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eonunued from page 1

EMS has five Thursday calls
Five calls for assistance were answered Thursday by units of
the Mel~s County Emergency Medical Service.
At 10:12 a .m. the. Pomeroy unit went to the State Street In
Pomeroy tor Bernessa Phillips who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 10; 14 a.m. the Rutland unit transported
Ginny Wllllamson to Veterans Memorial Hospital from an
automobile accident on Side Hill Road near Rutland; at 12:46
p.m . the Middleport unit went to Railroad Street for Dorothy
Roush who was taken to Veterans and at 6:22p.m. the Rutland
unit took Charles Foley from his ·Larkin Street resident to
Ve terans Memorial.
.
·
.
The Olive Township Fire Deparlment .wes called at 8: 44p.m.
to County Road 50 where there was a natural gas leak.

Restraining._..

Sheets in 'guarded' condition
Keith Sheets. 32. Rt. 4. Galllpolls, was reported In " guarded' '
but " stable" condition Friday morning at Holzer Medical
Center where he was admitted Thursday with a gunshot wound
Of the chest.
Gallipolis Pollee said Sheets, an employee of Foodland, was
the victim of an apparent self·lniiicted gunshot wound. He was
found In his car, on the parking lot at GalUpolls Foodland.
Officers said they found a note and a .22-callber revolver In
the vehicle. Contents of the note were not disclosed.
Sheets was dliicovered by Gerald Rupe. another employe of
Foodland, who heard the vehiCle's horn blowing when Sheets
slumped over the wheel. The shooting Is still under
Investigation.
Gallipolis Detective Mike Tucker said he has been unable to
question Sheets bE"Cause of his condition.

Woomer ...

continued from page1

"We are just absolutely ec·
ruary 1979.
static." said Tim Haas of the
Sellers was shot to death. but
South Carolina Coalition to Abol·
Wanda Summers survived to
Ish the Death Penalty, which
testify against Woomer. despite
canceled a planned vigil outside
having part of her face blown
the governor's mansion.
away by the same shotgun blast
Earlier this week. Gov. Carroll
that killed her friend .
Campbell refused to commute
Earlier. Woomer and Skaar
Woomer's sentence to life In
killed Cottageville, S.C.. coin
prison.
collector John Turner. Author!·
Among the arguments made to
ties said they came to South
the Supreme Court by Woomer's Carolina with the Intention of
lawyers Is one that overturned stealing valuable coins.
the death sentence of another
The other victims were Arnie
South Carolina death row Inmate Lee Richardson and his sister-In·
earlier this week.
law, Earldean Wright, both shot
The high eourt ruled Monday
to death during a robbery at the
. the prosecutor in the 1987 murder ' family's home in rural George. case of Demetrius Gathers of town County. Richardson's 5·
; Charles ton may have swayed the year-old daughter was wounded
• jury's sentencing. decision by by the assailants but managed to
heaping praise on Gathers' vic· rid e ~ miles on her bicycl~ In an
tim . Woomer ' s atiorn e ys effort to get help.
claimed the same tactic was used
Skaar, also of Huntington.
In his case.
committed ·suicide when he and
Before the stay was gran ted. Woomer were cornered by pollee
Woomer ordered a last meal of officers at a Myrtle Beach motel
"pizza with everything but an· in the hours after the shootings .
chovles" and asked to be burled
Without the stay, Woomer
next to his mother In Kentucky . would have become the 244th
Relatives came to visit.
person to die In the state' s
Woomer, 34, of Huntington. electric chair since 1912 and the
W.Va .. was sentenced to die for third since the death penalty was
, the slaying of Della !;ellers. o~e reinstated In 1976. Seven people ·
of two clerks he and Eugene have been executed In other
· Skaar kidnapped from a Pawleys states In 1989.
Island convenience store In Feb·

and a tornado swept through a
rural eastern Pennsylvania communlly , Injuring at leas t four
people.
Fierce winds In Florid a

continued rrom page 1

historic preservation or flood·
plain aspects, w)\en the mayor
was told to proceed as he deemed
necessary.
.
'
11 would appear that the
dis trlct court process began after
Dr. Frank Porter III, who.ls one
of five members of Pomeroy's
historic Preservation Commts·
sl.on. spoke with Cremeens·
Strong. Cremeens-Strong says
she was contacted first by Porter
and has slnee "had a lot of
conversation'with" Porter. Mary
Ann Peters, of the Ohio His tortcal Society. and with the historic
preservation office at the state
level.
· Dr. Porter was contacted Wed·
d b T o
Se
nes ay Y he ally ntln~lfor
Information. but refused to dis·
cuss the matter.
According to Cremeens·
Strong, the Corps of Engineers
violated Section 106 of the Na·
tkmal Historic Preservation Act
by Issuing the permits to Turner.
According to documents filed
In the court by Cremeens-Strong.
the excavation and construction
Is "within 100 yards of the

district buildings are more like
1.000 feet and across a main
street" from the Turner-Cain
site, •'with a · drug store and
automobile -deale r s hip In
between."
It was also pointed out In
documents forthe defendantthat
20 to 30 recreational docks are
built every year In Huntington
District under general · IJermlt ,
and an es timated 25 docks are In
the water every year around
Pomeroy.
The defendant maintains there
has been no Irreparable Injury to
Pomeroy's historic district. "No
historic buildings are about to be
razed or permanently altered.
We are advised that the city has
done that Itself within 'he historic.
'
district. but that Is clearly not
being done by anyone under
permit from the defendant."
An Initial conference on this
case was held last week In
Columbus. The next step In' the
court process will be some sort of
ruling from the district judge.
Rattan and Cremeens·Strong
report'.

Helen Pauline Thoma King, 63,
of 784 Kevin Dr.. Columbus, died
Thursday at the Kobecker Hos·
pice . . Olentangy Road.
Columbus.
Born on Feb. 19. 1926, at
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, she
. was the daughter of the late Ollie
and Georgia Thoma. Mrs. King
was a member of the Maize
Manor Methodist Church,
member of the Methodist
Women's Love Circle, and had
retired from the Lazarus Co., all
In ColumbUs. She belonnged to
the 20 year club at Lazarus.
Surviving is her husband , Leo
King. to whom she has been
married since March 6, 1946.
Other survivors Include a son and
daughter-In -law. Michael and
Marjorie. and a granddaughter,
Tina. all of Columbus; a brother·.
Guy and Ellen Thoma, Rutland;

downed trees, power lines and
damaged homes . •
A Potomac Electric Power
Company spokesman said two
days of storms ending la te
Thursday caused "unprecend·
ented damage'· to the company's
system In and around the nation's capital.
In the Central Manor, Pa .. area
Thursday evening, a • torando

9

8

Stocks ·
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elllll &amp; Loewl

GM-217

WAS S24,999

WAS S24,999

1989 CADILLAC SEVILLE

NOWt$21 ,4 99

.,.,.

:~s:14,400 NOW!$13,400

1989 CHMOLET ASTRO CL VAN

1989 OI.DSMOBU CUI1ASS

-

":).

-

NOW/

WAS 511,495

1989 CHEVROLET CAVAUER

.
NOWI$1 0,295

GM-204

WAS .9,495

starr .

~~

(

•

mt
14 Soctlont, 94 Pog•
A Muhimedle Inc Newapep•

Excess rain threatens crops
McKenzie said..
Hay crops also may not be
effected by the rain If farmers
can harvest their winter crop
soon, McKenzie said.
" If we can get our first harvest
In soon we can get a couple of
more harvests In this year, " he
said. "We could be In our second
growth period right now . At least

we won't be hurting as much as
we did In the drought .••
It 1s ha rd to predict how the
crops will turn out , Vollbornsalq.
"We don't know what the rest
of the season will be like " he
said. "It could turn out O.K.'' ·
"You're going to have to walt
until fall to see what will
happen, " McKenzie said.

M. • county
e~g.·~
II

~

d d (
recommen e J or
d "tSaster
•
re t•~e1

It Is Important to get tobacco

planted as soon as possible since
ltmustbeharvestedbeforethere
Is a !rostln the fall, Vollborn said.
"If It frosts while II Is In the
field It hurts the crop," he added.
Soybean crops usually do not
have to be planted until the
beginning of July, Vollborn said.
Approximately 50 percent of the
county's soybean crop has been
planted, he added.
When soybeans are planted
later In the spring the chances of
having a good soybean yield are
decreased, Vollborn said.
One advantage of the wet
spring Is that It has helped to
bring grazing pastures back to
life after last year's drought,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Sla le Emergency Board
recommended Friday that allbu(
five of Ohio's 88 counties be
declared dlsaster 'areas because
of excessive moisture and below·
normal temperatures this
spring.
The only counties not recom·
mended for disaster relief are
Stark, Scioto. Gallla , Columbl·
ana and Carroll, said Don Grul!e,
program specialist for the Ohio
Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation Service.
Qualified Ohioans would be
eligible to apply tor emergency
loans at 4.5 percent Interest
through the . Farmers ·· Home
Administration.
Twenty-eight of the 83 counties
recommended for relief Friday
had already been declared dlsas·
ter areas June 12 by President
Bush.
Farmers must carry Federal
Crop Insurance Corp. coverage

-~ke 11p, 'He dlif Jrto enter ill In

NOW/

•

GALLIPOLIS - The MasonGaiUa·Mt:lgs District ot the .Boy
Scouts of America's Tri-State
Area Council announced tha't It
raised funds exceeding the
$13;000 goal for 1989.
.
With Ron Mt;Dade, GaiUpolls
area manager for Columbus
Southern Power Company, servIng as district chairman, and ·
county cha,lrmen Scott Hinsch
(manager of the Gallipolis Star
Bank), Bill Nease (manager, ,
Bank One of Pomeroy) and Jon
Pal'rack (Nationwide Insurance
agent, Point Pleuant, W.Va.)·
leading the sustaining member·

to qualify for emergency loans
for crop damage, said David
Drake, farm program specialist
for the Ohio Farmers Home
Administration.
FCIC coverage Is not neces·
sary to get assistance for dam·
age to such things ·· as farm
buildings.
Farmers must have suffered at
least a 30 percen I loss of yield to
qualify for an emergency loan,
meaning they likely will have to
walt until harvest lime to get
their loans, Drake said.
They may apply. however. a~
soon as their counties are declared disaster areas. he said.
Gov. Richard Celeste must
forward the board's recommen·
dation to the U.S. secretary of
agriculture, who will declae
whether. a county Is to be
declared a disaster area.
Neither Drake nor Grube
would speculate on how long the
process might take.

Cooperative contract
continues 'for colleges

SPENDING TIME WITII DAD- This IHIJe girl &amp;peat Saturday
wtth her dad at the GaJUpolls dowatOWD aldewalk sales. Don't
forge&amp; to take a moment to recognize your !ather tor the tlmea and
memorlea shared. And remember all the little thlnp that add up to
tbe JO:r of bavtnr ~d being a fatller. (Timett-8ent1Del pboto by
Mar1aret Caldwell)
.

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Board of Regents voted Friday to
continue for another five years
the amended contract which
defines the terms of a coopera·
tlve relationship between Rio
Grande Community College and
Rio Grande Colleg~ .
"This cooperative agreement
Is unique within the State of
Ohio," said Robert L. (Bob)
Evans of Rio Grande, a member
of the Ohio Board of Regents. "II
was designed to meet the needs
of people In this area of the state.
It has worked well."
Under the terms of the contract, the college will continue to
provide certain Instructional ser·
vices for the community college.
The agreement also will permit
continued use o! the college

facilities (with the exception of
residence facilities) by both the
students of the college and
community college.
The board's action represents
an . extension of the current
cooperative agreement, which
has been In effect since 1984. That
agreement In turn was an
amended version of the original
agreement, which dates back to
1974.
One Individual serves as the
president of both the college and
the community college. However, each lnstltutlon Is governed
Independently by Us own board'
of trustees.
The colleges will unite to
become Universit y of Rio
Grand~ In the fall.

•.

ship enrollment team, the MGM lind Cub Scouts, and Camp
Klashuta (Chester) and Camp
was able to ~alse more money for
Arrowhead (Ona, W.Va.) .
area Scou tlng this year than in
the past three years.
In addition, the MGM received
Some of the Scouting events
a boost In Its fund -raising drive already In the yearbook are the
from Its aolf scramble at Cllf· Klondike Derby (for Boy
!side Golf Course In Gallipolis on · Scouts), tbe Pinewood Derby
Mayll.
(for Cub Scouts}, the Bowl·a·
Thon, Blue and Gold Banquets,
Among the Items the money aDd Courts of Honor. Events on
will be used for are lralnlnll the calendar Include the Cub
materials and aids for 'leaders, Olymplt:a on Saturday, June 24 at
professional staff In the districts, GaviD Recreational Park In
•council office stat! to provide Cheshire, Boy Scout Summer
help ·for each unit's "eeds, Camp In June and July, Webeloa
summer camps for Boy Scouts camp In July, Cub Day Camp on
July 17·21, and the Bike Rodeo
..
later In the summer.

'

. Meigs grand jury indiets
five .during June session

POMEROY - Five bills of lndlctmentl were banded down
this past week by the Melp Couaty Grand Jury. Indicted In
Melp County were Michael Todd Muillel', for .exual battery;
Harvey Faw, tor carrying a concl!aled weapon; Marvin P.
Cremeans, tor bavlng a weap011 while under a dlsabiUty; and
Oarrln W. Wise and Sherman A. Artrip, both for rect!lvllll
ltoleD property.
More laformatloa on the lndlctmentl will be released later by
, lbe Metaa Cpuaty PrOieCIItor's oftlce.

I

Cloudy. Hl1hli In mid 70s. •
Chance of rain 70 percent.

MGM district. scouts raise $13,000

NOWI

Gallla • Mason County
.
675-3388

Along the River ......... Bl·8
Buslness .......... ............D-1
Comics· ........... ....... .Insert
Classlfleds .... ............. D3- 7
Deaths ........................ A-3
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports .......... , ............ C1·6

By MICHAEL SHEARER .
Corn farmers who are planning
TtmetHieallllel staff
to store their corn In silos to feed
GALLIPOLIS_ Gallla County
cattle do not have to worry as
much since they do not need a
farmers are &amp;tnlilliDi to gel
their crops planted as more than
high quality corn, McKenzie
said.
three Inches of rain h'a s fallen
already this month.
As for tobacco, Vollborn said
After last summer's drought, · slightly more than half of the
tanners are now behind schedule
tobacco crops have been planted
In planting crops due to wet
In Gallla ·County. He added that
co~lllon.s ·which have existed
thiS week's rains have hurt local
throughout the spring.
tobacco farmers.
"We're In a ·tight spot right
' 'The heavy rainfall was crltl·
know," said Dave McKenzie,
cal In limiting what we can
executive director of tbe Gallla · produce," he said. "We need

B;atuo.wr,·(l~Eu

Cl

Inside

-------------------------------••
.

us."
She said the one thing she ·
GALLIPOLIS - He's the one remembers most about him was
who tells the tall tales, plays that he read the Bible 17 times
make believe and spends play- before he was 18 years old.
time in the evenings after a long
''That was something that
day's work.
always Impressed me," HineHe's dad, pa, father. daddy ~nd man said.
.
pappa. And today ts the day
Little four-year-old Emily
reserved for thinking a bout him, Meadows also gets entertained
remembering him, and offering by her father when they play
him love and support.
house.
Today·Is Father's Day.
"I cook for him ·tn my own
"Anyone can be a father , built ' kitchen," Emily said. "He eats
takes someone special to be a playdough and It comes out of his
dad," said Kevin Plantz, 24, ear. But he told me I couldn'ttry
Galllpolls. He Is the father o! one that."
,
and very soon to be a father of
To her, dads tickle and tease.
two.
' and "I love I)IJn . more than
· "It takes a lot of work to be a anyone else," Emily said.
real dad, " Plantz said. " He
For Bob Magnussen, 11, of
spends time playing and shows Gallipolis, dads still have time to
Interest In things that the kids are play after a long day's work.'
Interested ln."
·
"He comes home and rests for
Plantz said his father worked a a little, then he does things with
lot when he was young but now us In the evenings," .Bob said.
his father Is striving to spend "He plays baseball with me a lot.
tJme and be close tohls children. He pitches good, except when be
Marguerite (Moore) Hineman, gets (ar away."
76, of Gallipolis, remembers her
Bob said he enjoys playing with
father always entertaining her his dad and taking their usual
wlth'talltales.
trip together to Cedar Falls. ·
'
·
"
Take a moment to remember
"I remember him telling us
and
recognize your paternal
big, wild tales for us to enjoy,"
parent
for his hard work, !or your
Hineman said. "Of course, we
would get excited and believe · special times, and tor all the little
him. but that was just part of his things.

GM-219

18.888.00
'11,888.00
nO,III.OO
11,111.00
•7,881.00
•3.181.00
11,2H.OO
'I.IH.OO

t''

.

• ., ,. ., .....

Middleport-Pomerov-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant June 18, 1989

Thanking.·dad for
all the little things

NOW!$)4,7 50
CHEVROLET
. CAVAUER

'

•.

'1!' - ,.. ,... -

"We're running out of days to
plan·! "
Ed ..Vollborn, Gallla County
Extension Agent tor agriculture,
said only 70 percent of the
• county's corn crop Is planted.
.Most farmers prefer to have
thelrcrllp&amp;in the ground by about
May 20, he added.
.
until
Farmers
will
have
to
walt
CORN SUFFERING- Thill corn, growlnglaa field alongSR 141
fall .to see what effect .the wet
near Cea~ery, II jut begbmlag to brealllllrough the ground.
spring will have on their corn
Mally Galla County fanners stW have not been able to plant their
crops,
Vollborn said, adding that
crop11 due to the wet sprtnr condltlou while other farmers are
farmers
who are growing corn
beblad schedule. (Times.Senllnel photO by Michael Shearer)
for grain are at a greater risk.
"If there Is an early frost It
could be totally dlsastroua," he
said. "If they are llarvesllnl for
grain the maturity may not be
there."

WAS S,5,4SO

:tiCJepitalnews

_ .,__

,..

