<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11404" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11404?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T01:12:11+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42372">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/579dced9f889037ce86b5a09373fe375.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bdbaef91fcefa167d4dba89ae7af5e85</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35931">
                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER
WltfATULATf

/o't,F£LI.A,Mf

IT W~ LIVIIJb 1a£Tll~
1\lAT '1/A?
"'l~ '\WfU!':!&gt;!

~IS R~AL ~'{!

Sunday

Television
Viewing

AFThfl:WA~

•

FRI.,

JULY 27

EVENING

6:00 C2l 8 1D ()) D 1111 1121 D

1121 New•

NOW Ti4AT WE'VE 141\D LUNCH
TOGETHER, l CAN TELL YOU

IS ... Uf.I ... UH .. MI( NAME 15 ..

Ml( NAME IS PE661( JEAN ...

UH. BROWNIE (j.jARLE5!

WELL. UH ... UH

M'{ NAME

THAT'S
CUTE .. [
LIKE IT ..

' JUST
MA'fBE ILL
JVMP INTO Ti-lE
RI6~T ~ERE

LAKE

I

I
-,.._,,-'TI---1I:.
lr,--.IXODE
I111
.

.

.

.

. •.

r----::--::-::--:--,

6:05 (I) Beve~y Hlllbllloa
6:30 (2) II 1121 NBC Nlghdy Ntwl

I

I I ulsBIJEI ~ I
M

ft Newhllrt C
ID Ill Alit Newt 1;1

Paul D. Schiff
Ohio Division of Wildlift&gt; says residents
should know more about bears ... Page A~ 7

DOWUN

.

ID Zorro

James Sands:

Page B-1

Vinton Brick and Tile Co., made 20,000
bricks per day 86 years ago... Page B-6

By the time I was old
enough to realize my parents
were right, I have kids of my
own who say ...... ,

0

Complete !he

chuc~l.

I!J) 18 lltree'o Company

a

Top Card
ID SporteLook
1D Rln Tin nn K·9 Cop
6:35 (I) Andy GriHith
7:00 (2) 8 PM MegaJin&lt;t
(!) Andy Griffith
ID lnoldt Edition
(lJ Ill MacNeil Lehrer
NeweHour
II) Ill Current Alllllr
iiiJ 1121111 1121 Wheel 01
Fortun&lt;t
I!J) 18 Night Court
1l1l Miami Vice Crockett can't
arrest a serial killer without
blowing his cover. Stereo.
Music Row VIdeo
1D SportoCenhu
Ill! Montyllnt
1lll Scarecrow a Mro. King

ARLO AND JANIS
.--------,

MJ'f oo ooue.T' rliOf

AGODD·LOOKI~' WQMAIJ 1

a

FRANK AND ERNEST
WHAT po

Q

·I (

yov

AL.L

fO~

IT, ll?r

WHO'/ GOING
TO WATCH

THIN~ Of ~

PA~ff'ITAI..

jfff Jell&gt;$?
•

LfAvt?•

0 1-&lt;AV£5"

1 · 1]

(I · - " ' H( ... In&lt;

ALLEY OOP
OH~

OH! I THINK

THAT THING IS

PICI&lt;lt.IG UP ON US!

7:05 (I) JeHeroono
7:30 (l) II Family Feud
(!) Ma)or League Boa-11
(}] Entertainment Tonight
(}] fiJ Mama•o Family
iiiJ 1121111 1121 Jeopardy! 1;1
I!J) 18 M'A'S'H
ID Major League BaeobeM
Ill! Croooflre
7:35 (I) Sanford And Son
8:00 (2) G 1121 Bret Maverick Bret
uses a questionable
Columbian artifact to finance
a con game. (R)
Cil ID fiJ Full Houoe Plans
for an idyllic Hawaiian
vacation go awry. (A) 1;1
(lJ Ill Waahlngton Wee!&lt; In
Review Stereo. D
iiiJ 1121111 ~rime flmo Peto

8111 MOVIE: All 01 Me \PG\
(2.00)

1l1l Murder, She Wrote Birds
01 A Feather

® Toxoe Connection
Ill! PrimtNtwl
1D Bume And Allen Collage
8:05 (I) Goodwill Gamoel;l
8:30 1D 1D fiJ Family Maner.
Rachel and Harriette
accidentally smash up Carl's
patrol car. (A) D
(lJ Wall Slrett WHk With
Loula Rultey- An
investment strategist
discusses the outlook for the
rest of 1990.

Ill Wall Slrett Week With
Loulo Rukeyoer

Q

iiiJ 1121111 Matchmaker A

'

matchmaker embarks on her
personal misston to rid the
world ol lonely people by
starting a v1deo dating
service .
®On Stage
9:00 (2] 8 ll1l Yellow Rooe Roy
risks the ranch when he
offers the oil rights as baiL

·~

(A)

MORK MEEKLE AN
OiJR

WHY CONT 'lW TM:K
iJPA FEW NOTICE:6
Am.JND 1DWN ~

c;a:;; IS LOST. ..

I !XN'r KI-O.V \1/HAT
TOCO.

THA-T V.OULON'T
C:O ANY GOOD..
HE CANT~.

(}] Ill fiJ Perfect Strongtrt
Balk1 refuses to close the
window, in hopes ol a
parrot's return. (A) 1;1
(lJ lite StOIY 01 £nglllh jPt
4 01 9) Trace the Sconish
influence from Northern
Ireland to America. Stereo.
Ill Ev1111lng At Pops
iiiJ 1121 e Newhllrt 1;1
1l1l HHchcock ~reoenta Don't
Sell Yoursell ShOrt Stereo.
Naohvllle Now
Ill! Larry King Llvel
9:30 (}] ID fiJ Juat Tlte Ten 01
Ua Marie feels that her sexy
singing style caused a man ·s
death. CAl D
iiiJ 112118 Wloh You Were
Here Donny discovers
skeletons in the closet when
he traces his roots.
1l1l Ray BrodbufY Tlttatre A

a

IT'S FROM MY

BROTHER BUBBA-HE SHORE WRITES

A REAL PURT)I
LETTER H

IS THAT

SHIF'LESS
SKONK

NO II HE

AIN'T
COMIN' FER

A VISIT II

COMIN' FER
A VISIT?

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

\

maker instantly reveals which s1gns are
romantically perfect tor vou . Mail $2 to
Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper. P.O .

Bo• 91428, Cleveland , OH 44 tO t-342 8.
VIRGO CAUfl. 23-S.pl. 22) This could be
a good weekend to travel. especially it
you have something romantic In mind .
Go someplace tamlllar where you feel
secure and comfortable.

LIBRA IS.pl. 23-0cl. 23) A financial '
condi1ion about which you have been a·
trifle anxious looks like it will take a turn
lor the better today. You may learn not
to worry about things that might never

happen.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) There Is a
probability of a pleasant surprise today
when someone you've always admired

July 21, 18110
In the year ahead you might be ex·
tremely lucky regarding things ol a
worldly or material nature. This could
•
b
year whefe earmngs are
be a ~
conce~~
221 Business trends
LEO ( ~avorable tOt' you today, espeI~Ok very u're all ned wllh someone

but thoughl never noticed you becomes
· extremely attentive_ It's about lime .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don 't
dodge tasks or assignments today just
because they look like they might be
challenging. Your sense of self-esteem

will be enhanced by overcoming
obstacles.
CAPRICORN CDec. 22·...... 11) II you
ara presently unattached and have an
Cl&amp;lly 1 ~ ~~ld entr:reneur. You're on a .~ opportunity to go to a social gathering
who ~~hat could do something dramatk. this evening where you might meet
team h
to look tor romance and someone new, by all means do so. CuKn~w II! de~et The Astro-Graph Match- pid's been invited to the event as well .

23-Auv.

youtlfm

1.

_____..__

GLORY BE I!
THAT IS

A REAL PURTY
LETTER!!

AQUARIUS CJ•n. 20-Fob. tV) That
which will be of real value to you today
cannot be measured In dollars and
cents. The wealth you 'll be seeking will
be round In loving relationships.
PISCES (Feb. 20--ch 20) Although
you won 't intentionally act aggressively
today, there will be something commanding about your mannerism. Others
will find your demeanor worthy of
imitation.
ARIES tMerch 21·April 11) ~rovldlng
for those for whom you reel protective Is
likely to be your primary concern today.
'A sense or responsibility won't be your
motivation, love will.
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) The attrl·
bute that will distinguish you lrom oth·
ers today is the ract you will be a doer as
well as as talker. When you give your
word, something will be done. The recipient can take It to the bank.
GEMINI (Miy 21.June 20) Thlo could be
one of those unusual days when your el·
torts will reap larger returns than nOt'·
mal. ~ursue situations you feel will be
meaningful lOt' you materially.
CANCER (Junt 21.July 22) Your popu·
larlty could be at a high point with people of the opposite gender. If you've
been looking lor a new romance, something exciting might develop today.

cra ving tor silence drives a

man to violence.
10:00 (l) 8 ll1l Midnight Caller
Jack unravels a web of
mystery in the world of art
torgery. (AJ Stereo. C
(}] ()) fiJ 20/20 Wee~ly
News Magazine Stereo. 1;1
(lJ Nowewatch
Ill American Patchworl&lt;
Appalachia's contribution to
the pioneer culture is
ej{amlned .
iiiJ 1121e Room For
Romance A woman finds
separation from her lifelong
love diHicult.
till 18 Now Twilight Zone
111J lito Hitchhiker A
hypocritical mayor is
conlrollted by his own dark
past.
Ill! Evening Newo
1lll 700 Club With Pot

R*"-

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
? •H
Pagoda- River - Notch- Leaven- HANGOVER

NORTH

,42
tAKJ632

+2
Visitors to South Africa for the an·
EAST
nual bridge congress last May had to WEST
.KQ42
+J9 5
admire their hosts' Jack of timidity m
'10 98 3
bidding. The South Africans tended to . • Q 9 7
+1o"
overcall freely, regardless ol vulnera · +KQ10964
• 75
bility and often on limited h1gh-eard
SOUTH
values. That style worked against
+A6
East-West in today's deaL
'A
KQJ75
After North had made a negative
t8
double, South cue-bid three clubs, in·
+A J83
tending to next jump to four hearts.
Vulnerable: Both
That would describe a club conlrol as
Dealer: South
well as a potential slam-going hand in
hearts. However, North, with a long
West
Nortb
East
Soutb
and attractive diamond suit, saw fit to
Dbt•
Pass
2+
leap to four diamonds. No matter
Pa ss
Pass
J+
When South bid four hearts, North re·
Pass
Pass
membered the club cue-bid and risked u
All pass
a raise to five hearts. South, of course,
•negative double

'6

,.s•

,,I'

went

to six.

Without West's overcall, a declat er
in six hearts might well attempt to
ruff two clubs in dummy. He would be
set when East overruffed the third
club. But West's vulnerable two-club
overcall served as a warning. So de·
darer ruJfed ooly one club and then
ran his hearts. His intention was to
play several rounds of trumps and
then take the diamond finesse. But
West read his partner's high-low in
clubs as showmg four rather than a

Opening lead: + K
. '-:--:-:--:---::--:--;--:-~::-~:--'
doubleton. So defender West threw
away all his clubs except the queen as
declarer played out four rounds of
hearts. Even though the diamond
queen was onside, declarer now had a
safe and cerlain play for 12 tricks. He
played dummy's A·K of diamonds
while shedding a spade, came back to
h!s spa~e a_ce and gave up". club trick.

CROSSWORD
40 Cork 's
1 Cinema·s
country
Goldie
41 Land1ng
5 Nippy
place
9 Ar1hur
42 Shred
ollennis
43 Betng (Sp)
10 Concluded DOWN
11 Stretched
t Forced
the !ruth
to go, as
12 Wilhdr aw
to court
15 Dulch town 2 Out ol
16 Roc ky hill
the way 13
17 Recreation 3 B•g ·lime
veh1cle
operator 14
18 Dovers
4 Really
stale
ol f1lm
16
(abhr )
5 C1ga1
22
19 Htll
6 Untuduen
huilde1
7 Renl
23
20 Within
a 10om
24
(co mo
8 Succeed 25
lorrn)
111 a deal 26
21 Noled
volcano
23 Goalie s
place
24 Small
b1anch
26 Solemn
27 Load
28 - au

35
36
37
39

Mounlau1
c hatn
Malric u ·
late
P1quancy
Mak e
a kno t
Male swan
Sa!lboil l
C haplain
Yemen c;ty

28 Wear~ng
Welling
Ions
30 Uny•eld1nq
32 Milp
sedton
33 B1zane
38 Resl
on il bed
39 Un silul .
m verse

UAILV CRYI'TOQUOTES - ll~re's how lo work il:
AXYUI.BAAXR
tsLONGFEI . LUW
One letter stands for another . In this sample A IS usetl
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin~le leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wortls are all
hints . Each day the code letters are tlifferenl

Cltltlle Cltloe IV Cltartlo
Cltllso playa triCks on
country music atars and fans
alike.
Ill! Montyllnt
1lll ZOFTO
11:30(2)8 tm Tonlgltl Silo"v

GBKW

a Funny au~s~ne~a Wltlt

CRYPTOQUOTE

EWYEW
ARSW

IE W

OBSW

H

EBF(JU

R y J

ZCI

pRy, Q

CG

QUW

CQUWN

tiBQUCIQ

14 Sections. 126 Paget
A Multimedia tnc. New..,.per

system was recently lnaialled to the olllees and
willslmpHiy the departmenl"s operallotl8.

been In place In the court office
for several weeks. The em ·
ployees , however, have just
begun to tra in In the use of the
system .
According to LuAnn Christi·
ansen. who Is responsible lor
t ra ining of the county court
employees , the computer sys tem
will eve ntually eliminate the
expensive docket books now
ullllzed by the court, allowing the
computer to track all cases that
come under the jurisdiction of

UC has plan to
prevent dropouts
ual st udl"nt needs.
"Dropping out Is a develop·
menial process," said Joann..
Arhar. who made the study as
her doctoral dissertation. "Kids
don't ju st make a decision one
day I hat they're not going back 10
sc hool tomorrow, It takes a
whi lr.
" If you Mvelop bonds with
peopel over a period of time,
you're less likely to want to leave
that Institu tion . Middle !j unior
hlghl schoo l is a crlllcal stage
when kids need a strong peer
group and strong role models,
and teachers can be that."
Arhar studied 5,000 students
from 22 ci ty and suburban junior
high sc hools throughout thecoun ·
try . Half the schools used team
teac hing and half were organized
trad itionally by department .

the court.
In addition , the system will
al,.c provide printed reeelpts lor
those people paying lines and the
til&lt;e, doing away with the manual
receipts now being written by the
court clerks . Frequently -used
court forms and n&gt;ports will also
be taken care of automatically .
Most lmporta"l. ~c:ord lng to
Christiansen, is the system·,.
automatic bookkeeping feature.
This will take care of all
automatic disbursements to the
state, eliminating much work l or
the staff.
The system, called Unix , was
purchased from Direct Market
Data Systems of Dublin at a cost
of over $30,000.
Meigs Co un ly Court processes
traffic case and misdemea nor s,
as well as Initial appearances for
felony offenders.

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlm...Seadnet Stall
GALLIPOLIS- Although Ga l
llpolls may be 200 years old, the
GaiUa County Junior Fair Is only
In It's 41st year. but the annual
event Is going lo be better than
ever.
Some things remain constant
trom year to year, but In 1990,
there will be more changes made
at the lair than probably In any
past. From entertainment to
parking, · 'the times, they are
a-changing," as Bob Dylan
would say.
A national la st-food resLauran t
chain may boast "food, folks and
fun," but the Gatua County Fair
would rival t11a1 sta tement .
Considered by many to be the
best junior lair In the state, the
event remains a junior lair- In
other.words open only to youth of
Gallla County There are events
lor everyone to enjoy, and
competitions are lor the young
people In 4-H, Future Farmers
and Future Hom emakers of
America. Girl and Boy Scouts.
Fair Board President Garry
Fellure said the whole polnl of
the fair Is tlle yo'unk t)l'ople :... ·
they are the reason the lair keeps
going.
The entertainment Is top-r ate,
the "extras" like rodeos, wres·
tUng, rractor and horse pulls, are
nice to draw crowds and keep the
revenues high - money that
keeps the pn&gt;mlums paid lo the
kids among the best In the state,
he sa id .
This year , 4-H will be giving
demonstrations on Wednesday at
10 a.m. , and 1 p .m ., and their
many exhibits will be open l or
viewing the entire lair.
Animal judging begins on
Tuesday, with cats, poullry and
small pets and sheep getdng
their marks . Adjlltlonalty, there
will be a beef breeding show .
The Girl Srouts will receive
awards lor th e.r various projects
thai night.
On Wednesday, judging will
take place for rabbits, dairy
animals, swine and engineering
projects. Aerospace demonstra ·
tlons will be held and dog care
and showmanship will be pres·
en ted . Also that ilay . I here will be

a Garden Tractor Pulling Co n·
test, sponsored by the Gallipolis
Rotary Club.
The " big boys" take over on
Thursday with large animal
projects being shown. The steer
show and beef showmanship are
presented, the youth proJect
awards will be given and the
parade of champions and dairy
sweepstakes are held that night.
In addition, a horse putting
contest wilt be held, and kiddie

tractor pull. The kids' event Is
sponsored by the Gallipolis FFA .
The Gallipolis Kiwanis sponsor
kids' fun contests, like balloon
and bubble gum blowing and
watermelon eating.
Friday Is the wealthy day . The
annual market lamb, hog, tobacco and steer sales are held.
Young future farmers' efforts
pay orr when their animals are
sold at the lair.
Continued on A-8

.'

FOONG THE HOSE - Work In preparation lor the GaiDa
County Junior Fair conUnued Saturday lor the U st annual fair.
Here, Ted Shoop lhes a water hose b~ one of the barns. The lair
begins Monday. 1Tlmes-SenUnel photo b~ Kathryn Kelly J

Veterans seek more money

10:30 (!) Ntwo
(!) Qreot Perlormonceo A
defeated, middle-aged wraer
anempta a comeback at a
movie studio. 1;1
I!J) • Major !Mgue
ll.loebiH
II! Swomp Thing
® Crook &amp; Cltaoe
@ Major Loeguo II.INbel
11:00(2)8 1D ())D till GJD
OJNowo
(!) Twilight Zone
1l1l Mllml Ylce Two amateur
smugglers are Croct&lt;ett's
only lead to thO Colombllns.

BE

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel News Stall
POMEROY- A new compuler
system which was recently In ·
slalk&gt;d In the offices of Meig s
County Court Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien will sim plify several
court tasks for both employees
and the public.
The system Is made up of a
hard disk, four monitors and
keyboards and several prlnlers.
II utilizes a program called 1hc
Uniform Court System and ha s

CINCINNATI iUPt 1- Univ&lt;"r·
sltv of Cincinnati official s sa id
Friday a new study shows 1
million students can be pre·
vented from dropping oul of high
school II junior high teachers
work In teams .
"Previous studies have linked
a lack of student 'bonding· with
teachl'l's and schools to an
Increase In the likelihood of
dropping out and delinquency."
said unlverslly ol!lclals . " Inter ·
disciplinar y teaming ;o f
teachers ), however, Increases
social bonding and then&gt;fore, I he
potential to complete school. ..
Interdisciplinary teaming is a
way of organizing teachers In the
classroom so thai teachersoflwo
or mon&gt; disciplines work lo·
gether · sharing the same group
of students. coordinating course
content and diagnosing lndlvld·

•hum
Verse lorm
Ofl spring
River (Sp .)
Danish
money
One cu stomer
Wildebeest
Small
proJectile
Oven

ACYWZ

LuAon Christiansen,

New computer system
simplifies court tasks

ACROSS

29
30
3t
34

SYSTEM IN PLACE -

left, trains Uoda Bent!, Mel(!ll CGunly Court
Clerk. on the new Unix computer system . The

by THOMA5 JOSEPH

Sporl!! ..................... ,. Cl-8

Gallia County Junior
Fair to start Monday

Hl to

+10873

By James Jacoby

Deaths ... ...................... AS
Editorial ...................... A2

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis- Point Pleasant, July 29, 1990

After a three hour delay, an airline passenger
1nquired, "How much longer do you think this
HANGOVER will last?"

BRIDGE

Along lhe Rl•er ......... BI ·M
Buslnes• .................... DI-ll
CGmles· .................. .Insert
Classllleds ................. 02-7

l

Ill 3·2·1 Contact Q
iiiJ 1121111 CBS News 1;1

/ I

Inside

+

quoled

1_
.
.
.
.
_
by filling in the m1umg words
._......_..__..._.__...__. you deYelop from step No. 3 below

II)
(lJ Body Elecll1c

C-1

Major League results...

Gallians
prepare for
annual fair

•

(!)I Dream 01 Jellrtttie
(lJ Newton'• Apple ~eggy
Knapp goes behind the
scenes at Industrial Light and
Magic. D
Ill Reading Rllnbow 1;1
I!J) 1D Andy Griffith
1l1l He·Men
1D Otlter Side 01 Victory
Ill! Wo~d Today

50 cents

B

Q . -

II .

ECAWNEWQ
ARIMURA
Yeelerday'• Cryploquote: IF WE ARE TO LIVE
TOGETHER IN PEACE, WE MUST COME TO KNOW
EACH OTHER BETIER. - LYNDON B.•JOIINSON

PERRYSBURG, Ohio iUPI I
- A &gt;!ale veterans group says It
may have to use money from a
construction lund Ia pay the stall
working al the new $20 million
Ohio Velerans Home being built
In Sandusky.
The Ohio Slate Association of
County Veteran Service Commls·
stoners and the Oh Ia Slate
Association of County Service
Officers debated money and
other Issues during a joint
weekend convention al a subur·
ban Toledo motel.
Plans call for a pardal opening
In September to t5 veterans, wllh
another t5 beds In 1992. The
blllltllna evenl\lai ty wl II bou... 300
people.
The building the new OVH
facUlty wilt replace housles 3.'i0

nurs ing home patients a nd 200
resi dential beds.

VC'terans

home

exe-cutive

David Miller said Friday that
while Ohio leglslatun&gt; has provided eonstrucllon fund s, It has
not given the facility enough
money to pay lor staff.
The two groups said they
planed to discuss lhe financial
Issue during workshops to determnine whether to divert money designated lor construction
and equipment and use the fund
lor personnel.
Miller aald he did not think a
stale fund set up lor construcllon
could be used for salaries. But
regardless of the sou~ ol
money. Miller said the cost wilt
be carried by lhe public .

·'

I
'I

BICENTENNIAL TOURS COMMITI'EE - Memben of the
Bicentennial Toun Committee of GaiUpolls Historic Home~~ are
obowo bere. The event Ia ~eheduled Sept 11, 16, H aad !S. The tour

allo lnclllda Galla CouiJ llemel, bldldtap aad a dalrJ lann.
Pront row, left to rl&amp;bt are: Salty Orebaarrh, Beverb' Boaw. Tena
81111 aad Darte.e Cannlcllael; rear- ADcte T111lor, Ju Tbalor,
PIIJIIII Bowu, Lila Sauden aad Sudra KobJ, Cllbe• aad
vlltlon of GaiBpolle wW be able to atroD lbroup lbe b..,.c
but- ud nllldeztt•l areu, wll«e IIWIJ of the biiDdtap 11ft
lleled •the Nzttaul Jtealeler ef Hllllorlt Plaeelu '"'''leGUiletl

lA I!! Historic Dllll'tcl." Toun A ud 8, Sepl15 and 16w1Ubefrom I
to 8 p.m .; tour C, Sept. Hand 2hrlll be from llo8 p.m.; and lour D.
lhe COUIItry lour, Sept. H aad U wilt be from 18 a.m. to i p.m.
'nckeU for IOtln A, B, aad Can Sit per PfM» ud tkhU fer &amp;otlr
D, are SIS per perna, wblcb tDCitldea a box IIIIlCh. .....,_

piii'ClhMIDIIIcltela before A•l· M wWrecelvtaSidleee..t. Clleclle
m•l -JIUJ all mall lrden JNIJIIble to llle 01111\ 1111
11-lelllllal Commlllloa, $II 8eoolld A w. (11mM Sellllnel .,.....
IIJ Krll Coelnll)

.,

---!

..

�..

Sunday nm..Seootlnal Page A-3

:Commentary and perspective
A Division ol

8251blrd Ave., Gallipolis, Oblo
(614) 446-2342

lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(8U) 99~2156

ROBERT L. WINGET'f
Publisher
HOBART WIL§ON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asolotanl Publlsher-CoolroUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press Associ au on and t he American NI.'Wspaper Publis hers Associ alton.

July29,1990

Page-A-2

Miami's Cubans keep mum
WASHINGTON - Cuban ex - do. Or worse, they could be
Iles living In Miami came to the firebombed.
United States for freedom of
Ramon Cernuda, a Cuban-born
speech. but they're learning thai publisher and art collector.
It's best to keep their mouths knows the cost of Independent
shul, especially If they advocat e thinking. Last month, the art
anything less than the violent • museum he operates was
overthrow of Fidel Castro.
bombed. Federal Investigators
There Is a feeling In Miami's believe he may have been tarLittle Havana, as oppressive as geted because of his moderate
the hot summer weather, that views on U.S. ·Cuba relations.
Cuban-Americans should toe a
The FBI Is Investigating 17
rabidly anti-Castro line. And If such Incidents that have oc they don't. they are likely to be curred In Miami In the last three
publicly censured by those who years - most against CubanAmericans who don't subscribe

to the vehement anti-Castro
doctrine. The situation Is so bad
that the FBI has dubbed Miami
the terrorism capital of the
United States.
The keeper o! the anti-Castro
name Is the Cuban American
National Foundation, which Is
based In Miami. We reported
recently on the group's heavy handed ln!luence In Washington,
where It hands out substantial
political contributions and lobbies for a hard-line approach
toward Cuba.
The group has condemned the

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcom e. They sbould be less than 300 words
long. Alllettersau subJect toedltlng and must be signed wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unJigntO letters wtll he published. Letters should be In

goOO taste, addresstngJ~..~~. not penmal!tles.

•· Backstairs at
·: the White House
·•
;
·

~
•

.~

~

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WA SHI NGTON- first lady Barbara Bush likes to tell her storv
through her dogs .
Her first book. ··c. Fred"".thelongtime family pel who died. pulled
In funding for thP ··Rarbara Bus h Familv Llteraev foundation·· and
her new book. to be on thr stands In Septem ber, rn tl!led " M i llie' s
Book" Is ex pected to be a drawing card.
The first lady 's observations about thr White Hou sr arc told
through Millie' s memoirs. Some brief excerpts are publlsherl in thr
August issue of "Good Housekeeping Magazine ."
Livin g in the While House, "Millie," an English springer spaniel
has more public PXfX&gt;Sun• than her prede-cessor and gets morr
attention that the Bush children .
It's doubtful that Mrs. Bush will allow Millie to tell the famllv
secrets but she may re-veal somt?of the sidPlights such as tht•fact tha t

~ her master, George Bush. is cal led " l hr Prez. " around lhP Whitr

• HousP .

The Btcultural Ce nter , an advocacy group for the deaf, ha s asked
- the While Hou se Visitors Office. to have slgm•rs and Interpreters on
. hand for th e public tours when a v isitor may be dea f.
But th e aides who run the office are tuned out on th&lt;' subjl'&lt;'t ThPy
say that groups of deaf persons usually bring along th eir own signer .
"Besides," said one aide, " this Is the homr of the President of the
United States. It is nat a mu seum "

House M ajorit y leader Richard Gephardl of Missoufl was one c the
· nem esis of the G('()rge Bush Whil e House. Hut now thl" president
· ca nnot say enough nice things about him .
Gephardt . who used to be a thorn in theadmln!Stratlon·s si de when
he brat up on .Japan for It s tra de practi ces, has been co·opted by the
aura of the White HouSI' and daily Invitations to the Oval Office.
Gephardt. a Democra t ic presidential aspirant. Is among the
lead ers seekin~ with Bush and other top admlnlstratlon advisers
· agreement on a package of tax Increase s and federal spe nding cuts to
· meet the goal of a $64 btll!on reduction tn 1991.
Bush ha s lavishly prai sed Gephardt In his recent spePChes .
• Expecting a lion. administration officials found a lamb who also Is
• telling reporters that pollltcs should be abjured in see king solutions to
the deficit problem .
The president played true to form In making hi s fir st U.S. Supreme
· Cou rt justice appointment. He was extremely secreti ve. using back
. doors and the family quarters to keep candidates away from the
• prying eyes of the press. He madr a ca utious choice tha t he was
certai n would arouse lillie co ntrove r sv . And hl' acted with dispatch,
· wirhin 72 hours after Ju st icr William BrPnnan announcPd his
· resignati on from the benc h. to avoid anv public dialogue on the
· subject .
. Bush selected Judge David H. So uter who he had never mrt to rul e
on !=iome of thP most crucial dPCi sion s In lhr land. Bu t hrd !d intrr\' IPY.
· Souter, a recently appointed feder al appell ate judge for~'; minutes
· before announcing his appointment.
· He also had Souter's academic resume of Han·ard i.aw School
Oxford University. a Rhodes scholar and a Phi &amp;ota Kappa tx•for"P
him And the prodding of chief of staff John Sununu, who likr Soutl'r .
ha lis from New Hampshire
Bush, who is now adamantly opposed to abortion. but said in I~fi(J
· that Rof' v WadP . lega lizing abortion undrr certa in c i rcumstancf'~.
· was " right, ' told reporters he did not seek Souter's views on that
~co ntro versia l issue or any other at the top of thP soc· Ia I agenda
. because It would not have been "appropriate."
That was vet another divergence from the Reagan administration
• whleh did apply the so-ca lled " litmus test" on thoS&lt;' touchy issues to
· all candidates for top federal jobs.
. Barbara Bu sh, the busi&lt;•st first lady In modern history . i s taking the
· month of August off to gather with the family and tend to home chores
:at Kennebunkport. Me.
: With Congress soon to be In recess. the pace In Washington will slow
· down with the summer heat , and the president was expected to join
: his w ife for a three week sojourn at their seaside estate around Aug.

:to

• The Bushes' daughter Dorothy 1Doro 1 LeBl ond , newl y divorced
: from Maine contractor William LeBlond. has move d into a home In a
•fashionable section of the Washington suburbs and is working In
:communications at a rehabilitat ion hospital.

.

• Old friends In Washington were plea sed to see Pat Nixon at the
: dedication of the Nixon presidential librar y In Yorba Linda, Cal~ .
: The former first lady. who has suffered strokes and ha s other
·aliments. has stayed out of the limellgh4 since her husband was forced
; to re•lgn In the unraveling of the Watergat e scandal on Aug. 9. 1974.
·. But at the California reunion of friends and political associates who
' had served with the Nixon administrations. It was old home week, and
: a vibrant Mr s. Nixon, shined through It all
; She gathered In her hotel suite with her former sta ff memb&lt;'rs and
•lie len Smith. who had served as her press secreta ry . said It was " like
' old times" when thev sat around chattlng and recalling th e past.adv
.weekend july 28·29

;Today in history
By United Preoo International
Today Is Sunday, July 29. the 210th day of 1990 with 155 to follow .
The moon Is In Its first quarter.
· · The morning stars are Venus. Mars. and Jupiter.
: · The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
: • ThOse born on this date are under the sign of Lro. They Include
' French historian Alexis de Tocquevllle In 1805, novelist Booth
··Tarkington In 1869, Italian dictator Benito Mussolinlln 1883, actors
.William Powell in 1892 and Richard Egan In 1923, Labor Secretary
·tuzabeth Dole In 1936 (age 54) and TV anchorman Peter Jennings In
1938 (age 52).

, . On thll date In history:

• In 191•. the first tranBCOntlnental ~lephonl&gt; linkup was completed
:between San Francisco and New York Clly.
.' IalMI. Pope Paul VI upheld the prohlblllon of all artlllclal means
~f blrlb control lor Roman Catbollcl.
'• rn 1981, Prince Charles. belr to the Brlllsh throne, married Lady

.·

•Piau !lpenc:er at St. Paul' I Cathedral In London .

...

.

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
terrorist attacks Including the
bombing of Cernuda's gallery.
Led by Jorge Mas Canosa, the
foundation views Itself as the
true representative of Cuban·
Americans. But It doesn't have
much time for exiles whO support
dialogue with Cuba. Mas Caoosa
has Implied that those who
disagree with him are close to
Castro.
Mas Canosa renounces violence. but we have learned that
the foundation has added to Its
ranks two brothers who were
once members of the violent
Cuba Nationalist Movement.
Guillermo and Ignacio Novo
were recently assigned duties on
the '"Information commission'"
of the Cuban American National
Foundation. The commission's
job Is to generate better public
relations In Miami.
The foundation could have
picked better PR men. The Novo
brothers were convicted and then
acquitted In the 1976 murder In
Was hington of Orlando Leteller,
the former Chilean ambassador
to the United States. Letelier was
living In seml·exlle In the United
States because of his open
opposition to Chilean Dictator
Augusto Ptnochet.
Guill ermo Novo told our associate Scott Sleek that he doesn't
regret any of his past activities.
and he wrote off the bazooka
attack to the enthusiasm of
youth .
The foundation m akes no excuses for recruiting the Novo
brothers for Its PR committee.
since their murder conviction
was n~vers4?d.

Respect isn't the same as character
Television was still alrln~
gate scandal werp loyal. hard·
eulogies to Sammy Davis Jr.
workin g, dis ciplined , patriotic
when a co lumnist noted th at "the
men with strong ties to home.
glowing tributes to the talented
family and chur ch, They were
Pntertalner have lgnorNi his
tr usted men who betrayed their
self-destruct ive lifcstvle. hi s as· trust.
soclallon with mobst ers and
Nor were they the last of the
pornographers and his Involvelot. In the years since. other
ment In questionabl e financial
respected men In business and
schemes ."
banking and on Wall Street and In
Sammy"s fans protested . It
positions of public trust have
wasn't only that the writer had
followed In I heir train.
broken 1he generally accepted
All had belonged to the "'nice
rule that you don't speak ill ofthP set' ' - what we used to call the
dead - at least so soon after t hc,v
"beautiful prople. " They rould
have taken leave of us They also lw charming. enjoyed doing
challenged the columnist's favors for others and lent their
accusations .
names to all manner of worthy
One of the entertainer's clos est
causes.
friends said. "I want to say tha t
But they were not good people
the Sammy Da vis I knt&gt;W was a I I by good we mean moral A 1
warm, wonderful human being best. they were amoral. They
as wel l as a respected talent In were not troubled by what
lhr en t erta inment world."
Santayana called an "agonized
The standing ovations might be conscience."' 11 the st Ul. small
offered as proof of that. But an volct&gt; of conscience spoke to them
applause meter Is an unreliable at all , In the end It surcumbed to a
gauge of charac ter . II was louder call from elsewhere.
Watergate that taught us to
I gave a speech to a women's
bf&gt;ware of the " r e.5pected" man. rlu b a while back In which 1spoke
In publi c llfP
of the tend&lt;oncy manv of us have
Thr chief figures In the Water

to build up our respect In the
community by jolnlog good
caus~ - such as thP churC'h rather than bv personal
character-development .
1 told the storv of a tycoon who
had been senten ced to jail for
price fixing . The judge who
passed th e sentence on this
executive and five others said.
"These men wer e torn between
conscience on the one hand and.
on the otht&gt;r. the rewarding
objPctleves of promotion. com forlabiP secur lty and I arge salar
les . They thought they could
advance th eir career s by Illicit
practices ."
These weren't Mafia men any
more than lhl• leaders In the
Watergat e scandal were - although the dressing-down thP
judge went on to give them
sounded like something prepared
for charact ers or the underworld.
The principal figure In thiS
prlce-fl&gt;lng scheme was someone we'll call John. He was a
family man and a church man .
He was senior warden of the
Episcopal church In his communIty - the highest lay office In an

George Plagenz
Episcopal congregation.
On the day beforP hP was
senten ced. he had been reelected vi ce presiden t of the
United Way organization •n his
home town . E arlier that year he
had received a citation for his
work with disabled children .
Even aftl?r he was sPnt£'n('('d

his friends found II Impossible to
believe anything but good about
him . His clergyman said, "'The
vestry still fe el he Is Is a man of
high Integrity. "
IIIIer my speech. a woman In
the audience came up to me,
quite disturbed. and asked If I
kn ew John per sonally. I said I
didn't.
"Well ,"' she sa id , "I knew him
Intimately . You have done him a
terrible Injustice . .John Is the
most wonderfUl human being.
Nobody In the community has
given so selfishly of himself to
good causes .. .. "
Of course. I had just finished
saying exactly that. But she had
missed the point.

I miss homemade lemonade stands
Breathes there a man with soul
so dead
Who never to himself hath said.
tt'lr &amp; • ~~~ It's hot as hell!
I ca n' t spea k for the res t of the
country, but , In Irving Berlin's
words . we've been having "'a
heat wave. a tropical heat
wavr .
My local temperature hasn't
soared yet to the scorching 100
degrees that has been frying
folks In Phoenix. Las Vegas, El
Paso and Albuquerque . But 94
degrees wtth 80 percent humidity
comes swelteringly close to Me·
phlstopheles' residence.
When you're drenched with
sweat. "'It ain't the heat. but the
humidity."' Merely walking from
the parking lot to my office
building can wilt you. Don't
misunderstand me. 1 love hot
weal her 1especially In De·
cember, January and February) . But not this hot' Even God
turns on her air-conditioning
unit.
My Louisiana -born mother
loved hot weather so much that
she sometimes walked the mile
to her o!flce at the board of
education. neatly avoiding the
heat-prostrate bodies along the
way .
When she got home, my sisters
and I would surprise her with our
lemonade stand. We always
managed to scrounge up enough
pennies to buy some lemons.
Typical selfish kids, we made
this wonderful lady pay lor her
glass of lemonade.
But she humored us, because
when It came to lemonade, we
took no prlaonera. Our lemonade
wu North Pole cold, cot ton
candy aweet and 10 tart your
cbeeb would suck In after you
drank It!
Our lemonade atand8 were alto
part of a lf•at fu~t-filled Amer~

ca n tradition- like hot dogs and
beer at a baseball game or fried
chicken and potato salad at a
church picnic.
But , with apologies to Duke
Ellington. "'things ain't what
they used to be." Today's kids
aren't having fun unless they're
spending $20 to go to a rap
concert costumed In Air Jordan
sneakers and designer

the way . When they return . you
can try quenching your thirst as 1 did the other day - with
sonre store-bought lemonade.
It won't work I couldn't even
get through half of the carton.

Read my lips : \ 'u

~lnrl'-lmu~hl

/,.mnntulf• cnmpttrf'~

'" 1lw ''~'''

homrrnorlr lrmunmlt•.

That's

why

I

miss

street

Chuck Stone
lemonade stands. If you know of
anyplace where kids have set up
good neighborhood lemonade
stands, let me know .
I'd like to find out where the
best homemade lemonade In tbe
country Is - but only If It's sold
from a homemade street stand.

sunglasses.

This change In values may be a
big reason why I don't see
lemonade stands on neighborhood streets any more. Or maybe
l'm frequenting the wrong
nelg hborhood8 .
Hoosier philosopher Thomas
Rlley Marshall once quipped
that. "What this country needs Is
a good 5-cent cigar." What this
country really needs are good
neighborhood homemade lemonade stands.
Imagine your relief after getting off the bus In 9;.degree heat
and down the block "on the street
where you live," like an oasis In
the Sahara, you see a homemade
lemonade stand!
Ah, but the rapture of thirstquenching Is only hall of the
stand's contribution to America's global preeminence. Homemade lemonade stands symbol·
lze the real spirit ol American
democracy sell-Initiative,
youthful entrepreneurship, freemarket capitalism.
That ain't too cool with today's
Inflated prices. When we were
kids, we could buy three lemons
for a dime. Today, lemons are
lour lor a dollar - or 10 for a
dollar at a larmers' market.
But lemonade standi are like
anytblng elle - a high volume
plua a low overhead equall a nice
proftt. And bot weather means a
high volume of cold lemonade.
A brief ralatorm may cool ua
off, but mor• beat wa- are on

Berry's World
OH~OH!

LlSTE,fi-

THUNDER!

NO.
IT'S THE
BASS OF THE.

STEREO l~
THE CAR
NEXT TO

us.
I

Resolzttio1z
Where as,

the Director.r of The Ohio Vcdle_v B(1nk de.rire to record
their deep .rorrow at the death on Tue.rda_J!, June 26, 1990, of the Bank '.r
Director and Con.rttltant, Erner.ron E. Et•an.r, who .rerved the Bank .rpanning a
period of forty-three Jlears. twenty-fit·e of which he .rertJed cl.f Pre.rident
and/ or Chairman of the Board, and

Where as,

Erner.ron often referred to hirnself as a ''country boy"
relatinf!, to hi.r hurnble be[?inninf!, at McDaniel Cro.rsroad.r tn Walnut
Township. Gallia County, Ohio. and

Where as,

a.r a teena[!,er he moved to Gallipoli.r, f!.raduated from
Gal!ia Academy High School in 1928, and

Where as,

Erner.ron, who wa.r endowed with natitJe intelligence and
busine.rs acumen, skyrocketed to the top of the bu.rine.r.r world not on~y in
Gallia County but throu[!,hout Southea.rtern Ohio, and
his bu.rine.r.r experti.re wa.r .rou[!,ht, and free~y f!.ttJen,
throughout Southea.rtern Ohio by financial institution.r, bu.rine.r.re.r in general,
inditJiduals, in.rtitution.r of hi[!,her learnin[!, and medical and health
organization.r (particularly the Unit·ersity of Rio Grande and Holzer Ho.rpital
Foundation), and in the field of a{!,riculture, and

Where as,

Where as,

true to hi.r humility and gitJin[!, .rpirit, he practiced the
truth, that it t.r better to [!,itJe than to receive, better to fashion li[!,ht than
darkne.r.r, faith rather than doubt, hope rather than despair, understandinf!,
rather than confu.rion, lotJe rather than hate, and that it i.r in f!,ivinf!, we receitJe,
and

Whereas,

he was an excellent and perceptive listener and a
determined and .rtron[!, leader with vt.rtons of po.r.ribilities, which others
amon[!, u.r failed to .ree, and

Where as, by virtue of the force of his per.rona(ity and the charm of
the man, he created a new ima[!,e for Gallia County and Southea.rtern Ohio,·

Now, Therefore, Be It Re.rolved, the Board of Directors of
The Ohio Valley Bank Company [!,ive formal expres.rion of their lo.r.r in the
death of Emer.ron E. EtJan.r, and do hereb_y note in its record.r the pa.r.rinf!, of
this man who will be [!,reatl)' mi.r .red but whose spirit .rha!llitJe on a.r a le[!,acy of
hope and a memory of hi.r achievement, not for him.relf but for the ma.rse.r of
Gallia County, and .rhall etJer be an inspiration to the youth of ~hi.r county, and
for tho.re of u.r who .rerved with him, and knew him best, we can now sa_y, "He
belong .r to the a{!,e.r."

THIS RESOLUTION

prepared by Warren F. Sheets Co.,
L.P.A., adopted June 26, 1990 by Order of the Board of Directors of

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

�Paga A-4-Sunday Tim as Sentinel

Local news briefs____, Academic
Meigs woman hurt in accident
POMEROY - A Meigs County woman suffered m!rlor
Injuries Friday when she was lnvolvt'd In a one-car accident on
SR 248.
Patricia A. Jones, 25. Reedsville. was traveling westbound
when she lost control of her car, went off the left side of the road
and struck a ditch.
Jones reported to the Gallla -Melgs post of the State Highway
Patrol that she had swerved to mtss a deer In the roadway.
Jones was not cited.
Tony Maxey, 16, Reedsville. was c ited for passing at an
· Intersection when he struck another car on SR 124 Friday.
Maxey started to pass a car driven by Tammy Dillon, 21.
Reedsville, as Dillon was stopping to make a left turn. Maxey
struck Dillon on the left side.
Dillon and Maxey were not Injured. Two passengers In
Maxey's car also were not Injured.
A Meigs County man was c ited for failure to yield when
turning left when he was involved In a two-car accident on SR
124 Friday .
Morgan Johnson, 80, Hamden, made a left turn on to a private
drive in front of P"ul Thomas, 68. Reedsville. Thomas was
unable to stop and struck the tra iler that Johnson was pulling,
according to a report from th e Ga llla -Melgs post ol the State
Highway Pal rol.
NellhPr were Injured

EMS responds to six calls
POMEROY- Units of the Me igs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to six calls for assistance Friday .
AI 9:58a.m., the Rutland sq uad went to Meigs Mine J1 for
Billy Kennedy who was taken to Holzer Medical Center . Th e
Racine squad went to Reedsville at 10: 47 a.m . for Lydia
Chevalier who was transported to St. Joseph' s. At 12: 18 p.m. ,
the Racine Fire Department, Racine squad. and Syracuse
squad responded to a eal l from Cemetery Road for a motor
vehicle accident. The Racine squad tra nsported Tyson
Mugrage to Veterans Memor ia l Hospital and the Syracuse
squad transported Brian Randolph and Joshua Codner to
Veterans MPmorial Hospital . Kevin Whit e refused treatment.
At 3:04p.m., the Pomeroy squad went to Forest Run Road lor
Kelly Ann Roush who signed a release refusing treatment.
The Pomeroy Fire Department went to Mulberrv Avenue a t
3:53p.m. to Investiga te a vehicle leaking gasoline·
At 8:10p.m., the Pomerov sq uad went to Main StreellorT im
Fry who was taken to Holzer Medica l Center .

Miller will have office at fair
GAL LIPOLIS - Clarence Miller. lOth District Congressman .
Is scheduled to have his mobile office on the falgrounds for this
year ' s Gallla County Junior Farr. The office. s taffed by the
Co ngressma n's fair representative, Brlan Nicewanger of
Lancaster, will be open daily from noon to 9 p.m

RIO GRANDE - The dedication of the newest academic chair
at the University of Rio Grande,
has been scheduled for early
August during a piannedcelebra tlon of traditional Welsh music
and culture.
The chair Is In gradute education and Is named for Ina Alban,
a n educator In Oak HI II and
Co lumbus, who died In June 1989.
The chair's dedication will occur
during the "Gymanfa Ganu". the
traditional Welsh choral concert,
se t lor the F1ne and Performing
Arts Ce nter at the University of
Rio Grande at 7 p.m. on Friday,
Aug. 3.
Dedication of the chair will be
co nducted by Dr. Paul C. Hayes.
president of the university, with
dedication music provided by D.
Merr!ll Davis, an early neighbor
a nd longtime friend of Alban 's. A
benediction will be given by the
Hev . James A.M. Hanna. pastor
of the First Prebyterlan Church
of Oak Hill.
An open reception hosted by

Dr. and Mrs. Hayes will be held
In the west seminar area ol the
James A. Rhodes Center follow Ing the dedication ol the chair.
They will be assisted by the
executive committee of the Cardigan !formerly Cardllf) Welsh
Club ol Southeastern Ohio. The
academic chair has been long
used by colleges and universities
to memorialize Individuals who
have made outstanding contrlbu·
tlons. The chair will attract an
outstanding scholar who will
teach at Rio Grande the majority
of the time, but spend the
remainder In the community
lec turing, consulting and
writing.
"The naming of an academic
cha ir Is one of the most lastlng
honors !hat can be afforded an
individual," Hayes said.
The event Is being held In
co njunction with a week-long
Welsh language course spon·
sored by the North American
Welsh Studies Institute. Fea-

re~troomat

OlYMPIC
ClEAR WOI)D,:I
PRESERVAnVE

thP

ai&gt;REi~WAt.-

899

bar.
Christl Blazer. Gallipolis. rr·
ported broken glass in the back
window of her car Friday to thr
Gallla Countv S hertrr ·s
DE'partmen 1.

G&amp;I.

OlYMPIC
CEDAR Oil
STAIN

Man rhargro with
breaking and t'ntering

1295

GAl.

GALLIPOLIS - Willis Bovkin,

OLYMPIC
DECK
STAIN

32. Bidwell. was Mwstrd and
Incarcerated for breaking and
entering hv the Sheriff's
Dfopartmrnt
Fred Dresbach. 67. Gal lipolis .

1895

GAl.

was arrMtrd and incarr('ratPd

tor drlvln~ while Intoxicated and
opera tin~ without a license .
Stephen C. Dedman. Jl. Bid·
well. was ar!l'strd and ja iled for
dlsorderlv conduct by
Intoxication .
EliUbl&gt;th r: Jaqurs. 2:\. Rid
wfll. was arrrs.tPd and incarcf'rated for dlsordrrlv conduct alter
warning.

'DELL LUMBER

vtji!T.-Gitli'OOS-446- t 176
-.fri. 1·6,10; lat. 1-S; s.m t0-4
634 I.MAIH - PDMIIOY, OH.

991-SSOO

1

'U()JW:r!UWb j

HOMECARE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC.
EQUIPMENT- SALES· RENTALS· REPAIRS
"Complete Medical Equipment For Home Uss"

• AOULT DIAPERS
• UNOERPAOS (CHUXSJ
• BEOSIO£ COMMODES
• PATIENT LifTS

• llfl CHAIRS
• WALKERS
• DIABETIC SUPPLIES
• OSTOI.IY

WE BILL MEDICARE l OTtER INSURANC!i fOR YOU

Tr1i l lr1:1.

RIO GRANDE - The Gallla
Jackson -VInton JVSD Board of
Education held It s regular meet .
tng recently In the board room on
the Buckeye HIlls Career Cen te r
campus.
In personnel actions, the board
accepted the resignations or
Wyvonna J. Radabaugh, market Ing education Inst ructo r, and
Cheryl Sheard, community home
service Instructor. Jan McClaskey was appointed as Option IV
Coordinator.
The board hired the following
substitutes for the 1990-91 school
year: Teachers : Paula Anderson, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; John
Boyd, Oak Hill; Karen Burns.
Bidw e ll ; F.arl Cllckenger, Elva
Davis, Lissa Garnes, and Judith
Little, Gallipolis; Tony Ours,
Crown City; and Jimmy Prater
and Glenna Reed, Jackson .
Paula Hale, was employed as a
secretary at McArthur. Kathleen

Stewart was named a teacher's

MEMBERS of the Pomeroy EMS treat Kelly
Roush alter she fell Into the Forest Run strip mine

during a seizure. She was not injured and signed a
release at the seene refusing treatment.

"Drowning ' has happy ending

Dr. Morgan named to post
GALLIPOLIS - Physicians Insurance Company of Ohio
1PICOi recently announced that Thomas W. Morgan. M.D. will
serve as the company's medical director beginning this month.
Morgan, a surgeon. also will maintain his medical practice In
Gallipolis on a part -time basis . He has been on the staff of Holzer
Medical Center since 1952. He served as chairman of the
Cen ter 's department of surgery for 22 years. and has been a
trustee of the Holzer Hospital Foundation si nce 1968.
In his new duties, he will assist PICO's claims and
underwriting departments with Issu es related to medical
professional liability . Among his areas of emphasis will be
malpractice loss prevention programs. technical a nd medical
expPr tl se in evaluating medical risks. and clinical education
and Input regarding Issues which effect physicians and medical
practice.
Morgan has served as a member of the Board of Directors of
PICO since 1978 and also has served as chairman of the

JVSD board accepts resignations;
hire personnel for new school year

The New Harlech Men's Cbo·
rus ol Southeastern Ohio will add
Its collective voice to the evening
ol song.
Conductor Savage brings a
llletlme ol choral muslc dlrectlon
and teaching to the Aug. 3
celebration. As a writer, traveler
and lecturer, he Is active In
various aspects ol music research and serves as mustc
archivist ol the Ross County
Historical Society Museum In
Chillicothe.
The gymanla Is being CO·
sponsored by the Cardigan Club
of Southeastern Ohio, the Gampolls Bicentennial Celebration
and the University ol Rio Grande
Olllce ol Continuing Education.

limit 10

No Grills Or Specials
At This Price

107
Chestnut St.

171 S Eastern
Avenue

Henderson,

Gallipolis, Ohio
446-1 06S

W.VA.
67 S-3908

POMEROY - What the emegency medical service dispatcher called a "possible
drowning Incident" had a happy
ending Friday about 3 p.m .
Members of the Pomeroy
Emergency Medical ~rvlce re-

sponded to a calllrom the Forest
Run strip mine . The call was sent
In as "possible drowning
Incident."
Upon arrival at the scene,
squad members found that Kelly
Roush , Pomeroy, had IJ&lt;&gt;Ion fish -

lng at the strip mine, had a
seizure and fell into the water.
Roush sig ned a release at thr
srPne refusing treatment.
Pomeroy sq uad -member Joe
Strubble was relieved.

Voters may register at Gallia Fair
GALLIPOLIS - It 's summer ·
time. It's !airtime . It's time to
take pride In your community by
getting Involved In this year's
elections
Ohio Secretary o f State Sherrod Brown reminds citizens that
there are many Important issues
and races on the ballot this vear.
"But you can't get Involved If
you're not registered to vote." he
said .
That Is whv the Gallla Countv
Board of Elections, In conjun~­
tlon with Brown's o!flce . Is
making It easier for citizens to
register by offering registration
services at this year's county

fa ir . The Gall Ia County Fair will
be held July 30 through August 4.
"Exercising your right to vote
Is one of the basic principles of
our democratic society," Brown
said. "We don't want Ohio voters
to lose this precious right be·
cause they don't know where or
how to register ."
The county fairs provide quick
and convenient opportunities tor
Ohio voters to register or r eregister. "It only takes two or
three minutes to 1111 out a
registration form," Brown sai d.
To build famlllarttv with the
booths and In turn enhance voter

ei&lt;'Ctlons will also be held at the
lair. Brown said the elect Ions are
a fun. easy way tor Ohioans to

exprPSs their opinions oncurrPnt
Issues. bt"comt, lnvolvPd In lhl'

electoral procC"ss and -

most

Importantly - becomecomforta
hie with II.
To be &lt;•llglble to register to
vote, you must be a U.S. citizen.

at least 18 years old by No v. 6.
1990. and you must be an Ohio
resident. Ohio voters will also
need to re-regis ter If they have
moved to a different countv or It
they have not voted In any
election In the last four years.

turnout on elt'Ctton dav . mock

•
•
•
•

Pizza Processing
Frozen Vegetable Processing
Distribution
Maintenance

Applicants working in the team environment will
preferrably have had some manufacturing experience and enjoy:

• Working With Others On A Team
• Solving Problems
• Learning and Performing A
Variety Of Jobs
• Assisting and Coaching Others
Applicants should also:

• Possess High Work Standards
• Work Well With Little
Supervision
• Participate and Sho"" Initiative
• Possess Good Communication
and Listening Skills
The Pillsbury Company offers competitive wages
and excellent benefits.

' Wlll 1:1il fi/1 1i

446-7283

JACKSON/VINTON

PORTSMOUTH

317 Broadway

1005 Fourth St.

GALLIPOLIS
45 Olive St.

ATHENS
246 W. State St.

CHILLICOTHE
38 Marietta Rd.

WAVERLY
110 E. Emmitt Ave.

Beginning l~nrnedlately
From 8:00A.M. - 5 P.M.
~4LL8BURY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERIEOEIAAIM/F/VETERANS

aide at Gallipolis
In Adult Services Division. the
board :
-Approved the following full
time and part -time adult educa·
lion programs to begin ~pl. 4th:
Air Co ndiUonlng -Heatlng, Auto
MechaniCs . Industrial Malnte·
nence. Medical Secretary. Nurse
Aide. Ofltce Specialist, and VCR
Repair. An EMT-A Basic c lass
beginning Aug. 20 was also
approved.
- Approved the follow! ng
Instructors : Terry Jones, EMT·
A Basic; Cathy Petrie, Trans!·
lions II ; Darla Saunders. Community Literacy Instru ctor and
Recruiter; and Ste\'e Saunders.
ABE Instructor
-Granted permission to enter
Into an agreement with Holzer
Medical Center for the EMT
Program, beginning July 1.
In other action. the Board ·
- Selectrd Steven Stevenson
as delegate and Jeep Holley as
alternate delegate to attend the
Ohio School Boards Assodation
Capi ta l Conference in the fall.
Authorized the sc hool

district to participate In the statr
a nd federal school lunch program for the 1990-91 sc hool year
- Accepted bids from VaiiPy
Bell for dairy products and

HeinPr's Bakery for bread pro
duels for the lunchroom program

for the 1990-91 school year.
- Set lunch prlc!'S at $1 .25 and
milk at $.20 for stud ent s.

Rio to offer private
music lessons in fall
RIO GRANDE - Beginning
fall quarter, the University of Rio
Grande will olfer private music
Instruction to members of the
community through th e Office of
Continuing Education.
Private lessons are being offered In voice, keyboard, guitar.
strings, brass, woodwind and
percussion Instruments.
Instructors arp. being cun
tracted from the trl -s tatf' area
Students meet with instructor"

30 minutes per week throughoul
the 10 week quarter. In struction

will begin the week of Aug.17 and

run through the week or Nm· 2
Lesson times are arranged wit h

the individual Instructor
Beginners. as well as advanced
s1ud ent s,

are

encouraged

For mOre Information. or to
rPgister . cont act the Fine and
Performing Art s Center at 245·
5353, or toll-free in Ohio at
I !!00-282 -1201, rxt. 364.

ATTEND LEADERSHIP CAMP- On July 9-13, Buckeye Hills
students pictured here, left to right, Lisa Brickle, Tim Clickenger
and Christy DltUnger, attended the Ohio VlC Summer Leadership
Training Camp at Camp Muskingum . Brickle Is a diversified
health occupations student from G aiUa Academy. ('lickenger Is an
auto body student from Gallla Academy and I&gt;ltllnger Is a
colllllotology student from Wellston.

~

t

FRI. -SAT .·SUN

•

TOM CRUISE

FRI . THRU THURS

IN

PETER WELLER

DAYS OF THUNDER
PG 13

AND
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
IN

BLACK RAIN

OM! !VENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION I 1.50

416-0973

l ? 7S
IIARGP. IM

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

~ 275
"'-'TIM[ (~ O:,AT/ S ll~

8AR~IM

'~";;~:;;·

446 ·4524

R

416- 1088

A li[ D

MIGHT TUl )OA Y

([X((P T " GIKJSI"]

Malonev was a si,.,:. vear vf'TP-

ran with. the htghwav patml.
Futmrr sa id Malon ev. ~·ho li ved

near
EARNS NATIONALAWARD- The Marketing
Education otudents at Buckeye Hills Career
Center earned Slh place In the nation with their
Pepsi Cola "Learn and Earn" project. The
marketlnK •ludents enl&lt;!red Into an a~eemenl
with lhe Empire FurnKure Company to take over
I he huolness and run It lor thr&lt;'e days. In addition
lo a trophy lor the class and medals lor the student

represenatlves, lhe club received six shares of
Pepsi Cola stock valued at over 1-120. Pictured arP
Karla YouDK and Roberta Waugh, student. who
represenl&lt;!d I he ''DECA'' club In San Jooe; Henry
Thrapp, lhe Pepsi Cola representative who
presenl&lt;!d lhe otudents with their certificates; and
Skip Meadows, owner of the Empire Furniture
Company.

