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                  <text>Pega 1o--The Daily Sentinel

F~y. September 22, 1989;

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Sunday

r------Local news br'iefs-----. Hugo ...
Continued froin page 1
minor. There was no citation.
Miller suffered minor visible ln.jurles , and
Veterans Me.morial Hospital.
'
.

CQntlnued from page l
WliS

taken to

Squads have 5 Thursday calls
. Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports that five
calls for assislance were answered on Thursday by various
units throughout the county.
·
Thursday at 7:17a.m., Middleport went to Shady Cove Road
for Julie Engle who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 2:40p.m. went to Sycamore St. for Nicole Siek
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Rutland Fire Department at 3: 29 p.m. transported
Richard Martin al\d. Mike Southern from an auto accident on
Hysell Run to Holzer Medical Center.
. At 7:12p.m . , Rutland Fire Department was called to an auto
accident at the Intersection of County Roads 8 and 10. Jack
Miller was flown from the scene by Lifefllght.
Middleport at 8: 52 p.m. went to North Second Ave. for
Kenneth Barnett who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

.Man arrested on charges
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports the arrest of
60-year·old Elza Bartlmus, Route 1, Reedsv1lle, on warrants
charging trespass and telephone harassment.
·
Bartlmus posted bond.for appearance In Meigs County Court.

Warrant issued for mans arrest

:

:

An order for the arrest of Mar.tln L. Searles has been flied In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court, after Searles falled to
appear at the Meigs County Jail on Sept.15 tobeglna previously
Imposed sentence.
The State's case against Michael Todd Musser has been
dismissed.
In other court matters, Bancohio National Bank has been
awarded judgment of $6,949.72 fi·om William K Cogar·.
David Stewart and Nancy S't ewart have been aw'a rded
judgment of $1,163.87 from Michael O'Bryant and Marty
O'Bryant.
.
Judgment has been ordered for the defendants In the case of
Tamara Hawley, a minor, by her 'n ext best friend , Linda
Hawley, against Jeffrey Acree, et al.
The cases of Trina T. Lee against Lawrence R. Lee Jr .• and a
reciprocal action for child support by the West Virginia
Department of Human Services againsi ·Kermlt Buzzard have
been assigned to Meigs Probate-Juvenile Judge Robert Buck.
Finally. Lila Van Meter has been appointed a special deputy
clerk of courts in Meigs County.

_ __.;._Meigs. announcements----Plan reception
A reception will be held Satur·
day, Sep.t. 23, at the Chester .
Methodist Church, from 2 to 4
p.m., for Esther Smith. vlci&gt;--st·
ate councilor of the Daughters of

America Lodge in Ohio. Smith
was installed to the office at a
state session In Mansfield in
August. Members of all baugh·
ters of America lodges .a re
welcome at the reception.

---Area deaths--

The weakening was E"xE"pcted to
continue throughout the day,·
, Hugo smashed Into Charleston
just as high tide was coming In
around midnight ," sending water
coursing through streets as tar as
10 m lies· 'inland. The wind
stripped the roofs from numer·
ous. buildings, . Including City .
Hall, the old Slave Market and
thE" Coast Guard's · command .
center. and splintered ancient
oak trees.
"We will be recovering from
thiS for a long, long time," said
Paul Lunsford , director of the
state' s Emergency Prepared· ·
ness Division.
Residents stepped out at dawn
to get the full Impact of Hugo's
devastation .

Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T ......................... .. ...... 42'.4
Ashland Oil ........................ 41 V.
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Charming Shoppes .............. 14 3,4
City Holding Co .. ... .. .. ......... 15'h ·
Federal Mogul... .............. .. .23'.4
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................541.1
Heck's .. ... .... ....... ...... ...... .. ..... 3,4
Key Centurion .................... 1.31/,
I;.ands' End ............... .......... 26%
Limited Inc .......... .... .......... 37%
Multimedia Inc ...... .. ..... .. ..... 99
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ....... .... 14%
Shoney's Inc ................... ... .11%
Wendy's Intl ....................... .5'V.
Worthington Ind ,, ............... 23'1.
(Charming Shoppes reg. qtr.
5.03 dividend pay Oct. 16. Shareholders of record Oct. 2.)

Divoree action filed
. A divorce action has been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Eric Manuel Priddy.
Middleport, against Depra
Priddy. by her next friend,
Nancy Brian, Langsville.
A divorce has been granted
both parties in the case of Donald
Ray Smith against Nola Renee
Smith.
.
Rhonda Stout, Albany, and
Jimmy Stout, Albany, have been
granted a dissolution of their
marriage.
Lisa Ann Mollett and Michael
Alan Mollett have been granted a
dissolution and Lisa Mollett has
been restored to her former
name, Manley.

(

.

.. t•\

,.,,.

A call. from Hugo... .
(Pieroni thai is)...Page B-4

'

•

' And ll't Worth

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel staff
ALBANY - A total of 182
active elflployees of Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Division were laid off their jobs
on Friday. The layoff is the reS1,1lt
of the physical merger on Aug. 19
of the Meigs No . .1 and Raccoon
No. 3 mines. Into the newly

'1,000 .

87 NISSAN MAXIMA

85 MAZDA 626 LX

87 NISSAN PULSAR SE

$7489

mH619

$10,987

89 FORD AEROSTAR VAN
Two-t0111 brown. 1utom1tic cruise con-

sNts, rear •indow defroster.

trol. AII/FII. A/C. tilt stt.-in'

lf971149

1!991151

2 Dr.. rod.

IUiamali~

dow defroster.

RX7

AM/FII , re• win-

$7987

1195i!OG

87 NISSAN STANZA GXE
4 Dr.. Maroon, AII/FII/coss.. cruse co•
trol. till stMrin' pow, windows. auto.
w/overdrNt.

.

$14,495

58987

1197,1136

88 MAZDA MX6

4 Whetl
Dr;,e Truck, lone beet,
AII/FII/cas.. low miles, bfush pard
btdtin•.
11875271

2 Or... 11d. 5 sp•d. A/C, AII/FII/CISS,
re• Window defroster.

$7989.

$10,477

1198 tllO

85 FORD AEROSTAR VAN

4 .Dr., silver, 6 speed, AM/FM. great gaa
m1leage.

Automatic. cruise control, tilt steering.
AM/FM/cass. w/equalizer, int. wipers.

m•• ·laisin-Walnut

85 NISSAN KING CAB TRUCK
5 speed. mud flaps, bumper. $

#951176

$5987

#961086

5677

#951088

ST£Vf IIFFIE
Salos/loaling

CHILD'S PORTION ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ........... S3.32

592·4926

HOURS: 10:00 A.M. to 9:30P.M. Seven Oayo A Wool&lt;

85 MERCURY MARQUIS

4 Dr.. gray. A/C, AM/FM. cruise control.

S6989

#855271

84 FORD THUNDERBIRD
AM/FM/Casa .. A/C. 2 dr., white.

S6787

#941054

88 FORD ESCORT

4 Dr .• maroon. automatic, AM /FM /casa.
rear window defroster.
$

6 l 7· 7 ·

#981100

86 JEEP CHEROKEE

MARIC WlUAMS
Salts/leasing

592-4926

4 Wheel Driva, automatic, V-6. AM/FM,
A/C. luggaga rack, roar window defroa-

. ~~S6133

$10,477

87 FORD F150 TRUCK

198 7 Pontiac Grand Prix .~. S9 50'0
Auto., PB. PS. air, cruise, 24,000 miles, 1 owner, sharp.

'31ack. 4 speed, AM /FM. sildinp roar win·

:~~5176

1984 Chevy Chevette ......... SS29S

.

S7987

87 NISSAN SENTRA

Auto ., PB. PS. air.

4 Dr., red. 6 apeed, A/C, AM/FM/caaa:.
rear window dafroatar.
·

19 77 Ford Courier ................ 569 5
Auto.

,#97111

$5 989

87 NISSAN STANZA

1978 Ford F-1 SO ................ 51295

Managoi
592-4927

V-8, stand.

1978 Olds Toronado ........... 51295
Auto .. air, cru~se, tilt.

4 Dr .• white, A/C, automatic w/ovar·
drive, rear window defroatar. $

8191
&amp;\~e.F2t~£'at~~fM~~!o~!~w~n'!w
defroatar.
·
$
#971108

,119610153

1978 Olds Delta 88 ............ 51295
.

4977

S8989

88 FORD F250 %TON TRUCK

Sliding rear window, AM/FM/CIIIl. A/C,
automatic.

$1O, 987

#886223

87 FORD ESCORT GL
4 Dr., 9ray. 6 apeed,A/C.AM/FMotereo.
roar wendow defroster.

$547 7

#971168

85 FORD ESCORT
Automatic, AM radio. ·rear window defroster.
$

41 9 5

#961097

88 ESCORT GL 4 DR.

• 4 speed. AM/FM
frostar.
#981163

stereo~

roar window do·

55477

85 MAZDA 626 LX

Touring Sedan, automatic, p-er windows, A/C, .cruita control, daisy wipers.
AM/FM/caaa .. Alloy wheals.

$7989

#961070

89 FORD AEROSTAR VAN
I C. automatic, cruise control. AM/FM/coss..
tit ot-~ intermittent wipers. ._r dafrw/wlpen.

$13,497

•#991170

83 FORD F150
4 Wheel Drive, automatic, AM stereo. new
tlraa. bad liner.

$6787

. #831521515

*On Units Prlcecl Owr 1 2000

GIIQWII.. $1000 01 '"' 'IIADI

Where T.he Customer is # 1

Auto., PB, PS. air.

AZDA

SEVERAL CHEAPIES TO CHOOSE FROM

•

Located On Sl Rt. 550. Alhens

.·582·482&amp; ·
OPEN Mon., lues~ Wed., Fri. 8to 8

Thul'lday 8 to 8
I

i

workers the for the inevitable
layoffs, "it's still a heck of a
shock when the announcement Is
made," Tompkins said Friday
afternoon.
''The layoff Is unfortunate, but
necessary to preserve the jobs of
the majority and assure the
long-term viability of the dlv·
lslon," Tompkins said. In a May

Salurday 8 to 5

••••
•
I

RIO GRANDE - Containing
added classroom and office
space for students, faculty and
staff at the University of Rio
Grande, Robert Stewart Wood
Hall was formally dedicated
during a ceremony OJI Saturday.
The ceremony\ Included an
academic procession, along with
dedicatory speeches by Di'. Paul
C. Hayes, president of the unlver·
sity; Miles T. Epling, Immediate
past president of the Rio Grande
Board of Trustees; deans of the .
colleges; and faculty members.
A keynote address was dell·
vered )ly,RobeFtS., Wood-of Canal
.Wincltefter; tot wliom the ·butld·
lng is named.'·WOod ·is executive
vice president arid chief opera!·
lng officer of Bob·Evans Farms
Inc. Wood Is a member of the Rio
Grande Board of Trustees and ·
has served three terms as the
board's president.
The structure, costing $4 mil·
lion to build and opened In the fall
of 1988, houses the university's
. College of Social Studies and
·Ll beral Arts and the Holzer
College of Nursing.

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes-S~!!Hnel Staff
.
G'Al.t1Pbt:Js ..f.·Hm's Department Store Is schedule to open in
mid-October at the Ohio River
Plaza on Eastern Avenue in
GalUpolls, and with it comes
nearly 200 new jobs for area
residents.
Although Ohio's unemploy·
ment rate Is at a 15-year low- 4.8
liercent -In Ga!Ua County It was
6.1 percent In July .
According to Hill's officials,
nearly 1,500 people applied for
the nearly 200 openings as
cashiers, stockers, snack bar
attendants, floor personnel and
various other positions neces·
sary to the everyday operations
of the 60,000 square-foot store.
The majority of hlrlng is
complete, store manager Wayne
Benson said late last week.
Letters are being sent to nearly
1,300 not hired. he added.
For the next few weeks, the
new employees and the apprOJd·
mately 20 set-up managers will
be. checking in merchandise,
ticketing Items and stocking

meeting of the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce, Tamp·
klns ·described the area's coal
Industry as ''stablefor lhenext25
years" with the merging of the
two mines into Mine No. 31.
· The Mine No. 31 name was
derived by combining the
numbers from Raccoon No.3 and
Mine No. 1, Tomp(dns explained.

"Longwall mining Is the most
economical way to produce coal
today In a major underground
mine,'' said Tompkins, and a new
long'wall section will soon be put
Into operation at the Meigs No. 31
rlllne.
According to Tompkins, the
layoff affects 172 active em·
ployees who are represented by

the United Mine Workers of
America, and 10 salaried em·
ployees . In addition, 38 salaried
positions were eliminated earlier
through retirements, resignations and transfers. Tompkins
explained.
"Our UMWA-represented em·
ployees at Meigs No. 1 and
WORKERS, AS)
. (See
'

Japan
will host
.two Rio
branches

DEDICATION PRINCIPALS - Principals gathered for the
dedleatlon of RobertS. Wood Hall at the University of Rio Grande
. were, from left, Dr. Paul C. Hayes, presklent of the university;
Peggy Bradbury Woqd, center, wife of Wood; and Wood, executive
vice president and chief operating officer ol Bob·Evans Farms lac.
'
,.. ·'
"'
''The dedication of this build·
ing is a very fortunate event for
the University of Rio Grande,"
Hayes remarked. "It enhances
the Institution's abiUty to fulfill
Its mission of educating the
people of southeastern Ohio. and
adds considerably· to the natural
beauty of our campus.
''With the expanded classroom
space, which lnNudes a lecture
hall, our stUdents have found a

pleasing, academically-oriented
environment In which to study
and learn," Hayes continued.
"Such an environmentls assiSted
by the placement of a learning
center and an. Instructional media center In the building, so that
·our students can have full oppor·
tunlty to absorb and utilize skUls
necessary to achieve a better
life."
(See SCHOOL, PAGE A-3)

1,500 apply
for 200 jobs

,~""

87 MAZDA 826DO S£

86 NISSAN SENTRA

$7989

1!981154

5 speed, 'A/C. AM/FM/cass.. bucket

MA~DA

A/C. AI/FII/cas.. cruise colllrol, r.:.
window dolrostor and wip.-.

$9477

d75235

87 TOYOTA CAMRY

.85

88 MERCURY TRACER WAGON

Top of tilt li"' Hop, A/C, 5 speed. r.. r
window defroster. AII/FII.

cr_u1se control, A/C, power roof, power
wmdows.

named Meigs Mine No. 31,
according to Jim Tompkins,
vlce-pre.sldent and general man·
ager of the division.
The layoff of the 182 employees
is part of an .effort to improve
productivity and reduce opera!·
ing costs at the mining factnty.
And although efforts were on·
going for some time to prepare

School ·.
accepts
new hall

4 dr .. A/C. p. windows, cruise
control. AMlFM/cus. _w/equaf,
1zer, secunty system.

Touring S.d..,, 5 speed. AM / FM/cass ..

10,Sections, 78 Pag• .
A Multimedia Inc. New's paper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 24, 1989

182 are laid off at Meigs, ·Raccoon mines

1!971143

A·Go1111rout Serving' af H.-bokod Ham Featuring Ow Own Ha-Sau• Sonod with ScaRopod Potatoes, Hot
Buttorod c..n and Hot llutterod loll or Ho-mado Biscuit (with
H-yl, CoHoe, legular or Decaffeinated, Both Freshly Brtwod. lA
s-1 Drink or Hot lea Substitute May Be Ma.l.
·

MosUy sunny . High in lower
60s.

·Puah It
Puil It
Draa It
Jutt Gel II ·Htrt

SUNDAY, SEnEMBER 24, 1989
HOMEBAKED HAM DINNER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S4.79

NEW

B-l

VoL 24
~1989

· ' , r-.
/.\ '- · L
,_, .",I"'

Hospital news

WEEK'S SPECIALS

Along the River ....... .. Bl·S
Business ........ .. .............D-1
Comics· ........ ....... .... Insert
Classlfleds .............. ... D~ 7
Deaths ........................ A-8
Editorial ............. ... ,.... A-2
Sports ...................... C·1-8

tnttS

In lieu of flowers. relatives of
John Mora, Middleport Junior
High School Principal who died
unexpectedly on Friday, re·
quested that donations be made
In Mr: Mora's memory to the
athletic programs of Meigs,
Southern and Eastern Local
School Districts. To fulllll this
request. a central donation point
has been establiShed In Meigs
School District.
·
Anyone wishing to make a '
donation in memory of Mr. Mora,
should send the donation to the
Meigs Junior High Athletic Association, 621 South Secon.d Ave ..
Middleport, 45760 .
Donations will be deposited
into an account, to b·e divided
among the three school districts
according to directions from Mr.
Mora's relatives, reports John
Arnott, of MeigS Junior High.

J••

Inside

•

,_ r ,. \.,._~

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Earl ·
Glass, Middleport ; Adela
Swisher, , Pmeroy; Elizabeth"
. Horak, Pomeroy; Kathleen
McNickle, Racine; Donald w.
Ervin, Racine.
Thursday discharges - Do·
rothy Roush, Audrey Sauters,
Bermce Fry . Goldia Hendren,
Earl Glass.

·Beat of the Bend:
Worrying aboulthings
don't understand ..•B-3
In our town:

No.·:Jl

three brothers. Robert Parsons,
Chesapeake, Va.; Carl Ray Par.
Correction
and
James
sons.
Delaware;
William Joseph Parsons. Sr ..
The golf scramble sponsored
Parsons, Dayton ; three sisters,
44. of Blind Hollow Road, Racine,
by
the Eastern Athletic Boosters
Pauline
Bowling,
Winchester,
died Thursday at the Holzer
will
be held on Sunday only, and
Medical Center following a brief Ky.; Irene Rhodes. Racine , and
not Saturday. Everything else is
Leota Wolfe, Racine. along with
Illness.
the same. ·
·
several
nieces
and
nephews.
Born on Sept. 26, 19.44, at
He was preceded in death by
· Ravenna , he was the son of
his
father, a brother, Paul
Robert McKinley Parsons, and
Parsons,
and an infant sister.
REMEMID
Josephine Sybil Parsons. He was
Lillie
Parsons.
· employed as an eQUipment oper·
WITH ToFLOWERS
.
Funeral services will be held
ator at the Meigs Countyh
..... a b-llluUy
Sunday at 2 p.m at the EWing
d•lpodlu....U
Highway.
arraaiJII'MIII.
can
He was a member of the Mt. Funeral Home. The Rev . James
.,YlaM
·
·Satterfield
will
officiate
and
Moriah Church of God. A Li .S.
•
POMEROY
Army Vietnam veteran, he be· burial will be in the Letart Falls
FLOWER SHOP
longed to the Racine American CemE"tery . Friends may call at
"Th.- P'''"' ~ m~ri.Nl ."i'&lt;lff~ Lm'(' ··
2·to4
and
7
the
funeral
horne
from
Legion Post 602. and was also a
l'h. 9U-20n or 992·5721
member of the Chester Bowhun- to 9 on Saturday .
ters Club.
He is survived by his wife,
Dorothy Parsons, Racine; two
sons, William Joseph Parsons,
FRIDAY, SEnEMBER 22, 1989
Jr .. Randolph Air Force Base.
Texas, and Kelly Joseph Par·
SALMON PAniE PLATE ................................. S3.89
Try Ow O.liciaus Salmon Pattie; S.rvod wtih Savory, Creamy Macasons. Racine; his mother, Jose·
roni &amp; Choese (AI H-mado) and A Hot Buttered loll or HoiiHimadt
phine Sybil Par.sons. Pomeroy;
Biscuit.

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

Page

C-1

OSU loses to USC

Pomeroy's
sesquicentennial
next year

Donations sought
for memorial

William Parsons, Sr.

Stocks

50 cents

RIO GRANDE - The Univer... slty of Rio Grande will open two
bral)th campuses in 'Japan. This
action -will place the southern
Ohio'institutlon at the forefront of
American linkage with an educa·
Ilona! system In the Asian realm,
according to Dr. Paul C. Hayes,
president of Rio Grande.
· An agreement between the
university and Tanezo Yamasaki
Technical &lt;;alleges of Japan will
hrlng U.S.·style higher education
to that nation's young people,
· Hayes explained. In addition. at
leastup to 100 Japanese students
enrolled at the branca campuses
are to attend the Rio Grande
campus, starting In 1991.
"The creation of these branch
campuses Is one of the most
significant events to occur In the .
hlsiory of our Institution," Hayes
said. •"By taking this step. the
mission of the university ·as·
sumes an international perspec·
live. It Is a task that we are more
than prepared to meet, and one in
which we hope the best of two
worlds will result."

REPRESENTATIVES ON HAND- Ustenlng Intently to Dr.
Paul C. Hayes' announcement of the establishment of two Rio
Grande branch camp118e8 In Japan In 1991 are, from left, Katswnl
Tanl, vice president of Tailezo Yamasaki Vocational Schoolll and
Junior CoOeges of Japan; Kayo Takenaga, a Rio Grande stndent
who aened u translator; and Kolchl Tanabl, secretary to
Yamuakt: · ·
' ~Progressive Vision
The announcement was made
at a press conference Saturday in
the James A. Rhodes Student
Center at Rio Grande. The event
was attended by university off!·
clals and two representatives of
the Japanese educational foun·
dation: Kat sum! Tanl, vlcepresl·
dent to Yamasaki, and Kotch!
Tanabi, secretary to Yamasaki.
"The creation of these branch
campuses would not have been

possible without the interest and
support of Mr. Yamasaki, who
possesses a truly progressive
vision of higher education for his
nation's young people, .. Hayes
said. "We are honored that Mr.
Yamasaki has chosen our lnstltu·
tion to help fulfill his goals."
University officials said the
Yamasaki corporation, which
serves as an educational founda·
lion, will establish two cam·
(SEE JAPAN, PAGE A·3)

Lusher noting a golden anniversary
ISy LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
CROWN CITY- Pastor, evan·
gellst, friend- that's some of the
description of the Rev. Charles
Lusher. Scholar, teacher, stu·
dent - that also describes the
man who last Thursday cele·
bra ted his 50th anniversary In the
ministry.
Lusher has been a pas tor or
evangelist since ordination Sept.
21, 1939 at First BaptistChurchof
Gallipolis, by its pas tor George
Sagen.
Since thai time, Lusher has

Passport
PREPARATION - ~arklng lot paving Is underway at Oblo
River Plaza, In aatlclpatlon of Its opealng In October. Willi has
employed nearly 200 area residents, according to Its manager.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Lee Ann Welch)
shelves.
Benson comes to the Gallipolis
store from the Hill's in Mans·
field, Ohio, and seems well·
pleased with those who applled
for positions here.

Most applicants came from the
Ohio Job Service office In Galli·
polls, but &amp;ns&lt;in said approxl·
mately 40 have come In on their
own after seeing. signs in the
windows.

pr~gram

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY- Plans for apply·
lng for the state's single $2.5
million Eldercare Options Rural
Demonstration Prilject were dis·
cussed, and an explanation of the
health and social servlcesavalla·
ble under the expanded Passport
program were explained Friday
to members of the Meigs County
Councll on Aging Advisory
Board.
Representatives of health

explained

agencies, area hospitals and
nursing homes. met with
members of the advisory hOard
to hear Cindy L. Farson, Director
of the Area Agency on Aging
which serves, Meigs, Athens,
Hocking, Athens, Monroe, Mar·
gan, Noble, Perry and Washing·
ton Counties, ex pia In the two
programs. how they wlll effect
community based care for the
elderly. and how they are
financed .
·Farson listed statiStics which

pointed out that over thepastflve .
years the needs have been
shifting from the young elderly to
the frail population, particularly
the over-85 segment which is the
single tastes t growing population
group In the country. This, she
said, has brought home-care
issues to the forefront.
She echoed the statement of
Governor Richard F. Celeste In
hiS State of the State Address that
no Ohioan should be forced to
(See PASSPORT, A7)

OVB board member McNeill dies
..

Ex-Gallia coroner
Warehime dead at 76
GALLIPOLIS - Pc;&gt;nald R. last four year term, 0\!c. 31,1989.
Warehime, 76, 8 Airport Road,
A graduate of Nelsonville High
Gallipolis, a Doctor of Osteo· School, Dr. Warehime was a 1941
pathy, died Saturday afternoon graduate of the Kirksville Col· ·
, lege of Osteopathy and Surgery
at .Holzer Medical Center.
Dr. Warehime was a practic· at Klrksvllle, Mo. He attended
lng osteopathic physician for 47 the First Prebyterian Church of
years and was founder of the GalUpolls. He was a member of
Warehime (;llnlc, 530 Second Knlglits of Pythlas, American
Ave., GaiUpoUs. He served In the Legion, Benevolent &amp; Protective
U.S. Navy in World War 11. He Order of Elks and Morning Dawn
was appointed Gallla County Lodge No.7 .
life
Coroner In 1941 before entering · Dr. Warehime was a
the service, returned to the post member of the Ohio Os teopathlc
after his . tour of duty being Association. He was a member of
successfully elected and re- the National Association of Medl·
elected for 11 terms. He .bad cal Examiner; the American
served a total of 46 years as Osteooathic Association: the
(See EX·GALLJA, A8l
coroner at the expiration of his

pastored at Salem Baptist, Cal· Sheets Lusher raised four sons,
vary Baptist, Elizabeth Chapel, John. Stan, Dan and Jim. The
Northup Baptist and Providence latter son has followed after his
Missionary Baptist, all in Gallla father in the ministry , pastoring
at Faith Baptist Church In
County.
He also pastored at Tabernacle Rodney.
The Lushers. Charles and
Baptist In Chillicothe. where a
special service was held in his · Gladys, had been married less
honor last Sunday, and at First than three months when he was
Baptist Church In Painesville. called to pastor at Tabernacle
Charles Lusher was also a Baptist Church, and tl)ey spent20
chaplain In the United States years of his ministry' there. His
Army Air Corps an·d an evange· companion and best friend of
list for the ,Ohio Baptist 48-years, Mrs. Lusher died in
August 1987.
Convention.
(See LUSHER, page A3)
He and wife Gladys Pauline

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Mason County resident, well·
known auclioneer and business·
man john Samuel McNelli, 2007
Marquette Ave., Point Pleasant,
d led Friday in the Pleasan I
V~Jiey N~rslng Care Center.
McNeill retired as a professional
auctioneer for the Pomt Pleasant
Livestock Company, Washington
Court House Livestoclc Company,
and Charleston UvestOclc Company

after 44 years.

DB. DONALD R. WAREHIME

A graduate of Point Pleasant
High School in 1930, he attended
Potomac State CoUege in Keyser,
W.Va., majoring in agriculture. He
played guard for three years on the
Potomac College football team;
was president of the Class of 1933;
president of Theta Sigma Chi; and

r

editor of the college newspaper, the

"Pasquino."
He was engaged in dairy farming
in Mason County for 25 years and
was a partner in Jones and McNeiU
Construction Company for 16
years. He announced the Point
Pleasant High School home
football games for 15 years. He
was a auctioneer for the HuntingiOO
Burley Tobacco Company for 12
years.
He was Master of Ceremonies
for civic, charity and social affairs
in both Gallia and Mason counties
during the 1950s and 1960s.
He recreated the character of
Devil Anse Hatfield in the play
"The Hatfields and McCoys,' on
the stage of the old Majestic Show
(See oVB, pale i\81
··

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JOHN s. MCNEILL

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Commentary· and perspectiVe

Paga

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

A-2.·

September 24, 1989
.

September 24,

~/t()()l

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j~~ 1rimts • ientinel
A Division of

1125 'lblrd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(61,, w;.~z

111 Court St., l'omeroy, Ohio
(6U) 992-me

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaslstant Publlsher-Co•troUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press Assocla·
tion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
lona:. All letters are subJect to editing and must be slgne::l wtth name,.address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wOI. be publlshed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not perscaalltles.

Too soon to sing
~Bye Bye, Barney'

•••

Soviet pollution out .of control · ·

ON THE VOLGA RIVER,
statistic~ show an alarming
U.S.S.R. - Freighters plying decrease in the general health of
this river
a rainbow of
the people.
·
j I Ispew
c hem cas
n t o th e wa t er. R us t·
Tbe average Soviet man can
lng plpes on the s hore II. ne d ump e:xpect t o live 60 years. That , s six
raw human sewage In t o th e years less than the Ute e:xpec·
rolling concoction. Legend once laney of the '60s. A startling
ha d It th a I a di P In th· e "Mother one-th ird of the ,men wU 1 get
·
VI
1 So·
o ga " cou ld a·d d 10 ye~s , o. cancer, accordl ng to secre
wi
· lit B t
' one s
e. u anyone un se viet estimates. Soviet babies are
enough to make that dip today
paying the highest price. Infant
will emerge covered. w jtb ojl and mortality in the' Soviet Union is
gaso II ne. And th ousan d •~ o f th ree I imes worse than in the
I
cav !ar · b ear Ing s t urgeon go ·Uoiled States. Tb e So viet Unon
11
1 h v 1
is the only industrialized nation
be y-up n t e o ga every year.
'What happened to the river whose Infant death rate is show·
"? Tb
wbose name means " hoIy .
e lng a steady ln"fease.
same thing that happened to the
One of the Soviet leaders
it
t
1 1 Le 1
d
h
r c y w~ er supp Y n
n ngra
raising ell behind the scenes is
and the air in the Urals - seven biologist and ecologist Alexei
d eca des o f Commun js t P ar t Y Yablakov. He reckons that onej
ru Ie, where n'dus tr ·1a liz a tion was fifth of the Soviet people I1ve in
sacrosanct an d t h e env ironment ecological · "dis taster" zones, ·
d bl
while another 35 to40percent live
was e:xpen a e.
That callous disregard (or ·in ecologically "unfavorable"
Moth er Na t ure has cos t the areas.
Soviets their clean water and air.
andmaybethelrllves.TheSoviet
Thehorrorstoriesarereported
nion
has
more
doctors
per
in
the Soviet press or passed by
u
capita than any other nation. but word of mou th :

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta,
_ Children in Smolensk began
losing their eyesight, and their
hands s)look uncontrollably be·
fore officials cracked down on a
factory that was dumping mer·
cury into the Dnieper River.
-Ashblowntromsteelmillsin
the Urals killed birds, but no one
. reacted until the.faces of children
were burned by the fallout.
- Shoddy construction of an
earthen dam for a fertilizer plant
in the Ukraine caused a break in
the dam that flooded 300 miles of
the Dnlestr River with concentrated salts.

-Lake aatkal holds an incred··
lble 20 percent of the Earth's
fresh water supply, yet for .
decades pulp and paper factories ~
spewed their untreated waste
into it.
The Chernobyl nuclear plant
disaster may have slapped So·
vlets to their sense,s. Environ·
mental groups are springina up.
•
They form political committees

and field candidates. Greenpeace will soon open a Moscow .
office. Mikhail Gorbachev has
formed an "Environmental co·m·
mlttee" to survey the problem. .
But perestroika may have
-Leningrad's water is undrin·
kable for visitors and unhealthy • come too late to save much of
b
what the Soviets have carelessly
for residents because near y destroyed. The Communis'
Lake Ladoga was
polluted by Party, In a relatively short span'
.
dumping from a cellulose works. · oftime, created an Industrialized
- The Aral Sea, once the
world's fourth largest ·lake, has nation with a military, super·
power status to stand up to anv.
shrunk by two thirds In the last
'
and all enemies from without. '· . ·
decade. Farmers have pulled so N
th
.I
d
,,
much irrigation water from it
ow e country may be esthat by the year 2010 It will be a troyed from within l&gt;y disease
because it fouled its own nest.
desert if no thjng Is done.

By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Even some still unsure of all the lyrics of the
ballad know enough of the sordid saga to join in the chorus of "Bye
Bye, Barney."
But Rep. Barney Frank, the embattled Massachusetts Democrat,
'i s hanging tough. ·
Once the darling of his party's left wing, Frank bas admitted an
affair with a male prostitute. But he denies knowing the hooker ran a ·
blse:xual prostitution ring out of the congressman's house on Capitol·
Hill.

While some of his former allies quietly desert him, Frank staunchly
' insists that the House ethics committee pass judgment on him.
There cari be no reasonable doubt that Frank violated a House rule
against casting that body into disrepute. Bu t if that standard were to
be rigorously applied. many lawmakers could be thrown
immediately onto the job market.
The ethics panel currently has on its docket three other se:x·related
investigations.
Ohio Republ ican Donald Lukens was convicted of having sex with a ·
16-year-old girl, Illinois Democrat Gus Savage. alledgedly groped a
woman Peace Corps worker and California Democrat Jim Bates Is
accused by women on his staff of sexual harassment.
Republican strategists may gloat quietly over Frank's crisis, but
they know that scandal is a bipartisan scourge. Private conduct can
bring down any public official, regardless of party affiliation.
So most Republicans evidently are willing to accede to Frank's
demand that he be allowed to defend himsel(beforetheethics panel of
those charges be claims are false. It is the Democrats who are
squirming.
·
Ron Brown, . the Democratic na tional chairman, has urged .
withholding judgment until the committee's inquiry is completed. '
But Brown acknowledged it was "certainly not helpful" when
Frank's " hometown paper, " The Boston Globe, editorially advised
him to retire.
·
The Washington Times, the fierc ely conservative newspaper that
broke the ~ca ndal, quoted "several well-placed Democratic
congressmen" - which it did not name -as saying the party's House
leaders have decided privately that Fr;mk should resign.
"The death drums are pounding anrl he must go." the Times quoted
"a liberal Democratic congressman from a Western state."
Even when stopping short of demanding Frank's resignation.
Republicans get political mileage from the scandal.
"If I were to· have a woman prostitute in my employ for ,my
sell-gratification, I'd be run out of town," said House Republican
leader Robert Michel of Illinois.
Chances of Frank's political survival were crippled when the
Globe, a staunc h supporter in the past, cited the "chasm between the
ideals of his public life an d tile squalor of his private life" and
concluded he " must go."
Frank has said he may not run for re-election If his current crisis
undermines the causes for which he has fought. Those causes have
been grievously damaged.
Frank's fat e ultimately may be decided by the voters in a
blue-collar bastion of Cat holicism in Massachusetts. Eight years ago
they honored a · young Jew born in Bayonne. N.J., a closeted
homosexual , by sending him to Congress.
He justified their trust with representation that was courageous,
passionately idealistic and sometimes brilliant. But, flawed as all of
us are, Frank's wretched judgment and behavior in the end betrayed
them and himself.

Berry's World

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Bookers agonies: drugs or racism Chuck Stone;;
f\'r•w.~ iiPm :

On AuJ!. 2J. Yu ". uf
Hnwldn s a black Brooklvn I~Pn ·
0/H' r wa.~ .~hot and kill(•d whf•n hP
went intn the all-whirt&gt; neijlhbor.
hom/ ()f Ben~nnhu ntl to Inn"' m a
u .~erl rnr.
• N&lt;•u.M ilf'm : On Sept ...S. Prt&gt;!l/itlenl
Ru .•h declared war on flru/{s.
Wil.h Amt&gt;rica ctJught in a dt&gt;adly
l'i.•f' of drull"' nnd rad.,m.l kntw mv
Hnrlr•m friend. Booker Ll'roi Jar:k!iml.
WtJuld be pon((erin/{ thi.•
nnt ional brenk down .
Su re f' ntiUJ(h . he had wrillt.&gt;n a
praw•r. For rr&gt;a.o;oru vou 'II .m on .•ee.
Bm~h·rr didt1 '1 want ~iP ro r'f'ad rhi~
prayer. But I .'lnl'aked o pP('k w hPn
IH• lf'jl hi~ HarlPm apnrtmt&gt;nl to
pfn.v hi.• doil;.' numbt&gt;r:

Yo, Lord It's me again, and I · be
miserable. I knelt down to pray
this morning, but felt right'
lonely. Like we sing in church,
"Way down yonder by myself. I
couldn't hear nobody pray."
Somebody may be prayin', but
either you ain't hear in' us or we
aln' t pray In' loud enough. If we
did, we wouldn't be lettin' drugs
and racism crucify us.
White folks be lucky. All they

got to worry 'bout is drugs
messln' up they lives. Black
peeples got' to fight drugs and
racism just to stay alive. But
When I be kneelin' down, Lord.
do I ask you to deliver us from
drugs first or from racism?
Yusuf Hawkins is dead, and I
pray for his soul. An honor
student, Lord. And he don't be
sharin' no cocaine In his neighborhood. He jes' be wearing' his
black skin in Bensonhurst. Some ·
white stud shot him only cuz he be
black.
That's a heavy .cross to bear, .
Lord. But white America done
decided we got to carry this cross
we thought we laid down 20 years
ago. So, we be gettin' gunned
down on white streets, beating
ourselves down on black streets,
knocked down in tbe Supreme
Court and brung down in the
White House.
President Bush be part of our
problem, Lord, cuz he so j lve.
Now, I know Chuck Stone like
this man and believe that
"kinder, gentler" spoze ' to In·
elude black folks. But Chuck

Stone be buyin' a pig in the poke
in a minute. He see a picture of
President Bush or Mrs. Bush
holding a little colored baby, and
he think that be right nice.
But Lord, Mr. Bush don't be
speakin' out on how bad white
racism is today. He don't think it
be wrong that a Ku Kl11x Klan
man be servin' in public office.
He think that when he pick up
that little black baby sufferin'
from cocaine and say. "suffer
little children, come unto me,"
he be makln' up for all of the
other little black babies who be
growin' up to suffer from white
folks sayin' affirmative action
has got to go.
I pray, Lord, that you dellv~r
this country from racism and
help us put drug dealers away
forever. And, please help drug
addicts to kick they habit.
But, Lord, President Bush
don't be doin' his part. He be
flghtin · drugs like he fight
racism. By pickin' up little black
babies. ·
His 11'1 ol' $7.8 billion to fight
drugs ain't doodly squat. Them
savings and loan associations

'
ain't fighttn• no crime waves, '"'
Lord, but President Bush done
gave $159 billion to keep them In
business - and dig, Lord - so . ·,
some of them can launder drug ".
dealers' money! We done spe)lt .,
$22 billion just to build one '"
Steal-Away bomber, and it don't ·•:
even be stealin' away to ,,,
nowhere.
But, Lord, maybe you touched ! r.
President Bush's heart when he &gt;
say that neighbors workin' witiL "''
neighbors can get rid of drugs; ,.;
He also got hisself a chance to do ..:~
like your son did, Lord. when he · "
drove them moneychangers out . .:
of that temple.
"
We got to u nile as one to fight · ; .
drugs. But that don't be hap··, ··
penin' If white folks think like ' '
Bensonhurst and blame all crime .. :::
on us black "savages." Elliott
Ness didn't get fam!)us, Lord,
Chasin' . after black, criminals. .
And Medellin, Colombia, ain't . ·,
run by no black peeples.
Help us. Lord, to understand
that If we ·dOn't be. workln'
together in .t he same neighbor· i
hood, we gon' be fight in' against !
each other in differ~nt camos.

Kitchen·counseling a vanishing art

"AND SO, ON Ei,EHALF OF ALL THE BALTIC
STATES, I HERESY... "
•

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The American kitchen may
pie and meat loaf that we miss
soon be only a whiff of nostalgia.
today. It is grandmother herself.
About the only home cookin'
Nobody admits this more readily
(complete with the aroma from
than today's professional ,
the kitchen) that we can get CO\Inselors.
today is at the neighborhood
"There was nothing more
diner- or at tbetruckstopoil the effective than the old-time 'kit·
Interstate.
chen counseling,'" says a counseAdmittedly there are risks In lor I know. "My mother had no
eating at such places. It may be training In counseling, but the
wise to pass up the roads Ide number of troubled and anxious
restaurant that advertises "Eat people wbo trekked into her
Here - Get Gas" unless a gas kitchen to talk to her and went
pump Is In plain sight. Still, it away feeling better Is legion:·
may be the closest your nostrils
u we . miss grandmother as
will get to old·fashloned kitchen · much as her food, we also miss
smells nowadays.
her kitchen.
A British food writer says, "In
''A kitchen, particularly the
America kitchens are getting big, old·fashl(!lled kind, Ia a
smaller or even disappearing.
reassuring plsce,'' aaya another
People are changing their kit·
protesalonal counaelor as he alta
chens into gyms, video rooms
In hlaofflce. "Awa1tlll8roomand
and Jacuzzis. Less and less do an office lllle this are cllnlca1 and
women cook on an everyday cold. You can't beat a aood lrlend
basis in the United States. With ud the llllt!ll ot coffee 1nw1na
the modern young couple, on· tile ldtebell atove for 'belplll8
whoever comes home first juat somebody In lrouble."
puts whatever Is available Into
He aaka, "Can you lrnailne
the mlcrowa ve."
·
Je1ua •ttlng up an appointment
While "nothin' means Iovin' for IOIIIeODe who needed belp?
like somethin' from the oven," It He would have taken him by the
Isn't only il'andmother' s apple arm and topther they would
j

have strolled by the seashore.or
sat and talked on the hillside. It
would have been something
warm and human. Kiichens are
warm and human."
Or they were.
Kitchen counseling may be·
long to a bygone day. But
metaphorically speaking, we all
do more kitchen·counseling than
we are aware of and It is
important to know what to say
andnottosaytothosewhounload
their troubles on our ·shoulders.
Should we give advice or just
listen?
Listening sympathetically
may be the best method for most
ofus.Ouradvlcetootherslsorten "
based on what vie would do in a
similar situation. It could be all
wrong for somebody else.
Three other hints:
- Offer your hand. When
10111eone feels l!'lef, pain or fear,
the warm touch of another

!

George Plagenz· (
!

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I
person can be more reassuring · :
than cheerful words.
· •
-Avoid platitudes like "Don't ' :
worry" or "Try to look on the .' :
bright side." .
·· :
- Don't be like Agnes. When
Elsie felt low and called Agnes,
Agnes listened and said, "I'm I
sure It would work out, dear. I'd :
like to talk with you longer but .. ;
Bob is taking me out to dinner '
tonight and then we're going to . :
the theater. Call me again, :
honey. Promise?" With that, she 1
bung up.
· .:
• II Agnes had really wanted to
help, shewouldhaveaald, "Why ' ,
don't you carne over for dinner : :
tomorrow night, Elsie? I've Just •
bought a roast. Bob and I would :
love to see you. We won't lake no ·, :
for an answer."
.· ' •
' That is an example of REAL
sympathy - the kind that heals.

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A thought for the day: Author F. Scott Fltzaerald wrote, "The test :
of a first-rate lntelillence Ia theabiUty to hold twooppoaed ldeaaln the ! I ·
mind at the same time, and 1tW retain tile abiUty to function."
•1
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ACCEPTING THE BUILDING- Dr. Daniel H.
'fhlteley, at pOdhun, president of the Un~erslty
of Rio Grande Board of Truslees, .a ccepted Robert
S. Wood Hall on behalf of the board at Saturday's

dedlcatl~n. Behind Whiteley, from left; are Wood:
Dr. Paul c . Hayes, president of Rio Grande; and
tlie Rev. Lutller Tracy of Rio Grande.

Japan,, ,_.:...___~(F~R:;::O::::M;.::J~A.:.;PA:.::.N.:!.,.:.PA:.:.;G::.:E::..;A.:.·::.t.l)_ _ _ _ _- : - - - - - - puses. one to be located in Tokyo
and the other in Send a!, approxl·
mately three hours northwest of
the Japanese capital.
' In remarks made during the
press conference, Hayes noted
that educational institutions
have "lagged far behind in
programming" fl)r the global
economy created . by worldwide
banking, marketing and dlssemi·
nation of technology.
"Students lacking knowledge
or International affairs and geography cannot make sense or the
flood of information that spills
through the news media today
and, certainly, cannot function
as' business people In a world
economy without extensive mul·
ticultural understanding."
International Major
To .meet this need, the unlver·
sity Is plalll!ing to offer, through
the branch campuses, an international major In qusiness through
the Emerson E . EV!IDS College of
Business Management, Hayes
said.
·'Students will spend at least 20
weeks In Japan immersed In the
culture, studying the same
courses they would have been
taking here," Hayes e:xptained .
"Students from Japan will come
to this campus for the same
reason · that we wish to send
students there.
"In time, It is the university's
intent to build an international
dimension into otner programs
that are now offered,'' the
president continued. " II is only
tlirough multic\Jllural under-

Lusher...
(From LU!!HER. page A1)
Not retired by any means, the
74-year old Lusher spends time
preaching for vacationing minis·
ters. or wherever called, and
gardening with his present wife,
Dixie, whom he married in
NoveJllber 1988.
Rev. Lusher is a graduate of
Mercerville High School and
Ohio University, where he re·
celved a bachelor of arts degree
ln"1936. He attended the Southern
Baptist Seminary in Louisville,
~Y ., where he earned th.e bachelor of theology degree and
received a master of divinity
from Northern Baptist Theological Seminary in Chicago in 1951.
He also attended Chaplain's
School at Harvard in 1943.
In honor of his golden anniver·
sary In the ministry, be received
a congratulatory letter from
President and Mrs. Bush, and
Sept. 17 was declared Charles
Lusher Day in Chillicothe.

(lJSPIINII)
Publltlled each Sunday, trJ5'lblrd Ave..
G&amp;Illpdll. Oblo, by tbeObtoValleyPubllablng Oomj&gt;ofty !Muhtmedla. IDe s.,
ccnd clau pootace 11114 at Galllpollt.
Ohio 65631. ED.terelf u .econd cl811
moUIIIc molter at Pomeroy, Obto, Pool

Oflloe.

Member: United Prelo lnteraatlonal,
Inland Dally Prell Aaaoclatton and the
Olllo Nowop11r:£ Alla&lt;latton, Natkmal
Mverllllll&amp;
rHOntatlve, Bran bam
N.,.apoper
01, 733 'lblnl Awnue.
New Yortc, New York 10017.

111NDAY ONLY

8VIIKIUPTION IL\TI!II

., c:.rrter
.. - .. - 70 Cento
One WHit
............................

standing that we, as Americans,
can understand and effect world
peace, have prosperity, B;nd
llddress the problems of human
dignity in an ev!!r-shrlnking
world."
The agreement between the
university and Yamasaki calls
for Yamasakl' s corporation to b~
responsible for recruitment of
students, faculty and staff. The
university, however, will oversee
the operation of the br.a nches
through an administrator. Rio
Grande will also be sole authority
for the curriculum and will
ensure the curriculum meets
standards set by the Nor·th
Central Association of Colleges
and Secondary Schools, the unl·
verslty's regional accrediting
body.
Mission Unchanged
Hayes noted that North Central
plans to visit the proposed
Japanese sites in October and
will meet with university off!· '
cials at Rio Grande for final
approval in November.
"What has developed is an
agreement In which Mr. Yama·
saki will provide !acilltles and
suppo~t services fo,r a four-year,
U.S . .coUeglate·style institution
at these two sites,'' e:xplalned
Dean S. Brown, Rio Grande's
vice president for student
services.
"What we have done is to
'e stablish an adjunct of the
university without changing its
mission," Brown contlnl!ed. "It's
an opportunity to expand our
Influence, and It provides an
expanded area of service for Rio
Grande."
·
Brown. who was closely in·
valved In negotiations with Ya·
masakl's firm, said two representatives of the corporation
toured the campus in October
1988 when Yamasaki began seek·
log an American school for
possible affiliation purposes . The
representatives were "e:x·

Smoking may .affect thinking
ST. LOUIS (UPII - Smoking
cigarettes over many years can
affect a smoker's ability to
perform motor tasks, to think
and to reason ' researchers at
Washington University in St.
Louis said.
Older adults who have smoked
10 years or more performed
"speeded motor tasks" more
slowly than ·non-smokers 1;1nd
ex-smokers, psychologist Robert
Hill said in discussing the results
of his post-doctoral work.
"We know that the effects of
nicotine on younger people actu·
ally enhance performance,'' Hill
said. "That's pretty clear. Nicoline facilitates attention and
vigilance.
"But over the long haul,
nicotine and other materials may
detract from cognitive tunc·
lion,'' he said.
Studies performed at the Unl·
verslty of Reading In England
have shown that injections of
nicotine, which stlmulates the
central nervous system. enhance
attention.
It remains unclear whether the
same thing happens with smok·
ing, said Hill, an assistant
professor of educational psycho!·
ogy at the University of Utah.
Tbe findings of Hill's research
.

One Year ................................. 836.40

SINGLE COPY
PBICE
Sunday ................................ 110 Cento

No aubl&lt;rlpttont by maU permitted In

areu wbere motor carrier
avaUable.

~ervtce

tremely impressed" with Rio
Grande, Brown said.
"They really liked the open·
ness and natural beauty sur·
roundillg the campus, and they
felt a rural location tends to be
more comfortable for Japanese
studeni$," Brown said.'' Another
factor was that we have a unit on
campus Involved· in technical
education. Mr. Yamasaki is the
proprietor of about 11 schools of
technology, which prepare stu·
dents in all manner of technical
fields, including radio and televl·
sion. The representatives liked
our degree work in technology."
Bonding Of Cultures
The arrival of Japanese stu·
dents at Rio Grande will provide
an opportunity for students to not
only gain an international.under·
standing, but to help create a
bonding of cultures, Brown
added.
"This ' kind. of opportunity
should make our students 11'\0re
sophl$ticated internationally,"
he remarked. Brown added there
is the possibility or faculty
exchange as well.
"As the concept matures,
many· opportunities will present
themselves,' ' Brown said.
In closing remarks at the press
conference, Hayes said "this Is
an excttiJ)g .time for the unlver·
sity,' ' and noted that with the
· establishment of the Common
Market in the 1990s and the
presence o,f the Pacific Rim, the
U.S. is in c!anger or falling from
first to third place In economic
power.
"Thus, the realities cannot be
ignored l.f students of the United
States are to succeed In the fields
of business, political science,
professional education; or . any
other fields of their chosen
endeavor,'' be said. "They must
knQw, understand. and be able to
work effectively with emerging
countries, as well as the developed countries of the world."

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

'.

on the residual effects of longterm smok;lng, conducted at
Washington University, were re·
ported in the July Issue of the
journal Psychology and Aging.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Paga-A-3

___________&lt;F_r_om__sc_H_oo__L_,P_A_G_E__A·_•&gt;_________________________

The president credited much of
the university's growth in enrol·
lment and physical size to the
leadership shown. by Wood, who
has been a member of the board· s
executive and financial/Invest·
mentcommlltees since his instal·
lation as a trustee In 1975.
"Naming our newest building
for Mr. Wood is one of the
greatest honors the university
can bestow upon a man who has
served the Institution so well,"
Hayes said.
"Mr. Wood has demonstrated
leadership throughout his tenure
on the board of trustees, leadership that helped guide Rio
Grande through a .period of
dramatic growth. His efforts on
behalf of the SChool are greatly
appreciated," the president re·
marked. "At the same time, we
are most happy to officially
dedicate this new building."
A Gallta County native and a
graduate of Cadmus High School,
Wooo began his employment In
the Sausage Division of Bob
Evans Farms In 1954. He was
named to the company's board of ·
directors in 1955, and was direc·
tor of marketing when be as·
sumed his present position In
1968. He was responsible for the
development of the Up-Scale
Family Restaurant concept and
guided the growth o.f the Res tau ·
rant Division from a single store
to more than 220 restaurants
today.
A director of the National
RestaUrant Association since ·
1982, Wood served two years as
chairman of the association's
Public Affairs Conference ~nd is
a 1988 recipient of the Golden
Chain Award from Nation's
Restaurant News.
· Wood's educational interests
have included membership on
the Canal Winchester Board of
Education and the Advisory

Board of Eastland Vocational
School. · At Rio Grande. he was
president of the board of trustees
in 1982·83, 1983·84 and 1985-86. He
received an honorary degree
from the university in 1987.
He has served as a member or
the Board of Trustees of the ,
Methodist Theological School of
Ohio and Is currently Its finance
cOmmittee chairman. Wood is a
member of Faith United Metho·
dist Church in Canal Winchester
and a 32nd Degree .Mason. He is
married to the former Peggy
Louise Bradbury of Kyger, and
·they are the parents of four
children.
.
Construction of the building,
located on Ridge Avenue, began
In July 1987. It was designed by
the .architectural firm of URS
Dalton and the general contrac·
tor was Vesta Construction Co ..

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND IUPll - Frl·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PJCK-3
162.
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,322,671, with a payoff due of
$937,281.
PICK-4
8184.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$239,529.50, with a payoff due of
$72,800.

Don't wait or you'll
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Limited number of
cabins remaining,

CRUISE

OUTSTANOING BUYS

to the

ON A SELECTION OF ·
4 1 CT. RINGS
"Estate Pieces;'

Bellefontaine. Work was finished
by the early fall of 1988.
In addition to more than 12
classrooms and 40 offices. Wood
Hall houses a learning center, an
up-to-date instruction media cen·
ter and a skills laboratory for the
College of Nursing.

CARI8BEAN .
aboard the

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your cabin for AAA's
special New Year Cruise.

December 30, 1989January 6, 1990

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TAWNEY JEWELERS
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''Hello, Junior!
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Across the Street
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on Saturday, October 7.
Plea18 stop iri if you would
Uke to have your record• or
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I heve anjoyad ~erving all'
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Gallipoli&amp;, Ohio

�.

A-4-Sundey Tmaa SentNI

'

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

...---Area news briefs___, Man sentenced on
Minor accident investigated
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Pollee Investigated a minor
accident at 12:30 p.m. Friday at the Ohio Valley Bank Drlve·In.
437 Fourth Ave. No one was Injured. There was no citation.
Pollee. said Joseph G. Fenderbosch, 41, 250 First Ave.,
Gallipolis, was In line at the bank behlpd a 1978 Ford driven by
Carol E. Clonch, 43, Rt.1 , Gallipolis. Clonch's car drifted back
Into Fenderbosch's 1986 Nlssan pickup truck. There was minor
damage to both vehicles.
.
Pollee also investigated a property damage accident all : 28
p.m. at Ames In the Silver Bridge Plaza. Officers S!!ld a
tractor·tra ller driven by Roger L. Smith, 54, Zanesville, Ohio,
backed Into the loading dock and damaged a new overhang.
Police cited Richard L. Clark, 35, Rt. 1, Gallipolis for
·
disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

Transformer shorts out
GAL LIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Deportment
a nswered a n alarm at 1: 56 a.m. Saturday to the residence of
James Siders, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, RT. 2, Gallipolis. onKrlnfilT·Sand
Hollow Road, 1.8 miles south of Neighborhood Road.
Fire Chief Ray Bush said there was no fire only an electric
transformer shorted out on a Buckeye Rural Electric
Co-operative pole. There was no fire damage to the Siders'
trailer. Twelve men .a nd one truck answered the alarm, the
144th of the year for Gallipolis firefighters.

