putts of 40, 30 and
Next came Fuzzy Zoeller, who
12 feet on the first three holes. had a 69, and first-round leader
After three-putting for bogey at die Corey Pavin, who followed a 66
fourth hole, he rolled in an 18-foot with a 71, to Stand at seven-under
birdie putt at eight·to make the turn 137. At six-under 138 were Andy
in 32. Then he strung together Bean and Doug Tewell, while lOurbirdies at 11, 12 and 13, almost nament founder Jack Nicl\Iaus shot
holing a sand wedge at 11 and fol- a 68 to join Jim Gallagher Jr. and

~: .

lyrtis Kty's lltuty Shop
Crow &amp; Crow, Allys.
lltmtrd Fultz. Atty.
Cltrl's Jawelry
Far111 larkllinl
lopn lonu1111nt
Gallery Hair Art
Q'Britn &amp; O'Bri... Attys.
Pluser's Rtst.
Jill's C.rryout
Supr Run Ashltnd
Clll1nd Rlllty
Kropr's
Frtncis Florist
F•r-siHk ,
PomlfOy, link One
POIIIIfOJ llowlina Illes
Powell's SuP.• Valu
Crow's Ft~nly Rest.
Ohio Vtlley Bulk ·
R&amp;G Fetd Supply
Swisher &amp; Loltse Drill
•••· llolrJq. Childs &amp; llumr, Ins.
Sunny' I
Bil Bend Foodllnd
Adolph's Dtiry Isle
Excelsior Stlt Works

liddleport Trophin
Pll Hill Ford
Valley lllillb«
lill Strtttllook Store
liddleport Dept, Store
Quilty Print
1111 End Fabric Sllop
Ctntlll Tr11st link
Joltnson's Variety Store
laltr's Clotlliers
Locker 219
Prescrlptioft $hap
Video Shop
Addtd Touch
For~~~~aal&amp; Abbot
Gulf StlliOII
Gtnml Tire
Classic Cut
O.n's
Hudnall's
lnpls Furniture
SEARS
Fruth Ph•ftiiCY .
WIPO
Tawlinas. Colts &amp;.Fisher Funeral Home
RACIIIE
Ebtr's Gulf
Southern FFA
'Mother's Cupbolrd
Star True Value
Hollie llltlonal link
Cross' Grocery
W•an•'s Htrdwtrt ·
Racine Gun Club
SYIACUE
ller's Groctty
Syracuse Exxon
SJI'ICist Allllllld
Hubllerd'1 Greenhouse
lint's 'I&amp;
Kubllll)ts Shah Shoppe

Sports shorts---

! :-

Lambert Insurance Agency .

POMEROY

I ,

i. 4 ~ '
'
SJ!CO~D-ROUNJ? LEADER - Kenny Perry holds up his ball ·
after making • hole 10 Qne on the 16th bole in tbe second round or
tne Memorial Tournament Friday at Dublin, Ohio. Perry led after
two rounds with a 9-under par 63, which is a new course record.
(AP)
4,

i!:

FOR SMALL BUSINESSES 2-50, AND
INDIVIDUAL MEDICAL.
.
.

M MI18S COIWii

wv

• Power Rack &amp;
Pinion Steering
• Automat!&lt;; Front

Safety Belts
• MacPherson Front
Strut Suspension
• Shoulder Belts
Front &amp; Rear

Plus $1500.
for your
pocket.

Become a new cab le
subscriber, or i·f you're a current
subscriber add a new service (like HBO or The Disney
Channel) , before May 24th· and your'first month's service fees
will go directly to out local schools as a tax -deductible donation .

Keep it.
use It as

money
down.
or to

Just call now and mention this 'offer. We 'l l schedule your free
installation or additional service connection - another bonus of' our
CABLE + YOU schobl campaign . When we connect your . new
services, we'll aj)k you to make out your check to Your County School

reduce

the
ence
of the
Oldsmobile

System.
Free connection and ·a tax-deductible
donation to local schools ...
- .
.
When you add it all up,
now's the time to ge\cable TV!

When you "et your hands
on a Cullass Clera.~ ·

CALL

$10I ...995.
'"""' .......

lht

•II... -

CIIVROLET-OLDSMOIU·GEO.
16W. IAS1Ia l -

IIWPOUS, 01.

or,..........
nl-0014
11 ow. ...... ,
(6141446·J67ll

Otter

end~

May 24 , 1991 . Offer good in serviceable areas only.

(111 ..

I

�Pomeroy-Middleport-GaiJJpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page-C6--Sunday nmn Sentinel

Commentary
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Wriler
NEW YORK (AP) - Joe
DiMaggio's S6-game hittin$ sii'Cak
celebrated a quiet 50th btrthday
Wednesday with little hoopla
marlcing the golden anniversary of .
the start of one of baseball's most
sustaining records.
The New York Yankees
acknowledged the anniversary with
a scoreboard annoWICement, much
as they do for each dale in Yankee .
history when they play at home. A
larger tribute is planned for Oldtimers Day at Yankee Stadiu.m,

scheduled for July 27.
It was appropriate for the
anniversary to be marked in a
rather low key manner, since that
was bow DiMaggio's· streak started. He managed a ' lonely first
inning single on May 15, 1941 at
Yankee Stadium, and it was hidden
in the ·debris of a 13-1 loss to
Chicago.
The single was a handle hit, not
your ~type DiMaggio drive. It
left him batting .304 for the season
but touched off one of the· greatest
batting stretches in baseball history.

For the next two months, end Lou Gehrig at age 39 from
DiMaggio hit in every game the amytrophic 1atcra1 sclerosis.
Yankees played. Over the 56
When the streak reacbe4 30'
games, he had 91 hits in 223 at bats " games, people were really tuned in
with 1.6 doubles, four triples and 15 because DiMaggio was starting to
home runs. He scored 56 runs, make a run at re&lt;:ords. First was
drove in 55 and batted a sizzling Rogers Hornsby's right-handed
.408.
mark of 33 games. Once past that,
At first, the streak did not gener- the next target would be George
ate a Jot of attention. As May Sisler's 41-game streak, widely
sttetched into June and DiMaggio's viewed as the record. 'To get there,
bat stayed hot, it began to be Joe D. had to get past ex-Yankee
noticed. On June 2, he reached 19 Johnny Babich. Their confrontation
games with a pair of hits off Bob in Game No. 40 still sticks in
Feller. The big news that day, how- DiMaggio's mind, a half eentury
ever, was the death of Yanlcec leg- · rarer.
"Babich was dererrnincd to stoP
me," he said. "He would not give
me anything to hit.''
DiMaggio walked twice and
was sitting on a 3-0 count in his
216.941 mph before rain cut' short third at-bat when Babich got ball
, the session by an hour.
four a trifle too close. DiMag
Behind Guerrero among t~e jumpe.d on it, ripping the .ball up
non-qualifiers was Japanese rooltie the mtddle, through the pttcher's
Hiro Matsushita, who ran a lap at legs and into center fteld, extending
216.570, John Paul Jr. at 214.77~ the streak to 40 games.
.
rookie Willy T. Ribbs 213.230,
· Now DiMaggio was one away
. Scott Pruett 213.109, Dean\Hall from .S'isler's record. Then a base·
210.389 · a11d Tero Palmrot ball archivist discovered that 41
210.271.
wasn't the record at all because in
1897 Willie Keeler had hit in 44
straight. No problem. Joe D.
reached 44 in a I uly 1 ·doubleheader against Boston with two hits
against Mickey Harris and one
against Jack Wilson.
The second game was halted by
rain and during the delay, a fan
reached into the Yankee dugout
and swiped DiMaggio's bat. It
could have been a crisis but it
wasn:t. DiMaggio merely borrowed teammate Tommy Henrich's
bat and continued the streak with a
home run the next day. ·
The streak lasted another t)VO

'
By BETH HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Add
Tom Sneva to the list of Indianapolis 500 veterans who've ~ouen a
last-minute ride in this year s race.
Sneva, the )983 winner, was
scheduled to attempt to qualify Saturday for his 18th Indy start in a
BQick-powered 1989 Lola for John
Menard, who alreadll has entries
driven by Gary Bettenhausen and ·
Kyvin Cogan in the field.
·· ''Qualifying speed doesn't concern me. I'm not convinced the car
can't be competitive. We've got
p&lt;iwer, but we're down on ground ·
effects,"~d Sneva, who turns 43
on June 1 and has six top-10 finish·
es atlndy. ·
·
I The car, which has been updated
to:a 1990 configuration, was being
prer,ared for Sncva on Friday.
• 'It's a goo4 car," he said.
"Gary's had it on the track and it's
a Safe car because John's crew has
prepared iL"
Bettenhausen, who is the fastest
qualifier so far in his primary car,
has gotten the backup car up to
211.526 mph.
"We're not going to ~to get
ten-tenths out of the car,' Sneva
said. "We'll just go out run it and
see what we have."
Two two-time Indy winner Gordon Johncock also got a ride earlier
this week. His best lap in the 1990
Lola-Cosworth is just more than
204.
•'We need at least another 10 or
12 miles an hour," Johncock said.
"It's really not that hard to get
· back in it and go fas~ especially on
a track this smooth. The car's not
bad, but I'd be a lot happier right
I

Ribbs waiting
tor engine for
Indy 500 mount

now if I were running 214 or 215."
The ftrst weekend of qualifications produced 22 qualifiers, leaving 11 posjtions to fiU in the 33-car
starting lineup roclay and Sunday.
· Roberto Guerrero was the
fastest non•qualified driver Friday
in the final full day of practice for
the May 26 race, getting his Alfa
Romeo-powered Lola u·p to

most any living room in town. Win by the most people, an estimated year's Natio~al Leag,ue b':tti.ng
anything in between, and this · 100 million Americllts, and which race, and Phtladelphta Phtllt~s
WASHINGTON (AP)- You Bud's for you. And if you lose, k.ills the most people, about ~tc ~Daulton, •.mil·
win the big one, and you're the well, the night may yet belong to . 100,000 ann !Ially, in one way or bon-dollar agrung over the .wmtcr,
champagne toast of the locker Michclob. Or Jaclf Daniell.
another.
.
~~.broken bones and tntemal
room IUiely every bar room and
It is the dru&amp; which is ClliiSIIlllcd
Len Dykstra, fourth tn last tnJUI1CS m a car crash m suburban
'
·
·Philadelphia. Police said Dykstra,
the driver, was 1egal1y drunlc, and
that both players were lucky to be
alive.
. .._
Bill Shoemaker, the winningest
jockey of all time, is paralyzed in
~is llfi!IS and ,legs .afrer ~ car ~k
m which Califonua police satd his
blood-alcohol level was almost
twice the lqaltimiL
.
.
Add those to tbe recent cases of
~OY, Tarpley, the Dallas .Mav~rtclcs forward and OlymJ;ltC spnnt
and long-Jump champton Carl
Lewis. Both were charged. with
driving under the influence of alcoh9l.
·
. .
The NFL's drug pohcy
acknowledges that alcohol ts "the
most abused drug in our sport."
Other professional and amateur
organizations, including the NBA,
the NCAA and the U.S. Olympic
Committee, have issued stmilar
declarations.
In January, the USOC drew
scores of physicians, trainers and
drug abuse experts to its confer_ence center in Colorado Springs, ·
Colo., to discuss one topic and to
.
establish experimental. prevention
counseling for 80 athletes.
That came a little late for diver
'' GIVING INSTRUCTION- These Gallia
Bruce
Kimball, who underwent
in grndes 3-6 and will begin 'Wednesday, June 12
trClllment, in prison; for his drinlc- ·
at 11 a.m. in tbe Gallia Academy gym. Days and
. Academy varsity basketball players - Eric .
ing problein afrer he plowed his car
times will vary after the first session. For more
Hoffman and Clint Da•is ( background) - give
i!lto'a group of Aorida teen-agers,
informatloll, contact GAHS boys' bead basketWashington Elementary students Johnny Morkilling IWO, a month before the
ball coach Jim Osborne at 446·3112 or your eleris {left) and Eddie Nebus a few pointers In
1988 Olympic Trials. He is eligible
.mentary sehool principal. (Times-Sentinel photo
llbootlng as a preview of the Buddy Ball cUnlc, a
for probation in 1993.
· ·
by G. SpeBCer Osborne)
free clinic which is open to all students currt11tly
A recent University of Kansas
survey of head athletic trainers at
NCAA Division I schools ranlced
alcohol far ahead of marijuana,
cocaine and anabolic steroids in
frequency of abuse by ·their athletes. Ye~ only 36 percent of those
.same
trainers reported any effort to
Chambers
said
he
was
embarPhil
Bourque
·in
the
neutral
zone
ByKEN.RAPPOPORT
test
for
alcohol, while 100 percent
rassed
by
the
play.
and went in 1-on-2.
AP
Writer
"Whatever
I
did,
I
won't
do
split
Minnesota
Lemieux
-The big
the Pitts- defensemen Nett Wilkinson and again," be said. "I fell for the fake.
Shawn Chambers, tllen deiced goal- I didn't take the body and he went
tender Jon Casey out of the net and right around me. It's embarrassing
Your 365
backhanded the puck into .the any time someone beats you onevacated net while falling to the ice. on-one, embarrassing no matter
Day-A- Y~ar Retreat
' 'It was unbelieveable," Min- who it is."
.
Lemieux, who makes over $2
nesota forward Mike Modano said.
"It was something preuy to wateh. million a year - the second-high· . ~-- ­
He was just doing 11 ao quick with est figure in hockey behind Wayne
·~} ·~.,~&lt;!.-:
1lt '
'
~
• :.:-· . . " ~ ..----=:;
that reach and had everyone baf- Gretzky - acknowledged that the
. I ' ·'
fled. I have never seen anything Penguins expect him to makes ~uch
. ':f/~t
•-"!'*:2,.....
like that.
important plays.
'
,(,.~
"He toOk Chambers outside and , "It;s. a big . play. that's my
''!""
. - ~ · &lt;; . J. . ~......:
brought it back inside and then role," he said. "My role is to score
-~- ..-=- dragged it across with Jon right eoals, but there are 20 guys on the
there. His hands are so quick, and tee and they all work well together.
•Always hor and ready muse.
he's scary with the pock."
That's why we won the game
oMOTO -MASSAGE'". til~ only
tonight, not just me."
.
"
movin~ /t'tS.
Lemieux, the Penguins' leading
•Dee p. rec:lind searin~.
scorer for six straight seasons
•Nt&gt;vcr ovc:r 520 pe·r monrh to
before a back injury knocked him
out of action for most of this season , wasn't the only ~ource of
inspiration for the Pengutns. ·
.
Paul Coffey, the Penguins' AllStai defenseman, came back afrer
missing 10 playoff gam~s ~ith a
broken jaw . W.htle he dtdn t get
any points, his teammates said just
having him on the ice gave them a
NOBODY BACKS
By LEE BYRD

AIIOdated Press Writer

The mobile home
heat pump...the air
conditioner
·· ·
that also
heats. Financing Available
100% 2 rr. Parts &amp; Labor
Rtnrslng alwo, Comprts•r anol
Outi!Mr Fan Motor

Bennetts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
Rt. 2 Box 447. Gallipolis. Ohio
Call1-800-872-5967 or 446·9416

.

.•ttsburgh defeats Minnesota 4-1
tie ~tanley Cup ~nals at 1-1

P.\

.

~

rfo•INVICTA GL

•

Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 8 different colored
granites. Whatever your requirementl may be, complete
.utllflction Ia assured with Rock of Ages.
Open Mon., T~;~es .. Thurs. &amp; Fri.9:00 a.m. 'til 4:00 p.m.
Other
or 44D·&lt;!::S21
. Hours by Appointmant-683-8686
.

lift.

EAGLEGT

' goals.

now.''

. · Eleven spots are still open in the
33-car lineup for the May 26 race.
· Ribbs, whose best lap in practice
was at 213.043 mph shortly after
completing his rookie test, blew his
second Buick engine on Wednesday.
The first engine was damaged
last Friday and sent to Brayton
Engineering, the Buick manufacturer, in Coldwater, Mich., for
repairs. It was expected back today,
giving Ribbs at least part of one
day to practice.
..
''You have to do a lot of testing.
Because I'm a rookie and don't
have much experience, I lost vatu·
able test time," said the 35-year·
old Ribbs, trying to become the·
first black driver at Indy.
"We're here on an absolute
shoestring," he said, pointing to
his blown engine. "This i's the
result of il"
The iJ11mcdiate speed Ribbs and
ever} other non-qualified driver is
shooting for is the 214.859 mph of
Geoff Brabham, the slowest of the
22 qualifiers last week. Once the
field is full, the slowest qualifiers
may be bumped, one·by-one, by
each successive fasrer qualifier.
Others sliD looking fOI' spots in
the lineup include Scott Pruett,
Brabham's teammate, who waved
off a qualification attempt after
three taps at just under 214 mph
Jasl week; two-time winner Gordon
Johncock, who on Tuesday was
hired by Hemolprn-Byrd Racing
as a teammate of Stan r:ox and
rookie Buddy Lazier. two-ume run· ·
ncr-up RobcriO Ouomro. hired on
WedneldiY bY Palrick .Racing as a
te81111111fC of former wumer Danny
Sullivan; vOWIIII Jolm Paul. J,r.•
Dell Hall, Tcro PaJmrodl, Dtdtcr
Thcf•· Dominic: Dobton, Randy
LewiS, l'lnCho Clr1«, Jollllny ~·
50111 and Salt Wallbcr: ~ nxJkies
Lazier, Hiro Matsushita, Ouido
Dacc:o and Ted Pliipllll.
I

~·

.

1471 J8Ckaon Plk•
GALLIPOLIS

MIDDLEPORT

814-448-3137

114-lt2-1241

..

sfauran
· ·· f

3114 Eait M•ln St• .
POMEROY

114-882·1292
-

SUNDAY, MAY 19 ONLY!

BUY ONE - .GET ONE

FREE
SHAKE SALE
ON ANY SHAKE FLAVOR

Q

CHOCOLATE • VANILLA • PINEAPPLE
IIASPIERRY- MARSHMALLOW-CHERRY
HOTFUDGE·CARAMEL-STRAWBERRY
8UTTER8COTCH - PEANUT BUTTER
BANANA • CHOCOLATE MARSHMALLOW

....
.,

'

,,
•

SPECIAL!
MONDAY, MAY 20 THIU SUNDAY, MAY 26

. Bar~B-Q Rib

! .!.

$1 79

WITH MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES S2. 99

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

'

--

.

__

··-

,.. ,, .,~

..
. .:..

BAUM
LUMBER

.

And goaltender Tom Barrasso,
·· who wasn't happy with his Game 1
· ·performan~e either, was a lot better
·
tn Game 2.

Gallpels, DL

Pit. 446-2327

I Oen. H•rtlngar Pkwy

1111111

IDUBmER~

Kevin Stevens, who admittedly
played poorly in the Penguins' 5-4
opening-game loss. also came back
with a strong game, scoring two

ST.ANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 l'hlrtl Awa.

ure s f ami
1

. -;.

.

S43~5580R13

LARGE SELECnON
·
'

.

to have a functtOmng drug and .
alcohol cOIInsehn~ program, and h
was c~n~mced m early 1980 to
comm.tt. h~self to.'I;he ~ead~ws, a
rchabilt~;B~ton facthty tn Wtckenburg, Ariz.
,
Just last Saturday, Steve Hoy.-e
of the Ne~ York Yankees retunicd
to the maJors afte~ a .3 1/2-year •
a~scnce forced by his stxth suspenston for alcohol and drug abuse.
In the NBA, two ~layers who
h~ve faced up to theu problems·
wtth booze are among ~ !'«'st-.
the '!olden State W~tors Chns .
Mu!hn and th~ Washtngton But- •·
lets Bernard King.
In the .NFL. Dexte~ fv!anley of
the Washmgton .R;edskins wen~ to
the Lucas facthty for cocame
abuse; he left as a member of both
Co~alne Aponymous and Alco·
holies Anonymous.

p;----------"
'
!
"1----.,
,
Mc(l
"Iy 1---'
•

01 SPRINC SPA

-

SIGNS WITH llEDWOMEN - Paula McClellan, sea.ted
between ber parents, Paul and Jean McClellan of Dayton, recently
signed with tbe University of Rio Grande's women's basketbaU program. Tbe 6-0 McClellllll, who played forward and center for Ed
· Zink's program at Beavercreek HJgb School, was named 10 tbe rust
teams of tbe Western Obio League, tbe All·Daytoo Area Team and
the all-DistrictlS team as a senior. Sbe also ran track at tbe sebool
for three yeats. At Rio Grande sbe plans to majOr in mathematics.

$lid ~ey tested for marijuana and
coca.me, and 66 percent for
steroids.
.
.
Baseball has never suspended a
player for alcohol abule.
Darryl Strawberry entered the
Smithers Center last year, not
because the New York Mets called
him to task, but because his wife
called police 10 complain that he .
had slapped her and threatened ber
with a pistol. She decided against
pressing charges after he sought
medical help for what he now
admitswasa "lifeoutof~ntrol."
'Other recovering alcoholics in
the major leagues include pitchers
Dennis Eckersley and Bob Welch
of the Oakland A's and Dennis
Martinez of the Montreal Expos.
Welch had the good fortune to land
ftrst with the Los Angeles Dodgers,
one of the ftrst professional teams

.

