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                  <text>Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 21, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Buckeye Girls State elects officers. Summer loves mushrooms, potatoes
Campaign slogans, songs and
promotions of all types have been
the scene at the Oliio American
Legion Auxiliary's 45th Buckeye
Girls State Government Seminar.
The mythical two party system,
Federalist and Nationalist. have the
set the campus of Ashland University in motion. Elections and
appointments of City, County and
State government officials, school
board members and judges have
been completed.
Nichola Dawn Pickens, who
attends Eastern High S.c hool, has

been elected to the office of State
House of Representatives and
resides in the Girls State City of
Merritt, M. Miller County and
belongs to the Nationalist party.
Beth Clark, who attends Meigs
High School, has been elected to
the office of City Council Member
and resides in the Girls State City
of Garfield, McElroy County and
belongs to the Nationalist party.
April Hudson, who also anends
Meigs High School, has been elected to the office of State House of
Representative and resides in the
Girls State City of Sullivant, ·

Osborne County aild belongs to the
Federalist party.
Melanie Elaine Qualls, Meigs
High School, has been elected to
the orfice of State Representative
and resides in. the Girls State City
of Hobart, D. Miller County ·and
belongs to the Federalist pany.
By practical participation they
will face the functions and problems of government as well as
rights, duties and responsibilities of
American citizenship. Each girl
holds an office on one of the three
government levels actually carrying out her specifiC duties.

Homebuilders hold annual roast Clothing days set
The United Methodist CoopernThe Homebuilders Class of the Rosanna Manley, Willard and Net·
tive
Parish is annolincing clothing
Middlepon Church of Christ held . tie Boyer, Donna and Erin Hartson,
days
for the remainder of 1991.
: its annual weiner roast for mem- Bill and Flo Grueser, Bud and
The
parish
is located at 311 Condor
bers and family at the roadside park Hazel Wilson, Rayanna and Luke
Street
in
Pomeroy.
on Route 33 recently.
Stinson, Raymond and Farie Cole,
Clothing days are Thursday,
Blessings for the food and fel- Lester Bowers, Loretta. Tiemeyer,
II and 25; Aug. 8 and 22;
July
lowship were asked by Frank !hie, Joe and Marilyn Bishop, Dorothy
Sept.
12 and 26; Oct: 10 and 24;
Roach, Donna and Jacob Roach ,
teacher of the class.
Attending wee Thelma Boyer, Jordan Wi\liams, and Penny and Nov. 7 and 21 ; and Dec. 5 and 19.
These dates are on Thursday and
Osby and Mary Martin, Gardner Kathryn Evans.
the
times are 9:30a.m. to noon.
al)d Pat Wehrung, Frank, Kathy,
. Jodie and Joshua Ihle, Glenn and
: Kathryn Evans , Sco~t Melton,
Dorothy and Gene McDaniel,
Descendants of the late Albert
and Eliza Hill will have a homecoming and family reunion on June
,
The Wildwood Garden Club 30 at the Star Mill Park in Racine.
• will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. A carry-in dinner will begin at
noon.
; at the home of Betty Milhoan.
A Country Music Band Show
wiD be held at Eastern High School
on Saturday beginning at 6 p.m.
The event is sponsored by the
' Rachei, Whitney and Emily
Besides this organization they Eastern Athletic Boosters in conAshley, children of Keith and also belong to the Children of the junction with "Super Weekend."
Emma Ashley, Rock Springs, have American Revolution and Star
Admission to the hand show is
$2.50 for adults and $1 for stubeen accepted to membership in Junior Grange.
the Wes.t Virginia Division of the . They are continuing·their f~ily dents.
Cltildren of the Confederacy.
heritage since Emma Ashley IS a
Bands to perform include CounTheir eligibility to membership member of Paducah Chapter Unit- try Horizon from Parkersburg;
is based on their paternal ~reat· ed Daughters of the Confederacy · W.Va.• and Free Country featuring
great-great grandfather, William and Keith Ashley is a member of members from the Eastern District
Zoll Wickline, who served in the the Robert S. Garnett Camp Sons
A square dance will begin at 9
• 108th Regiment Virginia troops of the Confederate Veterans as well p.m. with Melvin Cross as the
until his capture and death at the as Ohio Organizer S.C.V. and sec- caller.
Battle of Lewisburg. Their mem- retary and chief-of-staff of the
Refreshments will be available
bership is in the Bluefields Chapter West Virginia Division S.C.V.
and all proceeds will be used to
fund the athletic program for the
of the Children of the Confederacy.
1991-92 school year.

Reunion planned

Garden club to meet

Country music
night planned .

Ashleys receive WSDCC membership

I

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-Names in the news-

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MAUDLOW, Mont. (AP) Movies can set fashion trends, says
Roben Redford, and he hopes the
one he's directing will make it
fashiona\lle to preserve the beauty
and wildnemess of the West
Redford was here this week
filming ''A River Rups Through
It " a tale of the West based on the
Nonnan Maclean novella: He said
in an interview he hopes the film
will make it fashionable to save the
West from overdevelopmC!lL
• 'I've never believed that film
changes anything political," Redford said. "It changes fashions."
Redford has starred in such
movies ail "Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid," "All the President's Men" and "The Natural."
His directing credits include
"Ordinary People," for which he
won an Oscar in 1981.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sex
: therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimcr is
: offering help to a pohllcal bedfellow.
·
She is one of 21 people organizing a Monday night fund-raiser in
New York for Sen. Christopher
Dodd, D-Conn. Those who attend
are being asked to concribute $250
to $1 ,(XX). Dodd is expected to seek
a third tenn next year.
Westheimer said she supports
him because of his strong stand in
favor of die right to an abortion.
"Anyone who is willing to
: speak up on that issue, it behooves
· me - you know, I speak for con. traeeption - to be helpful," she
said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - "L.A.
Law" actreSS Jill Eikenberry, who
· survived a battle with breast can·
' cer, is lobbying to make breast
exams available to the poor.
"Although I am celebrating my
fifth year cancer-free, I am frightened and concerned about all the
other women who have had and
will have breast cancer," she said
at a news conference Wednesday.
She urged passage of a bill
sponsored by Rep. Barbara Kennelly D-Conn., that would increase
reimbursements to doctors offering
breast screenings. Supponers say
that would make the process available to more women on Medicare.
ATLANTA (AP) - Burt
Reynolds, a Georgia good ol' boy
who has played that role in several

Powell receives ·
SA recognition

movies, has been honored for helping bolster~ state's ftlm industry.
Reynolds, who was borfl in
Powell, an employee of
Waycross but grew up in 'Florida, theNanette
SuperAmerica
store in
has been involved in more than a Pomeroy, has been recognized
for
half-dozen films made in his home
outstanding
performance
concernstate. Among them were "Deliver- ing the company's Customer Serance," "Gator" and "Sharkey's
vice Awareness Program, accordMachine."
ing to R.J. Maxwell, senior vice
On Wednesday, Gov. Zell president and general manage~ of
Miller gave him a proclamation cit- Super America's Southern Diviing his role in encouragi11g film- sion.
.
makers to come to Georgia. He
Candidates are observed and
also declared Saturday "Burt evaluated with respect to friendly
Reynolds Day."
attitude, a~arance, professional"I'm certainly . flanered," ism, efficiency_. use of mtercom
Reynolds said. "Georgia is ... my and telephone etiquette.
.
good luck state and I always feel
For her commitment to servtce
better the moment I cross the state excellence, Powell received a cerline.''
tificate of appreciation and a speHe is performinj: in a one-man cial "Service Attitude" award.
show, "An Evemng With Burt
Reynolds," in Atlanta.
MALIBU, Calif: (AP) "Highway to Heaven " Star
Michael Landon, battling inoperable cancer, is feeling a bit better
these days, his spokesman says.
"We're still in the interim period, a plateau, where he either takes
a turn for the better or h.e doesn't,''
Harry Flynn said Wednesday. "He
feels better this week."
The 54-year-old star of such
shows as "Bonanza" and "Little
House on the Prairie" learned
April 5 that he has cancer of the
liver and pancreas. He has undergone a program of chemotherapy,
coffee enemas and an experimental
treatment in which doctors unleash
drug-dispensing bubbles of fat
against his cancer.

t

and vinaigrette over vegetables.
By Aileen Claire
POTATO SUPPER SALAD
This kitchen-tested recipe makes 4
NEA Food Editor
I pound (3 medium-sized) potaSummer salads add pizazz to servings.
toes
(Note: Mushroom-vinaigrette
everyday meals. They go well with
1/4 pound bacon, cut into 1- ;
mixture
can be prepared ahead and inch pieces
soup or a sandwich of sliced turkey
or chicken when a light meal is all chilled for several hours before
2 cups zucchini, pattypan or yel- •
serving.)
yon want on a hot day.
low squash chunks
'
WARM BROCCOLI-POTATO
Fresh mushrooms, for example,
I cup red bell pepper strips
SALAD
add their special flavor when used
1/4 cup green onions, sliced
•
6 medium-sized new potatoes
in a mixed vegetable salad or
dressing (recipe follows)
,
(about 2 pounds), cut into l-inch
sauteed and served on toast.
1/4 cup green or ripe black :
Mushrooms, if stored properly, cubes
1 1{1.-2 cups fresh broccoli fll&gt;- olives, pitted
will keep in the refrigerator several
fresh herb sprig (optional)
' •
days, so take advantage of "spe- rets
In small saucepan with tight-fit;
1/4 cup orange juice
cials" on mushrooms this season.
ting
lid, cook pota:toes in 1 to 2
3 tablespoons olive oil
Store prepacked mushrooms
inches
boiling water until tender, •
3 tablespoons white wine vineunwashed in their original containIS
to
20
minutes. Drain, cool and :
er. If the package is opened, or you gar
cut
into
.!·inch
cubes. 'In large skil- :
2 teaspoons basil
bought mushrooms loose, keep
let,
cook
bacon
until crisp. Remove I large clove garlic, minced
thern in a paper bag in the refrigerand drain; pour off and reserve aU :
1/4 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
. ator. This allows the mushrooq~s to
but 2 tablespoons of the drippings.
2tablespoons
parsley,
chopped
"breathe" better and stay fresher
Add cubed potatoes to skillet; saute •
2
green
onions
with
tops,
thinly
longer. Don 't store them in plastic
lJlltil
golden. Remove potatoes; add :
sliced
b&amp;Ks. as plastic's non-porous nature
squash,
peppers and onion to skillet :
salt, to taste
wifi cause them to deteriorate much
with
addt;ional
drippings as needed. ·Cook
potatoes
in
medium-sized
more rapidly.
Saute
over
high
heat about I :
America's fayorite· vegetable, saucepan, covered, in l-inch boilminute
until
crisp-tender.
Toss :
the potato, is also a summer salad ing water just until tender, 10 to 15
•
potatoes
and
squash
mixture
star. Athletes needn't be the only minutes. Drain; keep warm. Mean- ·
together
in
large
bowl
with
dress:
ones to appreciate the spud for · while, blanch broccoli in small
being an excellent source of com· saucepan of boiling water fQr 1 ing; olives and reserved bacon: 7
plex carbohydrates, the body's top minute. Drain and add to potatoes, Garnish with fresh herb sprig; •
•
. energy-givers. Potatoes marry well In small saucepan, combine juice, Serve at room tem~ture.
Dressing:
Wh1sk
together
1/4
;
oil,
vinegar,
basil
and
garlic;
bring
with other vegetables and dressings
cup olive oil; 2 tablespoons lemon •
and are full of vitamins and miner- to boil. Remove from heaL Stir in juice;
2 cloves garlic, pressed; I 1{1. :
pepper
sauce;
pour
over
potatoes
als; they are also low in fat and
teaspoons
oregano; and salt and :
and
broccoli.
Add
parsley
and
calories.
pepper
to
taste
in small bowl. This •
onions;
toss
to
coat
Add
salt;
toss.
Remember, if talcing potato salkitchen-tested
recipe
makes 4 serv- "
ads to a picnic or family pitch· in, Serve warm. This kitchen-tested
pack them in an insulated cooler
w1th 1ce or trozen retngerants. lJO
not allow potato dishes or mayonnaise-based potato salads to sit at
room temperature for any long
FRIDAY, JUNE 21 I 1991
period of time. Return leftovers to a
cOQier and refrigerate immediately
SANDWICH PLAnER.....................~;'2.55
upon arriving home after the outIFran•ch F;rlas, Cholea of Slew, Macaroni Salad or Baked Baan1.
ing.
LEMON MUSHROOMS WITH
SUNDAY, JUNE 21, 1991
GARDEN FRESH VEGETAROAST BEEF DINNER......~•••••'4.95
BLES
Ifl. cup vegetable oil
Gen•roue Portion of Our Own Home Cooked Roast Pork Served
2 tablespoons green onions ,
M••h•d Potato•• &amp; Gravy, Hom• Cooked Graan Baans, no••
chopped
IBu&lt;nar·•~ Roii.Cott. Rag: or Dllcllftalnatad, Both Freshly Brewed.
2 tablespoons lemon juice
I 1/2 teaspoons lemon peel ,
NEW HOURS: Mon.-Set. 10:00 am- 8:00pm
grated
Sundoy 10 &lt;00 am-8:00pm
1{1. teaspoon sugar
salt and pepper, to taste
8 ounces mushrooms, sliced
;]. cups assoned fresh raw vegetables, shredded (carrots, zucchini,
beets and/or radishes)
In large bowl, whisk together
oil, onions, lemon juice and peel,
sugar, salt and pepper. Add mushrooms, tossing to mix well.
Arrange your choice of vegetables
on serving plate. Spoon mushrooms

:,.. ,p;;,
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The Harrisonville Senior Citizens wiD meet Tuesday at 6 p.m. at
the townhouse. Three month birthdays will be observed with a
potluck
dinner, A meeting will folFreeStoreFoodBank tbill week.
The Haggarda alao donated low after the dinner. All members
clothing. But because It's not are urged to attend.

Retired newsman finds it is cheaper to
buy plates at home • Bob Hoeflich • B-3

B-1
C. H. Wilson popular speaker in late
1890s, early 1900s ·James Sands· A-6
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.. Vot. 2fl: No. 20

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Ariel to offer
tap dance class

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IN

WHAT ABOUT BOB?
KIM BASINGER

GP

IN

MARRYING MAN

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Deatbs........................- •••••. AJ
Editoral .............................A2

Farm ...~ ..............................Dl

Sunay. HJab In 80s.

Sports.............................C J.. 6
W~atber.

_ ....................... 0 ·1

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11 Soctlona. 84 Pogto

A Mublmtdlt Inc. New_p.,

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HUNTINGTON- Residents of
Mason and Jackson Counties are
invited to participate in a public
involvement workshop scheduled
at Point Pleasant on Tuesday, June
25 at 7 p.m. in the Mason County
Courthouse.
The purpose of the workshop is
to obtain and exchange information
to assist the Army CorDS of En~­
neers and the SUite o(West VIrginia in developing a plan to
enhance the West Virginia side of
the Ohio River.
The study was authorized by
Congress to consider the Ohio
River, its shoreline, and the adjacent floodplains of the 12 West
Virginia Counties bordering on the
Ohio River.

CONCERNED ABOUT FUTURE • Mabel
Lane is concerned that the Oplimlil (or Elders
program which provides she and her husband
..JVIQI IIIUIIerous s~I· and. ·~ ~vlea will

be pbased out. Here she discuM her coocem
about what will happen to tl!enl In tl!e evmt It Is
discontinued with Donna 'filllamsnn, the
• Qptlons eoordlnator.
1
,

Avenue after finding it impossible
to manage on their own.
Mr. and Mrs. Lane's son takes
care of them during the night and
on weekends, but without some
assistance during the daytime when
he works, the couple says they
would just have to think about a
nlirsing home.
The role of Options is to provide
the disabled elderly, lite Calvin
and Mabel Lane, with assistance so
that they can remain at hQme.
So Monday through Friday noon
meals are dehvered from the Senior
Citizens Center to their Middlepon
home, and every Friday afternoon a
'homemaker comes by for several
hours to run enands and clean up
the house. The van with the
wheelchair lift takes Mrs. Lane for
her doctor's appointments.

. They also·arc provided Home
Health Services from Veterans
Memorial Hospital. A nurse's aide
comes each weekday to bathe and
give needed personal care to Mrs.
Lane who has suffered a stroke.
And once a week a registered nurse
from Home Health visits Mrs. Lane
to give general medical care and
check her catheter.
With their limited income,
Social Security and a small veterans' pension, Mr. and Mrs. Lane
fall into"a low income category. So
they must depend on some outside
help at a less than full fee if they
are to remain at home. Their
income, however, is above the
guidelines for Passport, Ohio's
other program of home assistance.
Mr. and Mrs. Lane are sure that
C011tioued on A-4

The focus of the s'tudy will be the sixth of seven meetings schedflood control, riverfront develop- uled for the twelve counties that
ment, environmental issues and border the Ohio River.
economic development. parks,
Previous meetings were held in
scenic overlooks and public access Ne~ Martinsville, Parkersburg,
to the river will be priority items in Weirton ,
Wheeling,
and
the study.
Moundsville. The date of the meetMunicipalities and organizations ing in Huntington will be
along the river have suggested a announced. The counties that barnumber of study objectives. The der the Ohio River are: Tyler, Wet·
workshops will be informal with zel, Wood, PleaSants, Brooke, Hanthe opportunity for attendees to cock, Ohio, Marshall, Mason, lackexpress ideas and receive answers son, Cabell and Wayne.
to questions about the study. ·
Individuals w~o want to make
Tbe meetings will be conducted comments, but who are unable to
by the Col'ps of Engineers. Repre- anend the meeting, may send them
sentatives of the Corps and the . to the U.S. Army Corps of EngiState will be available to answer neers, ATTN: CEORH-PD-F, 502
questions.
Eighth Street, Huntington, WV
The Point Pleasant meeting is 2S701 -2070.

Some Hobson families return to their
damaged homes; ARC helps others
By BRIAN J, REED

Cross coordinator Rita Fields sa1d . bq waitin~ to see what the right
Friday when asked about the safety lulnd is gomg to dq."
PITY ME -"II looks like it's . qf the !lfCII· The others who were
"If it )lleren't for the American
'pass the back' dmeH.
·
evacuated from :'Pity Me" have Red Cross," Byer said ,. Friday, "we
That's Meip County Bmergen· now been moved mto rental homes would be nowhere." I
cy Services Dlm:tor Robert Byer's throughout Meigs County.
· Fields stated that national Red
description of the status of homes
The American Red Cross will Cross representatives from Fairand residents at the scene of a rock pay for the frrst month's rent for mont, W.Va. arrived in Meigs
slide in the "Pity Me" area near displaced residents as well as any County earlier this week and disHobson.
deposits required.
cussed the situation with residents
All 16 evacuees from the area
While those evacuated from the affected.
have left the Mason Motel in area are trying to piece their daily
Although they have since left
Mason, W.Va., where they were lives back together, Byer and the the area, they will be back for furhoused after their homes and per- American Red Cross continue to ther evaluation of the situation.
sonal safety were threatened by a search for answers from the gov- According to Fields, tile Red Cross
rock slide on May 4 that knocked emment.
may continue to assist those in
homes from foundations and closed
"It's ironic," Byer said Friday need, but will oot do so until State
State Route 7 for several days for af~moon. "Th.e state wants you to and Federal agencies make their .
repairs.
wnte the emergency plans mandat- intentions clear.
•
At least two families .have now ~ by them and play the silly exerSuch visits by the main office of
returned to the damaged area to c~ses mandated by ~m. but when · the American Red Cross is routine
l.ive, despite a declaration by the the real em.ergenc1es str!,ke, the in e'!ler~tencv situations, according
Meigs County Board of Commis- go~fmmentlS
to find. .
to F1elds. She did not detail any
sioners shortly after the slide that
Now that v:_e re faced w1th a plans for further assistance by the
the area was a disaster area.
~eal emergei!CY• . ~yer co!llmented, Red Cross, nor stste when offiCials
"Nobody has told them they
It seems hke It s old pass the were expected back in the county ·
can't go back. Meigs County Rtp buck' time. The left hand seems to
·

nme...Sentlnel Staff

hart!

H

Buy' A New

GAS RANGE
And Receive FREE
2 Cylinders of Bottle Gas

OLD CUSTOMERS
BUY A NEW
GAS RANGE

RESURFACING BEGINS·- These COD•
structlon workers from tbe Shelly Co. or
Thornville aod the E. Small Co. or Crown City
lay down a stretc:• or blacktop on S.R. 7 near
Rolison Satlll'day momlna on the first clay of the
res•rfacloa pbue of this blpny project, which
ca01ed traf1k: to be reduced to 011e laoe from
Story's Run Road to a point about halt a mile

AND RECEIVE FREE
'.
2 CYLINDERS OF GAS

WHEN NEEDED.
FRI.-SAT-SUN.
BILL MURRY

Along the river .............. B1-8
Busiaess.............................Dl
Comics.........................lnse'r t
Classified........................02.. 7

River-related projects
workshop topic Tuesday
in Mason Courthouse

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - "If we didn't have
help, we'd probably just end up in
a rest home," commented Calvin
Lane.
The "help" Lane was talking
about are services which he and his
wife receive through Options for
Elders.
Both Lane, 81, and his wife,
Mabel, 79, are seriously incapacitated. She spends most of her time
in bed, occasionally moving to a
chair with assistance for shon periods. Her husband who is looking at
knee replacements in the near
future, gets around the house with
the assistance of a walking cane.
The ~wo for the.past couple of
years have been living with their
unmarried son on South Second

The Ariel Theatre will offer an
adult tap dancing class this summer
· on the stage of the .historic theatre.
The one hour class will be on
Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m.
beginning July 10.
The class will cost $32 and will
run for eight weeks. Students will
need a pair of low-heel tap shoes
and loose, comfortable clothing is
recommended. The Ariel's new air
conditioning will provide comfort
for all who attend.
For more information or to re11ister for the class, call the Moms
and Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre
at 446-ARTS
.

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Inside

·. Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 23, 1991

Coprrfghled 111t11

Meigs ·residents con.cerned
Options.for Elders program
may be phased out in 2 years

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Named toWS
dean's list

Senior citizens to meet

Major League baseball results - Cl

.

NEW YORK (AP) -Novelist
E.L. Doctorow is helping put
together a national program of
reading tours featuring prominent
and lesser-known writers.
The writers will speak at
YMCAs around the country. The
Five area residents have been
idea is to inspire Americans to stan named to the honors list at Washreading and writing.
ington State Community College in
The effort. the National Writ~r·s Marietta for the spring quarter,
Voice Project, is being fmanced by
Named to the president's list is
a six-year, $2.75 million grant from Anna M. Fowler, Coolyille. To be
the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest named to this list Fowler main·
Fund.
tained a 4.0 grade point average.
Writers who have agreed to take
Named to the dean's list are
part in the first year of the tour Amberly K. Short, Chester;
tnclude Roy Blount Jr., Galway Michael B. Nutter and Kay S.
Kinnell, Ntozake Shange and Luisa Coulson, Coolville; and Carrie L.
Valenzuela.
Bernard, Reedsville. They maintained a grade point average
between 3.50 and 3.99.
All students named to the lists
are full-time students at the college.

weighed, there's no way to know
how much was donated, said FreeStore spoteswoman Jan Boldt.
"It was oodles and oodles," she
said.
Hagprd Slid he hopes what the
couple did will inspire other people
to tliink about donating.
·

Reminders
for area
pet owners

Weekend Speeials

Gifts benefit provider for poor
CINCINNATI (AP) - When a
Cincinnati couple were preparing
· to gel married, IIIey decided to create a dowry for people less fortu·
nate, rather than lor lhemsel ves.
Gary and Kim Hqgard asked
. friends to donale fllod and clothing
to the needy instead cl buying the
usual wedding prea'"ts such as
blenden. toaSters ... lalickknacks.
"We gadJered up more than 466
pounds or food. The iiiPOftSC was
JUSt completely po~itive," said
Haggard. wbo JR. . . . the booty
from his June 8 weddiDI to the

75 n·nh

Su1HLn

RUTLAND FURNITURE
AND BOTTLE GAS
GEOIGE GIATE ·Manager
STATE ROUTE 124

742-2511

446-1081
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RUTLAND, OH.,

south or the jonclloa of Hobson Road. AccordIng to Brett Joaes, the ODOT Inspector in
char1e of this project, resurfaclog from the
MeiRS·GaUia Couoty line to the bqlnnina of tbe
four-lane stretch of S.R. 7 north of Pomeroy
should be complete In approximately 30 days.
(Times-5eotinel pboto by G. Spencer Osborne)

Medical insurance paymenttalks by
teachers, board winds up in court
ST. LOUIS POSTER - Tile City Ill Gdlpolla
celebrated Its Bicentennial In 1990. ne Cllhollc
community of GaiUa Connty llkewile celebrated ·
200 yean of C1thoUc herltaae ill 1!1!10. St. Louis ·
C1thollc Church participated In the Blllelllelllllal eelebratlon and u a coadllllon of the abler-

vance, the parish coamlasloaecl r ..l Mella of ·
Daytoa, to paint the pictured po1ler. Tbe po1ler,
accordlna to Mouslpor William R. Myers, Is
.not so much a portraltlll$e C1tbolk tal$ u h

Is a depletion of tbe Catholic COIIIaanlty over
this period Ill time. II coulltl of PIOtle. piKes

life

and events which are eentral to ihe
of tl!e
parisb. ne po11er Is beiDa made avallllble to Ill
parish members IDd wiD be aured wltll vwJous
community JP'DUPL Pictured are memben of St.
Louis' Bleentennlal c-mlteee, (L to R): MJa.
Myers, Saundra Koby, Mickey Johnson 1nd
Josette Baker. (T-S photo by Krls Coebran)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slllfl'
POMEROY - A debate berween
the Meigs lAlcal Teachers Association and the Meip Local Board of
Education on medical c:o-inlunnce
payments bas resulted in an aclion
beina filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun.
The Meigs Local Teachers

Association has filed a motion asking for a temporary restraining
order to prevent the Meigs Local
Board of EdUCIIion from deducting
any amount for insurance payments
from the pay checb of its members
until a gnevance is resolved.
The association members for
many years have enjoyed 100 percent payment of major mc!lical,
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visual and dental insurance as a ·
pan of their fringe benefits.
~w~ver, due to flllllleial diffi~ulues m.th~ district and large
mc.reases m tnsurance premiums,
acuon wu tabn by lhe board Jut
fall to bring about aome penicipation in those premiums by both the
certified and non-certified regular
C011tinuecl on A-3

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Commentary and perspective
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A Division of

.MULTIMEDIA,INC.
1125 'lblrd Ave., Galllpolla, Oldo
(614) .446-13(2
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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(6lt) 992-21.56

ROBERT L. WING'ETr

Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.

Executive Editor

PA'l' WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER orTh•Assoctated Press. Inland Dally Press Association and thE'
American N("Wspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION art' welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. Alll~tters are subject tof'dltlng and must be sigJaed wlth namP, addrPss and
telephonP numbw. No unslaned Jpttft's wUI be published. Utters shou ld bfo tn
good tastf'. addressing Is suet, not persona IItle!!.
'

Letters to the editor
Tells about good deed
~Editor,

.
. I'm writing this letter in hopes
Y,ou will publish it so I ean tell
everyone about the good deed a
young man did for me and my husb,and on Friday afternoon June
14th, 1991.
: My husband is not only·a double
qll8d amputee but also a suoke vicurn with his left side paralyzed.
Oue to the stroke he does not
always think rationally. Friday was
one of those days. He is a disabled
veteran.
: I had gotten him up in his
~heelchair and took him out onto
the front porch as he loves to wall:h
ihe birds that come to our feeder
llfld bath . I came back into the
house to do some wale and almost
immediately I heard a racket alid a
!DO&amp;R from bini. I ran out the door
and found him lying face down on
the ground with his whee~ on
rop of him. Not knowing the extent
'o f his injuries and knowing I
1:ouldn 't move him alone, (he still
:weighs 175 lbs.) I ran to the high'/Nay and proceeded to flag down
·the first car that came aloog. Was I
:Cver fooled! Three vehicles passed
;me up. Only one was a woman
'llriver, the other two were·men who
:Could have helped. The fourth vehi·
:Cle came to a screeching halL The
'}'flung man jumped out of his car,
. ·told his young children he would
· be right back, then ran up the driveway behind me. He helped free my
, husband as his pelvic restraint belt
1 was fastened holding him a prison' er in the wheelchair. He stayed
with my husband tallting to him

and reassuring him while I called
the EMS and got the medication
list ready. The only thing the man
asked was that r check on his children. One was only a baby, the
other a 3 or 4 year-old.
I would like to thank the EMS at
this time also, as they were here in
a matter of minutes. My husband
was lucky. He had n\) broken hones
but several cuts, bruises, and abra·
sions to hts face, stumps, and right
arm, but the doctor assured me a
few days of bed rest and ice packs
would take care of that.
Yes, ii was foolish for my husband to try to go down the
wheelchair ramp alone especially
since he went down forward and a
double amputee always backs
down due to imbalance, but how
could those people who passed me
by while I was desperately waving
my arms for them to stop and see·
ing a. handicapped person lying
face down with awheelchair 011 top
of them, be able to sleep at night?
Many, many thanks go to the
one who stopped. If Gallipolis had
a ''Good Nei~bor Award" I would
quickly noounate .CLINT ATCH.
He would certainly deserve it!
Todsv he even stopped by to see
how my husband was and to make
sure he wasn't seriously injured
and brOught his 4 year-old daughter
as she was very concerned and
worried aboui the man who had the
accidenL This world could certainly use more people like you ClinL
May God Bless You!
BiUie A. Gool
Porter, OH

League of Women Voters S!'eak
out
'K_
cerns of their constituents. With an
To the Editor:
&amp;!'POinted Board, citizens have no
Goverpor Voinovich has pro- dtreet input, and Board members
posed a plan to replace the 21- have no constitueniS.
member elected State Board of
An elected State Board of EduEducation with a 9 member Board cation ensures geographic, social,
to be appointed by the Governor. political, economic, cultural, and
He wants to. improve education in philosophical diversity of iiS memOhio, and he waniS to do it fasL
hers, and this enco~~r&amp;ges healthy
:
Improving public educ:ation in debate considering various view1 Ohio IS an adniirable aoaJ, but Ilk·
about education issues. With
! W)g away citizens' opportunity to points
an appointed Board, there is no rea, vote is not the way to do iL The son to believe that diverse views
, ,I,.eaguc of Women Voters of Ohio
: '&amp;lieves that it i! eaential that an =·be encouraged or even wei' issue as important as public edoca·
Education policies should be
: til:m be openly debated and dis- developed
and based on sound edu·
: cussed among all inteiated citizens cational practices and theory rather
· in the state.
than on what is politically advanta:
Local control of schools is a geous . An elected State Board
! concern of the citizens of Ohio. Ini· ensures an independent and non· tiatives to improve education at the panisan board. An appointed Board
: state level need to have grauroots owes its allegiance to the Gover: suppon if they are to be IIICC81sful. not, not to the school children.
· An elected State BOird of Eduea·
The Governor's plan iJ; an
: tion can provide the leadership for auempt to
. bypass a system that we,
· buildinll grassroocs suppat for edu· as a democracy, have chosen in
: cation mitiatives. An appointed order to give citizens a chance to
; •Bo!Kd cannot have this brolld-bued have their views considered in the
: :local suppon. An appoiniCd lloll'li decisions that will affect them,
. ~member does not tep!esent a . _ their children. and their future.
: 'district and does not necessarily
Write to your state representa·
• ~ave a relationship with local
: schools at aU.
An elecltd State Board of Edu:
' cation continues citizen repraentaMarilyn R. Sheater, President
~ tion in state government. Elected
League
: State Boanl of Education members
: must be aware of and responsive to
, regional education issues and conColumbus, Ohio43215
,
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~~:~:~ta~tas:=ar~~n:~~
ofW~~~~o~~~

Recognizes local citizens

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:, Dear
. this community,
.
AsEditor:
a teac her' tn
· 1 would like to recognize Iocal citi: zens who have given of their time
· and talents to inspire seventh ana
eighth grade students.
My intent this IIChool year was
to expose my junior higb Jllldenu
to people wilb IIUQ "II careen in
: our community. I believe if we can
: suongly encoaraae junior high
• youngsters to set aoafs now. they
: Will be better mociwatod to choose a
' hilh school c::vw• of SiUdy wbich
wfil prepare them for additi.onal
trainliJ. be it coDege or vocational

scJtoolinl.

To accomplish this soai. each
saadent "shadowed" a ptdou ~ith
a career ia wbic:b be or 1111 mil!ht
be inamted in
'1111 fol·

fAII::'t.
lcJwing people opeaed alke,

laboratorY· pnctice, IIC., . . . illy

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students were able to participate
and "live" a career for a day. What
marvelous experiences they had.
Thank you· for being role mod·
els of highest quality. Thank you
for representing the fact that Meigs
County is a place where young
peoJlle can plan and attain a suc·
ccaful career. Thank you for earin~ enough to 'share your talents
With our youngsters.
Dorris Curmode, Big Bear Phar·
macist
John Lentes, Attorney at Law
Dr. Carol Osborn, Doctor of
Ve ·
Medicine
::ffJarnes Soulsby
Paul Starkey. Ohio University
ComJIII.IIC': Lab
Lmda Wamer, Aaomey at Law
Patty Asbect
Teacher
Rejoicing Life Christian School

I

Vn.NIUS, Lithuania- Everybod&gt;: here is waiting for the shot
. that IS not f"lred, for the tanks that
do not roO and f&lt;r the suppression
that doe~ not occur. Until this
country 1s freed from feaf of a
Kre.mh~·ordered
crackdown
agamst m~ependence, economic
progress will be a dream deferred.
If and. when that day arrives, the
econom1c problems will be as
daunting as 100 Soviet divisions.
Nothing ~ymbolizes Lithuania's
current plight on the road to reform
better than the quest for privatization. Political and economic
reforms must run parallel, and the
Baltic states envision a confederacy
with Moscow - one enforced less
by guns and more by butter.
While it sounds esoteric, privatization ~il~ be a pillar of building
free SOCiebc:s from ~tern Europe
to the Sov1et repubhcs. No one
here has a rood map for this crucial
reform, but the Lithuanians mi,ght
be blazing a trail other fledglmg
democracies" can follow.

June 23, 1991

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As Vice President Kazimieras
Motieka complained to us, "Our
economy is frozen. It can't be
developed. We aren't allowed
thaL" He believes that only if the
Soviets cease using force in Lithuania wiU foreign investors begin to
flock to Vilnius in greater numbers.
"I think the So&gt;liets are re.tain·
ing this threat of use of force as a
weapon to interfere with our eco·
nomic development which then
hinders our politic'ai indepen·
dence. •' he told us.
Motieka asked us to pass on a
plea: "I ask you to help encourage
Western investors, make them
more active, so that the real Iron
Curtain that stiU stands on Lithua·
nia's weStern border can be broken
down. After the fall of the Berlin
Wall, we have to knock down the
Iron Curtain that separates Lithuaniafrom the WesL"
The most aggressive privatizer
in a former cenll3lly planned economy is Poland, but progress there is
stalled and the
is riaaed.

Poland is resorting to a bidding
proces~ for former state-owned
enterpnsesthatfavorsfCIIIIerCommonist Party bosses and hundreds
of ex-spies, the only Poles who
profited from the old system,
Lithuanian Economics Minister
Vytas Navickas doesn't want to see
. the same thin~ happening ~re. He
shared his visJQD with us, one that
foresees making lump-sum pay·
. ments to Lithuanians based on their
.. years of wodt. This would take the
form not of cash but of investment
vouchers, which could then be used
to bid on buildings and start businesses.
Navickas estimated about 98
percent of the property in Lithuania
IS state-owned and would either be
returned to its owners during the
pre-World War II ~riod of inde·
pendence or "sold' for the vouchers.
Lithuanian President Vytautas
Landsbergis told us he generally
favors the plan, but with an alter·
ation: The vouchers should be

~~y KIDS...
C~ To WAltH
~~oF

S~C~TED

SATuRCA'f MORNING
CClM\E~IAL

le~VIGION?

Miscellaneous
, Rec.entty the wnter rece1ved the
•O0OWing 1e~
.
Dear Fred.
I hear you pretend you are an
ex~!?" everything and I am wo~denng 1f I should plant sassafras m
the light ~r the dai_k of the moon .. I
hear variO!JS stones that there 1s
only ~ne lime to plant sassafras.
Certamly. you. should be able t~
help me m th1s matter. Stgned.
Aaron.
Dear Aaron: You have rea~ly
thrown me a curve ball. For the life
of me, I can~ot understand why
rou would~~ me on the subJect of gardening bps. Furthermore
1. do not ~w what sassafras loo_ks
like, ev~ if you should put a PIC·
IIJ!ll of II m front ofm~ ..However,l
Will make some 1.0q~es and get
back with you. Signed. Carry on,
Fred.
• .
.
For !he reader s.mformatJOn.• I
~ave d!scusse~ ~~~~ matter V.: 11h
. ree different mdiVJduals, cl8lmmg II? be ex~. As you ~bably
::O~u,1~~v~three different

The first ;x~ {rU,y) stated
th'at sassafras 15 an. herb and should
always be planted 10 the dark or the
m~n. The second expert (Curly)
advised that sa~safras should be
planted m the hght of the moon
because the moon control.s the
ude.s. The bdes CC!ntrol ~ rismg or
faUmg of the sap 10 growmg thm~.
T~e moon also controls 1 e
growmg of all ve~etables, bees or
whatever: My thud ex~rt (Moe)
told me 11 makes .no difference
18 out or
the
WISC. The only thin!.~ couniS 18
whether .the .groun 15. nght whe_n
the plantmg 18 done. LikeWise, this
. expen staled that the sassafras tree

w~ether moo~

oth~-

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Privatization key to Lithuania'sByfreedom
Jack Anderson
and Dale Tr'lJ:an AHa
Ul

allotted on the basis of age, not the
length of time someone has
worked. Either plan calls for a generational tilt toward older people
who will receive more. Imtially,
the young - who now largely are
forced to live with their psrents ...:..
will be able to acquire their own
apartments with the vouchers.
He believes the export growth
industries will be in electronics;
wood processing, food products,
cement, textiles, fertilizer and oil
products produced by a large refinery here.
But the beginning ·o f progress
lies with pulitical, not economic, .
reform.
SECOND VERSE ·- The new
regime in Panama is beginning tQ
look more and more like a clone of
Manuel Noriega. Authorities in
Spain. Argentina and the United
SJates have come across more
embarrassing revelations about
Noriega's successors. The investi•
gations have focused on two Span;
1sh brothers - both businessmen
with close ties to the Colombian
drug cartels. They have built a
business empire in Panama through
loans and business deals with associates of Panamanian President
Guillermo Endara. One of the
Spaniards has been caught smug~
gling drugs into Argentina and both
have been the subject of exten~ive
investigations for their dealings
with drug barons in Colombia and
Spain.
MINI-EDITORIAL - This
year's college students have a,
choice - dodge the buUet or walk
the plank. They are getting out of
school about the time tuition costs
are going up 15 percent. But they
are also graduating at a time when
there are no jobs. Comparatively
few college graduates will get job
offers in their fields of study, so
they will have to turn to the same
jobs they had before or during col·'
lege. It's enopgh to make a gradu•
ate tum in his sheepskin for a monkey wrench.

~usings _____F_re_d_w._c_ro........:..w

sh~~d .be p~ted m the day time

ter.v1ewpomt seems the best to thiS
wnter, ~owever, you wiU note that
t'!fee d1ffer~~~ expens have three
different opm.1ons on same. Aaron,
take your chmce.
After in.terviewing these three
experts, I discovered that most sas~ trees grow wild. This would
mdicate that they were not planltd
by anyone other !han by Mother
Narure. So what gtves, Rupe? You
teU ~!!e.
,
. .
Fmally the Webster s D1ct10·
nary states that bark of the sas·
~root has an aromatic, volatile
011 used as a tonic and astringent,
also used for flavoring and perfumery. Sassafras tea tastes good.
In .the ~~~ day~ sassafras was used
for medicinal purposes.
In browsing through various
publicatio~s. I noticed the foUowmg advertiSement, by a man named
Bart:
WANTED:
GOOD
WOMAN, able to clean, cook, sew,

lows: Dear Fred: ,I am 65 years ot
age, in gOOd health and also would
like to meet a man who has the fol·
towing qualifications: #1. He must
be able to read and write. #2. He
mu~t have all of his body parts,
including two hands and two feet;
#3 He must be a Christian #4 He
mmt like pickled pig's feet: #5: He
must be interested in Shakespeare
and be kind, considerate and love
biUy goalS Most of aU he must be
able to YODEL.
'
It is absolutely necessary that
my friend yodel for me especially
at hij!h noon and at S:30 each
mommg. My friend docs not have
to worry about working as I am
drawing my social security and
own my own home . If you have
any prospects, please advise.
Signed: Josephine.
Dear Josephine: The critter you
would like to meet probably does
not live in Gallia or Meigs County.
However, I wiU pass on the word
GOOd luck. Carry on, Fred.
·
I have received the following

Have I just put fOOd away, or have
I come to take some out?
·
And at times when it is dark
and I've a nightcap on iny head j
don't know if I'm retiring or 1j.ist
got out of bed.
So if it's my tum to write you
there's .no need for getting sore; i
may. think that 1 have written, and
don t want to be a bore.
So remember that I love you,
and wish that you were near; But
now it's nearlv mail time, so 1 must
say "goodbye(' dear.
Here I stand before the mailbox
with a face so very red. 1 didn't
mail this letter, I opened it instead.
READERS, PLEASE NOTE :
#I. I need to hear from someone
who has the background informs- .
tion on Bert Hart, the man whd
used to sell sassafras, paw-paws
and wore a heavy overcoat every
day of the year. At tiDies, he would
wear a 'coon skin cap. #2. Before
too long, the writer is going to take
a leave of absence from writing this
column. Anyone wishing to submit

SEND PICI'URE OF BOAT AND
MOTOR. Mary answered the ad
and Ban was pleased with the boat
and motor.
So pleased in fact that they were
married. Assume that Bart and
Mary were in the boat and the boat
sank. As a result, Bart became very
depressed and mad at Mary. Queslion: Is this ground for a divoree?
Assuming further that after Ban
and Mary were married, the Sheriff
repossessed the boat and motor.
Question: Would this be ground for
an annulment of marriage?
The following communication
was received by me. It reads as fol-

lion. Many of us old timers fit this
category although I would doubt
that any of us would confess same.
Just a line to say I'm living,
That I'm not among the dead
Though I'm getting more forgetful,
And mixed up in the head.
I got used to my arthritis. To my
dentures, I. 'm resigned. I can manage my b1focals,.. But, God,,I miss
my mind.
Sometimes I can't remember,
when I stand below the stair, If I
must go up for something, or I just
came down from there.
And before the fridge, so often,
my poor mind is fiUed with doubL

Do not use religion or politics
as your topic. Anything submitted
111ay or may not be used unless
both the writer and the editors consent. Anyhow, give it a try.
There it is • Rupe, for bCtter or
worse.
Carry on
(Long f
p
·
·
Fred W. c:::~ i~~~~:~t=eo~
col
~ th S
umns or e unday Times-

as. It IS ImpoSSible td properly. plant
thiS tree dunng the h1ght. Th1s 18~-

~:v:~~!t :~ c~e:o~~s~L~~~

b::' ~M:::~~~ ~~~~~

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~ ~~~~ column should send same

~::~:~·~r~dJ:ee!; !!!!i!, !~

Roosevelt Coleman

in~

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Will wrote disparagingly about
politjcal correctness on campuses,
PC opposition suddenly ballooned
into a different sort of "politically
correct" canon.
Unarguably, some PCers have
gone too far in zealously trying to
reform college curncula. As
Coleridge so wisely observed:
"Everr, reform, however necessary WIU by weak minds be carried
•
th . . If .
d
to an excess at 1tse WI 11 nee
reforming.''
Yet 1 am a proud PC advocate·
Contrary to the arguments of paternalistic PC oppollllniS of afflfiDa·
.
.
,
uve &amp;CUOII, I don t suffer from any
loss of inte.llect~al co~fidence
because aff1rmauve acuon may
have influenced my being the
"ftrst Negro" seven times. Nor do
1 know of a single black or woman
who feels inadequate about benefit·
ing from affirmative action. How
did Woody Allen put it? Take the
moneBYand ~1
ut po U1ca correctness was
very much 011 my mind a week ago
when I was the commencement
speaker at Atlantic Community

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College in New Jersey. I couldn;t
resist reciting the fust five lines of
Mark Antony's funeral oration
from "Julius Cnesar":
Friends, Romans, countrymen,
lend me your ears;
I come to bury Caesar, not to
praise him.
The evil that men do lives after
them:
T
·
·
. he good IS oft mterred with
thetr bones
So let it be w1'th Caesar
I then tran slated 11· mto
· · a pohb··
cally correct version_ thew·8 PC
'b'
't: .
y
en cs see.1
Multicultural close associates
multi-gendered citizens of Rom~
and countrypersons heed my plea·
I
to nd 't funeral '
v1·ce~omreth's
cod IICseda
ser1 ecea
''
pe:son, not
mto;~.hower that person w1th encoThe evil committed by persons
of all races, nationalities, genders
and sexual preferences lives after
them:
The sood is invariabl buried
with thetr os~ diversitiel
So, let it be for the decedent
~

Michelle M. Landen

Goldie E. Hasz

VINTON • Rooeevelt Colenum,
88, Rt. 1, ViniDD, died in the Heatt·
land of Jackson Health Care Center
Friday, June 21, 1991, in Jacban,
Ohio.
He was a retired coal miner, a
member of the ML Carmel ~~~
Church, Bidwell, 111d the
Mine Wodters Local, District 17.
He was born June 11, 1903, in
Pulaski, Tenn .., son of the late
Andrew imd Emma Love Coleman.
He was preceded in death by hls
wife Rubie Stephen Co1emal'l in
1973, by one daughter, Dorothy,
three brothers and one sister.
Mr . Coleman .is survived by
three grandchildren: Michael Coleman, Vinton; Mitchell Coleman,
Gallipolis and Diana D. Coleman,
Columbus.
· A step-brother, Percy Vassar,
Cincinnati, also survives along
with a special friend, Mrs. Joan
Bass, BidweU, several nieces and .
nephews.
· Funeral services will be con·
· ducted at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the
Nf. t. Carmel Ba{l!ist Church, Bid·
1¥eU, with Rev. Henry Fletcher and
Rev. Gene Armstrong offtciating.
Burial will be iri Pine Street Cemetery, Gallipolis.
· Friends may call at the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton, on
Monday between 7 and 9 p.m.

