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                  <text>50 cen t s

Sunday

-·

D-1

Mason livestock results...

l27th Meigs
fair begins
Monday night

Inside

James Sands:
Viii~

of Vinton founded around 1835 -

First church

B-7

Beat of the Bend:

Page B-1

With addition of 9 numbers, chances of

Along the River ......... B1·8
Sales ... ...................... D1·8
Comics· .................. .Insert
Classllleds ............. .... D2-7
Deaths .. ................ ....... A3
Editorial ................. ..... i\2
Sports .... ................... Cl·5

Partly cloudy. Chance of
High In mid
Chance of rain 30 percent.

•

PAGE FORTY-1990 MEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDITION
1/ol. 25 No. 28
Copyrighted , 990

11 Sections, 82 Paget
A Muhimedie Inc. NeWIPIPtf

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. August 12, 1990

Riggs enters no contest plea
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme&amp;-Sendnel Staff
POMEROY - Before a cour·
troom full of onlookers, Jason
Riggs changed his not guilty plea
to a plea of no contest on Friday
afternoon to c barges brought
about In connection with the June
death of a Canal Winchester

Over 40 Years Of Dependable Service

man.

W'alft Relia!ilt'tf

• Heating and Water Heating
•Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Drying and Cooking
•Construction Heating

11/frlcfel"viee?

•

For Home, Farm,

Business and Industry

RIGGS CHANGES PLEA- Jason Riggs, left, sits at the counsel
table wllh his atlorney, Herman Carson. Riggs, who faces charges
stemmtn1 from the death of VIctor Will In June, changed his not
guilty plea to a plea of no contest In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court on Friday afternoon. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J.
Reed)

Riggs, 18, was Indicted by the
Meigs County Grand Jury In
June on charges of aggravated
vehicular homicide and tamper·
lng with evidence, both third
degree felonies, and gross abuse
of a corpse, a felony of the fourth
degree.
The victim was VIctor Will of
Canal Winchester, who was
killed on June 2 when he was
struck by a pickup on State Route
248. His body was found the next
day over an embankment on
West Shade Road . Will was
struck after leaving the Chester
Elementary School where he had
been attending his high school
class reunion .
The truck was also found
burned the next day on an Athens
County road .
Riggs appeared before Meigs

County Common Pleas Judge That truck was described by
Fred W. Crow. III. and wa s bystanders who witnessed th.e
represented In court by Athens Incident and was found burned
attorney Herma n Carson.
and abandoned In Athens County
Meigs County Prosecuting At · the day after the accident.
torney Steven L. Story and
According to Ja gers. paint
Assistant Proyecutor Linda R. c hips from the burned truck
Warner represented the State of matched those found on Will' s
Ohio.
clothing.
After Crow read to Riggs the
Jager&gt; said In court that
c harges against him and the' Harri s, who was also charged In
possible penalties thereto, Riggs Meigs County Court In co nnec·
withdrew his plea of not guilty tlon with th e Inci dent, provided
and entered a plea of no contest. the patrol and the she riff' s
Testimony was heard on behalf department wllh Information
of the stale from Trooper Steve leading to 1he recovery of both
Jagers, who was the lnvestlgat · Will's body and th e truck .
lng officer of th e accident lor the
Jagers also stated tha t th e
Ohio State Highway Patrol In truck was probably burned after
Gallipolis.
Riggs and Harris returned home
Ja ger s rei}Orted on the stand
In Harris' car; Jagers explained
that the truck that Riggs and a that Harris was not believed to
passenger, Douglas Harris, wer e have been Involved In the burn·
seen driving had been reported
lng of the ve hicle.
stolen from a used car lot owned
Members of Will's family,
and operated by Riggs' famUy .

Including his brother and daugh·
ter, were In the cour t gallery
during the plea hearing . In
accordance with the law. they
were afforded an opportunity to
(See Rl GGS, page A3)

Bulletin
An elderly female was taken to
Holzer Medical C.,nter with Sl'vere trauma and a second person
with head InJuries was taken to a
Huntington hospital by
HealthNet helicopter loUowlng a
5: II p.m . slngll'-car accident on
State Route 7 Saturday .
The car roUed over one mile
south of Clipper Mill on SR 7,
according to emergency service
reports. Names were not avatla-'
ble from Holzer Medical C.,nter
at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, and no
other details ol the accident were
released.

Meigs County Fair opening as
exhibitors move in, stock up
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - The midway
rides are going up. the exhibitors
are moving In , the focxl stands
are stocking up, and the workers
In the Fair board office concede
that the time of "happy confu ·
slon" has arrived as final prepa
rations are being mad e for the
opening of the !27th An~ual
Meigs County Fair.
Following a tradition of many
years, religious services will
officially open the fair at 7:30
p.m. Monday night at the

RD
I
I

I.I
I

'

D FUR I ORE
AID BO
EG s

I

I

grandstand.
This year the Meigs County
Ministerial Association has been
joined by the Middleport Mlnlstl'rlal Association In sponsoring the
service which will feature Dr.
William Offutt d iscussing the
e ffect s of pornography upon the
co mmunity and society and
suggesting ways of combating
the problem.
There will a lso be special
music by the talented Laura
Hawthorne Gu thrie and the gospel du et of Jan and Kathy . An
offering will be tak en with that

(614) 742-2511 .

"Famil~

Owned"

money to go Into the Meigs
Ministerial Association and used
for outreach work .
As for the rest of the week,
there's no stopping In the fun
things to do and see. to ta s te, to
experience. and to en joy .
It's the co unty's oncl'-a-year
week for choosing the best from
all th e rest In a wide range of both
junior and senior fair exhibits
and activities to be judged.
It's there that you can enjoy
everything from professional
bands to pretty babies, from
cotton candy to Appalachia
cloggers. where you can share
the exc itemen t of toddlers taking
their first ride on the merry-goround, youngsters winning their
first blue ribbons, and teen agers
trying their hands at game
booths
(See MEIGS, pa~e i\5)

~'·•

.,

LAST-MINUTE PREPARATIONS- There are
always last· minute things to be done, and here
workers at the Rock Sprinp Fairgrounds go

about making those final preparations. The Meigs
County Fair opens Monday night and runs
through Saturday.

Home tours include private, public places
GALLIPOLIS - The 200th
birthday of Gallipolis, a his torte
city on the Ohio River. Is be ing
cele brated throughout the
summer with events concluding
on Oct . 20.
The final week will Include a
Founder's Day Dinner. a histo ric
drama and a bicentennial parad e
and costume bal l.
Guided tours of historic homes
and buildings throughout Galli ·

Rutland, Ohio

polls and Galli a County. are one
of th e features of the celebr ati on.
Scheduled for th e weekend s of
Sept. Jo-16 and 22·23 are eight
tours of homes and buildings.
Many of these homes have never
been opened to the publlr.
Gallipolis boasts man y hou ses
dating from the early part ol the
1800s. Homes on the tours represent many styles of archi tecture
and offer examples of dif ferent

modes' of living.
A sample tou r within th e city
Includes the oldest fram e Fed ·
era! style hom e dating from 1802.
an 1811 row hou se with a "dog
trot" In the cent er. a fun era l
home from 1825, an 1859 church,
an 185&gt; Art Ce nter and three
other homes dating from the mid
1800s. Each tour Inc ludes at least
ei ght fa cilities a nd may Incl ude a
mys ll'r y sil e to be an nou nced

later. fwo wurs run each day In

the cit y and last from I to6 p.m.
The co untry tour offered Sept
22 and 23 will be a day long event
which will be a .treat for those
unfam iliar with ll!e on the farm
This tour offer s a box lunch on the
spacious grounds of the Toler
family home and provides a
place for those touring to en joy a
break a nd also see the Toler
(See HOME, page A51

Completion date for locks project 1993
B~

INSIDE THE FUTURE MAIN LOCK - Pictured bere II a view
from poad levellookln1 •P at the Inside wall for tbe mala lock.
Tile ceacrete for lbe walls II being laid In alteraaiiDJ Hve-foot
llllenala. Tbe concrete II aliO being watered In order to prevent
craeldq due to heal. (Times-Sendnel photo by Kalhl')'ll Kelly)

KATHRYN KELL\'
Tlme&amp;-Sendnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Placing 12,000
to 15,000 yards of concrete every
week would not be an easy task
for most people, but for the 650
workers at the Galllpolls Locks
and Dam Project, It's all In a
day's work.
And It has been all In a day's
work since November 1987 when
the Galllpolls Locks Replacement began. The entire project ,
which has been contracted for
more than $217 mUllon, had an
Initial completion date of the
December 1992.
However, Patrick Morgan,
Quality Auurance Engineer
with the Army Corps of Engl·
neel'li, said that realistically, the
protect will not be completed
until the spring of 1993.
Update Dela,ed Ill Yean
The Gallipolis Locks and Dam
was to be updated In the late '!ills

and early '60s along with all the
other locks on the Ohio River
However, Insufficient fund s
caused the venture at theGalllpo·
lis site to be put on hold . The
problems resulting from the
project being halted for nearly 25
years are evident In that the
Ga llipolis locks are about half the
size of all other locks along the
Ohio River .
Morgan explained that there
were three basic problems with
the existing locks that warranted
the reconstruction work .
Old Loolul Outdated
"First of all, the present locks
are old , outdated and have been
expensive to maintain. Next. the
existing locks are half the size of
regular locks on the Ohio. The
bJaest lock here at Ga!Upolls Is
600 feet wide and other locks have
a 1,2()().foot capacity. And, laatly,
the locks are a hazard to the
tpwlng Industry due to the

be nding In the river . The locks
were orie nted In a bad way,"
Morgan explai ned.
He added that the tow wreck
which occurred earlier this
summer thai closed the main
lock for repairs was a perfect
example of how hazardo us the
present system of loc ks Is for the
Indu stry .
Now, tows pushing barges up
or down the river must break up
those barges In order to get them
through the locks. Morgan said
most barges are towed at 1,200
feet wide, and the locks will onlY
let through 600 feet at a time. The
result Is a long delay and a
back-up of tralllc on the river. It
takes up to two or three houn to
get through the locks, Morgan
stated.
Will Alleviate
Time Dela1
But the new locks will alleviate
the time delay, the dangerous

conditions and the maint enance
problems associated with the old
locks .
When th ey started the projec t.
workers at the Gallipoli s site
began di gging a two-mile long
canal to bypass the bend In the
river. Morgan explained that the
project was a joint ventul'f'
among Guy F . Atkinson Construction, S.J. Groves &amp; Sons and
Dillingham &amp; Harbert lnterna·
tlorlal. Atkinson Is the sponsor
and the other companies offered
monetary backing. The project
was desi gned to he handled In six
phases.
The first phase of the operation
was to strip off the topsoil around
tbe area for the new locks and
move It for later use. That topsoil
haa been moved to tbe railroad
tracks near West Vqlnla Route
2, and will be uUIIzed to !Ill In
around the walls oft he locks once
(See ComplelloD Pap A.f)

�Augwt 12. 1990

Commentary and perspective

Page-A-2
August 12, 1990

A Division of

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(814) 446-2342

111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
(814) 99HI56

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WU.SON JR.
Exeeallve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslaol Publlsher-ConlrGIIer

A MEMBER or The United Prt'!Js lnternaUonal. Inland Dally PrPSs AssocJa tton and lht&gt; Amer-Ican New spaper Publls hers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le5s than 300 words
long. AU IE'tters art" subjE'd toedltlng and must be signed with name. address and
teiPphone numbel". No unsigned letters wUl be published. Letters should b&lt;' In
good taste, addressing Lu ues, not penomdl1 1£'1.

Backstairs at
the White House
By HELEN THOMAS
UP! While House Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Bush is the luckiest president in recent
history . And his luck held out for the biggest cris is of his presidency.
Bush has been a ble to sit by and savor the victory of democracy
over communism in his brief tim e in offi ce - a triumph that came
without U.S. troops firin g a shot
The colla pse of the Soviet empire. no mean tea t, has come on hi s
watch . Other presidents have had th e s uperpower sword hanging
over their heads throughout the 40-yr·ar Co ld War. The strain took It s
toll on several of Bush's predecessors who tried toco ntaln co mmunis t
expansionism.
It cost Lyndon B. Johnson his job .
But In two military invo lvement s . Bush has had w&gt;de popular
support. When he invaded Pa nama last December to depose
st rongman Gen. Manuel Noriega. h1s polls remained high a nd his
critics were lew .
· The decision to send forces to the Persian Gull reg ion to deter
further Iraqi aggression after U overran ol l·rlrh Kuwait also struck a
popular note In the count ry . Not the least reason was because it was a
pocketbook issue.
The nation's motorists were Immediat ely affected by the capt ure of
Kuwait's ollflelds by Sa ddam Hu ssein's blit z. Gasoline prices shot up
Immediate ly . The a irlines boosted their prices a nd Interest rates orr
mortgages were hiked within a couple of days after th e Iraqi invas ion
and Imminent threat to Saudi Arabia.
So the pres ident . who always seeks a consensus, Is happy that his
military moves are being applauded. Ot herwi se It could be lonely a t
the top as other presidents have learned.
Bush Is not like Teddy Roosevelt who was willing to go It a lone.
saying: "I don't care what the people think . I know what they ought to
t hlnk ."
Former presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Ca rter have agreed to
serve as honorary co-chairmen of the Commission on Presidential
Debates, which Is making plans lor such tilts between party nominees
In the general election In 1992.
Both Ford and Carter had their costly problems In psst presidential
debates .
In the debate with Carter In 1976, Ford fell by the wayside when he
said that Poland, still under communist rule, was free He wa s a little
ahead of his time, but he paid the price In that e lection
Carter suffered by saying In his deba te with Ronald Reagan that his
daughter Amy had asked him , "Daddy. what's a mega ton? " A good
question. but It fell like a lead balloon .
Reagan also got away with chiding Carter by repeating, "Ther e you
go again" during their mome ntous debate .
Although he was burned, Ford Is generous In his attitude. · 'I firml y
believe that debates are in the public Interes t. They give I he public an
opportunity to see the candidates under pressure ...
Carter said, "I think it has nothing but beneficial effects."
The president has a new personal aide - Air Force Maj. Bruce
Kaufman, the first black to llold the job.
Kaufman Is replacing Tim McBride who was a ppointed a n
assistant secretary In the Commerce Department. Kaufman. who
had been serving one of Bush's military aides, was about to leave the
White House stint when the pres ident asked him to stay on as his aide
de camp.
It Is rare for presidents to have a military man In tha t particular
job, but not unique for Bush who· 'likes military men," other sta!fers
said . He had two personal assistants when he was vice president and
both came from the military .
The personal aide Is a "Ma n Friday ... always hovering nearby to
till the president's needs . He often carries the president's briefcase,
travels with him everywhere and ma kes himself Indispensable. With
a demand l n~ president It is a very trying position. But Bush has
plenty of he lp around, Including a valet. personal servants and Instant
stallers at hi s beck and call.
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater Is a blc to keep a
straight lace. even when he Is dancing onn the head of a pin.
Fitzwater solemnly told reporters that Bush was cancelling a
mid-September swing south of the border because of the need to stay
In Washington lor budget dellberat Ions. which face an Oct .! deadline.
Almost In the same breath. Fitzwater announced the president will
be traveling around the country lor more than a dow n Republican
fund -ra isers In the month of September.

Today in history
By Unlled Press International
. Today Is Sunday , Aug . 12, the 224th day oll990 with 141 to follow.
. The moon Is waning, moving toward Its las t 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 Leo. They Inc lude
~ngllsh poet laureate Robert Southey In 1774; American painter
AJ!botl Thayer, credited with noting ca mouflage In the animal world ,
lh 1849; educator and poet Katherine Lee Bates, who wrote "America
the Beautiful," In 1859; mystery writer Mary Roberts Rinehart In
1876; movie producer Cecil B. DeMille In 1881; country singers Buck
Owens In 1929 1age 61 l and Porter Wagoner In 1930 rage 60); former
national security advisor John Potnde&lt;ter In 1936 (age 54) and actor
George Hamilton In 1939iage 511.
·on this date In history:
In 1851, Isaac Singer was granted a patent for his sewing machine.
He tel up business In Boston with $40 capital.
In 1898, a peace protocol was signed ending the Spanish-American
War. The United St.ates acquired Puerto Rico. Guam and the
Philippines, and annexed Hawaii.
In 1984, the 23rd Olympic Games ended In Los Angeles with a record
attendance of 5 \2 million people, despite a Soviet-led boycott.
In 1985, In aviation's worst single-plane disaster, 520 people died
when a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 slammed Into a mountain In
central Japan. Four passengen survived.
In 1987, President Reagan, In his first television address since the
Iran-Contra hearings, said he'd been "stubborn'' In pursuing a policy
"that went astray ."

A thou&amp;'btror t~ day: French writer Anall Nln wrote, ''Thuhellls
America's m011 active contribution to the formation of character. A

tOUJ)I hide. Grow It early."

the Federal Avlallon Admlnls·
tratlon are quietly looking Into
the Cardoen deal to see wbo, If
anyone, could be breaking the
law If the deal Is consummated.
Cardoen' s ties to Iraq go way
back. He built his business on the
back of the Persian Gull War,
making cluster bombs for Iraq.
Iraq has few friends, especially among the Industrialized
nations wllh weapos to sell, so II
counts on Cardoen to be the
Intermediary, buying weapons
that Hussein ran· t get through
the front door .
Cardoen, a millionaire many
times over, Is good at what he
does. He captured the Third
World market by designing an
array of simple, Inexpensive
bombs. grenades, armored
trucks and the like showcased In
a slick catalog.
But you won't find his latest
offering In the catalog. Cardoen
Is keeping a low proHie on his
plans to retrofit old American
Bell 206 helicopters (nicknamed
LongRangersl and sell them to

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
as yet undisclosed c lient s. Pub·
llcly, Cardoen Industries calls
the retrofitting a clvUian job lor
cropdusttng, flreflghllng a nd
fishery surveillance. At least
that's what Cardoen's American
representatives told the FAA
when they applied for FAA
'certification of the retrofitted
helicopter.
But a Canloen brochure that
our associate Melinda Maas
obtained In Chile touts the
military attack capa bilities of
the helicopter once Cardoen Is
finished with it. Cons idering
Cardoen's reliance on Iraq as a
regular customer, U.S. of!lcials
are concerned that either Iraq or
Chile wut end up with a lethal
weapon made part tally from U.S.
technology .
Cardoen olllrlals told us they
are studying the military uses of
the helicopter. but would not
confirm whether Iraq wa s a
pending customer. "We have

designed a new version of the
Bell helicopter which Is entirely a
civilian version. but could be
developed at a later point to
serve other purposes," Cardoen
Vice President Jorge Ochoa told
us.
He denied reports that Iraq had
put In an order for 50 of the
retrofitted LongRangers. "We do
not know at this point who we will
sell the helicopters to. Once we
receive FAA certification, then
we will look at the market,"
Ochoa said. He added, "We are
not doing any thing that the
United States has not been a ware
of all along."
The U.S. government doesn't
want to put that sea l of approval
on anyt hin g that might put U.S
technolo gy In the wrong hands . .
FAA officials told us they were
only looking a t the modified
LongRanger as a civilian helle·
opter, but they had heard rumors.
about a s ale to Iraq a nd were
concer ned .

A law aut hored by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass .. called
the Kennedy Amendment, bans
sa les of U.S arms technology to
Chi le . It dates back to the abusive
Plnorhet regime In 1976. There Is
a separate ban on thesa leol U.S.
arms to Iraq. It remains to be
sPen who. if anyone. could violate
those laws In the LongRanger·
deal.
Ca rdoen's U.S. representa tive, ;
Global Helicopters. told us It ·
merely was acting as a consultant to Cardoen to steer him
through the FAA certification
process
Cardoen. as a Chilean, Is not
obliged to ask U.S. permission
ror any oft he deals he cuts, but as
a n Int erna tio nal businessman, he
also wants to stay on good terms
with the U.S. Commerce and
State departments And neither
of them wants to make It easy lor
Cardocn to put any more wea pons In the hands of the volatile

AND W7W *'1/LD 'rbU LIKe
THIS AU~VAPII 10 ReAD, WAROON?

Hussrln .

Edisqn shines no light on afterlife
The woman at tlw&gt; other end of
the line, knowing &lt;it my Interest
In para-psychology, wanted me
to listen to something that had
been picked up by her telephone
answering machine.
The voice was faint and there
was loud static In the background. But I could hear a man' s
voice sayi ng, "Penny, help," or
maybe, "Pen ny, hello ."
"That's my father's voice,"
sa id my e.clted caller. Her
lather had died about a month
ear lier. Before calling me,
Penny had phoned her two
brothers and sister - none of
whom have ever had any Interest
In para-psychology, which deals
with clairvoyance and other
sc ientifically une&lt;plalnable
phenomena.
They all said, after hearing the
recording, "That's Dad 's voice."
Was It a hoax? Somebody's Idea
of a joke? Perhaps. In any case, It
was something Thomas Edison
would ha ve wanted to
Investigate.

Edison told some or his ctose

spiritualism and In the ability or

rrtends before he dlfld that he was

the dead to communicate with
the livin g.

working on an Idea lor a mac hine
thatcouldplckupvolcesrromthc
dead.
No one knows how far the
Inventor of the electric light bulb
and the phonograph got with his
revolutionary Idea, but II he had
been successful he would proba bly have made believers out of
even us hardened skeptics.
We would have been Impressed
not only because of Edison's
standing as a scientist but
because he was an agnostic who
didn't believe In personallmmortallty . Here was somebody,
therefore. who we could trust not
to make up a story about talking
to the dead.
Edison's friend Allan Benson
always believed II was the
Inventor's admiration for the
lamed physicist Sir William
Crookes that sparked his Interest
In the afterlife.
Crookes' familiarity with phys·
lcs had not des troyed his faith In

Edison had profound respect
for Crookes. The English scient ·
1st's work on creating vacu um s
had helped Edison In hi s lnven lion of the Incandescent bulb.
Edison had no doubt rea d the
astounding story Crookes told
about the visit of the spirit of a
dead woman to his house. Summoned by a medium who would
li e on a co uch In the room
adjoining the library where Sir
William a nd his friends were
gathered, s he appeared in what
seemed to be fl esh and bones.
"clad as any woman might be lor
an afternoon call."
But she did not walk ln . She
came In Instantaneously - no
one knew how . Someone even felt
herpulse.ltwasbeatlng70tlmes
per minute.
These meetings occurred all
winter that year In the ear ly
1900s. Sir William took 43 pic tures of the spirit woman.

George Plagenz
When Edison read accounts of

these goings-on. what could he
ihlnk ? l-I e cou ld not doubt either
Crookes' veracity or his lntelll·
gence It was unlikely also that
anybody cou ld have duped the
British man of science
Edison, his fr iend Benson felt,
was " In the pos ition of one who
can not disbelieve a statement
made by a man of undoubted
principle and yet cannot believe"
because of his own doubts abou t
life a lter death.
fs this when Edison began to
wonder whether It might be
possible to make a machine that
would enabl e departed s pirits to
communicate with the living
without th ealdof medlums? To a
scientist like Edison . wary of the
spoo ky world of seances. this
wou ld end al l doubting_ or, on
the other hand, co nfirm what he
had believed a ll a long abou t the
Imposs ibility of a n afterlife.
There, sorry to say, the story
Pnds .

Young, irreverent, misunderstood Chuck sron~
The average family probably
has yet to figure out why Its older
members watch Johnny Carson
and Its younger members are
watching that Irreverent apostle
who nightly exhorts his audience: "Let's get busy! "
Arsenio Hall may come as
close as any popular figure to
defining the recurring genera tion gap. That gap begins with
eac h successive generation
shocking the older generation ol
the three mlddlers 1middleclass, middle-aged, middleminded power brokers), wbo
blithely forget Santayana's
warning that "Those who cannot
remember the past are condemned to repeat lt."
The old fogies In power have
forgotten the Intoxicating days of
their youth and can't understand
why their own values on such
major Issues as obscenity, abor·
lion and racial equality are at
odds with the younger
generatiOn's.
Recent studies and stories
have placed the present younger
generation under a gerontological microscope and come up with
some Inexplicable conclusions.
Today's version of yesterday's
hippies and flower children was
recently designated by a Time
cover atory as the "twentysorn~
thing" generation (18-29), a
variation on the name of the
opular TV show
P.thirtysomething."
A. Times Mirror company
study, "The Age of Indifference," lamented that the under-

30 generation (or tuned-out gen·
eratlon I "knows less. cares less,
votes less, reads newspapers less
and Is less crltlcal,of Its leaders'·
than any generation In the past
live decades. rcan you blame
them?)
These are my kind of kids !
While this member of the
stxtysomethlng generation applauds them lor their percipIence, the Times Mirror study
does point out one disturbing
tendency: Only 41 percent of
young people under 35 said they
had watched a television newscast the previous day (down from
52 percent In 1965), and only 30
percent said they had read a
newspaper the previous day
(down from 67 percent In 1965) .
Because the media are controlled by the three mlddlers,
they consistently fall to anticipate changes among young people. Then, when the changes
overwhelm existing values editors and reporters scurry
around, trying to understand
why.
For example, power brokers
cling to outmoded shibboleth&amp;
about obscenity and abortion
while young people have moved
on to higher plateaus of freedom
of expression, and the !reedom to
choose.
One of the Time story's conclusloiiJ Is that thetwentysomethlng
generation baa no heroes. That's
becauae the lhree-mlcldlers generatlolllln't producing any.
I have tbree children Krllhna, 31 (an actress~. Aile-

gra, 27 (a nursel and Charlie, 24
Ia video producer) . Two of them
qualify as members of Time's
twentysomet hlng general Ion.
and the third Isn 't very far
removed from It .
They are bright, Irreverent,
skeptical, liberal, occasionally
misunderstood and fun to be
with. Their heroes are different

Area death

from mine because we grew up In .

different times shaped by different events . But my wife and I .
don't need s tudies a nd surveys to
explain that our children's lives
are mere variations on a familiar
theme. Alter all , we remember
when we couldn' t understand
why our parents' values were so
different from ours.

0

COLUMl:lUS - Wayne R.
Phillips, 79, Bidwell, died In
University Hospital, Columbus,
August 10, 1990. He had worked
as a state Inspector lor the Evans
Pocking Co.. and retired from
the GalllpoUs Developmental
Center In 1977.
He was a graduate of Bidwell
HighSchool, a member of the Old
Brick Church (Springfield Baptist Church) and attended the
VInton Baptist Church.
Born December 27, 1910. In
Bidwell. he was a son of the late
Joseph H. and Eliza Pierce
Phillips. He Is survived by his
wife, Geraldine B. Collins Phtlllps, whom he married May 28,
1966; a son, Jeffrey Phtlllps.
Bidwell; two daughters. Mrs.
Thomas !Deanna) Morgan, Gallipolis, and Mrs . Charles
(Donna) Dowler. Wilmington.
and four granddaughters.
Also surviving are five stepsons: Tom I. Jones, Rodney, Dan
I. Jones, Point Pleasant. W.Va ..
Newton I. Jones, Rodney, John I.
Jones, Gallipolis. Edward I.
Jones, Columbus; ten step·
grandchildren and five stepgreat - grandchildren. He was
preceded In death by six brothers
and three sisters.
Funeral services will be conducted at I p.m. Monday at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Weatherholt Chapel, Gallipolis,
with Rev . Marvin Sallee official·
lng. Burial will be In the Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday. August 12 from
3-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

GRAND CHAMPION LAMB - Carol Barnett
10ld her 12~·pound 1990 Muon County Grand
Champion lamb Friday night to Haflelt MIU
Carpet Oullet, Inc., Gallipolis. Barnell Is shown

hurts Ohio

Riggs...
(From RIGGS, pqe AI)
speak. Both Identified them ·
selves to the court, but declined
to make statements regarding
the Incident or the plea bargain
agreement.
Though sentencing was de
!erred until August 31, Story
advised Crow that the plea
bargain agreement called lor a
prison term of not less than five
years and no more than 10 years.
Story also added that the agree
men! Included a line o!$3,000and
costs and restitution to the
victim.
Sentencing of Riggs will awalt
the receipt by the court of a
pre -sentence Investigation and a
VIctim Impact Statement, both
ct which are required by law .

l

y
I

DISPLAYS GRAND CHAMPION HOG -Chad
Lon&amp; stands wllh his Wl-pound, 1990 Mason
County Grand Champion hog during Friday's
annual Uve~~tock sale. Save-A-Lot and M and M
Medical Supplies Initially purchased the hog. It
wu then placed on the market for re-sale, where
Pleasant Valley Rosplla.l purchased the animal .
Money made from the re-sale went towards lhe

KENNEBUNKPORT. Maine
r UP!) - President Bush said
Saturday he believes the Unlled
States now has the au thor It y to
stop any Iraqi "ship at sea" and
suggested that he would favor the
overthrow of Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein .
"My feeling Is that whatever It
takes to have our objectives mel
should take place, " said Bush,
seeking to reverse Iraqi aggression In the volatile and oil-rich
Persian Gulf.
Wllh global pressure building
against Saddam's Aug. 2 armed
takeover of Kuwait, Bush wei·
corned the Arab League's repudl·
atlon of the Iraqi leader, and Its
decision to have Arab troops
stand shoulder-to-shoulder In
Saudla Arabia with American
soldiers.
He also reported that U.N.·
sponsored economic screws are
turning hard against Baghdad
with the halt of all Iraqi oil
through pipelines In Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
Bush. on a working vacation,
spoke with reporters on the porch
of his seaside home alter consult Ing with aides, Including Secretary of State James Baker. who
met Friday In Brussels, Belglum, with supportive NATO
allies.
Asked If he anticipated Saddam's overthrow, Bush said,
"That sometimes happens when
leaders get so out of touch with
reality that they commit their

· Heallh and Disability Income
• Fraternal Benefits and Activities

current lax base. Commissi on

President James Holzemer said
the commission will make Its
decision Monday.
Zooo olllclals said they Intend
to use the money and some
private donations as psrt of a $25
million expansion. The zoo also
levies a .7-mlll tax that produces
$3.2 million a year for general
operations.
The c urrent levy produces
about S2.2 million a nnually .

countries to outrageous acts."
"And I know that some coun tries around the world are hoping
that that will happen, ·· he said.
"We'll walt and see."
Asked II the United Sta tes Is
prepared to support an over
throw , Bush said, ·'No."
"But I hope" that the economic
sa nctions and International milIt ary buildup against Saddam
"resul t In an Iraq that Is
prepared to live more peacefully
In the community of nations."
He said, " II that means Saddam Hu sse in changes his spots,
so be it. And If he doesn't, I hope
that the Iraqi people do something about It so !hat th e ir leader
will live by the norms of inte r national h&lt;ihavior that will be
acceptable to other nati ons ...
On Friday. Bush warned Bagh·
dad not to try to s hip oil through
an undeclared allied naval
blockade.
Bush Satuda y said for the first
time that he believes that economic sa nctions Imposed aga inst
Iraq ear lier this week under
Chapter 7 of the United Nation's
charter gives the United States.
joined by other naval forces, " th e
au thorlty to stop a ship at sea."
"There may be some differ
ence of opinion on tha t," Bush
said. "But there Is no use using

words that may have differe nt
con not atIo n s In different
countries."
''What we want to do Is see that
no oil comes through the Strait of
Hormuz . And If th a t req uires that
naval vessels to see that that
happens, line ...
As reporters stood In a steady
rai n, Bush ex pressed hope that
ex tended diplomatic action will
be able to bring Saddam peace
fully to his knees.
Between conferring with aides
a nd speaking with reporters,
Bush, on a sell-described workIng vacation, braved a steady
rain and went fishing and go lfing.
Bush also made a predawn
telephone call to Egyptian President Hosnl Mubarak. thanking
h lm lor helping rally the Arab
world against Saddam at Friday's emergency meeting In
Cairo
In addition, he called King
Fadh of Saudi Arabia, where U.S.
troops are digging In, and the
leaders of two other supportive
Arab nation s, Qatar and
Bahrain.
Thus far, Ca nada, Britain,
Australia, Egypt, France, Belglum, Egypt. Morocco and Syria
have also sent or are preparing to
se nd In forces .
"There will be more coun-

tries." said Bush. who spoke to
reporters while s tanding on the
porch of his wood-shingle house.
The president said he was
particularly encouraged thai the
Arab League passed a resolution
Friday condemning Iraq and

opening the way for Individua l
Arab nations to se nd forres to
fortify Sa ud i Arabia Twelve of
the 21 members of the Arab
League voted to support the
seven·point measurf'.

Dance-Ballet-Tap
Jazz-Baton Twirling

Galli a
Performing Arts
Director-Patty Fellure

446-0425
Registration, Aug. 18th
10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.

Studio 55, Court St.
Gallipolis, Oh.

j

HOMECARE MEDICAL
SUPPLY INC.

EQUIPMENT- SALES· RENTALS· REPAIRS
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NEW! EXCLUSIVE
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o'fransler Bmm, 16m• SOda to VH5 r.pe
•Also VIdeo Weddings. Birthday l'lutlee. !tc.
•Inventory ADI:Iquea and Houebold lte-

MODERN WOODMEN SOLUTIONS

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
~
Cl 11110 ~ NIA. IN:.

Hannan, Waharna and Point Pleasant &amp;osiers.
Pictured are, !ell ta right, A.nnelte Glbbo, 1990
Mason County Fair Queen; Derrlc Dallon UUie
Mister; Lindsey Scarberry, UIUe Miss; Karen
Broadwater, Long, Gary Marnhoul, Robin
Marnhout and Mike Marnhoul, owner of Save ALot and M andMMedlcaiSuppUes. (OVP photo by
Amy J . Leach I

Kentucky .
A Kentucky woman trying to
Identity McGinnis as the man
see king a room at a motel In
Grayson. Ky., the night of the
discovery of the body broke down
under cross e&lt;a mlnation by
defense counsel.
Ann Marte Smith said McGinnis tried to obtain a room on
Wednesday night . Nov. 29, but
th e EconoLodge had no
vacancies.
"It was alter 7 and we had
filled up." Smith said . "We had
turned some people away . A man

TOLEDO. Ohio iUPli -The
Lucas County commissioners
will be as ked to place a one-hall·
mIll levy for capital Improvement s at the Toledo Zoo on the
November ballot.
The zoo's board of directors
sa id the levy would be a renewal
of one that expires at the end of
this year and would not add to the

