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                  <text>Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport,_O!Jiq__
HE MT

~ llUJoiDI

Pllt.H ~ /'1 FOOT

mAT

THAT OOW..Y
UIM' GOST
lY.&gt;

Television
Viewing

111£ lll08 £ 1101 IJIIAIIC&gt;
~THEY lOll UN.

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loll~ ""'

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(J,\1,£.!

FRI., JUNE 5

••••

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'

50. BECAUSE YOURE A
DOG. I GUESS YOU 14AVE
TO DEPEND ON ME, BUT
l cON'T REALLY WANT
YOU TO FEEL '(()U HAVE
TO DEPEND ON ME ..
"'"&gt;'·,YOV KNOW WHAT I'M f i)':'M-

Ill World Toibty
® llotman

;

GE T 0 B

1:05 (I) I Love Lucy
1:30(2). 0 NBC ..... C
CIJ D ({) ABC INWi Q_
(lJ Wild Amertc.o Slereo. Q
~ Squon One TV Stereo.

I

ia
aecastNwoO
Ill • Andy Grlllllt1

I

IIJ Scooby Doo
® INw Zorro Slereo. Q
1:35 (I) Andy Orlllllt1
7:00\llG OWhMioiFarturMo

SAYING?

~•

Unsold - Craze - Plaid· Kitten · TOASTER
"Over the last several years our economy has gotten
very weird." one fellow said. "My bank has failed long
before my new TOASTER has."

Ill• Stor Trek

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wiTI'i YOUf" HT.

Ttl~

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f1t}ggl.)tl YOU .)~~ ON
Ttl~ SCf"ffN I$ f1~At.. 'PLtAS~ ADJUST

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Neb. (game 14, if necessary)

1

ILl

Ill Crooofln
7:35 (I) Sanlonl • Son
1:00 (2) •
llroltow Report:
Amertc.o Ito Violent A look

a

YOU~

.rTANDAf1l&gt;S - ~:::--/-~ ,~-"
DOvJf'lvJ Afll&gt;.

at the increasing violence

lhat plagues AmeriCa.
focusing on Amet1cans · love
for guns and the media's role
in glorifying violent acts .

(1:00) Sloreo. 0

(!)Lud-oiiM.In
({) Gl (I)
Fomlly Molten
Lt Murtagh tries to sel Url&lt;el

e

ALLEYOOP

• 8 762
• Q 9.
• 986

Fllltlly Foud

lillie 1 Ster Sle&lt;eO
Ill Collogo llooeball NCAA
Wor1d Series from Omaha,

up in a!:r game. (A)

EAST
+J7
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• 10 9 6

ALDER

Fomlly
!IIDWhMioiFortune0

~&gt;II

NORTH
• Q8s
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WEST

PHILLIP

S"tareo. l,J .
(I) • Mltmo'o

not UM

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BRIDGE

IIIMoneyllno
® MOYIE: lUnd ollho
Bluo Dolpltlno (2:00)
7:05 (I) llevtfly Hlllblllloo
r:30 (2) • a J_.-dyl c
CIJ D E~J!trbtlnment Tonlghl

t K 10 I

+K IP32

SOUTH
+AK432
• JO
tAJ6S2

The innocence
of a non-counter

,.,,2.

pert. He can lose to a beginner -

(lJ (!) illttinv!OII Woek In
Rovlew Stareo.

0

aile a e Mlracleo end

Othef Wondorl (1 :00) Sleroo
i.Amoriclt'oMoot
W1nlld A. con artist's
tottery· ticket seam; a
~spected murderer. Stereo.

0 Munier, Sho Wrote Q

12!1 c.oolt lnd CltiH
121 PrimeNIWI Q
1:05 (I) MOVIE: One Doll&lt; Night

w.••

North

Eut

2+
I NT
S NT

Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

,.

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

The auctmn was unscientific but el ·
fective . six spades being the ideal
rontract.
Assuming the spades are breaking
3-2. you have 12 laydown tricks: live
spades, four hearts, one diamond and
two clubs. After winning trick one. you
should draw two rounds or trumps
with the queen and king. U the suit di·
vides favorably. cash the spade ace
and take a club Hnesse, guaranteeing
your contract.

· Chicago Cubs at Montreal
Expos ILl
CIJ • (I). Stop by Step

diamonds rrom hand. If an opponent
ruffs in, win his probable diamond

musl). play all the hearts, discarding

switch, draw the last trump and re-

peat the club linesse. Uno one ruffs in,
play a spade to yoor ace and take a
second club finesse. Your last dia·
mond loser disappears on lhe club ace.
Now watch how lhe actual declarer
played the hand. At trick two, be led a
diamtxtd to the jack and queen. West
switched to a club. Declarer put up

all1lirt band.~'i/:,:ereo

Q

Wooll

Sterao. IJ
0 NBA Bolltolboll

1 Small

their maniage license. (A)

5 "Godlalher"
author Mario

fails his tes~s lor renewing

Slereo. C

(lJ (!) Eoo1!t T oc1t '92 Live
coverage of the United

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
en&lt;!IKINEil.Y

HANDSOME.,
INTELLI6£NT.. .

and

profiles ol individuals from
around the world who are

!If. a e

working on environmental

WITTY,
SOPHJSTJOmo,
5LIA'VE ... ANQ.
o-ITOPCF
THAT...

PAAA!Ore AQE

projects. (2:00) C

MO~IE:

'Jollbltdo' CBS F~lght
Movie (2:00) Stereo.

:]]). Slgltdngo: Gho

The

story bahind The Entity;
capturinQ.9hastly images. (A)
true

Shtfoo. lfl. _
11J lloyorid Roollty

tales
14 Cooking tal

15 Wingo
16 less than 10
limesaa
much

El19 Sollllry

20 Author

Gardner
e.g .
23 Evil grin

Lony King

dOCtJmented . (I :00) Q

24 GUIISII
21 College dog.
28 Stair
29 Three-card

c

AUNT LOWEEZY!!
TREE HOUSE!!

ingredient
40 Having no

poinls
42 Uncanny
44 Impose a tax
45 Skirt part
46 Window
section

48 Grassy area

5t Olsoma

evergreens

52 Coal product
53 Skin and 54 On a single
occasion
55 Annapolis
grad
56 Ornamental

1 Steal• game
2 Mool
repulshl

button

57 Ancient

(A)

11 Seniors

11 llaroh

Stereo. C

10 Astronaut's
ferry

ill. Hlddoif VltHo A

22 Moulh

football team has to adjust to

ASTRO-GRAPH
onty as 51f"1)ffl9 ~the ~n~t ot both parGraph . c lo thts newspaper . P 0 Bo• tie'S 11 ~ 16 .a IKil ot tola comm•t91428. Cleveland. OH 44101 - J4 2S Be ) l'neflt Ch¥t0e'S.ar-e d ..-.·twor k
sure to slate your Zodiac s.gn
C~ (Oec.. ........._ tS) To get
CANCER (June 21-AIIy 22) S omeone · ma• rmum ~out oC mose wtto
m1ght tell you somethtng Cletnmental are ertfler WCW1ung wt1h .,au or for you
abou t a mutual frtend today The mi CK - toaa.,. . lei mem ~ as lt ldeperi·
mat1on c ou ld be b•asec:l or diSI Orl ecl !.0 (1ently as ;&gt;
.,. .tn 1 mtrumum
d on ·! chscuss '' ~Mih others untt l you vf! amount Cit~
checked the facts yourself
AOUARUS (..._ ....,..,_ "It) If 'fOO
addr essed. stamped en ve4ope to Astr o-

unreal!sbC loday. ,ou ""9t' attempt
Change SOI'I_.,.IIQ that 15 beyQnd 'fOOJ
lems with a fnend may anse over some-- power to .ner Dunl dO lft'yttl•ng
!rung matenat If there are d1sturbmg : nJPt•ve t't\at a'fll!lcts OlheB as weO
developme~~t s . quell thmgs as quiCk ly
your"$1eif
as poSSlble.
PISC8 (Folo. a r .,. Bl • may
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 If Y"'-' ..-e too ease foo you to Ph"' M
insistent upon having everyth•ng your than 111 will be to hOnOr them down
way today. you could end up betng the hne. Thir* very ~ before
one in your parade. Stove to please make
others as well as yourself
ARIES {Min:tll H-Aprill "8)
LI8AA(8epl.2).t)ct. 23)1t'sbeStnotto nltllltliiQ
..,. ".._.
broadcast your Intentions prematurety 1S 001 w:a twd aJUid be
tOday. There's a Chance a ;eaJous listen- 8U1 odds .-e JOUI"
et m1ght try to derail you.
d u~
witl be supenor to
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be careful mnovattOM..
m do•ng busmess with a friend today: TAURUS (Apri8-.: 21) You' re rea~ each ol you may end up feeling like sonabty lludr;y todaiJ. bul your Uck haS
you 've been had. Ther"e could be a gra1n itslmQtuls.. You.....,..llndsome 'lieof truth in both cases. too.
tones. wt you"re nol lbly liD gel saneSAGITTARIUS (..... 23-0ec. :tl) An th"'!j foo owtaw4
agreement you enter into today will be

lEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) There are warn tng StgnBIS today that posSIDle prot&gt;-

only

GEMINI (May 21..June 20) Failing

to

protect your interests today . coold
prove cosily. Sul&lt;:e no one else IS likety
to do 11 for you, see to It that you tend to
your own store. Gemini. treat ~rsetl

to a birthday gift. Send for Geln'nt s Asllo-Graplt predi&lt;:tlols ·lor lhe year

ahead by mailingS 1.25plu$ along, 5811·

10 Proe1111d

James reveal their anger
toward each other at a party.

