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~pecial

services slated

: Pastor Mike Pan&amp;~o Invites the
public to special services with
Evangelist Billy Jo Grandstaff.
The services will he held at
ltejolclng U(e Church at 333
~orth Second Ave. , Middleport.
The services are scheduled for
lonlght (Friday) at 7 p.m.,
Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at
tO a.m.
Grandstaff has pioneered and

pas tored two churches In the U.S.
and has also ministered over·
seas. He resigned after a seven·
year tenure as pastor of Tri·City
Church of God, Fairmont, W.Va.,
In 1985, to become State Evange.
list for the Church of God In West
VIrginia. He resl&amp;ned that post·
tlon In 1988 to minister nationally
and a broad. Grandstaff Is a
camp m"'tlng speaker and U.
authored many books.

friendship meeting held
The Friendship meeting of Mary Moose, conductor; Opal
Dis trlct 13, Daughters of Amer· HoDon. treasurer; Betty Wolfe,
lea, was held recently at the Belle junior past councilor; Betty
· Biggs, inside sentinel; Betty
Prairie Council In Belpre.
: A potluck supper was held at 6 Spencer, outside sentinel; Erma
p.m. with Esther Harden, dis· Cleland, one year trustee. Helen
trlct deputy, asking the blessing. Wolf was pianist for the meeting.
A special thank you note was
There were 30 members present
read from Jeanette Blackahire,
and two candidates.
· Betty Wolfe, district councilor. associate state vice councilor.
. Percy council, presided at the The district deputies and pait
business meeting.
councilor's club Christmas
• Dorothy · Ritchie, secretary dtwr will be held Dec. 2 at 1:30
· protein. read the minutes of the p.m. at the WeStern Slzzlln Steak
House in Athens. A $3 gift
last district meeting.
exchange
will be held.
' Initiation was held for two
Prize
winners
were Mary
candidates for Perry Council In
Donna
Davis,
Syracuse,
$100;
New ~xlngton.
Maurice
Smith,
Syracuse,
$50:
New officers were installed by
Eliza
betb
Hayes.
Chester.
35mrn
)\'Irs. Harden. district· deputy:
Eileen Clark. councilor; Jo Ann camera outfit.
There were members ·present
Baum. vice. councilor; Thelma
from
the councils of Gu ldlng
White, associate vice councilor;
Star,
Perry,
Chester, and Belle
'faye Kirkhart, associate counci·
Prairie.
lor; Doris Grueser, . warden;

Erma Cleland, council deputy,
spoke briefly about the frle11d·
~hip meeting held recent!~ at

Chester church gets minister

Belle Prairie Council In Belpre.
The ways and means commit·
tee will hold a silent auction at
the Nov. 21 meeting.
At the close of the meeting, .
Mrs. Clet•nd read a poem, "The
Falling Lear' and a game was
conducted by tbe members.
Kathryn Baum served as pianist
for the meeting.
A!tending were Mae McPeek,
Lora Damewood, Faye Kirkhart,
Sadie Trussell, Betty Young,
Beulah Maxey, Mary K. Holter,
Betty Roush, Kathryn Ba11m,
Goldie Frederick, Alta Ballard,
Erma Cleland, Ethel Orr, Eliza·
beth Hayes, and Ada Bissell.

'·

Sunday

•

The Chester Church of God Is
announcing the appointment of a
new minister, Gary and Deanna
Hines.
Pas lOr and Mrs. Hines come to
the Chester Church of God from
St. John's Church of God In
Quaker City. They also had a
mtulon church In Caldwell.
On Sunday at 1: 30 p.m. the new
pastor and the congregation will
be dedicating the newly remo,
deled building on · the church
grounds. Bennie Triplett, state
overseer, will be the guest
speaker.
Following the service, a dinner
will be served.

Tom Hunter, a Junior at'
Ealtern Hlp School, recently
attellded a JAOS workabop at
Ohio State University where he
was awarded the Most Wei·
!-Rounded Sports Article
TOMIIUNTER
Award for student journalists.
The OSU School of Journalism newspaper."
sponsored the annual fall work·
Hunter also attended the 1989
shop ·Oct. 28 which offet:ed · 20 · Ohio University Sports Media
students worlllbope covering Camp this past summer.,Besides
school newspaper and yearbook being a two-year member of the
topics.
EHS · newspaper staff and a
Attendlq the sports writing one-year member of the year· ·
The lunch menu for the East·
workahop, Hunter spent the day book staff, he has ·atso done ern Local School District has
1n writing seminars &amp;lid acllvl· photography and statistics work been announced for 'the week of
ties lllcludlng a preaa conference .. tor The P~IIY, Sentinel.
Nov.l3. ·
for all aesstons by Bill Faith,
Monday: hot dog with sauce.
director of the Ohio.Coalition for
macaroni salad. fruit. and milk.
the Ho111eless.
Tuesday: chill, pean'qt butter
''The JAOS fall workship was a
The Ewings Chapter Sons of
sandwich, reliSh tray; fruit, and
great experience," Hunter said. the American Revolution will
milk.
"I learned il lot a bout sports meet at ·the Lewis Family Res·
writing, and I plan to use that taurant In Oak Hill on Thursday
experience while writing for the at 6:30p.m. A tour of the Welsh
yearbook and school Museum will follow dinner.

_ ___....;,·Lunch

SAR chapter to meet.

•
'
menu---~
·

i

Wednesday : barbeque
chicken, bread and butter,
mashed potatoes and gravy,
fruit, and ?.)Ilk:
·
Thursday. pizza. lettuce salad.
fruit, and nlllk. •
Friday, fish, hash browns,
fruit, and milk.

J

&lt;

:
;
;

·VoL 24 No. 40

l·

1

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Strike averted
Class as usual Monday
By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes.SentlneiStalf
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Local Education
Association and Its governing school board reaqhed a tentative
contract agreement Friday night, according to Superlntendf!nl
Dr. "'ell Johnson.
The 185 teacher·uniOn ratified the three-year contract In a ·
vote Saturday at Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
The disagreement centered around pay scale, the contracting
ot services and job security, Johnson said. The latter was
probably "more of a misunderstanding than a real Issue,"
Johnson said Saturday afternoon.
·
·
The teachers have been In the classrooms In good falth since .
their contracts expired Sept. 1.
Johnson said the board members have all given tentative oral
approval to the contract, and will vote on II during their next
session, scheduled for Nov. 27.
Classes will go on as scheduled Monday, Johnson said.

[·Meigs finn first
.
.
i·pl'OgraJ!l recipient
''

.,
~

ft·'i.l, ···•H·

r· !
~ I,

to teach dance
:in CommuniverSity· class
•

Powell to teach
Gerald Powell. Pomeroy, will
be Instructing a workshop In the
Communlverslty's new "Let's
Dance: Country-Western Style"
bn Saturday, Nov. 11!.
• The workshop will Include
slow, swing, line and square
steps and will be conducted from
1: 30 p.m. to 5 p.m. In the Baker
Center Ballroom.
· Following the workshop from
t: 30 p.m. to 10 p.m. those
!'

enrolled will have time to practice the two·step, country swing,
western waltz, ten·step polka and
hoedown square In the ballroom
at an evening dance.
There Is a fee of $25 per couple
for the lessons or a cost of $10 per
couple for the evening dance
only.
Registration Is being handled
by the Ohio University Oftlce of
Continuing Education, 1-1!0().3365699.

------------------Thanks To All The Voters Who
.

Supported Me In The Recent
Election.

'

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(·&lt;I

ED DURST
SAUSBUIY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Plid For 8J Tilt Calldl4att, Ed Durst,

31340 lloblt Stmnitld., liddlePDrt. Olllo 45710

•

·.

H)W're 55 or over, BANK

SEE US FOR THE FINEST
USED CARS IN THE AREA!

1986 Chevy C-1 0 ••~••••••• S639 5
V-8. PB, PS, Air, A· condition, running b011rd1, topper.

pa1e AS)

•

~Powell
'

pb~,'

additional employees and looks
to expanding even . more as he
8)' CHARLENE JloEFLICH · . becomes establiSiied. ·
'
Tlmea-8eatlnel staff
Some of the' mooey from the
MIDDLE;~ORT- Roger Man·
lOan Is being used to pay for new
ley, wbo has·
Law· equipment !leeessary to get the
. rt~C)'el~ :business off the

Missionary group meeting held
cussed and plans were made: The
event will be held Dec. ·1 and
there will be decorated Christ·
mas trees from several
countries.
Martha Lou Beegle presented
the love girt secilon. The theme
was "Reflection on the Mirror."
Love girts were then received.
There were 22 members and
four guests present.
The Esther Circle served
refreshments.

.

(See

&lt;•

'

The Bertha M. Sayre mission·
ary group of the Racine First
8aptlst Church met recently In
the church sanctuary.
. The program was from the
Baptist Women's World Day of
Prayer.
: FollOwing the program the
group held a meeting In the
fellowship hall with Nancy Car·
nahan presiding at the meeting.
The annual event "Christmas
Aroung the World" was dis·

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l

NURSERY PROVIDED
SPECrAL MUSIC
Come and jqin, u!i each mominjfat ·UhOO 'a.m.
.
for Bible ~t~dy and Penona~ .Cfro'wt'h , ·
P~STOI: Stave Deliver
Study ~ 9~.~:2'167

Watch The Newspaper for Details
Of Our Opening!

\ I (l

J:

L\~IPS

850%
~ 816 %

· Meigs
funds from
Loan Program.
The new loan program was
es~bllshed with a mllllondoUars
In 1988 by the Ohio Legislature
for a pUot program designed to
. create a partnership between the
state's banka and the Ohio
Department of Development. ·
Purpose is to provide loans to .
. mini· businesses, which many
ttmes do not qualify for other low
IRtero!Stloans because of size.
Having under 25 employees as
Manley does in his new recycling
· business Is one of the requirements, explained Ron Wiley,
·.ODD loan officer, who was in
' j\dlddleport Thursday to slnallze
the loan application with Manley
and Central Trust Bank.
.· · Through the program. the
state guaranteed. to the bank 45
P!!rcent of Manley's loan of
$14,770. That amount was then
loaned to ~an ley at 5.5 percent.
Wiley explained that the mini·
.loan program Is not designed for
the already successful person or
business. but for those who have
a . real need and have difficulty
getUng financing. Al)other spec I·
tlcallon, he explained, is that the
• proposed business must provide
· jobs.
.
• Manley, while he Is just really
moving Into the recycling busl·
ness, ·bas already cqnstructed a
r42x75 foot building with 3,150
square' feet of space, hired a few

_____

crusher

Curre~tl at the center he Is
b y1
1y 1
1
~ nfa ~ um n~ . can;- g at~s,

a bl~ ~ clscont ners,:om e
purod. ' 1 e, thnio tlrecych g paper.
p uc s a
s me, owever.
Some of the garbage collected
1
1ng
tl
t.abl
s
go
across
a
sor
ng
now to salvage recyclable pro-e
ducts and Mlmley looks to
expanding that In the near
fu tu re.
He says he Is convinced that
recycling is a partial solutio~ to
the growing problem of trash
disposal. Being In the trash
hauling business for six years,
Manley says he has watched
landfills close and the costs of
dumping Increase 150 percent.
Mantey refers to recycling as a
practical solution to the major
.problem of trash disposal which
Is jus! not going to go away .
He commented, however, that
he Is getting Into the recycling
business in hopes 61 reducing the
overall cost of operating a trash
service - "a two-fold business.
one helping the other," he said.
Having, rellred on 0~1. 1 /rom
Amerjcan Alloys where he
worked for 20 years, Manley says
he now has the time to develop
the new business.
·,
Currently Manley's Trash Ser·
vice business has 1700customers
In Meigs County generating 10 to
~. (See MEIGS, page A8)

·r:;:

-- ·- --

·
the national Veterans Day salute
Saturday with a "highly person·
altzed" dedication of a Vietnam
memorial In Texas, an aide said.
The President, a bomber pilot
·
'
In World War II, was expected to
hall the 3,271 Texans killed
d ur1ng u1e un11e d St a 1es • deca de·
long military Involvement In
Southeast Asia as symbols of
dedication and courage.

Loca l OHP .commander
•
end s ·25 years '. servlCe

~

Pllllrft u.dlaRalletl the- a&amp;ne&amp;lllllh ln i

douku Oalllpollllate Jut week. (Timea-8•tltlel J11aoto bJ Lee .
~·-;b)
1!

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1---

-l

-·

. ,
Columbus. Those peacetime, warllme, forelp veterans and the
POW's and MIA's all play roles In this country's freedom, he said,
and none Is of lesser Importance than the others. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Lee Ann Welch)

GALLIPOLIS- Lt . Dan Hend·
erson Is announcing his retire·
men! from the Ohio State High·
way Patrol after nearly 25 years
9! ser.~ce.
.
Henderson began his career as
a cadet dispatcher at the Zanesville Patrol Post In January1965.
After graduation from the Patrol
Academy, his first assignment as
a patrolman was to the Medina
Post where he received the first
post Patrolman. of the Year
Award In 1g66. .
•
He was promoted to Sergeant
and transferred to the Gallla·
Meigs Post In October 1972.Whlle
a Sergeant, he earned a degree In
public administration from Rio
Grande CoUege.
In January 199:!, he earned a

,

. -

By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel staff
GALLIPOLIS - The weather
of the pas I week has been
cooperative .and conducive to
work on the streetscape project,
according to Gallipolis City Man· ·
ager Dale E. ]man.
During the past six working
days, AGE Contractors have.
completed 350 feet of sidewalks
on State Street, Installed the new
streetlights, finished · several
comers and the ·post office
driveway. "When the weather
cooperates," lman said, "we do
well." He noted that only one day
was loBI to r11ln last weelt, which
pleased !man and the
contractor.
· lman, and AGE president
1\lchard Brush, satd \he new
lights should be operational by
Thankaglvlng. Brush noted he Is
ready to install the junction box
for the atreetllahts and the meter
and circuit for the traffic lights.
Acc!ordlq to Columbus South·
ern . Power• Manager Ron

(See GOOD, pqe A8)

·- -

to1ts soldiers

·
The memorial features four
granite tablets Inscribed with the
names of those who died. There
also is an "eternal flame" by a
fifth tablet. which bears the
f h 156 T
t'll
'!'lmes o t e
exans s 1
listed as m1sssing In action.
In New England • Rep · Joseph
Kennedy, D·Mass, was to an·
nounce plans to open and operate
a daycare shelter for homeless

veterans at the site of a former
Veterans Administration clinic
In downtown Boston.
· • In tlartford, Conn., an original
artist's model of the statue at the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial In
Washington was to be dedicated
as Connecticut's official VIetnam
memorial.
Veterans Day · ceremonies
(See AMERICA, pa1e A8)

Voiiwvich proposes
office for vetera.ns

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Standing next to the American
flag on the day before Veterans'
prom'lMI:ln to Lieutenant and was
Day, Republican gubernatorial
transferred tlo the Georgetown
candidate George Voinovlch said
Post. Henderson transferred
Friday thestateo!Ohioshouldbe .
back to the Gallla·Melgs Post In
doing more for those who gave
Jur.e of 1983. where he served as
the country the freedoms It
the post commander until his
enjoys.
•.
retirement. ·
At a news conference, Voino· Henderson commented that
. vlch said If .)1e is elected next
"Jean this wlff') and I siezed the
year. he will move " the state
opportunity to come back to '
Office of Veterans' Affairs I'&gt; the
Ga1lipoll~ when it was offered .
governor's office.
We found that the warmest,
He said the office would give
friendliest people In Ohio live
veterans access to the governor,
right here In th!s part of th~
, work with veterans' organlza·
state."
LT. DAN HENDERSON
lions and try to bring federal
The Lieutenant also said, "I
money back to Ohio. He also
want to thank the other pollee to save lives on the highway."
p~omlsed· to appoint ah indlvtd·
agencies. the courts, the media ·
Lt . Henderson said he has ual in Ohio's Washlngton office to
and especially the peopl!l of the taken a position with the State coordinate federal Initiatives
area for the cooperation and t.elp Medical Board, which will allow and lobby Congress and federal
given to the patrol In Its mission him to stay in this area.
(See VOINOVICH, page A8)

Good weather
helps project

our unique banking program
ONE has something special just
,. · •
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checking, free Senior Champs
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----------~-'11.

By .JONATHAN FERZIGER
United Preselnterna&amp;lonal
From Boston to Honolulu
Americans paid tribute to th~
men and women who foughtthe
nation's battles, ·honoring veterans who returned to march
famlliar parade routes but
mourning others who died or are
still missing.
President Bush planned
to lead
·

'

AGB

(.

HONORING ....: GaiUpols paused Saturday
to~=~ to servicemen and women In a ceremony at the city
par for VetP.'an• Pay. All veteraas have a pari In keeping
freedli
In this na&amp;l!JII;.oaep&gt;rdlng to epeaker Richard Scott of
,,.•
.

=urn~-:e=-i~~=
"-neJ&amp;lca··p
' ayt!J·-t,..but·
e
board baUer, and a glass - n
l
~
..-.

UOBT INS'l'AUATION - Riedl 11'1111, left, 111111 lllaUIIardta, tf

I

Sunny, with a high between
55 and 60.

13 Sectiont. 106 Pogoo
A Multimedia Inc. N•wiP•P•r

Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, November 12. 1989

;C:OP\iilufllld 1988

The Word Of God · · ·

We Plan To Offer A Fine Selection Of
Shoes At Affordable Prices. 1

Along the River .... ... .. Bl-8
Buslness ........... ... .. D-1-D.a
Comics- .. ............. .... Insert
ClassHieds ........ .... ..... D2-7
Deaths .......... ......... ..... A-3
Sports ........ ......... ..... C-1·8

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ts

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WIU. BE PREACHING op;.lQCIIIIG
'

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GARY, DEANNA RINES

.RACINE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
EYANGEUST: Dr. T. Howelt'lipchurch
Louisville, ly. '""' '.:;,· ,., ,

•Betty RNd •Robby Wyatt

Inside

In our town:
Ohio Stale Patrol will
tum 56 on Wednesday...Page B-6

Page B-1

AT

OWIUSI Jelln I Cryltal lloo4
Experlencedl!nd Courteoua ·Staff

Beat of the ~d:
A clock thai goes
back in time...B·7

."new look'

NOV. 12-17-7:30 p.m.

HOOD ·
F
Y
·
S
HOES
210 UST 1111111 ST .. POMiiOY, OHIO
•Sharon Warner

Hall has

EVANGELISTIC
.REVIVAL MEETINGS

OPENING ·SOON I..

C-1

College football results

Anniversary

'

'

50 cents

'

'

Chester D of A meets
, Betty Yoilng, associate councl·
,lor. conducted the recent meet·,
ing of the Chester Council 323
Daughters of America held at the
lodge l)all with 15 present.
, It was reported tbat Doris
Grueser Is Ill, and that Everett
and Charlotte Grant have a new
grandson.
, A thank you note was read
from Esther Harden, district
deputy, thanking the council for
her girt she received at the recent
Chester Council Inspection.

Hunter
attends
workshop

'

roJ ~ llle apllt rim on tbe ri&amp;M froat wheel
to lOMe coatrot of tile
velllcle. The trllok bit a power pole 111111 then ran
lalo and d•lroJetl mach or the froat of HAR
lltealt, · belln ntrrt•1 .. Ita lllde Uti apewta1 a
lod of llmealllae owr lhe 1treet. See 1tory 011
pqe AI. (Tim• 8eatllllel photo)

RAI(-,n.ooK BLOCIIitD - 'A dump truck
travellq
on .But Main st. Ia Pomeroy
struck a , _ pole 81111 look oat the froat or the
DR Bltlek llulldlaa, llboriiJ after d - • Frldq.
Pbllllp w. Wu111. II, of Cnwa City, wu drlvlni
tbe truck wbtcb wu ownetlbJ Wuda K. Waa1b,
Gallpotll. Waa1b wu travellq tbroulb Pome-

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blew · ort, 0....._1 him

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November 12, 1989

Commentary and perspective

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

Four injured·in three-car crash

November 12. 1989

Page-A-2·

•

Jack Anderson .

Quayle inroads few thus far
WASHINGTON- Dan Quayle and Urban Development Secre·
has taken the role of a quiet vice tary Jack Kemp, Defense Secre·
president to a new low. When It tary Dick Cheney, tfatlonal Se·
comes to policy decisions, he Is curlty Adviser Brent Scowcroft
and Commerce Secretary Robert
almost mute.
The valu of a vice president has Mosbacher. If Bush still needs
111 Couri St., Pomeroy, Oldo
• '1'lllrd Aw., Os'Kt M , Oldo
often been measured nor by advice after consulting all of
(814) IIH1M
(114) UIIMJ
action, but by the quality of them, he might go to Quayle.
The presence of Kemp In the
advice he gtves the president.
upper
echelons has to grate on
ROBERT L WINGETT
When It's crunch time In the Bush
Quayle,
Kemp's name Is already
l'llblllller
administration, It appears
being
whispered
as a possible
Quayle doesn't even weigh ln.
PAT
W8ll'EIIEAD
In 1992, so
running
mate
for
Bush
Boa&amp;aT WWION 3
White House sources tell us
.u
...
,
••
,
Pllblllller-Collboller
that Quayle fits Into the third or he could be groomed to run for
lbee.el¥eU&amp;er
forth tier of Bush advisers. "He's president In 1996.
Quayle's role model for the
A MEMBER ot Tbe Uaho&lt;l Prou Iatornatlollai, IDIIIld Dally Prou Aloocla·
not taken seriously by anyone In
- llld-tlle Ameri&lt;aJl New'I'"POI" Pulllltllen AII&lt;ICialloa.
the White House In terms of a vice presidency Is Bush himself,
policy-making role," one White whose eight years In office
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welowne. Tbey should be less tlwl 300 wordl
spawned the question "Where
"'-~· All ..... are subjct toedltilllaD4 mu.lt be •lined wlfhname. addrelsand
House ofllc!al said.
......... oumber. No UDIII!IIIIIelton ..UI be pu~lltbed. l.etters ohould ~e ID
Bush's lop tier of advisers was George?" But Quayle . has
IIOGd tule,.-110111_., Dot pon..Utt•contains only two people - his been even more Invis lble.
One of Quayle's few apparent
abrasive Chief of Staff John
advisory
roles to Bush Is to let the
Sununu and his polished Secrepresident
know how 'certain
tary of State James Baker. They
policies
w!!l
fly with the conser0USe are Bush's policy bodyguards.
The second tier Includes Housing
By BELEN THOMAS
UPI WbHe a - Reporter
WASHINGTON - Every president has tried to keep his major
forelp policy moves a secret- and usually a secret from their close
aldel, 10 fearful are they o! leaks.
.
.
E:very president wants to put In his thumb and puU out a plum and
be tbe first to make a major news announcement. Often they are
cllellmvented by reports In the press ahead of time.
Of eoune, they also feel that secrecy Increases their options to
move wltbout public knowledge. But In the secrecy they often deny
tbemlelvs expert advice and a dialogue that could save them from
lbemlelves.
President Bush exblblted that kind of Jli!IIChantfor secrecy when be
sbut out for some four months Defense Secretary Richard Cheney and
CIA Director William Webster from tbe tact that he was planning a
pt-ac:qualnted aummlt meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbllcbev early next month off tbe COlli I of Malta.
Blish laid he told only tour persoDB In the beginning, declining to
ume them for fear there would be some hurt feelings In bls top
b!M'ucby. But at his last news confl!reiiCe he did acknowledge that
Clleney and Webster were out of the loop. Both, It appeared, were
Informed the night before the publiC announcement on Oct. 31.
Asked whether It was a lack of trust, Bush said that did not occur to
him.
.
ApParently, as a former CIA director, he understands how to play
Information close to the chest.
Althoulb It was supposed to be a simultaneous announcement In
BU~RS
Wasbln(tan and Moscow, The Washington Post beat the president to
the punch and had Itin the mom!ngpapers, severa:l hours before Bush
came Into the press room to herald the move.
Alde:l said he bit the ceiling when he !ound out that he had been
scooped.
Prelldents have tried for years to plug leaks. President Richard
Ntxoo leal'1led the foDy of that when he created the "plumbers," who
later fllured In the Watergate scandal that led to 1"1xon's political
demile.
During ·the Reagan era, lie detectors were trotted out after
newspapers broke ltorlel the White House hoped to keep secret.
President. Jimmy Carter, f~!ng leaks, tailed to consult with
Pentagon and national security experts In plltnntng the Irall.lan
hellc:opter rescue mission, which turned out to be a catastrophe "lor
the United States, with the hostages that were to be rescued
remaining In captivity.

Backstairs at the White H

.

vat!ve wing of the GOP. The vice met once all summer, according
.
president Is kept as "far away to his schedule.
The
summer
itinerary
lndl·
from Democrats as pon!ble,
except when he takes the lead for · cates that Quayle doesn't "power
the White House In lambas.t!ng lunch" very often with his boss.
them. Quayle's schedule shows From June through August, the
only one scheduled meal with a schedule shows only five Bush·
Democrat all summer - a Quayle lunches. But Quayle Isn't
breakfast with Sen. Sam Nunn of eating alone. Almost every Tuesday he lunches with Republican
Georgia.
One White H~use official ex· senators who hope he will pitch
pial ned the vice president's light tbelr Ideas to the president.
A spokeswoman for Quayle
work load by saying Quayle Is
her boss as a "bands·
defended
"stU! considered a potential
on"
person
who works long
political liability." Another
hours.
We
don't
question the
source said Quayle spends most
number
of
hours.
We
wonder bow
of hiS time at political fund
he
!Ills
them.
·
raisers In backwater towns be·
We
asked
Bush's
office
to
give
cause "they don't want him to
us
examples
of
Quayle's
advice
make a mistake."
One of his few defined job to the·president and an example
descriptions Is head of the of a challenging task that Bush
National Space CouncU, but that had assigned to Quayle. Bush's
job appears to steal little time people did not respond. Maybe
from his golf game. The council they're still looking.

----Area deaths------Albert E. Roseberry
MIDDLEPORT - Albert E .
Roseberry, 58, ol Beach Street,
Middleport, died Saturday at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was bOrn on Oct. 9, 1931 at
Apple Grove, son of the la te Leon
and Millie (Sayre) Roseberry.
He worked for 30 years as a
heat treater /operator at the
Metal Forge Co. He was also a
member of the Fraternal Order
of Ea.;l~s· Aerie No. 2279 In
McArthur.
He was also preceded In death
by one daughter. Betty
Roseberry.
Survivors Include his wife.
Della (Nicely) Roseberry, three
sons, three daughters, 25 grandchildren, one great-grandchild ,
and one brother, Cecil W. Roseberry of Racine .
Graveside services wlJl be
Monday at 10:30 a.m. at Letart
Falls Cemetery.
{rlends may call the Ewing;
Funeral Home today from 4 to 6
p.m.

I FINALLL( GoT
Ml/ MINIMUM WAGe

INCReASe AND I

n~ouGHT

•

VJe'D Go

OUT M-- DlNN~R

SaMeWHe~
S~lAL ,ToNIGHT.
PICK-UP WINOOW

TWO [)@Luxe

CHE!eSe

Ben H. Stepp

WITH FRI€'5 .••

GALLIPOLIS - Ben Howard
Stepp,
76, 651 Third Ave ..
Gallipolis, Oh"io, died Saturday at
·his home. He was a retired miner
and dairyman.
Born Dec. 9, 1912 In Pike
County, Ky ., he was the son ofthe
late Floyd and Martha Stepp. He
was a member of the Freewill

•

First lady Barbara Bush has not read Nancy Reagan's new book
"MY Tum," and neither llal the president.
'
Both are quick to say they have not read II. And Bush shied away
from clarifying an Incident Mrs. Rea1an related In her book.
But the fonner president and Mrs. Reagan will be making their
tint return visit to the White House on Nov.15 to unveil their portraits
painted by New York artist Aaron Shlkler. Shlkler also painted the
portraits of John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jackie. which hang In the
TiJilte House.
· The paintings, commissioned by The White House Historical
.llloclatlon, will be first shown at a reception. The Bushes, with the
l)elpof curator Rex Scouten, will decide where the portraits should be
1111111: 'I'M Reagan painting undoubtedly will be hung In the Grand
.,Uiway on the state floor. First lady paintings are relegated to ihe
ll'ouad floor.
·
'

• Nancy Rea1an loved living In the White House and so did her
husband. In several Interviews s)nce her book "My Tum" came out,
111Je bas said sbe misses the "support" staff. "If you need a plumber,"
lllle utd, ." you 1et one In a hurry."
.
The former first lady has been holding her own In the talk shows. A
recent devastating review of her book by former Washington Post
correspondent Sally Quinn In that paper was the talk of Washington.

·Berry's World
_ T~EN.

Boston tea parties erupt OVerseas Chuck Stone
Outside of the letter "B," the
one factor that binds Boston to
the people represented by the
words Belt Sahur, S.,rlln Wall
and Bantu Is the unguenchable
tight for freedom that all tcur
symbolize.
In the last few days, those three
foreign names have electrified
the free peoples of the world In
much the same way that Boston
sparked the colonists Into over·
throwing England's tyranny 213
years ago.
"We won --we beat them!" a

Belt Sahur resident gleefully
shouted after Israel ended Its
six-week siege of the West Bank
town lor not paying taxes.
"There can be no question of us
unilaterally abandoning the
armed struggle," Waller Slsulu
told 70,000 cheering Bantus
(black South Mrtcans) · at the
largest political rally In the
Mrlcan National Congress's history. Slsulu, the Congress's
former general secretary, was
recently released from prtsori.

0

but already Christmas musiC can
be heard In department stores,
shopping centers and TV
commercials.
By the time Christmas rolls
around, some people w!ll be
wishing they had never heard of
"Joy to the World" or "0 Come,
All Ye FaithfuL"
.
Some people- but not most.
The majority of Christians
can't get enough Christmas
music. Advent and Christmas
aretheonlyseasonstnthechurch
year, as a matter of fact, when
• many people 110 to church just to
·
hear the music.
Not only does church music fall
to attract many to church the rest
of the year, there Is even the
feeling among some that the kind
of music ordlnarOy heard In the
churches may keep people away.
What then Is the secret -of
Christmas music?
"Christmas music Is a comb!·
nation of religious sentiments
thatarewarmandnoatalgtcand
tunes that are Slnl&amp;ble and
famUiar," explains one choir
director. "That's what the aver·
age churchgoer likes In his
music."
That may be wpt the average

0

0

THE ICEMAN COMETH
'

""-----~--~-~--

'"'-·-· ---- --- . ~--~- . . ·------- k··

CUSP niHIIO)

Pubtllbed each SUnday.ll"25 Third Ave.,
GallipoliS, Ohio. by 1he0hlo ValleyPubllablng Company/Multimedia. Inc. Se. ccnd ctus postage paid at Gallipolis,

territory, a subjugated people a tax revolt six months ago. The
have a God-given right to partici- Issue was the same one that
pate In their own government. sparked our own Boston Tea
Tyranny by any name smells just Party: "No taxation without
representation."
as rancid.
Deluding Itself that It had ·
What Is especially hypocritical
"won,"
the Israeli government
about the Reagan-Bush adminisrecently
ended Its six-week
trations Is a moral contradiction
siege.
But
world
opinion supports
that applauds glasnost In the
Soviet bloc, but acts like a the Palestinians of Belt Sahur
and the rest of the Israellblu~!ng bride on South Africa
apartheid an.d Israeli occupation occ:upled territories more than
ever. The same Is true of the
of the West Bank of Palestine.
Obviously, Israel must take the "various Bantu tribal groups
strongest measures necessary to within South Africa as they begin
Insure the continua lion of Its a tense new effort o! extending
glorious 5,000-year·old heritage. glasnost to black as well as to
To the extent that the Palestinian white.
II the Thucydldean ·law that
youths' revolutionary Intifada
history
repeats Itself Is any
threatens the ultimate tranquilguide,
the
East Germans who '
tty of the Israelis, It should be
contained. But to the extent that non-violently march; the Belt
Israel uses the intifada's violent Sahur Palestinians who no.tvlotactics as a ratlgnale for denying lently withhold their taxes and
the legitimacy of Palestinian the South African Bantus who are
nationhood, It loses the Interna- holding non-violent rallies will
eventually enjoy the same freetional family's moral support.
In Belt Sahur, · a' West Bank dom .as the colonists who tossed '
town o! mostly Christian Arabs, the tea Into Boston Harbor.
the people collectively organized

Ohlo 45631. Entered u second class
matUng matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, POst
O!llce.

·Member: United Press tnternallonal,

Inland Dally Press .\ssa;:latlon and the
Ohto Newspaper Asso.:latton. National
Advertising Representat l\'e, Branham
Newspaper Sales, •733 Third Avenue,
New York , New York 10017.

SUNDAVONLV
sUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Mot or Route
One Week ............................ 70 Cent s

OneYear ................................. $36.40

----~----

.....

'&gt;

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churchgoer likes, but the !act
that It o!tentlmes Is not what the
pastor or the choirmaster likes,
hascreatedsometh!ngo!acr!sts
In church music today.
Alookaroundthecongregat!on
during the li!ngtng of a hymn on·a .
Sunday morning In the typical
church reveals that a great many
people are not singing at all while
others are just barely moving
their Ups.
As tor the choir anthem, one of
tbe complaints of the average
churchgoer Is that he gets
nothing out o! it. He pays no
attention to the words (often
because he can't understand
them) and he has little apprecla·
tion of the anthem's artistic
beauty.
This doesn't bother everybody,
of course. Some lay people
regard church music as an
"ecclesiastical seventh-lnnlnl
stretch," 1 which breaks up the
service and gtves them a chance
to meditate - although not
necessarily about spiritual
matters.
What Is the purpose of music In
a church service?
Some people believe It Is to
heighten the rellgtousexpertence
of the worshiper. Othen say It Is

tnnuenc~

Baptist Church, Nolan, W.Va.
He married Margie McCoy on
Aug. 17, I940 In Pike County, Ky.
She survives along with one son,
Hubert Stepp, Rt. 1, Vinton,
Ohio: one daughter, Mrs, Darrell
(Sylvia) Dobbins , Christmas, ·
Fla.: and five grandchildren. ·
He was preceded In death by
one son. Charles D. Stepp, five
brothers and two sisters.
Funeral, services will be at 11
p.m. Monday at the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, 420 First Ave.,
GaiUpolls.. The Rev. Jolinny
Jeffers will officiate. Burial will
be _In Pine Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5 to 7 p.m.
Sunday at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made to a special
memorial fund, care of Magrie
Stepp, 651 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio.

Zelma 0. Stewart
MIDDLEPORT -Zelma Opal

Stewart, 74, of Middleport, died
at home on Friday alter a !lrlef
Illness.
·
A retired cook, she was born
May 11, 1915 at Hazel, Ohio. She
was a daughter of the late Homer
Deem and Ruby VIolet Smith
Frederick, who survives.
In addition to her mother,
sutwlvors Include {Wo sons Thomas 0. Stewart, Rutland, and
Ralph Stewart, Pomeroy; a
daughter Donna Lathey, Langsville: five grandsons, a granddaughter, five great grandchild·
ren and a brother, Lawrence
Deem, Marietta.
Besides her father, she was
preceded In death by tier husband, Don T~ Stewart, and two
Infant granddaughters.
Services will be Monday, 1
p.m., at Ewing. Funeral Home
with Rev. Herbert Grate officiatIng. Burial will be In Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 3 to 5 and 7
to 9 ori Sunday.

popularity of thetr product,
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPI) Amertca11
turkey producers
Turkey producers should have a
should also benefit !rom lower
Happy Thanksgiving this year,
feed prices this year, lowering
an agriculture expert says.
their production costs.
State Agriculture Department
"The American love , aflatr
figures Indicate turkey produc- with turkeys goes back a long
ers should enjoy higher prices
notes Thlrey. "The birds
and better net return&amp; for their way...
were running wild In Central
producl this -year, said Harold
America and Mexico when the
Thtrey,. Wilmington College ·asSpanish
explorers first landed
sistant professor of agriculture.
and
It has been estimated that
· "That"s because Americans American Indians had domestlare eartng more turkey these
cated turkeys as far back as
days," Th!rey said Friday. "In
prehistoric times.
1988, turkey consumption In the
"The Spanish took turkeys to
U.S. was 16 pounds per capita,
Europe
when they returned and,
compared to only 4 "pound,,per
the early North Amerstrangely,
capita In 1950."
ican colonists brought o!!sprlng
Beef, however, continues to be of some of those domesticated
Americans' meat of choice, with turkeys with them to the New
consumption averaging 72.2 World.
,
pounds per capita per year, he . "Of course," Thirey says,
said.
· "wild. turkeys also gret!ted the
"Pork is next , and is followed colonists. The birds ranged
by chicken," said Thlrey, " but throughout the North American
turkey is becom,ing ·more popular woodlands, being found as far
each year. ''
··
north as Maine and southern
In addition to the growjng Ontario."

Sunday ................................ 50 Cent s
Np subscriptions by mall permitted in
areas where motor carrter service Is
available.