UJUted

Sister Grueser

DAYTON -Goldie E. Huz died
June 17, 1991 at Hospice, Dayton;
She born Oct. 9, 1913 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Robert
and Orpha Wooten lbivener.
She is survived by chi.ldren, Virgil Roberts, Jr., of Greenville, Shelby Roberts of lndianipolis. Ind. ,
Dick Roberts of Bremerton, Wa.,
g:I~?uita Crume of Santa Ana,
· ., and step-son, Kenny HBsz of
Dayton; three sisters, Phyllis Pope .
of Cadmus, Clara McCammon of
Galena and Lucille Thivener of
Columbus; four brothers, Bill
Wooten of Cadmus, Ray of Railto,
Calif., Carl of Grt,enville, and Gordon Gallipolis.
She was preceded in' death by
her husbands, Virpl Roberts and
Carl Hasz; two s1sters; and two
brothers.
Services were conducted
Wednesday, June 19 at Magetti
Funeral Home, Dayton.

John~on Scarberry
NEW
HAVEN-Johnson
Samuel Scarberry, 78, · of New
Haven, died Saturday, I une 22,
1991, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He waS born August 30, 1912, in
Jackson County, son of the late
Andrew Jackson and Addie Matie
Donahew Scarberry,
. He was preceded in death by
three SOliS, Francis Edward, Roben
A., and Aaron R.; two sisters; and
one brother.
A farmer, he was also a bus
driver for the Mason County Board
of Education for 22 years. He was
also a member of J.O.U.A.M. in
New Haven.
Survivors include his wife of 56
years, Emma M. (Grady) Scarberry; two daughters, Ruth Ann Mc·
Bride of Ashland, KY., and Betty
Jane Holden of Matawana, MI.;
four stins, Lawrence R. of Bender·
son, Wilfor~ R. of Point Pleasant,
Samuel R. of Monttose, W.Va., arul
Roy Thomas of New Haven: two
sisters. Maude Synder of Delaware,
OH., and Laura Rodgers of Akron,
OH.: one brother, Sheridan, also of
· Akron; 23 grandchildren; and 14
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducICd a~ Foglesong Funeral Home
Monday at 1:30 p.m., with the Rev.
Rex Young officiating. Burial will
follow Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral
home Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m.
A special service wiU be conducICd by J.O.U.A.M. Sunday at 7
p.m.

: POMEROY • Sister
Clara
Frances Grueser, 85, formerly of
·. Meigs County with the Sacred
IJeart Catholic Church, died June
18, 1991 at Holy Family Home in
Nfelboqme, Ky. ·
Born in Pomeroy, she. entered
the St. Ann Convent in 1931. She
was a teacher for more ·than 50
years and also wrote poetry and
designed crafts.
Survivors include a brother,
Mark W. Grueser of Shade; and
sisters, Christine Grueser and
Emma Broderick, both of
Pomeroy; and many nieces and
nephews.
.
A Mass of ChriStian burial was
held Friday at St. Ann Convent,
Melbourne.
Arrangements were handled by
the Muehlenkamp-ErscheU Funeral
Home in Ft Thomas, KenL Burial
was in the.convent cemetery,
"If she saw a need, she was
there to help do it," said Sister
~ EDen Cheevers, the provin·
cial secretary of Sisters of the
Divine Providence. "It didn't mat·
lfr where it was. She always
seemed til have time to give a helping hand."
After she took her vows in
1932, she taught for 15 years in
Northern Kentucky Catholic
Schools. She formerl_y taught at
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,
Corpus Christi and St. Vincent W.Va. (AP) -U.S. Sen. Wendell
DePaul in Newport, St. Ioseph in Ford 011 Saturday told the nation's
Camp Springs, St. Thomas m FL coal producers that the Bush
Thomas and SL Bernard in Dayton. administration is shortchanging
Then she moved to Kalida coal with its proposed national
where she taught first grade for 35 energy policy.
years at SL Michael's. She retired
"Maybe we need to read
in 1982 and returned to the Holy between the lines of these propos·
Family H&lt;ime in Melbourne.
als, because I have read all of the
"She was always such a cheerfUl lines, and coal is not there," the
· ~rson," said Sister Martha Ellen. Kentucky Democrat said during the
'She always had something .to say National Coal Aasociation's annual
to pe.ople. She was just a really convention at The Greenbrier
beautiful person." .
. resort.
Sister Clara Frances wod&lt;ed in
FoJd said the Bush administrathe gi~! sho~ at the retire"!ent lion's proposal fails to consider the
home. She d1d a lot of of thmgs abundance of coal found in this
like make stuffed animals and country.
stuffed dolls," said Sister Martha
"We have heard the right music
Ellen. "She would also create her in the administration's National
own design on aprons and paint 011
it. She was very creative m many
ways." Sister Martha Ellen said.
"She was just a very, very talented
woman."
Sister Clara Frances wrote and
published articles and poems, Sis·
ter Martha Ellen said. She just
received word one of her poems
would be published this fall. She
made her last entry into her journal
•h•.rntv before she died.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Michelle Marie Landen, 36, of
Dunedin, died Wednesday, June
19, 1991 at Bay Front Center, SL
PetersburJI. Fla., due to injuries
sustained m an automobile accidenL
She ..,. a native of Ponsmouth,
a homemaker and a member of
Missouri Baptist Church In Clearw~r.

RAVENSWOOD, W.va. (AP) ~ the · explosion Thunday at
A worker was burned in an explo- RavenswOOd Aluminum Corp.
"We know there ..,. an explo·
sion at a Jackson County aluminum sion. One employee wu hurt," said
plant dull barred federal safety inKale Dugan, a ~woman for
spectmlastmOIIth,ofllcialssaid.
Howard Shields, 28, of Weirton the U.S. Occupallonal Safety and
was listed in gOOd conditiOn today Health Administration regional
at CabeU-Huntington Hospil&amp;l, ac- office in Philadelphia.
No one else was injured in the
cording to a nursing supervisor
explosion, which caused no signifi·
who asked not to be identiliecl.
Shields sustained second-degree cant damage to the plant, said a
burns on his face and uppc:t torSO in RavenswOOd official who did nQt

Medical... - -Cnntlnued
from A·l
- - - - - , -,- - - - - - - -

Survivors include her husband,

want to be named.
The cause of the biaBt wu under
investigatioo, the official said.
A federal investigator ..,. • the':
plant Friday, alon~ with a iqAeten·•
tative of the Umltd SleeiWOIIIeli:
union.
About 1,700 Steelworken have .
been out of ·wod&lt; at Ravenswood :
since last November in a labor dis- ·
pule.

..

Company officials reiChed an.
agreement with OSHA earlier thi(
week to aUow inspectorS in ~
. plant. They were turned away May. .
23. .
.
;.
Coml'any officials hl!d said they :
barred mspectors because of fears&gt;
the agency was,being manipulate4.:
by !he Steelworkers.
•
•

employees.
·
. certified or non-certified regular
~~!"~~;~::f=~e~
Last Aug~st Supt. Jame.s Car- employee, paid totally from tax
Jim Compton of Clearwater; one penter met Wl!h represenlltt~es of dollar~ without any contribution
·
the union to ~ costs of msur- from the employees. has been over
John Da 'd Han f
step-$00,V:U.Old ~~~:;i ance and available new money for the past year $144.23 per month or
of Live Oak; one srep-d~uhter, t!'e l~ach~~!..ear. A~11 that $1,730.76 per year for the single
April lora Landen of L1~
·,one ume, ·
g to ~.,..nter, was ~an and $389 4 7 ro;r month or
·~
agreed that there was not enough
•
·
-~- f
.
sister, Debra Compton of Dunedin; money to fund both the required
•67 3·644 per year or "": amily
and maternal grandfather Wayne
· to
the · ·
sal
plan. Another 25 percent mcrease
•
r81se meet
m~um
19' m
insurance costs is scheduled lO
Bak~~J!· were conducted ~hedule and pay the mcreases m go into effect on July 1, according
•
msurance.
the
. tendeD 1
Saturday, June 22 at Orange BapCarpenter in a newsletter 10 the to
super_m
·
tist Church, Live Oak, with Rev. teachers said that "the Board
Healt!t m~urance cost~ to the
J.H. Brown and Rev. Hugh Harris bel'1 ed it. and till d
th
board mcreased a total of
officiating, Burial followed in the
~v
~n,
s
oes, ·at $150,227 52 from the 1989-90 to
I
church cemetery.
:::Cth:le~~C:C~~:r:~ ~ !he 1~0:91 school year. Of t~at
Pallbearers were David and teachers union and the school dis· mcrease the Board was able to p1ck
Frink Nobles, GBO" Peters, Gene trict) is thlt if not enough money is up $68,930.8~ ~ el!lploy~ were
Sheppard, Calvin Palmer and Ver- available to cover salary and fringe ~ to partiCipate m !hetr health
11:00 A.M.·1 0:00 P.M.
non Byrd.
benefiiS, lhal deductiona would be tnsllflll.lce costs by paymg the rest
Gallia
Jr.
Daniels Funeral Home of Live made from teachers • pay for of th~ mcrease..
Oak was in charge of arrange- frin ea to make up the diffaence •
SIJ!c~ a monon for a tern,rerary
Fairgrounds
ments.
that
there
0
Knob Squad
Vera Webb
delay arter delay m securtng arb1u
.
WELLSTON _ Vera L. Webb, trauon on the issue. It finally Court, no deduct.1on was. made
4-WhHier lactsl
occurred on Mab22. There were fromsalarychecks~~nday.
91, a resident of Rt. 1, Hamden,
.
The temporary restnwung order
Bauball Card Showl
died Saturday, June 22, in the three proposals Y the arbitrator. asks that the Board fEd ab' be
Two were rejected immedialely by
.
0. uc ~
and Other Events
Houston Nursing Home, Harndeli. the MLTA. The third one being restnlllled from ~ng ~ucuons ,
A retired school teacher. she that the board could make the from the ~her~ salaries fo~ the
For Partklpatlng Info
was born March 30, 1900, daughter d d 1
d h
h
.
costs of medical msurance unul the
Call
of the late Homer H. and Laura e uct. ons 8~ 1 en 1 e. umon grievance filed by MLT A against
LivingOOd Tripp.
could file a gnev~ Ieavmg the the Board has been resolved
2·5·53·7
She married Everett Webb. He matter to be determmed at a later
·
preceded her in death in 1984. One hearins.
daughter, Mrs. Roger (Marvel)
Since the deductions should
Karr, WeUston, survives along with have been Slll'ted last faU but were
two grandchildren and four great not due to the union's disagreegrandchildren.
ment, followed by a period of
Preceding her in death besides months before the board and
her parents and husband were one MLTA went into arbitration, the
brother and five sisters.
Board's only opt\on was to deduct
.
the full .year's
She was a member of the Wtn·
. . co-insurance
'ods .from
th
ters Chapel Church, Vinton Coun-• the remammg SIX pay pen
m e
ty, the Vinton County Retired 1990-91fi~'..~ ..... ,~
ade
Teachers AssociatiOn and the Ham·
The trSt uaow;uun was m on
den-Chase Chapter Order of East· June 7. This amounted to $45.15
'
for those on the single plan a~d
em Star.
Funeral services will be held 2 $113:91 for those on the fam1ly
p.m. Tuesday at tile J. P. Rogers planF. ....
.
h
h
Funeral Home, Wellston, with Rev.
, or u": en!Jfe year~ teac •
A. B. Maloy officiating. Burial will er s contribution toward 1nsurance
be in Hamden Cemetery.
y.-ould ~ve been $270.98 for those
Friends may call at the Rogers m the. Single P"!n· and $683.47 for
Funeral Home on Monday from 7 those m the fam~y plan.
PICKUP AND DELIVERY AVAILABLE
The cost of 1nsurance for each
until 9 p.m.
CALL 446-9495
Eastern Star services will be
held Mmiday .at the funeral home.

:!•

GALLIA COUNTY ·
JR. FAIR
FUNDRAISER
DAY
SATURDAY,
'JUNE 29
Co.

~nee

tim~

~as ~!! ~e~gs ~":'Y ~m"::n ~~:S

Bush proposal ignores coal
Energy Strategy," Ford said. "But
some of us are stiU looking for the
right words in the legislative pro·
posals growing out of this strate·
gy."
Ford said a bill drafted by the
Senate Committee on Energy and
Natural Resources calls for "a
wide range of energy efficiency
and conservation measures" 'following amendments that expanded
programs for deveioDin~ technology for the non-pol1utmg use of
coal. ·
·
"I have seen administraiion
budget proposals calling for cuiS in
ener~ research - and failing to
• prov1de for future rounds of our
existing clean-coal technology program," Ford said in his prepared
remarks.

ONEY

S•A•L~E

39 MONTH SPECIAL!

an~ subject (except for politics or
religion} are encouraged to write
to Mr. Crow in care of this neW!I·
paper.)

(U8PIIU.l
P\lbllshed each Sunday, 825 Tl\lrd AYO ..
Gallipolis, Ohio, by tllo Ohio Volley Pub-

I'm proud to be 'poiitically correct' ·
Just
you've been P,aying
more attenti~n to the fig~t filr. the
N~~ cham~o~sh1p .or b1parlisl!"
~lpmg ~ Pltol HiU, ~ostlers 10
e media.have been havmg.a field
day dumpmg on,'!'~ ~~mlc phenom~~on called political correctness. .
. .
.
,
PC IS ~~methl~g hke Plato, s
nobon of beholdm~.beauty ~1th
the eye of the mmd. Percepbon
depends on the beholder. To advo.. li .cal
.. .
cates, JlO b
correctn~ss 18 an
academic
movement
· 1to mfuse
· h the
l.1'bera I ar ts ~umc~
a wu more
!deas and philosophiC!! from }ongwoman. blaclc and Hispan·
1.gnored
h
li
.
1
~c Sl;=·w
se te":a canons
avTe
ngorous1Yteahi · ·al
o owonents- w te m e tra·
ditionahsts or white phat.ticists
(WPers) - PCers are gu11ty of
dilutin.g the integrity o.f the classi.cs,
lob
r,
adem affi
,bY(~ac. to IC thanmnauve
:i:U~~c· g ~ c~ that!)
When ~all Street 1~
.
•
The New Repub!1c, Newswee~.
New York m~pzme ~ Atlanuc
and conscrvanve colummst George ·

Sentlne~

RAC worker injured in explosion .

Page-A2

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

j"mmav 1Jinlts • ~tntinel .
:

.

-·

SUnday nmee

Pomeroy-Middleport Oalllpolll, Ott Point Pl.... nt, WV

June 23, 1891

.

.•

lishing COm~ny !Mu ltlmedtl. Inc. ~

cond cia" pootop pold at Gallipolis,
Ottto 456.11. Entered as eecond c1asa
mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohkt, Post

By Chuck Stone

before us.
Ah, but another poetic form is
far more popular among today's
srudents. So I followed the PC critics' version with a rap version:
·
Hey, homies on the block and ·
d d ftheO k
u ~~ me~ Jobes - 1 ain't :
herefornorock.
I'm here to send my main man
off to the sky.
.
Not to lay some J'ive 'bout the ·
~- elie.
way In;;
·
:
When
a dude messes up, his rep .
·take a whippin'.
·
But the decent things he do '
everybodybeskippin'.
So, let it hang out just one more .
time,
·
For my main man here who
don't even have a dime.
OK, so it's not William .Shake·
speare. But if Shakespeare were ·
alive today, he probably would be ·
f~ more comfortable with the ere- ,
at1ve rappers than the petrified
V(Pers. He might even spare a few
kmdly thoughts for the misunder- ·
stood PCers.
·

' Ollie&lt;!.

. If you need 1110ney to pay off your credit
cards, take a vacation, buy new furniture or
appliances, a boat, car or RV, to remodel - or
for any worthwhile purpose, S~E US!*

Mem~r : The As~latt!d Pftls, In·
land Dally Prest Au6Ciatlon and tht
Ohio Newspaper Auoclatlon, National

Advertlllnl ~pre~entatlve, Branham
Newspiper Sales, 133 Third Avenue,

New York. New York 10017.

ANNUAl
PIICEJITAGE
IAR

SUNDAY ONLY

SUB8CIIJPTION RATBI

By Cantor o r - · ilolde

One Wee-k ............. .............. 90 Ce11t1
One Year ................................. M6.10
8

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sunday.
.... 75
• No subo&lt;:rlptlono by mall pormltlod In
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~~Prvltf'

11

The.Sunday Thnea-Sentlnel wUIII4)t M
retpon!llble for advance payments

made to earners.
,

MIUL SWIOIIIPTIONI
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month a............................... S2f.'10
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~~

STAR BANK
There's a star within.your reach.

There Ill a eubatentllll Interest penalty for aerly wlthdr-•1.

O_ne Year .................................. 147.8f
• Six

Annucii percentage rato of 7.0041!. Is compounded
dally to prowlde 7.2541!. offoctlwe aMual yield.
'IIIII CD hal a 39 MOnth linaturlty and requires a
mhll•u• $1',500 deposit.

HURRY BEFORE THE SALE ENDS/

a

446-2631

1-800-468-6612

Ohio Valley B·a nk
Member FDIC

4 Convenient Location8

. .

Star ·eank, N.A., Tri-State
25 (OUIT STIEET
W·0662

SIVII ..OE PlAZA
446·9300

•certain ro&gt;ztrlctlons apply. Up to

3~~~neing. - ·--~---... --~··-.

"

'

'

SPittG VALLEY OFFICE
446-IS..

-· --·-- - ---~?!~.!:£!..~

J'

�•

•

Page-A4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleuant, WV

Recent B&amp;E case solved
by Meigs County deputies
'

MEIGS - A breaking and enter. ing of Larry's Bait Shop at Syracuse on June 13 has been cleared
and 15 reels and the cigar box that
held the bait and tackle money has
been recovered, according to a
report from the Meigs County
Sherifr s Department.
Charges are pendi11g against a
15-year-old juvenile from Wiscon·
sin for the breaking and entering.
Charges of receiving and disposing
of stolen property ~ also pending
against two Minersville youths, one
· ag~ 19 !lfld OJI!l a~e 17. An invt;sti·
gauon IS conunumg m an attempt
to recover the missfng reels. Additional person or persons may he
charged. Names are being withheld
pending filing of charges. The
mvestigation is conducted by Syracuse Police Chief Jim Connolly
,and Deputy Roben Beegle.
• Eugene Long, Lebanon Town·
ship Trustee reported that sometime on Wednesday someone stole
:gasoline from the tank at the
·Lebanon Township Garage~ It was
'reported that th'e hose had been
'taken off and app~~~Cntly a siphon
pump was used to take approxil)lately 200 gallons of gasoline.
• William Justice, Portland,
ieported 10 the department Friday
·that he discovered someone had
~ot through his front window. He
reported that he had heard a noise
Thursday night and discovered the

Three hurt in
Friday wreck
, GALLIPOLIS ·- Three West
Virginians were hurt in a two-car
Wreck Friday at 7:10 p.m. near the
Gallipolis corpomtion limit oh S.R.
7 at the entrance ramp to U.S. 35,
Q!:Cotding 10 the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway·Patrol.
: Three passengers of Donald
Walker, 46, of Henderson, W.Va.
- James Bai)ey, 64, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., Carol Walker, 44,
of Henderson, and Chelsea D.
Gleason, I If]. years old, of Point
Pleasant - were taken by the GalliB County EMS to Holzer Medical
Center.
Bailey was treated and released
for minor neck strain; and Carol
Walker was treated and released
for back strain, while Gleason was
treated and released for a 'forehead

•

broken windi&gt;w Friday mooting. ·
, Carl Young, Route 338, Antiquity, reported Friday that his lawnmower .had been stolen. He reported that he missed the mower on
June 11. It was recovered FridaY'
afternoon . His neighbors reported
that when they moved in two days
prior the mower was in the basement of the house. The house had
been vacant for about month.

a
Court ruling could
affect most states

CINCINNATI (AP)- A U.S.
Supreme Court ruling may affect
the election of judges in Ohio and
most other states, according to a
lawyer who prosecuted a suit over
the way Hamilton County elects its
municipal judges.
Voting 6-3 in cases from
Louisiana and Texas, the high coun
on Thursday ruled that a federal
voting rights law giving minorities
•equal voting rights applies to the
election of Slate and local judges,
"What it (the ruling) does is
eliminate the last hope of those
people who thought they might be
rescued by the Supreme Court,"
lawyer Thomas Atkins said Friday
in a telephone interview from his
New York office. "Now they know
there's no Calvary coming for

Meigs ... ___--==:!:Con=tiD::ued~rr~-=.!A~-·~...,.....-------------,,.....---:-----:-:ovcr the next two years-in Ohio's only for the .Lanes bu.tthe m.ore clients over the past year would •
without the belp provided through
Options, they will have no choice
but to go into a nursing home.
With minimal monthly income
and only a small savings, they
.know that if they IIIC unabie to continue their independent assisted living arrangement, they will be
forced into a nursing home and
onto Medicaid, where costs to the
taxpayers will soar.
.
"We 'II just have to depend on
the State ,fO take .care of us," commented Lane.
But goiilg into a nursing home is
the last thing Mr. and Mrs. Lane
want to do.
And they're very concerned
when they read !hat the Options for
Elders ·
be phased out

biennium budget.
than 70 0111ers who teee~ve semces
Gov. George Voinovic)l's bud- thrcugb ODdons.
·
get proposal called for elimination
AI explained by Thomas, Gov.
of the program in two years, the Voinovicb has proposed inmasing
House of .Representatives restored Passport funding while phasing out
funding, but then the Republican Opliona fer Elden.
controlled Senate backed the govHowever, to qualify for Passport
emor and eliminated funding for recipients must meet Medicaid
the social service program. The guidelines, while Options is avail·
budget is now in the Conference able 10 low and middle income who
Committee composed of lhree rep- can contribute 10 services p-ovided
resentatives and three senarors and on a sliding fee scale.
·
a compromise budget is expected
. Options provides the disabled
to come out of that committee elderly with more control over their
sometime this week.
lives, the Ol)pOltUility to have some
Eleanor Thomas, executive medical and-social assislance while
director for the Meigs County · continuing 10 live in the communi-

Council
'Agingprogram
which locally,
imple·
m~ts theon
Options
is also
concerned - not

have been eligible for Passport ser- :
vices.
:
Since some action is expected 10 •
be taken this week in the Confer- 1
ence Commitiee, Thomas is male-. '
ing a final appeal to residents to
contact Rep. Tom Johnson and :
Sen. Bob Ney, the two mid-Ohio '
legislalora who IIIC on the commit- :
tee. Letters should be sent 10 the ;
Slate House, Columbus.
1
"Closing lhe Options for Elders :
program would be a great loss for 1
many Meigs County families. l
These are tile people whom we ~
have seen 'fall through the cracks' ;
for years, and no" if Options is '

cent

Thomas.

.

Municipal Court
' GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
Municipal Coun Friday, Donald D.
Sbarp, 19, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, was
fined $100 for driving without a
lil:ense.
• Other fmes were handed to Jack
Shaffer, of 244 Fourth Ave., $50,
dbmestic violence; Mark A. Cremeans, 32, ESR, Gallipolis, $14,
speeding: and Lincoln M. Neal, 19,
J:.l&gt;wer River Road, Gallipolis, $12,
failure to yield to a public safety
vehicle.
: Angela L. Robbins, 22, of Bidwell, and Roben G. Marchi, 28, of
922 Greenbrier Dr., forfeited $35
bbnds for not wearing scat belts
~bile driving.
·

;

:,•
'

'

''

'

l
'•

•.

~

Deputies probe single-car wreck

•

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Sheriff's deputies probed a onecar accident around 5:15 ~.m. Friday.
According 10 the sheriff's report, a vehicle driven east on State
Route 554 by James R. Young, 37, Rutland, ran off the road into an.
embankment Young was not injured. Damage to the vehicle was
heayy. It had to be towed away.
According to Young, a person in another vehicle going westbound on State Route 554 came around a curve, went left of center
and forced his vehicle off the right side of the road. The accident is
still under investigation.
Deputies investigated a B &amp; E and theft complaint in the German
Hollow IIICB, off Hannan Trace Road.
.
.
Pearl L. White, RL 4, Proctorville, reponed someone broke into
his summer home and ransacked iL Missing were one dresser and a
bed flame according 10 the'report.

•

~

•

•

Youth rescued from.cliffs

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GALLIPOUS - Four motorists were cited by Gallipolis on. various charges late Friday and early Saturday.
Randall S. Cummons, 20, of 130 State St., Gallipolis, was
charged with failure to maintain conlnil of his vehicle and DUI following a single-car accident on Cedar St. at 3.:35 a.m. Saturday;
Christine A. Patrick, 34, Racine, was charged with driving the
wrong way on a one-way street: Bobby Lee Webb, 71, Detroit,
Mich., was cited for a stop sign violation following a minll' two-car
mishap at 11:23 a.m. Fnday on Second Avenue while Dinah A.
Worster, 31, Rt: I, Point Pleasant, was charged with SJICC!Iing.

!

TEallltll.tiGV Sf'tiRE~ ·

cars.

Donald .Walker was cited for
failure to rield and not having a
child restramL
A ViniOn woman was cited in a
car-van crash Friday at 4 p.m. in
Oallia County's Springfield Township on S.R. 160, .3 of a mile north
of milepost 5.
Deborah L. Ratliff, 35, of 196
Amby Lane, was cited for not
milintaining assured clear distance
after her 1985 Olds Cutlass rearended a 1988 Plymouth Voyager
driven by Marjcrie E. Kemper, 31,
of S.R. 160, Kerr.
Ratliff and Kemper were headng
north when Kemper slowed down
to make a left tum. Ratliff, unable
to.stop, ttied 10 pass Kemper on the
left, and hit Kemper's car on the
left side.

Four motorists cited by police

,

In Hamilton County, municipal
judges are elected at·laJ:ge. F1ve
black plaintiffs, led by state Rep.
WiUiam Mallory, D-Cincinnati,
sued in 1986 10 cballenge the system, saying it allows white suburban voters to control all judgemif.s
in the county. Only two of the 4
judges IIIC black.

; Donald Walker, driving a 1986
Buick Riviera, was heading north
on S.R. 7 until he stopped to tum
left to the enuance ramp to U.S. 35.
He then tumed left into the path of
,; I988 Ford Thunderbird driven by
David A. Ward, 39, of Oak Hill,
who was travelmg south. Ward's
car hit Walker's car in the right
side, causing heavy damage 10 both . -

GALLIPOLIS - Speakers for today's 1 p.m. rally for 111CB ccial
miners in the Gallipolis Public Square were announced Sarurday by
Community Improvement Corporiuion of Gallia County officials.
They IIIC:
United Mine Wcrt.ers President Richard Trumta; Ohio lOth District Congressman CIIIICncc E. Miller; Ohio 98th Disttict Representative Jerry W. Krupinski. chairman of the House Select Committee
on the Clean Air Act; Ohio 20th District Senator Robert W. Ney,
sponsor of Senate Bill 143; Ohio 30th District'Senator Robert L.
Burch and Ohio 94th District Representative Mary Abel.

;

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Sunday Times Sentinel-Page-AS

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ott Point PINsant, WV

---Local briefs-__, Model of new home to
be on display June 29-30
Name speakers for raUy

t;~,ex~p~la~i~ned;Tho~mas~.~:!~=Jp~hils~ed[ou=t~,
th:ey:w:il:·l:c:o:nu:·n:u:e:to~
She
less
'fall through the
cracks', concluded i:

them."

bi-uise.

June 23,1991

June 23, 1991

POMEROY - Two young Pomeroy boys were rescued qom. a
cliff behind Tate's Chevrolet (formerly Jim Cobb), East Mam
Street, on FrJ:day evening.
Pomeroy Police Chief Jerry Rought stated the department
received a cllll from Tate's Chevrolet advising that two boys were
in a tree behind their business yelling for help:
_ .
Upon arrival, Capt. James Webster of the Pomeroy Pollee
Department, found the twO boys, Robie Malhatra1 age II, or 326
East Main St, and Cha4 Freeman, age II, 250 Umon Ave., stra~!d­
ed, not in a tree as was reported by Tate's Chevrolet, but on a C\iff.
Webster stated the boys had been exploring the rocks and cliffs
behind Pomeroy Village Hall and Tate's Chevrolet when they
became stranded and could not go either way on the clif~.
·
With the aid of Rick Blacttnar, Tom Werry and Kevm V~tre
of the Pomeroy Fire Department, the two young boys were extncated from the ledge by the use of ropes and were rewmed safely 10
their homes.
. ~·
Also on the scene was Chief Rought.

MIDDLEPORT - A new alternative 10 the home builder is now
available from a local contractor,
Michael Shuler of Mic!c!Jepm.
Shuler, owner and operator of
Shuler Construction, is now spe·
cializing in the construction of
Eagle's Nest Homes and a model
of one of the homes will be on display during an open boule on Sat·
urday and Sunday, JUIIC 29 an!l30.
The homes are adaptable to ·
almost any ierrain, any environment, any lot .size. They feature a
built-in computer system that
allows the house to DCrform basic
functions, such as lire, burglary
and personal assault protection,
medical emergency alert and elimate control.
The homes offer a unique
pedestal construction which elimi·
nates the need for load bearing

walls. This results in the interior
desi$0 of the house being open and
spaciOUS.

The upper level is cantilevered
above the lower level and beyood
that is the airiness of a catbcdral
ceiling. To allow complete individualityininteriordesign,theEagle's
Nest House is constrocted of custom designed panels consisting of
wall, window and optional fireplace units. Shuler points out that
the homes are FHA and VA accept•
cd.

The homes are available in a
variety of different styles and
almost any type of floor f.lan can
be achieved with the fleXIbility of
its construction.
The public is invited 10 the open
house next weekend and the model
is located at 39212 Hobson Drive
in Middleport.

Squads make six runs
POMEROY· Units of the Meigs 7:32 p.m., went to the Ouis Hayes
County Emergency Medical Ser- residence on Main Street for a rug
vice responded to six calls for · fue, and at 9:13 p.m. the Pomeroy
assistance on .Friday and early Sat· Fire DeJ.Iartment was called to
West Main Slreet for a motor vdti·
urday morning.
cle
accident in which there were no
On Friday at I p.m. the Middleinjuries.
port Fire Dcparanent was called 10
On Saturday at 12:52. a.m. the
207 Beech S"trect on a dryer fire at
Middleport
unit responded to South
the Bonnie Roush resiclence.
At 4:56 p.m. the Pomeroy Fire Third Street for Bob Lewis who
Department and Emergency was transported to Veterans MemoSquads responded to a two car rial Hospital, and at 7:05 a.m. the
motor vehicle accident on Route 33 Pomeroy unit went 10 the Pomeroy
in which Lisa Robinson, John Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Robinson and Denise Richards for Mary Hoffman, also taken to
Veterans.
were treated but not uansported.
The Rutland Fire Department, at

Trustees to meet
POMEROY -The Salisbury
Township Trustees will hold a public hearing for the 1992 budget at
the home of cleJt, Sarah Gibbs, on
July 3 at7 p.m.
All citizens m invited to attend
and provide written or oral comments concerning the township's
entire proposed budget.
The budget will 6e available for
public inSpeCtion at the home of lhe
clerk until July 5.

· OUTSIDE VIEW • The Eagle's Nest Homes orrer a unique
pedestal construction whicb eliminates the need for load bearing
walls. This results Ill tbe lllterior design of tbe hoUse belllg open
aad spacious. This particular home was constructed by Michael
Shuler of Shuler Coutructlon In Middleport. The bome will be on
display for the public on June 29 and 30.

Gen. H1rtinger Pkwy · 79 Jackoan Pike
GALLIPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
814-448-3837
81 4·992-8248

·" ·
·:
.
.
"

3&amp;4 Eaat M1in St.
POMEROY
814·99.2 -8292

TURTLE SUNDAE!!
ON SALE

SUNDAY, JUNE 23 ONLY!
BUY ONE AND
GET ONE

FREE

PASSPORT

OUR TEN INCH ITALIAN
SUB SANDWICtf

PHOTOS

MONDAY, JUNE 24 thru
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GAWPOUS, OH.

A tan IJ1Ch sub bun filled with Ham. Salami, Provolone Ch1111111, Italian Dreosing,
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FOR

$2.79

Qospital news

VETERANS MEMORIAL
, FRIDAY ADMISSIONS - Barbara Butcher, Albany; Freda M.
Bing, Middleport; Iva G. Johnson,
Pomeroy; and Roy C. Betzing,
Pomeroy.
. FRIDAY DISCHARGES - Bur·
·well Mc,Kinney, Thomas Hysell
L~-------------------....1 and Jewell Curtis.
.

Correction
POMEROY • The apJ.IOintment
of Susie Karr to the Me1gs Board
of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities does not fJII a
position vacated by Belle Hoffman.
Instead, Karr will replace Vickie
Hanson, who resigned. Hoffman,
who was recently appointed Interim superintendent of the program,
has never served on the board.

Available In
White/Rtd/llack

·I I
BY N I KE

THE SHOE CAFE
LAFAYmE HALL
GAU.IPOUS, OH.

INSUIANCI

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ANTIQUES, ESTATE PIECES, REPRODUCTIONS,
PERIOD JEWELRY FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD.

ALL
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. UNITEDSTATES

AUSTRALIA

Our discriminali ng Estate Department has assembled a most impressive collection of
"one-of-a-kinds" from countries renowned for their jewelry creations. Come see the
necklaces, brooches, earrings, watches, bracelets, rings and other unique articles of
adornmeht. There's something for everyone .. . priced from under S100 to many
thousands.

_

Wil--·"'·---- -·-

111-IIMII INy- 1&gt;*'1 llilll ..... ,.. ""lll1

.

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING RADIO SHACK STORES AND DEALEf'IS

SRI LANKA

404 Second Ave.
GaUipolll, Oh.

•••Corbin and Snyder
Furniture
955 Second Ave. • Gallipolis
(614) 446-1171

I

'

.'

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

nmes Sentinel

orty-six cases .a re processed in Meigs Court

-"

RIO GRANDE HOTEL • The Rio Grande Hotel was built
, arouad 1875. Its mllllt famous occupant/resident was Henry C.
(Syndicate) Wilson, the most popular evangelist in Gallia County
, for 15 years.
"

.

lf. C. Wilson popular
Speaker in late 1890s ·
'

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspoa!lent

bridge. It did not matter to him. Wilh
that he gave the signal for the choir
and whatever Rev Lemaster had to
GALLIPOLISsay from then on fell on deaf ears.
Jar religious speaker
By lhe late pan of the flfSt decade
in lhe 1890s and
of the 1900's, Wilson had returned to
the early 1900s
his drinking. In 1911 he was sued for
.was Henry C.
divorce by his wife. Mrs. Wilson
Wilson, better
claimed that her husband had been
known as Syndiguilty for 3 sttaight years of habitual
cate Wilson. At
drunkenness and had failed to proage 13 Wilson
vide for the family.
had entered Ohio
For his part Wilson revealed an
Wesleyan Colinleresting tale. He said that in 1895
lege for the 6 year course. Upon fin- when he was holding a revival at
ishing his education,he moved to St. Harrisonville, and even though he
Louis where he worked for Standard was drawing 5000 to 6000 for meetOil.
ings,hewasin 1895inanunbalanced
After a few year's as a broker in condition. He was taken home by a
Cincinnati, Wilson returned to his manbythenarneofGroverandintrohometownofMiddleport,a"broken" duced to a Miss Clark.
man in many ways. For 10 years
"Ihadnevermetorspokentoher,
Wilson had ingested 104. grains of before.Mr.GroverwenttoGallipolis
opium per day as well as great quan- and secured a license and before I
tities of alcohol. After a time in the wasawareofwhatwasgoingon,had
Athens Asylum, Wilson WBS con- me married to Miss Clark. I laier
verted and moved to Rio Grande found out that Miss Clark' had been
where he ran astore in the old Varney engaged io marry another man wilh
Building. The store was called the all arrangements being secured and
"Syndicate Store", hence the begin- paid for. When the man backed out,
ningofWilson'snickname.
MissCJarkwentlookingforasubstiFor several years Wilson lived in tute and had apparently paid Grover
the old Rio Grande Hotel which we to fmd one, anyone."
have pictured today. By the early
Wilson implied !hat Grover had
1890's Wilson began speaking in a slipped him some~g in~ drink
few small Methodist Churches. By and had gotte!" Wilson .lfiB!IIed be- .
1894 Wilson was holding camp fo~ he ~w 11. The Jl&amp;1f di~ have 4
meetings at Crown City, Addison, cbildrenm l5yearsofmamageand
Kerr and a few other places. His Wilson claimed that he WBS a good
fneetings featured a brass band, a provider.
·
ll!rge choir, fireworks and addresses
. In his reply to Mrs. WilSon's soil
&amp;y local pastors.
for divorce, Syndicate claimed that
~· In 189.5 )When then GO\'C!IIOI' his wife was tha
one as she
Will~ McKlliley visited Crown · bad tried to bum down their home in
(r.ity, Syndicate Wilson's(:Bnlpmeet- order to collect the insurance money.
litg at Gallipolis drew 2000 more · Later in his life 'this once popular
jieople on tliat same day !han did evangelist lamented: "God only
JlcKinlcy. Once in awhile Wilson knows the sorrow and suffering
p into trouble with local pastors as through which I have passed, About
•videnced by one meeting held near thistimeS~cateWilsonwastaken
Rio Glllllde on Garner's Ford.
to the Lakin Hospital near 1'1. Pleas·
' During the openinll exercises of anLHediedinpovertytherein 1915.
the lBSt night's meeung there, the
(Editor's note - James Sands
Rev.~,wbowasthepastor.of new address is: James Sands, 65
ihe S!mpSO!' Chapel Methodist Willow Drive, Springboro, Ohio,
Church at Rio Grande, announced 45066
that immediately following the serv•
kes
he would
baptizeChapel
probationary
. ts
members
of Simpson
in the Methodists condemn cu
creek.
PORT CLINTON, Ohio(~)
Another person lhen siDOd to say
tltatRev Chapman, the United Breth- - One of Ohio's major religious
ren minister at Oak Hill, had been bodies has called for health care for
enlisted by Wilson to baptize all all Americans and condemned proconverts lbat ni~ht whether they be posed cuts in stale general assislance grants to the poor.
Methodist, BapllSI or whatever.
The East Ohio Conference of
Lemaster, obviously somewhat
humiliated by this tum of event, re- the United Methodist Church kept
butted that he would baptize his own alive its long tradition of backing
flock. Furthermcn he was outraged programs lbat assist the downlrodthat Wilson had 10ld the audience den in lhe final sessions Friday of
from the platform that Lelii8Siel was its five-day annual conference at a
against Wilson. Lemaster also fek retreat near Port Clinton.
During the debate on the socialslighted that never lhat week had he
been invited to speak even though an. welfare issues, as well as earlier
"outsider" from Oak Hill had been ·discussions on AIDS. many of the
some 1,800 delegates, half clergy
given free reign over the grounds.
SyndicateWilsonlhenmadeaplea and half laity, traced their COIEemS
for "sweetness". He shouted: "Let for the poor to their 18th century
the preachers f~ghtitoutamong them- founder, English cleric John Wes·
selves, for all the people came to hear ley.
me (Wilson) and not to listen to a
The delef!!~s called on the
in the conference
bunch ofl:ellyaching preachers." As 205,000 mem
fllr as Wilson WBS concerned some- to recognize that all people with
onewouldbaptizethatnightbysprin-. AIDS, regardless of bow they conJcling. immersion, by rolling people tracted the disease, are ''penons of
in the mud or _pushing them off the sacred worlh."