Wa.-ty

100% Sf.· Parts &amp; Labor on

t

By STEVE HERMAN
AP Sports Writer
I INDIANAl'OLIS (AP) - The
·. hole in the engine block is as big as
\'{illy T. Ribbs' ftst, The hole in his
heart might even .be bigger - and
birder to ftx.
, On the eve of the fmal weekend
o( ·qualifications for the lndianapo. lis 500, Ribbs roclay still .awaited a
rebuilt engine to arrive back in
Gasoline Alley.
·
·, The one sitting in his garage, the
one with the unwanted ventilation,
is 11seless.
:"I just feel kind of disappointed
at ' the moment. I want to do well,
but in order to do well, you have to
ruh and run and run," said Ribbs.
"I'm at a tremendous disadvantage

I

Alcohol abuse among athletes high; few seriously punis~ed

weeks until July 17. It ended in
Cleveland, halted when Indians
third baseman Ken Keltner made
two backhanded stops of shots
down the line. DiMaggio, hitless in

Sneva gets last-minute ride in Indy 500
.

Sunday nmn Sentlnel-Page-C7

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

May 19, 1991

May 19,1991 -.

CHESTEI • 915-3301

"-IRA• EAGLE VR

S195~550VR1&amp;

'

rGoe.llrEA•

WRANGLER

S7!f!5 7S

Areal suhl. Rugsed Durable.
Long·Llsttng. Yet lightweight and
easy to h:andle.
Features include,

•

,5
129

$

ST/HC.
......................

t

CARTER
TRACTOR SALES

POMEROY
HOME
.
&amp; AUTO

GAWPOUS, OliO·
446-0523

r

6061. . . . ST.

POIIIIOY,

o•o

992-2094

.,

t919 FORD FJSQ LARIAT OONuoooooo~ooooooonooooouuoooooouoouooooouool,400
1919 FORD FEmVA. Auto., air. Nict ............................................ 4,995
I 911 TEMPO 4 Dr. Auto, llir, tilt, cruiso.........--·-···-.............. 5,400
1911 CIIEV. CELEIIITl' 4 Dr. Auto.. oir.........- ........- ......- .. 5,700
1911 DODGE D50 PICKUP. Auto. trons......................,__,,__,5,495
1917 IRONCO I. (Z to dteoso from): Automatic or Standar4 .._ ...........
1917 FORD FISO. 6 cyl, 4 spool. Lent lootl .........................._ss,995
1916 FORD RANGER 4x4 s spot. rlir contl.............................- 6,400
1917 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA 4 DR. ooto., air, tilt, cruiH .......-.5,295
1916 CHEV. S-10 PICKUP, 6 cyl. s . -....................- .......-4,H5
1915 DODGE COLT 4 Dr. Ertra ·Sharp ..........................................2,400
1915 CHEV. BLAZER b4 ¥·6, aute., oir contl............................6,500
1914 FORD ESCORT 2 DR• ._ ncolotot..................- . ......._ .. 1,500 ·
1917 PONTIAC GlAND AM 2 DR. air, tilt, 11'11110. st.rp --.....6,495
1913 RENAUlT 111 4 Dl. Air c.M. tuM nCillltl-·--·---.1,495

1976 FORD GRANADA 4 DR.

ManJ more to choost from

MOSTLY

BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE

426 VIAND STREET

•.•.;................................................................................................ .

We build tough, time-tested machines. If your Snapper does
not work for any rc11011 within the firs! two fearS ol noncommercial use, we will ftx it free, wit~ no questions asked.

This warranty covers most Snapper products. See your dealer
today lor details.

'

110 West...

Hl·1..0

..

....',

•

''

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES AND SERVICE

204 Con•• St.

Po1111roy

. 992-2975

RIVERSIDE MOTORS

., ., .

"

Your Last Stop Car Shop

POINT PLEASANT, WY.

'

1919 FORD ES(OIT 2 Dr .................................................. 13,MS
•I

Ignition
• Dual·hne cutting head with auto·
matlc "bump" line advance.
• Powerful )0.2 cc engine that runs cool.
• Flow·through primer for easy starts.
All the quality diat h:as made Stihl the most
respected name in out·
d001 power tools at an
unbelievably low price!

lEGAL LANDAU 2 DR.

One Ownar. 58.000 Miles. E•trs Sherp.
cruise.

A 15 OWL

• Ufettme warranty on electronic

2204 IAmiJI AVI.

1976 BU

.

,..'

''
'
•I

·-

Sntp Crddit jvtS yCII na monthly peymtnts for 90 days. Ask yoor dealer lor de·
llib.

OW.

. .•
··-'

�•

Page CB Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

May 19, 1991

:,__
· -Area sports briefs-- Haney ha$little trouble keeping kids' attention
Swim team meeting Monday

•

GALLIPOLIS - The meetin$ for individuals interested in participating in this year's Gallipolis Municioal Pool's s.wim team is
Monday at 7 p.m. in lhe courtroom of the Gallipolis Municipal
Building, located at 518 Second Ave.
The cost for enl.ering the l.eam, which is for children and youths
five to 16 years old, is $12 (not $40 as was listed in last Sunday's
Times-Sentinel). Members will be taught the basics of competitive
swimming and will ~cipa1.e in·at least three meets.
At the meeting, mfonnation about team practices and meets will
be discussed.
For more·information, ca)l Kim Canaday at 446-7538.

Open gym dates postfd
GALLIPOLIS - The 0 .0 : Mcintyre Park District will host an
open gym Cor co-ed volleyball at the Gallipolis Developmental Cenrer's Activities Building on Sundays from 6 to 9 p.m. beginnil)g on
Sunday, May 26.
.
The free program, which is for individuals at least 18 years old.
will conclude on Aug. 25. For more information, call446, 4612,
ext. 256.

· Scuba class offered
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreatidn Department
is sponsoring scuba lessons at the Gallipolis Municipal Pool beginning Wednesday, June 12 and each Wednesday for approXimately
six to eight weeks from 7 to 10 p.m. ·
Dave Loyejoy, a certified YMCA scuba instructor, will1.each the
course. The fee, which is $100 per wrson, is payable to the Parks &amp;
Recreation Department, 518 Second Ave., Gallipolis OH 45631.
For more information, call the P&amp;R office at 446-1424, ext 37.

Football camp offered
GALLIPOLIS- The 0 .0. Mcintyre Park 'District is sponsoting
an intermedial.e football camp for stu,dents in grades 5-8 that will be
held from Monday, Jun.e 24 through Friday, June 28 from I to 3
p.m. at Raccoon Creek County Park.
The fee is $30 if pBid before Thursday, June 6, and $35 is paid
after that da1.e. The camp will be taught by Gallia Academy head
coach Brent Saunders and Blue Devil assistant coach Matt
Bokovitz.
Ttie skills taught at the camp include passing, placekicking, punting, receiving and long snapping. Also included will be offensive·
and defensive line rechniques, linebacking, offensive backfield and
secondary techniques. At the camp, participants will only be
allowed to wear non-detatchable cleated shoes.
Registration forms can be turned in at the Part District office,
located in the ground floor of the Gallia County Courthouse, during
its business hours (Monday through Friday, 8 am.-noon and 12:304 p.m.), or they can be mailed to the 0.0. Mcintyre Parle District.
Gallia County Courthouse, Gallipolis OH 45631.
Ayers announcing the camp will be distributed to each of the 10
elementary schools in the Gallia County Local and the Gallipolis
City School Districts.

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) .:_
Some people have little trouble
keeping the attention of 600 middle
school students.
"I'll take a couple more queslions," ~Haney, the seven-time
Mr. Olymp18, told students at Hayward Middle School. "Then ,
maybe I'll take my shirt off."
Haney was a guest of the
Sprinjlfield Opportunities lndustrializauon Cenrer to ta11c to students
about the im(!ortance of lil.eracy
and an educanon. Haney has been
campaigning to encourage ~teracy
and discourage drug abuse.
His broad smile and even broader chest and 'back might lead some
to believe that muscles and self
assurance are all it takes to be a
body buildin~ champion, but
Haney said that s not the case.
·
"If you think that, you're thinking fantasy," he said after his talk
to the assembly. "Every one- but
one - who's made Mr. Olympia
-has a degree ofsome son. same
-;-ith most Mr. Universes."
Education is important not on! y
in planning a work and nutrition
re81men to bpild toward a tide, but
to carry athletic success through a
lifetime, Haney said.
He now has a fitness program
on ESPN, a line of nutritional products and an Adanta fitness center.
He is working on a book and going
to acting school to work toward an
entenainment career.
''Being the best at anything is

USTA grant received
GALLIPOLIS - The.Gallipolis Parts &amp; Recreation Department
has received a seed grant from the United Stal.es TeMis Association
to assist in the development of entry-level adult and youth rennis
activities such as the free 1.ennls camp · ~ to run from July 15 to
July 19.
'
The times for the camp will be from 7 to 8 p.m. and from 8 to 9
p.m. daily. There will be a maximum of 20 participants per time
slot Tom Hopkins, the P&amp;R .director, will serve is the instructor:
To regisl.er, call the P&amp;R office at446-1424, ext. 37 . .

""filAR
.•BRAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
·•WHEEL ALIGNMENT
OWNIIS
992-2101

Pomeroy

, Farm/ Business

May 19,,1991

lt~s ·p ut-up'

time in · computerlan~

M KENNEDY
projection from Compaq Compul.er
•
Corp., and on Friday, reports surAP Baslness Editor
NEW YORK -It's put-up time faced that Apple planned a big
for the compill.er business.
round of layoffs.
·
Computer makers were busy
The bad news started with Com-·
··this past wee" doing what they paq, which said its earnings for the
need to do to succeed in hard second quarrer would drop 80 per.
d 1 ·
d
cent, ~efle~ting a slowdown in
umes: eve opmg ·new pro ucts orders ai the rl)tail level. The
:fo~{acing tough financial deci- announcement Wednesday promptThe week opened with a bang as ed Compaq's ·s~k to plunge and
NCR Corp. and Apple Computer drag down other ISSIJ!:S m the comInc. announced new products. But • puter sector. .
by Wednesday, investors were
The hystena passed by Thurswhimpering over a dismal earnings day as Compaq pro~1se~ to buy
back some stock to rB1SC Its value,
but worries over the health of the
industry lingered. Also during the
By"JAMES

••

Star Bank
funds Rio
scholarships

Money Ideas

•
.,•

'

units. the following units must go at:
'

.

The
Limited
...
,

By SIIID EviDS
GALLIPOLIS -The Limited, Inc .
announc:ed lak last week lbat first
quarter net income of $50.9 million
decreased 18 per'j
cent from $62.3
million last year,
while earnings per
I
share
decreased to
I
$.14 from $.17 a
year ago. Net sales ·•
·'•' increased
16 per- ·
'
-~ cent to $1.284 bila year ago.
••' • . lion from $1.107
Leslie H. WexJ1Cr,chairman, said,
•
"Results
for the first quarter were
••
lower than last year due to the repo•
• sitioning of our Limited Stores divi• sion. In January, we made several
•
sjgnificant decisions concerning
:-•
•• Limited Stores:
• •
;:
-Appointed Howard Gross as
·; president on Jan. 8. Howard has
been with 'the business since 1913
•• - setving 10 years with Limited
Stores as a merchant and. since
;: 1985 as the very successful leader
of our Victoria's Secret Stores divi••
sion.
·~
-Accelerated the move from
'• multiple brands to one brand • 'Limited.' - Cancelled merchandise on-order that did not fit into
our view of the business.
As a consequence retail invento' ry levels were dramatically
~· reduced, down nearly 30 percent on
a per square foot basis from last
• year as the quarter ended.
• · -Streamlined and restructured
:' the ll!erchandisjng organization.
·: "We concurred with Howard's

,• :

I am going to _restock our·used c~r lot .with fresh
'

~·

.

00 OVER COST
.
..
1990 FORD TAURUS Black 4 Dr. Loaded••••••••••••••••
1990 TEMPO G. L. Maroon, 4 ·or. ··~················· ......
1990. DODGE DYNASTY. Champagne. 4 Dr ............
1990 MERCURY TOPAZ GS. 4 Dr. White~ •••••••••••••••
1990 (2) PONTIAC SUNBIRDS. 4 Dr. Maroon •••••••••
1989 FORD ESCORT. 4 Dr. LX. Red ................... ~••••
'
1989 TEMPO 4 DR. Silver. Nice..............................
'
1989 MUSTANG 2 Dr. White ..................................
1988 TEMPO GLS. 4 Dr. Maroon ............................
1988 DODGE 600 4 Dr. White ..............................
1988 PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE. Light blue•••••·•••••••••••
1988 PONnAC GRAN PRIX 2 Dr. Ught Blue••••••••••
1987 CHRYSLER LeBARON 2 Dr. Blue.~...................
1987 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX 2 Dr. Silver ••••••••• ~ •••••••
'

.1987 BUICK CENTURY ··································•·········· ..

...
...

7,995
8,495
6,995
6,495
6,495
8,995
7,495
7,995
5,995

$10,829
7,529
11,529
7,929
6,829
5,929.
7,229
' 7,729
6,529
5,929
5,929
7,929
6,729
6,929
5,529

$11,995
11,995
11,995
9,995 '

$10,829
10,929
11,429'
8,929

$11,900
8,995
12,900
8,995
!,995
6,495

:

.

.

·TRUCKS
1989 AEROSTAR WAGON. Maroon. Real Nice ••••••••
1989 F150' XLT LARIAT. 2 Tone. Sharp •••••••••••••••••
1989 F150 XLT LARIAT. 4x4. Red •••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••
1988.F150 4x4. Gray ...............................~ •••••••••••

SEVERAL OLDER CARS (Example)
S3,995
1,995

1984 FORD THUNDERBIRD. 2 Dr. Maroon ..............
1982 VW RABBIT. 4 Dr; Air~ Low Miles .................

$2,829
1~429

OTHER CAIS TO

..

: I

•

:. Farm Flashes

decision not to spread the cost of
repositioning Limited Stores over
the fii'Sl two quarters, as it is consisrent with our long-rerm view of
the business. We do not run the
business on the basis of what puts
the best face on the cwrem quarter.
I believe the decisive action taken
to fiX Limited Stores now was the
righi long-!Crm decision and expec~
to see improvement in the second
quarter as new merchandise arrives
in the stores."
··
Wexner eontinue.d. "Two businesses deserve special recognition
for their performance in the first
quarter. Cheryl Turpin and t!Je
Lanll Bryant associal.es generated
significant store for store gains,
improved pou margins and signifi~dy improved operating income
and income as a percent of sales.
Victoria's Secret Slllre's associa~.es ·
and their new leader Grace Nichols
continued to produce ,strong store
for store increases and improved
earnings." .
The Limited, Inc., through Limited Stores, Lerner New York,
Lane Bryant, Express, Victoria's
Secret, Structure, Limited Too,
Abercrombie &amp; Fitch, Henri Bendel, Cacique. Victoria's Secret
Bath Shops, Bath &amp; Body Works
and Penhaligon's presently operal.es 3,918 specialty stores and distributes apparel nationally through
the Victoria's Secret. Lane Bryant
- Two local women
Direct, Roaman's and Lerner arePOMEROY
among
922
people who have
Direct catalogues.
~orne 1991 Purina Certified Pet
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment Advisors, according to The Ralston
Broker for The Ohio Company Purina Company,
in their GaUipoUs otr~ee.)
Rosemary Randolph and Hilda
M. Weaver of R&amp;G Fied Supply in
Pomeroy have successfully complered a course in basic dog and cat
nutrition .
Both Randolph and Weaver are
able to provide customers with pet
nutrition advice including what
dogs and cats need in their diets to
maintain their health. The nutritional ·requirements vary with the
. lifestyle and age of each animal.
Quality 'plants are a major con·
R&amp;G Feed and Supply carries a
cern at this point in time. Weather full line of Purina· dog and cat
conditions have favored ·seedlinl fonds which will meet the needs of
diseases and algae. ''Ridomil
your pets. Ralston Purina Company
resistant strains of blue mold have is the world's largest producer of
been coqfirmed in Georgia and dry dOg and cat foods.
Rorida.
Protective fungicide such as
Ridomil or Ferbam should be used
as labeled. Angular leaf spot and
bacterial soft rots have already
been diagnosed. Sueptomycin
sprays are needed to give conlrol of
these diseases.
The Ohio Crop Report on .Monday, May 13 reponed 70 percent of
the Ohio com crop planted. This
compares to the five year average
of. 67 percent for the same time
period. Soybean plandng stood at
26 percent complete. Some 18 percal~ of the reports indicated a soil

EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
COUNTY EXTENSION
::
AGENT,
AGRICOLTIJRE &amp;: C.N.R.D.
.
•
GALLIPOLIS - The 17- year
:: locust (Periodical Cicadas, magrici.• cada spp.) are overwhelming local
:. residents by their emergence.
The first' impression is that
. severe damage will take place, but
usually that is not the case.
·
The most obvious damage
comes from egg laying in small
twigs. In some cases this can be
·~ e~ially damaging to small trees
that have the most desirable branch
•'' size for egg laying. Large, established trees can withstand consider• able flagging·. The adulu live for
only 2-4 -weeks with very limited
,
feeding. The males make the loud
1
droninJ sou.n~ . as a part of their
courtslup acuvlllel.
Each female wiU lay up to 400
eggs in 40 to SO sites. Small fruit
trees can be covered with nettin8 or
cheesecloth during the egg laying
period. Soll!e control can be
obtained in the home Jandacape by
the use of "Sevin" on shrubs and
trees. In commercial altuadons
.. other methods of chemical COIIIIOI
: are available. Call the County
: • .Exrmaion om~,~~7007) for a
• • free faCt sbeet on
IODic.
.
• :- The increuo in Tobac:co pro·'duction in Gallla County put an
! lldditionll ene million dollarl in the
:•local OCC)IIOIIIy last year. 'lbae is
! : lhe pocendal to make 1 similar
• ; inc:teaiO
• this
($2 million
::over
!he lim!ta
•. ;will pat a lot oC pi JJ tif 011 qu1ity
·.,!ants, completins IOISCI, labor
:: IIIJlPiy, bar!) space, and favorable

,•

weather/

'

•.

STAR BANK FUNDS SCHOL~RSHIP­
Star Bank, N.A., Tri-Stale bas continued fund·
ing or its Star Bank Sc:holllrsbip at lbe Univenlty of Rio Grande. Paul D. Harrison, seconcl from
left, vice president for develop"'en.t at Rio ·
Grande, accepts a check for the fundmg from

Sbella Wood, manager or Star Bank'~ Spring'
Valley branch. Flanking them are, left, Peggy
Johnson, bead teller at Spring Valley, and
Daniel P. Davies, right, senior vice president and,
bead of Star Bank's Gallipolis office.

North .Gallia competes in envirothon
By Constance S. White
GalllaSWCD
VINTON - Srudents from North
Gallia High School competed in
the Area 5 Envirothon for southern/southeastern Ohio at Lake
Hope Stal.e Park last week. Sponsored by the Ohio Feder~tion .of
Soil and Wa1.er Conservauon Districts, ihe Envirothon in a competitive event which tests students
knowledge of soils, forestry,
wildlife, aquatic ecology anl;l current environmental issues.
This event was made pOssible

through the donations o( Stan &amp;
Doris Hamson of Harrison Farms.
Bob Evans Farms, Inc., Mead
Paper, South Cen\lal Power, Farm
Credit Service of Mid America,
Fairfield Soil and Water Conserva·
tion District Auxiliary, Farm Credit'
Service of Mid America and Vinton County Chamber of Com-

merce.

While team members from 14
1.eams awaited the final tally the
park naturalist, Marty Hall treated
them to a presentation on timber
rattle snakes and displayed one for

•
'

their observation.
Senator Jan Michael Long was
on hand to make the award presen·
tations. The two teams going on to
tllg state competition are Logan
H.S. FFA-Biue taking First Place
and Franklin Heights of Columbus,
Second Place.
,
' The Gallia SWCD would .
encourage more schools in the
county getting involved in the
excellent prognun. For more. information on planning for the 1992
competition contact the Gallia
SWCD office at 446-8687.

·

SENIOR TEAM • Pictured here are tbe
memben of the sealor team: (J.r) Matt GUmore,

mDIStWe surplua.

Spider m11.e11 in hot dry seasons
have caused severe problems on
spruce, juniper and arborvitae.
Homeowoers noticing IIJiider milt
damage may COIIIidu 1111111 insecticidal IOIP.S~r
roperly labeled
Kelthane (dicofo . '
At~e~~tion
.
I The Gallia
Count)' Cattlemens Association
annual meetina is scheduled ror

Friday evenina. June 28.
Tlie event wUI bo held at the

Bob Evans Sbeller Houe at ltio ·.
Grande. A CIIUII eveain&amp; of 10011
food and entertainment (no Tong
speec:hes) is planned. Advance
ticken a now aVIIilable rrom any
of the directora, or at the Allan
Beller Vercrinarlan Clln1c and the
Oal1la County Extension Office. .·

..

