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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 19, 1991:

\

tered. Tony began playing melodies on a tiny
xylophone at age 2, and now plays the guitar,
piano, banjo, harmonica and recorder, with
hopes or attending the Berklee College or Music
in Boston. (AP)

MUSICAL SAVANT • Tony DeBlois, blind
and autistic 17-year-old, smiles Thursday at his
home in Waltham, Mass., as he plays his guitar,
just one or the many instruments he has mas-

Blind and autistic teenager
plays the blues, Bach, broadway
By CHRIS TORCHIA
Associated Press Writer
WALTHAM . Mas s. (AP ) From birth , Tony DeBlois, blind
and auti stic, d1dn ' t seem to have
much of a chance.
Then, when he reached age 2,
his mother heard him at play on a
tiny coy xylophone, perfectly mim·
icking some of the childhood tunes
he had been hearing.
Now , he is being paid to play
piano, and is being considered for
admi ssion to the prestigious
Berklee College of Music in
Boston . He also dabbles in the
organ, guitar, violin, banjo,
recorder, harmonica and handbeUs.
DeBlois, 17, suffers from savant
syndrome, in which a retarded per·
son has a highly developed talent in
a specific area, such as painting or
mathematics.
Tony, believed to be one of only
a few musical savants in the nation,
is almost at the level of a profes·
sional pianist, said Steven Lipman,
Berklee's director of admissions.
"He's able to mimic and em bel·
!ish anything that he hears," said
Lipman. "If he doesn't get it exact·
Jy right the first time, he gets it
right the second time."
Watch Tonv DeBlois at the
piano, and you sec a teen-ager with
a trendy tail of hair whose fingers

sweep the keys through ragtim e,
classical and Broadway tunes.
On a recent evening at his home,
Tony played guitar and sang Elvis
Presley's " Love Me Tender " and
John Lennon 's " Imagine," then
launched into Scou Joplin' s rag time tunes and Broadway melodies
on the piano.
"I like to play the blues, -the St.
Loui s Blues," said Tony, whose
li st of musical idols includes Dizzy
Gillespie, Duke Ellington, Louis
Armstron g, Bach, Mozart and
Beethoven, among others.
" He can just make up songs, he
doesn't write anything down," said
Tony's mother, Janice. "He can
transpose songs and change them to
other keys. He can play 'Silent
Night ' in a waiLz, in a polka, in
jazz.,
Tony's "island of brilliance" is
more creative than the .skills of
other musical savants who are lim·
iled to repeating Lunes they hear,
said Dr. Darold Treffen, author of
"Extraordinary People," a book
aboul savant syndrome.
" I had noL seen until I came
across Tony anyone who was
involved in jazz," he said. "That's
improvisation and that's another
step beyond rote memory."
Treffert, a psychiatrist in Fond
du Lac , Wis., was a consultant to
the 1988 movie "Rain Man," in

which Dustin Hoffman play s a
savant with lightning mathcmaLieal
skills.
Ton y, who is s~dying jazz
piano at the Music Sc I at Rivers
in WesLon. has earned S2 fees for
petformances at nursing homes and
senior citizens centers, his mother
said.
For three years, he has been
enrolled in a special five -week
summer program at Berklee paid
for by the city of Waltham. His
family moved here so he could
auend Lhc Perkins School For the
Blind in the nearby Boston suburb
of Watenown. He was born in EJ
Paso, Texas.
Lipman said that despite Tony's
talents, Berklee will study his case
carefully because Lhe school
doesn't talce part-time students who
have nol graduated from high
school.
Whether he geLs in , Tony and
his 13-year-old brother, Ray, a special needs child, have some fierce
allies in their mother and her husband, Thomas. When Tony was
younger, Janice DeBlois withstood
temper tantrums that lasted hours
but still encouraged his talent
And if Tony ever had to give up
his inslruments, he already has a
solution.
" Sing," he said.

Officer says teenager's slaying was an accident
By CECI CONNOLLY
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Chris Rogers
had his share of problems in his 16
years, having spent time in foster
homes and a detention center.
But relatives and friends sav he
was a good boy who didn ' t deserve
to be shot to death by a policeman
in what the officer says was an
accident.
"Normally, people get killed
over drugs or in gang fights. You
kind of expect it with them," said
Diwonn Santos, a I 6-year-old
friend. "With Chris it was just so
shocking."
Rogers was killed in the city's
Dorchester section last weekend by
Officer James Hall, 28, who lived
around the corner from the teenager in an apartment he shared with
his mother.
The shooting is under investigation by police. The officer has not
been charged.
Hall has said through his lawyer
that his gun accidentally discharged
when he stumbled and fell as he
went to look for someone he
thought he saw duck under a truck.
Rogers' aunt, Jenel Manor,
recaUed that just minures before her
nephew was shot the two had been
laughing together as he tried to
teach her a new dance step that she
couldn't master. A few minutes
BURSTING BALLOONS • Jeremy Roberts, 7, learns a Jesson
later he left the house for a while,
Thursday at the South Webster Wacky Olympics, don't ~et into a
and five minures after that someone
water balloon fight with someone h~ice your size. Kevin_ Clarks?"•
called to say he had been shot.
in glasses decided the best way to won the battle was to s1mply p1ck
"I ran directly to hi s body. I
up Jeremy and burst the balloon arsenal that he carried. (AP)
saw blood coming out. ... I ju st
couldn't look," said Manor, who
took care of Rogers and several
other youngsters. ·
According 10 police rcpons, the
Elizabeth Meir, Middleport, Health and Human Services.
shooting occurred just after mid - received the BP Amcrica-Indusu-ial
Meir is a studcm in the School
night on July 13. Police said Hall Hygiene Scholarship at the 12th of Health and Sport Sciences. The
n:poned afterward that he was driv- Annual Studenl Awards and scholarship was established by BP
ing home to use the bathroom when Recognition Reception held by America to assist qualified indusLri·
the incident happened.
Ohio University ' s College or al hygiene majors.

Meir receives scholarship

He was suspended for five days
without pay for failing to repon he
was making a stop at home. Pohce
·said he would be assigned to desk
work after that until the investigation is completed.
Hall's fawyer, Frank McGee,
said the officer stopped his pa.uol
car when he saw someone runnmg,
and then bent down to look under a
uuck.
1

HBC holds July 4 activities
The Fourth of July was celebrat·
ed at Hillside BaptisL Church with
games and activities.
Horse ~hoes , volleyball, waLer
balloon toss and other games were
played with several bips on the hay
wagon.
A covered dish dinner was held

'

and an evening outdoor hymn sing
was conducted featuring the Will·
ing Hearts, God's LiLlie Lambs,
The Joyful Hearts, Linda Jones, the
Redeemed Quartet and the Children of God.
An evening hayride was enjoyed
followed by a weiner roast.

shopping spn:es, lavish homes, Rolls
Royces, an air-conditioned dog
house and a lot of mascara.It is virtually impossible 10 get
ofT a mailing list once you're on it.
These lists are sold and by the time
you read this, your mother-in-law
may weD be on a few more.
Dear Aan Landers: You sure laid
an egg with your response to
"Frantic in the Big D," who has been
married for three years to a man
with a 16-year-old son who lives
with them. The kid is a slob and
inexcusably rude to his stepmother.
She and the ex-wife have started to
have words and the husband refuses
to discipline his son.
You suggested joint counseling for
everybody in this psycho-drama and
hoped that the counselor would
make it clear that the ex-wife's
overnight visits should stop. This is
what you should have said:
· Dear Frantic: The next time your
husband's ex-wife phones to say she
is coming, tell her you are out of the
hotel business. When she wants to
see her son, she can invite him to
Mr home. You should then grab the
kid by thC'wll.ar and rell him to
keep a civil tongue in his head and
start picking up after himself
immediarely, no ifs, ands, or buts.
When your husband gets home
tonight, first !ell him that you love
him and that you want your
marriage 10 Succeed. Make sum he
understands that you are fighting to
preserve your marriage and that you
~t him tocoopeta~e. Hhe doesn't

''

,'

~

I

Sunday

75 cenh

Bakker ministry still hurting many
Dear Ana Landen: I will try to
make this as brief and simple as
possible, but then: is an awful lot
to leU. I speak for a family that is
desperate.
My mother-in-law inherited more
than $80,000 in 1980. She was 69 at
the time. The woman is now 80 years
old, blind, and has Jess than $1 ,000
left My husband is her only child
and it is up to us to take care of her.
We are people of modest means. Our
family income is under SI ,SOO a
month.
When my husband took over
for his mother he had access to
her bank statements and all the
checks she has Written in the past
several years. He was stunned to
discover that almost all her money
went to TV evangelists. Jim and
Tammy Faye Bakker received the
lion's share.
Is there any way we can recover
some of this money? Can we
demand an accounting from the
recipients as to where the money
went? How can we get her name ofT
the lists of the TV preachers? Please
gp.e us some answers, Ann. We
aon't know where else to turn. ••
RIPPED OfF IN KANSAS
DEAR KANSAS: There is no
way you are going to get your
mother-in-law's money back, and the
chances of receiving an accounting
are slim. As for Jim Bakker, he has
been serving time in a fedeml prison
in Minnesota. Accordin2 to Time
and Newsweek. the money Bakker
received was spent on "therapeutic"

-

Hall of Fame induction today- Page C-1

Arts
council
•
organizes

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"I tel. Loa 1\nll"lea

A story about a man with a strong
character· Fred W. Crow· Page A-2

11mRI Syndicate and
C'n.-Rtors Syndicate."

B-1

come through, tell him that he and
the kid can both pack their bags.
I did this, and my husband·
straightened up right away. Your
husband has had three years to get
out from under the thumb of his
ex-wife. If he doesn't do it now,
she's going to be a thorn in your
side forever. •• BEEN 1HERE IN
DE'IROIT
DEAR DE'IROIT: You sound
like a pretty tough coolcie but I.
can't tugue with success. The brass
lcnucldes approach worlced for you;
In defense of my advice, which
you obviously thought was lousy,
you might consider the possibility
that sometimes it talces different
strolces for different folks. 1'hank8
for your leller.
Feeling pressured to have sex?
How well-informed are you? Write ·
for AM Landers' boolcJet "Sex and
the Teen-ager." Send a self-ad·
dressed, long, business-size envtlope
and a CMck or moMy ordLr for.
$3.65 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Teens, cfo Ann Lan- .
dLrs. P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. ·
606JJ-0562 . (In Canada, send.

Pomeroy team captures Hartford
LL baseball tournament • Page C-4

pared with the previous year 's
study. And re sidents of 21 states
reponed Jess drinking and driving.
But just 13 states reponed
improvements in exercise habits.
And while 24 states reported a drop
in the prevalence of overweight
people, in 14 of those states the
decreases were less than I percent.
The percentages of respondents
who were overweighL - calculated
according Lo a complex height·
weight-gender formula - ranged
from 16 percent in New Mexico to
27 percent in Pennsylvania. Only

Pomeroy

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11 am to Mtd. Sun .-Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri . &amp; Sat.

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12 Sections, 80 Pages

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Open enrollment policy
may be adopted by two
Meigs school districts

THERE WAS LITTLE RELIEF in sight for
most or us during Saturday's beat wave, which
produced temperatures in tbe mid-90s, but ror
these girls, competing in the 8-and-under divi·
sion or a swim meet held at the Gallipolis
Municipal Pool, the water proved to be the

parents
and friends
at poolside. Later in tbe
afternoon, tbe average Joe and Jane were
allowed to take possession or the pool. (Times·
Sentinel photo by G. SpenCI!r Osborne)

Governo.r,.~c..ho(Jl offifials
clash on state board plan
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Education.
Associated Press Writer
He objected Friday to a package
COLUMBUS- Gov. George of materials mailed by William
Voinovich has criticized the Phillis, assistant state instruction
Department of Education fer plan- superintendent, to local school
ning a Statehouse rally to oppose superintendents and officials
·
his plan LO let the governor name around the state.
the members of the state Board of
The materials included sugges-

Shooting suspect held
in Ross County jail
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) One man was shot to death and his
brother was wounded during· a dispute over two families' property
lines in rural VinLon County, Sber·
iff Delno McClure said Friday.
Donald Toole, 42, was jailed
without bond in connection with
the shooting of John Buckley,
McClure said. His brother, George
Buckley, was shot and killed, said
McClure.
Sheriff's dispatcher Linda
Reynolds said Toole was charged
with one count of aggravated felo-

nious assault in John Buckley's
shooting. The case will go to a
grand jury for possible indictment
on other charges, she said.
Toole was being held in the
Ross County jail in Chillicothe.
The shooting Thursday resulted
from a long-running feud between
the Tooles and the Buckleys over
their adjoining property in the
Skunk Hollow area, McClure said.
In Columbus, Grant Medical
Center nursing supervisor Pat
Hamrick said John Buckley was
dischtuged Friday afternoon.

tions for having 50 to I 00 opponents meet Tuesday with each of
the 33 state senators to lobby
against Voinovich 's plan to replace
the elected board of 21 members
with II appointees.
Tuesday night, the SenaLe Education Committee will consider and
possibly vote on the bill that will
call for a downsized board replac·
ing members now elected in Ohio's
congressional districts.
Phillis and other educators have
been fighting the plan for reasons
that include the loss of Ohioans'
righLto elect members. . .
Voinovich accused Ph1lhs and
others in the department of resist·
ing reforms that for the fust time
would give the governor a strong
leadership role in Lhe state school
system. "I want to lead and be held
accountable," he said.
The department materials were
prepared at taxpayers' expense,
Voinovich said.
" This is being orchestrated oul
of the very department that needs
reform - under the flag of status
Continued on A-4

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY • Open enrollment,
that policy which lets parents select
what school and in which districL
their children auend, may be in
effect between at least two of the
disbicts in Meigs County this fall.
The Southern Local School Dis·
bict already has a policy in effect,
Bob Ord, superintendent, reports.
Meigs Local, according to Supt.
James Carpenter, has the possibility of working ouL a compatible pol·
icy with the Southern D1stncL
before schools open this fall.
As for Eastern, Supt. Richard
Smith says there are no plans for
adopting a policy for the 1991-92
school year, ~ut that the districL
will abtde bf the law and have
something in lJiace by the 1992-93
school year. i
Disbicts ha've been mandated by
Senate B·ill~•o to adopt a policy
permitting o en enrollment w1thm
the district d to make a decision
as to wheth to permit or prohibit
open enroll ent between contigu·
ous school districts. Both decisions
on open enrollment must be made
within the next year.
There are three main resbictions
on open enrollment, according to
Mary Goodrich, I Oth District rep·
resentative on the State Board of
Education.
She said that a school districL

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Secretary of
State Bob Taft says he will appeal
a court decision that barred the
Ohio Elections Commission from
investigating a GOP-led group that
is raising money for redistricting
purposes.
He said Friday the five-member
commission also plans 10 appeal
the decision of Franklin County
Common Pleas Judge Dana Deshler.
Deshler ruled Ohioans for Fair
Representation is not a political
action commiuee and therefore
cannot be investigated by the commission.
The OFR, created by Ohio
Republican Chairman Roben Bennell, says it is raising money for
non-partisan data and research on

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congressional redistricting and legislative reapportionment.
The Ohio Democratic Party
asked the commission to investi·
gate. Democrats alleged OFR actu·

READY FOR 1991 GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIR •
Members of the 1990-91 GaUia County Junior Falrbollrd have put
the finishing touches on the 42nd annual event, scbedoled July 29·
Aug. 3. First row, left to right are: Panl Shoemaker, Danella
Greene, Rodney Alderman, Eugene Elliott, Skip Meadows and

··

;·.

about the Southern Local pol1cy of
open enrollmem and thal they arc
"hoping to get Logether and sec if
certain things can be ironed out."
This year, Supt. Carpenter said,
the policies must be identical. After
the Jaw becomes mandatory next
year, the policies do not have to be
Identical.
Some of the problems, according to both superimcndents involve
Lransponation for sludents.
Under the law, transportation
must be provided for those students
who select to auend a school in a
disbict where an open enrollment
policy has been adopled.
One or the problems as
expressed by Supt. Carpenter is
thal of gelling the sludents from a
designated pickup poim to th e
school of choice before class es
start.
Class size is another factor to be
considered in accepting a student
from another districl, according to
Supt. Ord. He said Lhat the Soulh·
ern policy provides that students
will be accepLed up 10 lhc 25 per
class limi~ Those e&gt;&lt;pelled or suspended in one districl cannot transfer to another district, according to
the rules.
As. for finan cing , the State
Foundation monies of $2,725 per
student for the 1991 -92 year fol lows the student.

Junior-Youth Falrboard member Cherie Weaver. Rear· ,Ed Vollborn Ken Saunders, Garry Fellure, Tim Massif, David M!lls, Fred
Dee!'and Mike Sboemaker. (Times-Sentinel photo by Jtm Freeman)

'

"

ally was set up to raise funds for
campaigns and candidates and Lhus
violated election laws by taking
Continued on A-3

District court overturns
portion of Riggs sentence
POMEROY • The Founh District Court of Appeals has over·
LUrned a porlion of the sentence
against Jason Riggs, the Reedsville
man who was sentenced in 1990
for his role in the death of Victor
Will.
Riggs had appealed the sentence

handed down to him by Meig s
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred W. Crow ln. .
.
Riggs, 18, struck Will whtle
driving his trUck in Chester on June
2, 1990. Later, Will' s body was
thrown over a creek bank by Rtggs
Continued on A-4

Middleport man pleads
guilty on drug charges
Wednesday in connection with the
drug bust.
Robson was indicted on a
POMEROY - The first defen· . charge of aggravated trafficking in
dant to enter a guilty plea to drug cocaine, a felony of the third
charges following a massive drug degree. After being declared indibust did so in Meigs County Com- gent, Robson wa s referred to
mon Pleas Court on Thursday. Knight for representation.
Robson is the 31 st defendant to
while other drug defendants continbe arrested and arrai gned after the
ue to be arrested.
Vincent Stone of Middleport Meigs County Grand Jury handed
pled guilty to two counts or aggra - down indictments against41 defen.
vated trafficking in cocaine before dants. To date, charges have ranged
[rom traffi cking in marijuana ,
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
According to Meigs County cocaine and LSD 10 dealing in preProsecuting Auorney Steven L. scription drugs and sale of counter·
Story, Stone was sentenced to 18 fcit substances. A total of 63
months in prison on the first count charges were handed down by the
and to two years on Lhe second grand jury.
In addition, Lhrcc other defencount.
The sentence on the second dants are currently serving prison
count was suspended, and Stone terms in connection with previous
was placed on five years probation. drug convictions. Husband and
In addition, Crow ordered Stone to wife Menford and Joyce Jew~ll are
charged with a combined three
pay court costs.
counts
of aggravated trafficking in
"Tm very pleased at the speed
cocaine.
in which this case was disposed
Robin Slater, also in prison, has
of," Story said Friday aftem?On. "It
· has only been three weeks smce the been charged in this most recent
defendant's indictment and arrest." drug bust with two counts of the
Stone, who was represented by sale of marijuana. He had ~n preMeigs County Public Defender viously convicted of drug charges
Charles H. Knight, is expected to in both Athens and Meigs Counbe conveyed 10 Oriem Correctional ties.
Prosecutor Story anticipates that
Center in the very near future.
Meanwhile, Dannr Robson of several other defendants who have
Cherry Ridge Road m Pomeroy, been arrested already will ente~
was arrested and arraigned on guilty pleas in the days ahead . .
By ORlAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Starr

I

I

'

cannot prohibit one of its students
from auending school in an adjacent district if that district has a
policy permitting open enrollmenl,
that a school disbicL cannot limit1ts
acceptance policy 10 select groups,
such as athletes and gifted and
handicapped students, and that a
school district must continue to
assure the maintenance of racial
balance.
Mrs. Goodrich explained that
the rationale for the open enroll menL mandate is thal it permits
expansion of education options and
increases parent involvement.
"It makes sense that if the student and parents are happy with the
classroom environment, the student
will learn more. Increased student
achievement is what education
reform is all about," she said.
"But is the state saying that
Morgan County musL accept slu·
dents from Washington County, or
that Athens County musl accept
sLudents from Meigs Counly?
Emphatically, no.
'The choice on choice is up Lo
the scnool district," she concluded.
Open enrollr;nent is just one of
several reform initiatives which
will eive ootions to children and
their parents as to educational
choices in the 90's.
As for the local situation, Supt.
Carpenter of the Meigs District
says he has talked with Supt. Ord

Taft will appeal court's decision

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JUNE 22nd-JUl Y 3ht

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three states, California, Missouri
and Wisconsin, reponed decreases·
that were stalistically significant; :
the other decreases were too smaU
to matter, CDC statisticians said. ·
The percentages of people with
" sedentary lifestyles" - fewer
1 than three 20-minute sessions o_f.
exercise each week - ranged from ·
45 percent in New Hampshire 10 75
percent in Washington, D.C.
The percentage of people admit·
ling 10 "seat belt nonuse" ranged
from 6 percent in Hawaii 10 62 pe~­
cent in South Dakota.

Sunny, hot, humid. High In mid·

•

Driving is better, but too
many people are overweight
By ROBERT BYRD
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- An annual
survey of the unhealthy Lhings
Americans do indicates fewer arc
failing to buckle scat be lts before
driving, bul most still aren't exercising enou~h to lose weight,
researchers sa1d.
The naLional Centers for Disease
Control's latesl "behavior risk factor' ' survey of 39 states plus Washington, D.C., shows a trend toward
more scat belt use and less drinking
and driving, bul nol toward weight
loss or more exercise.
The data, reponed on Thursday,
didn't surprise Dr. Robert Brackbill, an epidemiologist in the
CDC's health promotion center.
"Wearing or not wearing a seat
bell is specific behavior; it's easier
for somebody to do," Brackbill
said. "Losing weight and exercising are more complex behavior. ...
It's just harder to have public
health interventions to modify
those."
The state-by-state results, com·
piled from random phone interviews conducted in 1989, don't add
up to a national sample. But they
do show some states with healthier
habits and others with more than a
IiuJc room for improvement.
Twenty-eight states showed a
decrease in the percentage of people ignoring their seal belts, com·

Inside

Along the river .............. BI-7
Business ............................. DI
Comics .........................Insert
Classified . ...................... D2· 7
Deaths................... ............. A4
Editoral. ............................ A2
Farm ............................... DI-8
Sports............................. Cl-5
Weather . .......................... A-4

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Page-A2
July 21, 1991

A Division of

~~MULTIMEDIA, INC
82S Tblrd Ave., GalUpolls, Oblo
(614) 446-2342

lll Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubUsher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber-CootroUer

A MEMBER of The Associated P!ss, Inland Daily Press
Association and lhe American Newspaper Publishen Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words long. Allletlers are subjeclto editing and musl be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned leuers will be
published. Lcuers •hould be in good tasle, addressing issues, nol
personalities.

Ohio Perspective
By CAROLYN PIONE
Associated Press Writer
HAMIL TON- Janet Abbon had four back operations for injuries she
suffered at the hands of her husband. He often threw her around during
their 23-year marriage.
In 1981, she had enough. She hired someone to kill Walter Abbctl
" When you li.Ye in the hell we lived in. you're just desperate," said
Mrs. Abbon, 46, who was convicted of murder 10 years ago for killing
Walter Abbott and granted clemency lasl year by former Gov. Richard
Celeste.
" I feel I've suffered enough," she said.
When she stood trial, there was no legal defense for battered women
who commit violent crime.
At her trial in Butler County, a judge allowed her to respond to questions about why she killed her husband.
Because the battered-woman syndrome could not be used as a defense,
Mrs. Abbott could not testify about her husband's behavior or let witnesses support her claims that Abbon had threatened to kill her and her sons if
:. they left him.
A Butler County judge allowed the New Miami woman to answer
questions about why she killed her husband, but would not let her give
details about his behavior.
Today, society recognizes the problems of banered women better than
it did when Janet Abbott entered the Ohio Refonnatory for Women in
Marysville, said her lawy~r. David Green.
·'When she went through this there was no place for her to go.'· Green
said.
That changed in March 1990 when an Ohio Supreme Court decision
set a precedent allowing women accused of violent crimes against abusive
mates or spouses to introduce evidence of the battered-woman syndrome
at their trials.
The Ohio Legislature later passed a bill recognizing the syndrome a1 a
· defense.
''Under lhe new domestic violence statute of the law. if a woman calls
the police, !he husband can be removed from the premises and incarcerated overnight until a hearing. You avoid a lot of situations (like Mrs .
Abbon's)," Green said.
He handled Mrs. Abbott's appeal to Celeste for clemency . She was
- among 120 Ohio women who asked the governor to pardon them or commute their sentences. When Celeste approved Mrs. Abbon's request, she
was five years away from parole consideration.
In April, she returned to her four sons and three grandchildren in Fairfield and Hamilton. As part of 200 hours community service, which was a
term of her release, she will volunteer in a battered women' s home in Butler County.
Mrs. Abbon paid a man $3,000 to shoot her husband and make it look
like a suicide. She said she considered killing him herself, but didn't
know enough about guns. She had also tried to have him committed to a
mental instirution, but failed.
The convicted killer remains in prison, as does Mary Juanita Marcum,
a neighbor who recommended the hired killer to Mrs. Abbott.
Mrs. Abbott conceded what she did was wrong, but she did not regret
her decision to have her husband killed.
"I wouldo't do it again, but I don' t feel I h!!d another choice," she
said.
"I think Walter loved the boys at first," she said. " But after they
became people and he couldn't think for them. he didn 't love them any
more.''

Letters to the editor
Scrubbers should be used
Dear Editor:
Several months ago I recall
reading an article in the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune that gave the amount
of pollution reduction that would
be obtained from installing scrubbers at the Gavin Plant and the
amount of pollution reduction that
would be obtained from changing
to low sulphur coal from high sulphur coal.
·
I don't recall the exact figures,
but my recollection is that the
scrubbers would reduce pollution 2
1/2 to 3 times as much as changing
to low sulphur coal.
According to the July II paper,
Phase I of the pollution reduction
requirements must be in effect by
1995 and Phase 2 of the pollution
reduction requirements by 2000.
Evidently Phase 2 would reguire

reduction beyond that required in
Phase I.
It would seem, therefore, that
scrubbers should be used. If they
are installed now, why couldn't
they be made adequate to take care
of Lhe reduction required by 2000?
I~ is quite possible that beyond !hat
t1me even more suingent reductions may be necessary.
In other words, if adequate
scrubbing equipment is installed
now, there would be less likelihood
of needing to incur costs in the
future.
No estimate has been published
.of the ~nomic cost of pollution to
the environment or to human
beings suffering from respiratory
diseases.
Yours very sincerely.
Elaine B. Rouse

Today in history

.

.•

By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, July 21, the 202nd day of 1991. There are 163 days
left in the year.
Today's ~ghlight in History:
Thirty years ago, on July 21, 1961 , Capt. Virgil "Gus" Grissom
became the second American to rocket into a sub-orbital pattern around
!he earth, flying aboard the Liberty Bell VII.
. On this date:
In 1816, Paul Julius Reuter, founder of the British news agency bearIng his name, was born in Hesse, Germany.
In 1831, Belgium became independent as Leopold I was proclaimed
King of the Belgians.
In 186I, the first Battle of Bull Run was fought at Manassas, Va.,
resulting in a Confederate victory.
In 1899, author Ernest Hemingway was born in Oak Park, Ill.
In 1925, the so-called Monkey Trial ended in DayiOn, Tenn .. with John
T. Scopes found pity of violating state law for leljehing Darwin's Theory of Evolution. (Ibe conviction was later overturned.)
In 1944, American forces landed on Guam durjng World War II.
In 1944, the Democratic National Convention, meeting in Chicago,
nominated Sen. Harry S. Truman to be vice president.
In I949, the U.S. Senate mtified the North Atlantic Treaty by a vote of
82-to-13.
In 1954, France surrendered North Vietnam to lhe Communists.

VD..NIUS, Lil.huania - Fal.her
Vaclovas Aliulis mauer-of-factly
recounts the persecution Soviet
communists have hea~ upon the
Calholic Church in L1thuania as if
his emotions on the subject were
spent
He says he was arrested only
once himself, and that was by mistake. He was held for II days
before the aul.horities realized they
had the wrong priest. They wanted
a friend of his. The other priest was
imprisoned for six years and shot to
death. The Soviets claimed be was
trying to esca~.
Father Ahulis was reminiscing
fur us in the Vilnius Cathedral ,
which for years was used by the
communist government as an art
gallery. Other churches were con verted into museums of atheism ,
auto-repair shops, wine wanehouses
and concert halls.
The priest preferred not to lalk
about the painful memories,
because now he can talk about Lhe
resurgence of religious activity -in
thi s, the only predominantly
Roman Catholic republic in the
Soviet Union.
Despite five decades of rule by a
government whose official policy
was atheism. about two-thirds of
Lithuanians are still Roman

Catholics. Their churches across
the countty are being reopened and
filled with the faithful.
But there aren't enough priests
to sezve them. There are now only
half as many priests in Lithuania as
there were before World War II,
and many of them are old or ill.
The expurgation of the church
in the Eastern Bloc began in 1940
when the Russians first invaded
Poland. The program included the
deportation of hundreds of priests
and nuns to Siberia. Some of them,
even bishops, were executed.
"There was a long time when we
only had one bishop here," Father
Aliulis recalled.
But the faithful continued to
practice their religion, mostly
underground. North of Vilnius lies
one of the most exttaordinary spontaneous monuments to the perseverance _of Catholicism during the
five decades of enforced atheism
- the Hill of Crosses. Since the
1800s, l.he hill has been a place
where people put up crosses for
personal worship. It was. festooned
with crosses in the mid-1950s
when Lil.huanians returned from
Siberian exile after the death of
Josef Stalin. From time to time in
the 1960s and 1970s, the communists would plow over the hill and

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,.He i~)(PaVeRS F'ol\" MoRe
TftlaN $1 BiLLi~, 3NP Ga'le
l-liMSe.LF $1.() MiLLioN
oF iT ;# SOIIIU,SeS!

....

rid it of its crosses. But new ones
would appear overnight. The com·
munists gave up, and now thousands of crosses adorn l.he hill.
The clergy and their followers in
prison or in exile kept the faith too.
One of the more famous exiles,
Father Sigitas Tamkevicius, wrote
resolutely and peacefully dw-ing his
five years in a Russian labor camp,
" The road to heaven via Siberia is
no longer than that via Lithuania.' '
He was released in 1988 and has
since been niade a bishop.
The new freedom for the church
was engineered by a grass-roots
political reform movement known
as Sajudis. which produced a
democmtically elected government
in Lithuania, although still under
Lhe umbrella of the Soviet Union.
Father Aliulis was one of the
founders of Sajudis and the only
clergyman 10 serve on its ruling
council.
He told us about the great
strides being made by the church
- how religion can now be taught
in the schools, and how the church
is winning a battle over pornography.
Mostly. the people here are
grateful to the Catholic Church for
keeping alive the dream of freedom
and a nationalist identity during the

roST ofFICE

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
long years behin&lt;l Ule Iron Curtain.
Even President Vytautas Landsbergis, a Protestant, pays homage to
the church by occasionally attending mass and dis{lla~ing Catholic
religious symbols m hiS office.
Lithuanian Foreign Minister
Algirdas Saudargas told us, "This
Calholic Church was the only organized structure ...- 110ssibly in the
whole Soviet-occupied territory which was opposing the Soviet system all those years.''
BREAKING RANKS - The
highly publicized split in the black
community over the nomination of
Judge Clarence Thomas to the
Supreme Court has hidden a second important fissure - the break
between the Rev. Jesse Jackson and
Minister Louis Farrakhan.
·
Although the two have -never
been close, Farrakhan has resisted
telling his Muslim followers to
oppose Jackson's pre~i.dential
ambinons. But m a surpnsmg arllcle in Farrakhan's publication,
"Final Call," he has urged blacks
to reject Jackson as long as he
remains in politics. Farrakhan
wrote that Jackson, "has a better
chance of being your leader if he
comes out of politics, but since the
Rev. Jackson has been lrying to be
a politician, he's been less effective
as one of our leaders because politics demand that you play by the
rules of him who laid down the
order for you."
Jackson's success depends on
appealing to a larger audience than
just the Farrakhan followers, but
Jackson's supporters secretly regret
that an organized group of blacks is
being told to give him the cold
shoulder.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
word is going out from the White
House that the recession is over,
the economy is recovering. But
George Bush is shunning the longterm solutions that are necessary to
build a lasting recovery. He is
doing nothing about the massive
public debt, leveraged bur.outs and
the savings-and-loan batlout that
could bring down the economy.
Bush won' t ask America to make
sacrifices because he is afraid of
losing votes.

The Okey Kiser Story ____F_red_w._cr_ow
(Long-time Pomeroy Attorney
Fred W. Crow is a contributor of
columns for the Sunday TimesSentinel. Readers wishing to
applaud, criticize or comment on
any subject (except for politics or
religion) are encouraged to write
to Mr. Crow in care or this newspaper.)
This is a story about a man with
strong character. In fact he should
be recognized as one of the top
characters in my Hall of Fame. The
man's name is Robert Okey Kiser
and all of his relatives refer to him
as Okey.
My meeting with Okey was by
chance. As some of you know, 1
became sick last Sunday, July 14,
1991, in l.he Ponderosa Restaurant
in Ripley, W.Va. All of a sudden I
became dizzy and my legs became
rubbery_ I had some difficulty
drinking by coffee. I told my family I was in a bad way and I got
transported by an emergency vehicle to the Jackson General Hospital
in Ripley. By the way, the hospital
is across the street from l.he Panderosa . My blood pre.ssure was
150/100. The 100 reading is on the
diastolic side. If it is too high you
· can have a stroke. So, for three
nights and two days 1 was confmed
to this hospital. Nearly every test in
the book was given to me and all
were on the negative side. Anyhow, I was placed as a patient in
the Jackson General Hospital by a
Dr. Casto, who appeared to be an
excellent physician. My treatment
in this hospital was first mte.
•
Late,Sunday I was placed in a
room with Okey Kiser. At !hat time
he was semi-conscious. That afternoon he appeared to be asleep but

was constantly mumbling . His acres for the past 17 years. His
speech was incoherent.
home was in the boondocks and his
Late Sunday night and early nearest neighbor was one-half mile
Monday morning Okey started to away. He had never married and
become wild. The nurses and ours- lived alone. She described him as a
es aides were in the room most of recluse. For 17 years Mrs. Hackney
l.hat time. Okey had IV' s inserted stopped at his house every week.
in his arms and constantly pulled She did the grocery shopping , cut
them out. On one occasion a loud his hair and shaved him once a
bell started ringing indicating that week. Okey liked his Mail Pouch
the intravenous bottle was empty. and his snuff called, "Square." I
This sounded almost like a fire never heard of it.
Okey had an eighl.h grade edualarm, but of course it was a differcation
and his father, Obida Kiser.
ent sound.
Then there were two occasions was a former state legislator. One
when there was a stream of water of his sisters. Ernie. was a college
hitting the floor. It was of high val- graduate and taught school. Hi s
ume and sounded as if a horse was other sister. Bertie, was the mother
going to the bathroom. Later I of Sylvia's husband. Okey had two
learned Okey had missed the uri- brothers and three sisters.
What makes this story unusual
nal. On three or four other occasions the staff had to come to quiet was that Okey was totally blind for
Okey. Okey, of course, was the past seven years. Very few visistrapped in bed. One furl.her note, tors came to his home. As stated
every hour two aides came to may before Sylvia did visit him.
Okey only left this home on two
room to take by temperature and
pulse. In between blood pressure occasions in the past seven years.
readings were taken by another One was to go see a dentist in Ripnurse. As a result of all this com- ley. When he arrived in Ripley he
motion I was unable to sleep. It refused to go to the dentist and
was like a three ring circus in room wound up having a hot dog and ice
cream cone. The other time was his
209.
I did not get angry about this sil- visit to this hospital a couple days
uation due to the fact that I felt before I arrived.
According to Sylvia, his water
very sorry for poor Okey.
supply
was ol)tained from a well in
On Monday morning when
whjch
he used a rope gadget to
Okey was semi-conscious I talked t
bring
the
water from the well to his
him briefly about his life. Because
house.
There
arc five rooms in the
of the condition of his mind I was
house
and
he
knew where everyunable to learn much from him.
thing
was
located.
He also did
However, Sylvia Hackney, hi s
some
cooking
on
an
electric
stove.
nephew· s wife, stopped in to see
His
toilet
was
in
an
outbuilding.
Okey and from her I learned a
Okey would watch TV before he
great deal about him. The story is
that Okey had been living alone on became blind. His blindness was
the family homestead farm of 120 caused by cataracts over his eyes.

&lt;. ' ",••

;I"

'

ATHENS - A tentative agreement was reached Friday in a
strike at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, according to union and hospital officials.
•
But Raben Turner of the union and hospital spokeswoman Lynn
Patton declined to release details of Lhe agreement until after the
union votes Saturday afternoon.
Contract negotiations lasted eight hours Friday. Issues in dispute
have included wages, insurance and whether the hospital should be
an agency shop.
·
Turner is the regional director of the American Fedemtion of
State, County and Municipal Employees union. The union represents about 260 workers at the hospital. including nurses and maintenance employees.
The employees began !he strike May 26.

Lawn-watering restricted
COLUMBUS - The city water department resuicted lawn watering as Central Ohio entered a severe drought.
Dick Hathaway, a National Weather Service forecaster in
Columbus, said at least 7 inches of rain would be needed to alleviate the drought under the Palmer Drought Severity Index guidelines.
Because of the demand, Columbus on Friday asked all users of
its water supply to water lawns only between 6 a.m. and 10 a.m.
John R. Doutt, Water Division adl'l\inistrator, said Columbus
faces possible water distribution problems. He fears a long-term
drought could lead to supply problems.
Pan of Ohio is drier than central Ohio, and pan is wetter.
Northeastern Ohio is classified as being under extreme droughL
Akron was 6.9 inches below normal, while Columbus is 2.2 inches
below normal. Hathaway said.
Southwest Ohio is above normal in moisture, he said.

Ex-deputy auto title clerk sentenced

passed state budget presents some
real concerns for Southeast Ohio,
but also protects a number of programs vital to the region State
Rep. Mary Abel (D -Athens)
reports.
"In my opinion, this is a compromise budget. There are many
positive aspects in addition to a few
painful cuts. I worked throughout
the budget process to prevent harm
to the programs and agencies that
benefitourarea," Abel said.
Abel pointed to a number of
programs that were threatened dur·
ing deliberations but survived the
budget conference committee.
"Among the initiatives that were
protected are many that benefit
senior citizens such as Alzheimers
research, arthritis care and fare
assistance for public transportation,
Abel said.
Total spending for the Depart·
ment of Aging will exceed $82 mil·
lion in fiscal years, 1992-93.

within the Department o! Nat~al how the money IS to be used: _
Resources were spared, m~ludmg
The Ohio Valley AfC!1 L1branes
Foreslry, Partes and Recreallon and system which serves Me1gs County
the Civilian Conservation Corps.
was also reinstated in the budget by
In the area of. education, Abel the confe~ence committee after
said that the le~lslatur_e bas1cally being elimmated by the Republican
"held the ltne.' Fundmg for the controlled Senate.
Department of Education was
Abel said that she was unhappy
increased to $6.1 b1llton for the about the budget reducuons that
biennium, an increase of $32 m1l· would affect many programs that
lion over the Governor's proposal. peor,le have come to rely on.
Higher educauon w1ll receiVe an
'However, I do feel that there
additional $17.2 million for student will be some recourse for those
choice grants and a total of $3.6 affected adversely by _the budget
billion over the next two years.
because of the InclusiOn of Ian A $50 million fund to help guage that w1U allow fundin$ dec1 address the problems of fundmg
sions to be exammed agam 1f rev ·
inequities within the state's school enue projections for the state
districts was included mthe budget improve," Abel smd.
.
after Democrauc committee memOne example of l.he comprom1se
bers insisted that the fund not be necessitated by the b~dget prob·
used until adequate language 1s !ems the state faced th1s year was
...

Taft...

You

Continued from A-1
corpomte contributions.
OFR has been soliciting funds
from corpomtions.
The Democratic Party also filed
a complaint that triggered an investigation by Taft. The secretary said
his investigation is still going on
and that this is why he is appealing
Deshler's decision .

Covered
•KEOGH
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EMPLOYEE PLAN

WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE - A former deputy auto title
clerk in Fayette County has been sen(enced to a year in prison for
stealing money from the clerk's office.
. Cindy Sharrett, 29, was also fmed more than $4,400 and ordered
to pay court costs Wednesday in Fayette County Common Pleas
Court.

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(614) 446-2125
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OHIO VALLEY BANI(

bility.
lives suffer no such dilemma. They
Naturally, African-Americans are so politically impoverished and
react with knee-jerk pride when a denuded of credibility am'ong
brother or sister is nominated for blacks that they have mothballed
imy high position. Irish-, Italian-, their outspoken opposition to quoJewish- and Polish-Americans do tas and affmnative action and hyp· the same when one of their own ocritically endorsed Thomas' nom·achieves distinction.
ination.
But it is as difficult to call
Can any "reasonable and pruClanence Thilmas a brother as it is dent person" seriQusly argue with
for us to embrace Uncle Tom and a straight face that Clarence
Aunt Jemima as role models.
. Thomas was not an affirmativeBoth legendary baseball star action appointment? This mushyHank Aaron and the late civil rights mouthed lawyer was appointed for
firebrand Cecil Moore had an only two reasons: (a) the color of
expression: "He may be my color, · his skin (mther'than what black
but he ain't my kind."
conservative Shelby Steele would
If 28 million black Americans call the content of his character)
are honestly confused by President and (b) his opposition to afftrmaBush's exercise in affirmative tive action (except, apparently,
action, salivating black conserva~ . when it applies to himself) and

Skilled Surgery
Holzer Medical Center has always had the highest
professional standards so that patients receive the best
possible care. &lt;8&gt; All surgeons are either board eligible or
Edward J . Berkich . M .D.
Chairman.. Depanmen1 of Surgery .,

Alice A. Gricosk1, M.D.
Surgery

Thomas W. Morgan. M D .
Surg ery

I happened to be visiting a black
township in this sun-washed coontty when President Bush's "separate but equal" nomination made
the news.

they have training in the most modern surgical tech&lt;8&gt;

One example is the new gall bladder surgery,

Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy, which can dramatically
reduce recovery time . Patients usually stay in the hospital
only overnight and they're back to their normal routine
in just a few days.~ Hol zer Medical Cent~r. ..leading the
way co provide the best possible health care, right here.