"cnlzy1

POMEROY - Meigs ·county costS; Brian E. Smith, Middleport,
Court Judge Pabick H. O'Brien speed, $22 and costs; OrviDe Hill,
processed 46 cues l&amp;'lt week.
Pomeroy, speed, .S23 an~ costs;
Fmed were: RaJvle!! Hays, Rut- Stephen A. Morns, Huntington,
land, speed, $2411111 costs; w~ W.Va., speed, $22 and costs; Jerty
Carleton, Raci!le. biahway use laX, A. Valenti~e. Galena, $24 and
$25 and costs; linda Johnson, Bin; costs, speeding; James P. Diad:,
W.Va., speed, $22 and costs; Jr.. Po~eroy, speed, $20 and costs;
Richard Hammonds, EwinJ!, Ky., Catbenne D. Sanders, Albany,
failed to display safety eqw~t, speed, $3~ and costs; Ken4ai! E.
$5 and costs; Charles M . Schloss, Dunfee, Vmton, reckless operall.on.
Shade, speed, $25 and costs; John $100 a.nd costs; Emma C. Srruth,
M. Hayea, Middleport, pusing bad Dry R~dge, Ky., speed,. $20 and
checks, restitutioa, costs, 10 days . ~osts; Junmy Deem, Racine, speedin jail suspended to time served; mg, $27 and costs; .Donald. J. Fry.
Patrick s. Cleland, Pomeroy, JliSS· · ~omeroy, no valid operatQr s
ing bad checks (2 counis), $200, bcense, $12.5 and.~ts. seve.n days
costs, restitution, one year proba- suspen.ded 1f val1d l~cense IS ~rotion, six months in jail, suspended d~ m 3~ !lays; Michael Mk:ios,
to time served on each charge; Bus Racme, drivmg under suspe.nsl~~·
G. Daniels, Dexter, domestic vio- $100 and costs, five days m Jail
lence, $100 and costs, six months suspended upon proper operator's
in jail suspended 10 two days, cred- license within 60 days; Keith .
it for time served, pmbatioa of one Black, disorderly conduct, $100
year, alcohol assessmeni; scott and costs, restraining order issued;
Pyle, Dunbar, W.Va., failure to Denver Fry, Ripley, W.Va., disorhave U.S. number and madcings on derly conduct, $50, suspended
vehicle, $50 and costs; Harty T. upon condition of no further tresHysell, Cheshire, failure to y1eld, passing, costs; Michael Stewart,
$10 and costs; William H. Vance, Shade, failed to display license
Loveland, Ohio, speed, $20 and plates, $10 and. costs; Ralph B.
costs.
Stewart, Shade, failed to d1splay
Denise K. Hoffman, Washing- license plates, $10 and costs.
Darrell L. McKinney, Middleton, W.Va., speed, $24 and cost;
port,
passing bad checks (two
Sharon Dianne Slater, Culloden,
charges),
$25 and costs, restitution
W.Va., speed. $23 and costs; John
on
each;
Kathy S. Hetzer,
B. Duffy, Corning, Ohio, safety
violation, $50 and costs; Todd R. ReedsviJie, passing bad checks,
McCandlers, Parkersburg, W.Va., $25 and costs, restitution; Clay E.
speed, $23 and costs; Roger P. Holbrook, Jr., Letart Falls, seat belt
Stover, Cross Lanes, W.Va., swim- violation, costs only; William Pridming in waters under control of
Ohio Division of Wildlife; $25 and
costs; Melvin Gilliland, Jr., Soutl\
Point, speed, $22 and costs; Trevis
T. Van Dyke, The Plains, speed,
$20 and costs; · Linda Wyant,
NEW HAVEN - A special
Albany, left of center, $10 and
presentation will be made to Phyllis
Scou atlhe June 24 meeting of lhe
New Haven Town Council.
Scott will be recognized for her
work durinj lhe Gulf War, and for
beginning Operation Yellow Rose.
The meeting will be•held at 7
in the New Haven F'lre Stap.m.
TOLEDO. Ohio (AP) _ ~
tion.
The
public is invited.
members of the Hell's Angels
motorcycle gang were sentenced to
15 to 25 years .in prison in what a
federal judge caJied a senseless and
I
bizarre slaying of a record store
clerk.
u.s. District Judge John Potter
ON SLIDE FILM
on Friday sentenced Mark Verdi,
41, of Cleveland, and Steven Yee,
By
33, of Parma, to 15 years in prism.
KODA LUX
Potter sentenced John Bonds,
35, of Cleveland, to 25 years in
prison because of a prior felony
conviction
·
424 Second Awt.!IGallipalis

399 W. •in

We're Yow "LoetJly o....d" DepenJGble Supplier of

I.PUI
Highly Trained IDBialler

Bulle Dlllwerr with
ncktll .
•Fair Prieta

..,.,.d

"Check Our Deal Fir•t"

~

UIN OR SHINE

;.Along the River ~imes- Ientine! Section B
,Pet owners advised to be cool to their
.animals, during the summertime heat
, _...

·~

June 23, 1891,'

. ...,..:._

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••••••

..••'
:~

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•
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•

"

ANYWHERE - Well, summertime is here and lbat means hot, humid,
.sticky, incredibly uncomfor1able weather - not only for humans bui for all
)ittle (and big) pet &amp;leads as well.
' As temperatures rise, dogs become more vulnerable to heat stress.
i;According to Purina Pel Care Center,IIJIJib I1I8D, the dog's sweat glands
!ilre not very well developed; dogs diJSipale heat primarily tJu:ough the
:!vaporization of moisture when they panL When tbis system begms to fail
·)nd body temperature rises, the circulatory and respiratory systems are
;~vertaxed to the point where pennanent damage or death may occur.
:: Although any d:o8 may suff~ frqm heat stress; cenain dogs are more
· 'vulnerable: They 1nclude: pupp1es and older dogs; adult dogs recently
:'moved rronl a cool to a warm climale; adult dogs with a history of beat
short-n!Rd 1neds, like the bulldog and JIUI, w~h normJilly have
:difficulty breathlng and panling, are una61e to dissipate body heat from
;ihe body surface; clop with cardiovascular or respiralory disorders may
·lle stricken under conditions which would not be hazaidous to normal
'ilogs; and dogs wbo blwe recently received short haircuts may become
:sunburn victims and are as susceptible to the various typeS of heat stress
"as other do~s.
.
• The Purina Pet Care Cent« stateS there are three typeS of heat stress neat exhaustion, heat Cramps-~.
.
' .
; Heat exhaustion or heat prostration !DIY occur foliO\ying. prolonged
''Cxpo~ure to intense beat and lteavy CXCI'IlOn. Heal Cl$1ustton 1s not com. mon in dogs, but may occur as a complicalion of cardiovasc!llar disease.
• ,J Heat'cramps are painful muscle spasms caused primarily by an insuffi·
~ient amount of salt in the body and by severe exerti,on mhot weather.
1Eeat cramps .-e rare in dop. but rae~ dogs or bunting dog~ may occa·~onally be affec:ted if heavily oxen:ised m inlense heaL
.
~ Heatstroke (also Cllled sunstroke or hyperthermia) can be fatal to dogs.
It develops rapidly and is oftell amciated with exposure to high temperahumidity llld poor venti'Mion, S)'IIIJIIDIIIS include p~~~ting, a swi!Jg
or anxioas:r:Esion, failuro to respond to commands, warm dry skin,
1pxtremely bi
fevu, dehydration, rapid heartbeat llld collapse. Profuse
Salivation
vomitlq mal,!!:::ur.
·
1 If a dOg showa signs of ·
, immerse him in cool wa1er or spray
i~ ·with a garden hose to lower his body temperature. If water is not
•available, apply ice piCks to the head and neck and move hun to a cool
·place at once.
li With any form of heat stress, prompt veterinary attention is imporlant
·!ro deal wilh potential complications. .
.

tures,

Baseball Card Show in
Commercial Building

.

~

Arts &amp; Craft Show in
Activities Building

••

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. .•

9

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·~------------~--~--~--~

Summertime precautions
HAPPY FELINES -These two hliPPY cats are pictured catching

Knob Squad 3 &amp; 4 Wheel Racing
1:30 and 4:30 On Track .'

NePer leave a dog confmed in a car or any other poorly ventilated enclosure during warm weather. In ODe study il was reported that
when the outside ~ ,is 78 dogrees, a closed car ~ in
lbe shlde will reach_9q dep-ee~ in five min!IIIS and 110 degrees in
25 mintltlls. en IIIII dlyf;yoar pet iJ Silfer • home!
Avoid exceuive exerc:lse of qs during hot days or warm,
, hwilid nights. The best time to uercise dogs is either early in lhe
~ mornilll! or late in the evening. r·
.
. · Providing small porti0111 of fresh, cool wlller throUghout the day
will help lower a dog's body temperature during periods of extreme
heat.
.
A doghouse Should have some ~sions for outside shade dui. the summer.
• .
mg
Paint a doghouse white if you live in warm climate. A test at the
Purina Pet Care Cenler to determine bow extensively the outside
paint color affects the interior of a doghouse showed that a doghouse painted white was 1.5 to 20 degrees cooler than an identical
doghouse painted black. In climates that have seasonal changes a
moderate green is most practical.

(LOCAL PARTICIPANTS
INVITED)
'

BANDS ON StAGE ALL DAY &amp;
EVENING
PEniNG ZOO II A.M. TIL 5 P.M.
Cloggers on Stage Betweenlands
.Fun For The WJrole Family!

Year lound

•Budget Plan

t~

BURULE LP GAS
.JCT. RT. Jl
ltANAUGA, OR.
(6U) 446-4Ut or ToO Free ~ Boo-42:1-&lt;bt9

li

rew ra:ys on tbe patio Instead of illside a locked car. Pets should

100 degrees io 25 minutes. If you love your pels, leave them at ,
home.

KEEP IT COOL - Exercise for your dog Is important at all
.·

times but in tbe summer it's also important to remember aot to '
overdo it .

be left at home due to the fact temperatures Inside a car reach over

'

~~·----------------~---------------------,

ALL FOR $2.00 PER PERSON ADMISSION
(CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE)

Available

Food c~nsumption

UFFLE WITH PRIZES DUWN
EVERY HOUR STAlliNG AT 12 NOON
$100 CASH GUND PRIZE IT 10 P.M.

During hot summer months, it is not unusual for a dog's food
consumption to decrease, accordintlto the Purina Pet Care Center.
Sb!dies show that, as a general rulo,_dogs need about 7.5 percent
fewer calories with each IO depee rise in temperature.

(MEED 1101' IE PIESEIT TO WIN)
•

BANK ONE PROUDLY PRESENTS

•

, Beware of weeds and seeds
n.

After dogs are exercised in f!Clds or wooded
always checlc
for weeds and seeds as well as ticks and fleas. Bristly and sticky
weeds can cause painful problems, )lllflicularly foxtail - the dried
awns of grass that clinf to a dog's bain:oal. Sometimes seeds fmd
their way into the dog s ears, nostrils, DIOUth, paw pads aDd even
internaUy. Prompt remoYII can help pmoent problems before they
start. The followin1 are ligns that a dog is suffering from the penetration of a foreign body: eyes - Rid and irrlllted IIICI seeds may be
visible; nasal passqea • suddeo snorting, pawing •violendy at the
face, had lll1lkin&amp; or severo bun&amp; of
nasal dilcluup or
bleedinJ: ean • violellt hold th•Jriaa,
at the ears and
neck, diacharae from the ear CIIIIBI, lwelllDI o the ear and an
unusual odor-or cllllnap; mouth· reluctance 10 eat, COUihinl or
~tchinJI; and JI!IW8 • llaiiJI!II or pawing • paw pills. 'When a dog
displays I!ICh 11gns lmmedi•M lrfalmeut by a veterinarian is recommended.
'l'bere is unlimited information aVIillb!e on the care and ·treatment of .anlmals. Just coniiCt your locial veterinarian office or
Human Society. information frolil the Humane Society of the United Statea may be obclined at 2100 L Street, N.W., Washington,
·
D.C.20037.
So, remember, take a few extra summer precautions to keep your I
dog happy. healthy and comfortable.

=·,

Thursday, June 27

7:00P.M.

Court Street I Pomeroy1 Ohio
The Public Is Invited To This FREE Concert

lfhctl,. 7/1 191, C•tral trust Iaiiie of Ga•·
polls •• • l•11r lie tllldng pay...ts for Col·
••••• S.thern Pow• Co, PaJ111M1tl May bt
111d1 at .., G...... offlct at 990 2nd Avo.
..tw... tile ...n of 1:30 A.M. to 4:tS P.M.

'Bring Your Folding Chairs For An Evening of RelaxatiOn .
and Beautiful Sounds.

............... the .... ~ ......
lltory llf tile ••• localltllo If r•• prefer to par
11y 111111, P.O. JS6, Oa.polll, ON. 4,631 l1 our

COW.S SOUTHERN POWEI CO.

..

'

..•

-~NE
Whatever it takes:

I ........

Photos by
Julie E. Dillon.
LotS PF COOL WATER· Dariat lh -mer montu ahra,a

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA Mtmbtr FDIC

•
'I

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••'

•

,.,. ..... -

'

11 A.M. TIL 10

'.

Pomeroy, Ohio

I

FROM·

Tawney Studio

The Store with "All Kindt of Stuff"
Far ,...._ Stable, lerge &amp; SIMII Animall, lAwN &amp; Gardena.

II •

ACTIVITIES

PROCESSING

SUPPLY .CO.

992-2164

ALL PROCEEDS GO TO BUILDING &amp; GROUND
IMPROVEMENTS

1 DAY

WE,\VON'T LET YOU
RUN OUT OF GAS! · .

•

·:mess;

Bikers sentenced

See U1 Fo1 All Yout Pet Need1/
R&amp;G FEED
AND

dy, Rutland, assault (2 chatges), suspeoded on the condition of iialf
$50 and costs, 30 days in jail sus- of the restibltion be paid within 30
pended to three days, one year pro- !lays, balance within s~ months,
bation on each charge; crimmal $200 and costs (concurrent on each
damaging, $50 and costs, 30 days count) probation of two years·
in jail suspended to three days, Jack Yates, Long Bottom, passing
restitution; Lori Rockhold, Long bad checks, $150 and costs, 30
BottDm, petty !heft (2 counts), six
days in jail suspended upon paymonlhs in jail suspended on each
ment ·of restitution; Marshall
·count, $150 and costs, probation of Wooten, Cheshire, assault, $250
five years, restiwtion; Ron Cape- and costs, 10 days in jail suspendbart, Pomeroy, DUI, $500 and ed, restitution; Anthony Jones,
costs, 60 days in jail, credit for
Athens, W.Va., driving under sustime served in rehabilitation facili- pension, $100 and costs, three days
ty, lhree year license suspension, m jail; Otis McNutt, Hartford,
probation of two years, driving W.Va., failure to yield right of
under suspension, $1~0 and costs,
way, costs only. .
60 days in jail concurrent with DUI
Forfeiting bon!! was Richard
charge.
Hammons. Ewing, Ky., failed to
Arnold Priddy, Pomeroy, theft display certificate of regisr:ration,
(five counts), s1x months in iail
$55.
,

Scott to be honored
by town council

., .•

'•

June 23, 1991

,,
I

•ake aan tllere Ia p1ntp ol cool, tresll water far 7011r caDiae ;
frlead.
.,
I .
~-

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�•

June 23, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt PleMant, WV

Page-82-sunday Times Sentinel

- - - - - - - - - - ---·

.

LISA GEORGE and MATI QUEEN

·. ·Evans-Taylor .

.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Denny
Taylor is a graduale of Southern
Evans, Racine,' are 8DIIDUIICing the High School and is employed by
enpgemem and approacbing mar- Miller Elecuic.
riage of their daughter, Rebecca
The open church wedding will
Dawn, to Chsd ·Lewis Taylor, son be an event of July 6 at 6 p.m. at
of ~r. ,aad Mrs. Larry Tayl9r, the Reorganized Church of Jesus
·syrxuse.
Christ of Latter Day Saints, PortMin Evans is ,a graduate of land.
Southern ~e~ngSchool and is
A reception .will follow in the
atteDding H · Technical Col- church social room.

DINETTE SET

· 5ug. 11m11 sas.us wt:~ ·•

tt:~

DINETTE

5ug. 11m11 tl79.tS !aa"WI

~::

Freeman Ohio U. graduate
man, son of Richard and Alice

Freemln, Pomeroy, is a graduate of

$2299,5

NEW 7 PC. WOOD

Je&amp;e. .

POMEROY - Joseph R. Free-

•

Beat of the Bend....
Since we are over-populated and
do have plenty of gasoline these
days, our lawmakers, in their infinite wisdom, have increased the
legal speed limit to 65 miles an
hour on some 246 additional miles
of Ohio' s highways. Now isn't
that special!

$3299 5

one year internship and a two year
residency at Doctor's Hospilal in
Columbus beginning July I.

.
i

.::···~:~ ,,,

the two sets - a ssvings of almost
$6. I can handle that can't you?

Most of us plan our vacations
right down to the "t". After all,
we're reliable, predictable people
and we don't want any big surprises OUI there.
-----,Mo~ t of us probably won ' t
':1 Margaret Bailey of Pomeroy is admit that we envy individualists
:::ilelighted that there are still honest like 'Phoebe Roberts and .Betty
Theiss who did none of that plan'!:beaDle around.
: She forgot her purse in a shop- ning. They have returned to their
jling can at Kroger's on Monday. homes after a four week play it by
;.'She returned 10 tlie store and much ear lrip a,cross pan of the United
Cto btl- relief, It had been found and StaleS.
Betty and Phoebe $Ot into the
;tumec1 into the office.
• The honest person is Rachel car and took off thinking vaguely
tAshley, daughter of Keith and they might reach California where
:Emma Ashley.
they would visit Eric Doming, Pat
: · Does that .make you feel a tad W)lite's son. However, the weath:tJetter.today? Does me.
er was bot and it was a Jona trip so
they niade a right tum before El
•
: Marthit .and Jack Greenaway are Paso, Tex., and moved into Col; in for the summer months to enJoy orado where they enjoyed the beau; friends and relatives in Me1gs tiful COUntryside for a few days.
fe ounty. They'll head back to
Now if any of
want to know
~lorida probably in October how to get lost 10 a major city ~eantime, it's nice having them
New Orleans, Houston, San Antonio, Colorldo Springs - just contaet
:around-.
&lt;
Betty and Phoebe- they say it's
: For some reason or other we can easy, they did it all the lime. How:'get our new motor vehicle license ever, they had really planned noth;plates these days via mail.
ing and felt that getting lost was a
•· I have.yet to see the advanl&amp;ge fun pan of the adventure.
~ as a ~u1t I just visit the Meigs
"It was a great trip", Phoebe
~ror Vehicle Registrar's offiCe comments. '
'
j'Jhe fonner Gibbs Grocery on Mul- ·
However, she did add that both
~ Ave., ·in Pomeroy - and pick
she and Betty are glad to be home.
~P my plates each year.
"Meigs County is still the great~ Into the bargain, I realized this
est", Phoebe says.
:Year that had I gone the mail route,
I knew that! Bel yoo did too.
:1he cost for two sets for plates
owould have been $60.30. At the
John Teaford is planning a day:tpcal office, I only paid $54.50 for long public observance of the
upcoming July 4th holiday at his
Kountry Klub golf facility in
· Chester.
Things will kick off about 9
a.m. with contests for the kids
•• . Descendants of the George including putting, chipping and
P hillips family gathered Sunday, other contests on the three target
'1ime 2, for their annual reunion at greens. There will also be bicycle
lbe home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale races, horse shoes and other con:Jo,amphier ofSmokey Row. Prior to tests with lunch to be available.
·!lhe reunion at the old family home, Handling concessiOns will be the
Eastem Band Boosters and Sheila
~ends and family met for memoriConnolly
who will be featuring
)1 services at the White Cemetery
desserts.
Awards
will be presented
~burch.
during
the
afternoon
and about 5
,.. Those attending the family
p.m.
Dee
and
Dallas
will
be p(OVid~union were: Mr. and Mrs. Paul
!ng
musical
entertainment
f!'rice of Urbana; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
John invites you, you and you.
illips of Ironton; Mrs . Erma
~e .o! srringfield; Mrs. Ann
And a speCial hello to the Gold. ichin1 o Ravenna; and Or. and
en
Girls - oh no, not the ones on
)1rs. Bill Welker of Dublin. ·
television
- I mean the ones in
~· Mr. and Mrs. Dave Kirkland,
S
~use. You three keep smiling.
~att Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Mar:i!hall PhiUips of Columbus; Chris;line Kratzer of Point Pleasant,
":ff.V.; Mr. and MAl. Keith Brown
fend Beth, George Pope, Kelly and
~en of Bidwell; Mark Collins of
:Ewington; Jocie Hall of Vinton,
;fl.ir. and Mrs. Dan Lamphier, Kevin
'-and Ed, and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
mphier of Smokey Row Road.

KANAUGA - The Tri-County
Full Figure Beauty Pageant was
held on May 24 at the Holiday Inn,
Kanauga
According to Marie Palmercoordi!!ator. seven contestants
entered the competition. The group
was entertained by Milcki Casto
Counlry Cloggers, while the judges
!allied their scores.
Jane Bush was crowned the
1991 queen. Bush is a native of
Gallipolis and is married to Donald
Bush. They have two boys Adam
· and Drew. Jane is interested in the
P.T.O. and is a member of the
Board of Directors Bowling Association. She is the press secretary
for the Gallipolis Emblem Club.
During her spare time, swimming, baseball, and crafts keep her
busy. The 1990 Q11een was
crowned by 1990 Queen, Nancy
Rhodes.
.
First runner was Karen Beckett
from Letart, W.Va. She has been
married·for 16 years and has two
children, Kreena and Janu8ry. Her
,hol!by is Sewing nd she is active
with selling Avon, and work:ing at
Spons and Stuff Shop in Letart,
W.Va. She teaches aroblcs and
does window decorating, and photography and has attended Gerber
Cosmetology School in Akron.
Second runner up was Ruby
Dray from Bidwell. She has .lived
there for five years and is married
.

Alhens.

Dr. Freeman received his Doctor
ofOsteopalby clepe on June 7. ,
A graduate of Pomeroy High
School, be received his Bachelor of
Scienc:e in pre-med from Ohio University in 1987. He will serve his

Sickels-Leach~~.....----------,
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Marlin James of ,Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of the.i r
daughter, Lisa A. Sickels, to
Matthew L. Leach, son of Paul and
Beth Leach of Chillicothe.
An open church weddins will be
held July 20 at 2:30 p.m. at Tyler
United Methodist Church, comer ,
of Mill and Church Street, Chillicothe.
Miss Sickels is a 1991 grll!luate
of the UniverSity of Rio Grande
with a degree in Secretarial Sci. ence. She is employed at McGraw
Physical Therapy in Jackson.
·
Mr. Leach is a 1991 graduate of
the Uf\lversity of Rio Grande with
a degree in Manufacturing Processes.

OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY, JUNE 29 &amp;
SUNDAyI JUNE 30, 1991
12 NOON TO 6:00 P.M.

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY

Foster/senior
group meets
GALLJPOUS - The Gallipolis
Developmental Center recently
bolted the quanerly Foster Grandparent and Senior Companion
InsiDrvice.
This meeting was held at the
home of Lucy Earwood. The topics
for the inservice training were
income reviews, evaluations, and
confidentiality forms.
Guest speaker was Eliabeth
Crabtree, Area III Coordinator
from Ironton.
Special
JIIOI!I of lbe day were Sadie Lewis
iad Myrtle Mink. and bolh retired
flolll lfie Faller IWijW&amp;il l'rop'am
aiW _,,_.of avice.
Til~ in auendallce from the
OaiUpolla Developental Center
were Francis Lenoir, Laura
Dowler, Virsinla Garnes, Mary
Nelson, Darlene R11tt, Lucy
Brwood and Slleryl Fitch. Tbose 1
attii!C!i. . from the Holzer Medical
Center were Clarice Callicoat,
Mable Beaver, Melva Sheets and
Kaduyn McKean

News briefs

39212 HOISON DIIVE

•HEATING
•HOTWAT€R

•

For Home, Farm,
Business and Industry

~yping

Ridenours
CHESTER

COMPLETE LINE OF WARM
,MORNING G,AS HEATERS
IN STOCK
Buy From An L.P. Gas Dealer
With Experience - Buy From

• RIO GRANDE - A typing class
:Is being offered through the Adult
:services division of Buckeye Hills
;.career Center bfrom July 8-18.
&lt;lasses will be Monday through
Crbursday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
~lasses will be geared for begin\l!ing typist or refresher typists.
!:' Interested individuals are
-encouraged to register by sending a
:Check or money order to: Adult
: services, P. 0. Box 157, Rio
:,Grande, 45674. Checks should be
:!D!Ide payable to G!lllia-Jackson~mron VSD. If you have any ques~ns call us at 245-5334 Ext 209.

(lpp. 'I• Mit Past
trades on
Buslneu Loap, 7 North)

•

'

. "

''Eagles Nest Home''
•Modern, Energy EHicent Livi"t
•Computerized Security &amp; Alarm System·
•Jenn-Air Kitchens
•Homes from 800 sq. ft. Single Story
to 4,000 sq. ft. Two Story
•Apartments, Profusional &amp; Commercial
Applications
G. MICHAEL

m.n,
OWNER

'•
'•
'

.RUTLAND F ITURE
and BOTTU GAS
'

.OIGI IIAn-MAIAGEI

S1AIE 10m 124

RUTUID

'•

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ACROSS
1 Hard blow:
·colloq.
6 Put oH
11 Sped
16 Whiskers
21 Falllnto disuse
22 Choice part
23 Hablluate
24 Ardent
25 Paid notiCes
26 Item' or property
a Tlllk Idly
30 Accomplishment
32 Note or seale
33 Negative prefix
34 That ·man
35 " - to Billie

JANE BUSH

Jean''
36 Rand
37 Short swim
38 Shea Stadium
player
40 Brimless cap
42 Work at one's
trade
43 Falsifier
44 .Suits
45 Paddle
47 Empower
49 Small aperture
50 Do wrong
51 Climbing palm
54 It grows In
Brooklyn
55 Food fish
,
56 Gun part
'
59 Ginger 60 JOhnson or
Rickles
62 Railroad coal
cars
64 Chimney carbon
65 Burt Reynolds'
wife: lnlts.
·66 A,s fares
67 BuSily clump
69 Wander
70 Baltic and
· Caspian
71 Olstrels signal
72 Goal
74 Bishop's
headdress
78S-potato
77 Let It stand

Lambert
Insurance Agency
SALLY LAMIEIT, AGENT
992-6641
114 EAST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

1
Motorists Insurance
.~ ~ Companies.' You know us.

--:l

A key in the fight
against cancer is early
detec.
.
tion.
Helpful in the early detection of breast cancer,
which affects one out of every nine women, is Mammography.
You can have this service performed at Veterans Memorial Hospital every week, Monday
through Friday, upon the request of your .physician.
Our well-trained healthcare staff at Veterans
Memorial Hospital offers you a complete range of
services to assist you with any health problem. Just
give us a call at 992-2104:

L..M1J

VET~RANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 5 E. Memorial Drive

·rsas::wMI::alll~

Pomeroy

11

,,

qas-3307

R~~
·- ---.- ...

_
-

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See Answer to Puzzle on Page, C-6

Early Detection

~

GAS SERVICE

SUNDAY PUZZLER

•
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•

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TV &amp; APPLIANCE

290 SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

WANT RELIABILITY
AND SERVICE?

FOOT .
Hl&amp;lll ·

•500 GALLON
•1 000 GALLON

Hot Water Tanks. Heaters. Coleman Trailer
Furnaces &amp; Central Air Units Available.

. Business Insurance
by Motorists.

class

lln y• In T he
l:ln••ifie•l•!

•COOKING
•CYLINDER TANKS

•250 GALLON
•330 GALLON

,• ,

MIDDLEPOII, OHIO 457 60

Presenting The

offers

~.

'

614-99,2-3911 '

the split of the two chun:be• m
10S4.
•

...
~BHCC
•

Cn l&lt;h G r cn t

TANK SIZES AVAILABLE

Your business is
special.
Shouldn't your
insurance be?

"•••

There will be a surprise birthday
card shower for Bill Fraley. He will
celebrate his 70th birthday on June
28.
'
Cards can be sent to Bill Fraley.
P.O. Box 4, Bidwell, 45614.

BULK GAS SUPPLIER

1

•

••••II

Pope Paul VI and Or&amp;bodox
Plallidl AdleDIIIIIIIII • A ~­
oully lifted In 1965 die mutual
eiCOIIIIIIUDicalions that llld led !0

,, ,

Heatirig &amp; Water Heating
Lift Truck Gas Delivery
Grain Drying ·&amp; Cooking
Construction Heating.

Effects-Nexus Keraphix; Peoples
Bank; Putney Photography; Hutton 's Car Wash; Subway Sandwiches; Carol King Salon; Middleport Flower Shop; Acquisition
LTD ; Bobs Market; Kellpling
Shoes; Poor Boys Tires; Pepes;
Sbear Pleasure; Criminal Records;
Fru.th Pharmacy; Big Wheel; Jo's
Oaft Shop; Francis florist: Basket
Delight
Door prizes were awarded to .the
following: Matt Scou from Letart:
Pam Glassburn from Bidwell; Jackie Blain from Apple Grove, W.Va.;
Kareena
B~ckett
from
Letan,W.Va.; Edith Brieily 'from
Ripley; Vance Dray from BidwelL

Card shower

Buy From A Locally. Owneu

E

LISA A. SICKELS

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei- Page-83

to Vance. Crafts ,and bowling are
her hobbies and she attends the
First Baptist Church in Gallipolis. .
Her interests include talcing care of
her great-grandfather.
Gary Stover from Thunnan, was
in charge of all photography .
Judges were: David Grate from
Rutland; M1klP Cas10, instruciOr of
The Mikki Casto Country Cloggers; Lou Ella Stover. Basket
Delight provided the jud~es with
their corsages and boutoM1eres.
Participants making donations
for the pageant were: Frencll City
Florist ; LaMarce Beauty; · Dr.
David; Carl's Shoe Store; Remo's;.
Carol Zembry Florist; Special

Phillips family
reunion held

the College of Osteopathic
Medicine at Ohio University in

' wv

Full figure pageant·crowns queen

•

··~......·.·;· i

by Bob Hoeflich

rou

RUECCA EVANS and CHAD TAYLOR

ton County Local School DistricL
Mr. Queen is a 1981 graduale of
Nonh Gallia High School and a
1989 graduate of Glenville State
College, Glenville, W.Va., with a
bachelor of ans degree in PhysiCal
Education. He is emoiOyed by the
Vinton County Local ~hool DislricL
.
An August 3 weddin&amp;ls beiDa
planned at the' Richlaud.Ull,itea
Methodist Church, AU...
'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant

Wedding policy

'

MCARTHUR - Nancy George
of McArthur announces the
• engagement and approaching mar: riage of her daugh~. Usa, 10 Man
• Queen of Gallipolis, son of Mr. and
: Mrs. Homer Ward of Bidwell and
t Mr. James Queen of Bidwell.
: Miss George is a 1983 graduate
, of Villtoll County High School and
· a 1987 graduate of Ohio Universi· ty, Athens, with a bachelor of sci; ence degree in Elementary Education. She is employed by the Vin-

June 23, 1991

.

Along the River inust be received
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
by
the editorial department by
reprds weddings of Gallia, Meigs
Thursday,
4 p.m., prior to llle dale
IDd Muon CXlllllties as news and is
of
ubtication.
·
happy to publi41! wedding stories
~otograpbs of either !he bride
IDd JJbotoKraDhs without ~barge
or the bride and groom may be
lfowever; wedding news must
publisbed with wedding stories if
meet genml standards of timelidesired. Photogmpbs may be eilber
ness; The newspaper prefers to
black and white or good quality
publish acc:ounts of weddings ~s
. color. billfold size or larger.
80011 as possible after the evenL
Poor quality photographs will
To be published in the Sunday
not be accepted. Generally, snapedition, tho wedding must have
taken Jlllce wilbin 60 days prior to shots or inslant-dcvelopinJ photos
the publication, and may be up to .are not of acceptable quality.
600 worda in length. Materill for

George-Que~n

r; ••

••

78
79
82
84
85
86
88
89
90

Ella' s. forte
Soldier or sailor
Improve
Support stick ·
Ireland
Mine entrance
Sketch
Glide upward
Vapid
Slates'
94 Erroneous
96 Ripped
1111 Unravel

e2-

I 100 Oel- I , ·"

102 Languish
103 Wager
104 One, no matter
which
105 Emmel&amp;
106 Dress protector
108 Nolle
109 Greek letter
110 12 Ins.
11 1 Exchange
premium
112 "Cry-"
114 Limb
116 Turf
117 - -me-nots
119 Couple
120 Verve
122 Sarcasm
124 Fed. agcy.
125 Servanl
126 Pillaged
128 Excavate
129 Tlbetian priest
131 Den
132 Aeriform fluid
133 Merits
135 Openwork fabric
138 Hall!
139 Gull-like bird
140 Small amount
14 1 Stalemate
142 Roman 51
143 Myself
144 Blrd'a bill
145 Wearies
147 River bank
149 Bright star
150 Baker's prOduct
152 African antelope
154 Fat
156 Groom's partner
158 Antlered animals
159 Drinks heavily
160 Borscht

. Ingredients
161 Reveals
'

DOWN
1 Demand
2 Dipper
3 Harvest gOddess
4 "Just the Ten

of -"
5 Oolong
6 Fond wiSh
7 Ingredient

·--

9 Spielberg allen
10 Corded cloth
11 Prepaied
12 Poker stake
13 Hinl
14 Teutonic deity
15 Loss
16 Chicago
foolballer
17 Dine
18 Sliver symbol
19 Forgive
20 Faucet casualties

21 " - Devil "
29 Play part
31 Hea.rlng organ
36 Containers
3 7 Extremely terrible
39 Carry
40 Wire nail
41 Sour
42 SuHiclent
43 " - Than Zero"
44 VIolin part
46 Near
48 Spelling contests
49 Olvarslly
50 GOd of love
51 Evaluales
52 "Home- "
53 Announcement
55 Shone
56 "The Love - "
57 - and ~agger
58 Hurry
61 Memorandum
63 Colorless
64 Prophet
68 Requires
70 Ship allendant
71 Beetle
73 Dismal; gloomy
74 Mud
75 Wireless set

77
: 78
80
81
83
84
87
89
90
91

Remain erect
Headliner
Low; mean
Insect egg
Three: prefix
Dinner course
Mollify
Scottish cakes
Oftlce personnel
Lone Ranger's
friend
92 "Do - otf\era. .."
93 C"'bra 91
95 Spiral
96 Choir voice
97 Musical study
99 Single Item
101 Cowboy
competitions
105 Matures
106 Dry
107 - contendere
111 Taj Mahal site
112 Comely
113 Partner
115 Frolics abOU1
116 Omen
118 Hoarfrost
119 Ache
121 Tidies!
123 Agave plan!
125 Food emporium
· 128 Tardy
127 Impels onward
129 " Silence of
the-"
130 Avoid
131 Meadow
132 Encircles
134 Born
138 Evade
137 Fork prongs
139 Spread~ lor
drying
140 Climbing plant
144 Container
145 Hit lightly
146 Cry
147 Jamie - Curtis
148 Recede
149 Tille of respecl
151 Babylonian dally
153 Behold!
155 Exist
157 s ,un gOd

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�Page

84

Sunday Tlmes-:sentlnel

•

Pomeroy-M,ddleport-Galllpoll•, OH--Polnt Pleasant,_WV

PORTLAND - Florence Hite,
Duncansville, Pa., is announciug
the marriage of her daughter, I udith
Hite Holter, Portland, to Tim D.
Kern, son of Wanda and Darrell
Sellers, Portland.
The open church wedding will
be an event of Saturday at 3:30
p.m. at the S!iversvillc Community
Word of Failh Chun:h in P&lt;Ktland.
A reception will be held at the
Long Bottom Community Building
immediately afrer the ceremony.
The couple will reside in Portland.

Abe~s

SCC grad

GALLIPOLIS • Barbara Abels,
of 47 Halliday HeighiS, Gallipolis,
recently graduated from Sinclair
Community College. Dayton.
She received · her Associate
Degree in Nursing from the Division of Applied Health Technologies.
She was a member of the Phi
Theta~~HoomeyS~~tyand

graduated with high honors.
-Attending the ceremonies were
her parents, Gene and Jeannie
Abels; sister, Sua Abels; and other
relatives and friends,

.JUDITH HOLTER and TIM KERN

June 23, 1991 .

Wilson family descend~ts hold r~!J~on
.
will

- .Engagements-~ Holter-Kem

.·

-

.

SYRACUSE • Descendants of Wears.
·
The next reumon
be held at
John and MaKJtie (Hudson) Wilson
Traveling the farthest were the Syracuse PB!k on Sept. 19,
metra:enllymrafamilynunionat Leonard 0. Wilson and bis wife, 1992. Dinner w1ll be served at
the Syracuse Park with PastDr Paul Anna. from SL A~J[IISiine. Fla.
noon.
voss giving grace.
Auendiug were Olarlc.s Burton,
))avid Dillard, Kim Smith, Jenny
Burton, Paul Voss, Beverly Voss,
Agoes Mowery, Anna Wilson,
Leonard 0. Wilson, Mary Voss,
Edward Voss, Tony Brown, Kathy
Gardner, Charlie Gardner, Amy
Special occaalona require apecial preReynolds, Missy Gardner, B.J.
paration•. If you are planning a wed- ·
Reynolds, Angelica Knopp, Rhonding, or annivaraary. then you should
da Fetty, Vickie Fetty, Donna
•come sea us at Haskins-Tanner.
Johnson, Betty Wilson, Walter
Wilson, Chris Freeman, Johnny
You will have over 190 styles of tuxFreeman, Rita McFarland, Donna
ados to choosa from. Wa have a large
Wilson, John Wilson Jr., Bob
..lectlon of tha ieteat sty lea and comWears, Anita Wears, Brandy
Smith, Xantha Smith, Jessie Burplimentary accasaorias for thi1 apeclel
ton, Alisia Burton, Timothy Voss,
occaaion.
.
Andrea Voss, Tasha Knqlp, Bubl)a
Qualitr Formalwtar at Affordallle Pric.._
Duct, Jessavyn Reynolds, Bethany
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR
Fetty, Sarah Fetty, Jeremiah JohnMORE IN WEDDING P~RTY
son, Abby Wilson, Awen McFarland, Joann Wears, Derek Wears.
Winning prizes were Anila
Wears, Donna Johnson, Rita
McFarland, Rhonda Fetty, Tony
Brown, John Wilson Jr., Brandy
· Smith, Alisia Burton, Jeremiah
Johnson, Jessanyn Reynolds, Tasha
Knapp, Abby· Wilson. Derek

For That Special
Occasion .•.

Anniversaries

June 23,1991

wv

OH--Polnt

Gallipolis Develop11Jental Center honors volunteers
GALUPOLIS • The Gallipolis
Development Center recenlly honored 200 volunteers at the Annual
Volm~teer Awards Banquet.
_f'eatunld speakers were Sen. Jan
Michael Long and Rep . Mary
Ables.
The volunteers are honored for
the ~aithful and ~edicate service
provided to the resideDIS at the center. There are many individual voi· unteers, as well as many groups
andorganizatioll$.
. Senator l.ot)g presented a Sena- ·
torial Citation to all group and Volunteers. Representative Ables,
along with Dr. Dey, Superintendent; Sheryl FilCh, Director of Volunteers; Richard Houck, Operalions Director; Marcella Barton,
Citizens Advisory Board; Lucy ·
Earwood, Volunteer Coordinator,
presented awards to the following
P.COPieandgroups:
-; A D 0 P T - A - C 0 T TAG E
AWARDS: Star Bank; Ohio Valley
Bank; Emblem Club; Parent Volunteer Association; Support Service Department; Vemie Joshus
Staton; Karen Miller; Jerri Simmons; Shirley Nolan; Jeremy
Schuledt; Donna Conley and the
Diversified Heallh Class of Buckeye Hills; Nancy Rhodes; Sue
.-ldkins; Gene and Lucy Earwood;
l:ida Green; Vado Mayo; Monty
Blanton; Sharon Brown; 3nd the
Northup Baptist Church.
•

GROUPS wert: Soulhwestem Kelly Nelson; Eunice Niehn; Dr. Helen Prunty; Troy Hoyt; Michele
Jr. Beta Club; AdVISOr and Volun- Iamshed Nunud; Nancy •Rhodes; George; Chris and .::had Fitch;
teer Dr. Dorothy Ruff; Rutland Macie Katlifeen Salser; Audry Susie Kinney; Gallipolis Parts
Garden C_lub; Rio Grande Garden Saunders; M3rilyn Shealy and the Warehouse; Cremeans Con,;rete;
Club; Wildwood Garden Club; Activity Department; Jeri ·Sim- Goodyear Tire Rubber CorporaOpen Gate Garden Club; French mons; Ronnie Slone; Chet and tion.
·
Cny Garden C_Iub; Cheshire Gar- Linda Stout; Virginia Walters; Sue
Receiving a special award for
den Club; Gallipolis Garden Oub; Burcham· Sue Adkins· Noreda Outstanding Service Beyond The
Vin~on Friendship Garden Club; Gam; S~lla Hess; GUy Sherri Call Of Duty was Senior Com)l81iFoster Grandparents and Senior _Fenderbosch, Tammy Caldwell; ioo Francis Lenoir. A special tfiank
Companions;. Paint Creek Baptist; Barbara Curry; Darlene, Byron and you was ~ven to the Gallia County
Later Day Samts Church, Men and Roger Burke; Almeda Powell; Commissioner's George Pope and
Women's Association; the First Mary Holley; Betty Owens; Linda T. Kail Burleson for lhcir continChurch of the Nazarene; and the Wamsley; Zylpha Saunders; Bon- ued support and attendance. Also a
Episcopal Chilreh.
nie Patrick; Debbie and Becky special thank you went to Donna
INDIVIDUAL VOLUNTEERS · Ellis; Regina Robinson; Donovan Saunders, Nancy James and Lisa
were: Lmda Black; Chri~ and and Hollis Davis; Ted Staton; . Lemley for lhe entertainment of lhe
Chase Blanton; Donna, Chad and Lanna and Steve Ferrell; Nick evening.
Briggs; Walton and Sharon Brown; Swain; Katie and Paul Shoemaker;
The invocation was given by
Mike Bush; Bill Butcher; Scarlet Judi Douglass and the Dietary Rev. Grover Turner from lhe Paint
Carpenter; David Christiansen; Ella Department; Chris Wilson; Amy Creek Baptist Church and the
Mae Cox; Terry Cremeans; Dick Shriver; Hurley Borden; Ray Benediction was given by Rev.
Cremeans; Darlene Rutt; Mary Slone: Jack and Mimi Slone; Jack Robert Kuhn.
Nelson; Patty Hapney; Jamie Bowman; Louise Kiesling; Lawana
Thompson; Francis Lenoir; Edith Moore; ~thy Hunter; Kenny and
Champer; Laura Dowler; Minnie Pam Williams; Louise Wilson;
Garnes; Debbie Denney; Lucy Ear- Homer Payne; Bill Stoops; Judy
wood; Gwen Fisher; Jodi Fisl!er Warren; Charles and Nancy
Burnette; Patty Forgey; Lida Burgey; Alert Peterkoski; elores
Green; Helen Grumling; Luella Hanley; Michael Harden; Jeremy
.
H~nry; Alicia Houck; Mr. Bnd Mrs. Ford; Jerry Lamebrt ll; Jason DunRACINE - Descendants of the
Richard Houck; Cheryl, Jay, Josh. lap; Kelly Joan Thompson; Trevor
and Johanna Jarvis; Carla Keever; Ashworth; Jennifer Terry; Alicia late Albert and Eliza Hili will have
Marie Leadingham; Ann Keating; Chambers; Mark Johnson; Cindy a homecoming and family reunion
Rev. Robert Kuhll; Bea Kuhn;Mary Armstead; Kelly Pratt; Sarah Wise- on June 30 at the Star Mill Park in
Layne; Meagan Matura; Evelyn man; Lethl! Frazee; Alice Stover; Racine. A carry-in dinner will
Barnes; Minnie Garnes; Mr. Mrs. John and Phyllis Taylor; Juanitu begin at noon.
James Middleton; Karen Miller; Wagner; The Wayne Wolfe family;

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page--85

Birthday observed
POMEROY • Meagan Renee
McKinney, daughter of Lewis B.
and Eslher McKinney, Galloway.
was honored oo her fii'St birthday
recently with a party at her home;
Attending were her parents,
grandparents, George and Betty
Lowery, Pomeroy; ~grana­
parents. Burdell and Kathryn McK·
mney, Middleport; maternal great
grandmother, florence J. Robson,
Jefferson, Pa.; maternal great great
-aunt, Myrtle Hostutler, Washington, Pa.; A. Thomas and Deborah
Lowery, Syracuse; Chris .and David
· Smith and sons, David, Craig and
Andrew, Galloway; Tim and Jo
Dunn and daughter, Jennifer,
Cheshire; Brian and Peg Hartman

and children, Stephanie and
Stephan Wood, Middleport.

·.

Reunz·on .planned

39 MONTH SPECIAL! ,

•

.
Your Insurance,
Wouldn't You Feel Better
With Our Name On It?

•"

'

~

'

7.00°/o
Chooslnc an lnsuroncoallftCY is often
a difficolt decision. Usually there's no
waw ,YO• can evaluate the slt'Vico woo will
rtctrve.

\

\

\

One moption is AM's lnsuronco
A,encw. W tnsurence Is a rocopiztd
01111 you can rtly on lor all tho qualities
you
_a~ insut111C~-••••,c,~
Call our Sal11
ltPrllllllali¥t,
Angie, today

••t ;,.

4 BIG 11111
RECLINERS

\'
\

Mauve oriel..
\

.\

THE OLD RAT DESEmD THE SHIP AND LEFT
THE Ill Ul HERE WITH THE CREW. THE OLD
RAT SliD SELL IT ALL.
liVE FREE DELIVERY AND SETUP BUT
BECAUSE OF THE SLOW RECOVERY,
GIVE THEM 24 MONTHS FREE FINANCING.

I

(

MR. and MRS. .JAMES O'BRIEN

Anniversary to be observed
POMEROY • Mr. and Mrs.
James O'Brien will celebrate their
SOth wedding anniversary at an
open house on Sunday, June 30,
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Meigs
County Golf Club, Wills Road off
SweRoute 7, Pomeroy.
The observance will be hosted
by their four children, Pam, Mike,
Pat and Peggy, and their seven
grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien were mar-

ried on June 29, 1941 at Grace
Melhodist Church in Galli lis.
The couple requests ~I their
guests not bring gifiS and that lhey
wear casual attire for the informal
celebration.