Centenary accident reported
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla County Sheriff's Department
investigated a one·car accident at 5:41 a .m. Saturday on
Centenary Road. at the junction of Graham School Road, about
1.8 m!les north of State Route 141.
Officials said Steven W. Schuman, 30, Mt . Gilead, Ohio, lost
control and his 1983 AMC Hatchback went off the road, strJ1t!ng
a n embankment. Damage was moderate. There was no
citation .
A passenger, George Brucker, 29, Rt.1, Cheshire, complained
of an Injury but was not treated.
The sheriff's department arrested Roy A. Phillips, 28, and
David J . Mooney, 22, both of'Rt. 2, Crown Cit yon charges of
disorderly conduct alter warning. Gordon W. Factor, 28, Rio
Grande, Ohio. was arrested Friday night on a charge driving
under the Influence.

drunk driving

Septanber 24. 1989

Probation violator sentenced ·

ch~ge

GALLIPOLIS Richard all $44.
Stutler, 36, Charleston, W.Va.,
Rosellyn 0 . Mciver, 39, PoJnt
was fined $300 and costs Friday Pleasant, W.Va.. and Es kew
In Gall!polls Municipal Court on a Wllllams, 21, Norfolk, Va., both
charge of driving under the $43; David K. Brandeberry, 22,
Influence. He also received a Rio Grande; Dennis R. Green, 28,'
three-day jail sentence and a 60 Rt . 2, Crown City; and Douglas
day license ~uspenslon. A charge Stroud, Archdale, N.C., all $41.
ot possession of marijuana was
Forfeiting $43 bonds on other
dismissed against Stutler during traffic violations were: Donna J .
Neal, 38, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, failure
·negotiations at his pretrial.
Karen S. Th!vener, 36, Rt. t
to maintain control; Patricia
· Gallipolis, and Ronald E. Morris. Spencer. 42, Rt. 2. Gallipolis, and
39, Gall!polls. were each fined · Theodore P . Neal, 22, Rt. a;
$100 and costs tor no o{lerator's' Gallipolis, both for failure to
license. Each received a sus· obey a traffic control device.
pended 30 day jail sentence and
Dale Sartin, 21. Utile Birch,
was placed on six months W.Va_, and John D. Casto; 28,
probation.
·
Waverly, · Ohio, forfeited $35
Noah Dale Lamm, 18, Rt. 3,
bonds for not wearing a seat belt.
Gallipolis, was found not guilty
Charges of not wearing a seat
on a charge of operating a rnotor . belt were dismissed against
vehicle
· without rea~tQnable
Michael Walters, 20, Rt. 4, Oak
.
.
control.
Hill; Randall W. Clonch, 31.
Carla Davis , Rt. 2, P atriot: Gallipolis: Robert L. Shirley, 38,
pleaded not _guilty to a charge of
Bidwell,
criminal damaging. Her pretrial
A charge of speeding was
was set for Sept. 27.
dismissed against Norena K.
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
Montgomer y, 47, PSR ,
were: Paul D. Moore, 52 , Ko·
Gallipolis.
komo, Ind., and Lisa Hogan, 20,
Galllpollls, forfeited $89 bonds
for speeding, 88 miles an hou~ in a
40 mile an hour zone; Abdulwahhab Alqutub, 30, Charleston.
W.Va .. $48; Lewis Newsome, 54,
Charleston, W.Va. , $47; John P .
RIO GRANDE ~ The regular
Barry, 33, Rt. 1, Thurman, $46;
meeting
oft he Rio Grande Board
Jimmy Burnett, 22, Rt. 2, Pa·
of
Public
Affairs, originally set
triot; Rita S. Vaidya, 36, Point
for
Tuesday
night, has been
Pleasant, W.Va .; Robert Martin,
rescheduled
for
Thursday at 7:30
58, LO\Ilsvllle, Ky.; and Greg
p.m
..
in
the
flllunlclpal
Building:
Shum;J,te, 37, St. Albans, W.Va.,

Meeting change .
for Public Affairs
Board announced

GALLIPOLIS - Robert L.
Leach, 34, Gallipolis, was found
guilty Friday In Gallla County
Common Pleas Court on a charge
of probatlon.violatlon. Leach was
sentenced to 12 months at Orient
Conectional Institution, Orient,
Ohio. He was given credit for 65
days already served.
Indicted by the grand jury for
breaking and entering In March
1!189, Leach waJ sentenced to 12
months at Oriel!! on May 2, 1989
and a little more than a month
later, June 8, 1989, he was
granted two years shock probation, the probation of which he
was found gullty of violating.
Richard Link, 21, Grove City,
pleaded gull ty to a charge of
gross sexual Imposition, a
c barge ;educed from the original
Indictment of felonious sexual
penetratlcin, He was sentenced to
18 months at Orient and fined
$750.
.
Link was orlgln~!ndlcted on
a charge of sexua battery for
allegedly assaultl g a Rio
Grande College Coed In Moulton
Hall on OCt. 3, 1988; That
Indictment was dismissed and
link was subsequently. Indicted
on the second felony charge
which was reduced.
Judge Donald A, Cox also
sentence Tony Sturgeon, 31, Rt.
1. Ashton. W.Va., to 12 months at
Or!enf and fined him $500 on a
charge of theft of a firearm.
Sturgeon was Indicted by the
March 1989 grand jury and
pleaded not guilty: he later

the Camara.
north when her 1985 Chevrolet
The patrol cited Little for Chevette went off the road,
failure to stop within the assured struck a dlich and overturned
clear distance.
onto its side. Damage was
One driver was cited In three moderate. No one ~as injured.
vehiCle accident at 4:50 p.m.
The patrol cited Smith for
Friday on SR. 7. 0.4 of a mile fa!Jure to maintain control.
north of mllepcst 26, at the
Another Meigs County acciredllght near the Sliver Bridge dent occurred at 8:15 a.m.
Plaza. No one was injured.
Friday on CR. 5 at the lntersec·
The patrol said Chad F . Clary . lion of CR. 7, in Salisbury
18, Rt. 1, driving a 1979 Jeep and Township.
Krist! L. _Lemley, 20, Rt. 1,
Troopers said a 1983 Pontiac
Gallipolis, In a 1988 Chevrolet Flreblrd driven by David .E.
Beretta. stopped In traffic John Peterson, Went across the InterL. Howsare, 79, Akron, Ohio, was section, striking the guard rail.
unable to stop and his 1986 Buick Damage was minor. No one was
Regal struck the back of Lem· Injured.
ley's car knocking It into the back
. The patrol cited Peterson for
of Clary's J eep.
failure to maintain control and
The patrol cited Howsare for failure to wear a seat belt.
!allure to stop within the assured
No one was injured but . the
clear.
driver was cited In a one car
No one was Injured !n a two car accident at 9 p.m . Friday on
collision at 4: 10 p.m. Friday on State Route 141, 100-feet west.of
Kerr Road, 0.4 south of State milepost 9. Troopers said 1985
Route 554.
Chevrolet Chevette driven by
Troopers said a 1988 Chevrolet · Jennifer Zarnoch. 16, Rt. 4.
Cavalier driven by Richard A. Gallipolis, went off road, striking
Atkinson, III, 28, Charleston, an embankment. Damage was
w _va. slid le!t of center. colliding moderate. .
···
with 11 1952 !'ord LTD driven by
The patrol cited Zarnoch for
David L. Sofranko, 20, 460 Lariat fallulre to maintain control.
Drive, Gall!polls. Damage was
No one was Injured and no one
moderate to both vehicles.
was cited in a one car aCcident at
The patrol cited Atkinson for 8 a.m. Friday on State Route 325,
lett of center.
Two persons were Injured in an
accident at 1 a.m. Saturday on
TOWSON, Md- (UPil - A
TR 112 south of State Route 248.
performer from the Leningrad
The patrol said 1983 GMC State Conservatory defected durJimmy driven by Cynthia A. Ing Towson State University's
Mayle. 30, Long Bottomn, went first student exchange program
of! the road, over an embank- with the Soviet Union, !t was
ment and overturned. Damage disclosed Saturday .
wqs heavy.
"The State Department . has
Cynthia Mayle suffered a· mi· confirmed that he is at some
nor visible injury while a pas- location, 110d that Is the only fact
senger, Calvin Mayle, 31, Long we know for certain," univer~lt y
Bottom, complained of an Injury. President Hoke Smith said.
Both were taken to Veterans
Immigration and Naturaliza·
Memorial Hospital.
lion Service officials declined to
The patrol cited Mayle for comment on the status of Pyotr
driving under the infuence and Zaytsev, 19, who Is said to be at
failure to maintain control.
an undisclosed federal location
No one was injured and no one seeking pclltlcal asylum, the
was cited in a one car accident at Baltimore Sun reported.
9: 25a.m . Friday in Meigs County
The performer ·was among 20
on County Road 34, 1.2 miles students and 10 faculty members
north of State Route 124.
from the Leningrad institution
Troopers said Jennifer D. participating In the exchange
Smith, 16, Racine, was headed with Towson State.

..

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NOW OPEN

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ANn

WH£1E? fairfitldi.CIIIttttHiry
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WHEN? Open by chance or
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•

Households served by partie!·
Further Information !s availa·
paling utility companies will ble by calling Community Action
receive a percentage credit for
at 367-7341 or 446-0611 for Gallia
actual usage cost for the months
Coun~y; 992-6629 or 992·5605 from
of December, January, and Feb- · Meigs County; Senior Citizens
ruary. Bulk fuel users and
Centers at 446-7000 or 992·2161, or
households served by non part!c!- the HEAP hotline at 1-800·282pat!ng utility companies will 0880.
receive a voucher redeemable
through their fuel supplier.
Applications are avalla ble at
Community Action offices In
Cheshire, Gall!pol!s, and PomeFOR
roy; the Department of Human
Services, Senior Citizens Center.
Ohio Bureau of Employment
WILD
Services, Social Security Office,
Courthouse, Post Offices, utility
. DBIEP
companies, bulk luel dealers and
various other publiC places.
GINSENG
Application deadline Is Jan. 31,
1990, however, participants are
BOOTS
encouraged to 1et their HEAP
application In early.'
Direct Shipment
CAA staff Is available to a11lst
1b The Orient
Individuals with their application
at our central office !n Cheshire,
the Gallla Coanty OUtreach ol·
flee at 220 Jackson Pille, and the
Melp County Outreach office at
39310 UniOn Ave. In Pomeroy.

PDOLLARS

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
tlon and report a conclusion.
the Vietnam WarforcedAmerlca · source of c ontroversy In the coverage.
Reston concluded that !n ask·
UDIIed Press lnlernatloaal
But wi)Ue It Is true that · lng the commission to provide
After a bout 10 months work, to realize the government could assassination. Today, among the
WASHINGTON- Tw~ nty-flve
the panel, which included former He to them. creating a skepticism most popular theories adVanced conspiracy theories have deve· the facts of the assassination,
years ago Sunday, th~ Warren CIA head Allen Dulles and then that exploded further during the by commission crltld are that loped Into their own ~ndustry of JohnsQn· had . "summed up a
Commission concluded PresiRep. Gerald Ford, R·Mlch., Watergate scandal.
the X-rays and photographs are sorts and often receive a fait' drama that w!ll Intrigue the ,
dent John F . Kennedy was transmitted Its report to Johnson
"It's really a question of how inconsistent with each other and amount of media attention, It nation long after the historians
murdered by lone gunman Lee on Sept. 24, 1964.lt was released you view authority. Do you with wounds reported by doctors also Is true that they have been have agreed on President
Harvey Oswald, setting off, a
to the public three days later.
accept gover.n ment pronounce- who worked on · Kennedy In lloatlpg around ever since the Kennedy 's place In history.''
·
debate that even a quarter
kllllng.
In that regard he was proCritics say ·doubts about the ments?' ' said Warren &lt;?om mis- Dallas.
centl&amp;,Y later has not been report were Inevitable because s!on critic Davld.L!fton.
phetic.
In the years since there
When the commission gave
· Authors Harry l!.!~ngstone
set tll!ll'.
"There's a combination of and Robert Groden b~teve the President Johnson Its finding have been numerous private
the 26-volume document has so
Kennedy 's killing - arguably many holes and Implausible reasons people don't believe the photos and X-rays, many of that Oswald acted $lone - the attempts to discredit the report.
A main problem for the cons pi·
the crime of the century- by its factors that It Is worthless. Warren Commission," added which have since been published, same .cpncluslon reached by the
very nature was destined to be Defenders arglle that a lust for David Belin, who was a counsel were doctored to hide proof of a Dallas police within hours ot the racy theorists, however, has
seared Into America's corisc!ous· . sensationalism and the public's to the panel. " Most people don't second gunman and make . !t shooting - there already were been that they have rarely acted
ness for years If not forever.
-in unison. At leastlnltlally, they
Insistence at looking only at know what the . facts are and appear the president, was shot murmllrlngs ol a conspiracy.
But Instead of providing the .selected facts in the report are related to that Is the whole from the rear, where Oswald was
And when public release of the were often perceived as a group
conclusive answer to the assassl· the main reasons attacks con· mistrust from VIetnam and supposed to have been. Lifton, report came Sept. 27. there was of crackpots pushing theories
nation, the commission added an
tlnue after 25 years.
·
Wate-rgate ."
meanwhile, contends that while . an Immediate recognition that It that were not only at odds with
lronlcally, some of the com-. . Interestingly, a number of some of the documents may have raised more questions than it the commission report, but also
anguiShing element of horror with each other.
that those. responsible. for mur- m!sslort's toughest critics and critics and defenders also agree been changed, the prElsldent's answered.
York
Writing
for
The
New
staunchest
defenders
who
in
part
that
the
commission's
Unlike Watergate or other
der.tng the youthful and popular
body also was altered to.make It
president may not have been would denounce each other on process was · flawed - that ·too appe11r the shots caine froiJI Times, James 'Reston, although scandals since, the esta)&gt;llshed
not questioning the main conclu· news media of ·the iime did not
caught.
almost all aspects of the assassl- much evidence, especially the back.
, ~.
sions of the report. said "the try en masse to refute the
Belin, probably the strongest
: Established by President Lyn- nation- agree at leas tin part on official autopsy X· rays · and
central mystery of who kllled the commission, leaving the cridon Johnson seven days after the why polls have consistently gr is ly photographs of the presl- defender of the commission.
president has been answered by tiques In the hands of the private
calls those arguments '''trash"
Nov. 22, 1963, murder, the com· shown a considerable majority of dent's body, was kept secret.
Those photographs and X· and "hogwash" and "rgues that the commission only !n the critics who developed theories
mission, headed by Chief Justice the American people do not
process of raising a new catalog that ranged from the reasonable
Earl Warren, was otdered to believe the Warren Commission. rays, held from the commission's the theories are kept alive and
of mysteries."
to the seemingly bizarre.
They point out that !mme· report at the request of the encouraged by excessive media
evaluate all the evidence and
.
J:lrcumstances of the assasslna- dlately after the assassination, Kennedy family, are the latest

'Education president'
·hosts ,·education meet

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FR~TERNAI

, . BREAK BREAD- President George Bush and
•, Ber~d Cardinal Law break bread at the 89ston
·· Arclldlocese Catholic Lawyers Guild luncheon

"Spec~al

Care For People Who
Are Special To You"

:· President B~;tsh clears way
;Jor' Dr. ·Morgan's release

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love living at Overbrook Center because everyone is so
nice and so good to me, we have a nice Admipi~tr,,or,
nice Nurs.es, and Nursing Assistants. We have[deli~ous
meals, served by goC)d Cooks and two nice Activity Dlr~c·
tors. There is Bible Study and .G ospel Singing a,?d
Church, and lots of social events~ I love Overbrook C~n­
ter, and I am proud to call it my home. Wear~ all just like
one happy family here."
··

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B4MA11;tz'

RUTH BENNETT, RESIDENT

Come Visit, And ~xperience First,
H(lnd· Th~ Qp~r'Qr~~k Difference.
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MI~_UPOn,

Saturday at the Boslon Park Plaza Hotel. Bush
urged attorneys to do more public service wor.k .
(UPI)

OHIO

:· WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres·
!dent Bush signed into law
:.saturday a blll that could lead to
: the release of Dr. Eliza beth
Morgan, who has spent 25 months
; In jail for refusing to grant •her
:ex-husband unsupervised visits
:With their daughter.
: • White House s·pckesman Mar·
;lin . Fitzwater told reporters In
Kennebunkport, Maine. Where
·Bush !s spending the weekend,
·'t hat 'the president signed the bill
:IJulckly, "out of compassion· for
;her plight."
• The blll was sent to the
:president shortly after the Se'nate approved legislation to free
•Morgan, who has been In jail on
'contempt of court charges for
: h!dl~ her daughter Hilary, now
7, from her former husband, Eric
'Foretleh.
Morgan. who dissolved her
marriage shortly before Hilary
:was born, has accused Foret!ch
of sexually abusing the child.
·Foret!ch &lt;1en!es the accusations
and. In turn. claims his wife Is
1nsane. Neither· one has seen ·
liiiary since Morgan sent the
c hlld underground. "'
The case has sparked nation·
wide attention and Morgan's
jailing Is believed to be the

longest !n U.S- history on civil
contempt, her lawyer said. The
divorce case also Is said to be the
costliest and most voluminous in
the District's history_
It was not immediately known
when and If Morgan would be
released but her lawyers were
expected to file an emergency
request for her freedom almost
Immediately after · Bush signed
the b!lllnto law.
The House lnl(lally passed the
b!ll Wednesday and the Senate

;c ommon Pleas Court news

..........

Allslale·

decision by voice vote came just
after midnight Saturday. The
extremely narrow legislation
limits to 18 months Incarceration
on civil contempt Involving child
custody cases !n the District of
Columbia.
·
Morgan, a plastic surgeon and
author, was jailed Aug. 28, 1987,
when she refused to comply with
D.C. Superior Court Judge Her·
bert Dixon's order that she
produce Hilary · for an unsuper·
vised visit with Foretlch.

Woman charged with man'sdeath sues doctors, hospital ·
NEWARK, Ohio (UP!) - A
Newark woman accused of poi·
son!ng her husband Is suing
doctors and the Licking Memorial Hospital, claiming they dld.n 't
act quickly enough when the
woman's husband was taken to
the hospital.
VIrginia LeFever, 38, Is
c harged with aggravated
murder In the Sept. 22, 1988,
death of her husband Wllllam_
Authorities claim the woman, a

(\t
\

.

former nurse, injected him with
an·antl·depressant drug.
Last week she filed suit !n
Licking County Common Pleas
Court. charging doctors and the
hosp!tal wl th medical malprac·
lice, hospital negligence' and
wrongful death. She claims there
was a delay in get Ung her husband Into intensive care,
there was !allure to consult
appropriate medical specialists, .
a fallure to institute and carry
out proper therapy and a failure
to appreciate the seriousness of
his condition_
William LeFever's !Ieath was
first treated as a suicide by an
overdose of pllls. But an autopsy
In neighboring Franklin County
revealed the Injection.
.
Mrs. LeFever Is held In l!eu of

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) ._Eight are going to agree to greater that wlll begin with an opening
months Into his term, President flexlb!l!ty .. - we want to tie It to a statement by the president and .
Bush faces the blgges t te;st yet of much higher level of end with a news conference.
In between, the White House
his vow to be the "education accountablllty."
president" when he meets the
Bush prom !sed during the 1988 said, there w!ll be six closed-door
nation's governors this week at a campaign to be the nation's workshops Involving the goversummit on America's troubled "education president," and re- nors, the president and members
schools.
cently said he wants the leaders of BuSl!•s Cabinet.
In the process, Bush will try to at the summit to commit theni·
Topics will Include:
set In motion creation of educa· selves to the establishment of
-Teaching, Including recogtlon performance goals, such as national education performance nizing and "rewarding excel!rtcreased literacy and gradua- goals.
lence'. and providing more flexiLast Week, Democratic lead- bility In teacher certification_
tion rates. And he will discuss a
request from the governors for ers preemptively offered thetr'
-"The learning environmore flexlbll!ty In the use of oivn list of performance goals, ment," Including maintaining
federal funds to reach academic such as ra.!slng standardized test crime-free schools, Identifying
targets.
scores, i ncreaslng the number of . at-risks studenis and reducing
Above all, his aides say, the youngsters !n preschool pro- drop-out rates.
president will seek to halt what grams and upgrading the status
former Education ~retary Wil- and qualifications of teachers.
They also noted Congress
Ham Bennett, now the federal
anti-drug chief, describes as a . calle.d' for an education summit
chilling fact of academic life.
five years ago but that the
, "The longer yOu are In school Reagan administration refused
In Amer.lca, the dumber · you the Invitation_
become, relative to (students lnl
'"The Democratic Party has
You'll chooee convenient
other countries," says Benn.e tt, long championed· educational
Allatatlllocations,
referring to comparative stand· opportunity for all Americans,"
money-saving insurance rates
ardlzed test scores. "You don't said Senate Democratic leader
and
famous claim service:
George Mitchell of Maine.
start out dumb."
,...---....
..
.
White House spckesman MarThe summit will be held
/ '
""~
.t
\.,-."
Wednesday and Thursday at the lin Fitzwater said the admlnls·
University of Virginia In Charlot· trat!on welcomed their recorn·
tesville, Va. It wl!l mark just the mendatlons. As for suggestions
450 2n4 Aw.
third time that a president has the Democrats were trying to hog
Gallipolis, Dh.
16141 441-1104
summoned the governors to the stage, Fitzwater said, "The
discuss a vital national concern. stage !s big enough for all of us."
Theodore Roosevelt did It on
Since Bush announced the
conservation; Franklin Roosesummit on July 31, there has
velt on the Great Depression.
"We've Invited the nation's been plenty of anxiety in the
governors to come . together to education community and in
statehouses about what, If any·
focus on theeduatlonal system, a
system · which Is not, In spite of thlog, It would produce.
The sense of unease mounted
the money being spent per
capita, making the grade, •• Bush as the White House waited until
last week before announcing an
said.
Since a landmark 1983 federal agenda for the two-day affair
report on education, "A Nation
At Risk," real spending on
education - at the state, local
and federal level - has risen
nearly 30 percent to more than
$350 billion a year.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
This wave of money has
12·floor
hospital dedicated to
provided increased pay for
cancer
treatment
and research
teachers and a return to the
more
than three
w!ll
open
Jan.16,
basics for students. Yet stand·
past
Its
o'
r
!g!nal
target
years
ard!zed tests show little If any
completion
date.
Increase !n achievement. trig·
"It's been a long time coming,
gering widespread concern and
and
we are ready to go," said
frustration.
Smith, administrator of
Dennis
"We must • find Innovative,
the
Arthur
James Cancer Hospl·
accountable ways to Improve
tal
and
Research
Institute on the
performance," said Bush, who
Ohio
State
University
campus.
hopes to unoover methods that
The 160-bed center was to have
don't require a big Increase In
been
finished In November 1986,
spending of tlghl'federal money .
but
was
beset with problems. The
The National Goverr.ors' Assogeneral
contractor. Massaro
elation Is pushing a low-cost idea.
Corp.
of
Pittsburgh,
walked off
It wants the ·, administration to
the
job
in
August
1988 In a
give states greater discretion In
state.
contract
dispute
with
the
the use of federal 'funds so that
Courts
are
to
resolve
the
more money can be funneled Into.
differences
between
Massaro
education.
"As we move toward establish· jlDd the State concerning COD·
ment· of new education goals, structlo.n work and costs. Meangovernors are saying they want while, TheShermanR. Smoot Co.
De\dopinganctPrinting
more flexibility so they can completed the work.
The project was to have cost
' better obtain them," explained
of Color Print Film
. Jim Martin,
NGA policy $54 mllllon, with the state putting ·
Bright, colorful results are
up $40.4 m!ll!on and OSU the rest.
analyst.
1 ,
assured
tor your treasured photos
A
construct
ion
cost
has
not
been
' Said Roger Porter, Bush's
when
you
bring us your film and
tallied.
domestic pollcy 1advlser, "If we
ask
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CE-iftg Prel•redl
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lloro itand CO\IIIIry and ri&lt;torian furnituro.
.ley• and (harlot Mdloan

Musician defects

:H EAP applications available in area
, CHESH IRE -Applications for
the· Home E nE:rgy Assls tance
Program (HEAP) are now ava!lh~le according to the GalllaMelgs Co mmunit y Action
Agency. HEAP is a federally
funded progra m designed to held
eligible low·lncome Ohioans
meet the high cost of home
heating during the winter
months.
Program el!glbillty is deter·
Ill ined by income and need. A
house hold applying lor HEAP
must report total household
)ncome for the past 12 months for
all persons IS years of age and
older. Total household income !s
defined as the gross Income of all
household members except
earned Income of dependant
1111nors under 18.
· The total household Income
must be at or below 150percento!
the 1989-90 Cedera.l poverty guidelines. The annual income cannot
exceed $8,970 for a one·petson
bo~~~ebold or $12,030 for a two
party househOld. A total of 13.060
{II then added lor each additional
member .

just south of the Gallia-Meigs
County line.
The patrol said Heather D.
Fleming, 17, Radcliff, Ohio, lost
·con.t rol on a curve·. Her 1981 ·0tds
Omega went Into a ditch. Damage was minor.
A deer was killed !nan accident
at 7: 30 p.m, on State· Route 588,
about 5 mlles east of Rodney. The
patrol said the animal ran into a
car driven by Karl D. Tawney,
17, Rt. 3, Gallipolis . Damage was
minor.

ANTIQU~

'

Family Life Insurance Protection

Meigs motorcycle wreck victim dies
GALLIPOLIS A Meigs
County man injured in a motor·
cycle accident Thursday evening
died Friday at Grant medical
Center, Columbus. according to
the Gallia-Meigs Post ofthe State
Highway PatroL
The victim was identified as
Jack Miller, 26. Rutland, Ohio,
who .was injured when his 1979
Kawasa ki went off the road Into a
ditch. Damage was minor to the
,-cycle. Miller was taken to Vete·
~ rans Memorial Hospital and
; later transferred to the Columbus hospita l where he died the
nex t day.
It was th e fourth traffic fatality
·of the year In Me.igs Coun.ty,
:according to the patrol.
· 'The patrol inves ligated 10
•accidents Friday and Saturday
'morning including seven in Gal:Iia and three in Meigs County.
·· Eight persons were cited out of
:the 10 acclden ts_
; A passenger was treated at the
·scene of an accident at 3: 12p.m.
:Friday on State Route7, about7.5
:ro ues south of Gall!pclls, just
north of Raccoon Road. ,
Troopers said Franklin R.
Shor t, Jr., 23. Ashland. Ky .,
~plied his brakes and slid left,
the rear of his truck striking a
1983 P ontiac Firenza driven by
William C. Smith, 18, ESR.
,Ga llipolis. There was mod-e rate
damage to both ve hicles_
~ A passenger In the Smith car,
){ imber ly D. Fuestel. 16, ESR.
Gallipolis. was injured and
treated at the scerie by th e Ga ll Ia
Co unty Emergency Medical
Servi ces.
The patrol cited Short for
fa ilure to main tai n co ntroL
Ke ith D. As hley. 36, Pomeroy,
was cited for failure to stop
within the assured Clear distance
a fter a rearend collision at 3:50
p_ m_ Friday on State Route 7, 0.5
of a mile sou th of milepost 30.
Ashley claimed injury but was
not Immediately treated_
The patrol said Ashley stopped
in traffic and his 1985 Volkswagen Rabbit was hit from be hind
)&gt;y a 1987 Chevrolet Cama ra
driven by Matthew D- Little, 16,
.iu. · 1. Gallipolis. Damage was
')Ieavy to the Rabbit; moderate to

changed that plea.
Richard Dale s ·m nh, 28, Rt. 4,
Oak H!ll; Ohio was sentenc~ to
·18 months at Orient and fined
$1,500 on a charge of theft . Smith
was also lnd.l cted by the Mllrch
1989 grand Jury and pleaded not
guilty when arraigned after
Indictment. He later pleaded
guilty as charged.
Ricky Boley, 34, Charleston,
w .va,. Indicted by the March
1989, grand jury for perjury ·
changed a not guilty plea to
guilty and Judge Cox ordered a
presentenclng Investigation. Bo·
ley pleaded . not guilty to the
perjury charge In August.
.
Delbert Davis 58, Rt.1, BidWell
Indicted !n March for felonious
as suit, changed a not guilty plea
to guilty and Judge Cox continued the case, ordering a
presentenclng !nvestigallori.

:s..n.mber 24. 1~89

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.; GALLIPOLIS - John S. D!lJo Ellen Mitchell. address uniard, Rt. 1, Gall!pol!s. has flied a
known, on grounds of gross
&lt;:ompla!nt In Gallla County Com·
neglect of duty 'and extreme
mon Pleas Court against State cruelty. Married Dec. 19, 1984.
Farm Mutual Insurance Com·- . the couple had no children. The
·p any, Newark, Ohio. seeking a
plaintiff ls seeking a reasonable
judgment of $8,650. The plaintiff . division of personal property.
bond.
also seeks interest, reasonable
Cheryl Wolfe and Franklin
·lt&gt;ss of use of his vehiCle and court Wolfe. both of Rt . 1, Gall!polls,
I!OSts.
are seeking a dissolution of their
1
: According to tJ!e c:omplalnt, marriage. Married Feb. 7, 1985,
1
Dillard's au to was Insured by . the cOuple has four children.
I
State Farm at the time !t was They are asking that a separa-.
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Cub
damaged In a collision on AprU,
tlon agreement signed by both Pack :W. will have Its Fall- I
tT, 1989. He says the vehicle was parties be made part of the Roundup at 7 p.m. Monday, I
damaged to theextentthat It Is no decree of dissolution.
September 25, tit the First
lbnaer operable'. The plaintiff
Trlna K. Werry, Rt. 3, Bidwell, Presbyterian Church, 51 State St.
alleges be has made application flied a petition for a divorce from
Any boy In grades one through
but the defendant baa rejected Eric M. Werry, Rt. 1, Bidwell. five may come to the social room
his claim for coprnpensatlon for The plaintiff charges gross neg· of the First Presbyterian I
1
damages.
teet of duty and extreme cruelty. Church.'
The Cub Pack also win be
Two divorce and one d!ssolu· · Married Marcb 2, 1987, the
recrutlng
parents to become Den
couple · has one child and the
tlon of marrlatre petitions were
Leaders
for
their boys. Anyone I
plaintiff Is expecting. The plain·
flied In common pleas court.
tiff also seeks custody of the with questions should call Dee
Donald E. Mitchell, Rt. 2,
Standish, 446·9958.
children.
VInton, Is seeking a d!vorc~ from

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September 24, 1989

Pleasant, W. Va.

September 24, 1989

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'

Hugo's death toll reaches 15;
Carolinas Continue to dig out

'HUGO AFTERMATH - Hurricane Hugo left this twisted mass
of boats oo Palm Island and the Intracoastal Waterway north of
Charleston, S.C. Friday. (UPI)

'

Crowd turns ugly
when water runs out
: cHARLESTON, S.C. (UP!)X radio offer · Saturday of free
water and dry tee lured 10,000
Charleston residents to a shopping . mall with buckets and
coolers. but tempers flared when
only a few people got water and
n)l one got dry Ice,
A 50().gallon water tank quickly
rim dry and no dry Ice arrived as
allvertised. National Guardsman
Craig Price said, sparking anger
In the mile-long line of peo pie
already struggling with short
supplies of food, fuel and other
provisions In the aftermath of
}\urrlcane Hugo.
• "We got a call that someone
was giving away dry Ice and
water and a mob·had gathered,"
p(&gt;uce Sgt. G. Batts said outside
Citadel Mallin the southern part
of the storm-ravaged city,
' Traffic quickly clogged roads
t6 the mall and people toting
coolers, bottles and water jugs
jwmped from their grldlocked
cars and hiked to the shopping
~enter to get In line.
' When we arrived, a priva te
~! tizen, a former military man,
hed taken charge of 10,000 people
ahd lined them up along the
Jutslde of the mall," Batts said.
' We are just following the plan
he worked out In making sure the
tine moves orderly."
"Now we' re trying to send
people away, " Batts said as
grumbling citizens stalked back
to their cars,
The state Emergency Pre·
paredness Division was trucking
hi dry Ice and tankers of water
from the state capital of Columbia. But some supplies were slow
Iii arriving because power out·
~:ges across most of the state
made dry Ice - the most
iought·after substitute for refrigerators- a scarce commodity.
' Pollee said several angry scuffles broke out In the frustrated
throng, and the four officers at
die mall when the crowd began
gathering called In pollee and
NatiOnal Guard reinforcements.
.::charleston resident Jack Ungaro griped about the lack of
provisions and the apparently
chaotic distribution system,

"They don't have enough supp·
lies, " he said. "They said on the
radio that dry Ice would be
available at 10 a.m. It's not even
10 a .m. and It'~ all gone.
"At my home the water Is
flowing, but It's contaminated.
We never expected this many
days after the storm we would be
in this situation." he said, "Ever·
ythlng In my refrigerator Is
rapidly rolling. They knew that
we were going to be in a storm
like this, and they should have
done more to prepare."
Ben Johnson complained about
wasting precious gasoline to go
after supplies that were not
available as advertised.
"If we don't lose our freezer
we'll be all right," he said. " I
think we can last three days- If
we don't have to keep driving
around and using gas, looking for
lee and water."
John Evans said is fam't)y was
"prepared for a week, but we
can't hold out any longer than
that."

·

Shelby Lamie drove an hour
and 15 minutes from Summer·
ville and walled In line 45 minutes
before hearing there was nothing
left to line up for.
"This was the worsts torm I've
ever been In and I've been
through Gracie and Haze) - the
majors - and all the little ones
like David," she said. "We
stayed In our home, and I'm glad
we did, because If we had gone to
a Summervile shelter, the roof
would have caved in,
"This would be easier to
survive If the officials would just
get organized, " she fumed.
Lamie's daughter, Jeannie,
the I988 Miss Charleston, said,
"We used a lot of gas getting
here. By the time we get back to
Summerville, we won't have any
gas at all to even try to do this
again."
Another beauty queen, Miss
Charleston 1985 Tammie Rice
Sturgis, also griped about wastIng gas .
''Hopefully a store near us will
open so we don't have to keep
driving," she said. "Officials
knew It was coming. They had a
chance to prepare. "

•
•

llugo and cold front
wallop Buckeye State
•

By Unl&amp;ed Press lnternatloaal
'Mother Nature celebrated the
siertof the 1989autumn season In
Ohio with a dramatic change In
weather . conditions, with high
temperatures dropping from
near 80 In some areas Friday Into
the 50s Saturday. And, for the
first time In many months, sleet
alld frost were forecast.
;Tropical storm Hugo combined
with a cold front to produce
nearly 4.5 Inches of rain and
strong gusty ;wJnds over the state
Friday and early Saturday, re·
sOiling In massive urban flooding
In some areas.
:A listener telephoned a Colum·
b$&amp; radiO S1atlon Saturday mom1111 to report snow flurries In
s,W111ao GrOYeport.
Maoy motorists In northeast
olito were trapped In their
n11i1110bllel by rapidly riling

·'

water beneath overpasses, caus·
lng several multl·mlle traffic
backups. Officials said a large
section of Cuyahoga Valley Railroad track was washed away In
the Cleveland area.
The Coast Guard Saturday
suspended Its search , for a
sailboat reported taking on water
on Lake Erie and In danger of
capsizing about one-quarter mile
east of the entrance to Cleveland .
Harbor.
Coast Guard officials said they
received the radio message for
help from a boat Identified as the
Serendipity at 6: IO p.m. Friday .
The transmission reportedly became garbled and no further
word was received. There were
reports that six people were
aboard the boat, but the Coast
Guard was unable to confirm
that.

CHARLESTON, S.C. IUPI ) Residents of coasllll South CarolIna dug through ' the destruction
wrought by Hurricane Hugo
Saturday as food and water
supplies ran low, u tllity workers
struggled to restore power and
pollee patrolled the debris·
strewn streets lor looters.
South Carolina authorities said
at least 14 huiTicane·related
deaths had been confirmed
there. An Infant killed when a
tree fell on his house In North
Carolina brought Hugo's U.S. toll
to I5,
Hugo killed 241n the Caribbean
before hlttiJ\g the United States.
"Fatalities at this point are 14
In South Carolina. I have no other
details or names," state emergency management spokesman
Sam McCuen said. ''The Department of Wildlife and Marine
Resources Is beginning to search
lsland·bY·Island along the coast
for survivors or the dead who
may have stayed behind.
Hugo's tidal surge put most of
the barrier Islands and other
low-lying areas under water
early Friday, flattening oceanfront homes and resorts and
washing out roads and bridges .
Pollee made four arrests durIng a. 7 p.m. -to-7 a.m. curfew In
Charleston, · where Hugo made
landfall late Thursday with I35
mph winds and a 17-foot Udal
surge that left much of the
low-lying city In ruins.
Two were arrested for looting
and two for violating curfew.
"There were a lotofpeople not
arrested for violating the curfew,
but they listened when they were
instructed to get off the,streets,"
said Sgt. Thomas Gardner. "It's
been very quiet. People have
been cooperating, thank God."
Charleston and most othe~
towns along the coast were
blacked out, along with cities
hundreds of miles Inland such as
Columbia and Charlotte, N.C.
Millions of homes remained
without water·and electricity and
haggard utility workers said
restoration of services "will be
measured In days, not hours ."
The screaming winds and wall
of sea water left the state's posh
coastal resorts looking like a

.

CHOICES FOB THE ELDERLY - cindy L
Far80D, director of the Area Agency on Aglog,
pictured left, met with llle Melp County Council
on Aging Advisory Board and repreaeotatlves of
healtll ageocles, nundnc homes, and area
,_p!Ws aervloc Meigs Countlaol to explain new

R&amp;'!IDENTS INSPECT DAMAGE - ·Leaolng
power poles are evidence of the force of tbe winds
of ~urrlc!Ule. Hugo as residents of Garden City, S.
battlefield. ·
Houses were shoved across
streets or smashed to splinters.
Hundred-year-old trees were
splintered like . matchsti-c ks.
Boats ,from marinas were picked
up .by the giant waves and
dropped In mangled heaps along
the shores.
The hands of a clock tower on
Charleston's historic waterfront
stopped three · minutes before
midnight Thursday night, a sl·
lent reminder of the moment
Hugo unleashed Its nightmare on
the city where the Civil War
began, ·
"There Isn't a city block. or a
structure that hasn't had some
damage,'! Charieston Mayor Jo·
seph Riley said. "I don't' think
there could possibly be a
stronger hurricarie."
Civil rights leader Jesse Jack·
son, touring Charlet on's devas ta·
lion with Mayor Joseph Riley,
called for a nationwide "rainbow

By United Pfess Intetnatlonal '
A strong cold front pushed
Former hurricane Hugo, wea- acros the Appalachian chain en
kened from Its rampage through route to the Chesapeake Bay
the Caribbean and South Carol· before hitting the Atlantic. The
Ina, raced up the Eastern Sea· temperature at Charleston,
board across Lake Ontario Satur- W.Va. , dropped 25 degrees beday, leaving power outtages on tween 6 a .m. and noon as the
Its northward path.
front passed through.
Scattered winds slightly above
The weather service said the
50 mph were still being reported front would produce thunderSaturday In New England In storms In Virginia West VIrginia,
Hugo's wake, In the Midwest, a the District of Columbia and the
Canadian cold front was drlvlng Delaware, Maryland and Vlrgl·
down temperatures 20 !legrees nla peninsula.
and could br-Ing the region's firs.!
Maryland slate pollee reported
frost of the season, the National "three or four small funnel
Weather Service said.
clouds'' along a shower line near
The Coast Guard said New Baltimore but It could not be
England coastal areas could confirmed If they touched down.
experience heavy tides, powerful
Flood warnings were posted
undertows and some flooding.
for several streams In rivers In
Heavy thunderstorms dropped southwest Virginia and eastern
up to an Inch of rain Saturday West Virginia, but no serious
afternoon In metropolitan New overflows were expected.
York, northern New Jersey and Temperatures were In the 70s
eastern Pennslyvanla.
and 80s east of the Blue Ridge
Several hundred thousand cus· Mountains and scattered showto~ ers were without .power for
ers were probable for much of the
varying periOds of time along state.
Hugo's path In South Carolina,
A cold front crossing through
North Carolina, West Virginia, Pennslyvanla created a 30Virginia , Pennslyvljnla, New degree variance In temperature
York state, New Jersey and New · from one side of the front to the
England.
other, setting up almost certain
In New England, wJnd gusts to thunderstorms.
49 mph felled tree , limbs and
Much of Kentucky and Ohio
power lines •. knocking out power girded for frost on the ·heels of a
for thousands of customers
across the region. About 122,000
homes and businesses were without power for varying periods of
time In the six-state area and
New York alone as Hugo wended
Its way north.
"It's been a long night. The
winds picked up after midnight
and then the bottom fell out,"
said Tom Jambart, a spokesman
for Public Service, Company of
New Hammpshlre.

C., returned to Inspect the damage' In the
community south of Myrtle Beach. Saturday.
(UPI)

rescue'' to get sorely needed food
and other sUpplies Into the city.
''The total - devastation, the
uprooting of homes, the trees
turned Into toothpicks -despite
this, the people's . response has
been humane," Jackson said.
"We have seen people functlonlg
together- black and white, arm
In arm, the rjch and the poor."
Riley praised citizens and
emergency crews cooperating to
pick up after Hugo's "24 hours of
hell."
He said the stoFm's most
savage winds hit Bull Island, I5
mUes up the coast and had_that
portion of Hugo hit Charleston,
."we wouldn't be standing here
today."
Riley said electricity was beIng restored to the city's sewer
system but the water supply "Is
stU! undrinkable."
"We may have . power to
hospitals by late tonight," he
said. "All dry Ice coming In Is .

ordered to hospltals~rlger·
ate medicine.
.
Officials at the state Emer· .
gency Preparedness Division
said tanker trucks would bring
water to the area. Officials
warned residents not to drink
water from any faucets that
might still be working because of
contamination from sewage In
the damaged water system.
President Bush declared
seven-county ar.e a In South Ca~
rollna a major disaster area.
The Pentagon reported "catas·
trophic levels of damage'' at
Charleston Air Force Base,
where roofs were blown off,
windows blown out .and most
trees knocked down. At tbe
Charleston Naval Base, tbe
· guided !lllsslle ship USS Downy
was damaged by a barge that
broke free and several small .
boats sank at the pier. No Injuries ·
were reported at either base.

cold front . Hie weather· service
said .cloud cover would spare
northeast Ohio and lakeshore
counties the frost.
Cold Canadian air sent early
morning Minnesota tempera·
lures Into the 20s and 30s and It

a

•

did not get much warmer during
the day. Relief was expected as a
weather , system moved ~ou·
theast from Saskatchewan!
bringing southerly winds. Killing
frosts were reported In southern
and western Minnesota.

'

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT f.2W9

accept nurs10g home placement already have such a program In
simply because there are no
operation. Determination of
home care services, · · ·
needed services. according to the
The Eldercare Options Proproject guidelines, would ~
gram will provide a package of
made by case management
community based long term care
people.
services Including homemaker,
She emphasized that In Ohio
home health aides, resplrte care, · only one rural and one urban
housing assistance. chore, trans·
Eldercare demonstration proportatlon adult day care, home
ject has been funded. A populadelivered meals; and meatal
tion of 50,000 has been set as the
health services.
· size for the demonstration proIt was noted that while some of ject area, although, ,Farson said
these serVIces are already avail·
there Is some flexlblllty In that.
able, the lack of funding has
Area 8 Agency on Aging h!IS
.limited th,e supply Of services.
only 40,000 populat!Qn but .has
FarSC)n said plans are being been recognized by the Ohio
made Ill file an application lor the Department on Aging which will
rural . ·demonstration project
be Instrumental In making the
through the District 8' 'Area on
recommendation tor accepAging. That application has to be
tance, as an · already wellfiled by Oct. 20, with the project
organized . area with advisory
to go Into effect In February.
councils In place and with a
· There Is a potential to bring
definite need of more funding for
. approximately $2,5 mUJIOn dol·
In-home services.
Iars Into our underserved disAs for the Passport program,
trict, according to Farson,
Farson noted that Meigs County
Letters· of support from the
as a part of the Area Agency on
Couocll members, along with
Aging will move lntQ that project
supporting evldepce on the abll·
ln. May. She said that It Is
lty of the area to service such a
anllclpated that between 250 ana
project through health and social 390 people In the area will be
agenCies lind deliver quality
affected and eligible tor the home
health care In the home will be · care service program as ari
. compiled.
, '
.
alternative to nursing· home
An area advlsqry committee
care.
will be f~;~rmed, consisting of
She emphasized that Passport
representatives from each of the
Is a Medicaid program which has
eight . counties to handle the
been ongoing In several counties
required procedu~.
as a pUot project over the past
Unlike Passport whiCh Is avail·· year. Farson said she an.ticlpates
able (lnly to Medicaid certified
that the program will generate
patients, Eldercare Is available
nearly $2 mlliiOn In services In
to anyone' based on a slide fee
the eight -county area In home
scale paymene
care services.
FarSQn said that Ohio Is far
Medicaid eligibility . for the .
behind many other states which
PasspOrt home care program

has been expanded to Include
what has been termed a "special
needs Income" group, the area
agency director explabted.
She said that the eligibility
waiver now allows a resource
maximum for a single person of
$716 per month In Income (up
from $320) and $I,500 In counta·
ble assets excluding borne, personal possessions and certain
other exclusions.
The purpose of Passport Is to
slow the growth In Medicaid
home spending by Increasing the
availability of lower cost
community-based care and give
Ohioans an alternative to nursing
home placement.
Farson said that to quallfy for
the In-home care the cost of those
services would have to be under
60 percent of what It would cost
were they provided In a nursing
home.
While Passport provides for
the low Income elderly, It In
combination with the proposed
Eldercare Options -would offer to
all elderly the cbolcl! of financial
support for In-home care as an
alternative to nursing home,
Farson concluded.
Passport deflnltely'comes Into
effect In Meigs County for the
Medicaid eligible In May, while
the Eldercare Options Rural
Demonstration Project area Is
yet to be selected'
An application from the Area 8
Agency on Aging for that project
to be filed on Oct. 20 received
strong endoraement from the
Meigs County Council on Aging
Advisory Board at Friday's
meeting.

FmHA farm · · borrowel'S invited
~enricing

to meeting ·on it's' loan
MARIETTA - Meigs, Athens
The meeting will be at IO a.m.
and VInton County farmers with
at the Washington Electric Cooploans from the Farmers Home erative Building, 406 Colegate
AdministratiOn are Invited to a . Dr., Marietta.
•
meeting on · Sept. 29 to discuss
The meeting Is particularlY·
how FmHA 's computer program
Important for FmHA borrowers
Is used . In considering loan
behind In their payments 11nd
servicing options such as schethose having difficulty with the)r
duling and write-downs, reports
loans, Urwin said. ''We will go
Dale Urwin, FmHA Meigs over all the options available to.
County supervisor.
those borrowers a11d explain how:
to go about .flndhig one ·that wilt'
keep them In operation," he
added.
911 8N
The Debt and Loan Restructur·
log ( DALR$l computer program
than emergency calls
which does many !llatllematical
calculations quickly and "I~ a
COLUMBUS (UPI) - When
the 911 emergency number was
Instituted, officials embarked on
a campaign to ~et the .publiC to
use tbe number.
But now the problem Is to teach
the publiC to use the number for
emergencies 'only.
Roger C. Hixson, operations
manager, said· 41,374 calls were
made In August. More than 50
percent were . non-emergency
numbers, estimated Kenneth
Borror, Franklin County 911
coordinator.
''There are only three legit!·
.mateusesfor91l-whenacrime
Is In progress, when there's a
fire. and when there Is a
life-threatening situation," BOr·
ror said Friday. .
Borror said some calls were
not urgent, but were In need of a
safety agency. He said the
non-emergency numbers for the
safety forces In the county are In
the telephone book, but not on the
Inside front cover. He said they
will be liSted there next year.

more

·[!:!}SNOW
FRONTS:

-RAIN
Cold

II Warm W

w'

~SHOWERS
StaHc . . Occluded

TIIE · F~NCH

AN~CO,ooNY
Rtt~lonal

EMs responds to calls :•
..:.

Funds are
distributed

..

By••••

•

Regular Price

MUMS .FOR SALE!

Marriage
licenses

PROCEEDS GO TO THE
RIVERBY RESTORATION

w'*'
pro"'""''

lty, -~~ dlffiwlty, 11nd/or one
eye moy turn • the pereon veto II·
· tlgued, Thlile ume olgno can be
ceuoed by other Prolll..,o. too. A
complote oye exomlnetion lo the

250 SKOND AVE.
110 MKHAIII( STIIUT
GAlLIPOliS, ott. 45631 POMaOY, OH. 45769
446-UOO
. 992·3279

Stew• Sa-n
T0111 llct:•rdl -

Shrlt."' Clowa

(lfJI

Se.eYou NeJt Ye1rl
•

.,

'
•t

•

F-.1 Mogul
O.W.E. Cia• of G.A.H.S.
Employ"• of D.Q.
&amp; Family
ChHhlrt Kyger Staff
Galla C-'r EMS
Gtnt JulxNan Chtv.·Oicls
North Guilla
Cllltrlsadert I
Advilar Pttricia Stout
North CWHa c-~~e..
Gng Stwl

W1 welcome: all of you back next y~arl
Gtt yaur IIGm ready nOW.
Picturtl Drt til di...J Df Dairy QUIH

992-6669 .
271 Nts lh Seainll
. . .1p1rt, OH.
'

whether poor
perform1r1ce of · vlouelly guided t•kl might be
rallied to poor aye coordination. 1 •
'.

A. JACKSON BAILES, 0.0.

Ill GillY
•
Olio Y.U.y lonk
Larrr Elatt
o-all111tal
Turtlpillt f•cl
E....._x's Faacllantl
ln~wn't kktt
lnlthr.s ef Culu-.
G lpal1 l•qwt C..b
Ca.t•)6111
lltptul'• ..,.., Artistry
Star . . .
Carroll Harris ,Dtdgt
Dairy httft ef Mid Olio

Pr•cription Shop
'

only way to know for ourelfln I'll . coordination problem do• exiat.
lll'•ke on appointment to INrn , I

dech•. *•ln•o. fotlgue.lrril•blt·

$35.00

••

'
'

ture, not two. Some poople with
poor eye coordination wiH ••two
pictvra. mootly
t"-1' ere
tired. Othere with obvloue ev•
coorclnotion
Mlch •
cro1ud ay• or wall-r• will onty
one picture, . becMI• their
brein h• INmed to tum off the
pioture coming from the turned
..,.leuppr•elonl.
Frequent eigne of eye coordin•
tlon probleme can Include: he•

Dairy QUlin of GallipoliS 'woUld like to take
this opportunty to thank the following people
and busillltltS for making our 1st amualla·
nana S~it Eating Contest such an overwhelm·
ing SUCCISI:

•

----~--·+·~(15?~~----~

Our two oy• muot work to-

GALLIPOLIS- These couples
recently applied for marriage
licenses In Gallla County Probate
Court.
Scott David MacCllnchy, 31,
Ewington, Ohio, and Wanda Lee
Johnson, 28, Ewlngton, Ohio.
Sean Edward Long, 20, Gallipolis, Ohio, and Michelle Amy
Coughenor, 16, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Richard N. Condee, 20, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, · · Ohio, and Connie
Shafer, 19, Rt. 1, qteshlre. Ohio.
Verner Marc Grace, 27, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis, Ohio, and Janice Sue
Beaver, 23, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Aaron Daniel Blrtcher, IS,
Galllpolls, Ohio, 11nd Barbara
Jean Rose, 23, Gallipolis, Ohio.

ntrerllO'KISqHrmbrroi-Dccallbtr ~I . 1989.
GU:(.OMF.TF.R 1.. ~ cmdcmark of :IIIIa In&lt;:,

EACH

•

U~'*· 10 thot we con i • one pic-

•

FINAL COST

f

, EYE COORDINATION

$182.76
. $135.00
$100.00 .

Mfr. Rebate

•

..

have diabetes,
get s100 for
taking better care
of _yourself.

Special Price

.....