Holzer Medical Center

By Chuck Stone

Countee Cullen would weep in
disgust

board certifted in thm area of spec ialty. Additionally,

niques.

Carry on,

abortion rights .
Somehow, the NAACP can take
an immediate position on an issue
affecting Afncans 10,000 miles
away, while dilly-dallying about a
nomination that could stagnate
African:American progress for
decades.
.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Member FDIC

Wants sanctions on Clarence Thomas
SOWETO, South Africa Countee Cullen 's quintessential
lament about the paradox of the
black ex{&gt;Crience- ·'Yet do I marvel at th1s curious thing, to paint a
poet black and bid him sing" has been replaced by the fatuous
hypocrisy of the NAACP's executive director, Rev. Benjamin
Hooks.
Hooks' angry hyperbole that it
would be "crimin8IIy irresponsible" to lift sanctions' for South
Africa is understandable. Most
black Americans agree with Nelson
Mandela that sanctions should be
retained. But the NAACP's unwillingness to tate a similarly strong .
stand on the nomination of
Clarence Thomas to the Supreme
Coun depreciates its moml credi-

581
AssiStance pro~_.
t
Gover~or Vomov1ch and Sen~e
Republicans wanted to cut lhe program more drasucally than t6c
De~ocmts would allow.
.
:
The fmai General AsSIStan~c
pian IS a hybnd of proposals whu;h
hm_1t ehg1b1hty and bencfns bUt
wh1ch also allows rcc 1p1 cnts to
work a nd keep a portiO~ of thi:H
benefns and the1r mcd1 ca l coveyage. Med1cal_covera~e will co nu~ ue for reclple.~ts umntcrrupted ~~
our IDSlstence, Abel srud.
.
~bel pomted out that ,the Govor_nor s agenda rna~ nego t131 1"S ·1
b~dg et compromise very dlfflcull
th1s year. Echomg the remark s Cll:a
!;louse colleague, she noted lh&lt;ll
There were no real wmners 10 tl~s
· budget. The ~mners were lh o~c
w~o s~!ved.
·

We've Got

About the only people who saw
him were his niece and two neighbors who passed his house. These
two boys found Okey on his front
· yard on the day he was brought to
the hospital. He had fallen from his
chair on the porch to the lawn.
Sylvia Hackney told· me that her
uncle never had a cold and never
had to see a doctor. That he worked
some odd jobs during his lifetime
but managed to make a living on
his gardening and other outside
work. Rupe, as you can see, Okey
was really a loner or recluse.
This man impressed me, not
only his living a simple life, but as
one that very few of us would
want Okey was happy on his home
place and his presence in lhe hospital would be enough to drive him
wild. His life was completely disrupted and it is doubtful whether
Okcy can ever go back to his home
again_ If this happens I doubt that
he will live very long.
Each person lives his own life.
Obviously Okey did not like to
commingl e with other peopl e.
From all indication Okcy wa s
happy m h1s home far away in the
wilderness. The newspapers arc
full of wealthy individuals who are
depressed with their lif(.:style.
Somcumcs you wonder who has
the best life. Rupe, each life is full
of many complications. Would you
rather be Donald Trump with all
his wealth and worries of Okey livmg a1 h1s homes tead in Advent,
W.Va.
Rupc, you be the judge.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel-Page-A3

.----Ohio briefs-,.._, C?c~!?v '~Th~!e!!: bJt~Kn!!f! pro~~"!l!!e~~!~i!~x~ bl!~es~u~!e~f 1~1 Ged~l
Reach tentative agreement

Catholic Church resurges in Lithuania

."

'.

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

July 21, 1991

Commentary and perspective

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Other surgeons and their specia lt•es·

08/GYN
Keith A. Brandeberry. M .D
Montrie Chaksupa . M .D.

Malcolm W. Lentz. M .D.
Surgery

Daniel H. Whitetev. M .D.
Surgery

Lewis A. Schmidt, M .D .
Surgery

Margaret S. ~arn ish. M .O
Laurel A . Kirkhart. M .D.
Donald E. O'Rourke. M .D.
Thomas P Price. M .D ..
J . Craig Strafford. M .D.

Otolaryngology
James R. Magnussen. M .D .
John H. Viall. M .D.

Orthopaedics

Den•se 0 . Holmes. M .D ·
Michael E. Moore. M . D
Donald M . Thaler. M. D

Opthalmology
Edward J . Sheridan. M .D .
UrolOgy
Restitute H . A lon20. M . 0
Mel P Simon, M .D.

Lawrence J . Yodlowski. M .D

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Page-A4-Sunday Tlmes--'-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaUipolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

90s as far north ss Maine. Danbury, New Jersey.
Conn., reached a record high of
I 03.5 degrees.
Thunderstorms over eastern
West Virginia during the morning
and early afternoon drenched Randolph CoiUity. D4:Jt~e six hours
up to 2 p.m. EDT.
s got nearly
2 1/2 inches.
Thunderstorms crossed parts of
New York state, Pennsylvania and

-:
Showers and thunderstorm$·
were widely scattered across Flori: ·
da, the central Gulf Coast, the :
western Plains. from easlem Alaba:
ma through eastern Tennessee to'
West Virginia, an~ over eastern
sections of the Carolmas.
.
A band of showers extended
from west-centrallowa to Wisconsin.

•

RECEIVES AWARD • Chris Blanton (in jaeket) is shown
receiving a $100 Savings Bond from Mike Harriligton, Goodyear
Industrial Relations Staff representative at the local K-Mart store.
Also shown are Lana Blanton (Chris' mother), Chase Blanton
(Chris' brother), Roger Buek (K-Mart manager) and Jack Quimby (Goodyear courier).

,.---Local briefs--Meigs EMS units answer nine calls
POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered nme calls for assistance on Friday and Satwday.
At 12:27 p.m., Rutland squad went to Hysell Run Road. Aaron
Sm1th went to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 12:52 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to State Route 248: Iva Rayburn was dead on
amval. At 2:47 p.m. , Pomeroy squad went to Main Street for an
accid~nt. Bethany Mayes was taken to Veterans, and Brenessa
Phillips and_Steven Carsey refused treatment. At 4:45p.m .,
Pomeroy umts went to East MaiD Street for an auto accident.
· Dorothy Gore and Teresa Guthrie were transported to Veterans. At
· 5:55p.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to State Route 7. Shirley Jones
was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital. At 7:44p.m., MiddJeport unit went to Overbrook Center. William Smith went to Veterans. At 9:43 p.m., Middleport squad went to William Street.
Madeline Moore was taken to Veterans. At II: 17 p.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Welchtown Hill. Kevin Kline was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 2:28 a.m. on Saturday, Syracuse squad was sent to College
Street. Russell Radcliffe was treated but not transported.

Puzzle ·Answer

auL

n'bla~

Charges filed against snake owner
POMEROY - Charges have been filed with the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department against the owner of a 13-and-a-half-foot
python found on State Route 7 on Thwsday.
Kenneth Carsey of Leading Creek Road filed charges of failing
to report an escaped animal against his neighbor, Cathy Elias, the
snake's owner.
The charge is a frrst-degree misdemeanor, punishable by up to
six months in prison and a fine of up to $1,000.
The dead snake was found near the Leading Creek Road intersection by a Litter Control crew. Elias reported to the sheriff's
· office that the snake had been missing for approximately I0 days
. but that she had not reported it fD the authorities.

------Weather-----

Governor...

91~~

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"See me for all
your family

HOMECARE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC.
EQUIPMENT· SALES· RENTALS· REPAIRS

insurance needs.''

1

Gtlipolll, Oh.
446-4290
.. 446·45

• HOME OXYGEH

• WHEELCIIAIAS
• •liOSi'ITAI. BEDS

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INSURANCE

®

Like a good neighbor,
Stare Farm is there.

SIBle Far, Insurance COmpames • Home OII1Ces Bloom rngton . llhno1s

• SHOWER STOOLS

• AOULTDIAPERS

•IJNOEIII!AIIS ICHUXSI • WAUCEAS
• IEDSIDECOMMODES • ~ SUPPUES

• PATIEHTLfTS

•OSTOtoiY

WE BILL MEDICARII cmtER . .UAAHCE ft!R WlU
THIRD &amp; PINE ST.

GAll.FOUs

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POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy Harry Lyon s
transported two prisoners to Orient Reception Center to begin serving their sentences imposed by the Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun.
Transported were Vincent Stone, 28 of Rose Hill in Pomeroy to
serve his sentence imposed by the coun on charges of aggravated
trafficking in drugs. He was the first of 41 recently-indicted defendants fD plead to drug charges.
William Richard Imboden, 33, Pomeroy, was transported on
charges of uttering forged checks.

MIDDLEPORT- The Friday breaking and entering of two buildings belonging to Herald Oil and Gas has been investigated by the
· Meigs County Sheriff's Department. 20 cases of oil and five cases
of transmission Ouid were missing. It is believed that the cases were
slid under a gate.
Investigation into the matter is continuing.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Water office has announced that
water service will be interrupted on Tuesday evening at 9 p.m. from
the Food Shop to the Syracuse line so that the department may tie in
a new line at the Nye Avenue intersecuon. Water serv1ce IS hoped
to be restored by Wednesday morning.
.
.
Customers in the MinersviUe and Enterpnse areas Will also be
effected.

" wei u

01/f 1111mben.

POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has been

file&lt;! in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun by Floyd Dean Pullins,
Racine, adn Vicky Lynn Pullins, Portland.

Driver cited following 3-car crash
Cellbrltlng126 Y111r1 of Quality Clothing Salea-1866-1991

20'0/o To 50°/o
OFF

•

For his honesty, Chris wa s
recently presented with a Goodyear
jacket and a $100 U.S. Savings

Warner battles
Ohio conviction

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
the selections Friday night in the
Ohio Lottery:
Pick 3 Numbers
3-1-8
(three, one, eight)
Pick 4 Numbers
7-0-2-4
(seven, zero, two, four)
Cards
10 (ten) of Hearts
5 (five) of Clubs
K (lc:ing) of Diamonds
8 (eight) of Spades
BEWARE OF THE CX!'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Lawyers for Marvin Warner said
improper instructions were given to
a jury that convicted the former
Home State Savings Bank owner in
the institution's collapse. ·
Warner contends a Hamilton
County Common Pleas jur)l that
convicted him of nine felomes m
March 1987 received improp er
instructions.

BANKRUPTCY
614-221-0881

l. W. CENNAMO
AnORNEY-AT·lAW
336 S. High St., Columbus, OH.

lOCAL CONSUlTATION
KNIGHT /MUUEN lAW OFFICES
POMEROY, 992-2090
In r-or with

He kcepe a neal of kittens
That he ever manipulate•.
Their age doesn't maller
And he hBB many dates.
He also Is a medicator
Controlling !he khteno' mlndo.
With a eahinel of pillo
He dooeo wiJb varloWI kinds.
He is a bold stealer
Of property and hearts.
He 'II take the unnailed
And break klllellll' hearts.

MEN'S SUMMER
SPORT COATS

20°/o TO 50°/o
WALIC SHORTS
&amp; SWIMWEAR
Reg. SJ4 NOW

S19 20

GROUP MEN'S
KNIT SHIRTS

33'ts

TO

40°/o •orr·•

STRAIGHT LEG
or BOOT LEG

$2399 S2699

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GALLIPOLIS - One driver was cited following a three-car collision on Garfield Avenue at6:09 p.m. Friday.
According to the Gallipolis City Police report .. Robert W.
Waugh, 25, Rt. 2, Crown City, was charged with failing to stop
within assured clear distance.
.
.
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Other vehicles headed South on Garfield mvolved m the chamreaction mishap were driven by Carol Beaver, 27, Eureka Star
Route and Edward 0. Blakeman, 20, Rt. I, Cottageville, W.Va. No
one w~s injured and there was little or no damage to the three veh•- ·
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Charles Cox, 29, Rt. 4, Galllpohs was arrested on an sm ecent
exposure charge at the comer of Fourth and Pine around 12:06 a.m.
Saturday.
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Edward England, 75, Rt. I, Gaiiipo1•s~ was Cite y po 1ce a
4:04 p.m. Friday on Eastern Avenue for failure fD yield while making a left tum.
,
. 5
F ·d
Anthony w. Petty, 19, Bidwell, was arrested at3.4 p.m. n ay
for unauthorized use of a motor veh1cle.

Virginia man
arrested in death
of Lesage resident
: HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) ;A Virginia man was charged -..:•th
4rst-degree murder in the shooung
of his {onner girlfriend's f~er•
CabeU County Sheriff Ottie Adkins

!'flid.
· Thomas Dunn 36, of Woodfold,
Va., was arres~ Friday at the
Cabell County Courthouse, wh~re
~e went to give himself up, Adkins
said.
Odell Beaver, 51, of Lesage was
shot by a man in a car as he sa~ at
ais roadsid~ rumma~e sale beSide
West Virginia 2.

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@

l1l'lll\
OLIS
446·0699
IQSJ' OALLIP
360 Second Ave.
Travtel Agency Serviw; rhB liB"''"pq/1/ic 11 weN IJ our members.

IIPp.hll'rrd 10 l1twm

and The Bahamas

TIIDIOST POPIL \IU :IUISL 1.1\1.1\ TilL \\ORU&gt; ,

He io a fornicator
And will his kittens oell.
He livco on their otampo
And monthly eheck.o 88 well .
He i• a wild abuoer
A very deotnctlve eat.
Yet his day• are numbered
The law io on thh bral.
©Robert I. H4tper 7114191

ATTORNEY D. INCHAEl MUUEN

DEBRA E. LONG, M.A., CCC
(304) 675-7131 •
Speech Language Pathologist
435 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH
THERAPY SERVICES AVAILABLE FOR:
•Consultation
•Speech/Language Evaluaflon
•Speech/Language Screenings
•Artlcuiaflon Disorders
•Aphasia
•Brain Injured

•Foreign Dialect
•Cleft Palate
•Augmentaflvo Communlcaflon
. •Language Delayed
•Stuttering
•Hearing Impaired

Gen. Hartinger Ptn.Vy

79 Jackson Pike

364

St.

MIDDLEPORT

GALLIPOLIS

East Main
POMEROY

814-992-6248

614-446-3837

614-992-6292

JULY 21 (SUNDAY ONLY)

Dissolution sought

c-

360 Second Ave.

MEN'S SUITS

bag.

Bond. "In Limes when our young
people seem to get nothing but negative publicity, it is certainly
encouraging to know that we still
can find young people who possess
the high moral standards and honesty that Chris exhibited", stated
Mike Harrington from Goodyear.

Water service to be interrupted

446-0699

lALLI POLlS
.
- TRAVEL

GALLIPOLIS - If you were an
eleven year-old boy and found a
banlc deposit bag from a major corporation in a parking lot,-what
would yow reaction be?
This was the situation which
Christopher Blanton of Vinton,
recently faced. Chris had discovered a deposit ba$ containing some
cash and checks m the parking lot
of the Gallipolis K-Mart store.
Chris' ethical uaining prevailed
and he turned the deposit bag into
the information desk at K- Mart and
with the help of the clerk, it was
determined that the deposit bag
belonged to The Goodyear Tire
Rubber Company's Point Pleasant
Polyester Plant. K-Mart notified
local plant officials who determined that the local] courier had
accidentally dropped the deposit

PROFESSIONAL SPEECH AND LANGUAGE CARE

: B&amp;E investigated

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September 9·22, 1991

DRESS &amp;
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CAROU SNOifDEN

: Lyons transports prisoners

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MEN'S SUMMER
DRESS SHIRTS
Reg. S23 NOW' $1840

Fot Homt u.•

· HComp/111 II~

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Vinton youth receives jacket,
$100 bond for being honest

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l)istrict ..

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GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia County Board of Elections will be
open from 9 a,m. to 12 noon the week of the Gallia County Junior
Fair. Also, Augost 3 is the last day to register for an absentee ballot
for the August 6 special county school levy election.

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Board lists fair hours schedule

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Sunday Times- Sentinel-Page-AS

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July 21,1991

--Area deaths-- Ohioans may get some relief from heat TuesdaY;:
She was a homemaker.
Clyde Rice
The Associated Press
a.m.; sunset at 8:57p.m.
She was born Jan. 10, 1938, in
This swnmer's heat will continAround the nation
POINT PLEASANT - Clyde D. Bashan, Ohio, daughter of the late ue through the weekend, but there
Sizzling heal stretched from the
Rice, 64 , Marion, IlL , fonnerly of Samuel Long.
might be relief for some areas. An Plains to the East Coast on SaturShe was preceded in death by increase in moisture will help day,
New Haven, W. Va., died Wedneswith thunderstorms craclcling
day, Jul y 17, 1991, in the Marion her husband Stirling Rayburn; increase the covelll8e of afternoon over parts of the Northeast and
infant daughter, Johanna; and one and evening thunderstonns.
General HospitaL
dumpmg heavy rain on West Virbrother,
Elson Long.
Born May 27, 1927, in Canal
Low temperatures tonight will ginia
She is survived by her mother be quite warm with readings in the
City, Ky ., he was the son of the late
Drizzle fell from overcast skies
step-father, Mrs. William lower half of the 70s.
and
Ova and Flora (Collins) Rice.
Friday
in Los Angeles as July conA retired plant manager for (Golda) Krackomberger; two sons,
The heat .aild humidity will con- tinued to produce sweater weather
So uthern Illin ois Power, he had Samuel W. Rayburn of Chester and tinue into early this week. Some in Southern California. The merserved as manager of several power Stirling Rayburn; two brothers, relief for northern Ohioans could cury lounged in the 60s in Santa
plants throu ghout th e United Eugene Long of Long Bottom and arrive Tuesday or Wednesday as a Barbara, Los Angeles and San
States. He wa&gt; aU. S. Anny veter- William Kraclcomberger Jr., of cold from drops south.
Diego at noon.
an, a member of the Elks Club in New Jersey; one sister, Mary J.
Record high for this date was
Blisering hot, humid weather
Marion and member and past com- Dempsey of Chester; sister-in-law, 101 in 1934; record low was 49 in brought misery east of the Rockies.
mander of American Legion Post Sandra Keyser of Point Pleasant, 1947.
Temperatures soared into !he upptZ
W.Va.; I 3 nieces and nephews; and
140 in New Haven.
Sunrise
Sunday
will
be
~1 _6:19
He is su rvi ved by his wife, several aunts, uncles and cousins.
Funeral services will be conBelly (Grinstead) Rice; two sons
OHIO Weather
ducted
I p.m. Tuesday at
and a daughter-in-law. Jam es and
Dawn Rice of Carlisle, Ind., and Foglesong Funeral Home, with
Sunday, July 21
Jonath an Ric e of North Palm Rev. Duane Sydenstricker officiatAccu-Weather$ forecast for daytime conditions and
Beach, Fla.; daughter and son-in- ing. Burial will be in Chester
law , William and Jacqueline West Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
of Marietta; sister Alvis Campbell,
home
on Monday from 6-9 p.m.
Hazard, Ky., two aunts, Mrs. Mark
Ward of New Haven and Mrs. RusToledo 92°
sell Bailey, Louisville, Ky.
Lexie Easton
Funeral serv ices will be I p.m.
Monday at Fog lesong Funeral
MIDDLEPORT
Lexie
Home in Mason with Rev . George Williams Easton, 77, of Overbrook
Mansfield 92Q
Weirick officiating. Burial will be Nursing Center, Middleport, died
in the Graham Cemetery.
Friday, July 19, 1991 at the center.
IND.
Friends may call at the funeral
She was born Nov. 17, 1913 in
home Sunday from 7 until 9 p.m.
West Liberty, W.Va., daughter of
the late Ed C. and Stella Ellen
Mary M. Snead
Williams.
Columbus 93°
She was a former nwse's aid at
AMELIA - Mary Madgalene Holzer Medical Center, a member
(Maggie) Snead, 80, of 88 W. Main of the White Oak Baptist Church
St., Amelia, died Satwday, July 20, ~nd the White Oak Cheerful Work1991 at Mercy Hospital, Cincin- ers.
She was preceded in death by
nati.
She was born Nov. 27, 1910 in her husband, Joseph Hillman EastW. VA.
Eskdale, W.Va .. daughter of the on in 1967; one son, Clarence Easton;
and
one
daughter,
Dorothy
late Joseph and Molly Spurlock
~
Swisher.
Allen.
Survivors include six grandchilShe was a retired employee of
27 years from Barto James Family dren, Ed Swisher and Joyce Hill,
both of Bidwell, Clarence Hillman
&lt;lf Point Pleasant, W.Va.
- Survivors include two sons, Easton II of Columbus, Rene
Raymond Snead of Norwood and Triantopaulos of New Hampshire.
Ice
Sunny P!. Cloudy Cloudy
Reginald Snead of Apple Valley, Candy Hopewell and Tina Easton,
C1991 Acc~J ·Weather, Inc.
Calif.; one daughter, Mrs. Paul both of Springfield, Ohio; and eight
(Becky) Skinner of Gallipolis; great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be con·
·:Seven grandchildren; one greatA slight chance of showers and
. grandchild; two sisters, Kathleen dueled II a.m. Monday at Willis
South-Central Ohio
·· Eleshire of Prenter, W.Va., and Funeral Home, with Rev . Arnold
Sunday, hazy sunshine, Hot and thunderstonns each day. Hot and
Skaggs officiating. Burial will be in humid. Widely scattered afternoon humid Monday with highs 90 to
. J,leatrice Martin of Amelia.
Rose
Hill Burial Park, Ashland, and evening thunderstorms. High 95 . A little cooler north and continShe was preceded in death by
Ky.
two sisters and one brother.
90 to 95. The chance of rain is 30 ued hot south Tuesday and
Wednesday with highs 85 10 90
Friends may call at the funeral percent.
Rite of Christian burial will be
north and 90 to 95 south. Lows
: II a.m. Tuesday at Waugh-Halley- today from 6-9 p.m.
Extended forecast:
Pallbearers will be Mike Elkins,
. Wood Funeral Home, with Msg.
Monday through Wednesday: upper 60s to middJe 70s all three
days.
. William R. Myers officiating. Buri- Jeff, Carl and Mac Ward, Clarence
Hillman
Easton
II,
and
Regi
s
al will be in Kirkland Memorial
Pelphry.
· Park, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
_c_o_n_un_u_ed_r_ro_m_A_-_I_______________
.. Friends may call at the funeral
: home from 6-9 p.m. Monday, with Hugh H. Hanson
and a passenger in the truck, Dou- fine, and the Court of Appeals
:.prayer service at8:30 p.m.
glas Harris. Riggs later went back agreed with Riggs.
MIDDLEPORT - Hugh H. to an Athens County road, where
"The sentence imposed by the
Iva P. Rayburn
Hanson, 73, of Middleport, died the truck was concealed, and set it court would prevent Riggs from
Saturday, July 20, 1991 at Veterans afrre.
working for at lest five or six
CHESTER - Iva Pearl Rayburil, Memorial Hospiral.
After a plea bargain agreement years," Judge Lawrence Gray
He was born on May 13, 1918 was reached between Riggs' attar- wrote in the coun's decision. "Thus
53, of SR 248, Chester, died Friin
Glasgow,
W.Va., son of the late ney, Hennan Carson of Athens and (Riggs has) no viable way to earn
day, July 19, 1991 at her residence.
Jesse and Minnie (Stover) Hanson.
Prosecutor Steven L. Story, Crow money to pay that fine."
He was a retired school adminis- sentenced Riggs in September to
Riggs ' appeal also stated that
trator in Dayton and a member of five to ten years incarceration and a Crow was vague in determining the
the Buckeye Sheriffs Association.
$5,000 fine on a charge of aggra- restitution to be paid to Will's fam( USP 5!5-800 I
Mr. Hanson was a U.S. Anny
vated vehicular homicide; two ily, stating only that Riggs was to
veteran
of
World
War
II
who
years and $5,000 on a charge of "pay restitution to the family of the
Published each Sunda y. 825 Third Ave.,
served in the North Africa and the tampering with evidence and 18 deceased'".
· Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshtng CompanytMulllmE'dla, Inc. SeIralian campaigns and was awarded months and $2,500 fme on a charge
In that matter, the appeals coun
cond class p~tage paid at Ga llipolis.
the Bronze Star and the Purple of gross abuse of a corpse.
reversed the trial coun·s fine impoOhio 45631. En tered as S£&gt;C1Jnd class
Heart. He later became a member
mailing matter a t Pomer oy, Ohio. Post
In his appeal, Riggs stated that sition and oldered the coun to set a
OftiC'f'.
of the American Legion Post 128 in
Crow erred! in imposing a $12,000 hearing for the purpose of deterMiddleport.
Member: The Associated Press. Infine since he was unable to pay that mining restitution.
land Dally Prf'ss Associa tion a nd t hr
He was preceded in death by
Ohio NewspapPr Association. Na llona l
three sisters.
Adverti sing RPpres e-nt a tlve, Branham
. :C:::o:::n:::tin::.::u:.::.:ed;:..;r:.::.:ro;:;;m;:..;A:.:.·. :.l________
Survivors include two daugh~
Newsp aper Sales, 73.3 Third Avenue.
.. · NPW York, New York 10017.
ters, Linda L. Berger of Holly- quo, don't rock the boat," he said.
pupils with anybody in the state.
wood,
Fla.,
and
Karen
Hughes
of
Phillis
took
exception.
He
But our inte.:est is not in personaliSUNDAY ONLY
Clyde; two brothers, Harond Han- denied that the materials were ties. Our interest is in improving
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
son of Rutland and Charles Hanson mailed at taxpayers' expense. But education," said Phillis, who hopes
One Week . . .. .. ................ 90 Cent s
of Columbus; a grandson, Adam even if they had been, "It would to be named state superintendent
One Year ..
. ............. .. .. $46.80
Farrant of Clyde; three stepdaugh- have been legitimate because this is by the board late next month with
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
. ters, Susan, Linda and Cindy (no a legitimate public policy debate," the retirement of Franklin Walter.
Sunday .. . ... . . .. ... . .. .. ... ... .. 75 C£&gt;nt s
last names given).
he said.
Voinovicb said he has agreed to
No s ubscr iptions by m a ll pt&gt;rmlttf'd In
Services will be held Monday,
He said the board is drafting a changes in his bill, including a plan
arpas where motor ca r r ier st&gt;rvkf' Is
July 22, at II a.m. at Fisher Funer- bi II containing a long list of to name a board member from II
availabl e .
al Home in Middleport. Burial will reforms, including some endorsed geographic regions whose names
The Sunday Tl mes-Senlln £&gt;1wUinot be
be at Gravel Hill Cemetery in by Voinovich.
would be placed on the November
r esp(J"'s ibi E' !or advancE' pa yments
Cheshire.
Phillis said the bill to be intro- 1992 ballot for ratification or rejec· mad e to earrlt&gt;rs .
Friends may call the funeral duced in the next week or two has tion by voters in each region . He
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
home
on Monday from 2 to 4 p.m. "cutting edge" improvements that said he compromised to ease conSu nday OniJ
and from 7 to 9 p.m.
will rank with those of anv state.
One Yf'ilr ..
. ... ........ 547.84
cerns of Phillis and others about
Slx month s
..... .... $24 .70
''I would match my record of 33 voter involvement but that they
Take two asplrla ...
years of improving the lives of have not indicated a wiUingness 10
Dally and Sunday
The
most
widely used painkiller In
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
compromise.
the world is aspirin. It was perfected
IMide County
IJ w.. ks ...............
.. ........ 12 1.84
by German researchers, Felix Hoff2G w...ks . .. .. ...... .. ... . ......... .. 143.16
man
and Hermann Dresser, in 1899. It
'52 Woeks ..
$84 .76
was first sold under the trade name
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Jl Weeks .
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Bayer Aspirin in 1905 by prescription
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only,
and in powder form. By 1915,
-!12 Weeks .
.. .. .. ..... 188.40
tablets of aspirin were sold over the
counter.

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�'.

Page-AS-Sunday Times Sentinel

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasan

wv

July 21, 1991 ;

:..

Along the River

~imts- ientintl

Section

B

July 21,1991

:MAC serves cultural, educational needs
By JULIE E. DILLON
Times-Sentinel Starr
MIDDLEPORT - What was
: once a dream for a group of concerned individuals is now reality.
Initial plans to create an organi: zation to serve cultural and educa.. tiona I needs of area residents and
·; provide entertainment were begun
.• in February 1989. What formed
.: was the Middleport Arts Council
, (MAC). A year later the group pre. sented its plan to Middleport
·: Mayor Fred Hoffman and Middle: port Village Council. Village gov• emment felt it was a beneficial idea
: and it became a department of the
: village. The MAC is supported,
• only partially, by the Village of
; Middleport. That support will con• tinue only until the MAC becomes
• self-supporting.
; According to its mission state• ment the MAC "is a non-profit
: organization serving the communi: ty of Middleport and the surround• ing area. The purpose of the orga: nization is to enhance the culture of
: our Appalachian region by provid• ing an environment and opportuni: ties for learning, creating and par.; ticipating in various art forms."
• The organization operates solely
: on volunteer efforts and more vol~ unteers are needed. Anybody can
participate in the organization
, which is governed by a seven
:1 member board of directors appoint:. ed by the Village of Middleport.
·, Officers of the MAC board of
: directors are Mary Wise, president;
;; Jeanette Thomas . vice president:
-; and Susan Baker, secretary-treasur-

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; The MAC has received short
:, term assistance from the Ohio Arts
;: Council which provided a develo~.

'

er who assisted the organizanon m
forming its basic structure, mission
statement and code of regulations,
all of which ate necessary to apply
for additional grant money.
A long term assistance progmm
grant has now been applied for
through the Ohio Arts Council
which will provide an advisor for
nine months who can assist in further program development
Right now the council offers a
variety of classes and there is usually a 98 percent turnout for those
classes, according to Mrs. Wise.
The classes are for anybody and
everybody and a variety of people
take advantage of them.
Some classes offered include
art. ballroom dancing, tap dancing,
crafts, clogging, paintin$. sign language, teddy bear making, bunny
making and children's classes, just
to mention a few .
Art exhibitions featuring local
talent, an antique seminar and a hat
show have been conducted by the
organization. This past Christmas a
tour of Middleport churches was
organized by the MAC and it is the
goal of the organization to make
this an annual event
Something the MAC wants to
do is to have a story telling time
during which residents of the area
could tell stories about "how it use
to be." The MAC feels this is
important to learn of the history of
the area and to preserve that histo·
ry.
The MAC is alway s open to
suggestions·for classes or seminars
that people feel would be beneficial
and anyone who would like to
teach a class is encouraged to con·
tact one of the officers.
The MAC is also interested in
preservation of the villa~e. build-

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tured, 1-r, are some or tbe boa~d or directors for that organization,
Mary Wise, Susan Baker, Nancy Cale and Marilyn Meier.

DEDIC ATED VOLUNTEERS -It takes dedicated volunteers to
operate an organization such as the Middleport Arts Council. Pic·
ings and in June it moved from its
original location to the former
LaSalle Hotel which is presently
owned by Brian Johnson. The new
location is larger and there is plenty
of room to expand when necessary.
Some form er owners of the hotel
include Henry Swift, a Guinther
family, and Yvonne Scally.
The history of the hotel is of
great importance to the MAC and
upon relocating to this facility discovered this information:
"The LaSqlle Hotel was formerly the Allen Hotel and is located on
Second Street between Coal and
Lynn Streets one block below the
Masonic Temple . The hotel was
built by Mr. Sam Allen in 1902 and
was operated by him and his son,
Mr. Edward Allen. as manager
unti/1914 (?) . Mr. Allen was noted
in all parts of the state for his fine
hotel and good meals.
Mr. Timothy Hogan. Attorney
General for the State of Ohio,
made his headquarters at this place
when in Middleport. During the
years when the Chataqua Circuit
was popular. Opie Reid was a
guest at this lwtel as were most of
the speakers and companies who
entertained the public on the
Chataqua programs .
After Mr . Allen's de ath . the
hotel was rented to Mr.
Shannon and later take_n_o-ve_r..,b-y
Edward French .
Lewis Bradford is the proprietor
at this time . There are 45 rooms
with running waler, lwt and cold in
each room,four bathrooms, commadius office and parlors.
The Burford Beauty Shoppe is
on the main floor at the rear of the
office. No meals are served at this
hotel. Prices of all rooms are$! ."
The Middleport Arts Council
has come a long way since its formation and many plans are in store
for the future. If you would like to
get involved with the organization
contact Mary Wise at 992-2675 .

HI.
TUB

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Banquet
Pot Pies •

'&lt;
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Repaired pieces...
Beautiful tin ceilings have
been repaired and repainted at
tbe new location of tbe Middleport Arts Council in the former
LaSalle Hotel. Tbe building's
owner, Brian Johnson, bas been
instrumental in assisting tbe
MAC witb improvements.

•

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27, 1991 • We

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NEW LOCATION • Tbe Middleport Arts
Council moved to its new location in June. The
new location, the former LaSalle Hotel, bas

mucb more room than tbe MAC's previousloca·
lion and there is plenty of room for expansion
when necessary.

�'

Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

•

~

•

• •

J

~

July 21, 1991

Engagements

l

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

Engag:ements

Davis reunion held

Weddings

CHESHIRE · The family of the
late Jacob N. M. Davis and Maggie
Sluyter Davis met July 7, at the
Kyger Creek Club House for their
annual reunion. Terrill Davis asked
the blessing on the pot luck dinner.
Everyone enjoyed visiting, talking
of present and past events.
The oldest member presenr was
·Gladys Church who was 84 years
old
The youngest member was
Megan Ours six months old daughter of Kerry and Kelly Ours.
There were four births this past
year: a daughter, Elizabeth Pearl
Chase, daughter of Johnny and
Amy Chase born June 6, 1991, and
a son to Bill and Denise Chase; a
son, Michael David Hineman, to
David and Kathy Hineman born
ovember 20, 1990; and a dauRhter
Megan Renee Ours, to Kelly and
Kerry Ours, born December 31.
There were two deaths C.
Norvin Hineman died October 7,
1990 and Emmett W. Church died
April29, 1991.
Terrill Davis, President, conducted the business meeting. New
officers for the coming year are
James Davis, President, Thomas
Davis, Vice President , and !Ia
Hineman Secretary.
Elgin Davis and Wilbert Church
sent their regard s and was sorry
they could not auend.
Those present were: James N.
M. and Esther Davis, Gladys
Church, Lillian Thomas, Julia ,
Bobby, Rose Plybon, Chuck and
Janelle Hineman, Joseph, Donna,
Josie, Heather and Danielle Hin eman, Wayne and Diana Gladman,
Diana Lynne, Erica, and Jacob

•

BRENDA ZIRKLE and DAVID WARTH

Zirkle-Warth

BRENDA SINCLAIR and BRIAN LLEWELLYN

Sinclair-Llewellyn

RICHARD GILMORE and RENEE WARD

Ward-Gilmore
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Bill G. Ward, Gallipolis, announce
the upcoming marriage of their
daughter, Renee Marie, to Richard
M. Gilmore. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lionel L. Gilmore, Cheshire.
The open church wedding will
be held, July 26, 7 p.m., at Good
News Baptist Church, Gallipolis. A
reception will follow at the Kyger
Creek Club House, Cheshire.
Ward is a 1988 graduate of

SHADE - Mr. and Mrs. Paul L.
Sinclair, Shade, announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Brenda
Susan, to Brian Wayne Llewellyn.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles C. Llewellyn of New
Marshfield.
Miss Sinclair is a 1987 graduate
of Meigs High School and a 1991
cum laude graduate of Ohio University with a Bachelor of Business
Administration in finance and management. She is employed by TriCounty Community Action Agency

Kyger Creek High School, attended
the University of Rio Grande, and
is currently attending Urbana University.
Gilmore is a 1986 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
1989 graduate of Hocking Techni·
RU1l..AND- The wedding cerecal College, Nelsonville. He is
employed at Allied Mineral, mony for Roberta Sue Napper and
Darin Eugene Young has been set
Columbus.
for
Sept. 7 at I :30 p.m. at the Zion
The couple will reside in Lon·
Church
of Christ, Route 143 in
don, Ohio.
Rudand.

and Putton's Miniature Golf, both
of Athens.
Llewellyn is a 1983 graduate of
Alexander High School and a 1984
graduate of Northwestern Business
College and Automotive Diesel
School. He is a certified diesel
technician and is employed by TriCounty Community AcbOn Agency
and Appalachian Tire, both of
Athens.
The wedding is planned for
Aug. 17 at the East Athens Church
of Christ

MARGIE THAXTON

·Thaxton-Prosser
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Thaxton of Bidwell,
announce the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Margie, to Jamie Prosser,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Brice Prosser
of Mullins, S.C., and Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Taulbee of Summerville,
S.C.
The open church wedding will
be held August 10 at 3:30 p.m. at

the French· City Baptist Church,
Gallipolis.
Miss Thaxton is a graduate of
North Gallia High School and Rio
Grande with a B.S. in education.
She is currently teaching at Aynor
High School.
Mr. Pressor is a graduate of
Aynor High School and is
employed with Horry Electric
Cooperative, Conway, S.C.

Knotts-Notter
I

I
I

TIMMONSVll..LE, S.C .. Rita John Notter Jr., brother of the
: and Lee Knotts of Timmonsville, groom, officiating.
· S.C. announce the engagement of ·
Miss Knotts is a graduate of
thei; daughter, Brenda, to Keith Timmonsville High School and has
· Vincent Notter of Greenville, S.C., a career m .nursmg.
: son of Rev. John Notter Sr., and
Mr. Notter is a junior at Holmes
Ann Notter of Columbus.
Bible College, Greenville, S.C.,
A wedding is being planned for majoring in ministry.
: July 27 at the Pentecostal Holiness
The couple will reside in
: Church, Sumpter, S.C., with Rev. Greenville, S.C.

She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Napper Jr. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack E.
Young.
Music will begin at I p.m. with
a reception to follow the ceremony
in the church social room.

will attend an area public high
school, share everyday life with
their host families and participate
in sports, school clubs and commu·
· nity activities.
Students arrive in mid-August to
begin school with their American
classmates.
Coleman has full applications of
these two students as wen as those
of several other boys and girls who
would like to live in this pan of
Ohio next year. Students have been
carefully screened, speak English,
and have their own spending
money. All a family needs to provide is a bed, a place to study, two
meals a day, and an open heart
ready to receive a "son" or "daughter" from another county.
Interested families should call
Shirley Coleman at 614 742-2125
or Regional Director Lynne David
at the AIFS national office in Connecticut at 1-800-322-4678.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

. f

Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the date
of publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold siu or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial depanment from I to S
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614)446-2342.

Baldwin-Freeman

PASSPORT
AND I.D.

HEATHER ROUSH and CHARLES CLELAND, JR.

PHOTOS

Roush-Cleland

leadyln

5 MINUTES

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GiWPOUS, OH.

:
:
•
:

son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cleland Sr., Long Bottom.
The open church wedding and
reception will be held Aug. 24 at 2
p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
Church in Racine.

SYRACU.SE ·Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Gibbs, Syracuse, announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their niece, Heather L.
Roush, to Charles M. Cleland Jr.,

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

Henry G~ Croci, MD
Bruce R. Paxton, MD
are pleased to anounce the
association of

Jeffrey F. McAdoo, MD
at
444 West Union St., Athens
In addition to providing comprehensive
medical and surgical eye care, Dr. McAdoo
will be specializins in the diagnosis and
treabnent of retinal eye diseases.
Appoinhnents are now being accepted at

614-592-4461

.
:
·
:
:
;
:
:
•
:

RACINE . Descendants of the
late Charles and Alma Heinzman
Snyder will have their reunion on
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Each family is to
bring a door prize, table service,
table cloth and picnic lunch.

SUNDAY
POMEROY · Rev. Eddie Buff.
MONDAY
ington, Gallipolis, will be the
RACINE - The Southern Local
speaker at the Naomi Baplist Board of Education will meet MonChurch in Pomeroy on Sunday at day at 7 p.m. at the high school.
II a.m.
CHESTER · The Ken Arnsbary
GUYSVILLE · AMVETS Post Chapter of the Izaak Walton
76 will present the George Jones League wiU hold its annual family
Show on Sunday at 4 p.m. Also picnic on Monday at 7 p.m. at the
appearing, at I :30 p.m. will be Two club house. The club will furnish
Lane Hgihway ans Kansas City ham. Bring drink, table service and
Southern. For more information a covered dish.
call662-2555 or 662-2115.
MIDDLEPORT · The OH KAN
FROST · There will be a three Coin Club will meet Monday at
day revival at the Faith Chapel Burkeu Barber Shop in Middleport.
Church in Frost on Sunday, Mon- Social hour and trading session
day and Tuesday at 7 p.m. nightly. precedes the 8 p.m. meeting.
Call 423-9766, 378-6238 or 667- Refreshments. New members wel3594 for information.
come.