SPRING VAl LEV CINEMA
-\41; 4524

far ••taHs.
. 446..0699

llot $799.95

/

.,

OVER 20
SECTIONILS IN
STOCK

'OILY

2-99''

5

8

360 Stcond A.._

SlEEP SOFA

)\RIEL

FtU Slullatrlprill lciiNill
ONLY

s44444

YHOUSE .

BEDROOM SUITE
ONLY

$1555

THE

FOURPOSTER

11

Featuring
Jerry Barkey and
Katie Kremer
Wedne1day,
July 3, 1991

GROUP
SWIVEL ROCKERS

. , SMt.91

rva•-7:30

ADIIISSDI $150
441-012!

:-I

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Coloalal Prlat

.......OILY $44'444
COIITIIPOWY SOFA, LOIISilr
LIIMIIHPIIW

~I
•

... $l7f~=y•aaa"

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WJ;JGHT CONTROL
'

ANNUAL
PEICENTAGE

un

Annual per~entage rate of 7.OOOfo is compounded
daily to provide 7.250fo effective annual yield.
This CD has a 39 month maturity and requires q
minimum $2,500 deposit.
There is a substantial interest penalty for-early withdrawal.

1-800-468-6682

446-2631

Ohio Valley Bank
AGENCY

Member FDIC
4 Convenient -Locations

CATALOG

CUSTOMER
APPRECIAT/Q

SALE STARTS
SATURDAY &amp;22
... ENDS
TUESDAY 6125 at

Presents

IIOHILIIC 1111 SIZE

$:14"·'·

ations; Jak Kobel of Columbia ·G al; Dwl1ht
Lerdy or tile Ualverslty of Rio Graade; Jack
Slone of Goodyear Tir.e and Rubber Company;
Louaaa Moore or GDC; aad Dr. Mike Dey,
superintendent of GDC.

, HONORED GUESTS - Members of the
,Riverview Production Board were reeeatly hon·ored during tile Gallipolis Developmeatal Ceater Anaual Volunteer Awards Banquet. Pictured
from left are: Richard Houck, director of oper-

.., snt.ts

NEXT DOOR

Featuring
Mar1hall University
Theater Dept.
Saturday,
July 27, 1991

A TEMPERANCE
TOWN
A Comedic
Melodrama
Saturday,
A ugusr 24, 1991

Morris &amp; Dorothy HoskiM Ariel Theatre
42 6 Second lnnua
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
BTI\BliSHED 18115

$

AU 3 PLAYS 10
Tiekete available atr Peddler'• Pantry, Brunleardi Mu1ie,
SEASON ncKm FOI

SHIPPING &amp; HANDLING!

I

NO shipping, NO handling charges on orders
placed from ANY current Sears catalogs•
'

SAVE on everything

from clothing, tools
and home fashions,
to appliances
and sporting goods
...everything Sears
stocks for catalog!*

E lliOY A Summ•·• of l1ghl Humcruuc. Entertdllllllt·nt 1

SECOND HALF 1990 REAL ESTATE TAXES
EXTENSION GRANTED
Closing Date - July 10, 1991

EariJAIIar'Selhl C.ler1

IIIS7tt,t5

BOYS

Criminal Reeorda, and the Stowaway Re1taurant.

SOFA CHAIR
ONLY

...

BUY MORE...
SAVE MORE!

Don1 miss a chance
to buy sale items &amp;
save even more
wnh FREE
shipping &amp;handling!

1 )On first day of month following second half
closing, interest is charged on unpaid balance of .
delinquent taxes fro~ previous yar for period of
time from preceding December first to that day.
2)0n December first, each year interest is charged
against the full unpaid balance of taxes for period
of time from day established in ( 1) above to date.
FAILUIE 10 IECEIVI IIU DOES NOT AVOID PINALn I INIDISI

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

15..... a .JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(104) 675-1675
~iijiiiliii
I

•

OHko Hours: lsJO All to 4:30 PM M.. day thru Friday
..... l•lllber - 992-2004

MEIGS COUm TIIASIIB,
HOWAIII. FlA.

711 •om1 SICOID

9t2·2171

'

.,

MIIIUPOIT
'

�June 23, 1991

Sternwheel Regatta part
of Always A River festival

Cheshire OES holds inspection· ,
MONDAY: Baked Steak widl
Mushroom Gravy, Parsley PotaIOes, Carrots B!'e!ld, Tapioca Pod·
ding.
TUESDAY: Ham &amp; Beans,
Boiled Egg, Kale, Cornbread,
Pears.
.
WEDNESDAY: Porkette wjdl
Dressing, Sweet Potatoes, 3-Bean
Salad, Bread Jello Cubes.
THURSDAY: Shepherd Pie,
Kale/Vinegar, Spiced Apple,
Bread, Oatmeal Cookie.
FRIDAY: SJ11111ish Rice, Cheese
Cube, Cole Slaw, Bread, Sliced
Peaches ·
Make reservations by calling
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
you wish to allelid.

GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus for tlie week of June 24-28,
at die Senior Citi7.ens Center, 220
Jackson Pike, will be as follows:
MONDAY: Short Subjects "Fitness Formula" 11 a.m.;
Cbonls,1p.m. ·
TUESDAY: STOP/Physical Fitness 10:30 a.m.; Video Matinee
"Back to the Future lll" 12:30
p.m.;
WEDNESDAY: Hearing Test
by Miracle Ear-Need Appointment
10-12; Cards,l-3.
THURSDAY: Bible Study,
10:45 a.m.; Mediclil Forms Assistance, 1-3.
FRIDAY : Art &amp; Craft Classes
canceled for renovation.
Menus ci&gt;nsist of:

I
'\

GALLIA REPRESENTATIVES- Students
rrom GallipoUs City Scbools represented Ohio at
the national evenL Twenty-four students from
Gallipolis City Schools represented Gallipolis .
and the state or Ohio at the National History
Day Contest In Washlnaton, D.C. The students
advanced to the national coolest by creating
wlnnln~~ries In the state coatesL Piclnred at
tbe Na
Awards Ceremony are: first.row (1r) Kyle Clark, Eddie_ Nebns, Alldra Bogp, Sum-