• Ute Insurance
• IRA's and Annuities

~~~ ~1C-~rw

~jA,:ti--~

-..

Zoo levy request
to be studied

Bush says U.S. can stop Iraqi ships at sea

I

I

entered the lobby very slowly
and looked all around. He asked
lor a room and he said, 'You don't
even have a single?' He put his
left hand on the desk and said,
'That's line,' and left ."
She said she was suspicious
because he was acting strangely.
he didn't arrive In a vehicle and
he went around the back of the
motel. She also Identified him In
a photo lineup.
"Is there any doubt In your
m lnd, " Prosecutor Chris Ch Ues
asked her.
"None whatsoever," Smith
a nswered .
The witness pointed out McGin·
nls In the courtroom .
On cross-exa mination, defense
lawyer Bob Allen asked her,
"Isn't It true, Mrs . Smith, that
you were shown a picture of Mr.
McGinnis a couple of days before
by law officers before you were
shown this lineup."
She replied, " Yes , sir."
Under furth e r crossexa mination, the woman became
visibly shaken when asked to
clarify a point.
"I don't want to be here , " she
said. " I don't want anything to do
with Mr. McG innis or any of you,
to be quite blunt."
This evoked laughter In the
packed courtroom.
"I can ass ur~ you that Mr.
McGinnis doesn't want to be
here. either." Allen responded.
"He doesn't feel this Is very
Iunny."
The trial will be resumed at 9
a.m . Monday.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. tUPII
-A West VIrginia state trooper
testified Friday In the Lyle
McGinnis murder trial that a
piece of te lephone cord taken
from the accountant's pocket
matched perfectly the cord found
wrapped around his slain wile's
neck .
Trooper J.R. Giacalone said
the piece of cord was taken from
one of McGinnis ' pockets when
he was found camped near his
wrecked Jeep In rural Carter
County, Ky .
McGinnis Is charged with
slaying his wile, whose body was
found last November behind a St.
Albans, W.Va. , shopping mall. A
plastic bag was over her head
and a length of telephone cord
was wrapped around her neck .
Another trooper. Sgt. Thomas
Barrick, testified that white
cotton fibers taken from the door
of Lyle McGinnis' Jeep could
have come from white slippers
his wife was wearing at the time
she was slain.
Barrick, a chemist with the
agency, said he analyzed several
fibers found In the Jeep . He said
white cotton fibers found on the
door of the Jeep were consistent
with the fabric of the white
s lippers on Kathy McGinnis a t
the time her bodv was found .
Barrick. however, acknowledged under questioning from
defense attorney Robert Allen
that he tailed to try to match the
white fibers against anything
Lyle McGinnis was wearing.
Allen pointed out that McGi n·
nls had worn white cotton socks
and was carrying a cotton bath
towe l.
·•Jn other words, there Is a
multiple of sources for the white
co tton fiber," Allen said.
"Yes," Barrick replied.
McGinnis' at torneys have
argued the accountant was kid·
napped by two men and placed In
his Jeep stat ion wagon before It
was run over an embankment in

Protect your family
~

with her animal and John Haflelt (left) the owner
of the l:alslness that acted as lhe buyer. Also shown
Is Annette Gibbs, lair queen. (OVP photo by Amy
J. Leach).

Gulf conflict
DAYTQN, Ohio tUPI! - The
economic blockade erected be
cause of Iraq's Invasion of
Kuwait has left some Ohio
exports In limbo.
Shipments sent to Iraq and
Kuwait by companies throughout
the state have been held up by the
embargo, prompting some firms
to file compensatory claims with
!he United States government.
"We know that there are Ohio
firms that got caught In the
embargo," said Daniel Waterman , deputy director of the
International trade division of
the Ohio Department of
Development.
The largest recipient of Ohio
exports Is Canada, which bought
$3.42 bllilon worth of Ohio goods
In 1989. But Ohio firms export a
substantial amount to countries
In the Persian Gulf.
Among Mideast countries ,
Ohio exports In 1989 were greatest to Saudi Arabia at $58.6
mUllan. Iraq Imported $24.5
m Ullon worth of Ohio products;
Egypt, $17.8 million; and Ku wait, $17.3 mUllan.
The U.S.-Ied economic blockade of Iraqi commerce has
reportedly a fleeted many Ohio
exports to the region. One Ohio
machinery company has yet to
be paid lor a multi-million dollar
shipment. Waterman told ~
Dayton Dally News. He declined
to name the company .
''There were shipments that
we don't know what happened to
them." said Salish Makkar,
owner of Mak S International In
Dayton, an exporter of air
conditioning equipment and
parts. "I cannot talk to anyone
there. The communication Is all
at a stJindstlll."

Sunday Tmes-Sentinei-Page A-3

Phone cord in pocket
matches that found
on wife of McGinnis

Wayne Phillip~~

Junbav l'imts- itntintl Arms merchant undercuts the laws
WASHINGTON- On the wall
of Carlos Cardoen' s factory are
the photos of two men who have
shaped his career. One Is despised, the other deposed. One Is
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, arguably the most dangerous man In the world, the mad
dog of the Middle East for the
J99()s . The other Is General
Augusto Plnochet, the dethroned
brutal dictator of Chile.
Plnochet gave Carlos Cardoen
his start as an InternatiOnal arms
merchant, and Hussein has been
his best customer. Cardoen, a
Chilean and the larges t defense
manufacturer In Latin America,
not only keeps Iraq supplied with
arms, but he has built factories
there so Iraq can make It s own
bombs.
Cardoen's latPst deal skates
dangerously close to breaking a
U.S. ban on sales of American
arms to either Chile or Iraq. He is
remodeling some old American
helicopters Into what could easily
become an Iraqi com bat lleet .
Both the State Department and

Pomeroy-Middeport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plerent. W. Ve.

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WE BILL MeDICARE •
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GALLIPOLIS

1 • ,:

•

,:

446-7283

�Pege A-4-Sunday limes·sentinllll

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

Talkin' talers with
fonner Gallia resident
By Max Tawoey
GALLIPOLIS - Recently I
had the good fortune to be Invited
to one ot the largest potato farms
In Maine owned by my good
friend Stan Harrlscn. He Is a
good old local farm boy from
Harrison Township who left
GaiUa County lor greener pastures and made It big time.
When he Is In Gallipolis, he
always stops at my store and
Invites me to come up to Maine to
see his potato farm. This time.
When I saw him at the bicentennial high school class reunion and
he Insisted that I visit his farm
for the Potato Festival, I accepted. Deep down, I thought
that he probably had bought
some old hllly waste land that no
one else wanted, but I wa s
surprised when I landed at the
Presque Isle airport.
Stan and his wile Doris (who Is
the daughter of Opal Powell and
the late Glen Powell who was my
favorite teacher when I was In
the filth grade) met me and my
daughter Becky at the airport .
Tiley took us to our hotel and said
that they would pick us up later
lor a tour of the farm.
It was hard to believe - there
were fields of potatoes all In
bloom as far as one could sc•e. Old
Stan has 1.000 acres of potatoes,
500 acres or peas, 2,000 acres of
broccoli, barley, oats and rnon'_
He owns 5,000 acres in tillable
land and has the largest tractors,
•.•:!th all o! the attachments, that
aremade. WewerelntroducPdto
his farm manager. Ra ymond
Harris, and his wife Laurie who
are the finest people you would
eveor want to meet.
Stan has four or fiv e packin g
and storage houses and s hips
potatoes to 10 states. All of the
trench tries sold at the Bob
Evans Restaurants

come

from

Harrison Farms . He also sells to
Bob Eastman's Foodland Stores.
Alter a lour-hour tour of the
farm, we drove to his lodge that Is
60 miles from his farm. At the
lodge on a beautiful lake In
Sinclair we enjoyed a lis h fry that
was fantastic.
On the second day, we toured
more of his farm and had lunch at
the University of Maine where

some big wheels spoke on potato
farming. Alter that we toured
R.D . Hews &amp; Associates, and
McCain Foods, Inc. that, I
believe, Is the largest food
processor In Maine. It took us two
and one--hall hours lor the tours.
That evening we enjoyed a big
barbecue feast at the Parkhurst
Plateau Farm t~at Stan owns.
On the following day we
watched farm demonstrations
with the big tractors. We also
watched pea picking. It took 28
hours to pick 500 acres with the
big machines. These machines
are operated 24 hours a day rain
or shine. Alter that we were
taken on an airplane tour. Piloted
by an old bush pilot, the eight·
passenger plane flew us up to
Canada - only 20 miles from
Aroostock County. There we saw
elk, moose and caribou.
On Saturday evening Stan and
Doris threw a big lobster dinner
at the beautiful country club
where about 70 people attended
- I met a lot of millionaires. The
lobsters were the biggest ones I
have ever seen.
Well, after these three days, I
sure changed my mind about
Stan Harrison. While he Is just a
plain old Gallla County farm boy,
he has made good. He retired
recently as president and chief
operating officer of BDM In
McLean , Va .. when Ford Motor
Company bought It lor 390 million
dollars . Stan was the largest
stock holder In the company. I
would say that he Is one the
r!chcst men to have come from
Gallla County, and that's a lot of
"taters 1 "
But Stan has not forgotten his
roots. He has done a lot for Gallla
County Including sponsoring visIt s by U. S. Sen . Richard Gephart,
U.S. Sen. John Glenn, pledging
$100.000 to Canter's Cave, and
supporting the Gallla County
Junior Fair by buying some or
the top animals and donating
the m back to help build new fair
buildings.
I was talking to a bustness man
In Presque Isle and he told me
Stan paid more taxes than any
one else In Aroostook County, the
largest county In Maine. It
makes me wonder why I still
have to work eli( hi to ten hours a

August 12, 1990

DOWN ON THE FARM - Stan Harrison, posing with one of his
truck drivers has become a very successlu I potato farmer In
Maine, sendltl&amp;' spuds to GaJDa County lor restaurants and stor•.

The book which has presold
90,000 copies will be available In
bookstores In about three weeks .
It will be launched to coincide
with the nallonally-televlsed
"Pigskin Classic" football game.
Special appearances, Including
major broadcast appearances
along with national and regional
advertising will follow the re·
lease of "From Ashes to Glory " .
Diles, cited more than 90 times
lor distinguished work In print
and broadcast media during his
career which has spanned nearly
three decades, calls the book "by
far, the most meaningful thing I
have ever written."
Other books to Diles' credit

day to put bread on the table and I
am almos t 80 years old - but I
just know I am going to hit It big
In the lottery real soon.
Time passed too swiftly for one
of the most enjoyable outings any

tlons located In Southern Ohio
and West VIrginia.
The Association of Surgical
Technologists, Inc., formerly the
Association of Operating Room
Technologists, was IncOrporated
as a nonprofit educational association In 1969 under the auspices of
the Association ol Operating
Room Nurses (ADRN), with the
support of the American College
of Surgeons lACS) and the
American Hospital Association
!AHA).
AST performs a vital role In
representing the Interests ol the
profession In the legislative and
regulatory arenas, and In communicating Information on the
education and skills ol surgical
technologists to the public and
the health care lndUJJtry.

games into the season. Mean·

while, s por ts pages and tabloids
pla s tere d the birth of Sal's son to
McCartn ey's daughter across
their front pa ges.
"F ron Ashes to Glory " profiles
strength on and off the football
field, c apturing the story of a
team a l the height of a winning
season. a long with the story of a
man and his family standing up
for each other and their personal
belie fs, In spite of overwhelming
odds.

person could have . On Sunday
Becky and I caught our five--hour
plane trip to return home. If you
ever get a chance to see the Stan
Harrlsnn farm - GO - you will
be glad you did .

WAREHOUSE STOP- Mu Tawney, left, his daughter Betsy,
right, and Stan Harrison, center, stop for a minute In the
warehouse at Harrison's farm.

Surgical technicians forrn organization
GALLIPOLIS- The organiza tional meeting to form a local
chapter of the Association of
Surgical Technologists ( AST)
was held recently at the Holzer
Medical Center, according to
Karf.'n Pylf.'s, CS.T. and charter
(ITesldf.'nt of the group.
Attending the meeting was :
Rebecca Compton, AST Region
114 Representative, who Is the
Project Coordinator for the Endotech Corporation of North
!lalem, Ind. Ms. Compton was the
guest speaker for the charter
meeting and offered her assist ·
ance In establishing the chapter
and the surgical technology
program t the Association.
Involved In the new chapter
are surgical technologists representing health care lnstltu -

Include ' ' Duffy" , the biography
of former Michigan Slate football
coach Duffy Daugherty; "Nobody's Perfect", the life story of
baseball pitcher Denny McClain;
"Twelfth Man In the Huddle" , an
account of the religious experiences of 23 NFL stars; "Archie" ,
the story of Arc hie Griffin;
"Terry Brads haw, Man of
Sleet", and "Up Close and
Personal, The Inside Story of
Network Sports. "
"From Ashes to Glory" with
Bill McCarmey, Is the account
the Buffalos' 1989 golden season.
It chronicles the team's undefealed season, leading up to the
battle fo r th e national championship against Notre Dame In the
Orange Bowl. Amidst this fast pa r ed s tory uf c ollege football,
McCarlney shares the personal
turmoil his family was experiencing aft er learning that his
daughtPr was pregnant with star
quarterback, Sal Aunese's child.
Diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer. Aunese died four

A LOT OF TATERS- Mu Tawney, right , Is shown In the
storage area with plenty of potatoes at Stan Harrison's Maine
farm.

EMS takes
calls for help
IN mE FIELD- Max Tawney, cenler, pauoes a moment in the
fields of Stall and Doris Harrison's Maloe potato farm.

Home ...

Diles completes
hook on coach
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Stall
POMEROY - Southeastern
Ohio's Davf.' Diles, former ABC
and CBS sportscaster, as well as
author of numerous books on
sports personalities, Is the coauthor of Thomas Nelson's soon·
to-be-released "From Ashes to
Glory", the autobiography of
University of Colorado football
Coach Bill McCartney.
Diles describes the book as
"not a sports book, but an
accounting ol a man who Is a
tremendously strong ChrlsUan
who just happens to be a football
coach." McCartney, Diles says,
Is the kind of person who
confronts all the provocative
Issues of his life Instead of
glossing them over, and moves
with complete obedience to God .

Included In the local chapter's
purposes are the study, discus sion and exchange of professional know ledge, expertise and
Ideas In the field or surgical
technology; to work cooperatively with associated professional medical organizations In
the development ol criteria leadIng to cerllllcatlon of surgical
technologists; to maintain the
highest standards and relation ships with other professional
organizations; and, most Important, to promote a high standard
of performance In the communIty lor quality patient care.
Allee A. Grlcoskl, M.D. , surgeon at HMC , said, "As a general
surgeon and sponsor of the local
chapter or AST, I am very

enthusiastic about the commitment this organization has to
ensuring quality patient care.
This goal can only be accomplished through continuing educa llon programs, which are de-signed to keep surgical
technologists accredited In their
ever changing field ."
Chapter officers, In addition to
Ms. Pyles. Include Patricia Dla·
mond, C.S.T., from Pleasant
Valley Hospital as Vice President; Bonnie Saunders, C.S.T.,
Secretary, and Donna Ellis,
C.S.T., Treasurer, both from
Holzer Medical Center.

POMEROY - Three calls for
assistance were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emer
gency Medical Services on
Friday .
At 1:30 p.m .. Rutland squad
was called lo State Route 123
East lor Malcolm Ingram. In ·
gram was taken to Holzer Medl ·
cal Center. At 3: 29p.m. , Middleport squad went to Overbrook
Center. Daniel Lee was I rans
ported from there to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 6:07p.m.,
Tuppers Plains squad was called
to State Route 7 In Tuppers
Plains for Shirley Jones . Jones
was taken to Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital.

Hospital

news

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Steven Powell.
Middleport;
Daniel Lee,
Middleport.
Discharges - Damon Gibbs,
Audrey Torrence, Flossie

Visit scheduled
POM E ROY - Tenth District
Congressman Clarence E . Miller
Is scheduled to hav e his mobile
office at the Rock springs Fairgrounds for this year's Meigs
County Fair. The office will be
sta!fed by the Congressman's
fair representativ e, Brian Nlceswanger of Lanca s ter , and will be
open dally from 12 : 30 p.m. to 9:00
p.m .

Weather
South Ce ntral Ohio
Sunday, partly cloudy with a
slight chance of thunderslorms .
High In the mid 80s . Chance of
rain 30 percen t.
Extended Forecast
Monday through Wednesday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Monday, fair
Tuesday and a chance of showers
and thunderstorms again Wed
nesday . Lows 55 to 65and highs 75
to S5.
Junbav V:imr• - Jmtinrl

home.
Among the unique features of
the country tour Include a visit to
Bob Evans' Homestead, Which Is
on the National Register of
Historic Places. Evans has also
opened his private farms, Hidden
Valley Ranch, where visitors will
observe reining and cu ttlng
horse demonstrations and a
lecture/ demonstration of embryo transplant techniques. The
farm Is known for Charolals beef
cattle and quarter horse
breeding.
Jewel Evans' Mill Is also
Included on the country tour.
This reproduction mUI was constructed by Amish carpenters
using historic French buhr
stones and equipment purchased
from the old Valley Gristmill In
Plainville, Conn. VIsitors may
see the process In action and hear
the story of the mill.
Holly brooke Da lry Farm Is
another feature on the country
tour. While the Federal brick
I arm house Is circa 1847, the farm
Is state-of-the--art. Each cow
receives a special diet, through
signals to the central computer
wh lch Is based upon the cow's
milk production and special
needs . The visitor w111 experlepce today's dairy farm In
operation.
Other features of the country
tour Include six private homes,
one ol which Is a log house also on

oond class PQ!itali!:r paid a ! Galllpol.ls.

Ohio 4.5631 EntNed as second cl ass
malilnl{ matter at Pomf;'TO\o', Ohio. Post
Office.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

B) Carrier or Motor Route
OnE' Week ...... ·---- ............. 10 Cents
One Year ...... ....... ... .. .... ·····--· $36.40

SINGLE COPY
PRICK

. SO Ce nts

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
arM!I wh ere moi&lt;X" carrier servtce Is

available.

The Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel will not llt'
respmslble for advance paymenta
made to carrlen.

MAIL 8UB8CRIPTION8
.. Only
OneYear ..........
..............
......... l37.t4

Sb; montht . ..... ... ............ ... ....... $19.50

DaiiJo .. d

s.n..,.

IIIAIL SUII8CBIPTION8

l•kleeout,

NEW CHAPTER - Kana I'Jiee, cealer, Dewly-eleded
preeldeat of the AST cllapier, talb wl&amp;ll Dr. Alice 4. GrlcGMI, left
ad Rebeooa Comploa. rtpt, A8T Bello• 4 •e,.....•IUive a&amp; tile
OJ'Itlllllallonal meetiDI of the
fonnetl cUpler lor
10ulllem Ohio 1111d Weal Vqtala IIU'IIcallecl!Dolopu.

-u.r

u Wteu .... .... .. ............. .......... . m .u
26 Wtelc.t ............ ... ........... ........ l37 .96
52W..U ............. .. ..... ..... .. .. .. .. 17U6

..... a...... c...,

13 Wtelc.t ....... .... .. ... .. ...... ....... S20.MI

~ Weelc.t .. ... ... ..... .. ...... .. ....... $10.30

52Woelc.t .. ...... ... .

40 &amp; 8 to meet

the National Register and fur nished In memorable antiques .
Each home Is unique and the
country tour offers a day In the
hills of Gallla County as visitors
explore the byways of scenic
southeast Ohio.
Gallipolis, the second oldest
permanent settlement In the
Northwest Territory and the first
ethnic setUempnt, was settled by
the French In 1790. The dramatic
birth of the small cit y was a
direct result of land fraud which
was a common occurrence on the
Ohio frontier. The French were
easy prey to unscrupulous salesmen since France was on the
brink of revolution.
With the passage of the
Northwest Ordinance In 1787,
land speculation was rampant .
When the French landed In
Alexandria. Va ., they discovered
that they had worthless title to
the property on the banks of the
Ohio River. They were artisans
and craftsmen and minor arl s to·
crats unsuited for life In the
wilderness . They were "sold" a
land of milk and honey and
discovered untamed wllderness.
The story of their plight has been
written Into a historic drama to
be featured Oct . 5-7, 12-14 and
18-19 at the Fine and Performing
Arts Center on the Un iversity of
Rio Grande campus .
VIsitors Interested In any of the
events planned during the upcoming months of the celebration

POMEROY - 40 &amp; 8 will not
meet at Abe Grueser's camp but
will meet Instead at the Legion
Hall on Tuesday .

IESTOIE YOUI
HEIILOOM PHOTOGIAPHS

DON'T LET YOUR FAMILY
HISTORY FADE AWAY!
Bring your original photogr•phl to
us for Free consutudon •nd •ti-

In 1989, displays the conlrast of the 19th century
styled exterior to the light and open use of space In
Its modern and taslelully decorated Interior. The
foyer's chandelier and the second level balcony
are amon1 several hlghUghts.

BICENTENNIAL TOUR OF HOMES- Fea·
lured on the GalllpoUs Home Tour B, Sept. 15-16,1s
the home of Shirleen Wiseman located at 425 Third
Ave. The Wiseman VIctorian reproduction, built
can contact the Gallipolis Bicentennial Commission office located at &gt;33 Second Ave .. or call
446-GAUL. The Ohio Valley VIs -

........... ...... 17MO

mltea. No oblloadon. of cour•.

TAWNEY'
S STUDIO
424 2ND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

!tors' Center Is also available to
as sis t Individual visitors or bus
tours and can be reached at
446-0VVC or 446-SITE .

WE WIU OC:.: 10 'fOIJI HOlliE
TOMEAIIIFI: &amp; MTII.lll«

BAZAAR MOlE FASMOHS FURCHML
... moE Fill! llfTJIUI

}kfeiJTS, .. _____~(~~~o~m~M~E~I~G~S~,p~a~~~AI~l____________""-~lh~~~~~~ Articles of
-o·

And If that's not enough, you
can just sit back and watch kids
testlng the patience of their tired
parents, 4-H'ers struggUng wlth
their livestock projects. and
oldsters trying to gel comfortable on hard benches - all while
the beat goes on.
The Meigs County Fair oilers
lots of action, both on top and
down over the hill. There's no
stopping II you have the strength.
And once you're on the grounds,
It 's all free.
Everyone seems to love the
thrlll-a·mlnute mayhem of the
demolition derby. The time for
that Is Tuesday at 7 p.m. In front
of the grandstand. On the hill
stage at 5 p.m. the annual talent
show will be held and at 9 that
evening Bruce Wolle and hls
fancy dancers, the Midnight
Ooggers. will take to tbat stage.
On Wednesday Little l'wilss and
Mister Meigs County will be
crowned on the hill stage loUow'lng judging that gets underway
at 4:30 p.m. The Junior Fair
Parade at lhe grandstand will
begin at 5:30 with the Youth
Awards Night to be observed at 7
p.m. In the show ring on the hill.
At 6:30 p.m. the Country Blend
Band will perform on the hill
stage.
The Wednesday night grand·
stand attraction will be Mike
Snider. a regular on TV's Hee
Haw and a frequent guest on
Nashville Now.
Entertainment on the hill stage
Thursday will be provided by the
Kyger Valley Quartet at 6: 30
p.m . At the grandstand at 8:30
p.m . will be the popular Phil Qlrt
and the Dozers featuring strong
vocal harmonies and a conta glolus sense of humor combined
wlt h the classic music of groups
like the Beach Boys and the Four
Seasons.
The Travelln ' On Gospel Trio
will perform on the hill stage at
5: 30p.m. followed by the Shady
River Shuftlers of Paulette Harrison In colorful costuming clogging to lively music at 6: 30p.m.
On Friday night the Cruise
Brothers. a light and music
two-man disc jockey show, will

present their version of music
dating from the fifties at 8 p.m .
Saturday therewillbeplentyof
action on the hill stage. The
pretty baby contest will begin at I
p.m. followed by Peggy Gillespie
Stylettes Twirling show at 2.
Barbara's School of Dance al4 .
an d Crossover Ban d a I 5: 30 . At
the grandstand Saturday will be
the draft horse fun show which
begins at 4 p.m . and Is expected
to continue through the evening.
Horse shows. truck. tractor
and horse pulling contests, har ness racing on Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday at 2 p.m.,
and quarter horse racing on
Saturday at 2 p.m. as well as
numerous animal e vent s
throughout the week round out
the lair program.
And there of course will be
plenty of competitive and noncompetitive exhibits to see and
commercial booths to visit .

Kiddie Day Is Wednesday and
that day the gate admission will
be reduced Ia $3 from 8 a.m . to 2
p.m. and free riding will be from
noon through 4:30p.m and6toll

P- ~hursday Is Senior Citizens

Ill be
Dayandanyone65oroverw
admitted to the fair tree at the

ga~~~-ly admission Is S5 with
children under one year of age
admitted tree. That admission
permits free grandstand and free
rides . For those holding member·
ship or 4-H tickets, there Is a
charge of S3 to ride each day .
Again this year all of the
commercial buildings are filled
with a variety of exhibits . Permanent local food stand opera ·
tors have been joined by several
mobile food units for the fair .
promising a variety of goods
things to eat

incorporation filed

COLUIMBUS - Call &amp; Lee
Enterprises, Inc. recently filed
articles or Incorporation with
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown's ofllce. The local agent
for the company Is Warren
Sheets, GaiUpolls .

BUYOUT

lOOth birtlufuy
dinner planned
GALLIPOLIS - The Blake
Family reunion and picnic will be
held Aug. 12 at the American
Legion Hall on Bob McCormick
Road with a basket dinner
beginning at 12: 30 p.m. A reception for the IOOth birthday of
Garred Blake will be held at 2:30
p.m. All family . friends and
neighbors are welcome.

NO-IRON PERCAI.E StEElS SETS
..... Tw~

88
19. •••
..

6.88ucH

Cross country
practice set
.,... Dolly

POMEROY - Cross country
practice for Meigs High School
will begin Monday at 9 a.m . All
athletes must have a physical
completed beforP beginning
practice. Interested s tudents In
seventh and eight grade are also
Invit ed to attend . Contact Jim
Oliphant at 992 -5876 for more
Information.

I:SO...t:30pm
SUnday, 12-!1

PboDe 522-0305
YouU.O. . . II

OrU..Our

luJ'--r-•Y

I
I

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!
In our communily, we're committed to offer
the kind of sen-ices and personal auention
you want and need. When you hank with us,
you 'U find that we're much more than j usl a financial institution, we're a hometown friend.
ROCK DONORS - Don and Jean Overmyer of Fremont stand
next to the I7-ton rock Saturday that they donated to the Gallipolis
Bicentennial Celebration. The rock had laid close to the roadway
near the Overmyers' farm In Sandusky County. The rock was to
serve as the base for the Art In Public PIII(!M project In June.

MEET DOTI'IE
Dottle Musser has been employed with Farmers Bank for 16
years, where she Is administrative
assistant. Dottle and her husband,
John, reside In Pomeroy. They
have a son, Steve, who attends Ohio
University. Dottle Is a member of
the Trinity Church In Pomeroy
where she Is a member or the
church choir. Her hobbles Include
traveling in their motor home and
singing In the choir.

SKYLINE LANES
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

UPPER ROUTE 7

WINTER LEAGUES

WIU

WILL

MEET
Monday Mixed league
8/27/90
Monday Men's league
8/20/90
Alley Cats league (Women)
8/21/90
Tuesday Morning Women's league 9/4/90
AEP league
8/21/90
Hillcrest league (Mixed)
8128/90
Wednesdar' s Men's Leogue
9/S/90
Pinsplitters League (Women)
8129/90
Thursday Swingers League (Women) 8/30/90
Skyliners league IMen I
9/6/90
Thursday Night Men' 1 League
8/16/90
Bowling Belles League (Women)
8/24/90
Short Time League (Men)
8/24/90
Highlanders Mixed league
8/25/90
lings and Queens Mixed League
1/26/90
.hmlor Llag1111

......
-.,.
WID.,......

DECORATIVE
TOSS PillOWS

446-3362

Advertlslug Repfl'S('ntattve, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third AwnuP.
Npw York. Ne,w York 10017.

IMJ'Ml q PomertJ, Tile woedclllleb are a
lamDIIIr liP* lo u.- who replarl)o
*lve 11u-wc1a Pomeroy .

(From HOME, pagt AI)

Publls tll"d each Su nday, 82l Third A~ ..
Galllpolls , Oh io, by 1he0h lo Val!~ Publishing Compony/Multlmedla, Inc. Sf&gt;-

Sunday ..................... .

Sunday T.,...Sentinet-Page A-6

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

_~=___:..!......~'-------

1usr Ju.soo1

MembE-r : UnltE'd Press lnterna!lonal,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio New1papl"'' Association, National

WA'ft:IIING 'niB WORLD GO BY - Tbll
11 1 f' '" or IJ"'tteWik u 1ft properi.J clllle4,
.._,, _,. 1o mllld lbe ll'llflc oa Eul Mala

August 12, 1990

9/8/90

TIME

6:00PM
6:30PM
9:30AM
9:30AM
6:30 PM
6:30PM
6:00PM
6:30PM
9:30AM
6:00 PM
6:00PM
6:30PM
6:30.PM
6:00PM
6100 PM

IOWL
8/27/90
8/27/90
8/21/90
9/4/90
8/28/90
9/4/90
9/S/90
9/S/90
8/30/90
9/6/90
8123/90
8/31/90
8/31/90
8nst9o
an6t9o

TIME
6:30PM
6:30PM
10:00 AM
10:00 AM
6:30PM
6:30PM
6:30PM
6:30PM
10:00 AM
6:30PM
'6:30PM
6:30PM
6:30PM
6:30PM
6:30PM

11100 AM 9/15/90 'ti:OG AM

"'We're Committed To Our
Hometown. ... ''

Your Bankfot4t...
Farmers

Bank
992·2136
221 WEST S(COND
POMEROY, OHIO

985-3385
MEMBER FDIC

STArt IOUTE 7
TUPP(RS PlAINS, OHIO

"

�Page A-6-Sunday Tnne&amp;-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

August 12, 1990

Along the River

-Local news briefs---------,
Hearing set for housing
GALLIPOLIS - The GallipoliS City Commis·
slon will hold a public hearing on Wednesday,
September 12 to discuss a rezoning application
submitted by Cendel Group, Ltd. for the old golf

course area.
The company applied to rezone property owned
by Lary Clendenin at Bastlanl a nd Ohio Avenues,
for the purpose of building 40 single- family homes
as a new public housing project.
According to City Manager Dale lman,
however, the application has already been
rejected by the City Planning Commission.
"By law we have to hold this hearing," I man
said Saturday. "It's pretty much a rubber stamp
kind of proposal tor (the city commission) to
reject."
Members of several city and county govern·
ment groups met Tuesday to discu ss the problems
and progress of the public housing Issue and at
that time had not chosen a site from the several
that had been s ubmitted by developers. The old
golf course area Is the first site to be rejected.

Lightning causes fires
A LOOK AT THE MAIN LOCK - As work
continues on the GalllpolLs Locks Replacement
project, the employee capacity is as la rge as it has
been. Here, workers help place more t•oncrete lor

the wall• of what will be the main lock. The crane
seen in the bu.ekground lowers wooden s tructures
used to 11ld workers In tht• concrete plac ement.
(Times-Sentinel photo hy Kathryn Kelly I

GALLIPOLIS - Lightning In the severe
thund ers torm that moved through the Gallipolis
area Friday evening was responsible lor two fires
that damaged more than $10,000 in property.
The Ga llipolis Volunteer Fire Departmenl was
dispatched to the Brookside Apartments on

Bulavllle Road to fight fire touched off by a bolt of
lightning. Roofing mater ials and siding were
Ignited over James Althol's apartment and did
$1,000 damage to the contents of the building and
$5,000 damage to the structure.
The Fire Department was also called in to light
a blaze at Zinn's Landing at 431 Pike Street .
Lightning had struck the east gable of the
bu siness and had ignited roofing and sheeting
materials. There was minor loss to the contents of
the building and $6,000 d amage to the structure.
The Point Pleasant, W.Va. Volunteer Fire
Department was a lso ·called in to aid local
firefighter s.

I

P hase four was the digging of

the ca na l where lhP new Jocks
will be located. Thi s pha se

involv ed c&lt;eavat lng la nd for the
walls of th e loeks , and that s ta ge
ha s been completed.
The fifth phase is t he actual
placement of concrete. This
phase began last summ er a nd Is
working at full capaci ty, wi th
three shift s every day except
Su nda ys.
Ice Mixed
With Concrete
Concrete Is now being placed
five feel at a lime Five feet Is
poured one day on one sectJ on,
and five- day s la!Pr. f ive more

feet is laid over the original
section. The co nrr ete b&lt;•ing la id
Is mixed with lr·c and water.
Morga n said 90 to ns of Ice a re
used during a n eig ht ~ h o ur s hi ft to
coo l the concretr and to prt've nt
crack ing.
When pha se SIK Is com pletPd,
the new locks will be on a n island .
Morgan said the project will
reac h tha t point someti me nex 1
summer. The nex t step wi ll be to
build a bridge from Wes t Vlrgi ·
nla to the new loc ks. Then the
workers will rrmove the plugs
and open up the new locks to river
traffi c.
When the project is comple terl.

plac ed 800,000 yards of concrete
and H million yards of relnforc·
lng steP!. Morga n reported that
roughly 60 percent of the concrete pla cement a nd 70 percent
of Ihe dirt work Is completed.
Project On Schedule
'1'he work Is going well. These
were the most dangerous locks In
the U.S. We are on schedule
wl thin a few days e ither way .
And we' re up to full employee
ca pacity," Morgan sa id .
Morga n explained that no local
companies were a ble to supply
the 250 truck loads of conc rete

used ln a da y so the co ncrete for

the proj ec t Is made on the
co nstruc ti on siiP. Morgan also
sa id th a t RO percent of the
cra ft smen are loca l people
within com muting distance, and
they were hired throug h local
union s.

Fift y percen t of the venture Is
funded by the federal govern·
ment and 50 percent through the
t ow in g Ind ustry . Morgan
ex plained .
' 'This project is long overdue.
Once II Is comp leted , the new
locks wil l allow river traffic up
and down the Ohi o River to flow
much more qui ck ly," Morgan
sai d.

TROY, Ohio I UP II - Workers
razi ng buildings lor a par king Jot
have uncovered a 180-year-old
log cabi n hidden inside the walls
of a house.
The house ha d been built up
a r ound the ra bin, whic h served
as a foundation a nd the inner
wal lS for part of the house . The
house ha d been vacant for years
Lacy Stacy of Star-Ex Inc., the
excavator hired bv Miam i
County to tear down ·t he house
a nd another building, sa id he
obtained papers from a local
history buff that indicate the
ca bin was built In 1810 by
Frenc·hman Louts Humbert and
wa s used as a taver n.
Gen . William Harrison Is be·
lieved to have stayed at the cabin
in 1837, while In Troy to dedica te
th e Mi a mi Cane!. That was four
years before he ran for president
with the slogan "Tippecanoe and

Preparation, planning go into opening fair
By JULIE E. DIIJ.ON
Tlmes-SeotiDel Slafl
ROCK SPRINGS -Old you
ever stop to think how much
preparation and planning goes
Into the Meigs County Fair, or tor
that matter, any other county
fair?
According to Mary Gilmore,
Meigs County Fair Board Secretary, planning lor the next year's
fair begins before the lair e nds .
The fair, which Is governed by
the Ohio Department of Agrlcul ·
lure, Is planned and prepared by
the Meigs County Fair Board,
which consists of 18 people and
the secretary. Fair board
members are elected In December, and Mrs. Gilmore stated

Two cited by lawmen
GALLIPOLIS - Billy Clagg, Gallipolis, reported to the Ga!lla County Sheriff's Department
Friday that an unkoown person had stolen the
centers off of his Chevrolet rally hubcaps. Clagg
stated their value at $100.
Sam Robinson. 18, Vinton, was cited lor !allure
to control Friday by the Ga ilia County Sheriffs
Department . He was traveling north on Floyd
Clark Road when he lost control in curve, went off
the right side of the road and came to rest In a
dllch. Robinson was not injured.
Sandra Drennen, 26, Gallipolis, was cited for no
operator's license by the Gallia County Sheriffs
Departmenl Saturday.
Kimberly Goidkamp, Lakewood, was cited lor
dlso~lng a stop sign by the Gallipolis Pollee
Department Friday .

Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the town
hall.

that anyone holding a membership ticket to the Meigs County
Agricultural Society Is eligible to
run.
MemberslncludeWIIIIamRad·
ford, president; Ben Slawter,
vice president; Barbara Fry,
treasurer; Robert Bailey. Tim
Bearhs, Jennings Beegle, Wal·
lace Bradford, Jeff Folmer,
Clarence Henderson, Jay HIU,
Edward Holter, Addalou Lewis,
John Rice, John Riebel, Dan
Smith, Roger Spencer, VIrgil
Windon, and Laurie Reed .
In addition to at tend ing
monthly lair board meetings that
last approximately three hours
each, board members attend the
Ohio Fair Managers Convention

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

----"'ofiEAR

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

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

GETI'ING READY - Mary Gilmore, lair board secretary, will
apend many, many hours u the Melp County Fair aasistlog othera
In maklnl sure tbat ail goes u planned. Here, she sorls rllibonslor
various 1bows.

"

GET THE WORLD'S BEST FOR LESS
THE ULTIMATE
New Nlssan 300 ZX Turbo

I

The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet In
special sesson Monday at 7 p.m .
a t the township garage.

SPORTS CAR SPECTACULAR

· New 1

weeks. The grounds crewmen
are .responsible for cutting the
grass, painting, and other genera! work.
Mrs. Gilmore stated that In
addition to th e work of the fair
board members many voiunleers help out with the fair. In
addition to this, the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department provides
security and the Meigs County
Litter Control Department keep•

the grounds li tter free rvery day
of the fair . Medical service
during the fair Is provided by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
So, when you attend this year's
Meigs County Fair, stop a nd
remember all the planning a nd
preparation that It has taken to
make it possible, and tha nk
someone.

PREPARATIONS - Dale Ebilo Ia one of live
grounds crewmen preparing tbe lair croundll
physically lor the big week, Au1. 14-18. Eblin Ia

seen here cutting the grass in lront of the unique
curved l"andlltand which Is over a cenlurJ old.

UNIQUE VIEW - The Meip County Fair
Grounds Is certainly unique. Most fair grounds

are situated on one level, but the Melgo Fair
Groundll occupies two level s.

THE 4 DOOR SPORTS CAR
New 1990 Nlssan Maxima GXE

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SAVE '3000

!air board members are not paid
and that the only recognition they
get Is the knowledge that a good
job has been done and the thanks
they receive from people who
attend the fair.
The board does htre, during the
fair only, three people to operate
the office. In addition to this, live
grounds crewmen are hired to
prepare the grounds physically
which takes approximately three

I
f

equipment package, 5 speed. 300 HP
Twin Turbo engine, VERY RARE'

In Columbus, as we ll as var iou s
seminars and meetings to aid in
the planning of the talr.
Accoralng to Mrs. Gilmore the
fair board pays all premiums monetary awards - for every thing at the lair. ThiS includes
4-H displays, school displays,
open classes, girl scouts, etc.,
anything where a pre mium is
awarded .
Mrs . Gilmore stated that the
board raises It 's money from
membership ticket sales and
gate admiSsion, as well as a
donation from the Meigs County
Commissioners. Funds are also
received from th e Ohio Fair
Funds from Harness Horse Rae~
ing, bu t this money is spent only
on racing .
Profits made from the fair go
toward improvements for the
grounds and Mrs. Gilmore noted
that this year a part of the
midway has been blacktopped.
A six·foot high chainllnk fence
topped by three strands of
barbed wire has also been
installed ar ound the lair
grounds . Mrs. Gilmore stated
thiS was necessary because so
many individuals were gaining
access onto the grounds with out
paying.
She went on to say that Meigs
County Is one of the few counties
that does not have a fenced -In
lair grounds . She added that th e
fence will increase the income
tor the fair thus generatin g funds
that can be used on nec essary
Improvements and upgrading .
For those of you who wonder
why the pr ice of admission has
Increased, the answer Is simple,
according to Mrs . Gilmore. The
cost of putting the lair on has
Increased. She went on to say
that Insurance costs to operate
the fair have more than tripled
during the past live years. not to
mention the Increase In costs for
entertainment. She added that
approximately Sl60,000 was
spent on the 1989 Meigs County
Fair.
Mrs. Gilmore pointed out that

j

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~;;;~ronic

B

August 12, 1990

(;()Tll}Jl~ti&lt;Jrt .•. ____~(_F_ro_m__Co_m~p~le_t_lo_n_P_ag~e-A_·_I)______________________ Log cabin hidden Trustee meetings set in Meigs
CHESTER - The Chester
LEBANO N inside vacant house Township
they are completed.
of dredge disposal
workers on the locks will have
trustees will meet

The nex t phase involved w
routing Flatfoot Creek to aid in
drainage of the area on which the
new locks are being built. This
phase Involved intercepting the
cree k at a different location a nd
divertlng it into the Ohio River.
Control Flooding
Damming the water off from
the work area with a coffer dam
so that , In case of flooding , the
e pglneers ca n control the flood ·
I ng, was also a part of the second
phase.
Boats come Into the locks a t
approximately 56() feet above sea
level. The plan Involved digging
60 to 70 feet down to a rock
foundation . When they dug down,
workers found clay In the top 30
feet and a sa nd and gravel
mixture in the bottom 30 to 40
feet. The workers mixed clay and
water to form a membra ne so
water will not leak through .
The third phase Involves the
excavat ion of land outside the
locks area. The tota l area unde r
co nstruction Is near ly 800 ac res .
The excavat ion is designed to
take the clay materia l removed
from the hole where the new
loc ks are being built a nd build
dikes between the canal and
Route 2. Also, the work In pha se
three deals with the containmen t

t'imts- jentinel Section

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'-&lt;.

Automali c , ai r, power s unroo f, seal.
wind o w s &amp; lo c ks. BOSE s l e re o
casse tl e .

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1990 Nlssan 240 SX Dem

MAP t 5 Ia 5C'\i-E
ju1 = J (:, C FT.

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SALE $1 8_.995

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THE OUTSIDE WALL - Shown here is one of
the outside walls on the construction site lor the
GaiUpolls Locks Replacement project. The wails

I

Baby

abandon~d

s tarted at about60 to 10 feet In a canal the workers
dug to begin their construction. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Kathryn Kelly)

irt drug st()r~

ST . CLOUD, Minn . tUP ii and a $3.000 fine .
Baby Jane Doc wa s in good
condition at St. Cloud Hospit a l
Stear ns Coun ty Attorney
Saturday, one day a ft er the Roger Van Heel sa id they will be
newborn girl was found aba n· arra lnged Monday In Stearns
doned In the basemen t res troom Co unty District Court.
of the Osco Drug Store.
Moline sa id it was believed the
The 16-year-old mother and the girl gave birth to thechlld abou t 9
grandmother, both of Swant on. p.m . Thursday night.
Ohio. were arrested In Moor Chr is t worked for Tr a nsport
head, Minn ., Friday and re· America, a Bloomington, Minn .·
turned to St . Cl oud. The grand · based firm that makes deliveries
mother, a truckdriver, wa s to drug stores.
Identified as LaDonna L. Christ,
Police said lhe daug hter ac·
42.
com paned her when she made a
The girl was being held In the de li very Jo the St. Cloud store and
state juven ile cen ter in nearby to a noth er drug store In
Sauk Centre ~nd ChriSt was in the Moorhead:
Stearns County jail.
Marvin Moe n, manager of the
Jim MaUne, St. Cloud assistant St. Cloud store, told police that
pollee chief, said the baby was while Christ was unloading her
found about 8 a.m. Friday In a
van, the daughter asked to use
basement restroom of the Osco the employees' bathroom in the
Drug store In downtown St.
basement and stayed there for
Cloud .
a bout 30 minutes each time.
Hilary Mohs, a clerk, found the
Christ checked with the girl
baby In a trash container.
several Urnes and asked Moen II
''Another clerk said she heard
he knew where to lind a doctor.
a baby crying, so f went Jo see Moen directed her to a nearby
what it was ," she said. "I could
hospital but ChrLst later told him
see some movemenl In the a trip · there would not be
earbage, so I called 911."
necessary .
The mother and grandmolher
The teenager later told pollee
were charged wltb neglect or
she held her chUd briefly and
endangerment of a child, a gross
then put it in the trash container
mlllderneanor. Each faces a
because she lhought it had no
maJCimum of one year In prison
pulse.

I

XE Co upA. s port package. 5 speed. air,
s le re o. c rui se. alloy wheels. spoilers,
tilt wt1ee l. mu c h more

SE Fas tb~ c k , hot red. 5 s p ~P.d. air.
cassette, Jilt wheel, 2.41. 1 ~0 HP
e ngin e, only 3000 mile s.

SALE '14.995

REDUCED s13,995

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New t 990 Plymouth laser RS Dem

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ENT.:.£_1&lt;___ _ ----,

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~ • Alway&lt; hot and ready to use.
• MOTO-MASSAGE~ the only
moving jets.

• Deep, rKlined seating.
• Never over $20 per month to
operate.

301. V6 enqine . automatic . air, power seRL
windows &amp; locks. INFINITY slereo cassetle.
alloy wheel&gt;. ~it dam &amp; tog lights . bright white .
SAVE OVER $2200 NOW

Automatic. ai r. crui se. casselle wilh equalrzet &amp; 6
speakers. lumbar seat. rear wiper / washet/dehost.
Iron! wheel drive

SALE '13,495

SALE $12,995

SAVE OVER $1400 NOW

COME IN TODAY AND DRIVE THE ......BEST
....,_
(~

BAUM

LUMBER
CHESTER
985-&amp;'181

•

- -- -

f\E/GS COUNTY FAIR
ma.p by AARDVARK 50VND, RoGER GILMORE

Meigi County Fair Ground!

.•

�August 12, 1990

Page B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

-Anniversaries---

August 12, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport- GP11 ipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

-Engagements--

Selective Service board
completes .annual training
COLUMBUS - Four district
Appeal Board members assigned
to the Southern District Appeal
Board have just completed their
annual update training progra m.
This training consisted of ap·
proximately lour hours of In·
strucllon which Included a re·
fresher course on selective
service syslem classification
proceudres. a review of th board
members handbook and mock
case !lies with simulated regis·
trant personal appearances belore the local board.
The trainees Included Included
Donald M. Burke from Cincin·
nat!. James R. Ros from Coshocton, Ann L. Kitzmiller from
Westerville and Donald R. Lan·
thorn from Utica.
Although selective service sys·

REED ANNMRSARV- The 20th wedding anniversary of Bob
and Golda Reed will be observed Aug. 19 with an open house at lhe

Harrisonville Masonic Lodge Hall from 2-4: 30 p.m. The couple
requests Ihat slits be om llted.

uim boards are In an Inactive
status, they would be responsible
for deciding claims for cerLaln
classltlcallons such as consclen·
llous objection. hardship and
religious ministry should a draft
be reinstated.
This training ensures that the
287.011 men registered with the
selective service from the coun·
ties within the jurisdiction of
District Appeal Board 565 re·
celve a fair and effective classlfl·
calion process by trained and
objection Individuals should need
lor such a system arise.
Young men must register
within .10 days or their 18th
birthday at any local post office.
Failure to register Is a felony
punishable by tine of up to
$250.000 or up to live years In
prison.

Lee-Shinn

Clark anniversary to be noted
GALLIPOLIS - Car I and
Judith Clark of Ga!UpoUs will be
celebrating their 25th wedding
anniversary on Aug . 11 . He Is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark
of Ga!Upolls and she Is the
daugtherof Mr. and mrs. Ramon
0. Bomgardner of Lewisport .

CHESTER - Lar ry and VIrgithe engagement and approach·
lng marriage of th eir daughter.
J ennifer Lynn to Joseph Lincoln
Shinn, son David and Judy Eber.
South side, W.Va.. a nd Roy L.
Shinn . Cotta gev ille, W.Va.
Miss Lee Is a gradu ate of
Eastern High School and is
e mployed by We ndy' s In
Gal ilpolls.

Bishop to say Masses

MR. AND MRS. AUBRA WASHBURN

Washburn anniversary noted
COOLV!LLJ:; - Mr. and Mrs.
Aubra Washburn, Coolville. will
celebrate thelr 65th wedding
anniversary with an open house
hosled by their children on Aug.
19 from 2·4 p.m. at the Lottrldgc
Communit y Center.
The couple was married Aug.
15, 1925 In Coolville by the Rev .
Everett Cole.
Washburn , a retired townsh ip
employee, now serves as a Troy
Towns hip trustee.
The co uole has seven children.

L. Franklin, Mrs. Ea rll Eleanor)

Guess, and Mrs. Arthur tBettyl
Co le. all of Coolville; Julia
tJudy I Rockhold, Guysville; Lo·
retta Gi llia nd. Homer; and Ma r
garet Lucille Wash burn. Co lum ·
bus. A daughter. Evelyn Louise.
died In 1944 .
The couple also has 22 grand·
ch ildren and .17 grea t ·
grandchild ren. Agrea t grandson
Is deceased .
The couple req uests that gilts
be omitted .

GALLIPOLIS - The Most
Reverend Albert H. Ollenweller ,
Bishop of the Roman Ca tholi c
Diocese of Steubenville. will be
the celebrant lor masses at St.
Louts Catholic Church In Gallipolis the weekend of August 18 and
19.
Ottenweller. a native of Leipsic. Ohio, was previously the
Auxiliary Bishop of Toledo and
was appointed Bishop of Steuben.
v1\le on Oct. 11. 1977.
Ottenwel\er Is the guest of
honor lor a progra m enti tled A
Tri bute to the BlcentennLal. Our
Musical Sa lute to Our Ca tholic
Heritage.
This concer t will be prov ided
by the sons and daughters of the
St. Louis Parish on Aug. 19, at 3
p.m. The parish will conclude the
les tlvlll es with a soc ial In the
churc h ha ll foll owi ng the
performan ce.
The concer t will consis t of
S&lt;'lectlons from the adult c hoir.
the youth cholr, Instrumental
solos and vocal duet s and solos
There will be S&lt;'lectlons of a
sac red and secular na ture. This
concert will be one of the
highlights notlng the b\centen·
nlal of Gallipolis and th e occasion
for nollnJt: 200 years of Cat hollc

OVVC names director
GA LLIPOLIS- Molly Skinne r
has been named the director of
tourism for thr Ohio Valley
VIsitors' Cen te r. located In Ga lli
polls. According lo the OVVC
board chairm a n, Jan Thaler.

Wedding policy
Sunday Ti mes-Se ntinel
regards weddings of Ga lll a.
Meigs and Mason count ies as
news and Is happy to pub\ L' h
wedding stories and photographs
without charge.
However. wedding news must
meet general standards oft Imel!·
ness. The newspaper pre fers to
publish accounts of wrrld ings as
soon as possible arter thr rvenl.
To be published In the Sunda y
edition. tbe wedding must na ve
taken place within 60 days prior
to the publication. Mater ial for
Along the River mustbe recleved
by the editorial department by
Thursday. 4 p.m .. prior to the
date of publiCation.
Photographs of either the bride
or lhe bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories.
11 desired. Photographs may be
either black and white or good
quality co lor. billfold size or
larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally. snap·
shOts or Instant-developing pho
tos are not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department !rom 1
to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
at 16141 «6-2342.
The

Child's crusade
RACINE - The Racine Naza·
rene Church will hold a child·
reo's crusade, "'Characters lor
Jesus.'" lor ages 4·12. Tuesday
through Friday at 6:30 p.m.
nfllhly, under the direction of
BIU Brown, Grove City. A prolfam will be held Sunday at 9: :tO
a.m. Tran1p0rtatlon will be fur·
nllhed and more lnlonnatlon
may be obtained by c alllng
992·11006 or 949-2668.

Sk inner assumed her duties on
Aug. 1.
She rep laces Angela Taylor,
who left th e cent er to reloca te to
Jackson Cou nt y. Wes t VIrginia
Sk inner is a na tive of Morgan
Co unty, Ohio, and holds a bachelors degree In business and
orga niza t tonal communlca!lon
!rom the Universit y of Akron.
She was assistant to the director
of public relations at Stan Hywel
Hall In Akron. and worked In
public rela!lons at Wadsworth
I Ohio I Rittman Hospital.

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ALBERT H. O'M'ENWELLER
Blllhop of Steubenville

-Weddings---

heritage In Gallla County.
St. Louis witt be celebrating the
blrentennlal In a specia l way the
week of Aug. 19, the dat e of the
parish concert. through Aug. 25.
the Feast of St . Louts IX, the
patron sain t of this parish.
The week will co nclude with a
parish a pprecia ti on dinner the
evening of Aug. 25 In the church
hall.

MILLER MOBILE OFFICE
Congressman Clarence E.
Mlller"s mobile office will be at the Meigs Counly Fair. The office