Municipal Court news
GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
Municipal Court. thP tollowtng
lines were levied:

j

Granted divorce

Christine Ward, ~2. Ewin~ton.
speeding, $57; Helena Lawson .
23. Jackson . speeding. $57.
Danny Walton, 37, Vinton, p!E'd
guilty to operatln~ without a
driver' s license . HP was fined
$100 plu s costs.

l "SP lU-1101'11

P\lbUslw'd rach Sundav . K'?t Th!rd A.w ..
Gall!poll&lt;i. Ohio. by thPOhlo Valle-.' f'ub·
Us tun• Compan~ ·Multlmf'dia. Inc Si'
rond rlass po&amp;taflr paid at Galtlpoll5.
Ohio ~~n EntPrf'd as Sl'rond class
maiHnjl mallrr at Pomt'rOI.'. Ohio. Post

Off!C'f'.
M('ml:)(&gt;r · llnitrd PrMs lnH'rn&lt;Hkmo.t! .
Inland DallY Prt'Ss Associt~llon and thr
Ohio Nf'wsP,pt't" Association . Nat tonal
Ad\'f'rt1slftR Ri"pll"'t'ntal fw . Branham

Cited by police
GALLIPOLIS - Dan A. Coen,
18. Ga!Upolls, was cited for
Improper lane usage by the
Gallipolis PoUce DE'partment.

SUNDAY ONL\'
St:MCRIPTION RATI!S

~ARGE

GALLIPOLIS - Jeffn·y May
hugh. Gallipolis. a nd Vlckir
Mayhugh. Barnes ville. received
a decree of divorce from Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
Thursday .
Christine Sanders. Gallipolis.
and Jeff Sanders. Gallipolis,
received a decree of divorc e
Thursday.
Gregory Myers. Huntington.
W.Va .. and Lola Mae Myer s,
Crown City, recelvt&gt;d a decree of
dissolution from Ga!Ua County
Common Pleas Court Thursday.

SELECTION

8)' Carrier or Mot« Kout.r
OnP W f'&lt;'k . . .. . . . . . . .. .
On~ Vrar

..

.. ...

70 Cl"nt ~
.... 136.-&amp;0

SINGLE COI'Y
PRICE
..... 50 CPnts

No subscripTions by mall ~rmltlt'd In
arf'flll whl'fe motcr rarriPr SE'rvlce I.J
available.

Thr Sundav Tlmes·Sf-ntlne-1 wUI not be
rnpautbiP for advann&gt; payments
madt' tocarrll!'l'l.

MAIL 8UII8CRIP'I10NS
8undaJ OaiJ
Onf' Yt-ar .. ..
. ..... . $37.44

Sh: monthS ... .. ........... ... ........... $19.50

Dollroo4-

MAIL 1\!118CRIPTIONII
laldeCouaiJ
UWHb ...
........................ llt.:M
H Wfofll .... ...... .... .................... $37.96
52WHb .............
.. ........... S7Ul
. . . . Oloi.W. CouiJ

13WHb ..... ... .... ... .. .. ... ........... DUO
26 WHb .. .. .. .. . .. .. ............. Sltl.!O
52WHI&lt;I .... ...... ... . .............. m.IO

Rock of Age• often you 1 choice of 6 different colored
grenltts. WhitMer your requirement~ may ba, complete
Ntisfactlon II alllnd with Rock of Agaa.
·
Mon.. TUN., ThuN. • Fri. 8:00 1.m. 'tl 4 ;00 p.m.
Other HOUN by Appolntmtnt-441-2327 or 183-11181

STAILEY A. SAUIDEIS MON. .IITS

lSI 'IIIH An.

wa:-. marrif'd

and had two children
stale Route 12'&gt;. about 3'&gt; mih

or

northl"ast

Pl. 44._1317

0 llflll., CIL.

MQ\.1 ~ H(N!IIG'

I RI DAl 1 00.9 1Cl
~ AI I OO. J JO.I 00 . 9 30

Thr accid£-n t ocru rrf'd nf•a r
Ci nc i nnati. Fu lmpr

'jlffl I 00 . 3 JO,I 00,11 30
'()II ' I U( I I ~UR 1 00,9 JO

WEO l 00 J 30.

00 9 )0

sa id therr appeared 10 be no

. · II*
:7
~.\\,\ ......

rc~

wllnf:l'sst'~ .

,.

'

tt:,~Jungle

"·' Book

Hospital news
~

Veterans Memorial

Nc&gt;U-·spaprr Saff'!l. 7:13 Third Avt&gt;OU&lt;' .
N('\1.' York . Nf&gt;.W York 10017

(;{&gt;or~No"·n .

POMEROY Co nnie

Morri s,

Raci nP:

SI(M,I11(. 1

fRIO'.¥ !J 00
9.00
5Lit~~ ~ 00
I() 'I / TUn A THURS 9 · 00
~TURDAl

Admis sions Iris

tu

register. Age limits may ap~i )· .
depending on the Instrumen t
Pre-registration deadllnP 1.s
Aug . 24 . Cos t for the lesson is
$120 , with checks payable to the
Univer sity of Rio Grande.

State trooper
·.
dies in mishap ... COLO\'
• fll, .,.,
GEORGETOWI'. Ohio 1UPI1
- An Ohio Hlghwa~· Patrol
trooper was killed Par ly Sa tur·
dav In a two-vehicle accident on
L' .S. Routr 681n Brown Co unt v in
southern Ohio.
Hl~hwa y
patrol Ll . Jim
Fulmer sa id Kenneth Maloney,
27. of the Geo rgetown post died at
the scene of the 1· 36 am.
accident that occured when the
patol car and a truck sldeswlpPd
each other .
Two Day ton people in th e stakr
truck. driver Mlcha r l Modesitt.
32. and his wife. Tonva. suffered
minor Injuries and wer&lt;' tr!'ated
at a hos pital.
No citations werr i.surd and
authorities sa id both , -e hiclrs arr
Mmollshed.

JENO~.

Applications Will Be Taken
At Your Local Ohio Bureau
Employment Services Offices

• HOI.IE OXYGEN
• V.li££LCHAIRS
• !IOSi'ITAL BEDS
• SHOWER STOOLS

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

The Pillsbury Company. which supplies premium
quality food products and outstanding service to
its customers 1s now accepting applications for
full - time employment as a team member m the
following areas:

of vandalism

water allovrr thr

lured as one of the events ol the
GalHpolls Bicentennial Celebra·
!ion, the gymanfa Is open to the
public.
Musician and gymanla ganu
conductor Lloyd Savage will lead
the evening ol music. He has
planned an unusual and varied
program, Including background
material on the composers and a
literal translation of the Welsh
words of the hymns.
A display of Welsh hymnals
collected from Wales and many
parts of North America wilt be on
display . The collection Includes
the Australian hymnal published
by the St . David's Welsh Society
of Brisbane as a feature of the
Bicentennial Australian Project.

the State of Ohio Competency Evalutlon Program.
The next course offering will be held from ~pt. 4 through 19
and will be conducted at Overbrook Ce nt er. Middleport.
Pre-registration Is required and class size Is limited. For
more Information contact Barbara Caldwell at 1-800-6&lt;18-2575 or
1-614 245-5306

GALLIPOLIS- The Nursing Home Area Training Center at
the Area Agenc·y of Aging. Inc. wit! be offering an "80-hour
state-a pproved nurse aide training" program designed for
nurse aides who are curre ntly working with the elderly or
ch ronically ill clil•nt
This program, which In c lud es 20 hours of clinical expe rience
and community CPR Iraining, Is required of any person who has
not already been stale-teted and workd as a nurse aide in a
long -term care facility, either now or In the future.
This course provides the competency -based training and
certificates of completion to enable the tralneeeto apply to take

Probe report

July 29. 1990

'chair' dedication set August 3

unf1prwrltln.., .... ...,....., '1111 fP~ .

State-approved course offered

GALLIPOLIS- Employees at
the Redman Inn on U.S. JS
reported vandalism to the Gatlla
Coun ty Sheriff's Department
Friday . They reported that an
unknown p.E"rson had torn a water
pipe out of a urinal and sprayed

July 29, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plmant. W. Va.

Baker. Sy racuS&lt;' .

G
SH0tt1PIG 1
~ RIOAY 7 00
SAT l· OO,J ·00.7 .00
SUJI 1·00 , 3.00 , 7 00
lt:JN/ TUf &amp; TlfJR . l :00
~[0 . L OCI 3: 00 1 :00

0

DischargB - nonf'.

CARDINAL
DRY CLEANERS
446-9495

6 MONTH
A NNTVERSA RY
SALE

�Pag

A-6-Sunday Tmes-Sentiuel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

-.29.1990

July 29. 1990

W.Va.

Porn«ov-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

Sunday Tmes-Sentinal- Page-A-7

Residents need to .know more about bears

"NEW" T.L.C. PRICING

By PAUL D. SCHIFF
Ohio Division of Wildlife
(Editor's nole - Followtog the
recent bear vlatl to Pomeroy and
surroundlog areas, there Is a
need lor people to become more
aware of black bears and their
behavior. The bear described
below as the McArthur bear Is,
accordlog to Meigs County Game
Protector Keith Wood, the same
bear that vtstled Pomeroy last
month and has since crossed
back Into West VIrginia.)

''Temporary Low Cost''
THROUGHOUT THE STORE YOU'LL FIND
BRIGHT RED TAGS MARKED ON OVER
1,000 ITEMS!! WE'RE PASSING ON
"TEMPORARY LOW COST" FROM THE
MANUFACTURER DIRECTLY TO YOU!

SUPER
SAVIMGSf

""Temporary Low Cost"
ITEM
SUNSHINE

SAVE

BACK TO OHIO - According to lhe Division of Wtklllle, black
bears are wandering back Into Ohio from neighboring states.
NATlONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 3 PM EDT 1·29-00

""

SUPERIOR

CHEEZ -ITS ••••••••••••• l~.q\•••• 12 &lt;

SUPER
MEAT DEPT.
SAYINGS!

KRAFT

MAYONNAISE •••••••1to.z••••• 2S&lt;
WHITE OR CIDER

HEINZ VINE GAR ••• l.q~~-•••• 28&lt;

HOT DOGS

79&lt;

12

oz.

KRAFT

BAR-B-Q SAUCE •••• lU\..•. 22&lt;

GROUND
CHUCK

WELCH'S

GRAPE JELLY •••••••• H.q\-•••• 39&lt;

$169

OCEAN SPRAY

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••s.4.PJ.. 17&lt;

LB.

3 lBS. 01 MOlE

WESTERN STYLE

RIBS

GROUND BEEF

$499

S119LB.

3 LB. PKG.

5 LIS. 01 MOlE

ORTEGA

TACO DINNERS ••••• !t~t ... 20 &lt;

BALLARD LINK SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••• }.'~~.~~; •• J6. 99
CRISPY SERVE BACON. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• }.~;.~~~; ••99 C

MUSSLEMANS

APPLESAUCE •••••••••1~.o.z••••• 30&lt;

SLICED SLAB BACON •••••••••• ~.~~~~.~?.~~ .......... ~~~.~ 1.29

GENERAL MILLS

LUCKY CHARMS •••• u.q~.... l 7&lt;

BREAKFAST
COMBO PACKAGE

HILLS BROS.

COFFEE ••••••••••••••••• l~.~z•..•• S1&lt;

•3 LB. SAUSAGE
•3 LB. BACON
•2 1/4 LB. POTATO PAnY

DUNCAN HINES

FRYER
LEG 1/4's

BROWNIES •••••••••••• n.s.Pl••• 28&lt;
CRISCO OIL •••••••••••!!.~~.... 30&lt;

49C

INSTANT

NESTE A•••••••••••••••••~.~~-••••• 40&lt;

MUELLERS

ICE CREAM

112

GAllON

99(

•Chuclt St~ak
eGround Chuclt

•STEAK
•GROUND CHUCK

89C
WHOlE 01

LB.

snu

FAMILY PACI

BONELESS
STRIP STEAKS

112

LB.

PORK

LOIN

CHUCK STEAl
COMBO

•ROAST

:Second tropical storm of
~season fonns Saturday

49( LB.

SPAGHETTI •••••••••••• H.q\•••• 29&lt;
SHUR FRESH

BOLOGNA

FRYER PARTS

5 LB. 01 MOlE

""DAIRY SAVINGS"

.

WHOLE OR
MIXED

LB.

$169

u.

$179

Ll.

Unlit 2 With

"'PRODUCE SAVINGS"

110.00 Purhau

HILLANDALE

ALL PURPOSE

EGGS

$129

1B
COUNT

$599
TENDER SWEET

ECKRICH

ECKRICH

CALIFORNIA

CHOPPED HAM

HONEYCURED HAM

CARROTS

$399 ~~

$149
S ll. lAG

NEW

YELLOW ONIONS

CO.NER OF GENERAL
HARTINGER PARKWAY
AND PEARL ST.

MIDDlEPORT
992-3471

MIAMI tUPli - Tropical
Storm Bertha formed Saturday
· In the Atlantic orr Florida and
&gt;was predicted to begin moving
north within 24 hours, possibly
; bringing strong winds and rain to
· I he nation' s East Coast.
; Bertha. the second tropical
storm of the Atlantic-Caribbean
•)lurrlcane season. was stationary
:1n the Atlantic about 280 miles
· eas t of Cape Canaveral, where
NASA of!lctals were decldln~
. whether to roll the space shu ttle
· Atlantis orr Its launch pad and
· back Into a hanger out of danger.
: Reconnaissance a lrcraft
' clocked the system' s winds at 50
mph with strong gusts In squalls
. north and east of the storm's
: cent er.
; · Forecasters at the Nationa l
· Hurricane Center In Miami up: graded Bertha !rom a depression
: ro a tropiCal storm at 6 a .m. a nd
located II near Ia tii ude 28.5 north ,
:.longitude i5.5 west.
: · "Bertha has not a rrect!'d Flori ·
da's weather yet. Tllere area few
: ~bowers near Cape Canaveral
: but IIley are not associated wltll
· the system," said Mark Zimmer,
il mPtl'Orologtst at the hurricane
: cl'ntrr.
•

$139
5 LI.IAG

lED IIPI

WATERMELONS

$2 99

IACI

Unlike mo s t sy stems . &amp;rtha
formed from the remnants of a
large low pressure art'a and did
not come out of the deep tropics .
"The depression set out in the
ocean covering a pretty broad
area and then gradually began to
turn a little more. Conditions are
favorable for additional strengthening ," Zimmer said.
Small craft !rom St. Augustine.
Fla . to Savannah. Ga . were
warne d to stay In port and tllo..,
from Jupiter Inlet south to Kev
Largo wrrr advised to stay clos&lt;•
to port.

Informational
booth .--1lanned
GALLIPOLIS - Th~ Ga ll ia
Coun t:-' VPIPrans Commission is
plannln~ an Informational booth
at til~ Gallia Count y rair. with
inform at lon to bfl provldf'd for all
vPt£'rans and dPpPndents as to

posslblt' bPne!lts.
Th~ public Is inv iiPd to stop and
sig n up for a dallv drawing for a
1~ - s qu a rr - foot 1f

x ~· 1 Amf'rlran

flag .

ment of Natural Resources.

''They're more like an overgrown raccoon than the popular
stereotype or the aggressive
animal we see on television,"
said Pat Ruble the division's
wildlife researcll and management administrator .
"The return of black bears to
Oil to Is something we're going to
nave to get used to. Most of us
here tlllnk it's fascinating and
marvel a t a rural Ohio that can
again support Black Bears."
Black bears are snowing up In
eastern Onto somewhat regu larly now . A lew years ago, a
sighting was a phenomenon that
attracted mucll atten~on. Last
spring, I llere were more than 50
slghllngs reported to the Akron
Division of Wildlife office alone.
Many of the black bears
showing up In Oil to are wayfaring
_voung males, on thP movt:- from
West VIrginia and Pennsylvania
trying to establish territory of
their own . However. It's inevita ble that some or these bears.
crowded out of their home state
will take up permanent residence
In Ohio. Sows !adu lt lemalesl
nave been spotted with cubs
fo Uowtng behind.
''People are going to see bears
In Ohio," said Ruble. "And

ents some immeOiate real threat
or the animal Is a repeai
problem, our advice will almos.t
always be 'back-olf.' "
Bear-up Ohioans, relax and:
enjoy; marvel! And use som&amp;
common sense. The black bear IS:
a fascinating animal, cautious;
timid yet curious, more scared of·
you than you are of It, and like
most wild animals harmless
unless threatened or cornered.
"It's unUkely that Ohio will
soon have a large bear populo··
tton," added Ruble. "There maY:
be 20 or so In eastern Ohio at an)'
one time. Ohio can support bearsi
Ohio bears, If people can learn to
live with them."

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES STARnNG
AUGUST 6TH
GaiHpolls
Mlddlepart-Pameroy
446-0699

s
Magic!

,..........r.M.""''·

111oo1. &amp; Fri. ti

I r.M.

rJ

tH 7
!etotMv ti S r.ll LGIUS&amp;

Suit filed recently

1990

A sui t was recently filed by Jan
Parker, Reedsville. aga inst
Tuppers Plains -Chester Water
District. Keedsvllte. and Paul's
Pipeline, Danville. Ky .
The plaintiff allegedly allowed
the defendants to s tore pipe and
construction ('(lulpment on the
plaintiff's property and claims
the defendants failed to pay for
storage.

Meigs

judgment awarded

Auto-Ramo

A petition for judllfllent was
,,..quested b.v Motorists Mutual
Insurance Compaily. Columbus .. a~atns t Leonard G. Padl'n, Mem ·
phis. Tenn .. as the result of an
auto accld enl allegedly caused

POMEROY PARKING
LOT!

b~· Pad~n .

occurred

in

Today 1:00 P.M.-S:OO P.M.
SPONSORED BY

ON

50 LB.
BAG

* OVER 200 VEHICLES

lED FLAME
01 THOMPSON

WHITE SEEDLESS

GRAPES

89C

Ll.

HOllE GIOWN

GREEN CABBAGE

25(

Ll.

10• GIOWII

TOMATOES

$2 99

or pursued. the bear will often
climb a tree. Most often, uninformed people !eel something
must be done and that's what
creates a problem. Left alone,
the bear will likely wander olf."
Several Incidents the last lew
springs verify Ruble's comments. Bears have been shot at,
chased and killed by wellmeaning but uninformed people.
At East Liverpool In early
May, a 125-pound male black
bear wandered Into a residential
area and was shot by pollee.
Wlldllle biologists had advised to
leave the bear alone. Given time
and a little quiet, the bear would
have left the area on Us own.
Within a lew days of the East
Liverpool Incident, at McArthur,
a bear was discovered In a tree
across tile street from an elementary school. A Dtvtston of Wildlife
biologist anesthetized the bear
with a dart gun. The Immobilized
bear was safely caught In a net as
It !ell from the tree and was
transported lor release In a
wilderness area at Shawnee
State Forest In southern Ohio.
·'We appreciate reports of bear
slghtlngs," continued Ruble.
·'But unless tile situation repres-

SUMMER
SIDEWALK SALE

POTATOES

''DELI SAVINGS''

$)59~:~

'

RED SKIN

$539

FOLGERS

INSTANT DECAF ••••tqt •••. 77&lt;

.

WEATHER MAP- Showers and possible severe thunderstorms
will likely develop ahead ol a cold front moving through the Great
Lakes Stales and the central Rockies. Showers are likely along the
AtlanUc coast as a surface trough remains In the area. The West
will he sunny. Skies will be partly cloudy over the Northeast, the
Mississippi Valley, and the Plains.

Lions and tigers and bears 7
on. my! Three beasts popularIzed by a classic ltlm hold a
certain mystique. Many people
think they're dangerous predators that belong In a zoo and not In
our backyards, where they might
chase our c hildren and eat our
pets. And definitely not running
loose In urban or suburban Ohio.
Well folks, the bears are llere
again. And as pre-settlement
Ills tory points out, they were here
first.
Dangerous predators' Far
from It accord ing to the Division
of Wildlife of the onto Depart-

unfortunately the reactions are
pretty predictable . They'll either
want to snoot It or make It a pet,
both reactions create problems.''
One extreme Is the bear fan.
This person might Ignore a "do
not feed the bears" sign In a
western national park and poses
the wife and kids lor photos with
a bag of marshmallows and a
begging bruin. In bear states
neighboring Ohio, these people
create the "habituated" bear:
one that overcomes the lear
Ins tlnct and assocIates people
and developed land with food.
In nearby Charleston, W.Va.,
black bears wandering through
the suburbs have become a
somewhat common occurrence.
West VIrginians, unlike Ohioans,
have had a little time to get used
to tile visitors.
The habituated bear, while not
tame, wtll wander llapplly Into
the suburbs, again and again and
again, In search of a handout .
This problems bear was created,
not born, and often the only relief
Is to cage or kill the bear.
The other extreme Is simply
one ol overreaction. A bear tllat
accidently llnds Itself surrounded by cars, dogs, and
people becomes confused and
may behave unpredictably . Its
bellavtor could easily be misinterpreted as aggression and the
simple solution that "dead bears
are the only good bears" could be
arrived at too quickly.
The return of black bears to
Oll lo Is viewed by many as
exciting. Those fortunate enotigh
to see a black bear In the wild
sllould enjoy the opportunity but
sllould treat the sighting with
common sense and respect.
A popular summation or the
bear problem In Ohio be wildlife
ofllclals ends will! "people are
the problem, not bears ."
So why all the russ? Misconceptions and bad judgment.
Occasionally a bear become
habituated to humans and human handouts. These animals
are sometim es observed upset ting garbagecansand wandering
Into developed areas. Other
wandering bruins turn left wllen
they should have turned right
and lind themselves lost In a
maze or blacktop.
"Authorltlell need to encourage people to back away, to give
the bear an opportunity to
retwat. said Ruble. II harassed

I L1. lilT.

IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!

NEW WHITE
SEED POTATOES

''Bslloont Fot The l&lt;ld1 ''

SOUTHERN YAMS

2

DEPENDABLE
HEAVY DUTY
LIS.Sl

GOLDEN IIPE

3 LIS.s ~
CANTALOUPES

S1 69

IACI

S4S9

$369

No 1 tn Long Ltle.
fewest Repairs.
Lowest Service costs
and Brand Preference
(Based on Consumer

BANANAS

J-0 HO.GIOWJI

WASHERS

DEPENDABlE
BIG LOAD
DRYERS

Brand Preference
Surveys)

The Number 1
Preferred Drye1
• Commercially
Proven (Based on a
Consumer Brand

Preloreoce Survey}

RUTLAND FURNITURE
ST. II. 124

742-2211
n.t'• Mltl Off lt. 7

You'll Find Super Savings
on All Vehicles in Stock.

IU1'UID, OHIO

HAT
WITH A TEST
DRIVE!!
~'FREE"

.

�Page

A-S-Sunday Time&amp;-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleesant, W. Va.

July 29, 1990

--Area deaths-- Forty-seven are fmed in Meigs County court
William Hash

Paul Cornett
GALLIPOLIS - Paul L. Cornett. 65, Canal Winchester, Friday, July 27, 1990 In Mt . Carmel
Medical Center. He was retired
from Gallipolis Parts Ware house
and was a member of Groveport
St . Mary's Catholic Church. He
was also a World War II Navy
veteran. He Is survived by his
wife Mary and three chl!dren Tom Corne tt, Groveport, Jill
1Chuc k 1 Fisher, Carroll, and
Robert Cornell, Groveport. He
had four grandchildren and five
brothers -Clarence, Vandalia;
Delbert, Zanesville; Norman. St.
Clairsville; Edward, Zanesville;
Car l, Zanesville. He had one
sister. Ma ry Agnes Scott, Newark, and numerous nieces a nd
nephews .
Co rnell was preceded in deat h
by his pa rents Harry and Rosa
tCrock t Cornett.
Fnends may call from 2-4 p.m.
a nd 7-9 p.m. on Sunday at
Dwayne R. Spente Funeral
Home In Ca nal Winchester.
Fu nera l mass will be Monday
at 10 a. m at Groveport St .
Mary's Ca tholic Churc h with the
Rev. Fa ther Anthony Mlssml
Ce lebrate. Entombment will be
at St. Joseph Ma uso leum.
Friends may make co ntributions
to the Ameri ca n He a rt
Association.
VIgil service will be Sunday,
J uly 29, at 8:30p.m. a t the funeral
home.

Herman Fierbaugh
GALLIPOLIS - Herman R.
Fl e rbaugh, 76, of Pat riot Star
Rou te, died Wednesday, July 25 ,
1990 at hi s residence.
Funeral services will be con·
ducted 2 p.m. Monday at Wlllts
Fu ne ral Home. Bu rial will be In
Centena ry Cemetery.
Friends may cal l the funera l
home tod ay from 2 to4 p.m. a nd 7
to 9 p.m
Pa llbearers will be Phil Pope ,
Do n Pope, Bob Foster. Verlln
Bac k and Henry Mye rs .

Rhoda Fox

BIDWELL - William Frank
Hash, 69, of Rt. I, Bidwell, died
Saturday. July 28, 1990 at his
residence.
He was born Nov . 8, 1920 In
Gallla County, son of the late
William Glenn and Luvlna
Surber Hash .
He Is survtved by three broth·
ers, Leonard Hash, Clarence
Hash and Martin Hash, all of
Bidwell; two sisters, Mrs . Dor·
cas Dodr!ll of Westerville, Ohio
and Mrs. Robert (Maggie) Hers
man of Bidwell.
He was preceded In death by
one brother and two sisters.
Funeral services w111 be conducted 11 a.m. Monday a l the
Morgan Center Weslyan Church
w1th Rtovs. Marvin Sallee a nd
William Wlsemandle otr!clat lng .
Burial will be In Mille r
Ctometery.
Friends may call at the McCoy
Moore Funeral Home. Vinton,
today from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m .

David Sims

POMEROY - Edna Ca rri e
Ha ning, 92 . Pomeroy, died Sat ur ·
day, .July 28, 1990, following a n
extended Illness at Amtorlcare·
Pomeroy Nursing a nd Rehablll ·
tallon Centt&gt;r .
A housewife. s he was born
Nove mber 13. 1897 In Bedford
Township to George and Hattie
·Dickson Cuckler.
She Is survived by a son .
Ha r lev 1Margaretl Haning,
Pomerov . two daughters.
Evelyn · Warner and Helen
1Hilbert Qulvey . both of Pomeroy. two nieces. 14 grandchild·
r~n. 29 gr~a t - grandchlldren and
16 great -g reat _grandchildren .
She was preceded In death by
her parents; her husband , Dana
Ha ning: three sisters. four broth·
prs. and a great granddaughter.
Rond• Cobb.
Funtoral services are scheduled Monday atl p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev . J.
David Prentice officiating. Bur·
tal will be In Burlingham
Ceme tery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home o ne hour prior to services
at Jhe funeral home.

roy, speed. $29 and costs; Brian
M. Wright. Nelsonville, not fish·
lng license, $25 and costs; Curtis
Lee Ward, Pomeroy, DWI, $250
and costs, 3 days jail. operators
license suspended for 60 days,
expired plates. $20 and costs:
Ronald Lee Ward, Proctorville.
speed, $22 and costs; Mark
McB!nge, Middleport, no opera·
tors lice nse, $75 and costs. Jdays
suspended If valid operators
license presented In 60 days;
Michele C. Garretson, Middle·
port, DWT, $250 and costs, 3 days
jail, license suspended 60 days,
jail suspended and $150 of fine
suspended upon enrol(fllent and
completion of RTP school, left of
center, $15 and costs and Ken·
neth A. Ferrell, Liverpool,
W.Va., sa fel y violation, $25 and
costs.
Also, Ralph J . McDaniel ,
Pomeroy. DWJ, $250 and costs, 3
days jail, 60 days license sus·
pended, RTP school; Mary L.
Mills. Detrlot, Mich., failure to
yi eld, $10 and costs; Tammy L.
Johnson, Pomeroy, DWI , $250
and costs, 3 day s jail, jail and fine

suspended upon completion of
RTP school, no license, $75 and
costs, 3 days concurrent, flct!·
Uous registration, $15 and costs;
David L. Carnahan, Reedsville,
no operators license, $75 and
costs, 3 days jail suspended on
proof of valid license by 30 days;
Susan K. Myers, Long Bottom,
discarding trash along roadway,
$50 and costs, 10 days jail
suspended on condt lion trash sl te
be restored within 2 weeks;
Jasper Bonecutter, Middleport,
speeding, $42 and costs; Jeffrey
L. Roush, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va .,
passing bad checks. $25 and
costs, restttutfon: Thomas
D.Grady, Racine, discarding
trash along roadway. S50 and
costs, 10 days suspended upon
cleaning of trash site within two
weeks; Norman W. Milliron,
Racine, discarded trash along
roadway, $50 and costs, 10 days
jail suspended upon cleaning
trash site within two weeks;
Lance He rman, Middleport, no
operators license, 9 days jail,
credit for time served; Brian
Bowling, Racine, speed, $50 and
costs; John L. Chevalier, Reeds·
vflle, no operators license two
counts, $50 and costs, 90 days
suspended to 30 days on each,
DWT, $250 and costs, 90 days jail
s uspended to 30 days, six months
operators license suspension,
failure to control, costs only ;
James Earl Erdmann, Colorado
Springs, Co lo., speed , $25 and
costs .
Forfeiting bonds were Clarisse
Pierce, Pomeroy . speed, $80;
Raymond Pauley, W.Va., speed,
$60; James Schackel, Long Bot·
tom, seat belt violation, $40;
Joseph Thomas, Middletown ,
Ky ., speed, $53 .

Along the River

iimes- ientintl Section

B

July 29, 1990

Final preparations are made for 41st Gallia fair

!

GALLIPOLIS - The 41st An·
nual Gallla County Junior Fair
opens Monday, and many groups
have worked long hours to make
certain the fair fs enjoyable lor
everyone who attends.
The fair boasts many different
kinds of activities !or everyone
this year . There are animal
judglngs of all kinds as well as
projects displayed by the 4· H
groups lrom the area. There Is
horse judging. tobacco judging,
dog obedience judging, cat judg·
lng, poultry and small pet judg·
!ng, sheep judging, rabbit judg·
lng, engineering project judging,
dairy judging and swine judging.

,.

/

There will be the annual lamb,
hog, tobacco and s leer sales .
There are also the traditional
actlvltes such as the Little Miss
Gallla County and Little Mister

Gallla County contests as well as
the 1990 Gallla County Queen
Contest.
Each evening, fatrgoers w!ll btl
able to enjoy entertainment by
many big name performers. The
Pfelfers. Lacy J . Dalton, the
Desert Rose Band, Just Another
Band and Earl Thomas Conley
will all be performing at this
year's fair.
Also, there will be a teen dance,
demolition derby, championship
wrestling, kiddie tractor pull ,
pretty baby contest, F11rm Bu ·
reau talent show and a style
review at the fair.
Many booths w!ll be set up In
the activity buildings at the fair.
Booths for churches, hospitals,
candidates for public office and
many more will be set up and are
available for people to browse
pas t.

•

r

Charles VanMeter'
WEST COLUMBIA - Charles
F . VanMeter , 64, of West Colum·
bla died Friday, July 27, 1990 at
his home.
Born Nov. 21, 1925 in Hall wood,
he was the son of the lale Edward
B. and Clara May (Bass) VanMeter.
VanMeLCr was employed as a coal
miner, served in the U.S. Army m
World War II and was a member of
the VFW Stewart-Johnson Post
119926 or Mason. He was preceded
in death by one son, Edward "Guy"
VanMeLCr, two sisters and two
SIGN BURNING EVENT HELD - A sign
bumlng event was held recently to mark the
completion ol the new home ollhe Church of the
Nazarene In Syracuse. Pictured stardng the strn
bumtng fire, while members or the congregation
looked on. are the Rev . Glenn B. McMillan,
pastor, and Jim Cundrffl, Sunday School

superintendent. The attractive 52 x 104 loot new
church building, located along Route 124, Is seen
In the background. A dedication service will bt•
held Sunday, Aug. 5 at 10 a.m . with the public
Invited. The fanner Church of the Nazarene
building, on Bridgeman St ., has been occupied by
the Syracuse Mission.

Weather
By United Press International
South Central Ohio
Partly sunn y. H •.. 85 to 90.
Winds becom ing south at&gt; to 10
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent
Tonight, partly cloudy . Low 65 to
70. Chance of rain 20 percent
Monday, mos tly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorm s. Hi gh In the mid 80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent
Extended Forecast
Tuesday through Thunoday
A chance of showers and
thunders torms Tuesday a nd
mainly over the south on Wedn es ·
day. Fair Thursday . Highs 80 to
85 Tuesday and around 80 Wed nesday and Thursday .

Clarification
POMEROY - Because or the
numerous requests concernintc:
camp sites at the Rock Springs
Fairground s during Me ig s
County fair week, clarification
on procedure has been Issued by
Mary Gilmore. secretary of the
Fair Board.
She advises that there art&gt; live
rules which the Fair Board Is
operating und er. They are as
follow s:
No spots may be reserved pri or
to the opening of the secreta ry 's
office on the fairgrounds on
Thursday . Aug . 10 . The office
hours are 9 a .m. go 4 p.m.
Spaces will be assigned o n a
first come, first serve basis .
Only one s pace may be re·
served per Individual, which
means that If an Individual
cannot be presen t to reserve a
campsite, someone may ask
another Individual to do that for
them, but they may only reserve
one spot total.
An Individual mu st be at least
18 years or age or older to reserve
a space.
The fees are $50 a week for
campers and $25 for tents .

. County···--- - GallUl
continued trom A·l

There Is also a pretty baby
contesl In the morning, spon.
sored by the GaiUpoiiJ Junior
Woman's Club. and an OSTPA
sancl!ont&gt;d tractor pull II held In
the evening.
On Saturday, thlnp come to a
c lose with the junior fair hone
show . till&gt; Farm Blareau Talent
show , a teen dane. ancl a
di'Rlolltton derby .
Entertalrvnent Ia a pia 111 thla
year's fair, with ppel mwllc'1
Pfeifer• headllnlnll on Tllelclay.
wedneoday kicks off I be (Otllllry
and rock perfonners, with Lacy

and costs .
Also, Bobby Cockerell, Corydon, Ind ., passing at lntersec·
tlon, $10 and costs; Karen S.
Schartlger, Middleport, speed,
$25 and costs; Kenneth E . Green,
Shade, fictitious plates , $25 and
costs; Gary Dean Painter, Par·
kersburg, W.Va., left of center ,
$10 and costs; Sammy Maynard,
Racine. disorderly conduct while
Intoxicated, $100 and costs, six
months probation, $70 sus·
pended; Cheryl Bethel, McAr·
thur, speeding, $23 and costs;
Timothy J. Thompson, Rutland,
speed, $23 and costs; John Henry
Noll, Ravenswood, W.Va., speed,
$21 and costs and Robert L.
Morris Jr., Lockbourne, safety
violation, $25 and costs, record of
duty sta tus not In driver's posses·
s lon . $25 and costs.
Also, Terry L. Dickey , Ch 1111·
co th e, speed, $20 and costs;
Roger C. Burba, Yellow Springs,
no medical certificate, $25 and
costs: Terry D. Michael, Syra cuse, $75 and costs, 3 day s jail
suspended upon presentation of
valid operators license within 90
days; Karen L. Gritllth, Pom e·

GALLIPOLIS- David Wayne
Sim s , newborn son of David Sims
a nd Patricia Bai rd. died Friday ,
July 27 at University Hospftalln
Ci ncinnati.
Survi ving wer e materna l
grandmother Mrs. Wayne (Do·
rothyl Baird. Gallipolis, and
paternal grandmother Mrs. Ver·
non !Clara I Sims, Gallipolis.
Funeral ser vices will be 11
a. m. Monday at Waugh-Halley Wood Funeral Home In Galllpo·
Us, officiated by Rev . James
Sims. Burial will be at Campaign
Cemetary .
There will be no call!ng hours.

CLIFTON- Rhoda E . Fox, 79 ,
of Clifton died Friday, July 27,
1990 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Ocl 10, 1910 in HuntingiOn, she was the daughter or the
brothers .
late Alben R. and Martha V.
Surviving are two sons, Charles
(B iaire) Smith. Fox was a member
F.
VanMeter, Jr. of Clifton and
or the Clifton Untted Methodist
Joseph
Allen VanMeter of West
Church. She was pr~ in death
Columbia;
one daughter, Norma J.
by her husband, Lloyd C. Fox.
Hutehins
of
Chillicothe, Ohio; two
Surviving is one son, Larry L.
sisters,
Eunice
L. Hallscoa and
Fox of Mason; three sislers, Doris
LaNora
M.
VanMeler
both of
A. Pearl of Clifton, Edna J. Roush
Mason;
four
brothers,
Ray
T. Vanof Mason and Bertha D. Canwright
Meter and William H. VanMeter
of P01nt Pleasant; one brolller, Roy
both of Mason, Harold L. VanMeter
A. Smith of Manning South
of
Point Pleasant and Paul E. VanCarolina, four grandchildren and
Meier of Rutland, Ohio. and seven
five grea t grandchildren.
granc hildren
Semce will be at 1:30 p.m. on
Service will be aJ 1:30 p.m. on
Sunday, July 29, 1990 at the
Tuesday,
July 31, 1990 at
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Foglesong
Funeral
Home with the
Rev. Terry Alvarez officiating.
Rev.
Bennie
Stevens
officiating.
Bunal will follow at the Kirkland
will
follow
at
the
Bunal
Memorial Gardens .
Adamsville
Cemelery
in
Mason.
Friends may call at the funeral
Military graveside rites will be
home on Saturday, July 28, 1990
held .
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
There will be no vrsitation hours.

Edna Haning

POMEROY Forty-seven
people were fined In the cour·
troom of Meigs County Judge
Patrick H . O'Brien Wednesday .
Appearing was Karl R.
Gordes, Naperville, Ill. , speed,
$24 and costs; Jo Ann Abel,
Crescent Springs, Ky ., speed, $21
and cos ts; Mindy Jo Ford,
Fairmont, W.Va ., speed, $23and
costs; Melinda D. Riggs , Langs·
ville, speed , $25 and costs;
Ernest K. Fox, Cottageville,
W.Va., safety violation, $25 and
costs; Michael McGraw, Athens.
$29 and costs, speeding; Henry
Roney Jr .. New Haven, W.Va .,
speeding, $22 and costs; Thomas
Hines, Little Hocking, DWI, $300
a nd costs, 10 day s jail , operators
license suspended for 120 days ,
disord erly conduct, costs and
restitution; Kelly A. Morris,
Long Bottom, speeding, $20 and
costs; Nancy Ca mpbell, Racine,
speed, $21 and costs; Lisa
Waugh, Middleport, speed, $24
and cos ts: Robert M. Ha ley,
Pomeroy, speed, $25 and costs:
Allan H. Smith, Athens, speed,
$20 and costs and Belinda Sayre,
Pomeroy. failure to control, S20

J . Dalton that night, The Desert
Rose Band on Thursday, Just
Another Band on Friday and
Earl Thomas Conley rounding
ou I the week on Saturday.
The opening ceremonies wllJ
be beld Monday at 6 p.m. , with
VFW Post 4464 providing the
services, and lbe Lllde Miss and
Mtalfr Galllll Countycontesll get
underway at 7 p.m.
At 9: 30 p.m., the Mtu Gallla
Counly pageant .,.glas, aDd cw
ot the ten youna women wlll be
chosen for that honor.

TOW TO DREDGE AT DAM - This tow, owned by L.W.
Matteoon, Inc., has entered Into a lease agreement with Yeager
Marine Industries, Inc. to dredge at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
The low wtll be working at the site for about four months,

THE WORK CONTINUES- Ray Bll!lh, Gallipolis Fire Chief, saws
a board as Farrell Miller as!li511 him . They are seen working on

laying a new cement pad for the Firemen's rtna t011s booth to beset
up a1 the 41st Annual G a!Ua County Junior Fair bepnnlal Monday.
(Tim....Senttnel photo by Kathryn Kelb)
HOOKING UP mE CUI«:UJTS - Ralph Young, also wllh
Wamaley Electric, hookl! up some electrical wlrea In the circuli
box behind the main sta&amp;e at the fairgrounds. He II working In
preparation for the Gallla County Junior Fair beglnnbtg
Monday.(Tim...Sentloel photo by Kathryn Kelly)

MONUMENTS ARE OUR ONLY
BUSINESS, NOT A SIDELINE. ..

LOGAN
MONUMENT CO.
MEIGS COUNTY
DISPlAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
lEO L. VAUGHAN, Mgr.
PHONE 992·2688

VINTON. OHIO
DISPlAY YARD
STATE RT . 160
JAMES A BUSH , Mgr.
PHONE 388·8603

, '!J''

.. ... JJ
I ' ' ;

LAYING GRAVEL- The work lor the GaiUa County Junior Fair
conllnues a.• a worker moves gra•el wllh this end loader to a
muddy area outside one of the barns at the fal111rounds . The fair,
which begins Monday, will feature many anbnal exhibits and t -H
project•. ( Times-Sendnel photo by Kathryn Kelly)

PREPARING FOR CEMENT - Farrell Miller, kneeling, and
Jerry Haner, standing, level olf some hoards as they get ready to
pour t•cmenl for a new pad lor the fireman's ring toM booth allhe
upcoming Gal !Ia County Junior Fair. Although the fair does not
begin until Monday, many people are preparing early for the
event . (Tim.s-Sentlnel photo by Kathryn Kelly)

MONTH END CLEARANCE
ON ALL TRUCKS

New 1990 Nissan Pickup

1 YEAR CD SPECIAL!

Now Is the time to select a
tamily monument. Perpetuate,
lor all lime, the rnlllflOT)I ol
those you love. Our knowledQII
and experience are yours lor
the .sking.
Nothing you buy will ever be
as pennanent as a fam•ly monu·
men!. Its purchase wan•nls
thou~t ana gu1rJance. See
wh~l you buy. Visil the monu·
ment dealer who hal a com·
plete display, and who can
aeslgn a person11IIHd manu·
ment 10 harmonize with Its
surrouncllngs .
We have the experience. We
have the complete dlsp/11)1.
Your pun:hiiSIIIS bllclced by file
strongest monument QUBflltiiH
obt11inable todll)l.

New 1990 Dodge Dakota

DRAPING THE BOOTH - Anne Rod&amp;enl, slandln&amp;, and Denise
Shockley, kneeling, staple ~rapes to the walls of lbeir booth for the
Fl1'8t Church of the Nazarene. They were found Inside one ol th e
activity buildings preparing lor the lair. Allhough a lot ol work i.,
being done. l)le Nazarene booth Is one of the first to be close lo
completion. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kathryn Kelly)

~-· ,jl_

New 1990 Dodge D-150
ANNUAl
PERCENTAGE

un

lhls 12 month variable rate CD with on annual in·
terest rate of 7.75"/o Is compounded dally to provide
an effective annual yield of 8.06%. This certificate of
deposit requires a minimum deposit of $2,500 and
has a floor rate of 7.25.,.. There is a substllntial in·
tel'llt penalty for early withdrawal.
• Annual Yield baaed on Initial offering rate.

446-2631

King Cab, air conditioning,
tinted glass , jump seals .

8 fl . bed, automatic, 318 VB,
stereo cassette, much more .

$11,999 $)0,934

1-800-468-6682

Ohio Valley Bank

'.'t ' ~ ....

Member FDIC
4 Convenient Location•

~ - Clrt W.,..leJ, .. Wanlllef
Bledrlc, d- t...
clueltiiiH llle eledrlclll worll
ler llle , .., .u.aJ Ollila c•.., ........ Fair. . . - ..... . -.
• • • a&amp; llle ,.......... m•• Hre 1M&amp; ..e..,a., II lit
lfll'lflr . . - fer llle tlfOIITI 111111'. WMI'IIe)' Bledrlc II tile
nab..._ lw llle _ , . .
,1111 fer tile
('II • I II II-- 11J ....,.lllll,r)

CJIECKINO 'lU

CONCII:IIION 8ET-1JP- Cbara Cn'en, lela, ud lee Abnunl,
rfllti, .. _ca•tnet... WW'Ilfwa
llludtobele&amp; ..
M llle Gille Ca•IJ h' 'u Plllr. !l.tsnCI Ill II 0.. lllet t 1 1, ol

m-...

•trlell

'*· . .

•

. ·'

�Tinll

July 29, 1990

s. ......

Pomaot-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Plavant. W. Va .

Magers-Wonn
•,,

PARSONS, Kan . - Mrs . Sandra Magers of Parsons, Kan .. Is
announcing the engagement of
her daughter , Dina Magers, to
Bryan Wonn, son of Mr . and Mrs .
EarlL. Wonn of Crown City .
Miss Magers ls a graduate of
Parsons High School and Is a
sophomore at La bette Commun Ity College.
Wonn graduated !rom Gallla
Academy High School and ls a
sergent In the U.S. Army cur·
rently stationed In Panama .
No wedding dale has been set
at this time.

SONJA M . STEELE , KEVIN N. FICK

Steele-Pick
POMEROY - Sha ron and
: Okey Meadows, Pomeroy . and
: Mr . and Mrs. Frank Steele.
·.Manassas, Va ., are announcing
;.tile engagemenl of their daugh·
' ier, Sonja Marguerlle Steele to
; Revln Nell Flck, son of Mr. and
: Mrs. Richard Flck. Jr., of Long

· }lonom.

~-- Miss Sleeil&gt; Is a graduate of

:Meigs

High School a nd Is em ·ployed at Slop and Slyle &amp;auty
: shop at Mauml'l'.

Flck is a graduate of Eastern
High Schoo l and of Hocking
Technical College with a degree
In ceramic engineering. He Is
e mployed a t Owens Brockway In
Perrysburg.
The open church wedding will
take pla ce Sept. 1 at 6: 30p.m. al
the Firs t So uthe r n Baptist
Church In Pomeroy.
A reception will follow In the
c hu rc h ha ll

:Fanning anniversary observed
GALLIPOLIS Bill a nd
. Esther tPowell) Fanning cele. bra led their 351h wedding ann!: versary on June 24, 1990 al lhe
: home of Lizzie Fanning. The
- celebrallon was hosted by the
- couple's two c hildren, Billy
Wayne and PamaJa .
Local guests Included : Mr. and
Mrs. Ishmael Gllspil&gt;, Ma ry
. Sayre. Mr. and Mrs. J ean
· Starcher. Rev . and Mrs. Mingu s,
· Elva Holbrook. Jean Barr, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Glll&lt;&gt;sple, Mr. and
Mrs. Maxie Jarvis, Mr. and Mrs.
· Marvts Wolf£', Donni£' McGulrP.
· Mr. and Mrs. Garland Lear and
: John DeLl lie.

:

Ou1-ot-town gues1s were :

. July -77
: Reunton

. GA LLIPOLIS - The descend
. ents of Milo and Ethel tSheetSI
· Fellure held their reunion on Jul y
:22 al the hom e of Dona ld
: Saunders at Lee Ia . Those at te nd · ing were Mary 1Fellure1 Cox.
: Doris Birchfie ld a nd Rebecca
' Birchfield of Ha nna n Trace Rd . ,
:Crown City; Doris I Felluret
:s.unders; Ray and Terry Saund· ers; Donald. Bonnie, Bradley
·and Melissa Sau nders; Jeff,
. Debbie and Kayla Saunders. all
o! Lecta; Paul and Vlvtan
: Fellure of Rock Li ck. Crown
: City; Kat hy 1Fellure 1 J ohnson.
· Randy and Adam Johnson of
: ca!Upolls: Richard. Becky, Joa·
: nle, Stacie and Vance Fellure of
· ME'reervtlle a nd Dianna Fellure
: !o Gastonia. N.C. Eric Lloyd. a
· friend of 1hz famlly'y . also
: attended . Mr . a nd Mrs. Bernard
: Fellure and Mr . and Mrs. Freder· lck Fellure were unable to
: auend , Plans were made to hold
:= thE' reunion at the sa me place on
-' July 21 nex t year

Robin En nis. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Ennis, Mr and Mrs . Elvin Ennis.
Mabel Escue, Barbara Sutton.
and Dorothy Peters, St . Albans.
W. Va .; Mr . and Mrs. Arlie
Ennis , Wilda Escue, and Larry
Ennis , Tornado , W. Va .; Mr . and
Mrs . Bill Fi elds , Charleston. W.
Va .; Mr. a nd Mrs. Will Fields.
Mr . and Mrs. Conard Midkl!!,
South Charleston , W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. .J oe Ca rper , Annie
Ca rper. Amma, W. Va .; Lorran
Philips, Co lumbus, Ohio.

Smith-Sauters
MIDDLEPORT - The open
church wedding of Rev . Odls
StevE'n Smith and Chert Allee
Saute rs will be held Aug. 11 at
noon a t the Middleport Untied
PentE'costal Church on South
Third Avenue.

Alii6 ~~c~
V Chuk u1 out/

Tesrs available

o NIKE

GA LLIPOLIS - Holzer Clln
ic's Gast roenterologis t. Ma rk G
Christopher, M.D Is now performing two new diagnosti c
procedures dealing with problems of lhe diges tive tract.
The tes ts are used to diagnose
swallowing disorders and problems related Ia hlalal hernia. as
well as diagnose ga llbladder
problems a nd pan creatic di sorders not picked up by ultra ·
sou nd a nd CT scans.
The tes ts Involve lillie physical
discomfort and are performed on
an outpatient basts at the clinic.
Prior to Christopher offering
these procedures. area residents
had to travel to Columbus or
farther to obtain the tes rs .
To schedule an appointment,
ca ll the Clinic at 446-5131.

o AVIA

o
o
o
o

KEDS
REEBOK
BROOKS
CONVERSE

o BRIDSH KNIGHTS

219 Jl. Second
""l!tptrt - 992-SU7

•
•

•

•
tf 0 •

BIDWELL - Layman day
&amp;Prvtces are Sunday, Mt. Carmel
Church In Bidwell. Services are
10:45 a .m . and 2 p.m.; Rev. Tom
Bolling Is speaker.

•

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
SUPER 81~EAWAYS!

LIVE RADIO
REMOTE
WMPO

•ICING'S ISLAND TICKETS
•SEA WORLD TICKETS
•WYANDOT LAKE TICKETS
•T-SHIRTS

4 PM-7 PM

TUESDAY, JULY 31ST SPECIALS
ONLY!! "ALL DAY"

-..NOW

OFF'ER GOOD THRU
AUGUST 4, 1990
4-,

1OOfo

OFF

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

announrP the engagement and

approaching marriage of their
daughter Ly nn Annette Ke nne ll
to Mark Thomas Allen, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J . Michael Allen.
Kennell is a graduate of Ca nton
Tim ken High School and Capital
Un iversit y. She is emplOyed as a

WHILE IN THE
STORE GRAB
A DISCOUNT
BALLOON!

mathematics teacher at Gallla
Academy High School.
Allen Is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School and Capttal Unlversllv . He Is owner and
manager of · Sideline Sports In
Gallipolis .
The couple plans an open
church wedding at Grace United
Methodist Church on Aug . 4.

I. Savings on Your Next
Premiption Purchase

PRODUCTS
PEPSI-DIET PEPSI
CAFFEINE FREE-7 UP
MT. DEW

$199

3. Instant lottery Ti(kets
"FREE"
4. 1 Year "FREE Member-

ship for Med-Module

CANDY BARS

°0

Buy One At The
Regular Pri,e, Get
Second One for Equal
or lesser Value!

4Q /o
0

~/

~~

off

Wide
Selection

FREE!!
I....-::::

1~

.._,\ You'll Find Many lrl7
""' Store Savings During?
~ Our Grand Opening ,,,
/
Celebration.

NEVER BEFORE SHOWN IN
THIS AREA.
14K GOLD NECKLACES,
BRACELOS, RINGS, EARRINGS
AND MORE.
UP TO

70 °/o SAVINGS

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Garden Club will hold Its annual
picnic on Monday at 6 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Virgil Atkins. The
group will tour the garden of Mrs.
Joe Bolin at 5 p.m. and the
garden of Mrs. Atkins at 6 p.m.
Workshop will be conducted
using the Meigs County Fair
Flowe r Show schedule.

Bean dinner set
VINTON -The Vinton Annua l
Bean Dinne r and Old Fashioned
Parade will be held Aug . 4 at the
AmPrlcan Legion Grove south of

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

Sliding fee 111le. No one reftaed senites because of inability 10 pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
POMEROY:

GALLIPOLIS:

236 E.Main St., 2nd Floor

414 Second Ave. 2nd Floor
446-0166

992-5912
8:30 to S:OO Monday-Friday
Closed Thursday

8:30 to 5:00 Monday·fiiday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday

AlSO: )D(kiOII, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillkothe, logan &amp;McArthur

DARWIN - The descendants
of Tommy Gilkey and Mlltla Jane
Hudnall will hold their annual
reunion Sunday at the roadside
park on Route 33 In Darwt n. A
potluck dinner will begin at noon .
Bring table servlce and lawn
chairs.
RUTLAND - The Jacks reun Ion will be held at the old
homt&gt;place on Sunday beginning
at noon with a potluck.

Enjoy the comfort and style of a l.a·Z.Sof
recliner ot a price you'll really feel good
about, NOW THRU SATURDAY ONLY.

Sale! $299

A. "HERITAGE"'
RECLINA·ROCKER' RECLINER
Streamlined lransrtional style with a
channel-stitched back. padded pullover arms and a deep seat.

IN-STORE
GIVEAWAYS ~
~-

I"=

DOOR PRIZE
DRAWING WILL BE
HELD IN STORE
WEDNESDAY THRU
FRIDAY!!
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

1 LUCKY WINNER WILL
WALK AWAY WITH A
19 INCH COLOR TV
WITH REMOTE.

LORI ANN WHSE

Lohse-Hanneken
POMEROY - Mr. a nd Mrs .
Harold R. Loh s~ . Pomeroy. are
announcing Ihe engagement and
approaching marriage of their
granddaughter. Lo ri Ann Lohse.
Cl nrinnall . t o Nr il H annekPn .

Cincinnati
Mi ss Lohse Is a graduate of thr
University of Cincinnati wllh a

GRAND OPENING
SCHEDULE
TUESDAY, JULY 31
Live Remote plus Giveaways
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 1
In Store Sale
plus

Photo Album &amp; Mug
Drawings
THURSDAY, AUGUST 2
In Store Sale
plus

Men &amp; Women's Selko Watch
Drawings
FRIDAY, AUGUST 3
141 Gold Sale
Remote Control
W. 1-u !lot light to limit

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

•DDUPOIT, OHIO

STOll HOlliS: ....., tin friday 9 U.·l , ... Slihlrdly 9 AJL.J , ...

Clvan~lils.

Is a ~raduate gemoto~lsl of the
Gemologic al In stitute o! Amer Ica . He ls also a registered
jeweler with the American Gem
Soc iety.
Th e OpPn c hurch wedding will
b~ an ~vent or Oct. 27 at lhP
Middleport Church of Christ.

Jtf.::·,.,_,~ ~~·~· :

....rr.,..... _''" -

tlon ar ts . She Is employed with

Great Am f'r lcan ln su rancr Com ·
HannPkPn Is th P ownPr of
HannrkC'n .lPWPIPrs. C'hr\·lol. HP

80th birthday
is celebrated
GALLIPOLIS - On Sunday,
July 22. Irene Ek&gt;ard was honored
on her ROth birthda y wllh a
surprise luncheon at the home of
her so n and daughte r -In-law , Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Beard of
Gal lipolis .
All of he r children were a ble to
attend Including Mr. and Mrs.
Louis tAilcel Pasquale of Galli ' polls. Dr . and Mrs . Bill Beard of
Addison , Mr. and Mrs . Milford
(Nancy) Bailey of Mansfield and
Mr . and Mrs. ,James Ek&gt;ard of St.
;Petersburg, Fla.
Also attending was her sister.
Evelyn Rothgeb of Kanauga .
That same evening, she was a
guest at a picnic hosted by her
grandchildren at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . Dwight Thompson,
Cheshire. Attending were her
chlld~n.
her . sister Pauline
Thompson and her grandchild·
,.en. Dwight, Donna, Levi and
l'eosa Thompson and Mike,
IWbln, Mlkayla, Alexander and
Julie Pasquale.
.1

Sale! $329
B. "THE NATURAL"
RECLINA-ROCKER" RECLINER

bachPior ·s dPgTef" In rommunica ·

pan)· In Cl nclnflall.

19 Inch Color TV with

253 NOITII SICOID

REEDSVILLE- There will be
an organizational meeting on
Monday lor all boys grades 9-12
playing football this !all, a nd lor
their parents, at 6 p.m. In the
Eastern High School cafeteria .

Reunion slated
HENDERSON, W.Va.- The
family of Otho Smith will hold it~
annual reunion Aug. 5, at noon In
Shelter 21n Krodel Park, Render;
son. W.Va. All attending a~
asked to bring a place &amp;Pitinga~
a covered dis h to share.
:

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•..

FREE FREE t

Selected
Gift
Ware

ALL GREETING
CARDS

POMEROY - Vacation Blbi£'
School will be held Monday
through Friday at 6:30 p.m.
nightly a t Ca lvary Pilgrim
Chapel on State Route 143. Ca ll
992-2952 .

MONDAY
JACKSON - The Parents
Advocacy lor Special Students
will meet Monday at 7:30 P· m. at
the B.J. Allison Health Depart ·
ment In Jackson. Joy Kear. a

PLUS

6 FOR$1

Vinton on Sta te Route 325. The
parade will begin at Vinton
Elementary School at 10:30 p.m.
Health meeting
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Board of Hea lth will meet
at 9 a.m . on Aug. I In the
courthouse basement .

POMEROY - Trlnlly Church
will hOld Its church and sunday
school picniC on Sunday at 3 p.m.
Each family Is to bring a covered
dish. Meat, drinks and dinner war• wtll be provided.

2. Up to 25% Off Savings

12 PACK

consultant for Ohio's Chapter
One reading program will be the
guest speaker. Ms. Kear's topic
for the evening will be "Left
Brain-Right Brain"' . All parents
and educators are Invited to
attend. For more Information.
contact 286-4899 or 682-3068.

CHESTER - The Chester
High Class of 1931 will have Its
reunion on Sunday all p.m at the
!Ire house. All teachers and
classmates are urged to attend .

YOU'LL FIND INSIDE

Meigs Cowtty's Only FuD Line
Authorized Purina Chow Dealer.

399 W. Main
992-2164
. P-•Y• OW.
Thia Stole With "AI Kinda of Stuff" for ...u. Sublea.
Larae &amp; Smell Anlmlll, 1.1- • G1rdena.