aDd
~~~
Mapussen, Josh.
Chad
Chad Ford, Kaci LaDe, Angela
Bowman, Eric Humphreys, aad Chris Smith.
Third row (1-r) Eric Hoffman, Jean knight,
Richard Kuhn, Sh&amp;Daon Poll', Jared Ford, Kel6
Smith, Catherine Strafford, and Nathan BelviDe.
Back row: (1-r) Matt Milstead aDd Josh BI~~eksmith• .
_

TOP PERFORMANCE • JeBD
Kaight, eight grader at Gallla
Academy, placed third In junior
individual performance at the
National History Day Contest
with her performance eDtitled,
"Deay Your Faith Qr Die." .She
received a gold medallion and
$250 for her winning entry.

Gallipolis students make
histo_ry at national contest ·

RIO GRANDE - Come learn
WordPerfect 5.1 at Buckeye Hills
Career Center dlis summer. Classes
start Monday, July 22 and enos
.
Thutsday, August L
Classes will be Monday through
Thutsday 8:30 a.r~~.- 12:30 p.m. The
class is designed for those with little experience in WordPerfect, but
gets the user "up and running" with
the main functions of the program.
WordPerfect 5.1 is one of the most
used programs in the business
world today, users of the program
find it easy io obtain new jobs or to
upgrade skills and productivity in
their present one.

Interested persons may register
for the course by seoding a cbeck •
or money order (Mate ,payable -(p:
Gallia-Jackson·Vinton NSD) Attn:
Adult Services, P.O. Bcix 157, ~
Grande, 45674. More informatiqn
about WordPerfect 5.1 may ,be
' obtained by contacting Adult Ser·
vices at245-5334 Ext209.
.,

S. . .I&amp;SU''"

CLEARANCE
SALE!
SAVE

Phillip~

graduates ·

MOREHEAD, Ky.· Samantha
H. Phillips of GallipoUs graduated
Cum Laude from Morehead State
University during its 1991 Spring
Commencement
She earned an A.B. degree

in Cleveland where they competed second place m Jr. group perforGALLIPOLIS - For die past ten
with students from throughout mance Matt Milstead, Chad Ford,
years students from Gallipolis have
Ohio for the honor of representing Eric Humphreys, Chad Shamblin,
been competing in the National
Ohio at the National Contest in Josh Sellen), third place in jr. indiHistay Day Contest. .
.
Washington, D.C.
vidual performance Jean ;night),
In the history day contest stuAt the National Contest students third lace in jr. individual media
dents compete m seven different
contest categories at the junior and from Gallipolis lhen competed with (lair Nimpson), dlird place in jr.
senior levels . Students can write winning entries from each state and group media Josh Blacksmith, Bob
historical papers or they can create the DiSD'ict of Columbia. After the Magnussen, Kyle Clark), fifth
1 projects, media pr.esentations, or . ftrst phase of the contesl the nearly
place in jr. individual media
live performances either as individ- one hundred'entries in each catego- (Richard Kuhn), sixth;dl place in
ry were narr.ow.ed down to the senior group media Jared Ford,
. uals or in groups.
The contest is held nationwide · nation's top ten. Seven entries out Eric Hoffman), and seventh place
and begins at the local level. Stu- of eleven entered in the contest in jr. group project (Chris Smith,
dents from Gallipolis frrst had to from Gallipolis were among the top Eddie Nehus). Gallipolis City
become winners in the district con- ten in the nation in their respective Schools produced more national
test a1 Ohio Univmity which com- categories. At the National Contesl winners than any other school in
prises the 13 counties in Southeast- Awards Ceremony the lOp ten in die United States and is the only
ern Ohio. These students then die nation were recognized and the school in the history of the contest
advanced to the state contest at top three places were awarded to have four national top prize win·
Case Western Reserve University medallions and cash pries.
nen in one COIIIell year.
Winners from Gallipolis were:

~:~;

20°/o lo .
30°/o ON

·~-.,.. 1

:;;~. Community

Calendar Items
:&lt; l!(lpear two days before BD event
,; iad the day of that evenL Item
:• ;P!ust be recelyed well In adVIIICe
:: ;~ assure publication In the cal·

Children'•

SHOES

., ,......
.~fda!'.

SECOND PLACE ·Seventh graders, Matt Milstead, Chad Ford
Josh Sebert, Chad ShambUn, and Eric Humphreys placed second
in the aatloa Ia the National History Day Contest In the junior
group performance category with tlleir performaace entitled,
"Rights Denied, Ju~lice Delayed: Cballeaglng Executive Order
90"'· They received gold medallions aDd $500 ror their winning
entry.

·~ .~-l' ..
-,
.• ,
, SUNDAy
[::: HEMI:.OCK GROVE- Pam and
!. ,paul Hi'~~eld, missionaries from
:. ::Kenya,
1 Africa, will speak at
;t/.ille Hemlock Grove Christian
·~urch. on Sunday 111 9:30 a.m. A
:: :J.Ibduck dilJpllr will follow services
at die Grange Hall.

WA111111~

GAWPOUS,GIL

: ;: POMEROY - Chip Wooders
:: meet Sunday, 2 p.m., R':ladside
-: Park on Route 33. Anyone mterest:• ed is invited to anend.

.
II

•

the most comforrabl!!
furniture on the market.
The unique and exdusive
"Penna- Wickere" weave
n:uur:ll

feel and because strong
steel wire &lt;.:ores re-i nforce
t:~ch

horizontal fibre
srrand . it will nm sa .~ like
some fabrics. E~ch fiber is
rreared wirh a spe&lt;ial
"new" latex ba~ ~:mulsiun
to seal out nioisture and

"Comppetl llldlcll EqutDR Fot,. .,...

·:
:
•:
:-·

family or a 3-year-old boy left
blind, l)eaf and unable to swallow
by a .violent shaking has won a $6
million judgment
~-.', P~ck Mitchell was left widl
.•: ~~ injuries at age 2 months
·:: .dri 1988 after being shaken by a
: • ;{rjend of his mother's.
~ ·· • The boy's mother, Melissa
~ -:Overstreet, sued John Coleman to
; •tletov.er medical expenses that have
i mounted to $6,000 a month and
': niore than $300,000 so far.
f· ·' Hendricks County -SuperiM
0 ·Court Judge David Coleman sided
~:. ,-idl die family Thutsday by grant,.. :1118 them die) award. An auomey for
! '·the family', Tom Deal, said die law·
··~-~it was brought to educate the
:;:•. lll!blif.about what's known as shak·...- Ca child l''lldrome
'
'
•· : Coleman was sentenced 10 Cll&amp;ht
~ .y~ars in prison, including three!
! .years suspended, after pleading
,_ guilty to afclony charge of ballery.
He served 2 1/2 years.

.

.

GUEST PERFORMER • ''Gil

Down" Smith will be perfoimlag
at the Alway• A River exhibit
Monday, July 1 from 6· 7 p.m.
Smith '• performance is in cooJunction with the 26th Annual
River Recreation Festival. The
barge will be at the Gallipolis
Rlverrront July 1-1.

Regular meeting
• GALLIPOLIS - Gallia-Mei~s
Community Action Agency w1ll
hold its regular meeting June 27.
Tbe P.Jblic is invited to attend and
provide community input.
Tbe rneetin¥ will.,-at 5:30p.m .
at the Guidmg Hand School
Cheshire. . '
'

expectatioos of coUecting die judgment," Deal said. "There's no way
he's going to make that kind of
mlXICy.''

TAK;E YOUR FAMILY TO

..

Toke your f!UDII;ylo cbareh
Doa'llellltBO..U,. ..,_.,,
Gl•ellaoplrlblalb.e

n..t II .m,hloiMd, ...rra1c1.

Toke rov fatall;y lo cburelo
\
Thalli mltlht 11'0" 1D .,...,.,,
EaJor the blooolllfl of Cod
Sloo...... dowa r.... lila faee • .
Toke 7"" fatall;y lo church
y.... the uod ohu ... _.
Cod ltoldo ro• reopOBiibla
Be tJua • JaU, DOl a lo.e.
Fbad 0.., lbat PI'\OUheollnlcht,

Cbrlat J - dlecl for olttaen
And Helo the oal;yplc.

ca.....£. ,_,_ 4I~OI9l

OttoiiiCin ......................'49
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MONDAY
Community Action Agency will
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- hold a free clothing day on Monday
port Church of Christ will hold from 9 a.m. to noon 8l the old high
Vacation Bible School Monday school building in Cheshire.
through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to .
,
.
noon daily. Theme is "Be Strong
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
and Courageous." Guest speakers. Coin Club will meet Moilday at
'Classes for ages three dlrougb Bwtett Barber S1top in M''lidlcport.
eight)l grade.
Social hour and trading sessioo at 7
p.m. precedes the meetiag.
RACINE - Vacation Bible Refreshments. New members weiSchool at the Racine Baptist come.
Church will be held Monday
through Friday from 9:30a.m. to · POMEROY - Summer practice
for Meias High School bimd mcmnoon.
bers will resume Monday from 9
POMEROY - Tbe Meigs Coun- a.m. 10 noon in prepamtion for the
ty Veterans Service Commission July 4 parade in Rutland and Mid- ·
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at dlepon. Call992-7141 for informathe veterans service office in tion.
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village
SYRACUSE • The Asbury Couacil will meet Monday at 7
.United-Methodist Church in Sr.r!!- p.m. at village ball.
cuse will hold Vacatioa B1ble
School Monday through Friday · KENO - 'Ole Keno Church of
from 9 a.m. to noon. Tbe theme is C~t will be holdina bibic school
"Jesus and You at Camp Can Do." Monday through Fridity from 4:30Ctasses for age two years through 6:30p.m. daily. Children in grades
junior high. Public invited. ·
kindergarten through high school
ate welcome. The theme is "Jesus
BltADBURY - The Brsdbury and You at Camp Can Do."
Church of Christ will have Vacation Bible School Monday through
RUTLAND - The Rutland GarFriday from 9-11:30 a.m. daily. den Club will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Curtis
Tbeme is "Jesus and You at
Can Do." All yoimg people invi
Dalton. Harrisonville. Tbe program
by Ruby Diehl and Stella Aikins
CHESHIRE - Tbe Gal6a Meigs will be on summer.plants and burning birds.

•·
:. Family of 3-year-old with 'shaken child ·
~~;syndrome' wins $6 million judgment
. '
"We don't have any great
•' · . DANVILLE, Ind. (AP) - The

It has been described as

RENTALS~

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·PetJJta-Wicker®

HOMECARE MEDICAL
J
INC.
EQUIPMENT· SALES·
REPAIRS

POMEROY - Morris Wood,
Gainesville, Ga., will present ~­
cial music at the First Southern
B.aptist Ch!Jlch d~ngdle 10:45
a.m. wo~p servu:e. Rev. Lamar
d'Bryant invites the public.

' MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Child Conservation League
., will hold its annual family picnic
,. on Sunday at 6 p.m. at die home of
' Bonnie Scott. Laagsville.

UMlTED TIME ONLY

$U~ . ~

..:;

-·

$700 million for
a boring task

.~uarnnrees a &lt;.:oo.J

--

::
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
:; meeting will begia Sunday at. 7
•; p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
:; Second Street in Pomeroy.
::
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:;
1,
,,

AWARD WINNERS - AI the National History Day Coo test,
held in WIIYinatoa, D.C., Gallia Academy seventh graders, Kyle
Clark, Josh Blad&lt;smlth, aDd Bob Mapaaen placed third Ill the
junior group media for their multi-media preseatatl011 entitled,
"Rigblll of the Accused". They received gold medalllcms aad $lSO
at the Nllllcmal History Day awanb ceRIIIOIIy.
.

MI.LFORD, Conn. (AP) Amencan men spent at estimated
$700 million ia 1990 pursuing
what most of them consider a boring task, according to a survey on
shaving.
"By the time most men reach
age 18, shaving becomes a
'chore'," says Dave Riven, direc·
tor of research, development and
engineering for Schick. A recent
Schick Tracer survey, he notes,
found that more than 95 pen:ent of
all men consider shaving boring.
An estimated 78 million Americans, or 88 percent of all men in
the U.S., shave regularly, the study
results showed, and the average
American male starts shaving at
age 15.

.

~~

The Shoe Cafe

,.

Meigs County calendar '

·: ...

(AND HAIIHAGS)

I

!he

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Men's, Women's,

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - first ever in. the City. Eleven Slem·
The First Annual Point Pleasant wheelers have already indicated
Stem wheel Regatta will be held they will participate in tlie Pcpne
Friday and Saturday, June 8 and The boats include: The boats will
29, as part of Poiat Pleasant's be docked at the Fourth Street
Always A River Fcslival.
Landing, behind the Lowe Hote.l.
The festival 'ol(as arranged to
The Sternwheelers will be open
highlight the visit of the Always A to the public from noon 10 8 p.m.
River Musewn Barge to die city.
both days.
The Regatta, arranged by Main
On Satorday aftemOQD from one
StreetPoinlPieasant!llldsponsored to three p.m. there will be ·s temby
is the wheel races on the Ohio River.
. several. city
- merchants,
..

PaJri

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'

l

Worthy Matrons and Worthy
Patrons frOm.oth~ Chapter~: Peg
·Saffles, GallipoliS Chapter, Jane
' Yeager, SotWI Point Cbapter; Betty
and Dale Burcham, Teresa Chapter,
· froctprville; Wykle Whitley,
·Wilkesville ChBJ!Ier; Vickie and
·Bob Powell, Vinton Chapte!;
Martha and Darrell Deity, Oak Hill
Chapter; Betty and Waiter Hogue,
Wellston-Cllase Chapter.
_
Odler, Chapters represented
:;;~:}~tellce Chapter, Ironton;
~:~Ollllll.. SW Chapter, Thurman;
:: ~~den Chapter, Hamdeo.
:~. : Preieu~ms ~d introductions
..· were COllllllued wtdl; Past Matrons
:.: qid Past Patrons of Cheshire Chap., :tllr: Gladys Rife, Wilma Haycraft,
:; .Yivian ·Kirbr. Mary Sisson, Mil:: .~ Scott, Linda Hall, Esta Reese,

Odella Mack, Patty Ranegar,
District Enviroamental ReproDonna '!Vaugh, Margaret Ehman, sentative: Danell Detty. AIIII JRRalp!l Rife and Grover Cremeans.
sent and introduced were thoae
F1fty year members l)releoted who have bad former Graad
were: Lola Mae Suiter, Gail Rus- Appoiatmeau and Put PatroDs
sell, and Florence Willis, Gallipolis and Put~ of other Cbapten.
Chapter; Ether Metcalf, Vinton
Officers of Cheshire Cbaoter
Chapter; Wilma Saltz, Hamden Chapter presidiag were: aata
Chapter; Mary Sisson, Viviaa Reeae Worthy Matron· Ralpb Rife,
Kirby BDd Esta Reese, Cheshire Wonhy Patton· Lois S~ydcr AsttOChapter. District Vice Presideat, ciale Mllron; Keith Dye, APocl•te
Ann Webb, Lawrence Chapter, Patroa; Margaret Ehman, SecreIronton.
tary· Doris Zerkle Treasurer·
Grand . Cbapt~r Comm!ttee Lindi Hall, Conducn..; Pam Dye:
Members: Credentials CC?mm1ttee, Associate Conductress; Odella
Cheryl Nelson •. Soudl Pomt c,Jiap- Mack, Chaplain; Joan Cornelious,
ter; Cathenne 'Shenefield, Marshal: Cfertrude Hylell &lt;&gt;raanWilkesville Chapccr, Co-Chairman ist:
Raaepr Adib· Catberine
or out ~f Sl!lte Committee; Chorus Little, Ruth: Cllarle~e Darst,
and DriU Directors, Betty and John Esther· Margi Wheeler Martha·
Finney, Morning Star Chapter, Kay Hockman, Elects; Donna
Thurman.
.
Waugh , 'Warder, and Homer
Grand Pages and Grand A~es Hockman, Sentinel. A ~olo, In
of tlie next Grand Chapter Session: Heaven's Eyes was presented by
Vickie Powell, Vinton ~ba_pter; Margj Wheeler: Candidate, Cindy
Venus Harless, South Point Chap- Sutphen, with Pm-tem Candidate
ter; Betty Burcham, Teresa Chap- Glenda Rife received die De~
ter, Procto':"ille, and Patty Rane- of the &lt;&gt;nJ« in Ritualistic form.
gar, Cheshue Chapter are Grand
Host: Larry Litde; Pages and
Page:" to the Worthy Grand Malton, Prompters: Gladys Rife, Wilma
J. Aileen Hughes. Martha Detty, Haycraft, Cheryi .Swishcr; Pin ODs
Grand Page to .the Depnty Orand ana Registration· Doris Zerkle
Matton, Maxine Wells, WllkesviiJe Odella Mack· Guest Book: Ermai
Chapter. Lee w~:r· Grand Aide Cremeims; Kitchen and Dining
to the~~ Sen
, Joacph Btaz- Room Cllllllni1tee: Earldene Skag·
er, Gallipolis Cllaptrz.
gs nc.othy R~ Catherine Little
AssiStants .for ~ Grand and Glenda Rife. '
Chapter SCSSIOII m Tnenniai.Year:
After die inspecting officer's
Joseph Blazer, Grand Sentinel, report members and goesu retired
assistant to the Right Worthy 10 the dining room for refreshments
Grand Sentinel of the Triennial and fellowship.
year.

,.,·...7

•I

• •

CHESHIRE ' Cheshire Chapter
Order of~ ~ Star bel~ their
Ann~al lnspecll?n Thursday
eveiiiiii,.J!ftlC 13, wilh 30 members
and 60 Ylllton present.
Esta ~ Worlhy Matron 3!1d
Ralph Rife, WOI1hy l'Birol1 presid- .
ed over~ ~ ~ welComed
·the ~ dislingwshed guests:
Grand ~ of the Orand Olap~ of Ohio, Joacph Blazer, .Gallipolis Chapter; Grand Chap~ of the
Graad Chapter of Oh10, Ann
Webb, Lawrence Chapter, Ironton;
The D~puty Grand M~tton and
In~b~g OffiCCI', Maxine Wells,
Wilbsville Chapter; Grand Representalive of Alabama, Patricia Bailey, South ~oint Chapter; Gr!!nd
Representauve of New Mex1co,

·

SarabBiazcr,Oall~isChapter.

WordPerfect classes begin July 22

Sunday Times Sentinel-Page 87

Pomeroy-Middleport G•lllpolle, OH Point Pleasant, WV

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Times-sentinel

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

June 23, 1991

Vanilla Ice faces
weapon violation
LOS ANGElES (AP) - Rap
singer Vanilla Ice and a bodyguard
race misdemeanor weapons violations for allegedly using guns .to
threaten a lniDSient in a supermarket parking Jot
Ice, whose real name is Robert
Van Winkle, and bodyguard Aaron
Eric Martin were charged Friday
and will be arraigned Monday. said
city auorney's spokesman Ted
.
v .........m.·
The charges stem from a citizen's arrest by a 35-year-old ttansient who says he was threatened
earlier this month after he ·
approached the singer's car and
tried to sell the occupants a silver
r"~u-. ·

FAIR SUPPORTER· Fred Deel (left) Gallia County Extensloa
Aa:eat, is shoWD aeceptlng the 4-H Health Tbeme AWJJJ'd cbeck
rrom J, Craig Stralford, N.D., Holzer Cllalc President (ceater),
and JIIDes BleviDs, cliDk ualstant administrator.

FAC PIANO FUND DONORS· Virginia and
Paul Davies recently presented a check to
Trustees Beth Cherriugtou aud Jan Thaler,
cbal{mu for the French Art Colony piano fund.
Tbe multi-arts ceuter is seeking a Ste1nway mid·
sbe pad, wllich will eaallle them to coatluue to

orrer redtals, chamber performances and a vari·
ety or music lessons to cbildtta and lidults. Con·
tributlons may be sent to the FAC, P.O. Box
472, Gallipolis. Pictured from left are Thaler,
Cherrington, P. Davles ·and V. Davies.

Holzer Clinic sponsors
4-H health theme at fair
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic is
initiating sponsorship· of 1 Health
ThemeAwardfor4-Hboolhsatthe
1991. Gallia County Junior Fair.
The health theme is added to the
existing prizes fbr 4-H Theme,
Animal Conservation, and Soil
Conservation.
· County 4-H members 'design
. these fair booths each year as club
pro~ts to ·furthu the ideals of4H, inform and entertain die fairgoers, and showcase the member's
achievements. Since "Health" is'
one of the "4-H's" and health care
is a m~or industry/employer in the
area, ihe Clinic feels it important to
award cash prizes and ribbons ror

PAC FtJND GROWS· Bobble Holzer, (ceu·

ter), n ~ellalf or ller self aad h•sbaad, Dr.
Charles Holzer; Jr., presented a check to FAC

Director Brent AcW!is ad 1'nllee Ju Tllater,

chalrmaa ror the ,._, l'alld.

. Community calendar
I

(lt.mfor liN comm1111ily cllltlldilr
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.·
, . , . two dap prior to 011 t~tlll. Grubbs to sing at Jacksoo Avenue,
TINy ..at IN receiml by /he Gal· Sunday, June 23 at 9:30 a.m. Rev.
llpolls DaUy Trlbullt ill ad~ollct Bob Grubb to preach.
for flllblicalillll)

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS
- Diabetic edu·
SUNDAY
cation
classes
will
be held June 24,
GALLIPOUS - There will be
25
and
261'rom
6-8
p.m. in die fifth
homecoming services at the Dickey
floor
classroom
at
Holzer
Medical
Chapel Church beginning at 10
Center.
For
more
infonnation,
call
a.m. Revs. Jesse Jeffers and. Junior
446-5246.
Birchfield will bring the morning
mes~e and Rev. Paul Barturm
GALLIPOLIS • Free clothing
will bnng the afternoon message.
day
for low-income persons MonSpecial singing will be by die Conday,
J11ne 24 rrom 9 a.m. to noon at
nors and Terry families. A basket
the
Community
Action Agency
dinner will be served at noon.
clothing bank.
CROWN CITY - Brolher John
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Fcllure 10 speak at Mt Zion Missionuy Baptist Church, Valley Chapter 283 OES regular meeting
View Drive, Sunday, June 23 at 7 7:30p.m. Monday, June 24 at Gallipolis Masonic Temple. Initiation.
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Singing in the
Park, Sunday, June 23 at 7 p.m.,
featuring the Shafer Family, Conquerors. Freewill offering wiU be
talten and bring lawn chairs.
PORTER - Prospect Baptist
Church revival features The
Gabriel Quartet at 7:30 p.m.

OES to hold regular meeting, Tuesday, June 25 at8 p.m.
RIO GRANDE • Open Gate
Garden Club will meet. June 25 at
7:30 p.m. at the home of .Brenda
Covell (1503 Camel·Belhamia Rd.)
Program: Making Rocks, ~ork ­
shop.

REUNIONS
EVERGREEN • The Ralston,
Ward and Vance reunion will be
Sunday, June 23 at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ward Smith, Clark
Chapel Road, (former home of
Charles and WildiJ Ward Ralston).
Dinner at 1 p.m.
CHESHIRE - Bradbury-Jenkins
reunion, 1 p.m. June 30 at the
Kyger Community Building. Bring
covered dish and table service. ·

THURMAN • Thurman Grange
to meet, Monday, June 24 at 8 p.m.
TUESDAY
VINTON- Vinton American
Legion Post 161 regular metting
Tuesday, June 25 at 7:30 p.m. at
Ewington.

IIYLOR WODDCRI"

First
Baptist
Church

Dr. Archie
,....,

(CHin

Alvis Pollar4-Asnc.. Peter
Filii WI ....-O.Y.C.S.
hvW Phii...-Mnc Dlrldet

..

Jose Lind singled in the third inning, and
Morgan then retired 17 sttaight until Lind sin·
gled leading off the ninth. Gary Varsho singled
Lind to third and Orlando Merced ended the
shutout bid with a sacrifice fly.
·
Doug Drabek (6-8) lost for the first time in
five decisivns, giving up three runs
. and sev~n
hits.
With Los Angeles leading 1-0 in the sixth,
Drabek walked Eddie Murray, who went to
second on Kal Daniels' infield bouncer. After
being down 0-2 in the count. Chris Gwynn singled to left and Mike Scioseia followed with a
two-run double.
Daniels gave the Dodgers a 4-0 lead in the
eighth when his fly ball to deep left field
deflected off Barry Bonds' glove and into the
seats for a home run.
The Dodgers took a 1..0 lead in the second
when Gwynn singled and went to third on
Sciascia's single to right. Alfredo Griff'm's soft
blooper to left scored Gwynn, who along with
Stah Javier is taking the place of the injured
D31TYI Strawberry in right field.
.
.

organization in 1988 by the U.S.
Supreme Court and therefore not
bound by due process as mandated
by the Constillltion.
, "People confuse crim'inal due
process with administrative due
process,'' Schultz said. .. What the
state legislatures are lrying to do is
force the NCAA · 10 conform to
crimiilal due process.
"We can't do that We don't
have subpoena power. We don '1
have the ability to swear people to

Wallace loQking to make mark
in Miller Genuine Draft 400
•
•
•

I

J

iJUJility to pay.

0' SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

to

Duane Ward pitched two innings for his
13th save, allowing one hit
Red Sox 9, Athletics 5 -:- AI Boston, Carlos Quintana keyed a five-run third inning with
a two-run double as the Bostoil Red Sox beat
Oakland 9-5 Saturday.
Greg Harrjs (3-7) gave up three iuns on five
hits in six and one-thin! innings as he beat Oakland for the aecond time this month.
Oakland rookie Joe Slusarsld (2-4) had control problems from the swt and failed to retire
a batter in the third before being replaced by
ToddBums.
.
Slusarslti was charged with five runs on four
hits, five walks and one hit batter.
Dodgers 4, Pirates 1 - At Los Angeles,
Mike Morgan, who had never beaten Pittsburgh, pitched a three-hitter against the Pirates
on Saturday 10 give the Los Angeles Dodgers a
4-1 victory in a matchup of division leaders.
.Morgan (8-5) won for the third lime in four
S\8fiS and earned his first career victory against
the Pini!es in six decisions. He struck out three
and walked none.

vesligatei.
"We're not opposed to due
process; we feel we have that,''
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The Schultz told The Nsociated Press
NCAA can police its membership Sports Editors national convention
· without the need for laws forcing it Thursday. "Our concern is that our
to apply the Conslitulional rules of nap.onal organization has members
criminal due process, NCAA ex- in all 50 states.
ecutive director Dick Schultz says.
"If we have four ·or five states
U.S. Rep Edolphus Towns, D- that have some type of due erocess
N.Y., has introduced a bill requiring legislation, then it's imposSible for
the NCAA to accord due process to us 10 evenly apply the rules."
coaches, players and colleges it inThe NCAA was ruled a private

PUNNED ·PARENTHOOD
POMEROY:
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
H2-5912
lrJo 5:oo Monday-Friday
Clored Thunllay
,

· TORONTO (AP)- Juan Guzman allowed
three hits in seven innings for his fusl maJor
league victory and Joe Carter hit his 16th home
run as the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Cleveland Indians 4-0 Salllrday.
·
Guzman ( 1-2) struck out six and walked two
in sending the Indians to their 14th loss in their
last 17 games. The Blue Jays have won•three
·straight
:
Carter hit the first pitch from rookie Jeff
Matis (0-2) in the bottom of the third inning
. over the left-field fence for his fourth homer in
three games. The homer gave Carter 10 for the
month, one shy of George Bell's club record
set in May and June of 1987.
Devon White led off the fifth inning with a
double and came home on Roberto Alomar's
major league-leading 22nd double. Alomar
moved to third on a wild pitch and score&lt;! on
Pat Tabler's sacrifice fly.
Toronto added a run in the eighth inning ·
when Carter was hit by a pitch from Shawn
Hillegas with the bases loaded.
·

By MICHAEL A. LliTZ
AP Sports Writer

_Siclng ..... No- .....,~- - -

.

Toronto hands Cleveland 4-0 loss

••

.

GALUPOUS
414 Second A"" 2nd Floor
446·0166
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
1:30 tG 12 Saturday ·.
Closod Thursday

b, Alhlla, Olllcotht,

ESTABLISHED 1895

11ie .)ifrit.{ ~tre Presents ·

By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motorsports Writer
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - Rusty is back in
'town, lind he'd like to make his prese.nce felt in
today's Miller Genuine Draft 400 NASCAR stock
carrace.
.
Rusty Wallace, a two-time winner at Michigan
International Speedway and always a threat on the
two-mile, high-banked oval, has not exactly scared
anybody with his showing so far. this weelcend, struggling with engine problems before taking the 23rd
spot in the 41-au lineup.
.
'~Every\&gt;ody' s probably geared up 10 ,come here
more than they are Bllywhere,else," Wil.lace said.
"(Dale) Earnhardt have their .best engine, the Fords
have their best engines and Chevrolets have lheir best
engines here.
.
"I thought we would have·our hest engine, but at
the last minute our cylinder heads we were waiting
on didn't pan out. They had cracks in 'em and we
couldn't run with them. I feel I'm under-horsepow·
ered now, but I'm going to do the best I can with the
handling."
.
But Wallace has plenty of incentive for doing well
today on the track owned by Roger Penske, his partner in the new Winston Cup racing team along wijh
St Louis businessman Don Miller.
"Everybody 's been asking me if there is any
added pressure to win here since Roger owns the
track," Wallace said. "Maybe a liltle bit because I
want to do well for him up here. It definitely fires me
up a liltle more. I've worked my butt off this week
trying to ¥~1 the car ready for a good run. The whole
team has. .
.
The ,other big incentive - beyond the obvious
ones of prize money and Winston Cup points - is
the fact that Detroit, the home of the big three American automakers, is just65 miles away.
"We all want to show off for the manufacturers
. because they're watching," said Wallace, who drives
a Pontiac Grand Prix. ''And the manufacturers want
them to run well becaiiSe they have their employees
here watching them. It's probably mm: important to

do well here than it is anywhere.''
Another Pontiac, driven by Michael Waltrip, will
start from the pole, .followed by four Ford Thunderbirds, driven by Geoff Bodine, Mark Martin, Davey
Allison and Alan Kulwicki.
Earnhardt, Wallace's friend, heated rival and the
defending champion here, wiJJ start sixth in a
Chevrolet Lumina. The four-time and defending
Winston Cup champion, comes into today's race
leading the current standings by 120 points over
Ricky Rudd, who will sllin seventh in another Lumi-

na.

'f!lere have been nine different winners in 13 I8CC8
11 .
• ·· Tha1me
· lodes "'·
· May
thJS ···
~n,
.. .......,,
.who won m
at Bnstol, Tenn., but the former Wmston Cup champiOJ!' has fallel\ ~ 12th in the stan~ngs, ~85 points
beWalhJtrind.Eamhardt b.ut only 81 behmd n.mth-place
·
toda
. y•s 200
, .w Iace heads ~nto
. -lap event w1'th a.
stnng of seven sttaight top 10 fJJiishes.
"I'm ~~ CC?~edlng the ~pionship, hell no,"
Wallace sa11L Our problems this year have mostly
been engine' related, with some wrecks and a broken
gear at Martinsville (Va.). ll's just ridiculous. The
en~ne prob~ms keep following me. We're trying to
get,~l ~anized.
.
I'd like to see us establish a good, Strong, stable
motor program. If I can get that, we can !'Jlndle the
resl. Fust, though, we need..a good showms here. I
figure I can handle that, IOU.
Lake Speed, Harry Gant and Waltrip, all of whom
· had engine problems prior to Friday's opening round
,of lime trjals, were die fastest qualifiers Saturday in
the final session.
Speed took the 21st position with a lap of 173.144
mph, a lap which would have been good enough for
fifth on Friday. Ganl was next at 172.414, followed
. by Wallace atl72.183.
Other second-day qualifiers included Jimmy
Spencer, Larry Pearson, Terry Labonte, Rick Wilson,
Buddy Baker and Richard Peny. Petty, the only driver to stand on his Friday speed, will start 36th.

!E

qafB.po{is' Own

THE

DAN ROWAN

Stools come in a
variety of colon
with maple topa
88 well 88
natural or
stained oak.

Welcome
To

SUNDAY SCHOOL-9:15
SERVICES-1 0:30 &amp; 6:00

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) Hulk Ho$an can stay · 'in the
wrestling rms and out of a feder81
comttoom, a judge has dec1ded.
U.S. District Judge William W.
Caldwell said Friday that Hogan
need not appear at the trial ot 1
doctor charged with supplying
steroids to him and four other professional wrestlers. None or the
wresders was charged.
The trial of Dr. George Zahorian
Ill begins next week.
,
"Ouneview ... indicates the
wiii!CIS' cqncerns involve private
and personal millf.eiJ that should be
protected," Caldwell wrote. .
The ruling does not apply to die
other wrestlers named in the case,
who did not appeal to the judge.
Hogan's aiiOrlley, Jerry McDe· '
vill, said in a Sl8telllenl Friday that
the two-time World Wrestling Federation champion had done nothing
illegal.
Zahorian is cbarged with 10
counts of distributing or intending
to distribute steroids, five counts of
distributing other controlled substances and two counts of using his
offices to distnbute die drugs. ,
'

CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter ·

"THE CHUICH IN lHE HEAil OF lHE CllY,
Willi lHE CllY ON ITS HElll."
INSP.UIG-SIC
CHAWNGING PIEACHING
SIPPOIIIYE SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASSES
AmYl YOUlH

Hogan out of court
and back into ring .

~intts • ittdhttl Section C

'

Towns bill to require due process in probes

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

.

In spite of protests from NCAA's Schultz,

the 'first, second and third place
winners in that category. The
booths will be judged ,on best
health or health-related message.
If local club leaders desire further information on the Health
Theme Award, contact Fred Deel,
Oallia County Extension Agent,
who is coordinating the clinic's
award with the Gallia County
1
Junic:WFairBoard.
·
·
.,
.. ---:::.::.~~-.:::::::··=~==-~.,

KCHS chcerleading
camp slat~dJune 26
CHESHIRE • A cheerleading
camp for students ages ·s-13, will
be held at Kyger Creek · High
School, June 26-28 from 10 a.m. -2
p.m.
.
Registration begins at 9 a.m.
Wednesday, June 26, with a $15
enlry fee. Participants are to bring a
sack lunch.
The event is sponsored by the
KCHS varsity cheerleaders. · .

ports

All tmilhea
available in
18"' 24" and
30" heifJhte.

'lben

a

Woodcraft dealp
1o aa~ea your IU~Je.
£Gille 1o I'IIENCII 8qt1
ROME
. BMBI.JSJIMENTS aad 1ee our .
·.,. . ., of thl1 nae furnltUft.

11l!f,9{CJ-f SQ~
!JlOMf£ f£9rf'Bf£LLIS!Jl9vft£9{'IS
338 S'£C()1J.fJJ JI'V£. • {jJU.LIPOLIS, 01£.
(614) 441-0411

THURSDAY, JULY 4

1:00 P.M.

•

oath. Without subpoena power, you
don't have the ability to cross-examine because you can't require a
witness lb appear,
"Those are things that we can '1
provide, butlher are not demanded
by due~.·
Critics say the NCAA provides
only limited access to evidence
against accused instirutions. But
Schultz said schools under scrutiny
are aware they are being investigated.
"You can take a look at any
voluntary ~ ... and I'll
guarantee that yoiJ will not lind
more due process provided in ad. ministrative hearings," Schultz
said.
Schultz said he has favored
reform since becoming die NCAA's
executive director in an altelllpl to
put college athletics back .in its
place on the college campus. .
"Competitive
athletics
in
· · almost
"
Amenca IS
lilte a cult,
Schultz said. "It's probar on a
postcard
discover later that
they lost often
more than a great trip.
Also gone, sometimes withoullheir
consent. isapieceoftheirchecking
accounts'.
The latest •---•--•
hem b
u ........ent.sc
e Y
unsavory
lelqlhono
nwttedng
firms has triggered special alerts to
. banks by die FBI the ·Federal
, Reserve, the Federld Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Comptroller
of The
die Currency.
trouble begins when the
· telephone sales person hawking a
vacation, low-interest c::.eru, card or
other product lures die customer
into providing 'his ,....,..,.;fta account
number.
The ~lhical operator then encodes die account number 011 a
demand draft _ forms that can be
used to withdraw funds quickiy.
Meanwhile, the promoted product
is rarely delivered.
·
. Victims often don'tlearn or such
a withdrawal until they spot it on a
monthly bank statement Or, if they
have orally agreed to a charge, they
become furious when their account
was charged but the product wasn't
delivered.
The firms send out postcards to
generate .rerum calls or do direct
dialing to hawk lheir promises of
easy credi~ grand prizes or services
such as help In seUing a used car.
In each case, there's a c)large
which - in the case of promised
~- often is called a process·
mg fee. The companies say they'll
take care a1 the IJanSaction if the
customer will provide his checking
account number.
Rep. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.,
chairman of the House Small Busi·
ness sabcommittee on regulation,
said the businesaes possess "an impressive anay of electronic and
computerized tools which literally
unlock the bank's safe."
Wyden's Sllbcommittee staff is
investigating the unauthorized
withdrawals. A slaff memo to the
chairman said there is no way yet
to estimate losses fronl the
sc;hemes, but "individual aneedoles
provided by institutionS ... Indicate
that the level or fraud easily Is in
millions of dollan per year."
The drafts aubmllted for payment
by the 1elephonc marb«cn are like
the'. . I uaed routine!y by
Iepumale nsunnce companies,
mutual funds and other businesses.

--'6

Before the /ireworb dilplay, enjoy
em evlening .mth
THE DAN ROWAN TRIO

But those finns have I CUS·
tomer's signed authori7.ation on
file, awbling regular amounts to be
withdrawn for premiums or in·
vestments. The friwdulent operatorS
don't have die, signatures, but tell
banks IIley do when they open ac-

'l'idrttttaiiGioble at ~r 'a Poa~ry,
B.....U.:ardl Mudc, C,..,.,., Record. aro4

SIOYG-

counts.

RettoJii'clnl.

'
MORRIS AND DOROTHY HASKINS

M(J.'Ei. TJIEJt~

428 2ND AVE&gt;oGALLIPOLIS. Ott
(614) 448-ARTS

LINDROS TOP DRAFT CHOICE -Eric
Llndros (right) carries bis Quebec Nordlquea
jersey Saturday as be M•kes lumds with m•·

ben nl the Nordlqatl com•lttee who picked

him In the ftnt I'OIIIIid nl the NHL drift 1D Bulfl·
, lo, N.Y. (AP)

·II

'

,.

"They deposit these drafts, often
a hqe number of them, jual before
closing time, and wire the fundi out
u 10011 u they are ll1owed to do
.,," the Federal R.rve Bank of
Richmond, V... wii'IIOIL
"Blob may DOl Jellize lhal they
have no IIJIIIorlzEou on 81e for
these JJIIIi&amp;ned drafts until the customen have received llld oumined
· their acc:ountlllllallenll."

IT'S MINE -Oakland secoad sacker Laoce Blankeuship (right)
makes the call and the catch of Ibis Jocly Reed poCup whUe avoiding'
a collision with reserve shortstop Mike Gallego n lhe ttilrd Inning
of Saturday's American League game Ia Boston's Fenway Park,
which the host Red Sox woo 9-5. (AP)

'
back ID
• th e
eenage umpire
game a fter ·d 0 d g•ng
• bu JJet s
T
.1

EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. (AP) -

walking toward him li'om the direc-

A uoen-:1110 wnpile for a boys bale- tlon«ftnlbue'lllliUIIIilrl&amp;bt band

ball league went right 6ack to offi- tucked under his sbin. •
elating one day after an angry
"He got about 10 feel from me
coach allegedly fired several shots and said, 'Now I'm going to kill
at him with a gun during a game.
you,''' Fisher told police.
Police on Saturday said they
After e~~ing his ren at Fishh
ld'
31
ld
C
.
. t1
were o mg -year-o
urus er, Fau
m th e •eld, poI'1ce
Fair, who fired at 16- year-old said. The suspect was captured
umpire Roderick Fisher Jr. after the later that evening. No weapon was
teen-ager called a boy on Fair's found, investigators said.
team out at.home plate.
Police said Fair fll'ed a .38-calPatrolman Lionel Seltles said he iber revolver at Fisher from 10 feet
did not believe Fair had been away but missed. The suspect con-,
charged Saturday, three days after tinued to fire as Fisher ran, along
Fisher made the call involvmg a 9- with terrified youngsters and paryear-old player during a Khoury eniS clutching their children, invesLeague game.
tigators said.
Fair, an assistant coach, ran onto
•• Amazingly, no one was
,the field during Wednesday's game injured," said a patrol officer who
and loudly asked Fisher why he asked not to be Identified.
· was "making all these bad calls,"
Fisher's father, Roderick A.
police said. Fair's ·team was losing Fisher Sr., said his son umpired ,
by one run.
·
again Thursday without incident. ·
Fisher ejected Fair and told him And he wasn '1 surprised his son
to leave the field. Fair .grabbed a escaped injury.
baseball bat, according to police · ''Rod nills track for the East St.
reports, and ran after Fisher,lhreat· Louis (High School) Firers. Rod
ening to "bust your head. I'll kill got the hell out of there,' the elder
you."
'
Fisher said Saturday.
A relative of Fair wresdcd the '
"Rod's a tough kid. I'm pretty
bat away and escorted him from the sure he's had his taste of arguments
field.
with parents, but this is the first
"He ran toward the parking lot time gunplay's been involved."
and drove off hot," Fisher told
The younger Fisher was compolice. Fisher resumed the game, peting in a track meet Saturday and
wiblesses said.
was not available for comment.
About 10 minutes later, Fisher
The Khoury League, founded in
said he notir.ed several patents East St. Louis, has various divigrabbing their children and running sions for players aged 7-16.
li'om the field. He said he saw Fair
~

Hydrau l•lC "eadml•ll helpzng
•
k to OlU
1..lfi
Tiloods
get
bac
orm
" t

CINCINNATI (AP)- Ickey
Woods is on the comeback ttail, or
rather, treadmill.
The Cincinnati Bengals running
back, who played only two games
before injuring his lcnee in the 1988
season, is on a two-month running
program using a hydraulic treadmill.
The program is designed to further rehabililal.e a knee injury that
required reconstructive surgery two
years ago.
Woods vomited on his first run,
but jumped back on the treadmill,.
which reaches 26 mph and climbs
to 40 degrees.
Teammate Eric Thomas, who
dared Woods to start the treadmill
running program, said he has been
impressed with Woods' determination.
,
"That showed me he's got the
commitment, the desire,'' Thomas
said. "I told him I wanted to see
him get back to the way he was. I
told him this P.rogram could help,
but if he wasn 1 going to go all out,
forget iL"
Jim LeClair, the former Benaals
linebacker, said he expected 10
have difficulty motivaiing Woods.
"That hasn 'I been the case at
all," LeClair said. "He's done
j

everything we asked. He's busted a
gut, and there's no question you are
going to see a difference.''
Woods, 25, said he feels the difference since the pro1j111_1Tl began in
April. Last year he tried to counter
·his lack of mobility by weighing up
to 250 pounds. But his 40-yard
dash time soared to the high 4.7s
and low 4.8s.
His 5.3-yards-per-rush in 1988
carried the Bengals to ihe Super
Bowl. The average fell to 3.2 last
season .
"I still have to lose at least lll
(pounds)," said Woods, who wants
to be between 22S and 230 for
training camp next month.
LeClair hopes the Frappier
Acceleration l'togram he runs with
John Frappier in Fargo, N.D. can
gel Woods through . Woods,
Thomas, running back Stanford
Jennings and kicker Jim Breech
have attended the three-day-a-week
sessions in Newark, Ohio, and
Fargo, where the program ends
July 8-9 with a series al tesl8.
"Prom what I see, lckey should
be able to run a 40 in the 4.5 ran~.
maybe die low 4.65," LeClair wd
"He's doing 24 miles per hour on
die treadmill and not many have."

�Pag~-Sunday

Tlmn Sentinel

June 23, 1991

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

June 23,1991

just kept 011 going.
Cincinnati took care of Montre-

beating the Expos 7-3 at Riverfront
Stadium on Fridlly night. Chris
al's seveo-pme winning SIJak by Sabo hit two homers for the Reds.
"With Sabo, you definitely
don't want to lay a fastball over the

Set )f.l' l1( )~tl·cl
In tbe majors...

oo-.

li;LO
- 11;luoti&lt;o.AI·
. 17: ' "
Chd-"
11: Sanol·
boq.C0oap.l6.
TRIPIJ!S...-T. Owyu, San Dicao. I;
........ Saa l'rucioco. 6; L. Oonul&lt;z.
S; Colemu., N. . YOlk, S; M.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eul DIYIIIaa
T-

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Califomi.l ·-·-.. 36 30 .545 41/2
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KanJu a.,.

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borali. 4; Eruk, Philaclolphla, 4; Can·
daefe:HOUJtoll, 4; T. Fem•acln, San

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.

' I«&gt;MB RUNS-Johr.•on, New York,
15; O'Neill, Clnclnaatl, l'i M,cGriff,
San Die1o. 14; G. Bell, Chicaao, 13;
B...... Now Y..t. 13; Out• Atlanta. I;!;
W. a . . t . S a t -, 1:1.
STOU!N--8~ M.,._
al, 34; Caleman, New York, 33; Nixon,
Atlaata, 32; DeShields, Montreal, 30;

Caldenm. Moo...t, 17: 0 . Snlit!t. SL Lottll,l7.
PITCHING (6 d.ecilioa•)-SampCil,
~U'Ml., 5·.1, .133. 3.7.; AIOIID , St.
I..Ouia, S~l, .133, 5.28; Gll'rine, Atlanta ,
11·3. .716, :1.11; c..pe.• . SLI..ouU. 7-2.
.711, 3.16; R. - . . _ Loo Anploo, 10.
3, .7(11. :t.7l; Tewbbuzy. $t. Lottll, 6-2.
.7SO, :1.72: RUo, ClDcluall, I ·Z. •751,
I:.aoticri, SL Lottll, II;

:IM.

nlUKEOtTrS--CGDe, New Yod, 96;
Atlanll,l6; Goodal, New Yod,
16; Rljo, Clnehmatl, I'; 0 . Maddux,

. plate,"
1J181111ef
Run·
nells said. 'He's
provenTom
he can
do
damage with thaL He did it again
10Right."
Los Angeles, the leaders in the
West, had its five-game winning
streak snapped as.Pittsburgh won
5·1 at Dodger Stadium.
Meanwhile, San Francisco
defeated Chicago 4-2 at Candlestick Park !0 extend the Cubs' losing streak to seven games.
"I think we're still playing
hard," Chicago loser G.eg Madt!ux
said. "Everybody might be trying
too hard. But things will change,
whether it's tomorrow or five days
from now."
Things didn't change much for
tbe last-place Houston Astros.

They lost again, 3-0, at Philadelphia to extend their losing streak to.
five games.
.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Atlanta 4, New York 2 and St.
Louis 4, San
Diego
3. 3
Reds
7, Expos
Sabo and Joe Oliver hit homers
off Chris Haney (0-1) to spoil the
Montreal left-bander's majorleague debut. Sabo added a two-run
homer off Tim Burke to put
Cincinnati ahead 7-2 after f1ve
innings.
Scon Scudder {2-3) won for the
firSt time since May 30 by scatter·
ing four hits, including Ivan
Calderon's two-run homer, over
seven innings. It was Scudder's
second start since he came off the
disabled list June 17 after recovering from tom cartilege in his rib
cage.
·
Gianls 4, Cubs 2
Terry Kennedy hit a two-run

homer in the seventh inning to give
the Giants the lead
Greg Maddux (6·5) carried a
one-hitter and a 1-0 lead into the
seventh when Robby Thompson

doubled With two ~t~ 11nd
Kennedy homered(~~)&amp; got2 ~tch..
. ~ly Downs
e wm ·
1n relief of starter Bcud)Biack, wbo ·
(See NL oa ·•3

·---· ~·~-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

""{iEAR
':@

•BRAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
eWHEEL ALIGNMENT

MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
JOHII FULTZ - J. IUICUS FULn
PoJHroy

OWIIIDS

992-2101

ACS to sponsor tournaments

qll~

ou...o.
14: · s.. Dleto. 72: lfar.
ailch,........
(/1.
Tbey played Sahlnlay

O•.kland (iluunlr:i 2·3) at D~t-.a
(Odkma 2-7). 1 o05 pm.
c...- (Mollo t-Il 101 T..- (Jo.
G - t-2~ l:ll p.a
(Tapui 4-6) ot N- Yadt
' (W.Tayla&lt;2-1~ HOp.m.
: ~al&amp;fomla {IAtJ&amp;Iton 9-2) at Detroit
• (Riu o.n 7:~ .!'""·.
Ballimcn (Miladi 2-2) "' lmuo Clly
' (Gonlao 4-4).1:C)5 p.m.
• Teaaa ()o. Barfield 3-1) at Chiuao

• {Ftmazwk:t 2-7), 1:05___p.m.

-~3-:QolMit-(A..

•

: .... 5-2). 1:05,....

·

.

.

Today'•a-

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B . - .. ~·a.,. :1.2:05 p.m.

T... "'Clllcoto. :I::J:I , ....
- · .. Mil-2:35p.m.
Califamia atn.rail. 1:05 p.m.

.West DlvlsloD

Gl

W .L Pd.

; Loo Anptoo ...... 40 26 .606
, 'Cin~aud • .:,_ l$ 31 .5)1
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...... ..... 33 31 . .!116

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.• Noor Yodt

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.. (Hill6-4).l,J5 p.m.
•
'

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Today'lp-.

Houltoa at PhU
·.1 :35 , ...
NcwYcdcult.llaa.2:10p.m.
M•O..l 101 ~Ill, Z:ll p.a.
1

., I

NEW YORit Y ANXEES-S;p.d Tim

Flattnclly.-Mat
... LylDMotttoa. - :

Hubbud

SI!A1TLE MAIUNEitS-&amp;pcl s...
R.e., pile:b•, aad auiped him 10 San
B
-ottboCalifoatiiLoap.
TEXAS RANGER5-Sipod Billy
Moen, CIGifielda', aad auipe4 him to
Odlhc.Da aty ~ the American Auod.a·
tioa. Aa;p.d Kmn BoL:b«, outlioldo.,
flam Otl.iioma Cily10 Tlllaa ~ ~e·Tcua

U.pe.
Nlllfonalwaue
CINCINNATI R_B DS-Phccd Jonl
ltijo. - · .., tlte lS-difablod tilt. tto. •
cauea Tim Layau. pi1chor, from
N.uhviUc fll the: .American Aaoci.ation.

Football
Nallotull r - ' ORREN BAY PACKERS'-s;1nod
R•&amp;aio Bumelte, linebacker. and
n._, !!....._ wld&lt;i -..... AIIOOII
ro 11m11 wtdl Delft WitkowUi, lintbck~

- ,_.__
--........
Hockey

(Allum. EDT)

·. ,.......

...-.

N1donal-,. Loape
·· ST. LOUIS BLUI!S-Aanauncccl the

(lln~ 6-7) al Loo A.,..
.• "' {Morpll1-5), 3:15,...
•• Chica., (lloak;e J.6) at San """'"""'
•; (T. Willion 2-6~ 4,(15 p.m.
·, Mon&amp;rnl (loJd 3·') a&amp; Clnclnnall

;.

-~-

CHICAOO WIIITI! SOX-Recallod
Wayac Edwadl, piteber,fn:ra Vancou.Yer

ibunaa, otrensi.valiDeman.

Pt-..,s,Loo....-1

·•

tcr H1vea 11 their aprina trunin&amp; 1itc

ar, md Stem Gabbed, offenl:ivc Llckle.
HOUSTON 00 HpS-Wiiv«&lt; Riobard
lobn1on, •ide reccivOl'. Siped Eric
Brown, wide n:ICeiYC, and Sbelclan Hal~

Ftlda.z·· nnJia

.•

BOSTON RED SOX-I!Jtteftdod lho

oodJI!a , _ . with tho cit1 of Win·

Thoooalc.-.........

• TWLPd.
Gl
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• SL Louio
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• NewYadt
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1 9"&lt;-ao. . ......... 31 36 .ol63 10 1f1.
. l'lliladclpltia ....... 30 37 .441 111(1.
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M.ui:Oipn·
or, cew:bcr, EDc Enowlal, lhortaop; and

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eul Dlvtsloa

,

Transactions
a....JJ.u

of die Pacific C01at Lcaaue. Optioaed
Wlrft:n Newlon, outfielder, to 'lancoD-

OUJ.nd . , , _ 1:01 P"'·
MinMicu at.NewYc8,l:JOp.m.

~'

SAVI!S-Dibllle. Clndonall, 19; Ia
Smith, St. LaWa. IS; Dave Smith. Chic&amp;·
p, 16; B. Landrum, Pltbburp, ll;
Pnoeo, New York, 13; Lcffcru, San
~.l3;WUIUuno,PiriloiNjNOa. 1:1.

•

......
""' ll&amp;lftOd ltlm - " ' ';,[ - · of
lholn..........WHoct.,.LoaaucSAN JOSE SHA.IXS-Named Bob

WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Sent

S1o'vo Leach, riJhl winJ, to the B01ton
Bruin• for Rand7 Bunid,e, left wina.
Sena SIOYB Malw.t ~rlt wq, aad T~atl
Klatt. center, 10 tho MinniiOII NMh S~an
for Shlwn Oamh1a, dcttn~e~nan.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County unit of the American Cancer Society will hold a golf championship at Cliffside Golf Course
on Saturday, June 29.
The winners of this tournament
will advance to the division champion ship, which will be held at
Firestone Country Club in Akron in
September.
The tournament is open to all .
amateur golfers with verifiable
handicaps; There is no limit to
handicaps.
Single golfers will be matched
with others to form four-player
teams, and teams of fo'ur who
desire to play togetb~r will be
accommodated in one of the three
divisions of competition for men
and women.
The all-scramble format of the .
tournament will run as follows:
Women's Division I - Teams
whose lowest handicap player is 11
or lower.
Women's Division l l - Teams
whose lowest handicap player is
between 12 and 22.
Women's Division m- Teams
with players having handicaps of at
least 23'.
.
Men's Division I -Teams
whose lowest handicap player is 7
or lower.
Men's Division I I - Teams
whose lowest handicap player is 8
to 16.
Men's Division Ill - Teams
with players having handicaps of at
least 17.
Entry forms are available at
Cliffside Goll Coone, various golf
clubs in ·the area, at the Gallipolis
ACS office at 444 Second Ave.,
and from golf chairman Bob
Marchi.
Tennis tourney to.start July 6
The ACS will bold its annual
tennis tournament from July 6 to

0.32

July 14 at forest Mullins' iennis
court on Henkle Avenue in Gallipolis.
The entry fee is $15 for the fust
event and $10 for each additi011al
event A new cait ·or tennis balls is
also required. All entries must be
accompanied by payment offees.
Registration forms can be
picked up from tournament chairman Brant Pauley at 446-4608,
from committee members Donnie
Hendricks in Syrapuse, Jim
Osborne (446-9284), Danella
Greene at the 0.0. Mclnty.e Park
District office· in the Gallia County
Courthouse (446-4612, ext. 256) or
at the ACS office (446-7479).
All players must repon to the
teMis coun half an hour befOJe the
start of their fust match.

IN STOCK TRACTORS
JUNE 22 ' 23 ' 24 On 2:;

SAVE $200 an 12.5-HP lown tractor
lndustriol ·commerciol Briggs &amp; Stratton Gold engine

• 38-in. twrn bladA mowing dRtk

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• 6·speed transaxle ptu~ reve'~f!
• 36 1/2·in. lurni119 ndius
• Solid·slate ignihon plus 25 ·amp
battery for sure strrl~

.CENTENARY - The 0.0.
Mclnty.e Parle District Will sponsor
an: intermediate football camp to
ru11 from Monday. June 24 to Friday, June 28 from 110 3 p.m. daily
at Raccoon Creek County Park.
. ..The cost of the camp, for chil·
~ entering grades S-8 this comlijg fall, is $35.
'
'
:•;Tile camp, which wiB have Galffil Academy bead football coach
llient Saunders and Blue Devil
4i$istant coach Matt Bokovitz as
i&amp;truetors, will feature instruction
ln:passing, placekicking, punting,
~iving and long snapping. Also
iC)eluded will be offensive and
tSdensive line tecbniQues.linebackipg; offensive backfield and sece;pdary techniques. Qnly non·
4el&amp;tchable cleated shoes may be

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BAUM LUMBER ·

FRIDAY1 JUNE 21 thru WEDNESDAY I JULY 31 I

flpor of the Gallia County Courtlro!tse. Monday through Friday
a.m. to noon and from
to 4 p.m., or mail the regisform and check to the 0.0.
Park District, Gallia
Courthouse, Gallipolis OH

ac..on.

,

DON TATE

··Come
!Join Uti

14125

:·'To register, stop at the Park Dis-

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Oakland, .327; Molilor, Mil•

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FREE ENGINEERING AND ESTIMATES

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BATnNG-C. Itipk... B11tllllore.
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ANY SIZE OR SHAPE
Farm Buildings, Homes, Utility Buildings
Commercial or .Residential

Junior football camp
slated for MoDday

IN SfOCK fOil
IMMEn!Atf DfllVfRY

Leo........., 4:115 , ....
San P,n · , 4:05 p.m.

;

PRE-FABRICATED ROOF
TRUSSES

.

SanDie&amp;OatSl~,2:1Sp..m.

Cb:icaao at

leading ihe team to its only Wa-ld
Series championship in 1980.
In a related inc1dent, a Cincin·
nati aavel agency employee pleaded guilty to char~ing $30,000 on
Pete Rose's credtt card while the
former manager was in prison.
. .
Steven Ihlendorf. appeared · :
befOJe U.S. District Court Judge S.
Arthur Spiegel on Friday and
pleaded BUi~tY to unauthorized use
of a cft:dit card account nuinber.
lhleodorf worked. for an agency
that made travel arrangements for
Rose and his wife, Carol, said D.
Michael Crites, U.S. Attorney for
·the Southern Disirict of Ohio.
He used Rose's American
Express account number to make
the charges. Crites said.

SEE BILL HUPP FOR A NEW
NISSAN PICKUP OR A
QUALITY NEW OR USED

Pttlaburah ..
"'

bat pushes Jays to 8-4 win

·"'

planned for .SIX months but kept a
secret. Domino said his Pbillies
dicln 't want 19 use it as a promoti011
and wanted to keep it as a surprise
for Schmidt.
"We did it for Mike Schmidt's
sake," Domino said. "Rose was
unable to attend Mike Schmidt's
Philadelphia jersey retift:ment last
year, and we thought that since
nothing prevents us from using
Pete, it would be a good idea. It
went fantastic. The fans loved it.
Schmidt was thorougbly surprised,
'and it's a Iiight none of them will
forget." · ·
Rose, who had a 21·year big
league career as a player and manager, played with Schmidt and the
Philadelphia Phillies for five years,

e r a s•e d .

HOW MUCH IS SHIPPING?
UP TO $80! SAVE NOW!

$1047

for gambling ·on baseball, was a . ball.''
ap~ce. the Reading Phillies
guest Thursday night when the
Later Friday night, ROte atlend- pomted out that their organization
Reading Pbillies retired Schmidt's ed a Philadelphia Pbillies game as a 1s covered by the Naliooal Aslocia·
number.
fan, sining with Schmidt and his . lion charter, not major league base·
"I didn't.know aout it," Vin- family. Phillies spokesman Larry ball.
cent said Friday. "My ~land· Shenk said the major-~ game
"They do like to try to fOVem
·ing is that the agreement says he was Rose's first smce h1s banish- more than they already do, ' said
can not participate in any form or ment. Rose had no comment.
Chuck Domino, aeneral manager .
activity related t.O organized baseConcerning Thursday night's of the Reading Phillies, Philadel·
phia's Class AA minor league affil.
After surviving two early e"ors \IS. Indians,
.
1ate. "To my knowledge, we did
nothing wrona and no ooe has ever
specifu:ally told anybody in minor
league baseball or the Reading
;J'ORON10 (AP).- After com- really have to hope they hit it to ble for &amp;:4-llead.
Phillies that we're not allowed to
mi,Jting two first·inning errors that you again just so you can restore
"The guys behind me came up use anybody on a suspended list. •..
led to an unearned run, Toronto some confidence.''
·
. with the big blows," Carter said.
"We were never told we were
rookie third baseman Ed Sprague . Joe Caner hit his 15th bomer to ''Anytime you score four runs off a not permitted, so we went under
W¥ itching for a chance to redeem break a 4-4 tie in the boitom of lhe py like Greg Swindell in the first the assumpti011 it was OK.''
himself.
·
ftfth. It was his third homer in the mning, you know you're doing
However, on Friday tbe
Philadelphia Inquift:r reported that
:Sprague wasted little time Fri- last two games and ninth 'in June.
something right."
day night, hitting a run-scoring sinBut it was his fltst-inning strikeDavid Wells (8-4) allowed four Domino re-thought his statemenls
gle in a four-run ftrst inning and out that got the Blue Jays rolling.
runs 011 six hits in eight innings for after being informed of Rule IS of
the Ml!-ior League Rules. That
adjling a two-run homer in tbe
"I~ a good time to swing · the victory.
eiJhth as the Toronto Blue Jays at a pitch in the dirt," Caner said
The Indians cloaed to 4-3 in the states: 'A player or other person
seat the Cleveland Indians to their of Greg Swindell's two-out wild second on a bases-loaded single by on the Ineligible List shall not be
eligible to play or associate with
lZfb loss in 14 games wi~ an 8-4 pitch that allowed him to reach Chris James.
victor)'.
·
ftrSt
"1 let them back in it when I any Major League or NaliDnal
, ,' 'Youjusthavetoputtheerrors
With Carter on second lifter should bave been bearing down," Associauon Club until .einslaled."
The National Association of
oht of your mind and hope yoo act Kelly Gruber's single, Pat tabler Wells said. "But after that I made
Professional
Baseball Clubs over·
.a;i:hance to redeem yourself," . trjpled for two runs. Sprague sin· some adjustments and seltled
sees
minor-league·
teams. Its presiSprague said. "After tile errors you gled to scOJe Tllbler and Pat Bor- down.
dent,
Sal
Artiaga,
told
the newspa·
•'
ders capped the inning with a douJames pulled the Indians even at
per
yesterday
that
his
organization
S••••_..:......;
(Con
. tinued from C-2)
4-4 with his fourth home run of the
. ••
. /!:)'
_ _ _ _. ; _ _ _ _ _ _ SCSSOII, IR the top Of the fifth.
adhered to the rules of major·
glve l'l&gt; one run and eigbt hits in four runs with a three-run homer
Swindell (3-6) gave up eight ·~baseball.
'Well, it sounds to me like
s"' n't
th"d" ·
D
anddouble ff"'--'-V ' Ia(7S)
runsonl2bitsinseveninnings.
!;X a u wo· 11 tnnmgs. ave
Hun•-'s~..~~--run
.... bomloer
"ll"ust didn't have it," Swindell we '.e in the wrong," Domino said
Ri&amp;hetti, the fourth Giants pitcher,
.... uu""'
VoS!rked the final ooe and two-third a 2-0 deficit in the fourth inning said. 'I made some good pitches in the report. "I'm not going to try
and bis RBI double came in the and they hit them. They're not in and fmagle.that rule in our favor,
innings for his ninth save.
:
Phillles 3, Astros o
· th
ftrSt place fir nothing. It's frustrat- because it's pretty clear."
Major-league
spokesman
~ Emergency starter Bruce Ruffm SIX • Cardilials 4, Pldres 3
ing the way we're playing lately.
Richard
Levin
agreed
yesteday,
pitched three-hit ball for eight
. Ray Lankford broke a l·for-14 R~g!'fdless of what my s,tats !'fe.
saying,
"It
applies
to
the
Nadonal
itinings and Miclcey M01'81)dini bit slump with a game-winning single this IS. a~ game and ~e ~ still.&amp;
Association.
sure.
••
a ;three-run homer off Mark Portu- in tlie ninth inning off Larry Ander· ~ m stxth place. We ~ JUSt IK?l
Domino said on Thursday that
gal (6-3).
.
sen (2-1).
. playmg the.~a)' I know thiS team IS
Rose's
appearance had been
: Ruffin (1-0), who was recalled
Pirates S Dodgers 1
capable of.
frOm Scranton·Wilkes-BarR: of the
. Bob Walk cS-0) improved his
Afte! Clevela~d loaded the
International League on June 8, record at Dodger Stad1um to S-0 ~With one out m '!te top of the
toOk the place of scheduled starter and Gary Redus and Barry Bonds nmth, Tom Henke rebeved Duane
Pat Combs. Combs experienced hit home runs for Pinsburgh. Walk Ward and Sln!ck out both~ he
s!Ieness in his elbow whiJe ·warm- gave up five hits in six and two· faced for h1s lOth save m 10
inif up.
third innings.
chances.
: Mitch Williams got the last
th!'ee outs for his 12th save, allow·
ing one hit. The Astros loaded the
bales in the ninth, but Mark David·
soo ended the game with a shallow
fly to right.
'
.:
Braves 4, Mels 2
, :;Rookie Brian Hunter drove in

NL uame·

FREE SHIPPINC

$22 MOHTHLY'

·NEW YORK (AP)- ~is·
· sioner Fay Vincent plans to look
inro whether Pete Roec violated his
banishment agreement with Major
D:aaue Baseball by appearing at a
mmor league ceremony to honor
. Mike Schmidt
:Rose, banned for life in 1989 by
th~n-commissioner Bart GiamaUi

~prague's

.Y'"·,-......

2C2·W. Main

Sunday Tlmn Sentinel-Page C3 •

Vincent plans to investigate Rose's -appeara~ce at minor-league game

Cincy beats Montreal7-3 to snuff Expos' winning streak .,
By Tbe Aalodaled Pre.
Some IIIWs c:ame 10 an ead in
the National Leque, IIICl odlen

Porrieroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Ple...nt, WV

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

Page C4 Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

June 23,199.1

June 23, 1991

Pomeroy-Middlej:lort-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday nmea-Sentlnei-Page CS.

GABC junior session concluded Frida~
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis
and Dribble Elimination: Aaron
Area Basketball Camp conclqdcd
Bictlc, Seth Davis, Melissa Ellion,
the junior session, held for students
Beth.Fellure, Jamie Graham, Jody
in grades 4-8, Friday.
·
Kuhn, Cody Lane, Jeremy PaytOn,
The camp, which drew 88 parRyan Perdue, Jason Ratliff, Alex
ticipants, promoted the enjoyment' Saunders, Jason Skidmore. Waller
of basketball and provided slcill
Strafford, Mark Wamsley and Robdevelopment at the individual and bie WoodWIJ'd.
team levels. In addition, guest
Last-day competitions showspealcers such as Roger Brandebe_r- cased Lacy Hamin. with the best
ry investigator for the Oalha notebook, Cory Wilson and JenCounty Prosecutor's Office (focus: nifer Martin liS foul-shooting
alcohol and drug abuse) and ,Uni- champs, and Martin, Eddie Nehus,
· ·v~ of Rio Grinde assistant bas· Payton and Amy Wilson as top
Jce
coach Earl Thomas (focus: ballhandlers. In the one-on-one
1\evelopinj! a practice routine) · competition, Amy Wilson was _the
donated their time to the campers.
best of the fourth/fifth-grade gills,
Daily contests completed each and Tiffany Varney took the top
action with these individuals l)onors for girls in &amp;rades 6-8,
Walk while
rated

·

amll!'g the fourtb·,sradcbebofif!th• BJCdelcI~ ~~ the same tn t
II -gra
diVISIOn, Perdue was tops among
the six~-grade boys and Graham
rated. h•ghest amons the seventiJand e.gbth-gradc boys. . . ·
Area ~han~ con111buung to
the camp with 11nzes and, awards
were The. Basulle, Ca_rl s ~hoe
Store, L~ttle Caesa~ s P1zza:
McDonald s of G_allitJ&lt;llis and Hen
dmon, W.Va., Sideline Sports and
The Shalce Shoppe.
Camp director Jim Osborne had
on his camp coaching staff Renee
Bames, Dena Greene, Lori Hamilton~ Gary Harrison, Todd Miller,
Tom Moore, Jack Payton, Lynn
Sheets
_ and JQC von.

.r

.MAKE THE CHANGE TO CITGO
JUNIOR CAMP ENDS - The Gallipolis
Area BaSketbaD Camp, which drew 88 participants entering grades 4-8 In the fall, concluded
Friday. The four-day camp witnessed Diotiva-

TOP SCRAMBLE TEAM - The winning
. team in Tburllday afternoon's Meigs County
Heart Aasodatlou golf sc:ramble wu die fou• 1010e of (L·R) Joe Clark. J.D. Story, Jim Ander•'

work
and
tiona! speeches on
self-esteem by guest
as well as instruction In fundamentals and strategy, (Times-Sen·
tine! photo)

McEnroe a 'longshot' at Wimbledon
By SHELLEYANSLOW

tor matches.
Britain's tabloids, which blared
"I don't want to feel like I'm lleadlines such as "McEnrow!" and
chealing the public. I want to feel "An$fY Mac's Back in the Old
lilce every time I step on the coun Rouune."
I'm really into il"
McEnroe arrived in England af.
That wasn't the case Wednesday ter helping the United StaleS defeat
when McEnroe lost 7-6, 7-6 10 Spain m the Davis Cup, and about a.
Italy's Cristiano Caratti in the first month after his wife, actress Tatum
· round of the Mancllester Open, the O'Neal, gave birth to their third
final men.'s wannup befo~e child.
Wimbledon, whicll opens Monday.
His original plan was to play at
McEnroe threw his racket QIICCD's Club in London as pan of
several times, drawing a warning his Wimbledon wannup, but the
for racket abuse. The match Gulf Will meant the Davis Cup had
provided plenty of fodder for
(See MCENROE on C-6)

MANCHESTER, England (AP)
- Jobn McEnroe has no illusions
about his chances of winning
Wimbledon.
"I'm certainly one of the
longsllots," be said.
McEnroe is piep8ring for what
could be one of his last attemptS at
the Iitle lie won in 1981, 1983 and

1984.
"I would guess that I'll probably
play this year and next year and
that's probably j!Oinll to be about
it." McEnroe Satd. •~'rve played a
lot of tournaments over the years
and some thiDJS are more diflicult
~w - the traveHng and getting up

CITGO
'

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VARISITY CHEERlEADERS
OF. GAlliA ACADEMY
HIGH SCHOOL!
When you stop in at GAS PLUS THIRD AND VINE, Gallipolis, present your
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you will receive a FREE 2 liter Pepsi product.

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THIRD-PLACE QUARTET- The third
: place team is Thnrsday's Hearl Association was
• the foursome of .( L·R) Jason Ingels, John

Thomas, Ed Durst and Bob HyselL The tourna·
ment wu held at the Meigs Golf Course.

c

Spectators

who

attended

ballgames last weekend, where
dolls wete passed around, said
security guards moved slowly to

' BOS'ION (AP) Fenway
Parlc"s bleachels have always had a conHseaiC them.
rqJUtalion for attracting rowdy Red
The Red Sox issued a statement
· Sox fans. But some spectators say
;the recent appearance of nude,
· .~ically correct inllatable dolls .
•goes 100 far.
.
. Some fans fondle them. They
,pass them around. They make
obscene gestures.
: The lewd behavior oflend other
bRllgamc fans, like Jeannine Robbins, 32, who witnessed the doll
phenomeiiOil last Friday.
· "The men were sucking on bet.
'it was disgusting," Robbins said.
..:'You come here to watch the
,game. You don't really need to see
men sucking on women's partS,
even if they're plastic."
.
'• The Red Sox issued a Slalement
'Wednesday condemning the Jl,lliC·
lice af1er one angry fan complained
to a local newspaper. But some
'Patrons say they have seen blowup
llolls in the bleacllers as early as
last year.
. And the naked dolls have made
an appearance elsewhere at Mas,sachuseas sporting events. After
Bostoil Herald sports reporter Lisa
Olson was harassed by the New
England Patriots, vendors sold
nalced "Lisa Dolls" at Foxboro

191

Stadium.

: Fenway 's

$6-a-seat

bleacher

•Crowds are Jcnown for more fun·
:loving antics. Usually, the partying

,,

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fCII' llore lllfolwotiOII

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Coli 446.06tt
360 Second Ave., Gallipolis

res~ 10 the criticism:

,
Such conduct is reprehensible
and the club has made special efforts IDd will conlinue to mate
special efforts to prevent such oc(See DOLLS on C-6)

·Stop By Attiens Honda Cars .
:for An Even Closer Look At These Beauties!

·The moblle home
·heat pump...the air
conditioner
that also
hea1s. Financing Available ·

is restticted to innocenl fun: rising
:for waves and lOSSing beach balls.
But beer drinlcing aometimes ~ets
llul of hand, and Red Sox officials
'estimate security officials eject 10
io 20 fans from the bleacllers per

$1

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eWII ARANTEEO

By EVE EPS'I EIN
Associated Prell Writer

· "A NEW GENERATION"

.

1 DECORATOR COLORS

Inflatable nude dolls at Fenway
Park offensive to some Red Sox fans

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The fourth annual Tornado Basketball Camp will be lleld on June
24-28 from 9:00 a.m. until noon at
Southern Higll School.
Tbe camp, for students in 813des
3-8 and each camper will be placed
witll players near his own age
group.
Cost of the camp is $37 and
checks .should be made out to
· Howie Caldwell. Kids still inlerested is talcing part in this year's camp
can register and pay their enrollment fee on the first day of the
camp.

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And, for every 'card processed, the cheerleaders get a 52 donation toward the purchase of ~ew uniforms, courtesy of CITGO.

500 ct.

RUNNER-UP TEAM- Win·
uing a playoff for second place In
tbe Heart Associatloo golf scramble was the foursome of (L·R)
York Ingels, Jay Riepenhoff,
Larry Banks and Larry Powell.

son and Rob Morpn. 'Iiae team flnlsbed wltb a
sc:ore or ll under. The tonrnasoent Wll held at
the Meigs Golf Course

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Page C6 Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport &amp;•JJpoJJ•, OH Point Pleaunt, wv

.

. Meigs Legion nine hands ·Marietta 9-6 loss

" ·'

·'•

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs sixlh inniligs 10 take a 3-2 lead. ·
Meigs came back and took adscored six runs in the sixth inning
to overcome a 3-211eficit and held vantage of a single by Terry
off a late Marieus comeback to de- Reuter, a sacrifice by Matt Finlaw
feat the Washington Counzy tesm and singles by Randy Corsi, Tim
9-7 in American Le'ion Baseball Bissell, Jason Wright, Andy Baer
action Thursday evenmg.
and a Marietta error 10 t11ate four
The win was the sixth in eight runs and give Meigs a 8-:3' lead.
games for Meigs and gave the lhe
Marietta scored four runs in
locals an 8-8 record on the season, eight on three singles and three
Marietta saw its record drop 10 17- Meigs errors 10 mike it a 8-7 con9 on the season.
tesL Meip closed out lbe scoring
Meigs jumped out 10 a 1-0 lead in !he eighth. Slewart led off with a
in the second inning when Andy single, and Bacr reached on an crBaer reached base on an error and .ror before Jeff Dural followed with
advanced to second on another Ma- a single 10 sccre SlewarL
rietta miscue. Terry Reuter singled
Baer started for Meigs and
to score Baer and give Meigs a 1-0 pitched the first five innings, before
lead.
Teny McGuire came on in relief to
Marietta scored to tie the gaine · pick up the win in pitchin. g the
in the fourth inning, but Chris sixth and seventh innings. Durst
Stewart slammed a solo home run picked the save, pitching the fmal
leadin' off the Meigs half or the two innings. Shane Burchett was
fourth IDDing to give tbem a 2-1 ad- the losing pitcher for Marieus:
Stewart led Meigs at the plate
vantage; But Marietta came back to
score single runs in the fifth and wilh the home run and a single, and

.,. ..
'

June 23, 1991

~

• •

1

TOURNAMENT SPONSORS - The annual
Meigs Couuty Heart Association Golf Tournament was beld on Thursday afternoon at the
Meigs County Golf Course. Sponsors for the
'tournament were (L-R) Rob Morgan of Riepen- .

1rimts ... j.entitttl Section

Tim Bissell, Chris Slewari. Durst
and Reuter esch had two singles.
Wright, Baer, Finlaw and Corsi
esch had a $Ingle. Kirk Huffman
led Marietta wilh two singles and k
double.
Meigs traveled to Winfield to
play a twin bill on Saturday and
will return home 10 host WellstOn
in a doubleheada' lllday.
Score by lnnlnp
Marietta ()()() ll1 040 - 7. 6-6
Meigs
0101060lx - 9-12-6
WP- McGuire (Durst save)
LP-Bun:heu

'

- -----·- -

Gino's ........ _.,,..•.•..........•....2
Foster Sales ........................ I

...

Adv~ Cleaning

..... ,.....0

By DIRK !EVERIDGE
AP Blllll Ill! Writer

.

1
2
4
5
6

, COLUMBUS - . Robert S.
Wood, vice chainnan and lllember
'of the board of directon of Bob
·t,Evans Fanns Inc., is recognized by
two restaurant industry orpniutions f~r his dedication and servil:e
not only tO Bob Evans Restaurants
'but also to the foodservice industry.
L Tbe International Foodaervice
.!IYUIIIufactums Allociadon (IFMA)
~tly named Wood u the winper of the Silver Plate Award For
lhe 37th year, tbia award nationally
tecognizes foodscrvicc operators
who have made significant contriputjons to the industry.
,
: The award is presented to executives PI nine areas of operations.
Wood won irr the category 'f!lr .,
chain restaurants offering fuU set·
vice. IFMA is a trade association
with members from more than 575
food, equipment and supply manufacturers 10 the foodservice industry.
The Ohio Restaurant Association will announce Wood as the
winner of their Life Time Achievement Award on June 24. He was
nominated by a committee of association members for this honor-·
the highest given by the Ohio
Restau.rant Association. Wood
receiyed this award because of liis
contributions to the industty and to
the Ohio Restaurant Association.
He l;ias represented the association
on the national level for nine years
and on the state level for 15 years .
In May, he was appointed hooorary
board member of the National

Ellen Zucker, president of the
National Organizaiion for Women's
Boston chapler, wekomed the Red
Sox response, but said more should
have been done aooner.
"I think when we set reportS
from fans tbal~hswere quicker 10
remove beac
than sexual
dolls that were used for lewd sexual
acts, there is reason 10 be concerned," she said "That they are
moving quieter on it now is a good

sign."

'

'

I..L White Sox stay on top with 7-0 win
. GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis
White Sox got another pitching
gem from Gation Justice, who
fanned 14 batters and tossed a onehitter 10 help pace his team to a 7-0
l;ittle League blanlcing of !he Gallipolis Yankees Thursday night.
. The offensive principals in the
Sox's allaCic were Kevin Wood (his
three hits put him one homer short
of hitting for the cycle), Ryan

Canaday (triple), Justice and Tim
Siders (one double each), A single
by Marie Wamsley was what separated Justice from a no-hitter.
The White Sox, 4-1, will take on
the last-place Gallipolis Athletics
Monday at 6 p.m. at the water
treatment plant fields, while the '
Yanlcees, 2-3, will face the Gallipolis Royals Monday at 6 p.m. at
Memorial Field.

farks &amp; Recreation
J.outh baseball ·

· PERSONALUED

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• t_

:.••
...

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am

W

L

..: .........................3
Sox-.........................3

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2
3
5

yals .....:.......................3
·anlcees ..........................2
's ....... :.......:..................0

:,
~
~

,

I

.

1:

2
IS ............................ .!
Jays ....................... .0
Orioles ............................0

'

1

2
2

2

McEnroe ...
(Continued from C-4)
to be rescheduled and the two
events clashed.
"When I was named to the Davis
Cup learn it was apparent that Ibis
would be a difficult lraiiSilion," the
32-)'elf-old McEnroe said. "I
wasn't necessarily expecting roo
much here because you build up for
Davis Cup and for Wimbledon but
that puts lhe tournament in between
in a difficult situation."
McEnroe will have to play his
vcty best at Wimbledon.
.,He is in the same braclcet as
defending champion Slefan Edberg,
U.S. ODen champ Pete Sampras,
(mmer Wimbledon champs Jimmy
Cpnnors and Pat Cash and the darigjlrous G00111 Ivanisevic.
. The Wimbledon comminee
us ually goes its own way when it
Cfl!Ties to seedings, bUt this year it
followed the rankings. That means
tl)at a clay-court specialist lilce
~ilio Sanchez of Spain is the No.
h seed, whereas McEnroe is No.

16.

Had Sanchez's COUDII')'Di8!l Sergi
Brugucra not been inJured, McEnroe may not have been seeded at
all .

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By ·EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
County Extenalon Agent
Atrrkulture
GALLIPOLIS - Last wedcend's
rain fall was welcomed by Gallia·
County farmers. Rainfall amounts
• were greatly scatlered with a range
of less than inch 10 around 4 inches'dcPertdfug upon location.
; Except for 5ome areas where the
heavy amounts of rain cams so fast
!hat flooding took place, the results
were very positive to crop growth.
Hot weather and very dry soils
again bro~ght stress to growing
crops by IDld-week.
Restaurant Association.
Wood, of Can·al Winchester,
Ohio, started with Bob Evans
Farms in 1954 as director of marketing. Most recently, he was chief
operating officer of the company's
resiaurants, before being named
vice chairman last year.
Bob Evans Farms owns and
operates 254 full-service, family
restaurants in 14 states. Bob Evans
Fanns also produces•and distributes
nearly 30 varieties of pork sausage
in 23 states and the District of
Columbia.
·

\

could not be immediately verified,
but they mean that all of Japan •s
"Bis Four" securities houses now
have been touched .by accusations
. of fVing Jnferential treatment to
·major investors. The four firms
have been h~ sharp drops ip
profits since
and tiond prices
began falling last year.
The luest companies brou_ght
into the controveny were Duwa
Securities Co. and Yamaichi Securities co·., Japan's second- and
fourth-laraest securities firms,
which alleJe&lt;l!y paid clients to offset losses m the fiscal year ending
Man:h 1990, Kyodo News Service
reported, quoting anonymous
Finance Mintstry sources.

Four Super America employees honored
LEXINGTON,' KY- Four
area Super America employees,
· Debbie Blake, Middleport, Marshall Tim Brown, KanauJ&amp;, and
Tammy McGuire and Pamela J.
Browning, Gallipolis, have been
recognized for Olitllandlag performance concemiq the com)l&amp;!ly' 1
Cus10111er Service Aware.u l'iogram accordlqto R. J. ~well
senior vice president and 1~

748 &amp; 750 East State Street - Athens, Ohio
PHONE 1593-1171

l

l

. TOKYO (AP) - A srock mar·
ket scan(jal widened Saturday with
reportS that two of Japan's largest
brokerage houses paid clients nlorC
than $72 million to compensate for
losses.
On Friday the world's largest
broke:age - the Nomura Security
Co. - and Nikko Securities Co.
acknowledged pa1.ments totaling
mae than $240 rmllion were made
to some of their wealthiest customers for stock losses..
Amid fierce competition for
clients since the crash or 1987, the
companies apparently have made
the reimbursements to keep from
losing business.
Saturday's new allegations

b'

Colu_mJ?U!, based i~ Wilmingron, vaiiing wholesale price . In fact,
Del., said 11 IS locked mt;o 100 many thai's about the same as the 49.9
old con~ts that force tlto pay up cents that h?meowners paid for
to four bmes the gomg rate for gas. natural gas m 1922, the earliest
That could cost Columbia $1 bil- year for which the government has
li~n, so it w.ill tty to persuade sup- records.
pliers to reviSe the contracts. If that
S&amp;Ls:
fails·, bankruptcy is the likely
The Bailout Bill Mounts
optiol);
Even if !he recession passes, one
Either way, consumers shoul.d big,problem is sure to linger: the
someday get lower rateS. Colu~blll savmgs and loan mess.
says: One consumer advocate wtshS&amp;L bailout chief L. William
es Columbia would go ahead and · Seidman told Congress that the
me' for bankruptcy to get things Resolution Trust Colp. would need
rolling.
. ,
.
.
$60 billion to ,$80 billion more to
Columbta s tumbhng stock f1msh the thnft rescue program,
dragged down the Dow Jones utili- about twice the amount. already set
ty average. Natural gas futures con- aside.
tmued to set new re;cord lows at the
Tl!e mone.y on hand should pay
New York Mercanule Exchange.
for the clos10g or rescue of 557
Natural Gas Week, an industty institutions through Seplembcr, but
publication, reported one deal out Seidman says he will probably
West for about 50 cents per 1,000 need the extra cash to take care o(
cubic feet, less than lialf the pre- another 355 hopeless S&amp;Ls. .

Rain eases Gallia drought conditions

Two more firms identified
in Japan's buyback scandal

DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.

orders are ill!-f s latest culpnts.
IBM Chairrn~ loi_Jn Akers has
also been blam108 ~u own manager~ ~nd w?rkers 1~ som~ wellpubhetzed tm1des, mcludmg the
comment that lb~y may be spe~dmg too much ume at the offtce
water cooler.
.
.
Most recently, 10 an elyctto~tc
?_~essage 10 \lffiPioyees, Akers S81d,
1 am convinced that some of our
people do not understand that th~y
hav~ a deeply personal stake 10
declining ';J!arket share, revenue
and profits.
•
.
~~a:'E~S
'Ex
C
ura 0 as
P1OSIOD' at
o1um 18
.
Gas. suddenly created a mmor
exploston 10 ~e financial markets
when Columb!a 9as _System Inc:•
one of .thd~ nauon s btg~est suppli·
er~. sal 11 was teetenng on the
brink of bankruptcy.

Farm Flashes

Jlllltag~ !lf SupcrAmcrica'l ~oulb·

ern DIVIIIOII.

.

Candidates are observed and
evaluated with respect to friendly
aaitude, ~· professionalism, efficiCDcy, use of intercom
and te1eDbone edquetle.
For their commitment to strvice
ncellcpr:t, lbe baaorDIIliCCiVed I
certificate of appreciati• and a
spcciii"Service Aaitucle" awud.

'

According to "Doane ' s" Ag
repon, pastures are good to excellent just about e)'erywhere (39 of
the 48 states) . Abundant gross is
helping to hold up stocker and
feeder prices and hold down cow
slaughter. Natioll!l,lly the pasture
sitpation is the besi sinee 1982.
· ~o~e economist feel that cur'
rent prtces for srocker and feeder
catde cannot be sustained in race of
the steep slide in feed cattle prices.
They say either feed cattle prices
must improve feeders will eventually be dragged lower.
Dr. Allan E. Lines, OSU Exten-

sion Economist, says that corn or any big changes in the weadier
exports arc not recovering. Export pattern.
inspections are 31 percent under a
The Gallia County Catdemen's
year ago. Production estimates for Association Summer Roundup will
this year are holding at,just under be held Friday, June 28, 7 p.m. af
8.3 ·billion bushels. Excellent crop the Bob Evans Farms S~lter
conditions throughout !"OSt or the House at Rio Grande.
corn belt support high yield optiThe di!lner meeting will include
mism.
the election of officers and direcI have seen yield "projections" tors and presentation of the Gallia
as high as 122 bushels per acre, but County Cattlemen's Distinguishect
it is really to early to be guessing. Service Awards . New O.C.A.
Weather will determine price Executive Director Rob Chapman
strength for the next several will be in attendance. Music will be
months. Whether you are buying or provided by ''Tad Free" of Chilli·
selling, be ready to take advantage colbe.
,
'Advance tickets may be pur4
chased from the followins: Tom
Woodward, Fred Vollbom, Jim 8i
Candy Baughman, Jay Crisenbcry,
Joe Foster, Maurice Toler, Marion
industrial, and private landowners 1'ree1! can lessen noise in an urban Caldwell, Dr. Alan Boster or the
esch ·year to ensure a sustained har- setting and act as windbreaks in County Extension Office.
'
rural communities without varying
v~t of ttees annually.
.
The American people own 28% topography.
Forests are responsible for many
of the forest land, which is managed by federal, state, and local jobs. The forest products industry
governments. Private corporations direcdy employs about 1.4 million
own 14%. The majority or the people. Additional jobs, goods and
nation's forests. 8%, are owned by services are generated through
private citizens. These forests com- 1recreation and other uses or the forbined , total about 740 million esL
Several methods are emJ!Ioyed
acres.
As mentioned before, trees are a . in tbe Mriestlng of trees. 'Selecrenewable resource because forest tipn, clcarcutting and seedtrce cuts
land can be easily regenerated with are some of the more popular in
!lew ttees. Annually we plant the use lllday.
Selection cuts, which are used
equivalent or two million football
primarily
in uneven-age stands, C8l1
fields worth of trees in the United
be
used
to
take cut lreeS of only a
States.
certain
diameter
or species. This
We have more forest land now
cut
can
also
be
used
to alter species
!han we did at the turn of the centucomposition
'so
undesirable
trees
ry. We will continue ·to have an .
can
be
eliminated
and
crop
trees
abundance of trees as long as we
continue to harvest only what we c'an have more space to grow.
Clearcuts, though controversial,
need.
Trees. positi,.ely affect our envi- are a necessary part of silviculture
ronment in a number of ways. They today. Clearcuts are made when an
PASSES STATE TEST. '
Arthur A; (Pete) Nibert, Galimprove the quality of air we even-aged forest is desired. These
breathe by filtering and trapping cuts are needed to efficiently
lipolis, has rec:elved word tbat '
pollutants. Trees also produce oxy- regenerate a particular species
be has passed tbe new Ohio
gen and utilize carbon dioxide. which is not shade tolerant. A Division of Real Estate's "
prime exilmple if Ibis would be oak
appraiser teat which be took '
regeneration on a west facing
on June l. Nibert, 11 veterau ·
slope . .Another tr¢e in our area
appraiSer wbo servei seveu' ·'
which requires full sunlight is tulip counties In southern Oblo, 'Is'
poplar. ,
the first Individual In thla area •
. .The seedttce cut is when an old · jo pass the examlnatlOD, wlllcb · ·
will be required by the federal ~
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Huffy stand is removed in one cutting,
govern.ment for all apprallen
Colp. has announced a three-for· except for a small number of seed
tw() stock split, effective July 12 trees left singly or in small groups. alter Jan. 1, 1992, aa a l'tllllt :
for shareholders of record July 3.
This ensures adequate seed for a or the recent Savings &amp; Loaa ··
problems.
They also will get a dividend or site which may not have had any
7 1(2 cents Aug. 1 for each com- new seedlings in the understory
mon share held July 15, the board prior to the cut.· This, too is a form Announce joint venture•.
said Friday.
· of even-aged management.
EVENDALE, Ohio (AP) - ·
That represents a 12.5 percent
There ~re at times, more to
increase in the quarterly dtvidend maintaining a•healthy forest than CFM International, a company SO 1
rate, raising annual dividends after just lettins other Nature run it's percent owned by General Electric
the stOck split from about 27 cents coilrse. The SCS office offers pro- c.o.~ on Friday signed a potential sl:'
a share to 30 cents a share. The grams to assist forest landowners btlhon contract to supply engines
· •'
· annual dividend would have with keeping their faests pest free, to !he Soviet airline AerofiOL
The deal was signed just 13 .
increased from 40 cents 10 45 cents vigorous, and producing mera share befae the spliL
chantable timber. If you need months after GE 's jet engine divi:t ·
The Dayton-based, company advice on harvesting, planting, ston, based in this Cincinnati sub-' '
manufactures bicycles, lawn and management plans or selling your . urb~ became the first Western·.:
garden tools and sports equipment, trees, co.ntaet Cindy Jenkins at446- eng!ne manufacturer to receive a·
including backboards for basketball 8687. Remember, a healthy forest Sov1et contract w1th a $150 million ~
order.
hoops.
is no accident!

What is a forest? ______;.,_.

Economic conditions

,.

Chevy Silverado
Sportside Pickup

L

0

cans lined up for unemployment .
benefits during the first week in
June, pretty much canceling out a
decrease or the same size a week
earlier.
Analysts said that could mean
!he economy has not yet bottOmed
out, or that the much-heralded
recovery is somehow getting sidetracked.
As the pqndits tried to make
sense of the conflicting numbers,
m~ bad news hit Wall Stn:et.
lnfemational Business Machines
Corp. told securities analysts that
its second-quarter earnings would
not be as good as they have been
pre&lt;Ucting.
IBM had said th~ same thing
durin~ the first quarier but this
time 11 found more to biame than
!he recession and .!he Persian Gulf
War. Pricing pressure from the

Money Ideas

Pee Wee League
(As of June 4)

~. . . ..........................
. . . . . . . .. . . .~·

~ it ~d liveD chalk up a first
birthday tbia SliiiiJJieC. ~ news
0!'. flictory ~den, ~ ~ and
hiring practiCes support lhlt VICW.
But the Labor Dqlartment's !atest n';U'Ibers on joblessness Clou~
the ptcture. Another 47.~ Ameri. competition and delays m customer

GALLIPOLIS - For many
people, the word forest conjures up
Robin Hood, Indians, or grizzly
bears. For these who are less
romantic, there is !he goal or backpacking !he Appalachian Trail or
viewing some remote virgin stand
Dftimher.
A forest is all or !he above and
much more. A forest is a combination of trees, other plants, insects,
wildlife, soil, water, air and people.
No~tter whether we live in the
country, the suburbs, or the city,
we come in contact with forests
and their many benc&lt;fits every day.
There are over 10,000 forest
productS !hat are used by Ameriof ignorance and inaccllr8Cy that cans daily. The average American
By STAN EVANS
exista when m!ljor changes in !he uses 8 pounds of paper a year. We
GALLIPOLIS -Present overall direction or the economy occur. · use 700% more paper products
conditions remain weak. Moie im- Second, whal we can an inflection !han we did I00 years ago.
portantly, the economy is at an in- · point actually is a process over time
Last year in the United States
flection point.
that ends a broad economic ttcnd.ln 2.5 billion trees were planted;
Namely, it is enother words, die current rcceasion is about nine trees "per person.
gaged in theprocnouiver, itisinthemidstof~ that
One mature tree (16" in diameess of changeover
will lead to its ultimate rcvcrsal.
ter) has the cooling capacity of
from recession to
Third, current conditions are op- lbree room air conditioners.
recovery. Thelatposite th3toflast1uly. The economic
Obviously, om forests are a very
est information
crosscurrents present as the steps to important renewable resource .
continues to poschanse direction unfold are again Hundreds or foresters nationwide
sessanincreasing
plarll!ghavocinintcrpretingthestate work continuously with public ,
bias indicating either a ''bottoming" · of the economy (not that the record in
' or improvement in economic condir less ~·changoa!lle" · tiDies is all that
. lions.
great). Fourth, the murkiness in interThe bulk of the "bits and pieces" pretation at an inflection point is
of available evidence from the vari- fuilber exacero.ted by the absolute
ous sectors of the economy generally lag in data collection (always a~
havesufficientttendtoconcludetbat: lem) and the seeming contradiction
1). lhe worst is over. 2). currently the that the difference~! in timing or lhll
economy is bottoming, Jn~g 10 response of lhe vanous sectors presrecover; and 3). growth will be re- ent.
stored in the second half or the year.
Consequendy, as we have done
The unique circumstances that above, much of what can be disprevail during the period of time at an cerned at inflection points - even
inflection point deserve additional the determination that the economy
comment. First, r:emember it rook is at an !nflection point - is done
nearly nine monlhs before the "offi. through tmprovillauon.
cial starting point" for !he recession (Mr. Evans ilan lnvettment Bracould be detelmined. ·
lltr for The Obln Comp811y in
This alone emphasizes the degree
their Ga!Upillil oMce.) '

Super Selection
Super l'rfeBS
A Winning Comlinatlon

(As of June 20)

!d!l!.te~Sox .......................4

l

MONUMENTS

----~~-

Wood is honored
for dedication to
. foodservice industry

L
1

Dolls....

(ContinuedfromC-5)
currences in the future," the team about the issue !hat they threw a
reporter out of the bleachers for assaid.
The Red Sox said there have king questions about !he blowup
.
been only two such incidents dolls.
during the 1991 se&amp;!iOII, and said
Ricl_lar.d Levin, a spokesman for
the club "makes cvcty effort to comrruSSioner Fay Vincent, said he
tnaintain socially acccpcable stan· has never heard of similar incidents
dards of behavior in order to allow in olher ballparks around the
all fans to enjoy lhe game in com- countty.
fort. tt
.
"We ccrt.ail)ly don't COIIdone that
Stepped-up security was in behavior, but we understand that
~vidence at the game Wednesday, the Red Sox have it under control,"
and the Red Sox were so sensiJive he said.

~W YORK - Is lhll_an eco-

n!?m~ recovery on the !Jorizon, or
will It tum out"? be a 1111J18e?

. s.ome fmancial gurus arc Jll7r·
mg ~to the czystal balls and seeang
a raptd bounce out ofthe recession,

~

hol1 Dlstrlbatlag, Paul Simon and Pat O'Brlea
of The Meigs County Golf Coarse, Sandy
IannareiU or the Melp Coulty Heart Aasocia·
tion and Jay Riepenhoff of Riepenhoff DistributIng.

- ----

June 23, 1991

Jlecovery signs tempered 'Yith bits of bad newS

Park District
. women's softbaD
Team
W
Fruth's
Pharmacy
............
;
..
S
.•
Mogte s..............................S
Stowaway ......................... .4

D

NEW SALESMAN • Gene
Goodwla, Middleport, has
joined lbe sales staff at SmithNelson Motors Ia Pomeroy.
Goodwin, wbo bas many years
or automotive experience,
resides In Middleport with bis
. wire, Sherry and sons, Nick
·
and Natban.

Huffy announces.
stock split

.

'•

'

Four from area attend.
recent banking session
ATHENS : Diana Kinder, student loan representative/lOan counselor; Paula Brennan, Plaza branch
manaaer; Scott Dillon. accountant
and Debbie Vollmer, Logan branch
managel of Bank One, Athens
attended !he 38th annual session of
the Ohio School of Banking, held
June 9-14 on the Ohio Unive{Sity
campus. The School is sponsored
by the Ohio Bankers Association.
Completing the freshmen year
of atudy, Kinder was among 229
banker students (104 seniors and
125 msbman). Brennan, Vollmer
and Dillon completed their second
year and graduated from the propm_n. Vollmer of Logan graduated
m the top six of the clasS because
of bcr 'acellcnt' wodt on her project "Bank One Customer Service
Product Handbook."

·- ....

MYSTERY FARM ·This treek's mlstery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soil aad Water
Conservation Dlstrlc:t, Is located somewhere In
Gallia County. Individuals wilblng to 'p&amp;rdc:l·
pate Ia tbe weekly conteat may do so by aueulaa
the farm's owntr. Jaat mall, or drop orr your
1uesa off to tbe Dally Sentlael,lll Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or tbe Galllpolil Dally
Tribune, 825 third Ave., Galllpolls, Oblo, 45631,
..

.

•I

aid you IDIJ win a $5 prize trom tbe Ohio V•J.
ley Publlsblnl Co. Leave your Dame, addrea
and telephone number with your card or letter.
No telephone calls will be accepted. All COIItest
entrlel abould be turned In to tbe Dewspaper
ollke by4 p.m. eacb Wednaday. In c:&amp;M of a de,
the aiel' will be clioeeD by lotter;y, Next week,
a Melp Co1n1y farm wlll be featared ll;r the
Melp Soil ad Water Conservation Dlltrlct.

•

•
••

·:
·.• ,
.~ :
:

�Pomeroy Middleport QaJIIpolls, OH P9lnt Pleeunt, WV

B:y Tile Allloclaled Press
TemperaiW'Cs wae ~ler in lite
Northeut early Saturday after a
scorching fint day of summer that
was martcd by violent storms in
the Plains, the Midwest and the
South.
Rain fell in the Northwest and
. lite Midwest SIIWday maoing. ·
ThundersiDmts Friday desuoyed
nine small airplanes in Missouri,
caused flash floods that swept

· Accu-Weather• forecast
MICH.

.

IMansfield I 79° I•

{)
o

W. VA.

Sunny · Pr. Cloudy

Cloudy

C1991 Acc4-Wee.ther, Inc.

!!EP pre-hearing
~conference held

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP)- A
man who hopes io clear himself in
the mutilation slayings of two
Logan teen-agers says his life is in
danger.
In December Dale N. Johnston
filed suit in Franklin County seeking a civil ~i lhat be did not
commit lite killings. But lite Ohio
auomey general's office said Johnston should have filed lite claim in
Hocking County and has asked lhat
the a~se be moved there.
Johnston tl&gt;ld a court in Columbus be fears fot his life if lite law·suit is moved 10 Hoclcing County.

ALJ?~RIA, Va. (AP) -

An Ohio h;igb school teacbcr who
pleaded guilty to federal charges of

.AI
tJ7

EAST

te~

Things could be more exciting than uaual where your work Is concerned In the
year ahead. Your proepeeta look lintrlgulng, ,nhough there are eome uncartalntlea connected.
CANCEII (.lune 21..,..., 21) YOU'll have
gooQ ld.a today, but you l)llghl not
June23. 1•1
know ·hOw to afleetlvely ,dlu.nlna1e
•7 •
'
'
'
•
your concepts to others. Take palM to
the lime could be ripe In !he year ahead state
your polnt.s clearly. MIJOr cilanQIII
fiat you 10 lniliale thai enterprlae you've are ahead
Can- In tha corning
lfilen preparing. Rely on your own judg- year. Seiid for
for can-•s ~o-Orepli
(!lent, not that of others, as to when you predictlona today. Mall $1.26 plus a
ahould do this.
long, sell·eddr-.1, stomped enveCANCEII (.luM 21......., 221 There lope to Astro-Gr!IPh, c/o this l1li
lllighl be a reluctenoe on your part to por, P.O. Box 91428, ~and. OH
"i&amp;ke a .buill,_. call until after the 4410 t-3-42B. Be sure to your ZOdijlleel&lt;end. HDWIMir, If 11 could be profh- ac sign.
able and the party Is reachable, you'd LEO (.lu!J D-Aug. ZZ) It you do not
bll wlae not to walt. c:.n-. treat your- think for youraelf today, INa
iell to a birthday gilt. Send lor Cancer's . qualltted
you may do 11 for you.
.§atro-Graph predictions for the year This couldthan
turn out to be a disappointtheed by meWng $1.25 pluaalong, aetf· Ing example Dl dalegaUng euthorl1y.
ilildreiMCI. atamped envelope to Mtro&amp;riiPh. clo thll nft&amp;P8per, P.O. Box VIRGO (AUO. II lapL 221 Tliere'l ~
t1428. Clewland. OH 44101-3428. Be .chanca atthls tm.,you may maet tiOI1Itlone new and '"trlgulng Who witt have an
eure to atate your zodiac sign.
Immediate Impact on your Hie. ~
t,IO (.lu!J D-0\lla. 221 Appoint yourself er, this relatlonahlp might end ~ly.
Cllalrman ot the SOCial committee today I.IBRA (hpl. ItS-Oct. II) UniNa Vau're
IMteed ot wailing on others to formuvery tactlul today, trtende may lliko Of·
~te plans that InclUde you. You're
IMndl wttl liter agree you piCked the fense ot your offerings of acMce. Even
though you'll "*" - · you could
!!llht Individual.
come oft looking lllta e know-It-ell.
W.OO (Aug. 23-llepl. 22) 11 you do SCOIIPIO
(Oat. :M Nuu. 21) •lsul'lly,
lomethlng generous lor a one to- you like time lo thlnlt thlnga through
a.y, don't c.ll attention ·to your deed. very c.refully. But you might
The lower your pronle, the greater your a dl...tce today by jumping to con.
Ilion.
clUsionS bettlre you've analyz8d all tha
(lepl. 23-0ct. 211 You have tactl.
mare In common than you think with an SAGITTAIIIUS (....,, 21-Dec. 21) Even
li\dlvldual you've recently mat but don't though you know better, you may lind
hilow awfully well. You may even have
mesmerized again today by a
In opportunily to compare notee·today. YOI/raelt
person Who haa duped you before.
M:OIII'IO (Oat. 24 Now. 211 One ol your ~nore past experioncell.
moe1 8PPMitnQ Cl*acterlstlcl today Ia C
ORN (Deo. ......... 11) In your
You&lt; open-minded,_. Becauae you're con-luna
Wilh tr1anc1a. today, you
w1111n0 to Mlten to vertou1 viewpoints. may ba ao buay
Hstanlng to what you
9011 may 1Mm eomethlng o1 lm,..,se have to aay that you won't hear tha conatgnlftclncl.
atrucllw lnfomwlluot thay have to olllr.
fACIITTAIIUa (....,, 21-Dec 21) You AQUAIIIUI (.laol. • FaiL 11) In your
INY - a n ln.. MIIna experience to- anxiety to gat an aealgrmant done
day 11181, altlloUgl1 " might not be signlf· qulcttly tud8y, you may allow tha WFOftl
lint In 111111, OOUid allow you hOw to ac- Pl&lt;llorl to halp you. Sadly, - lndlvtdljlmlllllll aMihlng you've been .... may bungle the oparatlun.
= t o dO.
II2ICII (Pall. • M •111 II might bll
ONI (11M. ......... 1t) Your wiN
to l18y .-y 1n1m a 111t1111 n.ut.•
tll1llllllllmo Is elllllly arOUNd today by man1 that COUld 11trac1 1001 . . you
~ IIOPMiila of • OOINMI cfal or ftnan..
dlalllle today. l3o eomeabu}OU k..,.. - · ......... thll Is bee..... you can have tun. not 1 pi- w1ww
,.,... lnettiiCia- t.-Jng you' that theM you'l 1811 Ut-lor11111e.
~· (Minliii'I-A!IItl 1t) In ..,......
MUMIUI
a M. 111 The last . ttve
11~111 today, ,au'oe men
lllord lhaukl be ,... ........ today In Hklllyda\
to be trlpped up by yaur oan lldl. . .lng • aott.oll ... llnMclal cMdalon.
felaoiCI or t.c1t 01 Nll-cOttlldll.- t111n
r - · IIIII doll not mean you hiMt
andc aeblld-..
hOpe
I
cP-IL.
:IGIIn ora to to_,_ tllalrallle........
, WOU'I
... fUiftlad today, H'a lmporgm you have to adhaN 10 methodlell ~
fotll un IOIMihlng you .... 11 a labof of duree. W1wi an abMrict Dl Oflllt...,
flwe. Tllla will give you.,_.., gratlflca- tlon
daleet
ln.
IIDn 11181 anrtJIII'IIIN you COUld do.
•57 II (VIr 21..,._ . . 81 OINfUI
•111 PI
lt-Aplll 1tl Even how you , . . , .
wllh
)!Iough ,au'l 10cu1 illllii1111N• on your fr1encla today, Nt*IIIIV N.,.,.,. II In....... ,au lliauld IIIII bll .... to aMo- VOlved. Tliere'a a poeslblllty 1 ~
p.1e
IOCIII8CIMIIM.

+QI072
.Q73Z

+u

+J 109

do,_...,

..,...,.........
c-.

M