will be stalled by Miller's representative, BriWI NICCBwanger of
Lancaster. rl~thl. and will be open dally from 12:30 p.m. 1o 9 p.m.
Congressman MIUer Is plclured center.

REPORT OF CONDITION
ConsoHdaling domestic subsidiaries of I he
Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State of Ironton In the state of Ohio, at lhe close of
business on June 30, 1990, published In response lo call made by
Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, Uniled States Code, Section
161 . Charter Number 16607 Complroller of lhe Currency 4th District.
L-Statement of Resources and Liabilities
,:i&lt;

Cash and balances due from deposhory lnslrtutions:
Noninterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin . . ....... ..... . 11,751 ,272 .75
lnlereSI·bearing balances . . ........... . ........... . ..... . .... 33,000.000 .00
Securilles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... .. . . . ... ... .. . ...... 44,924,040.79
Federal funds sold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.. ...... .. .
. ..... 16,535,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables :
Loans and leases. net of unearned income . .... .. .. ...... ..... .. 152,720,598.92
LESS: Allowance lor loan and tease losses . ...... . . ........ . ...... 1,929,441.78
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income, allowance. and reserve .. 150.791,157.14
Premises and fixed assets (Including caprtalized leases) .
. . . 3.961,147.89
Other real esJare owned . . . . . . . . .
. ... .... .
.....
. .. . 14,670 .59
Other assels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3,636,661.02
Total assets ........ . .... . . . ... . .. . .. . . . .... . . .. . ..... . .... 264.613,950.18

Deposrts:
In domeslie offices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240,831,865.30
Nonlnterest·bearing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 35,987.732 .41
ln!eresl·bearlng . . . . . . . . . . . .
.......
. 204,844,132.89
Federal funds purchases .
....
.. .....
. . . . 585,000 .00
Securilies sold under agreements to repurchase . .. ......... . . .. . .... 2,541,751 .92
Other liabilhles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . 2,023,671 .23
Tolal liabilhies . ... . .... ... . ...... . . . .. .. . . ... . .... . ......... 245 .982,268 .45

Common stock . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . .... . . . ..... 5,000,000.00
Surplus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . ... . .. ... . . . ... . ...... 4.346,571 .29
Undivided prolhs and capilal reserves ................. . . . .......... 9.285,090.44
Tolal equllycapllal ...... ................ . ... ...... . .. ......... 18.631 ,661 .73
Tolalliabllrties. flmhed-lile prelerred slock. and equity caphal ........ .. 264,613,950.18

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BIUNO IN 1HIS COUPON

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I! ANDYOUR FIRST 10
I·! POUND FREE!
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446-4664

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01110

LOCATJOHS

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liJIIJsAflf:

011s..
fOU PIR 1-·716·4654

We, lhe undersigned directors, attesr to
the correcrness of this sraremenr of
resources and llabilttles. We declare !hal
11 has been examined by us. and lo !he
besl of our knoWledge and belief has
been prepared In conformance whh !he
instructions and is true and correcr .

James L Heald
Bill Dingus
D. Dean Evans

Directors

I, Edwin L Graham
Senior VIce President,
Comptroller and Cashier
of !he above·named bank do hereby
declare !hal !his Report of Condillon Is
!rue and correcr lo the best of my
knowledge and belle! .

Edwin L. Graham
July 13, 1990

...,
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Southwestern Hi gh School. and Is
a student at th e University of Rio
Grande. He Is employed at
Harper Tree Trimming Service.
An open, outdoor ceremony
will ta ke place at the home of
Kathleen Bostic, SR 141, Cad·
mus. on Sa turday Aug. 25 at 6:30
p.m . A reception will foUow.

JACKSON - The Ja ckson Ap·
pie Express excursion train will
be part of the 50th Annual
Jackson County Apple Festival
from Sept. 19·23.
The train will make variou s
trips each day over tracks of the
Indian a and Ohio Eastern Rail·
road. This will be the first
passenger train operated on th e
l&amp;OE locomotives with pas·
senger cars supplied by the
Eagle Canon Passenger Car
Company of Parkersburg, W.Va.
The Apple Express rou te will
cover some of Sou theas tern
Ohio's most historic ra il lines.
The trains will depart from th e
historic for mer Chesapeake and
Ohio depot on Broadway Street In
J ackson. The trai n will depart
Jackson using tra ckage to Coal·
ton which was once part of th e
Hocking Valley Railway and
later C&amp;O Jackson Branch.
Coal ton-Well ston operations
Will utilize track wh ich was once
part of the Cincinnati Hamilton &amp;
Dayton and la ter Bal timore &amp;
Ohio Wells ton Branch . Former
B&amp;O track will be util ized for
Wellston-Hamd en and on Sunday
beyond to West Junction. All th e
tracks are now owned by the Cit y
of Ja ckson and used fo r regul ar
freigh t service by Ind ia na &amp; Ohio
which operates several Jines In
western Ohio as well as a rai l line
from Co lumbu s to Logan .
The train wil l mak e three
roundtrips each day on Wedn es·
day . Thursday. and Frid ay departing Jackson at 11 a .m., 2:30
p.m ., and 6 p.m. ret urning after
an approximate th ree hour
roundtrip to Ha mden. The Satur·
day sc hedule ,calls for nine
departures from J ackson . Trains
will leave each hour from 11 a .m.
until 7 p.m. for an approxlmate15
minut e roundtrip . The Sunday
schedule ca lls lor two roundtrips
from Jackson to West Junction
depa rti ng at 10 a .m. and 2:30
p.m.
Fares for the trips arc as
follows - adult coach. $12; child
(3-111 coach. $10; premiu m.
$20; Saturday. adult coach, $8;
child !3·111 coach. $5 ; premium
$10; Sunday. adu lt roac h, $18;
child. I J. lll coac h. $12; pre·
mlum. $25. Premium serv1 co will
utilize lounge and sleeper cars
with attend ant service Including

Jackson . Ohio 45640 . Orders
should specify dat e and time of
th e train they wish to ride and
Include a phone number If
possible. Additional Information
can be obtained by calling
614·286-27221rom 9 a.m . to 4 p.m.
or 614·286·5499 alter 4 p.m.

Senior schedule set
GALLIPOLIS - Act iviti es and
menus at the Gallla County
Se nio r Citizen Center for the
week of Au g. 13·19 are as follows:
Monday - Short Subj ects, 11
a. m. iTheRenewln gofa VIsion) ;
Advisory Council Meeting, 11
a.m.; Cho rus, 1 p.m.
Tuesday - STOP/ Physical
Fitness, 10:.10 a.m .; VIdeo Mall·
nee "Emplreolt heSun".ll a.m.
Wednesday - Armc hair
Travel " Ma ssac husetts", 11
a.m. ; Blood Press ure Health
Dept .. 1 p.m. ; Cards. 1·3 p.m.
Thursday- Bible Study, 10: 45
a. m.; Herb Class canceled, 1: 30
p. m.; Ohio State Fair jbe at
Center at 7 a. m.\ ; Board of
Trustees meet ing canceled.
Friday - Card s, Quilt ing,
Pool, Horses hoes, Shuffl eboard.
Monday - Creamed turkey or
chicken over corn bread. kale
with vinegar. cornbread. pears.
Tues day - Pot roast or beef

tips, whipped potatoes. green
beans, bread, Ice cream.
Wednesday - Hot dog with
mustard. baked beans, cril~l aw ,
Iced brownies .
Thursday - Meat loaf. brown
bean sal ad, sliced tomatoes.
bread, refrigerator dessert.
Friday - Macaroni &amp; cheese. :
broccoli. tossed salad, bread.
sliced peaches.
·
Make reserva \Ion s by calling
446-7000 before 9 a. m. the day you
wish to attend.

Now Is the time to select a
family monumenr . Perpeluate,
lor all time. the memory of
those you love. Our knowledge
and experience are yours for
the asking.
Noming you buy will ever be
as permanent as a family monu·
ment . Its purchase warrants
thought and guidance. See
what you buy. Visit the menu ·
menr deater who h/18 a com·
ptete display, and who Clfl
design a personalized menu ·
ment to harmonize with Its
surroundlnQs.
We have the experience . We
have the complete display.
You r purchase Is backed by the
strongest monumenrguarantee
obtainable toe1ay.
MONUMENTS ARE OUR ONLY
BUSINESS. NOT A SIOELINE. . .

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· 8803

GILBE RT AND APRIL IIENSON HENRY

Henrj-Henson
HENDERSON, W.Va .- Apri l
Alline Henson and Gllbrrl Eu
g~ n e Henry. J r. wish to announce
their marriage on June 30 at the
llend erson Chu rch of Chris t.
Hend erson. W.Va .
Th e bride Is the daughter of
Fra nk and Ann Henson of Galli
po ll s. She Is the maternal great·
granddaughter of the late Lee
and Rutha Turner of Heneger ,
AI.. and the paternal grand ·
da ught er of th e late Jesse and
Hazel HPnson of Knoxville. Tenn .
She is a graduate of Ga llla
Academy High Sc hool and the
So utheas ter Business Sc hool.
Henry is the so n of Gilbert E ..
Sr .. and !rna Jean Henry, both of
Gallipolis. He Is the mate r nal
gra ndson of Rosa Coughenour

and the late Robert Moore of
Gallipolis He Is the paternal
grandson of Ada Henry and the
late Edward Henry of Ga llipolis.
He ts gra du ate of Gallla
Academy High School and Is
emp loyed as a baker at the
Lafayette Bakery and Dell of
Ga lilpolls.
Also Includ ed In the ceremony
were matron of honor Mary
Henson. brid es maids Debbie
Henry and Eula Clonch . The
flow er girl was Amanda Henson.
Th e best man was Bruce
Henso n with ushers Robert
Henry and Frankie Henderson.
Ma tt ·Henry was th e ring bearer.
A reception followed the ce·
re mony at the Point Pleasan t
Youth Ce nler.

Tickets should be ordered In
adva nce by sending a check and
stamped sell addressed envelope
to the Jackson Coun ty Railroad
Historical Society, 210 Main St .

Fellowship to meet
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Flame Fellowship will m eet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Se nior Citize ns Center. The
speaker will be Bill Cadle.
Middleport. The public Is Invited
and refres hm ent s will be served.

ADOPT A
PET
MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY
CALL BEY
742-2170

We'll Be Seeing You.'
Ye,. we'll be seeing you in all rlwse old familiar pla ces
tlur ymtr heart embr;tces a t th e Meigs (()u nr y Fair thi s we&lt;:k .
And. of course. on e of the most famili ar places ;tt rlw Fair
is rhc Veterans Memorial Hospiral Booth , whi ch this year for
rh,~ first time. will be loca ted in the new Co mmerci al Building.
We' ll be gree ring yo u from I to 9 p.m., every day from
Tueslb y through Fricby. We'll prov ide blood sugar and blood
press ure re sring free of tharge and we will hav e a variery of
arrracr ive fa vors. We will ha ve the most modern and informative hea lthc are lirerarure and you can also register to win
one of seve ral nt ce attenJa nce prizes.
we 'll be looking for you - come out and

"IT'S MY OWN INVENTION- STEP BALL.
YOU CAN ONIX PLAY IT IN
LEVI'S" SPORr JEANS~"
The newest look in Levi 's' Jeans- Sports J ean s ~
100%cotton.Active inspi red denim jeans. High -tech detatli ng.

LEVI'S WEEK AUGUST 10 THRU 18
AT DAN'S IN MIDDLEPORT
Levfs

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

STAR BANK
Star Bank, N.A., TrtState

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Remember pay us a visit!

II

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PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs .
Keith Adkins a nnounce the engagement and approaching wed·
ding o! their daughter Melissa
Dawn to Timothy Brian Bostic,
son of Mr. and Mrs . Brian Bostlc .
Adkins Is a graduate of Southw ·
eslern High School. Patriot, and
Is employed by Holzer Clin ic.
Bostic Is also a gra du ate of

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page B-3

bever age and sna cks.

----

IF YOU ABE U POllNDS

Shinn Is a gradu ate of Po int
Pl easant High School. He Is also
employed by Wendy 's of
Ga!Upolls.
The open chu rch wedding will
take place Aug. 25 at 6:30p.m at
the Pearl Chape l In Albany. A
rec eption will follow In the
churc h base ment .
Th e couple will resid e In
Ches ter.

nia L er. Chester , are announcing

Ky .
The co uple married Aug. 11,
196..1 at the Eu reka Methodist
Chu rc h with the Rev. Robert
Mussman olflcla!lng.
They will celebrate with their
children and families : the Greg
Clarks and th e Sco tt Clarks.

Adkins-Bostic

Exrursion Train
set for festival

JENNIFER L. LEE, JOSEPH L. SHINN
MR. AND MRS. CARL L. ClARK

w. Va.

115 E. Memorial Drlwe, Pomeroy, Ohio

~

Member FDIC

992-2104

290 N. SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

20°/o OFF

JEANS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

�B-4-Sunday limes-Sentinel

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

Simmons-McGuffin

--Weddings--

M lDDLEPORT Beverly
Hills Baptist Church, Hunting·
tun, W.Va., was the setting for
the July 7 double ring wedding
ceremony of Debra Lynn McGuf·
fin and Kev in Lee Simmons with
Rev. Keith Creasy officiating.
The bride Is the daughter of
Doro thy McGuffi n. Middleport,
and the late Ha rry McGuffin. The
groom Is the son of Amos and Eva
Si mmons, Huntington. W.Va .
Mu sic was provided by Jackie
Mosley, pianist. and the church
wa s decorated with two seven·
bran ch ca ndela bra. a unity can·
die. and while pew bows ac·
cen ted with silver flecks.
Esco rted to th e altar by Harry
McG uffin Jr , the bridP wore a
floo r ~lt' nglh gown of satin with
la ce sleeves pufled at the
shoulder and a high lace co llar
with Insets.
Wedding coordinators were
Ch r is tie Staplet on. cousin of the
groom. and Charles Lovejoy . The
moth er s' flow ers were presented
bv Charles Pearson .
~ Elaine Martin served as ma tron or honor and other brides·
maids were Theresa Simmons,
aunt of the groom; Tabitha
McGumn. n Ieee.of the bride; and
Heather McGu ffin, n iece of the
br ide. flower girl was Porshia
Martin.
Sco tt Martin served as bes t
ma n and oth£&gt;r groo msmen were
Steven McGuffin, brother of the
hridr : S t an ley P e t Pr man ,
bro ther of the groom; and Joey
Simmons, cousin of the groom.
Ri ng bea rer was Eric Simmons.
cous in of I he gr oom .
Fot lo\.ving th f' ceremony a
n•ception w.1 s hf'ld at the EbPnczp r Community Outreach Ce nter in Huntington. W.Va .
Th e bride's table was deco·

MARK AND KIMB E RLY I'OLCYN THOMAS

Thomas-Polcyn
LALLIPOL!S
Kimberly
Kay Polcy n and Mark Allen
Thomas werP uni ted in marriage
In a double ri ng. Holy Com mun ·
Ion ce r emony at St. Peter' s
E pisco pal Church on J an. 27.
The brid e is th e daughter uf
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T . Po lcyn of
Ga!Upolis and the groom is the
son of Mr . and M rs Roger
Thomas of Patriot.
Soloists were Karen Polcyn
and Con nie Lam bert , and orga .

nisi was Jan Be tz.
Th£' altar was fl anked wit h
ca ndelabr um and vases of whit('
car nations. Sprays of ivy with
white candl es were placed In the
wi ndows and a white ais le carpet
wa s placed for the bride.
Givf'n ir1 marriage by her
father, th e bride wo re a white
sa tin gown with a sweet hra rt
neckline, basque waist, and
pr in cess sleeves, accent ed with
seed pearls. cry stals and ve nice
la ce . The full sk irt wa s lace·
edged and l'Xtended into a
chapcllc•ngth train . Her finger
1ip veil was held by a J uli et rap
with seed pear ls and pour ne t
lin g. She carr ie d a nosegay of
whit E' mlnurt rosPs . \ le p hanot is
and baby ·s brf'at h w ith ven ice
la cr and pearl-;.
Mimi Rentt: u f Miller sburg,
Ohio, was maid of honor. She
wore a wi ne-colo red sa tin gown
with v·necklin e. cut out bac k,
princess slet=&gt;ves and a headpiece
of pout net ting and pearls . She
earrif'd a nosPga_
v of w hit l' Jnd
wirlt' car nati ons. pi nk m iniat urP
roses and baby' s breat h sur

r ounded by I:.H.'t. '
Kari Polcyn of GJI!ipo li." and
Lisa Stepp , Pr . PleJsa nr wer P
bridesmaid s ~~nd won' gown:-,

identical to th r maid of honor 's
Bethany Johnson ot C;dlipolis.
cousin of fh p groom. WJs rluwt.•r
gi rL ShP wore a mull i ·colorC'd
gow n with a wr{'at h of pink
flow ers and ribbon In her hair,
and ca rri ed a basket of pink peldl
rose s.
Best man wa s Mike T homa s of
Cleveland. eousin of thr gr uo m .
Ushers wer H.ob Polcyn. brothr r
ol lh P hridP, and J) ;~ n l&gt; ~1 vil'c.,.
co usi n of l hP groom Rin g bl'arPr
was J os h Polcy n, brot her of thP
brid e.
Th p men v.:o r f' bl;t r k tu:xcdoP ~
Th r groom won .• a boutonnil'l"l' of
whitE' minuet rosf•s. v. ·ith the
others wearing pink fllrl l&lt; tlion:-,
wi th baby's hrC'ath
A bufft.) l n' et•ption wa s twill in
thl' parish ha ll follo win g tih'
c~·re mony . A fi v ~ · - ri rrf.'d c o~ kt
ccn rcrrd thl' b ri d r'~ IJh/1·. w hic h
wa s t rimm ed wilh pi11k ,tnd
topped by a n o~r gay o f pm k a11d
rr d rosPburls
Regiswrlng gursLo:; WJ s Mi
ehr llr Russ ') f T hu rman and
Mand v Pope of Gallipoli s.
Th e br idr i s a graduate of
Ga lli a Academy Hi gh Sc hool and
allc nded th e U niver sit y of R io
GrandE'. ShP is Pmp!O_'.i'd l&gt;y
l·l olzer Med ic al Cr•n tf'r .
Thf' groom is a graduate of
So uthwes tC' rn Hi gh Schoo l c.lll d
Oh io DiPsr! TC'chnir ~li i ns!ltutr in
Clevr land.
Th ey w ilt rP sid e in Pat rio t

summ f'ftimr. Jt "s fa irtimP
It .., timr to takP pr idP in your
cmnmu nil\ b~' gP itin g mvol ved
in th is yt• ilr" ~ r lrctions .

rated with a thre~tlered cake
and two side cakes attached by a
stairway . Presiding at the table
were Barbara McGuffin and
Debbie McGuffin, slsters·ln·law
of the bride; and Sherr! Pettit
and Terri Baldwin.
Anita Simmons. slster·ln·law
of the groom, registered the
guesrs.
The couple reside In Hunting·
ton. W.Va.
The bride Is a graduate of
Meigs High School and Sou·
theastern Ohio School of Practi·
cal Nursing. She attended Ohio
University and Is a senior at
Marshall University where she
will graduate in the fall. She Is a
volunteer instructor for the
American Red Cross In first aid
and communlly CPR. She Is
employed with VOCA Corpora ·
tlon of West VIrginia .
The groom Is a graduate of
Wayne High School and Northern
Wayne County Vo·Tech Center
where he studied heating, venll·
lation, and air conditioning. He Is
a volunteer with the Lavell'tte
fire Department. He is em ·
played with VOCA Corporat ion of
West Virginia as a habilitati on
specialist.

Blood preJJure clinic
HARRISONVILLE- The Har ·
rlsonvllle Senior Citizens will
hold a free blood pressure clinic
on Tuesday from 10 a.m . lo noon
at the townhouse.

Election board meets
POMEROY The Meigs
County Board of Elecllons will
meet Tuesday at 4: 30p.m . at the
office on Mechanic Street In
Pomeroy .

SUMMER
CLEARANCE .••
SAVINGS TO

50°/o OFF!

DAVID AND GINGER RICKARD DOERFER

Doerfer-Rickard

Peddler's Plllltry
140 Second Avenue
OallipoUs, Ohio 4l6J I
Phone6t~27ll

MASON, W.VA . - Lori Re nee
Redman and Clinton JHm es
Bailey were unitpcJ in ma rriage
on July 7 at the Mason Lnilt'd

Methodi st Chu rch with Rev.
Ben ni e Stevens offici al ing the
doubl r r i n ~ ceremony .
The brid e is the daught er of
Ray and J oyce Redman. Ma son,
W.Va . Th e groom is 1hP su n of
James Bailey, Lon g Rntlorn
Music wa s provi dPd by Lv rlyn
Proffitt. org anis t; U sa StarchPr,
pianist: and Susa n li&lt;.I .Y PS,
solo ls i.
The church wa s decorated with
fi reside bask ets of whi tl' mum o.,
and pin k ope n roses .
Glvt•n In marriage by hf'r
parent s, thP bridP wo n• a whi tt ·

•

satin forma l·h ·ng th gown. Th e
bodice featun 'd vrnise lace em ·
belllshrd with S&lt;'quins and simu
laird pParl s Jnd sheer illu sion
insets in til r fron t and bark . The
puffed s!C'eves wr'IT' ruffl f'd c11 t hP
shou ld er s and ruffed. Th C' go v..·n
had a full pick up skirr with lael'
floun ce hr m ex tendin g i nto Ll
chapel length tra in. accented
wi t h sat i n bow s. ThP vf'il was
held by a ci rclr of fl mvr-r:-. and
simul~ !Pd pPa r ls. Sh{' l '&lt;HI"il 'ci ;1
silk ca scading bouqurl of wh rtr•
satin with opc·n r n '&gt; P S. pink and
whil e mi nlatu rP rosf.' blu b . s11 ·phanotis, and strf'amcr s of pink
and wh\tr. sa tin ribbon s.
SPrvln g as maid of honor wa s
Paul a Bird . Nt&gt;w H &lt; l' · ~ ·n. W . V&lt;.~ .
Bridesmaid s wt •rr Meld niP M ar
sha ll. Masmr . W.Va: Sherry

..

~" '

Hi c km an, Ma son, W Va ..
Amanda Ru ssell. Ha ci ne. Junior
bridesmaid was .Jodi Rou sh.
Mason, W.Va . T he fl ower girl
was Kylic Sayrr•. Middleport .
Th ey won• pink satin tea·
lC'n gth dresst•s with a swt•e thea rt
""'kline. lace bod ic~ over lay and
hasq uC' wai st. They c arried nose·
gay bouquet s of pink and white
rosr s. Thl' flowr r gi rl was at tl red
in a whiff' dn:•ss with r uffles of
la ce. puffc•d sle eves, and a pink
sal in r ibbon sash.
C.J . Harper, Lebannon , ser ved
;Js bes t man and oth r r ~rooms
mf'n wr-rr Tom Pu llin s. Long
13ot tom; Char les Cl eland , Long
13ottom: Jnd Ha_'.l ReUman J r.,
Ma son. w.v~ ThP ring bearer
wa .'- Hy;Hl Huu sh, Mason, W.Va .
The.v wore gra y tuxedos with
pink ties and cummerbunds.
A r erPp tion wa s held at the
Pomeroy Sen ror Citi zens Ce nt er
wherr thP bridr "s tahlr f er~ lu red
J pink and w!1iiP t il'rP d cakP
topprd with "PrPl'ious Mo·
mPnt s" f igurines. Presiding a1
tile tabl e was Kathy VanMatre,
(;rec nfield . Guest s were regis ·
tr rcd bv Lana A rthur, New
Haw•n , \\ ' \' a.
Tlw coupif' rrs idPs in L ong
Bo t to rn
i\tlf'nding fro m out f1 f town
wrrr Waynf&gt; 1\ c kf't t. St Peter s·
bu rg, F'li.1: Kenn y and ValPr lr
~l ack. Prince ton. W.\ 'a.; J an.
Susir. J ustin , nnd Ja so n L ong.
Circ l f'\•illr ; L rnn and l&lt;av Ward .
Fo ll ansbee. 1\'.l ' a . and Kat hy
Va n Ma trr. Grrenf il'ld

RA CI NE -Gin ger Rickard
became the bride of Dav id
Doerf er on July 4 In an oout ·of·
door s double rin g cer emon y at
the home the bride on fores t Run
Road In RacinP.
Th e brille Is the daughter of
.Julia Darst, Clifton , W.Va. The
groom Is the son of Henery
Doerf e r a nd M rs. Sa m
Th om pson.
Escor ted to the altar by Ri ck
Taylor, the bride wore a fl oo r ·
l ength gown of white salin. la ce.
and seq uins. The fingertip vei l
headpiece was decora ted with
peac h Qnd white rosPS and
beaded pearls. She carried a
cascading bouquet of while and
peach roses , beaded pearls and
l ace with ribbon accent.
Josle Doerfer. two·year·old
daughter. was flower girl. She
wor e a knee·length dress of pink
and white lace. Her headpiece
fpatur ed a peach roses and
baby's breath halo with ribbon

accent. She threw white rose

petal s tu the altar. Christopher
Duncan, nephew of the bride,
served as ri ng bearer .
Kim Taylor was the maid of
honor. She wore a tea length
dres s in pink with peach baby 's
breath in her hair and a pea ch
and white rose cor sage. Chuck
RC'Itmi.re scrvcd as best m an.
Followi ng the ce remony a
reception was held .
Attending were Julia Darst,
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Thompson.
Bub. Gina , and Chris Duncan.
Rick and Kim Taylor. Tim.
Becky, Rachel!. and Ca rolyn
Davi dson, Gwen Folmer. Chuck
Reitmire, Glen Werry, Mary,
Annatte Sh&lt;•ets. Bill Doerfer,
Danny Buffington. Richard
Knopp, M r. and Mr s. W Perkins,
Jeff HyS&lt;' Il, Roger H ysell. Mr .
and Mrs. Tom Krautter, Mr. and
Mr s. Gregor y Sheet s, Mr . and
M rs . Max Wilson, and Debbi e
and Kenny While .

MOMENTS TO REMEMBER!
Lei IIASKINS.TANNER help you make
those special mom ents . You wUI hu"c over
190 styles of tuxedos to .:huose from. We

have a large selection of the latest styles
and complimentary accessor!~ to mak e
this your special night.
PRIUS SlARl Al

Optn Monday til 8 P.At

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DAN'S BACK-TO-SCHOOL
SALE
LUCKY WINNER - The wlnnl'r ol the grand prize at llw Grand
Opening Celebration at th e Prescription Shop In Middleport WIL'
D 1 M laeohs ol South Second in Middleport. ,Jacohs. left. wa.•

a ed

d'

a

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Magna vox teltvts hm following the store's

l11c&lt;l Wl't'k . Pictured with .Jar·ohs Is Sieve F'ollrod ,
owner-pharmacist at th•· store.

·~~'"'"'" $ 4~.£,~.,~
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Washington, Law rence, Scioto,
Jackso n. Ross, Clinton, Erie,
Lucas and Richland counties.
T hr oughout the campaign
tour. Congr essman DeWine will
trare l with his wife. Fran. and
their seven children: Pat. Jill,
Becky, John, Brian, Alice and
Mark.
The DeWines wil l trave l In a
campaign -d ecorated recrea ·
tiona! vehicl e and will visit
eounty fair s and courthouses
during th e d ay, spending the
evenings and camp sites and
state parks.

KEVIN AND DEBRA MeGUFFIN SIMMOSS

KUHN-COON
REUNION

rod Brown rrmindscitizr ns I herr
are ma nv importan t iss ues and
races on thP ballot this yra r .

"Bul yay r an·r ge t invo lved if
yo u'r p not rf'g i ~ tf'red to votr.·· hr
sai d .
That Is why t ht.• Mr igs Co unty
Board of E le&lt;·t ion&gt; . alon g wi th
Brown' s office. i s m ak ing it
easier for citize ns to regis ter by
offerin g registrati on sPrvi crs at
this year 's Meigs Co unt.v f air .
The count y fairs pruvlde 4ui ck
and convenirnt opportunities for
Ohio voters to register or w
register. "II only takes two or
three minut es to fill out a
registration form , " Brown sard
To build fa miliarity with the
booths and In turn enhance vo ter
turnout on el ec tion day. mock
elections will al so be held at the
fair. Brown sa id the elections are
a fun , easy way for Ohioans to
express their opinions on current
Issues. become In volved in the
electoral process and - most
importantly- becomccomfurla
ble with II .
To be el igible to register to
vote. you must be a U.S. ci tize n,
at IeastlB years old by November
6, 1990, and mu st be an Ohio
resident. Ohio voters will al so
need to re·regls ter If they have

i

Bailey-Redman

Will Be Held on August 19
at the Late Charles N.
Kuhn's Farm on
Fairfield-Centenary Road.
Relatives and Friends are
Welcome. Covered Dishes
Welcomed.
Dinner Will Be At 12:00

DeWines to visit Meigs Fair
ROCK SPRINGS- U .S Rep .
Mikl' OeWinl' (I{.[Jhiol and his
fa mily will visit the Meigs
Co un ty fa i r on Friday at noon.
Their visi t Is a part of a campa ign
swi ng that will taken them to
over 60 Ohio co unti es during the
month of August. Dewl ne Is the
Republican Ca ndidat e for Lieu I·
enanl Governor.
The tour was k ic ked off at the
candid ate' s campaign head quar~
ters in Xenia .
During their f i rst we ek on the
campaign trai l , th e family wi ll
make stops in VIn ton, At hens,

CLINTOS AND LOIU REDMAN B .•\ !LEY

GALLIPOLIS - Scenic Hills
Nurs ing Center will be holding
It's monthly F'amlly N i ght
Di nn er on Mond ay. Aug 13 at
6 30 p.m. All fami ly m embers
and friends of res id ents are
inv i ted to attend.
Th e menu will consis t of : r oast
beef and gravy, mashed pot a·
! of' s, glazed carro ts , garden
cottagl.' cheesP sala d, hot rolls.
('a rr ot ca ke with cr eam c heese
frost ing, Iced tea and co ffee.
Meal donation Is $2 per person .
The program will be provided
by F'ACTS tF'amlly Addi ction
Coun seling Treatment Se rvl ~
cos \. If you would like to att en d.
co ntact Sce ni c Hills hy 10 a.m. on
M on da y , !lug . 13 to mak e
n•sf'rv at Ion s.

movrd to .1 cliffrrl'nt count .\' or if
th 1•y h JVP no1 v oted in :.Jil .\"
l 'il'('li on in tlw I ii~ I lou r ~· t ·, Jr ~.

Sunday limes-Sentinei-Page-B-5

-Weddings-----

Family Night
set at facility

Voter registraiton set
for Meigs Fairgrounds
I t ·~

August 12, 1990

.,.~

HOLZER
CLINIC
CONGRATULATES
A GREAT 1990
GALLIA CO. JR. FAIR
We were proud to provide a
booth and participate as a
local livestock buyer.

20°/o OFF ALL

CHIC AND SUNSET BLUE
Aug. 1Oth thru 18th

$2ft95
7

DEWINE FAMILY CARAVAN - U.S. Rep . Michael DeWine
and his fa mily will visit thf' Meigs l :ounty Fulr as a part of a
month-long campaign swing across Ohio . DeWtne 19 the
Republican candidate for Ueutcnant Governor of Ohio.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense ...
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Sreening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
Sliding fee sole. No one refused servi1es because of inability to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
POMEROY:
23b E.Main St., 2nd floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Thursday

GALLIPOLIS:
414 Se&lt;ond Ave., 2nd Floor
446 -0100
8:30 fo 5:00 Monday-Friday
8:30 lo 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
ALIO : )O&lt;kson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chiili1othe, LO!Jon &amp; M1Arthur

�Paga B-6-Sunday Timas-Santinel

August 12. 1990

Beat of the bend

Dear Mr. Director...
By BOB HOEFl.ICH
Dr. Mr. Ohio Lottery Director.
Occasionally, I play your l\JJ·
per Lotio game
even though I
have this gut
feeling that I
stand about
much chance
winning as
snowball in
know here.
Still I play with hope In my
heart because I subscrlbt· to the
old saying, "You can't win, If you
don't play".
I have resorted to all sorts of
tactics In selecting my " lucky
numbers" - birth dates, highway numbers, motor vehicle
license numbers, the square
roOts of key figures divided by
lour, and the number of limes my
dog barks from midnight to six
a.m. Obviously. I don't have the
right system.
However, It's not all bad, Mr.
Director. I mean. sometimes I
get as many as two out of the six
numbers and if I do that well, I'm
thrilled. Alter all, that means I
only had four wrong - wow, I
came close. I get so encouraged
that I evE.'n try again -and again
-and again.
The bad news Is - and I know
this will upset you - that I am
retiring from the game this fal l
whE&gt;n some nme more numbers

-according to what I hear-arE'
being added which means I pick
six number s from a total of 53
rather than the presenl44. With
that addition. the snowball in you
know where chance really gE'IS to
the Impossible dream stage.
It 's going to break my heart to
throw in the lowe!. I mean . ran
you imagine what it mpans

psychologically to give up my
last chance to get rich quick?
That' s a real depressing milestone. Don't change your plans on
my account though. With the way
things are gomg my game money
w111 probably be going into the

Hospital. 29th St., Huntington, W.
Va. Otis Is doing so well, In fact,
that hE' Is thinking of Meigs
County and friends here. He will
apprecla te cards and E.'ven
visitors.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Little,
Zuspan Hollow Road, Middleport. recently toured thE' Bard·
stown Civil War Museum.
Among the displays was a
cannon In excellent condition.
The Littles were advised that the
cannon had come from the
basement of a Pomeroy tavern at
some point In time. Just proves
that our basements probably
have a lot of goods tullln them although I doubt If many can
boast a cannon .
Pomeroy has a new resident well not really a new resident but
a former resident has returned to
live herE'.
She Is Abbey Stratton, daughter of the late Robert and Ada
Warner. She lived In Pomeroy as
a girl and attended Ohio University where she was trained to be a
teacher.
Mrs. Stratton has been living In
Paulding County . She taught 21
years In Detlance and 11 years In
Paulding County.
Following the death ol her
Mother. Mrs. Stratton put the
Warner home on the market. It
almost sold, but the deal fell
through and Mrs . Stratton felt
relieved by the circums tance.
She had no relatives in Paulding
Cou nty. so why not return to
Pomeroy and live In the homeplace? That's what she has done
and will be redoing the home as
she moves al ong .

Mrs. Stral!on has joined the
Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and Is spending one day
a week there with the group. And
she's experienced.
She had
earlier spent 13 years workin g as
a vo lunteer In the hospital at
Defiance.

gasoline tank .

Otis Knopp. county school
attendance officPr. is getting
along ,.-,•11 followi ng major
surgery

and

on

Friday

was

mov£&gt;0 from the inle nsivP carC'
unit

'4i

=1

nVHTl

aT St

It's Incredible that this Is
Meigs County Fair Week already
and after that schools start.
Nothing goes as fast as your tim e
and your money does it ? Do kef'p

smiling.

F&amp;AM to meet

EdelmannOney
GALLIPOLIS - Jennifer Ann
Oney and Michael GE.'rard EdE'I·
mann announce their marriage
of May 19 at the St. Louis Catholic
Church In Galllpolls.
She Is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin Oney, WestervHie. He
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Edelmann, Gal lipolis .
The bride wore a blush pink
taffeta gown, embossed In a pink
and white tulip overlay with a
chapel train. The bridesmaids
wore pink taffeta gowns, carryIng pink and white silk rose
bouquets.
Matron of honor was Doris
Schaad and bridesmaids were
Beth Oney , sis ter of the bride,
Theresa Northup, sister of the
groom and Sue Hambrick.
Flower girl was Sarah White,
niece of the groom.
Best man was Thomas Edel·
mann, brother of the groom. and
groomsmen David Edelmann.
brother of the groom, Gerry
Keach and Larry Hohenbrlnk.
Ring bearer was Justin Oney,
nephew of the bride. The ceremony was officiated by Rev.
Wlllalm Meyers.
The bride Is a graduate of
Westerville North High School.
She Is currently an administrative assistant at William A.
Hopkins and Associates.
The groom Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School,
and received bachelor's degree
In ciE'Ctrical engineering In 19E7
from the Un iverslty of Dayton.
He Is currently emp loyed by
Sou th ern Engineering In
Westerville .
The couple Is residing In
Co lumbus.

Chamber to
host cookout
MEIGS - There will be no
regular monthly meellng for the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce In August.
The Chamber will sponsor a
Cha mber After Hours Cookout
for the members and their
families on Aug . 21 beginning
around .1 p. rn .
Thf' next regu lar

RACINE -The Racine Lodge
461 F &amp; AM will meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m. All members are urged
to attend.

August 12, 1990

By James Sands

DIAMOND

CLUSTERS

smnNG uS59.95

Tawney Jewelers Inc.
422 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS

MICHAEL AND JENNIFER ONEY EDELMI\NN

HELPING OUT The Webelo Den from
Pack 204 Is shown In lhe above and below
photographs at the /\riel Theatre loading up

CROWN CITY - Mt. Zion
!laptisl Church youth revival
features David Saunders with
John and Debbie Cardwell and
Michell&lt;' Ours singing, 7 p.m.
RIO GRANDE - The IIOth
Rlazer reunion will be held Aug.
12 at l{hodes Ce nter at ~he
University of Rio Grande with
din ner beginning at noon .
GALLI POLIS - The family of
Henry and Zelda Houck-Beaver
will meet for a reunion Aug . 12 at
the Raccoon Cr€€k Park In
shelter six.
KERR - Denney family
reunion will be held Aug . 12 at
Gilmer 'Bill' Knotts residence at
Kerr. Ohio. There will be a
basket lunch at 12:.10 p.m .
Family Is to bring table sec{ Ice.
chairs . favorlll' recipes for fam -

Ily cookbook and any lnlonnatlon
or pictures on family history
VINTON - The l'ew Vinton
Full Gospel Church will meet
Sundays at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. and
Thursdays at 7 p.m. with Jam&lt;'s
Sims as pastor. All are welcome.
Under the direction of IPCC.
CADMUS - ThP 72nd Myers
Reunion will be held Aug . 12 at
thE' F'ox Fairview Church In
Walnut Township A basket
dinner will be held at noon .
CROWN CITY - SpE'Cial singIng and a musical concert by
Brenda Hensley ol Gallipolis will
be held Aug. 12 at 7 p.m. at the
Crown City Methodist Church.

Iins Family sing mg .
VINTON - The 69th Annual
Gooch Reunion. Sunday, Aug. 12
at the Jim Bush Hall.
Dinner at I p.m.
SHADE - The 66th annual
Hayes -Young -Holliday School
Reunion will be held Sunday at
the Holliday School Ground. A
basket dinner will be held at
noon .

MASON -There wi ll be a
gospel si ng at New Faith Baptist
Church on Route 33 In Mason.
W.Va. on Sunday at 2 p.m.
featuring Conrad Cook and the
Ca lvary Echoes. and the Redeemer's Quartet .

701 2ND AVENUE

446 -0966

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

WE HAVE JUST WHAT YOU NEED
FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL
WhJ rever your age

Preschool ( 2T -tiT)
Grade School (4-14)
Jr. Hi (Pre-teens)
High School &lt;7-241
College
l."dirs

Oh, yes, Teachers need new school clothes, too.'
BACK-TO SCHOOl. LAYAWAYS .
NEW SH IPM ENT OF FALl. CLOTHES
FOR SIZES IT THRU 14 .
NO\X' HAVE SIZES 18 THRU 24

monthly

meeting will be the second
Tut&gt;sday In September at

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Parker reunion will be held
Sunday at I p.m. at Tupper s
Plains Elementary.
RUTLAND - The annual
Davis reunion, lor descendants
ol Orlando and Katherine Sheline
Davis, will be held Sunday at
noon at the Ell Dennison Post No.
467 American LE'glon Hall. Families are to bring prizes for the
games.
CHESTER - The annual
Weber reunion will be held
Sunday at Rodney Keller's farm
on Route 248ln Chester. A basket
dinner will begin at noon. Drinks
will be furnished.
REEDSVILLE -The annual
Connolly rE'unlon will be held
Sunday at the Bellville Locks and
Dam at Reedsville. A potluck
meeting will be held at noon.
Bring table service.

,·

'

CENTENARY - Centenary
United ChriiUan Church w111
have preaching Aug. 12 at 7:30
p.m. wltb the ~- Thurman
JohnsOn preaching the the RDI·

MONDAY
POMEROY -Croys country
practice for Meigs High School
will begin Monday at 9 a.m. All
athletes must have a physical
comp leted before beginning
practice. Interested student s In
sE.'venth and eight grade are also
Invited to attend . Contact Jim
Oliphant at 992-5E76 for more
Information .
CHESTER -

The Chester

1rust£&gt;1?S

will

m~r

Monday at7 30pm . althrtown
ha II.
POMEROY
The Burlingham Mod&lt;'rn Woodsmen will
have a melon supper on Monday
at 6:30p .m. at the Meigs Count y
Fairgrounds near the gra nge
building . Fo llow ing dinner.
members will prepare the Mod ern Wood smen booth for the
Meigs County Fair.
BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet
Monday at the town hall at 7 p.m.
DARWIN - The Dlsa bled
American Veterans and auxll·
lary will havE' a picnic Monday at
6: JO p.m. at the roadside park on
Route 33 near Darwin. Bring a
covered dish .
LEBANON - The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet In
special sesson Monday at 7 p.m.
at the township garage.

Doing, their part, Webelos den
helps recycle material at Ariel

r· - -7l

1- '.J•lJtlt\!l .
I -::f:P. r-~·

0
\

Rock of Age• offert you a choice of 6 different colored

grtnhn. Whatevel' your requirement• may be, complatll
aatl1factlon I• aaured with Rock of Ag••·
Mon., Tu•·· Thura. &amp; Fri. 9:00a.m. 'til 4 :00 p.m.
Other Houra by Appolntment-448·2327 or 113-111188

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

JSI '111W l•e.

Pl. 446·2327

BUYERS

c;ALL.I POLIS - The Webelo
Den from Pack 204 joined forces
with Kevin Eastma n of Food land
Grocery In a recycling effort at
th e Ariel Theatre. Pack
members showed up and loaded
up cardboard boxes that th e

Buy Your
Furniture From
Your
Tri-County Dealers

Ariel's new Victor ia n s tyle sea ls

were shipped ln. Ells and Levi
King. Jeff Mitchell and Kevin
Walker teamed up with Char lene
King and Dave. Sandy and Sara
Walker to load up th e cardboard
and dellvPr II to Foodland where
it wa s bundled up to go to a
recycling renter.

Dear 1\nn Landers: Recently my
husband and I were in New York on
business. While ridmg in a taxi from
La Guardia Air]Jon into the city. we
began to make small talk with the
driver who seemed exceptionally
pleasant and friendly.
We asked about his family and he
proudly told us about his wonderful
wife and fine children. Then he
asked about ours. We told him that
we had raised nine children .. four
of our own and five we adopted,
tllfcc Korean girls and two boys lrom
Vietnam.
The cab driver seemed very much
mtercstcd in all the details. He told
us how nice we were and how for·
tunale our children were to have
found a home with such loving
people. We assured him that the
good fortune was ours since we have
had so many wondetful, happy yean;
together.
When we arrived 81 our hotel, I
couldn't understand why my husband
was laking so long to settle the fare
with the driver. When he finally
came into the hou:l he explained that
the driver refused to accept the fare
which was $25. He kept repeating,
"You are such good people, please
let this ride be on me.· My husband
told him, "Absolutely not" and
iMisltd that he accept the money.
I'm sure New Yorters will find
this story hald 10 beUeve, but it's
true. Personally I love New Yorkers
and I think their cabbies are the
grea~ - P.K. IN COLLEYVll.LE,

Over 300 Years of Combined Experience
BUY FROM THE PEOPLE THAT ARE HERE AND
WILL BE HERE TO SERVICE YOUR FURNITURE
BUYING NEEDS NOW AND IN THE FUTURE

Rutland

Fu~niture

SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MAIN STREET
RUTLAND, OHIO

Lifestyle Furniture

Mason Furniture

THIRD &amp; OLIVE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SECOND STREET
MASON. W. VA.

Ingels Furniture

Anderson's

NORTH SECOND
MIDDLPORT, OHIO

E. MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

layne's Furniture

Empire Fur.-.iture

BULAVILLE RD.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

TEXAS
DEAR COLLEYVILLE: Wh8l an
upper I Driving 1 cab in New Yort.
has got to be one of the world's
toughest jobs. Thank you for !euing
us lcnow lhat dterc's a honey of a
hackie out lh«c, bucking lbal brutal
lraff'te but not leuing it ruin his

G.lpalls, 01.

.I
•

"We were so pleased to have
pack 204 and Foodland partie! ·
pate In the Ariel restoration this
way," said Artistic Director,
Lora Snow . "Scouting promotes
environmenta l conc iousness and
we have tried to do likewise with
the Ariel project. After all , we
are recyc lin g an 1895 theatre. "
This Is not the first recycling
project for the Ari el. Ear li er in
the restoration process, old con -

duit, waterpipes. ductwork and
other metal that was no longer
usable was removed and recycled. Care ha s been taken to

A nice taxi driver in New York, even!

LOCAL SERVICE - FREE DELIVERY
FACTORY DIRECT PRICES
TALK TO THE OWNERS

Corbin &amp;Snyder Furniture

LARGE SELECTION

GALLIPOLIS - The Rlake
Family reunion and picnic will be
held Aug. 12 at the American
LE'glon Hall on Bob McCormick
Road w1th a basket dinner
beginning at 12: JO p.m. A reception for the IOOth birthday of
Gar red BlakE' will be held at 2:30
p.m. All family, friends and
neighbors are welcome .
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Jack
Parsons will bE' preaching and
bringing tbe morning service at
the Faltb Temple Independent
Church, Debby Drive.

PORTLAND - The John E
Lewis reunion wi ll be held
Sunday at Walnut Grove Park
near Porlland beginning at noon.

Township

cardboard boxes to take to Foodland lor
recycling.

The Paper Doll Dress Shoppe

Community calendar
SUNDI\Y
PT. PLEASANT - The Fry
family reunion, will be Sunday,
Aug 12 at Krodel Park Clubhouse 2. Covered dish dinner at
1·30pm.

Sunday Timas-Sentinal- Paga- B-7

Vinton Methodist Church

BY JI\MES SI\NDS

Amt•r ic are -Pomeroy .

M~rv'&lt;;

Pomeroy-Middlaport-GaDipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

dispoiWoo.
Delr All8 Lalldm: I rec:etllly
read your tolumn about a moleslawho weaa for couaseling and
received only one year in jaB.
l'hRe yean aao. I!IY 17-year-old
•

son agreed to confess to touching a
child after he was promised by the
state that he would be given profesSiOIIBI help. After he confessed. the
tables quickly turned and he was
labeled a criminal . The arresting
detective said, "If thai was my kid,
I'd shoot him ." Our son was
convicted of one count of mo!esta·
Lion (frrst offense) and received 12
years with no parole. This is tl•e
minimum sentence for child molestation in Arizona.
Since that time he has received
no psychiabic help , no counseling
and no assistance of any kind. He
sits in his cell day after day waiting
for the 12 years to be up. By now
the child may have forgotten the five
minutes of touching, but for us the
suffering goes on ·- maybe for the
rest of our Uves.
Can you tell me, Ann, where is
justice? Why can a terrible thin~ like
this happen if you live in the wrong
st.at.e? I am heansick and cannot
understand this cruel sentence that
may ruin a young man's life. Plca.&lt;e
help me. -- OPPRESSED IN ARI WNA

DEAR MOTHER : That "five
minutes of touching" may seem
inconsequential to you, but it could
have a horrendous effect on thai
child for many years to come.
I agree, however, thai 12 years
with no chance of parole is an
extremely harsh sent.ence for a first
offense, especially for a 17-year-old.
Moreover, it is outrageous Lha! your
son is ~iving no counseling. I
send my condolences to you. dear.
And here is a plea for compassion
to anyone in Arizona who might
possibly take ancxher look at this
case. Please let me know if you can
help.
Dear Ana Landers: May I confess a pet peeve lhat ia making me

fwious'l

Illll referring to those comput.cr·
gencntcd sales pitches with a
brand new awisl You cannot hang
up (yet another example of \lOW

Insure energy effic iency with
Insulation being Installed bE'Iore
the nE.'W roof went on last winter.
Reusable cloth towel rolls have
been hung In the restrooms so as
not to create paper waste that
has to go to a landfill and Ariel
brochures and letterhead Is
prln ted on recycled paper.
"All of our workers have gotten
In t hP recycling spir it by bagging
up pop cans and bottles when we
are working on site." said Snow.
·'II doesn't take any extra effort
and every little bit helps ...

Ann
Landers
' " l.4 .~DI:R S

·" 1\lft •.

lo~ ·h~ ....

nm .... .. ,nfli1'1tlr •nd
I

rt·•••-

"'~ndltlfP

GALLIPOLIS - ThE' VInton
United Methodist Church was
organized In an official capacity
In 1881. There
had been Met hodlst preaching
at the VInton
Academy many
, .
years prior to . . . ·
that. Interest - •
lngly, although
VInton was founded about 1835,
by 1881 therE' was no church
building In the vUi age. Methodist, Universalist and Presbyter·
ian services were conducted at
the VInton Academy during the
period.
II was In 1881 that William
Butler and George Shack raised
the tunds to begin I he construction ol the present VInton
Church. The dedication ol the
building was held In 1882.
One ol the first large gather·
lngs here came on August 8, 1885
when persons !rom the northern
part ol Gallia County gathered
lor the memorial services of
General U.S. Gra nt. Addresses
were given by C.M. Holcomb.
A.J. Greene. and 17 year old
Edward Hamilton. According to
the Gallipolis Bulletin: "ThE'
church was protusely adorned
with the emblems of mourning by
the GA.R. under the dlrfftlon of
W.B. Casey."
The decade of the 1880's was
the beginning or a great era In
VInton, largely due to the railroad which began regular runs
through VInton tn 1880. By the
end ol the decade ol the 1880's
VInton had 6 general stores and 2
drug stores. The general stores
were run by Mrs. Henry Well, the
Vollborn Brothers, J.H. Feltman, W.A. Loucks. Well and
Company and the partners Bates
and Longstreth. Mr. D.J . Dustin
and Mr. E.W. Parker owned drug
stores. By 1889 Vinton even had a
newspaper the VInton Leader.
Wrote the Vinton cor respond ent to the Ga llipolis Journal In
1881 abou I the effE'rl oft he rail on
VInton : "We used to hear It
predicted before the building of
thE' railroad that the business ol
our place would be ruined when
the railroad gal Into operation.
The theory of these prophets was
that l'Verybody would go to
Gallipolis to do their trading and
consequently would leave our
home merchants without customers. I am glad to say that
results have proven their predlc·
lions false. and Instead of a
decrease In trade, It has Increased over 25%within the last 6
months. Our merchants have had
a better trade the last year than
they have experienced In the last
15 years."
In 1881 VInton only had 3
gE'nE'ral stores and but 1 drug
store- that run by Dr. Parker,
who was described as weighing
about 300 pounds, "the most ol
which Is love for his friends and
generosity In dealing out to them
all good things that he has. "
The Vinton Methodist Church
propered In Its first dE'Cade but In
the ear ly 1890's the Rev. P.S.
Butts was assigned by the
conference. Mr. Butts' was honest to a fault . On one occasion he
opened a fu neral service lor a

man's mgenu1ty has created a moo·
ster).
popular merchant and somewhat
The computer sci zcs your line and Inactive member or the church
will not disconnect until the with the statement "If this Bible
message plays all the way through. Is true, loday this man Is with the
You are forced to listen to ALL of Devil."
Then after Butts ra ked across
it. ActuaUy, you can hang up the
the
"coals"ln the pulpit by name
receiver, but the message ties up
some
other superannua ted mer·
your line until the tape has run its
chants,
a movement was organ·
course.
!zed
to
dismiss
Mr. Butts. After
I complained to the phone com·
the District Superintendent
pany and 11 said this is perfectly
(Called Presiding Elder then!
legal. Docs it sound right to you that turned a deaf ear to any attempts
phone owners should be held at removal, the congregation
hostage to an advertiser? Please print brought sull against lhelr
my letter and suggest a course of preacher to have him ruled
act ion ... BURNING IN NEW Insane. The judge did rule
ORLEANS
eccenlrt clty on the part ol Butts
DEAR BURNING: No, it does not but not lnsanlly. If, argued the
seem fair to me. An adveniser judge, eccentrlclly was a crime,
should not be able to tie up a line he would have to lock up most of
when a phone owner is not the preachers In the cou nty
interested in his message. If anyone
Butts became such an Iss ue
connected with the New Orleans
telephone company would like to thai In IE95 some members of the
offer an explanation for this Methodist Church, alter falling
outrageous imposition on customers. to rid themselves of Butts, broke
oil and formed the present
I'll be glad to print it.

HOLZER
CLINIC
PHYSICAL
THERAPY
SYWIOIE QINIC
41H &amp; Syattnore Strtlls
8 lleeNL Olit
8 r'lp elL Ohio
16141 446·5244

"''

WORK BEGAN ON - The prettent Vinton United Methodist
Church In 1881 which became the llrsl church bulldlngln VInton's
history. The church alone with the town prospere In lhe 1880's. In
lhe early 1890's Rev. Butll so enraged some members they pulled
out to begin the VInton Baptist Church.
the distinction, however, of con·
vertlng more peoplE' to the
Bapllst church than most Baptist
preachers.

Vinton Baptist Church .
Wrote one nE.'wspaper of Butts :
"The RE.'v. Butts Is still butting.
He continues to ram his thick
walled skull against every stone
fence he sees." He later went on
to pastor at Ewlngton where the
congregation was convlncE.'d
Butts was assigned only because
ol Ewlngton' s !allure to pay their
asklngs. Eventually Butts was
removed from the ConferencE'
and he started his owndenomlna·
tlon In Middleport called the
Genu lne M.E. Church. He even
published a newspaper briefly.
Unfortunately a membership oil
was not able to sustain this new
denomination. Butts does have .

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MEIGS COUNTY
YOUR UNNERSITY- YOUR COLLEGE
BRINGS CLASSES TO OFF
CAMPUS LOCATIONS
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL-------,
Introduction to Business
Monday
Tuesday /Thursday
Math Review
Introduction to Marketing
Wednesday
Fundamentals of Speech Communication Thursday

JACKSON HIGH SCHOOL
Computer Applications
Marketing Communications
Freshman Math
Introduction to Business
Composition I

Tuesday
Wednesday
Monday /Wednesday
Thursday
Thursday

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American Economy
Malh Review
Small Business Management

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Monday /Wednesday
Wednesday

FALL QUARTER BEGINS AUGUST 20TH
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UNIVERSI1Y.OF RIO GRANDE
OFACEOF~GEDUCATION

�ltmes- :;enttnel

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

12,

ports

~imes-

jentittel Section

C

August 12, 1990

Gallia Academy beats Vinton County 28-26
McARTHUR - In the flrsr
pre-season football scrimmage
of the 1990 season, Gallla AcadPmy's Blue Devils edged Vinton
County's Vikings 28-26 In a
three-hour battle Saturday
morning.

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., AUG. 12 THRU SAT., AUG. 18

An alert GAHS defensive unit
recovered six Viking fumbles
and killed a final VIking drive
with an Interception In the end
zone on the last play or the
controlled scrimmage.
"Generally our kids did a good
job against their running game.
but we have some work to do on
pass defense before Fairland
comes here Tuesday night," said
GAHS head coach Brent Saunders In summing up the hardhitting joust.
Saunders had noted that VIking
quarterbacks had completed 11
passes, each good lor more than
20 yards, Including one 40-ya rd
touchdown strike.
Viking head coach Jack
O'Rourk praised senior quarterback Tom Reid and freshman
signal -caller Andy Booth lor

their line efforts against the
hard -charging Blue Devil line.
"That Gallipolis team Is very
tough for the first pre-season
game, and I know they are going
to get much better by the season
opener," said O'Rourk.
The Blue Devils struck gold on
their first possession In a grind·
lng 70-yard drive, capped by
sophomore Tony Logan's threpyard touchdown run and the
extra-point kick by Tim Slone.
Big gainers on this drive were a
pair of 15-yard passes from
quarterback Donnie Haynes to
Clint Davis and Gene Garnes In
addition to a 29-yard run by
Logan.
Vinton County passed for sev eral big gainers, as !hey came
back for a five-yard touchdown
run by Reid, whose extra-point

kick was oft the mark.
On that drive Blue Devil
defenders recovered three fum bles, with F .J . Hastwell, Jason
Kopack and Aaron Seamon makIng the pickups.
On their next possession, the
Vikings sent Jason Sawyer on a
55-yard touchdown run. but a
failed extra-point attempt made
It 12-7.
A 61-yard gallop by Gene
Garnes set up the next Blue Devil
touchdown, with kopack scoring