In Our Town: Max Tawney visits
Turkey; tomatoes are ripe..;Page

~1-

NOWt$2 3,699

;~·!17,495 NowtS16,49S

1304-A

... ,.

~~~~~d ~~':~~:~l~ns~~~:: ~~~tl~~sf~~~e~~~~t~~a~l~~!!

GM-193

1989 CHEVROLET BERETTA

.9

"'

Beat of the Bend: Things are
looking up for Bob Gilmore .••Page B-8

Vol24 No.19

1989 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88

1989 CHEVROLET S·ILAZER 4X4

WAS S16,995

"

ttntS -

· Times-Sentinel

GM-209

"

•

....

WAS S22,499

"

Rain mars play in U. S. Open...

Page~~

1989 'cADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

GM-171

GM-221

'N .,.. • •

50 cents

Keeping
the past
alive•••

Dance planned
A dance will be held Saturday
night at the -E ll Denison Post 467;
American Legion, hall from 8
p.m to midnight. Music will be by
the new band, "Kitchen Pickers"
of Parkersburg. Donations will
be of $2.50 for adults and $2
children under 12.
To continue classes
Trinity Church In Pomeroy will
be having Sunday School during
the summer months contrary to a
previous announcement that It
would be discontinued for the
summer. Classes will be held at
9:15a.m.

1

1~443381

.,.

AnnouQcements

Am Electric Power ............ .27%
AT&amp;T .. ...... ......... ................35')i,
Ashland 011 ... ..... .. .. ... ......... 40~
Bob Evans ....... ........... :.... .. .15%
Charming Shoppes .... .......... 16%
City Holding Co .. ....... .. .. ... .. 15 ~
Federal Mogul.. ........ .. , ... .. .. 26~
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. ........... 54\1;
Heck's .. .. .. .. ............... ....... , .. %
Key Centurion .... .... .......... .. 12%
Lands' End ................ ... .... .. 27')8
Limited Inc ............... ......... 31%
· Multimedia Inc ........ .... ... ..... 98
Rax Restaurants .. .. ......... ..... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .. .... .. .. 17~
Shoney's Inc ... ..... .. ............. ll ~
. Wendy's Int1 ........ .. ... .. .. .. .. .. 6'!4
Worthington Ind ........... ..... .. 22

1989 CADILLAC ELDORADO

WAS S10,H5

Meigs c.untr

.. . . . -

SPECIAL FACTORY ·PUR'CHASE
USED CARS

IMBLEDON
1

. ........

'

Injured at least four people and
destroyed seven homes along
s tate Route 999, eyewitnesses
and emergency management
officials sa ld,
Officials said the tornado
carved a 10-mllepaththrough the
rural area between Millersville
a nd Montville. Much of the
damage was centered In the tiny
community of Central Manor;
where at least 20 hOmes were
damaged, officials said.
"I don't wan t to see another .
one." eyewitness Ruth Frey said.
" II sounded like an explosion.
The first thing I did was to turn
around and check my house."

HBO and Wmbledon.
A p6rlllct matr:tr lor 15 yeatS.

Muscaro. 56. was recom·
mended In May by a screening
:committee to succeed Arm·
: strona. who became commls·
· sloner ,In 1911l.
·
· "Naturally. I'm very excited
about the challenge ahead."
MuiCaro said. "My goal Is to
malat.ala the high standards o!
tbe OHSAA. I ·reel strongly we
: IUive one of the best organlza·
, tloastll the country, bull hope we
•JUlll.lllr "acll a polnJ where we
: tlllnll there Is no room for
IJDPI'Oftment."
Ltlrry Morrison, president of
tbe Board of Control. pralaecl

-'¥

Sunda

Muscaro named OHSAA commissioner
COLUMBUS. Ohio WPI) Clair Muscaro was officially
approved Thursday by the Board
of Control of the Ohio High School
Athletic Association as its new
commissioner .
Musaro. an assistant commls·
sloner the past five years. will
: replace Dick Armstrong effec: live Jan. 1. 1990, becoming the
• OHSAA 's eighth commission In
Its 82 years of exls tence.

......

••••••••••••••••••••••IIII~•••••••••••••

Pomeroywhich
Main IsStreet
district.
listed historic
on the
National Register of Historic
Places, and within approxl·
mately 20 yards ·of a V lllage
His torte District , which Is eligl,
ble for inclusion on the National
Register." Such excavation and
construction Is cIted as " a·
serious threat to the historic
Integrity of these properties"
which "Introduces visual ele·
ments that are out of character
with the property."
In addition to requesting the
temporary restraining order an'd
preliminary ·Injunction.
Cremeens-Strong has requested·
on behalf of the plaintiff. the
payment of attorney fees and
related costs under the National
Historic Preservation Act. If the
court does not order costs paid
under the national act , her firm
will likely just absorb the Joss.
Cremeens-Strong says. "The VII·
lage has agreed to absorb out-of·
pocket expenses" such as court
filing fees. she adds.
• U.S. District Attorney James
Rattan, Columbus. representing
the Corps , apknowledges that the
federal law does exist, but that II
has not been violated by the corps
In· this matter. The permits
Issued by the corps were general
permits for a small job which
was a great distance from the
a slster-in-J"aw. Pat Thoma. nearest historical building In
Pomeroy; nieces and nephews,
Pomeroy's historic section, Rat·
Terri and Dwight Sturgeon and tan says.
son, Brandon, Kevin, Cheryl,
According to. a document filed
Suzan and Kelly Thoma , all of the by Rattan. "there Is no excavaPomeroy area.
tion being done under permit
Her mother-in-law, Neva King from the Corps of ,Engineers If
and brother-In-law, Virgil and that Is being done, It Is above the
Delores King and family qf ordinary high water line In an
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, also area over which the corps does
·
survive.
not have permit au thorlty." The
document further states that
Besides her parents. she was excavation and construction of
preceded In death by· a brother, the recreational boat dock are
Earl Thoma.
being done "under au thorlty of
Funera! services will be held pre-existing general permits.
Monday at 10 a. m at the one national and one by the
Ruthford·Corbln Funeral Home, Huntington District Corps of
517 High St ., Worthington, with Engineers. each containing spe·
the Rev. Lowell Nelson clflc provisions for consideration
officiating.
of possible affects on historic
Friends may call at the funeral property. There Is no allegation
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on that either of those provisions
Sunday. Burial will be In Union has been violated In this case."
Cemetery. Olen tangy River The provisions of the general
Road, Columbus .
permits are described as a
"flexible application of Section
106" which gives the Corps of
Muscaro's qualifications to be Engineers authority .to deter·
mine the "area of potential
the new commissioner.
"I think the three most lmpor· effects."
The defendant refutes the
tant things that resulted In Clair
getting the job was his wide. plaintiff's allegation regarding
range of experience In athletics. the close proxtml!y of the exca·
his strong publiC relations skUis · vatlon and construction to Pome·
and his work here In the office," roy's established historical dis·
trlct. "The established historical
Morrison said.

--Area deaths-__;._Helen King

~

-

Storm batters East Coast early today
By United Preas Jaternadonal
More than !Kl,OOO people were
stU! without electricity In the
Washington, D.C.. area early
Friday following thunderstorms

.

FridaV. June 16, 1989

Pomelov-Middlaport. Ohio

r---Local news briefs...- -

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~···-"

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••

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Stnce the start o! the year, new
Cub Scout packs have been
OJ'IIIDIIed In Bidwell and Eureka
Ill Gallla CoUJIIt, and In Apple
Grove, nat ROck, Hartford and
t.oa Ia Mum County. Ia addl·
tloa. 1111r Boy Scout troops llave
11M! Ol'laalzed In GalllpoUs and
Hartfold, aad In Syracull! ID
~tal Couaty. A pew taw en·
~t Explorer poat IIIIHI'·
Jaa COO!PIItloa In Melli~­
The additional unltl have l11U
6ll8 IIOp to till MGM.

ttftloe), ea Is t'•'
a .... • •• 't11iir
..... Galu,.lll), 1M h&amp; Ill {HRMit?411

••••rerl
•-tm..... ..._.,.*

..._..-,Pels&amp;l'fnnst, W.Va.) .......
Nan• (lluk One,
- , 11A dlltnat
(!'bites Ina d

.....

)

! i• ••• " """•t•

•• • .-,.r·,,,,

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.. . . . . . .

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,.

.• ' 8211 'l'lllrd Ave., Gelllpn!lw, Oldo
::
(81t) "'-2SU
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...

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(814) 88Z.U16

ROBERT L WINGETT
Pub! IIIIer

HOBART WILSON .JB.
Exee.Uve Editor

..

PAT Wm'EREAD
Allbtaut Publlaber-ControUer

A MEMBER of The United Preas International, Inland Daily Press Asstrla·
tlon and tbe American Newspaper Publlahera AISOCiatlon.

.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 3llO words

,.

lCIIII. Alllelr.nartiUblect toedltlllllllidlllllotbeofllllal with name, addreouad
telf!Pbone n\ll1\ber. No un~lpa! let&amp;ers will be published. Letters should be In
aood taste. addrelsln&amp; I&amp;BUe&amp;, not perac:111llt1es.

..

.·

·. Remembering America's
' 'Forgotten War'

DAMASCUS.Syrta-Pientyof
peop)e have wished Yaslr Arafat
dead over the years, l!ut U he Is
ever assassinated, it may well be
by a fellow Palestinian. That Is
the prediction of a Palestinian
terrorlst who could be the orie to
order the de&lt;'d.
For 24 years, Ahmed Jlbrll and
Arafat hwe been bitter enemies.
They share a common cause- a
Palestinian homeland - but a
different approach. Jlbrll des· . •
pises Aralat for renouncing terrorlsm, recognizing Israel and
courting the United States.
Thelr face-of! has been nearly
fatal at times. Aides to Arafat
say Jlbrll has tried to have
Ararat kllled several times since
1966. Aralat himself declined to '
elaborate in a recent Interview
·with us in Tonlsla. His only '
comment was that an lndepend·
ent Palestinian state would put

anendtospollersllkeJlbrU.
Jlbrll was not so shy about
condem,nlng his old nemesis
when we lntervlewro him in
Damascus. He had plenty to say,
Including a prediction that Arafat would be assassinated sometime soon.
We asked If he,would Issue the
execution order himself. He did
not say yes or no. "We are ·
w•tc'l:~nd waltllte to see what
the Am
ans will give Arafat,"
he said. "We are sure In advance
thatyouwon'tglvehlmanythlng.
The Americans have made Arafat do a striptease. So he ha_s
stripped all all his clothes, and
the Americans and Israelis wUI
give him nothing for lt." .
,
Jli»'U said that In spite of U.!t
negotiations with Aratat and the
Palestine Uberatlon Organlza·
tlon, the Bush administration
will side with Israel and hang

Arafat out tn dry. ''Therefore, we
can fl111re that the end of Aratai
Is Inevitable," Jlbrfi said. "It will
be a natural end. It Is coming
shortly. As similar as the elld of
Sadat. The only dltference here Is
that Sadat had Egypt in his
hands. Ararat has nothing."
Egyptian President Anwar Sa·
dat wu UBallslnated by Jdoslem
fundalmentallsts who were
·angry that he had signed a peace
treaty with IsraeL
"Are you suggesting that
someone wUI assassinate Arafat?" we asked.
· "Yes. That Is what I mean,"
said Jlbrll.
In Jlbrll' s mind, assassination
by angry fundamentalists is a
"natural end" for Aratat.
,
Jlbrll recalled the time when
heand Aratat worlled together In

',.
:.
,
•
•
-;

Syria on their common cause
uptU 19811. "We weretreatllteltlnt
as family," Jlbrll said. He said he
broke with Arafat becii,Use the
PLO leader was "sbameiess"
and a liar. ·
Jlbrll ended his assessment of
Arafat by questiOning his heritage - the lowest blow In the
Mldcm East.
"I tlilnk that Arafat might not
be an Arab," he said. "1111 now,
we have no docullllllt which
proves that Arafat is Palestinian
or an Arab. His-. mother Is
Palestinian, but UUiii-SI ,kiiOwnQf
his father.
Jlbrll suagested that a check
Into Ararat's family tree would
turn up 'lome JeWs. 'In Jlbrll' s
mind, tllal ... t~ oJill! way .to
explain Aratat'.s WIHIIPes&amp; to
deal with Israel.

By LEON DANIEL

,.

,

June 18, 1989..·

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

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Page A-2

Jibril predicts demise of Arafat

ADlvlllon of

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- The unveiling of the design lor the Korean War
Veterans Memorial in the Rose Garden of the White House prompted
me to remember the conflict often descrlb&lt;'d as " forgotten. "
Admittedly, as wars go, this one was,n 't much, unless you happened
to have been In it.
.
·.
'
It used to irk thoseolus who were there when Americans back home
kept calling our war a pollee action.
Four million casualties, alter all. wasn't cops and _robbers stul!.
. But, having experienced World War II, It is perhaps understanda ble that many American civilians found the smaller-scale Korean
conflict boring.

.

The Korean War wasn't televised. In Its final days, it often failed
&gt;even to make the front pages.
·: You had to have been there.
:: Marine Corps boot camp at Parris lsl!lnd, S.C., was a garden spot
• compar&lt;'d to the Korean peninsula. which we all knew was our
: ultimate destination:
; Drill Instructors, some of whom had fought In the Big One. warned
.• that some of us would not survive.
:: Korea turned out to be, by ~easons. both the coldest and hottest

~

':'!J

-: ' Actually, I never heard of a M.A.S.H. unit until years later when I
.• saw the television series of the same name and whose dialogue
-; smack&lt;'d more of the VIetnam. era· than my time In Korea.
:: Anyway, I wa~ taken in a jeep ambulance over al\ ley, bumpy road
.• to this m&lt;'dlcal outfit behind the line. There were some tents there. A
: doctor in one of them removed pieces of shrapnel from my left leg. If
'; there had been any nurses there. I'm sure I would have remember&lt;'d
,· them.
: Later. I was sent to Japan to recuperate in a U.S. Navy hospllal.
.· where the nurses were terrific. After a couple of months in the
·: hOspital. I was sent back to Korea. I was on line when the shooting
; siDpp&lt;'d on July 27. 1953.

•ea.-LZI

We climbed out of our fighting holes and shook hands and trad&lt;'d
clgatettes with the communist forces , whom
called gooks and
•• dlher similarly IJtelegant epithets.
.
:
I don't remember much about the voyage home on a troop ship
• except that we ate gray oatmeal and barfed a lot.
In San Francisco, there was no ticker-tape parade to welcome us
• home but we were permitted weekend liberty decked out in our forest
• greens festooned with a capaign ribbon or two, not to,mentlon m&lt;'dals
attes tlng to our good conduct.
I don't remember much about that weekend except that we drank
• whiskey and barfed a lot.
:
'Discharged . honorably. I went home to Tennessee. where
• acquaintances remarked that they hadn't seen mearoun(llor a while
• and wondered where I had been keeping myself.
•
A decade later. I went off to war again. but this time just to watch.
•
As a reporter covering the VIetnam War, I met a lot of grunts . The
• ones who survived are now VIetnam veterans.
•
Upon returning home, some Vietnam vets were heckled. ll's no
• wonder they feel undercherlshed.
•
We Korean vets · were merely Ignored. No longer. Now they're
: glvjng us our own memorial.
• It's OK with me If Americans want lo'remember the4.9 million of us
•• Korean era veterans who survived the war. But the ones we all should
: honor are the 54.246 who didn't.

we

U

·Kitchen Faucet Exira long 9"
spout .
072-22

•

:• Letters to the editor

•
•
••
•
One man said, I could always wUIIng, and ablelfyou need him.
• rely on f.Y old man for money.
Soon there .t ..a family, now the
Anotlter said, I could always shoe Is on the other foot. You are
• count 011 mine to get -me--out or · walking your little ones thru the
; trouble. I sa ld, I think of a father hllls and valleys of life, explain: as a person that as a ~mall boy Ing, buying th!it first car, offer• you could reach up and get his Ing advice, and watching them
, halld and walk the hllll and reach adulthood. Sometimes
• valleys of lite. He would explain when you talk to them you feel
• It u you 10 along, telling you why they are nothearlngwhat you are
: the fll'&amp;ll Is green and why the say!RJ. Dlcln' t we Just 10 thru
thll? Qh, yes. Life II one vicious
blue.
u you reached ypur cycle, 1!1 been thilt way for
:
a1e )'Uri he llat!U wallllnJ several thousand years and hope.
; you !hru tlat hills and valley~, bt.!t tully for several thousand more
• by now yau feel you are toa btl W years.
; bold 1111 llaDd. But he 11etpa
A Father Is a man that cares
; reachlq. Btnowhelstellllleyou for II¥ tamUy:
• tlH! dolalld don'ts, tilt rllbta ..d

. .•

4

Police investigate one accident

Melba B. Thompson

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Pollee Investigated an accident at
5:05p.m. Friday on Spruce Street . just west of Fifth Avenue.
Ponce said a car driven by Martha Hurt, 37. 79 Spruce St.,
Gallipolis. went left of center and collided with another vehicle
driven by Steven D. Mullins. 30, Gallipolis. Damage was heavy
to thl1 Hurt car and moderate to the Mullins vehicle. No one was
cited.
In other action. pollee arrested George M. Nowlin, 34,
Gallipolis. oil a charge of driving under the Influence'and loud
exhaust.

LONG BOTTOM - Melba
Bevan Thompson . 73, of State
Route 248, Long Bottom, died
Thursday at the Holzer Medical
Center following a short Illness.
She was a former owner and
operator of a restaurant In
Cambridge.
Born on Dec. 10, 1915 at
Cambridge, she was the daugh·
ter of .Richard Reber and Stella
Ryan Reber.
She I&amp; survived by two daughters, Mu. Henry (Pat) Thomas
of Long Bottom, and Mrs . Paul
{Kay) Roberts of Jefferson;
three sisters, Betley Sayre and
Bonnie Wilson, both of Newark,
and Wanda ' Blattner of Cambridge; two brothers. Jim and
Jackie Reber. both of Newark;
and a special friend, C.E. Lash-

Police arrest man for auto thefi
'GALLIPOLIS- Charles P. Edwards. 20, Sheridan, Ohio, was
arrested Friday by G~lUpOlls City Pollee on a charge of
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle .
Edwards alleg&lt;'dly took a 1973 Chevrolet pickup truck from
Russell, Ky .. abandoning It on Lower River Road, near Clipper
Mills. Officers of the Gallla County Sheriff's Department and
State Highway Patrol searched the area south 9f town for
Edwards.
Edwards was apprehended on Garfield Avenue In Gallipolis,
by city Patrolman Bernard Goelllng.
Pollee said the owner of the pickup, who was not Identified,
did not know his vehicle had been stolen. unto they told him to
"Go look In your driveway." The vehicle had not been entered
Into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC).
•
Edwards is being held In the Gallla County jail for an
appearance in Galllpolls Municipal Court.

Waste conferences to be held
GALLIPOLIS - Hazardous waste minimization will be the
topic for a series of conferences lor businesses, sponsored by the
WSOSCommunlty Action Commission and theOhloTechnology
Transfer Organization (OTTO) . Participants will learn about
the minimization of solvent, paint, metal plating, and lubricant
w;~ste streams, as well as procedures to perform a waste audit.
Thrqugh waste minimization, businesses can reduce the costs
for waste disposal. reduces lines due to non·compUance. and
reduce future liability Imposed by hazardous waste generation.
Each one-day conference will present the same Information In
locations across Ohio. The conferences are sch&lt;'duled Ia be held
In Cleveland June 27: Toledo June 28; Dayton June 29; and
Zanesville June 30. A conference procerolngs will also be
available.
.
For more Information, contact Dwight Leedy. local OTTO
agent. at the University of Rio Grande at (6141 245-5353 or
Kathleen Bower at (419) 334-8911.

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallla County Sheriff's Deparlrhent
investigated a minor accident at 1 p.m. Friday In the
parking lot of the Ohio Valley Bank. Jackson Pike Branch. at
the junction of US 35 and SR 160.
.
.
Officers said a car driven by Juanita VInson, 59, Rt . 2,
Bidwell, back&lt;'d Into another car driven by Mary E. Yoho. 67.
Rt. 3, Gallipolis . Damage was minor to the VInson car and
moderate to the Yoho vehicle. There was no citation.
The sheriff's olllce also Investigated an accident at 12:42 a.m.
Saturday In the parking lot of the Gallipolis Holiday Inn at
Kanauga. No one was lrijured.
Deputies said something fell off the front seat of a pickup
truck driven by Duane.Paul Falcon. 42, Sulphur, La .• and he lost
control when he reached to pick it up. The vehicle jumped a
J;nedlan and struck a parked pickup truck owned by Terry
¥~Carf!!y of Letart , W.Va. Damage was mlnortobot~vehlcl~s.
'The sheriff's ttepertment arrested Falcon on a charge of
dr-Iving under the influence.

Six apply for marringe licenses.
GALLIPOLIS -These couples recently applied for marriage
licenses In Gallla County Probate Court:
Michael Robert Smith. 18. ESR. Gallipolis. and Debra Jean
Buttrick, 19. Rt. 2 Crown City.
Troy. Edward Shaw. 22 .. 107'h Second Ave., Gallipolis. and
Karii'K. Kemper, 19, Rt. 3, Bidwell.
David Kenneth Kuhn. 20. Rt , 3, Bidwell. and Windy K. Horner,
• 18, Rt. 3, Oak Hill .
Wilbur Theodore Woodyard. 20, Rt . 2. Crown City, and Sarah
Irene Simpson. 18, 2014 Eastern.Ave., GalUI!OIIs.
William E . Swain. 22. ·Rt. 1, Crown City: and Tabetha L.
Sheets, 20, 515 Oak Drive. Gallipolis.
·
Michael Allen Moore, 21, 749 Second Ave., GalUpolls, and
Titflnla K. Dotson, 21. 749'h Second Ave .. Gallipolis.

I~ Oz. Homlt'&amp;Wnp Klllor.
C.r&gt;nta1ns 05'!1. Baygon insec:ti·

IW 43'111 petroleum tlislilate.
1103

What is a father?

: theWJ'IIIII.Aptnyouaretoobll
• tor tbat, yauueaotheari!IJWIIat
: he Ia II)IIQ.
I Fatllfr, he

•

1114

tal-

'111n1,11dtq_._aad bt1lt11,
oard_ed_tb.
lima •d loualtter,
blotttot-.
lllr 11 lllore to -them an.
,
tollolp ywtllna ~· -u.
:J)-11 DO ...b I
u lbe Old MID,
Y. . . ._ . . , .
butbotutmmr

ru.

tiu:'~~~o~':

=-..

-. . . . 111 ......,.,..,
~
• -.
tllrliilrll'ctllllte'aberd

... flldlrlpt
T l t o - "'I' Fattw lela.

I love ~ou. Father
W811ey "Eupne" Ward

n.,.,.,
Oblo
For ldl Flt!IW
r.

f,

Wuley Ward
Chulllre, Qblo

.

L41

ley of LOng Bottom; along with 14
grand_chlldren and 15 greatgrandchildren.
Besides her parents she was
preceded in death by her first
husband, Charles Dul!ey; her
second huSband, E. W. Bevan; a
sister; and three brothers.
She was a baptist, a member of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Auxiliary In Pomeroy, and the
Ladles Auxiliary of the Fraternal
Order of the Eagles 386,
Cambridge.
Graves1de services will be held
Sunday at 2· p.m . at the Northwood Cemetery, Cambridge.
Burial will be In Northwood
Cel)'letery. There will be no
calling hours.
Arrangements are being
handled by the Ewing Funeral
Home. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the
American Cancer Society.

.

AJii6.

RAIN
(ill SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Stallc
Occluded
Map shows mlrimum temperatures. At teast50'fo of any slladed area is forecast
to receive precipitation indicated
UPI

11

ft

WEATHER MAP - During early Sunday, showers/thunderstonns are forecast for parts of the middle Mississippi Valley and
the Ohio Valley. Rain Is possible for ·the northem Pacific CoaSt.
UPI

Meigs land transfers
Compiled by:
Emmogene Holaieln Congo
Recorder, Melp County
Louise B. Jackson, Louis B.
Counts, Russell Jackson, 1 A, to
Ethel E. Adkins and Robert A.
Ours, Racine VIllage. ~~ -~
Warren D. Black and Esther
M. Black, .306 A, to Jack D.
Cleland and Dana R. Cleland,
Rutland VIllage.
Steven R. Barnett and Kathleen Kutsko Barnett, 9.1877A,
to, Wayne DeVault, Scipio.
Edna C. Haning, Harley Haning, Margaret Haning, Helen
Qulvey, James Qulvey, Evelyn
Morris and Harold Morris,
tracts, to James R. Hoyt,
Bedford.
V. Joyce Bartrum, parcel, to
Robert Hart and Gall P . Hart,
Rutland.
Ray Harper, 2 A., to Latisha
Rose Price, Bedford.
Albert R. Seldenabel, Affld, to
JeanS. Seldenabel, Salisbury.
Clovis L. Strausbaugh, dec'd,
af!ld, to Ada Strausbaugh,
Saiem.
James H. Vennarl and Martha
0 . Vennari, parcels, to Grant A.
Newland and Linda S. Newland,
Pomeroy VIllage.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
AdmtssloM June 16- Raymond
Craie, Middleport; Stella Bush.
Pomeroy; Eugene Underwood,
P&lt;A&gt;meroy.
Discharges June 16 - Lucille
Clay, Helena Daniels, Melvin
Freeman. Mary Meredith .

Delbert E. Murray, dec'd.,
affld, to Barbara A. Murray,
Pomeroy VIllage.
Joseph C. Zwilling, dec'd,
affld, to Lola B. Zwllllng, by
guardian, Pomeroy Vlllage.
Luther G. Harvey, 33.75 A, to
Dale ·Luthet Harvey and Walter
Olan Harvey, Columbia.
Walter Olan Harvey, Janice
Harvey, Dale Luther Harvey and
Arlene G. Harvey, 33. 75, to
Luther G . Harvey, Columbia.
George A. Deem, dec' d., Edna
Deem, dec' d., Louts B. Jackson,
lka, Louise B. Counts, atfld,
Meigs.

DCIIIU

)

~:

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BALL CAPS • BAGS ·
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I!IDDLEPORT

DIJ'ing all of 1919 we ari eel.;
ebrating our 40th year at bringing better heartng to our
fritntls-dientl. It is gratifying
ta knaw that we hawe tlevel-,
oped a reputation .for inte9rity ·
and tlependability. We were
here yesterday, expect to be
here tomorrow; nllll Oil' obligation to JOU is_ !a_l!f avail.._le
(every clay) os you netd us. with
the J!!OSt up·to·date technolog_y that is to ~ found. Hearing
proble!n? Hearing aid problem?.
Call the reliable _, - WE
CAREl

992-51121

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SEE US EACH
WEDNESDAY IN THE "PM" ·.
AT HOUER CLINIC
• GALLIPOLIS, OH.IO

DILES HEARING CENJER·.

. (1114) 594-3571
TOLL-FREE IN OHIO 1-100-237-7716&lt;
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ATHENS, D_HIO 45701 .·.

Star Bank offers you
banking at your
fingertips
24-hours a day
at 8 convenient
locations.

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••

~fie
Main Office-Downtown Ironton
Jones Street Office Ironton
South Point Office

Chesapeake Office

I

Rome Office
·,
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Sliver Bridge Pla.za Office-Gallipoll!(

Spring Valley Office-Gallipolis

...
'•

... AtiDWIIfl. ....

STAR BANK
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YEAQ •

"TNE SOOD OlD DA VI OF
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. CENTRAL SUPPLY CO.
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Gallipolis, OH 45631
Ph: 446-2374

~~:

POMEROY - Antwone Kendall Robinson, Infant son of Willie
Luellen Robinson of Pomeroy
and Londell Gerome Can of
Columbus. dl&lt;'d Friday at Holzer
Meqical Center.
Also surviving ar.e maternal
grandmother. Willie Lou Robin·
son of Columbus; maternal
grandfather. Duncan Grimes of

I_; ; ;I SNOW

·:

•

~yJIJjk·-~:
._
:

-

'

Gillon Trail C.. Snapcover. rust and dent
lllistanl
0229

'

Home.

01

••

,

Columbus; two uncles. Michael
Robinson of Columbus and Brad
Robinson of Pomeroy; and e~pe
aunt RochelleWardofPomeroy .
G~aveside services will ~e
Wednesday . 3 p.m. at the Be~h
Grove Cemetery ill Pomeroy .
with th&lt;' Rev. Eddie Buffingt~n.
Arrangements were unoer !he
direction of Ewing Fun'!"al

_Harold L Hazelbaker

Antwone K. Robinson

FCII 81&amp; 8IACI II•M

• l.i

lila _., .,. ,._, ud 1111 olvor belr
Y011 ..... _ , II Gil ltla mllld
Alll112.-.tt.ofllonldad.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- A-3

RUSK, Texas- Harold Lowell
Hazelbaker. 73. 1903 W. Sixth St ..
Rusk, Texas, d!&lt;'d Thursday at
the Cherokee Medical Center In
Rusk.
He was born on June 28.1915 in
Portsmouth, Ohio to the late
Frank M. and Mary E. IFor·
sythe) Hazelbaker.
A member of VFW Post 44641n
Gallipolis. he was a veteran of
World war II. He worked a
psychiatric aide.
Hazelbaker was prec&lt;'d&lt;'d in
death by his wife Hannah M.
Hazelbaker who died on August
7, 1987.
He Is su rvlved by two sons
Harold Hazelbaker of Rusk,
Texas and Charles Pax IDn of
Hamllion. Ohio. Also surviving
are 24 grandchildren and 29
great-grandchildren.
Services w1ll be at 1 p.m.
Tuesday
at the Willis Funeral
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EDT &amp;-18-89
Home. with the Rev . Bruce Unroe
officiating. Burial will be at the
Mlna Chapel Cemetery
Friend may call on Monday
between 7 and 9 p.m. at the
funeral home .
VFW Post 4464 will fold and
present the'tlnlte d States flag at
the graveside.

liT
ED
3 .DISPLAY~ NQIES

'

:• •:!l••n

..

.:
-Area ·news briefs- Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,;,_

GALLIPOLIS - Betty Stone of Gallipolis. filed -a petition
Friday in Ga!Ua County Common Pleas Court. charging Larry
Stone, of Columbus with domestic violence, and seeking a
temporary r'e st.ralnlng order to protect her and her child
against him.
The plaintiff Is seeking an order to k.;..,p the defendant from
haras~lng. assaulting, intimidating, or engaging In acts of
domestic violence against her. She also seeking a temporary
restraining order to prevent the defendant from coming around
her residence or the school of her minor child.

- •ORtHO

"""~

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

Woman requests court order

'

•
•

•.

Deputies investigate two wrecks

--

:: P~!t~~~; ~e~!:t"dn!~~~~:~n. o~u~~. ~';;l~;ht!::~ r\~~riz:~Y
-; lighting pro-democracy students In Beijing reminded me that 35
~: years ago a Ch)nese soldl~r threw a grenade that put me in what must
.• have been a M.A.S.H. umt.

••

June 18. 1989

•

.C ommeittary and·perspective
junb~ ~imtg ... i~tdinel

. ..

·-

f-

. ,.

... .

11A1L llJIICI&amp; JIONI

o.. Y-' ................................. m.u

. . . . . . ................................10

TUESDAY, JUlY 4, 1919

PHIL.DIRT are THI DOZERS
HIGH

FIELD

Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State Office Locations

.' ,

...
'

....

Main OI!Jce-Downlown Ironton

K·Marl Olfice-Chesape!lke

Coull Street Office-Gallipolis

. .

(814) 532-Ga83
.loMe .... Olllee-1""*111

(814)894-300D
Cbeatll Iaiii Oftlee
ll14)887·3101

(814)446-0682

•.

(814) 532·11142

South Polnl Olllce
(814) 337-4338

Sliver Bridge Plaza Olfice-Galllpolil. ~
(814)448-9300
Spring Vdey Olfice-Galllpolis
(614)446-1399

AomeOiflca
(114)886-5676

11rM &amp; TMttplldn: (OIIIIpalltt): 448-8TAA
.
UIIWIC

•

•. •

�.. .
Page-A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
•

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

..

June 18, 1989

Area news briefs-.---~---------, Raccoon Creek listed
No one injured in Friday wreck
as polluted waterway

•

POMEROY - Pomeroy Pollee Investigated a three-car
accident which occurred at 9:06 p.m . Friday night.
Clarence E . Lee. of Chester Road (Route 7) , Pomeroy, was
stopped on Chester Road to turn Into the driveway of his home.
.· Michael E. Morris, of Route 143, Pomeroy, traveling behind
. Lee. was unable to stop and struck the Lee vehicle. A third
vehicle, travelllng behind Morris and driven by James H.
· Anderson, Snowball Htll, Racine, was also unable to stop and
struck Morris In the rear.
Morris and Anderson were cited by pollee for falling to
: maintain an assured clear distance.
·· There was heavy damage to Morris's 1983 Dodge Omnl which
· had to be towed. There was light damage to Anderson's 1985
· Ford Mustang and no damage reported to Lee's 19800ldsmoblle
: Cutlass.

: Marr:iage license issued in Meigs
POMEROY - A marriage license has been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to Samuel Harold Bauer, 28, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and Teresa Lynn Wisecup, 28, Middleport.
•

~ Company files complaint in court
POMEROY - A judgment action for$12,561.11 has been filed
·In Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Edwin H. Davis and
Son Inc., Langsville, against Ambassador Transportation,
Grove City.
.
.
: Diamond Savings and Loan Company, Findlay. has filed a
- foreclosure against Don C. Becker, Middleport: Betty L.
: Becker. Middleport; City Loan Bank, Pomeroy, et al.
An a etlan to c ance1 a land con tract has been tiled by Lila
;Louise Green. Albany, against Keith Myers, Albany, and Judy
;Myers. Albany, et al.
· An entry confirming the sale of property and .ordering
· Cllstlbutlon of deeds has been filed In the case of Charles Hall
: versus Irene E. Walker.
: Robert Jason Jacks has been appointed b)' the court as a
• special deputy to Sheriff James M. Souls by.
. · Dismissed by the court were the cases of Home National
Bank. Racine, versus Jimmie Older; and Brenda Nelgler and
Kenneth Nelgler versus General Motors Corporation and Bob
McDorman Che'{rolet Inc.

~ Meigs EMS answers five calls

•
•· POMEROY - Unlis of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services answered five calls on Friday.
· At 10: 13 a.m., Middleport went to Cole St.for Gene Grate, who
, was taken Veterans Memorial Hospital. Middleport was called
• at 10:55 a.m. to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for
•

Stella Bush, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy went at 10:15 a.m. to Front Si.lor LOrena Ault who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 9:15p.m. , Pomeroy transported Kelly Lee from an auto
accident on Chester Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Syracuse was called at 9: 31 p.m. to assist Pomeroy at the
accident site. Sherry Laudermllt was taken by Syracuse to
Veterans Memo\'lal Hosplta'i.

Meigs Sheriff reports B&amp;E

·

POMEROY - Meigs Cou~:~ty Sheriff's deputies were called
early Saturday morning to a residence above Portland for a
possible attempted breaking and entering.
According to a report from Sheriff James M. SQJI)sby,
neighbors beard a vehicle and observed It making several
passes by the residence, stopping at the private driveway on the
last trip. When deputies arrived, pry marks were found on the
door, but no one Is sure lfthey were fresh marks. The owner was
reported visiting In East Liverpool.
,
A hit-skip accident earlier In the week, at the Intersection of
Salser Road and Bowman's Run, near Racine, Is also under
Investigation.
.
Sheriff Soulsby reports that on Thursday evening, Charles
Danny Bissell, 54, of Route 1, I,ong Bottom, w~s traveling on
Bowman's .Run Road, County Road 29, when a brown vehicle
pulled out of Salser Road In front of ·him. The unidentified
vehicle was travelling at a high speed. Bissell braked. but the
other vehicle struck the front of his 1986 Chevrolet truck. The
other vehicle continued east on . Bowman's Road towards
Bashan Road. No Injuries were reported.

· Divorce actions filed in court
POMEROY - Divorce actions have been flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Ed Gilliam, Pomeroy, against
Jeanna K. Gilliam. Pomeroy; Patricia Ann Eagle, Reedsville,
against Harold Lester Eagle Jr., Reedsville; Shelly Denise
Friend. Rutland, against Jeffrey Don Friend, Long Bot19m;
and John S. Thomas, Middleport, agalnsl Cheryl J. Thomas,
Middleport.
A divorce has been granted to Judy Anne Searles from James
D. Searles.
Granted dissolutions of their marriages were Kimberly S.
McClure and William A. McClure; Penny M. Clark and RogerS.
Clark.

Pittston can use CSX as defendant in UMW case
•

CHARLESTON, W,Va. (UP!)
- 'CSX Transportation can be
aaded as a defendant In civil
p[OCeedlngs by two Pittston Coal
Gt"Pup subsidiaries against the
U'nlted Mine Workers, a circuit
Judge ruled Friday.
\'Yildcat strikes showing sympathy for ·striking UMW
members against Pittston In
w'-est Virginia and Virginia grew
Fi'lday In West Virginia and
sgread to Pennsylvania and
lndlana.
Striking miners at Elkay Min·
lnj Co. and Buffalo Mining Co.
haye moved their picket shack
frj)m mine property to CSX
·. property, blocking Elkay trucks
fram entering and effectively
sHutting down operations. Judge
Erlc O'Brian! granted the coal
companies' request that CSX
make a greater effort to get the
pl&amp;et shack removed.
:CSX has refused to Ioree the
Uj'dW to remove the strike shack
from the railroad right-of-way at
•

.
.Bush
.

Slab Fork near the entrance to an
days.
Elkay processing plant, the coal
"We're obviously losing
companies told .the judge.
ground as the strike continues,"
Failure by GSXTransportatlon
Ebetlno said. "We're monitoring
to take Immediate and effective
the situation. The mort! serious It
measures against "unlawful ac(the strikel gets, the more
tivity represents Its condonation, concerned we get."
.
ratification and participation In
AEP Is the parent company of
such conduct," the complaint Appalachian Power Co .. which
said.
serves 778,000 customers In West
Pickets sat Slab Fork said
Virginia and Virginia.
Friday that CSX will not force
Monongahela Power Co, rethem to move because tl)e ported a coal stockpile of 50 to 60
railroad does not want the UMW days and VIrginia Power Co. said
to picket CSX operations.
· Its stockpile was "In the: high
About 3,200 union miners left 50s."
.
their jobs In Pennsylvania, about
"If.the strike contlilues, It will
1,600 walked out In Indiana. and
paralyze the economy of the
another 2,500 West VIrginia min· state," U.S. District Judge Den·
ers joined the strike, swelllng the nls Knapp said Friday In Charles·
number of strikers to about ton. Knapp Is handling several
11,500.
. federal suits against the UMW by
American Electric Power Co. lhe coal comoanies.
spokesman Chuck Ebellno said·
UMW leaders blame the strike
the walkout has prevented coal on resentment of tactics used by
shipments to the utility for three the state of Virginia In the
days. He said AEP.coal stock· 10·week-old strike against Pitt·
plies were expected to last 55 to75 ston Coal . Group. Since the

Pittston strike was called AprilS,
more than 2,500 VIrginia union
members have been arrested,
and union leaders remain jailed
on contempt of court charges. A
Vlrglpja jUdge has levied mas·
slve finej, a!Jainst the union,
es !I mated at more than $1 trillion
by UMW President Richard
Trumka.
.
About 1,600 miners left theli'
jobs early Friday at Rochester
and Pittsburgh Coal Co.'s opera·
lion at Indiana, Pa., apparently
In sympathy with the strikers In
Virginia. said company spokesman Hank Waneck.
·
Another 1,600 miners were off
the job at the Helen Mining
Company, Tanoma Mining Company and the Greenwich Collier·
les Co., all In Indiana
four mines In Creene

Jutf ·for Her

invited to Ohio meeting

'COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) President George Bush has been
lnVtted to Ohio to answer ques·
lions about the clean air program
hels recommending to Congress.
Nell Tostenson, president of
the Ohio Mining and Reclama·
t ion Association, In a letter to
Biash, Issued an Invitation for
B(lih lo attend the association's
annual meeting June 29 in
Columbus.
fhe letter said, "It seems very
lrll)llc that you released details of
yd1Jr proposed clean air program
aqd then Immediately took off to
tiK:· western part of the United
States to espouse your program.

while creating potential eco·
nomic havoc In the eastern coal
mining states.
"We would like to bear from
you how we are to meet the goals
.of Improving the quality of life,
using Innovative technologies
while creating environmental
protection and economic growth.
"None of this will happen In
Ohio. Ohio's coal Industry has
already paid a high price for the
reduction In sulfur dioxide em is·
slons. (:oal prnduction In Ohio
has gone down steadily over the
past 10 years."
Tostenson's main message to

...;·:~--Hospital news-~•

: Holzer Medical Center

JHICharges June 15 · Julia
Beyles, Paul Bragg, Anita Corn·
well, Steven Durham, Mrs. Jane
GIDenwater and daughter. Helen
KtOtdrlck. Gary Lambert. Terri
Latldrum, Melanie Mankin;
Jalllll!ll Peal'lon, Mrs. Timothy
PJ1d!t and daughter, Gary Ray·
btlm, Barbara Sberltt. Mrs.
LFrY Spaulding and son,
~lma Stephe,nson, Taml Tho-

mas. Mildred Tolliver, Julla
Whittington.
.
Blrtlla June 15 • Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Arthurs, son, Bidwell. Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Bryant, son,
Oak Hlll. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Daniels, daughter. Ray. Mr. and
Mrs. Alexander GilUes, daugh·
ter, Point Pleasant. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomaa Hopkins, daughter, Vln·
ton. Mr. and Mrs. Troy Litchfield, sou, New Haven.

WASHINGTON !UPI) Twenty-six Ohio waterways
were Included among 17,365 In
the United .States found to be
polluted In a report released by
the Environmental Protection
Agency.
Here ts the list, with facilities
·causlne the Impairment:
Rockswale Ditch (Whirlpool
Corp.. MarlOn); Mahonlng River
(Warren Consolidated Indus·
tries); Hemmine Ditch (Bechtel
McLaushlin, Sandusky); Tributary to Leslie Run (Roshel
Industries); Nlmlshlllen Creek
(LTV. Maslllllon); East Branch
of NlmJJhlllen C!Jeek (JAL Spe.
ctallty Products); ·Hurford Run
(Ashland Petroleum Co.. Can·
ton); Rocky Fork Mochlcan
"River · !White Consolidated Industries); Rocky Fork Mohican
River (Mansfield wastewater
treatment plant); Domer Ditch
(Timken Co.);
_ Hocking .River (Lancaster
wastewater treatment ptant);
Mill Creek (Ray Lewis &amp; Son
Inc.); Big Darby Creek (Ranco,
Plain City); Sclppo Creek ( PPG
Industries, Circleville); Paint
Creek (i'otead Paper Corp.);
Turtle Creek (Cincinnati Mila·
cron); ·011 Ditch (Cooper Tire &amp;
Rubber Co.); Slxmlle Creek
· (OhiO Decorative Products); Six·

mile Creek !Hayes·Aiblon
Corp. ); North Turkey Foot Creek
(Wauseon wastewater treatment
plant);
Maumee River !Toledo Bay
VIew wastewater treatment
plant); Raecoon Creek (WblrJ...
pool Corp., Clyde); Black River,
Stanadyne Inc. -Western Dlv·
lslon); Black River (Elyria 'wastewater treatment plant); Ash·
tabula River (Vygen Corp.);
Lake Erie (North Coast Brass
and Copper); Lake Erie (Elkem
Metais); Cuyahoga River (Ak·
ron wastewater treatment
plant); Mahoning River (Thomas Steel Strip) ; Red Run
Tr!butary (Sharon Steel).

POWELL'S
SPECIAL

We Reserve The Riaht To
~imit quantit,ie~ .

STORE HOURS
·Monday thru

~ALUES

Sund~y

8 AM-10 PM ·

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH;

LIBERTY GOLD

STOKELY

RNANCIAL
FUTURE

CATSUP

A good life Insurance program Is a flrat step to your
IIICUAI financial futln. Let's
talk over your chQices.

MIXED

Fryer Parts •••••• ~~••• 59&lt;

MODERN WOODMEN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

GALLIPOLIS - The emergency meeting of the Gal,lpolls
City SchOOl Dlstrtct employees
will be held on Tuesday at 1:30
p.m. In the auditorium of Gallia
Academy High School. The meet·
lng Is mandatory for Insurance
benefits.

FRESH PORK BUTT

Bush was: "The Clean Air Act Is
. working. Don't mess with it.
There's no freedom of choice lor
Ohioans."
· In his letter, Tostenson also
noted · that Ohio's clean co~ I
technology program has been
under way for several years and
that ·the Buckeye state has
funded more projects In conjunc·
lion with the Department of
Energy than any other state.
He said It would be a waste of
effort and funds If the president's
proposal goes Into 'effect.
The OMRA, an Ohio coal
Industry trade association. re·
presents the majority of Ohio
coal producers .

1

Carat
Diamond Pair
lEG. 1991

=~· $695°0

P.0 ..... 3411

lllo G..,clt, OH. 41174
Phone: (114) 241·8311

CLASSES

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Newlyweds?
PLAN YOUR

SOLUTIONS

Correction

PINEAPPLE

EFlECDVE SUN., JUNE 18 fHRU SAT., JUNE 24, 1989

Firemen respond to false alarm
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Volunteer Firemen were called at
11: 27 p.m. Friday to Scenic Hi11s Nursing Center. 536 Buckrldge
Road, Gallipolis, however, there was no fire. It was a false
alarm. Twelve .men and one piece of equipment answered the
alarm. the 89th of the year for GalUpolls firemen .

•

'

I Iff •

ANIHIITIE~

•IRA

~

I HAlf ANAl PHOGRAMS

Dear Citizens of lei1s Counlf; ,..
·
I w1111t to thnk you very iiAIII for your vote' for my husblnd in
tht election for coroner. As 111o1t of you know, Dr. Condl rectlwd tfji
hi&amp;hest votes Republican/Delnocntt tn this county in the pri111ry elec~
tion. Tilt rnson for this is because he wes honest and told tht public ·
tilt truth about several issues.
Recently tht Republican Party hid to elect 1 coroner to replace•
Dr. Pickens who hid been appointed after Dr. Condl lift tilt area to
further educate himself to become 1 sul)ton. After an accident. we raturntd lim. Wilen Dr. Picltlns ruianld as coroner, the county commiss-.rsseleclld Dr. Conde as temporary coroner until the Rep1bli·
can Com111itteetntn could re-appoint 1 new coroner.
Uttfortunltely, the lltpublican Con!mltt•mtn did NOT recaanize the
VOTERS' clloica and thertlort, eppolntltl SOtiiiOIII else who did not Mil
11111 durina the election •i111Uim. Oddly IIHitlfll,lhl man the Republican
c-IIIII.Mn lllecttd fer coroner is • relatively newco.~~er to lhlp
COUII\Y and has newr run for offiCI in a&amp;lnerallilt:tton.Does thet indicate
lhat die Republican Party had Its votttS' lnt••t at •rt? ·
In any Milt, "thank you" to the peopla for your many votes, that
is whit counts the most. not these few people.
I know lei1s County has tretlltl01111iy been a ler.ublicln Coul)ty.
Perhaps t•ls is typical of Republicans' self-servlna nterests Instead
of servlna the public llflo elects them. I wonder if 101111 Democratic
INdlrsbip Is what this county nllds to tum It around.
· Olea apln lllllisll to tf1lli our many friends, rtfltivlsandanyoneelse
w11o hu batin 111 supptltive 111 us 110111 ltld in the put
. ...
5tnCeoolJ,
·
Rhondl L. Coldl

·Chuck Roast ••••• ~..
·CRISPY SERVE

$1 49

$

9
2
Steak/Roast ••.• ~~.. 1
SUPERIOR ASSORTED
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Lunch Meats
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THECJ.1~;~=~~

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MACARONI
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oz.

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24 PAK

Bananas •••••••••~•••••• 29(
FLAVORITE
P~snc
$1 49
2~/o Milk ••••••••••••••

12 OZ. CANS

PEPSI COLA

GAllON .

GRADE A

Med. Eggs ••••••••••••• 59&lt;
DAIRY LANE

$
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1
1
9
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$
Ice
Cream
••••••••••••
299
Dog Food ••••••••• ::.~
. FRESH
$
~ MIKE-SELL REG. S2.19 SIZE
59
~z.$,
,
49
Bakery Donuts ••!'.; 1
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W1eners••••.•••••••••••.•99&lt;
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Ham Salad ••••••• ~~•• 189

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holding back wait·

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6 MONIH CD.
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gat 1D act flit.
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limited time only.

•'

MAXWELL HOUSE

•

WHY YOU SHOULD

~'wbltn

PORK &amp;

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LB.

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32 OZ. BTL.

LUCK'S

$

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TOWELS
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3/S2

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4.25 ll

14701

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GATORADE

uoz.$ 139

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12

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22 LB. AVERAGE

WATERMELON

�Page-A-6-Sunday Times- Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Ple.,ant, W.Va.

·Meigs County Court
POMEROY

- . Thlrty·elght

~ases were processed this week

·1n Meigs County Court by Judge
Patrick O'Brien. The foUowtng
persons were fined In the court.
according to a release from the
judge.
Charles Cleland Jr.. Long
Bottom, $100 and costs,10 days In
jail suspended, two years probation, possessing beer while under
the age of 21; Brent Bissell.
Tuppers Plains, $200and costs. 30
days In jail suspended, two years
probation, furinshtng beer to a
person or persons under age 21;
Charles A. Knapp, Middleport,
, $50 and costs. drug abuse; 30
• days In jail suspended to five
: days, two years probation. costs.
: obstructing official bustnss; Lon: nie LeMaster, Pometoy, $75 and
. costs. three days In jail suspended upon proof of operator's
liCense, no operator's license;
: Ronald Stanley, Harts, W.Va.,
• $75 and costs. three days In jail.
: one year probation, no operator's
: license; Mark Parsqns. Racine.
$75 and costs, three days In jail to
be suspended If a valid motorcy·
cle endorsement is obtained
wHhln 60 days, no motorcycle
endorsement; $15 and costs.
failed to register vehicle and
expired license plates; Ronald
Jones. Racine, 30 days In jail
suspended to time served. costs.
restraining order issued, two
years probation. domestic vlo·
lence; Richard V a nee, Middleport. $50 and costs, littering.'
Charles Woodson. Haydenville, $20 and costs. failed to have
valid registratlon: Danny Dalton. Rutland, $20 and costs. seat
belt violation; Seth H. Hill,
Raetne. $12 and costs. parked
facing oncoming tra(flc; Thomas
,Wise. Summerville, $15 and

~·

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--

THE JUANITA - As a pari
of Meigs County's HerHage
Days Ibis last weekend,the
AEP River Trai)&amp;JMlrlallon
Division permllled their 1~~&amp;1
sternwheeler to dock at the .
Pomeroy levee lor the public
to Ket a closer look at an era of
boating that has almost
forgotten.

I

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lUI' Pi ulldlon piln that toter.~lahnr and
I1IIIA ""-*" nn all ""'"1111.

Progr~m

Reg.

c.t. No.

Slle

hw $5- The FUNd.....nblto TL
hw 115-Prtlll._lc

19.95

25·1233

14~11

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25·1265

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24.111
41.111

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Photos and text
by Julie E. Dillon
Times-Sentinel Staff

~ittle

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S.ve•7

2485 a 2285

•

vessel keeps the ·past alive on rtver

POMEROY - Keeping the
past alive on the Ohio River Is one
of the most Important things the
Juanita does. The liiUe vessel Is
thl!· AFlP River Transportation
Division's 1as1 sternwheeler, and
she makes her home In Lakin,
W.Va.
As a part of Meigs County's
Heritage Days last weekend. the
Juanita docked at ·the Pomeroy
levee for the pub! ic to come
aboard and Inspect the vessel for
themselves.
The sternwheeler has undergone some ronstderable changes
since her original construction in
the early 1930's. The vessel was
first constructed lor Oliver
Frank Shearer and Sons. and
bullt with a woode!l hu'il. The
sternwheeler was named Juanita
in honor of one of Shearer's
daughters. In It's early days the
vessel was used on the Ohio,
Kentucky. and Kanawha Rivers
to push small tows of coal.
Since 1954 the little· sternwheeler has had two new steel
hulls. The first new steel hull and
cabin was built for the Juanita In
1954. This process was quite
different that one might think.

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The Juanita - almost forgotten era in riverboating

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Bennett, 65. Geneva. Ohio arid
Antonio Manzi, 35, Plaistow,
N.H., both $41; ChevisHornte, 75.
Martinsville, Va ..·$40 and James
Jenkins. 32, Rarden, Ohio, $39.
Forfeiting $41 bonds on other
traffic violations were:
JessteL. Johnson, Jr.,29, ESR,
Gallipolis, passing over the yel·
low line; Mlchjlel E. Brumfield,
18, Rt. 1, Crown City, squealing
tires; David P. Phillips, 27, Rt.1,
Patriot, fall~e to display a valid
registration; Wtlllam Carr, 67,
Rt. 3, Portsmouth, failure to stop
within the assured clear distance; James H. Sands. 60. Rt. 2,
Crown City, two bonds, one for
fictitious registration, the other
for failure to yield one half of the
roadway; Dale Speencer, 31, Mt.
Sterling, Ky. and Scott W.
Allison, 22. Gallipolis, both for
failure to yield the right of way.

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..__-Municipal Court--GALLIPOLIS - Charged with
driving under the Influence. Paul
R. Barry, 32, Rt. 1, Scottown,
Ohio was fined $700 and costs and
William E. Adams, 43, Rt. 3,
GaiUpolls, was fined $500 and
costs Friday in GalllpoUs Municipal Court.
Barry received a 30-day jail
sentence and a 180-day license
suspension. Adams .received a
10-day, jail sentence. There was
. no license suspension. A charge
of no operator's license was
dismissed against Adams.
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
were James McCullouch, 20,
Andrews, N. C.. $49; Robert E.
Wooldridge, 18. Rt. 3. Bidwell.
$47; Lawrence Dove. Jr .• 45;
Pbntiac. Mlch.. $44; Michael
Hickman. 46. Fayetteville. N.C.,
and Richard Courtier, 33, Westerville. Ohio. both $42: Robert

By Uolled Preu laterutlonal
Sou a, Ceatral Oblo
Sunday. Increasing cloudiness
with a chance of afternoon
showers and thunderstorms.
High In the lower 80s. Southwest
winds 10 to 20 ml!h· Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Sunday night and Monday,
showers likely and a chance of
thunderstorms. Low 60 to 65.
High Monday 7~ to .80. Chance of
rain 70 percent both periods.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Tuesday through Tbunday
Il'alr through tlte period .with a
warming trend. £tghs 75 to 85
Tuesday. In the 80s Wednesday
and 85 to 90Thursday. Lows 55 tp
65 Tuesday and Wednesday and
tn the 60s Thursday.

Rodney. No one was injured.
closed. Charles R. Surgenor, 35,
Troopers said Michael 0. Chillicothe. was unable to stop.
Campbell, 18, Chillicothe, Ohio, and attempted to pass on the
attempted to pass a sheriffs right but hit the Houck vehicle.
cruiser as .d eputy James Mar- There was no citation.
riner, 56, Rt. 1, Crown City,
attempted to make a left turn. l.oltery numbers
There was minor damage to both
vehicles. There was no citation.
PICK·3
Thepatrolalsolnvestlgatedan
236.
accident at 2:40p.m. Friday at
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
the lntersectlon of US 35 and · · $1,452,969.50, with a payoff due of
Mitchell Road. No one was $1,227,116.
injured.
.PICK·4
Troopers said Sandra S.
9251.
Houck, 18,
Rt. 1, Northup,
PICK-4 ticket · sales totaled
stopped to turn onto Mitchell $251,868.50, with a payoff due of
Road, but saw the road was $125,700.

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Patrol investigat.es Friday accidents

costs, Insecure load; Hat C.
GALLIPOLIS - The State
Webb, Ravenswood, W.Va .. $25 Highway Patrol cited one driver
and costs. no valid Ohio fishing in an accidental 7 p.m. Friday on
· license; Joe Gilkey, Middlepbrt. Hannan Trace Road, 1.4 mUes
$25 and costs. no address or name east of SR. 218. No one was
.on float line; Rodney D. King. Injured.
Pomeroy. $10 and costs, left ol
Troopers said vehicles driven
center; Phillip Cali. Pomeroy, by Darrell E. Jenkins, 32, Rt. ,2.
Crown City and Kenneth L.
$20 and costs, failure to control;
Harriet Dye. Pomeroy. $10 and McComas, 37, Rt. 2, Crown City,
costs, failure to yield; Faith coUidedonacurve. Damage was
Roach. Racine. $,~ .and costs, moderate to both vehicles.
unsafe vehicle; Joy L. Bentley.
The patrol cited Jenkins for
Syracuse, $20 and costs, passing failure to yield one-half of the
a stopped school bus; · Mike roadway.
Another accident occurred at
Harris. Cheshire; Derrek Jack·
son, Middleport; and Mark Har- 10:50 p.m. Friday on US 35, 0.2 of
ris. Cheshire. each fined $25 and ·a mOe east of milepost 9, near
costs, with fine to be suspended If
valid fishing license Is provided,
fishing without a valid license.
Fl ned for speeding were William Dum III. Lancaster. $22 and
costs; Carol Kender, Athens, $22
and costs; Henry Cutler Torrey.
Carrboro. N.C., $26 and costs;
Ira 0. McCoy. Reedsville. $29
and costs; David Giffin, Walker,
W.Va .. $26 and costs; Daniel J.
Hall, Pomeroy. $23 and costs;
Robert Bailey. Pomeroy. $28 and
costs; Donald Neville, GalUpolls
Ferry. W.Va .. $23 and costs;
Kenneth E. McCullough Jr.,
Pomeroy. $30 and costs; Jeffrey
Hannan, Huntington. W.Va .. $27
and costs; Donald May. Boca
Raton. Fla.. $21 and costs;
VIrginia Johnson, West Columbia. $21 and . costs; Charles
Woodson. Haydenville, $25 and
costs; Kimberly Zimmerman.
Athens. $23 and costs.
Bonds were forfeited In court
by Thomas Harper, Pomeroy.
$30, disorderly conduct; Susan
Dionne. Royal Oak. Mich., $5.~.
speeding; Richard Albright,
Clyde. $.10. insecure load; James
Polcyn. Middleport. $40, seat belt
violation.

•

June 18, 1989

The new hull was constructed on
the Inside cif a barge that was dry
docked at the O.F. Shearer arid
Sons' Cedar Grove facilities.
After construction was completed, holes were cut In the hull
of the . larger barge allowing
water to !Ill the cargo hopper.
The dry dock was lowered
permitting water to ftll the barge .
which In turn allowed the Juanita
to flqat. At that point the little
sternwheeler was floated out .of
the larger barge. It you're
wondering what happened to the
okl wooden hull and cabin - the
remains were burned on the bank
at Cedar Grove.

kitchen. · rt;eantng the crew,
which consts ts 'or only two people.
must carry their lunch with
the111. This Isn't a problem .
however· bjlcause .the ;Juanita
.crew works an almost normal
eight hour day. unlike the larger
towboats whose crew works 21
day shifts- 21 days on the water.
foUowed by ~I days off. In order
to keep warm during the winter
months, the crew has two coal
burning stoves, one Is in the
engine room, and the other is
located In the pilot house.

.

The sternwheeler still has
some of It's original bucket
boards. the paddles that dip Into
the water. although these are
replaced when ni&gt;eded due to the
fact that Inclement weather and
drift can cause the boards to
split.

Because she has no modern
equipment, the Juanita Is somewha111mtted In what she can do.
Her longest one way trip Isn't
normally more than two mtles,
thus she Is used primarily as a
harbor boat. This means the little
sternwheeler Is responsible for
getting boats or barges onto the
dry docks for matntalnence or
repair.

Unfortunately when the new
steel hulls were constructed
1here were no luxuries or modern
necessities added to the vessel.
There Is no electricity on the little
sternwheeler. thus no heat or air
coodlttonlng. There Is also no

Piloting the Juanita Is a
different situation also. Nathan
Moore is the pilot and has been
for a few years now. He maneuvers the vessel by shifting gears
hooked to a lever on,the floor that
In turn moves the rudders. This ·

..

AEP River Transportation Fleet

system can be somewhat compared to a car's standard transmission. Although the little sternwheeler gets odd looks and
smiles she is fespected . by
everyone who understands what
she represents.
Although the Juanita Is used
primarily as a harbor boat.
Moore says she can push six or
seven empty barges an(j two or
three full barges and can travel a
whopping six to seven miles per
hour wlthou t a load. This Is easily
uoderstood when one realizes the
little sternwheeler Is only 6S feet
long and 17 feet wide, has a 13.~
horsepower General Motors die·
sel engine that turns the paddlewheel, and only sits a little more
than three feet deep In the water.
The newer towboats have 5.600
horsepower engines and weigh
between 328 and 483 tons compared to the 60 ton Juanita.

fl'Difl rite oriBin.tJ OF. ShHr.r il«t: •

Olivet C. Sh•ar•r 11961)
· ' ·Lelia C. Shearer (19571
Wlnchnttr t 19701

Reg. Separate low Aa $35

/

Reg.
379.95

lOt

-shirlry (1965)

750

112

&amp;I

•]!.anita (smnwheeltrl (1954)

"'

.

U5

ManufKtrmd by Dr.1~:
Robert M. Kopper (1916)
C.l.. fllrr (1,.6)
A.N. Prentice (19"16)
F. M. INkn (19761

5,600
5,600

NeG C. Shtau (1911)
R.£. Doyl•. )t (19771
Ric:hard E. Hadsu (1971)
Huold Turner (lmJ

5.600

St. Loui1 Ship:
,., P. GIIJ• 119761

E. Gent Fo\trM~ (19"16)
J•m" E. wn8hr tt9'171
C.V. Sortn.an 119"n)
Robtrt R. )tMill1977l

II

..

5,600
5,600

5.600
5,600
$,600
$,600

581
,.,
"'
5&amp;1
5&amp;1
5&amp;1

'""
l2J

'""
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llbXJO
U6xl0

13.5lCl4.7
&amp;OxU. '
65Xll
D4.8X16..S

l40x4.Z
l40X42

140x.U
140XU

140x.U
140)(42

140)(42
140X.U
140xU

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140)(42

395

131)(.)8

395

13h3&amp;

395
395
395
395

136xl&amp;
136XJ8
13&amp;x3&amp;

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This chart gives !l!&gt;me Idea of what the llltle sternwheeler
Juanita Is up against In river transporlallon. The vessel Is kept In
working order because It Is economlcat and It Is a!so helping to •
keep an era of history alive and well.
:·

'

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•'* 11 a lit wllll

pewera &amp;ba lilt .wr-llullt ,_....., ~ 1111
very bll becu11' tbe Jualla ....UIIIIII Y81J
,I

5.600

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w-. 10 llllllllal wlul&amp;'a

5.600

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OW 132. Featuree word prOCMiing, data pniOtl8llng and dot·
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or
dnilt cir COITelpO!Idence rnodae. IBM graphlc:a printer and
Tancly 1111u11t1ona. UL Iliad. 128-281~ · .

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William j. Strwart (1976)

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5.600
5,600
5,600

C,J, Bryan (19'161

L9w AI S15 Per Month•

PILOT- NatliU Moon 11u 'llatedllleJualla

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149

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374

lJJ

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Littlt EaaJt Ill 119591
Bocnttboro (1969)

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Dtcacnliont

2.000

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Not
ToM

hmtt K. Ellit (1912)

Edwin A. Lewit (1977)

Not only does sentiment keep
the vessel in operation- it Is also
economical to operate because It
uses very little fuel. It's nice that
the Juan Ita Is kept in working
order because the little sternwheeler ts helping to keep a part
of the old river tradition altve.

-

H.,_
V.el IYur acqv.irtd)

�'

Page-8-2-Sunday Times- Sentinel

POI'tla'Oy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

'

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.'

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-