~~~::..a;.::.:::.

..

lUff-.

'*

--

...,._._flit

~ lliauld be ~lind' tun..

wll-lta..,

lnVOtt;.,.,..

tNratandlng could ...... -

_,

If _

..

bllha- Nlllahly.

••

"My life has been threatened,
bolh directly and indirectly, by persons ~ ~ockin.\i~u~ly," Jo~nston S&amp;ld m an
vtt supporting
.his request "I believe my J.ife ~ be
at great risk should the proceedings
be assigned to Hocking County."
In an affidavit asking that the
trial remain in Columbus, Johnston
nored that Hocking
Sheriff
Jim Jones ordered him Jailed in
neighbtrlng Pickaway County after
he was.indictcd.Jones had said he
could not guarantee Johnston's
safety in Hoelting County.
.
A crowd outside the Hockmg

Countr

+Ks

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

'

Eut

Pus
Pus

Pua
Puo
Pau

Opening lead:

'It' s a

+K
'

man's

world
By P~llllp Alder
There iJ a common bridge ex pression: "Never III!Oitl a boy to do a man's
job." lt meaas that if you are taking a
ruff and can afford to ruff high, you
abould do 11t1; don't take the unnecessary r11t of being overruffed.
Sltt1n1 South, you reaeb six hearta
West leadillllhe club king. How would
you try to win 12 tricks?
At li111t glaDCe, South's bidding looks
aqreulve, liDCe be has only 14 highcard poinll. But what a 14 points! With
ao lew killen he can easily use Black·
'wood and go to six hearts.
West wu tempted to bid two notrump ovw two hearts, the 'un·-··•
...._.
no-t.namp• llbowing length in both mi·
nura. But the vulllerabiUty wu against
lllm, and a- It wu clear the oppoDlllll bad the balaDCe of polllta, he
didn't WMt tO tip off North-llotdh that
the IAIHIWNIOIDC to break badly.
Dec.._ WM very bapjly wben the
lhmtmy wu tabled. It looked like an
-Y job to restrlc:t hll lole111 to one
trump trldl. He won the openlnctead
whit thmuny'a clab ace, cu1tet1 the
apade A-1 and diaotGnd A·K, and
ruffld 1 cllan.d with the heart nine.
Dtaar!.-1 Ear! tlftl'ruffed with the
lleart q - and returoetl a tl'tllllp,
lae9lal declarer satldletl with a dla-

n.t!'-r.

c,_,,.,

...,.lc•
vldueta wt,o have mentel re-

+z

West

lndlvlduo.. or
eQanciH lor tha oaoNIInotlon, m""ago"**t, and provlalon of ld.,tlfled &amp;UIJportod living HrVioeo far lndlvkluolo pr-tod horaln.
a.lod propoaalo wll bo rocelvod ot the 8-d Dffloa.
Guiding Hand
Scr-t.
Ohtu untl 10:00
a.m. Eastern 8tandord lhM
IESTJ an July I , 1181.
Dpanlng of blclo wHI follow
lm-toly. ·
Rofer-lndlvlduola for
thlo prapaool wMI require a
varying range of oarvlco aptlona and will po-u o wlda
ronp of abllltlso. •• contolnod within _ , lndlvltluol
oarvloe proflloo. lndlvltluol
HrVIco prollltio are IOVailto po-lst propoaal ....
pandsnto far puJPU- of re·
and davolopment of In·
dlvldual -panolva proposals. Protloa wUI oloo bo In·
cludocl In the RFP p...oto
which will bo dliotrlbutod
during the Pre-PropaHt
Tho opproved OM'VIc•
mon11111r will provide or·
tlculltod
tor lndl·

.K.J!0165
tAKU

Soootli

-

w~ tranlllliWng fro~ his rac!io~ viii parked m a Sft'rli!lg,

U.S. attorney, said Haas admitled
in his plea agreement be made a
similar call 10 the Prince William
County depenment ill Ju:T.!~·
FBI agents arrested
as be

west: in the 60s and 70s tn the
Great Lakea J'Ciion arid New England; lite 70s in ~ Na;them P~
and ~ong the Calif~ coast; the
80s m lite Cen~ Plains, .the Midwest an~ the mtd-Atlanuc ~;
lite 90s II! most of lite ~lh. and
.over 100 m a ~ stmcbing from
southern Anzona through the
Te:us ~
.
.
The high for lite n&amp;!J?n Fnday
was 1071jegrees at PJ'esidio, Texas.

Situation

EARN ·IIONIY Ro II 11 - ·
atl,tiOOiyr. ""'ontlll.
Dotolio. (11 - - - E l l . y.
EAfY WORK! EXCEUEHT Poyl

14

~J

Bon

Or Laoclod. IMilldJntl

11

•

0ooct Y1n Equip.

...... PI- 01 IIH-. DIIOiftr
UMing 1-11111-2411-.

8

wanted

-.
=

Yooro Vornilblo
&lt;ml E~p~~to,_,, 311 Canto IIIIo

Na•dall: RocMn

Otor 3111 _ . . . . , . . . - -

..._._Thlld-.
-.011-.

BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE

Olo " ' l i t

PUBLIC AUCTION CONSIGNMENT SALE
EVERY FRIDAY NIOHT 7:00P.M.
locetlon DAY Building on Rt 311 Bypaas
Conalgn-nt taken fnlm 10:00 to 11:00 dsy.ot ule.
NEW AND USED MI'RCHANDISE
Terms: Cuh or check •ilh !KoPer 1.0.
0001 PRIUS

Nudtd. AOOIIII I llolrd In 0..

AUCTIONEER, DAVID BOGGS. lie 4596
Gllllpolis. Ohio - 614-«&amp;-nso

Wll

LlcenHd .,d Banded In Stoll of Ohio
Not reapanolblo lor accidents or loss of property .
Would you H1to to havo e ........ Contact
DAVID BDQOS 814·441•771i0

If oely Soulll lWI aent the man to
work rat111r 111111 the boy. He alloald
nff the low *IT Rd whit the beart
.,., aat the aiDe. He retuma to band
with a elllb nlff and trumpa bla 1aat dlamaad ~ tilt llllrt llille. Now II
tloasa't matler thai Jt:ut. overruffs declarer baa no t.an left.

Coii14-24M7tll.

Fmanc1al

-=

s -Lawn..,
For Trton
Lown
Moll!lon.-,I

SPECIAL MEETING
NOTICE 18 HEREBY 01·
YEN, That thoro wHI be o
mooting of the Board of l'du·
cation af the Oolllpatlo City
&amp;cr-1 District.
Oollla
County, Ohio, on the followIng daya:
Jul!l 24, 21. 21. 1191 ot
4:30 P.M.
The purpaH of-h meeting wll bo ta hold a -.olive'
-'&lt;lnl to ciiCUIS poroanno! 1Ntt8fa, Eoch -lngwlt bo held ot the odmlnlotr-o afRcM locoted 11
11 State Stroot. · Oollpotlo,
Ohio.
·
June 21, 1981
Ellen M. aorty
Jullil

23. 1881

TrNeur•

Business

· Opportunity

ear.: -

Lono'o ChMd
T~
Apptlcltlono For Child CorL

!NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY

1'wO O!&gt;lnl-. SilL AHorcloblo,

PUBU8HINQ CO.

P - tloopond 10: Box With Lumrng ActlvMIM, Cor- ...O..monclo that you do ..,11with poopla you know, ond
_c/o Oolllpolio . DoUr. tlflocl . , County. Qoocl -NOT to
oond . . _ througn lho
Trlbune1..125 Third Avonuo, Go • Roloronce. So.m.-l::ltlp.JW. Mon- moll
until you hove lnvoatfgotocl
day Thrv Frlda.t::;;:', Porter,
Upolls, ...,lo 4!1e31.
lhe otlorlng.
Vlnlon ArM. IS
1.
OWnerJOperator with ll'lctor,
muat have wet llne1 w. eupply lllso Poulo'o Dey ear. Contor. Arthur's .Choln Unk Fonco.
trailer, 1-100-1'714871 uk tor Sail, •tfDrdaiM, chldce,., 11-f Roltclontlot, Commorcill, In·
~

dultrlll, FIW EatlmotMI Com-

5:30 p.m. •
a•1.1t1.
._ • lftor
..-.

I

I IlL

AYIIIablo:

Coli

r.o'Z' su...,.lolon
su,.,loor Far• eaWill
..

21!1-10.
Drop-lnl
welCOme. eu ••• 1224. NeW ln.
lint Tocldt. Cora, 114 4411:127.

Diota lnatalatlon. PlioM: eM!114-1277.
'

Bu-tor Silo DollY Bor IIIII
A-u10nt, tut toocl, hot toocl
1 Nlocl bor8. It Rt 124, 1 mi. ott
Rt 7 tawordo tlulllncl, coli 114-

llobllo Homo lor waah
Wor1Jina .......
clft304-17B-1214.
Wllh - . Dllturboil
Papulllion
1n An.Countr

lllii,.lll'.-

Toom

11124414 or "2·2370.

WUI II tloQuloocl TO
-Some DlraciStrvlco.
Minimum Uconioure lloaulooclls
AniL

Problomo • lluot Sill
-~~~~ Routo, t2 Popol m•·
Will build patio ........ doc:1aol chinH, Gal .. l Melga, emalllnrooms, put up vinyl -tmtnt.-2.
......, Nogotlablo. Moll - - siding
or lrolor lklrtlng. eMTo
SOnd10
llcFIJiond,
· -•nd eantoJO, Inc. 412 Vln- 245.se57.
•ton Pille. Oolllpolls, Ohio 41131.
Will ataty With older!)' - n In
: EOE/AA Emptoyor.
tholr homo or hoopltol 11 night,
' Pooltlono Avol'*-: Cllnlcol M- 304..75-1816.
'-latoo • Naoclod For Our
In llld·
·Youth Crlola Contor, To WIU wash and wa ca,. tor 1 Teo"'"' tor- er , Pfovtclo OIJOCI
Coro For rouonoblo omount, 1114-1'12- rltopart, Ohio, lpoil1lllont OYII'•
ChlldNn In Crlo11 And Shift 8u- 2020 lllk lor Dink.
~--- lllg!ltlabla. 304porvlolon For Stall. R•
' qui-a: Vollcl Drl-'o
' U..., Flrot A1c1o And CPR
, Trolnlng; Aoooclato llogNO Or
lWo Yooro CotloQo CourN Work
. Whh Conc:ontrollon In Sac ill
11 Help Wanted
"•WOJI&lt; Or ~· Or High
uivlloncr
lWo , ..... Of ·-lot
DIRECTOR OF PATIENT ACCOUNTING
- Expo- With Aclolo-.to
Exchlng opportunity available lor an Innovative inAnd Ev- 01 Continuing
~- Rliatod To Tho a.;
dividual to direct all aapHto of the Pationt Achovlorll Sclonco Ftold. SOIII'J
counting Qopartmont from tha reglotrotlun pro·
Nogotloblo.
Moll - ·
- To
caaa through the fiiMII collootlon.
Sli\dro
llcFollond
Woocllond
Cont.,. Inc., 412 Vtnton Ptko,
Wa. "!'e aaaklngagoal oriented Individual. TheoucQolllootlo, Ohio 45631. EOEI,U
. Employer.
caaaful candidate wll po-•• tha leedenhlp end ·
vlalon to eupervlee omptoy•• and will bo reaponslRoglal•ocl Nurn, Up To
ble fur policy, planning, directing, organlrlng and
$52,000/yr. • FrM Houilng. 8
mo. oxp. 1-i00-423·17:ltl.
controlling the pationt account• araa - to Include
accounts recalvablo. outpat!Mt and emergency to·
Bauth-orn l'nJbotlon Troot·
glatntion. bAling. credh and colioctlon.
mont Altornotlvo (SEPTA) Contor ,7 W. Twenty-111M Dl. Nolau.llflcotlunolnclud• 3·&amp; yooruxporionceau 01·
oonvllle, Ohio 45714
rector of Patient Accounting In a hMhhcare HI·
""lnct
an~.:,. To
ling;
• waottlng knowledge C!f • computerized bil·
. Your IMal Ohio lu101u 01
ling/Information
svotem; proven ln-dopth working
~ Ser•le• Olftca.
knowledge of -lthcore rolmbu....,...nt and reguDllottptlono Aro
Anlloblo· For • R~tlow AI Tho
latory'-· An underpaduato dllgl'ee Ia required.
OIES Olllco. -lne For Ap.
Attrectlva aalory • ...,llflt poak.....
ollootlono lo ....... ao. 1811. , _
Send reaume In aonfld.,oo to:
lng O..~llllon Is aa lollowo.
· fljaldel'll Supei'YIMN', Annuli
P.O. Box 721 V- C/0 The
Sentinel ·
SIJary • I17,2M minimum.
111 Coun Street 411789
Spoclollzocl
Skills
IIIII
KnowlodiJI: 110-omMII ond
SupervisOry oklla,liMJVIowtng lr---------------------------------""11

------------------11 HelpWanted

9 Wanted to B
AVON • All •-· Coli llorllyn
=-~~--:-:-,....U.:Y.,...,....., Wuvor --2145.

t::oftltilol• -•hold or Eatatool

plio.- locolly lor
Any typo ol tuml..,., op- Anower
Natlonwlclo
Co. Mt I porHime
plloo ro , llltlquo'o.._ !AC· Also
or wll tro~ring 1-llely
.......... IVai'*'. VM-;z4J1.8152. utrelftlly
•
, lei-lui!
Uood ....,.. Homoo, Call 114- no...-, .f 1:\£::pm, IM-

Aiii'Ouncrnw r1t•,

._...Annul, Gottt,aiiL

ltop At ExoolsiGr 011 Co. . .
Exit

!loin

~~-

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

Jull-aRuiOooolne.

lor

eo:

tklllt; knowtedgl of human
relalkww; knowtedge of corrwc•
tiorw 1nd )Ill 8tlndtrde;
knowioclgo ot ulatr proctlcoa
ond prociodiWH; oblllly 1o work
under ltrenlul cOndttlona·

oblllly to 011lntaln roconto iiiid
- o rvutlne raporto; oblllty
to
IIIII rnalntoln ottoc·
live
ng rolatlonlhlpo with
relldents; ueoct.tea; -.era
vloora; ond tho g_,l public;
.!:1;Ions
to - l u ollnarmol
ond loka oppropialo
octlon, skill In orol on&lt;! wrlttan
communlcationa.
Supervlt•
lho r - . In tho SEPTA Con· ·
tor:2:·provld• •.~~eurtty 1nd au•

44f-H42.

":':!:

3 Announcement•

Enploymcnt Srrv1ccs

-II11

HelpW&amp;ntld

Gallia Co. Fund
Raiser Day

$100..00 A Dlyl Pre CUI phone

tor clololio Nnd

IZ.OO to Pom OOUthln, SR 181,
R-vlllo, OH 45772
~y
. PROCESSING
-For
·
·PHONE,
Piooplo CIUOnt..
You To At
Circler.
lnlo 1-ltJ0.73Hi87 Ext. 1122.

se.oo to se.oo por lioUr, Avon
Frw Gift, ceii1~M-G10.

t
functions. Supervl ... two
ret ent monltora per thlft.
Respontlb.. tor counlt1 ~.

(raft Show

and all roPCJ!IIng luncllono. Min·
lmum Quollllcotlone: Valid Ohio
Pooco Olflcor CaJtlllcatlon, two

11 to 8
Sot., June 29

In

Galllpolla
&amp;

In IMIIICIIY of lhl fill

R". Al

Pt. Pleasant
. &amp; VIcinity

VIlli .... Gi.- 1118 ......._

.

llod,- .......... - -

Hotia•• -------''
~~,~~.

Immediate openings for
rt&amp;istered nul$ts to
work in Medical-Surgical or Special Cart Unit
-full and part-time positions. Salaty commensurate with experience.
Excellent fringe bene- ·
fits.
Contact:
Rhonda Dailey,
RN, RSN •
Dirtctor of Nul$in1
Veterans Memorial
Hospital
115 E. M~~norial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-2104, ext. 213

answering machine, dishes, glassware, vases, glasses,
planters, cnrats, humidfiar, electric impa"' wrench, Stihl 056
chain saw, hydrau'ic pumps, cyfinders good for wood splinar.
eklctric wire, n~ls. 4 chain .binders, hydraulic hoses, fittings,
V·bells. log tumor teeth, drag chain, roils of sawill, belting

"MISC."
Lawn Boy push ' mower, bicycle, sled, wheelbarrow, misc.
hand tools, weedealer, Craltman tool box, m•sc. tools, pony
cart, saddle holder, horseshoes pitching.

·new, sway bars fortraier, 318 chains t 0-00 20' rims and and
tires, auxiliary aut riggers.

JUDITH l.

ALLENWORTH
ADMINISTRATOR
Case #26995

AUTOMOBILE: 1979 Plymouth Arrow Pickup, 4 cyi. , 4
speed.

AUCTION C:ONDVc:TED BT

DAN SMITH

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

AUCTIONEER

57-68-1344 Ohio
515 W. Ya.
Phone 614-949-2033
Cash: Terms
Positive ID.
Refreshments

LUNCH

MEDICAL HELP: RN or LPN tor
oucta lor _ . , .,..

chilli

Earn ihe bigge~l paychecks ip the htlcking industry wilh CRST. one of
!he nation ·s lop ten long-haul carrie IS.
'Top pay.
• Career advancement opponunilies.
·• Pension and profil·sharing plan.
' Quanerty
bonuses.
• No experlfnu necessary. We'll pay lo 1rain you
' insurance.
and you'll be on ihe road in lhree weeks.

,......, ""' ,._

773-5785

OWNER: BILL and SHARON

AUSTIN
TERMS: Cash or Check with I.D.
Not Responatbta For Accld'"l:l Or los. 01 Property
llt:enud &amp; Bonded In OhlQ, Ky. &amp; WV 166

Not responsible for accidents or toss of property.
Anouncern111t by auctionHr like precedence over
· printed matter. ·
Real Eatate General

Real Eatate General

''THE PREnlEST
what'the owner tol~ us.
vites commendation. A
home with living room, dming room,
room.
large kitchen and 2 baths. Siluated on a pic·
turesque 3 acres. m/1, wooded sett•ng w1lh access
to large Jishing pond. Own with pride. $93,500.
fHi03

FINAllY ASTAlTER HOME YOU
HAVE TO
FIX UPit You witt need lo see this 3 bedroom with
recently replaced vinyl s1dmg, roof and guttering,
plumbing, 200 amp. etectnc service and new gas
furnace. large family room. 2 full baths, conveni·
ent laundry room and pnvate patio. Th1s oppor·
tunijy is only mmutes from town on St. Rl. 141.
City schools. $49,500.
NilS

LOCATION - lOCATION - LOCATION - Ask
anybody! Location is most important when sel.ect·
inga home. Here'sa6room home on I acrewHha
great view ot the uver and only 5 m1les from town.
Includes 3 bedrooms, fireplace, lull basement
ga1age and bam. $59,500.
f116

·1" .,. ...

FOR STARTERS, IT HAS ALL OF THE ESSENTIALS
including a very reasonable P!ice tag. 3 bedro~m
ranch in a convenient tocahon mcludes liv1ng
room family room. eat-m kitchen and bath. Newer
carpet m most rooms.Heat pump with central air.
larJe flat lot within 2 m1les of town. Pnced to sell
at $43,500.
*500

Minimum age 21 years.
The difference between driving a lruck and a career in trucking.
Find .out more about acareer wi1h CRST.
Colll·B00·7JJ.z778. Ask for ihe CRST Recruiler.