The Sunday Times-sentinel will not be
responsible for advance payments
made to carriers,
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only
One Year ............ ...... ............... $37.44

~~~ ll&gt;" •• ~m ' l'n .... lbo \

In " ':ll''h ,.f :1 ~ill•·r.
ho•r..... l ..oiOM&gt;oiM '
.,j,,;. &lt;"iiiM·r llw ~~ ,. 'I h•· lifo •.,,

Six months ........ .... .............. .'::&lt;. $19.50

..n ·

.• no ll• •.

liol'l~· 111·~~ ·~•· "'1o ,.Ill•· •· .;,, . ,~ ' llnl"' II

olll• •.

I

Dally and Sunday

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Counly
13Weeks ..••..•....•••.••...•....••....... $19.24

26 Weeks .. .......... ..... .... .. ........... $37.96
52 Weeks ... .: ......••.......... ....... •. .• $74.36
Rates Ouillde County
13 Weeks ............. ....... ...... ....... $20.80
26 Weeks ........ .. .. .... .... .......... ... $40.30
52 Weeks .............. .•...•.... .. ..•.•.. $15.40

ueorge Plagenz_j
.'

to serve as a quieting
and to act as a "frame" tor
matlon, however, congrega · t
religious thoughts.
Onemuslccr!tlclkfiOw(who!s tlonal singing was Introduced.
a former choir director) says he What was needed was something ~
would prefer no music at all that could be sung by amateurs. t
during the church service, "bull The popular music of the day - •
tlnd It distracting. Invariably I music with rhythm- was drawn
am removed from any semb· upon . but purged of Its more :
.l
lance of rellglousdevotlondurlng secular qualities.
What
are
your
favorite
·
tbe music."
hyml)s
the
ones
you
like
to
sing
~
The church realized that puis·
tng rhythm - or the presence a · In church? We want you to tell us.
To participate lh our national
regularly recurring beat would seize the attention of the hymn poll, send the names of
worshipper and . distract him your favorite hymns (up to ;•
three) to: Hymn Poll, Box 327,
from his pious contemplation.
,
With the comlnll of theRefor· Columbus, OH 43216.

i

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Todaay in history

~

By Ualte• Preu lnterna&amp;lonal
Today Is Sunday, Nov. 12, the 3I6th day of 1989 with 49 to !ollow.
The moon Ia waxlq, moving toward fuU.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evenfnlstars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn."
Those bQrn on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
French physicist Jacques Charll!lln ~746; women's suffrage activist
Elizabeth Cady Stanton In 1815; Supreme Court Justice Harry
.Blackmon In )911! ( a1e 81); actress Kim Hunter tn 1922 (age 67)Prlnceis Grace of Monaco, the former American movie sllir Grac;~
Kelly, In 1929; actress Stephanie Powers In 1943 rage 46) and rock
muslc!fn Nell Young In 1945 (age 44) .
"

.~

•
r

95°/o
STUDENTS ACTIVELY SEEliNG
EMPLOYMENT HEAR THESE WORDS AFTER GRADUATING
· FROM OUR PROGRAMS IN... ·
*BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
*SECURITY OFFICU
*EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
*MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
-*MICROCOMPUTER/DATA PROCESSING*DATA ENTRY
*"ACCOUNnNG
·
*JUNIOR ACCOUNTING
•PROVEN JOB PLACEMENT
•EXPERIENCED FACULTY
•SMALL CLASSES

•

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·-- ...

GALLIPOLIS - Four persons No one was Injured. 'T)le other
claimed Injuries In a thret&gt;-ear vehicle left the scene.
-coUislon at 3: 50 p.m. Friday on
The bottom lett-front ball-join\
US 35, 0.3 of a mile east of broke on a 198I Pontiac Transam'
mllepost6,accordlngtotheState driven by Cynthia G. Hutton, 25,
Highway Patrol.
Middleport. causing the vehicle
Troopers said Carol F . Roush, to go off the road and overturn
64, Grove City, Ohio, driving a Into a ditch. The accident oc1985 Chevrolet CO{slca, and Ar- curred at 2:55p.m. Friday on SR.
mond Hoafat, 56, Ri. Gallipolis, 124,0.4 of a mile west of milepost
Ohio, driving a 1984 Chrysler nine, near Langsville. No one
·New Yorker, stopped In traffic. was Injured.
William R. Brown, 56, CircleOne driver was Injured In a
ville, Ohio, was unable to stop. two-vehicle collision at 2t 15 a.m.
His 1988 Olds Calais struck the Saturday on SR. 160, near VInton.
back o! the Hoafat car forcing It
The patrol said a 1985 PlyInto the back of the Rouslq;ar . mouth driven by Ralph L. TayDamage was minor to the Roush lor, 26, Rt. 1, Ew!ngton. went left
car, heavy to the two other of center, coll!dlng with a 1987
vehicles.
Chevrolet pickup truck driven by
Both drivers and two pas- Myrl T. Sammon, 40, Rt. 3,
sengers. John H. Roush, 71, Galllpolls. There was heavy
Grove City, Ohio, and Marla A. damage to both ~hlcles .
Hoafat, 57, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
Taylor was Injured and taken
claimed Injury but no one was to Holzer Medical Center.
treated.,
The patrol cited Taylor for
No citations have been Issued.
The patrol ·said the accident Is
still under Investigation.
Another Injury accident occurred at 6: 15 p.m. Friday on
StaN! Route 7, 0.7 of a mile south
of milepost 27. One driver was
cited.
Troopers said Robert A. Weethee, 29, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
driving a 1973 Ford truck, slowed
for the traffic light. His vehicle
was hit In the rear by a 1969
Lincoln Continental driven by
William E . Graham, 80, Rt. 1,
Galllpolis. There was heavy
damage to the car, moderate
damage to the ,truck.
Graham sut!ered a minor
Injury and was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
The patrol cited Graham for
failure to stop within the assured ·
clear distance.
Stephen D. Hamlin, 29, Dublin,
Ohio. was cited for driving under
the Influence, lett of center and
no operator's license after an
accident at 6 p.m. Friday on SR.
588, near Rodney.
Troopers .said Hamlin's I974
Ford Torino went left" of center,
sideswiping a 1986 Aerostar van
operated by Emogene E . White,
56, Rt. 3, Gallipolis. There was
minor damage to both vehicles .
No one was Injured.
The patrol Investigated a hitskip accident In Meigs County, at
12:15 p.m. Frt~ay on County
Road 32, 3.1 miles east o! SR 7.
Troopers said an unidentified
vehicle went lett of center on a
curve forcing Frances F. Foster,
.37, Rt.1, Racine of! the road. Her
1989 GMC pickup truck struck an
l;'mbankment and mall box
CMOil. SNOWDEii
(«"" ollhird
owned by R.E. Evans, Rt. 1,
.... &amp; Stolt St.
Racl
Da . oder te

SOUTHEASTERN
"BUSINESS
COLLEGE
SPIIIIG VAWY PLAZA
GAWPOUS, OHIO

•DAY &amp; EVENING CLASSES
•FINANCIAL 'ASSISTANCE
TO THOSE WHO

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"Your Career Connection"
REG. #811·11-1011118

·'•

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driving under the !nlluence and
left of center.
The patrol also Investigated .,
the following deer accidents:
•:
- 2 a .m. Friday, Gallia :•
County, Clay Township, SR 7, 0.2 ·:
of a mile north of milepost 18. ·:
Kenneth Higley, 50, dr!Vlng a :•
1979 Dodge van, struck and killed ·:
a deer: minor damage to the :
vehiCle.
•
-8:10a.m. Friday, Meigs ::
County, Scipio Township, CR 17, .:c
0.7 of a mile west of SR 143. Erin ·:
D. Sheets,16,Pomeroy,drtvlnga ::
1988 Chevrolet pickup truck,
struck and killed a deeJ": moder- :
ate damage to the vehicle.
,
- 8: 10 p.m. Friday, Gallia : •
County, Gallipolis Township, SR ·:
7, 0.1 of a mile south of milepost ::
21. Marvin A. Baird, 23, Rt. 2, ;.
GalllpoUs, driving a 1986 Ford ·:
pickup truck struck and kUied a : •
deer: moderate damage to the i:
vehicle.
·
·:

I wish to thank all
the voters ·of
Harrison Township
for their support in
selecting me for their
Trustee.

i

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YOUR VOTE IS APPRECIATED!

DELBART. CISCO

COLONY f/llAlHE

..
-.
''

Turkey produce~ to have .
Happy Thanksgiving this year

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Does Christmas music top hymns?
It Isn't even Thanksgiving yet,

NOW

"Free elections! Let the people
decide!" chanted thousands of
East Germans In a march a few
days ago. Widespread East German resentment against the
nation's dictatorship exploded In
several East Germans In a
tnarch a few days ago . Widespread East German resentment
against the nation's dictatorship
exploded In several East Ger·
man dtles and toppled the
18-year reign of Communist
rarty boss Eric Honecker.
The demonstrations In East
G..rmany. as well as those In Belt
!Sahu1 and South Mrlca, are no
different In their purposes and
goals than the Boston Tea Party.
"No taxa t ton w!thou t represent&amp;.
lion" I&gt; being fought lor ln 1989,
just as the American colonists
fo1.ght tor It In 1773.
Whether a ruling government
oppresses tM Palestinians In
Belt Sahur, tile Bantus In South
Africa, the Germans In East
Berlin or - 213 years ago - the
colonists In the Brtttsh-occ:upled

crusher. The minl·loan handlecllhrou1h Central
Trust Co. was the first one comln1 Jnto Melp
County. Manley recently opened the Lawrence S.
Manley Memorial Recycle Center In lower
Middleport. (Times-Sentinel photo)

£!lASS CRUSHER - One of the pieces of
recycling equipment which Roger Manley pur·
chased with some of the low-Interest money he
received through the Ohio Mini-Loan Program,
Department ·of Development, was this glass

____,o

(

Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei-Pege-A-3

'·-

.·-'

Gallipolis. Oh.
PhoM 4.46-4190
. _ 446·4~5':.'--

FRIDAY 1'11111 TIIUISDAY

KICKBOXER•
J..,.cl-

Starring

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$ilvet Btidge Plszs Ofliee '1
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Will Be Clotsd
Norembe1 13 Fol'
Apptoximsfelg Two Weeki.
•
the Silver
convenience,
For your banking
•
open.
Bridge lobby will rema1n

You may also use the drive up windows at
Court Street and Spring Valley locations.

STAR BANK
Reach For The Star.
Star Bank, N.A., Tri-state

Member FDIC

�Paga A:4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 12, 1989

Pomaroy-Middlaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Two charged with petty theft:

STORE CLOSES FINAL TIME - Saturday
was the last day of business for this small comet
grocery In Bash an. The establishment has served
the community as a grocery for some 70 years and

wiD, without a doubt, be missed by residents ofthe
community. Ruth Rose, pictured, has operated
the business for the pa.ot three years.

POMEROY - Two young men
are charged With petty thelt
folloWing failure to pay for
gasoline-a( the Pldt and Shovel at
Salem Center,
Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that J{elth A.
Hicks, 18, 9f Route 1,_ Bidwell,
and Brian D. Hicks, 23, Route 1,
VInton, were charged With petty
then lor the stealing of $21.70
w(lrth of gasoline from the Pick
and Shovel. The ·theft occu~d
around 7:30 p.m. Friday nigh\.
Rutland Marshal John Spires
stopped the vehicle after being
alerted that the vehicle was
headed east on Route 124.
'
After deputies received from a
witness, positive ldenti!lcatlon
on the vehicle, the complainant
signed petty theft charges
against the pair.
Both were taken to the Meigs
County Jail. They are scheduled
to · appear Wednesday in Meigs
County Court.
,,
KelthHickslsalsoscheduledto
appearlnRutiandMayor'sCourt ·
on charges of driving under the
Influence, possession of a controlled substance and fictitious
registration.
Harvey A. Faw, Racine, was

arrested for driving under the
Influence, failure to control and
driving under suspension. followlng an accident In Racine around
12: 30 a.m. Saturday.
According to ·the report, Faw
was operating a .motorcycle and
went off the roadway and struck
a pole.
'Racine Fire Department and
emergency squad were on the
scene. There were no Injuries.
friday evening, deputies took
a .theft report from· Adelia
Swisher. Laurel Cliff Road,
Pomeroy. Swisher reported that
sometime between 11:30 a.m.
and 6:45p.m. Friday, a crystal
necklace and two engagement
rings were taken from her home.
Deputies also took two motor
vehicle accident reports on
Friday.
The first accident occured on
Route 1241n Salisbury Township.
According to the report, Elbert
L. Keesee, Middleport; was travellng east on Route 124 at 6:45
a.m. when a· deer ran Into the
paih · of his 1983 Oldsmobile.
There was moderate damage to
the vehicle. The deer kept on
rpnnlng.
The second accident occured

November 12. 1989

· --~ea news briefs---. V

n::~~oZr~ted ja~~~~~~~t

on private property at 12:55 p.m.
Bobby L. Foster Jr., Pomeroy,
was backing a 1989 Chevroh!i
truck down the lane at .,th~ .
Charles Lawson properiy and
struck Lawson's •1976 Dodge:
There was light damage tq
Lawson's vehicle and no damage
to the truck. No Injuries were
reported.

Residents In the small town of
Bashan will now have to travel to
Racine or Pomeroy In order to
pick up a loaf of bread ora carton
o!mllk.
For many years the small
grocery served as a meeting
place lor members of the community to gather and chat with

Gallia ambulance,

Winners named
POMEROY - Winners of the
Halloween Costume Contest,
held Saturday 'Oct. 28 during the
Haunted Trail' Hike, at Raccoon
Creek County, have been an- .
nounced by the 0.0. Mclnty~
Park Dis trlct.
The winners were:
Scariest - BEicky Mullins as .
Scary Lady; Ugliest - ChriS
Wallis as Sicklehead; MostOrlgl'
nal - Billy Mullins and Daniel
Wright as Burner Buddies; Best
Character Costume Brian ·
.Rupert as Policeman; Prettiest
·- Mellssa Elliott as Bo Peep;'
Wildest - Chris Bowman as.
Conehead; and Funniest Costume- Tie: Kevin Call, Amanda
Wickline, Shonda Walter and
Lisa Drenner.

Five calls sent to M~igs EMS

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Sheriff's Department investigated a deer accident at 4
a.m. Friday on State Route 7, 200
feet north of State Route 218.
Officials said a 1987 Ford
Econollne ambulance owned by
.the Gallia County Commissioners and assigned to the Gallia
County Emergency Medical Ser'

vices and driven by DebOrah L.
Carter. 33,' PSR. Gallipolis,
struck and killed a deer. Damage
was moderate.
The sheriff's department received a report at 9:37 p.m.
Friday of a stolen vehicle from
University of Rio Grande. Officers said someone took· a 1989

The author said he Intended
this book to fill the gap in war
literature, by "relating the connectlons between the story of the ·
conflicting armies and fleets
with the life of the factory,
colonial peoples, vl~ttms of concentratlon c;unps and guerilla
lighters."
Loyd Lee Is currently a Professor of History at the State
University of New York (SUNY).
He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree
from Ohio State University, a
Ph.D !rom Cornell University, is
married, has two children and
currently lives in Highland, N.Y.
Lee Is the son of the late
Chester and Frances Lee, who
lived on State Route 554, at
Bidwell.

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KROGER
COMPANY
SIVER BRIDGE PLAZA

NEW BOOK - Connie Whit&lt;!, Reference.Librarlan, holds the
book, War Years, presented to the Dr. Samuel L. ·Bossard
Memorial Library, In honor of a fonner GaiDa County resident
turned History professor and author. Morris and Dorothy Haskins
ability to manage national forest
land. by consolidating it into · gave tbe book In honor of Loyd E. Lee, o!Bighland,N.Y., Professor
of Hlstory,l!!tale University of New York. Lee Is the son ofthe late
large, unbroken blocks or to
Chester
and Frances Lee of Bidwell. ·
·
acquire land with resources that
are especially valuable lor public
ownership.
The new regulations are Intended to streamline procedures
-l
and speed up exchanges. They do
not affect how managers justify
exchanges or select land to be
exchanged, except to more directly connect proposals to land
management plans.
Comments should be sent ·to F .
Dale Robertson, Chief, Forest
Service, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, P.O. Box 96090,
Washington, D.C. 20090-6090. A
copy of the proposed rules Is
available !rom the same address
or from the Forest Superviser,
Wayne-Hoosier National Forest,
81 Constitution .Ave., Bedford,
•••
lnd, 47421.

Hef, Look Ut Over--··

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needed.

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Test administered by PRO-MED Screening Services Inc (614) 446-4407

DON'T SETTLE FOR
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GIEENS FEES NOVEMIII THIOUGI FEIIUAIY

S7 All Day Wtekdays
S9 All Day Saturday and Sunday

e ic e registration renewals .are mailed

GALLIPOLIS - Those people
with last names beginning 'With
'•s•: should plan )lhead to renew
velllcle registrations In November, Ohio State Highway
Safety Director William M. Denlhan reminded motorists.
"We mailed 1,055.349 renewal
notices in October for November
renewals. Since November is our
largest renewal month, we hope
peeple will lake advantage of our
mall-in registration option that is
available," said Denlhan.
To promote the mail-In option,

the Ohio Departmental Highway
Safely Is featuring print and
television ads that state, "Now Is
the time to renew your au to tags
you won't get the same old line .. :
They emphasue that people
don't have to walt In line to renew
auto lags. They can do lttbe easy
way - by mall.
Of the 1,1)55,349 renewals
278,171 were mailed each week 1~
October for the people who are
registering for the second time In
1989. The renialnder of the
renewals (777,178) are !or people

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ATHJ;:NS -:- The Dairy Barn
Southeistern !'!Jllo Cultural Arts
Center of Athens. Olilo, will
present "Loco~t~otlon: A Celebnrat jon of Railroading,'· Dec. 9-22.
Ahy artist whose work reflects
a railroading theme Is Invited to
submit slides. photos and descirptlon or work for consideration. Paintings, .prints, drawings
and photographs are welcome.
Anyone who Is a railroad buff Is
encouraged to submit descriptions of artifacts, memorabilia
and model trains. "Lo~omotion"
will offer. something lor
everyone.
The Dairy Barn is a showplace.
for traditional and contempary
fine and cultural arts In tp.e
Appal!lchlan Foothills of Ohio.
The structure provides more
than 7,000 square feet of exhllbltlon space and was formerly part
of a worklng dairy farm.
Address all submlssons and
Inquiries to Eluabeth DeMott,
Exhibition Coordinator, The
Dairy Ba~n Southeastern Ohio
;Cultural Arts Center, P.O. Box
:' 747, Athens, Ohio 45701, (614)
, .592-49811. Be sure to enclude a
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whose last name ends in "S" who deputy registrar loCations In
have until the end of the month to • your area," Denlhan said.
renew and who will be prorated
The new dep~ty registrar conto their birthday. Motor vehicle tracts went Into effect July 1,
renewals are bring prorated In 1989, and some locations that
1989 to switch everyone to birth· were not renewed , were closed.
date expiration.
Other agencies moved to a more
"We hope everyone will use the convenient location.
mail-In option so that no one has
The mali-In percentage rate Is
to stand In line a long time at the averaging 35 percent for the
end of November. But, II you year.
need to visit your local deputy
For questio ns on mail renewals
registrar , we hope people plan and agency locations , people can
ahead before the end-of-the call1·800·5~9-TAGS.
month deadline and know the

18

ATHENS- The Dairy Barn Southeastern Ohio Cultural Arts
Center announces plans lor the Sixth Annual Art &amp; Leisure
Auction.
'
Scheduled for Saturday Nov. 18 at the Dairy Barn on Dairy
Lane, at Athens, Ohio, the event begins with a 7 p.m. reception.
Featured lor auction will be art ;work and leisure Items
donated by businesses and many &lt;area artists. Paintings.
carvings, sculpture, jewelry and pottery will be offered at
auction as well as business services and leisure Items Including
·ski trlps,•a one-week vacation at a Hilton condominium, and
more. All proceeds will t~ene!lt the Dairy Barn, a non-pro!ll
cultural art5 center. ..
· ,
·
Auctioneers Ottie Opperman and Forrest TUrner will provide
their services to help raise money for the Center ..Tickets for the
Art &amp; Leisure Auction are $12.50 per persori.
To make reservations cont'act the Dairy Barn, P .O. Box 747,
Athens. Ohio 4570i, or call' (614) 592-4981.
·

,._IIC(IIlll

CLIFFSIDE GOLF COURSE

·· ·

POMEROY- A dump truck traveling west on East Main St.
In Pomeroy struck a power pole and took out the front of the
.
H&amp;R Block building, shortly after noon Friday. .
Phillip W. Waugh, 26, of Crown City, was driving the truck
which was owned by Wanda K. Waugh, Galllpolls. According to
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Jerry Rought, Waugh was traveling
through Pomeroy at 12: 12 p.m. when- the spill rim on the r1ght
front wheel blew off. causing Waugh to loose control of the
vehicle.
The truck hit a power poll! and then ran Into and destroyed
much of the front of H&amp;R Block, before !lipping on Its side and
spewing a load of limestone over the street. Fortunately there
were no Injuries, Rought said. H&amp;R Block employees were at'
lunch at the time of the accident and the driver of the truck,
although shook up, was uninjured. The driver was not cited by
authorities. Damages to both the truck and the building were
extensive.
The area surrounding the accident scene was not cl.e ared of
debris until about 5 p.m. Friday, Rought reported. Utlllty
companies werEt_ on the scene most of the night securing power
lines. The Pom"'roy Pollee Department investigated the
Incident with some assistance from the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department. .

farm's OWIIer. Just mall, or drop off your pes1 to
the GaiUpoUs Dally Trlbuae, 825 Third Ave.,
GaiUpolls, ·Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457W,and you may win
a S5 cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephoae
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All cenlelit entries llhould
be turned In to the newspaper.office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a lie, the winaer will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a GaiDa County
farm will be featured by the GaiDa SoU and Water
Co.-rvatloa District.

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs SoD and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
In lire weekly contest may do so by guessing the

Time extended for
comment on forests
• GALLIPOLIS - The public
will have additional time to
comment on proposed rules
governing the exchange of national forest land with private
and other government land,
according to a U.S. Forest
Service notice, according to
announcement by Gordon H.
Small, Director of Lands !or the
service in Washington, D.C. The
cbmment pe&lt;'iod has been extended to Dec. 1989.',
The proposed rules are designed to provide procedures for
the Forest Service to use In
following Congress' Instructions
In the Federal Land Exchange
Facilitation Act of 1988.
The Forest Service has exchanged a bout 3.5 million acres
or national forest land with
private landowners and other
government agencies over the
past 80 years. Exchanges are
Intended to improve the agency's

.

Art, leisure auction slated.

Former resident-writes,
presents book to library
GALLIPOLIS - A book by a
former Gallla County man has
been presented to the Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library.
Morris E. and .Dorothy w.
Haskins, 1 VIne St., Gallipolis,
gave the book. The War Years, A
Global History of the Second
World War, in honor of Loyd E.
(.ee. a 1958 graduate of Gall !a
~cademy High School.
Lee sa~d his book Is intended to
"be a stimula nt to further
reading and understanding of the
crucible of today's world'' . '·
"Total war, modern global
war. swallows up people's indlvidual private lives and sets
them in new directions. The story
or colliding armies is only part of
the truth about took place."

.·

h I

Truck takes out power pole

collide

Chevrolet lour-wheel drive
pickup truck owned by Ma-rk
Harper, {tt. l, Kitts Hill. The
report said the glass was broken
on the passenger's side and the
vehicle had a quarter of a tank of
gas.
At last report, tjle vehicle had
not been recovered.

.

POMEROY - Five calls for assistance were answered on
Fr(jjay by units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services.
At 10:14 a.m .. Middleport was. called to Mill St. for William
Weaver who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 12: 12 p.m. was called to treat Phillip Waugh at the
scene of an auto a'c cident on East Main St. At 1:29 p.m.,
Pomeroy went to Mulberry Ave. for Tracie Morris to Veterans
·¥emorlal Hospital.
.
Middleport at 4:25p.m. was called to Page St. !or Ada King
who was treated but notlransported.
At 11:47 p.m., Pomeroy went to High St. for LaDonna Clar~
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

one another.
For the past three years the
business has been operated
under the ownership and management of Ruth Rose.
The establlsbinent has served
Its community well and will
undoubtedly be missed.

dee~

cited one driver In an

accident at 1: 16 p.m. Friday at 2208 E;astern Ave. No one was
Injured.
.
O!!lcers said Terry L. Adams, 26, 133 Klneon Drive,
Gal Upolls, backed !rom a private driveway and his 1983 Buick ·
collided With a 1987 International truck driven by Dewey W.
Ervin, 40, Wellston, Ohio. Medium damage was done to the car
and minor to the truck.
·
Pollee cited ~dams for Improper backing.
Other citations In a 24-hour period ending at 9 a.m. Saturday
Included:
·.
Verne C. Sommerville,. 23, Galllpotis, no operator's license
and attempted physical harm; Carl11llh L. Davis, 20, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis. and Michele L. Brookover, 34, Rt.1, Little Hocking,
Ohio, both lor speeding.
·
'

.Little grocery store on the corner
'in Bashan closes . doors final time
BASHAN - For the little
corner grocery in Bashan, Saturday was Its last day of business.
The little store has served the
community as a grocery for
some 70 years. When the business
first began all those years ago, it
operated under the ownership of
:Allan Bailey.

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

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Hayman, form~r superlntend~nt
of Radne-South~rn schools; Bill
Wellb, nationally known princl·
pal of East Patterson High
School; Joe Clark, the subject of
lhe 1988 movie "Stand and
Deliver''; and Jamie Escalante,
Garfield High School, Los An·
g~l~s. Calif.
Charles W. Hayman, for whom
the Southern Local Gymnasium
is named, was successful as a
teach~r. coach and superintend·
ent. Hayman, a sterndiscipllnar·
ian, · yet caring and friendly,
dev~loped a long lasting legacy
for South~rn Local School
District.
Although Haym;m died .last

Bush dedicates ..
Texas ·Vietnam
Veterans Memorial.
DALLAS (UP!) - President
Bush delivered a solemn Vete·
rans Day salute Saturday to
those who fought In one of
America's longest and most
unpopular wars by helping qedl·
cate the Texas Vietnam Veteran~
Memorial, inscribed with the.
names of 3,427 men who did not
return home.
At a sun-drenc~ed ceremony
atwnded by thous'ands of veterans, many dressed in ojd battle
fatigues, Bush said: · "If the
Texans we honor today eould
speak, they might say 'Praise us
as you will - bu I above all we
want to be remembered."'
Thousands.of former warriors,
many w!t)l their !amllies, ga·
thered tot the dedication· or'the
memorial. inscribed with the
names of the 3,427 Texans lost in
Southeast Asia. Several were in
wheelchairs.
Bush received several rounds
of applause, particularly when
be vowed to continue working to
determine the fate of a 2,331
veterans still listed as missing In
action in the war in Southeast
Asia. ,
At one point, numerous vete· ·
rans attending the Ceremony 41
the Texas State Fair Grounds
chanted, "Bring 'em home, bring
'em home."
In a speech to the veterans,
Bush said: "Unlike other veterans, the brave boys who went to
Vietnam had to endure two wars.
"The first war was the bat tie
waged In the swamps and jungles
a:broad." Bush said. "The second
'!as !ought for respect and
recognition at home. And, with
the passage of time, they have
•'
finally
won the battle for the
hearts of their countrymen."
'Bush used the occasion to once
a.iain welcome the recent wave
ol democratic reforms in East·
etn Europe, including this ·
week's opening of the Berlin
Wall, long a symbol of the Iron
Curti in.
"Look to the very heart of
Europe, to Berlin, and yeu will
see a great truth shining brighter
. each passing day: The questfor
fteedom is stronger than steel,
more permanent than concrete,''
he said.
Bush praised "the Lone Star
heroes of America's longest
war," but also saluted all vete·
rans of Vietnam as well as
America's other wars this cen·
tury. World War I. World War II,
and the Korean War, particu·
"Because they gave the last
full measure of devotion, our
nation Is at peace. And because of
tllem, the peaceful ideals of
America our now the ideals of the
world," he said.
i'lear the end or his remarks,
Bush read a letter he received
from a Dallas mother, Connie
McWright, who lost two of her
four sons in VIetnam.
"'Ed and Dale,"' Bush quoted
McWright as saying, "'died with
the Marln.es. They were ex·
tremely proud to represent
Texas ... Ed asked him !hat I
send him a Texas flag.' She said
his buddies called him •Big

Tex."'
Bush, a World War II bomber
pilot, told the gathering, ''This is
your memorial. Ed and Dale's
memorial ... Fellow vets, I salute
you."

.,

As he toured the monument,
McWright took Bush to see the
names of her two sons Inscribed
on the wall.
"Very moving," Bush said.
" Beautiful. Very well done."
The president and his wife,
Barbara, then both hugged
McWright.
Tile memorial, the result of a
seven-year, $1.2 milljon fund·
raising campaigit, sits .on a
two-acre landscaped site at the
Texas State Fair Grounds.
.It features four granite tablets
inscribed with the names of 3.271
Texans killed during the United
States' decade-long military 'in·
volvement in Southeast Asja.
There also were plans for an
"eternal !lame" on a fifth tablet,
which was to bear the names of
the 15&amp; Texans still listed as
missing In action. But, the
veterans ran out of money and
were unable to include the tablet
in the final j!lans.
The monument .fs similar to the
VIetnam Veterans Memorial In
Washington, D.C .. which con·
talns the names of more than
58,000 Americans lost in the war,
including 2,331 MIAs.
rn recell( days, the United ·
States obtained prom tses ·from
Vietnam of Increased efforts to
determine the fate of the MIA's.
And the United States, drawing
m !xed reaction from vets, said it
would provide the communist
COU!llry with an estimated
S25b,OOO In surplus medical
supplies.
The nation's two largest vete·
rans groups, the 2.1-mllllon
member Veterans of Foreign
Wars, and the 2.9-mlllion
·member American Legion, denounced the ·aid.
The VFW called it a "slap in
the face'' to those who served and
the American Legion and said
Vietnam should receive no assist·
ance until the "fullest accounting
possible" Is made of the MIAs.
But the 40,000-mern,ber VIet·
nam Veterans of America, which
has often been in conflict with the
older and bigger vet groups,
supported the move as a human·
itlrlan gesture and as a step ·
toward normalized relations.

Stolen parach~tes .
don't work: owner
PHILOMATH, Or~. &lt;UP!) ~
Pollee Saturday had a warning
for whoever stole five parachutes
from William Munson of Philomath: Don't use them.
Police said they were told by
Munson the parachutes are dam·
aged and will not open.
Munson told officers the para·
chutes were taken from his. car
Wednesday night, along with
other items.
Munson said his car was
broken into outside- a school
where he was playing volleyball.

I

~m~~~!~a!~ e~~~ a~ 1 ~uo:er~~~

tendent took time to make his
rounds throughout the schools,
personally· ensuring the ' ·high
quality of sc.holarshlp that he
stood for."

Eastern prlncipa!, Charles
Moore, commented on American
Education Week by saying,
"American Education Week pro·
vides us with another opportun·
ity to recognize and remember
·ihe outstlnding teachers In our
life and the contributions they
made, It also gives us opportun·
ity to recognize that In this highly
technical world with all of its
problems, there are s.tlll !hose
dedicated teachers making sim·
ilar contribulio!IS in young lives
today."
Southern Local School B!&gt;ard
·President Scotf Wolfe stated,

-.._.........
.

J

r

accused and were very, very
embarassed. "Most were really
shocked that it was their
lockers."
Robert Loury, editor of the
school's student newspaper, said
he accompanied a search team,
which had trouble pinpointing
lockers.
'The officers were unable to
Identify which locker the dogs
were trying to Identify," Loury
said.
ije said one locker was empty,
and the studht to which It was
assigned sald It had not been used
since school began.
The dogs also pointed to about
40 can In the school parking lot,
Including some staff cars, school
officials said. McGovern said he
had not decided whit Ia do with
the listofcarsld.entifled, because
It was unlikely many contained
drugs. r;
·

~·

whips
Ohio
Valley

CHARLES HAYMAN

'

status quo needs a shake-up.
Ollio Governor Richard Cc·
teste had already Incorporated a
shake-up of the educational
system in Ohio through the
studies and incorporation of the
Education 2000 Commission.
John Adams, United States·
second president, spoke of the
following educatl~nal ide.a l
nearly 200 years ago. •'The whole
people - must take responsibil·
lty for the education of the whole
people," Adams said. .
With this Ideal of self·
responsibility and responsibilty
for the country's future,
teachers, parents and citizens
must ban together for a strong
America and a strong education,
said Scott Wolfe. ·
Although lacking resources
like those in more prosperous
areas, Meigs County · Schools
have scored either at the average
national standard or exceeded
those s!Jindards in many cases,
Wolfe said.

four 28 by :10-foot clusroom1, with electric heat
and central air. The modular replaces four old
classrooms, two cunently belag used In the
ancient nearby arts building behind the old high
school building, to be torn down after the new one
Is completed, and two In the old high school
buDding wbere om seats were located Ill the
balcony on the second noor and another on· the
first floor om level. ( Ttmes-8enUnel photo)

Capitol. Hill scandal figure dead
BOSTON (UP!)- Washing!ou and the bathroom door," the two call boys one night in the
lobbyist Craig Spence, a flam· SP'Jkeswoman said.
summer of 1988. He reportedly
boyant !igure In a Washington
Sp€nce checked Into the hotel gave the Secret Service officer a
male prostitution scandal, was Nov. 4 and was scheduled to Rolex watch In exchange for his
found dead Friday In a barr! . depart Friday, Ritz-Carlton pub· troubles.
caded room at the posh Ritz· · lie relation5 director Patricia
Police In New York City
,Carlton Hotel, pollee said Cutler said.
arrested Spence on drug and
Saturday.
.
Police were summoned shortly weapons charges on July 31 after
Spence, 49, was round dead, after 3· 30 p.m. Friday when )lte they found a smal\ amount of
lying in bed In a black tuxedo housekeeplftg stiff was unable'to cocaine and a .32 caliber pistol in
after police and firefighters get into the rMm, she said.
his hotel room. ·
sawed through the barricaded
Spence was under investlga·
SpenC(' had a reputation as a
door to Room 429 of the Ritz. tlon by federal authorlt!P.S in man about town In Washington,
Carlton shortly before 4 p.m. Washington 1!1 conn~clior. wllh a reportedly hosting parties. for
Friday, officials said.
1 homosexual prostitution rlng op·
'many prominent people. ·
Paramed~cs pronounced
erating under the name Prof('S·
Spence dead at The ~ene and his slonal Services Inc., which re·
body was removed to a local portedly was patron~ed by
morgue, a police spokeswoman government officials, mllltaiy
said.
officers, congressional aides and
'The fire c!l!partment had to U.S. apd foreign businessmen.
saw the door In half in ord~r for
ln Juna, The Washington
pollee and the EMT' s to get into Times reported that Spence
the room. The door was barr!· - arranged, · with the help of . a
caded by the bed, with a chair Secret Service officer, to conduct
also jammed between the bed
a private White House tour for

By United Press International
Gusty winds whipped much of
the Ohio Valley Saturday and
brought unseasonably high
temperatures while the mercury
soared to record heights In
Arizona: but the Pacific Coast
prepared for a damp week after a
spell of fair weather. ·
Clear skies prevailed over
most of the So1,1thwest, the Plains ·
stales and the mld·South because
of a high pressure system over
the area, the National Weather
Service said.
In Ohio, southwest winds blew
up to 40 mph in. northern parts of
the state early Saturday and
were expected to sweep through
western Pennsylvania and no~th·
ern West Virginia by afternoon.
The wind brought mostly dry
weather In its wake and should
nudge afternoon temperatures up
toward the 50s and 60s, some 10
degrees above normal, fqrecas·
ters said.
New Englanders were waking
up to mostly sunny skies early .
Saturday, with clouds expected
to move in by afternoon. High
temperatures will be in the 40s
and 50s.
•
•
Some· high thin clouds were
scattered over Kansas and some
clouds were lingering In southern
Missouri. A light south or south·
westerly wirid breezed across
most of the region at 5 to 10 mph.
Winds were light and variable
over most of Colorado and New
Mexico.
Ariz0na has had unseasonably
warm temperatures. The high at
Phoenix was 90 on Friday, z·
degrees above the old record.
Tucson also recorded a record
high of 88 degrees. Skies will
remain mostly clear through
Saturday with afternoon temper·
atures well a bov~ normal.
A ridge of high pressure over
California is gradually b,eing
eroded by a series of weak
weather disturbances moving
into the Pacific Northwest. Alter
a generally fair weather weekend there will be an increasing
chance of precipitation, accom·
panted by a gradual cooling trend
for all of northern and centraL
California, tbe NWS said.
:
A change In the mild No- •
vember weather is In store for '•
Oregon during the weekend. A ,
soggy frontal · system that
dumpE-d heavy amounts of rain in
·western Washington the last lew
days ).llllh lighter amounts In
northern Oregon is expected to
slowly sag south aaoss 't4e:sUite ·
through Sunday. ·
Semi-monsoon weather con·
linues in western Washington,
bu 1 is expected to become a bit
cooler and drier by Sunday.
Areas from Olympia northwards
to the Canadian border still have
a mixture of drizzle, rain and fog
however. Storms In the northern
areas mean continued flood
warnings for the Skykomish,
Stillaguamish, Nooksack, Sno·
homlsh a~d Snoqualmie rivers.

othtn.

. By United Press fn\E'rnallonal
South Central Ohio ·
Sunny, with a high between 55
and 60.
Extended Forecast
Monday through Wednesday •·
A chance of rain Monda~· and
Tuesday. A chance of rain or
snow on Wednesday . Highs ln the
50s Monday and Tuesday and in
the 40s on Wednesday. Lows will
be between 35 and 45 Monday and
Tuesday and in the 30s on
Wednesday.

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'.
DALLAS (UP!) - President American people his conviction,
Bush said he received a call from which he sUited publicly In Berlin
West German Chancellor Hel· today, that this remarkable
mut Koh1 telling him tllat sweep- change that is taking place ...
lng democatlc reforms In East· could have never taken place
ern Europe - Including the without the steadfast loyal sup·
opening of the Berlin Wall port of the United States of
"could never have taken place America."
withOut the steadfast loyal ~u Bush·-.had' some pointed re·
port of the United States."
arks for Gorbachev in his
·" He asked me to tell he
nner speech, which he began by
American people this, and he Is heaping lavish praise on the
absolutely right," Bush said Texas governor before focusing
Friday to applause in relating attention on events In- Eastern
their ~onveratlon at an apprecla· Europe.
lion dinner for Texas Gov. Bill
"We all look at the amazing
Clements.
changes in Eastern Europe,
Earlier, White House press Indeed in theSovietUnlonltself,"
secretary Marlin Fitzwater, In 1\e said.
Yet, Bush said, the United
disclosing the 18·minute tetephone call, told reporters that States "must not base its foreign
Bush congratulated Kohl on his policy or national security on the
"handling of the s)tuatlon and aspirations of one man Inside the
promised the full cooperation of Soviet Union or anywhere else."
the United States."
The president said that during
Fitzwater said the two leaders his upcoming talks with Gorba·
agreed that the dramatic devel· chev, "I will ... make It clear ...
opments make Bush's Dec. 2·3 that we want to see his reforms
meeting in the Mediterranean succeed."
with Soviet l\)ader Mikhail Gor·
"And r wiH tell Mr. Gorbachev
bachev, "even more Important." what his government can do to .
The president tokl the Cle- Improve relations with the .Uni·
m~nts dinner: "We are·IMng in
ted States."
State Department offlctals,
remarkable times. Changes are
mind-boggling."
meanwhile, said that the influx of
Bush, who has taken an enthu· as many as 1 million East
slastic yet cautious approach, Germans will strain the West
said, "I will do my level besi to German economy, and perhaps
· conduct an Imaginative foreign creat,e new political alliances.
policy. But I wil\be purdent. And
The officials sald the realistic .
I must be that. I will do my level prospect of Germany becoming
best to mbve freedom forward." reunited will be greeted with
Bush, -said Kohl, who Inter· some concern by other Eurorupted his trip to Poland so he peans, particularly the French
coulH return home In the after· and the British who recall the
·math of East Germany opening catastrophes of two world wars.
Its borders Thursday, called him ' State Department officials also
at his Dallas hotel.
suggested that the euphoria
"He asked me to share with the
could lead to a de-emphasis on

FLAG WAVERS- A West llerJID dem.,..trator waves a West
Berln flag as East Germaa border flll&amp;rda slalld atop the BerOn

.

UO SICOND AVE.
110 EIIAIIK STIEII
GMUrOIII, 011. 45631 PGIBOY, 011, 4576f
446-UOO
"2·H7t

'

Sunday Tmes-Sentilai-Page-A· 7

W. Va.

-Bush·
Events could lead to conflict
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The ~ast German ambas¥dor to
the United States warned that the rapidly moving events In his
country could get out of control and lead to an East-West
mUitary conflict.
Ambassador Gerhard Herder, speaking to a news conference
at the National Press Club Friday, said the opening of the East
German and East Berlin borders Is lri:eYersible but added, "U
the events get out of control, they could lead to a conflict that
nobody wa6ts, by miscalculation."
He laid out one possible scenario. "There is a big
demonstration, people start throwing stones, children are hurt
or killed and that could lead to a llPR military Intervention, and
an outbreak of events with the military of the United States, or
France or Britain or West Germany."
He described the measures by the East German communist
government as "a radical renewal of socialism" that could lead
to open, multi-party elections if the East German Parliament
· decides to hold them.
;

DISCUSS DEVELOPMENTS - Helmut Kohl, .left, West
German Chancellor, and Min IIIIer RudciH Setters discuss re~ent
developmetits In Bona, · Germany during Satarday's cabinet
meeting. (UPI) ,
.

Western military unll!f, with the
Western Europeans cutting back
their NATO contributions so
quickly that the East-West equa·
tion could be des ta blitzed.
Secretary of State James
Baker called the East German
government's announcement a
"very welcome and poslllve and
significant develop!llent," but
acknowledged the United States .
was caught by surprise.
. ''I don't think anyone would

have predicted three or four days
ago that you would get this
today," Baker told reporters
after a sUite dinner Thursday
night in honor of Philippines
President Corazon Aquino.
.
In interviews Friday on the
major television networks,
Baker said the United States has
offered West Germany assist·
ance, including military houslnl!'
to help accommodate the influx
of East Germans.

"

S219.99

BAUM LUMBER
I

915

Wall at the Braadenbuq Gate Saturday. (UPI).

Kohl to meet East German leader
BONN, West Germany (UP!)

establish trade unions, the right omy," Kohl said. "Only in that
- West German Chancl!llor to create Independent political way call the East German
Helmut Kohl said Saturday he parties and free and fair elec· economy be strengthened."
will meet soon wllh East German lions by secret ballot.
Kohl said West Germany's
leader Egon Krenz to discuss
· The West German leader said partners In the European Com·
economic aid, which he otfered his chief of stiff, Rudolf Setters, munity also should be ready to
on the condition East Berlin would travel to East Berlin on help East Germany because "a
agrees to fundamentJII reforms.
Monday to mel!! with Krenz and pan· European responsibility is
Kohl said he and Krenz agreed new East GE/)man premifr H?ns involved, just as with Poland and
~a telephone ·conversation Sat·
Hungary."
Modrow.
.·
urday morning to "meet soon Jn
"We want in these talks to find
Despite recent reforms, he
East Germany Itself and not In out about concrete steps being said, East Germany still has a
E;as t Berlin. "
planned by the East German long way to go before its citizens
• "In this historic moment, all leadership, and above all about · enjoy the right of self·
C:..rmans In East and West are how it Intends to con(luct free determination, and "that Is a
facing a crucial challenge," he elections and In what kind of time condition for (German) reunlfl·
·
said.
frame," Kohl said.
cation In freedom."
Kohl said he is In "regular
"Our fellow countrymen in
He and Krenz agreed In their
contact" with Soviet leader Mik·
telephone conversation "to re- East Germany must be able to
hall Gorbachev, with whom he . main In constlnt contact" and decide for themselves the future
also spoke by phone Saturday. then meet soon in person, he said. they want," Kohl said.
The West German leader said he
"l tokl him emphatically that
Asked about the Impact of the
also talked with President Bush the talks wiH also involve how flOOd of East German lmml·
and other Western leaders.
material living' condlctlons can grants hoping to stay permaBonn's aim at this time, he be Improved for East Germans mently In West Germany, Kohl
said, Is to provide enough aid to · so that they feel well where they said, 'There Is no state of
give East Germans an Incentive are and don't want to leave," emergency."
to stay· where they are. West Kohl said.
"There will be no new taxes,"
Germany has traditionally of·
"But aid measures can only be he said. "As the No. 1 economic
fered citizenship to all East successful if the state economic power In Europe we are fortu·
Europeans of German descent, planning system Is replaced by a nately able to provide
bUt the In Dux of more than socially committed market econ: assistance."
110,000 East German refugees In
recenl weeks was believed to
have aggravated West Ger·
many's housing shortage and
unemployment.
Kohl, speJklng at a news
2924 JACKSON AVENUE
conference following a Ca blnet
POINT PLEASANT, WV
meeting and prior to resuming an
interrupted visit to Warsaw, said
IS NOW SCHEDUUNG PAnENT APPOINTMENTS
Eut Germany muat make per·
EVENING &amp; SA'ltiRDAY HOURS AV.AliABlE
manent Its declllon to allow Ita
citizens to travel tr.ely.
(804) 675-1982
Kohl said Eut Germans muit
allo iMi paranteed fiVe other
MICHAEL B.
DOS GENERAL DENI'ISTRY
bale riith&amp;: freellqm of expres·
,ton, a 1rfe press; tile rllllt to

.

..,... . . . -

A. JACISON IilLlS, O.D.

PIBBIInt,

•

ACCU-CHOKE

AI oont.ar • - • c., M warn far
•port•
pertidp.. ioft, but eomeiMIIfn to
be bttltr eul ... to ctrtMt "*'' the

. . . ~ . . . . lor . . . . IPO'tllfld
otiNr . .~w......ln. . . . . In dullY
.,,.., • .......... o•• muM be tl·
..........
w..~n ooflleet , _ _ dur·
IMW. . . . . . .C 11 • • .

Pom•oy-Middleport-Gallipolil, OhiO-Point

Weather

CONTACT LENSES AND S~O~T~

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

November 12. 1989

'1990s: A decade of

.,

~ CLASSROOMS --: The GaiUpolls city
schoolll' new lour classroom modular, uader
co~tructlon behind the GaiUa Academy High
SchooiSYmnaillum, Is "just "bout done" accord·
lng to Tom Pasquale, of Bell Contractors, one of·
the su~ontractors: Last July, the city board·
voted to purchase the 56 by tl6 foot modular
structure from Diamond Engineered Space,
Columbus, for $132,283. The modular contains

Drug dogs a real bust
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) ..:_
The firs~ use of drug-sniffing
dogs in a Mullnomah County
school was a bust Not a drug
bust. but a failure.
Parkrose High School officials
said Friday dr\Jg·detection dogs
,indicated 75lockers at the school
contained drugs, . but a search
produced no illegal substances.
"The dogs Identified 75 hot
sppots, but not necessarily the
correct lockers," said principal
William McGovern, who added
the scent of any drugs may have
migrated Into nearby lockers.
The search Thursday raised
the ire of some student&amp; and
parents, McGovern said. Some
studenis ·were pulled oul of class
for questioning after the dogs
sniffed out their lockers.
"We got real poor results,"
McGovern saJd. "A lot of kids
were pulled from clasf', felt

"The dedication and expecta·
lions of excellence prophesied by
men like Charles W. Hayman
still exists in the values, scholar·
ship and level of discipline
maln!JIIned by the Southern
Local School District through Its
line teachers and employees.
"Much progress in career
development, intervention and
competency-based education
has taken place through the hard
work and effort of our own
teaching start. As an Individual
on the board, I praise the efforts
of these individuals and wish to
recognize them for their superior
efforts."
American Education has been
a topic of debate on the national
level, where many critics feel ·
that as a whole, education has
suffered a continuing d~ay In
standards and scholarship, as
well as society suffering from a
resulting tendency of decay In
values and morality.
In order to reverse this unfa·
vor)l.ble trend, President Bush
earlier this year called for an
educational summit (Sept. 27·28)
wnich brought together the na·
tlon' s governors to discuss
thoughts 'on how to achieve
educational excelleflce.
Richard Chambers reflects,
"We need more discipline; less
dignity. Poverty Is not an excuse
for mediocrity as a standard of
excellence.''
Bush acknowledged, . "The
time ·for rhetoric Is past. 'fhe
time for performance is now!''
According to "NEA Today,"
the summit agreed on the need
for comprehensive school res·
tructuring. President Ijush him·
self asserted that the educational

year, his contributions to the
educational system iand his memorles are still alive through
those he encountered either as
students or colleagues. A tribute
to his legacy was justified by the
0ver 3,000 people who mourned
his passiiig during two memorial
·services In both · Columbus and
Pomeroy.
Eastern educator, Richard
Chambers, a fo'tl,ner teacher
under Hayman reflected,' 'I am a
teacher today because Of one
man, Charllis Hayman. Through
his endeavors and :fo):'('e of will,
he has Indelibly etched a legacy
upon the educational community
in Meigs County." ;.
Sald Ralph Wigal, an Eastern
teacher with 26 years of experience, "Charles IHayman was
!eared, but yet respected. He

..

November 1.2. 1989

eek observed ·

American Education·
EAST MEIGS- Meigs County
schools, ln conjunction with
thousands of schools nationwide,
will recognize American Educa·
lion W~ek, Nov. 13·17.
Educators in each of Meigs
County's three school districts
wlll recognize the teaching profession in a variety or different
ways.
Eastern educators have
chosen toobservetheweekwilh a
series of dally events honoring
Individuals who have made sig·
nlflcant contributions io the
educational system in America.
Educators selected to be no·
nored include long-lime and
highly respected, Charles W.

w. v•.

--·-· · 't"'" ·- .

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Th• &amp;nk Th•t M•kes Things

Ha1J1Je11.

Affilill"e: Tht Central Bancorpontion, Cincinn••. Ohi11 • Vembrr FDIC

..... . ..

�~II

T/0;
n,.... ',; ~"h• ••
J'- I ""-'""""

ye~sasCievelandmayorthathe

can deliver on his plans.
"Ohio veteraas have serve our
state and nation proudly," said
Volnovlcb. "Oblomustnowdo Its
part to better serve these

veterans."
The mayor said Ohio bas some
1.3 million veterans- sixth most
of any state- yet Is In the bottom
five In U!rms of federal dollars
received per veteran.
Volnovlcb said the new office
will monitor gubernatorial ap·
polntments to veterans' boards
and commissions, and will work
with the Dlvfsion of Travel and
Tourism to promote patriotic
actiVIties.
'l'be existing. Office of Veterans' Affairs In the stat~ adjutant
general's omce has a tlldget 'Of
$306.000, a 27 percent Increase
over the last two years.
Volnovlch pointed out that
East Germans are beginning to
experience wllat American veterans fought for almost 50 years
ago.
• 'Why do we have what we have
today?'' he asked. "Because
people stood up and sacrificed to
l!et what
we have."
.
.

· Meigs. firm ...

(From MEIGS, pqe Al)
12 tons -of garbage a day which
has to be disposed of In a landfill.
It now cosll $12.50 a · ton to
dump, or about $96 a truckload.
The trash collection service
dumps about 10 loads a week at
the West Columbia landfill.
Manley says that his goal with
the recycllllg center, named for
his late father who hauled trash
In Meigs County for 40 years, is to
reduce the amount of solid waste
going into the landfill for both
economic and environmental
reasons.

Nursing home
faced closure
before strike

I

Good

&lt;rr- VOINOVICR, pace Al)
_ _ _ _____:;._,:__....;_

a1eacles on veterans' matters.
Later, speaklllg to major Republican contrlbu tors from
Franklin County, Volnovlch said
he has as much vision '8S
Democratic Gov. Richard CetesU!, but bas shown during h'ls 10
.

Porlaot' Midclaport-Oellipolil, Ohio

A-8--Sundlly Tlmu S1ntinel

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- West Virginia health officials
say a Boone County nursing
home faced closure by stale
regulators before operators shut
It down In the wake of a slt·down
strike.
.
Paradlgn\ Corp. of Columbus,
Ohio, clbsed Its Danville·
Madison Nursing Home Oct. 27, a
week before a state-Imposed
deadltoe to solve staffing shortages. At the time, the company
l:l)amed the strike for Its decision.
, Dlv:l.slon of )lealth spokeswo- .
J1l8ll Elizabeth Broughton said
InSpectors visited the· home In
July and August, before the
walko\tt, and found a lack of •
epough registered nurses, no
physical therapist and other
problems.
Broughton ,said the violatiOns
were severe enough that the
&amp;geJICY o~ered the home to
correct the problems or shut

d'own.

Paradigm's attorney, Fred
Holroyd, said the company could
not meet the state staffing
~uirements because pickets
llarassed new workers.
•'They just couldn't get past the
opicket line," Holroyd said.
Holroyd said Paradigm is
considering reopennlne the facll·
ity, or subletting the building to
another operator. The building Is
owned by the Boone County
Building Commission, which
teases It to Paradigm.
Boone Ceunty officials said
they have already received In·
qulries from other possible oper·
ators of the home. Because of
bond requirements, the building
must he operated as a nursing
home.
.
David Molt of District 1199 of
the Health Care Workers Union
said the union does not plan to
contest the home's closure, even
though it Is illegal under federal
labor laws to shut down to avoid
strikes.
"At this point wecouldgoafler
them legally through the labor
board to sit down and negotiate
wtth us , but we don't walll te,"
Mott said. "For us, we're an tiel·
patlng getting someone in there
to treat people well."
When the home closed, Its 110
residents were taken to facilities
as far away as o•k Hill and
Charleston.

new manager."
He said Ohioans are looking for
leaderShip and problem solvers
to go along wl!)l the vision
exhlbltell by Celeste, "We've had
the 'If,' but we haven't had the ·
delivery," he said.
Voinovlch said be plans to
streamline government as he did
In Cleveland and " utilize the
corporate clout to revitalize this
state's economy."
He promised not to raise taxes.
' 'We'll get the job done with what
we have," he satd.
·

... (From GOOD, paae At)

AGE has been worktne on the · were scheduled at the National
corners at Court Street and Memorltl Cemetery of the Pa·
Second Avenue, Installing catch· clflc in the extinct volcanic
basins aild pouring concrete crater Punchbowl overlOOking
durinc the past week. Those Honolulu . Ceremonies were
should be complete In the next planned to kick off at 11 a .m . with
the theme "A Grateful Nation
week.
·
Remembers."
At least one resident of -the,
vicinity sighed with relief at the · In the climax, Jets from the
work, and a sign sprang up on Hawaii Air National Guard were
Saturday declaring, "It's ,about to tty over the crater, one peeling
·time." The comer has 'been off In a "missing man"
' fonnatlon .
.
unfinished since July.
In
Bucyrus,
Ohio,
officials
The upriver side of that street
In the 200 block will be left alone planned to dedicated new city
until after the hoUdays, lman Jlmll signs in honor of Lt. Harry
said. By leaving the sidewalk L. Martin. a Medal of Honor
alone, shoppers will have access recipient who was killed on the
to several businesses and the , final day of the battle for lwo
Jlma.
. municipal parking lot. .
Rep. Ralph Regula, R·Ohlo,

area.

. The post• office on Second
Avenue should be ready for
.traffic by 1)1esday, Imari said.
The ~ontractor won't brick the
driveway unUI the concrete Is
suttlclenlly cured, Ill'lan said.
When the 200 block of State Is
finished, AGE will move to the
100 block of that street, doing
both sides at once, Brush said.

was scheduled to present a
special Prisoner of War-Missing.
In Action Commemorative Medal to the sister of a soldier still
missing In Southeast Asia at a
ceremony In MassillOn, OhiO.
A gran lte memorial was dedi·
cated Fricfay at a veterans park
at Port Columbus International
Airport. The 12·foot obelisk rises ·
among the ·nowers in the park at
the edge of the Ohio ajrport. It Is
topped with a bronze eagle sitting
on a cluster of four helmets.
representing the wars Ameci· ·
cans have participated In ·this ·
century. The dedication klcklld
off a hostofVeteransDayevents,
whlchlnclude a downtown pa·
rade Saturday.

t!'imo-

,

""

~entiattl Section

8

Novemblr 12. 1989

... .
t-..
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'

•,

~·

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"·

·.·

What Co.uld Be Better Than 1 Day of
Spectacular Savi
At HASKINS-TANNER
HASKINS.

HASIIIISTAll-

fANNER

1989
NOVEMBER

1989
NOVEMBER

1989

16
15
14
17
13
WIDIIESDA

•

·HASKINS-TANN-ER 6 DAY SALE!

'~--'-I-ID_AY__&amp;_M_ON_D_A_Y_9_A_M_'n_L_8_P_M~~~~----SA_T-~I_D_AY_'_J_AM~,~·L~6~P~M-·___,
HANES
UNDERWEAR

MEN'S

MEN'S REG. Sl8.00

SPORT COATS FLANNEL SMIRTS

20°/o.oFF 20°/o OFF
MEN'S

MEN'S

WRANGLER
FASHION
JEANS

$899 OR

2 FOR S16

DRESS SOCKS

GROUP OF MEN'S

3 PAJRS $69~
6 PAIRS 51398

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

REG. S3.75

SAVE

sa.so

MEN'S

REG. S30.00

ALL WEATHER
COATS

20°/o ,OFF

• OLD W~LL$, NEW INTEBJ!)R- Annlvenary
; Hall, the. olest standlna hulldlnA; at the
Unlver.slty ol Rio Grande, h88' undergone
• renovation for the past ll months. While the

exlerior loolal almost the same as it did when It
opeaed In October 1921, the Interior has a new
look.

·Anniversary Ha¥ reopens
lor use following facelift
il,

-J:
..•

{

•• RIO

GRANDE - When stu·
'dents , faculty 'and staff In the
):ollege of•Ji;l)uc;allon, Fine Arts,
-Health anll Physical Education
a t the University of Rio Grande
lJegln working In Anniversary
~all again at the start of winter
~uarter, they will find an almost
}lew structl!re within Its 62·year·
old w~ls.
L
,. In ~ditlon to nllte. offic~ a (\II '
( lve eialju:ooma...,. Anllillersai')L ~
'!low contains t\l(o specialized
.classrooms, Including one for
f eading methods and another for
'ICience and art methods.
•. The Instructional Resource
Center has also moved Into new
9uarters In ~ADII!Versary . In·
.creased handicapped access bas
peen provided In a basement
l.evel entr.!IJI~. 'Ind elevator, and
a small student lounge has been
.Installed. The spacious class·
cooms have allowed for storage
space and enhanced bulletin
jloard display .
H.. Paul (loyd, dean of the
¢allege, said the college Is very
lippreclatlve of the renovation
work, which he feels meets
present needs and allows for
future·expansion.
"It's one thing for a contractor
to go out and put up a new
~ulldlng, but to come in and try lo

.

Mi'lt

•

do something within the confine· mouth serving as the general
ment of the walls already there is· contractor. Prior to the work,
a different situation," Lloyd there were six offices and four
said. "The people who carried classrooms serving the profes·
out this project did an outstand· · slana! education pr&lt;igram. The
ing Job of utlllzlng the available IRC was located In the basement .
space."
Koby said future plans call for
Lloyd said the faculty and staff the IRC to be moved to Davis
are not only happy a bout being in Ll brary when expansion of that
their traditional home again. but bulldlnl! is complete .
, ,
" are w~; elated about· the
Durjng the renovation, educa··
~.,.it .~ o(fe.: ,.to,_ ~lpn ...!~~I!Y..Jn!i .. l t! ff '!!'.rf#,
enhance the ptofebl&lt;inf l educa- housed In Wood Hall. No" that
lion program."
· · those offices are open, Koby said
In addition to the space, the a study of continuing space needs
renovation gave Anniversary will be conducted to determine
new windows, a new beating and best use of those spaces.
air conditioning . system, and
Bulllfor$50,000onfundsralsed
replacement and cleaning of the In 1926,· the year of the unlversl·
,exterior stone alld brick.
.
Dr: Herman Koby," executive
assistant to Rio Grande Pres!·
dent Paul C. Hayes, said steps
were taken to preserve as much
of the building's character as
possible, because, as the oldest
standing building on campus, it
has "become the really slgnifl·
cant tie to the university's past."
''Technically speaking, one
would get -the flavor of the old
building in the center hallway,''
Koby said.
The renovation, started ·last
December, cost approximately
$1,025,000 with Portee of Ports·

i FINISHING TOUCHES - An employee of
Portc.o, the general contractor on the Anniversary
renovation proJe~ ;puiS tlle'flnlllhlligt·lluclle8
on a rooftop gutter on the building's south side.

,, H'an

The renovallon was started last December and .
' College ol Education staff have started moving·
baclt lmowhat h.., been the college's home since
the .mld·ll70s.
·

•
ly's 50th anniversary, Anniversary Hall was dedicated during
homecoming on Oct. 22, 1927.

Over the years, II also served as and the bookstore . The College of'
the home for the administrative · Education has been based there
·
and finance offices, the cafeteria since the mid-1970s.

l•

QUILT LINED

MEN'S
SUITS

REG. S28.00

TUBE SOCKS

,.
lJ

20°/o
OFF .

REG. S4.00

3 PAIRS $8.00
6 PMRS Sl 5.00

$1799

MEN'S

SAVE 19.00

SIZING UP THE 'SPACE - . H. Paul Uoyd, left, dean of the
College of Education, Flne Arts, He tilth and Physical Educational
the "University ol Rio Grande, and Sharon Yates, associate

professor of education, size up available space In Anniversary
Hall's new readlna methods room. A $1,025,000 renovation of the
8Z.year-old building was substantially completed last month.

1-

HAGGAR
SEPARATES

GROUP OF

HAGGAR
DRESS .
SLACKS

~·

. l,·

t··:,;,;; '
%

SPORT

COATS

REG. 532.99

REG. SJ9.9S

news

REG.

sas

VMJl
Friday admissions - Sara
Spencer, Long Bottom; Martha
Clonch, Pomeroy.
Friday dlacbargi!S - Mattie
Warner, Rober)&amp; Caruthers.
---------~ -~

'

- ---- -

From

Bauer discovered the day
faculty in the College of
Education at the University of
Rio .Grande moved lnM their
new offices In Anniversary
Hall. Bauer Is associate profesaor of education at Rio
Grande.

$6 7

$2295
Mon. • Fri.
9 AM 'Till PM
Tuet.·Wed.·Tllura.
8 AM 'Til I PM
hturd-v
9 PM 'Till PM

--·--···~ --~~---

MOVING DAY -

chaos emerges order, Unda

MIX OR MATCH

!i?&amp;,

'«t· ...

SLACKS
Hospital

river

• .. ..________
(From AMERICA, page Al)
_
A merr.ca

weat~'('

McDade, his crews will be
transferriJIC the overhead con.
ductor to the unclei'JI'OIIIId circuit
on State Street next week, and
then walt for lbe clrcultlnstalla·
tlon by AGE !Qr the tramc lights.
Until the streetlights are tunc·
tiona!, Iman suggested mer·
chants leave front store lights on
overnight to,provlde l~ht to the

At the • ·ranklm County Republican Chalnn~Ut's Club luncheon
for donors of at least $1,000,
Votnovlch said Democrats " have
had the ball and they tumbled it.
We' re In the cellar alld we need a

•

Novemblr 12. 1989

POint P11111nt, W. Va.

SETTLING IN - laUe Cbamben, Ullltut pl'llf...... Df
•education, ammpaltemaln ~- oftlce In Allldvenaey llllllat
•the Ualver.ttr of Rio Grun. a-ovation oa die INlliila 11M
;ereated Dine olflcea &amp;lid five claa-• for the prollllltnal
ed11ulloll program.
!

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r

I

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�______________________________________
-.

,_._._

----·--

·---··-··

.

..

-

_....

..

..

REBECCA PEARSON, KEI'l11 YOUNG

Pearson-Young
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Chapman, Bailey Run
Road, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement of their daugh·
. ter, Rebecca Pearson, to Keith
,;Young, son of Mr. and Mrs.
~':Charles Young, Raclre.

..

Young is a graduate of Southern High School and is employed
at Grueser's Saw Mill In
Pomeroy.
The bride-elect at tends Meigs
High School.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

Calendar

SUNDAY
Anonymous meets ·Tuesday, 7
CROWN CITY· - Crown City p.m., Wiseman Insurance
Methodist ·c hurch has the John- Agency.
son Family Quartet singing, ·
Sunday, 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - PERI meets
LETART -The Letart Falls
Tuesday, 3 p.m., Senior Citizen PTO will be holding Its turkey
CENTENARY - Revival un- Center; election of officers.
dinner and fall festival on Sunday
derway, Centenary United Chrisat
the school with serving to·
tian Church, 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- Operation Lif· begin at 11:30a.m. Themenuwlll
toft meets Tuesday, 445 Third
consist of one choice or meat,
CROWN CITY - Good Hope Ave.
whicH
includes turkey, ham, or
United Baptist Church, evangebaked
chicken,
mashed potatoes,
. listie services, Sunday through
GALLIPOLIS - Homemakers . noodles, slaw, green beans, roll,
Nov. 18,7 p.m., with John Mellon Council meets Tuesday, 10: 30
drink, and dessert. Prices are
and Wllllam B. Hall.
a.m., Presbyterian Church; $3.50 for adults, $2 for .children
topic hassle-free holiday by exGALLIPOLIS - Grubb Fam- tension agents Becky Culbert- under 12, and free for children
"Uy Singers at Bailey · Chapel son, Cindy Oliveri; potluck under three. A country store, ,
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m ., Rev. dinner at noon; an homemakers games and door prizes are also
· being planned. The public is
. Bob Grubb preaches.
may attend . •
Invited.
RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church will have revival
beginning Sunday and continuing
through Thursday. Dr. T. Howell
Upchurch will be the evangelist.
Evening services begin at 7: JO
p.m. The public is Invited.

Fall festival set

An alcolwl probiPm? How can

--~

·---

Christmas party
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
VFW Post 9053 and Ladies
Auxiliary in Tuppers Plains will
have a Christmas party for
members and family on Dec: 16
at 6: 30 p.m. The auxiliary will
furnish the meat and everyone is
to bring a COI(er~ dlsll. Santa
Claus will be present to give out
treats and a gift exchange lor the
kids with a $3 lim it.

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Washington
Elementary PTO rileetsMonday,
7 p.m., schoot"library; speaker
Beth Amorlya on defiance.

Yes, at Veterans Memorial Hospital we again have
something to crow about in the success of our Meigs County
Senior Citizens Mini-Health Fair staged on Nov. 2 and 3.

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP- The
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet In regular session on
Monday at 7 p.m. at the town hall.

We had scheduled 130 senior citizens for appointments
during the two-day fair. A few walk-ina did come also, so
actually we surpassed the 130 person goal set for the·event.

CHESTER - The Chester
Township Trustees will meet
Monday at 7:30p.m. In the town
hall.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Christian Union Church will
hold revival Monday through
Saturday with different s~a~ters
and singers nightly. TM public is
invited to attend.

Those attending received free blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol tests and .colo rectal cancer testing skits
were made available at a minimal cost.

REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will sponsor
the football and volleyball banquet at the high school on
Monday at 6: 30 p.m. Each family
is to bring three covered dishes,
meat, dessert, and vegetable or
salad. Table service and drink
will be provided.

Our employees performed effectively to make _the fair as .
pleasant as possible down to ·the se..Ving of refreshments in
our conference room as those attending waited for test results.

SomefhfRI To C1ow About/
.,

.

115 UST MEMOMAL DIIVE

992-2104

Overeaters
(

er.....r.sr!MII...,.

checlt or mont-1order for 13.65 to:
Alcohol, c/o Ann Landen, P.O. Box
I 1562, Cloi""'fO, Ill. 606/1-1)562.

'·

PO.IOY

POMEROY- The Laurel Cliff ruffles and lace. She carried a
Free Methodist Church was the white lace basket with ribbons
setting for the Sept. 7, 7: 30 p.m. thai matched her dress.
double ring wedding ceremony of
The ring bearers were Joseph
Margo Elaine Martin, Anaheim, Franklin Martin and Maithew
Calif., and Brei Edgar Florian, Earl Sellers, both nephews of the
Anaheim, Calif.
bride.
The bride is the daughter of
Michael McDonald, St. Albans,
Franklin and Ida Mae Martin, W.Va., served as best man . The
Middleport. The groom Is the son best man, soloists, minister, ring
of Edgar Florian Jr., Pomeroy, bearers, and fathers were presand the late Patricia Florian.
ented boutonnieres.
The Rev. William R. Williams
During the ceremony the bride
officiated the cer~mony in which and groom presented roses to the
music was provided by Kathy mother of the bride and the
Johnson, organist, and Steven grandmothers.
Martin, brother of the bride, and
A receptton was held In the
Kyle Soltesz, Columbus, as church socllil room where the
soloists.
bride's table featured a blue and
Given in marriage by her white three tiered cake with a
father, the bride wore a formal bride and groom replica on top.
white gown of taffeta with lace Assisting at the reception were
BRET EDGAR and MARGO ELAINE (MARTIN) FLORIAN
overlay which featured a chapel Dolly Mowery and Diane Roush.
length train. The long lace Guests were registered by Lisa
sleeves were gathered at _the Ashley.
wrist and the yoke was of
The bride is a graduate of
matching shear, lace with a high Meigs High School and attended
stand up collar. The fingertip veil Rio Grande College. She will
of Illusion was fastened with a continue her education In Califormatching headpiece.
nia where she will study elem!'nFebruary B-18, 1990
The Bl ble carried by the bride . tary education. She Is employed
was a gift from her grandmother, with the Presbyterian PreFrances Martin. She carried a School.
colonial style bouquet of blue
The groom is a graduate of
roses and white carnation with Point Pleasant High School. He Is
blue and white matching employed with Coast Corvette In
Escort
streamers.
Anaheim, Calif.
Ul Applegate
Jolene Martin, sister of the
The couple resides in Anaheim,
bride, served as matron of honor. Calif.
She wore a mint green strapless
Out of town guests attending
dress with lace. She carried a the ceremony were Ruth Florian,
Ftve ports-of-call on four islands: Oahu, Maul, Kauai,
colonial bouquet of miniature grandmother, Mansfield; Mike, ·
and Hawaii.
silk carnations of mint green and Andrea, and Seth McDonald, St.
white with matching ribbons .
Albans, W.Va. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Call AAA today! ' ·
The flower girl was Pamela John Umbarger, Galllpolis; DiMarttn, niece of the bride, who anne Roush. New Haven, W.Va.;
wore a mint green dress with Kyle Soltesz, Columbus; and
June Wickersham, Letart.
Dorothy Douglas is the grandmother of the groom with whom .
he resided during high school.

1-iawaii Cruise

·FACTORY AUTHORIZED ·SERVICE
·E...erson

, Goldstar
·Satnsung .
Soundesign
Zenith
-

Shin toni
Multi Tech .
Scott

~

WE IEPAII ALL MAKES
992-3524

.'

Ho e fashion

Sale I

FLOOR
LAMPS

Grandfather Clocks
Driwen

REG. 5159

8-Wov
68''

SALE

'GALLIPOJ.,IS - Activities and
menus for the week of November
13, thru November 17, at the
Senior Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike, wUI be as follows:
Monday - Chorus, 1 p.m.
l'uesday - STOP/ Physical
Fitness, 10:30 a.m.; Video
"Space Camp" 12:30 p.m.;
Pretty Punch, 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday .::- "IN THE
KNOW" The Heart of a Healthy
Life 11 a.m.; Cards, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday- BlbleStudy,10:4511: 45 a.m.; Herbalists, 1:30
p.m.; Bd, of Trustees, 1:30 p.m .
Friday - Art Class, 10-nQon;
Craft Class, 1·3 p.m.
Menus consist of:

S77
OVER 200
LAMPS IN
STOCK AND
AU ON SALE!

URIO CABINETS
Lighted, Mirror lade

lEG. 1359 SALE

$1 8
--•

..
\

"

$699

79" P•dim•t Top

bv HOWIIrd

'"

Mill•. W"tmlnster Chim• wh:h
a,... Weights.
A Gift of Tru• Sentiment

'"

A DOZEN STYLES IN STOCK

From.l599 to 1299

...

•

•CEDAR CHESTS
•BEAUTIFUL
. COlLECTIBLES
•WILLIAMSBURG BRASS
•WALL CLOCKS

40 SOFAS

•nd PECAN

Oyw 1 S Dlffertnt Stylet
, , _ •••• , •• , . . 011

REDUCED

GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank
locate in the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH has full-time, parttime, or temporary help.
These 50 years or older applicants have a better stability and
a better record of continued
acceptance by employers once
they are hired.
Do you need someone to do
cleaning, !ix&gt;~our broken storm
doors, leaking pipes, baby sitting
some one to live in or part-time
live in with the elderly, if you do
the Job Bank will fill your needs.
The Job Bank Is open Monday
Monday - Swiss steak with
through Friday from 7 a.m. to 3
onions, noodles, broccoli, bread,
p.m. so feel free to call one of the
sliced peaches.
Job Counselors.
Tuesday - Lasagna, garden
The number to call Is 446-7000
salad, rye bread, white cake with · lets put a senior citizen tu work.
cherry topping.
Wednesday - Uma and sausage or ham, harvard beets,
mandarin oranges, biscuits,
cookies;
Thursday - Baked chicken,
whipped potatoes, green beans,
bread, apple cake or apple brown
betty;
Friday - Fish. hominy, penny
carrot salad, bread, lee cream;
Make reservations by calllng446-7000 before 9 a.m. the day you
wish to attend.

w.

TOP DOLLARS
FOR

WILP
PRIEP
GINSENG
ROOTS