•

Jon'

Po·meroy women
complete course

• •

I

l10 GRANDE · Star Bank,
N.A., Tri-Stal.e continued its support of higher education for area
youth when it recently provided ·
funding for its annual scholarship
at the University of Rio Grande.
"Star Banlc has been a long and
loyal supporl.er of Rio Grande and
its efforts to increase opportunities
for southern Ohio youth through a
college education,' Paul D. Harrison, Vice President for Development at Rio Grande, remarked.
"Through this funding, students
attending Rio Grande will take a
positive s1.ep forward," Harrison
continued. "The bank's continued
interest in the University is very
much appreciated.•
Annual Star Bank scholarships
are awarded to srudents from Gallia
or Lawrence counties who plan to
attend Rio Grande on a full-time
basis.
Other criteria for students
include a 2.5 or above grade point
average in high school or college,
or an AtT composil.e score of 18.
·Successful applicants must also
demonstrate· a desire to succeed
and an inl.erest in business.
The scholarship can .be granted
for ruition, general fees, books, and
room and board.
• Recipients are chosen by the
University's scholarship committee. chaired by the duector of,
financial aid. Students may apply
though the Office of Financial Aid
at Rio Grande.
A member of the Star Banlc Corporation, Star B811k N.A., Tri-State.·
is headed by Douglas R. Daniel of
Ironton, president and chief executive officer.
Star Bank's Gallipolis office is
direcied by. Daniel P. Davies ,
senior vice president.

week, struggling compu1.er retailer ca' s biggest company, became lbe
Businessland f1181181CC1to wodt out lai.CSt in a
line of ecjuity pejlSOllie emergency financing to keep dlm, announcmg plans to issue 14
srocking its shelves, but it. w~ million new shares of preferred
·
·
of a possible banlcruptcy flimg if 1ts stock.
The announcement capped a
fmances worsened.
"Prime Computer Inc. said it trend.that has seen companies rusllwould lay off 800 workers, and ing to take advantage of the genetlll
' Apple)was rumored to be consider- enthusiasm for SlllCkll since the ead
~·
ing cuts of 600 to 2,000 employees of the Persian Gulf War.
The new GM stock is
to trim production costs.
redeemable for cash or commlin
Stock Markets
The stock market remained shares' in three years. Meantime,:it
erratic, waffling below its record should raise half a billion dollars
levels of last month, but that dido 't for GM, which lost $1.1 biUion in
interrupt tbe flow of new stock the fust quarter amid the disastrous
slump in auto sales.
:
issues to nwket.
General Motors Corp., Ameri-

.~ Return of 17-year locust said
~~ 'overwhelming' residents
·.

19lr.Sntctl:.

'

~httes .. itntintl Section D

-- -------- - - - - - - - - - - -

.•

.

See Puzzle on Page

ing- but his body buildinLhobby
soon became a vocation as started pulling in amafe\U' awards.
When he starred weight lifting,
he knew he · was struggling to
becorDe the best at something, and
he resisted succumbing to boredom
in school be said "because I knew •
if the opPortuniiy came, 1 would ·
have to have the tools of communieating with people on differentlevels.' •
Haney has been married eight
years to his second-grade sweet- .
heart, and they have two kids.
•
·

Dwight Stevens Says:

MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
. JOHN FULTZ - J. MUCUS FULTZ
242 W. Main·

if it sounds rough, believe me, it
was. Shootings, drugs, alcohol, all
those things were there, but I was
determined to get out of that hole."
As a kid, he did "anythinJ that
wa.s decent, anything that was
moral, to get an e11tra buck," raking leaves, selling drink bottles,
mowing lawns.
At the age of 13, he took up
weigbtliflinl as. a way to prepare
for football. He had hoped to get an
athletic scbolirship to continue his
education.
.
Ae got the scholarship - and
earned a ·degree in youih counsel-

•

Baseball tournament slated
LSONVULE- The Fifth Annual Nelsonville-York Youth
ball Tournament, sponsored by Kroger and McDonald's of
ville, will be held June·28-30 and July 4-7 a the city park in
i'jds~viUe.
·
tournament is open to all regular Litde Leag1ie reams with
r """''ers nine to.12 years old. No all-star .or tn~veling l.eams will be
accepted.
This is a double-elimination tournament. with ream and individual trophies awarded to the top four places. In addition, there will be
a most home runs award and a most hits award (a new bat is the
· prize for both cBI.egories), and ~ pitching .award (the tourney's top
pitcher gets a new glove) to be gtven. T-shirts, courtesy of the sponsors, will be given to each member of the participating 1.eams.
The tournament is limited to the first 16 teams to enl.er. The entry
fee is $40 and the deadline for entering is June I. To obtain an entry
form or additional information, call1eff Carl.er at753-3953: '·

sellable.'' Haney said. "If you
have the education to go with that.
you have a dynamil.e package for
long-term success."
The wiMer of a series of body
building championships during his
college years -beginning with
Junior Mr. America in .1982, Mr.
America three months later, Mr.
Universe a week later, then Mr.
Olympia - Haney told the students of his del.ermmation to brealc
out of a dangerous. dead-end child·
hood neighborhood,
·
He grew up in a part of Spananburg, S.C., Called the Hole- "and

'

YOST RETIRES • Del·
bert R. Y01t llu retired after
37 .years with the Colum bla
G• SJ~tem. YOII wu 1Upervl·
aor of maintenance tor the
Ulldqroud . . . pallor·
ap welll at the Supr Grove
olllce ~ Ca!n•bla GM Tl'llllmillloa Corp, He Joined tbe
IJIIelll Ia 1954. la}HG, YOII
wu pnmoced to CGIIiltl iiCtloD
toremu aad ill 1973 to well·
lllllllteiiiiiCI lapervilor.

RESERVE TEAM • Plctared bert are
relti'Ve team m11111tn wltll alttntatat O·r)
Charles McGIDaell, ScGit OUer, SLe: &amp;U ~·

Terry Farley, Jamie Campbell, D.R. Keeton,
and Bobby Rousb.

�wv

OH-Polnt

' May 19, 1991

OH Point Pl....nt, WV
11

Classifie
--~----~-----------.---------~
,. . . . ---.For
-- -cESTATE AUCTION

Wanted to Do

18

Help Wlntld

Win llobplt _ _ ,... 11 , _

• The Ar•'s Ru•ll• 1 M,rketplace

w.ntec1 to Buy

I

PUBLIC ·NOTICE

•
FOR SAlE
· Tha Ohio Valley &amp;.nk
Company. 420 Third Av·
enue,

G•llipolia,

Ohio

46&amp;31. will offer for oatil the

foUowing .described; prop-

eny:

-

•'*

Pike Ofli.,. of the Ohio Val·
Compony, 370
· llty
Jackson Pike. Goltlpolio.
Ohio ot 10:00 o.m. on Sot·
Ordoy. May 211, 1991 .
The vehicle will be oold to
hlgheat biddw "ao Ia"
'without •nv upreased or
i mplied warranty. Thlo vehi·
pte ,.Y be '"" 1t the
Jackson Pika Office of the ·
Ohio Volley Bonk Company

or CERTIFIED CHECK.

MAY t2 , 19. 22, 1991

AIVlOU ncerner, t s

3 Announcements
llpollo, 011

,4

.

Giveaway

3 bobv ...... 304-d:l.-.

.... -old,

4
· GIVuway
--;;;;:-;:;;:;;:~;;;~;;:
1 pup1 10 p eaer, 1 wb old,

--·

I -·
I

I

rr old 7
good with
I

.,

114-

old; I -pdoa, old; 1
-pdoa.
lyra
okl.
·
szoz.
. -·
R..rcute-_~~­

SmaU mole - · wtll ....
. . . 304-fT~-~~1~.

=-:ro:.r;: b~::o;...,-::
...." 304~111.

Public-Sale

1 He's a slowpoke
6 Give up
10 Los A~geles
problem
14 Grain to be
ground
19 Shade trees
21 Crucial point
22 Rise and fail
of ocean
23 " Purple Rain"
star
24 Puts to use
26 Animal that

Wldltftll.,.l Auc11M s.vlct,
Rio Orondo, D111o 114-24UII2.

9. Wanted to Buy

REWARD. :104-773-52110.

----"-----.-~:-------------ASTRO-GRAPH
ASTRO-GRAPH

BRIDGE

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

PHILLIP
ALDER

\
NORTH

'

~1cJions for the year ahead by mail-

i!'IJ S1.25 plus • long. self-addressed,
I$Pmpod envelope to Astro-Graph, clo

this newspaper, P 0 . Box 91428, Clevel.,d. OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state
. , zodiac sign.

· - (. .J 21-June :10) It's basi not
l!!: belitt~ someone whom you've had a
recent disagreement with in front of
Ill!*• today . When things gat straight·
eled out. and they eventually will. you
""y regret your cilmments .
·
~NCER (.111111 21..Julr 221 You are
Piltsently In a cycle where your eKiravagence might be vying lor the upper
tlnd . If you are not financially. diSCi·
plined . thos could be a very trying day.
..0 (JufJ 23-Aug. 22) You 'll be a very
-Y peroon to gel along with today J!il:&gt;voded everyone is in accord with
)lliur aims. Oissenlers. however, cook!

• the less charming aspects or your
ptroonality.
~ (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Don't con:
,..,plate doing any1hing out of spite to~; it could have a very unp~asant
ang effect. Remember , a
IS a heavy burden io bear.
(Sept 23:-oct. 23) II you give
expecting any1hing In return totfy. rewards are likely. II you give hop·

E

.,. to rece1ve a greater response,

YIJI 'relikely to be disappointed .
(oct. 24-,..., 22) Take time
tl' r-aluate your objectives today;
liilre·a a possibility you may be ex·
'*'ding too much effort on goals that, II
. . . .ad. will lack slilnilicance.
QomARIUI (Nov. :n-o.c. 211 11 you
f~ out of sync with your philoaol)hical
bjlliels today. it could be beCause
~ · ra putting your rears In front of your
,.h lnllead of doing the opposite.
PflfCOIIN (Oec. 22..Jen. 1t) Somewith dubiOuS motives might try to
up a friend ot yours today. II you
...,se that your pal is oblivious to what
;Avourring. be protective.
lctUA!Iflll (Jan. 20-Fell. 11) You might
niJt be ve(y good ar delegating today,
aid this could caute you complications.
11' be on the sale lid&amp;, Hmay be wise to
h~le diHicuH •rgr..-rs yourlefl.
...CII (FeiJ.. M ,.,., II you have
tf relay compNeaMd tnetructions to
sijneone elM today. don't depend on
VII'' memorv. 11 the dirtcliona gat mist:t!lltrued. tha horN you're hoPing to
could ..cl liP a Qlrafle.
.
l(lllnllt21..,_., If you gat IllIn a joint -'ure fCIRr, be sure
lill are ~petted out tn _,..8IICI, or
... thil situatiOn could gel out of bal·
a - and create hard teellngs with one
o; both part~ .
r

i

...,.,,..,

~11·11

.... 104

.KQ
.AKQJI02
.76

WI!ST

EAST
• J 932
.9 543

.KB 5 · •
.... 1062

74
+a
You ahould begin to experience lm·
... 10 5
+K 8 43
provements In the yew ahead - ·
your aoclal life Is concerned. The spill·
SOUTH
over could usher In benelttsln other ar+Q76
eas81Well.
.
87
TAURUS (Aprll20-llar 20) An imaglna·
• 6 53
tive friend. who frequently h81 81 many
+QJ92
crazy ideao 81legltimate ones, might try
Vulnerable: Both
to talk you Into some type or involveDealer: North
ment today. Keep this pal's track record
in mind. Major changes are ahead lor
Wesl
Nort~
EaSt
Taurus In the coming year. Send lor
I t
Pass
Taurus' Astro-Graph predictions today.
Pass
3
NT
All
pass
Mall $1 .25 plus along. self-addressed,
· stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
Opening lead: • 2
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 44 tO 1·3428. Be sura to alate ·
your rodiac sign.
GEMINI (...f 21..JUI)e 2)11 you're malt·
lng a large purchaae today, be mindful
of hidden costs you didn't antiCipate.
Down deep, this deal might not be 81
good as It appears on tha surf-.
CANCER (June 21..Julr 22) i&gt;eopte Who
resort to flattery may be able to write By Phillip Alder
their own tlcltat with you today. You'd
be better pH paying more attention to
Today's hand was played ':'~~7.1
individuals who treat you objectively.
LEO (Julr 23-Aue- 22) In your impa· years agp in a match between PI
tlenca to get something done today, you teams. and both declarers went no••n.o
might try to accomplhth a task for which If you fancy your chances of ouiiPI&lt;tY·I
you lack the necessary expartiae. It ing them. cover the East-West rar·dsl
might be wile. to wait lor the cavalry.
and d,ecide on . your line in three
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpl. 22) Auociates trump against the lead of the
may h&amp;ve trouble dlac:ernlng your poHtj.. hearts. dummy"s queen winning
cal moll- tOday IIICI. aa a r - . may trick.
turn their llacka on a -you ferwnt·
Both declarers saw an
ly ""f!fUM. Therefore, be explicit.
· tricks by way of one spade. two,-helrrtsl
LIIRA (lept. 23-0ct. :II) Appearing to and six diamonds. After winning
be a bit tar out with your ldeu tOday
could have a negative ellect on a pre- first trick. without pausing for breath,
'"'"'endeavor. To be 114-afui, othera they led back dummy's king of hearts.
But they had overlooked a minor
must perceive you ao being stable.
ICOIII'IO (oct. M Nov. 22) It a friend lem: Where was the hand entry to cash
givea the Indication of being untnlarest· the jack of IH!arl!' Both pairs of de·
ad in what you lillie to offer tOday. 118 lenders played perfectly at this point.
wiae enough to reed the tignall. f&gt;arsls.. West won with the ace of bearts and
renee wfll onty make mattn -....
switched to the five of clubs. East
IAGITT Allllll (..... 23-Dec 11) A COI- with the king and returned a
Ioctive venture may not work out too West won with the ace and exiled
well lor you today, ~ H. gotng In, a diamond. leavinc declarer in
there's a miaundlntandlllg 1110u1 mon- dummy. South drew three mundo
ey. Both parties could ._ in _..

.J

Strip
them!

tliiiiiCIIIds and then let! a spade - ,_,
qUfttt, but luck ,.-as crut 10 lunc:b.
won with lite ltiDc and
...... The f i - of thlmr:nr'• 10
what II most expedient impuiiMI reao- aa well. and the contnn was
down.
tutlona COUld spell trouble.
AOIWIUS (.!an.
II circumTbe declaren llllotdd 111M ta. a
stances comPel you to - ' ! In ctaae lew - I s at trick OM to ccaitler
aituatlon.
• .
CAI'IIICOIIN (Dec. 22..JM. 11) T111a II
one Of thoee dave - e you could campound your problen• by .trying to dO

crawls

26 Sedition
29 Health reson
30 Seasoning
32 Storage chest
33 Manifest
34 "Little plggie"
35 Flock
37 Den
39 Unit of energy
40 "Duck - "
41 Transported
with delight
42· Act
44 Gratify
46 Aligh1
47 Shallow vessels
46 Fat of swine
50 Abating
52 Remainder
53 Hepburn ID
55 Food program
57 UK Princess
.58 Memorandum .
59 Lane
60 Father
62 "-Whom the
Bell Tolls "
64 Recreation area
66 Note of scale
68 Sun god
69 Rower
70 Haul
71 Encourage
73 Long narrow rug
75 Night noises
77 First. second
or third
78 Cowboy
competition
80 Bultwinkte, e.g.
81 Hurricane center

. 614-949-2033
Ohio licenu
157-68·1344
Terms: Cash

Positive J.D.

Dan Smith. AuctiOIIHr

The famHy of Joe Vo·
111h would like to think
all .f1111lly and friends
for their thotlllltful·
ness, pl'llytt1 1nd kind·
ness durinc his recept
surpry.
Special thanks to Dr.
Lentz, Dr. Abels and all
the nurses of 3rd floor.
Thanks to tht Physical
Thtrap~ Department for
their patience and Cll'll.
thinks to Dr. Chilies
Holzer for tht visit and
citt.

82
84
86
87
89
92

Chooses
Other than
Feel Indignant at
Playhouse
Period of time .
Incredible Hulk's
color
95 Decree
98 LA rootbailers
99 Made amends
101 Nullify
103 Battle wound
104 Bitler vetch
10!\, North Sea Ieeder
106 Paid notice
107 Above
108 Animal coat
110 Music: as written
111. Latin conjunction
112 Antlered animal
" 13 On the ocean
115 Babylonian deity
117 Watch face
119 Martin 10
120 Pinochle term
121 Rapid method·
of writing
124 Island ott ireland
126 Trade lor money
127 Groan
128 Made lace
130 Complacent
132 Shopping area
133 Detachable
incandescent
lamp
13.4 Write
135 Leak through
137 All - (attentive)
139 " ~ My Children "
140 Stockings
14 1 Conveniently
near
143 Flesh
145 New: prefix
146 Most flexible
148 " Sixteen -"
150 One of Santa's

d-

152 Tall structures
153 "- Apache"
154 Fraternal
organization
.156 Each
t 57 Genus of geese
158 "Planet oflhe -"
159 Wash cycle
160 Church parts

DOWN
1 Shatter
2 Took 40 winks
3 Attire
4. Sick
5 Hawaiian wreaths
6 Calloway 10
7 Go astray
8 Piece for two
9 "Midnight -"
10 British singer
11 Dairy' product
12 Poem
13 Earth goddess
14 Developed
15 Inlet
16 Moment
17 Large ladles
18 Doctrine
20 Fasten tightly
23 Support
25 Strike
27 Soup dish
28 Dull sound
31 Cash drawer
33 Melody
36 lifeless
38 Rex or Robert
40 Rational
41 Reckless
43 Faucet problem
45 Stage whispers
46 Form of
liturgical
prayer
47 Fondles
49 loved one
51 Pertaining to
Norway
52 Lilts
53 At a distance
54 Professional
tramp
56 Long-legged,
long-necked bird
59 Gave
60 Station
6 1 Inspires with
fear

63
65
67
69
70

Buys back
Di"iculty
Native metal
Negaiive prefix
Method of
procedure

•.

72 Lone Star State
74 Bond nemesis
76 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
77 Twists
79 It follows Sept.
83 Jamie ,.- Curtis
85 Expunged .
86 Harvest
87 Woody plant
88 Colorado's Gary ·
89 Printer's measure
90 Cause
91 $nalie
92 African antelope
93 Iterate
94 For example:
abbr.
96 Household pets
97 English streetcar
100 Conjunction
102 lamb's pen name
105 Shout
109 Sailors: colloq.
112 Small valley
113 One of Israel's
greatest kings
114 Be present
116 Emmats
118 Crippled
120 Becomes mature
121 Food fish
122 Treats
123 Judge
125 Shades or
diHerence
126 Tavern
127 New wine
129 Profound
131 Athens' country
132 Mediterranean
island
133 " Who's the-?"
f 34 Gasps lor breath
136 Brazilia'l,estuary
138 Painful spots
140 German title
141 Rabbit
142 Bark
144 Bark cloth
147 Diocese
148 "Kindergarten

•

14

•'I

•

•

••

•

We would ' fika to
thank . evaryona whn
htil~ u• In any WI'/
tlurtng tha Ulnaat and
death of our precloua
. Dati. All me mlnlaterl
. who .VIIn.cf him In the
hliapltal, the tloWllfl,
tha food, the BettY
Stam Claaa for their
help. tl)e neighbora for
thalr klndn111, the •In·
gar a. Rev. Jack Holley
for hla
conenUng
worda, Willie Funeral
Home lor their - ·
vlcaa. We appreciate
all the uprealonl of
aympethy. MIIV God
Bleaa.aach one.
The famHv of Garred
· 0 . Blake

CARD OF THANKS
The Femlly of Merv
E. Betz would like tn
thenk our trland1. re·
letlvea end neighbol'l
for· their help and
kindnn• ilurtng our
loved one'e lllneaa
end deeth.
Alto; we~uld like
to thank Dr. Abela.
Or. Subbleh, the In·
tenalve Care Unit end
nu,.lng eteff on 4·
Eaet, Holzer Hoepi·
tal. for thalr dedlca·
tlon and compaNion.
Special thank• to
Paatora
Godwin,
Conn. Pollard, The
RIIY. AI MacKenzie
end the choral group
from OVCS.
Your ldncln- end
thoughttutneaa wHI be

149 Snow runner

151 Pincft
153 Astaire ID
155 Tin symbol

ramembenlcl.
,.

•

•

·

Harl'f Betz and
Family

3 Announcements

MOUNTS
GREENHOUSE

'h mi. up MI. Olhre Rd ..

llaaide R.R. In lltlwell.
11114) 388-9314
· t..rga
Gerantume.
98¢ each. Tometoea.
Petunia• end oth•.
e1. 215 doz. Hanging
Pou t3.150.

'
\

•t

+'

.••
'•

••
'

•

PATRIOT .

.

rYPYI

\

1-800.;388-1150
A IJ!ADI!IIIItiiJIIIILYINOQUAIJTY TAAININO
TO '11111 'J'IIUCDIG INDUS'IliY.

She's 40!!
••
&lt;

1-1'1

:Mart to his .• • "Lei me _, If I

, uilderltalid what you are saying.
You .won't 188 me anymore becauae
' you need ep8C8 and want to date
; olhlr JI80Pie. Does that mean we
WON1':tJ8 MARRIED?"
•

•
•

.:.

...

.. '

..'.

'

M""'f"P· ·..... o«1

An Independent Dealer
Guaranteed Low Prices

· Real ESiate General

Uniroyal, Firestone. Bridgestone,
Miche.lin, Armstrc;mg, Brigadier
Mon.-Sat.