J,.YNN ANNETI"E KENNELL, MARK THOMAS ALLEN

GALLI POLIS - Rev . James
L. Ke nnell and Marjorie Kennell

pin

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

MIDDLEPORT - The Taylor
Harper Reunion will be held
Sunday at I p.m. at the home o!
Ben and Ruby Rile. Leading
Creek Road . Middleport. Bring
lawn chairs, table service, and
beverages .

Kennell-Allen

PLUS MUCH MORE!

FRIDAY
AUGUST 3, 1990
10 A.M.-7 PM.
Show Halters, &amp;.ads, Bridles,
Grooming Supplies, Buckets,
Leg Wraps, Large Selection
·
of Clppers.

SYRACUSE - There will be a
covered dish dinner at 5:30p.m.
at the Asbury United Methodist
Church In Syracuse. The dinner
will be followed by an evening of
music by the Angelalres . Everyone Is Invited.

Tuesday, July 31-Friday, August 3

Jewelry Sale

__. GET READY FOR
THE FAIR SPECIALS!

SUNDAY
.GALLIPOLIS - Stephen and
Stella Myers reunion will be
Sunday, July 29 at Raccoon
Creek Park In Shelter Hou&amp;P
number two.

GALLIPOLIS - Clagg family
reunion Is Sunday, Raccoon
Creek County Park shelter four;
bring picnic baskets and lawn
chairs .

1 &lt; CANDY

~~

.

Sunday Times-Sent:inai-Paga B-3

Community calendar

CHESHIRE - Thomas and
Sarah K!nkald-Reese reunion
will be held July 29 at 1: 30p.m . at
the Little Kyger Congregational
Christian Church.

Taylor birth annount-ed
GALLIPOLIS - Gary and
Lelsa Taylor of Gallipolis an nounce th'e birth of thei r second
child Kalle Nicole Taylor . born
on May 23. 1990 at Holzer Medical
Ce nter .
Maternal grandparents a re
Donald and Maxine Schilling! of
Gallipolis. Paternal grandparenls are Kennllh and Audrey
Taylor of Gallipolis. Paternal
grea t-grandmother Is Florence
Sllnde of Point Pleasant. W.Va .
Paternal great-grandparent s
are Arnie and Thelma Taylor of
GalUpolls Ferry. W.Va .
Katie weighed seven pounds
and seven ounces and was tw enty
Inc hes long. She was welcomed
home by her !ou r -year -old
br other Eric.

-Engagements----

•

Job Bank
helps seniors
GALLIPOLIS - Looking !or
work In loday 's uncertain economy can be a frustrating and
overwhelming experience.
Studies show that older
workers have records as good as
or better than younger workers
In terms of Interpersonal rela ·
tlonshlps, dependability and job
commlttment. Business owners
who hire older workers find they
can bring stability to the work
place and thai they often serve as
role models to younger workers.
If emplOyers are planning to
hire, the Job Bank encourages
them to hire the older worker .
Ca ll 446-7000 and speak to a job
counselor at the Job Bank at 200
Jackson Pike. Galllpoll, _
The Job Bank Is opPn on
Wednesday!romlla.m to3p.m .
and Thursday and Friday from 7
a. m. to 3 p.m.

Pomeioy-MicUapxt-GIIIipolis. Ohio- Point Plev It, W. Va.

29. 1990

ANOTHER SERVICE?
YOU BET
Sophisticated , computerized stress tesr equipment ha s been inst:~ll ed at Vere rans Memorial
Hospital - another progress ive step to provide
our p:aienrs wirh rh e rnosr modern srare-of-rhc.
.
arr equtpmenr resttng.
This new equipment, featuring J treadmill
which increases in speed as well as eleva res dur ing seven different stages of resring. is used as a
diagnostic aid in checking patients for coronary
:merial problems. You can undergo the srress
res ting pro_gram, merely by having your physician make an appoinrmenr.
Dr. Mark 0. Brown of rhe Vererans Memorial
Medical Staff is in charge of directing the patient
resrtnK

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
115

un .....AI DIIVI
PO lf19Y
tt:t,-1.104

Versatile transitional style lealunng
a deeply cushioned back with button·
tufting and wrap-around arms.

Your

choice!

$359

Your
choice!

$300

'

C. "SUBURBAN" REQJNA-ROCKER REQJNER"
OR RECUNA·WAY" WAU CHAIR
De.igned for comfort, this lromi~onol •!Yl• feolvres
o diomond·tvlted back, roll arms and deep seal.
D. "BRENTWOOD" REaJNA·ROCKEr RECUNER
OR IEQJNA-WAY" WAll CHAIR
Sleek cootemporory style with a double-gathered
bact and open arm dMign in oak.

R
ST.U.114

ND FURNI RE
742·2211
Thrlt
. . . Off lt.. 7
'

..-

�Tmes-Serninel

July 29. 1990

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Powell's Super ~alu Summer Fun Fest!!

Pomeloy-Mic:Yaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Sunday Times-Sentinat-Page-B-5

--Anniversaries---

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

NOT WITHOUT HELP!

PRICES EFFECITVE SUN., JULY 29 THRU SAT., AUG. 4

FOR A FREE CONSUlTATION
Call Leesa Murphy &amp; Associales

PUBLIC RELATIONS/ ADVERTISING
992·2922
HARRY AND MARTHA REAPP

MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM EARL BACKUS

$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Backus anniversary celebrated

T-Bone Steak •• ~~. 459
1/4

Reapp
•
anntversary

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. William Earl Backus cele brated their 50th anniversary on
July 21 by renewing their wed ding vows before friend s and
family at the Middleport Community Church with Rev. Sam
Anderson officiating.
Allendlng the ceremony were
the couple's four children. Mr.
and Mrs. Larry tGeraldlnel
Lahna of Coshocton. and Angel Ia
Tobin. U.S. Navy In Waslngton

Pork Loin ... ~~. $179

ECKRICH SMOKED

Sausage .•..•••...•.~. $2 19

DC.: Earl Backus Jr. and TPsa.
Holmesville: Darlene Backu s.
Cincinnall: and Gail Reed. St.
Pctersbur~. Fla .
Mr. and Mrs. Backus have
eight grandchildren and three
great grandchildren .
Mrs . Baf'kus Is a houS{'w\fr and
Backus Is rPtired from thC' A M.
Corporation.
The coupl&lt;' reside s al 3R1 Ash
St. in Middl eport .

ECKRICH ASST.

CHICKEN

$49(
Q
Leg uarters ....
LB.

Lunch Meats ... !~~ $1 59

RC

GRADE AWHOLE

Chicken .••••••••••• ~•• S9(
KITCHEN PRIDE LAYOUT
Sliced Bacon .... ~•. 89(
LONGHORN
Colby Cheese ..• ~~$1 99

COLA

observed
GALLIPOLIS - Harry and
Martha tSmlthi Reapp celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary July 6 with a surprise
reception at the Chapel Hill
Church or Chris!.
The couple was married July
13, 1940 by Rev . Keyser at
Catlettsburg, Ky .
They have five children, Alma
Harris. El Toro, Calif.: Barbara
Hammond. Bakerfleld, Calif.:
and Joyce Neal. Lanny Reapp
and Marilyn Reapp who hosted
the event.
The couple has 15 grandchildren and II great ·grandchildren.
Attending from out or town
were James Harris of California .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Higginbotham of Co lumbus, Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Cregar of Franklin , Tenn .
and Mr . and Mrs. Osby Martin
and son ol Middleport.
The wedding cake was made
by daughter Joyce and grand
daughter Teresa Laton.

Don't CiO Home Next Friday.

Fly To cancun.

FREE!

Leave any Fnday ~"enmg through Au~u&gt;t. and hnnf! your lavomc person.
Stay at the hcachfwnt Oa't' Canum Hlltc l fllr 7 n;~ht, .md 7 days.
Free Arrfarc - Save $300 rcr rer"m.
AAA Travel
Call AAA Travel today and starr P't&lt;k tn~'
360 SECOND AVE.
446-0699

WAS

LESS FREE AIR

NOW ONLY

$649- $300 = $349

~SIMMONS ANNOUNCES

$139
8 PACK, 16 01.

TRIPLE

COUPONS
$

U.S. # 1 WHITE

Potatoes ...•.....~~~~. 169
$

FlAVORlTE

2°/o Milk ••.••••••G:~. 169
COUNTY liNE AMERICAN
$
IWS Cheese •....~~~; 149
KEMP'S PAIL
Ice Cream •••••••••• $299
FOX'S
oz. 69(
Pizza ••••••••••••••••••
SQT.PAIL

7.5

•

.....

.....

• • • • • • ,IVT'Illll.T
•••
~~~,.

CREAMEm

PRINGLES
9
6-70L $1

°

5letl Only At ,....... s.p.r hlu

.... s.. lilly 79 ..... Sat. ""· 4

ELBOW MACARONI
or SPAGHETTI
0

3f$1

160Z.
Gooo1 Ottly At Powtll's Sopor Yalu

Goool s.. July 29 ..... Sat. ""· 4

AD(, EP, lEG. or Fl. ROAST

PURE SWEET

SUGAR

HI.

• MAXWEll HOUSE

$119

Good ~y At Powlll's Sopor Yolo
Goool s.... July 29 .... Set. A... 4

390Z.
0

COFFEE

$5 39

G... Only At Powtll's S.,. Yolo
Goool s.... July 29 "'"' Sat~ A... 4

Sunday,
onday
and
Tuesday
July 29,
30 &amp; 31
,------------,
I TRIPLE I
I COUPONS I
I

I

I

DALLAS AND JOSEPHINE BLEVlNS

Blevins anniversary celebrated
MIDDLEPORT - Dallas and
Josephine Blevins celebratPd
tht-lr 45th wedding ann iversar y
on Wednesday .
The couple wa s married July
25. 19451n Port Chester. N.Y.
Blevins retired a Iter 30 years
of service with the United States
Navy . Mrs. Blevin s has accompanied him In his travels during
that lime.
Thev are the parents of Dallas
Blevins, Jr., Denver . Colo.;
Donna Joann Blevins, Middleport: and Richard Bryon Blev -

POINT Pl.EASA i"T -

The
Abundant Life Christian Center
will have revival servlct-s July
~·31 with guest speaker Brother
Rush Starr from Valley Point.
W.Va.
Abundant Life Christian Cen·
ter Is located on Route 2 abo ut
lour miles north of Point Plea·
sant just bt&gt;fore the Jericho Road
turn off. Services will begin at 6
p.m . Sunday and 7 p.m. Monday
and Tuesday.

I
I

BATON, DANCE

ALEADING INDEPENDENT CONSUMER PUBLICATION
TORTURE·TESTED 32 MAnRESSES FROM MAJOR
MANUFACTURERS AND RATED THEM FOR DURABILITY
LASTING FIRMNESS AND VALUE.
BEAmRESr CAME OUT ON TOP!

GROUPS,
CLOGGERS,
WEDDINGS, ETC.

!-ITO I' 1\ 01{ (' \LL

I S TOB .\ \' .

BUTTONS
AND

BOWS

997-5177
270 EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

BEAUTYREST"'

$249 ':'
FULL SET................... S299
QUEEN SET 2 p1 ...... 5399

sns ONLYI

I

July 21,30 •

COUPONS WITH THI8
COUPON
·

L---------

$299

r:v~N

FUll SET. .................. s399
QUEEN SET 2 pc. "'" $499
sns ONLY!

TRUCKLOAD
JUST ARRIVED
BEST PRICES ON
SIMMONS
IEAUTYREST.
DON'T MISS TIIS SALE!

MOMENTS TO REMEMBER!

those opeclal moments. You wUI have over
190 styles ol tuxedos lo choose from. We
have a large selection ol the laleat styles
and compUmentary accessories to make
tllll your apeclal nlglll.
5

.

NKIS still It

$2 99

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

31.

LIMif I TRIPLE

BEAUTVREST®
SIGNATURE

Let HASKINS.TANNER help you make

I Buncllly, Monday, T-dlf,
I

LET US MAKE
VOUR SOCKS!

"WE MAKE ANY
COLOR OR SIZE"

Revival set

I WITH THIS COUPON I
1 IS.t Store for llttalh) I
I TRIPU VENDOR I
II Coupon
COUPON
I
Oood
I

•••

Ins, Houston. Texas. They al so
have a gra nddaughter.

... ,...

ST. RT.l24

Three Miles Off Rt. 7

.,

RUTLAND, OHIO

-··

�Paga B-6-Sundey Tlmas-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point PIB:Jsant. W. Ya.

The Vinton boom...
"Boom In the 11111~ city of
VInton" read th~ story llne from
1904 edition of the Galllpolis
Bulletin. The ar·
tide went on to
explain that the .
Vinton Brick
a nd Tile Com,
pany was mak· ....
lng nearly 20,000 •
bricks per day.
Other Industries In 1904 VInton
Included the broom factory run
by Mr. Eckhart, the spoke mill
and the S.D. Eubanks Sand Co.
Stated the Bullt&gt;tln : "The Eubanks business has Increased to
an enormous extent, having
leased and opened up another
sand mine on the Star Furnace
property near Jackson. The new
mine will In no way effect the
output of the VInton mine. as the
sand Is of an entirely different
quality and Is used lor a different
purpose altogether."
The spoke factory which of
course made spokes lor wagons
even had a branch In Cora. The
Vinton Spoke Company's main
plant in VInton made a better line
of s poke using mostly hickory
wood , T he branch factory in Cora
und er the management of D.J .
Hangar made a "rough" spoke.
In November.l904. the Bulletin
reported that "The VInton divIsio n of the Wilkesville Independ ent Company met at Butler 's
Opera House last Friday and
elec ted the following officers:
S.L. Perk ins , president . K.G.
Kir ke ndall, secretary, C. B . Russell. treas urer . Other business
came before the meeting among
which was the consideration of a
probable connection of the Bell
Telephone Co .'s Jines with our
switchboard here. Beman Tho
mas. Henry Eagle and William
Les lie were appointed as com·
mlltecs to co nfer with the Bell
Co mpany reg ar ding
connection."
Also in 1904 , the Knights of
Py thlas was organized In Vlnlon
wi th the following char tN
members: David Hangar . How ·
a rd Butler. B.B Wilcox. Colby
Fe ltman. JO&lt;' McGhee. Jacob
Clark. Gus Baker. J .D. Shack.
W.H . Glenn, Claude Hutchinson.
.l .H. McGhee, B.W . Glassburn.
W.B. Eag l~. H.J. Splres. Hannan
Huntl ey. C.L. Deckard, Lester
So les. T.H. McGhee. L.B .
Turne r . B.C. Kcllv . B.H . Tho
mas , Lew is Alexander. A .T.
Cla rk. E .B, Miller. W.H . Wilcox .
B.W. Jones . and E.H . Robinson.
It was that year that the K of P
e rected the ir two-story buildln~
th a t was recently torn down fo r
the new Vinton pos t office.
In regard to the postal se rvice.
there was bl)! nPws in Gallla

' I!~
1

MASON - The Ducks UnllmltPd Golf Classic will be hPid at
Rlversldl' Golf Cour~ In Mason.
W.Va. on Thursday .
Golfers will be divided, accord·
rng to handicap In A, B. C. and 0
groups. A golf professional will
piCk teaJnl.
There will be shotllln start at I
p.m .
The entry lee IJ $tO per plltyer
and will lnrlllde a tiHk diDMr

__ ____

-· - .... _ ,

_:_

grandchildren. Mr. and Mr&gt; .
William F . tCarla l Lohrer.
Troy; and Mr. and Mrs . TerryW .
tColeenl Ohlinger. Zanesville.
The couple requests that glh s
be omitted.

Plan reunion
GALLIPOLIS - The family of
Otho Smith will hold Its annual
reunion Aug . 5, at noon In Shelter
2 In Krodel Park, Henderson,
W.Va. All attending a re asked to
bring a place set tlng and a
covered dish to share.

Polly Flinder
Britlond
Natalie
Ad I
Details
Chou
Jorda,he
Bugle Boy
Doily Habit

CPR classes planned

PF-Sport
Nannette
Justin Allen
Camp Bevely Hills
Vanderbilt
t-ya
Charles s,ott
Leslie Fay
Lord Isaacs

Awarded degree

Also taking Special Orders - must be
placed between 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday
thru Wednesday - 446-0966
Gift Certlflcatu Anllahle

Local Man Loses 80 Lbs.
In 14 Months •••
So Can You!!
To Include You In Our Celebration,
We're Offering
For A Limited Time ...
FORMERLY A S&lt;'HOOL - The VInton Town Hall was !onnerly
the VInton School and wa.• built early In this century. One Gallipolis
newspaper In 1904 re!er,...d to VInton
a "hoom town" with
se•eral factories and businesses In lulU •wing.

a.•

GALLI A
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL
NOW
ACCEPTING
APPLICA liONS

•Guaranteed Results
•Fast or Gradual Weight Loss
Programs
•Behavioral Sessions

*Traditional Edu,otion
*Kindergarten through Grode 12
*Sound Spiritual and Moral Philosophy
*Strong Acodemi( Program
*Chartered by the State of Ohio
*Qualified, Dedi,ated Christian Tea,hers
*Modern Fo,ility .
*Admits Students of any Race,
Color, Notion or Ethni( Origin .
*Grants and s,holorships Available
FOUNDED 1976

•Stabilization and
Maintenance Programs
• Individualized Counseling
2-3 Times Per Week By
Trained Staff Who Cares

G--"
[j.---

MEMBER OF ACSI

•Free Optional Use Of Our
Exercise Facilities
•Healthfast Diet Program Only

CAU 01 WIITE TODAY FOI ADDinONAL
INFOIMATION

GAWA CHRISnAN SCHOOL
P.O. BOX 279, CHESHIRE, OH. 45620

PHONE (6141 367-7475 or 367-0306
'1

Weddings-------

GALLIPOLIS- Kimberly Ann
Stutes and Christopher Wynn
Rhodes were united in marriage
on June 30 at the Grace United
Methodist Church. They are the
children of Jim and Bonnie
Stutes and Bud and Faye Rhodes
of GaiUpolls .
Rev, Joe Hefner officiated the
candlelight ceremony. Music
was provided by vocalists LuAnn
White and Patty Stutes. Organist
was Edith Ross . Guests were
re gistered by Kelly Patrick.
The bride wore a whit£&gt; taffeta
gown with a sweetheart neckllne
and a V-back bodice. The fitted
bodice was accented by crystallined schif!ll embroidery, hand
beading, sequins and pearls. The
gown had a flounce skirt with
satin rosette accents Which extended Into a chapel length train.
The bride wore a floral headpiece
or white roses, sequins and
pearls.
She carried a cascade of pink
day Ill lies , Ivory calla JUlies, pink
and white californian rose s.
white pom -poms, white carna tions and white pearls.
Matron of honor was Pam

Roach and bridesmaids were
Connie Wilson and Sherry Vance.
Flowerglrl was Cee Cee White .
Each wore a floor length gown of
blush pink tatfeta with a sweetheart neckline and lilted basque
waist bodices and lull sklrts .
Best man was Marc Vanco.
Groomsmen were Gre~ Rhodes
and Michael Stutes . Each wo re a

GALLIPOLIS- Marralee BorIng and Glenn Curtis Spencer
were united in marriage on June
16, at the Gallipolis Christian
Church.
The bride is the daughter off
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence Boring of
McArthur. The groom Is the son
of Mr . and Mrs. Roy Spencer, Jr .
of Point Pleasant.
Dennis Coburn coducted the
afternoon wedding ceremony .
The nuptial music was per formed by organist Pat Elardo
and Bill Ward playing the saxaphone . Following the ceremony,
guests were Invited to a church
reception .
The bride wore a while satin
form a l gown with a silk overlay .
The fitted bodice featured seed
pearls , sequins and a sweetheart
neckline . The sleeves were
layered with chiffon rutnes . Her
lull length vlel wa s accented by a
crown of seed pearls. Thecascadlng bridal banquet was of silk
roses, lilies and sprays of ba bies
breath accenled by ribbons of
lace .
The maid of honor was Stephanie Davidson of Athens .
Brides maids were sisters of the
bride. Angela Wright of Clear ·
water. Fla.; Teresa Reker of
Miami. Fla; and Lesa Wolle fo
McArthur . Ohio Th e flower girl

j

GALLI POLIS Marriage
vows wrre exchanged June 2 at
Grace United Methodist Church.
Gallipolis, between Jamey R.
Mink, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Mink of Kerr, Ohio , and
Randy L. Harrison. son of Don
Harrison of Gallipoolis and Betty
Frazee of Well• ton .
The Rev . Joseph Heiner otrlclated the double ring ceremony .
Music was provided by Edith
Ross. organist . and Avis Heger .
harpiSt. Registering guests was
Mary Evans .
The bride was escorted to the
altar by her lather . She wore a
!ormal:length gown fashioned
out of white satin designed with a
sweetheart necklinl' and basque
waist. accented with beaded and
sequined alencon lace. Her gown
also featured princess sleeves,
rapped with satin bows and pearl
strands. and cathedral train
adorned with alecon lace motifs
and trim . Complimenting her
gown was her pear led tiara with
Illusion poul full-length veil . She
carried a bouquet of white call
llllles. stephanotis and white
roses on satin and lace ribbons .
Cheryl Caudill. sister of the
bride, was matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were Teresa Mink.
sister of the bride; VIrginia
Carvour. friend of the bride; and
Kodl Gaston. cousin of the bride.
They wore full-length gowns of
lrredescent royal blue with sweetheart necklines and fitted bOdl·
eea aceen ted with a bow at the
waist, accessor!Zed with pearl
neccklace and errlngs, glltal'rom
tiM' bride.
The bride's mother wore a
three quarter length dress or

"

Meigs fair flower show planned
POMEROY - Meigs Countlans
will have the chance to show
what they grow In the second of
two flower shows to be staged at
the Meigs County Fair this year,
Aug. 14-18.
This second show will be held
Thursday, Aug. 16 and the entry
deadline Is 4 p.m .. Aug. 10. The
theme for the show "Wedding
Anniversary Artis try.''
The flower shows are a cooperative project of the Meigs County
Fair Board and the Meigs County
Garden Club Association .

RhodesStutes

HarrisonMink

We Offer ...

SundBy Tllll8$-Sentinel Page B·7

Ohio-Point

SpencerBoring

We're Celebrating!!

Kiro gets
ex pans ton
.
proJect grant

and priZiel. Tlcllett mutt be
purcllued 11y 'l'llelday. Call
773-9527.

POMEROY - The 50th wedding anniversary for Mr . and
Mrs, Rus~ll tBudl Wilson.
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.
will be celebrated Saturday with
an open house from 3 to 6 p.m . at
the Middleport Church of Christ.
The couple was married Aug .
8. 1940 at Shade.
Mrs . Wilson Is the former
Hazel Carl and Is retired from
Ohio University in Athens. Wilson Is retired from the Ohio
Department of Transportation.
The celebration is being hosted
by the couple's children and

County In 1904 for that was the
year that Rural Free Delivery
came to Gallla County . Establis hed In 1904 were four rural
routes out of Vinton, fo ur out of
Bidwell. two from Gallipolis and
one from Allee. The fir st rural
carriers out of Vinton were : C.A .
Mill er. H.A . Miller, Clem C.
Wilcox, and Ira Jacobs. Bidwe ll's first carriers were C.E.
Thomas. J .M. Robinson, Ca rl
McBride and William Grover.
W.A. Davis and Ernest Davis
were Gallipolis' original rural
carriers wllh Samuel Might
driving the fir s t Allee route. The
first R.F.D . In the United States
was In Wes t Virginia in 1~96 .
Vinton Route 3 left Vinton by
way of Oscar Clark' s the n to the
Jackson Countv line. I I ca me
back by way· of Vinton and
Keystone road lo ChPs tnul
Grove. Bunker Hill Sc hool a nd
the Tyler Farm. From that point .
the driver proceeded up Tomato
Valley to Fort Scott School and
th e n to the little village of Obal.
The driver returned to Vinton by
way of four corners . ThP roufP
was 23\1, miles long . There wen•
104 houses on the route with 520
people living In those houses . The
pay lor the vear 190l was S702.
Route 2 Vinton paid $648 and
MR. AND MRS. RUSSELL {BUD) WILSON
Route 4 Vinton paid $66fj .
On November 26. 19IJ.I. the
rural mail carriers of Ga lli~
County met to organize a local
POMEROY- Recognizing the
lear n I hose life-saving skills
c hapter of a national organiza
signs a nd symptoms of a hea rt
Monday, July .10, from o:30-9: 30
lion for persons who deliven•d
mall.
a llack a nd knowing how to
p. m .
res pond co uld mean the differ ·
PartJclpants In the three-hour
Other active concerns In 19{11
pnce whe n minutes sepa ra te life cou rse will become certified In
Vinton Included the Vinton Bank.
a nd death . St. Joseph's Hospital.
one · rescuer CPR . Participation
founded in 1902, a number of coa l
Parker sburg , W.\ 'a .. will hos t a
Is limited to 20 Pf'Ople and
companies thai had Vinton as
communitv ·wld e CPR certlfica· prr ·reglstratl on is required .
home office. the Vinton Mill a nd
the Vinton Leader ne wspaper
lion c lass . thai r an h&lt;" lp anvo ne
There Is a SJO registration f('('. To
r~g lstf'r. or for morP Informa that had been started In 1889 and
tio
n. call St. Joseph 's Educa
tas ted to 1916. A high school was
tlonal
Services at t3041 t2H911
begun in Vinton In theear lv I~R!ls
bu I was dropped . It was' be!(Un
GALLIPOLIS - James 1\
lh:kers JOins Navy
again about this sa me era , the
Palmer , son of Charles and
first decade of The 20th centu n . Sa ra h Pa lmer
;; Hallid av
GALLIPO LIS - 1\av' Pel 1\'
Vinton also had d numb&lt;'!' of
Height s. has bePn awan1Pd iJ
Officer First Class Benwood D.
s tores . thr town bPing l'asil.v
baehelors degree from the Col ·
Rickers. son of William 8. and
accrssi blr by rail from such
lege of the Un lvr r51ly of Chic a go
HPl r n J. Bickers . Gallipolis .
places as Ewin~ton. Alicr. Our·
Palmf'r rrrPIVPd h is degrf'f' In
rpcentlv de parted Long Beach on
ga n. Glenn Summ it a nd Wood s
ronYOCa l io n crrrm on iPs hPid
dep loymen t to the wl'stern Pa ·
Mills In 190l , Vinton even had it s .June 9. in Rockrfrller Memoria l
ci flc Ocean while .s en1ng aboard
own opera houSf' whi c h ":as run
Chap&lt;&gt; l on the campus of the
the drsrrover lJSS Prairie.
bv the same famu,· that had the Univer.'ii t.\' of Chic ago .
During th e deplovmenl ,
mortuar; - The Butlers . Com
A Chfmlstry major. Palm er i."
Bickers will part&gt;cipalr in ,·ar
ing to 1hP hous.e WPr£' such
a 19Rn graduate of Wilming ton
iou'\ miliT ary ('Xf'rr ls.es and will
notables as " The Great Ga i,·a nl '
Hi g h School Hr plan s to en te r
\'islt severa l foreign ports .
a nd Harmount' s "U nc le Tom s
Ohio St ate lJn ivcrsitv Medica l
He joined the !\an In Ortl972.
Ca bin ."
Sc hool thi s fal l.

Golf classic
set to benefit
Ducks Unlimited

JUly 29, 1990

-~Anniversaries--- Wilson anniversary to be held

... By ]ame.r Sand.r

MIDDLEPO RT - Klro Chlro
prarllr. Inc . of Middleport will
soon receive a $29 ,000 loan lor a
renovation and business expan·
slon project due to state assist·
a ncr acco rding to Stale Sen. Jan
Michae l Long, O.Cirdevllll&gt;.
The Ohio Department ofOevel·
opment. through the Ohio Mini·
Loan Program, will guarantee 45
percent. or $13.050. of the loan .
The Central Trust Co. of Southeastern Ohio. Middleport , Is
making the loan .
The mini-loan program Is
designed to help smaller com·
panles employing 25 or fewer
people to get money lor fixed
assets and equipmE'nt. The loan
Is to be used to allow Klro
Ch lropractlc to renovate exls tlng
offices and buy equipment lor
ex pansion .
The cost of n~novatlng the
ex isting structure Is etlmated at
HOOO. while the cost of equipme nt Is estimated at $29,000.
Mi scellaneous costs camP to
another $3.000 lor a total project
cost of $36,000. Klro Chiropractic
Is to put $7,000 equity Into the
project . makln~t the actual loan
$29,000.
Established In October 19i!'i.
Klro Chiropractic specializes In
the treatment of spinal related
lnjurifos .

July 29, 1990

Seven classes will be offered In

the second show for senior
artistic including twentieth.
china, Informal luncheon, exhibition table piCture; twenty -lltth,
silver, Including sliver foliage ;
seventh, copper. modern to In·

naturally grown. not disbudded.
spray : and miniature rose, dis·
budded. foli age anachcd. In the
dahlia division there a re three
clas~s. dahlia . decora ti ve . disbudded ; dahlia, cactus, dis·
budded ; and any exhibition type
perennial.

elude copper tuomg in the
design; fortieth. ruby. featuring
red; seventy-fifth. diamond, Including glitter; thirtieth. pearl,
reminiscent or the sea; and
thirty-fifth, coral, featuring
pinks.
Two classes are offered In
junior artistic . six th, sugar
candy, bright colors; and four teenth, gold jewelry, Incorporat Ing jewelry In design.
In the senior horticulture div Ision there arc eight classes In
the hybrid tea rose. dlsbudded.
foliage attached category, Including white or near white;
yellow, yellow blend or apricot
blend; pink, pink blend; red . red
blend: lull blown rose , any color ,
stamens must show; grandl·
flora. naturally grown. may be
single or s pray; florlbunda .

There a re two classes offered
the exh ibitor in the junior horli
culture catego r y . They are sun
flower , any variety: a nd any
annual, dl sb udd ed. foliage
attached .

Men's,

&amp;
Children"s

Women ~s

2 for 1
SUMMER
SHOE
SALE

Caution will prevent
insect stings: NSC
POMEROY - Those pesky
honeybees. wasps, yellow
• jac kets and hornets are back for
CHRISTOPHER AND KIMBERLY STU TES RHODES
another summer. The National
Safety Council offers these lips
lor ta king the sling out of
crystal
s
teps
which
led
to
side
s
ummer aclivltles.
black tuxedo with pink ties and
ca
krs,
bridging
an
arrangement
When e ncountering a stinging
cummerbund s . The groom wore
of
wh
itr
lilllPs,
roses
a
nd
pearl
Insec
t, rpme mber they are look ·
a black tuxedo with a while ve s t
s
prays.
lor
flower pollen. It Is likely
lng
and tie .
Th
e
brldP
allend
s
Ma
rsha
ll
they
will
not at tack unless
Alter the ceremony, I he wed·
Unlver
sl!y
and
is
employed
at
provoked . Move slowly away and
ding party left the ceremony in a
Au tow or ks.
do not swat at them .
hor se-drawn carriage which
Th e groom Is a graduate of
late r returned to therhurch for a
Ga
llia Academy High Sc hool and
reception.
is
e
m ployed by th eGa ll lpo lis City
Sa ndy E lsenaugle , P a ll y
Po
llee
Departm e nt .
Stutes and Ca mmie Saunders, all
By Untied l'ress International
Th e co uple will reside in
aunts of the bride . served rake.
HANK 'S QUICK EXIT: Hank
Ga lli poli s .
The white, tiered rake featured
Williams Jr.'s rowdy fan s
wouldn't settle down Thursday
night when he left the stage
without explanation aner play·
lng less than hall of his 90-mlnute
show in Tinley Park, Ill. Angry
fan s c ursed and threw trash and
bottles around the newly opened
World Music Theatre but a
Williams spokesman said he was
sick. ·' He was ill before he ever
left th e office," she said. " On a
lot of his songs he even had to sit
down . It 's just a stomach virus ."
Prince Mayne, operations dirertor for WCCQ-FM, a Jollet
country station, said Williams
didn't seem to be himself. "He
was not very active on stage,"
Mayne said. "It wasn't really
right. He looked like he was
working hard at trying to be up
but he just wasn't there.''
MOORE DIVORCE: Dudley
Moore 's marriage to aspiring
actress Brosan Lane Moore has
run It s course after 2 \', years.
The
couple separated July 15 and
)
Brogan . 34 , flied lor divorce
Thursday In Los Angeles. The
petition for divorce cites Irrecon•
J;
cila
ble differences and asks that
'
.
property right s be determined by
th e co urt. The couple were
married F e b. 21. 1988, at the
GLENN AND M,\RR ,\LEE BORING SPENCER
Lillie Church of the West on the
Las Vegas Strip at the recom rOSE' S
was a niece of th e bride. Misty
me ndation of Ur.a Mlnnetu,
Th r br s t man wa s J eff rr~'
Rynae .
Moore's co-star In "Arthur,"
The brides maids wore V1 cto· JonPs of Po int Pleasa nt , and thr . who se mother. Judy Garland,
rla n Rose floral tea len gth groo msmPn were W4?re Ol in R lcP
had once been married In the
dresses of m a uve. pink and Rill McCoy and Ba rr y Lanier. a li
c hapel. Moore previously was
while . The flower girl wore a p:n k o f Poin t Pleasa nt.
married to actresses Suzy KenThe co uple is residi ng In
and while lac e dress and a c rown
dall
and Tuesday Weld.
of babies breath with silk pink Ga llipo lis.
QUEEN AND SHIP: Queen
Ell1abeth II visited the ocean
liner thai bears her name Fri day . The occasion was the 150th
anniversary of the Cunard Lines
ship company and the QE 2 was
In Southampton, Its home port.
The queen. accompanied her
husband , Prince PhWp, was
ferried to the cruise ship aboard
the Royal Yacht Britannia, past
a !lotflla of nav a l vessels and tall
s hips.
VINEYARD BOOK: Martha's
Vineyard regulars like Waller
Cronkite, Mike Wallace. Arl
Buchwald and singer Carty
Simon are Invited to a benefit
party Sunday for a new book by
Simon's brot)ler , Peler.aboutthe
Isla nd's celebrated residents.
"O n the VIneyard II" Is a sequel
to Simon's 1980 "On the Vineyard." featuring photos and
personal essays about life there.
Sunday's party at the Harbor
VIew Hotel fn Edgartown Is to
benefit the Martha 's Vineyard
Hospital and Simon says he will
contribute part or the book's
proceeds to the hospital .
BAR BARR: Roberl Merrill
RANDY AND .I~MEY MINK HARRISON
says Rooeanne Ban was way of!
base and should have been
draped ~arland fea tured a fou r
light pink georgette. The dropped
1hrown out of the park for her
ti e r rake with fountain. and two
waist and shoulders were actortuous rendition of "The Star
sid
e cakes, all accented wi th
cented by lrredescent sequin s
Spangled Banner" before a San
c her ubs and white roses with
and peals set on embrodered pink
Diego Padres game. "I never got
gold leaves .
so a ngry In my life," said MerrUI,
lace . The mother of the groom
The couple resides on Mill
wore a peplum suit of royal blue
the former Metropolitan Opera
Creek Drive, Gallipolis .
jacquard satin. The V neckline of
star who regularly sings the
the jacket wa s accented by a
cream lace collar.
Best man was Steve Wilcoxen .
friend of the groom. Ushers were
Gary Hood, Nick Talllouris.
NOW ENIOLUJIG FOI FALL
Terry Holley and Craig Kingery.
541 Znd ....... 081l1Doll1
friends of the groom. The groom
·(&amp;141 441-2483-112-7321
Or IA1111• Meuag• 44e-1811
wore a black tuxedo and tails
Wt eH•r part·t!Ne lu IIIIBI _. ;.;
...
..,kti..,.:•l
with a white vest and white bow
• ., ...._. fw t .... J ... ,....
tie. Ushers wore black tuxedoes
with black vests and black bow
11110
ties with white wing-tipped
au. 01 mil' n
shirts. A formal dinner reception
Mn. Sliriw J. tw.N, M.l4., A6::111ittrltw
was held at tiM' Elks Cl11b. A
UMtTED
bridal table with white cloll) and

Avoid smelling and looking like
a blossom . Don't wear brightly
colored clothing and sweet·
smelling cosmetics.
Wear close-fitting clothing that
won't trap bugs . Remember to
wear shoes, especially In grassy
and flowery areas .
It stung, apply Ice to reduce the
swelling and seek medical at ten ·
lion if other complications
develop.

Buy one pair at the regular
price &amp; get a second pair
of equal or lesser value

FREEl

-People in the news-national anthem at Yankee Sta ·
dlum . "Never heard anything as
stupid and anti-American . It Isn't
good lor baseball. Baseball is like
apple pie, Cracker Jack and
peanuts. It' s the national paslime. This Is a national disgrace. " Merrill. who 's performed the anthem at eight ·
World Series and before nine
presidents, says he's going to
write Baseball Commissioner
Fay Vincent and National
League President BtU While to
complain. ·

Living Room Suites in Stock
All at prices so low you won't believe your eyes!

HALF-PRICE!
New Early Ameriton 2
Liv. Rm. Suite

•

..
i l .. :~

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOL

............. '"'.A.&amp; ..

A.&amp;

S1999S
Sug . Rot.

SAVE

'349.95 'ISO

.......

,

-

,;.:

,._.

'-

5...•• ·~"'
P&lt;

'179.lf5

o.:y

Savt '70

Qu~ttcllnn••pring

-·...--...... r Tt.,..~T·

l~UR

fREE PARKING
HEll TO OURSTOO£

COUNTRY

C\JRTAtNS
....,. _a.,._

..........
.....,
......
_._.,__

-··

... II' w.a...

.......

1• SLAT

VINYL

_
.........
-..
·........
_-....
MINI
IUNDS

....

~­

...,.

1122-0305

OPEN DAILY, 8:30-8:311
SUNDAY, 1M

�Paga 8 8 Sunday Tmaa Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gar.ijlolil. OHo--Point Pie

••lt. W.Va.

July 29. 1990

~imes-

---Weddings------- Quirks in the news _ _ _ _ _ __
LoDJ lllaad aiDJalor waddles

HaskenRiffle
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Church of Christ was the
setdng for the double ring
wedding ceremony of Tl na Renee
Rltfie and James Nolan Hosken
with Robert Purtell officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
Ronald rume. Athens, and Linda
Bates. Pomeroy. The groom Is
the son of James and Peggy
Hosken. Mexico City, Mexico.
Music was provided by Mrs.
Ann Lambert with a plano
prelude, and Art Bush, soloist.
The church was decorated with
three large candlesticks decorated with dried flowers, lace.
ribbon and pearls. There were
two large vases of roses In shades
of pink on either side ot the altar.
Given In marriage by her
lather, the bride wore a gown
with satin bodice and sleeves,
sweetheart neckline and short
puffed sleeves. The bodice and
sleeves were accented with a
beaded and sequined floral applique trim. Tbe gown leatured a
basque waistline, lull length
gathered skirt with a teardrop
JAMES AND TINA
dotted net overlay . Her headpiece was Illusion length with a g-room. Mexico City, Mexico.
Waverly edge that featured se- served as besl man and other
quins and pearls, and she wore groomsmen were .John Arnold,
opal earrings and a necklace. Pomeroy; and Mall Haynes,
gifts !rom the groom. Her bou- Rutland.
quet lea lured white silk flowers.
The bride's mother wore a
Bridesmaids were Martina Or- two-piece mauve dress and
tiz, Padilla, Mexico; Kristina mauve miniature rose corsage
Riffle, sister-In-law of the bride, wltth pearls a nd ribbon accents
Abilene, Texas; and Melanie
The groom ·s mother wore a
two-piece
teal dress and corsage
Arnold. Johnson City, Tenn.
Identical
to
the bride's mother.
They wore tea-length conon
A reception was held In the
dresses In shades of mauve and
pink and each carried a single fellowship hall and the bride's
pink rose.
table fea tured a three-tiered
heart-s haped cake topped with a
Kenneth Hosken, brother of the
blown glass heart dPCOrated with
love birds and bells . The top was

DAR marks
local grave

lnlo capllvi&amp;J
OCEANSIDE. N.Y. (UPil Frank Ballko had the natural
reaction when he looked out his
window and noticed an alligator
crossing his n~:lghbor's lawn.
He called the pollee.
But by the time Emergency
Service officers arrived about
6:30 p.m. Thursday, residents of
the Long Island neighborhood
had corralled the 2-toot reptile
and put It In a cardboard box,
pollee said.
Pollee and plan to donate the
carnivorous beast to the Bronx

Zoo.
It was unclear how the alllgator made Its way to the
neighborhood.
The last alligators spotted on
Long Island were found several
years ago In a Massapequa lake,
he said.

Wroq-WaJ seal treks 8,0011
mDes
SAN DIEGO !UP II- A hooded
seal from Greenland arrived on a
San Diego beach this week,
completing a stunning 8,000-mlle

OSU honor list
is announced
RIFFLE HOSKEN
brought !rom Mexico by the
groom·s parents .
Presiding at the table were
Ruth Ann Riffle, aunt of the
brldl'; and Paula Haynes. assisted by Susie Reed. Julia
Mondlspaugh, and Marcia Robinson, all cousins at the bride.
Guests were registered by Nl·
chole Bunch and Deanna
Henderson .

The bride and groom will be
attending Kentucky ChrtsUan
College in the tall. He will study
Bible and Ministry and she will
study Christian Education of
Children. They will reside In
Grayson, Ky .

here."
Antrim estimated the visitor
from Greenland Is 3 years old.
"The 8,000- to 10,000-mUe swlm
could have taken it a lilts life," he
58

~artlng from waters ott
Greenland. Robin probably
swam westward through the
Arctic Ocean above Canada,
around the entire state of Alaska
and down the Pacific coastline
from Canada to Calltornla,
scientists said .

another because " he didn't ll'&lt;e
the looks of It," transit pollee
said.
McCollum then hopped aboard
another bus tor a trip back Into
Manhattan. where he roared
through red lights on Lexington
Avenue ~fore he was finally
nabbed In Grand Central Station.
Torlure mWJeum oft limits to
kids

PARIS tUPI) - A new museum dedicated to torture and
punishment through the ages has
been placed oft-limits to children
under 12.
"Martyrs de Paris," an attraction displaying whips, rats. wa ter torture and the "rack,"
recenUy opened In the Forum des
Hailes In central Paris. The
museum Is operated by the
Kunlck group of Brita In, which
operates a similar center In
London known as the "London
dungeon."
Museum officials sa ld Thursday they received word from
pollee this week that children
would not be al towed inside.

Attorney• ocuflle during
meeUag
CHICAGO 1UP II - It wasn't
tbe divorcing couple that came to
blows In court . II was their
--- ·
Pollee: flnlc:ky thief slole 13 lawyers.
clly bluelJ lut year
Attorneys Diane Shelley and
NEW YORK 1UP!t - A Charles Simon said the Incident
25-year-old man arrested this happened Wednesday In a confer·
week tor stealing two city buses ence room outside the courtroom
confessed to making off with 13o! of divorce Judge Herman Knell,
the 22 city buses stolendurtngthe but their versions of what happast 12 months, authorities said. pened differed greatly.
Darius McCollum wore a blue
Shelley. who Is black. accused
shirt to masquerade as a bus Simon or hurlln~ racial and
driver tor joy rides and habitu- sexual slurs and hlttln~t her while
ally returned buses he thought trying to take away some
were too dirty or In which
documents .
air-conditioning malfunctioned.
"He pushed me and I pushed
"He not only qualities as a hbn back," Shelley sa ld . "He
super-butt, but also as a one-man then struck me In th e torso and I
crime wave," Transit Pollee tell down."
spokesman AI O'Leary said.
Simon called Shelley "a liar "
and
said shew as the onE' who took
The bus rustler's latest joy ride
a
swing.
began Wednesday morning, ·
when he stole a bus from an
"For no reason she hit me In
Upper Manhattan depot and the lace,'' Simon said. "She's a
drove It to a depot In Queens. liar . I don't go around hilling
when• he exchanged It for women .

TOPS meets

GALLIPOLIS - The National
Society Daughters ol the Amerl ·
can Revolution, the French Col·
ony Chapter, gathered on Sunday, June 24 to pay the last and
highest DAR honor to AllceCiyse
Wiseman .
Friends and lam lly looked on
at Mound Hill Cemetary as the
regeant. Carol Jackson, placed
the marker from the DAR In her
memory. Others taking part In
the service were Chaplain Donna
Lewis and Mrs. Estlvaun Mat thews who gave a tribute to Mrs.
Wiseman. Two junior members,
Mrs . Gwen McGuire and Mrs.
Cindy Graham. represented the
chapter as honor guard.

Brenda Templeton and Sylvia
Neece were the best losers at the
recent meeting of Ohio TOPS 570
held at lhe Carpenter's Hall In
Pomeroy.
Runner up In most weight lost
was Phyllis McMillan.
Lennie Belle Aleshire, leader.
opened the meeting with prayer
and pledge.
The fruit basket was won by
Phyllis Drehll.
It was announced that KOPS
will be recognized on Aug. 7.
A game was conducted using
musical chairs and the meeting
closed with a song to the queen.

On dean's list

Extra effort
GALLIPOLIS - Bossard LIbrary Homebound Service Book·
mobile Driver Jack Mowery puts
extra effort Into dellverln~ library service to homebound
patrons In Gallla County. Alter a
recent storm, Mowery walked to
a neighbor's house. borrowed an
ax and chopped up a tree which
was blocking the road so that he
could continUE' dellverlng mate·
rials to Addison. Cheshire and
Morgan townships.

The Ohio State University has
Issued Its honor roll for the spring
quarter, llsdng the names of
undergraduates who have
achieved high academic aver ages tor their quarter's work.
Those honored received a grade
point average of at least 3.5 and
were enrolled tor at least 12
credit hours.
On the list from Gallla County
are Todd Hudson, Cheshire;
Richard Stitt, Crown City; Carole Carmichael, Kerry Notter,
Jennifer Poole. James Scott,
Timothy Spurlock and Lori Tope,
Gallipolis; Michael Dobbins, Rio
Grande; and Jodi Adams.
VInton.
On the list from Me~gs County
are Jared Sheets, Pomeroy;
David Rice, Reedsville; and
Krlsdna Adams, Todd Adams
and Tamara Theiss. Syracuse.

trek around tile North American
continent and baffling experts,
veterinarians said.
The wrong-way seal. affectionately dubbed "Robin" by her
temporary keepers at Sea World,
Is the first of her kind ever found
along the West Coast of North
America.
Since she turned up Monday at
the Silver Strand State Beach,
Robin has been recovering from
her marathon swim at Sea
World. Scientists are scratching
their heads and contacting colleagues throughout the nation to
share the news.
"Our reaction Is total amazement and borderline disbelief,"
said Jim Antrim, senior curator
of mammals at Sea World. "We
were absolutely amazed to find It

WISEMAN HONORED - Daut~htero of the American
RevoluUon honored -'lice Wboeman by placing a marker on her
\!Tave recently. Taklnfl place In the ceremony were (1-r) Donna
Lewl•, Carol Jackson, Cindy Graham and Gwen McGuire.

GALLIPOLIS- David Brown Ing. son of U. Dean and A. Jean
Browning. Gallipolis. was recently named to the spring
quarter dean's list at RoseHubnan Institute of Technology
In Terre Haute. Ind. Browning
earned at least a 3.3 grade point
average and was among 430
students to do so.
Browning Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School.

IF YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED
YOUR LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
CARD IN THE MAIL OFFERING
SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO THE
CLASS OF '91, PLEASE CALL OR
STOP BY OUR OFFICES.

LEAR.
Pft010GRAPHY

DRESS1SHOES
SANDAlS

7 50/

/0
OFF

chased

P~rez

in thP sixth Darr\·1

Hamilton opened wllh a double.
advancf'd

to third
s &lt;:~crlfire

on

hun t

Robin

and

retired Dave Parker. Va ughn
and Brock In order to keep 1hr

Creating the perfect fall
wardrobe is easy when
you shop the JCPenney
FaN andWmter Cata!o9 .
You'll find the latest
lashiOns lor you and your
family. Plus sporting
goods, home furnishings.
cameras, electronics and
more- t,400 pages ol
hassle-free shopping.

k

WINHR

199 0

was late . Both runners moved up

on Shetfleld's sacrifice bunt, and
Parker was walked Intentionally
to load the bases .
Vaughn drove the next pitch
deep enough to left to allow Mike
Felder to score uncontested.
The While Sox have outscored
their opponents 70-35 In the first
inning this year, adding the latest
two runs Saturday to jump to a
2-0 lead.
Sammy Sosa jumped on the
first pitch from Hlguera.llnlng it
Into the left -field seats for his
ninth hom e run, the fourth to lead
off a game . One outlater. Ivan
Caldero n tripled Into the right ·
field co rner. and he scored on
Dan Pasqua's base hit through a
pulled-in Infield.
The While Sox built their lead
to .1-0 in the third. Sosa opened
with a double. stole third 1his 18th
thefll and scored on Calderon's
one -out single.
Sherfield brought the Brewers
within J.l In the fourth with hi'
se venth home run . The shot to
left. th e first hit of the game off
Perez, made the front row of the
upper deck and extended She!·
field' s career-high hitting streak
t o 15 games.
Broc k thE'n opened lhe fifth
with a home run to rlghl. his
fourth homE'r of the year. making
the score 3-2.
Royals 10, Orioles 9 - AI
Kan sas Clly, Mo .. Kurt Still well
capped Kansas City's live-ru n
sevE'nth Inning wilh a lwo-run
homer and George Brett blasted
a three-run shot Saturday,llftlng
I he Rovals to a 10-9 victory over
Ba ltimore In the first game of a
double -headN that fe atured the
e nd of Orioles shortstop Cal
Rip ken Jr.'s error less streak.
Kansas Cit y !railed 9-4 after
Baltimore's six-run fifth Inning
but scratched back with a run in
th e fifth off the error by Rlpken
and then the ft v..-run SE'venth to
broke the seven-game winning

streak of Mark Williamson. ~2 .
Stillwell 's home run was his
second of 1he year and Breit's his
seventh . Tim Hulett and Brady
Anderson. who finished with four
hit s. each hit two-run homE'rs for
Oa lllmorr a nd each have two this
si'ason . Anderson's homer rame

off Steve Crawford. who survived
to improve to ~ -2. Jeff Montgomcrv go t s &gt;x out s lor his 14th
sa vr.
Gerald Perry opened the srvrnl hoff re liever Joe Price with a
single and Brett followed with a
shot down the rig hi-field linE' that
was rul ed foul until umpire VIc
Voltaggio agreed with Breit's
argument that the ball went of!
the glove of first baseman Randy
Milligan . Brett was given a
double. th e S40th of his career.
tyi ng him with Joe Medwlck for
13th on the all -time list.
.Jim Elsenrelch was givPn an

RBI when Milligan booted hi s
grounder. One out later. Williamson was brought In and Pat
Tabler hit a sacrifice fly to pull
the Royals within 9-6. Mlkt&gt;
Macfarlane's pinch-hit single
made the score 9-8 before Stillwell's drive to right -center returned the lead to Kansas City.
The Orioles trailed 4-3 when
Royals starter Mark Davis
walked Rlpken and Hulett to
open the tilth . Mike Devereaux
became the first of five Orioles to
collect RBI In thE' Inning, with
Anderson's home run capping
the rally.
Rlpken misplayed a grounder
tram rookie Jeff Schulz and
Etsenrelch, who had tripled.
scored to make the score 9~5.
Rtpken's record ended at 9o
games and 431 chances. His last
previous misplay was April 13 at
Detroit.
Baltimore scored Its first run
without a hll . Davis walked
Anderson and Randy Milligan .
Both runner s moved up on a
passed ball and Anderson scored
on Rlpken's sacrifice fly . HuiE'tt
followed with the first hit of the
gam~. a two-run shot that mad e
the score .1-0.
Kansas City answered with a
tour-run third inning. Seltzer
singled and Bill Pecota walked to
set up a run-scoring single by
Perry . Brett then hit his home
run deep Into the right -field
seats.
Neither starter was effective.
Davis lasted just one batter Into
th~ lltth Inning. giving up six
runs . six hits and seven walks .
Pete Harnisch, the BaltimorE'
starter. was pulled three batters
Into the sixth, having allowed
five runs, six hils and six walks .
Tigers 17, Red Sox 9 - At
Detroit, Larry Sheets collected
six RBI with a three -run homer In
the llrst Inning and a bases·
loaded triple in a 10-run sixth
Saturday that carried the Del roll
Tigers to a 17·9 victory over th~
Boston Red Sox.
The 10 runs were the most in an
Inning by the Tigers since they
scored 11 In the first Inning
against Baltimore on Sept. 20,
1983.

Travis Fryman starred lhe

Detroit sixth by taking a called
third strike but the next II
batters reached base safely.
Lou Whitaker walked. raced to
third on Dave Bergman's single
and scored on a single by Alan
Trammell. Dennis Lamp. 3-3.
replaced Dana Klecker and
walked Cecil Fielder to load the
bases. Sheets laced a 3-2 pllch
that hit llrst base. bounced over
the head of first baseman Carlos
Qutn1ana and Into the right -field
corner lor to tie thE' score 9-9.
Lloyd Moseby was walked
Intentionally and Chet Lemon
followed with an RBI single to ·
break the tie . Mike Heath singled
home Moseby and Lamp was
replaced by Jerry Reed. Tony
Phillips batted lor Fryman and
walked . Whitaker drllled a double to right to drive In two run s
and the final two runs or the
Inning scored when third baseman Wade Boggs bobbled Berg·

......
'

,

SLIDES FOR FOUL BALL- The New York
Mets' Mark Carreon slides In to try and catch a
foul ball hit bv the Cardinals' Tim Jones In the
man' s grounder.

The defeat for Lamp was the
tlrst In 12 career decisions
against Detroit. Paul Gibson
Improved to 3-2 by giving up two
hits and one run in four Innings ol
relief.
Detrolllncreased lis lead with
two runs In the seventh on an RBI
single by Healh and Phillips'
fielder's choice.
The Red Sox shelled Tiger
starter Frank Tanana. 5-8, lo r
live runs In the first lnnlng. Tim
Naehr\ng doubled In a run and
scored on Mike Greenwell's
single. Quintana h\1 a two-run
double lo chase Tanana and give
Boston a 4-0 lead.
Clay Parker relieved and gave
up walks to Tom Brunansky and
Kevin Romine lo fill the bases
and

Qunilana

scored

on

a

fielder's choler.
Tanana. who Is winless In his
last eight starts, has given up 39
earned runs In his lasl 29 and
two-tlllrd lnnln~.
The Tigers came back with
three runs In the first on Sheets'
seventh home run .
Boston went up 6-.1 In thE'
sE'cond and Detroit added a run In
the bottom of the Inning, on
walks . Boston slarter Mike Bod·
dicker left thP game with a sore
right elbow and was replaced by
Klecker.
. Boston increased its lrad to H-..t

In the th ird on Reed's fourth
homer .

Detroit got a run back In th e
fourth on an RBI double by
Bergman .
Boston Increased Its \cad to 9 o
with a run off Gibson In IhE' sixth
when Wade Boggs scored on
Greenwell's !\elder's choice.
Ranger• 3, Blue Jay.Z ( 131nn.)
- At Toronto, Harold Baines hit
a two-out solo home run In the
13th Inning Saturday afternoon to
boos I the Texas Rangers to a l2
victory over the Toronto Blue
Jays .
Baines hit the first pllch from

••

eighth Inning~~ Saturday's game In New York.
which the Cardinals won 1-0. (UPI)

Frank Wills. ~&gt;-:l. over the center·
field fencE' for I! is lOth homer of
the season.
Wills. the fifth Toronto pltchE'r,
allowed one run and two hits over
three Innings while tanning two
and walking one.
Brad Arnsberg. 4-1. worked
one and two-third Innings, allow Ing one hit and one walk with one
strikeout. John Barfield retired
the !Ina\ batter !or his first save.
Toronto tied the score In Ihe .
ninth. Fred McGrltt led off with a
solo homE' run ott starter Kevin
Brown - a 413-fool shot to center
field for his 23rd homer this
season After John Olerud
doubled. Kenny Rogers replaced
Brown. who then yielded Pat
Borders' ground -rule double
Olerud scored to tie the game.
The Rangers gol to Toronto
reliever J lm Acker for two runs
in the elghtll\nntng. Ju llo Franco
led off with a single and advanced to third on Ruben Sierra's
single. with Sierra thrown out
trying to strclch his hit Into a
double.
One out \at~r. John Russell
doubled down the lelt -!leld line,
scoring Franco. Toronto's nE'wty
acquired John Candalerla camE'
on and allowed an RBI single to
Harold Baines.
In the duel ol starters. Brown
scattered sE'ven hits over elghl
innings and Jimmy Key for
Toronto worked seven scorPiess
Innings Brown struck out eighl
and walked one. Key allowed live
hits while striking out four and
walking two.
Brown allowrd mort&gt; than one
base runner In an Inning only
once. In Ihe firth. With two ouls,
he su rrendered consecutive sin·

gles to Manny Lee, Glenallen Hill
and Mookle Wilson before strlk·
tng out Tony Fernandez on a full
count, called th ird st rike to end
the Inning .
Tied alter 10 - At San
Francisco. the Reds-Giants
game was 1.\ed 2-2 aft er Giants

plnch-hlltrr Dave Anderson. a
new acquisition !rom the Los
Angeles Dodgers. led oft the
Giants' ninth Inning by sending a
Tom Browning pitch over the lett
field fence for his first homer of
the season and the Giants' tilth
pinch-hit homer of the year.
Will Clark followed, but popped
out In lout ground to Reds third
sacker Chris Saba. Then Kevin
Mitchell cam!' on and singled to
center. but ~fore Matt Williams
came to the plate. Browning got
1he hook and was replaced on the
mound by reliever Rob Dibble.
With a 1-2 counl on Williams,
Mitrhclltrlcd to steal second, but
was thrown out by catcher Jof'

Oliver. Then Dibble proceeded 10
s trike out Williams to send the
game Into extra Innings .
In the lOth inning, the RE'ds got
two on base . but were victimized
by a 5+3 double play . TheLiants
didn't do as well, as Dibble
retired Ihem In order.

F~

agent Pease
arrives at Bears
• •
trammg
camp
PLA'ITEVILLE. Wi s. tUPII F'ree agent yuarterback BrE'nt

PeaSf' took his share of snaps
Sa tu rdax on his fir st day of th~
Chicago Bears training ramp,

while Steve McMichael's expensivE' holdoul entered its third day
and Jim Covert reached an
agreement

Covert. an r \ght ~ yea r offensive
tackle. signed a "series of
one-year contract s,'' sa id Bears
finance director Ted Phillips.
although he added II Is a "short
series." Covert was expected In
ca mp Sunday .
Only cornerback Vestee Jackson a nd rookie quarterback Pe"
ter Tom Willis remain unsigned
and absen t. Phillips said there
was " no progress" on either
p\ayP r's status.

Rose will senre time in summer camp-like surroundings
By STEPHEN WADE
MARION . Ill. IUP h - Pet e Rose will be
serving his five-month senten ce for filing faiSt '
Income tax returns In surroundings at the Marion
Federal Prison Camp th at would be consid ered
comlortable and familiar by most Americans.
There are no bars In sig ht at the southern
Illinois facility and th e only fence is in th&lt;' outfield

''I'm sure there will be high bids to get Rose."
added William Haas. 43, a former Chicago
policeman sentenced to 18 years for extortion a nd
bribery . "Bul I'd say we have a gen tle man
playing he re who will outhlt Pete Rose."
Rose. baseball's all-time hit s leader. wa s
ordered to report to Marlon by Aug. 10. A Rose
spokeswoman said this week he wants to report
sooner, so he can be out by Christmas. but she said
his exact arrival date would not be reveal ed
Prison oftlctals also said they would not announce
his arrival In advance.
The convicts here are non-violent. white collar
oflenders- most serving five years or fewer. The
penalty tor walking off Is an automatic five-year
sentence, a $50,000 fine and a tra nsfer to a place
that has bars and lences.
"We haven't had anybody walk away In sl~
years," Michael Laird , a case manager at the
camp, said Wednesd ay.
The 100-acre faclllly Is adjacent to but separate
from the nation's top maximum-security prison .
The U.S. Penitentiary-Marion is the nation's only
Level 6 prison and houses Inmates other tacllltles
cannot handle, like well -known spies a nd
International drug dealers .
The prison camp looks like a resort or summer
camp. Well-tended flower boxes dot the lawns.
Picnic tables are scattered under tall shade trees .
For recreation there's soCtball, a weight -training
room, handball and tennis courts. a modest
basketball taclllty- and a bocci ball court. When
they're not working, Inmates are on their own.
The 200-man dormitory where Rose wlllllve Is
just a year old, alr-condllloned, with 12-foot-by-12toot sleeplnll cubes that house two Inmates each.
The architecture Is art deco, the primary color
Inside II aqua, and the place II hospital-dean.
"I'd say It's like a college donn or ponlbly a
mUitary barrack&amp;," said Randy Davit, executive
usluanttothewardea. "He !Role) probably had
a lMng experle-llkethbln the minor leagues."
LIUard Davis, 39, Nashvtll~. serving 21 months

or the well ·groomed softball field .
··sure he 1Rosel will be we\comr to play softball
- 11 he can make one of th E' team s," said John
Wilson of Clarksburg, W.Va., servi ng a 94-month
drug-related sen tence. Wilson, 36, oversees an
eight -tea m camp softball league that plays a
%-game sc hedule between May and October.

Purchase your catalog
lor just $5 and get a
certificate worth $5 oH
any Catalog putehase

Discover for yourself how
easy catalog shopping
can be.

There's
no need
pay$60
or more for a great perm.
At Fantastic Sam s, you11 get
a beautiful Helene Curtis' perm.
including a shampoo, cut and
complete style-everything you
expect from an expensive salon,
except the price.
,
You don t need an appointment. we're waiting lor you now

A~Sarit's•

'

3-0 early. tied t ht• score and

Ken Patterson re!Jpved fo r
Chicago with two runners on bast•
and no outs in the sixth. and hf'

FALL &amp;WINTER

f AI I

.........

. . .Ot'l' f,.,.,Hollclan.

.... I Fri. Ill I P.M.
r...~ wet~. nw. 111 7 , ...
s.tw•r Ill s ,...

The BrewPrs, who had 1rai1Pd

scored on Sheffield's baSl' h\1 .

The Latest Fashions
At Your Ftngertrps

tribute $100 lor a l~etlme membership. The money will be used
to set up an annual scholarship
tor a Point Pleasant graduating
senior.
Anyone Interested should contact John Ni~rt at 13041675-6664 .

WOMEN'S SUMMER

innings. Those hil s. howPvf' r .

score tied.
Hamilton singled to open the
eighth off Patlerson. who wa s
replaced by Donn Pall. Felder
came In as a pinch runner and
was sacrificed to second by
Yount. Yount also was safe on the
play whPn catcher Karkovlce's
throw lo second to forcE' Felder

At an Illinois prison,

The presenter will be Dorothy
A. Stltzleln. R.N.. from Ashland
University . The program has
been approved by the following
professional organizations as
continuing education: BENHA .
LPNAO. Social Work. DMA .
ADA. RAP and RAC. Approval is
pending from ONA and Ihe Ohio
Cou nselor Board.
For additional Information or
to register. contact Barbara
Ca ldwell at 1 ~ 800-648- 2575 or
1·614-245-5306

LARGE GROUP

Cardinals I, Mets 0- At New
York. Wlllle Mc-Gee ~lted his
second home run of th e sE'ason
Saturday and Joe Magrane and
Lee Smith combined on a !our·
hitter to lilt the Sl. Louis
Cardinals to a 1-0vlclorvovrr the
New York Mets.
Magrane, 6-12, has won six of
hts last 12 decisions a Iter open lng
the season with six straight
defeats. He Issued one walk and
struck out five over seven and
two-third Innings as the Mets
were shut out for only the third
lime this season. Smith relieved
for his 16th save.
McGee's homer In the seven th ,
a high drive over I he center field
wall, came on a 1-1 pitch from
David Cone, 7-5. McGee extended
his hitting streak to 19 games.
matching his career best set in
1983.
Cone allowed ont:v two hi ts.
walked two and struck out 10 ovrr
eight Innings but ended his
personal six -game winning
streak as he lost for the first 1ime
since May 25th.
Cone has struck au I 10 or more
for the fifth time this season.
John Franco pitched the ninth
Inning.
New York had two runners on
base In the first Inning with two
outs. Greg Jefferies doubled and
Kevin McReynolds walkE'd but
Magrane struck out Howa rd
Johnson.
The Mets threalened again In
the sixth with two aboard and one
out, but Kevin McReynolds and
Johnson flied out.
Brewers 5, White Sox 4 - At
Chicago. Ozzle Guillen smacked
a two-run single wllh no outs In
the ninth Inning Saturday afternoon to rally the Ch ica go White
Sox to a o-4 triumph over the
Milwaukee Brewers .
With Chicago trailing 4·3 . Ron
Karkovtce lined a double off the
left -field wall to open the ninth off
Don Plesac . 2-4. Rodney McC r a)·
came In as a pinch runner and
took third when Scott Fletcher
laid down a perfect bunt for a
single. Pinch hitter Carlton Fisk
walked to load the bases befo re
Guillen singled up the middl e.
Scott Radlnsky, 6-0. rei ired the
last four batters afler Milwaukee
had rallied for a 4-:\ lead In the
l'ighth on Greg Vaughn' s _,arrl ·
flee fly .
Teddy Higuera spoiled thr
While Sox three runs In the first
three Innings, then retired 1·1 of
the next 17 batters . .Jaimr
Navarro pitched the eighth he·
fore Ptesac entered .
Chicago slarler Melldo Pr-1-rz
allowed just four hit s in ftvr plu s

Yount's

PPHS alumni forminf!, [!,roup
POINT PLEASANT . \1'.\'a . Graduatt'S of Point Plra&lt;ant.
W.Va .. High School are being
asked to participate In a srhool
alumni ass()('latlon. Alumni are
eotabllshlnj:: a ·' Founding
Members" of the association and
are uklng that graduates con-

Cardinals top Mets 1-0

Sheffield and Greg Hrork .

Nursing home training
center plans workshop
GALLIPOLIS - The Nursing
Home Area Training Center at
lhP Area Agency on Aging, Inc. Is
announcing an upcoming work shop endtled "Comprehensive
AssessiTll'nt of the Elderly.''
This six-hour presentation Is
designed to Increase the know!
edge of. and skills related to.
performing a holistic assessment
of the elderly client. The pr&lt;&gt;
IJ'am will ~ conducted on Aug.
15 from 9 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m. at
Heritage Square. New Boston.
Ohio.

July 29, 1990

Included solo home run s b:-' Car.v

SPIING VAUIY PU ZA
GAUIPOLIS, OH.
1146-7494
1-100·272-UAI

C

ientitttl Section

CillO IV. PlAZA
IITWPIIUS I •

GAUIPOUS. CillO

IIAI

11011........ " • , ...
SAT. tiO 6 P.M.
SMAY1210SP.&amp;

$5

Get Your New
Catalog For Only

"We're NEVER closed,.
SHOP BY PHONE
1-800-222-6161

... ....
.

(MIIjhiif Wls
OliO IIVIIIIUIA
GAWPOUS, OliO

JCPimly

_,

CAnter

BOMJ: IWJ:ET HOME - ftla Ia the donnllory
• l1le Mlll'loa Federal Pl'llloa Camp In Marlo•,
m., ••- Pete Bole wiD serve hill flve-moath
•ltlt•e lcll' flllll1 falle ._etu ,..,._...... Theft

""'

...

.~

~·

are no bM'I at thlaltkcre flleiiiiJ, wlllellla.Jtul
acroa tbe rold from tile utloa'alop mulmllllllleeurit)' priloll. ( VPI)

. t·

on a drug charges . rated th e slee ping quarters
highly ~

"Great. lor not being at home. you can't beat
It," Davis sa id. The ex-Marine then added, "This

Is ~Iter than anyplace I was stationed .
Everything here Is all right . but his freedo m is
being taken away , his fam ily - that will ~the
hardest. "
Added Haas, "You takeaway a man's freedom,
It's hard no matter where you are . But serving
time here Is better than doing it a cross the street."
Randy Davis meant nothing negative by It, but
said Rose should fit right Into the Inmate
population.
"From whal I've heard. he !Rose ) Is a very
down-to-earth per son, " Ra nd y Davis said.
"These guys here are no problem They are like
your next door neighbor, maybe better than some
you have. "
The food Is your basic ca feteria bland . The work
sc hedule is eight hours a day, five days a week.
There are about 40 jobs. ranglng from grounds
maintenance to food service. The pay starls at II
cents an hour and can reach 25 cents. Inmates are
allowed to spend up to $125 of their own money
monthly In a comm issary that looks very much
like a convenience store
Rose wilt wear a khaki or white uniform when
he's working. On his own time he will be able to
lounge In Inexpensive clothing of his choosing like
sweatsults, shorts or solid-colored T-shlrts.
An unscientific poll showed mixed feeling about
the fairness o! Rose's sentence. But Inmates
expect Rose will be treated like anybody else at
the camp - at least by the prison staff.
"He (Rose) will be treated the same by tbe
staff, but other Inmates will probably rtve him a
warm welcome becauae of who he Is," Wllsoll
said. "Eventually he'll blend In and just be one of
tbe tellu."
Asked IC be would uk for Rose's autoerapb,
Ullard Davis answered: "I don't thlnll10. 11l(lve
him mine."

�P.ga C-2-Sundlly TITI II Sentinel

Ponlero¥-Middlepott-Gui(!JoliJ, Ohio-Point PI

UNit.

W. Va.

July 29, 1990

July 29. 1990

\ In the Kyger Creek Little League Tournament,

·•

fram e.

•
..

With a 7-0 deficit staring them down, the Wildcats got the bottom of
rhe sixth started with four straight hits- singles by Nathan Swindler.
Dillon and Merrick, and a double by Nathan Waugh 1the game's only
ex tra base hltl - !hat with the help of an er ror by the Sox's Iert
field e r. rang up three runs for Trace.
With Waugh at second base, Jeff Still walked, and after Robbie
Ha r rison struck out, David Rucker reached on an error by the Sox's
seco nd baseman. Wes ley Gibson' s single got Waugh home. and an
error by !he Sox 's right fielder allowed Stitt and Rucker to score.
cu tting the Sox's lead to 7-6.
With Michael Black at the plate, Gibson came In from third on a
wild pitch to tie the game at 7-7. Then Black singled, and with
Swind ler coming up for his second plate appearance of the Inning.
Blac k stole second. Swindler reached on an error by the shortstop,
which allowed Black to come In from second with the winning run.

r

•.

'•

'•
'·
'
•

Trace's pitching triumviral~&gt; of Dillon, Merrick and Rucker
combined to strike out five and walk eight , while the Sox's trio of
Casey Canaday. Jason Daltl'y and Humphreys totaled eight
strikeouts and two walks .
The Guyan offense was fueled by Gibson (3-4 1. Dillon and Merrick
I both 2·3), Black 12-4) , Waugh 11-3, doubl~&gt;l and Swlndl~&gt;r 11·3) . The
Sox's lour hits were colk&gt;cted by Casey Canaday and Kevin Wood
I both 1·31 and Humphreys and Gallon Ju stice I both 1-4 l .
Score by lnolllgs
White Sox .............. .. ............ .. .............. ................ .. . 000 610- 7· 4-4
Hannan Trace ..... .......... .. .... ... ........ ......................... 000 OGI-8·11-2
WP - Rucker lin relief of Dillon and Merrick I
LP - Humphreys (In relief of C. Canaday and Dailey)

By SCO'JT WOLFE
T-8 Corre~~pondellt
STEWART - The name was
"Bond - Andy Bond". the
second generation driver who
came from the fifth row to score a
dramatic Mid-Season Championship victory Friday evening a t
Skyline Speedway .
,·
Claiming wins In the Mid•
Season bonanzas In the other
divisions were Kemp Kelly In the
Semis. Kevin Haught In the
Sportsman and Roger Garnes In
the Street Stocks.
I '
In summary, the Late Model
feature was a great one; a lot of
passlllg and a lot of side-by-side
:: · action In lhe pack. Butch McGill

WP - Crow 1tn reliPf of Deemer and Clelaod 1
LP- Buchanan lin relief of Crane and Oliveri

Hubbard's 10. Fnath'.S - Just as In the first game, the pltc!H!rsgot
a workout. but!or Hubbard's, this game was unlike any In which the
Syracuse nine had played In some time. as Fruth's shed a 1·0 deficit
like an old skin with an eight -run rebellion In the third .
The Insurrection chased Syracuse starter Kevin Deemer (two
Innings, six strikeouts. eight walks) orr the mound and subjected
middle reliever Cass Oeland, who came In from shortstop. to more of
!he same. but Cleland kept the Pharmacy from putting double digits
on the scoreboard In any category.
The Greenhouse aired out Its grl pvances against Fruth's by scoring
five In It s half of the third to cut Fruth's lead loS-6. Then In the fourth
the Meigs squad brought In ace hurler Robby Crow In from shortstop.
where he moved after s tarting the game at first base.
Crow put Fruth's on an offenslvp diet, allowing no runs and no walks
while fanning six In chalking up th e win , which wa s ass ured alter the
Greenhouse scored three In !he fou r th for thelPad and one In the filth
fo r the tclng on the cake.
For Fruth's, Brian Crane, Butch Oliver a nd B.J. Buchana n
combined to strike out two and walk th ree.
Syracuse's hit collectors were Crow and Deemer (both 2-3 ). Jay
McKelvey 12-4. double). Tyson Buuckley (1 -3, double). Cleland and
Jay Day !both 1-4 l. Fruth's hltscamecourtesy of Jason Stephens 11 -4.
double ). Buchanan. Oliver, Randy Randolph and Sammy Stephens
lalll·4l.
Score by Innings
Fruth's Pharma cy ......... .............................. ........ .. 008 000- 8-5-5
Hubbard's Greenhouse ........ .. ................ .. .. .. .... .... .... 015 31x-10-9-2

.••

and Don Clark paced the 21-car
field lo the start with McG ill
jumping Into the lead, where he
took command of the top spot for
22 laps.
With McGill in the top spot, Bill
Childers. Larry Miller, Bob
Adams. Jr. and Rod E vans
waged a great battle for second
spot. Adams was piloting an
all-new Doll Brothers Chassis
equipped with a V-6 engine.
Defending champ and points
leader Adams had the small
Chevrolet humming, but despite
reaching second at one point the
" Little Bandit" lacked the necesary tork on the tacked up oval.
By the midway poin t Andy

,.
l

I:

HAL.
WET/DRYIAC
Vacuums wet or dry, in·
side or out Heavy-duty
steel tank lor long !We. Fi~
!ration system provides af·
licient wei or dry pickup.
Special bonus accesso·
rles Include crevice lool,
round brush. gulper

•

..
,.

•
•r

r·

noule.

shop-vac®

99

•
•

Sunday Tllli8S-Sentina6-Page C-3

Bond wins at Skyline Friday

•
•
:~Hannan Trace, Syracuse post come-from-behind v1ctones

; ;:
By G. SPEN&lt;:ER OSBORNE
• •·
Tlmea-Seallllel Staff
. CHESHIRE - In thecoocluslon of quarterfinal acllon In the Kyger
··creek LltUe League Toumaml'nt Friday night at tiM! Kyger Creek
Employees Club Field, Hannan Trace and Syracuse Hubbard's
.Greenhouse lound lhemselvi'S down by Sl'ven In thl'lr fi'Spi'CIIve
.· conti'Sts agalnstthl' Gallipolis While Sox and Fruth's Pharmacy or
·· Point Pleasant, but took advantage of shaky pitching from those
team s to stage come-lrom-behlnd vlctorii'S.
Rutland and Green played thl' first Sl'ml!lnal game Saturday, and
Hannan Trace and Syracuse confronted l'ach otber In lhl' second
_semlllnal contest. Thl' winners of those games will play In the
·championship game today at 6: 30 p.m., loUowlng the 5 p.m.
·:consolation game.
:- Wildcats 8, While Sox 7 - "It ain't over 'UIIt's over!"
. This Yogi Berra saying bore true In this gaml', as the White Sox
· failed to put away the Wildcats In the sixth Inning alter holding the
· Guyan nine to live hits and no runs tor live frames .
In fa ct, the first three Innings comprised the stage for a duel
between starters Casey Canaday for the Sox and Paul Dillon lor
Trace. as the plate remained In pristine condition, batter's box dust
notwiths tanding . But the Sox took advantage ol control problems by
Dillon and reliever Jamie Merrick to mount a six -run rally In th e
fourth . However. Trace assured all concerned that the Sox would not
: · do an encore In th e !lith, as the Wlldcats allowed only one run In that

Pomeroy-MkklaJlOit-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Bond In the McDonald's/ Larry
Mllhone Trucking York Cons truction number AIO had pulled
Into the number lour slot behind
Bod Adams. Bill Childers, and
McGill. While It appeared McGill
was going to dominate, tiM!
former trio had a heated batUe
for the runner-up spot.
Bond bad been coming on all
season long, but despite great
drives never sUpped Into the top
spot until tonight. Bond at one
point had a string of 6 straight
heat race wins.
Unlike the rest of his competl·
tors the younger Bond moved to
the outside. where he utilized the
small cushion to perfection. On a
lap 22 restart Bond had moved
Into the runner-up position,
wh Pre he pulled McGill on the
start and never looked back.
Meanwhile, the bright blue
number 10 of brother Larry Bond
crept Into the uncharacteristic
low groove, while passing three
cars going down the stretch. The
elder Bond In the Whaley 's/Facemeyer Lumber car then cast his
eyes on his brother Andy, but the
Coolville driver had the McDonald's Hamburger machine fly Ing high and on to a half-track
victory .
Behind the one-two finish oft he
Bond brothers, Butch McGill
salvaged third , Rod Evans
fourth . followed by Adams, Bill
Childers, Pomeroy's Benny
Hickel, Don Clark, Keith Riddle,
who In his !Irs! Late Model Ride
came from 18th to ninth In a line
drive; Bobby Davidson, Dave
Nutter, and Bryan Wolle In the
other McDonald 's Hamburger
car from Racine .

MIDSEASON CRAMP - Andy Rood of
claimed the 30-lap Mld-Seuon Championship lor
Coolville, Ohio drove the McDonald 's HamburrerLate Moclela. Larry Mllhooe of Tuppers Plains Is a
/ Larry Mlllhone TrucklnlfYork Construction
spo1180r of the winning car. Ironically, Andy Bond
Raybum Chusl8 to a very blc victory Friday
rolled to victory over hlo older brother Llll'ry
nllht at Skyline Speedway, when the second
Bond.
generation driver (oon olle~endaryiRiioiioiiiniileiiBoiiiiindiii);..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
McGIU won thedashover Ciark
and Childers. Bob Adams won
the first heat over Andy Bond,Steve Burnside. and Bryan
Wolfe. Bob Davidson won the
second heat over Larry Bond,
Tim Buckley, and Rod Evans.
Kemp Kelly of Ravenswood,
W.Va ., In the K and K race cars,
number 2K was again the class of
the field In the semi-late division.
Jim Wilson of Frazier's Bottom, W.Va. , took the early lead
and looked to be In line for the
win, but following a late race
yellow his set up !ailed off and
Kelly moved In for the kill. Kelly
got a great jump on the restart
and sprinted from third to first ,
(See SKYLINE on C-4)

--

•Wheel
Alignment
•Brakes &amp;
Shocks
•Struts
•Used Tires
•Goodyear Tires

""filAR

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

JOHN FULTZ- J. MARCUS FULR
242 W. Main
OWNERS
992-2101

Po1111roy:

•

3/8" 2-SPEED DRJtt

'··.

Drill and drive with the ·
rre~3aom of
cordless "'"'
Convenient
2-speed trigger
control, 225/350 rpm .
Charging stand included with
handy bit storage for 31 bits.
130)
1 1
"'

.

-·- . .._,...... ·• ·

YOUR

Lifetime Warranty Parts!
LAST LAP WINNER Ripley , W.Va., driver Rocer
Gar11e1 made a last lap pus to
de!eal .\Jb1111y'o Brlllll WWard
by a ooee In lhe Mid-Season
Championship Races at Skyline Speedway In Slewart,
Ohio Friday nlchl. Garnes
was crowned champ In the
Street Stock division over
WIUard and Nolan Miller.
Trophies were presented to
the top three drivers In all
divisions.

88

$

CHOICE
VSRnGSAW
. DILLON SINGLES- Hannan Trace plteher/llrot baseman Paul
: Dillon grounds Ibis Casey Canaday pitch up the middle and Into left
· center field lor a single be lore moving lo second base on aa
: oudlelder's error In the second Inning of Friday's Kyger Creek
LUUe League Tournament game asalostthe GaiUpolls Wblle Sox
the Kyger Creek Employees Club Field, In whlcb the Wlldcalo
. came from behind to win 8-7. ( Tlmea-SenUnel photo by G. Spencer
· Osborne)

:at

THE LAST OIJI' - Alter plcklllg up a grounder ba.ck to the
mound hit by Hannan Trace's Nathan Swlodler, GaiUpollll While
Sox pitcher Case~ Canadll)l makes lbe throw to llrot to retire
Swlnder aud end the third Inning of Friday'• Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament opener. Canaday combined with relievers
Jason Dailey and Eric Humphreys to lan eight and walk two, but
the Wildcats came from behind to win 8-1. (Timeo.SenUoel photo
by G. Spencer Osbome)

Quality jig saw with variable
speed to handle a wide
range of materials !rom
wood lo steel. y, h.p., 3.0
amp, built-in blade and
wrench st: rage . Trigger
locks lor continuous cui·
ling . {4235)

Diddle wins West
Virginia race

0
1

6" ONE HANDER BAR"' .. ""
Ught,wtth
ofroog.laot
lJie
one hand.
St... bt r, soft pada.

ill (00506)

$

BAIT &amp; TACKLE &amp;
CARRY OUT
One Mle Below Galipolis locks

OHIO RIVER·
BIG CATFISH
CONTEST
1st Plact

S15 0.00 Fishing Tackle

MIDDLEBOURNE. W.Va .
Racine, Ohio's Chris Diddle had
one of his biggest days In racing
recently when he c !aimed the
fast car dash and placed second
In the feature at Tyler County
Speedway In West VIrginia last
week.
Diddle Is sponsored by J.D.
Drilling In Racine and McDonald's In Ripley . Diddle placed
second to winner Kirk Isner. and
defeated veterans Cotton Sayre
and Jack Queen.
He Is the son of Jim and Linda
Diddle of Racine.

OUIC~GRII?

BLADEN
LANDING

2nd Place

s75.00 Fishing Tackle
3rd Place

S50.00 Fishing Tackle
PRIZES CAN BE SEEN
AT BLADEN LANDING
CONTEST WJU START
WEDNESDAY I AUG. 1
TIIRU SEPT. 30
Must be registered to be

MAX,PCIW.a [

Remanufactured. For most
domestic vehicles With exchange:
llfG. TO 49.99 ....... ...... .. 31.81
llfG. OVfll 49.99. ... 20'11. OFF

Holda
18 Clnl

~~·

. TOUGH TIMES on lh• hW were oace again lhe lot of Hubbard'•
·treenhou!W! •tarter Knla Deemer, who held Fruth's Phanna.c~
tcorelesolor two lnnlnp before the West VIrginians chased him oil
:the mound wllh an eight-run rally In lhe third Inning oflhe nightcap
)II Friday night'• Kyger Creek Utile League Tournament
o4oubleheader at Cheshire. However,lheGreenhauseshook olllhal
:ieven-run deficit by scorlns In every Inning alter the llnl and
:wfnnlng 10-8. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Canada beats Finland 6-5
By JOHN SWENSON
VPI Sportl Writer
: KENNEWICK, Wash. iUPI) lienl Mandervllle scored with 58
~conds remaining. giving Canajla a 6-~ vtclory over Fl nland
Gnd lolling a lhree-goal comellack tor lhe losers Friday night.
: Jukka Vllander's goal at 13 :19
qt the third pl'flod had pulled the
FJn.U.h squad Into a t~ al ~5.
: RVM Romanluk tllld Joe Juneau each ICOred two goala for

~nacla.
;. Romanluk, picked by 1M Wlnlllpef Jet1ln the Jt88 NHL draft.
jave Canada a 1-0 lead at 2: 33 Ill

111e tlrat pl'flad wltb 1 IIIIP lbot

from the right circle that beat
Finland goaltender Sakarl Lindfors. After Pekka Tuomlsta tied
tbe score H with a power-play
goal at 10: :10, Juneau, a Boston
Brulna dralt piCk, gave Canada a
2·11ea4 at 12:49, then converted a
power-play opportunity at 19:37.
Canada's Gary Shuchuk made
It 4-1 al 2:07 or the second P"flod.
After Kal Rautio made It 4·2 at
5:13 Romanltlll rea ponded with a
goal II 5: 25.
Juba Rllh!Jarvl pulled Flnlllncl
to wtlhln ~a on a power-play gnal
a1 16: 32, lhen Mlka Nlemenen
made It 5-I 11 4: 22 of the third
periOd.

BUCHANAN SCORES - Frulb'o Phannaey'o B.J. Buchanllll
(partially hidden by Syra.culll' calc her Ryllll HID) sUdeo under HID
to ocore during lhe Pharmacy'• etcht-rua Jailbreak In the third
Inning of Friday's Kycer Creek Utile Le&amp;~~~e Tournameol conlelll.
However, Syra.cuse wu able to score live In Ito hall of liM! third en
route to a com~lrom-behlnd , 10-8 victory. (Times-sentinel photo
by G. SpencerO.bome)

Last Chance ends season at 18-0
GALLIPOLIS- The Last Chance softball team, managed by Mike
Canaday and sponsored by Last Chance Carry Out owner Gwen
Carter, completed an undefeated regular Sl'ason with an 18-0 record
In the Gallla Counly Men's Softball League, which closed
regular-season play on Wednesday .
Taking second place went to the Food! and team, managed by Phil
Skidmore and sponsored by Ohio Valley Supef!Jlarkets owner Bob
Eaatman, whk:h ended tiM! regular season at 13-5.
A three-day, single-elimination tournament on Tuesday, Aug. 7,
will conclude the meo'a summer program .
The league's final standings were:

(\~2504)

-

(

30 WT.• IDI!f.JO,
OR IIIW-41

Beam

Headlights
With Complete
Taiii!Rht

9 7'

RESISTOR....
SP!CIAL 7Y PLUGS... .....

ZO-HP Toro
Power Plus ..

BE COOL TO YOUR .NGINf/

YOUI Mglntl COOlin/ fTHxtvrt is OM Of the rwtl
most importlnt fluialevels )"'u should regularly
Cfl«k And If'S not lnoog/1 10 fJJikt surt your
11(/IA(Of IS lu ll. tht COOlin/ ShOuld IISO be frtsfl

Engint

With Oil
Filter
8-Pinlon
Hydrostatic
Chrome
Transaxle Hydraulic
Hubcaps
htlaehmenr 42' . 48' &amp; ti(J"
&amp; Details
Lifr
Commtrctal Mowing Decks (Optional)
Uni-Drtvr•

IM C/Nfl. BeiCUSf II ,,., COOlin/IS

old and conllmiN~. " can't
pro11K1e tflt 1nt1-corroswn 1m1

n,ar r~mo1111 propMi8s
ntass.ary_1M resutr couki/Jt 1n

ntUTIIDT

Auniq!M -time
engin• fl'llllmtml with
PUE. For I}ISind
dlt!slli ft'191n&lt;s. 14 t 3.

oVflfhtllfld tnqinl. ' corrodld
thsimostat or housing. pr~tT~~tum
wamr pump wur·-or lt"Mll
bkiwn ong/ne. Don! risl il-

/Mst OfiCf '

OVER BOO LOCAnONS TO SERVE YOU • CHECK YOUR LOCAL
DIRECTORY OR YEUOW PAGES FOR THE STORE NEAREST YOU/

5
5
10
11
16
17

BA

LUMBER

985·3301

Cllftll
I

'I

',(

·----------

----

--

''

... __.__
.., ..
............
,......
......
_,.,.._
____........
,. ,.,..._,,..,
_______
.......,...

cl""fff your coollnr or

Right at home.

,·

r

. ..... _$40FF

Sealed

~WL
Lui Chance .........................................................................18 0
Foodland .............................................................. .. ...... .. .... .13
C A Trucktaa .................... ...... .. ... ............. .......................... .13
Hol%B Medical ~nter .. .. ....... ..... .... ............. ...... ..... .......... .. .. 8
Old Brick Tavern..... ...... ...... ..... .. .. ... .. .. ... .. ... .. .. .. ... ... .. . .. .. .. ... 7
Smith Bulc•·Pontlac .. ... ........ ........................ .............. ......... 2
Oblo Valley Banll ................................ .. ........................ ....... 1

1.~''""-' wirh excllanoe

Umil 12 qua~s
at sale pricl.

tnd'icalor
Light Package

&amp;~um

•aa••

With exchange.
OVER 25.19..... 1O'Ho OFF

I IOTOROIL

&amp;

Gauges
Ealonl

Poly troy can't rust. Easy to
c lean. 14· pneL.nlOIIc lire.
Great for big yard jobs.
(24-350) ( 164) (1&gt;400) (I (&gt;OJ

NEW WATER PUMPS

BRAKE
SHOES AND PADS

Oe&lt;k lndudtd

lndudlng
Tachommr

4CO. "·

Remanufactured. For most import
vehicles.With exchange.
RfG. OVER 39.91..... 20'11. OFF

CIIMII

0
$4495°
With 48" Mower

tnstru~Rntallon ,

WBEELBUIOW

I..IFETIME IMPORT
STARTERS AND
Al..'f'ERNATORS

eligible to win. Rules will
be awailable.

15' "Sure·Grlp"Stttrlng Wheel
Deluxe.
No-lbol s
httach·A·Mallc ..
Qllld·Adlust Stat
With hrrn Rtsrs
~~~Hitch System
•
Complete