•

Pomeloy- Middeport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

June 18, 1989

June 18, 1989

------Anniversaries------

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3

Named to admissions department

--~~--Weddings

POMEROY - Tina Rosen· views for the summer quarter
baum of Meigs County has been beginning on June 26.
named a representative of the
Admissions Department of the
Southeaster n Busines~ College.
h \ ' .\
Bob Shirey, executive director,
~
r • . :11
announced today.
..
\r
.~•ore.
A graduate of Meigs High
~••-..;,·- - l &lt;' ·
School. Ms. Rosenbaum Is the
daughter of Alfred Ray Smith
FRI., SAT SUN.
and Sue Ann Smith, Cheshire.
Along with her d1.1 ties as
GEHE
RICHARD
admissions representative, she
WILDER
PRYOR
is a full -time student at Southeastern Business Co liege and Is
working toward an associate .
degree degree In micr ocomputers and data processing.
Ms. Rosenbaum joins Ron
Pitchford .tn the Admissions
Department, and theyareavalla ·
. bie Monday through Friday from
8:30 a.m . to 6: 30 p.m. They are
now conducting enrollment inter-

u '· ,\

·

• '&lt;211

.. '

SEE

N8EVI~

. HEAR

N~~~~~

.

.

CARL and PEARLENE LEE

.VICKI LEA ELLIOTT, RAYMOND BOWMAN

Elliott-Bowman

.,•

: GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
' Richard Elliott announce the
· : engagement and · forthcoming
: marriage of their daughter,
• Vicki Lea Elliott, to Raymond
~ Bowman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
: Ernest Bowman of Waverly,
· Ohio.
: Elllott is a graduate of Gall!a
: Academy High School and Mount
.· Vernon Nazarene College with a
·: degree In Accounting. She is
:: employed . by Penn Central in

Cincinnati, Ohio.
.
Bowman is a graduate · or
Waverly High School and Otter·
bein College with a de'gree In
Computer Science. He is em·
ployed by General Electric In
Cincinnati.
An open church wedding wlll
take place on Aug. 19, at 1:30
p.m., at the First Church o! the
Nazarene In Gallipolis. A recej)tion wlll follow the ceremony.

'

The couple was married on
June 10.1939 tn Russell, Ky. He Is
a retired worker of 35 years with
Columbia Gas.
They have nine grandchildren.
13 great grandchildren. and eight
step grandchildren.
·
Several o(her relatives also
attended the celebration ..

'

PATRICK SWAYIE

PORTLAND- The Rev. Law· grandchildren. Michael, Joi'-1
renee and Louise VanMeter Beth. and Christa Jo Bailey,
Gluesencamp. Portland, cele· Joshua Lee. Robert Ross Wilson,
brated their 20th anniversary on Mrs. Jacqueline Gluesencamp
Oberieln, Columbus; Mrs. Garry
Wednesday.
The couple was married In (Barbara) Giuesencamp Martin.
Chester by the Rev. Pearl Cas to . Mineral . City; and !lvf great
They . haVI!' three daughters\ grandchildren, Meredith and Ju·
Mrs. Lawrence (Shirley Jean) · lle·Oberleln, and Heather. Stacie.
VanMeter Theiss, Vinton; Mrs. .· and Justin Martin.
Ted (Lindal VanMeter Bailey,
·. Patriot;· and Mrs. Robert tNicki .
.'Dawnl VanMeter Wilson. New
INSULATING
' Summerset; two sons. Mr. and
VINYL WINDOWS
Mrs. Julius and Albert Fitch
Gluesencamp, Sunbury; and the
late Lawrence Gluesencamp. Jr.
The couple also ·has seven

ROADHOUSE

Tucker
•
anntversary

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REBECCA HAMMOND, CHARLES G. BUSH

·~

Hammond-Bush ·

• • MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Lydia
·. :. Hammond. Lane as tel'. is · anZ:: nouncinp; the engagement and
:-~ upcoming marriage of her
.:.:- daughter. Rebecca. to Charles
;~:~ Gregory Bush. son of Charles E .
·&gt;· : Bush, Springfield, and Celesta
:.:; Coates. Middleport.
·
:~;: The wedding will take place on
~ ; July 22 at 1:30 p.m at the
.,-:- Redeemc•r Lutheran Church,
;:-; 1400 Concordia Drive. Lancaster.
."'::· Miss Hammond is a gradual~
-~-

::~Jeffers-Nelson

of Lancaster High School and
Ohio University. She is employed
by Morrison's Custom Manage·
ment as assistant food service
director at Ohio Dominican Col·
lege in Columbus.
Bush Is a graduate of Meigs
'High School and Ohio University.
Hf' Is employf'd al Miamisburg
High School as reserve assistant
fo9tbal!, and wrestling coach .
'The couple will ' make their
home in the Day ron area.

Reunion set

POMEROY - The annual
% GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs. Spencer· Fell reunion Is to.be held
;:,.: Ray Jeffers, Route 3, Gallipolis, . Sunday al the Waid Spencer
,!: . announce the · upcoming mar· recreation area. II II rains, or Is
..,..i rlage o! their daughter, Dana too muddy to get the recreation
area, the reunion will be held at
.; :.:. Yvonne Jet!ers, to Barry Robert
the Bashan Fire House. A basket
:; : Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
dinner
wlll be served at noon.
·.r Robert Nelson, 52G Hilda Drive,
•·.- Gallipolis.
·
'
..: ·. The open church wedding will
;:ilake place Saturday, June 24, at
MIDDLEPORT- Jane Coates
:::6:30 p.m. at Gallipolis Christian
will
conduct a ceramics class for
j thurch.
children
on WedneSday, at 2
..: · The reception will be held
p.m., at the Middleport Library.
-'~following the ceremony at the
There
will be a $5 charge lor
.:-i.llome of the bride's parents.
materials. All children are In·
vlted to attend.
J'

'

--·

.

.

Class for kids set

....

.~i Willi~s-Bailey
;:~ GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
',i : .,wger Williams of Gallipolis

!~ announce the engagement and
marriage of their
'~ ~ da!Jghter, Tony a Williams, to ·
•: ' MJehael Batley soil or Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Batley, Patriot, Ohio.
Wllliams Is a graduate o!
Academy High School.
II employed at Kroger
a.IIIpolla.
a araduate of SouthwSchool. He II em·
lferWrat Industries In

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Photographs of either the bride
regards weddings of Gallla. or the bride and groom may be
Meigs and )'llason counties, as . published with wedding stories,
news and Is happy to publish If desired. Photographs may be
wedding stories and photographs either black and white or good
without charge.
quality color, billfold size or
However, wedding news must larger.
meet general standards o!timeli·
Poor quality photographs will
ness. The newspaper prefers to not be accepted. Generally, snap·
publish accounts of weddings as shots or Instant-developing phosoon as possible alter the event. tos are not of acceptable quidlty.
, To be published In the Sunday
Questions may be directed to
edition, the wedding must have the editorial department from 1
taken place within 60 days prior to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
to the publication. Material lor at (614) 446-2342.
Along1he River must berecleved
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the
CARTER &amp; TROUT REUNION
date of publication.

Vacation Bible School
The Pomeroy Church of Christ
will be having Vacation Bible
School the week of June 25·~.
from 6: ~0-8:30p.m. The theme Is
"Jesus, Joy Forever." All child·
ren of the area, klndergar,ten
through 12th grade. are Invited to
attend. There will be clowns,
refreshments, crafts, fellowship,
fun, and Bible lessons everyday.
The Bradford Church of Christ
vacation Bible school has been
rescheduled for June 26-30 rrom
9-11: :J1 a.m. Classes will be for
ore-school throullh senior hll!'h.

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July 4, 1919

$1500. for a carpetecll2 ft. by 12ft. room
Call (614) 992-6338
estiinat~ and

•:c~

l...

'

R

Frye-Sayre

'

GALLIPOLIS ·- Brenda Lou decorated with lavender and
Rood and Richard G. McDaniel pink !lowers.
'
Best man was Tom Gooch of
w.e re united in marriage on May
13 in the Our House Museum Gallipolis. and groomsman was
ballroom, with Dr. Frederlek Danny Chandler or Mason, W.Va.
Williams officiating.
Ushers were Bob Hood and Brad
The bride Is the daughter of Hood, both brothers of the bride
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hood and from Gallipolis, and Jell McDa·
Gallipolis. The groom is the son nlel ·of Athens, brother or the
of Mr. and Mrs. Glen McDaniel of ·groom.
Albany, Ohio. .
·
The bride's mother wore an
Given In marriage by her Ivory street-length dress and
parents, the bride wore .a lea· pink corsage. The groom's
length ivory gown with ru~fles. mother was In a pink street·
lace and pearl trim. The full· lengt!l dress and wore an Ivory
, skirted gown featured a basque· corsage.
waist bodice with an overlay of
. Attending the guest register
antique lace.
was Charity McDaniel, daughter .
She carried a bouquet of of the groom. Music was profresh-cut spring flowers ac· vided by soloist Kern Hemphill
cented with potpourri and wore a and pianist Joe Gulley.
headpiece of baby's breath.
A reception was held at the Our
She carried a white handker· House Museum, and assisting
chief belonging to her grand· were Melody Wiseman of Galll·
mother, Alma Fowler of Galllpo- polls, and Cindy Hoover of St.
. lis. and wore a pearl necklace Albans. W.Va.
and earrings.
The bride is employed at
Toddler
Tech Daycare Center In
Maid of honor was Barbara
Rodney.
The groom Is employed
Hood of Salem. Va., sister of the
Ohio Coal Compapy.
by
Southern
'' bride. Brldesmatron was Sally
reside
at Route 4,
They
Brown, Grove City, Ohio, cousin
of the bride. They wore matching Ga!Upolis.
!lora! print tea-length dresses of
bridal sa lin and carried lace fans

WILKESVILLE - Kammy L.
of bride.
Sayre and Leonard E. Frye were
A reception· followed the ce·
united In marriage Aprlll5 at the
remony at the Pythlan - Sisters
United Methodist Church In
Hall in Wilkesville.
Wilkesville with Rev. Robert
Assisting at the reception were
Cindy Strausbough·Jones and
Steele officiating.
The bride Is the daughter of · Pat Jewett, both o! WllkesvUle.
The bride Is employed at the
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Sayre of
Wilkesville. The groom Is the son
Country Carry-Out and Dell,
of Mrs. Elizabeth Elston of
Gallipolis. The groom is em·
Rayland and Mr. Leonard Frye
played at D &amp; M Logging,
of Florida.
Northup.
Given In marriage by her
parents, the bride wore a floor·
.o
.
length white satin gown trimmed
POMEROY - Pomeroy Drew
In lace and stimulated pearls.
Webster Post 39 of the Arn.erlcan
She carried a cascade of pink, Legion wm · meet at 7 p.m.
blue, mauve ' carnations, roses Tuesday. Dinner will be served
and officers for next year will be
and baby's breath.
Maid of honor was Debra elected.
Mu11lns, Gallipolis. She wore a
floor length pink gown with drop
shoulder sleeves which was over·
laid · with antique lace. She
carried matching flowers of the
brides .
The groom wore a gray t11x
with silver gray accessories.
Best man was Dave SomervUle
of Gallipolis, who wor a matching
tuxedo.
Registering guest, was Penny
Sayre and Bridget Sayre, sisters

••

•

,. I •

•

-.,

~
_.... ~

Leaia,n meeting

lRST CRUSRDE

Spectacular ·s·ummer Sale!
. SAVE' 20 50°/o STOREWIDE

RETIRING

To

3 PC.
CAFE SET

3 SEAT
GLIDEIS

PAnO GROUP

While July f9 will be my last day at my
office, located at 224 E. Main St., Pomeroy, my practice will be assumed by Dr .
Rick Harris, an internal medicine specialist, and Dr. Danny Westmoreland, a
family praqice physician.

appeint•nts.

DR. LEE ROBERSON

'

Meeting set

RODNEY - Dr. Lee Rober·
son. chancellor of rennessee
Temple University In Chatta·
•· nooga, will speak at Faith
Baptist Church Sunday through
Tuesday. He will be in the Sunday
10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. services
and on Monday and Tuesday at 7
: p.m.
Roberson Is also pastor emeri·
tus of Highland Park Bapllst
Church in Chattanooga. where he
served for 40 years.

I want to extend heartfelt thanks to
all of my patients and assochites over
the long years of my practice. You have
been faota:;tic people and I .deeply ap·
preciate all of your considerations and .
kindnesses. I will miss you.
Dr. John H. Ridgeway

CHOKE OF 3
CUSIIIOII COtOISI

~:~9.00 uu S399

Sofas

BEAUTYIEST

49900

$39900

CASH lo CARRY .

$

2

P~

QUEEN SIT

FUU SET

$43800

NEW SHIPMENT

NOW AYAILAILE

OF PIICE
......
.....,
S19 990 w •••., .....,.
I

•Cane
Accent

Chairs ..._~

SAVE

Sala

S19900

PIICIS
RA111NG AI ·

200Jo TO 300fol

&amp; , . Tltltt Stnlcl

446·3145
••

Father'•

RA111NG

Deliwtry

- --··

La-Z-BOy

AS LOW AS

.,,..

IAWPOUS,-0
. . . . . . 1114

$ 179

Day

•FrH
Perld..

D.J. Sfllll
'S Craft
Shop
YAUIY IUZA

SALE

Rockers

*3 IR. 2 F. laths
Eat·ill ·
*Vauh Clill..
lltchln
*R-22, R-11, 1·13.1 •lifetime Warranty
•s.pante UtiHty ltw. an Vinyl Skli.. .

FOR THE

::~t.OO

•Swivel

•Spci-

'

NEW SHIPMENT
JUST ARRIVED!

Chairs

BlAND NEW 44124

•

STARTING AT

COMPUTER DESI

' Rockers
•Wing

GOOD COlOR SELECTION•
LARGE SELECTION OF WEDDING
ACCESSORIES TO CHOOSE.FROMI

•Jtt.oo sm S149

Dinettes .

$3 9900

WITH OUR STAFF CHANGES WE NOW HAVE 65 YEARS
MANUFACTURERED HOMES EXPERIENCE
**WITM OUR TEAM AT RIYIIDALE HOMES**

JUST ARRIVED ..- ·NEW SHIPMENT
OF WEDDING CAKE TOPS.

.

Mattress Sale

STARTING AT

YOU CAN'T BEAT EXPERIENCE!

G BULLETIN!

2 COLOIS

lfG

Patio Furniture!

•Glide

WED

IWdRBoY

LEONARDandKAMMY(SAYRE)FRYE

.McDaniel-Hood

businesses, offices, ·and homes•

for

Da., ,.

I am retiring effective July 19 from
my long-time medical practice in the
Big Bend Area.

\
GU.st Books Feather Pens
Garters
Candles
Lace Gloves Ring.earer Pillows

3t ' X 16' OuliNitDinwrstOnt

2~

WILL BE HELD AT THE
0.0. MciNTYRE PARI
JUNE 25 FROM 10·3.
EVERYONE WRCOMEI

ONE EVENIN SHOW 7:30
ADIISSION 1 1.50

RICHARD ud B~ENDA (HOOD) McDANIEL

Inc.

A special introductory offer good

Pllrkk

IN

Quality cleaning for

'

IOIIHN modal• otwtffltl. IUUI

ceremony wUI
6 p.t,J. at Firat
Nazarene In
IUieV. Bruce UJU'oe

~s

---Wedding policy---

t

_.

••
::·

l~troducing

c·

'

Tom and. Jan (Brewer)
ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED
Duncan, of IU. 2, Galllpolltl, reeeatlycelebrated tbelr 21ith Weddlag
Aanlvenary with a trip to Orlando, Fla. They were married oa
February 14, 1.961, at GalllpolltJ. Tltey have two 8008, Tom, of
Vandalia, Ohio, and Greg, of Galllpoll.s.

FRI. THRU THURS.

Gluesencamp anniversary noted

GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Tucker wUI cel~brate the
25th Wedding Anniversary, July
2, at 2 p.m. at the Faith Valley
Christian Union Church, BulavUle Road, Gallipolis. A reception wlll follow the ceremony at
221 Main St., Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

·:: ' i

'

REV. arid
. ' MRS. LAWRENCE GLUESENCAMP

Lees note anniversary recently
LONG BOTTOM ~ Carl and
Pearlene Lee, Eagle Ridge
Road, Long Bottom, recenlly
celebraled their 50th wec;ldlng
anniversary with a cookout
hosted by their chlldren. Carol
Wriston of Marietta, Charles Lee
of Logan. an'd Larry Lee . of
Chester.

(01.0\' .
. /},,,.,, ...

.

$19900

SDEmDIE~~

~,. .

SAil

95900

....
---

0,.. to 5 ....
... &amp; fill.

..... c.il,
-.lim•• w
. fiJ II I•

I

�•

Page- B-4-Sunday limes- Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plee•tnt, W.Va.

•
Rescue &amp;boo!.
During the four-week course at
the Naval Air Technical Training
Center, M!llington, Tenn., Proffitt studied the causes and types
of fires, rescue techniques and
emergency · operations procedures. He was taught to operate
and. maintain fire-fighting equipment, Including fire trucks, and
the use of special rescue tools.
A 1971 graduate of Racine High
School, Racine, he joined the
Navy In August 1971.

June 18. 1989

June 18, 1989

II

· Myers is the son of Alvin J. and
Josef!na D. Myers of395'10Sllver
Ridge Road, Reedsvllle, Ohio.
The corporal Is a 1983 graduate
of Eastern High Schoo~ Reedavll!e

MARK A. LANE
He Is an anti-armor weapons In i:ombined operations.
Mark A. Laue, son of John W, Infantryman with the 506tb InfanTile operations Include the
Laue of Rura·l Route 2, Galllpolls, try In South Korea.
reception, slaaing, employment
Ohio, has been promoted In the
Eynon is the son of James 0 . and redeployment of out-orU.S. Army to the rank of and Ruby A. Eynon of Racine, . country U.S. augmentation
sereeant.
Ohio.
forces.
Lane
Is
an
Infantryman
In
West
The private Is a 1987 graduate
He Is an atr-defense IntelliJVANL. BURT
Germany,
with
the
502nd
Infanof
Soutbern
Hlgb
School,
Racine.
gence and operations assillant
Army National Guard Private
with the 62nd Air Defense ArIvan L. Hurt has completed basic ' try Regiment.
ROBERT
A.
BATI!'.S
II
tUiery at · Schofield Barracks,
training at Fort Leonard Wood,
WARREN F. STONE
Army Spec. Robert A. Bates II
Hawaii.
·
Mo.
Army National Guart! Pvt. · has participated In exercise · •B ates Is the soli of Karen R. and
During the training, students
Robert D. Waller of Rural Route
received Instruction In drill and Warren F. Stone has completed ·'Team Spirit •89" In the Republic
or Korea.
1, Gallipolis, Ohio.
ceremonies, weapons, map read- basic training at Fort Dlx, N.J.
During the training, students
The exercise Involved personHis wife, Christine, Is the
Ing, tactics, mllltary courtesy,
In
drUI
and
received
!struction
nel
from all mllltary services of
daughter of Thomas R. and
mll!tary justice, first aid, and
ceremonies, weapons, map read- the Republic of Korea and the
Deloria Belcher of 128 W. GerArmy·h!story and traditions . .
man St., Tlpp City, Ohio.
Hurt is tbe sonotlvan Hurt Sr. Ing, tactics, mllltary courtesy, United Stales. The purpose Is to
military justice, first ald, and increase the defensive posture of
The specialist II a 1984 graduof Rural RoUte 2, Bidwell, Ohio.
the· Republic of Korea and U.S.
ate of Kyger Creek High School,
His wife, Tina, is tbe daughter Army history and traditions.
Stone Is the son of Shella D. support forces through training
Cheshire, Ohio.
of Rose Ragland of Jackson,
Stone
of
West
Columbia,
W.Va.
Ohio. .
, His wite, Angela, Is the daughThe private is a 1985 graduate
ter
of Tome and Nancy Belcher of
of Gallla Academy, Gallipolis,
Letart,
W.Va.
' .
Ohio.

WOMEN'S CAMP SET The annual women's camp at
Canters Cave In Jackson will
be held July 10, 11 and 12. All
women are welcome lo attend.
Last years camp attracted
women from Gallla, Meigs,
Scioto, Lawrence, Plckaway,
Jackson, Franklin and Highland counties. The women
enjoyed seeing old friends,
hiking, swimming, crafts,
singing and relaxation. Reglstrallon must be turned In by
July 1. For more lnldonnatlon
call !he Extension olllce at
446-7007.

For
.
Speelal
Oeeaalon
We offer complete tuxedo rental ..,.

Teen pizza maker .rolls in dough

vice to belp you look your belt on

that 1peclal dav.
PIKED FIOII

$2995

HASKINS·
TANNER
3328econdA-.ue

!louis

Moo. &amp; frL t-1

r--lhiL-IIoors.
&amp; s.r. ,_,
'

toss dopgh .and ladle on sauce.
ALEXANDRIA. Va. (UPI) As!m, who graduated from
When Waheed Aslm left Afghan- .
Alexandria's T.C. W!lliams High
!stan five years ago for a better
School last week, has earn\'d
life in the United States, he did
more t.han $20,000 and been
not speak a word of English and
rewarded with two sports cars
certainly had never seen a pizza.
from Frank Meeks, owner of the
He settled in the suburbs of
Domino's franchises In the WaWashington with his mother and
shington metropolitan area.
brother, enrolled In junior high
school and strJ.Igg!ed to learn
He is a bout to embark on a tour
English and American ways. of the United States and Europe,
Later, he needed money and challenging ·other pizza makers
something to do' af!er school.
who think they can beat Asim's
A friend worked at Domino's · lightning speed .
For the past two years he has
Pizza and As!m star ted hanging
around the store In Alexandria. won Domino's pizza. contest. Last
Employees felt sorry for the year. he shaped 16 pies - 10
smalL dark boy and gave him a medium and six large - and
topped them with sauce in 2: 56,
job picking up trash.
Eager to learn. he kept hang- beating his wlnn!ngtlmetheyear
ing around, and soon. they gave before of 4: 56.
him more jobs until he landed the
The first year he entered the
one people say he does laster contest he finished second and
was determined to never let It
than anyone else - make pizza.
Five years later Aslm. now 18. happen again.
Is herald~d by the giant pizza
An Intense. confident young
chain as the world's fastest pizza man. As!m begins practicing five
maker and Domino's has paid months before each contest.
him handsomely for his a bll!ty to tossl!lg 200 to 300 pies a day, five

Golllpolit. Ohio
M•n•t

w.-.. Since 1866"

.

Heart Fund plans
golf scramble

FA(IOIY AUIHOII!ED SEIYI(E

Chester Council
meeting slated

Gold star

Samsung

S•••••an
tenlth

WINNERS- Brenda Holter, left, and Dorothy Leifheit were the
local winners in the annuai4-H health and safely speaking contest.
They will now go into district competition.

Bookmobile
routes announced
-·

,GALLIPOLIS - Bookmobile
Schedule for the week of June
18-24. 1989.
Monday:
1st Truck: Sun Valley 2:453; 10; Lewis -urive 3: 15-3: 30;
Kerr 4:15-4: 45; Bidwell Old
School 4:55-5: 30; Bidwell (Nolan's) 5:35-6:00; Bidwell (Phillip's) 6:05-6: 32; Cochrans 6: 457: 15; Deer Creek 7:30-7: 40; Deer
Creek Church 7: 45-8; 15.
2nd Truck: Rodney Village II
4:30-5: 00; Rio Grande Vlllage
5:15-5: 45; Rio Grand Post Office
5:50-6: 30; Rio Grande Estates
6: 45-8:_00.
Tuesday:
1st Truck: R &amp; R Tr. Ct.
10:15-10:45; Russell11:05-11: 15;
Hudson 11:28-12: 48; Fisher
12:00-12: 20; Russell, Garnett
12 : 35-12:55; Eno 1:30-2:15;
Africa Road 2:20-2: 55; Roush I
3:15-3: 35; Roush II 3:40-4: 10; L.
Marlin 4: 15-4: 25.
2nd Truck: K&amp;K Tralier Park
4:15-4: 45; Kanauga 5th Ave.
4: 50-5: 20; Georges Creek 5: 406: 00; Addison 6: 10-6: 30; Cheshire 6:45-7:30; Cheshire Levy
7: 35-8: 00.
Wednesday:
No Route Ma!ntena 0 ce Day.
Thursdi!Y'
1st Truck: Legrande 3: 25-3: 50;
Northup 4: 00-4: 30; Mudsock
5:00-5: 30; Patrl(lt 5: 45-6: 45; Cora
7:00-7:30; Meadowbrook 8:0()8: 20; R. Murray 8: 20-8: 30.
2nd Truck: Cadmus 4: 15-4: 45;
Gall! a 5:00-6: 00; Centerpoint
·li: 15-7:00; Centerville 7:15-8:()().
Friday:
!at Truck: Fulks 1:15-1: 35;
Goody's 1: 45-2:00; Myers 2:20, 2:35; Churcb's Store 2:45-3:15;
Mercervllle 3:~-4:00; Swain's
Store 4: 15-4: 4:1:· R. Myers 4:50, II: 05; Neal 5: 10-5: 25; Ohio Townbouse 6:30-7: 15; Teen's Run
7:45-8:15.
Saturday:
.
CJ'IIIIIIIblck 9:80-10: 00; Gall!a
~·:OJ~ 10!1~10:40; Gal!la
Iii
·10:45-U: 15; Allee
rV~~:,~; ;::~; ~1!1~;: MorMor-

POMEROY - Bookmobile
Schedule - June 18-24, 1989.
Bookmobile Service ls provided
in Meigs County by .the Meigs
County Public Library under
contr~ct with the Ohio Valley
Area.L!braries.
Monday - Keno, 2: 40-3: 10;
Chester (Fire Station), 3:304:00; Burlingham (Mobile Home
Park). 4:30-5: 15; llarrisonville
(Church), 6: 15-7:00 p.m.
Wednesday - Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 4:40-5:10;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's),
6: 10-7: 10 p.m.

. POMEROY Meigs 4-H
member Brenda Holler and
Dorothy Leifheit have qualified
to participate in the district
safety speaking contest to be held
on June 27 at 5:30 p.m at the
South District office located In
Jackson. ·
.
The two were the local winners
in the annual contest held this
week at the Meigs County Extension Office.
Brenda is a member of the
. fitarllters 4-H Club and has been
in 4-H for three years. He speech
was entitled "Child Abuse" and
focused on the different types of
abuse and how big of a problem
child abuse is becoming to
society.
Dorothy. a member of the Kid
Konnection 4-H Club. has also
been a· 4-H member for three
years. Her speech was entitled
" Heat Stroke-Heat Exhaustion"
and focused on · the dangers of
heat stroke and beat exhaustion
and the preventive measures to
be taken to avoid them.
Mary Powell, Pomeroy res!-

"'!'he most i'mpo~tant thing to
me Is equal rights." said As!m,
who' plans to delay college to
enter Domino's management·
training program and eventually
own a franchise. "Everybody
has a chance to do anything they
want to do. I can give myself as
an example."
There is no such thing as
competitive spirit in Afghanis tan. he said.
His father' died before the
family came to the United States .
His mother had become very
depressed as the war with the
Soviet Union dragged on and
decided to leave.

•

391 WEST MAIN STREET

992-3524 •

Graduates

'

'.

You have reached a milestone of accomplishment_in
your lives and we wish you continued success.
This spring we, at Veterans Memorial, your Hometown Hospital, inaugurated on-site Career Days to ac.quaint high school students with the career opportunities which are available in the healthcare field. These
programs were highly successful and we feel pride in
ha~ing initiated Career Days which we plan to continue·
each year. ·
Now that you may be going on to higher education, do
look into the career opportunities in the healthcare
field. Not only are jobs available when you complete
your training but you will find that healthcare.offers you
the opportunity to. be in the position of helping other
·•
people ~ a most rewarding feeling.

Din NPSI

FINE ARTS HELP -:- Although coal mining
Isn't uilualJy 'associated with the line arts,
Southern Oh!f Coal Company's Meigs Division
haS contributed to Ohio University's Children's
Theater. Thtney will be used to help finance
productions huch as "Scarecrow," pictured
above, which was perfonned last month at the

"WilLI SIIPPUES WJW

Best of Luck.

Prescription.Shop

,'

115,

..
'

~)

CADMUS- An Old Fashioned
Pie Social will be held on July 1
from noon until 8 p.m. at the
Cadmus Community · Center a I'
Cadmus, Ohio on SR 141.
The event Is being sponsored

by the Community Center in
order to rasle money to restore
ihe old school house. Admission
to the event Is free.
Festivities will include music
by theBiuegri!SS Gentleman and

Job Bank helps seniors work
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior false assumption. The earned
Citizen Job Bank is an employ- wages are paid by the employer.
ment agency which gives free The Job does not set the wages,
. services to employ4i!rs and appli- however, It Is assumed that the
cants 50 years of age and older.
employer will pay the same rate
The Job bank counselors at- to the job applicant as he or she
temp to get job orders In the would pay to any one else.
community hopefully lor each .
The job bank welcome$ appli• applicant,
cants with any mark!table skill
Many people bave the mis- and· solicits job orders from all
taken Idea that Job applicants employers In the .;ommun!ty who
work as unpaid volunteers. Oth- are seeking dependable help call,
ers think that some state agency 446-7000 lor more Information.
pays the saler!es. That Is also a

..

Gospel's Cabell Fam!jy. The
Midway Cloggers will perform at
5 and 6 p.m.
A Banjo and Fiddle P!ckln'
contest will begin at 1 p.m ..
There Is a $10 entry fee and
people desiring to particpate

C.Y.O. Slip-on

Woman's
Leather or Convas

C.V.O. Lace
Women's
Leather or Canvas

IN STORE STOCKING
STARTING AT $299 S/1 &amp; UP
1ST QUAUTY - NO SECONDS

WAU MUIALS ....~........................................ 129.99
5' &amp; 6' SILK TREES r~g. '59.95 ................... S45.95
ULY TABLE LAMPS r~g. S59.95 ..................... S49.9S
LEVOLOI IUNDS - WALL COVEll. BY MAY FAll
SIGNIP FOI Fm WALLPANI CUNIC.

should call 379-2268. Only 15
contestants in each category w!ll
be accepted.
Pretty baby conests for babies
up to thrE'e·years-old will be held .
starting at 12:30 p.m.
Sumerlest Queen contests will
begin at start at 1:30 p.m.

BOOK IN JUNE AND SAVE $50.00

ISE

Where The
Gifts AreT.M.

to the·sun-struck

Bahamas.

From

LAIGE SELICftOfl

$429.00

Someo~e Jery special's getting married

CNisc cl Pon Tu

=:.:.:"

you • choice of II different colored
yow r a q . _ ,.. mey be, oomplete
Mdlfectlod Ia - • with Rock.of Agee .

Rook of
gmlitel.

Mon.. T -.. Thuro.. a FrL 1:00 1.m. 'IH 4:00p.m.

Ot'* Hou,. bv Appolntm~t-441-2327 or 183-1181

STAaiY A.

JJIWA.i
••

(

~

Old fashioned pie social planned to benefit center

·'

'

qGC!bo"k

SPRING VAUEY PUU • GAUIPOI.IS, OH. • 1614) 446·7333
MON.-FII.I 0·6
SAT. 10-.t

GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Business and Professional
Women's .Club meets Monday,
6:30 p.m., at the Down Under.
. Speaker will be State Rep. Mary
Abel (D-Athens) . whose topic
wlll be the multiple roles of
women.
Meeting chairman Is Mary Lou
Tawney, with committeemen
Ruth Snyder. Lucy Earwood.
Wilma Brown, Terri Weier and
Lisa Koch.

Join your AAA hostess, Karen Ra~bum
October 27-30 on the STAR/SHIP ATLANTIC.

. VDERAtiS
.

-

CLIPPER MILLS - Christ
United Methodist Church Bible
School is Monday through Fri- ·
day, 9 a.m. to noon, for ages .
preschool to lOth grade.

WALLPAPER MILL OUTLET
AND INTERIOR DESIGN

,'

•

GALLIPOLIS - Faith Temple
Independent Church Bible School
is Monday tbrough June 23. ·6 p.m .. for ages 3 and over.
-

served.
Others attending were Elieen
Bowers. Mildred Phillips. Suzan
Thoma. and Eleanor Lawson, a
guest.
.
The next meeting will be af'the
home of Mrs. Thoma on July 18.

PREMIER CRUISE LINES

USI..UI-11'~

"'"""

VINTON - Vinton Baptist
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and Church Bible School will be
menus for the week of June 19-23, Monday, June 19 through Friday.
at the Senior Citizens Center, 220 June 23, 9 a.m. to noon. The
Jackson Pike will be as follows: theme will be " Treasures in
Monday -Chorus, 1 p.m.
Christ."
Tuesday- STOP/ phys!callitness 10:30, Cards/ Euchre, 1-3
CHESHIRE - Silver Run
p.m.
Bap'tist Church Bible School will
Wednesday - Wednesday VI- be June 19 through 23, 6 to 8 p.m.
deo, 12:30-2:30, "Short Circuit";
Cards/ Euchre, 1-3 p.m.
ADDISON- Addison Freewill
Thursday - Bible Study,10-12; Baptist Church Bible School will
Herbalists, 1:30-2:30 p.m.;
be June 19 through 23, 6:30 p.m.
Friday- ArtClass,10-12; Mini .nightly lor children and adults of
Craft, 1-3 p.m.
all ages.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Sausage link or
patty, hashed brown potatoes, VBS closing exercises
buttered Kale/ Vinegar, Bread,
tonight at church
Tapioca Pudding
Tuesday - Beef Tips with
GALLIPOLIS'- Closing exer·
gravy, whipped potatoes, but- cises will be held at First Baptist
tered carrots .and peas, bread. Church for Vacation Bible
cherry chrlsp.
School. Sunday, 6 p.in ., accordWednesday - Chicken and hig to pastor Dr. Archie Conn.
noodles, spinach, cranberry
sauce In orange jel!o, bread, cake
During the week. the children,
with glaze.
ages 3-12 participated in crafts,
Thursday - Hot dog with Bible memorization and a balsauce, baked beans, green loon launch.
pepper, cole slaw, applesauce.
Friday - Macaroni and
The public is InVited to the
cheese, stewed tomatoes, green closing exercise. after which
beans, garden salad, bread, refreshments will be served in
sliced peaches.
the gym.

B&amp;PW to meet

· university's recital hall. The donation was
pre~ented to Dora Wllsiln, dean of the College of
Fine Artsm abd Marilyn Remonko, dlrectorolthe
Athens Community Music School, Children'~
Chorus and Children's Opera by represeniallve
Sally Gibson.

Again -- Our Most · Sincere
Congratulations and ..the

S1C9

Bible schools set in Gallia

Mary Lash. president. conducted the recent meeting of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ Evangeline Missio'nary Group when
members met at the home of
Mrs. Gertle Bass in ReedsVille.
Cards were sent to shut-ins
and Janet Venoy gave the mis·
slonary report followed by Pat
Thoma who gave the prayer
before refreshments were

POMEROY, OHIO

The entire staff at Veterans Memorial Hospital extends warm congratulations to all of you high school .
graduates in our area this spring.

Senior schedule
set at center

Et·an[!,eline Mis.rionary Group hold.r meetin[!.

•

Congrat~lations

PURCHASE A 2 LITER
10m£ OF YOUR (HOKE .
PlUS A PACKAGE OF
KEEIL£1-Pima BRAIDS
OR INOTS FOR

271 NOrPI
SIC- AVE.

hours a day, live or six days a
week.
"There is an attitude I wake up
with every morning. I want to be
the best. I don't want anybody to
be faster than me," As!m said.
He considers himself extremely competitive. one of the
things he said he loves most
about America.

HOME ENTERTAI. .Nl CENTER

dent. was the judge of the local
contest.

"SUMMER TIME FUN"

PEPSI

I me non.
Shin tom
Multi Tech
Scott

WE REPAIR All MAlES

4-H safety speakers compete
•

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- 8-5

Intheservke---------------------

SHAWN D. BEAVER
Navy Seaman Recruit Shawn
D. Beaver, 'son of Jann!e P.
Butcher of 1274 Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis, OH, has completed
recruit training at Recruit TrainJOHN W. SJSSON
Ing Command, Orlando, Fla.
Airman John W. Sisson has
During Beaver' s eight-week
grad4ated from Air Force basic
training cycle, he studied genU'alnlng at Lackland Air Force
eral military subjects designed
Base, Texas.
to prepare him for further
During the six weeks of trainacademic and on-the' job training
CVRTIS D. JOND
DANA 0. EYNON ·
ing the airman studied ,the 1\lr ' In one of t)le Navy~s 85 basic
Pvt.
Curtis D. Jones has
Army
Pvt. 1st Class Dana 0.
Force mission, ·organizaUon and
fields. ··
completed basic tralnlrili at Fort · Eynon has 'participated In ·exercustoms and received special
Beaver's studies Includes sea- Slll, Okla.
cise "Team Spirit '89'' In the
training In human relations.
manship, close order drill, Naval
During the training, students Republic or Korea.
In addition, airmen who comhistory and first ald. Personnel received Instruction In drill and
The exercise Involved personplete basic training earn credits
who complete this course of ceremonies, weapons, map readnel
from all military services of
toward an associate degree · instruction are eligible for three Ing, tactics, mll!tary courlesy,
the
Republic of Korea and the
through the community college
hours of college credit In Physi- military justice, first aid, and
United
States. The purpose Is to
of the Air Force.
cal Education and Hygiene.
Army history and traditions.
Increase
the defensive posture of
Sisson is the son of Iva M. and
A 1988 graduate of Gal!ia
Jones Is the grandson of the Republic of Korea and U.S.
Robert W. Sisson of Rural Route
Academy High School, Gallipo- Ayward C. and Pansey M. Jones support forces through training
1, Rutland, Ohio.
lis, he joined the Navy In January of Racine, Ohio.
In combined operations. .
1989.
He is a 1988 graduate of
The operations Include the
EARL R. FIELDS
Southern Local High School,
reception,
staging, employment
, Pvt. Earl R. Fields, son of Earl
ELWOOD J.MYERS
Racine. ·
and
redeployment
or out-of'I{ . Fields of 33151 Happy Hollow
Army Cpl. Elwood J. Myers
country
U.S.
augmentation
Road. Middleport, · Ohio, has
has partj.c!pated In exercise
ELIZABETH A. McCAIN
forces;
completed basic training at Fort
"Team Spirit '89" In the Republic
Elizabeth A. McCain has comDill, N.J. ·
of Korea.
pleted a triU,lsportat!on officer
During the training, students
. The exercise Involved person- basic course at the U.S. Army
received instruction ·in drill and
nel from all mUititry services of Transpottatlon Schoo~ Fort Eusceremonies, weapons, map readthe Republic of Korea and the tis, Va.
Ing, tactics, mli!tary courtesy.
United States. Tbe purpose Is to
POMEROY ·- . The Meigs
During the course, students
military justice, first aid, and Increase the defensive posture of were trained In a variety of County Heart Fund Golf &amp;ramArmy history and traditions.
the Republic of Korea and U.S. mU!tary subj eels and given a ble has been rescheduled lor
His wife, Marteena, is the
support. forces through training basic knowledge or the structure Thursday June 29, at Jaymar
daughter of Henry Eblin Jr. of In combined operations.
or transportation corps units and Golf Course. A luncheon and
Pomeroy, Ob.io.
The operations Include the operations.
Calcutta will be held at 12 noon.
re.;ept!on, staging, employment
McCain Is the daughter of followed by golf at 1 p.m. A steak
JAMES. G. PROFFITT
and redemployment of out-of- Carol G. Langtord and step- dinner a,n d awards will conclude
Navy Petty Officer lsi Class -country U.S. augmentation daughter of Carl E, Langford of the day's activities.
James G. Proffitt, son of Clar- forces ',
-628 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio.
ence .G. Proffitt of Route 1,
'He Is a combat engineer with
She Is a 1984 graduate of Gallla
Portland, OH, b.as graduated the 65tb Engineer Battalion, Academy, Gallipolis, and also a
from Aircraft F!re!lghting and Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.
1989 graduate of Rio Grande
College, Ohio.
CHESTER - Chester Council
ERNEST EDW ABDS Ill
323, Daughters of Amercia, will
Army Pvt. Ernest -Edwards .meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday. InitiaIII, son of Drema K. and Ernest tion will be held lor Guiding Star
Edwards of Gall!polls, Ohio, has Counci1124, Syracuse. Quarterly
arrived for duty In West birthdays will be observed.
Germany.
· Members are asked to wear
Edwards is a cannon crewman white. Potluck refreshments will
wltli the 1st Field Artlllery,
be served.

'\

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

Call Now!

~ &lt;8 8ALLIPOLIS ·
~TrBwel~~
-·
160--ll&amp;
\IU,

and you really care.
Give•a little of the love, feel
the love· you want to share.
1 Let them know
yov cared ~noug}i to go
where the gifts are.

~
_:zt.,.

...
,...,

...

,
LA

4IM 11001111 · - • •. . .

•

.llh.ll \£1 IPII -~~ lllh

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·~

Page-B-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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June 18, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport-G.Uipolil, Ohio-Point Pl.._,t, W. Va.

June 18, 1989

In our town...________

.·

By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS- Have you had
any tlpe tomatoes this year from
your garden?
Becky and
Alan Scott . \vho
live on old State
Route 7, abOut
three miles
south of Gallipolis, had their
first · ripe homegrown tomato
Thursday from their garden.
Mrs. Scott said the tomato was
of the Early Girl variety and was
planted March 15. She said It was
really delicious, quite unlike
" tube tomatoes." sold on produce counters In supermarkets.
Scott said so far they had
picked only one tomato. They set
out only five plants In March, and
later set out another 80 plants.
They expect to harvest a lot more
tomatoes this summer.
Got. a postcard from Becky's
dad this week. Max Tawney Is. or.
was; In Turkey, at least that's
where the card was mailed from·.
It was posln\arked Takslm,
somewhere around Istanbul. I
believe. His message was brief,
"HI Dick. ·I found a place over
here where I can buy cigar loads.
I will see that you get one."
Max was always a good one for
playing jokes on you with a
loaded cigar. I remember the
lime we were· at a Downtown
Coaches I athletic awards) ban·
quet In ' the Washington School
cafeteria . Max gavemeaclgar. I
. didn't know It was loaded until I
was typing away about 1:30 the
next morning when it "went
bOom In the night."
Bill Gray of the Ohio Valley
Bank called me the other day and
said he's looking for old pictures
of Gallipolis. or was It pictures of
old Gallipolis. Anyway, Bill's
connected wlth the Bicentennial
Commission and he's looking for
Interesting pictures of Gallipolis
taken In the last 198 or 199 years.
And. he's particularly lriter·
ested In pictures In the late 1800's
and around . the turn of the
century. Of course, he wan.l s
pictures of the years since that.
In fact. what he's really looking .
for Is any pictures or lnteresUng
people and places. So If you have
any pictures you'd like to loan
Gray. call him at the Ohio Valley
Bank 446-2631 or at home 446·
8578 ..
And, speaklnK of banks, Star
Bank, of which we have one here,
has a new employe. Remember
Mr. Carlson II believe that's the
way you spell It 1 of WKRP In
Cincinnati fame? His name Is
Gordon Jump. Well, Big Guy, 'a s
Herb Tarleck called him, Is doing
Star Bank commercials on the
tube.

James Sands

And. that's not all. he t1;10k th e Warren , Ohio, was a member of
Maytag repairman's job on the class and J, Emmett, him·
another commercial. Sleep and sell, President or the· Galllpolls
gets paid for it. Jump has proven, City Board of Education at the
as we all know, there's life after time, handed out diplomas to the
WKRP. You can see him this 49'ers, 40 years ago.
Lola Mae Suiter was "Miss
Wednesday night on a new
Rupe"
a second grade teacher at
episode (not a rerunl of Hard
·Washington
Elementary School
Time on Planet Earth. It airs at 8
In
1937.
She
was honored as a
p.m. WednesdayonCBSC(Jannel
representative of the 49'ers'
13, Huntington.
Back to tbe Gallipolis Blcen· teachers. Her daughter, Jennie
tennlal. Got a letter the other day Mae. now Mrs. Jack Waugh of
from Charles A. Murray of the Ravenswood, W.Va., was a
GaiUa County Historical Society, member or the class.
The Morrison loaned me the
who says they're doing research
on one·room schools In Gallla reunion bOok which was com·
County for the bicentennial. They piled by Janice Folden Burnett,
need help In finding old records Mrs. Alan G., of Reynoldsburg. II
that document the his tory of was a mighty fine piece of
these bygone structures. The literature, as the late Jim Porter
historical society plans to publish would say. There are pages of
a book which will contain photo· graduates, each with his or her
graphs of the past as well as own page, with a place for a
Interviews with teachers as well small picture and lines on which
as students who attended these to list all your background
cradles of early formal material, along with spaces for
comments abOut their years at
education.
Murray says research on old Gallla Academy High School.
SCHOOL DAYS- The a helve group picture was
"Oat." Brtnr your lawn chairs, cameras, and any
Some or the teachers mentl·
one·room schools began locally
pbotos you'd like to share with fonner classmates
taken
several
years
age
when
achool
waa
still
In 1987 when the French Colony oned were Ann Bradbury, Aldeth
and
friends. Soft drinks will be provided. A very
held
at
lhe
Sliver
Run
Grade
School.
Look
belnK
Chapter, Daughters of theA mer· Robinson, Lawrence Smeltzer,
be
your
class.
Last
year's
short
program Is also planned this year. Once
carefully
It
could
lean Revolution, participated In Ruth Masters, Ben Evans, Eulah
again,
reunion,
lhe
flrsl
to
be
held,
proved
to
be
a
great
a photographer will be on hand for group
a statewide project called "What Williams. and GARS Principal,
aucceas
and
another
reunion
Is
planned
Ibis
year
pictures
and snapshots throurhout the afternoon.'
Happened to the One-Room the late Harold Brown. And then ,
on
July
2,
from
I
to
4
p.m.,
on
the
sebool
ground
Please
plan
to attend.
Schoolhouses?'' Photographs there's this unforgettable com·
were taken of more than 70 ment from one of the 49'ers "You
structures that are either still will graduate, GOd and Miss
Intact or have been remodeled Bradbury, willing."
A couple of the younger genera·
Into dwe!Ungs for Gallla County
614-221-0888
lion are at this moment vacationresl!!ents.
The group already has col· Ing In Hawaii. Nate and Terri
lected many photographs which Thomas flew out of Port Colum·
DARWIN - The Bedford lng Hocking Technical College
. AnORNEY ·AT -LAW
were loaned by private lndlvldu· bus last Tuesday for the beautiful
Township Scholarship Commit· this fall.
336
S. High St., Colu!Mus, OH.
Custer Is the daughter of Judy
als, then copied and returned to Island of Oahu and the sandy
tee met recently and awarded
LOCAL CONSULTATION
the owners. So If you have any old beaches of Walklki. I lt:now
three scholarships for the 1989·90 Well and Phillip J . Custer. She
school records or pictures, con· because, their little black dog , school year. The recipients are will also be attending Hocking
KNIGHT, MULlEN LAW OFFICES,
tact Murray at 446·2272; Mrs. "Cricket" Is spending the week
Decker R. Cullums, Jndy Lynn· Technical College In the fall.
POMEROY, 992·2090
me·
and
my
wife.
The
with
Young, the son of Roger and
· Estivaun Matthews, 446·1956;
Custer and Wesley R. Young. '
In P-oy with
Mrs. Mary Niday 4464892; or Thomases will be home Wednes·
Cullums Is the son or Don and Yvonne Young, will attend Rio
A
nOIINEY
D. MICHAEl MULlEN
day to Columbus, and on Thurs·
Mrs'. Etta Altizer 446-2272.
Kay Cullums and will be attend· Grande College this fall.
More on schools. Silver Run day to Gallipolis. While In Hawaii
School Is having another reunion they plan to look up another local
of classmates this year. But. face. Brad Abels. son of Dr. and
after this year, there will not be Mrs. Gene Abels, Is In theN avy ,
SECORD NAILED AGAIN:
another reunion for three or four stationed at Pearl Harbor and
Iran·Contra
scandal figure Rl·
years. The 1989 reunion will be Invited them to ·call him while
chard
Secord
has been arrested
held July 2, that's a Sunday, they're on the Island.
for
drunken
driving
again. SeSo long, for now .
from 2 to 4 p.m. on the school
. cord. 56. a retired Air Force
ground flats. Bring your own
major general, was arrested
chairs, Cameras and any piC·
Wednesday night In VIenna, Va.,
The Gallla County 4·H Health&amp;
lures you would like to share with
and
released on $750 cash bOnd.
former classmates and friends. Safety Speaking Contest will be
Secord
was convicted May 11 of
Soft drinks will be furnished. June 20 at 7 p.m. In the Columbus
driving
with a blood alcohol level
Group pictures wlll be taken. If Southern Electric buUdlng.
of
0.2,
twice
the legal amount.
Any 4·H member may select a
you have any questions. call
either Pauline Thompson 367· topic of health or safety that When he was arrested the second
lime he refused to take a breath.
affects famUy living.
7124 or Maxine Little 992·5703.
test.
Speeches
presented
by
Junior
The Class of 1149 of Gallla
. . .
Academy High School held Its contestant$ (lbose who have not
KEITH PLEADS AT LAST:
40th reunion May 27 at the passed their 14th birthday as of 'There was a warrant out for the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge. My next January 1) should not exceed 3 an~st of David Keith briefly
door neighborS, J . Emmett and minutes . Senior · contestants'
because neither the actor nor his
Marie Morrison were special speeches should not exceed 5. 5 lawyer showed up Wednesday In
guests at the reunion represent· minutes In length or be under 4 court .ln Beverly Hills to enter a
lng parents of all the members of minutes.
· plea to the ·drunken driving ·
The contest Is sponsored by the
529 Jackson Pike
that graduating class. Their
charge against Keith. The war·
Buckeye
Rural
Electric
daughter, Ann Morrison Dula of
rant was quashed Thursday.
Spring Valley Plaza
Company.

Bedford township scholarships
presented to three students

-People-

4-H contest slated

..f..

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Phentr 446-2134

Weddings pretty much the same as 1800's

HOWARD BAkER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.

to the women's movement for
equal rights.
As soon as 'the minister pronounced Mr. Norton and Miss
Brown m.a n and wife, the party
filed out of the church to their
carriages and were taken to the
Brown home, where the reception was held. The tables at the
Brown home · were decorated
with white tablecloths and orna·
mented with smilax and Amerl·
can beauty roses, !Illes and white
and pink carnations. The meal
was In four courses and consisted
of: sherbert, chicken croquets
with mushroom sauce, tlmbals
with French peas, potato chips,
bread, coffee, cheese dressing
and tomato sandwiches, olives,
cake and Ice cream.
At 4 p.m. that afternoon the
new Mr. and Mrs. Norton
bOarded the Hocking Valley train
which took them to Columbus for
connections to Niagara Falls,
New York City and then Wa·
shlngton, D.C.

GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County
HlsiOrlal Society meets Sunday,
St . Peter's Episcopal .Church:
board meets l p.m., general
meeting Is 2: 30 p.m . Program by
Dale Iman on the city's
blcen ten nla I.
GALLIPOLIS - White Oak
Baptist Church has special singIng, Sunday, 11 a.m.
MT. ALTO. W.Va. - Grubb
Family Singers will be at Gospel
Lighthouse, Sunday , 7:30p.m.

_....__

.
··

.. EUREKA - Joyshlp Enter·
- prise launches dally 9 a.m ..
· ~ Monday through June 23 at
·· Christ United Methodist Church.
THURMAN T.hurman
grange meets Monday, 8 p.m. at
·· the grange hall.
..
VINTON - American Legion
: Auxiliary 161 meets 1 p.m.,
Monday. Ewlngton Academy .
'

CHESHIRE -Vacation Bible
School will be at the Silver Run
:: BapUst Church Monday through
.. Friday from 6·8 p.m. The Silver
.. Run Baptist Church Is located In
: Cheshire.

MIDDLEPORT - The Ash
· Street Freewill Baptist Church of
·- Middleport will be having Vaca·
tlon Bible SchOol Monday
.: through Friday !rom 9·11 a.m.

--

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SAT, JUNE 17
SOUTH POINT, .OH.
RAMADA INN ·

·-

~OMI ONI Of A KIND • MOST STI~L IN CONTAINER$

NONE USED • NONE DAMAGED • NONE SOILED
NO MIDDLEMAN THE s:~:G~:~.INTO

49C
99C

·-

-

If you answered yftto any of these questions, you may be eligible for assistance
under a new federal program for dislocated workers.
Beginning July 1, the Economic D'-locsllon snd Worlrer Adju.lmiNII Au'-tsnce
Act·will provide money to local agencies to help dislocated workers receive
job training or find a new job~
If you think you qualify and you want to explore (IIIW skiil training or job plscemiNII
su'-lsnce, contact the office in your area for d&amp;lails:
G1llla·Miigl

.

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'

Richard F. Cel-

Ellen O'Brien Saunders

ao..lnor

Adminiltrllor

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~UESDAYS
•
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At Continuity of Care, We Fit The
Wheelchair To The, User, Not The User To
The Wheelchair.

Continuity of Care
507 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992-2310

PRICES .GOOD MONDAY, JUNE 19,
THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 26.

or. JD:D.
ac:r.loUIO&amp;

10 CT. --.&amp;. .. "

420UNCE

220UNCE

SURF

PALMOLIVE

LAUNDRY

DISHWASHING

DETERGENT

DETERGENT

199

109

999

LlMIT2

LIMIT 1

- CD

DURACELL
. ALKALINE
BATTEIUB8

180UNC£

TABLETS OR

LISTERINE

CAPLETS

MOUTHWASH

2PACKCORD .
SINGLE PACK· 9 VOLT

YOUR

diiiC

u:...-

2·

CBOICI!ll

19

a:vatDA.T ~Dift' PIIIC&amp; 1.71

BOLD ·HOLD
7 OZ. HAIR SPRAY
8 OZ. STYLING SPRITZ
7 .OZ. STYLING GEL

YOUR. l99 .
CBolCEI

WWI MIC&amp;I.te

AA 2 PACK .... , 1.79

.a'D!DAr -.cGvtn' PIIICE :111.40

Doesn't your monument
seloclloil des.f'le lhe some
prot&amp;ssional guidanc•?

PRINTS EVERYDAY!
· MOUNCE

DO~
PABIUC · •

ENT

INC.
--A.:n:r·
.....
I

G. . (..ty Dllplay Yanl
lt. 160
(

•

BJUNG YOUR l"D.M TO USI
, COLOR 110, 135, OR DISC

C41nOCBSs

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MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES

a;

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BURRITO

446-8226

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Dir1ct Billing to Patient's Medicare, Insurance, Social
Service Organization, Etc. We Also Offer A Payme11t
Plan For Those Patients Who Are Poy All Accounts.

279

You consultod • prolesslonll
lor your lllo Insurance
your est
planning
•nd your will -

'
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Thia ad iaa pybllc Ht'Yice of the Ohio Bureau of Employmll1t Services.
An Equal Opportunity Employer

FREE IN HOME EVALUATION &amp; FITTING
PERFORMED BY OUR .WHEELCHAIR
SPECIALISTS.

TACO
MONDAYS
'

EB

.

814-387-7341

•

SPRING VAI:!LEY PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS

the hands
of a

.

Community Action Agency
P.O. lox 272
Cheahlre, Ohio 45820

'·

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AND

24COUNT

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Choose From Our Large Selection of Makes and
Models, Manual or Power Driven,

Put it.in
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2 FULL TIACTOI TIAILIII·3D DIPfiiiNT STYLES I. fAIIICS
MANUfACTUIIIS DIICONTINUID MODlLSFROM 1911, AND
DISPLAY FUINITUII FIOM DIALIIS TRADE iHOW

I

to the wind ...

;.
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13.65 ro: Alcahol, c/ n Ann Landn1 ,
P.O. B ox /1562, Chicogo, Ill.
606 11 ·0562.

I

CHESTER - Chester Council
323, Daughters of America , will
meet TUesday alB p.m. Initiation
will .be h~ld for Guiding Start
Countll124, Syracuse. Quarterly
birthday s will also be observed.
Members are asked to wear
white. Potluck refreshments' will
be served.
'
POMEROY - The Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will meel at 6:30p.m. on
Tuesday In the hospital cafeteria. Members are to brlilg a
co.vered dish, and entertainment
~Ill be provided after the dinner.
Nettle Hayes will be honored lor .
her hours of servic, to the
auxiliary. All honorary111embers
are Invited to attend.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
special
Lodge 164 will have
meeting on Tuesday at 7'p.m. at ·
tlie MiddlepOrt Temple to work
on master mason degrees. Reireshments will follow and all
master masons are urged to ·
attend.

f

NO NEED TO TRAVEL MILES TO
GET STANDARD &amp; CUSTOM
FITTED WHEEL CHAIRS

Presents ....

MIDD~PORT - Group two
of the Mfddleport Presbyterian
Church will have a meeting on
Tuesday night at7: 30 p.m . at the
home of Mrs. Don Lowery. Bible •
study will be conducted by Mrs . .
Myron M!Uer, and devotions will
be by Mrs. Tom Rue. The thank
offering will also he collected.

..------------,_,.
Don't cast your fate

..

314 Jackllll ,..
12 Noento 5:!10 P.M.

CONDUCUD IY POOl MAN'S fURNilUII GALUIY, N. PHIUY 216·343·3119

l'lbiiQa, epaulltl

-·--

HEMLOCK GROVE . - The
Hemlock Grove Christian
:- Church will be having vacation
· : · Bible scl\ool on Monday through
~: Friday from 6:30-8:45 p.m. for
persons two years old through
' · adults.

addressed. long b u.aine11-size en ve-lt:Jp e and a check or m oney order for

ANN LANDER S
" 1989,1M Anpl•
Tlmp Syndlmte and
Creaton Syndlclllf!

(FOIMEILY TACO GIANDEI

---

RACINE - There will he a
reunion planning committee
meeting of the Southern High
School class of 1970 on Tuesday a I
7 p.m . at the home Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Hillin .Racine. All class
members are urged to attend.

. I s alcohol ruin in~ your life or rhe
life of a loved on ~!? · "A icoholiam:
How ro Recogniz.e l r, How to Deal
Wi t h It , How to Co nq uer It " can
t urn rhing• around. Se nd a tf'l/·

RAN DE

SUDAFED SINUS

....

~

ADDISON Kenneth
McKibben preac hes at Addison
Freewill Baptls t Church, Sun·
day , 7:30p.m.
·

'

'

A surprising number of readers,
however, supported my stand.

I

VINTON - Vinton Friendship
Garden Club meets 'Tuesday, 1
p.m., home of Thelnta Barnes;
election ofp fflcers.
I.

land. That effort destroyed the
commercial fishing Industry up
there.
Now the people who lost their
livelihood must live on welfare.
Worse yet, the seals are multiplyIng at an alarming rate. Those
beautiful creatures wUI now be
left to rot Instead of being used
sensibly. Then where wU!the big
headlines and TV cameras be?
Nowhere near, I 'II bet, because
those animal rights people have
plenty of money and movie stars
with clout. - J .W.C., Ullnols
Dear J.W.C.: As expected, I
was screamed at by the s ame
folks who are opposed to using
animals for medical r esearch.
They arP a loud and vocal bunch.

Ann
Landers

I.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
Division of the American Heart
Association meets Tuesday, 7
p.m., home of Lota Mae Suiter,
661 Second Ave.

GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Area ostomy group meeting has
l!een postponed until June 25.

·-

II. 52 at Jlelt• ln.
12 Noon Iii 5:00 p.M.

Dear Ann Landen: I am
writing to express my thanks for
y ou r s ens i bl e a nd we ll ·
researched column abOut wear·
lng furs. It's refreshing to see
some positive press about the fur
Industry for a change. We see so
much of the other kind, mostly by
hysterical people with closed
minds.
I wonder bow long It wlll take
before the American public real·
lzes that the majority of the
anln\al rights groups are bilking
them out of their hard·earned
dollars. The few genuine efforts
by sincere people have ·resulted
In a great deal of harm to
humans, for example, stopping
the seal harvest In Newfound·

~--

D.J.'s
Craft Shop·

BY JAMES SANDS
trimmed In ribbon !ruts and which has changed over the
"The bride was dressed In a collar of burnt orange, with years. In 1898 II read: "I require
pearl gray, bengaline sUk, deml· shrimps of Uberty silk. The and charge you both, as ye will
train, with long sash of pearl groom was dressed In a three answer at the dreadful day of
gray, lined with
button cutaway of black worsted, I udgement when the secrets of all
with black braid and striped hearts shall be disclosed that If
turquoise blue
pantaloons."
and the front of
either of you know any lmpedl·
·The presiding clergyman was ment why ye may not be lawfully
turquoise blue
and applique
Rev. E.H.. Gelvin and he began joined together In m.a trlmony, ye
the service with the familiar do now confess 11."
and lace, therewords: "Dearly beloved we are
verse of shrimp
Much of the rest of the service
p'lnk, with
gathered here In the sight of God, Is similar to today's ritual aside
cream applique, standing collar and In the face of this company to that Is from the "pledging of the
of salmon pink, back collar of join together this man and this troth" and "the love, honor and
gray, lined with pink, pearl gray woman.••
obey part'' bOth of which have
bell fastened with a diamond
Later Rev. Gelvin read a part been discarded out of deference
buckle, fancy sleeves, trimmed
with shrln\p pink and applique,
the collars and sash trimmed
with ruchings or cream chiffon
and gloves to match all. Her hat
was or turquoise straw, a "She' pherdess", with pufflngs of white
liberty sUk, rhinestone buckles
and sweeping aigrettes."
The above was how the Gallipolis Dally Tribune described the
wedding outfit or Miss Mary E.
. ·Brown when she was married to
Joseph Norton In 1898.
.· C.The
wedding took place In the
First Presbyterian Church on
State Street In Gallipolis.
Just before noon 7 carriages
left the Brown residence on
..
Locust Street carrying the bridal
WORK
WAS
begun
on
the
Flrlt
Presbyterian
Church's
preseat
party. When they arrived at the
l&amp;lldliiU')' In 1818. Some 70 years later, the church would be the
church they found the sanctuary
aetlnr for a lovely wedding unltlnr Mary E. Brown and C. Joseph
decorated with potted plants,
Norton.
·
geraniums, lilies and white and
pink carnations.
The party tarried a bit In the
vestibule as thelaattewchordlof
the song, "I'll Promise Thee"
were being played by the orga·
nlst Mr. J.M. Neal and sung by
"We Mana,e Your Rltk"
Mrs. Frank Moore. Mr. Neal then
U7 S.C...t lw-1, lallpol1
SliCE
began the grand weddlllg march
1951
Oppallte tM Pod Office
from Mendelsohn. The four
uahers proceeded up the side
alllel leading In the parentl,
attellclantl, IP'oom and belt man. ..
Sbtlrtly tile bride and maid of
11o110r eame liP tile middle aisle
tO,etller. Wbln tbey bad reaebed
• IIICIUP
lllollt tile baltway mark of the
allle, tbey ltOppld. Wbereupon
tile croom and belt man walked
bldl to eiCOl1 tblm to Ute front of
tllellalltciW7· 'hemald of~r
;~~black
andorlllJII
wblte
of burllt
cream llllllrty,
·lilao•lr ntln rlblloa.
edpdwltlltlle

{

SUNDAY
dally.
CARPE NTER - The MI.
- - UniQn Baptist Church will be
RACINE - The Southern Lo·
having a father 's Day Home cal School District will have a
Coming dinner at noon on Sunday special board meeting on Mon·
with singing at 1 p.m. by the day at 7 p.m. at the high school.
Joyful Aires Quartet, ChrlsUan·
--Union Quartet, and the Gabrll!f
RUTLAND - The Leading
Quartet. The public Is Invited to ""'· Creek Conservancy District will
attend.
.
) wid It's monthly meeting on
·
Monday at 9 a.m.
CROWN CITY- Craig reunion
TUESDAY
wllt'be Sunday, June 18, at the
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rohome of Billy Craig on Swan
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m. ,
Creek ROad.
Down Under.
GAI.LIPOLIS - Lighthouse
GALLIPOLIS Galllpolls
Assembly of God, SR 160, will
have a puppet gospel Crusade Lions meet Tuesday, 6: 30 p.in.,
Mound Hill.
Sunday , June IS through Wednes·
day, June 21. 7 p.m. nightly.
GALLIPOLIS Ala·Teen
meets
Tuesday
,
8
p.m.,
Wood·
CHESHIRE - Rankin reunion
land
Centers.
Call
Joyce
at
will be Sunday , June 18 at Kyger
245·9103
for
Information.
Creek employees ·club house at
noon.
GALLIPOLIS - Am!lrlcan Le·
glon
Auxiliary 27 Installation of
GALLIPOLIS - New Gabriel
officers
ls' Tuesday, 6 : 30p . m.~;
Quartet sings at Elizabeth
;neetl ng·follows at 1:30 p.m.
Chapel. Sunday, 7 p.m.

LW. CENNAMO

.· Come to·
D.J.'s Craft Shop and see
the Idea table for Bible
Sehool Crafts, Supplies
available· for all erafts.

Sunday

Community calendar Hearing from loud, vocal bunch

· BANKRUPTCY

'

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

SOPT£NBR

219
LDIIT 1

I
l

�Page-B-8-Sunday Tmas Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlaport-GIIIIipolil.

Church dedication slated
RUTLAND - Bennie S. Tri·
plett. overseer of the Church of
God in Southern Ohio, will be the
featured speaker at the dedica tion services for the Ru Uand
Church of God to be held on
Sunday, .J une 25, at 2 p;m. the
. Rev. Raymond G. Cox, pastor,
announced today .
The Church of God congrega·
tlon has been worshiping in the
new brick structure for several
months although the front exte·
rior was only recently com·
pleted. The church has a large
. sanctuary along with numerous
: Sunday school rooms. a pastor's
· ottlce. and a spacious fellowship
hall in the basement.
Sunday's speaker is the former
director of Forward In Faith, the
radio and television department
; of the denominational headquar·
ters in Cleveland. Tenn. His
. ministry there was heard around
: the world each week through
some 3.'i0 radio stations.
The Rev. Mr. Triplett's minis·
try has taken .him around the
· world with travels in Russia.
: China. India. Japan. Korea.
· Africa, Europe, Romania, Yu·