RACINE . Mary D. Baldwin
and Jimmie L. Freeman exchanged
wedding vows June 15 at the
Buchanan Christian Union Church,
Buchanan, with Rev. Marlin Kellough officiating.
The bride, a graduate of Southem High School, is the daughter of
Stephen Baldwin of Racine and
Cathy and Richard Young of New
Haven, W.Va.
The groom, a graduate of Southem High School and Ohio University, is the son of Clarence and
Evelyn Freeman of Racine. He is
currently employed at the Gallipolis Daily Tribune as a reporter.
The bride was escorted by her

@

RIO GRANDE · A scholarship
named for Gallia County resident
Stanley L. Evans ha s bee n
endowed at the University of Rio
Grande by Robert L. and Jewell
Evans, Walnut Township Trusrce
Orlyn Miller announced.
Evans, who grew up in Walnul
Township and received a reaching
certificate from the Universiry .
served as a member of Rio
Grande's Board of Trustees fro m
1947 until 1972. The athletic fields
at the University were dedicaled in
his name in 1974.
The Stanley L. Evans Scholarship will be awarded to deserving,

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UPCOMING BAZAAR - The Christmas in July Bazaar is coming up, Tbursday, July 25 from 9 - 3 at tbe Senior Citizens Center,
220 Jackson Pike. Seniors are busy stringing bay leaves, apple
slices and cinnamon sticks to make berb bangers for tbe kitcben.
Over IS craftpersons are bringing tbeir crafts to tbe center. Homemade baked goods and barbecue sandwiches, cole .slaw and drinks
wiU also be for sale.

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father. Maid of honor was Lorna
Greene, of Virginia Beach, Va.,
friend of the bride. Bridesmaids
were Deborah Lawson, aunt of the
bride, and April Freeman, niece of
the groom. Flower girl was Alex
Lawson.
Lawrence, Cliff Stapleton and Jody
Best man was David A. Powell
II, of Orlando, Fla., friend of the ·
groom. Ushers were Robert
Greene, of Virginia Beach, Va.,
and David Hoover of Middleport,
both friends of the groom.
Music was provided by
Clarence Freeman Jr. , brother of
the groom.
A reception followed at the
church.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.

ROOM AlA

full-time students attending Rio
Grande who will be selected with
the following priorities: first consideration to students from Walnut
Township, second priority to schol·
ars from Perry Township, and third
to students from Greenfield Township.
Applicants must have a 2.0 high
school or grade point average. The
recommendations of teachers and
community leaders will be important to the selection process. The
scholarship can be granted for
tuition. general fees, books, room
and board.
Recipients will be selected by
the University Scholarship Com • ..
miuec, chaired by the Director of
Financial Aid. Students may apply
through the Office of Financial Aid
at the University of Rio Grande,
(614) 245-5353, ext. 218. The tollfree number in Ohio is 1-800-2827201.

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and Brittnay Hicks, Stephanie Danford, Kenneth and Loueva Ours,
Doris Davis, Thomas Davis, Misti
and Melessa Davis, Jim and
Dorothy Liptack, Roger, Elaine,
Sarah Anne and Mary Beth Liptack, Jim and Barbara Denny, Patty
Denny, Jim and Jamie and daughter
Candice Denney, Rusty Denny,
Dave Linquest, Meredith, Pat, Man
and Mike Davis, Vera Ross, Roy
Keifer II, Richard, Judy, Viki, and
Steven Doty, Celeste Ward , Rick,
Debbie and Rick Dillon, Helen and
Terrill Davis Sherry Dragich,
Tony, Terri and Gmna Ours.
David, Kathy and Michael Hin~ ­
man, Kerry, Kelly, Daniel and
Megan Ours, Leland, Becky, Chad,
Kala, and Dara Ours, Dean, Shelba.
Andrew and Edwina Hineman.

Stanley L. Evans
scholarship endowed

JUST ARRIVED

FAMILY PRACTICE

=Wedding policY==
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
: and Mason counties as news and is
: happy to publish wedding stories
· and photographs wtthout charge
· However, wedding news must
· meet general standards of timeli. ness. The newspaper prefers to
: publish accounts of wedding s as
· soon as possible after the event.
~
To be published in the Sunday
· edition, the wedding must have
Qlken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be. up to
600 words in length. Matenal for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by

MR. and MRS. JIMMIE (MARY) FREEMAN

Eye Physicians and Surgeons of Athens, Inc.

Exchange students need
home with host families
•

Haven, W.Va . with Rev. David
Fields officiating the ceremony.
A reception will follow in the
church social room.

Meigs County calendar .

Napper-Young

POMEROY - Host families are
needed for Matthias from Gennany
and Elena from Spain who are
coming to spend the next school
year in the state of Ohio. The students are enrolled in the Academic
Year in America program, a nonprofit high school/homestay experience sponsored by the AIFS Scholarship Foundation.
The program's local representative, Shirley Coleman of Pomeroy,
is interviewing families in this area
who would be interested in hosting
Matthias or Elena. Seventeen year
old
Matthias
enjoys
basketbaU,\roccer and computers.
He comes from a small village outside Hamburg where his dad is a
physician.
Elena is a 16-year-old from
Barcelona. She is an excellent student, plays the piano and enjoys
cycling and going to the movies
with friends. Matthias and Elena

RACINE . Mr. and Mrs. David
Zirkle, Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Warth, Pomeroy, announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their children, Brenda
Zirkle and David Warth.
Miss Zirkle is a graduate of
Southern High School and is currently attending Hocking College
towards a degree in nursing. She is
employed at McClure's Family
Restaurant in Pomeroy.
He is graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed at Powell's
Super Value in Pomeroy.
An open church wedding is
planned for Aug. 24 at1:30 p.m. al
the First Church of God in New

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-83

uNauoa, OHio

.

HOLZER CLINIC OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY DEPT.
446·5381
JACISOII PilE • GAWPOUS, OH.

I

.......,_ _ _ _ _ _ _......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __·· ·- - ----- ___ ___,:__ _ _ _.........-Jii_ _ _ _ _ _....._ _ _. . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . . . . . . . . . . . .liliWroi~_...._..~;;.......a.

�.

Page-84-Sunday T1 mes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv
'

July 21, 1991

~·~

..

July 21, 1991

Talent show deadline July 26
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Fann Bureau Talent Show
will be held Saturday, August 3,
beginning at 1 p.m., at the Gallia
County Fair.
The show will be divided into 3
classes - 12 years and under -13
,years through 19 years - and
mixed age groups.
All entries must be in by Friday,
July 26, and will be accepted on a

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

ftrst-come, rust-serve basiS. No late
entries will be accepted, Send
name, address, age, and type of tal·
ent to: Gallia County Fann Bureau,
P.O. Box 349, Jackson, Ohio,
45640.
'
For further details, coniAct the
Gallia County Farm Bureau office
at 1-80()..333-1944, Janette Elliott
at 446-4950, or Merle Howard at
245-9191.

Anniversaries Son -of Racine couple provides
comfort after going to war

For That Special
Occasion...
Special occasiona req~ire apeci•l pre- ·
parations. If you are piMning 1 wed·
ding, anniversary or prom, then you
should come see us at Haskina- 'f•l'·
ner.
You will have over 190 atylea of tux·
edoa to choose from. We have a large
selection of the iateat atylea and complimentary eccessoriea for thla·apeclal
occasion.
Quality Forrnalwear
at Affordable Prieea.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

MR. and MRS. RiCHARD (BETTY) HARMON

Rose-Harmon
Holter-Kern

MASON, W.VA.- Betty Karen
Rose became the bride of Richard
Keith Harmon on May 28 in Pensburg, Va.

STIVERSVll..LE · Judy Holter Pa., and Nancy Snyder, Dun She is the daughter of Glen and
and Tim Kern were united in mar- cansville, Pa., sisters of the bride,
Dee
Tharp, Nelsonville. He is the
served
at
the
refreshment
table.
riage on June 29 at the Stiversville
Rhonda De Pue , sister of the son of Carl and JoAnn Hannon,
Word of Faith Church in
groom, decorated the church and Mason, W.Va.
Stiversville.
A dinner reception was held at
The double ring ceremony was reception hall.
the
home of the groom's parents
Following a tour of Pennsylvanjlerfonner by Pastor David Dailey.
with
out-of-town guests, friends
· Given in marriage by her broth· nia the couple resides in
and
relatives
attending.
er, David Hite, the bride wore a Stiversville.
He
is
employed
at
Harris
Farms,
two-piece white satin dress and a
The bride graduated from Nelshoulder length veil. She carried a Portland, and ·she is affiliated with
bridal bouquet of pink, burgundy the Stiversville Word of Faith sonville-York High School and was
formerly employed at the Pomeroy
and white spring flowers. Her Church.
attendant, Debbie Dailey, wore a
She is the daughter of Aorence Kroger Store.
The groom, a graduate of
pink dress with a burgundy cor- Hite, Ducansville, Pa., and he is the
sage.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Waharna High School, is employed
with the Phillip Sporn Power Plant.
The groom wore a navy blue (Wanda) Sellers, Ponland.
suit with a white rose boutonniere.
Tyrone Brinager, Racine, served as
best man. His attire matched that of
the groom.
The church was decorated in
white, pink and maroon. White
bows marked the family section of
the church.
Kate Evans, registered the
guests, and immediately following
the ceremony a reception was held
at the Long Bottom Community
Center.
The bride's table was decorated
in the maroon. white and pink calor
scheme with a canopy over the
table which was accented with.
wedding bells and lovebirds. The
cake was made by Faye Westfall.
Brenda Holter, daughter of the
bride, registered guests and wedding gifts.
Marcia Martin, Shelbysburg,

Saunders among
outstanding women
GALLIPOLIS - The Board of
Advisors for the Outstanding
Young Women of America awards
program announced recently Brenda Saunders of Gallipolis, been
selected for inclusion in the 1991
edition of Outstanding Young
Women of America.
Now in its 25th year, the
OYW A program is designed to
honor and encourage exceptional
young women between the ages of
21 and 40 who have distinguished
themselves in many fields of
endeavor, such as service to community, professional leadership,
academic achievement, business
advancement, cultural accomplishments, and civic and political participation. Achievements in these
areas are the result of de,dication.
respon sibility, and a drive for
excellence - qualities which
deserve to be recognized and
remembered.
The women listed along with
other Outstanding Young Women
throughout North Am erica, were
selected after 73,000 nominations
were received from political leaders, university and college officials,
clergymen, buswess leaders , as
well as from various c1 v1c groups
and community organizations.
Each young woman will-be represented by her biographical entry in
this prestigious annual awards publication .

Memoriam for
Ted Reed
We wish to honor the memory of

Ted Reed, who for many years
devote(l his services unselft.shly ·
to the interest of Meigs County
Libraries. During his tenure we
developed a new funding
system which enabled us to
build a new library, renovate
the Middleport Branch, establish
our own Bookmobile service and
increase book collections, of
which Ted contributed 81 books
Missionary group in memory of friends and loved
gathers for picnic · ones over the years.·
· The Evangeline Missionary
His friendly and kindly spirit
Group of the Pomeroy Church of
Ctuist and fuest met recently at the
will be greatly missed by all of
campsite o J.R. and Linda Lauderinilt in Maso!l. W.va. for a ptemc.
A~g were Andy and Debus who had the privilege of
bie Miles, Ed ,and Jan~t Ve.noy,
Bernard and ~hern Might,
serving and working with him.
Charlde.ine, Chns and Debbie

Alkire, Eileen Bo~ers, Kathy
Haley. Naomi Ohhnger, Sara
Mansfield, Belly Spencer. Pat
Thoma. Bva Dessauer and Pauline

Kennedy.

.

They will reside at Crew Road
in Pomeroy.

Op111 Mon. &amp; Fri. 'til I p.m.; Tue., Wed. Thurs. &amp; Sat. 'tM 5 p.m.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 TV's David 6 Palatable
11 European herring
16 AdheSive

substance
21 SuHerer from

Hansen's disease
Commonplace
Devoutness
Willow
Suitable
Long for
" - Life Is It,
Anyway?"
30 Word with lamb
or pork
32 Sodium symbol
33 Pronoun
34 Valle
35 Period of time
36 Pull the - over
22
23
24
25
26
28

one's eyes

37 Forerunner of

CIA
38 Crafty
40 Animated
42 Butter square
43 Support
44
45
47
49

Escape

Sea eagle
Sea nymph
Devastate
50 Capuchin monkey
51 Strike out
54 Food fish
55 Yogi Berra's
glove
56 Word of honor
59 Knock
eo Guido's high note
62 Indian chiefs
64 Warsaw native
65 Teutonlc deity
66 King of Bashan
67 In music, high
69 Wants
70 Horse's neck hair
71 Natl. Aeronautic
Assn.
72 Above: poetic
74 Joints
76 Auction word:
abbr.
TT Connery role
78 Stoup
79 Chief executives
82 Bags
64 Human trunk
85 Cushions

86 Helmond sitcom
88 Gaelic
89 "Bang the -

Slowly"
90 Twirls
92 Native chief

In India
94 Eating place
98 Await settlement
99 Wild plum
100 Music variety
102 Look fixedly
103 Meadow
104 Consumed
105 Bridge
106 Bazaars
108 Asian ox
109 Struthers ID
110 Sun god
111 Jump
112 "The- Bears"
114 Limb
116 Siamese currency
117 Slumbers
119 A fixed quantity
120 Tumble
122 Correct
124 Rear of ship
125 Enormous
126 Renumerated
128 Spread for drying
129 Classify
131 "sax, - and
videotapes"
132 Vehicle
133 1960 A.L. MVP
135 Shade tree
138 Play on words
139 Cincinnati
base bailers
140 Hawaiian
rootstock
141 Cash ending
142 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
143 Guido's low note
144 Alight
145 Monk's hoods
147 Item of property
149 Shoemaker's tool
150 Kind of foot race
151 Save wadding
expenses
154 Goodbye: Sp.
156 Summed up
158 Snares
159 More recent
160 Trite; stale:
slang

161 Docks

DOWN
1 lmperfectlc;&gt;ns

2 Repulse
3 Choose
4 Compass point
5 Attempt

Former Russian
dictator
7 Comes on the
scene
8 Transfix
9 Tag player
10 Condensed
moisture
11 Pastime
12 Leaning tower
city
13 Female ruff
14 Near
15 Wealthy
businessman:
colloq.
16 Minnesota Fats'
game
17 Viper
18 Yes: Sp.
19 Taut
20 Expunge
27 Moray
29 Chief
31 Skip
36 Court order
37 Mixture
39 Bark
40 Poker stake
41 God of love
42 "Five Easy -"
43 Places
44 Journey forth
46 Concerning
48 Verve
49 Edges
50 Department store
hlghllghl
51 Languish
52 Ardent
53 African gazelles
55 Interfere
56 "On Golden -"
57 Stands at a slant
58 Muse of poetry
61 Toward shelter
63 Beetles film
64 Critlzes sharply
68 Mental strain
70 "- Blaise··
6

Standard; ragular
Grumble
Young goats
Accumulate
Foundations
- leaf clover
Pulverized rock
Depressed
Go astray
Exact
March
Dimmer
Masls
Flower part
Smack
Shower
South African
Dutch
96 Birds' homes
97 Experience
99 Health resorts
101 Like better
105 Clan
71
73
74
75
77
78
80
81
83
84
87
89
90
91
92
93
95

MR. and MRS. CARL (MARCIA) KERNS

Kerns to celebrate anniversary
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs,
Carl D. (Marcia L. Duckworth)
Kerns, l)nion Cily, Ga .. will celebrate their 50th wedding annivcr·
sary on July 23.
He is a 1932 graduate of Middleport High School and she is a
1937 graduate of Pomeroy High
School.
They were marri ed July 23,
1941 in Glouster by the Rev . C.B.

Tignor, a Church of Christ minis·
ter.
Kerns worked as a salesman for
the Storck Baking Comjlany and
lhey moved to Akron In 1948.
Since 1972 they have made their
home near Atlanta, Ga.
They have two daughters, Carla
L. and Barbara J. , four grandchil·
drcn and one great granddaughter.

106 Doom
107- meet
111 Direction
112 Captures
113 Grand-

(baseball)
115 Obtains
116 Assistant
118 Merit
119 Regrets
121 A linking up
123 Brother ol Odin
125 Concealed
126 Wading bird
127 Stylish; smart:
colloq,
129 Gush out
130 Exterior
131- Dawson
132 Cringe
134 Anger
136 Frown
137 Merges
139 Beams
140 Head of Catholic
Church
144 Circuit
145 Farm animal
146 Cui de14 7 Ventilate
148 Hilllghtty
149 Fruit drink
151 Armstrong ID
153 French article
155 Fulfill
157 UK Princess

MR. and MRS. LARRY (DELORIS) SAYRE

Couple to observe anniversary
LANGSVILLE · Larry and
Deloris Sayre of Langsville will
observe their 25th wedding
anniversary with friends in Fort
Wayne, Ind.
The couple was married at Spar·
· ta, N.C. on July 25, 1966 by Rev.

Alben Pierson.
They have one daughter and
son-in-law, Craig and Sherry Chapman, and a granddau~hter, Erin
Eliwbcth, all of Langsville.
Cards may be se nt to 33322
Jacks Road . Rutland .

Larkins, Fitch host meeting
The Long Bottom Community
Association met recently at the
association building.
Melody Roberts opened the
meeting with the Lord's Prayer and
the pledge. Mae McPeck gave the
secretary report and Alta Ballard
the treasurer's report.
Host for the June meeting was

Dorsel Larkins and Brnndon Fitch.
Alta Ballard, Harland Ballard,
Melody Roberts, Georgie Mount
and son, James Mount, Lancaster,
and Delores Hawk painted the back
fl'JI'Ch of the Long Bottom Community A~s&lt;xiation building.
Hostess for the next meeting
will be Melody Roberts.

NORFOLK, Va. - Now that
Navy Lieutenant Commander
Lewis L. Van Meter, the son of
Delbert and Opal Van Meter of
Racine, is back in the states, he's
had time to sort out his thoughts ftrst, about going to war and then
about changing the focus to saving
lives.
After more than six months at
sea, Van Meter, a member of Fighter Squadron 41 (VF-41), known in
the fleet as the Black Aces,
returned to Norfolk as part of the
USS Theodore Roosevelt battle
group. The carrier returned to Virginia on June 28.
VF-41 fll'St took ~ in Operation Desert Stonn, arriving on station last January 20. Then, after the
cease-rtre that ended the war took
effect, the squadron left with the
Roosevelt to work in the Navy's
relief effort for the starving and
suffering Kurds known as Operation Provide Comfort.
Before the Roosevelt left the
region to head for home, the carrier
had off-loaded 34 million pounds
of food, medical supplies, and
clothing to the refugees from the
unsuccessful rebellion against Saddam Hussein.
An alumnus of Southern Local
and of Gahanna Lincoln and a
graduate of Ohio State University,
Van Meter, who is a naval aviator,
helped to keep the F-14 Tomcats in
the fight during the war and in the
air as a warning during the early
days of precarious peace in the tension-filled region. Van Meter said,
" I flew 35 combat missions is support of Desert Storm. I flew com bat
air patrols over all of southern Iraq
and eastern Iraq, including Baghdad. When I wasn't flying I was the
maintenance officer for 10 workcenters and 150 men. They-were
responsible for maintaining all nine
of our F-14s in a combat ready sta·
tus."
According 10 Cmdr. Chris
Wuethrich, the squadron's com·
manding officer, the success
enjoyed by America's military
forces can be directly credited to
servicemen like Van Meter.
"I attribute our success to America's youth serving with the mili·
tary," the 39-year-old naval aviator
said. "If you give our young people
a truly worthy cause they are as
dedicated, and I believe more dedicated, than anyone else around.
Historically 1 think that's true about
America. Our youth will always
rally when they know the cause is
right"
In this instance rallying meant
that Van Meter and the other members of the squadron worked literally around the clock launching airplanes, landing airplanes, fixing
airplanes and loading airplanes
with ordnance. During the 43 days
of the war VF-41 flew 445 sorties,
totalling I ,500 combat hours, an
exceptional performance.
Wuethrich said, "There is a
mutual respect between the aviators
and the technicians in the squadron.
Everyone understands his role and

Bonaduce faces jail term
PHOENIX (AP) - Former
child actor and radio personality
Danny Bonaduce faces up to 22
months in jail for attacking a
tran sves tite prostitute after he
admitted guilty to reduced charges
in a plea bargain Friday.

COLOt-Jv' THEATRE

FRL THRU THURS.
JOHN RinER
IN

·--Cift-K
o•

mi•G SlOW 7•JO
IDMIISIOI $1..50
446·0922

,/\RIEL
YHOUSE
Presents

A Comedy Tom Griffm

JULY 27, 1991
~:00 p.m.
Presented by

I DOOR

I

Trustees and Library Staff of
the Meigs County Public Library

.Denmark eo~~~lsts of tile Jutland
Penlnlula and about ~00 ljilands, 100
of wblcll are inbabltec!, ·
--

..

'

Weddin

MR. and MRS. TIM {JUDY) KERN

-.~

Answer on Page A·4

.

MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
THEATER
TICKETS AVAILABLE ATo
PEDDLER'S PANTRY, BRUNICARDI MUSIC,
CRIMINAL RECORDS, AND THE
STOWAWAY RESTAURANT.

Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatn
42 6 Second AYlnue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

does his job. The pilots arc grateful
for the talents of the people who
work on the ground. The support
people in turn respect the courage
and the ability of the flight crews."
Van Meter sa id that th e
squadron was surprised, initi ally ,
that Hussein's air force wa sn't
more aggressive in air action
defense. As the war progressed the
squadron not only flew traditional
fighter escort missions they also
flew photo reconnaissance escort
missions, securing an area so that
airborne photos could be taken.
Then, almost as quickly as it
began the war was over. Wuethrich
said, "We were all relieved and
happy that we were able to perform
our mission quickly and effectively . Mentally and physically we
were tu.'ted to go on much longer:
but when it came time to take part
in Operation Provide Comfort the
entire crew was happy and more
than willing to take pan."
Of his role in this part of history Van Meter said," I feel lik e
wherever my government requires
my service, for however long they
require it, is how long I'm willmg
to stay on station. When we arc
given a job to do it is our obligation
to the country to do that job to the
best of our ability. I was very proud
to have served in this conflict For
over 14 years, I've been thoroughly
trained to fly combat missions.
Certainly no one ever wants to go
to war: but there is a great feeling
of accomplishment when you know
you have successfully executed
your wartime mission."
Having missed the early flurry
of homecoming celebrations and
parades Van Meter says he's glad
just 10 be home and to have come
back safely. VF-41 suffered no
losses or injuries during the war.
But for Van Meter the best part
of the operation was the support
from home. Van Meter said, "
Thanks a bunch for all of the outstanding support. It made our job
easier knowing that Americans

STEPHANIE DILLON

Receives scholarship ·

LEWIS VAN METER
were behind us and it kept our
motivation peaked even when the
hours were long and hard."
(Story contributed by the Navy
Public Affairs Center in Norfolk ,
Va.)

Manufa ctured by H.l. Miller &amp; Son , Inc.
Iota. to:ansu

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Color fu l choices
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U.OO IM&amp;AIN *'T•ES SATURDAY I SUNDI\Y
Sl .CO SA--NIGHT TU£SIIo\Y

I

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thru THURSDAl I

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SCHWARZENEGGER

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PAUll . IIIIIMiltiiiR NIII!T .

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 5

CARL'S
PREINENTORY

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LARGE GROUP
WOMEN'S

SUMMER SHOES
SS • SlO • S20 • S2S
GROUP CHILDREN'S

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GROUP MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

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....- ............................._______....____________...._______.............._...._............
v

. r---~-··----

RIO GRANDE · Stephanie
Lynn Dillon, a graduate of Hannan :
Trace High School, is a recipient of:·
the RobertS. Wood Scholarship.
Dillon plans to major in Early :
Childhood Deve lopment while .
attending the University of Rio
Grande.
In school, Dillon was active in
Beta club, libr ary club, French
Club, drama club, S. A.D.D., right
to life, and pep band. She also participated in basketball, Cheerleader, marching and concert bands and
church you th group. Dillon is the
daughter of Paul and Joyce Dillon
of Crown City.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

' !
I

- - · · - ----- - -~~---

!

�... ..... -.

! 1 1 J+ 1'
''"""'~

Page-86--Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Sunday, July 21
GALLIPOLIS - Gospel meeting, Church of Christ, 161 Third
Avenue on July 21 at 11 a.m. and 6
p.m., and July 22-24 at 7 p.m .
Topic: "One Nation Under God."
HENDERSON, W.Va.- Jam
session with clogging and square
dancing beginning at I p.m. at the
Henderson Community Center.
Free admission.
PORTER - Rev . Ron Lemley
will be preaching at Clark Chapel
at 7 p.m.
Monday, July 22
RIO GRANDE - Annual republican Club Com Roast and Cookout, 6:30 p.m. at Bob Evans Shelterhouse, with guest speaker, Rex
Elsass, political director for the
Ohio Republican Party. $2 single;
$5 per family.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Chapter 283 OES, regular meeting
with initiation and refreshments at
7:30p.m.

betic Education Classes July 22-24
on the fifth floor classroom of
Holzer Medical Center from 1-4
p.m. For more information call
446-5246 or 446-5313.

--

REUNIONS SLATED
GALLIPOLIS - The family of
Stephen and Stella Myers will be
July 21 atj.accoon Creek Park,
Shelterhouse 3.

NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS LASTING AS A
PERSONALIZED MEMORIAL FROM .
LOGAN MONUMENT CO. IT IS A WORTHY..
EXPRESSION OF LOVE AND RESPECT.

GALLIPOLIS - Annual Canaday reunion July 21 at Raccoon
Creek County Park, Shelterhouse 4,
from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

&lt;

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.

GALLIPOLIS - J .H. Sheets
family reunion, July 21 at Raccoon
Creek County Park from 10 a.m. to
dark. Basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.

Crites twirls her way Garden club members make
to 3 first place finishes fans during monthly meeting
POMEROY · Kimberly Crites,
12, of Pomeroy was the winner of
three ftrst place trophies in a recent
baton twirling competition held by
the Drum Majorettes of America at
th e Point Pleasant Junior High
School.
Her first places were in
advanced basic strut, beginner solo
and spec ial beginner solo. She also
placed third in fashion modeling.
The daughter of Linda Crites of
Pomeroy, Kim is an eighth grader
at Middleport Junior High School

where she is a cheerleader and a
GALLIPOLIS - The Nature 's
member of the junior high band.
Garden Club of the Gallipolis
She is a private twirling student Developmental Center met in the
of Peggy Gillespie of Point Pleas- activities building for the club's
ant and is also a member of the June meeting.
Stylettes Champion Teams who are
The meeting was opened by
current national, regional and West repeating the pledge and roll call
Virginia state champions.
was by Charlotte Young, with 14
Kimberly is now preparing to members present.
compete in the 44th Annual Drum
Majorettes of America National
Minutes of the last meeting
Championships to be held July 26- were read by Rita Fey and poems,
Aug. I in Boiling Springs, North "Thanks be to God," and "FriendCarolina.
ship ," were read by Glenna
Williams, club member.
The program was given by the
Cheshire Garden Club with Katie
Shoemaker as president. Other
members participating were
Katherine Yeauger, Lucie Martin,
Debbie Dodrill and Helen Preston.
For the program, small fans
were made and decorated with silk
flowers and a bow . Impatiens

POMEROY

VINTON, OHIO

MEIGS COUNTY DISPLAY YARD
NEAR POMEROY-MASON
BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH, MANAGER
PHONE 992-2588

GALUA COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD
JAMES A. &amp; KIMBERLY
BUSH, MANAGERS
PHONE 388-8603

:
:

I I'S a shining example of foro

:
.

Wings, and Air Assault qualified.
He has had overseas tours in Vietnam and Germany and two in
Korea.
He is a graduate of Southern
High School, class of 1970, and has
a two year college equivalency
from the U. S. Anmy.

Russell Cline observes birthday

Junior, Brad, John and Jay
Holsinger, Carl Cline and daughter,
Tammy, Mason, W.Va.; Mary,
Robert and Roberta Forester,
Loretta and Mary Smith, Racine;
Russell, Freda and Crystal
Hols inger, Chester; David and
Daphne Young, Paul and Brenda
Holsinger, Carol, Lee and Se va
Cline, Long Bottom; Charles, Lois
and Steve Cline, Marietta; Pat and
The second annual reunion of Virgil Collins and Tony Forester,
the late Ben and Luella Bradshaw Circleville: Brian Panky, Ironton;
Stahl was held at the home of their and Randy and Sherry Holsinger,
granddaughter, Ferndora Schaefer Belpre.
Story and son, John. on Sunday.
One aunt, Clara Stahl Gilkey,
and husband, Pearl Gilkey. were in
attendance.
Attending from out-of-town
were Helen Earl, Piqua; Elizabeth
Ear l Kohler. Springfield; Richard
and Bernice McCamey, Findley; N.
David Schaefer, Mansfield;
Richard and Phyllis Gilkey,
Clifton, W.Va.; Mildred Schaefer
Ferrellgas provides you with a long-term
Perry, Athens; Max Geary, Holly
commitment to safety and quality service.
Nicole and Jill Blake, Martha Fox,
Shelby and Holly Rh ea White,
Ferrellgas gives you a lot more than just what we put in
Bobby and Cheryl Fox, all of Midyour tank . You get propane PLUS ..
dleport; Pearl and Clara Gilkey
Richard and Nancy Jeffers and
SAFETY... We have one ot the most experienced propane
"T.K.", Sean, Mary, "AJ .", Jeffers,
delivery
teams in the business. We give you more for your
Art and Goldie Gilmore, Femdora
money when it comes to safely and dependability.
Story, John Story, two guests, Edna
Clark and Mildred Miller, all of
SPECIAL SERVICES•.• Because we value you as a
Pomeroy.
Ferndora Story was the recipient
customer, we want to give you better service while we help
of a calendar from Goldie and Art
you control costs. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL
Gilmore and a polled azalea from
CUSTOMER PROGRAMS, including our Level Payment
Helen Earl and Beth Earl Kohler.
Plan and the Ferrellgas Installation Review.
Blessing was given by Richard
Russell Cline celebrated hi s
84 th birthday on July 4 at the home
of his daughter, Grace Holsinger,
Reedsville.
A cookout and games of horseshoe were enjoyed.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ru ssell Cline, his daughters,

Stahl reunion held

Ferrellgas
State Route 35

,
HOrRtraaor. Come In
Even
. though )'Our tracror may last a long
2875
"* .....,., 41'' time, this price won 't.
-·lOll,

Trann&amp;Ridy._M:*m

.BAUM LUMBER

Gallipolis, OH 45631

Call us at

.446-2264

CAlAIS

Air, auto.,
AM/FM.

1991 CHEVY
BLAZER
414 4 DR.

15 area
·-students in Sunday show

CADillAC
DEVILlE

1987 MERCURY MARQUIS

1987 FORD UNGER

1983 PLYMOUTH REliANT

1983 CHEVY CAPRICE

1988 FIRD ESCORT

loat7495int.

51,0f2491Siles.

Afft4919tick.

s39t9
DON. TATE

'29'99
making It 111sitr to do businm
withus with this

TOU FREE number.

Chevrolet·Oidsmobile-Cadillac-GEO
308 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

614-992~6614

..

RIO GRANDE - From the
mournful err, of the rams horn
announcing ' Prepare the Way of
: the Lord," to the haunting melody
·. of "On the Willows," the audience
: of Godspell is privileged to learn
· the lesson of St. Matthew in song.
Godspell will be performed
·Sunday, July 21 at 2:30p.m. at the
· Alphus R. Christianson Theatre on
· the campus of the University of Rio
:Grande. Tickets are $4 for adults
. and $3 for students.
Godspell was written by John
Michael Tebelok; music and lyrics
by Stephen Swartz and the cast
includes I 5 students who have
: come to URG on scholarship to
study theatre and to create the production.
The students have learned about
: lheatre from many professionals,
· .such as, Roger Jerome, Troy Pow: ·ell and nationally-known chorcog. rapher, Kathryn Posin.
In addition, they have been
guided by URG staff members
-Greg Miller, Terrence Hopkins,
-E.dith Ross and Director John
McLaughlin.
Through an intense program of
theatre, Summerspell , students
have learned about theatre tech nique, and how to create a production from the ground up. The sets,
costumes, props and lighting are
created by the students.

1990

$16,495 $18,995

899'9

FAMOUS RELATIVE· Sara Ann Barr, 8, met an interesting
relative at the Oliver-Barr Reunion earlier this summer. Lillian
Oliver Clark, right, is the mother of country music great Roy
Clark. Sara is the granddaughter of Dale and Pauline Barr of
Reedsville.

~ Godspe ll features

985·3301

1987 CHEVY BLAZER
I ow,er, low mileage.

1·100·137·1094

~
Ferrellgos

1991 -OLD$

RODNEY - The alumna of Rodney Elementary School held their
first ever reunion on Saturday, July
13 at Rodney. The fanner students
at the school met at the old threeroom school for a time of sharing
of memories and getting reacquainted.
There were former students
from the one-room school. th e
three-room school and Pleasant
Hill School, which was located on
what is now Cora Mill Road.
A potluck dinner was held in the
fellowship hall of the Rodney Unit·
ed Methodist Church. Grace was
offered by Martin DeLille. After
the meal the fanner students introduced themselves and their spouses
by families. Several families had
more than one member present
Teachers honored were Ruth
(DeLille) Boice and Eulah
(Childers) Grim. Also introduced
were Annabelle Ball Fellure,
widow of teacher Raben Ball and
Ellabelle McDonald, wife of Bruce
McDonald, who was unable to
attend because of illness.
The group decided to have the
reunion every year on the second
Saturday in July.
Others attending the reunion
were Dale and Kay (Shriver) Ritenour, Dick Lakin, Earl Winters,
Hunter Boice, Betty Owen, Sophia
(Roberts) and Gordon Swisher,
Jean (Haskins) Martin, Ann Fellure, Marlin and Kathleen Hughes,
Robert Hawk, Donald and Betty
(Hill) DeWitt, Ernestine (Fraley)
Shotts, Elizabeth (Fraley) Custis,
Wilma (Leonard) Walters. Raymond "Buster" Hawk, Kathleen
Camflbell, Darrel and Bettie
(DeLtlle) McClaskey, Eugene and
Patty Holley, Eugene and Mary
(Roberts) Moore, Billy Tawney,
Lawrence Tawney, Okey Tawney,
Leo Tawney, Bill Hamrick, Bob
Bateman, Paul Coulson, Dale Neal,
Bette (Gibson) Smith, Mary Ellen
Woodard, Eloise (Woodard) Tannehill, Helen Matthews, Nida
(Matthews) Simmons, Bob and
Judy (Shriver) Ball, Larry E.
Wheeler, Sue Dearth,/Molly
(Vanco) Plymale, Frank and Ann
(Haskins) Burke, Frank and Peggy

Gillespie, Jerry an d Ruth Ann
(Hawk) Evans, Bob and Elva Jean
Coulson, Carl and Jean Gillespie,
John Milhoan, Joe Owen, Naomi
(Hawk) Haskins, Dorothy (SeAton)
Drummond, Beryl (Gillespie)
Wooddell, Mary (Gillespie) Sahr,
Jewell (Fral ey) Matthews. Lisa
Bloomer, Ona and Luella (Hughes)
Sanders, Jack Owen, Dick Neal,
Sheila (Coulson) Whaley , Kail and

Meigs County
Bookmobile
schedule
POMEROY - The Meigs County Bookmobile will make the following stops this week: TUESDAY
- Americare, 11 :30 to 12:30 p.m.;
Darwin, I p.m. to 2 p.m.; Counlry
Mobile Home Park, 2:30p.m. tO
4:30 p.m.; Wildwood Estates, 5
p.m . to 6 p.m.; WEDNESDAY Racine, 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.; Letart
Falls, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m .; THURS. "DAY- Tuppers Plains, 12 p.m. to 4
p.Jil.: Reedsville, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.;
: fRIDAY - Gilbert 's Store, 11:30
·:a.m . to 12:30 p.m.; Syracuse, I
·-p.m. to 4 p.m.; Baum Addition, 5
: p.in. to 6 p.m.; SATIJRDA Y : Rut. land, 9 a.m. to I p.m.; Danville, 2
Jl.~· to 3 p.m.; Salem Center, 3:30
: p.m. to 5:30p.m.

ELECTROLUX
675 -1457

During the rour weeks, students
have had classes in acting, classic
monologues, make-up and stage
movement. It is a major goal of
Summerspell that the program will
grow and the interest of these students will be carried back to the
home theatres to help create a new
awareness.
Through this experience the students will have learned something
about themselves and getting along
with others in a creative theatre
collaboration.

1 DAY

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

refUNd services because of inabiity to pay.

Siding fM llalt. No -

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GALLIPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
446-0166
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
1:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
AI». Jaduon, Chesaplake, Athens, Chl&amp;cathe, lagon &amp; McArthl.lt

POMEROY:

236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Thursday

SAVE

$30

ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF
A NEW MEDICAL SERVIcE IN RAVENSWOOD

U44677

HOOVER®

EllteTM
200Upright
Cleaner

Powerful
5.0 Amp Motorl
• lightweight
• Brushed edge clealling
both &amp;Ideo

COMMUNITY PHYSICIANS

• Top-fill easy -change bag

• Automatic height adju1tment

An AIDilate ol JlekiOil GTZ• II Ha pltal

prGYidlDI coa~plete bealtb care
for tbe eadre h•IJ~ Ia

~-..L-ooroow

IIGOIEie FUIUI'IIs Clllllllr VICUUttl
Wllli'OIIII' IIDZZII
-mo!

• Ta .,._ I'll Ill I I CJ"III

• •.o -

HP• Motor
• Swl.-1 hole
• Conwnlent toollforQ98
o l'OWirnatlc'" Nonie
with hlallllght
anct brullled eOQe
cleaning on bOtfi &amp;Idea

PEDIATRICS
ADULT GENERAL MEDICINE
ADULT INTERNAL MEDICINE
GERIATRICS
Or. Susan B. Casto

Family Medicine

Dr. William J. Casto

Internal Medicine

Or. James G. Gaal

Internal Medicine

Mtlllla7 - l'ridaJ' 9:00 . . - S:tltlplll

PROCESSING

.,

ON SLIDE FILM
KODA LUX

Tawney Studio
424 Second Ave.•Gallipolis

Cal1273-8199
Tor

lUI

appoiDtmont

walk-laa

-aa-

ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

...
c

--

~ ,-g

.....

ll

1111' ..... .....

"We Care For You;
We Care About You."

. ,. . . . . . . . . 11 c " Ill

• t{Vhlwelgtll

• Deluxe rug and ftOOf noule
I futl·flmo edge CiOOIIIng

• Includes ottochmlnll

At Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital - Caring is the
motto of our well-trained healthcare staff. We stand ready to assist
you with any healthcare problem.
We offer you - right in your home area:
Acute Care
Outpatient Clinic
Special Care Unit.
Helicopter Service.
Skilled Nursing Care Facility.
State of the Art Equipment.
Emergency and Urg~nt Care Units
Operating and Recovery Rooms
Home Health Nursing Service

Vet.._ ••Miillloapltat

_

IIOIIEie .._,..

........
....,..., s189 95
... IIUAIM

• ,..........

1" 711

•loploolconnecllon
• tncludel deluxe Sopc. foo4 lilt
• Attached tool c:ocldy

$129 95

--·......
.-·
--IWI:1:\'t:•;.:••

·~NV_.~_.

e ~. --ttlvcllffCUD

• ldoeciMN'II on Ill*...,_
elalyCCIICI,._.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

INGELS FURNITURE

992·21f4

106 NORTH SECOND AVE.
OH.

115 Memorial Drive
Pomeroy

I

••

Phyllis Burleson, Joh n DeLille,
Sharon (Holbrook) Howard, Ted
and Eth a Hanna, Jim and Jan
Burleson, Raymond and Rosealee
DeLille, Jean (Lear) Beach, Eileen
(Lear) Sanders, Margi (Winters)
Rosales, Bill Fellure, Marie (Coulson) Bishop, Elva (Roberts) Hoibrook. Marguerite Winters . Rex
and Louise (DeLi lle) Greenlee, and
Carolyn (Neal) Klinger.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense ••.

~n .

...........

$8995 $8995

w••,

•.
•

paint and linish. But n01: every tractor

SALE PRIUS EFFfCnVE
JUNE 22nd-JULY 3ht

PROPANE! '

Six of the best-selling cars in the
United States in 1978 were the Ford
Fairmont, Chevrolet Camaro, Cadillac Oldsmobile 88, Chevrolet Mabbu
and Ford Thunderbird.

means Toro Wheel Horse equipment

'"fU.~ 10to netrls il ro lasr as long as a Toro \WIeel

CHESTER

ANYONE CAN SELL YOU

Gilkey, and basket dmner, picture
taking and visiting were enjoyed by
all.

formu lated electrostatic pal nils applied

will keep thai""" look longer.
Not every tractor brags aboullts

• IIIAT LOCAIIOIIS
• IIIAT FACiliTIES
• IIIATRlm

AM/FM.

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior Citizens Job Bank, located at 220 Jackson Pike, need employers who will
call in their job orders.
The Job Bank has applicants SO
years of age and older who are
seeking employment. Applicants
who have named at the bank or
have put in their applications
should call to see what is available.
For more information call 4467000 to place job orders. The Job
Bank is open from 11 a.m. to 3
p.m., Wednesday; and from 7 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on Thursday and Friday.

and baked to a uniform gloss. Which

-

1991 GEO
PRIZM
Air, auto.,

Job Bank seeks
senior positions

prepares rhe rne1at before a specially·

Whenever you see a Toro Wheel
Horse uaaor, you see red. Toro Wheel
Horse red . !t.nd a lex goes Into that

Halliday family
reunion held

GENE LAWRENCE

Jamie ·ord and Kyle Ord or the Blue Ribbon
Riders 4-H Club. The Ords wiD be competing in
the barrels and pole bending on Friday, August
2 at the Ohio State Fair. Parents are Pete and
Cindy Scott or Pomeroy.

protective finish . II ftve -.stage process

wheel Horse quail()'.