(31

/lfiPQJ

Quality! Value! Selection!

FROM TORO WHEEL HORSE
STILL YOUR BEST DEAL ON
A LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR

MODEL
520-H

~-)

LIFETIME_..._.w
STARTERS&amp;
AI..TI!RNATORS

TWO·YUR
WAR RAllY
EPA

,.,,_

---··-·-·

�Paga C-4-Sunday T..,._Sentinel

Pamaoy-MiMaport-Geli;oolis. Ohio-Point Pia

July 29, 1990

•t. W.Va.

Garrelts' ninth-inning run gives Giants 4-3 win over Reds
Ex-Marshall hurler
Robiruon finishes game
SAN FRANCISCO tUPII RunnE&gt;r and ball r eached home
together, setting off a heated
debatE&gt; when umpire Jim Quick
ruled lor San Francisco - and a
ninth Inning 4-3 Giants's victory
Friday over the Cincinnati Reds.
The narrow win came as Sco tl
Garrelts scored from second on
pinch-hitter Btu Bathe's single.
"I looked to see what Jim
Quick had called bE&gt;Cause every thing happened so fa st," a n
ebullient GarrE&gt;IIs sa id . " It felt
good to get In there. "
Re--ds manager Lou Pi nella was

unhappy with the call.
·'The catcher said he lllocked
the plate, " PI nella said. "We lost
a ball game on the same damn
thing, the same (umpiring I crew
earlier In the year. The other
time they reversed It , when they
called our runner safe," then
dec la red him out.
It was the second time In two
ga mes that the Giants, who
moved to within 7'h games of
first place In the NL West.
overcame a 3-0 tlrst-l nnlng de-licit to defeat division-lead ing
Cincinnati.
The Reds extended th eir losing
strea k to five ga mes .
With one out in the ninth, Ga ry
Ca rter singled off loser Scoi t

Scudder, 2-4. Garrelts ran for
Carter and advanced to second
when Scudder's toss to second on
Robby Thompson's comebacker
pulled second baseman Ron
Oes ter off the bag. Reliever
Randy Myer s then re placed
Scudder and Bathe followed by
s lapping his 3·2 pitch Into right
field, sending Garrelts home
with the winning run.
Garrelts barely beat Paul
O'Neill's throw and catcher Joe
Oliver argued homeplateumpl re
Jim Quick's call, claiming the
ru nner never touched the plate .
" It was 3-2 situation and I
wa nte d to stay out of the double
pla y a nd this guy 1Garrelts) can

Skyline races .. ____________r"_"_.._·_G_i_an_t_s- m-•n_a_g_er_R_o_ge_r

!Continued from C-31
while Dave ME&gt;adows foil wed sult
a nd moved to second.
Behind Kelty al the finish wrE&gt;
Meadows, Jim Wilson, Bobby
Hill , Racine Driver Lee Floyd.
Bobby Mosser. Jerry Toncray .
Mike McDaniels, DarrE&gt;n Smith
Racine 's Chris Diddle, Ed Sh u:
ma n. Archie Burdetle, Ja ck
Queen a nd Kirk Isner .
He at winners were Wilson and
Queen .
First timer Kevin Haught In
the Hughes Dodge / Toyota
jumped Into the lead from the
pole position and never looked
bar k In the Sportsman feature .
Haught sus tained several cau tio n flags, but eac h time pulled
away from the rest o! tht&gt; pack.
Jim Amick In the Uptown Dog
car flnlshed second over Phil
Davis of GaiUpolls, who came

from the la ll after an eor lv
c ra s h: Gary Bcrtrum, Mike
Adkins. Robert Stackpole, Steve
Woods. Ron William s. Aaron
Scott and Bob Alloway .
Hra t winners WPrP Haught and
Aaron F'! rmlng
Fast timers for the night were

Bill Ch ilders , LM: Kirk Isner.
Semi; a nd Haught In the
Spo rtsma n.
Br ian Willard of Albany led 19
la ps, but the mos t Import a nt lap
was led by winner Roger Garnes
who edged Willard at the r heckerE&gt;d fla~ . In a just as exci tln~
fini s h Nolan Mill er nosed out
Cla ir Sullivan In a photo fini s h fo r
Ihe third spo t.
Roger Gar nes of Ripley.
W. Va . now has the bugs Ironed
out of the new 00. and has been
the man to beat on the Ohio-West
VIrginia Circuit the past month.
The finish stood at Garnes In

first, Willard, Miller, Sullivan,
Steve Ca in, Greg Oxley. Roger
Dunlap, Dave Fisher, Ralph
Ga rdner, and Chris Garnes .
Next Friday, August 3. the
STARS Late Model s invade the
Skylin e Oval fo r Ihe top prize of
$2,000 to win . All the members of
lhe STARS c ircuit , many other
nat iona lly prominent star s, a nd
thf' locals wllljoln forces for the
big pay-o ff.
In addition, promoter Darrell
Willie has signed Mike Rossi and
th e famous Doosday Cha ir as an
a dded at traction. Rossi utilizes
seve ra l pounds of dynam lie to
actually blow himself up In a
death defying stunt.

Cra ig said . " He' a a better than
average runnE&gt;r. That's why I
was so surprised that the play at
the plate wa s so close."
Giants ' starter Don Robinson,
7·1. pitched his first complete
game of the year. He allowed
three runs on seven hits, while
walking none and fanning six.
Sc udder , worked eight and
one-third Innings , allowing all
four runs. six hits and two walks
while striking out sll&lt;.
The Reds jumped loa 3-0 lead
In the fir s t on O'Neill's three-run
hom er . Ch ris Sabo opened with a
double and went to third on Barry
Larkin's Infield single before
O'Neill's deposltE&gt;d his 12th home
run Into the right-field seats .
The Gia nts closed to within 3-1
in th e bottom of the Inning. Brett
Butler drew a leado!f walk,
advan ced 10 third on Rick
Leac h' s singl e and scored on a
single by Will Clark .
San Francisco added a run In
the third on Leac h' s second home
run .

Cincinnati had the potential
go-ahead run thrown out at the
plate In the sixth Inning. O'Neill
opened with a single and at tempted to scorE&gt; on a double by Hal
Morris . Leach's throw to the
Infield was handeled by cu toft
man Robby Thompson In shallow
right. who threw a strike to
Carter at the plate to na!l O' Nelll.
Elsewhere In the National
League, New York pounded St.
Louls 10·1, Ph!ladelphla sunk
Pittsburgh 5-J, Chicago blanked
Montreal 2-0 In 10 Innings, San
Diego rocked Houston 6-2 , and
Los Angeles scalped Atlanta 5-4
In 12 Innings .

Melo 10, Cardloala I - While
banging out 10 runs, It tookjust96
pitches from Frank VIola for the
New York Mets to wrest the
eastern dlvlson lead from the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
VIola, pitching on three days
rest, breezed through eight Innings Friday night to lead the
Mets Into sole possession of first
place with a 10-1 victory over the
St. Louts Cardinals.
Entering Friday's action, New
York was In a first-place tie with
the Pirates. who have led the
division for all but four days
(See NL on C-i)

HOUSE AUCTION
1676 UNCOLN HEIGHTS-POMEROY, OHIO

SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1990
10:00 A.M.
Th~ Farmers Bank and Savings Company. Pomeroy.
0~10. reserves tha right to bid at thia sale, and to

Robby Thompson's two-out homer In the fourth. his ninth of the
season. lied the game 3-3.

Withdraw the above collateral prior to sala . Funhar,
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company reserve the
right to reject any or all bids submiHed .

FULL GOSPEL
TENT REVIVAL

Further, the above collateral will be aold in the condition it is in with no expressed or implied warranties given .

At. 664, Bidwell, Oh .

B&amp;N STONE YARD
STARTS 7:00P.M .
EVERY NIGHT!

For more information, contact ScoH Shank at
992-3293.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

fllttq1 rWII~n 1-fil •• "'olllruJ 10
"'...rtlllf'r 'l -7), nl~~:bl

II)' I 11Mrt1 p,...,.,. •• an ... lo-1
.\.W ERK'..\.'Irri ~ZAGl t

,\ll&amp;JIIa r.'lmolu 7 -~ r _. Lo ..
( \ ' aJ .. IIZura. )I .,X I nil{hl
Hol&amp;lllon t~· otU l-111 .. SoUl

I. P1·1. c; B
..ll ' ' .Ja J:t l j .J!5
I

......

Toro•q

.......

..... •• se

.111

. . Ill U

.t71

"''ll........ ~
'\r111 l eA

.... II 5t .UII

llaiUmut"'"

n ........, .-J~ .t

S undllo) ( illll'tl"'o

Phlladr lphh • 111

~-·

Oiiklllll d

f'IIM'Io~notJIIIJ

..........

·~

·-~

..

I~

\!

It' .
1111 u •,
11l 1J

u

)t

1~

Ku*" 111• ..

}~

FridA)

S port ~

"hit"

u;

'*t'""
.......

!I.~ I

n""'..

laiW.. to tAme ••..._
"'-•1..-d Flr-4 .. _ .....
(01••• Dft~ I• II rrllahlliMIIG• prelf'llln
at f•lwnllll ... liori!l"''l• ol lhr .'oi.eullll'f'•
Lr~ lAo ,\) ; ,-,...d eotfll'llll" ·h•lrr

'""' hriiJ.
d' . ....
\'nrtr. I. fl rw htllld I 11111
T•.-..•1 . To·\ 11, I
a-.-11 . Dt1raat 1

........ '

j .. lt•a(!l ~ . "''h.-..

-

OrUt an IJ-411)· lli"'lhkd IW : n•o·alkd
•llffl ..... r ~arllb.vicho• lrfiiTI l'llo-..'"' ol
r .. -tfk· (-.... ~ I." QUI' 1' ' ·' r: rr~&amp;~11
~a t f' d • o re"'"' Rd ..~ H•mi"'l from
ll.-dllo) dl - hl ~d l l .. l : &lt;lllh .. do .:li&lt; 11,..,. \lo ·Tn&gt;\'lfto
k"•I H) - Ma o-o·d plldwr IMj.,
-\q•nn •n lh •· ·! 1 -di~&gt; •il.,.hh ·d 11--1 101111d
,wdaa...-d plidw1' IMio- tAt u•den
tron1 Umllir111 ol tho· \mo·rlo lOil h - IYIIota

MI•"""U I. OUJ•IId I

llllhlmllf'l't. &amp;11..,...1 atJ t
""'· • Uir I . 1'11Ufon•h 1
.'\:Mlll'fll\ (;111m,...
Ro&gt;-4"" i l'kl4dk k ~r 11 -11 al

U.-·lrnll
o T-• l-~' - ' t~ll"'
"' l l•·a•hr 1Hipr11 .._, . 1111 t llk· 111 1 ~
l l',.,.,.t t- ~ 1. I IJ p m
lb.ltimo"' 1 H arlli"-l·b !1--l 11.n d -hf'Wtoooft 'ltMKar~-.(IIJI)I

nl~~:hl

Tun ... .-l ior.o
8-bir.ll
( 'allloMU- llf'ndlr deutflt-tdrr B·n Oft
l r - Eolmonl•n ol tho· f'JU·Ino
f ....t Lf'III[IM' I ,\,U, I ;tJid •llllo••d

FrWOQ K,...ul..._

'rtl

t'nnd"''"

Transact ion~;

lW It• ,

,,.
I! I!

J~

lalllorllh
Ml_... _,

7•,

•• ! ',

Sllll

\1111n1.11 a1 l..o• .\Jo,r;PIP"o
HoWiton al ,. ,..,. PirJO
Sl LoW.. 111 ,,. .. \or\ .

n " .rn u• ,

111 3~
.;~ l~

(

r ln..hu~h

t Ill• ll,CG 1*1 )'lud.rral

11 ,
I

'' u .•• ..,

1111•-•.:n

Ult•. .

1K ~~romUOM"n i -ll 1. n11111

~

, .. 1&amp;11.

Ollll.,lludtll.,.ll

I

Tn...,. 1&amp;_.. 11- ~ t 1111 Tarot11a1Kr\ I
lt . I Jl 11 -m
()!U.I&amp;M I"'•·• arl I til iUid M ~ h l t.J I
oil )11...,."-CCII ll.ut.. r t o• :1- ! .llld tJit ·k.,.ll
I !l . L twllli(lll
,,.. \ '•rt If :U) I 41 Ill I'I••HIARd

Url,..a 11JNI •utfl .... dffl',. ..o \tv11n10 frnn•
T•reM o Ia o•uhMKf' lo r pH.&lt; h-11' .folul
la~r l ~.; ili&gt; "'IPW'd .\ lu,.., Ia 1'nr1111nd
. ,I....,PaoHI . '"*"'I Lr11(\0"", \\..\ 1

.

( ai!Mrllia t.Mf"' aNalll

~••

:\...

(,

wu... ~ ·f' . .

1111ruo
al ,II_...._.,
"-"'"'""'~&amp;
I~~~

O~tkb.lld

;~lll • r••

1'1-oriiiM Item( ltlloi'IUII't' .. lo'lt~ttd.ast ll lo ·

M I. P'•1
~~

"•Ill
IT oM
rhil» drt,-la

IMJM

I

I~

HUIII

.. ..
'Hi

, ..

IN .

-

III

u

~..e-..

l!U

I
l

Sl

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

Jl

U11kla11d - \11h aalr d tlllnl hWOI·m.on
l•rnr) l .anllf•~ lrn t ~ diQ diNAI*Ii

f,ft

M .lJL1
fl; l .

___ )I

PM""'-1'111 .

11.-IM~At t

.....

......... ! ,

Plll• ..,i ... ll

ll

b-k•..,• - \M r dln ~ . ... ,. ~ u0111 .... 1
I ••loof'.-'111&lt;·1" p!'fllllllll olll•·lllf ln•ll•l "'"
ltnm !'WI ... r ..tr r 1 ( ......,... ....,.
.fao .... ,n, -tUr - 'lin&gt;&lt;· II T••rl) \lr\
A ll . . t hl'lldll .,..,.'-"f ..... o•ll.
'•rtln~o ... lrr• - \ a - •'i"dilo......_. -tl! IIU

,..,.41.4,..._..__.., !

... _ .. ,.... ..... , , (1111 1 -l l l
,_._ t.A.,t.... l . \J•una I 1!111111...,.

.......

ktf'll'llrtl 1-: \1111

. . . . .., 1•• ,._

lA• t l)rl - • 1-ll t .II ,,,.. \ nri.

u, ...

~'J-a.-c·ho· e J iti~II-J l

" ~~

.II

I~ ~

r ......... ...tU . . . n-1 .. 11 In

t II . \ K r r _.d 111111.rd Uarr111
11111111' \ fr om h.,.._,'i h llll lr:&amp;n•
'A...i,ln«&lt;•ll - ''uno·d \h 11-o •IIH'o·.
( fol,.,.yl P11rko·r _,.,.. \llo-ll.o. ·l 'AII,..11

"•n

J - 1.-,m
, ..... *4 ..... oNafUn 1-111 .t1 I'll!"

'-1'1"1-M..\

Ktk---· 11 h•nurd '

( ""''C'

w......... .

1•·1-1 l fttD"'III"tt:

-

0 1\ld 11..-ka-.-tl. 1.. 1u- .1...-IL-• and
U.U•Dil\
hll;trd .11111 l~&amp;ard Ttt~\
Tru..UU.•

.... o....

~~--- ~ · 1• . 1

P:.• lth I ..... ,

L•· acw·1 \\\ 1
R.:r.•lu•thAII

,,.. \er\ II, K1 l A ... I
~ ntl ... .-.h .1

I

T ~~o~ .. nll &lt;~I I Itt

..

~ .... Dlrlfll

'II

npiMI•·d thlnl h-·n"u' s ,_,.,

H.-me.ll It

........,....... · ~· " " ,"'., -,.~· .
Loo- "'11"4 ....
"" "
_
,....... t ' riiiOQ K ..."""..u -""" "'""·~ "1!1• .
~

fir .,.

,_, • ..,... I ,\ I l .. lt,•..diftl.

\ HIO' \I. U: \f .t l :

,,. ' .n.

n .......

"'..,,.... \1 111"'' lrnm K•· llillll!aj[ u l 1-:w- 1.-r 11
'"' lltf\111' 1,\ \ 1; promoirtl pll• h&lt;1' Tnl'!~

........

111 Sr•ll•·

....

r \l. r -

r-.r"""llr.,.. ( ' •l~~~mhy, nl IIH••t ..tklnul
,_,. .....,. I.,A,\ t
,,... \•rtr. 1'\L1 - l'ralfMI llr,.
h- · rt~~~o• MIIM · \lllr .. ..ll '" lln..rn• '"•
pMo ·llo"' lir.-11 H11•'lf'll Dlltflf'tdft- t:.M••r
P••r~;R~~ ,uo d 11 plu_
, rr lo ho· lll&amp;mt'l ' lll .. ltf-1 .... 11 H.•"•·- · d plh l11•r

111 .,,. .. lh·

\MO ....... ,M fi P\t"iaAII
ft.o,.to I al O,.t IWM

I

\on.

•r.·d lnl' lo-t*'' ,.._ ll

hiUof'ma ll Ooa .\ I.Jnnd) un ~ 1 -ot.._,
dl-.hk- d 11... : ro•n&amp;J!.·d • 111o · htoo- lbl11n

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

y,.,.. .. r.,.••

~t· q

"la,....Dita -

II • •ti•UIIt--4 1. all(hl

.... ~ ..... 1 ,,., ••, ...

• lrfll

The Pillsbury Company, which supplies premium
quality food prod ucts and outstanding service to
its customers is now accepting applications for
full - time employment as a team member 1n the
following areas:

• Maintenance Mechanics
• Refrigeration Technicians
• Electricians

\\,\J.

f. it . I UP· "'

' " · · - · .. ; .. •1111111

JENOs

-\~~vi ...

Randall F. Hawkins, M.D.

Applicants working in the team environment will
have had some manufacturing experience and
enjoy:

J~

29, 1990

TORONTO tUP!) - Michael Chang dE&gt;feated
Andre Agassl for the first time In live tries
eliminating the No. I seed from the $1 .2 mlllio~
Players International tournament Friday with a
4-6, 7-5, 7-5 quarterfinals victory .
Pete Sampras upset third seed John McEnroe
7-6 (7-4) , 4-6,6-3 Friday night to set up a Saturday
semifinal meeting with Chang.
Chang and Agassl engaged In a furious seesaw
batUe, waged primarily from the baselinE' thai
left both nursing Injuries.
Agassl, ranked fourth In the world, opened
strong and broke Chang's service twice to take a
3-0 lead . Chang then held and broke back twice to
jump In front 4-3 beforE&gt; Agassl ran the final three
games of the set.
Chang won the final three games of the second
set, twice breaking Agassi after falling behind !&gt;-4 .
In thE' dE&gt;Cidlng set , Chang fought oft severe leg
cramps to jump to a 3-0 lead. Agassl roared back
to within 4-3 but Chang ended the match by
breaking Agass!'s serve for the second time In the
set.
Agassl won decisively In all four pevlous
matches against Chang, including a 6-3, 6·1
victory last weekend In the semifinals of the

!Continued from C-41
since April 22.
In becoming the NL's first
14-game winner, Viola , 14-5,
limited the Cardinals 10 just
three hits. The left -hander was
helped supported by Dave Maga dan's four RBI and an attack that
posted all 10 runs by the third
inning.
VIola allowed singlE's by Milt
Thompson and Rex Hudler In the
third Inning when the Cardinals
scored their run and gave up a
double to pitcher Scott Terry In
the eighth. He walked one and
struck out four.
Kevin Brown. making his
major-leaguE&gt; debut after being
called up from Tidewater,
pitched the ninth inning.
"I think Frankie felt re al
comfortable tonight with the
ea rly It-ad ," Mets manager Bud
Harrelson said. "On three days
rest, It helped him nollo have to
throw so many pitches. he had 96
pitches In eight innings. And that
was nice ."
Vloia said he didn't have
trouble with the fact thai he was
pitching on three days rest.
"I did It a tot In Minnesota
1pitching on three day s rest) ,
fortunatt&gt;ly for me I have an arm
that comes bark prE&gt;Ity quick ."
sa id Viola. " When a team scores
10 runs lor you It's a lot easter to
throw It 100. You put those
Ingredie nts together It' s not too
bad."
New York scorE&gt;d fiv e runs In
the first off Bryn Smith. 7-8.
added another run In the second
and four more in the third when
Magadan hit a bases-loaded
triple.
" Viola ' s a rea l pro. It's a
different game whe n Viola
pitches when it's out of hand
practically ," Cardinals manager
Red Schoendlenst said . "He
pltrhE'S different and knows how
to get the outs."
· 'Sel'med like

Interna{ Medicine
intlie

Pftasant '!!affty JWspitaf ').{eaicaf Office 'Buifiing
Suing patients 6eginning Jlugwt 1
%oni~Jy throUf!h '.friiay
9a.m. · 5p.m.
Call (304) 675-7700 afttr July 18 for appointltllnts

Applications Will Be Taken
At Your Local Ohio Bureau
Employment Services Offices
JACKSON I VINTON
317 Broadway
GAlLIPOLIS

PORTSMOUTH
1005 Fourth St.

45 Olive! St.

ATHENS
246 W. State St.

CHILLICOTHE
38 Marietta ·Rd.

WAVERLY
110 E. Enunltt Ave.

Beginning lmn~edla'tely
From 8:00A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
PILLSBURY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPL;OYEAIEOIIUAAIM/FIVETIIAANS

Page--C-5

aftt?rwards that he was physically and mentally
drained. Bul he said he expected to recover In
time for his match aga inst Sampras .
"He ran me pre tty ~ood bu t1 don 't know If I'll be
that sore," Chang said. "As far as the cramps, It
got to the polnl where It I was running hard they
would stick. It neve r got to the point where I would
gel a cramp and It would stay though.
"Towards the end of the match It got pretty bad
a nd Agassl being the way he Is m ade me run from
one sidE' to the other.
"Luckily I could finish the match."
Jakob Hlasek of Switzerland also advanced Into
the semifinals with a 6-4, 6-2 win over Todd

Jay Berger-Tim Mayotte match .
Sampras, another 18-year-old, seemed to wear
out the 31-year-old McEnroe. Leading 5·3 and up
40·151n the first set. McEnroe allowe d Sampras to
brt?a k him a nd gel back In the set he eventu al ly
won on a ll ebrea ker.
"He didn't take It from me, I lost II on my own ,"
said McEnroe, ranked 12th In the world . " Su re
I'm disappointed, I could have won a tournament
like this If 1 was bE&gt;Iter prepared but there' s no
sense crying over split milk.
·'Basically I threw it away . I gave away th e fi rs1
sel and I could have won It In straight sets. At this
point I just haven't donE' enough, haven't worked
PLAYERS on C-41)

GENE JOHNSON CHEVROLO-OLDS.-GEO

USED

hit the ball, If thE'y hit It good It
was a base hit . And If they didn't,
It was a base hit anyway ."
PhUHeA 5, Plra&amp;eA 3 - At
Pittsburgh, Charlie Hayes wenl3
lor 4 with a homer and Dennis
Cook pitched five Innings of
two-hit relief to 11!1 PhlladE&gt;Iphla.
Cook Improved to 7-2 and Joe
Boever rE&gt;Corded the final out for
his ninth save. Reed, 2-2. allowed
four runs on E&gt;lght hits over live
and two-third innings to take the

loss.
Cubs 2, Expos 0 ( 10 Inn. ) - At
Montreal, pinch-hitter Gary Varsho and Ryne Sandberg slashed
lOth-Inning RBI singles and GrE&gt;g
Maddux pitched a two-hitter over
nine Innings to lead Chicago. Bill
Sampen, 8-3, allowed both runs
and took the loss. Maddux. 7-9.
and Montreal starter Mark
Gardner each pitched nine shu lout Innings . Bill Long pitched a
scorE&gt;IE&gt;Ss lOth to earn his third

save.

Padres 6, Aotros 2 - AI San
Diego, Jack Clark belted a
three-run homer, Joe Carter
added a two-run shot and Andy
Benes pitched six and two-third
strong Innings to power San
Diego to Its fifth slralght victory .
Benes, improved lo 7-7 . Bill
Gull!ckson, 6-8, worked five a nd
two-third Innings and allowed six
runs lo take the loss .
Dodgers~. Braves 4 ( 121nn. ) At Los Angeles, Mike Sharperson
singled home Juan Samuel with
one out to lift Los Angeles in a
five-hour game that featured a
major-league record lor runners
Jell on base. In the longest game
In the major leagues this season.
the Dodgers left 25 runners on
base. establishing an all-time
high for a team In a 12-lnnlng
game . Los Angeles left the bases
loaded six times. Ray Searage,
1-0, pilc hed the final two Innings
for the win Rich Luecken. 1-3,
took the loss.

TRUCK
SALE!
WE HAVE TRADED FOR SOME A-1 USED TRUCKS
STOP BY AND LOOK NOW. YOU WILL BUY AT
OUR LOW PRICES.

1983 Bronco

1984 Bronco II

Full size, 2 -tone green / black .
automatic. air, clean .

$4888

Puzzle on Page C-6

Orange / white, auto ., P .S., air.

WAS 15995

1985 Chev. Scottsdale

$4888

1986 Bronco II 4X4

'I•

ton. 360 V-8. automatic, 2tone blue. runs A- 1.

2 tone blue. V -6 . Must see/

$6888

$4488

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION FOR
(lncludlntt DomeAII&lt; and Forelp Subsidiaries)

HOME NATIONAL BANK

1985 Jimmy

of Racine In the stale of Ohio, allhe close of buslnet18 on June 30, 1900, published In
respoMe to call made by ComptroUer of the Currency, under Tille 12, Unite--d
States, Code, Secllon 161.
Charier Number 98U
Comptroller o! the Currency 4th Dls lrlct

..

Cash and balancE'S due !rom depository Institutions :
NonlnterE&gt;St-bearlng balances and currency and coin... . .... .. .. .. .. t ,727,000.00
SE'Curltles ....... .... .. .................... .............. ... ........... ,...... . .... .. ... ... .... .... 5,031,000. 00
Federal funds sold .. . .............................................. .. ........ ..... .. .. ... . 2,743,000
Loans and lease llnanclng receivables:
Loans and leases, nel of unearned Income ........... 22,073,000.00
LESS: Allowance lor loan and lease losses .. .... .. ...... .311,000.00
Loans and IE&gt;asE&gt;S. net of unearned Income,
.. .21. 762,000.00
allowance. and reserve............ ........ ..... .. .. .. .... ........... ....... ....
Premises and llxed assets (Including capitalized leases ) ...... ............. .213,000.00
.. ........ ...... .. ...... 27.000.00
Other real estate owned.. ........ .. ....... ............ .. .
Other assets .. .. .. .. .
.. ... ........ .... ........ .......... .. .... .... . .. ..... ..... ..... .........709,000.00
assets ... ... .. ... .. ............. ..... ...... .. .. ....
. .......... .. ..... .. .. .32,212.000,00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j )
.... 32,212,000.00

----~

&gt;-c
::::ti:
t:~

oc

IMU

Jlnnounu.s tfu opening of ft.is practice in

Sovran Bank Classic at Washington .
Agassl, who had reached the finals in
five-of-seven tournaments this year and won
three, said his plan was to tire the 18-year-old
Chang by making him run for every point. Hi s
plan !ailed when. early In the first set, he felt a
strain In his right lower back that he said
prE&gt;vented him from being as aggressive as he
would have liked.
"I feel my downfall w ere a few unforced errors
late In the second and early In the third,'' sa id
Agassl, 20, who threw a towel down on the court on
a changrover and strE&gt;tched to the shrieking
delight of the female crowd. " I should have taken
advantagE' of morE&gt; of my c hancE&gt;S whE&gt;n I had
them Instead of making him run more and trytn11
to tirE&gt; him out.
''The stillness In my back didn't allow me to
dictate the way I like to, It didn 't rE&gt;ally bothE'r me
I was just worried that I mig hi make It worse and
that madE' me tentative.
"I beat him by wearing him down . Whe n he
wakes up In the morning and hE' knows he ha s to
play, I want him not to look forward to lt . I don 't
think he's going to feel to good tomorrow."
Chang, ranked 24th In the world, admitted

NL games ... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Applicants should also:

The Pillsbury Company offers competitive wages
and excellent benefits.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Chang defeats Agassi in Players International Tournament

• Working With Others On A Team
• . Solving Problems
• Learning and Performing A
Variety Of Jobs
• Assisting and Coaching Others
• Possess High Work Standards
• Work Well With Little
Supervision
• Participate and Show Initiative
• Possess Good Communication
and Listening Skills
• 2-4 Years related experience
(Maint., Refrig. or Electrical)
• Technical School preferred
• Past experience In manufacturing environment is a plus.