~~~~;~!

Direct Shipment
To The Orient

446·0699

Hours: Mon. to Fri. 9:00 •m·5:00
Sot. 9 .:30 am-t2:00
-

DON'T MISS THIS SA I.E!

In the service..._ _ __

•'

REG. 1995

Job Bank
aids seniors

Senior Citizens plan
weekly cent~r eyents

6 WAY

•Moon Dial •Chimtl

•Cabli"br

'

Tho Moot light
For Ae•ding or 1
S-ing

AN INVESTMENT IN TIME

Badawia- Roberts

with baby's breath.
::POMEROY - Diana Roberts
Cathy Maltby, Granville,
a11d Husam Badawla were united
iii marriage on Oct. 28 at the served as maid of honor, and
Carnal Khader, Toledo, served
!Wme of the bride.
: The bride Is the daugther or as the bes I man.
A reception followed the
Sharon and Michael Roberts,
Bath, and the granddaughter of ceremony.
The ' bride is a graduate of
Nanga Roberts and the late Bob
Revere High School in Bath, and
Roberts, Pomeroy.
Is attending the University of
,The groom is the son of Refqa
Toledo.
Salhiyah and Mohammed Bada- .
The groom ts a gr~_duate of
W:ta, AI-Salmiya City, Kuwait.
AI·Satmiya
Secondary School, .
"The bride wore a street length
g6wn of tiered satin with chiffon and is attending Wright State
Un lverslly in Dayton.
s!Peves and she carried a bou·
The newlyweds reside in
qltet of white roses with white
carnations lipped in light blue Dayton.

HoME
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
391 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

·Holiday
·Ideas!

HUSAM and DIANA (ROBERTS) BADAWIA

.•
••
..•

.,

'"
..

20°/o-70°/o
...'"
"

-:

AARON E. WATTERSON
Waltraud M. Parsons of 262
Air Force Airman Aaron E. Jackson Pike, Galllpolls;OH, has
Watterson has arrived for duty at completed recruit training at
Elmendorf Air Force Base, Recruit Training Command,
Alaska.
Great Lakes, Ill.
Watterson is a jet engine
During Parson's eight-week
mechanic with the 21st Compo- training cycle, he studied gennent Repair Squadron.
. erai military subjects designed
He Is the son of Evrelle E. and to prepare him for further
Carol J. Watterson of Rural academic and on-the-job training
Route 1, Vlr)\Pn, O)llo.
In one of the Navy's 85 basic
The airman 19 a 1988 graduate fields.
'
of • North Gall Ia High School,
Parson's studies Included sea·
Vinton.
mans hip, close order drill, Naval
history and first aid, Personnel
JEFFREY D. MUNDELL
who complete this course of
Jeffrey D. Mundell has been instruction are eligible for three
pr9moted in the U.S. Air Force to hours of college credit in Physithe ranlt of technical sergeant.
cal Education and Hygiene.
Mundell Is a materia.I storage
and distribution specialist at
GREGG T. GRAY
Grissom Air Force Base, Ind.,
Marine Sgt. Gregg T, Gray, a
with the 305th Civil Engineering resident of Gallipolis, OH, reSquadron.
cently participated In two weeks
He Is . the son of Patrick and of· act(ve duty training for
Ernestine Mundell of Rural reseJ:VIsts.
Route 1, Bidwell, Ohio.
During the training conducted
The sergeant is a 1975graduate with 4th Marine Division, Char·
of North Gallla High School, lotte, N.C., Gray received infor' Vinton, Ohio.
·
mation and practical application
relating to current mllltary
PATRICK R. PARSONS
procedures and policies.
Navy Seaman Recruit Patrick
He is a 1982 graduate of Seneca
R. Parsons, son of Jabez D. and High School, Louisville.

GIBSON
REFRIGERATORS
14 c:u. n.

$489
GUN
CABINETS
&amp;
CURIOS!
Greal Selection
Of Styles &amp; Finishes
Layaway

MAYTAG
APPLIANCES!
•AUTOMAnC WASHERS
•DRYERS
• DISHWASHERS ·

Give Mom The Best
This Christmas!

FOR SALE
1980 PETERBUILT TRUCK ............... $1 0,000
360 Cummins engine, 9 speed and 40 ft.

••

Shown Above: A comfortable 86': 10fa in blue end
• reel floral · ~
A SUPER VALUE- 1 ONLY
.•

REG •. $1495

VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

GALLIPOLIS Riverside
Study Club meets Tuesday, home
of Elaine Rees; prognim by
Marguerite Hinernan.

j

TIIIH'II Svnditt~lf' utd

The positive remarks from many residents who came to
the fair certainly again puts Veterans Memorial- Your Hometown Hospital - in the happy position of having:

TVESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro·
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.

GALLIPOLIS -

ANN LANDERS

" 1989, LDt ""......

The fair was just another example of Veterans Memorial
Hospital's dedication to community service and support.

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladies
Auxiliary wUI meet on Monday at
7 p.m. at the hall at 124 Butternut
Ave. Refreshments · will be
served.
'
POMEROY -The A.R.B.A.
Rabbit Club will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Office. All youths and
adults interested In the rabbit
industry are lnvitzd to attend.

you help your.elj or ~omPonf' ynu
love? ..Aicolaoli•m: How 10 Reco/{·
nizr lr, How roDeal Withlr. How lo
Conquer It" will ~ive you l·he
an•wer.. Send o telf·addreu~d.
long. butin~u-•i:e envelope ond a

Ann
Landers

Somsthlnf ·To:.
C1ow About/

GALLIPOLIS - The Burlingham Modern Woodmen will
have an outing at Dale's Smorgashoard on Sunday beginning at
noon. All are welcome. The price
will be $2 per person with age 10
under free.

Forian-Martin

Weddin

Inadequacy, guilt hold her back·
Dear Ami Laaden: I am a blame on her, remember that
woman close to ~ yean of age you allowed her to do 11.
who Is completely dominated by
It serves no usefill pul'p9Se to
her mother. She is nearly 80.
look back. Look ahead. Today a
After I was divorced I moved in woman "close to 50" is still
with Mother because I couldn't young. With good professional
affort a place of my own. My help you can make a life for
daughter was very young at the yourself and stlllfeelllkealoving
time, and I had no choice.
daughter. The real enemy in this
My job turned out to be a scenario -is not your mother but
godsend. I did well and am now your own sense of Inadequacy
financially Independent . My and that old bugahoocalledgullt.
daughter married recently, but I
Dear Ann Luden: I've car·
am still living with Mother and rled this clipping In my wallet for
still hating lt. She is a chronic 20 years. I believe it's the most ·
complainer, always sees the touching thing you've ever pubdark -side of everything, and no · llshed. Please run it again. matter what I do, she feels that CbiCl410
she could have cione it better.
Dear Chlcqo:· Thanks for
I cannot make a move without asking. I loved reading It again.
my mother. Every place I go she Here it is:
Insists on going along. If I take a
Dear Ann Landers: I was
day off from work she includes moved by the letter from the wife
herself In my plans. Some of my who complained because her
friends resent this and have husband never said, ~ ·I love
stopped inviting me. The times you." My bu.sband was the same
when I have become determined way, but he didn't need to say
to "be my own woman" and left anything. The things he did spoke
her at home alone, she has made for him.
· ·
me feel so guilty that I decided It
We had been married 45 years
wasn't worth it.
when he died. He was not
I haven't had a decent vacat ton articulate; In fact he was more of
in years because I'd rather stay a blusher than a talker. But there
home than take my mother. All were little patS and pinches, and
she would do is complain.
sometimes a wink. I remember
Can you help me get my head his wonderful gifts during our
on straight? Should I tnove no · salad days, a 49-cent box ot
matter what? I feel as If my chocolate cherries and a 50-cent
entire life is slipping away and I handkerchief. from the dime
can't save myself. Please do not store. One day he hough! me a
indicate where this letter came hot tie ot cologne. He said be had
from. If my mother knew I wrote smelled it on a girl In the otflce
to you she would cruelty me. and thought I'd like lt.
Stuck Somewhere in the U.S.A.
My loveliest memory Is the
Dear Somewhere: I am sugtime he came home from a
gesting two moves. First, out of two-day business trip with an
your mother's house and, second, artl!lcal sunflower in his suittoward a therapist who can give case. He said he hought It
you some understanding of what because it reminded him of me.
has been going on all the~eyears. That sunflower Is my most prized
, Your molh&lt;!l''s lifelong domi·
possession. As I said, he wasn't
nation has crippled you emotion- much of a talker. He was saying
ally, but before you lay all the "I love you" . without using
words. - Oklahoma City
Dear 0. City: What a man he
must have been! No woman
needs words with music like that.

........ .u .. -

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

November 12, 1989

Pomaov-Midcleport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point PlaMant, W. Va.

Engagements

~

. ....
November 12, 1989

Pllge B-2-Sundey Tmes:-Sentinel

:

FbiNIIUIE
'1 •GALLERIES
.
.
S.Cond at Grppe
~·lpolls,

ofi.

446·0332

ONLY

S4 70

·trailer.

2.4 ACRES •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S5,000
'lz Mile from Epetern High School. Utilities
.

available. TP/C water.

·

Layaway
Now

2 ACRES Cwtis Hollow Road, Long lottom.u.$5,000

eLay-away'
•Gift Wrappl-.g
•FrH Delivery

Borders Forked Run State Park. Drilled well,
electric available.

o,... Mon. &amp; Fri. 9-1

•

WHicdays 9·5

·,!
I

'

HOME NATIONAL BANK
ladne, Ohio

,,

IIEIIBER FDIC

9t9-2210

' MASON,WV

.• - ·

�•

Paga

B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Katie's korner

/

BIKE WINNER - John Bechtle, left, representing his lather,
Darrell, Middleport, is seen here with his mountain bike won at
Vaughan's Cardinal in ~liddleport. Also pictured Is Nancy
Anderson, Mason, W.Va., with his and her bikes.

By KATIE CROW
If all goes well U wlll be fun fun- fun!
In May or 1990
the 1940 graduating class of
Pomeroy High
School will,
Lord willing,
celebrate Its
50th reunion.
It just seems like yesterday
that we walked onto !he stage at
good old Pomeroy Junior High
Schoof to receive our diplomas.
What a grand night that was. We
really !bought we were big stuff
-!(new It all, butboydldwe have
a lot lo'learn.
·
Five of us grads held a
preliminary meeling. just to lay
the ground work, las! Tuesday at
the home of Mary Bowen. Others
a !lending were Anna bell Houdashelt. Gallipolis, NeiUe Brown
and Ada Warner, Pomeroy, and
myself.
If the meeting was any Indication as to the good time you will
have next May, you no doubt will
have the time of your life - to
remember for years to come.
There were 87 graduates In the
class of 1940. There are 64 of us
left with 25 of the 64 residing In
Meigs Cou ty.
Now we hope to hear from
those of you In Meigs County we need your help and Input. Wf!
hope to make this the best 50th
reunion ever staged.
There will be lots or work to be
clone -lots of plans to be madeand lots of fun to be had - so let
us hear from you.
Tuesday night someone said
we needed lo put$2.50 each In the
pot for postage. Then someone
quipped, no we need $3. Well to
start with I had $10. Ada took my
$10 and gave me two $5 bills. I
was in good shape. I put In the$5
and took out $2. Nellie and Mary
said, "now that Isn't rlghl"
Annabel sat quietly waiting for
us to made Idiots out of ourselves.

certificate.

•
•

REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Band Boosters will sponsor an
arts and crarts show on Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There will
be live entertainment. food, and
soft drinks. Call 98~3951 or
992-2996 for information.

Craft show and sale
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Ladies-Auxiliary of the VFW post
9053 in Tuppers Plains will have a
craft show and sal'e on Dec. 2
from 9a.m. to4p.m.Soupbeans.
corn bread, cole slaw. pie, cake.
and hot dogs will be served. The
public i~.invlted to attend. ·'

II was unique, It was clever,lt
was grand.
On the Sunday before Halloween Jack and Judy Williams of
Syracuse entertained with a
Halloween party.
The party was held at the barn
on the Jack Williams Sr., property. The barn Is huge. There
were bales and bales of hay In the
barn that were arranged so that
there was a huge couch. a table
that was laden with food, olher
seating areas and tunnels for the
chlldren to go through In the dark
of the night.
Suspended from the ceiling
was a hangman's noose that
turned out to be a fun game.
Miniature lights were strung
throughout the barn. The outside
of the barn was also attractively
decorated in keeping wlth !he
event.
Across the highway from .the
barn was a bonfire where you

HARRISONVILLE --The Harrisonville Senior Citizens wlli
sponsor a blood pressure clinic
oit Tuesday from lOa.m. In noon.
Followlng the clinic there will be
a club meeting and all members
are urged to attend.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will meet
In regular session on Tuesday at
noon 11t Velerans Memorial Hospital. The guest speaker will be
Fenton Taylor, principal at
Meigs High School.

--Anniversaries--

Turkey dinner

WHERE: The Fabric Shop
WHEN: Tues., Nov. 14-6-8' pm
WHO: Anyone inter1sted in learning
what niachine knitting is all about.
We supply the machine, yarn ancJ
instructors.

CUSS FEE MAY • APPLIED TO PUICHASE OF
KNimNG MACHINE
.
Cll•s Size Li•lt.d-Cal 992-2214 As Soon As Possible

MR. and MRS. WARNER HALLEY

Halley anniversary observed
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
'Mr. and Mrs. Halley observed
Warner M. Halley were united In their 50th wedding anniversary
marriage on Oct. 28, 1939 at on Saturday, Oct. 28, with an
Pomeroy, Ohio by the late Percy · afternoon .reception hosted by
Peoples, Justice of !he Peace.
their daughter. Linda and nelce,
They are the parents of one Jody ( Mehl) Dyson, Tucson,
daughter, Linda (Halley) Stauch Ariz.
and one granddaughter, Shanda,
Both are retired from the State
Londonderry, Ohio.
of Ohio and reside In Gallipolis.

Family Planniltg
It Makes Sense•••
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

v.

Sliding fee Kille. No one refused services blaMe qf i11ability ta pay. ·

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

•

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:
236 E. Main St., 2nd floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Cloud Thwsday ·

GALliPOLIS:
414 Second Ave. 2nd Floor
~46-0166
1:30 10 5:00

.....,.friday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
o
Clo11d Thursday
AlSO: .lacks011, (httapeakt, Athens, (lillicothe, legon &amp; McArthw

...
·'

-

GJM alcohol, drug
council meeting set
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga!lla,
Jackson, Meigs board .of alcholh,
drug addiction and menial health
meets Monday. in the board
offices, 7 p.m.

•

-.

.•

}ames Sands

An exciting event
in the Ariel Theater
While the Ariel Opera House
has been opened to the public
since December of 1895, perhaps
the most excit·
ing day for the
Ariel came
ear.Iy In its
history.
The date was
April 8, 1896 and
on that date the
AI G. Field Minstrel Show
appeared here. At that time the
Field show was the largest
minstrel show In the world. It had
60 performers, elaborate costumIng, scenery and they traveled In
their own railroad cars. But the ·
thing which made this particular
show so special that year was the
80 year old man, who was making
his !~ewell performance tourDaniel Decatur Emmett.
Dan Emmett, born In 18151n Mt
Vernon, Ohio was one of the
Inventors of minstrelsy. Emmett
or the fiddle, Billy Whitlock on
the banjo, Frank Brower on
bones, and Dick Pelham on
tambourine made up the nucleus
of what was .regarcled as the first
minstrel troupe, named the Virginia Minstrels. The Virginia
Minstrels, the Charles White
Minstrels and tM Dan Bryant
Minstrels all of whom at on~? time
or another used the services of
Einmett developed the minstrel
show as a musical form.
As In large measure developed
·by Emmett and others the
minstrel show soon came to have
a three partformat: the first part
featuring more serious music;
the second part being the olio
which Included parodies, dancIng, lighter songs and Instrumentals; the third part. was the
. walk-around or the finale with
fast paced transitions from singIng to dancing to Instrumental.
While Emmett was the author
of such familiar songs as '~Tur­
key In the Straw" and "Old Dan
Tucker" It was his composition of
"Dixie" for which hP is best
remembered.
It was at the beginning of theCivil War that the Emmett
walk-around finale composition
called "Dixie" was first performed In New Orleans. lr, was
such an emotional moment, that
tM show received a very lengthy
standing ovation. In other cities
In the ,south, the song became
popular. During the CivU War It
was a tune sung often by the
Confederate soldiers.
Following the Civil War Dan
Emmett lived In Chlcag3 and
traveled with Haverly's Minstrels, and later the Glgantean
Minstrels. Due however to a
chapge In public taste away from

"Special Care For People Who
Are Special To You"

Rifes observe anniversary
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Rife, of Cheshire, will he
celebrating their 50th Wedding
Anniversary with an open reception on Saturday, Nov. 18, from
2-5 p.m. at Cheshire Baptist
Church fellowship hope.
Mr. and Mrs. Rife were married on Nov. 18,' 1939 in Russell,
Ky.
He Is the son of the late Rachel
and Cornelius Rife. She Is the
daughter of Edith Shamblin and
the late -James H. Shamblin.
The couple has lived In Cheshire the past 50 years and are
still active In the community and
Cheshire Baptist Church, of
which both are memoers.
They are the parents of two

Emmett's style of minstrelsy to a
more sentimental approach that
featured the songs of Stephen
Foster, Emmett a! one tim~ was
In the throes of poverty. His
fr lends even held a be neff! for
him and got him a job as.a fiddler
so he could survive:
•
About 1888 Emmett retired to a
small chicken farm near Mt.
Vernon, laqiely forgotten. AI
Field found Emmett In 1895 and
was surprised that very few
people In Mt. Vernon even
realized how famous a celebrity,
at least In the south, Emmett had
been. Field talked Dan Emmett
Into going on a farewell tour In
which the feature of the show
would be "Dixie". Emmett
would perform In the show and
also · speak for a few momenls
aboul the minstrel show and
about the history behind
''Dixie''.
All through the south the AI G.
Field Minstrels with Dan ,~m·
melt played to standing rbom
only crowds. Ov~tions, two,
three, four a night were given to

Slug and muzzel
loader shoots
POMEROY - The Ken Amsbary Chapter of the Izaak Wallon
League will have slug sh·aots on
Sunday, and Nov. 26. Muzzle
loader shoots will be held on I'lec.
17. Dec. 24, and Dec. 31. The
shoots will consist of free hand
and bench rest events at various
distances. Rifle and scopes wlll
not be shot in the same category.
Various prizes of meat and
money wlli be awarded.

ON THE OF THE Most exciting evenings In the old Ariel Theatre
occured on AprO 8, 1896 when the AI G. Field llflnstrel Show
featuring the farewell tour of Dan Emmett perfonned. It was _a
standing room only crowd and when Dixie was performed, rt
broul{ht the house down.

this grand old man of the stage.
During the day Emmett would be
wined and dined by the local
notables. Finally the tour came
north-In Kansas, in Chicago, in
New York and other places the
reaction was the same, From
Buffalo the Field show came to
Gallipolis anc;l then to lronlon
which was the last performance.
So Emmett's next to last public

We Specialize in
REHABILITATION
EQUIPMENT
Continuity of Care

Council to meet
ATHENS -A meeting of the
Buckeye Joint County Self Insu- .
. ranee council will bz held on
Friday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Athens County Extension Oi!ice.

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES
507 Mulberry Awe.

P-eroy, Oh•
Ph. 992-2310

CHRIST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH WOMEN
ARE HOSTING A

-

WOMEN'S

DRESS, SPORT &amp; TENNIS SHOES

SPAGHEnl SUPPER

2 Pair Special

SAT., NOV. 18
At Christ United Methadist ·
Church (6 mi. South of ·
Gallipolis)
Serving 5:30 to 8:00 p.m.

Buy One Pair at Regular Price

1/2 Price
2nd(LOWER
Pair
PRICE PAll 'It PRICE)

MENU: Speghetti w/meat uuce,
..lad, garlic breed. pie, coffee and

,...

appeara,nce outside of his hometown was at the Ariel.
The AI G. Field Minstrel shOw
continued until 1928. It was the
last professional minstrel show.
The tour of Emmett with Field
caused a reawakening among
historians of Daniel Emmett and
until his death In 1904 he received
a steady stream of visitors to his
farm.

ENTERTAINMENT AT
'h HOUR INTERVALS

ADULTS-13.75
CHILDREN Undtr 12-13,00
Kids 3 &amp; u.., fill wI A~ult Meal

WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES
SPORT SHOES
TENNIS SHOES

for at
Speelal eeaslon

MR. and MRS. RALPH RIFE

'

Sunday Times- Sentinei-Page-B-5

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

ATHENS -The South Eastern
Ohio Regional Council on Alcohocould roast hot dogs and there
lism will have Its board of .
was a barrel with apples and pop.
lrustees meeling on Tuesday at 7
Most everyone was In costume
and the costumes were Judged. It , p.m. at the office In Athens. The
public Is Invited to attend.
was a grand party with lots of
good food and good fun. Assisting
Judy wlth the decorations was
Eleanor McKelvey.
REEDSVILLE -The Ladies
It was nice, very nice. E:vents
Auxiliary of the Orange Tow~
such as this just make the
ship Fire Department are plan-.
memories sweeter than ever.
nlng a 1urkey dinner on Saturday
beginning at 4 p.m. at the fi~
And so It goes.
station.
:

Pomeroy Chamber
meeting Tuesday

Blood pressure
clinic scheduled
WINNERs AT VAUGHAN'S- Ruby Vaughan, left, Is seen here
with winners, from Jell, Terl Hockman, Middleport, who won a $50
gllt certificate; Kelly and Lynn Hawk, Letart, W.Va., who won a
microwave oven; and Betty Shelton, Pomeroy, who won a S50 gift

Mary and Nellie began to counl
what they had done and It just
didn't add up. They kept saylng,"thls Isn't right" With five
people putting In S6 each we
should have had $30. AI first we
had too much then no! enough. By
this time we were In hysterics
with laughter.
Now If you think we are to be In
charge of high finances you got
another think coming - we Just
aren't the high flnancelype.JI we
had had an adding machine and
calculator we probably wouldn't
have done any better.
So you see we need help;__ give
one of us a call- We can have a
dandy reunion If we all pitch ln.
We had a Purple Garter Assoclatlpn when we were In high school
and 1 penned a quote for the
association- A good garter lsn'l
a good garter u~tless It Is a good
supporter.
There are some grads whos
addresses are needed: they are
Bertha Paige Brown' Williams,
Marcella Cunningham .Bartels,
Virginia Graber (Sister Grace
Anton), Betty Jane Hysell McGowan, Edith Kerns Honchell and
Mlna Mae Sinclair Gorby.
If you have addresses on the
above let us know.

Nov.-nbar 12, 1989

SEO akohol
council to meet

Fun, fun, fun time...

Someone said we needed $6
each. So I took out the three
dollars I had put In and put In a
one dollar bill and a five dollar
bill. That left me with four
dollars Which was·correct. Then

·' Arts and crafts show

November 12, 1989

Pomaoy-Midcl..,uf-GaMipolil, Ohio-Point Plur1 ''·W.Va.

We offer complete tuKedo rental service to help you look your best or

children, Sharon Ann Taylor,
deceased, and James Rife of
Manassas, Va., and grandparents of four grandchildren, and
two great-grandchildren.
Hosting the event will be !heir
daughler-ln-law, Eva Rife and
granddaughter, Tammy Oliver.

2995 ·
HASKINS·
TANNER
332 Second Avenue

that sJ.acial dav.
PRKED FROM

$

MON. 13th- SAT. 18th

Mon. • Fri. 'Til 8 pm
Tues.-Wed.-Thur•. 'til7 pm
Saturday 'Til 6 pm

Gotllpollo. Qhio
MPn'.c Wrar Sino- 1866 ..

Happy

Wedding policy
"I was so ill when I came to Overbrook Center that I thought
I may nOt get well again. Now, I am making plans to go home at
the-end of this month and the special care I received at Overbrook
Center is the reason why I am going home. I will miss'everyone at
Overbrook because they are like familvl"

•

ULLA STRAUSS, Resident

Charbroiled Chicken, Steak and Shrimp.
Now your family can enjoy their favorite charbroiled dinners without fi~ing
up the grill. Just come to Shoney's for our Charbroiled Dinners. Chicken,
steak, shrimp, or steak and shrimp grilled to perfection over an open flame.
And with rice or potatoes, plus unlimited trips to our Soup, Salad and Fruit
Bar, that's quite a meal. So grill ~ut at Shoney's tonight.

Come Visit, and Experience First
Hand The Overbrook, Di erence.
ApproY... and Certified
far

IDon't miss the Thanksgiving Feast at Shoney's.l

SHONEY~
CHARBROILED DINNERS

,·

'.

I

Mlclcaid, Weare,
Worbrs Cllllplnlation
Private lnlur•c• Programs,
A1 Well AI
Self-Pay hsidtnh.

u

(614) 992·6472
333 PAGE STREn
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45 760
•

'·'

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia.
Meigs and Mason counties as
news and Is happy to pub! ish
wedding stories and photographs
without charge.
However, wedding news musl
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers t.o
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.
All material for Along the
River must be recieved by the
editorial department l!Y Thurs• day. 4 p.m., prior to the date of
publication.
Photographs of either the bride
• or the bride and groorri may be
publlshe&lt;! with wedding stories,
if desired. Photographs may be
either black and white or good
quality color, billfold size or
larger.
.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or Instant-developing photos are not of acceptable quality.
•
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department from 1
to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
at (614) 446-2342 .

"

Specials Just for

No~emher!

WHO.LE HOUSE OF
CARPET CLEANING

ANY 2 ROOMS OF
CARPET CLEANING
Combined living ereao count as
Hparate roorn1.

MaKimum seven clHnlng areas:
any combination of 6 roomo, h11t1,
and o18lro or beth.

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UPHOLSTERY CLEANING TOO-.
ANY SOFA UP TO 7 n. or 2
CHAIRS

$4499

$3999

Protector and Deodorizer each eveltable at additional colt. Free commerclot ootimatos. Visa
Charge end MoeterCard Welcome. Beoed on regular price of •39. 99 for 2 rooms of carpet
ciHning and •17.00 I*' eddlt!Onet room, rogutar price of •44.9~ por oofa. U2.60 per
chair. Minimum order: 2 roomo or 1 oofa or 2 chalro.

•1ng

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ADVANCED
AUTHOIIZED
CUANING
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CAU MON.·SAT., .:30 AM TO S:OO PM
Gallipolis (614) 446-3915

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1506 ...,............
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•

Members of the museum 's
hoUday planning committee are
still asking area residents to
bring out the old toys and
Cbrlstmas decorations from years past for use In exhibitions at
the open house.
Many Items are. already In
place at the museum but there's
still time to add more before the
holiday season gets Into full

.

...

at 992-3810, 1 to 4: 30 p.m .,
Tuesday through Saturday.
Also, anyone who would be
Interested In dei1\Qnstratlng the
making of Christmas decora·
tlons or other Items should
contact museum workers about
that also. The committee hopes
to schedule some workshops
during the month of November,
as well as during the open bouse.
It's possible that a new exhibit
room - a sewing room - may
even be ready for public viewing
by open house day.
A definite new feature of this
year' s open hOuse will be a
Gingerbread House Contest
which Is also being sponsored by
the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society.
Now's the chance for anyone

GINGEIBIEAD HOUSE CONTEST
N•mt- - - - - -- -- -- - - - -- -

who has ever thought about
mak lng a gingerbread house to
do just that , and maybe win a
prize In the bargain.
There are three categories to
the contest; cottage (one-s·
tory), house (two stories), and
other structures. Entries are to
be no larger than two feet by two
feet and must be In place at the
museum on Butternut Avenue In
Pomeroy by 1 p.m., Friday, Dec.
1. The gingerbread buildings ar~
to be displayed during the
museum's Dec. 3 open house.
Judging of gingerbread entries
will take place on Dec. 2 and
awards will be given.
Anyone wishing to participate
In the Gingerbread House Con·
test should register with the
museum by Monday, Nov. 27 ..

.. ,,:/

•

By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - If you'd like to
turn back the bands of time,
perhaps, you
can check with
Ora Bass of
Syracuse.
Mrs. Bass has
an electric clock
In the kitchen of
her home and
lor 20 years the clock has kept
perfect time. Tue&amp;day morning,
ho')'ever, she noted that the clock
was not In accord with the time of
day. She checked It out and found
that the clock somehow had
started running backwards.
Some have suggested to Mrs.
Bass that she unplug the clock
alid perhaps, when It Is restarted
It ;will go back Into the normal
pattern. However, Mrs. Bass Is
resisting that suggestion - she
says she can always look at other
clocks In ' the house to get the
correct time - she klnda likes
the novelty of the clock running
backwards.
She Is curious,
however, to know If anyone else
has encountered this problem.

P~n•--------------------------------

CATEGORY

(1 story)
___ House (2+ stories)
-Other Struct11res
~Cottage

Library meeting

Diet class set

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
District Library Board of Trustees meet Tuesday, 5 p.m .,
Bossard Library.

GALLIPOLIS - Choose to
Lose diet class meets Tuesday, 9
a.m., Grace United Methodist
Church.

WEDDING
.DIAiONDeENGIAVD

TAWNEY JEWELERS

PlAIN

all Filipino-American health
professionals who are enjoying
freedom and security of health
and comfort at their best In this
country, not to forget the poor
and their less 'fortunate fellow
counti-ymen in the Philippines.
Lydia Simon, R.N .. wife of Dr.
Mel P. Simon, a urologiSt, works
In the program each year and
will leave on Nov. 20 to go to the
Philippines to assist In prepara·
tlons for the medical miSsion.
Her husband will join her there
on Dec. 8.
Simon Is one of 14 doctors from
the USA who will be participating
in this year's mission.

'21 SIC_, '"·
Gall..... Ohle

30°/o OFF

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I

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PRIC E
2 MATTRESS SALE

-------Don't know If you ·caught the

Today Show on TV Friday
morning but there was a topic
wlllch might be of Interest to a
number of Meigs Countlans.

l\ gentleman Interviewed re·
ported that he Is compiling a
registry of VIetnam veterans.
There Is no such registry at this
time and the man now has listed
25,000 veterans of that war.
However, be estimates that there
arf more than 1 million such
veterans.
During the Interview, the gen·
!Ieman reported that he Is
complllng the book at his own
expense and Invites all VIetnam
v~erans to get registered , with
him. To get the Information on
what you need to send him you
should write Vietnam Veterans
Registry, P .O. Box 430, Bridgton,
Me.• 04009. You are to send a
self-addressed stamped enve·
lope so tl)at he can get the
Information to you without cost
slllce he Is dobtgthe project at his
own expense.

BACIC BY
DEMAND!

His wife, Lydia Simon, R.N., who handles medfcal
supplies and assl!!ls with otber phaseti of tbe
mission, will be leaving for the PbUipplaes on
Nov. 20 and will be joined there by her husband In
early December.

and conducting lectures during
their stay, Dec. 11-15.
Last year the medical-surgical
mission worked at the Quezon
Cit y General Hospital from Dec.
12·16. The hospital is located In
the city's . slum district and
surrounded by squatters who live
a hand-to-mouth and day-to-day
exls tence and where basic health
care Is a luxury, according to
Simon ..
IUs for this reason, Simori said,

People in the n:ews
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
Vnlted Press International
ROYALSCREW·VP: How common -PrbtcessAnne listed In
the Gloucestershire, England, phone book. Queen Elizabeth's
daughter was mistakenly included In the directory under H for
"HRH Princess Anne, Mrs. Mark PhiiUps" but the number
liSted was actually that of her shepherd, Simon Gaskell. "We
~ave not so far received any calls for the· princess," said
Gaskell's wile, Frances, who finds the whole affair amusing.
"ObviOusly, she's not available on this number." The erroneous
phone number came from Princess Anne's letterhead, which
listed several numbers, including the Gaskells'. The directory
was publiShed in August but there were no royal complaints so
British Telecom oflldals never nolle~ the liSting until
newspapers pointed It out. British Telecom changed the
GaskeliS' number Thursday .
MLK 10 HOLDS NO GRVDGE: Martin Luther King IUsays
he told the Rev. Ralph Abernathy that his book deals with his
father unfairly but he still loves him. The younger King said he
ran Into the Abernathy, whose autobiography "And the Walls
Came Tumbling Down" talks about King Jr.'s extramarital life,
last week at the dedication of the new civil rights memorial In
Montgomery, Ala. ''I told him, 'I have always been taught to
love people and I still love you," ' King Til told The Tennessean
newspaper of Nashville. " 'I think your treatment of my father
was unfair.' But I told him I loved him and I always wilL " The
younger King said he was speaking for himself and not other
family members.
ZAPPA SAYS INVEST IN WINDSHIELD WIPERS: Frank
Zappa Is helping bring capitaliSm to the Soviet Union. The avant
garde rocker recently turned his attentions to International
whecling and dealing, working as a go-between for companies
that want to do business In the U.S.S .R. Zappa, appearing on the
Financial News Network's "Focus" program, said be has
worked out an agreement of his own to have his records
distrlb~ted In the Soviet Union. And If you want a tip on what's a
hot Item In Moscow, Zappa says the Russians direly need
windshield wipers. He claims the shortage Is so acute that taxi
drivers now remove the wipers from their cabs to discourage

that members of the medical·
-surgical mission have made it
an annual project and encourage

Our first bus is sold
out,' so wJv·e added a
second bus. Call AAA
today to make you(
reservation. Our remaining seats are
selling fast!

of

~estiva£ Lights
at Ogkhay Par(
~.m!Jer 16·17.

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
BALL CAPS • BAGS
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You did a lot lor Jane Warner
who certainly has needed that

!Diabetes
..
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educators
,,
help ·afflicted
in norm~l ,}ife
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1969

Oglebay's Annual Wintu
Festival of Lights will be a
thrill to behold. Over
300,000 colored lights will
sparkle over brcathlal&lt;ing
landscapes covering 300
acres. In addition to.the
festival, your tour includes
an exciting Chrtstmas pro·
duction at Jamboree uSA
and more' .

..,.,.

992-5627

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COLLECTION
for a festive, fun-filled
weekend.

.J.
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GAWPOUS

'l'l'iftel•g:nqr

J60 - . . . ....

446-0699

HOURS: Mon.·Frl. 1 :00 am· 5:00 pm

Sat . 9 :30..., to 12 Noon

IS TILL IN FULL SWING - - - -

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
STOP IN OUR NEW LOCAnON AT 330 2nd AVE., ACROSS THE
STREET FROM THE BANDSTAND IN THE PARK....

Big, Big Savings On: PIANOS, GUllARS,
AMPS., DRUM _SETS, P.A. SYSTEMS &amp;
BAND INSTRUMENTS.

sic Inc.

••

••• TO AITEMD A VERY

Join me, Brenda Roush,

Grand Opening Sale

Brunicardi

Pomeroy-Middleport

••

DATE Sunday, Nov. 12, 1989
TIME: 12 Noon til 4 P.M.
PLACE: Fruth Pharmacy Gift Dept.

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about the PRECIOUS

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LIMITEDIU

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364 Jackson Pike
Galllpolls, Ohio 45631

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Fruth Pharmacy
Cl UIU ENESCO CORPOR.-.TIOI1
•
lllullrMion *-' Cl 19111 Samuel J. Buktlef. Uc. Enuco

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boost.
Jane had been having some
health problems and ended up In
University Hospital in Columbus
where she underwent some
pretty major surgery. She now Is
at her home on S. Second Ave. In
Middleport and Is progressing
nicely.
Your cards . and words of
encouragement have meant so
much to her and undoubtedly ate
helping her ·along the road to
recovery. Jane sends along a big
thanks.