Righlarhome. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

The descendants of Alexander
Laing and Mary Longstreth Halliday held a family reunion at the
Rutland Park on Sunday with 22
members present.
Raymond Furbee gave the bless·
ing before the basket dinner.
Eileen Carter conducted the
business meeting and the same
officers were retained for the coming year: Eileen Carter. president;
Sharon Jewell , vice president;
Pauline Atkins , treasurer; Anna
Halliday, secretary.
Pictures were taken and dues
were collected.
Members were drawn for prizes.
Chery l Jewell , young es t girl;
Michael Cline, youngest bOy; John
E. Halliday, oldes t man; Alice
McNeil carne the farthest distance.
A card was signed for Fern
Stansbury who is 101 years old.
Attending were Eileen Carter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Furbee and Douglas, Racine; Mrs.
Karen Bidwell and Michael,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Fisher and Sabrina, Mrs. Eileen
Cline, Billy and Michael and Mrs.
Alice McNeil, Wilmington; Keith
Mutchler, Athens: John E. Halliday
and Anna Jenkins, Gallipolis;
Pauline Atkins, Robert, Sharon and
Alan Halliday, Dexter.

OUI'STANDING EQUFSTRIANS- Two 4-H
members will represent Meigs County in 4·H
horse competition at the Ohio State Fair. Selected at the county competition on Thursday
eveninR at the Meigs County Fairgrounds were

See Red

plants were potted in paper cups for
residents to take to their rooms.
Betty Hubbard had the closing
following refreshments. The next
meeting will. be held July 25 wtth
all garden clubs invited to the
annual picnic. Gallipolis Garden
Club will host the evenL
Those planning to attend should
c·a ll Rita Frazer at 446-9697 ;
Eunice Niehm at 446-1897; Cheryl
Fitch at 446-1642, ext. 444; or
Noreda Gauze at 446-1642, ext.
254.

Lawrence is promoted
RACINE - ISG Gene R.
Lawrence, son of Mrs. Jeanette
Lawrence of Racine and the late
Paul Lawrence, has recently been
selected for promotion to Sergeant
Major and appointment to Command Sergeant Major.
He is presently assigned to C
Co. 2D Aviation Regiment, Camp
Stanley, Korea.
He is married to the fonmer Beverly Rowland, daughter of Herbert
and Phylis Rowland of Gallipolis,
and they have one daughter, Dana
Lynn. They currently reside at
Clarksville, Tenn.
LSG Lawrence's awards and
decorations include the Meritorious
Service Medal, Anmy Commendation Medal 30LC., Anny Achievement Medal NCO Professional
Development Ribbon W/4, National Defense Service Medical 2nd
award, Overseas Service Ribbon
W/2, Vietnam Campaign Ribbon,
Vietnam Service Ribbon, and Vietnarn Cross of Gallanlry with Palm.
ISG Lawrence, who will be
returning from Korea soon, also
has Master Anmy Enlisted Aviation

:

CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter
OES to meet at 7:30 p.m .. with
installation.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. The
descendents of Sebastian
THURMAN - Thurman Grange
to meet at 8 p.m. in grange hall.
Cabot Nibert will have their annual
family reunion July 21 at th e
GALLIPOLIS - Three-day Dia- Moose Shelter.

KIMBERLY CRITES

-

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-87

Rodney alumni hold first reunion

A TOTALLY UNIQUE·DESIGN
IN MEMORIES

Tuesday, July 23
RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meets at OVB at Rio
Grande at 6 p.m. to tour Brenda
Black's gold fish pond in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Desert at Shoney's
follows.

P. ih P4J U.P ;; JLJP • .J .tJ .CO 2 h U li!i i!X Iii t it l.l L I iiZ I I ~

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

GALLIPOLIS - J.A. and Nam- dark at Ra cc oon County Crook
mie (Duty) Queen family reunion, Park, shelterhouse I. Basket dinber
Sunday, July 21 from 10 a.m. to . at noon.

Gallia County calendar
(Items for the community calendar
appear two days prior to an event.
They must be received by the Gal·
lipolis Dally Tribune In advance
for publkadon)

'

July 21, 19.91

spy h

;

~

�I \

July 21, 1991

TO.MATO
SOUP

STORE HOLIKS

8 AM-10 PM

PITTSBURGH (AP) -The
Cincinnati Reds stopped their 10game losing streak Saturday, with
Eric Davis hitting a three-run
homer in the first inning and the
defense turning five double plays
to hold off the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-

DUNCAN HINES

CAKE
FROSTING

SPLIT

Chicken Breast •• l~ $129

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy head football coach Brent
Saunders and members of his coaching staff Wednesday issued a
call for boys in the Academy's 1991 freshman class to play football
this fall.
"We did not have enough boys to form a freshman squad last
year," Saunders said. He added, "This means you have to put fresh men in with the reserves or older boys and sometimes that hurts
your overall program."
"We encourage any boy who would like to play ninth-grade football to do so. Conditioning drills are at 8 a.m. on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays," continued Saunders.
"The coaching staff is planning on having a team of ninth
graders who will practice by themselves and play an eight-game
schedule," he concluded. "The staff encourages last year's eighthgrade players, those who haven't played for several years and those
who have never played to go out this fall."

ZESTA
CRACKERS
POUND BOX

GARS football meeting slated

99&lt;
(
Leg Quarters ••••• ~·•• 49

GALLIPOLIS - Brent Saunders, Gallia Academy 's head foot·
ball coach, announced today all boys in grades 9-12 who are planning to play football this fall should be at the GAHS locker room on
Fourth Avenue on Monday, July 22 at 8 a.m.
Individuals wiU work out on weights , receive insttuctions and be
fitted for helmets.
Pre-season conditioning will begin Friday. Aug. 9 in preparation
for the season opener on Friday, Aug. 30 at Rock Springs against
Meigs.

CHICKEN

FRESH GROUND
USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

Ribeye Steak •••-.:!. $4 99
ECKRIC~ FRESH BRATWURST OR

$

Turkey •••••••••••••••l"o

$

. REGUlAR or UNSCENTED
9
0
TIDE
1

Southern grid camp Monday

DETERGENT

RACINE- There will be a football camp for all players entering grades 7-12 to be held at Southern High School's football field
beginning Monday from 6-9 p.m. for various groups as detailed
below.
All football prospects are invited to attend, and all Southern foot·
ball players must plan to participate.
On Monday, July 22, from 6 to 7:30 p.m., offensive linemen,
tackle to tackle, will report, while quarterbacks, running backs,
wide receivers and tight ends will report from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Potential candidates vying for different positions may wish to
receive insttuction in more than one area
Tuesday's schedule will be the same as Monday.
On Wednesday, defensive backs wi11 report from 6:15 to 7:15 .
p.m., while linebackers go from 7 to 8:15 p.m., and the defensive
line from 8 to 9:15p.m.
Thursday will be a special teams and individual day from 7-9
p.m.
The cost of the camp is $15, which includes aT-shirt for each
player. Registtation can be turned in the first night of camp.
Water will be available, and players should wear loose clothing
and comfortable athletic shoes.
For further information, call head coach David Gaul at 985-3945
or 949-2611. All checks should be made payable to the Southern
Football Program.

136 OZ. BOX

29

2
$
9
3
Lunch Meats •••••• ~·· 1

ltahan Sausage .~~.
FLAVORITE ASSORTED

CHARMIN
TOILET
TISSUE

FLAVORITE

Wieners •••••••••••••• ~·•• 99&lt;

Cincinnati won for the first time
since July 5 and halted a nine-game
losing string against the Pirates.
The Reds also prevented what
would have been their longest los·
ing streak in 25 years; they had lost

F ootball players wanted at GARS

99&lt;
$ 49
Cubed Steak •••••• ~·· 2

2.

.....-.-Area sports briefs~-

16.5 OZ. CAN

BEEF BUCKET

12 ROll PACKAGE

North Gallia volleyball meeting set
VINTON- Girls entering grades 9·12 interested in playing volleyball at North Gallia are required to attend an orgamzational
meeting slated for Thursday, July 25 at 6 p.m. at North Gallia High
School 's gym.

U.S. #1 -

$

10 LB. BAG

199
Idaho Potatoes ••••

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ........ ."~~:. $169

Open gym sessions to end

BOUNTY
TOWELS

GALLIPOLIS- Jim Osborne, Gallia Academy bors' head bas·
ketball coach, reminded all individuals participating m open gym
activities this summer that the 1991 open gym session will end on
Thursday, July 25.
Those who have not yet picked up their basketballs are asked to
do so. The gym will be closed for several days while maintenance
officials refinish the floor.

Eastern sports physicals slated

ROLL

EAST MEIGS - Sports physicals for all sports for the 1991-92
school year at Eastern High School will be conducted on Saturday,
July 27 at Eastern High School.
The physicals will be given by Dr. Mark Brown, Dr. Wilma
Mansfield and Dr. James Witherell.
The schedule for the physicals will be as follows:
9 a.m.-noon -all students in grades 7-12.
Student athletes should wear shorts or loose comfortable clothing
on the day of the physicals and bring a completed physical card
with them. The cards can be obtained in the office at Eastern High
School.
On the day of the physicals all athletes should report to the
school cafeteria.
There will be no charge for the sport physicals on this day. If
unable to attend on Saturday. other arrangements will have to be
made by each indiVIdual at their own expense. For further information, contact athletic director Pam Douthitt at 667-6942.

79&lt;

HANGING ROCK

Large Eggs •••••••••••• 69&lt; GROUND
BEEF
MAXWELL HOUSE
KEMP
99
$2
99
Instant Coffee.:.o:. $2
Ice Cream ••••••••••••
CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN
$1490
7.4 oz. - 8.1 oz.
Noodl e Soup ••• ~;. 5/$2 Jeno' s Pizza •••••••••
..................
.GROUND
·''''COUPON' •••• ••
·COUPON··
•
CHUCK
DOMINO
SUGAR
CHATEAU BLEACH •
CAT FOOD
CAKE MIX
DOZEN

10 lB. PACKAGE

Golf tourney set for August 1

S QUART PAIL

POMEROY - The American Cancer Society's Meigs County
unit will sponsor a golf tournament at the newly remodeled Meigs
County Golf Course on Thursday, Aug. I. All area golfers are invit·
ed to participate and the tournament is open to the public.
The entry fee will $50 for m;m-members and $42 for members.
In addition to cash and merchandise prizes, the first three teams
win the opportunity to play in the Ohio state finals at Firestone
Counlry Club in Akron. All proceeds will go the Meigs County
ACS unit
For further information, call the Meigs County ACS unit or the
Meigs County Golf Course .

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Coaches' clinic set for August 2

10 LB. PACKAGE

GALLIPOLIS - A Southeast Ohio District Coaches Association clinic will be held in the Gallia Aeadem y High School gym on
Friday, Aug. 2, from 9 a.m. until noon.
All area basketball coaches are invited to participate.
Following the clinic, a golf outing will be held at Cliffside Golf
Course.
For more information, contact GAHS boys' mentor Jim Osborne
at446-9284.
.

$1690
II

•

July 21, 1.991

Reds' 10-game losing streak is history!

5/$2

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PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 21 THRU JULY 27, 1991

C

Because Cincy edged Bucs 3-2 Saturday,

10.75 OZ. CAN

Mondoy thru Sunday

emimts ,. , ~tnfitttl Section

Sports

CAMPBEll'S

,,

more than 10 in a row since the
1966 team lost 11 straight.
The Reds, minus suspended
closer Rob Dibble, nearly blew a 3·
1 lead in the ninth. Randy Myers
left after a pair of one-out walks
and Ted Power sttuck out Lloyd
McQendon.
Orlando Merced followed with a
ground-rule double, a play on
which Gary Redus would've scored
the tying run from fi!St base if the
ball hadn't bounced over the rightcenter field fence. Instead, Redus
was forced to stay at third, and
Power retired Jay Bell on a
grounder for his first save. •
Kip Gross (2-2), a 10-6 loser to
Pittsburgh in his previous start. was
helped by double plays in the sec·
ond, third and fourth innings. Tim
Layana got Bell to hit into a double
play in the seventh before Myers
took over. The Pirates roughed up
Myers in their four-game sweep in
Cincinnati last weekend , scoring
eight runs in three and one-third
innings.
Pittsburgh lost for the second
time in 10 games and the fJJSt time
in five home games against the
Reds. Last year, CinciMati beat the
Pirates 4-2 in the National league
playoffs.
.
Cincinnati, a 7-2 loser Fnday
when the Pirates scored four runs
in the first. benefitted this time
from a big first after Bill Doran
singled off Bob Walk (7-2) with
one out and Hal Morris walked.
Walk got ahead in the count 0-2,
but Davis homered over the right·
field wall, his I Oth of the season
and third against Pittsburgh.
Walk and Bob Kipper held the
Reds to just one hll in the last
seven innings. Still, Walk lost to a
West team for the fli'St time in I0
decisions since he lost to the Reds
on Sept. 2, 1989. He was S-0 againt
the West last season and was 4-0
this season.
The Pirates scored in the third
on Andy Van Slyke's RBI single,

but Bobby Bomlla and Harry
Bonds - who have 10 homers and
30 RBls against the Reds - were
1-for-7. Bonilla, who had nine hits
in 15 at-bats entering the game. hit
into two double plays.
Royals 8, Tigers 4
At Kansas City, Mo., Danny
Tartabull got three hits and raised
his average to .331 as Kansas City
beat the Dettoit Tigers 8-4 Satur·
day at steamy Royali Suadium.
The Royals, trounced by the
Tigers 17-0 Friday night, bounced
back to cool off Detroit. The tem·
perature on the artificial turf
reached 130 degrees, according to a
team spokesman.
Mike Boddicker (8· 7) gave up
10 hits and four runs in five and
two-third innings, but raised hi s
career record against the Tigers to
7- 13. Boddicker went into th e
game with a 5.32 ERA against
Dettoit
Mickey Tettleton and Dave
Bergman hit consecutive homers it
the sixth off Boddicker. Luis
Aquino pitched the final three and
one-third innings for his third save.
Rookie Rusty Mea chan (2-1)
lasted just two and two -third
innings in hi s first major-league
loss.

two innings, completing Minnesota's lOth shutout this year and earning his fmt major-league save.
Rookie Mike Gardiner (3·4)
gave up only five hits, but walked
four as the Red Sox lost for the
ninth time in their last II home
games.
Dodgers 11, Mets 7
At New York, Dave Hansen and
Eddie Murray each hit three-run
homers in the fifth inning as the
Los Angeles Dodgers rallied past
the New York Mets 11· 7 in 100·
degree heat Saturday.
Starters Ore! Hershiser and
Wally Whitehurst wilted in the
sweltering conditions, and neither

pitcher made it past th e fifth
mnmg.
Whitehurst (5 ·6 ) breezed
through four innings, but gave up a
walk to Mike Scioscia and a single
to Alfredo Griffin with one out in
the flfth. Hansen followed with his
first major league homer.
Brett Butler and Juan Samuel
each singled to chase Whitehurst,
and Murray homered off sttuggling
reliever Doug Simons.
In a scoring oddity. the victory
went to Jim Gott (2-3), the fifth
Dodger pitcher. Mike Hartley.
Dennis Cook and Tim Crews, all
worked briefly and ineffectively
before Gott relieved in the sixth.

Twins S, Red Sox 0
At Boston, Mass .. Scott Erick·
son pitched seven scoreless innings
in his second start since elbow
problems and Kirby Puckett hit his
ftrst home run ever in Fenway Park
to lead Minnesota to a 5-0 victory
over the Boston Red Sox on Saturday.
Erickson (13-3) threw just 64
pitches in his second start since
returning from the disabled list. He
scattered seven hits and walked
one, but was helped by three double plays.
The Twins won their third
straight game and seventh in nine
games since the All-Star break.
Mark Guthrie pitched the final

Baker-Finch, O'Meara
lead British Open
SOUTHPORT, England (AP)
- Ian Baker-Finch, who's been
there before, had "a very good
feeling" after shooting a courserecord 64 Saiurday and grabbing a
share of the lead in the British
Open.
Co-leader Mark O'Meara, who

very nearly wasn't here at all, had
an entirely different feeling after
shooting a 67 at Royal Birkdale.
He's hurting, gulping medicine and
sleeping on the floor because of a
painful rib condition that almost
kept him home.

ON THE MARK - American Mark 0' Meara watches his drive
orr t(Je second tee reach the mark during the third round of the
Britilh Open Saturday at Royal Birkdale, England. O'Meara shot a
67 to put him in a tie for the lead with Australia's Ian Baker-Finch
after the third round. (AP)

...• ...:
~

Perry gets Hall of Fame election despite spitter
By JIM DONAGHY
AP Baseball Writer
OK, so Gaylord Perry threw a
spitball. So d1d a lot of pitchers.
How many of them won 300
games?
There's been all sorts of debate
since Perry was elected to the Hall
of Fame in January as to whether
he deserved it. Perry· s critics say
he had to stagger to 300 wins. In
his last four seasons, Perry played
for five teams and compiled a
record of 3548.
"I don't really care what they
say," Perry said. "I think I should
be in the Hall of Fame and there
are a lot of ot!Ier people who think
SO, too.
Perry received 342 of 443 votes,
77.2 percent, from the Baseball
Writers Association of America to
gain election.
It might not have happened if
former San Francisco teammate
Bob Shaw hadn't taught a struggling 25-year-old reliever a thing
or two on May 31, 1964.
That's when Perry learned the
spitter, a pitch that made a simple
tap of the sideburns enough to tum
umpires into customs officials .
Suddenly Perry's pitches were
slipping and sliding and batters
were swinging and missing. He
jumped from J-6 with a 4.03 ERA
the previous season to 12-11 with a
2.75 ERA.
Experts agreed that Perry was
loading up, but searches for saliva,
Vaseline or Slippery Elm always
came up dry.
Perry himself finally owned up,
admitting in his 1974 book, "Me
and the Spitter - An Autobio.·
graphical Confession," that he had
used the pitch for years, even giv •
ing the exact date of the wet one's
major league debut
"I thought of my wife Blanche,
our very young children, and
Mama and D«ddy back !lome on
the farm, all counting on me," he
wrote. "I figured if I could master
that super pitch, I'd be buying time
to develop some other pitches ...·
The old dewdrop takes total dedi·
cation, like any new pitch you
learn, only more so.''
His brother Jim, who won the
Cy Young Award in 1970 with the
Minnesota Twins, was 215-174
over a 17-year career. Their 529
victories is second to Phil and Joe

Niekro for the most by brothers in
big league history.
"Gaylord should have been in
the ftrst time, not the third, and I
don't sax that just because he's my
brother, ' Jim said. "I'm proud of
him and have been from the start
I'm glad he made it, and it's way
overdue. When you're in the Hall
of Fame, you're in with the best.
And· he is among the best ever to
play."
Gaylord Jackson Perry was born
in Williamston, N.C., on Sept. I 5,
1938. He made it up to the big
leagues with the San Francisco
Giants in 1962 and in 1966 won 20
games for the first of five times. He
combined with Hall of Farner Juan

Marichal over the next five years to
give the Giants one of the league's
best one-two punches. But Perry
never got to pitch in the World
Series.
After th e 1971 season, the
Giants sent Perry to Cleveland for
Sam McDowell, four years
younger than Perry. But whil e
McDowell struggled and was out
of baseball four years later. Perry
received the Cy Young Award in
1972 after winning 24 games and
remained an effective pitcher
through the rest of the decade.
In 1978, he won 21 games for
San Diego at the age of 40 and
became the first player ever to win
the Cy Young Award in each

TAKING ADVANTAGE or.tbe 1;1pportunlties
Point Pleasant's Home Care Met''cal kept giving
them, Green's Senators dented tbe plate 10
times, most of tbem on wild filches, In the second Inning eo 'route to a 17- kllockout victory
in tbe Kyger Creek Little League Tournament's

.

.~

. '

league. It was then, the right-han der recalled, that he began thinking
about 300 victories.
Allhough he slipped in the
1980s, a determined Perry hung on.
He signed with Seattle in 1982 earning himself the nickname ' 'The
Ancient Mariner" - and at age 43
became the oldest pitcher to win
300 games. He retired after the
1983 season, finishing with a
career record of 314-265 , a 3.10
ERA and 3,534 sttikcouts.
Perry's cap on his Hall of Fame
plaque will have the SF of the
Giants, but his jersey at Cooperstown will contain the names of all
eight teams he pitched for.

opening game Friday night. Here Green's Josh
Atkinson (10) puts tbe seat or his pants squarely
on tbe plate as Medical catcher Jason Wallis
(left) straddles him in a late attempt to make tbt: :
out. See the story and additional photos on C-Z. ,
(Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne) '

�'.

'

Page-C2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

~

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July 21, 1991

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--C3

Pomeroy-Middleport-'Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

In Kyger CreekU Tournament's first round,

Green, New Haven Reds first victors

KEEPS RALLY GOING - Green's Paul Siders (lef't) steps on
the plate and keeps the Senators' rally going in the second inning of
Friday night's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament opener
against Point Pleasant Home Care Medical, as the ball is fU'ed in
. front or him from catcher Jason Wallis to reliever David Nelson
(right) af'ter Nelson's wild pitch. Inerrective pitchiog was primarily
responsible for Green racking up 10 runs in the second and helping
the Senators walk
with a 17-1 victory. (Times-Sentinel photo
·
. .; : by G. Spencer
...

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE - The 24th Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament
began first-round action at the
Kyger Creek Employees Club field
wtth a pair of games as different as
night and day. as the Green Senators shellacked Point Pleasant
Home Care Medical 17-1 in the 3
1/2-inning opener, and the New
Haven Reds survived a last-inning
comeback bid by the Gallipolis
Red Sox in the nightcap to post a 65 victory.
Green 17, P.P. Medical1
The Senators, last year's runnerup team, took advantage of Medi·
cal's lack of effective pitching (six
strikeouts and 16 walks compiled
by starter Jermyn Queen and re·
lievers Jason Wallis, David Nelson
and Micah Shinn) by scoring in
each of their three innings.
They broke the game wide open
with a 10-run jailbreak in the bot·
tom of the second, a frame that saw
the Senators score several of their
runs on wild pitches before Medical got the last two outs on plays at
the plate.
Paul Siders, the winning pitcher,
fanned I0, walked two and gave up
as many hits (both to Queen, who
went 2 for 2) io his complete-game
effort.
Green's offense was powered by
Chase Bonon (2-2), Jason Ratliff
(2-3), Siders and Robbie Woodward (both 1-1), and Jeremy Griffith (1-2) .

Score by inDings
Home Care Med. 0 000- 1-2-0
Green
1106x - 17·7' 1
WP-Siders
LP- Queen
Reds 6, Red Sox S
In the nightcap, the game was
tied once and the lead changed
hands twice, something the Red
Sox almost changed in the bottom
of the sixth, when they put two
men on with two out, but Reds reliever Seth Howard sbUCk out Bob
Rogers to end the rally and assure
New Haven' s survival in the diamondfest
New Haven racked up three runs
in lhe top of the firs~ and the Sox
scored one in the bottom of the
first, but after Sox hurler Isaac
Saunders held the Reds scoreless in
the second, Gallipolis took the lead
away in its half of the second,
which began when Alex Saunders,
Isaac Saunders' brother, grounded
out to starting pitcher Chad Ord.
Heath Rothgeb followed with a
walk, and Joshua Sanders struck
out Ryan Glover walked, and Isaac
Saunders reached on an error by
right fielder Jeff Tyo, which allowed Rothgeb and Glover to score
and tie the game at 3-3. Th en
Stephen Roderick walked, and
Brett Burcham singled to score
Isaac Saunders and move Roderick
to second base, putting Gallipolis
ahead 4-3 and in position to score
an insurance run. But that opponunity vanished when Rogers grounded into a fielder's choice to Ord,

who threw on to third baseman
Tommy Fields to retire Roderick
and end the inning.
The Reds' third began when
Lori Bumgarner - one of five girls
participating in the tournament p:ounded out to shortstop Roder1ck. Brannon Harper follow ed by
grounding out to second baseman
Rothgeb, but Howard wallced and
moved to third on two wild pitches
before Ord's single scored Howard
to tie the gam e at 4-4. Tommy
Fields ended the rally by popp1ng
out in foul ground to first baseman
. Rogers.
Ord, who was in his last inning
of work, kept the Red Sox away
from the plate in the bottom of the
third, but his mates made him the
winning pitcher in the fourth,
which started when Johnnie Fields
grounded out to third baseman
Alex Saunders. Justin Fields fol ·
lowed with a single and moved to
third on two wild pitches during
Tyson Reitmire's at-bat. Rcitmire,
who replaced Tyo in the batting order and in right field, popped out to
first base, and before David Tennant struck out to end the New

·.: .
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•••
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•••

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·~·

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;; ; : ONE OF THE FEW- The New Haven Reds' Lori Bumga,;er,
• • one of five girls playing on the 26 teams participating io th~ year's
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament, was one of the few In more
ways than one, as she cracks a single to right center field orr Gal·
Iipolis Red Sox hurler Isaac Saunders - one or three hits the Reds
got orr him - in the first inning or the nightcap or Friday night's
first-round action at Cheshire. New Haven won 6·5. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Diddle, Adams among victors
in recent WVMS track action

''

'

;li
:I
! '

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.Driving the C.J . Ray~urn-J . J?.
Drilling Company Spec1al, Chns
Diddle won his third saaight feature at West Virginia Motor Speed·
way.
.
.
Diddle agam defeated a fme
field of cars, making a clean sweep
with fast time, a win in the dash,
and a three-second feature win over
Cotton Sayre. Early race contender
Kemp Kelly challenged Diddle
early, but Diddle pulled away
before Kelly tagged the wall in the
early going.
Diddle of Racine pulled away
fpr the win in his McDonald's
sponsored machine.
Bruce Dennis won the late
model main.
Bob Adams Jr. of Racine recently got a great thrill as he roUed to
victory over Winston Cup star and
Daytona SOO fast qualifier Kenny
Schrader in the 30-lap feature at
Interstate 79 Speedw~y in Fairmont, W.Va. Schrader was on a
week long promotional tour during
his off-week from Winston Cup
events.
Adams made it a clean sweep by
setting fast time, winnin~ lhe dash
over Schrader, and clatming the
feature win.
Schrader drove the Mark
Richard's Bullitt Chassis house car.
Rutland's Rick Williamson has
been doing well in the IMCA modified tour and is currently in the top
ten in poin!S with several top three
finishes.
Phil Davis of Gallipolis is currently the top winner in the Sports·

man Class at Skyline Speedway in
the Whaley's Auto Parts 8- Ball.

Pomeroy Mustangs capture Hartford LL Tournament title
tivities. I would like to mention
those who worked hard over the
The First Hartford Little League nine days or so of baseball. Those
Tournament has come to an end af. who worked on the field, Rick Hester a week of great baseball. It was son and Jimmy Fields and all the
· . a week of many thrills, tight games young men of the Hartford Braves
and memories to treasure. It was Little League team. I cannot fmget
· ~ also a week that left many people the conceasion stand where those
tired and weary from the wonderful women that kept me in
:: preparations of each day's ac- hot dogs and drillks for the duralion

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were: Lori Bumgarner and Seth
Howard, 2 hits each; Chad Ord,
Tommy Fields, Johnny Fields and
Luke Harris all had one hit each.
(See FINALS on C-4)

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INDIVIDUAL AWARDs-:From left to right are: Jeremy Pierce
of the Rutbpd .Reds, .who received the Glenn N. Goodnite OfTensive
Award; Chris Roush, also of the Ratland Reds, who received the Wil·
liam MacKnight, Jr. Defensive Award; and Matt Ault or the Pomeroy
Mustangs, who received the Johu L. Gib.bs MVP Award. Roush also
received bonors for pitching a. qo.hltter durlag tournament play. ·
(Photos courtesy of Rev. Rex Young.)
·

Scoreboarcl
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In the majors ...

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Milwaukee (Huntc!r 0 -3) a l Chicago
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Scaulo (Holmu 9· 9) 11 Bahimorc
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(Kilo 3-4). 8:05p.m

Finan,ing Available

L Pel

Friday's scores

Tbey played Saturday

2 door, 4 speed, one-owner.

7
9 .
95
14
17
l4.5

lhlcimore&lt;4, SeaWe 1
Minnci;CM 3, 801101'12, 11 inninga
Chicoll" 14,
3
Deuolii1,1Ww City 0

Loa An~ele 1 (Henhiaer 3·2) at New
Yotlt (WhildiWII S·l ), 1:15 p.m..
Cincinnati (Kip Crew l -1) al Pltbb•rah (Wolk 7-1), 1:15 p.m.
San Franciaco (Billk~ ~-5) It Montteal
(Dulins 5·6), 7:3l p.m.
«;:JUcaao (G. MaddiiA 7·6) at Ho1uton

V6, automatic, air, low miles.

W

Chicago
..•••....
California .........
Ooklond
.........
Texu
...........
Seaule
...........
Konsu Cily .......

GB

HoUitM. S, Chica'o 'I
A!lanul, SL LolDI 3
Philadelphia 4, San Diego I

13 CHEVIOLn CELDim

.Jli

GB

.. ..... 53 38 .582

Mionoo...

PltUbur&amp;h 7, Clntlnnatll
New Yad&amp;: 6, Lol Anadca 2

Aulomatlc, air, stereo,localllllde.

Convertabed, low mile trade.

.... ..... 37 52 .416

l'tt.
.604
.S21
.506
.500
.449
.416

W•IDbblon
Team

Friday's scores

14 NISSAN SJANZA

4x4, 4 door, 5 speed, casaelte.

17 DODGE CAUVAN

14.5
15.5
17.5

Montreal 6, San F~ncilco 0

Leather, loaded, low miles.

17 ISUZU TIOOPEI

9

42 48 .467
41 49 .456
39 51 .433

27,000 m\loa.

15 CHIYSLEI FIFIII AYE.

Custom wheels, just lraded.

17 NISUN PULSAI

Loaded, Taylor sold new.

an~

4

47 42 .5 21

Team
W L Pel
Lo. Angel"
...... 50 39 .562
Atlant.
........... 46 41 .529

Houston

87 NISSAII MlliMA WAGON

GB

West Dlvlllon

II NISSAII TIUCK

Low miles, all power options.

17 NISSAN MAXIMA GXE

16Y. NISAIIKING COLE XE

Loaded, aUMtOf,

W L Pet.
55 31 .631
52 37 .584

CINCINNA T1 • 44 44 .SOO
San Diego ........ 43 4' .47J
San Fra!'lcisco
. 3&amp; 51 .427

Air, C8118118, alkling rear window.

Loaded, sunroof, only 27,000 miles.

T-Tops, air, casette, just traded.

810 East State Athens, Ohio 594·8555

Indians . New Haven survived two
triples by Jimmy Gilmore and
another one from the bat of Seth
Davis. Hills rally feU shon and the
New Haven Reds won 6-4. Those
Reds bringing their hitting caps

10 1 12th St., Vienna

Automatic, air, stereo, lilt, cruise.

f

playing days.
Friday evenings' games were
rescheduled for Saturday as the
beginning games of five games that
day. Mason VFW and Pleasant Valley Hospital opened tlie days
schedule with Game 1117. Mason
VFW brought their hitting caps and
pulled away from PVH by the score
of 7-0. Dale Johnson led the way
for Mason with 2 hits. Cory
Johnson, James See, Josh Jeffers,
Keith Cundiff, Jerry VanMeter, and
J. R. Varian all had one hit J. R.
Varian pitched a good game against
PVH in allowing only 4 hits.
Mason VFW makes it to the final
four.
Game #18 pitted the New Haven
Reds against the lone Gallipolis
team, the Hills Indians. New Haven
also brought their hitting caps and
pounded out some timely base hits
to earn a 6-4 victory over the Hills

NEW BOATS - 10°/o BELOW COST
VIENNA MARINE

91 DODGE SPIIIT

I'.

of the tournament . Those working
in the concession stand were: Connie Fields, Nancy Greene, Connie
Gibbs, Lois Ann Gibbs, Mellissa
Hoffman and Janet Young. If there
are any that I have missed I am
sorry, but, I am very happy for your
help in any way. Several men
volunteered their time to umpire
and did a great job and they were:
Doug Russell, Brent Fields, Charlie
Hoffman, Mike Roach, Donald Kay
and Fred Reed. I cannot go any fur.
ther without mentioning those great
fans that came to support the young
men and women that participated
so earnestly in America' s favorite
pasttime. All this hard work
rounded ·out what was needed to
make a successful tournament Oh
yes, I must not forget the good
weather given to us so that we
could play. One day was all that
was pos1poned out of nine possible

295-7927

(2) factory vehicles, loaded.

.,

Runners-up: Rutland Reds

First place-1991 Hartford Little League Champions: Pomeroy Mustangs

By Rev. Rex A. Young

Middleport Baseball Camp
scheduled for July 29
MIDDLEPORT - The annual
Middlepon Baseball camp will be
held July 29-August 2, 1991 for
Pony League and Little League age
players seven to 15 years old.
Each camper will receive lunch,
after the session, and a camp Tshin in adult sizes only. The Pony
League sessions, ages 12-15, will
be 8:30-12 noon, while Little
League(7-ll )will run from 1-4:30
p.m.
Camp fee is $35 with a family
of two set at $50 and a family of
three $75.
Each Camper will be taught the
fundarnenlals in hitting, catching,
running, pitching, fielding , and
sliding.
There will be live games for
both age groups and awards for
each age group and campers must
come fully equipped with glove,
hat, cleats and baseball pants.
Each player will receive group
and individual training from the
camp staff, which includes camp
director, Herb Sharfenaker Jr. of
Bishop Ready H.S. in Columbus
and former Rio Grande catcher;
Scott Gheen, former Meigs star,
Kyger Creek head coach and former Rio Grande player; Dave
Oglesby, head coach at the University of Rio Grande; and Herb Sharfenaker Sr., head coach at Bishop
Ready H.S.
Four other instructors include
John Collins, Bishop Ready assistant; Darrell Marcum, Hamilton
H.S. grad and Rio Grande pitcher;

Haven tourth, Justin Fields scored
on a wild pitch to score the eventual winning run.
Ord and Howard pitched three
innings each, and they combined to
fan nine and walk six. Isaac Saunders had five Ks, gave up three hits
- to Bumgarner, Justin Fields and
Ord (all 1-3) - and two walks in a
complete-game effort. The Red
Sox hitters were Burcham (3-4),
Roderick and Rothgeb (both 1-2).
and Isaac Saunders (l-4i.
Score by innings
New Haven
301 110 - 6-3-2
Gal. Red Sox
130 010-5-6-1
WP- Ord (Howard save)
LP -I. Saunders
Today's action ·
Cheshire and lhe Mason County
GAP Association will face each
other at 1 p.m., and ftrst-round action will conclude when the Gal lipolis White Sox and the New
Haven Orioles meet at2:30 p.m.
Second-round action will begin
when Green and the New Haven
Reds meet at 4 p.m., followed by
th e winners of Saturday's Hub bard's Greenhouse #2-PVH Medical and Nelsonville-Gallipolis Roy·
als games at 5:30

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and 8:30-12:00 Saturday. In Rutland, call ]run May at 742-2888.

$9745

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242

PWS FREIGHT'
TAll a TITL~

w. Main
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onns .

9?~·1111

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BANKEONE

MEIGS T·IRE. CENTER

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. Whatever it takes:
&amp;W(~Nli!I'&lt;i, ~

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Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21, 1991

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

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:· July 21, 1991

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Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-C5

Lancaster Post 11 tops Meigs Post 39 13-0
ByDAVEHARRIS
T-S Correspondent
THE PLAINS.- Todd Kauff.
man fired a one-hitter and Lan~t~r ~ adv~tage of ~ ~-run
mnmgs and a. th~ee-run mmng .en
route to a 1~0. victory .over. Me.•gs
m the 8th Dutnct Arnencan ~g10n
Bas~ ball Tournament Fnday
e~enmg at Rannow Field at Alhens
High School.

Lancaster now 4-l ·and in the 17-17 record after a"slow start. striking out twice but seem to hit
tournament and 36-13 overall was Meigs is sponsored jointly by Drew the ball to right at someone all
to have played Athens (3-0, 16-16) Webster Post39 of Pomeroy and evening.
Saturday ~ormng at 11:00 a.m at ' Feeney-.Bennett Post 128 in MidLancaster jumped out to a 2-0
Raru)ow, if Lancaster won ·the two dJeporL
·
lead at the end of the flfSt inning on
teams was to have p~yed a ~ond
The only hit that Kauffman aJ. the strength of two walks, a hit batgame a.t 2:00p.m. With the wmner lowed was a two out single by third tcr; a single and a sacrifice fly. Pat
advanct~g to the s~te tournament. baseman Eric Heck in the second Willing Jed off the Lancaster third
~!hens IS the defending state cham- inning. Meigs was able to make · with a single, after stealing second
ptons..
.
.
contact against the lefthander only he scored on a double by Chad
Meigs fimshes the season With a
·
Armstrong. John Mowery singled
in Armstrong to make it a 4-0
blew the game open

smaII worms work best on Burr
o3 k bJUegl•11S, SUDfjIS h at Shore1IDeS
.

Third place: Mason VFW

Fourth piKe: New Ha~en Reds

Hartford LL Tournament finals ...

i ,.

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noon was now set and it would be a
remau:h between the Pomeroy
Mustangs and the Rutland Reds.
Sunday had finaUy made it and
Game #22 has !he making of a
great game. Remember that
Pomeroy was coming out of the
Losers' Bracket and must defeat the
Rutland Reds twice to be Champions. Both teams scored aU their
runs in the first four innings with
the score being after 4 innings of
play, 6-4. That was the final score
or the first game of the finals,
Pomeroy winning and forcing a last
game. Each team had 6 hits, but,
each team had players with multiple hits: for Pomeroy; Matt Ault
and J. R. BlackweU, 2 hits: for Rutland; Jeremy Pierce, 2 hits. The
stage was set for Game 1123 of the
Tournament It was the "if needed"
game that Pomeroy forced when
they won the first game, 6-4.
In Game 1123 Rutland didn't
waste any time scoring first when
Scotty George tripled in Chris
Roush. They would score again in
the second when Morgan Vanaman
walked and Jeremy Pierce and
Shawn Michael singled. The
Pomeroy Mustangs rallied scoring
two in the 2nd inning, 3 runs in the
3rd inning, and more run in the 4th
inning for a 7-2 lead. Rutland
would see 12 men left on base and
twice leaving the bases loaded. Rutland would score twice in the 6th
inning, but the rally would rau
short and the Pomeroy Mustangs,
sponsored by Kentucky Fried
Chicken, would puU off the
doublehitter win by the scores of 64 and 7-4. Congratulations to the
Rutland Reds for !heir ability to
play strong baseball and to win
second place in the First Hartford
Little League Tournament. Now, to
congratulate the winners, coming
out of the Losers' Bracket, the
Pomeroy Mustangs (sponsor: Kenlucky Fried Chicken), took home
the honor of Champions.
There were other special wards
given in the name of Veterans who
have served and died as a result of
injuries received while defending
our country. These men were from
Hanford and we as a community
are proud of !heir love for us and
country.
The
John
S.
Aumiller
Sportsmanship Award: given to the
Hills Indians for their exceptional
show of sportsmanship. Aumiller
served in World War II.
The Glenn N. Goodnit.e Offen· .
sive Award: Jeremy Pierce of the
Rutlands Reds. Goodnite died in

; _The Hills Indians other than Jimmy
• ·Gilmore and Seth Davis saw Aaron
: :Beaver, Robbie Woodward, A. J.
:: :Johnson, and Adam Bush con:· &gt;tributed a hit each. New Haven
' Reds were now in the final four
playing Mason VFW.
Game #19 saw one of the most
exciting games of the day and of
the Tournament The Pomeroy
• Mustangs trying to slip by the Rut: land Reds and into the Cham• pionship game on SWlday after.- noon. Pomeroy struck first for a run
in the first inning on a walk, a
stolen base, and a single to take a
- 1-0 lead. The score remained this
• until the bottom of the 4th inning
• when Rutland was on the receiving
end of an error that allowed the hitter to reach second base. A stolen
base, and a single tied the game at
1-1. Pomeroy grabbed the lead in
the 6th inning on a single, a walk,
and another single, giving them a
2-1 lead. Rutland scored the tying
and winning run with two outs in
·• the bottom of the 6th inning, when
.• : they loaded the bases on a single,
·: fielders' choice, two walks, and a
: single. Rutland won 3-2 sending
• -Pomeroy to the Losers' Bracket.
: Pomeroy's hitting heroes are: Man
• Ault, J. R. Blackwell, Jason Roush,
: 11nd Joe Hill all had one hit. Rut: land hitters were: Jeremy Pierce,
• Adam Barrette, Sam McKinney and
• Morgan Vanaman ail with one hit.
Rutland now .;ust had to sit and
wait on the wmner of the Losers'
• Bracket to play the Championship
: round beginning at 3:30 p.m.
•
Game #20 was for fourth place.
• The team that would lose this game
: would win fourth place in the
•. Tournament and the winner would
:: play in Game #21 against the
: • Pomeroy Mustangs. The New
· ;·Haven Reds would tangle with the
: ·:Mason VFW team. Mason took ad: : ;vantage of some time~y bitting on
·: iheir part and some quJet baf:S from
:- .the New Haven team to wm 5-0.
·: Neither team set the base paths on
; &lt;lire with their hitting, but, it came
···down to the team with the timely
· :hitting. New Haven managed only
: two hits from Seth Howard and
:: Luke Harris and Mason managed
-: only 6 hits from the bats of Dale
; -Johnson, 2 hits, CC!rj Johnson,
• · James See, Keith Cundiff and J. R.
: HyseU, I hit each. There were
several good defensive plays by
both teams during the game. Congratulations to the fourth place
• winners the New Haven Reds.
Game 1121 saw Pomeroy waiting
in wings for the winner of the
previous game. Mason VFW came
through when they defeated a tough
• New Haven Reds team. 5-0, earn; 1ng their shot at the Championship
- game slated for Sunday. Pomeroy
: .was certainly destined to make it to
• the Championship Finals on Sun: day when they jumped to an early
; lead and kept up the pressure by
• scoring 6 runs in the first two innings. After three innings Pomeroy
led 7-2 and would never look back.
• They would go on to score two
.. more times in the 6th inning to
· make it a 9-2 game. Mason had 4
bits coming from the bats of James
See and Keith Cundiff both with
two hits. The Pomeroy Mustangs
' got an exceptional game at !he plate
from Josh Harris, 4 hits, aU singles.
~ Others contributing were Matt Ault,
;: Jason Roush, Joe Hill, and Steven
.• McCullouglt. Congratulations to
· Mason VFW winners of third
; place. The Finals for SWlday after-

WWD.