·Beat of the Bend

goslavla. Central American, and
the Caribbean.
He is known for his unique
ability to share the gospel in both
sermon and song. He has released 12 long-play albums and
has composed and published
over 200 hymns and gC8pel songs.
with many having been recorded
by leading artists and listed as
high as the Billboard charts.
He Is also the author of several
books Including "A Contempor·
ary Study. or the Holy Spirit",
"Sermon for Holidays", "Holy
Days". and "How to Pray
Elfectlvely. ",
A native of North Carolina he
received ·his .bachelor of arts
degree In religion and phUosophy
from Tennessee Wesleyan
College.
The Rev. Mr. Cox invites the
public to at tend the dedication
service.

Reunion slated

1

.

By BOB HOEFLICH

been released from Veterans

fo~~~:~l=~~:~~~~fs~!~aa~~

Memorial . Hospital and really
appreciated the cards and good
wishes of friends and neighbors
during her hospitalization. Ann
will soon be going to the OI)Io
State University Hospi,lals' Car:
diac Care Unit where she will
undergo observation.

. council
· member. Bob
Gilmore. ·
' Having .suf·
fered a heart
attack while vis·
itlng his daughter in Columbus
last weekend. Bob has been
confined to the cardiac care unit
at MI. Carmel Medical Center
but he was expected to be moved
to a regular room this weekend.
On Wednesday, Bob underwent
heart catherization and on Thurs·
day able was able to sit In a chair
for a while. However, he will
probably need to go back in the
hospital tn four or five weeks for
by-pass surgery.
Cards may be sent to him at
Mt. Carmel Medical Center. 793
West State St., Fifth Floor,
Columbus. Ohio 43222.

The Meigs Health Services.
Inc. of Dr. Wilma Mansfield and
Dr. James Witherell and Conti·
nulty of Care, operated by Greg
Kaylor, will roil out the red
carpet for you next Sunday
afternoon - that's on June 25.
The two businesses. now lo·
cated In the former Robert Fetty
home on Mulberry Heights. wlil
be holding open house from 2 to 5
p.m. to give the publiC an
opportunity to look over their
new quarters. The residence. or
course. has been redecorated
and revamped to fit the needs or
the two businesses.
There will be favors and
snacks and the Health Services
will offer a free blood pressure
cliniC during the open house.
Employees of the two bust·
nesses will be helping with the
afternoon's activities. Working .
at the Health Services operation
are Becky Depoy. Rita Reed.
Marie Phillips. Kathryn Wilder·
muth. Kathy Lehew and Beverly
Yeager.
Employees of the
Continuity of Care business,
which features medical equip·
ment and supplies and is In the
local level of the establishment,
at 507 Mulbeerry Heights include
Pam Riffle and John Heilman.
Ann Davis of 30 Riverview
J&gt;lace In Middleport. has just

And Pomeroy's Elizabeth Flck
enjoyed another nice birthday.
She · received 41 cards, many
from people she served durinJI
her employment over many
years at Hartley's Shoes ·in
Pomeroy. And, of course. there
were numerous other remeliJ·
brances or the occasion. ·. E;llza·
beth thanks you.
There much activity In the
!';astern Local School District
these days as parents and stu·
dents scurry about to raise
money for extra curricular dur·
ing the next school year.
As a part of that action, the
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
sponsor a · three day Super
Weekend, June 23, 24 and 2.~.
On June 23 at 6: 30 p.m. , the
feature will be a T-ball tourna·
ment followed by a dance in the
Eastern High Auditorium from 8 ·
to 11 p.m.
On Saturday, beginning at 10
a.m .. there will be ball games. a
yard sale, bake sale, a bazaar,
games for children and at 11: 30
a.m., a chicken barbecue and the
sale of homemade lee cream will
get under way.
On the 25th, the final day, there
will be a car show and pee-wee
and little league 'championship
games.
Joe McCloud states there have
· been some rumors floating
around since an unfortunate
incident outside the McCloud
home In Middleport early one
recent morning.
Joe was unaware of any of the
events preceding the incident but
was wakened by his Injured
brother pounding on the door.
Joe did transport that brother to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he Is undergoing
treatment.
I'll be you didn't know they
made ties like that, huh? Keep
smiling. Dad.

Point Pleasant. W.Va.

June 18, 1

Grimm

REV. BENNIE S. TRIPLETT

Fellowship co meet
. POMEROY - The Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
the Pomeroy Church on Thur!i·
day at 7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT- Rev. lloyd
D. Grimm, Jr. has been ap.
pointed as pastor of the Middleport Chllrch of the Nazarene by
Dr. J. Wilmer Lambert, superin·
tendent of the Central Ohio
Dis trlch Church of the Nazarene.
The appointment was effective
as of June 1. Rev. Grlmth !
previously served Nazarene 1
churches in Fairview Par.k ,
Zanesville, Kingston, Uthopofts,
West Layfayette, Rutland, and
more recently at Racine. Grimm
and his wife, Fern, are residents
of Middleport.
Mrs. Grimm assists her hus·
band in the pastorate ·aJ;!d Is a
teacher at the Gallla Christian
School In Cheshire.

June

.

ENGLAND

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BENCH CRAFT

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ST. LOUIS !UP!) - Right·
bander Jeff Robinson of the
Pittsburgh Pirates earned a bit
of self-confidence Saturday. win·
ning for the first time as a starter
In almost five years with a 7·2
decision over the St. Louis
Cardinals.
Robinson, who had made 194
consecutive relief appearances
prior to Saturday, found himself
struggling as the Pittsburgh
stopper this season.
The man who rllled that rote
last year, right-hander Jim Gott,
is on the disabled JISt after
· undergoing elbow surgery April
12.
Robinson, suffering from the
buUpen blues, entered his start
PIRATES SCORE- PIU&amp;buflh'l Daa BIJar..
Penatrlesloputata&amp;onhlmlnthe~eveniiiiMinl
with a 2-6 record and a 6.81 ERA .
dello IICOres from third as Sl. Louis caucher Tony
of Saturday's game In St. Louis. (UPI)
In his previous five appearances.
Robinson was 0·1 with no saves
and a 16.20 ERA.
But the right-hander, who last
won as a starter with the San
Francisco Giants in a 3·2 victory
over the Montreal Expos on Aug.
28, 1984, pitched five strong
Innings against St. Louis, allowIng one run on four hits. He struck
that only hours later had been
The storms of Friday night and out four and walked one.
By MIKE RABUN
"We've tried everything." Ro·
awash
In
the
flood
waters
of
Saturday morning, comtng as
UPI Sports Writer
said. "Today was the
blnson·
ROCHESTER. N.Y. -Defend· Allen's Creek - a 10-foot wide they did after other heavy rains
topper
with me getting the
stream
that
turned
Into
a
1()().
earlier In the week. caused some
lng champion Curtis Strange shot
starting
nod. You've got to
yard
wide
river.
USGA traditions to be discarded.
a 2-over 37 on the front nine
''I've never seen a course as
Players normally compete in believe In yourself. but someSaturday and fell back Into a tie
with Tom Kite and Jay Don Blake . damaged as this one," said twosomes during the final two times you start doubting your·
midway through the third round United States Golf Association rounds of "the U.S. Open and self. It has been tough to digest.
"Now the next time I get the
executive director P.J. Boatw· everyone has always started his
of the U.S. Open.
ball, I'll have a good feeling."
right. "Our original prognosi,s round at the tirst tee.
Three other players were one
For Robinson, 3·6, it was his
But on Saturday, In an attempt
shot behind - . Peter Jacobsen, was that we would not play any
first
golf
today.
start since Aug. 21, 1986.
to
speed
the
pla_yers
around
the
Larry Nelson and' little-known
Robinson,
who has four saves
course
as
quickly
as
possible.
Edward Kirby, who holed his
this
season,
struck out lhe first
"My
recollection
is
that
this
Is
they were paired In threesomes
second shot at the par-4 12th for
the
worst
string
of
days
we've
four
batters
he
faced and retired
and serit off both the first and
an eagle.
thE&gt;
first
11.
He
got
Into trouble In
ever
had."
tenth tees.
The Oak Hill Country Club
The
start
of
play
was
delayed
the
!lfth.
allowing
a
run, but got
layout proved to be a dlfflculttest
"To my knowledge." Boatw·
jam
when Milt
out
of
the
for most Saturday after over· for more than four hours because right said, "we have never used
night rains sent normally placid or the more than two inches of two tees before. Butlthasalways Thompson lined out hard to left
Allen's Creek storrntng out of Its rain that fell in the Rochester been our policy that we would If with runners on first and second.
"We've got to get Jeff some
we bad to.''
banks to flood the low-lying area.
kind of rhythm because he Is an
portions of the course.
excellent big-league pitcher.''
Six players began the day with
Pittsburgh Manager Jim Ley·
sub-par 36-hole totals and only
land
said. "When Gott broke
. two birdies.were recorded by any
down,
we named !Robinson) as
of those players on the front nine.
our
stopper.
Since then, he has
Strange started the day ai
felt
.
a
lot
of
burden on his
5-under. but bogeyed the second
shoulders.
and ninth holes lo slip back to
DETROIT !UP!) - Michael fastest qualifying speed Friday,
"He gave us a pretty -good
3-under. Kite equaled that figure
Andretti
predicted
it
would
take
0.860
Improved
his
lap
speed
by
performance.
We have to get him
by shooting a 36 on the front ntne.
a
lap
time
of
1
mtnute
and
41
mph
In
his
Lola
Chevrolet.
It
Is
started."
making a 40-foot birdie putt at the
seconds to capture the pOle the seventh pole position of •his
Bob Kipper entered the game
ninth hole.
position for the Detroit Grand career. His previous best start
with a 3-1 lead and worked four
Blake toured the front nine In
Prix.
this year was from the No. 2 spot
innings for his second save of the
even par, narrowly missing a
Saturday.
Andretti
cl011ked
a
in
the Long Beach Grand Prix.
·
season.
hole-in-one at the sixth.
of
88.512
mph
or
1
minute.
lap
ttl.
who
drove
on
the
Andre
The
loss
snapped
the Cardi·
The best rounds oft he day were
Detroit
course
in
the
.Trans
Am
41.6681
seconds
to
grab
his
first
nals'
three-game
winning
streak,
being put together by Jacobsen
pole
position
of
the
season
and
and
Super
Vee
raclrig
series.
but
St.
Louis
Manager
Whitey
and Nelson - both of whom were
Herzog, ejected In thefirsllnning
3-under for the day through 12 -the top starting spot for Sunday's credited his past experience on
$1
million
Indy-car
race.
him
earn
the
circuit
with
helping
along with Vince Coleman, found
holes. Jacobsen's round was
the
pole.
a
sliver lining.
highlighted by an eagle at the · The 155-mile race will be the
"So
far
we've
been
making
opening hole. where he holed an
first Indy-car event on the progress every sessions," he
An1els 6, Tigers 3
8-lron from the fairway.
downtown 2.5·mile winding said. ''And I think a lot of that is
DETROIT ~ UPI) - Claud ell
Two shots out of the lead at
street course after- hosting the because I didn't have to waste a
Washington's
solo home run
l ·under came Scott Simpson and
Formula One cars for the pre· lot of the first session. I was able
slarted a three-run third Satur·
Jumbo Ozaki while Ian Woosnam . vlous seven years on the same
to
go
to
work
right
away."
day and Chill Davis finished it
was even for the tournament.
circuit .
.Andretti's
qualifying
speed
with a tie-breaking RBI single to
Jack Nicklaus was 3-over
''The car has been very predlc· was the slowest in CART Indy·
lead the California Angels to a 6·3
through 12 holes.
table all weekend and I see no car racing history. The previous
victory over Detroit and help Jim
The 71 players rem a inlng for
reason why It shouldn't be In the low was 90.261 mph recorded last
Abbott fulfill a lifelong dream of
the final two rounds of the Open
race," Andretti said.
year at the Long Beach Grand
winning a game in Tiger
began play Saturday on a course
Andretti. who had the second Prix by Danny Sullivan.
Stadium.

Strange slips into tie for
·u. S!. Ope~ lead at the· tum .

S169'5

Glass Top Table

'

By MARTIN LADER
wits and power spread over an
exquisite setting.
UPI Sports Writer
ROCHESTER. N.Y. -For all
"Golf is so much dlfferenl than
the world that enjoys the game. other sports," Jack Nicklaus
golf Is prescribed therapy, a said. •'Not only are you out there
soothing salve to the cruelties of playing 4 to 5 hours a day, but a
life.
tournament runs four days, each
To the people who make a of them with different conditions.
living on the course, golf is a That's what makes golf such a
mental hazard. an elegant.testof . mental game."

There can be no better exam·
pie of the mental toughness
required than the scenario. that
greeted the 71 survivors In the
U.S. Open Saturday when they
awoke . to a course flooded bY
overnight storms. Even before it
could be decided If play was
feasible, there were three ver·
slons of the day's schedule.

ENGLAND

Sofa, loveseat,
Chair

Sectional

' IIIII PAS18.

QUill SliiPII

C-YU.

ROCIIIYLOII

Blue Jays 3, Mariners 2
TORONTO (UPn - Kelly
Gruber singled home Nelson
Lirlano from second base to cap a
two-run rally In the ninth and lift
the Toronto Blue Jays to a 3·2
victory Salurday over the Seattle
Mariners.
With one out In lhe ninth. Mike·
Jackson, 2·1, walked Manny i.ee.
Tom Lawless ran for Lee and
stole second. Liriano walked and
Mike Schooler relieved.
Schooler, whose bases-loaded
wild pitch In the ninth Friday
gave Toronto a victory. struck

out Junior Felix, but Tony
Fernandez singled to left to tie
the score. Gruber lined the next
pitch into right for the winning
single.
Duane Ward, who yielded the
go-ahead run In the ninth, pitched
two innings to run his record to
4·7. Toronto has won elgbt of Its
last 10 games.
Seattle had taken a 2-1 lead
when Alvin Davis sirigled home·
Harold Reynolds from second
with two out. Reynolds had
struck out, but reached first
safely on a wild pitch. He stole
second and scored when Davis
poked a single to leit.
The game was played before-a
sellout crowd of 48.•336, the sixth
consecutive run house at the
Sky Dome.
Seattle took a 1·0 lead in the
fourth . Jay Buhner opened the
Inning with a single off John
Cerutti. took third on a one-out
single by Edgar Martinez and
scored on Omar Vizquel's
fielder's choice.
Cerutti lasted seven innings
and gave up a run on 10 singles
and a walk.
Toronto evened the score In the
fourth with an unearned run off
Gene Harris. Harris, who came
over from Montreal In the deal
that sent Mark Langston to the
Expos, was making his first
major league start.
Gruber reached first on a
throwing error by third baseman
Martinez, went to second on a
groundout. took third on Fred
McGriff's single and scored on
Whitt's sacrifice fly .
Harris worked 51·3 innings and
allowed a run on five hits and a
walk.

Lend), Van Rensburg
move to Artois finals
LONDON !UP!)- Top seeded
Ivan Lend I moved witllin one '
victory of his first title on grass
Saturday when he defeated 12th·
ranked Paul Annacone for a
place In the finals of the $385,000
Stella Artois Grass Court
Championships.
Lendl and Annacone struggled
for more than two hours In a
battle of serves before thE&gt;
U.S.·based Czechoslovak scored
a Hi (7·5), 4·6, 7·5 victory- the
farthest the world No. 1 has ever
gone on the slick, fast surface.
Lend! will play Sout.h African
Christo Van Rensburg, a who
scored a 64. 6·4 victory over
eighth-seeded American Derrick
Rostagno. Van Rensburg encoun·
tered minimal opposition from
Rostagno, who has yet to r.each a
tournament final.
Lendl's place in the final of the
tournament, considered the pre·
mier tune-up for Wimbledon
beginning June 26, equalled his
career best showing on the grass.
He has never won a singles title
on grass. though he lost Wim·

bledon finals In 1986 and 1987.
"Wllining . Wimbledon Is my
· ambition now In tennis." said
Lend I. who has won all other
three grand slam tournamenis.
"I came here hoping to get In a lot
of practice on grass.

Navra t"l
d
I OVa an
Garrison gain Dow
Classic finals

BIRMINGHAM. England
(UPI) - Martina Navratilova
and Zina Garrison posted
· straight-set victories Saturday to
reach the final or the $150,1J()()
Dow Classic Women's Grass ',
TenniS Championships.
Top-seeded Navrat I!ova. 32,
returning to action · after a
two-month layoff. rolled past No.
13 Elna Relnach of South Africa
6-2, 6-2 In 50 minutes. Garrison,
25. meanwhile. avenged last
year's straight-set semifinal loss
to .West German Claudia Kohde·
Kilsch by defeating the defend·
ing champion 7·6 (7·3i, 6-2.

U. S. Open play delayed Sat~rday; course· flooded by raz.n

$99995

ENGLAND

Abbott, who grew up some 6.~
miles from Tiger Stadium in
Flint. Mich. and frequently paid
his way in to root for the Tigers,
spaced ntne hits over seven
Innings before leaving at the
start of the eighth . for Greg
Minton, Dan Petry, and Bob
McClure.
Abbott, a procluct of the Unl·
versity of Michigan who was
California's No. 1 draft c~oice
last June, walked one batter and
struck out two in raising his
. record to 64.
The left·hander allowed solo
home runs to newcomer Tracy
Jones in the first and Gary Ward,
his third, leading off the second.
Jones, obtained from San Fran·
cisco -In a trade Friday for Pat
Sheridan. hIt an 0-1 pitch into the
upper deck In left in his first
American League at-bat.
He singled in the seventh to
score Gary Pettis. who walked
and stolE&gt; second, to make It 4·3.
But California sewed It up with
two lp the eighth off starter Doyle
Alexander, who is 4· 7 overall and
1·7 in his last 11 starts.

•

3 PC-IE(IJNIIG ENDS

$19995

'

Tigers, Mariners lose

·

MAUVE VELVET

B

1989

Cards drop 7-2 tilt;

FLEXSTEEL

SOFA &amp;
LOVESEAT

C

Section18,

appointed
new pastor

POMEROY ·- The Smith·
Bowles reunion will be held at the
Senior Citizens Center, Pome·
roy; June 25. There will be a
basket dinner at 1 p.m. Anyone
related to the Josiah and Ella
Smith family is Invited to attend.

Things are looking . up

ohio

IOSI-1

IECUIIIIID

$109995
90 DAYS
AS CASH

~

I

01 USE

M'"•.,:. ,

IJClUEBP OFF UCE88 WATER n1110e worllen " " - off exce111
n &amp;he
eJi¥h fairway u heavy. overqltt ral• eiUNd

wlller

.'

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...

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'

Fred Couples, originally schetoday it's l:&gt;lowlng," Watson said.
duled to begin his third round at
"It becomes a different game
8: 54 a.m., called oflicials af because you're playing on a
about 7 and was told to come out different golf course. The wind
to Oak Hill. He arrived a half makes the golf course so much
hour later, learned of the post· different. I don't think batters In
ponement, and sat around until baseball change a whole lot when
he finally got a chance to play all
the wind changes direction.
.p.m.
.
''If you're capable of playing a
''It's by far the hardest game to golf course well on a particular
play, especially when you have a day versus those days when
mind as big as mine," Couples you're not particularly playing
said teasingly while lounging In well. you scramble and try
the clubhouse. "I'm sure the different things to get the Job
quarterback of the Jets thinks his ·done."
pme Is harder, but for us It's a
The man with the most pres·
struggle. You go out there and sure this weekend is Curtis
play three hoes without any good Strange, seekJng to become the
shots, a million things go through first player stnce .Ben Hogan In
your mind. When you get off to a 1951 to complete a successful
good start, that doesn't mean
defense of the U.S. Open. He
you'll shoot a 68, but you think a attracted even more attention
lot better, you do everything a lot when he took the lead after 36
better.
holes.
"You play five hours and one
Yet, he contends he already
shot may cost you a couple of has broken through the pressure
strokes. Nine out of ten Urnes, potnt and Ia Immune to any
when you hit a bad shot some- ·further attack.
thin&amp; was llotherlng you, and that
'1 honestly don't think there's
comes from a weak mind too. any extra presaure becaull!
..- You have thtnp on your mind there'a· so much prnaure with
and you have to get all thatoutof the Open anyway," he aald. "If
it.
It's anythlnt like lut year
"But even tf golflsdlmcult, It's there's enousb · there anywq,
a1ao the most tun. ,IJI these other and If you're thtnlt:lq tbe way
athletes, all they want to play Is you should tlliDk. It llhouldn' t pop
golf, golf, golf.''
up Into your mind."
Tom Watson, who haaiiiii'VIved
Paul Azinp~ bad hla first
the pressure to win eight major brlllh with maJcir pressure at the
champloaablps, agreed the men· 1987 Britllh Open, where be led
tal upect of golf was critical.
Nick Faldo by a &amp;hot with two
holes to play. then lost tbe title by
"Here, for example. there Will
no wind the flrat two days and
flnllhtna with ~ pair of bopya.

'

''

''

I 1

.... ~- .'

"Everyone konws golf Is a
mental game." Azlnger said
Saturday. "The amount of time it
takes to play 18 holes makes it so
mental. And you're not just
competing you against an lndl·
vidual on the other side of the net. ..
and you don't have teammates. •
It's just you and your caddie and
the golf course.
''The most Important thing
people have to learn is patience.
Sometimes you're hitting it so
good you become overanxious.
sometimes you're hitting so bad
you come anxious and you have a
lot of doubts. You have to learn to
control that."
BobbY Wadkins. who was at the
course at t a.m.-six hours
before his eventual start-also
keyed on the almost 20 hours
reql!lred to play a tournament
over the better part ef a week.
"'Tiiink about It, In what other
apqrt do you have to concentrate
for five hours," he said. "A
buketball game Ia a couple of
hours, a football game Is the
aame thJng. and they can come In
and take a breali.
'1t doesn't work on you, but
yuu have lo be aware of It. If
yuu're playtna: 110011. your mind.
doan't seem lvwutllr. If you're.
pla)olarllad. you lit ~-mtndetj, .
other tblnp
'l'llln! Ia, or ll&amp;w. another .•
dllli'actloa pr tltuloals mult .
contend wltll. 'l1lt belt o •
make a !Qt of mllllfY, enough tt&gt; .
gt-ve them •mattlllni el1111 tiJ .
worry about 011 tbe aolf course. , ·•.

-IlL.. .

,_ .,_ -··--.' - ---·---.....lllr-__::.__,

�Page-C-2-Sunday limes-Sentinel

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

June 18, 1188

Announce ·rosters for -1 989 KC little League Toum8J11ent
CHESHIRE -The board of
directors for the 1989 Kyger
cree kLittle Le 8 gueTourna ment
would like to thank all of the area
'
teams for entering this years
tournament.

. Thelea~hasnowreachedits
,
•
lun
. 1'1 Of 6 teamS, making thiS
year's tournament tbe IBigcst in tbe

Tri ..County area. An~

learnS

still

:wishing to sign up Wlfi be placed
on a waitin&amp; &amp;t and contacted in
nt Of an~
. g
tbe
eve
The Kyger reck . townament
, will beoin
Fri~, July 14 at 6 p.m.
p-:-·
~OSC lDte'leS are urged to COme
QUI and help SUnnnri the almOSt 4()()
• ,.t"~· • thi
'
hildre

n patU.Clpallng
tournament

C

In

S

year S

· IS
· a 1iS! 0 f tile
'' " ' The followmg
' •
f thi
• li tJ I
.
-players Dr

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S yearS I e eague.

N-..,na..York

"" .. J•oo Gail; 1UI&amp;in Oail; Tnvil Rc.eer; Uriah
: Au;!""" Kliao; Anlbooy Polloy. Tad SIOinblint;
• ,Matt c.JJ; Gory Su~J~yuo; DoMy Cut.or; Iolh
!Gol'ioldo; N- Sloldor; Kavii\Foocock;

-:&lt;-:
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..... ; ..-•" ·'•'J11011J&lt;met; Fllllkie FaudreD; Jua Fol.da\; Zach
,.•J~tee~W~

Moyo;AIIIDtlamoo;O"'*~Ridli&amp;Looa;
o..._d

AAdy. S.C.: Cbod Moy•;

Wda'u; s...

Wooci;RonnCilk;IonueOnlum,NiclloeiO.....

1ac11aa1

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Miley;""'"""
W'illiomo;
H.,~ . 0.·"""' n ___
..

Moo-• Hemr.
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Sebat;CbodSbamblio;AdtmCom;C..,.Willon;
ErltRodtriA:t;
Muk Wall»; Sdb Daria:
~

=:.=.f~:::·~~:n-;MikeDenWhltos..

J. Nalhan Smith; 1"(11 Enoch; Ryan Canadly;
Kma Wood; Andy Doh.tinau.t; Allen Enyart;
Michael Halloy: Mauhew Halley; Cuoy Canaday:
Ju,.. Dolley; EN: Hum""-; !"""' M.corty.

,.. .....r•

RO)'all

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ft-•- ~.,· S-'·'·

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Jllll.lJ ,
lAory Lona; Dwifhl Miod&gt;cll; Bnd 11oM; Juan
Pcny. Jwh Coak; BahbJ Criaonbmy; Bob.Maa·
v: ..1. r_ ... 81--a.-:.t.., Chad

nlliiCII\; ...._y ·
Wbodar; lAzry Henry.

.-.

........,..,...;

Rtd S..

Paul Sidon; B""' Burcham; lJuc SoundeD;
llobl&gt;y R"1011; T.C. Boavw; Wcoloy SoundeD;
AAdre~ Blink; Mo=, Sid.,; 8"" Buoh; Rob
Shoud; Mau.bow Bm:kfml.; John Howaley: Luke
Pauict; DullY HiD; 10&lt;\llhon BlookfonL
.

'tiay ."

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~ Hallncn.; oey .. .._..; · r
Scou Jluudl; !.any ~ 1UIIio

Robtu Bn·g ;

Ho~Mn;

Moen; Bury .Pionm; David Prica; Rod Putnoy; '
laredShinn;AuonWlKmtn..
Ru&amp;laftd

,

Paoridt MoGuUe; Roy IWooell; PID11ip Edmmdo;
Jeremcy Inboden; Bryan Colwell; Michael latVia;
Adam Htndri:l; Oary Stanley; J-.ney CeltQJan;
Jemney; Honaker; J•IGI\ Oeo!p; Brie Jano.; Jet!
Fitwaur, Tnvil Hendrix; Ricky Malhlmy.
1tdoon

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NOW Wl'l'ltfiLL·tiME SERVICE
IECUNIC SPECIAUZING IN AU · ·
MAlES AND MODEU Of SMAU ENGINE

.y.. WiiJi.ao; Joy McKeloey; -.,. c..,...

EQUIPMENT

Wf ProU;

Iooy MIJOI; Mo~ PWdo; am. Wwo-md;
Olfil Y&lt;"*er, Alia - , I - XU.,: -

s..

gym.

Tht" first camp, which will nm until Friday, Is for students
who will enter grades 4·8 In the fall. Registration will be
accepled on Monday.
.
The second camp, for students entering grades 9·121n the fall,
will begin on Monday. June 26.

Softball tourney set for July 8, 9

=:~~,_~~:~
1S YEARS OF EMPEIIEIICE
PaW O . .··Ju. ~ ~ Uw~ . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~~;;;;~.-.-. . . .;;-.-.-.. . . . . .~..,. .

MARIETTA - River City Tire Is sponsoring a USSSA I United
States Softball Slow-Pitch Association) Class D tournamt"nt on
July 8 and 9 In Martelta.
There will be two divisional D berths. two stateD berths and
1wo stale Class E berths for the qualifying teams.
·
The top four teams will receive trophies. but the
championship team will receive 15 pairs of Pony softball shoes.
The runner-up team will win 15 windbreakers. and the
thlrd·place team will receive 15 travel bags. The fourth -place
team will get 15 T-shlrts .
. .
Tht" Most Valuable Player will get a sleel bat and a batting
glove. while the winner of the Most Hits award will rect"lve a
steel bat . The winner of thE' Best Defensive Player award will
receive a Rawlings fielding glove.

~--bllboy.

Willio Johnloo; Nicky Milll; Paul PWlinl; 1•ao ·
Frieod; I. D. ' - I · P. Fioher; Donald ~;
Bre•&gt;&lt; Honoon; Rog" Baiabort; W. M&lt;0.n:
Mike Little; Chad BurtM.

At .OVB
Now .Earn A·GREAT RATE
And You Can Choose Tlie Terms!

HE' was inductt"d into tht"Hall of
Fame at Cooperstown. N.Y.,
Aug. 18, 1975. by Commissioner
Bowie· Kuhn with 7,500 people
looking on.

.

SUN STAR BElliES GAR DEW TRACTORS
Alllllobloln tC•ti-11UO H.P.

• Modet (~nSI• 201 • ttotMPOWtr (20 hpJ
• Key alecutc start

• Automatic trlf'ltmllllon.

No clutenlng.lnHnlte apeed chOice.
• .42'', 41" or 80" ahaft-drtven mower
evallllble. Altlt-mOunted to fOllow
ground contour.
.
• Tight 26" turning radlll*.
••
• Full·tlme power ttMrlng.
• Dual peclale to aid tight tuma; two
tranamlatlon apted range~; and dlf·
te,.ntllllock for acktlllon• trecUon.
• fotlgh·b*:k, thk:k.aushloned IHI:.
• Fully eneloMCI engine.
• Sh.tt-drlven attachrn.nta tor Otpendabhl
power transfer.
• ElocUic f'TO . Engage ond dl~~ngogo
att.ehmenta with flip or t twitch.
• Hydraulic lift, ralae and low.
attachment a •lfortl.... y,

llwtngo up 10 •tiOO, no """'""'"'"'"'""'" no 1.. .
-tuotlllopl. t.t•IO,.._..._.

REED'S COUmY STOlE&gt;
41~

&amp;MAIN

IIIDSYW, OliO
PH. 371·6125

•

OPTION # 1 t Loek In today'• h ..h lntenat
nteo fOr the long term I Get our fixed rate CD
for •• Uttle ao •soo and eam 9% for a 48
month maturity or loqer.
OPTION #2t Take advantage of ow: aurae·
the ohort term variable rite e.~rtlfleatel Our
varl0ble rtite CD lo eurrently being luued at
9% and mature• In juot 12 montho. Thlo CD.
requlree a minimum depoolt of ,5,000 and
liaa a floor rate of 7 .5%.

W I. Pl·t.

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t.o• - .

STOCK CAR RACING
SKYLINE SPEEDWAY
SUNDAY - JUNE 18

GATES OPEN 4:00

HOT LAPS 6:00

SPEEDWAY LOCATED 4.5 MILES OFF
U.S. 50 BETWEEN ATHENS AND COOLVILLE
ITURN-OFF NEAR REST AREAl

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Heat " • lnstaiW

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88!,. 59!
CAiftOL
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Fi-ciallid a . .ilalolt

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SPRING VALLEY PlAZA 11 ~ 1 ditotlon,.
~ cere
,,
446-4367 ... No. 16·11·11051 ;.

fer thcut who 11uahfr
. Apprntd for boining of.,,.,...,

AtiiUitlt• II~
( A. ~.
PKW.,;h Pl•rd rll(tll ·handPr
lriiYI FIII~Wor 0111bP U4 It' d,_hlrd Hilt,
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Gregory said other nigh!
gamE's may be scheduled on a
trial basts to determine If a
permanent lighting system
should be purchast"d.
"We want 1oseehowitwillgo,"
Grt"gory said. ''A lot of tx;Qpie
have expressed Interest In going
to a nigh I game."

FAMILY DENTAL CARE

.

fourth at 1~6.917 mph.
Earnhardt will start seven til In
the race after finishing with a
SP!'ed of 156.522 mph. Alan
Kulwicki, last year's pole sitter,
qualified 15th at 155.408 mph.
Defending champion Geoff Bo·
dint" crashed on the first t~rn
during his qualifying run and will
attempt another run Saturday
aftt"rnoon.
Tht" top 15 spols were deteremined for the race on Frjday. with
the remaining 26 spots in the
41-car field ro be determined
Saturday.

Gregory said the University of
Akron, which Is on the schedule
for an afternoon contt"st, has
agreed to a 7:30p.m. kickoff.

Transactions

t

Phl... dtlphla ................'!! M .3U It

WILLIAM JOHNSON

BOWLING GREEN. Ohio
- Bowling Green Stat!'
University Is negotiating with a
portable lighting company 10
play Its first home night football
game since its stadium was
erected 23 years ago
Athletic Director Jack Grego~y said Friday laiks with tilt"
Musco Mobile Lighting Co. of
Oskaloosa. Iowa. could be complett"d In about 10 days: The deal
would also provide lights for the
surrounding parking lots .
{UPI~

Caltt.rllla • n.troM
Mlht'llllkiN' 1&amp;1 Mlalll'll"'"

(01

Mollllrt'.li, ....................:tl :10 .141 -

hml'
Cun venicnt
· Lncal inns

It was the fourth pole on tht"
NASCAR Grand National circuit
for Wallace. who will try for his
fifth victory of the year. His last
triumph was May 7 at tht"
Winston 500 at Talladega. Ala.
"This track is mentally
tougher and physically tougher
than the track last week at
Detroit," Wallace said of Poco·
no's 2.5-mlle trl-oval track.

!WIIIQ 'II GuiiW'IO

PlthiMI,P ............... _ •.'l$ 17 ..ID:t

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could run."

Wallace Is third In the NASCAR point standings behind Dale
Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip.
He Is seco nd behind Waltrip
among 1989's leading money
wlnnt"rs .
The Miller race Is the 13th of
the 29 races on the Grand
National circuit this year. A
purse of $514,642 will be divided
among the 41 drivers In the field.
Waltrip. the leading money
winner, a lso qualified on the first
row with a s"Peed of 157.249 mph.
Mike Martin qualified third at
157.068 mph and Lake SP!'ed was

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CALL 446-2631 or Toll FrH

LONG POND. Pa. tUPI) Rusty Wallace captuft"d I he pole
position In the opening round of
qualify)ng Friday for Sunday's
NASCAR Miller High Life 500
race at Pocono International
ftaceway.
Wallace drov~ his Pontiac to a
SP!'ed of l:i7 .489 mph , earning a
bonusof$83.600. It was Wallace's
first poi!' al Pocono, where be
also is seeking his first win.
''ThE' car handled perfect,"
Wallace said. "Getting through

Bowling Green may play night football

GALLIPOLIS - The first of two basketball camps run by
Gall!a Academy boys' baskt"tball coach Jim Osborne and his
staff will begin Monday al 12:45 p.m. at thE' Gallla Academy

446-9556 '

Por1f"r .

Sunday limes- Sentinei-Page-C-.3

Wallace earns pole position at Pocono

Basketball -camp begins Monday

(FGIMIBY ZIINS Ll-IG)

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Jf"rMny OU nlhrl'! Shawn Dalley : Cllr~Giln'ldr:
Chuck.v Robl!'r1~; Jamry Nelson: Ronnt.- Jolin·
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INTEl

Area sports briefs

ATHENS - Amy Prichard, Ohio Unlvt"rslty women's head
basketball coach, announced that there are still openings for the
second session of the Ohio University Lady Basketball Cam I?,
which will run from July 16 to July 20.
The cost or the camp Is $190 for individuals and $170 when
groups or fivt" or more register at the same time.
In addition. there are limited spaces available for the third
session - the Post Playt"rs' Camp. Tht" cost for lhis ca01p is
$140. Post-player skills such as post deft"nse. passing, scoring
and three-point plays will be covered.
For more Information, call the Ohio University Workshops
Office at 1·593-1776.

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Rod•
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Mllkl: NakuM TYreP: ZIPbUion 'rhd:labl'n; Shan

Maahew~ ;

scout for the Philadelphia Athlet ·
tcs and became the major
leagues' ·firs! black coach when
the Athletics signed him as
assistant to manager EddiE' Joost
In 1954.

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Adam~; Chid a._ 011)' ~~
BrionCnna:OocqoMoeor.lnd-.Michael

.

: • After Integral ion, Johnson was
:hired to find young talent. He
&lt;Came out of rt"tirement in 1951 to

~

Joey Brown; J ...on Evans; OW Kin&amp;; Geoffrey
Tcnuny McNcdin; Jamie MiUa;
I"""'y Newlrirl&lt;; B,...
Ryan Holl; Bad
Howe; Jdm Kins; Matt Robbin~; RidUo Sdawab;
Jarod Wol!ml; Kevin Wolford.
Mld41eporl

.f llall of Farner 'Judy'
~- Johnson dead at 89
MLMINGTON. Del. I UP!) · William ·.. Judy' ,' Johnson. base. ball Hall of Farner and one of
: America's top black baseball
:. ; players, has died of natural
• • causes. He was 89.
· ;; Johnson. whoplayedthlrdba~e
· In the Negro Leagues from 1922 to
: • 1937 and became the major
: leagues' first black coach In 1954,
; died In his sleep at Tilton Terrace
· Health Care Facility In Wilmington Thursday morning.
~·The Snow Hill, Md .. resident
had suffered a stroke last year
'!bat left him partially paralyzed
end his speech Impaired .
• • Johnson playt"d for Hllldalt", a
Ciarby, Pa., team that won three
ifennants. and he played for the
Y-135 champion Pittsburgh Craw.fOrds. However. he was barred
l!;y racial barriers from playl~g
)n the major leagues.
_
&lt; In 1947. Jackie Robinson beeame the first ballplayer to
break the color barrlt"r.
: • '"I never dreamt It would
:happen, even in the late 30s"
·Johnson once told an interviewer
:Or Robinson's achievement. '"I
:Was just thrilled I llved·to see the

~..ooa;

U.yd;.......,,.,.~AmborS_,...,....ap...

11ft Oilley; !!Do Loodl; Joy ..,........

AUUI Beever, WJlliam Millclr; Eddie Nehua;
Bt~d HuN; ric:k.F toACib; Naihla

I

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Mo4 Coft'ee; ... bUOI; NIUu ......

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Muir. Wamaley;

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~

June 18. 1989

�Pllga C-4-Sundey n.,..... Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pln1.rt. W.Va.

June 18. 1989

Strange leader by one stroke

Four aces feature second round Open play
ROCHESTER, N.Y. !UPUDefending champion Curtis
Strange eagled the fourth holj!,
survived a torrential rainstorm
and shot a G-under 64 Friday that
gave him a one-shot lead over
Tom Kite !Ylldway through the
89th U.S. Open.
Four Aces On Slxtll
The early portion of the round
was highlighted by the four aces
at the sixth hole- made by Doug
Weaver, Mark Wiebe, former
champion Jerry Pate and Nick
Price.
Never In the history of a single
Open champiOnship, much less a
single round. have there been
four holes-In-one. The previous
record had been three. recorded
during the 1982 Open at Pebble
Beach.
The odds of a PGA touring pro
making a hole a.ni' 3.708-to·l.
Strange and Kite, who over the
past two years "have · demonstrated they deserve to be
considered the top two player's In
the United States, set up a
weekend duel by playing the
day's best golf on an afternoon
Ill-suited for greatness.
II was a day. hOwever. that saw
four holes-In-one In less than two
hours at the same hole.
A brief but torrential rain·
storm lashed .t he Oak Hill Country Club course , Friday afternoon, suspending· play for 14
minutes and adding to the
already-tough conditions.
But Strange overcame the
sogginess td eq4al the Oak Hill
record set by Ben Hogan In 1946.
He came within one shot of the
Open single-round record and his
36-hole total of 5-under 135 was
also a stroke away from the
tournament record.
Remarkable Scores
Strange's round included a
remarks ble 10 scores of 3.
"But next week. nobody will
know what anybody · shot,"

•
(

;~~

.... . l r

.

•'

·-·-C.'"

•.
• 1!1'!; •
SECOND ROUND
LEADER
- Defending champion Curds .
Stnnge eagled the fourth hole; survived a torrential raf•lorll! and
shot a G-under 64 Friday that gave hbn a one-sllot lead over Tom
Kite midway tllrough the 88111 U.S. Open..

U. S. Open notebook...
~QCHESTER, N.Y. (UP!)-

Despite a 4-over-par 74 Friday
that left him six shots behind
leader Curtis Strange at the
midway point of the U.S. Open,
Jack Nicklaus stU! sees himself
In conten lion.
, "If you look through the history
ot tile Open. you'll see that 140,
141. you're never out of ft." said
Nlc)daus. who stood at l-over 141.
"If you can play a couple of good
rounds, you have a decentcliance
to win.
"The more I play this course.
the more I think I can. I got my
nervous round out of the way.
hopefully."
. Nicklaus, a four-lime Open
c!lamplon. registered his only
birdie of the day with a 40-foot
putt. on the 17th hole. but gave It
back when his 10-foot effort on
No.' 18 Upped the cup for a bogey.
: "Generally, I played kind of
lousy, then "1 Improved ft."
Nicklaus said. "I couldn't get the
billl on the golf club with my
driVer. which was the basic
problem."
Jiltcklaus. who set an Open
record by surviving the cut for
tile 28th time. said the short rain
dPlay when he was at the 12th
hole helped.
•
""I seemed to slow down my
swing and tempo and I played
very well the last six holes." he
said. "but then I couldn't make
any putts."
:Doug Weaver, Mark Wiebe.
Jerry Pate and Nick Price all
made holes-In-one Friday on the

sixth 'hole. Only ,once before , In
1982 at Pebble Beach. had as
many as three aces been regis:
tered during an entire Open
championship.
According to the National
Hole-In-One Association In Dal·
las, the od¢1s of four PGA touring
pros making aces on the same
~ hole In the same round are 8. 7
million to 1.
Gregory Lesher. who wUl be
starting his senior year at
Louisiana State. was the only one
of the six amateurs to survive the
36-hole cut at the U.S. Open.
The 20-year-old from Lebanon,
Pa.. shot a 2-over-par 72 Friday
for a two-round total of 142.
"It was more of a struggle
today compared to yesterday."
Lesher said. "The only bad
mistake was a 3-putt on No. 1
from 40 feet.
"I played real well In the
practice rounds and I felt I'd play
well when the tournament
started. I'm happy to be In this
position. It wlllbefuntoplaywlth
the best players In the world the
next two days."
Only three times In the history
of the Open has an amateurfatled
·to survive the cut.

Strange said. ''They will just· Ballesteros made It with thelr145
know who won."
total, but Ben Crenshaw (146).
A Strange victory would make Gary Player !147) and Sandy
hlm the first man since Hogan In Lyle !152) dld not.
1950-51 to wln the Open two
Neither did Lee Trevino, who
straight years.
won the ttrst of his six major
"It's always a possibility If a titles on the Oak Hill course 21
good player wins the )(ear before; . years.ago. He shot a 79 Friday for
he has a chance to win agalll." a 1~ total.
Strange said. "Especially If he
Strange, who shot a l-over 711n
has a game suited for an Open the Open's Hrst round, holed his
course."
third shot on the par-5 fourth hole
Kite shot a 1-under 69 Friday with a pitching wedge tor an
for a 4· under 136 total. A missed eagle to highlight a 4-under 31 on
lour-foot puu at the par-4 16th the front nine. He then bll'\iled the
cost Kite a shot at the lead. Kite Is par-4 lOth to move to to 4-under
the PGA Tour's leading money- for the tournament.
winner this year, but still Is
Strange birdied the 15th and
looking for the first major 16th holes as well and that put
champiOnship that would high· hbn In position to equal the
light his ·otherwise brilliant all-time Open single-round recareer.
cord of 63- !!rst shot by JohnnY;
Miller In 1973 and equaled In 1980
In third place at 3-under 137
by both Nicklaus and Tom
were first-round c&lt;i·leacler Jay
Don Blake and Scott Simpson,
who fired a 70 Friday In quest of
his second Open crown In three
years. At 138 came Ian Woosnam
of Wales and •Mark McCumber.
Six Others Below Par
After 21 players broke par In
·the opening round, there were
only ·six players left below par ,
alter 36 holes.
, Greg Norman. Masters .cham·
piOn Nick Faldo and Chip Beck
were among those at 140, while
Payne Stewart, Larry Nelson
and Jack Nicklaus posted 141
totals. Nicklaus, a shot off the
lead when the day began,
slumped to a 74, while Stewart,
who was tied for the top spot
when play began. had a 75.
"I missed a lot of chances,"
said Nicklaus. who made the cut
In the Open for a record 28th
time. "But 141 Is not that far
behind. I still have a chance."
Bernhard Langer, whose day
began with him sharing the lead.
bad a 78 for a 144 total.
The. 36-hole cut came at 5-over
145. Tom Watson and Seve

Weiskopf.
Stranae. however. put his
second shot at the dltflcult, par-4
17th hole Into a sreenstde bunker
aod although he lilt an excellent
shot to wtihln four feet of the cup,
he missed the putt for a bogey.
Key On Par-a Firth
The key to Strange's round
came at the 570-yard. par-5 firth.
It was remtnlllcent of his opening
round a year ago at The Country
Club when he hoped an eagle at
the par-5 14th. Without II, he
would not have won the Open.
At the fifth hole Friday he had
115 yards to the pin for his third
shot.
"When that thing went ln. Itold
myself to keep going," Strange
said. "You have to talk to
yourself. I've played some good,
solid rounds lately and some not
so good. '
.
.

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Boston and tests revealed the·
torn cartilage. He will undergo
arthroscopic surgery early next
week.
The Red Sox d ld not immeBurks. who was placed on the diately r~place Burks on the
15-day disabled llst Friday, In·
roster. Randy Kutcher started In
Jured the upper part of the his place Friday night.
shoulder Wednesday night while
Burks was batting .280 through
making a diving catch ag'alnst 58 games with 7 home runs and 32
Detroit. He stayed tn the game · RBI. He missed the early part of
and doubled In the ninth Inning,
last season after h,a vtng boae
but complained of soreness chips removed from his rl~t
afterward.
ankle. .,
Burks. who did not make the
trip to Chicago for a four-game
serJes against the.Whlle.Sox, was
examined Friday ·morning In
CHICAGO (UPI) - Boston
Red Sox outfielder Ellis Burks
will miss the next 4-6 weeks with
torn cartilage In his left shoulder.

_..__

Another amateur wUh a stan·
dout score was Jonathan Yarlan.
who just completed his freshman
year .a t Marshall University.
Yarlan. at 19 the youngest player
In the field of 156, recorded the
highest score.

"1eer O.tiet• ••• Heel.. Oere ltere"
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Fittipaldi tpins
pole post for
Detroit Prix
DETROIT (UPI) -What was
supposed to be a qualifying round
for the $1 mllllon Detroit Grand
Prix Friday · was actually a
learning session for the drivers.
Indy 500 winner Emerson Fl t ti·
paid! " drove his PCI8 to a
qualifying lap of 87.693 mph to
earn the provisiOnal polE' position
for Sunday's 155-mlle race on the
2.5-mlle winding street circuit.
"It's a very challenging
track," Flttipaldl said after
Friday's qualifying. "It's diffl·
cult to set up the car.

Michael Andrettl grabbed the
second fastest speed of 87.652
mph on his llnal quallfylng }ap.
His top start this year was second
In the LOJtg Beach Grand Prix.
"The djfflcult part Is getting
your car up to speed and down to
speed Andretd said . "That's
what It's all about on the street
clrculis. this onE:' in particular
because It's a vpry tight race
track and not forgiving.
"If you make a mistake, It can
bite you very fast.''
AI Unser Jr. was third among
the qualifiers with a lalfspeed of
87 .'i62 mph. Mario Andrei 11.
Michael's father. was the fourth
quickest with a clocklngof86.665.
Scott Pruett. who has driven on
the Detroit circuit the last two
years In the Trans Am racing
series. sped around the course In
86.297. He was followed by Rick
Mears In 86.209.

NOW
IINOYlftONSII
ALL .....- YOUIAUTOMOTIYE
APEARANCE NEEDS
'

I,,.,
I

By United Press International
Pinch hitter Eric Davis
clubbed a two-run homer off
I:Cllever Rich Gossage's first
pitch In the ninth Inning Friday
night II) 11ft theClnc!nnatlReds to
a 5-t victory over t~ host San
FranNsco Giants.
.
Davis. batting for'KenGrlffey, .
capped a .three-run ninth Inning
with hls 12th homer of the season,
moving Cincinnati within a half·
game of the dlvjslon-leadlng
Giants and Houston Astros.
"Coming ott the bench In the
ninth Inning to hills tough In any
situatiOn, especially against a
veteran likE' Gossage," said
Davis. who didn't start center
field because of a rPported
hamString pull.
"He threw a pitch that was
easy to hit,'' he said. "I didn't
think It was a home run when I hit ·
it ...

Another qualifying session will
be held Saturday to detprmlne
the final pole positions.
Sunday's race will be the first
Indy-car event on the Detroit
circuit after seven years of
Formula One racing on the
course:
Fltd~~Bld!, whose best start this
year was two weeks ago from the
No. 2 spot In Milwaukee. was
1. 765 mph off the course quallfy·
!ng record of 89.458 mph.

• unCIIAin

• ADUlT DI.EIS

•IIIED.CIIAIIS

TIIRDlPIN!ST.

Reds.edge _Giants on Davis'
two-run homer in ninth rung

"The teams really have to
work their best to make sure the
cars finish the race. The surface
Is very bumpy and we are going
to have a lot of gear box and
transmission problems." '

Burks placed on 15-day di.sabled list

·--------.if~----•-.,
I . . . .,
. . . . S201

I

••-...."'
~·- . ... II

Pa.n. ''"'

There wa.s a dogfight for the
top qualifying spot among Flttl·
paldl. Michael Andretll. Teo
Fabi, Pruett and Unserwltheach
driver holding thE' quickest time
for at least two laps.
Fltdpaldi recorded his top
speed on his next-to-last quallfy·
lng lap.
A total of 31 cars recorded
official qualifying Urnes. Up to 28
cars can start Sunday's race.
There was a 1.537 mph differ·
ence between the lop and seventh
fastest qualifying speeds.
·'The speed wlll be quicker
Saturday un\ess It gets very hot,"
Michael AndretU said.
Fltdpaldl agreed with the
younger Andrettl saying," I
think It'll be at least onE' second
laster than today."

Toledo resuhs
TOLEDO. Ohio IUPI) - Tex
McKinzie led al) the way Friday
night In posting ' a. fwo.JeJtg\11
victory over Paw Paw .:r'lger In
the featured 11th race pace at
Raceway Park.
JuHet Klllean finished third.
Driven by Tom Moore Jr., tile
wlllJiel' covered the mlle In 1: ~9
aad retutnell $3.20, $4.80 and
$2.80. Paw Paw Tiger plild 17.20
and $5.20 to place while Juliet
Killeen kicked back SUO to
shOW.

Pe~b

POINT PLEASANT

875-1160

N \ Seven and Todd's
Mark team up to provide a 7-4
dally dollble combination that
wu w.th $332.80.
A CJ'ollod of UT:l wagered

1227,885.
....

a..__;

••

Pomeloyo-Midcleport-Galipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

June 18, 1989

••

Gossage offered no excuses.
"It was a do ordte situation and
I just didn't get the job done,"
said Gossage. who recalled that
Davis had homered off him at
least twice In previous season~.
"The pitch was out over the
plate more than I would have
liked and Davis Is too good a
hitter not to have hit a pitch like
that," he'sald.
Reds manager Pete Rose said
Davis was kept on the bench
because of a hamstring pull. But
Davis also Is only 1·20 lifetime
against Rick Reuschel, the
Giants' starter who went eight
Innings.
"He's our best hitter." Rose
said of Davis. who's batting .302
with 45 RBI. "That's who you
want up In that situation."
Norm Charlton, 3·0, earned the
win wllh one Inning of work
beforE:" giving way to John
Franco. who notched his 18th ,
save. Craig Lefferts.l-4, took the
loss.
Trailing 4-2 entering the ninth,
Todd Benzinger led off with a
double off Lefferts. After Barry
Larkin popped 'out. Paul O'Neill
lined a single to center to drive
··home Ben:itnger.
Gossage was then called upon
to face Davis, who greeted hlm
by smacking his first delivery
over the left-field fenc~ .
San Francisco starter Reu·
schel went eight Innings, allowIng two runs and five hits.
striking out two and walking
none. Rick Mahler pitched seven
innings for Clnclnnall. allowing
four runs and six hits. walking
foul' and striking out five.
San Francisco took a 1-0 lead in
the first Inning. Brett Butler led
off with a double, advanced to
third on a slow groundout by
Robbie Thompson and scored on
Will Clark's groundout.
Cincinnati tied the score In the
. fifth when · O'Neill drove Reuschel's first pltch ovpr the
centPr-!leld fence for his lOth
homer of t·he season. O'Neill has
rjpped Giants pitching for four
home runs and 11 RBI. batting
.48.~ In Plghl games this season.
The Giants went ahead 2·1 In
the
sixth. With one out, Thomp·
son lined a single to left and went
to third by a slnglP to right by
Clark. Kevin Mitchell followed.
with a sacrlllce fly to score
Thompson,
The Reds evened the score 2·2
In the seventh. Larkin lined a·

double down the left·tleld line
and scored on Rolando Roomes'
double down the rlghl·fleld line.
The Giants score twice In the
seventh for a 4·2 lead. Jose Uribe
doubled to right and ThOmpson
followed with hls eighth homer of
·
the year.
In other games. It was: St.
Louis 6, Pittsburgh 2; Houston 3,
San Diego 1; Moritreal8, Chicago
5; New York 15, Philadelphia 11;
and Atlanta 6, Los Angeles 1.
· Expo&amp; 8, Cubs 5
At Montreal, Huble Brooks and
Andres Galarraga drove In two
runs each and Bryn Smith
sCattered nine hits over eight
Innings Friday night. leading the
Expos to a 8·5 victory over the
Chicago Cubs. The victory
moved the Expos Into first place
in the National League East for
the first time since June 28, 1985.
Smith, ~-2, struck out four and
walked three before giving way
to Tim Burke. who recorded hls
14th save. Paul Kilgus. 5·6, gave
up fivE' runs and five hits In 3 1-3
Innings.
· Cardinals 8, Pirates 2
At St. Louis. the Cardinals
scored runs on a passed ball and
·a wild pitch as part of a four-run
seventh. Scott Terry. 5-6, Pnded a
· personal three-game losing
streak by pitching seven Innings
for St . Louts, while Ken Dayley
picked up bls fourth save.
Aslros 3, Padres 1
At San Diego. Bill Doran and
Glenn Davis smacked home runs
and Jim Clancy scattered five
hils over 6 2-3lnnlngs, pacing the
Astros. Houston has now won 17
of Its last 21 games while San
Diego lost for the eighth time In
Its last 10 .
Mels 15, Phlllles 11
At Philadelphia. pinch-hitter
Mackey Sasser doubled In two
runs In the eighth and Gregg
Jefferies had a career-high four
RBI to. give New Yor)( Its third
straight win. Randy Myers. 6-2,
the Mets' fourth pitcher. went 2
2-3 Innings. Rain halted the game
three times for a total of two
hours and 49 minutes.
Braves 8, Dodgers 1
· At Los Angeles. Jeff Treadway
clubbed a flrst-lnnlng home run
and Tom Glavlne scattered eight
hits over 7 2·3 Innings, snapping
the Dodgers' five-game winning
streak. Glavlne, 7-3, lost a .
possible fourth shutout on an
unearned run In thE' third Inning
when he dropped a popup for an
error.

Peters sentenced to two years in prison

SABO ROBBED - Cincinnati's Chris Sabo was
robbed of a base hit In the sixth Inning by Giants'
third baseman Ern~st R!,les during Friday's

UT names McElreavy grid assistant_.:
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)- Larry served as head coach at the
McElreavy, head coach at Co- University of New Haven follow·
lumbia University for three !ng 10 years as an assistant coach
seasons. 1986-88, has been named at Pennsylvania. Yale and
an assistant football coach at the Dartmouth.
"I'm very excited to have
University of Toledo.
McEireavy wlll succeed Harry Larry join our staff. " said Dan
Hiestand. who accepted a similar Slmrell. UT head coach. "I've
position at the University of known Larry since the early '70s.
Cincinnati. His appolniment Is He's a quality person, with a lot
subject to approval of UT Pr!!Sl· of ability and experience. His
dent Frank Horton and thE'
·-~. Sports briefs-,
school's board of trustees.
McElreavy served as a gradu·
Golf
. Golfers Jack Nicklaus. Al
ate assistant at the University of
Toledo In 1973. He will coach light Gelberger. Hubert Green and
ends. while also assisting In Kathy Whllworth wlll be In·
dueled Into the All-American
recruiting.
A native of Claremont, New Collegiate Golf Foundation Hall
Hampshire. McElreavy, 43. of Fame on June 20 In New York.

knowledge of the game and his':
recruiting a bility wlll be nPflt our -,
program."
.,.
.
.

.

~

*•• * * *• • *•**•

For '89, AAA is offering tours to

Nashville
any way you like il. .•
July 7-9
Loretta L)'IID Ranch/Concert
Sally Holley, Escon

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
WITH APPROVED CREDIT
NO DOWN PAYMENT

. July 13·16
Best of Nashville
Sally Holley, EscOtt
August 17-20 Best of Nashville
Donna Murphy, Escort

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TRACTOR

Sept 21-24
Best of Nashville
Rose Marie Brisker, Escon
Sept 28-0cL I Gospel Quartet
Ava Duncan Chaboudy, Escon

Call AAA today!

CINCINNATI (UPil - Ron
Peters, a major figure In the
gambling Investigation of Clncln·
nat! Reds !)'Janager Pete Rose,
was sentenced Friday to two
years in prison.
''The only thing I regret Is I
met Pete ~ose." said Peters.
Prosecutors have sa ld PetPrs
may have booked bets for Rose.
However, Rose denies thE'
allegation.
Rose is scheduled for a hearing
before Baseball Commissioner
Bart Glamattl on June.26. If Rose
Is·found to have bet on baseball
games. he could be suspended
from baseball for one year. If he
Is found to have bet on Cincinnati
Reds' games. he could be sus·
pen~ed for life.

acijon In Candlestick Park. The Reds rallied In the
ninth to win, H. (UP I)

-

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Peters said he would be willing
to testilY at the June 26 hearing.
"If they request it." he said.
"l'.d be more than happy to."

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Page-C-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bud Black, who pitched ntne
tnutngs of shutout baseball Frida)' night, wasn't around the see
the ending.
:·I knew I wasn't pitching If
thete was a lOth, so I came back
Into the locker room." sald
Black.
''I took off my shoes when Luis
(Aguayo) got hit by a pitch. I was
In '1he Ice by the time the bases
were loaded. but I told (trainer)
Jimmy Warfield 1 was getting
out to watch It on television."
said Black, who was acquired by
the Tribe from Kansas City last
June for outfielder Pat Tabler.
What Black saw was a hitless
inning that produced the only run
of the game.
Pete O'Brien walked with the
bases loaded to give the Indians a
1-0 victory over the Royals. It
broke a 15-lnnlng scoreless
streak for the Indians.
The only run of the game came
against Royals relief pitcher
Terry .Leach, who took over for
Kansas City starter Luis Aquino
to start the seventh. Leach got
out of jams In the seventh and
eighth but didn't survive the
ninth, dropping to 1-1 since being
.acquired from the New York
Mets last week.
Leach hit Aguayo to open the
ninth. Joel Skinner sacrificed
Aguayo to second before Jerry
Browne was intentionally
')',a) ked. Tom Gordon came In to
pitch for the Royals and walked
Dave Clark to load the bases.
The Royals then went to a
five-man Infield with Bill Pecota
playing between short and third.
Gordon then got Joe Carter to fly
out to short left field where Bo
Jackson prevented Aguayo from
attempting a try for the plate. ·
· Pecota returned to right field,
but the strategy went for naught
when O'Brien was walked to
force in Aguayo with the gamewinning run.
O'Brien .. the only player for
either team with two hits, saw his
at-bat turn on the second pitch.
"The 1-0 pitch w'as close," said
O'Brien. They (the Royals)
wanted It, bu I It was down and
away and (Davei Phillips is a
high ball umpire. I was very
relaxed. I knew if Joe (Carter)
didn' t do it, I would. You have to
rreat an at-bat like that no
different and look to drive th.e
ball".
.
O'Brien 'didn't have to.drive It
as Gordon fatle'd to throw a strike
tn four offerings lo the Indians

two out In the bottom of the sixth.
first baseman.
The Indians threatened In the After a delay of one hour and )13
eighth, loading the. bases, but · minutes, the game resumed at
fa tied to score. Pete 0' Brien 12:33 a.m.
Jones, 2-llost his shutout In the
walked, Cory Snyder doubled
fourth
Inning when Rafael Pal·
and Mark Salas was Intentionally
metro
lofted
his ttfth tiome run of
walked. But Brook Jacoby
the
season
Into
the rlgh(-fteld
grounded to third baseman
stands.
Jones
yielded
only two
Kevin Seltzer, who stepped on
other
hits
before
being
relieved
third and threw to first for an
In
the
seventh.
by
Dale
Mahorclc
Inning-ending double play.
The Royals mounted their best Mahorclc worked the seventh
scoring threat tn the third . Rey and eighth giving up three hits.
Palacios doubled with one out, Dave Righetti pitched a hitless
but was stranded after two ninth.
A's 7-1, Orioles 5-5
ground ball outs.
At Baltimore, Joe Orsulak had
Kansas City threatened again
tn the eighth and ninth. In the two RBI and Jay Tibbs scattered
eighth. Jim Elsenrelch singled stx hits over seven Innings,
and stole second, but Black giving the Orioles a spltt In a
retired Kevin Seltzer and George battle of division leaders. In the
first game, Ron Hassey and
Brett.
Mark McGwtre homered and
Black put runners on first and Storm Davis, 5-3, allowed five
second In the ninth, but forced hils over five tnntngs to lead
pinch hitter Kurt Stillwell to hit Oakland. Brian Holton fell to 2-5.
Blue Jays 4, Mariners 3
Into a force play and end the
At
Toronto, George Bell scored
Inning.
from
third base on a wild pttchby
Black, who posted his first
Mike
Schooler with none out In
shutout since Oct. 2, 1985, gave up
six hits In pushing his record to the ninth, rallying the Blue Jays,
who have won seven of their last
6-7.
Scott Balles 11·2) Is to start for nine games. Tom Henke, 5-3, whO
Cleveland Saturday night entered the game tn the ninth,
against the Royals' Mark Gublza was the winner .
Angels 9, Tigers 4
(6-4).
At
Detroit,
Chill Davis hit a
In other games, New York took
three-run
home
run In the second
two from Texas, 8-3 and 6·1,
California's
first home
tnntng,
Oakland ·split a double-header
run
In
72
Innings,
and Jack
with Baltimore, winning the first
Howell
added
a
solo
shOt
In the
game 7-5 then losing 5-1, Toronto
fourth. helping the Angels break
nipped Seattle 4·3, California
bombed Detroit 9-4, Mtlwaukee a seven-game losing streak. Bert
Blyleven, 7-2, allowed nine hits
topped Minnesota 8-6 and Boston
over
7 2-3 tnntngs.
shut out Chicago 2-0.
Brewers 8, Twins 6
· Yankees 8, Rangers 3
At
Mlnneapolts,
Greg Brock
Yaukees 6 Rangers 1
drove
tn
three
runs,
Including
At New York theralnreallyfell
two
on
a
pinch-hit
single
In the
on the Texas Rangers Friday
seventh
Inning,
leading
Mtlwaunight.
kee to Its sixth straight victory
Not only did they have to
over
the Twins. Chuck Crlm, 6-3,
endure some of the East Coast's
allowed
one hit In 2 2·3 Innings of
soggy weather, they also
relief to get tl)e victory. Dan
dropped a double-header to the
Plesac
worked the ninth for his
New York Yankees.
16th
save.
Andy Hawkins scattered seven
Red Sox 2, While Sox 0
hits over eight tnntngs and the
At
Chicago, Roger Clemens
Yankees broke a tie with four
threw
a two-hitter and pinch
runs In the sixth Inning of the first
hitter
Danny
Heep's Infield sin·
game en route to an 8-3 victory.
gle
with
two
outtn
the ninth broke
Jesse Barfield's two-run single In
lifting
Boston.
a
scoreless
tie,
the first Inning sent the Yankees
Clemens,
8-4,
struck
out
a
season·
to a 6-1 victory In the nightcap.
high 12 batters, hls most since
Hawkins, 7-7, struck out two
and walked none. Texas starter · July 30, 1988.
Bobby Witt, 5-7, gave up only two
hits before the sixth Inning, but
took the loss.
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPU ·The second game was delayed
Ol'lto
State football players Corey
for 43 minutes In the bottom of the
Fargo
and Buster Howe and
first Inning, and then again wtth
basketball player Mark Baker all
have gained their ellgtbtllty to
compete for the Buckeyes during
the upcoming seasons it was
slty In Lockport, lll., in 1971 and announced Thursday.
,
earned a master' s ·degree from
Parga, of Toledo, and Howe, of
the University of Wisconsln- Zanesvtlle, both former UPI
Os hkosh In 1983.
''Bob Is one of three outstandIng candidates who received a
thorough evaluation by our review committee." said Wittenberg President Wllltam A. Klnnl·
son. "He has played first-rate
competition and hls record
speaks for Itself. I know that
Wittenberg's winning tradition ts
In quite capable hands."
Since 1956, Wittenberg has won
78 percent of its games (680-192),
won two nattonalchamptonshlps,