from the eight-yard line preced·
tng Slone's extra-point kick,
which gave Gallipolis a 14-12
lead .
VC came right back on live
plays, with Reid passing 40yards
to Shawn Speakman for the
touchdown. Reid's extra -point
kick put the Vikings ahead 19-14 .

GAHS struck quickly when
Logan raced 55 yards lor the
touchdown , which preceded
Haynes' two-point conversion
run that made the score 22-19.
The Vikings then traveled 70
yards on six plays, with Reid
running the final eight yards on a
quarterback option before adding the extra-point kick to give
his team a 26-22 lead.
The Blue Devils had seen
enough of the no-huddle, hurry up offense employed by the
Vikings. but the talented Reid
ran his option well and created
problems throughout the contest.
On the next GAHS possession,
Mike Donnally, the new quarterback who succeeded Haynes .
Davis and Nathan Miller, ran an
option for 25 yards to set up the
final Blue Devil score. which

came on a llvl'-yard run by Jason
Matheny. The two-point conversion pass that foUowed failed.
The VIkings had the ball one
last time. and they quickly
moved It to a first-and-10 at the
Academy's 12-yard line. Two
plays later Booth's pass was
lntercepled by Blue Devil Larry
Howell for the touchback. ending
the game.
Hastwell ended the game with
two rumble recoveries, and In
addition to Kopack's and Seamon 's pickups. Logan and Willie
Sturgill recovered fumbles.
No serious Injuries occurred In
the contest, and every player got
some playing time.
The Blue Devils will host
Fairland's Dragons Tuesday at 7
p.m. at Memorial Field In
Gallipolis

Toronto records 7-4 victory over Minnesota
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WSAZ-TV meteorologist
Tony Cavalier will be the
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E.M. (Ike) Wiseman. The
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goU, prlaes and dinner. SlgnU(IA may be made by contactIng Cliffside club pro Don
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TORONTO iUPli - Don't
expect Kelly Gru\!l'r to carry the
Toronto Blue JaY's to an Amerl·
can League East Division
pennant.
Gruber Is only too happy to
play a key role In Toronto's
fortunes. as he did in the 7-4 Blue
Jays victory over the Minnesota
Twins Saturday. But Gruber
In sists that he can't do It alone.
"This Is a team game, and you
can't say that any one player Is
more Important than any other,"
Gruber sa id after his two-run
hom er In the seventh Inning
provided the winning runs Saturday . "Everyone In the lineup ha s
to produce some.
·'The main thing Is that we win

as a team. II you d have told me
before the game I'd goO for 4 and
we'd win, I'd have said show me
the way. Winning is what

matters.''
Gruber, third In the league In
RBis with 80, had just four hits In
his las I 27 at bats ( .14R) going Into
the game. After going hitless In
his three at -batsagalnst starter
Roy Smith, Gruber nailed the
first pitch from reliever Terry
Leach In the seventh Into the left
field seats lor his 23rd home run
of the season.
The blast put Toronto ahead 5-4
and restored some of Gruber's
confidence.
·'It felt good. It kind of came In
the nick of time, didn't It?"

Illinois officials prepare for NCAA
hearing on recruiting violations
COLORADO SPRINGS. Co lo. IUPII - University of Illinois ofllclals Saturday prepared lor
their confrontation with the NCAA Infractions
commltll'e, which has accust'd the Big Ten school
of recruiting violations.
U of I Chancellor Morton Weir headed a
delegation, which arrived for the meeting Friday.
The hearing was scheduled for Sunday but no
announcement was expectPd at Its conclusion.
The hearing was expected to focus on assistant
basketball coach Jimmy Collins. who allegedly
offered Inducements to East St. Louis standout
LaPhonso Ellis and Chicago Simeon star Dean
Thomas If they would agree to play for the llllnl.
The Chicago Tribune reported Saturday that
Illinois' defense will consist la rge ly of casting
doubt on Ellis' testimony .
Ellis has told the NCAA heallegedlywas offered
$5,000 to sign a U of I let tl'r of Intent, $5,000 annual
payments and a car. He als osaid Collin• offered to
help his mother buy a house and offeree him $200
to S300 to attend his high school prom. He decided
against attending Illinois. hewever. and played
last season lor Notre Dame.
The Tribune said U oil attorneys will hammer
at Inconsistencies In Ellis' statements. The
Tribune quoted sources as saying Ellis has
backed off several allegations and could not recall
where the alleged offers took pla ce.
University spokeswoman Judy Rowan con firmed Friday thP NCAA has dropped the prom
allegation- one of six major allegations cited In a
February letter outlining the school's alleged

transgressions.
Also dropped was a " minor" allegation Collins
gave Ellis some athletic clothing, Rowan said.
Twelve charges remain against Illinois .
Co llins allegedly offered Thomas, who sat out
last season, $80,000 to sign the Illinois letter of
Intent, a sports utility vehicle when he enrolled
and help getting better housing for his mother.
Head basketball coach Lou Henson said he Is
confident Sunday's hearing will be lair.
"I have a lot of confidence In the NCAA
Infractions committee," Henson said. "They're
athletic directors and faculty people. There's no
question In my mind that we will get a lair
hearing."
The letter received by Weir In February Is
known as notice of an "Official Inquiry," and said
"It Is reasonable to expect the NCAA Committee
on Infractions will find violations."
Illinois could be forced to suspend Its basketball
program for at least a year If found guilty of major
violations. The university's football program was
placed on probation by the NCAA in 1988 for
transgressions that occurred In 1985. The
so-called "death penalty" provision could bP
applied to a school with a second major violation
In any sport within a five -year period.
The death penalty, If It Is applied. would affect
only the basketball program.
University officials have said they expect to
learn of the NCAA committee's decision within a
few weeks or Sunday's hearing.

Edberg defeats Gomez in A TP semifinals
MASON, Ohio tUPii -Topseeded Stefan Edberg of Sweden
won his semifinal match In the
Association of Tennis Profession als tournament Saturday, beat Ing lhlrd·seeded Andres Gomez
of Ecuador 7-5. 6-3.
Defending champion Brad Gilbert met Scott Davis In the other
semifinal match. II Gilbert win s.
It will set up a rematch of last
year's title game Sunday .
This Is the fourth straight year
that Edberg has been In the final s
of the ATP Championship at th e
Jack Nicklaus Sports Center
Both Edberg and Gomez llad so
strong a serve going that a game
did not reach deuce until the
ninth game of the first set.
"I don't think there Is a server
like him." Gomez sa id . "I

thought I played good . I ju st
made a lew mistakes on my

serveWith the score tied 5-5 In the
first set, Edberg reached a break
point at 311-40. Gomez hit a long
forehand to g ive Edberg a 6-5
advantage . It was only the
second break point of the match.
both In favor of Edberg.
Edberg then held service In th e
following game to win the firs t
set 7-5.
"The good thing about today
ls he (Gomez) star ting serving
well." Edberg said. "I thought
1 served very well throughout
the match. What I was waiting
for was him to make one or two
mistakes ."
Edberg was pleased with his
serving. not losin g a service

game the entire match_
"The key was that! served well
today," he said. "Even If I
missed the first serve, I sUit had
a chance of winning the point
with my second serve."
At 3-3 In the second set. Gomez
took a 311-ll lead , only to lose the
next lour straight points to allow
Edberg to go ahead a service
break.
Edberg seized the opportunity
and took a 5-3 lead. In the final
game. Edberg reached doublematch point at 15-40 with the aid
or two double-faults by Gomez.
He lost the next point. hitting
along backhand volley. But on
the following point, Gomez hit a
backhand volley wide giving
Edberg the match.

Gruber said. "I've been struggling, things haven't been comIng easy lately, but hopefully this
Is a sign or good things to camP.·'
Blue Jays manager Clto Gas ton, whose club had dropped two
straight and six of their last 10,
was relieved to see Gruber snap
his mini-s lump.
·'We've had some bigger home
runs than Kelly's earlier In the
year, but not lately," Gaston
said _ "He's been struggling off
and on since the All Star break
but hopefully this will turn it
around tor him."
Dave Stleb, 15-4, got the win for
the Blue Jays. allowing lour
runs, three of them earned. on
five hits while striking out lour
and walking onP over sev ·n and
two thirds Innings . Tom Henke
got the last four outs to record his
24th save.
Leach took the loss, allowing
three runs on three hits In an
Inning and two-thirds . He walked
none and struck out none.
Minnesota carried a 4-2 !Pad
Into the seventh Inning when the
Blue Jays came to life.
Glenallen Hill hit a one out
double and one out later, scored
on Tony Fernandez's major
leagup leading 15th triple.
Gruber then foUowed with his
home run to deep left field, giving
Tot'Onto the lead lor good.
The Blue Jays added a pair of
Insurance runs In the eighth
Inning on RBI singles by Manny
Lee and pinch hitter Rance

Mulllnlk s to complete the
scoring.
Smith pitched five and one
thirds Innings. a llowing two runs
and four hits, s trlklng out one and
walking five. Twins manager
Tom Kelly pulled him In the sixth
Inning, but the Twins' bullpen
failed to hold the lead.
Smith reels Kelly wasn 't to
blame.
"(Dave! Wes t gave us a
complete game yesterday and
wp've got an off day coming up
soon." Smith said. "Tom Is
consistent In his thinking and I
knew If we had a lead going Into
the fifth or sixth Inning and I got .
In trouble, I'd be out of there .
We've got guys who have to pitch.
·'Our bullpen has been good all
year . Gruber ju st got all of that
pitch "

Toronto jumpred ahead with
two first Inning runs on three
hits. Junior Felix and Fernandez
both singled and both later
scored on an RBI single by
George Bell a nd a sacrifice fly by
Fred McGriff. to make It 2-0.
The Twin s got to Stleb lor four
runs In the sixth. AI Newman
singled and went to third when
second baseman Lee let Dan
Gladden's grounder get past him
lo r an error. Nelson Llrlano
!allowed with a run scoring single
and Kirby Puckett's sacrlflcP fly
tied the game.
Kent Hrbek then ended a
1-for -19 d rought against Stleb by
belting hi s 17th home run of the
season. a blast Into deep right
field that put theTw lnsahead4 -2.

Rams hand Chiefs 19-3 loss
WEST BERLIN iUPII - Buford McGee and Alfred Jackson
scored touchdowns and Mike
Lansford kicked two field goals
Saturday to help the Los Angeles
Rams dominate throughout a
19-3 American Bowl triumph
over the Kansas City Chiefs In the
first NFL game played In
Germany.
The first exhibition this st'ason
lor both teams attracted 55,429
people to Olympic Stadium.
McGee scored on a seven-yard
pass from Jim Everett In the first
quarter and Jackson Intercepted

Steve Pelluer and returned the
ball 31 yards In the fourth .
Lansford added kicks of 33 yards
In the second quarter, giving the
Rams a 10-ll halfllme lead. and 21
yards In the fourth.
Kan sas Ci ty's only points came
In the third quarter on a 19-yard
field goal by Bjorn Nlttmo. a
Plan B lree agent from the New
York Giants, who also had a
42 -yard attempt blocked.
Gaslon Green carried 21 times
for the Rams. gaining 115 yards
and caught a 13-yard pass.

Mize leads in round 3 of PGA Championship
By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. iUPiiFormer Masters champion
Larry Mlze put together a stl'ady
! -under 35 on the front nine
Saturday and moved a shot In
front of Wayne Grady and Fred
Couples midway through the
third round of the PGA
Championship.
Gil Morgan charged out of the
pack with a 7-under 65, Nick
Faldo's bid for a third major
champions hip this year disappeared and Greg Norman mad e
two straight double-bOgeys to
wipe out an early charge.
Mlze made a 25-foot birdie putt
at the sixth and a 30-!ooter for
birdie at the eighth to move In
front of Grady, who began the
day with a one -stroke lead.
Grady, a loser last year In a
British Open playoff, opened the

round at &gt;-under and moved to
&amp;-under with a birdie at the par -5
third. But he bOgeyed the short
fifth hol e, missed a s hort birdie
putt at the sixth and then made
bogey from a greenslde bunkPr
al the par-4 st'venth .
He was 4-under through eight.
as was Couples - who had two
birdies and two bogeys to that
point .
Next. at 2-under. ca me Mar
gan. who mad e e ight birdies In
his 67 . the low round of the
tournament .
" I played really well yesterday
and didn't get anything out of the
round," sa id Morgan, who took
live weeks off prior to thr PGA
because of shoulder problems .
"So today I felt like If I could get
It going I could have a chance.
"1 feel like my game is back
together. If I can shoot something In the 60s tomorrow I will

have a cha nce ."

Joining Morgan at 2-under
were defending champion Payne
Stewart through 11 ho les and
Billy Mayfa ir through nine Stewa rt Is try ing to become the first
player since 1937 to successfully
defend a PGA title.
Faldo came into this event

hoping to become the first since
Ben Hogan In 1953 to win three
prolesslonal majors In the same
year.
But In a nine -hole stretch
beginning a t the fourth. Faldo
went 9-over . That Included a
triple bogey at the par-4 10th.
After 17 holes Faldo was 8-over
for the day and 10-over for th e
tournament .
Norman began the day at
2-over and climbed back to even
through eig ht before doubl e
bogeying th e next two holes and
bogeying Nos. 13 and 14 .

More Ohioans say Browns favorite team
CINCINNATI (UP I) -The Cleveland Browns
and the Cincinnati Bengals are the two most
popular ~rofesslonal footba ll teams among
Ohioans.
The Ohio Poll, conducted by the University of
Cincinnati's InsUtute for Pollee Research, found
that 46 percent of professional football fans In the
state consider the Browns their favorit e team,
while 26 percent favor the Bengals.
The Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers
came In third with 5.7 percent of respondents, and
the Pittsburgh Sleelers were next, getting
respollll! from 5.1 percent .
One startling lind log of the survey Is that the
Brown haves significant support In southwest
Oblo, home to the Bengals, but the Bengals have
virtually no support in northeast Ohio.
Mike Brown, vice president and legal counsel
lor the Bengals, told tbe Dayton Dally News
Satlll'tlay the Cleveland franchl.w earned fan

support by advancing to the American Football
Co nference title game .
"We 'll have to earn our way back," he said of
the Benga Is.
Both teams were founded by Paul Brown; the
Browns In 1946 and the Bengals In 1967.
The Ohio Poll Is co-sponsored by the Dally
News , The Cincinnati Post and the University ol
Cincinnati.
The survey also found betwen five and six
mOl !on professional football fans In Ohio.
Almost 27 percent of those poDed said they are
very Interested In pro football Thirty-seven
percent said they were IOI'IIewbat Interested and
another 37 percent of adults In the stale said they
were not Interested in pro football al all.
Interest In the sport was highest among men.
younger adults, Catholics. people with college
educations and adults who have never married.

NORMAN GETB OVT - Ore&amp; Nonnaa blltiU
old ol a UDcMnp oellle llllnl llole ODbltl way 1o a
birdie dllriDI llllrd-1'8111111 lldloa Ia tile POA

Cllamplollllllp 8111.-day. Nonnaa bepa lbe day
at ~ver JIU'· (UPI)

�,Page C-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

August 12, 1990

Pom•oy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va.

UPI Sports Writer
Now lh!!re's something you
_don't see every day .
-:. Two singles hitters took a Hall
:ot Farner deep, an untouchable
: tellever couldn't lind the strike
.r.one. and a part-lime Infielder's
: fifth RBI of the season was a
(lame-winner- not exactly your
average night in the American
League.
Rookie Craig Grebeck and
. Ugbt-hlttlng Ozzie Gulllen wen•
;the unlikely longball heroes in
. IJie Chicago White Sox's 5-2 5-l
:d!luble-beader sweep of ' the
:T~xas Rangers, as they knocked
.consecutive pitches from Nolan
:lcyan out or Comiskey Park.
·: It was Grebeck's rtrst majorleague home run and Guillen's
:ltrst of tbe season.
·: "Hitting your first big-league
:!UJme run Is one thing," Grebeck
:said, "but when It comes off a guy
like Nolan Ryan, a sure bet lor
the Hall of Fame and probably
the best pitcher there's ever
been, that's a big thrUI lor me."
: In the second Inning, with
-runners at rtrst and second.
:Grebeck smoked Ryan's first
:otfl!rlng Into the left-field seats
·for a J-0 Chicago advantage.
: "It surprised me," said Grebeck, recalled from the minors
only eight days ago.
Guillen followed by llninR

Ryan's next pitch Into the rightfield seats. The blast came in his
36!st at -bat and was the seventh
of hls six -year career.
"Both pitches were real poor
pitches, right down the middle,"
said Ryan, who fell to 11-6 with
his second stra ight loss since
picking up his 300th career
victory. "What happened was I
just made bad pitches," he said.
" I seem to be In a rut."
Angels Z, Orioles I (10 inn.) Baltimore Orioles' reliever
Gregg Olson hasn't had much
experience with ruts this season,
or with runs. but a sudden lack of
control took care of that.
Olson watched from the bench
as the California Angels pinned a
2-1, 10 Inning loss on him, but he
had no one but himself to blame.
Olson, 5-4, simply couldn't find
the plate in the lOth. He walked
Chili Davis and Lee Stevens to
open the inning and then ran the
count to 3-0 on Johnny Ray before
being lifted lor Curt Schilling,
who completed the free pass.
With one out Kent Anderson
stroked a single to right -center
over a drawn-In Infield for the
game-winner.

thls season. " Basically , I was
t rylng to hit a fly ball or a line
drive. Fortunately. I hit a line
drive."
Anderson driving in a run was
about as common as Olson
allowing one.
It was the time the right hander had been scored upon
since July 1, a span of 14 games.
Overall, Olson has allowed runs
in only six of his 44 appearances
this season.
But Friday was a different
story.
"Tonight, Ijustranoutofgas,"
Olson said. "Th is outing's not
worth talking about. We'd better
leave it right there."
"He just lost It," Baltimore
manager Frank Robinson said.
"He didn't have real good control
all night . That Inning he just
couldn't even come close. I felt 1
had gone as far as I could with
him."
Elsewhere in 1he American
League: Kansas City swept a
double-header from Milwaukee

by posting 6-5 and 9-4 victories,
Cleveland topped Detroit 5-2,
Minnesota slapped Toronto 7-J,
Oakland blanked New York 3-0
and Seattle sunk Boston 4-1.
Royals 8-9, Brewers 5-t - At
Kansas City, Mo .. George Brett
tied a club record by collecting
seven hits In a double-header.
Four of Brett's hits came In the
opener, Including a two-out,
two-run double in the bottom of
the eighth Inning off Dan Plesac,
2-5,that rallled the Royals.
Brett added three more in the
nightcap to equal the team mark
set by Gerald Perry earlier this
year. Kevin Seltzer delivered the

big blow In the second game, a
three-run triple in the second
inning that put the Royals on top
3-0. Storm Davis, 6-7, went five
innings. Steve Crawford recorded hls first save.
Mariners 4, Boston I - At
Seattle, Ken Griffey Jr. collected
four hits and Randy Johnson
scattered four hits over eight
Innings to snap the Mariners'
three-game losing streak. Boston
maintained Its two-game edge In
the AL East. Johnson, 10-7, won
for the first time since July 4and
tied a season-high with 10
strikeouts.
Twins 7, Blue Jays 3 - At

Tennis tournament slated Aug. 18-26
balls. There will be a $10 charge
lor any additional event entered.
All checks are to be made
payable to th e Galli a County unit
of the ACS and sent toP at Boyer.
Executive Director. American
Cancer Society. P.O. Box 813,
Galllpolls OH 4!;631

GALLIPOLIS- The Johnson's
Super m a rketsl American
Cancer Society tennis tournament has been scheduled for the
week of Aug . 18-26 at various
tennis courts In Gallipolis.
The entry tee is $15 for the first
event and one new can or tennis

1

PLEASE ENTER ME IN THE FOLLOWING EVENTS:
__ Men's singles
__ Intermediate Women's doubles
__Men's doubles
__ Men's doubles (35 &amp; Over)
__ Ladies' singles
__ Men's singles (35 &amp; Ovef}
__ Ladies' doubles
__ Boys' (17 &amp; Under} singles
__ Mixed doubles
__Girls' (17 &amp; Under) singles
__ Intermediate Men's single
__ Intermediate mixed doubles
__ Intermediate Men's double

"I got ahead of the count and

when you're ahead of the count, it
makes it easier to get your
pitch," said Anderson. whose
RBI was only his fifth In 40 games

.,..,"'

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

NIKE
DAVIA
D KEDS
o REEBOK
o BROOKS
o CONVERSE
o BRtnSH KNIGHTS
D

Telephone:

Address: _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

Doubles' Parter: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Toronto, Gary Gaettl and Shane
Mack each hit a home run and
drove In three runs to support
Dave West. 6-7. The twins rallied
from a two-run deficit with a
six-run seventh Inning to pin the
loss on John Cerutti, 8-8.
A's3, YankeesO- At Oakland,
Dave Stewart scattered three
hits over eight and two-third
Innings and Terry Steinbach
drove In two runs. Stewart. 16-8,
retired 17 batters In a row at one
point. Dave LaPoint. 6-8, lasted
lour and one-third innings.
Indians 5, Tigers 2 - At
Cleveland, Mitch Webster
capped a five-run fourth Inning
with a grand slam and Mike
Walker. 1-3, earned his first
major-league vietory in his ninth
career appearance. Doug Jones
earned his 30th save.

AJJii6: [QUit• ·
V Ched u1 out/

TENNIS TOURNAMENT ENTRY FORM

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone:_ _ __

Address - - -- - - - - -- - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - Miud Doubles' Parlntr: _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone·____

Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __
ONLY ENTRIES PAlO IN ADVANCE to the Galli a County Unit American Cancer Sociaty before
August 16. will recolve a tree T -Shirt!
Please understand, ANYONE PAYING AFTER AUGUST 16 WILL NOT RECEIVE AT-SHIRT.
T-Shirt sizes: S -

M -

L -

XL

(circle olut

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

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-C-3

In exhibition opener Saturday night,

Unlikely heroes emerge in ChiSox's wins over Rangers
By ERIC MeHUGH

August 12, 1990

·,
219 N. Stcond
Middleport- 992-S.27

Falcons sport new unifonns in game against Redskins
By Unlled PreBSinlernatlonal
The Atlanta Falcons put new
coach Jerry Glanville, their new
black uniforms and new offense
on public display for the first
time Saturday night at Chapel
Hill, N.C., In their exhibition
opener against the Washington
Redsklns.
Glanvlile promised football
fans in North Carolina will see an
exciting brand of at lack in his
first game since leaving the
Houston Oilers at the end of last
season.
"We don't play according to
down or distance," Glanville
said. "It doesn't matter if we're
at the two or the 50, we're keeping
II wide open and keeping the
throttle down.
"We're not going to look at the
scoreboard. We're going to keep
the throttle wide open the entire
game."
Glanvllle changed the Falcons'
helmets and jerseys from red to
black, and Installed his ''Red
Gun" offense - which is a
passing-oriented attack.
The game, at Kenan Stadium
on the campus of the University
of 1-&lt;orth Carolina, was among 11
exhibition games Saturday.
In other games. lt was the Los
Angeles Rams vs. Kansas City
vs. West Berlin, Germany, Mlami vs . Chicago, Cleveland vs .
Green Bay, Cincinnati vs.
Tampa Bay, the New York Jets
vs. Philadelphia, Denver vs.
Indianapolis, New Orleans vs.
Minnesota, the Los Angeles Raid-

ers vs. San Francisco, Seattle vs
Phoenix and Dallas vs. Sa~
Diego.
AI Philadelphia, the Eagles
and Jets began learning new
systems in their ('Xhlbltlon opener. Phlladelphla has a new
offensive attack designed by
Rich Kotite, whowasflred by the
Jets after last year, while New
York is starting from scratch
under rookie coach Bruce Cos let.
"We have all rookies in our
camp .. Coslet said. "They 11
have ' to learn new off a
ense,
defense and special teams. It 's
not like we have any veterans
who are doing the same things
they did In the past. so It's a little
slower than normal."
Kotlte's system calls lor more
motion and play variation than
the Eagles used In the past.
''All the players have to learn
the system," Philadelphia quarterback Randall Cunningham
said. "A wide receiver might go
in motion and end up running the
route of the fullback so he has to
know what everyone Is supposed
to do on every play. We've just
got to put It all together."
At Latrobe, Pa., second-year
man David Johnson bolted into
the early lead in the three-way
race for the Pittsburgh Steelers·
starting left cornerback job.
Johnson, a seventh-round pick
In 1989, is battling 33-year-old
Incumbent Dwayne Woodruff
and Delton Hall for the job. He
gained an edge in the Steelers·
exhibition opener Thursday

night bv ret urning an lntercep!ion 35 ·ards for a touchdown and
battlln~ down another ass.
Johnson was votedpthe butstanding defensive player of the
game in Pittsburgh's 30 _14 victory over New E ng land in
Montrea l
Defensive backs eoarh J ohn
Fox said Hall did not play well.
Woodruff the last player remain ing from iheSteeters' Super Bowl
XIV championship tea m sat out
lth
h ld . j ry · ffered
wJ
a" s ou er tn u su
u1v 2o.
.:l thought David played very
well,,. Fox said. "He's shown a
history, the little bll he play ed
last year, that he's a game-type
player. Right now on my gut
feeling, I'd say he has a very

leg itimate snot at starting."
At West Chester, Pa., the
Eagles signed running back
Keith Byars and kicker Roger
Ru~~k, leaving the club without
elg pla yers.
Byars signed a three -year deal
but financial terms were not
di~;l,osed.
.
..
I m.. glad It~ over. Byars
~aldj It wasn t something I
we led on, because I knew It
would get done. I just wanted to
get In here and help this team
win "
·
At Madison, N.J ., New York

• SPECIAl SUMMER BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY/SUNDAY

$2.15

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT/SUH l WED

'-no' c"'"""'"'
liH l'•

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

n.ew contract. "Now I .~lieve the
Giants believe in me.

Giants fullback Maurice Carthon
signed a three-year contract
reportedly worth $1.55 million,
giving the team Its complete
offense three days before the
exhiblton opener in Buffalo.
Carthon's signing leaves the
Gian ts with live unsigned veterans - all defensive starters.
New York Is without linebackers
Lawrence Taylor and Gary Reasons, cornerback Mark Collins,
defensive end Leonard Marshall
and nose tackle Erick Howard.
"Thi
k
.. s rna es me more secure, Carthon said Friday of hls

BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
(E!CEPT 'GIIOS T")

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COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
BRUCE WILLIS

AND

NOW SHOWING!

GENE HACKMAN,
DAN AYKROYD

FRIDAY 9:00 PM
SATUROA~

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SUNOA1 9:00PM

MON/TUE &amp;THURS. 9:00
WEDNESDAY g :00

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SUN.l:30.3 : l5,7 30,9. 15
I'ON/TUE 1!. TltlR .7:30,1j) :)S

WED. I,JD 3,15 7,30 g, 5

Edberg tops Chang to move
into Thriftway ATP semis
MASON, Ohio iUPii - Topseeded Stefan Edberg of Sweden
defeated No . 7 Michael Cbang of
Placentia, Calif., 3-6, 6-3, 6-4
Friday In the quarterfinals of the
$1.3 million Thriftway ATP
Championship.

Third-seeded Andres Gomez of
Ecuador topped No. 11 Jim
Courier of Dade City, Fla ., 6-1, t\-4
and will face Edberg in the
semifinals Saturday
Defending champion and No.4
(See ATP on C-4)

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"'""t

BAD LUCK - The Indians' Alex Cole 18 lagged out by Detroit
third baseman Tony l'bWips In the first Inning of Friday niJht's
game In Cleveland alter Cole, who was trying to steal his second
base of the night, had bad luck strike him whe teammate Mitch
Webster bll a grounder lo l'hWlps lor the easy out. The Indians.
however, won 5-2. (UP!)

Reeves' condition improved
after coronary artery surgery
REDWOOD CITY. Call!.
1UP II - Denver Broncos co&lt;fch
Dan Reeves. hospitalized lor
chest pains. was reported in
"grea t" condi tion Friday and
headed for speedy recovery after
undergoing a surgical procedure
for coronary artery disease.
Reeves . 46. was hospitalized
Wednesday In Greeley, Colo.
before being transferred to Sequoia Hospital In Redwood City
Thursday where he underwent a
successfu l atherectomy procedure to remove plaque from his
coronary arteries .
He was scheduled for release
from the hospital Saturday. the
primary surgeon said.
"Reeves· atherectomy went
well. hts condition is great and
his recovery should be short and
uncomplicated." said cardiologist John B. Simpson, who
headed a three-man surgery
team . Simpson is the Ioven tor of
the cath('ter used In the
procedure.
Reeves had no previous hint of
a coronary problem. according
to a team spokesman .
Before heading for California,

Reeves was diagnosed as having
arteriosclerosis. or hardening of
the arteries. at North Colorado
Medical Center, where Dr. Randall Marsh said Reeves had not
suffered a heart attack
Reeves was temporarUy replaced as head coach by defensive coordinator Wade Phillips.
who said he was prepared to
make decisions on pre-season
cuts and trades if Reeves was
unable make them himself.
Team spokesman Jim Saccoruano said Reeves would be
recuperating for two to four
weeks before returning to his
dutles.
"He'll be out at least a couple of
weeks or four at the outside," he
said.
"An optimistic view Is that he
could be back for the 49ers'
1exhibition I game two Mondays
from now but it may not be that
quick," he said "It's going to be
tough keeping him away. But
they don't want him on the field
right away. So they 're kind of
thinking he'll be back on the
sidelines by the regular season

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limit 16 al

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OVER BOO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU· CHECK YOUR LOCAL
DIRECTORY OR YEUOW PAGES fOR THE STORE NEAREST YOUI

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�Times-Sentinel

r--Area sports briefs------.
Reserve seats on sale this week
GAL LIPOLIS - Gai lla Academy athletic d irec tor Bill
Wamsley announced that rese rve seats for this year' s Blue
Devil football season will go on sale on Mond ay and Tuesday for
Blue Devil Clan Members and film sponsors .
Parents of va r sit y a nd reser ve football players will be able to
purchase reserve sea ts on Wednesday and Thursday .
Reserve se ats for the genera l public will be a b le on Friday a t
$20 per ticket. Tic kets may be purchased In th e pr incipa l's offict•
at the Academy be tween 8 a.m. and 3 p.m . There will bp no limit
on the number of reserve seat s an Individual or bu si nt&gt;s s m ay

purchase.

Crace wins first IMCA E-mod race

Reds beat Giants 7-0 to boost NL West lead to S 1/2 games

to ga rn e r suppor t for what will
probably be a regular division
nex t season at many tra c ks.
Promoter Darrell Willie received his sa nctioning lirrnse
las I week to officially ht'COrnP an
officlaiiM CA !ra ck.
Skyline will now run IM CA
ope n-wheel modifieds each week
with national points being
a warded each week. The IM CA
ca rs will Join the regu Ja r pro.
gram of Late Models. Semi
Latcs. Sportsman, and Street
Stock car s.
Cla iming wins in the other
divis ions Friday were re peat
wmne r Andy Bond of Coolville,
Eddie Clendlnin of Charles ton.
Aa ron Flem ing of Belpre in th e
Sport s m a n, and in c lemen t
weat her in the Street Stocks.
Next week Skyline will h ave
double fea tures in the Street
Stoc k divisio n.
Bob Cra ce Jr . who wo n the fas t
ca r dash In th e IMCA m cxl ifled s
led fr om fl ag to flag In the 20-lap
A-main, defea ting ru nne r ·up Don
Kerr, Jack Kress, Rick William ·

CHESHIRE- Kyger Crrek's junior high vo lleyba ll pract ice
has been schedu led for Mond av from 6 to 7:30pm. a t Kyger
Creek High School.

Organizational meeting set

WATKINS GLEN , N.Y .i UPi i
Dale Ea rn hardt Frida y
grabbf&gt;d his second co nsecu ti ve

pole posit ion by se tting a track
reco rd a t qua lifying for today 's
NASCAR Budwe iser at th e Glen.
Ea rnhardt, of Moores ville,
N.C. , fini s hed in a record of
1.12. 12 5 - 121190 mph - in a
Lumi na.

He

when

Davev

Al li son

Firestone Country Clu b In Akron for the sta te tournamen1.

nearby Montour F'alis . NASCAR
of fic ia ls h e ld up the session while

He was un in jured . but he will
forced to quali fy his backup car
Sa rurda y. T hP second delay
came du ri ng a powe r ou tage,
whrn th e utilit y co mpa ny m adr

repai rs to tran smissio n lines in
power was n•stored to th e e lec·

There were only two servi ce
breaks In the first two sets of the
Edberg· Chang matc h, bu I both

were crucial.
Chang broke Edberg In the
sixth ga me of thr first set when
the Swede sliced a back -hand
volley ou t of bounds. The Ca lifornian held on to win the set 6·3.
In the seco nd set, F.dberg lock
Chang's ser vi ce in the fou rt h
game and went on to win 6-.l
''This m a tch , (Edberg ) pla yed
the bigger po ints better tha n I
did, " said Chang. " He was a ble
to hit the shots, and tha t was the
difference I think he is a lot
stronger me ntal ly now tha n he
used to be."
With the t riumph, Edberg
beCame the top-ranked ATP
player a t 3.003 points. a hea d of
Ivan Lendl's 2,995.
Gomez dominated his match
against Cou ri e r from thr onset.
with the Fl ori dia n ta ll yi ng just 11
points In the first set,

seco nd

SL'f."

Gilbert felt behind 3·1 in the
last set before captur ing four
s tra ight gamesto ma rc h ahead
5-3. Hlasek tied It 5-5, but Gilbert
won the nex t two gamPs and thr
match, tak ing ma tch point with

an ace.
Friday's fina l match camP
down to a final se l th a t see-sawed
back and forth until Dav is pulled
out the victory by winning a
ti e- brea ker 10-8.
·'I can't really say why I won,"
sa id Davis . "iFromberg ) c ame
up with some gocxl sho ts when he
was down . I ca m e up wi th some
good shots when I wa s down . I
happened to come up wit h one
more. "

tronlc timing sys te m .
The pole is Ear nhard t's firs t on

a road coursP si nce 1979. Ea rn-

ACROBB

int ens ive care unit at Robert

1 Untamed;
undomesticated

Pa c kard Hos pital in Sayre, Pa.

8

t4
!9
21
22
23
24
26

W.VA.
675-3901

52 Disturbance

53 Near
55 Mi&gt;
57 Latin conjunction

58
59
60
62

Soil
Frigid
Sodium symbol
- Vegas
64 Pintail duck

hardt . who wp nt three years
wit hout cla im ing a fi rst starting

posi tion, also had the pole in the
las t NASCAR Winst on Cup r ace
at Talladega . Ala

CAN YOU FINISH IT?- In the ei1hth lnnin1 of
Friday nl1bt's 1ame agaiDBI the visiting San
Francisco Giants, Reds pitching coac h Stan
WIUJams (ri«hl) comes to the mound and ask•

Mark Marti n. cu rrr• nt Wi nston

Cup poin ts lea de r , wa s the on ly
one of the th ree dri vP rsinjured in

Thursday's prac tln• arc idenl to
attempt to qualify for Sunday's
race. Marti n. driving his back · UP
Ford Th underbird . sPt th e third ·
fa s test qualifying time. Dick
Trt ck le re m a ins In a nea rb y
hospi ta l w ith a uadly br ui sed
foot. Trick le' s backu p ca r was
qua lified by the 191!9 SCCA
Tra ns·Am champio n Dorsey

Skyline results ...

171 5 Eastern
Annue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-1065

RANDY ROFF

PONTIAC-BUICK-OLDS-GMC TRUCKS
JCT. OF U.S. 36 &amp; RT. 93, JACKSON
MON. &amp; FRI. 9-8; TUES.-THURS. 9·8
SATURDAY 9-4

286·6471

GMC:·h~uc:K

Kemp Kelly .
McDaniel and Clendenl\1 paced
the !G-ear field for the start of the
30-lap main. with Clendenin
taking the lead . After a scramble
for the top spot Clendenin
grabbed a stronghold and went
on lor th e win .
Isner was second, followed by
McDanlle. Hill, Kelly , Bobby
Mossor , Jack Queen, Jerry Ton·
cray, Buck Lamb, Chris Diddle,
Dave Meadows, Larry Strathers
and Tony Perkins.
McDaniel won the dash and the
heal went to Mossor.
One man's loss was another
man's gain. as lor the second
week In a row, race leader Phil
Davis, In the Eight ·Ball, suffered
a flat tire crossing the start/ lin·
Ish line lor the white flag lap.
Despite the high speed blowout
Davis made a gu lsy drive to the
llnish only to have the seeond·
place car of Aaron Fleming edge
him In a photo finish at the
checkered. The win Is Fleming's
second feature In a row and third
of the year In the sportsman
division.
Following Fleming across the
line were Davis and Kevin
Haught, who conUnues to be
consistent: Minersville driver
Mike Adkins, Ron Williams, Rick
Tracewell, Roger Cozad, Jim
Amick. Steve Woods and Buck
Hutton.
Davis won the dash and Flem·
Jng the heat.
NoLan Miller !llld Brian Willanl
were the beat winners In the
Street Stocks. The feature was .

pitcher Norm Charlton (S7) II he complete the
game. Charlton did just that , allowing three hits In
coUecilng his first major league shul&lt;&gt;u! In th e
Reds' 7.0 victory. ( UPI)

crest
98 Algonquian
Indian
99 Dishonest:
unjust
101 Philadelphia
footballers
103 Former Russian
ruler
104 Swiss river

105 Princely Italian
family
106 Therefore
107 Early morn

108 Graned : heraldry
110 Three: prefix
1t 1 Thallium symbol
112 Ruby and Sandra
113 Swiss 1 !5 Greet&lt; letter
1 t7 Vats
I 19 Running
120 Lubricates
121 Swlnness

fultlm~ -

Slre et slock.1
Heat one - Nolan Mllk'r . Clair Su lliva n .
.John Wllllam5. RORff Dunlap.
Htaltwo - Brian Willard. Rick Car !'I''.
Tim frame. Todd Woll&lt;'
Ffll.t u~ - Cancell!'d. r ain

LAWN
TIACTOR

$999
Medel
420

l..a&amp;r modeb

Bob Adams. Jr. IJ : 11
Duh - Andy Bond. Larry Bond. Srot1
Woltf', Bob Adams. Audit' Swartz. an:J Bill
Ch11dtrs.
Hell - Jttft BurdettE&gt;. Rolando f...ll parz.a .
Chuck Ingels. Kenny Jnhnsoo. StPVe
Bumskte.
Fell• .. - Andy Bond. Larf!' Bond, [k)b
Adams. Bill ChUdws. Scott Wolfe, Strvr
Burnside, Kt&gt;ltb Rlddlt&gt;. Oa\1(' Nu!IPr ,
Audit Swartz. Chuc k In~o: eh. William~
Robln!M.
Sem~latt&gt;!J

Fasi time - Kirk Isner
Duh - Mike McDaniels. EddiP Oen ·
denln. t&lt;trk Isner.
Hea&amp; - Bob~ Mo ssor. ChriS DlddiP.

Jade: Queen. Dave Meadows.
Feature - Eddie Clendl'fl ln. Isner,
McDaniels , Hill. Kelly . Mo ssor,Queen.
To~ray, Lamb, Diddle.
Sporttmu
Ful dme - Roger Cozad
Dub - Phil Davis, J( evln Haughi,Ron
Williams, Cozad.
Real -

F1emlng , Mike Adkins, Rldt

Tra~IL Jim

Amick
Aaroo Fleming. Davis.
Hauaht. -'dklna. wuuams, TnefWell.
Rower Cozld. Jim Amick. Strv(" Wooil ,
FeM•re -

Buck

Hutton.

IMCAmodtledA
.,. - Bot&gt; Crace, Jr ., Don Kerr, Rtci
WIUlamiiCII, /oiV1JI Wbtto.
hllta.. - Bob Cnce. Jr., Doa Kerr,
Jacl Kroo~ Rtci WUUamsm. Ttm Smot!·
lfl' , Alv!D Wl&gt;lte and Doug Dean.

ltlltl
•12 "' lrltt• &amp; Strllttell
1/C ....•

,_._,

__

as .,.t.~ Slllft

........... no

.......
C...ml

ec..,•.,,.....,
•TIII'f SlmrTirel
•F hr Is II.. Sltlft Level

•11V lllwwlw &amp;

O'DELL L. .D CO.
61 Viii St;

L . . St.

G.. •Is, 011. p rey, 011.
646-1276
tt2·5SOD

videotapes' '

6 "Total Recall"
star: tnlts .
7 Cover
8 Paddles
9 Advance
10 At that place
11 Stockings
12 Abstract betng
13 Old pronoun
t4 "Watt Until - "
15 Hos!efry
16 In opposition to
t7 Nullify
18 Omni. e.g.

20 Ship's
complement

23 Challenge
25 "- Trek "
27 Frank:
straightforward
28 Announcer

126 W81 god
127 Capuchin

Gowdy

monkeys

t28 Antenna
130 Not one
132 Sums up
133 For fear that
134 Airline Into .
135 Killed
t37 Cronies
139 Nockpiece

31 Break suddenly

33
36
38
40

Burden
Tolls
Weary
Borscht
Ingredient

41 Footless

43
45
46
47

Strokes
Sots
Discord
Is Ill

49 Peru's capital

5 t Quoted
52 Decayed

73 Stumbetlng
75 Exertion:

150 Advance in rank

68 Agave plant
69 ".....,,.
70 Following Jan
71 Performs

78 Rock
60 Small Islands
81 Investigator :
abbr.

82 Schulz comic
strip
84 March

12 ""
UIIKH

1 Cooftagrattons
2 Wears away
3 Vacation places
4 Emmet
5 "sex.- and

124 Memorandum

152 Roadside

77 Hawk eye State

called after two laps because of
rain with Willard leading. Double
features will be on th e program
next week along with a Sportsman Invitational pay ing $300 to
win .
Upcoming wi ll be the Late
Mod e l In vita tional. 'lalvollne
Just Say " No " to Drugs race on
Sept . 7.
Also, a reminder that Skyli ne
will now run 5classes on a weekly
basis with the addition of the
IM CA modllleds.
SUMMARY

OOWN

140 Leather strap

pains

!Continued from C-41

"The Time - "
Ultimate; Hnal
Obese
Take unlawfully
Rugged mountain

141 Cruel; savage
t43 South African
Dutch
145 Small rug
146 First
148 Callings

66 As far as

No Grills Or Specials
At This Price

Henderson,

Singer RoBB
Peaceful
Floalln atr
Sh81pen
Parll
Lists
Coorse of
proceecllngs
28 Slaughter
29 Old name tor
Tokyo
30 Deposits
32 Frighten
33 Move furtively
34 Author Fleming
35 Otd·tlme stave
37 Need
39 Opp . of WSW
40 Weary through
dullness
4 I Pilaster
42 Walk
44 LiHO&lt;l
46 Chair
47 Church part
48 Fasten tightly
50 Forecast

10 CONVERSIONS
NOW IN STOCK!

Limit 10

107
Chestnut St.

and

10 Pronoun

Gomez.

With the score 2·2 against
HJasek, Gilbert was broken twice
and lost the final lour games ol
the !lrst set.
"I was a little flat In the firs t
set," said Gilbert. " I went to a
lltde bit looser racquet beCause I
felt like !just wasn't getUng the
stick on the ball. Then I started lo
return serve really well In the

Abo~e

86
87
89
92
95

touching

"He was moving me arou nd

a major factor In the match. Hi s
!lrst-servlce percentage was just
under 60, and he served six aces
against only one double -fault .
"That was the key," sa ld

Slewart and Wbltney llaatweu. Standing are
Coach Jack BasU, Mandy BuriUe, Kasey
Atkinson, Janie BasD, Coacb Jell .Donnall)',
Jennifer Baker, Wendy Banks, Fausdna Leon and
Coac h Debbie Baker. Absent was Coach Fred
Hastwell.

Answer to Puzzle on Page D-8

eesenut
MONDAY
C"
4:00 PM to 9:00 PM

Gomez's service accuracy was

Kent Mercker on a 10-hitter and Lonnie Smith,
Greg Olson and Jeff Treadway drove In runs.
Mike Morgan , 9·11, took the loss .
Padres 2, Astroa 0 - At Houston. Benito
SanUago, making his first appearance In nearly
two months, lilted a first ·l'nnlng sa crifice fly,
sending Ed Whitson, 9·7, and th e San Diego
Padres to victory. Cra ig Lefferts notched his 17th
save. Jim Deshaies , :;.10 , took the loss .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Schroeder, who fin ished 28th in a
Pont iac Gra nd Prix.
Trickle has no t dPclded
whe ther he will attem pt Sun day' s race. T roy Beebe, the third
dr iver Invol ved . remai ns in stabl e but serious co nd itio n In the

\llcoo~t&gt;.I.O'S et s eci'a\

and really contro lling the play s ,··
said Courier. ''I just never really
got 1t together -"

Zelle had three apiece he lping the St. Louis
Cardinal s knock the Pirates out of first place.
Reliever Ken Dayley, 3-2, went three and
one- third Inning s lor the victory. Randy Kramer,
0·1, lost his first start .
Braves 3, Dodgers 2- At Atlanta , Steve Avery,
winless agai nst the rest of the National League,
beat Los Angeles for the second time In his bri ef
bi g-league career . Avery, 2·6, combined with

OVAA JUNIOR SOFrllALL CHAMPS- The
Green II soltball team won the OVAA Junior
Softball Division with a 9.0 record before taking
second In tournament action to end the se..-.on
with a 12· 2 record. Kneeling In lront are (L-R)
Amb er Wolle , April Donnally, Heather Alba ,
Bridglt Dar st. Morgan Woodward, Hannah

crashed

cou rsr.

seed Brad Gilbert of Oa kla nd.
Calif., downed J a kob Hla sek of
Switzerland 2-6. 6·1. 7·5 and wi ll
meet un seeded Scott Davis of
Largo, Fla .. who upset No . 15
Richard Fromberg of Australia
4-6, 6·4, 7·6 110·8)

Firm
Innerspring
Mattress

during hi s qualifying a ttempt.
Th e seco nd "grnrratio n driver,
from Hu eytown. Ala . crashed
his Ford Thunderbird on the
fa s tPS I pa ri of thP 2..1 m il e road

boxlng career in the late 1950s and early 1960s .
Rademacher is now the Ohio go lf coord inator for the
American Ca ncer Society
All local golfers are Invit e d to par tlc!pa tP in t he tournament.
The entry fee for the tourname nt Is $50, and that inc lud es
lunch and dinner.
'
The winning learn at Thursday's tour namen t will go to the

(Co nt inued from C -31

Back -in-1hr-pack action fea -

tured a great mid-race battle
IJe twecn Bt lI Chtlder s and Wolfe

Barry Larkin led off with a single a nd scored on
O'Neill's 13th home run .
Cincinnati added a run In the second. Billy
Hatcher si ngled and took second when Charlt on
struck out but was safe on Gary Carter's passed
ball. Lark in singled home Hat c her.
The Reds m ad e it 4·0 In the four th on O'Neill' s
seco nd hom er of the game and his fifth of the
season off Robinson.
Davis led off the sixth with his 15th homer to
give the Reds a 5·0 lead.
The Reds ex tended the lead to 7-0 In the eighth .
Davis beat out a single to second and scored on
Hal Morris ' double, his third hit of the game .
Morris scored from third on Mariano Duncan's
groundout.
Elsewhere In the National League, Mon treal
downed Philadelphia 0, New York beat Chicago
5-l , St. Louis burled Pittsburgh 8-3, Atlanta
stopped Los Angeles 3·2 and San Diego blanked
Houston 2-0 .
Expos 4, Phlliles 3 - At Mcntrea l, T im Raines
scored two run s and 011 Can Boyd pitched the
Expos to their third straight victory. Boyd, 7·5,
handed the Phlllies their third straight defeat.
Steve Frey got the fin a l out for his fifth save.
Terry Mulholland, 6-6, took the loss.
Mets 5, Cubs 1 - At New York, Std Fernandez
pile bed a three-h ltter, tossing 86 s trikes In Just 110
pitches. He also s napped the 18-game hitting
streak of Mark Grace. Greg Maddux fell to 9·10 .
Cardinals 8, Pirates 3 - At Pittsburgh, Vince
Co leman collected four hits, Including a home
run. and Jose Oquendo, Willie McGee and Todd

" I didn' t kn ow how fas t I'd
gone. " sa id Ear nhard t, a threetime NASCA R Winston Cup
c ham pion. "bui I knew I hadn't
made an y mist ak es a nd the car
ran real gorxi through th e

ACS to sponsor golf tourney

boJllng champion who went on to a succes sful professio nal

Jgo.

CINCINNATI iUPI) - The Cincinnati Reds
entered their biggest series of the year lugging
their worst streak of the year.
They need just one Inning to change that.
Paul O'Neill hit two home runs and Eric Davis
blasted a 442-loot shot behind Nonn Charlton's
three-hitter Friday night, helping the Reds open a
lour-game series with a 7-0 victory over the San
Francisco Giants.
"That's what you 've got to do against a c lub like
the Giants," Cincinnati manager Lou Pin lelia
said. "Score on them early like we did and Ju st
keep adding to the lead . O'Neill put us in front
early and Charlton did the res t."
"There was a different attitude today in our
dressing room," Chariton said. "Maybe getting
our ta ils kicked by the Dodgers yesterday helped
prepare us for the Giants. And a talk we got from
(owner) Marge Schott before the game was
Insplrational. too."
The Reds have led the National Leagu e West all
year long, but had also lost 13 of their previous 17
games. Charlton, 9·6, struck out lour and walked
two to hurl the Reds to a 5)2 -game lead over the
second ·placeGtants. lt was his first major-league
complete game. Don Robinson, 8.J,Iasted Just two
and one- third Innings.
"He's got one of the best split -lingers, and I'd
say he throws an occasional spiller, too," San
Francisco manager Roger Craig said of Charlton.
''He didn't throw many, just a lew when he had
two strikes. II he does It against us again, I think
we'll have to check the ball."
The Reds took a 2·0 lead In the first Inning whe n

front r ow wi ll be T erry L abont e,
who wa s threP- 1l' nl hs of a seco nd
slowrr tha n I:..:a rnhardt .

Friday 's qualifyin g sess ion
was s topped twtce. tltr first time

Jay mar Golf Coursp on Thursday
Born In Washin gton State, Rademacher wa s a 1956 Olympic

pe r fo rmam·e of the mid -season
c hampionsh ip race of two weeks

la ndo Esparza. Marr McCor·
mick, Ke n ny Johnson and Jeff
Burdette.
It was a big night lor cruc ia l
McDonald' s-sponsored cars, as
three of the top five ca r s were
McDonald's cars; those of Rand ,
Adams a nd Wolfe .
Andy Bond won the dash , and
Burdette won the fir s t heat.
A new face to Sky line victory
circle was Wes t Virginia invader
Edd ie Cle nd enin in car 95, who
came out on top in an exciting
battle with runner-up Kirk Isner,
Mike McDaniels , Bobby Hill and
(See SKYLINE on C-5)

Geoff Bodl nt •'s 1988 q ua lifying
mar k by fo ur ten ths of a seco nd .
Starling on th e outsid e of the

corners."

a gotr tournament sponsored by th e American &lt;:ancPr SociPt y at

fo r the third spot. For 25 laps
Wolfe in the McDona ld's /E ber'sIGulfO'Brlen Prcxluce 5R held
down . third spot , but lapped
tra ffi c proved to play a big role in
the finish .
Wolfe moved high to move
around lapped traffic. but a hole
opened up Inside and Bob Adams
and Bill Childers both slipped
through lor the pass .
At the finish it was Andy Bond,
Larry Bond, Bob Adams, Bill
Childers, Wolfe, Steve Burnside,
Keith Riddle, Dave Nutter, Audle
Swartz, Chuck Ingels , William
Robinson, Dub Barnhouse, Ro-

brokf'

VINTON - T he organiza tiona l meeting for North Ga ilia's
junior high football team will be Monday at 7 p.m. a t North
Galli a High Sc hool.
Pare nts as well as player s a re in vited to atte nd

POMEROY - Former boxer Pe te Rademacher Is th e guest a t

son, Tim Smedley, Alvin White,
and Doug Dean .
Al thoug h Crace was never
rea lly ser iously challenged. a
great batUe for seco~ e nsued
when Don Ke rr a nd Jack Kress,
who came off the tail in his new
ca r, really put on a battle fo r
second . For the las t five laps the
two battled s ide by side around
the perlmeler of t he fast Skyline
oval wi th Ke rr edging Kress by
Inches a t lh e Checkered flag .
Rutland' s Rick Williamson did
a fine job to fini sh fourth in his
firs t ever IM CA s ta rt .
In th e lat e model division, the
" Frost Flash", polesitter Andy
Bond led from flag -to-flag to
cla im the 30-lap Late Model
A·ma ln over brother La rry Bond,
Bob Adams. Jr ., Bill Child ers,
and Ra ci ne's Scott Wolfe, mak ·
lng h is first S kyline start of the
yea r .
Bond In the Mc Donald's / MII·
lhone Trucking/ York Construe ·
tio n A-10 claimed th e pole positi o n as a res ult of a 1·2-3 finish In
the fas t car dash over brother
La rry and third place finish er
Sco tt Wolfe .
For a ll 30 laps the Bond Boys
battled furiously through traffic ,
but little brother Andy carried
the rnomPnlum in a repeat

Earnhardt captures pole for
NASCAR Budweiser race

Chev rolet

KCHS volleyball practice slated

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page C·5

With homers from O'Neill, Davis,

rac es have been run ln th e s t atP

ADKINS WINS RACE - Mike Adkins of Minersville won the
2il-lap Sportsman feature at Ohio Valley Speedway In Parkers·
burg, W.Va., last Saturday night, driving the Adkins Garage/The
Watering Hole-sponsored Dodge RT. Adkins also placed second In
iast week's STARS special at Skyline In the Sportsman division .
Adkins finished fourth Friday night. In addition to his feature win,
Adkins has won two heat races In the past two weeks. He has
strayed away from the usual Chevrolet-powered cars and has
opted to run the Dodge Mopar 318 engine bored out to racing
specUicatlons. The Dodge dogged Rick Tracewell lor 23 laps at
Ohio Valley Speedway before overcoming the leader and posting
the win.

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

August 12. 1990

At Skyline Speedway Friday,

By SC01'l' WOLFE
'r·S Correspondent
STEWART -Chillicothe 's Bob
Crace Jr. regis te red his name in
the his troy books Frd iay nigh t as
he became the first ever winner
of an lM CA E ·Mod sa nc tioned
race In the state of Ohio,
defeating a field of 7 ca r s a t
Skyline Speedway.
Although other IM CA E -mod

ATP actwn ...

August 12. 1990

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

153
154
156
157
158
159
160

53 Word of sorrow

54 Diplomacy
56 Occupiers ot
home
59 Fat
60 En

restaurants

61 Arabian garment s

Learning
Drinks slowly
More Indigent
Aoctent chariot
Imitated
Athletic group
Out of date

63
65
67
69
70
72
74

Plug
Otherwise
Harvest goddeBB
River In Italy
Most toathesome
Trap
Spanish article

76 12 Ins.
77 Inactive

79 Betoro
83 Cottoctton ot
facts
85 Entertains
86 Story
87 Command to cat ,
88 Mountains of
Europe

89 Note of scale
90 Passageways
9 t Figure of speech
92 Ocean
93 Deal secretly
94 For example:

abbr .
96 Starchy rootstocl&lt;

97 Emerald Isle
100 Iron symbol
102 Stupefy
105 Lampreys
t09 Bleck
tt2 - lrae
t t3 Landed
I 14 - ot Liberty
t 16 Egyptian goddess
118 Halt
120 Establishes by
decree
t2 t Swln
122 Tidiest
t23 Seasoning
t25 Charms:
captivates

126 Beautiful young
man
127 Trode for money

129 Jump
131 Makes happy
132 Dwell
133 Meadows

134 Went astray
136 Twist out of shape
138 Cubic meter
!40 Celtlcs ' Larry
141 Reveal
142 Great Lake
144 Noose
t 47 Golf«' s mound
t 48 Pollc@man: slang
149 Health resort
15 I Extloct Htghtless
bird
153 .. _ Law"
155 SamarkJm

symbol

�Livestock Sales

D

Section

August 12, 1990

Top Mason fair steer sells for $4 per pound
THE ROAD IN FRONT OF OUR STORE IS FINISHED
AND WE'VE HAD 3 WEEKS OF LOUSY BUSINESS!

WE HAVE TO MOVE MERCHANDISE
OUR WAREHOUSE IS FULL OF:

•TV'S
•VCR'S
•CB'S
•Car Stereos

•Air Conditioners
•Camcorders
•Radar Detectors
•Home Stereos

FOX
RADAR
DETECTORS

50°/o
~~~~ER $8 99 S