Hospital news

withMemorv•

630 FIRST AVE. e GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

POMEROY - Deputles 'of the Jim Robinson farm on Cherry Pomeroy.
~ ':
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart· Ridge Road for a tractor fire. It
John .Thomas, Leading Creeli: :
men! are Investigating a two-car was originally suspected that · Road, reported on Friday nlglit •
accident which occuJTed on Frl- someone had tried to steal the 1hat sometime )letween Wednes· :
day evening on Route 33.
Ford 3000 tractor whlqh bad day and Friday , three quarter ,
According to the report, Mable received moderate damage to horses were missing. If anyone -:
B. Brumfield Route 143 was the wiring.
sees these horses they are asked
driving north ~n Route 33 in her
After further Investigation It to call either the Sheriffs office ;
mother's car and Joyce Scbug
was suspected that rain had of Thomas.
-~
Middleport, ~as traveling south
gotten Into the relay causing the
Finally, Ronald E . Collins , age::
when her vehicle skidded left. of starter to shortout. The tractor 43, Seneca Drive, Pomeroy, wal;•
center on the wet pavement traveled approximately 75 feet arrestedFrldayevenlngbydep!f: :
striking the Brumfield vehicle.
Into the roadway before the ties on a charge · of crlmlnat:;
Mrs. Bruinfleld was trans- wiring caught on fire causing the damaging, He had broken out a •
ported by the Pomeroy Emer· tractor to stop. The tractor was window at his mother~ ·, ·
geilcySquadtoVeteransMemor- owned by Tom Zano, Route 3, residence.
, ~~
lal Hospital for treatment. Ms.
: •,
Schug was cited to Meigs County
·
Court for left of center.
Oiga Yonker, and five-year old .
.
·
.
' !
Dawna Brumfield were p;IS·
•
,
• '•
sengers In the Brumfield vehicle.
POMEROY - Units of the a call on Dewhurst J,.ane at 9: 35 ~
They were not Injured.
Meigs County Emergency Medl· p.m. In which Audrey Patterson· ·
There was moderate to heavy cal Service responded to 11 calls was taken to· Holzer Medical ·~
damage sustained to the Schug on Friday.
Center .
:
vehicle, a 1982 Ml!Zda station
At 11:44 a .m. the Racine unit
The Pomeroy Fire Depart· ·
wagon, and Brumfield's I973 was called to Dr. Doug Hunter's ment received a call at 9:52p.m . ;
office for David Nakao who was . for a tractor lire on Cherry Ridge ;
Cl!evrolet. .
Meigs Co\lnty Sheriff James taken to Veterans Memorial Road. The call was cancelled In •
M, Soulsby also reports that Hospital, and at I p.m. the unit route.
,
deputies and the Pomeroy Fire went to Third St. for Edna
The Syracuse Fire Departmznt
Department were called to the Plc!tens who was transported to received a call at IO: 07 p.m. for a -~ ·
Pleasant Vallev HosDital.
car accident on Route I24. The
The Pomeroy unit responded to call was cancelled in route.
,
an auto accident at 4:07p.m. on
At 10:08p.m. the Syracuse unit ~
Route 33 near Shade In which went to Water St . from Helen ~
Hazel Wilson and Don Vicker Diddle who was taken to :
'were taken to Veterans. Another Veterans.
Pomeroy unit at 4:08 p.m. took
Finally, the Tuppers Plains '
Bernice
Brumfield
from
an
auto
unit,
at 10:12 p.m. was called to ·
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
City and Gallla. County LOcal accident at Burlingham on Route Wlckam Road from Gary . Dill '
Schools and the Gallla County 33toVeteransandtreatedbutdld who was transported to ·
Board of Education received not' transport Donna Brumfield Veterans.
$706,366.18 In State School Foun· and Olga Yonker,
The )'dlddleport unit was called
dation Subsidy payments for
to
Lincoln Heights In Pomeroy at
September before deductions for
FITNESS WALliNG
4:
I4
p.m. for Robert Hooten who
employers' share of employees'
was transported to Veterans.
pension funds.
At 4:27p.m. the SEOEMS from
City Schools received
Athens
was called to the auto
$375,437.29 after deductions of
accident
at Burlingham and
$I0,264 for school employees
transported
Danny Murphy to
retirement and $59,538 for state
O'Bleness
Hospital.
Murphy was
teachers retirement.
later
flown
to
St,
Anthony's
County schools received
$13I,817.45 affer deductions of Hospital In Columbus,
The Ru !land unit responded to'
$21,053 for school employees
retirement and $77,552 for state
teachers retirement .
The Gallla County Boa.r d of
V eteraos Memorial
Education received $30,704.
FRIDAY
ADMISSIONS
Statewide, school foundation
-David
S.
Nakao,
Che5 ter;
subsidy program payments total·
Alban
Taylor,
Racine;
and
Anna
lng more than $227.3 mUUon were
Hllldore,
Syracuse.
dlstrlbu red to 6I2 Ohio city,
FRIDAY DISCHARGES
exempted village and local
-Marie
Thomas and Kathleen
school 'districts and 87 county
McNickle.
boards of education, according to
··,
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson.

GWCO~ IT Blood Glucose Meter

MuiU·Artt Ctnl!r

4,o• SlOOOo•$3

number of combinations In helpIng In the analysis of farm
financial plans,' will also be
emphasized. "If a restructuring
plan exists that will keep the
borrower on the farm, dollars
will fund the plan and the plan
will minimize the costs of debt
restruc·turtn 'g ,'' Urwin
explained.
DALR$ was developed as a tool
to help debt res ttucturlng au thorl7,ed by the i\grlcultural Credit
Ac.t of I987. FmHA farm borrow·
ers who are behind In their
payments should, by all means,
Urwin said, try to attend this
meeting.

If you

WEATHER MAP - ShOwers are forecast for the qorthern
Atlantic Coast. Showers aod thunderstorms are p0881ble for the
southern Atlantic Coast. (UPI) .

Weather
By United Press International
South Ceatral Oblo
Sunday, sunny. High around
60. Northwest winds around 10
mph, becoming ~arlable .
Sunday night, clear. Lownear
40.
.
Monday, sunny. High around
70.
.
Exteadect Forecast
Tueaday throUgh Thursday
Chance of sllowers Tuesday
with fair weajber Wednesday
and Thursday. Hlgbl will be In
the 60s Tuesday aod between 55
and65WednesdayandThursday.
The low will be In the 40s Tuesday
and ranee from the upper 30s to
mid 40s Wednesday and
Thursday.

provllto. at tbe etate's Pusport pJ'OII'am and
the Eldereare Options. Pictured wttll Fanon Ill
· Eleaoor Thomu, Melp CoWity Council oa Aging
director, aod Florence Richards; c halnnao of the
Advisory Board. (Times.SenUnel ~olo)

Passport ... ,_·. .______;_&lt;Fro_m_P_AS_SP_o_R_T,_AI_&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Rain replaces weakened hutTicane

I'

1

.Two-car accident investigated~- ,

•.

~·-~-

.-•v· • ••~

... - . , _., .,.,.,..,, ... , -·

�,,

P.ga A·B-Sunday Tii118S-Santinel

182 tvorkers...

September 24, 1989 .

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

(From 1s% woJtKERS. At&gt;

burned. ·
The Meigs No. 1 coal preparaPomeroy. AI Hartson will offi- at Rutland.
tion plant Is being upgraded to William E. Escue
Friends may call at the funeral
ciate. Burial will be In Riverview
handle coal from the merged
hOme
Sunday. 2 to 4 p.m. and 7to
Melg5 No. 31 facility In addition
DEXTER - WilHam Everett Cemetery In Middleport.
9p.m
.
Friends may call the funeral
to that from the Meigs No. 2 Es.cue, 58, of Cleland Hill Rd ..
home
Monday from 6 to 9 p.m.
mine, which It already handles.
Dexter, who also lived sometime
.
'
Mary Riebel
Coal travels from the Meigs
in Dayton, died Saturday at his
No. 1 preP.,ratlon plant to the res ldence In Dexter.
POMEROY - Mary Virlglnla
Gavin generating station by
He was born on Nov. 1, 1930, In
Jack R. Miller
Riebel
of Pomeroy, died Saturmeans of a 10-mlle-long overland Pomeroy, son of the late John
d.
a
y
afternoon
at Riverside Hosconveyor.
William and Roxie (Meyers)
COLUMBUS.- Jack Rayburn
pital,
Columbus
.. Arrangements
The new longwall at Meigs No. Escue.
Miller, 27, died Friday, Sept. 22,
will
be
announced
by the Ewing
31 will be the third In operation at
A plumber and welder for the
at Grant Medical Center . In
Funeral
Home
of
Pomeroy.
the division. The Meigs No. 2 Sauer Mechanical Co. of Dayton,
Columbus.
mine Is already operating two he served ·In the Army during the
·Born July 19, 1962 In Columbus
longwalls.
.
Kore~;~n War. He was also a
he was a son of George A. Miller, Joseph A. Wright
of Charleston, W.Va., and'Kat'en
The merger, the third. long- member of the Plumbers &amp;
P,.OINT PLEASANT - Joseph
Keller Thacker of Rutland.
wall, the reduction In workers Plpefltters Local162 In Dayton.
A.
(Joe) Wright, 90, of Rt. 1,
and the elimination of· rail
He was preceded In death by
Also surviving are two broth.
Ashton,
dlect Saturday at his
transportation "all will play a two brothers and one sister,
ers, Paul Mlller and Michael
home
after
a long Illness.
part In the cost reduction at the
Su rvlvors Include ·. his wife.
Th'acker, both of Rutland; granddivision, which In turn will help Mildred Escue of Dayton; three
mothers, Elizabeth Keller · of
He was born April 15, ~899 a1
hold down the costs of electricity sons, John Escue of Pearl Har- Pomeroy and Aletha Miller of Pliny, W.Va.. a son of the late
for AEP customers," Tompkins bor, Hawaii, Thomas Escue of
Charleston, W.Va.; great - Joseph Anderson Wright Sr. and the
Dayton, and James Escue of
grandmother, Mary Sargent of late Mary Elizabeth Cox Wright.
said.
Southern Ohio Coal Company London, Ohio; . one brother; Charleston, ·.W.Va.; a step- He was a farmer and a member of
Is a subsidiary of Ohio Power Chuck Escue of Pomeroy; five
mother, Sandy·MIIler of CharlesCompany, one of eight electric sisters, Margaret Andrews, Elton, W.Va.; several aunts, uncles
and cousins.
operating utilities In the Ameri- lene · Hatfield and . Mildred
He was preceded In death by a
can Electric Power System. The Withee. all9f Pomeroy, Maxine
division produces approximately .Marcinko of Tuppers Plains. and
grandfather, Paul Keller.
five million tons of coal annually. Leona Webster of Dayton; two
Services will be conducted
The Meigs No. 1 and Raccoon grandchildren, and several nieMonday, 1 p.m. , Rawlings-CoatsNo. 3 mines have been doing ces and nephews.
Fisher Funeral Home, with Rev.
developmental work to prepare
Services will be Tuesday at 1 Samuel W. Basye Jr., officiating.
!or the merger and the new p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home In
Burial follows In Miles Cemetery
longwall section "for quite some
time," Tompkins said. Earlier
this year, a tunnel was driven
(f'n!m EX-GALLIA, Al)
through a natural sandstone
barrier which separated the two
mines.
American Society of Geriatric Newklrk-Warehlme Funeral
Despite the layoff, the Meigs Physicians; and the Ohio Osteo- Home of Kirkersville.
Division will continue to be one of . pathic Political Action
The Family requests that
southeastern Ohio's largest em- Committee.
memorial contributions be made
ployers, with approximately
Born June 26, 1926, at Nelson- to the First Presbyterian Church
1,300 employees remaining In Its ville, Ohio, he was the son of the organ fund.
late Homer and. Bessie Dowler
work force.
This Is part of an effort to Warehime. In addition to his
Improve productivity and reduce parents, one brother and three
operating costs at the mining sisters, also preceded him In
facility . And although efforts death.
were on-going for some time to
Survivors include his wife,
prepare . workers the for the Mrs. Mary L. Jones Warehime,
·Inevitable layoffs,. "It's still a Ga!Upolls, Ohio; one son Donald
heck of a shock wh'en the R. Warehime, Kirkersville,
announcement is made;'' Tomp- Ohio; one daughter Mrs. James
kins said Friday afternoon.
(Mary W.) Morrison, Gallipolis;
''The layoff Is unfortunate, but one sister, Mrs. Katherine Willinecessary to preserve the jobs of ams, Gallipolis and four
tile majority and assure the grandchildren.
long-term viability of the divA memorial service will be
ision," Tompkins said. In a May held at 1 p.m. Monday at the First
meeting of the Pomeroy Area Presbyterian Church In GallipoChamber of Commerce. Tomp- lis. Conducting the service will be
kins described the area's coal the Rev. Robert Kyser. Burial
A hearty quarter pound •of
industry as "stablefor thenext25 will be In Mound Hill Cemetery
years" with the merging of the under direction of the Emersonlean, boneless pork ... grilled
two mines into Mine No. 31.
to stay tender and juicy,

Raccoon No. 3 have been aware
that this layoff was forthcomtq," Tompkins Indicated. "We
began working with the union
loCals (who also will be merging)
more than one and a half years
ago, and they have been Involved
In the planning process. "
Until earUer this summer, lt.
was believed that the union
layoffs would be limited to
approximately 100 workers.
Inltlaliy, SOCCO officials had
anticipated using six continuous
miner units and one longwall to
develop Mine No. 31. However,
explained Tompkins, ~ number
of occurrences this summer lni:ludlng costs related to the
merger of the two mines, the
summer's UMWA strike and
· recent geological studies, caused
company officials to reduce the
number of continuous miner
units at 'Mine No. 31 to five,
instead of six.
The reduction from six to flve
continuous miner units resulted
In the additional layoffs. The
company just came to the decision of the five units thls week,
Tompkins added .
Of the total 182 employees
losh\g their jobs, 30 workers are
from Meigs County and 22 are
from Gallla County.
II was two years ago, Tompkins pointed out, that the Meigs
Division began considering "every conceivable method" to
reduce the · costs Involved In
producing coal at Its mines.

nver

the Christian Valley Church of
Christ at Glenwood.
Surviving is his wife, Elsie Haw- :
!hom Wright of Ashron; three :
daughters, Dayoney McGowan of ·
Point Pleasant, Dorothy Mayes of ·
GaUipolis, Ohio, and Margie Bond '
of Mississippi; three sons, Dallas
Wright of Gallipolis Ferry, Ronnie
Wright of Ashton, and Denver
Wright of Columbus, Ohio; 29
grandchildren;
two
stepgrandchildren;
several
greatgrandchildren and several greatgreat grandchildren.
He was precedc4 in death by one
daughter, thiee sons, three sisters,
one brothet, and one half brother.
Funeral services will be Tuesday,
1:30 p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Roben Tucker
officiating. Burial wiD follow in
Crist Cemetery in Ashton.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home on Monday after 4
p.m:

'limes .., i.entintl Section

8

September 24, 1989
COUNTY SEAT- Pomeroy
became the county seat of
Meigs County In 18U. A copy
of the lnco.rporatlon act of
Pomeroy slates that the town
became Incorporated on Feb.
19, 1840. This picture dates
back to approximately 18"10
and shows the building before
the facade addition. The old
Pomeroy . house can also be
seen In the upper left hand
corner. (Photo courtesy of
John Fultz.)

•
Ex-GallUl
···-------

The concept of physlcaily
merging the two mines was first
Introduced "to all employees"
Tompkins said, back In early
1987. Employees were apprised
of the concept of physically
merging via group meetings and
also by letter from Tompkins.
Since then, employees received
updates on the merging process
as often as possible ..
Then 18 months ago, the
company began meeting with
union officials to involve them In
the merging process. A ''dove
tail" seniority unit was developed to determine the layoffs,
said · Tompkins, meaning, that
the 300 UMWA employees at
Raccoon No. 3, and 440 employees at Mine No. 1, were
combined into one group of 740
Mine No. 31 employees. The 740
employees were then laid off
according to seniority.

Althougn union omctals could
not be reached on Friday after(From OVB, page At)1
noon for verification, it was
reported that the · two affected Boat, which toured the river• ~i~e-s_Mr_s-.-G-.-D-o-ilg_l_as_(D_i...Jxi_e_Lou_)_Ra_y_
J]MWA locals - Nos. 1957 and
of Greenville, N.C.; one son, Dr.
1890 - have already been given during the late 1940s'.
During
'World
War
II
he
conSamuel
McNeill o( Point Pleasan~
the new number of 1857, a
tributed
10
the
war
effon
by
one
sister,
Mrs. Clay (Fay) Honaker
combination of the two former auctioneering
hundreds
'of 0 f Pal B Fl
local numbers .
thousands of war bonds in Hun·
m ay, a; two nephews:
one neice; five grandchildren.
By Friday afternoon, at least
tington.
He was preceded in death by a
80 percent of the affected emHe
was
a
member
and
past
sister,
Reba Oshell, and a half-sisPloyees had been noll fled by president .of the Point Pleasant ter, Ennis
Lowry.
telephone of the impending . Rotary Club and was honored as
Services will be Sunday, 2 p.m.
layoffs, by "senior mine site Rotary Man of the Year in 1961 for at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
people," said Tompkins. Efforts
contribution to the civic life· with the Rev. Louis A. Hussell.
were still underway on Friday his
the
community.
Burial will be in Forrest Lawn
afternoon to notify the remaining
He was director at Ohio Valley Cemetery.
employees by phone.
Bank in Gallipolis, Ohio; since
Employees at Meigs Mine No.2
1960 and was serving as Director
were not affected by the layoff,
Emeritus.
Tompkins added.
Born July 6, 1912, in the HickThe physical merger of fhe two ory Chapel Community in Mason
mines will permit further savCounty, he was the son of the late
Ings by eliminating rail haulage Samuel Henry and Lilly Mae
of coal from Raccooh No. 3 to Pauline McNeill.
Ohio Power . Company's Gavin
Surviving are his wife, Beulah
Plant at Cheshire, where the coal
(Dashner) McNeill; two daughters,
from. the Meigs Division is Mrs. LTC Jerry A. (Norah Ann)
Moore of Newpon News, Va, and

OVB boar'd

-.
.

,.

and smothered in our
own thick hickory.style
barbeque sauce. Served
hot on a freshly toasted ,
homestyle roll with onion
and pickles.

,

McRIB® Lean. 'lllnder.
Boneless .•• and soooo saltisliyiJ:lg!
ftnLimited time only!

Gill
MCO ' 8&amp;·04 7

At participating McDonald's

104 Chestnut St.

0

·w.g~"''"" ""'"
FC McON-63-4

~ 1989 McOOnt~ld' a Coroof&amp;tiOfl

1715 Eastern Ave.

Henderon, .WV.

Gallipolis, OH.

Prtnled In Unded Slates or AmeriCa L----~--------''--...;,---'

WHY YOU SHOULD

INVEST. IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH CD.
NOW!

is available for a
limited time only.
For more infer·
mation contact
your nearest
Central Trust office

111E CENTRAL TRlBI' aMB\NY
71¥ BaM 1JpoJ M*s Things filppm. -

. ....... ~'J,...:..s.w..w,,. ................... rlfeeil•lllt/"

By JULIE E. DilLON
textiles exposition which will
Tlmes-8entlnel Staff
feature the various clothing and
POMEROY - How many of textiles that were common at the
you think of Pomeroy and Meigs time Pomeroy was Incorporated.
Counlll w.Ub ~rille .ind a~a­
Thi£ expoalllon will~ PI'IW'!nte4 ·
tion? Well, ·tf you don ·t you' · by Schuylar ·Cone, a dol'\oni.te
should!
student of the Ohio University
The area has quite an Interest- School of Home Economics.
Ing history and background, all
Other entertainment for the
of whlcli , Is not negative . or weekend will Include a bar~r­
downgrading.
shop quartet, clogging. groups,
In 1990 the town will celebrate
the Community Choir which will
Its 150th birthday, or sesquicenpresent a concert featured
tennial, of Incorporation with a
around Stephen Foster, special
year full of activities. These
Civil War drills, music by Sweet
activities are being organized by
Mountain Sound, and the Restothe sesquecentennlal committee,
ration Jazz Band. In addition to
of which Mary Powell is the · all ofthls there will be an.arts and
chairman.
crafts fair.
The activities will take place
During the first weekend In
on the weekends and will include October there will be an Ethnic
. ~omethlng for people of all ages. Settler's Fes·t. All the activities
: · The committee has tried to on this weekend will pertain to
plan activities that will focus on the early European set tiers of the
;!he early set tiers, as well as other area and their natlonai!Ues,
:events that will provide a unique those being mainly German,
type of entertainment.
Welsh, and English.
All of the entertainment, arts
: • In an attempt to avoid possible
;bad weather, the series of year and crafts, and games will center
-long events will begin on the around this ethnic theme. The
' weekend of April 28. This wee- committee Is planning a parade
. :kend will feature a Founder's of nationalities. It Is the hope of
·Day Dinner with ·a few days of the committee that the people of
:activities surrounding that, ln- the area will research their
;volving senior citizens, garden family 's ethnic backgrounds and
possibly make costumes and
clubs, church groups, and posslfloats to correspond with that for
' ble other gruups.
• . The next big series of activities the parade. In addition to a
w!IHake place during Heritage parade of nationalities, the comDays on the weekend of June 8.
mittee Is planning a Kinder
The events that take place at this Parade, better known as . a
time are In conjunction with children's parade.
Anyone who has fundralslng
those of the Meigs County Museum ,and will serve to enhance
Ideas or any Ideas for other
those activities..
events Is encouraged to contact
There Is a good deal of Mrs. Powell who will In turn put
entertainment lined up for this
them in touch with the appropweekend Including a play, enriate person. The committee
meets on the third Tuesday of
titled "Rivers of Gold." which Is
geared toward a younger
every morlth at 7:30 p.m. in the
generation.
JTPA of!lce In Pomeroy.
In addition to the play there
The committee has received Its
non
profit corporation papers
will be a special costume and

1\.\

'I

POI,'fEROY AS IT IS TODAY - One can see many changes
between the Pomeroy of earlier days and that of today . Although
which will allow thecommlttee.,to
really get rolling. financially . .
The committee .Is now In the
process of putting together a
cookbook, "Treasured Recipes
of the Past" which Is ready to be
&amp;ent to the printers. If all goes as
planned, the committee hopes to
have the books available for sale
sometime around Christmas.
1n conjun~tlon with the cookbook sales, the committee also
hopes to have a tasting spree.
This tasting spree would feature
various recipes In the book that
are unique, unusual, and those
that sound pleasing to the pallet.
In addition to a commemorative cookbook the committee is
also working on a business
review history. This commemorative book will be a history of
what businesses have been In

Pomeroy from the time. of the
early settlers up until today.
Anyone who has any Information, pictures, etc ., Is again asked
to contact Mrs. Powell or attend
a committee meeting.
Arrangements have also been
made top~ t together a sesquicentennial quilt. The quilt would
show a scene of Pomeroy , the
sesquecentennlal logo, and
vignettes of the early Industries
In the area.
Well-known qullter, Bunny
Kuhl of Five Points, will be doing
all of the work on the quilt, which
will be used as a fundralsing
project.
In order to get the younger
genera !Ions of the area to participate further In the sesqulcentennlal celebration, the committee'

•

NEW HOURS TO SERVE YOU BETTER
'

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and,' FRIDAY OPEN Tl 7:00; TUESDAY &amp; THURDAY OPEN nL 5:30P.M.

•

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~ c;,. . . .

446-0902
. Middleport 992-6661

•

·See Rick Tolliver, Jay Hill, Pat Hill or Dwight. Honaker

PAT HILL FORD INC.

461 SO. THIRD

992-2196

.

Pomeroy to .celebrate sesquicentennial next year

-

H you've been
holding back wait·
ing for a great rate,
. this is it. But you've
got to act fast.
This offer from
Central Trust

•

---Area deaths---..........- - - - - - - - - - -

MIDDLEPORT·
'"

POMEROY IN EARLIER
• DAYS - Thill picture was
taken around the turn of the
century when Pomeroy was
quite a thrMniJ town fuD of
people ud bulln-. both
commercial and Industrial.
(Pboto courtesy of John
Ful&amp;a.)
l

'

•
'

lhe Iown Isn't known for Its growing economy ,It Is still a town rich
in history.
hopes to conduct a series of essay
and art conies Is throughout the
year In the school districts.
Pomeroy hasn't been known
for Its positive progression in
terms of business and Industry,
but perhaps this sesquicentennial celebration will help to
restore the pride and admiration
that the early set tiers of the area
once had .
Mrs. Powell has taken the word
pride and summed it up very
well.
·
PRIDE IN POMEROY
P - To protect what th e area
has and to preserve what is in the
area. The area has a lot of history
and historical districts which
need to be preserved.
R - Renovate the historical
districts of the area.

I - Generate Interest and
become QJore intent with what
should be done with the community. Become an Individualist and
stand up for what needs to be
done.
D - Develop and design new
Ideas for businesses and growtli
In the area's economy.
E - Educate residents of the
area on the history In the area
and what could draw other
people to the area both com mer:
cially and Industrially.
Pride In a community - ·is:
essential to it s growth and·
without it an area cannot develoP:
to its fullest potential. With thE!
support of the town, as well as lh:ecounty, th e sesquicentennla[
celebration may perhaps be
step in the right direction.

a;

�Pega-B-2-Sundlly liWVJs

COmposer Berlin·:
dead at age 101
NEW YORK (UP!) - Composer Irving Berlin, revered for
his Incomparable -songs that set
America's dreams to dance
music, died In his sleep Friday.
He was 101.
His unforgettable "White
Christmas" and Inspirational
"God Bless America" lightened
the hearts of his adopted countrymen - he was born In Russia through two world, wars and the
Depression.'
·
Berlin composed some 900
songs over half a century for the
nation's most popular ·s ingers,
from Bing Crosby to Fred Astatre, earning formal honors that
Included a Congressional . Gold
Medal, the French Legion of
Honor and, In 1977, t)le Medal of
Freedom.
But the songwrltlng giant, who
marked his 101st birthday May
11, never learned to read or write
music, despite composing the
scores for 19 Broadway show and
18 Hollywood films.
Berlin died about · 5:30 p.m. '
Friday at his Beekman Place
home on Manhattan's Upper
East Side, miles from the Lower
East Side streetcorners where he
sang for pennies as a child,
according·to his son-in-law, Alton
Peters.
"He died very, very peacefully," Peters, the secretary of
the Metropolitan Opera Association, said.
"Irving Berlin has no place in
American music," composer Jerome Kern once said. ".He is
American music."
Long after he retired, Berlin
was honored at the 1978 presentation of the Antoinette Perry
awards, receiving a special Tony
" (Or distinguished lifetime work
trr the theater." '
•,
A small, slender man with
li9ely brown eyes, heavyrimmed glasses and abundant
btack hair, Berlin kept youthful.
looking long after most of his
colleagues were dead.
llerlin's wife, author Ellin .
Berlin, died at a New York
hospital July 29, 198(!, following a
st'ries of strokes . She was 85. The
couple had .marked their 62nd
wedding anniversary in,January
1988.
:For the last decade of his life
B('r lin lived as a virtual recluse,
communicating with old friends
by telephone. He left his East
Si):le Manhattan home Infrequently for auto excursions,
will ks , or a vis it to his office in the
Broadway theater district.
By the time he turned 99, in
1987, Berlin had outlived ' the
copyright on some of his most
popular works , including "Alexar!der's Ragtime Band."
· 'fhe copyright law providing
pr'.otectlon to authors and comil:Osers for 56 years, plus an
e*tension of 19 years granted in
1978, began to put his earlier
works into the public domain,
d&lt;ipriving him of some royalties.
f e llow composer ·Jule Styne,
one of Berlin' s oldest friends,
cal led the songwriter, ''One of a
kind ."
"No body will ever write songs
as grea t as Irving Berlin, " said
the 84-year -old St yne. " He was a
truly g reat America n melodist."
. Styne praised Berlin for l)iS
work with the American Society
o( Composers. Authors &amp; Publis)lers, the composers union
which he founded.
·'He set the tone and the
protection for all the songwriters," Styne said . "Songwriters
used to be cheated all the ' time.
He fought agains t that ."
Berlin was born Israel Baline
in the village of Temoyun.
Kirgizia, near Ru ssia 's Siberian
border , on May ll , 1888, the fir st
of !"ight c hildre n of Rabbi Moses
Ba.Jine and his wife Leah Lipkin.
It' was a time of pogroms . When
the boy was 4 his ramshackle
house was burn(!d .to ashes.
The Balines together with their
children - there were then four
- emigrated to New York City
the following year and moved
into a crowded tenement on
Cherry Street In tne heart of the
Jewish neighborhood of the
Lower East Side. Berlin's childhood was poor in material things
but provided him a rich of
knowledge of human nature. He
later said: "Everybody ought to
have a Lower East Side In their
life."
The rabbi worked as a can lor in
the most Impoverished section of
the slums. He sang in the
synagogue on High Holy Days,
and taught Irving and his broth-

September 24, 1989

POmeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OhM:J-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

IRVING BERLIN
ers the hymns of the jewish faith.
Berlln was 8 when his father
died, and the boy star ted singing
on corners for ilennies. When he
was 14, he ran 01way from home
-as far asfourblockswesttothe
Bowery, where he became an
assistant to an Itinerant street
singer and occasionaliy sang
himself. He slept in flophouses
and sometimes sang in cafes.
Roaming through Chinatown,
he met Ml ke Salter, owner of the
Pelham Cafe on Peil Street, who
hired him as a singing walter. It
was at this time that he changed
his name to Irving Berlin. He had
powerful vocal chords and belted
out his songs .with .enthusiasm.
Over ·the years, his voice diminished great Jy In volume, so much
so that a Hollywood wit remarked: "You~ve got to hug
Irving to hear him .. "
When Berlin wasn't hauling
steins of beer to customers, he
sat at the cafe pta'no. pounding
out popular airs of the early
1900's, playing everything in the
key of F -sharp. He composed all
of his songs In F -sharp throughout his career, explaining, "It's
the only key I can play."
The Pelham had a pianist
named M. Nicholson. and Berlin
began writing words to tunes that
Nicholson had composed.
Another pianist-singing waiter
team in a nearby .cafe produced
an Italian dialect song called
"My Martucci, Taka Da Steamboat." The ditty swept the beer
halls, and inspired the BerUnNicholson team to compete.
Neither man knew enough
forrriat music to transcribe their
melody on paper. A local fiddler
volunteered to do 'the job. The
pair took their song to Joseph
Stern's publishing house in 1907.
It appeared under the title
"Marie from Sunny Italy" and
netted its creators a profit of 37
cents. The fu lure Emperor of Tin
Pan Alley was on his way.
The 19-year-old youth did not
make fast headway with his new
career. One song followed
another but caused .few ripples.
Then he was offered $10 by an
actor for some verses In praise.of
Dorando, an Italian marathon
winner and idol of the day . The
performer, who had planned to
use the piece as a recitation in a
vaudeville show, never turned up
to collect it. So Berlin improvised
a melody that an arranger
transcribed, and " Dorando" becaine a topical song of minor
popularity.
It gained Berlin official acceptance into the world of Tin Pan
Alley. The Snyder Publishing CO.
put him to work at $25 a weekagainst future royalties. Soon he
produced his first real hit, "Sadie
Salome, Go Home."
The tune was published at the
moment when ragtime, a distinctive popular musical style, had
become the national fad. Berlin
accommodated himself to the
ne w beat and came out in 1911
with " Alexander's Ragtime
Band ." Within a few months a
mill ion copies had been sold.

Cirruit-riding Methodist preachers

]ames Sands
By James Sands

Into the present day Thurman
United Methodist Church, the
above mentioned families organIn the early 1800's the following
families moved to the area along ized about 1838 the Emory
the Jackson-Gallla County line Methodist Church.
The first deed was · dated
near present
December 24, 1838. James Love
day Cellterconveyed property for a church
polnt: George
building to Clement Cherrington,
and Hannah
George Smith, Davis Booton,
Smith, John and
Jesse Gillilan, Josiah CherringPolly Mosston, Joseph Street, James ~ove;
barger, Jesse
John
Mossbarger and William
and Elizabeth
Parktns-trustees
of Emory. The
Gillilan, Clement and Catharine
name
Emory
came
from Bishop
Cherrington, Josiah and Fannie
Emory who also· had a college
Cherrington, I Davis and Margaret Booton, James and Sallie named after him in Atla!}ta,
Love, William Parkins, and Georgia.
The llrst church was erected In
Grace Street.' F'or several years
these families worshiped at one 1839 just a few feet from the
of several stopping places foi' present ;building. Tile orglnlal
Methodist circuit riders church was 30 feet by 40. It was
lncludlng-Pavfs' Bottoms , weatherlloarded on the outside
James Love's, Clement Cher- and plastered on the Inside.
One of :the orglnal members of
rington's, and "Old Zion". Wlllle
.
Emory
Church wrote in 1891 that
farmers who lived near Cen~er­
the
timbers
· for the first church
vDte began the "Old Zion"
were
"whipsawed".
church·which eventually~voived

.

•,

BUILT IN 1875 - The Emory Freewill Baptist Church 1ocatecl
near Centerpoint, was built In 18'lll as a Methodist church. The
original Emory -Churi\h was put UJI in 1839 on the fann of James
Love. One member of Ibis' churcli died at 108, and three others
became ministerial members of the Ohio Conference of the
l\felhodist Church.

1

" This method consisted In
show the thickness of plank
desired, after which the log
would be elevated'upona scaffold
several feet from the ground.
One of the sawyers would stand
upon · the log, and the other
underneath. It Is 'said to be very
laborious work and for the one
underneath ' 'hard on ·the eyes".
The pl8:stering was done by a Mr.
'Davis from near Rio Gral)cJe and
burned on the spot. The finishing
coat was of burned mussel shells
gathered from the Raccoon
Creek."
·
Inside, the church had one aisle
and the pews were rough and
quite uncomfortable.. The writer
of the 1981 history of Emory
remembered .t hat · the pulpit
reminded him of a section of
water tank near ,a railroad. He
wrote:
.
"The pre!lcher ascended by a ·
spiral stairway, wflen . kneeling
low, he was· i'nvlsible to the
audience. To the infantile mind
the minister seemed to be tantalIzing the audience, by pounding,
stamping around,, hollering and
shaking his lists without anyone
being able to get at him, or even
daring to respOnd::
· In 1839 when the first Emory
was built it · was a part or the
LeTart Falls circuit which consisted of 28 preaching assignments. It was nohoo many sears
. after this th.a t the · CentervUle
Circuit with preaching stops at
New Zion, , Madison Furnace,
Emory, Vega, Winchester and
other places was established.
When building began O!l the
Emory Church .there . wa.s
scarcely a Clear path to the
church let alone a road. It was
chosen because of its loCation, it
being central to the families that
formed Its membership. . ·. ·
The first '.cl,ass .leader was
Josiah Cherr~gton and · he was
followed by: Sam Parkins, Jesse
Gillilan, Joseph Waddell, SamueL
Prose, Jefferson Mossbar,
George Johnsf~n, William Norman, and John Stringfellow.
Three men , went out of the
mil)islry from Emory In the last
century: Frank Gillilan, William

Orebaugh is regiona~ ·
·governor for CMHA

Cherrington , and William
Parkins.
The first person to be burled In
the adjoining cemetery was
Davis Booton whO died In 1840.
One of the members of this
church John Mossbarger Jived to
be 108 years old.
It was in 1875 that the orglnal
Emory Church was torn ~own
and the pr~sent building was
erected. It continued to be a
Methodist Church well Into the
present century but today It Is the
worshipping home for a congregation of Free Will Baptists.

GALLIPOLIS-, Malcolm Oremembers, .. 't o recognize notebaugh, CMHA, 'has been conworthy accomplishments In the
firmed by the AMHA Board of fieid of behavioral sciences and
Governors as Regional Governor to educate the public in the
for the ~ssoclation. His . term theory and practice and effiruns through 1993.
ciency of behavioral health disOrebaugh was recently elected a bllti tes., admi~Jistra tlo n.
to a second term as Regional
The group was founded in 1959
Governor for the National Assolind has 'Rl:OWn to become an
, elation of Ment&lt;tl Health AdminInternational organization with a
Istrators. Orebaugh's responsibroad range of representation
bilities wlli be for the states of among its membership of providIllinois, Indiana, Ohio, Wiscon- · ers In the public and private, not
sin, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota for profit In governmental
and Michigan &lt;tnd the Provln!!'! agencies.
of Manatoba.
Orebaugh · Is currently AssoThe Association of Mental ciate Director/Director of OperHealth Administrators Is a pro- ations at Woodland Centers, Inc.
fessional association of adminis- In Gallipolis, a former Deputy
trators for programs for t)le pPvernor' of Region IV and a past
emotionally disturbed, mentally Pr!!5ldent of the. Ohio Chapter.
Ill, mentally retarded and develHe als_o actively partici'pates In
opmentally disabled and chemi- f!le Ohio Council of Community
cally clependent.
·
Mental He(llth Agencies where
The goals of the organization he ,serves on the public Policy
are to promote excellenc.e In Committee, the Ad Hoc Commitadministrative practice, to fos- tee on Health Care Issues and the ·
ter the professional gi-owtli of its Political Action Committee.

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PAIIERSBUIG, W.Y.
Memorial lrillge approach
West Virginia
at .
the foot af the · •
304-428·1 065 .
Monday thru Friday
9 a.m. til 8 p.m.
Saturday ·
9:00 p.m. til Si30 p.m.

Side,.;a:

·'God Bless America': a castoff

AWARD PBB8E!IITED- Joe ,81one,
was presented &amp;be 011111tandlng vocaiiQI&amp;IalfllluJture teacher award by Sam Cus~. rlgbt, of the

America'' at rallies and Inspiring
By United Press International
$600 million worth of World War
Irving Berlin wrote the music
a,nd lyrics pf "God Bless Amer11 bond sa.les.
Ica" In 1918 for an all-soldier
revue while be was Iii the Army in
World War I, b.u t decided It was
too syrupy and eliminated It from
the show. ·
;
Kate Smith uncovered the
unpublished song,20 years later
and introduced 'it to a war-·
nervous American audience on
her first regular radio program
on Nov. 11, 1938 - Armistice
Day, now celebrated as Vete- ·
ran's Day·.
Smith's fuil:thr&lt;iated rendition
of the song cheered Americans in
the dark days before and during
World War II. Over the years
there were.attempts to designate
it as the national anthem on the 1
grounds that· it Is more singable
than "The Star-Spangled
Banner."
·
DISCOVER I-IANDSEWN
Because of ''God Bless AmerMOCCASIN COMFORT IN
Ica," Smith became so identified
VNA COLLECTION PUMPS
with U.S. patriotism that Pres!'
FROM OLDMAJNE ThO!TERS:
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt Introduced the singe~ to Britain's
King George VI In 1939 by
saying: "This Is Kate Smith' this is America.'' ·
·
Thanks partly to Berlin's ·dlscarded song, Smith barnstorjn~
. .. ,,,
the country, singing "God Bless

NEW PARIS, Ohio - Joseph
K. Stone, a 1975 graduate of

. SElECT
CALICOS

llllllod Eyelll
Ours 2 ydo. lor $1

Our price

lOOlt.Cotton.
Clu' price

' $3!19 yd. .

S2.99 yd.

S1.79yd.

SALE

SALE

SALE3 YDS.
FOR $1.00

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$100
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t.rnn

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SCRIBBLES 1M
PAINT
Our price
SL99eo.

$100

$100
BOX

DOUIII-FACED

RIBBON
6.8.~

·OPEN MONDAY &amp; FIIDAY TIL I P.M.
TUES.·WED.·THUIS. &amp; SAT. 9 A.M. Ill 5 P.M.

CANDIE'S BLOOMERS
FLOWER SHOP

"Your Downtown Hallnwrk Store"
46 COUU ST.
446·1779
GAWPOUS
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J.

10yads.

Qu' price

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99C-

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2Fo!1
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lOOlt. polyester. 45'.
Our price

CHALLIS
PRINTS

FLOSS
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3.1C each

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$1.69yd.

SALE

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vos.$2

4Fo!1

FOR

SEIICT
HALLOWEEN
SPORTSWEAR
SOLIDS
SOLIDS
Acetate. 45' wide.
CoHon ~ blends.
&lt;;Jut price
$ol.99yd.

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Poly/IOfO'l, 45'.

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EA.

Beat of the Bend

Our price
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POSH

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WREATHS

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14" STRAW

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Asoolled.

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FOR $1.00

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SPQNGE
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is proud to be offering

llllllod lace
Ours 3 yds. fO&lt; $1

SALE
Limit 6.

Hannan Trace High School and
son of James and Viola Slone of
Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis,
has been named "Oulstandlng
Teacher''.
Slone, agriculture educator tn.
the National Trail High School at
New Paris, Ohio has been
awarded The 1989 Outstanding
Teacher of Vocational Agrlcul-•
lure Award.
The award is sponsored by
Ford New Holland, Penn., In
cooperation with the NVATA and
the OVATA, the national and
state professional o~ganizatlon
representing agriculture educa'
tors throughout Ohio and the

lRIMS

WIDE MUSLIN

. 3.000yds.
Our price
S1 .99eo. ·

FLOWER SHOP

36" a 38"

Poly/cotton, 45' .
Our price

POLYESTE~

,

•

Community calendar

Our price

YD.

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~

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j
11

•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

II

GALLIPOLIS - Grubb FamIly sings at Liberty Chapel
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m .
BIDWELL . -' Revival concludes Sunday, Apostollc Faith
Church, 7:30 p.m. nightly with
evangelist Bertha Jordan.

••

•

TUESDAY ·
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rotary • meets Tuesday , 6 p.m .,
Down Under.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire OES
meets Tu esday. 8 p.m.
VINTON - American Legion
P.ost 161 meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.

Register tapes
helping MJBS

national vocational teachers' assocla'tlon.'Willl
Slone
Is his wife, Lorrie Sager Slone.
.
-.
.

.

United States.
district five chairperson IncludThe Outstanding Teacher of ing Preble, Montgomery, Darke,
Vocatiolial · .Agrtcult11re Award ,Shelby, Miami, Mercer and Aurecognizes OVATk members glalze counties.
National Trail, under thedirec·
conducting the highest .quality
education programs In agrlcui- · tion of Slone, has had numerous
ture. The award recognizes lead- awards Including: Outstanding
ership In civic, communitY. agri- FFA Alumni Affiliate, State
culture/agribusiness and Champion teams In Parliamenprofessional activities.
tary Procedure and CooperaSlone was presented the award tives; Public Speaking, Reserve
at the annual Ohio Vocational Champions In Soli Judging and
Conference and Technical Up- Cooperatives, numerous top ten
date held In ColumbiJS, Ohio at · finishes in State Competition and
the Ohio Center earlier this two national teams.
month,
'
Slone currently resides in West
Slone has been the local agri- Manchester, Ohio with his wife
Lorrie (Sager), a 1977 graduate
culture • ed'u cation instructor at
National Trail since 1983. He has of Gallla Academy. and twoyear-old daughter Jessica.
served two years as county
chairperson ancl three years as

.I. _just wonder...

By BOB HOEF:LICH
. ones. sO:.many times that I have
fast food pitchman getting hit
POMEROY - I wonder about reached the saturation point.
repeatedly in the face with
the things I don:t understancl - · that, I think, Is the point of the
gooey, strawberry pte. If I'm
and stn·c e I
advertising .;,. saturation. Howsupposed to get a strawberry pie
derstand so ' lit·
ever, I'm so saturated that! can't
attack In viewing this, it's not
tie in this day
eyen took at a hamburger
working. I wonder after seeing
and age, I find
anymore: , .
the commercial a dozen times If I
Of course, the hamburger
myself wondercan ever have the same respect
ing a lot. It's npt
spo~~ve now added cJ!icken to
again for strawberry pie.
all that bad
thelcn"$nus.andwearebarraged
Speaking of appetizing, I notice
though
I
. ·· with the •ehicken commercials
mean, It beats wandering --!;Jut I &gt;not •ollly from the hamburger In this wonderful age of I989, we
suppose tllat comes later.
plliceil but the chl!iken places.
also have signs posted at bustI attempted. to cheek ·out my While the "chickeri in every pot" ness establishments advertising
concerns In al) encyclopedia- no tdea.tnigbt have sounded good at sandwiches ·and fish worms. I ·
luck there. Not even the cards one time, J frankly think we:re wdnder lf that's a goOd combinafrom the Trivia game could · also being over chlckened.
tion to advertise. I would buy my .
currently, ' one of the ham- fish· worms there, but not my-.
provide help.
However, it's
always good to talk things over burger places has a commercial sandwich.
with friends, so let me lay these - featuring people ~lnglng like
One of my reoccurlng wanderwondering on you.
chickens - well, !hey kind of ings these days pertains to the
Somehow I wonder about to- 5011nd like chickens - as back- bridge between Pomeroy and
day's service contract although I gr'ound music for the harC:I .sell. · Mason. It was bullt like In 1928If you do' a little math you 'll
never buy 9ne. These service Another - a chicken place contracts purchased for ·$XX features a man dressed In a decide that's been quite a spell.
provide' for repairs on the · new chicken costume on top of the Not knowing much about the life
appliance or n~w au tomoblle you roo!- he explodes or something. expectancy of bridges, I keep
just bo~,~ght. Down deep, I keep
1 wonder If these commercials wondering how many more overasking myself why service conare supposed to whet our appe- hauls the bridge can handle. I
. tracts are necessary If the tiles. I wonder how anyone can assume that It's safe but then
·product Is what it should~ in the think they do.
only the other hand - I do
·
Now strawberry pte has at- \YOnder ....... .
first place.
People selling service · con- ways held a special place on my
There are just so many things
tracts sometimes are not receplist. of favorite foods. However, to wonder about these days tlve to your refusal to pay the
that's going down the tube also like I'm wondering If you're
SXX for the protection -In fact,
with tliecommerclal showing the managing to keep smiling.
some of them are not.receptive to
the point o! being rude.
SWIMMING POOLS
I can only assume that they get
SPA
SALE
'100 FREE MERCHANDISE WfTI\
a little divvy on each contract
Fv.n for The
PURCHASE OF IN-GROUND POOL.
they sell. I'm contrary - I will
Wbole Family!
provide no d,lvvles. If tbe prowmt
ABOVEdUcts warranty won't cut It, then
POOL
I'm In trouble. ,
I also wonder about the big
(INVOICED
bucks that must be in those
THIS
.
sandwiches which ar11 paraded
before us on the teievilion - In
MONTH).
'
. ljvlng color - muy tillll!ll every
~~
clay - these commercial• have
aot to cost meaa buckJ.
l9Zl P!sd'oo! Rd 1 "W'P!Ilwt • C394l
I have vlewecl the hamburger

. QLS INC
HOLIDAY Po
mlzu t;-"ik...,

'

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Church of God will honor senior
adults, ages 55 and over, on
Sunday at the church. Activities
will begin at ~O a.m.

on Monday at 7 p:m . at the high
school. Everyone Is urged to
attend .

RIO GRA NDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meets Tuesday,
7:30p.m., home of Jackie Davis.
. DR. MALCOLM OREBAUGH
COOLVILLI;: -Homecoming · Installation of officers .
GA~LIPOLIS - Peter Parsons family· reunion is Sunday. at the Vanderhoof J:laptis t
Orebaugh holds a Master's
beginning 10 a.m., at Raccoon Church 'in Coolville will be held
Degree in Education from Ohio
GALLIPOLIS Ala-teen
on Sunday with services begin- meets Tu esday. 8 p.m., WoodCreek County Park shelter 2.
University and a Credential In
ning at 9:45a.m. A basket dinner · land Centers .
Advanced Studies in Health
REEPSVILLE
-The
Eastern
will
begin at noon .' Afternoon
Service Administration ·from the
Athletic Boosters will sponsor a · services at 1:30 p.m. David
University of Minnesota School
GALLiPOLIS - LIFT meeing
four man, best ball scramble on Stone, Neighborhood Ministries, First Church of th e Nazarene,
of Public Health.
Sunday at the Riverside Golf will be the speaker.
· He is also a licensed profesGa!Upoiis, Tuesday , 7 p.m.
Course In Mason, W.Va. The
sional counselor and ·a certified
POMEROY -Services at the
member of the National Associa- · entry fee Is $20 and Includes cart
HARRISONVILLE -The Harand green fees. Registration Grace Episcopal Church in
lion of Mental Health_Adminisrisonville Senior Citizens will
begins at 1: 30 p.m. Contact Bill Pomeroy will begin at 7 p.m. on
trators of which he flas been a
have a meeting and first three
Hannan at 985-4244 or Johnnie Sunday. There will tie no morn- months birthday supper on Tuesmember since 1976.
Evans at 843-5440. Prizes will be Ing services. The Rev. Ron
day at 6 p.m. aj the townhouse.
awarded.
Baird, Point Pleasant, W.Va. will
' preach.
RACINE -The American As-""'"'MIDDLEPORT -There will
sociation of Unive rsity Women
be a family picnic for members
MONDAY
(AAUW) will have a meeting for
THURMAN Thurman
of the Feeney Bennett Post 128on
all members on Tuesday at 7
Sunday at the Legion Park on grange meets Monday, 8 p.m.
p.m . at the Racine United MethoMill Street In Middleport. Dinner
dist Church.
CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
will begin at 1 p.m. Chicken and
Band
Boosters meet Monday. 7 Revival slated
noodles and coffee will be furnished. Those attending are. to p.m . in the band.room.
REEDSVILLE -The Joppa
bring a covered dish. In case of
United Methodist Church will
RACINE-The Southern Local
rain the picnic will be held In the
have revival and homecoming .
School District' s introductory Wednesday through Sunday at
annex.
Chapter One meeting will be held
the church on Route 681 near
POMEROY -The annual on Monday at 7 p.m . at the high
Reedsville. There will be special.
homecoming of the Eagle Ridge school cafeteria.
singing and preaching.
Church will be held Sunday ..
Morning services will begin atlO 1 POMEROY -The Meigs
a.m. with a carry In dinner at County Churches of CltristMen's
noon. Afternoon services will be Fellowship will meet at the Zion
at 1 p.m. Wl.th special singing by Church of Christ on Monday at
the Dailey family. The public is 7:30p .m. All men are welcome. ,
invited to attend.
RACINE -The Southern BoosLETART, W.VA. -The El- ters will have a special meeting

- ~and

._,

CHESTER -The Shade River
Lodge 453, Chester, will have its
annual plcn icon Sunday at 6p.m.
at Royal Oak Resort. Aill
members and fam!Ues are invited. Those ·attending are · to
bring a covered dish.

CLIPPER Mll.L - Shammah
sings at Christ United Meth.odlst
Church, Sunday .

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Junior High School started this week
collecttni re111ste~tapes from all
Big Bear stores .to get free Apple
• computers. printers and soft. ware through Big Bear's "Apples
for the Students'' program.'
In this Innovative program.
Big Bear gives Meigs Junior
High School the opportunity to
acqul're any of five different
Apple computer systems for
their classrooms.
· Carmen Manuel, Meigs Junior
High director of the "Apples for
the Students" program, explains, "What we are doing is
, collecting register tapes from
Big Bear stores and turning them
back into the store. 'They'll take a
smal I part of every dollar total on
those tapes and buy the computer
we. want for our school."
Apple computers are the standard for educational computers
and many Meigs Junior High
teachers think It would be Ideal if
every student could eventually
have extensive hands-on access
to a classroom computer .
· Meigs Junior High teachers
hope that all parents and community members will help sup·
port this program by sending
their Big Bear register tapes to
the junior high school with their
children, by dropping them off at
the school office or by placing
them In bOxes located at the
Farmers Bank in Pomeroy,
Central Trust in Middleport and
the Rutland Branch of Bank One.
To qualify, register tapes must
be dated between Sept. 18, 1989

. . ..
.'

Wallpaper &amp;
Interior Design
Spring

Clo_
v-y
Plaza

"City Pump"

and March 17. 1990.
"Please help us help your
young~ters an!l future community leaders," said Manuel.
For more Information, contact
Carmen Manuel by calling Meigs
Junior High at 992-3058.

Quality products .. .
with the right
'-----.. feature~ .

"Complete Medical Equipment for Home Use"
i

:·

~ -BOWMANS
1446~7283]
'HOMECARE MEDICAL sulpjpp&gt;[LY~~
63 Pine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio

em=
·

il

··

Golipolit, Oh.
16141 446·7333
M-f I0-6; Sat. 10·4, (losed SWI.

Today's Bes.t Buy
is the Country
Classic Look
Order Now For
Christmas!.

r

.

wood Lievlng family reunion will
be held Sunday In Letart, W.Va .,
at the Community Building beginning at noon.

' SUNDAY
CADMUS - Cadmus High
School reunlo11 is Sunday, lunch
at 12:30 p.m . (catered), 'at the
·
school.

eJuistanding teacher ·a~ard presented

Eastern school
menu announced ·
REEDSVll.LE -The Lunch
menu for the Eastern Local
School District has been announced for the week of Sept. 25.
Monday: hamburger, green
beans, fruit, and milk.
Tuesday: chili, peanut butter
sandwich, relish tray, fruit, and
milk.
Wednesday: taco salad with
corn chips, peas, fruit, and milk.
Thursday: tuna. french fries,
fruit, cookie, and milk.
Friday: pizza, corn, fruit, and
milk.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-3

' Curtain .................. .. $40.95
100X45"
100"~'· Curtaln ......... ..... ........ .. 41.95
lOO"lC84" Curtain ...... ..............42.95
200"x45" Curtain ... ,........ ........62.!11!
200"x63" Curtain ........ : ...........71.95
200"JC84" Curtain ....................79.!11!
Twin QuUted Spread .... ..............81.95
Full QuOted Spread ............ ....9~95
Queen Quilled Spread ........... 100.95
King QuOted Spread ...... :...... 116.95 AvaUableln Blue,
Sham 'Std
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Natural Ill
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v"
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White.Peach,
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Plilaw Sham (King) ...... ....... .'..27.95 hand-tied bows
1
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72
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__

L__~_·:_t_~__erP_:U_:-:r-li_i~_-:_·-p_·i_ii_·~__~._~_-~_c_.· ~_c_l~-d-ae:_il_~_a_~_hl_n_e--~---'-------"'7----.....l
."'

..

�Page- 8-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis. 9hio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Meneely- Wolfe

Wayland- Venoy
POMEROY - The Outr igger
the-va lley a nd pearl sprays. She
Prince-Ku hia Tropical Garden in
carried a bouquet of fr es h. pink
Honolulu, Hawaii was the setting
roses and pink and burgundy
for the outdoor double ring · lilies with ivy a nd baby's bre a th.
wedding cere mony of Robyn
Her jewe lry was a double strand
Loraine Veiwy and Terry C. of pearls, a gifl fr om her parents,
Way land on Aug. ll with the Rev . and diamond earrings which
Ju l i a McKenna-Ritchie
belonged to th e groom's mother.
officiatin g.
Kelly West a nd Je ff Patrick,
T he bride is the da ughter of
Greenville, S.C., were the co u· 0
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert Venoy.
pie's attendants.
Pomeroy . T he groom is the son of
The bride is a graduate of
the l a te Mr. and Mrs. Jennings
Meigs Hi gh School and is a senior
Wayla nd _
a t the Univer sity of Rio Grande
The bride wore a white s trap·
where she is·ma joring in e lemenless te a length dress which had a
tary e duca tion.
c ircular skirt gat hered to a fitted
The groom is also a gradua te of
bodice a t a dropped wa istline . Meigs High School and Rio
T h e bod ice was of re · Gran de Co llege wh ere he re·
embroidered lace over ta ffeta
ceived his bachelors degree in
a nd accented wi th seq uins and
physical education and health, as
pea r Is . The skirt was covered weil as a m inor in lear ning
).vith sheer fluted edged ruffles.
disa bili ties. He is employed With
· She wore a headpiece made of th e Roane Coun.ty School
silk rose s a nd dangli ng lily-of- District .