Pomeroy- Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Blue / silver , auto., P.S., 8tr , 56.000

miles. V-6 . AM -FM -Iape.

Sierra

Classic . ek tra sharp unit.

$7888

----

Depo•lls:
a. In domestic offices .. ........ . ............... .... .... .............. ............ .. .. .. 28.051.000.00
Noninterest-bearlng .. .. .. .................................. . 3,259,000.00
Interest-bearing .................... ....... ...... .............. 24, 792,000.00
Other liabilities ... ......................... ...................... .................... .. ..... . .... 381.000.00
Total llablllttes ... ... ... .. .. ..... .... ....... . .... .... . .................. . ..... .. ... .... .... ... 28,432.000.00

Common stock .. ......... ... ..... .. .................... ................. ... ....... ... .... ... ..... .125,000.00
Surplus ...... .. .. ......... ............. .. ... .. ........ .. ...... .... ... ..... .. .. .......... ......... ... .. 125,000.00
Undivided pro !Its and capital reservE'S ............. .... ....... ... .. .... ... .. .... ... 3,530,000.00
Total equity capital .. . .. .. .... .. ..... . .. .. .. .. .... .. . .. ... .. .. ..... ....... .. .. .. . .. .... .. 3, 780,000.00
Total equity capital and losses dE&gt;Ierred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) .......... ........................................... .... . J,780,000.00
TotalllabllltiE's, limited-life preferred stock, and capital,
and Iones deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ........ .. .... ... .. .. ..... 32.212,000.00

1986 Chev. El Camino

Light blue. only 23,000 mites . smell
V- 8 , auto., air, tilt &amp; cruise. Hard t o
find this nica

$8888

J.? 8c~/~~~- ~~:~oe';..;~~
et
gel aever .

speed w / 00 . Look

thla

1988 Chev. 3/4 Ton
Cheyenne
Blue /silver, V-8. P.S .. 3 speed. only
19.000 miles. A real work truck .

$8888

---

S9999

~---PLUS!----------------~

1984 &amp; 198S CHEVROLET SILVERADOS
1-YELLOW/WHITE

1-RED/WHITE
LOADED

BOTH SUPER SHARP TRUCKS!!!

1, Gary P . Norris , Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this Report or Condition Is truE' and correct to the best of my knowledge and beliE'!.
Gary P. Norris ,
July 24, 1990

OfEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•GEO
WI!!, the underslilled directors, attest the correctness of this statement of re-sources and liabilities. We declare that It has been examined by us, and to the best
of our knowledp •nd belief bu been prepared In conformance with the IDStnJctlona and Ia true and correct.

John T. Wolle

Marvin Hill - Directors

Georae Nelaler

1616 EASTERN AVE. • GALUPOUS, OH.
(614) 446-3672
01 lOLL FlEE 1·100·521·0014
"The Hoortbeot of The Ohio Jlalley"

�Paga C-6-Sunday Tmas-Sentlnel

Pomaoy- Middleport- Galllpolis, Ohio-Point Plau•lt. W. Va.

July 29, 1910

U.S. cagers hand Brazil 112-95 defeat

'.1
.f
·

WELCOME TO MASTERDUNK THEATER - U.S. eager Todd
Day slams the ball through the hoop alter getdng behind Brazil's
Gerson Vlclallno during Friday night's semifinal match In the
Goodwill Games In Sea&amp;Ue. The U.S. won 112-95 to earn the right 1o
lace Yugoslavia In the gold medal game today . (UPI)

McMichael fined $2,000
By CARRIE MUS KAT
UPI Sports Writer
PLATTEV1LLE, Wis. tUPli - Defensive
tackle Steve Mc Mi chael skipped a cos tly second
day or training ca mp Friday, while Chicago Bears
tinemate Dan Hampton signaled "thumbs up"
a nd WilHam Perry pronounced hlmse ltrlt , notf a t
McMichael will be lined $2,000 each day he
miSses, Bears coach Mike Dltka sa id , adding tha t
Thursday's team m eeting counted In the penalty.
" If you ' re not he r e a nd you have a contract
you're fined," Dltka said.
The Bears practiced twice Friday under
overcast skies a t the University of Wisconsin ·
PlatteviUe with the ir first preseason game one
week away In Ca nto n, Ohio. against Cleveland.
Both McMichael, who Is d emanding his
co ntract be renegotiated. and the Bears Ignored
midnight Thursday deadlines to reach a set lie
m enl. Mc Mic hael reportedly is seeking $800,000
this year a nd next, while the Bea rs presen ted a
$175,000 r aise from his curre nt $600,000 sa la r y.
Mc Mi chae l was placed on th e "reserve-did not
re port list" a nd does not count on the Bears'
BO-man roster .
"We're tryi ng to create o ne word this year to
make It sy nony m ous with everything this
orga niza tion does a nd tha t word Is 'team ,'" Di tka
sa id . " There's no Individual better than the team .
The team Is omnipotent. Tha t's al l. It requires
great Individual s to make a good team , we
understand that, we didn't fall off a log. Bu t th e
team comes first."
Dltka a lso Insis ted Hampton , who underwe nt
knee surgery alter the fourth g a me las t year, be
on th e field for the afternoon workou t. Hampton
wa tched the defensive linemen go through
one-on-o ne dr ills but did participate In the full
squa d sc rimma ge a t the end
" It seem s like things ar e going pretty well,"
Hampt on sa id . "I just wa nt to get back Into th e
!low of things. There 's question marks In
eve rybody's mind a nd certainly mine, too. I'd like

By JIM SLATER
UPI Sports Writer
SEATTLE i UPI) -The Unl·
ted States basketball team ad·
vanced to the gold medal game
Friday but the Soviet Union
squad that prevailed three days
earlie r failed to quaiiiy for a
rematch at the Goodwill Games.
Kenny Anderson scored 25
poin ts a nd Billy Owens added 22
to lead the United States past
previou sly unbea ten Brazil 11 2·
95 and Into th e c hampionship
game today aga inst Yugoslavia,
whic h e liminated the Soviet
Union 84-78.
"We don't have a Soviet Union
fetish, " sa id U.S coach Mike
KrzyzewskL "We just wan! to
play good basketbal L If we were
playing the Sovie ts, we would be
playing for th e bronze meda L"
Soviet frustration ex te nded to
gymnastics despite a gold medal
Friday In team competition . U.S.
women scared the Soviets be fo re
settl ing for a sliver , their best
showing ever In a major meet
aga ins t Soviet rivals. F urther·
more , the top Soviet gymnas t did
so poor ly her coaches pull ed a
technicalit y from the rule book
tha t sent her lo Saturday's
all-around finals .
While a thletes competed In
nine sports on the lig htes t medal
day so far, one offic ia l hinted the
Ga mes m ight not even be worth
contes ting in 1994 as planned .
Paul Beckham, president or
the Goodwil l Games. hinted that
Ted Turner may not stage a 1994
Games In the Soviet Union.
Turner has told stockholders
these Ga mes could lose more
than $26 million.
" It has to be fiscally prudent, "
Beck ham sa id . "That doesn't

a

Answer to Puzzle on Page C-5

to see what It's (kneel going to do.
"I'm very optimist ic," he sa id . "Thum bs up ."
Alt hough he ' s lis ted a t 315 pounds. Perry
checked In at325 . Dl tk a said he expected Perry to
Jose weight du ri ng ca mp, a nd he was pleased with
how Perry and th e res t of the squad loo ked.
" We've got a lot or work to do," Dlt ka said. " I
think the first d ay was encoura ging. I liked what I
saw, the enthu siasm a nd ever ybody."
Quarterbacks Mike Tom cza k a nd J im Har·
baug h were busy laking snaps. Free agent
quarterback Brent Pease did not arrive 1n time
for the second workout, while rookie Peter Tom
WIUis Is absent because he has yet to sign.
Dltk a said Tomcza k a nd Harbaugh will
probably split playing lime In the firs t preseason
game .
T he Bea rs did officially s ig n Ha mpton ,
Tomczak, defe nsi ve back Maurice Douglass and
fourth -round dra ft c ho ice To ny Mo ss, a wid e
receiver , lo new contract s. All had agreed to
terms before reporting Th ursday.
The tea m a nnounced It rele ased rookie free
agen t line bac ker s Rod Ma nn ing a nd Lorenzo
Square. safe ty Alex Armenteros and wide
receiver Cedr ic Tillman to mak e room on th e
roster for the four slgnees. Armenteros and
Tillman will be placed on the Injured reserve list
Sa turday.

Players tourney ...
!Co ntinue d from C-5 1

ACROSS
t Fred ol "The
Wonder Years ''

7 Delineate: sketch
12 Burdons

11
21
22
23
24
25

enough. It 's patheti c I s till should have won the
first set."
Sampras thought he deserved mon· cred it tha n
McEn roe gave him
"He did give It to me, If yo u' re tal king abo ut the
first set ," Sa mpras admitted . "Bu t I th ought I
played pret ty well, I won the ma tch .
"Th is Is the biggest win of my career. I've been
watc h ing him play for years and It was really
s trange at firs t but later on In the firs t set I was n't
playing John McEnroe, I was playi ng the baiL"

Paddles
Three-base hit
.. _ Dad"
Wldaawake
Walk
Faroe latands
whirlwind

26 Hearing organs

28 Pertaining to
the cheek
30 VIsions
32 Fullltt
33 Armed conflict
35 Force
37 Light, pink wines
39 Shade trees
40 Mongrel
41 Printer's measure

43
45
47
48
49
52
54
56
57
59
61
62
63

Merit
Repulse
Down: prefi •
Diplomacy
Wise persons
Baker's products
Draws oft by
degrees
Recompense
Folds
Writes
Otherwise
Healthy
Ravetings

64 As far as

66 Short swim
67 Series ol games
68 Olympian SpiU
69 Calloway tO
I t Emmet
72 FaShion
74 Sat lor portrait
76 Mend with cotton
77 Chinese pagoda
78 Old pronoun
79 Lawmaking body
8 t 2,000 tbs.
82 Trial
83 Tart: bit Ier
84 Ceremony
85 Cotton st.
87 Atmospheric
disturbances
89 The ones there
90 Talk s Idly

FROM

SMITH'S GMC TRUCKS

In Celebration of the 41 st Annual
Gallia County Jr. Fair, Smith's GMC
Truck Center is offering any
4X4 Full Size Pickup at

92 Burrowing animal

94 Wild plum

lly United Press International
Cody Rlslen , a 10·year veteran
who ha s been a starter at right
o!fenslvP tackle for t hP Cleve·
land Browns since the seventh
game of his rookie year, a n·
nounc ed In March he was rettr·
lng, changed his mind and
reported to training camp, then
had second tho~~~:ht s about pl ay ·
lng for an lith season and le ft
camp Thursday night.
"I just realized that that's not
my focus anymore," Risen sa id .
"I don't have a burning desire to
play football anymore."
The announcement means th r

Browns could open the season

OVER DEALER
INVOICE!

95
96
97
99
100

Tolled
Rool edges
Small we_.
"t'_.. - a Secret "
"A Farewell to

101 Matures
102 "Toke Her, She's
t03 Consumed
t05 Rllad
107 Selby 10
109 Crimaon
t10 Run eully
111lt13Trict&lt;
t 14 Chapeau
115 Spielberg tO
t 16 Stockings
117 Fusa
118 New Deal agcy.
120 Tellurium symbol
t21 Horae's neck hair
122 Alter-dinner
candy
t23 Aroma
124 Fronth retort
t26 tn Short supply
t28 Steeple
t30 Football kick or
pase

t32 Give up
t~ Command
t35 Story
136 Abdul tO
137 Heads In Parts
139 Farm structure

141 Egger tO
t42 Inquire
143 Decant
t45 Cut
147 Weary
t49 Oreal&lt; tetter
t 52 That thing
153 Defeated
155 Hebrew least
15 7 E&gt;ccllange
premium
!59 Paid notice
ttl() Hawaiian goooe
t62 Medltteranean

-

164 Evahlaled
t68 Come on the
scene
!88 Narrow opening
169 City In Germany
t70 Scoff
171 Closer

DOWN
1 Pack away
2 Regloo
3tttxtt
~Simian

5 Merry
6 Uncanny
7 Matheoon tO
8 Male 1/teop
9 Slightly open
10 Shade; ttnt
11 Wiped aut

12 "- Law"
13 Ancient
1• Oanlllt Island
15Foant
t6 Gambler's capital
17 Forerunner ol CtA
18 Near
t9 Humble; conquer
20 Puttmea
27 Break suddenly
29 Serveo u an
example
3 t Ed.'s concern
~ Temporory ruler
36 Journey
38 Closed securely
~ "Moonatruck"
co-star

42 Fteah
«Want
46 Roster
46 Speech
49 Spread out
expand
50 Place In position
51 R-U linkup
53 Cut
55 Noon symbol
56 Gl_.. prior notlca

58 Rocka
60 On the (at once)
62 Mated65 Harem room
68Churchl8fVice
89 " Rebel Without
,.
a 70 Manlletted
concern
72 Apporlloos
73 lOolely woven
cotton
75 Dlstr8BS signal
78 Goddess of
agriculture
77 tnstrui1Wlts
79 locations
60 Run away to be

married
82 "F -"
83 MortHicatlon
8~ Ranted
86 Htvh mountlin
88 Old low Germen:

TOP GOLFER - For the third year In a row and the fourth time
In his career Jay Harris of the Jaymar Golf Cluh won the Parker
Long Memorial /\ward presented to th e he&gt;t junior golfer or tht•
year. Harris won thel!l-17 age group last Monday at Rlvt•"lde Golf
Cour~~e . Long was an oustandlnK junior golfer that was tragically
kUied In a auto acddent a few years ago.

abbr.

89 Briel
90 Boac and on}Ou
91Frenzles
93 Speaks with
embelllahmenta
95 Temporory rata
97 Developed
98 Alrttne Info.
102 MaJorl1y
104 Short jactcet
106WIIeeltrack
107 Waltz
t08 lleel animal
1 to Solitary
1 tt Worships
t 12 Heroic event
114 More difficult
116leaae
1t 7 Mine entrance
119 High cards
t2t Defaces
t 22 Dairy product
123 Type ol art
t25 Redact
t 27 He wao Archie
Bunker: lnlts
128 Blemishes
t29 Light color
130 Cookl quickly
In fat
13 t Fool ped•ts
t33 Lamb 'o pen name
136 Armed band
t 38 Automobile atyte
140 Musical
Instrument
t 43 Hebrew tetter
t 44 Soak a, as ftax
t 48 Nerve netw:ork
148 Ireland
150Po151 North Sea f 153 Wager
154 Scotltah river
156 F1111ale ruff
156 Anglo-Soon
money
16 t Japanese drama
t83 - garde
t65 Phys.
167 Negative prefix

agatn

contract re-written to give him
more money .

The Bengals say Brooks will
not be tined for missi ng c amp.
Assistant general manager Mike
Brown sa id he Intends to talk
with Brooks abo ut his contract
"a nd s&lt;&gt;e what happens."
At Kirkland, Was h., the Seattle
Seahawks signed 11-year veteran
Dave Krieg for the 1990 season.
Kt;leg. 31, made his third Pro
Bowl appearance alter the 1989
season during which he became
the Seahawks a ll-time leader In
passing ya rds with 20,858 and
complet ions with 1,644. Krieg
a lso ranks first in career touch ·
down passes with 169 and In
300-yard games with nine.
At Plat tevllie , Wis., refe ree
Bob McEiee and three other NFL
offici a ls held a seminar with the
Chicago Bears Thursday night,
a nswer ing questions about calls .
McE iee sai d th e guid elines
regardi ng when to ru n the clock
w hen the ball Is out of bound s
we re ad ju sted , although the la st
two minutes of the first half and
last five minutes of th e game
wen• not al tert'd.
Also changed was a r ule In
which no part of t he quarterback
- hands or feet Included -ran
rru" th e line or scri mm age
befor&lt;' the ba ll is released.
What abou t Instant re pla y?
"I find no fa ult with It a t a ll. "
MeEiee sa id .
Drfcn sivr tackle Steve
McMichael sk ipped a cos tly
sPrond cJ a.v of tr a lnin~?; camp.
Bears r oarh Mike Ditka sa id
Mc Michael will be fined $2,000
ror rac h day of cam p missE:'d.
addin g th at Thursday's team
mP!'IIng counted In the penalty .
"Ir you're not herl' and vou
haV£' ~ ron tract. you'rp f ined ."
Ditka said
McMichael reportedly Is see k
ing SBOO.IKKl this year a nd nex t.

The Bears presented a $175,000
raise from his current $ti00,000
salary .
At San Marcos. Texas. the
Houston Oilers re leased 11-year
veteran tackle Bruce Dav is .
Davis, 34, had started 43 consecu·
live games lor the Oilers since
they obtained him from the Los
Angeles Raiders In 1987. Alter
undergoing arthroscopic surgery
on both knees In the offseason, he
had dropped to third team on the
depth c hart at left tackle.
Davis was holding out fora new
co ntract a lter making $435,000

las t season.
At Fredonia, N.Y, AII·Pro
Thurman Thomas was among
seven veterans absent Friday
when the Buffalo Bills opened
training camp at Fredonia State
Co llege.
Running back Thomas is seek·
log to renegotiate his current
contract. reportedly seeking
a bout $1.3 million per year.
The Bills did sign first -round
draft pick James Williams. a
cornerback !rom Fresno Stat e, to
a four-year contract. Veteran
wide receiver Andr e Reed
agreed to a slx ·year contract
ex te nsio n worth a repo rted $7.5
million.
At Miami. thP Dolphins signed
first ·round draft c holcP Ray mond We bb, a 6·foot ·6, 295- pound
offensive tac kle from Texas
A&amp;M and the NFL dralt's ninth
overall selection. Webb a greed to
terms believed to be worth e ither
$3 million ove r four years or S3.8
million over five years with a
guaranteed signing bonus of
a bout $1.1 million.
At Austin, TPxa s. the Da llas
Cow bovs , In a nother attempt to
increase thP press ure on firs !·
ro und draft c holer holdout E m ·
mitt S mith, tra ded a conditiona l
draft choler for DPnvPr Broncos'
ru nn ing back lorenzo Hampt on.

ALMOST GOT AWAY Bengals runntns hack John
HoUIIeld (while jprsey) tries
to esc apt' the grasp ol unlden·
tilled defensJve lineman behind him during practice
Friday at the team 's training
camp In Wlimlnglon, Ohio, hut
wiL• not abiP to do so. The
Bengals are preparing lor
their Sept. 9 homp and season
opener agaln.•l lhP New York
.let•. fUPll

Preliminary approval given
to N BA pre-pension plan
rx plres In 1Y94 . raps Iot a I sB iar

!D-AND· UNDER WJNN ER - Dav P Ande.,on won the lop honor•
In the 10 and under agP group In the junior golf tournamenlla.•t
Monday at Riverside Golf (o urs('. Anderson r epre,rnted the
Jaymar Golf Club .

Hanis captures Parker Long
Award as top junior golfer
MASON. W.Va . - ForthPthlrd
ve ar In a row and th&lt;' fourth time
in his y oung career. Jay Ha rris of
the Jaymar Golf Clu b r&lt;'rirv&lt;'d
the Parker Long Award for the
Tri-County Junior Golf League
golfer of I he year.
The award is presen ted to the
most o ut~ ta nd l ng junior golfer of
the year In memor y of the late
Parker Long, a form er junior
gol!pr of the year who was
tragica lly killed In a aut o accl·
de nt a fpw years ago.

tn the 11 ·12 age group Josh
Stt'Wart took home the top
honors, while Jason King was the
runner-up and Jeff Pyatt finiShed
third. all three golfe rs are from
the Riverside Golf Co urse.
In the 13·14 age group top
honors we nt to Mark Georgi of
Hidden Valley. who took home
the top honors besting Adam
Krawsczyn of Jaymar with Robbie Chas.' of Hidden Valley
flnllhlng In third place.
Golfer of the year Jay Harris
won the 1~17 age group while
Adam Bl't'aktron of Cllf!slde took
homl' ll'COnd place. while Sam
Hamilton ai!IO or Cllflslcle !tn·
lshed In third.
f

with none or the starters from
openin g day a year ago In the
same position on the line. Guards
Dan Flke and Ted Banker are out
with knee Injuries. Gregg Ra ·
koczy has been moved from
cen tPr to guard and left tackle
Rlck&lt;'y Bolden missed most of
las t seas on with Injuries.
At Wilmington, Ohio, Ci ncln ·
nail Bengals All-Pro running
back James Brooks s kipped th e
veterans' first training camp
practice Friday In an attempt to
have hts contract rPnegotlatPd
Although Brooks Is under con ·
tract for this season - for an
es tlmaled $600. 000 - he wants he

A spec led award was pn•srntrd
to Bill Child s of Jay mar for his
co ntri butions and guidance to the
the j u nior program si nce It s
inception .

Shy Devil wins
$115,000 in pace
COLU MBUS, O hio 1UP I l Heavily favored Shy Dev il swept
past S ta rt Dialing In the fina l 75
yards and withs tood a la te
c los in g rally by Sec Line to win
th e $115,000 P ink Bonnet !lily
parP Friday night at Scioto
Downs .
The two-year·old No Nukes
filly. drive n by Jeff Foul of
Fi ndlay and trained by Green ·
ville's Alan Riegle , covered the
mile In 1:57 3·5.

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-7

•

Risien changes his mind

The juniors flnlsh&lt;'d up the
sPason with a tournament las t
Mondav at Riverside Go lf
Cours.': In thP 10 and under age
group Dave Anderso n of Jaymar
took home the top honors, Zack
Pullins of Hidde n Valley fin is h·
lng In second . Rad Faulk of
.Jaymar finished In third place.

THAT'S RIGHT! ANY 414 FULL STYLE PICKUP
ON THE LOT FOR ONLY $41 OVER INVOICE!
THIS WEEK ONLY!!
HURRY IN! OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST 4TH!

,

day , The United States and
Soviet teams both went J.() In
round·robln competition.
Jim Scherr defeated Bulga·
r la'sDraguya Rusev 7-(), Japan's
Akeo Akatsht ltHI, and Turkey's
Efralm Kamberoglu at 90 kilograms (196 pounds) . Bill pinned
Japan's Anabu Nakanishi In 1:47
of his only match at 100 kilograms (220 pounds).
Reliever Shlgetoshl Hasagawa
retired the first 15 Mexican
batters he laced and Japan
scored live runs In the eighth
Inning for an 11-4 bas.'ball
victory, set tlng up a showdown
Saturday with the United States.
Cuba, another medal favorite,
opened with an 11·1 triumph over
Taiwan shortened In the seventh
by tbe mercy rule.
In another team sport, Jesus
Rollan made 12 saves and Spain
beat the United States 10·7 In
water polo, eliminating the win·
less Americans from medal
contention.
Andrew Gaze, who helped
Seton Hall to the 1989 NCAA Final
Four, scored 50 points In Australia's 1(16.78 consolation-round
basketball victory over Italy .
Gaze sank 9 of 12 three-point
shots and 16 or 21 attempts from
the field in Australia's first
triumph of the tournament.
Jan Vtktorsson scored 4: 48tnto
the third period, lilting Sweden
past Czechoslovakia 5-4 In the
opening game of the round ·robln
hockey tournament. Canada
edged Finland 6·5 in a night
match.

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

day

STRAIGHT TALK

$4100

mean It has to make money.
Ina, 15.
That's not what! mean. Buill has ·
·'Her problem was well known.
to make sens.'. And It's a
but all ol our glrla had Injuries
judgment decision between the and problems to light," said U.S.
quality of the event and what it
coach Bela Karoly!, the defected
cost to get there. "
Romanian national coach who
Oksana Skaldlna of the Sovie t guided both Nadia Colnanecl and
Union won the rhythmic gymnas- Mary Lou Retton to Olympic
tics a ll-around title at Spokane championships. "ThiS Is a very
and the Soviet handball team young team, and we gave tbe
e dged Yugoslavia 29·27 In over· Soviets a very good run lor their
time lor the gold medaL Spain money . We Issued a world-class
beat the United States 24-19 lor challenge."
the handball bronze .
The Soviets. defending Otym·
The United States has won 105 pic champions, opened the door
medals, 41 ol them gold. With lor a possible upset during their
three gold medals Friday, the !Irs! event, making a series of
Sovi et Union has taken 34 golds uncharacteristic mistakes on un·
and 96 medals overall through even bars. World champion Sve104 medal events.
tlana Bogutnskala or the Soviet
Di no Radja scored 31 points to Union fell and failed to qualify for
spark Yugosla via's basketball all-around competition. Bogutns·
triumph, which helped avenge a
kala, 17, had just performed a
loss to the Soviets In tbe 1988 release move on the upper part ol
Olympic final. Yugoslavia shot the bars and , as she came around
57 percent from the field and
to regrlp, sUpped and fell.
outrebounded the Soviets 37-25 .
She was not Injured but scored
Radja scored e ight points Ina run only a 9.275 alter an automatic
of 12 straight by Yugoslavia over hall-point deduction and finished
the final 4:42 of the first hall,
lOth overall with 39.049 points.
boosting the 1989 European
The Soviets Inserted her Into
champions to a 45-36 halftime all-around competition In place
lead . The Soviets had beaten the of Tatlana Lls.'nko, 15, the Soviet
Ame rica ns In round-robin play
junior champion who finished
bu l gave a hint they we re ahead of Bogulnskala. Rules
strugg lin g with a loss to Puerto allow a team to substitute II a
Rico.
gymnast defaults lor valid rea·
American gy mnast Kim Zmes· sons, but the Soviets did not say
kat, s uffering such pain from why they switched .
tendinitis th a t her participation
Wrestling twins Jim and Bill
was In doubt two days ago, led Scherr celebrated their 29th
Individual scorers with 39.661 birthday by overwhelming their
points. Zmeskal, 14, of Houston, opening toes and helping the U.S .
ou tscored Soviet Natalia Kalin· team Into the Sf'mlflnals Satur-

July 29, 1990

By FRANCES .\NN BLRNS
NEWARK , N.J. tUPI1 - A
federal jud ge ga\'P preliminary
approva l Frlda .v to a plan that
reduces sa laries for National
Bas ke tball Association player s
in order to prov ide them suppport a fter the ir careers end
T he pre-pension plan supported by ttfl&gt; NBA and the NBA
P la;·ers Association is being
disputed by a group of about 20
union m embers , Including Ml·
c hae l Jordan ol the Chicago Bulls
and Patrick Ew ing of th e New
York Knlrks.
Thev ar gue that the pla n
undercuts free agency by fl.'dUC ·
tng the cas h available for trams
to offer fr ee agents.
U.S. District Co urt J udgPDick ·
lnson Debevolse sc hedu led a
fina l hearing Sept. 24.
Simon Gou rd ine, ge ne ra l ro un ·
sel lo r thr players assoc ia tion,
ca lled the pre-pe nsion plan
" forced sav in gs' for players
whose professional rarePTs ofte n
rnd at the age of 30 or 35 a nd who
do not become &lt;'ilgible for pen ·
s lons until thev a re SO. Ma n;·
plavrrs do not t hlnk to set as id e
monev from average sa la ries
that now top $6SO,OOO, he sa id

The pre·pensio n plan a mends
a n agreemen t reached in I~H7
aflrr a grou p o f players flied a
rlass ·actlon sui! c harging the
NBA an d Its member team s with
viola t ion of iedera l an ti -trust
lilws T h&lt;' settlement. which

les a t a set percentage of gross
rece ipt s.
The object ing plavers Sa)' th&lt;'
pre ·penston plan reduces the
total mon&lt;·v avallabiP for sa lar
les by $1.3 million per tram . a cut
that will have to come out or
monPy for rrer agents.
" The c iPar byproduct of th e
plan Is a reduction In revenues
available to pay player sa la ries
a nd e nt er a free market for
player services, " lawyersSt&lt;'ven
Umln and Mark Levlnsteln. both
of Washington, sa id In a brl &lt;' f.
"Becau s.' there are other pe n·
s ian programs that could provi de
thP sa me financial securitv to
retirees, without a n v comprom
lse to player mobilit y, approval
of this plan would cons titu te a n
unecessa r y stPp bac kward ."

BANKRUPTCY
614-221-0811

L.W. CENNAMO
ATTORNEY -AT ·~W
336 S. High St., Columbus, OH.

LOCAL CONSULT AnON
KNIGHT, MUUEN lAW OffiCES,
POMEROY, 992-2090
In Pomeroy with

ATTORN£Y D. IIKHAR MIIUN

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25m &amp;JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

(Jo4) 675·1675

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!
In our community, we're commiued to offer
the kind of services and personal auention
you want and need. When you hank with us,
you'D find that we're much more than just a financial institution, we're a hometown friend.

Curly Wiles has bee n employed
with Farmen Bank for It,&lt;, years.

NOW
YOUR HOME
CAN HELP
SAVE YOU
MONEY
ON YOUR
CAR.

Curly is the oulside mainlenanl'e man
for Farmers Bank. Curly and hi s wiff',
Belly, reside in Poml'roy . Th&lt;'y have
lhrel' rhildren, Larry, of Rarine ,
John, who lives in Columbus, and
Anna Karbryn al home. Curly allends
rhe Finl Baplisl Church of Pom e roy .
He is a member of lhe Pom eroy
American Legion Posl
include bunling and

Havinl( All state Home

Insurance co uld save you up lo

15%on car insurance ! Call about

39.

Hobbie s
gardening.

Curly retired £rom Fool e Mineral in
New Haven, W . Va. afler 32 years.

the All stalP Auto AdvanlaJ(e.

IIsIaIe.

4so"::t~u
A
0t.. UUI
MAlVIN IOIDOIRI

~lpeN.,.
IV~-

lU-UI -1104

" " "I• ~

1 1" 1,~ ~1 ,,., , 1~ 1·11 •1 ) "nol .,,. .,hho ~~~·n '

o\ 11 ., 1 :~ 1• · I'""'" "',. I ••mi'Mn)" ~ ••n hl • f"&lt;~ • ~ II.

""We're Committed To Our
H orne t own ... "

Your Bankfo't~···
Fs Farmers

Bank
992-2U6
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

MEMBER FDIC

98S -338S
STAll ROUT£ 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

'

�Page C-8-Sunday Tmee-Sentinel

July 29. 1990

Douglas feeling better, ready to
train for Holyfield fight • Johnson

LEYRITZ SCORES - The New York Yankees'
,Jim Leyrilz sUdes safely Into tbe plate before
Indians catcher Joel Sklnoer sets the late throw

from the oudleld In the second Inning of the first
rame of Friday's doubleheader, which tbe
Yankees won 3-0. (UPI)

New York sweeps Cleveland
•
tn Friday doubleheader
By BOBKEIM
UP! Sports Writer
CLE VELAND iUPli- PitchIng well enough to win was
nothing new lor Andy Hawkins .
Winning was .

Hawkins' three- hit shutout Friday night gave the New York
Ya nkees a 3-0 victory over the
Cleveland Indians in the first
game of a double-header sweep.
The victory was the first for
Hawkins since May 6, although
he pitched a no-hitter during the
losing streak and lost another
game when he pitched 11 shutout
innings . He was also on the losing
e nd of a no-hitter thrown by
Chicago's Melldo Perez against
the Yankees .
"It's been a long time since
May 6," Hawkins. 2-8, said. " It
felt like two years. The way
things have been going, things
have happened that made II feel
like a long. long time."
Steve Balboni and Roberto
Ke lly hll homers to back Haw kins. and the Yankees won the
'eco nd game 4 I behind Jeff
Robinson.
Balboni hit a solo homer In the
seven th off Greg Swindell. 6-6,
and Kelly homered with Jim
Leyrltz aboard In the eighth .
!'I e ve land , which has los t eight of
10. had won nine s traight games
in which Swindell started.
Hawkins struck out five and
walked none In pitching his lOth
ca reer shutout and seco nd com -

plete game of the year. He gave
up sing les to Jerry Browne in the
firs t, Dlon James in the fourth
and pinch-hitter Ke n Phelps In
the ninth .
"I

knPw

I'd

win

1another

game&gt; I had the opportunltv to
win ." Hawkins sa id . ''I've
thrown well during this period .
As long as I throw we ll, I'm going
to win. It I his performance! was

vf."ry comparabiP to what I wa s
throwing In Ch icago 1in the
no-hitter! You get the feeling
you r an Throw a s trike when you
want to ."
In the second game. the Yankees scored twice In the second
when Lcyrltz and Brian Dorsett
walked and came home on
singles by Wavne Tolleson and
Kelly . Cleveland made It 2-J in
the sPCOnd when Chris James
singled and scored on Jeff
Manto's first major-leaguE' hll
In the fourth . Tollesondoubit'd.
Deion Sanders walked and Steve
Sax's Infield hit loaded thE' bases .
Oscar Azocar hit a grounder
under the glove of shorts top Felix
Fermin for an error that scored
two runs, Onf' of which was
unearnrd.
Robiru;on ..l-6, Improved to 2-J
dS a starter . He gave up eight hits
In seven innings while striking
out two and walking one . Dave
Righetti pitched the ninth to earn
his 2ht save.
Cleveland rna nager John
McNamara was hoping for a
better start to a stretch In which
the Indlins play 18 of 22 games at
home. A~ his team went down the
tubes his stomach WIIIOinl. too,
as he was diagnosed wllh tbe flu .
Second-Kame loser Mike
walii«, 0.2. llvecllap to bl111ame.
walldlll four batters and hltUn1
onr while slvlna up five bill and
four rUIIIIII four IMlJiil, TbrH C
the men be walked acored.
While Hawkins has had hard
IJICk in other ball parka thla year.

he Is never better than when he is
pitching at Cleveland Stadium,
where he is 3-0 lifetime and has
yet to surrender an earned run In

25 two-third innings .
Blue Jays I, Rangers 0 Glenallen Hili may bE' afraid of
spiders, but not of hanging
knuckleballs ... or pennant races.
Hill's third Inning homer
hacked the five -hit pitching of
Dave Steib and two relievers
Friday night to lead the Toronto
Blue Jays to a 1-0victoryoverthe
Texa.• Rangers. The win kept
Toronto one game ahead of
Boston. also a 1-0 winner, In the
AL East .
Earlier this year Hill . who
s uffers from arachnophobia -a
fear of spiders - had spent lime
on the disabled list after injuring
himself during a nightmare
about them .
Charlie Hough's knuckier
didn 't look scary to Hill, though,
as he took the veteran deep with
one out In the third . Hough , 7-7,
allowed only eight hits over
seven innings, strlkin~ out six
and walking one in dropping his
third straight decision .
Pitching and defense picked up
the slack lor the rest of the
Toronto hitters .
Slieb, 13-3, allowed five hit s
over seven Innings while striking
out three and walking four .
Duane Ward and Tom Henke
each contlbuted a hitless Inning
of relief, with Henke plckln~ up
his 21st sa ve.
Stieb, 8-1 In his last 12 starts.
a lso got some help behind him .
·'The two big plays oft he game
were by Mark Whiten in the
field." St ieb said, referring to the
right fielder's assist in the fifth
Inning and running catch In lhl'
sixth off PetE' lncaviglla . "It was
~ood defense that won It for us
today .
Slleb, on a pace for his first
20-win season. sounds as If he
would prefer some post -season
a ell on

" My objective Is to pitch as
well as I can and hop!' we go and
gl't some runs. " he said. " It
doesn't matter who gets the wins.
as long as we keep winning."
The Rangers' best scoring
chance came In the lllth Inning.
With runners on first and second
and one out, Jeff Huaonsln111ed to
rtght field . Steve Buechele tried
to score from second base on the
play but Whiten's throw to
catcher Greg Myersl'asily nailed

Buechele at the plate.
Texas threatened again in the
sixth but Whiten made a good
ca tch on a drive by lncavlglla
and Stleh s lruck out Buechele
with two runners on to end that
threat.
Elsewhere In the American
League, New York swept Cleveland 3-0 and 4-l In a doubleheader . Boston nipped Detroit
1-0, Chicago topped Milwaukee
i-4. Minnesota blasted Oakland
9-4, Baltimore slapped Kansas
City 9-2 and Seattle crushed
California 8-1.
Red Sox I, Tigers 0 - At
Detroit, Tom Bolton and two
relievers pitched a five-hit shu tout to outduel Jack Morris .
Bolton. 4-1. gave up four hits over
seven and two-third innings. Rob
Murphy worked the ninth for his
filth save. Morris, 8-13, surrendered only four singles In pitchIng his fifth complete game of the

Incentive. Our feeling Is It was
just getting to the point where
James In his mind was saying
'The hell with It then, we'll fight
somebody else."'
Holyfield has been the No. 1
contender since April of 1989.
After Douglas won the tllie from
Mike Tyson Feb. 11, the new
champion elected to fight Holyfield Instead of giving Tyson an
Immediate rematch .
Johnson said Douglas now

thinks Holyfield has not shown
proper appreciation and came
"real close" to not fighting tbe
mandatory defense.
''There ain't nothing mandalory In boxing," Johnson
laughed.' 'It might have cost him
the WBA title or ail the titles or
whatever. I don't think It was far
away - It was a feeling that we
had tried to work things out with
Evander. We liked him and he's
gone from being a nice guyln our
minds ."

By VINCENT DEL GIUDICE
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UPI)
America's economy - struggling to avert a recession,
strangled by tight -fisted spendIng and bumped by a dip In
exports - managed only a 1.2
percent gain In the second
quarter output of goods and
services , the government said.
The Commerce Department
also revised down Its estimate of
growth in the first quarter gross
national product to 1.7 percent
from 1.9 percent, further stunning economists who had expected a 1.5 percent gain In the
second quarter.
"We are teetering on a border line recession," Norman Robert·
son, chief economist at Mellon
Bank in Pittsburgh, said Friday.
He suggested the "soggy report"
might force the Federal Reserve

For the put 26 yean, I've bea11 helping my neighbors here
In Galllpoills protect the things they value with State Farm
insurance. I'm proud of thla community and grateful lor
my many friends here.
Thanks to all of you in Galllpolla, lor being my
"Good Nelgh~ora ."

..........

Rolu. Ylalt 18mlly end fritndl. Enjoy loloure ootlvldoo. Our life In-nee ond .,.
nu- -roma~~UPP~emont your Soclol
s-rtty ond .,....., to - · rotlrement d-m• como truo. Aottremont In·
oo- - One of lhe

MODERN WOODMEN SOWTIONS

IJ~JilofJm ltf;t~
MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
'- riiAftiNAl un MoUIANC~ SOCKTY
HOMt orne£ • lOCk tY.AHO. IU.JIOS

llff • MmU ITII S • IRfl S • !RAHR~&lt;A l PROGRnM S

to act to slash interest rates
further to bolster growth.
•'This is no doubt an economy
that is gasping for air," said
Robert Dederick, chief economist at Northern Trust In Chicago. "The economy has been
moving a lot closer to the edge of
a recession."
•'The economy Is now one step
away from a full-blown recession," added Richard Rahn ,
chief economist at the U .S.
Chamber of Commerce. ''The
Fed must ... lower Interest rates
to keep the economy afloat. Time
is running out."
The Commerce Department
also released revised data lowerIng Its estimate of the real GNP
between 1987 and 1989 to 3.4
percent from 3.8 percent, confirming the slu~glsh state or
economic affairs.
"Weaker consumer spending

for services accounted for about
two-thirds of the revision," the
department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said . "In 1989,
growth In GNP was consldfrably
weaker."
Exports, which had been
pumping fuel Into the economy,
fe ll by a surpris ing 3.7 percent in
the second quarter after registering a bold 11.2 percent gain in the
first three months of the year.
Mi chael Darby, undersecretary of commerce for economic
affairs. attributed the stiff dec lin e to fewer export' of computers and farm crops, as well as
statistical faclors, and predicted
a rebound in the second half of
the year, particularly in October,
November and December.
"The outlook for solid exports
Is bright," Darby said.
Imports In April, May and June
gained 3.2 percent. mainly on

•

Stale Fa1m Insurance Compames • HomeOihces BIOOillmgton llllllOIS

'90 Grand Ams
'89 Centurys
'89 Regals

Senate leaders, however, de-

McKINNEY'S BOWIIUNTING DEN
Sam
McKinney, riKht, Is the owner of a new archery
shop, McKinney's Bowhunlln&amp; Den. McKinney Is

pictured with his wife, Ann, his son, Eddie, and
Terry Brown, IOnner owner of the shop and owner
of Brown's Taxidermy.

New archery shop to open Aug. 4
POMEROY - A new archery
sho p, McKinney's Bowhuntlng
Den , wlli be opening Aug . 4.
Door prizes, pop , coffee and
donuts will be given away at the
grand opening
Owner Sam McKinney is no
stranger to bowhunting: he has
been a cllve In bowhunling since

1963 and owned an archer y shop
in Pomeroy from 1965 to 1974.
Those familiar with Brown 's
Archery and Taxidermy will find
lhe new shop to be familiar :
McKinney's Bowhunting Den
will be on the site of the former
Brown's Archery. Terry Brown
will stlil be operating his tax i

dprm y t1u sin ess on the present
site.
Mc Kinncv's Bowhunting Den
Is loca Ted un Pomeroy Pike ,
three mile s pa s T Meigs High
Schoo l. The bu siness will be open
from noon to 9 p.m . Mondav,
Tuesda_v . Thu rsday. Friday and
Sa tu r da v

•

Gallia County S&amp; WCD among award Winners
.,

AKRON- Gallla, Erie, Franklin, and Shelby Soli and Water
Co nservation Di s tric ts are

Grand Award Winners in the43rd
annual Goodyear/ NACO Awards
Program.
The Ohio districts were among

Money Ideas

Tax-empt bond funds
BY STAN EVANS

Driven only 41,521 miles. tilt and
cruise control. stereo, Immaculate condition.

1987 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME

Brougham VB ledan, sliver gray with
matching vinyl top. driven only 26,000
mllea. Power everything, new Buick
Century' hade. Hard to find model. WHI
go feet.

Increased demand for foreign oli.
Not counting inflation , the real
GNP rose by $12.6 billion to more
than $4 trillion, projected at an
an nual rate, In the second quarter of the year after increasing by
$17.4 billion in the first quarter.
In the fourth quarter of 1989,
real GNP edged up by $3.5 bililon.
Second -quarter personal
spending fell by 0 .3 percent, on an
8.7 percent plunge in the purchase of expensive durable goods
-items such as home appliances
- and a 4.4 percent drop In
non -durable goods such as
clothing.
Business inve ntories, the
stockpile of unsold goods,
vaulted by $35.5 billion as a
result . Personal spending on
services, meanwhile , lea ped by
5.5 percent, the Commerce Department said .

By CHARLES J. ABBOTT
UP! Farm Editor
WASHINGTON - The Senate,
after Including provision to Impose trade sanctions agalnstt
Iraq, passed a farm bill Friday
that would spend $55 billion on
farm subsidies, create new programs to protect the environment and give farmers slightly
more freedom to decide what to
grow.
However, the package could
see major changes before it
becomes law . The White House
ha s warned It might veto a farm
bill that does not in clude substan tial cost cuts from the current
level .

Like a good neighbor. State Farm is th&amp;re

1987 BUICK
CENTURY SEDAN

July 29. 199o

GALLIPOLIS - Tax-exempt
bond funds are funds formed to
Invest In municipal securities
and to pay out
the interest income received
to fundholders
on a com pletely
tax -free basis.
Each fund is of
th e closed -end
irust type, meaning that once the
fund has been formed, the fund
cannot sell new shares (somelimes called units , or certlfltates) to the public.
· If the Investor wishes to sell his
holding In the fund. it can either
be sold In the secondary trading
market for fund units maintained
by the securities firm which
Origlnlaily sponsored the fund
offering, or the holding can be
redemmed by the fund Itself.
Since tax-exempt bond funds
were first created in 1961, over
160 funds totalling over $3 billion
In value have been offered
primarily to individual investors. For a few funds, the
!plnlmum Investment Is $1,000,
but most require a minimum
purchase of $5,000.
Aller the Initial investments
for the fund have been selected,
no further trading is allowed by
the Securities and Exchange
CommissiOn, which reaulates
tax-exempt bond funds. Usually,
the fund Invests In 20 to 2!1
different Issues ranKing from 15
to i!O years In maturity.
The fundi thel'llllelves do not
have a final maiurlty date, but as
~

a fund's bond holdings mature
(or as the bonds held are paid off
by the stale or local government
through sinking funds or other
redemption operations),the pr oceeds are distributed to
lundholders.
The funds do not charge a n
annual management fee . The
fund sponsor's co mpensation
comes Instead from the Initia l
sales charge, which ranges between 3.5 to 4.5 percent of the
fund's assets, depending on the
lund. Currenliy, the average
tax-free return available to the
public Is around 7-7¥.% .
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment
Broker lor The Ohio Company In
their Gallipolis ofllce.)

Morrison attends
recent seminar
GALLIPOLIS- Paul B. Morrison, Rio Grande, Modern Woodmen of America rE&gt;presenlatlve,
has completed a five-day educa tional program at the fraternal
life Insurance society's home
office In Rock Island, Illinois .
Selected from Modern Woodmen's nationwide agency force,
Morrison was one of 34 life
insurance agents who attended
the program.
The program reinforced the
concepts of sound llnanclal planniDI for famUies through Modern
Woodmen llle insurance plans,
annuities and IRA's. Morrison
also reviewed fraternal benefits
and activities available through
Modern Woodmen's fraternal
program.

,

Business spending on buildings
and equipment slid by6.1percent
In the second quarter and that
residential spending collapsed
by 13.5 percent, reflecting the
anemic pace of home building.
"A recovery In residential
Investment Is unlikely in the near
term," Darby said. "The current
level of mortgage rates, credit
restraints, high vacancy rates
for rental housing, and demographic factors are all working
against a strong housing market
In the second half of the year."
Defense spending by the federal government was up by 3.3
percent, while non-defense
spending boomed by 60.7 percent. Total spending by state and
local governments, on the other
hand, was up by a mere 0.2
percent .
The implic it price deflator, a

gauge of Inflation, dipped to 4.4
percent In the second quarter of
1990 from 4.8 percent in the first
quarter.
In Its revised data for 1987,1988
and 1989, the Commerce Depart ment said there were no signs of
recession, which Is defined as
two or more consecutive quarters of negative GNP.
The revised data also showed
that the infiatlon averaged 4.2
percent for the three-year period
and that personal Income and
personal savings for 1989 were
lower than Initially reported, In
part because of s tatistlcal errors.
Looking ahead, GNP data for
July , August and September
could be bolstered by an increase
in manufacturing activity In the
auto industry, which has been
anticipating an autumn strike by
the United Auto Workers.

Senate approves farm bill;
White House threatens veto

INSUUNCI

While Sox 7, Brewers 4 - Al
Chic ago, Carlton Fisk and Dan
Pasqua slammed home runs to
power Chicago. Jack McDowell,
6-5. gave up seven hits and three
runs while walking three and
striking out four over six and
one -third Innings . Ron Robinson..
4-2. gave up five runs and eight
hits In just three and two-third
Innings .
Twins 9, A's 4- At Minneapolis , Brian Harper extended his
hitting streak to 16 games with a
two-run double to highlight a
six -run fifth inning and make a
winner of Roy S mith, 5-8. Mike
Moore , 9-9, gave up nine hits and
eight runs in four and two-third
innings .
Orloleo 9, Royals 2 - At
Kansas City , Mo .. Phil Bradley
wenl4 for 5 and drove In two runs
and rookie Ben McDonald won
for the second time In two starts
to lead Baltimore. McDonald,
2-0, gave upslx hits and two runs.
while walking four and striking
out seven over six and two-lhird
innings . Storm Davis, 4-7, gave
up five runs in three-pius Innings .
George Brett had his 16-ga mE'
hitting streak snapped.
Marlnen 8, Angels I - At
Seattle, Erik Hanson tossed a
four hitter , Ken Griffey contributed three hits and Henry Cotto
added two hits and scored three
runs to lead the MarinE&gt;rs .
Hanson, 11 -8. struck out five and
walked two over eight innings .
Mark Langston, 4-13, lasted only
two and two-third Innings, allow ing seven hils and six runs.

D

Nation's economy struggles to avoid recession

Gallipolis•••
My neighborhood.

CAROLL SNOWDEN
Corner of Third Ave. •
Stote St.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4516

Section
•

season.

Retirement Income

- - r - - - - -- ------ --

By LISA HARRIS
UPI SporiA Writer
NEW YORK !UP!) - Heavyweight champion James "Buster" Douglas, one day after
receiving the five-week postponement he sought for his first
title defense against Evander
Holyfield, Friday reported improvement in his bronchitis.
"He's feeling better today,"
Douglas' manager, John Johnson, said Friday. "He has missed
training time due to a lot of
different reasons but he thinks
he'll be ready to train Monday ."
Hours before the Holyfield
camp agreed to push the !ight
back from Sept. 21 to Oct. 25
Thursday, Johnson said "a ll I
care about is James Douglas the
person and he belongs in the
hospital."
Douglas' physician said hospital izatlon was unnecessary but
the champion should not consider
fighting until at least the end of
October and should not train until
Aug. 6.
"That's his opinion," Johnson
said Friday. "I think he would
have been ready by Sept. 21 but
we're happy thai It's Oct. 25.
From my conversation with
James today, right now we're
planning on ftrainlng) Monday ."
Holyfield's camp had filed s uit
to keep scheduled Sept. 21 date
for the bout at The Mirage Hotel
and Casino In Las Vegas, Nev.,
despite Mirage owner Steve
Wynn's wishes lo delay the boul
for promotional reasons.
"What it did, !hough," Johnson
sa id. "It did give James greal

Farm/ Business

the 97 top prize winner s nationwide In the competit ion sponsored by th e Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Company In cooper a lion
with th e National Assoc iation of
Conservation Dlstricls (NA CO! .
An Independent judging committee of s tat e agricu ltural leaders sr lPCtf'd the wlnnprs on the
bas is of I he dist riels' accomplishments In soil and water conservation , ac cording to David L.
Fulton, director o r the awards
program .
Each di strict will be represented by a member of the board
on the gr.a nd awa rd s tour, an a ll
ex pens es-paid, vacation-study
trip In November to Camelback
Inn ; Scottsdale, Arizona. Lawren ce Burdell, will represent the
Gallla SWCD. Burdell will be
jo in ed by representatives of the
other winning districts from
throu ghouT the United States.
This Is th e second time for the
Galli a SWCD to receive thi s state
honor .
The grand award-winning dis·
lrlcls also will receive plaques
recognizing the ir achievement s
In present ations at a meeting of
the Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Conservation Districts on
Monda y, July 30 In Columbu s.

r ided to delay cuts until Congress
and the Bush administration
agree on a pa ckage of budget
cuts - possibly weeks from now .
The bill includes a proposal by
Senate Republican Leader Robert Dole of Kansas lor across the-boa rd cuts if major reduc
lions are needed.
The bill passed 70-21 after
senators spent most of the day
debating Iraq sa nctions and

Farm Flashes

America."
It took six days of debate for
the Senate to pass the bill about half of the lime consumed
by the con tentio us 1985 farm bill,
which had the goal of making
U.S. commodities competitive on
the world market.
Th e 1990 fa rm bill co ntinues
many of the policies of the 1985
bill.
"This Is a good, solid. progressive farm bill. It Is an e nvironmentally conscious farm bill,"
sai d Agriculture Committee
Chairman Patrick Leahy , D-Vt.
Passage of the bill was delayed
for nearly a day by a dispute over
whether toguaranteeGreat Lake
ports a share of Food for Peace
shipme nt s. Rather tha n the
240,000 ton guarantee the Initially
was proposed, the Senate decided to let the ports compete for
half of the food -aid shipmrnts on
the basis of a more favorable
formula .
Senators voted ro invokP sane.

lions against Iraq a s a way to
ex press repugnan ce with Iraq 's
viola tions of human right s. its
Con tinued on D-8

Streptomycn sprays may
reduce tobacco infections

BY EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
i\G RICliLTURE &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS- Angular Leaf
Spot, Blue mold and Insects are a
co ncern for Gallia County Tobac co producers. Angular lea!
spot Is a bacterium that colonizes
the leaf surface during wet
periods and Is driven into the lea f
during heavy rains. Spots are
a ngular In shape with a yellow
halo and brown to black center.
Streptomycin spray s can greatly
red uce ln!er tlons, but they must
be applied to insure complete
leaf coverage.
Blue mold has become active
following the return to cool and
wet nights. Generally the leaf
must be wet for 4 to 6 hours or
longer during the dark for Blue
mold infection or reproduction to
occur. In conlrast, blue mold
activity Is limited during hot, dry
weather when

resolving a fight over which ports
would handle Food for Peace
shipments.
In a rare coincidence, lhe
House and Senate spenl the pa st
week debating different versions
of the farm bill. The House
refused Friday to kill the honey
support program, joined the
Senate in voting sanctions
against Iraq , and gave Its approval to a pla n to divide control
over the Food for Peace
program.
House leaders hope to complete work on their bill nex t
week.
"He (iraqi President Saddam
Hussein) Is a butcher, a torturer," said Sen. Alfonse D'A
malo, R-N.Y., sponsor of the
amendment aga inst Iraq .
"We've got to stand up at this
point in time or the mad dog will
go further and further."
Sen. Max Baucuas, D-Mont.,
was the only senator to announce
In advance that he would oppose
lhe bill. He said It would not
provide enough Income for
farmers and predicted It would
"crpate ghost towns In rural

spores cannot

germinate and penetrate the dry
leaf . Aceording to a recent
publication , where blu e mold
develops late tn the growing

season, there is benefit from
preplan! plus layby , a pplicat ions
(2 quarts preplan! plus I quart
iaybyl .
Single wilted leaves on tobacco
plants usually are the result of
feeding by s tink bugs. Enzymes
lnjecled Into the planT by the

suc king mou thparts as stin k
bugs rem ove sa p will cause that

lea f to wilt or co llapse on hot
sunny days wilted leaves ca n be
scalded. Aphid populations are
also starting to build In local
tobacco field s.
Co ntinued on D-8

Cremeens Funeral Chapel
installs custom background
and chapel music senrice
GALLIPOLIS - As part of a
continuing desire to expand their
service In the community, the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel of
Gallipolis announces the Installa tion of a custom background and

c hapel music service which
a ffects th e atmosphere of the
e ntire Home.
Called "Musical Presence",
the music service Is provided and
Installed by National Mus ic Service, Inc ., o! Spo kane, Washing

ton, a subsidiar y of NAMSCO
Corpora tion.
Jay Cremeens, ownf'r, says
that his facility now provides
appropriate back ground music
throughout, which Is specia lly
produced to have a therapeutic
effect on families or friends in the
grieving process. He can. In
addition, provide so me 2,000
vocal solos for chappl use which
ca n satis fy reques ts fnr v! rtually
Co ntinued on 0 -X

Agribusiness degree

dropped by NW
ARCHBOLD, Ohln (UPI)
The Northwes l Technical College
said It will phase oullts agribusi ness degree program during the
next two years because of declln 1ng enrollment.
Dean of instruction Esther
0' Dea said the technical college
needs 25 students to maintain the
program, but succeeded In draw Ing only 14 last year.
The program will be maintained during the next two years
to allow students already enrolled a chance to complete their
studies toward an associate
degree.

MYSTERY FARM - Thlo week's mylllery
larm, featured by the GoUla aad Wll&amp;er
Coaaenatlon District, II located aomewltere In
Galli a Counly. Jadlvld1ala wlahlna lo parllelpate
Ia the weekly contesl may do ao by pelllllfl the
farm's owaer. lur.l mall, or drop off yoar
lo
the Oa!Upoll Dally Trlbuae, IIU Tblrcl Ave.,
Gallpolll, Oblo, 0831, or the Dall~ Seltdnel, lll
Court st., Pomeroy, Oblo, U'lllll,ucf yoa mar win

cuen

a S5 cub prl:ae from the

Publishing

Co. Leave your aame, address aud telephone'
·number wllh your card or letter. No telephoae
calla wiD be accepted. All contest enlrlea should
be lurned In lo the aewapaper office by 4 p.m. eacb
Wedlleeday, Ia cue ol a lie, lbe wlaner will be

er-a by lolteey. Nul week, a Melp Coaal)'.
larm wiD be featured by lbe Melp SoD and Water
eo-rvatlo• Dra~r~c&amp;.

�Times-Sent mel

July 29, 1990

Pomeroy-

Oh10- Pomt Pleasant, W. Va.
9

houuhotd or Eallt•l
Any lype or tumHure, •~&gt;
pllance1 anlbie'l .. c:. Al10

Announcements

I

•

614-446-2342

3 Announcements
qeADOPTIONSpoc:lol
flmlly
wanta to glv. rour be by • nd u•
a chance. Cal colltct 708-352·
1658. Mary Ellyn and Chuck.

304-675-1333
Public Notice

Public Notice

lEGAl NOTICE

any end all bidl.
Ellen M . Barry. Trauurer
Board of Education
Gallipolis City S c hools

Galli. Metropolitan Housing Authorlty lnvtl:• aiNIIed
bhll for the procurement of

Automobile lloblllty Cover·

July 22. 2P; Aug. 5. 12

16. 1990. For bid lnformo·

tion and a copv of thelnvltll·
tion for 81•. contact June
A . WHIIama. Executive 01-

. roctor. GMHA, 381 Buck
· Ridge Rood, Bidwell OH .
46614, 1814) 446-0251
JUlY 20. 25, 29. 1990
PubliC Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
SURPLUS VEHICLES

s....d

bids will be , .

ceNed by the Galllpolia City
Schoola Boerd of Education,
61 St1te Street. Gallipolis.

. OH. 48831

until 12 ·OO

noon on Augu1t 20. 1990

·-·d. .

GALLIPOliS CITY
SCHOOLS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Separate. sealed propo1111 for each of the requirementa set forth below will be
received et the office of the
Treaaurer.
Gallipolia Clry
School•. 81 State Street.

Galllpollo, OH . 45831 until
12:00

tlonal
Bus. No. 34 19801nterne-

·ttonal
Vehlcl• mey be ..en 1t
the but garage located behind Green

School.