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-+-+-+--1

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llomoy Ml..r
IIJ , . Hllchhihf
Ill Dn Stoe- Sleroo.
Ill World® 700 Club WHit Pot

make some important
changes 10 the year ahead in your basic
lifestyle that could prove of benelit to
you bOth materially and domeslically.

9 Tlod up ta
boot)

encompa11·

5$ e

may

8 Unrollnod
malat

5 Df an olf

111• Clle 20/20 Sleroo

YOll

7 Aulhor Grey

4 Look al

DOWN

11J Swomp Thing
10:00(l) Mljar lo119U0 lloooboll
Atlanta Bravos al San Diogo
Padras (L)

June7, 1812

6--arms

one another

a new female center . (A)
Stereo.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

lng vl1w

3 Shldelnlo

9:30 CIJ • CltMro
(I) • lllby Tllo Maggie and

THAT'LL L'ARN YOU
TO TAKE YORE Nlllfl'~
SOMEWHARS
ELSE II

MAKE UNCLE SNUFFY
STAY OUT OF MY

sword
Jl Soap

49 Shapeleoo

18 Spanlstl hero

a......,,.,,..,• ._

t

r,orto

23 Swill orcoalt

(abbr.)
25 Up-good
26 Hypnotllod
30 Sltlnny llohoo

By KEVIN KELLY
Special to lhe T -S
GALLIPOLIS - Reured educa tor Thomas E. Hairslon of Bidwell
has been formally recognized by
the state for a career filled with
accomplishments by being named
to the Ohio Semor Citizen Hall of
Fame.
HatrSion. who rettred in 1979
following a 3-ycar stinl as supcrin tendenl of the Gallia County Local
School District, was inducted inlo
the Hall of Fame a1 a ceremony in
Columbus on May 13. A presenration was made to Hairston by Gov.
George Voinovich.
The announcement of HairslOil ' s
appoinrment was made by Judith
Y. Brachman, director of the Ohio
Dcparunent of Aging. The Hall of
Fame was esiablished in 1977 to
recognire outstanding accomplishments and exceptional contribu ·
tions of older Ohioans, begun or
con1inued afler the age of 60 .
Hairston is among II people
induciCd into ihe Hall of Fame this
mooth, bringing its membership to
150.
"I guess whal I feel lhe most is
elation." Hairston remarked. 'What

surprises me the most is that no one
from southeastern Ohio had won
this honor before, which makes it
more of a surprise.
"But to me, it's not your age

you should be recognized for, it' s
whal you do," he added.
The assistant state director of
Ohio' s chapter of the Amwcan
Associatton of Retired Person s,
Hairslon is a native of lhe Waterloo
area of Lawreoce Counly. ihe home
of the famed Waierloo Wonders
high school baskeiball team,
coached by his older broiher Mage llan. Following his graduation
from htgh school, Hairston
received a bachelor's degree from

Wilminglon College in 1942, the
sam e year he joined 1he U.S .
Marine Corps. During the war, he
was assigned 1o the staff of Leatherneck, the official Corps maga zmc.

Hairston received his masler of

art s in educatton from Marshall
University in 1950. but had slarled
htS career in education four years
earlier as a reacher and coach at
Monroeville, Ohio. In 194 7. he was
named superintendent of Walerloo
Local Schools, and five years later

ass umed ihe superintendeni's post
al the Dawson-Bryan! Local
Schools in Coal Grove. He served
one year as assisrant superinrendent
of Lawrence County Schools.
In 1957, Hairston. his wife. lhe
former Belly Jo White, and 1heir
children moved lo Mansfteld,
where Hairston became director of
personnel for that city's school system. After serving three years as
fir st assistant superintendent for
administration and personnel at
Mansfteld, Hairston became assisranl placement director at Ohio
Stale University from 1961 to
1965, a positioo he held while conducting post-master's wm'&lt; in educatiooal administrntion.
Hairston said working in university placement was "the lhing I
wanied the most," and he pursued
htS goal further by serving II yearas director of the Placement Cen1er
al Kenl State University, the post
he held before being named Gallia
Local superintendent in 1976.
His enthusiasm for helping col lege graduates find jobs in the areas
in which they were trained led him
10 be named chairman of the
Continued on A·l

32 Enzrmo

34 Poring

35 PorfuiM
36 Tried
37 Papalonvoy

olllcor

311111ollkoo
41 L1nguage

R-..n

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BoHbd Cincinnati AedlJ at

Los Angeles Dodgers (L)
0 A1y Bradbury~
Ill Auolln Encore Stereo.
Ill Mltjar Looguo lloooboU
Ill

-

oulllx
43 Comparative
IUffll

46 Unit of
lllumlnotlon
47 Joponabariglne
50 Non-profit TV

51 Kontuc:k y

t1:00(JJD Clle a • a e

bhaegra11

( l}-Witcft

11J MOVIE: Sizzle llolclt,
U.s.A. lA) (2:00)
Ill c.oolt lnd a....
Ill Sporll Tanlght
OIIIWin

11 :30 (2).

"""*'.,... Eadlllllt•lntt.._...,....,..__
I

G.rn..:~~rw
, . . _ . _ . Slereo.

tllgi:Ait• c
'DIItt Juotlio' Cllmo

SllnD.

e0 llaniiiiDwn Slereo. Q

11 :35 CIJ • Mo-"tl '92

lllgltllgftll (I)

• • PQA

Gall , .

Momortoiltlgltllghta (I)
11:50 CIJ. a-. t;l
11:5115 ..... tlld... WHit Cltllctntt

Md ~

r-..'tc~W.·J~C .

The Flnll Round

(lJ -

(I).

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.t.brlly ~~Mil .,. o.ttd INim QIMitltlol• bJ

(1) I(J - ·

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X

M T 8 V Y

P X YI

KNWO

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IT

K N W 0

ENXIOY

XC

JKXJNLT.'

INJSEOIII

tors in math and science instruc -

The equipment which has now

si~

university -level mathematics

educa1ors and two Hewleti-Packllrd
offiCJals .

tion. The Meigs High School staff

Conlinued on A·l

State honors retired educator

38 N.,olpotty

10:30 1111• Mltjar Looguo

was assisted in preparing the proposal by the University of Rio
Grande as a pan of that univemry ·s
program to help area schools in
upgrading instructional materials
and teaching.
The schools receiving lhe
awards were selected by a panel of

Puz'-

on

13 Armadillo

Ill

parks across the country are

BARNEY

9 Mother of
Milo.
12 Giani ollairy

21 Physician ,

AntWIM to Prewtou•

31 Holy peraon
33 Fencing

dogs

12!1111tohvlllo Now Slereo

U..l
® Sol World Ml,.cle
llobln a Frlencll Animal
l&gt;rtlls occurring al Sea World

lfl , ., .. .... -

ACROSS

Ht gh School science and math
reacher, Rick Ash will be traveling
to Chicago lhtS month under
Hcwleu Packard Co.'s sponson;hip
to attend a week-long reacher train·
mg program on the new curriculum
materiaJs.
To be considered for the grant
program, schools were required to
submil proposals desc•ibing how
their schools would use the calcula-

(Gen. James M. Gavin Plant)

©-. . . . .MDIWICU:WUIM..