----Wedding policy· ---The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia,
Me igs and Mason counties as
news and is happy to publish
wedding stories and photographs
without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards oftime.l!·
ness. The newspaper prefer s to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior
to the publication. Mate rial for
Along the River must be recieved
by the editorial !lepartment by
Thursday, .4 p.m. , prior to the
date of publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with . wedding stories,

Rankin-

Gilbert
CROWN CITY - Jea nette
Re nee Gilber t and Kendell Scot t
Fola n kin we r e unIted in marriage
du ring a candlelight cere mony
July 22 at Crown City Methodist
Church.
Th e brid e is th e daught er of
Mr. a nd Mr s. John Gilbert. The
groom is the son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
J ack Ra nkin ,
Th e Rev . George Holley offi·
e lated the ceremony. Music was
provi ded by Rand y a nd Sharon
Sha ffer .
Escorte d to th e altm· by her
fa the r and g iven in marriage by
her paren ts . the bride wore a
fl oor-le ngt h gow n or sa tin and
lace. accented wi th .pearls and
se quins.
Ma t ron of · honor was Co nnie
Gilbert. sis te r-in -law of the
bride. She wore a balloon dress of
min t gree n.
.
Bridesm aids were Chr istina
Mi lle r . cous in of th e bride, a nd
We ndy Smith . They wore match·
in g m int green ba lloon dresses
and ca rri ed fl oral arran gemen ts
of mint gree n and peach roses .
Bes t ma n was Dale Sheets .
Ushers a nd e:roomsm en we re
Ra nd y Rank in. brother of the
groom a nd J oe Gilbert , brother
of th e br id e.
Ring bea re r was J ayse n G ilber t. brother of the ·bride. and

.·

MIDDLEPORT - Elizabeth junior at)endants wore very light
Ann Wolfe and . ThOmas Alan pink gowns. The wwn~ "!ere
Meneely were united In marriage accented with bows, open backs.
on July 22 at the First ChriStian and hemlines that ranged from
Church In Ft. Myers. Fla.
street length In the front to tea
The bride is the daughter of length In the back.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wolfe, Ft.
Julie Szulczewskl, Ft. Myers,
Myers. F!a., fol'l)'lerly of Meigs Fla., was.the maid of honor. The
County. The groom Is the son of bridesmaids were Melissa
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Meneely, Woods, Pomeroy; Amy Erwin
Cinci nnati.
Perrin and Diane . Rusaw ,
In following a tarnlly tradition Cincinnati.
the couple used the wedding
Serving as best man was Ken
ceremony written by the groom's Green. Louisville, Ky . Grooms·
moth er 26 years ago.
·. men a nd ushers were Scott
The Rev. Paul Childers, grand· Meneely and An.drew Meneely .
fath er of the groom. performed Cincinnati; ·· Steve Salmon ilhd
th e ceremony · for the coupls as Craig Grammar, Louisville,
well as that of the groom's Ky.; and Darin Wolfe, Ft. Myers ,
parents 26 years ago. Also Fl~.
officiating at the ceremony was
Junior attendants were Dana
and De de Decker, also serving as
the groom's father.
Thechurchwasdecoratedwtth flower girls, and David Rusaw ,
palms and pink mauve flowers ring bearer.
The music was provided by
and bows. The windows held
mauve candles, ferns, flowers.
Rosemary Moniz, Ft. Myers,
Fla . A vocal solo. "Household of
and ribbon. ·
The bride wore a full length Faith," wa s sung by Sarah Beth
white satin gown with hand Simmons, Plymouth, Ill. Brenda
beading, embroidery, and bows.
Railey , St. Louis, Mo. presented
The sweetheart neckline was
"Memory" as a pianosolodurlng
accented with hand beading on which the mothers of the bride
embroidered petals which con· and groom lighted their respec·
tinued into puffed a nd layered
tlve family candles, which in turn
sleeves. The fitted bodice .fea- were used to light the bride and
ture&lt;j a Basque wais t with a
groom unity, candle. ·
pearled petal design. A pearl
The couple resides at 2470
fringe framed the open back Atlantis Dr., Apt. 11, ·F f. Pierce,
which cascaded into a chapel
Fla . The groom is the associate
length train with butterfly bows,
minister of the Southside Chris·
embroid ered petals, and pearls.
tlan Church in Ft. Pierce. He
The bride's attendants wore
holds a communications degree
mauve Siltin gowns and the
from Mllllgan College and East

TERRY AND ROBYN VENOY WAYLAND

SePtember 24. 1989

'.

.
El,IZABETH WOLFE MENEELY

Tennessee State University. He · port; Mary Woods and Melissa
also has a year of graduate study Woods, Pomeroy; Mrs, Eileen·
in Christian Educatlon,at Clncln· Blosser Kernya and son, Joe,
nail Bible College. The bride has Cleveland;; Mrs. Janet Hinkle,
a degree in biology from Milllgan Columbus; and son, Harold Hln·
College in Tennessee. . ,
kle; Mrs. Pat Arnold , Harrison·
Attending from the area were ville; and Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Mr. and Mrs . Jo.e Wolfe.'Mlddle· Thomas, Middleport.
port; Mrs: Regina Swift, ~lddle·

Lambert-Dean
PATRIOT
Mr. and Mrs. tlon will follow at Raccoon Creek
County Park.
.
David Lambert Sr. are announcMiss Lambert is a graduate of
ing the engagement and ap·
: proachlng marriage of their Southwestern High School and a
student at the University of Rio
daughter, Lorle LY,nn Lambert,
·
to Charles William Dean Jr., son Grande. She Is employed at the
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles William Ohio Valley Bank.
Dean Is a graduate of Gallla
Dean, Vinton.
Academy
High School and a
The open-church wedding Is
student
at
the
University of Rio
planned for Oct. 21, at 1 p.m. at
Grande. He is employed at
Salem Baptist Church, Nebo
Road, Patriot·, with Kenneth Carter and Evans.
Sanders officiating. The recep-

Snyders note 50th anniversary
VINTON - James and Ka· daughter-in-law Patty, their
thryn Snyder observed their 50th · daughter Marva Leah and grand·
Wedding Anniversary.
children, Stacie and Cole had a
They .were married at Ports· celebration for t~em at Bonanza,
mouth, Ohio, on Aug. 26, 1939. Jackson, Ohio.
Floyd and Dorcas (Snyder)
Their grandson Ronnie Snyder
White were their only attendants. and wife Michelle called from
They spent their anniversary Texas, where he Is stationed with
away from home and Sunday the U.S. Army.
evening their son _ Philip and

j

COLUMBUS - Potential real
estate salespersons and brokers
will take licensing examinations
using questions developed by
Educational Testing Service
(ETS), one of the nation's largest
pr·ores .slonal testing
organizations.
The Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Real Estate,
contracted with ETS to develop a
question ba,nk from which test
forms will be complied. Test
forms will have questions cover·
lng general entry-level knowl·
edge, and questions that cover
knowledge of Ohio-specific laws,
rules and regulations for both
salespersons and brokers.
General knowledge ques lions
are based on lhe results of a job
analysis performed by ETS to
assess
entry level requirements.
LAURj\ ELAINE CARPENTER
The recent survey is designed to
provide licensing appllca!'ts with
tests that are both current and
appropriate.
A committe of real estate
PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wheeler of Lorain, Ohio.
professionals
was appointed by
George Carpenter of Rt . 2,
The open-church wedding will ·
the
Division
of
Real Estate to
Patriot are announcing the en·
take place at 2:30 p.m . on
participate
in
the
writing and
gagement and approaching mar·
Saturday, . Sept. 30, at Gallla
reviewing
of
Ohio-specific
ques·
riage of their daughter, Laura
Baptist Church.
Working
under
the
~~­
t
lons,
Elaine Carpenter, to Michael
Miss Carpenter Is a graduate of
dance
of
a
senior
ETS
test
Allen Wheeler, son of Nina and
Southwestern High School.

FIUKS AVAILA8LE- The Gallla Counly Conservation Club
presented the area schools wll slide tape kits on clean air, fore!lt,
eagels, soli, water;wlldllfe, and predators. Receiving the kits from
Larry Betz of GCCC, .center, are Dr. Grant Sheppar!l, clly school
superintendent, left, and Dr. Nell Johnson, county school
superintendent.

Carpe~ter-Wheeler

NOW IN. STOCK

SCOTT AND JEANETTE GILBERT RANKIN
the groo m graduated from Ha n·
nan Trace Hi gh School.
They reside at Route 2 Crown
City.

. ...

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: only $89.95
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Sofa and Chair 1
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: An Area is defi~ as :
SOFA UP TO 8 FEET I
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a Room; Hall, Staircase, 1
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SedJonals Extra
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OBSESSION; 3.4 oz. Spray .................................... :45.00
KNOWING, 1 Oz ............... ~ ........•.................... ~····· •35.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz .................... 14.60
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.5 Oz ............... :27.00
: OMBRE ROSE, Oz ...... ................................. ~ ......

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CORBIN &amp; SNYDER FURNITURE
955 SECOND AVENUE
(614) 446-1171 -

il

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0 0 0

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GALLIPOLIS, OH.

16.gg

SHALIMAR, 1 Oz.··········· ~ ··········~·········· ················· *23 .

. SEPTEMBER SAVINGS

development specialist, commit·
tee members reviewed test specl·
flcations and drafted examlna·
tion ques lions.
Committee members were se·
lected from different parts of the
state by Marg.aret Rltenour.
superintendent of the Division of
Real Estate. Each had expertise
l n v arlous areas of real estate.
such as ihe law, education and
practice.

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent
Family Practice
Accepting New Patients
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a.m: - 5 p.m.
Wednesday
9 a.m.- Noon
Appointments and Walk-ins .Welcome
Office Staff:
Mary Dillard;C.M.A.
Gail Hoveatter
Linda Trent
138 Main St., New Haven, W,V + (304) 882·3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

·

THAT EXTRA
SOMETHING
Veterans Memorial- your Hometown Hospitalhas that extta something.
Our facility boasts a well-trained staff o(professionals
who offer a complete range of health care. Our staff
works to provide friendly, compassionate care. Our employees are a family and pride themselves in taking.good
care of your family.

'.

I

JOANNE NEWSOME. Pmale Counsellllll

JAMES AND KATHRYN SNYDER

Real .estate examination
developed by ETS group

Workshop set

Each and every piece of the Victorian Sampler
Collection is a work of domestic art , combining
yesterday's ~raditions with today's value. Fine
materials, skillfully embellished with lavish
motifs of the Victorian era have been scaled to
today's lifestyles. Choose fro m a variet y of
authentic reproductions. painstakingly crafted
in select hardWoods and quarter-cut oak veneers.
Affordable, practical , and it 's in our showroom
for your inspection .

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

•

MONDAY, TUES., THURS., FRI. 10:30·2:30
WED. EVENING 1-9
BEGINNING MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1989

-

'ctorian
a.fumpler
· COLLECTION

., ,,.,.,...,....__~ . Inc

CHESHIRE -The Gallla
Meigs Community Action
Agency now has registration
forms available for those interested In being fuel vendors with
Emergency HEAP this winter.
Individuals must complete
vendor registration fonns In
order to be placed on the vendor
list. Forms are available at
Gallla-Melgs CAA Central Office
in Chesblre. For more information, contact the Cheshire office
ai 367-73416r 992-6629.

224 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY
APPTS. 992-5052

AS SEEN IN Victoriq Magazine . . .THE

flower girl was Kala Ours, neice
of the groom.
The bride is a grad uate of
Sou thwes tern High Sc hool and

CAA registering
feul vendors

Dr. Westmoreland's Office

ft!i

Any 2 Rooms
I only $38.95

Eastern school
-Anniversaries-- menu
q,nnounced

AT

if desired. Photographs may be
either black and white or good
quality color, billfold size or
larger.
Pdor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snap·
shots or instant-developing pho·
los are not of acceptable quality.
. Questions may be directed to
the editorial department ,from 1
to 5 p .m . Monday through Friday
at 1614) 446·2342.
·

POMEROY - A workshop o.n
filllng . out the National 4-H
Report Form will be held at the
Meigs County Extension office on
Wednesday evening, Sept. 27, at 7
p.m. There are many opportunl·
ties and awards for 4-Her's ages
14 and over and the National
Report Form is the basis often
used lor. selection.
All older 4-Her's are Invited to
attend the workshop. as are
·advisors and interested parents. ,
For more information, call the
extension office at 992·6696,

Sunday TIIlMIS-Sentinei-Page-B-6

REEDSVILLE -The Lunch
menu tor the Eastern Local
School District has been an·
nounced for the week of Sept. 25.
Monday: hamburger, green
beans, fruit , and milk.
Tuesday: chlll, peanut butter
sandwich, relish tray, fr¢t, a nd
milk.
Wednesday: taco salad with
corn chips, peas, fruit, and milk.
Thursday: tuna, french fries,
fruit cookie, and milk.
Friday: pizza, corn, fruit, a nd
milk.

STAILEY STEEIIER ..

1

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

,~-Engagements __

The next time something ugly ~l s on JUUr corpet.
get on yoor phone and call St•nley Steemer.
We're the best alternative to slain resistant carpeting. Our truck -powered, deep-cleaning system
removes ground-in dirt and stains JUUr vacuum can't.
And for those ol JUU who do have a stain resistant
carpet, we're a good way to keep ]Uilr investment
looking great.

I

September 24, 1989

1 0 1

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0

I

I

o o o o oo

1

o o o o o o o o

0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0

O

0 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 I

O O O O

I I

0 I 0 0 0

'

:24.00
47.60
·2
· 9 60
.
•22. 60

Your Hometown Hospital is consistently being
updated, not only from the standpoint of redecoration
for an appealing appearance, but in the installation of
state-of-the-art equipment. The latest equipment added
to our facility is a whole body, x-ray CT Scanner. Your
Hometown Hospital wants to provide the most modern
diagnostic and treatment facilities available so that we
may better serve you .
Whatever your medical problem or concern, contact
your Hometown Hospital. Give us a call at 992-2~04.
You'll be pleased with the complete. range of servtces
·which are available. you'll find that we really do have:

THAT EXTRA SOMETlflNG.

VETERANS
.MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 UST . .OIIAL DIIYE

171 NOITH SECOND

•DDLEPOU, OliO

•

991-2104

POMEIOY I DIP

•

�..

...

..

•

.

September 24, 1989

~Pai~~~~~B-~8~&amp;~un~..~dll~y~Tm~~~~~~S~t~lltii~,..~~==:===~P~OI~m~III~OV~-~M~id-~dl~a~p~ort~;~G~el~lipol~ia~,Oh~io~·~Point~'~PI~a:a~sant~.~W~.~V~a·~==========~S~a~pt~am~bar~~2~4~,1~9~8~9 ;

w.

TIMOTHY ESTEP
Timothy Estep, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Estep of Bidwell
enlisted In the Air Force, accordIng to Msgt. Stev~n Elfrink, Air
Force recruiter, Athens.
Upon successfully completing
the Air Force six-week basic milItary training at Lackland Air
Force Base, near San Antonio,
Texas, Airman Estep Is scheduled to receive technical trainIng In the Mechanical career
field.
·
Airman Estep, a 1988 graduate
of Gallla Academy High School,
will be earning credits tllward an
associate degree In applied sci·
ences through the Community Col·
lege of the Air Force whDe attendIng basic and technical training
schools.
DOUGLAS D. FLANERY
Douglas D. Flanery, son of Mr.
Dou11as i&gt;. Flanery of Scottown,
enlllted In the Air Force accord·
lng to Msgt. Steven Elfrink, Air
Force recruiter, Athens.
Upon successfully completing
the Air Force's slx·weell basic
military training at Lackland
Air Force Base, near San Antonio, Texu, Alnnan Flanery II
scheduled to receive technical
trainbig In the Security career
field.
.
Airman Flanery, a 1989 graduate of Hannan Trace High ·
.Jo'

School, wUI be earning credlts to- sport operator . course at· Fort
GALLIPOLIS - Got a call
ward an associate degree In ap- Dill, N.J .
from Hugo the other evening. No
It wasn't the
of tbe
plied sciences through the Com·
During the course, students
same
name.
It
·
munlty College of the Air Force were trained In the Operation ani!
was Hugo Pier·
while attendln1 basic and technl· · maintenance of mDitary vehl·
ottl, former Gal·
cal training schools.
cles of less than four and one-half
·'
.\\' .
llpolltan, calling
tons rated capacity. Instruction
.
from Ocoee,
AIRMAN JEFFE&amp;Y T.
W!IS also glvea'ln the transporta_ THACKER
Fla. Remember
tion of personnel, equipment and
him? ·. He was
Air FOrce Senior Airman Jef· supplies.
here
this
fery T. 1back$" has "bi!en awarded
He Is the son of Herman P .
summer. I had an Item on him In
the Good Conduct Medal a~ Offutt Perry of Rt. 1, Crown City, and
this column.
Air Force Base, Neb.
Earleane Mills of 4615 Camp
Well, anyway, Hugo called. No
The award was p~ented for Creek Road, Lavalette, W. Va.
particular reason, just thought It
exemplary conduct while In the
active ·service of the United
would be appropriate. Said his
States.
name was all over, 'down there.
He Is a aeroapace equipment
Said he was quite famous. He
SGT. DUANE M. SKIDMORE
walked Into his favorite barbermechanic with the 55th Field
Sgt. Duan!' M. Skidmore has
Maintenance Squadron.
shop that morn~ and they said
arrived for duty In Beckley, W.
·
''We.can take 'yourwaier but we
Thacker Is the son of RUth A. · Va.
don't want your wind." I guess
Thacker of Rt. 1, Chesapeake,
Skidmore Is a single channel
and Carl T. Thacker of Rt. 1, radio operator with. the Welch
the hurricane missed Florida
Glennwood, W. Va.
altogether. Hu~ went shore at
Recruiting Station.
Charleston, S.C.
,
ijls wUe, Julie, lsthe daughter
He is the son of Elmer A. and Roof James C. and Theresa C. Clark semary Skidmore of 544 JacksOn
!like the Charleston area. My
of 2463 N. 144th Ave., Omaha, Pike, GaUipolls:
Wife and I spent 10 days down
there one fall. I wonder how the
Neb. The airman Is a 1985 graThe sergeant Is a 1979 graduate
duate of
Chesapeake High of Gallla Academy High School.
big carrier USS Yorktown rode
School. .
out the storm. I saw some
pictures on TV of Mt. Pleasant,
STAFF SGT. KENNETH D.
opposite Charleston, just north of
AIRMAN UIA B. BOND
HAYS
Patriot's Point where the York·
Airman Lisa R. Bond has
Air Force Staff Sgt. Kenneth
town · Is permanently moored
graduated from the u.s. Air · D. Hays, whose wife, Air Force
along with a destroyer, a submaForce course for Information Sgt. Mary E . Hays, Is the daugfl.
rine and the nuclear ship Savansystems specialist at Keesler Air ter of John A. and Dorothy E.
Foree Base, Miss.
nah, all part of a display that
Smith of 31110 Salser Road, Racosts six or was It seven-dollars
Graduates of the course learned cine, has been named noncom·
to (our.
· how to operate and malntaln elec- mlssloned officer of the quarter.
'I wonder how Fort Sumter, the
tronic data PI ocesslhg equipment,
Hays Is an Information man·
and earned credlts toward an as- agement supervisor with the
once mighty fortress In Charles•
sociated degree In applied sclenee 2003rd Communications Group
ton harbdr, fared. And; how
through the Community College of In Turkey.
about the Battery, the sophistiAir Force.
cated strip facing the harbor with
He Is a 1972 gradujlte of Meigs
Its classic homes. where 128
Bond Is the daughter of Mr. .High School.
and Mrs. David R. Bond of Rt. 2,
years ago, southern gentlemen
Bidwell. She Is a 1986 graduate of
2ND LT. VAUGHAN J.
and their southern belles,
Canton South High School.
SPENCER
watched shot and shell burst over
the fort. From what I hear
Second Lt. Vaughan J. Spencer
SPEC. ROBERT A. BATES II
damage was not as extensive as
has completed an armor officer
Spec. Robert A. Bates II was basic course at the U.S. Army
first · predicted. The last big
presented the Air Assault Badge Armor School, Fort Knox, Ky.
hurricane to hit Charleston was
upon graduation from the u.s.
David in 1954. Hugo was bigger.
The course covered branch
Army's air assault school at training In armor for newly comAbout 10 to 12 hours after Hugo
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.
missioned officers with special&gt; slammed Into Charleston. he
Trainees learned to rapidly and emphasis In the duties of tank
made his way Into the Ohio
safely exit a helicopter from a va- and . reconnaissance
platoon
Valley minus extremely high
riety of
difficult situations, leaders. Their training Includes
winds yet dropping a lot of water
Whether descending Into tree tops Instruction In automotive prlncl·
on the Tri-State are. By 6 p.m.
or lowering themselves or Injured pies and maintenance, commu·
Friday, Hugo, just a skeleton of
soldiers down sheer drops.
his former self, was west of
nlaations, weapons and tactics.
Spec. Bates II has been de·
Pittsburgh.
Spencer Is the son of Bill and
corated with the Army Achieve·. Mary K. Spencer of 174 Mulberry ' I failed to check_the barometer
ment Medal at Schofield Bar- Ave., Porrteroy.
at the onset of Hugo's travel In
racks.
He Is a 1984 graduate of Meigs
The Achievement Medal Is Local High School and a 1988 graawarded to soldiers for merit or!· duate of Ohio University, Athens.
Farm Bureau Dinner
ous service, acts of courage, or
RIO GRANDE - Th.e annual
other accomplishments.
SPEC. JOHN F . CLENDENEN
Gallla County Farm Bu.reau .
He Is an alr·defense lntelll·
III
dinner meeting will be held
gence and operations assistant
Army Spec. John F . Clendenen
Tuesday, Sept. 26, in the Buckeye
with the 62nd Air Defense Artil- III has arrived In West GerHills Career Center Cafeteria.
lery.
many.
The 7 p.m. dinner will be catered
Bates Is the son of Karen R.
Clendenen Is a utUities equipby Circle's Catering. Entertainand Robert D. Walter of Rt. 1, ment repairer with the 11th Sigment, and business will follow,
Gallipolis.
•
nal Battalion.
Tickets ($4 a · person) may be
His wife, Christine, Is the
His wife, Monoka, Is the daughpurchased at the Gallla· County
daughter of Thomas R. and
ter of Louis Brady of Pt. Plea·
Extension office and River City
loris Belcher of Tlpp City. He Is a sant.
Farm Supply.
1984 graduate of Kyger Creek
The specialist Is a 1983 graduate
High School.
of Pt. Pleasant High School.

,..,_· ·
·~··'
'l
.

ne:

WEDDING

AIRMAN JOHN W. SISSON
PVT. MARK A. GRIFFIN
Airman John W. Sis·son has
Pvt. Mark A.
Griffin has
graduated from the U.S. Air completed the heavy wheeled·
Force course for Information vehicle mechanic course at the
systems specialist at Keesler Air U.S. Army Training Center, Fort
Force Base, Miss.
Jackson, S.C.
Graduates of the course learned
During the course, students
how to operate and maintain elec· ·were Instructed to perform malnt·
tronlc data processing equipment, enance and assist In the repair of
and earned credits toward an asso- heavy duty vehicles and associate degree In applied science ciated equipment.
through the Community College of
Gflffln Is the son of Ruth A.
the Air Force.
Longenette of 30 Ash St., Tuppers
Sisson Is the son of Robert w. Plains, and Clifford Longenette
and Iva M. Sisson of Rt. 1, Rut- of 40342 Lin berger Ridge, Reedsland. He Is a 1988 graduate of ville.
Meigs Local High School.
His wife, Tanya, Is the daugJi.
ter of Chuck an!l Sandy Savoy of
PVT. JIMMY D. PERRY
50303 Arbaugh Road, Reedsville.
Pvt. Jimmy D. Perry has ·
He Is a 1988 graudate of Eascompleted an Army motor tran- tern High School, Reedsville.

PHOTOGRAPHY
5 99
f'HOM

LEIIR. .
PHOTO&amp;RAPttY
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS. OH.

the area but. I knew the glass. as
the old timers would say, was
dropping . I checked the barometer at 4 p.m . It was down to 29.31
Inches of mercury. By 7: 30p.m.,
It was back up to 29 .53 and by 11
p.m. It was 29.3. After a short nap
I· checked It again at 6 a.m.
Saturday and It had climbed to
only 29 .78.
Gol a letter last week from
Bryan V IIJICe, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Vance of Gallipolis, In
far-off Hawaii. He's a lance
corporal In the u.s. Madne
Corps, stationed at the Marine
Corps Air Station, at . Kaneohe
Bay . He'sattachedtoMarlneAlr
Control Squadron 2, Tactical Alr .
,
Operations Center.
Bryan and I worked together at
WJEH-WYPC before he joined
the Marines. Nowhetellsmehe's
been attending school in Hawaii
and just recently graduated from
the Columbia School 'of Braodcastfng. Said he'd like to work at
one 'o f the big radio stations on
Oahu. And, he could do it. Bryan
say~ he's coming home Dec. 9, If
all goes well. It's been more than
a year since I heard from the guy.
Thought they'd transferred him
somewhere. But, he said he'd
been busy.
H you saw the Notre DameMichigan game last week you
saw the new Goodyear blimp,
Spirit of Akron , hovering over the
stadium In gray leaden skies,
And, the pDot. according to the
TV announcer, was John Moran.
He was pilot of the ·Goodyear
. blimp I flewonoutofChesapeake
several years ago. He ·hasn't
changed much. I'd say he's gone
up In the world.
Gol a phone call the other day
from Lucille Contas ta who lives
on State Route 160 In the
BldweU-VInton area. Said Mrs.
Clara Fisher, 88, recently had
lunch with two students she
taught 65 years ago at Glen·
Summit .school. Mrs. Fisher had
lunch with P;m line Shaffer JoneS'
72, and Frank Contas ta; 75 at the
home of Frank and Lucille
Contasta. Doesn't take long for
time to sUp away, does It?
still looking for 1940 Gallla

•.tt~ (20 hp)

• AUiomiiiC lrlftlnM~on .
No clutctung . lntlnue tPHd cftole•.

• .a··.48" 01' IO" II'IIfl-drtven mower
•llllblt. Axlf..mOunlld to tottow

• Dual l*tllslo aid Ugtlltuml; two
,,.,.,,,~" speed ranget: 11'14 dlf·
lt,.,lill loek for .sdltlonlltractiOft.
• Hlah-baell, thlck-culhloned ...,.
• Fully tneloHd engine.
• Sh1ftodri.,.n alt~~ehmerHa ror~

po. . t lfllntltt.
• Electric PTO. Engege anca dlten!IIQI

ettachmentt wl1h Itip or • swllc:h.
• Hydraulic Ult, rt6M lind tower
ettactlmentt

•"ortl"tl".

No Interest or payment U May
1990. Ofltr bp. Oct. 15, 1919
Savings Up Ia 11,100.00
90 ,_.Is Now in SID&lt;k

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
4th 8a MAIN
REEDSVILLE, OHO
PH. 378-8126

All New
Motorcoach Tour!

. 5lillng t. ICIIIt. MD -

CallAAA todiJy!

niUIIII • wlcwo '-c1uu fllnabllty to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
236 L . . St., 21M1 Fleor
992-5912
.
wo te 5:00 l•d•rFrWDr
CIIIMhn•r

GAWPOUS:
414 S.COIIII Aw1., 21111 FIMr
446·0166
I:JD te SiDO ._.,.friday
1:30 te II Sat••r

CIIIM'Ihurs•r

aso, .lllr._, Chl•••ub, AthiM, ChHcelhl,llpn &amp; McArth•

992-5627

.

'Lazy Way' to
·Lose Weight

RIO GRANDE - Especially
Music, the adjunct program · of
the Valley Artists Series, opens
Its 1989·90 season with a performance by noted oboist Thomas
Gallant on Sunday, Oct. 1 at 2:30
p.ll). In the Fine and Performing
Arts Center at the University of
Rio Grande.
"The oboe Is a newcomer, so to
speak, as a solo Instrument,"
Gallant observed, but he Is
flndfng It Is winning acceptance
with· audiences .
Pl.s a result, he has been
featured qn numerous stages
around the country since his
professional debut ln 1983 and
bas earned praise from music
critiCs for his "awesome technl·
cal fluency" and for playing
"with emotion that audiences
can Immediately Identify."
"His phrasing Is, acute, his
breath control Impressive, and
his shifts In timbre were never
used just for effect," noted The
New York Times, which found
his work "elegantly songful."
A native of Clinton, Mass.,
Gallant attended Indiana Unlver·
slty. where he was awarded the
prestigious Performer's Certificate. He was the first prize
winner of the 1983 Co.ncert Artists
Guild New York International
Competition which led to his
debut at Carnegie Recital Hall.
Featured In High Fidelity / Musical America as an outstanding
talent to watch, Gallant has
performed at many music festivals around the world. His skill"
with the oboe has led him to
perform at the premieres of solo '
works written expressly for that
Instrument and strings. In add!·

u.s.

changeinlhecolorofyourstool,caused :.
by the "fat panicles he~minated. · '
"Automallcally"
Flit
According tooneof"the Inventors, Dr. ..
Willi~m Sfiell, heart specialist and ·
associate professor of medicine· at ·.
UCLA medi~ school, ''the new fat· :
bor)dlng process is a "lazy
"to lose ·· :
we1ght because the pi'J'f. alone - ·.
"automatically" reduce calories bY' . ·.
eliminati dietary fat. It is 100%
and 001
The fat-magnet pills. are already : ' .
sweeping the country with &amp;low~· reports ii ~ight loss from liinne ' ..;
averweigbt people in all walb of li • : &gt;
who are ~ al~, 1Jimmer apcl ::~
more aaract~ve agam
·
• ••Now AYaOible IIi lbe ~ •· t:
If you are trying 10 lole 20, ~ 100 .-:
pounds or 11101e, you ciu Older your ~:­
supply of tllese '"no-rislc" hiahlY sue-' ;•:
cearuJfil.mapetpilladlllldlyfnlmthe '.
dfx:lon' exclusive lllllllllllctWe onlY: ;:
(mc:ludea oplionll Cllorie-reductioa ·
tUn tbr even healer reiUlls). Sad $20 •
liJr a 90 l'l!hupply (+$3
~.;
$3Sfora IBOJ)illlupply(+$3
' ':;,
to: Fat-MaDe~, «JJ6 Wllahire 81 .~~=~
Dept. W705, Beverly Hllll, CA 9020. ;.--:
((/l'I«F . .
·5·
'" 1/. ,_, l~ llltldid. Vila ' : ,,
Maatl'rCU'Illlld
-.... __. _ American
_._
. preu• .. '':~•
OK• } - .................... llllplre dille, - -.
IIIII IIIJI'I'tre~ &amp;.lest aervice ilr ·:.
cnlditCudo
ONLYca!!~ ::.
24 hours, IOU .free 1(801) m.9'1U0,

.

sam ·:·

' ·,

msl.,...,. ..eA-5

0

en. W705.

·

•

... ._

POINT . PLEASANT _ On . Runners will be competing In a
Saturday, oct. 7, Point Pleasant One Mile Run, and a 5K and 10K
Main Street will ·host a Battle Race.
'
Days Celebration. The day-long
The Point Pleasant .Battle
activities will commemorate the Monument Staff Is sponsoring a
first battle of the American Costume Contest. People wishing
to participate need to dress In
Revolution fought In Point Pleasant In October 1174.
costumes depleting the 1774 era .
The day begins with breakfast Registration Is at Tu-Endl-Wel at
at the American Legion at 8 a.m. 9 a.m., with judging at 1 p.m.
Another part of the day·long
and ends with a Street Dance
from 6 to 9 p.m. at Fourth and events will be a Lip Sync contest.
Main Streets.
A hundred dollar prize awaits the
The Street Dance Is being held winner of the 13 and over
In conjunction with Pleaser's category; and a $50 prize for the
Restaurant In Point Pleasant. 12 and under group. The contest
Mike Alexandar of WKEE radio begins at 3 p.m .
will be the DJ and provide the
music.
A Flea Market and Arts and
Crafts booths wlil be set up along
Main Street, as well as concession stands. ~here will be enter·
talnment and fun and· games for
all ages.
Another part of the event will
be the Battle Days races.

Job Bank helf,s
seniors find work

GALLIPOLIS - With the fall
Season just around the corner It
Is lime to thlnJ&lt; of the many
chores to be done around the
tlon to his concert schedule,
home, such as painting, yard
Gallant Is founder and artistic
work, and the stOring of lawn and
director of the Ohio Chamber
patio furniture that needs to be
Music Festival.
done before the coed winter
months.
·
Gallant resides In rural Ohio
with his wife, Jennifer, who Is
The Job Bank located In Gallla
currently enrolled In medical
County Seniors Citizens Center,
school.
220 Jackson Pike, has applicants
For more Information, contact
that can fill those·needs. The Job
the Fine and Performing Arts . Bank Is open Monday through
Center at 245-5353, ext. 364. The
Friday 7 a.m. t~ 3 p.m.
'
IOII·free number 1n Ohio Is
For more Information · call
1·800·282·7201.
446·7000.

;

·

· .. ·
In WiMer· White.
Brown._..,.,
u..,..... Khaki or
BIKk.,

Mon. &amp; Fri. Ill I P.M.
Tues., Wotl. Thun. til 7:00
5at.rday til 5:00
·

=s=ill

FOR ONE

Over 60 Styles
to Choose From!

G EAT PRICE!
La~~:ay

2 FOR $799°0

For Christmas!

. IGE SEUCnON

•

Rock of Agel offer• you e choice of 8 different colored
grenlt... Wh1tever your requlrem1nta m1y be, complete
aatlmctlon 11 ...urad with Rock of Ag... .
.
'
Mon., T11111., Thuro., &amp; Fri. 9;00 a.m. 'til .4 :00p. m.
Other Houro by Appolntment-448· 2327 ~· 693·8688

STANUY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENts

ISI'IItlnl An.

.

Pl. 446-1117

' ·

G••~•la.

.
I--_rtll~

A\mmrm
recliners~
.

•··

01.

rnaxiD1§™

HAIR HAPPENING
II
.
.
I
PERMS ON SALE II
I
SAVE3QO/o
All perms regularty II
$40 and up are now I
I
I
I
Cut and styling Included.
I
Long hair slightly higher.
I
I
·Save 3()0/o on all conditioners
and hair color services!
I
Participating slylists only. Appointments not always necessary.
I
I
Sale ends September 30, 1989
I.
· SILYEI I•DGE PUlA - 446·3353
I

·SALE ENDS OCT. 18!
Choose from over 150
fabrics AND
14. COLORS·
.
OF LEATHER!! .

~,:le$28

.

~

PICK-A•PAIR

Gallant opens series

BEVERLY HILlS, CA (Special)- .
An amazing new weight loss pill called
"fat-magnet" has recently been devel· ·
oped and perfected by two prominent .
doctors at a world famous hospital .in
Los Angeles that reporttdly "guaran· · ·
tees" you steady fat loss and calorie :
reduction by simply taking their tested
and proven new pill.
·
1be
government has jusi apprtr.:· . .
ed the doctors claims for a hard-to--get · .
patent that confinns "there has never ..
been anything like their fat-bonding I?ill · .
process before." It is atotally newma,JOi" ·
scientific breakthrough and is rewlu- ·
lionizing the weight loss industry. '
\bu Can "F.al Normally"
·.; ·
Best of all, "you can continue to · :
eat your fuvorite foods and )UU don't .
have to change your normal ·eating · · ·
1\abits. You can start k&gt;sing fat and ·· ·
reduce calories from the very first &lt;hiy; ··
until )UU achieve the ideal weight you ·· •
desire wilbout exercising".
.· ·
Flushes FBI Out Of Body
..
The new pill is a,llP.R&gt;Priately called : ·
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks · ··
into thousarids ofparticles, each acting · ·
like a tiny magnet, "attracting" and ··

Bor:

OF SOUTIIUST OHIO

POIIIIOY:

POMEROY The . Rev. · , Christians are taught to stuay me
Word of God·and apply It to their
Cl11ncy Thompson, missionary to
own lives.
Brazil with the Free Methodist
Thompson also supervised the
Cliurch, will speak at the Laurel
missionary
outreach of the BraziCliff Free Methodist Church on
lian
Conference
Into other areas
Sept. 30 at 7 p.m.
of
this
country.
Thompson and his wife, Doris,
The Thompsons served as
worked in Sao Paulo, the fifth
evangelistic missionaries In
largest city In the world, a
metropolis of modern sky scrap- · Brazil from 1958 to 1971. For. 15
years they pastored the Drayton
ei.s and slums.
Heights Free Methodist Church
The Thompsons were Involved in Michigan where they had a
In th!! evangelism program of the strong missionary program. In
conferences. They worked with 1986 the· Thompsons returned to
ooUl,.Br.azlllanf al)d Portuguese Brazil.
The publlc:i Is Invited to attend
speaking Japanese, teaching Ia- ·
and
hear about life and church In
cal church leaders the principles
Brazil.
of discipleship ~aklng . . N~w

..._________"'"""-:
i .-

.na::...

DORIS THOMPSON

Missionaries to speak
at Laurel Cliff Church

right out a( your body because they ··'
cannot he absorbed.
.
Within 2 days you should notice a :

Travel through the beautiful fall
countryside to Indiana's
Amish Acres at Nap..
panee. In Wisc:ontin,
pontooo through the
Horicon Marshes then witndSs the East·
ern flyaway of the mip'ating birds.
Browae through Mitchell Puk Honicul·
tura1 Conservatory, and tour "The Streets of Old
Milwaukee" at the Public Museum. A tour of the
EAA Aviation Center, shopping at the famous Osh- ·
Kosh B'Gosh Outlel, and some good old· fashioned
harveat time cookln' all add 10 the fun of this

·

Tlie REV. CLANCY THOMPSON

~1t=.~n:.~=
··
and calories are nillurally "flushed" .. ·

Zscon, &gt;lva CfuzDmufy

~

COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
BALL CAPS e BAGS
·r -SHIRTS • &amp; MORE
-Custom Transfers·
and Lettering- ' ,. '

I.LS. Gcw't. AanwuPnlnt
Claims for Niw Diet ~

around ;ontour.
• naht 28'' tumlno t'ldlus .
• lluii·Umt 110'"' """ng.

(814)448-7494
Toll frH 1·800.272·LJ:AR

exciting fall tour.

...

Doctors Invent·

OuofJu-16·21, 1989

Confidential Servioaa:
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Scr.-ning ..
Pregnancy Talting ·

•'

'

• Model (SunSiar 201
• K_,. eiRCrla 11M

RUTLAND - The Friends and
Flowers Gard en Club of Rutland
will be holding its annual open
meeting on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at the Rutland United Methodist
Church. Judy Snowden will be
having the program. Everyone
welcome.
Cliffside Ladles
GALLIPOLIS - The final
· · ladles day for t)le season at
Cliffside Golf Club will be Sept. 27
with a nine hole !our-woman
scramble; lunch follows . End of
picking up trash left by others. Cub master is Ron
year meeting and election of
Caudill and Weblo den 3 leader Is Ron Pitchford.
officers. Slgnup at the clubhoilse
Assistant leader Is Tammy Plants. (Times·
or call 446-GOLF.
Seatlnel photo l

Battle Days scheduled

Diet Pills SW..plng U.S.

SUNSTAR IERI£S CWIDEN TRACrORS
Alllilllle In 14-11-IIUO H.P.

Annual meeting
set by' club

MEDAL WORK - Cub Seout Pack 222 from
Bidwell's Porter United Methodist Church
worked on the God and Country medal Ibis
summer, and · oae activity was cleaning up the
GaiUpolls city park. Here the young scouts work

41/601bii)

.

CHE SHIRE - Th e Gallla
Me igs Co mmunit y Action
Agency now has registration
forms available for those lnter.es ted In beingfuel vendors with
Emergency HEAP t his winter.
Individuals must complete
vendor registration forms In
order to be placed on the vendor
list. Forms are avalla ble at
Gallla-Melgs CAA Central Office
in Cheshire. For more lnforma- '
tlon, contact the Ch.e shire office
a t 367-7341 or 992-6629.

GA):..LIPOLIS- AcHvltles and
Tuesday - Navy beans with
menus for the week of Sept. 25, &lt;ham and onions, clleese stbl, cole
thru Sept. 29, at the Senior
slaw, cranberry sauce, corn·
Citizens Center, 220JacksonPike
bread, frozen fruit and cookies.
will be as follows:
Wednesday- Creole Spaghetti
Monday - Chorus, 1 p.m.
with parmesan cheese, tossed
Tuesday - Elderwalk, 11 a .m .
salad with french dressing, garWednesday -Cards, 1·3 p.m.
lic bread, sliced peaches.
Thursday - Bible Study, 11·
Thursday - Sliced turkey with
noon; Herbalists, 1:30-2: 30 p.m .
gravy, whipped potatoes, wal·
Friday - Art class, 10-noon;
dorf salad, bread, butterscotch
square$.
·
Craft class, 1-3 p.m; EXPO 1989.
Everyday activities: quilting,
Friday - Macaroni and
pool, shuffleboard, rug weaving,
cheese, buttered IImas, marl·
horseshoes.
nated cucumbers and onions,
Menus consist of:
bread, lemon jello cake.
Monday - Hamburger on bun, .
Make reservations by calling
french fries, tomato· and onion; '446-7000 before 9 a.m. the day you
Ice cream.
wish to attend.

~~

•

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 8·7

CAA registering
feul vendors

rf&amp;"4&amp;•#'

MIDDLEPORT

arvest Tune in Wisconsin

Family Plannhtg
It Makes Se,nse...

Academy graduates.
.
Also got phone calls from the
foUowing:
·
Mary Lou"Harrison, who gave
me her sister's address: Opal
Leonard Griggs; Nina Dorton,
with the address of Marjorie
O'Dell Saunders; and Eileen
Mink who gave me the telephone
number of Helen Rlriel!art
Cowden; Mildred Rice Scott.
with whom 1 talked about Eleanor Lanthorn, but more on her
after I do some checking; and
Mrs. Ralph (Marjorie, Robinson
who Informed me one of the
grads we're looking for, her
brother, William Moore, died In
1981. He lived at Dayton. And, we
have Paul Tope's address . He
lives In the Gallipolis area.
So that leaves us only Charles
L. Smith, last known address ,
Columbus, and Allee Wheeler
Jacqmln,'Houston, Texas (?).
If we can round 'em all up, the
Class of 40 will have Its 50th
re union next May.
·

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Senior citizens plan
activities for week

In the ·service neWs______ In our .town.. ....______By_Dic_·k...;._r._'ho~ma_s
WII..I.MM M. BROTHERS
Marine Lanee Cpl. Wllilllm M.
Brothers, son of Candance L.
nuts, Rutland and Mlcheal
Brothers of Route 3, Pomeroy,
OH, has been promoted to his
present rank while serving at
Marine Corps Air Ground Com·
bat Center, Twentynine Palms,
Calif.
A 1988 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy; he joined the
Marine Corps In October 198!1.
GREGORY S. COLE
Gregory S. Cole · has been
promoted In the U.S. Army to the
rank of sergeant.
.
He is a heavy wheel vehicle
meclumlc at Fort sm. Okla.
Cole Is the son of Homer E. and
Nancy R. Cole of Tuppers Plains,
Ohio.
.
His wife, Krlstl, Is the daughter
of Bill Gaddis of ReedsvUle,
Ohio.
The sergeant Is a 1982graduate
of Eastern High School,
ReedsvUie.
JAMES C. HENSLER
¥Brine Lance Cpl. James C.
Hensler, son of Daniel C. and
Patty L. Hensler of Route 3,
Racine, OH, has been promoted
to his present rank while serving
at Marine Corps Air Station,
Yuma, Ariz.
A 1987 graduate of Southern
Local .High School, he joined the
Marine Corps In March 1988.
MJCJLU:L p , (:.u.Af'ATJS
Michael P. Calafatls has been
promoted In the U.S.-Alr Force to
the rank of airman first class.
Calafatls Is a pavements main·
tenance specl;lllst at Francis E.
Warren Air Force Base, Wyo. ,
with the 60th ClvU Engineering
Squadron.
He Is· the son of Constandlne
and Ann Calafatls of Rural Route
1, Chesapeake, Ohio.
The airman Is a 1987 graduate
of South Point High School, Ohio.
COLSTON G. COLLINS
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class
Colston G. Collins, a 1975 gradu·
ate of North Gall Ia High School of
U11lon, OH, recently reported for
duty aboard the gu lded missile
cruiser USS Sterett, homeported
In Sublc Bay, Republic of the
Phlltppines.
He joined the Navy In August
1975.
.
KEITH A. SCOTT
Marine Cpl. Keith A. Scott, son
of Charles F. Scott and Edwin
Bell, both of Middleport, Ohio,
has been promoted to his present
rank while serving with 2nd
Marine Division, Camp Lejuene,
N.C.
A 1983 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomer,oy, he joined 11\e
Marine Corps In January 1985.
GLENN D. SMITH
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class
Glenn D. Smith, son of David H.
and Katha Smith of Route 2,
Bidwell, Ohio, .recently reported
for duty with the Precommtsslonlng Unit aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln, based at Newport
News, Va.
He joined the Navy In November 1981.
SHANE D. HOGAN
Navy Airman Apprentice
Shane D. Hogan, son of James A.
and Patricia R. Howard of 54
Spruce St.. Gallipolis, OH, recently reported for duty aboard
the aircraft carrier USS Midway,
bomeported In Yokosuka, Japan.
A 1988 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School, he joined
the Navy In June 1988.
. GLENN D. SMHH
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class
Glenn D. Smith, whose wife,
Lorle, Is the daughter of Leo and
VIrginia Carpenter of Route 2,
Patriot. OH, ri!Cently reported
for duty with the Precommlsslon·
lng -Unit aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln, based at Newport
News. Va.
He joined the Navy In November 1981.

Pomeroy- M

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

OPEN DAILY
9·5
MON. &amp; FRI.
9-8

(ORNEI OF TtiiD &amp;OliVE
446-3045
0111 SBE(l'ION IS STU IEAunFIIL

,.

�.

September 24, 1989::

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

•

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Steaks/Roast ••• ~~ S1
ECKRICH SMOKED
Sausage •••••••••••• ~~ $199
$

SUPERIOR ASST.

9
3
Lunch Meats ••••• ~~ 1
TOP
··
.
·
9
Round Steaks ••• ~\ $22

RKEY

Drumsticks •••••• J~ ••
BONELESS
$169
Chuck Roast •••• J~.

CINCINNATI - The "Battle of Ohio" goes .
national Monday night · wheri the unpefeated
Cleveland Browns toss the American Conferen·
ce' s No. 1 defense agalns t the Cincinnati Ben gals'
AFC top-rated offense,
MondaY night television viewers across the
country will have a chance to see the kind of
emotions that accompany the Buckeye State's
Cleveland-Cincinnati rivalry. It didn't take long
for newcomer Cleveland coach Bud Carson to get
the picture.
"I was looking at last year's films and I saw
everybody playing on an upbeat tempo," said ,
Carson. "I'm well aware this is a special game for
the players."
.
Indeed, when the Browns ran· into the locker
room following last Sunday's 38·24 win over
· Carson's old team, the New York Jets, the players
were chanting, "Let's go to the J ungle. Let's
rumble in the Jungle."
The Jungle Is what Bengal fans call Clnclnnati's

I ;·"
3

~
z
0

0' . 1»

l&gt;

· "'::~-&lt;
a.~
.. I

~·:E3C
!" zo

• mO
NOZ

ml&gt;

N

~:&lt;

:I

l&gt; -4

0.

-&lt;lii

,...,
\1

,

I

0 m

c: &lt;
....
V

0 m

z

I
I
I

--------------t

We will
redeem up
to 5
vendor
coup·ons
;

(Maximun~

soc

Value)

Cabbage ············"•·

19&lt;

FLAVORITE

With the
above

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••
GAL.

NEW COUNTRY

Yogurt •••••••••.~~~ 4 f$1

KEMP'S

NABISCO PREMIUM

Saltines ••••••••••• ~~ •• 99(

. or.
Ice Cream •••••••••••

PRODUCTS

FRESH BAKERY

RC

99(
Cola ••••••••••••••• •
.

2LITER

.

GAY 90'S

9 liVES

W-HITE BREAD

CAT FOOD

2ooz.

2/$1

6-6.5

OZ. CANS

Go••

"

4/Sl

Good Clllly At Powoll's s.,.,..wk•
Good s..., S.t. 24 tlru S.t., S.t. 30

••••

~' ·

•

YOU MUST

Donuts ••••••••••••••• $169
DOZ.

•

147
BOX

oz.

BIG CHIEF

Good Only At Powell's S.pormorkll
Good SoiL,
24 llru Sat., Sept. 30

s.•.

••

SUGAR

$681

. limit I r.. C•l.,_

TRIPLE
VENDOR

COUPON

PAIL

TIDE DETERGENT

limit 4 Plf Cust .....

Umit 2 Por Customtr
Only AI Powell's Supormwkll
leH SulLo lopl. 24 llru Sat., S.t. 30

S

(No Cigarette
Coupons)

4.0 LIS.

$119

limit I p., Cust"""'
Good Only At Powell's S.pormwkot
Goo• Su&amp;, S.t. 24 tlru Sat, Sept. SO

BRING THE
ABOVE TRIPLE
VENDOR
COUPON.
One Coupon

Per Family.

• • • • • • • ••••

'

•

'

opponents from substituting extra defensive
backs in passing situations.
Clevelalld' s defense has forced 12 turnovers In
the first two games, but It Is so aggressive that It
sometim es overplays the ball and can get burned
by a speedy, quick•cutting runner like Cincinna·
tl's James Brooks .
"I'll try to intimidate Brooks a little more, " said
Cleveland safety Felix Wright. "With Brooks, I'm
going to set the tone in the begi nning."
Brooks, who two weeks ago responded to
Chicago coach Mike Ditka' s charge that he had
go tten old and slow by running the Bears·crazy,
will have to carry the bulk of the Bengals' running
attack because Ickey "Shuffle" Woods is ailing
with a sprained ankle.
This Is Clnclnna,ti's fi rst Monday night appearance since 1986 and the Bengals only have a 5-10
record In Monday night games. Cleveland Is 10-6
on Monday night s, but the Browns haven't won a
Monday night game on the road since 1972.

Morning .line - Browns
vs.
Bengals
'

log In clutch against Chicago,
)'Ieiding a 95-yard game-winning
•
(1-1)
.
drive, defender s held Pittsburgh
to 274 total yards last week. NT
· Favorite - Cincinnati by 4.
Tim Krumrie still not at full
Turf - Artificial.
Browns coach Bud Carson- •'I strength as broken leg heals. FS
don't kriow how good we are. This Rickey Dixon has two intercep·
week will be the first time we tions, LB Carl Zander leading
play a team that Is obviously a "tackler with 12. Very weak
contender. It wlll be a good defending against kickoffs and
chance to find out some things. " Metcalf poses big problem.
Bengals offense- QB Boomer
Bengals coach Sam Wyche Eslason
right behind Kosar In
" Bernie Kosar Is amazing. He's
the trigger man, -the guy who gets passing ratings at 96.8. Coming
It done. We didn't play champion- off Impressive 328-yard passing
ship football agafnst the Steelers. effort, with two TDs and no
We didn't poUsh them off like we' Interceptions, In rout of Steelers.
Favorite target WREddleBrown
should haye."
Browns offense - Begins with · back after contract holdout, ·
QB' Bernie Kosar, who Is off to caught first pass of year last
week for TD. RB Ickey Woods
great start. His 97.8 .passing
hobbled by sprained ankle and
rating is best In AFC. In first two
not expected to be factor against
games has completed 31 of 55
Browns.
Speedy RB James
passes fQr 403 yards, three TDs
Brooks, who has 201 rushing
and no Interceptions. Veteran TE
yards In two games, wlll try to
Ozzle Newsome still a threat ;'
sweep end against Cleveland.
caught fojlr passes last week
Browns defense - Wlll pose
against Jets. Rushing attack
big problems fo r Bengals, who
limited in absence of Kevin
had easy time rolling up 520
Mack. Eric Metcalf leads AFC in
yards
against Steelers' poor
kickoff returns with 34·yard
defense. Aggr~sslve Browns de·
average;
fenders have forced 12 turnovers
Bengals defense ~ After fold ·

,...

c
0
:a

Cinci nnati's Boomer Eslason. In the first two
games, the sidearming Kosa r has completed 31 of
55 passes for 403 yards, three touchdowns and no
Interceptions. The left-handed Esiason has hit 34
of 63 for three TDs and no Interceptions .
While Cleveland's usually tough defense. Is
playing more aggressively than ever under
defensive specialist Carson, the Browns' defend·
ers will have to scramble to keep up with
Ci ncinnati'£ quick-moving, no-huddle offense.
Last Monday night, viewers got a chance to ~e
an Imitation of I he Cincy no-huddle when Buffalo
went to the no-huddle to spice up a sluggish
offense ·and It produced a co uple of quick
touchdowns against Denver. Interestingly
enough , Buffalo coach Marv Levy was a
no-huddle hater last season. Carson stilUs.
"If a lot of people start using it, I'm sure they'll
outlaw It," says Carson. " I don't like It because
for one game you can't substitute freely.':
Cincinnati's no-huddle is designed to keep

· Monday, Sept. 25
Cleveland (2-0) at Cincinnati

-~

~

49

Stadium, which Is sold out for Monday
night's game and where the Bengals have won 11
straight games.
"The.home field Is a tremendous edge In a g11me
like this," notes ·Ctnclnnatl coach 's am Wyche.
Although Cincinnati Is only 1·1 and the Browns
are 2·0, the Bengals have been Installed as
four-point favorites , mainly because of the home
field advantage.
"They're at home, they went to the Super Bowl
last year and they're going to be 'hard to beat,"
agrees Carson. "But we' ll be there .. This game
doesn't heed Monday night to make It special. I
can already see that the veterans don't need a ny
extra Inspiration to play Cincinnati."
Not only Is the game a state rivalry, It's also a
division rivalry, as the Browns and Bengals both
play In the AFC Central. ·
"It's double points because It's a division
game," says Wyche. "And it's going to be a tight
race In our division. This Is a team we could be
battllng for the title at the end of the season."
. The ga me matches the American Conference's
top two passers In Cleveland's Bernie Kosar and

... I
;AI I

~ ~ 2

Bacon •••••••••••••• J~ •• 69&lt;
Cube Steak ••••• J~. 52

Rlverfro~t

--1 I
7"""11 I

I

Section

Cincinnati to .host Cleveland Monday night

,...--------.-----,
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I

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I
I
I
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..
Gl

CAROLINA PRIZE

tt'imes,.. i".entin:el

'Bll:ttle of Ohio' goes national

SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 24
MONDAY
SEPTEMBER 2S
TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 26
.,. WEDNESDAY
09 SEPTEMBER 27

FRESH PORK BUn

C

•

September 24, 1989.