••• 1

Me11"

. WONDER
~
r;;;.--IN£
WON'T be MARRIED

TRUCK DRIVBR TRAINING CENTER

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

8:.30-6:30

· . Intersection 160/5 54

388-9406

.

•••
...-

'

•

.

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

;I

acres,
care
room for 4·H projects.
6 year old home has had excellent care and
the settm&amp; will please those lookin&amp; to &amp;et away
from noose and confusion a1ler a day's work. Fea·
lures in~lude 3 bedrooms, living room , drning
room, eat-in kitchen, wopdbumer, detached gar·
age and workshop and small horse barn . Owner
leaving area, Must sell. $65,000.
#231

Mtw USniiG Ill SPRING VAllEY AREAl- Very
well cared for maintenance free ranch home in
e•cellent 'neighborhood. Home includes 3 .~·
, raoms, eat-in kachen. formal dining room, lovoni
raom wilft attractrve loreplace and famoty room
wah another fireplace (w~h insert). Good storage,
2 car garage wah breezeway oulburldong. Gas
heat Uow bills}, central air. Priced to sell at
$84,900. Extra tot and 8.38 addilionaf .acres for
sale also. Please don't hesitate to call today. Call
Dave at 446·9555.
1229

8

'..

•

Public Sale

"' ''

&amp; Auction

BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE
PUBLIC AUCTION &amp; CONSIGNMENT SALE
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT, 7 :00 P,M•
AT D.A.V. BUILDING ON RT. 35 BYPASS

IIOTHIII' IUT COUNm - Very good location
along Rt. 325 just south of Roo Grande. Here's a
deluxe· home for the beginner. 3 bedrooms, 2
IN!hs. Very nrce kitchen. living room, fam~y room ·
partial basement. Country surroundinp. CoJY
schools. $42,000.
#220

"·'}~

STAR
PRICE ,REDUCED - Stretch the Value of Your
Dollars on this surfrisingty affordable brrck
ranch. 3 bedrooms, \! baths, attached garage
and nice large kitcnen. You'd better be an ea&amp;er
beaver at the new tow prrce of $47,000. H505

-....
I

N~lLIDAY HEIGH!S - E•eculove qualify home
' in a professional neighborhood! This home fea·
tures newly remod~ed kilchen and.baths, 3 bed·
.rooms; 21! baths. longue and groove family room
panelong, coveted patoo, storage build1ng, 2 car
caroorl, trees, lovely varrely of shrubs and flowers.
uutstandmg voew of rover and town. Price reduced
·~ $123.900.
#400

.

.

Consi1nments tlken from 10;00 to 6:00 d1y of sale.
. NEW AND USED MERCHANDISE
.

Terms: Cash or Check with Proper ID
AUCnONEER: DAVID BOGGS Lk. #4596
GALUPOLIS, OHIO - 614-446-7750
lictnslll and bo!tdad in Stole ef fl!rio

NOT llSPCJNga£ JOI ACCIDINIS 01 lOSS OJ rttOI'UTY
NOW IOOIIHG SALIS

ESTATE AUCTION

SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1991
10:00 A.M.

Located on Rose Hill just out of Pomeroy, Ohio
city limits. Turn rieht on St. Rt. 33. Watch for
auction si1n to late Don Betzin1 home.

"ANTIOUE OR COLL£CTOR'S ITEMS"
Hat &amp; umbrela ha~ tree w/marble lop, marble lop wash stand,
child's piano, break front dresser. cherry dresser, wardrobe,
little Burnside stove. kotchen.cabinet. drop-leaf table, oak sew'
ing machine cabinet • Burnswidl, smoking stand. oil lamps,
draw lrnife, horse collar, 'rose back chairs. cooper wash boiler,
books, wrrtong desk. misc. what·n~t magazine rack. organ
lop, Shi~ey Temple p~cher. mirror, costume teWelry. Brownoe
box camera, couch. Ragge:Jy Ann &amp; Andy dolls. picture
frame$, misc. old furniture, pieces &amp; etc.
•
"HOUSE NOLO"
RecNner. Gibson frost-clear refrigerator, base cabinet. metal
wardrobe. stands, table &amp; 4 chairs. metal shelving, desk,
bed, dresser, wrougtrt 11on flower stand, Mayta g washer &amp;
dryer. &amp; chairs.
"MISC."
10' Fiberglass ladder. alum. step ladder. dog house. base·
menl jacks. drafting table, &amp; etc.

LESLIE JANETIE
ATKINS
Admlnlstrllrix for
Refreshments by
lleias Band
Boosters
Terms: Cash
Positive J.D.

Casell26973

DAN SMITH
614-949-2033

..__NntrelfOraad
8lr ........ 01rpor1 ancl

Din Smith. Auctioneer
"lot rnporrslbla for accl ....ls or loss of property.•

....

, ~~
.._,'ETY

• Weekday anriWeebndcluaea availoble

BIDWELL-PORTER
TIRE CENTER

·~·•K•••

poJmont. 304 411 5330.

SCRAM-LETS

. • Job Search Allliltance offered

3 Announcements

Good
Knight

helped
make· It a eurprlae,
prepare and
cleen-up.

ANSWIIS TO · 'M:~')A.-4t.M

• COIIIJlla'C&lt;ial Drivm·J.,icenae (COL) lftPII'IIion ·

Piau. can T~M-448.,31l711
· R'fllalorillon
1Zl'll.
.

811818
112
Gront ·-""
.,_, ..
Mldde·
port. Ohio. The _. ea- . .. e z otooy. 3
flodniOm h - . 1 batl\,

-

... Finlnci*l Aid avlilable
thoac who qualify
•• Hands-on !raiDing I No home atutly
• Pl'DIACcrtif'Uid/UAW Approved

-IISoulhllotom
Coltego, Sl!rlna Volloy

DON BElliNG

FOR SALE
Offer&amp; wllllo _.Hat
the Dlfloe of lernarcl V.
Fultz. 11 1'h w. Meln
ltrwt.. Pon.,.Y. untl
Friday, May 24 at tO :OO
p.m. fOr the of the
ftOIIfe Allan.-tfl Nil

Homes for Sale
lldlntl Ohio: 3 IR ...._

GOnllcler .... MOdel ·~0 . .

Business

Bulin~~~

thOH that

w/4
lots, .......,••1 --. N,oao. wtt1

Training
Allroln

~I·

.

John and Maxine
Ruuell want to
thank everyone
who helped
celebrate John'•
·70th blnhday .by
'\yiaiting, phoning or ·
Mndhlg cards May
12th.

Alao thank. to all

Real Estelle

JOB WITH A FUTURE!

45131.

\

a,... ,..

proximity IG!IIOOI• we- fllllll. thr pllllible pitfalls. You mast will the
odl you diltnltl tocllty, tAl lldra- lint tr1tt with the queen of bearlland
""'"to prot8C1 JQUr.,.. tc llllnlelwtl. Immediately Clift three I'OIIIIdll of tllaPIICII (Felt. :10 M Gil . . II you ..... monda, removing that suit from the
erate the laellng that your prO(Iuction
capabMttiea need to be lfl*(lollld. your opponent~' hancll. Only then is it sale
bOla could be except~ dllllcult 10 10 advuce the ltiDc of bearts.
W. il . .~~~e to defeat the conget along wUh today. Gel lllck on track.
Alllll (....... 11·Aprl,., K.ap . . . tract. ~moat~ a trick In -of
peeled lor the unexpected today. tbe 1141Huill. and d11111tny still hal the
Thefe's a chance aoma!hlng dleruplhia ace of lpades u the entry to the remight occur that will require a QUICk ,.. mainiq dla~DWM! winners.
e ........,. ...,.., ,....... '
sponsa In order lor 'fO\! to COfr8C1 it.

Paltolllhl. Prof 'anal Penon.
-d
Ohio Vllloy ......
Ad...U.Ina Satoo Commlaalono
PvallioM. l:or • 111.-t. Loodo I
Troinlng
fllovidod.
Sond
R-mo To: loo eta 0111, oJo ·
GaiiJIOiio Dolly Tribuna, e25
Thlnl Avonvo, Galllpolil, OH

LARON C. CLOSE
Son, you ere gone,
but you will never
be forgotten .
Happy 21st .
. Love. Mom •
·Frlende. Mia8ed •
lOVed
all.

Auctioneer

See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-8
ACROSS

N-

In Rio Clrtr\(il. ~

SHORT-TERM TRAINING
'
. FOR A

For

DAN SMITH

Auction

*-·-O-CJ¥brtda0.
Pl....
retwn
contenls.

Pertnerships In the year ahead could be
!Ji&gt;re or a hindrance than a help. This is
tM&lt;:ause you' re likely to attract ex·
(ltrnery obstinate individuala.
·
nURUI (Apr1120-lley_:IO) Someone
· '"'h whom you 're closely involVed could
.rverely test your patience today, l)e..
cause the more you give, the more this
individual wants. Adjustments are es~tlal. Taurus, treat yourself to a birth·
clay gilt. Send lor Taurus' Astra-Graph

--~~· 1-1142~ .
••pra,.,.m Y~r ln.
CCHM or Cllln • Clreir. Earn
saoo uao • Weoldy, Full or

=

satvlces
TIL llanMilonal Tertntna,

Bualnlu .
Training

WANTED;

SUNDAY PUZZLE.R

~d~-=
p.
,.

14

Wonted: "*rl~fmo Ski~ Tro...
tnllllllptln
lloCkaround

1 Card Of Thanks

LOST blootl """"'""' pllrao,

.'

23 Proleulonil -

• Plld In
..,.._, OUOLIIE: I:OD p.a

1111~.
-·
Will vtrglnlo, 304-m-1111.

LOST • IIIIo -ioMbr

In Memory

ALL Yonl s.r..-

llllldof 110- IIIII od to 1o - ·

"Well - Ahi't Utt
ASlt~t"

L

"Not responsible lor aci:idsnts or lou of property."

auctloa..._
.,.rr
lull limo - .

Lost &amp; Found

Contact • •_ . .
na or write P.O.
1oo 104,
Ja:a' eon, Cll 41140. no Iller
than 1121/tt. Equal Opportunity
Ernpla,.,.

Case 1126979

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

1 Pllbull, 1 112 Y!'l

. . . . _ - monlll !Il-Ion.
........ lloln lllolga County.

EVELYN HESS

no lllw than
1121/tt; aak hlr Clwllly. .Equal
Opportunttr Emptoyor.
Expo-d tfolling and cool·
lng lnotollw and llirYico mon,
Qrmon Hall, Inc, 1317 ·
Dhlo"St, Point Ploooont

YardSale

..,_ay.

In Memory

•OIU'KI

You . . . . . . . . . . . . .d and ltlondohlp In a
Rto
poo101111livtna ollllo and
I ODIIMIIIa•• tD . . ~
lftd •salapment of .,. ln-

HILDA WALLER
Administratrix of
the Estate of

&lt;;0111~31·1302

~-lor

6E&lt;!NICE
BEDEOSOL

and ltlonll

llllomobllo .... _
roqulrad.
Salary: $5.DOihoUr. lt lnllrootod

Gorman ~
lddo, hll had ohota. Had to

Ave. -

;

~=,..=--::: may ,..
~- ovomlghto. lnformol _..

111m. Hlah ochool dogrMdrt~~lcl
· · · ltc.JM.
ng
-.1,
anll goOdodoquato

Home. Hol••l:lrQkln. 114-

Oood

a

-·• llkl (0 cook, ··· - · prdln, re&amp;;d_.._or drt¥1we ...,. toovo o ..., tar· ""'
. .
w.·..
lor poaplo Who
onlor - . ...... tllliofo ..aklao to - .
Who aro -lvo. and willing to
worll 18 part of an ono'1flllc

Huokj.l14-lt2-UM.
I WMII Old IIIIo Kilton. To

6

'

, _ . . , ...... - a n d

"NOUSEHOLD"
Whirlpool refrigerator, Magic Chef range, table.&amp; chairs.
glass door cabinet Hoover washer, couch ,charrs, Warm
Morning heater, 'color TV, cedar chest. compact
sweeper, stands,
misc. what-nots, fan, lawn
thairs, fled springs,
mrsc . linens, pots, pans,
dishes, oil lamps, wood
hobnail
dishes, pr. chandeliers, .

-rnv

&amp;

I

.

llnfl. Vtlloua okiMo

6

8

In Loving Mamol'f Of
DALE NICHOLSON
Who Paaaed Away
May 18, 1990
Sadly missed by
wife and children

Servrces

Siberian

ootlng - . - . .

-

.2

Employ1:1en1

''Is he surrendering or
drying his laundry?!' '

-·= -·y:

~
Hoo~k=i~ looii)Q,-

.... 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7¥
C
,.,
a.ul II.
W.

PubliC Sail
&amp; Auction

Located at 100 Hill St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
· Watch for auction signs- at Monkey Run.

DIERGENCV REUEF CIJII..
SKILLS INSTRUC.
TOR(S) WANTED: lnMJUCIOI'(o)
to IN&lt;h ComiiiUnlty and
otdlla to oduMt with
loomino -llkona. (lloloo ·
•
HOURS.
At

. . Cllol. .

Nal Chonoe.

Hlrtna S7110-11$GG

IIUNtTY

Fraa to gooll -

~~~

"'----·1-.
....,_ .... ....,_
=•
-••a.
WAHTID: Ful-tiN •r.plartnllll

THURS. EVE., MAY 23, 1991
.
5:30 P.M.

...... ~.... Jol&gt;
.ExNo
Ex...-. 24hr.
ng.
211-155-3a011

bt.Oifllt.

:UP to the dete 1nd time of

l heoale.
f The Ohio Volley · lank
Company,...,.,.. the right
to 1ccep1 or reject any •nd
itll bido. ond to withdr- thia
valoido from ule prior to the
olio. Tarmo of Sale: CASH

8

;:;:;2

1 public Hie 11 tha Jackson

-

114 . . 1111

~11,100 ..... St,IOO.

1887 Ford Bronco It, Soriof
, •1 FMCU14T3HUCZII030
Thlo vel\icle wilt be sold at

-

hoUM • mini. Hlw'•••noea.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Public Notice

111 .Wanttd to Do

AuctionHr

GOOQ INVESTMENT IN ESTABLISHED RENTAL
UNIT ·-: Improved to attract good renters. Double
two story unit with separate front and rear enlr·
anoe. Storage building with children's play area.
Listed II $38,900.
1300
.OWNERS WANT IT SOLD!!- Part riot listing. Brick
hom offers 2 bedrooms. I bath, large living room
with place lor woodburner. eal·in kitchen. Large
· ·lot.· ! car carport. Priced at $40,000.•
1221

.
UNUSUAl OPPORTUNITY -

Newly hsled brick
ranch which displays a beautiful living room with
cathedral ceiling and cross beams. 3 bedrooms,
very nir.e enclosed porch which is useable yar
round, fo:·mal dining room and roomy, attractive
eal·in knchen with an abundance of oak cabo nets.
21! baths. oversized 2 car ~arage and more. the
house rests on 45 acres which includes a 48 site
campground and 3 ponds. Give us a call lor more
information.
•
n14
PRICE REDUCED! Very attractive home for the
family movmg up or starting out. For $54.900,
you 're buvonR 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, livinR room
and family room . Very nice eat-in kitchen with oak
cabinets. "Garage and nice deck. City schools.

#206
CUTE AND COlY- Situated on a pnvale lot near
Clay School. featuring 2 bedrooms, eal·in kitchen ,
washer and dryr hookups and aluminum siding.
Call us today fol an appointment
#216

. NEED A LOT 8£QRODM SPACE, but don't have
1
a large budget? Here's 4 bedrooms on a large lot
wolh garden spac~ . Several oulbuildmgs and
porches. ~riced 1t '$37,000.
1~17

DON1 LOOK AT THE PRICE!!!- II will shock you

for Sale - Se·
miles !rom town. This
home offers 1
large fireplace, family
room. complete
central air, 7.75 acres
and tots morel There is also room to ~uold your
own boat dock on Raccoon Creek! Thos os a home
you must see!!! $79,900
· #700

to see that you can sf~l own a home for $33,500.
You will find thrs 3 bedroom, vinyl sided ranch on
Centenary close to the convenoence store. Smal·
ler. remodeled room perfect for sewing room or
nursery. Master bedroom has been remodeled.
Detached r car garage. Approx. 3/4 acre. City
schools. ACT NOW!t
1100

2.122 ACRE TREAT OF LAND located on Graham
School Road. less than I mile off St. Rt 141. Good
buoldong sHes! Seller will provide use of existing
crossing adjacent to 2.122 acres w~h buyer pro·
vrdjng maintenance.. 4 miles to Holzer Hosp~al, 6
miles to Gallipolis by .,y ol St,,Rt 141. Surveyed
descriplron. $12.000.
·
1305

AnEIITION INVESTORS!!- APARTMENTS: ex·
cenenl rental property recently remodeled ·wah
gross income of $1 ,000+ mon1hly. Consists of
three I bedroom apartmenls and 2 bedroom mti·
bile home. Qose to college. Ideal for students and
!acuity members. $59,900.
1404

CLOSE TO TOWN -- located on Rt. 7, 5 minutes
from town, this is 1v'ery nice doublewode home.. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, vaulted ceilings m the famo)y
rDOm. Jiving r00111and kotchen. Flat lot, fenced rn
yard. Outbuilding. $45,000.
·
1205

17 ACIE TRACT OF VACANT LAND reduced in
price from $89,900 to $67,500. Access from U.S.
Rt. 35 and township Road. Excellent location to
build.
· 1340

We Need listingsl!!
Wiseinan Real Estate
.

(614) 446-3644

David Wi••an, Broker, 446-9555

Olllo Ucenst

157-11-1:144

'

I

'

LORETTA McDADE. 448-7729 CLYDE B. WALKER. 2415-&amp;278 B. J. HAIRSTON. 441·4240

,,
•

"

....

'I .,

-·4 ~

l

..,.-.;.~- .. .. ....

t

�Times Sentinel
31 Hom• tor Sale

OH Point Pleasant,

42 .Mobile Homes
for Rent

loo-.

.

5 room houio wkh

ond ~
A....,_ tiled Nat Cell.

..,..:.·- =====--I
I.AIIOICOLONIAI.
4 II dr:NJM. 2 112 ..... 2
Fh ptvn, 2 · VIr-

...,.._.IM•im.

Atd C'td To W : a ltory 3br

eor-

U1 In ChMhiN, Ohio.
Ell-.. - - - · - • • . - - -.

A_. Dtd I nn Md -b df.2 nn
lind.

.._.,.,., 1 oon -

,~~~~:C.
&amp;.
NI7'0

· 231 Llnccln

Non. 4p.m.I14-&lt;W6-:IIIl
Cloon. N• Polo. - . . . &amp;
~ bod,_ mobile ' - · unlur- Dlp&lt;loit lloqu!Nd. tM-1*11111.
nt.hed,
fWtlrr-·e,
amall

_":'_u~_:_:~_'_S_@!~~.~jf.lrS~

~·..:.. 1 P=. ~..~
1lit.'

O words
Rearrange !he 6 ICfOmbled
below to make 6

Rt. 211. R o - • ~

_

44

My -

-

~

·-·
....

r·-·

Cobto ....ttobto. eott 1M-W:
1251'
Nice rncbllo " - tor ,..,, 1
oduN lfttorrod. ~polllt n.

-

-

1144e7-7lli3.

Poitlotty
tumlohod
moblie
~
..•J®PIJulllllloo,~h,
T$-2535.

Apartment
for Rent

In Sleek
Contor.Which To 2

Fl,.nclng Avoltobto.

1-....mO,
1173 ,.nDybM1'111 2 BR. 114-

&amp; Bolh.

Aporlment ..,liable

lor 2 .., 3 .

2Rot.lA,
11 otoc., mobile"-· con~tructlon · - ~l Dep. r.q'od. 114-251-1122. 25M.
;;:::=r=-:-:---:---Nice 2bt, 121115lloblle Homo .n A-s lor...,,·-.., nionth.

32 Mobile Homes
.
.
for Sale
,,_ ElMo -ion
,,_,

-

Furnished
Rooms

clllldron , ..,....., ,,... trottor 45

poll,

1100 AEIATEI

Fumlohod •

Stllrtl!lglt . ,... Oolllo Hotol

114 411-Nio.

•

-SIIIPina ·roome· wHh cooking

Atoo.trollor -

· All--:

Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·77:1.;.-=·
;;;•::-:;:;.YI'l.:.:.:;·_ _ __

46

S~ce

for Rent

CcHnmorctot opo.o nut to PPHS
behind r-. ....... Wotld.
Very viol~ huvy trofflo .....
304. . , . . , , . . . , , _• .

....

Totol

~. -.WV1·:104-

tUN lam, In Chnhl,., 114o-182·

~ Lh(lng: Untum-. S

Skytlno,

11M

14170,

~1.

1NI NMhua 2 Bedroom, LIYtng
Room Nice Size KHchon, Llrgo
8oth, !Wtworic~, Untum.-,

bdrm 11!14. Avolloblo Juno 111.
·----

$171.-.
- ............ with - -..
1
:;;1":1n ~oobodtr=.r':~~~ County APP!Io~ Inc. -

Lorgo 111111 ultalna. Con Soo
AI: 1144 Joci&lt;Hn Pllia, 1.o1 10.
.,................, .... 8377.

rwqulrod, no polo, IM-Itll·2211.
Fw RoN: 2 Allt., wlhlin oNy Mmlto. DIYtlmo: Col 514-

-·

441-11Ml E..,.fnp:

Cloyt.n 2 bod........ 14115,

-

.~oo~A'G:.'

l:l:'t',:,::

ltN llolllle Homo 141'111, 3lw 2
Full lolho, C.ntrol Hill &amp; AI;,
All - - Pltlo Dooro,
t13,10b." 114-387-7!113. lluot 8o
-ldl
I
3 bod,_ lrollar, wHI

oc-.
Hnoncoll

10% whh- .._n. 3

ri)lloo N. At. 2, 30W75-7853.
IJ 3 bod- mobile

114-446-

00'10, or oM-441-1314.

120

Fuma~~~o-.
Fowth, Qaglpotlo, $11'5''Utllltloo
Pold. 114-1-llollor 7p.m.

Fumlohod
EHiolonc¥ 1150
Utllhloo Pold, Shore Bilh, 701
Fourth, Clalllpollo, 11• 441 1111
after7p.m.
FumEHicloncy,
All
Utllhloo Pold. Shore lllh

r=,.:a~

locoiid A-ua·

At-

;;===:;=:;::;--;----,-.,---,-

"""" wlodd-on, ocro IICiudod I
'-"&lt;!, llrgo p411'Ch ond dock, Oroclou:t living. 1 lnd 2 bodwloppiiiMM, SCM-IJII.m3.
, _ oportmonta ot VIJJogo
llonor
lnd
Now 121110 mobllo homo, Aporhl\l!lll In lllddlo-. From

~~r. """..:,~=~~': ~~~. CoJIIM-182·7781. EOH.

!1043.

SPECIAL loci~ . to ,.u. 111Dt

Fum- mobile Mmo, 1 milo
billow '"""' -Icing rlvor
No1 Suffobto lor Chll&lt;hlic Poto'

two or th,.. bedroom 14170 CA. IM 441 0331.
'
n:c
oompl.. ely .... up. In~ludlng ololftlna, tlo - . -lflll"'l oppllcotlono lor
~ond olOpo. ' S11,11l00 ... _,..,...,_,.,,Equal-

d••·

1 . - of ....,..) Coli
nt-1041 lor tlotallo.

1.1111J.

lng Opp., air """"·•

c-

loundry

""""• hw trollll pickup,
to ~~- I ochoolo. 304·773-

IJ-~·~~~~~;;Tn

.,.. Farms lor Sale
,.,.

b•*-"

ita 4 -

Dokoto Hcmo, Ono
oplo
Bull Oft y..., Lot "'1115 d ().l(on Alii lido lor 1135/Jno,
• .IP."";J
an
pi~ utlfltlu.. 1lne bedroom
up. IM-1•7311·
., ·
dupln tor Ptlllln&gt;o, utll-

· 34

Busl-·
........
Bulldln
gs

pold. 3N-tl7&amp;-ltoo.

,..,...,.,

P..
••
&amp;
""' Sill: - · •
....,morclol
IPICI doownlawn HlwHaven,
WVA. . Ellol!f":: o_. .od to

41RI28olh ' - · ptuo . 1Apl.
.ond
· .

did• woodln bunk
'

tum, ''"'•

·

£' i

2 bod......,.,

rei. • - ·
1- 1 p m IM

port.

hcck.. p,

o, con ·~

n.1

~:;·A,.:-1.1~
~-•

Crolllloto

5

1 I' 1
~~~"=t~M::R=e=E~~
Ii Ill I I' I e