GALLIPOLIS - Ftny·Six ye·
ars ago this week, Nov . 15, 1933, a
group of 60 men became the
nucleus of what
has proved to be
one of the
s tr ongest law
e'nforcement
agencies In the
state of Ohio.
The Ohio State
Hl~hway Patrol Is observing Its
56th birthday on Wednesday,
thanks to the group of60 men who
started out from Camp Perry on
Lake Erie to take on the job of
enforcing state traffic laws on
Ohio's hlghw~ys.
1
· The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
Patrol will observe the 48th
anniversary of Its founding, Nov.
15. 1941.
'
P .O. McCreedy of GalUpolls, a
retired Commander of the
Gallla·Melgs Patrol Post,
stopped by the office the other
day and brought some background on the Gallla·Melgs Post.
We' ll have a complete story on
Tuesday on the local patrol post,
complete with pictures. '
Speaking of roads, some time
In the next decade, or sooner,
whichever comes first, you can
expect a State Route 7 bypass of
Gallipolis. The traffic on State
Route 7, over Eastern Avenue to
the Silver Brldgfj Plaza gets
heavy at time», especially with
the addition .of lhe Ohio River
Plaza.
Sometimes, it takes quite a
while to get from here to there. I

Rehearsal&amp; are underway al·
most on a dally basis at various
locations In Pomeroy and Mid·
dleport as , Varieties of '89,
annually staged by the Big Bend
Minstrel Association, Is readied.
The 'muslcal which will Include
almost 50 numbers - not to
worry, the cast Promises to wrap
the wllole show In less than two
hours - will be staged at 8: 10
p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 25 that's the Saturday of ThanksgivIng weekend - at the Ru !land
Civic Center. Proceeds will be
divided equally between the
Pomeroy.Area Chamber of Com·
merce and the Rutland Civic
Center Organization. Advance
tickets- and you save 50 cents a
ticket under the price at the door
on Nov. 25- will go on sale next
week · at several locations.
Having advance . tickets Is an
advantage not only from the
,financial saving but also on show
night you can move right Into the
center and select your seat
thereby avolillng the ticket sale Cashing In on communist crisis
line.
NEW YORK {UP!') -Leave It
Mary and Roger Gilmore, who to American capitaliSts to try to
more than active for the show make a buck off of a communist
and will be providing the sound crisis.
system for the musical free of
A pair of Cincinnati brothers
charge, are also planning a cast ' Friday offered East German
party at the center. And this will Communist Party leader Egon
be hi!ld Immediately following Krenz $1 million for the Berlin
the closing curtain.
Wall, saying they planned to sell
A group representing the show some pieces and donate 10
cast and orchestra will also be sections to museums.
airing on WYPC on Monday,
Lawrence and Martin Horwitz
Nov. 20, at 10: 30 a.m. ,Besides said pieces of barbed wire, which
talking about the show, they will would be Included In the deal,
be playing partial tapes of some would fetch higher prices than
of the numbers Included In this pieces of the wall itself.
year's presentation.
"It seems ironically approp:
rlate that capitaliSm be em·
Keep looking for the silver played to remove this eyesQre of
lining and do keep smiling.
communism," said La·.Vrence
Horwitz, In a statement released
In New Y.o rk.
'
The offer came the same .day
' East German border guards tore
away parts of the Ber Un Wall, a
28-year symbol of the Iron
Curtain and the division of
Germany .
·
The brothers made the!: offer
in a letter addressed to Krenz In
East Berlin saying they want "all
concrete. wire, doors,. hinges,
gates and passageways" and
gave Krenz seven days to
respond.
The brothers want the wall
down within six months.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medl·
cal Center wUl observe National
Diabetes E;ducatlon Week, Nov.
13-18, with :the theme, "The
Rewards of Teamwork", accord·
lng to Dottle Esque, R.N ., dla·
betes educator In staff
development.
DOTI'IE ESQVE, RN
'I'llls special week Is set aside
each year by the American education program, Esque said.
During this week, ·Ms. Esque
Association of Diabetes Educa·
has
announced a number of local
tors In conjunct kin with diabetes
activities
sponsored by Holzer
educators on hospital staffs, to
Medical
Center,
to emphasize the
highlight the benefits of a diaImportance of diabetes
betes education program.
education.
As Ms. Esqile points out,
On Monday, Esque will be the
working with a diabetes educator
'
featured
speaker In Mason
helps people with diabetes deCounty
at
the nutrition site at
velop the skills and attitudes they
12:15
p.m.,
for the bi-monthly
need to lead independent and
Health
Maintenance
program,
fulfilling lives. Diabetes educa·
co·
sponsored
by
the
hospital
and
tlon can Improve health and give
Holzer
Clinic.
patients a greater sense of
On Wednesday at 1 p.m. , she
, well-being.
will
present the same program at
The American Association of
the
Senior Citizen Center In
Diabetes Educators Is an lnde·
pendent, multidisciplinary or· Gallla County. Also scheduled
ganlzation of over 5,500 health· later In the month are Health
care professionals, dedicated to Maintenance programs on Dia, promoting the quality of diabetes betes In Jackson, Meigs and
·
educatiOn for persons with dla· Mason Counties.
On
Friday
the
hospital's
mobetes and the professional devel·
bile unit will be parked In
opment of Its members.
downtown
Gallipolis, along SeA number of special activities
cond
Avenue
by the City Park
have been planned for the week,
from
10
a
.m
.
until
2 p.m .. Esque
that will be of benefit to the
said.
community and call attention to
Blood sugar screenings will be
the Importance of diabetes
available at no charge during
education.
Diabetes Is a serious disease that time, and the resldents of the .
affecting over 11 million people area are Invited to stop by the
nationwide, many of whom are hospital's mobile unit It they
undiagnosed and others who are have any question about their
not seeking proper therapy. blood sugar level.
Esque also serves as the
Many complications are assoadvisor
and program chair for
ciated with diabetes, which make
Support Group that
the
Diabetes
It one of the leading causes of
Jl!eels
on
the
second
Thursday of
death and a major cause of
each
month
In
the
French 500
disability In this country, Esque
Room
at
the
hospital.
Residents
said.
of
the
hospital's
multi·county
Diabetes edbci1,tion can help
lessen or prevent those compllca· . service area who either have
!Ions by giving persons with diabetes or . have members of
diabetes the skills and attitudes thelr·famlly with the disease, are
they need to manage their Invited.
disease.
For a diabetes educator, tak·
lng care of the physical needs of a
person with diabetes Is the easier
part of the job. Teaching the
patient to manage his or her own
chronic disease offers even more
challengea.
The nurses, dietitians, physl·
clans, pharmacists, social
workers and other heallhcare
pi'OfefstoDJII who become dla·
betes educatora, gladly face
these challenges because they
Pd. lor by
know the benefits of a diabetes

"I've arranged to have a
pick-ax ready for me there In
Berlin, and I'm going to carry
back as much as I can ," said
Assalone, 42.
The businessman has taken out
classified ads In The New York
Times, USA Today and the
Providence Journal-Bulletin, offering pieces of the wall. The ads,
which are scheduled to run
Monday, tout the offer· as a
"unique gift."
The only charge for the trag·
ments will be the cost of slllpplng,
Assalone said. The size of the
pieces will depend on how much
he can bring to the United States.
·'!'hey will probably be jewelry
box-sized pieces," be said. "People can literally own and haye a
piece of history. That's what this
wallis, history."

u
,•,

·'

POMEROY - Pomeroy Attor·
ney Linda warner will be the
speaker at the Thursday training
session lor caregivers of those
with Alzheimer's and related
disorders at the SeniOr Citizens
Center. .
Mrs. Warner will talk on legal
implications of careglvlng. The
meeting will begin at 1:15 p.m.
· with registration followed by
Mrs. Warner's talk and a questlon and answer time. Refresh·
ments will be served at 2:30p.m.
At 2:45 p.m. the support group
will m€'1'1 .

alter telephoning the White
House and making undisclosed
threats against the president,
Sec~t Service spokesman Allan
Cramer said Friday .
Cramer said the White House
switchboard transferred
Schmidt's call to the Secret
Service. Schmidt allegedly continued to make threats against
the president while on the phone
with agents. ·
He also gave his name, tele·
phone number and address. A
short time later, Secret Service 1 ·
agents in California arrived at
Schmidt's home and arrested
him alter he restated his threats
against the president, Cramer
said.

·

••

Sharon Wright Is In charge of
the program which Is offered
through the Meigs County Coun·
ell on Aging.
Since Noveml;&gt;er Is Natlortl!l
Alzheimer's Disease Month, '
plans have been made to honor '
caregivers and care recipients at
a program to be held at 6 p.m. on
Nov. 28 at the Senior Citizens
Center.
The program will Include speclal recognition to caregivers,
live entertainment and relreh·
ments as well as a door prize and
a special guest appearance from
Santa Claus.

~e~«Qee~e~ ·

ALL

LONDON
TOWNE®
•

2 PAIRS ARE &amp;mER
THAN ONE!

25°/o.

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OFF
Buy 1st pair at
Regular Price, Get
2nd Pair At

HALF-PRICE!

'

~
~~.,•~eee~e
. LAFAYmE MAll • GAlliPOLis

.
••

•

••

MEMO:

-...--........

Man threatens Bush, leaves
address
GLENDALE, Calif. (UP!)- A
man who made repeated threats
against President Bush made It
easy for authorities to track him
down, giving his , name and
address to the Secret Service
over the telephone, agents said.
Carl Schmidt, 44, of Glendale,
was arrested Thursday night

Thanks For Your Vote ·Of
Confidence.
Your Support Was Appreciated.

•

. Caregiver's training session scheduled

...•

wants one.

a Weiaht WaU:hers m.eetina near you.
NEW 'W"": PlEASE Alllil 10 -.&amp; lAilY FOIIIIGlS'IIlTIOII AND WEI6H-111.
There

GAWPOUS
IT. HIH'I EPIICOPAL CIIIRCH
541~Avlnul
·rue: 7:00 p.m., Wed: 9:30a.m.

....-...
·-·..
.

·.!'

POMEROY
. . . ctnZE. CEmR

••

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Mulblny lfllglttl

Wtd: 1:00 p.m.

~

CLAY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

j

limes-Sentinel- Page B-7

noon In August (Aug 2, 1970. I
I never go to Point Pleasant
think ) and I took pictures. Had to
that I don't stop at the Mason
drive
them to Athens to get them
County Courthouse. Dropped In
In
the
Sunday paper.
to see "Buck" Sturgeon In the
Got
a
nice little letter the other
Assessor's olllce and Tommy
day from Marjorie Rinehart,
Haines In the County Clerk's
former Clerk of Courts In GaUla
office. I saw a familiar face In the
County. Now retired, she Is living
hall outside the Sherlfrs Tax
at Newark, Ohio and she sent me
office and It was Mary Burris
her sister, Helen's address.
Knight. Her husband was with
Helen was one of the members of ,
her. Mary used to work In the
the Class of '40 at Gallla
Circuit Court Clerk's office for
Academy High School, we'd been
the late Howard Schultz. Mary
trying to locate. It ·seems Helen
left theclerk'so!!lcetogo intot~e
and hubby , Bill Cowden, were In
service. Didn't get up to the
second floor this time to see Miles· Ohio last month for an event at
Epling and crew. Down In the · Ohio University and spent a
COllple of day s with Marjorie.
county clerk's office. I picked up
Meaanwhile, I had gotten Hel·
a brochure of the Mason County
en's
phone number and called
State Farm Museum with How·
her
at
Gulfbreeze, Fla. She told
ard Schultz's picture on the front.
me
she
and Bill had been to Ohio
Saw a couple of more famWar
and
had
visited Marjorie. If you
faces . Stopped In to see my
want to write to the former Gallla
barber, Lou Rossi, In what used
County Clerk of Courts send It to
to be Buck Fruth's barbershop.
920 Sharon Road, Newark, Ohio
And, I ran Into Stella Ball, Gene
43055. I'm sure she'd like to hear
Ball's widow. Always used to see
-·
from her friends here.
Stella on election night at the
I hate to bring this up , folks . . •
courthouse. I will never forget
But, did you know that alter :
when Gene Ball's Restaurant on
today (Sunday) there are only 42 ,:i
Sixth Street burned and I was
shopping days left 'Ill ChriStmas. :•
working · for the Athens Mes·
senger . It was a Saturday after-

Man turns Berlin Wall Into
souvenir chips
COVENTRY, R.I. (UP!i John Assa!Qne thinks everybody
should own a piece of th~ Berlin
WaiL
The laundromat owner
planned to fly to Ber Un Saturday
and spend Sunday chipping off
chunks of the wall to bring back
as souve nirs for anyone who

HAROLD SAUNDERS

•

sat In a line of traffic, north·
bound, for what seemed to be a
long time the other day and by
the time I got to the new traffic
light, at HillS. traffic was backed
up south of Smith Buick· Pontiac.
Think what It will be when Big
Bear opens.
About 25 years ago, a plan was
presented to reroute State Route
7 around Gallipolis, but nothing
ever came of lt. Then, sometime
In the last live years, there was
another plan to take State Route 7
horth over the exls tlng Second
Avenue from Sycamore Street
north to Kanauga . But, that
would have never worked. Oh, it
would have worked, but the State
of Ohio would never have approved of It, splitting state route
,traffic.
Had to go to Point Pleasant the
other day and stopped by to see a
former Tribune staffer, Mar·
garet Caldwell, now editor of the
Point Pleasant Register. I had
never seen the Inside of the
Register building, other than the
front office, and got a tour. Henry
Elliott showed me the oid llno·
type machine Flo Smith used to
run. Unotypes are a thing of the
past.
.
I remember when the Register
was on Fifth Street and the editor
was Ed Swint. Flo Smith taught
me to run a linotype. I wasn't an
expert on It but I picked up
enough to turn out good usable
copy. !was good enough to set my
own columns and other material
for print.

Quirks in the news

.

SPECIAL PRECIOUS.
MOMENTS EVENT 11

CJ • .
This may be your opportunity to obtain
the Limited Edition ftgurine designed by
Sam Butcher exClusively for
1989 Special Events!

&gt;

Sunday

Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

In our town .. ~-------------By--Dic_._k_r._'ho_ma_s

Turn .back time...

POPUlAR

POMEROY - The medical
mission programoftheSocietyof
Phlllppine Surgeons In America
(SPSA ) beaded by Dr. Mel P.
Simon will again this year be
sending a medical-surgical team
to th!! Philippines to attend to the
health care needs of the poor and
underprivileged.
The team will not only be ·
handling medical problems of
the Filipinos but will also be
teaching local surgical residents
the latest surgical procedures

.

Beat of the Bend

Address _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _ __

Simon heading medical mission to Philippines
,,

MEDICAL MISSION - Dr. Mel P. Simon,
urelocist in area llospllals, pictured here fourth
from the left, annually coes on a medical mlsson
1o the Phlillplnes. This year he will be there from
Dec. lH$ treating the poor and underprlvile1ed.

··-·

~ .. ...

November 12, 1989

swing.
Some of the Items which
museum goers can look forward
to seeing Include handmade toys
which are being provided by the
Meigs County Grange and the
doU collection of Middleport
resident Judy Arnold. Janet •
Theiss, of Racine, will be provld·
lng an antique youth bed for
diSplay.
In addition, each of the Meigs
County ·garden clubs will be
preparing a table setting loUowlng the old-fashioned theme of
ihe open house. The table set·
tlngs will be displayed upstairs In
the museum.
But more old toys and decora·
tlons are stU I needed and anyone
wllh Items for display should call
the museum as soon as possible

t~

........_ .. . ... November 12. 1989

Christmas Wonderland open.house slated

ever.

___... _ ..

Pom.-oy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pla·hnt. W. Va.

Plga B-6-Sunday nmes-Sentinel

POMEROY - Don't forget to
mark your calendars for the Dec.
3rd ChriStmas Wonderland open
house at the Meigs County
Museum. Museum workers a re
working steadily on the annual
hoUday season open house, spon·
sored by the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society,
which promiSes to be better than

_.

Clnd., ESR Gallipolis, Oh. 45631

-~

-

NO'IBING WORKS liKE WEIGHf WATOIERS! ......."
HU4!!&amp;l.lt-====TOO.FREE
. . . . .i 111 t
(800)182·1399
~

-'l"'&amp;'

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�ports

•

nver, to
a restaurant
By SANDRA L LATIMER
r... hlier.-&amp;loaal
Famlll8 wbo had been accustomed to going to grandmother's
house for ThankSgiving are now
making reservatiOns at their
favorite restaurant for that big
diiiDt!r.
The practice of going out for
Thanksgiving dinner has blossonled so rapidly In recent years
that It's becoming one of · the
busiest days of the year for
restaurants.
"From what my members
have told me, the num!M!r one
day Is still Mother's Day," says
Cbarlle Blosser, director of the
Ohio Restaurant Association.
''Thanksgiving Is probably comIng In about number two In the
days that people eat out."
And It's suprlslng some people,
especially Cathy Copley at Service America Corp., which ha'ndles reservations at the lodge at
Mohican State Park In Richland
County.
''Thanksgiving was a day that
everyone prepared for a week In
advance," Copley said. "More
and more. people are going out
for ThanksgiVIng. It's a beautiful
time of the year."
State park lodges are very
popular places for those family
gatherings.
l
Deer Creek State. Park In
Plckaway County, for Instance,
takes reservatiOns for seatings
every half-hour between 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. By· Election Day,
more than two weeks before
Thanksgiving, the 1 p.m. seating
was filled.
Deer Creek, Salt Fork, and
Hueston Woods lodges will serve
between 500 and 600 people for
ThankSgiving dinner, says Marllee Kuhn, the reservatiOns manager for Canteen Co., which
services those three parks. And a
similar turnout Is expected at
Mohican, says Copley.
Canteen Co. also manages the
smaller ·parks at Punderson, a
half hour east of Cleveland,
Shawnee and Burr Oak state
parks. Kuhn says those lodges
. serve between 200 and 350 people.
The state parks started serving
Thanksgiving dinner aJx&gt;ul four
. .. years ago. At that time, parties
were two to lour people, says
Tammy Dlck,tbeasslstantmanager at Deer Creek.
"II was mainly people who
decided not to cook," Dick said.
"Then tile¥ bepD telllllg their
aunts and uncles, and now we're
finding groups of 20."
Going . out for Thanksgiving
dinner Is a lot easier than having
someone doing all the cooking
and tying someone up In the
kitchen all day, says Blosser.
"Wherever you go, one person
does all the cooking," he says.
"This way, no one has to worry
about staying In the kitchen all
day.
"With two people in a household working, all of a sudden
they're realizing 'Why should I
spend one of my days off In the
kitchen? That's what we've got
restaurants for,"' said Blosser,
who said he made his reservations In October for ThanksgivIng at a restaurant.
Some state. parks have started
a new marketing technique lor
·their Thanksgiving Day diners
by offe':lng weekend packages.
"With so many women work. big, they .want to make it a
mini-vacation," Kuhn said. "And
for single parent families, It's
something special for the kids so
they don't feel so lonely at the
boHdays.''
Sbould preparing ThanksgivIng Day dinner be too much of a
strain on grandmother or too
time-consuming for mom, some
restaurants and catering services offer carry-out service.
''There has been an Increase In
recent years in fa mUles ordering
their Thanksgiving dinner
through caterers." said one of
the women at Cincinnati's Glrmann's Catering.
"It appears -people are trying
to save time. There's a lot of
preparation time involved In a
family Thanksgiving dinner and
to some families, time Is more
Important than the money Involved In having the meal caterecl. We're catering q·ulte a few
Thanksgiving dinners for families this year." ·
They offer traditional dinners
centered around turkey, ham,
and cbleken, with variOus side
dishes and desserts.

v.w

Gift certificate
winners named
Recent winners of $50 gift
certificates at Vaughan's Cardinal In Middleport were Terl
Hockman, Eulonda Haley, Dorothy Roller, Charles Van Cooney, and Mildred Long, all of
Middleport.
Gloria McNutt, Hartford,
W.Va.; Sally Bennett, Gallipolis;
Eulah Redmah, Muon, W.Va.;
Ulllllll Wright, Vinton; Kathy
AJ'rOWood, Cheshire; and Betty
Shelton and Sondra Sexton, both
o1 Polfteroy.

'iimw ientintl ·

STORE HOURS

·59-6 for 22nd straight win

school record with their 22nd
By liM SLATER
straight victory.
·
··
UPI Sports Wrller
The
de(ending
natrona!
cham.: SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPil pions,
10-0,
llurpassed
the
school
Ricky Watters scored two touch·
·
mark
of
21
consecudve
triumphs
downs Saturday, one on the
set in 1948 and extended the
lOngest punt return In Notre
natiOn's.. lobgest winning streak
Dame history, and the topby trouncingSMU, 2-7, playing 59
. ;ranked Fighting Irish ripped
freshmen in Its first season after
Southern Methodist 59-6 to set a

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., NOV. 12, THRU SAT., NOV. 18, 1989

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~ -'·'

ECKRICH

END ZONE BOtJND- Notre DamerunniDgbackRicky Walters
cees put the Southern Methodist defense on his way to &amp;be end zone
In &amp;be firM quarte~ of Salurday's carne In South Bend, Ind. The
top-ranlred lrtsll beat the Muslallp 59-&amp;towln a school-record 22nd
stralpl Yidory. (\JP.J)
'

Bologna •••••••••••••••
LB.

C

Novembei 12, 1989

Irish beat ·S

We Reserve The Righi To
limit Quantities

Section

coming back from the NCAA's
death penalty.
The rout was Notre Dame's
most lopsided victory since beat·
lng Georgia Tech 69-14 in 1977.
The defeat was SMU'·S most
lopsided loss toft non-conference ·
school. Except for a 95-21 setback
earlier this year to Houston, the
Mustangs had not been whipped
so badly since falling 61-0 to
Baylor In 1916.
Watters raced 97 yards with a
punt return down the right
sideline for a touchdown, breakIng loose alter a block by D' Juan
Francisco. The runback, which
gave Jllotre Dame a 26-6Iead 7:04
before halftime, broke the school
record of 95 yards set in.1909 by
Red Miller against Olivet.
Notre Dame scored 35 second·
quarter points to take a 42-6
halftime lead, tying the school
record for a second quarter set
against Indiana in 1951. Only a
42-polnt third quarter against St.
Viator In 1912 was lwtter.
Notre Dame became emba·
rasslngly merciful In the second
halt.' Running backRusty Setzer
Ignored an unchallenged path to
the end zone and ran out of
bounds at the SMU five-yard line
and the Irish also took four
Intentional delay of game
penalties.
Notre Dame faces No. 13 Penn
State next week and No. 7 Miami
the following Saturday. Wins In
both those games would line the
Fighting. Irish up for a IJ!ot
against Orange Bowl for the
national championship against
No. 2 Colorado.
Notre Dame's mistakes kept
the Mustangs In the game early.
A clipping penalty negated a
65-yard punt return for a touchdown by Raghlb Ismail. A poor
pass by Tony Rice turned the bail
- over on downs and the Irish lost
two of five fumbies.
SMU' s Darren Harrington recovered a Rice fumble on Notre
Dame's first rush, but the Mustangs tailed toconvertwhenMatt
Lomenlck missed a 38-yard field
goal attempt. The Irish then
moved 79 yards on seven rushes,
scoring when Watte:s took a
pitch from Rice and raced 35
·· ya~ds down the right sideline for
the only tJrst.quarter points.
Ismail ran 26 yards to s&lt;?t up a
one-yard touchdown run by
backup quarterback Pete Gr&amp;ham, one of 23 Irish seniors
playing their final home game.
Ismail fumbled SMU's next
punt and · Marty So lombrlno
recovered for thE' Mustangs to set
up a five-yard touchdown pass
from Mike Romo to Andy 8Prgfeid. The conversion kick was
blocked by Notre Dame's Nick

Smith and defensive end Andre 'q uarter with an 87-yard scoring more Saturday to lead No. 10
Tennessee to a 52-9 rout over
Jones scooped up the footbal I and drive in j1,1st six plays.
'Akron.
The key play In tha.t drive was a
rambled 91 yards for the first
Webb, a redshlrt · freshman
two-point defensive ·conversion 55-yard pass play from Frey to
from
Toledo, Ohio, scored on
Jeff Graqam, on .which the 6-2,
In Irish history.
runs
of
40 and five yards In the
Billy Hackett added a 34-yard 195-pound junior weaved his way
first
half
when the Volunteers
field goal before Watters' punt to the Iowa 'nine on a great
broke
the
game
open to Improve
return touchdown and Anthony Individual effort. On the next
7-1.
to
Johnson rushed . four yards for play, Frey hit Scottie Graham
Kelly connected on scoring
another Irish TD. SMU punter with a nine-yard TD pass .
passes
of 40 ,yards to 'Fhomas
The final &lt;'lhlo State touchdown
Casey Clyce took an intentional
Woods
and 22 yards to Greg
safety and Irish sophomore Wai- was scoreCI by freshman Dante
Amsler.
Amsler also hll VIncent
ter Boyd added a 14-yard touch· Lee, who played much of the
Moore
on
a 31-yard halfback pass
down · run to put Notre Dame sec;ond half In place of starter
for a TO; Carl Pickens ran an
ahead by 36 points at halftime. . . Carlos Show at tailback and had
Interception back 39 yards; re99
yards
in
13
carries
.
Setzer added a two-yard scorserve
quarterback Sterling HenGraham
had
86yards
In
Scottie
ing run .. Rod West scored on a
ton
hll
Woods for a 72-yard
one-yard run and Hackett kicked 19 carries and Snow added 75 in 19
pass
and Greg Burke
scoring
tries
as
the
Buckeyes
rushed
for
a 32-yard field goal in the second
kicked
a
29-yard
field goal to
267 yards.
half.
complete
'Tennessee's
scoring. ·
O!Jio state 28, .1owa 0
Rodgers, theHawkeyeserratic
Akron.
which
closed
its season
At . Columbus, tJhlo, fullback sophomore quarterback , com6+
1,
scored
on
a
three-yard
pass
Sco~tle Graham scored two pleted 15 of 33 passes for 201
from
Mike
Johnson
to
Derek
touchdowns and flanker Jeff yards. Tom Poh&lt;ilsky . played
Alst,on and Bob Drmbroski' s
Graham scored a third and set up briefly at quarterback In the
37-yaNI
field goal.
the fourth with a 55-yard pass- third quarter for Iowa and
and-run play Saturday to lead completed three of five for 47
Penn Stale 13, Maryland 1a
Ohio State to. a 28-0 Big Ten yards .
At Baltimore, Md ., Nell O'Donvictory over Iowa.
W. Virginia 21, Rutgers 20
nell threw for a touchdown and
The victory was the fifth In a
At Morgantown, W.Va., Major
Dan DeArmas kicked two field
row for the Buckeyes, now 7-2 Harris passed to Reggie Rem- · goals Saturday, including a 26•
overall and 5-1 bl the Big Ten, and bert for two touchdowns and ran
yarder with 58 seconds remain·
their first shutout In the last 35 59 yards for another score
ing, helpl,ng Maryland break a .
games. Iowa; blanked for the Saturday to lead co-No. 19 West
24-game losing streak against
first time since 1983, covering 79 Virginia to a 21-20 victory over
No. 13 Penn State with a 13-13 tie.
games, dropped to 4-5 and 2-4.
Rp tgers.
Maryland 's game-tying drive
The Graham's, not related, • ·Harris, a leading contender tor
foUowed a field goal by Ray
scored the first three Ohlo.State the Helsman Trophy, hit Rem- Tarasi that. gave Penn State a
touchdowns as tile Buckeyes bert on 11-yard touchdown
13-10 lead with 5: 081eft .
scored once In each of the four passes in the first and third
The Terrapins marched 57
quarters.
quarters. They set up ~he first
yards in 12 plays ' against the
After an early exchange 9f touchdown with a 59-yard pass·to
natlol)'s most stingy scoring
turnovers, Ohio State recovered the 17.
defense to set up DeArmas.
Iowa's fumble and drove 40 yards
Harris registered his ·second
Dennis Spinelli ex tended Ihe
In nine play~ with Scottie Gra- straight 100-yard rushing game, · drive with a three-yard run on
ham scoring on a three-yard run~ picking up 160yards on 15carrles
third-and-1 at the 17 and O'DonOhio Sttate made it 14-0 with and completing 10 ofl9 passes for . nell had passes of 15 yards to
12: 24 left in the second quArter 139 yards with no interceptions.
David Carr and 14 yards to Barry
with a 15-play, 80-yard drive, Harris rushed 135 yards in last
Johnson. ·
y.oltlt Greg Frey passing eight week's loss at Penn State.
yards to Jeff Graham for the
Harris 's second touchdown
Texas Tech
TCU 7
touchdown.
pass, on a timing pattern to
At Lubbock, Texas (UP])
Iowa had one serious scoring Rembert in the end zone, gave
James Gray scored three times
threat in the fi~st half, moving · West Virginia, 7-2-l,its 21-20 lead
and ran for209 yards Saturday to
from Its 14-yard ine to a fourth late In the third q\jarter.
· • send 19th-ranked Texas Tech to a
down on the Ohio !!tate three.
Doug Giesler, who kicked field
37:7 triumph over Texas
~awkeye coach Hayden Frey goals of 26 and 24 yards for
Christian.
passed up an almost certain field Rutgers , 2-5-2, missed a 41-yard
Tech kept Its hopes alive for at
goal for a touchdown but Lo:;,w field-goal attempt with 1:49 left
least a Southwest ·Conference
Montgomery wa~ stopped oqe that would have given the Scarlet
co-championship by boosting Its
yard short.
Knights the lead.
season record to 7-2 and Its
Ohio State, after two threeTennessee 52, ·Akron '9
league mark to 4-2. TCU lost its
plays-and-punt series· to starHhe ·- ·At · I&lt;JIOirllille, · Teifll: , Cbuck ·. · hopes-of a winning xuon,;tall~
Secpnd half, put the game out of
Webb rushed for two touchdowns' to 4-6 for the year and to 2-5 in the
reach midway through the third
and. Andy Kelly passed for two SWC ·

:n;

Ollers, Bengals clash 1n fight
for .second in ·AFC Central
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HOUSTON CUP!) - The AFC
Central standings show Houston
and Cincinnati tied for second
place, but Oilers coach Jerry
Glanville Is telling his players
otherwise.
"It looks like Cleveland Is in
first place, ·but the team that is
really In first place is the team
without a division Joss - Cincinilatl," GlanvUie said.
· "We're really playing a firstP,Iace,team that has all the talent,
a Super ;Bqwl·returnlng team
Coached by a guy who was coach
Of the year a year ago."
• Houston, 5-4 overall and 1-i in
divisiOn play, takes on Cincinnati, 5-4 and 3-0 In the division, in
the Astrodome Monday night.
: Despite GlanvllJe's view of the
standings, the game will force
O.ne team out of the AFC Central
!lecond-place tie.· The division Is
led by the Browns, 6-3 overall and
2;2 In the division.
., Houston's defense ranks 20th In
the NFL against the pass, so
Glanville Is switch! g the club

from a ·zone defense to man-toman · coverage. Although the
Bengais' offense has been erratic
In the last month, quarterback
Boomer Eslason is the AFC's
third-rated passer.
Eslason is expected to play,
even though he suffered as
brujsed lung In last week's game
against Los Angeles.
''The· l!ottom line Is that you
have to play man-to-man, and If
people don't want to do It, they'
have to come out of the game,"
Glanville said. "U you're not
good enough to play man against
a good throwing tream, you're
not going to win."
The Oilers enjoyed success
against the Bengals' offense in
their last meeting, a 41-6 drubbing by the Oilers in the 'Dome
last December. Houston held
Esiason to a career-low 10-of-22
passes for .131 yards, no touchdowns and one Interception. .
"This is a huge game," Esiasonsald. ''If I can be there,l'll be
there. rm not. jumping ship.

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. Goo• Sun., Nov. 12 thro Sot., N••· II, 1919

••
••

••

NAPOLEON'S CHARGE - West VIrginia
runalnK back Eugene Napoleon (83) charges
around the rlghl end lor a short gain as Rutgers'

Shawn Williams (92) puts a grip on him during
Salurday's game in Morgantown, W.Va. The
Mountaineers came from behind to knock off the
Scarlet Kn(IJ!Its 21-20. (UPI)

_Seahawks hoping . to rediscover offense against Brawns .
•

FOX DELUXE

We've still got a long way to go."
Bengals coach Sam Wyche
said he's sure Eslason will be
ready for the Monday game.
"It's a bruise, so It's just a
matter of being able to take those
deep breaths and still throw a
tight spiral,'' Wyche Said.
Because regular backup quarterback Turk Schonert is sidelined with an injury, the Bengals
would be forced to -use third·
string rookie Erik Wilhelm if
Eslason can't play . .
Oilers quarterback Warren
Moons Is coming off one of h'is
best performances, having completed 30 of 38 passes against the
Lions. Moon threw for 345 yards
and two touchdowns with one
Interception. He also ·rushed
eight times for 22 yards and
scored the winning touchdown on
a two- yard run in the fourth
quarter.
·
Moon said he will be more
aggressive the rest of the season,
calling more audibles and throwIng more.

·;
By DENNIS ANSTINE
: SEATTLE (UPI} - II can't come too. soon for
Seattle coach Chuck Knox, but the Cleveland
Browns wo·uid like to see the Seahawks wait a
week before rediscovering an offense that has
!leen in a slump all season.
· The Seahawks, 4-5, haven't scored more than 24
points In any one game this season and the offense
lias scored only one touchdown in its last two
games.
.. Knox, 57; won't talk about anything but today's
game against the Browns, but the veteran coach's
future In Seattle could very well depend on a
Wlpnlllg record this season.
"I've seen Chuck In the positiOn he's in now
many times," said Browns coach Bud Carson,
wh_o came Into.the NFL In 1972. "He'll get out otit.
He's as good as coach aa there Is the league. I see a
real comeback. I just hope they walt a week."
, l;lut Carson Is not new owner Ken Behring, who
Indicated a year ago he preferred more exciting
football than what Knox prOduced,' but was
~

quieted when the Seahawks won their first AFC
West title with a 9-7 record.
However, he is much more active than the
previous owners and hired an old friend, former
Los Angeles Raiders coach Tom Flores, as team
president It Knox suffers his first losing season
(out of se~en) In Seattle, he may be out Of a job
with a year lett on his contract.
Then again, Knox's teams often overachieve
when pressured and have a street fighter's
mentality - just like their eoach. For example,
the Seahawks lost!our In a tow and were 5-61n 1986
when they suddenly won their last five aames
behind a revived offense.
The problem with the current team Is that It has
played out of character lately on offense, making
too many turnovers and falling to establish a
runnin&amp; game. The defense has Improved this
season, but It has spent tnomuch time on the field
lately becauae of offensive mill lakes.
Charalteristlcally, Knox Isn't pushing tile panic

·--

'-

... ~

button. He has ·concluded the plays and the play
selection Is sound, and although he and his
coaches have been analyzing personnel this week,
he plans no major changes.
Rather, as he has each week of his career, he
calls for fewer mental mistakes and better
performances from his players. ,
"We're minus-5 in the turnover-takeaway
factor," Knox said. "If we take that one thing and
eliminate that, we're going to be a better football
team right there, without changing personnel or
anything else."
Offensive coordinator John Becker said Knox is
taking the right approach .
"Chuck Is not. ranting and raving. He's not
pushing any panic buttons," Becker said. "He
doesn't go In and blame It on any one person."
But Becker knows It could be wlri or else this
~ason.

"If It continues long enough, either the coach
gets fired or you replace the players," he said .

"Ultimately, one of the two Is going 10 ha~pen."
. Enter the Browns, 6-3. who have won "three
straight - thanks to a revived offense. Bernie
Kosar has been extremely hoi In leading tile
Browns to 97 points in thE'ir las! three games,
completing 54 of 70 passes for 707 yards and seven
touchdowns.
Webster Slaughter Is averaging a league-high
20.7 yards for each of his 40 calches, and rookle
running back Eric Metcalf ls a threat to score
each time he touches the bail.
Metcalf had 233 all-purpose yards against
Tampa Bay last Sunday. including a . 433yard
touchdown run. The acroballc 185-pound Seattle
native has totaled 377 rushll)g yards, 33 receptions
and is second In the league In kickoff returns with
a 27 .4-yard average.
"I don't know If we've found all the ways to get
Eric the ball, but we're trying ," said Carson.
"He's something else and we like the way he's
getting some of the tougher yards Inside."

�C·2-Sunct.y Thu

Psg

''

Sa alii

November 12, 1989

Pameroy MidJ:IIIDOI1 Galipolil, Ohio-Point Pleur rt, W.Va.

November 12, 1989

Tbnberwo-ves beai Sixers 125-118 to claim first victory
wolves from ~troll In the quarter and keyed the Celtlcs'
expansion
draft, butht!ldoutand doslll&amp;' sllrge. n a 117·106 victory
VPI .. 1n.Wrteer
later
was
lrlidecl
to Phlladelpllla. over the winless Atlanta Hawks.
It took the MIMHOta TimberMah&lt;lrn wu areetec1 with a · Bird, who hit 19 o;&gt;t 25 field-goal
wolves oaly four · eames to
chOrus
of boca tiy tilt! MenoliOme attempts, last reached the 50~pllsh wllat the Miami !;f1!at
crowd ea~b tllllt! be touched the point plateau on March 10, 1986,
required llleames to do last yea1
- record their Inaugural NBA basketball. Mahom played 20 when hescored50agalnstDallas.
minutes and scored ttwpolntson
BuUeta 100, Cavaliers t2
victory.
At Baltimore, Ledell Ea.ckles
TOllY Ca~J~pbell scored 38 tree throws.
Elsewhere In the NBA Friday scored nine fourth-quarter points
points and Tyrone Corbin addl!d
36 Friday night, both career night, .Indiana clipped Miami to lead a late Was)llngton charge.
hllhs. lsdiitC the Tlmberwotves 102-98, New Jersey upended Jet! Malone led the Bullets with
\Oal25-118ovl!rtimevlctoryowr . Chicago 117·107, Detroit held ott 31 points, and John "Hot Rod"
prlando 125-121, Boston outshot . Williams led Cleveland with 22.
the Pblladt!lphta 76ers.
"We've been called scrappers Atlanta 117-106, Wuhlligton The Cavaliers, wracked by Injurand CBAers, but how do you like topped Clneland 100.92, Por· Ies to center Brad Daugherty and
us now?" asked CampbelL whose . t land defeated Dallas 99-91, Utah forward Larry Nance, are win·
'
performance Included the go- thrashed San Antqnlo 106-92, the less In four games.
L.A.
Lakers
dropPed
CharlOtte
Trail
Blazers
88,
Mavericks
91
aheed points In overtime.
·
11J6.100
and
Phoenix
pummelled
At
Dallas,
Kevin
Duckworth
Minnesota held the 76ento just
·
.scored 12 of his 24 points In the
one point In the last 2:55 of Sacramento 1311-109.
third quarter to help carry tlle1
regulation, and no points In the
Trail Blazers. Portland won two
final 2:15 of overtime.
Paeen .lH. Heu t8
"It was a helluva effort, an
At Indianapolis, Vern Fleming of three games In Its early swing
unbelievable effort," Timberrecorded 23 polnts,lOasslsts and through Texas. The victory came
wolves coach Bill Musselman eight rellouJ1ds to rally unde- without forward Clyde Drexler,
sald. ''We had to just dig In feated Indiana. The Pacers, of!lo who flew home to Portland on
mentally and get II done."
th,e best start In their 14-year Friday !or treatment of a bruised
• Corbin. whose 36polnts was his
NBA history, rose to4-0 and hold elbow .
Jazz 106, Sp111'8 92
best scoring night ·sinCe high- ~ole possession of the league's
AI Salt Lake City, Jim Stockton
school basketball, hit two free . best record for the first time
throws with three seconds left In ever.
Netam,a.•te(
regulation to tie the the score
BLADEN LANDING
At East Rutherford, .N.J.,
111-111 and cap a !our-point
Cbrls Morrts scored 26 points and
roml!baCk In the las Ill seconds.
BAIT, TACILE &amp;
• "1 didn't want those two free ~nnls Hopson added 22 to lead
CARRY-OUT
Uu-ows to be the difference In the the Nets. Charles Shackleford
1
Mi.
ltlow Gallpolis
game," said Corbin, who played and Sam Bowie added 16 points
locks
&amp; Dam
all 53 minutes and added 13 each for New Jersey, which had
ENTER 11G ·IU(I( CONTEST
dropped Its last two games. The
rebounds.
$5.00
Entry F•-llultsl•ailtlblt
: MlnnPsota, which came In Nets held Michael Jordan to only
· o.ctdlirie to legiiter
shooting just 38 percent from the four points In the first half and 26
hoor, shot 56 percent In the first for the game.
10:0Q pm, Nov. 26, 1919
half and 51 percent on the night to
l'ls&amp;Hs 1!5, Marte 121
Open 8 om to 10 pm
Moncley thru Thurodoy;
post Its flrst100.polnt game of Its
At Orlando, Fla., Joe Dumars
Fri.. Sot .. &amp; Sun. 6 om to 1 1 pm
sco~ . U third-quarter points
brief NBA existence.
and
sCored
a
breakaway
layup
"We didn't execute well. We
didn't make our chances,'' said with 15 seconds left to lift the
CharleS Barkley, who led Phlla- Pistons. Detroit snapped a two,!Jelphta. with 31 points. ''The_ game los! II&amp;' streak and was
"dOt!lln't have to be a
comlll&amp;' off an embarrassing
lilowout because tht!y are an 95-74 loss to Indiana that marked
the second-lowest offensive out~xpanslon team. They are not
put In team hiStory.
·going to 10 1-81."
Cehlcs 117, Hawks IN
. The game featured the return
At Boston, Larry Bird scored
to Minnesota of Rick Mahorn,
who was acquired by the Tim her· l7 of his 50 points In the fourth

•J .JBn'·IIIIAIN •

tallied 31 points-and 16 assists to
help the Jazz to their third
straight home victory to open the
season. Rookie center David
Robinson led the Spurs with 27
points and 13 rebounds.
Laker&amp; 198, Hornets 108
'AI Inglewood, calif. , Byron

New England, New Orleans
·battle in must-win game today

scored 24 pOints and 1 Eddie
Johnson added another 31 to pace Johnson added 22 for tbe Suns.
the Lakers. Rex Chapman paced Chambers, who hit 10 of 17 shots
tlte Hornets with 27 points, while from the noor, passed the 13,000Kelly Trlpuka contributed 18 and polnt mark forhllnine-yearNBA
career. Waymon Tisdale led
Kurt Rambls added 15.
Sacramento with 30 points. 16 In
Suns IIMJ, Kinp 109
AI Phoenlll. Tom Chambers . the third quarter.

Scott scored 33 points and Magic

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POMEIOJ· - 992·217ol
.

~

MEETING THE CHALLENGE- Two Soulhw. estern ·p layers converge on shooter Bill Potter as
(he lakes aim In the paint during a practice held
-last week on, their home floor. The Highlanders,
~who lack a true blgman, must meet the challenge

DON WOOD .
830 E. MAIN ST.

GAWPOUS -

olol6-2532
'

.

.

. By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
··
Tlmes.Sentinel Staff
~ PATRIOT - De!ense .. . unselfishness ...positive at tit ude ...ex·
'cited ... these were some of the
thoughts expressed by Southwestern basketball coach Jim .
Walker as he prepares his troops
for the upcoming season.
However, this could be a
season that may disappear in a
puff of smoke, as the teachers'
strike in the Gallia County Local
School District could put a halt to
the hardwood proceedings
across the count y. not just at
Southwestern. But for the lime
being, "unless something drastic
occurs," according to Walker,
the Highlanders will praclice on
their home floor in preparation
for their·season and home opener
on Tuesday, Nov. 21 · against
Ironton St. Joe.
"If we ·lay off lwo to three
weeks (because of the strike),
we'll be that much further
behind," Walke~ added . "Besides, I want to loach baskettajl,
and the kids have worked roo
hard for me nor lo come in.
. "In spite of everything, we've
had good response from the kid s,
and they're excited about the
season," said Walker of his ·
charges, who moved toward the
middle or the pack in the SVAC
with a 9-12 overall record and a
5-9 league mark. Such· excile·
ment should be matched wilh the
off-season work that some or Ihe
players have exhlbiled.
"Brad Bryant, Joe Hammond,
John Ehman and Chris Melzger
attended' basketball camps this.
past summer, and they've been
here in open f(Ym." said Walker
or !his quartel, which feature s
Metzger as lhe newcomer .

eame

Jlruins top ·Capitals;
Sabres. beat Canucks
llJ Ualled Prea lallerMtlual

The Boston Bruins paid each
compllnnents. Th~ Wa• other
shington capitals just paid the
price.
·Former Capital Rob Carpenter
had two coals and an assiSt and
Randy Bun1dge contributed a
goal and two assists to lead the
visiting Bruins to a 5-3 victory
over Washlngton.
''They're feeling good about
bel Ill together," said Boston
coach Mike Mllbury said of the
line that Includes Carpenter,
Burrldce and Bob · Sweeney.
''Tbey're retting lobe a real rood
line and they're finding eacb
. otht!r on the Ice."
The victory was the Bruins'
fourth straight and snapped
Washington's five-game unbeaten ·streak. Yvon Corriveau
led the Capitals with two goals.
'1t's good to have the gQ!llS, but
It's relevant to the way we're
play Ill," Carpenter said.

''We're complementing each
other real well."
The Bruins scored tllree tlnu!s·
(See NBLGAMES, C-t)

I would like to
sincerely thank
the voters of
Guyan
Township for
lheir supporl in
lhe November
7th Election. .

M8ReMONT

ClEW CHIIf Mllffi.SI
~

'

MARKS. MOONEY
N. fir 11r Cllll.,
II. 3, lox IUA, Glllipoli$

.

O.E.M. opl;

LIFETIME WARRANTY PARTS YOU TRUST!

In the paint with light defense If they wan I to post a
winning record in the U89-90 season, which starls
Nov. 21 against Ironton St . .Joe. ~Times-Senllnel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
.·

J)efense, unselfishness keys
~o Highlanders' cage season

ATIIINS- 593-66ol1

SMRH GMC TIUCIC CENTU
135 PINE ST.

·,
Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-C-3.

Pomeroy Midd--Gell1p0'
"-.
· 1881ant.
PI
W . V·........ •
- Ohio P01111

..

'""'ut. Foo,.,..t~

12"

Melzger , ·a 6·1 junior who will
learn with 6-0 senior Jesse
Ehman in the Highlanders' open·
pos l, three-guard offense, Is "a
leaper" who was highly sough!
after las I year, but chose nol to
play.
"Hopefully, we can play Iough
man-to-man defense, cause tur·
novers and box out. and if we can
do those things, we'll win some
games, " said Walker of his crew,
who only lost lhr~e 10 graduation
-top scorer Mike Walker, Dave
Mershon and Bill Hager. With
many of lhe same faces back in
the lineup. including seniors
Bryan!. John Ehman and Ham·
mond, the Highlanders wll! look
to turn up the heal from their
pressure-cooker defense and use
their quickness to crack the .500
plane In order to make the
conference's upper crus! work
1\arder in their preparation for
!heir games against the
Highlanders.
However, if lhe boys from
Patriot are to get respect from
Ihe res I of the league, "we can'!
get sel!ish about who scores and
who gets playing lime," Walker
said, because "If we do, that's
when things will fall apart."
Las I year the · High landers
started off well. winning six of Its
firs Ill games, including a pair of
upset victories over Hannan
Trace and Oak Hill, before
hilling a four -game losing skid in
mid -season lhal knocked lhem
oul of any shol of entering the
Iitle race !see Lasl year's
res ull s ).
This year "a positive atlitude
is our biggesl attribute, becauS£•
we feel we can win," said
Walker, who said that tHis is the
Highlanders ' strongesr poinl.

·Whether that translates Into
Improvements In defensive play
and rebounding on both ends
against teams whose lineups will
be somewhat shOrter than In
years past but whose quickness
'quotients are as yet unknown,
remains to be seen.

Last year's results
DATE.OPP.
SCORE
Nov . 18-al IrOntoo St . Joe ........ .W 88-75

Nov . 29-Hannan Trace .. ... ........w
Dec: 2-at Oak Hill ., ........ .. .. .... L
Dec. 9-ar North G;allia ...... .. .. .. L
Dec. 16-Kyger Crt&gt;ek .......... ...... W

65-63

62-i2
58-93
78-56

Dec. 20-ar Eastern ... ............ . . L G5-81

Dec. 21-Symmes Valley ...... .. ... w 8().62

Jan. 3-at OVCS . ... .... ... .. ........ .. W
Jan. 6-Southern .. ............. ....... L
Jan. 10-at Hannan Tract-.... .... .. L.
Jan. 13-0ak Hill .... ....... ..... ...... W
Jan. 17-New Boston .. .. ...... ..... .. L
Jan. 20-Norlh Gallia ...... ......... L
Jan. 21-at Hannan, W.Va ....... .. L
Jan. 24-at Symmes Valley .... ,;·.. L
Jan. 27-at Kyger Creek ....... ... .. W
Fe~. 6-Easte-rn ..... .. .. ........... .. .. L
Feb. 7-Hannan, W.Va . ....... ... ...W
Feb. 10-at Southern... .. .......... .. L
Feb. 11-0VCS ... ...... ......... .. .. ...W

66-65
5().70
57-78
70.54
68-99
Tl -8{
73·99
68-75

76-73
66-66
83-64
53-69
90-83

Toumament pia,
Feb. 13-CI'een Local ..... ., .. ....... L 46·53
! at ChesapeakeH.S, I
SoUTIIWESTERN HJGH:.AI'iDERS

DATE

OPPONF.NT

Nov . 18 .............. ...... ......... SVAC p:'f'vlew
Nov . 21.. .. ........ . ........ ... .... Irml rn St. Joe
Nov . 25 ............. .. ........ .......... aT SouUH·t·n
Nov . 2!I . ..... .. .... ..................... ..... Oak Hill
DE.' c. 1.. ..... .... ........... .... at Ky~e1· Cn~ek
IJE-c. 5-........... : ...... .. ... ar Symmes Va1ley

[)('c. S................ ..... ..... ......... .... Ea~~err,
Dec. 15 .. ........ ............ ... at Hannan Trace
Dec. 22.. ....... ............. .. .. ... ... North Gallla
Jan . 2 .................. ·.... ................... OVCS
Jan . 5 ....... .. ........ ... ......... . Kyger C:-eek
Jan . !J .... .... .......... ... ... .... Hannan, W.V3.
Jan . 1:! .. ~............ .. ..... ... ........ at Oak Hill

Jan . 16 .. ....... .... .............. .at New Boston
Jan . 19 ..... ....... ,...... ............ .... at Ea~; 11:-rn
Jan . 26 ...... .... ... ....... ....... ~ymmes Vallo.•y
JHn . 30 ...... .. .. ... .. ... ...... at Hannan, W.Va.