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Cal our Sal"
Ropto...,tatiwt,
Angit, today
for details.

•

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360 Second ....

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I forgot one important penon,
the scorekeeper, Butch Gibbs,
thank you!
The Hartford Little League
Tournament is. over, and it was a
great success with many good
teams taking pan and many gmat
fans coming and cheering their
heroes on. Congratulatioos to all
the players who participated, eadl
of you are wiMen just for trying
and participating to the best of your
ability. See "ya ail" next year and
May God Bless!

. =
un

.

..,,...,

;·Middleport nine
..wins senior title

""' 101 ,

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OFF

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New! Not remanufactured. ·
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·• MIDDLEPORT- The Middle; ;port Dusters won the Senior Girls'
·Meigs-Mason League Tournament
recently at Middleport Park.
The Dusters won their first
games of the tournament Saturday
by defeating Point Pleasant 6-5,
then suffered a last inning, 7-6 loss
to New Haven in the double-elimination tournament
Coming back to the tournament
on Sunday, the Dusters beat Point
Pleasant again 16-0, and then won
four games in a row. beating
Chester 12-7, Racine 7-0, New
Haven 8-1, and New Haven in the
championship 13-10.
A grand slam home run by Billie Butcher with two outs in the
bottom of the seventh and final
inning won the exciting championship game for the Dusters.
The Dusters are currently Wldefeated in league play. Team members include Tncia Baer, Billie
Butcher, Bobbie Butcher, Mary
Compston, Vanessa Compston,
Verna Compston, Tara Gerlach,
Kim Hanning, Marcy Hill, Tara
Humphreys, Kim Osborne, Kelly
Smith, Chrissy Wea~er and Yvene
Young. Coaches are Ed Baer,
Randy Buu:her, and Mike Gerlach.

to close out the scoring.
Lancaster had nine hits with
Andy Smeltzer, Chad Armstrong,
Chad Schneider and John Mowery
had two hits each.
Jason Wright the first of four
Meigs pitchers was the losing
pitcher, Jeremr Phalin, Chris Stewart and Tim BISsell also saw action
on the hill. They combined to strike
out nine, walk seven and hit two
batters.
Score by innings
Meigs
000 000 000 - 0-1 -1
Lancaster 202 220 3lx - 10-9-2

I

$2399
Modell238

List $2799

··

BACK TO FIRST- Mike Wickham of Lancaster Post 11 dives
back to first ahead of the pick ofT throw from Meigs Post 39's Jeremy Phalin, as first baseman Terry Reuter gets set to apply the tag
during Thursday's American Legion playoff game at The Plains,
which Lancaster won 10-0. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

APPALACHIAN TIRE
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The William MacKnight, Jr.
Defensive Award: Chris Roush,
Rutland Reds MacKnight also died
inWWII.
The JOhn L. Gibbs Most Valuable Plliyer Award: Matt Ault,
Pomerot Mustangs. Gibbs was lr.illed in Korea.
Another award given by the umpire that did the most games behind
the plate to the ~oung man that
protected the wnp1re the besL The
Umpires Award: Matt Ault,
Pomeroy Mustangs.