By RiCK VAN SANT .
:United Press l'llernatlonal .

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, ~H ;.

.

ports

Triple
Vendor
Coupons

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

BUCKET

..,

YOU'RE MINE, MISTER - Michigan State
defensive lineman ·Chris WIUertz moves In to put

Indians slip past Angels 5-4·

the wraps on Notre Dame quarterback Tony Rice
In the first quarter of Saturday's contest In South
Bend, Ind. The Irish won 21-13. (UPI)

USC thumps Buckeyes
lead and · made Jackson the
By MIKE BARNES
school's No. 3 a11-tlme receiver .
UPI Sports Writer
.LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Todd It also topped the Trojans' record
Marlnovlch threw two of his four of 80 yards set In 1949 and equaled
touchdown passes In a 50-second in 1954.
The Buckeyes placed them·
span of the second quarter
Saturday - including one cover- selves in deeper trouble two
Ing a school-record 87 yards to plays later when Frey and Snow
John Jackson - to spark No. 15 fumbled a handoff, with USC's
Southern Cal to a 42-3 rout of No. Tim Ryan recovering at the Ohio
State 11.
20 Ohio State.
On the next play, Marlnovich
Tight end Scott Galbraith had
two scoring catches in . the looked right. then spun left to find
21-point period, an 11-yarder Galbraith alone In the flat with
from Marinovlch and a five· 7:3lleft before halftime. It was
yarder from Shane Foley , who the Trojans' third touchdown In a
entered after Marlnovich left 3:49 span.
Marinovlch's first TD pass to
briefly with a sprained left wrist.
Marlnovlch , a redshlrt fresh· Wellman finished off an eight·
man, added TD strikes of 19 and play, 88-yard drive. His second
17 yards to Gary Wellman In the gave USC a 35-3 bulge with four
third quarter . The left-bander seconds remaining in the third
completed 1~ of 22 passes for 246 quarter.
Foley,returned to di rect a drive
yards and one lnterceptlorl.
tha
t 'e nded with freshman Mazio
Ricky Ervlns followed up his
Royster
scoring from one yard
career-best 180-yard effort last
out
with
98
seconds left .
week with 117 yards on 21 carries
Ohio State had r-ushed for 61
as the Trojans Improved to ~-1
yards - more than double the
with their second straight rout.
Ohio State, 1-1, opened the total USC allowed in the first two
scoring on Pal O'Morrow's 45- games - on the opening drive,
yard field goal with 4:18 left In but 0 ' Morrow missed a 37-yard
the first quarter, but was blanked field goal. However, the kicker
connected from 45 seven minutes
the rest of the way.
After completing 16 of 21 later for the short-lived 3-0 edge.
passes for a career-high 285
Notre Dame 21, Mich. St. 13
yards last week .against OklaAt South Bend, Ind.. Ricky
homa State, Ohio State's Greg Watters rushed for 90 .yards and
Frey was only 13 of 28 for 135 two touchdowns Saturday and
yards and one Interception. Car· · top - ranked Notre Dame
los Snow ran 11 ·times for 83
yards.
With USC trailing 3·0, Marino·
vlch was forced to leave after a
By United Press International
tackle by linebacker Tom Lease,
Toledo 29, Ball State 22
but Foley stepped In to polish off
Bowling Green 24, Central Michl·
an 80-yard drive that put the
gan 20
.
· . Western Michigan 26, Kent State
Trojans ahead to stay.
·A junior who threw his first 4
· college pass in last week's 66-10 Cincinnati 30, Miami 14
pounding of Utah State. Foley Mount Union 36, Heidelberg 13
faked an Inside handoff, then Hiram 24 , Thiel (Pa) 23
rolled out to find Galbraith John Carro1133, Ohio Northern 14
running along the back of the end Musklngum 44, Marietta 20
zone for the go-ahead score with Allegheny (Pa) 38, Oberlin 13
11: 20 left in the decisive period . Case Reserve 13, Earlham ,(Ind)
Ervlns had 71 yards on eight 7
carries In the march.
Hope (Mtch) 17, Denison 14
On USC's next possession, . Wittenberg 21, Kenyon 14
Marlnovich returned and found Ohio Wesleyan 14, Adrian (Mich ) "
his team pinned at Its five-yard- 7
line after a 69-yard punt by Jeff Wooster 14 , Grove City CPa) 7
Bohlman. But on third-and-two Dayton 23, Butler (lnd) 23 (tie )
at the 13, Jackson got behind · Olivet (Mich) 27 , Defiance 7
cornerback Vinnie Clark to catch Alma (Mich) 29, Findlay 20
Marlnovich's pass at midfield Wilmington 13, Tiffin 10
and go the rest of the way Urbana 24. Campbellsville (Ky)
untouched.
6
The pass play gave USC a 14·3

Ohio Scores

.

In two games; Intercepted Jets'
QB Ken O'Brien four times last
week .. New head coach Bud
Carson previously was defensive
.coordinator for Steelers and Jets
and he's continued tradition of
emphasizing aggressive defense
In Cleveland .
Key matchups - Cincinna'ti
QB Boomer Esiason vs. CB
Hanford Dixon; Cincinnati FS
Rickey Dixon vs. QB Bernie
Kosar; Cleveland TE Ozzie Newsome vs. LB Carl Zander;
Cleveland S Felix Wright vs. WR
Eddie Brown.
Key Injuries - Cincinnati RB
IckeyWoods (an kle, knee) doubt·
ful; WRs Eddie Brown (groin)
and Mike Martin (hamstring)
both probable. Cleveland OT
Tony Jones (toe) doubtful; RB
Mike Oliphant (hamstring) questlonable; CB Frank Minnifield
(groin) and P Bryan Wanger
(knee) both probable. ·
Head-to-head
Cleveland
leads series 19·18; Browns won ·
last meeting, 23-16, las t year.
Streaks Newsome has
caught passes In 145 straight
ga mes. Bengals have won 11
straight home game·s.

ByBOBKE~

UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Brook
Jacoby walked with the bases
loaded in th e eighth inning to
force In the winning run Satur·
day. giving the Cleveland Indians . a 5-4 victory over the
California Angels in the first
game of a doubleh~ader.
. The loss prevented the Angels
from making up a game on
Oakland In the American League
West and kept California four
games behind the Athletics, who
lost 5·3 to Minnesota.
Jerry Browne led off the inning
with a single, reached second on
a sacrifice and )Vent to third on
Joe Carter's single. Joey Belle's
Infield single dr ove home Belle
and chased California starter
Mike Witt, 9-14 .
Bob McClure walked Pete
O'Brien to load the bases, ;md
Greg Minton came hi and walked
Jacoby. Dave Clark ended the
inning by hitting Into a doubl e
play.
That gave the victory to Bud
Black, 12·11, who won his third
straight decision. Doug Jones
relieved in the ninth and ear ned
his 31st save.
Bobby Ro se had two hi ts and
scored two runs for the Angels.
Chill Davis drove him home with
a sacrifice fly In the third , a nd

42~3

struggled past Michigan State
21-13. barely extending college
football's longest winning streak
to 15 games.
Watters scored on runs of 53
a nd two yards as the Irish (3-0)
took their 18th victory in the past
21 games against the Spartans.
Michigan State !1·1) has iostfive
of Its last six meetings with the
Irish.
Anthony Johnson dove one
yard for a touchdown with 8:16
remaining, c applng a 62· yard
drive to give the defending
national champions their final
ma rgin. Michigan State then
drove to· the Irish 25-yard line,
but Hy land Hickson was stopped
for no gain by D'Juan Francisco
and Pat Terrell on fourth down
with 3: 35 to play.
Michigan State forced an Irish
punt but a poor snap on the
ga me's final play prevented the
Spartans from making a des per·
atlon pass attempt from their
own 35-yard line.
Micqigan State's top rusher,
Blake Ezor, was sidelined in the
first quarter with a sternum
separation. But Hickson re·
placed him and gained 81 yards
on 27 carries while junior qu'llr·
terback Dan Enos completed 18
of 28 attempts for 200 yards to
spark the Spartans' attack.
Michigan State's defense over·
powered Notre Dame In the third
quarter, allowing the Irish only
four yards rushing, 11 yards
passing and one firs t cjown In the
period. Notre Dame committed
four turnovers for the first time
since its last defeat , a 35·10 loss to
Texas A&amp;M In the 1988 Cotton
Bowl.
The Spartans drove 38 yards In
12 plays on their first possession
of the second half but were halted
when Todd Lyght Intercepted a
lob pass by Enos Intended for
Courtney Hawkins In the back
right corner of the end zone. But
the IriSh returned the ball three
plays later when quarterback
Tony Rice, pressured by line·
backer Percy Snow,' threw a
hurried pass that was Intercepted by llnebacker Carlos
Jenkins.
Three plays later, Enos con·
nected on )lis first college touchdown pass, a 30-yard toss to split ,
end James Bradley. Bradley
raced, past defensive backs Terrell and Stan Smagala down the
left sideline and caught the ball in
(See COLLEGE GAMES on C-3)

Rose scored when third baseman Anderson and Roy Smith SaturJacoby missed Davis ' grounder day afternoon a nd carry MinneIn the fifth for an error.
sota to a 5·3 victory over Oakland
The Indians have made 16 that broke the Twins' six-game
errors in their las t 13 games, skid a hd the Athletics' five-ga me
leading to nine unearned runs.
winning streak.
Dante Blchette added a 456Anderson. 17·10. allowed three
foot solo home run for California. runs on six hits a nd two wa lks ~
Bichette, who entered the game wi th one strikeout over fivl"
hitting .190, blasted his third innings. Smith worked the final
home run of the year in the fourth four innings for his first majorinning. The ball was carried by league save.
swirling winds out of the north at
Oakland starter Mike Moore,
24 mph. Temperature was 49 18-11, gave up five runs on nine
degrees at game time.
hits a nd three walks with six ·:
Bichette, who was hitless in his · strikeouts In six and one-third ·
previous 16 at bats, reached the innings.
middle of the temporar y · Bush's 14th home run of th e ·
bleachers and cleared the 377 year, in the Twins' three-run
foot sign in left·center by nearly four th inn ing, provided a 4·3 lead
100 feet. Bl ack had not given up a after Paul Sorrento singled and
home ru n since July 29, a spa n of scored on Lenny Websler's
65 and one-third Innings.
double.
Clevelallll cut the California ·
The Twins look a dvantage of
lead to 3-2 in the seventh when Moore 's wildness to lead 5-3 In
Tony Armas dropped Cory Snyd· th e fifth. Ke nt Hrbek walked
er's fly ball to right with two outs, advanced on Gene Larkin's... ·
allowing O'Brien to score from groundout , a nd scored after two
· ·
first base.
wild pitches.
Cleveland took a 1·0 lead in the
Oakland led 2-0 in the firs t.
first when Browne walked, · Ricky Henderson wal ked. stole
scored second, went to third on a second, and sco red on Carney
groundo.ut and -scored on Carter's La nsford's single. Lansford then
single to left. Carter has 104 RBI. sco red after Dave He nderson
Twins 5, A's 3
si ngled and was thrown out going
At Minneapolis, Randy Bush to second .
hit a two-run homer to back the
Minnesota pulled within 2·1 in
CQmblned seven-hitler by Allan
(See MAJORS on C-3)

.

SAFE! - MhmNola'l Paul Sorrento (left) Is
safe at home u Oakland catcher Terry Stelabach
loaes the hallj lower right) Ia the fourth Inning of

,..

I\ '

'

SaturdiQ''s game under the Metrodome tn ;
Mlnneapollll. The Twins beat the A's 5-3. (UPI)

·'

--

�September 24, 1989

September 24, 1989

Ohio-Point Plsn·ent, W. Va.

Hurst,.15-ll; took the loss.
By JEFF SHAIN
his 35th save.
Astros 3, Giants 1
Drabek, 13-12, was touched for
UPI'Sports Writer
At
San
Francisco, Mark PortuEven if the St. Louts Cardinals the four r uns and 10 hits In live
gal
scattered
four hits over eight
refuse to give in as they chase the and two-third Innings.
and
two-third
innings and Gerald
"I don't think anybody's going
Chicago Cubs In the National
Young
drove
In
two runs to lead
League East, the Cubs can take to catch them," Pirates manage r .
the
Astros.
Portugal,
7-1, Is
comfortfrom the fact that time is Jim Leyland said. " I think the
running short.
Cut&gt;s are going to be the Eas~rn unbeaten since being recalled
from the minors July 15 and has
Mike Bielecki notched his 17th Division champs ."
·
victory Friday to lead the Cubs to
At St. Louts, pinch hitter Denny not allowed r.un In his last 20
a 4: 2 triumph over the Pittsburgh Walling stroked a bases-loaded innings. Dan Schatzeder got the
Pirates. St. Louis kept pace with single with two out in the lOth final out for his first save of the
season. Scott Garrelts, 14-4, lost
a 2-1 victory over the Philadel- Inning to lift the Cardinals.·
lor
the first time since June 25.
phia Ph lilies, but. the schedule
"We're not dead yet, but wE!'re
now Is down to eight games.
In Intensive care," Herzog said.
"It's a big win lor us," Bleleck.t
Pinch-hitter Tim Jones started
said. "We still have a lot left to the winning rally with a leadoff
go, playing at Montreal and St. single oft of Roger McDowell, 4-8.
Louis, but as long as we keep After John Morris and Vince
winning, games keep coming off Coleman bounced Into forceouts,
the schedule."
Ozzle Smith singled Coleman to
Chicago remained four games
third. With Jose Oquendo at the
ln. front of the Cardinals. but tl)e plate, Smith went to second
·cubs' victory brought their uncontested. Oquendo then was
magic number down to five.
walked Intentionally to set the
"We've got what, eight games
stage for Walling.
to play?" Cubs manager Don
John Costello, 5·3, who pitched
second baseman Jose Oquendo In the fourth
OUT BY A STEP- Ph lilies pitcher Ken Howell
Zimmer said. "We've got to the top of the lOtli got the ylctory
Inning of Friday ·night's game In St. Louis. The
Is out by a step as Cardinals' first sacker Pedro
come out and do what we' ve done as Joe Magrane failed for the
Cardinals won 2-1. (UPI)
Guerrero stretches to catch the throw from
all year - try to win each one. I
fifth consecu live time to get his
wish there were three (games 19th victory .
left), but there's eight. It seems
"We had the bases loaded In
like It was just yesterday when
three Innings and didn't score,"
we started this thing, but II can't said Philadelphia manager Nick
get here soon enough." .
' Leyva, whose team stranded 14
Bielecki, 17-7, avenged a 2-0 runners. " We just couldn't get
loss to the Pirates and pitcher anything done."
Doug Drabek last Suriday In ·. Elsewhere In the National
Pittsburgh. His strong perforLeague:
mance .came a day after Greg Mets 3, Expos 2
Maddux threw a complete game
Ai New York, Mark Carreon
against the Ph lilies and two days hit his fourth pinch-hit home
after Zimmer met with his run of the season In the seventh
struggling pitching staff In an
inning to lift the Mets. Carreon
effort to get them back on track. was the first batter .to !ace John
The right -bander allowed two Candelaria, 0-2, who had
runs and eight hits, striking out relieved starter Pascual Perez
three In six and two-third into begin the se~en th. Ron
nings . Paul Assenmacher Darling, 14.-13, allowed four·hits
pitched one and one-third innings over seven Innings ~o win for
of scoreless relief before Mitch
the second time In his last six
ON THE SPOT ·
Wllliallls recor&lt;led two outs for decisions, and Randy Myers
RNANCING WITH
earned his 24th save.
·
APPROVED
CIEDIT.
Reds 8, Braves 3
NO
DOWNPAYMEfiiT
At Atlanta, Luis Quinones
drove in three runs a11d E;ric
Davis drilled his 34th homer to
. help the Reds snap their 10-game
· losing streak. Ron Robinson, 5-3,
gave up four hits over six-plus
Innings for the victory. Derek
Man!llntllt-h, Owner I
Lllllquist, 8-10, took the loss.
204
CONDOI
I'OIIIIOY
Dod~~:ers 2, Padres 1
992-2975
DALLAS (UP!) - Unseeded
At Los Angeles, Jose Gonzalez
Wo Offw hcollo.t Senko &amp; Pwta
led off the fifth Inning with a
Anne Smith of Dallas and fifthto U, Door Sal• to , _ OtN:
seeded Monica Seles took u_pset tie-breaking homer and Tim
v•lllcuot-•.
wins Friday night In the $250,000 Belcher hutted a three-hitter to
LAWII &amp; GAIDEII IQU.MIIII IS
·VIrginia Slims of Dallas, and lead the Dodgers. Belcher, 14-_12,
OUI .. $.155-IIOT SIIB•I
top-seeded Martina Navratllova
extended his personal winnmg
ove'r came a second-set slump to ~ streak to six while . hurling his
join them in Saturday's ninth complete game. Bruce
semifinals.
Smith took her second upset
win of the tournament, 7-5, 7-6
(7-5), over Fairbank while Seles
REED SCORES - Bosll&gt;n's Jody Reed (below)
Friday night's game against the Tigers In Detroit.
ousted
Sanchez Vacario; 6-4, 6-2,
· sUdes in for the score as teammate Kevin Romine
The run, which tied the score at 6, helped the Red
In the night's second upset.
waits at the plate alter Reed scored on a three-run
Sox post a 9-7 victory. (UPI)
Third-seeded Manuela Maleeva
double by Dwight Evans In the seven1h inning of
of Bulgaria beat seventh-seeded
Raffaella Reggi of Italy, 6-1, 7-6
(11-9), 6-3, and Niivratilova beat
No. 6 seed Mary Jo Fernandez.
•
7-5, 0-6, 6-1Seles, 15, continued the upset
10,000 miles. WAS '1 0.800
trend set by Smith's victory by
ousting Sanchez in the first
quarterfinal Friday night. Seles
broke Sanchez' service three
By JOE ILLUZZI
5\'2 ahead of Kansas City, which
Over 40 Cars
vious 16 at-bats and a .122 hitter times In the opening set and
CALL
los t the second game to Seattle over the last 12 games, lined a
UPI Sports Writer
and
Trucks
·
neutralized the Spaniard's baseCHEIYL
Dave Stewart guarantee d his 2-0.
home run into the right-field line game with crisp returns.
to
Choose
CARPENTER
"This was a real significant
third straight 20-win season
bleachers to snap a 4-4 tie.
"The match was very close, "
From.
Friday night. but will it be victory for Stewart," said OakRed Sox 9, Tigers 7
614-949-2551
Seles said. "When you have
enough to guarantee him his first land manager Tony LaRussa.
At Detroit, John Marzano's deuce-ad games it comes down to
992-2551
Cy Young Award?
" He deserves everything that's
bases-load.ed sacrifice fly in the luck, and I was lucky. It could
RAciNE,
31D &amp; ELM
Stewart arguably has been the coming his way . He's a horse."
ninth inning helped the Red Sox have gone either way."
OliO
In other AL games:
best pitcher in the majors the last
s trave off mathematical eliminaSeles
jumped
to
a
4-0
lead
In
the
·
three years, yet he has nothing to
Blue Jays 7, Brewers 3
tion from the AL East. Rob second set and fought off one
At Milwaukee, Dave Stieb
show lor it in terms of awards.
Murphy, 5-7, worked one and
service break by Sanchez to take
Now the Oakland right-hander scattered seven hits over seven
two-third Innings for the vi~tory. the set and match.
Innings and Manny Lee drove
~ays It's time to compensate him
Lee Smith recorded three outs
"I don't know why, I [us! didn't
fo r his accomplishments.
home three runs, helping the
for his 23rd save.
feel
very con!ortable on the
" Winning the division, the Blue Jay s forge a two-game lead
Wi!lte Sox 9, Rangers 6
court,"
Sanehez Vacario said.
playoffs and the World Series are over Baltimore in the AL East.
At Arlington, Texas, Carlos
"She
(Seles)
hit the ball very,
the most important things to The Blue Jays pounded out 17 Martlnez doubled home Ivan
hard
and
hit really good
very
hits, 16 singles, In winning their
me.·· Stewart said after beating
Calderon with the go-ahead run
shots.
''
.
the Twins 5-2. "But it 's my time 11th game in their last 16 in the ninth. The White Sox let a
Navratilova
fell
apart
in the
now to be respected for what I do. contests.
four-run lead evaporate, resecond
set
against
Fernandez
bu I
Yankees 5, Orioles 4
I'm the best pitcher In this league
gained the advantage and then
At Baltimore, Mel Hall broke
and maybe the major leagues
lost it again before Martinez bounced back In the third set to
'''
out of a 12,game slump by hitting doubled over the head of left a void the upset.
when it comes to winning."
ROLL
"I dldn' t win a whole lot of
Stewart certai.nly deserves the a tie-breajdng homer in the sixth
fielder Pete lncaviglla to pro''•
points," she said. "My serve
Cy Young, but Bret Sa berhagen Inning. Hall, hitless In his preduce the deciding run.
~}
went, and she (Fernandez)
can also lay claim to the honor.
started playing really well, servThe Kansas City right-hander
..'
100 FOOl lOLL
Ing very deep. She has a really
posted his major league-leading
"I
good return of serve, and In the.
21st victory by defeating 'the
•
second set she didn 't miss
•
Mariners 9-2 in the first game ora
anything.
·
'
dou6re:iJeader.
Smith,
who
earlier
upset
"That was one more step to the
fourth -seeded Pam Shriver,
Cy Young for Saberhagen,"
985·3301
By REBECCA BRYAN
convincingly
In
the
opening
(See VIRGINIA SLIMS on C~)
Royals manager John Wathan
UPI Sports Wrlte"r
match -play foursomes, winning
said. "You can't get any better
SUTI'ON COLDFIELD, Eng- two and tying two to lead 3-1.
than he has been for a long time.
land (UPI) - Europe blunted
However, as in 1985 at The
tau feel like every time he goes
America's bid to recapture ·the Belfry and 1987 at Mulrtleld,
out there that if you get a couple
Ryder Cup galt trophy Friday, Ohio, the four·ball matches got
rJt runs, you are going to win."
leaving the challengers down 5-3 the better of the inexperienced
: It will be up to the baseball after the first of three days of American team.
writers designated to vote for the
•
play.
In four-ball, two players from
Cy Young at the end of the season
" It's unbelievable," American each team compete. On each
to determine which pitcher is
captain Ray Floyd said after his hole, the player with · the better
more deserving, Stewart or
team's thorough defeat at The score on one team Is matched
'
Saberhagen.
Belfry in England's Industrial against the player with the better
: One thing the writers won't
midlands.
score on the other team. Four~eclde Is tl!e pennant. That 's
"I am absolutely stunned. It ball can be matCh play or stroke
going to be decided on the field
doesn't make . any sense to play, but match play Is used In
and right now, Stewart's Athlet - anybody. These are guys that the Ryder Cup.
ICs have the edge In the American
have made hundreds of thou"It was a grand afternoon,"
beague W~t.
sands of dollars playing golf. and ~ European captain Tony Jacklin
: By becoming the first pitcher
they don ' I know what said after his team swept the last
~e Jim Palmer (1975-78) to
happened."
four matches. "We felt, all of us,
W) n 20 In three straight seasons,
3U Stc:OND AVL
GAWPOUS, OH.
The United States, WhOlle play- It could !!ave gone either way (In
Stewart moved Oakland four
ers came to England to avenge the morning}. We weren't too
(614) 446-1413
Mon. 10-8, Fri.1 0-6, T,W,Til, Sat. 10·5 A I
games ahead of California and
1985 and 1987 defeats, began
(See RYDER CVP on C-3)

a

BEHINDS
5 WALK
IN STOCK

SUPER'' DEALS
ON 5-1989
MODEL WALK
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~GiAAVELY

A's hand Twins 5-2 loss to
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(Continued from C-1)
the end zone. Michigan State
elected to kick a conversion to
pull within 14-13 just 8:24 into the
third quarter.
Michigan State took advantage
of two Irish turnovers to pull
within 14-6 at halftime on field
goals of 38 and 36 yards by John ·
Langeloh.
WVU 30, Louisville 21
At Louisville, Ky., West Virgl- .
nla scored twice In the final three
minutes to record a come-frombehind 30-21 . win over the
Cardinals.
The win extended the Mountaineers' unbea ten string this season to four.
WVU ,. went ahead for the firs t
time h\ the game on a touchdown
with 2:54 remaining and then
tailed another on a romp by
Eugene Napoleon.

Wittenberg U, Kenyon 14
At Springfield, Ohio, Jon Warg~'s five-yard touchdown run
with 5: 20 left in the game lifted
Wittenberg to a 21·1~Nor th Coast
Athletic Conference win over
Kenyon Saturday afternoon.
Warga's winning TO run c ame
after Kenyon, 0-2-1 overall and
0-1 in the conference, had overcome a 14-0 halftime deficit with
two third-quarter touchdowns .
Wittenberg, 2-1 and 2-0, h&amp;d
taken that lead on 11 one-yard run
by Jeff Stockdale and a 29-yard
•
run by Warga.
Kenyon's two third quarter
TDs both came on passes from
Chris Creighton to Sean McCabe,
one covering 18 yards and the
other 22.
Ohio Wes]eyan 14, Adrian 7
At Adrian, Mich., fullback
Kevin Sims carried 20 times for
94 yards and scored two touch-

Georgia 23, Miss. St. 6
downs as Ohio Wesleyan de- when Kentucky 's Chris Tolbert
At
Athens, Ga., John Kasay possession with Talley, who
feated Adrian 14-7 Satuday.
intercepted backup quarterback
Sims' second touchdown, a Gary Hollingsworth's conversion kicked fteld goals of 36, 49 and 48 com pleted B of 15 passes fa~ 93
one-yard run, snapped a 7-7 tie pass and returned It to the. yards Saturday to oo.ost No. 20 yards before sitting out the fmal
Georgia to a 23-6 victory over 21 minutes of the ga me , connectwith 9:35 remaining in the fourth
Alabama 43.
previously-unbea te n Mississippi ing with Broom tomakethescore
quarter. Sims opened the scoring
It was Alabama's 30th win over
. 10-0 with 6:32 left in the first .
State.
with a two-yard run In the second
Kentucky, 2-1 and O-lin the SEC,
quarter .
.
Georgia,
2-0,
also
scored
a
pair
quarter.
which has beaten Alabama only
However,
Georgia
was una ble
of
touchdowns
an
eight-yard
The Battling Bishops (2-0-1)
once. in 1922. The teams tied 7-7
first-half
threat
to
mount
a
nother
pass
from
Greg
Talley
to
tight
outgained the Bulldogs on the
In 1939 and until Saturday had not
and
Logan's
two
field
goals ·
e
nd
Chris
Broom
midway
ground 218-36.
played in Tuscaioosa since 1941.
enabled
Mississi
ppi
State
to go
through
the
first
quarter
and
a
Adrian (1-2) picked up its only
N.C. Stale 40, N. Carolina 6
out
at
halftime
traiUng
only
10-6.
3-yard run by. tailback Larry
score with 59 seconds left In the
At Raleigh, N.C., Shane Mont- Ware early In the third quarter.
A
fumbled
pitchout
on
the
second quarter . Pete Mazzoni,
gomery passed for 222 yards and
opening
play
of
the
second
half
Mississippi State, 2-1, got its
who completed 14 of 25 passes for
three touchdowns Saturday and on ly points In the second quarter
gave Georgia possession at the
152 yards, threw a 40-yard
No. 16 North Carolina State on field goals of 27 and 36 yards
Mississippi State 22 and It took
touchdown pass to Richard Benconverted four North Carolina by Joel Logan.
the Bulldogs only five plays to
.
son. Benson caught six passes for
turnovers Into seores in a 40-4;
widen the lead to 17-6 on Ware' s
Georgia, a nine-point favorite,
105 yards ,
rou t of the Tar Heels. .
TD run .
scored
on
its
first
two
posessions.
Alabama 15, Kentucky 3
The Woltpack, who have The Bulldogs drove 48 yards oil
An interceptip n by Mall
At .Tuscaloosa, Ala., Martin
opened with four consecutive their first possession to set up
McCormick .at the Mississippi
Houston scored on a one-yard
victories in the Atlantic Coast Kasay 's 36-yard field goaL They
State 34 se t up Kasay's 49-yard
plunge and Philip Doyle kicked
Conference, kept the Tar Heels drove 66 yards on their next
(COLLEGE GAMES end on C-5)
three field goals Saturday to give on their own side of the 50 on all
No. 12 Alabama a 15-3 Southeast- but three possessions, North
ern
Conference victory over
Carolina, 1-2overalland0-1 in the
(Continued
from
C-1)
' 'J
••• ~_.:..::.:;.::..:.::.:=-:.:.:::.:.:..:.;::.:___ _ _ __
· Kentucky.
.
.
ACC, gained just 119 yards of ·
'the
····•· second
. when Larkin singled, ·
Alabama, 2-0 and 1-0 In the
total offense In a second straight
single.
SEC,
led
9-3
midway
through
the
advanced on Moore's wild pitch,
lopsided loss to the Wolfpack.
Jose Canseco:s solo homer in
fourth
quarter
when
Houston
and scored on Greg Gagne's the third put the Athletics on top
It was the first time N.C. State
had defeated the Tar Heels in
3-1. It was Canseco's 16th home scored to put the Crimson Tide
ahead 15-3 . . A two-point try
Raleigh since 1975. The Wallpack
run of the year.
almost
turned
Into
a
dlsas
ter
won
48-3 last year In Chapel Hill.
Red Sox 5, T lgers 1
• Permanent Life.
At Detroit, Wade Boggs con• Term Life.
UIIOU !IICiiDIII
TVC Football Sian dings
tributed two RBi singles and ·
c.r- of 'llir.
(All Games)
• Retirement, .
Danny Heep hit a two-run single
lw.&amp;S-St.
COLUMBUS,
Ga.
(UP!)
the
cut,
along
with
former
p
'Team
W L
OP Saturday to enable the Boston
pension and
Bobby Clampett, who hasn' t won Southern Open winners - Jerry
:Trimble ....... ........ 5 0 103 15 Red Sox to post a 5-1 victory over
.... 446-42'0
group
plans.
a tournament since he took home Pate, Fred Wadsworth and For·Vinton County ...... 4 1 113 48 the Detroit Tigers.
"'-446-4511
the trophy here seven years ago, res 1 Fezler.
• Universal Life.
: Nelsonville-York ..3 2 '90 43
Rookie Detroit starter Kevin shot a six-under-par 64 Frictay for
' Melgs ... .......... .. ... 3 2 80 92 Ritz, 4-5, gave up nine hits In .
•Belpre ...... ..... ...... 2 3 47 58 three and one-t hird innings as a one-stroke lead after the second
Like a good f'le!Qhtx:Jr,
.Miller .............. ....2 3 44 89 Boston loaded the bases in the round of the Southern Open Golf
Srare Farm 15 there
Tournament.
CENTENARY - Ohio Valley
~ Wellston ........... ...1 4 60 84 first and third. The Tigers are
Clampett has been struggling
Christian's soccer team got a gift ·
cAlexander ...........0 5 28 156 two defeats away from losing 100
this
year.
His
best
finish
was
a
tie
goal !rom its opponent in its 2-0
:Federal Hocking ..0 5 25 113 games for only the third time in
for 11th in the Western Open and
victory over Gallipolis Friday
their history.
he
has
missed
the
cut
In
13
of
25
afternoon
at Raccoon Creek
,
TVC Games Only
INIUIANCI
Mike Boddicker, 14 -11, scat - times.
County
Park.
•
:Team
W ·L P OP tered five hits in six and one-third
"It's no secret that I haven't
The Defenders, recipients of a
;-Trlmble.............. : .. 4 0 75 15 Innings Including a solo home run
wrong-way kick, got their other
:vll)ton County .. ... .. 3 0 95 12 by Matt Nokes, his ninth and played well the last six or seven
years,"
Clampett
said.
"This
goal from Jamey Black.
'Nelsonvllle-York ... 3 0 78
7 second In two games , in the third .
The 9-0 Defenders will host
~Meigs ...... ... .......... 3 1 74 46 Rob Murphy collected his ninth year I'm having the worst year In
the 10 years I've been on the
Cross Lanes Christian Monday .
Jlelpre .................. 2 2 38 43 save with two and two-third tour.
"
·Miller ................... 1 3 31 82 innings of one-hit reilef. The hit
Hi~o-round total of 131 gives
~lexander ............ 0 3 . 20 89 he allowed was Nokes ' fourth of
him a'&amp;e-streak lead over Dave
Wellston .... : .... ...... 0 3 33 58 the game.
Rummels,
Ted Schull, Rick Fehr
"Federal Hocking .. . 0 4 25 97
Two singles and a walk loaded and Sieve Pate who were at 132.
Friday's games
the bases for Boston ln. the first Kenny Knox Is at 133.
Nelsonville-York 14 Belpre 0
before Heep delivered his twoBill Andrade, who shared the
·Trimble 23 Alexander 0
out hit . Rich Gedman doubled first-round lead with Fehr and
Miller 13 Federal Hocking 12
and scored on a single by Boggs Steve Pate, shot a two-over 72.
:Athens 36 Vinton ~ounty o·
in the second.
Defending Southern Open
Meigs 25 Wellston19 (4 ot )
. Boggs, who had three hits and · .Champion David Frost missed
: Sept. 29 «ames: ..
Is only five away from his
Meigs at Nelsonville-York
seventh straight 200-hlt season,
;Alexander at Wellston
collected his second RBI single In
l'rimble at Federal-Hocking
the eighth. Dwight Evans and
.Yinton County at Belpre
(Continued from C-2)
Nick Esasky also forced ill r uns
Miller at Zanesville Rosecrans by walking with the bases loaded
battled back from a 5-3 deficit in
it Saturday)
the !lrst set with two ser\rlce
In the eighth.
•
breaks to take a 6-5 lead and then
(MAJORS ends on C-3) .
captured a marathon 12th game
(Continued from C-2)
_:..__.:..:::::.::.==::..=:....._
_ ___,. and the set. She won the second
set and the match on a 7-5
despondent."
tiebreaker.
Calcavecchla and compatriot said.
"The points were so tough, the
Jacklin replaced just one pair
Ken Green were among the
quality
of tennis was really
winpers In the morning, downing in the afternoon, sending Sam
good,"
said
Smith , who will face
West Germany 's Bernhard Torrance and Gordon Brand Jr.
the Navratllova -Fernandez
I,al)ger and Northern · Ireland's in place of Langer and Rafferty.
winner in the semifinals. "I
The
two
Britons
defeated
Ronan Rafferty 2 and 1.
would hit some really good
: PGA champion Payne Stewart Strange and Paul Azinger by one serves, and she would hit down
hole,
despite
Strange's
eagle-3
at
and Lanny Wadkins defeated
the line winners ' ..
Britons Howard Clark and Mark No. 17 to tie the ·score. Brand
Fairbank said Smith "just
J.ames by one hole, and five-time ,holed an 8-foot putt at No. 18 for seemed destined to win'' before
British Open champion Tom the victory.
the hometown crowd.
'
''It was a terribly brave putt,"
Watson and Chip· Beck . held
'
'She
played
really
welL
she
!)everiano Ballesteros and Jose- Jacklin said.
used
her
head
and
the
court
well,
Woosnam a nd Faldo played
Marla Oiazabal to a tie .
and she played some smart
e
ven
with Calcavecchia and
· U.S. Open champion Curtis
shots." Fairbank said . "We were
Strange and Tom Kite also Mark McCumber from No. 8 to
both playing great points. Ann hit
the
13th,
when
Woosnam
chipped
earned hall a point, finishing
the line every time. It was some
in
from
a
bunker
to
go
one
hole
even with Nick Faldo and Ian
really good tennis."
·
Woosnam, but the· four ball up. The European pair went on to
Smith
has
won
10
Grand
Slam
played in rising wind and cooling win the match by two holeS.
titles, all in doubles, and has won
Another British pair, Howard
t~mperatures, was another
each
of the·Grand Slam doubles
·Clark and Mark James , rounded
story.
·
events
with .partner Kathy Jor· Ballesteros and Olazabal off the four-ballroutewith a3 and dan. She missed the first half of
blazed to a 6 and 5 victory over 2 victory over Wadkins and Fred the 1988 season due to Injuries.
Watson and Mark O'Meara. Couples.
In an afternoon quarterfinal,
"I'm not trying to hide any
Ballesteros eagled the 275-yard
Maleeva dominated Reggl with
players,"
Floyd
said.
"
I
thought
par-4 lOth, then posted birdies at
her baseline game in a match
Nos. ll, 12 and 13 toputthe match I'd put up strong teams . It just that lasted two hours and 15
didn
't
work
out.
One
thing
I
think
out of the reach.
minutes and Included 17 service
•: "When Seve gets his Porsche about tomorrow is that the boys breaks. Maleeva overcame
USY 516,78,.00
4 dr., 5~ •• auto., air, &amp; more.
going, not even St . Peter in_ who are playing for the first time seven double faults to advance
INVOICE 514,323.75
LIST SJ1,5 10.00-INVOICE Sl 0,084.70
·h eaven can stop_him." Olazabai will have that behind them against Seies.
tomorrow."

MariorS

For Life Insurance,
check with state Farm.

TVC standings

Clampett leads in Southern Open

.........

Defenders win 2.0

-

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Americans down 5-3
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SIDELINE SPORTS

R

t'

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-3

College games.....

...Cubs top Pirates 4-2 ·to hold
four-game lead in NL East

Smith, Seles
win upsets ·
in Virginia
Slims tourney

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

'

(•

'

•

••

It Will Cost You More.After Sept. 27

I

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or Both, But
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This is a Limited Offer •
Interest co!llpounded 1daily and substantial lnlel"eelt penalty for early withdrawal,

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- --

---------,-- - -- - --· ..._-----

'r." -- •

,_

�September 24, 1989

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

P,age-:-C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 24, 1989

Ohio-Point Paarsnt, W.Va .

.Vikings boost record to 5-0 with 39-14 win over SWHS
By G.• SPENCER OSBORNE
·
Times-sentinel Staff
. GAGE - Adjusting io Friday
night's -rainstorm, Symmes Val·
ley ·kept th.e ball on the ground
. and tramped through the mud to
the tune of 371 yarl!s, which
allowed the Vikings to post a 39·14
victory over Southwestern F;riday night.
In posting Its second league
win :or tile season, the Valley
boosted its overall recoro to 5-0.
So uthw ester n, 2-3 and 0-2,
· dropped Its fourth consecutive
conference loss.
• "Our offensive and defensive
lines controlled the game," said
VJklng skipper ~errill Triplett of
his llneqien, who opened enough
holes for :junior running back
Kl!nny Daniels to chalk up 84
~ards on seven rushes and three
!Jiuchdowns. The Viking back~ld · confined the majority of
fl)elr runs toward the left side of
111e line, where tackle Roy
P)lyton, a 6-3, 210·pi&gt;und senior,
~t up shop. "You've got the best
liile-I've seen In 10 years," said
~uthwestern chief J ack Ja(lles
"Ill Triplett after the game.
•:The Norsemen cashed In on
tltelr first offensive series with
~ ll·play , 48-yard drive that
it$ed up the game's first 5:10 and
ended when Daniels burst
IJirough from eight yards out for
U)e Valley's first touchdown. The
jpl!owing two-point conversion
run was stopped short, and the
visitors settled for a 6-0 lead.
The Highlanders' first possession was a quick three-and-out
thlit was stalled a their own ·
25-yard line. In that drive quar·
terback C.hris Metzger. who later
.left the game because of a broken
bone in hiS foot, threw two of his
five Incomplete passes. He had
no completions on the night.
Wlien the Vikings got the ball
back on theSW 48, just as they did
on. their Initial possession, they
achieved the same result with the
same running back, but In fewer
plays. Daniels ended the drive
when he broke Into the clear.for a
27-yatd touchdown run at the3: 49
mar
., k. The two-point conversion

pass fell Incomplete, and
Symmes took a 12-0 lead.
The Highlanders' second possession took five plays; but a
penalty· bjl.Cked them up five ·,
yards, pinning them at their own
24 before Metzger's punt landed
at the SW 45. From there, the
Vikings committed a penalty
that backed them up to their own
44. Then, quarterback Paul
Hayes rolled out to his left.
turned the corner toward the far
sldel'lne and bolted away lor a
56-yard touchdown run. The
following two-point conversion
pass from Hayes to tight end Carl
Robinson, Hayes' only comptelion In four attempts, padded the
visitors'.
. cushion to a 20-0 count.
The day-long rainstorm, which
stopped sometime before the ·
game, resumed at the start of the
second quarter, but this time
with a torrential. vengeance.
Both teams stayed In the middle
third of the· field for most of this
quarter. except when Daniels
visited the end zone for his third
and final time with 7:58 left. He
fooled the Highlanders, who had
been looking at a lot of runs to the
left side and the middle of the
Vikings' front, by cutting to the
right side, eluding several defenders and breaking away for a
28-yard paydlrt run. The extra·
point kick by C.J. Jenkins, which
. was the Vikings' final PAT, got
through to give Symmes a 27-0
lead.
Things seemed to turn a little
brighter for the Gatuans when
one of Hayes' passes was caught
by Highlander cornerback Joe
Hammond, who put the ball at
the Southwestern 41 with 26
seconds left. Two plays later,
new quarterback Aaron
McCarty, orchestrating an attempted two-toss pass play.
threw a lateral pass to tailback
Bill Potter on the right side.
Potter never got his hands on the
pass as l!e watched the ball go
toward the near sideline. Viking
cornerback Harry Morris, makIng sure the ball didn't go out of
bounds, scooped It up at theSW47
and jetted away for a 53-yard

touchdown wllh no time ·left on
the clock. The Vikings left the
field at halftime with a 33-0 lead ..
"I can't believe Potter stoOd
there and looked at It," said
James of the play.
In the third quarter, things got
better for Highlanders when
defensive tackle Brent Davies
recovered a fumble or) the

Vikings' six . From there, Potter ley's lead to 33-8. .
i-an twice for five yards to set the
· Potter ended the Highlanders'
table lor fullback Josh Halslop. first drive of the fourth quarter ,
Halslop, who was limited to hjs which covered 45 yards In 11
lowest rushing effort of the plays, by p(ck!ng up a pair of first
season at 41 yards on 19 carries, · downs a long the way and the
blasted through lor a one-yard hosts·· final TD on a one:yard rtin
touchdown wllh 3: 14 left. Hals· with 7:47 l~ft. The tl"o-polnt
lop's two-point conversion run conversion run was short, and
was successful, cutting the Val- the Valtey's lead was cut to33·14.

College games ...

The No.r semen responded with
a nine-play, 49-yard drive that
con~umed 4: 13, ending wh~n
tailback Fred Wilburn, playing
at times out of an Hormatlon,
drove Into the end zone from six
yards out to comptete the night's
scoring.
For the Vikings, fullback Jason
(See VIKINGS on C-6)

(Continued frQm C..31

t

Washlock. the qu_a rterback,
field goal, the longest the junior romp over Marlet ta 44-20 In the
left the game In the fourth
has kicked In conelle. and Geor- Ohio Athletic Conference.
. gla led 20-6 with 7: 53 left In the
Bendle, a sop)1omore tallbacJ&lt;, quarter when he silffered a .
third quarter.
;
·
carried the ball 22 times and broke n collarbone. It was not
1
Kasay's thlro fteiiJ goal came scored on runs of one; two, two Immediately determined how
long he will be out.
3: 14 Into the final quarter and and 49 yar~.
.
Coyne's field goals cames -on
Pioneers running back l,..J.
neither team was 'a !lie to score
again. Mlsslaslppl State drove to · Harplne ran for TDs ol19 and six ·kicks of 21 yards In the first
quarter alid 41 yards In the fourth
the Georgia 26 on fh~ passing of yards.
Both teams. are 2-1 overai'i and period.
backup quarterback tJ'ony Shell,
Scott Peasley hauled In a
but turn the ballov~r~m downs at 1'1 In the league.
seven-yard pass from John Wor·
the Georgia 40 after\' Shell was
CWRU 13, Earlham 7
tham In the third quarter lor
sacked. .
· • ·1 I
AI Cleveland, Paul Washlock Earlham's on)y score In Its first
scored on a one-yard run and NCAC game. Wortham was 14 of
ClnciiiiWIIO, MlUtl14
Larry Coyne kicked two field 27 lor 124 yards and two
At Cincinnati, Mar\lin _Bowgoals Saturday to lead Case Interceptions.
man, who tied a schopl recoro
Western Reserve to .a 13·7 North
Case Improved to 2-1 and 1-lln
with three of CIJICiriitatl's four
Coast Athletic Conference win the NCAC. Earlham has lost all
Interceptions Saturoay .~returned
over Ear!ham.
three of Its games.

...

..

SVAC standinp
(All games) .
Team
WL
Symmes Valley ... 5 0
Kyger Creek ........ 4 0
Oak Hill .............. 3 1
Eastern .. ............. 2 2
North Gallla ........ 2 2
Southwestern ....... 2 3
Hannan Trace .....0 . 4
Southern .............. 0 4

'

(SVAC only)
TeaUt
W L PF PA
Eastern ...... ,, .......... 1 0 35 0
Kyger Creek ........... 1 0 23 0
Symmes. Valley ...... 2 0 59 . 28
North Gallla ........... 1 0 6 0
Oak Hill .................0 1 14 20
Southwestern .......... O 2 14 45
Southern ................. O 1 o 23 .
Hannan Trace ........ 0 1 0 35

ttles to keep the Highlanders' Nell Walson (72)
away from the ball. The recovery, m&amp;lle bySWHS
tackle Brent Davies, set up a one-yard touchdowu
run by Josh Halslop. Buill wasn't enough to keep
the VIkings from posting a 39-14 . victory.
(Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

GET THE BALL! - Southwestern's defense
has just stripped the ball from Symmes Valle~
Inside the VIkings' 10-yard line, and the
IUghlaliders' Silas Owens (58) stonns past VIking
running baek Fred Wilburn (45) to try to get the
. ball In the third quarter of Friday night's SVAC
contest a1 Gal(e, as VIking guard Matt Myers (64)

,,.
•

fF PA
145 74
80 28
110 42
81 55
61 60
74 79
16 141
6 70

'

-···~

.

..
._,

~": :~~':! !~raa~'U~ ~:~

I

l
I

SOUTHERN VARSrrY -The Soulhern Tornadoett.e varlllty voiJeyball team haa been enjoying a
fine season thusfiU' In 1988 and Is atllllncontentlon
for the SVAC IItle with an 8-3 overall mark and &amp;-1
mark In tbe SVAC. PICtured are team meJJlbers

Friday's residl
Symmes Valley 39, SWHS 14
Kyger Creek at Eastern, ppd .
Southern at Hannan Trace, ppd. ·
Oak Hill at North GaiUa, ppd.

(front, L-R) Trlcla Wolle, Jane Ana WllllaJilll;
baek- Coach Suzanne Wolfe, Cheryl Pape, Megan
Wolle, Chris Harmon, Junle Beegle, and Aadrea
Theiss. Absent were Tracy Norris and Aimee Hill.

Next week's action
Eastern at Oak Hill
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
North· Gallla at Symmes Valley
Southwestern at Southern

Miami (Ohio). ·
: I
Bowman, whO beca~~ the fifth
Bearcat to have three lpterceptlons In (lne game, SCOre4 his TD
In the fourth quarter . .,
.
The Bearcatsscored b~ all four
Interceptions and the oae Mll;tml
fumble they recovered. Both
Miami's TDs came on Cine nnatl
mistakes.
Chad Volland klck.l\dl three
field goals, one set up by a fumble
recovery and two by lnierceptlons. His first kick of ~2' yards
came In the first quartel\ after
Doug Bates recovered a Miami
· fumble on the Redsklns 15-yard
line. He kicked a 3~y!lfder just
before the first half ende4 and
another 35-'yarder In the', fourth
period.
.
Miami recovered a Cincinnati
fumble In the second quarlennd
went 34 . yards In seven ' p)ays,
capped by Tim Forehand's'first
of two toi.IChdowns.
Forehand added his second
touchdown In the tblro quarter
after a bad snap on a punt
attem~t gave the Redsk'lls: the
ball on their own 48. Nine p)ay s
later be scored on a one-yard run.
VIncent MunUn plc;ked off the
fourth Miami pass to set , "P a
five-yard fourth-quarter TD run
by B6bby Brown.
'
· Cincinnati's .offense hac) one
sustained drive that resUitep In a
score. In the second quarter, the
Beai-cats drove 73 . yards jn· 13
plays with Terry Strong gojng
over the from four, one play ~~~er
Doug Hoog hit Brian Hatcher
with a 28-yard pass.
·
Clnclnnallls 1·1'1 whlje Miami,
which hasn't won for 16 games, ·
fell to 0-3. •
•

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ANTIFRIEZ!

~ TOUCHDOWN BOUND - As Southwestern defender Nell
.:waison (72) gives chase In the distance, Symmes Valley·

:•quarterback Paul Hayes speeds down the sideline on his way to ·
•·scoring a 56-yard touchdown In the first quarler of Friday's game
::at Gage. Hayes gained 68 yards on the ground to help push the
&gt;Vikings to a 39-14 victory. (Times-sentinel photo by G. Spencer
•: o s borne) ·
'
.

.

Pictured are
TORNADO RESERVES members of this year's 1989 Southern reserve
voUeyballsquad which bas been enjoying a good
season. Team members are, left to right, front,

wn 1u. . )'QII mun1y lut11 •

I.!!

tole price.

Cardinals 11, Phlllles 5
AI St. Louis, Milt Thompson
belted a bases-clearing double to
cap a seven-run third Inning and
Pedro Guerrero had three RIU
Saturoay, leading the St. Louis
Cardinals to an 11-5 victory over
the Philadelphia Ph lilies .. .
St. Li&gt;ws, which has won six of
Its last seven games, trails the
first-place Chicago Cubs by four
gam~ with. seven remaining.
' The · Cardinals roughed up
s'tarter ' Dennis Cook, 6-8. Cook,
who has lost five straight decl·

Vikings ...

SPECIAL ORDERS ON THOUSANDS OF PARTS

(Continued from&lt;C-4)
,Sheppard led all rushers with 1&lt;l!
yanls on 15carrles. Hayes ran four
times for68 yams, and Wilburn had
44 yards .In five rushes. Robinson
ran seven yaros In two attempts.
The Highlanders were led by
Potter's 58 yanls rushing on 14
attempts. Hammond had five yaros
on one run. and McCarty, who
passed twice and had no completions, needed five attempts to gain
two yards. Met2ger rushed twice
·and was sent back for ·1 yard.
Recovering other fumbles for the
Highlanders were John Sites (two)
· and Keith Carter (one) , while one of
the Viking recoveries was made by

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slons, worked two and two-third
limlngs and gave up six runs and
.eight hits.
St. Louis reliever Frank DIP·
Ina, 9-0, worked two and one-third
scoreless Innings for ihe victory.
He took over for starter Crls
Carpenter, who' pitched four and
two-third Innings, allowing three
runs .and five hits while walking
one and striking oufone.
Carpenter started a string of
seven consecutive singles ln. the
third and moved to second when
Vince Coleman hit safely. Ozzle
Smith lined hard up the middle,
but center·flelder Len Dykstra
threw . Carpenter out at home
plate ..

But Guerrero, Todd Zelle and
Tom Brunansky and '!Ferry Pendleton each followed ' with RBI
singles. Pendleton's single to put
runners at first and third, chas·
lng Cook. Reliever Don Carman
walked Jose Oquendo to load the
bases lor Thompson. who lined a
double Into the rlght·fleld corner.
Guerrero Is second ili ·· the
National League with 114 RBI.
The Phlllles took a 1·0 lead I'!
the thlro when, Darren Daulton
singled, went to thll"'l on · · a
groundout.and scored on a double
by Cook.
,
Philadelphia cut the deficit to
7-3 In the fourth when Dickie
Thon smacked a tw.o·run homer
to left .

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Robinson.
The rest of the SVAC contests . Kyger Creek at Eastern. Southern
at Hannan Trace, and Qak Hill at
(ljorth Gallla - were postponed
Friday night because of rain. They
were scheduled to be played
Saturoay night.
. On next Friday's agenda, the
VIkings will host North Ga!Ua; and
Southwestern will playoSouthem at

\II • t

Burlile Oil Company, Inc.

(Continued from C-3)

6!!

,.