By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
FOXBORO, Mass. (UPI) - In
the opinion of Saints coach Jim
Mora, Ieday's New Orleans-New
England game will finally put
one of the two struggling teams
out of Its misery.
The Pat riots are 3-6 and their
only shot at a playoff berth berth
Is to win their final seven
regular-season games. The
Saints are 4-5, but parity Is not so
prevalent In the National Football Conference and a 4-6 mark
will start them thinking a bout
next year.
"Both teams are hanging on by
their fingernails," said Mora.
"Both teams need a win.··
These desperate straits come
after an off-season of high
expectations. New Orleans was
12-3 and 10--6 the previous two
seasons; the Patriots were 8-7
and 9-7. The primary reason for
their slide has been an Ina blllty to
stop the pass.
The Saints are 21st In the
league against an air attack,
giving up 2,063 ya'r ds and a
conference-high 111 first downs
against the pass. New England Is
ranked 26th, surrendering 2,292
yards and 105 first downs on
aerials, and 20 of their opponents •
25 touchdowns were by passes.
The secondary was supposed to
be a Patriots' strength. But
Injuries took out cornerback
Ronnie Llppett for the season,
safety Roland James missed two
games and cornerback Raymond
ClaybOrn sat out most of last
week's game with the Jets. When;
' the Patriots use six defensive
backs, they are forced to play
three rookies.
The passing defense Is also
hurt by the absence of a reliable
pass rush. Defensive end Garin
Verts and linebacker Andre
Tippett, probably New England
top two defenders, are both out
for theseason.
·
Tb'e Saints run defense Is the
best In the NFL, allowing an
average of o~ly 7'1 .1 yards per

game.
"Their front seven Is proba.bly
the best we 've faced thiS year,''
said Patriots coach Raymond
Berry, "but that doesn't change
anything. We Intend to run the

football and think we can."
New England's rushing game. ,
ranked 18th In the league. Is
centered 011 John Stephens, who ·
reached the Pro Bowl last year as
(See PATRIOTS oa C-4)

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HEATING AND COOLING

985·4222

CHESTER, OHIO

-------------------··
PUBLIC NOTICE

Due to the increase in cost in maintaining a
high inventory at Jim Cobb Chevrolet-Oidsmobile-Cadillac-Geo, Inc., we have elected to
cut our inventory and pass the savings along
to our customers .

Feb. 2.. ......... ... .... .:.. ....... Hanru;.n Trace
Fe b. 6.... ..... ...... ... ... .... ..... ..... ... aT OVCS
Fe b. 9..... .... ....... . .'... .... .......... .. SUuthern

.

•

Feb. 16 .. .. .. .. ........ .. ...... .... 31 North Gailla
Head t~!Mcll- Jim Walker
(All SVA C doubleheaders st.Jrl with
IT' SC'r\if&gt; gam f'S al

6:30 p.m.: all non -league
twinbllls start at 6 p.m. l

.•
•

"
I

.

..•
~

•'..

. -~~­

•

Wllllllll Pllrcllase of a Naw Home by Jim Wllter
...., • ....., ........ .,..c~ry.rarour
c:NdlllriiOO.OOIIrOWIIIiiW. ft'syaur
-.~YFIIEE.-you

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LOW,anu' ,,

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With the purchase of our new aircraft we will
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So, if you do not see what you want on our lot,
please don't hesitate to ask your salesperson
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November 12. 1989

Poma'oy-Middlaport Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.

Page-C-4-Sundey Twnas Sentinel

-----

I

New coach pressing to .make 'second
chaltce' part of his winning tradition

OPTIMISTIC - New North Gallla bead coach Tbm Riccardi
flashes a smile of optimlom for the team's forlones l'llhe 1989-90
basketball season. "While It's going to lake llme for us to get to
know each other, but I've got nine ball players I can put on the t190r
at any time." (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
VINTON- "I've waited all my
life tor this," said Tom Rlccardl.
"I never thought I'd ever get this
.chance again!"
Riccardi, 37, Is North Gallla' s
new head basketball'coach, who
steps to the brllge after the
eight-year 'c aptainship of Bruce
Wilson. Joining . him In the
Pirates' wheelhouse Is assistant
coach Gregg Deel, who returns to
the hardwood after a one-year
absence.
The Bucs graduated six from
last year's squad, Including
all-district center Rusty Denney,
now a freshman . on Otterbein
College's basketball team. Butln
his place will be ,6-5 senior D.J.
Hammel, who saw limited action
last year, and 6-2 junior Shane
·Smith. This Inside pair, which
will get occasional breathers
from 6-2 junior Richard Haney,
will operate In an open-post,
three-guard offense.
Looking for time at the guard
. spots will be 6-1 junior Brian
Stout, 6-0 sophomore Chris Tackett and 6-1 sophomore Darin
Smith, with (ormer reserve players Terry Farley, Brandon Twy-

. games••• _ _ _ _ _ ___:__ _ _ __
NHL
(Continued from C-2)

during a seven-minute span
midway through the first period
to lake an early 3-0 lead, then
fended off a Washington rally.
Burridge finished off a two-onone break by taking Ken Linseman's pass and flicking the puck
past Washington goalie Don
Beaupre for his fourth goal of the
season with 5:58 gone In the
period for a 1-0 Boston lead.
Carpenter, who began his NHL
career with the Capitals, ex·
tended the Bruins' lead with his

fifth and sixth goals of the
season.
With Washington defenseman
Neil Sheehy off for holding, the
Bruins needed only six seconds to
capitalize against the league's
second-best penalty-kllllitg unit .
Ray Bourque won the ensuing
f&lt;iceoff and shoveled a pass to
Carf,enter, who flicked .a shot
past Beaupre from close range.
Burridge stole the puck from
washington's Rod Langway deep
in the Capitals' zone a,nd passed

Patriots ... ___!c_on_t_ln_ue_d_f_ro_m_c_.J....:.l_ _ _ __
a rookie , but due to his injuries
and a weaker offensive line, has
gained only 460 yards on 139
carries.
New England's passing game
has improved since 36-year-old
Steve Grogan became the starter
three weeks ago, and now ranks
lOth in the league. The wide
receivers corps, led by Cedric
Jones, Stanley Morgan, Irving
Fryar and Sammy Martin, Is
playing up to Its ability. Tight end
Eric Sievers has 30 catches for
328 yards , "and we didn't realize
he could hold his own as a blocker
as well as he has," said Berry.
This season, the Patriots have
lost two games due to missed
extra points by Greg Davis . On
Tuesday, Davis lost his job and
. · .- Jason Staurovsky was re-hired.
Staurovsky, who has less power
but more accuracy, was also
brought in last year at mid·
season after Teddy Garcia had
missed five point-after attempts.
New Orleans' balanced offense
is directed by Bobby Hebert, the
NFL's third-ranked quarter-

back. Hebert has completed 172
of 261 pass attempts for 2,183
yards and "has all the pitches, he
can throw it short, medium or
deep," said Berry .
The Saints top receiver is Eric
Martin, with 36 receptions for 641
yards. The running attack is
dependent upon Dalton Hilliard.
who has 169 carries for 616 yards.
"He's the guts of their running
game - an extremely powerful
·runner," said Berry of the 5-8,
204-pound Hilliard, who also has
32 catches for 306 yards.

to Carpenter, who beat Be~upre
for a 3-0 Boston lead at 13:·17 of
the period.
Corriveau scored his third goal
o( the season with 1: 25 left In I he
peri&lt;&gt;&lt;! on a power play to cut
Washington' s deficit to 3-1.
Corriveau again beat Boston
goalie Roger Lemelin with 1:59
elapsed In the second period to
bring the Capitals towlthlna goal
at 3-2.
The Bruins regained a two-goal
cushion on Greg Hawgood 's
slapshot from a tight angle at
8:39 of the second period.
Washington closed to within 4-3
when Mike Ridley banged home
his sixth goal off a rebound with
4: 14 gone in the third period.
The Capitals then had several
chances to tie before Garry
Galley extended Boston's afjvantage to 5-3 on a slapshot with 3: 31
to play.
, In the only other games Friday, Buffalo stopped Vancouver
4-2 and Hartford downed Winnipeg 4-2.
Sabres 4, Canucks 2
Whalers 4, Jets 2

For ·your help and support.
in electing me as Green
Township Trustee. .

.TOM WOODWARD
Pd. for by Clnd .. PSR. Gallipolis, OH.

old adage, "games are won and
los I on the foul line."
Riccardi's travels
Riccardi, a native of Sandusky,
Is a 1970 graduate of Clyde High
School, where he played football
and was named all-state In
basketball before moving on to
Gulf Coast Junior College In
Panama City, Fla., where he and
teammate Dennis Bell were
selected junior college AllAmericans as well as winning a
state junior college championship. While there he played
against such hardwood luminarIes as Bob McAdoo, Nate "Tiny"
Archibald, .Spencer Haywood
and Marvin "Bad News" Barnes.
From there the 6-6 Riccardi
moved on ·to Ohio University,
where he was a member of
Bobcat teams that knocked off
sulh basketball powers as Ohio
State and Indiana and faced
teams such as Marquette In the
NCAA tournament. After graduation, he taught and coached
basketball until 1975, when he
resigned as head coach at Van
Lue High School In Fl ndlay
shortly after taking the job to
play pro basketball In Italy for
three years with three different

teams.
"Would you teach and for
coach for $8,000. or play ball for
$100,000?' ' asked Riccardi, who
also has citizenship In the Republic of San Marino.

Last year's· voyage
DATE.OPP.
SCORE
Nov, 23-Unioto .........................W 64-60
Iat Rio Grande College)
Nov. 26-McDrermou NW .. .........W 75-11
Nov. 29-at Kyger Creek ..... .... ...W 72·53

Dec. 2-Eastern ....................... L
Dec. 9-Southwestern ..•............ W
Dec. 16-ar Symmes Valley ·······"
Dec. :10-0ak Hill ...................... L
Dec. 30-at Southern .................. L
Jan. 6-at Hannan Trace .......... W

ByROBERTJ. MURPHY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UPI) -Top seed
Martina Navratilova lost her
chance for a fourth straight
VIrginia Slims of ChiCago title
Friday when she was forced to
withdraw from the $250,000 event
with a groin pull and bout with
the flu .
Navratllova, who had won the
last nine Chicago tournaments
she entered dating to 1978,
apparently suffered the Injury
last Saturday when she slipped
on an icy sidewalk In New
England. ·
The default allowed the Soviet
Union's Larlsa Savchenko,
ranked 32nd, to automatically
advance to the semifinals, where
she will face third-seeded Helena
Sukova of Czechoslovakia on
Saturday. Sukova defeated Ann
Henrlcksson 6-4, 6-4 in their
quarterfinal match.
In Saturday's other semifinal,
fourth seed Manuela Maleeva of
Bulgaria will face No. 2 Zlna
Garrison, who breezed past

seventh-seeded Pam Shriver 6-3,
6-0 Friday · night. Maleeva
coasted to the semifinals with a
6-1, 6-1 victory over Gretchen
Magers earlier Friday.
"It's always good when Marti(See NAVRATILOVA, C-5)

~
· Ferrellgas

75-78
93·58
65-40
51!-59
69-16
54-59

Jan. 10-Kyf{er Creek ................W 62-53

Jan.13-at Eastern .... ,........ , ..... L 72·90
Jan. 17-McOermon NW ..........:W

~1 - 67

Jan. 20-at Southwesrern ........... W 84-11

Jan.

24-So~thern,. ;; .. ... ......... :... W 11~~ 5

Jan. 27-Symmes Valley ............ w

62 .. 9

COMING DOWNCOURT - Vele~an guard
. Wtnlam Strait of GaiHpollaJrlght) b•blp tile ball
dowacoorl as a Sprlngflel Calho.llc eager gels
away from Josl) Williams ( backgrotinll) In order

Feb. 4-Latham Wester n .......... W 60-59

Feb. 8-at Oak Hill .. ........... ..... L 64-66
Feb. 10- Hannan Tra ct' .. ........... W 78-56

Tournament play
Feb. 15-Southern ...................... L 64-74
tat Meigs H .S.)

Janszen

NORTH G ALUA PIRATES
DATE
OPPONENT
Nov. lB ................. ... .. ... .. .. SVAC preview
Nov . 22 ........... .. .. .. ........................ Unioto
tat Rio Grande\
·
Nov. 28 ........... .. ...... ...... .......... at Eas1frn
· [t(&gt;c. 1........... ............ .... Symmes Valley
Dec. 5............................ ...... ... Southern .........
DI:&gt;C. H.................................. at Oak Hill - ~

Jan . 5 ......... , ........ .. .. . a t Symmes Valley
'"
Jan . 12 ............ .. .............. ... ........ Ea~tern
Jan . 13 ........ ..... ............ .. ... . at Roclk Hill
Jan . 16 ............. ................ at Chesa peakP
~
.Jan . 19 .... ...... .... .. .. .................... Oak Hill .,,
Jan. 26 ............ .. ................. at Southern
Jan. 27 .......... .... .............. lr&lt;Jlt(JI St. Jop
FPb. 2. , .......... ............... at Ky~E'f Crepk
FPb. 9 ......................... ar Hannan TracE'
Feb. 10 ............................... ... .. Rock HUI
Feb. 16 ................. ... .......... SOuthwestern

Head coach- Tom Riccardi
(All SVAC doublehead ers start

with

reserw games at 6: 30p.m.: all non-leaguE'
· lwtnbills start at 6 p.m. 1

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DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) -Paul
Janszen, one of former Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose's
principal accusers, says Rose
continues to lie and contradict
himself about his alleged gambling activities.
. Janszen criticized remarks
Rose ma~e during televised
appearances to promote his new
book during the past few days,
saying Rose still Is lying when he
says he didn't bet on baseball.
"When all this started, he
denied at least five things that I
told (special Investigator) Johr1
Dowd," Janszen salc.lln a story
Saturday In the Dayton Dally
,News.
"Now he has admitted to four
;of them. One- he said he never
;won any Plk-Six tickets. Two .he said he never bet with bookies.
'Three - lie said he always paid
his laxes t never evaded them.
.Four - I said Pete had a
gambling problem. He denied It ,
-now he says he Is getting help for
:a gambling disorder. Five - he
·said he never bet on baseball.
• "Right no)'! J'm four for four .. .
,and they say I . have no
,credibility."
;, Janszen also refuted com,ments made by Rose In an
~tervfew with The Cincinnati .
lf-nqulrer.
. Concerning the former Reds

Dec. 9..... .. ...................... SOuth We~ter ~
Dec.l!i.. ..... :.............. .......... Kyger Creek ... .....,.
Dec.l6 ..... ........................ Hannan TracP
·t.
OPe. 22 .............. .. .. ........ at South~.~o·C"stern ' ·

Navratilova withdraws
from ·Chicago tourney

THANK YOU.VERY MUCH!

NOW ONLY S29995

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man and Jeff Ratliff coming In
for them off the bench.
"It's going tota!:etlmeforus to
get to know each other, but I got
nine ball players, and I can put
any of them on the floor at any
time," · said Riccardi, whose
seamen show some promise of
continuing the up-tempo game
that Wilson started last year.
In addition. one ofthe weapons
that North found to be effective
was the three-point shooting of
Stout and Darin Smith. This
Mlnuteman-sbootlng duo demon·
strated the ability to force
defenses to come out and try to
stop them, which cleared out the
Inside for the big men. That
ability wUI be needed this year as
well to help the Pirates' new front
lin e.
However. as effective as the
running attack and the threepoint shooting were In c~eating
last year's 13-6 finish, foul
shooting continued ·to be one of
the Pirates' bugaboos. " We' re
working on consistency," said
Riccardi, whose crew will have
the quickness to lure teams Into
committing fouls, and therefore
earning trips to the charity
stripe. To once again dust off the

,I
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sponded, ''I never did that. I
never handed Pete a piece of
paper just to get his
fingerprints ... "

Wrenn shoots five-under par
lead in Kapal~a tourney

to
I

.

K&gt;'\PALUA, Hawaii (UP!) with two birdies and three
Robert Wrenn shot a flve·under- bogeys. H~sald he wanted to look
to the final round Saturday.
par 6'1 Friday to take the 'lead
after the third round of the
"l need to chip a little better
$650,000 lsuzu Kapalua Internatomorrow."
he said. "I didn't
tional golf tournament on the
chip
well
at
all
today , nor did I hit
Island of Maul.
the
ball
as
well
as I hit It the first
Wrenn, who entered the round
1
two
days.'
four strokes behind leader DonPeter Jacobsen also moved up
nie Hammond, had a 14-underwith
one of the three low scores of
par .202 going Into Saturday's
66
In
the rou~d . He was tied with
final round on the par-72, 6,761Hammond
for third at 204.
yard Kapalua Bay course.
Jacobsen's
round Included a
"All In all, I had a pretty
hole-In-one
at
the 220-yard parpathetic ball-striking round,"
three
12th
hole
using a five -Iron.
said Wrenn, who earlier told
"Overall, I played well and
reporters he was getting used to
putted
extremely well today. I
the course. "It was just a good
puttscomlngln, or I
missed
some
thing I was chipping and
m
lght
have
been
at 64 or less for
putting."
loday's
round,'"
Jacobsen
said.
Steve Pate shot his second
The
Portland
native,
who
has
consecutive 68 for a two-round
been
on
the
PGA
tour
fur
13
total of 203 and second place In
years,
said
hil
!as!
had
a
tournament, one stroke behole-In-one
·
at
the
19&amp;5
Los
hind Wrenn.
"I never really had control of Angeles Open. He has had 10
anything out there today, even holes-In-one durinJi: his golfing
·
thol!gh I scored· well. I had the career.
Jacobsen
has
won.
more than
same score as yesterday, but I
$267,000
this
year,
finishing
sedidn't ptay nearly as well .... l hit
cond
in
the
Beatrice
Western
It everywhere." Pate said.
Hammond, who looked like he ·Open Butler National in Oak
·
·
might run ·away with the tourna- Brook, Ill.
Loren Roberts and Chris Perry
ment after the first two rounds.
both
shot five-under 67s to tic for
carded a one-over-par 73 to sllp
back to 12-under 204 and a tie for fifth place at 205. J;lob Estes had a
six-under 66 and was another
third place.
Hammond said he considered strok,e back with a three-round
·
hlnl_"lf lucky to to have shot 73 total of 206.
(Continued from C 4)

the

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na's out, as far as I'm concerne,d ," Garrison joked. "I'm
just looking at It as now maybe I
have an opportunity."
Shriver, who teamed with
Garrison for a doubles gold
meqal at the 1988 Olympics, also
lost a o!ongshot chance to capture
the final spot for the seasonending $1 million VIrginia Slims
Championships In New York,
with Magers getting the berth. lt
will mark Shriver's first winless
season since 1982.
Navratllova. the secondranked female playe_!' In the
world and all-lime career money
leader with nearly $15 mllllon,
aggravated the Injury Wednesday night In her opening-match
victory over Donna Faber.
''The flu started It all and It's a
combination of everything, but
mostly It Is my groin," Navratilava said. "If I keep playing, It
jus~ keeps getting aggravated. I
couldn't even play close to 100
percent, and thai would not be
fair to the crowd or the person I
was playing."
·
After a 15-mlnute warmup
Friday afternoon, Navratllova
called tourname}lt offlclals to
announce shewoul~ nat be able to
•
play.
"It's a tough break for Martina," Shriver said . " It 's a good
break for tl!eo!our semifinalists
because It's a total tossup now."
. NavratUova will rest the next

f!!w days in · Chicago before
heading to New York for the
Slims Championships.
·
Navratilova 's withdrawal W?.S
a severe blow to tournament
officials, who already saw three
of the top seeds eliminated iP
first-round matches .
The world's top female player,
Steff! f Graf, and third-ranked
Gabriela Sabatini did not enter
the tournament . In addition,
fourth-ranked Arantxa Sanchez
dropped out last month with an
injury, and 15th-ranked H;ina
Mandllkova withdrew Tuesday
because of an ear Infection.

Hunting seasons
coriunence Monday

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overall last season. The game Will be the llrst
home game of the 1989-90 season for the Redmen.
Admission to the tournament is S3lor adults, $1 for
children and free to Rio Grande students, faculty
and staff who display their 1D card.

Family Life InsuranceProtection

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Departtment of Natural Resources
announced that hunting seasons
for &lt;accoon, opossum, skunk and
weasel will open on .Monday and
remain open until Jan . 31,-1990.
There Is no limlt'oh the number
of animals that can be killed or on
the hours In which hunting takes
place.
Gun season for deer will begin
on Monday, Nov. 27. and will last
until Dec. 2.,
For more ·Information, call
game protectors Terry Hawk In
Galli a County at 446-1967 or Keith
Wood in Meigs County at 985-

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Tr~State, coached by Dick Hack, was 14-19

FACE REDMEN FRIDAY -The Tri-State
University Trojans of Antrola. Ind., will meet the
Redmen of the Unlverolty of Rio Grande In the
seventh Bevo Francis Classic basketball tourua·
ment at Lyne Center next weekend. Rio Grande
and Tri-State square off at 9 p.m . ..friday .

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scrbnmage at the GAHS gym. Williams Is a
veteran guard for the Blue Devils. (TimesSe.n dnel pboto)

LOOKING 'i'O JUKE- Gallla Academy's Josh
WilliAms (rlg~t) looks to put a, Juke move on a
Springfield -&lt;:!a!holle lllayer durlntr SalurdiPoY'S

is still lying

manager's SJiggestlon ~hat Jan.~- ·
zen may have handed him a
blank piece of paper In order to
get : his fingerprints to later be
used In forgeries , Janszen re-

Gallinns on
'89 An-SVAC
volleyball team

MOBILE BOMB DATING 8 COOLING

to pard Strait during Saturday'~ pre-season
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money slartiar !\alardiPoY, Nov. 25 against Vlntou
County In McArthur. (Times-Sentinel photo)

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�Page C-6:-Sundlly Tm11 Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midclaport-Gelipolis. Ohio-Point Plnssnt,

w. Va.

November 12. 1989

November 12. 1989

the collisioo of bodies was ·fien:e.

Sarurday night against defending and neither team managed inOther
Champ SL Joseph. This wiU be a score in the tense battle of two surematch of the 1988 finals when St.. perior _learns to go in at half with
the saine 1-0 margin.
Joe downed MorgiiJIIDwn.
Tl)is game was one of very
Not long inro the pme, it becarne appiii'CIIt that the Big Blacks physical action, and while not as
were in for a super ballle this niaJU brutal as their struggle in the
as the Morganl!lwn crew .cm~e at Regionals, it IOOic.on a college type
!hem with a bristling, bruisang at- · ftaVQr as much bumping and pushtack titne after time. Then, some 10 ing kept the nonnally smooth
minutes or so i11to the conteSt, an PPHS attack off balance. It was acuncharacteristic defensive lapse by tion of thi type that the Big Blacks
PPHS gave the winners a close-.in usually delight in, and halftime disshot which couldn't be stopped llld cussions showed hopes of big
they look a 1-0 lead. Loeaf fans had things ahead as the second half
.
seen the Big Blacks get off to slow be
CIIOIJ4h. the Naporamen
starts before, and the large group &lt;!f
faithful supporWS exorted lheu came out roanng. During that first
favorites to kick it into the higher half they had been' outshot 10-4,
gear to bring it back.
and it was apparen~ they were
The Naporamen did just that as delennincd to make something
they picked up the attack and ·happen. Immediately. they went to
reached down to find 'that aggres- the iuack, but after • couple missed
sive defense which would rum the opportunities for the locals, Mortide. Action became more heated, gantown made good on their first
but the Morgantown speedsters attempt. Itwas a corner toss which
raised their level of play as well, went high in front of the goal, and

record in the Suite as "!hey finiSh
Somehow, the ball was headed by when the Big Blaeks would had to
20-2.
If Morgantown wins the tide,
one Morgantown lad to another, have had one of those most outthey will finish with 19 wins, so no
and in the melee of off-balance standing nights, as it should be in other team can match the local
bodies, Lofthead nodded the ball SIIIC playoffs. This night, they mark. And, last night, the PPHS
into the net for a bi$ 2-0 lead with were just a shade off form and it
only some eight mmutes gone in could not be afforded against a lads never gave up in the attemp~ to
keep it alive, ctesp;IC die ~verstty.
the period.
team of such strength and talent. Eight Seniors played theu final
"Plenty of time" thought tl)e Morgantown had gotten to the
game as Scott Lovell, Jeremy
crowd as they charted and cheered finals a year ago, and seemed to Blain, Rich Reymond, lames Saafor their Big Blacks to get a fturry peak last night to get th~ again.
of scores. Again, the courageous Last night, lhey did the better job, ders, Chris Voigh~ Michael
PPHS lads reached even deeper for but the feelinf was that on a dif- Lovejoy, John Musgrave, ~'­
Butch Marshall leavo a ncb
that elusive ~ to ignite an ex- ferent night 11 could have been herirage for the stellar rounger
plosion and kick their machine into another story. Still, it is single
lads, all of whom saw action in the
that fantastic high gear which had elimination and Morganto\Yfl was
contest last night
·
carried them to the best record in the beuer 'team night as they kept
After
being
outshot·
the
first
half,
the State. Several · minutes later, their poise in face of the furious
with PPHS now dominating the of- PPHS anack and weathered the PPHS carne back in the secand half ,
to outshoot Morgantown 13-7, but
fensive play, the furious attack stOrm that no other teams couta &lt;1o
the only scores went to the winners. .
brought the ball into the mid area as they, lll!d fare, frqstrated the Bjg
the 1989 page of PPHS Soccer ,
So,
some 20 yards from the goal, where Blacks.
.
.
I
history closes on the highest note
John Musgrave unloaded an ab"It was an outstandin~ season lly · thus far, but the dream lives on and '
solute rocket blast that would nar- outstandiilg
me11' said a di~­
1!190 will soon come along led by
row the score. But, fate deemed appointed
h Napt)ra." I feel
now veterans Jeremy Duncan, Chip
otherwise as the ball was a half- really badly for the guys, they canie
inch high, caught the crossbar, '!&gt;!!ether, accomplished marvello~J$ Wood, Carl Hogg, Matt Wedge. ,
Craig Tatterson, Denny Casto,
bounced straight l!own, and left the · things, went a step farther thap last
Brian
Reymond and others includnet undisturbed.
year, and are champs in the truest ing Chris Bordman, Shawn Jiesson, .
One began to sense that it was sense. But, tonight MorgantoWn JR Eads, Mike Stewan, Jason Elias,
not meant to be this night, and the deserves great credit, and we Wish
Brian Norvell, Mike Taylor, Charvaunted local defense would have them the best of success in the
les Towner and new faces yet to be
to totally cdntrol the ball if PPHS final", noted the gracious Napora,
seen. Exhausted fans applauded the
was to bring this one back. With aU adding "the lads were fantastic , lll)d
of 1989 openly, amid anthe bean of a great champion, the , we all thanlc the super supporters of efforts
ticipation
for 1990. As they deparlocal lads reached deeper into the parents, cheerleaders and fans for
ted
disappointed
this night, but with
well for a miracle, but met with helping make it such a great
heads high, hearts full of pride for
frustration time after time, and it season."
!
their own, and hopes for next year was clear this Morgantown bunch
Great it was, too. The Big Blacjcs just as it should be everywhere in
could sense ·a return 10 the Title are assured of postin11: the best
sports.
match. Tho locals threw away all
!
caution and desperately made offensive thrusts. 1ben, with just over
five minutes remaining, their doom
was sealed when Lofthead got a
long pass from his inates, raced in
on the PPHS goal on a one-on-one
situation. Stellar goalie, James
Sanders met him headon, and
barely missed stopping the play, but
FORMER PATIENTS OF DR AARON BOONSUE AND)
(
the chip shot ticlded into the net as
NEW PATIENTS WELCOME
if direeted by
seeing-eye
TOURNAMENT SOCCER PLAY - The Poillt ~nt High School Soccer tam lost in tourn1ment force and fans on"-both sides knew
play at Fairfiekl Stadium Friday neniag qaillst MorganiOWII, 3-0. Although the Big Black Kickers cannot the season was over (or this valiant
reach their goal or state champioos Ibis year, the local tum bas pmltd the best season record in tbe state, Big Blacks bunch.
witb 20 wins, two losses. Shown above is an action scene from the tourney game.
It was a ni~ht anmst a fine team
.

GALLIPOLIS - "It was by far
our biggest teM thus far: ··
remarked Gallipolis Blue Devil
basketball coach Jim Osborne
after . Saturday's scrimmage .

Red-S~x

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-

Starling to meet Brown if $1 million purse·OK.
Jamaican-born fighter from Germantown , Md. ',' I'm looking
forward to fighting a great
fighter like Marlon Starling. Now
he might consider giving me a
fight ."
It looks like the $1 :n llllon
figure is not out of the question
because Brown's promoter, Don
Elbaum, already offered Starllng $800,000. StUJ, before Starllng can take Brown's money, he
has "bigger" things to think
about: namely, tBF middleweight champion Michael Nunn.
The Nunn fight, which is slated
for early 1990, is the first
big-money fight for the 31-yearold Starling, who had to move up
a weight class to get the payday

he was shopping for.
While Starling talks big about
Brown· - •'He wouldn't last four
or five rounds, If that" - he Is a
little more humble when he
mentions Nunn.
"Great lighter; likes to
move," Starling said. "Never
fought anyone like Nunn."
The Starling-NiiM fight came
as bad news to the Brown camp,
which also wants a big payday of
its own. "! just hope he doesn't
embarrass himself out of a
payday with us with the Nunn
fight,' ; Elbaum said. "That's
going to be an awful light."
One bright spot for Brown, 25,
is Starling would retain hls WBC
title if Nunn defeats hlm.

Arch!)r started the day with
three birdies In the first five
holes, but then expe-ienced put·
ling problems.

NOT CLOSE ENOUGH- BobbfNldloll ...... lit a m..... oldp
shot IIIII&amp; robbed llbn of a bltdle ud a flve-ader par after aiDe
• holes on tile fl"' day of the M-llole General Tire._.. VePI CJ...te
at tile De8ert Inn Coaa&amp;ry Club Ia Lu Vepa, Nev. Nlellellletltlle
....... iournarnent aadl lie failed to IIGCiee aa erltw oa 1111
scorecard on the 18111 hole. He , . . dl~qaallfletl . ·from Ole
IOUJ'IUIIJJetlt. (UPJ)
..,

.,

~

.

"I got all to a mce start," he
said. "I made three birdies
.easily. I went to a baseball
(putting) grip after a few bad
plitts and star ted putting better."
The grip change was made
after Archer three·putted from
1a feet for a bogey on the par-4
eighth hole. With the new grip,
Archer sank birdie putts of 10. 20'
an&lt;' };! feet and also saved a par
wtth a 25-loot putt on the 11th
hole.
Coody hlt 17 greens durlng his ·
round of 67.
''1 made a couple of good putts,
but I missed a bunch of short ones
and tl.at concerns me a bit.'' he
said. ·
Sixteen goiters In the 54-man
field bettered par In the ~pcnlng
round. The winner of the threeday event wlll take home $45,000
Sunday .
Defending Las Vegas champion Larry Mowry finished the
day seven shots back after
carding a 73.
In a two-man competition for
the 1989 Senior Tour money title,
Orville Moody fired a round of70,
while Bob Charles of New Zea-'
land shot a 71.
·
With three official PGA Senior
Tour events remaining this year
heading into the Las Vegas
Classic, Charles held a slim lead
of $152 over Moody. Charles has
won $567,771.
Bobby Nichols was disqualified following Friday's round for
signing an incorrect scorecard.

·1 would like to take this opportunity
to thank all the people of Guyan
Township and Crown City Precinct
for supporting me in the Trustee race
OA Nov. 7th.
I have been a resident of Guyan
Township fqr over 40 years. lam ·
very proud of the people in Guyan
Township.
THANK YOU VERY MUCHI

ROGER WATSON

..

Pd. for by 1111 Cllid., It l, Cro111 City

·.

•

history oi Fenway Park."

the controlled scrimmage on the
GAHS hardwood, but Osborne
said "Our boys are starting to
play well as a unit. Our defense
looked good at times. They were
the best competition of the three
teams we've faced in pre-season.
He added, "we didn't do too
well on the bo~rds . Our sl).motlng
was off. We' ve got Jess than two
weeks to Improve our offensive
play," he continued.
"Friday, the Galllpolts freshmen, reserves and varsity will
take part In three two-quarter

previews at Wellston.
Saturday, Nov. l8, theGallians.
wlll ho!lt East Carter, Ky. at 10
a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 21, the
Gallians will travel to RossSoutheastern for their final pre·
season tilt.
The Gal.lians open their 1989-90
season Nov. 25, at Vinton County.
Mo;day, the remaining 75-100
reserve seats lor the Galllans
10-home games go on sale at the
principal's office. Reserve seats
for $40 per ticket with a limit of
four per person.

.

.

25TH&amp;: JEFFERSON AVENUE

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LONDON iUPI) - French double faulted to give the Czech match.
"I just felt stiff," McEnroe
Open champiOn Michael Chang two break points to put him back
said afterwards, explalnmg hts
ousted Soviet Andrei Chesnokov In the fight.
6-3, 6-4 and top-seed John McEn·
· B.ut then Mc.Enroe hlt a volley first set disaster.
roe rallled from a set down to along the line and produced two
''Knowing you have to be on top
defeat Mtloslav Meclr of Cze- service aces before being called of your game sometimes makes
choslovakia Friday and advance on a foot fault. He eventually got you flat. When you want It mosttt
to the semifinals of the $517,500 to his feet and a forehand drop is not there," he added.
volley gave hlm the set and the
Silk Cut tournament.
"Luckily I got going."
Frenchman Guy Forget .was
the only unseeded player lo
advance to Saturday's semifi·
nals, defeating Robert Seguso of
Boca Raton, Fla., 7-5, 6-3,
By PAL BURMAN
remember anything of the match
Seventh-seeded Chesnokov
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UP!)
'now," said Gustafsson, who
took the Initiative, breaking - Magnus Gustafsson scored his
employed unusual tactics
Chang's serve In the !lrst game. second major upset in two days,
against one of the world's J&gt;rst
But the No. 2 seed, from Placen- shocking former World No . 1
ralllers.
tia, Calif., hit straight back, Mats . Wilander 7-6 (10-8), 6-4
·'I decided to bore him with
breaking the Soviet, holding his Saturday to reach the final of the
long rallies and then suddenly
own serve and then breaking $1,02 milllon Stockholm Open
hammer In winners," the 22again to lead"3-l.
grand prix tennis tou rna men I.
vear -old said.
Chesnokov broke back and
Wilander's Joss meant that las t
Wllander has dropped from
then held hls own serve as the two year's top-ranked player failed
first to 14th place In the rankings
basellners produced the best to ·win a single grand prix title in
this year, partly because ~f
rally of the tournament so far, 1989. The 25-year-old winner of
Injuries, partly because ollack of
each rushing the net and produc- ' the 1988 Australian, French and
motivation and family probl&lt;!ms.
lng several astonishing returns .
U.S. Open tournaments had won
Earner this fall. he learned his
The 17-year-old Chang then
at least two titles each season
father, Einar, was seriously Ill
made the decisive break in the
since breaking through ' with a
with cancer.
eighth game and went on to take 1982 victory In the French Open. · "I would prefer to keep it a
In the featured evening semifithe set.
private matter, but It had to
Only three games went with
nal Saturday, World No. 1 Ivan
come out eventually and that
serve in the second set as both
Lend! was to face home star
hasn't really disturb~ me, "
players produced more brilliant Stefan Edberg, No. 3ln the world. Wllancler said. "It is something
tennis. Chesnokov served four
The tournament included the so seriOus tome thatldon'tgive a
aces In an 11-polnt seventh game
three best and seven of the 10 damn about what pioople may
ut still lost lt . Chang managed to
highest-ranked players In the
write about it," he said.
hold his own serve and made the world and Gustafsson overcame
Wllander lost In the second
crucial break In the ninth to lead
four higher-ranked opponents en
roupd of the U.S. Open and
5-4.
route to his second grand prix
crashed out In the first rounds at
''Today was a very tough
finaL
Los Angeles and Paris earlier
match, Andrei does not give
The 92 -ranked underdog
this fall.
much and you really have to downed fourth-seeded American
"I'm pleased with the way I
chase your shots." Chang said.
AndreAgassi In thequart&amp;rflnals played,'' Wllander said. ''But his
''Today I came up a little more
to follow up unexpected victories
forehand was Incredible today,
than he did and I think helped to over Italian Paolo Cane and last and he never. faltered.
mix things up and keep him
year's flnaltst Peter Lundgren of
"I missed the important points
thinking," he added.
Sweden.
and I only have myself to blame
"Chang Is moving on the court
Gustafsson pljlyed as II · In
for that."
very well, he has a very good
trance against Ills famous counWllander had the Initiative In
passing shot. better than most
tryman and was COllier on the
the first set but, without the killer
other players," Chesn!lkov said.
pressure points.
·
Ins Unct that made him a winner
' 'I was so concentrated, I can't
last season, he failed to take
"I think Michael Chang Is a
very good tennis player on any
surface." he added.
McEnroe looked stiH and ~n­
comfortable In the first set of hls
, match, dropping his serve In the
first and third games, winning
only slx points In the 1irst five
games .
McEnroe, who wlll meet
Forget 'Saturday, came alive
toward the end of the set,
breaking Meclr In the seventh
game. The Czech went on to wln
the set but McEnroe was back In
top ' form in the second set,
breaking Meclr's serve In the
fourth and sixth games .
McEnroe roa~ed to a J-0 lead In
the decisive third set. Meclr held
his own serve In the fourth ~rame
but then miSsed a vital break
point In the next game.
saved two match points at
. 15-40 In the elgtbh and then with
McEnroe serving for the match
.
at 5-3, the players produced the
beat game so far In the
tournament.
Meclr produeed a .auperb rePlld f!l{ by Cl... , Rt. 3, Boll 111, IIHipolls, 011. 4513
I dof serve and then McEnroe

POINT PLEASANT

&lt;1enlu4 .......... f

Phoett~x .............. ..........

Chang, McEnroe advance in Silk Cut tourney

(FORMERLY POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL C'kNTER)

.,......

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Hartfonl at Clllcap, nllfi'
Toronto Ml Min ~~Nota , .. _..
Caipryal WID..,..~. niKf!t

NFL re!!ults
' By l 'nill'd Prt.,.,.lnll•rr.: .., ...,
N.4.TIONAL FOOTBALL LE,\G\ :E

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$3795

Gustafs8on' upsets Wilander in Stockholm
Open
.

Littler leads Las Vegas Classic
LAS VEGAS, Nev. ( IJPI) Gene Uttler fired a 6-under-par
66 Friday to take a on@·stroke
lead after the first round of the
$300,000 SeniOr PGA Las Vegas
Classic.
.
__ ' .
Littler carded seven birdies
and one bogey in posting matching 33s on . each side of the
7,111-yard Desert Inn Country,
Club. That put him one stroke
ahead ()f George Archer ariel
Charles Coody. Lee Elder and AI
Geiberger.were next, three shots
off the pace.
"I hit the ball pretty solidly,"
Littler said. "I putted extremely
well. It's nice to get off to a good
start. It's b!?en a long time."
Littler, who has been suffering
from back problems, said he has
not been playing well in recent
weeks.
The first-round leader is no
stranger to the Desert Inn
Country Club, where the 1961
U.S. Open champiOn captured
three successive Tournament of
Champions titles beginning In
1957. .
"It's nice to see famlllar
surroundings . where you've
played well before, but just
because you've played well
somewhere before doesn't mean
you'll play well there again,"
Littler said.
· ·

willing to exchange

CLEVELAND iUPI} - The
Boston Red Sox are wil!lng to
trade left fielder Mike G.reenwell
to CleWland In exchange for Joe
Carter, the Plain Dealer re·
ported Saturday.
The newspaper said the Ind~
ans needed only to say yes to
Boston's offer In order to peddle
the unhappy Carter to the Red
Sox for Greenwell, one of the top
young outfielders In the Ameri·
can League. Carter has said he
wants to pursue free agency
· when hls contract expires after
the 1990 season, and the Indians
announced they would trade the
slugger rather than risk losing
him without compensation.
Carter, 29, his 35 home runs
and drove Jn 105 runs last season,
and has a lifetime .347 average In
Feriway Park. Green wei~ 26, has
averaged .320 with 28 home'runs
and 101 RBis In hls first three full
seasons in Boston.
Other teams In teres tee! in
Car·ter in~llJde San Dtego, •Californta, Toronto, Kansas City,
Minnesota and the New York
Mets, but the Plain Dealer
quot~ Gorrmin as saying: ''!'get
the l'i!ellng they like our proposal
best. There's about five othf.r
teams Interested. but 1 think
they'll come back to us ."
According to .the Plain Dealer,
Gorman told Boston writers this
week that: "If we could get the
· particular player we want, that
fellow could hlt40 to45 home runs
and become one of the n\ost
.prolific power hitters In the

FAMILY PRACTICE
PAIN CONrrROL CLINIC

to put the money in the bank- $1
million."
Brown, who earned a unanimous decision over a feisty Luis
Santana In ·the 12-round bout,
chose Springfield as the fight site
as part of a gentlemen's chat·
lenge to Starling, who Jives and
trains in nearby Hartford, Conn.
Starling has avoided the challenge since 1985, when he handed
Brown h ts only professional
defeat.
,
"I believe I have established
myself," said Brown, a

wlth Springfield ,Central Ca'tholic, a finalist in last year's
Dlvlslon v championship game
with champion Columbus
Wherle.
No score was kept throughout

Greenwell for Tribe's Carter

ROBERTM.;HOLLEY, M.D.

By KENNETH ,, ·'BAZINET
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UP!)
- World Boxing Council welter·
weight champion Marlon Starling Says for the right price- $1
million - he will grant the title
uniflcati~n bout sought by Intern'ational Boxing Federation
champion Simon Brown.
"He's ping to have to pay for
It, '' Starling said at ringside
Thursday night after watching
Brown defend the IBF welter"(elght title at the Sprlngfleld
Givic Center. " He's going to have
•

Poma'oy-MiddltlpGft-Gallipoia, Ohio- Point PIBIIMl, W.Va.

Gallipolis, Springfield Cath~lic in cage
scrblmtage; Wellston preview is Friday

Morgantown posts 3..() win over Big Blacks in semifinals
By FRANK CAPEHAK1'
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -Cold
weather and a talented group of
Morgantown kickers Joined for·
ces Friday night at Fairfield
Stadium to bring an end to the
great 1989 soccer season of the
Point Pleasant Big Blacks by
handing the Naporamen a 3-0
defeat in th e semifinals of the
state soccer tournament.
It was a courageous group of Big
Blacks which went down with all
guns firing, but the PPHS machine
was not hitting on all cylinders this
night.
Appearing
emotionally
drained from their dramatic wins
on route to Huntington, and other
events of the past week, the local
lads gave their all, but seemingly
could not get it into synch, and it
was a night when their best was to
be demanded. The big, fast and
skilled team from Morgantown rolled in with their most outstanding
game of the year, and thus won a
return trip to the Srate finals on

.J

There's never been a better time to save on
Armstrong suspended and tile ceilings. Choose
from a super selection. Hurrv. in rodav!

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Thanks To The Voters
Of Green Township
For Your Fine
Support In Tuesday's
Election.

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Point

TONY L. BECK,.
GREEN TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

,•

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~ --

.
advantage of the opportunities he
created.
He broke to 6-5, bu tthrew away
his own serve In the next game.
In the tiebreaker, Wllander
showed glimpses of the gutsy
at tacks that surprised his opporents In 1988.
·
But despite t!lree set points.
Wllander couldn't carve- out the
set. Instead, Gustafsson con-

vertecl hls first chance with a
bltsterlng forehand.
Wilander will rest for two
weeks and then start to prepare
for the Davis Cup final against
West Germany Dec. 15-17.
"I hope to maintain my form
until then ," Wi!ander said. ·"It
will be the highlight of the year,
together with Christmas."

1990 CHEVROLET

I

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Gene Johnson Sole Price

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•

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(614) 446-3672

...•
•
•

�. . .... -·

Pomeloy-Middleport-Gd~il.

Ps91 C·B-Sundey Tm11 Sentinel

Nov.-nber 12. 1989

Ohio Point Plaaamnt, W. Va.

the Packers' backfield coach. defensive signals.
Peete weekly showS more skill at
to be pressured. And Majkowski played.
Tiley were then relayed to
•'Most of the credit goes to Don· completed 14 of 28 passes against
running Detroit's four-receiver
- we tried bu I we could never get
Majkowski,
supposedly, alGreen Bay for 201 yards and a
version of what Is called the Run
near him. We've got to put some Majkowski," Infante said.
though
both
the
quarterback and
touchdown . Last week, Peete
"Maybe It's because he's been
•n Shoot. And fellow rookie Barry
pressure on the quarterback.
was.l8 for 291n a 273-yard day In his head coach deny the
Sanders bas run for 184 and 1911n
''That Is a must for next year. named the starter. buthe'shada
whiCh he threw for two TDs.
· accusations . .
considerably
more
professional
the last two games.
Somehow and someway we're
''This week," Infante said with
Green
Bay
was
accused
by
rame
this
year.
approach
to
the
But Detroit's Jack of a pass
going to gl!t somebody who can
a smirk, "we're going to put
Detroit
In
&gt;the
·first
game
of
He's
more
aware
and
more
rush showed why It :s contrlbu ted
rush• the passer. And then we
to so many Lions' losses both last
need big, fast or little and fast aware of what we're trying to do. deploying two players on the them on our side of the field. In
Injured reserve list opposite. the trench coats and dark glasses so
"His scrambling ability has
week, when the cjub's defense
wide receivers. And receivers
.
Lions'
bench to steal their nobody knows who they are."
certainly helped this team. A
was unable to slow Houston's
who can catch the ball."
Detroit should benefit from a classic example of that was last
Warren Moon, and the week
season
under Fontes just · as week against Chicago."
previous when Green Bay's Don
Green Bay has won two
Green
Bay
has Improved from a
Majkowski shredded It when he
straight
for Its best record after
year
with
Uody
Infante.
•
needed to.
nine
games
since the 1978 team
"We can't · rush the quarter- ·
Majkowski has gone from a
was
7-2.
The
:packers have
back," Detroit coach Wayne I ourneyman rookie to one of the
played
tough
second-half
ball to
Fontes said. "We've tried every- top quarterbacks In the league
get
wllere
they
are.
thing. We need a (pass-rushing)
(third rated In the ~C last
"Our focus Is trying to be as
week) under Infante's guidance.
defensive end badly.
eompetlllve
as We can every
"That would make a huge He passed for 367 yards against
'week
of
the
seafiOn," Infante
difference. A guy llke Moon has the Uons the first time they
said. "That way, when the end of
..
the season comes , we can walk
away saying, 'We ~ave It the best
we could."'
1
.
,
Detroit has lost, Its last two
for tree agency since the end of changes, possibly at the winter games by 23-20 and 35-31. It's
the World SerieS. The deadline to meetings the first week of offense has Improved with
declare Is Monday at 1 p.m. EST.
December In Nashville·, Tenn. Peete's Increasing experience .
JOHN FULn-J. IIAICUS FULTZ
Yount's agent, his brother Yount's main goal Is to play on a but Its defensive 1weakness · Is
2C2 W. Main
· OWNUS
PoMeroy
Larry, said from Scottsdale, World Series winner, and at age getting exploited mpre.
992·2101
Ariz., Yount would have no 34 he may feel he does not have
Peete, whose father WIIUe Is
further comment at this time.
many seasons left.
Yount, who thlsseasonbecame
"What Robin wants to do Is
the fifth player to reach 2,500 hits figure out a way for the team to
before age 34, Is expected to win," Larry Yount -said. "One
battle George Bell of Toronto,
time In his life, he'd like to win
Cal Rlpken of Baltimore and it."
Kirby Puckett of Minnesota for
Yount, who has 2,602 career
AL MVP honors, which will be hits, left his home In Scotlsdaie
announced Nov. 20. Yount won for a -vacailon In Hawaii this
the AL MVP In 1982.
weekend. The Brewers are hold·
The Brewers finished a dlsap- lng discussions with the Younts.....
....
. pointing 81-81 last season. To''I've had a lot of conversations
r
ward the end oftheseason, Yount with Robin and his brother
said or the Brewers. •'I definitely Larry," Brewers president Allan
think some changes need to he H. "Bud" Selig said. "What
/
made, just to shake things up."
Robin has done a lot of plllyers
....
_..
Yount's statementlndlcates he have done in baseball.
r
Is walling to see whether the
"Our discussions are ongoing
Brewers make personnel and they will continue to be,"
./
Selig said. "I would characterize
....
....
them as very, very productive."
./
Brewers general manager
Harry
Dalton was unavailable
Lloyd Moseby, of.
J
for
comment.
National Leape
...Teams
must
offer
salary
arbi....
Atlanta Braves - Darrell
tration to free agents by Dec. 71f
f
Evans,1b.
1
they
are
stiU
In
teres
ted
In
signing
Chicago Cubs - Scott Sanderthe player. If they do not offer
1
son, lhp.
cannot
sign
the
arbitration,
they
....h
_..
Cincinnati Reds - Dave Col·
player.
llns, of; Joel Youngblood, of; Bo
r
The player then has until Dec.
Dlaz, c.
Houston Astros- Bob Forsch, 19 to accept arbitration. If
J
rhp; Greg Gross, of; Rick arbitration Is accepted, the
....
_..
Rhoden, rhp; Dan Scl\atzeder, player and team haveunt11Feb.1
r
lhp; Harry SpUman, If; Kevin to agree to a contract, or they
lace a hearing to ~ettle the
Bass, of.
,
f
Los Angeles Dodgers - Dave dispute.
It
the
player
rejects
an
arbitraAnderson, If; John Shelby, of;
./
John Tudor. lhp; Fernando Va- tion offer. he would still be free ta
'
.
sign with the team. But If the
lenzuela, lhp.
Ask For Oscar
Montreal Expos Huble team does not sign the player by
For Sales See Auctioneers
J
Jan. 8. It would be unable to sign
Brooks, of; Mark Langston, Jhp;
For Alignment
. Lon' or Chris Neal For Sales
Pascual Perez, rhp; Bryn Smith, him again until May 1, a 01onth
Into the 1990 season.
'
rhp; Damaso Garcia, If.
''-\II
'
'-\II
,,_,\II
·
'
\
I
I
-'-,\II
-'-,\II
-'-,\ll.'"\11
-'-,\ll-'-,\11New York Mets- Don Aase,
rhp; Keith Hernandez, 1b; Tim
Teufel, If.
Philadelphta PhUIIes - Steve
Lake, c; Bob Dernler, of.
Pittsburgh Pirates - Doug
Balr, rhp; Jim Gott, rhp; Neal
Heaton, lhp.
St. Louis Cardinals - Frank
D!Pino, lhp; Rick Horton. lhp;
Tony Pena, c; Ted Powe~. rhp;
Danny Cox. rhp.
San Diego Padres - Carmelo
Martinez, of; Mark Davis, lhp.
San Francisco Giants - Bob
Brenley. c; Terry Kennedy, c;
Mike Krukow, rhp; Craig Lef·
ferts, lhp; Candy Maldonado, of;
Pat Sheridan, of; Chris Speier,
If; Bob Knepper, lhp;
Ken
Oberkfell. If.