fish for bass, walleye and catfish.
Carp and freshwater drum are also
presenL Check with area bait shops
to get the latest river conditions.
ACTON LAKE - Try the
deeper eastern shoreline and use
night crawlers or top water baits to
take largemouth bass. Bluegill can
be taken on red worms. Use traditional baits and fish at night for
best results in taking channel catfish.

~~~~~~d~!~ =e~nth~e~~~~~

G*W

Give It The Best
Protection Possible-

.

,.,.
..

_&lt;co_ntin_ued_from_c-_3&gt;_ __

chicken livers or night crawlers.
Try top water baits and rubber
worms to take largemouth bass
averaging 10 to 20 inches. Use
maggots or red worms to take
bluegills from areas with submerged vegetation and cover.
Southwest
OffiO RIVER - Areas where
tributaries enter the Ohio River and
the deep pools behind lock and
dam structures are good places to

in the fourth inning with two more

To each his own......
home is a special plac:el

:' Women who drink heavily during
•. pregnancy (more than three ounces of
:. alcohol per day or about two. mixed
•: drlnka) run a higher nsk of debvermg
~ babies with physical, mental and be·
;: havloral abnormalities.

,.,.,.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weekly fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
BURR OAK LAKE - Bluegill
and sunfish can be taken from most
shoreline areas on small worms.
Fish near drop-off points with night
crawlers to take largemouth bass.
Channel catfish and brown bullheads can be taken when fishing
with traditional baits on the bottom
during late evening and early
, .morning hours.
LAKE HOPE - Shoreline fiSh. ing at night produces good results
~ for catfish anglers using cut baits,

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:- Farm/ Business

jentitttl Section

July 21, 1991

MIDDLEPORT - Bruce Fisher,
Middleport, has purchased the
Middleport Department Store from
its long-time owners, Lionel and
Mary Lou Boggs.
The business. originally Rath burn's Department Store, was purchased in 1935 by D.S. Harold who
changed the name to the Middleport Department Store.
Boggs states he was raised by
Harold. and in 1940 began his
employment at the Middleport
Department Store. Boggs inherited
the store in 1960 after the death of
Harold. He points out much has
happened over the years and many
changes have talcen place.
Flood waters, not an uncommon
nuisance for business owners along

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NEW OWNERSHIP • Tbe Middleport
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RACINE - Construction is
underway for the new 1,300 square
foot Racine Optometric Clinic.
K and J Construction of
Pomeroy, under the direction of
Greg Bailey and Jim Clifford, i_s
building the clinic with an expected
Oct. I completion date.
The new single-story facility,
financed by the Home National
: -_ Bank of Racine, will feature a
masonry exterior, concrete parking
area with ample spaces and handicap.accessibility.

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Dr.
Melanie
Weese, Ind., Indianapolis, Ind., HuntingOptometrist, will be practicing at ton, W.Va. at the Veterans Administration Hospital, and also at the
the clinic.
Dr. Weese graduated from Indian Health Service Hospital in
Southern High School in 1983. She Whiteriver, Ariz.
Dr. Weese currently resides in
attended Muskingum College in
New Concord for her undergradu- Racine and is a member of the
ate training and then received her Racine First Baptist Church. In her
Doctor of Optometry degree from free time she enjoys golf, attending
Indiana University in Bloomington, local sporting events and spending
Ind. in May 1990. While attending time with family and friends.
Dr. Weese is currently practicIndiana University, optometric
clinical experience was gained by ing at Union Optical in Belpre and
working at clinics in Bloomington, Chesapealce.

Jill Burdell
Fairboard, volunte~rs work recognized
during field
hard for 1991 junior fair
entry level. Entry figures show day ev~~nts
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
Gallia County
increased numbers in both steers

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Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; C.N.R.D.
GALLIPOLIS - sA special twilight tobacco meeting and field tour
will be held this Wednesday, July
24. The activity will start at 7 p.m.
with a field tour of plants started in
the Float System by Joe Foster.
The field is located just off
State Route 775 at the Raccoon
Bridge. Joe will share his experience in raising the plants and
review the cosL As a added feature,
Jim Baughman has agreed to bring
his "Undercuuer". If weather permits we will demonstrate this alternative to pulling plants. Following
the field tour at approximately 7:45
p.m. , there will be a roundtable
meeting in Shelter House 5 at Raccoon Creek Park.
Mr. Benito Lucio from the
Ohio Bureau of Employment will
be present to go over some regulations for Migrant Labor. such as
housing, wages, etc. We will talce
time to discuss items of common
interest about the 1991 Tobacco
Crop.
A new contest at the Gallia
County Junior Fair will be a 4-H
and F.F.A. Tobacco Grading Contest. See Page 33 of the fairbook
for details. Samples will be available at the -Wednesday . July 24
meeting for youth that want to
practice for the new contest.
The 1991 Gallia County Junior
Fair is rapidly approaching (July
29-August 3).
The number of youth exhibits
thi s year will approach the 3,000

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and market lambs. Fairboard and
volunteers are worlting.hard to prepare for thiSyear's fair. bnprovement projects include a new wash
area for hogs and lambs. The permanent improvement committee is
seeking donators to help with the
continued upgrading of fairground
facilities . Your contributions to
this, the largest youth activity in
Southern Ohio is welcome.
A annual highlight of the Gallia
County Junior Fair is the sale. This
year's sale will be Friday, August
2, starting at 12:30 p_m .. We arc
expectin8 about 400 sale items this
year. New rules allow each youth
to still sell two projects, but only
one per species .
The July 14 Ohio Crop Report
still showed more than one half of
Ohio in a moisture shon situation.
Dr. Allan Lines, O.S.U- Extension
Economist, at a meeting in Gallia
County this week expressed a very
strong opinion that the Mid-West is
in a critical moisture situation.
Grain markets will be driven by
weather. Continual drought conditions would drive grain price up.
Adequate moisture would favor
record yields and deoressed orice.
Dr. Lines feels that the next week
· will determine the direction for
grain price.
Did you know? The city of St.
Lois is switching its I ,400 vehicle
fleet to ethanol-blend fuels. The
move is bein~ made for environmental reasons. The switch will
also boost the area's economy
since ethanol is made from com.

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LONDON - Spectators of the
Ohio Junior Hereford Association
Field Day saw a top quality set of
cattle.
Youth from Illinois, Indiana
and Ohio exhibited 8 head of
heifers, steers and cow/calf pairs.
The junior show and field day
activities were held at the Madison
Fairgrounds, London, and hosted
by Anthony Herefords, Mount
Sterling.
A special competition for cattle
resulting from exhibitors' participation in the American Hereford
Association A.l. program resulted
in Jill Burdell, Btdwell, appearing
in the winner's circle with H-C
Prospector. An April '91 bull calf,
CWH Prospector 3232 sired the
winner.
Bruce Schlickau, Haven, Kan.,
placed the entries and selected
B&amp;C Ms Domineer 0549 as his
grand champion female. Doug
Musser, Otterbein, Ind., exhibited
the early summer yearling sired by
K&amp;B Ll Encounter lET. B&amp;C Cattle Co., Miami, Tex .• bred the
champion.
Quentin McConnell, Kincaid,
Ill., took home the reserve champion heifer honors with his secondplace summer yearling. BL Starlet
0 II lET won as a BL I Demander
618 daughter.
The steer competition saw the
two champion heifer owners return
to the winner's circle . Quentin
McConnell captured the grand
champion steer honors with his
I ,280 pound entry. BL I Demander
618 med the home-raised entry.
Doug Musser won the reserve
champion steer honors with his
Calgary Ribstone 74U son. The
steer weighed in at I ,090 pounds.
Peter Wagner, Fremont, exhibited the fust-place cow/calf pair. WF
Beryllium Vindi, an eight-year-old
daughter of RST Vindicator 22N,
won with a March I bull calf at her
side.
John Adams, Springfield, was at
the halter of the the heifer named
calf champion. J A Ms Technicow
4ET, a senior heifer calf, won as a
daughter of The Technician lET.
Specialty Gal lET, shown by
Tom Ostgaard, Dayton, made me
Continued on D-8

Earns banking diploma

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car of truck In stock
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U .S.

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PRESENTED AWARD • Don Stimiey or tbe McGi~ness•Stan·
ley Agency in Gallipolis was presented the 1990 Allstate Distin· .
guisbed Agency-Award at a recent banquet beld at Hueston Woods
Lodge, College Comer, Obio. This award, presented annually, recognizes tbe Allstate agencies wbo provide extraordinary service to ,
their policyholders and support the objectives of tbe company as ·
well. The award was presented by Donald J, Villenauve, CLU,
CbFC, Agency Sales Manager for All~tate's Ohio Independent
Insurance Agencies.

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BANK
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Boggs says he can remember
the day when $1 would buy not
only a shirt but a pair pants too,
and there would still be money left
over.
Mr. and Mrs . Boggs atuibute
their success to the people of the
Tri -County area and know they
could not have done it without their
loyal customers.
Fisher, who officially took over
June II. says it is very imponant to
him to continue the service demonStrated by Mr. and Mrs. Boggs over
the years.
Fisher will maintain the existing
Jines carried by the business and he
hopes to expand new lines to
juniors, mens and boys clothing as
well. It is a goal of Fisher to add a
line for young people.

Lionel and Mary Lou Boggs wbo have operated
tbe business for over SO years. Pictured, 1-r, are
Bruce Fisher, Mary Lou and Lionel Boggs_

/

$500.00

the Ohio River, made it to the second level balcony of the building in
1937 and in 1948 put three feet on
the main floor.
Major renovations were com pleted in the early 1950's including
a new facade and according to
Boggs the Middleport Department
was the fust store in the county to
install air-conditioning.
The Boggs' family also operated
a style shop in Athens in 1948 as
well as the Wellston Store Company in Wellston which was operated
by Boggs and Edward Tewksbary.
After Boggs' heart trouble in the
early 1980's Mrs. Boggs took over
at the Middleport Department Store
but Boggs continued to remain a
major part of the business.

Construction begins for new
optometric clinic in Racine

#RITB01

You May Qualify For Extra
Special F·Serles Program Of

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Middleport Department
Store under new ownership

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1991 FORD
FESTIVA

,,_ll!o.-.c.lllt-.a•t.~SIIIt 1 1 ~

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GALLIPOLIS - Sheila G.
Wood, Branch Administrative Officer of Star Bank, NA Tri-State,
was one of 104 bankers from
across Ohio to complete the second
week of the twD-year course at tlie
Ohio School of Banking, conducted June 9· 14 by the Ohio Bankers
Association (OBA) at Ohio University, Athens.
Graduation exercises fQr the
38th annual school wete held on
Friday; JUne 14.

NEW OPTOMETRIC CLINIC - Construction on the new Racine Optometric Clinic bas
begun with an expected Oct. 1 completion date.
K and J Construction of Pomeroy is building the
1,300 square foot facility and Home National
Bank of Racine is providing the financing. Dr.

Melanie Weese, Racine, will operate the clinic.
Pictured, 1-r, are Dr. Weese, Bill Nease and
Gary Norris, Home National Bank, and Greg
Bailey, K and J Construction. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Julie E. Dillon)

Honor Gallia
cattlemen
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Cattlemens Association
held its annual meeting on Friday
evening June 28.
The session was highlighted by
a New York Strip steak dinner,
entertainment and a short business
meeting.
A special feature of each annual
meeting is the recognition of the
"Gallia County Cattlemens Association Distinguished Service"
Award recipients.
Those recognized in 1991 were:
Butler Hereford Farm (Ruth and
John Butler) and Bob Evans.
The Distinguished Service
Award is earned through both service as a cattlemen and service to
the cattle industry. Previous recipients include: Charles Shaver, Anna
Davis, Emerson E. Evans and Merrill Rose.
The 1991-92 officers and directors were elected:
President, Fred Vollbom; President Elect, Jim Baughman; Secretary- Treasurer, Candy Baughman;
and directors, Paul Hill and Dean

JENNIFER OSBORNE

Five are
promoted by
local bank
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Bank in Gallipolis has announced
the promotion of five employees.
According to James L. Dailey,
president and chief executive officer, the moves will coincide with
the remodeling of the bank's main
office. He explained: "with these
promotions in place and construction inside the main office soon to
be completed, we will be even better pos•tiened to provide greater
Continued on D-8
·

PRESENTED AWARDS· Those receiving Gallia County Cattlemens Association awards recently were John and Ruth Butler
and Bob Evans_ Pictured lert to right are Tom Woodward, Gallia
County Cattlemeos 1990-91 president; Bob Evans, Ruth Butler,
two of the honorees and Jim Baughman, association director.
The past years' county memMartin. They will join Past President Tom Woodward and directors bership exceeded the 200 member
with unexpired terms, Marion mark. Special guest for the evening
Caldwell, Maurice Toler, Joe Fos- was Rob Chapman, Executive Vice
ter and Allan Boster, DVM to President, Ohio Beef Council and
make up the 1991-92 Executive O.C.A. Executive Secretary.
Tad Free provided the evening
Committee.
entertamment.

KATRINKA HART

l

�Page-02-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

July 21, 1991

July 21, 1991

Springfield Grange organized in 1873

THE PRESENT home of the Lighthouse Tabernacle Assembly
of God was formerly the Springfield Grange Hall. The building
dates to about 1957. The Springfield Grange, once the largest and
oldest grange in Gallia County, went out of existence about a
decade ago.

By JAMES SANDS
Special CorrespondQat
"Long years ago, sixty we know
Someone had a vision bright
Someone had a goal in sight
For the Springfield Grange
And we're ·still here to do our
'best foc all.
Living sixty years we're surely
here to stay
Helping all to live a better life
each day
As in years gonc by
We'll be sure to try,
J usl to keep our aim as pure and
high
As the twinkling stars that shine
in the sry.
Beautiful Springfield Grange in
dreams we see
Visions of what you can be
By faith we're here, we hope to
stay

in homes, and in the Mt. Zion
Methodist Church (torn down in
the middle-1950's).
It would appear that the Grange
Hall was not completed until about
The above lines were a part of 1960 when a formal dedication was
what was called the "Springfield held. SpringfJCld Grange continued
Anmversary Song". It was to be to meet into the 1970's when the
sung to the tune "Beautiful Ohio". building was turned into a church
It was written in 1933 by we by the Lighthouse
believe Marietta Atkinson for the Tabernacle Assembly of God.
We have before us a newspaper
60th aqni versary service of this
grange.
report of a picnic held by- this
Grange
in 1902 at the home of Jacob
Taking part in the Grange Trifftz which was near the old
#210's anniversary were: Carl Top- Methodist
ping, Marietta Atkinson, Harland camp meeting grounds in SpringYollbom, T.H. Bailes and Eddie · field Township.
Pullins.
"Early in the moming they com·
Springfield Grange was orga- menced to drive in the spacious
nized in Springfield Township of barnyard of Uncle Jacob and plenty
Gallia
of stable room was found for the
County in 1873. A charter was horses. Then the well-fill.ed baskets
granted on November 22, 1873 were unloaded from the carriages.
with John E.
At noon the baskets revealed their
Mills as the first master of the hidden ueasures and a long table.
Grange.
which Mr. Trifftzs had erected in
his beautiful shady yard was soon
fiUed with fried chicken, roast beef,
In 1957 when the flfSt and only boiled ham, flanked by 8 pyramid
Springfield Grange hall was being
of pies, cakes, jellies and pickles.
built, this grange was reputed to be Hot coffee was not lacking.
the oldest surviving Grange in Gal"The Master J. H. Morrison
lia County. The Springfield Grange seized the leg of a chicken and
met previously in the Evergreen called on everybody to pitch in. It
Townhouse,
was "go as you please" and everyCharity we have for all
We will all work as one
For Springfield Grange
And will guard it with Fidelity."

Pul)llc Notice
2
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Gallia County Board

body in the race. It was nip and
tuck at first start between Dan
Morehouse and undertaker Dan
Glassburn. There is no doubt but
Mr. Glass burn would have won ,
but while trying to slip a melon in
his pocket, Brother Morehouse got
a chicken and two ptes ahead.
"At2 o'clock Uncle Jacob filled
the long table with watermelons
and muskmelons of his own raising
and everybody again was called on
to "fall on." Here is where David
Powell, secretary of the Grange,
and who should have made a report
of this meeting, got in his work .
The way he made melons disappear
o was a caution and when time to
go home had to be assisted his
buggy.
"This is the second picnic the
Grange has held at Brother
Trifftzs '. AI the first every one
enjoyed themselves, but it was conceded by members and visitors that
the second "outing" beat the first.
The Trifftzs have a beautiful home
and know how to make visitors feel
..at home."
In the early part of this century
the Springfield Grange had about
75 members, but by 1957 there
were some 206 paid "Springfield
Grangers". The land where the
Lighthouse Tabernacle (formerly
Springfield Grange) sits once
belonged to the Keener Sand Co.

of Commissioners in aceor-

" dance with Section 307.12,
Reviaed Code, will offer for

public sale the following absolute personal property by
competitive bidding. Terms

oi sale will be caah, certified
" check, or U.S. Money Order.

The public oala will take
place at tho Guiding Hand

Sc~oollocation in Cheshire,

Oh•o at 10:00 a.m., Satur-

day, Auguot 3rd, 1991 . In spection of tho itomo will be
available for viewing one
half hour prior to the sate.
The folowing items will ba

bod:
1I A !used)

1980

Pontile

Bonneville Stationwagon, 9

paaMnger, " asia".
2) A (usod) 40" Frigict.ire
Deluxe Election Range. Har-

vest Gold .
3)

A
piece of

!new)

type carpet.

22'6"x1 2'

indoor/ outdoor

The Gallia County Board
of Commisaionera reservea
the right to set minimum
bids and reject any or all

to waive informalities

· bids,

or to accept any bid which is
deemed moat favorabloJ to
the commiasionera .
July 21, 1991

3 Announcements
DotroH Tlgor

B111b.oll boo trlp
Aug 24 I 25 1111 Seattle Martna,..

$9Q". uch No Smoking or Alchol
permttted on bua. Bus leavN

PolnL Plo1oan1 1:00 AM. Call
Auety Caato 304-755-2431 or
755-4698.

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4MonLh old lduan 614·H2-7382.
..., BoautlfuL Malo Puppy1 4 mos.
• old. Brown With BlacK On Hie
... Back. 814-37llo2G4D.

Classified

T.

DISPLAYS ANIMAL • Sarah Hill, Bidwell,
shows her grand champion "owned" heifer at
the 1!191 Eastern Regional Junior Angus Show
In Richmond, Virginia. S A V Mac Jestress 1761
Is the name or Hill's winning entry that topped

138 other

"owned" heifer entries to win grand

champion honors from judce Cheryl FulkefliDn,
Sand Springs, Okla. The heifer Is a February
1990 daagbter of Grubbs Mac Kenzie. (Photo by
American Angus AJsodatlon).

Power follows party with greatest representation
By WENDELL TOPE
Earth Team Volunteer
GALUPOLIS - It is often stated
by those who seem to know? time
has no ending, but seasons do.
In com~n our 215-member
Congress JS definitely much like
our seasons these changes always
follows each new election. and
immediately new thinking in our
national capitol occurs. However
time goes on. In a Democracy a
portion of our population benefits
while others suffer consequences.
To understand the mechanics of
political policy of the delemlining
political representation you only
need one rule. Power follows the
pany that has the greatest representation. The demographics recently
canpleted by the U.S. Census surely sending messages to the farmers
through out our Mid-West.
In case you haven't heard Americans are migrating to the West and
South. Since congressional seats
are based on the number of people
represented in a region, the country
s political power base is also mov •
ing to the West and South Texas
and California.
nus trend shows the farmers in
the Mid-Cenual states are loosing
at least eight congressional seats in
the reapportional process. The
changing of Congress to reflect
populauon shifts is called Reapportiment n _the other hand California's gam IS seven addJUonal
seats representing them for a total
of "representatives in Congress.
Florida and Texas will also have
greater influence as they expand
their influence to 23 and 3.
What this means to Mid-West
farmers as a whole docs not mean a
lot but, what it does mean a great
deal is the fact that this loss of voting power along with the fact that
here in Southeastern Ohio we cannot afford to loose any Let us

reflect for first one moment what
our changing industry has cost us
in the last half century our fathers
and grandfathers had a flock of
chickens and nearly every farmers
wife had her flock of twlceys, geese
and ducks. At the end of each week
she had a small cream check These
she used to supply food for the
family with enough left over to buy
the necessary household items The
husband in most cases had a tobacco crop, a pen of fat hogs to sell
along with fat steers and calves.
Then the rural family was made
up of a single unit Today there is
no market for eggs or pouluy on
the small scale. Mass production of
the poultry industry is centered in

By Constance S. White
GaUia County SWCD
GALLIPOLIS - The Field Day
on Manure Management sponsored
y the Fairfield Soil and Water Conservation District arid Fairfield
County OCES will assist you in
answering these questions. The
field day will be held on Wednesday, August 7 from 9:00 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. with a lunch provided.
The event will be held on the
Strickler Swine Farm, Strickler "
Road, Amanda.
New Manure Management legislation will pass sometime in
1991. WiU your facility be acceptable and efficient? During the day
discussions and "hands on concerning: Suuctures and Design will be
presented by Mike Yeenhuizen
OSU Ag Engineer. Followed by
Kevin Elder, ODNR-Div. ~f Soil
and Water will go over egulation,
Legislation and Ohio Manure

Education Fund, Ohio EPA P.O.
applications for the Ohio Environ- Box 1049, 1800 WaterMark Drive,
mental Education Fund's (OEEF) Columbus, Ohio 43266-0149, or
regular grant award is Sept. 27, call Bryan Saums or MicheUe Lach
I!191. Regular grants can range fro at (614) 644-2873.
$5,000 to $50,000.
Eligible OEEF grant recipient~
include primary and secondary
8chools, colleges and universities,
. environmental advocacy groups,
indQalry associations, and others.
OEEF uses some monies col. lected by Ohio EPA for air and
; water polluli~n control violations
to award proJect grants so aware: nea IIIII understanding of environ: mCIIIil iJsues can be expanded.
. For ~t applications an addi. tioilal anformation write: Grant
: Information, Ohio Environmental

Nutrient Management Program.
The special f~iured speaker is
Jim Cummings, Division of Soil
and Water, Nonh Carolina Environmental Health and Natural
Resources. Also features that day
will be spreader calibration, test
plots and sampling procedures.
For reservations and $2.00 registration (payable in advance,
please), contact: Fairfield SWCD (
1-63-320) 1109 E. Main S.ueet,
Lancaster, OH 43130, before
August 2, 1991. For a copy of the
directions contact Gallia SWCD
446-8687.

long halrad kht1n1,

EFFECTIVE JULy 22 19q 1
I

9:00 AM-6:00 PM

:Hospital news
, Veterans Memorial
FRIDAY- APMISSIONS •Asther Frecter. Racine.
; FRIDAY DISCHARGES· Bur.wen McKinney and Junior Hunt
:

MONDAY - SATURDAY

Bob's Electronics
Upper Rt. 7 • Gollipolis

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NEW ON THE MARKET! SPACIOUS SPLIT FOYER HOME. 4
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Card of Thanks

- 1
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•

I would like to ax•
".,. press iny apprecia~

I

••
•

RESIDENCE AND MOBIL£ HOME PARK- VERY NICE 4
BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX. 23 ACRES.
HOME FEATURES lARGE liVING ROOM, FORMAL DINING.
lARGE FRONT AND BACK PORCHES. 2 CAR GARAGE. 8 MD·
Btl£ HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5 MOBILE
LOTS. All PRESENTLY RENTED. EXCELLENT lOCATION.
CAll FOR COMPLETE 0£TAilS. JUST liSTED'

r..

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•

..•
•
••

THIS LOVINGLY KEPT THREE BEDROOM HOME IS SITUATED .
ON 5.8 ACRES MIL LARGE YARD. STORAGE BUILDING.
NEAR THE RIVER. AFANTASTIC BUY AT $26,500,

~

.'

....

BRICK AND FRAME RANCH- IN PORTERBROOK SUBDIVI ·
SION. JUST OFF FAIRFIELD CENTENARY ROAD NEWlY DE·
CORATED LIVING ROOM HAS FIREPlACE. NICE DINING
AREA, 3 BEDROOMS, 121? BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE, lEVEL
lAWN WITH NICE PATIO AREA FEATURING AROUND IN-'
GROUND POOL $59,900. THIS IS APRETTY HOME.

67 ACRES- ROUTE 325- 3 BEDROOM HOME. 2 BARNS,
NICE LANIJ! $38,000.

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU.
ExcelilnL
P1y,
Bon111L1,
Tronlporlallon. 407-292-41117,
ll&lt;t- 571. 91.m.-10p.m. Toll
Jlalundld.
'AVON I All Arlll I Shlrtly

w Spu~ 304-e75-t429.

NEW LISniiG: THE VIEW WILL CAPTIVATE YOU, AND YOU
Will DELIGHT IN THE PRIVATE SETTING OF THIS SPACIOUS
HOME. WELL BUILT RANCH WITH APPROX. IBOO SQ. n.OF
LIVING SPACE SITUATED ON ONE ACRE M/L PRICED TO
SEll AT $60,000.00.

ACREAGE - ROUTE 218 - MOBILE HOME HOOKUP,
BARN, $28,000.

Colnt, Gold Alngt, Olamond•1 Wanted to buy, Standing tlmb•r,
Sllvar Colnt, Sterling, Gola Bob Wllllame I Sona 814·992·

Coln1. M.l.S. Coin Stoop, 151 5449.
S.concl Avenue, Geltlpolle.

W1tor hMLor1 Tup-re. Loolo,

1617. PRETIIIYIOUS -

glauware, ClothM, "ltame.

614-256-6710
Crown City

I'IOFIS~ONtl

SUVI(IMUIS 1111 llffiiiiKI

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER. 388·8828
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR. 44a-8808
EUNICE NLEHM. REALTOR. 446·t887
RUTH BARR, REALTOR. 445·0722
DEBORAH SCITES. REALTOR. 448-8a08
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR, 44e-8806
MICHAEL MILLER. ASSOCIATE, 44e·6B08

&amp; VIcinity
ALL Vanl 91111 Mull Be Paid In
AdYIIICI. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
Lhe clay boforl thl ocl II to run.
Sunday odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday odHion • 2:00
p.m. Soturday.
Eatoto 9111: 108 Plno Strool,
Cllltlpollll, Ohio. July 21oL Thru
24th. 1-?
Cllnoge Sole: Monday Thru
Thlridly, 1008 Neighborhood
Ad, Stwao Conoolo, Sawing

Machlnl, ClolhN. Mlec., Hot
Wltar link, O.rden Tiller, Naw

Etc.

SHORT-TERMTRAINING FOR A

JOB WITH A FUTURE!

RAIIIIU . Cedar ~"h home s~uoted

on 47 1Cres. lhis home leetures 5 Bds., and or office, pl&amp;yroom.
2ih blths, ut1Uy room, cethed11l ce•hnfS over living room. d10·
in&amp; room end kitchen, convefSation pit m living room tnd stone
fireplace, lire end security alarm system. frn•shed family room
with lirepllce, heat puml)tnd central ar. 2 CJr car qt. covered
pallo. blfn, stocked pond. Home has ll)p. 3,000 sq ft . living
SPite and men~ other amenities. Call for IOOfl! mtorm111on.

Gallipolis

3 Announcements

Finlncial Aid availeblo for !hose who qualify
Hands-onlrlining I No home study
YIDIA Cettifie4/ UAW APP'oved
C&lt;liiUILaCial Dri~ens License (COL) p-cparation
Job Search Asaii\IJICC offered
Weekday snd W"""md cluses available

PAT~ID-r~ =~
TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING CENTBR
1-800-388-1150

'546. LAIC.( VIEW lOTS - Ch01ce lo! s w /spectacu ~ l v1ew You
w1U want more than one. Oak. map f. dogwOOO and everg1een
trees make tn•s asubu rtan parad1se. Also IMs tr o nlln ~ on White
Rd For fullparl1cu~ rs call to m s ~ct

N706

Public Sale
&amp;AuCtion

JEYIEI LNl SULl TC!IIN. 3~drm.. t ~ story nome. IN.

rm ~/ hardwood. flOors. lug!! !IHn U .. n~ce lot. l oc ated '" a
good netghborhood Close to stores and sc hool. $24.000.00

11665 ll11A.OIUINAIIT CHAIIING
HOlE
many. features. 4 ~rooms, 2 bath~ . huae ltvtng room, 101'~11

dinlnl room. equ ipped ~itchen, !am•ly room w•th woodburnmg
!!replace w~h a Buell stowe insert blsement, gas heat w /cen~~
air deck. 1n.ground pool. 2car prage, 2 ac. m/ lwrth a wood
ra~ne. Convenient locaton at ~e ed&amp;e of town. To see !July ehghtful home call lor any al)pomtment

1664 R£NT 1/0PTION TO BUY - Wechallenge you tofmdany
more.c harm locatiOn and convemence Th1s IS perfllct klr ~i
sm le ret•red. or Jel set. 2 bedrm . 2 baths, krt .large LR and ,
ut 1 f1 ~ rm. located onthe t 1 ~t .noor Trulv de1•.2hlfu l. lnsoecl bv
1 ppomtment this condom1n1um_Rent1opt1on.

1691.

NLa - NEAl - Nlm - In lown homo. 1/ 3 bed·

rooms. LR. formal dtung room basemen! central llr. mod.
btchen. range. relng. , dls hwa~her . washer anddf'l f!l Start housekeeprng •mmedi.llely 1n th•s cha rm1n11 home

lt;lti NEXI10 WATNE NATIONAL fOIEST frontSon 2 roa ds. land contract $2).0QOOO

117"

1719. DEllt»tTFUL COIFORTABlE- 3bedloom ranch home.

•mmacuBte thr oughout 2 baths fam ily rm . char mmg LR. JXthO.
ga 1age &amp; large lot You can atlord th1s one. ttle prce IS $50 ,00~
Ownf!f mslal'ed a new 10111 th•s yea r Worth seemg and wort
buymg

i1700. COlOIIIAL CHAII W
/OHIO RIVER fiOIIIAGE. lmmoc&gt;·

late cond~ion, 3 bedrooms, I 'h baths, k1tchen , LR , OR w/ wood·
burning fireJJ\Ice. Th1s ~ome rs well cared lor and locatedccnvl!·
nient to town 1nd shopp101. Very good garden SIJ)I 1 car ga r-

IRe.

A LHADBR IN SUPI'LYINGQUAIIIY TRAINING
TO niB TRUCKING INDUSTRY.

8

General Typing

RummiJI Sale, Burdltta Addn,
1:04»:00, Frl &amp; Sat, Home lnt,

Wood cratte,

•
•
•
•
•
•

Resume's

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

PERFECT

&amp; VIcinity

NEll LISYING _ IDEAL FOI WGE FIIIILT - 4
1704
bednf.s .. 2 baths, 7 ac m/1ol !I a! land. Cozy LR w/hrep-.ce,
ellra 1&amp;. kll w/ bar and eating area. lull basement. an tbove
vourd pool. 10 !Tiles out of town. $65,000.'

••
•
•
•

tion to my friends
and family for the visits, cards and flowers during my stay in
the hospital.
'Tiianks to the 3RD
floor nursing staff
who gave me wonderful care.
Most of all thanks to
all for your preyera.
Pastors John Jeffery, Alfred Holley,
Eugene Harmon. Michael
Yeager and
Frank Claytor.
God Bless All of You.
Anna Kerwood
33 Smithers_

L--~.;.;;.;.;........;...~

•

• 2

THIS NEW HOllE SPARKL£S IN ITS COUNTRY SURROUND·
!NGS J«JME FEATURES THREE BEDROOMS AND TWO BATHS,
COMfoRTABlE FAMILY ROOM, FORMAt UVII«l ROOM AND
MU()I MORE SITUATED ON 3.9 AmES MIL HANDICAPPBl 1£.
CE~E. CALL FOR DETAILS. $80.000.00.
ROUT£ 160 -JUST AFEW MINUTES FROM HOLZER HOSPI·
TAL ONE BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGE KITCHEN WITH LOTS
OF CABINET SPACE. FAMILY ROOM. STORAGE BLDG. ON AP·
PROX. 1.4 ACRE LOT. PRICED UNBELIEVABLY LOW AT
,30,000!
PRIVATE WOODED AREA- BEAUTIFUL PINES SURROUND
THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME. THE COMFORTS OF
THIS HOME ARE ENDLESS. INFORMAL FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN AREA. BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND
DINING ROOM. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS OtiTO DECK ON SECOND FLOOR. FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM. WOODBURNER IN FAMILY ROOM. 2
CAR GARAGE . AVAILABLE WITH 3 OR 9 ACRES.

-..

THE BEST BUY WE HAVE SEEN FOR $21,000 - 5 R9QM
FRAIIIE HOME WITH BRICK TRIM. LARGE LEVEL LAWN WITH
FENCED BACK YARD.

~

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~

••

1

BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE

DAVID BOGGS &amp;1 4-448· 7750

.

: - $11.78-$111 .90 hr. No exp. neldad .
• For anm and epplicallon lnlo.,

liNDA G. I - ·

101 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $29,000.

Complete househOld or Estates I

~md~a/ezfM2M

9!.

3 Announcements

Pt. Pleasant

call 1-216-967-41699 7a.m.-t0p.m.

11

AN\' IIOUI

FAlliS AND VACANT LAND
25 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $15,000.

Sadly missed by ALL
HER CHILDREN and
LOVED ONES.

Wanted to Buy

RESiDENTIAL • INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL - FARMS 1

Sundoy odHion- 1:OOpm F1Lclay,
Mondoy odltlon tO:OOa.m.
Saturday.

Help Wanted
POMEROY
'POSTALJOBS'

Dog WILh 010nge Collar. 614'
446-3968.

,'

446•3636

BRICK AND FRAME RANCH- IN PORTERBROOK SUBDIVI·
SION, JUST OFF FAIRFIELD CENTENARY ROAD. NEWLY DE·
CORATEO LIVING ROOM HAS FIREPlACE, NICE DINING
AREA. 3 BEDROOMS, I\? BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE, LEVEL
LAWN WITH NICE PATIO AREA FEATURING AROUND IN·
GROUND POOL $59,900. THIS IS APRETTY HOMEL .

~?atia

9

Rick PNroon Auc:Lion Company, Any Lypo ol lurniLura, lptull time 1uctlonNr, complata pllancae, antique's, ate. Alto
IUcllon Nl'YICe. Uc1nlld Ohio, IPP!Oilll IYIILiblo. 614·245-5152.
Wilt VIrginia, 304-773-S785.
UHd Mobile Hornet, Call 614·
446.0t75.
9 Wanted to Buy
Want to buy picked blackber·
Top PriCII For: AIL Old U.S. ~01, 6L4·D92-8895.

Real Estate General

Advance. O.dllne: 1:OOpm tha
day beto,. the ad 11 to run,

PUBliC AUCTION CONSIGNMENT SALE
. EVERY FRIDAY NIOHT 7:00P.M.
location OAV BuHding on Rt 36 Bypaaa
Conoignment taken from 10:00 to 8:00 ct.y of ulo.
NEW AND USED MERCHANDISE
Terms: Cash or check with proper J.D.
DOOR PRIZES
AUCTIONEER, DAVID BOGGS, Lie 4596
Gallipolis. Ohio - 614-446-7750
Licenold ond Bonded In State of Ohio

Found: Mala Beegle HunUng

.

446·3644

Realty

OIC.21 LOCUir If., GAI~LI'=OUI,~~~~~~~·==I~O~..~Y~.~II~IIIIII~UN:o.-;;-"

1

German

ShophordL BLack &amp; T1n~._1 Yoor
' Old, Very •riondly. Vlcln11J: Cora
l ..Mill Road. 814-24!5-5183.
·

'

QUIET COUNTRY LIVING IN THE CITY - OWNERS HAD
THIS HOME CUSTOM DESIGNED. LARGE LIVING ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING, FAMILY ROOM, LOTS OF
STORAGE SPACE. CARPORT. PEACH AND APPI.£ TREES,
GRAPE ARBOR, GARDEN PACE. VERY NICE PROPERTY.
$94,000.

&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Salle Mull Ba Paid In

.,..OofM'Ia . ~OHD

!

Canaday
IIOIII

Rio Grande, Ohio 614-245-5152.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

: ... ;Found In Flva Polntl erea, 1•
blue and wNta pirakeet, 614-

·

1. UNADAT,

who passed away
July 17, 1973.

Lost &amp; Found

• - FOUND • Beverly Wood• blbla,
i.
dalm .. PINIInt Velley Madlnl
: _,Equipment, 304.075.0100.

Make a home
your
livability describes lhis
living/dining room
kitchen. 1Y.. baths plus nice
country setting for your family.
Wants this home sold!!

Real Estate General

AUOIII

pall

.;..;.PuppiH, 112 Sorlngor Sponlol,
~her Holl ?, 7Wookl OLd. 814-

Real Estate General

IIAIYOI Jlt-2616
IUIT P. lLOYD
IIAIYOI 446-JJU

doa,

~ Brittanay Spanlal, 304.&amp;~5419.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

stay dry this week

NEW STORE HOURS

•

--r

Most of Ohio will
By The Associated Press
Most of Ohio will continue dry
with little relief expected for crops
stressed by too much heal and too
little moisture.
Temperatures are expected to
continue in the 90s Sunday before
cooling into the mid- and upper 80s
by Tuesday and Wednesday.
Overnight lows through the period
wiU be in the 60s and 70s.
Heat will pose problems for
livestock. The livestock safety
index may reach the emergency
'level during the afternoon hours.

.

• phplcll - - - for InterClll .-y .,10 p.m. IM-'M2·

",,.,~·4('

Middleport

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wedemeyer'• AucUon Strvlca,

Yard Sale

~:::;_--~~~~~~,__

dll...o.-you ....... up and ·
wootoul.l_..,eyourmentol

0

Ar... I~ • Reward!

Pomeroy,

8

0

•' Fr11f Adorable Khtens, 7 WMU

Real Estate General

•-

Clueoe ~ ,_, LNm IIIII

8

I.OSY,Mole Brinony Sponlol.
on1nge ond while, wHh collor,
REWARD, 304-175-6418.

FrM Santy Rooelar, 614-992·

3 Announcements

•

814-ltl2.a837.
L.Get: Femolo P:r:uppy. FamiLy
Pet. 0.11illd Ho 1 l Avonuo

77BD.

,.f .....ce.
l!lingle
o r -.......
olngilo.lind
ll ConSold reel eotate i1 ep· fldenllol and olfonloble. Wrtte:
prllilld It 117.000.00 end Slng_IH. P.O. Box 1043, Qo1.
cannot be oold for le11. Sold Npolil. 011411831.

~

FANNIE J. HART

Famala Dog, Approx. 1 Year Old.

; ..,.6

-

And to
love, and
praise.
and walk
those
streets of
gold.
In loving memory
of

. Frlondly. &amp;f4-446-4070.

Announcements

CHINUE KE11P0
KAIIATE

zipper ca• from Lang1vllle At.
124-lo Pomeroy-Middleport area,

7

'

~z

LGet 1.Siom- cot, mole 1-yr
old, h11 brown collar, Sllvar
Ridge aru, f14-185-4418.
LDST· 1 Blblt In 1 novy bluo

fii

Public Notice
Hie will be held In me offlc:e

by

Is your livestock facility
legal and efficient?

Next grant deadline Sept. 27
The next deadline for submitting

the South and South East Our Milk
Market is gradually being shifted to
the South and South East and the
West Coast. The tobacco production is slowly drifting to the South.
Many other Items are following the
same path The Department of Agriculture is telling us it is costing our
government too much money to
produce crops and livestock in the
hills and that we should be thinking
in terms of recreation such as hunting, fishing, trails through the
forests and such
It sounds to me like there is
going to be a host of people living
on starvation rations as these trends
begin to have impact.

I look forward to tho
day when we can be
together.again
With all the wonderful
times to behold.
To be with our dear
Savior in endless

.., · Famala, Very Loveable. 614446-

4070 .
....
..- Call and
~·

of Crow and Crow, Attornoyllt lAw. Second St. and
Mul&gt;eny Ave.. Pomeroy,
Ohio at 2:30 p.m. on July
31.1981.
The Adminirtrotrix of tiM
eo tate of Barba.. A. Whit·
tlngton _,..,.. the right to
reject any and 111 blct..
I. C..r.,n Crow,
Attorney for the Eltllte
P.O. Box tltll,
Pomeroy, Ohio 41718
Ph. (tl141892-t1018
or982-1132
17114, 21, 28, 3tc

I know you are In a
much better place
And worldly things
cannot affect you
any more,
But. oh. how I would
love to see yourface
again
And
tell you how
much I love you,
just once more. •

Black 3 Month Old Kitten,

~ 304-67W4UI.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTEA OF
THE ESTATE OF
BARBARA A.
WHITTINGTON. Det11oed
Plalndff
vs
BRANDY ANN GROVER,
It II
Defend onto
C..oe No. 28.781
NOTICE OF
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Notiel II hiNby given that
the underolgned will 1111 to
the hlgheot bidder tho real
lila'- owned by Barbe,.
Ann Whittington, docealld.
ond Delbert Frldll'f on the
31otdl'f of July. 1891 . Sold
reol eotate 11 locltld In Rut·
lind Townohlp. Section 8,
Town e. Range 14 end con·
tlinl 110 ICNI. Slid Deed
deecrlptlon 11 deecrl&gt;ed In
Volume 301, 1'11ge 91. In
Me1111 County dlld record1
which illncorpo,.ted herein

WANT ADS Off

Loat &amp; Found

0

IN MEMORY
I hope you somehow
know how much
l"m thinking of you,
Mother
And how much l,miu
you aa years go by,
I think of you with
happy memories
That touch my heart
and make me cry.

•· =:..:.:,:..:::.=-=::,:::....-=

• .The Area's Number .1 Marketplace
Public Notice

8

In Memory

time.

-

Sunday Tlmes-sentlnei- Page-03

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

0.

In Memory

Not responsible for accldenta or loll 'of property.
Would you like to heve a sale .... Contect

mi. lOCATED OUT SR 14t -

Vinyl ranch,'"'""""' ,,.,.

ter bedrm. remod eled. eat-10 kll., all wood cabinet s, bath
•ty rm .. l ac. lot mil. Anewhome could be buill on lte teilf kit.

REAL ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, JULY 27, 11:30 A.M.
2370 Mt. Olive Rd., Bidwell

Three acres, quiet valley between Bidwell, Tycoon
lake. Three room primitive cabin, lots of built-in
storage and furniture. Garden and landscaped.
Acreage cleared. grassed, mostly fenced. Two outbuildings. Excellent building site. Electric, phone,
county water nearby.
Open for inspection
Saturday, July 27. 10:00 A.M .

.$33,500
m5. NEW lLSTLNG. ACREAGt -

71 ams

m/1 j)OMil PAS

lURE) Very okl house. ~mall bu n,po nd. 3 s ~ mgs and all m1
nen l ngtll s. tall

-726 NEW LISTING. INVESTORS. make yourself some mo11ey
300 Beres mil w1t h ve ry old ho use. 3 bans appro•. 36'148'

IMI7B.

REDUCED FOR QUICK SALEIILOW, LOW

40'1. You'll be pleasingly surpriS~ when you Slt!P
inside this 3·4 bedroom home With lR, FR. eaHn
kitctlen, range, rei., uril. rm·.• gas heScahooL
an d new bath

1s.

Located on .0 ae mil . Kyger Creek

1701 REDUCEO fOR QUICK S.UE. 14&lt;70W&gt; ndsO&lt; M/ H w&gt;l h
LR 2 BR. 1 bath. k•t w/ work rsland. dt shwasher. ret . i iS fur

nace C/ A. 2 outbu1fdmgs S9.SOO

each. t1mber and ~II mHlf!ral fights Call fdr more Information
'.

'!¥1:~~
~;¥
f . · .. . H
.,•''·

&gt; ..· ~·
;i

NSlO. UXAJION IS TM£ k£Y to lh1s 2·slmy home lOCated on

F1rsl Avenue 4 bdrm., 1'h b ath~. tam •ly room. lrv1ng room, base·
men!, and small] bdrm . bath , k•lc llen. hvrng room coltage on
lot Home IS s.tualed on a corner bl Ca ll lor an ap~m l menl

0

OWNERS: DOUGLAS &amp; CAROL GRAHAM

Details: Contact Col. Jason H. Sheppard
RANCHO COMPANY-446-0001
Terms: 10% Cash Day of Sale .
Balance 30 days or sooner.
Owner reseiVeS ri&amp;ht to reject bid.
Not responsible for accidents.
111178. LOOK WHAT $37,500 WILL BUY II Nice older

AUCTION
~

PUBLIC
~~ AUCTION

home wt LA , OR, 3 BR. 1 barh, kitchen . fuel oil heat-

er, new rool, 2 outbldgs . Call lor appt.

16 ;u:. M/ LIarm with 14 ac m/1pasture
lsnd
house has 3 SRs, LR k•l &amp; balh Al;o60'• 75' barn m
ood coM•hDrl. com cnb. machmerv she d and wor ~ h o p M1~

!O's

NEW LLSTLNG. RLVERFROII1 PROPERTY. 14 acoes m/1,cho&lt;e
land lor buil ding houses or lor mobi le homes. RIVer enlrance.

1705. CLOSE·IN. Cozy ranch wiLh LR. 2·3
BR. t bath, FR. Eat-In kilchen. NEW luel 011
furnace, CIA, woodburner, garage, 48' x 32'
bam, 1 oulbldg. Low
. Call.

11683 NEW LISTING: Ve ry nee home locat ed'" Cheshlfe Twp
on Ro.ustlla ne $11uated on !;.. ac m/1 leatuung 3bdrm, ! bath.
11v1ng room , kllchen. ut1lity room an d I car attached ga rage. a n ~
7 car delached ga• age Well u1ed 101' home Cal l lor more de-

"'"

JULY .27, 1991-10:00 A.M .

Between Racine .and Keno, Ohio (Meigs Co.) on C-28
Bashan Road near Red Brush Church of Christ.
GAS ENGINES: Firsl6 are show ready -Worthington l'h hp;
unidentified Hit and Miss approx. 2 hp; McCormick-Deering
110·2'h hp; Tom Thumb 1 hp; Associated (the Hired Man) 2'•
hp; Throllle Qlverned En~n·Sattley 2 hp w/m1cro mag;
Cushman 21Ahp Model25; Stover 2 hp Type CT: Hercules I I?
hp; United I ~ hp; Fairbanks-Morse 3 hp Style C; Type AREO
\? hp; International lb. I\0 hp-2\! hp; Sallley I'h hp, Hercules
l'A Hp: Ideal, Briggs &amp; Strallon, Delco L1ghl Plant, 15 plus
lwin litsingle May·lags, other misc. part~ bells, several brass
oilers, spark plugs, gauges, slam whistles, etc.
GUNS: 3-12 gauge and 3-20 gauge Remington (Wing
Master·Model 870 pumps). 410 Mossl!erg pump, 22 Savage
octegon banel (Model 291. 22 single shot (Pioneer) Model
750,22 Winchester (semij Model 190.
GLASS AND COLlECTI.BLES: Misc. glass including depres·
sion carnival and fenton. Bull'~ Eve Lamp, 15 plus 011
lamp~ Dazey· chum, lard pres~ sad irons, cherry seeder,
· com shellers, meal grinder~ brass fans. air compressor (as
is) , traps, chain saw~ boat motors. boatlra1ter, oak kLtchen
clock, platform scales, old Maylag washer, anv1l, sausage
· stuffer. copper boiler. gir~ bike, case and other m1sc. kmves,
misc. stoneware, including crock~ large &amp; sma111ars. JUgs, I
Donaghho, Avon bollles, Fodder chopper &amp; other ,mLsc:
rtn.Lirtd. Te~ms of Slle: Cis h. ~.ot~~D!~~~~!•
available. 'KathiMn
Sale by Lowen Goff Auction

lf621 PR1C£ REDUCED: Great starter home teat uun&amp;3 bdrm ..
bath."ltJtc hen. hwmg room With ~pp. 1,000 sq.lt . ol hvmg space.
Call or ap p. Pn:ed 10 the $20 s.

17t4. NEW USTINO. Unfinshed ranch , 2 BR , 1
bath, L~ wlidin . area, eat-in kitchen, on 42 acs . MIL .

llli?D.

REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE- Portefbrook

Subdivision - Lovely 3 BR r~nch w •th LR,
kltchenldlnene, 1 :t. baths, large family room, range,

dishwasher, ref. disposal, utilitY room, alec. BB heat,
ciiY schools on :t. ac. lor mil: Call lor appt

19 NEW LISTING: Th•s house ISlocated on I i t m/1, leatur·
116 2. r 3 bedroom w•th tam•ly room . ~•!chen. bath. co~er e d car ·
mg
r storage bulkli~. Th iS home IS an f!JCellent starter
ro~ ~rred in the $30'S. Call lor more lnlormatiOn

r

· !611 N!llliSJLNG: fh• cLmyhome is bell&lt;! ~an'""· hie•

s'4 bedrooms, 1'II baths. dining room/ formal ~~ng room

•lui basem ent Mlen~ies inch.t~ fw~place w~handl nserl
Du'lt·in china ct binets. ltenc h doors,
m~n

~~7

brick si:le'l!alks

m~. Pro~rty is klcated mlJinlon. ~II lor deta1ls and lllllllnt·
menL $69,000~0 ..

IIUI UWOIIYIIE.!IA'IIIT· This dofiti!L1ullo mi~home h1!3 ·
bedrOom' 2b•hs, lll!jebeoutiullill:nen ond • &gt;oomwilh 41.6
sq ft over the oLLie hod I"•&amp;• Slltllled ·~ 12 •~os mil '"
G10.,; Scl'OOIIISiriCI. Sl'itroiiRienlios.C.lluu nd seothisone
soon.

'

'.' :·· ,.. . . ... •__.,.. :Itt,.. ...... '"" .. .. .
.~

HOlE FUIIUSHED anq 101dy o m"e 'nto J bdrm . 2
bathS fam~~ roo m w1th hrel)•ce. forma l d1nrng room. ul•lity
·Th iS home IS ~rled tor a reuremenl homeor • newlywed

1Hit3

11724 NEllliSnN .. CHOICE lOTS. each kit "" '' acre 1"
bu1ldn1 hou!ill!! 01' for mobile homes Oleck these out Call klr
m«e information.

·"

••

�.

'

Page-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

be exceptionally lucky a t th1s time regarding th•ngs that p er ta1 n to your sta~

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov.
You are
now In a cycle where your past elforts
are hkely to be acknowledged, especial·
ly what you consider your most relevant

tus and fln anc1a1 well-b etng Something
b1g IS m th e ofhng and 11 m ay come
down at any mom e nt

successes You may have been over-

SAGITT ARtUS (No•. 23-Dec. 21) You
possess a spec1al type of knowledge

July 21, 1991

whi Ch IS ol c onsrdera bl e rmporta nce to
th ose wrth whom you re mvo lved If 11 IS

There 1s a poss1brhty that you may make
an 1m port ant career change for the bet ter rn the year ahead It will be a Situa-

dr spen sed properl y rt could profit e veryon e c oncerned
to be logrcal today but srmultaneously
don ' t rgnore your rnturtron Bo th c ould