Elementary

Bids mutt be ualed and
-cleerty rnerked on the envelope 10 lhet bidl will no1 be
.opened
premeturely . The
Board of Education re~ervM
the right to accept or rejec~

noon

1990 ond will

August

20.

bo publicly
opened and read by the Treeaurar immediately thereafter
and praented to the board
at ita next meeting. BidJ
mu1t be clearty marked on
the envelope "Bid Opening.
Auguot 17, 1990"

DESCRIPTION OF
REQUIREMENTS

· for the 1ale of the following

: Bu1. No. 9 1980 lntema. tlonaJ
· Bus. No. 31 19801nterna-

Public Notice
Public Notice
Golllpolio City School• tiona.
Board of Education
BY OROER OF THE
Ellen M . Barry, Tre•urer
GAlLIA COUNTY
July 22. 29: Aug. 5. 12
COMMISSIONERS.
Joan Davia.
Clerk of the Board

Sealed bids will be received by the Gallil County

Goliipolio. Ohio
a.m . on

46631 until 10:00

thereafter for one 11) 154
Pu•ngar modified School
Bu1 for the Gallle County
Board of Mentel Aetardation, Ch•hlre, Ohio

Awarding of bid eontln·
gent upon Stete of Ohio
ContJolling Board approval
end releeu of fundi.

Speclfle~tlon 1 may be ob·
tained at the Gellil County

Boord of MRIDD, P. 0 Box
14. Chethlre, Ohio 46820.

Envolopoo

mould

be

1. Ice Cream p.-odue1s for
use in cafeterias

marked "SpecificatfonJ... A
6% bid bond must ac·
compony bid

2 . Bread products for use
in ca feterias
3. Milk products tor usa in
Clfeteriu
4. Gasoline and DiBle!

The purchaser '"'"'•
the right to reject eny bid or
part of bids which they 10
detire . Quality. price and
service wiH be u•d to IC-

Fuel
Said Board of Education

cept the lower and belt bid.
Purche11r will be the sole

reaervot the right to accept
or reiec:t any. all or parts of
any bidl.
No bidl m•v be withdrawn for at least 30 dav•
after the 1cheduled closing
time for receipt of bidl .
Bv Order of the

judge of quality and 1.,.
vleet.

Bid tor body and cha11i1 to
be a lingle unit con.. ructlon
bld together.

nified op!lon lor llndlng a
partner. Heartsaarch: P. 0 . -Box
1043, llllllpalls, OH 45631.

PUBLIC NOTICE

4

FOR SALE

July 31 . 1990 ond oponod

The Ohio

Vollf!t Bonk

trlendly. FrM to good homa.
6\4--992·507&amp;.

llle lhe following delcribed

Bilek &amp; T1n Coiii...Shepherd,

property:
1988 Chevrolet Cavalier,

lomalo1 opavod, to good homo.

614-44o-910ci.

Serial ,

101 J 089 P8Q 718 B628

FrM: Tnr dawn building, like
Ill lumber • I rash. 614--448-7612.

This vehicle wit be aokl11 a
public sale It the Jackson
PHce office of the Ohio VaiiiPf
Bank Company, 370 .llckaon
Plto. Golllpolil. OH. at 10o00
a.m. Saturday, Augu 1t 4,

Pupptn: Medium small breed
mala garman ahepherd, 8 mM

old. All to good homn. 614-388gJ49.

1990 ·

6

The vehicle will be sold to

SubdlvltiDil,
Reward!
Will
anawer to the name Tltty. 614446~57:

Lost Fawn and whhe female
bortr. Morning Star Road tru.
Ant:Wirl to "Kelly". Call 614~a-2532. Raward.

Vall_, Bank

....,
Company r8l8rY8I the right to
accept or reject anv and all
bldl, and to withdrew thil vehlcte from tale prior to the
lila.
R

29

1 3

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

_

ASTRO-GRAPH

BRIDGE

ASTRO-GRAPH

AVON - AU areaa, C.ll Marilyn
Waaver 304-882-2645.
Amarlca~omaroy

and Rehabilitation Cent., ~
Immediate
opening•
tor
quallll.wt LPN'I and RN'1. Wa of.
rer c:ompelltlvt llllry, benettta.
pluaant turroun!!."J' tnd exctUent working
ltlona. Wt
art an aqu.l opponunhy
Empklyer. PlaaH contact La Rut

Creek,

county
oul of cotNamed Rd.18.
lady.SUpped
l.o81 :7·2'1·80
on
tar. Is not 1 hunting dog, but Iii a
much lov.d family pel:. PINu

call 814-992-7'201.

304-675-1429.

Graal Be111fltt
1. W1at Coaat &amp; return every
waek.2. Driver Insurance Polley
with disability banalltl offltred.
3. S.fety lnnnllve bon•.4.
High Pay.!.. Stata of tha art •
qulpmonl. CKW 6 PETE'S).
Oualllicallona :
1. 2 year-., OTR experience fluh
2S YIIJW old.2. Able lo pill
drug screen.3. Good
record.U.S. WAnB 1-80
7229
E1m money by the weak. Join
the number-. to demonltral•
"Chriatm•e-Around-Th•Worid",

July-Oec•mber. L.Mva name,
addrnt, and phone number on
anawerlng aiMca. 814-112-UUI.

«l

JAMES
JACOBY
~!ttL

2nd, 3rd, 4th. Rods, Rea la,
Dea aprtldl, eurt1ln1, clocks,
wh11 nota, laC• of goodiH. 322
Spruce Sl . Ext.

A'hlr

wcmrthday
July 29,1-

aw-hUe. Thefe wtll be numerous oppor-

on which you can capitalize. so

ways fire your best

shot

LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 221 Thai which you
hope lo accomplish today mlghl not be
achieved U you lack cooperation and
support from others. Don't do anything

tbat

could altenate k ey players Leo .
treal your sen to a birthday gift . Send for
vOur Astro-Graph predictions for the

year ahead

mailing S 125 to AstraGraph, clo lhis newspaper. P 0 . Bow
~1428. Cleveland. OH 44101 -3428 Be
by

sure to state your zodiac sign .

VJROO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 221 Thetels a big
dlfterence today bet..-. having lixi1y
of purpose or merely having a closeO
mk1d . Don' t turn a deaf ear to the

g!ISIIOflS

sug--

ol people who wanl IO help

you.
I.IIIRA CSopt. 23-0c:t. 23) When

assessil)g financial matters today your JUdg-

nlent might be more opt1m1stic than ra-

tional. Oon'l kid yourself about lhlngs
dtat

Should be realistically evaluated

ICORPIO COct. 24-N&lt;w. 221 An objoclljle you hope would be ralhet easy lo
achieve today might be more dllllcull
tl)an antiCipated Howe'w'er. it can s till be

done

11

votire

resoorcetul

and

dlotermtned
IAQITTARIUI CHow. 23-Dec:. 211 Be
Y.ry carei\JI today not to let your ago
Ill" In the way and cause you lo pretend
to be knowledgeable about a subjecl
abOUI which you know Ultle.
CAPRICORN co.c. 22-Joon. 111 A wei~
IntentiOned Irian&lt;! may not be the nghl
pilrson with whom to dtscuoo business
matters today, becauselhis person will
1e11 you whal you wan11o hear inoiOad of
111v1n0 you 11rllght an•-•
AQUAIIIUI (.18n. -lb. 11) SometblnO ol llgnillcanco can be achieved
taday, bul not owing to the assiolance
o1 strong allleo. bul rather In splle of
'"""'· Try 10 wof1o without parlnerl.
PISCES (fob. :111-MMch 20) This Is one
of thOse da~ wt&gt;en you m1Qh1 moke undesirable laolla even more unpleasant
by doing lhem lhe hard way. Try to plan
.;hat you Intend 10 do In advance.
• • (March 21·Aprll 11) Demands
Gil your puna could be a bit more cum~ lhln you anlldpated loday.
Oon't WOf'Mfl matten by being extravajjllnt - • no-tlals are

~ned

TAUIIUI (April »~by 20) Try lo avoid

l t i - t a lochiy that bring you 1n1o
doM conloct wHh people Who •• dlffiwn InC! diMgr-ble. You are nul apt
tO hew the tolerance required lo """ lhem.

4f!MINI C..., 21-JuM 201 In order lo

be productive today you musl also be
r(lelhodlcal and organized. II you tackle
~· 1n a slipshod lashion, 11

=--Pita
*'

woflo.
..... 2WIIr
221 Relax llld
til~or .--today inllaM of locullng
your llllltlrlallffan. You're no1 ap1
tb be
1n ~~~~~- and n might
lie wiMIO ..rt until your reiiiiii'IIOolll
lllilr'llltlilllar.

0

••r

f

NORTH

your career is concerned

Big

+Q

+K 9 A5

thmgs

lEO CJuly 23-Aug. 221 A pleasant our.
pnse may be m store for you today per laintng to a situat1on abou t wh•ch
you·IJe been rather negative . Your !ears
could turn out to be merely mtsd•rected
tmagtnatton . Mator changes are ahead
for leo 10 the comtng year . Send lor
your Aslto-Grapn prechcttons today

Mail $1 .25 to Astra-Gr aph. cia this
newspaper . P.O. Box 91428 . Cleveland .
OH 44101 -3428 Be sure to state your
Iod1ac Stgn
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 The rec'pe
lor success today ca lls for equal parts
ol •magtnalion and elbow grease . Ane.you have formulated your ptans . turn

ALL Yard Slltt Mu8t Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly btlort the ad Is lo run.
Sundl~ adltlon - 2:00 p.m.

• KJ 92

responstbthhes m the year ahead where
could be tn the offing . but you' ll ha~e to
ex tend yoorselt to get them

4 , 9-6.

&gt;-11-H

+ K J 53

Don 't be reluctant to take on addtltonal

Condi1ions both hnanc1all~ and careerwise look mora encouraging lor you in
tbe year ahead than they have tor quile
l~nllleo

4 FtmHI••: Everything goea,
oHicl
tumilur1,
tlaetrorWca, nint1ndo tapes,
royt, tooll. The only thing wa
trtn't Mlllng .. the famly Pf'l!

c\olhH,

,.------------,13Whit•
112 mi!H paal Hollers on O.J.
Ad. Lood for signa, Aug )..
July 30.1-

WEST

Frldoy. Mondoy odllion ·

EAST

Aug . 1, 2. &amp; 3, on Bul1vllla Pike,
off 554. Firat Rd. lo left. 1st
housa, board
fence,
11ya
champion f1nna, 614-357-7636.

•to
tJ97 6 1

. , 43
t A K 10 3

lS

+12

Exl. Y-4562.
Edward'a Tranepot11Uon ~ ~·
ln\1 tor a hlw QOOd ov•r the road
driYitl lor ffal bed, operallon
basad In A•vtnawood, WV, 800228-6658 for details.
EXCELLENT WAGES for apare
Umt aasembly. E11y work at

• J 10 6
+A 10 9

.A Q8
• 852
+A Q43

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: North

3 NT

the venlure over to your muscles

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. :m There's a pos-

W~1t

All pllll

,.

Nortb

Openmg lead

I

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
MOVING SALE · ""guat 2·3-4-•,
h1,J11=h, •t•reo,

Kelly 't

304·773-9172.

f:aot

suddenly somethmg grander and more
prom1s1ng m•ghl peak over the hortzon
10 cause you to switch targets

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 221 Today you
should have two powerful attributes go.
tng lor you Ttley are ~our opltmtsm and
your prachcaltty wh1ch you will be able
10 mold .nt o an effective force lor something produc11ve

Wagn tor apart llrna

1

Wrong
inference

Rood'

Middleport.

Carpor1 Sale. Augual 1-2-3. R1ln

By JamH Jacoby

or •hint. Follow thll algna In
Dt~ .' ~tllt.

ua11on over whtCil you have small Influ-

three no-trump without even a

CAPRICORN COoc. 22-.len. 1tl Your
greatest benefits todav are likel~ to

come from invotvementa you have wtth
friends with whom you share a mutual
interesl. However. the ga.ns you d&amp;n¥8
Will not be ot a material nat\H'e.

AQUARIUS CJan. - l b . 11) Oon'l be
alreld to etevate your sights a bll allhia
time where your ambitious alms are

Houaekeeper
wanted
tor
taachw, 7:30a.m. to 12:30, M..f.

aome

Independent Sates Rtp. for:
Health Salae. Worll. Soulhern
Ohio Area. E.xoer*'ce Pr1ftr·
red. Will trtln. Stnd rwume to:
Boll Cl.A040. '% Gllllpolll Dalty
Trlbullll. . 825 Third Av1 ., Gafllpol... unio. 45631
IMiructor Ill to taaeh at C.rltton
School Prlm1ry Cl111. Mutt
hava
currant
Vllkl
Oh+o

·

$17,000. Posting anda Bf.lt9o.
Sand return• only to: M•lg•
MriOO 1310 Carleton Strwl
Syi"IICUM, OHo 457N.
lad~

Enforcement.No

of mlac. t-?

PHYSICIANS ASSISTANT
l

Thoroele

Su'lloon•

h•ve Immediate opeonlng tor
llct~need Physlcla111 Aalatant.
Thor1clc aurglell txperlenc.

C...,

1M-

....

"'I ..,,..,.....
e-=•• ••:u ..._

Commtreiii·Hornt Unlta, From
$16. Lampo, lotlono,

oe-

low
11 $11. Call lodov FREE Color
Cololog. 1-80Q.22tl.f2ta.

Professional
Services

dill.,.,

ttn Saul-.!, Clo• A. 2&amp;

11111 .~ mllol. 8 ' - 1. 4KW
OHAN 011...-ator, fulty Htf-contolnocl no. oond, -..g
tt \500. eu 1 te 1521.

t2x16 mobile homo tm model,
11. eond, bloc~ &amp; unclorplmlng,
mullt ..... appNO&amp;It•, cell aJ.
•• &amp;:30 $5200, 30W11-:IIIIV.

Boi"'J .,.

In

PI~•

18e0 trailer wUh JNiheri..,_,
atov• and rafrt=or- Cll alter
Sp.m. IM-112
.

FNO!toul 21' Tondon
Aluminum Dump with wotllno

11110

S,.C:Iellz.lng In dried evtrlutlng
nowa,.. Cuatom ordel"l Wtl ·
Wa

32 Mobile Homes
lor 5ale

Gal-

Galllpollo, llt4 44e 4a.a

and trallar mounted lri. $7,500.

114-111:1-3734.

Skyllno 12d2 lr•ll•. -

11110

eondHion. 14,1100. 114-JQ.2140. :
1f71 .......... t:biiO, 2 bedroom. Ou hoot, Apptto- In

Real Estate

kitehe11. New pa heM . . .r
lank. lluat be moved. AakJna
$3800. Mab me an ofllr. 8-M:
Jll2·3033.

31 Homes for Sale

1173 Kirkwood, 2 bechoom1,
12180, lfove and refr1gntor, ·

112 acra, 6 rooms wtth basement, new hut pump, g1rtgs, 2 vinyl undor1&gt;1nnlng lneludod.
bulldlnge. Located It Lalart New hoi wat.- h-'•· Good
condhlan $4000, FlAM. 304--468Fal•. li4·247-3743.
113 acN ~ whh MxlO 1980
mobile home, 3 BRa, 2 full
bathe, garden tub In m111tr BR,

dlthwath.,,

walher

fllnge, l'lfrigarator. CA.,
lleetric,
eppralald
12!,500, uklng $16,1100.
contract negotlabll. Call
lhlf 7 p.m. 614-38a-8158.

dryer
lotal

1908.

"" Guerdon Futur11ma 12x15. 2
bedroom, Central A.lr $5891

llhown by appolnlmtnl l........e-

1012.

VIIUI

Land 1W. Kirkwood t2xl0 21A, a.rc.
ava'a eond. 18800. 614-446-47112.
1980 Fairmont Bayview, 14170,
2 bodroorn homo. Aoklng large, Lr wfflr.pl.ce. 3br, 1 112
114-448~ after
119,1100. 883 Maple Strool, MIO- bath, all
dlapor1, Ohlp. 614-912.f5227 or

•*'·

_
5_ _H_B_P:.;P:,.Y;_A_d_a_ __

carport. county water, I mlnut11

flclent Hrvlca.
The Paul Rea•
Family

,.II_

'"""''""· 1221 por month. 114444-42'41, 111 u~me or .......

I ,_, lumlohod oportmonl
""'h 1/C. lnd .....
In 01•

Merchandise

==·

;como. $118/llo.IM~M-11111

*or

44t 4421.

1114&amp;.

=

:c':

!!_"!hi
-ln orlvoto2.
----2.

BEAUTFUL APAiriiiHTi AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
UTATES. 131 , _ Plko
lrom $1112/ma. lo ohot&gt; I
movie~.

Call 814 441 :211L £0H_

Cloon, 2 bodnoam ..,lumlohed
apartJHnta.
S.ove
and
.., . . _ . No """' 1144112-

11111.

':"51--~h-kl~House o

Good

I

LAYNE'S FURNRURE

mata

ond
prtoodond
.....
-·T-hO
up
to 1121. Htd1 1 b ds l3eO to
Ql&amp;. lllcllnoro ms lo 13111.
Llmpo 128 IO $128. Dlnlltll

t1GIIond up lo MN. Woodloblo

w.f oholrw 1288 to flllll. Dooko
$148 uplo ""- -hoo- I
Elllclonoy
Apl,
"""""'
qulol,
Slcyllno ttm t4110 2 Ill,
up, bunk aomploto with
Mpt, nlooly lum., corpolod,
Electric, lg. boy ,.,,_, lklrt· C.rpolld, dining ...... lorgo
molt,_ hV&amp; ond up lo t3911.
lcNollar
I
_..114lng, llopo, goad condition. ldtehon. R1110n11&gt;1o '"'"·
boby $110 MoH- or
·Fronoh Cily Bri&gt;korogo. 114-446o Refit 11101 ond dopaoll roqulrod.
bol oprlngo lull or twin
&amp;-1-.
' 11340.
Fum- Elllclonoy, ~ .....nd . .. Ounn ...
'
UIUftloo Pold, '101 Ave, up, King $350. 4 RENTERS! Ha,.. $1.00 OaJIIpollt.
114
Ul
1 tie. .,.., IQ.
Gun Coblnolo I, I, l 10
33 Fanns lor Sale
llJ-IIopol~ Oov~ QIYMWIJI.
1p.OI.
Aemodtltd houle In ChMI•-

114-448-23110, ovonlngtt

21S.

II-

•~

1»-.

Maeon Countr F1rm, Dunham
Rood, 61 oeroo, S
2
bathal, fonntl dininG room

'"""y~roorn.
D.om;;;;)
outbulldlngo,
2
_,nty

Wiler, 304-488-

B.

Small farm for IIIII. o4 1J2 ICJII
1111. """ lind. 4 .............
living room, bath, kttcMn,
dining room, eamblnod kltehon
a.blnata are 2 yura old, 1tao
kitchen ftoottng '*'• llllllht
:':!'!,.,riding .,...,, lrMur,

Aoldn,/:3r.'ebo~":~J!

and Ravenawood bridge. Ct.ll

onyllmo 614-141-3014.

a

acru.ga tvallabll lor

-

troltoro,piouo.

nov...rulloo, Golllpollo

~

Ar•

8uUd your estall or mutt. lamlly
complex. 304-678-!IIM, 30H15'

446-0ISII

Bonk-·
... ~·•nnlenl
" ' " - ' NlooiJ . . , _ - - . 1
propett-.
gino- pragromo. For ,,.,. mile betow town, ou.tooklntl
matlon coli 1-liM-641·77111 Ext. ..... CA. hlo\ llol. 1182tt.24hour-o.
0331 .

for Rent
~rollor In chy, tully

Ono bod,_,
...... far
- ·
S221
month. Dopool
roqulrod.
l'fot.--082...2218 .,.., • p.m.

or
two
Mdroom
..,._ One
eullabla lor one penon. .,.,..,.,.. tor l'lnl downtown
Pohd P-..nt. Remadsl1d I
811 111 0113.
Cioon Phono114""411o:l300.
2 l:lsJ wm IRObht home, furFurnished
. - , 1100 " - " .... 45
11&gt;r1

ni~Ma,

,.NM!oo phone 304-111-1112 ar
&amp;1lloHOO.

J11.2171, ·
· 3 BR.
Avolloblo
til of month
Trollor, 1 miioe o.n~po~~o
on 2'18; t14 SBI 1941

Clutnnlna
- · ........
Upper Rt. lbt,
7, m&amp;/ma.
pluo
uttlltioo. Oop

:zst&amp;.

a

Rot., • -

Fum-,_~IM~ullo
- ol
Portor
on OM.
111113.
Fumlohod, 2br, mobile homo, on
Mil Ad, No olaol1cl, no

5386.

2 Iota. Vtuhl 1nd h•dstonn 1t
Meigs
Memorill
Garden...
Yatarana Section. 47A Lo1s 3&amp;4.
13,000 lor oil. 814... 53 e484.

Trolor lor rent. Trwo bedroom
lrallllr fDr ..m In 'blppert Plelne.
111&amp; monthly pluo utNIIIoo. 814-

pole,IMC&amp;-1122

38 acr11 2 mUst from Vlnton.
Good bul\dln~tltH. No IIIIWII
rlghto. 8M Ull-4239
Farmland 45 Acf'll mor or leu,
Bud Choltln Rood 8 mlioo,

$27,000.

Ona acre tralttr lot with covnty
water, Mpt:lc tank and elactrlc
hoolt up. On block lop rood.
Plniotty lonc:od. Ownor will "''
!lolly finoneo, $2,1100. ooklng
prleo. 304-f~.

Apartment
lor Rent
t bod"""" opl. St-. rolrlg.,
-~-So­
or
HUO. 402-112 24th Ill, Pt .
Pl-ro. w.v. 114-11112-6158.
2 BR opo,_, ..... I rol.
lum-. Upllolro. Wll• l
lrooh lumlohod. Upper Rt. 1,

441-4:1:12.
llg Bovinao an

o,..

t3~ prd.
Fum.-l'1~.

IIOelt

Turf

Inc. uood ....- . T.V. oeto. 0oon
II UIL 1o I p.m. Mon ..aat.. ......
1ZT lrd. Avo. GoJ.

County Apptil-

:;J..""oil

01--. - , 6 Fumfttn
Shop, 1411 Eootom Avo. Buy,
Sol and Troclo. ~ prl-. 114-

14112211.

Wanted

GET A START
&amp;looping """"" ""'h -..g. ON THE 21st
Aleo .,.. . . . . .. All .......
Coli oft• 2:00 p.m., -ns.
CENTURY IN
1151, ...... wv.
THE ARMY.
46 Space for Rent
Wlll.f1424~4L

AI.

3&amp;

lacllaetl. marbe you'd
llko lo lry .... IWid 81

HattY Birthday
Ralph

44

Apartment
lor Rent

Sleeps 8,
Swimming Pool,
Overlooks Ocean.
N. Myrtle Beach,
S.C.
Still Available
Aug. 18-26
Aug. 26-Sept. 1

446-2206
9-6

Prine•• Pag&amp;Mt.

Thanb to aCI our
IPOIIIora:
H•ldna-Tenn•. AM.

Dan Mltchtll. D-hr

•••. h ••,.
Stepllle &amp; SeoH

Tot•, Dan To. C.C.
Caldwlll. Joll-'1

Tfalllr loll,

Rd. &amp; AI. 1.
4o30p.m.

SWIYIIJe, A.ddll cn
It~ U&amp; 1HI ollor

10 Wanted IO Rent

AND

CONSIGNMENT SALE
EVERY FRI. NIGHT
AT 7:00 P.M.

LOCATION: DAV Building on Rt. 35
Bypass. Consignments taken from
12:00 to 6:00 day of sale.
Truckload Sale o, new merchandise. 28"
Goldblate trowel machine. 4 bladed.
AUCTIONEER:
DAVID BOGGS, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
614-446·7750
Licensed and Bonded in Stata of Ohio
License No. 4596
Not Responsible lor Accidents or Loss of
Property
We Are Now Booking Summer Sales

SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1990
10:00 A.M.

You can, In lhe Anny.
Becauee today's
Anny II on lheleadlnJ
edre of biJI&gt;Iecb

career

opportunl&amp;les.

Aad we cu tnla

)'OU

Would Ulc.t to nrl houM In lhli
Lonpvlll- or
St&amp;am Centlr • •· I"M-iQ.2SU
Of &amp;11 till 1008.

for a rewardla1 and
e:aclttaa cueer, world&amp;
wllb the mool
1101Jbllllcaled

Help Wanted

•odUvem
lbe - ..."'ODArnt1
prtdo and

....,.ry.

11

leeluloloo.
The v..,lble o - ''"'
,.., In lbo i\ry, .....
t!XPII"'f_aoe df!lhoen, IJID

WANTED
REGISTERED
NURSE
RN

supervisor needed
immediately for night
shill. Differential pay
lor nights. Experience
rates available. Insurance provided. full
benefit package avail able,
compelilive
starting salary.

shndlrds and

mel bods ol mlu11inc compliance: d,.tlop PASSPORT budlll:

procedur es and rac-ommends Horu Cart Provider contracts: establish Jl(Ovider rtfe~nl . billin&amp; and rtim brrsamant proctdurtS:
implement futurs community-based care procrams as well.
QUALIFICATIONS: lluhrs Do&amp;r• in Sodol Sorvices, Hoolth
tare Admlnistntion. Public Administration or related field prtferrtd . Candidate must demonshate stro11leadersblp and manaa:ement ability llrith successful pro111nivefy ina•sinl supir·
visory tlll)tfitnct of five ~tlrt or mort in halt hi human SlfYICH
tdministration. Blchtlor' s 0etr11 in tht ltuMII'I uruices field
with procrHsiwely inu11sinc supervisory responsibilitr of ti&amp;t!t
yaars may be substituted tor lasltr's Dtp11. Comput1111per1·
ence. public speakin&amp; and ucellent writin1 skills dssirablt. Salary r1n11 iS $25.700- tJS.SQO with annual ilatiSIS and IIII:Cti·
lent IT ina• benefits.
.
.
A resume and five letters ot rtcommtndltiOn must btrecervtd

Apply at Pinecrest
Care Center or call

446-7112

taJie you a lolltl way
~award

IUCC-ID lilY

""''"""·
u you qualll), lbe

-·-lpalel

Ann.J .,... )'011 ""'"'

lqiHecllapet' M!e And
Wf WQ'I aood briJIN
Md . . . . - . aaltllon

rectd11o ...........

........... clloiJ'"'CIB of
And
1'111Q·
lole&lt;latoiOI)'.
IS otuted .,.
.... ~ oeatury.
To "" aillbe delailll
aboul yoo ond ud Ihe
hlple&lt;h i\nny, )'&lt;1411' locaiA nny
llem~iler loday.

446-3343

LOCATION: From Galliplis, take St. Rt. 7
south 15 miles to Riverside Flea Market.
TOOlS &amp; EQUIP.: (2) lool shelves w/visiiS, Parks machlllics tool bo•. Powercralt AC capacitor~ h.p., com-a-lona,
page door op1111er, air tools. several hand tools, drills.
bartd saw. 5000 watt aannlor, disc pinder, hydraulic
jack. Cmtsman sander. 2 ton cable hoist. lawn waaon.
nuts &amp; boHs. drill bits, electrical supplies. plumbing SUJ)plies. heavy duty ext. cord. several tools and accessories
too numerous to mention.
MISCELANEOUS: Satellite dish. 2 squares while vinyl
siding, railroad jacks. some rurnilure. much more.
GUNS: Taurus 357 mac. Rem. 870 winemaslerw/dears·
layer bmal. 22 pistol w/inhrhanpble cyls.
VEHICLES &amp; FARM EQUIP.: 1978 Jaep Cherohe. 1940
Dodae trucks (reslorabie, no en&amp;ine). grain bed, corn
pider, Int. hay baler. 5' pull disc.
This sale has many miscellaneous items not listed !I
Sale will be outdoors . Bring your lawn chairs!!

OWNER: JERRY COLLEY
LESLIE A. LEMLEY, AUCTIONEER
614-367-0171

licensed &amp; Bonded in favor of St. or Ohio
Cash/ Check with proper ID
Concession Available
"Not responsible lor accidents or loss or property."
Flea market will bt open next door to sale.

r oe-;

ARMY:
BE ALL·YOU
CAN BE:
h.
J •••
~- .~

PUBLIC AUCTION

no'''" llran UO p.m. on ~""sl I. 1990 tn lht oHico ol:

SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1990

Joyce Shon1. Personnel Officer

10:00 A.M.

Atll qencr on Ali• I District 7. Inc
P.O. 801 978, Univorsily ol Rio Grandt

AT STEWARTS GUN &amp; GIFT SHOP
SMITH RD .. RUTLAND, OH.

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

Some of our most successful
Sales Representatives
had never "sold.. before!

PUBLIC AUCTION

Some of our most accomplished representatives
are ••·teachers. administrators. personnel people
. many of whom never thought of themselves in
a sales career. Maybe It is the uniqueness of our
·product" that changed their minds.
If you are an assertive. Independent. ambitious lndl·
vidual who ca n talk easily with business owners. you
may be on your way to a rewarolng career with the
US. Chamber of Commerce as a Membership Sales
Representative lor the marllet area of \MJOD
COUNTY. WV and SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.
This rewaroing and demanding position Includes:
r-J Complttl traiDing In tiM field
n ExcaiiHIIMriiiHI piCIIIgllnclulllntlllfl IIIIUI'
1nce, hNIIII lftiUnnce, 1... Wlllllt plln 1ncl

Mrs. DaYis is 92 yt~n of 111 and no lonear ablelo
stay alone. So will sell the followina .. Locate~ approx. 2~ lliles lroni Rulland to lan&amp;SYtlle, Ohto on
St. Rt. 124, taka Co. Rd. 10 Oellar Rd. approx. 4Y•
Miles. Watch for sllu
"AIITIQUE liR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
E.a~y 1900's wicker blby buggy makes into slloller !good
sh&amp;pe), stepblck chest. blanket chest, square stand. vtc·
1rola, hall lree, 2 htlh sinllle beds. wood wash tub stand,
clothes rack &amp; k~chen table. wood krtchen cabmet w/flour
btn, library table. chatr metal bed. leather ticks, Demaski
sewtn' machine tn oak cabinet, buffet. o~ lamp. 1939-1940
Worlds Fatr bottle, old l&amp;ddybear. fiat irons. homemade
stand, Ohver Steel Corp. wood lxu . wood ktchen table
wlmetal top &amp; 3 chlirt &amp; etc.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Fn~datre electric range, green frost proof Frt)lldatre rein·
gerator. _sectional couch, 2 pc. living room surte. maple table
&amp; 4 chatrs. maple des~ sllrtds, lloor lamp, collee &amp; end Ia·
bi&amp;S, bed complete. blby bed and cradle. B&amp;W TV. loot stool.
chest ol drawer~ quilt rack, damage sols frame sood. roll·a·
way beds, blankeb. bedspna4s. rues, fun. J)lctures, metal
dothes press, misc. diShes, pots &amp; pant
OWNER - IIRS. WORLEY DAVIS
OAII SIIITH-AUCTIOIIEER
51-61-1344
W. Va. 515

SATURDAY, AUG.4, 1990
10:00 A.M.

ta $50.000 (Some experienced employees earn
substantially hlgher.l
For consideration and more Information. send your
resume to:U.S. Clwnllor llfCeauMrcl. Mr. W.,...
Duncu, DlsVtct Ma....., I S.mlnot. .-..,

Huntington, WV 25705.

·U.S. Chamber ~~')
of Commerce ~

614-192-7:101

'CAl PEl"
1974 $.. CJIIt CIIII.. IP. Je1111 fllapl, CIW. ..
Cash
PositiVI ID
LIHidi ~ lellt Jilt .....
"IIIII 111,_11111 I• lccllftrllt or USI oll'rlpal(

Su~llloHr

Conatluetlon •
N1n111• l'llp-.

PUBLIC AUCTION

oonunUDicallon oyotemL

.....

vHatlon-··

Congrll1ulatlo111 to
Brand for being
overall ~nlliat In the
MlltAmeran

SATURDAYS 7 P.M.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
PARTIAL LIST: Mchen cupboard, chtmney cupboard, I&gt;
brary tabl~ dresser, chest, pressed back chairs and rocker,
magazine rack. Buster Brown sign, pottery marked Red
Wtng, old bottles (including Gallipolis, Ohio medtcine botllel,
and lots more.
Consignments will be taken from 1·6 P.ll. on
Saturday or call for other days.
AUCTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC-614-388·9370
Bookln&amp; summer and fail auctions. Cali for details.
Ucensed and Bonded 13 Yaars
CLOSED AUGUST 18th FOR VACATION
REOPEN 25th

PUBLIC AUCTION

IMtr ::'.f.';.IIDd- or

o nnt year aM'IIIngs a11au111 ,.,.. '""" szs.ooo

CHANNEL MARDI
CONDOMINIUMS

JACKSON ST., VINTON , OH.

ml&lt;rr&gt;eiedrmlao, or

!10, Munt ngton, WV 2a ru2 or

Look Who's 40

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

U yttrfre bl&amp;lt-tecll

Comrnorolot ~n . _

8

h••
Mo111 &amp; D..

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Terms : Cash or Check with Proper 1.0.
lunch

Happy Ada

Blrthdat Oret
We
'loa

In

llo8ohon

eu 1.s;eeao

DUTIES INClUDE: Implement, odmlnisltr, ond oonitor lht
ltdiclid PASSPORT prop~m In lht count!" of ~dims. Brown.
Gallta. Hichlond. Jackson. Llwuoo. Plko. Roso. Scioto and Vtn ·
ton: diroct~ supervise PASSPORT s!JII: proporo Ar,. Aaoncr oo
~·~ Oislricl7 PASSPORT policiH ond proceduros. mndords ol
QUIIity assur~nee

ooiiCiion
ol l&gt;o""""'
molol ooblnolo,
hood130
ond up ta 11111.110 doro """' u
ouh wHh opprvvod crodiL 3 mi.
out BUiovilll Rd. ()pan II A.M.ta
I P.ll. lion, lhru Bot. Coli 814-

Aoom11 lor rent - wtek or monlh.

Full -tim• position in ntw community-bned c•• procram prowidin&amp; in-home services to ltdiCihl--lliJiblt seni01 citizens.

systems.

138 I king tromaU:SO. Oood

Slontna 11 $12011no. 0o111o !Ioiii.

Upper Rlvor Rd. IM-4454140.

Help Wanted

n. Bod
Baby.......
- - 138
•
8.
Qulin

D

11

&amp;114417.

44

E

Rooms

HOME CARE DIRECTOR

care. operational

ond

Apart~lnll~oportFrom
Unlwr1lollld2-- $111l.
CIIH 114-812-111t E0H.
Nico, oloon. 'o'iriOiii ond rol. ,.
~- No polo. &amp;14-11112· Niooly F - Homo
In oily. CA. far 1 - . Rol. lOop R...... 114Why Poy Ronl? Hornoo lor $1.001

Cono

1t

R-

Oroel- living. 1 ond 2 bodoport"*"" ol ¥!logo

Eat. R1241, Including
Sotond
.
llonor

42 Mobile Homes

8

llJ.Irm

2br1 tral~ w/aJr concl, oall 114-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Loti

Mnk r11~, forealoiura, tu
I
pr&lt;&gt;poriiiO. 1.....

:=

---..:..:~....;..:__ _

sincere

thank• to all who assisted in any way
during the illness
and death of our
loved one. For your
preyera end expreallon• of tympathy,
carde. floral offer·
inga, food, to Dr.
Vallee and his staff,
to Rev. Joe for his
comforting words
and to the Waugh ·
Halley- Wood Funeral Hom a for their ef-

2---AII

80cond ond Plno, GoiiPolio.
StoVI and refrigerator. Watar
pto.-tdtd. No ..-. Ret..nc•

" An Equll Emloyment Opportunity Employtr"

r--------t
preas our

2 BR. Apt. For Aoni, Nleo, -

Rio Grande. Ohio 45674

from major lhopplna .,.. ·•·
Buy for your own or aa 1n 1.-..
Ylllment. Curftn11y bllna ranted. priced lo alii. 128,500. 6M3N4441 aak for Jaft.

5

Rentals

SPECIAL Foclory lo ,....11tt 2 41 Houses for Rent
' or 3 bldroom14J70 modele 'at
, lho unbollovol&gt;lo prlco ol 3 BR. howe, Grwn School Dl•
$12,1100 dollvorod oncl oat up. lrlel. AI. 14_111~ milo lrom 1-.
AI•I:OOI-'Coll1.f00.-&amp; lor -Ill.
2
to S BR, 1 bolh, - l i d 8
'Mobil Homoo lor on 3
· quonoro oero. 1700.2 llobll mlnut• from loom. t30111mo.
Homoo lor Ront Chll- 114-37N1121 or

12 scree btauttful, vlaw to Rod.

Available. 614o448-

~- - - -

:IOH75.f347 "' 175-

Nice Starter Horne, 2br, 1 bath,

roome a

illlh

wllh oky llglll, 21u11 bolt., muot
.to_ . opproclllo, 121.000

•

btth, 814--M6-24et.

Mxl'O Troltor 3BA. 2

la .. yette Garden Cent•

llpoll8.4al J1ekaon

=-

-

lal $18,!00 IIM-44e-llll24

ClrciM

come.

diiCOrlted In mauv. and llahl
gfltn. Large ciR:ular bath fub

homo CGnllrucllan on
Aoybum R•d. Povod nlld,
county
wat•.
.....aoable
ra.trietlana lntonnat6on mallad
on r.qu•t. 304-615-5253, Jottn
D. O.rlac:h, no 81ng.._ldt

Hou• In Northup, 8

Apartment
49
For Lease
for
Rent
Untumlohod
...............
_ __:.:;...:..:.;,.:;.._ _ _ 1 ............ s-., lloor, """"'

dllirtbls, but not 11nnllal ta
WI will train. Outlet will conalwl
or 111\atlng turgaone In al
BJpectl of pelllnl cara In
hospl1l lilting, •pprox. 50
ho1.1r1 per waai. Ere. S1l1ry &amp;
BenafH p.ack•g• whh reloc•llon
anlltJnct. send rnuma : Connil Sllgerl2828 Flrll Ave..L.Suha

per or a search lor a possible maJor·· =o::-o,...-~·s.=,,-.-=o-;
.. AI"'."'I:::4
2 :-::2"'t"'" call 304-62WM5.
suit fit' The answer is that their weak· mi. ol&gt;avo Southom High SOhool PUny Truok Slop AI. 3!1 Ia now
(Old Flohor ~~ Blond I&lt;Coptlng oppliellion lor cook·
ness will likely be in a major suit. So rooldonco. ounto, · plll"'!•1 Wlhi"Htl, cal( 10 a.m. • &amp; p.m.
West attacked spades In today's deal. btonkolo, ole. Aug. 1-2~ . ..., 30C·757..Q35l
West reasoned that his side was deall p.m.
Sataa Dlbh Man1ger
two top tricks in diamond! and that - - - - - - - - NHd a local pe...an to eontld
the best chance for success would be 8
Public Sale
ntabU1t.d c:•toman wtthln a
to find Eut with lencth and strength
&amp; Auction
60--mlta l'llclua to coUact lnin spades.
aun~nca premluma on a regular
Ric~ Pol,_ Auction Company dtbll raute. Mat.. rour own
There wu a flaw in this reasoning. now
booking luctlona, Ill· woftdng hour'l, :zo..tO PM WMk.
If South's jump to three no-trump perienct
makM the dlrt.r-.nce. Eam 1175-t300 or more ptr
showed 1$ or more hlgb-nrd points, Liconlod Oh~ Kentucky, Woot • • In oommlt•ona whh lull
c o = benlllta. Mult bl
Eut'sstrenglll would be very limited. Vlrglnio, 304-r r&gt;o5185.
,.,
btl, mltuN, own aer,
In that case West's best chance would 1 card of Thanks
have 1 llabea work btc:kgroundl
be to hope that the opponento had _ _ _ _ _,_,___ be llcenM and bondtbta. W1 wt
train. For confidential Informaerred by settling ID no-lrump and that
tion piNH CIM:814-431-8211t
East held live or more diamonds. The
Uond•y only 10 a.m.• e P."'EOE 11/F
king of diamond! lead wowd he a win·
We wish to e•ner, provided West continued with tbe

concerned. Condlllons are vary IIVOf·
able lor pulhng oH oom81hlng biQ.
PISCES Cfob. 20-MMch 20) Spare no
ellorts today in trying lo craale good
will wllh people wllh Whom you have
commercial arrangements pending.
The proper type ol PR lnvealmonls wiN
yield dividends. ·
ARIEl IMMel! 21·April1t) Condlltona
In general ore alrlfle unu-lodlll' and - and the 10. But a low diamond
at llf11 glance It rnlghl appear you are away from the A·IO after that opening
tuckier for anolher than you are tor lead would block the suit.
There Is a happy ending Lo this sloyoursell. In lhe llnal analylit, the rery. Although West's spade opening
V&lt;II'M may be true.
TAURUI (April ~ 20) You mlghl lead aplnat the no-trump pme let dehove a chance lodlll' 10 lake a relatively clarer make 12 tricks, the came wu
small oppor1unl1y and tranelorm 11 Into team-of-lour, and defender West's
IOmethlng meaningful. However, 11 teammates were still Lo be heard
won't be eccompllshed unaldad.
from. In the olber room, In a more BCi·
GEMINI
21.,une 20) There could entitle blddln&amp; oequence, North
be a market today lor something you reached Ill clubs, a makable contract
have or do lhal does not provide your
primary source ol Income. 00&lt;1'1 be as long u Ute defenden' trfllllps dividgreedy, bul on lhe other hand, don't ed 3-1. ~Ia! A We pickup for the
team Mlllfllr Well'llnept clloke ol
give IWay llle " ' " lor lnle.
npenlqleld
...u.t tine ao-lnlmp.
CANCIR (.lwla 21....., Ill l.tdy LUCie
wiN be a willing ally loday Ill eN ut ...
.~-.,....,.)
-~---·
·~•c.Ma-'(rnllr. .nti flllhtMr.
- - you ........!ding your
beat ellotU. Don't lit Clllllcull •oe11av
OrnM
~).,- · · - rtl
• I, .
. . .,.,,
ora I n - • you. 11o1 up your....._
and give II your all.

WOlFF TANNING BEDS

61448&amp;-3305.
houoo In Konoull". Small
n- 31&gt;r,
fenced yard, NIY lo c:ara lor,

perilnCll necesury. For •pplleetlon tnrormallon (219.862·

For Sail. 8 roam houH and 2
bedroom lnllar, Laadlng CNak.
Wattr, gae hul on ona JCII ol
land fn HerrltonvUIII, Ohio.
$23,0011. 814-l'l2·2t&amp;l.

ovollol&gt;lo.
Call 11W41-111111 I p.m.

-liz .,.._,

_.., 7:00.

qulrod. 614-&amp;113-61131

l.ol
0...,.0
- ·
Rood.far112 -.... mil.
Eloy -

lo Wlllr lftd electric. Cabfa aiM

44

""""lon.IIOMlNIM
· 11188 Pntlllp, MllOL.. :ll&gt;r, 2
a
Aottlan, 1 oero 1o1o. s
' belt., .. - · ~ ..17.
011110 Golllpollo Looilo,
pold. 8horo boiiL
pullllo wot•, no -rlellono,
' For So.. t yr. old 14x:N
91110. 911-.. Avo. mobllo homo buullluily

miiH to Meigs High ~­
Rafwtnce~ ai1d dtpoel ,..

112 baths, cenfral hilt and ·~
baaemenl, 1H1ched ga111gt. ~
minute• tram A.lhlina 1·V2

coK8M-446o3S42814-44MS34

the orfarlng.

tiBJ. 141111 Control olr. 304-271-

lleOollorlp.m.

24&amp;-96111.
Country Soiling. 4 bodroomo, 2-

- l o r Solo In C-lro o....

INOTJCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r.oommends that you do bua~
n... whh people you know1 1nd
NOT to lind money throOUgln the
mt/1 unlll you have lnV111lgattd

cooking r.quln~d. Exparlance
1nd referenc:11 p,.ftrred. Send
re1ume to Moody, 403 Fourth
Ava, Ge:lllpotls.

NurM Pract~ Two Cardlo-

ence can still be ulillzed to your advantage loday Instead of try•ng to call the
shots. be extra supportive of the one
who does

paid ror t•klng • .,. ~nap­
ehotal ltoO per 100. Wrtle
PA.SE· 31H, 161 South Un-co.lnway, North Aurora, n. toa-42.

1·3. Shin..-.. 4 miiM SR
143. Old bollln, cHd 78 rec:ords.
8o00-4 o00.

Augull t,2,l. Clothla, boya,
glrfi, lduha, ch1l,.., 2 h11ler
boards, oddllanda. 301'111 Nefce

Business
Opportunfly

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

. 48 112 A. 8 room brtak r1nch
3brh Lr/Fp, Don/Fp, Kc, Br, t tiii
bot lui ltniohod boNmenlllp,
lull oil Frlottoehod - .
alngll aftaohad Or/opener, plus
2 cor ll"rogo/'llork ohap. a torgo
bama :and crib shld. 314 mL cut

Financing
8382.

a..

Vooeulor

•ric .,aem, • uttntt•
dlohJI on 43.8 ocroo far

an, eorpot, In '""" 0.....

Mlnsgemtnt : New
Mlnapment, clean roorna, low
....... 8~2501.

11:111 EJt.()tj1J8 aoOO.m-8:00pm.
Thank you.

' - - - - - - - - - - - - . 11Aug.

Financial

23

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

+2

baHboard htttln• 3 c.- delaeh

g1ragt wldoor openera. county

r,•rt·

asaembly. E11y wor1l. at home.
No a.:perltnea ne.dad. ctll 1·
1104-641-7178 Ext 5.214. Open 24
houra, lnc:ludlna Sundly.

Law

I--Zuap~n
What conclusion does a "·fender
u-.::
Large afamilyytrd salt.
draw when the opponents quickly
Hotr- Rood. Auguot 1-4. Loto

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 211 A.,,.

nMded.

whh e:~~perlenc:e to eiNn
nmge, mora. my homa on a wetkly basle.
VPII, Muon, 614-092-7711.

Pa ..

sibil•ty you mtght start out Wtlh rather

conservaltve obtettives today . bul then

behind

eorpotlng lhrougho,.. Elletrie

Doll_.

1·91a-e22-5e5.l, Ell. 1244, oortoo. Monthly poy-.to

Houstc..lnlng, washing,

cludll ouat0111 ntH. eolld oak
buln In bookclu. Dining room,
buiH In kHchtn wtth range, ilrga
laundry room. 4br rns.auttna
oppro1. 12w14, 10&gt;112, tow14:l
9x40. 2 blthrooma, wall to wal

Magk: 'tNrt Day Cara Ctnter For Sale: Home In good condireasonable,
ct.pind1b~, tion. 10 mlnutll trOm Mare-wllcanu, quallly child care. Mon- vlllo or Oolllpoh, -IIIIo lond
doy lhru Frldoy, 1:30 till &amp;:30. oontract. 114--251-18&amp;5..
For mort Information or to
GOVERNMENT HOMES lrom
regltter 304-e7J.5847.
$1.00 IU Ropal~ FO&lt;oelooureo,
Tu
Mitt Paull'a Dey Cara Cenlar. Aopoo
Sala, affordable, ohlldcare. M-F Pr-~loo. Now Nftlng your
8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Age• 2 -1o. .,... Caii1-N-73&amp;-137S:Ezl. HBtfora, after tchool. Drop-Ina OH-02 current tlst:e. 24 hra.
wtlcoml. 61-4-+t&amp;-6224.
HOOSE $1.00. No Mort- ta
llolhor, Daughlor, bobysllllng worry 1boul, or even I llf'lilll•
Arvlce, If ona can'1 do 11, th1 monthly par,menl. Full prlcl 0011
dollar. lht a known progra~
otr.r one can. Full-ttrM or
lim• an~ ahlft, conven\enl oc•· gst thl htclla. Amaztna JJU·lion, oxporloneod, 11~ 446 ooes ,.....age IIVINII lleia\11. Ca•
ehar 3p.m.
anytlmt 1·to0-451·.S87.

EKI. Y456.2.

Otpartmenl of EductUon TMehlng Certlllc:ele, 1nd h1ve or bt
wnllng •nd lbla to obtlln Ohio
G•rag• S.la: Fot 3 d1yt. July 31, Dtptrtmtnl
of
Educstlon
and Augu.t 1 &amp; 2. 105 Kln.an M.D.P.R. Certification. Annual
1t1rllng ulary for B.D. Dearn,
Drive.

SOUTH

SouU

2o00

p.m. Saturday.

+II

• Q762

18 Wantedlo Do
,.,...,-,--=--=---:--:-

EARN MONEY Roodlng Boolcol
lncom• potential. Will .....,." In my """"· Days
Now hlrlng. (II 80H87.f000 only 114 us 8682.

&amp;nclucUng Sat. and Sun.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Sunder, July 28, 1 -

management,
Airline trtvel, NurMa A.kl, Trtetor Tralltr training, Anldtnt!Homl atudy. Financial •Ide
avalllble II qualified. Placll'nlnt
auhdanc.. County School• local oftlcl 2307 Camden Ave,
Patbr-Murg, WV 1-600 848 841t

130,000/yr.

Excatllnt

,,

Schools &amp;
Instruction

Bookh•ping!Aceou nlln g,

=

a:~~jMtri•nc•

A-fnlm• tor 11ft br OWMr, 2200
oquoro locl111vlng room w/oprlol
wtelrcue. 111 Df"lpllce, 1180 ln-

By Ownor. IIN.. IIul ......... 001·
ling for bMroom for ~h, 17
ac:rn. pool, pond. tne,ooo. 814·

Hotel/Mot~

Seeking experienced drtv«a
(man or women) who Wlnt to
11ay long tenn whh • stable fut
growing company In lht Zln ....
villa &amp; Ohio SUITOUndlng ll'lfll.

homl. No

Yard Sale

7

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

15

$30,000/yr. Income potent11l.
Now hiring. (1) 805-687-6000

George•

~· Clll 814-11112-7111 0&lt; 14U-

AI.S88 10 Cono IIIII Rood. Homo
'"CPfOlllmataly 2 v.J: to 3 mll11
on .tt. In Ohio Call: 1-614-oM8&amp;611, In WHt Vlrgtnla Calf: 1304-344-5838 after Sp.m.

DRIVERS
KINGWAY
TRANSPORT,
ZANESVILLE, OH

Call

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Nuralng

L.o.t : Female R8d Bone Dog, in
CrNk,

T-nohlp Rood 27. flrot raodlo

$8S,uw. Home on 13 ac... tor
$75,000. 30.8 aoret an~ available
wJpurc;hall of homllar an addlllonol $10,000. loeolod AU, Go~
~polla. Directions : Tiki Rl.35 to

lolt:
Female
Beagle,
bla&lt;:IVWhhe 21
mos. old,
Pltct'lford Road Perry Twp. July
161h. &amp;M-371-2578.

McCully RoM a rnl 614·4460201.
L.o.t :Sma/1 size female Beagle.
Black-whll•brown In color.

1 ""'"" 1 112 botho, _ . . . ,
living but cloee IO Melp SahDoa
and town. AI. 3S4 lana,

w.. .-.