-.

.

-

.,.

""

.. .

•

.. .

••

Novemblw 12. 1989

Davies continued, "We are work Is being done . Lobby
GALLIPOLIS - An extensive
remodeling project of Star Bank. · pleased with the decision -of our facilities will remain open for
N. A., Tri-State's Silver Bridge board of directors to remodel the customers to conduct business."
Star Bank, N. A. Tri-State
Branch facility on US 7 Is In Its Siver Bridge Office. This coincurrently
has nine offices located
third week according to Dan cides with our bank's commitment to better serve our custo- In Gallla and Lawrence Counties.
Davies, senior Vice president.
Total assets on Sept. 30,1989 were
Construction workers are en- mers In the Tri-County area."
$259,487,751.97 , up $17,223,005.24
Davies
added
,
"
This
project
gaged In a complete facellft of
from the same period or the
reflects
the
growth
our
bank
is
. the building's exterior, interior
previous year. Star Bank, N. A.,
cusexperiencing
by
Improving
remodeling, an easier drlve-thru
Tri-State
Is one of the 15 affiliate
tomer
service."
access, slgnage and landscaping.
.
banks
of
the
Star Bane CorporaIn
closing,
Davies
said
,
"The
Davies said Installation of a
a
·5.7
billion
dollar holding
tion
,
drivethru
lanes
will
be
closed,
new Tellerlflc Money Station
com
pan~
of
Cincinnati.
Nov.
13,
for
beginning
Monday,
Machine Is scheduled for the
The bank Is a membero!FDIC .
approximately two weeks while
bank's Cll~ln!the Gallla,
Meigs and Mason County areas.

•

REMODELING IN PROGRESS - . Mike
Danlels,left, a construction worker for Neighbor·
gall Coutructlon of Huntinrtoa, W.Va., watches
as fellow worker Billy Jack Stap~oa prepares to

Money Ideas

'Wheel of

STOP IN .AND LQQI( A~OUND

vs

.-

PRESf:JII'l'!!.UIECK - Harold Ratliff, maaa1er of the GaiUpolls
Rax reslaaraiill- pre)M!nl8 a elleck for $311.55 to Tent Wil'ler,
executive director Of the FamUy Addiction CommunltyTreatinent
Services (FACTS). The donation Is part of . the ' local Rax's
continuing fish-tank promotion. (Times-Sentinel photo)

Farm flashes

NEW SHIPMENT OF
FACTORY CARS
JUST ARRIVED AT
PAT HILL FORD

Ohio cattle inventory down
By Edward M. VoUborn
Conaty Extension Agent, ·
Agriculture &amp; CNRD

FORD TEMPO'S AND ERCURY TOPAZ
6 -1989 MODELS IN STOCK :FOR
•
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

SAN DIEGO

SHOP
AMD ·
COMPARE

NFL GAMEDAY"'
Picks and Previews

11:30AM
NFL PRIMETIME'"

'

All the Day's Highlights

1PM

0,
__ o:NLv
S8495°
- - -•Automatk
·Tr•llllli•sion
•Air (OIIIItioning
•Tilt WhHI ·
(•trol ·

tip•••

. . . Dtfrostlr ----------------~
•AM/FM
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•6 Yr.-60,000 Mit
Power Trcin w..,.anty

PAT·HILL FORD-INC.
461 SO. THIRD

________./

~L......------=-7.~ ----:. --·----- ~--·

.,
-

---~

-

-- -

LAKIN, W.Va. -In addition to
keeping coal moving on the
. water, the AEP River Transportation Division Is also helping
keep LtfeFIIght In the air.
Life Flight, Grant Medical Center's emergency medical helicopter service based In Wellston
made a brief visit to the River
Division's headquarters In Lakin
recently to pick up a $270
donation. The division Is plugged
Into the LlleFllght network, and
pilots from the service have

made a successful landing on
AEP barges to rescue an employee who had s'irtfered heart
problems.
"We're In an area here (at
Lakin) wllere all the emergency
services are volunteer,'' said
Gale Rhodes, River Division
manager. "It could take 20-to-30
minutes for a volunteer emergency service to get here If we
had an accident. In addition, a
boat could be out in an area
where we couldn't get help for

-

- - - - - . - - . . . - - - -- - _ ; __ __ :

GALLIPOLIS - The cattle
business has Its ups and downs.
In recent montlls the prices have
been -good. The Ohio cattle
inventory Is down. Cattle and
C'alves on feed October 1, for
slaughter market In the 13 state
quarterly report was down 6 per
cent from a year earlier. Placements of cattle and calves on feed
during the July-Sel,ltember ·1989
quarter were down 5 per cent
from 1988.
"Doanes" Ag report predicts
that herd rebu IIding will be slow
enough to expect a couple more
years · of relatively favorable
cattle prices. They see cow-calf
pairs reaching a peak price by
next spring. Despite these long
.term trends heifer calf prices are
currently strongly discounted.
Spreads between steer and heifer
calves of $10 per hundred are
'common.
· The local group bus trip to the
North American Livestock Exposition In Louisville, Kentucky lor
Wednesday, November 15 Is
proceeding as planned. We will
be using a 28 passenger bus.
There are still a few open seats.
Late reservations can be made
by calling me at the office
446-7Q07 or home 446-8997.
BurleY. tobacco marketing sea·
son Is rapidly approaching. Reports are that many smaller
growers are well Into the stripping and grading process. I have
1

obtained the market reports for
several of the fluecured markets.
Their prices this year are 4-5
cents per pound higher than last
year with a slightly higher
percentage going under loan.
The Burley Tobacco (type 31)
price support schedule sllows
B1FR at $1.68 per pound,. B3FR Is
supported at $1.64.
Tobacco market cards were
mailed from the county ASCS
office this past Monday. II you .
did not get your card or have
questions. you should contact the
ASCS office as soon as possible . .
The two major reasons for not
getting the cards relates to forin
MQ38 (eligibility statement) and
AD1026 (sod buster). If you did
not get your card, there Is a good
possibility that these forms are
somehow Involved.
The fall 1989 Agricultural Poll~y and Outlook dinner meeting
will be held In Chillicothe on
Tuesday, November 21 from 5-9
p.m. at the Holiday Inn. Reservations should be made Immediately by calling the · County
~ Extension Office. Mr. Bcyson
(Bud) Cater, District Extension
· Farm Management Specialist Is
In charge of the program.
We are planning an AgronomyRow Crops class !tere In Gallla
County on the evening of November 30. Dr. Mark Loux, State
Extension Agronomist speclaliz·
lng ln. weed control will be the
primary resource person. As we
plan the program, I wUI like to
know some of the topics you want
covered. Take a few minutes to
call with your suggestions.

MFR. training control session Nov. 28
By Anhur Daniell
Gallla SWCD Technlct1111
GALLIPOI,IS - On Tuesday,
Nov. 28, at 7 p.m., a Multiflora
Rose control training session wUI
be conducted.
Those wbo have signed up for
the cost-share program for 198990 should plan to attend. The
training Is a requirement to be
eligible for the cost share.
Ed Vollborn; county ag-agent,
OCES, and Patty Dyer, District

--

Conservationist, USDA.SCS will
be conducting the training. The
session wm be held at the Gallla
SWCD office at 529 Jackson Pike,
Room 308-C, Gallipolis.
H you are not Involved In the
cost sbare pi'OIIfam, but are
Interested In the most current
Information In combating Multiflora Rose please feel free to
attend. This II OJI'II to the public.
For more Information, contact
the DistriCt office at 44&amp;-8687.

GALLIPOLIS - The money
made In "the development , and
syndication of gameshows over
the last several
bly Impressive.
Financial
· plres have been
built on th
backs of ''Jeopardy". . Wheel
of Fortune" and•
even ''Hollywood Squares". Je,alo1us
'loyal and dedicated following
th'e se shows commanrl, we
thought we would take a stab at
)heir technique.
In our game, we simply ask you
to fill in the blanks and keep your
copy of this edltlog untU the end
of the year. Then, just for the fun
of it, check your responses
against the actual year-end results. There are no prizes In this
game, unless you put your
responses to'work In the financial
markets. By the way, we will list
our responses below. (At the end
of 1989, compare our results with
yours - maybe we can do
business). Are you ready?
Ques'tlon #I: The stock market
will be (higher/ lower) than today's levels at year-end.
Question #2: The level of
Interest rates will be (higher/ lower) than today 's levels at
year-end.
Queston #3: My portfolio's
performance will be . (higher/ lower) than the market's for
1989.
Most of our Joyal readers know
where this is leading. We continue to expect the stock market
to add Incrementally to Its
year-to-date gains. As Investors
continue 10 build a "wall of
worry", we are particularly keen
on the small capitalization
lssuj's. We believe Interest rates
wUI be little changed from
current levels, with any action
being focussed on the short
maturities. Finally, we are quite
proud of our Model Portfolio and
believe we can continue to
outperform the overall market.
As much as we like to Inject
humor Into our opening com men- · ,
· !aries, we are quite aware of the
facts. Investing Is !JOt a game. We
enjoy seeking investment oppor·
tunltles because of the satisfaction, both monetary and professionally, that success generates.
We think the last quarter of 1989
Is going to be a good one.
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment
Broker lor The Ohio Company In
their Gallipolis oHice.)

..

three-to-four hours."
In 1986, LlfeFllght flew to
Lakin from Wellston - a swift
13-minute ride In the 160-mph
helicopter- to conduct a demonstration landing on AEP barges.
The successful landing was LifeFlight's first for a barging ·
operation of any type. .
"We want the best services
available for our employees, "
said Rhodes. "We're happy to be
. able to donate to a service like
LifeFlight. "

&amp;.'! I - - f _1__

BY STAN EVANS

--

RAIDERS

LifeFlight ·receives $270 donation

Fortune'

.

WI un uaa a ca•• Lft
ft 1111 UI·MORI ~

--

SUNMYNHiBT
TONIGHT BPM LIVE

loosen the old aluminum sheeting from the roof of
the Ga1Upoll8 Star Bank's Silver Bridge branch.
(Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

'll' Made To Fit Muffler Shop (Open) Nov. 1st
'll' Inspection For Auto Open Now
'll' Frontend Alignment Shop (Ball Joints • ldlearms, etc.)
:-:t New Passenger &amp; 4 Wheel Drive Tlres &amp; Snow Tlres
'll' New Semi·Tlres
:n
1:c Over 4,000 Good Used 11res
~e S\llll"·
'll' Service Van Available
\\t~
soot\
Fast, Friendly Service
~
d\\t\~
'll' Cheapest Prices Around
o~~·

C

D

Star Bank's Silver Bridge
Branch re!Dodeling continues -

COMPLETE AUTO CEN'rER

*

Section

Drive-thru lanes to close Monday

. No:wl \Ve Are Bzpaadlag

•

·~

~imts - ~tntintl

_MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Baseball free agents list
By United Press lnleraatlonal
American Le8111e
Baltimore Orioles - Keith
Moreland. If; Dave Schmidt,
rhp; Mark Thurmond, lhp;
Jamie Quirk, c.
Boston Red Sox Nick
Esasky, 1b; Dennis "Oil Can"
Boyd, rhp; Dennis Lamp, rhp;
Greg Harris, rhp; Joe Prlee,lhp;
Mike Smithson, rhp.
~ Calllornla - Dan Petry. rhp.
Chicago While Sox - Richard
Dotson, rhp.
Cleveland Indians - Pete
O'Brien, lb.
Detroit Tigers -Charles .J:!u&lt;fl
son, rhp; Gary Pettis, of; Frank
Tanana, lhp; Fred Lynn, of.
Kansas City Royals - Floyd
Bannl~ter, lhp; Steve Crawford,
rhp; Willie Wilson, of; · Bill
Buckner,1b; Frank-White, 2b.
Milwaukee Brewers - Terry
Francona, of; Ed Romero, If;
Robin Yount, of, Milwaukee.
Minnesota Twins - Carmen
Castillo, of; Shane Rawley, lhp;
Jerr Reardon, rhp; Wally Backman, 11; Kent Hrbek, lb.
New York Yankees - Rich
Gossage, rhp; Mel. Hall, of; Walt
Terrell, rhp.
Oakland Athletics - Rickey
Henderson, of; Ken Phelps,
11&gt;-dh; Tony Phillips, If; Storm
Davis, rhp; Matt Young, lhp;
Dave Parker, db.
Texas Rangers - Rick Leach.
of; 1Craig McMurtry, rhp.
Toronto Blue Jays - Sal
Butera, c; Lee Mazzllll. of; Tom
Lawless, If; Mookle Wilson, of;

. ....

•LUBE and
OIL
•BRAKES
•SHOCKS
•FRONT END ALIGNMENTS ·.
•GOODYEAR TIRES

:Brewers' Yount on free agency list ·
By JOE DIGIOVANNI
United Press International
Robin Yount, who Is unhappy
with the direction the Milwaukee
Brewers are heading, Friday
flied for free agency for the first
lime In his career,.
Yount, who hit .318 with 21
. home runs and 103 RBI last
season, said filing does not
necessarily mean his 16-year
stint with the Brewers Is closing.
"Today. I have elected free
agency &lt;0 that I will not have to
, make any Immediate decision on
· my baseball status In the 1990
: season," Yount said In a
statement.
Other players to declare free
agency were pitchers Doug Balr
of Pittsburgh, Rich GOssage or
the Yankees, Ricky Horton of St.
Louis and flrsfbaseman Darrell
Evans of Atlanta.
A total of 89 players have filed

..

Farm/.Busiriess

Pass rush-deficient Detroit Lions to host Green Bay today ·
By IUCJIAIU) L. SHOOK
VPI Sporu Wrltl!f
PONTIAC. Mich. CUPI) -The
· Detroit Uons will continue their
search today for something that
Isn't there - their pass rush.
Detroit hosts the Green Bay
Packers In a rematch at the
Sllverdome of a game Green Bay
won 23-20 In overtime In Milwaukee two weeks ago.
The Lions are 1-8 now while
Green Bay Is 5-4, sharing second
place In the NFC Central DivIsion with Chicago after beating
the Bears, 14-13. Minnesota Is a
game ahead of both.
But unUke previous seasons
whep the Lions had better
records (but not by much). this
club Is headed 'IP·
Rookie quarterback Rodney

_,

-- -

I

.-·

...

''-

.

'

RECEIVES DONATION - Grant Medical
Center's UfeFII~ht emergency medical helicopter service visited the AEP River Transportation
mvlslon headquarters In Lakin, W.Va., recently
to
donation. From lef~ *o right are

Les Guy, UleF!Ight paramedic; Patl;v Lacey,
UleF!Ight nurse; Jerry Well, Rivet Dlvllilon
human resources senior representative; 1\Dd Jeff
Rieger, administration manager for the division.

NEW BOARD APPOINTEES- Board appointments · for 1990 were announced recently ·by ·
Woodland Centers, Inc., GaiUpolls. Members
from the Melp-GaiUa-Jackson County areas are,
first row, left to rlghi -Chloris Gaul, Meip, vice
chairperson; Marilyn
Gallla; Josephine
Wll, MelliS; Michelle
Jackson; Pam

Boothe, Jackson, secretary;

Patricia . Petrie,
GaiDa; Ula Buckley, Jackson, treasurer; Geraldine McKinnis, Jackson. Rear - Rev. Richard
Freeman, Melp; Larry Shong, Gallla, chairperson; · Dr. Douglas Hunter, Meip and Johnnie
Ru!lllell, GalUa.

.•.

'

Fann tractor sales
up this year
CHICAGO (UPI) - Retail
sales of two-and four-wheel-drive
farm tractors were nearly 5
percent higher In September
than the same month In 1988, the
Farm and Industrial Equipment
Institute said Tuesday.
For the first nine months, total
aales were Virtually unchanged
from the comparable period last
year.
Retail sales of self-propelled
cornbl111!1 were up 46.9 percent In
September, rectangular balers
up 5.8 perct:nt, forage harvesters
down 4.7 percent.

•

'
'

FUNDING PARTNER!!IIIP - Ropr M1111ley
of Middieport Is Melp Couaty'slln&amp; recipient of
funds from the Mlni-Lo1111 Provam of the Ohio
Department of Development. That areacy
paranteed fS percent of Manley's loan lo the
lending b1111k, Central Trual Co. of Middle~

with that amount tben belnc loaned to Manley at
~~ percent Interest. Here Manley, left, receives
the loan. clleck from the bank officer, Manning
Kloes, center, loOowlnl his acceptance of fonds
from thee Ohio Department of Devel..,ilellt loan
officer, Ron Wiley. (See •&amp;orr on page 1.)

-.

•

,.I
.. ...
·~

�1

Pomaoy Middleport- Gallipolis,

Pega D-2- Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

Noo.12,111t

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Your chart indicates a busy, produc11ve
year Is In the offing. Your chancaa lor
fulfllling your ambitious looks good, but
you may neglect enjoyable oreu of
your lite to IChlove U&gt;orn.
SCON'IO (Oct. :MsMov. 22) Try to plan
your moves In advance today Instead of
attempting .to mike on,the--spot decl,
slons. Your judgment is good when you

tlko limo to thlnl&lt; INIIQI through, bul
not """' lfOU're ~. Scorpjo,
treot--" to • ~gilt. s.nd for
your Allro-Gr.ph predictlona lor the
yeor llhead 1&gt;11 milling $1.25 to AatroGrlph, Glo INI -~. P.l). Box
91~28. Cle\'IIMd, OH « 101-3428. Be
lUre to IIIII your -.c oign.
IAGITTARIUI(-. :II 21) Major
acoompltohmenta .,. polllbte today,
pr-lfOU don't let Mlf-doubtac:loud
lfOUr thinking. M I'OU don't believe In
Yo(ll'lllf,lfOU'U find ....
not ,to try,
CAJIIIICORN
11NM. 1tl Some.
ono within your Intimate ctrde of friends
who haa alacully for malclng
may
try to draw you Into something atlcl&lt;y to-

r-

3

Ohio

-·

. day by pretending to

r~

your

AOUAIIIUll (.1111. - · 11) II I'OU
have aome prob- today with per-

OUI-

eons In the
world, bt extremely
careful you don't bring your troublol
homo and take out your lruatratlont on
the family.
PIICII(I'oll. 3H' ell 21) Your opln,
lono and thoM of someone you like
COUld bt diametrically opposed today.
Don't let the lolue put I valued relation,
lhlp In Jeopordy.
a.a ......., 21-Apoil 111 You might
have to _... with someone today who
u- Intimidating tactlcl. This person
may try to 1101 the u - hand, but will

3

Wl-

only bt blulftng.
lAUIIUI (April 2H1aJ 10) Even
thoutlh you'K bo logical and rouon~~blo

today you COUld hiYI a tough limo got,

ling pr- ouppon from your mate. ISs

peclally on ' - -.you dloagread
prevloualy.
.

01 7111 ( - 2t..J- 20) You'll bo wills
lng to bo o1 ~atence t9day II persona
tNiy need your help, but you may not bo

too conc:emad about lndlvldulll who
tlke you lor tranted.
CAIICE~~.11n· 21-JIIIy 22) It's blat to
avoid gr 11 lrwol'(8fllefltS today thlt
might attrKt poraona with whom you've
prevlouJIY had probtoms. Pial\ your IC,
tlvlllot to Include only thosa wt1h whom

youleelat-.

.

~

LIO (..... 2J.Aul, 22) There could bt a
big Ylrlance today -

November 12, 1989

~

November 12, 1989

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

4

your priori-

(=

to either.

Purot&gt;ioL
loloiodor.

22 lopl. 221 Things you .•
usuelly otook In olhln could bo very ,
Irritating to you today. All will go
ornoolherllyou'ro conaciOua ol IIlia and ·;

otice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPAIITMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbuo, Ohio
OotoboT 27, t989
Contnct Sotaa
Llaol Copy No. 88-810
IINlT PRICE CONTRACT
BRS·91116J
Seotad propooala wil bt
reCeived 111: the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depart-

ment of Transportation, Col·

umbuo, Ohio, untH 10:00A.
M., Ohio Standard Time,

T-dly,

November 8.

1989, for Improvements in:
o.11ia County, Ohio, on sec-

THE FAMILY OF
WOODROW
o ·eVAULT
WJahes to extend a
very warm and

tion GAL-218·4.39. Stote

Route 218 in Guvan Township, by greding. dreining,
paving with asphalt con·
crete on a bituminousaggr&amp;gete base in pen and rMurfacing with uphlllt Concrete
in part; and by constructing:

Bridge No. GAL·218·0441,

a single sp41n reinforced con·
crete slab on reinforced concrete well abutments ~span

24 feet. roodwoy 33 feet

between guardrails), over

UnleCreok.
Project length - 200.00

lin. feet or 0.038 mile: Work
length - 672.12 lin . feet or
0 . 108 mile: Pavement width
- variee.
The Ohio Depanment of
Transportation hereby noti·
fiea all bidders that it will afflrmltivety insure that in any
cont111ct entered · into pursuant to this advertitement,
minority busineaa enterpria• wiU be afforded full
OppOrtunity to submit bids
in reaponae to this · ·

andwll

haartfalt "thank you"
to all of our relatives,
friends and neighbors
for their sincere.
generosity, kindness
and support."

Your thoughtfulness

against on the groundll
race, color, or national origin·
in consideration for an
aw411rd.
" Minimum wage rates for
this project have been predet•mined as required by
law and are set forth in the
bid proposal. "

appreciated and
extremely

2

In Memoriam

comforting.

Thank you all.
Sincerely,
From tho family of
Woodr- DeVault

In Loving
Memory Of

EVERETT
SCHULTZ
Who passed

The Family Of
HARLEY RIGGS
wish• to thank fri.-.ds.
neighbors, and relatives

for

their

cards.

kindnaat,

flowers. food

6nd pnoyoro at

the time
of the death of 1 our
loved one.

Spect.l, th1nkt to
Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, Doctors end
Staff of Veterans
M~morill
Emergency
toom, Rev.
O'Ouin
Kelly lnd family, Ewing
Funeral Home. Hani-

tonvlle Matonie Lodge
#4t1, faculty and stiff
of S1lisbury Elemen.tlry and Meigs High
School ond pallbt1rors.
-

Your thoughtfulness

and cering were ap-

precioted and comfort·
in g.
Sincerely,

Mildred Riggs, Bill
Riggs, George and
Noncy Bl'llwley and

away

Nov.13,1987.
·

Sadly missed
By Wife Beulah
and farnihtl

AOLINE L. COOPER
who departed this Uta
Nov. 8, 1981.
Nothing coukt be more
be.._.tiful than the me·
moriaa we have of

you.

PUBLIC NOTICE
ATTENTION
forth In tho bidding proPoAccepting oppllcotlons IO&lt;
sal."
Each bidder shell be re- 40 hour 1 wilk Pltrolmon
quired to file with hia bid a
certified check or c•hier'
check for an amount equal
to five per cent of hia bid. but
in no event more tMn fifty
thouund dollars, or a bond
for ten par cont of his bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidder mu81 apply, on the
proper forms, for qualifications at leMt ten deya prior
to the date aat for opening
bids in .accordance with
Chapter 5526 Ohio Reviled
Code.

Bidder must apply, on the

THANKS FOR
YOUR SUPPORT
3 Announcement•

In M.emory Of
DONALD (Bud)
MILLER
Who palled away
Nov. tO, 1979
You are 1lways in our

thoughts no matter
whore we go;
In our hearts because
we loved you ao.

11

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

bt,_ the hours of 9:00
A.M. 1nd 3:00P.M. Monday
through Friday. AlllippNco-

7

1989 at the close of busin•a. Far funher information contact Ralph Stein-

bocl&lt; •• 2411·1141t .
NOV. 12, t4. 16

Pth,

=

Til-COUNTY UCYCLING
omiS J IOCAIIOIIS 10 SIIYE YOU""'

HENDERSON, WV: Rt. 311. Adjacent to
81dtlro Equipmor1t
.
Open Tu•.·Sat. 10 A.M.·&amp; P.M .
Cloead Sun. end Mon.
POMEROY, OHIO: At Junction of S.R. 7 and
143 on the by·paoo.
Open 7 Days 9 A.M.·7 P.M.

bldo ond tow~hdr-thio ve-

hide from sale prior to the
-'•· Terms of Sale: CASH

or CERTIFIED CHECK .
NOV. B. t2, 15

8

Oeportment would like to

W'l.

__.. ...... - ....

ahalr, »t-1714770.
lllwo _ ,

to

031l,

'

Mothor lobby

F~dl!i_Sotu..ro,, I Sundoy, Ins
lkll. un Klngtown Aold, Pl. Pl.,
1011 Chriltmaa glftl, tumhure,

....

M

cot wltll

tens, two ~llow maiM,
groy lomoto. lt4sii:I.J213.

Pupplto

Gormon
1151.

Molhar

Shoploord,

8

0n11

,.i~lrwd
75-

..

Building.=·

•

...

111-3122.
I. puppl., mlxMI 'Labldor, A rwd
boiW, male a temal•, 114-317·

814-6112s241.1.

014t .

From Gallipolis Take Rt. 141, turn
left onto, Rt. 776, tum right onto
Patriot Road. Watch for Signa.

..

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

"

·.,

'

614-245-5152

..

stemw11n1, sltlno jars, old Christmal .cllcondiona,
picture&amp;, lamps, Realistic Programmable Scannar.

PRESTON MUSTARD- AudionHr

btoi&lt;eto, lawn furniture, pkl&amp; much, much more.'

Jlkkson, Ohio - 216-5861
Ucensed and Bonded State of Ohio

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO,
MASON, WV

LUNCH
TERMS: CASH OR CHECKS WITH 1.0.

773-5785
•

PUBLIC AUCTION

ESTAtE OF WESTON LEHMAN CRABTREE
CASE NO. 60339-SOOTCi CO. PIIOUT£ COURT
IOWBI CRAJlllll • tXKUIOR

DATE: SAT., NOV. 18, 1989

.

SATURDAY, NOV•. 18
10:00 A.M.

Toke ·Appalachian Highway from Jackson, Oh.
Turn llf I on CR 20 to Mustards Auction lorn.
IIISC. JTEIIS: litton mia-owave. breakfast set, GE refrigera·
lor, gas stove, color T'l, wringer washer w/lub, Speed Queen
dryer. several recliner~ Singer sewing machin~ 2 pc. living
room surte, wrrting des~ chest of drawers, Hoover sweeper,
several wood stoves, Ziegler oil stove. end tables, lamps, melal des~ oil lamps, kerosene healer, pictures, l~ames, gun
case, violin, several quilts, blankets, sheets, krtchen appliances, doll babies, radios, clocks; plus more modern ilems.
TOOLS: Many sets ol good hand tools. electric drills, saws,
several ~rinders, anvi, welder, Stihl chain saw, pipe vise.
Atlas dnll press, extension ladders. electric plane, bell
sander, several weedeaters, hayfork. Sears aid compressor,
large vice w/stand. axes, shovels, 16 hp Simplicrty riding
mower, Sears push mower. This~ just a smalllistingof lhe
tools. 14 FT. JOHNBOAT, TROLLING MOTOR.
.
ANTIQUES: Round oak clawfoot labl~ 2 pc. walnut CUP"
bo•d. oak ftitlwall cupboard, several oak dressers, 01k high
back bed, I•Rt 2 pc. glass door cupboard. Victorian umbrella stand w/mirror, Hoosier c~gboard , 2 fancy oak sidebo8fds, old baskets, baker's table w/dou~h boxes, oak se·
cretary, round dropleaf oak table, stone tars, stone churn
w/wrrtin&amp; old doll babies, several sets of chairs, wood
krtchan utensils, some casl iron toys. several old knives, several nice guns, old silver coins, over 200 Roosevelt dimes,
quarters, dollars. and half dollars, plus mDre, game table,
lrunk, antique mirror, old feed sacks, glassware and more.
fAIII EQUIPIIEIIT: '65 Massie Ferguson lrsctor wilh
loader, new 6 ft. bushho' scraper blade. 8N Ford Tractor,
bush ho11 2 wheellraiiBf.
AUTOS: 1981 CHEV. 4 OR. MAliBU CLASSIC; 1978 MONTE
CARLO. 8oth cars.less lhan 60.00Q miles and very good con·
drtion. 1969 CHEV. PICKUP TRUCK; 1982 CHEV. 4x4
PICKUP, New rebum engine; 1968 CAMARO 56,000 miles.
Very clean. 198D CJ7 JEEP 4 cyl., 4 spd. One owner.
THIS IS OUR lARGEST SAL£ YET.
PIAN 011 STAYING A WHILE - LUNCH SERVED
TERIIS: Cash or local Check .wilD. No out of slate personal
checks.

AT RUTLAND LEGION FARM
BEECH GlOVE lOAD, IIUT1AND, OHIO
Mr. Brogan has sold his house, and due to· ill

health. evarythin&amp; has been moved to the Lecion
Farm. Mr. Bropn sold out approx. 1 year 110, so
everything is either new or like new condition.

DIRECTIONS: From Pomeroy, Ohio. take S.R.
124 WEST thru Rutland to Baach Grove Rd.
Right on Beech Grove Rd. approx. ona,fourth
· mile to Farm. SIJ!no will ba ponod.
AIITIQUES l COLL£erABL£S
2 trunks, milk bottles, very old Killen in Basket Cookie Jar,
knotted comlorter. BlobtO)l beer bottles, kerosene Lamps,
set ol 18 Depression Glasses, milk glass lamp w/cranberry
shade, tilue hen on nest, 6 Blue Willow linger bowls. Mealtin
semt:PO(telam covered dish, double mirrored wardrobe,
carniVal, Er~cson &amp; Slrech glass, walnut and gumwood dir&gt;
ing table, 6 chairs and bullet.
HOUSEHOLD &amp; IIISCELIANEOUS
Buffet. 7 drawer desk lmillllel. butcher block microwave
cart, Tappan mia-owne. capehart 19" Color TV, Simmons
Hode-a·bed, coffee and end tables, new 9 tube full size 3 pc.
water bed su~e. twin bed complete, 2 chests of drawers
portable phone, dishes, set of McCoy dinner ware, 30" Whir~
pool electric range. Kenmore washer and dryer, dinelle set
w/4 chairs, &amp;Urtar and case.
TRAerOR, IAWII &amp; GARDEN, BOAT. GUll
8N Ford Tractor (runs goad), 3 pt boom pole, Dynsmark 10
hp , n4mg mj)Wer, Dynamark rotoliller, 20" lawn Chiel
mower, 2 chlin SIWS, air compressOr, Brazilian 12 c•. shot·
gun (hke new), 14' Boll and trailer ill/new Min kola trolling
motor. telephone poles, saws, drills, work bench, several
hand lools, plus lots more too numerous to mention.

ONR: JOHN IIOGAN
AUCTIONEEit COl. W. IDTH IKilDEN
Ollie 131 I; • . Va. #9163
614-7~!4,2~.~:1U·..

10:00 P.M.

PRESTON MUSTAID-AudionHr

POSITIVE I.D.

Olio - 614-216-5161
j

1M.

8

JOBSt

StiJI

II

=

I

poeiUon

In odrntulon .... dlos
ptonnlng. Applicant
be 1bll to handle etx or

•

AVON I All -

I IIIWtoy

.::rh·,.

rehiW.Itlon).
tlpooro. ~ra.tca
-c I 2 Illlantlllee.
toand lltliH
with
lo
ds
:stop
plllw
tor
Nball
and/or
PI,_,.
IAitN
1 - - ootonttoL
Ootllo,(t) IIOWII7- Ext. Is ~ larrft llwlng II'J'II~:IL
Cll2.
I
A oiolof
ns

-.v ·- • -

SATURDAY NIGHT

EARN MONEY

typing II homo.

••

*•

- ·110po-

porto- In Nil•nt . . . . . . . RIC
J. 'JNe lea
tc.p !Met ,_hlon ..........
to ...
1¥1
Apptr
,
_to:
lth.-

Ad--·

5i!:i

Mr.~

Jooltoon

$30,000 year Income '*•nllal. Pitre, Ooltlpoll'!r_ OH 'CSI31 "'
Dotolls, ltl 105s117.aorltl Ext. Is

,.
"

EOE.
PootoiJobo
EARN MONEY wolohlng TVI StiJI l10.l'VIHR. For onm ond
$50,000/)'f. lnc:ocM pot•nllal. orot&gt;ilciUon lnformotlon, coli.
Dotoill (I) 805-687.aODO Ext. K- 21.·719-1141 HI. OH151, I a.m ...

!OIIt.

4!1112.

ID"'
C
I&amp;ilAfi·""'
LAND AUCTION

Provldlla ~ptoymantaervicea to rl'llidentl. Retponsl·

phone ltc.441snl2.

•A licensed hygienist with an outgoing per,
sonality and confidence in your skills?
•Interested in providing spacific, individuallzad cara for each of your patients?
•Willing to grow and laarnthrough continu,
ing education?
•Searching for a well-planned schedule in a
roQmy, modern office?
•Able to acc119t the highest salary in the
area?

Retail
Pharmacy

ble for job' ...rch education component . Must complat• on site checka and job development in the 7 par·

tlclpltlng oou ntllt.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS - 2 yeora experience
in social•ervicea delivery . Job placement, Job place·
··
ment experience preferred. .

Annualllelory - •18.182 minimum

DENTAL BUSINESS COORDINATOR
and RECEPTIONIST

We ~re cur~e.ntly seeking registered pharmacists to JOin the staff of our new store in
Gallipolis.

R•pontlble to link re~ources of penicipating 7 coun·
tie&amp; with the offender's needs . Network in the com·
munitlea to provide 1nd r.eceive aervicea:. Coordinates
recreatioMI, religious. and leiture time activities .

ARE YOU:

Education.t Coordinator
Annual Salllf'Y - *19, 178 minimum
R81ponalble for Plenning and implementing instrUction and educ1tional program• tor offenders. &amp;oordi·
nates end providel in-hou• GED programming .
Coordlnat• adult education end basic literacy program.

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS - Valid Ohio Teaching

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN EIIHEI OF
THE ABOVE POSIIIONS, PUASE SEfiD A
COMPLETED RESUME TO:
DR•. LAllY KENNEDY, DDS
441 General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio 45760

noW.

Cenlficete end minimum of 2 years teaching experience.

614-464,6536

Rooldent SuporviiO&lt;o
Annuol Selory- 117.284 minimum
Suporvllaa the r•lden1 In the SEPTA Center. Pro·

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

a

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(Call Anytime)

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[B

Meintenence/Mechanic

Annuol Selory - tt4, 680

R•ponaiblit for general maintenance and custodial

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AEALTOA'

ft .). Supe•·

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MINIM\IM Q\IALIFICATIONS - High ochool di-

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ptoma or equtvalent •• 1 yHr experience in a related
field .-.d 800 hn. ti'Biining in buHding maintenance.

,.

CALL CHERYL LEMLEY - 742-3171
Fulf Time Meigs County Agent

Food Service Coortllnotor

Annual S.lery - *11.140 minimum
Plen end prepare3 mNia per day, 7dayspe~weak , for
42 r•identa. RHponalble for: menu planning. inventory control, toad preparation and supe'rvision of
cooltl.

....

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS - Associate degree in
food service plus 1 year experience.

8 p.m., 7 days.

Real Estata Genaral

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#134

TRAer I. ADAIIS CO. FARII TO SELL AT 11:00 A.ll.:
Being 124 acres of vacant woodland, approximately 24
acres of bottom land, tobacco bas~ rambling stream road
fronta~e .Dn Rt. 781. ~ mile oft Rt. 348 in Jefferson Twp., seven mtles from Otway. This lract wil be sold on location ol
Tract 2'
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TRAer 2.. SCIOTO FAR lito sell imtwediitltly followin1 ••
Tract One: Bemg a 77 acre all-around larm, approximately •
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50 acres tillable and pasture land, lobacco base woods
pond, lronting on Big Bear Road. PlusH! story 3 bedroom •
lrame counlry home, attached garage. barns and oulbuildmgs 1n Rarden Twp. Located on Big Bear Road, l'h miles
Irom Mt. Joy off Rt. 772, approximately 25 miles from Wav- '
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erly. Tract One being sold on location of this farm!
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TRAer 3: .EJGS CO. FAll Ill BEDFORD TWP. TO
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SELL AT 3:0D P.II.: Being 140 acre cattle farm to include a •
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1\0 story farm house, barns ~nd outbuil~ing&gt;. Avery pic·
turesque rollmg farm with several nice Iill able fields, wood
lots and excellent road frontage on 3roads. IDEAL BUILDING
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SITES HERE! OFFER EO IN 3 PARCELS ... And Ihen as one tract
dh greatest dollar amount preva ilin&amp; PARCEL ONE: Apt prox;malely 90 acres w/home and building&gt;. PARCEL TWO: ••
Approximately 40 acres ol vacant ~nd fronlingon two roads.
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PARCEL THREE: Being approximately 10 acres of vacanl
land fronl on two roads. All parcels being sold pe• acre
•••
amount, subtect to survey. If sold as individual parcels a
fourhundred dollar survey cosl sh all be charged to buyer'at
clostng. TO LOCATE: Take old SR 33 (Pomeroy Exit) al Athens,
go SE on Old SR 331o Twp. Road 18, turn left near Roadside
Park, then proceed onto Twp. Road 20, turn right, go to Twp.
Road 84. turn left. Near villages ol Chester and Pomeroy.
Sale timeth1s tract 3:00p.m. at Old Farm House on Twp. Rd.
84.
PIAN TO ATTEND AND BUY ONE Of THESE RARE
.
OFFERINGS AT YOUR PRICE!
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AUCTIONEERS·NOT£: Pursuant to the Agricullulai'Credil Act
•
of 1987, if two or more qualifying bids in the Slme amount
are received, and such bids arethehighest received and one · •
of Ihe qualified bids is offered by the previous ·owner the of·
fer by lhe previous owner shall be accepled.
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TElliS: An Earnest Money Oeposrt ol Ten Percent per tract
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or partel, payable lo cam Taylor Co., Realtors, wrth balance
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• due upon delivery of Limrted Warranty Deed on or before De·
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cember .31 , 1989. All ~roperties sold subject to acceptance
of last btd. Possesston tmmed;ate upon closing on farms one
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a"d lhree. Fal'l' Two subtect to tenants rights on or before
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December 31, .1989. Ta~es P~oraled lo day of closing.
SIGII POSTED. F"l lrH to mspect lhnt propertin on
your 01111 or by appoitttmlllt.

MIDDLEPORT- Ahome to be proud oP. This neat 3 bedroom
~an~f, wrth modern k~chen , large Iami\¥ room , and enclosed
•ear porch on a large lot would bey our pride and joy because
ol all the comfort it offers! $36,900. OWNER WANTS AN
OFFER!!

OFFERED IY:

Aucti-rs - llllltttrs, A..c. CTC

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POIIlRDY ~ 24'x60' TraiiJ wrth 3 bedrooms, 24'x20'
family room added on, c;vp~. 16'xll' porch and satellite
d~h . Asking $51,900.

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POIIERDY - 21 acres wrth 24'x37' new barn, eleclric
available and lP.C. water. Asking $39,500.

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IUTIAIIO- loodt Grllvt Rd.- Approx. ID7 acres of land
w~h 4 room house. Approx. 30 acres tillible, balance
wooded. Good hu nling! $31,000.

CAM TAYLOR CO. IDI.TOIS, Colurnbt~~. Ohio.
Salt Cottductttlly1 Dave Pritchard Sr. &amp; Jr.
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1977 BARRINGTON HOME- New carpet. new heat pump.
N;ce front porch and rear deck. Situated on 1.88 acres on St
Rt. 143. Price reduced to $40.500. ·
#1$3

POMEROY - Approx. 3\0 acres, vacant ground. Good
bu~ding srte. Close in. Waler may be availabl e. $7,500.

CIVIL WAR ERA -If you are looking for lhat classic beauty
to restore this.llalianate home with a blend of GreekRevtval
may be jusl the one for you. The ow nets have done some re·
pairs but had to leave the area and have priced this home to
sel! There are 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 41i•eplaces, attached
servants quarters plus a private 7 acre settin g located 6
miles south of low n off Rt. 7. Priced at only $43.000#136

MIDDLEPORT - When the work is done and the p11ce is
small, il's perlecl for you! 3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen,
insulated, vinyl siding, large lot. $22,000.
·

2128 CHAT HAll AVE. - Ju st listed. This 3 bedroom home in
Gallipolis. includes basement. woodburner and 56'xl74'1ot
Needs some work. $21,500.
#123

IIIIIERSVILL£ RD.-RACINE - 2 story houSe with 2
bedrooms, bath, carpel, paneling and in Soulhern Sc hool
District. Recently remodeled and in good condition. $29,500.

RIVER VIEW -Relax by the f~replace and watch the beauti·
lu i Ohio from this 3 bedroom home near Pomeroy. lncludes·a
., fireplace, lull basement. 2 car garage, and double lol.
$27.900
ms

PATRIOT - Thts new listing is a spacious 7 room 2 story
home on appm ..3 acre. includes 3 bedrooms, family room,
dining room, and more. Has low maontena~ce vmy l siding
and newer carpel. $35,000.
#410
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NEW LISTING- Nice llat lot, with 2 or 3 bedroom home.
Convenient to shopping area. Owner wou ld like a quick sale.
can today.
11143

GENTLEMAN'S FA~M - Elegant counlry living on 131 acres
mil wrtti a lovely cedar 4 bedroom home. Over 2,000
squa re tef! ot llv ong,space, includes 4 bedrooms, fire place,
formal dmm g, eQuipped kitchen and much more. Land is
level to rolling and mcl ud es a beaul tful pond, a 2 car ggarage
and a barn. You wtll love it Call for an appoinlmenl
$110,00000.
#l2i

FIVE PDIITS MEA ·- Three on&amp;acre build jng s~es. Elec.
and wtller available. Good location for your new home.

$5,900.

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® ahd.,. trademarks of Century 21 Real Estale Corporation .
Equal Opportunity Em~

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EVE.
EVE.
EVE .
EVE.
EVE.

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EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATEn

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LASLEY STREET. POMEROY- Th1s newly ltsted home tn·
eludes 2 or 3 bedroom s, full basement w1t h garage. small
corner lol and very co nven tenl. Askmg $24,900.
#138

JIM COCHRAN. BROKER .......... ........ ..................... 446-7881
PATRICK COCHRAN, REALTOR .............................. 446-8666
SONNY GARNES, REALTOR ................................... 446-2707
PHYLLIS MILLER, REALTOR .................................... 446-83.4 6
MARTHA SMITH. REALTOR .................................... 379-2661

.