26" COLOR
CONSOLES

ssaa

UP

POINT PLEASANT - Tne
1,235-pound 1990 Mason County
Grand Champion Steer, shown
by Michael Call, was purchasro
by Napa Auto Parts, Dr. John
Wade, M. D., Citizens National of
Point Pleasant and Foodland
SuPI'rmarkets for $4 Pl'r pound at
the M85on County Fair Lives lock
Sale Friday night.
Toby Lepon showed the 1075
pound Reserve Champion Steer.
the slea' sold to McDonllds of
Henderson llld Oaiiipolis for $1.75

per pound.
The third place 91£«, shown by
Jamie Bm. was ~d to benefit
the fair scholarship. Ciliuns National pure'-'I the I ,()80 pound
Sleer for $1.10 per pound. On the
resale City ke llld Fue~ WUIianoon Pallets, G4C Thwing and
Village 1J1surwe paid $2.2S per
pound.
.Shawn Holm's 1,380o pound
steer was bought by Gl!lt.ll Mesa
for $1.75. On die IMtlle of the slea'
City Ice llld Fuel puchased the
animal for 90 cents per pound The
resale was to benefit die Pleasant
Valley Hospital Health Foundation.
The total amount of the original
sales was $96,27515. The IIIIOUnt
of resales is not available yet. The
total weight of the aniDtals sold wu
70,675. 1'be lotahmount &lt;i sales in
the 1989 sale came to $96,492.20.
The weather paid its IOU on the
gate receipiS for Friday. Actordillg
to Fair Treasuru Kevin Dura. thm
wm 6,9@ paid admissions which
was down 26 percent from Friday
night last year.
Haffelt MiD Carpet Outlet, Inc.
outbid ot11er businesses and individuals at the livestock auction 10
claim the grand cllarnpicn lamb
owned by Carol BametL
The animal weighed I2S pounds
and was J)Uitbased for $8 per
pound by !Wfelt's.
The rcxrve cblmpion, OWIIDd by
Mike Crull, a Fulale Farmers of
America member. was sold 10
Yauger Farm Supply of Soulhsidc
for $8 per pound. The lamb was
then resold to City Ice and Fuel for
$3 per pound. The money from the
resale went IDWards the MIISOII
Crulty Chapla- of the Special
Olympics.

OFF

were rect&gt;ntly promotro at the

AND

UP

HOME
STEREOS

sale.
The 240-pound Grand Champion
hog for this year's fair was shown
by Chad Morris of 4-H. The hog
was purchased by Save-A-lot

ani!

M.tM Medical for $5.25 per
pound. II was dlen resold to
l'leasant Valley HOSj!ital for $2 per
pound with proceeds ~ng to the
liannon, Wahama Mid Point
Pleasant High Scllools' Boostm
Clubs.
The Reserve Champion, shown
by 1bdd Robetlwl of FuiiD'C Farmers of America, weighed in at235
lbs. II was
by Cily Ice .t
Fuel and
·c Video for $3 per
llOUild.
A total of 70 hogs were
purchased during this year's
livestock sale, with a three·way
tie lor the heaviest hog going to
Mike Chapman of FFA, Josh
Taylor of 4-H and Hallle Hart of
FFA . Their hogs .-ach welghro
260 pounds.
Chapman's hog was purchased
by Barr's Custom Butcher Shop
for $1.25 per pound. Mason Glass
bought Taylor's hog lor $1.25 per
pound and Harts' ht&gt;avy hog was
purchased by Cltlzt&gt;ns National
lor $1.40 per pound.
The most mont&gt;y spent on a
purchase was the $5.25 per pound
paid lor the grand champion.
Otht&gt;r big buys during the sale
lncludro the $3 paid for tht&gt;

t!l:.hased

Money Ideas

CHAMPION STEER - Michael Call owner ol the 1990 Mason
County Grand Champion Steer, sold his anbnal Friday nlghl to Dr.
John A. Wade, M.D., Citizens Nallonal Bank and Foodland store!l.
The steer weighed 1,285 pounds and wentlorS4 per pound. Pictured

reserve grand champion, the 255·pound hog shown by Rachael
$2.25 paid by Pat Hill ford and Watterson, and tht&gt; $2 paid by
Thomas Do- It Center for Craig • Mason Glass of Mason and
Tolliver's 220-pound hog, the $2 Ripley for Shant&gt; Cremeans'
paid by Dianna L. Johnson for th e 210·pound animal.

General Motors

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - Gt&gt;neral Motors announcro second quarter
r.-sults In line
w
I
t
h
exPI'ctations.
For the p.-.
rio(!, revenut&gt;
rose 1.2 percent
to $3.33. 9 billion.
Profits eased
even further as n.-t Income fell
38.1 Pl'rcent while earnings per
share erodro 40.8 Pl'rcent .
GM's North American opera·
tlons appear to have been slightly

profitable as nigher earnings
w.-re g.-neratt&gt;d from European
OPI'ratlons along with two of Its
non-automotlvt&gt; subsidiaries,
Electronic Data Systems and
General Motors Acct&gt;ptanre
Corp.
GM Hughes Electronics Corp.
and operations In Brazil reported
sig nificantly lower profits . ln
addition, car and light truck
retail salt&gt;S totalro 1.4 million
units , down 5.5 p.-rcent from
1989's local despite lncentlv.-s
that averaged $1,000 as Its sa le
erosion was trss than the over a II

Six OVEC employees are promoted
CHESHIRE - Six t&gt;mployet&gt;S

SINGLE

Ovmll, there were 47 milker
Jambs that wen: placed on the auction bloclc during Friday's livCSioclc

Ohio Valley Electric Corpora·
lion's Kyger Creek Plant &amp;C('()rd·
log to Norman H. Tarr, plant
manager.
Effective July 21. 1990, Ronald
L. Clay and Thomas E. Smith
w.-re promoted from assistant
shift OPI'rating t&gt;nglneers to shift
operating engineers. Charles D.
Grllflth and Donald W. Leach
were promoted lrom unit SUPI'r·
visors to assistant shllt operating
.-ngtneers. Robert E. Board and
J . Robert Burnt&gt;m were prometro from t&gt;qulpment operators
to unit SUPI'rvlsors In the OPI'ratlons dt&gt;partmt&gt;nt.
Clay jolnro OVEC In I957 as a
laborer In the labor-janitor dt&gt;partment . In 1960 he transferred
to tht&gt; operations d.-partment and
advancro to unit supervisor In

1980. In February of this year he
was promoted to assistant shift
OPI'ratlng engineer . Clay and his
wife. Gayanne, live In Chestt&gt;r
and are the par.-nts of on.daughter and on.- son.
Smith joined OVEC In 1956 as a
laborer In tht&gt; labor·janltor dt&gt;partment, whert&gt; In 1979 he was
promoted to unit sUPI'rv1sor. In
1989 ht&gt; was promoted to assistant
shift operating engineer. Smith
and his wile, April, Uve In
Pomeroy and are the parents of
one daughter and one son.
Leach joined OVEC In 1965 as a
laborer In the labor-janitor dt&gt;partment. In 1967 he transferrro
to tht&gt; Opl'ratlons department and
has served as a unit SUPI'rvlsor
since 1980. Don and his wile.
Dorothy, live In Cheshire and
have two sons and ont&gt; daughtt&gt;r.
Griffith jolnro OVEC In 1972 as

a labor.-r In the labor-janitor
dt&gt;partment. ln 1973 ht&gt; trans·
lt&gt;rrt&gt;d to the operations depart ·
ment where he has served as a
unit SUPI'rvlsor since 1983. Grlf·
lith and his wilt&gt;, ReiJecca , and
two daughters live In Bidwell
Burnem jolnt&gt;d OVEC In 1975 as
a labor.-r In the labor-jan Itor
departm&lt;'llt. In 1977 he trans·
lerrt&gt;d to the op.-ratlons depart·
ment where he advanced to
equlpmt&gt;nt operator In 1981 .
Burnem and his wife, Linda , li ve
at Route two, Racine, and are the
part&gt;nts ol two daughters .
Board jolnro OVEC In 19711 as a
laborer In tht&gt; labor-janitor department . That sam.- year he
transl.-rred to tht&gt; operations
department and In 19!1l was
promotro toequlpmt&gt;nt operator.
Board resldt&gt;S In Hartford.
W.Va., a~d Is tht&gt; part&gt;nt of one
~aughtt&gt;r and one son.

Fair queen named first
place scholarship winner
Mason County Fair Queen Anneoe Gibbs received the Citizens National Fair Scholarship Friday evening from Mario Liberatore, executive vice-president and secretary, of Citizens National. Twelve local
students compered for the three awards. Second place went to Charles
Hagley, third to Amber Long, while Sandra Yauger was name firsl al-

au to market.
GM sulfrs from bloated Inter·
nat .-xpenses associated with
exct&gt;Ss capacity In Its North
Amt&gt;rlcan automotive opera·
lions. For example, although 70
percent of th e compa ny 's salt&gt;s
are derived domes tic ally . earn·
lngs from these OPI'ratlons are
only marginal at best . Conver·
sely, GM's lntt&gt;rnatlonal bus!·
ness continues to grow. posting
record lt&gt;vels of profltabllllty
once aga in .
t.:onsequently, given an lm·
proving U.S. automotive market
durl ng the second hall ol this
year along with continued strong
International OPI'ratlons, wt&gt; are
maintaining our p.-r shart&gt; earn·
lngs estimate for 1990 at $5.50.
Longer term, wt&gt; bt&gt;lleve GM's
stock could provide patient lnvt&gt;S·
tors an

left to rlghr are Larry Howard, Brent Eastman, Dr. John A. Wade,
M. D., Scott Cohen, Calt Pete A!Under, E. Bartow Jones, Mario
Liberatore, Lanny WUIIamBOn, Jim Utterback, Annette Gibbs, fair
queen; Lindsey Scarberry, Utde Miss and Derrlc Dalton, Lillie
Mister. (OVP photo by Amy J. Leach)

attracflv~

total return

vehicle since management re·
mains committed to closing
ou t·datro facilities whllt&gt; also
dlffert&gt;ntlatlng lht&gt; comapny ·s
product line.
1Mr. Evans Is an Investment

brokt&gt;r lor the Ohio Company In
the GaiHpolls ollie e.)

terntlle.

Gibbs, the daughter of Denver and Sharon Gibbs of Letan, m:eived
$1,400. She is a 1990 graduate of Point Pleasant High School and wiD
aaend West Virginia University to pursue a masters degree in professional accountancy.
A 1990 gradwue of Hannan High School, Hagley is the son of Dar·
reD and Beatrice Hagley of Fruiers Bouom. He received $800 in
scholarship. Hagley plans to attend Glenville State College to study
~education.

Long .s also a 1990 graduate of Hannan High and received $400.
She is the daughter of Ron and Darlene Long of Ashton. She plans 10
attend Marshall UnivCISity and Sllldy elementary educauon.
Yauger grad•w!e!l from Point Pleasant High School and plans to attend West Virzinia S1111e Coliele to stUdy ac:counting. She is the
daughter of Raymond and Mollie Yauger.
Citizens National purchased Jamie Burris' 1,080 lb. steer. Citizens
then donated the steer back for resale with the proceeds going into the
Citizens National Fair Scholarship Fund, which is given annually a! the
bank sponsored baby bed sale.
A group of local businesses consisting of W~liamson Pallets, Inc.,
City Ice and Fuel, G&amp;C Towing and Village insurance purchased on the
resale for a price of $2.25 per pound for a total of $2,430. The money
from the resale will be added 10 the scholarship fund for next year.
Ora A. "Beth" Drake, the division leader of West Vuginia University
Extension Service, addressed the audience before the scholarships were
awarded. She stared the scholarship was the only one of its kind in West
Virginia and that 63 students have been helped with th_eir education
through il A total of 41 pasl wmners are now resoding m the county
making a contribution to their community.
The Citizens National Fair Scholarship was orginated in 1965 by E.
Bartow Jones, chairman of the Board of Directors. The scholarship has
been sponsored annually by Citizens National since taking over the
program from Jones.

Classified
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

$399°0

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SAlE

behotf of Cendot Group. lod.,
121 W. Nor111 Stroot. WOOl·
""· Ohio 44e91 . Tho oppt~
c:antodoontorwonotheUI"j
A. ct-lln proportv (form.
orty old Golf C0&lt;1rotl M Butf
onl ond Ohio ,.._,._ Oollf
polio. Ohio.
Tho pr-rty
to roned

AND UP!

GAlliPOliS CITY
SCHOOLS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
FOR

BIOI

Sep1rtte. IMitd pro~
llllt for tlch ot the requirements Mt forth below win be
received tt the office of thl
Trtnurer,
Goltpotle Clly

Schoolo, 81 State Stroot
Oottlpolt1. 0 H. 45831 uniM
12:00 noon Auguot 20,
I 990 ond wilt bo publicly

AIR TEMP

AIR CONDIONERS

.....,

STAmNG

AT

looltf

IAUlliTl

lA~TH

IU.nON

RONALD CLAY

ROBERT BOARD

CHARLES GRIFFITH

Auguot I 7. 1890".

"

$27995

1. Ice CrMm products for
uMin cafeteri..
2. BI'Md produclt fo&lt; UIO

Vehldw mev be ' " " ''
the bus gerage located behind llrMn
Elementary

d.-tv merited on the env•

lopo oo thot bldo wit not bo
opened pmnoluroly . Tho
Boord of Educotlon r•o,..
In Clfettrltt
tilt rfoht 1o occopt or Nj0&lt;:1
3. Mttk pro®cto !OJ uoo in ony ond oil bldl.
EDen M. lany. Treaurer
4. Oetollnt end DIMtl .
Boord of Educotlon
Gottlpotlt Clly Bohooto
Fuel
Sold Boord of Educotton · July 22, 21; Aue . B. 12
.....,. tho right to occopt
or Nject 1 ny, tHor pert• af

.,.,.......

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~il\nRi~~~li:i1S~
"SERVING GALLIPOLIS FOR OVER 20 YEARS., ....................-:::::::::::::::::::::::::..
il ~

Schoott Bo•rd ofEducttion,
81 St1t1 Strut, GalllpoU1,
OH . 45831
until 12 :00
noon on Auguat 20, 1990
for the Hie of the tollowlna
vehldH.
8u1. No. 9 1980 lnttmellonot
Bu1. No. 3119801nt.-nellonot
Buo. No. 34 1110 tntOf'llll·
tlonol

446-4517

. ,-.

01

No 10111 mey 11o whh. _ . !Of ot 30 doyo

446-7390

PubUc NotiCe

- r tile ocM&lt;tulod aloofnll

llmt lor ......PI of .....
1y Onlor of tilt

PIJIUC NOT1CI
The !~.....,... CliJ Comion mlalloll wll hold • public

c:eat•

Goltlpolte
loll&lt;l of
Ellen M• .....,,
July

DONALD LEACH

J. ROBERT BVBNBM

THOMAS SMrrB

r-nr "-"'8 011 w.ditJIIIIJ, lop-

22, D; A... I, 12

-12.1110etlil0p.
... "' tilt llllllllalll Moortlot""' luldl... .,. '-""
A - lllllttpok Ololo.
""'"' Iiiii ..... hiid 011

ccpADOPTIONSped•l flmlty
w1nta to glvt your blby and us
1 ch.lnc. . C.ll coUac1 '108-l521W. Mary Ellyn and Otuck.

=4-::-_G
71v~eaw~7ay~c:-=
2 ott gray tomoto colo,

:tiQ4.a82.

:M!I.

2 ~ yood ooto good~. 1140pon Spoce Dlotrlet, ond 388
t.
thl tpplk:tnt dttlret to ra- 2 tomoto mixed blood ..,....._
qUIIt 1

llon

ruontno to Suhur- 814 ... 2643, ..................

RHidenttol

con-

•-n

Ctooo "C"

EariJ
lillian
Olotric1 for lllo purpooe of TV,
prelfr ..-,""TV MOdo
cont-lng forty (401 olngto - . SOU7WC1a.
famitv homes.
Oaltlmtn Fuel oil floor lurntrec~and la nk,
City Manager pluo mtoc. junk Iron. Froo tor
remavll. ~tDl-5664.
Aug . 12

School.
Bldl muot bo oooled ond

DESCRIPTION OF
REQUIREMENTS

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

435 UPPER RIVER RD. • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

oponedondroodbytheTr...
ouror lmmediotoly tlotrooftor
and prMtnted to the boercf
It ht "'"' mMting. Bids
mutt be cletrlv marked on
the onvolopo "Bid Oponlng,

SURPLUS VEHICLES
Sealed bidl will be re·
coived by the Gottlpollt City

3 Announcements

Honoy -

192~083.

to gtv-,. 814-

Coli Np.m.

Announcements

3 Announcements

-

...... bllil..... IO'kldo,

--.
-

-

to

Ml, 1Mio.

114-

�August 12. 1990

Paaa
8

31 Homes for Sale

0-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lost &amp; Found

11

Help Wanted

Babyltnar needed. UUil be In

mr r.om.. 114-441-'111111.

11

Sc-

Help Wanted

lluat
..-

poMIII

'

but Oporotor, I ...,.h
-lon, ...11 ... - . c..
lract brule only.,....... eat I ne
In tho Ala QrOndo, VInton - .