EARN MONEY RN&lt;Ing boob!
S30,0001yr. tncorne potentl•l.
Now hiring. 111 806..a7-IOOO
Ext Y·t0181J.
21
EARN MONEY Roodlng bookol

Mill

All chonlo ond body mull TE MS OF SALE
meet or exceed all State.
CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK. Aug.
.
Federal, end Gellia Countv July
_
Boerd of MR / 00 Speciflca-

Lost &amp; Found

.,..-----:-;:,..-...,.---.,.
Calico eat lo.t In Porterbrook

the hlghe11 bidder "u is"
without any expressed or
. plied warren ty . Th'II veh.I ·
..
cle may be Jean at the
Jecklon Pike Office of the
Ohio Velley Bank Company
up to the date and time of

Ohto

Giveaway

12 WMk old, white klnen . Vary

Co01p1ny, 420 Third Avenue,
Gllipolil. Ohio wtl offer for

~~~~e

Help Wanted

Spear~,

Public Notice

Commlu~onert at the Oallll
County Court Hou•. Locutt

11

AVON I AR Aroao I Shirley

Singles lnformttlon and a dig-

lor col·

Compl.tt hoUIIhold or EaiiiHI
Any type of tumHure, •P" Rotor!. 114-tll2.f488.
pllancea, anllqua'tL etc. Al10 POSTAL JOBS $18,392-$117,
appralsalavlllable. tn4-245-5'152. 1251yr. Now hiring. Call t1) ~
Wanted to buy- trumpet, 304- 687-tOOO Ext. P-4582 for c:ufTint
liol.
675-5538.
Qualified
r~gl••rld
nurM
noodod lor 62 bod loelllly (long
term) localed In Point Pl1111nf.
WV. Admlnllfratlve akUia and
woril eape:rtence naceuary.
Employment Services Competitive
1111ry and bsnefhl.
Canted
Fnmk
Topping,
Carahavtn of Point ~Hinl.

Pomeroy, Ohio. 6t4-1192.feo&amp;.

NOTICE TO BIODERS

Street.

PorHimo ornploymonl

Hill, O.O.N. Amtrlctrt-Pomero'J,
38759
Rocksprings
fl .,

JUlY 20, 29, 1990

Public Notice

e.

1990. The bid closing
date it 11 :00 a.m., Augult

Rftfardl 2 JCPtnny Wlckor
Rocking Chairs. Stolen o"
porch. -541 Fourth Avt, Chel,.
can bt ldlntifled. 61,....46-7325.

Public Notice

tge. The coverage ia to become effective September

31 Homes lor 5ala

lege etudenl 11 -.curlty guard.
WTII work around clau
oeheduio. C.U Royal Oolt

oppraloalovollobio. 614-2411-81112.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

614-992-21 S6

Help Wanled

11

Wanted to Buy

•. 32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Com~.tt

Classifie

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va .

1980

11

Direclions: From Pomeroy, Ohio, lake S.R. I24 West
lo Rutland, in Rutland take Co. 3 (new Lima Rd .), ap·
prox. 2~ mi. Turn nght onto Smith Rd . approx. 'h Mi .
lo shop . Signs will be posted .
Mr. Stewart is ''NOT" goina out of business. He is, htr
wever, selling oullhe &amp;ill shop to allow lor enlaraement or
lht&amp;un shop to better sOlVe lht publie There hu bten a
consip11ent of approx. 80 very high quality guns. none or
which belong lo Mr. S1e111rt, entered in lhe sale.
GIFT SHOP &amp; RELATED ITEMS: Asst ol candles, candle
rrngs. candle light• po1 pourr assts. lois ol biSque &amp; por ce·
lam ttems, churns. basket• pressoo flower trames, touch
lamps, lois ol brass preces. punched ltn rtems, wooden polat o btn elc . very mce brass &amp; glass shell unrt &gt; conctele
btrd bal~ contl'&lt;!e yard ornament&gt; Van111ard 2:0 Sat~ 2N.
CR. programmabl e model 280 cash registers.
AUTO &amp; TRAVEL TRAILER: 1977 Olds Della 98. 1977 Ptowler
Jrav eltrailer 24' sleeps 6. sell contamerl. very good condil ron
&amp; clean.
BACKHOE &amp; TRUCK: Davod Brown 990 w/ Waon-Ray ho e.
good rubber. runs &amp;works good , 1973 C-60 Chevrolet dump
truck w/new engine. 482 trans , almost new Gallion bed.
FURNITURE: Oak srdeboard, plallorm rocker, church pew,
htgh chatr, end lables, Eureka upnght sweeper, Hoover
upnglil sweeper, plu s olher misc. lurnrture
GUNS: Approx. BO guns to tnclude rilles, shotguns &amp;ptslols.
Some ot whtch are Ru ger Red Hawk 44 mag.. Ruger Black
Hawk 44 mag., Taurus 9mm. Ruger mag. w/10' bbl., S&amp;W K·
22 22 cal.. 3 M.A.S. military match rrftes, T/C muuleloader
~5245 54 cal . several II C. Haw kin, CVA, and lyman muute
loaders old rate muzzleloader made m Piqua, Ohm, several
math PPC's to indude 1w/cu stom WichtlaAclion &amp; Hart bbl.
6 mm .. others with Hart barrels, several Winchester Mod.
69's I very rare early model. Shrlo sharps 45/120 ~2614,
Remmingtoo 87012 ga_. tar gel Brownong Mod. 200 12 ga.
trap, Winchester Mod 70 30,06 target. Winchester Mod.
Mod. 70 308, Wards Western Freid dbt. bbl. 12 ga. N.R. DaviS
dbl. BBL . 12 ga., Wickliffe Mod Mod. 70 308, Wards Western
Freid dbl. bbl. 12 ga N.R. Davis dbl. bbl. 12 ga., Wtckhffe
Mud. 76 22/250. Custom SAKO w/Hart bbl., 6mm. PPC Sav·
age Mod 24 V.A. 222120 O&amp;U, Coli Officers Spetial Match
38 cal., several scopes includmgLymon, T/C, Weaver, &amp;laa·
pold.
For colltlltll pn Nttln&amp; fltl frw to ull AIICIIoaiW. AU
ftdanl &amp; Stat1l•1 will apply, G• IO 1111 111:80 Pl.
Lunch
Cnh
Pos. I.D.

OIIIERS: TOM &amp; BIU STEWART &amp; OTHERS
AUCTIOIIEER:COL I. KmH IOI.D£11
614-742-2041
Uc. Ia Olllo lUll I I.W. 110

Sunday
8

Public sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

•.

THURSDAY EVE., AUG. 2, 1990
5:30P.M.
Leaving state so will sell the following items. :
Located 733 Beech Sl., Middleport, Ohio. ;·
Watch for signs.
·
"HOUSEHOLD"
Couch &amp; loveseal, 3 p~ coffee &amp; end tables, Singer wood
bed, ntee Amanal6 Energy Saver refrigerator, Amana heavy
duty washer &amp; dryer, bunk beds, dresser, chest of drawer~
beds, gun cas~ Rad,...nge microwave, stereo &amp; entellain·
menl center. misc. pot~ pans, dishes, Boston rocker, large
cowboy &amp; cowgirl statues &amp; elc.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Cherry hutch, vantty dresser, chest or drawers, Johnson
Bros. dishes, green &amp; pink depresston, ruby &amp;clear &amp;)asses,
butter dish, crackle glass plates, iron money bank. glass
shoe. hen on nest &amp; misc. dishes.
"MISC.
2 pc. porch lounge &amp;chair, bicycle, scooter, wishtngwall,
tan &amp; etc.

OWNER - FLOYD REYNOLDS
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER

57-68 -1 344
W.Va. 515
Cash
Positive I.D.
Rafresltaltnls
"Not Responsible lor Accidents or loss of Property"

ffiaJ®91Dffi~

Saturday, August 4 -10:00 a.m. :
Located at1302 Hogg Street Point Pleasant, WV,
behind the new Go-Mart Store. Selling the elta18
of Carl Herbert &amp; Beulah Knapp at public auction
to the highest bidder.
FURNITURE
Frigrdaire 2 door relrigoralor lreemr (lrool iree), w1cto1r
chair, end lllbles, coffee lllble, Zenilh ClOior TV, hallOCk,
couch and char, sola bod and chair, melltl porch glldar enctrocl&lt;er. May1ag wringer washer, taunay lllble, u~ll1y table.
clothes hamper, 3 pc. complele -""'" &amp;Uilo, aw1w1
rocl&lt;er. love &amp;eal wooden 3 shell comer aland, blgracllntr.
whal-nol shell, Iron akineiS, polo, pans, and glau """""pie plates, truh cans, eleclnc wall dod&lt;, oloclria grll,
eleclric si&lt;illo~ lans, Hoovervacu.... oloclrlcbtooom, tampa.
lramedwallpalnbngs,lhrowrugs,dlshel,walmtnor,enamei
coaled disphans. wash tubs, shopping can, c&amp;Ming lara.
elecllic bocl&lt; massager, bedspreads, couch c:overtt d ·
cases, Avon bottles and much mora.

·

ANnQUES
Telepllone "' go&amp; Sip soa~ l8ble wllh magazine rack oltached, writing desll wilh leather irrlayed &amp;Uiface, 2 oak
tables, 11arge&amp; 1smoU,woodenironingboord,wlllmountad
oil lamp, Coca Cola set'Jing Ira)' . cuspidor, wash board,3pc.
bedroom suile (vary rice I, mlkaocl&lt;, raootdllromlalll30"
10 early 40's . B&amp;O wood rocker lrom Point Plaaa.t dallOI.
hananade lbilies, quilts, comlonero,alghans, green jln, 3
gal. glass candy jar.
TOOLS
6' stepladder, saw horses, 2garden hoses, woodeniDOibox .
wilh drawer, hand btace, polo axa,
alodgel, r•ltaa. ·
along with many more items too numeroua to mention.
·

'"""*·

AUCTIONEER: COL. OSCAR E. CLICK
754-91 &amp; Bonded In

wv

EXECUTRIX: Zelda

Phone: 895-3430

Knapp

St111t1110n1 dly ollllo by cosh or choclt w1t1r ,._.,

H&lt;ll . . _....

tor_,. or lola ordafn9d ..,..,. '

PUBLIC AUCTION
Complete Conlents Of The Late

MICHAEL J. FRY WELDING SHOP
Localed in the small Gallia County Vlllap of Cheshire. Ohio alii East Main St. Turn off Route 7 althe
stop light in Cheshire (toward river) and follow 1
block to sale . Cheshire is located north ol Gallipolis
and south of Pomeroy, Ohio .
·

SATURDAY, AUGUST 4. 1990
AT 10:00 A.M.
Mr. Fry was well known lor his industrial Wtldin&amp;
and rebuilding business. Thts sale repruenls1ha
antire welding shop inventory' Apartialllstinc fol·
lows:
SHOP CRANE: Elw~I- Parker m ne and plallorm hH w/4cyhnder gasolin e e ng~ ne

INDUSTRIAL PRESSES: Lemp co 200 too press 1565-P)
w/loolmg convey'" system IIOV Power11aH Std. 22-speed
wonch; 75 ton hydraulic uprrght press w/electrtc I Y, hp motor. 110 v
.
INDUSTIRAL &amp; PORTABLE WELDERS: Ltncolnweld LAF -5
arc weld er w/ automaltc wire head. 36'·1beam c•ner and
36' !rough w/ track: lrn colnweld submerged arc wPidet
w/automalic toller and rdler reb utlder: J.Sureweld AC arc
welders; &lt;Mrller ACDC co mbtnalron welder~ portable weld·
mg outfit wrth Smtih gauges/Hams larches and cart.
AIR COMPRESSOR: Kelloiii 10-hp 200 lb . horoootalau
compressor w/ 1" hose
OVERHEAD CRANES: 2 Robbins 6-hp. overhud mnes.
INDUSTRIAL LATHES: lodge &amp; Shipley lO-hp metallalhe
w/3' lathe and toohng Another •nduslttal metallatheo, Fe·
deral
INDUSTRIAL SAWS: Beav et ptp e tooiiO·hp industrial cut·
off saw: Kalama1oo metal cullmg band saw.
HEAT TREATiNG FURNACE: Heat trestong lurnacew/leeds
&amp; Northup Mtrcomax conlr~ panel.
INDUSTRIAL GRINDERS, SURFACE MACHINES: IO·hp rol·
ler &amp; tdler grrnder w/hyd. I" hp vanableJpeed transm~5ton and 36" trough and tra ck. Durnon hyd. surfacer
w/ 12&lt;24 mill(n~rc chuck; Blanchard sur lace grmdmg ma·
hme w/el eclrtc magnetiC lable: Gostger kntlelsurlace
machrn e 3-hp stalionary gnnder: Standard l·hp. bench
grmder; Lempro Hp bench arrnder: Roatn 5-hp. lrtndtng
mach rn~ On ~ Keyseater key cutler.
SHOP TOOLS. SUPPLIES: 3-chatn hots!~ large industrial
Parker v•s~ Craftsman floor drrll press; )JOI'IIble Se.-s 100
amp battery charger; larp Kero. SPICe heller; 1.-ge poria·
ble e&lt; haust ian; )acks; portable gr&amp;aSe pump 1nd Clrl; large
tank parts washer; close_!lutl of aillype ballbewines; aboul
60 bo&lt;es assorted weidrng rod; 75-rcs. heavy ltmber critr
wor~ case new grindin1 disc; case o new weldinulove~ lot
ol gnndmg whe~s: new pins &amp; bushings lor Cue 450A
dozer: lol of nuts/bolls lor dozers &amp;misc. dozer )llrts; cable
come-a-tongs: large "C" clamp~ pipe wrenches; boomers;
heavy log chain~ large sue wrenches, sockets; sheivmz 2·
securlly light~ motor;; assorted heavy scrap metat 8-hp
Sers ridmg mower; much not listed!
INDUSTRIAL"STUL BUILDING SIDING: Over llO pes. or
IO 'tone stee_lpanel sectiOns lor steel buidtng (never used).
NOTE: ThiS isting ~ abbreviated, IOO'xlO'buUd*alull Can· ·
not ijst everythinJ Don'l know what may be uncovered. Sail .
wtll start 11 !DjlQ a.m. wrth lools and smllll shop ~ents.loiGI
cabinets arid stllfaae arMs which need deant!d out and un·
loaded. Many additiOntllems! 100a30' buidiniCOIIIplelllly
lull. Most ev&amp;rythin&amp;l·llhtst LARGE All DAY SAI:E!
Ttrms: Calh Daw of Stlt or Chtcl wMh posltln IO.tEIO-·
VAL: R1111oni wlllllt tt b1Jtn IIPflllt ... r!J'- IIU111ta
7-diJ rt1110111 parlod lro11 d.ll1 of 1111: Food anllillt.
OWNER: GLEIIIIA-1. FlY

POWER OF lmORNEY: HOIAIIJ •• 81111
AUCTIONEER: Oltii"OTnE IPPEIIAII
&amp; DEAIIIIACIIURI
Ollie o,--. P.O. lox .... !,_1111, 'OIIIIUUI,
1114) IIS·71H
I .
.
I
\

,
·
,

·

..

�Pig a D-4-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel
Household

Ohio-Point Plm '"

S©tt~N\-~t.tf~'

THAT DAILY
PUZZLER

Goods

- - - - - - - Ed;tod by CLAY R.

0
lllplo · - • 80. ....... $200.
IM-44f.'l367ollorllp.m.

~ ~r"'Oie wo rd s

Pr tnl

~och ·n ,fs l,ne

of ~uores _

--· ......
-Q1&amp;u

cl••

King •lu watel'bld wllh book
hoodbolfd, bumper podl,
hliaw, and ,.....ger. 114-256-

3nf Y..r AM..W 8aitll Maynud
Oulllo &amp; Flbrico'-Woot of Rod-

=

l US T N I
J

0 NE R S I

Plcllerul Fumlturt~
"SDKIll"
,.. owned IJupreme Man,....
I Feundallon S«a. T'frin• $99,
Full tnt. 112 milt OUI Jenicho
RO. Pl. .. Wv, ~70·
MIO.

0 R0 CN0

PtCKENS RJRNrTURE
NoWI\Jud
""' hold tumhhlng. 112 mi.
Jentcho Rd. Pl Pl.... nl, WV,
ooii30WJ&amp;.-.

I 1 I' I I

·--

RENT TO OWN

The woman had JUSt
finished writing checks to pay
her charge card bills. "I don't
know why they call it instant
credit," she sighed, "when in
reality it's -----------!"

C A T HT H

• pc. wood (JfOUP $14 .01 ~r
...._ 4 ,a.t•r bldroom •ull•.
oontplltl tiS.20 PM WMk,
dll'lllhe wtth 4 ctudrw Sl50 per
...._ Magic CtW M cu. ft .
Alf'rlalrllor 112.811 p.r wtH. 15
ou. ft. InNer, S10.10 per
...... VJ'RII furnHurL Rt. 141, 4
, . . oil RL 7-c.nl~n.~ry.Open 1

I1I

l 0 VE R T

cloyo•-

I I I'

1n

Root 6 houM palnllngl ohlnglng ~. howe r.pa r. 114-

mborwhlp,

1

I

0

? . 2q

Comp le re rke chuckle quored
by '"''"9 in the mrssrng words

L._J..-...J.I.-...J...--'·---'· __,J, y ou develop from

~ep No. 3 below.

a p.m.

810rllng

..

__--.,._

Pomwoy-Midclapott-G,..;Allil. Ohio-Point Plaesant. W.Va.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

56

Musical
Instruments

Pets lor Sale

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

.,._,. ............ a • a...

lVI

achiiMI ..00 2 -.ctrlc

heatln,"m ~~~eh:'AJI;Uke Newt

Clll :J04-U6.3422.

B'g a Ndroom t.nn home bultl Moving s.le: M•l S.ll Allll'wo
on your tal $3a,HII &amp; up. 814- complltt bunk bH Hts, one
881·7311.
new bedtoom suite comptete,
a,... Bed, full . . . headbolrd, complelt living room Nl comfoc:rlboard, framtr ' ..... 114- piMe dlnMite Mil, rWJna •
qulpmonl, pori- oo1or T.Y.,
38.,7610.
new, 10011, two hand gune, two
Cluranc. 9ale H..qunm• lllr cond nltendo tapM, clol"114 •4e em:
trlmmtra. 10% cw• co.t. Paint llcQ
PIUI, 30&amp;--tl~.
N•d•d cuttl~ to ltlf'l roMCouch I kw. . .t, ctblnte, bu- r.r E1111o Seoul proloot,
.t1r10 wHh Alrl!FII radHl, 8 fof pennanenl
II ~~""
track, rec~_d1 lampe I table -um304-07
oomblned, ;KM..f76.4&amp;41.
bod, dort. ,...
Dtthwuhtr, Kitchin Aid, txc. lllh, draw.a undemuth. 1xc.
eond, hii'VHI QOid In cokw, cond, 11W67.0500.
$150. 114-388-805).
Remington 170. 12 IJIUQI. Both
For ••1•. 6 plec• dining room blrrella. . . . lealhar allng and
de, Kenmore portable dlah- awtvele. Uke new. I~JIU-21'11.
walhk, 304-175-15768.
Sear'• 22 c~o~. ft. chHI tr.zer,
For Sal• Plano v.ry good cond, twin bedroom lUIIe, 12" tabfl
MOO, 30~7W822.
""!", I ft . I 7 0. al- lop
caiHnec. 304-111-nd' .nw 1
For Sale: 5 horN power toto p.m.
llllor, good eondlllon, coli 114- ;,Sna=pp:::,:-:rldl=ng:-:m:::o=w=orc-7.1475.::;;-,
.w6-04ll after 15
ceUng t.n $18., •ytag wringer
wuiW' $6CI., Rlnoll tube $20.
I"M-M8-2521.

FOR SALE

a.- .........

-f.

Hay &amp; Grain

Real Estate Gene111

Hay lor Sale. C1over I nmothy.
Round BalM In the Reid . 114-

246-6508

wllh mowing

Canary P.rslan,

tractor with 10" IINM'M'. l14-lt2a
7012 ••• 7 p.m.

Hlmlllytn kltt.na.

1h1r 7 p.m.

Warehotu ID&amp;IU, hind urt1, Fem.a. B•gle Dog, Reg'd,
dootl.~,;.lUG• Hystw Forlr: good ltock, l V2 4 y•ra old.

Utl.

~
2S5t.

Colt. ~. uc. m s~ia.
~NO. ~~ ~~~~~~==~
Fteh T1nk, 2413 Jacbon Aw-1 .

Point PIMunt, 304-G?S--2063, 10

WhiM unlfarm pant AUtll. New gal Ml up $14.81 •nd 10 gal
lftd uud. 8tul from 18-22 l/2. compltee 143.25.
Chup. l14-tt2...Stl2.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pal

Grooming. All brHde. All
lams Pel Food Dialer.

Building

BkJc\,

~.,.., wtn-

bridl. HWtr

- · ""'""' .... ctoudo
'""·
Rio Orllrtdo,
2AUI2t

"J'"·
ulle

Webb. Call !14-446-0231.

ow """

Mu I I
s ca
Instruments
Snare Drum ., 50, 3..,..75-2821•
II!:"'P

won- .,,
&amp;14-

56 Pets lor Sale

Condl·

-

Allloiii,OH,-.oMII.
F.,.~ri, SR. Sl,
Will Gall
, 114-"11-f771;
WkHr ......
,... &amp; UHd lum

Srtnt own contatn.w. 114-2472981.
Ginning tom1ton. $4.00 a
buthll. AlrMdy
Brt~ •

tr.ctonr &amp; 5mp~ernera luy,
Mil, trade, I:Q0.6:00 a I Snyt;,
SotiiiiNoon.
l.rtlo 1101111 Ford Dloool
Trocl"!o 1&amp;1110; rea UF !!,_~
580 y,. Aetund ..._, h,Z111iJU· M
MF wllh Ill. buoh hog, 12,1iii;

tn Anll-

qully. IM..
Ounnwln '""' Form juol o11 so.
Rt. 881 Eut ot Albany. We ao-

Upright, Wllk behind tlr'lwly

Wogon, lxll . . ., bod,

JIM'o

com-. Am

Supplies

REDUCED, REDUCED

Good querMty ng'~ qu1rter
hor'M. btood Ml,.., bred lo
.IOHA Chlmplon.I14-2BUS22.

Hoy

=·
,,.:rm.

55

Real Estate General

2 Horle tnrUw MOO. Dl,£~r:;:
I~ Evening: I
1151M

64

wtth lkrll "" .... fl,.,..,,

Canning IOINtDM tar .....

SUNDAY, JULY 29 AND
MONDAY, JULY 30, 1990
10 A.M.-6:30 P.M.

:.:C!i

Uvestock

D-5

wm nn.~ OM-211-auz.

Fruits &amp;

58

Vegetables

202 JOAN PLACE
HAVEN HEIGHTS
NEW HAVEN, WV.

63

T~rMS-Sentinei-PagB

-1111, ....L loolor,
Fonl Jubllol ""h , _ 12500.
3010 JD MilO. 2010 . &lt;10~ cullhnrtolor I - . $2180. _,.,

-·-a-;4

2 CORNER CUPBOARDS
5 OTHER OLD CUPBOARDS
2 SECRETARIES-Stack on Bookcase
2 WOODEN ICE BOXES
2 FANCY IRON BEDS
11 STONE JARS w/Writing "Big Eagle Jar"
MUCH, MUCH MOlE

61 Fann Equipment

Ford 111110 -

Jollti.ll5; hoai... • 14U6rd:.: 0¥11 Bloolo 0.. Toblo Too.
,,..... .. 144.15; cond
O..ln l 1111 kill Urwa, 10ft ...,_
ar---·~7307
• ttJbe bedl.

Cllllaldo

ml.e.

6

-

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

~~~: ~ price."'"'

$1.50 per ~ard. 1on. ootlen
calico, $2.00 per yard, babV
quina. prw.qulll.ct,le.M pw lb.

EmP're Fwnlh.n W."rbldl I
Buoplloo

July 29, 1990

1311.

por !d., II Inch bolllng 12.50 lov-, ohllr MOO; lull bed
por !&lt;1- ~- ponlll, f1,75 Whh maH1011 I bore opringo
-h; ool &amp; ..... motlrill, : : : walhor MOO; dJYII $2511;

IIIII

alllaou-.

ton 304-17&amp;-71121.

Golf
-.., 31 Jacbon MkO, ,__ 10-5 CourH Member hu moved out
._,
-·
ol lawn. Otllr.d " r.ducld
11120.
00 Inch quoiHy mo1orlolo, IS.5v IIOVINQ SAlE - Couoh

labl• 4

..... e.blnll wlh . . . .""~
top
.... lor TV $30, Small '" 2
110 Dkl wood round labia,
ntldl ,.,1nAMed owet 100 yun

3D-1711 aft•

Twtn bed whlle canopy wlsprlng

!"'"'

54 Mlscellaneoul
Merchandise

54 Mlscellai'IIIOUS
Merchandise

SIDERS EQUIPMENT. -

JIOO. IM-44f.'1111, , ,....
30.oe rtt11 wtth taeco warld
ICOPIL!l!M 20 II'!'!!!.
eonrlllion.IZo!D.IIM-11...,...

F AB HE l

hlrllll ... pno.. tt..cll Ul aut.

54 Mlacenaneoua
Merchandise

,....., price

elters of

1

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Jdy 29, 1990

MK Gold IodiN woddlng lllnd.
Oorllo • Counly Fair
U.. """'tiD. I'M-182..un.
S.Ciala. Buy 1 otaam . .
got ono FREE.
20 Inch, boye bllle, Huffy. 17S.

Rearrange :he 6 sc rarPbied
worc:u. betow to make 6

'hAahM Cwp.la Upper Rl. J
- h Cloollly CllrpoOo &amp; FumlOWII llnOkM

WORD
GAME
POUAN - - - - - - -

w. Ve.

cepo toed otompo. -hH,

gnen com
beans,
ttome grawn
..,_.
.net tOI'IIIIon. 8-7

dally, cloMd Monday. tt4-1t1-

8218

J

·
&amp;

R

-

·

=:-' "'"• t'

Frooh

'""'
Rouah'l St11rwbeny F1rm: 8uth

I Pole Beine,

Tomat~.

com,

polarloea, and cucmber. 2 mllea
behind New Haven, WV Union

Roocl. --2237.

Ont ARts WAY Ot1nder Miler,
one 1,000 gallon plullc Wiler
t1nk, 01'11 -rift 10n KILBROS

Orovllywagon.II14-2U-15811.
63
LivestOCk

"'o~,---old,.,.,N""u-,.,..-..,,._.,~~Oool=.

..........._....

Want Sold'"

I motllh old poMr hertwd bull

HoiMefn milk ODWI, I calf, 1750.
11....241-18'12.

story nome wrlh 4·5 bedroom~ par·

~'

W34

SOUTHERN HILLS REAL ESTATE, INC.
JUDV DEWin, BROKER
446·6624

PH. 446·7699 or 446-9539

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

Real Estate Gene111
61 Fann

1~

tt_al_basement. 2llving rooms, 2 kilchens, alummum
srd1ng, large rooms. 2 lots each approx. 87'xl7S'.
Storage bu 1ldtn g&amp; Iarge barn. All tor $25.000 Call t~

HOllE IN GALLIPOLIS, 1 STORY
8 rooms. white vinyl s1d tnr,. bathroom. has all ctly ut1h·
ltes. and a srde pooch Prrce only $16.900 00 ~ 688

an. caw and e~.H. 'tew1ing hrtf.
tor.• - .......

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

SERIOUS, YOU BET!
SLASHED PRICE/$9,900.00

=-111M~2811~~~~~22~:-=.,-,......,:::-­

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Equipment

Caat baclr.-hol an•tun.nr . 5141112-2.536.

Real Eetate General

Real Estate Gene111

/I ll/ ' I I L

Il l 1/ lrt' II&gt;///('

'

.. i1830 1N\11SNI s.~ N1iB8J uo

{

U84M,, .pa4DIS 845 .. ')lp8J~ IUBISUI )I
liB~ A841 A4M MOU~ I,UOP I, 'Sii'Q pJe~
a5Jeu:J J84 Aed 01 S~:J84:J DUIIIJM
pe4souoJ 1snl pe4 uewoM 841

SWAIN
AUC'TlOH ' FURNITURE. 12
Olive Sl., llalllpolla. New &amp; IJMd
fum•ure. hu.t•rs, Wut.-n I

I

won boc:lla. e14-441-31sg.

u..d Nf'rtgtrttor 23 cu. ft., WtR. .,,, kw1 IUt &amp; matching
NCIInw, quMn ul of tMdding.

~-:____:_,fJ~':l~'iJ"":-:::yl.:::lf:::'t\~-~~~-::=:O~l~5~113:::M;S:::N:::"'f:::-:::-::::-~J~

.,.......117'1.

53

Antiques

Real Esta1e General

Buy or ••H. Rlv.,lne Antlqutt, 53
Antiques .
1124 E. Main Sire.. , Porr.ruy. .:_:_ ____:...::__...;__ _
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sundly , :00 to 1:00 p.m. RECORDS. 3J'e-45't·79'a-EP'•
114-H2-252S.
50't-IO'aL
Ju..CI ..tlnl-

WNCH

BOXES.

Kldt

Only!

Poytng up •• $100.00 ... .....
eon'• bol. Hlat\Mt pric» paid
tor Ylnyt 1ncl mttll bout.
BetoN JOU throw tt _.,, gl" tt
ewey 01 Mil M to chMip. Call
114-ti2-6U711arc Fultz.

1830 1Ntt1SN/
110113/:i
HJ1ttH1
l:iOGNOJ
l:i0/N3S
1?nSNI
:i1ttH38
S.L3NVtll:iJS

~ntry-ulg

REDUCED TO $71.500- RIO GRANDE AREA. Owner needs
lo sell Ihis farm as soon as pos~ble. like now! Give us a call
lor more delarls. Pr~ce nas been reduced and addRional
acreage can be purcha5ed .

Btnd-Rock. lll4-

POMEROY. OHIO

'---=- - - - -

992-2259

Top Ca1h paid. Old fumltw•
cuboard1,
qultll,
Oflental,
palnllfl91, toys, or 1ntlre Ntate
cell collect 304·52.5-3276, or ~
523-6854.

RUTlAND - Smilh Run Road -

~PPIO&gt;

IDEAL FORA URGE FAIIIlY- 4 bedroom~ 3baln~ formal
ilvong room and dinrn~ modern krtcnen. lam r~ room Very
nrce nome. large back dec~ 2 c~ garage All olin" setlrng
on an acre plus. Green Elemer&gt;t"l Schools
MOBilE HOllE AND 30 ACRES more or less rn tn• Rro

on Gold Rod1e wrth 3 gas

oneacreot cool.

MIDDlEPORT - Ab.-gam of a home - A1~ story nome
wtth 3 rooms up and 3 rooms down. Carport part basement
equrpped kitchen . Great starter home or rental home

$8.000

Mu st see to belreYe.

Grande -'rea. Some wood I and and thet e ts a new pond or. the
property. N1ce prNate area. Ideal tor hu_nters or to raase a
hm1ly. Not restncted. w/mineral rrghts

lOG CABIN &amp;3 ACRES - City SchooiOistnct. On~ $16,000

$140,000

Call our 24 -hr. answering eervice at
446 -4206 Anytime

lANGSVIllE - 7 room home•nh4 bedrooms. drningroom.
and a g1gant1c ltvrng room. Also mclud es a store bu1ldmg, an
efficiency apartment. garage and approx one acre Ha s an

Stutes
Real Estate
Bonnie Stutes 446-4206

rncome of $440.00 a month.
Only I $25.000
WE NEED LISTINGS

Patti Hawk 446-1967

Real Estate Gene111

level yard. $38.500.00.

A.Y REALTY

1

...

belt-.. Utflen. drmn1rm. I

h

bat II. extra lit if lob, • I nvPr
, Some a-ner lln~t~Qn( l'l'lrl.t

...

~.1100

IIDOU,DfJ -

BIIIJAOWjt,l' 2

Dlt 143- HUIISOIIVtlU IOo\0

-olttt""l coubedrn!r~m Hm ll Out~tandmc
style
fii\ Ch
G r~al
cond ApiJfo~ IJ 11e1 Wej l stocked

I IS hllli R~duced

ora

bftt001111.. I Pl!ra ' CiOITl lrvrnH roo m
dtnmr room liTth~M b;.rth. Ill bas@
mMt liP• u lrnt Be.tuUu l ~ low

MIDDLEPORT - Praure your lamoly rn tnrs beautrtul nome

llr•

D. BRENN
MARY FlOYD, REALTOR
HOMES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

446•a.?636

~~
lJ't

• ****

FIVE STAR HOllE - TWO STORY RE~OOO
STRUCT URE. QUALITY AND BEAUTY IHROUGHOUT. 9
ROOMS , 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FAMILY ROOM Off
KITCHEN ON fiRST flOOR PlUS RECREATION ROOM OPENING ONTO DECK ON SECOND flOOR . fORMij_ DINING
ROOM. liVING ROOM HAS FIREPlACE.SPINDlEDSTAIRWAY
IN FOYER 2 C~R ATTACHED GARAGE. 3TO 4 ACRE SITE Will
BE SURVEYED, WHEN SOLD HOME IS COMPlETElY SUR·
ROUNOEO BY TALL PINES AND OTilR TREES. ONlY 10
MILES FROM CITY. fiRST TIME OFFERED. $125.000.

COURT STREET - Sulloo Township - We have 2 ooeacre

t.tr~

lo1 s wrlh rural wafer and elec available. Surtable lor mobrle
home omr hom e stle Call tor details

11¥11(

"""- 111111. larcr til ~ ~4 chtn
wllah orl bfMitul cabin~~ crnh •
taut I t~Miflf • · b•ument 1 c.ar
nrr' nrcr lol G!!lf 00~ 111

C1hl

ffALti)ie

2 story, 3 bedrooms. carpel, a!l eledr1c and frreplace. D1sh

wasner $39.900 00
Mal( - UOADIAr flict 1 loot pl., ] beliGGtM,

[H'•

~d.

'lear i;llllie. atx:rut 8ac trm
tie". mrneral ' 'ihh, .tppillnces. lup
closets. !rreotn Great llun!rnR and

DO:HI -

30f-Oroum~ .

\ill f t lrvllg

room. OH he~ 1-. blllh t u ~ basP
mt~t Qarlltt 01r n illd pond Good
hun hnt and l rshr~t hu ~ lr ~
lGd~,. ly~ r.om~ on 30 acrf!S dh
mm~1 ~I r rghfs 70 mt~u!M ou r d Po

mMO • )0 m&lt;nutn our ol

AUten ~

10 liN OUT OF ATHEJI5 OFT IT ~
Good 11u~ r~ill ~ pld IDmr I
!Iocr plin ? bedroofl"!l 111.-r£ room. ea
~ 1'\ ~cJ'Itn . tllfh. all CWIJ(Cs:l . llt!JI
h.rnn. •f'fl llWIIIIJI 1 tit! .1 ~
Olly $19 (XXJ 00
UCIIU . 6th St - 6uulrtu t I
story 4 be'dfoo~ . 1 bl.lll5 1111 1111
room wrrool ~ ~~ 111 ~fclren lll
6en central hell. etnt rJI 1111 ni!W
roof. Rf"' pk.rmbrl&amp;. 2 rrtrr loh lDir
l.l! ~llres 8e-;l IJoy I!IM.Ind 10011 4{1"1
Pu::e re~ttv r edu~ d oo don' t
~~ utr~loh

an

POW:ROY lrncotn Hts . •
lu ll tcr~ ol comlort1blt I!'Imp 3Md

room s

hrn1rm Hch~n . l "' b•lhs

IIODllPOIT - GIAJIT Sl . - l
lloor pltn. 7 be!toont.. l1mrly room.

hwlfll room. eal·rn kllhen. bit h.

Tolly

ctrpeled. hll'dwood lloon, rn·
5U IIted (l(IJ!Ienl cond.Dn, Iaiit

lot. Edr•

tow 20's.

nrce yard. left OOir. lo•.

AUT LAND - I aa e shady lot to burld your dream home on
Eledr1c a'Jatlabl e. Owner will tak e land Central REDUCED

$2 000 00
POMEROY - Th ts neal homers read y f01 1mmed1ate occu·
pancy Frve ro oms wrth 3 bed rooms, large lot other featur es.

PRICE REDU CED 11 2.500 00
POMEROY - Kingsbury Road - 2 acre lot &gt; Wateo and
eledr1c avarl able Owner mav help hnance. Two lois to

choose lrom. $6.500 00
land. gas well plus royalt1es. water and elec. a"Wailable.
~ppoox.

25 acres of vacant

land. water and elec available. Beautiful home srte_

$18,50000

lANGSVILlE - 6.35 Acre Countr, hull - Barn, sneds,

two ponds, and a nt ce I ~,&lt;, story home in good repair. Electric

neal plus a woodburn .. lor cneap heal. $43,900.00.
lONG BOTTOM - FARM wrlh gently r~hng meadows• Tnos •
a beautiful srle" ~pprox. 84 acres. Includes a really neat 2
bedroom mobrl e home wotn large additioQ gas I.a. neat. Cell ·
barn or wor;shop. Pr•ate and peaceful $51.000.00. Call lor
appomlmenl.
SAlEM TWP.- ~pprox 50 acres of vacant ~nd , 1mmedrale
possessron Old dug well. mmerals. and co~ . $16.800.00.

II!IITIFVL HOI! -

OWIR

d.,..WI dell

NEW LiliA ROAD - Very ne~ and very nice'' 3 bedroom
ranch, 2 balh~ central air, back deck on farge lot
$42.000.00

LOn TO BUILD
IUTWO Cll - 1 - l•cre 1011..
~".Ill 17.500 liD ...
12 ACID mil loyr •••· JOO&lt;I

ROCK SPRINGS RD. - Appoox. 80 acres of manl ground.
Approx. 20 aaes lillabl• All mrnerals. waler and elec. availabla Good hunling land. PRICE REDUCED $27,000.00.

JUst ower Middleport Hil Call me to-

barn. lilll~e. incomt produCinJ

an

nil l frt1 p lor home. RUfi.ANO
CR 3 - lAmlr ~ .. lor • lloml ot
'"'"' ~~oma *en'l •a IDnt at 011r

r;AIIIIIltl 1011111 UCIU 'M llfltill n&amp;hf ,,.,... KOOO ••
I Ill ICJI,,IDb.
. . lddliln
......
_ift _
I'OOIL

ntft

OONl DRIVE BY - MAKE AN APPOIITIIENT TO SEE IN·
SIDE. THIS 4 BEDROOM HOME HIS BEAUTifUl WOOD
WORK. EXCEllENT flOOR PIAN, lARGE FORMAl liVING
AND DINING ROOMS, KITCHEN IS EQUIPPED WITH JENN
AIR RANGE, NICE WOOD CABINETS. fAMilY ROOM WITH Fl ·
REPlACE , 2 CAR GARAGE. JUST AFEW MINUTES FROM CITY
$94.900.
THIS IS Nlffi IF YOU'RE THIIffi- IT IS NT EVERYDAY
THAT YOU FINO AGOOD HOllE AT AlOW PRICE. VERY CON·
VENIENT lOCATION AT 1016 SECOND AVENUE IN GAlli
POliS. !HIS 3 BEDROOM , 2 STORY IS DEfiNITElY WORTH
TAKING TIME OUI TO VIEW. $32.000.

$23.500.00

tral arr. plus woodburntJ. Small orchard. eKiralargeshed lor

lUST $fll - Looktodl ~ lf'ld uwr
SS.OOJ Lovely te~riCt &amp; 1~ wes

QUICK POSSESION: ROOMY
COO IN NICE ARE~ Of
NEWER HOMES' 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FORMAl DINING.
2 CAR G~RAGE. fULl BISEMENT. SHOWS liKE ~ MODEL
HOME. $62.000 OR BUY WITH EXTRA lOTfOR $68.000.

SUTTON TWP.- Court Slreel - ~pprox . 26 acres of vacanl

SUTTON TWP.- Court Street -

s&lt;C~r frce -

$21.900 and rl' s yours. Why pay oent

when the mortgage p a~men t

IS

less 1

H614

NEW LISTING FOR STARTERS' for starters. rl nas
all lhe essentials ondudrn~ a very reasonable
price Ia, 3 bedroom ranch tn 1 convenoent loca·
lion tncludes IIVIfll room. family room. eal·1n
kncnen and bath. Newer carpel on most rooms
Heal pump wtlh central oir. Lor'e flallol •rthrn 2
miles of lown. Proced lo sell at $42.500. ~201

shed. and nice home located

wells. Good Rtanng tarm

$50,000
MINERSVIllE -

3 bed

room house w1th full basement in a tnendly ne~ghbor·
hood. A mce place 101 your

VERY DESIRABlE HOME- Now more desrrable
HOUSE OF THE MONTH- II has rl all' Cap!Nal ·
rng, peaceful, spac1ous. lake lronl, protess 1on all~
landscaped. Qualrty-constiUCted and well marnl ·
arned. redwood . excellent locat1on. 4 bedrooms. 3
bat hs. huge famtly room. large deck and num
erous other amemt1es !hal make rt a w1nner 1To
see rs Ia bel1eve - call for an apporntm ~n l

w1th reduced p11ce Currenty used as a double
rental located m the crh at !he corne1 of 3td &amp;
Spruce . Range &amp; refr1gerator lurmshed rn both
umts. Separate front &amp; back e11trance. Storage
bu1ldrng &amp; chddrcn's olav area behrnd home.

$38.900

#300

!401

lomo~

$15,000.
POIIUOY - Good begrn
nine home ne&gt;t to play
ground wnh 2 bedrooms.
lull basement. and carport
$16.500.
EAGlE RIDGE - Speoal ~

nanane avaJia~e. 61.}-t- aetl!l
farm w~n ''"""barn gar'll•

Real Esta1e General

UniiC - UCIIt£ - lain

bu1id1ng. Plent~ or space lor a ne~ lamrly to start
hou sekeeprng. Located rn Add1son.ttns house IS a
g1eat bu~ at $24,900. but the owner IS wtlhng to

home

$16,000.
RIVER VIEW - 5 lotsand a
good older home Total clec
lric wrtn 3 bedrooms full
basemen! &amp; garage l ol of
lrurt lrees. A good buy at
$15,000
NEW LISTING - Mtddl•
port. 3 bedroom 14x70 m~
bile home mo~ly carpeled
and dean. $7,500.
FAR II - 68 acres , barn,

green lawn or grow your own vegetables. Ha sawell kept mobile home with two bedrooms 1n good cond1hon. Front deck

baths. Thrs 125 acre larm rs set up tor beef caHie. It has a

I'OIOOY - l . M11n St - J

lie and lnen iuslt.. , n easjoeslrng tn tne snade
rn the back yard OR rent n at any trme wilhoul
nasle
H411

"APlACE TO START" - Ntceslarter nome or ren·
tal uml. 2 bedroom&gt; I balh and outsode storage

nice yard. close lo town. Th1s
IS a n1ce s1arler

large metal barn and other outbuildmgs a11d stock ponds.

noa plan . J btdrooms.
!&gt;~Wilen! . Ill City UttlhM.
•·--·~ ~r·ard Grul lwy Low .Jih

SubdiVISion on an p··lra nice lot Buy. lix ~up ahi·

POll EROY - Pr~ce re·
duced, lull basemen! wrtn a

205 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992 -2886 / HOME 992 -5692
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER

RUllAND- Smrth Run Rd.- lnrs dognrloed ctlunlry res o·

wrth 14xl51ivrng room &amp; utilrty room . House insula!~ and
has regular tetmrle rnspeclmns. Storage buildmg 6x8, mce

tor that great buy1 Here llrs!l Huge prrce re&lt;lu ctmn on thts J.4 bedroom home rn c1ty schools.
Features like fam1ly room. _large ltvrng/drntrlg
room combrnat1on. 2 baths, !rreplace wrlh wotx!·
butt~er. attached garage and 2 5 acres aren t
usually available !01 $46.500 Sellers want 11
SO LO NOW" Mak e us an oiler
~401

614-992-3325

dence 1s a ptduresQue seHingw1th a redwood home that srts
way back from the road . Has adreamy pecan kitchen, cathedral ce11tng 1n spac1ous hvmg room w~h fireplace. The coun·
try SJZed lamily room also has a fireplace, and there are two

MIDDlEPORT - Rivorviow Drivo - Nrce nergnbornood ,
cute •ell kept nome on deadend stoeel 3 bedroom home

PRICE REDUCED TO BARGAIN lEVEl!'!

$34.000 - 3 bedroom ranch located in Plants

216 East Second Sl.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Ju st $13.500

~2-6657 Man: F1.11lz.

TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE

COUNTRY SETTING- THIS 3 BEOOROM RANCH OfFERS
PRIVACY, AND ANICE MODERN HOME. FAMilY ROOM WITH
fiREPlACE, FORMAl DINING ROOM. EAJ.IN KITCHEN, CAll
PORT, APPROX 3 ACRES. 2 MilES FROM RIO GRANDE
$55.000
JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM TOWN - BRICK RANCH ,
lARGE FAMilY HOME. 4 BEDROOMS. EQUIPPED KITCHEN
HIS RANGE. REF .. DISHWASHER, TRASH COMPACTOR, DIS HAS RANGE, REF., OO~ASHER, TRASH OOMPIOOR, IHSH
WASHER, FUll BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM, ATTACHED
NACE, CEN . AIR WND. ONE ACRE lOT, UNBEATABlE PRICE.
$65,000. DDNT WAIT. CAll NOW!
NEAR RIO GRAll DE - 3 BEDROOM. 2 BATH HOME HAS
fAMILY ROOM NICE DINING ROOM, KITHEN EQUIPPED
WllH RANGE AND REFRIG, BATH OfF MASTER B£DROOM
HAS GAROENTUB. VINYl SIOING, ONlY 4 YEARS OLD .. lOT
IS GENTLY SlOPING. lOT HAS BEAUTIFUl TREES $42,000.
BRICK RANCH- 3 BEDROOMS, 2~ BATHS. NICE OPEN ll ·
VING/DINING KITCHEN AAEA WITH FIREPlACE. ATTACHED
GARAGE, DECI(, NICE LEVEL lAWN W/GAROEN AAE-.
l.OCATED ON O.J. WHITE ROAD. $66,000
CH£CI THIS CUSTOI RAIICH- 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS.
EAHH KITCHEN FORMAL DINING ROOM.Ju.LARGE liVING
ROOM WITH FlltEPLAC£ AIID FRENCH wuRS OPENING
ONTO SIDE PORCH. COZY DEN WITH FIREPLACE, lARGE LOT
WITH RIVER VIEW. ~.000.

GOT THAT FENCED IN FEELIN67 282 ACRES OF BEAUTIFUl
WOODED lAND IS ASURE CURE. GO CAMPING, TRAil RIDING. HUNTING OR HIKING. All ON YOUR OWtllAND. 4
HOUSES ON THE PROPERTY. $124,500.
WORTH THE IIONEYI APPROX. 71 ACRES FOR $34.500. 2
BEDROOM HOME, LAND IS PARTIAllY WOOOEO,SOMEPAS·
lURE AND TillABlE. FRONTAGE ON PUBLIC ROAD. 2 BED·
ROOM HOME ON PROPERTY.
SUGAR CREEK ROAD - IF YOU THINK AHOME WITH
ACREAGE IN A GOOD lOCATION IS MORE THAN YOUR
BUOOET CAN HANDlE -LOOK AT THIS PROPERTY. THIS IS
ONE YOU CAN AFFORD NICE 3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS
VINYl SIDINC. COUNTRY SIZE KITCHEN WITH OAK CABI·
NETS. RANGE AND REFRIG., FORMAl DINING ROOM, FUll
BASEMENT, WASHER AND DRYER. DEl ACHED 3 CAR GAR·
AGE lARGE FRAME BARN, 30'1-10' EQUIP. BlDG. APPROX.
56 ACRES. $60,000
SIIAI.l FARM IN OHIO TWP.: 21 ACRES. MOSTLY WOODED.
TOBACCO BASE, NICE GARDEN AREA THE HOME IS ONL' 5
YEARS OlD AND IS VERY ATTRACTIVE. 3 BEDROO~ . 2
BATHS, FORMAL DINING AREA. EQUIPPED KITCHEN, LARGE
24'X32 GARAGE. 28'X40' NEARl'f NEW BARN.IFYOU LIKE
COUNTRY LIVING DONT MISS OUT ON TitS ONE! $58.000.
COUIITRY SETTIIIG - THIS 3 BEDROOM RANCH OFfERS
PRIVACY, AND ANICE IIOOERN HOllE. FAMILY ROOM WfrH
AREPLACE, FORMAL DINING ROOM, EAT ~N KITCHE111£AR·
PORT, APPROX. 3 ACRES, 2 llllES FROM RIO GR1110E.
$55,000.

/workshop. carportlmachrn·
ery barn k"' g"' win a
~ockftf bass pooo lhrs • a
gre&amp; place lo burid '"''
dream nome $65.000
LAIIGS'IIllE - A really
shaop Vend ale mobrl e home
2 bedroom wdh new carpel·
on1 and a heal pump. Thrs •
1 well taken c•e ol place.
&amp;Pod buy $8.000
EAGlE RIDGE - Newer
wMe bflck, •rth 3 bed·

NEW liSTING - MINI CONDITION - 3 bed·

ENJOY THE COMFORTS AND NEIGHB{)RHOOD OF THE

CORNER lOT whrl e vr ew rn ~ lht&gt; Ohro Rrve r from rout wafer .
lr ollt 1st Avr. orooertv ·1 rm s 1 bath do wn 3rm s &amp; bath
lull up 2 WBrP, HW Hoo ~ strl.'ell fd·ln pach A clasSic home
w1!h character Do rf1 lel lh rs on e Rei awav . call
I

~109

deep Includes a residence w1lh 'lor 3
busmess rooms and 2 moD1le homes. OrrHed well
and 2 septic tanks. County water avarlable. Ow net
~

PRICE REDUCED ON 3-BEDRII. HOME wdn I~ acres.
located •rthrn Vrnlon Village Was $25,000.00. NOW
$22.500.00"
NEW liSTING: 3 BEDRM . HOME localed on the bord•r

01

Gallra·lawrence Co lr11e. Pn ce In cludes 8 actes $20,000 00.

bath mobile home on rented
lot. lh1s needs some work

If YOU ARE ALREAOY TIRED Of CUTTING GRASS, SEll

You must see th1s to appret

446-.72

11n1ct

BIObr

"ry anx 101rs to selL lskrn g $54.900 but would

consrder any reasooable offer.

oul of town. $17.500
POIIEROY - 3 bedroom. 2

11e it $48,000.
IIIDDLEPORT - lOUNGE
AIID RESTAUIAIIT - wlh
too rerrtal aprrtmtrrls. Rem~
deled and n lui oporlllloo
Tho • 1 wei esl1bloshed buS&gt;
ness wilh unlimlftf fl'owlh
polenlr~. $75,000
SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom
dh lull basement. garage
111d fenced in yard. new fur·
nace wnh equip8ed modern
IGichen. $48,50 .
POIIEROY - 2-3 bedroom.
luly corplled wlh lwo large
sun decks overlookrng tne
Ohio River. $16.500
POIIEROY - 3 bedroom
newly remodeled near town
th• Ihe own• wil consider
fin111cin&amp; $14,900.
SYRACUSE - River front
property nelllo the mar~na
2.5 acres lor fishing mrt~
menl. $2D.OOO.
"Wt Nttcl Usllnp"
H.U.O. Ht. . Ar1lllblt
llllt £. Tarlor t92-3129
U. "Y1r' VIIMIIInt

BUSINESS POSSIBiliTIES!! Located
area on Sl Rt 7 wrtn 80' lrontag e

i

ments and two busm~ areas
~ street level. AI are rn luH

bul does have P&lt;JSSObrlrtoes
$4,000
RACINE - large 4 bed·
room nome rn exccller&gt;l co~
dition dna fuM fino ned ba
sernenl and 2 car garage

on 3rd Ave Has carport and back porch
tor home Call us tOOay lor an app0111t ·

$60.000.
POMEROY - Bu•ness bu rll&gt;
~g wih lour rrntal apart

1 aae rn a private loutwn

stdmg, new wrrmg. aas forced arr lur
central au also Located m amce ne.gh·
lb&lt;&gt;~hc&lt;&gt;d

rooms. family room on 1
aC"Je Ver~ prr~ate locatiOn

oponlini cooonoo $55.000.
NEW liSTIG - Cheslor- 3
bedrooms. rerrodeled. •In a
spaoous yard tn a &amp;Pod neg~
l:llrhood. Only $18,500.
MIDDLEPORT - PRICE
REDUCED - W~l taker&gt;
cwe ol neweo nome •nh 3
bedrooms. lull basement on

TOWN CONVENIENCE - At an atlordabl e
,
buys th1:i neal 2 bedroom bunga ·

VOUR MOWER and move rnto a beauttlul 2 bedrm. condo
located along Gr;,pe St. Ample tn5ulatron wrth heat pump
gr~es you comfortable a1r condrtronmg and heal with econ ·
om1 cal pr JCes Avera ges less than SSO 00 permo tax abale·

_.103

80 ACRE FAR II- Gu,.n Township - Wells Run
Road &amp; Sl Rt 218. Beautfful home site. 16-18
acres tollabl~ 65 acres fenced. Approx . 2,000 lbs
lobacctl base. Moneral roifrls. Some hmbeo. Out·
standing barn for tobacco. cattle. horses. some

bays w!h ooncrele Concrete drove· tnrouifr. Good
water supply' $60,000
N804
BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION- located on Rt
160, !nrs home is waol1ng tor is first owners. Large
master bedroom wrth bath. large &amp;teal room m·
eludes f1mily room, d1mng area &amp; ul·m k1tchen

men! program I ~ock to grocer1. 2 ~ocksto Crl1 Par; Low
maintenan ce Call 446 1066 lor rnlo.
NEW liSTING: INVESTMENT PROPERTY 7-rental prope&lt; ·

wih cnerry cabinel&gt; Home hiS 3 bedrooms, 2
2caraaoaae&amp;heatpump 100•3001ot for
· . you can'l alford not lo look.
#220

ties. located wrthrn the crty ol Galllpolrs. 2nd Ave. Purchase

59 ACRE FARM lOCATED ON RT. 775 approx 6
mrles lrom Rt 141. !ttractr;e I~ slory home has
new vrnyl sidong and new roof. 3 bedrooms. I ~
balks. den, new ca~nels rn the eal-rn ;nchen.

all for $100.000 00
3-4 BEDRM . HOME located apprO!. I mtle above old Solveo
Br~d ge. along St Rt 7. Use lor resKier&gt;lral/commercr~ . lot
soze. 153'xl54' Buy'"" lor $35,000.00.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON - 6 rm. house located
along Marn St Hen! or lrve rn. Presenlly grossrng$2.100 00.
Buy now lor $1 5.000 00
NEW LISTING: 10 acres. Perry lwp Some lrmber. Buy now
lor $10.000
6.5 ACRES . WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS Situated
ahlng Garlreld ~ve Sr le rnludes 2 buolding lots w/coly water
sewer . Buy now tor $30.000 00. or purchase house witn lot
lor $15.000.00
WE HAVE BUilDING lOTS rn Rodney Vrllage II. Call lor more

pantry rn the uhlrty room. Partial basement.

36&gt;52 shop building ~us baon. garage and stor·
age buildrn' Amusllo see at $87,500. #706
137 ACRE FARII - Near Kyger Creek Hrgn
School. This has been a very product1ve I arm rn

the past Wilh a lillie wor~ il could be agarn. Own·
ers h,ave priced thiS farm to sen due to resrdenc e

on Flortda Older 2 slory home in good repair win
tree gas. Lorge shed. baon. 2 ponds. Call tooa1 tor
more onform3lion $79.900.
N211

PRICES DRASTICAllY REDUCED on 3 properttes wrthon the
Village of Porter !I - Old Cottr~l grocery buidin' Now
'15.000 00" !2 - 2 story home adiater&gt;llo slore bid' Now
$25.000 00 #3 - 3 bedrooms npme nell to above. Now
$20,000.00. Call lor more onlo. Will sell any or all~!

$34.900

!800

1

Losled al $64.900

!JOJ

= REAL VALUE -

TAKEYDUR liME - lou have logo rntoapprecr·

lOCATION • PRICE

ate thiS lovely 3 bedroom ranct1 Lrvrn g room w1tll
hreplace drnm Rroam eat In kr tc hen &amp; 2 bath ~ 2

probably not another house on !he market nght
now that IS comparable to th1s home Located rn
one ol the a1 ea' s best se lhn~ ncrghborhoocts (Spr
rng Valley) and prrced at or near what othe1
homes. that ollered much les~. 1n th e same nergh·
bmhood have sold to1. Th rs ts a real value!' Fea·
lu res lrke ~n ck construC tion. full bas ement. 2 trr eptaces. tn· ground pool are ~ou nd I o plea se Call us

"garage 1 acre lot .$57.500

~304

SHADY LOT. ClOSEIO TOWN -lot sol characo cr

and charm can be lound rn th1 s l ' ~ story twm e
wrth1n walkm~ drsl an ce kt 1own rncludes 3 bed
rooms. lar ge hwrng room . dHllng room and l ~
baths Full basemen! 3 car gMage w1th re~lled
apartment overh~ad
#100

13 ACRES AND COMFORTABlE J BEDROOM
RANCH -A rme vrew. clean countrv au. Qurel
peaceful ne1 ghhor hood and lot s of room lo roam
awa1ts you atxJul 15 rmnutc s hom town at lh1s
co mfortabl e 3 bedroom. 2 bath home. In cludes
tam rlv room. lrHmal dmrngand n1ce k1tchen Huge
2 cat garage jpl enly of room lor a shop) plu s a
small barn and dandv cellar house Gallra Counly

local schools (bus SIOIJSallronl dour)

#615

TIREO OF BEING CORNERED? lnalwon't nappen
rn thiSround house loca.ted mMetgs County . Truly
a home to be adm rrOO 8eaul 1lully decorated •n
country atmos phe~e. th1s home has 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, hv1ng toom, lam1ly area , eat·rn kitchen and
utility room. UnfiniShed full basement . Wrapa·
rounrJ decks on both fl oors will gtve a v1ew that
w1ll tak e yout breath All thrs and more1You mu sl

see lo belreve Only $67.900 1

#608

RENTALS - We have ad,.rtrsed tnrs properly
ir"!uenlly the past 6 weeks. but have you oeally
g1ven thought to wh at thiS group of rent~ls on
State Slreet could mean to you as an rnvestor1
Rate ot occupancy has been e•cell ent ove1 th e
years and considering the location and r et~l al
market tOOay, your teturn should be constant Th e
dup lex call be pu rchased sepa rat ely hom th e
group ol fl\le houses. Come in. s1t down. and let's

talk about thos un usual olle!rng.

#408

today' $77.500

lnere·s

#106

BURKHART LAN£! Ch aracter and charm ca n be
found rn thr s at1ract1ve. well ·cared lor home
wrthm wal krng dist ance to town . Remodeled
throughout rt 1n cfud es 3 bedrooms, I1Y1n g room
w1th fireplace. formal rl rmng toom and basement
Don' t ol'erloo~ lh rs home Cal l lor ~n apporntment

!64000

#802

WAS I HAT A DEER I SAW? Capture th e wonder
and beau tv of nature 12 months a year rn lh1s 3
hedroom ran ch l ocal~ 1u st a l ew miles from
town. Nt ce start er home 1us1 needs a litt le T.l.C
Over 6 acres of Wildlife habttat w1ll gtve you hours
of enJoyment. and the oozy lam ll ~ room will be a
great place lor family gatheunss ·An mve stment
rn your lulure lor on~ $43.400.
tt610

CHAROlAIS LAKE ESTATES - Aoareopportunoty
to des1gn and compl ete the 1ntenor ol a home 111
an excellent neaghbOI hood at an affordable puce
The completed eK ferror ollh1s 1~ story Klg home
mcludes a deck. 2 car garage and basement.
Buyer would own l/20th ol an 8 acte stocked

lake wotn lull provrleges. $69,900

N401

SAlUTE TO !HE fAMILY - You"lllrnd ever1tnrng
troma cozyltreplace lor wmter evenings loa cov
creel pat1o lor summer entertaining rn th rs 3 bed·
room. 2 bath stone r&amp;n ch with custom made
drapes and tasteful carpetand wallpaper. Th e1e1s
also 1ncome potential from a garage apartment.

House and garage apartment prrced at $80.000.
#50'

WE NEEED LISTINGS!

mformat1on.

2 BE DR II. REMODELED HOllE along Cnolirctllhe_Rd. Walk to"
groceroes and ~enooL Bu1 now tor $26.500.00

of th rs nrce slar
m•les tram Rt 7 on Rl 218. you
can see lhrs bedroom. 1''7 bath home larRellv
mg room Covered porch /p atiO and breezew~y lo
larRe recreal1on room wrth frreplace C&lt;trport and
two storage bu1lrJH1 RS l 5 acre. mil. for 1ust

room. 2 bath home located only 4 m1les west lrom
Holzer Hosprtal C•ty school system 6 rooms ptus
ulil1!y and 2 car overslled Ralage attched. Ooul&gt;le
closets &amp; large bath of! spac1ous master bedroom
12•20 l1vrng room 12xl5 fa m1ly room wrt h wood
stove Labo r savrn~ krtchen A!l electr rc home.
heahn~ and coohng. lots ol burtt-1n sto1agespace
Above ground 4'•20' poolrn excellent co ndrt1on
Good dog ken11el All on over ? ac I!.'V el lot
Lo cat ed rn ~odney area olf mam traveled road

Wiseman
Real
Estate
(614) 446-3644
E. M. Wiseman, Broker
David Wlumen. 446·9656
B. J. Hal~on, 446-4240

.•

...·-·'.
.

•'

,.

Loretta McDade, 446-n2!,
Clyde B. Walker, 245-6276

r

Bill
Todd,
.
. 446-3443
- .

-·
•'

.

�Page D-6-Sundey Tr u Sentinel
Hay &amp; Grain

64

Ohio-Point Plnu 1t. W.Va.

Autos lor Sale

71

71

Autos lor Sale

71

Oood ....... hoy. 11.26 • bolo.

72 Trucks lor Sale

Autos lor Sale

.,...... uti.

'79 Mlllb"' 350, pe. pb, air, tfd
wAmMn lnltrlor, ti700.oa, 304-

&amp;71-4M3,

1911 Pontloc Col- PS, PI,
$300, 1!4-~46-~IIJOI.
1W1 Ford Granada.
car 1400. or Mil ott«. 814--.
2440.

Good_,

1177 Ponll.c Asn. 4 cyt,
IUIOW.tlc. 79,000 ml'".l .~!!f

1200 tlk•• h. 814-36 r-u:&gt;W,
8p.m.-tp.m.
1918 Dodgo Mag,..m XE. 310
VI. Auloni.IUc; £-topL Fair to

oood condtllon. Aaldnt WI.
~80. 81444~113.

1m Fotd LTD n, tolded cfalh
lnterlat', new palnl lob, S'10i5.oo,
!04-175-4631 eweninga, 1717251dayt.

euu- w-

1110 Oldo
tor
pana, engine aoekaa up·
transmlnlon, ,.., end a;;d
many other part• good t4oO.oo
If lnt•ralld INVI nlml and

1ddruss on answwtng rn.
chine 304-675-327S..

74

75 Boats &amp; Molora

Motorcycles

tor Sale

La,.

Cllovv Covalllr Z·24. Low
mlloor:llll· LO-.e MW. C.U 1!114-446-

1180 Old• ClrMaa. oood cond ..

Autos lor Sale

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

b1011 MOlen, 11!1130 Elllem
Avmue, OaUipotlal..
Inventory ot N'leatoc:ll Ill nil lrtlftra
by Hltt.bota, O.lta &amp; Panderou
in GooHneck or Bumper HHch

Transporlalion
71

July 29. 1990

llaft,ll60.114-1*'281.

nn.

1811.

lo I p.m. el1r I

8~-

1181 - Trtf!_.
ISO, 4 brl.,
1u1o.
O.D.
1 ~.door, n6ce 1M Chryaler Fifth Avenue,
wort ur,
au.
nlcoJ!Nidocl, 81,000 miloo. 8141181 TlluncMr Bini. VI. olr, good 319..r.l.

a.o. ..........

- · CAll 114-11124281 ., 114-

1117 Buick Conlury CUllom. PS,

ml•

PB,Tit, Air 81•rro, Sterra Tape,

eoz.:zm.

but runt good. Alt.
~~ WOttl oar. $100. &amp;M-

-

a.v.n..

THRtl h10 by J.8.; ..... flit
truck beda 1tom 1 112 ft . thru 12
ft. We apeclallu In lnatalllng
trtllar hflchq of all klndl on
cars I lruclcs, wiring tor trailer
brak.., etc. See ua tor Ill your

1883

814-

1911 ChryW ~barron, 4 dr,
eutomaUo. AC.~-~1,000 millie.

=========
72 Trucks lor Sale

ean 114·eB2·-· Bola""' Foot.

WIITinly.

12500. 814-371-zne.

1976 Ford F-250 Auto. Good

1181 Chtyalar TUrbo New 1m Muttang, v.. engine,
Yorll•. 4 door a.ct.n, liM new. autontlc trans air oond, PS,
All tho -pmanl. 37,000 mlloo. PB, auper body 61 lnlerkll', $2.500
IIICie.IM-tiZ-1711.

lif'll. 1250. 614-11t2·3064.

1ffl Chevrolet 112 ton Pick-up
firm~.8~1&lt;-446~~-1~022;·~~:;;;~ Good Cond. $'1.600. 614-44&amp;-2125
D•ya 11l-446-3810 Eveninga.
11U Toyota Supra, one owner
1 1 - GMC ~oo C"-37,500 - . ....- ........ QOVERNMENT SEIZED
A 14
.,00 Fords M
•••
'"'
•-ler II ,
and eunrool, AIC, AMIFII with f rom "'
·
·
•reaMs. 427, gal, Sx2, 13-112 ft. aluminum
tape ct.ck, IJIC. cond, S9,800. CorvlhH. Ch•vy•. Surplus. dump t1lncope hoyat truck.
814-245-1127 1tt.r &amp;p.m.
Your .,. • . (1) 805-687-8000 Ext 614 .9Q2-S27S.

~

$-10189.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

gouthe~n

[B

Pontoon Boat

wllh Tr•ll•r, outboard and troll·
lng motor,1nd diipiMindtlr. 814319-2222.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

!-· 40 HP 1114 Ponloon • Baa• lracker
=::~o:=..Corrd. =-~=--::.. hp .......

eon,....
for -

1171 17ft. ~
1o1t

ctrrro•ll~,~

w/140

hit.