made seven appearances In the
NCAA final four and won 20 Ohio
Athletic Conference.titles.
Wittenberg, a member of the
OAC for 72 years, hegins play this
upcoming school year In the
North Coast Athletic Conference.

Paddlefi~h

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--

Farm/ Business

'limts· jtntintl

Section

D

June 18, 1989·
•

$300 million development
bill approved by cotmnittee
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Senate Agriculture Committee
approved a SDI mtlllon rural
development btll Wednesday
that attempts to bring new jobs,
better schools and advanced
telecommunications to the
countryside.
"Rural America does not need
a handout," said Agrlcu lture
Committee Chairman Patrick
Leahy, D-Vt. "All It needs Is
adequate capital and the tools to
compete In our modern economy
and build for the 21st century."
The committee qulcltly approved the btU by voice vote and
sent the comprehensive legislation to the full Senate, where It
faces a less certain fate next
month .
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Kansas threatened
Tuesday· to sidetrack the rural
development bill until the Senate
acted on drought legislation for
winter wheat growers.
To appease Dole, Leahy outSAFE AT THIRD -Cleveland's Brook Jacoby
slides safely Into third IJaae as . Royals' Kevin
Seltzer attempts !o handle a bad throw from right

fielder Pat Tabler during .s econd lnnlna; action
Friday. Cleveland won, 1·0. ( UPI)

.,

Annacone ousts Wilander from Artois p'lay
Important to do that wtth Wimbledon coming up. There were
times out there today when I
thought I might have to come
off. ''

LONDON (UP!) - No. 3 seed
.Mats Wllander. weakened by a
stomach virus, Friday fell to
Paul Annacone, 6-2, 6-4, In the
quarterfinals of the $385,000
Stella Artois Grass Court
Championships.
Top seed Ivan Lendl progressed to the semifinals for the
first ttme In stx years, downing
West German Michael Stich 6-4.
4-6, 6-3.
"I just dldn' t feel up to tt,': satd
Wllander. "Some of the other
guys have had the same thing.
My coach got the bug earlier this
w.eek.
"Still, I've had plenty of
practice on grass this week
which has been good. It's very

In contrast, Annacone, Ihe
26-year-old 12th seed from Knoxville, Tenn., looked relaxed and
confident throughout hts straight
sets wln over the Swede.

~me for a State Farm
•

..._... .. ..·-··.. .
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,

,

all-Qhloans, sat otH the 1988-89
season after faJUng to qualify
scholastic ally under the NCAA's
Proposition 48 to play as
freshmen.
Baker missed last basketball
seas.on for the same reason. He
was the UPI Division I player of
the year In 1988 at Dayton
Dunbar.

CAIOU SNOWDEN

c-r., Third

lined a schedule for action on the made rural development one of
drought bill In July, but It was his top priorities this session and
unclear whether Dole still might he hope_s quick Senate action will
raise objectiOns to the rural force the House to consider
development bill when It reaches similar legislation.
the noor.
A House Agriculture subcomm lttee has been holding a series
The btll tries to stimulate the
of hearings this month on rural
stalled economy of rural Amer·
development, but the chairman
tea by creating a pool of money
had planned to fold the panel's
for Investments In new busiproposals Into the 1990 farm bill.
nesses. publiC works projects
"If we pass something over
and better telecommunications
here,
that's going to provide the
links for schools, Industry and
Impetus,''
said Sen. Kent Conhospitals.
rad, 0 -N.D.
The legislation also attempts to
In addition to creating new
narrow the economic gulf bejobs, the . btU tries to provide
tween rural and urban·AmeriCa.
some extra money for rural
Rural unemployment currently
communities to make badly
exceeds urban joblessness by 31
percent and the poverty rate Is
needed Improvements In their
· water and sewer systems.
nearly one-third higher.
A 1984 study found two-thirds of
"We cannot have two Amerl·
the rural water supply violated
cas - one a land of urban
government standards and
opportunity and a second, rural
another survey showed 70 perone left behind," Leahy said .
cent of the substandard wasteLeahy, with the backing of
water facilities are located In
Senate Democratic leader
small towns.
George Mitchell of Maine, has

HONORED FOR 15 . YEARS SERVICE Harold Thompson, president of the Southern
Division of the Ce~tral Trust Company of

Local finn receives
Contractor of Year Award
Alside to Buckeye Siding and
GALLIPOLIS - Bu,ckeye Sid'
Window
for demonstrating an
Ing and Window Co., 502 Second
excepttona
I level of expertls&lt;'
Ave ., Galllpolls, has been
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In their use
awarded the Contractor of the
of
Alslde
Residential
Bulldtng
Year Award by Gary ·om.
Products.
By
combining
Alside
Charleston. W. Va., divisional
siding and insulation undersales manager for Alslde.
layments. thE' company has proAccepting the award locally on
vided energy efflcency as well as
June 13 was Danny Pelfrey.
beauty to homes I~ the Greater
VInton.
Ohio
Valley.
Dtll said Alstde Is the world's
"Buckeye
Siding's growth can
leading manufacturer of reslden·
tlal building products.
. 'be attributed to their excellent
The sales manager added, management leadership and
"through five decades, more dedicated efforts of their emrhan twice as many homeowners ployees toward giving hohave chosen Alslde products over meowners excellent value In
their residing and Insulation
any other brand in -America.''
needs."
Dill concludl&gt;d. "this spechil
award has been granted by

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It's a no-cost review of
your insurance coverages and needs.

Gallpolls, presents Patricia A. Clark (left) and ·
Bonnie D. Coffee (right) with clocks in recognl:
lion of their 15 years of service with Central T~ust.; · ·
'

like a good nerghbor. Slate Farm rs rn~re

St8te Farm Insurance Compan1es
Hc.me Offices: Bloomington. Jllino•s

Clerical programs scheduled Revenues,
, RIO GRANDE - A full-lime Department of the Galltageneral ciNical program will Jackson-Vinton JVSD. is $200. pre-tax· income.
run from Thursday. Jun&lt;' 29 to including books.
August ll at Buck&lt;&gt;ye Hills
Adult Services is also offering announced
·
CarPer Center.
part-time clerical classes held on
The class. which will meet on
weekdays from 8: 30a.m. to 1:30
p.m .. will cover typing. accounting and records management.
The class Is design&lt;&gt;d for those
needing a refresher on their
clerical skills as well as those
wishing to enter ihe clerical ise- ·
creta rial field. Students have the
option of concentrating th~ir
Pntire hours on one or two
subjects instead of all three•.
Tuition for the program. con·
dueled by the "-dull ServicP

Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9
a.m. to noon at Buckeye Hills.
These 36-hour classes wlll be11:in
on July 6.
The courses offered Include
Typing (any IPvell, Accounting
and Word Processing (using
Displaywrite software and IBM
computerSJ. Tuition for each
class . Is $.14. and Accounting
requires a $20 textbook.
To register. contact Adult
Services at 24o-o336 for
information.

DANNY PELFREY

First impressions important

NASHVILLE. Tenn. - Sho-'
ney's Inc. reported second::
quarter revenues and pre-taX.
income continued to set recor.d ·
high~.

For the s&lt;&gt;cond quarter of 1989,:
which ended May 14. revenues
increased n percent above the
mark set in the same quarter of
1988. from $179,180,:\5o to
$203.169.672. Pn~ tax tncom&lt;' bE-fore Interest expense increased .
23 from the same figure in 198(1,
from $23.207.189 to $28.460,946,
Net incomE' and earnings per
share for the second quarter.
were $4,:\32.268 and $.12. res~c,
lively . Pre-tax margins bela~~
. Interest expense for the quarlfi.r
Improved from 13 percent in 1988.
to 14 percent In 1989.

Much ·bas been said of "first
As Important as an airport
By Mike McGinnla
Impressions"
... for many busimay be as ·a stepping off po!Jilln
.President, UC, Inc.,
nesses,
the
first
Impression of
leaving a community, Its greaGALLIPOLIS - Public per- test worth may be as an entry Gallipolis Is the open door of a
ception about places and events point for those who come here to Learjet or Citation at Gallla.
can sometimes be Incomplete or
Metgs airport, not to mention the
visit.
Pre-tax margins from restau.
misleading, and that's partiCuGallla-Melgs 4000 feet runway fact that they have direct air
rant operations Increased 28
larly true Of "non-airline" air- Is frequently the landing stte for
access to a planned business site.
percent for the second quarter.
ports such as Gallla-Melgs twin jet and turboprop aircraft
We need to work hard at
Comparable
restaurant sales in··
Regional.
'
bringing business executives, • Improving that access and "first
creased 7.4 percent. resulting in
Too often looked upon as a · engineers, etc. to the area to Impression".
a real estate sales gain of 4./,
"playground" for a few people or conduct meetings, perform
In order to foster an exchange
percent after adjusting for menu ·
as a place pilots use to commun- matntalnence, deliver parts,
of Ideas and to lay the groundprice increases.
..
Ity that ts not so Immediately etc ..
work for future cooperation
obvious. Not only do they support
between our organizations, ABC,
This benefit Is the least obFor the 28 weeks ended Ma,· J{
local businesses, but they also vious, since !bose who ny for Inc., will co-host a cook-out for
revenues
Increased 14 percent to
serve as an entry point Into the business purposes usually conmembers only Saturday after$44o.519.93o. as income before
area for those whose primary sider time to be at a premium so noon and evening, June 24, with
intere~t expense . and , ipeoll)e:
business location Is far distant.
the presence of these larger Mid-Ohio-Valley Aviation Associtaxes
tncr('ased 38 percent. Net.
Gallla-Melgs Regional ts the aircraft Is relatively brief and
ation at Gallla-Metgs.
Income
and earnings per share:
home of three full-time busi- they are not so well notiCed by
were
$7.:\03.395
and $.20:.
nesses ... Nighthawk AviatiOn,
those who pass ·by. ·
respectively.
Appalachian Aviation and Crisp
A look at the corporate log at
NEW BUSINESS -Sonya WoUe Is seated here at 011e the tables
Pilot ServiCes. Nighthawk ts an the airport shows planes arriving
located In the. dining area of her new bust...,.,., Sonya's Country
aircraft airframe &amp; powerplant from such far-away cities as
'
Kitchen. The new business wl)l provide a place for luncheon and
malntatnence operation, oper- Rogers, Arizona, Castrovalley,
dinner parties and Is an extellfilon of her caterlnl!: service.
ated by Bob McCarley.
California, and from such famtl~eigs employees ~.:
Appalachian, owned and oper- tar places as St. Louis, MilwauALBANY
Several
Gallta
ated by Louis Manyak, Is prlrnar- kee, Atlanta. Detroit, Seattle and ·
County employees of Southern
promot~
tly an atr charter operation also Cleveland.
Ohio
Company's
Meigs
Division'
offering malntatnence and pilot
Who do they represent? FedALBANY -Fouremployeesat
services, while Glen Crisp Is the eral Mogul, U.S. Marine, Health were honored recently for their
Southern
Ohio Coal Company'!( ·
,
owner/operator of Crtsp Pilot Care, Inc., Allegheny Veneer, years of service.
Meigs
Division
have recently :
Receiving awards were:
ServiCes whose primary service Inc., Rockvtlle Mining, Reyriolds
RACINE -Sonya Wolfe ha·s a · addition to the menus. which wtll been promoted to section
20-y.ear service award - Tho·
stick with a summer theme, she
ts corporate flylnJ!.
new Idea to offer the area.
Machinery, Eagle Coal &amp; Dock · mas P. Gannaway. Vinton. main·
supervisors.
.' '
Two part-time flight Instruc- and Captain D's to name a few.
As the owner and caterer of will offer hom&lt;&gt;made breads and
Stan Burdette of Point Plea,- .
tors also fly from Gallta-Melgs. These are buslnesllell who supply tenance supervisor at the Mei11:s
Sonya' s Country Kitchen, she is seasonal desserts.
sant;
Paul Spry of Wtlkesvtlle;:
No.2
mine.
The business. a screened In
In addition, four business planes
open tng a new bu sl ness at her
jobs, serviCes, payroll and taxMike
Curnutte
of Gallipolis, and
15-yE'ar service awards are based here ... flown for J -D base to our community and for
home in Antiquity, which is an ari!a at her home overlooking the Karl Brandau of Wellston have ,
James
E.
Estrp,
Galltpolts.
me·
Drilling (Racine), J. Hall (Che- them one of the most costextension of her catering service. Ohto River. Is located outside of attained the position of section
chanlc
at
the
Meigs
No.
2
mine;
shire), Jim Mink Auto (Gallipo- efficient ways Into the Trlto provide a place for dinner Anltqulty. off Blind Hollow Road. supervisor at the company:s :
Lawson
McCoy,
Ewtngton.
meThe only thing required for a
lis) and Kerr Distributors County Is by air.
parties and luncheons.
at
the
Raccoon
No.
3
chanic
party or luncheon is 48 three underground mtntngoper4- ,
dinner
(Athens).
mine; Richard C. McDaniel.
hours notice. To schedule such an lions In Meigs and VInton
The area ha s seating for up to
·
Galllpolts, stores attendant at the 20 people and she has several event, Interested partl8 may counties.
Burdette,
secc!
ton
supervisor
·
·
Mel~ No. 1 mine; John E . Park.
different menus to offer. In · call (6141 949-2055.
at
the
Raccoon
No.3
mine,
beg~
Bidwell, pumper at the Raccoon
working for thl' company as ~
No. 3 mine; Robert R Taylor.
co-op student In 1981. After
Gallipolis. meehantc at thP '
attaining his bachelor' sdegree of
Meigs No. 2 mine; and Harold L.
mining engineering from the :
Thaxton .. Bidwell. set-up man at
West
VIrginia Instlute of Techno- ·
the Meigs No. 2 mtne.
loy
In
Montgomery, he joined.
Five-year service awards By STAN EVANS .
Meigs No. 1 mine on a permanent :
period ahead. A continued weak Daniel J. Hamm£&gt;1. Vinton. secGALLIPOLIS - The OOslttve economy coupled with Federal tion supervisor at the Meigs No, 2
basts as an assistant surveyor .•1
momentum for
Spry, section supervisor at the·•
Reserve easing would certainly mtne.
Meigs
No. 1 mine, joined the
that has beE'n
· reinforce the trend towards a
Melp
No.
2 mine as a general
bulldlnR over
more positively sloped yield
. the past- six
Inside
laborer
In 1917. He has held ;
curve.
the positions of shuttle car.
months strenR·
Because of the rapid decline In
t h~ned further
operator
and continuous miner
l!ll~rest rates over the past two
GALLIPOLIS - The second
operator before being hired a~ ,
in recent weeks.
months, our forecast at the quarter cub dividend at Ohio
the Melp No. 1 mine In 1983. -.:
For instance.
beginning of the year that long- Valley Bank ln. Gallipolis was
yields for 90-day
Curnutte began worklna for the •
term U.S. Treasury yields would raiSed to 45 cents per share
Melp No. 1 mines In 1ft7 u .a·:
U.S. Treasury
arE' c~~;:~ be 8 percent by the year end folloWing approval by the bank's
lower than they were at tl
trablee. He held the poslttona of ·
appears currently to be a mtn- . board of dlrect9rs on May 23.
February.
(ll!llel'allnllde
laborer and face- ·
lmum expectation. In addition,
The Increase of two cents per
The trend In thedlrectlonofthe our observations regarding the share wUI be paid to shareIIUIII before this promotion to;
yield cui'Ve Is also reinforcing trend of the yield curve lead us to holden of record by June 1, 1989.
~election IUpei'Vilor II Melp Noi'
our positive. outlook for short' conclude that short-term Treas- Annualized thil represents an
L
!·
term Interest rates. While Inter- ury Bills will decline to the low 7 illc:reue of 9.K In the cash
Brandau joined tbe compaiQI-Ilf .
est rates have drifted lower over percent range In that same time dividend.
1977 u 1 train• at tbe Raceada
the past two months, the yield period as well. A further easing
No. 3 mille. He held tbe po~ltJalli .
Chairman of the Board Morrll
curve continues to be relatively In economic growth and Federal E. HaskiDa and President and
of aea.atlltalde tallanr,
HONOBEDFOBIIYEAB88EB\'ICE-EiolleAdan,rl..-,of
flat at Its lower leVels.
macblne operator
Reserve policy are the two most Chlllf Exeeuttve Officer James
BrogBft-Waner
JnattriiDCe
Servlcee
Ia
Pomeroy,
wu
pren•tett
a
IIUIII,
roof bolttr
compelling
factors
to
that
However,ln recent weeks, this
L. Dalley alao announced that the
cloekoalutweekldullllceJIUVIalftiiP••elllera,eanof
·
outlook.
oper1tor
before
trend Is showing Indications of
book value of Ohio Valley Bank's
auperlldtve
emploJIIII!Id
u
aa
ac-t
et
the
8&amp;a&amp;e
.btomolllle
No.
2
..
(Mr.
Ev18
aa
lnveslml!lll
atock wt~~~t up 85 cents per share
bottomlna out. suggesting an
Mutuallulll'IIICle Cotn;n•r· Pr!t !lll11111e 11ft 18 Raber! Ga....
Brandau
broker for The-Ohio Compaay In from $S1.:118 ·to 131.91 effective
Important decline In shQrt·term
oomp1111y
field
1111•
reJ~~Weutldlve
for
·a.•lltl'~t
OJalo,
Ita Galllpolll efflee. )
rates lies In the tntermedlllte

.

INIUIANCI

Gallia
employees
honored

.

New business offers place
for luncheon, dinner parties

Horse Racing
Veteran jockey Wlllle Shoemaker, embarking on a farewell tour of Europe, ts expected
to have at least eight rides at
Royal Ascot next week. He will
arrive In Britain after riding In
Milan and Madrid this weekend.

are

Money Ideas

found below dam

Lower interest rate
push gains strength

••••••

OVB inueases
cash dividend

I

,.

·•CHEVROLET
• ·oLDSMOBilE
eGEO

1616 EAmRN AVENUE • GALUPOUS, OH.
(614) 446-3672
• 446·6400
.
.'

Marc:b 31, - -

'•

'

.

..

AvL &amp; State St.
Galipoll&amp;, Oh.
Phone 446-4290
" - 446-4518

--Sports briefs--

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) tton In which low voltage electric
Eight paddleflsh, the largest 48 current Is passed through a
Inches long, were captured below limited area of water. The
the Deer Creek Dam lnPtckaway current temporarily Immobilizes
County Wednesday and released fish so they can be weighed.
Into the the reservoir by state fish - measured, tagged and released
biologists.
unharmed back Into the water.
' The captured fish were among
Schaefer said the paddleflsh
a . larger group of paddleflsh are hard to capture because of
located last week In the spillway
their size and strength. He said
during a routine fish survey .
while all the paddleflsh released
It Is believed the huge !Ish
Into the reservoir have an excelmigrated northward from the lent chance for continued surviMississippi and Ohio River sys- val, reproductive capabilities
tems during recent periods of will depend on maturation and
high water levels In the state's optimal breeding conditions.
rivers and streams.
Paddleflsh do not reach reproIn the put decade, paddleflsh ductive age until they are seven
have been found only In the.Ohto years old and must have exact
River and Infrequently up to the spawning requirements. They
first dam In the Mustctngum, Include a water temperature In
.Mtaml and sCioto rivers.
the upper 50s and the presence of
, "We have never before seen so a flooded clean gravel bar for a
many paddleflsh In the Deer period of at least seven to nine
Creek apUhl'ay and only one or days.
two atghttnp are reported to us
Schaefer said fish blologilts
each year." said central Ohio plan later this month to capture
flllh management aupervtsor more paddleilsh for release Into
Ren Schaefer.
Deer Creek. He said at leaat 12
'The paddlefJJh were captured additional fish were known to be
In the spUiway below the dam.
durlnl an &amp;lectrofllhlng opera-

- - ...

..

Ohio State athletes regain eligibility

Gillespie Wittenberg coach
SPRINGFIELD. Ohio (UP!iBo.b Gtllespie. head basketball
coach at Ripon College the past
nine years, has been named to
replace Larry Hunter as head
coach at Wittenberg University.
Gtllespte compiled a 132· 73
record In hls nine years at the
wisconsin school and led the
Redmen to the Midwest Conference championship and NCAA
Division III tournament berths In
1986 and 1987.
"Wittenberg is one of the
premier Division III programs,"
said Gtllespie. "The challenge of
maintaining a program that
competes at the national level is
a tremendous one. but I am
confident we wtll get It done.
"At 40 years old. I am very
confident of my career goals, and
I have no desire togo to Division I
or Division II. This ts where I
' to be."
want
Four consecutive Wittenberg
coaches have moved Into DivIsion I coaching- Ray Mears to
Ti'nnessee In 1962, Eldon Miller
to Western Michigan In 1970, Bob
Hamilton to Navy In 1976 and
Hunter to Ohio University just
this spring.
A native of Joliet, Dl., Gillespie
graduated from Lewis Untver-

..

'
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,
Ohio

:Cleveland edges Kansas City;
Yanks cop pair from Texas
By United Press International

~

I~

..

.

�-·Page-D-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Poma'Oy-Midcleport-Gallipolis,

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

June 18, 1989

Poma-oy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

June 18, 1989

-- ~~~~~~~~:::r~~~~~=====:;:;;;;~~

0""•/ U.I . Mol.

ESTATE AUCTION

..

SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1989
lOA.M
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE

'

LEVIA ELIZABETH QIU WIU BE SOLD.
HOUSEHOLD Mil IIISCELLANEOUI: Sen TV, Eiecllanicl 111180, 30' elecn: Kilt mont range, KenmalllJMge, S..S KlltiOIDII hezer, G.E. waher Md Qye&lt;,

maple IWin ~ IIUile, ,_,..and c:Nirs, chel~ 2 - - · '"'"" llblot, lnu halllnle, Klblina10r refriDWalbr,
couch, chU', 2 lllr condilionerl, Kenmore 1\'telpat, jeMtry
lind diamand ring, .22 pilllll lingle ohot by Hun•fs, p1ur

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
-Register - 675-1333

gluiWft lind more misoelllineous.

VEHICLE: 1977 Plymouth Volllre ao is.
TRACTOR: John Daera 212 tractor with mowinQ dec!&lt; - ,..1

nice.

AUcnONCOND~BY

RICK PEARSON AUCliON CO., INC.
MASON, WV 173-5715
ADMINISTJl.ATOR: GEORGE GILL
TERIIS: C1111h or a-k with ID

, Not R11ponalble tor 1acldenta or toaa of property.
UOIIIMCI. lo-In Ohio- WV-

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

.•

Public Notice

6 ·Loet and Found

•-oct

..
. ..

cop181 con bo
upon
poyrnont of UI.OO por ••·
2. Dotoooll wfl .,. r•
lundod upon rotum of tho
Project Monuol ond Orowlngo In good ' condition
within 30 deyo of bid • lng.
3. No portlolooto w• bolt•u•d.
AI bldo to bo ocaomp•
nlod by o bid ltcUriiY In tho
fonn of o 10% lkl lond
o•oallod on AlA Document
A310, 1170 Edition or 1
011hler' 1 chocll poyatllo to
tho ow- oquol to 10% of
tho totol eum of oumo tlld.
The owner _..,.. tho
right to roloct ony or 11 tlldo
ond to walvo "'-lerfly In
ho bldo ond In tho ~~~-•
No bidder mey
hlt bid wlthlol 1hhy 1301
doyo oft• t h o - doto of
tho_., ..........
Upon -•rd
of - ·
ouc-oful
bidder
bo r•
qulrod to oubmlt o PwfDrmonco, ~bor ond Ml1erlol
Poy"**l lond gtvon In tho
nome of tho Ow-In 1 opoclflc omount oquof to 100%
of tho Contrect Sum or o
' C81hler' • chocll poyollle to
tho Owner oqull io 100% of

wll"*-

..
..

·•

"WII the driller with 1he license BD-108 please
move your car? It's blocking the getaway car."

Public Notice

Public Notica

423 Second Avenue
INVITATION TO BID
Golllpotlo, Ohio 4&amp;131
Notice It given h.-eby tho!
Bldl wRI bo rocolvod lor:
Middleport Pr•byterlon
1. Genar•l Trad• ConChurch
1113 North Fourth StrHI tract
Sealed bldo will bo r•
. Middleport, Ohio
: -wilt occept bido for the lol· celved et the Architect'• offico untl Tu•doy. July 11.
, , lowing project:
• • Roof Ropolr ond Ropi.Co· 1989012:00 P.M.
~ ment
Bldo recetvod ofiOf lhll
;. Middleport Pr11bytorlen limo wMI not bo occeptod.
• : church
Bldl wll be op.,H ..d reMI
&gt;, - 1113 North Fourth StrHI aloud 11 thot lime ond thot
' •• Middleport. Ohio 417110 pl~~ee. lnter•1ed pertiel Ire
: - iccording to Drewlnga -'d lnv~od to ottond b!d open• : speclflctltlon• prepared bY
Ing.
: ;: Mork T. Epling. Archhoct.
Bidder~ mey 1ecure copl•
of tho propoood Contrect ·
' '::---:::--:--::-::::---;-:---- Oocuman11 ftom the offloe
:~ 1 Card of Thanks
of tho Architect beginning
.•
June 13. 1989 on tho fol•
lowing boolt:
1. Ono copy of tho Project
We wish to express our
Monuol
ptuo ono nt of tho
••
sincere thanks and
Drowlngo
upon
of
appreciation for the
•
•211.00
depoo~.
Addhlonll
•
care and concern
•
shown lo our family at
2 In Memoriam
the time of our
daughter's accident
We would especially
In Memory Of
like to lhank the Gallia
•••
EMS, Dr. Lentz, Dr.
LUSHER A. EVANS
:
Simpson. the staff of
EDWIN MAYO
:; Holzer Medical Center.
Today recalls tilt memory of
-· our families. our many
loved ones 10nt to rost
And those who think ofthtm
:: friends and neighbors,
today
•• The First Church of the
Are
those who loved them
Naza1ene and all the
best.
local churches who
Sadly missed by Family
'• added Megan to their
•
prayer list. You were
•
all so helpful and
supportive during this
In Loving Memory of
time. We just wanted a
Paul W.
chance to thank you
Higginbotham Sr.
- you are great!
who passed away on
'
Sincerely,
•
Father's Day,
Terry and Melanie
•
Lucas
June 19, 1988.

w•

the Contrect 1um.

till 15 1tc' •

· ·

.. -

po-

l

-- L-------..11

::3
•

Announcements

NOAH'S

ARK

PARM

1-800-282-2167 011
800-8f8-4f91 IIATL
Happy Ads

million
limes we've
needed you.
A million times we've
cried.
II love could hiYe savld
you
You never would hiYe diad.
In life we loved you dearly,
In death we love you still.
In our hearts you hold a
place.
Thll no one else can fill.
It broke our heerts to lose
you,
But you did not 10 alone.
For part of us went wfth·you ;
The day God took you
home.
Sadly missed by
Wife &amp; Family

3 femate kittM"IL I wk. old •
11~441-

Bttgs of v•rd sale Clothel to
glv-oy. Coli e14-318-IM41.

I cute • friiiiY ldtt- ta give
,..., to o good homo. mole lo
femlle. Colle14-218-e735.

MoloeMo. old doll mkoclbrlld
112 Dabernw'l l / 2 Oerm~n
lloopwcl Coli 304-17&amp;-2320.
Female Black Llibndor. 7

montt. old. Hid 1hcrl1 .nd
WOtmod. Colle14-182-2IO&amp;.

Kittlnl. male .,d fernala To
good ho-. e14--2&amp;44.

Femll•"
do&lt;.

v•• old BIICII Ubn-

Coli et4-182-&amp;1e1 oltor

1:00 p.m.

One •• It .,... • . Cell 114-

982-2781.

Found: ring of ktrfL Laah•F•rm
In Rutloncl Col e14-182-11&amp;8.

Lon: mtfe LhMI Apse;\ June&amp;.
219 Union Ave. Longhllr onteil
end . . .. BJonctwtthllntebl.ek.

e14-982-7830.

S
_7___v_a_nl
__a_le_ _

------·aalliPiJiis---------&amp;Vicinity
5 t.mly Y•d Sale: Thurs. ftru
Sol. 1-1. bob¥ clolhll lo h..,..
Childr., a w ....en cotNng. ·
Horne in.... chwy rolly wheels,
c• Pitt&amp; mlac. htlm.
Gage11 mi. out141finthouse
before Jet. 325.

s•" •

------pc;·.nerov___,..... -Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Rullon4 e14-742-2141.

Giveewev

Wtter trllintd. Cllll

T•••

MonciiV. June 1tlh Ill Jim
StiWart't on North" Main In

a

3&amp;51.

fri-

Found' •tro
Milo block
c• .,lth white 1po1 undlr chin.
Found
on Rodcoprtn 111
Ad .• acrou from Fairgroundt.

..-------- -· -· ---·--· ·- ----·- -· ---

AIIIli! u il l: I' 111 e nl s
4

Approa. 8wtco. •blodl
Ia •• MeciGIII PI••· ctll
e14-446-08U.
Found:

2 t ...ly. MeedowbrookEttll:•.
up,. ftoint Pl. .em. June 11th
.,d 20th. 10o0Q-..,OO.

...... Pt-PTeasant _____ _
· &amp; Vicinity

.. ··---- -----· -.. ··--· -·. ·-- -- ,__ _
V•d Stile 111 ,_,iii•). R1kl 01
Shine. June 14.11. 11. 17. MMn
Str- Leon. from 8 :30 to 7:30,

Home -..... lhoM, gu nt.
nidi- IIICk. cklthlng. quill tQPI

.. dmilc.

21••tlt.lldtt_8....,old.1

male end 1 ,...,.... 3041?5-

,e_71_4_.- - - - - - Y•d Slle. June 11 lll'ld 17.
-., .,d loturdlrt, 2211
..loob101 Avo. In bode. 8,00 AM
to 1:00PM.

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

V•dSIIIi. 3 f1mlv. Fri ..-dSat.
9:00 til 'I, ,.
aut Gr•
ICittentmlle•d...,..llooklng Roecl Small lumttct. atave,
for. good homo. will deljVor, montoll, chllro. tlbiM. dlshoo.

m••

304-875-&amp;178.

dot'-, toolo ll!d rooo maro

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION

EVERY FRIDAY 7:00 P.M.

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1989
10:00 A.M.

Located from St. Rt. 7 in Gallipolis take Spruce
St. then approx. 1 mile to house. Watch for auctionsign.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS''
(6) walnut chairs w/cane bottoms, butcher block table, oak
dresser, square oak table. oak frame mirror. pocket knives,
casl _iron _lea kettle, Coke cooler, lois of glassware, lots of
pnmltNe 1tems, HuU, Roseville &amp; McCoy pottery, seaman's
chest. school desk, buffet, round table &amp; 4 chairs, pictures &amp;
picture frames.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Bedroom surte, chest of drawers, night stand, queen size
bed, couch &amp;ioveseal- Early American, GE&amp; Frigidaire relrigetators, bookcase w/glass doors. electric sewing machine.
large dresser, baby bed, wringer washer, pine bar, single
bed. old chairs, blonde dining room suKe &amp; hutch, Caloric
gas range, typewrrter stand, coffee &amp; end tables, telephone,
disc player &amp;radio, desk. misc. linens, dresser base, cord organ.
"MISC."
Double axle H.O. trailer. 14 K.gold chain~. silver~ lurouoise
jewelry, silver plate flatware. blue lavatory in cabinet, ropes,
lires. Jim Beam bolties, brass firplace set, tools, tool boxes.
· log chains, and lots more.

JUNE 24, 1989

10:00 A.M.

Located 4 miles soulh of Ravenswood, WV on State
Rt. 2,across from Puke Enero. Inc. Everythina except property will be sold atabsolute auction with
no 11mi1tum or reserve. Owner reserves lhe riaht to
reject the list bid on property.
.
3'h ACRES COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
DOZER ** IIOAL BUILDING** FARII EQUIPMENT
**WELDER TOOLS** IIISCELIAN(OUS
Property consists of 31\ acra co11marcill prol)tl!y wMh
362 frontqt on Sllteloute 2. Ter11s: 10% Down Day of
SaltwHh bll111ce due in 30 d11sor othlrwisn1111d upon
bJ nil• and buyer. ,
·
Allis Chll111•s HD 6 Doni with hydr•lic an&amp;lt bllldt.
80'1190' buWding frame w~h heiYy duty industrial aluminum
rool, 25' high cetrter beam, dismantler:f, no side panels; 200
amp Lincoln welder on !Jailer; 24' 2 alie lllilar, M.H. pony
tractor wrthside mower; J.O. l4T baler, M.F. 3 pt. rake, cui•
valor~ wa~n. post hole digger, h1111mer mill, II h.p. 32"
Simpliclf. nding lawn mower, Jaepr 125air compressor, two
small ut~ity lrailars wilh tilt beds, weldin1lable, lart~~~as·
sortment of name brand wrenches, various sizes of pipe
wrenclies. electtic side ermder, 5 h.p. rololiller, sprocket
puNar lor D·8 dozer, chotkar cables, sclfloldin1 2 drag
buckels, puiiJpe road rrader. Franklin slove,likenew,large
assortment of shop 10015. vises, various size aear pullars.
barrel. pumps, chains and bin• 25' aluminum llddar,
chain hoist, 13:00x24 IJIII• lires and wheels, l)liscellaneous lumbet, roofinl pipe and conduit, 35 ton hydaulic jack,
10 and 20 tan porta-powers, carpenl• loots. air impact
wrencha wilh sockets. iron kellle, slane jars plus much
more loo numwous to menlion. Property w111 sellat12:30.
IlliCit IIJ Coltllwlla fllt••ltlr ·
T...:
ar Clltcllltir of Slla wl•l'olllvt I.D.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1989
10:00 A.M.

Rutltnd Fire111n's Ptrlt
Main Street - Rutland, Ohio
Aflerfarminl in lllti&amp;s C0111ty for the Pill 40 ye~rs.
llr. llorris his lORI out of the linstock business
and is chln&amp;ill his entire operation. Ht will be offerilll equipment no lonaer needed for ule at auction. Due to the narrow road and lillittcl P1rlti111at
the firm. the followina llu batn moved to the Parlt
located In the Ctlllsr of Rutland.
TRACfOIS &amp; £QUIPI£1T: Zelor 5211 Diesel w/wide lronl
(new), 1550 Oliver w/tritycle front diesel, M.M. U302 diesel
w/wide front, MltheWs 7' nnry scylhe, John Deere 7' hay
crimper, Ford 3 pt. 6' bush hoe Tiimco 3pt. 6' bush hog, 4' 3
pt. lawn mower w/new gear bo•, 6' blade, Ford 8N · 9N side
mt. mowing machine, New Idea manure spreader (very good
condrtion), A.C. 5' combine w/aood canvas &amp; belt~ wagon
=&amp;ear!!
, Alhu..·r:o:~·Clf: 731111. Loadslar 1600 w/hoist
lbadneedl replir, hoist 81011. !111. n FordFISOPIU.3006cy1.
~sPeed. !bed r• • 7fP1yriMdJI318auto., 78HondiC8750K
w/1.-inl 11111 enlln• Clds, blllery.
HOUSOIOLD IIIIC.: llinell8 s«, hydllbed, c:ot~ch, coftee
&amp;end IIIIIs, occ•ionll chairs. ps ranae. G.E. double-·
chain saws. IIWn m~ r«ctiiers, plus IIYRY items too
numeraus Ia 111ention.
OWNEIS: LEO I UNDA IORRIS

c:.•

AUCJJOIEER'S NOTE: Onlr, Bnlnl Johson lib·
ifii.Ntirlll wllldiiPOII Ill coiiPitts 1-tory. This
II 1 11r1t 111t. Plln now to lttlnd.

AUCTIOIIEER: COL. W. KEITH IOLDEN
'
&amp;14-742-2041
DIRECfiONS: Fro• P••W· Olllo. tat 1.1. 124 leet te
lutl•d. Sale Ia 11111111 st. Ill..., of ton. PIIIIJ of

I

Located at 504 College Avenue,
Rio Grande, Ohio.
Due to the death of Goldie Davis, the following
will be sold:
Two color televisions. L.R. couch, bedroom su•e. sewing
machine, old dresser, dining room lable w/6 chairs, buffet,
antique table, wheelchair, glider, quilling lrames, automatic·
washer &amp; dryer, Tiffany lamp, other - ~mps, 4 drawer lilecab·
in el; canning jars, lois ol glassware and dishes, antique brass
bed, anlique library biblE. 3 pc. bedroom suKe, 2 stand tables, entique chair. desk chair, bar stool, writing desk.
Christmas decorations. L.R. lurnrture. Mayiag wringer
washer, linens. pots &amp; pans. small table and chairs, several
odd chairs. and many other miscellaneous items.
Terms: Cash or Check w/ID
Imogene Morbitzer. Co-owner
Lee Johnson
AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio .
Pho"' 256:.S740
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of property

UBLIC
AUCTION

Corner of Nye Ave. &amp; Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Consignments Taken 12 Noon-6:00
P.M. Day of Sale
Eats - Cash - Positive ID
"Merchandise Pickup Available"
Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith Molden ·

ltntclt ., btt.d flrt .,_

Saturday, Jun 24, 1989
10:00 A.M.

OWNER, JENNINGS BIAS
Refreshments
Posrtiva I.D.
Cash
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
Ollio 157·68·1344, W. VI. 515
Ucensld &amp;Bonded in Ohio &amp; W. Va. Member of Ohio.
W. ¥1. &amp; National Auctlonaor Associetion
"Not Responsible lor Accidents or Loss of Property"

• Auction

l*tliiJ
CISh

PUBLIC AUCTION

THUR. EVE., JUNE 22, 1989

omplo fuel .. •
2111-MB-1732 - -

a. Auc:tion

OWNEII-OP!RATOIII-.
Oolly
HELPWAHTEO
E.,_.lnc.ANaUonwklllhiW;' lnd~p.nct.rt: busin•• hiring for
loopocillllocl-lor •-ing WMII:.
..... m..Pllld
olmoblnlfft.
h• • Md
noo'IIC•
••
m.,.., llooo.~&lt;:li
;;;.1 tion. Col Mond• or T••dor
trotllc..,olllllo. N"""lor*cllo- tt4-44&amp;-&amp;1u
petCih •o yau a..~
you- to h.,l r;'"••h••
WORK
~ ::..~ .:.!~0:.
OVERSEAS
ath.- ••••· vou .,, ...h b••
ol••
a
~-- eo•
Ialor U. S. campania 111for,_ ••..., • 1-1100-7112terviiWIR&amp; now lor TAX1221 In Ohio or 1-1100-143FlEE, Hl&amp;h lncomo Pos~
;::,'!:"~"':.•orr.:,v~r.::, lions. Conl1ruction, Data
Mon """ Fri or oflor epm a
rr-slnt. $acurity, Enli~:::" 11 3- 88 "-11820 •k
n11r1. Ex-lllitlry. Dilltl
Mechanics. Wlldtrs. ladl:,~;-•.:, n::"",.:. ':'.~:':. eel, Food Sarvlct' 1111ny,
7.4,30 p.m. llond ph. no. '"'· lo
many liOn. Worldwide Lo1... of lno-Oilon toboiWoltcations. Paid Trsnl &amp; FuH
•• -... Rt. 4 ... 147.
Bonlfit PacU&amp;e on Ill as....... 411811 •
slp-ts. Serious appl~
-'*Inti LPN-" 1u1 14or cants call (813) 986-3100
. . . , . _ """'""• {'._
or sand ralllt to: ·
:.."t~~:;
Global
tho ~~~r.... of......,. l'ln.,.
Employmant
Contw. 181 Jo'*''"'
Service
1!1.c
Coif...e14-441-7112.
E.O.E.
10938 N. IIIIth StrHI
OUKE CLEANEA8: Oolllfl...
Sullo 206
.,, time om_,_ fpr-•.
To"'po, Fl. 331117

;to;;;

tM..,..

•

bo- . .

11

PART-TIME TEMPORARY CLINICAL
NURSING INSTRUCTOR

bea~tlt.tl do1hel for •

••n •

II 14-742-2481.

Jutt went to
Unl• .•t,.
moM¥'7 Or would you fte to
h•• • cer•7EII:her WilY A won

Ouillo
Pre1940 qulta. Any oondltiDn.

882-2e411-

Uted furniture by tM piece or
enth hauuhold lito atlllng.

a.. help vc-.. i)elthebelt you can

of a position or 1 tempo11ry part-time clinical nursin&amp; instruct~r in the School of llursinc.
Reportina directl1.to the Dean of the School the posilion rasponsibihtils wHI include supe!Vision and
evaluation of nursi~ -students in assiped nursinc
arees of mtdical/suri!CIIInd/or psychiatric nursina.
Qualifications include a BSN required : current Ohio
R.N. License required; and previoustuchineexperience in an Rll nursina PIOJIIm desirable . At lust
one year of previous expenence as a stiff nurse in
requ11td clinical area of expertise preferred .
Position available for Fall Quarter Auaust 1989.
Interested crsons should send a current. resume.
includin&amp; t names and addresses of thraa refertnces, copy of transcript before the deadline of
June 30, 1989 to:
Ills. Phyllis Mason , Personnel Officer
The University of Rio G11nde
P.O. Box 969
Rio Gllnde, OH. 45674
Tho Uninrslty of Rio lrando ond Rio Grondo Corw11unity
Coll11e oro Eq•l Opportunily/Afflrllllive Action Employtrs
• 0 N0 17633

bel II Call M•iiV n Wewer. 304-

•t~raltt•

n•

c ..h ollcl Coli 814-882-&amp;1&amp;7
.. e14-112-2&lt;111 .

AUTOMOTIVE SAL.ES

Uted furniture .nd houllhold
app lilflcet. Phone 814-7t12·

.PERSON NEEDED!!

~llllllll\111''111

S&gt;:i VIL I: 0

•Must have prior auto sales experience
-Earning potential to exceed S3,000
per month
·
•Must be motivated and enthusias.
tic

11 · Help Wanted
UCENSEO SOCIAL WORKER
Center. lo ICF-MR ,...... lo

Echoing Meadow• Rnldlntlll

.

:r:~d ·~~~ w:rO:io~=
meets

•••e e.

both

.

fHerel

requifem.,tL thole quetlfic•

tion -. Mult iru;tudl • beah~ors

degriJit, exp. It pref•red. Inter·
ested perty thould ,.,d 1
f!MUm8 S. ref. IO Echoing Me•
dows. 319 Wnt Union St.
Athent OH 45701 . or clll
614-613-8074woek .... o 8-1.

APPLY IN PERSON ANYTIME
DURING BUSINESS HOURS.

••in.

t omeone t o
Light hou•·
keeping rtquired. C.ll $14-44&amp;o
B727.

Third SAw ., O.lllpoUt OH

~eM1.

Mlllnten.,CII p•aon "VIftt ... IO
. ltv e in lor llpf . aompl• . C. I

Rent Free. Coupla to live lnchuch cernp prol)a'ty ne•
VInton. Light malnten.,cework
roqulrld . Colr e14-8811-190&amp;

bol-91o4.

18 Wanted to Do
HOME WORK/SPARE TilliE
Paint !only miniature toys, earn
$20 set. No cx. pr:ricnce necessary.
No sellin g, no sluffin g en velopeS.

iii);;;.-. wv.
income potentill.

resume to:
·
Herdman. Preaident.
Home CMtt.,.., P . 0 .

by

St&gt;enoor. WV. 2127e.

Heir 1tyht needed IIPPiv '~•thv
Kut .,d Kurr or a•ll 304-87&amp;.

all you do is pai n1 the toys we send
y~u .

Have the entire family hel p

you.

Arlllllne: · ret or~N

mesn&amp;t

Willbebrta•

In my home. Aeaonabl• rttM. Aefer~011 •II•
ble.ANea•. •lloWMkerMk. Cel

l14-246-87e&amp;.

Want to do ~~rivet• ~tv

814-4411-8828 ,.,.,. 4pm.

12

Bab,sktlng In my home durW.g
111e -... Coli 814-3117-7&amp;28.

Situations
Wanted

We c:•e for elderly Md handcapped In our' home. 21 v..s

•peri"'ee. LPN on c•. Low

Income home. Cal 114-882·
8873 tift• 7:00p.m. for more
lntormM:ion.

•Radiologic Tehnologisti
•Registered Nuclear Medicine Technologists
•Cat Scan Technologists
.
•Registered Therapy Technologists
•Radiation Therapy Technologists

Will

&amp;873.

c•e

Will do lawns, llndu:tplng. odd
Jot.. sell blldc· top •twewaya.
CeH 814-446-2734., or 814441-2208.
Will do bib¥ sitting In my hoinll.
~ shtft. Green T.,ece Dr.·

c..,en.,... Coli &amp;14-441 -oeoo.

All type of conc:reta wort.: done,
petktt. sidewelb. D•lll•· etc.
C1ll for •atlmMe 114-4tll·

1&amp;91. or 814342·117:t

for eldertv men or

FinaiiCid I

tn my home. 814-e87·
3402 .,yllme.

WDIIW'I

15

21

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS.

COLlEGE. 529 Jadr;son Plila
Cell 81...,&gt;441-4387. Reg. No.

Bli-11-10588.

Outstanding pay program, 8% shift differential, excellent
' Heehh and Dental Plans. To learn more about these out·
standing opportunities or to arrange for an interview contact Karen Walburn, Professional Recruiter. Call collect
(614) 364-8118, or send resume to USHCSO. Depart·
merft of Human Resources, 1806 27th Street, Portsmo .u th, OH. 45662.
Equal Opportunhy Employer

!NOTICE I

TliE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . reoo rnnwtdt thet you
do bJtinMI with people vou
know, .,.d NOT to send money
through 1he mil urd you h.,e
invellit•edtt. offering.

18 Wanted to Do

BE VOUROWN BOSS

Will do odd · jobs. 'verd wort.
palntl_ng. etc. lfi.OOper hour.

814-948-2463.

begin....
.,doclu~ ..... otu-

Dinribut• Frlto-L•ytt, N• blscote . Hershev41e. 6 other
n..,e brand anack foods. No
setling. SltnliCfl m . owned lecounts. Independent National

Cenaua

Now .......,8 .,,.

•~•need,

Buaineaa

Oppo~unity

dents In my home. A"o teach

:;:',c:;::..~:, s~:~.;a,j'

Immediate openings for part time registered
nurses to work in the Special Care Unit, Emergency Room, Home Health, and lledicai/Surgi·
cal Unit. Salary tommensurate with experi·
ence. Excellent fringe benefits .
Contact:
Rhonda Dailey, R.N., Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
(614) 992-2104, Extension 213
EOE

•how• ennlll!l ••au•

part- time 11rnlng1 up to

*17,000 . Yau will need
*15,000 cah for equipment.
Coli 1-800.782-1160 onytime.

Op•.tor4t.

BLAC!K BURN
REALTY

REGISTERED NURSES

,..,,..;g.

Evenings I tome weekendt.
Can t.unlth ref•ences. C.M

uvul• detall t. Csll anytlrri'
1•900-456-4567. ex t . 28$1 t $1 minu1c1

USHCSO, a multi-hospital sytrtem, has immediate open·
ings in our two expanding Radiology Departments.

~--------------~----------~----,

_304-878-&amp;104.

.

Room for eld•ly m~ or wom•
It Elim Hom&amp; C•r• lar ehllrly
and h•ndic:~pped . 114-992-

ATHENS, OHIO

--:...--

1528 Elstem Ave. :.
~Y Evans Motors
4i86 Sq. Ft. Whse.
Plus
28'131' Office
CALL 446·3994
9-5 Mon. tbru Fri.
Evans Enterprises, Inc:

w.,t.t; Ekl•lv llily needl

::::::=::::r:::::=:::::r:=====-1
TAYLOR NISSAN
1200 EAST STATE STREET

Want4NI: En•getlc. people or·
iented. tMm m..,.,./DENTAL
HYOtENlST to jcMn our prec:tlce
full or pen-tim• Mutt be
llc.aed to preetlce tn the ttlte
of OIL E Ill'· hlltl.. f but noo
,..d. Wtlllngtoworklwd-S.d
us your ,..u.,. to B• cia 20 1
c 1 o Oonlj&gt; oh Dolly Triluno821

Rt. 160-Formerly
Motor Car Brokers
4800 sq. fl. Wbse.
plus 20'x20' Office
1.89 A. Completely :
Fenced

e,oo.

wMtlld in ..., home.

3 mo. old boy port· lim• Rot.
lloq'od. Col 814-2411-11&amp;8.

WAREHOUSES.
w/OFFICE
FOR LEASE

Pwt-tirMm.tfCIIIIb t.:hn ld.,
fDr • ... ., ~uipfMd phpllid.,'t
laboretorv. No thtft work. APP'-'
in ........ Modioli Pl . .. 203
Jeckeon Pike. G•"ipolls. 8 :30 to

RADIOLOGY
DOUBLE
EXPOSURE

Plrtv
pion I NO macloHng•o'qll. FINIIob
wlttl ....., hnl Now ln\IMrMII\
no coHtct:inG or d~U~ferlng. Cell
114 - 2415 - 1383. tor 1n
lnt....,iew.
lor

Help Wanted

TheUniversi~ofRIO
' Grantleannouncestbeopeninc

Love clothes? Demon1tr1t•

OWNERS: MR. &amp; MRS. TOM DARNELL
ESTATE OF MARV E. DARNELL

•

0

•.

RANNY BLACKBURN
BROKER - 446-0008

.

4247 or e7&amp;-30111.

AUCTIONEERS
KENNETH SWAIN &amp; ASSOCIATES
Kenneth Swain
Diilll Callahilll
Gallipolis, OH. 446-3159
Gallipolis. OH. 446-3159

UbOri'IOf"' chemletrv aupervt.
tor, full time MT ·IASCP) or
equNalent. Contllc:f Ple•ent
Vlll"f Hospital. Pt. Ple•lftt. WV
Tom Gooch- Personnel 304-

6715-4340 EOE·AA.

Bllbv sitter WMted in nw hom&amp;
3 week endl and some ttwu
weekden. ml'lure pers on pr•
ferred. 7 end 9 'It• old.
304-676-7349 in t\leningo.

LARGE 2-DAY PUBLIC AUCTION

At THE ROBERT TRIPP HORSE &amp; MULE FARM, LOGAN. OHIO. Farm located 3-miles west of Lo41n.
Ohio near Villaae of Enterprise (old U.S. Rt. 33) JUSt
North of Lopn Hockin&amp; Valley Mall!
-

AVON .tl •-lllhlrllr( Sp . .i ,

304-676-1428.

Saturday, June 24, 1989 at 10:00 A.M. at
Sunday, June 25, 1989 at 12:00 Noon

I

Help Wanted

EARN MONEY Rooclng bookll
•30.000/yr. income pottntill.
O..olo. 1118011-1187-IOOOht.
'V-10181.

Location: From Cheshire, Oh. take Rt.
554 west 2 miles.

e

In-- . '. ._ -.

11

dlrf. Tu•. &amp; Wed.
morning l!:::::::::::::::~!::•·::
ot~]op~~~
. .A~Mo~
· : :·:::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::
18-121

ANTIQUE ESTATE AUCTION
Saturday, June 24 at 10:00 A.M.

SATURDAY, JUN£ ~4TH
Appro•. 20-head mules: Work, hunting and show mules! One
team of Sorrell wcrk mules broke to worhll farm machinery!
Appro•. IS-head ol horses: Walkin&amp; rocking and quarter
horse! Very large selection of new &amp;used tack, appro•. 3Dnew &amp;used saddles' New set double work harnes~ new set
show driving harness; several sels work.harness. Lots ol new
nylon. New buggy driving harnes~ blankets, and more! 1984
Chevrolet Crew Cab Dually in e•celient condition and Delta
5th wheel 4-horse trailer! New decorated white oak pony
cart; new steel horse parade cart; 5th steel parade wagon: 2
wheel pony sulky, 2-wheel horse sulky and a selection ol
horse drawn equipment! Large quality of oak fence lumber
and pressure lrealed lumber. Approx. 3.000' of new white
oak 1"•6" rough lence lumber in 8' and 16' lengths! Pressure treated 2• 12's, 10' s, 8' ~ 6's, 4's; up to 16' iengths, and
morel Large amount oliumber!
SUNDAY. JUNE 25TH
Tractors nd Payloader: 1978 Belarus 500 70 hp tractor in
nearly new condrtion1Excellent Ford 2000 tractor and plows,
cukivators, disc, and mower (all 3 pt.) lor Ford Tractor! inler·
national-Huge Pay Loader wrth 6' buckel' Outstanding 198B
Silverado Chevrolel pickup truck w1th less lflan 10.000
miles, loaded wrth options in excellent cond.! 1976 Chevy
Pickup Truck (rouil).1978 Ford Fairmont Sta. Waaon! FARM
MACHINERY: Forcf!OI plows, Ford rotary mower, Ford 501
mower, Woods rotary mower. rear blade, manure spreader,
new bush hoe bale mover. dump bucflet. lrlilers, Fiexo-Hitch
disc, Dearborn 13-2 plows. Dearborn 13-2cuni•alors; Ferguson 2-btm. plows. 10' 2·wheel steel transp(lrt lrailer! Everything 3-pt. and in very good condition. Good qualrty GUNS:
Winchester Models 62A. 63 &amp;67 Rifles. S&amp;W686 .357 &amp; 38
Special Pistols, Reminton"Win ~U~~aster" 870 16 ga. pump &amp;
514 .22 riPe. - Nil&lt;ko 12 ge. pump. Save 30 .410 ga.
pump, Marlin "Golden 39 Mountie" carbine! Very good 1972
Dlrians 64'd2' moliilt ·home. E'xcelient Ameriao slide-in
camper w~h fold-aut bacl&lt; &amp; complele interior.
lllrn W ollools, power tods 111d rtNier:f ~ems! Chain link dog
kennlls &amp; runs; aood asst. of lishingequip1111111! Aselection tiof·
fice furnture! Also: Household IJ)ods. lurnislin gs and major applianOIII Furnislinf. major appliances! This is a lirlll2·di'J auc·
lion. Edler1~ briellilting..Miny Unmentioner:f Items. lois of
very aoad
ilerns in tlis huae 2-di'J 1.-m sale.
T•IM: h Dly of Salt or Chtct with PosiiW ID.
..arnd ••: 1911 &amp; 1984 Pickup trucks and horat
lrtll•l

Help Wented

=.':::..==..

2048.

ANTIQUES-LISTING IN PART: Pie safe, drop-leal table,
milk cans. oak round table wrth claw feel, large iron kettle,
pitcher pump, old claw foot bath tub, victrola. 2 oak spindle
back rockers, steamer trunk, 2 fancy iron beds, 51eg table. 3
high headboard beds with carvings, oak sideboard, large
grind stone, cycle grinder, lots of old lruitjars. 2egg baskets,
lanterns. p1cture frames, several crocks, oak Hoosier cabinel
w~h original finish, treadle sewing machine. 2 old radios,
school seals, fainling couohes, oak secretary, cream separa_lor, stone churn. lots of stone jars.· large &amp; small, mirror.
qurnmg lrames, telephone part~ wagon wheels, piano rolls,
oak Hoosier cabinel 30's, tall pie sate. jelly cabinel. oak
china. blankel chesl, oak dresser, 78 rpm records. copper
kettle.. brass kettle.
MODERN: Oak bedroom su~e. gun case, cedar chest, book
shelves, lois of books, lrumpel, saxaphone, flower stands,
lots of Iabrie, 3 piece bedroom sutte. 2 piece bedroom sutte,
goll cart, several assorted dolls, cedar chest, costume Je·
welry w1th bole~. sola, chair &amp; ottoman, lamps, large maple
hutch, 2 wood d1nette set~ TV,Iots of beer siRns. collection of
fi.,rin,es. ·set Briltanica, twin size bed luggaee. cocklail table,
moaowave oven, toaster oven, toaster. pd~ pans, dishes, Ken·
more 21 cu. ft. freezer, Eiectrotu• sweeper, sola, rag rugs,
hall tree. swivel rocker, 6 leg table. electric heater, pressure
cooker, shop vac, metal shelvin&amp; flower pols, melal gates, ~
horse a1r compressor, chicken brooder, kerosene heaters
sleellraps, log chains, arts &amp;crafts. luggage rack, 40 in. elec:
tric range. 2 wheel chairs, oneelectic wrth baltery &amp;charger,
011 paml1ngs, cream cans. coffee maker. old license plates
ladies bicvcle, Troy Built lawn mower sell slart &amp; self prO:
pel Ielf · ongmai cost over 1,000 doUars used one lime if you
need a lawn ITIOwer don't miss th1s one.
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TRUCK: 1978 'A lon Dodge wtth 50,227 origini miles. This
lruck has been in the dry since new. Oon'l miss this one.
GUNS: 20 gauge Ithaca, Rushan 7:62 rille, Percussio·n rabbit
ears shotgun, 12 gauge single barrel.

coli

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Located at the lite Beulah Bradford residence,
Main St., Racine, Ohio. Watch for auction sian
on St. Rt. 124.
"HOUSOIO LD"
I yr. old stacked Speed Queen washer &amp; dryer. Crosley electric range &amp; refrigerator I yr. old, round maple lable &amp;4
chairs, 3 pc. bedroom suile, set of cookware, cedar wardrobe
&amp; chest, single bed, Admiril upriaht deep freeze, couch,
desk, rockers, small chest of drawers. Capehart color portable TV, 50,000 btu Warm Morning healer. I drawer stand,
misc. pots, pans, dishes, lots of embroidery &amp; crocheled
fancy work, l1111ps, pictures, misc. electrical appliances. Admiral B&amp;W TV, electric roaster. gas ranae. &amp; elc.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEIIS
Sola stand, oil lamp, several quilts, sel of Royal ironstone,
blue, while, green &amp;brown crocks, glass cake stand &amp;basket, service for 8 double Phoenix ironstone made in Japan.
IIIII china cabinet, Racine Melhodisl Church plate &amp; book.
wood tables, several Rich Valley milk bottles, service lor 12
Crosby silver plate in case, rocker~ stand w/drawer, several
large plales, mis ~. bed parts &amp;more.
"RINGS"
14 K. yellow gold wedding band, diamond solrtaire round, diamond is a lull cui European, &amp;ladies soiKaire w/one round
lull cut diamond.
"IIISC."
Pelonis radiant healer, carpel, ladder, seat, push lawn
mower, saw horse, transmission &amp; etc.
"REAL ESTATE"
5 rooms, bath. porches, basement &amp;2 car garage on double
lot 20% down day of auction. Bal. on delivery ol deed in 30
days. "Real Estale to be auctioned al 6:00 P.M. by Mercee
ReaHy Co. - Bud Spires-ReaHor/Auctioneer 614-3742819.
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER: 614-992-7301
RUTH FlANK-EXECUTOR
Cast ~26182
Rafrahmtllts
Ohio 157-68·1344 Cash
Positive ID
"Not Responsible for Accidents or loss ol Prop.ty"
Member of Ohio, W. Va. &amp; National Aucfionaor
Assoc'llion W. Ve. #515

Job hunting? Nted 1 tkiU1 W.
train people for jobl •• Auto
Mechanics. Cerpn•t. coe ....
tologifts. Diversified Medial
Workers. Electrician.. Food Service Worketl. IEiactronics Tectt
nieians. ln«llttrlll Mlinten~not
Work. .. NursingAIIittMtUnd
Orderli•. Mat::hinilts. Office
Worken .., d WeldMI. Aegilter
now for
beginning J utv
101h. Call Tri-CountvVoCMk»,..
Adu~ Coni• ot 814-7113-3111
ext. 1•. A varlltY of furdlng
aourcet to prf for trWnlnl ere
av1leble for tho11 eliglbla

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Be in demand. Food Servict

worll•• mllke up one of tM

l•o-t . end , • ..., grOW'Ing
OCCUPit6ontl groupt in the labor
force. Enroll now for ""'m•
quart• In the Adutt Food
Menegement ~nd Cet•trtg Program • The Adult Educ1Uon
c.m .. ·Tri-County Vo~klnll
School. We h.,l 1 v_.tty of
funding IOUI'OII llll'alllllfe for

The University of Rio Grande announces the opening
of a full timeadministratin position as Coordinator
of Health Services.
Reportin' directly to the Vice Presidsnt for Student
Services Dun of Students, responsibilities of this
position include providiq quality medical trealment for illness and injuries: 11sistinc students and
the stiff with special health needs: referring stu·
dents and staff to specialists as the need indicates:
screenina medical forms of prospective studentt;
initiltin&amp; student Insurance clailns: supplyilll resi·
dent directors with first aid essentials: 1)JOYidiJ11
health and first aid instruction as well as deva,opinl
and assuming responsibility for an operatiOnal
budltt.
Qualifications for the positon include a BSN pre·
filrred: current Ohio R.N. License required u well as
previous nursina experience prefellbly with teens
and you111 edults required .
,. ·
Medical and other leans available. Paid medical be· ·
nefits.
Interested p~~:~ons should send an up-dated resume, copy of transcripts and list of three refer·
ences no later titan June 26, 1989 to;
.
Ills. Phylli 1 Mason, Penoneel Officer
The Univarsity of Rio Gtw~tle
P.O. Box969
Rio Grande. OH. 45674
TH tltllrnfty ollfo Qrondo •d Rio Gran do ComMnhy
Collop •• E~•l Opportonhy/Aifirllllivl Aclioo Etopl.,... .
•·
P.O. flo. 17130

LOAN ASSUMPTION - $2,500 DOWII 9'hp FIXED RATE- 3 BR, bath,liYingroom,
krtchen, attacbelll car garage. Call lor more
delails.
PRICE REDUCED!!! - II you have been
looking for a home lhat will give you room to
stretch out, lhis is rt. Fealures in this home
are equipped krtthen, formal dininlo den,
lovely livinf room dh fireplace, dinette.
balh, 3 BR. he lull basement is finished and
offers bath, laundry, roomy, altractive family
room.
22 ACRE CHURCH CAIIP FOR SALE Numerous bu~dings, induding dining hail,
caretaker's trailer, cabins. pool, church
buidin~

YOU DESERVE TO OWN AHOllE LIKE THIS
- Just off St. Rt. 35. Corner lol. This home
offers krtchen, JennAire range, OW, double
overs. family room wilh FP, LR w/fireplace,
dining room, fenced rear patio, HP/cent. air,
one car anached garage, carpet.
12,5 ACRES 1/L konls on Symmes Creek.
Bottom tied. Tobacco base. $10,000.

GO AWAY FROII THE HECTIC CITY LIVING
- Very nice home located in Country Air
Estates offers 3 BRs, bath, eal-in kitchen,
living room, family room, gas heal/cent. air,
KC school district.

TRANQUILITY - 6 acres m/1, overlooking
beautiful green valleys. This home is located
just south of Rio Grande and leatures 4 I!Rs,
2 baths, LR-FR combo, kitchen, stone
fireplace. Very Private.

THIS COULD BE YOUR DREAII HOllE Owners hiYe given this beautiful Cape Cod
style home lots ol TLC. Features includes 3
I!Rs, 2 bllhs, LR. eal-in kitchen. dinette, FR.
lull basemen~ 2 car garage heal pump,
central air. Located in Mercerville area. Call
for further details and appointment.

YOU WONT BE CRAMPED FOR ROOM HERE.
This spacious home and 4.5 acres oilers a
tri-level style home w/4 BRs. 3 baths,
kilchen, LR. OR, FR. 2 car attached garag~
HP/cent. air, 2 woodburners. Small creek
runs aaoss property.

2.4 ACRE TRACT - COIIIERCIAL SITE Located on Upper Rt. 7 across from new
shopping center.

EXCELLENT LOCATION FOR AllY TYPE
BUSINESS - Froots on busy highways.
Building has appro•. 2016 sq. ft., nice
parking lot.

PRICE REDUCED BY $17,000!!! - 73 acre
farm in Perry Township: Very nice home
ofters 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR, krtchen, carpet,
electric heal, woodburning stove. There is a
40•60 barn, cellar house and several other
buildings induded. Call tor appointment.

LOTS OF EXTRAS HERE- 1.52 acres plus a
beaut~ul roomy home and just mmutes kom
town or HMO. Home features 4 or 5 BRs. 2\\
baths, LR, 18•261amily rm. w/ lireplace. wet
bar. gas heat. cent. air, 2·car garage, ali
brick.

. 4 ACRES lORE OR LESS Call ~~ details.

.

Harr~on

Twp.

HARRISON TWP. waler tap. $10.000.

11.872 acres m/ 1,

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED ABEAUTIFUL
HOllE ON FIRST AVENUE7- Make plans to
view lhis home which offers 2 balhs,largeLR
dh fireplace and view ol river, l ·shaped
krtchen, formal enlry, FR. summer porch,
lovely lawn on river.

LET'S GO TO .THE RIVER! - Thai's what
you'll be saying every day when you own this
beauty that lronts on the river. Living room
w/stone _fireplace. cathedral ceilings, kitchen. d1nrn&amp; family room, rec. room, 3 balhS
and much more. Cailloday.

IIAKE THIS YOUR CHANGE OF ~DDRESS!
- Attractive home just minutes from town
offers 1368 sq. fl. 3 BRs, 2 baths, eal-in
kitchen, dinette, fam ily room, living room,
laundry, cathedral ceilings; lenced yard.Call
lor an appointment.

FINANCIAL OFFICER

lAKE A SPlASH WITH YOUR FAMILY Lovely bricfl home w~h pool just oft Rt 35.
Other features include equipped ell-in
krtcllen, LR. 10•27 lam~y room w/stone
fireplace, gas heal and cent. air.
·

LOAIIASSUIPTIOII OR lAND CONTRACT to
qualifier:! buyers. Nice 100' •300' lot, 3 BR
ranch offers LR, krtchen, bath, attached
~.-age. Not 1.- from HMC. Call lor more
Information.

Large Southeastern Ohio physician group practice le
seeking qualified financial officer to over. . . accounting
budgeting and payrell operatlona. Chalr.nglng poaitlon
offers growth potential Into higher re~ponllbllltlea.

LOOI AT THI$-OWIU HAS REDUCED
THE PIICE-S35.9001 ~ Very nice home
with lois of room. very iarlll L-shaplll LR
with fireplace. equlpper:f kitchen wrth palio
doors, 3 BRs. bath. LR, fenced yard, deck.
Call tr dellils.

THE WORD HERE IS "LOCATIOII" - Older
home located just one blocfllrDr!1 downtown.
Home has been remodeled and offers 4 or 5
bedrooms. ~H. kncnen, ~ baths, unattacher:f
gar~ge and shecl.

CAPE COD STYLE HOIIhltheedgeoltown.
$28.900. 3 BRs. bath. LR, krtchen. Owner
may help wrth financing to qualified buyer.

THIS HOII£ HAS I£DI QIYEN LOTS OF TLC
- This home and 1.112 acres m/1 ofters 3
BRs. 1\i bllhs. LR, equipped kilchen.
dinelle, lltached 1111ge, brick lront,steel
sidina.

Applicant should hllve experienoe In graduate degr. . or
CPA. sarery end btneflte competitive. ·

LDTS FOR SAl£ ~ Morpn Sisles Rd. and
Chealwclad Werer Rd. Call lor deleils.

lhoH who -11\r. Coli 8147&amp;3-3&amp;11 ... 14.
AVON - AI • -· Con '
w••• 304-112· 21~.

•

COORDINATOR Of HEALTH
SERVICES

Respond in writing whh raume to:
Holzer CHnlo PII'IOftnel Dept.
P.O. Box 344
Gallipolis, OH. 41831

1'01. I.D.

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•"'*'I""

harleeletlot'lw.ggl\
• Nw1 In Rilt Gr~nWhtrlot
Area. E.::: . ....-111nepalllo" for
r•tlr~ ar ftouiiWtf• Weg• •

5:00P.M.

LOCATED OFF SAND HIU ROAD. TAKE LONG
HOUOW ROAD TO QIU RIDGE. FOUOW SIGNS.

-Ill:-

11 Hlip Wintect .

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-3

·-~-~ - ---

101 ACRES, 11/L. GUYAII TWP. - Some
Ulable:

36.5 ACIES Ill. ClAY TWP. - Frontage
on Friendly Ridee Rd. Old house on land.
. $19,500.
4 SAl£ - IJIIS on Rodney-Cora Rd. Very close
!O St. Rl 35.

· $15.010 - 19.143 acres m/l Apflrox. II
mile from crty imits. All uli~ies available.
SIIALLIIOI£ with extra lois. 3 BRs, blllt
$21,000.

514 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 4663i

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Page-0-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Pom Pleasant, W.Va.
35 Lot• 81 Acreage

.

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44&amp;.1340.

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3 1 Homes for Sale
Sm •• nNt • c:IIIIW. 1/ 2 8 0' 1

lot. Garage. .,_ed rd 1&amp;, min.
•om Glllipolil. 20"1. CaM 0142511-8200.

for Rent

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Rutl•d T-nohlp. Col 114992·3643 all• 8:00p.m.

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Oltll'lrlooking the Ohio River.
Ceble T.V . waihibla FDd•'•
Mable Home Perk. Call 114·

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36 Lots 8o. Acreege

•

2br., hou ... lwge.WingrOom•
kitchen, 2 •cr•. jlnclion 160,
Kerr Rd .• 16 min.. fromG•IIIpoUs. 1 1I 2 mi.. from Holzer

Hospital. *40.000. 'Call 8144411-9837. "'814448i4188.

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Ashton be.,ttl-11 one •ae
with river •omag._ publicw•tll'.
ClYde Bow... Jr. 304-6782338.

GOVERNMENT HOMESI From

r

ti•. Now Setting This Are.t Cell

•

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(ReiUndollltl 1-315-733-8084
Ext. 027 32A For . Current

'

3 bed"oom
11f.r ato.-i• on
Rt . 7 to trade for 3 be~oom
treil•- Call 614-992-1332 for
.. appointment.

Utting~l

12 ·~· IWid. long HollOw
Road. Letart, W.Va , flhone304895-3929.

hou•.

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..Mobile home tor ..-t. 2 bedrooma. s.. d HMI Rood. 304
6711-3834.

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_H:.:o-m"'"e_o_n-:L:-In~.oo-:ln--:-;H:::ill-.8:-roomo-r
end·b•h. nice section 2 story.
approK.. 1 acre of de81 land C•U
6 14-992·3270.

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On approx. ,A eae lot. 4
bectooms. bath. lg. living room.
lg. kitdlen. Call 614-742-2931
·or 614-742-2233.

~ HouiB for 181&amp; 2 bed&gt;oom. 2351

Fourth and Crook Sts .. Syrawae. Ol'lio 614-992-6105.

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8roomhouse, citywater. 1hecre
good gwden. largf! c•port.
Make off•. 814-797-2744.

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HouiBfar saleonSMld1ill Road.
all brick. 3 or 4 bectooms. 1'h
batt-.. 1Vz •cr• with b•h. CaU
for appointment after 4:00PM,
304 876-7332.

t"

~482 2ND AVE. REAR

11=-~ OFFICE
448-4208
HOURS
~;~~u•n ... lot m'- ''"

Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00
Sat. 9:00-12:00

12k10 M. H . toCIIed, 2ml. •om
town In 181. nM' dedt Call
814-441-1015 . 814 · U•·
2082. or 114-44&amp;0802.

SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL - Well aroomed 3
bedroom, Bi story home wrth afresh coal of paint. ·
Spotless inside and out Basement. carport and
screened porch. $33,500.
.
8513

AFFORDABLE HOUSING - D011n"t Have To 8t
lklrlniThis spotless 2 bedroom ranch has so many
special features rt wil not be possible to lisl"them
~~~ here. But here are a few -a master surtethis a real retreat, a new 97% efficient gas pulse
furnace wrth add-on heat pump, an abOve groond
swimming pool, art~t's studio or home office wrth
rts own heating and air conditioning system above
a 2 ·car garage, 4.75 acres wth frurt and nut trees.
All this and more for $60.000.