Real Estate

31 Homes for Sale
, 114 ..... 3 mlleo 11om town,
2br LR dh ft11- don
..._...,_, 114 Ull 0311.

•PP""JJ'iil•

--pump.w--.·---

TEACHERS WANTED - NO COLLEGE DEGREE NEEDED. Uve-ln instructor• needed to
teach communhy and personals kills to adults in
th&amp;if own home. Various skills and talents

needed. II you like to cook, exercise. garden.
......- - o r
Cock+
read. or drive - wa may have a job for you .
mod ..... ...., ll'llndly, Coemtcologlel n.dtdl Gulrtn- wtlllna to - · Fot _ . .,..
m 1 ICio to Gootv. doG. tood poltf VICIIIono. 114- .......aton coli - - or
Wa're
looklng for people who enjoy other peo....... coli 304-1'111-1111:1 .. til 448-J2el
wrlto to tho Qolllo County ple,
who
can teach various skills to othero. who
llllttl
2
Hlgllflnd .... Pt.Pit.
of llltOO. P.O. BOo M,
. ~ted il L.Otort
Elm money by lhe week. Join Choohlro, Ohio 41120.
are
creattva.
and willing to drNa as part of an
Filii.
_,.14-241-20511.
'M numbtn to demonstrate
7
Yard Sale
energetic
taem.
High school degree. valid driv"Chrl•ma•Around-Th•Wortd". Soml truck drlvori-2QCI 3,!&gt;&lt;~_1_. 2112 bolho, lhrintl ......
er's license and good driving record required.
Juty..[)ecember. LNve n~mt, radlut; o1 PornerDw. Sind "'""'' - , khohOn, flmlly
tdchta. and phone number an r. .ume lo P.O. Box 721-H, , _ , out Sl AI. 141, wflh
Two positions starting at $4.26/hour. (f inter·
Galllpolla
......nng ··~tc 614-992-831i. Pomeroy. Ohio.
estad call286-6039 no laterthan 8/17 /90; ask
- · col .,._1:3011.01. 114&amp; VIcinity
A 11r &lt;W~-4~31-Inquwioo only.
EARN IIONEY Reeding Bookel Someone to dD hou
for Christy. Equal Opportunity Employer.
hO,OOOiyr. Income potontlol. hour. Re~ lnd holl'tr .... brldt, 1 liZ both, lull AU Yard Sileo Muot Bo Pold In Now hl~ng. (I) 1105-4111-1000 rate. Writ. Box P10 car. PGinl
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Ext. Y4562.
mont on :114 1c:r1. ~~:1
Ple... nl Aegltt.~. 200 Main 91,
...LOtiO, 114-24UMI, B
tho dly boloro the ed lito run.
Point PI-nt, wv 2UIO
Sundly · edition • 2:00 p.m. EARN MONEY ANding bookol
:1:.._ IOOitod on LN« River
Frfdly. Mondoy edHion • 2:00 $30,000/yr. lncamt polential.
p.m. Saturday.
Now hiring. (1 I 805-4111-fOOO
~"
Soturdly, Bl11~j H. Sundoy Ext. Y·1018t.
Dfltrlcl. 114.-.tm
8112ilf0, 111-4. ... t.o.r River Eoholng Moodowo. An ICF
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO
Rood. (21/Z mlloo- AI. 7.1
pM.R. Ia currM'ttly ...kina 1 full.
4 bedroom, 2 11 ory homo wnh
ilme AN or LPN for aftlrnoon
-rol
hlotl:l,;.nd
olr
_,..,
InSTructor
position available in Practical
ahlh wfth Friday and Sttwday
84 ·
Pt. Pleasant
Ul,OOO.,....
Nursing
Program.
Daytime employment .
aft. Interested ptrtlee ple11e 12
Situation
call 114-5944541 or 1ppty In
&amp; VlclnHy
4
,_-.both,
tunMust be an RN with a BSN Degree. Mini·
per~on el 3'19 W. Union StrMI,
wanted
ment,
edrllot, 42 Burdine Add,
HUilfl Yord Solo, Frl &amp; Sol, 1:30 Athent, Ohio 45101. Mondlf"
PI.PI.:J04.1~311.
num
of 3 years work experience and li ·
Older woman to llvt In I elwe
1111 ?, Bun. 12:00 Ill •:oo. 2 Frtdly &amp;.11:30 1.111. or 1~ p.m.
·- - wllh expeMM. 1114-245-1211.
7 ""'"'
rr~ In
censad to practice in Ohio.
obo¥o Crowlvnl St.,. -EXCELLENT
WAGES tor eporo
~ Clethea, lumtture,
~a:""Ri'V.rCall Lola Cress at 614-532-7187 or
3
gluware, Home Interior, kit• of Ume UMmbly. E11y work et 18 Wanted to Do
home.
No
••perlence
needed.
Forltod
Run
Slota
Pork,
Shldo
614-867-6641
mfec tt-. All PfDCIIdl ....
call ' ·i18.fi2:Z·5652, Ext. 1244, a.byomtng 1n mr -... Ex· Rlwr ForMt I 110011 to be
Aft
5pM
Glng ........ good ..- . 304- Including Sat. and Sun.
perltncalf, loving
ChritUan n.rl... WHNn mlnut11 of throo ,._ _ _.,:o;;.r..;;:;~B::;r~.:..:.·:::.:,·..;6:,:0:,:6::,:-.:,7,::3:,::9~-6::,6::,2::,9~--J
71-t077 afteri:OO.
public
bolt
rompo.
Ownor
1malhor who wOuld onloJ
Exp. HouH cl.. ner tor Frldaya, mothering
Yo.U s.t. St
Add. $5
your child wNie you -ood. ortcodlo .... 115,500.
an
hr.
114-448-0671.
Frltfot,soturdoy 1:01).4:00 p.m.
wort. ....It and IMCka lrl Cllll S'141185-4175 Of tM/247tm C1W1J Ho¥o, 3111 ong, duot, Experienced heating and coof.. provided. can Rultde 114-)12- 40311.
PASSPORT ASSESSOR/CASE MANAGER
gl-11, ckllhoo, mloc.
In~ lnltall•r. Muel be wHilng lo 3084.
7 , _ . 1 112 botho, oountry
work. Send N1um• lo P.O. Box Child coro provldod In mr Rio living but c - to Molao School
The Area Acency on A&amp;ing District 7. in Rio Grande.
7211G, Pomorov, 011.
Pomeroy,
Ohio is saekingto fill four full-time and two temporary
GrtrKM HOlM, day .. be. c.ra, lnd IOWR. Rt. 3S4 line,
wrt"Neonable rtl81. •~ Townehc!fl Road 27. FirM road lo
contract Case Mln~&amp;er/Assessor positions for a new
Federal Job1!
Middleport
1550.
~·
IIM-112·7t11or1-SNEarn $28,000-$88,000
Medic.oid PASSPORT procram for home bound senior cit·
&amp; VIcinity
All OCCUpillonl needed.
Countryoldo
Aooldontlll Cora
izens.
DUTIES INCLUDE: To assist, manage and coordi·
614-894-7859,E.l:t.Q1.
Harne. Enjoy thl QUill of tM A·frwM taf .... by owner, 2200
Auauot 141 11. , Rl 7, Tuppors
nate comprehensive case plan with long-term care clients
Plalne, TIIDCttL Mena, womena,
'i:':u~~'t:,.k.
·~t;: :.~."!'~"'":' :~ and their informal/formal providers within desipated
c/rildrsn clothing. Roln concoltl. Food eervlca worker OMd.d to Homa.
cost caps. To assure Itt at the services are appropriate and
24 hourt care, laundry, cludel cullom mad• .olkl 01k
pick up prepared m..la 1nd
Tuoodoy lhru Thutodly. Aug. 14 dlllver to Carleton School, HI room 1nd home cooked meell. buMt In bookcaM. Dining room,
meet the needs of lhe client. Conduct face-to -face com·
lhnJ18. All alz.e &lt;:hUdnn'l ntca up urvlce and serve mea'- to we promiM tlftller loving oare built In kitchen wtth rtnge, 11111•
prehensive assessment to determine client's level of carec:lothl~ birth lo 7 yura. 1ppro•lmatety 50 etudtnt• and lo ell our l'lllkllflte. For more laundry room. 4br mauurt~
/need. eliaibility for available community resources and
Uet«n Clothing and home ln-. Iduna, clun up. Must hive Info call 304 n5 3831 or ,_. 1pprox. 12114, 10x1Z, 101
8x40. 2 bllthrooms, wall lo WI
long· term care options: develop care plans: arrange for
lerior. rew Road behind the velld Ohio drivers licence. )563 end 11k tor Judy.
e11pollng throughout. Eloclllc
tolrgroundl. 10.? pm.
service
delivery induding collaborating and negotiating
Ability to operat1 kitchen • Mill Paula'• Dly C.. Cent•. buabolrd
hulling. 3 car det1ch
gulpment, maintain .-.cordt.
witlt
service
providers for services: maintain regular conYo.U Solo. Judr Humpltrwro $5.96
SaM,
1ffordebl1,
chi~. M-F g1r1gt wfdOOf opann, county
hr. 10 hra. per wk . plus
Rockoprlngo Rood. MondOy, lrt'let per
6
1.m.
•
5:30
p.m
.
.a..,e
2
·10.
weler,
uptlc
eyttem,
&amp;
aetellhe
tact
with
client.
caregivers. and other provitlers ofsorvice
r~~lmbursement . PosUng
Tuoodor, Wodnoodoy. H p.m.
BetoN, 1ftlf tc:hool. Drop-lnt d.U1 ~_.11 on 43.8 Kf'll tot
to determine if services are appropriate: conduct compretnd1 8112190. Submit application wlk:ome.
614-446-1224.
US,wu. Home on 13 acrw tor
to: Melge MRJt&gt;O 1310 Clrtetan
hensive reassessment to determine client's needs andre8
Public Sale
St. Syr~cu11r..... Ohio 45779. Win Baby 1ft In my home. Ha'll 175,000. 30.S acre~ IN nallebla
evaluate
the appropriateness of care: review cost of
wlpurchnl of home tor an lddlMEIGS COUNIT BOAAO OF Qood Relerenc~~. 614-388-IIM llonol
&amp;Auction
$10,000. L«&lt;tod Al.3, Go~
PASSPORT covered services and mal:e necess.ary adjust·
MENTAL RETARDATION AND
ments: maintain on· going telephone contact with all ser·
DIS- Will boby oH In mr homo, OIIC llpotlo. Dlroctlono: Toke AI.J5 to
Rick Peirson Auct6on ComPiny OEVELOPIIEtiTAL
roloroncoo, JOU18-31123.
!It- lo Coro IIIH Rood. 1iomt
ABILITIES
DOES
NOT
vice providers: maintain on-going contact w~h caregiv·
now bookl-. auctlana, •x· CRIMINATE IN PROVISION DISle
1PJWQXI1t1111fy
2
112
lo
3
mil•
OF Will babysit In my honw. O.ya on tift. In Ohio Call: 1-t14-t4&amp;perianee meke1 the diH.,..nce.
ers.
family and friends listed in smice plan: monitot eli·
OR EMPLOYMENT
li&lt;*IHd Oh!!z_ ~~ucky, Woot SERVICES
&amp;811., an Waet VIrginia C.U: 1·
en I' s progress relative to goals and objectives ofthe home
BECAUSE OF HANDICAP, only. 6M~U.
vtrvlnlo, _ , r....tliO.
RACE, COLOR, CREED, NA- Wllt to babyltlllng In my home »U t4 1131 efter lp.m.
care: assist client in transition. if PASSPORT program dis·
continued: maintain data collection system: participate
TIONAL ORIOIN, SEX, OR AGE. wnkdeya, Ag11: 2 6 up. Hive CountrY Setting. 4 bedroom~, 2·
9 Wsnted to Buy
deyc.rt ••parltnc• &amp; reter.n- 112 bllhl, oanfral heal and lllr,
in client c1re conferences with providers: educate fam..
nl, attached gan~p. 20
Complete hou..hold or Elt.._l Individual to perfrorm cl"nlng c:e1. E.l:ceUant Care. 114-446- I bit••oorEmno!Ot
ilies
and community agencies regarding PASSPORT long·
ltf'Vicea
et
tht
Crown
Chy
Ott6o
11202.
min'"" flont Athlnl, 1·liZ
Any type of tumhurt, tpPa.l OHiee, Contact the tocal
term case management: advocate on behalf of a client for
mllto to llol9o High Sohoof.
ptllncoo, ontlquo'o&lt; lie. Aloo poetrn~~ster
AI.... _
And tlapoiH ,...
11 111~256-1947 ror
_.toot ovoltoblo. o14-245-815:l. turther lnformlfion.
other services.
Financial
qulood. 814-81Wt:l7.
QUALIFICATIONS: Ucensed Social Worker or Registered
Uood Mobile """-· 0111 814- lndlvldull lo P«form ciNnlna
448-4178.
....
muot
loll
Nurse
with at least one year prior experience in home care
..,....lcel al the R•clne Poll 21
Business
-~~~ llylo, 4 bodroomo, 2
Offica. Confect PQM ma1t1r. &amp;14·
for the elderly and/or disabled adu~s. home health care,
W.nled To Buy: Junk Auto.
MrM.
hlument, gan~• &amp;
OpportunHy
wtl h or wfthout motora. CaU 9411-2!100.
o4horo. Bullcl- 2.~ oc110, 1&lt;1
medical social wort. gerlatrics/gerontolog or other reltturry Llntr. 514-3811-130:1.
vant subst~ute. Must possass the knowledgund skills nttaround
·
1:.111
SomoMno
EARN
MONEY
typing,
!HanCE!
Rlllly, 304-87Wo3o or 11784431.
WOfdprocealng, personaf com- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINO CO.
cess.ary to provide the IBYel of case management required
puting. Ae homt. Full or pt. time. rwcommende thlt you do bwl- For Site: ! bedroom houM on
11 Help Wanted
by lite client and by any legal regulations. Must possess an
S35,000fyr. Income potentlel. (1) nooo with poop1e you k - , ond IPIIIOL 32 1roo fiiO 1
unders!Jndinc of the communny service delivery system
AVON • All lrHI, Cell IHrllyn 80HI1.ect00 ht . 8·10181.
NOT to eend money through lhl mile 11om Rutlond, h9,8011; ~..
mall unlll you ,..,. lnv.tlgllld Sole or Trodl: 2 bedroom Wuv• 304-882-2&amp;4$.
and the abtlrty to utilize the community's resources.
NurMe: Overbrook C.ntar. The tho oftttlng.
on
Chelter
Ad.
In
Pomeroy,
Acooptlng opptlcou...,. llondoy ertat newllf 1nd most modem
SALARY RANGE: Sl8.000.$25.000
14,000. 114-3111'7217.
SS$ FOR SAL.E m
thru
Thursd•y,
1:00-4:00. lkllled lonc&gt;l•rm coro loeiiHy,
Resumes must be received no tater than 4:30 p.m. on
L.orobfe PIUII Sllwr Brklae now lu tu11 •nd part-lima RN Vtndlng RO\Ao Choop. lloko llg GOVERNMENT HOliES lr'orn
Pl.ua, Golllpot/a, Oflo. Apply ln end LPN poeftlona •v•lleble. $$$. 1-JIIwat!S.
August 17. 1990 In the office of Joyce Shan&amp; Personnel
SI.OO IU lllool~ Forocloouroo,
,..._,_ no phono Clflo p-. FGJ more lnformetlon reg•rdlng
tu
Oollnquont
Manacer. Area A&amp;en~ on Aging District 7. Inc., P.O . Box
Horohly tloncll Routol GroM R Overbrook Center employment
Ptopo~llo. oolllng JOUr
978,
University of Rto Grande. Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
Airline Jobl Directory. Guerln- which ""•• a very comptll- Sl3,000 .... ,..,, noqulrod, lrtl.
Call1-31~r..73-ni. Exl. H·
$10,000 IO tlal'l, 1~288-3Ael.
lood EmploJrnont, 304-344 5385 tlvo "An Equal Employment Opportunity Employer"
OH.Q2 cu~t lillie. ~ hrw.
lnd
bonofft
pocklr..
Ext A-t.
Pt... CIIH 114-482-M72. .. VENDING ROUTE: lilt ...
quelt lilly Oloackner, Director
lor - . 5 Bunlllto
locallono.
- - pOoolbll
AVON I304-175-14211.
AH - · I 9Hrlor ot NuNing.
NCh m~ehlne _..,, mu.l ... Addn,~.
Spoo11,
Real Estate General
lllulng -

~

.

!:toe.;:. ....':'C

LAWRENCE COUNTY
VOCATIONAL SCHOOL

-ar::r.. ;:':

a..-.

Bebplner In my home. Rio
Grandt ertt, 2-3 clap JMf Wllk.

l::oll.m.-4:00p.m. e14..2&lt;5-91J7.

1

card ol Thanks
We wish to !hank all
our
neighbors and
friends who helped in
any way during the ill·
nt!ll and death of our
loved one. A spacial
thanks for your prayers
and expr111siona of sympathy, cards. food. ftoral
offeringo. RBII. Jamt!l
Patterson. Vmton V.F .
W. Post 161, doctors,
nursing and soc:i.. ltllff
at Chillicothe V.A. Hoo-

pital, and the McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home
The Family of
Bobby Erwin

a

Card of Thanks

1

Thanks to all of the
following : T.P.
Emergency Squad .
Silver Ridge
Community, Ewings
•Funeral Home, Rev.
Duane Syndestricker
and the South Bethel
New Testament Church
for all of their lood,
help and prayers.
Thanks Agam.
The fzra Sheets Family

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC
AUCTION
Saturday, August 18
10:00 a.m.
Out To Lacil Of Parking, The Aucllon Has Been Moved
Camden Avenue
AtTitt Youlh Cenw n Point Pleasant- Watch For Signs!
AHTTQUES: Beartilul roll lront walnut secretary. unusual
"Folk lu(' desk. laney oak secretary, round oak table. old
cabinel early kitdlen table, 2 night stands, flat top oak
deSk, willow settee and chair, barber's cabinet, wicker table
Femer. 5 nK:e pre&amp;Sback chairs, 3 rockers, laney arm chair.
.-al beds, rurved glass showcase, doll bed, cnest,
trunk. piano stool, oak telephone, trunks (all SIZes). wooden

kitchen 11Bms, Victrola and records, two 9x12 rugs. Uncle
Wiggly Ovattine 1\dv. Mug. figurat·car napkin nng, qutlts &amp;

Meigs Co. quil, 1800's Meigs County map, good old
dishes, 'Ctvil W81' print, Uonel tratn engine no. 257 l81r
conditiofl, hanging oil light, old bisque 'Darling' and china

1~11la-1144.

Professional

=. . . ,

Services

LIIIJOIII Clonllll cantor
Unique
homo. 22
~llllzlna
"' - . ...
rlowtra.
C"UIIom
. , nteotlna
. _. ocroo, 5
~rry Rklgo.
come. We dlllver In 0... $40,100. S14-111f

llpotlo.453 Joc'-rt Plko

11

Help Wanled

ketlla, pottery, mantle, mucll paper advertising, books,

postcallla (some local), crod&lt;s, stone jars, tin cans wtlh
adver1ioing, many wood boxes (some wtlh adverlising),lots
or pictures and lrames. old Christmas ornament&amp;, local milk
bOUle•...vit, toys. child's games, vintage aothing, rag
rug~, many teed sacks, light lixtures, Howe sewing ma·
chlr\e, soma slarling ftatware, old jewelry, C.J. salesman's
IMIJII8 store with utensUa, lightning rod, bamboo fishing
poles, ironware, old dlaise lounge, oil adv. cans. cream
saparalor. fHd ocalea,wood clamps, draw knives. large
bench visa, Sunoco oil boUle, Maytag washer, old tools,
lawnmowet and many interesting items too numer-ous to

mentlon.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
Lunch

Mason, WV

n3-5785

Owner: IMOGENE WHITE

TEIM: Cllll or CIIMl ..h Ul.
11o1 Aupano!Mt IOI'IIIIIIItllrltrtl al ptq11rty
Uttottootll ..,...Ill 01t1o, l!otttldy I Wnt Yltglnlo Me

Room. for rent· WHk or month.

,,.Stooping
•••••o.,_,. wHh

HousehOld
Goods
Couch ond oholr, good cond,

aem, Maton wv.

Real Estate General

~• If
unbellevab.. prlae Df
$"12,100 dellvartd end Ml up.
C.lll-800-'121-4041 "" dota llo.
Mo6llt Homn for ule on 3
quartal'l ICI'I of lind. For
$7,000, 614-258-1518.

the

1&amp;4 acrn on Rollla :15, ten mil•
from Polnl PleaHnt. Ho~.~~e,
bam, gar•ae and outbuilding•.
All mrnerals. Owner tln1ncrng
1110,000. Coli Somorvlllo RNIIy,
304-675--3030 or 1175-3431.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Cognitive
Development; and
Self Help Skills .

Farmland 45 Acrta mora or 1111,
Bud Chanin Road, chy water,
PIYod n11d, $27,000. 304-7183571.

For more information 'Concerning this
FREE SERVICE call 367-7371 from B
A.M. -4 P .M.

EXCELLENT BUILDING SITE - Washtnglon School Dislricl.
6 acres +f. Some woodland, ma;esltc vtew . Excellent netgh·
bot hood. Restricted. Owner/agent.

pc.
USED APPLIANCES awnk.
dtyar~,

refrtgeretora,

rongoo. Skllllll AppllollCH,
Upper River Rd. Bnldt Slone

Crollllotol. C.ll S14-44&amp;-73H.

Hld. .·bed, axe . &lt;:ond I luy
boy rtc:llner, good
Date al

cond,

Sale: 111~. 3:00p.m.. ...1 of.

torl814-448-22011.

&amp;1UU-31SI

gRIUI) S14.01 por
4 ~ bedroom auhe,
complete $14.20 per WNk.

-

dlntlll wnh 4 oholro 81.80 par
wHk. U1glc Chef 14 DU. ft.
Rtlngorotor JIUI PI' WHk, II
ft . frtuer, S10.IPO per
WNk.VI'Rt Furntturt. Rt. 141, 4
mlln oft AI. 7-Co-ry.Opon 1

cu.

daytl . . .k.

Real Estate General

Jud~

£stale ~nr:.

COewiH

738 2nd AVE. GALli POLIS

WANTED: "NEW LISTINGS!!!"

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE OR RENT w/oplion 2 bedtoooms,
Rodney atea. Secunty deposil and relerence tS reQutted.

WHY PAY RENT? When jou can own your own home. Priced
upper $20,000 Ntce 3 bedroom home, l.R, eal·tn k~chen,
gas heat. Ctty schools. 2 car garage. Nice Hat lot covered

;;~~o:;w

Estate

;;:;·
Bonnie Stu1es 446-4206

One acrw trlller tDI with county
w1111, Mpllc lank and alactrlc
hook up. On block top !'Old.
Pel'llally tencM. OV.ner wtll perll~ly

Waahera.

RENT TO OWN

36 ACRES &amp; MOBILE HOME- Rto Grande area. New pond,
lots ol woodland.

33 Farms lor Sale

Social, Emotional. or
Physicial Maturation;

Goods

Good u..d 25" color TV, Floor
model. &amp;14-388-r162.

GOOD

Household

JUDY OEWITI. BROKER ............ 446-8147 Sam Hoffman ............................. 379-2449
J. Merrill Carter .......................... 379-2184 Jeannie Tolliver ........................... 446-6624
Cathy Wray ................................. 446 -4255 Tammie DeWitt ........................... 441-0703

Real Estate General .

or 3 btdroom14x70

51

Household
Goods

Real Estate General

gout~enn rni~~g CRea~

I:H

SPECIAL Footory to you11191, 2

Early AmtrtCin Sola I Chelr,
Spindle
rtcllnw, Full ..H
Hoodboord. footboorU &amp; bod
lnlmo. tw-44e.ma

51

cookl"'f.

Aloo troller - · All hook'"PI·
C.H oftor 2:00 p.... , -773-

Pl'jysical Development
Skills;

m
IUllOW

Real Estate General

flnonco, U,IOO. ooklng

ptlco. :104.e7S-2722.

NEW LISTING!
CHARM, LOCATION. CONVENIENCE!
Is whal lhiS excepltonally well matntatned bnck
ranch has to offer plus 3 bedrooms. living 1oom.
II\ baths, lormal dtntng area. attached 2 cat
garage, 8'&lt;12' slmage building Apptox 1\ acre
landscaped lawn. Ntce qutel netghbothood
Localed at 475 Kalhy Slieet. CalllodavlWon'tlasl
long
#2866

NEW liSTING!
BELIEVE IT!"
Alii he TlC Ihat has been put tnlo tht s e•cepltonal
2 3 bedroom home. ltvtn g room. lamtly room.
dtning room Enclosed porch and partial
basement concrele dr~e. newly patnled and
papered, mcelj decorated Ctly livtn~ conventenl
$40s
#2867

NEW liSTING!
AFFORDABLE &amp; ADORABlEit
ThiS charmmg 1987 28•48' Foresl Park
doublewtde has 2 alla ched decks. 3 bedrooms, 2
lull baths. newer carpet 1n living room and dming
area, range, refngerator. washer and dryer

tncluded. Call now '

#2868

Route 2 Mhton, 1 ICfW kn 3
miiH lOuth G1lllpolla Lock1,
pubUc wet•, no rntr1cUont,

Real Estate General

oomo wbh

~..,

flontogo, !104-

575-2336.

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent
2br, haual ,..,

tar 1 or 1

tum-.

orocerY ldlll

-~-app1l.no11
.
$50

~- 120 ThlrU

Avo.·-

lbr haula, 1 112 mlln out.tdt of

Rio on AI. 321. 814~5-1551 .
a roomo &amp; both pontolly fur-

579 JAY DRIVE - Attractive home wtlhtn mtnutes
from shopping and hospttal. Thts home offers 3 BRs,
!ill baths, LR. equtpped kttchen, dininR area, gas hea~
cent. air. 2 car attached gara~e. 16'x32' " I

KANNT ISLAlKISUKN

446-0008

nished, kx:ltlld In town, IIM4411..,01, 01 814-3111-2l'IG.

OFFE
THAN THE AVERAGE HOME..
.2 lots and a beautiful home lor $44,900
Outstanding leatures of thts home are the liv·
ing room with ftreplace, built·l n hutch in din·
ing room, 3 nice bedrooms. 2 baths, gas heat
and central air. City schools. Come see this

SMALL FARM - 22 ACRES. Ideal lor lhe family
who has other emplojmenl. 6 100m modern
hom e. 2 or 3 bedt ooms. I ~ baths. lull basement.
central healing and ' " condtltomng and cou nly
walet . la rge masonry garage 32'x48' apptox. lhts
"niCe' Pasture IS alllenced and has a large pond
and liveslock water. Tobacco base and a good
barn. ltke new rooling and concrete floor . Pnce
has been reduced lo $51.900 Appro• 12 mtlesl
from GallipoliS at Stale Route 775
#2845

abr, 1 112 botho, gorgo, oleo

Yl!d1 llorogo building. C\~=

IUDCIIViU)n,

clly

IC

$400/mo. ptuo dlpoon, • 2Jtll.

LOOK NO FURTHER!
Conventent locatton. ROod schoo~. 34 bedrooms.
2 balhs. Ltvmg and lamily room. lat ge kitchen.
dtntng area and m01 e IS what you'llltn d tn thiS
spltt·level. Ntce corner lot. AHordably pflced
$40's
#2827

ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS INSIDE
AND OUT
l tvm~ toom, lamtlj room and lormal dining room.
3 large bedrooms !large walk·mclosel off master
bedtooml. 2~ balhs. Overmed 2 car garage
[qutpped ktlchen . Matnlenance flee vmyl stdm&amp;
concrete dme Presgltgtous netghborhood. Keep
cool thts summer wtlh the club pool'
#2831

Real Estate General

•

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
ROBERT D. BRENNEMAN 446·2174
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR
HOMES, FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

I

446 3636U\
-

DO YOU WANT MORE FOR YOUR MONEY? Call us
to see thiS appealtng 1988. 14'&lt;56' mobtl e home.
614.9&amp;S-3848.

~~
.

~---

PASSPORT SCREENER
Tlte Area Al•tY on ~•1 District 7, In llo Grande, Oltio ~
SIHin&amp; to fill the posttton of Scr- for a ... Medicaid
PASSPORT prllflm for ltomt bound sMIIol dtizens. DUTIES
INCLUDE: Contplllt llllohontt 1er11111; sdtdrlt cllily assassntlllls for both PASSPORT and nunln1 flclllty appl~
cants: male -arr conllcts durlnc scr.nlna pr11011s;
schdrll MIDD or MH In II ns•llltllls whln RKISAty.
oonfirms Medit:lklllllus with county lllptrttnlnl of lllman
S.tvictl: nuinllins flt:Ofds Mid coltplllt rapGIIs 11 rttquired: lfiiY Itt r•pansible for cornpllllna:thiiiiOtllltly PASS
Mid RN AIStltor sdtldul•; ffllinllln roltilonslips with cose
111111118'1 and RN ••sen to fldlllltt client ftow tltrouall
system: ffiiY Cllnlld lddltlonl! lnfonnlllon sOUIQIS to apply
PASAAR Mid PAUPOIIT ertt.-iL
QUAliFICATIONS: Rtaisttrtd Nurse or Ucenstd Sodll
Worker 11Hh tlptrfMetln home
lor lldtrly 1ndlor
disabled adults. EJCIIIent lnttrvltwlnc skills requlrld.
Comput11/typla1 biiCll'ound 1 pl11.
SALARY RANGE: $11.000-$25,000
Ruumo 1114Ut bl ncalnd no Ill• t11at1 4:30 p.m. on
Aq~tt 17, 1!190 Int.. ofllet of Jorct Shon' '•nonnll
M1n11•· Ana Actll'Y 1111 All•l District 7, Inc., P.O. Bo•
978, University of Rio 8r~ndt, Rio G11nd1. Ohio 45674.
"An Eqtlll Employ"""' Opparturtlty Employor" ·

c••

lishrng. Reduced pra

14x60 28A. Extra Nlc., CA,
Awnlngo, prlvolt lol. Mile 11om
H~zer. No Ptla. lw.441-2300

14x70 31&gt;&lt;, lOIII oloolrlc . CAj 1
112 both, flrgo JlrU, I ml •
born town. J•t .,.,.........
Jock Nool.l14o3.,__,

bod""'"' troller lor l1nt Go~
ttpotto FwrTY.r"'•lly tu....-.

,,.. w11er

garbl~.

phone

304·773-2681 or .vanlnp 175-

2827.
2 bedroom,

NIW LISTING- RACINE-

St - I floor olan. 3 bedrooms.

RilCIII(, lrcl Sl - 2 star,. 3 bet!·
rooms. Oath. Uthen. uhli• room,

balh. kt.. basemeflt Ill city ubllies.
fenced ~•rd Gtf!&amp;l buy low 30's.

tarre na lot. Pnced lor Qud sale

lain

location,

Eftlcloncr
~l!i utllltleo tnctudod. 1141m-

SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 1990 - 2 TIL 5
LOTS Of ROOM FOR FAMILY AND ENTERTAINING. YOU KNOW YOU ARE GOING TO LIKE THIS HOME WHEN
YOU STEP INTO THE GRACIOUS FOYER. VERY IMPRESSIVE FORMAl DINING AND LIVING ROOMS. KITCHEN
HAS BEAUTIFUL CABIN£TS DISHWASHER AND JENN AIR RANGE. FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE TO KEEP
YOU AND YOUR FAMILY COZY THIS WINTER. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LOADS OF CLOSETS. OUTSTANDING
WOODWORK THROUGHOUT HOME. 2 CAR GARAGE. DIRECTIONS: FROM GALLIPOLIS DRIVE OUT RT 588 AP·
PROX . l'h MILES, WATCH FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE SIGN ON THE LEFT JUST AFTER YOU PASS BOB McCOR·
MICK ROAD.
BRICK RANCH - 3 BEDROOMS, 2~ BATHS. NICE OPEN ll ·
EXCELLENT LOCATION - COUNTRY SETTING' ONLY 2
VING/DINlNG KITCHEN AREA WITH FIR£PlACE. ATTACHED
MILES FROM RIO GRANDE. APPROX. 3 ACRES. COMFORTA·
GARAGE, DEC~. NICE LEVEl LAWN W/GAROEN AREA.
BLE 3 BEDROOM, I~ BATH, HOME HAS FORMAl DINING
lOCATED ON O.J. WHIT£ ROAD $66.000
AND FAMilY ROOM, CARPORT. MOVE IN CONDITION .
$55,000. OWNERS Will CONSIDER HOLDING FIRST MOR·
TAGE AT 8~% FOR QUAliFIED BUYER. MIN. $5,000 DOWN·
SMAll FARIIIN OHIOTWP.: 21 ACRES, MOSTLY WOODED,
PAYMENT. BALANCE 20 YEAR TERM. MONTHLY PAYMENTS.
TOBACCO BASE. NIC£ GARD[N AREA. THE HOME IS ONLY 5
P&amp;l, $43392
YEARS OlD AND IS VERY ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOMS. 2
BATHS FORMAl DINING AREA. EQUIPPED KITCHEN, LARGE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - $37,500 TWO BEDROOM
24'X3i GARAGE. 28'X40' NEARLY NEW BARN. IF YOU UK£
RANCH WITH EQUIPPED KITCHEN. BASEMENT, NICE FRONT
COUNTRY
LIVING DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ONE 1$58,000
PORCH. ALSO SEPARATE 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. OVER
AN ACRE LOT. APPROX. 5 MILES FROM CITY.
TWO STORY BRICK HOME IN CITY - 3 BEDROOMS. 2
BATHS, EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH RANGE AND REFRIG. AT
CHESHIRE - VERY ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM AT AVERY AT ·
TACHEO CARPORT, LARGE LOT. JUST liSTED! $43,000.
TRACTIVE PRICE. $36,500. KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH
RANGE AND REFRIGERATOR. CARPORT, LARGE LEVEL,
BEAUTIFUL LAND - PARTIALLY WOODED, NEAR RIO
FENCED lAWN. READY TO MOVE IN AND ENJOY'
GRAND£. APPROX. 47 ACRES, NICE 2 BEDROOM, 14'X70'
MOBILE HOME. PATIO, GARAGE, BARN. IF YOU LOVE THE
1016 SECOND AVENUE IS STILL ON THE MARKET AT
OUTDOORS, HI KING AND CAMPING THIS PROPERTY HAS A
$28t000. THIS IS THE BEST BUY WE HAVE SEEN IN YEARS.
SMAll A·FRAME NEAR THE WOODED AREA SUITABLE FOR
3 BtOROOMS, DINING ROOM, NICE SIZE LIVING ROOM. WE
CAMPING. ANO IF YOU REALLYWANTTOROUGH IT, PART OF
ADVERTISED THIS PROPERTY AT THIS NEW lOW PRICE
DANIEL BOONE'S CAVE IS LOCATED HERE. $65,000. NEW
LAST WEEK. IF YOU MISSED OUR AD THEN YOU BETTER
ON THE MARKET.
CAll FAST. THIS ONE IS SURE TO SELL SOON AT THIS
PRICE!
QUICK POSSESION; ROOMY CAPE COD IN NICE AREA OF
~EWER HOMES! 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FORMAl DINING,
$42,000 - FOUR YEAR OlD VERY WELL KEPT MODUlAR
2
CAR GARAGE, FUll BASEMENT. SHOWS UKE AMODEL
ON NICE WOODEO LOT 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY
HOME.
$&amp;2,000 OR BUY WITH EXTRA LOT FOR $68.000.
ROOM, CATHEDRAl CEILING IN UVING AREA. KITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE ANO REFRIG. OWNER IS TAKING A
BUILDING lOT WIH RIVERVIEW - LOWER ROUTE 7 AP·
II£ATING AT THIS lOW PRICE BUT IS LEAVING STATE AND
PROX. I ACRE . 15.000.
MUST SELU

...... "" ~ ontr 130.0011
IIODLEPOIT - ettCI KOMI -

. 2nd St. 4 bedroom~. hYirJi room
· 1am11)' ,oom. •lt che~ 11'1 bath .l~rl!e
corner lOt 'J1ew ol nve- Ill's.

lAifGSYIIII -

pluo

l~ ~CI!S

- 3

bedrooms. hill£ room. dtr11n&amp;room.
bllh. prate. nc:e porche1.
$20'1 We'll liSten
kttch~.

NIW LISTING - GREAT HOlliN

raoiTUIJ. 2 ful b1th1, alrlcond,
Gall. t-erry, 1326. manlh. 304-

STIVERSVIllE - l ftoor plan. 5
bedrooms.LR, OR ~lcflen . bit h. lui
basemMt. hregiKe. llfden. TP WJ ·
ter plus small ~R ca tin &amp;small ren·
tatl\ou!l!. Pnced lo move QUICk. Writ

118-3011.

""'' I JO. 000

Fum-,_2_brcJ12 mile Porler on OIM. DM-381 8883.

DOOER - llltli"oofl'l!, ~rge hvnu
room. Uchen, II; bath. ful bas• ·
ment pr111e. b.vn and pond Good
tHJnlmi and 11Sh11K. lrul! trees.
lodre t)'pl! !Mlmt oo 30 aues with

mmerll reflls. 20 mllutn out rJ Po·
30 m1nutts oul ol

mt!foy

ot

Rent: 3 brdmmn lralllf. Nlca, 2
miiN from Pomeroy on 8r 141.

JOU'15-11200.

44

Apanmenl
for Rent

IIDDLEPOIIT- GIAI1 n. - I

1br, fUrn'ed apt, wtwaehlr &amp;

1001 plen, 2 be!t"ooms. t~mily 1110m,
li¥ing room. 1!'11-Jl Mhfn. bill\ tully
urpt!l:ell. h~rdwOOd floors. in·

dryer, In VInton, 114-446-2-nl.
2 BR opo~mlnt, • otovo &amp; 111.

lot Extr• nice y1td let's IODllow.
low 20's.

suitlld. Eacellent condhJn ltrp

fUmllhed. Downatalra.. Wal• I

trelh tumllhed. Upper AI. ~
Uppol' Atvor Rd. ......4&amp;-31140.
311 Woll Apt. 2bt, 1 both, privoto

. 2 btllo.

IIOOUI'OIIT -

ancla.d patio. clol:1 to grocery
etorttlthopplna cenl!!z w11er,

....,., tr~th provlded,

t&lt;~Himo.

In Pomotor ond dlopOtl Colt lllf2.1'111

IEAUTlFUL APARTIIEHT1 AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSCifl
ESTATE~1 . __~ 11ctnan PUce
born Jl.....,., Wollt to ohop l
movtoo. Coli lit ttl 2111. ECltl.
Fumlohod 2 ,_,, • both.
o.-rolro. Cflln. No polo. llol.

• dip. roqultod.l~tlll.

-.. . . -Inti-.
Rent: 1 IJallroom

~...,..

41h St. -

3 bod·

rooms, h•nt room. dinlll rooll\
bath. full blsement. ~w•te,pwllftl
mu ptivlte ~1rd. Mid $20"

--.eoll.

AptL

Land needs t o be developed Hou se need s some
tender lovmg ca1c. Thts one IS one that you ca n

.EW US TIN G- I floor ptn J
roms bath. lR, ~ilchen . basement
Locust St. Pomeror New vlflyl Sid·
mr.Some owner lm1non1 nlil1rte.
lotllld it. - l
tM"OM'6.11; bllfL 111111.'0011\ dlllf"lg
room. litchfJI. CI'ace. QUii Nat E•

Korr

Double wldl, rrtYite to1, 3 bed·

PRICED IN THE MID $20's
aetes ;usl outl!deGalhpohs city ltmtls 5tooms
and balh. 3 bedtooms. c•IY walet and nat gas
own as teasonab le as posstble

()o&gt;ly$17,500
IIOOI.IPOII -

need edrt lots.

814~-

Charming 2br, mobUe home,
Upper At. 7, 1275./mo. plul
u1IIIIIM. Dtp &amp; Ref., 6~
2515.

2 Bed room home located m the 11rllage of Vmton
Nt ce large lot, parttally temodeled. barn
IMMEDIATE POSS£SSION.
#2826

4~

!lory. 4 bedfoorm., 2 tlllhl, lrYrol

room. sunroom. nl·ln U~hen . pt·
den. ceolrll hell, centr1l ~r. new
roof. new p~mbing, 2 e.tu kit~ LtlW
utlities. Best buy lrtlluld low 40's.

258·tll18.
2br, tumlthld, or untumllhtd.

2br, ~roller, wotor pold.
BIIMI Rd., $200 ront
dopool.l14_...&amp;-tl84.

Undef 120.\JIIC

#2833

REDUCED!! - $10,000.00
SS$$$$SS FARM
Apptox 71 acres tn all. Corn nb. metal free stall
barn. storage butldtn&amp; pond and sprtng, tobacco
base MtlkmR syslem and mtnetal nghts m
eluded. PlUS 2·3 bedtoom home wtlh ltvtng room.
balh, lmmal dmmg and more. Call today lor co m·
pl ele listt ng 1 IDEAl lOCAT ION
#2835

tAC1tiE. 6ttl St. - Buutttul "/.

2 Moblt. Hom• tor A.m.
Child,.., _,cam1. $171/mo. IM-

OPEN HOUSE

c~tral tlell. ctntral•r . uuty bid(. .

srtuated m Quret area. Nr ce well mamtrr11ted lilwn

Call today !01 mme mlotmat10n

MUST SHU
NEW PRICE 19.900.00

POilROT - E. M1in Sl - . l
bedrms. ktlchen, dtntnllm. "-· ~ •.
room bllb. w/n'ltl 'II!YI. Some
owoe'r bloCJnR tvltl1ble UJ.OOO.

Prlca &amp;filii)' rldUCid tt y01 llon'l

nice
Included.

utllltlel

Mln11l,
Pride, and Jor

POSITION OPEN
R.N., part time. Graduate of approved
school
of nursing
with currant license
to practice nursing in
the 1tata of Ohio. Appllclltlons accepted
through AuguST 17,
1990 at the Gallia
County Health Department.
E.O.E.

for Rent

2

Lowe,

Help Wanted

42 Mobile Homes

2 bedroom mobile home. Fu,...
nlohod. Wahl&lt;. dryer. IS2351mo.
plus depod end !AlliUM. IMM2·lll'lll.

Micky,
We're Proud
ol Vou,
Great Joh!

11

ON 14! - H!RIISOIIVILLIIOAD
-Con country flavor Outstandinl
oflrr. 3 bt~m. 11nth styt!. Gru
cood Apprn 13 11es. Well stocke«l
pond. 2 ur 11••ae. about 8 •c. !1m·
ber, mmeul n11ht~ applance..lrae
closets. lireplae Gretl hulllmgand

Houle tor rent on Ftatwooda
Rd. No chlldron or lnoldo polo.

Happy Ads

5

topl,

dais, ~ain signs, graniteware, old baskets, nice brass

51

up. bunk bedl compa.tt wtth
mattrna 1295 and up to 1395. Brand niW Kitchen C.btnlt
boby bodo $110 Men-- or Sllrter eel whh Butcher Block
box aprlnQI full or tw1n $78, linn Counltt top...7!. 114-37W113

Furnished
Rooms

Stoning 11 $120/mo. Gollle Hotot.

Areas include: Language, Speech.
Vision. and Hearing
Skills;

In Memory
In Memory Of
EDDIE RAY
JACKSON
who left us five
years ago. Aug .
11, 1986.
Little did we know
that day we would
never hear you laugh
again. or see your
sparf&lt;ling eyes of joy.
You left us. loved
one. without saying
goodbye. Oh, what
e joyful time that
will be when we'll
be in God's heavenly home with our
loved ones again,
where there will be
no more goodbyea.
juST tears of joy.
We love and miu
you always,
Mom, Dad. Si1ter.
Brother-in-lew and
Friends.

45

The Guiding Hand School is now accaptlng applications for pre-school enrollment agas 0-5. Classes start August 27, 1990. If your child has a developmental disability in any one or more
of the following areas. you may be eligible for pre-school services.

®. CANADAY REALTY

WOlff TANNtNQ BEDS
Com"""'loi-Homo Unlto, F"""
$1W. umpo, lotlona, IC-'oo. Monthly poy.-w low
10 S18. C.l todly FREE ~
Cololog. 1-800-22Hlt2.

2

Goods

N&amp;, and $98. Que.n Hla U1&amp; I
up, King $350. 4 di'IWII' ch•t
$69. Gun C.blnoto I, 8, &amp; 10
gun. Bab~ manr11Nt 135 &amp;
$45. Sod lnlmoo U~L- OuHn
Slzo $35 II. king tromo ...,. Good
Hleetlon or bedroom auttn
rnetol ooblnoto, hoodboorda til

REALTOR'

Ohio. Seriaull lnq.

Galllpo..l, 1111 Ut 4811.

Household

both, 114-44&amp;-2-tel.

only. 114-N:I.ellll.

23

5I

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
OM b1droom fumllhed ape,
So1u ond ohol11 priced born
utiiKioo pold, 304-f78.2722.
:104.e7Ht88.
h9&amp; 1o $9115. Tobleo $50 end up
A£NIERSI ._ ti.OO to S125. Hl-.t&gt;odo 1390 to
Counly Appliance Inc. Good
(IJ-Ropolf) Oov'l .,_..,, bonk $8111. RociiiiOfll ma to $3711. and up to $81.80 dap ume 11 uood oppllonceo, T.V. Hll. Open
.._
-~ IU dollnumpo us to $125. Dlnolloo oub wlh OPI'fOVod crodiL J mi. a Lm. to e p.m. Mon.-811. 814quonl . . -.... 1.f1H22- $101ond up to $418. Wood llble out Bullvllll Rd. ()pen II A.M. to ~1HSI 127 3rd. Ave. Gal·
8852, Ell. - . InclUding Sol. w.e chllro U85 to S195. Dooko 5 P.ll. Mon. thru Sot. C.ll 114- llpotto, iJH
tnd$un.
S145 up lo SJ78. Hutchoo S400 &amp; 441-4322.

Position available at Americare-Pomeroy Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center. Position involves
treatment of geriatric patients with primary
emphasis on neurological and orthopedic admissions.
The facility has excellent ancillary and nursing
support for a true team oriented rehabilitation
philosophy.
Contract candidates will be considered. salary
competitive. If interested contact:
Mary Mason. MS. SLP. CCC
Rehabilitation Coordinator
Care Enterprises
500 West Wilson Bridge Road
Suite 245
Worthington. Ohio 43085

,..... tor .............. VIdeo,
Pome~ oy,

Apartment
for Rent

44

Sunday Times· Sentinel- Page- D-3

In No&lt;1hup, I rooml &amp; I

-

VIdeo AMUI etcn 1nd ....._

Apartment
for Rent

PHYSICAL THERAPIST WANTED

r.:.=::

Ouallfled
regl"ered
nurM
.-... lor 52 bod foclllty (long
ltnn) locettd In Point Ple... nf.
WV. Admlnlstrtllve tkllll and
wor1t experience ntciiUry.
Competitive uta I')' end benefht.
Conllld
Frtnk
Tapping,
C.rehtftn of Point Pte...nt.

44

August 12. 1990

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

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

IEAIITiflll 1101( Hill 10.. IIDIIlEI'OIT

must sell lool todly
$5.00). Lovelr terrer:t &amp;
f1oo 111-i&gt;o priced.

WHT 1111 - IIAU OOWI P'-T·
t.ooost prict - · 3 1104·
~ home. Low PIYntlflb, Munu
Hdl Rd., Mlddlopor\ 311R •.Il,IIR,
lR, bll~ I ftOJ pi" w 01114

•m -

111.!100. lilt • olltr.

BOAT DOCKING PRIVILEGES!
Are tnduded wrth thts 3 bedtoom mobtle hom e
and 2 lois (appro• 70). cable TV available. Ctly
schools Call today lot more detat ls
#2860
PRICE SLASHED $5,000.00
100 actes more or les s, apptox. 900 lb. loba cco
base. Rural water avatlable. Some small growth
ttmber Good butldtng Stte. Ctly schools'
#2824
CONVENIENTlY LOCATED
AND AFFORDABLY PRICED
Th1s 3 bedroom ra1sed ranch ts located approx 1.1,

mile from cily. Oilers l"1ng room. lm mal dmmg
and mote. Has been e&lt; len siv~y remodeled . ntce
carpeting and vtnyl stdtn R lar~e deck Pn ced tn
the $20s.
~2850
$25,000.00
II\ slmy home wrth 4·5 bedrooms, 21tvtng rooms.
formal dintnl and family room.2 ktlchen s. part tal
basement a I situaled on 2 ntce le"l lois plus
garage storage buildtni and bam Call today
'
#2834

SO YOUNG &amp;BEAUTIFUL!
This 4 bedrooms, 3 bath well conslructed tram~
/brick bi·level oHers telaxed comlorllhroughoul.
[QUIPPed krtch en wrth beaul,fu l cherry cabtnels.
2 car garage, all this and more nestled'" 4 shady
acres.
#2839

#2849

$6,000.00 REDUC110N .VACANT ACREAGE.
Approx . 8.12 wooded acres S•le cleated lor
mobt le home 01 house. Located at SR 7. v1ew of
Oh1o Rtver
#2820

DIVORCE YOURSELF FROM THOSE
PAYMENTSt!t
When vou r.ould be pavtng for thts newly remodeled 3 bedroom ranch. l1vmg 1oom. bath. forced
a1r gass heat. newer deck area nestled among nrce

shade trees on appro• I acte lot KYG£R CRE£K
SCHOOLS'
H2862
ONE OWNER liQUIDATION
VACANT ACREAGE

YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS
Gorgeous bnck home 1ust as soon as you tak e orw
look. you'll be sold . 3 bed•ooms. lot mal d1 n1 n' &amp;

Morgan TownshiP

Morgan lownsh1p

46 Ar.res
344 Acres

age, pond. private settmg. bcepliona lly n•ce

Raccoon Townshtp
Raccoon Townshtp
Hunltn~on Township
Hunltn~on Townshtp
Hunltnglon Townshtp

IB8 Actes
123 Actes
19 Am~
.12 Acres
.80 ACies

Huntmglon Townshtp

50 Acres

hvtng 10oms. 3 baths.lamily room. lully .equtpped
kitchen 2 car garage an d sepatale 24 x36 ~"
home wtlh a lot ol amemttes •

schools'

over 4 acre s. C1ty
#2857

$15.500- Y, ACRE + HOM E =
A GOOD BARGAIN
3 bedrooms. bath, dtntng room and mDte ~ai~~~
more detat ls
BEAUTIFUl BRAND NEW HOME IN
TUCKED AWAY NEIGHBORHOOD'
[xquiSIIe 3 bedtooms. 2'h bath hom e m great tocalion,'.\ story wtlh apptox 2.374 q It ol ilvtng
space, apptnx. 18\24' garage Fa mtly room. lot·

Ohto Townshtp ...
133 ACies
Harnson Township ...
81 Acres
Call Today for local ton and More Details.
#WVC
AnENTIONt
Ownets hav e reduced th epnce $5.000 Rem arka·
bleoldet II\ storye&lt;l enStvely temodeledhome 3
bedrooms,

l1vm~

1oom. newr,r nat gas furnace.

storage butldtnR and ovet I acre lawn

#2852

mal hvtn g Joom, dmmg aJea and much. rnuch.

much mote' Ctly schools Call today lor complete
I!Sitng.
U2848
LOTS WITH IMPROVEMENTS
Each tract 11 over 2 wes with sepltc system and
tutalwatet on each Good locat ton 1 Call today lot
more inlormalion
#2825

LOOKING FOR A FARM?
App•o•. 128 acres slu ated at Add1son Townshtp
Lat~e batn. 57'!120' metal butldtn&amp; tte house.
ttaclot and equ 1pment shed 4 ponds Vtnyl stded
temodeled 3 or 4 bed toom home Easy acres. Fat
more detatlo; and locatto n. ~tve us a can IOOay

.