Mullklnpm 44, Marietta ttl ·
At New Coiieoro, Ohio, Mus)cln·
gum, led by Mitch Bendle's 104
rushing yards and four touchdowns, exploded for 24 points In
the fourth quarter Sat uroay to

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Heather McPhail, Chrlstl~aldens, Angle Swiger,
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T~my fluckley, Marcy IDii, .SIU'ah Duhl, arid
Renee Russell.

iJuiUII.T

\

-~--'------"'---"--

•

�September 24. 1989

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

September 24, 1989

Logan, GAHS only non-league

~fter

.•·

BRAVE HUGO FANS- Fallout tr.n BuntC.. Bup reached the Gallpolls area uound
1:31 p.m. Frldar. By 8 o'cl!ICII Friday even IDe,
:Oalla Academy's Memorial Fleld was a
'!l•cmlre. Tbe rains, however, stopped brieRy
:1ftrst and second quarters) but by halftbne, the
:skies opened up once. acaln and It continued
:ralnlnc the remainder of the game. These brave

souls, around NO of them, remained on hand for a
bitter defensive bailie between the Blue Devils'
and vlilll!nc Columbus DeSales. The Stal Dons
woll, 1'-3• eomlng from behind 1~ In the second
half. n was Gallla's third straight home game
marred by rain, and second week In a row the
award-winning . Blue Devil band was unable to
perform.

beSales.~ second half rally
defeats Gallia Academy, 14-3
GALLIPOLIS - A first quarter clipping penalty, missed field
g6al attempt and three costly
third period fumbles by Gallipolis gave visiting DeSales a big
assist In the rain and mud here
Friday night as the Stallions
rallied from a 3-0 deficit late In
the third period for a 14-3
tril!mph.
"Their two-platoon system
was a big difference," remarked
a dejected GAHS Coach Brent
Saunders. "Our boys played
their hearts out, but came away
with a Joss. We could have won
this one, bu I our mistakes and
their manpower let them go
home happy."
DeSales played 11 different
boys on offense and defense and
approximately 30 players while
the Galllans used approximately
18 or 19ln the 32-mlnute mudfest.
'It was Gallia Academy's final
non-conference outing. DeSales
entered the game ranked No. Iln
Division 11, Region 7. The Stallions are now 4-I on the year.
Gallipolis, ranked eighth In Division II, Region 8, dropped to 3-2.
GABS Scores Flrst
GAHS missed a 3I-yard field
goal attempt with 4: 481eft In the
Initial period after Robby Skidmore recovered a Stallion fum ble. The Galllans had marched to
the DHS 14.
·With 2: 23 left in the first
stanza, Gallia running back Josh
Williams scampered 48 yards to
paydlrt, but the sparkling play
was nullified by a GAHS clipping
jlepalty. "We should have had at
least a I0-0 lead at this point,"
saunders said.

Marietta 28 CarroUton 14
At Marietta ''the Tigers took
advantage of· four Carrollton
fumbles in the second half, .
including a one yard fumble
stalled. It was GaiUa's !Ina! recovery run by Nick Matthews
in the final two, minutes. The
threat.
.
.
other
three Tiger TDs were
DeSales controlled the bali the
scored
by Jeff Smith, Larry
remainder of the period, then
Kerr,
and
Brian-Warden while
scored with 34 seconds left with
Mar,k
~urlein
k!cked . ali four
Chad Young taktng·il in from the
extra
points.
three. Mahle's kick made it 14-3.
Maril!tla (2-3) finished with 23I
Slatlstlcs
Gallipolis rushed for 143 yards total ya~cjs while Carrollton (0·5)
(39 trips) and had three of seven had niinus.yardagefor the game.
Score by quarters: ·
pass completions 'for a minus
three yards, giving the Gallians ' Carro(Jton .... ......... 0 I4 0 0-I4
140 total yards in 46 plays from Marietta ... .... ... ... .. 7 7 0 I4-28
scrimmage.
Wai-n!n Local 10 Newark 6
GAHS had five fitstdowns, was
At
Newark the Warrtors upped
penalized eight times for 85 yards ·
their
reeoi'd to4-I asqua.rterbae~t '
and punted five limes for I67.
Scott
Mitchem scored ali ot the
DeSales rushed for 122 yards
t
s
on a 25 yard run, a 38 yard
poin'
(97 in the secortd half) on 41
carries, and had 26 passing with field goal. and toed .the extra
poipt.
. .
.
one completion in eight attempts,
Larry Ryan, paced the WHS
giving DHS I48 total yards in 50
offense with 26 carries for 100
plays.
yards while Newark (1·4) got a 22
DHS had eight first downs, was
for 97 yard effort from Scott
penalized seven times for 63
Kennedy.
yards and punted six times for
The Warriors dodged the bul199 yards.
lett
in the final one minute of play
Gallipolis fumbled five limes
when
the Wildcats moved to the
and lost three. DeSales fumbled
Warren 20 yard line, but misfired .
three limes and lost two.
on four straight passes.
Haynes paced GAHS rushers
.' Score by quarters:'
with 44 yards in seven trips.
Warren ........ ..... ...... . 7 3 0 0-10
1\[illiams added 26 in eight tries
Newark ................... 6 0 0 0- 6
and Chris Plymale 25 in eight.
The latter received a "neck
Athens 36 Vinton County 0
sting" with 4: 26 left in the third
At Athens it was· the Ryan
period, and did not return to
Adams show as the senior
action. Allan Garnes. had I6
tailback scored all six of the
,Yards in five trips.'
Bulldogs'
touchdowns on runs of
Young paced DeSales with 53
one,
five,
four, 18, 16, and nine
yards in 13 trips, 31 coming
less than a !f!inute left to play .I yar·as. Adams finished the evenVrancken added 48 on 21 carries ,
Logan Next Foe
Gallipolis opens SEOAL play
at Logan Friday. DeSales wiil
(
host Dayton Dunbar.
Statistics:

Gallipolis marched to the Stallions' I6 after Brent Simms
recovered another DHS fumble
·early in the second period. From
here, Justin Fallon's educated
toe split the uprights from 33
yards out (9: 36) to give Gallipolis
a 3-0 advantage.
GAHS &lt;lefenders stopped sustained DeSa.Ies drives twice
during the first 11 minutes of the
third period, but lost the ball each
time on a fumble.
Stallions Bounce Back
Mike Lacher recovered the
first Blue Devil bobble (7:47), but
fine defensive play by Dave
Crisenberry and Josh Williams
stopped a DHS gamble on fourth
down at the Stallions' 42.
With 1:36 left in the third, Brad
Mager pounced on a Blue Devil
fumble on the GAHS 29. Two
p)ays later, QB TOdd Vrancken
found wide receiver Kevin Jenkins all alone in the endzone for a
26-yard TD strike. It was the first
time this fall GAHS surrendered
a touchdown by air. Andy Mahle's kick made .Jt 7-3 with 4I
seconds left in the third.
Gallia Academy gave it up a
third time on, the DHS. 39 •with
Brian Diggs recovering. Gallipolis held the visitors, taking over
on its own 44.
· Haynes Breaks Free
It appeared Donnie Haynes
was going to score on an 82-yard
keeper play (IO: 4I) when he
broke free down the sidelines, but
a missed assignment at midfield
allowed the Stallions to pull him
down on the GAHS 45.
The Blue Devils moved to
DeSales' 39 before the drive

~EO

standings

(Opponents, All Games)
TEAM
W L P OP
Athens .... ............. 4 I 173 , 62 .
DeSales ...... ......... 4 I 88 32
Warren .......... ..... .4 1 75 35
Coal Grove.. :..... ... 3 1 I06 28
Logan ... ....... .. ...... 3 2 59 85
Gallipoiis ....... ...... 3 2 61 62
M~igs .... ......... .. .. .3 2
80 92
Pt. Pleasant ... ... .. 1 2 57 62
Marietta . ... .......... 2 3 60 98
Jackson .......... .. .... 2 3 88 115
Wellston .. ............ 1 4 60 84
Fl-lday's cames:
DeSales 14 Gallipolis 3
Meigs 25 Wellston I9 (4ot)
Jackson 27 Centennlal19
Ironion 44 Logan 6
Warren 10 Newark 6
Marietta 28 Carrollton ·14
Hurrtcane at Point Pleasant,
ppnd, reset Monday
Bt!ffalo at Coal Grove, ppnd, ·
reset saturday
Athens 36 Viqton County 0
SeiJI. 2t cames:
Ga)UpoUs at Logan
Jackson at Marietta
Warren Local at Athens
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg
South (Saturday)
o,arfork at Coal Grove
Dayton Dunbar at DeSales
Meigs at Nelsonville-York
Al~ncler at Wellston

The deer population on the
Ohio River island has exploded in
recent years, and the Division of
Natural Resources in the past
has urged that hunting be allowed on the 507-acre island in
order to manage the size of the
herd.
The excess animals were a
particular problem in the winter
as lack of forage caused some
starvation deaths, and the deer
entered populated areas of the
park (ograzeonbushesandother
vegetation.

in a steady rain.
. pass.
Atheh~ (4 -1) rolled up189yards . The Tiger offense enjoyed· an
rushing and 66 passing while 18-4 advantage in first downs and
Vinton County (4-I) was limited
a 328-65 in total yardage.
to I07 net yards.
Score by quarters:
Scofl! by quarters: .
Ironton .. ......... ..... 14 14 10 6-44
Vinton . ......... ... ..... 0 0 0 0- 0 Logan ............ .... .. 0 0 0 6- 6 ·
Athens ... .... ..... ....... 6 12 12 6-36
--Ironton 44 Logan 6
At Logan the powerful Tliers
ran their season mark to 5·0 as
Delandual Conwell and Keith
Brownstead led an awsome offensive machine.
Conwell scored on runs of 25
yards, nine, and four while
Brownstead tallied from the one
and I3. Kicker Andy Neal added a
30 yard field goal and five extra
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis
points.
The Chieftains sCored in the
Ph. 446-0699
fourth quarter when Scott Sigler

Chang, Gilbert, Krickstein, Davis ·advance
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Top- match with Krickstetn. "I defi- serve, and returned the best
seeded Michael c;hanJ!, No . . 2 nitely am going to have to serve a when it counted."
·
Brad Gilbert, No. 5 Aaron Krlck- lot better to win tommorrow ;"
Curren, ranked No. 23, was
steln and unheralded Scott Davis
The unseeded Davis saved two ahead 5-2 and held two match
marched Into the semifinals match points and ran off the last
Friday at the $425,000 Volvo five games of the match to.sweep
_Tennis . of Los Angeles
past No. 6 Kevin Curren, 3-6, 7-6 ·
tournament.
(7-I). 7-5.
. Chang, playing his solid baseChang, the reigning French
line game, defeated . Darren Open champion and 6th-ranked
Cahill of Australia, 6-1, 6-3 in &amp;I
player, said he .didn' t take
minutes, and Krickstein whipped Cahill lightly·
BUENA PARK, Calif. (UPI) error-prone Andrew Sznajder of
"I knew I was ln.. tor a tough Cindy Rarick shot a 4-under-par
Canada, 6-0, 6-3 in 55 minutes.
match today," Chang said. ''His 68 Friday to grab a share of the
In the night's feature match,
name is pretty much recognized. lead with Pat Bradley and Amy
Gilbert came rrorn behind to beat He always seems to rise t11o the Alcott !af.ter two rounds of ,t he
defending champion and eighth- occasion; He took (John) Mai:n· $300,00!l LPGA MBS Oassic.
seeded Mikael Pernfors of roe to five sets at Wimbledon and
Bradley and Alcott each had
Sweden, 6-4, 6-I in 1 hour and 28 beat (Ivan) Lend! last year."
69s for the second straight day to
minutes.
Chang then previewed his stand 6·under through 36 holes.
In the error-filled first set, . Saturday semifinal with Davis.
Myra Blackwelder, co-first
Pernfors held a 3-1 lead, but
"I can't take him lightly round leader Usa Walters and
Gilbert ran oft five straight either," he said. Scott's been Pam Wright were another shot
games before blowing a pair of here before. He's played the top back.
set points in the ninth to make It players. I'll go out as always and · · Rarick, playing her . fourth
5-4. Gilbert then broke Pernfors
try to play my besf and fight my year on tour, rebounded from a
to take the set.
·
hardest."
double-bogey on the par-5 No. 9
"I was fortunate to get
Krickstein said he would have with birdies on five of the next
through! 'the match," said Gil· preferred more court time, but seven holes on the 6,36I'yard Los
bert. "! .was expecting a battle was satisfied with his siralght- Coyotes Country Club course.
because the first . five games set·victory.
· . . · \c.
•. "I was pleased' shooting a 68,
Pernfor• started off very well....
''I thlnk I played pretty well,!' · · especially with a double bogey,"
But he lost his patience a little . said Krickstein, who h!ISn't Rarick said.
bit." '
dropped a set in disposing of
"After the double I wasn't
Early In the second set, Fern- three · opponents !hili w.eek. :'•r upset. I just said tci myself that I
tors got' a warning for using didn't think I'd win that easy,l!Ut was going to make some birdies
profanity and a code violation for he (Szilajder) helped me out.
on the back nine.
arguing with the judge which
Kricksteln made only five
"When I made the turn after
gave a point and the second game unforced errors to 43 for his the blnth hole, I saw that Pat
to his opponent.
opponent.
Bradley hl!d posted a , G-under
Perforns said the Swedish
With his upset over Curren, score. That gave me ·something
word he used was "fat tar'· which Davis - ranked No. 57 in the to shoot for."
the judge mistook for an
. of
worldhassince
posted
his bestef!ort
the year
finishing
seco.nd . .
obscenity.
in
an
upstate
New
York
"I lost my concentration after
getting ahead 3-I. I played some tournament.
·'Today I felt fortunate to win.
stupid points, " ·Pernfors said. "I
should have been more aggres- Not that I didn't deserve it," said
Davis. "It· was a funny match.
sive on his second serve."
. "I always have a battle with We both played OK in spurts.
Aaron, he's a tough guy to play," Mentally I'm hanging in there
said Gilbert of his upcoming pretty well. I StrU&amp;&amp;led on my

~

Majors

:

a,v.... r ............._.
AMBRIK'~

. ...
Tor..-o .......................HI
llaiUrnCH'f' ••.••..•.•.•.••••,•.HJ
Mlhnul~...................71
~--··············· ·······-~•

·
'

Upper Rt. 7

t;

lnlercepled b)- ... ...... ....................... 0

0

Yonls .-o~n, ........................... :... -3 26

Toial _)'ard• ........ ....................... .. 140' 148

Plays ................ .. ...................... .. .. t6 58
Retum )'arcbi ...... ...........................44 18
Fumbles ............................. .. ........ ~ .s 3
Lost FUR1blm ........................... ...... 3 2
Peaallleo ............................. (ll-8! ) (HI3)
Punls ...... ......... ................ (il-187) (6-119)
•

,..;,.,.,. ''·' ' C)u11rt• ·r.•:

Gallipolis ........ ..................0 3 0 . 0- 3
U.Sale~ ..... ........................t 0 7 7-U

ATTENTION
,

,

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DP•wr ..............t
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Oaktlnd at

Midway in. the fourth quarter7;
the Marauders came alive.
Randy Hawley returned a JetE
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lion at their own 46. On firstdown•1
Jeremy Phalin hit tight end Jay:•
Humphreys over the middle for':
28 yards, as Humphreys broke ~
several tackles to move the ball
(See MARAUDERS on c..sj_-.

Nn.. results

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a

Wellston started 14 play drive.
with Marlin doing most ,of th(' .
damage (7 carries for 28 yards)-.
but the Marauder defense •
stopped Martin inches short ol •
the first down on the Maraudet ·
25. Still Meigs could not get~:
anytl!ing going on o!fense as thl!'
Golden Rocket defense was shut.:
. •
t I ng down the Marauder ground:

,....~,~
· ~-,. 10-P-AN_E_G_A_S....;·~

EXT RA

ALL REMAINING 89's MUST GOI

Scoreboard ...

Clo-1

IAltWTE

Bradley, the tour's all-time
money winner, said poor iron
play has cost her the lead.
"I would like to be hitting my
irons a little closer," she said. "I
just feel that minus-3 and minus3 (her rounds each day) Is not
enough."
Alcott Is two victories !rom a
career total of 30, which would
place her in the LPGA Hall of
Fame:
"I wasn't hitting the ball real
well coming into this tourna·
ment," said Alcott. "But the
more I play the more I get Into a
groove, and I got my game going
In early July." .
Blackwelder's 67 was her best
round of the year. It was
remarkable, considel;ing she is
traveling with her · husband,
children and a babysitter.
''Tonight the babysitter is
taking the kids so there won't be
four in the bed," she said. "This
lifestyle is very challenging and
dl!flcult. Once you have kids, golf
is not totally the most important
thing."
'

occasion, scoring to force the
extra frame.
Both teams had trouble getting
started in the rain and mud, .but
the Rockets came up with the big
play late in the half. Chris Martin
fielded an Ed Crooks punt on his
own 41 yard line started up the
right side line then cut back
against the grain at about the
Marauder 35 yard line and
waltzed into the end zone to
complete the 59 yard punt return.
Jetf Hendershott pass for the
extra point was Intercepted by
Frank Blake and the Colden
Rockets held a 6-0 halftime
lead.
Wellston took the Marjluder
kickoff to begin the second half
and looked like the were going to
put more points on the board.

----------------llll!i-----·

em
e.:
......

points on his opponent's serve In
the eighth game. But Davis
stayed alive, mounted a raliy and
then was criticized by Curren.

Rarick, Bradley, Alcott
share lead in MBS Classic

•

When wt; s;1y the Mitsubishi E-32l\1 nudi\,system fills ypur
living room with music. we mean it. It comes C( &gt;fllplrt~ with n,pc&gt;w
erfullOO-watt amplifier nnd 7-band graphic cqu:~lizer. As )VC'll as
a CD player.Cllssette deck nnd three-way spt~ake~. And _you cnn
control everything with a wireless remote. Making it perfect fi,r
everything but a quiet evening at home.
J..~

The Marauders twice had the
ball needing to score to force
apotherovertlr!le, but both limes
the Maroon and Gold rose to the

Volvo Tennis toomament action

Drivers Education .
Classes ·
Starting Oct. 2

c :7.

,

By DAVE BARRIS
· Frank Blake sliced off right heart stopping 25-I9 victory .
Times-sentinel
tackle 12 yards for the winning . over the Wellston ~· Golden
Correspondent
touchdowninthefour!hovertlme ROckets before a sparse wet
.
WELLSTON Fullback to J!lve the Meigs Marauders a crowd Friday night at Wellston.

with :

'No
. hunting' signs to remain on island
PARKERSBURG, W.Va .
(UP!) -The 'No Hunting' signs
will stay up at Blennerhassett
Island despite the Island's new
status as a state park. the park
superintendent said Thursday .
"We do not anticipate any
changes in our general operation. ·particularly with respect to
the deer relocation program,"
said Jim Todd. "We have prohibited hunting on the island and
that will continue."

Jackson 2'1 Centennial 19
At Coiumbu,s the Ironmen
spotted the, host team a·13-0 lead
before Ryan Mapes and Marty
Exline each scored two touch·
dOWI\$ to of!:;et a 181 yard rushing
effort by the Stars' Darrell Bell.
Exline led Jackson .(2·3) with
44 carries for 217 yards and
cau~ht two passes for 30 yards.
Bell paced,Centlnnlal (I-4) with
TD tuns of 74 and 13 yards as
Jackson's ,offense ran 83 plays
while the Stars had only 32 plays .
Score by quarters:
Jackson ................ 7 14' 0 6-27
Centennla:l . ..... , ..... 13 0 6 O-I9

four overtimes,

Page

Sunday Times Sentinel

Marauders emerge with 25-19 triumph over Wellston

~~~~~So!~er~~!l~7~s ro~~!~!Ja!!~ls!!~~eyard
Ohio Athletic League posted a 4-2
mark In the rain Friday night
against non-leagUe opponents in
the final week of tune-ups in
preparations for the 64th year of
football.
In the win column Friday
Jackson pounded Columbus Centennlal 27-I9, M!lrietta whipped
Carrollton 28-I4, Warl'f'n Local
edged Newark I0-6, and Athens
walloped previously unbeaten ·
Vinton·County 36-0.
On the loss column Columbus
DeSales downed GaiUpolls 14-3
and the Ironton Tigers burled
Logan 44-6. ·
Teams from the SEOAL completed lion-league competition
with a record of I8-I2 in ali .
games.

POI11a'OY Middlapo~t-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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25 carrln for 10 yards
and 2 TD's, 3
intercepti-. I last was _12 yard return flf
TD to give Mt1p Q 25-19

,,

Point Plllllnt, wv
I

'

.'

-'

�Piga C-8-Sundlly Times-Sentinel

September 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Midd141port-Gallipolis, Ohio,..POint Pleasant, W. Va.

Farm/Business

~arait£lers... __________&lt;_co_n_u_nu_e_d._~~wn__c~~~l----~--------------------------------~--~----~----------------~-----------to the Rocket 26. Blake was
stopped for a one yard gain and
Mike Cremeans piCked up slx.
Phalin found Humphreys over
the middle on two consective
plays good for 7 yards. and 8
Yards. Cremeans picked up 3
more to the one and Blake tied
the game up as he dove in from a
yard out with 6:04 remaining in
the game. Chad Walker busted
through the llne to block Dennis
Booth's kick. Neither team could ·
mount a·threat therestofthew~y
to send the game into overtime.
Wellston won the toss to· begin
the overtime, but the Marauder
&lt;!_efense stiffened as Martin
~ked 11etted 3 yarcls In three
· ~rles before Dave Jaycox 34
~d field goal attempted .was
' !ll)ort and off the left. The
1\larauders also had problems
-!'ovtng the ball In the first
Olfertlme and Phalln fourth down
r:IUs to Kevin. .Musser fell
ilicomplete.
• In second overtlme Wellston
ISegan to move the blill. Wells'\on
cpoove to the Marauder four in
~ly six plays, the big play was
~_arlin plckiilg upSon a third and

.

.

~·

four to the Marauder 6. Two
plays l&amp;ter Bill Atha ran In from
four yards out for the score.
Jaycox extra point was true and
the Golden Rockets held a 13-6
lead. II didn't take the Marauders long to score." on first down
Blake ripped off 12 yards tohthe
eight. After Bl~ke picked up one.
Phalin running the option to
perfection took advantage .off a
beautiful Blake block wen.t the
remaining seven yards for the 6,
Boothe hit thealllmportantextra
point to forte .still another
overtime.
Wellston took three plays to
take the lead, with Atha picking
up 15 yards in the drive including
the last four, Jaycox kick was
wide and it was 19·13 Wellston.
Meigs took 8 plays to tie the score
up on a drive that included two
fourth down . plays that the
Marauders converted to stay
alive. Blake picked up a first
down on fourth and one when he
picked up three yards to the
Golden Rocket eight to keep .the
drive going, and with the Marauders faCing a fourth and goal
from the five, Phalin threaded

ou tstandlng game for the Maraud· varsity down did an excellant job as
ers catching 5 pas!!fS for 52 yards holder on the pressure packed field
and fr&lt;m hls linebacker spot he goal and extm point attempts in
seemed to be all over ttle place with place of Crooks. "Jeremy Rupe did
17 tackles, Dennis Edmlnston led an e~ellant job as a blocking back
Meigs with 18 tackles, Aaron Sheets when 'we needed the yardage,"
tomed in a excellant effort with 10. coach Staggs went on to say, ' 'we
"Our secondary played their best might have misjudged Wellston a ·
game all ~ar. Ed (Crooks) played little bit, they played well."
a great game, he Is the quarterback
Blake led the way on tile ground
qt the defense and calls out the
for Meigs picking up M yards on 25
coverages, we shut down their carries and be picked off three
passing g~." Marauder Coach Wellston passes. Piialin was 5 of 13
Mike Staggs said after the win. The
(after an ~ start) gOod for 52
win might have been a costly one as yards, with Humphieys catchlrig
Crooks went down with a shoulder · all 5 passes. Martin led the gtound
lnjucy late in;the game. Freshman
game for Wellston picking up ~6
BUiy Glaze WI!O has never played a
yards on 22carrle5, CoiVinackled34

on 14 carries.
Next week Meigs will traveled to
Nelsonville-Yorl&lt; to take oil the
Buckeyes who are atop of the 1VC
with a 4-0 record after last nights
14-0 win over Belpre. Wellston will
host Alexander.
Score by ·quarlers
Meigs ........... 0 0 06 0 7 6 6-25
Wellston .........0 6 0 0 0 7 6 0-19

D-l

September 24, 1989

Watkins dealer pla"s benefit
project for Special .Olympics

Depulmenl
M
W
Flrstdowns .... , .... ...... .............·.. ll
8
Yards tushlng .............. .. ,........ 120
137
Passing ...... ... ........ ,..... .. ......, .. 5·13
0.~
Yards passing .......................... . s~
3
Interceptions ... .... .... ........ .. .. ·· .. ···
Total yards ........ ...... .. ...... ........ 172
137
Penalt tes .............. ....... ........... 8-6!5 3-25
Punting .. ....... ............ .... .. ......9·243 7-230
Fumbles-lost :................. ,........ J -0
3-1

POMJ:;ROY - Special Olympics provides year-round sports
training and competition io over
600,000 children and adults with
mental retardation, In nearly 80
countries around the world.
. Special Olym pies provides people·wtth mental retardation the
chance to strengthen their character, develop their physical
skUis, display their talents and
fulfill their human potential.
These athletes are given the
opportunity to compete in world
competition at tile International
Special Olympics Games.
It takes much· advanced plan·
nlng to organize the International .Special Olymics Games.
Already, Irwl.n Jacobs; owner of
the Watkins Company, and chair·
man for the "1991" International
Special Olympics Games, Is
working to make 1991 the best
year ever for Special Olympics.
To ensure that 1991 will be a great
Special Olympics year, the Wat kins . Company Is donating 25
cents from each can of pepper
sold by dealers and !llstrlbutors,
to the Special Olympics cause.
In Nov~mber, the . company
will be tloing the same with its
vaniila -donating 25 cents from

Wednesday .September 27"' Is The Final Day For GM's "BIG EAsY"
~ebate On Our Remaining '89 Model Bulcks a Pc&gt;ntiacs
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t:ar-1 C1tnf011ll, N•warrt' Falrlf'lols 16

1\kr llueht'Rier -Q, TwsQ Vid (I
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B&amp;rbH&amp;o~~

n. t\kr Sprln«Ut'ld II
Rq VllkKr !'7, otnu;ll.· d F;tlll; 3

•••nl

f•nlt'l46

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Menler LM.b Cal h 24, Ill' dfold Ch ~~nel 0

G~

Mil IN Gllrno11r !I, IMillllond

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Middletown 31, Un Syu·mort' I

o..,.

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Mln!IW!r 21, St. HIPIIry It
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Morp:an 7, West

C'l'nlt'rhtl~ 2%, .lohndown N'ridKt&gt; Ill
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·
C'ln Prlnr;elon '!II, Fall'tll'ld lit
l 'ln, SbiN'Illl :13, Cl• Lu.ndmark I
fin Tllft Ill, On Grt't'nNIIs 13

( 'In Wl'sll'rn mll!o! tli, nn Ullk Hills o
( 'In \\o' lthru~ t&amp;, C1n AlkPn II
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( 'lay ton Northmonl 17, Trotwuud 8
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j

Mouri Ht'Mith.l' 2:8, Coi«UI• 6
l'lriN' Lex: In••• U , Croobvllle i
NN' MlunJ.a7, BIU.nl• I

( 'l)'df' !I, Port (1inton t
{'ol lkot•t•ht:roft :!11, fol F.a.•umoor o
( 'nl Brookhavf'n -II , ( 'ol t~ a~\11
( 'ul Dd&lt;ll&amp;ll'!" U, C&gt;alllpolls l

rarroU II

NN Rh·hmond K, WIIU.-.hura 8
Nordonla til, Ta.llnw.dll" 7

It EOIN&amp;wood U

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GrWton Mldvii'W 3, Londn Sr 0
Grow Clly 31, Galloway M'l'!&lt;lthmd I!J

l'lriorlh Canton Hoowr. 1':, Loub1viiW I

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011k H11rbor t1. S.ndllsky PnWM7
Oht•rUn U, Lorain Brook!llde R

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l.ltMorty6, St•,...·lon l&lt;' alls:l

'

6 ,

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S'«&gt;JW~t

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lodll&amp;lt Hill U, l.ovt"laod 0
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lt onlon -1~ . I.OjlM 6
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,lf'W I'tt..Sdu K. Stra~hUJK li

Mu~~npm

Ontarto 25, Cr1"11Uiftf' D
Orrvllle13, Mf'IIIM Buckl')'t' II
Orwt•ll Gr~U~dV W 1,, VlrnmMIIih..WK1
O.Ctai'd Tidawllndt. iiS, Trent F..d~ood

6

Paint Valley :J.I, Unlolo 7
Parm11 Normtlndy 10. Parma~~ 0
Perno~yhu~

LOS ANGELES (UPI)--: Ap·
pie. Computer Inc., with a heavy
.dose of Hollywood glitz, Wednes·
dayrolledoutltsfastestpe_rsonal
computer and tts first laptop
model.
The new products - the
Macintosh Ilcl and the Macin·
tosh Portable-'- debuted at the
Universal Am pi theater amid las·
ers, smoke and flashy videos.
Apple's "Power and Motion"
marketing campaign for the new
products, which began Wednes·
~ay, !~eluded shots of the porta·
.lile bemg used c;m a mountain top
&lt;!Dd at the beach by a wom_an In a .
.
·.
black swhpsult.
John Sculley, chairman and
chief executive officer, said tile
new products represent ''a revo-

. By Constance While
GALLIPOLIS - The Bylaws of
the Raccoon Creek Improvement
Committee w111 be reviewed at a
meeting set for 3 p.m.,on Sunday,
Oct. l, at the Raccoon Creek
County Park. Shelter #5. Refreshments will he served.
The Raccoon Creek Improve·
ment Committee has been working this summer on the bylaws.
This wUI not only help the
committee be. better organized,

Bankers put faith
in insurance fund

Auto, Tilt, Cruise, Power
Windows, 2-Tone,Cassette, Etc.

Reduced
To

811,990

Pontiac 6000's
SfiVE szz00°0
GRAND PRIX'S
WERB$iS~91LOADED
NOW

. '12,9

WINS PRIZE - Amanda Stapleton (right) recently was the
winner of a Levi's sales promotion at Thomas Clothiers. Shown
with her Is Steve Thomas ofThomu Clothiers, presentlngherwllh
a Sony AM·FM stereo cassette recorder .

Money Ideas .
By Sian Evans

OILY 2 BUICK CIHURY'S • BURRY.II!
Fo~ just $4.99, we'll pile your plate high with 24 plump, juicy fried shrimp.

You'll also get a heap of fries or rice (or a baked potato after 5:00 p.m.) and
unlimi\ed trips to our famous Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar. It's an incredible
amount of good food for $4.99. And it's yours if you come to Shoney's for
lunch or dinner.
_

·County by salesmen represent· ·
lng Harris; or by any other
Watkins dealer, 25 cents will go to
lnternatlpnal Special Olympics.
Harris ' profit will benefit the
local Special Olympics
org&lt;antzat Ion .

"Top Dollar Value For Clean Trade-Ins"

Equities
As long as these conditions
exist, the financial markets will
continue to climb a "wall of
wor111". Our model portfolio
continues ·to stress Important
exposure to smaller capitalized
companies and interest rate
sensitive Issues, particularly
banks and building relatell
Issues.
(Mr. Evans is an Investment
Broker for The Ohio Company In
their GaiUpolls office.)

PEPPER PROFITS - Members of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Bela Sigma P.hl Sorority are among many local organizations
which will be selllng Walkins pepper to benefit International
Special Olympics. Here, Linda Jones, president of Ohio Eta Pbl
Chapter, displays a can of the pepper. From each can sold by
Watkins dealers and distributors, 25 cenls will be donated by the
company to International Special Olympics.

but It wUI . enable them to
incorporate.
You may wonder why this is
Important. Well, to be eligible for
many grants the group needs to
be an incorporated body . Even
when the group has inquired
. about loeltl support the question
was raised about the
incorporation.
We Invite any person who is
interested in becoming a
member of this group to attend.
Anyone who Is dedicated to the

preservation and restoration of
Raccoon Creek or Its tributaries
for flood control and recreational
purposes can be a member.
We especially would like as
many as possible of the Ian·
downers along the creek to be
Involved. There Is a small
membership fee· of $2 to cover
mailings and a membership
·
emblem.
For more information, please
contact our office at 446-8687.

:
:
,
:

Farm Flashes

It, Maurne•IK

89PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

SHRIMP DINNERS

in two versions. It is priced at
$5 799 with one floppy disc drive
a~d $6,499 with a 40 megabyte.
hard disk drive.
The portable weighs 15.7
pounds, slightly less than many
analysts had expected, but much
heavier .than other laptops.
Allan Loren, president of Apple
USA said Apple has already
received about 20 000 orders for
each new product: which he said
represented about $100 million in
revenue for the company.
Analysts have been saying for
the past week that there is a
pent-up . demand · for 'the new
products and tli'a t ' dealers have
been gotten slgnlftcantordersfor
the machines sight unseen
'
·

Iutton of people using
technology.''
· ''The people who use our
computers are actlon·oriented:"
Sculley sal!(. "People want to
focus on wh~~ they're doing, not
how to do It.
The IIcl wlll be offered In four
versions, ranging in price from
$6.269 to $9,152, not including
monitors and keyboards.
The Ilcl is the same size as the
popular llcx, which debuted in
March, but can be up to 70
percent faster, Sculley saJd. The
new machine uses a faster
version . of. the MQtorola 68030
microprocessor and l)as other
Improvements in its memory
access and software.
The Mcintosh portable· comes

rt&gt;rry 3-1, PIW Wn~~t '!1
Plckl'l'lnttonl7, Hilliard 0
Plkf&gt;t.on 241, Hu ntln.-on Q
Plq111 12, Tt&gt;l'Um""h II
Plymoulh H. SOulh Ct'ntnll 0
.
l"orl!iftloulh W 13, Gr~·t&gt;•up (Ky) li
Portfiii'10Uth E :1.-1, Lut•lloK\'Ilk&gt; Vall!
l"rPhlf' !olhawnef' 21, Mlddlf'lown Mad !I
KeynoldMb•,.. U, Whl&amp;tolwll 0
Bl ehllp\d Rt'Yf'rt• 1, Wau!N.werth I
Rittman U, Smithville I
Rlv..rdlllt&gt; 52. Rl.dllll' 0
Ro ckford Parlnny li, s -· Br•mt&gt;n 0

Bolek-Centary
SfiVE szooooo

SHONE~

:::::
Sheila Harris, of Middleport, is
bringing the idea closer to home
by donating tier profits from her
sales
Watkins pepper to the

.

Mt•ll'l ,S, W•UIIIon II (-4ot)

FWnlf'\\' 7, i\mhPrst 0
Fll"ld II, Hud,.on I
f1rt•laands 3. Loml n flrarl-1.-"· 0
Fo!&lt;ltorhll~. To I U..VIIhiNN G
Fran kiln 1•• : Le luon I
F)'anldln HtN ~.Meant \'('I'm• ZK
. Frt"derltki(M'n 20, Mouri tml"ltd 13
Fremont l'it ,Jotll'ph ,7, HojJl'wl'll
LoudonO
Gatuuuu $, Upper ·l\rllnl(lon U
Gill ion 21. Tlftln t:ol..nhlan 7
Gk!.ntWII} It, SIUid,y V!lillf')' 13
Gaarrelh4vlllt 7, tlf' Llnt.'Oin W 0
Gut Mllbl Ha"· ~ct-• st. Lorain r:.ath 2!

Grnt:~~

C:t•IIJM U, Um111 Shawnl"r I

foi Hlli'IWy :U, {'ul \\o'l"hrlt• 7
foi In dt'pt'ndt&lt;nl·•• ;, f 'ol South 6
( 'ol Mar: t'ra.n kiln '!I, ( 't~I .LI nd1•n li
( 'ol Mlfnln to, ('ol "-'alnut Rid~· 0

't

Meigs County Special Olympics
Program. Harris has engaged a
number of volunteer organiza·
lions to go door·lo·door in Meigs
County selling pepper for Special
Olympics.
From each can sold in Meigs

~r;:a~:le ::::in:~.
Apr~nle Co.mputer Inc•' unve:ls
"
l
M
•
h
d
bl
Jaster actntos an porta e O!
Raccoon Creek. by-laws to
be rev•·ewe·d Sunday, Oct.• 1

Mt:Do-.ldS5, Lowplhll~l
Mudowbrook r., Col Rudy 7
MudYIIIe (Pa) .U, Huhhard !I

Elm 0

lipolls Ferry plant manager; Martien Wester·
man, member of the board .or management
from Akzo n.v. in Arnbem, NetherlandS; and C.
Robert Fisher, plant manager .or safety and
training. (OVP photo by Chuck Mason)

0

Mar)'llvllle U, OINiiRD' 7
M•!llllon JackHon n, C11•ton s 0
Maoullllon '!5, AuMHelawn FNcb IS
M~Q"fltold H. Eau!Uakl' Nor. IS
Mt:Comh :13, U llerty Bl'nt• 6

'"Gc&gt;nt&gt;t:a 13. Palnt'1&lt;1 Rlver!ddl' 8

Ca r~~~~l Full .. NW ~I. Mwln,(lon I
('anion McKinlt'y :U, Botu'dmun )I
Card! n-o• :U, Spurta Hl,rhland 0
farry ~. Rlvf'r Valley 7
t 'Pd!V\oillt&gt; .&amp;II, Oinlon-Ma&gt;i!!dt" 0

( 'ol Hl&amp;mihonTwp:lti, Rlnom

Mul«nod. U, Cln Re ... qO
Mult'IIM Ill. CarrolltOn U
Mario• ('~h l:i, Galton Norlhmor :1
MMriol EIP• S$, Btu:lr.eje Cenln.l J.l
Mario• Locall3, ('oldWaltr 6
Marion Plt-M&amp;nl !5, OJionrl Crawlol'll
21

. Elyria!!. N Rl·\·1111' I
Elyri• Wf'll II, WeiH•.(Ion 0
Ela(·lid !1. Lyndhuf!oll: Bru"h i
FalrtJJUJa. 31, Rldl"mollt f
Fairborn !7, Spltnjlfll'ld N 6
F~lrfltold .Uakml, Lo~~&amp;~~

SAFETY AWARD • Tbe GaUipolis Ferry
Akzo cbemical plant was the recipient or tbe
1988 Akzo Safety Award for having 2,290,462
exposure hours with no lost-time inj11~ies in the
past seven years. Pictured are Bill Brady, Gal·

Mllplelon33, Dat.lll'lury l.Wi.ftdck-0

To,...

&amp;.~r

.Jolu't MW',..:.dl :U. ~· inl.euvllh •
Clr W Tt"..:h :!1. Cit• Kt'nn:•ttv II
fll'\'t'll&amp;nd His U, Lakf"Wood K

25, MlU'IiVIIIe 7

Um111 Sr S4, \\' Ch~r Lako&amp;a tl
LI!Ohon IS, OJiumhl._ CrM~ew 6
London a I, GrandvlN a
Lorain SouChvl~ 3, Vl'rmllionO
Madeira 21, Dt'l'r Puk Ill (Jot)
MaiHIKln IS. PWne11~lllf. Harwy It
Man~letd !fl, Clr Bfoaediidlnr II
M111n!llleld Ma41Aodl, Fremori RoNd3

EWil Llvt"rpool !1. l\'elrton IM.Vu l j
Eulon !II, v .. ~ey VI.,.· i
EdiMOII ~-· U,
i!l
Elldl. n . Olw.wa-GIIUMiori' 17

lto.U.•IIW n, W*'"erd I

( 'It•

o

Eu1 CUnlon 31. Greent"VIew 0
E•t Knox !e l, Dan \IIIII' 7

1\yerlll\llllf' 1-&amp;, O.llit 1

Cam~ll2.f,

Northrld~l'

Drt&gt;!ldtonTri ·V~It!y

l..aC'Id ft, Mantua Cr~t,.·oodtl
(Mirhl !I, NapGIP. . lii
Btllford '11\, M llflr HlM lJ
•nbrook U, ('ulhl" t
Belleto.UIIM' It, SprlaJ ShMwnP .. 10
llelln.r !M, Norwalk 7
Ber Clr WNn Reo: !1, .fat.•k.&lt;~on Milton II
Bfrral. St~Yiik&gt; t
BeruNIIclpiU"It1, M••-o
BiJWILinlll !1, Cot Madfmy 1
Bllu·k Rlvt-r 311, AMhiiUid CrP!iiYirw j
Bluth on t2, ( 'olwnhu,. Gro\'j• l.f
Bowllnj!: Grf'rn II, Millbury-Lab I
Brf'tb\'tllt- 6, Loll ( ' lon•rll•af t
Rrld..epCMt 31, Rar~r!ivlllt• "'
Rrookvllll' iO, Da,.v 0111kwood o.
Rru ..nwlck J.l, No;dl Royalton 6
RryM~n WIJ, WMU!II.'on Ill
Budu•yf.' So•llhwf'M I!, Wt'llnillt- 10
lure on Bt'rk."'hlr.• 9, J\"pwbu ry;
ntdlz :ee. n.- Rllod..,. •
fl&amp;mhr:ldtt' 311i. Bc&gt;llll.ll'f' i

U hf'rty C..nfl&gt;r 11. Pill rtck Henry 0
Ul'ldnl( HtN 211. a.rnr Union I
Uckiai(Valley :!8, UtlcM~O

CoiSICIIas ~tt.

Otllq Hl1h Scllool Footb .. l Rn•s

'

the needle hitting Humphreys In
the back of the end zone for the
score. The Marauders picked up
a 15 yard lJenalty after the score,
so
the Boothe extra point
attempt was from 34 yards out.
The kick was off to the right to
force another overtlme.
One~! ag$1 it looked like the
Rockets was putting another drive
together but the Marauder defense
made the blg play. Hendershott
picked up nine yards and a fli"st
down to tile 10 on tile optlon, but the
Golden Rockets went to the well
once to often. Once again Render·
shott tried to run the option but he
was hit hard as he tried to pitch by
Geoff Cogar and Dave Lester and
tumbled with Lesll!r pouncing on
the loose ball. From there It was all
Frank Blake. Blake on three
consectlve runs picked up 6, 3, and 4
yards to the seven yard line. A 5
yard penalty put the ball back to the
12 yard line. to set the scene tor
Blakes heroics. Blake sllced
through a hole off right tackle and
was hlt at tile seven but br~e Cree
for the winning seore. ·
Jay Humphreys had another

Fall harvest waiting· game for most farmers
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
County Extension Agent, .
Agriculture &amp; CNRD

WASHINGTON (UPI)'- The
president-elect of the American
Ban·kers Assocatton told a House
subcommittee Wednesday that
tlie banking indus try belleves the
Bank Insurance Fund is sound
enough to assure the safety of
customer deposits.
"In fact, our view is that the
fund is healthy, wealthy and wise
enough to accommodate the road
ahead," C.G. "Kelly" Holthus
told the House Subcommittee on
· Financial Institutions Supervision, Regulation and Insurance.
The subcommittee Is hearing
tes tlmony to deiermlne the finan·
cia! soundness of the Bank
Insurance Fund. Yesterday, the
panel heard testlmony that dis·
turblng parallels exist between
some of the nation's banks and
the beleaguered thrift industcy,
the beneficiary of a massive
federal bailout.
Federal regulators, however,
said the nation's banking Indus·
tcy has already faced the worst of
Its anticipated problems and is
showing signs of Improvements.
Last year, the FDIC paid more
than $7.5 btllion to close a record
198 banks. The Bank Insurance
Fund posted a loss of $4.2 billion,
the first loss in its 50·year
history.
•

GALLIPOLIS - Fall harvest
1989 Is a waiting game for most
farmers . This weeks' crop report
set corn sUage harvest at only 11
per cent complete. I had a chance
to talk to several crop farmers
from throughout Ohio at the
Farm Science Review this week.
Everyone that I talked with was
very proud of their potential
yield, but concerned about late
maturity and late harvest.
A farmer from Delaware
county said that he needed 60
more good days this fall·30 days
to finish growing his crops to
maturity and 30 days to get them
harvested.
A beginning "Christmas Tree
Growers Business Management
and Marketing" class w111 be
conducted on the even lngs of
Sept. 28, October 5, and October
12. The sessions will be held in
Hillsboro. For more information
and registration call the High·

land County Extension Office at Farm Bureau meeting will be
513·393·1918.
held this Tuesday, Sept. 26 at 7
An lndustcy sponsored event p.m. The event w111 be held In the
will be held October 5 at the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Merrill Evans farm starting at Cafeteria. Advance tickets are
5:30 p.m. Wagon tours will be available from the . Board of
used to .:view the operation and Directors and at several loca' •
highlight Innovative ideas such lions Including the Extension ,
as intensive grazing, high tensll Office.
fence, forage systems, feeding
Mark your calendar for the ·
programs, animal health, etc.
Gall1a County Pride In Tobacco
I would encourage local beef Association Annual Dinner Meet·
producers to take this opportun· lng on the evening of Oct. 12.
ity to visit this operation which Is Complete details will be availaone of the largest beef finishing ble next week.
operations in Southern Ohio.
Attention Dairy Producers! A
Company representatives from tour of some of the leading .
animal health, fencing, and feed Holstein Herds In the WapaIndustry will be on hand. The koneta, Ohio area · Is being .
Extension Service and SCS w111 planned for late November. I :
assist with the program. To would be willing to organize a bus
assure enough food and wagon trip to this event If there is
space, reservations should be enough interest.
made directly to the local spon·
Please let me know If you ·
sor, River City Farm Supply at would like to attend this event by :
446·2985 by Sept. 30. Ohio Depart- bus. The Auglaife County Exten· ·:
ment of Agriculture Director, slon Agent, Agriculture says that ·.
Steven Maurer, will be in Gallia Applenotch Holsteins will be one
County that day and w111 make an of the stops. More details on the
appearance at this event.
event should be in the next "Ohio
The annual Gallla
News.''
~

Gall1polis- This year's perfor·
mance of the equity market has
surprised most 1~:~~!
thqught it
would. Invest·
rnent advisory
services have
cons lstently remained cau·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Na·
Uous, ~hlle intlonal banks reported record
vestors have
Income of $8.34 bllllon for the first
been reluctant to
half of 1989, $3.7 b111ion higher
fund sub·
the market. Mu
scriptlons remain significantly
than for the same period tn 1988.
below the peaks of 1986-1987. ·
.
the ·Comptroller of the Currency
reported Wednesday.
At the same time, mutual fund
SC
portfolio managers ·have been
At the same time, the Compraising their cash levels des pile a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A · troller reported that 102 national
focus on conserving natural . bariks, With losses totaling $1.5 .
sharply rising stock market.
These are not the signs of a major
resources is just one example of billion In the first half of 1988,
mllrket top.
the evolutlon of 4·H. The world's failed In the year ending June 30.
While the fundamentals that
largest youth organization cele·
Median return on assets for the
brates Its 87tll year during 4,262 national banks rose to 1.05
dictate the direction of the
percent In the first half of 1989, ·
financial markets have not · National 4·H Week, Oct. H .
''This year, 404 youngs~rs · compared with 0.92 percent dur·
changed muchdurlng1989,lnves·
displayed and discussed their lng the first six months of last
tor anxieties have.
As a result, "selling squalla"
couervatlon projects during 4-H year.
Natural Resources Day at the
Aggregate non·performlng
for both stocks and bonds have
Ohio State Fair," says Dennis assets fell by more than $1 billion
Jppeared ~om time to time:
Elliott, 4·H specialist at, Ohio during the period.
·
financial market partiCipants
lock In gains In fear of loalng
State University. ''That was the · The previous record earnings
,rhat t)ley have surprlalqly
moat 4·H'ers we've ever had in for national banks was $5.0
couervatton
actlvlttei at the b11llon, setln the first six months
•bleved In the way of returns in
Ole currnt yell'.
Fair."
ot1985.

Banks report
record earnings

Nalional 4-H Week
heduJed OcL 1_7 .

..

-~- =~

farJQ, featured br tile Melp SoD
c.-rvatton Dlllrld, Ia localed -ewhere In
Melp Couaty. IDdiYidula w11111D1 &amp;o participate
In the weekly eonteet may do 10 by llJt!SII•I the .
farm's owner. Ju1&amp; mall, or driiP off yoar peA &amp;o
&amp;he Gallpoll IWJy Trlbuae, 1U Third Ave.,
Gallpolls, Ohio, 0831, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
C.un 8&amp;., Pemeror, Olllo, tl'lte,and yoa mar win

the Oblo Valley Publlahlng
Co. Leave your . .me, address and telephone
aamber with your eard or letter. No telephone
calli will be accepted. All contest entrll!ll should
be tuned In &amp;o the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednellday. In cue of .a Ue, the winner will be
cholllln by lo"'ry. Next week, • GaJDa County
farm will be featured by the GaiDa SoD and Wider
Couervatlon Dlatrld.

1

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�Page- D-2- Sunday Times-Sentinel

1989

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

junbaJI . ~imes- ~··entinel .

ACROSS

90 Unger
92 Conduct
94 SeMonlng
95Cdlng
88 Oriental nui'Mii
97 Pill
1111 Hard•woild tree

stlnlatlon

7 Cutt1eflth

Announcements

6

Lo.st &amp; Found

11

Employment Services

12
17

Help Wanted

Fllll Into dlluN
Kind of 1oc:k

21 Evaded
22 Knot;

107

33 Decay

35 Stupe!)'
37 Spirited horse
39 Fallin dropa
40 Mrn.al aprlng .
41 Concerning

43 Song-and-dance
act

57 Mexican dish

48 Pl)c;h
48 TIMitla48
50

~41

53 Obt.rns .

143~-

55 SccUi'l ID
58 -' 'Supermah''
cllarecler

llebrew letter
l42 " - ~ Uvtna"

72 Diplomacy
74 Scrub hard
78 Baseball teem
77 Perdl
78 Therefore
79 Second of two
81 Rude cabin
82 Give food to
83Awaahlng

'•·•

Mlxeii
Stone cut In

relief
51 SpaniSh article

• 139 ,_~

71 Legal matter

145 Cut
147"--"149 Haggard_hlrolne ~
162F-- '.
153 GratifY.
155 Hebi.... festival
157 Midday
158 Equally
180 Key - pie '

58

82 Workman

85 Perform
88
88
70
' 72
73
75

87 Keep
89 Step!W,Iie
Beacham
rOle

188 Lalnb'l pen '" -""'
188 Part Ollfah line! 1 ,
170 Scoll
.
17) Come Into Ylew

Hold on property
Name
Additional

Doinestlcatea

Bank emplo)eea
"Days ofLI¥M"
78 Conjunction
77 Sword
711 Woodworker's
machine

164~

188 SeniOr members

Click basile

eoe-y ,

182 Rlna-in

84Crlppled
85 Conducted

. 11

15 Begins
18 Spooky
17 Pot...ttl
.18 Neuillay ID ·
18 Foollah; witless
20 " ' - parts
27 Diving blrdl
29 Har111• with
urgent aHackll
31 M, -. 0, -. Q
34 Walkl - ' l y
381nsectegga
38 Temporary
roundaiJOUI way
40 "Dllck - "
42 Bal8ball etats
44 Pound down

135 Cincinnati ~

UAifaru

The University of Rio Grande is An Equal
Opportunity Afflrmattve Action Employer

Equal

14Jum~type

• 138 Italian ""'
137 Santa' a helpers

87 Hlnl
88 A Turner

Ms. Phyllis Mason, Personnel Officer
The University of Rio Grande
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande, OH. 46674

10 .Angry
11 State without ·
proof
1~ Frerlch article
· 13 "-My Chlldr.n"

' destiny

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Reporting directly to the Director of Security, the part-time campus security officer is
responsible for protection of the Univeristy's facilities and property and the enforcement of published University regula tions.
Qualifications f;,r the position include a
high school education or equivalent. Basic
law enforcement training is required. A
commissioned officer is preferred.
Interested parsons should send ·a letter of
interest and resume, including the names
of three refe.rences prior to the deadline of
September 26, 1989 to:

8Mocculns

"a-."

134 Goddnna of

84 "- Law"
S6 " HIIrP8!' Valley

89

8 P~ lor print
7 StnuthniD
8 Abetrect being

130 Ml- nem·
132 Trar1811Ctlon

59 Pintail duck
81 Vut ages
82 lnatnument lor
a Marx brother
. 83 Demoiia ·

The University . of Rio Grande announces an opening for a part-time security officer.

c.....

5 PromoniOf)'

..

45 Heron
47 Tallurlum symbol
48 Cook In hot waler
411 Frighten
52 Antlered animal
54 ll6rs legally
58Pr11Ms .

ole group

Help wanted

1j

Help Wanted

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFERS 3 LOCAnONS TO SERVE YOU •••

RN
REALTY

Open 7 Days 10 A . M.-7 P.M.

PAYING TODAY (Aug. 30, 1989) AlllOCAnONS
ClEAN DRY ALUMINUM CANS ......................... 41 c per lb.
#1 COI'P£1 .........................................................90' pw lb.
· #2 COI'P£1........................................................ 75' pw lb.
•RED BRASS ......................................................... 50' pw lb.
YRLOW BRASL................................................ 40' pw lb.
RADIATORS ....................................................... 35&lt; per lb.

'

SAT., SEPT. 30, 1989
10:00 A.M.

~:A

· OFCASH ·
JSBEliER...
.... THANA
:GARAGE·FUI
·: OFSTifF
'· •

-.- WANT
....

•

·-

ADS

Located at 130 Wehe Ter.. Pomeroy, Ohio just off
Union Ave . Watch for sale signs. Mr. &amp; Mrs . Henderson have sold home and moved into a mobile home
so will sell the following:
'
"HOUSEHOLD"
Swivel c h a~r, rou nd lable &amp; 6 chairs, 21' M.W. uprighl
freezer, lamps, stereo &amp; cherry cabinet, 3 pc. bedroomsuile,
m1sc. lin ens, p1clure frames, 20" Ian, chairs, typewrrter &amp;
sland, filin g &amp; bo ok cabinels, luggage, r~l- away bed, melal
cabin el, tape player, galeleg lable, oak offi ce chair. chairs
lllankel chesl, sewing machine. carpet pieces, Chrislmasde:
coral1ons.. loldmg doors. misc. pots, pans, dishes, lots of
antK]ue dishes &amp; elc.
•
"IIISC."
Wh eelbarrow. 10' tablesaw, misc. hand lools, drill motor. gas
&amp; eleclric molars, CB40 channtlllase slalion Bell &amp;Howell
projector, 3 pc. msulated slave pipe, smali desk copier,
workshop ben ch, m1sc. coals &amp; clothes, lots &amp; lots of misc.

Owners-Mr. &amp; Mrs. Clyde V. Henderson

Dan Smit~-Auctiopeer
· *57-&amp;8-I344
.
RefreshmeniS by Carleton Church !Mill
~sh
· 614-992-7301
Posilive I.D.
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Propll'ly"

:~ WORK

Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 120 Jocban Plko.
Coli 814-448-4307. Rog. No. 8811-10558,

Wonted to do houoooiNning,
haw referancM. 814-218-0783,
114-288-8323.

Help Wanted

8471.

otoroo. W-onl~.

-kdo~o. 114-441-7381.

Got Eltra limo, """ the 'II*
oro-~~~ ·- Tum lhlloxlra- Into ... Coil Avon, ell

12

44141U

Chid ..,. ptaV~dod.' Agoo 2,3,4.

_
....
--HMS

...

REFNET

Situation
Wanted
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II wlllllia Ia 110 Ia lhi lopr 114-·

211-lllfooklor LN. '
Wo ooro lot oldolly ond hon-

d-lnowtoomo.21~Nra

u,erlence. tPN on nil. Law
lnoomo

homo. Colll14-112-1173

.n... 7:00 p.m. ror ·more lraiOf'&lt;o

.

matlon.

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LOW PRICED SPIQM.-IN II DOl!POll
TO Clll PARI - 3 bedrooms. remodoed

CLDSI

..1tcheo. lots ol good lealures. An e~~cetlent oppOftumty
in the l8's.

NIW LISTING - SYRACUSE

acres, co~ y, well kept
lull basement hea ted gar.
well tnsulaled 5.75 acres, almost
tn thrs home. II you see~ . you wil
too low but owner says sell Low S60's.

RANCH SllLE - Clost: to ctly par~. 3 bedrooms, 2
bilhs. kitchen, dtntng room. tul ly carpeted. central air.
all ejectoc, retngerator. range, dtstr.vashef &amp; stereo
system. An excellent buy .n tow 30's.

BROKER- 446-0008

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED ABEAUTIFUL
HOllE ON fiRST AVENU£1- Make plans lo
view this home which offers 2 baths, large
LR with lireplace and view ol river. L-shaped
kilchen, lor.mal entry, FR. summer porch, lovely lawn, on river.

' __

RllmCIED!! - If you have been look·
ing tor a home lhat will give you room lo
slrelch out, lhis ~ it. Fealures in Ihis home
are equipped kitchen, formal dining, den, lovely liv ing room wrth fireplace. dinette. bath,
3 BRs. The lull bas emen!~ finished and off·
ers m . laundry, roomy, altraclovelamily
room.

POMEROY- DoUblewide trailer, 3 bedrOOI!lS, 2 baths, car, pel, FA elec. heat. Built in corner cabinets and bar. in
krtchen. Ready lo RlOVe inlo. $34,900.00.

WOULD YOU UK£ TO OWN AII INI
Now you can. Lovely 3. 72 acres offer apple
lrees, cherry lrees, insulated workshop,
24x26 barn wilh loft, cellar house, 12x21
garage. Very nice home wrth someoulstand·
ing features, LR, FR, equipped krtchen, cent.
air. Call lor more details.

••
•'

THIS HOllE HAS BEEN GIVEN LOTS OF TLC
-This home and 1.112 acr es mil offers 3
.BRs, Ill baths, lR, equipped krtchen, di·
nelle, attached g~rage, brick lrool, sleel sid·

'"'LOCATED ON RT. 689 in Meigs County th is

property contains 21.04 acres, m/1, and a
small h&lt;lme. Owner anxious lo sell.
2.4 ACRE TRACT- COIIIIERCIAL SITE located on Upper Rt. 7 across from new
shopping center.

.

CAPE COD STYLE HOIIEat Ihe edgeollown.
$28,900. 3 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen. Owner
may help wrth financing to qualilied buyer.
SIIAll HOllE WITH EXTRA LOTS. 3 BR.
balh, $21,000.
·

BRICK HOllE UNDER $50,000! WE HAVE
ONE on LeGrand Blvd. wilh a full basement
(partially linishedl. carport, central air and
much more. Call for appointment.
IIAKE THIS YOUR CHANGE OF ADDRESS!
- Attraclive home just minutes from lown
offers 1368 sq. ft., 3 BRs, 2 baths, eal-in
kitchen, dinette, family room, living room,
laundry, cathedral ceilings, fencell yard.
LOAN ASSUIIPTION ...$2,500 DOWN 9~% FIXEb RATE - 3 BR, bath, living
room, kilchen, attached 1 car garage. Call
for more details.
$15,000 - 19.143 acres m/ 1. Approx. II
mile lrom cily limils. All utiities available.
I41 ACRES 1!1/l. HUNTINGTON TWP. Approx. I mile of fronlage on Raccoon
Creek. Some bottom land, black walnut
•

119.86 ACRES 11/l. Section 17 &amp; 18 Huntington Twp., lronlage on Jackson Rd. and
Lillie Raccoon Creek.
36.5 ACRES 11/l, CLAY TWP. ~ Frontage
on Friendly Ridge Rd. Old hoose on land .
$19,500.

· PRICE REDUCED - POIIEROY - ·House on II acre lot, 2
bedrooms, I bllh, carpetine part baleinenl and ut~ity rooni ..
$10.500.00.

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course
, i
,
basement, gas heal/ cent air.
AREAL.CHARIIER ... I.87 acres, m/1, and an
all ractive country slyle home jusl a couple
of miles from HMC on Rl. 35. Features in·
elude 3 or 4 BRs, balh. LR, kitchen, DR an d
FR. fireplace. gas heal, 2 car garage. Thereis
a 30x30 barn and mob1l e home pad on property. Call for more del a1ls.
YOU'LL liKE THIS ONE...Iocaled jusl oil Rt
35 and near HMC this home offers 3 bed:
rooms, living room w/ FP. lormal dining,
k1tchen. den w/ FP, lau ndry rm .. attached
garage, corner .lot Call for an appointment.
I9.86 ACRES. II/l. Section 17 &amp; 18, Hunllngloo Twp., frontage on Jackson Rd and
Lrtlle Raccoon Creek.
·•
LOTS OF POTENTIAL - 67.496 acres mil
on Crouse-Beck Rd., nice wooded buildin g
srtes, rural water available.
I2.5 ACRES 11/llronls on Symmes Creek.
Bottom liled. Tobacco baSe.
VIllAGE OF RIO GRANDE - 6 room home
and .7666 acre, m/1. Features include LR
FR. krtchen, laundry rm., gas heat, vinyl sid:
lnJ

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POIEIIOY - · Briel! Ranch Home localed close lo schools. 1
garage; fuU basement, large hv.ing room and many oilier
features. ONLY $35,500.00.
·
CM

A~ fliPPERS PlAIIIS 011 ST. RT. 7 - FREE gas on 8
acres. Wiler lap in placewMh electric available. Convenient
location, nice building srte. $25,000.00.

IIIDDLEPORT- 3 bedroom 2 sillY home. Nice krtchen, W.
B.F.P. and much more! REDUCED TO 516,500.00.

. RttlUND- 26.2 acres in lhe country. 6 room. 3 bedroom
home. Private and secluded. Needs
some work. $28,000.00.
•'

HARRISONVIllE- Really nice I4xro ScKultz Mobile Home .
w~h 2 bedrooms,lifepl~ee in living room, equipped kMchen,
dishwasher, big 2 car Jlr~Je. storag~ buildin~o and nice 1.06
acre lot. REDUCED $30,000.00. ,
~.

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POMEROY - N(ce Home with 2 to 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, W..
B.f.P.• carpet and N.G.F.A. heat. Full basement nice yard ..
$29,500.00.
.

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MIDDLEPORT - Do you like the str,eet you·liVe on? II not
this location will be just rightfor yoo.Shaded l~nsadd to its
beauty. 3 bedroom house, 2 bllths, fireplace. g'as F.A. h~at
$23,_500,00.
I

TWP. IIOAII 341- Approx. 93 acres ol vacanl land wrth 2
story barn, slacked pond, old house s~e ww~h well. Approx.
25 acres tillable wlh balance in timber, abundance of wal·
nul. Get a relurn on your investment from sale ol timber .
$60,000.00.

' sale. Building and.all.
MIDDLEPORT - Bar &amp;Restaurant lor
equipmenl complete and in operlllon. ASK FOR DETAILS!

..

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STARCHER ROAD - POIEROY - 6411 acres, vacant
IIIDDLEPOIT- Approx. 12 acres ol woodland plusa sev~~
around, gas and electric availebll!- Spring lor development.
room brick home. 4 bedrooms, F.A.F.O. heat plus a wood·
CALL. FOR· DETAILS! PRICE REbUCEO!! $48,000.00.
burner.. PRIVACYI
·· ·
J
,., · $27,000.00.
"' ,
., ·• ,
, I'OIERv• .,.. 2 st ory fr ame house w~· h 2 beQrooms
an d
POIIE!IOY - .tf~lll HEI8HTI - Ne.ll 2·3 jJedrJOm , · ~b. will wood ftoors and some vinyl t!JverinJ ASKING
home 1n excellent condition! urge play area for kids -ail· &gt; 'i $6.100.00.
prox. I acre lot. Call lor appointment. $33.500.00. .. . ' . '· ,. POIEaOY- 21ols with possibllrties!Septic and elec. avail a·
POMEROY -·f RICE REDUCED .:._ This handiCapped ac:
bl\ tuts of Shi!le trees. $2,500.00.
•cessible h&lt;lme, ramp ways, speci~ ftoor coverln&amp; special
•
bllh fix lures, .etc., all designed wrth the hlltdiCIPIJed in
'Hillllf'E. Ci.Ei.AIID .............. .'........................ 99 ~91"
mind. 3 bedrooms. f1repl~ee. basl!lftent, larp mod~~rn
JW JIUSS£LL ............................................ 94 2HO
kitchen. $34,900.00.
001111 TURIIEI ............................. ~..............99 -5&amp;92
JO KILL ...................................... :.................91
OFFICE ...............;............... ;......................... m -22st-.·
. COOK RD., ROCK SPIIIGS- Hemlock Near Rt. 33'- .Ap' ,prox, 80 ages of vacant woodecllllld. fdeilfol' buldlnal!ld '
IIEW USTIHII IIEEDED- SellinUOIII 'property Is n
, · huntm&amp;! T.P.C. water availllill!- • ASKIJ«l $25,000.00.
Ill II U It II Ill ratl· Lilt Wit~ Ul for Bast
. S
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PRiciD'io'S([LC:Iii liOLIPORT

~ story house wtlh 4 apts.
Potential mcome. $7.800 per ~ea r . Cor. Cole and Third,
agent owned. A real moneymaker al $40.000

RUTIAIID- LJrge lol wilh I861eel ~anlage on S.R. 124.
Livin' qu1rters wrth 3 bedrooms in back of large business
buildin,J Bu1 wrth stock and fixtures or without. CALL FOR
MQRE INFOIIMAT ION!

PRICE -EDUCED- PO~IOY,... Mobil~home,l21 55with
2 bedrooms, bllh and billlt cin fronl porch. Would make a
good rental. $6,400.00.

•

GET AWAY FROII THE HECTIC CITY LIVING
- Very ni ce home localed inCounlry AirEstates offers 3 BRs, bath, eal·inkitchen, liv ing
room, family room, gas heat/cent air, KC
school dislricl.
PRICE REDUCED TO $65,000! Beaulilul Lshaped brick. All roo~s large. Eal·in
krtchen, lormal dining, LR w/ FP, 3 BRs, 1\\
balhs, attached garage.

PRICE REDUCED- POIEIOY- Mobile Home, 12x55, 2
bedroom, wrth lronl porch. Sitting on 7lx 170 lol wrth a I car
garage. $7.400.00.
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BEAUTifUl lOCATION -

RACINE- Doublewide, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpel, refrigerator, range. I car garagewrth part basement and storage
buoldtn&amp; 3 yrs. old. $39,500.00.
SHAIOII ROAD- Off Co. Rd. 35, Racine, 5 acres, privacy,
lois of.of shade lrees. 24x55 home wrth large living room, 3
bedrooms, walk-in closels, 2 full baths, utUrty room and barn.
$39.900.00.
.

BAS HAll ROAD - Move righl inlo tllis 1971 2 bedroom
~ome, nei¥~ UP.dated, on approx. ll acre lot. VERY GOOD
CONDITIONt$(4,000.00. .
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.

Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

11

Schools 1

15

Wanlolt. Pura molal - olngorl
!Joo!dng 1 pon m1111 group lo
hock 11p wHh. 11100d group thot

Public Sale
&amp;

laborer ·
148 Nerve network
148 Weaving machine
150 Suspend
151 Actuel ·belng
153 Edible seed
154 Lamprey
156 Female null
. 158 Brood of
pheasanll
181 Mile: abbr.
183 Paclno or Hlrt
185 Riddle ID
187 Teutonic deity

PIIod.

CALL 446-2206, 9-5
446-2734 After 5 P.M.
8

114Fr~a

118 Ctl11- harshly
117' Surfeit
119 Rend
121 Break suddenly '
122 Propositions
123 " - Arlthe
World"
125 Wild plum
127 "-Mice and
Men"
128 Thr-bue hit
129 Sell to consumer
130 Landed estate
131 River banks
133Verve
138 Bards
138 Automobile style
140Wearaway
143 LouiNID
144 Anglo-Saxon .

-~-- .. .,Rolo_ pork.
,114-ft2.11NS.
o...-

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOMINIUM
NORTH MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.
SPECIAL FALL .RATES
AVAILABLE

108 Very minute
arachnids
110 HorN's 118!:k hair
111 Waterways
112 Newts

RANNY BLACKBURN

PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE AS MARKET
VARY

OVERLOOKING OCEAN

hOrN

Wonted: CMotlon Bobyslttor,

~rclllW41-4117w._IIC.

HENDERSON, WV: Rt. 35 . Adjacent to
Siders Equipment
Open Tues.-Sat. 10 A .M .-6 P.M .
Closed Sun. and Mon.
POMEROY, OHIO: At Junction of S.R. 7 and
~
143 on the by-pass.
Open 7 Days 9 A .M .-7 P.M .
ALBANY, OHIO: At Junction of S. R. 50
and 143

RHcuea

90 Tardier ,
91 Leaves out
93 Plainclothesmen
95 Minted
97 Time gone by
98 Ah8\"f\OOO SOCial
102 ...., Linn Baker
104 Brother of Jacob
108 Carpet
107 Old deereplt

I

Food Nmpllng, Nloo 8 ~

Reel

83 Emptier
64 Climbing plant
88 Pigeon paa
88 Chinese pagoda

3 Mobile unit: abbr.
4 MOUI)taln o.n

cllar..:ter: lnlta.
109 Airline Info.
110 .. ..-. Appell"
111 Stop
113 Hurrlel
114Snownunner
· 115 StiiCI&lt; ID
118 Separ...
117 AlgOnquian
Indian
118 Astern ·
120 Earth goddeM
121 Quarrel
122 Flnenclal
ll'lltltutlon
123 Need
124 ShchOIIIIIIIWIOI_IM_IIIn
lndlw11 • ~
128 Give ·.·
128 ThreefOld

32 Guido' a low note

PART-nM£ SECURITY OFFICER

1 Fright
2 Choir voice

"**

23 Choice part
24 POker stake
25 Near
28 - · Minor
28 Top of heed
30 llecomea aware
Of

Action

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-3

80 Walks unsteadily
82 Imitation

tiOWN ·

100AOO...
101 Fork prOng
102
103 Golf mound
105 Mons uncanny

compllc:allon

. 45674
Rio Grande is

'

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

SUNDAY PUZZLER

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

1 Hu~;

Public II! .(Jtice

.

September 24. 1989

.

•• i

�Page- 0-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
Fmanc1al

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

21

$uslness
31 Homes for Sale
23 . Professional
Opportunity
Services
21
BUSineSS
tOO% CASH INCOME
STRIP
Opportunity
$301).$700 Noh AmUitmonl Furniture, rtllnlsh
and repair.
Game
per wMk..
Prime
INOTlCEI
locallons. 100% Nlum ot In· Call&amp; to 9pm. &amp;t4-1112·7~1OHIOVALLEY PUBLISHING CO. westmont GUARANTEED. Calli·
recommends that you do
business with piDplt yau k'V)w,
and NOT to u 'nd money
throul'lh the mall until you halve
"' ed tt110fteri
Invtst1gat
ng.

Shot Store and

Vld~

Store

C9mblnod for ..... In Pomeroy

800~46-4443

.

1000 WOLFF

'"'

paymenls! Commercial, Home
tanning Beds. Lamp•, lotion1,

tcctuorits. Call Today FREE
can Catalog. 1-800.228-6292

=-----

41 Houses tor Rent

Real Estate

House trailer with bu!_lt on
rooms, 3 btdrooma, Uvlng room

khchln, bath, hllf-buemont,

workshop,
aam
carpon.
Located In Hamlock Grove. 2.1

31 Homes for Sale

46 Space tor Rent

Two trallar tpac., Routt One

Locuat Rood

on

right, 304-171-

1071.

Merchandise

41 Houses tor Rent
2 bedroom, all oladric, In LOng·
OH. $245Jmonth, un-

furnished. $125.
dotlosH.
Avollsblo Dot. 1. 614-185-3$11.
2 bodrooma. both, nowly·

decorated, clean, nlca. 114-112~
18~6.

2 br, hou... located 52 Mill
Cr,ak~ Slov. I Nfrlg, .tum'ed.
1165/mo. StOOlclop. It 4-«6bailment,

LOCATED AT: 2305 JEFFERSON AVE. POINT PLEASANT, WV ·
Mr. BaJoldKeewbu mond to liD aputment o.lnoe
. bla wife puoed a~y and no lonfu needa the ltoma
. that will be oold at PubUc Allctloa to the ~beot

3 'bedroom unfurnished houu
tor rant, 304.&amp;75-8120.
3 bedroom•, 1 1f2 baths, 2112
sr,ruca . Ave, Meadowbrook ld~
d tlon, 304-875-4815.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Craltsman wrenches, 3 tool boxes. 3 step ladders, 2
folding tables, new ear ooYer standard size, 20 in. push lawn
mower. shovels, hoes. rakes, assorlmenl ol hand tools, &amp;

Your -

qw~MI'" .,.. Will~ 1'QU1'

JlOII!bllltlel for SUCOIIM-

'--Il(lepl D-Oct. h) Thlnp .t!ould
..orl DUI: ratller Will tor )"'U IDCMy re~lllnO .-our lnoolwiii.,ill 'liltth trt.nda,
be IIW)i lot lkldlt Ot for ~ purJ)OIM. Try ~ luck 1r&gt; etlher • • Ubrl, lrMI yowMII to 1 l*thd~ gin,
~ lor ,.our Altro-Grl!ph powdlcUom
lor tile yur 1t1111d by rnWing lito At·
lro-Gra, CIO Ifill neap..,.., P.O
8o~ llt&lt;i21, CleWI!Md, OH 4-4101 -:.-411'11
S. -•Ia IIIII ~ Zodiac 1lfn

HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC: love seat, 2 recliners same as new
coffee table &amp; end tables, 19" poitable color T.V., bed with
brass headboard, chest, dresser, cedar chest, comer what
not stand, mahogany bookcase, 3 pc. dinet set, 5 pc. dine!
set, maple reflector table, hot point mtcrowave, ao· elecbic ,

stove &amp; hood, oak lamp table, Kef. lreezer, Whi~pool dryer,

oil lamps, lamps, clocks, setofencyckJpedia, Hoover sweeper,
costume jewerly, lines, doillies, phones, organ, blankets,
8mm movie editor proiector camera complete, pictures, pots
&amp; pan s, towels; coli. of elephant's, Fenton vase, set of china,

Alien bottles, stereo, rugs, copper broiler, oak singer sewing

machine, kraut cutter. dry rack, jugs, crock, tools, ballery
charger. drills, Sabre saw,levels, tool boxes, vise, ext. cords,
vise for Sharpening saws. humidifier. lawn mower, pipe
wrenches: skill saw, Reddy heater, plumers tool boK com-

plete, tool boxes are full , Rockwell Port a Planes, concrete
tool's, brace &amp; bits, blocl&lt; &amp; tackle, finishing saw, head,
grinder, 500 board h. mn cherry lumber &amp; other lumber, lawn
furniture plus more.

Audio11 Conduet.d B)l:

be~lva.
.
CNWCDRN IDle.....,.,._ tl) II d b1
dlfllcilh kll' - . . , to kMp U*lgl Nddlrl
from )'OU today. Your • - . tnvaat•

Uve lnlllncta will rtt~~ ~ that ..t!lch

II COYetld up.

AQtJANUII I -- »-F• 11) Tod-v Is
tile r'Oht d11y lo taka cara ol
l'lllntl IIWII n.d liddftloNf unlfk:11Uon.
YOU'll be llble ID tlluat..,. fnlfn
both lktellnd hllvtt thtt lii!IIIIJ to ruM!
llllm logetl'*,

wt..ra vour

CUIII' .. tanee!'ned W~

your bon becor'nM aw..-a at your allortt, )'OU'I gal eoop..-lb u w.ll.
. . . (..... 11.,...,. 111 Nice lllng:l
.., baing Mid about rou -.,er blc8ull
thl word hat totlen 8round that~- ­
In "tOW prlbe Of ot.W..

'-' ""'*'out

.....

"..

wii

Combu.llonHr Stoker COlli
Stove for 1111. Set ol emaU

ohow pony hlrnHOM. 614·742·
2234.

'

.

Dakota F•rm Home bull on

your lol, $13.11115 6 up. S.. our
inodol. &amp;14-8111-7311.

Metal work machl.-y: South

Bend, Emco Maler, ~at Muford,
Clausing, AuanoK, Shertlnt.

Blue Rlilge MachlnlfY, 304-512•

3538.

with
Good
or 340.

Now I 11218ft; pink arM Ng.
onlco alzs rotrtgorator,_ typing
table, tt111 offiCe diu, chair,

utltlly
tabla,
answering ·
macftlng. 114-192·7711.

wNkanaa.
Nice 2 dOO:r retrtaarator, frolt

lroo, m. Llrvo 'hinging , ••
furnace, $40. Seara C•rPtt
Sham-r, $50. Roll nice IIW

Camper. liMps 5, run• good,
$800. 8111 camper, ulf con·

lalnod, 11100. 614-~8-2528.

CannelbUrg, Inc. 471119
Speclallz lng In Pol•
. .
Buldlngo.
Oaslgned to mMI your
Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on
poat btdgo. ond paoo•
· deale. Sav1t hundr. .,

n-.

N..- c:..t Iron lrH st•ndlng
woocllc011l burner, wlfln a vtnl

blower. $250; Ping-pong lablo
top. $45; 614-446-4l41 after I or

D. C. Metal Sales, Inc.

---..IIOITOIIi

IUUIIIGS, IIC.

1677 ... 60 Etott
._._ors.cll• WV US0-4
Call Tol Fr• Merton, IL

1-100·447-7436

even thouundl of
dollaro.
tocol !ator ...,• .,totloo

OONNA CRISENIERY
E.S.R .• Box 1118
Gallipolla, Ohio 41131

PH. 614-256-6511

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY
1:00-4:30 P.M.

stsaplng

1'0011111

wHh cooking.

can •tttt 2:00 ' p.m., 304·773o5151, Muon WV.

Trailer niCI c101n unlulnlshod.
rtllroncu roqulrod, Route Ona
•oot Locu11 Rood an right, 304175-1078.

Country Mobile Hom• Parte.
Route 33, North of PomeroY.
VlfY n'ca 2 br, 11 VIntOn"-~ Lo!J ro-. pariO, NIOI. Clll

polo. U!O/mo. pluo . . .. ...... 614:ew.7479.
114-4-111 orl14.f41.at185:

:a•

C.lNC!Il f,_. 21_.,
today ~ou
should be QUilt good II batng lble to
lopOI "'~II !till can ~ turnad
Into tornathlflg of !*tonal, m&amp;llfll!
~~~ - When YOU llt'lllln ~!uni ­
ty, do lomathln!l POIIIMI about It
LID '""' D·Aut- 32) PromotJnv )'OUt'