Moft.frl, no w..un. or
holldeyo. bonllh
potk\190.
PINU eubmlt r'MUIM 10 J. 8"elilrny~8 Chillicothe St., Sullo

FULL AND PART-TIME
NURSING FACULTY

Slale Fenn MuMum Dnctor:
... king 1nthllllaatlc creltlve

The University of Rio Grande ennounce1
the opening of full and psrt-tims positions
for msmben of the College of Nu111ing Faculty. The111 poaltlona are available for the
Fall Quarter IAuguat, 1991 ).

103;

1mouth, OH 45M2.

po10on wlih good vorbol ond

-

written tkllll, who mMII public
will. Management akllla 1 must.
Slloi'J JWgo!loblo. O..dll,.. lor

lcotlon: JulY t, 1811. Aplont evallable 81 the WHI

Examine our
utwo-step" mortgage
before you buy.

nll Stlte Farm Mueeum, At.
1 471, Point PlooNnt, WV
Phone 304-175-1737.

1

255110.

~-·..,
tlon.

10qulrod with approllcl-

lWo poll u- LPN'o neoclocl lor
12 11M 1 - to bo II bod) LCF
taclllly. Pey commeniUI'Itt wHh
•xporlenco. Contoct S.rlli !lor-

cum, DON1 _!1"!!..Ha_, or Point

MEMBER FDIC

PIM.anl, ;JM1f~t-1001.

Wol!locl: Exportoncod tlopolr
Tochnlclan. u ..t lo Ex·
In R...... rotlon lea
llochlnoo, Chli-. And HVAC
Equl_.. l'to!IM Soncl
11ooumo Or wodl HIMory To:
CLA 071. GIO Oollpotlo Dolr
Trttluno.
825
Thtrd - - · Qo~
llpotlo, OH
41nt.

...,..ncocl
SHORT-TERM TRAINING FOR A
JOB WITH A FUTURE!

Reaponaibilities of the poaltion include inttruction in unclergrllduate nuraing classes,
ttudent sdvialng 11 neceaaarv. and ap·
pointment to unhte111lty commltt"' " required.
A M attar's Degree In Nuning Ia required.
Conaldaration will be given to thoae appli·
canta with a BSN. R.N. licensure in Ohio is
required. Previous teaching experience is
helpful.

Interested paraona ahould aend a letter of
lnteraat. current reaume and copy of transcript before thll deadline of July 6, 199110:
Ma. Phylll1 Mason. PHR
Peraonnel Officer
Univereity of Rio Grands
P.O. Box 919
Rio Grande, OH. 461174
Tho Unwolty of Rio Orenda Ia. on Equal
Opp-nlty AfRrmatlvo Action l!mplovor

• P'IIIIIICial Aid available far thole who qutlliiY

PATRIOT

MASON, WV

SPRING VAllfY AREA! - Very well cared for
mamtenance free ranch home 1n excellent ne1gh·
borhood. Home includes 3 bedrooms, eat·ln
kiiChen lormal dming room, living room with at·
tractive' f11eplace and family room with another fl·
reeplace (with msel). Good storage, 2 car garage
w~h breezeway outbu ildmg. Gas heat llow billsl.
central air Pnced to sell at $84,900. Extra lot and
8.38 addii•onal acres for sate also. Please don't
hesitate to call today. Call Dave at 446·955.5.

HEADS WILL TURN TO TAKE ASECOND LOOK at
th•s 3 bedroom recently redecorated horne that IS
brimm~g w/comlort. tlnng wilt always be pleasant
1n tne attractiVe lorrnal dining room, 3 bedrooms,
nearly new carpet. full house att1c fan. enclosed II
bath with shower in full basement. Gas he.at. cen·
tral air. Oon't be disappoinled by a sold s•gn. See
thiS one now' Kyger Creek schools. $58,000.
.
.815

~229

llochoillco And Bodr Poroono
Avolloblo.

• Pl'DIACertiW/UAW Appotijd
• Cmunen:iaJ Drrr• Licen1o (CDLI prepmticm
• Job Seln:b Allilllla altered
• W..atq ..t Wlllll:mdc~M. available

tltrilllltw...., .....
for IIMir ,.,.,., vlllte,
oanll IIIII RoWifl . . .
lllr .... lllnlla. lip II IIIIi
dooiOrl II Yllnne
Mlmor111 end Fllhlf

more.

NEW LISTING WITH QUIET COUNTRY SUR·
ROUNDING$! - Very nicely decorated ranch
home perfect for startmg. Located al the end of a
qUiet lane, th•s 3 bedroom home Is ready to move
into. Fully equipped eal·m kitChen. dmmg r~J?m .
· lrvmg room with altractive hreplace and mce,
large lawn. all make thiS the home for you. Pnced
at $59,900.
8228
PRODUCTIVE FARM FOR SALE - Very
picturesque and produciiYe, lh1s 190+ acre farm
along Raccoon Creek Is a very good buy at
$135,000. Localed along Northup·Yettowtown
Road. has approx. 1,000 H. of creek frontage, 75
m/1 acre tillable, 60 acres pasture. 4 farm
buildings feed lot operation m one; 3 spnngs. I
pond, 2800 lb. tobacco base. silo, grain bm wHh
dryer and more. 2 houses. Main farm house has
been remodeled , other house currently a rental.
Call for more '"fo.
·
•230
PLENTY OF PRIVACY - You'll be surprised at
how much privacy this home offers white still
being wrthin 5 minutes from everythmg. Very well
maintamed country slyle ranch also offers over
2900
sq. ft . ol comlortable liVIng spa.ce. large
1
country k1tchen will allow your •magtnatwn plenty
of room to do many thmgs w~h . format dining
room. formal liv1ng room with fi!eplace, very
attractive den w1th another fueplace and
hardwood floors. J.4 bedrooms wrth space lor
additiOnal rooms to be fimshed wilh little cost
Lots of extras 1nclud1ng screened·m porch,
·garage. parkmg lor 3' cars plus workshop area,
storage and more. This •s a very mce home and
must be seen to be app1ec1ated tully.
f212
NEED ALOT OF BEDROOM SPACE. but don't have
a large budget? Here's 4 bedrooms on a large lot
w~h garden space. Several outbu1idmgs and
porches. Pnced at $37,000.
8217

IT. 7 LOCATION walt kept home 1n
area includes 3 bedrooms, large fam•IY room,
basemen! and inground swimming pool. Easy to
heat and maintain. Great starter home! ~213

VERY ATTRACTIVE HOME for the fam1ly movmg
up or starting out. For $54.900, you're buying 4
bedrooms. 2 baths. livm·g room and family room.
Very mce eat·in kitchen wrth oak cabinets. Garage
and nice deck. C1ty schools.
*206
PRICE REDUCED TO $75,000!1! - On this very
n1ce bl·level pnvately settmg on a 7.75 acre tract
along Raccoon Creek. Very nice 3 bedroom home
which includes 3 bedrooms, 2 4 baths, large
family room wrth kitchenette and woodburmng
fireplace . Nice deck overlooking creek w1th patio
undernealh. Located only 5 miles from town. but it
see!IIS like a million wrth all the privacy. N700
VERY bfSIRABLE HOME now used as a double
rental located in the city a( the corner ot Jrd and
Spruce Range and refrigerator furnished in both
umts. Separate front and back entrance. Storage
building and children's play area behind home.
$38,900.
.
.300
UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY - . Newly listed brick
ranch wh•ch displays a beaullful livmg roorn wrth
cathedral ceiling and cross beams, 3 bedrooms,
very n1ce enclosed porch Which is useable year
round, formal dining room and roomy, affractive
eat·ln kitchen with an abundance of oak cabinets,
2\i ba!hs, oversized 2 car garage and more. The
house rests on 45 acres which Includes a 48 srte
campground and 3 ponds. Give us a call for more
informatiOn.
N214

• Jlall.gn trabtiq I No home IIUdy

Fra Yf1!11n8. w..,.. to

Hlrt1011, lhl nur111 IIIII

Startlnt pay
$22,000 to $33,000

Nooclocl. All Shllla
Cllllt4-441-PART.

-=-.:zze

==--· -.

located at 612 Grant St., Middleport, Ohio.
Watch for signs on Hartinger Parkway. This
is the personal property otthe lata Flossie
Allenwo.rth.

portonca.

•••
•- •
'

Apjlooxlmllaly 431C111 with &amp;year old houst. Thrtt bedrooma,
2bltha plus a full ba~~menl.1.06 acr11 m'l with ll~trlc, wallr
andaapUc.
·
Th/1 proptrly btlng o/lfrtd by Homtslead Really
Sltldy Ounn,Broker
Terms 01 Salt -10't. Down Non-Rtfundable Earnatl Money
(RI'SERVED SALEI
• Balance At Closing
for Information on Rial Eslltt, C.lt 67S.S540
I MA.ES SOUTH OF POINT PLEASANT TO CRAB CREEK ROAD,
2.SIILES OUT CRAB CREEK ROAD, TURN RIGIII', 8110 MR.E.
HOUSEHOLD I MISCELLANEOUS: Matching plaid sola
and loveseat. gold living loom suite, swivel rocker. mahoganr
china, mahogany dropleal tabla; 5 pc. dinette, desk. c:l1est
and lhsser, while desk, piano (upright), 2 matching chests,
cabinet 2 wall units, sawing machine, Sears 19 aJ . It
treezer, 36" electric range, dishwasher, stereo, lypewriter,

r.ctJona or ltw enfOfcement,
rurs •u~aory ••·

614·245-5363
For A looth.

'•

lO:OOA.M.

two

Exhibitors Call

'

REGISTERED
NURSES

.SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1991
10:00 A.M .

to four yura expertenc. In oor·

Many OtMr Evtntsl

..

Help Wanted

Com--

Spoora, 304-175-'1421.

Tap Fw: AH Old u.a.
C.., Qolcl Rtnao. ~
81- Coins, S't.irtlna.
~ M.T.S. Coin Bliop, tit

ac:

r..':t"7rarn

5•.zott
AUSTAAUA WANTS YDU . ,
- t o buy, 81ondlna dmbor,
Poy,
._flto,
loll Wltlomo I 8ona ~ Excollont
Tronoportotlon, 4G7·215-7100,
11441.
t\i,~ lo.m.·1.0p.m. Tott
Wlintocl to buy, wuher I otry.r
In WW1dnil caOcltlon, coli obor 4 AVON I All AI'Oiiii'· I Shl~ey
p.m.1144DZ-1103.

11

THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1991

·Sc-

Wlntocl To luy: Junk Auloo
Corrlara Nooclocl: Tho Dolly
with or 111ithoul motoro. Coli Trl..,...,
Ia ..,lkllng 1 llot ol
Lony Uvotr. 114 311 ao3.
-ntlol corrJ.,., If you .,. at
Wllntod Teo luy: llondlna Tl!it- iooot 11 ,..,.. old, dapondoblo
.... Top PrieM Pold FCII'"WhMo IIIII wauld Ukll to oarn your ~ I Alii. CoN Ill• 7p.m. lt4- ~lng ....,.,., cal to hove
your AlUM put on our carrier
3P-7111.
lilt. OoUipollo Dolly Tri....... •

===~=~~

IItty..

21

CIO oat,

Claims.

8

Public Notice

::c-

l'uiWIIIHoml.
Hlr ,...,

-

LPC. P - An LPCC Or U8W.

tardation and/ or tlevolopmontol dlaabllttlel. The ., . _4~=G::I-;vea-;-:w::a::::y~::-:::::
Mlltant contract wltlblllnax- tt ,_...!:!'~..old, IUilt
lst.,ae for • tlmo period of •-•UM.,._~
opproxlmototy 1 tonal v•ar
runtll JuM 30. 11921. Atthe
conclusion of - h yNr tM
contract wll' bo - •
gotiotad booed an tho - aonoblo and,....... - •
of tha lndlvlduolo baing ~..~, 4 mo. old,
......... .. wollll the quality
of Mrvlooo bolng provldad
tOhlo
Rav!Hd
Cod•
1112e 44J.
IIIC
I Month Old
Th• - · managor wiH - p h o o d F....... 514be a111ctod to -poratoln 44Hm.
all actlvltlll Involving cart!·
~-lo -llan Dog. 1 YNr
flcotion. quality ooouranco, Old.
progrom IIV-Ion and ap· 1102.Good Woitoh Dot= 114-388ptiooblo pollcioo an~ proco·
Froo For P~o: 25' Z.nlth T.V.
d~raa.
All contractual aemcH 11WIIof72t ahsr5:00p.m.
will bo lundecl through
OIPproptlotlono mode by
ODMR/DD to tho 011111
CIMinty Board of MRIDD.
A Pro-Propoaat c.-.
.,.,. wll bo conducted on
Ju"" 20, 188111 8:30a.m.
Mood ....... Or Con u.. For
ot the loord OfR-. Ould- -AM
t71J2 ,_Old. Atoo,
lng H.,d 8choul, C,_lre, 1tuo
With a- -.
Oftlo 41&amp;20 In order to 11· dint. I'M
4431.
low lnt-ocl pertleo on apportunity to roloo quostlono.
cl~rlfy loouu. .,d clocuu
6
Loat &amp; Found
concerns.
-:::::::-.:::=:::-;::::;~;::::::
JUNE 12. 11. 23. 1181
Found:
0!1J10o
---:-::-::--:-:""""::----- I - .
Coli1.
Public Notice
~CrNII
----------------~'!:!1°!:_~~ Condor
PUBLIC
NOTICE
A pu bile hearing on tM
1891 Budget of Huntington Loot: I lnalloli
Tawnahlp wHI bo hold on ~· Kona;r:: 15.Ju"' 27, 7:00 p.m. 11 m.. ArM.- Col 11 411 024l
Townottlp Ooroge In • - •ton, Ohio. E- 1'0111 Ia wol·
como. 1-Jnds RottiH. c - 7 .
Yard Sate
Juno 2:f. 1811

hlf mlnltllr,

....,.. In . ..,

ESTATE AUCTION

"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Marble top wash stand, halltiee. beveled rnirror, Jenny lind
bed, cedar chest, rnarble lop stand ,~ pc. bedroom su•te, S1n·
ger treadle sewing machine w/box top, New Haven patent
brass clock w/weights, stand w/magazine rack, Sentinel
mantel clock, dror~eaf table, large mirror, quilts, license
plates. 1951 Lione tram set w/2 engines, 2 transformers, I
tunnel &amp; I caboose; misc. dishes and tots more.
"HOUSEHOD"
Night stands, 2 pc. bedroom su~e. m•sc. chairs, oval muror,
lamps, porch glider, m1sc. dishes,. pots, pans, lmen, plus

Anr.lmo·
Rodney
Aru.
Ro .,_An-. Alllhlfta,

Holp Wlntocl No • - '.....
rw 1111ry. Some exPerience
liolplul. Ai&gt;P'Y onrtlmo olla~
12:00 -kdoyo, Duio Clllnora,
1111 tloc_. Avo. Oolllpoilo.

PUBLIC
UCTION

&amp;Auction

0..01 Hooljo
liD .,...
ThoOutl =To

17111. Ext. GOT.

-lion

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-03-'

Public Site

&amp; Auction

-~~~-Call
for
Mlallna ,.cardedNOWt
n
ge.
CliO pilei ffO!ft homo! eM-432-

County couttbouse cheered at news
of Johnston's conviction and
lhreatened. ll!s attorneys w~n lhcy
left !he b~.Johnston said.
Johnston ~d be wore a OO!Jet·
~f vest during ~oun proceedings
m Hocking County.
He noted that after the O~io
Supreme Court ordered a new trial,
a Hocking County judae ruled that
it should be held elsewliere beca~
Johnston could not get a fair trial a~
Logan. The case was moved to
Columbus.
. ·
His attorney, Robert Suhr of
Columbus, said a court ruling. that
Johnston was wrongfully COOVICted
could pave lite way f&lt;r Johnston to
seek money from lite Ohio Coun of ·

8

Public Sale

a ..nl. ean

10181.

• Johnston has resumed construcVa., neigltborliood He - sta)'lllg tion work but teeps his wherewith friends so he eould attend a abouts secret because· he has
received death tbreals, Suhr saicl
ham lldio fesliVII in Baltimore.

Con,.rence.

SOVTB

•F•

=

Johnston said someone has
offered a bounty for killing him.
"This I have 10 take very serious, and feel it necessary to take
every precaution 10 ensure my safety, " Johnston' 8 affidavit said.
"Staying out of Hoclcing C0t111ty is
lite No. 1 precautioo."
He was convicted in 1984 in
Logan of lite mutilation slayings of
his stepdaughter, Annetle Johnslon,
18, and her fiance, Todd Schultz,
19. He was sentenced 10 dealh but
was freed last year after prosecutors said a court ruling made it
impossible to convict him al!ain. .

qualified

NORTH
.A9654

\ June:M, 1•1

1:

12

Help Wantld

DRIVERS.: 5

. ~ . lhe Aria's Numtier 1 Marketplace

+A764

I .

Hurricane-force .wi~ds that
accompanied ~vy ram m ~
C1ty. M!&gt;·• twiSted the s~all ~plane~ like pre~els, police S81d.
The ":•nds also npped a ~-Sicr·
age bm o_ff the lOp of a silo and
clu~sed auport employees from
their tower.
.
.
. In_ Montana, a womB!~ was still
m1ssmg after heavy rarns caused

ed in lite 50s and 60s '" lite ]'Jorth-

ClaSsi

PHn.LIP
ALDER

TAURUS (April 20-lllliJ' 201 In ISSUing
dlrectlvee to youngst•s today, be explicit and use as f- words as poeslble.
This will make your lnstruc:Uona more
effective and achieve the compllanc;e
you desire.
GEMINI (..., 21-.lune 201 You'll be
happier today - It you're free to move
around a bit to visit with others. Instead
of dropping In on juat one friend, put at
leaat two on your schedule.

\

'

broadcasting false officer-in-distrt:ss calls faces Ill! 10 15 years in
pnson.
James A. Haas, 39, of Athens,
Ohio, also pleaded guilty Thursday
· in U.S. PiSirict Court in Alcxaildria
\
to unauthorized usc of 1 credit
card. He will be sentenced Aug. 30.
Athens School Superintendent ·
. Richard Bongiorno ~d he would
make a recommendation on Haas'
employmeat at I Board of Educetion meeting Thursday. Ohio law
allows a school board 10 remove a
teacher bec•nsc of a felony conviction. Bongiorno refused 10 say what
his recommendation would be.
Haas, a gym teacher for 17
Public Notice
years, has been oo paid leave since
his arresL He was amsted niiking
A REQUEST FOR
a false officer-in-aoublc call April
PROPOSALS
The Oollla County Boord
5 over a Prince WiUiam County,
of Montot Retardation and
Va.. police radio channel.
Dwolopmontal Dlaabllltllo
John P. Rowley m, an assistant lo
-.ptlng prapoaalo fnlm

Weather

BEHNICE
BEDE OSOL

Arkansas.

floodilig that swept two vehicles
off a hi&amp;hway. A woman in a pickup lnJd was racued. Aulhorities
found the miaing WO!IIIII' 8 car, but
it was empty.
RaiD fell in Oregon, Montana,
Wyomiq, the Dlkow, Nelnska,
Colorado. New Mexico, Kauas,
Iowa, Illinois, Indi•as, Tennessee,
Alabama, Georgia; florida, the
Carolinas, Vqinia, New Hamp' ·
shire and Maine.
High temperatw;s were expect-

Athens man pleads guilty to charges

. COLUMBUS - The Public Ulil- in Alhens on Thursday,July 11, the
·ities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) fust beginning at 2:30 p.m. and lite
:held 11. Pre-bearing Conference on set9nd at 6:30 p.m. in the Alhcns
:Wednesday, JWJe 19 in lite atse of City Hall, Council Chambers,
.tfle American Electric Powef's Third Floor, 8 E. Washington St.,
(AEP) compliance plan to discuss Alhens.
The hearing in Columbus will
discovery mailers, scheduling of
hearin8s and other mauers relared be held on Wednesday, July 17
:lo this proceeding, according to a beginning at 9:30 a.m., in Hearing
Room II D Public Utilities ComP.UCO release.
:~ Questions from parties regard- mission of,Ohio, 180 East Broad
il!g Ibis proceeding ~ requesred St.• Columbus.
® later than lite close of discovery
.b n July 19. AEP was ordered to
sUbmit all of its prefiied testimony
i!l support of its compliance plan .
1uly 10.
South Central Ohlo
; All interesred parties 10 lite case
Sunday, partly sunny. High near
(jncluding lite staff of lite PUCO) 80.
)¥ere ordered to submit !heir pre' Extended rorecast
~Ied testimony concerning the
· Monday through Wednesday:
eompliance plan by July 17. A
Fait Monday and Wednesday
Jii,aring will be held July 29 at 10 and a chance of showers and thunP.:m. in~ Room liD, PUCO, derstorms Tuesday. Highs in the
)80 East B
SL, Columbus.
80s Monday and Tuesday and in
:l Public bearings will be held in the mid 80s to low 90s Wednesday.
Athens, Canton and Columbus to Lows in the mid 50s to mid 60s - - - : BRIDOi:
Obtain. testimony from interested Monday and in th~ 60s Tuesday 1
~ Two hearings will be held ' and Wednesday.

-

away a woman m a car m Montana
and knocked out power in

11

•

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

Logan man says there is murder contract on hi~

•I Columbus I 81 I

e ca•

June 23, 1991

.Thunderstor~s ~ool parts of Midwe~t

: Sunday, June 23

..

June 23,1191

f·-···~"'AN5'WER"s'TO~i4)1i:i~~-,~~;- ·
SCRAM·LCTS
SEPTIC
QUAKER
IMPURE
UPTURN
HERMIT
VERIFY
PICTURES of IT

s=!

TR.UCK DRIVD. TllAININO CBNTBR

1·800-388-1150
AWIWIIIIIUNLYIIIII QUAUTY'l1tAINIIIIJ

---·---

TOT11111lQD!OINIIUI'mY.

, ,~

.... .

·~·· ··-

..

.
While attending a movie at the
visitors center that depleted the valcanlc eruption and formation of a
lake. I overheard a woman say. "linaglne, all that happened centuries
ago and they got PICTURES of IT!"~J

L~IIK·IILI~:t,~' -We've got a "oneot a
kmd" home for you.
eye appealing rust1c con·
temP.orary home has something lor lhe entire •
family. Master bedroom has adjacent loft and am·
pie room lor the most complete bedroom Slllte.
Liv1ng room wrth cathedral ceiling and fireplace
will welcome your guests fo• you. Full basement
thai JUSt won 't quit has possibilities for a 4th bed·
room and rnore. tnground pool. large outbuilding
wrth potential to become a guest house. 1.5 acre
lot with a v1ew. 4 car slorage. Give us a call for an
appointment You've got everything to gain and
noth1ng to lose. $125,000.
•204
OWNERS WANT IT SOLO !I - Pal riot listing. Bnck
home offers 2 bedrooms. I bath. large liv1ng room
with place for woodbumer. Eat·m kitchen, Large
lot. I car cxarport. Priced al $29,000.
#221

HOME AND 1.5 ACRE LOT located just off
Rodney-B1dwelt Road on Denny Cemetery Road.
Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 bath modular home on
permanent foundation . County water and .septic
system. Also storage building Less than 2 miles
north ol new Rt. 35 interchange. Priced at
$30,600.
f306
216 ACRE. M/l, FARM - Buildings consisl of 2
barns and complete set up lor mobile home. 55
acres crop, 50 acres pasture, balance in woods
and misc. area. Some timber value. 1200' m/ 1of
desirable roed frontage with rural wa ter tine.
Excellent area to build a home. Tobacco base.
Located on Gage·Palriol Road . For sale at
$87,500.
*307
ST. RT. 325, NEAR RIO GRANDE - Out of stale
owner would like nothmg beHer than lo selllhis 21
acres, m/1 of vacant land. So, If you're serious
about building and have been lookmg tor the
perfect land, give us a tall, we've gol it!! City
scrool system.
*604

Wiseman Real Estate
.

··.

(614) 446-3644

David Wiieman, Broker, 446-9 55 5

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

LORETTA McDADE, 448·7728
B. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240

SONNY GARNES, 446-2707 CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1nn·7··•
CLYDE B. WALKER,

~~-- ............
~.....:r"~~~

.. ..

I•

-

'

.

.,

... ·h.

-~·

I

�~

-.-.

...

. ., .

"'

..

•

•

~

•
Page-o4-.sunday Tlmes Sentinel

S@\\.cil~-~£~s~

TIIAT DAILY

PUUUI

WOlD

33 Fsnns for Salt

GAM I

lr r' oom Fum
Apaot.- Over A O.Uiola
Dotochocl Oarago. Well Slockocl
Ponti. J7 _..,_ MIL. PriDocl to

0

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words below lo make 6
s!mple wo.rds. Print tellers 0 1
each In lis line of squares.

I.I I

I

I

SoU AI : ~100.00 ConJIOI Jim
AI WHY
Alh- Allny AI:
114-512-1141, (lr eM-512·17114.

I

2

Lola I ai::rooogo anllalola lor
naw homo aanolluotlon on
RoVJ&gt;um Rood. Pwv~ rood,
county
wllw,
rw11e0nable
roiii'ICtlona. Comp!elo lnlonnltlon mollocl on
304-tTI5213, John D. Oe!lach, no

roq.-.

I
I
I

U P MI R E

UNRUPT
1-~1--,1...-6~."1'~1--.1-1
_ _ _ _ _
L-__.__..___.__..___.____.

I

I

alng ...wide tr~Hera. pita-.
12 Acres, P1rtly Wcc:lld.
' Socludocl. At. 35, w. $21,000.

114-2C5-JMOa.

Whiie aHending a movie at the
visitors center that ,~epicted the
volcanic eruption and formation
of a lake. I overheard a woman
say, "Imagine, all. that happened

_._l8_.._l_.._l_.._l_.._l9_.._ ~~~~~~~r ·-!~gO

L.

I
e.
I
I
II I I
I v E F0 R y
I

_

_

_

'

_

--

Ccounly

and

th"l~'

Complete the chuckle

LOTS FOR SALE In OaiUpollo
Flfi'Y. WUI ICCOIII triiiOI'I, clly
Wlter •vallab ... Phon. 304-6~
2722,

I' I' I' 1 r "I' I' 1·

175-7N8.

3 bodr_,. wtth built/on, olr

COnd, Z batha. I IC,_, lanced,
outbldga, 3 mlln from Pt. Ph,
- - ...,.,.. JoJOO. OK!dopoolt.
304-175-7853.

44

Apartment
for Rent

QOI

q:~.:~

Rentals

1~ ]~J

Plantz
0271l.

Subdlvlolon.

or

11lo.

I

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
~10 Moblto It;'!':¥ Par11ally
Fumloltocl, 114-31
•

I

ptota kllchon. CA. 1-1-41 ·

Nlco 2 BA, 4 112 mi. lrom 0111Upotlo. SJoYI a rolrlg.,_wat• •

liuh pick-up pold, $235/lllot-·".:. Noln
DOlo. Aloo, 2 BR apo •-"

t.lh, nice · - -.... cuf In Pt.
Pl-nu.e . .e858.

Rio Grandt.f1+441-8038.

1117 Redman, 1110 Chlmplon,
3CJM7S-!Q3,

IIIII 7Vx14 Total Elodrlc Mobllo

=·~~ l ::~~ =~.:

And OuiiKolldlng. 114~1-3547.

11tl Schun 141171, 2br, 2 Balho,
Pluo Don, S.VO P,DOO. Fnoch
City _ . . Hofnoo, 814-44111340.

call 1114-4112-:1021

~::.

•

.. '• . '

514 Second A venue

'

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: (614) 446-0008
Ranny Blackburn, Broker

.

pooto, - -

., :

. . _ trollor
than -Julo.:oul.,.,..
Hill ~C
A -loll

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

..•

~.f·

•

r,!erchJnj::;c

t-, ...

Not sunablo for Chlldron, Palo,

_Oopoolt Roqulrocl. l11-411-tSII.

CA. 111111 D33a.

Fumlohocl Apa~mont, 1 Sodroom; 123!/mo. Utlltloo Paid,
107 a.o.nct, Galli polio, eM--1414411 aft• 7p.m.

Household
Nooth 3rd 11, Mlddl_., ~o, 1 5I
bocln&gt;om lumlohocl apt, raloron:
· Goods
and dopooH roqulrocl. :JD4.
812-2511.
Canoot 34-00 Yanl I Up.
13... I 14.81 Yanl. P - Tull, .
;N::oot:;h_:C::;th:-/v-;;M;;::Idd~~lo;:::ooot;;,-;Ohl;;;;i,o;-;,! 13.81
I SUI Ylnl. -.n .
bad uom mlahed lpl, clefiD:I:n Cor~ U - Rl. . Rood, 114' ·
1
and raterenea requlr.t, 30~·

zse•.

O(EAN FIONT
CONDO

••

.-

Vlnvl:

--·-··Equal -

County Applillnoo, Inc.

.......... appllcol- lor
llolng Opp., air _..._ ooundry
nMHn, tr. lnl.tl pickup. a._.
Ia oloroo I ochciolo. SM·773WI,

2 Bedrooms/
2 laths

Furnished

Dates Available:

Rooms

Gootl

uooclappl'"-. T.V.-- ClaM
1 o.m. to 1 p.nt. Mon.-811. lM-111!~, UT 3td. An. Gal'

NICE HOME FOR THE GROWING FAIIILV-Green township near Centenary. Bi-level home
offers 4 BRs. 2 baths, LR, krtchen w/range,
refrig., OW. displ., oven, FR, gas heat attached
srtuated on
ooe-haff acre.

Jlpollo,""
El.ct~

Slave, Sl20i Wutw,

$11; Olalo Watan:- . .
Lawn - · Sl10; llilaoi
Coblntol
Sowing Mochlno, .... '

,_,...

_

DON1 BE CRAIIPED FOR ROOM - Nice
home and 16 acres, m/1, oo St. Rt. 218. Four
BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, full basement City
school district

Blooplno ....,_ ivHh -no-

Call 446·4249

AiootraTior - · Alllooalt-upo.
Cd aftar 2:00 p.m., 304-7735GSI, ll11on WY.

Real Eatate General

eo~ stale

Kno1 19111, 1-nor, 2 bocii'OOIII,

-lc,

·=

BLACKBTJRN REALTY
2

Uti.,_ •

Fumilhld moblll holM, 1 mi..
below
-lng rlvor,

Fumlohocl 4 I lolh.
CINIL No - - Roleronco •

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1U

.•

ldl/m0.11t
. luildlnt-•• •
MobiJo
- -...
- · call 114-1112·7117. EOHMobUo -~:
Modtm downtown, 1 IR, c om- Counll')'
Aouto 3 1 , - ol
31

July 6-13,
Aug. 10-11
Aug.3-10

114-441-

Hot4- '

ond
Aplttmontl In Mlddlopoot. F -

Elflclooncy
opl., . atovo,
oebigwator,=s, private

41 Houses for Rent
4 BR houoo lor ronl

-lorronl·---.
=
... .,.__- ... .

Manor

. Garden City, S.C.

Real Estate Genel'!ll

Business
Opponunhy

Complololy · hao~oocl
lor 1 or 2 people, No

0 mal l

el'5-1200

1NI 14~70 2 bed! oom mobile
home on 1 • • lot. Phone 304-

•

Fumlshld
Rooms

::;:::-;--;;;i2ie(i:
IIOd 2 lood- 46 Space for Rent .
Mvlno.
1
room apootmonll alAI;:-a:' ua - .
Pod F.Qr .

JIOio._latl plua ulllltloo. 814-4411o
D3U
young couplo,
111-30111.
......
- ·3MLotllt,
- · Cottap ,_rent, tumlahld. AJC,
carpot, aoocl nolghbot'-&lt;1, no
JIOio, PL. P1o
; WY 1-30442 Mobile Homes

for Rent

$150

»t! · ::::

•

(12 mi.~- of
Myrtle Beechl

by filling in the missi~\1 word•
_ you develop from step No .) below.

4

21

-·

EflldoncY,

UtUIIM Pald lha,. tath, 7U1
- h , OaluPotlo, 114 Ul 1411

FOI lENT

I

1---,r:T.;...-,H_RT-1_H.,-E~rl

·---Rot;;..._.-..
-1114-441-3710, 114-31Jio78Z(

35 Lots &amp; Acreage .

oft'= .. .o,ft~at;;7=p.::m~.

.....,. cu and
Famt llouN 130Ct/m0. Kr111• IU-21M.

45

Apanment
for Rent

Fumlohocl

11Mct1 ...... lllddllp at1, Ohio.
0no , _

Creole

1

RA0 EUK

_

~4

Buutlful

44

Apartment
for Rent

44

41 HoUIII for Rent

Wbh A hperate 3 Bedroom

- - - - - - Ed'"d by CLAY a, POLLAN - - - - - -

PITECS

June 23,1

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

01'

114-11112-7107.

HOllE offers lots of attrac21! baths,LR, FR, stone
ounno11:enL aor, 2 car attached gar-

Looltlna l'or AllordabiO Houolng? dOnalclor A Clovton
141711. 3 Boclroom, Tolol
Eloelrlc, 113,1195. C!oll Elau

FRONTAGE ON THE RIV_ER - 3 BRs, LR,
equipped kitchen, fuel 011 furnace, cent aor,
full basement, attached garage.

Homo Contor, 1.eM-772·1220.

34

..

EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL PROPERft Presently used as Riversode Marine, steel
building woth approx. 3,000 sq.h., 1.057 acre.

"'

Business
Buildings

OFACE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd ""·• Oalllpollo. C'- Ia

Court Houu. 1 room, 2 roomt,
I roome. 4 roome. All nicely
d.aor~led,
air condilionlna,
your watw &amp; ...., bill are pala.
Make your choice now. No

quCIIIH· over the phorw1 you

muot -

.............. Of
Dlllllir'l And. Relolocl
, , . _ .. Olloolng

Dol-·

...,.... roaOUior•c:..-

., CINe Ono D ol oloiD Pwr

=

c:ounay. AIM All

lhom. Pfoone "" an

:.=mmant. IM-UI-lU119 doy,

531tva.

Real Estate General

Of WYA And

'

EXECUTIVE 1rn1u1

NEW!

1.975 acres m/1 provides pnvacy and seclusion
for this magnofocent quality custom home. 3 baths,
liv'"g room, family room, formal dinong, master
bedroom w/dressing room, walk-in closets, secur11)' system and so manv more am~notoes too laoge
to mention. Located woth'" the c1ty of Galhpol1s.
,
N2904

~

'

,·:

MAKE AN APPOINTMENT IMMEDIATELY!

NEWI - NEW!

Thos modular is only 9 months old and sibtated on
over 1\\ acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living
room study, formal doning, family room, study
w/sh~vmg, attached 28'x30' garage. Electric
heat pump. Make an appoontment today_to voew
this beaut«ul home with every extra possible. Immediate possession! R10 Grande area! ll2919

To voew th1s 6 acre mini-farm. Remodeled 3 bedroom vinyl sided ranch style homewHh prage, in·
ground pool, large barn and oomerous outbu•dings. Several feet of road frontage. 8eautKully
maintained.
f2107

EXTRNIRDINAI'f - 112 A. m/1, beautiful
large loa home, 4 BRs, 21! baths, LR, krtchen,
OR, FR, 3 fireplaces., Call for more details.
.:

LAND COIITRACT 10 QUALIFIED BUYER $1,200 down payment $363.45 per mo. Modeled home 1s vacant and ready for a new
owner.

. 588
2BRs,
••&lt;'nen, mobile home pad on prop·

-••....
~
.:.,..

..

'

~':':,.=

W11o
""Wi':1To Staot ~
Own IU.JII, Cllll 0.0'1 .......
..., 01 a w, ~ntn~on. 0111a.
-

-1711.

32 Locullt Street, Oaillpolls

446-1066
31 Homta for Sale

112-

3 • 4llr , _ l o - , CA,

Ken Morgan, Realtor/llroker-4411·0971
AHen C. Woocl2 Reeltor-4411-41123
Moll Canterbury, Reeltor-4411-3408
Jeanetlll Moore, Raaltor-21111·17411

KIN EON DR. - Ranch style
LR, kitchen, lull basement

MAKE US AN OFFER

Lol,- C l l y Dlllflct, CJOM To r-. a
Hoopllol.14t,OOO. 114-441-4421.

,,......__

41--4
-

.... -

FARM

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENT?

boclroom

111,000 """·

When you could be paying for this remodeled
home. Living room, bath, forced m, gas heat,
newer deck: nestled among shade trees on ap·
prox. 1 acre lot
#2920

RIVER FRONTAGE,
POSSIBILITIES GALORE!
Only $10,000.00. Approx. 3 acres, older 1 story
home in need of repair, large barn, good garden
area. Call for further information.
N2918

LOCATED ON THE QUIETEST
BLOCK IN TOWN
Older two story wrth sunken family room, beautoful must-see kitchen, 2nd income dwellmg Included, w1thin one block of city schools. N2906

SPACE FOR SALE!!!

Approx. 36 acres. Recently reseeded, 1enced,
pond. Majority of acreage is tillable and partially
wooded. Call tor price and location'
N2892

FOil SALE BY OWNER 110 Por!l
DIM, _ , . , 2 ololy, 3
t ...... 1 'V2 .......
~ full hn~.

=

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·~·
ohaln link
..... ~
........
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l!llaiJ .. - - . . - , ,
~~· $41,000.

Lol-ln-1')', 15acrao,3
.......,.. 2'112t.tht,~. Mtll·
............ 3111.
,., ., -..,, Cluallty

-

1111111 AlndiCIOM To_,

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II he' 411r, F'* In:
. . . llloclocl Loo4 , ·~

.......

Pot In Town On
1111111 - : 311, VInyl

=a.= -· ~
r

4

1

$20'o.

~COLONIAL
......
112 a.~~~a,_z

a

pt "£FA I Aorel, lam. Ylr·
. . . . . . . 114-lal.
n t , To toll: a ...,. 3br
LOll In et.lllre, ~­

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32 MObile HomH
forSIIe

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2

~

- Wrth livong room, doning room,
eat·in kitchen, ~-~rooo1s,, utility room, nice lot All fllf
$29,500. MUST SEE!I
3-4 BEDIOOIIIiRICK RANCH, Srtuated on !i-5 acres wrthin
view of the Holzer Hospital. 24'x36' bam presently beinf
utilized as a 2-car garage and storage. 2other outbuildings.
QUALITY HOME with many amenrties, 2 full baths and 2 haft
baths, den, formal living room and dining room, 2 WBFP, entertainment k1tchen. QUALITY THROUGHOUT.
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A2 story frame double
located on Second Avenue, Gallipolis. 4 rooms and bath
downstairs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs. CPII today.
HOllE IN MERCERVILLE - 3 bedrooms, living room, dining
area, lutchen, 2 baths, 'h acre lot more or less, storage building. Call for appointment
PRICE REDUCED!!- Investment property 1n Vintoo, 6room
house located along Main Street Rent or live in- BUY NOW
for only $12,000.
NEW LISTING- Privacy, convenientand excellent location .
R1o village, plus 4 BR. 1'h bath, liv. rm. with wblp, OR,
•ncnen. What else could you want. Alovell large family rm.
wnh wblp, and utility room In basement. S iding glass doors
to back area . This house has been well maintained and is a
well insulated home. Large 1car garage and loads olstorage.
Call tor appointment today.
GREEN ACRES- Two lots. !large level homesite, 140 h. by
148 h.• c_ny water, Green school, good location. Priced right
at $10,000.00.
.

LOOKING TO BUY YOUR OWN BUSINESS,
NEED SOME HELP WITH FINANCING?

Then give us a·callabout this one today! Presently
doing busoness as the REDMAN INN, located at SR
35 near Rio Grande. Busmess only: Includes complete inventooy, pool tables, juke box, equipment
and numberous other business chattels. Lease on·
eludes 2 bedroom apartment to ass1st with
monthly payment Call today! An excellent oppor·
tunity.
N2899

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS

Gorgeous brick home. Just as soon as you take
one look you'll be sold. 3 bedrooms, formal dining
and living rooms, 3 baths, famoly room, fully
equipped kitchen, 2 car garage_and separate
24'x36' garage, pond, private settong. Exception·
ally noce home with a lot of amenot1es plus over 4
acres. Coty schools.
ll2857

16 ACRES MORE/LESS
Localed 1n Huniington Township. 12 acres m/1.
$7,000. 4 acres miL $3,700.
.0007

LAND/HUNTINGTON·TOWNSHIP
50 acres more or less: frontage along Shepard
Lane. Call. for more details.
N004

.

N2913

UNDER $5,000

I 972 Schult mobile home woth expando. 3 bedrooms, electric heat, plumbing has been replaced.
Tie downs, 2 porches and underpinning included.
Situated on rented lot Owner anxious to sell! Call
at ooce'
#2910

REDUCTION $67,500.00
3 UNIT RENTAL COMPLEX

HAVE YOU BEEN OVERLOOKING THIS ONE?
Then call today to see this extremely nice 3 bed·
room, 2 bath ranch, full basement, family room,
electric heat pump. Approx. I acre lawn. And so
much more. Call today to see this one! *2905

SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME

•·· »f!l,

Owners say sell now! You can have immed1ate
pOssession of this cute 2 bedroom home sibtated
Of1 .9 acre. FurniShed living rotim, large bath,
kitchen */refrigerator and range, storage build·
ing plenty of room for a garden. Call now!
'
-2114

PRICE REDUCED!

~

68 ACRES II/LIN OHIO m. Frontage on St. Rt. 7 wnh
some timber. Priced II $10,000.

STATE ROUTt 211 - 1.263 acre, m/1. Very
nice home offers 3 BRs, 1 bath, living room.
krtchen range and refrigerator, fioeplace, cny
water, basement city schools.

Cclthy Wray

NEWlY LISTED!
LOTS WITH RIVER FRONTAGE

REDUCED! ,
$9,000

Poiced at $2,800 . &amp; up. Call for more details!

•

.

Approx. 4.5 acres situated at Rodney Poke. Rural
water available. Anice level p1ece of land. Call to·
day.
•2114

OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD BUSINESS Plus launcl"ry. Loctted on St. Rt. 35. Call for
mtlfe onformation.

379-2114

446-4255

Dt.1 Cart•
446-1434

LARGE HOlE leabtres 4 BRs, I I! baths,
krtchen, LR, DR, unattached 18x29 garage,
North Gallia School Oisl.

Shirley lostar
4"·1260

VEI'f NICE RAIICH ml! HOlE LOCATED
ON STATE IOUTE 110 - 3 BRs, LR, krtchen
w/range, refrigeratllf. one cat attached caoage. I 00x300 It fol.

GARAGE IN VINTON 220 electric service,
lu_rna'c:e, two 7x9 overhead

.-.

446-6624

Jeannie Fi-a1ce Tammie DeWitt
446-1006
441-0703

niA~P. .

MULTI PURPOSE!

Clll UICOTHE lOAD - Ranch style home offers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen w/range, ,retrl.,,
washer, dryer, laundry rm., gas heal, city utili·

738 Second Ave.
J. Merrill (arlit'

IIAKE A SPLASH
THIS ONE 35 this lovely home offers 3_BRs, 2
FR. dining area, equopped krtchen,
w/vac. system. 2 car attached gar, cent air. Very well kept home.

sehong just monutes to
downtown. Home feabtres 3 BRs,
w/range &amp; refrig., LR, DR, carpet, fire~ilv school dost

Excellent location. residential or commercial
property. 35 West area. Vinyl sided 3 bedroom
ranch . Over I acre lot and approx. 1,100 sq. fl.
commercial building.
ll2909

Judg Dewitt -

WE HAVE BUILDING lOTS in Rodney Village II. Call ftlf more
information.

IIINI FARII - located on Bulawille-Porter
Rd.- 13.44 acres and a nice one story home
· wHh 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR, krtchen, FR, OR, car·
pet, oil and electric heating. 4 car unattached
metal garage, bam, approx. 4 acres fenced
pasture.
.,.,

IIICE STAllER HOllE - Located just at the
edge of town. This home teat~ res 3 bedrooms,
bath, living room, kotchen, dmmg room and a
run basement FIVe minutes to downtown .

NEW LISTING!
EXCElLENT LOCATION FOR BUILDING!