LIKE NEW. - Brick and frame .ranch offers 3 ·
bedrooms. living room wrth fireplace, dining room,
2 baths and eat-in kitchen. Energy saving·heat
pump. 2 car garage. Srtuated on a flat 1 acre lot.
$57.600.

#304

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:: Govtrnment.Hom• from f1 . 00
•tJ tU· repK) detinquent tax prop.-.
•• tl• end repo' t. For amw lil1s
. ~ call 1-800-242- 4944 flft 3670
~ alto open fNenlnga.

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~ ""32:;;-;M;io~bi;-:.;:le'H701:::m::-18:::s~::
for Sale ·
~ --------------~--...

1972 Freecbm. good aond.. call
~ 8 14-44&amp;0101.
... Big dOwn p-vment. shof't time
.., tmpiO'tm.-rt Of' pllt O'.tit hit~ toryltoppingyoufrombuylnga
"' home7 Conaldlr a repou. . ed
.., 14x?O. t500 dowf\. aaume
"' to•. Fr• 0..1"-'-v-Ohto w.rts:
- 1 · 80~826-07&amp;2.
8x30 trail• wilh 10x30 Midi·
t5on. Mutt be moved/81&amp;00.
Calll14-4411-149a

ll-··

,

•

• 1971 12&gt;1110
Docie,
• awnine t3600 Goad oo ndf.
: Uon. 114-982-3107.

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: 12x II, 2 bed'oom. Good mndf.
.. :.;__
lion. c•• 11~19:Z.5118 .

.··

~."'Greatly

reduced-aectional
'·• home-1888 dltpl., modll· 3
~ Hctoom-2 bM"~mlnOf we•·
: ........ 1"•·814-423-6371 ..
: RtP-acl-1981 2 -oom
• 14 ft. wide--mutt ..... awner
• • d-od Cd 11442~1371.
: _ID_a_a_ld~o-:d-:-,,::-1::-l~mo--doi:-:-,-..,-ID:--:nal
.· ho-3 btct-2 b.l&gt;pri: 1D .... 114-4Z.G71.
• 2 btct-

lor_.....,....

on lot
• In POmeoy. e71100. Cal 114; 192· 3122.

.

;. 2 b t c t - Iorge parch. ... h
r•~"~~" Oft ... lrl '-•ov~

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1000. Cal 814-882-1122.
--::::~--:-::-:::-:::-:--:­
:- 1177 - - 12x88. 2 •

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ACRES - ACRES- ACRES
-2 lots located State Route 7. Beutiful view of river.
-65 acres of vacant land in the city schools.
-Lot w/24x32 buildin~o $18,000. Hemlock Ro1d.
LOVELY BRICK HOllE- 2.294 so. ft. hvin~space, 31arge
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, family room, 2 car garage.
.92 acres. Located near lhe college, city schools.
THIRD AVE. - Great to raise a family. Children walk to
school. J.4 bedrooms. LR w/fireplace, lg. family room. Mo·
dern eat-in kitchen. Large garden area. Big backyard.
NICE HOllE. CLOSE TO TOWN. 2 bedrooms, bath, krtchen,
living room, dining room, carport, krtchen appliances and
cabinets. $29,900. Owner will consider helpingwrth financ·
in~o Call for more details.
OWNERS HAVE MOVED AWAY!! .
love
lovely
home. This home has lots of quafrty features you should be
looking for in a home. Over 2.300 sq. fl. living SIJice. formal
entry, fivin, room and dining w/chandetier, 3 bedrooms, 2
full bllhs, ~ family room, compfete krtchen w/alf appli·
ances indudmg a microwave oven. .920 acres. Stereo interearaee. CAN BUY FOR LESS THAN REPU·

HANDSOME NEW LISTING - Best Lookln1
Hou11 On The StrHII - Drive up Rl. 160 just
past North Galli a High School, and see what you
think. Very attractive bi·leVel wrth 13 acres. This
beautrtul 5 bedroom home features an
outstanding krtchen, large family and rec. room
area, 2 fireplaces lone wrth Buck insert), nice ·
carpetin&amp; formal dining overs~ed 2 car earage
and in-ground pool. Plenty of ~ontage on Rt. 160.
to maintain your privacy or sel!2 buijding lots if
you desire. Priced at $106,000.Lookand see what
you think 1t's worth. The owner is moving out of
state.
8106

NEW LISTING - Peaceful Livine On Raccoon
Creek - Perfect setting for r~axalion and
enjoyment of Raccoon Creek. 3 acres, m/1, wrth
good access lo the creek and plenty of room for
recreation. Log home includes 6 rooms including
basement. Large deck overlooks the wonderful
settin&amp; Perfect for weekend gettogethers or full
time country livin&amp; $42,000.
8231 .
SICK &amp; TIRED OF RENTING? -Gel started on
homeownership now with this 19812 bedroom, 2
bath mobile home on 1.8 acres. This is a clean,
nicely decorated home wrth a large krtchen
featuring a bui~·in hutch. $21,500.
#504
JUST MINUTES FROM TOWN- This home offers
4 bedrooms, livmg room, large eat·in kitchen plus
1 bath. Enclosed p01ch, utility building on 'h acre,
more or less for on~ $44,500. Crty schools.