tell -fnlatettl 'M" b1 Of p8'amount 1m.
i)OfiiUlCI tO )'OU IOdty You'l h111de
your ln~tl In Ill 81Mr1Mt !Mho
ion; bul )'01.1 WCII\.IIItP oYer lhllnll and
be dten1l'd too P\Mfl~ .

tt:,rdl

of

Approx.
balhs, family
room. formal
slorage building barn.
40'x 56' approx
· i g wilh concrete floor.
Above.ground pool, satellite dtsh and gas well I
mcluded wrth sale. Call loday for more
i

.
.
ble A-frame on a wooded lot 5 rooms.
rooms. 1\\ baths. Onlled well 'with submergible
pump. Rural wier .lap. is paid for. Discover lhe
bea41y and love 1n th is home. all lor $22,000. Call
for an appoinlmenl.

FRONTAGE AND VIEW remodeled frame home. 3 bed·
rooms, balh, enclosed porches, forced aii heat,
storage buildin~ Listing price. $23,500.00. ·
.. #2766
NEW LISTING! COMFORT THAT YOU CAN AF·
• . FQID! - located in the•Kyger Creek school dis·
; trict 3 ' bedroom low maintenance ranch 1\;
. baths, family room, lull ftmshed basement formal
• dining area; carport $40's. lnmtigate today!
.
#2781

if) iNf NF.'hh PUi F.PITI')IP~II'F. ASliN

.

'

JAMES
JACOBY

+KJiflt

_

t1 ~

fAK.t '~~l

1::-'!IT
. _.. _. flOITt
• ltlt Jl fl

• Q 1111

tiOI~I

tAQ

SOI!TH
.,.,~2

•·
+n

•u ~ u

W..l

••
~•
r.~

r~ Puo: ' '
'l'lt!t
' •+
r ....
All r•!l'l

,.

f'flrUI
I
f

flrlf'nlnjt II'Ad 9 K

Slam

lever

TAK
LANDLORD OFF YOUR PAYROLL! Affordable 2 bedroom home Situated in lhdillage
of R1o Grande. N1ce lawn. $27,500.00.Investigate
loday'
#2746
NEW LISTING! SOPHISTICATED LUXURY IN NATURAtSURROUNDINGS! Almost brand new spa·
c1ou s bl-ievel. 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, fam ily room.&lt;
car garage, approx. 2 acres, and more. Begin ale1·
surely room·by·room lour of lhis remarkable
home lodayl
#2779
MEIGS COUNTY FARM - 80 acres w1lh 2 story
home. 5 bedroom s. dm~n g area, bath. located in
Salem Township. lisled price $45.000. #2737

*''

F.ut

4t

Cons1gnm ents f rom sever al Loc al Farm s an d De ale rs .
Many 1tems at Absol ute Au ct 1on

TRACTORS: J.D .. I. H.. Ceae. M.F., Ford, Etc.
·Assorted M akos &amp; Models to choose from 25to 160 H.P.
In duStr ial Equ1pmen t and sal vage tra c tor s
Til lage Equ1prnent. Plows 1 t o 7 bottoms. d• scs .
Fte l d Cul 11va tors . Pack e rs. Etc .. Gn nder -M1xe rs,
Com b •nes, Co rn P1ckers. Gr avt!Y Bed Wag o n s
Round &amp; Square Balers . Rakes &amp; Mower s of all k1nd s.
Tools &amp; Eguipment to 1111it Everyone• needa.

:!!Jd~::~

tYCOON LAKE - 2 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME
storage buildin~ large pal1o. Jusl perfect for that
qu1et getaway!
•
#2767

2 STORY TRI-LEVEL. Brick and Frame. 8 rooms
2'h balhs, 4 bedrooms. finished 2 bay garage, plus
I detached garage. ln·ground pool. Everything
Immaculate. Approx .. 3,100 sq. H. localed in
Crown C1ty, 20 easy m1les from Gallipolis, 15 miles
from Hunllnglon area. II you are looking for anice
home, good area. call us today '
#
..2761

'

• LUNCH SERVED - TRUCKING AVAILABLE •

BACK'TO SCHOO[ SPECIAL! 2 or 3 bedroom re·
·modeled.home. new carpet, VlllVJ s1din&amp; rural wa ·
, • ter. and 2.4 acres 1for lhe children 'sactivity plea·
.. ·· sure. ~ 2 car block garage alm'o'st completed for
• slorage·or repa1i work..Gallipolis schoOls. Paved
road. Approx. 5 miles from Gallipolis. Reasonably
priced
m lhe $30's. Call us loday'
·
freshly
'
'
#2776 .
cou pie .
or retiring. 2 bedrooms. livmg
room. eaHn
OWNER WANTING SOLO.
HAS REDUCED THE PRICE TO $24.500.00.
ALONG RACCOON C.REEK- large 101 wilh fronlage and easy ac cess lo Raccoon Creek.. Unfin#2755
ished 2 bedroom struclure with mosl ol finishing
ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY'S BEST LOCATED
mater1als included. For more details and price call
FARMS- Closelo.Gallipolis, Add1son and Porler.
loday
#27S1
236 acre farm. Frontage along four roads, excel·
lenl for subdividing or iust farmin g. Remodeled 3
or 4 bedroom viny l Siding home. 2 large barns.
machmery sheds, lie house. 57." x120' Morton
$4.000.00- VACANT LOT.,... Would make an exmetal building rural waler, 5 ponds, 2 produc1ng
cellent homesile. lays veil•well. rural waler and
gas well s. plu s much more. Callloday for more de·
electric available! ·
lails!
•
·
#2773
#2778
'

NOT TOO BIG AND NOT TOO-SMALL! Just rl1ht
for...Family comfort! 3 bedroom brick and ~a me
ranch. living room •. formal dining allached gar.
ag~ Econom1c healtng and cooling thai would Iii
any budget. Unbeatable family enjoymenl of your
own 16'x32' in ground pool. Spring Valley Area!
Why wail! Here's the home for you! Call TODAY!

· New &amp; Uaed Form &amp; lnduotrlool Equipment Of All Kinds

JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR! - 3
bedroom ranch dh a lillie acreage ·(approK. 217
acres). Full basemen!, 2 baths. eflicienl eleclric
· heat pump with central air, allached I car garage
plu~ 12'xl6' apptoK. unallached garage, cable
TV. Appro•. 2 miles from Holz~r Hosp~al:

,: m&amp;8

LOT WITH IMPROVEMENTS all ready for lhal mo- .
bile home. Kyger Creek Schools. ApproK. 2 miles
from town. Asking price $6,500.00. ·
#2757

SUPER LOCATION! 458 JERRY STREET! lovely
bnck 3 bedroom ranch home.wilh formal dinmg
area, livmg roon;t wrth It replace, complete kitchen
wrth newer appliances. 2'car. atlached garage and
more. Call for an appoinlment loday.
N2731
BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTING- Seven room brick
home wrth 2~ baths. AQar!menl bu tiding used lor
caring for elderly and handicapped people. large
· modern barn used as feeder pig bu s~ness located
tn Guyan Townsh1p. Approx. 50 acres level tillable
laod surrounds farm buildtngs. Call loday for
showtn&amp;
#Z7SI

"'"446-6624

SOUTHERN HILLS REAL ESTAJE, INC.

Tri-Green
lnters~ate Equipment, Inc.

'

'

'•

1499 U.S. Route 42 N.E.
London, Ohio 43140

G)
......,,...,

• 614)879-7731 · 879-7732 - 879-7649tParto)
Dick Green Judy Green Connie G. Bellah

738 Second Ave.

o,OIIItUNIU

446-8147

JUDY DEWin, BROKER

Mad1son Co. Airport &amp; Motels nearby
L1 censed &amp; Bonded 1n favor of the state of Oh oo
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
TERMS: c..h or check w/proper f.D .

' lB
.

REALTOR'

•

MERRILL CA.IEI, REALTOR
.

...

379·2114
I

'

·'

=

:~;:.~'i:~~,'~ilo~lo;~A:~IIII end lounge on
QUALITY
HOUSE ON 16ACRES-:- Abeautiful selling I
Raccoon Creek htghltghts th1s
property in Perry Towoshtp. House includes 3
bedrooms, large bath, living room &amp; huge kitchen.
Vinyl siding and new rool have been added recently. 24x32 outbuilding included also. lots ol
potential if you're looking for a small farm. More
land possibly available. Southwestern schools.
N245

I he
and
the river view of lhiS 3
bedroom home. You'll
the cool comfort of
the central air when indoors. Family room boasts
buill-in bookcases and fireplace. Gard'e~ tub m
one ofthe two baths.' Formal dining room. Certain
lo pleas~ .. $59,900. ·
#708

TIRED OF PAYING RENT? This may be the house
for you'' AUra clive 3 bedroom home located in the
city school distncl. House includes fenced
backyard, covered patio. living room. cozy family
room with woodburner. ut~rty room and all appli·
ances ate included. Priced to sell at $33.400. Cell
us today for an app'!'nlment.
11714
•.

'

•

.•·

.

fiO'IIally fur•

l a h - Rd.
Ayona~lo Oc:lobot tat. QIOimo.
114-448-1151 oftor 7RM, 1894.SOI aok lor l.lny.
2 l:u:ltoom apt1. tor rant.. C.
nlahod.

~··-••- Will rMUft.

91'Pn

ulltllioa In-

2 811. 1/2

bon om ot,. nat't bien dlllurblnQ )'OU. "

...

:p-1_,,
Ill
1300 par mo. !lop, noq'd.

114,441-17112-

a.-...

NO!tTH
f-U-11f
+AIQ 111l
9 QH

304-875-1211.

114-1*4222
·- - ••! 12
•.m.
Z BA llllftmoAt, utHitiH pold.
;Clll - - 11MI &amp; 8RM only.

VNIOO (....
22) Try to llltt
!loOirlfl! tltna t~ to enatra )'OUt lnnarmoit r..Nnga 111 that you can '*''o tha
new

tachmant a 24 biQS. Full mtt·
trase &amp; 1prlnga. Chlkf't Blcrcll,

1111- apt. Ao~go.
• Wotor, MMgo, ga,_
....... !lop. &amp; Rat. 114-4*
4
•

GlMN (Mar 21.....,.. •t lltll mora
c..ornp~o: tttu.tlan• bleoma today. tl'll
!urlul Of ch~ de .ODII .. III

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Golllpolla. Now 6 UH&lt;I
lumhura, h•atara:, Wastam &amp;
Work booto. 114-446-3159.
Upright Swupor wHh. Ill II•

R•l Estate General

for Rent

n,...., "* Ofiii'Mio Will "'nd try
you"'"*" 1M chip."' dawn.

batler you'rttliQIID fill ell Your mlr'H'! Ia
nimble alld qMk, lind you WC!ft' t bfl

Apartment

44

.

Vulner;blt: Rnttr.
l&gt;r-R lrr· Wfo' l

~

parcelaln.

wlntlr lor $350. Call 11""'"1·
0901 .
.

Allo tr•ller epace. All hook·ltPI·

11~ .

7 m 1les n o rrh of london . Oh to at 1nter seCt•on of I· 70 (e)j •t ~ 79)
and US Ro ute 42 12 m•leswest o f Colu mbus . 19 m tleseasto f
,Spnng l•e ld and 4 0 mtl es ea sl of Dayton

(

•II

King Wood and Coli lurnor

wltti trlptlo watlplpe uNCI on•

.. ·-

'AUMII (AIIrfiiD-Mit ID) The peop..
you ""ould be tile most Bolldtoua to today ~tat,. "'*"'bar• ot your awn 11111·

Licensed &amp; Bonded in OH . WV &amp; KY. #66-89

,

446-1044
379-2720

·,

lhlt gives '1'011 two reatot~S tor lltlllfl

Not Responsible For Acx::idents or Loss of Property

:

French,

'

l

.am. etlecttve fi'INiura you ean taka
today that 11hould bl benlflellt tor ~ou

MASON1 WV
Executor • William M. Weaver
TERMS . Cash or Check with 1. 0 .

~

Antiquo gu
hootar. $75.
Window
olr -eondhlonor,
$50.
1:,81:,:4~-192=--5=:MI:.:::·,..,,-:-:---:--:-COIIocl01'8 Dotll 20 lnchoo
oacrillco. 814-111Z·nn.

rorrta-

"ICII!fM. .-ell at TN&lt;11 •a

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Interstate Equipment, Inc.

111

· ----~

We _do everything we can to make.your real estate
trans;tction go smoothly. And that includes offering
HAA Buyer and Seller Home Warr;lnty Plans .
II you're selling, that means cost-free protection for any covered
items that might require attention while your home is on the market
II something does go wrong, you pay only a standard deductible .
.
II you'r(! buying, a Home Warranty means protection from repair o~­
replacemenl bills caused by 'mechanical failures for one full year after
closing~ So , if you want to buy or sell a home. ask us about the HAA Home
Warranty. We'll make your life a lot easier.

LUNCH

&amp;2-D!~.!~~~ION_&amp;

1

ton ,......,,

ICONI'tO
1ft The Cidd:l
at11!Mted sllghlty In~ I!IVOr 1~ In
alll*lont tfm INi¥111 Pf~ comPif'tlwil ...._., blcaiM fOU' I btl
betMf able k) ~ ... 1'01" obflletl¥e1! In
~- IOQII..
•
IAOITTARIUI (JIM_IJ..,._ 31) II you
lim~ ~ "*vt torneth6rlg of ,.., 'UIUe
lhll ollletl Mould ~IM)W libout, ..... 11.
good day lo bllglr&gt; dt!ICUI!Iont T~ """

••i1!1118-

Located at 812 4tb St New Haven, WV. Turn at
Church of God &amp; foUow signs.
The estate of the lata Wilda Brinker will be sold.

~ao motor home $4,000,.
IIC cond, 304-8814813. ·

Good

•
r,nty
buy1ng or sell1n ·
a tiome
a,
lot
•
eas1er•.

In the~" lheld lhtore erelndlcailorlt
you w•r to:perleoce 1 \d..ngtt'!efllng of
boltl )'OU' ptorl()nalllr lnd your will.

AUC'I'IONEER: Cal. Oscar E. Click

10:00 a.m.

$2,100. Wood burning
wlblowor U50. 1974 Win-.

.Reel Estate General

hpi.J4, , . .

many more items too numerous 10 mention.

Saturda$
Sept. 30, 1989

lion

114-448-1511.

ner, along with many small ilems &amp; kitchen accessories.
TOOLS

ESTATE
AUCTION

Chain Link - Split
Rail • Commercial
Residential
lnsur.ance • Repair

reference. In
Crown City nut to the Lodge•

dryer, 3 pe. bedroom suit, rocker rediner, locking 2 drawer
file cabinet. Ell'el&lt;a sweeper, air conditioner. aluminum
gfider with cushions, electric healer, Preslb pressure can-

Not TfJSpona/ble for sccldflflll or loa of properly.

Ohio Valley
Fence

BaMitt

trom Rt. 7, Eureka, OH 304-871.5104
3 rooms 6 both, 1175 mo. $50

HOUSEHOLD
Frigidaire fiost free 2 door refrigerator, Maytag washer &amp;

S.rt/emflfll dsy of aa/e, c.,h or check with proper/D.

truc:k

1229 (If In
Groupo, Roa,
111 In 11oek).

3 br, farm house 1 112 mil••

deposit.

Merchandise

~~~~~~ =~~~='mL==-------------tm Ford F-250 • whool *~••

01

..._ dl 1
Antiquo Duncan Ph,,_
roam auha, 11 hp Brigg1n
Strano; ~na with trona ulo.
304-ll7
•

"'
2br, house ·$100 dap, $200 mo•
w~tar, turn. 114-448-2461.
.

ANTIQUES

IYIIIIble whh
Sol• I Chair,

ytrd,

2655.

Pie cubbard, china cabinet (curved glass door). bow saw,
hay knile, oil lamp, squans claw fool table, 8-day clock, 3
wicker straight back chairs, 3 wicker botiDm rockers solid
· 'wood rocker. 2 wooden buckets, small stand tables, ,;,icker
' egg basket, cast iron tea kettle, 3 leg iron pot, sloneware
chum, jugs; jars, pitchers, crocks, handmade quills, doillies.
rare plates (Creston Church, Pine Grove Church, Old Silver
.Bridge &amp; more). salt &amp; pepper sets, sugar &amp; aeamer sets
and much more.

Clll till ' p.m.
lt4.f46-3158.

room In

fenced

54 Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

CODk ltova-. $50. 81 ...742·301'3

lion-Sot.

Wllher, Ill fabric. 5200 llc:ti.
114~--

screened porch. Call 114-446--

bidder.

Uc. 754-89 &amp; Bonded
Note: This Ia one of the cleanest IIIIa you WIIIIYII' allend.

•

.-c.

Merchandlsa

Merchandise

tl8i Chivy truck cab with air
Roa, 11111, now $389 1 8
cond. 1187 Chovy clolh truck
11ock). 0\laan Anno ColiN
...t. Dually pickup bod wHh
End Tabloo $149 a 01t. 5 goco• nock hitch. Dually 1 ton
variiiiH of Sunk - · S141 6 jlckup rur and. 1 ton bed.
up. Twin &amp; Full ManresHt wet Wheel•. • •peed tra. .. mlulon.
$99 6 up. $-CU5 (!50 In Mise 1 ion other ~·· go cart
stock). Ou..n Mattrn1 Sell lnmo, tiller, Chivy RHII Hllch.
$249, Roa. 5850; King Manno.. 114-388-1!1114 altar 8:00PM.
$129. 8 VlrilliiO 81SH1 Bod·
room Suht, Reg. $1600, now 1182 Dodao K Aries Clr, 73,000
$998. 30 day1 warranty on ·~ mhao. ~9l-_PS, tiN - " I
pllancn, M•~•g Wnhlr $11 6 whHI, A~• rldlo, wry ~
up. Dryer $75 &amp; up.
-over
11,850
or 18!50ot npor
•
,_
paymonto
$75
Whirlpool outomatlc w~ahor mo. !tee:. mnga, 30 lnchla wide,
lpOod qUHn, IIHII)I_ duty
1125. 814-3el'-G234.

$300 month plus dopooh. Jack·

2 br, houH, with

54

54 Miscellaneous

1973 CIJlfiCI, uoo. lnlor· satto boom bo•. R - 20
nttlonat IUI'r convartad to channel ~eannar. 114-441-7'081
PIIancoo. · can 814-4411-7572. motor homo, $ 00. 38 plotot and anytime.
Hours8-l.
100 round ot ammO., $115. Ben.
dod PVTIO Gvllar and 1111p,
S250. Myo,.. Shallow wall pump,
Vl'r1 Fumttura 6 ~lptilla.nc:~
S35. 2 coal and wood bumiM
Rl. 14t, 1/4 mi.

Vaughan

aon St, Vinton. 814-388-11360.

lll'I'DUY, II". 30, lla. A' ID:IIti.M.

54 Miscellaneous

VI lilY Fumhul'l

'

3870.

Household
Goods

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page D-6

W.Va.

New and uald lurnltura and ap-

Rentals

Bottom,

51

Ohio-Point

Flolwr Compacl tloc playor
w/14 dl'". Crown _d oubl• ca,.

Woodland, 132 ac:r. ., $:35,000,
At. 7, below Euraka, Call 814-.
446-4411altw 7 p.m.

ICJII. C.U a14-t41-2112 af'tltr
!p.m.

Public Sale .
&amp; Auction

Pomeroy44

for Sale
For sate : One acre 1•~•1 lots. 7
miiH north of Holzer Hospital.
1974 35 ft, Coachman. Parle lt4-388-8848.
Modol with IIP"'ut. llr,
•PirtrMnt ...tze
appllllncee. Thrte 4 acre tracts; 3
$!5000.. CIII814-M9-2389.
· acrWpond. Own•r lln.nclng,
$100. down. 10 acrH MIL
3 bedroom. Holly Park with E•· Moadowrwoodl, spring, gas
pando. Total el.etrlc. $7000. royatUtt, $45,000. Gunvllla
Rood. 304-876-7887•.
614-892-3972.

SUNS"DS

Toning tables. New low monthl)'

24. 1989

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

32 Mobile Homes

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri11ht

NOW.

area. 814-992-38.3.0:..::or:..:I1~4=
-8=82~·J..:COH=0=~=8=
D)=·
2571.
-

8

September 24. 1989

patod. Nloe oattlna. lllundry
faciiKIH avollablo. Cilt 114-Ht·

anaOH.

·

.35 W. apj. 2 br, 1 bath, prlvalo
onclosad

poUo.

Cloao

to

lt'OCI'I' - - • ohopplng ......
fw, water.
truh
poovfdod.

f46-1727.
Sbf

....,..&amp;..

Qe51mo. ...a lt4-

kitchen

wJitova,

r.trig.mor, $2!50/mo., pluo
~~~~~-. dap, A rei, no ptta. 5
Court St.l14-4411'1828.

WHAT A DEAL' - No Appra1sal Fee, home has been
appraised for $46,000.00• .owners selling for only
$41,000.00 and also paytng pomls. ONLY $1.900.00 down-.
payment' that includes prepaids. Monthly payment o1
$370.46 princ1pal &amp;inter.est 10%ltxed rate for 30 yrs. Can
pay off early, no pre-payment fee. 3 bedrooms, l.R., modern
kilchen, formal dining room. separate laundry room . Stngle
car garage w/storage room and a separate workshop
Fenced backyard. Mud room off from back patio.Lots of stor·
age and closel space. If you're in Ihe market th1s home you
should consider looking al.
I
""'"' ..,.,
/

Ar&gt;allatOnl for - · 104-1712211.
IEAunFUI. APARTIIEHTS AT

IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
EITATE!L 538 Jacklan Plb
from IIIIVMO. Wotk .. ohop •
movtoo. CIIII14-«II-2AL EOH.

Pum. EHiclancy 1150 udHdoo
lid. Shl1'8 bath. 107 Second,
·balllpotla, 114-«1-4418 ahor

........

,f AM A FRIENDLY HOUSE
1am an A·Frame on a wooded lot and have my own lands-

I :' I I

Ill

1{11 II

I\ I
II\ II 11-..

TEAFORD
REAL ESTArE
216 L S.Cond St.
P-roy, Ohio

' (614) 992·3325
NEW LISTING - Excellent
localion beside courthouse:
170 ft. frontage by 150 ft.
deep, old 2 story brick strut·
lure lhat needs removed.
Very good investmenl for
$35.000.
NEW LISTING - Good 2 BR
home w1lh l \\ car garage, n·
verview from porch &amp; bal·
cony, fully carpeted, central
heat, on a nice Qu iet street.
Just $32,000.
RIVERVIEW- Slots &amp; good
.older home, lotal electric
wrth 3 BR. full basemen! &amp;
1•ae. Lots of fruit trees.
Good buy al $17,500.
COUNTRY - 5 year old 3
BR home with 3acres. doullle garqe &amp; large shade
lrees. Needs some finishin&amp;
Just $29,500. • .

capecllronl vard. II is cozv where I set: here where 1t ~ nro.
vale and secluded. Trees shade my lawn. I can even let you
relax on one of my nice decknndy oul:an gaze
lrees. These are my most prec1ous fealures and I have more.
The smell here is not of Ihe c1ty. If you are lookm gfor a wee·
kend relreal I would be perfect for thai, too. I have ~ bed·
rooms and I he masler oft hem is allached tooneol my decks.
Come and visit me- Stay a while - Make me yours. I'm a
wort~while $34.000. Make me an Offer, but don't hurt my
feelings.
FOR RENT- 3 bedroom home wilhin walkmg distance of
clownlown, 2 baths. Nice back yard. Secur~y Deposrt, refer·
ences and no pets.
2 BEDROOM HOME in country school s~slem . nice home,
$300.00 rent per monlh, one mbnlh securrty deposrt, no pets
and have to furnish references.
$100.000.00 PLUS- Large h~me 4·5 bedroom~, 3 balhs,
acreage. pool. etc Extra nice, g1ve us a call1f ~ou re lookmg
for somethmg like this. By appoinlmenl only .
JREEN ELEMENTARY - 2 ~cres m~r.e or less. Very nice
oome with great view. Famtly room, liv1ng room, large back
deck. 3 bedrooms. large family style krtchen.

OWNER· RELOCAliNG

ANXIOUS TO SELL - Nice home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
about l'h miles from city. Washmgton Elementary. Back
deck. Priced 50's.
ACREAGE - REDUCED TO 65.5 ACRES. SZO.ooO.' Cily
schools. Good home site.
5 ACI£5 1/L, Rio Grande area. Could be aood buildina srte.

USTINGS

REAL ESTATE

TIRED OF LISTENING .TO COMPLAINTS
ABOUT THE OLD HOMESTEAD?
If you're not happy with the place y~u're liv·
ing in, do something about it. It's easier than
you may think. Give us a call and we can help.
We can find a buyer for your property and to•
get her we can find the perfect home in a price
l'ange tharnieets yo.u r-budget!

RIVER VIEW_ watch the boats from the deck of
lhis older 2 story home. New ~oof, new krtchen. 3 ·
bedrooms. 2 lull baths. FamilY room and basement Quiet communty w1th great netghbors. Thts
home and view can be yours for only $34,900.
.
.
11702

OLD TIME CHARM - There's not many homes
like this still available, especially at an affordable
price. $32,700 buys lh1s \901 vmlage house in
Kyger Creek Schools. 3 bedrooms, large ktit:hen
(eal-in), dming room, living room &amp; family room.
Home has had major improvements done. just
needs your finishmg louches. Call today ·before
it's gone'!
~218
LOCATION. LOCATION, LOCATION - .Ask any·
body! "location is most important when selecting
a home." Here's a 6 room home on 1 acre wrth a
great view of I he river and only 5 miles from Iown.
includes 3 bedrooms, fireplace, lull basement,
garage and barn. You'll have access to the river.
It's priced at $59,500. and should nol be on the
market long.
*116 -

'

DRIPPING WITH CHARM- Come and reminisce
as you enjoy the older home detaillhis updated •
four bedroom offers. Heirloom quality for $59,000
in Middleport.
#508

LARGE HEATED (lAR,~lYQiiiitiDP
rently a body shop but could adapt for Olher us·
ages. Srtuated on 1.5 acres, property includes a
nearly new 1152 sq. fl., 6 room. 2 bath home wMh
deck and porch. Paved road. ample parkingspace
and nice setting. $54.900.
11413

BIRO'S EYE VIEW- One of lhe mosl beaul1lul,
panoramic views overlooking the Ohio River val·
ley can be found lrom lhis Y·shaped ranch Very
spac1ous. livable, and well·maintained home.
Greal for enlertamin&amp; includes 3 bedrooms, formal sunken living room w1th lots ol wmdows.
calhedral ceiling and beautdul stone fireplace.
Also features family room wrth 2nd lireplace, wifeapproved eal-in kilchen, 21; balhs and 2 car gar·
age. Make an appointment toseelhishouse, you'll
fall in love.
#246

NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD- Greal buy for $24,900
includes this 3 bedroom home wrth living room,
eat-in kilchen and bath. Carport and approxima·
!ely 2 acres of ground. Clo.se Co City. Gas heat.
~227

SPACIOUS CEDAR RANCH- Nestled in tall pine
trees offers more than most Outstanding kitchen
located wrth beulfiful oak cabinets and large
breakf,sl nook. COlY fam1ly room wilh hardwood
floors and warm fireplace. Formal dinin&amp; sludy,
partial basemen! with rec . room. Enjoy the peace
and quiet on the mult~ level deck which contains
hoi tub. iaccuzzi off master bedroom also. 2 car
garage. City schools. $114.900
!1206

SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL - Well groomed 3 bedroom. HI slory home wrth a fresh coat ol paml.
Spotless inside and out Basement, carport and
screened porch. $33,500.
11513

100 ACRES 5 MILES FROM TOWN- This vacant
land offers a ridge rverlooking the river and includes woods. open pasture, a large pond and
several home Sites if developed. All kinds of wildlife Olake rt perltct for nalure lovers, hunters, elc
It's the only one of its kind on lhe market loday.
$29,000.
#116

4 ACRES RIVER FRONTAGE- VACANT LANDUnusually mce gently ~opmgacreage iutvung to lhe
river. Prime ;esid.enlial building·lot wrth 400' of
waler and highway frontage. Ptobably the best va ·
canl land on lhe river lhat'·s withm 5 miles from
lown.
!1116

ATTENTION HUNTERS!! Excellenl turkey, rabbrt,
squirrel &amp; deer hunling. 80 acres in Morgan
Township on Wildwood Road. Several places lo
build I hat hunting cabin and get away from rt all.
Owner will divide. Asking $35,000 for all.
•
11100

CUTE AND COlY- Silualed on a privale lot near
Clay School. Fealuring 2 bedrooms. eat-in
kitchen, washer and dryer hook·ups and aluminum sidin~ Call us · today for an apponlment.

WILL TAKE ATRAILER IN ONTRADE ~Very mce
doublewide home on counlry lol includes 28x40
garage (ideal for welding, auto shop, elc.). Home
includes 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, screenoo m perch.
and is in excellent condition. Only $38,000, and
will consider your mobile home as trade in.
8233

m8

LIST.WITH GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER ..

Wiseman
Real
Estate
(614) 446-3644
E. M. WI..-•, Broker

482 2NO AVE. REAR

441-4208

Stutes - 446-4206
f)

but lhis lovely
I 'h story home has plenty of potential. Wrth ap·
7.99% INTEREST RATE AVAILABLE- BUY NOW • ' prox. 3.5 acres of land, lhere' splenty ol rQQm for
garden, 4·H animals or recreation. Turn of the
-SAVE THOUSANDS- Take advantage ofth1s
cenlury
home includes 3 bedrooms. hv ing r!JOm,
low interest loan and buy this 3 bedroom ranch.
dining room and foyer. large screened in porch
Conveniently localed in the country, 1,t 111cludes a
for warm weal her enjoymenl. Some of I he major
family room. 2 fireplaces, very mce k~chen, f~lly
remodeling ilems have already been completed.
carpeted. Green Township. $54,900. ltm~ed
Beautiful oak woodwor~ Best of all ~ lhe $24,900
supply of low inleresl money, so hurry!
#110
asking price.
#234

•

WE NEED

G. lruet TIGford
992-7614

aI

David Wiseman, 448-9&amp;&amp;6
B. J. Halmo", 448-4240

Tom Ru...n, 448-2875
••

Lorette McDade, 448-7729
Phyllis Miller, 448-8348

.,

�september 24, 1989

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'::~::.' S~\\(llA-~t.trs·
HloH lor ClAY I. POllAN
Rearrange the 6 Krombled
0. words
below to make 6

••••

71 Autos for Sale

58

Fruits &amp;

Vegelables

lAIII

Hall

nm..,.,_ ....,.,._.,

1111 pick ,.,..-

own,

.......... ~-

1imple words. Pr int letters of
eoc.h in its li ne of squOJ•s.