The World Almanac 00 Crouword Puzzle

Finals (game 2. 3 or 4) (L) C
CIJ D (I) e Dlnouun £air

AEP spokesperson B.J. Smith ancc strategy, in accordance with
satd the new round of PUCO hear- Ohio Senale Bill 143."
ings is another step in lhc regulatoFollowtng thai slep, lhe U.S .
ry process.
EPA must issue the emission
"We are pleased that the Corps allowances available to utilities
of Engineers has decided to issue which build scrubbers.
perm its as on e step toward the
The corps issued the pcrmiiS.
in stallation of sc rubbers a1 the Signed Thursday by Col. James
Gavin plant for compliance with VanEpps, chief of the corps ' Html·
ihe Clean Air Act amendmeniS of ington district. after weighing the
1990," Smith said. "The company lestimony given at a May 4 J&gt;Jblic
has asked the PUCO to mle on the hearing at Meigs High School.
inSiall ali on of lhe scrubbers al Granting of the penni IS was urged
Gavin as the lowest cost compliContinued on A-l

dummy's ace, discarded his second

club on a top bur~ played a diomond
to his ace and ruffed a dlamoad with
dummy's spade fi .... Finally be lhw
trumps and claimed. The approlli·
mately 1&gt;-pe~Unt tine had worked as
well as the 100-peroent line.

J.T. and Cody dress in drag
to replace members in an

Summ~

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentiael Staff
POMEROY - Meigs High
School is one of 106 high schools
in the Uniied Srares and Canada 10
receive a classroom calculator program gran! from Hewlelt Packard
Co.
As a recipient Meigs High
School has received curriculum
materials, along with graphmg calculaton; and related equipmen1 val·
ued at $8.500. In addiUon Meigs

from a club duplicate in New Vork' ' - - - - - - - - - - - . . J

lead.

17 Sectlono, 126 Pogeo
A Multlmedle lnc. Newapa~per

MHS is one of 106 schools to receive
classroom calculator program grant

Cover the East-West cards and plan

1:30 (!) Mojar Looguo Boooboll

Naliorts' Eortl1

al 3 p.m. and 6 p.m., at Athens Cily ensuing effons of civic leaders, the
Hall; Thursday, July 2 al 2 p.m. United Mine Workers of America
and 6 p.m. at lhe PUCO offices al and other groups to oonvince AEP
180 E. Broad St., Columbus; and 10 inSiall $800 million in coalThursday, July 9 at 3 p.m. and 6 scrubbing lechnology at Gavin and
p.m., a1 Canton City HalL
save more than 1,000 jobs at the
The compliance plan AEP ftled mining complex led to AEP's deci with the PUCO on April 29 is its sion to ftle a new plan.
second in less than a year. liS origi·
Ohio Power and the Meigs
nal plan, submiued in May 199 (, Mines are subsidiaries of AEP .
called for swirching Gavin's fuel
In ihe new plan. lhe utility gianl
source 10 low-sulfur, out-of-state proposes paying for the installation
coal inSiead of the high-sulfur coal of the scrubbers through a lease
produced at the Meigs Mines. The financing arrangement

Opening lead ' 8

As an example, look at today's deal,

If lhe spades are 4-1, take an immediate club finesse . When it wins (as it

(AI (1 55)

9:00 (2) •

placement of fill malerial in certain
nearby wetlands earlier in the
week . But the project needs
approval from the Public Utiliti"'
Com mission of Ohio and the U.S.
Environmenlal Protection Agency
before taking effect
The PUCO has scheduled a
series of public hearings on American Electric Power's compliance
strntegy with the Clean Air Act of
1990. which calls for the installalion of the scrubbers a1 Gavin. The
hearings will be Thursday. June 25

the play m s1x spades against a heart

Stereo.

(lJ (!) \!!II

By the T-S Staff
CHESHIRE - The race 10
install scrubber technology al the
Gen. James M. Gavin Power Plan!
has cleared one regulatory hurdle,
but has two more to pass before the
clean air devices become a rcalily
for the Ohio Power Co. -owned
facility.
The US Anny Corps of Engincen; gave tts appmval 10 penniiS
necessary for the conslruction of a
lime barge loading dock from the
Ohio River 10 the plan! and lhe

Vulnerable: Neither

6t

something that doesn't often happen in
other games

ndn 60 percent.

Gavin scrubbers face more regulatory hurdles

Dealer: South

Soalh

Bndge ran be a frustrating game
for everyone, but especially for an ell-

High in lower 80s. Chance or

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpoii-"Dint Pleasant, June 7, 1992

+75

By Pbilllp Alder

Along the rivrr .............. Rl· 7
Businessl.l'arm ..... ....... ... 0 1-8
Classified ....................... 03· 7
Deaths. ............................... A2
Editoral ............................. A4
Sports. .......................... .. CI-8
Weather ...........................A-3

Vol. 27, No. 18

Copyrighted 1992

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

a e EnJ!&lt;IIInment Tonight
Stereo . ~
IIJ MKGyver Q

Ttl~~~ It f'IO

I

€)

Mltrritd... With Cltlldren

a•

I

P~ 1 NI NUMBERED

Inside

•
xmts·

Comp lelo ••• chockle qooJod
by tdi11"1 [J in the m1!smg words

UNSCR AMB lE fORI
I I
_,;.A.;.;.N:.c..;
SW~
f ~--,.L·---1-.......-

i . Jeopardy! Q

ERNEST

t

Where are results of recent Meigs
gas survey?- Bob Hoeflich- Page A-6

"You don't get any work
done . You're jusl lazy!" one
complained
to
worker
another." Laziness," smiled
the goof off, "is just getting
your rest before you ...... --1"

l Elf ERS IN SQUARES

In- Edition Q
~ptlfltlni

Gallia County apple dates back
to 1859 - James Sands - Page A-8

you de~elop from step No. 3 be low

f}

[lj D

A.P. Indy 124th Belmont winner - C-1

B-1

I' I' I I •
RUTIVE
I
C)
17
I
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I II

I

e

-

Heritage
Weekend
scheduled
June 13-1

TAR I TE

EVENING

75 cent-.

X

ZNOXVR,

UTCCXO

0 II

KI C I .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "You can never tx~gg~rate when tt comes to

Hollywood." - (Director! Robeft Altman.

5

FIRST FOR SOUTifERN OmO - Retired
educator Thomas E. Hairston, SKOnd from ~en,
bas berome the first person rrom southem Ohio
to he named to the Ohio Senior Cilimls Hall ol
Fame ror his aecomplisbmenl5. Flaakiag blm

-i

are State Rep . Mary Abel, Stat&lt; Sea. Jan
Michnl Long and Pamela K. Matura, dir&lt;ctor
or tbe Area Ageacy oa Aglag District 1 orr~ In
Rio Grande. (Photo by Ed Wylie).

GRANT RECIPIENT- Meigs High School
has been awarded a classroom calculator program grant by Hewlett-Packard Co. and hardware valued at over $3,500 bas been delivered to
the school. Assisting Meigs ia developing the
~rani proposal was June Slobodian or the Uni-

versity ol Rio Grande, pictured len. Rick Ash,
standing, math·science teacher, will br traveling
to Chicago later this month ror a week 's training
session. The students shown working with th&lt;
equipment here are len, Lori Krlly and Kalrina
Turner.

Utility settles in 1987 death at Sporn
POINT PLEASANT - Ohio
Power Company has agreed 10 pay
an appm,;imatc $7.5 million scttlcmcnl, reporiCdly lite largesl verdict paid in a smgle death in !he
history of West Vtrginia, to the
family of Michael Pasquale.
In Augusl 1987. 23 year-old
Pasquale was killed when he cut
imo an energ1z.ed 2.300-voli
electne cable al the Pltitip Sporn
Power Plan! tn Mason County.
Sporn tS a division of the Ohio
Power Company.
Pasquale was employed by Gallia Refngeralion, which was doing
contra:! work a1 the Sporn facility
for Central Operating Companyan American Elocoic Power subsidiary thai ran the Sporn plant
AI ihe time of his death ,
Pasquale was married and had two
young children, lhe youngest bcmg
seven weeks of age.
Randy Magan, coonscl for
Daplten Pasquale and her family,
filed a suil against the Ohio Power
Company, Central Operating Com·
pony and Gallia Refrigerntion.
Ohio Power and Cenual Openling
were aile~ to have in their common law duly 10 provide Pasquale
wiih a reasonably safe place to
worlc.
In 1990. a Mason County jury
returned a verdict in favor of the
plaintifT and her family. The jury
assessed damages for loss of income and services in the amoun1 of
$1 .174,712 and damages for sorrow. menial anguish and loss of
companionship m the sum of $5

•

million.