·

s:a. 110

41101-1939

~~~~-.Ill..

.

.

.

~.

..•

LuiAir I I -

8.,,

- . - . $100. tlrm, .....
CUrtlo . . . . . 2Mt.

Complete
thethechuckle
by filling In
milling quoted
words
• you dftelop from llep No. 3 below.

llantlo Ulor cultlwlor,

riow ond

.,.n,

bott8r to ..............
llwla .... f*lo!iil
lobe
-,...,,.... Wllahl 211 lb,
~ aft•I:OCr.
IIUST SELL: A~ Ook A_,

'

ClUb, . . _• .F U I ~~~~~::udlna lrenotoro ond-

NEW LISTING~ !'It STORY "STARTER HOUSE"- 2 bed ·
$'2otoaJ. bath, 36 Chillicothe Road. Partial basement.

l'llght lull of ... _
IIDnol llcllltloo IncludinG · -. peel, [ICUUI,
~~~ - · lllhlng. Coli

Real Estete General

..

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

!

range ttarwei
&lt;!rylr lfD; oholl ..._ $71.
Stioaao Alllllloncoo, Uppor Alvor
Rd.lk-4411-7381.
eleo.

•

gold f7!i_kO.....,. ....,.. f18;

'

Judg ·Dewitt -

1-:1151
AENT20WN
Solo ond Choir, P.l5 por - " I Polol Woocltnuo, I14.G1 por
week. L..Shapid Junk •..:..~-

~= ond Chill ot o..';;;
'SWivel R.ckor,
• 111.14SU4, .por --"k.
-

81oke~

•

:=TUPPERS PLAINS -

738 Sec:ond Ave.
J. Merrill Carter
379-2184

Cathy Wroy · JMnnie France Tammie DeWit•
446-4255

446-,8006

Dan Corter

441-0703

'Patti Hawk

Shirley Boster Sam Hoffman

446-8434

446-1260

379-2449

''

446-1967

5p.m.

SPECIAL

8He, Campl.te, Twin or Full

polil.

Fll .A. Sulo, -

SUllo

u••••••· Soli, • Chll,.

c~or.

N. MYRTLE BEACH
Overlooking
Ocean

the

DAT£S AVAILABLE: .
June 1-8
Aug. 3, 17r 24, 31
Fall Rates Available

446-2206

Co~

.... End- ....., ......
llpMioJol P1cbna FwnHure, 112
lflo Out .lorotc~ Rd., Pt.
nt, WY 30W71-1450.
SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12
Olivo st. Oalllpotlo. Now &amp; Ulod
Q

NEW LISTING!
DON'T JUDGE THIS IMMACULATE HOME
FROM YOUR WINDSHIELD! .

01 1

"UI In Stook. llollohon' Cor·

Antiques

Excellent location, restdentia~ or commercial
property, 35 West area. Vinyl sided 3 bedroom
ranch . Ov.er I acr.e lot and approx. 1,100 sq. ft.
commercial butldmg.
12909

1124 E. lloln strell, ,_...,_
Houre: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. IQ 1;00
p.m., , . , . , 1:00 to 1;00 p.m.

1:~

toto, IIIKh 0nm
~- loto, Info IIIII
lot . .

NEW LISTING!
ROOMY &amp; ALL BRICK

11. Jill Podnor. 114-241-........ tow 1111,100. ovllltabll ·
lit M11d uhln lubdlvlrlkwl, 2.1

Attr~ctive 3 bedroom ranch home with 3 baths.
larntlv room, formal dtnml! room ..soar.in"' ~itrh•n

-·

-RESTRICTED
.... londhiH
BUILOINO, - :11)4!

wrth solid oak c1111nets. 2 car garage +additional
detached garage. Full basement, heat pump/cent
aJr, Ali this and more situated on over 49 acres.
Cali today•
2911

lDTI 1'011 SALE In Oolllpotlo

Wll - - tndloro, ""'
:IOU?I-

IIAKE AN APPOINTMENT IIIIIEDIATELY!

To view this 6 acre mtnt·larm. Remodeled 3 bed·
room vmyl sided ranch style home w~h garage.
In-ground pool, iarllf barn and numerous out·
buildings. Several feet ol road frontage. Beauti·
fully mainttned.
N2907 .

.,. buUdlna loti, ""'
·
- · "" llnglo-wldo. 304tm-1100.

Fl&gt;r - : Rlnr bonk proporty In
Mleon. *'"m.IU1..l

Real Estate
Wanted

LOCATED ON THE QUIETEST
BLOCK IN TOWN
·

Older two story wlh sunken family room. beaut~ui
must·see k~chen. 2nd income dwelling included.
Within one block ol c~y schools.
N2906

non'·•S
'

1(,

•

REDUCED/$44,000
· A LOT OF CONVENIENCE!

Only a lew blocks !rom church, school and shop·
ptn~ 2 story brrck home srtuated on .644 acre in
Galhpohs, 3 or 4 bedrooms,2 lull baths, nice living
room and large eat-in krtchen. Call today tor an
appomtment

naaa

USTIIG- lliMIJIOrt- Briel linch - Extra Ntce! .
house hu'• f•nished ba11111ent thllts livable- espe·
ctally in the summer hilt! Has 3 BR, k~.•LR. OR, 2 baths, lg.
ut1lity mt., den, stone hreplace. Bmment has kitchen, !?
bath, bnck firepl1ce, 1,745 sq. ft. living space. PLUS- at·
tached .2 car
and on an elrtralot another 2 car prage
Plus utHity buJidJn, You must see thit house to appreciate.
Call us today!
IIIDDlEPOIT
500- 543 N. 2nd • 3 BR. LR. OR . 1~ balh • gar " '
base., ••7
~ ,
.
S Y~US£-On 124, 3 BR, LR, OR. FR. 2 baths, pool. In
s. Make offer.
IR IDOLEPORT - S. 2nd, Brick, 4 BR. I !0 bath. LR. FR. OR.
lvtrVteW. $32,900.
IINEISYILL£ - 4,000 sq. ft. Commercial Bldg. on SR 124.
locatiOn'

_.,.ee

50

42 lira II HI ttom•
fai'Aenl

1.,.,.,...,,...,
..... =I
a

........
Ail

l·

II Ill"~ lrV.

•

..,....

.-

· :.~

·• .• .

IS here, II acre,

ACREAGE- 35 WEST AREA

Ideal development property. OvJr 100 acres.
Land lays well, partially wooded. Call for complete
hstingl
N2812

16 ACRES IIOREILESS

Located in Huntinfllon Township. 12 acres m/1.
$7,000. 4 acres m/1. $3,700.
N0007

NEW LISTING!!
ACREAGE!!

NEW LISTING!
11081 LE HOllE

1972 Schult l2'x70' with 7'x12' expando. 3 bed·
rooms, electric heat, plumbing has been replaced .
Tte downs. 2 porches and underpinning included.
Sttuated on rented lot. Ownr anxious lo sell!! Call
at once!!
N2910

REDUCTION/f67,500.00
..3 UNIT RENTAL COMPLEX
Receive a positive cash flow !rom the .rental tn·
come on this newly constructed complex. Each
unit consists of 1 bedroom, furnished kitchen iiv·
tng room, bath. 'Vinyl stding. Low maintena~ce.'
Call.today for more details!
N2816

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS

Gorgeous brtck home. Just as soon as you take
one look, you'll be sold. 3 bedrooms, lormaldining
and ltvmg rooms, 3 baths, family room, lully
equipped kitchen, 2 car garage and separate
24'x36' garage, pond, pnvate setting. Exceptton·
ally nice home with a lot ol amenities plus over 4
acres. City schools.
12157

REDUCED!
• $9,000

Approx. 4.5 acres situated at Rodney Pike. Rural
water available. Anic' level pie« of land. Call to·
day.
12874

m4

LISl'ING -THIS HOM£ SPARKLES and oflers 3 bed·
baths, cozy lamtiy room with fireplace. tully
kitchen, 16x32 in-ground pool, 2 car garaRe.
L~&lt;'ll.eo In a lovely area just minutes from Gallipolis. Call to·
details
N33&amp;

PLANTZ SUBDIV.- Don't think voo
lake • look at th1s 2.7 acres,
ho~:·nnm
!rom c:ly. Asking only $39,000.
VACANT LAND - Rio Granda uea. Various sizes ranging
from 20 acres to 100 acres m/ 1with road fr011tage on Tyn
Rhos Road. Call lor details.
#316
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - 12.9 acres m/ 1 located in
Cheshtre Twp. Approx. 700' road kontage, good home site
With barn. Rural water available. A good buy al $16,550.

..
"" •

ms

. ...

YOU'LL KNOW THIS IS AGOOP BUY!!

When you see this well liken care ot mobtle home ·
nestled on 21cres more or less of treed surroundtngsl Private set11111. 2 bedrooms. livinl room.
bllh w/ prden tub and eat-in k~ehen. WON'T
LAST LONG! $14,000.
,.
12185
Approx. 36 acres. Recently reseeded. fenced.
pond. Majority olacreap is tHiabie and pirtially
woodd. Call lor price and location!
N2192

.

'

UllOA G. SMIDIIOIE

1ElllOIII9·26U

.IB,_.

, _

umoa m .uu

GAlliPOliS. OH.

·: l·SHAPEO RANCH ON JAY DRIVE- FEATURES NICE OPEN
: KITCHEN/DINING / FAMILY ROOM ARRANGEMENT WITH Fl ·
• REPLACE. FORMAL LIVING ROOM, 2 CAR GARAGE. NICE
~ VIEW OF THE SURROUNDING AREA FROM·THE POOL DECK,
~ COVERED PATIO, LOTS pF HOME FOR $65.000

.•• BULAVILLE ROAD- EXCELLENT LOCATION ONLY 5 MILES

THE REDMAN

Located at SR 35 near Rio Grande. Business only.
Includes complete inventorj, pool tables, juke
box, equtpmenl and other busmess chattels.
Lease includes a 2 bedroom apartment to assist
with monthly rent. Posstble owner financin' Call
now lor an appointment at this super opportunity.
12199

!

FROM CITY. OVER AN ACRE LAWN. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
HOME HAS NICE OPEN FLOOR PLAN. KITCHEN HAS ROOMY
SNACK BAR, DISHWASHER. ANDERSEN THERMOPANE WIN·
, DOW$, ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE.
THIS IS A UNIBILT HOME PRICED BELOW MARKET VALUE
• AT $59,000.
&lt;

!
l

~
•
,
,

Tl RED OF YOUR LANDLORD?

Stck ol rent? Then own lhis cute liHie 2 bedroom
home situated on .9 of an acre. I.Jrge bath storage
buJidmg and fOOtn to expand IS your lamily doest
Cali today. Pnce reduced. $22,900.
N2aM

ApproXImately 42 acres
Township, rural water.

s~uated

m Huntinlllon
12117

VIEW OF THE RIVER

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

THIS HOME ARE ENDLESS 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 SECONO,FLOOR. FlRE·
PLACE IN LIVING ROOM. WOODBURNER IN FAMILY ROOM. 2
CAR GARAGE . AVAILABLE WITH 3 OR 9 ACRES.
THIS NEW HOllE SPARIILES IN ITS COUNTRY SURROUND·
INGS. HOME FEATURES THREE BEDROOMS AND TWO BATHS,
COMFORTABLE FAMILY ROOM, FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND
MUD-i MORE. SITUATED ON 3.9 ACRES MIL. HANDICAPPED AC·
CESSABLE. CALL FOR DETAILS. $80,000.00.
ROUTE 160 -JUST AFEW MINUrES FROM HOLZER HOSPI·
TAL ONE BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGt KirCHEN WITH LOrS
OF CABINET SPACE. FAMILY ROOM. STORAGE BLDG . ON AP·
PROX. 1.4 ACRE LOT PRICED UNBELIEVABLY LOW AT
$30,000!
./

! NOTICE- HASKINS TAVERN 0~ COURT S.TREET WAS RE·
••
•

•

.

With this over 8 .acre lract ol land. Wooded. site
ci~red lor mobile home or house, rural water
available. Road frontage along SR 7. $8,500.
12193

PEACEFUL AN.D SERENE . Lots of.privacy. Very nice country
home. Large hving room w/woodburning lireplace. Eat-in
country kitchen w/ appliances. 3 bedrooms,1.25 acres more
or less. lop of ground swlmmtng pool. Very nice home wiih a
pretty setting. Kyger Creek or Bidwell schools. Your choice.
1349
ST. RT. 588.200 Fr. OF ROAD FRONTAGE- I acre of nice
FLAT ground. Just like new 2 bedroom mobile hoine wtth ex·
pando. living room, lovely dining room w/wood floors and
bow w1ndow. Large
detached
Also an extra mobile home pad and
with
drive. Pride intheir
home is reflected
N347

NEW ON THE MARKET! SPACIOUS SPUr FOYER HOME . 4
BEDROOMS, 2!? BATHS, EQUIPPED KITCHEN, HAS SNACK
BAR. NICE DINING AREA. CEN. AIR CONO. VERY CONVENI·
ENT LOCATION NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL. $65,000.

OIC. IIJocusr
II.. , :H~OII=I~~~_jiO~M~I~I.~~~--.J PRIVATE WOODED AREA- BEAUriFUL PINES SURROUND
. :(~~AD~A~I
•jA:UD:tl~l~f
rHIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME. THE COMFORTS OF

1.975 acres m/1 provides privacy and seclusion
magniftcent quahty custom home. 3 baths.
hvmg room. family room, formal dining, master
bedroom w/dress111g room, walk-in closets, secur·
1ty system and so many more amenities too large
to mention. Located wtthm the cily of Gallipolis.
N2904

forth~

.....
·:.'

..

ANY IIOUR

..·

EXECUTIVE RETREAT!

OWNER WOULD CONSIPER
SELUNG ON LAND CONTRACT

. .
.
. wtth 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, livingrm.,
drntng and kttchen wtth some !arm eQuipment located on
L:ncoln Pike.
12n

446•3636
MAll P. IIOYD

•

SPACE FOR SALE!!!

Over 5 acres situated In Green Township It Buhl·
Morton Road. Call for more inlormation. Perfect
for thai specill home! .
IZIU'

With this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remodeled, vinyl
siding, storage building, II! acres plus excellent
garden area. Tobacco allotment Raccoon Town·
ship. Unbeatable price. $29,000. Call today.
N2895

.

CIJY SCHOOLS- This is one you have to see. A5 bedroom .
3 bath vtnyl stded ranch wtth family room, di:ng room . full
basement Lots of room 12x20 and BxlO decks. Ali th:s and
!)lOre on 1.5 acres m/L Call today for your appointmnt.

Realty

BEAT THE RENT RACE!!

•

~·

Real Estate General

~· ·

.

Canaday

Grova

.....
2722. - -· -

. 79 ACRES MORE OR LESS located in OhioTwp. The property
has some timber. Call for more information.
STOP BY OUR OFFICE FOR A COMpLETE BROCHURE OF
OUR LISTINGS.

114-M2--.

.

REDUCED PRICE, SPACE- Everything
Kyger Creek school district, paved road ,
3·4 bedrooms, 21! baths, lamily room with ftrepiace and
much more. Cali lor details.
· .
-315

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - Spacious, attractive
3 bedroom , 2 baths, famtly room , living and din ing room ,
breakfast area, heat pump central air w/ electric or propane
gas Iurn ace backup. 1900 sq. ft. MI LliVing area. Partial ba·
sement. Big home and 20 ac . m/ 1.
#329

68 ACRES MIL IN OHIO TWP. Frontage on St. Rt 7 with
some timber. Priced at $10.000.

Real Estate General

5

Bur ., HI. A I - Anllquoo,

GAVIN
2 WAYS TO BUY -Straight out or land con·
tract. 3
home, nice fenced yard, new carpel, newly
painted inside and out, family room and more. $34,000.
'
N339

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS 1n Rodney Village II. Call lor more
information.

HENRY E. CLELAND .. ...... ... ... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL .. .. ......... ...... 949-2660
JO HILL ...... .. .... .. ..... .. .. .......... 985-4466
TRACY BRINAGER .. ... ........ .. . 949-2439
OFFICE ... .
.. .......... ......... 992·2259

Real Estate General

•Llr1ll pri!ota .......rlctad

6.5 ACRES WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS situated along
Garfte.(d Ave. Site includes 2 bu ilding lots w/city water.
sewer. Buy now for $30,000 or purchase house w~h lot for
$15.000.

.

PRICE REDUCED! IIULTI·PURPOSET

Make an appointmnt to view thi~ 4 bedroom 2
b~th hom~. family room, dishwasher includ'ed
w~h the kitchen, cathedral ceiling, utitny room
C~ntral air heat pump, 24'x30' garage. Within
mtles of ctty . Kyger Creek schools.Owner will con·
s1der flnancmg to qualified buyer.
12912

polo. 11~11144.

53

RACINE - Quiet anil peacelul a lovely 32 1h acre site with 2
bedroom mobile home with porch. 14x18 log and pole build·
ing, cellar house. and utility building. Experience the life of
transquiiity at the reduced price of $20,000. MAKE OFFER.

&lt;

tumlturo, - - · -om •
Work - · · 114-4U-3151.

VInYl Fl...., C&lt;warlng:

'
,•
·
'•

• THE REASON W£ SELL HOUSES .. .IS BECAUSE WE KNOW
WHO WANTS WHATI LIST WITH liS AND THE ONLY PEOPLE
PARADING THROUGH YOUR HOlE WILL BE THOSE SEEK·
lNG YOUR SORT OF HOUSE. TAKE IT EASY - LET US DO
THE WORK. OUR LIST OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS SPEAKS
. FOR ITSELF. WHEN YOU THINK OF REALTY THINK OF CLE·
LAND REALTY!