63

61 Fann Equipment

a10. bu

1l!GG - Will 1ft
'"""omall
toodor
w/p!lmp.
or
moollum tiiOtor,-'/1': firm . Colt
. . . , _ I • I.,
-1112.
.10

2111

plan)!!!t.,~ver
olrl-,
..,... 114-

Wlllorn

~- -522.

.Um"o • - EGu'-nt, Gol·

Ml~ troclo, UMd
Farm tradOre. uwer soo tann

• - lluy,

f J''ll &lt;;upp 1t• ,

LIVYAN-

II
I
1

I

I1-~.~~~~;;1;1'~1~
·

·

.

et•..z• em
110 AC -

r.dlok.

II 0 I II I I I
•

•

•

.

Fotd

W/1111. bUill hoa, plow,
oullpookM, I3HII. 114-

roo1or

211-11122.
S5G JD llcln", I way lslldo,IIOO!I
concl. Roody to ~¥0rk. 1 1 1044.

_ 1 1 1 1' 1 I_
I~~~
h,.-rM~U;...B~R;_;;.E_.:N-T-i

,.....,, -m r:.oa..Aotyn

Point
4114.

~··

·-

roiM ..... -

calf approxlmat ..r 100 paunda.
B"" Blcko11, BB Fonn,lll-117·

Good aetacllon of Duroa loal'8.

Aogw Bontloy. 513-1114-23111.

i11•

G I
ra n

RebUii engiM,

::'m..':;t:h:.
,;!.~1 =
21!17ooronlnga.

Holololn lull Col- lor-. i
mo., to 2 -ko, 11• ... OU4

Hay &amp;

earv-.

1

q-l"' 0 -... ....... ...._

wnom, -

Open House

81

!!::'-. :
:r;:, sr uroo. 14100. 114·-

geraBaaemenl

•-ion,

c.

~h

,...

Aolllllll.

!.~

t&gt;loiU!Po

.:.YI::''":!P~P1ml=:..·-:=-:::--==
1070 Chovr

lloiiiMI Clooolc

Tna-.

Wotoi"proorlng.

trenching, for

114:.i

4

01 SliiMSNY

55

Building
SupplieS

56

Pets for Sale

DriiBI'••rncl C.Boty K - .
,.,....,..
Slamu•
and
Hlmotopn klnont.

=·
56

Pets for Sale

1 wk old, 2 lomolo1 Chlhuohuo

....,...o

11411VfJU.

44~5-~a~

111111

Filii To... 2411 .......... - - ~-175-21113, 11
pt 101 up 114.11 end 11 pi

171 -·· ., 4-371143.25.
FooH blooded
AKC RealM- IINglo pupo. .....
,+2111111.

· BuuiHul AKC fomolo moH- I
- ........,4......7412.
Bundw!"* lor..., 1171. 114-

a-

- - 11440113844- 7
p.m.

AI-

pupplot. of.

Gnoom ond lupply B Gnoomlng.
All oll.oono Pol Doolof. Julio

=• .,...':"r',::;...
-

0!11111~211.

~

-

ct:;':

-.1!0.111 ... ilet4.

11111 llo!dt! DoYIOM TUllio Z.
outomotlo a AC:. 541,000 mille.

1111

~ out~

AC,

J &amp; J Water S•rvlc•. Swimming
poole, claternt, wtllt, C1ll 11~
24H2a5.

Septic Tank Pumping SOO, Gailla
CO. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackson, OH 1-800-537-9528.

R &amp; R Water Service. Pool1, cl•
tems, wells. lmmediete-1,000 ot
2,000 gallons delivery. C.ll 3()4..

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

re11onabl1 r1t11, volume dlt-

675-6370.

.

Watterson'•

Water

HaPJIIng,

counla, 2,000 lo 4,000 capachy,
cistern•. poole, wells, Me. C.:ll
304 ·5 76,2919

Davia

S.W-Vac

Service,

Georg•• Cruk Rd . Parts, aupo
p11es, pickup, and delivery. 614·
448-0294.

or
commercial
Hrvlct or repalre.
electrician. Ridenour

304-176-1786.

.q{

Q/m~d

RESI'DE~~ - I,M$TME~ . C~ ..tRCIAL · FARMS

AII~M

......,.. Good concl. $4100.
114-441-2544.

85 Ge119ral Hauling

r:Jd.d'CVJ/ak

114-3711-2725.

. 23 LOCUST ST.. .
446-6806

'

,·. .. Ptrmoulfl Aollont. 4clr,
PSIPB, oula trono, AC, lUI nlco
I38GG. 114-25M251.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAllS THE DIFFERENCE

72 Trucks for Sale

1117
CutillO '"'"· 13,000
mil... 1181 . Mercury Tr11~,
1o,ooo mllel, prtc:.t lo aell, 3IWo

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER. 3B8-8826
RUTH GOODY. REALTOR. 379-2628
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 256-625,
LEESA CLARK. REALTOR, 367-7623
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 446-1 897
RUTH BARR. 446-0722
.LINDA SKIDMORE, 379-2686

TRUCKS FOR SALE

171-4121 o .... lngo.

87 FORD 2 WD, 1f2 TON

1111 utl!ltJ Wotlft

Clean.

86 FORD 2 WD, 1f2 TON

lor

Low mileage, one owner.

88 GMC 2 WD, 1/t TON
V-8. auto., 2 WD.

.: , 80 CHEVY 112 TON

Auto .. 6 cyl ., short bed ..

•

CARS FOR SALE
84 CHEVY MONTE CARLO
clean, ona owner.

'

:smith's GMC Truck Center

US!! Slop by and see yrursetf just how ·
.much the owner has done to make this house the besl buy on
the market. There's a brand new beautiful cherry kitchen,
new carpet and floors throughout along wrth very attractive
decor. New roof. new sidin&amp; new cenlral air condrtiooin&amp;
new deck and landscapin&amp; new bathroom fixtures and
much more. large family room with stone ftreplace. 3 bedrooms, 1\7 baths, living room and dining room, eat-in
kitchen. Quiet FAMILY ORIENTED neighborhood close to
town. PRICE REDUCED TO $68,000.
.
.
#200
DIRECTIONS: Rt. 14lto the firstthrpu&amp;h street to the
riaht (B1rkhllt lane), left on Willow Drive, lsi house on
the riaht. Follow SiiJIS.
·

....

._,._1

:

446-2532

..

NUO. CAN YOU lOVE RIGHT IN: Yes. lmmed. possessron on Ills IOwely bl·
level. Ow11er has move out ol tOYI n, wa nl s a QUICk sale You have got to see •n·

Ona owner. loaded.

. . 82 ·CHEVY 3f4 TON .

COIIERCIAL
24x44 showroom, attached
home &amp; basement. Income
57
Musical
apartment over 2 car garInstruments
age. River lrontage &amp; garden.
.
1 BundY C1o~nol 1125, 1 lUndY
FARM REOUCED $10,000
Fl1Mif25. Coii114·H2-173a of.
t•lp.m.
120 acres, · modern 4 BR
home. barn. beautilul rotting
Individual
guftu louono,
begin..... ........ g .. loriol.
land wnh limber &amp; pines.
B-nlloo ...... .,~
Tob B., S.R. 775.
0117 Jolt W.llltlol' ....tnoctor,
GREEN TWP •.
.
114:4~. lml1oiloponlngo.
four bedroom home w/den.
58
Fruns &amp;
two car garage. 10 acr~
anCIIher \7 A. avail. TenVegetables
nessee owner anxious, make
, · offer.
Bundy Clorioiol - ...
1 ,coo=sd::.:·t2=1.:.:0.:..:1:.:_:11:..;4:.:41:..:31:.:D7:.:1.:...__
40ACRES
I •
four BR home, 1794 Ntoll.
AM Rubonlnlor Bolol Fr01on
Pldc ,...,r own 01reedy
B., barn, timber. fru~ trees.
plckocl. Toylorll Berry Potc~.
Ohio Twp. $25,500. Terms.

srde toapprecrate the beauty ;m d corwe n1ence I hrs home o11er s. 3 bedrooms.·
l.r . kit w/ range and relrr g. Lovely decK all ol this on l si level, famrly room
wrl~ woodburner to spendI hOse cozy wmter e~enmg$. 2 ca1ga1age. 21g. lots.
Don1t mtSs oul on a bar gam. Crty Schools.

···""':_DRIVE
UKUIIII
IN TH
. 6 rooms, 2'h baths, approx. 2 years old, ceramic tile
bathrooms an d kitchen. All other area IS carpeted .
24'&gt;40' new garage w1th three overhead doors, elecpump, bay window in dining area, front wrap-aporch wtthaview, \\ basement. Close to alarge lake. A
home. Phone for an appointment now to see lhts
#678

11-:

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Phone 446-7699 or 446-9539

'

® CANADAY REALTY
446-3636
.
~~------~-----

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

AUDREY F. CANADAY. BROKER
HOliES FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

1144411014

.

652 2ND AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
..

.d water a drain

. .......It;!~

751 orl14-441-7104.

446-0001

SBJ-1¥'11:/0S

Home
Improvements

Reel Eltllte General

1eae Dodge Arftl, 4dr, Ice Blue,
outo ~1~ cllllh llilorlar, U911-

ancho

A1NI~A

~1100

Plumbing &amp;

linN, 114-448~151.

..

113.!/IIM

W. Davlton

ml.

3liANJ
ll38mlN
;JN/,/30

81

BASEMENT
W.\TERPROOFING

to,06o mllll 12SIMI. 11~ . ·
.
' '
good condMion, Dllcod ., 1ft. 8143oklp.m.
·1111J
Chryloltr
Fifth
Avonue.
Ex-,
::
21 fool F...,klln Trovol
Tiollor, 81100. 114-441o7141.
tro olllrp. 62,000 mUolo.IIW7t- ' ·
2721.
'
1871 -ong II, good wort&lt; aor, lilt 11oc1go Amnl, out-tlo •
uso. aoo • 011 1111 lnDm
olr 43,GGO mlloo, f250CIIIW7tbird IllS; 111711 Chtv.

·

Home
Improvements

condlllon a1111. 111711 Thun-

1111 Bulok Sllylort V-1 ongl..,
Ac;. lronl WIIMI dri".!, _!!,~0.
1018 Otda 1300. 304-1111-•r.so.
11111 DoclcHo . Chorp sa,ooo
mlloe 114-211·1213. ·

Today, 1-3 p.m:

.

-

iMJJ.Nr.JNIN~

,."3AI.lN3::lNI N't' II 1110 BM '8Q!J9
't' PBIIBO SBM 11 Aeo s,ewpu&amp;JE)
Ul "91\!IUB~UI eg ISnl'j 8M IUI!M
1M IB4M DO SP!)f 84.1 I~BN 0.1.,
:SO!IJO S,Ul!!O!JIB!ped U! U61S 91n:)

Home
Improvements

Experienced drywall h.lnglng
and tlnlllhing also repair worK.
304-47a-1451.

Unconditional llletimt gUirantN. Local r.lerenc• tuml &amp;hlld.
Fr11 HIIMIIII. Call collect 1·
614-237~88, day or night. R q

boll on.r. 114-441-11111.

7157

.... """'· -

- . hlfohM po"o • .oriN. 11t ui 102 Moft.alt.
Hoo¥J Milo! collie "'"""
a...,
lrUCk. 114-742-2711.

81

..

11110 Corvotto, block. outomollo,
1 owner, tow mlleqe. uoelt.nt
condHion. $11,1011. ~~ -

Ev- Motoow, 1131 Eoll..,
Avo. Now UOitora In llocll 13)
lxll 11M _..._ llr11 Q.N.,
7x11 O.N. 7x11 G.N. 7o11' G.N.
olumlnum, 241 G.N.I'Iolboo!l, 11'
• 1r aor ........ ld UIIIIIJ

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Serv1ces

auto, 4 cyJI~r, Pl. Pl. 1"• :
lt7t Mercury, no iuot, good u'"
oruiH, AMII'II - - · II"" ··.
lhoclcl. Mnda, bnl~ ""·

273-3078.

Complete tho chuckle quoted
V by filling In the missing words
• you develop from step No. 3 below.

79

Motorcycles

1114 Fotd T-lrlrd, VI, lUll ln)oj&gt;- -.
loci, ..,_,_ ........ . . . _ &amp;o. oonol., rune - "

m1.

Lorge round bolos ol hoy, $15
uch. 814-448•1052.
·

no

74

73 Vans &amp; 4 WO's

, .., lhundolblnl. 111711 Choit- .

114-3794!171.
For Solo: Slmmotol 11- ·club

HorN OWnuo,
Wogon. IllS. 114-H2-30to.
Polnl PI,. 1o now COrfYing !lOck.
Point PLuo, 2411 Jockaon Avo., Strow lor alo. $1.11 bolo. 114o 1171
T"'- Y-1, new
-----~ pho
:JGoH75- 44f-4111 Evonlnao: · 114-441- u. . , neooloiH11o-"'- S22IIO or

I ft
.

looutltur AOHA noglotiCI m111, I
yro. Old. Coli 114-371-.2740 or

"" 64

ATTENTION

72 Trucks for Sale

I ransportat ton

0·7

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

1873 Prowler 25ft. tlrJ)ft, AC,
tlC.·ICOnd. 61~367·7530.

~~~~~~~~~~
!.!!.'t..-

uft, 14710. 100 -

Cutellgn ii't pedialrician'a ol·
floe: "To tMIIe The Kida Do Whlll
We Willi We Must Bt Inventive.
In Gl"lllllma's Day It Waa Called
A Bribe, We Call It - ~-"

·

·1 V E N I T J

1777.

Livestock

Com Eltvotor, llko I.:::"'.:I::.14;..::441::.:.:711C1=.2.--:--:-:--:-, __11211. 114-MI-.2102.
Pip lor ooslo. 10 wook old plgo,
1 yoorold boor. t14-446-72G7o~
61 Fann Equipment
83
Livestock
tor 4pm.
IQ31 C.• TII01or, '2 Pollod H...tord With Youn\loylng chlckono lor 1011.
IS.~"£11if, trootor wfth Ill , 11_ br - . 8710. polr, 304- puro ...., • boawn •ova. 114• 12,S5G; 1211 Dovld t75-421G:
2541-1413
-.
ol wfth Cob, t4.110;
::::::;:.:.:::..·- - - -·- -

T WI R R E

·

,_King Kuttor Plrlo.l14-446-

&amp; Lt•,r&gt;tcck

I' I I I

ENFIED

lmPiomM1oln lloolt. Po~o lroo-

t'omeroy-Mtddleport-Gallipolis,

24.1989

'

446-71!01
(CAll ANYTIME)
MEIGS COUNTY

I

0

mething close to town an~;dt ~~:r:f;~'~
Make an appoinlment lo see this 3
room home located approx. I \\ miles west
of Gallipolis on Rt. 588. Has maintenance
free sidmg mce saed rooms, and carport.
tocated on approx. I acre. Green Grade
School. Prtced at $37.500.

ROillllO ROAM- You will have plenty 01
space in this spacious llfick ranch wrth
over 2,000 square feet m/1 of living area.
Includes 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, dining
large lamily room, full basemen! wrth summer krtchen. gasH/wheat, 2car garage all
on·nearly .6 acre. Priced at $79,900. Call
for an appointment.

::.;~,r~~·kf~ii=~~~-~r~;w~h
colonial
~·
Executive

home
style
lamily room, formal dining room. Baseme.lt has rec. room
wrth stone lireplace. There"s an in-ground
pool. Many 1110re amen~ies. Asking
$155,900.
#104

*120
LIKE TO FISH &amp; HUNT?- You'll enjoy this
80 acre farm that includes 31arge ponds
fully stocked wrth bass, catlish, etc., approx. 50 acres of woods wrth abundant
wildlile. plus a 2 story 3 bedroom home
located on Hannan Trace Rd. in ~arrison
Tw p. priced at $52.000.

2128 CHATHAM AVE. - Just listed. This
3 bedroom home in Gallipolis.Includes basement, woodburner and 56'xl74' lot
Needs s.ome worl $21,500.
Ht 2l
GET STARTED FOR ONLY S'Uit- A3
.bedroom home near Rodney wrth hardwood floor~ electric forced air furnace
plus a level 75'xl20' yard. Call to see today.
MIU

•EW liSTING - Want to bealthe heal?
Take a look at this. Beautdul 20x40 Pool.
plus everythmg else to malle your su~mer
a nice one. 3 or 4 bedroom steel s1ded
ranch wrth 2 baths. fireplace and much
more for only $43.500.
10 ACRE BUILDI.G SITES - located
near Rio Grande. Land lays gently rollin&amp;
rural water available. $12.000 each1H24

.

ATTEIITION HUmRS!I - Approx.
114.95 acres wrth mineral . On Cherry
Ridge Road, Orange Tow••ship. Asijng
$23,000.
#107

l.OCATIOI,LOCATIO•• LOCATIO•- Just
listed 5 bu~ding ICIIs in Tara Estates. AI
IJtiiHies and Tara convenience are available. Call for details.
1110

,11M COC:HIAN, IIOICEI-446-7111 EYL
~lTOI....-446·2707

..

GENTlEMAN'S FARM - Elegant country .
hvmg on 13lacres m/1 wilh alovely cedar
4 bedroom home. Over 2,000 square feet
of living space includes 4 bedr00111$, fireplace, lormal dininp; equipped krtchen
and much more. land is live! to rolling and ·
includes a beautiful pond, a 2 car garage
and a barn. You wijl love H. Call for an appointment. $110,000.00.
Hl21

Nll2

SONNY GAINES.

APPROXIiiATELY 40 ACRES ON BAILEY
RUN RD.- Two bedroom homewitha full
basement and detached garage. Add~ional
septic and water lap for a mobile home.
Also includes a gas well wrth free gas and
sman royaHy. The price is $36.500 and includes a satelme dish.
Ill&amp;

EYL

Put your trust in Nutilber One:

new heal pump. Nir'' frnnl
deck. S1tuated on
Price. Reduced to

#103
FLEETWOOD IIOOUIAR HOllE- Approx.
8 yrs. old. In excellent condftion. large
spacious rooms. living room has ftreplace.
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, equipp'ld krtchen.
Situated on I acre in Chester area. NOW
ONLY S:U.iti(Reduced to $40.00~

105

105 ACRE FARM: Owner wtll sell w~h or
wHhout minerals. Co~temporary style
home w~h 4 bedrooms, attached 3car carport, detached 2 car garage. In-ground
pool. Call for more details.
1102

LISnNG: 2
home. localed along
garage, ni~e ICII. $45,000 Oil
NEW LISTING: 2 bedrm. house, wrth upslairs dorm. 1\7
baths, ·fully furnish.ed, newly remodeled, new carpet.'wrth
new range and refr.tg: Full basement. Near Tycoon Lake. Buy
now for $36.900.00.
NEW LISTING: I acre w~h older mobile home. county water,
no septic system, localed along Rt. 160, near North Gallia
school. Price: $18,000 or ~20,000. Call lor details.
'
CONVERTED MOBILE HOllE wrth large lamily room. 2 baths,
2 bedrms. nice view,wrthin the village of Vinton. $27,500.00.
PRICE REDIJCED ON 3-BEDRII. HOllE w~h I \7 acres
located wnhin Vinton Village. Was $25,000.00. Now:
$22.500.00!!
UNIQUE 2-STORY - 3-4 bedrooms. Conveniently located
along 3rd Ave. $32.000.00.
NEW LISTJNG: 10 acres. Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
.for $10.000.00.
·
NEW liSTING: 6.5 acres w~h 4-nn. house within lhe crty ol
Gallipolis. Buy now for $30,000.00.
·

..

2 11 3 BEDROOM HOllE on Beech St. ij1
Middleport. Newly remodeled Convenient
lo schools and stCJres. Selling price
$21,000.
Nl06

PAT (OC:IIIAN, IEAlTOR-446-1655 EVE.
CJRTL ..-JY, IEAlTOI-742-3171

WF NEE"D LIS fiNC~;

..,..

'·•..,
'. ,

.

;·

LOCATION: 554 JAY DRIVE. PARK lANE SUBDIVISION .
LIST PRICE: $45.000
AGE: BUILT 1973
LIVING AREA: 960 SQ. n.
PLUS ONE CAR GARAGE
TAXES: $177.96 HALF YEAR
LOT SIZE: 92"X150'X92'X137'

PROPERlY IN PORTER- Grocery"store, 3 bedrm. home, 5
bedrm. home. Call for more information.
DOWNTOW• INVEniiENT PROPERlY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartments. Also, adjacent metal sloragelutilny
~~::.1\oss rental income, $820.00 per ~o All pr~ lor

LOcated along Frank Rd. $18.900.00.

3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR lYCOOII lAKE (50'xli5'1. Can
pun:hase on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% Interest. pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs.
·
5.6 ACRES localed belclw GaiHpolis Dam. along Hazel Ridae
Rd. $4.900. (Can pureltase on land contract.) $1,500.00
down, 10~ ipllrest, pay' $100.00 ~er ,month.
CONOOIIINIUII LIVINIAT ITS lEST: Centrally loclted near
J'DC81Y stores, churches etc. 2 bedrms . 2bllhs.all electric,
hell pump, AC, insulatiil, dishwuher. disposal, carport and
Ill the camlorts of home. 1,012 sq. ft. for $&amp;9,000.00.
$45.00 mo. mainenance fee includes watet. Call for tour.
·1.02 ACRE LOT aloniKUcker Rd. near Cent111ary, $8.000.00.
HOUSE: Third Ave. $45.000.00.
ESTATE IS IIIIIISIIUS.••CALL AI
~TY

IALIJPEitll.

.... II lSPECIALlV FOR YOU. Compare clean br i~k &amp; Ira me ran ch r"s''21
4·
,.. ·
~
&amp;b th 1o ety~ 1 tch en ul~•tv rm &amp;extralg. x

l!~,;d ~~~~w~~~i~: flre~lac'e ~d calh cetlmg. Pool IS'~)~~· o~t ~~~~
bu•lingCosts have nsen and it woold be ImPOSSible to dupllca e 15 o
tH'e ort e. $~9 .900.

.,.

·.

.:

.

NlW ON
QUALITY 8U Ill STRONG HOME. BENJTIFULLY FINISHED INTERIOR, NEW CARPETING WITH COOR·
DINATEO DRAPES AND WALL COVERING, FAMILY ROOM.
OINING AREA. OPENS ONTO BREAKFAST PORCH , STONE Fl·
REPLACE KITCHEN EQUIPPEO WITH RANGE. REFRIG. ANO
. DISHWASHER. CARPORT. ALSO HAS A COZY GARAGE APT
VERY NICE RENTAL OR GUEST HOUSE. EXCELLENT BUY AT
$85,000.

...·-

NEW ON THE MARKET! APPROX 13 ACRES, LOCATED ON
GEORGE'S CREEK ROAO . 2 BEDROOM RANCH HOME HAS
LARGE LIVING ROOM KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE
ANO REFR IG. 2 WALK 'IN CLOSETS. JOHN DEERE TRACTOR
WITH EQUIPMENT ALSO INCLUDED. $49,000.

..

tCIS WO:ARORY Of MODERN DESIGN. Stucco Dome L1kesometh mgd1t1er·
1 a0d e~c 1 h n g - come and Sff! thiS home 2 or 3 bedrooms. !'~ baths.
k:\ chen. u1i 1ty room. 1\vme roo m, scr,eened tn !)Otch and open PO!Ch Fne·

· place m center of hOme, locate d on 11 mil acre
LOAN ASSUMPTION: This homeoltl!fSJ bedr ooms I bath, u l dtl ~ room. k1t .
and LR hmlly room. ThtS home IS situated on 6 ar m/ 1 Call lor locatmn tod.Jy

t'

.-,.

IN CITY- If YOU HAVE A FAMILY THAT NEEDS SPACE.
LOOK AT THIS! 3 BEOROOMS, LIVING ROOM, KITCHEN, FAM·
ILY ROOM AND BATH ON MAIN LEVELLDWER LEVEL HAS
LARGE RECREATION ROOM OPENING ONTO SCREENEO
BACK PORCH BATH UTILITY ROOMS. WITHIN WALKING
DISTANCE OF SCHOOLS, DOWNTOWN. A BRGAIN AT
$48,00D.

2 LOTS WITHIN BREEN.ACRES SID. One is 84'xl481, the
other 75'.d48'. Purchase dhetlor $5.500.00.

- .
21.5 ACRES. NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures ..

SUPER LOCATION JUST Off RT. 35. NEAR SHOPPING,
HOllER HOSPITAL. 3 BEOROOM RANCH HOME HAS NICE
KITCHEN WITH AMPLE OINING AREA, RANGE. REFRIG ..
WASHER AND DRYER. DISHWASHER, CEN . AIR CONO , GAS
FURNACE. GAS BUDGET $43.50. LAWN MOS.TLY LEVEL.
OUTSTANOING BUY FOR THIS AREA.

,.

liB.ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP•• Graham School Rd
·Super Vi!w' $44.000.00.
·

MASONRY BLDG. Commercial localion. 2 story, along 3rd
Ave., Gallipolis.
.
- -·
.
75'x120' BUILDI•G LOT IN ROONEY II SO: Recllced lrom
$5,000.00 to $3,500.00.
. ·
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in RodneY V~lage II and Mills
Village. Call for 1110r@ information.
SECOND STREET - This 3 bedroom home has beautiful hardwood floors
throughout large 90x 120 lot Convenient'
to stores and shoppinp; $37.500. #109 ,
APPROJ. 3 ACRES more or less w~h I!+
story lrame home. New interior. Mobile
home s~e also. located on Ross Rd. Asking $25,000.
1100

i·-.

•

•'
•'

..
....••

*444 S!Cl~D!~ SI'!CIIIL- $49.900.1111-4 bedrooms, 21ull ball» lR
w/ wOodDurnet country kitchen, 4 ac m/1. Extra large 2 car ilta~~· land
fenced !of the' horse lovers. 2 rural water laps lor mobtle homes. T IS ver~

.·

mviting country home could be all yours,
.
d .
Mlt PRICED fOI (lliiCK SALE-Vinton r~nch, 2 bedrms . hw mgrm., mtng
rm and kitchen. bath. Owner has don e' muth work. Good sldtng and cement

,•' •

siLl 'oome plu sa4·car garaae. 28'x 40' Mother wllllove INs exua lg country
kite~ with wood cabinets and pantry.Comtorta~e LR w/ woodburner space.
1'r'J baths, screened patio. Gareae has 220 etectrJC, heal and water . S44.900.

back porch, e~rport. barn and 2 lots .

11420 BUSIN!SS OPPOIITUNITY - HOI! WITH AFUTU.IIt: - Veri large 2

•

....
FURNACE, CENAREA PLUS AT·
.
LOT. KITCHEN APPLIANCES
PRETTY, WELL MAINTAINEO
FAIII- MOOERN 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGE
.~::~ILL~ KITCHEN ANO LIVING ROOM, OEN, 1,316 Sli. FT.
AREA 2 CAR CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE. OVtR 9
MOSTLY PASTURE. KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS.

,..• .
:;
...
'I

o•

THIS HOlliE SAYS "COllE
1•• ·-·THE liVING IS EASY!
BRICK RANCH WITH 3 BEDROOMS, 21+ B~THS. FAMILY RM.
WITH FIREPLACE. FABULOUS KITCHEN IS THE BEST
E8UIPPEO WE HAVE SEEN. FORMAL DINING. SCREENED IN
p RCH 2 CAR ATT~CHED GARAGE, 1 CAR DETACHED
GARAGE PLUS P~RKING PORT FOR BOAT OR CAMPER.
BUILDER ·WHO BUILT THIS SUPER QUALITY HOME EVEN
PUT ACONCRETE FLOOR IN THE CRAWL SPACE. IN-GROUND
POOL CENTRAL AIR CONO. IF YOU
LOOKING FQ~ . A
REALLY NICE HOME OON'T MISS
THIS ONE!

~

..

,...

says
Make lfl
i435. LOCAit011 IEAIIS ALOT! One o!Cal1ia County's best su:Jvis10ns, all lo·
ve~ homes. This 2 stort colonial oou ld be your ne•t hometo eni(Jy lor ever.
H15 2lh baths, lotffllll entfy. f .di01ng lam • ~ roo mw.th cozy l•replace. 217 car
M1gM be just what you have been lOOking lor. I ac. m/ l 1n

!417. ct.OS! TO SOUlHw!Sl!ll SCMOOI.- 3 bedrms., 2 baths. k!then,

dmmg room, ut11ily roo m, carpets, elec, turnac~. relrlgerator. rante.
d 1shwas~er. 30K40 page, wood pat10 and deck plus sw•mmmg pool.

....
..••
..
::...

"

�fl-ae-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 24, 1989

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

October is best
Small business research funds available
time .· to plant ·tulips

helps the state's small techno!- ·
POMEROY - Gov. Richard F . lty 'tor Ohio's small technology· Included In the defense depart·
ogy
companies apply for federal
Celeste announces that Ohio's -oriented businesses to become ment's annual SBIR solicitation,
SBIR
awards. Ohio's SBJRProSmall Business Innovation Re- Involved In federal research, ·• which was released earlier this
gram
counsels
companies on the
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP! ) -Whether you plant new or
search (SBIRI Program Is offer· Gov. Celeste said. "With the month. The solicitation book
SJi!IR
proeess,
project
IdentificaAlthough September Is an excel· divided bulbs. ml.x a bulb tertii· . lng small Ohio companies to assistance available through describes each of the SBIR
tion
and
design,
and
proposal
lent time to plant most spring· lzer or bone meal Into the soli
compete for a shareof$60mlltlon Ohio's SBIR Program, more research topics, provides com·
Assistwrtting.
Five
Technical
flowering bulbs, Ohio State Uni- below the bulbs. Those products
available from the u. s. Depart- companies have a chance to win panies with procedures for sub·
ance
c
..
nters
have
been
estabversity horticulturist Barbara contain the right amount of
mlttlng proposals and Identifies
funding."
ment of Defense (DOD I.
Williams says October Is the best phosphorous that the bulbs need
The federal SBIR awards wlll resources to contact for more 'ushed around th" state to provide
Approximately 1,200 awards of
area companies with direct,
time to plant tulips.
at planting time. Follow the
up to$50,000wlllbemade by DOD support feasibility research lor lrtformatlon. Requests for the
personal assistance In sul.lmlt"All sprlng·flowerlng bulbs package ·dtrectlons carefully.
to U.S. firms with 500 employees specific topics Identified by the Deparment of Defense SBIR tlng federal SBIR proposals.
sl!ould be In the ground by the end
-Plant bulbs in areas with! or less. The agency will accept Department of Defense. Success· Solicitation may be directed to
The federal .SBIR Program
of October." Williams said. good drainage that recel·ve at
SBIR proposals through Jan. 5, lui research projects may later Ohio's SBIR Program.
was
created In · 1982 to provlqe
"That's because they need time least six hours of sun daily .
The range of topics available
qualify for up to $500,00(1 from
1990.
small
firms with funding for
to get their roots established. Waterlogged bulbs wlll rot.
"This round of SBIR awards DOD for prototype development. from the .Department of Defense research and developmeni proGood fall growth ensures bulbs
-Bulbs should be in an upOght
from the Department of Defense
·More than 800 topics are covers most technology fields, lee .
Department of DeIncluding materials, artificial
take. up nutrients In the spring. It position when planted. Don't
provides an excellent opportun·
fen
e
Is
on
of
11 federal agencies
also helps them flower well and press them into hard soli. This
Intelligence, specialized devices
In the SBlR
p
tlclpatlng
reproduce.··
can damage their rooting ability.
and equipment, films. sensors.
'
rogram.
To keep flowering, tulips have Plant them in groups or clumps
textiles, communications, elec·
Ohio small businesses with
Ironies, automotive. lasers, ceto form new bulbs in the ground at the proper depth and at the
questions
concernln15 the SBIR
every year, Wllllams says. recommended distances. Usu·
ramics, software development;
Program
andor
the Department
Ohio's climate does not favor this ally, smaller bulbs are planted
chemistry, medical, nuclear
of
Defense
SBIR
sollcltiatlon.
are
type of growth, so tulips don't two to four Inches deep while
energy and nondestructive
encouraged
to
contact
Mark
·
spn1ad In the garden. she says. larger bulbs are planted 6 to 8
testing.
use
It
as
a
modi!!
for
free
trade
In
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UPI)
manager,
Ohio's
SBIR
Skinner,
And each year, their flowers gei inches deep:
Created · In 1988 by Gov . CeRapidly expanding Asian econo· ·other res trlcted economies."
-Select solid, large bulbs. Soft
leste, Ohio'~ SBIR Program Program, (614) 466-5867.
smaller.
That means setting the right
mles are an opportunity for U.S.
But narcissus, which includes bulbs or lightweight ones are
trade
agreements, producl~
farmers
and
food
processors
to
daffodils. will spread in the usually diseased. Avoid bults
products
Asians want and prom·
sell
more
of
their
products,
and
garden.
with blue or green mold spots.
.oting
those.
commodlti(!S. Some
an
conference
sponsored
by
Ohio
"Narcissus spread from their · Mold can damage or destroy
firms
have
already succeeded
·
State
University's
Department
original bulbs and can colonize bulbs-.
·
others
can
learn from that
and
of
Agricultural
Economics
and
an area In a few years," Williams
-If you have to store bulbs
success,
Tweeten
says.
Sociology
Is
designed
to
E.ural
says. "Plan to avoid garden before planting, keep them In a
The
cortference,
"Realizing
help spur such exports.
overcrowding when . you plant cool, dry place until planting
Economist Luther Tweeten Opportunities for Farm and Food
narcissus. Count on separating time.
says
Americans can crack these Product Exports to the Pacific
your narcissus every four years
-Consider choosing bulbs
markets
by marketing spe- Rim" will be held Oct. 24-25at the
new
and planting some of them in other than tulips, daffodils and
cifically
to
the
Asian countries. Ramada University Hotel on .
other areas."
hyacinths. Spring·flowering
But
before
such
a
marketing plan Olen tangy River Road In ColumIt's easiest to separate over- bulbs that also produce colorful
c·a n have any effect, there has to bus. For more lrtformatton, con'
.crowded daffodil bulbs in spring flowers in unique shapes Include
be free trade between the Far tact Tweeten at 614·292·6335.
after their foliage turns yellow . allium, anemone, chionodoxa,
East
and the United .States.
The Asian trade conference
Dig them up, dry them out and crocus, eranthis, fritlllarla, ga·
Includes
s!Jeakers from Industry.
"There's opportunity ahead,"
replant them In fall, Williams ian thu s , iris , leucojum, ornlthog·
government
and academia. Top- .
Tweeten says. "Asian countries
says.
alum, oxalis, ranunculus and
are growing rapidly and want to lcs include export promotion.
She offers these tips on plant· squill.
continue using the United States product dltferentlatlon and the
lng anil selecting bulbs:
outlook for trade.
as a market for their goods.
Representatives from several
"At the same time they're
trying to Increase their Individ- Asian countries will present
ual standards of living and that information on reaching their
means they want more of our markets. Daniel Amstutz, chief
agricultural products. If we play agricultural trade negotiator
our cards right, we can open the under President Reagan will
Asian market even further and address the group.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A feeders and waterers- all make
swine specialist says farmers a difference in the stress a pig
concerned about feeding . and . gets each day.
Healthier, happier pigs should
genetics In raising pigs often
overlook another key factor, the reach market weight faster and
more efficiently. And that means
pig's environment.
¥" 10 S.E.E.R. EFFICIENCY
The 510HP is Heil's mo&lt;i nuv&lt;erful, mo&lt;t
agrlculture·related displays and
less
production cost.
"'fhe environment your pigs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) II"
GREATER
ENERGY
SAVINGS
~fficient heat pump. Buy one now andwe'll
Some of Ohio Stale's work on Americans' love affair with demonstrations held at Ohio
live in. is just as important a
- ··· · -·-mcludc the Homeowners Extended Lahor
stress on hogs
environmental
management Issue as nutrition
quick-stop meals shows no sign of State's Mqlly Caren Agricultural
¥" COMFORT ASSURED
andPartsprogram(H.E.L.I~)',anu-"''rTY.5
or genetics, yet it's often ig- . will be reviewed at Swine Tech- dying. A recent national survey Center near London.
DEALER
year protection plan that covers labm ;md
"Specific nutritional informa·
p;.1rt" ~.:ha~cs on &lt;~II rcp;til":\.
nored," Jerry Shurson of Ohio nology Day, Sept. 8, at the showed that the average tee·
Western Branch of Ohio State's
State 'University says. "When
nager eats at least one dinner a lion Is available for most of the
Ohio Agrlculturai Research and week away from home- usually nation's fast foods," Coplin says.
"OnJyatl)lltk~tinQdulm.
~~-pyou think about environmental
"""""""''
m"" """""''
,:._,
•'But even If you can't have it In
Development Center near South at a fast·lood restaurant. .
problems for pigs you have to
II.E.L.P. contrxt.
front
of
you
when
you
order,
pay
Charleston.
consider the stress !hey can put
But burgers and fries aren't as
-As-k-us=a"'bc-o--u,-t""it!"',- - ••,.•.., •c""''"" """""""
"As university researchers, bad as they sound, says Sharron attention to controlling the
on the animal.
we're trying to do more to Coplin, nutritionist at Ohio State amount of fat, salt, sugar and
"We know stress can add up
understand how environmental University. Nutrition Is a matter total. calories in your meal."
and cause the pig to be Jess
factors influence pig comfort and of what you eat, not where.
Curious about how your favor·
healthy or not grow as well. So
performance
as
we
work
toward
lte
fast foods do nutritionally?
let's reduce that stress, let the
"We all want the advantages of
improving
management
practl·
·
Coplin
wql have copies oi infor·
pig grow more efficiently and
convenience, speed and bullt·ln
ces,"
Shurson
says.
"That
means
mation
from an Independent
Improve profits."
dishwasher service that we find
985-4222
CHESTER, OHIO
paying
attention
to a lot of things when we grab a quick bite to analysis of fast food at Farm
Shurson says pork producers
besides the bottom line. The-key eat," Coplin says. "The trick Is Science Review.
who pay attention to the little
Is to be able to recommend a learning to choose wisely on each
things that stress their pigs
production practice lhat makes and every trip to the local
benefit in the long run. Pen size
money and is good for the pig fast·food franchise."
and shape, temperature, the
too. "
number of pigs in a pen, types of
,.
Coplin has the recipe for
healthy fast-food eating .and
she'll tell all in the Horne
Economics Building at the 1989
Farm Science Review, Sept.
19-21. The Review is 1,000 acres of
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) -An likely to be caught in the squeeze, .
Ohio State University economist Tweelen says, and the governsays phasing out agriculture ment should carefully examine
price supports worldwide would the impact on these producers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP))
be good for the majority of the before taking away any support Forage shortages are likely to be
U.S. farm economy .
programs that help them.
a problem this fall and some beef
Luther Tweeten says such a
On the whole though, the
and dairy farmers will consider
move would open new markets to
benefits of an open economy
buying standing corn to cut as
American farmers.
outweigh the costs.
silage. Gary Schnltkey, agriculThe . 5 percent of American
As for the problem of getting tural economist at Ohio State
•'
farmers that produce 50 percent other countries to go along with Unillersity, says buyers and
of the country's output are such a move, Twceten says the sellers should set the price before
Geoigle~
...
efficient enough to compete in an United States could simply cut all harvest. In setting that price,
open world market . For the 50 its own supports and sell Its consider any value the grain
FORE~T
percent of the country's farmers products at till' "natural world farmer will lose by selling his
who produce only 5 percent of price. "
corn as silage rather than harv·
D Subtle woodgrain texture
U.S. farm output, lost income
Without supports, the United es tlng it later and selling the
from unsupported crop prices States would ·undersell most grain as well as the feed value of
D Fifty-year limited warranty •
wlil 'be made up through th e other nations and make it dlffi· that corn as silage. These two
off·farm jobs they typically hold cult for other countries to justify numbers give the range in which
D Virtually maintenance-free
anyway.
lhe cost of export subsidies to the two parties can negotiate the
Mid-sized producers are mos t their taxpayers.
actual price of the standing corn.

Conference looks
at Asian markets

Pig's environment
often overlOOked

Hell's Energy Efticient
510HP Beat Pump
Plus
Protection Until 1994

Amerkans should eat
right wi~h fast food

WARNER

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Economist says U.S. should
phase out fann price supports

Shortages likely

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

CHARLESTON, S.C. (UP!) Authorities said they would begin ·
searching Isolated localities
.Monday for more victims of
Hurricane Hugo. which devas·
tated a third of the state and
caused more than $2 billion In
damage.
Gov. Carroll Campbell said
Sunday there were areas that
officials still had not checked,
and addeQ that damage was
eJtpected to "far exceed" the $2
billion officials estimate Hugo
caused to buildings and homes In
Charleston County.
''We are stlll looking for
fam!Ues and people, Individuals
located In isolated areas." Camp.bell said. "They may be In
shelters. We just don't know."
The storm kllled 16 people In
the United States, 24 In the
Caribbean and left thousands
at EllS. Also pictured are Mise Rile hie's escort,
Mike Martin and Miss Murphy's escort, Tom
Morrisey.

EASTERN HOMECOMING QUEEN
CROWNED - Last year's Eastern Homecoming
Qu~en, J&amp;fne Ann Ritchie, crowaa the 1989 queen,
Amy Murphy, during Saturday night ceremonies

NEW YORK (UPI) ,- George stage for a superpower summit
Bush's apjieluarice Moilday at
In the spring or summer of 1990,
the United Nations, his first as and the two signed a "memoran·
president, provided a touch of dum of understanding" on chern·
~ nostal"'o for the man who
weapons ·as ~ a bilateral
..........
""--·=-"'' ....
----- ,. - . "' leal•··
•cy•.,sen=
the ,.,,~
aumlnlstratlon
agreement;
,
·
of . Richard Nixon at the world
Bush has expresse concern In
body. .
the past about the.value ot any
Bush, who · served as U.S.
ban that does not- Include all
ambassador from 19TI·73, ad·
nations.
dressedtheU.N.GeneraiAssemA senior U.S. official who
bly· Monday to "offer a new requested anonymity said the
Initiative . that wlll bring the summit probably Wlll require
world closer to a ban on chemical two more preparatory meetings.
weapons," said Secretary of between Baker and Shevard·
State James Baker.
nadze, the first In November or
Baker conducted successful January, probably In the Soviet
negotiations with Soviet Foreign Un Jon:
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
Bush promised a summit cov·
over the past tl)ree days in erlng."a wide array of subjects,"
Jackson Hole, Wyo., setting the but placed particular focus on

'f

Phone 675-1160
vaney Drlw. Point Plt-nt. w.va. 25550
...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-.~ r ._3_1_2_6_th_S_t_re_e_t_ _ _-,-_______P_o_ln_t_P_Ie_a_sa_n.;.::t,:...:WV:.::..:.-.r ~
}:-

1 Section. 10 Pagos
A

26 C.nti

Muhimodio Inc. Newopopor

rebuilding efforts and offers of
aid pouring in to City Hall.
He said all 500,000 residents ot
the Charleston metropolitan
area were otlll without power and
300,000 served by the water
system could not be certain their
drinking water was safe.
'"!'he pressure Is acceptable,
but when you shut down a water
system you run the risk of the
water being contaminated," he
said. "We don't think It was
contaminated, but If It was It
would be a terrtble thing."
Riley said the city was testing
the water and should know by
noon Monday If people can
resume drinking tap water. He
said sanitation pickups, halted
since Hugo struck. would resume
Monday.
''There are no health probelms
associated with (the accumulat,
lng garbage) .yet," he·said, "but
we are not going to let It around
any longer."
The mayor had no estimate on
how long electrtclty would be out
In the 300-year·okl city and
surrounding area.
"This Is a Herculean task, and
getting power back Is our top
priority," he said. "Hospitals are
our first priority and then main·
talning the water and sewer .
system. High on that priority list
are obviously grocery stores and
gas stations."
. R)Jey S&amp;.!d.the CltyCO\Inell also
adopted an ordinance In the
emergency session Saturday
night that outlaws ·prlce-go~jglng
after a few gas stations there
began charging up to $5 a gallon,
and some people were peddling
lee, water, tools, propane, batter· ·
Conilnued on page 10

"Foul play Is suspected" In ihe death of three people found
dead Ibis morning at a Kanauga home, according to GaiDa
County Prosecutor Brent A. Saunders.
·
The victims were Identified as Marvin Wears, 94, Beulah
prospects for rpovement In anns
· Wears, 81, both of 41Ji Foul:th Ave., Kanauga and Audrey Foster,
conlrill.
. ·
·
·
50, of Millon, W.Va. Foster Is the daughter of Mrs. Wears.
Bush told repo_rters ·~unday
The Gallla CounQ- Sherlfr s Department received the Initial
that) he had ''added a couple
c811
to t.l l .f9Jirill j\ve., .this momiDg, tel~g- them of .three
tiling$" to his U.N. apeecl\ to · •
people
s•pectecl dead at that address.
reflj!f.t the advances made dur·
At
the
sceae were Saunders, assistant prosecutor Mark
lng • the talks In Wyoming beSheets,
prosecutor's
Investigator Mike Fenderbosch, Shj!rlff
tween Baker and Shevardnadze.
Denis
R.
Salisbury,
Chief Deputy Carlos Wood and several
II) his · speech, Bush also
other sheriff's deputies.
·
tOU\!hed on regional corifllcts,
The
Bureau
of
Crbnlnal
lnvesdgallon
was
aodfled,
aild at
particularly the continuing tur·
press
time
local
officials
awaited
lbe
BCI's
arrival.
mqllln the Middle East slrtce the
U-~· has . stepped back from
promoting any peace Initiative In
that area while encouraging
E~ptian President Hos_
ni- Mu·
barak. to pursue his 10·polnt plan
for bringing about elections in
Kroger lost more than . $17
nok~ said Kroger had offered a
ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) th~ occupied West Bank and
million In the first half of this
raise
of
5
cents
per
hour
per
year
About
2,600
Kroger
grocery
store
Gaza strtp.
year as it tried to recover from a
for the next lour years.
employees who voted to strike at
'
j
dividend
paid to stockholders to
The union said employees gave
midnight Sunday night will be
hold
off
a
takeover attempt last
up $1 per hour three years ago
considering a proposed contract
·
When the company said It needed year.
settlement Monday afternoon.
The strike affects 39 stores, but
Kroger spokeswoman Joann concessions, and they have gotBoone said company officials ten back only 62 cents per hour Boone sa'ld all siores are opera!·
lng_normally.
since then.
and the United Food and Corn·
mercia!
Workers
met
In
emer·
'
gency sessions throughout the
ensure his election as president.
night and came up with a
1The book details how Presser's
proposed contract early Monday
f~ther, Wllllam, working through
morning .
tljen Teamsters president Frank
Workers In Western VIrginia,
F;itzslmmons, got then President
Tennessee
and West VIrginia are
~!chard Nixon's White House
scheduled
to
vote on the proposed
a;de Charles Colson to place
contract Monday· evening.
~~:~~so! .~~!:::f!~t~f.~nents on
BoOne said the Cincinnati com·
I Fitzsimmons also was able, the
book says, to get the Nixon . pany understands union leaders
~dminlstratlon's cooperation In will recommend. acceptance of
c,rlppllng former Teamster Pres- the contract. The union was not
Ident Jimmy Hoffa's attempt to Immediately available for
return to power after his release comment.
Union officials said Sunday the
r'rom prison.
strike
was approved because
J Hoffa. who had been sentenced
salary
offers by the company
tl:l prison for a jury·tamperlng
were
unacceptable.
UniOn local
~nvlctlon, had expected Fltz·
president Gene Moser In Roa·
simmons to be merely a care·
taker until the prison term
l!xplred, to be content with being
acting president until Hoffa
could return. But, the book said,_
Fitzsimmons had different Ideas
and enlisted the Nixon admlnls·
!ration - through Colson - to
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
help.
problem developed Saturday
, When Hoffa was paroled, a night during the spinning lor the
'condition set by the Justice Kicker game during the Ohio
'Department said he could not Lottery drawings, prompting lot·
hold union office for seven years. tery officials to can for a decision
Hoffa later disappeared and, from the game's director Ron
according to several reports, was Nabakowskl.
murdered .by mobsters.
The lottery drawing host had
The book, "Mobbed Up: Jackie hit the Ieverson top of the Kicker
machine to reveal the six
1 Pres!M!r's Hlgh·Wlre Life In the
Teamsters, the Mafia and the numbers, l.lut the first number
. FBI," -was written by James stopped In between the numbers .
5 and 6. The oilier five numbers
1 Neff, a former reporter for The
Plain Dealer and now a seniOr came up an right - 34515.
editor at Cleveland magazine.
· The machine resembles an
Neff's book said the Teams· automObile's odometer and Is
ters'lnfluencelntheNixonWhlte deslped to stop on a number,
r House was so pervastve that In ,aid ·1ot~ry spokeswoman Anne
1973 Attorney General Richard Bloomberg.
CONCENmATION OFJI' - 'l'hllllUie felltw could have gotten .
Kleindienst refuaed an FBI re"In the event of a malfunction·
bywl&amp;ballltleleubelpfr-welkn-lqfrlendauhetriedtoaet
quest for a 20-day extension on a lng of the Kicker machine during
up bll patt at Ward~~¥'• Harwn IIW&amp;Ival Ia Raelae. Hlllluddl•
wiretap that was threatening to practices, we are to utilize one of
Jut wOIIIda't Ita)' out of Ule WI!¥, wlllcll IDterrupted hll
expose Fitzsimmons' complk:lty the · Plck·3 or Plck-4 ping· pong
coiiCeatratlon. The puttllllll'eell pme wu fiiiOIIIOrell by Sou them
in a .Mafla klckba_ck scheme.
biQ1Wer rnllchlnes," Bloorilberg
Local School Dlltrld's c-r Committee.
Continued on page 10
said.
·

Kroger strike _may be short

Book says Presser used lfBI
to eliminate rivals within!Teamsters
'

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A new
book about Jackie Presser says
the late Teamsters union presl·

dent used his position as .an FBI
Informer to eliminate rivals
within the union's hierarchy and

,....-Local News Briefs,-t
No one· injured in accident
No one was Injured and there were no citations as the result of
.
an accident on the Pizza Hut parking lot.
~omeroy pollee reported that Charlotte Stewart, Pomeroy R.
D .. was parked along the slde walk In front of the entrance when
a car driven by Mary Lavender, Middleport, backed from a
parking space into the left rear of the Stewart car. Tbere was
minor damage to both vehicles.

.

Randall Denney and Crace were treated and released for
cuti and Adam Denney and Rhodes were treated and. released
for bruises.
, Contlflued on page 10

.

,,.
'

•

homeless,
Charleston's mayor appealed
for help Sunday In cleaning up
anq rebuilding the historic city,
which was without electrtclty,
drinking water or h9mes for
more than 75,000 people.
·''This Is a grand opportunity
for members of this community
and the rest of the country to help
those less fortunate," said Mayor
Joseph Riley, standing at the
roofless Oty Hall.
"Our goal was when the
hurricane hit to do the best job
any city ever did ln,preparlng Its
people," he said, "And now our
goal is to do thebestjob any city
ever did In recovering from lt."
Riley said City Council
members in an emergen.cy session formed a new governmental .
agency called the Department of'
Volunteer Labor to coordinate

Foul play is suspected
in death of 3 people

Bush visits United Nations

.

Hours: Monday-Frtday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon

•

Pomeroy1 Middleport, Ohio. Monday, September 26. 1989

Search continues for
.fatalities after Hugo

Center.

J1r. family of professionals

,..

.

Vol.40, No.98

Copyrighted 1988

Four Gallla County residents were -Injured In a two-car crash
Saturday at 10:05 p.m. on S.R. 7 at Eastern High School,
according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
. Injured were the driver, Randall A. Denney, 18, Rt. 1, .
Bidwell; Allam L. Denney, 13, Rt.1, Bidwell; Matihew Rhodes,
13, Rt. 1; Gallipolis; and Christopher J. ·Crace, 13, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, Randall alld Adam Denney were tak"' to Pleasant
Valley .HospltaLby the Meigs County EMS. and Rhodes-and ~
Crace were transported by the Meigs EMS to Holzer Medical

...

Low tonight In mid 50s.
Chance of rain 70 percl!nt.
Tuesday, high In mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

•

Four hurt in Saturday acciflent

Colors Available At Higher Price

(304) 675-5220

Page 3

Two accidents were Investigated over the weekend by
Middleport Pollee.
·
·
At 11:19 Friday evening . Mary Lang, Middleport, traveling
north on a Moped on North Second Ave.., Middleport, lost control
of the vehicle and It overturned, Middleport pollee reported.
She was taken by the Middleport unit of the EMS to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment. Lang was cited for failure to
control.
.
Sunday at 4:20 p.m. a car driven by Jeffrey P. Hood,
Middleport, was struck by the vehicle of Larry R. Rutter,
Pomeroy, as he pulled from a parking place on North Secoild
·
·
Ave. ·
Middleport Pollee reported that there was damage to the
right door and front of the Hood car. Rutter was cited for failure
to yield and DWI. There were no Injuries. ·
.

Double 4
or
Double 5

Adolescent Medicine

Pick·3
None
Pick-4
None
Super Lotto
None
Kicker None

Middleport police probe mishaps

$39.95 sq.

Infant, Children

Ohio Lottery

49ers, Bills
rally to win
NFL .contests

Lottery has
Kicker malfunction

..

...

'

'

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