The

power

company

defendantS appealed thtS verdicl to
the WeSI Virgm;a Supreme Court of
Appeals.
On May 15 , 1992, the West Virginia Supreme Coon of Appeals
unanimously affinned the jury
decision m a 5-0 vote. Morgan
reponed thai ihcrcaller the power
company defendants abandoned all
further appeals and paid un10 the
plaintiff and her farntly a sum of
approximately $7.3 million . This
amount includes interest from the
date of the verdtct.
"Mrs. Pasquale and her family
are deeply graiCful to ihe Mason

County JUry that n..~ lcd m her favor

She is also gratciul the West Vu
gima Supreme Coon of Appeal;
affirmed the verdict unanimoush·:·
Morgan said. Mrs. Pasquale aiso
hopes )Ob sit"' for al l wor'&lt;ers wtll
be made safer in West V irg m~.a as a
result of thts dectsion, he added.
Morgan declared ih tS ca.o;c was
by far the mosl difficull case he has
ever encountered, but is convinced
the end result JUSbfied the years of
litigation with the power company
defendaniS. Morgan bcUeves the
verdicl and subsequent affinnalion
was a VICtory for CVCf)' work.ing
man and woman and thc1r fam1hes

in West Virginia.

Riffe challenges legality
of July 1 budget cuts
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The Voinovich
administralion has defended the
legality of its decision 10 order
S370 million in budget cut• July I.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, 0 Wheelersburg , said Gov. George
Voinovich may be on shaky legal
gro und wilh the plan, whi c h is
designed to bring the slate budge!
into balance.
Riffe said Friday ihat he understands the law prohibits culling
more than the difference bel ween
esLimated revenues in the fiscal

year staning Ju ly I and the amounl
appropriaied by the Legislature.
He noled that this fiscal year
will end with an $18 million bal ·
ancc.

"How can we say that ihe fiscal
year starting July I is $370 million
oul of balance? The economists
have been wrong before," Riffe
said, referring to forecasters whose
estimates of future revenues are
used in the budget.
Paolo DeMaria. assistant budget
direclor, said ihe law refened to by
Riffe is subjecl to inlerpretation.
Coatiaued on A·Z

•,

\

�Page A2-sunday Times Sentinel

June 7, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

June 7, 1992

--Area deaths-- Voinovich wants litter program extended
Marie C. Taylor
:-.~~LIS- Marie C. Tayb, 80, Gallipolis, died Friday, June 5,
- Born Aug. 30, 1912, 81 Hogsen, W.Va., daughter of the late William
and Nancy Jenkins Crawford, she was a member of lhe Wyona Pente• coslal ClnD'Ch 81 Gallipolis Ferry.
'
S~ was also preN"'ed in death by her husband, Too Crawford, and by
five SISI.erS and one brother.
:
Surviving are. a son, James Gordon of Gallipolis; a brolher, Charles
, Crawford of Gallipolis Fell')'; and two grandchildren.
• Services will be Monday 81 I:30 p.m. in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
: Point PleasanL Burial wiU be in Vion Baptist Cemetery. Friends may call
; at !be funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

~• Hazel V. Wright
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va-Ha:ze! V. Wri_gh~ 100, of Point Pleasant,
• died Saturday, June 6, 1992, foUowmg a long illness.
: She was born October 27, 1891, in Rolland, OH., the daughter of !be
;

• late Cash and Aorence Van Zanl.
: For the last several months, she has been residing in Caren Haven of
; Point Pleasanl
· In addition to her parents, she was precedoo in death by two sisters.
; Survivors include one son. David Wright of Point Pleasan~ six
; grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
.
: Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday, 1:30 p.m., at !be Langsvdle
. Christian Church, Langsvtle, OH., wtlh !be Rev. Robcn Messer offictal: ing. Burial will follow in !be Miles Cemetery, Rutland.
· Friends may call Wilcoxen Funeral Home_Monday from. 7 to 9 p.m. The
; body will be taken to !be church one hour poor to Tuesday s servtce.

.

:One-third of high school
.students dropping behind
. WASHINGTON (AP)- More
. than one-third of high school-age
: Americans have either dropped
: behind their class level or dropped
• out entirely, the Census Bureau
: said Friday in a repon on school
: enrollment in 1990.
The report, entitled ··s,hool
: Enrollment- Social and Econom·.cc Characteristics of Students,"
:)aid 40 pc=nt of boys and 29 per:~ of girls ages 15-17 were eilher
:'one or more grades behind in
· school or had left school wilhout
: graduating.
: It said the 34.8 percent overall
· rate of laggers and dropouts was up
:from 29.1 percent in 1980. That
: occurred despite a decline in !be
· annual dropout rate from 6 percent
: in 1980 to 4 percent in 1990.
The study also found that the
: gap between white students and
: black and Hispanic shldents widens
: as !be youngsters get older.
Amoog pupils ages &amp;-8, the rate
; of !bose falling behind their age
: group was 22 percent for all three
'groups. The major changes occur in
the next few years, and by the time
they're teenagers, the dropout-drop
behind rate was 32 percent for
whites, 48 percent for blacks and
48.9 percent for Hispanics.
·'A great deal of falling behind
in school occurs at an early age for
black and H1spanic students,"
report author Robert Kaminski
said.
In !be high school group, 53.3

percent of black males were either
bchmd or dropped out, compared
with 52.8 percent of Hispanic
males, 44.4 percent of Hispanic
females , 42.7 percent of black
females. 37.4 per,ent of white
males and 26.3 percent of white
females.
The dropout rate alone was 8
percent for H1spanics, 5.1 percent
for blacks and 3.8 percent for
whites.
Economic stabls was also a factor in attendance, with the 1990
high school dropout rate reaching 6
percent for children from families
with incomes less than $20,000, but
only I percent for those wilh fami ly incomes greater than $40,000.
Among 3- and 4-year-olds, 30
percent from homes with family
mcomes less than $20,000 were
enrolled in nursery school, compared with 59 percent from families
earning $40,000 or more.
The repon also found:
-Only 49 percent of Hispanic
children ages 3 to 5 were enroUed
in preschool or kinderganen, compared with 57.8 percent of black
children and 60 percent of whites.
- Fony-one percent of whites
ages 20 and 21 were enrolled m
college, compared with 28.4 percent of blacks and 27.2 percent of
Hispanics.
-Enrollment m grades 1-8
stood at 29.3 million m 1990.
There were 12.8 million in high
school and 13.6 million in college.

Continued rrom A-1
_ __
Riffie••• __::_==.::=-:.:..:::.:.:.::....:___
But he added, " We feel comfortable with what we are doing .
Essentially, we're trying to cover
what we lmow will be slate obligations.''

Voinovich said Thursday that
the deficit, including the soaring
costs of Mooicaid that weren't fully
anuci pated, will be at least $370
mi11 ion and that he plans to order
cuts of that amount on July I.
He said he stiU hopes Riffe and
otller leaders will reconsider !heir
refusal 10 increase taxes on
cigarettes and alcoholic beverages.
Adoption of such taxes would
eliminate or at least ease the sting

of major 'uts in imponant areas
such as higher ooucation, he said.
Riffe sa1d Voinovich should
slow down because all possible
alternatives to cuts haven 'l been
fully examined. He recalled that in
1982, temporary taxes were adopted to deal with a similar deficit
"A II I am asking is that we be
sure we know what we are doing.
I've sent word to the governor that
I will not run from my responsibilities, and I'm no~" he said.
But he added, "The Legislature
and the people of this state are not
in any mood for any additional
taxe s. '·