Wotor

i&lt;iddJ_ng. 7

Dining . A..m

burner tn the full basement. 1 car garage also isin basement.
Equipt kitchen and satellite dish are just a few of the many
leatures offered in this very nice home sitting on a IOO'x200'
lot. CALL FOR YOUR SHOWING' Asking $36,900..

.

Nowlllood

a.....,.

.

•
•
'•
•

•

llo.m.-ep,m.; Sundly, 12 N.....,..

Cllooto,

1 floor pian home 'with 3 bedrooms.

rt bath, ni.ce fireplace in living room. Family room with wood·

Bunk Bodo, CcHnototo, llbr

Court-· 1 - · 2 -

3-4-.Aitnlolty

'

·; NEW LISTING- HE II LOCK GROVE - Ranch style home
:~ with 39+ acres, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, I II bath. The grounds
•• mclude bemes, cherry orchard, various lruil trees and gar:: den space. ASKING $54,900. , ,,

'

Roct- SZ'III par -1c. Dl1114ta

...............
_
_,...., CHANNEL llodoil
- .....,I-IIIII.,.
MARKER r:·
-....:.hl,::::--..r:: CONDOS

.

PRICE REDUCTION- on this 1987 modular home with 69
acres of land located in Rutland. Home is in excellent condi·
tion·includes carpet and drapes and plenty ol closet space.
Many lealllres includmg FREE GAS! CALL TODAY! Reduced to
$65,000.

I

ovoC&gt;Ddo II'_, fill; llnlll relrtg
I cu. fl. tl5i lito. 30"' range

3 BEDROOM BRICK. Situated on 1 acre, 5 miles from Galli·
polts on Bulaviiie Road. Kyger Creek School District 1.440
sq. ft. P.riced in the 60s.
·
COUNTRY LIVING- 3 bedroom home with Great room. fire ·
place. 111 baths, 1~20 sq. ft. living space, approx. 1 acre lot.
in-ground pool. CALL NOW! PRICED TO StLL!!
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A 2 story lrame double
located on Second Avenue. Gallipolis. 4 rooms and bath ·
downstairs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs. Call today.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON- 6 rm. house located
along Mam St. Rent or live in. Presently grossing $2,100.00.
Buy now lor $14,000.00.
HOME lN MERCERVILLE- 3 bedrooms, living room, dining
area. kitchen, 2 baths. II acre lot more or less. storage build·
ing. Cali lor appointment.
GREEN ACRES- Two lots.·I large level homestte. 140ft. by
148ft. ctty water. Green school, Good location. Priced rtght
at $10,000.00.
·
TWO BEEDRO~IS, 2 baths, living room. ~ining room.
kitchen and ut1lity room. 11.012 sq. fl.) condom1nium, GOOD
LOCATION, choose your carpet color and MOVE IN NOW!II
CALL FOR MORE ll;fO.
...
NEW LISTING - 10 acres, Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy
now for $!0.000.

POMEROY - SR 124 - Approx. 311 acres of vacant land.
Water, electric and gas available. lots of firewood and a suit·
able site lor house or trailer. ASKING ONLY $4.900.

coli 301-171-M&amp;O.

opt. oz. f711: Aotrig. 2 dr.
11Ratrta.
, wlilta fl5; _.. bJ old4i relrtg.

3-4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, situated on 5.5 acres, within
Vte~ ol the Holzer HospitaL 24'x36' barn presently being
utthzed as a2 car garage and storage. 2other outbuildings. A
QUALITY HOME with many amenities. 2 lull baths and 2 hall
baths, den, formallivmg room and dming room , 2WBFP, en·
tertainment kitctien·:.. QUALITY THROUGHOUT .
.

HOW CAN YOU BEAT THIS? This home has everything &amp;
more! Brick ranch home with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, elec. heat
• pump, 2 car garage, newer carpet. patio, fireplace in living
room, ail this on 1 acre of landscaped ground w~h numerous
fru~ trees. Originally priced at $80,000 but you can have it
now for only $65,900 - rHIS IS A REAL STEAL'

ry.

-~

JUST LIKE ADOLL HOUSE- Beautifully decorated . Formal
hvtng room, complete kitChen, family room large and sunny, 3
bedrooms, rustic covered deck and also a sun bathing deck.
Great home lor entertaintng. Nice flat and well landscaped ·
grounds. Satellite d1sh . 2 car garage and storage buildmg
with a loft. Green Elementary School.
.
#344

PRICE REDUCED- on thts treautifui Country Estate Ranch
style home stlltng on 40 acres! Includes 4 bedrooms 2
baths, carpet heat pump and 2 car garage. Also a basketball
court for the kids and barn •nd pond with ail that acreage for
the la.rmer tn the family. Reduced to $59.900. MAKE OFFER.

tu,_ Wlatr

Bulov.. Ad.

wfth 4 Cholro, 17.50 por - · •
Pootar Brooo Bod, -.20 por
oY
........ - - ...
~woN,4SUO
por will!. Rt. Ml,'
Dro-r
•t
00ttoo Oft Rt. 7 In Callllnlry.
H AS: MondoJ thru Soturdoy,

Real Estate General

992-2259

PICKENS FURNITURE
NawiUaod
Hovnllclld lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlc~ Rd. Pt. Ptoi•rt, WV,

m·

For

Real Estate General

ol
to c:Gut. 0,7110. lntor"'od porlloo miJ vi.. • ....

tumlohlnp.
HouN: Jlllon.lot, t.l. · -

Solo.IM-241'M51.

Wobb. Coli 614-446-4231 1-8003!2~231 .
•

.
·1!~1 I I I' lael I I I I I I I

COmplota , _

white '

C:,.:

dhlonii14-2(1.M48.

~·-·•300. -

rr1·rrrrrrr1

441 1143
·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

WurtHz.er Upright Plano

I90S

~

L -IIM-I*7SN• .

Fo:..-...
"' ..

1:::--::---:----

_...I, INC.

por!loo

SIOO.--IOimfthond
--- IIIII' - ·
---Chill
- " ' ~n boor) - · liol-

~- &amp; llryO&lt; 2"'
Old, S310. 111 t111Sti, I*

OFI'ICI IMCE 1'011 LEASE .n
2nd Ava., Clolllpotlo. CloM ID

............,__ 114-&lt;W6-'IIh
44&amp;-1131tft.

a!I'J:":=

~-;~·~·~~~~·~ : ~-

...,.. - - • · or WorlcrDIIIIl IM-112-11181.

. ----·"=-

d ryora, rofrig&lt;lrat.,.,

.

~~10~-==

want to date other
~-~ that mean we

•

-

Hoollr Fw In Ground """'·
E l l - Cendlttonl -4 . Yaors
Did&gt; CIII.Anr!lrna: l1t 2•1Ne.
IBM I!I!IOrlll ~ .._,.

lddate~ ~see.! ,

You WOI'l'l see me
anymore beca• •tie you need

to

w..........
---.

B-

POMEROY, OHIO

oftor • ,.., r howl boo ....
lui II pc. -~~-........
1344
- ....
......loft.
•ppll•
llol ' ".........
' ""'"""
Iii
boor,
I to all rid of. Joll1_,.._

I

•

Pets for Sale

to,..,..

wv

I=

o

56

stool plpo -1 ,., oulvarl, 111
...... " " " - 1:00
Pll
Cottogo~lll,
-372-1401. .

I ..,. ll4lltlna •

luood
·lito. DDon
o.m.~.
I p.m. T.IIM..IIot.
614-

4otl-11111, 121 Srd. Ave. Qa~
llpotlo, OH
GCOD USED APPUANCES

oo-,

lot of Robin Cryotoi
• ""'· IIIIo. 71 Y11re Old
114-2111-1083.
. . .

1-T.Rr-;y.E...;.H.;.r..C...;Ir:-0.:..,...-i space and

Cc4togo lor rent, tumlehod, AIC,
ntighborhl:l; d, no

Pets tor Sale

sto~ng'";· ~":: _56;::;;-P-:e::t;.s.;:lo:-=r:iS::a::;le~""'"

CODKWARE

l 18 1

56

304-'22-110.
· Groom ond Supply Sh4op-Pot
T-n Eloctrlc Aongo, ..,
30 1 h Grooming. All br- 11....,1
SIU..cll1nlna Oven. ~
l•m• Pet FDOd 0u1er. 3;.51

Z podclloo,
... cond, . . . 301-171-1104,

loon 17 II

I

r

CII'PI'L aoocl

. Equl-

-·Tho

":~~====:::: saying.

1112 8\lddJ mollllo " - 2
partiallY brnlehed and loti ...,.. 304-175-

~

~

1M .......,
Woohor
Dryw ....... l14 4tl 2144.

RENWOD
t-.....r.-16 .....;..r-1;.;.l,.:.;....;lj-.;.,1...,..7 ~ I

'nd ooma, air,

!lectrtc, 31w, 1 V2 bltho, lllnJo.

__ ......,._..,;

011 • au Tonk. All 1or
aoo.tM-2411tM.
.. ..
A Nlllono!l-.._ Dryoro .. ;

. I· 1 I I I .

I

Pets for Sale

nor

-=-----

1Pt Shull, 3 bdrm, • ....., &amp;
dryer, .,.ntrol olr, ownl"\a~'
~lng, $8100. 114-112' . .

56

OMIIollc TIICIII, 2 lown •
111GWN.I14 •• a.
.

rl~T.;...;·U~D
,:.;N....:I;.....:..Cr--11 ·
1
DAM w£:0

Real Estate General

Sunday

..,. . Wlllor JIUMP&amp;II"\\l ll HI-~
llnal C.l.- chon-·

"""'R&gt;Y

..._.

· 11M lloniiiDn 14110 2 bodroomo
and bMhl, al etec, waaher and
dryer, 304-e?I-JIIn.

lAME

Country H - ......
bdrm
Apt.
uplllolro, Routo 33, NOf1h ol
Ndlcorlited,
••hlrld.,_r Loll:, rwnt.aa, pan., MIM. c.ri
1
hook~p, no • • 1221. llof.t92~ •.;;:M-112-~::.,"'::::.:_711::.
.
70111.
"

121111,- 11c cond,
roducod.
1173
lloon Price
-

·I

WOlD

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

54 Mlacellaneous
Merchandise·

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

simple worch. Print letters ol
each in its line of squares.

I

.
1991

May 19, 1991 ·

Apartment
for Rent

44

4 bad~ ~tlvtlICI'II,
cMJ wllor,
kup,
goOd
14115 2br,I.Dcoto&lt;lln EVOfllr-.

wv

MIDDLEPORT AREA - 11h story w/3 bedrooms, bath,
60x100 IGI on Broadw1y Sl Asktn&amp; $29.500.
11293

~ FARIS AND VACANT LAND

• 25 ACRES- HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $15,000.
•

•

••78 ACRES- ROAD FRONTAGE. TOBACCO BASE, OHIO TWP .
' EX~ELLENT BUY AT $32,000 . .

APPROX. 24 ACRES w~h colonial home nvotlonkino
meroy. Executtve style home with formal entry. Family room .
lormal dinin' room. Basement has rec. room with stone fi're·
place. There san in-ground pool. Many more amenities. Ask:
ing. $145,900.
N294
NEW MODULAR HOllE. Family room , dtning room, 3 bed ·
rooms, 2 baths, Situated on 1.54 acres m/1 in Oltve Town·
ship. Look at this 011e today.
·
-309

CENTLY DAMAGED BY THE FIRE. WE ARE STILL OFFERING
• THE PROPERTY FOR SALE . PRICE HAS BEEN DRASTICALLY
• REDUCED. FOR QUICK SALE.

. 101 ACRES - HANNAN rRACE ROAD. $29,000.
•
• ACREAGE - ROUTE 218 - MOBILE HOME HOOKUP,
! BARN, $28,000.
•
; 67 ACRES- ROUTE 325- 3 BEDROOM HOME . 2 BARNS.
• NICE LAND! $38,000.

NEW LiliA lOAD- Agent nw'""''"""·l• Jn.l w:lh
ranch home w~l! family room w/fireplace
full basement, 2 car attached
with privacy len~e. Askmg

OWNER HAS REDUCED THIS LOYUY HOlE IN PORTER·
BROOK SUBDIVISION TO $62,000 FOR QUICK SALE! HO·
WEVER. THIS PRICE IS FOR A SHORT TIME ONLYI SO ACT
FAST! 3 BEDROOMS, I II BATHS. LIVING ROOM HAS BEAUT!·
FUL FIREPLACE. 2 CAR GARAGE . IN-GROUND POOL COV·
ERED PATIO. LARGE LEVEL LAWN.
THE BEST BUY W£ HAVE SEEN FOR $21,000 - 5 ROOM
FRAME HOME WlrH BRICK TRIM. LARGE LEVEL LAWN WITH
FENCED BACK YARD .

NEW LISTING - Character. style. country charm - this
home ha s il all. Older home, completely relurbtshed . 3 bed ·
rooms. 2 bath s. Wrap-around porch . Several buildin gs.
Situated on approx. l 'h acres. Ro ck Sprmgs Road. Asking .
$59,500.00.
• #345
PORHAND AREA- Quality built brick ranch home 3 spa ·
c:ous bedrooms, 2 full baths, part1al basement. On '5 level
lots. X-tra wtde doorways, hand icapped equpped. Ask ing
$69,000.
#334
NEW LISTING- JUST WHAT "EWE" HAVE BEEN LOOKING
FOR. 105 acres m/1 w~h mob:le home. n1ce farm buildtngs
and ponds. Approx. 65 acres :s fenced and ready lor sheep
!arm. Check this one out. Portland area.
1337
BUILD GREAT CHILDHOOD IIEIIDRtES tor your children tn
this spacious ranch home situated on approx. 2 acres where
fruit, nut~ berries abound. Mached 2 car garage. lull unlln·
tshed basement with a lirepla&lt;ce. Portland area. Asking
$55.000
N325

I

�I

OH Point Pleuam, wv

Pag&amp;-06 Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel
58

64

Fruita •
VegetabiN

"'* oil
of"'-·-

Gil.-...._.,.
......... ---to . . -

=-

0

01 , , . . . ,

.

•

~~~-

trull ....... AliiWi
HOme grown ..,...

.........

_,.,_lor-·
·--11113f

Toblcco
Cal
'1712.

DuNovtn FNII F -:

1R Ill -

Hey &amp; Grein

71 Autoa lor Sale

1171 Old&amp; ~ AIC, Ill
....... ....,.. .......... IbM,
run&amp;.-. . . . 304'171-1111.

1117- , _ GT, 1.1 -~

-Do!~~&amp; Plok...

-~--.
raz. Col­

lion. .

-

lulcli

~

e-

BI,DIID 1111&amp;1, t1,100j .!Ia- To
Buy: 2 bv s Polnl ...ch · lf4:446.Jt13.

Tr d nsport at 1on

'

11 Autos lor Sale

...................
........ .-.
p.M.ft1.141

~·

1
. . . ..

E=

Ptool' ,' 1:8.
ODonCloood
......

a..., ~!!:'1 ~
I~ NI2,1~7W.

T-'o

.... t
•r

21,

a.....

Col

___,__..

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

110 IIF 'IJIOIOI Shlil?t 14,3!0;

11011 IIF 13,1110; Qollnl i."!~
424 lnl'l A IN; lift •lniiMG
Bla •......_.
Round 1111r ~,1-'. Owl"'lr Wll
- · 114-2111~1122.

-

•i!L

, &amp;-

Real Estate

cr-.

Callar'a-..g

Alii-Ill Of
wlrlnt,
, _ --01 ..........
lloalar Uoanaod -rlclan.

.:JI6
Auto Paris &amp;
•

..:·:

R-

Acceasortes

1TII..

87

'~'lojlpor tor a' ft. lruck.
1 ·lltl477.
'

Real Estate General

Real Eatate General

.,. WOik Clr. GCIGd 'llroo. lf14tla-3UI.

CKtpk~· ~ . (?/md~a/1fAbzh;.

lfll Thundirlllnl. aood .....

mil-

ru~ · 1M2
Vol•~. lin color,
hlah
goccl, 114-

IA-4411.

RESIDEIITIAL . 11¥ESTIEIITS • COIIEICIAl • FAllS

run&amp;

23 LOCUST ST.
446·6106

olD DlaoCII Traclor, Shorp,

IC,Mi_3010 JD D1aH1 $3,115;

Real Estate General

oiU ..... C.IIOjiJ $3,1111;
110 David a-n Trootor With
Pl"'!r,lllac. Buah Hclg, I Blodo,
$3,1ou. Ownor Wll Flnonco. 1114l!JioiiZI.

hw·V.a
Servlc•1
OtorgM C*!fl AcL Ptl'll, IU~
pNao, pickup, and dollvorr. 814oi48-GZM.

O.vla

Elootrlca~ . · ·
·

Upholatery

f!lowNr'a Upholal'!f:lnt -

lOCI I l l _ , .... 21 ,..... Tho
bOlt In lumKuN ........,Iring.
Call ~M lor 11'111 -

High C.pocfly

••Me,

....,. Hay ....... Ao - Aa,
SI,IOO. Slllnn'o Tr... or Solo&amp;,
240 U... River Roo4, flair

OFFICE 992·2888
HOME 992-6892

Npolll, "Ohio. l-.t6:1044.

I'Gnl _ , p~on~er. a -· with a
corn plliao, Good cond~
tlofl. M50. (llika ollarllt4:441o
170oftorlpm. '

~
. ..•.•..,

. :....•••.••

101/il

.........

'

~IIHI ..... .....

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
• MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOlTIE.S. TURNER, BROKER

.

rH

G:r
,_:_

·

'"'"'"'"

.
REALTOR'

. ..' ' . .•

VIRGINIA SMITK, IIIOkoM, 318·11&lt;&amp;•
DIAN CA'LtAHAN. fiEAllOR. all·t:lll
EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR. 441·1881
RUTK IARII. Rill.TOll. 441·0121
QE&amp;oJ~~H SCITJI, IlEAL TOR, -441·1801
LYNDA FRALEY. IlEAlTOR , 441·1801
MICHAIL MILLIII, IIIBOCIATI. 4U-IIh

Eclulpma,.., SR. 311,

-ion,_.,

•

'

-~ ....... 1:110:1:00 - , . .

Sol I l l -.
""""Daoraolghlrv.oornplonlor. Good ClindiiJan, :JCM.e'IS:

--- . . . . .....
=
.... _
--..... ,,...., ,......

'

.·.

514 Second Avenue

.

Cl!f &amp;iriP, OOYet'ed patio, blrn, stocked pond. H~ hasapp.
3,000 511. ft. livill space and m~nr other ttntnihes. Gill lor

more information.
HU.IIIIT w/0"1011 IOIUY- Wtchll!"'i&lt;IOU lolindony
more cM"m, IOCI!ian 111d convemence. Th~ is perfec.t lor the.
~~~~. ~l.,d, oriel set. 2 bedrm.. 2 bllhs. U .. largelR 111d OR.
utility rm. louted on the r~t tiOOt". huty deliehttul. lnsJ~et l by
lppotntment Ills condomrnum

,.,,._,

11411- ... w;~~ao ...hhoo
.... ...., lolodt• . , . _ , - .

NICE STARTER HOM£ - located just at the
edge of town Th is h~me features 3 bedrooms. •
bath, living room. kltc~en . dmmg room and a
fl!ll basement. Five minutes to downtown.

,.,...11

._...,_

........,,--11.

Uvlltoek

11-oldHara-,F~

···-·

-~--LoadTIIIIOr,

Tal dh Draaalna Room,
IC,BIIoiJ.: 12 II • .,ocli T 7 11.

.......
-. ............
........... ~-··"
~f\711; -

For _

, Clocid ........ lor ....

&amp; 1MM

·~'

..-

&gt;&lt;~»-·

$19,900- HOME AND 1:686 ACRES . M/ l1n
Springfield Twp. Home oilers 2 BRs, LR.
_) 1tchen, bath.

•\

LAND CDmACf TO QUALIFIED BUT£1 SUOO down Pltment. $363.45 per mo. Mo·

ROOMY HOI£ - Village
- II?
story, 5 BRs. LR. OR. FR. kitchen, carpet; City
water. 2 rm. bldg.. formerly used as ofloce.
shelter

i&amp;a1. YCII COULD CAll THIS ACOUIITII'I ESTATE -:- You' I

. , ......

delecl home is vacant 1nd ready for a new
owner.

find ch~rm and corwetlitnte piLn prest1re.and pleasure 1n _
an all
brick 3 bedroom ranch home tor happy IMne. Lg l~. equll)ped
kitchen. 1\? baths. huee 1lamit, rrrt. w/weodb~rn1ng hreplace.
entertainment center w/ wet ·bar. covered Ptho. wood backup
iurRKe and elec. hel' pump w/CA. attached praa_e, detached
garage w/ 6' door, briCk blfn. inRround pool w/ pnvac: y tence
and security lthts. Ptlwate location plus 7 ac. or land. Somethmg
special. Set it now!

JS45 LAIE YO lOTS - Choi:t In~ w/o:MrtM.uiJ!r v•w
Vou ~~tt wal'l morf' than ON' Oa~ map lf clo~w«Jd ;md
evere;reen trees make !tis asuburban p~r~d ise . Also lots ffonllnR

on W1'11!f' Rrl For ltJH partculm n il 1!1 lf1S[l'Cf

S ppn~ l

\v~\
...