HEIIIIY £. Cl£LAIID ....................................... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL............................................949·2&amp;60
DOmE TUllER ............................................ 992·5692
JO HILL ........................................................91s.4461
OFFICE ......................................................... 992·2259
NEEDED: Wo •e a full Tlmelleip County
~~~~~~~~ and WI Have Buytrs for llelp
Coulily P,t
Wlntto Hll pi•• call today. We
~' ·' ~

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Fl~ETWOOD MODUlAR HOM£ - Appro•: 8 yrs. old. In ex·
cel.ent condot10 n. large spactous rooms. ltvong room has fi·
replace. 3 bedrooms, 2 bat hs, equ ipped kitchen. Situated on
I acre'" Chesler area .. Was $42,500. Reduced to $40,000. ·
#105

POIIEIOY - FLATWOODS RD - 10.73 acres of va cant
ground. Would make nice home srte: ca11 for . more
information. $21,500.

POIIEROY - 5 acres, vacant ground on top of a hill near
lown. Great location for house or lraiiiJ. $3.90.0.00.

· · 'i ·~·· ,:,, I: :

ENJOY THIS RIVER VIEW hom lhe large en~losed porch of
this I'll story home with 4 bedrooms, 1full and 2 hall baths.
formal dining !~replace wilh inse rt, 3 car gara ge and a good
garden area on .73 acre on Rt. 7 jusl minules lr om tow n
$66,500. Call for more info.
#139

SYRACUSE- RUSTIC HILLS- Ahome to be proud of! 3
bedroom ranch, l'h baths, family room, form al dining room ,
garag~ electric BB heat, lireplace, on a 112'x99' lot. Very
nice. REDUCED TO $39,500.

PDIIEROY PIKE - Forty·one acres plus a 1980 liberty
Mobile Home. Beautiful view, 2 car garag~ porch on 3 sides.
3 storage building&gt;, and barn. 2 good s~ed bedrooms, bay
wirodow~ eQuipped kitchen. Real privacy. $35.000.

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243 ACRE FARM - Rocksprings Road- Over 50 acr es of
cropl an d. appro.. 130 acres of potential pasture and bal·
ance in woodland. The land lays level to rolling and includes
an older log home with 3 bedrooms plus an additional cot·
tage wrth 3 rooms. This is a good one for $10ff,OOO. #137

POIIERDY - A2 story home with a lar ge lot, big kit chen, 3
bedrooms, bui~ in thtna cabinet. nice deck in back, ano a
part basement $25,000.

LETART- IIANUEL ROAD- Mobile home site, one acre
landscaped for mobile home or building site. A.steal at
$3.500.

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1987 MOBILE HOME -A nicP. 14x17 2 bedroom home
(could have 3 bedrooms). Includes heal pump wit h gas
backup, 2 full baths, 2 porch.s ;nd awnin gs. Mu st be
moved. $14.500.
#145
A·FRAME &amp; 7 ACRES- Nestle&lt;! among the trees you'll fi nd
th is newer 2 bed room A·framc localed in Ihe Southwestern
sc hool district. This is one for those looking lor a getaway
Has a barn. bu ildin g, and rural wateo. Priced at only
$4 2,000.
11141

IIIDDLEPOIT - 2 un~ apartnienl hou se. needs some
work Afixer upper lor a rental in rome. Corner lot $6,900

RUTlAND - One floor plan wrth 3 bedrooms, I\? baths,
dining area, large level yard, garage, and woodshed.
$39:5110.

MIDDLEPOIT - Commercial building for a place of
busines~ Call lor more details. ItS KING $49.500.

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RUTlAND - 3 trailers in Ihe cou nlry on 7 acres of ground.
Exc~lant rental potent ial. CAll FOR APPOINTMENT
$26,500.

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD- Beautiful ranch type house in the
oounlry. 3.98 acres wrth scenic view. Two WBFP, full
basement garage. many other leatures. $84.900.

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RUTLAND - AIarm hou se with several outbuild ings. f;ve
aa-es of ground, some fruit trees, garag~ and is ver.y private.
Home has 3 bedrooms, one bath. NOW $29.000.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Morlon Addilion - 3 to 4 bedroom
ranch In ex c ~lant condrtion on a large 1 acre lot. A large
lamily room makes living here a joy. Electric B.B. heal plus
woorlburner. large storage shed. call for appointment.
$41,000.00.

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POIIEROY- Three lots wrth a one story frame home. Has 2
bedrooms, dining room, one bath, lorced air heat. JUST
$6.0po.

RUTlAND- large lot wtt h 186 feet lrontage on S.R. 124.
living quarters wrth 3 bedrooms in back of large business
building, Buy with stock and lillures or wrthout. CAll FOR
MORE DETAILS'

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RUTlAND- Al;vge level lot on Depot Street wilh an older
mobile home. Has 2 bedrooms. Iron! porch and a patto. ONLY
$9,500.

PORTlAND - SHARON ROAD - IIINI fARM IN THE
COUNTRY - In Southern D~tricl. 14 plus acres. I ~ story
house wrth 4 bedrooms, 2 kitchens, 2 baths, 2 living rooms.
carpet, natural gas heat, garden and well water. $39,500.00.

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446-7101

MEIGS, -SCIOTO and ADAMS COUNTY FAIMS
341 ACRES IN TOTAl
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1919
nME: SEE BELOW

CAU TOll F. . t,I00-14~·6996 or 614,235,2356
(twiNIIp), (lrdolillo 614a4J7al744
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OWNUo FAIM CIIDIT lAIII OF lOIISVIUI

s

652 2nd AVE.

deoree in lOCi~ work. sociology, psychology, criminal
j~:~ .. ice or rel8t•d field. 3 veers experience in.correctiona couRJ811ng. social work. or related area. Valid
Ohio drNer't license.

..Yise reaktent work crew. ·

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Real Estate General
Real Estate General
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MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS - BA/BS or Mostero

SEPTA Canter 118,200 sq.

.

•A warm, friendly, confident per10n with
exceptional verbal skills?
•Searching for a work environmant that
offers challenging yet rewarding work?
•Willing to continually. axpand your skills,
responsibility and knowledge in all
areas.
•Able to demonstrate work habits that are
organized and detailed?
•Experienced in computers (preferred but
not necessary!?

E~cellent sal~ry and c.ompany paid benefits are pro,
vtded. mcludtnl proftt sltarinc. pension . vacalions
and personal days. Health plan includes life insurance, disabil_ity pay, hospitalizatifln and surgical
coverage, ma1or medical and vision, and dental cov,
erage. 42 hour work week. Please submit resume or
call collect to:
·
Joe Maslak
Pharmacy Director
Big Bear Stores Company
Goodale Blvd.
Columbus. Ohio 43212

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS - 1 year experience in

11poct1 of the

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DENTAL HYGIENIST

Work Rotoooe Coordinotor
Annuolllelory - •18,888 minimum

toke on omsH ononthty
poymonto on plono. 9oo locoiiJ.
Coli ... _ .. t.-oo-636-71tt

.

Help Wanted

ARE YOU:

field .

Counaelora
Annual Salary 117,066 minimum
Provides Intensive, ahort-term, goal directed counliet ·
ing to offenders on a one to one basitad•groupbaaia.

15

WANTED:

sociel work. sociology, psvchologv, criminal
justice or related field and &amp; years of relined worJt ex·
periencathet includea tuplf'Vilion in corrections, pro·
tecttve services. rehabilitetion counseling. or related

Ill. 1U1. I:GO -:GO ..... 7
Yoot hoolw wontod whh good doyl.
PIANO I'OR IAIZ
,No.
... Ibrick
I -"""
......arl!to.
30Uf8.27111,
W.ntod: ·-ponoiblo po~y to

In her

t------==========---~

~r" In

vidl:e security and custody functions . Supervises 3 re·
"dent monitGrl per 1hift. Rnponaibla for counts.
loge, on4oll reporting fu net ions.

babysiHI~

11

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS - BA/ BS or Ma.ters

MINIMUM Q\IALIFICATIONS - Valid Ohio Peace

"""'-·
Pine.- now hoa

Schools &amp;
Instruction
home. Wookdoyo. !lornlng Stor
~ 114-149-2357.
RE•TRAIN IIOWI
BUSINESS
Room, Board and laundry. El- SOUTHEASTERN
dtrty praltrNd.. Good malt. COLI.£GE, 52f Jock_, Plko.
Also 2 room aparlrMnt for rent. Coli 11"'444-43117. Aog. No. ll6o
11·10558.
lt449Utl0t .
llolh.,. will do

Intake Screener
Annual Salary - *18.7~ Minimum
Screen• offender• for placement in the SEPTA Center. Interview• offendwa in 7 local counties . Ad·
mlniat•s teat baHety. Writ• recommendations and
reports.

Officer Caniflcadon. 2 to 4 yean experience in correcUona or law enforcement 2 years auptNilory experl~ce .
·
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&amp;lim

$30,_,.., 'ootonlioL light odmlilo'- por woolt ond
Dwlall8 1 (1) J05.a7-IOCJG bl. a. _.,. ... .....,d-(lnl
tO tit.
NGent Mudy nearty hall ol our
admlalone...,. dlsohlrgld at-

.

Public Sale
&amp; A11ct1on

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Ad.•

APPLICATION&amp; MAY ONLY BE OBTAINEO FROM
AND RETURNED TO YOUR LOCAL OHIO BUREAU
OF EMPLOYMENT SERVICE$ OFFICE. COMPLETE
JOB DESCRIPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR REVIEW AT THE OBES OFFICE. DEAOLINE FOR AP·
PLICATIONS IB NOVEMBER 17, 1989.

anlllbiL In a lelclrig auto

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Ama~:lcare,

JOB POSTINGS

and ap-

11 Help Wanted
EARN MONEY t)optnfot homo.

lOCAnQN: Jones Morgan Hardware Store

Pqlnt Plusant

raom

Aoolotonts.

Southeastern Probation Treatment
Alternative (SEPTA) Center
7W. Twenty-Nine Drive
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

flllcotlon Into. Coli 2111·838-llt'~

Employment Serv1ces

licensed.and londod In SUit of Olllo

ALSO AUCTION

Hllp Wanted
81

the coordlnltion of activities and 2 year• experience in
the delivery of toclel eervic::... Knowledge of the
Southern Ohio area prefwred .

$t0,31/hr, For

ALl NEW MERCHANDISE

Thommi.llt Aeclitttrs, Oak China Cabinets, Livin1
Room Sut~~s. Bassett Bedroom Suites, Kitchen Dinette Sets. Displ1y of Dishes, Toys, WIJit,nots, and
much, much more.
EATS
CASH
POSITIVE.U.
. MARUN WEDEMEYD , Audi-r

Help wanted

12
Nurolng

Community Rele•• Coordinator

_,-AL

FRIDAY, NOV. 17-7:00 _
P.M.
· ·

11

llolpor wonted lor ln"otllng
loolllng &amp; olr cond. oyot-.
MUll tio willing to I loom
tho trodo oppty In ponon ot
Yotoo Hooting &amp; Cooling, 2111

:.:;;~i;fu;~Mil;~c;;;;;-~oo!d -

1987 Pontiac Sunbird,

10:00 A.M.
~~~~
CHRIST EPISCOPAL

~Ina

to area.
boloyotl
Uled tumkur• and .-Ill
In our home. GeiiiDotll
All
~o. Phono 81 4-742s hhlfto.lt4s441-Mtl•

# 1G1FPB78XFN 124227

IIISC.-4 pc. diningtabl~ night stands, cofteetables, cedar
chesl, Cor~le dishes, new mattress and box springs, Sun·
beam applia~ces. Corn ingware.lamp fixtures, canning supplies, seveul new kids bikes, sholgun shells and supplies,
sleds, lavaiDry, metal cabinet, curtain rods, spittoons, hor·
Seshoes, horse collars, stove parts, Old ammD boxes. miner' S
dinner buckets, pulley s,.lead laddies, thread .box and needle
box, several nice display counler, glass top displays, several
old oak glass fronl cupboards, ladder and raling, steel pipe
:hreader mac~ine. plus a lot more items too numerous to .
mer~ion thai are found in old hardware stores.
TERIIS: Cosh or Check W/P!op• I.D.
NOT£: Buildin1 will be heated

to

mtnager, P. 0. lo-.
Rave11 - · ad, WV 211M.

Loak!ng lor oo1 - - lor

Pn

Oak Hill, Ohio, Downtown
HAVING DISCONTINUED THE OLD HARDWARE
STORE AND MOVED INTO A NEW BUILDING THE
FOllOWING SURPLUS ITtMS ARE FOR SALE:

mume

hvaloM. 8o:"Mf

(lood

Oulno
1140 qulno. Atrr oonclhlon. - Hlivon, WV. 24 unl iorotoct,
alclllo_
In molntoColh Pold. CoN lt4'112olll7 or end-1-'t,
_..

3 month old Btagle pup. 304-

THURSDAY; NOV. 16-5:00 P.M.

hovo

Sot-.

Publlo Sale
. &amp; Auction

~~~~~~~~:::":"

PUBLIC· AUCTION

COlt, mutlt be proh •• nal ..wll

..........., dopl. "" •
Chrlotmoo Auction Novombor oounlllr 11111111 IIIJM:~n~ncl. Good
••h. 7:00 p.m. Spcnoorocl bJ
P.O. Boor aa
SyVoluntoor
Fn to ports
Da~rt.. Aucttonllr: Den
SmHh. At Syrocuoo Flro blon, Jockoon, OH - ·
lm-• _.., X·AIJ TochSt. Rt. t24 on right.
nlclon WV A.A.A.'r. prellr..cl. ~c1d
9 Wanted to Buy
In AIII'IISOund prlforrod. ApoiY
Jsf.. Mn Ava, t:3D "till
Junk cal'll with or without 2500'
tt :30 All. ~ lhN Frldor or
Colt l.orryo Ltvoly 114s coii:I04-e75s11T8.
311.e3113.

Giveaway

Refreshments
CASH.
Positive I. D.
Not Responsible For Accidents or loss of Property

clnlna room runap, mu..
hovo .,_,..... of oCIIodullna.
omployw trolnlng ond lociil

-·-·-roq-

3111.

Nov. 3, 1888.

P11bllc Sale
&amp; Auction

pooductlon orlnotod end oblo to
lluot bt pn&gt;tooolonol ond hovo
good hyglone. Sond rHUme to
Kllchen lllnoaer, P. o. Boxi2C,

SUpNYiee lnd Rln emp6oJWI.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
CHRISTJWI AUCTIOil llortfonl Woot Collogo Rio .l lronH, OH
No~Communly
Nov. t2. Rlchord
Auc:tlonoor. 30t II.
2'/5. tm..-.o.........., poeiUon

kit·

lhroo

HU wantM • bperllt cI d
khchen ~. 1111111: have
kno.tada:a of echeclul!!ll, food
COlt ana . lnveniOI)'. ..... be

odhlon , 2:GO w...,., 304-182·--5.
llolp Wonlod , '&amp;portooicod

Pt. Plelllnt
&amp; VIcinity

Kit·

goad homo.

Monday

p.m. Saturday.

Run Ad., Pomeroy, OH. Efflcdve

located at the SyrQ(use Fire Dept. on
St. Rt. 124 in SyrQ(use, Ohio.
New Toys, Furniture, Tools, Lots of Nice
Christmas Gifts.
•
AUCTIONEER: DAN SMITH

SATURDAY
NOV. 18, 1989

EATS

Hend~r~on,

8

Polhlvoty no hunclng or trope
ping on the oJd -'ohn
Houdllholl proptorty, Foroot

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
SATURDAY, NOV. 18-6:00 PM

PUBLIC
CIIABITY
AUCTION

AL8ANY. OHIO: At Jet. of S .R. 60 and 143.
()paft 7 Dayo 10 A.M,,7 P.M .

No Hunllng or Tree,.atng
without permlnlon vlolatore
wtH bo proooeiUd, J\m StowOJt,

•.

·

ti'IIIMd. 114-

Frte kttleM, 2 flm•le, I mo. l:lld,
t ootid omoko g...,, 1 colloo.
lt4ot4&amp;o178~·

Ohio Volley Bonk 4

Company meNM the right
to accept or reject any or ell

Eostern Local School
s.qt
District #t G2J031 M5H758527338900 8 R 7 1983 Ford Bronco,
Reodtvile. Ohio 45772 Serlo!
1.1_1l:.,1...;2:;.,_t,.;,3:.,•t,;_4:;.,',.;,3,;;tc;...__ _.; #1 FMEUt 6G8DLA29011
t981 Pontile: Grone! Prilo
8
P11bllc Sala
&amp; Auction

992-5114

TOP PIICISJ

The

Depanment.
The Tupp•a Plains Fire

PUBLIC AUCTION

Dovi4 W, Sond, W.M.
G. Gordon fi.r, Soc.

without any upr•sed or
implied warranty. The vehicl• mey be seen et the
Jackson Pika Office of the
Ohio Valley Bank Company..
up to the date and time of
aaie.

rec:oll11y purchooad by the

no more;
·
But in memory you are
with us,
As you always were

MORNING
DAWN
lODGE
NO. 7 F&amp;AM
MONDAY, NOV. 13
7:30 p.m.
E. A. DegrH

l67~7120.

IIIII&lt;

Ohio

to the hlghoot bidder "oo io"

ment. The bulding will be
conatructed on the property

Som.e may think you
are forgotten,
Tho' on earth you are

3 Announcements

O.lllpollo.

day, Novembtr
tB. 1989.
~~~~~~~~= , .46831,
ot 1O:OOo.m.
Sotur·
This property will be sold

btr 16, t9B9. Sold Boord of arty:
Educltion ,..,... the right 1985 Chevy Comoro,

1

wko. old 1.

Thill property wil be sold
It public sale at the Jackson
Pike Branch. 370 J1ckson

wll offer for aalothe
later than noon on Novem- 1tolllo;.•lng cteecribed prop-

804 MaiD. Street

F.rnaa. tla•r llrtptd ldltlna 7

Yard Sale

Fridoy.

••Y

Sorllil
#I"H01EAL17HY128716 .

Bida mutt be received no

1

.....

tht day bltare the ecl II to -run. Alvanat a cd, WY 281M.
Sunday dlon 1. 2:00 p.m. AVON , All ,,.... Coli llorltyn

lena. I wka. Old. 2 yelow, 2 ,

'

M~toteyclo.

40" white and ono 30"
wh~e with setf·d-ing 1-'--,-----:--oveno. Aloo, one 110 volt
PUBLIC NOTICE
electric scaffold with 30'
FOR SALE '
lift, 1100# cep..,;tv. Moy bt
THE OHIO VALLEY BANK
-n8:00A.M.to4;00P.M . COMPANY, 4~0 Third Av·
Mondoy thru Frldl'/.
O.llpollo, Ohio

=~·

:~-;o

ell- Clormon
Ylno

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yord Soloo lluot Bo Pold In
Adnnco. DEADLINE: 2:GO p.m.

• ...,.Cotll14sll2·711t.
'
Kmono, ono 1 mo. ctatk long ·
hair, wtiH• 1...: 1
whhe .otrlolo, to good ha-, 6t4s«&lt;o

1987 Herl11y Davidson

The Board of Educetion of thank everyone for their
Eastern local School Dis- continued support and look
trict desirl'll to receive · forward to being better eble
sealed bidl an five Frigidaire to Mt'Ve you In the future .
electric ranges, two 40" 111), 12, 17, 2tc
goldandone40" greenwith 1--p;jijjiCN-j;ik;--conventional ovena; one 1

Eloise Boston, TreM.

t«4:30p.m.

Serial
·
#1 FTB10C3EUA482t B

than Novombtr 24.

NOT IIESPOII8III.E FOR ACCIIlEH11 OR LOSS OF PIIOPERI Y.

bofore.
And always will ba.
Greatly miasod by
Mom and Dad
and everyone that
knew him.

1984 Ford Ranger.

tiona must be returned no I•

'Serial

mlxtd tu.d, llolher
am1l, wormed. 114-44S.OGIII-

tVVVFA0178HV083457

facUlty to.houoe the depart-

NOV. 5. 12

pur.pt..

Seriel

Grande Municipal Building,

tar

1

#1 FTCRt OC2EU002664
1987 Volkswogon Golf.

the Rio

ytar

Shophoi-d.
5:00p.m.

1984 Ford Ranger
Sa riel

f"::;::J

You were someone special. God must have
thought to, too.
All our lives we will m411
you. though yurs may
come and go.
But in our he•rtt you wUI
live forever, because
we lov. you ao.
Deeply loved ond
mitl8d by daughters,
Mery, Edna and Ada.

111": ~ 11orohol~ AR

Lost &amp; Found

6

--------1
--------,
.
Giveaway
4
Giveaway
•··
4
a

#1G2AJ37A9BP669370

'for the YillltQI of Rio.
Grande. AppliCUiona may

bt picl&lt;ad up

Announcements

S.ri·el

proper forrM, for qualiflca·
NOTICE
tiona at least ten days prior
The Orange Twp, Volunto the date tet for opening
~ids
in accordance with teer Fire Department would
Chapter 5525 Ohio Revised like to ennounce it has
chenged ita name to the
Code.
Tupper•
Plains fire Depert·
,Plana and specifications
are on fila in the Departmer)t mem. Inc. The name change
of Transponation andtheof· wu necessary for tha ~ire
fica of the District Deputy deportment to become in·
corporated. Now that the
Director. .
The Director reaervea the Fire Department Ia incorright to reject any and all porotod, It wKI bt poooibteto
apply far state end
bids.
Bernard 8 . Hurst. grenta. Future plana in
Director bu~dlng 1 n- ond modern

Mike and Marge Barr

I, JODY NANCE,
WO\IId lika to thank
the following
people for
spon10ring my
entry Into Miss
Ohio Teen
AU,American
Pageant:
Larry's Pairning
and Service Inc ..
Norris Northup
Dodga, Friends
from G&amp;G
Grocary, Bob's
Electronics, The
Ohio Valley Bank
Inc .. Howard B.
Sa11nders, Ins ..
Conatance l.
Hemphill, Roger ,
ind Susan Morgan,
Central Supply
Company, Dailey
Tlra 'Inc.. Top Shelf
Beauty Shop and
for Picture Money
from Pat and
Eamie Mauger and
Bob &amp; Annabelle
Caldwell.

Public Notice

''The date set for campi•
tion of this work shall be set

to eccept or rtitct eny and

ing Memory Of
Our Mother

port

SUMnal,

••goo "" -

avoid nlt..plcklng.
..
LIIRA (lapt. JS.Oct. :II) Obetocloo
and ftua~ratlont may bo .,_.. In lfOUr
anornpls to oonducl bullnlll today. II might bo batter to forget It lor the-- •
end end gat alrelh 111ar1 tomoo •ow. ·

•

all parto of ony ond ott bldl.
In

Chow,

llata

1111'11 Nrtv/Dec. Vehicle , .
QUlrotl. Ouik Mtn. ,.,..,'12.~

1 , IOt...t.at-1710 . ...,.
501-t 1
112·1117.
.
1:110o4:00.
Roglot- ,_.,. Wolkor Dog,
3 pupploo, . . lick, • port &amp;aollont
111 :biJ. EUy work at home.
wiiUr. 114 , . 1410.
No , . , . _ noodod. CoM 1·
IIQ4.N1s7778 Ext, 1214- 2C
haurw. 11 cl ·ding Iunder.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
Public Notice

Halp Wanted

11

9/oophord
pup. I - · old.
St
...... 114-4414297.

Notice

and cering were

1-

Ps~

IOUthein

Dlddy . WM
I
Trovolng Mon.
old. 114-

•

Public

Help Wanted

Top Wlgoe, Plocoworlt.
Purot&gt;l• to ,JIIVOIWif, lloogiO. Eom
Pto"!!ng
plno
-Ungo,
.114....7135:'

Loot: IIIIo

•
Classi 1e

11

...
11

•

till and thoea of oomeono wtlh whom
you'll bo doaoly Involved. This might
cnate conclltlono thlt.,. not bol•llclal "·

VIIIGO

Giveaway

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page- O-J

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

•

�Page-. D-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

31 Homes for Sate

18 Wanted to Do
Will bobpll In "'f """"'· O.•
llpolie
A._,
Raferenc11
............ ,~..71~.

32 Mobile Homes

HARTFORD • I 1'001110, both, opp«&gt;K. 4 1&lt;101. WMC Point Road.

A,. rou ntlalled with IM can-dllon ot your homo ... the upcoming holiday•? I guaraniM
lmprawemenll. Will c...n by
Wur, dly or Wllk. Whl aupply

$22,000. Fronl tot 1.4 acrM aold

rellar1lnell . Phone Pal.
)04-17&amp;-2712 morning hou,.,

35. $38,500. 614-44&amp;-1358.

-.td
Bring

t~

new lur with

eu1tom

wal6covertnp Pllntlng I lrfm.
Special honday fiiH, on Ill·
lured c:.lllnost2x12 $100. 9x12,
$75, amall Dath,' $50 b- quality
work. &amp;1~-8207 « &amp;14--4460217.
' ·Fan1111 YOCIIllt IHkl to

Hptrlll. Call eo.l.cl, 1-114282-11218

3 br., utility, tingle Qirage, 2
mil .. Wut of HOiz•ra, oft At.
HouH, with large lot,$25,000. 1
~~

hu

wat•r

gat,

elK.

available. Rt. 160. Ktrr Rd. 5
min. from Holzer Hospltll. &amp;1 4446-1637 or 814-446-4166.

4--

P - ? Wo

NMCI • New or u..d llob&amp;ta

crlldlt hl•orv a problem? Wa
con holp. t-1100-1121-0712.

33 Fanns for Sill
145
lbr.,

Ac-, Rt. 211, e-n Cly,
2 bath,

bu•,

lobiCCG

very

modem,

mlrwral rlahta.

maclllnory opllonll. 114-"ZH-

loin

local Country Rock Bank. ~

Have metal detector wiU find

lost lew ..ry tor more lnfor·

matlon: 3Q.t..a71-2321.

C.

112

n-··

~L

Point Plllllnt,

nut

~

__

.....' : ' s

,

Btfere, aH•r schod. Orop.lnt
wllco.,... &amp;14-446-8224.
REIIOOELINO INTERIOR, EXTERIOR PAINTING, ROOFING,
CONCRETE
WORK,
ELECTRICAL l PLUMBING E~P.
HAS REFERENCES. ALL IKSURANCE CLAIMS ACCEPTED.
PLEASE CALL AFTER !P.M.
614-2511-1111.

ldlotwn. lalrth, I t 1 eac&amp;
1171. 1 .... _., . . . . . . . ..

_...,.

2 br. Klrtwood, vinyl uncMrDinnina. Will conaidar •nr ott.,.,
IS1(1..td-8785.

80 ac,.., ~ and bu-g
•It•, ·Somwvllle Healy, .C:.
175-3030 or 17S.3A31.

AvoUibla.

•100 - · 10 ac&lt;e

----No

ling. 114-7424011.

Will do bltwalnlng In my heme.
Rtf. available. 114·367·7414.

wood.
wv. -dopaalt,
· - 104-1111Ill...
•too. daonogo

2 bedFDOm

F - lor aola • 115 opiM •

54 Mlactlllnaoua
MirehandIll

54 MIICIIIanaoua
Merchandise

54 MIICIIIaneous
Merchandl.se

Kirtlr
-- _
_.- oW
lltKhi'IIMIL PIG. ....,.~

:,7,
- - - - WIIIF•
:=.1. I mo. oW. wiMHIIOMI.

1811,

4114 an• 1:1» 1111.

.

...... 114

ue 1124.

~··

2 bod""'"' lumlahod, - - •
Dryer,
- " · pluo
utHhiat,lie.
nl. 304-175-4874.

-plllbiO

ue n1s.

Apartment
for Rent

-~c him. 110. s Inch
hillel hold bolt unclor. $20. 114112-3401.

lh~~.ret~c:rlha ~:
car-

.

•

D. C. Metal Soles, IlK.
Cannllburg. Inc. 47618
Spocllliting In Polo
needt. Any aize.
CHOICE OF 1 D COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on
post bldga. and piiCkege

•

by fi llin~ in the mining words
• you develop from step No. 3 below .

ea• boloro tp.m. 111-441-4131.

Buildings .

-..

I
110

DrYor,

Designed to mee1 your

•
•

mechanic. 'Whera's

WMCina._..

whtte. approa:. I rn. otd, 171;

Trlmmor,

•

H YMN 0 I
bu~etor?" the customer
.._....::-:.-:.:.,l,:.:.....;.l....:...,...l---l asked. 'If I don't tell you,"
1. 1. . . • • laughed the mechanic, 'than
~:;~:::~::;=~ you canl -- ---· with it. •
DA L E E T
11-il
....;...,;::...:.;.,..::.,;:;..;;:....:,.-:-~
8 Complete the chuckle quoted

I

Hadgo

•

=
I

Whlta

wtth

•

"Someona's been messing

Two cholco loll I« aoJo, Otlvll
HIR ~loy, Choohlro, Ohio.
114-742-:1101.

Mctrlc. $ol0. Kti'OMM hetl8r

•

1. 9 1. ·

1350.

- ·HP,
110.laoklng
12 t. V bottom
·3
112
Ga""' fllhor
!rolling motor. ltoO. 24 Inch
Cr.. man

.

MW,

.... 11 tnolluw, 1 ber, 1 ct.ln.
•110. Doonon Howou Compound

tbr, opl.ln IUo Orondo, ........
1141.

I

Uko

Now l'lallabla Evlromental
Grophlco Woll Murolo. Rog.
151.11 aola $3U5. Point Pluo,
2•11 Jackton Ave., Pt. Pit. 301-171-4014.

•

..
....
rtfrlg.
-·
rot
1110,_
, ac1aa
"'
IOM&gt;. 114...,.._ 114 11~1·

54 MIICIIlaiiiOUS
Marchand! I I

NBC 340 cornputor &amp; kepoord

114

••

illlpoll.
Col 11411112401
Hoyoo llaol-o.

IIOITOII
IUUIIIGS, IIC.

•

ExceD•c.....SlDce 1113

..•

...bounorih WV 25504

. . 3677111. 60 loot

Cal Toll Fr11 Mlrttn, II.
1-100-447-7436

dells . Save hundreds ,
ev .. thouMndl of
doll are.
lotal SalOl lloprll«&lt;lali..
DONNA CRISENBERY
E.S.R ._ Boil 166
Gollipolio, Ohio 45631

PH. 614-256-6511

-••

..
~

2 bod""'"' furnlohad. woahor
and dryor, AIC, 1200. por month
plua utlllll-. reterencee, 304&amp;75-4874.
.

2111', olr. furnlthod1 cilln • qulat,
bMutlflll ri- VIIW, KanauaL

Z.bodroom largo ldtchon Footor'alloblla Homo Pirie, 114ond
-mont,
nlco
- - 441-1101.
hood, largo yotd, 104-1171-1213.
3 and 4 M*Nm . _ _ with 2111'. moblla home, S.R. !to
""-nl and gorogo &amp;orne- ,_...., 122511no. • dopoolt.

Will do oc1c1 lobo, ~75-308~.
RANCH Tl PE HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Park St. Corner lot. 4 bedrooms. krlchen.
dm_rm. comb,1 fu lly carpeted

gas heat. cent. air. alum. srdin&amp;

Business

ttou. fDr nnt Olin-

2171.

Will do hoUtt cleaning fer
holidoya, boby lilting, hove
rat.renc•, 304-&amp;75-6647.

44

ldt-.

Z Rio Orondo I I - (glriolto 01107.
....,. hoono w"h othor gl~. Z

Will do tlllbyaltUng In my home,
ot 112 Spruce SL 614-446.0386.

HouHhold
Good I

roomhowa.IMgo--.

12150, OM 01' two, M pilla,

="':'::-.. .:.:.

51

Houuhotd
Good I

11441'7~131 114-31'7·7111.

dining - .
both. Nloo
yord. 1300.110--

42 Moblll Homes
for Rent ·

41 Houses for Rant

51

IUoUcl, dtUve;;/, truck .....

•

,

Rentals

304.a71-Z156.

~

.........,
!12 """· fUll
104-1171- ldt-.bolh.IMI,
7511.
Pom.ror. 1110. I ._.,....
1.o1o Fot Sola • OoiNpollo Forry,
11.000. Pullllc Wllor. 104-11n; -.ldlcholi,loolll.17ellul'
bMy, p - N00. I bod2?22.

TIVII ....... 1 - Ounvllla
ROid.
OWnor
l'1nonclng

Sunday.Tim8s-Sentinei-Page-D-5

,.,.,. Dond.
.. ,..,.,I200Jmo.
.... •ao~"l:·
1
.
•

E N P A W0

'-:::1:::::1:::::1::::1=1~

Will do baby titling In my home,

Financial

words below to make 6

1-rR'-'U"r-'-V--r'I'-tQ....;;E,....-;1
7
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

43 Fanna for Rent

simple words. Prir'lt letters of
ea.:h in its line of ~uores .

rt.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
whh n.W porch, fane. and
building. $7000. 114-H2·73i2
after 6 :00p.m.

WOlD
lAIII

•

ORaorrange the 6 scramblad

NOM,

2 bedroom trallw on one ICrt

Wist P1ula'a Dly CaN Center.
Safa, aHord•blt, childcare. M-F
6 a.m.• 5:30 p.m. Agee 2'...,10.

21

w

IJvinl

tract, 15,000 - · 304-11757187.

1822.

675-3560 after 4:00 PM.

Gutt•r Cleaning. Frtt . .tlmatee.
Call614-i12...S55i after a..m.

Dupin:/:··~· ttad, '.231

can holp. 1-11- 0712.

Home? Shott limo '"' tho Jab?
Small down p11yment? Pa..

,......

- - . . JIM-12 attor
I:OOPII.

Smol Down Poy"*"' Pool
1

--In Cornp

Conlof ......... -

Need 1 ·Haw or UNCI llobllll
Home? Short lime on IN Job?

Credit HIIIOfY

November 12,

41 HOUIII tor Rent

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

for Sill

November 12. 1

IIICe livmg 100m

ut1iily bldg.. comfortablo
roomy, You' w got to see th•s
one. You wo11't IJeheve m only
lhe low 30's.

I

il

I

mg. all elec., ~tlrrgera!Df , mnge, dis·
hwasher and stereo system An un·
behev ~jje buy m low 3D·s

GREAT HOME ON S.R . 143- 10 MiNUTES FROM POMEROY- 3 bed•oom

ovilla Roolty, 304-e75-!to30 ,.

114-41Htlll14-441-lllll.

t75&lt;14S1.
.
3 t.d~, large bing raom,
nlco khchon with pantry. Mull
bo
_,king
or
Ntlred.
$225/morMh P'• dopooiL 114-

~aol n1co Zbr, 12115, Clbla,IIC,
114-441-0121 oftor 2p.m.

3br, hoUR for rtnt, 01 ~
9i41.

7 mila, DH1 HIIC on 110, Zbr,

m-3151.

ranch style. 2 baths. li¥rng room. kitchen. uhlll~ room , l1replace w/ msert,

• P. 41!M

aNno~v 100:1 I.U~ noA U941,.

'O!U11lj:l8W 941 PB46na1 ,'ReM

1111 1,uop t 11. ·pe~se Jawo1sno
&amp;41 .i.JOIEIJnq.reo 841 S,9J84M.
'O!U11!p8W 941 P!8S ,'JeMOW
UMBt Jno.-'i UO J018JnljJ80 841
41!M Bu!ssew u1111q s,auoewos.

. o•·to

S~t\~-Vl.IJ''t\:P:,

O.L

ONfiOI:I'f' 100::1
03.l'f'1;1
ANirKJH
1:1311100

Nnsnw

•

AN013::1
NOd!f3M
S.l31WVI:IOS
SliiMSNY

•
•
•

114-388-htS.

large 2 car garage lht!ated) , pond, woods. *ood hunting and fishing, mineral
rrghts. 13 acres. 1~ear warranted home. Thrs home was built .it-lhes~e. Beau·
btul louiiOn. let me show you - ~ou ' ll love rt. Only in the 60's .

.•

WANT THE BEST- PEACH FORK RO .-CR 19- BEAUTIFUL BRICII HOME

- 3 bed rooms. 2 full baths. l1v mg 10om. dmmg room. bar. kitchen, sew1ng
room. full e•lra n1ce basement. tully ca1 peted. well msulaled. almost new. aD·
pila11ces. garage. 5.75 acres. eAha wei~ built. sheer luAUil . out oftow11 owner
sard show tl and s~l t• Call me and we'll make your dream come true In only

the low 60's

·Mu'..JI.ve 81•rt up
prolimalaly $20,000.

100% rafurn. Call tall tr..
527-0033. Oporolor 14.

CHRISTMAS TANNING BEDS
FOR YEAR ROUND TAN, FROM
$190 WOLFF HOME, COMMER·
CIAL
UNITS,
MONTHLY
PAYMENTS LOW AS $11. CALL
TODAY FOR A FREE COLOR
CATALOG,
1-800.228-1212
t0H05801

r

'

AITRACHVE COUNTRY HOMl- LONCBOnDM- PoST OFFIC£ ROAD4 bedroom s. I r_, baths. hvmg room, dimng room. sunroom. kitchen, lui bas~­
ment, carpeled, l&gt;eaullful view of O~lo R1ver, P ~ acres, plenty of garden area.
hu1t trees. old Long Bottom Sc~oot on propertv lot. Lots of storage. You've got
to see 11 to belteve 1t. Great, great buy 1n the m1d 40's

•-

.

NEEDS A FAMILY- S.R. 124- 2 MI. BE\'0110 RACINl- 4 bedfooms.
bath, l1vmg room. completely remodeled dlnll'\iiiOOm and k1lchen, new fur·
nace. new SlteUrte. new steel garage. Too much to list. You've get to see. Calf
me. 1l's orlly 1n UH! m1d 40's. ~'-'! acres of pure pl~ure.
Wf

Ht,\•

~ll

811'&gt;"'",

save Anltor tau tiU •nd of y•r

I

on!y.

Apta and commercial
1pace downtown Nlrw

1

[

~

I,

IIi 11;)

Eallty convtrtld to lour
room,2 balh hcmt •nd etill
1pt. and comm•rclal
c:onMrt ccmmen:W
go10g0and ·-kroom.

.-

'

MIDDLEPORT ON BROADWAY - BEST BUY IN TOWN- VERY AFFORDABLE
- 2 or 3 Dedrooms. hvmg room, dm mg room. ~I!Chl!fl. den, Jl~ baths, base·
ment YIJWI s1dmg, extra large lot, pnvacy fence, clqse to city park. A real
~aluable property . Greet opportun:ty m the low 30's

1

1

U
f') f'

1\cJ~)

N'lf-&lt;

1'"
I '
/I

1·11

·'

)
-~.,

.....

Real Estate General

lEW LISTING! SMALL FARI FOR THE WORKING
FAMILY - With modern six rooms. 3 bedrooms,
Ill baths. basement. FA furnace and rural water.
Barn is in good condition. Approx. 22 acres of
land, farm jY.Ind, ~asture land is fenced. Plus.
three room cottag~ add~ional unattached block
garage 32' ,48' w~h two overhead doors, one is
16' in height Priced only in the 50's. Call today'

YOU WON1 BELIEVE YOUR EYES when you step into
this 2 story home in excellentcond~ion! 3bedrooms.
1\&gt; baths, family room, formal din in&amp; nat gas fur·
nace. vmyl siding whicl! was recenl~ added. City
schools. Call today lor more information and appoint·
ment You'll be impressed.
#2787

m91

7481.
water bu .. nttl tor ..... &amp;14245-1281.

BEAUTIFUl FARII SETTING- Seven room brick
home wrth 2~ baths. Apartment building used for
caring for elderly and handicapped poople large
modern barn used as feeder pig business, localed '"
Guyan Towns nip. Approx . 50 acres level !~table land
surrounds farm buildings. Call today for ;howin~
.
#2751

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sate
174 Cool or. 222 112 Nonh Thlnl.
Mldcllopor1. 2 bodroorn, Uvlng
d~

room,

wuher/dryer

3052.

room,

up. 216-835-

2 ..ory houtt, 3 or 4 bedroom,
larga eal-1n kitchtn 1 Hwlng room,
pontry, 1 full ball!, utili'/ room
and 2 .. ary -bam en 31 acrat,
men ar leu. 614-24~1115 •«er
5p.rn.

.. ·

2 story housa, uvan rooms,
1112 balh, full b11emanl, (1,75
acrtt1 3 acres waodad &amp;tr·
veyea, on blacktop , road.
Reduced musl ule, $18,000
61.-192:&amp;506 evening•, 014-H2·
3922 doya.
gla. .d-ln

. 2-Hdroom hDUM,
tront porch, full

Double

Cll

m1.

SJinlge.

basemant.
814-192·

2610 Garfltld Ava, 2 or 3 bedroom. •• little 11 $1,400. down
can put you In thla cozy home.
Exc .taner home or couP'e
nHdlng ciOH to h~phll and

ochoolo, 304-675-7302.

-Owner anXIous to sell and leavethearea.
you benefiil Come and view thiS lovely 3 bedroom home.
leatunng a large liVIng room. spaciouskitchen w/ formal din·
in groom. S11ualedowa mce level lot 1usl m1nutes from Iown
C1ty sc hool s.
FOR RENT - 3 bedroom home w1thm walkin g diStance of
downlown. 2 baths. Nicr back yard . Secunty Oeposrt. reler·
ences and no pels.

50 ACA.ES- Mllre or les s. located ir, Springfi~d
Township. ·
• 2771

ANXIOUS TO SELL - N1ce home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
·about 11h mil es from c1ty. Washmgton Elementary . Back
deck. Pr~ ced 50's.

AN IIVESTIIENT THAT Will PAY OFF EVERY
IIONTH! - When yoo own one trailer already
rented , anolher trailer space ready fo: hoor,ups plus
a two car garage. Rural water. All located en .98 of an

acre.

·

#2785

2br, houN, 2 mille out 141
price reduced $29 ooo loll id

balore puning 1n Retllcn
h1nda, 114-44&amp;-:0U$ •tt•r &amp;p.m.

PRIME DEVELOPMENT LANO - Over 74 acres.
Stale Route 35 area. Call today for more information.
#2710

1 bedroom, tolll •ctrtc. On
Broadway, Middleport. &amp;14·892·
5550 dllya or 614·9iJ2~n54 af1tr
5:00.

&amp; room •nd bath. On 3 to 4

,ern. WISI'point Rd., Hanford,

W.V. 122,000. Al80,1ronllcM, 0n1
•nd four tantftt acre. Wil Nil

..,.......,. 141 .... 212-11211 colloci.
7 room hemll Large ltltchln, 3
large br., Hpirllla 3 car gar•ge

with • c,; llrg• t.nced yard. On
Sl. At. 141 at Watwloo. $26,000.
61t-843--2555 wNkdlly1 arter
4:30p.m.
7 room houN In Middleporl,

lovely 1 112 llory brick 4br, 2
bath•, full butment wfgarage,
CA walking dlttlnc;e 1o town,
nlee ptay •rea tor children, For
Info. l appolnlmtnt to Ml, 114912-11870, 814-444-7003. t.IJOO.
446.0221.
B•utltul country hom. on 30
~era.
Meiga County, ttn
mlnutn from Flutl•nd. Lodgl
ttrte hamt with gr811 room,
pone!, J:»ams, erchard. S75,000.
114-142-:!019.

CktH to town, 3 or 4 tara- bed-

, _ , hardwood llooro. -

11-y. prlcod In 30'1. Sommvllla Roollty,
175-3431.

Country

30M75.:J030.

NEAT AS CAN BE -LOVely 3 oedroom home in city school
distr~ct 2 baths, modern kitchen. living room. family room
w/ woodburner, separate utility room, extra large master
bedroom. Nice flat yard. swimming pool. If you're looking for
a very mce home don't let this one pass you by
2.150 ACRES - In Gallipolis City w1th a very nice brick
home. lookmg for pnvacy &amp; seclusion. but close to everyth·
1ng' Give us a call lor more deta~ls.
WOW' WHAT A DEAL'- No Appraisal Fee, home has been
appraised for $46,000.00, owners selling for only
$41 .000.00 an d also paying points. ONLY $1,900.00 down·
payment that includes prepaids. Monthly pa~ment of
$370.46 principal &amp; mterest. 10%fixed rate for 30 yrs. Can
pay off early, no pre·payment fee. 3 bedrooms, l.R., modern
k1tc hen. formal dining room, separate laundry room. Single
car garage w/storage room and a separate workshop.
Fenced backyard. Mud room off from back pal1o.Lotsol storage'and closel space. II you're in the market this home you ·
sho uld co nsider lookmg at
5ACRES 11/l. R1o Grande area. Could be.good buildingsrte.

COli FORT THAT YOU CAN AFFORD! - located in
the Kyg" Creek school d~tricl 3 bedroom low
maintenance ranch. 1\&gt; baths. fami~ room, full fin·
ished basemiJI~ formal dining area, carport $40's.
Investigate today!
#2711

VACANT ACREAGE! -Over 8 acres. Site cleared
for house or mobile home. Road frontage alongSR
7. Wooded, rural water available. View of river.
#2763
POSSIBLE lOAN ASSUIIPTfiiNI2 slor'l home in nice
neighoorhood. Mom will save ccuPliess steps wrth
this cozy breakfast nook. 3 bedrooms. formal dmin&amp;
Musl see to appiechla
· #2712

Gl
,_ .......
!),.,.,.""'''

JQDY DEWin, BIOIEI"
MIIIILL CAITO, IE.LTOI

3 cor .....,. with

REFNET

46 Space tor Rent

Country lloblla Homo Pork,

-

u,

"

'

North of

Pomoroy.

Lot11 rontalo, porto, - · Co~
114-oi2-7471.
For ,..,. 1100sq.fl. commerclll
.-ca downtown New Haven.

Laundinnat, chlldc&amp;r8, Pf'8G•,
nerciH machln.. llol-llft.

•pee•

Trail.,
evallab... l1oi-US.
4231.
Two trllltt apecee, AHI• One
Loculi Road on right, 30U7f.
1071.

Merchandise

"KIDS LOVE" to play where they don't disturb the
neighbors. 21\ acre lot approx. w~h 2 car garag~
large enough for utilities such as garden, lawn &amp;
recreational vehicles. Making this more appealing
1s a remodeled 2 or 3 bedroom ranch st~le home.
Recently remodeled, located on blacktop road,
Gallipolis schools. Please call for more information'
•2776

51

ms

sus.

•so

Roell... $221 to 1371.
Llni!IO
lo .121. Dlnott•
1101 ond up to 1411. Wood

m

t1bll w~ cMII'II t2ll to $7'11.
Dlltoo 1145 up to $371. H.,._
1400 • up, bunk -pllla
wNh manrou tzel ond up to
PIS. blill' · .ItO IIIII. . or bol: ·~ tuM • twin
'"·
firm Ill, arid ,.._ oota 1271 • ~p. King PJO. 4
di'IWW chlet Nt. Oun C.biMI•
!.!
.• 10 g i l l . - rnot1_..
... I 141. Bod lrlmoe 125,
O..n Slzo H5 • king frame
110. Ooocl aolaellon of liidroom
'""..,
mMif
Cl~net•,
- - UO and up to

446·8147
379:2114

REALTOR'

I

'

DISCOVER COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST atthis
4 yr. old. 3 bedroom ranch nestled on an
outstandmg 8 acre lot on a good paved road just 5
miles from Holzer and 2'h miles from U. S. 35.
Features indude a larRe livinR room with
Andersen bow window, a large family kitchen,
bath has tub and separate shower. lots ol closets,
plush carpeting and as neat and clean as a pin.
There is aseparate oversized 2 car garagewrth a3
workbench shop, a woodbu'rner for heat plus .a
2nd story for hobbies, kids playhouse or storaga
The 8 acres is all clean. fenced pasture with a
small wooded area wrth a parked hiking trail lor
those·who enjoy walking. This is aperfect place for
horses or a few beef caUie. There's a small barn
and a little chicken house. Owner is out of state
and desires a Quick sale.
#117
82 ACRES OF ROLLING HILL LAND - Np
buildings. located just off Pleasant Valley on Tick
Ridge Road. 41\ miles to Rio Grande, 2 miles to
Thurman and U.S. Rt 35.1deallocation for home
and part·time farm. Good ~rowin&amp; wooded area,
cropiand and pasture. Good hunting area on thiS
land and surrounding area. Rural water hne on
adjoining property. Road frontage. All for
$34,000.
#301
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE. CITY CONVENIENCE
- Located jus&lt; outside oft he city limits on Spruce
Street Ext .. this well maintained maintenance·free
· home has both. Not hampered by close neighbors.
yet close enough to walk to town. this ranch
features 3 bedrooms. bath. living room with
fireplace and lull basement. Perfect home for
small family. $49,900.
. #225

•ea.

alh whh IP.

1 ...,, to 1 p.m. llon ..Sif. d14441-1111!.. 127 3&lt;d. Ava. GaiUpollo,""
for
lola:
Solid
wood
dinlngr- tlbll, • padded
chalro, mopll color 1210; llaplo
Bulfll .10. 114 441 1111.

[B

PR,;tE R;UC:T 101;. ~· ~li~tl~

HomeI turn
century home w~h
the original character still intact Large livin~
dining and fami~ lor den) rooms. all wrth
fireplaces. beautiful open staircase lead• to 31ull
size bedrooms. large eahn krtchen, sitting room
and workshop. 2 very nice porches. Sets on 2
landscaped lots providing plenty of shade and
room for the kids. Owner desire quick sale. Has
reduced price to $69.500.
#221

:

~~~~~~:~~;~0 STORY
g St\·lmgOVERLoOK·

.R~

highlight this turn
the century
.
Remodeled through out rt in dudes 2 bedrooms.
each with own ' balhtoom su~e. f~rmal dinmg.
large formal living room. eat-in kitchen and more.
4 wor~ng gas fireplaces, upstairs balcony
overlooks river. Guest house bonus: smali 3 room ·
house would make nice office. w~rkshop, etc.
PLUS 30x!OO shop buliding with large overhP.od
doors and several other 'maller ou!bui;dings. Can
all be bo~ght for unbelievaNy low prk~ of
$81.000 or purchased sepmtely. Call lor mo.e
detailS.
#104

Get On The
BEST SELLERS
LISTl
LIST WITH US.
Wa Naed listings Now!

Household
Goods

LAYNE'S RJRNITIIRE
Sofao ond chalro fl(lcad from
to 1111. T and up
to $125. Hide • br!Sr t310 to

COUNTRY SERENIT'I BUT CLOSE TO TOWN Flat corner building lot located in Clearview
Estates. 6 miles sooth on Rt 7. County water
available. Maintai~ed public sewer system. Nice
view. All of this for only $6,600.
•600
PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK •
Perfect setting for relaKation and enjoyment of
Raccoon Creek. 3 acres. m/1, wrth good access to
the creek and plenty of room for recreation. log
nome in dudes 6 rooms i1cludingbasement Large
deck overlooks the wooderful setting Perfect lor
weekend get·togelhers or full· lime country living
$42.000.
#231

13 ACRES AND COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM
RANCH- Anice view, clean country air: aQuiet
peaceful neighborhood and lots of room to roam
awaits you about 15 minutes from town at this
comfortable 3 bedrool)l, 2 bath home. lndudes
f1mily room, formal dininR and nice k~chen. HuRe
2 car garage tplooty of room for ashop) plus small
barn and dandy cellar house. Galli a County local
schools !bus stops at front door).
#101
BEST BUY IN VINTON - This ~an older home
that has been modernized into i very liveable.
up·to-date, 3 or 4 bedroom home. It's on a quiet
street, hiS a large fenced lot. Very nice modern
kitchen. new large living room with woodburner,
formal dining and 2 baths. 2 car garageand priced
well under market value at $27,500.
#1102
OUTSTANDING lEW LISTING RUSTIC
CONTEMPORARY -Tired of the regular ranch'
This 3 bedroom, 1~ story cedar home will please'
you. Vaulled ceilings, skylights. open oak
staircase, custom-buill oak cabinets in liitchen
and baths give this home lots of appeaL 3
bedrooms, 21\ baths, living room, diningroom and
fam1ly room, large 2 car garage Energy saving
gas/heat pump furnace. Green Township, 3 m~es
from town. Nice n~ghborhood. $99,500. #106
AFFOIDAILY PRICED AT $29,500!- 1250 SQ.
ft. ranch perfect for any age family. 3bedrooms, 1
full bath, living room and utilrty. Ready to move
into. Newer furnace. Must be sold to settle estate.
Call for an appointment
fillS

NEW LISTING: ,EXECUTIVE HOME - Here's one
that's impressive inside and out Very clean and
well maintained split level home that's for the
family . 4 levels of living space lapprox. 2500 sq.
ft.) includes 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. formal
living and dining room and fully equipped eat·in
kitchen. Outstanding lower family levels in dudes
large family ro9m .with brick fireplace and f!C.
room and another full bath. Family room opens to
professionally landscaped brick patio and
muiiHevel deck surrounding swimming pooL
Great for entertaining: Close to hosprtal and
snoppin&amp; 90's. Call for more information.Pu1#208
STARCHER HAMRICK ROAD - located on a
wooded lot w~h lots ol privacy, this 4 bedroom
h~me is a welcome retreaL from crowded
subdiviSions. 2 full baths. living room with
lireplace. eat·in kitchen. Full basement. Green
lownship. $60's.
#243

BEORM. BRICK w~h approx. 1 acre, s~uated along lower
, overlooking the beaut~ul Oh io River, 2 WBFP, full
~~!~e1nt . (outside entrance). access from Rt. 218. $80s.
sq. II.
BEDRII. HOllE WITH CARPORT - ApproK. 1.4 acre.
along Africa Road. Price was $25,000 Quick sale
$21.500.00.

~llu:area.

TIRED OF PAYING RENT7 - This may be the
hou:;e for you" AUractive 3 bedroom home located
in lhe city sch~ol dislrict. House includes fenced
backyard, covered pat1o. livmg room. cozy family
rocm wrth woodburner. utility room and all
appliarces are included. Priced to sell at $33.400.
~all us today for an appointment.
#714

LISTIN.G: 2 bedrm. house w~h upstairs dorm., HI
fully furnished, newly remodeled , new carpet. wrth
range and refri&amp; Full basement Near Tycoon Lake. Buy
for $36.900.
REOUCED: 1 acre w~h older mobile home, county
no septic system. located along Rt. 160 near North
' school. Price: $13,000.

1CENTENARY - Goo~ lor.at ion which offers gooo
resale·value. N1cc 3 b&lt;ldroom frame ranch offers
living room, kitchen, full ba:.ement and garage.
New roof. Hardwood floor3 Would make a good
starter home. rental, etc. $34,900.
#211

located

!IASONRY BLDG. Commercial location. 2 story, along 3rd
Ave.• Gallipolis. !Ask for Russell)

VICTORIAN IN CITY - There is square footage
galore in this 5 bedroom home on 2n~ Avenue.
even a laundry room upstairs' From the ioyer
through the living room. family room, dining room
with bay area to the 3 car paved parking area in
rear. it offers accommodations for any size family.
House and gr.ounds do need work but could be an
outstanding home. Make us an offer!!
#404

NEW LISTING: 10 acres. Perry Twp. Some limber. Buy now
lor $10.000.
NEW LISTING: 6.5 acres with 4 rm . house wrthin the c1ty of
Gallipolis. Buy now for $30,000.
1973- 12'xso; - 2 bedrm. mob1le home, wrth rear deck.
Call Allen Wood for more info.

OLD TillE CHARII - There's not many homes
like this stm available, especially at an affordable
price. $29,900 buys this 1901 vint.age house in
Kyger Creek Schools. 3 bedrooms, large kitchen
leal· in), dining room, living room and family room.
Home has had major improvements done. just
needs yoor finishing touches. Call today before Ws
~~
#2U

118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP .. Graham School Rd.
Super view! $44.000.
PROPEAT'IIN PORTER- Grocery store. 3 bedrm. home. 5
bedrm. home. Call for more informat1on.
DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure w~h
3 rental apartments. Also, adJacent melal storage/util~y
bldg Est gross rental income, $820 per mo. All priced for
$65,000.

VERY DESIRABLE HOllE- Now used as adouble
rental located in the city at the corner of 3r~ and
Spruce. Range and refrigerator furnished in both
un~s. Separate front and back entrance. Storage
bu~ding and children's play area behind home.
,$40.000.
#300

WE HAVE BUL01NG LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills
Village. Call for more .information
Z LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES SID . One is 84'1148' and the
other 75'xl48'. Purchase e~ther for $5,500.00.
21.5 ACRES. NEAl NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
lacaled along Frank Rd. $18,900.

Wiseman Real Estate

3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOON LAICE 150&gt;1 ISl Cln
purchase on land contract. $2,000 down. 10% interest. pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs.

(614) 446-3644

1.02 ACRE LOT along Klicker Rd. near Centenary. $8,000.

E. M. Wiseman, Broker

lEAL ESTATE IS BIG IUSINESS....CALLAI
WOOD REALTY SALESPEIISOII.

'

David Wiseman, 446-9665
B.J; Hairston, 446-4240

,,

REDUCED ON 3 BEDRII. HOllE wrth l'h acres.
w~hin Vinton Village Was $25,000. NOW $22.500!

LIST WITH GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER

We i:nn sell yom prosent hont-:J ···:.1WH (:an put yo•~ ir1
louch wilh 011e nf.~pproximolelr •:·•. 1, ~11 1eal e;l~l•·ofllf P
I(Jr.flfion~ qunlifi~d to help yr,ulhHI 111 •ioftl ht111U~

rolerrel...tworlrlnt oylfem. ·

•
(

c.. ...

The nallon. tapti

• . ..... i - F1r111, Coil :10&lt;1-:144-

•.