CWA's proposed boycott
of AT&amp;T gaining support
WASHINGTON (AP)- Mem bers of olher unions are ready to
join the Communications Workers
of America in a boycott of AT&amp;T
if contract negotiations reach an
impasse.
The Teamsters and United Auto
Workers, two of the nation 's
largest unions, said Friday they
would transfer long dislance service to another carrier as soon as
CWA gave !be word.
CWA and the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
have been working wilhout a contract since Sunday, when their
three-year pact with American
Tdephone and Telegraph expired
CWA President Morton Bahr
ruled out a strike over !be weekend
and CW A spokesman Jeff Miller
said the union would not call for
the boycott over the weekend,
eitheo'.
AT&amp;T reponed progress in talks
Friday. which were to continue all
wedtcnd.
The stickiest issues have been
WIICS. pensions and the com~y·s
~t of waters losing JObs to
recbnology.
MiUer said more than 60,000
CWA members have signed cards
allowing 8lllllha long distance carrier to take over their residential
service. He wouldn't name the
aJternau carrier, but the union has
iodicated it would not be an

adamantly non-union company.
Some individual IBEW mem bers and locals also are participat-

ing in the CWA-organ1zed cardsigmng, said IBEW spokesman
Bob Stander, who said his union
also is employing other laetics.
" In the end we will each do
what we have to do to put lhe most
pressure on AT&amp;T to get an agreement that is just and fair," Stander
said.
"The
Teamsters
stand
foursquare with the Communications Workers, and if !bey ask us 10
be a part of the electronic picket
line and transfer our service away
from AT&amp;T, we will do i~" said
David Mitthell, assistant to Teamsters president Ron Carey.
The Teamsters Unioo, witll 643
local offices and 1.5 million members, generates a tremendous
amount of long dislance business,
Mitthell said.
United
Auto
Workers
spokesman Reg McGhee said his
1.4 miUion·member union also will
suppon CWA's boycott.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich says a litter prevention and recycling program due to expire next year
should be continued, but he has not
decided whether to seek changes in
the tax that pays for it
The program, supported by $10
million a year from a litter tax on
caporatioos, will end in June 1993
urdess extended by legisi8101S.
Voinovich said he suppons continued operation of the litter office,
which is part of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
However, a special committee
he appointed to recommend better
ways of running state ~ovemment

concluded the focus of the litter
program was unclear and said tile
tax used to raise mOI)ey for it ought
to he reconsidered.
The Operations Improvement
Task Force said !bat if the program
is maintained , its focus should he
shifted from litter prevention to
waste reduction and recycling.
''Consider repladn~ its suppon·
ing tax with higher sohd waste disposal charges to directly affect !be
producers of waste and unrecyclable materials," the task force
said.
Voinovich outlined his support
for extending the program in a

news release.
"Government has the responsibility to take the lead and set an
exam ple for the private sector,
local govermnents and its citizens
on !be imponance of recycling and
liner prevention," he said.
Michael Dawson, a Voinovich
executive assistant, said !be natural
resources department believes the
program is working well.
"That particular program raises
about $10 million a year, and
between 70 {perceot) and 75 percent or it goes right back to local
communities for !hem to administer
their recycling and liner programs," Dawson said.

Sunday, June 7

" It's a btg help to local govern·
ment entities who are trying to
fight !be war on litter and also get
involved in imporlant recycling
programs."
.
Dawson said no decision had
been reached on the task force proposal to consider replacement of
!be tax.
Since its inception in 1980',
money for tbe program has come
from a two-level surcharge on the
corporate franchise tax. AU corpo•
rations pay a base amount depending on their income, while companies that make or sell liner stream
products pay higher rates.
·

Accu- Weather~ forecast for daytime conditions and

8y The Associated Press
After anolher cold front hit Ohio
MICH .
last night to bring increasing
cha nc es for more showers and
thunderstorms it will continue on
Sunday.
Wet weather wiU likely contint
PA
ue over eastern and soulhem Ohio
mainly during the ftrst part of the
IMansfieldlat ' l·•
day. Stronger high pressure will
nose into the lower Great Lakes
Sunday afternoon bringing dry air
into !be state and ending the showery wealher.
Around tbe nation
•lcolumbuslat'l
Fog shrouded much of the East
Coast and Midwest early Saturday.
It rained in New England.
Forecasters predicted more ram
Sunday in New England and parts
of !be Mississippi Valley, while !be
seaso n's first heat wave was
expec ted in the Southeast, with
W. VA
hi ghs in lhe mid-90s.
Friday evening, 3.5 inches of
KY .
mm feU in 45 minutes near Prosser,
Ncb., and large hail fell al Fullerton. Neb. Tornadoes touchoo down
in Colorado, Nebmska and Kansas,
,,,~·- : .··
but
there were no report; of injuries
Showets T-slorms Rarn Flumes Snow
Ice
Sunny Pr Cloudy Cloudy
or serious damage.
Vis Associsttld Preu GraphcsNel
C1992 Accu-Weathar . Inc
Heavy
rainfall
caused
widespread noocting of streets and
Extended lorecast:
Soutb-Ceotral Obio
highways in New Jersey.
Tuesday through Thursday:
Sunday, showers and thunderRainshowcrs and lhunderstonns
Tuesday, fair. Lows in the 50s. n tended over the Atlantic coastal
stonns likely. The high in the lower
Highs lower 70s 10 low er 80s . states, th e Appalachians, the Oh1o
80s. The chance of rain is 60 perWednesday,
a chance of showers Valley, the Mississippi Vall ey,
cent. Sunday night, partly cloudy.
and thunderstorms. Lows mid -51}; much of the Plains and much of the
A chance of showers and lhunderto mid -60s. Highs mostly in the Rock.ies.
storms early. The low around 60.
80s. Thursday, a chance of showThe chance of rain is 50 percent.
ers. Lows in the 50s. Highs m the
Monday, mostly sunny. The high
70s.
POMEROY - Marriage lice nses
around 80.
have been issuoo in Meigs County
Probate Court to Johnnte Mac
Brown, 28, Langsville, and Jane
Bare, 41, Dexter; Rodney Dewayne
King , 28, Pomeroy, and Misty Gay
Van Meter, 18, Middleport ; and
Homer
Stephen Hill, Jr ., 31.
GALLIPOLIS - "W1th school ever botheroo by a stranger in a car,
Pomeroy,
and Beverly Jane Wil out, parents should take special or if th ey should ever see a playson,
32,
Pomeroy.
steps to ensure the safety of their mate getting into a stranger's car,
children," Gallia County Sheriff they should get the license number
Dennis Salisbury said. "You can of lhe car and a description, if posmake the summer a fun tim e for Sible," ~Ic sheriff said. "Remember
CLEVELAND' (AP) - Here are
your children by making sure they to report any incidents to law Friday night' s Ohio Lottery selec follow some Simple guidelines for enforcement officials immediately. uons:
their safety."
"As parents, you should know Pick 3 Numbers
6-1 -2
With increased tim e on their the character of the adults who
(Si&lt;, one, two)
hands without supervision, it IS become frie ndly with your chil especially imponant to know where dren," Salisbury notal. "Know the Pick 4 Numbers
3-0-0-7
your children are at all times, Salis- background of babysittcrs or any(tlvee,zero,zero,seven)
bury said. You should also caution one who has charge of your chil Buckeye 5 Numbers
your children about contact with dren in your absence."
12-15-30-32-37
strangers, he added.
The mo st important thing for
(twelv e, fifteen, thirty, thirtY·
"Remind your children never lo ch ildren to know is !bat there are
enter a stranger's car or house , certain people they can depend on two, lhiny-seven)
The Super Lono jackpot is $20
never to accept money or gifts from - parents, law enforcement offi million.
strangers, and never lo lei a cers and teachers.
stranger touch them or join them in
"The sheriff's office is co nplay," Salisbury said.
cerned about the safety of all chil Children should play in groups, dren," Salisbury concluded. "Let's
never alone or in vacant buildm~s make this a safe summer for everyor alleys. When heading to a publtc one."
place, th ey should always go with a
friend.
Salisbury urged parents to ask
[heir children to tell them of any
(USPS 525-100!
unusual actions of grown-ups they
Publiahed each Sunday, 826 Third Ave.,
Gallipolia, Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley
may encounter.
PubliahinJ Company/Multi!Mdia , Inc
"Teach them that 1f they are
Second clua po~~t.age ~id al C&amp;Jiipolia,