#2821

446-6624

IACIII - IIOAII'IAT - htro
nictl toor plan 3 belioams. llwJ~I
room. bath. IWIII lll·in klchen
wilds ~ buulllul e~tinets. c:enlnl
hl!ll &amp; lir. baeme'lt 2~· ...... l
extr£ n~et lot. Grut buy 1111Dw 30's.

wen ml!-IIJMitll•ltl .. 1

ttoor

pit~

l lilftl111o I

btl~

lichen win let cotinlls.IIII.LR,i&gt;o
olllill. ulllly Udl., llldln; Creel
- · Prlctd lor qui:l•~•liilmotli·
lie polltllon

U* 130.000.

V'JP. cnn sell yoUI ptcscnliH mvJ . •·· I .,,.,, can ptJt yo 1 • 1· 1

REFNET

touch wilh 0110 ol,approxim r1ul }· '' . ! )t 't 11eal f!C::I.ltl· ollu r
lor.flllnn~ qunlifil)d lo heir yr,• 1Iii It 1111 1it}l tl h' 11tH r

~-J:,.~PL

- -··

·---

-·

-

...

.t

- .. -- - - - --·-..----- - -·--·- · - ____ ....
\

�Page-D-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
5I

Household
Goods

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

SWAIN
AUCTlON A RJRNITURE.

62

Oil.,. St., O•lllpoUa. New I lJHd
tuml1ur., hellllra, Will., I

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Work boola. 61'-'46.315fl.

SCRAM-LETS
YEARLY
ADROIT
JASPER
NUDIST
SPLINT
PASTOR
OPPORTUNITY

IIOITON
IULDINGS,

D. C. Metal Sales, Inc.
Cannelburg, Inc. 47619
Speciatiz ing In Pole
Buildings.

Designed to meet your
needs . Any size.

IIIC.

u,..,.,._,,.... 1903

E...

13233 S.R. 110
All!land. Ky. 41101-1939
Call Toll fr• Marian, HI.
1-800-447-7436

12, 1990

12, 1990

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

7.8 Orav11y Tractor •nd Sulky

Big 5 bedroom hmn home built
on your lot S35,SKI5 1 up. 614888·7311.

$900. 614-367-JSn

I nad what was cons1dered to be a

very lucky day and was relating

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

my

Real Estate General

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-5

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

w1ndfal : to an old fnend "Luck,'
mused my fnend ... ,s JUSt a maner of
preparatiOn meeting OPPORTU-

l

NITY'

CHOICE OF 10COLORS

FREE ESTIMATE on
post bldgs ...and package
deals. Save hundreds,
even lhousands of

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

dollars.

lo&lt;al Soles Reprtstnfolin
DONNA CRISENBERY
E S.R .. Box 166

~(]

Gallipolis. Ohio 45831

PH. 614-256-6518

o"OIIII"'''

REALTOR'

RESIDENTIAL - INVESTMENTS- COIIIIERCIAl . FARIIS

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 38B-8826
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 266-6261
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 446-1897
RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALTOR . 379 -2686
DEBORAH SCITES , REALTOR . 446-6362
LYNDA FRALEY. REALTOR. 446-7499
MICHAEL MILLER . ASSOCIATE , 441 -1406

''DO
IT TAK .
That's whal we're going to do The smarl bu1er wrll take
advantage of thrs ndiculously low pr rce on a bril nd new
ranch home. Ask~ng priCe dropped lo $54 .900 on lhiS 3
bedroom. 2 bath home Never lived rn belore thrs home has
features hke chefly krt chen cabmets. large m~ster bedroom.
~car gar aRe. heat_pump. Owner will con s1der helpm g wrth
l1nane~ ng to quahhed bu yer
#110

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

652 2nd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

-3644
Real Estate General

(CALL ANYTIME)

446-7101

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
Q.UIET NEIGHBORHOOD IN GREEN SCHOOL DISTRICT rs
thiS 3 bedroom I balh ranch wrlh brg krlche11. I car garage,
I ~ lots. Was $47.500 Now $45.500
#261
GREEN SCHOOL DISTRICT - Very nrce 5 bedroom . 2'h balh
ranch with full basement. gas heat. woodburner . 2 car
garage, fam rly room. central arr, 14 acre and a lot mo re On ly
-~
#2M

FIVE ACRES - Beaulrlu13 bedroom, 2 bath home. Equrpped
krtchen. oak cabrnets. sn&lt;Jck bar. eledrrc heat pump, cenl.
arr , pl us woodbu rner. Custom des1gned to conserve energy
w1lh 6" rnsu laled walls. 12" rns ulaled rn atiiC. Andersen
!hermopane wood wmdows Insulated doo rs. oty school
drsl11cl.
#257

.... ~LL III!IC! B!AUT'I OF PEIIFECTION CH!IIM · P£RSOULITY ·
ctiiFORT- Qualdy borl new home on 3~ acres 'fl rlh polld [nt~rtrwough a
leaded Klass door irrto a 16'~27' livm1 rm wrth bay wrndow ar~d ilm doors lo

1nltr1Um. The krlthen rs edraordrnary wrth ISland andlrostedoal cabinets by
B~lord. M1ster bedrm. 15 vety hu~ with whirlpool tub, 2 lull bath~ 2 c~r
ll•r•e.e. ThiS homers maanleoanre tree . ._ real classrc beauty Buy home and 3
at mil at a reduced puce. $89.000

POMEROY - Everythrng goes All slack &amp; equrpment, build·
rng and ground I double hump g~eenhouse ASK fOR DE ·
TAILS"

~608.

NEW liSTING: !~ ACRES OF ROlliNG LillO OUTLINED
PINE
TRE£S iiO wrth thrs 9 ~ear old ranch 1'1 ~h 3 be!iooms. 2 baths. ktchllfl.lR w~h
r area. utrlit) rnom on gr lewel. tarae ORV basement, I car atteched

RACINE - Newer 4 bedroom ranch type house localed oo
237 ac~es '"I he country . full baseme nt and small bar n. All
'" good cond rl1on. $69.000.00.

PICTURESQUE SEntNG ~II br mor~ rnlo on INs propert) and let us

lETART - DRASTICALLY REDUCED - 7 room house. 3
bedrooms. I balh, carpet lhr oughoul. large kitchen and pa
lro Gas heal and hot waler heal 2 car garage $19,900.00.

17 ACRES AND A 4 BEDROOM HOME wrll1 LP gas he .11
Included rs shop buildrn ga ~rd del ached gcuJge Home has a
nrce mer '"w Ask1ng on ly $36.900
#230

HOME

IN GALLIPOLIS

6 rooms. 3 bedroom s. bathroom. all c11y ulrlrlres Whrle
weatherboa rd S1d1 ng, Ir on ! por cl1 , good buy ror a home or
rental. Pnce $19,900.00.
#687

PH. 446-76CJCJ or 446·CJ53CJ

REAL ESTATE
LAN 0 CONTRACT - On lhrs 3 bedroom. bath. ranch in QUiet
ne1ghbOJhood wrth mce lot wtth lence Fam 1ly room
w/ woodburner an d more Callloday Only $34 .000. #115

LAND CONTRACl - 3 bedroom, balh.laundry , krlcherr orrrl
IIVrng room. elec heat. I car gar age Askrng $32.000 #186

11607. YOU'LL SL£!P BmER IN IH£ COUNTII'fA. ron!o'O.o·or
bedroom home ot1er1 Situated on thr ee acr~ m/1
1!'s too late ~~~us ~nd see Ihi! toda y Aflordablv;,;,~

unt~

;d ;;si'IOC

....

GRE EN SCHOOL DISTRICT - 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch w~h
lull bas ement garage. deck. heal pump . Nrce neighborhood
lor I he clr1l dlen lo play Askrng 159,400
#263

R1 7
li-%7.

I

10 ACRES and a 4 bedroom 2 bal h hom e w~h lamrly room.
drnrng room. 2 ca r garage and much more.
#26S

POMEROY - 5 acres, vacanl ground on lop ol a hr ll near
lown. Greallocalron lor house or lrarler $3.900.DO

HOUSE WITH 3 01 4 BE
. IIV~n g room.
groom.
~tchen. balh. Dwelling has new lrol waler healrng syslem
and air condiltonmg. Separate l1'.'1ng quarters tn basem ent.
Vinyl Sldtng.
ANXIOUS TO SEll - INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 7
RENTAL UNITS - located on Seconrl Ave . Gallrpolis May
purchase all or a partral ollhe properly lo live'" or to rent
Call us lor all the inlor malron

17 ACRES - Plu s a ruce 3 bedroom. 2 bath ranch wrlh den.
drnlfl g t~rea. lrvrn g room. fu ll basement 2 large buld1ngs.
Appra&gt; 200' Ra ccoo n Creek lronlage
#104
NEW LIST ING - 3 bedrooms. I '\ hal h. lamdy room, drnrng
roum, 2 car ~arage rna brrck ranch rncludrnga mce 18d6
rn ground pool $77 SUO
#266
11!0. £1CELLIIIT

HAVE SOLD SEVERAL HOMES
iRECIENTlY AND NEED HOMES BE·
$35,000-$65,000. CALL

US IF YOU WANT TO SELL. WE MAY
HAVE A BUYER!!

~LL

BRICK IIOMEFORTHEF!IIILI - Roomy 3·4beo m

ranch wrth l l'r baths hl-rn k~ch~ . l01mal drn 1m . lull Mslmenl.
rmprovemenh hl~e betn melle on th s charmmg rmmacutate home New
ptJC§e 111 lurnltl! rnsfllled w/cenhtl 1rr Some new Clrpet. tamdy rm
w/woo&lt;lbu1nr11lir~Ke on towe1 levti 2~ca r gar~~, NrcPlol ~nd ~ CAIInn
Real'l 1 lrne horne that ~oo should 5ef! wfhoul del1y

139.9 ACRES ANO I Y, STORY HOME wrlh 3 bed rooms. balh .
LP gas heal large barn. lobacco base. Askrng $59.000
.
#251

MIDDLEPORT - Cenlral alf would be nrce lhll sum mer and
havmg a 5 room horne 111 excellent cond1t1on w1U let you stt
back rn cool comfort Rear deck wrth gas grrll. equ1pped
krl chen. storage burldrng. Good locallon. $33.000 00

COURT SIREET - Sutton Townsh ip- We have 2 one acre
lots w1!h rural wate r and electric awallable. Surtable for mobile home or home s1 te Cal l lor de!a1ls

,

POMEROY - Remodeled home 111low" wrlh la10e lot Three
or lour bed roorn s Ca rpeted, elec. 8.8 heal. Barga1n pmed at
$23.900 00

2 SMALL APARTMENTS - Bolh lully lutn iShed goes w1th I he

SECOND AV E. - You wrll l10d IhiS 3 b•droom I '?balh home
w1th famrly 1oom. drnmg room. woodbu1ner and more.
$46 500
#241

SHADE - NICe cou nlry bu1ld1ng lots are hard t olind but we
hm 8 beautrlullol s 1ust warlrng lor you" Smallest IS 94 acre
and largest IS I 54 acre EleclfiC on each Slle and TP C. wa
ter la ps available. Seclud ed. beaulrlul vrews 10 m~ns lrom
Pomeroy and 15 mrns lo Alhens NO TRAilERS Starlrng at
$6.500.00

COURT STREET- Sutton Township - Appr o• 53 acres ol
vacant land wtth ut 11il 1es avarl able plu s free gas and r o~al
t1es Owner wrll subd11nde

...

property. I apartment has one room an d balh . I apa ~ menl
has 2
and balh
1110. ~ GIAllO WHilJIE

from the loy~ you e~n enter the lrvrnJ room. tamrty room
t
upslllf! Upst11rt you have • bedrooms. tilth 1nd slllrW&amp;V 10 !he IRrge allr~
tru. lhe home IS sl!ulled en 1 corne1 'ol tnd I"IIS an edu lot wrth 1 small
apartment. Pre! ~as been r!duC!d

POMEROl.s-- lwo ap artments wrlh rentals ol $300 00 a
monlh All' aboullhrs one 113.500 DO
POMEROY - Older 2 slory home, g01geous wood•ork. hr~
place. n1ce ktlchen cabrnets. 3 be~rooms , eqUJpped krtchen .
cen lral '"· ~ arage and stora~e $39.900 00
RACINE - RANCH HOM EON CR 35 . 5 rnrles !rom Racrne 7
room. J bed rooms. !amrly room w1th ftreplace. mud room.
ul1l1l1. heal pump AiC ? 15 acres PRICE REDUCED
$47.900 00
RUTLAND - I acre shady I olio lwrld yoor dream home on
Eleclnc mrlable PR ICE REDUCED $2 000 00
DEXTER - Railroad Street - 3 bedroom. I bath I •; sl ory
rnsulated home, has bay wrhndow rn llv tng room 2 story eel
lar home Slorage burldrn&amp; wrth e&lt;lra lot' $19.500 00
RUTLAND - Must see lo appreCiate. 3 bedroom. I '7 balh
ranch. Beamed cerlrngs Heal pump, CIA, palro. garage. car ·
po~ plus olher burldrngs s~ ualed on appro• 6 acres
$44 000 00
FLATWOODS ROAD - Nrce 3 bedroom. I balh modular
home srttmg on 1 11 acres Carpet and vm~ l lloormg w1th
heal pump and central arr $39.900 00.
POMEROY - 40'!112' lol wrlh I floor home. wrth 3 bed
rooms. I bath. carpet Full basemen!. garage rn basemen!
$17.900 00.

POMEROY AREA - Vmyl 11ded two slory w~h 2 bedrooms,
ball1. laund ry , basemen!. all remodeled wrth one car garage.
slorage buldrng and more Now $3 2,000.
#228
ON SUMMER RD. IS lhrs aluminu m sided ranch w1lh 2
bedrooms. bath, lamrly room. lull basemen!, I car garage On
approx. •• acre. $49 ,500
#260

MIDDLEPORT - 2 unrt aparlmenl bu1ldrng rn Mrdd leport
Good renlal rncome Good nerghborhood OWNER WANTS TO
SELL NOW $24.900 00

BAUM AOOIIION - Vrnyl Sided bl'ievel w~h 4 bedr oo ms, 2
bath s. dmrng area. family 10om, tJasemenl, ~arage on I acre
mi l Askrng only $62.500
#116

MIDDLEPORT - 1978 Modular Home srttrng on 2 lois rn
Iown. 2 car garage. N.GFA heal. garden area. Als o has sell
con larned A/C unrl. Ma ny ot her nrce lealures. All applrances
go w1th !he house. $39.500 00.

3.44 ACRES 11/ l on Foml Run Rd and lhrs 3 yr old vmyl

sided oanch with 3 bedrooms. 2 bal hs. equrp ped k~chen .
dimng room, he~ pump and central air $49.500 #267

'

RUTlAND- F01 only $29.900 you can h" e a 3 bedroom
metal Sided one ~ory wrth one bal h. gas heat. 26x32 gar age
and more Call today lor your appornlment.
#254
BAILEY RUN 110. - 39 acres mil and an older vrnyl sided
home wrth 2 bedrooms, bath. krtchen and l1 vmg room, full
mobile home srte wrth water and sepl1c.
.
~252

Jim Cochran. Broker ........... 446-7881
Petrick Cochran, Realtor ..... 446-8665
Sonny Garnea. Raltor .......... 44B- 2707
Phyllll Miller. Realtor .......... 266-1136
Martha Smith, Realtor ........ 379- 2651

Eve.
Eve.
Eve.
Eve.
Eve.

Cl990 Centul')' 21 Real Estate CorporaUoo as LrusU'r ror Ltu· Nt\F
e and TM trademart&amp; or century 21 Real Esi.Bit Corporation
Eqllal llouolfll OpponUDil).
~ OPfta tSINDEPINDENTLf OWNBD ~NO OPWHD.

FRONT ST.. MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom. I bath home wrth
parttal basement, one car garage. excellent n11er view and
more Askrng $35.000
#148

REEDSVILLE - RIGGS CREST - Appr ox. I acr ~ spirt· level.
ktt chen. dmtng room, famrly room rprrii ..N•·"n,·oom, 5 be.drooms, 3balhs. car- '~~ot F PENDI -~~lus WBJ P
2 car garge Thrs '-~o;;t,'l!lllo be proud to own . Full bas~
ment $64 .500 00

POMEROY AREA - I ~ story w1lh meta I srdm&amp; 4 bedroom~
11\ balh. lam 1ly room . basement On I acre lot Only $59,900
#249
MAIN ST.. MIDOLEPORT - I ~ slory wrth 4 bedrooms, bath,
kitchen. h"ng and drnrng rooms, lull basement, gas heat All
lh1s on two lots. Askrng only $32,00D.
#244

Cheryl Lemley, Meigs Co ............ 742-3171
Dick Finlaw, Meigs Co . ............ 992 -3921

- 12x50 adjacent to Weaver Alley.
EXTRA LOTS WllH PROPERTY

Put your trust

in Number One:

1-""'

100 AC.I/11. ADDIIOI JOiiiSII, wtU!a fllrrrorl torr1111 011 B.,ile
nro SRI &amp;a ldool lor
1 blldlo1111t -lt.toorolllfltllrt ._lor lfloir nteds.
Rrrod. 11-'t 1o _ , . ' " ' 2~ mlos

"'ii(JiYcO:fUiiR REAL ESTAH IS BIG BUSINESS....CALL AN
WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON.

•u

POMEROY - COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Possrble ollrce
space or apartmenl on 2nd floor. CALL FOR MORE INfORMA·
liON. PR ICE RE DUCED $39.000 00
RACINE - Thrs ho use needs some work lo make rl a home
but the beauttfullarS!e lol1n town woufd be the reward lor
your elforls. 4 bedrooms. olde1 I ~ slory lrame wrlh part ba ·
semenl $12.000.00

POMEROY - Kinpbury Road - 2·2\\ acre loi s Waler and
elect11c available. Own er may he lp l~nance. two lois 10
ch oose Irom. $6.500 00

POMEROY - 2 bedroom. I ~ sl ory home wrlh carpel , bu1ll·rn
book ~he l ves. pa lro and rear bal con~ . w1th avtew of the r1ver
I ~ car garage $27.500 00

CITY SCHOOLS - 3 bedrooms I balh ranch wrl h IrVIng
room. ktlchen. full basemen!. central arr. 1 car Rarage I car
carport. Askrng $49,000
#219

RACINE - 50 acres ol vacanllar.•J. lPC waler availab le
Gas well. Soulhern DISiflct $19.900.00.

POMEROY - 21ols wrlh posSibllil res 1SepliC and elec avail a·
ble. lois ol shad e trees. $3 .000 00

MIDDLEPORT - GOOD STREET- Th rs nrce 11h stor1 hom e
lealures 3-4 bedrooms. mod ern kllchen wrth drnrng bar . all
storms &amp; many other featur es. Inc lud es tratler lot Call for appornlmenl PRICE REDUCED $23.500.00

rnfounatron
- OWNER Will lAND COIOIUCT. P!rl~et shf1f!f horne
be&lt;! rooms and one •ere mll nNr Vinton. Only $21.500.

POMEROY - Appr01 3~ acres, vacanl groun d Good burld·
rng site. Clo se rn Wat er ma1 be available. $7 .500 .00

POMEROY - Thrs neat homers ready l o move ~nl o. 5 rooms
w~h 3 bedrooms, carpelrn~ range, lar ge lol. and 2 car gar
age. PRICE REDUCED $12,500.00

MIDDLEPORT- 2 sl ory home lhat shows lhe work thai has
been done! N1 ce k1tchen. 3 bedrooms, dinrng room . alt1c area
and much more $18 .500.00.

i

SYRACUSE -A beautiful bi-level home in excellent cond1·
lion. 3 betlrooms, 2 baths, a large lamily room with l11epl ace
AttiC lan s. storage workshop and fenced yard. All thrs lor only
- PRI CE REDUCED $45,500.00

SYRACUSf. - N1ce modular on corner lol 3 bedr ooms. I
bath, laun~ry room , carpet. Patro and close lo school
$21.900 .00

LONG BOTTOM- 6 room cabin 11ning on I'• acres wrlh a
VIew ol lh e Ohro R"er . Newly remode led. carpet. eleclrrc
heal, rei and range New deck. $23.000 DO

RIVER FRONTAGE - 50 acres mil and a must see log home
wrth 3 bedrooms, I 'h bath, basement, famrly room, dimng
room. r.athedral ceiltn g, solar1um, Irant and back decks. 2 car
garage and I car garage.
#147

i

CITY IS THIS OlDER ONE STORY wrlh 2 bedrooms. balh.
drnrng room. pallial basemen!. gar age Askrng only 129,500
#224

MIDDLEPORT - Beaulrlul Colonral Home' levellol. 2 car
garage, has ornate t11m. attiC slud10 wi skyl1ght Well rnsulated REDUCED $49,900.00 . Owner wants lo sell"

ANTIQUITY- One story ho me wrlh 3 bedroom s. and coal
lurna ce. Would make a great summer place. has 31ols.'"
cludrng rrver lronlage $9,900.00 REDUCED.

lwobf{jroom unrts. Loca led 011 Second Aft The trme to mvest in your lutureB
now Call us and set Ihe proptr1~ today Pnced rn the 160's.
11'568. IF YOU UK£ TO FISH we have 1he place tor ~oo We ha~e seveulloh
wrth rNtr frontage Perltcl lor anylhln~ ham 1 umoer to hou~ LOCI!ed on

60 Mil BEAUTIFUL ACRES - Greallor hrkrng or hullltllg
Grandma Gatewood hik ed here !tails ar e already ther e w11h
beaulrlul rock lormatrons Askin g $22.600.
ff226

NEW LIMA ROAD-Very neat and ~ery nicell 3 bedroom
ranch, 2 balhs. cenlral arr . back deck on large lot. PRICE RE DUCED $38.500 00

POMERY - Kingsbury Road- 2• Acre lol Water and elec
Inc available Owner may llelp lrna nce S1-.: lots to cho ose
lrom $6.000 00.
POMEROY - S.R. 33 - On e acre burldrn~or mob rl e home
lots. waler and eleclflc available. Land contract w1th $50D
dow n. 15% rnteresl for a 5 year term Mont Ill~ payments ol
~95. 1 6 on balance ol $4.000.00 Total pr •ce $4.500 00
PRICE RrDUCED. 2 lois to choose !r om
LANGSVILLE - 6 35 acre Country Eslale - Barn . sheds
two pond s, and a mce I \II story home mgood reparr Electri C
heal plus a woodburner lor cheap heat $43.90U OD
LONG BOTTOM - FARM wrlh genlly rollrng meadows1 lhrs rs
a beaul rlul srle' Approx 84 acres Includes a really neal 2
bedroom mobrle home w1th large addrt1on Gas FA. h..t. CIA
plus wood burner Small orchard. extra la rge shed lor barn
or workshop. P11va1e and peacelu l. $51. DOD 00 Call lor ap.
pomtment
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story bnck home on 2 lois. wrlh 4 lo 5
bedrooms. 21h balhs. woOl! lloors.N.GFA lu rnac e Garage,
carporl and 15'•25. storage shed REDUCED $47 900 00
POMEROY - Grand &lt;Jder home wrlh pot"'lral 8 rooms. 3•t
bedrooms. brrck co nSiruc~on. Needs some w01k $25.500 00

POMEROY - Here 1S a home w1th an mcom r Reaffy

lar~e

home m Pome1oy w1th alarge apartment lor rental Must see
lo apprecrale $31.5UO 00

POMEROY - A lrllle b1l oil he Swrss Alps 11ghl her e rn Po
metoy Thrs 3 unit asarlment burldlll~ IS all ren!ed and ready
lor "''' $14 .900 0
POMEROY - One ol Pomeroy 's mosl unrque Slruclure The
old Elm Hurst l avem JS now lor sale Thrs burldrng has a va
nely ol polenlral uses. Ca ll loday lor your s how rn~
$12 .500 00
POMEROY - 4 unrt aparlmenl bulldtnR rn Pomeroy Polen ·
lral. Monlhly Rross rncome $400 .00 Wanl 117.500 00
MIDDLEPORT - Prcture your lamrly rn lhrs beaulrlul horne

2 story _ 3 bedroom. carpet all elecfrrc and frreiJla ce Drs
hwasher $39 .900.00
POMEROY - COMMERCIAl lOT- An""' l OB loollr o11
lage on Marn "s'""A
"
PENDING reaVIIy lravr ii'CI
slreel Appro!
••. "' ocvrn MAKE AN OfflR

LE

RUTLAND TWP . - App1 103 acrt' FARM wrlh lree ges ""'
royallres 2 story . 41 o \bedrooms. rnsula led Slocked pond
7 stmy !Jar n. cellar house-. Z500 fb tobacco base Has a lot
ready lor trailer hook-up lor ren taf Great hunlrng_Call tor rn
lormalron 11 $63.500 00
SALEM TWP .- Appro x 50 acres ol vacanlland . 1mmedral r
possessron Old du~ well. mmerals. and coal $16.800 00
POMEROY- ROCK SPRINGS ROAD - Nrce qu •et local ron
1s the sellmg 1011h1s 3 bedr oom hom e, convenrer1!1y located
short drstance oH lour lane. Full bas ement . large yJn1 ~ nc
garden area C•ll lor complete delar ls $35 500 00
MIDDLEPORT - Are you lookrng lo r a rea lly neal home wrlll
low healmg bill sal a small pnce&gt; Th iS 2·3 bedroom !I? sl 01y
home ts wattmg tor you Call for appornlmenl" PRI CE RE
OUC[O $17.000.00.
ROCK SPRINGS RD. - Appro• 80 acres ol vacanl grou nd
Approt 20 acres trlalble. All mmerals . water andelec av ail a
ble. Good hunlrng land $27.000 00
ANTIQUITY - ST. RT . 338- Hou se and lot. sm all house
small pr1 ce, ti\IP.r 111 ew wrth potenlr al of a ca br n ASK ING
$5.900 00
MIODLEPORT - Remodeled home. 3 bedr ooms b&lt;~f'lfiP nl.
small yard with prtvacy fence N1ce front srtl rf1g po r e ~~
PRICED TO SELL' PRICE REDUCED $19 .900 00
POMEROY - PRICE REOUCED - Th rs handrcapped ac
cesstblr home. ramp ways, spectal floor '"R covetrng, specral
bath l111ures. etc .. all des1gned wrlh !he handrcapped rn
mrnd 3 bedrooms, li~eplace. basement. large modern
krtchen $34 ,900.00
PORT,__ NO - Appro! 8 acres, lwo att ached mob1le home
under sh rn~ed roo! . 3 bedrooms and bath Burll on ulrhly
room. 30x30 storage burldrn~ $26.500 00

RUTLAND - 3yem old hou se wrlh large garage.lree gas to
house pl us a 1978 Holly Park Trarler 14'x70' wrth Expando
and room added on. large metal barn. sal ellrte drsh and
many olher lealures Must be seen l oappreCiale. All '"good
co nd1l 1on 179.500 00
POMEROY - NICe nerghborhood. 4 bedroom home. slidrng
glass doors rn liv1n g room . old trrm woodwor~ carpeting, atr
cond1 tr onrn g. apt . O'.'e r garage for 1ental or workshop . And
much more' $42.900.00
RUTLAND BRICK STREET - 66•166 lot. I floor home. 2
bedroom . I balh Nrce k1lchen cabrnets $21.500.00
RACINE - Ranch hom e w11h 3 bedrooms, 1\\ bath. car pel·
mg. and 2 car garage srttmg on 3 2• acres. Woodburner to
supp lement heal and spnng "ail able $28.900.00.
RACINE - LEB~~SALE' pj:NDING res ol vacanl ~nd.

$2.000
!UPPERS PLAINS - Morton Addition - l4 bedroom
ranc h 1n excellent co nd1t ron on a latge I acre lot Alarge fam rly room makes a li'ln g here a joy Electnc B B. heat plus
wood biJrner Large storage shed Call lor appointment
$41 000 DO .
MIDDLEPORT - Would make a great renlal or a horne lor a
)'oung couple Has 2 bed rooms. d1nrng room , one floor, all
carpel ed new rool. and 2 1ols $14.50000
POMEROY - New wurn~ new plumbrn&amp; new drywall. new
roo! are already completed tn thrs 4 room home wrth 2 bed,
rooms Could have 3·4 tooms ups!au s, lull basemen!. Great
lor a renlal $7. 00 0 00
!UPPERS PLAINS - 3 bedroom. l '? balh. bflckranch. lull
basemen! Garage, large lol Fenced rn back yard w1lh above
ground pool lois ol shade lrees $48 .000 00
MIOOLEPORT - Nrce slart er hom e lor a young couple
S:r me remodelrng completed 3 bedrooms and 1 bath ftniSh
rll he way you want $20 .000 00
POMEROY - AriCk ronch home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. Cal·
pet. nrce front porch Gar aRe w1th rloor opener Heat pump
Rea lly n1ce home and well tak en care of See th1s one
$75.000 00
SALEM CE NTER - A nrce 3 bedroom Sh unz mobrle home.
1 4~ 70 wr!h afta chPd lam rl y room Ele drrc heal pump plus
coal combust ron stove [Qurpped k1tchen Star age bu1 fdmgs.
orchard and gra pe arbo r
TUPPERS PLAINS - !he perlecl bulldrng s11e wrlh free gas
water and elfdr iC .wadable c~ ll tor rnformallonll
$25 000 00
RUTLANO - One floor pldn wrlh 3 bedrooms. l 1h baths. dtn·
•ng area. large level yard. garage and woodshed . PRICE RE
OIICfD $1?.500 00
RUTLAND - 26 2 acres 1n Ihe coun try 6 room 3 bedroom
horn t• Prrvale and srd urlrr1 Ne ed~ some work $28,000 00
TWP ROAD 34B - Appr 01 93 acres ol vacanlland wrlh 2
\lo ry barn. stocked pond old house srle wrlh well Appr o&lt;
75 acres hllabl e wrth balan ce rn !1mber. abundance of wal
nut Get a rf'lurn nn your Investment !r om sale of !Imber
$60 00 0 00
THIRO STREET- MIDDlEPORT - lolally remod~ed 2·3
bedroom One float home Beaulllul cond1tron. carpet thr ou ghout Nrw wrrmy, vrnyf srd rn g, one car garage, InSulated
ard all slorms N'ce lol $29.900 00
POMEROY - l ookrni lor a 3 bedro om. I balh , i slory home
conv enren11y located near school anrl town t~l a small p11Cen
CJII lor appornlmerrl $16.000 00
LET ART MANUfl ROAD - Mobile home 1rle one acre
landsc ap ed fm a rnob1le home or burldrng ~ r te A steal a!
13.500 00
RAC INE - Nrce randr hom e. 3 bedrooms. I bath, carpei,F

0 hrat. CIA_1ecreatron room tn basement Range &amp; lreezer
2 r ar gat age wrlh ce ment dmeway Garden space
$1·1900 00
PO MEROY PIKE - Fo~y ·o ne acres plusa 1980 lrbe~ y Mo ·
bile Home. BeiiUtllul vtew. 2 car garage. porch on 3 stdes, 3
s1ora1e burldrngs, and bar n 2 good s11ed bedrooms. bath
"&lt;ndow. equ1ppecl k1lch en Real P""'Y PRI CE REDUCED
132.000 00
STARTER ROAD - POMER OY- 64 'I acres. vacant ground .
gas and ele ctrrc available Spr1nR lo r drvelopment. Call lor
rlrlar ls ' $48 .000 00
MIDDLEPORT - Ri,.rvrew Drive- Nrce nerghbor hood.
cute wefl kept home on deadend street ] bedroom home
w1!h 14x 15lr1Jrng roam &amp; utrlrty room House rnsulated and
has reRular term 1t e tnspec!w ns Storage burldtnR 6x8, n1ce
level yard $3g.5QO 00
NEW LISTING - RUTLAND TWP - 84 acres ol manl
ground $34 ,000 00

OUR SALES VOLUME HAS BEEN GOOD AND WE STILL HAVE BUYERS LOOKING FOR MEIGS
COUNTY PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT TO SELL. CALL CLELAND REALTY TODAY!! WE SERVICE
OUR LISTINGSI!

WE NEED LISTINGS!
WE HOPE TO SEE YOU AT THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIRIJ

�12. 1990
54 llscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

Flu cod Far Sale: MoMty
- · 41ne, OII!Ck. SplllotockoCI '83ut R~lcondRolla~o1 _J -Ito,
lnl4111bwed, UO. 114 441 3017. • o, .,..,..,...
, -,.,.,..,.. m a,
$1,:150. 304-4~5&amp;11.
flooltUft,lwtdHrlo,- plotO,
••II .... carta, truck bed, M Inch C..., whMII, 304-171-

~.·~-

..,.,, :lUI •
10M,
-. ~

1111'4 ConroHo Sllngnry; 1168
M•roHw Btndl; 1D84 Chevy
~briiSty; ttiiiV2 Saab; tii88Ch Ford
-ro ar an; 1M3
,.,...,
~~-·1"- Volllowa
-~;
......

t!fi;

-r'lir==================:;
Scrrocco; IM-440-0701. IJ4..S81.

~.r~'·

lrumor

=sOw~.--

:dl.:.:·~,•
mlcrolia••; ..,_.
::\'.i.t.f..ehopod -

Real Estete General

1110111

cond,

=· :;

-;!,{~;~= &lt;?{'

~d (5;;,.,k

.nnlrror,
otond;

_,..-=.e::'W31'"'-

(/nutf ( : )

:o::;.'\'i:m

rn

I

~R'

23 LOCUST ST.

::o.:::-a:·.a..~l:"'.::.

·----' .."--·

RUTlAND - Smnh Run Rd.- Beautiful start. approx. 4
acres of .a cant ground wsth a dug welt. barn, stock tank and
113,500
IS lenced.

614 - 388-8826/446-6806

l*d ..,. llttlo, •ory good -..1,

POMEROY - Chester Rd. - 2 lots, newer hom~ 2 bedrooms and 2 decks. Assumable loan wsth a small payment
Call lor more detasls 1

King Sla Wiler bod. Con - · WIIIMU
roue;:"~·
.-oo
ldayal or
I
1107 (EvolA"' lor '"'Y·
...,... hoophal bod with Soaro

LET ART- Mamtenance Free btersm, 4 bedrooms. 2 baths.
3 sitting porches, and a dming room. Nice big l ev~ yard.
Fenced area wrth barn lor ansm als. and a tree house for chsldren.
MUST SEE $44.900

1Wo oloclrlc rodlllcn ~ oocll.
3D4-TIM102.

MIDDLEPORT - Historical looking corner store. Ha s 6
apartments up and another store down Start yout own bussness. Ha s lots of room, and has an sncome Call for more details'

2 twin bodo,

lllovlng Nlo.

.... .c.-. ....... ~
205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
OFFICE 992-2886/HOME 992-5692
DOTTIE S. TURNER , BROKER
RACINE - Reduced- On adead end street. Great place for
children, this 2 bedroom mobile home has a nice yard. Reduced from $13,500.
NOW ONLY 112,500

RESIDINTIAI · INVESTIEIITS • COIIEtctAl. FAllS

lnlcraliava, clnetta 111, 4 chllrt,
rnloc. E•ervthlng muot go. 114-

11112-_

NAYLOR'S RUN- Beautiful VIew. corner lot wsth 2.15 acres.
Has natural gas across the road, electrsc avaslable. Older drsveway.
ONLY 16,000

Reorra nge the 6 scrambled
0 wordl
below to make 6
simple words .

Bolllo, . ,.,. goad, otondonl. e14-31H217.

Pr1nt letters of

RYALEY

I

uctlltnl condition. Down

boot,.~~. otc. Rnonclng

HEGAKT turtt-ol-tlw -ellllury home . • beciooms. 3 blths, lilnry. ustfut
ilftiund (omplele basemtnl. s lir.flaces. ps heal wrth c~ntralll~ . prace.
Rorrumtic: cazebo. Pttios. buvtifwl_y landmped. Alllcrmcly JNinlalntd.

abll now at lf'IIMndoua
uwlnga. 1'rada your ofd car,

Clll'S MOST M!GNifiCENI HOME - N!HON!l REGISTER: Victod10.
b~

lht Ohio Ri¥tr in Gallipolis. Oh _ VERY

oval...., t.eOII-14!.-7865 . _Potent
ill btd
&amp;_
bruktul
rtmatn
(co:l5).
__
_
_ 01
_
_ ru1dl!nlitl
_ _ _ _ _ _ _..J

Building
Supplies

55

I

lORIDA
SAJERP

I

I1--lr'---111'-lr.--sr--1lr-1 ~,..,,._,..,'-"""

I had what was considered
1---&amp;16...:.rl"--r"-1-.:,-1--r:;-17-I
I. . . . . . . to a very lucky day and was
relating my windfall to an old
N 1 p S L T I triend. "Luck," mused my
f---.r-;._:_,.;I~:--=r.9 -.-1 friend, "is just a matter of ~repI. 1. 1. . .1 .1 . aratJon meet1ng •••·•····••.
UNTIDS