Pr'(f'

•.• .,..

x~

:~. ~
An£NTION INVESTORS!!! Nice home located
in town on2nd Ave. Owner hasmoved to anew
home and wants this one sotd. 3 BRs. LR. k1t. .
OR, bath. garage. Priced in the 20s.

MIDDLEPORT- 2 lots, and a one story home with seven
rooms. Has 3 to 4 bedrooms, huge tiving room, big dining
room, riewer one car garage, and four fireplaces . Also alarge
ltoored attit front porch and a partly fenced large lot.
'
$36,000

lla.A¥11-now. 114:1V2·7314.

Rag. LlmcMialn hallor Jllrllnao.
1 -lng buH, Rag. 114-lla:
lifO.
.
R giM od Pllnl -

~~

' it

FARI FOR SAL£- GUY AN TOWNSHIP -86
house With 2/ 3 bed·
several outbuildin gs.
Call for directions.

CLOSETO TOWII BUT SECLUDED SEniNGLocated on Neighborhood Rd ., l'h story home
offers 4 BRs, bath, equipped kitc he~. LR. OR,
part. basement. Block bldg. wnh 3 rms. and
carport beh ind house. Situated on 1.75 acre

liNt FARM - · located on Bulavitle-Porter
Rd ..- 13 44 acres and anite' one story home
w~h 3 BRs, 2 biths.lR. kitchen, fR. OR. car·
pet. oil and electric heating. 4 car unattached
metal ga'rage, barn. approx. 4 acres fenced
pasture. '

f

169.7 ACRES, HARRISON TWP. - Home on
property wnh 3 BR. bath. lR. k~ chen , FR.
large bam.

mil.

LETART - llinttnlilct Fi'H Exterior - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 3 sinlng porches, and a dining room. Nice big levet
yard. Fenced area with barn for animals, and a httle house
lor children. Price was $42,500. REDUCED TO $39,900

11100. 114-

...h

OON1 B£ CRAIPED FOR ROOM - Nice
home and 16 acres. mit. on St. Rt. 218. Four
·aRs. bath. LR. kitchen. full basement. City
school district
·
·r -1':

BE WHAT YOU ARE
FOR Newer all brick home just five minutes from
downtown. 3·BRs. 3 baths, great room. !amity
room, 2 ca r atta ched garage. heat pump/cent.
air, city utilities.

~

MIDDLEPORT - Priced lflordlblt- A I 'h story home
w~h vinyl siding, msulation, 3 bedrooms, large living room,
dining room. Has some newer panelint
$22,000

· - - :JCM.e'IS:

eo- .....

$8.500

PORTLAND- '111 Lot- One story home. Acute 5 room, 2
bedroom home with attic space for more rooms. One car gar·
age level lot, wen insulated tor econmical living.
·
'
"
REDUCED $22,500

.IIIW _,_7ft. Hayllli11, A1C
2:rw
planloro, Gohl
-lllor.AIIu-

-

'

SYRACUSE ;.., Ctolli. but not setluded - An older home
wnh a new heat pump, new roof and completely redone in·
s1de. Home has 3 bedrooms. sunroom. dining room, wrap-a·
round porch. and a patio. Two ol the bedrooms are huge.
ASKING.$43.000

I )Ill. hlch ...... I 11 ft.
oq&amp;=A ''""-'' 114-311l'04A

63

WISEMAN REAl ESTATE

home situated on 47acres. T~is home feature s 5 BRs. ~nd &lt;1 ,ol·
fice, ~yroom, 2 ~ baths, util~ room. clthe~l ctn~n_p .o~r
livinJ roomj dininJ room 1nd kitchen, co~versttiOn pit tn I1V1n1
room and stone 1Rpllct, fire 111d secunty '"'m srstem ..lin·
ished ftmity room with lrep~ce, heat ~mp and central atr, 2

MINEISVJLLE'- Spectacular view of the river- Would be
great as a rental property or a starter home. A3 room ~orne
with a bath and 2 lots.
'' ·
$10,000

IIIW ""'nd
-hay
· raico,
4T1 1~1
NH
hayblna,
ase NH

-

11502

Gallipolis, ·Ohio 45631
Phone: (614) 446-0008
Ranny Blackburn, Broker

POMEROY - Lincon Hts. - Cute as a button - Neat as a. ·
pin - describes this two bedroom home with an equipped
kdchen, carport, and part basement Has afloored attic and
50x288 foot lot.
$25,000

,_.,. I lmplemonlo. Bur,

-

$1l~ .uuu .

LEADINGHUl lEAL ESTATE
·PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

BLACKBTJRN REALTY

.
.
MIDDLEPORT- u.. Frta- Live in the big house and len(
the garage apartment The big house has huge living room,
lormal dining room with wmdow seat. Four to live bedrooms,
2 baths, and an enclosed front porch. Garage apartment has
3 bedrooms, and equipped k~chen. Hving room and two car
garage.
ALL FO,I JUST $27,900

Wool G.. IDOilo, IM.UW717;
Wid&amp;
UMd larm

i!Oa~~h

payina rent). S111 th~ home now .

..

PhfESIIONa&amp; SuVK~ MADS llll . .fiiii'FICI

POIEROV - Skinner Road - Ready to build that dream
home? Three 2 acre building tots. electric &amp; water available.

Jlm'l Fann

COIIIIIe or 1 youn1couple just starting to buy

I Inial.

11617. OISMIIID FDI lUIIIII'I &amp; PllfSTIGI: COdw ronch

For SolO: -

On th is
I on 3.5 acres, m/ 1,
the 2000 SQ . ft. include 4 bed rooms. 211 bath s fam ily
room w~h fireplace, some newcarpebng, large k1tchen
and format dtning room w1th out stand ing v1ew. Add to
this a 2 car gara~e and an tn· ~round pool and you have.
everything a family coutd want at the reduced pnce or

Refrigeration

.._..., "'"'

7718.

Electrical a

84

1m .... •
A.T.,
llobulll Enalnl. GoOd Tao-r

tnn atertar, buobldrt inlwlor,

-

_.., f\000. 010. 104-171- .

~-n

Plumbing &amp;
-Hilling
and-Ina

BLACKBURN REALTY

. . --

Condltlon. llulll SoUl 114-2!11·
1141.

I

Fowth ond PTna

446-0008

17W014.

1tla"-...,'""--·
y ..... lr&amp;IIOr, 10 hp

82

llng.

CALL RANNY BLACKBURN

v- ........1...,
1300. Good lllia{ll. Phon&amp; 304-

11111
10 .........,trig
~ "'""'·
lad ~
Cowir -I ,Rallo,
Boonla, SUn VI""', Chrg1111

I

Q·WpDIII Ohio
114 ... ' " '
•

12ft.-

73 vena &amp; 4 WD'a

81 Fenn Equipment

UIO&lt;nc,..ornoiMIIIollllolilll lllollmo g..,.,..
lao. !Mol - ..... himllhlcl.
F,.. ootlmoloo. Coli C011101 1·
114-:m.-, day or nlghl.
Ragen IIMrnent WaterJWoo-

:ICIWJI.'4211.

GRAND I'IIIX 111,000 - . air
114-JU.:IIII7 or 1M XI 1111.

r dlill ~·ur-r' (h
S L•v•. !•Jlk

IIASEIIENT

WATE-OOI'ING

lnopacllon,

11ua1 loll: •• IAwriclor Haolar
Da.._, A,IIOO. .-.a4111S
olor.,.m.

1

•

wv

Home

81

~

011

24hr. RICQFdlng. Ztlllll211,
Ei40H1t1.
'

,.,

ilw. Pic~:
-h'a
Fo.,..

PilOn&amp; In
DR

lui Iiiia, . . . -

... CrMII? ....... c...
" - '· Gal . ~ c...
CUdl. O.&amp;nntu• Re~Ca~te.

'

Auto Parts &amp;

YOUR OWN
FAST FOOD BIZ

Do•- FlHT CI&amp;Mic,
lullr . _ , lhloll- .......

•

Pomeroy Mlddleport-Galllpolll, OK-Polnt

Home.
Improvements

'Harler

ConiMwa

76

,

•poll,fS.IO.
· - .,. - . llof111nt
....

•

~

0.,.:
Eww....: 114 ttl 1071.

IIOOHT'S GREENHOUSE. 112
....... Olive lid. R.R. In · 114-_ _ _ _ ·•
IIIM.I..Iop-......,
~-h.T

May 18, 1981

75 Boats a Molors
for Sale ·

73 VaM&amp;4WD'a

72 TI'U&lt;*a tor Sale

.......-.;;,_=. ,

~

111U

S BEDROOM HOME near town with 2 baths.
equ ipped kitchen, LR. FR. full basement. 2 car
garage, gas heat/cent an.

MIDDLEPORT - Abargain of a home. A11h story home w~h
3 rooms up and 3 rooms down. Carport, part basement,
equ1pped krtchen. Great starter or rental home. $8,000

Guild, ·

In&amp; - . 10 yra old ....
.... .... - · · .,,500. . ..,.,.
1101.
. _ 11R. Siock Trailer .,,5110;
UNci 2 Horae T,.liar
ti.OIII:
)IR. · Hydtouilc
caoa..-nctl Dull T•ndem AIIH.
40,CIIIO llo. OVW P.IIIO. 114-liJI.
IIU.

SHERYL WALTERS ...... .. ...... ..... .. ..
DARLINE STEWART ... ...... .......... ..
BRENDA JEFFERS .. .. .. ... .. .. ...... .. ..
SANDY BUTCHER .... ...... .. .... .... .. ..

RNI Eatate General

...
CL-i·······~

' '·~ \

'\

387,0421
982,138&amp;
882·30&amp;1
992· &amp;371

Reel Estate General

.'t

1 ' ")..
·~

ROOMY HOME + 5 ACRES MIL + MOBIL£
· HOM£ located at the edge of town. Lot s ol
extras. Gall for details.

$ll,o0o, I~ LOTS - Chestnut St. 2 8R s,

RIO &amp;RAND£ AREA - 2.876 acres, m/1, lo·
vely 2 story home wnh 3 BRs, I 'h baths,
kitchen, LR. tdeally loc1ted near new highway.

.

batH.
. LR, kitchen. city utilities.

.

111 ACRES. -IOR£ OR l£S$, HUNTINGTON

*1111. IIWLISTIIG. CI.OSI II - Cozy. wei ltel'i bullllilow
w/ 2·3 Bill. LR. OR, ICtt, bolh. fll. luei •I lurroct lnewi..C/ A.
prate. outbkt1 .. city scll!ols on 4 Kres m/f. Call lor more tnlor·

PRICE REDUCED - HOME and 20 A. Ill, 3
BRs bath LR kitc~en 36x15 barn, lots of
fru1i trees: OWNER WANTS THtS ONE SOLO!

mat10n.

FOLLOWING THIS
IMPORTANT

TOWNSHIP -i Bnck home offers 6 BRs, 2
baths eat·in k~chen . LR, FR. etec. and wood
heat, cellar house, log bam. sheds. frontage on
Raccoon Creek and little Raccoo~,

$32,000, EXCELlENT STAlTER HOI£ - 3
BRs. LR. kitchen. bath, laundry, attached gar·
age.

COMNERCIAL MESSAGE,

c••• us.

COIIERCIAL BUilDING AND LOT
LOCATION: 900 Second Ave.

4,950 sq. ft. m/1, corner lot 3,900 sq.

ft. m/1, parking. 8 yr. old 50'x20' one
story block bulldrng. Heat pump/cen·
trJI lir, two baths. Heavy traffic flow
end high visibility makes this a areal lo·
celian for your business. For more de·
tills call today. Shown by apporntment
. only!
1991 (',•nlllr\ :ll Ht'lll l';~l nh• Ctll'pn llll ttln ·•· It""""' f,.
Ilk· XAf •11M! '" tl• adt•ml~t).~nf('t•nlun :! I No•nl
CMIMW!Uinn t:qu:•l H• •u~1 n.: ()ppnr1uru l.\' e

E·•·•"·

t•or:rr.,.nt:-wn.r 1•w'lft:n Mill un:aAn:p,

Locating a commercial
property that satisfies the
space requirements for
your business is one
thing. Finding a property
that will be a good invest.
ment for you or your com·
pany is quite another.
Call us. The
CENTURY 21~ network
is one of the largest and
most successful com mer·
cial-investnient sales
organizations. As a
· member ofthat network,
we can help find the right
property to meet your
specifications.

•
NEW LISTING- KIIIEON DR.- Ranch stYle
home, 3BRs. bath, LR. kitchen. full basement.

-

:.;.-

lriiS. 1111011 TNIIMIIT- IItts delllhllulllmjy h..,. hos
3 bedr•PM. 2 blttls, llirllt bllu.,..llliftfltn 1nd 1 room w~h
416 sq."·o"rll10 oll«htdPIIM· Situolldonl.2ocmm/ lln
Green sdiOOidistrll:t. SmnlamenrtiH. Call us: 1nd see this one

soon

..,........

BIG liND IEALn,
Ulllitl ba.
lc.ll "'tllowl

INC~

446·7111

21.69 ACRES, MIL, Sugar Creek Rd., I
TwP. - Home ollers.3BRs. 2balhs, k1tchen. 2
car garage,new barn.

w•.

11704. RIW UITIIG - IOIAL FOI
FlllllY - 4
lledrno .. 2bllhs, 7 " · m/l ot Hit •na, Cozy LR w/frep~Ct,
e•tr1 11:. k~.. w/ blr and eatint aru. tul basemenr. If! tbofe
III'DUIII pool. 10 "'~' 0111 of lOw~ $65,000.

S45,GOO- ST.
!II- 311Rs. kitchen, LR,
FR. part basement, very nice home.

.'

COMFORTABLE LIVIIIG - IWIY kom tile hec·
PIID£ OF OIIIUSHif' - •autnul home
.
city life. VlfY nice home offers 3 BRs. 2
situlted on 3.605 1cres m/1. Four BRs, 2\l , tit
baths.
k•tchen. LR, FR. DR. 8126 porch in front
b1ths, equipped krtchen. DR. LR, FR. Cent.
and
rear.
lots of nice wood in this home. Call
vac. system. large stocked pood, be1utilul · loi more dellils.
'
d!!Ck work. Call lor more details.

WELL KEPT RANf:H
1.382 sq . tt.,
heat. Attached garage. Very

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

Page-08-Sunday Times Sentinel

May 19,1991

Lettuce has long history of pleasing palates
I.

I
1

POliNO RIDGE, N.Y. (AP) crisp hearts might rank with the sandwiches), I think w:_ce it
LetiUCe was pleasing Mesopocami- butter-heads and the tender, leafy most for ill refrabin&amp; q · · It
an palates 5,000 yeats ago, but leuuces wllose delicate taste and · was Jcnown as ''water ptant" in
breeders never stop refining it. te;\ture simply cannot be maiChed antiquity. To tbis day, roadside
They now have created an iceberg outsil!e the ganlen.
stands in bot K.,._ countries sell
variety no larger than a tennis ball.
A tangy green like arugula lcttnoo• as tbint-qM!!!Cbers to trav·
Developed at the U.S . Agricul· templs us now and then, butiCIIUCC elers wbo 110p to ell them whole
tural Researc)l Station in Salinas, reigns unchallensect. Surveys by then llld dlele.
Calif.. these miniature heads may the National Gardening AssociaLooting at dli$ )Ul'S Cllalop,
reach produce shelves and trendy lion unfailinllly rank it high among you're clanled at~ number oC Jct.
n!Staurants by 1993. A boon for the ' the most-grown vesetables. In tuces -solid belds, looae heads,
·SII)ICITIWicct shopper looking for a . truth, what's a garden without a let· ronl4ines, 1oollle1cafs; By my count,
single-serving salad, a dwarf ice- tuce patch? Never tiring of it, some !he Cook's G...sen in Looclonderry,
berg may have something for us of us grow its succulent leaves Vt., offers SJ Ylricties divided into
gardeners, too.
.
·indoors and out the year around.
~ng, .summer, winlu and forcing
Shelf-life leuuces like the big
What is i(s chann? Aside from .kinds. Johnn;r's Selected Seeds of
iceberss serve no purpose to a its-versalililY(a base for most sal· Albion, Maine, featurea 31; W.
home grower. .But harvested for ads and prcilcilly indispensable in Atlee BIIIJICCr&amp; Co. in Warminster,
prompt eating. little icebergs with
·
·
Pa., 21: Shevberd's Garden Seeds

home pOMr learns to
piQ: llld clloole for tale, tcxtlm!
llld color l1llher dian bu west dead··
lines orrefri&amp;cnlor life.
In 40 yean of gardening I've
sampled a lot of Wn'CC' and found
they sblrecl one thing: they'Je best
w.hen picked YIJUIIll and eaten tbe
same day. This is true of moat vegetables, but it's vital in lettuces,
whose dclicaiC leaves wilt quickly.
So I slarl plailts a few at a time
every iwo or lhree weeks to give
me steady hlrvesls. F&lt;Jr Jl two-per·
son family like uelired OOI!ple lettuce is an ideal crop, since a few
plants can .be liJ'OWII be'-1 other

•
•
t
d
t
•
l
·
· p•4rec e
0 ~.emazn 0 w
J bean p•zce~
.S 0 1\1
I '

WASHINGTON (AP) - Soybean fartnerll may see more of the
.
same .t.n the coming year as U.S,
supPlies remain about the same and
pnccs continue to be muffled by
huge lllobal oilseed inventories. ·
. Last we.ek th~ A
_ gricull~re
f?epartmentJSsued Its first "pro~ecltons •• of 1991 crop produ.ctton,
along with some supply-and·
demand analysis of what might be
ahead for marlcets and producers.
Projections aJe based mostly on
yield trends, economic analysis and
assumptions of normal weather
during the crop year.
The projections were said io be
"highly tentative '' and will be
. made obsolete in August when
USDA issues its fu:st official estimates of 1991 ·production of soybeans and other fall-harvested ·

crops.

,

Meanwhile, the report projected
the averase farm prices of soy·
~ns in the 1991-92 marketing
year that will begin Sept 1 at $4.75
to $6.25 per bushel. The midpoint
oflhatrangeis$5.50perbushel.

I ·UJ

In the current soybean market·
ing year. the fann price was indicated at $5.75 per bushel, just a
shade above the averase of $5.69
reported for 1989-90. ·
,
According to USDA records.
soybean farmers began the 1980s
with an average price of_$7.57 per
bushel, reflecting a growmg export
market. Production wu stepped up
frorn 1.798 billion bushels in 1980
to 1.989 billion in 1981.
Exports were still strong, but
excess production pJeSsured prices
and 1he farm average in ' 1981-82
tumbled to $6.07 per bushel. The
1982-83 prices, burdened by a
record harvest of 2.19 billion
bushels, dropped to $5 .71 per
.bushel at the farm.
So it wentlhroush much of the
decade. Drought in 1983 reduced
production and boosted prices -to
$7.83 per bushel, on ~average in
1983-84. Then there was a fouryear streak of erratic markets and
· prices.
.
The decade low came 10 198687 with a U.S. farm price average
of $4.78 per bushel of soybe4ns.

Some recovery occurred lhe following year, and in 1988·89 the
·
,
.
$
pn~ average rose agun to 7.42
per bushel.
But ~tow, 8CCOiding to lhe latest
projections, fanners Sbltd a cbancc
of_ seeing DStional average soybean
Jlr!CCS bel&lt;;lw $6 per buslle1 for the
thu:d year m a row.
Further, the USDA analysis
helps put into penpective the effect
of world oilseed supplies llld markels oo soybean growers in Illinois,
Iowa. Arkansas · and the other
· dozens of StaleS where the crop is
so importanL
Total oilseed OUIIJUI in 1991-92
·was projected at a recqrd 223 mil· lion ·metric tons, up 2 peroenl 11om
1990-91.
·
Oil seeds includ(' those from
othe_r oil-beating crops such as
peanuts, sunflowers and cotton·
seed, as well as s~=ns. For
1991-92,101al U.S. o·
produclion is expected about the 181110 as
~his. Y.ear at ~_.5 million tons,
mclliding 51 million tons of beans.
But foreign OUtpUt is projected
to rise 3 percent in 1991-92,
.