•

ditionally held by college ami htgh work or diJf&gt;IJ\ lr1r tl 1t: lf kHh ."
She \t!HJ n•un: UJ \ trJHil.:r"-. die Lry school students scck ine sum mer
mg
ttJ pi.~wfl rrtf1r•; 1\.trrl\ , but many
employment.
uf
th
e •I L:Tfl"' JU"'I &lt;:tr ~.: n 't good
The youths turn to summer
employment programs that already enough Ur rc'&gt;Cll And lcwcr people
arc huy1ng .
serve many, he said.
Jont.:\ ~ a•d he'~ not umvmccd
··The vast majority of young the
ceo nom y 1\ ra.ov c.: r1 ng .
sters, you're going to find !bern on
"
It alway\ 'recovers ' man elec !be streets," Herron said.
tion
year."
he sa&gt; d.
The rise in unemployment
Jones and his wife arc living on
spawns other increases.
her
income from an insurance comEvelyn Pappas, who helps run
pany.
They moved into a small er
Pappy's Pawn Shop on the city's
apartment
and sold one of their
soulh side, blames the bad econocars.
They
have
been married two
my for a significant boost in cusyears and had planned to start a
lDmers.
"We see lots of new customers family but will wait now.
They are depleting lhw savings
every day," she said. "Many peoaccount,
money they had mtended
Continued
from
A-1
ple
are
coming
in
and
trying
to
sell
••• ---=:.::.::=.:..:..:.:...:..:....:..___ _ __
to
use
for
a downpayment on a
anything they can, just to get
house.
director
of
the
Gallia
County
ComNational Professional Placement
enough money for gas to drive to
Association, a position he held for munity Improvement Corporation,
Continued rrom A-1
was president of the Gallipolis
two years.
"Since placement was my num - Developmental Center Advtsory
ber one objective, being named Board, and has been a trustee of !be at the hearing by a number of of !be Gallia County Community
national chainnan was one of the Area Agency on Aging for south- speakers, while opposition from the Improvement Corporation, said the
things I've enjoyed !be most about eastern Ohio and of Serenity Sierra Club - which objectoo pri- scheduling of the PUCO hearings
House. the shelter for abused marily lD the placing of fill material were "surprising" and somewhat
my career," he said.
But there are other accomplish- women and children. He is a mem- in the wetlands - was submitted in ve~ing to local leaders pushing for
the scrubbers, but added that he
ments Hairston can point to, both ber of several organizations at lhe wnting.
Michael
D.
Gheen,
chief
of
the
was
optimistic !be PUCO approval
of which have affected the lives of University of Rio Grande and !be
corps'
Regulatory
Functions
would
be forthcoming.
southeastern Ohio's young people. Buckeye Hills Career Center AdviBranch,
said
in
announcing
the
"We're
hopeful, but gee whiz,
An abiding interest in sports led sory Comminee, and is currently
issuance
of
the
permits
that
"the
we !bought the corps approval was
him in !be '50s to found the Ohio vice president of the Gallia County
anticipatoo benefits outweigh all the last thing neOOed," Fowler said,
Valley Conference, an athletic Planning Commission.
Upon notification of his reasonable forseeable detriments adding !bat he doesn't expect envileag ue that started with smaller
high schools in Lawrence and appointment to the Senior Citizen and !bat authorization for Ibis pro- ronmental objections to take a role
Scioto counties and continues Hall of Fame, Hairston was the ject would not be contrary to the in the hearings.
"llhink the hearings relate more
today with several West Virginia recipient of a citation from Ohio pub~c interest."
Local
officials
were
concentcd
to
the
people who use a great deal
teams among its members.
Senate President Stanley J.
of
electrictty,
such as the manufacIn 1985 he founded and has Aronoff, sponsored by Sen. Jan that the publicity surrounding the
turers,
and
because
the ~ttle guy
corps permits would lead people to
since served as president of the
Michael Long.
Gallia County Academic Excel"You arc, indeed, a remarkable believe that if approval was grant- needs to be heard," he remarkoo.
lence Foundation, which annually
individual, combining civic con - ed, the path was cleared for the "The PUCO wants to please both
sides, and it's their responsibility to
recognizes teachers and students
cern and commitment with selfless Gavin scrubbers.
hear what the public has to say."
lack
Fowler,
executive
director
who have excelled in the classinitiative to become a dynamic
room. The AEF is widely credited
leader in the Gallipolis communi wilh instilling pride and dedication
ty," the citation reads.
in the county school system.
''WiUingly giving of your time,
After completing his duties as
energy and abililles, you have
Gallia Local superintendent,
worked tireles sly to betler the
Hairston was officially retired, but
world around you, and you have
he likes to refer to himself as "'self- earned the respect and esteem of
employal." And if you lhink retire- many," the ci1ation continual. "We
Pusher Mm... r LllZPN
Sell-l'ro)I&lt;Ued Mower LliZSN
ment meant he just went fishing , arc certain that, in the years to
guess again: Hairston has main - come, you will continue lD display
tainoo his memberships in a num - lhc same unwavering commitment
ber of organizations and continues for which you hav e been recently
to serve oo a number of committees bonored."
Ust 469.95
list J69.t5
and organizations. His wife is in
The Hairstons are the parents of
nursing administration at Holzer lhrec children: Jane Barre of LoveMedical Center.
land, Ohio, Anne Seibel of Akron,
Locally, he served as interim and Jim Hairston of Mansfield.
$70
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TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - One
person was killed and at least II
IDJurOO in multiple vehicle crash on
!be Ohio Turnpike early Saturday.
At least 12 vehicles were
involvoo, said Renee Patton, a di s~atcher at the Berea post of the
Stale Highway Patrol.
Traffic was being rerouted
around the crash site, using the
berms, Ms. Patton said. The tum pike was not closed.
: The identities of the vi ctim s
were not immooiately released.
· Dispatcher Rene Kubisch said
that heavy fog may have caused the
crash.

399 W. Main

992-2164

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Store with • All Kindt of Stuff"

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Pomeroy

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Anniversary Sale

Ohio 45631. Enl.trtd u aecond clah
m~~ilint mall.er al Pomeroy, Ohio, Poll

Hospital news

SAVE

o4 HP commen:lal -

Paul Davies Jewelers

Sheriff issues safety tips
for kids out of school

LAWN·BOY

o4 HP commen:lal •

in the 90s were recorded in the
Southeast, Texas a¢ Calilornia.
The high temperature for the
nation Friday was 108 degrees 81
Gila Bend, Ariz., Lake. Havasu
City, Ariz., and Parter, Ariz.

Licenses issued

Gavin...

tion.
La.&lt;t year, the Taft Group recog nizoo Hewlett-Packard as the second-largest corporate giver in tile
United States. The company's 1991
philanthropic grants totaled $71
million with about 87 percent or
$62 million going to elementary,
secondary, and higher education.

Plains and Rockies.
Readings in the 80s were
recorded from the mid-Atlantic
states, lhrough !be Ap~hians 10
the Mississippi River, southern
Plains, Nevada and Oregon. Highs

Weather

State

been delivered to Meig s H1gh
School consists of 28 HP 48S SCIentific graphing calculators for
teachers to use in classrooms. an
overhead projector that shows the
teacher's HP 48SX display on a
classroom screen, an HP 82240B
infrared print !bat lets students produce output wirelessly from tlleir
calculators, complete teacher-train ing mat erial s developed by th e
Oregon State University Calculus
Curriculum Project, and a program
development lmk that lets teacher.;
develop custom software on a personal com puter , and then load it
into eithe r one of the student or
teacher calculators.
Last year Hewleu-Packard gave
similar grant packages to 40
sc hools in communities in which
the company has manufacturing
facil1ties.
As cx plamcd by Daniel Terpack, ge neral manager of the
Hewell- Packard Corvallis Division
wh1ch manufactures the calculators, "grafting calculators are an
cxcitmg tool for teachers and students in that they help teachers
illustrate fundamental concepts of
math and science, improve classroom productivity and suppon the
development of basic skiDs."
The classroom-calculator program was developOO in cooperation
wnh the Oregon Slate University
Calculus Curriculum Project, one
of several initiatives in higher
mathematics, curriculum innovatioo and development that is fund -

Highs in the 60s were recorda!
Saturday for nonhero New England
and the nonhero Plains. Temperatures in !be 70s were seen in southem New England , New York and
Pennsylvania, and in the central

...

Jones is among an increasing
number of Ohioans looking for
wort, Employment Services says.
The agency said Friday that !be
state's unemployment rate in May
rose to 7.3 percent, its highest point
tn four years. April's rate was 6.9
percent.
Keith Ewald, director of the
bureau 's labor market information
division, said there was employment growth but many more people
were looking for work.
Jim Herron, manager of th e
Employment Services office, said
more adults now are competing for
restaurant work and other jobs tra-

SAVE

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Page-A3

Wet weather expected to continue around Ohio

OH 10 Weather

Former marketing director says 'it's tough
to stay optimistic on unemployment line'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
fonner marketing director who has
been out of work for a year says
it's difficult to remain optimistic.
Jamie Jones of Columbus said
he thought he would bounce back
after the home improvement company he worked for went out of
business. That was in May 1991 ,
and Jones was still looking for a
job last week.
"For the first three months I
kept a very positive outlook,"
Jones, 22, said while waiting at an
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services offtee. "But lately it's gotten
very tough."