#707

11-411

751125 LOT located in Rodney Village II. Good flat
lol to build that home you 've been dream ing of.
$5,200. .
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8111
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY - CAR WASH Here is an opportunrty that could be of interest to
you if you want a small cash business that
requ ires ve;y little of the owner' stime. Less than 2
years old, this car wash offers 4 self serve wash
bays, I automatic wash bay, 5 auto-vacuum ·
stations, all high quality car wash BGUipmeirt,
maintenance free building and .75 acre w~h !50'
fronting on U. S. 35. Excellent visibilrty from the
highway. One of the highest traffic areas in the
county. Has complete black IIJ!l drives and
parking area. E.P.A. approved, city sewer and
water. Casn business. The owner expects the
annual income to level off at $72.000 and produce
anet profit of $38,800. located one half mile west
of Holzer Medical Center. $325,000.

mg

'LIKE NEW - Brief&lt; frame ranch has 3 bedrooms,
1 bath, family room wrth cathedral ceiling
beautiful fireplace, above ground pool w~h deck
for only $49,900.

8704
120 ACRES, 11/L, OF VACANT UNO - Good
road ~ontage for building home and small farm.
Owner will divide. Excellent area for hunting Most
lays well for hay and pasture land. All for $63,000.

11319
TOO MUCH FAMILY? for your little house? This 4
bedroom ranch w~h new carpet in !Nine room,
dining room and hall can solve your problems.
Gorgeous tongue and groove h•dwood floors in
bedrooms. Full finished basem111l boasts family
room, 12 x 12 bed1oom, faund;y room and
krtchen. Full s ~e attic wrth puU down stairs lor
great storage space. '2 car garage and 2 st01age
building; located on a double lot. Remarkably
priced at $59,500. Calf today for an appointment!

#703

HALF THE SIZE. BUT IWICE AS NICE - For the
small family that wants something special.
Nothing to do but move in and relax . This home
practically takes care of itself. Located in Rutland
Township, Meies County. Price reduced to
$51,500.
#503
$5,500 BUYS A LOT- Flat 100 x 150, township
road, country water in front, sewage plant, facilrty
available in a growing subdivisilri. Just a few
minlues from town. Ready to start building? Call
us!

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c•p•«t. apptl.,.-,
1r1 d
trllh pic:kupa provided Meint•
n~r~ct *•llwing dose to thopplnll bonb .,d ochoolo. FO&lt;
morelnh,.ion c• 304o-882·
3711. E.O.H.

Furn6thed 3 rms., &amp; Ntl\
u,.....t cle.~, no__.,..._ Sukable
for ·one Ref. A 0.· required.
Call814-4411-1119.

49

·For Lena

MW.,·

For le•e: Aplf'tmWit.
dtoorMed. 2nd floor, corner
S.oond &amp; Pin• GaiJipolil. On•
et~~~~e &amp;

be&lt;*'oorn.

r... i. .•or.

w•t• provided Dllpoll and
ref•Wtca rtqui'.._ t22&amp;. p•
month. Coli 114-4411-4249.
114-4411-4425. or 814-44112325.

114 ACRES WITH RIVER FRONTAGE -Very few
like this outstanding farm just 5 miles ~om town.

Approx. 500 feet of river ~ontageoffering 3 014 of
the best homesrtes in the county, right on the
river..Plus 110 acres of niH land which includes a
, beautiful iidge overlooking the river and the Ohio
.Valley. A serene farm pond in the middle
surrounded wrth woods makes this umque in
Galha County. Good 3 bedroom, l 'h story home
with formal dining. fireplace. new furnace, full
basement, 2 car garage. large barn and tobacco
base. Owner will not sell river ~ontage separate
from the farm.

M116

We h11ve several prospective
buyers still looking for their
Dream Home", but we are
'
low on listings. If you're
thinking of selling, please
give us·a call. We may have a·
buyer waitinglll
EXCELLENT BUSINESS LOCATION- It's located
in high traffic area on St. Rt. 7 wrth 80' frontage
and 180' deep Includes a res idence wrth 2 or 3
business rooms and 2 mobile homes. Present
tenants are paying $500 a month. Full asking
price - $54;500.
8113
OLO TillE CHARI - There's .not many homes
like this still available, especially at an affordable
price. $34,900 buys this 1901 vintaae house in
Kyger Creek Schools. l bedrooms, farge krtchen
teat·in) , dining room, living room and family room.
Home has had major improvements done. just ..
needs your finishing touches. Calf today before rts
gone!!
#218
PAMPERED BY PAITICUIAR OWNERS- Smart.
..3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch featuring alaree family
room/kitchen combination wrth lireplace! Call
today! $52,900.
· '
!1502
THINKING OF BUILDING?- We have the perfect
• homesrte for you in Charoflis Hills Lake Estate. All
5 acre, m/1, tracts have outstanding views. Don't
'. 'just drive. by. WALK THEM!
1217

UIIO. 0000&lt;- oiColo.llllrci

Mldcl.-on. DowniUIIrs ep81·
ment 2 beltOOft\ living room.
dining room kltch.._ bath.
1180.00 38
~ . 2n!i. Mldtl!lflort. Dow.....,s
•tl1:mant llvlng-bedl'oomcombin•tlon. kit chen. b•t h.
11110.00. Pomor... COli 814992·2403,. 814-992-2780.

_1..., -......

FOR RENT

C1ll Jaannie Abels

#406

NEW HOllE - Attractive country ranch with
spacious surroundings. I mile south of Rio Grande
on Rt. 325. This 3 bedroom home offers large
living room-dining room combination, custom
made cabinets. I 'h baths, breezeway and I car
garage. Srtuated on a I acre 'lot wrth extra lot
available. $66,500.
·
#215

Upllalrtr . . . _... 2 btctooft\
living . room, kit chan. bath,

446·4249

SWAIN
.
AUCTION • FUIINFrURE 82

Olivo St .. Gallipolis.
NEW·I pc. wood group · *339.
Living room ouM ... I198· 1699.
Bunk- w~h -.,11" '249.
Furnllhld ••·· 1 br., t200. F_. stre m.-tr... &amp; foundlltion
Utltti• peid. 243Jadcson Pic. ltartin~ tl9. Reclin• ttertinoGolllpolla. call 1144411-4418 •19.
afl•7 p.m .
USEP· · .,.,... btctoom
tutiM. Oetkl, wringer wuh«. a
Upstalrt. unt.lrnilhed tpt.. c•· compltlle line of uHd furniture.
peted. utltti• paid. no pet1. Cell NEW- W81tlt'n boota- t35.
Warltbooto e11 lo up. (Steel •
114-4411-1837
- - · · 8-4 10ft too.I Coli 8.14-446. 3169.
p. m.
1 lw., apt., 238 fnt eve./ .175
mo. Jlkl• depa.lt. • ref. No pets.
Call 814-4411-.4926.
2br., thNII&amp;refrig. . 1\.lrn, wet•
paid UpporRt. 7. call~14-4411o

3940.

County Appli.,ce. Ina. Gaoi:l
us.r JD'llienoes and T.V. •eta.
Open 8 .M . to 8 P.M . Mon ttw-u
Sot. 814-4411-1899. 827 lfd.
Ave . Gelllpollt. OH.
USED APPLIANCES

2 btctoorn ..,. .....,. Sooond
A ....... e. t2215 month. D•oslt
r.:tu~ed. Celll14-441-1110.

New 2 br .• exc. loartion.

la.~ndty

room. low ut11ttl-. no pet1. Me.
dop. Call814-4411o1817. ,

14..-.;6--;F"'urn=",·':"SIL"'
wd=•R'"oo=m=ts
.

tor...,.._.
month.
St.nina
*120 e mo. Qallie
Aooms

or

It

Hotol-8"1oi-44&amp;9880.

l------------:----Furn.,affidencv allu ... l• pajd.
Sh•e b•h/•100 mo. 119
Second Ave. Call 114-4463945.

1,-,-----------------

steeping rooms wfth cooking.
A Ito Trail• space. All hook- Lf)S.
CAll . after 2p.m . 304-773&amp;1151 . Meson WV.

48 Space for Rent

Picken• Furniture
New / Used
Speci1l : New 4 drawer
ehett/ t49; New din.-e ctteirs.
dlnlltte ..... maple bunk bedl,

maple hut~h. many more items.
1/ 2 mil-. Jrtricho Rd. Pt.
Pl-ent. 'WV Call 304-67&amp;1450. .
VI"RA

Furnhurl• AppNWICII
Rt. 141 In Centenll'\'. t 4th mi.
on Llncdn ,P\ , Mon-S'at : 9 -1 .
Sun : 12-&amp;.' Att•hn. untU9p.m .
for eppointment. So give us 1
coli. 814-4411-3118.
All

nM top quality.

Rnendngev•llabla

7ttH
pc. potter . b••• br., sutte
or t32.75/ mo. *50 c•h,
reb« e. H .0. Bunk bedl 8148 or
112.48/ mo. 4dr. chet849. 95.
5 dr. ch•t *64.96.

Mattre•• tel 899. Bunkies
t39.91. gaodmettreu 129. 9&amp;.
Wood

groups

t319 o r
t17.3&amp;.t; mo. 3 peice sofa chair.
IOYIIMt 1799, or t31 .90/ mo.
With 150 rebolt. ooffla • end
.bl.. t75 ....
f
All wood country dlnMte Mt. 3

ch.n •

Country Mobile Home P•k.
Aoute 33. North of Pom•ov.

lot1, ,.,.alt. pertL Nl•. Cell
814-992·7478.
.

Office or lfMH bu lin. . space
,... In Middi1PQ11. All
utltt:l• Included. Air condttioned. t200. p• moNh. Avail•
blo July 111. Coli 814-882·
15&amp;415, '7:00 e.m.-4:00 p.m.;
114.-949-2217 evenings.
far

bandt with mttching

hutch *618 or t24.11 mo. t71
rebtlte.

6 gun al•s front gun cabin It
t219 or 113.55/mo. 125 ,..

Sot• and chelr1 Pfiettd from
t395 to eaH. Tebl• t50 and
up to t121S. Hide-a-beds t390
to tl85. Redln•• t225 to
t375. Limps t21 to t121.
Oin«tM t101 and up to t495.
Wood table w-e
t211 to
1795. 0Hk .145 1111 to .375.

ch*•

Hutch• t400Mdup.bunkbadl
complete w-m.tt:,..... *2915
.,d up to 13811. Bo.., btlil
t ·1 10. Mlttr.... or box IPf"lng~
fuH or twin t78. firm *88. Wid

t98. Queen ..., *275 • up.
King tHO. • ~aw• ch_. tl9.
Oun cabin•• I , I , &amp; 10 aun.
S.bv mattr.... t31 A t41.

AUDREV'j: .- CANADAY •.REALTOR..
ROBERT E. GORDON, REALTOR
. ' MARY FLOYD. REALTOR
OFFICE: 26 LOCUST ST.
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

m
II AlTO . .

446-3636

... dup to •e&amp;.

c•h wllh
approwd credit. 3 MH• out

90 Dev• •em• •

Buill" lA• Ad. Optn 9 A.M . to&amp;
P.M. Mon. thru let. 114.4410322.

VIlli¥ FurniluN
New and uted llrnlture •d
eppli._CII, C.ll14-44.. 7172.
Hours 9-5.

Lerge ulectlon of c.p• 1 pem.
9x12. law ts/ ..0. MoUohtn
F\~rn"urL Rt. 7 NorthGIHipoli1.
OH 814-441·7444PICKENS FURNFrURE

Ne\N I Uood
Houuihold furnllhing. 1/ 2 mi..
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pl••.wtt, WV,
coli 304876-1450.
tor, elec:llric renge, woodburn•.
Call 1ft• S p.m . .U&amp;-9708.

JUST LISTED! ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BRICK
RANCH HOMES IN THE COUNTRY. 3 BEDROOMS, 2\\
BATHS, LARGE FORMAL LIVING ROOM, FAMILY ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING. KITCHEN HAS AMPLE CABI·
NET SPACE ANO IS FULLY EQUIPPED, ATTACHED2CAR GAR·
AGE PLUS DETACHED I CAR GARAGE, PLUS CARPORT
LARGE ENOUGH FOR BOAT OR CAMPER. IN·GROUND POOL,
LARGE LEVEL LAWN. VERY NICE!!!

$39,900 PRETTY HOME - NICE LOCATION IN THE COUN·
TRY HOME SET S ON A KNOLL ON AN ACRE LOT. 3 BED·
ROOMS. KITCHEN HAS NICE DIN!Nr. ARFA ATTArHFO C.A·
, RAGE. ALUM. SIDING FOR EASY CARE. SOUffiWESTERN
SCHOOLS. APPROX. 7 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS.

Sold hou . . Now ll!llllng ..ltJrN-

ture. 611 Tl;tird Ave.

Used appliatCII. W•hera. dry81"1, ..nges, Nfrlg«Mor&amp; micro-

wave

ov~~n~.

Ken't Appliance.

217 E. 2nd St., Pom«oy.
814-992· 1335' or 814-98631181 .

Refrigerator end fretzer for •I e.
Call 814·992·8830.
Two used sofa end ch.W sen.
Good condhion, one •• by
Rowe. 1150. each. 114-992-

6742.
8 piece living room suite. Ch...
of drerw . . Wid babv changing
tobla CtH 814-99:!-3814.

30'' electrlcttowllkenew, U8ld

v-v lttle. HarvutGold. 1175.,
matching rlfrigarltor t1150. or
noo. to&lt; both. 304175-2513.
53

Antiques

Highest Price~ ptld. c.h for
orientals. quihs. cupbo•da.
n.,n cktckl, entire ettet ... C1ll
oollo£1' 304-125-3275, 0&lt; 304623-8854 .
Boy or Sell. Rtverin• Antiques,
1124 E. Main Str-. Pom•ovHours: M.T,W 101.m. to lp.m..
Sundev 1 to lp.m. 814-1922121.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Commodor, 128 computer disk
drive. rnonttor. • printer deek. &amp;
software- ulld very lttle. 2 vrs.
Did . Naw / 11800 •-lfica/1800. Coli 814-44&amp;
8189.

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - THERE'S A LOT TO ENJOY!! This attractive 4 bedroom lr~levet offers more
lhari just comfort. Super country like location on
Fanfield·Centenary Road offers peace and quiel
along wrth convenience. Large flat lot perfect for
pool, garden or any other recreational activrties.
Home features include 3 full baths, family room
wrth fireplace, 2 car garage and back yard patio
perfect for cookouts and relaxation. Offered in Cow
80's. Call us to make an appointment.
8706
ACROSS THE STREET FROM FOODLAND- Yeh!!
on 4th Avenue. $29,900. Walk anywhere
downtown from this well'kept bungalow. New
vinyl siding storm windows, modern forced-air .
gas furnace. This 3 bedroom home is 1n very good
condition. Excellent for retirees. singles, . new·
lyweds. Owner in nursing home.

~CANADAY .REALTY

Ht.ction of bectoom suit..,
m•el cablnellt. htadbo•dt no

bot&amp;

Complete line of oak furnishIngs, oek cln ene ,. pr. . beck
chalrtr •1849· "' 037.19/ mo.
•ao Nb•e. Curved ol•• curio
cabinet •279 or· .115. 14/ mo.
·Trade in' t t8ken.

Real Estate General

Real Estate Genaraf
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

For Sale: Q .E. 21 cu . In refrigera-

GOOD

W•here. drysn, Nfris-etors.
rena•• · Skaggs Applianc ...
VPP• River Rd . belide Stone
Cret Motal. 814-448·7398.

GracioUs lv In g. 1 end 2 bedroom ap 1Ft ment1 •t Viii ege
Menor and Rlvtnlde A,:.rtmenu In Middeport. From
• 182. Coli 814-982· 7787.

Ocean front Condo in
Garden City, S.C.
(10 mi. So. of llyrtle
Beach).
'
~ bedrooms, 2 baths,
complete kitchen &amp;
laundry.
l Timea Available:
6/24·711. 8/5-9/9

JUST LISTED! PRETTY 3 BEDROOM RANCH WITH ATTACHED
GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR COND. LOW COST GAS HEAT, AND
EVEN AT 1HE LOW PRICE OF $45,000 THE WASHER AND
DRYER, RANGE AND REFRIG. ANO DISHWASHER ARE IN·
CLUOE01LOCATED ON· JAY DRIVE, JUST A FEW MINUTES
FROM HOUER HOSPITAL.
HARDWARE STORE - COMPLETE WITH INVEN10RY,
EQUIPMENT AND REAL ESTATE. ESTABLISHED BUSINESS
LOCATED AT COURT ANOTH!RO DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS.IF
YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR AGOOD INVES1MENT, CALL
SOON'
.

JUSt LISTED! NICE PlACE IN THE COUNTRY. ONE ACRE
NEARLY LEVEL LAWN. HAS WALNUT GROVE IN BACK YARO.
ALSO NICE TREES ON FRONT LAWN, QUALITY BUILT 3 BED·
ROOM RANCH WITH LARGE FAMILY ROOM, CITY SCHOOLS.
GREAT PROPERTY FOR AGROWING FAMILY. $50,000.
IF YOU MISSED THIS HOME LAST TIME WE ADVERTISED,
BETTER LOOK NOW. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH RANCH ON 2 ~
ACRES. ATTACHED GARAGE, FULL BASEMENT, PLUS AOOI ~
T!ONAL SINGLE CAR GARAGE. KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS.
$58,500.
•
ATTHE END OF ABUSY DAY. RELAX HERE ANOEN.IOYTHE
SPACIOUS LAWN, TREES, RIVERVIEW. YOU'Ll LOVE THE
FLOOR PLAN IN THIS 4 BEDROOM RANCH. OFFERS LOTS OF
PRIVACY FOR ALL FAMILY MEMBERS, SECLUDED DEN WITH
FIREPLACE, EXTRA LARGE LIVING ROOM AND FORMAL DIN·
lNG ROOM, BASEMENT W/ GARAG'E, CONVENIENT LDCA·
TION. NEAR CITY. $85,000.
2 ACRES WITH FRUITTREES AND STOCKED POND . 3 BED~
'ROOM BRICK AND FRAME RANCH HOME HAS ATTACHED
GARAGE PLUS OET ACHED 2 CAR GARAGE WITH WORKSHOP.
COVERED PAllO, CITY SCHOOL ONLY 5\\ MILES FROM GAL·
UPOLIS. GREAT PLACE TO LIVE! $52,000.
BIG PRICE REDUCTION - 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH IN
1HE VILLAGE OF NORTHUP. FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM,
117 BATHS, ATTACHED GARAGE. REDUCED FROM $53,000
TO $48,000.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

•

'

SOUTHERN HILLS I. E., INC.

REALTOR®~

662 Second Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio

11107
TIRED OF RENTING? - Then take a look atthis 2
bedroom, 1 bath home. Living room, dining room,
separate laundry. The good news is the assumable
loan with low fixed rate interest. Priced at
$40,000.

8702
WE BELIEVE IN THE ENJOYMENT - and lhe
Wisdom of owning your own home. II you
agree and are lookinga I hoes on the market
be sure to include this one! It's a 3 bedroom 2
story wrth 2 baths. country krtchen, Carma living
room, big garage, picnic sheHer and 0.6 acres.
Country atmosp~ere. A ve;y comfortable home.
$54.900.
•.
41400

IN PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES you will findChis lovely

BEAUTIFUL FARM Sm!NG- Seven room brick home
wrth 2\l baths. Apartmenl btJildini ijsed for carini for
elderly and handicll)ped ·pa&gt;ple. large modern barn
used as feeder· pig business, locatedinGuyan Township.
ApprO&gt;. 50 acres level tiU~e land surrounds farm btJ il d·

ingl. ca n loday for showing

~758

- NOW $56,900!! - BlOWOUT
- Owner wants house sold
next 30 days
are ~ill i ng to help finance a
qualified buyer. Look at lh1s nice, older home one
bloc!&lt; ~om city park and city schools. It features 3 ,
bedrooms, large living room, dining room, krtchen,
entrance foyer with attractive staircase and
includes a 6 year old roof. New plumbing in the
kitchen - was raw1red last year. A picket fence
en~loses the yard providing safety for your
c~1ldren or pets. look at hnd if you donHkeour
pr;ce, make us an offer!.
N210

446-6610

N409

2 STORY ON OVER4 ACRES- Nice large flat lot
compliments this r1111odded home nicely. Plenty
of room for &amp;•den, pool, recreation. etc. Home
has been completely rewired, has newer roof and
has been nicety remodeled on the inside.lndudes
4 bedrooms, living room, dining room and large
eat-in krtchen. A steal al $56,000.

8232

R()(),ll TO ROAM in too I ll story home wit h over 21
acres. Home indudes 5 bedrooms, living roomwith bay
w1ndow, format dini ng room, 2 car attached garage, par.
tial biSement. Newer furnace. Call for more details.

.

m~

NEW LISTING! LOTWITH IMPROVEMENTS all ready Cor
thai mobile hom• Kyler Creek Schools. Approx. 2m1les
fromlown. As~ng pn ce 16,500.00.
H2757
HOT SliMMER DAYS- We don't mind and yoo won't
when yoo move into thisspaciousran ell wi h16'x32' ,..
ground pool. Eco nomic heating and cooling would fit
any budiel. Make yourappcintm..,llooay.l62.000.00.
You'll fall in love!
,
*2745
NEWLY UST£01 QUALITY THROUGHOUn Is what you'll
lind in this 3bedroom bricli ranch.Formal dining area, 2
full baths, living room , great room with wet-bar. 2 car at·

!ached garage and lots more! Call today lor appoint·
ment, you'll be iml)ressed!

m56

50 ACRES - Close toSR 35. Approx. 6 m1les to town.
Call today.
*2713

COIINER LOT in a subdivision close to town is a
definrte plus .which provides your own space for
outdoor.act Nilles. 3 bedrooms, large family room.
eal·m k~chen, front porch and deck. $39,900.

3 bedroom bnck ranch with for ma! dining area, living

INVESTMENT PROPERTY- I \l story home w ~ h 4 bed· room with fireplace, com p let~ kitchen w ~ h newer appli·
rooms, livini room, full basement. eat·in krtchen. Two ances, 2 car attached garage and more! Call today for
mobile homes with 2 bedrooms an d bat h in each. Ap- more in formation.
prox. I ~ acres land. Can for co mpl ~e listing
.
~7~
AFFORDABLE AND CLOSETO TOWN! 129.000.00. - 2
story homewtt h 3 bectooms, living room, bath, 1\7 car
garage, good garden area. Call today for app omt menl.

M2721
NICE FOR THE PRICE! 129.000.00. Located at 312
Central Avenue, Rio Grande. Remodeled 1 story home
with 2 bedr ooms, fu ll basem ent, newer carpet, eat-in

kitchen. 56'x204' apprO&gt;. lot. IMMEDIATE POSSES·
SION.
m41i
REDUCED NOW 132.500.00- 2 MOBILE HOlES1988 F l emiri ~ 2 bedrooms, bath. livmg room. ran i~ re-

frigerator. draperies, central air. 1978 Richardson: 2

J. 111111 CAifa
379-1114

COcHuN

PAI1KI
.., ... 5$

\

''

MEIGS COUNTY PIOPEITY CALL 742-3171
TWO STORY HOI£ - W~l mamlained 3 bedrooms,
basement. 2 car gorag• Nice wood looring throoglloul.
Located in Middleport. ASkini $37,500.00.

10 ACRES liTH 2 STOI'I HOI£- 5bedrooms, dining
area, bath. loclled in Salem Township. listed ·al
$45,000.
112737

C.Yl u.n

FARM approx. 172 acres w~h nice 5 bedroom home, 1II
baths, lree gaslo home btJt also has a heal pump. Full
basement. LO&lt;aled 1n Hemlock Grove area
112742
371 SOUTH lNIID ST.. IIODI.EPOIT - 8e.. tilul 2
story enerrt eflicit111 home. 5 bectooms, lorllll dining
room. fireplou in hYinaroom, filMy roam. 2bolhs, ba~
sementond dlllc:hed a•qe. Askin1 $49,500.

hot water healer. and more!! Perfect for couple starting

out or relil int

M2755

.

REDUCED TO 122 500.00111 1111 THIEE BEDROOM
BUDDY MOilLE HOlE in.ext~lenl conditio~ Sftuated
on • lovely lot on Pt•l Street. Nice oorches and Oul·
build1np.
· *2744

I

NEWLY USTEO! CONVENIENT- 61MiU Creal -li•·
ing room, eat·in k~ chen, 2 bedrooms. newer root and

bedrooms, bath, liviniroomcomplelely fu rnished,lront
porch. Both mobile homes are underpinned. Nice flat
over 1 acre lawn. Owner will consider setting mobile
homQS separate.

MEIGS COUNTY PIOPEITY CALL 742·3171

••

FIRST TilE BUYERS CONTACT US FOR LOW.
FHA/VA INTEREST RATES!!

*27!1.

FARM - Approx. 119 acres w~h s~id older 2 slory
1hom• Barn and several btJildintll. Salem Township.
$55.000.
12731

197S SECTIONAL HOME s~uated on I acre appr01. 3 ,
bedrooms, 2 balhs, ~0111 and rea• patio. Askin1
' $39.900. Hemlock GriM! area
112743
11\IIOIY HOI£ II IIDDliPOIT -lalttii*OIUI
rOOIIB wlh U&amp;ttt ook trim. EXlra woll ..edflr homton
nice Col. Clost to ViiiIll PIIIL Alllched I .. p 1L
112740 $39.900.

ELIIANT COUIITIY LIVING- This farm hes epprox .
Ill acres of nicelond. The home makes aquality .tl1e·
menl. It contoins -4 bectooms, forntl! dining room.
equipped Uchen. I II bllhs and lots. lotsand more. Call
lodly. Rulland oru

"1-SIH

PUt your trust in Number One~·

UST WITH US!

Bonnie Stutes - 446-4206
Moore - 367·7760
Richie - 446-3&amp;38

._.oam ..,_.nwrts.
.,.t•

Now accepting •plicatioN for
2
fullv

C•pMad. Nice unlng. t....lndry
fad! II i• avallebla Call 114892· 3711 . EOH.

.

RUSTIC A·FRAIIE - Wooded Cot, private and secluded . .
First time on market. Features 21P.decks on upper level. One
from tne master bedroom, also front patio on lower level.
Watch the deer, squirrel, birds, etc. Great view. 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, 1,440 SQ. ft. of living space. 24'x30' gmge &amp; shed.
This one
is very unique..Lot of trees &amp; flowers. Amust to see!
.

JUST LISTED: ACRES IN GREEN TOWNSHIP: Possible bu ild·
ing site or nice spac1ou s lot for a trailer, nice quiet atmos·
phere, but not far from city. A mu st to see.

44

2 becWoom Aptt. for reft..

'

TERRIFIC 2 BEDROOM - I bath, living roo111,
super krtchen, endosed porch. 16x32 oval above
ground pool, 2 buidings, insulated, workshop.
newer roofs, house rewired and plumbed. Vinyl
siding 1 car garage. Central air. Small orchard.
Setting on over 3 ac1es.for $54,900 in North Gal!ia
Schools.
#700.

JUST LISTED: MAKE THIS YOUR NEW ADDRESS: Lovely
home just minules from town. 3 bedrooms wih master, 2 full
baths. spacious living room w/ fireplce, modern kitchen
w/ appliances. formal. dming room. Affordable! First
· us a call.

No depot•. chllt:t·an welmme.
•175/mo. ca.l 1142911-15711.

•t

GREEN IWP. ACREAGE- 10 acres wrth approx.
half of those cleared and Hat, remainder wooded.
Creek runmng through property. $16,500.

NEW LISTING- NEW BUSINESS BUILDING,
HOllE AND LOT, ALL IN ONE PACKAGE -Very
I constructed building. Mobile home has: living room , eat-in
kilchen, dishwasher, 3 BR's, nice do01s on trailer !front &amp;
back) .

2 br .• trol•wlh•l*ldD living
room. air condition Call 114378- 2~1. If no tnaw«. celt
I 144411-81110.

One blctoom o-.. e
In qUiet
· neighborhood. ref•a'ICII r•
quhd. 304-871-18110.
·

MAINTENANCE FREE RANCH - 3 bedrooms. 2
. .
..
baths, large k~chen and dining area. Thermopane
HEAD START HOllE - Move ah.ead into this
. windows w~h attached 2 car garage. Situated on I
i:omfy 3 bedroom wrth an almost new garage and
acre, only 12 miles from town. Priced to sell at
· workshop.,you must seethe interior to appreciate
$48:500.
8701 .. this tastefully decorated home in Cheshire Calf
today for an appointment. Priced at a reasonable
$35,000.
'
#512

.

li1 Hou1ehold Goode

st.,.. building 30&gt;c80. Mondor·
ton, W .Ve . t300.00 per month.
Coll814-4411-9882.

51 Household Goods

1 br.. 100m furniitt.d IIIII"· t200
Oluo olec. CaN 304 171- •00.

ALSO OPEN ON SUNDAYS!!
2:00·4:00 STARTING JUNE 18th

Ita'•.

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REAL ESTATE

Priced in 20s: 6 roams and b.-t\
1.6 acres: 2 bectoom houte
60.:80 lot 3 bectoam hau•.
3.6
Priced ' in 30t : 25
acres good b.lilding sites.; 90
aa• good building sit• a'ld
hunting. Priced in SOt: 4 bedroom houte on 2 acr•. All h .. e
public wMer. Colonial Re.,.y ,
304- 896-3566.

:.

'

Bed ftem .. •21. Qu..,.. Size
t35 • ldng fr1me *150. Good

2 BR .moblehome•EWfgrMn.
Call814-379-2978.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

l•ge ~- living

r .

T•r• Townhou• Apertmfts · 2
bltha. CA.. dl•
- · •· dla.-;. prloata .,.
dooad ootlo. poot lllotaround.
W.• . ...-. &amp; tr•h 6nct.u:ted.
Stilting et t 289 P• mo. CaH
8 14-387· 711110.