~~~- n10m1 whh cooking.

' .

wNh 13 ac"'!'1 J71t: wlill 42
acree. tl5,wu.
lad on
-.oy Cont Ad. Off RL 31
appror. 1112 mH•flom

Oollla

a..·tl'llllet apace. All hooll:-upa.
2:00 p.m., :10&lt;1-771-

A-

-Dpl .en,•oo,
I dlatt,
llllr'89'1
Mtelllt•
av.lllbte

: ·: lfll.
.--· ...

R60mt lor ront • woH or monlh.
Starting 11 11 ZQ/mo.
Holal. 114-44f.l580.

Appllanoo'y Inc. Good
lllld oppllancae, T. . aota. ODin·

bodRMIOI. Onr 2200

ft.

Furnished
Room a

7481.
Smal bullnn• apMa far ,.nllft
-laporl. kllll for croft or all
lhop. $2001month, lnc:lud"
utiiHiao. 114--S. 7:00.
4:00.

,. ......&amp;
oprtal llaln:- with dack ...

-

45

c-morclll apaco, 1400 oq.M.
Cornor llac:ond ond Plno. Ampla
porlllng. Cllll14-441-4241, 44&amp;2321,0&lt;44&amp;-4425.

ftrJJ' DC,
tiN
...ctr~c. wllh battle

-

potad. NO polo, Inquire II 300

KYGER CREEl SCHOOLS! FARII - Approx. 101
acres. newer 3 bedroom ranch. 117 baths, family
room. formal dining area, storage buildin~ barn,
40'x56' appr01. building wrth concrele floor. Above ·
ground pool, salellrte dish and gas well all included
w.1th sale. Callloday lor more delails.
#2769

SOPHISTICATED LUXURY IN NATURAL SUA-·
ROUNDINGS! Almost brand new spacious bi·
level, 4 bedrooms. 3 baths. lamily room, 2car gar·
age, approx. 2 acres and more. Begin a leisurely
room-by-room lour of this remarkable home today!
82779

bedroom
wil
make yoo the perfect star:ter or move-up home.
Features include large living room, eal·in kitchen.
handy util~y room and 1'h baths. 1 car attached
garage. Situated on a flat lot, just right for kids.
Nice neighborhood development that's not all
"scrunched" .together. $49,900. Call Chris for
more information.
#700

Fourth Avo.

,5111, ...Mil wv.

LAND! LAND! LAND! Approx. 42 acres niore or
less. Rural water. Call for more details . . #2775

.

'

CHARMING VICTORIAN 2 STORY - Has lots of
character in every room. Ver'l well decorated
home throughout includes formal living room and
formal dining .room with corner fireplaces, large
eat·in kitchen w~h loads of cabinels, full baths,
family room w1th woodburner. Upstairs is
complete wrth 3 nice bedrooms and second bath.
House has vinyl siding, new plumbir.g and new
wirin&amp; 174 n. deep lo!. $79.900.
#210

Haoon, W.Va. I14..U·7481.
Upoloi'!1 unhanlahod opl. Car·

TYCOON LAICE - 2 BEDROOM IIOBtLE HOlE.
Storage btJildiit&amp; large patio. Just perfect lor that
quiet getaway!
#2767

Fot Ownor,
otory
...,_.,
*·
:a
--moon:,
.,.t
•zt_.,
I

--·No-·Nq'od, ·~~~

Collnl)'

-lful, prlnla -ion. Aloo
ly

Unlurnlahod opl. 4 rrna l bllh,

DI'OVod crodN. 3 mi. out lulnlllo
~d. Opon I A.ll. to I P.M. lion.
thrU 811. Coil lt4-4Q.OIZZ.

home 1n Coni- na• llhaplllng. 114-251 _ ..

"

CABIN IN THE WOODS! 3 Rooms, unfinished
bath. backporch which opens up to beauty of the
forest lands. Cabin insulated. wired for electricity.
rural water ava1l able located on approx. 5 acres
land. GOOD BUY AT $7,500.00. IF INTERESTED.
YOU BETTER CAll NOW!
82789
ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY'S BEST LOCATED FARIS
- Close to Gallip~is, Addison and Porter. 236 acre
farm. Frontage along four roads, excellent for subdi·
viding or just farmin&amp; Remodeled 3 or 4 bedroom
•finyl siding honie. 2 large barns. machinery sheds.
li• i10use. 57'1120' Morton melal building rural wa·
ler. 5 ponds, 2 producing gas wells. Plus much more.
.Cali tcdaj lor more delaits•
#2778

labia lor 1

DWIINitv looated, . . . lllllp, ref.

eo Rp .. ,.. •

home.

wookond

VACANT LAND! APPAOX. 18 ACRES- Some is
cleared, btJt most is lorest type of l11r1d. Rural WI·
ter and electric available Green Township. De·
velop into lots or as you wish. Priced at
$12,000.00. SHOULD MOVE FAST!
#2790

me&amp;

2 BEDROOM HOME '" co untry school system, nice home.
$300.00 rent per month, one month secunty deposit. no pets
and have to furnish references.
$100,000.00 PLUS -large home 4·5 bedrooms, 3 baths,
ac1 eage. pool, etc Extra n•ce. giVe us a call if you're look•ng
lor somethmg li ke this. By appointment only

'
OWNER RElOCAliNG

NATURE'S COLORS
SURROUND
THIS
STONE TIIIIIED CHALET - CHARLOIS LAKE
loft w~h patio doors leading to a tar ge deck over·
looking Charolais Hills lake Gracious great room
featuring cathedral ceilint~. floor·to-ceiling stone
fireplace, master bedroom with connecting bath.
elliciently designed k~chen. recreation room.
walnut trim throughou~ central vacuum, attached
gaug~ • 2 ·cir unattached garage All this
s~uated on approximately 2.44 acres, profession·
ally landscaped. Don't miss seeing it TODAY'

lEW LISTING! $33,500.00 PRIVATE! - Vmyl
Sided ranch, mce approx. 1 acre lawn. Very nice
24'x24' two car garage. Call for more'information.
#2784

-a. . .

. - · fum.
•2. 11t 441 03M.

NEW LISTING ·RENT. W~h a
payment. you can
building equity in a home instead of y~ur
landlord's pockel. Th1s mce, clean 3 bedrobm
home is affordable priced al $26,000. Good size
bedroon1s,, 1 full bath, large eat·in kitchen, and
Vinyl siding makes for easy
~!~~1~~.n,?,~· lOnly $26,000! Only $26,000! Only
worth the
II
#2£3

.,

Tom Ruaaell. 446-2676

L

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
Chrla Ellcaaaor, 446-3621
'I

·,

�Times-Sentinel
Musical

51

w. Va.

Ohio-Point
61 Fann Equipment

Instruments

61 Fann

e4

November 12. 1989 .

71 AutOI for Sale

Hay a Gl'lln

71 Autoa tor Sate

November

11 AUtoe tor Sale

71 AuiOI for sale

73 Vane&amp;4WD'e

ServiCe!&gt;

" 82

Eloctnonlo, 2 ko-ld lot_
...., ... _ 304-77WOII7.

-. .......

--

.....

- . - . .... CloUdo-

Rio - _ OH Coli 114:MW121 .

58

Pets

and~

.,........
=~

for sate

RESPONSIILE

olne.

IIUII with ousdil"'
cruiM. tnt, PW, T·Tope. ~

PARTY TO ASSUME SMALL
MONTHLY PAYMENTS. SEE
LOCAUY.CALL 1oiCJO.- t2to

:nl3.

7 plgo 120. _., Ra'o Pia
F"",!', Ton IIIIo CrMk Rood ol

-

2G10 JD lfKtor wllft:. Nn bofl,
bloolo, h4So,
1tractor w.'toltder, 4 Mllom
a
6 gmw, mi-. 2111 go~_,.,, 11150. ...
fl
' nance. .14-281 'Q2

a.-_

m....

C':

Fcrm Supplrrs
&amp; Ltvestock

and !luJiply lhOfl Pol

Oro•.W.. All....._ Allatvtn.
limo Plil Food Dootor. Julio

* lnl'l
=""

du
machine, - . No. d
~.lnl'll
,.,...11110·
300
tar . .. . tH.ot.
$2250.114 - " "
PUV•

l-------- r::,
:::t':"uo~1~ 61 Farm Equipment
Clllft4-44f.OZI1.

:1447. I

M

ottwuo.

.

ft I
ftiW

tractor

W1

=·

I PHil

. . . . ..

lot

Olio; If J04I ...

kKtltlna tor a ltof'M, oiii'M ...
uo, I of quol~y rogtotorod
qumar1 , . _ ..
chld'e _..., 11...-.t111 or
.,. 3111=2!:

.,...,,+

~ lull lor Silo, 22 mo.
Pronn
1750.•, .........
1081.
Paint PIUI now halll:dltlrt and

Tock,ICM-4~-

64

Hay &amp; Grain

llv•ock
3C)4.~

- ~~ -~ -ifw/-1

- ~'8~-

am_.

or

oommerc&amp;ll

p·· • • ; ...............

Elocl~l.

:1114 ..71-1711.

.BEl;lPE~~ · INYUrMENIS • COIIMEACW. . fAiiws

;:

t3 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

'

•
75 Boats •

1111- -LXI; luoll"'

12 I . Aluminum Y·lotlont Ia•

-·---··em

1229.

-ion.

___

.•

PROFESSIONAl. SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER, 388·8826 ·
. RUTH GOODY, REALTOR, 379· 2628
DIAN CAlL!&lt;HAN, REALTOR. 268-8:a61
EUNICE NIEHM. AEAlTOR. 448· 1 897
RUTH IJAAR. REAlTOR, 446-0722
liNDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR, 371!1·2886

Motors

1111 """ T-Binl. 20,000 mlltL
Elcollont·
Col 0141111111

for Sale

1r-.

boll 6
trolling -or •
loolllan. ,_ Uroo, now ••11-4*7474 ..,., ........ boHory, MOO. PhonO 30Ufl.

11117- Contury,

v.. -

1m

17 1. Storcraft Trl-Hull
- · 121 HP, Evlnrudo Englno,
comDiolo top, now uilhOfaloly.

IIIII 14311; 1111 lulalo Call 111..-·UI11
- i ), .
. l.l lI.INoln
Pont.
......,..
Mi

-. I. 'md

~~.~A... OT
Y-1.
......_ IR. 110. t1t 116 1115

-YI

~~ ~::.

.·

mo.

i.J:

BOATERS:

•••r 7:00 p.m.

-

WlntwiZing

Proclolon -llo lllllno.
dod.l1~5111.

eo.;:;

216 East Second StrHt
Pomeroy, .Ohio
(614) 992-3325
670 ACRES- Sci pio Township, combination wooded, agri·
c u~ural, and reclatmed land. Has one story older home Barn
and dug well. $200 per acre.
·
RIVER VIEW ...:. Good 2 bedroom home with porch and bal·
cony, fully carpeted, central heat and I I! car garage. On a
mce qutet tree!. Just $32,000.
ATTRACTIVE - 5 room home wrth large closets, full base- ·
ment, eQUipped kitchen, and cenlral heat, large yard. Just
outside ol town. $33,500.
POIIEROY- 3.bedroom home wrthin walking distance of
stores. All utilities and a full acre. Want $28,500.

114 ACRES LOCATED IN
ORANGE TOWNSHIP, OFF
CHERRY RIDGE.
CONTACT:
PAUL KLOES OR BRUCE REED

G. IRUCE TEAfORD- 992-7614
446·9172
l/11.1/ II: II I!"

RICHAID YAI.EN11NE -

992-2136

//til -.1 d . Ill

014-44N111.

®. CANADAY . REALTY
446

1111.11 11:11/i-

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

DEER HUNTERS
PARADISE

~

11 • tandam ••II linllocll
~ to 11,001
trollor, lmlkoo, alllo - · c..tor • ,.. for 0111. exc cond, $2.000. »U7J. ::::~.~.;.,~~':'· AI. 35,

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
446-7699 or 446-9539

1111 Ford F - , plain, ~­
m..... 44 mile per pi, n~ 1
eMu.- IWiced lo ...,, ... ,500.00.

.

301..'11-21171.

AUDREY F. CANADAY. BROKER
HOMES. F,ARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

For Silo: 1. . Ponttoc Orond

Prlr. ,_ - . 1111, oruloo, olt,

11300. ...._.
1QIIotl1...-111.
W: ml\00,
1117 Ford
T:,',pol
42,001
.

·-·
!fi-. IJn.
p..,. or 114-~
241 a" ••)41me.

. ''

clor I n _ II

41-7

Ont - . 1. . Corio,
· :lt,OOO -114441-t171.
;

I

LOTS Of EXTRAS HERE- 1.52 acres plus a
beaulilul rootiw home and just minutes !rom
lown or HMC. Home leatutes 4or 5 DRs. 2 ~
baths, LR, 18K261amily rm. w/ltreplace, wet
bar, gas heat, cent. air, 2 car garage, all
brick.

4.9 ACRES, MIL, JUST AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN, BEAUTifUl VIEW - 1260 sq. ft.
home offer s kitchen, living room, 3 BRs, FR.
2 fireplaces, attached garage. workshop and
a 12x60 mobile home thai would be ideal for
mom or rental. Call for more details.

Rolumlna to ~ 1 Soli: 1111 OIIC S·1fTNck 414,
4opd., red wlol- M~olna.

...

00\ll!lllllliHT IEIZED Yolllctoo
g:z
1101. tronll. Mwcedn

HOME OF TilE WEEK

·=

•

tor

Truck~
Sille
1.,4 """ , 110. 11 II. lolllod,

72

CUSTOM BUILT 3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN WITH OAK CABINETS, RANGE. REFRIG. SNACK
BAR. WASHER AND DRYER ALSO STAY WITH HOME NICE
DINING AREA. 2 BATHS. QUALITY BUilT WITH ANDERSEN
WOOD WINOCWS, 6" INSULATED WALLS FIR ~IDING 2 CAR
GARAGE. PLUS CARPORT. FRUIT TREES GARDEN ' AREA
CITY SCHOOLS.
'
'

--.-~~o

.... _,

~o'lplno.- .... ··114 11!11 ...., ....,

1111 -

'=• r.."i1M·~is~04:' wiil

PB.1
tlkol

·.·..... ···. ·Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•

'•

DUE TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL
HOMES. WE NEED
-.
NEW LISTINGS.
GIVE US A CALL IF V'OU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN LISTED YOUR HOME.

=-~-..-::
1177 CMvy plcll-up, outo, P8

&gt;

ing .for a
will give you room to .
stretch oul,
·. Features in this home
are equipped kitchen, lormal dinin&amp; den. lovely living room with ftreplace, dinette, bath,
3 BRs. The lull basemen! is fin~hed and off·
ers bath. laundry, roomy, attractive family

REALTY

Phone: (614) 446-0008
WOULD YOU LIKE TO OWN A MINI FARM?
- Now you can. Lovely 3.72 acres offer ap·
pie tr~. cherry trees. insulated workshop,
24x26 barn with loft. cellar house. l2x21
garage. Very nice home with some outstand·
ina features, LR, FR, equipped krtchen, cent
air. Call for more details.

PIICE HoiiiCfo!

514 Second Avenue

•• • • 0 • • •

S1l,C*L 11+211 10ii

au;...
- ...Cllo¥p.
(1) ·
· 01
!ott.
...

A REAL CHAIMER - 1.87 acres m/1, and
an altracltve country style home just a cou· ·
pie ol miles from HMC on Rt. 35. Features in·
elude 3 or 4 BRs. balh, LR, k~chen, OR and
FR. fireplace, gas heat, 2 car garage.

BI~ACKBURN

- AIM'JI~
llodllnoi
AC,
:IO,DOD-:
11,911!1; t•t 'Oidln liD £».
lnf Cololo~4~ Rod ......
Mrlplng.
clolh lntoilor.
Arltamllkl,
• tiU whHl,
Allofll 1100 mlloL

ASKING PRICE: $65.000
ADDRESS: BUR RUN ROAD
LOT SIZE: FIVE ACIIES
TAXES PER HALF YEAR: $192.90
LIVIIIG AREA: $1,328 SQ. FT.

a

wlrlnf, ,_ or Nplllra:
Dono llceriilod -~lin. -

1111/ -1\L Ill

•f:I•I~Uft.

"*
T-.o, puno bred, s
t e. 1 ...... 114417·7810

AttldenUel

Electrical

Refrigeration

..,._uc,
ohorl bod. U.DGO 1111.
11100; tlo-441-11301.

For lell: OMM, 114311 1572

Toy

,.,.., • . . . , , _ Mlrullo,
Lal 1

1114 . cno..c Zdr, I opel. nc.
oond, 111011; . . . FoRI f.110
plcll-up, ' ........ 1011 y... .

-_ , _ ,_,lhiY
olrm«&lt;L Soo
Coll1.aGII-2N4210.

Rl . ... lOt ••• 1sa.

or 114-241 M44.

64

eM,,~

Tllundor Squire lullol Eloclric
guilar ond Tllundor "';'~~Vary ""'"" 1:121. 114-112

-

Sallllc Tllllk Pumoina MD....aonto
Co. ROll EYANI'EHTERP"'SEI,
Jockoon, OH 1-.ali74DI.

___
141. P - . Ill,

W.-:
Rooponolblo poily to aoourno
Solo!

lllorlna Clofll, plano .... oond.
114-Hl•7414.

o.-

*·

11U-Z·•,3011N-

Tr.msport&lt;Jiton

PIANO FOR SALE.

Plano . For

87 . UphOlstery

Plumbing &amp;
Htatlng
Co~.... . . . . - .

lndlvlduol
,.....
-.
loovl....., ..rlouo gulla~ol .
lntnk=lrdll Mu.Ac a1~
0117, Jotf Wamolof lnooruotor
114_.&lt;16-1077, 11mMool oponlngo. '

WANTED:

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page D-7

Ohio- Point Pleaunt, W. Va.

..
. THIS GRANDE HOME
outstanding
woodwork and other fea!UI'I!$ not found in
homes built tooay. Majestic foyer w~h spar·
klingchandelier and beautiful stairs, lormal
dining LR. 3-4BRs, k ~ chen, office. lull basement

n,

.
.
1177 OIIC trt-..10 4Z7 onglno.,
1111 SumMit dump
30ft.,
uo. cond., Calf After 7 p.m. 11+
25M121.

,,.u.,

1111 ChoW, PY Toppor, CB,

r:r:·

tra!for pulling

pockolo, , . ,

no,...,

~~·a.., Von,

FAll- MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGE
FAMILY KITCHEN AND LIVING ROOM DEN I 316 SQ FT
LIVING AREA, 2 CAR CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE OVER g·
ACRTES. MOSTLY PASTURE. KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
$52,000.

moo.-

ohorp.

HIOO·

1iij Dotlat 11on, 4 clr., - - 4
1111 Dodge K Cor
~. .1,11111. 114.211 " "

w...,

ood;, o. . . . .

-.

1...OHbr
110, v-e.
.....
1·
2lf
Drive,4 ai
4-441 0001.

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED ABEAUTIFUL
HOME ON FIIST AVENUE?- Make plan sto
view lhis home which offers 2 baths, large
LR w~h fireplace and view olriver, L·shaped
krtchen. formal enlry, Fit summer porch, lovely lawn. on river.

THIS HOME HAS BEEN GIVEN LOTSOFTLC
-Thi s home and 1.112 acres. mil. offers3
BRs, I !? balhs, LR, equipped kitchen, dinell e. allached garage, brick Iron!, steel si1·
in g.

1..7 - D-Ill; ,.., CltoY. ..
10.WIIIr, lflll Clift, ..111, liN

~~ ~:...~-King-Cob~

Ford N auto . - tnocu low
ml.loo, priCOij 10 Salll liD
Mc.ilora Rt. 110, 114 Ul 1111
11·-4-111.
1117 Fc-ril Rangor pick-up. _Eo·
colllntccndhloii. 114-317-0214.
Far Solo: 1114 1-10, ¥-I onglno,
autonllllc trane. · Wovrirfve,
PS, P11 al! oond, Alllfll ole-

lEAR NEW POOL - GOLF couqsE, LARGE LEVEL LAWN
WITH LOTS OFTREES, 3 EcQ\.01 RANCH HASEXTA LARGE
LIVING ROOM WITH fl;, ~ &lt; . NICE KITCHEN WITH
DINING AREA. ATTACHED GARAGE. BARBEQUE GRILL IN
BACK YARD. ASKING $48,000.
QUICK POSSESSION: ROOMY CAPE COO IN NICE AREA OF
NEWER HOMES! 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS FORMAL DINING
2 CAR GARAGE, FUll BASEMENT. SHOWS LIKE A MODEL
HOME. $62,000 OR BUY WITH EXTRA LOT FOR $68,000.
IIEW LISTING - 48 ACRE FARM, 2 STORY HOME ·HAS 9
ROOMS, NEW ROOF. VINYL SIDING. KYGER CREEK
SCHOOLS. $55,000.
$45,000 FOUR BEDROOM CO!ONIAL - FORMAL DINING
LOTSOFSPACE FOR ALARGE FAMILY. APPROX. ~ ACRE LOT
WITH FRONTAGE ON RT. 7. COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL
. .
FINE LOCATION - 2 STORY BRICK HOllE IN CITY 3
BEDROOMS WITH SPACE FOR Pr&gt;&lt;.SJBLE 4TH 2.11 BATHs
FORMAL DINING. FAMILY "i~\~ERY NICE ENTRY WITH
Of'EN STAIRWAY. LARGE ~v ,.,TH INGROUND POOL
PRIVAC~ FENCE. ONLY A FEW BLOCKS FROM DOWNTOWN.
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE AT $89.900.
.

cue..· DUCIIM

Let us help
you sell
your home!

614~se-e2711

1177 DoMigo Von, 1100.

MOVING TO THE CITY? THIS HOME ON UPPER SECOND
AVENUE IS WITHOUT ADOUBT THE BESTBUYONTHEMAR·
KET. 2 STORY FRAME HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. KITCHEN IS
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG. AMPLE DINING
SPACE. GAS BUDGET IS ONLY $41.00 MONTH. NICE LEVEL
BACK LAWN. JUST $35,000. CHECK IT OUT!
$45,000 JUST A FEW MILES FROM CITY- VERY NICE 3
BEDROOM HOME. HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM KITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH DISHWASHER RANGE AND R'EFRIGERATOR. SEPARATE UTILITY i,n.\.0 TTACHED GARAGE VINYL
SIDING AND ROOF ARE &lt;~V ~ vLO. CENTRAL AIR 'coND
GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE. FENCED BACK YARD. THI S IS
AN EXCEPTIONAL BUY FOR $45,000.
2 ACRES WITH FRUIT T~EES AND STOCKED POND 3
BEDROOM BRICK AND FRAM~ RANCH HOME HAS
ATTACHED GARAGE PLUS lSQ\.00 2 CAR GARAGE WITH
WORKSHOP. COVERED PA ... . "'' f SCHOOLS. ONLY 51?
MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS. GREAT PlACE TO LIVE! $52,000.

•

•

l
•

'..
•'

'

'

•

•

.-

.

,..... ,. . ..... ..... ... . ,...
~

·'
''

....6-0001

1'

NO.

... ·..... ~..,....- .. ~~ ...... ~,.

~

··~r

· ·~··

-··

'

MAKE THIS YOUR CHANG£ OF ADDRESS!
- Attractive home just minutes lrom town
offers 1368 ~q. ft .. 3 BRs, 2 balhs. eal·in
kitchen, dinette. family room, living room,
laundry, cathedral ceilings, !enced yard.

THIS COULD BE YOUR DREAM
Owners have given this beautilul
style home lots of TLC. Features incllud~
DRs, 2 baths, LR, eat-in krtchen, dinette, FR,
full basement, 2 car garage. heal pump. central air. Located in Mercerville area.

PRICE REDUCED TO $65,0001 Beautiful
L·shaped brief&lt;. All rooms latge. Eat-in
k~chen , formal dining LR w/FP, 3 DR s, I I\
altlched aara1ge.

30.382 ACRU, TAYLOR lOAD-This small
f1rm also has a 1966 Vmdale 12160 mobile
ltonie, small barn, Grl!lll Elementary school.

ancho 1

~

.I

·-·

FIRST &amp; OLIVE
Cornar Com11«eill
living quarters. income apt.
wllwo car garage, river
lrontage, garden. Terms.

•

'--~----------~--~--~~~ '·

ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME IN THURMAN
- $34.000 - 1650 sq. ft. home offers 4
BRs, LR, k~chen, bath, 2 FPs, unattached
garage, satell~e dish, vinyl sidin11.

LET'S GO TO THE
tn111swnatyou 11
be saying every day when you own this
beauty thai fronts on the river. Living room
w~h stone fireplace. cathedral ceilings
kitchen, dinin&amp; family room , rec. room, :l
baths and much more. Call looay.

5 ACRES
Best View. Addison Twp.

GIIAI.jt bedr -., IJJath. kit., M, .4ac. m/1.Pr +ced tn

BRICK HOllE UNDER $50,000! WE HAVE
ONE on LeGrande Blvd. with aluN basement
lpartiallly linished), carport, central air and
. much more. Call for appointment.

LAND COIITRACT
Frlur BR home, lwo car gar·
age, I? acre. Green Schools.

\

SOLID AS A ROCK AND CLEAII AS A PIN! STONE RANCH
FAMILY ROOM HAS STONE FIREPLACE, WELL E8UIPPEO:
KITCHEN, BEAUTIFUL CARPETING AND WALL C VERING
BREAKFAST PORCH, MUCH MORE! CARPORT. ALSO GUEST
HOUSE. DON'T MISS SEEING THIS ONE! $85,000.

"· ,

u o.....

P-nt, -

RENT/LEASE ·
'OPTION TO PURCHASE
4 .OR Farm Home. Twenty lo
120 acres.

BEAUTIFUL LAND OIIACCOOII CREEK- If YOU HAVE
BEEN LOOKING FOR A SPEC!~ PLACE TO BUILD A NEW
HOME THIS ONE IS EXCELlfNl APPROX. 23.9 ACRES, 2
BEDROOM RANCH HOME WITH GARAGE. BAAN.LOCATEO AT
NORTHUP. NEAR BRIDGE AND WATERFALLS. $65,000.
JUST A FEW IIIIUTtS FROI TOWII - BRICK RANCH
LARGE FAMILY HOME. 4 BEDROOMS, EQUIPPED KITCHEN
HAS RANGE, REFRIG., DISHWASHER, TRASH COMPACTOR,
DISPOSAL, FUU BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM. ATTACHED
GARAGE PLUS 24'X40' GARAGE/WORKSHOP. GAS FUR·
NACE. CEN. AIR COND. ONE ACRE LOT. UNBEATABLE PRICE
$65,000. OON'T WAIT, CALL NOW!
'

t-

II.,-

1'111-1772.

•

....., UC. cond.

alter 4p.m.

73 vane &amp; 4 WD'a
thollo

SPLEIIDID HOME AND 13.37 ACRES, IlL
- Spacious ranch style home lealures 3·4
BRs, 2 baths, equipped kitchen, FR , OR, LR,
fireplace. carpet, heat pump plus wood
cenlral healing system, air cond.. 20x4S
pool, unattached garage. This could be just
the one lor you if you want privacy and
space.

..

1

II T11E CotllfJYI

'

YOU DESERVE TO OWII AHOME LIKE THIS ••
Just off St. Rl. 35, carnar lot. This home
Otters kitchen "Sf~&gt;': range. OW, double
ovens. family r.... ~. FP. LR w/firepltce,
din ina room.lenced rear patio. HP/cent. air,
one car attached garage, carpel.
- .COMMERCIAL SIT£Rl 1across from the new

I.OOIING FOR A SMALL PLACE WITH CON·
VDIIENC£ IUT IIOT CROWDED? .,... Nice
home in Rodney. 2 BRs, bath, LR. krtchen,
level lot 86x 172. $22,500.
.
,
· ,

36.5 ACRES M/L, CLAY TWP. -Frontage, .
on Fn1111dll Ridte Rd. Old house on land.
$18,000.
.
.
119.86 ACRES MIL. Sedion 17 &amp; 18
Huntington Twp., lrontaae on Jackson Rd.
and Litle Rlccoan Creek

$2UOO...LIICOLII AVE. - Nice two story

home, 4 DRs, LR, kitchen, balh, lull
blsement with shower, gas heat
LOCATED ON IT. 689 in Meigs County lhis
, property contains 21.04 acres, mil. and a
. small borne. Owner anxious to sell.

.

$15,000 - 19.143 acres m/1. ApprOIC. I?
mile fnm city ~mrt~ All utHrties avahble.

PRICE REDUCED BY $17.000!1!- 73 acre
I arm in Perry Township. Very mce home offers 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR. kitchen. car pet, elec·
tric heal, woodburning slove. The1e is a
40x60 barn. cellar house and s ev~ral other
buildings induded. Call for appointment
LOTS OF POTENTIAL- 67.496 acres, mil,
on Crouse-Beck Rd ., nice wooded building
srtes, rural water available.
141 ACRES M/L HUNTINGTON TWP.- Approx. I mile of lronlage on Raccaon Creek.
Some bottom land. black walnut

�. . ·-

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__.. .. ......

.......

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..... D-8-Sunct.y Tlm11 Sentinel

. ~anagement
of family
- forest a must
By Coutuee White
GalllaSWCD
GALLIPOLIS - The family
forest !lerVeS many uses. When it
II properly protected and mapqed It can prevent erosion on
steep slopes. Trees can help
reduce the damages of heavy
ra1111 and fioods. There Is the
esthetiC value or the scenic
beauty with the changing sea110111 and the economic advantaaes of this beauty of our
landlcape attracting tourists to
ovr ares.
11mber production Is compati·
ble with most other uses of our
foJ"ests with proper management. When ttmber Is properly
harVested, this use should not
Interfere with the other purposes
set forth by the landowner.
Remember that an untended
forest, Uke an untended garden,
produces many weeds and lew
usable products.
We increase our need for
timber each year. It has been
estbnated that by the year 2000
we wtu need to groW 28 bUtton
cubic feet of wood annuatty. The
family forest will supply about
one-ball or the volume.
What should your forest look
ltke? No matter where your
forest Is in thll country the trees
need to be suited to the soli,
climate, and locality to produce
salable saw logs, pulpwood, or
other products. To have good logs
the lesser quality trees need to be
removed to gtve the good ones
room to grow.
You need to look at your forest
and determine if you have
dileased or damaged trees, or
badly shaped trees. Also are
there trees that are mature and
need harvesting. Too often trees
of value are lett and eventually
are past their best growing year•
and no Ionaer have a commercial
value.
Some forests may be "even·
aled", that Is trees of about the
same age and size or "uneven·
aged" trees of several ages and
slzel. The forest type will dictate
whether the stand Is even-aged or
uneven-aged. Some species require large amounts of direct
sunlight, and grow best when they
sl8rt on open areas either from
tile clear cut method or from
e1tablisblng a new forest. This
wUI produce your better atands of
oak.
Tbe well managed forest II
protected from !Ire, lnaects and
dluase and even grazing
aalmais.
What about access roads?
Haw youf!V« thoUght about the
adYIDtage. of having permanent
111oadl roads In your fomt?
roads would permit the
b eqt1ent removal of amalt quantltlll of timber products. In
addition they Jive accesa to the
anNI for working on controlling
griP"''nes and multiflora rose
ud tbey are a gl'eat benefit In
fiN prllladfml.

n-e

'

-

··~

November 12, 1989

Pom1r0y-Midd'eport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea111nt, W.Va.

Ftrnt urges clients to
help stop program trading
MILWAUKEE - The Invest·
ment firm of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Incorpqrated Is asking approxl·
mately 15G,000ol its customers to
expri!U their concerns about
.current stock market volatUity to
,officials of the Securities &amp;
Exchange CommissiOn and Fed·
1llf&amp;l Reserve System. .
I In a letter being mailed' this
week. Pmldent and Chief Exec·
utlve Olflcer Thomas s. Franke
urgee clients to join with Blunt
EW. &amp; Loewl and Its parent.
Kemper Flnanclai'Cc!mpantes, In
oppo~lng the practlcel of proIJ"am trading and lclex arbitrage
trading. These practlcel are
beiJig intensely crltiMzed as ,a
major cause of_market volatUity.
Franke's Jetter reada in part:
"Tile recent volatUity seen in
the atock market concerns me as
I'm nre It conceru you. Even if
you are not a direct stock market
ln~tor, you are affected. Stock
market volatility affects investments across the spectrum In·
eluding Interest sensitive
Investments. ·
"Tile uncertainty over the
future direction of the market
!las not changed. What has
changed Is the extreme and
violent nature of the mar•et
swings ... This volatUity undermines Investors' confidence In
the lair functioning of the
market.
"U market volattlity · Is a
concern of yours, you should be
heard. Write a letter to the
regulators: Mr. Breeden, Chairman, Securities &amp; Exchange
Commission, 450 5th St., NW,
Washington, DC 20549 and Mr.
Alan Greenspan, Chairman,
Board of Governors of the
Federal Raerve System, 20th
and C Streets, NW, Washington.
DC 20551."
On Thursday, Kemper Finan·
clal Services announced that
public reaction to Its stand on

.

'

Education, roads are keys to preserving environment

proprietary Index arbitrage has
been extremely positive. Support
has come from individual Investors, brokers nationwide, corpo·
ration heads and other Investment managers. Following
Kemper's announcement of Its
stand, several Wall Street firms
announced they would discontinue or severely restrict Index
arbitrage.
Blunt Eilts &amp; Loewl Incorporated Is one of the natton's
largest regional brokerage and
Investment banking firms. With
corporate headquarters in Mtl·
waukee and Chicago, the firm
serves over 250,000 clients
through 500 brokers In more than
70 full-service branches In the
Midwest and Florida. Blunt Ellts
&amp; Loew! Is a member of Kemper
Financial Companies, Inc.

WASHINGTON (UPI )
Farmers trying to scratch out a
living are the cause of much of
the environmental damage In the
Third World, an economist said
last week, and It may be a long
struggle to change the situation.
Agricultural economist John
Mellor recommended developing
nations. attack the underlying
problem of poverty through
education and a better road
system, which would allow
farmers to grow crops better
suited to their land and to earn
more money .
"Most of the environmental
damage In developing countries
is the result of poor people
spreading out on poorer and
poorer land,~ Melior said at a
news conference held during the
annual meeting of the Consultative Group on International Agri·
cultural Research.
"The simple, honest answer -is

It (environmental degradation)

Is gojng to go on lor some time ....
We should get after these longterm processes that will slow It
down in five or 10 years and turn
It around."
While concern has been raised
In the United States over excessive use of fertilizers and pest!·
cides, Mellor cautioned "you just
can't be blindly opposed to use of
lertlllzer" In developing nations
since yields must be increased on .
good land In order to stop
depletion of land that is less
lerllle or easily eroded.
As an example of the problem,
Mellor said 00 percent of the
damage to forests worldwide Is
the result of "shifting cultivation." In It, poor farmers clear a
patch of forest, grow crops untll
the soli Is depleted and move to
the next patch. In other areas,
grass land is lost to the desert
when farmers try growing row

crops.
Mellor said developing nations
should commit more ol their
resources toward development
of rural areas, where a large
portion of their populations live,

and rural development also
shOuld be a goal of foreign aid
spending. In the developing
world, he said, development and
environmental protection "are
the same story."

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Ohioians favor
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of September.
CINCINNATI (UPI) -A new
Support for drug testing In all
Ohio Poll released Monday
jobs came as a surprise to Elinor
shows a majority of Ohioans
Alger of Columbus, staff counsel
favor drug testing for ali em·
tor the American Civil Liberties
p!oyees, regardless of what kind
Union of Ohio. Despite the
of work they do.
,.The poll found 58.2 percent of findings, she said most Ohioans
those surveyed supporting drug balk when asked to give a urine
tradition started b~ her iather, the late Pal Duffy, of placing nags
REMEMBER ALL VETERANS - Saturday, all across the
. testing, up from 48 percent three sample for drug testing.
on the graves of veterans. Taylor'&amp; grandfather, Ed Dully, was
llnlted Stales, scenes like this one at Pomeroy took place as
Alger said close supervision
years ago, when a similar poll
also a veteran. Members from both the Drew Webiler American
veteran• participated In ceremonies commemorallng Veterans
and
surveillance, rather than
was coll!lucted.
LeJioo Post, Pomeroy, and the Fenney-Dennett Post, Middleport,
Day. Lepon posls from Pomeroy and Middleport participated In
drug
testing, can be used to
In addition. nine of 10 respondSaturday's observance In front of the Meigs County Courtho~e. A
were present with colors for Saturday'&amp; ceremony. Also
that contractors and
ensure
ents in the poll said ali employees
represented, but without colors, was the Pomeroy chapter of the
hiJrhltshl of Saturday'• observance was the presentation of a
charged with public safety subcontractors meet the federal
Disabled American Veterans. Meigs HIgh band, members also
plaque to Patricia Duffy Taylor lor continuing a Memorial Day
should be tested, Including law government's requirement to
enforcement personnel and provide a drug-free workplace.
At Dayton Power and Light
transportation employees such
as airplane pilots, railroad eng!·· Co .. where random drug tests for
neers and bus drivers. Three all employees have been In place
years ago, 76 percent favored lor two · years, there are no
testing public safety employees. objections to the tests, said Steve
· T.he statewide survey Is seen as Kozlar. group vice president.
a measure of growing concern One or two employees lntllally
with drug and alcohol abuse and objected on constitutional
grounds, but no one complains
the probl~ms they cause.
any
more, he said.
The poll was conducted by the
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia
DP&amp;L
has to test because
University of Cincinnati's Insll·
(UP!) -: The Communist Party
·
drugs
on
the job can cause
tute lor PoliCy Research for The
Monday deplored a wave of
Dayton Dally News, The Cincin- accidents, misconduct, absenteedemocratic r~!orm that is sweepnati Post and WKRC-TV. Re- Ism. low mprale. reduced proing the E~st Bloc, crippling the
ductlvtly anil poor customer
power of the communist par!les searchers interviewed 825 adults service, Koz!ar said.
by telephone during the last half
•
ot some countries.
. , .'l:he Ql~t . !'arty ._ news·
paper Rude ~vq, . whlcli renect• the party's view, said
antt-soclallsVorces aided by the
West had launched a frontal
attack on soclaltsm In the East
Bloc countries.
VBI'EitANS DAY SPEAKER - "'1'1111 day
ATHENS - Athens attorney
It deplored that "a social
sacred to many leJIODalrei,"'laid .Joe Stn~ble In
and former State Rep. Claire M.
Is
fading
In
some
revolution
remarb during Saturday's Veterans Day obser·
"Buzz" Ball will run for State
socialist countries."
Senator from the 17th District,
"Such development is vividly which Includes Athens, Gallla,
documented by ,the situation in Jakcson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pick·
Poland and Hungary where the away, Ross and VInton Counties.
com1f1unlst parties have already
Ball, 48, Is a former Athens
officially gave up their leading County Prosecutor whO served
roles In society." the newspaper five terms In the Ohio House of
said.
Representatives. Currently the
The Hungarian Communist Athens County Republtcan ExecParty dissolved Itself last month
utive Committee chairman. he
and
the Polish Communist Party was an assistant to lOth District
By United Press International
Is scheduled to do the same at the U.S. Rep. Clarence E. MUter
Unseasonably mild weather
party
congress on Jan. 27 next
spread over the Ohio and !ower
(R-Lancaster) and was apyear.
Missouri valleys early Monday
pointed chairman of the Columwhile cold temperatures and
But in Rome, Pope John Paul II bus Regional Board of Review
light ~now pushed from Canada
said be was praying for the for Workers' Compensation by
Into the northern Plains.
"hopes of all Germans" in the former Gov. James A. Rhodes.
A high pressure system stalled
"We need a strong and effec·
wake of the the opened border
over the eastern part of the
live
voice in the Senate who can
between East and West Gercountry warmed Ohio with
CLAIRE M. BALL ·
work
on a bi-partisan manner to
many, and In Paris, the patri·
temperatures . from 15 to 25
our
area,"
get
the
job
done
for
arch of the Romanian Orthodox
degrees above normal, the Na·
Church called for s!mUar re- Bali said. "This is not the case Association. He Is a past member
tlonal Weather Service said.
now, and a change is needed." of the Ohlo4·H Foundation Board
forms In Romania.
of Directors, the Ohio YMCA
Forecasters said high temperaMonsignor VIrgil Cbeorghlu Among subjects needing Immetures Monday were expected to
Youth In Government Commit·
called his homeland a "prison" diate attention are equitable
reach a balmy 80 degrees in
tee,
the Ohio University College
and called Monday for a revolt funding lor education, jobs,
of
Business
Executive Advisory
southern
sections
of
Ohio.
READY, AIM, FIRE- Leglonalres Robert Vaughan ud Jerry
against the au tocratlc regime of building highways, envlronmen·
Committee.
Ball currently
Unseasonably
warm
temperaRought ltre their pns at the clo~e of Saturday's annual Veterans
Romanian leader Nlcolae tal Issues and C!ghtlng the drug
tures
also
were
predicted
for
serves
on
the
Ohio
State Univerproblem.
Day obeervance In P_!!meroy.
Ceausescu.
southern sections of Indiana,
Ball Is a member of a host of sity College of Law's National
"The limit of endurance has
Illinois, Missouri, Iowa and Necivic
and professional organlza· CouncU. He was a delegate for
passed," Gheorghlu said, urging
braska. The mercury climbed
Uons,
!ncludlpg Rotary, Farm now -President George Bush to
his countrymen to follow the lead
Into the 80s Sunday In Missouri
Bureau,
the Sigma Chi fraternity the 1988 Republican National
of pro-reformers in other East
and Nebraska.
the
Athens County Bar Convention.
and
Bloc countries.
Low pressure and cold Canadian air brought wintry condl·
sometime on Saturday. It was lions early Monday to northern
The Saturday death of 63
reported ' that nothing was miss- Minnesota and North Dakota,
year-old Cleat us Arnett has been
Ing, but later the sheriff's o!!!ce where temperatures were In the
ruled an accldenlal drowning l)y
was notified that a piggy bank mid 20s and snow flurries fell.
Dr. James Witherell, deputy
High pressure moving east·
coroner, according to informa- conta!niilg approxlmatley $200
ward
through Texas overnight
was missing, as was a nine-shot
tion from Meigs Sheriff James
Both Pollee Chief Dwight Jo·
narcotics officers. what the value
left
mostly
clear skies through·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPIJ - A
.22 caliber pistol.
M. Soulsby. .
·
seph
and
Mayor
Dana
Rinehart
of
the property is, and how they
out
the
Southwest,
the
Plains
member of the narcotlcs unit of
David Holter, Long Bottom,
Arnett's body ·was found early
lor
an
Investigation
able to raise the money for
have
asked
were
states
and
the
mid-South,
the
the Division of Columbus Pollee
reported Saturday evening to
Saturday afternoon lying face
Into
the
realeslateholdlngsofthe
purchases.
the
deputies that a five ft. brush bog NWS said. South Texas had some owns $1.5 million in real estate,
down In water In the roadside
much of it in the heart of the
had been taken from his property partly cloudy skies with a few
ditch in front of his residence at
In
the
thunderstorms
reported
city's crack district.
capital
on Yost Road. The exact date of
377~ State Route 143, Pomeroy.
area.
Big
Bend
One
of
the apartment buildings
the theft is unknown. The brush
The body was discovered by
Ottlcer
Thomas
J. Jones Jr. owns
A low pressure area over the
hog was valued at $400.
Gene Hanning as he passed by
with
his
real
estate partner
Autumn Walker, Route 684, Texas Panhandle and western
the scene on his tractor.
Richard
Clouse
has
been raided
Pomeroy, reported Saturday Oklahoma produced gusty
The sheriff's department was
three
Urnes,
and
Is
one
of seven
that a Seara deep well pump had southwes I breezes up to 35 mph,
called to the· scene at 1: 15 p.m.
A Pomeroy mall and a Middleport woman were Injured In a
suspected
crack
houses
In the
.
been stolen from her garage the NWS said.
with Sherif! Soulsby and Deputy
two-car
wreck Sunday at 5:24 p.m .. In Salisbury Township 011
city
that
had
been
hit
three
times.
In the West, hoth sides of the
sometime on Friday or Saturday.
Robert Beegle answering the call
C.R.
25,
U miles east of S.R. 7, according to the Gall!a·Melgs
Jones has been purchasing
Deputies are attempting to con- Cascade mountain range In Wa·
along with Dr. Witherell. Dr.
..,Post
of
the
State Highway Patrol.
shlngton began to clear after property since 1976, but has
tact a suspect In the case.
Witherell ruled the drowning
Revna
.J.
Reynolds, 19, o.! '3323 Frank Rd .. Pomeroy, was
Als9 on Saturday, a 1977 Dodge three days of rain cau!ied major bought 00 of his 43 properties
accidental. 'fhere was no loui
taken to Holller Medical Center by the Pomeroy EMS. while
van was towed from County Road !loocllne In the western part of the since he joined the Franklin
play, Sheriff Souls by reports.
Suzanne
Richmond, 39. of ~95 Bradbury Rd., Middleport, was
County
Narcotics
Task
Force,
state.
1 (Paynter Ridge Road) after
taken
by
the Pomeroy EMS to Veterans 1\l,emorlal Hoapltal.
the
Columbua
Dispatch
reporll!\1
But as rivers receded and
Pomeroy EMS removed the , au thorittes received complalnts
In
a
copyright
story.
·
Reynolili
was admitted for treatment of a cerebral concussion
Sunday
body to Ewing's Funeral Home.
that the vehicle was parked on soggy tow111 began lo dry, the
and
muiUple
trauma before his scheduled discharge today
The
paper
said
U
searched
A breaklne and entering of the
the roadway without tags. Depu- NWS said a new rain and cold
Richmond
was
treated and released lor fractures to her nose
·
county
recordl
to
find
that
Jones
Iva Rayburn trailer on Route 248
ties lnves ligated and !oUDd that front was making Its way to tbe
and
lett
hand.
$1.6
million
for
pi'Opl!rty.
paid
Is being Investigated by the
the vehicle had been parked region from Alaska, Increasing
Reynolds, driving a 1988 Chevrolet Cavalier, was headlne
sheriff's department. According
lllerally on the roadway for the chances of snow. Forecasll!rs Only 15 of the holdings are In
areaa
that
are
not
known
to
have
to the sheriff's report, the front. several days. The vehicle has said temperatures will drop
ConUnued on page 10
crack houaes.
quickly
door of the trailer was kicked In
been Impounded.

Czech

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A Muhfrn.clielnc. Newtp-.:ter

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monilay, November 13, 1989
.

NIN,FULL,QUEEN

STABDNCAT

Low n~ar M&amp;ontcht. Chance
of rain 2:0 percent. Cloudy
Tueoday. Hl1h near 70.
Chance ot rain 58 percent.

•

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Two injured .in Sunday wreck

REG. 8 1883

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SAMEASCASH

Narcotics officer owns $1 million
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