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�June 7, 1992

Commentary and perspective

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant, WV

Documents show U.S. aware
Iraq was terrorist haven

June 7, 1992
Page-A4

Democrats unravel Bush's foreign policy
A Dl'rialon of
~K.
IllS nlrd A..,, GaJUpoU., Oblo

Ill Court SL, l'llmeroy, Oblo

(614) 991-ll~

(614) 446-~l
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

HOBART WILSON JR.

Assistant Publls..r-Controlltr

EReutlnEdllor

A MEMBER of The Associat£d Press, and the American

Newspaper Publilben AsSOl:i.ation.
LETIERS OF OPINION an welcome. They sbould be len tban
300 wonls. All letters an subject to editinB and must be oigncd with
name, lddnu and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be
publisbed. Letten 11bould be in good taste, addressing issues, not
pcnonllities.

Vice presidency is a
farm system for future
presidential candidates
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Nearly 33 million primary election voters had a
hand in choosing the presidenlial nominees, and hundreds of thousands
are signing the petitions that will make it a three-way race. Now, wilh a
single vote apiece, Bill Clinton, Ross Perot and President Bush will pick
the candidales most likely to succeed one of them .
In seven of the last eight presidential elections, at least one of the
major pany presidential nominees had served as vice president flfSt. Five
of the last nine presidents had been vice presiden~ three of them by succession, two by election.
Jokes and gibes about !he vice presidency are a trad1tion. Vice President Dan Quayle is a staple for the one-lillCIS of late night television,
especially since his family values criticism of TV single mother Murphy
Brown.
For all of that, the vice presidency has become a farm system for future
pres1dential candidates.
In h1s book, "Crapshoo~" author Jules Witcover calls the office lhe
most important stepping stone to the presidency, and says nobody who
holds it "can be dism1ssed out of hand, as once was the case, as a serious
presidenual prospect.··
So the selections for this year's tickets- Bush has said Quayle will be
his running mate again- could be major factors in the presidential campaign of 19%.
A University of Vtrginia study, led by a fanner vice presidential candidate. calls the selection system "often awkward, sloppy and imr:rfect,"
but says it ought to remain a one-man choice by the presidential nominees.
That repon says presidential nominees should deal more carefully and
methodically w1th the choice of running mates than has sometimes been
the case, and should make sure they are of presidential caliber, "given the
strong likelihood of succession.''
The commission was headed by Edmund S. Muskie, the Democratic
vice presidential candidate in 1968 and a fmalist for the ticket in 1972,
with his own futile pres1dential campaign sandwiched between. He says
presidenual nominees need the flexibi lity to choose compatible running
mates who can hel p the ticket politically.
So the commission doesn't advocate turning the choice over to open
conventions, to choose from a list of prospects acceptab le to the presidential nominee. But it recommends that presidential nominees meet with
prospective running mates well in advance of the national conventions,
and make public the names of the people they're considering.
J1mmy Caner in 1976 and Walter Mondale in 1984 did it that way.
Bush did no~ saying that to name his prospects would have been humiliating to the losers. Muskie. mteCVJewed but not chosen m 1976, said he'd
enjoyed the attcnuon.
The com missiOn sa1d a more public process would infonn voters and
ehmmate "the kind of surprises which thrust a vice presidenlial candidate
illlo a campaign for which neither the candidate n&lt;X the electorate nor lhc
press IS prepared ."
That's what happened wilh Bush's surprise selection of Quayle in
I9S8.
The Muskic panel also recommended a 48-hour break between nation al convention votes on the presidential and vice presidential nominations,
"to buy time and extend the scrutiny."
Clinton set up a vice presidential search operation nearly a monlh ago,
with Warren Chnstophcr. a d1plomat and attorney in three Democratic
admmistrations. tn charge of 11. Christopher, a Los Angeles attorney, has
hcrn talking w!lh prospective nommccs, and Clinton said Wednesday his
prospect list is shorter. But he wouldn 'I say how many names are on iL
lie's said to be planning to announce his choice prior to the Democratic Nationa l Convention. which opens July 13 in New Y&lt;Xk.
Since Peror is an mdqx:ndcnt wilhout a party, he doesn't really have a
process to deal with. He could opt for a late choice, after the major parties
&lt;rrc done with their convcn(jon.s. He's gol an interim running mate, James
Stockdale. a retired admiral and Vietnam POW, because it is a ballot filing requirement in some states.
In the end, as the Musk1e panel noted, not many votes seem to be
affected by the No. 2 candidates. There are exceptions, as when Lyndon
B. Johnson boosted John F. Kennedy's ucket in crucial Texas in 1960.
But the vtec presidency seldom is an issue.
. "For reasons left to practitioners of psychiatry, political and otherw1sc," Witcover writes, "voters arc s1mply not moved by the record that
nearly all vice presidcnt.s now become the presidential nominees of their
parties and that half of them have become president over the last half century."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics ror more than 25 years.

Berry's World

to underpin lra9's military
- A June 21, 1990, Custo~s
mach1ne. Saddam s bad cred1t memo obtamcd hy ou~ a"octate
debts alone w1ll cost taxpayers $1 .9 Dean Boyd outlmcs a stalled threebillion.
.
.
, year probe of Eugene Klc1n ,. for A Vital cog m th1s scheme was mcrly of the solid rocket dJvJ sJon
the once-obscure Atlanta branch of of Rocketdync . Suspected of
Banca Nazionale del Lavoro. ''work related to a maJor lraq1
QC
Among other things, investigators defense project ," JncludJOg the
believe the branch may have ille - alleged '' illegal oponatton ~~
gaily divcncd agricultural credits to Condor II tochmcal mtss1le data,
financelraqiweaponsdeals.lntry- Klein's prosecutiOn had hccn
ing to document this claim, Rep. authomed by a U.S. Attorney m
Charl ie Rose, D-N .C. , has made Texas in 1990. States the memo:
the most dramatic disclosure to "(Customs officials in Washmg·
President Bush 10 months before dale.
ton) have advised us of their rclucIraq invaded Kuwait - states that
Last Tuesday, he presented evi- tancc to conduct certaUl invcstiga"!he United States should con..sidcr dencc to Congress showing that !he tive activities related to (Kiem 's
sales of non-lethal military assis- third largest recipient of U.S . company). As such the ... invcstitance" to Iraq.
tobacco credits for Iraq, Casalee gation ... is approaching a stands till
"NSD-26" became the foreign America Corp. of Nonh Carolina, due to the conflict." Earlier this
policy gospel of an administratiOn is wholly owned by a Swiss com- year Customs said the probe was
be nt on building up the Baghdad pany with a long history of ongoing, bul five years after it was
dictator. Moreover, investigators weapons sales to the M1ddle East launched, no indictment ha s been
believe the spirit of NSD-26 sound- Documents show !hat the U.S. gov- filed. Klein denies everylhing.
cd the din nerbell for companies ernment had previOus knowledge
- Ha1dar Darbouti 1s an Iraqi
across the country looking to cash of this. but saw no risk in extending national currently under investigain on the Iraqi arms Irade.
as much as $16.6 million in credits tion for allegedly providing
The appeasement approach to Casalce's four U.S . employees weapons components to both Libya
dates back to Ronald Reagan and in 1988-89 alone. Casalee America and Iraq. August 1990 telephone
continued as Bush, both as vice officials declined comment on records from hi s Houston office
president and president, pressed Rose's presentation.
show a se ri es of early-morning
government agencies to provide
As these and other tangled webs calls placed to a number answered
Saddam billions in credits, v1tal of Iraq-gate begin to unravel, at Bolling Air Force base in Washintelligence and sensitive tcchnolo- we've learned of some other loose ington, D.C., the days just priorand
gy, all of which in the end served Utreads worth following:
subsequent to the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwa1t. Barbouti's lawyers claim
their client had an employee seeking a Job at the base. Other sources
dispute the claim.
- An alleged cable from the
Israeli Embassy in Washington to
the Israe li consu lat e in Houston
dated Feb. 4, 1992, reads: "It is
apparent that the U.S. administration JS currently reluctant to proceed with prosecutions (against
Barbouti) due to potential political
emharr.:~.ssmc nt prior to their clcc·
tions." Although the Israeli
•
Embassy denies such a memo was
ever written, suc h sentiments
would not be surprising. Sources
close to the Barbouti probe say fed eral agents have repeatedly complained about Justice Department
foot-dragging in the two-year-old
case.
Ultimately, by tugging on
eno ugh loose threads, the
Democrats are betting they have a
shot at exposing the foreign policy
president as the Emperor without
-~~-Clothes.
· -.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated columETQ.o
nists for Uniled Feature SyndiilU ~~'&lt;\€' &lt;Zll"~ F&lt;(lr V&lt;o&lt;!niiTAJ-Tfl.{&lt;i-!1&lt;0.'1-.~
cate, Inc.