p rovrde you wrth rnsrght s that overlap
and c ompensate for wha t the other

you look for

CANCER (June 21-July 22) The rewards lor dotng thtngs well could be

tacks
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) Your abtl-

more generous than usual today Take
prrde 1n everything you do, from the

smallest to the largest tasks Cancer,
treat yourself to a btrthday gt« Send lor

rty to work w ell wrth o ther s rs your great est as set today There IS a pos srbrltty
th a t yo u may bnng two o p p osrng lac Iron s to g e the r fo r somethrng mutually
benetrc ral

Cancer 's Astro-Graph predrchons tor

the year ahead by matltng $1 25 plus a
self- addressed

stamped enve-

PISCES (Feb 20-Morch 20) lmporlant

lope to Astra-Graph, c/o thts newspaper. P 0 Bo• 91428 Cleveland, OH
44 tO 1-3428 Be sure to stale your zodt-

llmld a te d b y gr and rdeas or unfamrhar
d evel o pm ent s today th ese are the

for

which

you 've

hoptng
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You could

for
dloltwoohora. Expofionc..t proloo...t Full ond Port tlmo pooltlono

endeavors you personally

:t04-m-t0311.

~...;....

DrivwaTractor Trailer
Drtvors-

want, and your chances lor getttng what
you go alter look e•cellent
ARIES (M•rch 21-Aprll 19) Your tncllnatton to take calculated risks could be
rather strong loday This could work to
your advantage. provided you're knowledgeable about your Intentions
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You have
the capability to make the most of your
opportunities today Don't be dtscouraged by advisors who think you can't do
something Focus on what looks good
to you

IAMI

0Reorrange the 6 ocrombled
words below to maka 6
Simple words. Print laHars of
each '" 1ts 1,,e of squares.

21

11 you venture mto a duplicate

IIIII
0 XC I T E
EPREIIE

I

HI L c c N
f---,il6 ~1=,.;:.17 ...:;lr-:-:,1,..--J

,.L.

I

The young boy was try1ngto

~· jo1n
convince his mom to let him
the athletic club at his
R E S J Y E . school. He finally won her

I I I I 1 over by saytng, " Sports serve
I
~-~-=~-~-=~-~-~ soctety by provtdlng an
a

CAT NEC

I1

Ie

example of · ········-."

INonCE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO WOLFE TANHINQ BEDS. Com·
rooommondo thol you do buo~ mon:lof.tlomo Unlto. From
nHo with poop1o you know ond 11H.OO. Lampo, Lollomt, Ac....
NOT to oond monoy through tho - . Monthly Parmonto Low
mall unlll you have lnvfttrgatld AI 118.00 Col Todoy FREE
Color Cotolog. 1-IOG-228-e:m.
tha offering

_______

742-2328

Real Eatate General

7·21

~-..,:;.-:.r;-.;;:-r:....:;r-::,..-1
Complete the chuckle quoted
9 10
by f•llmg •n the m1ssing words
_
.
_
_
.
_
. you develop from step No 3 below

j

I I I

e ~~r~wo I' 1 1• r I' I' I' I" I' 1' I
2

0

IIIIIIIIIII
c

Business
Opportunity

$30,000/rr.

lneome

potentl•l.

• 30N31130X3
jO 9jdWBX9 UB 6UtP!~OJd .{q .\le!OOS
eAJes siJQds • '6u!AIIS ~q JQo\o Jll4
UOM ,(IIBU§ eH "j()OipS Sf~ 18 QOIO 0!191
-~IB IIIII u!OI WI~ 191 01 wow st~ &amp;:lUIA
-uoo 01 6u~1 seM ~oq 6uno.&lt; 94l

Real Estate General

3QN3113QX3
1N3:JQI/
,(3SI:J3r
HQN/10
IJ3d33M
0110)(3
Oln0/1
5131-t'V\fi:JQS

Real Eatate General

...

...;.;,.;;.......,_~

ln1erut1d In selling or want to
buy Avon, frM gift, call Kay 614-

Dotolt.. 1) 805-162-8000 Ell!. y.
1018V.
992-n&amp;O

1Uesd .., 7123!81

&amp; Inor Trailer
,_ WMh Rocont OTR Ell·
...,..,__ ff You're 23 ,... Old
And lntoroolocl In:• Stoning At
23c Por Milo" Y~ Roiooo To
27c" 2 112c Por Milo Fuol Sololy
aon..• 401-K "-flr-t'llocl~
Cll Dontll ln-.,_• PAID PU
Stop 011' PAID Deoclhood"
Cobo-. Con-tlonoloThon
Soo KLLM, Inc. And ARo-ntlllve F...., Eoton Aoocl R.angor
At The: Holldly Inn
4th Avonuo, liP 14th SfHuntington, WV
n-d.oy, Jutv 23nl
10:00 Lm . • S:lla p.m.
11-..H-1004
_ _ _.,
CONSULTANT
,..,_ paroon to holp children
wUh 1 Mrloua
proltlom,
Enuroolo.
Appc&gt;l-• oot by uo. lllnl

end adun•

wort lnd trovot roqulrocl. llakl
140,000 to $50,000 commllllon.

Clll ..-cn-2233.

OET MID lor Cornlllllng llaillnv
Lillo. f!IDD por 1,000. Cill t·I002-31 (IO.Himln) or WrHo:
PASSE • 33R 181 South Uncolnwoy, North Auroro,IL 80S42.
lmmocllale Oponlngo Avolt.blo
For Ful-Time AM Port-Time
LP.N.'L Cornllolblvo Wogoo,
~t.l Wllh Exlllrionco,
Floxlblo 8choclullng Avolloblo.
~ The Dlroctor ol Nu,.
i!&gt;g, Plnocroot c.r. Cont.r, 170
P I - DriYol.,Ooltlpc&gt;llo, Ohio
w:n 114-448-'1112. Equof ap.
porlunltJ Employer.

Part-time perrTllnet Pharm1t1st,
1ve111ge 20 hours a WHk, no
holiday• or Sundays, retail environment for Athens area, .,nd
resume to PO Box 729-P

Pomoray, OH 45769
EXECIITIVE DIRECTOR
THE DAIRY BARN CULTURAL
RN'S TO $31MOUR
ARTS CENTER
LPN'S TO S21MOUR
Pooltlon Anlllblo S.ptombor 8 Asslgnmonto
Throughout
Far Dlroctar Of Vlbront Com- Southom And Control Ohio In
munltV Cuhural Arta Center Hoopltolo (ER, ICU, Mod Surg),
WHh rntomotlonol And A!lfllonal Nursing HomH Correctional rn.
Exhlbltlono. Strong Monago- stilution~
And
Home
.,..t Sllilla And An AKin~y For
Coro.At HENS INTERVIEWS
lho Arlo ..'Y Roopon- Ohio University Inn, Thuradoy
olbll~loa Include StoH Suparvl- And F~day, July 25th a 2tlth
alon, Program Implementation, Call
For
An Appoint·
Flnlnclol Pt.nnlng And Budgot
mont. WESTERN MEDICAL
u.,.,.ment,
Gr•ntwritlng,
614-846-11398
Fund
A•lalng,
G1llery

U.lntMince, Arta M•ricetlng
And Public Rolotlono With ThO

Secretary,

Law

Firm,

Generous

Office

Admlnletratlon,

30

Houro!Wook. Pooltlon Roqulroo
Paopto Skllto, Compulor And
G-.at Dtllco Ability. S.nd
Contact lnfvrm~rtlon To: Box
CLA 014, C/o Golllpollo Dolly
Trlbu..J..~5 Third Afonuo, Gal·
llpollo, "" 45631

Help wanted

Benetlte,

OUIET COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS! Very ntcely
decorated ranch home perfect lot startmg
Located at the end of a QUiet ~ne, thts 3 bedroom
home ts ready to move mto fully eQuipped eat-tn
kitchen, dtnmg 1oom. hvtng room wtth attract1ve
ftreplace and ntce, large lawn, all ma~e th1s the
home for you Pr1ced at $59,900.
#228

bndge club, you Wtll probably compete m a matchpotnted patrs game
The same hands wtll be played at all
1a bles and the drllerent results compared You recetve one matchpotnt fo r
each patr you outscore. and hall a
matchpo10t for each he
Suppose at nme out or 10 tables
Nooth.SOuth plays 10 three no-trump
and wms nine tricks lor ptus 400 11
you· play in four hearts and wm 10
tncks, you score 420 and recetve nme
matchpmnts one for each patr you
beat You get a "top " The other
North-South patrs wtll each recetve
four matchpotnts
Th1s dnve lor extra po10ts somettmes "forces" you to nsk your contract 10 the hunt for an overtnck - as
21

Business
Opponunlty

Arthur'• Chain Link F.nce
Rt.,dlnllal, Commercl1l, lndullrial, frM E~lmat11! Complete lna181tallon Phone 614-

384-&amp;m
Large Local Vending Route For
Salt. WUI S.tl An Or Pan
Repeat
Bualnns
Secure
Loc1tlon1. Above Average In·

como. 1-IOG-940-8883.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

New Commerelal, Home Units,

From 11H.OO. Lampo Lotlono,

AccuaoriH. Monthly Payments

$18.00, Coli Todoy FREE
NEW Color Cotolog. 1-IIOCI-462·
Low AI

1181.

long as the odds are m your favor
In lour hearts, at rubber bndge, you
would draw trumps and rull your club
loser m the dummy the sale route to
10 tn cks But tn a duplicate, tl other
declarers are makmg an overtrick,
you wtll score very lew matchpomts
for makmg your contract exactly
The nght play, m th1s deal !rom Bill
Root's "How to Play a Bndge Hand,"
IS to wtn the diamond lead m the dummy and take an tmmedtate club fs ·
nesse Suppose West wtns wtth the
queen and returns another dtamond
Wm tn the dummy and take a second
club lmesse tt ts a 2-to-1 lavonte to
wtn
True 1f tt loses . you wtll go down.
but you Will have company However,
11 the second club ltnesse wms, you
draw trumps, discard dummy's diamond fsve on the club ace, and rufl
your diamond loser m the dummy,
brmgmg home an overtnck and sharmg a top

31 Homes for Sale

Flexible

VERY ATTRACTIVE HOlliE for the lamtly moVIng
up or slartmg out For $54,900, you're buy1ng 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, ltvtng room and fam1ly room
Very mce eat-1n k1tchen wtth oak cab1nets Garage
and ntce deck Ctly schools
#206

NEW LISTING - Wouldn't il be ntce to come
home to a place thai has~ alP. Well, tf so, we have
rust lhe home lor you Located a short dtslance
from town, brtck and stdtng, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
atr condtttoned, ltreplace, tnground pool, ctly
schools and lots more. It's also very allordable.
Now how does thai sound' Call lor your appomt·
ment 1 $69,000
11701

SPRING VALLEY AREAt Very well cared for matntenance free ranch home tn excellent netghbor·
hood Home tncludes 3 bedrooms. eal-m k1lchen.
formal dlntng room, ltv1ng room w1th another ftre
place lwtth Insert) Good storage, 2 car garage
Wtlh breezeway outbutldtng Gas heal(low btlls).
central atr Prtced to sell at $84,900 Extra lot and
8 38 addtttonal acres for s.lle also Please don't
hes11ate to call today Call Dave at 446·9555
#299

l
I

'l !
l

Front End Manager position
requires a minimum of 5 years of
experience, 3 of which being In a
supervisory position. Pay and
benefits based upon experience.
Bring resume to Vaughan's Cardinal
Supermarket In Middleport, OH.
992-3471.

Oporotor. Will ..r u oupory'Town of Nttw Haven, Box 217.

0021.

Worwod: Sorvlco Tochnlclon lor
Hilling a Air CondltlonlnllfRof~g'orotlon. Exporloncocl
s.ind Rooumo! Ctl O'IV, cto Gattlpollo lloltJ T~buna, 825 Third
A•on... Galllpc&gt;llo, DH 45631

Metromedia Steakhouses, Inc.,
Ponderosa, America's leadmg family
steakhouse, has an exciting opportunity
in the southeastern Ohio/West Virginia
area for an HVAC technictan.
You'll need completion of a trade
school curriculum in HVAC ; 3-5 years'
experience; strong mechanical aptitude; and electrical, sheat matal, and
plumbing knowledge. We prefer experience with food service equtpment. Out of
town trlvel requlrad.
We offer:

I

I

• Salary to $33,000
• MedicaVdental benefits

• 401K Plan
• Paid vacation and holidays
• Company, provided uniforms and vehicle
To apply, send yqur resume to: Metro·

medlll 8t ll'rtiOUIN, Inc.; P.O. Box 578;
Dlyton, OH 48401; Attn: Paul Jonea,

FIIOIIIIIN Dwpellnwnt.

METROMEDIASI'EAKHOUSES,INC.
1

'' 111111111

Situation
Wanted

Have Openl~ For Elderly Peraon At Gwinn 1 Care Homt, Sl

Refrigeration
Service Technician

1

wv we.

Wlnlod: OTR Truck llrlvor 2
Yoorw Vorllloblo Export.nco Roqulrocl, Clllullor ar COL
Llconoo, And Clun Driving
Rocord. Coli Mornlngo, 614-44t·

12

HVAC/

llu• bl

willing ta rotOc.t.. S.lory tllblo. P - ruumo lo:

Now Hllv..,

I I (V H I

".

An Equal Oppol'lUnlty Employer

Rl. 218, Crown
S50tl

Cit~,

OWNERS ARE WILLING TO DEAL- They have
bought another house and MUST sell thts one tmmedtately Brtng us an offer, but be senous be·
cause they may JUst take 1t Very roomy and mce 2
story Dutch colontal on 3 5 ac1e lot leatures 4
bedrooms 2 ~ baths, famtly room w1th ltreplace
and deck overlookmg mground pool Also full basement, 2 car garage, 2 new hel pumps 1 mtle
lrom hosptlal Prtce reduced to $115,000 Don't
hesttale because they're g01ng to sell rt soon Call
Loretta McDade
NEW LISTING! Does a n1ce lot and gooo netghbors
appeal to you? Thts home offers that and more A
ntce stze ranch home located mKyger Creek area,
large ltvmg room , spac1ous kttcnen wtlh oak cab1
nets. over stzed 2 car garage, cable and satellite
dtsh 2 plu s mtles lrom Rt 7 $54,500
#702

814-256-

14

Business
Training
Rllroln
Nowi!ISouthllllom
Buolnooo CollajiO,./!fti ~olloy
PtiZI. Coli Todly,
38711
Roglll-lon fi0.05.12748.

ST. RT 325, NEAR RIO GRANDE- Out o( slate
owner would like nothtng better lhan lo sell th1s
21 acres, m/1, of vacant ~nd So,tl you're senous
about butldtng and have been looktnR for the perfect land. gtve us a call. we've got1tfl Ctty school
system
#604

18 Wanted to Do
Will S.byoh In My Homo
Anr.lmo.
Roclnoy
Aroo.
Ro o r - Anlllbt.. All Shlho
Coli f14-245-571111.
Buoh Hog Sontlco. Roooonoblo
RltOI, No Job To Smolll 8t+
37V·2942.

FOR STARTERS. tl has all the essentials tncludtng
a very reasmable pnce tag. 3 bedroom ranch tn a
conven1ent locat1on tncludes ltvtng room. family
room, eat·tn ktlchen and bath Newer carpet 1n
most rooms Heat pump wtlh central a1r Large flat
lot w~htn 2 m1les of lown Pnced to sell at
$43,500
#500

Georgn Ponabfe Sawmill, don't

hout&amp;,: taao to tho mill juot
call
75·1157.
lnto~or ond otdorlor palntlngi 10
yro oxpari.nco. Roof polnil ng.
Hond woohlng hou- trolt.ro,
wlndowo. Ddcljalll. Ro1oroncoo.
F&lt;H lllituiH. 304-17&amp;-2108.
Uconlocl Procttcot Nuroo, Will
Bobyott In My ~l Ar-.1
Tho Clock. '*'"~' .
Will build patio - . docu
ocr- · olllrtlng.
put up yb;t
lldlng ar ·trollor
tiM:
245-Q57.
Mloo Poul•o lloy Core Cantor.
S.lt, aHordoblo, chlldcont. foi.F
s 1m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
Before, aHer IIChoof. Drop-Ina
welcomo. 114-44a-8224. NeW Infont Toddlor Corw, 114-44UZ17.
Would Uko To CINn - o ,
O.y Or Evonlna, "-IONncoo
Avolllblo. 814-~11011.

•

• •u 10

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer South
East

Pass

Pass
Pass

+Q

L------------..J

31 Homes for Sale

A Frame

Home,

3br,

32 Mobile Homes

Priced

Right! S14-256·1981.
32 Mobile Homes
Roducod To S.ll: 2 Story 3br
for Sale
Comer Lot In ChtStdre Ohio

Excallent Condition. For ~Inane·
lng, Five Star Mortgage, Vlckla
Hauldren. 614-446-4042, Seller

10 Acree, 1980

Ba~llw,

14x70,

Trollor For Sata: 14x70 With
10x60 Add 0., With 2 Loto Aoklng 118,000. 814-381-7111.

34

BuslnBss
Buildings
OfFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd An., Galllpc&gt;llo. Clooo to

Court Houae. 1 room, 2 rooma,
3 rooma, 4 rooma. All nlctiJ

doconrtod, olr

amaU
cr11k,
real
woodland, 80MI timber, exc

hunting, t.-n, $29,000. 304-1581522.
Buutltui-Bulldlng- Stint 2-5
AcM on Loodlng CrNk Rd with
Laodlng Cnok Wotor. $300G$3800 par ocrw, 814-992-2772.
ep.m.

North

Openmg lead

r.ure,

L.ota &amp; Acerage For 9•1• land
Contract. lf4-llt7-3044
after

lor sale
MUST SELL to Utilly llloto.
Dtdor 2 otory home, A·l condl·
tian Now doubt. gorogo. t2x52 Llrgo LA WHh Corpot,
80'x180' 1ot. Nlocl olfor. 304-li?S- Window Arr, 1br, 1 Both, Cotl To
3030 or 875-3431.
Soo· 1-800-940.1202
~Ro:.:ot.:.o.:.rocl-7-=-7h:.:..,..-=--:lor::-::--::u::to~.l
t2x60 mobllo homo. Partly lur·
3 bedrooms, 2 bathe, 2941
Meadowbrook Drive, call for ap- Hardwood llo«a ond corpot, nlohod. Extro cl11n. f!ITDD. 814polnlmonl and price 304·675- hllt pum!&gt;&lt;'ontral olr, V2 ocro 245-9453.
lond, gorogo 11 112 care), 2-out
4466.
bulldlngo, lull booomont ond t4x70 Oronvlllo Mobllo Hamt,
3br 2 Full Balhl, Groat Room, 2 cellar, ltorm window• and 18,000. 814·24S.el15.
Car Garo9o, $57,500 614-446- doort. Small down payment and 1851·12150 Skyllno, 2·BR hauu
071)6,
take over paymente, 81C-241·
trollor, coii614-H2·2915.
2600.

r:ondHionlng,

w-our water I .,.., bill are pakl.
Make your choice now. No
quotn ovtr the phone, you

mull - thom. Phono lor on
oppolntmont 614-448-76DD doy,
448·i53i 1111

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Loti 1 ecreage avallabJe lor
n.w home con1tn.~cUon on

Roybum Rood. Povocl rood,
county
wlter,
reatonablt
rollrlctlono. Comptoto lnl.,.
lion moiled on roquoll. 304-41755253, John D Gorloch, no
slngl•wldt trailers, pleaH.

Men:ar Bottom Sub-division,
one ICrt Iota, At 2 frontage,
l)l'lca reduced, city water, 304·

1171-2338.
Crown City, Ohio 163 Acroo
Noar At. 1. U,ooo 304-522·19118,
Mondoy Thru Friday. 1.00-4:30.

Rental Property Hou11 and 4mobll' homo, good condition,
good location, will return lnVIIIment In
5-years,
New
Haven, WV, 304-882-2466
For Sale : Rl~r bank property In
Mason 304-n3-5651

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted, 3-BR home, R1clne
" " to rent or IHII w/opUon,
614·94~2783.

Rentals

Furnlthlcl
Efficiency,
S150
Utlllllts Paid, Share Bath, 701

Fourth, Galllpotlo, S14-t46·4418
1tt1r 7pm

cenlral air, a250. month, $200.

dei)OIII

2

ret~renc11,

near Btteh Street, Middleport, Ohio

AXZO Chomlcol plont, 304-li?S1221.

room efficiency apt,
One
reftrancea and depoe it , 304-

682-2566

2 moblll homH for rant or uta,
Glenwood ar.., 3CM-57&amp;-2&amp;U
Clean

3 bedroom 111 otoc, Galllpollo
Forry, 1250 mo. pluo utll~l oo,
1100. dopoolt, no polo, 304-li?S4088
3 bedroom double wide, private

lot, AIC, 2 batho, porch
wlawnlng, 111c1 walk-In closets,
nlco nolghbomaod, Galllpotto
Forry, 1323 304-875-3087
3 bodraom, 14x70,11rgo lat. Bud
Chottln Rood. $225. month, 304·
875-3509 '"" 5:00.

2-BA
ap1rtment,
downtown New Ha ven, WV, unturnlshtd-no p.ls, 614 -992·~81
Also 1500 fl commercii I apace
EHiclancy
Apartment,
Fur·
nlahtd, O.poalt, &amp; Reference
Requlrtd No Ptla, 614-448~879
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment,
$225 utilities lnetuded, deposll
raqulred, no pels , 614·992 -2218
Furnished Apartment, 1br, $235
Utllltl11 Paid . 920 Fourth Ave,
Gallipolis
614-446-4416 aHer

Mobile Hom11 For Rent, phone

7pm

Mobile homes tor rent or ute,

Nicely Furnlehed Apartment,
1br, netc'l 1o Ubrary, puking,
central heat, air, reference ,..
qulred 614-446..0338

614-146.0508 or 446-8321
fumlohod, 614·1192·111111

Newly remodeled, small 2·BA
trailer on 15 acres In Meigs
County at Prans Fork, 1-ml east
of At 33 on Corbum Rd, deposil,
flflrtnc11, HUO welcome, 614·

592-Sllt3

44

FurniShed eHiclency WISIOYI &amp;
refrigerator Share bath 919 2nd
Ave . $100 per mont~ 614 ·4•6·

3945

Apartment
for Rent

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bedroom eparrtment1 at VIllage
Manor
and
Rlvwala.
Apertm1nta in Middleport. From

1198 Colt 814-m-7781. EON
LAioyotto Moll: ~br 2 S.tho, All
Utltttln lncluaea.1 t4251mo
Oopoalt Roqulrocl. Ho Poto. 814448·7733, 814-141-4222.
New Haven, e2 bedroom tur·

nllhod opartmont,

d~

reflrence, ~-25M .

¥011EROY- Mulberry Ave. - look at lhts Ht slortcal home
Thts home has cherry cabtnets tn ktlchen, a beauttlul woo
den archway and large wooden pocket door s separat 1n g the
ltvtng room lrom lhe dtntn garea Also has an open statrway
'3 bedrooms, and a garage
$32 900

NEED ALOT OF BEDROOM SPACE, but don't have
a large budget? Here's 4 bedrooms on a large lot
wtth garden space. Several outbutldtngs and
porches Prtced at $37,000.
#217

TIRED OF LOOK-ALIKES7 We've got a "one of a
ktnd" home for you Thts eye appealmg rusltc contemporary home has somethmg lor the enttre
famtly Master bedroom has ad1acent loft and ample 1oom lor the most complete bedroom su1te
ltvtng room wtth calhedal cethng and ftreplace
w1ll welcome your guests lor you Full basement
that IUSI won't QUit has pos~btltttes lor a 4th bed
room and more In ground pool Large outbu tldtng
wt(h potenltal to become a guest house I 5 me
lot wtlh a vtew 4 car storage G1ve us a call lor an
appomlmenl You've got everylhtng to gam and
nolhmg to lose $125,000
~204
CHERRY RIDGE LOTS REDUCED 10%. 7 lots tn
all Prtee ran2e of $6,500 to Sl0.300 Located 1
mtle west of Rio Grande. Allltee covered llts. Qutef
localton Restncltve covenants apply lor buyer's
protection. County water
#336
COUNTRY COMFORT- There's a splendtd coun
try vtew many dtrectton from thts 2 slory home
near Champton Farms on Rt 554 Home tncludes
open k1tchen and ltvmg room, 3 bedrooms. one
ntce bath and u~ltty room Dver 1acre of fatrly llat
ground Posstble 9 5%loan assumplton Prtced at
$32,500
11224
CITY CONVENIENCE/COUNTRY PlACE $45,000 1s cheap for a 4 bedroom 1400 SQ ft
m/1, home With 2 baths Ltvtng room, famtly room
&amp; ntce eat tn krtchen, central atr Come see a
home wtth a prtce you can live wtth
#602
NOTHIN' BUT COUNTRY - Very gooo locatiOn
along Rt 325 lUSt soulh ol Rto Grande Here's a
deluxe home for the begmner 3 bedroom~ 2
baths. Very ntce kttchen,ltvtngroom, lamtly room,
parttal basement Country surroundmgs C1ty
schools. $42,000
#220

UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY - Newly hsted brtek
ranch whtch displays a beaultful hvmg room wrth
cathedral ce1hng and cross beams. 3 bedrooms,
very ntce enclosed porch whtch IS useable year
round. lormal dtntng room &amp; roomy, atlracttve ea·
ltn kitchen wtlh an abundance ol oak cabinets
2\1 baths. overgzed 2 car garage and more The
house rests on 45 acres whtch mcludes a 48 Stle
campground and 3 ponds G1ve usa call for mo1e
mformatton
11214
216 ACRES, M/l, Of lAND -lncludtng2 barns
and complete mobtle home set up 1200' m/1 of
road frontage wtth rural water ltne 55 acres. m/1.
of crop, 50 acres pas lure Balance mwoods Good
grow1ng lrees over most Excellent hunltng area.
Tobacco base 1378 lb reported Goal area to
build and live Located on Gage·Patnol Road Approx 12 mtles to Gailtpolts Ltsted at $87,500.
11307
NEW LISTING! CONVENIENT TO TOWN! Just 2
m1ies out Rt 141 Th1s 3 bedroom home has a lull,
dtvtded basement, ltvtng room w1th ltrep~ce,
deck, gas heal With cenlral atr and morn Green
Elementary Only $44,900
N407
WANT TO BUILD BEFORE SPRING? Before you
butld. even ij you already own a lot, please look at
these oulslanding 5• aCfe srtes We have two ol thf!
besllols 1n Green Townshtp. flat, level lots 1n a
QUiet, coun(ry surroundmg C~y schools #600
FINALLY ASTARTER HOlliE you don't have to ftx
upll You wtll need to see th1s 3 bedroom w1th recenliy replaced vmyl sidtng, roof and guttertng.
plumbtng, 200 amp. electnc serVIce and new gas
furnace. Large fam1ly room, 21ull baths, convent·
ent laundry room and prtvate pat1o Th1s opportunrty 1s only fll1nutes from town on St. Rt 141.
C1ty schools $49,500.
Ifill

Wis.eman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644

________________ David Wiiaman, Broker, 446-9555

.;~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~_;"~~:_----~---------------,---

lOHt:IIA McDADE. 446-1729
B. J. HAIRSTON, 446-4240

SONNY GARNES, 446-2707 CAROLYN WASCH. 441-1007
CLYDE B.
• 246-6276

:iiDDLEPORT- Hey look at thts- Two busmesses lor th e
.prtce of one In one side you can start your own ttre bu~n ess
"Wrth the compressor &amp; l11e changer In the other you can
have an appliance bu smess w1th used washers dryers,
stoves and relngerators already lhere Come ta~e a look at all
l)te thtngs thts bu stness has lo offer
JUST ASKING $8 500

446-0338

North 3rd St, Mlddlepor1, Ohio, 1
bedroom tumlahed apt, reterencn and depoell required 304·

882·2566.
North 4thl Mlddlopon, Ohio 2
bedroom umlahld apt, dtpotll
and raltrtncl required, 304-882-

2566

One bedroom efficiency apartment, all utllltl11 paid, partlalty
furnished, 30o4~7S.S911

Real Estate General

1-BR
apartment,
Include
utllltl18 2-EIA lrallor, tumlst'led,
Include utlllll11, $80 par WHk,

614·ti4~252S.

41 Houses for Rent
2 bodroonl hOUIO 2302
Modloon AVo, :104-675-2535.
2 bldroom home, nice location,

1br Apartment, Appliances Fur·
nlahld,
1
Block
From

&amp; Room1, lath 6 81Hmtnt

2br Allar1menl Acrol8 From Rio

42 Mobile Homes

ful River V11w In Kan1ug1. Fo•
11,. Mobil• Home Park 614-446·

304.e75·7373.
Dowrwawn. Colt 614-t46-t639.
3 BR homo, c~y achaoto, $315 1br Near Holzer Hoapital, CA,
month ptuo dopoalt. 614-146- Stove I Refrigerator Fuml1hld,
$235/mo. Ptul Utii~IH. Socurlty
03115.
Oopoalt Roqulred. 614-44&amp;-2957.
3 Room House. 1011 Third Ave,
Qolllpollo. StoYI a Rol~gorotor 2 BR furnlahld apartm1nt. Rent,
Fumlohod. Rol a Oopoolt ro- $285 par month Sarno ulll~loo.
114-14&amp;-2404.
qulrocl Phonrt: 614-146·1232.
Ponlolly Fumlohod, 35 Vlno, Gn~nde Colltge, All Utlllllea
$250/mo 614-146-0836, 614-146 Pold, 614.:188·91148
1214
2br Apartmtnl For Rani In Mid·
7 room hou.. Rollinlvllle, dloport, Colt Shtlly, 614·H2·
rotoronco ond doposlt, $250 11837, 614-146·9788.
month, coli thor 6:30 304-895- 2br Furnished Or Unfurnished,
3435.
Air, Cable, Nice &amp; Clean. BeaUII•
for Rent
2 bedroom Alhton Ur.lond Rd,

$165 mo. plut utlllt H, S100
dlpoolt, no palo, 304.e75-t088

543 N 2ND YIOOlEPORt -

Ve&lt; v
nrce 3 BR l R, OR kr ! l ,., batn u1rl
1ty rm lull basemen! 2 car Ra'al &lt;
lenced yard 2 lois Great Of

1602

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

601 Third Avenue, Gillllpolla,
2br, Rtfrtgef'ltor, Stove, Months

137 500

llopooH
Outoldo Slorogo
$250/mo 6t4·245-9595

H
stylt
tully carpeted
baths
drmn R room lrvrng room front
porch back deck TP water l full
acre Make us an oiler rn lhe 30 s

NICE HOlliE FOR THE GROWING FAMILY Green townshtp near Centenary Bt·level home
offers 4 BRs, 2 baths, LR, kttchen w/range,
relrtg OW dtspl, oven,FR, gas heat, attached
garage, sttuated on appro• one-hail acre

'lANGSVILLE- Dexter Rd -Nestled tn lhePtnes -IS lhts
modern total electnc 2 story home wtlh 3 bedroom s 2 car
garage and cenlrnl a~r All stlltng on approx 25 acres
'
FOR $69,900
lli()DLEPORT- Hey you gorta see lhts ntce house tn lhtS
ntce area on Maple Sl 11 has two ntce stzed bedrooms up
$lairs a cute kttchend down wtth d~ntng room and lovely ltV
mg room 11 also st1s on a g1eat corner 50x100 lot Even has a
ltttle garden spot
$26 .9000
RUTLAND - New Lima - II you re lhtnktn g ol buytng a
; home, we' ve got one you need lo see Wtth a geall oc alton,
' level approx I acre lol, 3 bedroom s 2 bath s ltrepla ce and
: an upslatrs balcony All WITHIN YOUR REACH AT
•
$39,900
: lANGSVILLE - How would you ltke a ntce 52 acre larm'
: \'lell here 1t ts approx 45 to 50 acres fenced W1th aboullO
· ams ltllable Also stlltng on tl IS a lwo bedroom home wtlh a
: ttrep~ce, and two car gara ge Has well water thai has never
; gone dly Even bas a l1ttl e ltmber acres JUST $49 000
·£VERY MAN'S DREAM -A 35 ft. Houseboat - There's
:nothmg more pleasurable than crutstng up and down lh e
•Ohto Rtver tn your own yacht Sleeps 9, has martne radto,
.and a tn·a•le boal tratler Loo~s ltke NEW' PRICE WAS
REDUCED $19 900
;!21.000

NEW USTINO - 3 BR All Brick ranch wtlh
lull basement and ·~. 25 acres, mn Groen
Twp just a lew minutes from town on SA
cent wr, 2 fireplaces, crty schools
141
STATE ROUTE 218-1 263 aero mil Very ntca FARM FOR SALE-OUYAN lOWNSHIP- 86
home offers 3 BAs, 1 bath, h\11ng room krtchen
aae~, m/1, older farm house wrth 213 bedrooms,
range and refr~alor, ftreplace, city water,
bath 1 LR 1 oull&gt;ulldlnga largo barn, tDbacco base
ATTENTION II Very nice homo on Graham School
Road-Ranch Wtth 3 BRs, LR. FR kttchon bath.

basement, crty s

Is

YOU'LL MAKE A SPLASH WITH THIS ONE-

Just oH SR 35 thra lovely home offers 3 BAs, 2
balhS, LR FA, drnrng erea, equrpped kitchen,

t6x32 pocil wtvac. system, 2 car attached g&amp;age,

gas heat, cenl. arr Very well kept home Call lor
appo~ntment

FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER- 3 BRa, LR ,
equipped kitchen. luel Olllurnace, cent wr, full
basemen!, attached garage

Callror drrecuons

CLOSE TO TOWN BUT SECLUDED SETIINGLocatod on NolghbO&lt;hood Ad , 1112 atOI)' homo
offers 4 BRo. bath. equipped kttchon. LR. DR.
part basement Block bldg with 3 rma and
caJpOrt behind house Situated on t 75 aero m'l
OFFICE BUILOING LOCATED AT 250 SECONO

-OffiOB down and 1 BR apanmenl upslaJfS Very
nice burldrng CaiiiDf details

MAY BE WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR- DON'T BE CRAMPEO FDR ROOM- Ntce homo

Newer all brrck home JUSt frve minutes from
downtown 3 BRs, 3 baths, great room, family
room, 2 car anached garBQ&amp;, heat pumpfcent rur
crty utihties
tttt

''"n·rw• ROAD- Ranch style ttomooHera
wtronge, relttg washer dry9f
• City UlthtleS PRICED A'l

and 16 aCie!l, nv1, on St At 218 Four BAs , bath,
LR, kitchen lull basemen! Ctly school diStriCt

GOOD IN·TOWN LOCATIO~st a block from

grocery store Nrce home ofters LR krlchen, BA s,
bath . large front porch

L.ORANDE BOULEVARD -All ORICK, 3 BAs.

EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL PROPERTY -

attached g&amp;age

w1th approx 3,000 sq h, I 057 acre

LR, kitchen, bath, full basement, gas torced wr,
city ttChools

5 BEDROOM HOME near town wrlh 2 bath s
equrpped krtchen, LA, FA, full basemen! 2 car
garage gas heavcent81r

NICE STARTER HOIIE-l.ocated JUOI at tho odoe
or town Thts home fealures 3 bedrooms bath,
living room , krtchen, dining room and a full
basement Frve mmutet 10 doWnlown

Presently used as Rrversde Manne steel butld•na

EXTRAORDINAAY-112 A mil, beauhful large
log home, 4 BRs, 2112 balhs, LR, krtchen , OR , FR,
3 fireplaces Call lor rTl04"e detwls

S40 FOURTH- 1112 story homo olors LA.
krtchen , dtnlng rm ' bath, mce back porch , gas
heal, dose 10 elementary school

\IFF HF.RE - Attracttve
wtth
16x32 po~l. ortvacy tonce. satellt:e dtsh
Home offers 3 BRs, kttchen, LR, bath, 2 car
detached garage Just at the edge ol
Centenary
VERY NICE RANCH STYLE HOME LOCATED
ON STATE ROUTE t6G-3 ORa, LA. kitchen
wtranga, refrigerator,

one

car attached garage

00x300h lot
DON'T WAIT-Extra nice homo and 20 390

acres mil Attractrva features rnclude equrpped
eat· m'ldtc:han. 3 BRa. 2 baths, LR, carpet , cent
Blr Bam on property Crty schools

QUIET SECLUDED sarong jUSt mtnutes to HMC

and dOwntown Home features 3 BAs, kl lchen
wlrange &amp; refrrg . LA. OR, carpet, frreplace c1ty
sdmol drs!

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONEI

Lar 9 log home. can be purchased wrth 162 acres
or ~ acres Thrs home offers 4 BRs, 3 baths
equ 1ppcd krtchen, LR, FR . 2 frreptaces heat
pumpl cenl a1r !backup system). oversrzad 2 car
anached garage Frontage on Raccoon Creek

MOBILE HOME and 82 acres m~ . $t4 ,500 2

BAs. LA kitchen w1range, relrrg, washer and
drye r, rural water

21 69 ACRES mil, Sugar Creek Rd ' OhiO
Twp -Homo oners 3 BAs, 2 baths, ki1chen, 2 car
garage, new barn

OHIO

TOWI;~HIP-531/2

acraa more ar 1111,

very nice ranch style home offers 314 bedrooms,
LR kitchen balh, full basement catpel, dade,
gar&amp;QG. srdmg Tobacco base and tobacco bam.
Addrtronalland
ROOMY HOME- V•IIage ol Vinlon story. S BRs,
LA DR FA, krlchon, carpel, c•ry water 2 rm
bldQ lorfner1y used as ollroo Shetter houae

VERY NICE PRICE FOR A VERY NICE HOME

-3 BAs. 1 bath , ktlchen w1range and refrigerator,
18x24 FR. LA" I trop~oo ollached garage CoJIIor

appotntmont eAICE HAS BEENREDUCED

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP - Beauhful home
srrua1ed on 3 605 acres mil Four BAs, 2112
baths, equrpped kltdlen OR, LA FR , Cam vac
system large stocked pond, beauuful deck work
Call lor m9te deta11s

LOOK NO FURTHER-A dream of a place
log homo oilers 3 BRs, 2 baths, LA, ktlchon, FR1
Walnut Twp , M1ller Road Beauulul Hearthstone

DR full basement, 2 !~replaces, wrap arouna
dock log garage. 46x50 bam, sprtng and pond on
propery all fenced, rn Wayne National Forest
Jusllovely

HOME AND 176 ACRES MIL1 OREEN TWP-

Home offers 3 BAs, bath, LA, kitchen, anach&amp;d 2
car garage N1ce pallo

FAMILY SIZE HONE - AttracttVo homo located

MINI FARM-l.ocated on Bulavtlle Porter Rd 13 44 acres and a nrce one story home wtth 3
BAs, 2 baths LR. kttchen, FA DR. carpet, otland

a1Cen1 enary offers 4 BAs. 2 baths , kllchen LR
Allached garage and mce lawn

electrrc heatrng 4 car unauached metal garage.
barn. approx 4 acres fenced pasture

LARGE HOME lo a1urea 4 BRa, 1112 baths,
k•tchen, LA , OR , unanoched 18x29 garage, Nor1h
Gallra School Drs l

S21,000 1112LOTS-Chestnut St 2 BAs. bath. OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD BUSINESsLA krtdlen, c•ly ublrtles
Plus laundry Located on St Rt 35 Call lor more
1nlormat1on

MIDDLEPORT- Beech Street- A 1\? xtory frame home
'wtth 2 bedrooms, newly remooeled Comes wtlh new washer,
·dryer, range and refngerator Also, a 9 p1ece ltvtng room
:su1te. 3 beds. and 2 ntghl stands WAS $19.500
.
REDUCED $18,500

A, mn, along Racooon Creek, Hunt Twp approx 70 A
bQtlom1s, fronts on SA 160, artestan well
.187 A., mil, Rodney Cora Rd , ntce homestte, butldtng

3 A. m/1, Charolats Acres alongSR 160, near Hoker 21.5 A., mil Frank Ward Road (Thetss Rd ). Morgan Twp
rolltng and htll and $17 500
'
Hospttal $t6,500

MIDDLEPORT- Russell Stre8t- GREAT NEIGHBORHOOD
- In town ltvtng wtth country settmg- A3 bedroom, i'h
bath home wtth a fuj) basement. 1car garage, and a large lot
:~RICE WAS $59.900
NOW $56,000

7.5 A., mil. Perry Twp . Symmes Creek bonom land, some
i , tobacco base $9,000

COMERCIAL PROPERTY-2 4 A , mil, 248 lrontage along 35 A, mil Clay Townshtp, Wtlltams Hollow Road approx 8
SR 7, just across from OhiO Atver Plaza
mt Jrom ctly, older hs , two water taps S15,000
98 Acre, mil, (Hobart Dtllon Subd) along Raccoon Crk,
n A., mil, Sect 30. Salem Twp , Metgs Co . appro• 28 great for a moblo homo, three s1des have large trees for
acres ttllable, 46 woods, well and eleclnc on property pnvacy $I 2,000
$27,000
36 A., rnA . Spnngfteld Ave . Sect 22 $45,000
17.4ST A., mn, Clay Twp, Soct 21 and 27, $30,000
MEIGS CO., 240 A , rnA , Bedford &amp; Chester Twp , old
COMMERCIAL-Rto Grande area, 85xl50 lot jUSt oH SR ongtnal log home with addttton added, dnlled well, county
325
warer avail , has been owned by same lamtly lor 4
generations.

iiiDDLEPORT - 2 lois, and a one story home With seven
rooms Has 3 to 4 bedroom s. huge hv1ng room. btg dtntng
~m, f1ont porch and a partly fenced large )pt. PRICE WAS
,36,000
NOW $30,000
CHESHIRE - Watson Grove Rd. - Come see thts lovely
l!'tck front home Wtlh lull basemf!llt 2 car ~a1ue, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths and lots ol storag_e spa ce All th1s s1ttmg on
6.3/100 ol an acre 1n a great location PRICE WAS $63,9"00
NOW $60 ,900
-~~~~PfrJlf~m

i&lt;!.'!!!!!!l~~ :~~·.-.-;.1!£!1!~

HERMAN NORTHUP RD.-Green Townshtp, 3 tracts,
approx 20 acres each, 1 tract approx 5 acres Call per
price.

2ri.e24 A., mil, Perry Townshtp, JUSt belore Gage on SA
t41 , bam, IWO spnngs,lob base $25,000
U9 A., mtl, Section 34, Raccoon Twp , fronts on SR 325
$25,000

ond

Comptelly Fumlthed mobile
home, 1 mitt below tow!'~ overlooking river No Pate, CA. 1514-

Real Estate GenBrat

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
_. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE.S. TURNER, BROKER

29.8 A., mn, Sect 32. Morgan Twp. lronts on SR 160 and
108 A. mil Guyan Twp VaC&lt;Int land, spnng on property
IMider Rd, ntce home sttes or tratler stte $16,900

....... .. ................ 992-3056
1 ..........
................................ ........ 992-6365

.............................................. 992-5371

'AI . .:&gt; .......... .. . ............... ................

I

+KQ
.AKQJ9
t9 8 3

wlter, Mptlc, electric, lrath
~kup, about 20125 acrn paa-

at hts 3 4 bedroom home Ladtes you have got lo see the
~liChen 1n lh1s one 11 ts equipped and has a s ~yltghl 11 Will
1ake your breath away Every room has been completely re
~one II has 2 baths and a detached 2 car garage
·
All FOR $68.900

Trutment

ernplor...

SOUTH

2.

Apartment
for Rent

:$1. RT. 7- Tuppers Plains- look once and look no more

opptlcotlono lor pollco potro~
man, applicaUon available at
C~y Bldg.
Wonlod In tho T-n of Now
town

fOidtlde lot Jbout 1 ICrl

Real Estate General

OUT.Of·STATE OWNER Ill ABIND! Mustlet tilts 3
bedroom brtck &amp; lrame ranch go NOW! 2 baths,
famtly room, ltreplace, ntce flat I acre lol Possrble
VA loan assumption $55,500 P1ck up that phone
and call TODAYt
#304

Town of MaNn now accepting

to

70 plua acrn with nlee

Nice 2BR, riverview, Gar~ge, 112
Acre lol:, large utility burldlng·
10x16, Asking $31,000. lm·
mediate Poa ....lon. 614·2581917 Uava Mnsage.

Haven a Clue II Water and

CAREER POSITION AYAIWLE

5881.

••o

Pass
Pass

2 bedroom trolfor camplotoly BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
lumlohod, AIC, woohor, dryor, BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
:104·773-8158
ESTATES, 531 Jockoon Plko
ltvll
from $'192/mo. Walk to ehop &amp;
City 2 bedroomoJ nlco privolo lot, moviH Call 814-446·2568 EOH

New Haven, 128,500 304-773-

+A J 9 2
3
+64 2
+K 81 S

West

44

located on Broad Run Road,

EAST

• 86s
.14
+QJI01
+Q 6 43

for Rent

Apanment
for Rent

HOME 992-5692

Woodollold, OH. For Furthor In·
lormotlon: Coli Dot Popa At t•
800-635-11812. EOE.

Walll'

WEST

44

42 Mobile Homes

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2S acre1, rural water available,

• 86 s 2
+AKS
+9 2

1121 Ellpando, 2 Full Batllo,
Clrpot ThrOYghout 19120
Will Poy Polnto. 104-132-li959, 2Now
Car Garage, $18,000, No Lind
904-932-7670
Controcto. 814-3'19-2945.
For Salt By Owner: Quality 10x55 Shultz, 2·BR mobllo homo
31 Homes for Sale
Brick Ranch Close To Holztr wtundorplnnlng
and porch,
Hoaphal. 4br, Full BaHmtnt $3500, 614-H2'31114.
2 atory, located Point Pluunt LArgo Shadod Lol 614-t4S.0647
Hlllorlcol Dlot, llaln St, 9 after5p.m.
1984 Wlndoor 2BR, 14x70, AC,
roorM, 2 112 blthl, NnOvattd,
pa11 nelan on cloalnJ. Owner GOVERNMENT HOMES form 11 wuhorldryor. Houoo oldlng. 614·
44&amp;-3183 or 614-146-0331
oru&lt;- to Hll !1:'"1ng boll (U repair) Delinquent taJ
oftlt OYir w,a . fore July property. ~epounalone. Your 3br, 1 t/2 Both L.ocltod Pl..
31. ·To lnopoct coli
-675·1348 oroa (1) 805-962-8000. Ext. GH· StrOll, Noll! Ta Halrhut. 114-245or 111-78110.
10189 for cunent repo IIIII
11440.
2·1111 houH.L 3..c,.., lnoldo In 01lllpotla, Nlc:e Older Home Knox 1Ml, 1~ner, 2 bedroom,
remixllled. chester aru, 614- In
Excellent
Condhlon
111 oloclrlc, coli 614-992·3021 ar
9854920.
Ooslrablo Location. auotlty 614·H2-not
Bulh Par11al Financing 614·2562-BR wlrtfrlgerator and gas 6855.
Now 1m 14x80 thru bodroom
r~~np, carpel, aluminum tldfng,
2 lull batho, ohlnglo 1001, vtnyl
Lyona Addition In Mason, oldlng,
~rogo, rnotoblo, 614·992ohuttoro, corpotod
quoltly butn, 4 bodroomo, 3 throuahaut, oil drywoll lntorlor
balht, custom ut In kitchen, ond :!-boy window l17,111l00
25 Acrw, 3br Home, Fl•h Pond, DR, FR, 2 llroplocH, CA, 1 ocro Call 1-80CI-1211-t045.
Ideal For HorNe. 1 Mile From lot, Moro!l! $117,500 ,304·773Chy Llm~L 614-446·1340.
5881.

Rea l Estate

H0 -91

OFFICE 992-!886

Dlya And Hours And Much
Morell»oaltlons A,. PreMntty
Available In Pomeroy and

Welte

NORTH
• 10 74 3

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-05

good

Community. S.lory $21,000 Nertterfal skill requl...a, typing,
$32,000. or Comm~neun~te With dictation, word proc11sing1. 11c.
Ellpartonco. llodlcll And Yoco- Write Box P·2 care ...~nt
tlon S.noho. Soncl Rooumo With Ploount Roglll~!'-200 Moln St,
Wort Ellpa~onc., Educotlan Paint PLAaunt, wv 25550.
And Covor Lattor To. S..rch
Convnntoo, P.O. Bax ;&gt;17, Someone to haul brush away,
304.e75-7791.
Athono, Ohio 45701
SPEECH LANGUAGE
Need babyaltter In my home.
PATHOLOGISTS
Mon-Frl. After 6pm call 614-446- Join NavoCoro, Tho Nlllon'o
2215.
Lodlng Provldor Of Rohab Sor·
vlcu -To Long Term Care
NHd eomeone to disk &amp; eow a Facllltloo,
And Enjoy Top Salary,
yard In Patriot aru. 614-379-

2984.

NEW LISTING IN CITY SCHOOlS- Tree shaded
lot provtdes good pnvacy on th1s briCk ranch wrth
3 bedrooms Includes ltvtng room, I bath. lull basement Bnck patto to entoy, grape arbor and
more Pnced at $49,000 Call Sonny Garnes lor
more 1nlormatton
~703

Match point
madness

Q I L UD I

I=:·==·=·==·==·

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

By Phillip Alder

11 Help Wanted
11 Help wanted
EARN MONEY Roodlng boobl _ _ _....:;._ _ _ __

KLL'!_I1 INC.
CINCINNATI, ON
TERMINAL
will bo In
HUNTINGTON, WV

11

manage or

usual at this t1me You'll know what you

GEMINI (M•y 21..June 20) You could be
such leel1ngs Lady Luck ts looking lor a rather lucky today regarding partnerships If someone with a good track rew1ndow of opportuhtty she can open for
cord lnvttes you tn on a deal, give It seriyou
ous conslderatton

RQOFING

o20 Years Experience
•'Quality Homes end
Custom Remodeling

available. Uom'e Smorg..bord,

th1s

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Enterprises or

.FREE
TROMM
BUILDERS
ESTIMATES

Accoptlng
oppllcotlona
ooob, waHr-o, one!

c/o

zodrac s1gn

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATII
AVON • All erMa, C.ll Marilyn
w-.,
-..a-2845.

Astra-Graph,

21, 1991

WOlD

TIIAT DAILT
PUIZLII

Financial

WE DO

Help Wanted

to

target

Employment Serv1ces
11

Graph predtcltons today Matl $1 25
plus a tong, sell-addressed stamped

and expectatiOns are runnmg a little
h rgh at th1s trme, there IS JUStiflcatron for

snap decrsrons mrght not be your best
However, when you take trme to revrew
matters, your Judgment Will be on

been

Astro--

Nothtng wtll be gamed by trymg to put
the pedal to the metal
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) 11 your hopes

related sources today One of the bulle- GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You could be
ltns could contain tnlormatton about an rmpulsrve thrnker today . and your
somethmg

MaJOr
rn the

your ace rn the hole today Let rmportant matters proceed at thetr own pace

der less tha n optrmum c ondrtlons today It you analyze 11 from every angle,
you II know how to make 11 work to your
advantage

the rec1p1ent of good news from two un -

won't

at the helm today
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Ttmtng ts

that c oul d dr sturb you

rf you get to know one

ate the greatest rewards You
have to ask lor compensatron
c hanges are ahead for Cancer
comrng year Send for Cancer' s

• Luck endorses your efforts when you're

to a select group such as the boss or TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May 20) You mtght
mtluentral contacts Forturtous thmgs have to conduct a busrness matter un another better
LIBRA (s.pl. 23-0ct. 23) You may be

day, lhts ts the prtnctple that will gener-

dtrecl could be slated lor success Lady

types of thtngs you II handle better than
stanttal gams are ltkely
VIRGO (Auv. 23-Sopt. 22) II you're en- usual It s th e everyday tnvral matters
tertarmng at your place today, restrrct 11

terms or bemg of servrce to others to~

newspaper P 0 Bo• 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101 -3428 Be sure to slate your

LEO (July 23·Auv. 22) 11you attempt to
do too many thtngs today success may ARIES (March 21 ·Aprtl19) Don 't be tnbe demed you However , rf you focus
sotely on your matenal Interests, sub ~

tn the ofltng
CANCER (June 21..July 22) Thtnk In

envelop e

Obtec trves are ac hr evable today , but
you r suc c es s mrght n o t come on your
rrrs t try If yo u fall short of the mark . r e gro up and grve rt another g o

ac srgn

could happen -

Your mat e nal prospects look very en~
c ouragrng for the year ahead, especrally
wher e your career rs concerned A
rarse. as well as specaal perks , could be

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Stnve

tion that seeks you out rather lhan one

long

July 22, 1991

looked, but not lorgotten.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) Far
removed from where you presently are
ts something fortuitous that ts stirring
on your behalf. lnlormatlon pertaining
to these developments might start to
tnckle to you etther today or tomorrow
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..J•n. 11) Joint
ventures are usually predicated upon
some type of equal contnbutlon. However, you may be Invited to parttctpate
tn something promising where your In·
put would be mtmmal.
AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-Feb. 18) It's always best to try to think lor yourself, but
today, II you feel you'd like to have another do your thinking lor you, go to a
lnend who Is both lucky and wtse
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You're
ltkely to be a btt more ambttlous than

July 21 1 1991

J67-042J

\,

II

'

..

�I' f

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel
45

Furnished
Rooms

Apartment av. llabll for 2 or 3
construcllon workers 304-882-

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant,

54 Miscellaneous

HAPNEY &amp; SON
CONTRACTING CO.

Merchandise
Bhama Bl1at, tun eruiH.tlotel

2566.

pickege, Florida to Baham11,
$211. per couple, 5 d.ye-4

Rooms tor rent- Wllk or monlh.

nlghla. Oualhy hotel, llmlted
t upply, good lor 1 yr. 404·1126-

Starting at $1201mo. Gallla Hotel.
614o.446·9580.
SIHplng rooma with cooking.
Also traller ap.ce. All hook-ups.
Call attar 2:00 p.m., 304·T'1'35651, Maaon WV.

46 Space for Rent
Country Mobile Home Ptrk,
Route 33, North or Pomero~.
Lois, rentala, partJ:, u iH. Call

614·gg2.JII79.

lot, Holloway StrNI,
Henderson, $60. month, 304·

Tr1iler

675·7332.

47 wanted to Rent
Young f1mlly, mother and flvt
children, urgently naed hou•
lng. Rant must be conaarvatlvt.
Would cons ider sharing houH
wllh an elder1y woman, parhlpa
someone who nMds aome II·
shltanca. yard work, etc. Have
no phone call my brother at 1·

aoo-833·1302.

Merchandise

3751.

Extensive Avon Cape Cod Col·
lectlon, c.n 814""'46-1870.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

811111, ~11om DH9 l Build,

Ccnc,.tt Caiel.,
Rtpllctnwnt Windows.

From FOtlllng 1o Rodlng I
EvttYINng tiBBIIHil

AI. 7.

Frtt Ell~lnlurtd
(614)446-7332

Llko
Now,
614-4411-4705.

20

Ouar1

Reconditioned W1Shlra, Dryers.
Guerttntted prompt atrvlce tor

it's your turn to drivel"

all
makao,
models. Tilt Washer 54 Miscellaneous
Dryor
Shop~.
·- a14-446·2944.
Me h dl
rc an S8
Moving Sale: Washer &amp; Dryer Buth Hog Flail mow"!r 50'' pull·
No Boa &amp; box Springs. 614-441· behind, $1400 now. Now $550
614·1185-4369.
' Wlzord ~ mowor, 8 hpl 30"
1210.
cut, 3
' tltc tlart. &gt;275.
Wllttl Chairs, Ukt Now $100 Two 26 Inch 10 SPMCI Bicycles. 304-675- 61 after 6:00.
$25.00 Etch. 614-4411-21111.
Each. 514·245-5152.
'
Building
Supplies

245-5121.

entflnct,

Pt. Plaaunt, WV,

61 Farm Equipment

AKC
Atgletared
Miniature
Schnauur, Very Small. 614-441-

Jim'• F1rm Equiprnenl, SA. 35,

erected.

56

p etS fOr S ale

Groom end Supply Sho~Ptt
Grooming. All broods, s/;los.
lomt Pol Food O.alor. Julio
Wtbb. Call 514-446~231, 1·80().

3G2.0231.

$3849.00

Precl1lon Post Bulldel"l 014·992·

Wide selection new a. uMd farm
trtc:torl a Implements. Buy,
Hll, trltda , 8:00.5:00 WHkdaya,
SOL 1111Noon.

;;::;==-:::----::-=--=-1
Doberman Pinscher Pups, AKC

Canning

Reglltared black/tan male, also
extra large doghouse for $30.00,

picked. $6 buahll. Baughman
farm. 7 112 miles aouth ol G1l·

614·1112·3004.
n....
-v end Cat

llpolls, St. Rl. 1. 614·258-6535.

grooming
all
brooda, tpoclallzed
In Pi&gt;odlo
grooming, 12 yro txptrltnct,
304-875-6332.
DSiragonwyndd Heal nory Ptrolan,
amest an
malayan kittens.
814-446-3844 aHor 7 p.m.

3541.

lege, must sell, 304-895"-3610.

formula kills qulckar, lasts
longer. For doas and eats!! Con·
talns no alcohol. R&amp;G FEED &amp;

$150. 614-643-2a24.

Farm Supplies

3010 John Dttrt Dl011l, $4,a50,
4010 John Dttrt Dl011l, $4,a50;

Cub Low Boy, Plow, Disc, Blade,

Mower,

61 Fann Equipment
International Model-720. Forage
chopper, 2·row, com head and
grass plu also 18-foot 11ock
frallor exc cond, 614-992-5114,

SUPPLY 614·992·2164.
Lhaoa Apoo pupo t... salt and 1970 ChiYY 1-Ton, 12-toot 11111
also 22().1 BBotr, 614-742·1103. flat boa, oxc cond, 614-992·5114.

S2,315;

Livestock
19!11 Stock Traitor, 12 h. $1795;
Big 5 Yttr Old AOHA Golding;
Blny Royol Show Saddle, Call

il, C. Metal Sales, Inc.

C1111nell&gt;urg. Inc. 47619
Spwcializing in Poio, · ~
Buldinga.
Designed to m1111 your I
· nHdl. Any tile. .
CHOiCE OF 10 COLORS ·
FREE ESTIMATE on -

·1

even

thouundl of
dollars.

Side by side rtlrlgorotor $200.
El.c range $100. Bathroom alnk
$25. 304~75·1473 or 575·2570.

mss

.-tl. $4110. 814-441·1456.

'I

Local lain RlprnMitaliYe.

DONNA CRISENBER'Y.
E.S.R .. Box 186 .·~
Gtllipolla; Ohio 4&amp;&amp;n •

PH. 614-256-6511

table and chalra, dishes, etc. lntorestad ? 304-875-1517.