1
be

~~~

ART S0 p
I
I
I
I
11
1
I
I

0

Complote tne cnuckle quoted
by t;lling in the missing words
L.-.1.-.J.-...L..-..L.-..1.1-..J. you dovelop from stec No. 3 below.

1a

V

•-•z.

AI&lt;C

PUI&gt;I,

ktltena.

.
A liTTLE
.
near Vinton on St Rt. 325. Anract ive home off
ers 1348 sq h on gsound flo or Kst chen. LR
w l ~one FR . cathedral ces lmgs, formal dmsn g
w1th corner cabm ets. lull basr.m enl. 20~ 24
unattach ed ga rag e.

.·•

...

.,....

..,

.

EXTREMELY NICE STARTER HOME
l ocated Just at the edge at town . Th ss home
le atuses 3 bed rooms. balh, lsvmg room.

NEW liSTING- STATE RT. 160- TRI-lEVEl
HOME WITH lARGE lOT - A«ractive home
features 3 BRs. l 'h baths. LR, kstchen, lamrly
room. two decks. a«ached garage. Call tor an
appointment.

NICE HOME LOCATED AlONG OHIO RIVER $39.900, 4 BRs. bat h, LR, kst chen. carpet oil
heat. 2 car detached garage, ulshtv buslds n~

krt chen , dmtng room and afull bas emen! Frve
mrnutes to downtown.

large lawn and nrce vrew

.

Schnauz11'8, mJn'-tuN, un and

6.000 SQ. FT . WAREHOUSE PLUS 1.100 SQ.
FT. OF OFFICE SPACE - Very ns ce buildin g
located JUSt off BulaVIII e Rd Omh ead garage

AI&lt;C. Aloo
- - . tiny
toya.·
CooMIIe.
1!1~-3404.

doors, ramp, overh ead heaters rn warehou se.
IOUI mce offr ces, Ioy er and reception area

....,..... Kltlene $10. EKh. B14-

Sstuoted on 2 acres of land . Call our offsce lor

'

" .

·,

.......,..

4tM

.... .

'*

c-rty Fill&lt; Spoclll. 15% oft
Nglll!r tunlngo. Endo Auguot

LARGE HOME WITH APPROX. 7 ACRES, 11/l,
approx. l ms. from Gage on Rt. 325. Master BR
wslh sky lite, 3additional BRs, 2 baths. kitchen.
LR . large laundry, full basement Owner wiling
lo work wsth qualshed buyers on fmancing

nLick bm11. Btnkcr
Ask YOUR BRO~ER if

COME TAKE A LOOK AND MAKE US AN OF FER WE CAN1 REFUSE! Home located at
1128 Sec. Ave . 2 or 3 BRs, LR , DR . kst chen.
l ~ bath s. FR. atl sc could be addsls onal room.
gas he at/cenl a ~r

Conning - - lor oalo. Pick
~or - d y plclcod. 114-

10 ACRES. CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP- Newer
home offers 3 BRs. I 'h baths, equrpped
kst chen. LR. FR. gas heat. cent. air, rear dec~
central vac. s y ~em . TV salellrte. 40x60 metal
bldg wnh 16' door~ Free gas. $147.000.

Connlng
- -·
$3 own
I buohot.
Ptdl ~·own.
Bring
coo-

-.Rod'--.114-

LOOK AT THIS! JUST 134.900! - Very nsce
home near Green Elementary Sc hool. A« rac
live features include lR. kstchen wlstove and
re frsgerat or 2 BRs. bat h. 2 car art ached gar·
age Ca llloday
EXTREMELr NICE STARTER HOllE
l ocated fU~ at the edge of town. Thss home
features .3 bedrooms. bath. lrvsng room,
krtchen , dsnsng room and a full basement Five
mmutes to downtown

. llo-Adamo.IM-

w.aea.

JIR~ .

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

story
neoghborhood. 3
bedroom s. 2 ~
lamily room with
stone fireplace
~sert). sunken lsv10g
room. for mal dsning and eat-10 k~chen . lots ol
closets and storage. 2 ~ car garage. Central air
recently snstalled. Resting on approx I acre lot in
Porterbrook Subdivssion. Close and convement.
but not nossy and drrly'
#205

NEW LISTING- 137 ACRE FARM- Near Kyger
Creek High School. ThiS has been a very
productsve farm sn the past. With a little wor~ rt
could be again. Own!Js have pnced thss !arm to
sell due to residence 1n Florida. Older 2story home
in good repa1r wrth free gas. Large shed. barn. 2
ponds Call today for more inlormatoon. $79,900.
#215

arown
Frooh

=r'" ........... 114Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

PRICE REDUCED 10 $65.000! Beautslul l
shaped brsck. All rooms large Eal·sn kst chen.
formal dsns ng,LRWl fP . 3 BR s. I'' balhs. al
!ached garage
$15.000 - Appr o11mat ely l acrealongSt Rl
588 (400 II ol Iron! age) Small home otlets 2
BRs. bath. I R. kslchen. mohsle home pad on
property.
ALL BRICK - JUST OfF RT. 31 - CLOSE TO
HMC AND SHOPPING - Mraclsve homesn a
nice nes ghborhood o ~ ers 3 BR s. bath.
equspped kslchen. LR. d'nert e. lsseplace. new
carpet, 2 car at1ach ed garag e. gas heat and
central air

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FOR YOU!! - Very
attractive home ss1uated on 1.9 acres Fea.
lures include 3 BRs. LR . kstche n. 2 bat hs. lull
basment. gas heat. car pet and hardwood. ulsl ·
sty bldt
OWNER HAS RHOCATEO AND WANTS TO
SELLIIIIIEDIATELV - Oak Drsve. all bock. 3
BRs. l 'h baths. LR. kstchen. DR. full basemen!.
gas heat
AnRACTIVE LOCATION FOR YOUR NEW BU SINESS. located tu sl along St. Rt. 7 and
acr05' from the new shoppmg plaza. Owners
may be wihng to spin. all level

4.n

ACRES - $3.500 - Clay Twp Hazel
Ridge Rd .
83.2ACRES. M/l NEAR MEIGS MINE#! . Older two story home wrth Vlnvl ssdrng Storm
wmdows. Two small barn s.
$15.000 - 8.7 ACRES MI L Hansson Town·
fronts on Little Bullskm Rd .

ATTRACTIVE HOME AND TWO lOTS- 3 BRs
bath. kstchen w/range and DW. LR. carpet:
elec. heat. l car detached gar age. Sstuated on
two lots. Very nsce.

118'1 Dodgo Colt DL PS, PB,
Allll'll CUaotto, AC, - tlroo.
Automotlc. Goto good gu
mllllp:. _4_?"000 miiM. 16,!00
linn. BlllrfW',..2377
118'1 llonto CoriO SS. Burgondy.
43,000 mlloo. Sharp. $81011. etol:taa.e523 0( 114-388-8434.

Monte Carto,

::a:

St.~per

eport,

14911. Whllo. llot-992-36114, •
Sp.m. or f14.18MN3 IYI.
1988 Nluan Sentr1, 28,000
mlloo, 4.,.,, air, $3,500; 1987
Pont. SuntHrd, 4dr, 1uto 6 air,
SUN; 11187 Chovy C.lllbrily,
13,600; 111111 Chovy Sprint,
12,500; 1t87 pty Aell1nl, $1,lta5;
lOBO Otdo Colo II M,2C)4!i._INII
Pont SUnblrd, $2,000; ,..,. Ply
Horizon, $1,i00; 11185 Ford b- . I t , - 180 Dodao
t&gt;.tytona U,4bo; 180 Ronoult,
11,100i..1985 Otda COiolo, $2,900;
lV84 Utda Ornlgl 58,000 mllel;
1983 01• Omega; 111114 eo..
...... C.rk&gt;i.. 1~ !l&lt;&gt;"G" Chg.
11.000; _
UOOifO
fl 500; tiRS Buick Sk
11:1&lt;)0; 1M2 Buk:k
IKira
$1,200; 11181 Ford Folrmont
5l 000 mlloo; 1tll Pont. Grand
"rix, ft,OOO. 860 Auto Saito,
Hwy. 150, 4 mllol N. of Holzor,
&amp;11 448 6165, 114-441-1189.

II

,

I

wrth sliding dom closets plu s an abundance of
bul't " storage space. Roman brsck fsreplace tn
hvsng room also fireplace on lower level. l5x28
garage attached wrth pull down stairs to storage
area. Special front door wslh ssde louverS. Oou~e
glass windows wnh marble wsndow sills. Home ss
w~l onsulated for efhoent heatsng and cooling
located lUSt off Lake Drtve sn Rio Grande near
Universrty. All qualrty homes sn area. Near cllu rch,
recreational area and lake. You must see msid e
thiS home to appreote si s many line features.
hsled at $69.900
N301

SMALL FARM FOR SALE- 50.15 acres mil
Clay Township Hom e on property offers ap:
proxsmately 1100 SQ. ft , 3 BR s. bath. lrvmg
room. krtchen Qusel setting Frontage on two
roads . Ca ll for details

IN TOWN - 119,900 - Chatham Avenue.
new shoppmg 2 BRs. LR . krtchen, bath

"o

ATTENTION INVESTORS OR FIRST HOME
OWNERS - 116,900 nsce home sn
Thur ma n, use&lt; so~
present tim e.
very well Ia kess
_, ...th,l, kitchen.
FR, DR. storm .snoows, some remod~sn g
do ne Call lor more details.
WORKING FARII - 231.18 acres. more or
less. Perry Township south of Rso Grande. Very
nsce home wsth 3 BRs 1
krtchen and
dsning room, ne• s o "
astsa beaut&gt;
lui great room w
.....lings, 12x24'
loh. sprral staur~ stone chtmney and free
~anding woodburner, parll81 basement.

1'10. '·

$21 ,900 - 30.382 acres mil. 12x60 Vindale
mobile home wrth expando, 2 BRs, l balh,
kstchen. LR, county water, small barn.

~ - .s · - ·· '
- : &lt;~~t. ....- - CLEARVIEW ESTATES - the subdiv~ion IS
growmg! Se&gt;eral new houses in thiS quiet aoea JUst
10 minutes from town . We areoff!Jing an II year
old brick/frame in very good condrtion wrth option
to buy tw olots on each ssde for extra
1296
SQ . h.. 3 bedroom~ 2 baths. i
kstchen l dining area. 2 car garage. •""'·""'':.

nra·rrn• - LOCATION - LOCATION - Ask
anybody' "locatton is most important when
selectsng a home" Here's a 6 room home on l
acre with agreat vsew at the river and only 5 miles
from town. Includes 3 bedrooms, fireplace. tutl
basement garage and bar n. You'll have access to
the rivet . Irs priced at $59.500. and should not be
on lhe market long.
#116

$14.900!!! - Very a«ractsve prsce for a nsce
home. Two or three bedrooms. bath. LR. DR ,
kstchen. carpet part basement. lau ndry room.

SPRING VALLEY - OAK DRIVE - large
ranch style home offers 3 BRs, 2 bath~ L·
shaped L~/dinin~ area wrth fireplace. nsce
kitchen, large famsly room, laundry area. patio
doors, gas heat.

1'0

0 _,

furnace wrth central au also. Located rna nrce

neighborhood on 3rd Ave. Has carport and back
porch Well cared lor home. Call us hxfay lor an
appomtmenl.
#209

$:14,000 - 3 bedroom ranch located m Plant s
Subdrvssion on an extra nsce lot Buy, fix n up a
h«le and then just take rt easy rest ing in the shade
sn the ba ck yard OR rent n at any hme without
hassl e.
11411

udcns, gas heat,

cen1ral a~r. carpeted and hardwood 11oors. 2
car anached garage.
141 ACRES MIL, HUNTINGTON TWP. - Ap.
prox. I mile of ~ontage on Raccoon Creelt
Some bottom land. black walnut

All BRICK + 2.15 ACRES +SMALL POND and JUSt 5 minutes to downtn"'n - lovely
home at the edge nr •· o· 11\ R wrth wood
bu1ner. fireplace.
.11...1en. dinette.
barn, carport, ga: ~ "('cent. air, basement,
many more features also. Call for an appoint·
ment and details~

S

SIS.OOO- 19.143 acres m/1. Approx . ~mile
tram city limits. All utslihes avaslable.
NEAR NORTH GALLI A H.S. - 21 ~acres m/l
Morgan Twp. Frank Ward Rd. - $17.500.

EVANS HEIGHTS- 5 MINUT'~ TO TOWNCITY SCHOOlS - "o·1 1\ orne offers 3
BRs, LR W/firep
2 baths, attractive sundeck. ..,.o garage, new sidin ~
eas heat/cent. arr.

S ·""--'·

LOTS OF POTENTIAL- 67.496 acres, m/1, on
Crouse-Beck Rd., nice wooded buildin prtes.
rural w.ater available.

FOR THE BEGINNER! - Nsce starter home
• located tu st mmutes from lhe hospitaL livsng
room. dimng room. 3 bedroom s and l bath

Detached gatage. Home needs a little wor~ bu t
could be a show place. Wrap around porch an d
plenty of yard mak e thss a greal pl ace Ia start a
lams ly $27.400
#607

AN OLD! E, BUT GOODIE!!! - Go back in time and
relsve all the charm of a house at the turn of the
century. Thss 2 story house busN in 1850 in MesJp
County has 3-4 bedrooms, l bath wrth eat· tn
kstchen . fireplace and a double garage. 3-4 acres
wsth alar ge If allot bessde rt Has anew hont porch
wslh ma ny ex tras. Needs work done to st Nsce
slart er home All lor $25,000
~709

WHAT A CLEAN HOUSE' - Immaculate can't
even describe the condsl!on olthss top notch brsck
ranch . Located m city schools on a large flat lot. m
a Quiet spacious neoghborhood Very a«ractoe
wrth features includtng 3 BRs. 2 baths. hvsng
room. eal-10 k1tchen , and full basement New
deluxe carpet through out 2 car garage. concrete
drsve and lar ge back patio $70's.
#108
SUPER TAl-LEVEL - SUPER BUY - Her e's a
house lor I he actsve la msly It's plenlv lar ge wrth 4
BRs, fam~y room and rec roomplu s lor mal hvmg
room with fireplace an d 2 balhs Spacsous lot has
room for pool ANO lenno cou~ or tust about
anythsng else your famtly want&gt; 2car garage, new

from $100. Forde. Mereedla.
Cheyye. Surplus.
Your II"U... (1) 80J.687.IOOO Ext.
S-101".

72

Trucks lor Sale

deck. new central a1r. Owner anxrous to sell and

has prsced st ac cordm~y at $69.900 Green
schools
~112

1973 Ford 1 Ton Trvc::k with • 10
Ft. St.... Btd. Esc. Cond.
l2300. 114-44UIH

1m OIIC Dvmt&gt; Truck, goad

ccncl, $3,500. IM-2U.aoe7.

1 ton Ford Truck. Ste ..

bod. $3500. 114412-3114
092-3814.

Of

114-

1118 Ford 2M, 4x4 aiJiom•tk: A1
condlllon. Body In e•ceii4Wtf
•hape. I"Moa4W426.

11111 Chovy olck up

11,900. 304-4'1H182.

runo

goad,

a-v

1882
8-10, ~~~!_hart bod,
llborg .... loppor,.....,,ll-2104.

. . - It has rt all'
I. spacs ous. lake Irani.
profesSIOnally landscaped , oualst y·constructed
and well maintasned. redw ooo. excellent localson.
4 bedroom s. 3 bal hs. huge fa mily room , large deck
Capt~a t10g

36.5 ACRES M/l -ClAY TWP.- Fronts on
Friendly Ridge. $18,000.

A•ng~r,

----·-·--·---

~

1m Ford Bronco 11 43,300; 18&amp;4
S10 Bluw 13,~ Ninon P.U.
wlalr, $1,200· hNIIf Ntasln P.U.

12,300j 1183 FOid F150 Erploror
auto a ek", 13.800; 1884 Ford
Con•. Yon, I OW!!:"'j 1183 C....
Bote P.u. LDna Boa; tm Font
Lorlo4 P.U. $1)000; BlD Auto
Solol, Hwy. 110 N.o 4 miiM Norlh
of - · 114~5 or 614441.elll.
I~ 'Polo. Conr~." ap., on 1~,
[lka, ml ,..,.. "alk~n oloopor.
lOIII Frvolraul. 45 R.1 ';'!' ~!~ 111-2
IJHMII, .ade kll. ~.uuv
lor

STAY HOME &amp; LOVE IT- Relax on the screened
porch. snack at the breakfast bar or entertam sn
the formal dsning area. There's Pl.enty of room sn
this 3 bedroom 2 story home. You ve got to see rt 1
$74.500
#500

WHO COULD ASK FOR ANYTHING MORE? Owner has moved to Florida and desires an
immediate sale of thss outstanding home and 10
acres. This 12 yr. old Quafijy home has 2700 SQ. ft.
of livmg space which in dudes 4 bedrooms. famrly
room with woodburner, huge ground level rec.
room. wife apprO'Ied ~rtchen (all appliances) and
large snground pool. Also features an outstanding
40x60 2 story garage. The 10 acres is a ftat to
gently rolling meadow localed in the city school
dsstrict near Rio Grande on a state highway. Not
many like this On today's market at this price!
$96,000.
~219

CHAROIAIS LAKE ESTATES -A rare opportunsty
to design and complete the intenor of ahome man
excellent neighborhood at an affordable pnce.
The completed extenor of thss 1~st or y log home
mcludes a dec~ 2 car garag e and bas ement
Buyer would own I I 20th of an8 acre stocked lake
wrth full priv~eges. $69.900.
MOl

VERY DESIRABLE HOllE now used as a double
rental located in the crty at the corner of
3rd and Spruce. Range and relrigerator furnished
in both units. Separate front and back entrance.
and children's play area behsnd
#300

.I

bo1h. ll4olll2~410.

IV/I Ford

a......

Sl,aoo. IOW7U431-

..

rvno

good,

Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644

Motorcycles

E. M. Wiseman, Broker

1114 - • lingo.All
...._
$800.214tJ:

·--· -

r

1885 F210, 4 d~... good
condldon. 11f...MI).2380 or 8141140&lt;20111.

74

Ranny Blackburn, Broker
446-000B

COUNTRY COMFORT - There's a splendsd
country vrew m any direct son from thss 2 story
home near Champion Farms on Rl. 554 . Home
sncludes open kitchen and living room. 3
be!lroo,ms. one nsce bath and ul!lsty room. Over l
flat ground. Posssble 9.5% loan
at $32.500
m~

wmner' To see ss to believ e - call for an
appointment
#405

new motor,
~~dr, ole. 12,5110. :1041913 Font

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

$29,900 -lOCATED IN CITY- Older home
offers 3 BRs, balh, lR, krtchen, gas heat. crty
waler and sewer. Call for an appointment.

·-

MINT CONDITION - 3 bedtoom. 2 bath home
located only 4 miles we~ from Holzer Hospi1al.
Cit\' school system. 6 rooms olu s utihtv anrl 1 r.or
overs~ed garage aHached. Oouble closets and
large bath oft spacsous master bedroom. 12x20
living room. 12xl5 family room wrth woodstove
Labor saving kitchen. All electric home- heating
and cooling lots of busrt·in s1oragespace Above
ground 4'x20' poolsn excellent condrtion. Good
dog kenn~ All on over \\ ac level lot Located sn
Rodney area oft main traveled road. Lss1ed at
$64,900

BE SIIART - QUIT RENTING - Invest in yout
own future. Three bedroom, one flo or pla n wrth l
cas garage snualed on a .91 ac re lot wrth m~ur e
trees in Green Townshsp. Pnced losell at $2 7, 000.
N5ll

and num erous ot her amenities that mak es 11 a

FRONTS ON THE RIVER - All brick ranch
S1yle home With m,n, -~
'eatures. f!V·
sng room wrth s
\o
1 wrth DW.
range, oven and

rn•v&lt;osii;•CE - At an affordable
p11ce $34,900 buys lhss neat 2 bedroom
bungalow. New ssding new w~rm&amp; gas forced a~r

COUNTRY SETTING ott his nice starter
3 miles from Rt 7on Rl 218. you can
see thss 3 bedroom. I~ bath home. lar~ hvsng
room. Covered porchlpatso and breezeway to
large recrealson room wrth fsreplace Caroort and
two storage busldings. 1.5 acr~ mil. lor 1usl
$34.900.
11800

eorv.tt•.

1m

IT'S SURE TO PlEASE THE FAMILT - Eye·
ca1ching home located just off Rt. 35 with
2 111 acres of well manulact•~red lawn and
gar den. All brsck con"o'1 -''tt.ractsve tea·
lures sncludtng C.' '"" baths. tully
equspped kitchen, ;J . ....m wrlh lsreplace
(sn se rt sn Is replacer. LR and dsnsng room, heat
pump/ cent. asr , vacuum system. 2 car at·
tached garage wsth electnc opener. Call now'

TIRED OF BEING CORNERED? - That won't
happen sn this round house lo cated sn Mesgs
County Truly a home to be admired. Beautsfully
decorated sn country atmosph ere, thts hom ehas 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. livmg room. family area, eat·m
kstchen kitchen and u1slrty room Unfsn sshed lull
basement. Wra p- ar oun d deck s on both ft ootS wsll
~ve a vs ew that will take your breat h Alllhss and
more' You must see to bel seve' On ly $61.9001

OOYERNIIENT SEIZED Yohlcloo

~·-Dovlo.
Clrlr*'l
,.,..._, Bring con-

ond tornll-. t-rdolly,
_ ,, ll&gt;&amp;.e811-a2118.

1811.

-bye

flodnt. DoMio Hill 614-IM..

copl--brlyirorYall

0(
.............
.......,
or ropllro.

-

I 'e"lld lllee:trtdan. Ridenour
Eloctrlcol, 304.e7!1-1711.

tlmll-.
Qroham Upholllory Contor, :103
HUHop Dr. COli lor IPIIOI,.,_.o
• ..u,...t... c.u 1"14-446-3431.

P~x LE, loodod,
bU!ell l'l'HI. 1014 'Jotvo chael.

PATRIOT AREA- THREE BEDROOM RANCH
offers l120 sq. ft.. krt chen, living room. bath.
carpel, a«ached garage wrth electrte door
opene1. Call for an appointment

an.

[)uM&gt;W1n Fruit Form juot oft St.
At. • bM of Alblny. We 10-

Mowrl)' '• Uphal-'•rlng MrW&gt;
lng trt eounty •rq 25 yul'l. The
bMt In fumtture uphollllflng.
Clll 304-675-4154 tor lfM ..,.

Elaclrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

--lot

wt~ng.

Upholstery

1t118 lltond

4

Conning·-- 14.110 ~ .
8eHnd M : nla Lodot In

home

In Z.nltlr aloo _....lng 111011

othlr lnndt. HouH calr., a110
oomo oppllanco ,....... WV
304-678-231111 Ohio llok4e-2454.

fJ7

18118 Cortrrca, 4 door, good
ccncl, 304.e7!1.e2H.

ml•lng board, 5
3 otondl, $400.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

1M Chevy Caviller Z·24. Low
miiHr,IJI· L.Rw new. Call ~~
111'1, to S p.m. after 6 l!l........a.

Burpndy, 43,000 mil•,
18,900. 814-3811-8434, •
11523.

he or she supported
OUR YOUTHS at the
Gallia County Jr. Fair.

Ward :104-N:Z-2325.
tyetem.,

304-flt-2~8

114-

1988 Red C1mero. 1 o.n., VI
Fuel 1nl. Good A.. lable Car.
$5000. Call 30H"I5-6883 .. 614387-l!UO Anytlmt

1981

15. J I II Plano Sorvlco. Coli BIU

-

somco, opoctollllng 84

IIMI.

GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN SELLING YOUR HOME.

Conn Cornot. $200. ~.

~puchN.,

Ron'o TV

11187 Chrywier Flflh Avenue, darll;
blue, k»aded, Interior, A n1111ot',
IIAUihar Mila, eunrool, l'ldl
on trunk o4 Fo1 CB, log llahto,
good §II mlltiQ!oi ldUIII niriH,
2~401. 11\1100 uBO. 114-446-

Ra nny

./

7 JIC· -Sol, goad oond,

WaftiNDrl'a Waw Hl.ultng,
renonable reiN, \'Oiume dt.
count., 2,000 to 4,000 ctpachyl
ciatemt, pools, welll, Me. Cal

Comptoto llobllo Homo Ml upo
COrtol'o Plumbing
ropolro, lllo plumbing l
lndH•Jna
- - . roollng, romodollng,
,_andPTno
potJoo &amp; doc:ko ilo. REIIODEI:Clolllpolla, Dlllo
INGI Roloroncoo. EotlmotoL
114-256-1111.
114 441 - ·

a!W48-2877

') l·i Sct()nd Avcllltl '
·(;;dlipoli s, Ohi() i ') ()~ I
.. ·..
Phone ((ll i) ·i· j() . ()OOH

m01e delarled rnl01matron

MusiCal
Instruments

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

I

1181 ChryM Lazer. Shlrp e.tr,
26,000 ml.... AUiomatlc, air, tu ..
lnfocllon, muclr moro. 15,200.

BLAC:KBUiti\J REAL/fY

w-

:17Wlt3

Evenl,..:

1985 Okfs 18 Aegtnq. Exc.
cond, 90,000 miiH. $~2.

Groom ond SUpply Shoj&gt;Pol
Grooming. All broodO. AllotyloL
Jomo Pol Food DNiw. Julio
Colo 11&gt;1-441-0231.

-

Co. RON EVANSlNTERPHISES,
Jookoon, OH I-IOO-a31-f11211.

ling.

:~~Mono doHvwy. COil 304-

ct.rro.t..-, 12500. 114-44tr

B14-2A-&amp;Oefl.
245-V11B.

compWe $43.25.

58

·- · - ·
"~' .
ROiory or coblo tool drilling.
Moll ... tl aompf..ed urn:. day.
Pump ..,.. ond ..,.leo, 3041•111~1~31~toa.~:;:-;;::::::;:::-;;;;;-;;=
I;
Sopllc Toni&lt; Pumolng SlOeQolllo

Froo 0111111111-. Coil collocl t614-237.o488, day or night. 82
R"'l.,. Buonwnl Wotwpr...

1885 Fard Eacort, 2d!J... lopd.,

Fish T1nk, 2413 J1cbon Ave.
Pol,. Ploalanl, 304-f75-2063, 10
pi all up 11UI and 10 pi

~

-r

ond !lldlng. Troller
"'"'"M:lntod. Froo 0041p~ •~- - - ~~~

tM. l.ocl1 reter.nc11 tumlahld.

Exc. goo mlloogo, $1,810. O.y:

l'IIO.

eoond

EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY' - Great
sn town locatson 3 year ol d bu sldm g buslt to code
lor bar and grsll. Over 2.000 SQ. ft . Well tnsulaled
Plenty of parking Ownes wsll sell busldmg
ent and liquor license lor $115,000. or wsll
e for buslding and lot separately. Good
p_2te,ntsal for bu sin ess
#202

$1,150. fh4.446.17St

r..r
17111.

a-,

114-441-3844 '"" 7 p.m.
Femllt Pomeranl1n. 10 w•kl
okl. IAr.t worming. 480. 814--,..2~

F~Mtllllo

Roollng

.U.A Willi Dotlvory. 2,1100 got.

-··.
==lwp,-.v.c: dol..,._
.,..

1981 Dodge Charger, automatk:
air, AmtFM ltar.a ceautt•.

Onogonwynd C.Hory Porolon,

.,.u.. 1mp,

1984 Buicll Parle Av•, 51,000

a

Rog'd, S7!1ooc:h. 114 441 8320.

51

1H4 Wlnno_bago a.Joftllnhomo, 30 II. onrloo. 414 c:how,
CZK ml, IUR -bod, ..... both,
AIC pluo - · . - . onon,
.._ e, - ·-cs, TV
ant, hhch. ltof' pod, lldder and
_, rock, 101go 3 lilY rolllft,
lllch liroo, oloc- lOll 1urnoc:o ond ho4
ton1r, lui
111u dlnotto, wl,_lold - ·
loto of ~-mlllnt -.1,
525,000.

85 General Hauling

- h y. 114-317-7301.
BASEIIEHT
Davlo
WATERPROOFING
_,... Croal&amp; Ad. Prrrto, oup- R l A Wllor Sorvlco. Pooto cloU.-ndftlonol Hlotlmo g tama, werlt. lmmadtat ..,,OOO or
and

8711.

2ot6-51&amp;1.

Hlm111~1n

81

Home
Improvements

19S3 R..•ul1 AIU1nce, 4dr, 4ey1.,
o opd., $1,&amp;00. aM-256-1644.

1885 Chovy lmpoto. 4 &lt;1oo&lt;
Mdan, like new. All tht equipmint. 301 VB. &amp;2100. 814-182-

b1,ack. $110. 1M1912.et21
AKft Roalllorod Rolwollw Pup~ 7 wlca. old, excelt.nt Blood
llno, Gourd Dovo. 1300. 114-

SltmeM and

Homa
lmprovaments

18111 Holliday " " - · 3211.,
MU-atntalned, 2tft. awning on
n. t14-3aa mL

81

Home
Improvements

Ul83 Monte eano, gaod eancu.
lion. l-lop, 305·-VI. 814-n22IJ.IO.

1881 Chevella -4dr, autorn•Uc I

AKC Reg'd Mtle Pomer•nlln, 2
112 yaoro old, $150. 814-256-1322.

Spaniol

Services

81

1883 lm.. 10. Nova. 304451·1111.

atr, AmiFM ate,-.o CIIMt11,

Real Estate General

MotorHomea

18113 Chovy COvlllor, ""'r 4opd,
Powera 11:Mrlng, pow• DrliiM.
Altllng l800.114-25e.e:m.

245'-fns.t.

Real Estate General

c.npa...

79

18112 CRdo ~. 4dr, ~~ PB"

1984 VW R1bbtl L, QOOd cond,

WE NEED LISTINGS

Real Estate General

Campers&amp;
MotorHomea

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-0-7

malta offer. 814-f46..4113. N M~.

!C, 4opd, $2,000. O.B.O. 114-

Pets lor Sale

B~nony

1981 Dodgo Omnl 024, 1600.

Good cond, air, aUio, 15 1000
mil.., 31J4.87&amp;-e713 after 5;00
Pll.

,., 7:00.

24Utlt

~

79

111115 22t1 ., Marlin Yorleh
1111'4 Non. 414 onglno, 4011 1912 17 n . Stercr1ft Tft..Hull en.1oor, Joodod. .... m eMTurbo tr~rwm61tton, .,._ltlve
1112-7727.
!riCIIon ,..r-end. Black lnllwlor. Bolt. 121 HP, Evlnrudl Engine,
compte~, top, new upho..lery.
$1,200. 114-l'IMZSI.
C.H tM-288-13'18 after 1':00 p.m. VInton AUla Salvage. ~n I
Dam Porto buying [unk coro.
· 11111 uncoon Cont., tm 01c1a
114-388-1012.
CuttaA, botk run, S2t5 each, Houu Ba.1, :M' Flbergl.... 1112
304.e'IW21a.
Nouta-llno
350
onglno, 79
Campers &amp;
1m Dodoe M•gnum, VB, 1-top, ::io'4~~
Motor Homes
111r concftlon. hM o"-. SMMt-2113.
1-:::TE::A::R::'Y:::TR::A:::V:::EL-:T::A:::AI:::LE:::RS
1818 Rogal Buick, U&lt; oond, J&lt;Mr-kl X-2 fol lid . 114-1021810 CLOSEOUT!
118,000 mlloo, $2,000. IIM.e75- J
__.
I6l _ _ __ __ _
All unite to go 81 ICMWI pric•
/168.
lhle v..r1 Plut no charge fof
A/C. "Terry delller for over 20
NOW
ON
SALEII
YAMAHA
1979 Ford Musteng, $100. run•
r-ra. Buy wtth confidence.
WAVEAVNNEAS.
Saloo,
Porto,
good, 304-475-5705 oftor 5:00
Acceaor5H Service. RIVER- Fixed rate financing av1Uabl•.
PM.
CAliPER SALES! On
SIDE MARINE, At. 1 (ocrooo IRVINES
St.
Rl.
7
North al St. At. 1155.
Jrom
K·lllrtl
Golllpollo,
Oh.
1141980 Rroblnl, right ~onl
Lllllo Hocking Ohio Approx. 10
dornogod, boll ottor. 114-388- 446-2424
min. 114-Ni-2281
113:18.

mll",_loodod, 30H75-3521 ot.

Dlpoo, wtndowe, lint•, etc. Claude WI•
,.,., Rio Granda, OH Coil 114-

AKC roglot .....

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

..-.

I

Blocl&lt;. brick, -

56

76

lor Sale

1---------

PEACH FORK RD. - Showcase kslchen. buslt·mdiShwasher.
Jenn·Aif ra nge, oven and mscrowave Three bedrooms. full
basement. and lots of big ns ce trees for shade sittmg on 2
pre«y acres.
JUST 136,000

Real Estate General

Pomeroy-Middlepon- GaUipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
75 Boats &amp; Motors

1m

each 1n itS line of ~QuOreS.

I

August 12, 1990
71 Autos tor Sale

9-MIN!I POOLS
HURRY .. We're ovtrltockld!
Many IIHI and ahapea anll--

WOlD
GAM I

Ed ired by CLAY R. POLLAN

- - · · - 1 1 4 ... 2310 1=7111=.=== = == = :..!..:8;':::'11.===== = = =

""' ldlolton . . - . , King o~ul ·
bod, a~oe~ric ho4

T:~~~t:~T S©R~N\-Lttlr~~~

Real Estale General

,_Alii'-·

lootrolllllll
... _ _
1111

1140"' IIWID.

David Wiseman, 446-9666
B. J', Halrtton. 446-4240

Clyde B. Walker, 2415-15276

Loretta McDade, 448-772!
Bill Tod!J, 448_-3443

·'

'}.. )·

·•

. &lt;ft•')l

·l· d

PEACEFUl LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK •
Perfect setting for r~oxation and enjoyment of
Raccoon Cree~ 3 acres, m/1, w~h good access to
the creek and plenty of room for recreation. loa
home includes 6 rooms includingbasernl!llll.lrJII
dect overloob lhe wonderful settin, Perlect fot
.-end eet-tllf'lhen or fuN time country livin&amp;

$34,900.

f231

...

�'.

Pqa D-B-Sunday limes-Sentinel

-

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

August 12, 1990

In London, Ohio Sept. 20

Manzey family, Pomeroy, will be
honored at Fann Science Review
By JIM FREEMAN
Tbnes-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY- A local farming
family has been listed as one of
lour runners-up for Ohio's top
conservation farmer of 1990 by
lhe Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Soil and
Water Conservation, and ThP
Oblo Farmer magazine.
Richard and Patty Manzcy of
Pomeroy will tie honored at a
public ceremony on September
20 at the Farm Science Rev iew
near London. They will a Iso be
featured In the September Issue
of The Ohio Farmer magazi ne.
The Manzeys' have pra cticed
many techniques including con·
tour strips, grassed waterways.
!ish pond management. no-till
planting. and development of
pipeline and livestock tanks to
conserve soil and water on their
365 acre farm.
Several grassed waterway s
were cons b'ucted on the Manzey
farm. Grassed waterways arc
guUeys formed Into parabo lic
shapes !usually by bulldozer!.
and topped witth grass. The
grass helps to keep soil from
washing away. It also serves
another practical use: the grass
on the grassed waterway ca n be
harvested and used for cattle
feed .
The Manzeys' also practice
contour farming: planting crops
in alternating rows following the

co ntour of the land. Currently
they have corn and alfalfa
growing In rows.
The practice of planting no-till
corn helps to keep valuable
topsoil where II belongs.
One of the more Interesting
features of the Manzey farm Is
1he fish pond management program. The fish pond is fenced to
keep lhecattleout. Thecattleget
water from a pipeline running
from the pond into a water
tro ugh.
The Manzeys· also follow other
conserva tton pr()('edures such as

exc luding livestock from woodland, hayland and pasture management. timber stand improvPmenl. rotational grazing, residue
management, hay land and pas·
ture renovation and establlshmenl. and soil testing.
According to Mike Duhl of the
Meigs Soli and Water Conserva·
lion District. Richard and Patty
became cooperators with the
di strict in May of 1982. They are
cu rrently in their second long·
term a greement with the
district.
Richa rd does all of the work out
in th e field mcludlng construe·
lion of waterways, ponds, clear·
i ng brush and maintaining his
bulldoze r. Duhl said. Also, ac·
cord ing to Duhl. he has modified
some of his farm equipment to
make it more elficient. Pat
handles the books and ensures

Ohio Lottery

Reds hold .on
to defeat SF
Giants, 6-4

l'lck-3: 711
l'lck-4: 3817
Cards:
7-H; ~-C; J-D; A.-S
Super Lotto
14-30-31-32-36-43
Kicker 892612

Page 3

the long-term agreement and
conservation plan practices go
according to schedule.
The Manzey's originally de
clded to practice conservation to
save soil, time and money. and to
Improve the appearance of the
farm, according to Duhl.
Started in 1984, the Ohio
Conservation Farmer Awards
program is designed to recognize
farmers who are doing an out·
standing job of conserving soU,
water and related natural resources. The program is coordinated
by ODNR's Division ot Soil and
Water Conservation and sponsored by The Ohio Farmer
magazine. Nominations are ac·
cepted each year between Janu·

•
Vot.41 . No .70
Copyrighted 1 990

FENCED·IN FARM POND- Richard Manzey
poses with Ills lenced-in !arm pond. The pond has

been fenced In to keep cattle out. CatUe can still
get water from a pipeline-connected trough.

CAIRO, Egypt (UPII -Saudi
Arabia turned away an Iraqi oil
tanker Monday In a sign a U.N.
trade embargo was working
against Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein, who stepped up hi s
attacks against Arab opponents
and Egypt's leading role in the
fight against him.
A day after the United States
announced it will begin blocking
Iraqi oil shipments, Egyptian
Foreign Minister Esmat Abdul
Meguld held talk s with the Soviet
ambassador to Egypt and Assist
ant Secretary of State John
Kelly, who met with Syrian
officials last week In U.S. efforts
to Isolate Iraq .

IITrDTUrDIIIf
ntntn~
BETTER BY DESIGN
/

••len •

H"EFFICIENCY

HEAT PUMPS
Far Molile &amp; Manulachred Hames
Tho now P.C.S.D. Hut Pump t...
tun11: 100% 2-YJ. porto ond loboo
warnntv: 100% 6-YJ. portundloboo

warranty oo the compr•IOI'. outdoor motor end rwerling valve; de•igned and engineered to fit mo.t
late model tnterthorm. Col"'""" t!o
Mill• furM&lt;ti.

French

Modtl f'UD

PresldPnt

Francois

Mobile Home Heating/Cooling
Safford School Rd.•Gallfpolis, OH.
lnlorttwm, Coltman &amp; Miler Factory l'ar!1 &amp; Sorvi&lt;t

A Mason County woman was
kllit'd Sunday when the ca r In

MIDWAY TAKING SHAPE - Late Sunday
afternoon the carnival rides were In place on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds and almost ready to
provide a week of fun lor Meigs County lairgoers.
While one worker was busy checking seats on the
ferris wheel, several others took a break from

,, l
. {'* "

. ..i. t.

Tomato field may be bad
ATLANTA. iUPII - Federal
and state health officials are
trying to find a field of contaml ·
nated tomatoes that may have
sickened thousands ol people in
four Midwest slates.
Doctors treated more than 100
eases ol salmonella, or food
poisOning, in Minnesota, Wlsco n·
aln, Illinois and Michigan last
week, but a health officia l In
Minnesota said there were 6.000
to )0,000 unreported cases in his
state alone of people who may
have become iiltrom eating the
contaminated tomatoes.
"Onlyaboutl percent tofthese
cases 1 are usually reported ...
said Dr. Oscar Holm. Minnesota
stllte epidemiOlogist, who Is
coordinating the lour-state inves·
ligation with help from the U.S.
Centers lor Disease Control and
the Food and Drug
Administration.
Holm said in a weekend Inter·
· view there have been no reported
lata lilies from the illness but that
14 people in Minnesota remained
1\ospltallled out ollhe 66 known
cases in that state.
The outbreak originally was
confined to Minnesota, II Unois
and Michigan but Hobn said new
cases were being reported In
WllconJin.
•'•A field lull of tomatoes was
iomebow contaminated," said
. Dr. Robert Tauxe, an epidemloi·
· Qlilt with the CDC. "This did not
bappen In the klrehen."
TauR and Holm said they
don't know where the !leld is and
II II not lmown 11 the search is
~"&lt;· COIIflllld to the four states.
;}·l
Holm 11ld the probe ol the
~;~-·L outbreak that started In July
"' ImpliCated raw tomatoes "very
___ .a...,.....

st rongly " .
"It Is som ewhat unusual to
thmk of sa lmonella being Iran ·
mill ed by a vegetatlle," Tauxe
sa id . " It usually Is a problem
wi1h raw meat."
There are about1.500 varieties
ol sal monella bacteria bu I they
al l rause th e same kinds of
symptom s - abdominal pain.
fever. diarrhea. nausea, vomit ·
ing and dehydration.
Salmonella normally is trans·
milled by ingestion of food
contamin ated with feces of In·
fected animals; also In eggs and
egg products. meat and meat
products. and In broiler chickens
a nd turkeys.

work in the heat. The rides wfll operate Tuesday,
Thursday and Friday Irom t lot: 30 p.m. and from
6 to II p.m. The schedule on Wednesday, Kiddie
Day, Is noon to 4:30p.m. and 6 to II p.m. On
Saturday the ride schedule Is noon to 5 p.m. and 6
to II p.m.

YEAREND
CLEARANCE
NOW IN
PROGRESS!

ATTENDS CREDIT
SCHOOL - Mike Francis.
Collection MaD"'er of Ohio
Valley Bank In Gallipolis was
amonr; 7f Oblo bankers who
recently atteaded the 27th
annual Ohio School of Consu·
mer Credit held on the Kent
State University campus,
Kent, July 8-13.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND iU PI) - Fri·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Plck-3
976.
Pick-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,372,459.50, with a payoff due ol
$2,554.194.50.
Plck..f
6400 .
Pick-4 ticket sales totaled
$256,933.50, with a payoff due of
Cards

Two of hearts.
Three ol clubs.
Jack of diamonds .
Three of spades.
Cards ticket sales totaled
$1~5.889. with a payoff due of
$1!1 ,000.

crisis, calling far the uncondl ·
tlonal and immediate wlthdra·
wal of Israel from the occupied
territories and removal of Sy ·
ria 's presence In Lebanon before
negotiation s on "ar rangements "

for Kuwait co uld tlegln.
The United States and Israel
re jected Saddam's plan, which
also called for the end of an
eco nomic boycott against Iraq,
removal of U.S. and foreign
forces from Saudi Arabia and
replacement of those troops with
a U.N. -organized all-Arab force
exc luding Egypt.
In the first major test of U.N.
sanctions against Iraq, Saud)
Arabia turned away an Iraqi
Co ntinued on page 10

lost control in loose grave l.

Offic ia ls said the Walden car
over tu rnl'd, k tiling Mrs . Spradlin
and s lightly injuring her daugh·
ter , 9·year·old Brandon Spradlin,
and Wal\1!3;l's 13-year-old son,
Randy Walden . Both children
were treat ed and released at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant. W.Va .
Walden. Durst, and Am y
Durst. 32, were not injured
A Ga ll ipolis woman was killed
and a Gallipolis man was se·
riously injured in a one ·car
acci dent Saturd ay a ft ernoon on

State Route 7. acco rding to a
re port fr om the Ohio Stale
Hi ghway Pat rot.
Gus ta Hay man. 69, was fatal tv

Injured when was throw n from
the car that her son. Charles Cox .
27, was drivin g.
Cox wa s north bound In Clay
Township. one mile south of
Clipper Mill when he went off the
left sid e of the road. s truck a
ditch and went airborne. The 1982
Dodge Ari es then rolled several
Limes before coming to rest. Cox
was also ejected from the
vehicle.

The two were nol wearing seat
belts.
Hayman was transported to
Holzer Medical Ce nter by Gallla
Coun ty EMS where she was
pro noun ced dea d on arriva l.
Cox was tra nsported to Cabell·
Huntington Hospital IW Va. ) by
a Heal thNet heli copter with hea d
injuries. He wa s reportl'd in fa ir

co nd ition In th e hospital' s inl t·n·
slve carr unlt Monday

Levy was quoted by the radio
as saying "Jordan was walking a
ti ghtrope" by giving assis tance
to iraq and possi tll y allowing
goods to rea ch Iraq bv wa y of
Jordanian terri tory .

Safety factor improved at
Meigs sheriffs department

Israeli off icia ls have repea l·
edly warned .Jordan against
allowing fraql troops onto Its
ter rlt orv, but they have been
amb igu ous about th e sea port of
Aqaba . During the Persian Gu lf
war, goods a nd su pplies were
lru cked from the Gulf of Aqaba
port through Jordan to Iraq

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A re novation project at the
Me igs Co un ty Sheriff's Depart ·
men! not only gives the off ice a
face llft but Increases the safety
fa ctor for those who work there

reported .

Sheriff .James M. Soulsby
expla ined that before the renova ·
lion , the di spa tch er sa t with his
back to the window and the

tr r wi re IX' strung and l hr Law

En forcement Automa ted Data
Sys tem b e
rtl'connec ted.

mo v"P d

and

doorwa~·

into thr dispatchf'r 's
In addillon to the new diS
office With the new office patc her' s desk and th r metal
a rrangeme nt, the di spatcher door, Mas h insta lled new floor
now ca n SP&lt;' each doorw ay tile through out the dispat cher' s
every day .
office and hallwav.
A rearrangement ol the dis · leading in and ou t of the office.
The project is a part of an
The
m-.w
siPPI
door
also
crea
tes
pat cher's office will keep th ose
ongoi
ng re nov ati on project that
an
unus('(l
po
r
tion
of
th
e
old
cond ucting bu sine ss at the she
So
ul
sby
hopes ~· ill co ntinue 1n
corr
ido
r
which
So
ulsby
antl
cl
·
riff's department away from thr•
months
and
.vcars ahead
pat
es
Pve
n
t
u
all~'
converting
Into
prisoners area. In addition , In
So
ulsby
say
s that the nex t
stallatlon of a new steel door a booking room .
pro
jec
t
b
e
in~
planned for the
According
to
the
Meigs
Counl
y
Inside the en trance to the depar t·
sher
iff
's
department
will be work
men! will allow pris oners to be Co mmis sione rs Offi ce, the
in th e cell area . including fresh
tran sported in and out of the work . whi c h was done by C.R
office without routing them Ma s h ro nstrucrton of Pomeroy. pai nt , new srrrrn s and glass on
cost the co unty approxima tely th(' wind ows, new door s and new
throu~h the di spatcher' s offl re.
$10,11!XI While the or iginal bid light fixtures .
thu s Increa sing securit y .
Th e sheri ff also sta ted th at the
was placed at $8,600, the metal
door required by the state jail rece nt renovation work wa s thr
In spector cost an additional first work to be J)f'r formPd sincr
lhe term of Sheriff James Prnf
$1.4011
So ulsbv Indi cated that much fill In th e late 1970's
According to So ulsby, iht•
re -wiring was ne-cessary for thr
PAINESVILLE , Ohio IUP II co
unty jail now mePt s minimum
renovallon
ft
required
that
new
Followers of a cult leader are
sta
te stand ards for jail facilities
expected to provide detai ls or phones be Installed , new compu·
how they helped their leader kill
five members of one family In
northeastern Ohio.
Eight people who had joined
the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints that
Jeffrey Lundgren was leading
An escaped prisoner from the Mei gs Co unty J ail is in the
have agreed to testify In the
custody of the Wood County. W.Va authori ti es today following
aggravated murder trial of
his ca pture Saturday morning.
Lundgren, which was to begin
David Persons escaped from the custody of the Meigs County
Monday with jury selection.
Sheriffs Deparb'nent while performing a work detalllhere late
Prosecutors Indicated five of
Wednesday evening.
them have agreed to testl t'y In
A deparb'nent spokesman sa id today that Peroons was
exchange for reduced charges.
arrested on Saturday in Parkersburg on esc ape charges which
The defense has asked for a
are pending in Meigs County Cour t stemmi ng from his
change in venue, claiming the
Wednesday escape.
conviction ol Lundgren's wife on
Persons was serving a slx ·onth se ntence In the co unty jail on
charges stemming from these
assault charges at the time of his escape.
killings wtll make II impossible to
Continued on page 10
seat ann impartlal jury.

HUGE

$112.600.

on U.S. 35 just north of He nder
Ma so n County s heriff' s
department.
Kimberly Ann McMellon
Spradlin. 33, West Columbia.
WVa .. was killed about 1:1 0
p.m.. a Mason County sheriff's
di spa tcher said.
Deputies said a car driven by
Kenneth Walden , 40 , West Columbia . W.Va., was traveling
south on U.S. 35 when his vehicle
approached stow traffic and
attempted to pass othe r south·
bound ve hicles.
A pickup truc k driven by Alan
Lewis Durst. 36. of Point Plea·
sanl . W.Va .. was attempting to
turn left off the highway as the
Wald en vehicle was attempting

JERUSALEM iUPI J - Israeli
Foreign Minister David Lev y
Monday warned Jordan's Kin g
Hussein aga inst a iding President
Saddam Hu ssein by a lklwlng
goods to be transported across
Jordan to Iraq, Israel Radio

MERRY -GO-ROUND READY- Joe Westfall who has been with
Bale• Bros. Amusement Co. of Wintersville lor the past 18 years
returned to Meigs County again this weekend. His job is to get the
merry-go-round ready lor the lnllu• of youngsters starting
Tuesday when the lair gets underway .

which s h r was riding ovrrturned

to pass In an attempt to avoid a
collision . Walden steered his car
off the left berm of the road and

so n, W Va .. accord i ng to thP

Israel
•
Issues
•
warnmg

GMC:i-RUCK

'

Mtlt errand dispatched a fresh
naval co ntingen t to the Persian
Gull and announced he would
se nd special envoys to meet with
leaders of 24 nations to present an
Initi ative to end the crisis trig·
gered by Iraq· s Aug. 2 conquest
of Kuwait.
The French aircraft carrier
Cl e menc eau. the missile
launcher Colbert and a canting·
ent of 2,650 troops and technl·
cla ns left the port of Toulon to
bolster French naval presence
part of an armada of U.S. led
multinational forc es deployed In
a show of force against Saddam.
The developments come a day
after Saddam announced an
Initiative to end the Persian Gulf

Two area residents ·killed in
auto accidents over weekend

BENNEn'S

..

26 Canis

A Muhimediaa Inc _ Newspapet

Iraqi oil tanker turned
away by Saudi Arabia

' w, ~~fPf~~&lt;&gt;'' ·. '. ·' &lt; :"'l;jl

STOCK TROUGH - This slock trough Is connected to a
leadlnr; from a fenced-In larm pond. This allows cattle to drink
water from the pond wlthGul messing up the pond.

1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio. Monday, August 13, 1990

CAll 1-800-872 -5967
446-9416

CONSERVATION FARMER RUNNER8-UP - Richard and
Patty Mun.ey, Pomeroy , were one of lour runners-up for Ohio's
Con~ervatlon Farmer award . They are shown here on a grassed
waterway under construction on their farm . The Manzeys' will be
featured In th" Seplemb&lt;er issue of The Ohfo Farmer magazine.

Low tonight in mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday, partly sunny. High
near S5.

SAVINGS!

Murder trial
starts today

Hurry

..--Local news briefs_,

While
Seleetlon
Lastd

Esroped prisoner captured

.

SMITH GMC TRUCK
CENTER
135 PINE ST.•GAWPOLIS

(614) 446·2532

NEW DisPATCHER'S OFFICE - The newly
renovated dispatcher's office at the Meigs County
Sherllfs Department Insures Increased safety

and protlucllvlty lor the operation. Deputies
Danny Leonard, lett, and Mark Boyd were at work
last week In the new hwlllty.

Get Quick Results! Place A S5 Per Day 'Bulletin Board· Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section.

'

I

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