ROOMY AND ALL BRICK

Very attractiVe 3 bedroom home. Large living
( room, family room, dmmg room and kitchen recently remodeled . 2 full baths, 2 car garage. Over
2 acres. Situated at 8uhi·Mortoo Road just off SR
35. Call today! Immediate possesSion. N2914

-~th, LR, kitchen, City ut1htoes. \

•

ISO acres m/1 farm land. Approx. 30 acres blla·
ble, 80 acres pasture, the rest in wood lot, SOllie .
timber. Average ~ story frame nome and three
barns. Private ' ,ting. Owner anxoous to sell ommediately. Tnr .easoo is here, but you can own
this one very ~ick. Call us today for a showong.
*2901

REDUCED PRICE TO $19,900
EXCEPTIONAL BARGAIN !I!

Attractive 3 bedroom ranch home woth 3 baths,
family room, formal dining room, spacious kotchen
with sohd oak cabmets, 2 car garage plus add!·
tional detached garage. Full basement, heat
pump/cent air. All this and more situated on over
49 acres. Call !oday.
N2911

$21,000. I 'h LOTS·.- Chi!Stnul St., 2 BRs,
..

$32,000. EXCEllENT STARTER HOllE - 3
BRs,LR, kitc~en. bath, laundry, anached gar·
age.

'

OWNER TALKING SERIOUS
REDUCED PRICE $6,000

Approx. 9-10 acres ~rtuated off the Cora ,Mill ~oad .
All acreage is level, Includes approx. 30 x60 barn
and 12'x60' shed.Rural water~ available. Call today!
f2924

~2916

..

CLOSETO
Located on
offers 4 BRs,
part. basement
wrth 3 rms. and
carport behond house. Situated on 1.75 acre
m/1.

CLOSE TO CITY

Raised ranch on large lot 3 bedrooms, hving and
dining rooms. Nice carpeting, has been extensively remodeled. large shaded deck'
f2921

Receive a positive cash flow from the rental Income on th1s newly constructed complex. Each
unit cons1sts of I bedroom, furnoshed krtchen, ltving room, bath . Vinyl s1dmg. Low maintenance.
Call today for more details!
N2886

Approx, 3 acres vacant land. Rural wale~ and
elect11c avaolabfe. Call today for more details.
N2917
.

10 ACRES, Perry Twp. Some tlrnfler. Buy now for $10,000.

ITOI' IY OUR OFfiCE fOil A COMPLETE

ThiS 2 story brick home in Gallipolis needs to sell.
3 oo 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, basement, nice lot
These are full siZe rooms. Reasooablv close In
church, schools and shoppmg. Negotiable. Call
us now!
N21U

CENTENARY·AREA

Approx. 6.669 acres of land, all1n grass. Some of
the amenities include a 12" rural water line crossing property. Tap fee paod. Approx. 31! miles·
from GallipoliS. Ctty water and natural gas close
by. Lots of road frontage. Call for a showing.

GET SOME PRIVACY HERE!!!

2 STOIY FRAIIE DUPL£X .;_ Located on Gallipolis, walk1ng
distance to town. 2 apartments - one 5 rooms and I II
baths, one 3 rooms and bath. Call lor appointment today.

79 ACRES IIOIE Oll£SS.Iocaled in Ohio Tl'lp.The property
has some timber. Call for more infOrmation .

49 acres .of land including two developed homo
srtes. One 1979 mobile home 14'x70 purchasec
by present owners. the other home sile has elec
t11c, running water and aerobic septic system al
1n place. Farm consists of approx 17 tillablE
acres, IS pasture acres, 17 acres of woodland, to·
bacco base and stocked pond too recreation. let
us show you this one.
#2903

•

.

m.

110111 AND 17.1 ACRES 11/l. GREEN
- Home offers 3 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, attached 2 car
Nice patio.

RUth Goody, Sal•• A11oclate
Sam Hoffman

Patti H1Wk

379-2449

446-1967

379-2828

IIIOCHURI OP OUR UITINGS .
•
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�..

.. . ,. . .

OH Point PlaaiBnt, WV
51

56

54 MIICellaneoua
Merchandlee _.

HouUhOid

Goode

Petatorsale

llogill- , _ IMaio, I
::.--...':,";~~' Will Nft
LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Compltlo ._.. fumlol!ma..
ltollnl: fllon.Sal, 1-5. 114-440322, ' mille .... -viiiO Ad.

F-Dellvery.

:!\!!
Fa"::~~."':~lt:'!ii"'·
"- _ _

1tl'l VW ... a.y Good
$310.Coll 1~141 after 1 o(

High Mlloo, h,700. 114-251-1171.

concllllon,

-A!' W, """" -lon.

''""' ...
T·llnl,
~~Condlo
lion,
, 12,700.
010
114441MII

1111 Pontlla- T·TI!Po
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, 4l0011-71M
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lly
alltr•IL

1111 Clifty CavolloJ Typo 10,
Till,
PS,
PI,
Aulomollc

2:30p.ftl. .. - -

Wide-

an-.

s.t.' uti ~;-·

00

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1111 Iuick RogoJ, », N:;, .....

Livestock

63

114-1'12-2212.

:::::-=::-::=~~~~
"~ Notlh ~ "!'r L.. - .
' Stock T . - _ , . .....,__, FutGIJ
Stud ser.tc. Pu'*od Malo h,,., ~ 2 Troll•; a..W~~&amp;­
Cocker With Paporo, • - S8!!i, ~ 111. Sloclt Tr-. G.vopd. P,OOO. Cal I

PICKENS RJRNITURE

4005.

NoWIIJMd

Hoouoo•otooOidld lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jonlcho Ad. Pt. PI-nt, WV,

MusiCal

0111 aown-14!0.

·; lnatNments

RENT20WN
114-44&amp;-3158
Vl'ra FumHure

El- Guftora: 1100, aoo

WATER WELLS DRillED: loll,

N•a

llbll~k:e. l.....,...n-11.

Cllllt, h1.10 w..k;
kllnet, 15.47 WNl, Swivel - l n g gown tor ulo, $110.00,
- - · SUS WNk.Bunk Bed aluW,II14-IMIM411.
CompleJo ...41 'WMII. 4
CIIMI, 13.21 Wettk; BedBuilding
~~~~~~~ 1 _po.. hU7 w..-.
Inc- lletllllng.coo.ntry PIM
Suppllea
Dlnolll
' 4lloncloy
Clloh,
hO.• - Wwk.OPEN:
Tlvu SatlM'dav, ILna. to lp.nL.,
SUndo¥ 12 lloon Till !!p.m. 4
IIIIN Ott Roulo 7 On Route 141,
In Conlonory.

s..ta •

Autol tor sale

MWfo -...,;
Labrllory ::::"::"
....I _lmpl!"-~1. Ill)', 1171 l'&lt;lnl Torino, aluminium

Block
Rorrlo-, IIW41-U01.
lloglotorod rot torrtor PYIIIIiot
trl&lt;olor 1 block 1 tan. voi
chockod, ahalo a -.mod.
S751N. 114-441-1354.
lloglotorod

D&lt;•-

56

bch, NOgcrclttbltt. ·~11145.
~ht plono, US. · 104-f'/11-

58

FNhl&amp;
Vegetables

1HI 14ft. -

........ 114-21MUZ.
2300.
I~:=:-=:.:7.==:;:...,..::-::-:,...
Month Old -lord Bull. AI&gt;- 11177 Trono Am, 400, 4 botNI,
prox. Weight 100 1bo. 114-MI- . . .., $1200.00, 114-8112-3131.

1171 Thundotlllrd AC. PS, PI,
TIIIBI..tna.E.llllull,
' ·-•-••••·
Tlreo,
boollont Slttillll
Cal- AIHorN And Stook Traitor, tor lp.m, 114-.1418.
.
tt~7N; 7 Y- Old Broke
AYHA Cleldlna Whh 1 Wo11.n 1m Flroblnl. goad conc1. 304Piuouro Polnfo. 114-211M522.
5~21101.
1m Pontile
64 Hay &amp; Grain
--r~:,..;.,..,;;.;=;_wtlh
red - · ahttrp, ti,JOO.
304·773-U40.
.

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Transportation
c,!rm SuiJplll ,,
&amp; Ll'lt'SIOCK

4AKC-•T- ...........:2
....... 2 Fr·lnc . 7 w..u Old;
1 AKC R g' tired lloeton Tlflo
"''· s .,..,. Old. All - . .
Wormocl. 1~17.

Autos for sate

71

3_,.

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as "'· na 1oo.
- . $1,!100.

-

11173.

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1m Sunltlod

seoo o.a.o.

1112 Ford E - Stollon
Wogon. """" ollcMr, runo
go0d.104-f71.1721.
1112 Otdo CUtluo Clora 4 Dr.
lr&gt;ldod. -

114-4411r0204.

.... 111100 080.

Auloe tor sale

71

"ltD I for Sele

71

1113

Oldo ... Good Condition.

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~Mart.

Nl
~

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· tor 9ale
HAMILTON WATER~~
IUIIMEA SPECIALS

-~Uudolol

DotltJO OWnollr
Like
Atr -Conlllloll,

1110 c:t;o,ry 1-10 To'-. ..,100.
fullr lctociH. colllloloni 1:30 or
-1:00, ~--.

V:!,

18111 Ftroltlnl

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only s,aoo

1111-.lttUIMv.

Ott OIRI.7.

. Vane &amp; 4 WD's

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Homa

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Sunday
Home

84

Electrical &amp;

lmpJOVements

Refrigeration

~N

- ·VIC
Sorvlco,
CINk Ad. Porta, sup.
plloo, pickup. lnd doNVIIJ. 114•

wlrtng, new NrYice or reDalra.

.~.02114.

Rldonour

Dovlo

81

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or

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eommatelal

ettetticlan.

Eloc1rlcol, )04-f'lll·

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87

Upholstery

304-'1'134110.

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4 ""'
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- 4 .......
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1GB3 Toyoto c-lcla, lolded,
13300. 3114-e711-t1132.

CORVETTES :

=-~,11,72,111,7'11,11,87

-

Rl81 Estate General

=
114

114-241- -

... ··
1."1"!"
'Lr,r"~~:o.~ '1..
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GIIC dump tntctk, 304-1113-

an.

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76

11M.

Auto Pans &amp;
1

ludael T.........lono. .._ 1
robulil, ll.lrtlna o1 · Sill• Auto
Put&amp; 114-2U-117J. ' ~~
.2:113.
.

OFFICE 992-1888

79

HOME 992-8892

Campera&amp;
Motor Homes

1811 AM'ro "'" 304-17H3H.
11M CMvr Ash von, ,.food
roi 4.1VCR,
CB, •lr, eMu,
Ut• ........ 31,000
=-::1,100, ••• cond, 31)4.

r·

1m Corutr, 22 ft. -

trollor.
Uko - · 2 ..... lully ..........
~!'!!~~Ina. -ltlo al. . ..
. IM-441-0204.

....v

1m 28 ft. P r - campoo' lull

~4

bath, .., oond., 304-11'1-1111.

Motorcycles

1Ft TNok camper, ...,_ 4 -

Ooldwlng, 1100 ••. contolnod, fully oqUtppld 'wHh
114-812·77'll4.
'" - ... good cond. 114-tl2·
zm:
1112 -

..

Real Elltlle General

Proct...llla, Ohio

1030 or 1'11-2114.

F a n l - van ntco
- · nlco IMdo. IICrot.C. lor
81100, ...... SliGO. 114-'11122001. .
1. . JMp Chtrc%-. 4 wltetl
- ....! oyl, 304of75.3711 after
-

1117
a-. Aut~
12,2110; 1114 - . 4 ......
~

%'1-

Accessories
11ae cartnotlor. Phono aown-

11111 Ford Van. E-lonl condl·
lion, .,._11114.

AKC Collie atemplorl lloodllno,

· s IIlolonlho
HouubarUn.
Bladen

'

~0 Ell ::0 ::..::.• ...

11.1 IIVR Yt

...~~

Real Estate General

' I

r ,. •

75 Boata &amp; Motora

Control. ........... .,.,.....,

1m Bc•movlllo_, 455 eng.\.MANY 1884 Couaar, V-11, . auto,IOodod,
NEW PARTS. MOO or 8ElOT 01'· 71,000 mDHj 614-lli2-2357 or
FER. 304-1175-5975 AFTER I pm. 1'12-23111.
.

•

Home

81
~lnqulrio8
"!'11'
ptouo. Ill -uti 0111
alorlp.ln.

-PS, PW,nooo-.
~ '1111--. Cntt•

-7107.

••

7.100 .............. _,.....,

..

"""

...... -

''

1Ht"-k1oloi=H0•2
• 13,7711; 110 U •
; 110 IX

-

57,000
IIIlO -

.

Motorcycles

,. . HonU •

1 - . Air,

Trw

--=·
==-=::==~Gaa1o tor- -· - -

.....

Pets for Sale

74

72 Tn.lckl for Sale
71

. ..

POmeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Potnt

June

81 Farm

•'

VIRGINIA IMITH. Ill OllER. 381·1821
DIA"' CALLAHAN, REALTOR. 441·1801
EUNICE NIEHM. IIEALTOII. -·1117
RUTH IAIIII, REALTOR. 44f.0722
OEBOIIAit ICI1U,IIEALTOR. 44f.""
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR,
MICHOU!L MILLER, ASSOCIATE, ..........

GOlD RIDGE- DOUBUWIDE ONLY- Adeal too good to
be true - A 24x4B Patriot mobile horne that has 3 bed·
rooms, two full baths, a family room. and 1 hv•na room. Also
has a real nice wobdburlter. This lovely home won't last long
at this low price. Owner will pay $1,000 towards the cost of
moving.
.
.
116.900

44t·-

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

OWNER REDUCED THIS PROPERTY TO SELL! - 4 year old
vinyl sided ranch style home with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, lam·
ily room, dming room, full basement, heal pump central air,
2 decks and a lot more. Only $45,000. Call today
pointment.

lANGSVILLE - Look at this nice I~ story home that sit on
approx. 31 acres. It has 3 bedrooms, 2 batlts, heat pump,
and wood burner. Some of the land is tillable, plus~ would be
a great place for hunting. It has adug well plus aspring Hey,
this 1s a great place - Come take a look.
DillY $4UOO

Raal Estate General

Old,
Ao.d,

. RESiDEIITIAl • IIW:STIEITS · COIIEICIAl · FARIS'

lANGSVILLE- CrouSI Rold- Avery pe1celul setlm&amp;for
this 3 bedroom home. Sitting OQ approx. 6.35 acres. One car
garage wrth storage and a mce screened in front porch.
·
ONlY $31.000

LETART - lalnltniMI Fm Elterior - 4 bedrooms, 2
· baths, 3 stlting porches, and a dining room. Nice big level
yard. Fenced area w~h barn for animals, and a httle house
for children. Price was $42,500. REDUCED TO $39,900
II DDLEPORT - Historical lookin&amp; corner store. Has 6
apartments up and another store down. Start your own busi·
ness. Has lots of room and has an income. CALL FOR MORE
DETAILS.
RACCOON CREEK - A nice camp1ng lot wtth electric and
Grey water disposal, Showers and bathrooms really close,
also has 1 frontage on Raccoon Creek for 1 boat deck. Rea"y
n1ce.
JUST $5,900

or din me room, eat·
porch, walking dis·
mial•t ho what you are look·
H353

SNOWVILLE - Shows nc -A 4D acre farm that iS all rol·
ling cleared pasture land. Approx. 20 acres fenced. Large
metaf .barn, and an immaculately clean 3 bedroom newer
home wrth free I!S. equippS!Iutchen, and P!Jbllc ~ter._
.
lUST SU $55,000
lETART- BtiYou'll Low lt-Justrighttor afamily. H••
bedrooms, dining room, new k~chen cabinets. new ranee• .
and enttre home has been remodeled nicety - inside and
out. Also has a view of the river.
$24.900
OVEILDOIIIIG
and economical to hve ·
new shin.., roof, white
sidtng (no upkeep),
Rural Water System, small
(no work), and afront porch. This four rooms, two bed·
wkh bath and a shower in tub. Ideal for a retired
or a young couple just starting to buy their first home
paying rent). S• this home now.
11696

UADIIIGHUI lEAL ESTATE
PH. 4C6-7699 or 446·9539

· IMMIW I IllS- CltOtt lob will! spoc:locu~mw. ·You
WillwtiM rnor.t ttlln one. Oak, IIIPII, dlpaod and cverlfeen
trees nle ttis 1 suburbafl pmdrse. Abo 1m frlntkl( on White
Rd. For lull l)llltu~n coli ~ inspect Speoiol Price.

-

-.IUSIIOSFOISAll DillY- WAU.PAP£1&amp; 11111101
DISIGIIS- 1500' of disply oreo. Top olllloliot-yond
fixt!dlssels.

IIDDlEPOIT- Halt to mow Jllir IIWIIf ..-. It Will be un·
necessary due to the unique landscaping of this 7 yr. old
home on Mill Street. Has 2to3 bedrooms, also has lar£11 wre·
P·&amp;round deck wrth beeut1ful view for entertaininglriends or
maybe you'd like to just kick back and retu
YOURS FOI $42.100
BIEN DA JEFFERS .......................................... 992-3058
DARLINE $TEWART ........................................ 912-eHS
SANDY IUTCHER .....................:..................... 99Z:5371
SHEIIYlWAlTER................................ .. ...... H7..fMZ1

...

. lEAS! OIIUY IIIOCUY- Video rtttlol, p~eroom Mtd \
other sales rms. lOCited in llfQwirtl ••· lMII! 2 story bu•d·
inJ w1ttt showriXHis, 2 bedrm. IPirtmtnl:. attc stOI'IIf. Plus 1

-

n1a 2 bedrm. mobile holM. Clll fof delttls.

·

8AYII 01. - 2 WAlS TO IUY - Straight out or find con·
lrt_ct. 3 bedroom home, nice fenced yard, new carpet newly

canaday

....

Realty

fl74. IIW liST1118. QIII!T PIRHCTIOII . This 100my, cheer lui

1ffordlble home ltltultS three bedrooms, two blths, fJmiy
room 1nd much more. fhe intefiof is perlrecttw hlnwOI'IIJtd.
•• .6 m/llal. N.G. school dittttt Calli'" -b.

446•3636
fiNY

IM7l. VIII .._ . ., - • ltltlrms.. 2~ ltllhs. LR
wlhtoploc:e, ..~... billy ""·. w~ tartMI diil~ nn..
i .171 10 w~h· '"""'' 011 IIIIo Llrl'. barn

f&amp;M. IIIIW/O"tGtt TOIUY -llocl»lltttlt you!ol~dony

,.... charm. ltattiotl Mtd co--.... Tltts • pot1ocl Itt&lt; lite
fl71. lOW. lOW 40'1. YGII'Il H PUMtlaY SUIHISID w11en yco s~e~&gt; , ...~. relired, ar lot"'-2 bedrm .. 2111111s, U .. ~rt•LRII1d OR.
iosido litis 3-4 boclrcom home wiffllR. FR•Oll·in lichen, ...,.., MI., util. rm ..
rm. tcelled '"'"' lnllcor. Tru~ de~&amp;iiHUI. Inspect 1ty
I" 11011 ••d - ltllll lo&lt;olod en .&gt; oc. roll. K11.or Ctftl S&lt;hoob. IPPOintmtnt ttws condominium .
rTIO. IOACIUAIII/l willlloblc:co blsund ltlrn. 2 srory

"""itt

- · il ACIEI PASIUIE LAIID.It ACHS WOOOS- Nice
lind tor buildlllll .tiOUtet. Wll driYt •r mterestf:d penon over

fond. Clllor apfl!.

E81yTerm•
I.L~G~Om

••

,..

frlft'lt ii:MII! with 3 bedrooms, b1th. liv1na room, ~lily room.
Call lor
tnd loclten.

. .....

- . :-:, ' .'r

AUIIU f . (AIIIOAI, 110«11
Of(. 2S ICKUSI 51., GlliJPOII~ 011.

uoua

l - G. 51111110•

IIAIIOIIit-2616
IUIII P. fiOIO

01

IIAIIOI 446-UII

-n.tiiNIPAII

$58,000 IS THE flEW LOW PRICE on this lovely ranch on Jay
Drive. Very conveniently located. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
open (amily room/dming/kitchen area
attached garage.

w~h

fireplace. 2 car

..

o;c.
MIIIIW...Iac.
c:-ea.....,.-:-m,•
lullllftll.

'

CHOit'l OF 10 COt 0111

.....
-~. . "'1!::~
.
hunar&gt;do.
thtlu_. ef

--lllr•

tlal-

laal w.CII.IN.RY
DONNA
1 .8.11 .. lox , . .
Glllipollo. Oltlo 41UI

PH. 614-256-65

1314

STEP BACK Ill TIIEI THE ABOVE TURN OF THE CENTURY
.SKETCH Of THIS BEAUTIFUL OLD HOME... PROVES IT ONCE
WAS ONE OF THE MOST ElABORATE HOMES IN GALUPOLIS.
IT COUlD SE NOW, WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINAliON.
If RESTOR)NG AVINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM, CALL US
FOR ATOUR OF THIS ONE.. .AND MAKE YOUR DREAM COME
TRUE!

GENTLEMAN'S FAR II- Elegant country 1tv1ng on 131 acres
m/1 with a iovely cedar 4 bedroom home. Over 2.000 square
feet of hvtng space IncludeS 4 bedrooms, lireplace, formal
din1ng, equipplll kitchen and much more. land ts level to
rolling and Includes a beautiful pond, a 2 car garage and a
barn. You will love 1t. Call for an appointment. $110,000.

llli. IIWliSTIII.IIis~ul .....oll""'*'loonelftlle
moot pmlleiouso,.ISift GollpoklR. 4 fiR1. klwlbor,dirliiJ
ara off U., 3 blths, fR, Clf ..ttlttPI blths ••d ~~ . Jenn-11re
"""- dlslnl-. ulilly ""· 2 en ..,..,. FP wi!Morlele&lt;
heat pu~p. C/1. Cllj schoob. Alto 20'x30' switttm~&amp;IJOOI. You
win ••nllo &gt;an• c:ocrltlel naN owoy. CIU FOR APPI.

WE NEED un•oSI
IF YOU WANT· YOUI PIOPrm
.. SOLD
GIVE US A CALLI

NEW LISTING -:- lookmg for a housing site or mob1fe home
lot?Thts s1te has IOD ft. frontage and located in the village of
Ractne. Sewer. water and electnc hookups on site! Beautiful
level lot for $7,000.
'

ev111

·

.

MIDDlEPORT-_REDUCED! 6.77 acre Execubve Buildtng
S1te. H1gh on a hill overlooking the beautiful Ohio Rtver. If
you want a superior homesite...call for details. Reduced to
$19,500. MAKE OFFER.

Mil IITIMATiolt

·

NEW LISTING- lose Rd. Llb1non Twp.- 350• acres VA·
CA NT GROUND. Owner !llaY spl~ some acreage. Call for de·
tII1S.

446-2917

............__
"' ....
011.....,..
. ..... , .....

nri..,~.

1511. CUIII·IIl. Cllly 211Ritu ...... will LR. FR. bll~ to. 011·
~ kilcllttt, ps lurtll&lt;o, FP. 2"' p11ae. bsmL, city scfroab.
$38,000 wil buy lhis neal homo Take •!oak. Coli k&gt;t

NEW LISTING- Pritts fork- 40 acres of vacant ground
· with barn. 10+ tillable, 17+ pasture 13+ limber some land ts
fenced . Old oil welt on the property also. ASKING $25,00D.

Low Price

patnted 1nside and out, famtly room and more. $34,000.
*339
REDUCED TO $37,500- Kerr-Bethel Rd. 2 bedroom home
with family rooinJo!s of furn~~[!tp. far~~e 2 carfarage se·
Plflte aJ!Itlmenl tr111 rents tor .IZlO month. All on plus icre.
Owner wants this one sold!n
· · 130&amp;
CITY SCHOOLS- 14x70 IEDROOI1914 DUIE MOillE
HOlE ON NICE lOT. Complatefy furnished except for beds.
Electric furnace and atr conditiOning. Gantentub 1nd sepa·
rate shower tn bath. Above RfOUnd pool, 2 utilrty buildings,
one w~ eledricily and concrete floor. Call today,. 11342
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - 12.9 acres mil located in
Cheshire Twp. Approx. 700' road frontage, good home site
w~h barn: Rural water av1ilable. A good biiy at $16,500. Not
restricted. ·
1335
!ACAIIT LAID- RIO GRANDE AREA- Various stzes rang·
mg from 20 acres to 100 acres m/lw~h road frontage on Trn
Rhos Road. Call for details.
13 6
H ACRES WITH MOillE HOlE. bam, utility butldtng. Quiet

.#" .~.' :

'

LOIS
NEAl TOWN.

NEW LISTING- lots are hard to find but we have avatlable
10 of them! All have 50 ft. frontage wrth minimum depth of
157. ft. sewer and water av11labfe. Located in the village of
Rac!ne. YOUR CHOICE! $2,500 each lot.

THE lt:ST IUY WE HAVE SEEI FOR $21,000 - 5 ROOM .
FRAME HOME WITH BRICK TRIM. LARGE LEVEL ~WN WITH
FENCED BACK YARD.
·

WE NEED liSTINGS! IF YOU WAIT TO SUL..S£E US! WE
HAVE BUYERS WAITING FOR IIOUSU lAD PRGPUTIU
OF AI.,!- Ill OS. LISTING UIIGEITLY IEED£0. Fill A"IIOOD
DEAl • AT THE II£ST PRICE AIID PROMPT ACTION ln US
HEAR FROI YOU!
'

=:.

CiflAN0 ....................................... 912·&amp;1tl
1lAGER .......... :................... ............ 941·2439
JIM
TIUSSELl.. ........................................... Mt·2MO

.. HIU ........................................................!1115-44M
. .ICI ...................................,..................... HZ-225t

••

-THIS HOllE SPARKLES and offers 3 bed·
rooms. 2 baths, cozy family room with fireplace, fully
equipped kkchen, 16x32 in-ground pool. 2 car garage.
locttled In olovely area just minutes from GallipoliS. c.tlto·
day for details.
_
1336
NEAR RIO GRANDE -10 beautiful acres with stocked pond.
You need to see this one.
1341
SALE in Addison Township. t.nttnlv ••••••
this one out.

Rnl Eatme General

. Raal Eatata General

1171. ATTOOIOI - IIMST • IICDII PIODUeiU PIIOI'·
1m -1 poet lor • doublowde. 1telup b' ....~~ ltomt. Repmble 2 bedn11. home. 2 Wiler lips, 2 septi:ay-. 2 "'"
m/1. Get the MOST lot your money. $20s. ClOSE IN.

I
· 2 story home thit his ~ atl! 4 bedrooms
l ~ baths, family room, 2 car gnge, new A/C unrt new wan:
paper tn kttchen &amp; dining, family room and a bath. Large
front Sttltng porch. All drapes go with thts ver.y bright and ch·
erry home. Decorated mostly with mauve blues &amp; peach
REDUCED TO $46,900.
,
'
.

.KYIO CREEK SCHOOLS - Spacious,, attn1ctive hn""' "''
3 bedrooms, 2 blths, f1mily room. I
room,
bnaakfast area, heat pump central
or propane
au furnace backup. 1900 $CI. ft. mlllivmg area. Partial
basement. Bi&amp; home and 2D ac. m/1.
*329
GIE~IFIElD TWP. - 2 story home and 2aeres in thecoun·
try, small tObacco bise and goOd prden area.
t343
FAll I•
TOWNSHIP- 76 acres
2 bedroom
horne
··
and kttchen. Also tob1acco

FARMS AID V..:ANT LAID
ZS ACRES- HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $15,000.

101 ACRES ~ ~ANNAN TRACE ROAD, $29,000.
ACREME - ROUTE 211 - MOBilE HOME HOOKUP,
BARN. $28,000. ·
lilt.
IIWUITIII:
· - • 1""· tllllllltltrilt!
2. 3
- wiltlT111o
...., """·
.... ltllll, ..........
port, ""' ..... bul~ft&amp; Thll it ......llont """" ~ the PO'o. Coli b' .... · - ·

&amp;7 ACRES- ROUTE 325- 3 BEDROOM HOME , 2 BARNS,
NICE lANDI $38,000.

PERFECT FOR HOISES -PASTURE AREA IS WIGE EN·
OUGH FOR RIDING RING. MODERN 3BEDROOMS. COUNTRY

KITCHEN, FAMILY ROOM WITH WOODBURNER. 2CAR CON·
CRETE BLOCK GARAGE. OVER 9 ACRES. $49,900.
NOTICE - HASKINS TAVERN ON COURT STREET WAS RE·
CENTL Y DAMAGED BY THE FIRE. WE ARE STILL OFFERING
THE PROPERTY FOR SALE. PRICE HAS BEEN DRASTICAllY
REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE.
·

ST. IT. 124- UUCIU 11/UIID All'r STORY ALUif·
NUl-SIDED HOlE w~h 3 bedrooms, bath, kttchen and llv·
ing room, 2 car &amp;at:•Je,_IJ(!Ie budd in&amp; wished, satellrte dish
and more. Aslun1 $46.900. Only $39,90D.
*214
SUIIJIEIIOAD -Is this 3 bedroom aluminum sided ranch
wfth blth, livinl tnd family rooms, basement. one car p,r.
aae. storage building. All this on .840 ol an acre m/1. Asktn&amp;
only $4U,UUU.
*299
- I\\ story w/3 bedrooms. bath,
BriiiiWiySl Askine $29.500.
1293

.

I

�June23, 1181

OH Point

PARKAY
JUMBO
SPREAD

STORE
--..... HOURS
Mo~tday fht:U. Sunday.
I AM-10 PM

Soap box
derby
·W•IDDerS

Pick 3:376
Pick 4: 3009
Cards: Q·H, 7-C
A·D; Q-S
Super Lotto:
6-13-lS-17-26-47
Kicker:S941S4

PageS

3 LB. TUB

.

Ohio Lottery

$159

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY.
OH.
.
.. '

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 23 THRU JUNE 29, 1991

a1

SUt4NY .DELIGHT

CITRUS
.PUNCH
64

oz.

$
249
JOY
LIQUID
Cube Steak ••••••••~.
DISH ·
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF La. Sl
9
7
Rump Roast ••••• ,...
~ DETERGENT
BUCKET

.

LONGHORN .

·.

.

22

.

o~.

en.

Vol. 42, No. 34

59
Chuck Roast .......'! 1

Bologna .............~. $139

American Electric Power Corp.
was challenged Sunday by the
president of the United Mine
Workers of America to stand up for
the people who have supported the
energy giant for years, back clean
coal technology and save the jobs
of not only 1,258 Meigs Mmes
employees but those of miners all
over Ohio.
"It's absolutely up to AEP to do
its part," Richard Trumka told
more than 500 people attending a
rally Sunday in the Gallipolis City
Park: "It's up to Af'.P not to take a
walk when it's their tum, to know
what it's like to be pan of the community that supports it. It's not ask-

ing for much; Stick up for the peo- Gavin with its energy source, ~ack·
pie who were there for you, stand ers of the SC!Ubbers have swd.
up for Ohio and a clean ~;Cal future.
AEP, which must conform with
And we won't stop until we have the dicrates of the Clean Air Act, is
that future."
·
considering either inSI8lling ·scrub·
· Speaking in ringing tones and to bers at Gavin or importing low-suicheers and applause from the audi- fur coal from western Slates to cut
ence, Trumka pledged that the sulfur dioxide emissions at Gavin.
UMW A and the legislators and ShoUld AEP opt for the latter, the
community leaders working to con- Meigs mines will close. The corpovince AEP to install scrubbing ration has until this summer to
technology at the James M. Gavin make a decision.
power plant in Cheshire will work
Trumka painted a gloomy ecowith AEP to,achieve that goal.
nomic and social picture of the
Installation of the scrubbers at immediate area and southeastern
Gavin will maintain the Jobs of Ohio in general should the mines
employees of Southern Oh1o Coal close. He also blasted the conCo.'s Meigs mines, which supply . tention that in place of the mines,

VANILLA ·
WAFERS

MIXED

fryer Parts •.•••••• ~~. 49(
P-ick ot the Chitken ••~. QQ&lt;
KENTUCKY BORDER
.
.
W1eners.................

11 OZ. PKG.

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND

12 OZ. PKG.

COFFEE
34.5

oz.

~

Cantaloupe •.•.•• !~ ••• 99&lt;

TIDE
DETERGENT
Regular .Only
136

···FLAVORITE

2°/o M·ilk ••••••••••••••
.

.

. GAL

KRAFT .AMERICAN SINGLES ,

Cheese ..............~2.~z••
TEXSUN FROZEN

GROUND
BEEF

(
Pringles .••••••••..~~~••• 99&lt; Orange Juice ........ u

POTATO CHIPS

·

. . 12

LIBERTY GOLD

·

oz. . ~.;,;,· 9

10 LB. PKG.

Pineapple··~····':::. 2I Sl Ice Cream •••••••~..~. $J19
BAR-1-Q SAUCE
11

oz.

79(

.... Gilly At ,_..., Sup« Valu

.... .-.u~~n.-.2',1"'
lllllt 1 "' c......

oz.

$1 ·59

Sl s9 .

FLAVORITE

JIF

ss 99v•

PEANUT IUnER
' Sll. .

GeM 0111y at ,_..,

· GeM-~~-

s..

Ji11111t, 1"1

lllllt 1 Plr C I -

DOMINO SUGAR·.
Sll.

$169

GeM Gilly At ,_••, S.. Volu
GeM .... II thnt Mit 19,
LIMit 1 "' c.._

1"1

GROUND
CHUCK

GOlDEN WHEAT

MAC. &amp; CHEESE

5/Sl

Geed Ollly At ,_..., S... Valu
Geed ,_ II tllnl ,_ 19, '"'
LIMit • ,., c...-

10 LB. PKG •.

$1690
•

....•.,...-...

SAYS IT IS TIME TO ACT • State Rep.
Jerry Krupinski, D·Steubenville, tells reporters
action must be taken now on the clean coal issue
during Sunday's coal miner's rally in the Gal-

lipolis Public Square. On rigbt talking to area
miners (wblte , shirt) is UMWA President
Ricbard Trumka,

Action must be taken now on
clean coal issue: Krupinski
.

'.

jobs .will be created in othe:r states
and industtial development offer·
ing the area's workforce lowerpayinj! jobs will take root, to
underlme his point.
He added that based on what
he's read and heard about AEP's
position on the issue, he believes
the corporation isn' t interested in
clean coal technology to make
Ohio's high-sulfur coal more
usable and environmentally safe.
"Let's talk about how much
families will be able to spend on
clothing, to eat in restaurants in
Gallipolis, to buy a new home, or
send their lcids to school," Trumka
said, his voice rising with emotion.

"Let's talk about an Ohio where will leave an Ohio to the future
more of our sons and daughters generation unlike the one its par·
pack everything they own into a U· ents left them, .the UMW A chief
Haul and go to Texas or Florida to said, "and that's why it's high time
- absolutely high tune - to fight
fmdajob.
"Why should that be?" Trumka back and Ieick the crap out of the
asked. "Because someone in a people who want to Ieick the ecoskyscraper in downtown Coliunbus nomic crap out of us."
Trumka, who has led the
decided to ignore research that
nation's
unionized miners for nearshows that clean coal technology is
ly
a
decade,
was the main speaker
good business sense. They chose to
at
the
rally,
in which community
ignore the one study, and that being
union
representatites and
leaders,
from tlle Public Utilities Commisstate
and
federallegislatott,
includ·
sion ot Ohio, which said that saving
U.S.
Rep.
Clare""c
!1,
Miller,
ing jobs is not only morally right, ·
spoke for nearly two hb\111,
but the cheapest route to go."
Miller, whose Tentll CongresClosing the mines and its cumu·
lative effect on the mining industry
Conlinued on page 3 .

Coal bill
awaits
action

MRS •. ALLISON'S

'

A lluiUmedlo Inc. Newop.oper

It's up to AEP to do its part: Trumka ·

ECKRICH

$

1 Section, 10 P~gM 25 cente

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 24,1991

Copyrlghr.d 19111

Cheese ••••••••••••••••~. $1 89
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF ·

•

•

~

Clear tonight. Low near
65. Tuesday, sunny.

A state legislator actively
involved in offering incentives
to utilities to use clean coal
technology feels action must be
taken soon on legislation now
before the House of Represenratives which could help save
Ohio mining jobs.
"We're running out of time
and something has to be done
this week," State R.ep . Jerry
Krupinski, D·Steubenville, told
The Daily Sentinel and Gallipolis Daily Tribune following a
rally Sunday in the Gallipolis
City Park.
Krupinslci referred to Senate
Bill 143, which cleared the Senate 32-1 and offers utilities a tax
break if they employ scrubbers
and other technology designed
to clean Ohio coal. The bill, cosponsored by Sens. RobertNey,
R-Barnesville, and Robert
Burch, 0-0over, goes to the
House Public Utilities Commit·
tee this week for deliberation.
Krupinski, himself a former
miner, led a special committee
which conducted extensive hearings on the clean coal issue. He
authored a House bill providing
breaks to utilities, but the bill
was blocked and no progress
was made until S.B. 143, which

.

•

incorporated much of Krupinslci's bill, was approved.
While
Gov.
George
Voinovich and House Speaker
Vern Riffe have voiced misgivings over the bill, Ney was optimistic last week that the bill
would gamer enough bipartisan
support in the House and win
approval. Voinovich said he has
unspeeified concerns about the
bill, but did give it his endorse·
ment
··
The bill and Krupinski's
work is considered a key to
keeping more than I ,250
employees at Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs mining complex employed. Coal dug at the
mines is the fuel source for
American Electric Power
Corp.'s Gen. James M. Gavin
power plant at Cheshire. To
conform with the dicrates of the
Clean Air Act, AEP is currently
considering either scrubbers-at
Gavin or the the purchase of
out-of-state,low-sulfur coal.
"No one knows at this point
what the legislation will turn out
to be," Krupinski said, refming
to possible changes in S.B. 143
worked out in the House committee. "The legislation in its

present form will the be the
least-cost in terms of the overall
picture. If AEP doesn't choose
the least-cost alternative, they
will have to prove it to everyone. And I don't think they ean
do it if S.B. 143 is passed in its
present form."
Krupinski was also critical of
what he called AEP's "boycott"
of the legislative efforts. ·
"I think they've waited too
long to become a player in the
procedure," he said.
The Public Utilities Committee is to begin considering the
biU by the middle of this week.
AEP has announced it will make
a final decision on the use of
scrubbers or western coal by this
summer.
Krupinsld was one of several
speakers at the rally, organized
by the members at the Meigs
mines and community leaders.
The rally drew more than 500

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
&lt;;OLUM~US, Ohio (AP) Ohto's Legislature, which has
moved in spurts this year, swings
into full gear this week with a state
budget deadline approaching and
hearings scheduled on a variety of
other big bills.
A Senate-House conference
committee met behind closed doors
. !lllllt\&amp; at ~t lll!ft of-~ we4ell!l
6n the $27 billion, two-year budget. Progress was reported to be
slow, however.
The Democratic House and
Republican Senate approved vastly
different versions of the document
that the srate must have by July I in
order to pay its employees and
meet other ongoing obligations.
An interim budget, providing
exua time, has been mentioned as a
· possibility. But leaders called it an
undesirable option that could focus
national attention on Ohio and
damage its credit rating.
Meanwhile, the Senate Health
and Human Services Committee
scheduled its first hearing Wednes·
' day on a House bill requiring
women seeking an abortion to be
informed of risks and other options
at least 24 hours in advance.
Testimony is expected to be
limited primarily to a presentation
by the sponscr, Rep. Jerome Luebbers, D-Cincinnati, whose bill
passed the House earlier this month
with more than SO co-sponsors.
Rep. Frank Sawyer, D-Mansfield, who heads the House Public
Utilities Committee, said his panel
will hear more testimony and vote
Wednesday on a long-debated bill
affecting utilities and Ohio's coal
industry.
'
Under that Senate-passed pro-

·

CHALLENGES AEP • Richard Trumka, president of the
United Mine Workers ot America, told approximately 500 lndivid·
uals attending a miner's ·nlly in the Gallipolis PubUc Square Sun·
day that It is now up to American Electric Power Corp., to do Its
part to save jobs for coal miners in southern Ohio.

•

posal, utilities could qualify for tax
breaks by installing scrubbers per·
mitting the use of Ohio's high-sui·
fur coal instead of switching to
cleaner coal fipm other states.
Ohio's utilities are being forced
to consider those options as a
means.of complying w1th the federal CleAn Air Act, and the already
troubled Ohio coal industry says
the bill offers its only hope of survival.
In other matters this week, the
House Commerce and Labor Com·
mittee scheduled for Tuesday
another hearing and possible vote
on a bill prohibiting Ohio's local
governments from enacting gun ·
control ordinances.
As introduced, the measure
sponsored by Rep. ~ark Malone, ·

0-South Pomt, woul[J repeal exiSt· ·
ing ordinances in several Ohio
cities. Gov. George Voinovich, a
former mayor Cleveland, has indi·
cated he would veto any bill that .
repealed that city's gun law.
In other action, the House is
expected to reject Senate amendmen!$ to a bill allowing the state ~
and its local subdivisions to issue ·
bonds to assist in the financing of
private housing.
The !lOusing bill was authorized
by a constitutional amendment
adopted by Ohio's voters last fall.
Sponsors of the bill ho~ to reoolve
issues that include a dilemma over
the financing of a trust fund that
could qualify the state for federal
dollars.

Doctors are urged to cut health costs

CffiCAGO (AP) - Health Sec·
retary Louis Sullivan says Ameri ·
cans will push harder for nationalized health insurance unless doc tors curb soaring costs and improve
the availability of care.
"Unless we act now to meet
these goals, we could find ourselves with a critical mass of our
citizens demanding a total government takeover of health care," Sulbill we fashioned in the
livan warned doctors Sunday at the
House was carefully balanced
opening of t()e American Medical
and researched with all concerns
Association's annual meetin$.
in mind," Krupinski told the
"l doubt that many in th1s room
crowd. "The bottom line is, it
today would welcome that developwill be balanced and .fair to
ment," he said .
everyone."
Sullivan said health care
accounted for 12 percent of the
gross national product last year or about $2,500 for every man,
woman and child. The cost is the
highest in the world.
"As Americans, as well as
physicians,
we must be concerned
libraries.
that
conswning
ever larger portions
Anderson reponed that Exten·
of
ONP
on
health
care necessarily
sion Services·Librarian Leah Grif·
diverts
resources
from
other good
fith and he held a successful meet·
uses
for
example,
increased
ing with tbe Muslcingum County
wages,
savings,
capital
investment,
Library System to renew their
Books by Mail contraeL Andc:non research and development and
hopes to have contracts. for the human services such u drua reba·
OVAL Board to approve at the July bilitation, foster care and lamily
support." Sullivan aid.
meeting.
·Sullivan made a passing rofer·
A policy to eliminate staff
schedulinp: problems when Book- ence to AIDS when he called for
inc!QSed emphasis on individuals
Continued on page 3

accepting responsibility for their
own health, Including curtailing
sexual· practices that can spread
AIDS. He also cited improved diet,
childhood vaccinations, early pre-

natal care and elimination of illegal
drugs and tobacco as ways to
improve overall health.
AIDS is expected to be a major
Continued on page 3

~l!fi~

Area legislators support OVAL
An update on the funding crisis
for both the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries (OVAL). and the public
libraries was given by Eric S.
Anderson, OVAL director, at a
meeting held Thursday in Wellston.
Anderson reported that there is
strong support from area legislators
for both issues although the matter
S1ill rests in the hands of the Confere~ ~ommiuee. That commit·
tee IS composed of'three Senators

and three Representatives who are
worlcing on a compromise budget
which will be acceptable to both
the Senate and the House.
"The biggest threat to the
improvement of public libraries,"
Anderson comffi!lnted, "is taking
public library monies to fund State
Library operations." Anderson
asked Board memben to contact
tbe Conference Committee and
express the impact the proposed
changes would have on their

AND AWAY THEY GO! -Two racers In the ftnt Melp County Soapbox Derby fire out ol the blocks and bead dOWII the tr.ck In
the first leg o1 the nee Sunday in Middleport, wblcb Adam Brown
won. For the story 1Dd additional photos, see Pa1e 5. (Sentinel
photo by Brilll Reed)

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