Boaulllul SOlid Otk Dining
Room Sullo, 1 Yoar Old, 814-446'
8000.

992-22S9
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

r

'

Washers, dryers, refrlprators,
nng••· Skaggs Appllancta,
Upper River Rd. Buldt Stone

Whirlpool Dryer, Good Condl·
tlon; S.o,. Coldopol Air Can·
dl11o1Wr, 11,000 BTU. 614-44114410.

53

OWNER WANTS TO SELL! NO REASONABLE OFFER WILL BE
REFUSED! Take advantage of this! Areally n1ce large home
with a garage apartment for rental. Rental s are in constant
demand' II you purchase lh1s at this low price you'll make
back your money PLUS MORE' Th e mam house 1s nice and
roomy and'" EXCELLENT condittan 1 W1th your add1!1onal in·
come you'll be living for FREE! Owner has reduced to
$20.000 Will

REDUCED TO SELL! I story frame
1
acres, carport, garage, ut:lity and storage build:ng I to
store and post off:ce. Home has 5 room s, 3 bedroom s, 11h
bath. Includ es heat pump and appliances. Reduced lo
$39,500.

245-5152.
Antiquo Furniture Rapalrtd;
Lampo Rewired. (25 Yurs Ex·
porlonco) W. Wllho, 614·245-

NEW LISTING- .62 acre of va cant ground located near Har ·
r:sonville ASKING $3 500

Top, And Candle Holdare. 614-

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
18ft 2-Axel Trallor, $500, 111631n·
·tomatlonol Dump Truck, $400,
Ferm All Cub wiatlechmenle,

f1500, 814-Wol-7410.
21 FNtllholvlng, Baked Enamel
Sllelvte. Ptcl llilordo, Excallonl
Condlllonl $200. 814-388-862o.
Alful Trike, lllaml Sun, All now
parte, f12S, 114-1112~52.
All Condlllonir, $150; Eloct~c
81-. f!OO; 1Win Bod, $150;
Clteil ~ DNioor, S1oo;
Couch. 114-441-3224•
~ern~n XL c.voe loW, Wllh •
~u,..:~., .~:!~~~~
251-1315.
, .
WhN h
C::;;.- ':i!ZM-I98!1~ •1r,

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENT!
When you could be payin g lor this remodeled
home. liv1ng room, bath, forced air, gas heat,
newer deck, nestled among shade trees on approx I acre lot.
#2920

;;;;;

. 0 J I J 5 It J #Pi 5)!) I J I] !I iJ$)) 5 l ) -

79

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Home
Improvements

Compltlo Mobile Home Sot·Upt,
Ropan; Commarlcal, Ruldantlal lmprovomonto. Including:
Plumbing, Electrical. lneurance
Clalmt Aecopttd. 614·258·1811.
Cu~lt
Homo lmprovtmtnto:
YNro Eaporlonco On Older I
Newer Homoo. Room Addhlono,
Foundation Wotk, Rooll~,1
Wlndowo &amp; Siding. F- IEj.
tlmatHI AefertncM, No Job To ·
Big Or Smanl 114-441-0225.
JET

6,
16ft.
Refrigerator,
Pull Typo Stove,
Camj&gt;orGat
SIHpo
Fur·

naco, 614-379-2853.
Water Hook-up, Clean,
$1,100.
1971 Holldoy camper, 15 ft
sleeps 4, CIHn, porta pot, store
and rolrlgorotor, 304·57J-2594.
19n 1Vh Ford Motor Homt,
42,000 Milot. FullY StU Con·

talnld. Roof, Air, (xtrl Slor1ge
Area On lop And In Btck PIUI

Aarotlon Maloro, ropolrod. New
&amp; r.tJulh molort In etock RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. \ . 53l'M28.
Ron't TV S.rvtco, epeclellllng
In Zinlth oleO otnlclng mot!
otlltr bronda. IIOIIN ct[l, alto
tome appilenco ,.,.,,._ WV
304-11W3118 Ohio 114-441-2454.
Sopite Tonk Puff'llllna HO._Gallle
Co. RON EVANS ENTERP"ISES, '

Hllch. Excellent Condition!
614·388-gcll1, 614·368a23o.
1964 Nomod Compor, 814·949-

.lockaon, OH 1-aoo.a:IH521.

2189 evenings 1fttr 4:00pm.

446~294 .

1988-26ft Tioga Motor Home on
a Ford chassis, 5100 actual

Will do remodeling, roofing,
building. ti'M trimming and
r.moval, houN painting. For
free HtlmatN, call George at 1·

$5,500.

mll~ _generator

1
614·Wl·3102.

and all ex1rn,

21 '-Travtl Word, chevy engine,
ACA low mllttil auto, PS PB
fltGIO, C8, 114-t 2· 38i't.

I

I

Davit
a.w.v.. Service, ·
1
pilot, pickup, and dallvory. 114- ·

Gtorvn Crook Rd. Pano, oup-

814-1192-1752.

82

YOUR ATTENTION PLEASE! - Here is an exquisde horse
farm and a stately Colonial style home Th1shomeoffersover
3,000 sq. ft. of living space, wdh l1ving room, fam1ly room,
dining room, kitchen, office or den, 4 bedrooms, 3'h baths,
32x40 stainless steel pool, 2 patios, two car garage and a
large stocked pond. The 40x60 stables have six bo x stalls
and a tack room. Other buildings include a 40x60 pole barn
and other sheds. All th1s and much more are here among the
102 acres m/1 of beautiful rolling hills. Pnced at only
$157,900 by appointment only.
#361

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
C.rtlf't Plumbing

Merrill Carter
379-2184

446-4255

Jeannie Fron(e Tommie DeWitt
446-8006
441-0703

[H

Dan Corter
446-8434

Shirley Boster
446-1260

. 19111 Buick LaSabro Umllod. Air,
Till, CruiN, Small V-6, Now
Tlrn. S1,500, a.B.O. 614-446- 15112.
19111 Monlt Corio, 304-t75-15011.
- 1982 Dtda N Regency,
Brougham, 4-dr Hdan, every

- optloil, Ilk• new, new drw, 350,

. v.a, $2100, 814-41!12-8719.

1883 Dodot 800 Interior

and Hooting
Galllpollt, Ohio
814-1411-3681

Fourth 1nd Prne

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

AHidantlal
or
commercial
wlrlng, new 11rvlce or repairs.
Mattar UcenNd eltctrtclan.

Ridenour Eltclrlcol, 304-175·
1781.

72 Trucks for Sale

NEW LISTING - Tuppers Plains- APPLE PIE ORDER' Do
abs!lutely noth:ng but move '"and en1oy th1s 3 bedroom
ranch w1th huge fam1ly room, located on two beautiful lots of
approx. one acre Wilh the satellite dish you can relax in
lroot of the TV or s1t outside on the covered patiO. Accented
w:th sol:d oak tr:m and sta:rway . The inter:or of this home
shows the care of the owner s Be sure to make an appOint·
menml to see til is one 1 ASKING $'48,000.
POMEROY - 2 story home w:th 5 lots and I car garage
Home has 2·3 bedrooms, hardwood floor s and a 111ep1ace
ONLY $14,500.
RAINBOW RIDGE - 16.82+ acres w1lh mob1le home, furm·
lure, shed, woodburner. Ready lor immediate possess:on
ASKING $16,000.
WE NEED LISTINGS!! BUSINESS IS GOOD AND PROPERTY
IS IN DEMAND! IF YOU HAVE EVER CONSIDERED SEL·
LING, WHY NOT MAKE NOWTHETIMETO DO ITT GIVE USA
CAll AND WE'll TELL YOU HOW EASY .tT IS. WE DO All
THE WORK! YOU'LL RECEIVE THE BENEFITS OF DEALING ·
WITH AN EXPERIENCED GROUP IN REALTY SALES! GIVE
US ACAll!

SPACE fOR SALE!!!
Approx. 36 acres. Recently reseeded, fen ced,
pond. Mator:ty of acreage is tillable and part1ally
, wooded . Call for price and location!
82892
ACREAGE - 35 WEST AREA
Ideal development property. Ovr 100 acres. Land
lays well. part1ally wooded . Call for complete l1st·
ing!
#2882

:1994 Buick Skyhawk Stttlon
·wagon, PI, PS, air cond, $1,100.
. ·30(-875-6831.
· ·1984 Lincoln Mark VII, all op. ·tlonth high mllaago, vary good
· : cond Ion, m~l IH to ap.proclato. Price rtducad to

GETAWAY RETREAT - Owner financing wijh down pay·
men!, approx. 7 miles from Gallipolis. Ideal location. Excel·
lent condition, overlooks Blue Lake and Raccoon Creek. 23
ft. travel trailer, sundeck, rural water, sept1c system, and
electric fishing, boating, hunting or just relaxing.
11514
VACANT LOT - .92 ACRE - Lnro''"' 1 short distance off
State Highway 55~MAKE OFFE~.t Road. Great place
for a new home or ........ nome. Price rsduced to $1990.00.

11692

REIIUCIE~ - $58,900 only
covers
pay·
men!, clo~ng costs, pomls and prepa:ds. Cash requ:red &amp;1n·
teresI rates subtec! to changes due to market condrt10ns. 30
yrs. , 9\\% fixed rate. Monthy payments of $500 55 pnnc1pal
&amp; Interest. Taxes &amp; msuran ce and monthly M.I.P. w:ll be
added lo payment. Lovely well maintained 3 bedroom hom e
Large lam1ly room, sunn:ng and covered deck Must see
Green Elementary.
#344

IN CITY - Live 1n one and rent other. modern 4 bedroom
home plu s garage apt N: ce garden area. Reduced to
$41,000.
#331

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

RIO GRANDE AREA - Is th :s n1ce 28x60 Br:dgeport 6 yr old
v:nyl sided home w:th 3 bedroom s,2 baths, fam1ly room, d:n·
ing area, elect. he2t on .337 of an acre m/ 1. Asking only
$41,000.
#346
VACANT LAND - Rio Grande area. Var:ou s sizes ranging
from 20 acres to 100 acres m/1 w1th road frontage on Tyn
Rhos Road . Call for details.
#316

UNDER $5,000
1972 Schull mobile home With expando. 3 bed·
rooms, electric heat. plumbing has been replaced .
Tie downs, 2 porches and underpmnmg mcluded.
Situated on rented lot. Owner anxious to sell! Call
at once'
#2910

Patti Hawk ·
446-1967 :

0·

ICDTII~I T\

•

Power wlndowellocka, 2.8 liter

V-8 onglno, good cond. 304-875'
1510.
1988 Pontltc GTA, Trant Am,
Mint Condlllon. B~ght Rod,
loaded, Must Sttl 81(-146-1751,
814-448-7804.
'198!1 Buick century, Lotdoa,
·.a ..nl $8,000. 814-141·1500, 614·

.
Located 1n Huntington Township. 12 acres m/1. •
$7.000. 4 acres m/1. $3,700.
#000~ ,

150 ACRE CATTLE FARM

7 room hou se, dr:lled well, 3 goiXI barns, some
t1mber and lots of grass. Pr1ce has been reduced
to $58,000. Only under stress would a seller be
selling at th1s pr1ce. Let us show you th1s one.
#2908

-

I

1f/tJ1ti

1&lt;ettU,, 'J.e.

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

LOCATED ON RT. 218 - Is lh:s 3 bedroom, 1 bath, lam:ly
room, dinmg room, plus lull basement w1th boo room s, beth,
k:tchen and family room For only $52,500
#360

446-1066

Allen C. Wood. Reeltor/Broker- 446·4623
Ken Mortgan, Realtor-446-0971
Mole Canterbury, Realtor-446·3408
Jaanatlll Moore. Realtor-268-1746

ST. RT. 588. 200FT. OF ROAD FRONTAGE - 1 acre of nice
FLAT ground. Just like new 2 bedroom mobile home with ex ·
panda, living room, lovely dmmg room w/ wood floors and
bow w:ndow. Large 2 car detached garage Also an extra mobile home pad and hookup with separate drive. Pride in tlle:r
home is reflected here. City schools.
#347
CROWN CITY AREA IS this 2 bdrm home w1th living room,
d1ning room, kitchen, bath, above ground pool on over l'o\
acres Only $27,500. Call today lor your appointment.
#358
NEW LISTING- 1987 14 x65 Clay ton Newport mobde home
2 bedroom s, t bath. total elecl. In cliy schools d:slr:cl For
only $21.000
#356

1177 Doclgl Van, 4 rww tires,
now banory, body aood, motor

nNdt Worll, $4011. 304-8711-5189
anor 5:00.
1178 Good Extenalon Dodge

Von. $1,vt5. 614-245-5182.
1982 CJ7 LaNdo, 4 opted, llahl
ber, honltop, chromo ~molj!n·
. P200. 814-44&amp;.a137.
led g-, oxtru, 304-882·3;nrr.
-:1988 Fcwd Exp, tun roof, AIC, 5 11183 Font Canvartlon van, 304·•pttd, $2,700. 304-937·203t
175-11843.
. 1V88 Morcwy Lynx, 4-cyl, 4-lpd, c,,:.:81:o=F:;.ot::.rd:-::Ec-conotl
--:-ne
- ean=--vt-r·
· AC, AMIFM ct,_..lt, bltck lion Yan...~y oqulpptd, 16,1100.
· wlrod Interior, oxc ohapo, runt 304~82·.- .
. -·· $2000814-949·2388.
: 1981 Muetong GT, 302, 5 spttd, _74,.,...,.,..-Mo.,.....,to,..rcy-:,c_le_,s,.,.._
.Excti!Ont
Coildlllon, Good Goa "'
F
Mileage. Mult Selll 014.388- 1Q88-Honds our Tn•·2SO, exc.
·110110.
cond., $1800,814-843-5211.
1188 Dtdamobllt Cutlau Honda 460 Extro clan, 3,000
·Ciorra,V-6 ong, A-1 condition, mllu. $500.814-245-9463.
$3100, 814-1192'3194.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
1t87 Chavy. cavalier Z-24,
for sale
.82,000 Milot. 5 Spttd. Excallont
.Candhlon. 814-2118·1414.
1a Fool V-Hull1.'10 HP, Mtrcury,
1988 CtMvrolet Berlftl, must Runa Ooocl, 8101, Tube, AccnMil, •1.000 mUtt, Air cond, oorlot. $2,000. 814·2511-64'10.

16 ACRES MORE/LESS

CLOSE TO CITY
Ra1sed ranch on.large lot. 3 bedroom s, llvmg and
d:n:ng rooms. Nice carpetin g, has been extens:· ·
vely remodeled . Large shaded deck'
#2921

Ex·

-.terlp.m.

MAKE AN APPOINTMENT IMMEDIATELY! ·
To v:ew th1s 6 acre min1-larm. Remodeled 3 bed·.
room vinyl sided ranch style home with garage, in·
ground pool, large barn and numerous outbu:ld· ·
1ngs. Several feet ol road lronlage. Beautifully .
ma:ntained
#2907

SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME
Very attract:ve 3 bedroom home. Large · llvmg
room, family room, dinmg room and kitchen re·
cently remodeled. 2 full baths. 2 car garage. Over
2 acres. Situated at Buhi-Morton Road just oH SR
35. Call today' Immediate possessiOn. #2914

1988 GMC auto Ps.PB AC
cruloo, tilt Loto oltxtrao. 'tinted
wlndowo, dlottl. 114-441-8044.
1981 Toyota Pick-up, Automatic,
'-- IIIINgo, Nloa Shapo,
$4,6011· Now Honda Ganorotor,
1,000: MOO. 814-441-8111.
1IIGO Font F·150 4x4 liLT Larfal,
air, duel 1111 tank. pe pw, Db,
12,000 ml, f11,500.814~!12-S225.

. lorlot, Eiccollonl eo;;dhlon. 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
_ Nttda EngiM. 814·25&amp;-1211 lf·

f01ta 1 H('U\1',1

738 Second Ave.

Is the ask1ng pnce
i
bil home. Acre lawn along SR 141, Cen1lenarv
to1ay for a showm g! Won't last long.

~~truu•Ll - Spacious, attractive home w1th
3 bedroom. baths. lam1ly room, l1v1ng and din1ng room.
breakfast area, heat pumg central a11 w/e lectr~ c or propane
gas lurnace backup. 190 sq. ft. M/ LI1V1ng area. Part:al ba sement . B1g home and 20 ac . m/ 1. Allordabl e
#329

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

446-6624

ROOMY &amp; All BRICK
Attractive 3 bedroom ranch home with 3 baths,
family room, lormal dmingroom, spacious kitchen
wilh solid oak cabinets, 2 car garage plus add!·
tional detached garage. Full basement, heal
pump/cent. a:r. Alllhis and mores1tuated on over
49 acres. Call today!
#2911 ·
PRICE REDUCED!-MULTI PURPOSE!
Excellent locat1on, resident:al or commerc:al
property. 35 West area. Vinyl si:Jed 3 bedroom
ranch . Over 1 acre lot and approx. 1.100 sq. ft.
commerCial building.
#2909

Sam Hoffman
379-2449

LOCATION, VALUE, REDUCED PRICE , SPACE - Everything
1s here . 17 acre, m/ 1. Kyger Creek school distri ct, paved road,
J.4 bedrooms, 21o\ baths. lam1ly room with l11eplace and
much more. Call lor details.
#315

good conc1,

eon::r; ,roo.

FARM
49 acres of land including two developed home
s1tes. One 1979 mobile home 14'x70 purchased ·
by present owners. the other home site has elec· ·
tr~c, runnmg water and aerob:c septic system all
'" place. Farm consists of approx. 17 tillable
acres, 15 pasture acres, 17 acres of woodland, tobacco base and stocked pond lor recreation. Lei
us show you th1s one.
#2903

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS
.
Gorgeous brick home. Just as soon as you take ·
ooe look you'll be sold. 3 bedrooms, formal dining
and livmg rooms, 3 baths, family room, fully
equipped kitchen, 2 car garage and separate
24'x36' garage, pond, private setting. Exception·
ally nice home with a lot of amenities plus over 4 .
acres. C1ty schools.
#2857

"

'

.

614.. 411-111V2.

10... 2t ft. Pontoon Boat, 75
Mercury HP motor and trailer,

304-875-1336.

1988 Bahl, Mint eond, w/350
Chevy motor, $13,750.00. Steve

rev

i'138 after S:OOP .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri1bt

BEAT THE RENT RACE!!!
W1th this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remo1eled, vmyf
s idm~. stora~e bUIIdm~. 1\\ acres plus excellent
garden area. Tobacco allotment Raccoon Town·
sn:p. Unbeatable price. $29,000. Call today.
:
#2895 .
WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR
AT THIS PRICE $32,900
3 bedroom ranch home with livmg room, eal·in
kitchen, utility, and bath. Nice fenced-in lawn
and attached carport Within minutes of Holzer .
Hosp1tal. Call today!
112875

Sid B011t, 15' Sea Star 70
H.P. Motor, Nice Trailer, $1,500.

and Peggy Davit, 6086 Radfont
Ad, Athena, OH, 614-592-4241 or
·1118!1 Chevy catobrlly, 4 clr, dtrk 614·gg2·2529 .
1llut
- r Interior, V.a, Connolly IT Slalom graphllt tkl
1111, P , 1/J, AM.f'll tlt&lt;IO ca• w/nyton cOYer. 2•p precilion
:..ne, 37,300 rnU•, IXCIII1nt turbo SS propJnawl. 304-8J5.

.-.litton. 814-441-4719.

\~

~ 312. To ~A CAr]
c(.J;

t

GENTLEMAN'S FARM- Elegant country hvingon 131 acres
m/1 With a lovely cedar 4 bedroom home. Over 2.000 SQuare
feet of livmg space :ncludes 4 bedrooms, lireplace, lormal
din:ng, equipped kitchen and much more Land :s level to
.roll1ng and 1ncludes a beaut1lul pond, a 2 car garage and a
barn. You will love :t. Call lor an appointment $110,000.
Nl21

1m

.446·7732.

HAVE YOU BEEN OVERLOOKING
. THIS ONE?
Then call today to see this extremely mce 3 bed· ·:.
room, 2 bath ranch, lu ll basement family room, .
electriC heal pump. Approx. I 'acre lawn . And so .
much more. Call today to see this one! #2905

THE REDMAN
Located on SR 35 near Rio Grande. Business only
ACREAGE
.
includes complete inventory, pool tables, juke
REDUCED!
box, equipment, and othr business chattels Lea se
13+ acres, Green Township. Listed at $10,900.00.
HENRY E. ClElAND ....................................... 992·6191
$9;000
includes a 2 bedroom apartment to assist wrth
Lois of development around the area. Some land
TRACY
BRINAGER
..........................................
949:2439
Approx.
4.5
acres
s11uated
at
Rodney
Pike.
Rural
monthly
rent.
Possible
owner
linancmg.
C
all
now
is wooded. Small stream running across property
1
JEAN TRUSSELL... .......................................... 949·2660
water available. Anice·level piece of land. Call to:
tor an appo1ntment at this super opportunity.
and has a small pond. Homesite IS gradea off. Has
~·a ~to _.10-tanllo,
JO Hlll ........................................................ 985·4A66
day.
#2874
#2899
electr:c and rural water available. Call us
! •
~ ·~~~~o.Joc~l. ~-o-F-FI-cE_._
..._..._..._..._.•._.. _..._..._..._..._..._..._..._.. _.. ,...._..._..._..._
.9_92--2·2-59~: . . . . . . . . .~. . . .- .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~

·=

Durallner 8'-Truck Bed liner

Good Condlllon, $100 614-IISS:
4392 Of 514.gg2·2164. '

81

Sc::otty'1 UHd C.ra Hew Haven,

1!1711 Font 4 wh dr.:..~· $500 "'
:1m Oklo Cutillo Suprtmt - ollor. 814.:J&amp;7..rwo.
_cour. Solo or lrada. 614-1411- 1V80 Cllovy, 305 Auto, Two
341 .
Tone, Now Tlrao &amp; Rlmt, Dual
Exhoull, SltNO, Long Bod, can
.1m Okla 88 Della, v..a engine, 814
446 4482.
·PS, PW, AJC1 good rumlng
· cond, 304475~m.
1960 lnlomallonal Truck. 404
MoiOf, U 2, 171. ltd Whli Log
·1m Otdornobllo Cutttao, Good Bunko. 814-HI·1!122.
814 446 0840,
11 .
814
1982 9-10, 4 Spooa, 4 Cylinder,
_.,
Exctllont Con1m Plymouth Vol1rl, a~nt 8
dillon! 814-4411-'1552.
low mllot, 304-175-5090.
· 11'11-Ford Falrmonl. Ena. over- 1815 Font F-1110 4x4, two tone
houltd lett yoor. $450.110, 814- rod, lotdtdl 11&lt;111 ott Ia tp.
- 643-6241 dayo "' 843-8211 -"'·· 114 448 0315.
tvanlngo.
1V81 Toyota, 1 Ton, Plck.Up, 5
1!1711-Font Folrmonl. Eng. ovt&lt;· 8potd. 13,0011. 114-441-4782.
- lloultd loot yoor. $450.00, 814....~ : •on. 1oac1tc1,
. 943-6241 ...,. Of 843-8211 11000Ford
114-ln· 6 •

1.975 acres m/1 prov:des pr:vacy and seclusiOn .
for lh1s mag01f1cent Quality custom home 3 baths:
living room , family room, formal d1nmg, master ·
bedroom w/ dressing room, walk-in closets, secur·
1ty system and so many more amemt1es too large .
to mention. Located withm the city of Galhpohs. ,
#2904 ;

Jqdg Dewitt - 8Mket

VIEW OF THE RIVER
W1th th1s over 8 acre tract of land . Wooded . Site
cleared for mobile home or house. Rural water
available. Road frontage along SR 7. $8,500.
#2893

NEW LISTING! Scipio Township - Large metal build:ng
and 24.93 acres located in the country ASKING $45,000

Buy ... oolt. Rlvarlne Antlquoo,
1124 E_ Main Stroll, Pomeroy.
, Hou,.: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m2 .!!"nday 1:OQ to 8:00 p.m.
114--·2526.

.

REALTOR '

Antiques
Antiquo DrooHr, With Morbla

11441.

;;;;;

)I k $)

3381.

gout~ekn CJli~~s CRea~ 8state ~ne

APPLIANCES

R"oute 141 In Centenary.

' ' ~ ),

NEW! - NEW! - NEW!
This modular ~ only 9 months old and srtualed on
over III acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, livmg
room, study, formal din1ng, family room, study
w/shelving, attached 28'x30' garage. Electric
heat pump. Make an appointment today to v1ew
this beautiful home with every extra poss1ble. Immediate possession! Rio Grande area! : #2919

7398.

VI'RA FURNITURE
514-4411-:1156
LIVING ROOM: Sola 6 Choir,
$1gg.oo· Rtcllner $149.00;
Swlvtl Rocker, agg.oo; CoHN &amp;
End TabiH, $89.00 S1t.DINING
ROOM: Table With 4 Ptddoa
Chalro, $149.00; Country Pine
Dlnollo With Bench And 3
Choir•:. $299.00; Matching 2
Door ~11ch , 1349; Or $589.00
Sot; Ook Tablok 42x62 Wl1h 6
Bow
Bac
Ch1ira,
$629.00.BEDROOM: Potter Boa·
room SuHo (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
Drawer Cheel, $44.95; Bunk
Bod, $229; Complolo Full Man
Sot, $105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Codar
Bedroom Sullo, $f1gg.OO.OPEN:
Mondey Thru Seturday, Sla.m. to
&amp;p.m., Sunday 12 Noon TIM
6p.m., 4 Mlln Off Routt 7 On

)I j

1"'

Llko Now, $250; 2 Air Conditioners, 8,000 BTU, S150 Eachi
Skaggs Apptloncn, 614-446-

Complete home
Hours: Mon-Sat,
0322, 3 mllu out
Free Delivery.

v.a,

MW

. avenlnge.

Frigidaire Relrlgerator Almond,

Croll Mottl. Call 614-1411-7398.
LAYNE'S

Sundanca, :111~ Milot 5
Air, ss.-. 1986 ~g•
Daytona, 38,000 Mhot, 5 SpooCI,
Air, $4,800. 114-211-27:18.
198!1 lroc Comoro,_ Totally
Loaded,. Excallont Condllonl
41,000 Milto. 304-875-3331.
1985 Coltlo Supromo, 3.0, V-6
~lne, Spoclel Order, Now
Tranamlaalon, And Now Air
Condhlontr. Good Condllonl
$3,300. 114-245-41525.
For Solo: 1984 Plymouth Rtllanl
lllttlon Wogon. Phone: 814-44114868 George E. ca~ ...
!lpotd,

Sttt~ng,

446·1699, 627 3rd. lvo. Gal·
llpolls, OH

USED

i·

1

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appllancts, T.V. sets. Open
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. e14·

GOOD

198!1 Dodgo Colt, 20,000 Milot, 4
~. $2,525; 1tll8 Horl"'!'l
AutomaUc, Air, S2,SOO· 1018

PISMnger olde, $50.00 814·192~
8125 after 5:00.

gor

droo and paint,
64,000 mllot, 11,000. 30~·
llorwo,

Singer touch &amp; aew aewli'lg machine k1 ct~blntl S125. Couch

ond choir $50. O.sk $20. 304675-6822.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Galllpollt. Ntw &amp; Utad
furniture, heaters, Wntam &amp;
Work boolt. 614-448-:1159.
Anllquo china cabinet. buHet,

Autos far Sale

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
73-81 Chevrolet truck hood
$50.00, T.l-81 Chovrolot bedoldt
76

Sl- 8, Low Mlloago,
WV. 304-882·375:1.'14 Font Ron· Shatto,
4x4 U,79S.'II Buick Canlor Soli Cantalntd. 614-2118-890il.
N,885.'a7 Plymouth Turlttmo
225 lb. Ycwbhlro hog, $125. 304- $1,vt5.'63 Ford Rongor Rtcl
662-3793.
$2,100.'88 Dodge O.ytono
Bronco II 4x4
Cow and call lhow hiH•,. for $2,8115.'84
$3,1115.'88 Font Rongor Black
tall, Point Plut, 2415 Jackoon $4,185.'11
Oklo Nlnty El~t
Ava, Point Pluttnl, WY.
Services
$1,8115.'63 S·10 4x4 11,vt5. 83
Corvalr $l,vt5.4 cars under
$1,000. from 1!1711 · 1V81.
Transportal ion
Home
Two 1116V Comoro't F... Sale Or 81
Trade. 814-388-9770.
Improvements
11 Autos tor Sale
2 par old Quarter horat, m1rt,

Reai .Estate General :

LET'S TRADE!
Modern 2 story brick home in Ga llipolis. Will sell
or trade for a mod ern country home with acreage.
Th1s ISa lull 2 story home with 3 or 4 bedroom s, 2
full baths and basement. let's deal your way '

Will

63

'12 Buick. 350

DON1 JUDGE THIS IMIIACUIL~
FROM YOUR
Make an appointment to
4 bedroom, 2
bath home, family room, dishwasher included
wrth the kitchen, cathedral ceiling, utility room.
central air heat pump, 24'x30' garage. within 5
miles of city. Kyger Creek schools. Owner will consider financing to qualified buyer.
#2912

Owner

Flnonco, 814-2116-8522.

p011 bldr.... r\ .ol neck er.."'.~
" . •I
d eaIa. ave huno.- :·~. I

'

HAPPY JACK DROPDEAD
brHd U. each. Going to col· FLEA-TICK MIST: Advanced

L1te Model Long 40 HorH
Pow• DJIIII Tractor 13,850;

alre1dy

&amp; Livestock

n.

amall animals and s uppl

tomatos,

Hall Runner Boona: $12 Bushel.
614-245-9640.
Swtol Com• Sllvor Ouot~, AI·
bon Routh •arm, 3 mllot Nor1h
of Now Havtn on AI_33.

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ava.

Adult pel rabbits , purebrod Rax
and Dwarf, $5. oach. Mlxad

AKC black reglstored Labradcor
Retrieve,... Sholt and wormed .

71

Wott Galllpollt, 614-1411-8777;

ploa, 5 Wttko Old, $125 Each. Point Pltasant, 304-675- 2063
614 '379-2745·
full llno Tropical flshl birds:

Specl1l 24X24X9, 2 car garage,
2·9r7
overhead•, · 1-3
n

call 304-675-1450.

'

3 Miniature Dachshund Pup-

Block, brick, ..war plptt, win·
dowa, lintels, tic. Claude Win·
ttrw, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614·

Housotlold furnishing. 112 mi.

~~=~=====1'=========~
_

8064 or 446·1387.

Chow Chow Pupploo For S a ~, 3
Cramt, 1 Bluo, 1 Black, 1 ~n·
nlmon, Roglstoroa. 514-445- Canning
tomatooo !Of aalo.
8323.
Bring containers, 614-247·2961.

!----------~---------

O.humldlller, Used 1 Yoar, $75.

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uttd

The Protean Staff

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

letters

$47.50 box. 1-ll00.533-3453.

Musical
Instruments
54 Miscellaneous
1 112 year old Kimbell consola
Merchandise
plano, 1111 price $2695.00 Asking
$1800, 614-992-6349.

0152.

"Some deal you got lor us. Here

j3 j)

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-07

Congratulations
Ryan
#1 In the Nation

165 MF Tractor· Wllh Lot do;,
$4,950· 1030 FlfgUton $1,gg5'
Latt Uodtl 135 Ml' $4,550; 900
Ford $2,195; WD 45 AC NIW
Rubber $995; 1gg1 Horoo '
Stock Trailer, 14ft. $1,DHi Owner
Will Finance. 614·288-6522.

AKC Regi stered Golden Ratrlvar
puppie1, $250. each, 614-446-

Nlnttndo eman.alnmant ayetam,
exc cond with e gamet lnclud·
lng power pad and cleaner,

dellverylleHere. Plastic

Llrge 5,000 btu air cond, 304·
773-6403.

61 Farm Equipment

fil

AKC Registered Dalmallan Puppies For Sale. Will be &amp;·weeks
old on July 28th, 1991, 614·992·
)lt67 ask for: Gary or S1ndy
Hysell, SA 124, Rutland, OH.

614-14&amp;-'r.Zgg.
For Solo: Good Utoa Rototlllor
Largo ~ HouH, Now Two 6 $160. 304-8V5-3610.
Panel DOOrs, Pro-hung, Slzo: Pittsburgh P1inl Interior flat wall
32160. 814-146·1272, Evonlnga &amp; paint $10.48 gal, Interior nml·
Wttkondo.
glo11 $13.99 gal, txttrlor lilt
For Solo: Two Air Condlllonort, ~oust poln1 $13.gg, ~415 Jtck·
aon Ave, Point Pleaunt, Pt. Pit.
$175, $125. Coli 814-1411-3714.
304-875-4084.
Hoovy duly F...d bruah hog, a·
Ponabloalgn
lighted changooblo
lat·
llbergi111 plck""P topptr, Olvld ter
$299.
Fru
Yoa1, Racine, 614· 949-2853

Pets for Sale

Poodle pupplto, toyo and tu
cupt, AKC Champion Bloodline,
Coolville 614-M7·3404.
Roglslortd AKC, Poodlo Pupplos. Will Bt Roady To StU: July
AKC Female Collie Pup, 3 29th,
614-388·91111
Montho Old, $150. 69 Blodon Anytlmt. 1991.
Ro1d, Second House Right Off

For Solo, Air Temp Air Can- - - - - - - - - - diUoner, 14,000 BTU, call 6141192-2111.
54 Miscellaneous
For Solo: 1985 Pontloc 6,000;
Merchandise
1!1711 4x4 GMC PU; Longabergor ___;;;;;:,_:.:.::;::,_:::::;;__
Buketa, DlshH, Bt by llama,

56

Pets for Sale

ft j

July 21, 1991

July 21, 1991

AKC Chihuahua pupploo,
roductdl 1 long holr malo $75·
1 ohon coat lomolo, S1oo: 614:
367·7926.

New Homn, Colqliellt R•
Model, Siding Specllllll, Pole

55

Jorricho Ad.

56

wv

)I ,i2 )I

!

2 STORY FRAME DUPLEX - Located in Gallipolis, walkmg
distance to town. 2 apartments - one 5 rooms and I\\ bath,
one 3 rooms and bath. Call lor appointment toda, .
3-4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, Situated on 5.5 acres, w:lhin
view of the Holzer Hospital. 24'x36' barn presently be1nf
ut11ized as a 2 car garage and storage. 2 other outbuildings.
QUALITY HOME wrth many amen1lies, 21ull baths and 2 half
baths, den. formal livmg room and dinmg room, 2 1/BFP. en·
tertammenl kitchen ... QUALITY THROUGHOUT
HOME LOCATED IN TOWN- Wijh living room, dining room,
eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, u111ity room, nice lot. ~I lor
$29,500. MUST SEE!!
GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY - A2 story lrame double
located on Second Avenue. Gallipolis. 4 rooms and bath
downstairs and 4 rooms and bath upstairs. Call today.
PRICE REDUCED!! - Investment property in Vinton, 6 room
house located along Main Sir eel. Rent orlivein - 8UY NOW
for only $12,000.
GREEN ACRES- Two lo1s.llargelevelhomesite. l401t.by
148ft., city water, Green school, good location. Priced right
at $10,000.00.
10 ACRES, Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now for $10,000.
WE HAY£ BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II. Call lor more
information.
68 Aj:R£5 M/l IN OHIO TWP. Frontage on St. Rt. 7 with
some timber. Pr:ced at $10,000.
79 ACRES MORE OR LESS located in Ohio Twp. The property
has some timber. Call for more information.

BY OUR OFFICE FORI ~A~~~~!!~~(i~
BROCHURE OF OUR ,;

NEW liSTING - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large spac:ous
kitchen with island range. Home has had lois of care Look at
i one only $35,000.
#361

24 ACRES with colonial home overlooking Po·
meroy. Executive sl)ie home wrth formal entry, family room,
formal dinin~ room . Basement has ree. room with stone fire·
place. There san in ground pool. Many more amenities. Ask·
mg $145,900.
#294

WHY PAY RENT when you can own this home Only $20,000.
Nice ranch home .sitting on \\ acre m/1. 3 bedrooms, hvmg
room new vinyl siding. 2 storage buidmgs, apple trees,
grapes &amp; raspberries. Call for appointment.
11357

NEW LIMA ROAD- Agent own lid double ltll w~h 3 bedroom
ranch home wrth l•mily room w/fireplace, equipped kitchen
full basement, 2 car attached garaRe. 16x32 in-Rround pool
wrth privacy fence. Asking onl~ $55,000.
noa

�· - .., "1".,.,.,...., ,.. :1

,1

I)

Five ...._...:C:::o:::n:::ti:::n::ue::d:..:f::.ro::m:::...:D...:·l:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Jill...
compliance officer.

and you may win a $5 prize frCIIII the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name, address
and telephone number with your card or letter.
No telephone calb wiD be accepted. AU contest
entries should be turned In to the newspaper
ofllce by 4 p.m. each Wednaday.In case ofa tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Meigs County farm will be featured by the
Meigss Soil and Water Conservatioo District.

service to our existipg customers
Continued from D-1
George E. Woodward, Jr. to winner's list as the reserve champiwell as new customers.
assistant cashier and manager of on heifer calf and frrst-place bredPromoted were:
Jennifer L. Osborne to assistant Jackson Pike Office. He is a Gallia and-owned heifer. Thts blue-nbbon
vice president She is a graduate of Academy High School graduate junior heifer calf captured the wm
Gallia Academy High School and and has attended The Ohio State as a SE SF 4WF 38 Special daugh·
has been with the bank since 1970. University and the University of ter.
Mrs. Osborne's new position is Rio Grande. Mr. Woodward, prior
In the futurity heifer class, RCS
manager for residential real estate.
to his transfer to Jackson Pike, was
Miss
Challen 011, shown by Cindy
Katrinka V. Hart to assistant a loan officer in the main office.
vice president She is a graduate of
E. Richard Mahan to assistant Charlton, Bowling Green, earned
Point Pleasant High School and cashier and manager of secured ·· the blue ribbon. Bred by Robert
came to OVB in 1979. Ms. Hart, commercial lending. He graduated Chapin Sons, Norwalk, the junior
who previ&lt;iusly managed the Jack· from Southwestern High School yearling won as a Ll Challenger
son Pike Office, has been trans- and earned a bachelor of science daughter.
ferred to the Main Office where she degree in business administration
Julte Chapm. Norwalk. and Sara
will become the manager of install- from the University of Redlands,
Sponseller,
Glenmont, made thetr
ment lending.
Calif. Mr. Mahan returned 10 Gallia
Michael D. Francis to assistant County from the West Coast earlier ways to the winner's ctrcle as
champion showmen. Sara won the
vice president. He joined the bank this year.
All promotions are effective junior divtsion whtle Juhe topped
in 1989 and has a bachelor of sci·
the semor divtsion. Wtth the semor
ence degree in economics and tmmediately.
division vtctory, Julie wtll repre·
finance from the University of Rio
According to the Bureau of Labor sent the state of Ohio at the NauonGrande. Mr. Francis will continue
to manage the Loan Adminislr3tion Stattstlcs, 6. 4 percent of men and U al Showmanship Contest to be held
Department while also assuming percent of women held more than one July 18 during the AII-Amencan
Hereford Expo in Twin Falls, Ida.
the additional duties as the bank's job in America in 1989.

PRICES
GOOD
THRU
JULY 27TH

EVERYTHING

TO
BUILD
ANYTHING

SHINGLES

OSB BOARD

OWENS-CORNING

4' X 8' X 7/16"

$18

99
PERSQ.

Good Selection - Colors

$769

STUDS
2" X 4" X 92

518 "

$169

For Rooting &amp; Siding

INSULATION
3112" X 15"

SPF

1 PC.
TUB &amp;SHOWER

$1Q99
88.12
SQ. FT.

KRAFT
FACE

;:

.

;sp;;:;

)

;; ;;

)£$!

;;;;;;;

CLOSET
COMBINATION

$4995

Ohio Lottery

KC tourney
resumes
tonight

as

MYSTERY FARM • Tbis week's mystery
farm, featured by tbe Gallia Soil and Water
Cooservation District, is located somewhere in
GaUia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
pate In the weekly contest may do so by guessing
tbe farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
IUHI off to the Daily Sentinel,111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Obio, 45769, or tbe Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631,

;; I

, \ I

July 21, 1991

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

Page-08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

G ,f

Pick 3:175
Pick 4: 6!!75

Cards : 4-H, A·C
4-D; 9-S
Super Lotto:
5-8-9-12-25-32
Kicker: 197263

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 54

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 22, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

AMulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

Heat wave enters seventh day; relief on way
By KAREN SCHWARTZ
Associated Press Writer
How hot was 11? Workers at a West Vtrginta tce
plant broke a sweat in the freezer.
A stifling heat wave today entered its seventh day
over the eastern half of the nation. Americans sought
relief in ice cream, frre hydrants - and word that a
cold front was on its way.
Temperatures Sunday soared inlo the upper 90s
and triple digits m New England, the middle Atlantic
Coast and the Central Plains. The mercury reached
106 degrees in Salina, Kan., Lincoln, Neb., and Beat·
rice, Neb.
A resptte was expected as early as today as a cool
front from Canada moved south.
"The back of the heat wave is broken," said Walt
Drag, a National Weather Service meteorologtst in

Boston, where Sunday's htgh was 98. He said highs
in northern New England would be m the low 80s
today
Charleston, W.Va., meteorologist Jeff Medlm satd
the system would amve in his area by Thursday, bul
temperatures could start dropping Tuesday.
Lou McGuire, diviston manager of Home C!ly Ice
Co., said workers sweated to keep up wtth demand.
The company has 10 plants in West Virginia and
Ohio.
"My men even work up a sweat m the freezer,"
said McGuire, who manages the company's Milton,
W. Va .. \)lan~ which produces 120 tons of ice a day.
"Busmess is fantastic ," he said. "We're selling
everything we're making."
Popsicle salesman Tom Hartney in Akrpn, Ohio,
satd his business was down. "The hotter it gets, the

worse business ts," he said. "When lhe temperature
gets above 85 or so, well, people just don't come outstde as much."
Jerry Ranke, 72, endured the heat at the zoo in
Columbus, Ohto. "I just had to gel Qut of the
house," he said. "Now, I'm standing here waiting
for the wind to blow.''
The Roxy Deli in New York Cny offered a spectal
on borscht, a cold beet soup. A bowl sold for whatever the temperature was in cents. Borscht normally
sells for $4.95 a bowl.
The temperature reached 102 in New York's Cen·
tra1 Park - the highest temperature recorded there
since a 104 reading exactly 14 years ago.
Air conditioners and fans sent power usage to
record levels in New York City and Phtladelphia.
Restricuons on outdoor water use were m effect m

parts of Ohm and in Balttmore, where the tempera·
ture reached 104, tying a record set in 1930.
In Phtladelphta, crews worked to shut off ftre
hydrants that had been opened by youngsters lookmg
for relief. The hydrants gushed millions of gallons ol
water, causing a dramatic drop in water pressure
"I'm sure there are households 111 the hundrects.
poss1bly the thousands, w1thout water today ," Water
Deparunent spokesman Drew Brown satd.
The heat and sunshme combtncd to produce dan ·
gerous levels of ozone m many areas. The elderly
and people wtth resprratory cllseases were warned 10
stay mdoors
Tennis player Mary Joe Fernandez. 19, playmg m
temperatures in the 90s, was bncny hospttaltzcd wnh
heat exhaustion after losmg to Rosalyn Fatrbank Nideffer in the fmal s Sunday of the Vtrgm1a Slims
Hail of Fame Inv1tauonalm Newport , R I

Gov. Voinovich calls

SEAT EXTRA
URWHITE

WHITE UR ATLAS

W11rm and mu ~~ ~ toni~ht.
Low in mid - 70~. High
Tuesday In m ui .I,IUs

for meeting on drought

WORK CAMP - These 13 Richwood, Ohio
residents performed much-ne~ded repair work
at tbe Meigs United Methodist Parish building
on Condor Street in Pomeroy last week. The

group painted the interior of tbe building and
made major improvements to tbe second-floor
clotbi

COLUMBUS, Ohw (AP) Rain is in the forecast, but state
officials plan to meet thiS week to
assess how a worsening drought is
affecting crops and the availability
of water.
Gov. George Voinovtch satd
Sunday that the State Drought
Assessment Commmee and offi·
cials of the Ohio Department of
Agriculture will meet Tuesday to
outline ways to cope with drought
conditions.
"Thts is a precaunonary move.
State government pas a drou~ht
response flan and- ibis is the frrst
stage o implementing il."
Voinovich said.
Most of Ohio is suffering moderate to severe drought condttions.
Only southwest Ohio is near normal rainfall levels, said Frank Kieltyka, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service m Cleveland.
Northeastern Ohio, mcluding
Cleveland, Aleron, Canton and
Youngstown, are experiencing
extreme drought conditions, he

satd
The northeast needs at least
etght to nine inches of rain, while
central Ohio needs at least seven
mches and the northwestern part of
the state needs at least five inches,
he said.
Some Ohio communittes
already have tmposed water-use
res111c110ns. In Columbus. the city
has restricted law-watering to early
morning hours only. some south·
western Ohio communittes have
asked residents to watch water use,
but no such restrictions are in effect
m the C'Ieveland area.
Voinovich said it is too soon to
call for extreme water conservation
measures, "but it's always a good
idea to conserve any way possible
during prolonged periods of dry
weather.''

Kieltyka said scattered precipi·
tation is expected early this week.
"Right now, we need a whole
lot (of rain) but even a little bit
would be welcome,'' Kielty lea said.
Voinovtch will be briefed by

agriculture offictals on crop dam.
age across the state durmg the
meeting.
''The continuing summer
weather conditions are beginning to
threaten what began as a very
strong growmg season, due in part
to the favorabfe weather condtUons
we enjoyed this spring," said Fred
Dailey. director of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture.
Dry weather has reduced spnng
wheat yields from a projected 54 to
55 bushels per acre to a statewide
average of 50 bushels an acre, srud
Wayne Matihews, U.S. Department
of Agriculture deputy statistician
for Ohio. Hay yields are only about
30 percent of what was expected m
northeastern Ohio, he added.
Drought condiuons now threat·
en to drasucally cut com yields, he
srud.
Agnculture and weather offt·
ctals have said, however that the
drought is not as bad as the 1988
drought because of the rain the
state recetvcd earlier thts year

Union County volunteers make
improvements to church facility President Bush ending one
LUFKIN
TAPE

ICE CHEST
48

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WITH BLUE ICE

2125

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6

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1" X 25'

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WORKSHOP
ORGANIZER

$9.99
524

HEDGE
TRIMMER
16" DOUBLE EDGE

700

3 BONUS TOOLS

$44.99

6124

GAS CAN
2112 GAL RUST-PROOF

$3.88

1226

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
A group of ambitious United
Methodists from Union County
hammered, pamted and polished at
the Metgs Umted Methodist Cooperative Parish late last week, male·
ing many improvements on that
facility.
Men, women and children num·
bering 13 from the Richwood First
Umted Methodtst Church in Richwood, Ohto learned of the Cooper.

ative Parish ftom Jackson Area
Mmistries Director Rev. Robert
Davids9n. After discovering the
parish's mission in Metgs County,
the group decided to devote funds
raised by their church . and manpower from their membership . to
conduct some needed repair work
on the Condor Street property.
According to Rev. Raymond
Gage, pastor of the Richwood Ftrst
U.M.C., the church's youth group
raised nearly $300 two years ago

I

THOMPSON'S
WOOD PROTECTOR
GAL
10801

ELECTRIC
WIRE

SAW HORSE
BRACKET

250'

HING.E TYPE

$33.95

1212 w/grd

CIRCULAR SAW
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5150

SKIL

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VARIABLE SPEED

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4235

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$1.88
1767

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HAYIOS

19" HIP ROOF
TOOL BOX

PLASTIC
SHE'ATING

$18.99

$4.49

HOMAK

819

10'x25' ROLL

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LATEX WALL PAINT

LIGHT BULB'S
GE 4 PACK

BENGAL
ROACH SPRAY

LIQUID NAILS
PANEL ADHESIVE

WATER PROOFER

$12.88

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WHITE

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so lb. 1o.s oz. cart.

6FT. FIBERGLAS
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6006

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'

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) After a grueling nine-day trip, a
weary President Bush headed back
to Washington today facing a quick
turnaround for next week's swnmit
m Moscow and the signing of a
major nuclear-arms treaty.
At a brief airpon depanure cere·
mony, Bush repeated hts pledge to
increase military assistance for
Turkey. In addition. he satd the
United States will provtde $1 mil·
hon to help Turkish villages along
the Iraqi border cope with losses
suffered because of the nood of
Kurdtsh refugees from northern
Iraq.
nals in secured areas and throwmg
Bush also made one last appeal
away confidential police reports m
for
Turkey and Greece to resolve
pubhc trash areas, the newspaper
said.

Misuse of technology puts
Ohio behind in fighting crime
COLUM BUS, OhiO (AP) OhiO AttornciGeneral Lee Fisher
says Ohto ha s fallen behind other
states in computer cnme solvmg
and a statewide law enforcement
network.
''The fact is, Ohto ts very far
behind, and what we need to do ts
play very fast catch-up," Fisher
satd m a story published Sunday in
The Columbus Dispatch.
Fisher said Ohio has high qual•ty law-enforcement offtcers, but
the state has done a poor JOb of
usmg technology to help ftght
cnme.
Fisher said he' does not favor
creating a state poltce force, but
wants to make technology more
available to ihe state's police agenctes and improve cooperation and

lhe now of information. Ohm is
among 13 states without a state
police force to coordinate invesU·
gatwns and information.
One of Ohio's best cnme-ftghtmg tools, the Law Enforcement
Automated Data System, is riddled
with security problems and misuse,
and contains incomplete data, the
newspaper said.
The LEADS computer system,
created in 1969, has 700 terminals
statewide and ts used by more than
I ,200 certtfted operators. It can
provide the names of wanted per·
sons, a list of all stolen cars, drivers
licenses and driving records and
criminal background checks.
The patrol last year found security problems in the system, such as
agencies not keepmg thetr term•-

Charges filed against drivers

LEADS often doesn't provtde
full cnminal backgrounds. Pan or
the problem is that three other
regional cnme computers extst.
EliCh of these systems- in Cincin·
nati, Cleveland and Toledo - con·
tains information not shared with
LEADS
"The pnmary purpose of
LEADS is the se&lt;:unty of the offi·
cer on the street," says a state pro·
motional brochure on the system.
But it doesn't always work.
When Columbus police did an
emergency background check on a
murder suspect, the LEADS system
showed no record of violence.
The. suspect, Charles R. Justice,
36, of Columbus, later was charged
with killing his gtrlfriend, Pamela
KeaiOn, 32, and therr son, Charles
Justice Jr., 3, on July 8.

Charges have been filed against two drivers of vehicles involved
in three accidents investigated by Pomeroy police Friday
Robert Ohlinger, Letart, W. Va. was charged with failure 10
maintain assured clear distance resulting in a three vehicle accident
on West Main Street at2:45 p.m.
Police reported that Ohlinger said his truck slid on the wet pavement into the rear of a car driven by Betty Mayes, Point Pleasant.
Her c~ was pushed into the rear of a car driven by Brenessa
Continued on page 3

The FBI's computer and the
National Crime Information Computer confirmed Justice had a
record. Neither said what 11 was,
but referred officials to an IUinois
law enforcement agency. It took
local officers 24 hours to confmn
Justice had served 10 years in an
Illinois prison for murder.

---Local briefs---..

road trip, prepares for another
thetr 17-year-old dtspute concern·
mg Turkish occupation of part of
Cyprus.
"If the wall in Berlin can fall to
human brotherhood, so can anctent
hatred on Cyprus," Bush said.
In hts departure remarks, Bush
satd hts admmistrauon would con·
tmue the search a solution to the
Cyprus dispute, working with
Turkey. Greece and the Greek and
Turkish Cypriot population in sup·
pon of the negotiating effon led by
the United Nations.
Bush also pledged to "stand
stde by side tn maintaming an
intcmattonal force to preserve sta·
bility on your southeastern fron ·
t1cr." That comment referred to the

allted rapid deployment force Sta·
ttoned on the Iraq 1 border tn
Turkey.
Turkish President Turgut Ozal
thanked Bush for making the twoday vtsit and said tt highlighted the
"determination of our two countries to foUow an ever-closer relationship.··
At his last meeting wllh Ozal
over breakfast. Bush said, " I leave
here very optimtstic about Turkey's
future."

From across the table, Ozal said,
"I am very much sausfted" with
the outcome of the discussions wtth
Bush.
Asked by reponcrs about SecreContinued on page 3

RUBBERMAID

312 6th Street
Point Pleasan(WV
Phone 675-1160

I

for use by a work camp. Only this
year, however, did the work camp
organize and decide to perform the
work at the Pomeroy parish.
In addition to the funds rrused
by the youth of the church, members of the Richwood congregation
conblbuted to a special collection.
All of the money raised by the
church was spent on supplies and
material for the work camp, which
was completed on Saturday.
Continued on page 3

Hours: Monday-Friday, 8 am-5 pm
saturday, 8am-12 noon

VU:W CLASSICS • Tbis 1952 MGTD
Replica, owned by Homer Notter of Gallipolis
and 1981 Corvette belonging to Steven LaFo·
lette, were two of the more popular classic cars
on display during Ibis weekend's "Oldies but

Goodies" car sbow In Pomeroy. Most of the
Pomeroy parking lot was nlled witb classic cars
and local residents eager to catch a glimpse of
one or tbeir favorites.

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