'

in Fcllllll, cilic., 18. Some of dlcae plants llld in ihc shade of upara- many leauces; have IJrnadc:nM o!li
are clearly limed ll the inlm:t pr- Jill fcms, cornsaallal or pole beans choices. A Frencb leuuce called

-~.but a

although that would be less than
lhe S percent annual growd) rare of
.... 1""""
u~&lt;&gt; """"·
.The 1991 U.S. soybean crop
was projected by l]SDA at 1.875
billion bushels, down from 1.922
billion bushels~~ year. Ex~rcs
aJe expected to nse ~- ~ million
bushels li:om 540 million m 199091:
·
Most of the export increase is
based on a !eduction in tbe avail·
abilily of foreign soybeans for the
world madret, particulariy in Brazil
when! the curJent crop ia expected
to be down 20 percent from last
year.
"Brazil likely will be a significant impbner of soybeans this fall
to cope y.oith short dome,stic supplies,'' tbe report said . ''With .
antiCiJ?IIIC!i pins in other oilseed
crops m JD11ior importing countries,
net export demand gains for ~­
beans aJe cxpccled to be limited m
1991-92."
Counting tbe ~supply minus
exports and domestic use, the lliy·
bean inventory on Sept. 1, 1992,
was projected al 350 million
bushels, about the u tbe 355
million bushels expected in the
stockpile on Sept. I, 1991.
The 1991-~ outlook for U.S.
soybean oil and meal also was
examined. Despite some pickup in
ex{XIrts, Oil SIOCks were projected
to lnaeaie and prices softeri during
lhe I!OW year.
Meal Cllports and domestic liSC
wCJe projected higher in 1991-92,
widl prices proJected in die range
of $145 to $liS per IIlii, compared
widl $165 estimalcd for the current
year.

u the summer gets hollcc.
In late fall, l grow lettuce·in _a
cold fnune heated by an eleclnc
Cable buried a few inches under the .
soil. I also have plants srowing
indoors under OUOieiCCIII lights to
fill winter needs. In mid-Man:h, I
put plants in the bcated cold frame
again for harvesls in Allril. ~bout
mid-April, young planes go m the
open growi.Cito be81Jl my summer
cycle.
.
I'd choose buuen:runch as one
of the best of the &amp;_arden lciiUCes.
As _calJ!IC?gs say, tis leaves. ~e
"thick. JUICY lild tender" and n:stSI
heal better lha!t Btbb, another highly popular vancty. But both lake 75
days to maturity . To g~t earlier
ones, I grow lettuces like black
seeded SimJ?SOn, salad bowl and
oak leaf, which talce only 45 to SO
days. Red·tinsed ruby also matuJeS
early.
Since the 1970s, imports of foreign-bred vegetables, including

.

an- blonde pjlimeuse (lazy li!g

blonde) performs nicely in my gar-

den. Its large, light green leave'
and bland t.Mte go well in a tomiiO
sandwich or as a base fer shaqlu
greens like muswd and arusula.
Another l'renchie, mantilla, form!!
bea••iful soft heads inside crunchy
leaves, an all·aroond ple&amp;'lCr. '
A commqn beginner's mistake.
is sowin£lcttuce too thickly. My
first time out, l poured a whole
packet into a six-foot row. a terri~
ble waste of seed and of time and
effon. for in a few weeks I faced
the pesky jol;l of thinning Oullhick
patches. One seed every two or
three inches i.s fine. After they
grow a little, you can thin 10 one
planl every six inches. Better still, :
sow your seed· indoors in flats
under lights and set out the plants. ·
Be sure 10 keep the soil moist Lettuce not only gives but wants
refreshment, so be generous with ·
througboudts life.
.
,_

Study sees Soviets repeating
agriculture errors of past

alllellr:lllnlua

'

~

im=

~~~ owner .......... . . '6000
D
llll..,

Moll. I Fri.

T-., Wed~ Tllur. tU 6 PJl.
Saturday til 5 P.M.
'

(i~

-

.

1887 HONDA

~~~c.,~~:"· .... ~ .... '3000

OLDS CUTLASS

=,""'~·- ~

••

1986 lSUZU TROOPER

' Tan &amp; white,
one owner .......... . .

'6000

'3000

-

~~:'o~"~:~: ...... .. ... '5100

y· en~L

Mulling,
gray flnlah ......... , .
•

'2000

.

'Goals lead to success': Musser

1887 MERCURY
Cougar,
white flnlah ... ...... .

*6000

1885 FORD
Elcon,
red llnlsn .. , ...... , •.

'2700

~.

.J ~

-

1880 HONDA
Prelude, ·

orange finish . . . . . . . . •

'2BOO

•
•
w

·...

•

1988 .,UICK SKYHAWK

::·:=: ..........'4600

ATHENS HONDA CARS
"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
810 E. State St. • Athens, Ohio
594-8555

.,,~·--

d

THE lAST H1JRRAH • B.urtJCennrdJ,.BDL- &amp;r• pates or Meigs High School Sunday
H1sell, Scott Wbobrey, Kenny Reynolds and l!'ternoon.
---~

The Meigs High School Band
under tbe direction of Tony
R1cbard Peyton .were amoag th'e happy
Dingeu played for the processional. Invocalton was siven by the They spOke on "The Past, the Pre· ing questions, and our minds were maintaining a sense of humor.
Rev. Frank Smith, pastor of Heath sent, and the FutUJe."
complctelr open to new things and
"Optimism is not hoping things
United Methodist Church, and Eric
Beginn~t!:;,i978 with the tri- ideas," S81d Slawter of the elemen- will get better, it is knowing,
; ; · 'i'HI LAST WALK TOGETIIER • Tbe 1.3!1 .....,.._ oldie
Heck. praident of lhe senior class, a1s and bib • s of tinderaarten. tary years.
beyond the shadow of a doubt, thai
:..:g... ofi?JlJI. ...... Aftt.IIIMfiiiJ'OOD- •4 ...... Were Uaed gave llle .welcome. !11troductions- Mt; ·Shlwtef IGok t~ 6tldienu -·-" -Bllllt ltidi'i'r!W! 1lllll! lllfms.,_.,~er11111J111Sll'lft!rll'be al!'t1gtlt,*
· .., ad
·t iiiiei ai ll*~e- -pped. Tile eM wu
were ·given by · Kristen Ayne throush lricJe·lcriool, juni6r lllgh coVer stress," she said, "once we saltf She-ets, who continueil by
· • · led Into tiie auditorium by Aaroll Sbeets and KQtea Sinter.
Slawtet, class treasurer.
school, and high school, right up 10 were on our w~y to our freshman describing optimism as a "tool of
.
.
· Special music included graduation day.
year of high school." It was there, perseverance."
"Unchained Melody" by the Band, ·
She SDOke of "The Past" where she said, that personal talents and
Stressing the importance of
and two selections, "From a Dis· ·the cllalfen11e of kindergarten was abilities began to take form, and love, Sheets said that ··no matter
tance" and "One Voice", by the coloring wtdlin the lines, through the question that now demands an what we may achieve or what sueMeigs High School Chorus.
the many friendships wbich cru.ne answer became constant-''What cesses we may have, when life's
•
. Kristen Ayne Slawter, Aaron and went over the years, and the aJe you going to be when you grow end draws near, it is one's relationBradford Sheets, and Jennifer l.au- fearsof "fitting in" which was up?"
ships with family and friends that
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) He said there are ·so vacancieS in ric Taylot, lri·valedictorians of the always present.
Usins "The Present" as his really matter."
Statewide elected officeholders his agency that will go unfilled.
class, addressed the hundreds of
."Our capacity fot learning new topic, Sheets listed three things
"If you can learn to laugh at lit·
aren't particularly happy with the
"We clearly are doing more relatives and friends which packed things was unlimited, we were important to enjoying the present tie at the world around you, you
bqer prospects for the next two with less," Fisher said.
the Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium. always curious and constantly ask- - Op~mism, loving others, and
Continued on page 3
years, but most seem to accept the
He told Ney's commiuee last
fict that funding for their offices week that he was not requesting
will be · ht.
·
any additional money.
Sen. 'lfobert Ney. vice chainnan .
of the Senate Finance Committee,
"The budget proposal before
said statewide officials are not you barely allows us to maintain
making as much noise about the basi~, high quality s.ervices and
· b d ets com provtde adequate leaal renresentaneed to boosI lherr u g
• lion for the stale of Ohio/ -he said.
P8Jed
with
nut
years.
"Tberefs-only 'X' amount of "I do understand the economt'c
press~s facing all Ohioans."
mone)l'. Even priva1ely I can le 11
Secretary of State Bob Taft, a
By JULIE E. DILLON
you that nooe of them have called R bl'
'd he uld be
, Se~~tlnel News Staff
us and have said, 'We need to do
epu tcan, S81
wo
able
this or that."' said Ney, R-Bar- to· fulfill a campaign promise to
nesville.
computerize camp_aign finance
Sixty-seven Southern High
Ney heads a subcommittee that reports, despite spending less Slllle School seniors received their'diplois examining lhe proposed budgets money than in the current budget.
mas Sunday evening in combined
for the governor, lieutenant gover''In order to respond to the baccalaureate and commencement
nor, attorney general, au(,litor, sec· srate's critical financial situation, I exercises held in the Charles W.
retary of state and tre8Surer.
am submillins a budget which pro- · Hayman gymnasium.
· "Everybody sot some form of poses to spend less seneral fund
It was standing room Qnly.for
either the same level of funding as . doUars in the next biennium than the audience of parents. relatives,
the last budget or a lillie bit more. we expect to spend in the cur~ent friends and faculty when the grildu·
Some got a little bit less," Ney said biennium," Taft said.
aling seniors enten!d the gyrnnasiin an interview.
·
Fisher, · Taft and Lt. Gov. um as the Southern Band, under the
•'Now, last time everybody Michael DeWine testified in person direction of Tom Walters. pergrappled for dollars. Every execu· before Ney's subcommittee, while formed the processional.
live offtceholder last time said,. 'I Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson and
Rev. Ken Baker, pastor of the
need a little bit more. • This time Treasurer Mary EUen Wipuow sent United Methodist Southern Cluster
.,. flat Publ"cl
and rep~esentatives.
Churches, $liVe the invocation fo!·
they 1m
1
•
· ow 1 5
Y
Bill Hannigan, finance director lowed by the Southern Cho1r ·
privately they're saying, 'We're ~ F
'd f di
singing "Until We Meet Allain,"
~~~.try to live within our ~~nd~~;~h~gov:"mo~gw':o~~ und.er the direction of Roberta
Spending levers for the enough to operate the auditor's Maidens. ,
statewide officials wen! proposed office effectively.
.
During his baccalaureate
in the bud~el submiued by ·Gov.
''T~e repercussions of under- address; Rev. Baker urged the
George Vomovil:h for the next two funding our bujlgct Jequest will be seniors to always strive first for the
fiscal years starling July 1. The felt far beyond our asency, since a ldngdom of God in their lives and
!'louse made almost no chan~es large portion of (state operating) wlhatoulind ~ollowodl
. Heer~mindplishmeed
. memn~.
when it approved its $27 .I bilhon funds are used in conjunction with
. . ''.
·~
subStitute budget bill last week. It services to governmental agencies bers of the 1991 class that even
is now in the Senate.
across the entiJe state," Halinigan though they may be "out from
· At least two of the officeholders said.
under Mom and Dad's thumb" they
seem to be taking a cue from
Pauline Hesske of Mrs . With· wiU always remember the love and
Voinovich, who pledged during his row's office said the administration caJe as wcU as discipline r~ived
campaign and since taking office in budget proposal would reduce during their school years.
Hayman Gymaaslum at Sunday alsbt's comJanuary •'to work harder and funding to below current levels and
Citing examples from his own
SOUTHERN PROCESSIONAL • Clarence
bined baccalaureate and commence11Jenl exer- ·
smarter and do more with less."
would be counterproductive: ·
life, Rev. Baker concludt.d the biteAraold Dupn and Cbad Ryan Diddle led the
cises.
Attorney 0enera1 Lee Fisher, a
Ney offen!d no encourasement calaurcate address by telling the
processional 67 araduatalnto lbe Cbarles W.
t:iemocrat, said his office opened about the chance for futdinll addi- students to be achievers but not to
more cases than it closed in April. tional cash.
106C sight or what ia auly important
caring for others and treating
senior
Pollowins the baccalaureate
adtlre11 the b4nd performed
"Artin£ton OvertUJe.
Two vehicles we~e damalled in an accident Friday night 81 the
Masterinll the art of living in a speaker at the outdoor event, said use their diplomas as a springboard
In hi&amp; salliiiiOry lddras, Jamxl rapidly
world shoukl be learning how to master lifestyles of to greater learning. The learnins
· interSection of Second St. and Butternut Ave., P'oti&amp;~;
Circle, IPOkc to &amp;is ·fellow class- lhe goal chansing
of the 325 p-adtlll.eS of the the futUJe will be a key to coping process does not end with coUege,
· Pomeroy Police reported thai Bernard Gi!key, Middlepott, wu
mates about decisions. c~!3 Class or 1991 at lhe University of
' traveling west on Second and was in the proc 111 of lllppin•·• ~
with the political and tecltnolollical and "each of you have discovered
Robert Frost's poem, "The
Rio
Grande,
Ohio's
Assistant
veins of gold irtyour ability 10
intenec':"'ackf Bullemul, wben a car driven by Rita Stobml Milfchangea
awaiting the world.
Not TWo," Cift:le told the .uors Superintendent
dleport,
a left turn from BUIIemllt onto Secood.
of
Public
''Tbere
are
no
simple
solutions,
study and learn," ~ added.
that "we all must decide which
The two vehicles collided 'causing 1igbt ciiiJaae.to die loft front
Instruction
said
Sooday
during
the
Secondly, gr.aduates shoutd
but
u
we
dlink
about
~~~~~~aiD~
the
I'Oicl to take.• He llid that many university's 115dt commencement
: of the Gilkey car, and modeiiiiC damlp ID die leA JU".cloar 11M of
adopt
public or private service as
art
o(
livins,
there
are
some
timea people try to do loinethins cxetcise.
princfP.Iea
to
guide
Ill,.
he
said.
pan
of
their lifestyle, PlliUis noted.
'
Continued oa ..... 3
Coatiaued oa pqe 3
William L. Phillis, featured
PhtUia
the llfiCiuales to
Cont. . . oa Jllle 3

Southerrt graduates told to be
achievers, always care for,others ·

1885 MAZDA RX,7

_,JcA _

188oiF0RD

1 Secllon,10 Pegea 25 cente
A llutUmedte Inc. Newapeper

,....,10
.
State officeholders are
resigned to tight budget ·

•.' ¥.

1- ... .....

. US!

.

'

Jcnowsneitherviclotynor~

til 8 P.M.

.l . •

.. ... ....... '4200
..
.....
.......

_ !'omeroy~MiddlepOrt, Ohio; Monday; May 20, 1991

CIC till

.
•··~~

~~~?sh

'.

$100

• .

1886 PONTIAC

...

Catapult Machine 3/4

... $3000

1887 FORD TAURUS

VoL 42, No. 11
Copvrtgltted1111

"Goal setting, thai clear sense of ...
purpose and keen sense of direction, is what leads ' to success in
life," said Steve Musser, speaker at
Sunday afternoon's 23td Annual
Commencement at Meigs High
School.
Musser, who graduated from
Meigs in 1987 and will graduate
1i:om Ohio Univenity in June, told
the 139 graduates tbal seaing soaJs
forces decisions as to where you
want to be and how to get there.
Talking about continuing educa. lion, Mu511er said it is more than
just collese. teehnical school. or
going into the armed forces, but is
an approach to livins one's life.
He 1isled thJeC tools for gcttinll
where you want to be • live by the
golden rule, believe in yourself,
and have the courage to do what is
necessary to reach your goals.
.
He concluded with a ~from
Teddy Roosevelt • " Far
it is
. to dan! mWttr lhinss, to win glori·
ous victones even thoug~ check. ,
ered by failure than to take rank
with those timid souls that neither
live much nor suffer much because
they exist in the great twilight thai

1985 FORD

8

•

BasKetball

iey Pl!b;
I CO. a.ea•re
and telepbolle alllllber
:your card or letter.
No teleplloa~ calls '11'111 be accepted. AJI CODlesl
entries should be turned ill to tilt new&amp;JIIper
office by 4 p.m. eacb Wednelday.ID cue ol a tie, .
~e winner wiU be c:bOieD l!Y lottery, Next week,
a Meigs Couaty farm wUI be featared by tbe
Meigs Soil and Water ~oaservatlon Diltrlc:t.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- increased length. of the domestic around one farrowins in the spring,
sider the pig, a noble animal that pig· s large intestines," Spinelli growdl in the summer, fattening
has rooied its way across wide said. "A eat's intestines aJe four during harvest, and slaushter and
stretches of Europe and North times its body length; a wild boar, proc:essinll in the fall and winter.
Spinel6 said it wun 't until arti·
America to help tame the wilder· nine times its body length; and the
.
ficial
refrigeration became availness and make it easier for the domestic pig, 14 times its body
able in the 1$701 tbll pork produc·
human species.
length."
.
.
.
For cxample, says an Agricul- . The l~hger food 1s bemj! digest· tlon became independent of the
ture Department economist, some ed, he satd, the more nulnents can seasons. The refriseraled rail car
made il possible to llhip pork 81 any
historians and agricultural writers be ~rbed. . .
. .
· ,
hive suggested the P.ig aided in the .
Other postuve .ch~iflen~~cs time.
The
big
pork
countries
could
advancement of civilization.
mclude the domesuc ptg s abi111y
lheir
be~nings
to
at
least
trace
"Hogs are credited with clear- to )Jroduce llJ!g~ nUJ!l!'crs of Off·
one
of
the
pig
s
"positive
charac·
ing land on the outskirts of towns sprtnj!. th~ ptg s abthty to grow
in Europe and with pmviding fast. liS early_ value as a source _of teristics '' Spinelli said.
increaSed incentive to bring Great lard for cooking and soa~: an~ 1ts . "Fo; eXIIIlp1e, boll production
Pllins land into com production 10 ~al~ as a source of meat, SpUICI· was fosten!d in the world's dlree .
com belts - illc U.S. Corn Belt,
feed increased hog numbers in the h Sllld.
1800s." writes Felix Spinelli of the · Today, hog farmers tun~ o~t the J.,a Plata ll!glon ol S!Julh Amerdcparlment's Economic Research pork_thr~ghoutthe ~·a hip Y ica.llld tbe Dlmube buill of south·
Eurooe - beci!JIC of cheap
Service.
_
effic1ent md~ that IS conccnlnll· eastern
feed . ;:: if~ said.
Farmers discovered early 011 that ~ ()II a dechmng ~umber of speA~aner bacon-type hogs
·1 was good to have some pigs c~ahzed, large~ umts. Fewer than
·
were
developed in Canada and
~·
100.000 operall~s ~ount for 94
Scandinavian
counlries where die
Chief among the domestic pis's · ~ent of the naqon s pork, ~ ~
animals
could
ccovert smlll grains
lllribules is its ability to survive on mtd-19SOs. dleJe weJe ~.4 m1lhon
and
dairybypu~l":fl
into pork.
Ylried diet of vegetable or animal hog producers 10 the United States.
In
Germany
10d
Poland,
pork,
a .
A century or two a,o, the hfe
and potatoeS became dietary
~his ability is due to the cycle of the domestic pig ~evolved lard
mainstays. And in China and many
Latin American countries boss
WC!e flaened On prbqe from the
kiiChcn and ~efuse from gardens
llld fields.
For NOOII American CC1111U111en,
melt
WASHINGTON (AP) - The farms rat!ler than chantpna proper· polk wu die mos&amp;
· said.
Soviet Union's Cn!Bky agricultural ' ty or financial relauonsbips to staple until the 1920s.
But by the 19501. u 11101e people
JIIICbine ia beinl dlleatened furlhei improve resowcc uae." .
left
flrmlllld moved to dties, pork
b)' policy remedies that could
Despite an increase in the conaumption
JelllliDed about die
ICflll miateo of die past, a new amount o( technoJoay, machinery, same wllile beef
iiiCIWed as per
lllllylillw ... A8ficulture Depart- seed and fertilizer llllld in riiOII ~
c:apill
inconle
&amp;JeW.
1111111 c:oncludel.
duction, many of these wac said to
Moreover. despite its reform be of low quality and are being . Pert iUtilliiCCOIICIIO beef in the
u.s. per Clpita ...,me. but poultry
plana Moacow lias not come up aUocated inefficicndy.
now outwelsbs each
Mlh
to impove the
"Increased input prices and cliJ. conaumplion
of
lhenl,
acconllng
to department
lllion's blaeledecouomy.
rupted supplies, avenion to holding
"Traditional in~rets have monetarx assets and government figwa.
In 1991, per capita beef conreaucrted conuol of
cultural steps to supPC&gt;n inefficient farms
SWIIJ!Iion
is projecfeilll68 pounds,
""'Icy... the report
Tue8(!ay. will blunt tnccntive and efficient
rewl
weigbt,
pork at SO ~.
r.Their solutions are baaed on gains," the~ said.
llld
totalfOultry
1195.4 potllllb,
lllcliUing the flow of ftiiOIII'CCS to

Parlly cloudy tonight.
Low near 60. Thesday,
sunny.

· Sentinel News Staff

and,.=,··

Lowly pig seen a contributor
to growth of civilization

Page4

l

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

For ·An Even Closer Look At These Beauties!
MYSTERY FARM· This week's mystery
farm, featured by lbe Gallia Soil and Water
Couervation District, is located IIOIDt'l!'bere in
GaUia County. Individuals w~hing to parliciJIItf in the weekly contest may do so by 1uessing
tile farm's oner. Just mall, or clrop off your
1uess off lo the Daily Sentinel,ll1 Court. St.,
Pomeroy, Obio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 lhird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631,

Pick 3:163
Pick 4:9068
Cards : 2·H, 4-C
6·D; A.S
Super Lotto:
6·27-31-32-34-41
Kicker
171702

·water

Stop By Athens Honda· Cars
-

Ohio Lottery

Perry wins
Memorial
·Golf tourney

''

~

""
~

• f:
·
.-----Local brie S--.,;,;,-... =~:~~.::~ng
Two vehicles damaged in wreck

.,

State official .urges Rio Gran·de
grads to master 'art _o f living'

"

-

ur"'i

-

~

--

~I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="310">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9601">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34791">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34790">
              <text>May 19, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2253">
      <name>deeter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3814">
      <name>hagerman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2171">
      <name>hollon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2060">
      <name>massie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="375">
      <name>yost</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