79

Real Estate General

spd,

Exc,

cond

naso·

Aluminum Topper, fie a F;;d
:::.m.~ cond, $2110. ....

Real Estate General

198!1 Ford Conversion Yen,
18,500 mille, 111,000. 814-3782118.

BASEMENT
WATlRPAOORNG

1JnconclldonM

l:':r&amp;"" -· '"" .... ·~

van. 12,700 mllea. $115,000. 114-

:,44:=8-27110~:.::..·-=-:-::-::----,::-:c:-

81 Bronco Erlclla ft-u- Edhlon.
••
88 SIY«""do !Dooley.. Both
101ded, ocellent condition.
Must INfl 6...~75.

DUE TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL
HOMES. WE NEED
NEW LISTINGS.

Real Estate General

84

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
ond-lnl
l'&lt;rurllrllndPinl
Clllftlpallo. Olrlo

114 ... 1811

Conrr-.111

and

Flllt•nlr.t

or

~
1'

-

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

~

Sa pUc Tonk Pumping SilO'"Ollila
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
JacUon, OH 1-8D0-6:J7.N21.

Comptlle lloOIIe Home Nl upt

I - ·roollng,
aloo plumbing
I
-'col,
10111odallng,
palloo I dacko ale. REMODEL-

Davta

Estlmat1e.

114-IM-1811.

=,.·

- . . , · . Uphallltrtng MfYio.
!ng trl county arN
The
blat In lumhurt
staring.
Cal !D4-115-4114 IDr " • . .

,,......

oomiMICIII

naw ..moe or reptll"'.

allied IIMtrtclln. RldiMur

.... ~ 304-m-1111.

S.W.Yec

Service,

Real Estate General

'~/~. "'"

(1' c-:-J,~~~Ii
'})
(
...11rn/

Cleotgea er..11 Rei. Pan., aupplln, p(ckup, and delivery. 614-

( ) .)/tilt

448~~ -

Real Estate General

&lt;=l Ul
m
~=~"fT.~

REALTOR 1

IISIOEifltAL · INYESTIEIIIS · COIIERCIAL . FARIS

Real Estate General

Upholstery

lrT

wDollvory, 2.000 ••'-•,
.•,..,..,-7301.
A&amp;A

Rotary or cablo tool -ng.
MoM •Ita campa.tld ...,.. dey.

roofing, fllumblng,

Ret.fiiiWI.

85 Gentrel Hauling

Frod Morita, 304-m.tl11.

lie, No
loo am.aH. CaJI after
5:00 weakdaya anytlrna Sit and
llun.liOWIWI11.

ING!

Electrical &amp;

Raoldonllol
lllrfn9,
rwpaln.
Uoariood Eloalrlc-.,flrraq
..lo
Eterorlc ....... 114 4411 me.

C.~a&lt;'ofllunrlrlng

-

D-7

Refrigeration

and Sldlnfl. Trolla&lt;

Rooting

Hio lind Hor Conollll&lt;llol\ addlllor•
dacka,
oldlng,

Real Estate General

514 Second Avenue
. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
... · · Phone (614) 446-0008
Ranny Blackburn, Broker

1181 Ford full IIIII c,_,,.fllion

82

roola palni:M. Fne Utiftlltn.

aldP't~

Owdntr'• Home llllproMment:
I Com., Roofing, palnllna.

:::':.:.::::"::3

othtr bnndl. HouM calla, Mo
""""'appllanco IOHiro. WV
304-171~11 Ohio ....... otWUA.

Tounro. 21 • . Full¥ ... ~

Home
Improvements

Home
Improvements

~,!

lflllme guaran-

::::-' Buement W.terproo-

Services

81

81

,mat ..

--·
-·--Ill,

BLACKBURN REALTY

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD.'s

Home
Improvements

111. L.oc.a m.rtnc11 fumi.ttld.
Frw ...
Call COllect 1·
814-2!7-ooaa, day or nlglll.

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

.... laofr·

at1olllllna SIJUU. Can 1M . .,. I
mllll -.itt ol Oal'lfalla on At. 7.

lh
- · ooloololllo, .......
~~ on trallar,

1087 Fanf Alnflr, S..TX, 414, S

81

117'1 !!"'~._!;~·

!AI- - · ...... 1. . la)a
~~~~- 1 1 0 - 110 hp,,..

23 LOCUST ST.

446-6806
652 2nd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PIOFE5SIONAl SERYlCE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388-8826
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR. 266·6251
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR. 446·1897
RUTH BARR. REAL TOR, 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR, 379-2686
DEBORAH SCITES. ASSOCIATE. 446-6362
LYNDA FRALEY, ASSOCIATE , 446-7499
MICHAEL MILLER, ASSOCIATE. 441 ·1405

(CALL ANYTIME)

446-7101

BIG BEND REALTY', INC.

M67. 1£1 LISTIIIl- OIJI(R IIU lAND CONTRACI . ~leer sbrt ~ llomP
01 renttl pro~ Two bedrooms lnd one we m/lioC~Ied near Vonlon On~¥
$21.500.00 Calllol deh1l~
1561 . Wf JIOW HAVE SlYERAllOTS 110!1h rr~er lron11Rf

ISJ,. '00 CAN'T SH TilE FORES I FOR Ttl[ TREES •ooded land lflltl~

nur ll:emiM'!'

COewiU

Perl ~c tlor an) l h tn~

lr01111 campti" Mil r~ew houSt II \'OU would ltke to ~p~nd ,our h ~ lil!lt . a te~
IIIII he rr¥et roll by c1ll us lor more rnlormatton Lollar~ ~ low Sladfn on Rl
7

GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN SELLING YOUR HOME .

· '·

rwo Rt0 ! on PIOPf"l~

~otlow

Pfrl~cT

l lr lf l~ ~mn dr ,,., t•

kn V'rHlrr •. hun!rr \ lor ~~ P~

Rd ONlY $1 1000 00

,..- --"""'
............"!i&gt;.a.:.:. •" ' .
....~, ....,.
.. , . , ..,.·

738 2nd AVE. GAlli POLIS

REA~TOR

W.Va.

- - · lloapa • . • •• .,..

SJirrg CRear ggtale ~ne.
Jud~

A~lo

Frl, N, S.LB-3.

Sala: 1982 Plymouth
R..lant, $750; 1ta2 Ptymouth
1988 Nl. .an Pulllr HX. Blldt, T- Champ, •m: 1975 Clrvy
T~.
AM~~- 5 Camaro, tao; 114-245-MI2.
8pMd,~l1~ Miles. 114-~
GOVERNMENT SEIZED V1hlcln
614-36 .....1
from ttoo. Forde. lllfOidM.
196 Ford TaiA'UI LX. Aid lnalde Corvan... Ch•vya. Surplus.
and aut. All Ford optlana Includ- Your .,... (1) 805-187-1000 Ext.
Ing dlgl1al d..h, e'-ttrlc moon S-10181.
roof and aH power acc...OO.a.

1912 Buick hga.l, 1 ownw, new
1i82 O.vrolel

C.III14-2Be-1:h&amp;alter 1':00 p.m.

For

1526

~:na., aalt eonnlnp: 6M-

complete lop new uphole:ltty.

I'I'IOdela; utNitr trallara, 4d

trailer parts 6 IICICIItory nalde.
Phont~ : 814-446-85e2 Open Mon--

Ptua Much Morw, Ele.
High Ctulu,
Cond. All&lt;lng $1,000. 111-146-

11112 A.II.C. Conoonl.

1072 f7 ft. Slarcrafl 1'11-Hutt
Boat 125 HP, Evlnruct. Engine,

July 29, 1990

JUDY DEWITI, BROKER ............ 446-8147 Sam Hoffman ........ .. ................... 379-2449
J. Merrill Carter .......................... 379 -2184 Jeannie Tolliver ........................... 446-6624
Cathy Wray ... ........... ................... 446 -4255 Tammie DeWitt ........................... 441-0703

OWNER HAS RELOCATED AND WANTS TO
SEll IMMEDIATElY - Oak Dnve. all bnck. 3
BR. I ~ balhs. lR. k1lchen DR. lull basemen!
gas heal

PATRIOT AREA - THR££ BEDROOM RANCH
offers 1120 SQ. II. k~chen. living 10om. bath.·
carpet, attached garage wrth electric door ·
opener Call for an appo1ntment

GREEN SCHOOL OISTIICT- 3 bedroom. 2 bath ranch wrth
lull basement, garaae. dec~ heat pump. Nice n~ghbllrhood
lor the children to play. Asking $59,400.
8163
1988 14x56- Carohnton mobile home wdh 3 bedroom, 2
baths. lam1~ room, cathedral ce•lrngs. 8x20 porch on ap.
prOK. ~ of an acre Ask1ng $36.900.
1289
CITY - One story wih 3 bedrooms, bath, INmg room.
k~chen

and dining room. partial basement. Woodburner

17 ACR£5 AND A4 BEDROOM HOME wrth lP gas heat In·
eluded IS shop buildmg and detached garage Home has a
niCe r~ver VIew. Askmg on ly $36.900
#130
GREENFIElD IWP.- 3 bedroom ranch wrth bath. ruralwa ·
ler. gas heal. woodbu1ner 5 acres m/1 Only $14.900
#239

#123

41 ACRES -Tree larm. 1972 fleetwood. $34.900. Call lor
more lnlo
#125

CITY SCHOOlS- 3 bedroom. I bath ranch wrth I1V1ngroom
hrtchen. tun basement. central '"· 1 car g11age, 1 car car:
port. Ask1ng $49.000.
8119

60 M/L BEAUTIFUl ACRES - Greal lor h1k1ng or huntm~
Grandma Gatewood h1kl&lt;l here Trails arealready ther~ wdh
beautdul rock lormat10ns Askmg $22.600.
#116

NICe lot Now ask1ng only $20,000.

8224. CITY IS THIS OLDER ONE STORY w1lh 2 bedrooms
bath, dmmg room. part1al basement. garage. Askmg onlY

$29·500

PRICE REDUCED TO $65.000' Beaut1IUI

JUST LISTED'
COMMERCIAL BUILDING

JUST LISTED!
YOU'll BE SOLD

The m s ~nl you see lilts 3 bed10om. 2 bath b11ck
ranch. !llualed at SR 160 2 lull balhs. eQuipped
k1tchen. enclosed sunroom. 2 fireplaces, bt~se·
menl. attached 2 car garage. Over I acre lawn.
low marntenance. Owners retirm1 and relocatrng

lake hme to VIew this home today'

82864

DO YOU WANT MORE FOR YOUR MONEY?

Excellent lor'""' sales. SR 160 location Br~c~

construction: low maintenance, appro~ 1.500 sq
n. walk·1n cooler Bu1ldm~ constlucted 1983re·

Call us to see thiS appealmg 1988. 14&lt;56' mob1le
home. s1tuated mquiet area Ntc:ewell maintained
lawn Call today for m01e inlormalion
#2833

1118 SECOND AVENUE - 2 or 3 BR, I !oi
baths. lR. lormal DR. krtchen. !"heal/cent
ill/ .

modeled 1989 PlUS. 2 bedroom apartment

bath. spac1ous l1v1ng room. eQuipped kitchen
Large gr av e1 parkm Rarea. Lar lle lot Call t 00 av lor
JTl()fe mtmmation and P.uc:l IOGft1on. Pm:ed below
replacement cost!
#2863

GIAIH PRICE REDUCTION - BEAUTIFUl
lOG HOlliE and 27 acres. more or less. located

tust a lew minutes hom town on aprivate lane.
N1ce v1ew. Home oilers 3 bedrooms bath
krtchen and hvmg room. wood and etect fl~

heat 25x30 detached garage plu s 20x30

barn.

NEW LISTING - STATE Rl. 160 - TRI·
lEVEl HOM£ WITH lARGE LOT - Artracl • e
homelealures 3 br&lt; . 11h baths. lR. kitchl!ll.
lam11y room. two decks, anached garage Call
lo1 an appo1nlment
ATTRACTIVE OWER HOM£ IN THURMAN $34.000- 1650 SQ II homeoffers4 BRs.lR.
~lchen. bath. 2 fPs, unattached garage.

SO YOUNG &amp; BEAUTIFUL!
ThiS 4 bedrooms. 3 bath well constructed lram~
/bm k bdevel offers relaxed comfort throughout

REDUCED
$27,000

C oz~ &amp; comfortable 2 bedroom vmyl s1ded home.
l.J~ ing room. bath, eal·m kitchen, large detached

ga~age

• apprOK . 1 we

#1819

STARTING UP'

ThiS 3 bed 1oom dou ~ew1de IS

~eal

REDUCED!
OWNERS WANT SOlD'!'
Call to set an appomtmenl to see th 1s 3 bedroom
ran ch home. Anac:hed carport. con crete dnve. 1n
ter1or and exle11or recently pa1nted 1 IMM£0\ATE

POSSESSION'
lor you 1 lull

baths, tam1t~ room. formal dmin g. Ma ster tied·
room has walk·m closlrt and bath with g;rden tub

Situated on a mce '"~lot lapprox 86'xl71'1
Don't let all lhtS lool yoo Pnced at ONlY
$22 00000 Cltj schools'
#2814

COMPLETELY FURNISHED!

12830
ACRES + HOME = GOOD BARGA I Nt

3 bed10oms. bath. dtnmg room and more Call lor
more del.,ls. $15.50000
#1809
II so. then th•s one 1s Ideal lor you 1ApPfO~ 2 94
acres. Several teet o! road frontage Excell ent

'"'"i

room. bath. eat ·rn krtchen . e~cellent cond~1on
You can keep coolth1s summer wrth the central

#2843

PRICED IN THE MID $20's
acres just outs1deGall1pohs c~y ~m1ts . 5rooms
and balh, 3 bed1ooms. City water and nat gas.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED
AND AFFORDABLY PRICED'
ThiS 3 bedroom ra1sed ranch 1s located approx '·:
mile from c1ly Otlers ll ~1ng room. formal dtnm_g
and more Has been extenstvely remod el~. mce
carpetmg and vmvl Stdmg large deck Pr1ced 1n

the S20s

4 11;

und needs to be

d"~oped

House needs some

tender lovmg care. fh1s one 1s one that you can
DWn as reasonable as posstble
N:2849

[QUipped krtchen wrth beaut•lul cherry ca~net&gt;
2 car gara ge. all th1s and more n~lled in 4 shady
acres
#2839

12850

LOTTA LAND

Each lract

ran~ ng

lrom 6 to 6 ~ acres

Exc~l enl

bedrooms. bath. h~mg room. kitchen. dmtng
room and a full basement f •ve mmutes to
downtown

local1on. Reslncted to protect property values
Little, •I any , excavatiOn needed. Rural water and
electnc ava1lable Green Townshtp. II you' re look·
.ng lor an •deal hoAle s•l e w1th acreage gwe us a

calltoay'

THIS COUlD BE THE ONE fOR IOU" - Ver y
attractive home s ~uated on 1.9 acres
featulfs mclude 3 BRs. LR. k1t chen. 2 baths.
lull basement. gas heat carp~ and hatdwood
Ulihly bldg.

#2807

Owners have reduced lheprrce$5.000 Rem.-~a ·
ble older I11 story exlensiV~Y remodeled home 3

$21.900 - 30.382 acres mil. 12x60 V1nd~e
mobile home with expando. 2 8Rs. 1 bath.

bedr ooms. hv1ng room. newer nat gas furnace.
storage butldmg and ove1 I acre lawn #2852

Appro~

kitchen. LR . county water. small barn

REDUCED!! - $10,000.00
FARM

$24.900!!~

- Very attractiVe pnce tor a mce
home. Tw o or three bedrooms. balh. lR. OR

ssmm
71 acr es mall Corn 11b. metal tree stall

barn. storage bulldmg, pond and sp nng. tobacco
base M1lkmR S'I Siem and m1neral rrghts 10·

eluded PLUS 2 3 bedroom home wrth hvmgroom.
bath. formal dmtng and more. Call today tor com·

plele hsl mg1IDEAL lOCATION

s• ~m g.

EXTREMELY NICE STARTER HOME -located
JUs! at the ed~e of town fh1s home featur es 3

RESIDENTIAL BUILDING SITES

krtchen. carpet. part basement. laundry room

141 ACRES Mi l . HUNTINGTON TWP. Approx. I mrle of frontage on RaccoD n Creek.
Some bottom land. black walnut

#2835

Appro~ 160 acr es. Rural water available. mmeral
nghts. mcluded. road frontage along tw o roads

C.llloday lor more 10lormal10n

satellite d1sh. vmyl

ATIENTION!

lOOKING FOR A LOT1

le&lt;el build1ng lot or lor mobile home $9,500
HURRY'
12819

1988 flem~ng Mob1le Home -2 bed•ooms.
a" Call lor compl~e hst10g!

v,

8224

36.5 ACRES M/ L. ClAY TWP. - F1onlage o11
f11endly R1dge Rd. Old house on land $19.500
14.77 ACRES - Extra large pond 3 miles out
ol Vmton on Rt . 325. $16.5001

11816

EAGlE RD . - RACCOON TWP.- 39 ac~es
$6.900
Sl~.000 - 8 7 ACRES Mil . Ha~r~ s on Town

L-shaped bmk All rooms large Eal·1n krtchen
formal dmm~ LR w/ fP . 3 BRs. 1'1, baths'
attached garage
·

&amp;~:~

All BRICK - JUST Off Rl . 35- CLOSE TO
HMC AND SHOPPING - AllraciiVe hc..,e '"a
n1ce ne1ghborhood oilers 3 BRs bath

eQuipped k1tchen. LR , dmetle. hr eptaCe. n~
carpet. 2 car attached g a~age. gas he~ and
cent ral a1r

lOOK AT THIS' JUST $34.900'- Very n1ce
home near Green Uementary School.
Attract1ve leatures mclude lR. k1tchen
w/stove and relr1ge1alor 2 BRs. bath. 2 car

;.&gt;...

" ~fo e

· ~:·~ ,,

·,.. .....~

&gt;&lt;Ak.~
...,...

'"'

GREEN SCHOOL DISTRICT - Very n1ce 5 bedroom 2~ bath

ranch with full basement. gas heat. woodburner 2car garage, fam1ly room. central air . 1-t acre and a lot ·more. Only

H ACRES 1/l- And a 3 bedroom ranch wrth bath, family
room dining/kitchen combo. 2 car garage. Very nrce and
dean. home Call us lor more Information S53.9!m.
#246

attached garage Calllooay

SMAll FARM fOR SAlE - 50 15 acres mil
Ci a~ Townshtp . Home on p1operty oHerS
approXImately 1100 sq II.. 3 BR s, bath. ''""I

$69.000.

#234

RIVER FRONTAGE- 50 acres m/1 and a must see log home
w~h 3 bedrooms. }1.~ bath. basement. lam1ty room. dmmR
100m. cathedral cetlmg solar1um. lront and bad de c~s. l
car ~arage and I car garage
Nl47
1. fOR I - A2 bedroom. I bath home wrth hYing room.
krtchen and a 1979 14x70 mobile home w1th 2 bedrooms.
1~ baths. lam•~ room wrth lireplace All on 1 acre mil
132.000
mo

room. k1tchen Qu1et s et11n~ frontage on two

roads. Call lor del!lls
MAY BE IN YOUR PRICE RANGE - Very mce
home oilers 2 BRs. LR. ~liChen. bath. attached

tSIJ. AS ClOS( fO mffCf AS fOU CAl 8fT A HOIL Betlltilul tr1d
r1ncher wllll 3 be&lt;iooms. 1 bllhs. ltmlfl/' room /wood burt~e~~ . B:n!lll room
Mellett 2 c• !!«Iff. eowr~ed po~th. lenetd 111 • • II ~Sf tlr chlldl en.
Show' iJUI

1557.
m/l near

....

wl•oodburMr

C1ouse·Beck Rd . mce woocled bu~d,ng s1ies.
rUial water a~ a •l a ble

1.4 ACRE TRACT - COMMERCIAl SITE Located on Upp er Rt 7 across lrcmlhe new
s hoppm ~ cente1

83.1 ACRES. M/l NEAR MEIGS MINE #1. Older two story home w1th v1ny l $1d 1n .~: Storm
wmdows. Two sma ll barns
NEAR NORTHGALLIAH .S - 21 1hacresm/1.
Mor gan lwp Frank Ward Rd . - $17.500

fiVE ACRES -

-1

Beautiful 3 bedroom. 2 balh home

Equipped kitchen. oak cabinets. snack bar. electric heat
pump, cenl. a1r. plus wood burner. Custom designed to con·
serwe energy with 6" insulated walls. 12" Insulated 1n attic.
Andersen thermopane wooj windows. Insulated doors, c1ty

school d11tr~ct

tYO. IAIE AflfSH STAll 111 thiS ryfll lfwor.:j tanell OOu~ 11 hiS ltltn·
wh'C lir!l)tla. tint bedrooms tnd M.~ch mort. All dulled on one 10t
"'!!ff

tlome

#2~)

lAND CONTRACT -On thiS .3 bedroom. bath, ranch'" qmel
n€1ghoorhood wrth nu:elolwrth len ca. fam•~ toom wiw~~
burner and more Call today . Only $34.000

_,

I

I

b.rlronm, ranch wrth bath . b1g kitchen . lrvmg room.la
room. 1 car garage. 11; lots and more. $47.500

01 less locallll "'• aull!'llfn ntlf Rodn" Cllt b" dtlllli 1nd S8e nus
flOW $52.00000

_............ ..

..
••

$19.900 - lOCATED IN CITY - O l d e~ home

lOIS Of POIENIIAl - 67 496 acres mil on

IPIJOIAI·

H11·. LAID COWTIACT Oil EASt Home ts lOCated on Plum Sll~ of! ol
Henkli! Awenut C.lllol det11h.

garage. sm:ill hothouse. con crete bloc k shop
Corner lot
offers 3 8Rs. bath. LR . k1h:hen. gas heat. c1ly
water and sewer . Call tor an apporntmenl

he~ tn lhl

~ .... ~

M61. All BIICIIEAUTT Of I'ERF f CTION CHARI · P£R SQNAlllY · COM
FORT - Qullf• butM ntlfl homf on 3 1cm w~ll pond { nler throuRh A
IUOe~ l!fiSS dOOI IIllO a 16"o/ I" h~rn ~ I m 11dh b.u " 'II dOll ~nd ~ I a\\ lloor \ TO
All ~ lr tJm lht&gt; k~(hl.'fl " ~ • l raoll1onar~ .,,rh r. ~rHI ~~~ ~ hcr.lrrl i}il~ r ~ tiHW I'

hy 8fdfllfd hb~ lfl' bf'drm r\ ~'fY huR' "''t h "'lurlpool tuh ? lull bll h\ ? ( ~r
p~rut. ! Ius horne ~ m111menjnu trrr a · ~•I rtr, 1H beaurv Buy hemP ~M 3
. lC IIIII I I I I ~UC~d pu::t $811.000

t,..

S9t. RUT 01 BU'f - lat e l tl~ t.tSY1t1 ' condo f ni(IJ wonflrorh1 Inewway
2 1•1~ bedrm!. 1 balfls. !111 ~ ItYing rm " !Oon11111rea. sltP ~vt
kllchrn Make 1n apporntment lodly 1nd s~ 11YOtl an rP.Srst CIWfllnt an t• l ra
nullfld clun dWellrnl rrrst llooi locahon
olh¥11~

M. IE DFF£1 fOO 6 8Uil01JIIG lOTS NUR BUIJTIFUl CHUALOAIS
lULlS ESTATE: 4 cho~~:~ lots
;:peelieu 111 Iale ~tew You may •~~ani on~ 0,
mote e11:h COrlltrniiiR 5
!M OJt . m1ple do~oOd~nd t'l ft green lr l'f!S

~,;;'~"~"~~~':',"',1•~1&gt;1 "~~i~-~~:~'•.::o1

lronta~e Whot ~

(2'1 dt!rr
tJn lol o; 11
avaiiAI:I
e tobleallloiS
lets•dh
All 1he •bo¥e
be sub(eclto the r ~t r ct~~;e CIJ¥tfllflts

II

CITY - NICe one story wrth 3 bed10om. 11h baths. lam1ly
1oom. gas heal. woodburner. convemenl location $46.5CO
f242

oeul11 ~

all to H1·

Sl5.000 - 19 143acres m/l Approx •, m,re
from Cll'l l1m•t s All ultllftes a1,1arlable

11.88 ACRES - H&lt;lrriSon lownsh1p Will sell

s mall~r

t1ad

4.77 ACRES - $3.100 - Clay lwp Hazel
R1dge Rd

shrp. fronts on L1ttle 8ull sk1n Rd

THINKING Of BUILDING?

Get a rump start on buid~ng your new home by fin·
IShong thiS rocent~ constructed 28'•70' frame
home shell - 40 acres part•aHy wooded. t~abte
acreage. Several leet of roa.d frontage. Call today
lor ~cat1on and more detailS.
81846

JOYFUL EXPECTATIONS!!

Call me perlectl0n14 bedroom. 3~ bath. two si&lt;Wy
home prrvatety nestled'" over 3 acres Huge lam''' room. l01mal entry, dimng and lrv•ng rooms.
Study. large k~chen 11J'K.IO' 1nground pool. And
f18~4
10 many m01e amen«ies. Call today'

BEAUTIFUL BRAND NEW HOME IN
TUCKED AWAY NEIGHBORHOOD!
bqu1s1te 3 bedrooms. 2•,; bath home m great Incalion. ? stOJy w1th approx . 2.374 q. ft. of llv1ng
space+ approx. 28"x24' garage. Fam1ly room. lor·
mal hvmg room. dmmg •rea and much. much.
1

much mor~ City schools Call today tor complete
hstmg.
#2848

~.JOG:'- 139,900.00
MAKE OWNER AN OFFER TODAY!!!
And you m1ght be surprised what you can buy thiS
home tor' lovely 2 story with 3 bedrooms. I~
baths. l•v~ng room. parttal basement. 21ots each
a~p1ox 85'Kl20'. unattachedtwocar garage and
a lot more Call today lor showing and complete

'"''"~

ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS INSIDE
AND OUT
liYIOg 1oom. fam1ly room and formal drrung room.

31arge bedrooms llarge walk·ln closet off master
bedroom). 21; baths. OversiZed 2 car garage.
Equipped k~chen Ma~ntenancelree VInyl s1din&amp;
concrete dnve Presgt1g10us neghbllrhood. Keep
cool th•s summer wrth the club pool'
N1831

f28~ 1

LOOK NO FURTHER!
Convemenl locallon. I!Ood.schoott J.4 bedrooms.
2 baths. l iVIng and tamlly room. large k~chen.

6,000 SO. n. WAREHOUSE PLUS 1,200 SO.
FT. OF OFFICE SPACE - Very nice bu~ding
located rust off Bulaville Rd . Overhead gara1e
doort 11mp, overhead heaters 1n warehouse.
lour nice offices. foyer and r«eplion area

Srtuated on 1 acres ol land. Call our office lor
more detailed inlormation.

garden. AR tlfick construction . .Anractive

lealures mclude 3 BRs. 2~ baths, lully
eQmpped krtchen. tam1ly room wrth lireplace
lmsert m ~re~lace). lR and d10101 room. heat
pump/cent. air. vacuum system. 2 car
attached garage wtth electr1c: opener. Call now!

d1mng area and more 15 what you'll find in this

splrt·l.,el. NICe corn" lot Affordabty p!ICed
$40's.
N2117

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

'"""'"' not-*1119 ...,.-.

-- --··-·--· - --- ---- -- ..-·-

ond winn~

8118

BAILEY tUN RD. - 39 acres mi l and an older vmyl s1ded
home wrth 1 bedrooms. bath. krt chen and lwmg rooms. lull
basement. garage. mol&gt;le home srte w~h water and seplrc
Only $35.500
1152

POIEROY AREA- I~ story wrth metal Sid in~ 4 bedrooms.
I~ balh. lamily room. basement. On I acre. Only $59~~g

'

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP- Newer

home afters 3 BRs. 1~ baths, equipped
.. cllen.LR. FR. 111 heat. cent. oir, r•r de~
central nc. system. IV satell~e 40x60 melll
bldJ w~h 16' do011 free 111. $147,000.

V'lo!! cnn soli yotuturn;cnt h(ml ~ . ,.. r '""'can put yn• · i·•
hnJCil 'Mih ()ftl Of ,l1pftroxitnr h: 1\ " I ' •. ( ~ '111981 f' r,f ,)/1 ' f)flll r
~)(".t'tl(ln!l' qunlili11d to 00111 ~" r ttt1.111 t riqltl he lf'll!

,.,. ...... llrgHI

rooms. bath. baseme.13n remodeled. garaRe. newer roof

MEW LISTING - Nice first home close to school. Large lot
w~h 3 bedroom home. 26•32 detached garag~ Rutland.
Asking $29,900.
8254

446-6624
..-...
REFNET

IT'S SUR£ TO PlEAS£ THE FAMILY
EyecatchmR home located jUSt orr Rt. 35 wlh
2.411 acres ol well manicured lawn and

BAUI ADDITION- V~nyl Sided b•·level wih 4 bedrooms, 1
bllhs. diun1area. lam•~ r.oom. basemenL garage on 1acres
mil. Ask~ng on~ $62.500
m&amp;
AFFORDABLE - AI ·1 BOO 11 thiS lwo ~&lt;WY w!h 2 bed·

Renny Blackburn, Broker
448·0008

RU1h Goody. Salea Aasoclat1
379·2828

- - - - - - -- ·-·- --

..

·----·---- --

Jim Cochren, Broker ........... 448· 7881 Eve.
Petrick Cochran. R11hor ..... 448-88&amp;&amp; Eva.
Sonny Gernn. Reltor .... ...... 448-2707 Eve.
Pliflll Miler, Rolltor .......... 218-1131 Eve.
MlttiMt Smith, Relltor ........ 379·21111 Eve.

OSBORNE STREET- Newer. one story w!h vinyl sidine 2
bedrooms, bat~ family room, k1tchen and living room. lull
basement Wood deck and more. Asijng $22.000. *243
Charyl Lemley, Melgo Co............ 742·3171
Dick Flnlow, Meigs Co . ........ ...... 992·3921

Put your trust

In lumber One:
~

•

IIQ.ITMTIIIIOII 011111111110 COUPlE. Add"'''" •Oh LR. I
Bl. blttl, dtr room, klc'-t, ~I Will turn1ce. one ltrat ntw outl&gt;uikl int
0... Rl 7" Eurlll. Allill ~&lt;~to on~ 17.0011. lrlo • "''"
IIIL Nlll UriiWt: Nlllt • AIICIII·IIIIIII - . lootacQiiao ol
- n. olorrlrt lilt irlln 'llrJ flrll r.. ,...,..._ ·1~ brli11, ""'
iO lllo " " - . . .
hion~.

..,illr•.

........._l....,•llalll"w.

A--

•

1111.41161 AIIIAI'MIIIIIII 1101111 tor tlo ......... hoooollld

TMiiMtttiMIII illywrlltwrts

... Ctllao .. -

"*-" - ·"'""' II"" IW•

�House, Senate refuse to cut sugar price
Page 0-8-Sundly Tmes-Sentlnel

By CHARLES~ . ABBOM
UPI Fann Editor
WASHINGTON - The HouM'
and Senate, warned Amerltan
jobs are at risk, relused las t week
to cut thP federal support price
for sugar despite argum~t s
consumers would save $500 million If the guaranteed price were
cut 2 cents.
The votes vir tually assureo
there will be no change In the
support price, eve n though Congress Is only part way through
debate on the new llv...-year farm
poUcy law, since price s upport
critics said they would not seek
another House vote on the sugar
Issue.
In addition, the vot£'8 Indicate
that farm program critics face
powerful opposition to the ir plans
to try to scrap other farm law
provisions they see as was telul.
"'l'he bottom line Ion sugar 1 Is,
It Is jobs In the United Sta tes of

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

America , farmers In the United
States, " s houted Rep. Kika de Ia
Garza , D-Texas, chairman of the
Agr iculture Committee, as the
House vote neared. " It ·s jobs ,
Jobs, jobs In the USA ."
Critics said a 2-cent cut In the
s upport price, which the pending
bill would freeze at 18 cents a
pound for the next five years,
could save consumers $500 million a year, as well as res training
U. S. production and allowing
torelgn grower s to sell more
s ugar In the United States.
The House rejected the Idea,
271-150. Sena tors, In a roll c all a
few hours earlier, rejected the
2-cent cut, 54-44 .
"We got waxed. I thought we
would do much bette r ," Rep.
Thomas Downey, D-N.Y ., a leadIng price-cut a dvocate, sa id a fter
the !louse vote.
" I think we s UI! have In this
country a fairly prot ectionist

bent, " Downey added.
There was speculation farm state congressmen prevailed on
the suga r vote wlth the help of
co lleagues worried about tex tile
Imports or sav in g o ther jobs
unde r pres sue from foreign competition. Defenders of the s upport price warned a cut would
drive farmer s, and sugar refin er Ies, out of business.
Sen. Bill Bradley, D·N.J.,
vainly a rgued during Senate
deba te tha t the sugar program
"was the S&amp;L of the farm
program. " The sugar program
guarantees farmers a minimum
price for sugar and sha rply
limits Imports of lower-priced
foreign suga r .
Import quotas unfairly deprive
U.S. allies of a marke t and
Indirectly hinder e!!orts to stamp
out cocaine production, Bradley
said .
"These co untries have to have

other goods they can export.
Sugar Is one of those goods, "
Bradley said.
Supporters argued the sugar
program ensures a rella ble
supply of sugar at reasonable
prices. Sen . Bennett Johnston,
D-La. , said the cut would' 'devastate my state" and questioned
why sugar was under attack
when the program, thanks to fees
charged on Imports, operates at
no cost to the government.
"I don't know why the foreign
aid group, the goody -goody,
s oft -headed, American -Jobexporting gang, wa nts to export
a nother set of jobs," Johnston
said .
The sugar program, which has
kept U.S. sugar priC£'8 above the
world prices, has been credited
with aiding the development of
lower-priced corn sweeteners In
the past decade.

Young pigs may need supplemental Vitamin E
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPl i Sudden unexplained deaths of
weaned pigs can reach 5 to 8
percent In some swine opera tions, and an Ohio State scientis t
says many of those deaths can be
traced to a vitamin E deficiency
''Farmers may take the dea ths
In the nursery as routine, but
they don't have to be," says Don
Mahan, who has a lso worked on
similar problems resulting from
deficiencies of the mineral
selenium.
Although problems stemming
from selenium and vitamin E
deficiencies are related , he says
many of the current problems
are attributable to vitamin E.
VIta min E can be a dded tofeed
to offset deflctencl£'8 common In
many swtne nurse ri es, he says .

Streptomycn ...
Continued from D-1
New Products
A 1988 study by Nielso n a nd
Dunlap at OARDC con!lrmed
that Tempo 2E, Sevin SL and 80S.
and Turcam 76WP applied to
plant foliage provided 100% control of adult bee tl es wh e n
sprayed onto the beetles. However, no residual effect was noted
with horticultural aU or Insect ic idal soap. Talstar 10WP Is a
recently rt&gt;glstered pyret hrold
with activity against adult JB' s.
The botanicals, rotenone and
pyrethrUm, also have some ac·
tlvlty and can be used by organi c
gardeners.
The exlenslon office will be
operating on a very limited basis
this week due to major r£'Spons l·
bllltles at the Galila County
Junior Fair. Emergency sltua·
tionscan be handled by calling or
just stopping us at the I air to talk.
We stilt have three or lour
openings for the Tobacco Trip to
Tennessee on Aug. 9-12. See me
as soon as poss ibl e If Int er es ted .

In a recent s tudy, Mahan and
graduat e s tudent Yang Kl Chung
compared the performa nce of
two form s of vitamin E and found
one works significantly better In
feed than the other.
"We round that in young pigs .
synth etic vitamin E may not be
as eas ily digested as we ll as th e
na tural !a rm ." Mahan says.
"The synthetic form, commonly
used In feed , Is a very good
product. It's very stable In a
complete ly mixed feed. unlike
the natural form . But Its success
Is dependent on norma l fat
digestion."
In a wea nling pig, digestion
Is n't fully developed, Ma han
says. It ta kes about three weeks
for weaned pigs to develop a
diges tion system mature e nough
to proper ly handle dieta ry fat s,
and thu s th e sy nthetic form of
vitamin E. T hat form has an
acetate molecule atta ched to
preve nt oxygen from destroying
the vita min .
The a cetate bre aks off during
diges tion, freei ng th e vita min E
to be a bsorbed and used by
tissue.
In the st udy . the natural form
or vita m in E didn' t req uire the

digestion processes necessary
lor the synthetic form, Mahan
says. The study showed that
young pigs need about 25 percent
more synthetic vitamin E to get
the same e ffect s of the natura l
form .
The natural form of the vi ·
tam in was coated and emulsified
with fat to protec t It from norma l
oxidization In the feeds .
"If a deficiency becomes a
problem, producers sometimes
Inject selenium and vitamin E ."
Mahan says. " But that's expen·
s ive and labor-Intensive. and by
that time It may be too late."
The deficiency sometimes occu rs because the sow herself was

TV station, paper declare drug war
CINC IN NATI tUPI )- Wa r on
drug pus hers wa s decla red
T hursd ay by a newspaper and
te levision s tation In a campaign
c alled "Push out the Pusher. "
The Cincinnati Post a nd
WCPO-TV said the effort Is
Intended to e ncourage people to
watc h for drug activity and
re port It to pollee In as much
detail as pos sible .
The newspa per distributed an
eight -page broc hure with Thurs-

any faith or creed.
" This mu sic service Is the
lates t, stat...-of-t hea rt sys te m" ,
says Cremeens, "both technically and from t he stand -point of
human emot lonal support" .
The so los fe ature the vocal
artistry of Merrill Womac h,
nationally known gospel soloist
and r ecording artist . Re nectlng
a li fe long minist ry In mu s ic,
Me rrill Wom ac h's singing has a
dis tin ct lve qu alit y w hlch Inspires
and uplifts - perhaps th e r £'S uit
of his own personal ex perie nces.
On Th a nksgiv ing Day of 1961,
Womac h barely escaped with his

life from a fiery plane crash In
which he was burned beyond
recognition . He has risen above
adversity through a strong faith
that has challenged and encouraged thousands of others through
personal appearances and ma ny
years of radio and televis ion
per formances .
The entire s taff at Crem eens
Funeral Cha pel Is dedicated to
serving the community, and In so
doing has chosen with pride to
prov ide this additional comfort
an d hope to the !amUies they
serve. They are located at 75
Grape Street, Gallipolis .

MONDAY, JULY 30 THRU SATURDAY, AUG. 4
MEN'S 14 OZ. UNWASHED
ST. LIG OR BOOT CUT

LEVI'S JEANS
NDW$179 9

BOYS •••
PIE-WASHED

ALL STONE-WASHED
ACID-WASHED, nc.

JEANS

25°/o OFF
PRE-WASHED

LEVI'S

LEVI'S

IIG. ' " ·"

IIG. 123.50

NOW

NOW

S2249

S1949
REGISTER TO WIN
11'111 , il l l.iS

I I , WI· 1&lt;1/1

J I'AIIS
LEVI'S JIAMS

day's editions - " A guide to
reporting drug dea lers to the
pollee."
The broc hu re, which provides
pollee phone numbers, Includes
checklis ts for taking notes on
suspected drug activity and
fill -In blanks for reporting Information to the poll ee.
" fhe purpose or the handbook
Is to help people come forward
with Informa tion on Illegal drug
activity In their neighborhoods.

Continued from D-1
Cremeens ••• ---..:=.:::.:.::..:::.:.:...:::...:..___
_ __

b DAYS ONLY-

BG.I22.99

vltamln-E deficient, passing
along the problem while nursing
her pigs. It can also be caused by
using old corn as feed . Corn can
be a good source of vitamin E.
but the vitamin breaks down over
time.
"Farmers need to be aware
that If they have young plgsdylng
for no apparent reason, they
might have a vitamin E deficie ncy ," Mahan says . "It's something that can be prevented."
The study will be presented In a
poster session at the Annual
Meeting of the American Society
of Animal Science, July 31-Aug.
3, •• Iowa State University.

LIYI'S POmiS
LIYI'S WA JCHIS
LIYI'S
1'11-IOLDS

......."

July 29. 1990

Senate approves... _ c_ o_nti_nu_ed_f_rom_D-_ 1 use of chemical weapons and Its
attempts to acquire nuclear
arms technology.
The administration opposes
the sanctions, which It says
would deprive the United States
of leverage with Iraq.
In a speech Immediately after
the vote, Dole warned that "a
substantial nt" In the bill was
likely. He pointed to estimates
that cuts could run as high as to
$18 billion.
"Keep In mind, If we don't do
anything, we'll get a (budget)
sequester and that will hit
agriculture very hard," Dole
said.
In addition to extending farm
s upport progra ms for five years,
the bill would set the terms for
operating food-aid, export promotion and environmental
programs.
Since 1985, farmers have been
required to practice conservation In order to be eligible for
program benefits such as crop
loans and support payments.
The bill does not contain a
nutrition section, the provisions
that would renew food stamps
and other public-feeding programs. Leahy says those programs will be added during
House and Senate negotiations .
The House has proposed a $4.5
billion expansion In food stamp
spending by allowing larger
deductions for recipients and
slightly sweetening the formula
lor benefits.
Senators generally refused to

major chang£'8 to the bill,
whether they Involved so-called
reform amendments - like ban·
nlng payments to large farmers
- or e!!orts to Increase subsidies
or reduce spending. They
dropped the Idea of Including a
mandatory seafood Ins pection
program In the bill.
The only notable changes were
a vote to end the honey program
and to reform the money -losing
federally subs idized crop Insurance program.
"It Is a carefully crafted,
difficult compromise, " Leahy
told senators just before they
rejected the final attempt by
prairie Democrats to ra ise target
prices.
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind .,
said It wa s misleading to suggest
that subsidies could b e
Increased.
" It 's not going to happen . It 's
going to crash In a heap, " Lugar
said, pointing to the virtual
certainty of budget cuts.
A key point In the bill was Its
creation of two new programs to
protect environmentally sensitive land. One would buy 30-year
easements to protect wetlands
and the other would pay farmers
up to $1,500 a yea r to help
farmers Implement practi ces
tha t will avoid conta mination of
wate r by farm chemicals.
In a ddition, the bill strengthens
the "swampbu s ter" program by
making It easier to catch producers who convert wet lands to crop
production.

HOLZER CLINIC

Ohio Lottery

Hannan Trace
captures KC
LL tourney

Daily Number
202
Pick-4
8624
Super Lotto
5-6-18-22-24-38
Kicker 654637

Page 3

•
Vot.40. No.310

McGinnis trial
starts Tuesday

F.1 RM POND EXHIBIT - Jenny Varney dlsplayshere.hlblton
"Ohio Ponds. " She was one of more than a hundred 4-H club
members parti clpallng In the miscella neous judging of projects
held Saturday at the Rutland Civic Center.

GONE FISHIN' - Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood
judges Edson Hart's fishing project. Hart will be having his 4-H
e•hlblt on display al the Mel g&gt;~ County Fair, Aug. 14- IR, In the
junior fair building.

Sheriff
involved
in wreck

HOME
446- 'j 381

T wo wrPcks were r epo rt ed
over the weekend by the Pome
roy Pollee Depa r tment
Me igs County Sheriff J amL'S
Soul sby was in volved in a n
acc ident Frid a y a ft ernoon while
res pond ing to a n e mergency c all
on Eas t Ma in St reet In front o!
Kroger' s , Pome roy. Souls by was
travelin g nort h when a car
drl\·en by J ohn Jo hnson , Maso n.
fa iled to yield the rig ht of way .
The ca r dr iven by Jo hnson
struc k a wa ll near the Kroger 's
park in g tot a nd was s truc k by th e
Sou ls by vehic le

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(lacludlas Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)
Stale Bank No. 130

The Ohio Valley Bank
Company
Federal Reserve District No. 4
of GaUipolbi, GaUia County, In the State of Oblo al the close of buslnesa on June 30,

1990.

C ONFISC.~TE

DRUGS - An ongoing tw&lt;&gt;county drug inv estigation paid off during th e
weekend as forces from the Mason and GaiDa
County Sheriffs' Departments . Gallipolis Polke
Departm ent and West Vlrglna State Patrol raide d
a house ne ar Hend erso n, W.Va. Pictured here
tlefl to right) are Galll a County Sheriff DennL&gt;

The 19'ltl, F'ord · dri ve n by
Soulsby r Pre ivPd hea vy dam agP
to rrar , pa ssr ngrr s !dP an d
dri vrr·s door . Th P 19R6 Mr rc ury
drive n by John son. owned by
Morri s Scarberry of Blue fie ld .
Va., rec eived hea vy da mage to
the pasSPnger a nd dri ver's door

Salisbury, Mason County Chief Deputy Uoyd
Akers, and Mas on County Sheriff Erni e Watterson with som e of th•• mat erials confiscated from
the house. Three people are being held In the
Mason County jail awaiting charges. (OVP photo
by Melinda Powers)

and u nd erca rri age .

Sheriff Souls by was ta ken to
Vetera ns Memori al Hos pita l lor
obse r va t !o n. Joh nson was not

Parents of Athens youth plan to
find out more about son's death
ATHENS. Oh io i UP i i - T he
parents of a n 18-year -old youth
who di ed mysler ious ly las t
month In the Netherl a nd s plan to
vls!t that co untry to lea rn more of
their son s dea th
Ma rk Gri mes, tourin g Europe
after his s pr ing gradua ti on from
Athe ns High Sc hool, d led J une 20.

member of the U.S. Cons ulate
c al led. sa id Mark 's mother
13&lt;'1ty.
She a nd her husba nd Steve n. a
physics professor a t Oh io L nl w r
slt y, a re pla nning to vis it th e
~ Pt he r land s to get som r answer s
a bou t th eir son's death .

minutes a fter hav ing eal en in a

the home of Corrie te n Boom .
w ho wc n1 to a Nazi conc en trat ion
ca mp bec au se s he a nd her fa mi ly
h ld Jews during World Wa r II.

restau ran t

in

Haar lem,

1h(l

Netherla nds.
But his fam il y d idn't le arn of
his deat h unti l J une 29 wh en a

M ark was i n Haar lem 1o

Sl'l'

Since his bod y d idn 't con tai n

injun•d.
Johnson was f i tPd for fa ilurr t 0

yield thl' ri ght of wa y to an
cmcr gPncy ve hic lr.

A Syracuse• ma n was r iled
Sund ay followi ng a one-ra r ace!·
de nt on NyP A venue. Pomeroy .
.John Jeffers. Ru s tle Hills. was
tra ve lin g south on Ny P Avenue
when he los t r ontrol , went off th e
r ight sid e of the road a nd struck a
telcphonP pole cau sin g heavy
dam age to the fr on t of hi s B R5
Ford Esco rt.
Je ffe r s wa s ci ted fo r failu rr to
ma in tain co nt r ol and lea v ing the

a ny Iden tificat ion. It wa s buried
in · an unmarked grave Mrs
Grim es said her son was pla n·
nlng to car ry two wallets, so she
thinks one may have been s tolen
The seco nd was found In his
baggage.
It was his ba ggage th a t led lo
his Identifica ti on. The Chris ti an
You th Hote l in Haar lem notified
poll ee a fter the yo uth 's baggage
went unc la im ed . A wa llet was
found wit h this baggage, Mrs .
Gr ime s sa id.

I

I~Ti{i'lAYS4
FREE BALLOONS FOR THE KIDS

OPEN MONDAY A FRIDAY NIOBT8 'ftL 8 P.M.

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condl·
lion and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best.of our knowledge
and belle! has been prepared In conformance with official Instructions and Is true
and correct.
Morris E . Haskins
Jeffrey E. Smith - Directors
James L. Dalley
State of Ohio, County ot Gallla, u :
Sworn to anchublcrtbed hefore me thll24th day ol July, 1990, and 1 hereby certify that I am not an omcer or director of this bank.
CIDdy H. JohDJton, aka Cindy L. Harrtneton, Notary PUblic
My commission expires March 2~. 1991.

left to right, Sharon VIckers and Mildred Fry.
oo-chalnnen of the Autdllary's Scholarship

By CARLOS BREZII\'i\
UPI Business Writer
WAS HI NGTON - Persona l
1neome inched up 0.4 percent in
J une on the s tren gth of higher
wages . bu t pe r sonal consu mp·
tl on ex pe ndi tures rose even morr

and depressed th e sa vi ngs ra te.
Commerce De pa rtment said
Monday .
Per sona l inco me rose $1 6 fi
billion in J une, to a sea sonall y
ad justed an nual ra te of $4 6
tril lion. up0 .4 pcrce nl from Mav.
wit hou t ad jus ting for inflation .
the depa rtme nt' s Burea u o!
I he

Economic Analy sis said . Per
sonal inco mP had posted i n

crea ses of OJ pe rcen t In bo th
May and Ap ril.
Di sposab le pe rsonal incoml' perso nal Incom e a fter tax es and
somr non -t ax pay mPn1 s - ad
va nced $1 Rbil lion. or 0. 5 percenl .
in .June 10 $.1.9 tril lion. Th r

c alcgory: r osr OJ pPrr rn t in Ma.v

a ft er re ma in ing s ta ble in Apri l.
Prrsonal consumption expe- ndit ure Increa sed $:t4.8 bill ion in
.J une to $.18 trillion - a I P&lt;' rcc nl
adva ncr from Ma y - after
r{' m a i ni n~

st ablf' i n

M i.l ~·

and

advanc ing 0 2 percen t in Apnl.
the depar tme nt sa id
As a res ult, per so nal sav in g
dropped lo $19.1.6 bi ll io n in J une
from $210.2 billion in May . T h••
.June mont hly sa,·lngs ra te fell to
4.9 perce nt from 5.i percent 1n
May and 5.1 perce nt in Apn l. the
bu rr a u's fi gures s howrd.
Ad jus ting lor infla tion. d t,pos
ablr prrsona l inr omP was un
c ha nged In .J une as we ll as 1n May
a ft er slipp in g 0.2 pe rce nl in
Apri l.
Infl a tion ad justed perso na l
co nsum ption expendlt urr s r osr
0.5 perce nt in J u ne a fter f a lli n ~
Cont inued on page 12

Centerburg man
is electrocuted
COLUM BUS. Ohio iUP li - A
Ce nt erbu rg man sta nding on top
of a house be in g moved died
Sund ay a fter he accid en tally
touched two hig h-vo lt age powe r
lines.
Ro nal d Matthews died In
surger y at Ohio State Un iversit y
Hos pita ls a bo ut three hours after
the acciden t in eas tern F rank lin
County, said a spokes man for the
Jeff e r so n To wn s hi p Fir e
Depar tment.
Ma tthews was sta nding on the
roof of the house and was try! ng
to keep the 3,200-volt wires fr om
touching the house when the
mishap occurred .
Th e spokesma n said If Mat thews had touched only one of th e
two wires , he would not ha ve
been hurt .
Ma tthews sulfered second · a nd
third-degree burns over the
upper half of his body . a nd
mas sive hea d Injuries when he
fell onto the street , the spokes man said .

SCHOLARSHIPS-:_::-cTr:;.;nac;;I~B~a:rte~ls. The S400 scholarships are renewo-

AWARDED NURSING
Two 1990 Melp High School graduates were
presented nursing scholarships recently by the
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospltal. Pictured at the presentation ceremonies are,

Personal income
up 0.4 o/o in June

sce ne of an acciden t

I , the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condit ton has
been prepared In conformance with olftclallnstructlons and Is true to the best of
my knowledge and helle!.
Madge E . Boggs
VIce President and Controller, July 24, 1990

... ,.,..

tri al to taxpa ye r s by abo ut
$12, 000.
The pn x·c•pdl ng it se lf. m ea n
killer Lyle McGi nnis were sch e
while . is ex pectPd to focus on
duled to be In Fayette Count y McC inn ls' whe rPa bo uts bet wren
Monda y In hopes of com ing up thc• evening of No v. 28. 1989 and
with a jury fo r the Hun ti ngton 8 30p.m Nov 30, 1989 - the time
period poli ce believ e Ka thy
accountant 's mu rdl•r trial.
The ba nk rupt former millio· McG innis was sla in .
Although prosecutors do not
nalre bu sinessman Is to be tried.
have wit nesses to the killing.
in a proceed ing thai begins
Tuesday . on cha r ges of s tran - they a re likely to produce othe r
glin g his wife Kathy to dea th las t Incr imina tin g testi mony.
For one. they are likely to ca ll
~ove mber behind a Kanawha
on the paramedic who a id ed
County mall.
Ca bell County Circuli Judge McGinnis a ft e r he was disco·
Alfred F ergu son said he feels an vered In his Jeep some 100 feet
unb iased ju ry can be pi cked in down a ravi ne In neig hbo ri ng
Fayette Cou nty. eve n thoug h it is Kentucky, In what was a n appa r relati ve ly close - wit hin 100 e nt a ccident.
The para medi c reca lled tha t
miles fr om Huntington.
who cla imed to have
McGinnis,
De !er. se attorney s had soug ht a
been
a
bducted
a nd tortured
change In ve-nue, however. the .
judge sa id he d id no t believe tha t a long wi th his wife. a p peared
re laxed nex t to a ca mpfire he had
was necessary .
Fergu son said Faye tte Coun· set .
Police say they have a lso been
ty's res idents have not had too
able to deter m ine th at the
much exposure to the case, sin ce
most do not rece ive the Hunting- key-sha ped bu rn s infl icted on
Ka thy McGi nnis' c hes t we re
ton newspaper .
made by a key from a Cabe ll
He co nceded . howeve r . that
some m ay have knowledge of th e Cou nt y m otel where Lyle McGi nrase th rough local telev ision nes sta yed prior to the kil li ng .
In add ition. a uthori ties sav
broa dcasts a nd Charleston's
they
fo un d pieces of l c l e ~ hon.­
news papers.
cord
.
s im ila r to that fo un d
"Kn owledge of the case does
arou nd Kathy McGinwra
pped
not exclude a juror . it 's wh ether
they have formed an opinion on n is in McGin nis' w recked Jeep.
Tr ia l proceed ings are sla ted to
it ." Fe rguso n sa id.
res ume Tuesday with cons idera
Ca be ll Count y Pr osecutor
\ion of som e 25 pre -trial motions.
Chris Chiles estimates that
The tria l Is se t to sta rt at 1 p.m.
brin ging In a n outs ide jury will
th at sa me day.
lik ely boos t the cos t of McG innis'
HUNTIN GTON. W.Va . iUPI)

- Ca bell Count y prosecutors and
defen se attor neys for accu sed

SIX BOARD CERTIFIED OBSTETRICIANS

ASSETS
Cash and balan ces due from depository lnatitutions:
a. Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin ................. 4,213,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ......... ... ... ... .. ............ ............ ..... ..... ..... .149,000.00
Securities ....... .. ............. .... ...... ....... ..... ...................... .. .. ......... .... .... 59,618,000.00
Federallunds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to resell In domestic offices of the bank and of its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBF's :
Federal lund sold ... .......... ....... .......................... .. .. .. ..
. .. . 11 ,700, 000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ........ .. 132, 058,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses .... ... .... . 1,557,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income.
allowance, and reserve .. . .. .. ...... .... .... ......... ....... ...... .. ...... ... .. ...... 130,501,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (In cluding capitalized leas es) .. ... ...... ..... . 2,398,000.00
Other assets . ... ..... ...... .. .. .. . .... ......... . ... .. .. .. .......... .. ... ................. ... ... . 2, 983,000.00
Total assets ..... ..... .......... : .......... .... ..... .. ..... ....... ... . .. ... ........ .. .. ... . 2 11 . ~2.000 .00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823 (j) ... .. .. . 2 11 . ~2.000. 00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
a . In domestiC offices .... .. ..... ... ... ........ ................. .. ... .. ... ........ ... 193, 826,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng .. .... .. .. .... ......... ... .... .. ...... . 15, 765,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ........ .............. .... ........ .. ... ... 178,061,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreeme nt
to repurchase In domestic offices or the bank and of It s
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBFs:
Securities sold under agreements to repurch ase .. .. .................. .... .... 699,000.00
Other borrowed money .. ... ....... .. ... ...... ..... .. ......... .... ..... .... .. ......... .... ...... 40,000.00
Other liabilities .............. .... .. ........ .... .. ...... .. .. .... .. ... ... ....... .... ........... 2, 844,000.00
Totalliabllltles .. .. .... ...... .. .... .. .. ................. ...... ... ...... ..... .... ........... .. 197,409,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock No. of s hares a . Authorlzed .. ....... .459,606
b. Outstandlng ....... .454,392 .. ......... ... . 4,544,000.00
Surplus ...... ................ ...... .... ...... ... .. .................... ...... ... ... ........ ..... .... 6, 785,000.00
a. Undivided profits and capital reserves .. .. ... ..... .......... ... ... ........... 3,161,000.00
b. LESS: Net unrealized loss on marketable equity securities ...... ... .. 337,000.00
Total equity capital .................... .... ............ ... ......... .. ....... ............. ...14,153,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C . 1823()) ... ..... ...... .. ...... .................... ........ ....... 14,153,000.00
Total liabilities, llmlled - llle preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) .. ..... ... ... .... ....... 2 11. ~2 . 000. 00
MEMORANDA: Amount• outalalldlng u of Report Date
Standby letters Of credit . Total ... ..... ... .. .. .. ....... ...... .......... ..... ..... ... ... ... .729,000.00

1 Section, 12 Pages 25 Cent s
A Muhimadie Inc:. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 30, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

~

HELPING YOUR
"SPECIAL DELIVERY"
TO ITS FINAL
DESTINATION:

Low tonight In mid 60s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Cloudy Tuesday . High In mid
70s. Chanc e of rain 30 percent.

ble for one year. Caruthers, daughter ol Diane and

Herman Lynch, and Robert Carulbers, all of
Middleport, will attend the Unlversltyhol Rio
Grande, and Bartels, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Edward Bartels, Pomeroy, wlll attend Hocking
Technical CoUege at Ne lsonville.

I

BLOOD RUN - The Melp County Bikers congregated at lhe
Pomeroy Parking Lot on Sunday to travel united to the Senior
Citizens Center where they gave blood for the American Red
Cross. The bikers make the blood run annually 118 a service lo the
community. They are also responsible lor the "toys lor lots"
program each year al Chrlslmas whkh benefits Melp County
chUdren.

Get Quick Result s! Place A S5 Per Day ·sulletin Board · Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section .
•

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="299">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9572">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35933">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35932">
              <text>July 29, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="913">
      <name>cornett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6114">
      <name>cuckler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6706">
      <name>fierbaugh</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="207">
      <name>fox</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1051">
      <name>haning</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2200">
      <name>hash</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="224">
      <name>sims</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="451">
      <name>vanmeter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