lr.. 1 1/ 2

out 141. Call 114-4411-8038

P••·

~., . ~~d::=~
~~~.~~!rDDm.
=·d
bathroom.
l•ge dining room. 11111:-in kil· chen. derl with half-btl h. glas
, ' en doted sunporch, l•ge b••
ment ch Bin link f., ce. 2 c•
r
g•eg• Call 814-992-2496 for
,..
appointment.
'--

' "

Nice 3 br., lnnllhecl 1•01!
'tlrcl. / t210. Na p«s. 41/ 2ml. ."

l.Olfurnlahocl fully -potad. No
intide
Oepos• riQUired.
Ctll 8 14-19:!-3090.

2 br. , M . H . located In
Kerrlf176 ml • 100 dop . Call
114-4411-1354

81 .00 fU Rep•) Foredosur•
Repos, Ta Dellf)quent .Prop.,..

•
•

, . ·"

446-1102.

br:.

8780.

"

for Rent

"2 br.• furn"H. dW'I &amp; qu6«,

o,w.,_,_

·

,

'*•

IMtdforMie. Oneto••8CI'•In

1970 Ramlr-. 121l80 with 41
Homes for Rent
10•20 odd-on room. 151100. --------:~---:---:­
GOVERNMENT HOMES trom
Ch•l*t. 3 br•• 2 boll&amp; largo lot
•1. 00 (U Rep•) Foredotur.., Coli ,144411-9200.
Aepos. Ta o.liquent Prop• Mutt 11"t011e1884Nat....,•14xl0 rW• front. C.A . . •1 alldrlc.
ti•. Now stlfin~ Cal 1-315-- mobile hom•- books for Oepostt • rlf. requi'ed. CaM
731-7376. Ext. H.OH-G2 cur- t17,000. Set- .. wllh centrll 703-388-1109. or 814-387rent lilts. 24 ln.
air, .wning ,.rio &amp; tkininO. 7687.
Located 2 mil• fram Gahlpolt.
Vtnton: Totdf reinodlled. 2 br., E~~:ei.W tor rMir.t aauple or 3 tr.. AC, t.noa. 2 ftrelahoute on one acra Apprailed ,_,~y- . Aolclng 114. 1100. ce/ 1310 mo. Cal 3048"1&amp;
28, BOO. Mljor applitn a. incan 114-4411-0189 "' 44&amp; &amp;10 ..
cluded •o n.w c.p•. eurtllln" 8421 .
HouM. UntmV.hed. lt(IIVtl &amp;
blown in inlulllio,n hoi: wat•
t.nk. f21 . 500. c.. h prica 1981 lroMmora Mobile home m. 2 BR . Neighborhood lid .
$24,000 land oonlrlc:t with 14&gt;o72. 3 SR . 2 ful bolho 12311. Rof. requhd. 4411-4418
down p-vmn. Cep.t»&gt;e int• jg•den tub). NIIW D ~ntStsln­ . . . 7pm
• eotod lluven cal onJv. Coli m•t• c•peling In ..,ing room
Boa~tllJI 3 br.. llllr c•p•td.
814-388-8482.
&amp; h 1111. Hou•• type ll:orm winfemlt;'
room. deck. fMOL tmtW
dows. unct.plnning totel elect·
•ea• t3751mo. pkledepasll.
For Sale: 3
2 flr~~plece. ric. EJCellentcontltion. W•h•. R
II . ref. required, call
e•-o• pooL _ A-C / f89,ISOO. tl ryer, refrlo••or. r•gelwin- eodn8f
14-245-5383.
A.&lt;Jne Rell Estl'te brokw. cllll ·unit AC . 112.800 or land
304-876-610.. Of 304-676- contriiCt toapprcwed bJyer, Cel
Pom•oy. NI-ce two INictoom
5328.
. 614-446-9308 eft.- Bpm
hou• for _Nnt, 117 Mulblrry
Ave. lpKiou• •1n1 room.
Moving mu., ... : Cozr.:,auat
lining room. su_nporCh. ldtch•
onRacooonCtMk.nM'
hup
wtth lfOYe and r..,l..-•or lf'ld
• •· 3.6 aa•. 2 br .. plemy of
bMh. WMhlr-dtyer hooktp In
Fa'nns for Sale fulbe...room to • PlfHil t21. 000. E v- 33
. c-....,. . ..
. . ening~ : 8 14-441-•38. Dlys;
. - . h e cttPe. Win- air
. 814-44 .. 11,71, Oebbi•
condltkl,..
t221.
Cou ntrV dr..-n firm home. 3 br ., Pll" month. IICIUity ftposlt
2 baht, onlv /1124.91&amp; • up. Phone 114-812-1292 aft• I
See our modal. Call 1-81~881- p. m. or on wHkendll.
7311 .
Meedowbrook Addn, 3 bed• Forulet:Nownw: 3br .• 2bai:Jw,
rooms, fultt' c•p•ect. eir cond.
: p~nelld f.,itv room --*'did. 34
Business
l•ge fenced yard,. teroe «Nered
.. 36 aa•l M5. 000. C1ll 614deck. axe cond. no pets,
Buildings
-· 268-1912.
•37aOO per month. dtPoo• -:--:--"'--:-'c:-:--:required. 304-8715-2822 or
3 br .. bl-l.,el. 1 1/ 2 b•h. I&amp;
176-7413.
'
kitchen S. dining .,a 2 c•
gange. Above grilnd pool
For rent. HouMat JuncUonTtn
w / dec*. 5 min. from HMC . 10
MiletndRt. 2 . t200. per month.
. min. from Olllipolil. Plantz
304-896-3808.
Subdtiillon. Low 80's C•ll 614446- ... 49between 12noon&amp;8 Ground floor 3 room office
p.m.
s~ 2nd A..... Mldcleport.
For Rent : Hou• tlor 2 or 3
Will remodll to need. Clll p~mpl• ne• -~ ref. r•
Home on St. At. 58&amp; 1 c• 1·814-882-2381 d ....
qulr..V 1180 mo. Coii814-4411garagi.. full ' b••e 0974.
m.,. / tz9. 500. Call 8 14-44&amp;

.
..
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BEAUTifUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGEr I'RICEI AT JACK ·
SON ESTATEI. 538 Jod&lt;oon
from t192 a mo. Wille to
shop and movie&amp;. 81~44&amp;2688. E. 0 . H.

..
&amp;

.

~42~~Mo~bl;;le~H~OI;m;;e~a=:f~44;::A~part~m~en~t~=:=f48 Space for Rent

'

2 br., lrfnlahOcl DIP. •Rof. 1/ 2
mi. of Port• on 514. CIH
8 14-38&amp; 191~

1971 Eloona. 14&gt;o711. 2 br .. 1
bolh. lorgallvlng room port lolly
t.unllhed, good oond., c.ll 8142511-1528. or 814-2511-1977
aft• 7 p.m.

~· •

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~~~Piom~er~§oy~-r.M;iddl;;eport~~~=G;al;l~ipo~lis;:,;O;h~io~;;;Pot;·~nt;;;PI:;;;eas;::;;:a~nt.::;;W;;;;;.;;;;;V;;;;;a;;;;;.======;;;;;S; u;; ; nda
; ; =y;; ;TI; ; ;I;mes
;;;;;;:; ; -;;;;;;Sent::in:ei:-:=
Pag=e:D:·::5

1 :00 ·-· 4:30 . P~M.

Mav

"

June 18, 1989

OPEN SUNDAY

Wao...,cl132acre/ *35.000.
Rt. 7. Wow Eurlk&amp; ctll 114446-4411 aft• 7 p.m.

Sotoiii/No Poym.,.a dl
Auguet on In¥ MW Mobile
Home purdl•ad In Mtv. F..,ch
cttv MobHe Hom•. Call 114-

June 18, 1989

"!

D•vld WINrMn, 441·8111
•• ,J. H4111110n, ••••• 10

e Jillll c.nturr 21 Roall!al~~e c..._tion • ,,_ .... '"" NAF. 1111n11 •

1~rbol Ct11111111' 21111111l!allle CaoJcntion. ~~~ ....... o_.unky •

Lorettll McDade, 441-7728
Phyllla MOler, 441·8341

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F.Al:IICWI'ICE 181Nill!PI!NPINTLY CM'NiilANDOPEHATEIL

'

WAN'l,ED

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NEW LlSTINGS! ! !

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Tim11 Sentinel

June 18, 1989

Ohio-Point Plearlil'1t, W.Va. ·

li4 Mite. MerchandiM · 154 Mite. Merchanclile

111 Fann Equipment

il1 Farm Equipment

71 Auto' a For Sale

'

........ hi\'· 10-11 - !Winglon • vmton A,. . C.l
I 14-31.. 8078.

ee Seed i

Fertilizer

,.,1&lt;1-

son. OH. 1 ·~137·11121.

AIR COMPIII!IIDRS

63

VI'Rt Furn1tur11
At. 141. c.nt.n.,..1/4mban

fteg'ecfOuart.tHorMMer•and

cl• from 1100. For*. Mtr-

- - ......... Cllll 11421•11.21.
He•d
Anguo. A·1
poldtion.
holt. I
,ond311uito. , 114-7'2·3011
ATTENTION H - /Ow..Point Pluolo _c..,.lng-.
Point Pluo, U .1 1 1Jochon
A-•· Point Pl. .om. Phone
304-171-4014.

105-117·1000bt. 8-10189.
1171 8...., C..turlon. now·
·~- d - Int-. 1710. Col
.:.1.:..'4-:..44~•...:40.:.•.:.::.·- - - IS Dodge Ch•gor. 12100. 81
Ren.,ll F - I2000. COl
I14- 21•1270.

r, ,1·1

IWIMMINO PDOLII1118

ltrewblrrtM· plck vour own.
Call Cl•u de Winters. Alo
Orondo. OH 114-245-1121.

lollthlh•wllho..,go11hl31
pool. Hugo lonco.

;:&amp;.=a,CoH 24 two' till•.
1.111)0.

wiiiObo&lt;l •· cond..
"""'- • light.. hoodbound.
Colt 114-4441'1DA, 114-44..
2082. or 114-441-III!OZ.
Dynorn•krottOiiilw, 3 1/2H.P.
driven 24 ln. tllpoth. IIIIo
n-11110. COli 114·441·
9301. oftw I p.m.

""' ... ., puoh ...n - · fill
•• - ... 114-317-0441.
Fat' Silo' 11H.P. Bolon !own•

l

lrlctor/ t2400. Coli
14-44f.44ZI.

ordoft

- ........

6~wln-okcondlllonoro.

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

"'.. NCR 210 CMh ......,.,, 8

of--

ltrtwbtrd•. ~ou pldl • we
Dlall. .S o.m.•8 p.m. Mon.·llol.

'1:':" ....,..,

446-0001

FIRST AVENUE
Nice home, basement. fireCoH 814-44.. 11192 "' 114place, attached showroom
245-1178.
or office. Sep, apart. over 2· ·
... _
... , ......... 2 mi••
c'ar gar. River lrontage &amp;
Iouth of New Hw• WY·nNr
\lnloo Comp Ground. Picking garden.
MD,., June lth. ell! 304120 ACRES
112·2237.
Modern, 4 BR home. Bern,
beautiful tolling land wth
i "II' ;,llllfl[li",
timber &amp; pines. Tobacco
' base. Perry Twp.
,\ Livi•:;lrnJ.
• • • • .80 _ , . , _ .... t the
.
GREEN TWP. .
HIIIPI'J•'* 3-X FlooColorln It
,Four .bedroom home wilh
w-Ill c...wn. "" 1¥-lc
Pl'l«lwoldll A .• 0 l'oed •
den. Two car garage. I; aere.
81 Fann Equipment
Supplv, 319 W. Molin It,
$32.500.
40 ACIES ·
-or411 wkh7
68
Pets for Sale -fl. b•.Hollond
Four BR home, large tob.
lea n•t 10 Church· in
base. F1ut trtes. Private set·
Allr .. on lt. Ill. AI. Mondlf
· ling in Ohio Twp.
11wu
Wadn•dor·
o,_, ond ..,....., lhopoP.,
Toyloo' 1 11..., P -. Korr Rd.

Oroomlne. All br..a ...AII
Olylol. lomo "-' Food Deolor.
Julio Woblt Ph. I 14-44.. 0231.

64
HoT -.:a •

Have. Gr!lln

... 81 ... 317·7143.

.

.

!dta pul-tvJII mow1n1
m Khint. Good co ndftkHI. 1310.
Coll814-742-3033.

Att.,tion

-=--·
phu .

Ccwvett• Cflwya. lurluyera Guide (U

tabecco p,o..cere:

lnture your crop -a-'ntt htl

YIIQOJI, OHIO
"Your Used Parts Supermarket"

EJC. Cond. CeO 11 .. 317· 0242,

1171 Mont, C.rlo. •tomltlt.

Motore, Tranamlaions, Reer-end1,
Sheet Metal, ·Glai1. Batteries, Brake
Druma, Rotore, Starters, Ahematot'l,
and a wlde - ~electon of uted tlrea.
INSTAUAnoN AYWilE
AI Pam GllwG11teid te Fit 111111 le hod.

d.ntlll&amp; Contllct tM Jim Aile

............ 814-17.. :1!788.

1117 old Cl•ol•l4tlt 1988
Yu go/11191; 1811 Oodgo
o...nv 111911&lt; 1181 Ford E•
cort / t1C595; 1881 Mul ·
tong / UU I ; 18 II Ro ·
noull / .,281; 1977 Chryo.
Cordobo/171111; 8 • 0 Mot~r•
HWY. 100 N, Col 114-445111111. or 114-445-8119.

SWEEPER REPAIR

1172 Plymouth Scwnp. 310.,4
twriL Momlltlc. aluminum slot

MODRS

Port F.B. T; Top•; 1181

1982 Z-28. V-8 ~to. exe CDnd.

All MAKES AND

MAmN'S

FUINITUIE
and MOlE

742-2421

txt•lor. -~ interior, 305 •utQ.,
tit. · cruise, 1U,860.00. 304

675-8788·

...,;,_:..:.::.:_~---­

s1 .. 441-1189.

Jim't Odd Jot.. Sunde_cklidWIIJ
palminG roofing, c wpent«. •

bullclng~. Frte e.t irnlte.

814-37.. 2418.

.

C.U

Gollpollo. Ohio
445-4477.

Phone 114-448-3888 or 614-

84

·'
81

Cor. Fourth M dPin e

Home

Electrical
&amp; Re1rigar•tion

, lmproY.ements

General Hauling

Dill•d Wa-tflf Servlee: Paots,
Cilterns. Wells. Delivery Anytime. Ca ll 614-446-7404-No

SUnd!Pf calls.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools, cisterns, Wells. Ph, 814-

246-9285.

R &amp; R Wa191' S8rviee. Pools,

cisterns. wells . Immediate·
1.000

or 2. OOOg•llon,d eliv-ery.

Coli 30 4- 875-fi37P.

P1tridls Water Hau ling Servieti
poof1. Wefl1: cilt fl'ns, 1:000 or
2. 000 gaff. deliver I•. · phone· .

73

1881C•m•o. V·8, P9W«st_.·
ina power brM•. tilt. cruise. •ir
cond.. AM I FM c••ette. take-

87 Ford Aaroe•r., mn c:tr.rd.
Approx . 411000 mi-. Air.

PIPt'm~u.

Cell 814-448-

Sh ..p. Coil 614-265-6000. V6
luellnJ ,

RESIOEHltAL·. tMVISTMeiTI · COUt ICHCIAL · Fivwi

.

1987Mom:eC•rlo, Sup•sport,

306 HI-output onglno PW/ PO
locko. 8"gundy / t1D.IOO. Coli
814-38
.
. .. 82&amp;8.' '

Gllnl!ral Hauling

Watterson· • Wat ei- Hauling.
Re•onlbte rat•. Vohlme dil·
counts, 2,000 to 4. 000 cap•city. cil1•ns. poole:, well•. etc.

Cell 304-871} 2919.

87

Upholstery

Mowrer'• Upholstering serving
tri oou ntv .,ea23ve••· Thebll!st
in lJ rnlt ure upholstering. Call

3 04- 6 75 - 4 1 6 4 for free
estimates.

Vans 8o 4 W.O.

AM ·FMI R•tiio, C.ll I!S14-C48-

7739.

1984 Ch..., Covaller/12.000. 74
Coil 114-31.. 9997.
1987 Cem•o. auto, AM/F~
c••ette, P .S . P .B,. One owner.

85

NEW LISTING- Beautiful home in Middleport, 3 bedrooms,
fully carpeted, central air, forced air heat, in-ground pool.
Garage. HAA Warranled . Pnced for Qu1ck Sale· Mid SO's.

Motorcycles

Moped fo• .. ~ E&gt;Collent cond&gt;
tlon. 1310. Coli 814-318-8620
or IIH4&amp;-7333.
198&amp; Hondo. xRZOo. good
cond 1 e100 Cell 614·44&amp;aae5. or &amp;14-441-8189. · .
1978 suz~A~I os. 6&amp;o E. st.
Bika 7BOOoctuolmi. goodtlr•·

MIDDLEPORT - Priced right, 2·story home close to city
part 2 bedrooms, lull basement, large lot. viny Isidin&amp; Com ·
fortable. low 30\

FOR SALE - CHAROLAIS HILLS

Restored home, 11 rooms &amp; 2 baths.
In-ground pool, 1¥2 acre lake, 2-car
garage. Barns. Acreage.
446-1259

PEACH FORK RD. - Priced for Quick Sale. Garageor St. Rt.
33 A goldm1ne
Want your own tiusin ess1 Here' s
your chance. Mid

~•k· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~;;;;;~~

304-175-4084.

AK C. w.., Hlghlond whko t•
rlor puOIII-. For 11io. COli

Don't mllke• mew• wtlhout us.

t14-31t-:IH1

. Doren. Loedera. . .ckho81,

537· 9121.

Moton. con 814-44a.eeee• .,

Serv1ces

CARTER 'S PWMBING
AND HEATING

PfUSES. Jtcklon, OH 1 -800.

· 85

Real Estate General

71 Auto's For Sale

.&lt; Plua.

CoH \I·Houl. 304-875-7421.

li e Co. RON EVANS ENTER-

Plumbing
8o Heating

•Gravel ·.

992-6172

7117.

- . 450 2nd AVE. .
446.6106'

Septic T•k Pumping- . 90. Gai-

Yo• Call It
We Wll Haul It

222 last llaln
POMIIOY, 011.

*1,200.00. 304-175-1711. 7 .
1980 El Comlno blk ond gold

ov•

D _ _... Coftory illnnol.
,.,..., •d lilrMM •d_l'fim•
...... ldtt...l c:;Mw mill -~
vlco. Cllf14-44.. 3144oftor7

82

L.W. STEWART
TRUCKING

•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

whit• letter . Wheell .

304-875-3193. '

19'M V..cllaao min i rftOtOt'
twJme: 21 fl:. Air. v-"•Mor,
17.000 m.i./11281. a • D

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- D· 7

30 4-57 6- 2311 "' 614-446·
4088.

trll. C.l 114-,..a..3403.ett•• air. new paint, old lhllll'(
p.m.
Wh... nHd , lnt•k&gt;r work.

m

.

.

~

.::=·----...,.---:-

oond .. coli 1'14-44.. 1011. "'
44 2092· "' 81 "- 4412 •

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J~u~ne~1:8:.=19~8~9~~~~~~===Jr=:~~~Pomeroy-Middleport-. Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Homea
81
Home
DODRILL'S AUTO PARTS 79 Motors
&amp; Campers
Improvements

rln\ prioodto .... Colll14-4451213.
1877 LTD. ~ mil•. good
condition. lSIO. 114-882· ·
8338
""' ... ., 1111 - ...,. COugw
opodol odllon -wkh •· 1972MontoCorlo310Mito.tlh.

11D Cam•o AS.IoadU. ex.

deep " - • for •I e.

••- Colll14-lt~3~17.
P.M.
: Plktt ... now galng 011 • 'PalM

20 N oent off ,..,,.
Driol on lntWr" Md tDCteriar
. twd
""*''ah
'-lntt. Yau wor1c too
to plllnt with q t ... g IMt.
hint PluL 241 I J•dc•on Aw.,

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh&gt;

'

4 yr. old reg'ed cau.t• t1orse.
.GIId.l ng-h11 b••n lhotlll'n-

I!'M. Sun, 12-1. 114-44..
3111.

King ,_

71 Auto'• For sale

Liv88tock
1

Uncoln Pic• Mon.-llt. lAM·

fl'''i"l'"'l

.

.

' ~'

llfl« 6 p.m&gt;

Com"""l Houolold UIA
2 HPvwtlcolpump, 20 all.-~
-27okt-lorgo....""
to-from. orortil)gll 111.

~""o:'::&amp; ooll 24two' 1 · ~

. .. ..-,

PS, PB, AC. 1810, .CoM &amp;1444 .. 9103, oftor I p.m. coli
8t4-441-8311
Far Silo: To- ...... 1111. •
100tt lood. oolll14-44a.411t. For Solo: 1177 c ....y Blaor.'
good ooncl, ooiii14-241HI41.
olor I p.m.

For Sale • Conoete •d Pl81tlc
-le
All • -· RON
I!VANS ENT£11PRIIES. Jock·

IWI-11110 P00Lit1111
-·-b•wllho..,go11hl3t
pool. Hugolnltehtion
dock. lonco.. ,-flnMc&gt;
·.
Wlnanl¥.

19711Linooll\ 411,000ml.. 1887
- ...,. Cougor. zs. 000 mi..

·~··

ing / ..76. eell 304-676-1433.
New ' clutch c•blt.
1984Honda 10. EKe . cond., call

8 , ... 445-6666.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

IMao. mid t...,_ mole.
A.K.C. Rog-ocf, 3 yr. old

- · T-motor.. Log ,,_ DOII!RMAN·mull .. him go to
r'-"1. Coli J .F. You.-.
'
W.Vo. 304-731-7191 •copt 1,4-441-11141. '

Dump truCk, c.ttle. Humin-on.

a."""".

t2&gt;112 """'" Ink dog pon. eoa
•
3 air aondl: Fedd. . 1,000 btu oflor 1,30 1.14-2flo1888.
1100.00. Weotlngllauoo 1.700
btu 1110.00, Wl!irloool 10,000 Filh Tonk. 2413 ·Joclloon Avo.
btu 1110.00. 304-&amp;7.. 2311. Polrit , . _ 304-171-2013.
tneot •• up tl4.11ond tO eo1
143.28. .
·
Lfaht.t oh~n..Wt 1.... tlgn cornploto
'
'
wih l.n• t"218.: non-IDIW ..
1198. f!IIEE DB.IVERY. P'f•le
Musical
lett. . 147.10, Boo oflor · - 67
1• Juno.23. 1·111)0.133-3413
·Instruments
_:.
•nvdme.
8ft

.

BACK 011 THE MARKET

.

. Owner 110vi••· MUST suu Nnl, re111odt1td three

NEW LISTING:

located along Garfield
A~.• Gallipolis. /A glli turn., cent. A/C., HW, carpeted
floor~ :E~Ient con~rtiOn, ready to move into. $34,500.00.
3 BEDRII. HOME withm Vinton Village. 1.5 acres. 6 rm.
house. $~7.500. 00 ,
•
79 ACRE FARII located in langsvill; New 4 bedroom, 3
· bath, 2 C!r garage, barn, .pond &amp; landing strip for small,
planes. Pnce $171,000.00.
.
64 ACRE FAR II located on Fairview Rd. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
finished basement 6 years old. Custom woodwork 1n the
home. Check il out'
3 BEDRI. HOME. liv. rm.• ·eat-in k~chen, w~hiQ Vinton
Villa&amp;e. 2·c• carqe, approx. 1 acre, $32,000.

bedroom colonill INdy for im11edilte occupancy. .
Prictd to sell. 44&amp;-2267 for •n 1ppolntm1nt.
Mil. EXClUSIVE, IUT PRICED liGHT. REDWOOD AIID STOllE IAiat;

Choice locltion 1nd situated on a wooded lot. The structure is a MM KOF
QU~LITY .

Real Estate General

_____
.,,...,
•••eel

Many elllras come wM hthis smartly decorated home. Andersen win·

dowt Special wooD 11001 area, cathedral ceilmg. tans, 3 bettms., ~ FULL
baths~ one with a1arden hb. Extral_
lf&amp;e master bedrm., 2 car attached gar·
age.You ha~e an open im1 •1tton ta see this outstanding home.

2Jt4 tach 78 c.nt ..

Ponoling 8.10.12 ft 11.00 pw "'right plono fo&lt; ..1. COl
oho« toko ol. IIIII pump _l_t4-_91_2_·_3&amp;_3:,.2_.- - - co,.loto. hoor ond coo11.200 lndlvldull gultlr - . . bo-

•ofl.,..

•q . W••
twtlch gtnnen. Mriau• tult.~tn.t. Bru5box, llo•il-o llghlo. coot . cordlt Muolc. 114-441·M87,
MOO naw. goad •"-'»a ..,.
w•t•t.nka.
dpldlup Jeff Wem•.., kmruct•. 114PolntCini~ 7:00tHII:OO. Alo" 441-8077. Lim... o-lngo.

c.n .....

118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP .. Graham School Rd.
Super V1ew1 $44,000.00.

1974 . If&amp; t.guoon troct.,, lundir D*not bought ._,

1900 hn., 31 , f.g.~son With Oc1. ,,,Ill. Com• ww•hwarlold•. regftt•ed
t.~.,m rlfttV, CM&amp; mu•k: n.,·d •d
ttor.-. gen.,. n..l• with aolt., book Included. e200.00 Of bellt
loc:t&lt; oervlco • ltud oorvlco. 011.,, 30 • 17.. _ 11 _

•.tt.

304-17.. 2178.

-

PROPERTY IN PORTER - Grocery store, 3 bedrm. home, 5
bedrm.' home. Call lor more information.
DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure with
3 rental apartments. Also, adjacent metal storage/util~y
bldg, Est. gross rental income, $820.00 per m9. All priced for
$65.000.00..
NEW LISTING: OIHer 3-4 bedrm., home, located along 3rd
Ave. Nice lot. A good "starter home" lor a young couple.
$32,000.
MASONRY BLDG. Commercial location. 2 story, along 3rd
Ave., Gallipolis. Ask lor Russell Wood.

~

""' oolo IS ft. • 4 ft. ,...nd , . , . , - - - : : - - : - : - - - owi.,..;ng pool. n- lnor .,d 68
Fnlit
~ie~. tnt.. ""mp. 304-ISZ.
8o Vegetables
APPIOI. Z
8 rooms, 4 bedrooms. fenced in
. Nil. 111 lor cootUni
1nd heatin' Nice ~ont porch. modern ~rtchen wrth dish·
wtsher tnd lots of cibinet~ You must see this home before
yau buy. Priced at onlw $49,900.00.
11674
.

White Provlnd .. b•bt bed with
m . . r... Exc. condition. tee. ' Pi~ wour own ttNWblrria
304-175-Hil
Huutll' 1 Strewberry Fltl·d

""' .. lo Yomohok ..bowd. PSR

Mon.·F~.

IAM·to 8PM.

31 with 11 kiW'I. 3 yen old

uoo. Kkto•lrew~terNctwlhl
lhlhr••· mirror, headboard.

IIEW LISTING! - If you have been looking for "thll
investment opportun~y" we have ft lot you1! 3 rental
apartments wth a com,merciai room all located along a busy
street in Gallipolis. Buy all now lor $35,000.00.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Phone
or 446-9439

wwel••m..,.... t300. S..Vo
mini rtfrlgll'ttor, ac. cond.
1150.; 3 prom • • • • like ,.,.
lira 7 to 13. SG 200 ~11•

1,110. 304-175-2101.

Real Estate General

lor
JP394.

•
CONTMC1': For retlfed couple, newlyweds, or smgie 2 BR , LR(
bath, new construction, close--m LOW 30's. Call !of location and more in forma·\

lion. NO PROPERTY TAX FOR 15 YEIAS.

..

1397. THIS COULD a·EYOOR HOME an d/or extra inco me property. live in
one lptrtment and w/a lilt~ remodeWn s one apart ment could pay lor two. 2
BR's. LR, eat -1n k1tchen, bath upstairs. K1lchen. LR, garagedownsta1rs.Call lor
more mformation.
.

Mi7. IN IOWII-IHIRD AVE. 1 sl&lt;lf)', 1·3 BR, DR IFR, eat·IM kolchen, ! ~

· baths, range, ref.. nar. gas furnace. High 20' ~.

75'x120' BUILDING LOT IN RODNEY II SD: Reduced from
$5,000.00 to $3,500.00.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS m Rodney Village II and Mills
V11lage. Call for more information.
, 2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES SID. One is 84'd48', ihe
other 75'd48' . Purchase erther lor $5,500.00.
75 ACRES located along Glen Summit Road. Oider 5 rm.
house. $20,000.00.
21 .5 ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
Located along Frank Rd. $18,900.00.

3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOON lAKE {50'xll5') . Can

POIEROY- 21 acres wtth 24'x37' new barn, electric avail·
able and TPC water. ASKING $39,500.00.

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD- Beautiful Ranch Type Housein the
counlry. 3.98 acres wttb scenic view. Two W.B.F.P.,full basement. garage, many other features. $84,900.00.

RUTlAND :.... Aacre shady 1m to build your dream home on.
, .Eiedric available. $2,500.00.

LErART- MANUAL ROAD - Mobile home sfte, one acre
landscaped for mobile home or building srte A steal al
$3,500.00.

RUTlAND- Nice Ranch wrth a large lot that~ level. Rear
dedi, 011e car garage, vinyl siding, 3 bedrooms, 1~ baths,
huge prlllfy kttchen. Two heat sources. $37,!)00.00.
'

IIDDLEPORT- 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms. bath, carpet, F.
. A.N.G. hell. recently remodeled and in good condrtlon.
$47.000.00.

·POIEIOY- 2 or 3 UnftApartmentBida. in Pomeroy, needs
SG111t tePiir. Lotlled on a good stteel. PRICED TO SEtW
$16.900.00.
.
.

· LMGIYII.l£ .- IJO ACil FAll- Fr••• to home. Bern,
4 bedrooms, ohle' ..Ill llome in llod condi·
lion. ASMING 157,500.00.

cell•. ••

HAIIISOIIVILLE- Approx. 41; acres of beautiful nice lay·
ina hay field now Homesle Iller. Eledric avllillllle, lot of
roed lrontaae. $7,500.00.

liiiiUPtll- Bar &amp; Reltlullllt tlr sele. Bu~cln.t_llld Ill

HEIIRY E. CULAIID •."................................... .".192-6111

IQIIipnlent compla tnd in operation. ASK FOR DETAILS!

JEAII TIIJIIILL............................................MI-2110

..

DO.mE TUII~R ................ ,...........................19=·

JO HILL.........................................................

.

_,

OffiCE ............................... ,roo.:.................~.....
Pn,llty. lilt wllli
Nit

..

11,.

.

~.

j

....... ,..;.;._.;__ _ _....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _~..:..-------··----- ..· · - , - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - ............... 4?

dr••·

304-675-1167.

'

1979 Hondo XI.IOO. 0900.00.
304-875-~16~ .

72

Tn~cks for Sale

11fM Chov.

810, LWB. 48.000

Motors for Sail!

mi, nlcolt:IIIH; 1184 Nlun.
auto, therpl/ e3. 4.1. 1881

Ford \lon/13991; 1814 Chov.
v../.1195: 1982Chov. 3/U.
Sllorp/13391; 1879Chov. ~/4

Boats and

76

·•

Motors. Hwy . 160 N . Call
114-4-46-1886, or 814-446-

Boll 8oot-19871M1dtu 18'5"
with Mtra~ry 31 f1J motarwlth
ppw• trim end ..tool injection.
Mercury Trolling motor. Shor•
llnetnUer plus mOr• AR in good
condition. Call814-992-2770.

1"982 D..tun King C.b. '"to
IPPreci•e. ted w/•tv• .tripe&amp;
low mi. Price-below whole .. le.

BOAT REPAIR ." Mer111ry M•·
crul11r. Speci•11•t bctory
tr.W,ed. Mobile Service. Precttion Moble M•ln• a..ed .t

ton/ e199&amp;; 1180 Chav. 6 cyL
tuto, P.S.It179&amp;. B &amp; D

8189.

Coil 614-44.. 7076.

Two 19 72 D.. ton pick- ups. 4
c:vl., 4 spd., for both/t400. Call

304-67&amp;-1812.

1988 Chewy Doot.,- Silver•do.
1t.p. Loaded. e15. 000. Cell

6.14-215-1475.

Ollllpollo hat Cklb. Cell e1426.. 1979.

Two 24 ft., pontoon bolla. 36
horu powr. Johnson ' Motor/ $2, 000. Ofle tar e2,500.
Cell 814-387-0447; or 814-

367-0481.

76

73

&amp; Accessories

Yens 8o 4 W.O.

For ..le: 1987 Ch~~Vy full tile
corwenion 'tlln. 5 liter V8. all
power equipment

color TV.

videp c••ett• plarer. etectrle
fold-down couch. front end rew
AC/he ... low mil,.. Mint condition t18, 900. Call 814-4467231 efter 6pm.
Step wn for •le. cheap. 1-one
cond~lon.

Coli 814-388-8180.

1987 Chw. Am•iC*l RoN
Corwenlon. 15.000 mi.. like

now. 1991 Chov. l'lockwood

Auto Parts

8UOQE1 TRANSMISSION·

Uaed 6 rebu lit •II typel.
Warranty-30 d.,.s. Prices •99&amp;
up . U1ed • ubult torgue
convert... st•ndlrd clutch•.
Preuure pl ..... • eve ;o~nt••n
types. BUvlna tran•mi11ion1 for
Partl-· Call 814-379-2220 or

304-878-1769.

611. 4 in.. by 7 11..

10 in. utility

treilw. lin. by 21n, steelefr•m•
IUip8niiOn S. I igh·

With

••10271. cell 614-44.. 4928.

Conwnlon. EKC. cand. c.ll

814-441-2142.

198&amp; Ford Aeroat., XLT. rtereo
•nd AC front .nd beck, Comput·
oriMd trip syltlm. loadecl C..l

79 Motors Homes ·
&amp; Campers

814-912·7814.

11172. 27ft. Col... fifth w~

1982 Ford Econolille Cuttom
v.,, Bl.ck With ..,., •nd
m•roon striping_. Loaded.

CoH 114-981-3360 "' 81498f.3311.

16800. 114-8411-3041.

1913 Sub.U IUtlon Wagon. 4
wheel drtve. •uto. tilt, •ir.
AM· FM . Iot• moreectrat, needl

point. 12.376 00. 304-671·
8718.

CM'IP•· V.y good condition

Sflt contained Prowl• 24Y2

ft.
air cond. •wnlnG .. ..,. I,

304-175-1718.

1980 Sfl•t• Ultt• C.mp•, lir.

he••·

he•. wit•
a•·etec
refrigerator., telf cont•lned.
1or...td room, •2. 9915.00. Can

'78 Joop CJ7. 3 apood. V·8, 304-875-4411.
aood oond. 02.000.00. 304175-1388.
1978 Chovy
SH-3821.

c... om .... l!i&gt;od 154 M'-A.
MA,.....,,
.........AndiM
~

cond, t3.300.00. Phone 304-

CAll Tol fr•

· POMEROY - AbeautHui modern kitchen compliments this 3
bedroom home. Full basement, n- back dedi, lms of close! space. Nice woodwork! PRICE REDUCED! $41,900.00.

IIDDLEPOJf- IOOD i.OCATIOII- Oh!er home with a .
nice • ureae and w01ksh0p in llod condition. PRICE TO
SELl! S19,900.00.
. '

1184 Y•meh• Ventute1200cc.
fuH
like rww or ti'He tor
Chary 8-10 truc11 ..u•l v•luft.

1617.11. 60 lost
.......... ~WYUS04

STARCHER RD. - POMEROY- 641\acres, vacant ground,
aas and electric available. Spiinalor development. CALL FOR
DETAILS! REDUCED PRICE $48,000.00.
.

IIDDUPORT - Excellent Neiahborhood. 2 bedroom w~h
possible 3rd. Remodeled recently. Nice lot and ciDSetoever·
ythina. ASK FOR DETAILS. $32.000.00:
·

- - · Coli. ,614-441-

110,100.00. 304-17.. SIZO.

SYRACUSE -Quality shows in lhis 3 bedroom ranch home.
1 bllh, beaut~ul family room, nice ~ftchen wfth all appli·
ances induding dislnvasher, washer &amp; dryer. Large yard
wth chain link fence. New wood storage building.
$45,000.00.

aood

ACROSS

1987 Oodao LE pM-111' von,
30.000 mllat·. •lo•ded.

•

IAIIGSYILLE - 6.35 acre Country E5tlte - Bern, sheds, .
two ponds. and a nice 1~ story home in
repair. Electric
heat plus a .woodburner lor cheap hest $43,900.00.

-···~_

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS... CALLAN
EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON.

MIDDLEPORT- THIRD STREET- Totally remodeled 2·3
bedroom, one floor home. Beautiful condftion. Carpet throu·
gliout. New wiring. vinyl siding. 1 car garage, insulated and
ail slorms. $29.900.00.

SYRACUSE - RUSTIC HILlS - A home to be proud of! 3
bedroom Ranch, 1~ blllhs. family room, formal dining room,
garagl. Electric B.B. hell, fireplace, on a 112'x99' lol. Very
Nice. REDUCED.TO $39.500.00. ·

'I

5.6 ACRES located below Gallipolis Dam. along Hazel Ridge
Rd. $4.900. {Can purchase on land contract.) $1,500.00
down, 10% inlerest. pay"$100.00 o•r mnnth
NEW LISTING- 2 BR RANCH sftuation on~ acre. Hardiop
road. Hannan Trace School District. $26,500..
IN TOKYO a 833 sq. ft. condom inium costs $502,330.00; IN
GALLIPOLIS you can purchase a 1,012 sq. ft. condominium
for $65,000.00!! We have 2 left: 2 bedrm., 2 bath, utility rm ..
living/dining rooms, modern kitchen, heat pump, carport, ali
the comforts of home.... Call lor a tour!!

RUTlAND- Lar~e lot wtth 186 feet ~ontage on S.R.l24.
living quarters w1th 3 bedrooms 1n back of large bus1ness
buildinl'. Buy with stock and fixtures or wtthout. CALL FOR
MORE DETAILS!!
·
.

· PORTlAND ROAD- 2.15 acres and Ranch Home with 1850
sq. ft. of living space. Heat pump, wtth central air, 7 rooms,
dishwasher, range and refrigerator. l.arge living room. family
room, fireplace. $59,500.00.

,,

purchase on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% Interest. pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs.
.

BRADBURY- Close in, bul out of town.Gatden area. 3bed·
rooms, oulbuilding. front &amp;rear porches and some new car·
peting. Partly new roof. Owner will sell on Land Contract wfth
small down payment. $20,000.00.

POIEROY- 24'x60' Trailer wlh 3 bedrooms; 24'120' family room added on, carpel, 16'xll' porch and Saiellrte Dish.
ASKING $51,900.00.
.
.

, cOmet. 37,000mi..

J

iii....... ~

.. , _ """'

-·-~~·

......

~...

.......... ~ · · - -

- - ...1""

•

l

,' 1 Perlume at1ained
from nowers
6 "Aladdin and
His_ ..
10 Lower; moderate
14 Kettledrum
19 Australian
parrots
21 " Dona - and Her
Two Husbands"
22 Libra's birthstone
23 Prelentlous home
24 Studio
26 Su.,.,_
28 StrtktiS out
29 Kin to a beret

3osow

32 Former Russian
rulers

33 "Fortune - "·,
.. 34 Chapeau
" ·•
35 Rl- In Germany

37 Peruse
39 Abstract being
40 Stupid fellow
41 Chickens
42 Thick slice
44 Intimate
48 Wander
4.7 Sailors: colloq.
48 Emerald Isle
50 Tease
52 Part ot RBI
53 College deg.
55 Pack away
57 UggamsiD
58 Run easily
59 Dispatch
60 .. _ 109"
62 Eye: poetic
64 Smoke and tog
66 Concerning
68 Down: prefix
69 Church part
70 Pee - Herman
71 Flesh
73 Wipes out
75 Empower
77 Give fOOd 1o
78 Vermont clly
80 Fine pottery
81 Fast-flying plane
82Cieveland
Stadium
players
84 Stoves
86 Penetrates

87 Make happy
. 89' Native metal
92 Europes,n herring
95 Cries
·
98 "A - lo Live"
99 Five cents
101 Stirs up
. 103 Wild plum
104 Individual
106

U~derground

excavation

106 Macon's si.
107'Aiternatlve word
t08 Stumble
110 Sun. talk
111 " - arelhe
World"'
112 Wampum
113 Need
:115 Tantalum symbol
117 Undergarment
119 Tellurium symbol
120 "The - Jar"
121 Busch Memorial
Stadium players
124 Producer Norman

126 Narrow, flat
'' board ·
127 "- on Enlebbe"
12'a Courteous
130 Winter vehicle
132 Belabor
• .133 "William Overture"

'
134 Choose
135 Youngsters
137 Wash cycle
t39 Prlesrs veslmen!
140 River in Russia
141 Rent
,
143 Tavern SIOCk
145 Macaw
146 Generous
148 Despoiled
150 More In want
152 Power
153 Devaslalion
154 Goddeos of
discord
156 He was
Remington
Steele
157 Kind of fabric
158 "A Farewell to
"
159 Pintail duck
160 Birds' homes

DOWN
1 Winged
2 Sums
3 Shake with !ear
4Belll
5 Former

Portuguese
money of account

6 Falana ID
7 High mountain
8 "Beetle Bailey"
creator

9 Roll-call response

10 Wild hogs
11 Egyptian sscred
bull
12 Hindu cyfl'!bal
13 " - Cid"
14 ·.. A - ot Two
Cities' '

15 Sudsy brew
16 Swimmers
17 " - Eleven"
18 Remains at ease ·

20
23
25
27

Prophet •
Shut up
Sand bar
One who mars
properly
28 Roy Rogers' wile
31 Arrow
: 33 "Lonesome - "

36
38
40
41
43
45
46
47

Hearing organs
Watch lace
Sleep lightly
Workman
Small amounts
Habituat&lt;!d
Matures
Tommy of
Broadway
49 Alaskan cily
51 -Mine veins

52
53
54
56

Feel indignanl at
Explosive
Region
Becoming more
evil

59 Slivers
60 Point ot hammer
61 Danson and

Koppel
63 Heavy
bombardmenl,
65 Openings
67 Japan ending
69 'Habrew month
70 Mlnkllke animals

72 Barter

74
76
7_7
79
83

Therefore
Near
Conflagratjons
Goal
condensed
moisture

85 Kindly
86 "- ot Eden"
87 Develop
88 Path
89 S!amp of
approval
Esteem
91 African antelope

90

92 Full-house: abbr.
. 93/Door
94 Urich ID
· 96 Elard
97 Withered
100 Cerium symbol
102 Window frame
pari
105 Liquefy
109 Baker 's products

112 Toll
113 Lament
114 Drink habitually
116 Landed
118 Cronies

120 Fat of whales
121 Hall
122 Public
announcements

123 Take a - a1
{attemp!)
125 Mends
126 Sally
127 Aolual
129 Paradise
131 Lead
132 Men
133 Salver
134 Unlocks
136 Leak !hrough
138 The nQs!rijs
140 Force o nward

141 Slender·
142 Fixed period of
time

144 Check
147 Unit ot energy
148 Animal coal
149 Expire
, 151 Scotttsh river
153 Sun god
155 Selenium symbol

�.

Pomarov-Midcbpon-GIIIIpolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Ve.

Paga 0-8 Sunday Timet-Sentinlll

June 18, 1989

Fannen have option8 ·bealuse of delayed. plantings
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI). Federal leedgraln programs
have several options lor farmers
who delayed plandng because or
weather.
Allan Lines, agricultural econ·
omlst at Ohio State University,
says to examine them closely.
Farmers could file lor disaster

.

A Strange
day of golf

u!oe this year and the farmer
receives a guaranreed payment
baae on historiCal yields lor that
land.
Farmers may also swttch corn
program acreage to sorghum
Without penalty, but the avalia·
bility of seed and market should
be considered first, Lines says.

credit with the ASCS which
allows their program acreage to
be counted as "planted" for
historical record purposes. Tben
they can plant another crop on
that disaster acreage. ·
Another option Is G-92. Unplanted program acreage can be
counted as being In conservatlon

Ohio Lottery
PICK-3 006
PICK-4 3954
Lotto

Tonight, a 40 percent chance of
ls11owers early, otherwise partly
cloudy. Lows &amp;0 to 65 and east
Wind 5 to 10 mph. Tuesday, partly
cloudy, with a 30 percent chance
of afternoon showers. Highs 80 to
85.

17, 26, 32,
33,43,44

Sports on 4

Kicker

417280

•
•
Vol.40, No.31
Copyrl!!htod 1989

Farm Flashes
BY EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
COUNTY EXTENSION. AGENT
AGRICULTURE &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS - June Is Dairy
Month.
In a recent proclamation, Gov.
Richard Celeste cited Ohio's
dairy Industry for Its contribution to tbe state's economy and
national reputation. The dairy
Industry makes the largest con·
trlbutlon to the gross farm
Income In Gallla County annually. It Is estimated that Gallla
County dairies produce more
than 30,000,&lt;nl pounds of milk
annually. That's nearly 3.5 mil·
lion gallons.
The state proclamation further
recognizes milk as "one of
nature's nearly perfect (oods.''
and states "the month of June Is
set aside to pay tribute to the
dairy farmers of Ohio, whose
dally work and dedication contribute significantly to the health
and prosperity of many
Ohioans." A special thanks to the

New corporal punishment bill tried in Senate

a Sl eaall prbe from llle Ohio Valley l'lllllllblal
Co. Leave y..r 111110e,
aad lelepllolle
number ·wltb ~ card or Idler. No lelephone
ealll wiD be aeeep&amp;ed. All eoalest enlrlea allould
be taned Into lbe newapape~ olllce bJ' 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In ,eaae 01 a tie, &amp;be wilmer will be ·
choeee bJ' loUery. Next week, a Melp Co1111ty
lann will be featured bJ' the Melp So'l and Water
Co~~~~ervallon District.

ad._.

MYSTERY FARM - Thill week's mylltery
lann, leatured by the Galla SoU ud Water
CoDMnaiiDn Dlslrlcl, Ill located Hmewbere In
Galla County. Individual• wlabln1 to participate
Ia lbe weekly coolest may do so by ·pUDIIbe
lann'• owner. Just mall, or drop off. your ..-a to
tlie Galllpel• Dally Tribune, w Thlnl Ave.,
Galllpollll, Ohio, tH31, or the Dally Seallnel, 111
Court S&amp;., Pomeroy, Ohio, 4$788,ud you may win

PHONE 446-0699

held at the Gallia County Exten·
slon Office on Thursday evening,
June 22 at 8 p.m.
This Will give local producers a
chance to see the animals without the drive. Producers that are
Interested in a purchase can then
either drive to the sale or
telephone a bid. This Is a new
wrinkle that we wanted to try out.
Field work being at a standstm, now Is the time to catch up
on all of those animal health
projects. I have bad reports of
animals being lost becauseoltbe
lack of some of tile baste
vaccination programs. One such
vaccination tbatl consider essential In GalUa County Is the
"Ciostridlal-7-Way".
This vaccine Is used for the
prevention ol blackleg, malig·
nanI' edema, enterotoremla, ect.
Check with your veterinarian for
specific and Instructions and
help In developing an animal
health program for your farm.

360 SECOND AVE.
· GAWPOUS, OHIO

are being raised, normally a
report by June 20 will protectl989
base history . If there are no
bases and one of the crops are
being Mised. reports will glvea
history to establish a base In th~
future.
"There could be a long line of
farmers reporting crops.on June
20.1ftheofficedoesnothavelime
.to take all certifications on that
dale. Individuals will be permit· .
ted to sign a register and
appointments will be set up for
their certification."

Com or beans?

1
I
I
I .
I
I

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Which
crop is best - corn or soybeans?
Allan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio State University,
says the decision to plant corn or
soybeans in rain-soaked Ohio this
year depends on timing, location
and government programs.
Before June 1, the advice was
to plant corn. After June 15.
planting soybeans will be more
profitable.

••••••
We Now
llavt
la!placil

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SUNDAY RACING. BEGINNING JUNE t8, 1989
Now Tri-State's Greyhounds will drive for the finish line on Sunday
afternoons in 14 action-filled unpredictable races. Doors open at noon;
1st race is at 1:30. Buffet-style brunch served each Sunday.
'

OVER

40 NEW '89 BUICKS IN STOCK!

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NIW PERFORMANCE SCHIDULE:
Sunday-1130P.M.Matlnee(14racol) ·
Clo11d Monday a Tue~day
Wellnuday- 1taG jt.M. Matlnoo a 7130 P.M.
Th••day-7r30P.M.
Prl. a Sat.- ,,., ..... Matlnoo a 7r30 P.M~ ·

er. ._bit 47 Olf 1-64

....... (*) 77..1110
•

South, Midwest and New England·, the report said.
The skinheads are turning to
high schools for new members.
with recruiting efforts reported
at Schools In Phoenl ••
• Orlando,
~.
Austin
and
Houston.
Fla.' Wa w
Texas. Orange County, N.Y..
McKeesport Pa .. and eastern
Oregon, the ADL said.
"Skinheads assaulting minor·
lty students, scrawling racist
graffiti on school lockers, walls
and doors, shouting racial
epithets and distributing racist
flyers Polso n the total school
a ttrtosphere , " · sa ld An II·
Defamation League National
Chairman Burton Levinso~t.
The report said students.
teachers and administrators arrlvedatOakRidgeHighSclloolln
Orlando earlier this month to find
twoflagsralsedabovetheschool.
one procla tming. ''White
Power." the other bearing th~
lnslgniaoftheAmerlcanFront,a

Tilt, cruise, buckttstOts, rear defogger, power windows, AM-FM lterea, low milts.

TRJ-ITATE GREYHOUND RACING PARK ANNOUNCES

NEW YORK (UPI) - NeoNazl skinhead groups are prolif·
eratlng across the country. recruiting high school students and
arming their members with
more dangerous weapons. ineluding semtautomallc rifles, It
was reported Saturday.
The Anti-Defamation League
of B'nal B'rith said skinhead
groups that formed in the West
are organizing chapters in many
parts of the country, particularly
In the Southeast.
Skinhead gangs , whose
!Demt~:rs eave·thelr heads and
wear Nazi Insignia. operate In as
manyas31statesand llaveabout
3.000members, theADLsaid ina
~pedal report, "Skinheads
Target the Schools."
That is a dramatic Increase
from last October. when the ADL
reported In a similar study that ·
skinhead groups were operating
In 21 states with 2,000 members.
While still concentrated in
Western stales. there has been a
rapid rise in skinhead acllvlty

Disrupting school activities is defined as
entering a classroom without permission, making
noise that hinders classroom Instruction. preventing a pupU from attending classes or enticing a
pupil away from classes.
The Senate will begin quick hearings on a bill
that passed the House last week extending the
"certificate of need" program for two more
years.
The certificate of need program enables the
Ohio Department of Health to regulate the
creation of bed space or the purchase of expensive
equipment by hospitals and nursing homes. II is
aimed at eliminating duplication of services in the
same areas of the stale.
.
The House Education Committee will meet
Tuesday evening to receive from subcommittee a
Senate-passed education reform bill. Included In
the bill Is a controverSial amendment permitting
certain religious activities in the schools.

Nine die
on Ohio
highways

San Francisco skinhead group.
Portable classrooms were spraypainted with swastikas.
'
The report listed other exam·
pies. Including one In which a
·13-year-old skinhead threatened
a teacher at Rosemont Junior
High SchpoUn Glendale, Calif.,
with a loaded .357 Magnum after
the teacher refused to allow him ·
to wear a white power t-shlrt.
Three months later at the same
school slogans such as "No
Jews" and "Happy Birthday
· Hitler" appearea on do-ors and
swastlkas were scratched on
student lockers and the office
doors ol Jewish teachers, the
report said.
In Idallo and Oregon.~ The
Nationallst99clallst Vanguard. a
neo-Nazl group, took the names
of student leaders. honqr 'r olf
members and star athletes from
local newspaper~ and sent them
a skinhead promotional
newsletter.
In Waco High School in Texas,

:~~~~~e~e;~~:r·.~~~~p~~~n:~! r:.~::~~~'::t~~!~~:!~o~:~~~~

I

MO:it~~~~:~o-s ~

their children.''
Another version, sponsored by Rep. Judy
Sheerer, D-Shaker Heights, is a bout to emerge
from the House Children and Youth Committee,
perhaps Tuesday.
That bill permits corporal punishment as long
as It Is not abusive. Parents could exempt their
children, and if physical harm were done to a
child. a teacher could face court action on a child
abuse charge.
·
The other disciplinary bill being voted In the
Senate Tuesday permits school superintendents
to extend suspensions and expulsions of students
Into the folloWing school year.
Under current law , a suspension is void If the
school year expires,
'
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Eugene Watts.
R-Columbus. also prohibits disrupting school
activities and loitering or prowling on or near
school property, all under penalty of a $100 fine.

Skinheads on rise,
better armed: report

..

GALLIPOLIS
David
McKenzie of the Gallia County
ASCS Office announced that
Tuesday. June 20, is the final date
for Individuals .to report their
acreage.
McKenzie said there were
various reasons why a report
should be filed .
Among them: "If your farm is
signed In the 1989 corn or wheat
program. a report must be flied
by June ro. This is true. regardless if crops are planted or not
planted.
"If your farm has a wheal or
~rn base and none of the crops

Senate President Sianley Aronoff, RCinclnnati, said senators are hoping to allocate
$150 million of a $290 million revenue windfall to
education, with prtmary and secondary receiving
·
two-thirds and higher education one-third.
Aronoff said $45 million of the new money would
be added to an existing $45 million appropriation
to create an education Improvement fund sought
by Gov. Richard Celeste.
The money would be spent on such things as a
management Information system to compare
schools throughoutQhio, early childhood development and teacher Incentives.
Schafrath's bill outlawing corporal punishment
cleared the Senate last year, only to be bottled up
, In the House by teacher opposition.
He said the discipline task force approach
"allows for !both community Involvement and
decision. Parents would have the opportunity to
voice their opinions concerning the dlselpllning of

Active recruiting at O.U

June 20 deadline for
reporting farm acreage
J

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Senate will vote this
week on a new version of legislation relating_ to
corporal punishment. or paddling, in school
classrooms.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Richard Schafratb,
R·Loudonvllle, gives local school boards the right
to ret at n or ban corpora I punlshmen t based on a
local task force report on discipline.
Also up for a Tuesday floor vote In the Senate is
a related bill giving school superintendents
addidonal powers to curb unruly activities on
scllool grounds.
· ·
The House is toreconveneTuesdayatl p.m. and .
the Senate one-half hour later.
Senate and House conferees will continue work
behind closed doors on the $26.6 billion budget.
Rep. William Hlnlg, D-New Philadelphia,
chairman, said the six-member ·panel made good
progress last week and hopes to have a report
ready by Friday for all legislators to study over
next weekend.

WE'RE VACATION SPECIALISTS
CALL US TODAY AND
ASK HOW YOU CAN SAVE '50.00 ...

Dairy Mo~th is observed
Gallia County Industry.
A reminder of the June ro
deadline for certifying planted
acres to the local ASCS Office.
Some special provisions are
being set up this year lo~ farmers
to go to the ASCS Olllce and sign
a register and then return later to
make the final report.
This Is an attempt to keep
people from waiting In long lines
and . to address the problem ol
planting not being completed.
Farmers should be getting a card·
with the details. II you have
questions, call the ASCS Office at
446·8686.
A reminder or tbe Gallia
County Cattlemen's Association
Roundup this Friday, June 23, 7 ·
p.m. at the Bob Evans Shelterhouse. A fun evening Is being
planned. Call late reservations
Immediately (446-7007).
Something new! A special
showing of the video tape ol
"Boars" In the June 24 Performance Tested Boar Sale will be

1 S8cti0n. 10 Pages 25 Ca·n ts
A Multim~ialnc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday. June 19. 1989

(614) 446-2212

CHURCH DEDICATION SET - The Rullattd
Church of God · will be dedicated In special
services to be held al2 p.m. Sunday wit" the Rev.
Bennie S. Triplett as guest speaker" The
congregation bas been worshiping In the new
brick structure for aeveral months although the

front exterior was only recently completed. The
church has a large sanctuary along with
numerous Sunday school rooms, a pastor's study,
and a spacious fellowslilp hall In the basement.
The Rev. Raymond G. Cox, pastor, Invites the
public to attend the dedication service.

Calm marks week-old wildcat strikes

was doing "to help the white
CHARLESTON, w .va'. (UPI)
schoolchildren of America. "
,... Massive wildcat coal strikes,
The ADL said there have been staged by miners protesting
scattered attempts to recruit
students on college campuses, Virginia's handling of union civil
a bitters battle
1 1es 1n disobedience
particularly lllree un1verst
p
cin lG
d
Ohl
th Ohl St I U i
It
w1th !Its ton oa roup, un ay
o- e
o a e n vers y. entered a second week in relative
Ohio University and the Univer- calm.
sity of Cincinnati.
A stale police spokesman at the.
The college recruiting efforts South Charleston, W.Va .. head·
have met with little success, quarters said the weekend was
however. It said.
quiet, with no calls for help from
Thereportalsosaldthegroups either coal company managers
are arming themselves with
w k
more dangerous weapons, some or striking United Mine or ers.
d b 0 th
The lull gave southern West
f th
o
em sup 11 e
Y
er rae 1s 1 Virginia troopers a needed
organizations. such as the Aryan break, after answering nearly 30
Nations.
· com,plaints late last week.
"Heretofore the typical skin·
The pollee, however. remain
head instrument of assault has on 24 _hour alert.
been a baseball bat, a knife or a
"Everything has been pretty
steel-toed Doc Marten boot." the
ld E
lh
lml
quiet over the weekend." a po 11ce
report sa · " ven se pr · spokesman said Sunday. " There
live weapons in the hands of
Is nothing at all to report."
skinheads have been shown to he
Most mines In West VIrginia
capable of murdering innocent
normally close for the weekends,
victims.
and miners manning the picket

four states.
.
b
L 000 l ffllners
a Sent The walkouts flared in sym·
pathy with 2.000 miners staging a
against Pittston in ·west
f rom tvOrk MOndaY strike
According to a report from the
Public Affairs Deparment of the
Southern Ohio Coal Company In
Lancaster. workers from lbe
midnight and day shifts did not
show up for work today at the
Meigs County Mines.
According to the report, there
baa been no communication as to
why the workers did not show up
butlt was stated tllal there are no
on-goillg disputes between the
company and Its workers or with
Pittston.
d t 1 k
lines also appeare Q a e a
break.
Monday marks the beginning
ofthesecondweekforthewlldcat
walkouts that began a week ago
and eventually engulfed more
than 11,000 UMW members In

Area news brief:s-.-------------,
Hit skips investigated in Meigs
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department Is Investigating
separate Incidents ol a hit skip accident and a breaking and
entering.
Charles Danny Bissen. :14. Route 1; Long Bottom, reported
that on Thursday evening he was Involved In a hit skip accident
on Salser Road and Bowmans's Run. According to the report, a
velllcle, tra.veling at a lligh rate of speed, pulled out of Salser
Road onto Bowman's Run Road and into the path or Bissell's
1986 Chevy truck. Bissell applied the brakes but the other
vehicle which. st~uck his truck, continued on County Road 29
towards Basban Road. There were no Injuries.
Early Saturday morning deputies were called to a residence
above Portland for a possible attempted breaking and entering.
Neighbors heard a vehiCle and observed II maktna several
passes by the -r esidence and stopping at !he private driveway on
the last trip. When deputies arrtved, pry markl were found on
the door, but it was unclear lflbernarka were lresll marks. The
owner of tbe residence was reported to be visiting in East
Liverpool.·

Discharges, admissions listed
OH.

By United Press International
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
Monday at least nine people,
including one motorcyclist and
one pedestrian. were killed in
Ohio traffic accidents this past
weekend.
The count showed one death
Friday night. five Saturday and
I hree Sunday .
Patrol officials said the motorcycle victim was not wearing a
helmet and none of the seven auto
victims was wearing a seat bell.
The pedestrian. struck Saturday night on a Portage County
road, was not immediately
Identified.
VIctims included:

Saturday admissions at Veterans Memortal Hospital were
Tl!omas Turner, Pomeroy; Michael Neutzllng, Pomeroy; Susie
Blevins, Lanpville; Frank King, Pomeroy; and Fannie
Maynard, Racine.
Saturday dlscharres were Robert Burdine, Harland Aleshire,

Russell Cullums, and Raymond Grate.
There were no Sunday admissions or discharges.

EMS reports 10 weekend runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to ten calls over the weekend.
Saturday calls Included the Racine unit at 11:08, which
responded to an auuto accident on Route 338 where Herb Rose
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 11: 15 a.m. the Syracuse unit went to Route 338 lor Tim
Wales and sieve Brumfield who were transported to Veterans
Memorial.
.
The Pomeroy squad at 11: 48a.m. went toRoute338onanauto
accident In which Charles Llevlng, Kevin Grady, and Shane
Bumgardner were taken to Veterans Memorial, and at 1:23
p.m. the unit was called to Lincoln Hill lor Grace Eich who was
tak~n to Veterans Memorial.
At 4:33 p.m. the Rutland squad was called to Dye Road for
Lucille Lambert who transported to Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday', all~: 35 a.m. the Racine unit went to Route 6811or
Martha Baney who was taken to Camden Clark Me~ortal
Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va. and at 12:54 p.m. the unit
responded to a call on Route 325 in wblcll Eleanor Davis was
transported to Holzer.
At 8:22 p.m. the Middleport unit went to General Hartinger
Park lor Brandon Allensworth who was taken to Veterans
Memorial, and at 10: 39 p.m. the unit and the Middleport Fire
Department were calll;d to North Second onn a structure lire.

.

.

'

VIrginia and VIrginia. More than
2,500 VIrginia miners have been
arrested s.lnce the walkout began
April 5.
In Pennsylvania, an estimated
1,600 workers walked off the job
Friday at Rochester and Pitts·
burgh Coal Co.. the stale's
largest producer, spokesman
Henry Waneck said Sunday. The
coal company walled for mid·
night Sunday, the next regular
workday, to see If workers would
remain off the job in sympathy
for Pittston miners. Waneck
said.
"It's becoming selfdefeating." Waneck said of the
strike. "It drives our costs up. We
laid off 1,100 . people In 1988
because of our competitive coal
market.
"What's happening now Is just
compounding our problem of
trying to maintain stability of
supply," he said: "We're very
(See CALM, page 3)

Friday Nl ght
Wellsville: Leonard W. Rawson. 16. Toronto, killed when his
car crashed into. trees along a
Columbiana County road.
Saturday
Mt. Gilead: Jason A. Saladonis. 19, Bay VIllage. killed when
his car collided with another on
Interstate 71 north of Mt. Gilead
In Morrow County.
Warren: Michael E. Bradley,
21. Warren, killed when hi s
motorcycle crashed on Ohio
Route 46 In Trumbull County.
McArthur: Gerald W. Lammey, 48, Columbus, killed when
his car collided with a truck on
Ohio Route 93 in Vlnto.n County.
Brunswick: Stephen H. Keck,
17. Brunswick. killed Ina two-car
accident on a Brunswick street.
Ravenna: male pedestrian
killed when hit by a vehicle as he
walked on Ohio Route 59 In
Portage County.
Sundllf
Ashtabula: Mark D. Emus, 19 •
Conneaut. killed when his car hit
a pole along an Aslhabula Coun.ty·
road.
Sandusky: Aletha M . Handley.
78, Elyrta, killed In a two-ciu-_
crash on U.S. 6 In Erie County.
Attica : one killed in an acct."
dent on Ohio Route 4 In Seneca
County.

Middleport financial report
released by clerk-treasurer
Middleport village had a total
or $232.975.58 In alllunds at the
end ol May, according to the
report of Clerk-Treasu!'E'r Jon
Buck.
Receipts into all funds during
the month were $110,962.92 With
disbursements or $94,897.96.
In the general lund there was a
balance ol $42,442.!Ml with receipts ol $46,786.91 and disburse·

ments of $15.073.2ti; In the street
maintenance fund the balance
was $658.44, with receipts of
$4,890,78 and disbursements of
$7464.521 In the fire equipment
fund no receipts. disbursements
of $560.34. leaving a deficit In the '
lund ol $4341.04; In the fire truck'
lund a balance of $.'13.ll4.48: In
the lii!Wer escrow fund , a balance
(See MIDDLEPORT, pa~e 3)

Stolen car recovered Sunday
A car stoled In Pomeroy
Saturday night was recovered Ill
Racine early Sunday mOI'IIIIIg,
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Gerald
Rought reported.
The olflcer IBid that a 1971
Chevrolet belonging to Hobart
CundiH, Route 1, Middleport,
was 118rked on Second Street In

Pomeroy near the bowllllll alley
with the keys left Ia 11. AblutlO
p.m 1te diiOOwred that It · was

mlsalna.

It was reeovered In Rlfllllt
vlllate behl'lld t~ lnndl'alllaf'
early lkiiiiiiY mol'tllllg. ·"riii!N
wu no damage to the vehicle.
Rouallt ukl .

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