Hong Kong tailors understand
that an enure. sutt can unravel 1f
you keep tuggmg on a loose thread.
The Iraq-gate scandal is a suit of a
hundred loose threads.
With each new tug, the threadbareness of Bush's foreign policy
toward Iraq becomes more visible:
the blind seduction of Saddam even
after the end of the Iran-Iraq war,
anduptotheeveofhisinvasionof
Kuwa11. As Rep. Sam Gejdenson,
D-Conn .. puts it, it was "a foreign
policy blunder of !he first order."
The next chapter in this unfold ing saga will come with the expected appomtment of an independent
counsel to investigate alleged criminal conduct in the administrntion's
blunder and subsequent cover-up.
At that point, the not -ready -for prime-time scandal will become a
political main evenL
Already there are signs that Bill
Clinton and Ross Perot will
unsheathe these charges this fall.
"l'm not a real believer in silver
bullets, but in terms of bringing
down Bush's positives in foreign
policy and scratc hin g off the
Teflon on his foreign policy expert1se, this IS doing that," one Democratic strategist told us.
One of the "silver bullets" is
"National Security Dircctivc-26."

only a portion of which the admtnistration has agreed to declassify.
The most stanling line in the October 1989 document _ signed by

B

J

kA d

n erSOn
and
M' h l B' t •
lC ae lnS eln
J

4ti\i~~""'

Local celebrations - May 22-25, 1992
As everyone knows this week - Lydia Thompson DeLong.
end was very busy for everyone,
The class of 1933 was representespecially the writer. First of all ed by Katherine Raub Welsh,
there were graduations at Meigs, Louise Hartung Bearhs, Henry
and Southern High Schools. Later
Eastern held its graduation ceremonies. Many fine students have
graduated and ventured into the
Wells and yours truly, Fred Oow.
world.
There were 351 dinners served.
The graduate will see his class
m toto for the last time. It is amaz- The la st grad uatin g class of
ing that you will never see some of Pomeroy was the class of 1967.
your classmates again. For the most The banquet served by Gilmore's
part they will scatter to the high Res taurant was excellent and
winds and 10 years or more from everyone en joyed it. The program
now many will be living in differ- wa s handled by Ed Knchen and
Frank Vaughan gave Ihe invocation
ent states.
I can recall making this state - and the benediction. Everyone
ment at my graduation ceremony seemed to have a g&lt;XXI time.
Sunday. May 24, Grace Episcoand it was a true statement This is
a sad experien~:te but a true one. pal Church had a celebration for its
There have been several classmates !50 th anniversary of the founding
whom I have not seen since gradu- of the chun:h. Approximately 115
ation.
individuals attended this celebraOn this weekend was the gradu- tion. It was pleasing to again meet
ations as mentioned above, and the with Lee Miller (1983-1990) and
Alumni banquets of Pomeroy, Mid- Robert Leake, (1936-1939), fanner
dleport and Southern. There was Rectors of the c hurch . Harold
also a meeting of the Sugar Run Deeth, a fonner Rector sent his letGrade School which was reported ter of regret. Charles Baird repreto have been a success. The writer, sented his father, Charles J. Baird.
having been a graduate of Pomeroy Rector from 1940 to 194 7. The
High School, attended the 1992 pastor of the Lutheran chun:h, Rev.
reunion held at Meigs High School Laura Shreffler was also presenl
Rev. AI MacKenzie and his
on May 23. The oldest graduate
present was Maria Foster of the lovely wife, Dot MacKenzie also
class of 1922 (70 th ). Lucille attended this celebration . AI
Swackhammer was present, a grad- MacKenzie has on many many
uate m 1925. Helen Smith, a for - occasions helped the church in the
mer school teacher, accompanied pasL Thanks AI and Dot for commg.
Lucille.
The writer wishes to give hi s
Others anending were Nanga
Fleming Roberts, Class of 1927; personal accolades to Eleanor
Mary E. Daniels Roush, class of Smi th and Ada Titus who engi1927; Ceci l Heilman. class of neered and directed this affair in its
1929; Harnct Thompson class of enlirety along with Rev. Roy
1930 and Evelyn Wolford. Hunt- Myers and his wife, Benetta. Also
ington, WV, class of 1931. The assisting were Nancy Reed and Jim
60th rcun1on of the class of 1932 Titus. Special mention should be
had the following graduates pre- given toP. 1. Harris, Leesa and
sent Virginia Heilman, Mary Hz- Mark Murphey, Mary Caroline
abeth Chapman, Lillian Gloeckner Wiley, Kathy Reed, Rita Lewis,
Rich of Morgantown, WV, Man:el- Laurie Reed, Annie Chapman, and
la Baker, Harlan Wehrung, Eileen Mary Powell, of the choir. Jim
Ray Wchrung, Oscar Qualls and Lochary with his wonderful voice

Fred W. Crow

also assisted as did Yonicc MiUcr.
Cline Dailey played the organ.
Many leuers were sent to former
parishioners. Charlotte Nye
McCulloch, Dorothy Russell Farnham sent letters of regret. Bill
McQuigg and Betty Ward Mecs
both telephoned their regrets .
Emma Lou Keehne Sweeney and
Bob Slagle sent contributions and
regrets.
Some of the fanner parishioners
visiting were Martha and Bob
Hamm, Chillicothe; Eugene Wolfe,
Cleveland, Jean McKay, the fanner
Bea Douglas, and Ramona Compton, Athens. All in all the ceremony
was very moving and it was a pleasure to see many of the old fnends
again.
On Monday, May 25 !he writer
visited two cemeteries where his
relatives are buried. My wife,
Eleanor, Aunt Lily, and grandparents, Dr. Richard Owen and Uda
Spencer Owen are interred at the
Beech Grove Cemetery. As always,
I would pause at these graves with
many memones pertinent to my
wife and aunt. 1 did not know my
grandparents who immigrated to
this country before 1900. In looking about you could see the waves
of Edgar and Margretta Erwm, the
Hart Stansbury family and many
other old timers.
There is quite a different feel ing involved in visiting the grave
sites of loved ones and friends. It
always seems that there is a qUJet
calm feeling involved that docs not
occur in any other place. One can·
not help but notice the many flowers, plants and other objects
appearing on the different graves. It
is sad to notice that some graves
did not contain any evidence of
. friends or relatives visiting them.
Time and distance do cause
changes in family lives and when
you think of it, life is very short.
Nevenheless, one's grave does create a most solemn feeling especially when he has been close to the
deceased.
In Beech Grove there are many

graves of th e Karr fami ly. These
arc all relatives of Eleanor and I
knew most of them . There were
flowers on eac h grave. The only
remaining male members of the
Karr family in Meigs County are
Horace and Paul Karr and thCJr
children. I have attended reunions
of the Karr family when there were
many descendants of Thomas Karr,
fanner Superintendent of Meigs
School present.
The last cemetery which I viSll ·
cd was the Letart Cemetery. A
great number of Crows are buried
th ere. Grandpa Charles H. and
Mary Virginia Crow along with ll)Y
uncles, George, Burt, Will, Tom
and Harry Crow, their wives and
some of their siblings· graves arc
located in lh1s cemetery. Both my
father, Judge Fred W. Crow and
my mother, Maud Crow arc
interred there . Again , the same
feeling !hat I had in Beec h Grove
cemetery was al so present during
my visit to Letart Cemetery.
Both the Letart and the Beech
Grove Ccmcrcries arc we ll kept
and md1viduals m charge or t.hcse
cemctencs should be congratulated
for the~ efforts.
On Monday, May 25, I got a
tour of Bald Knob Cemetery, the
baseball diamond m Portland, the
Gayle Price farm and beautiful
down town Stivcrsville.
Rupe, I had one disturbmg feeling on May 25 and that is why docs
the government screw up your cal~
endar by having all holidays fall on
a Monday? In my book !hey should
fall on lhe anniversary date and not
on a date convcnien1 for government employees. Enough said.
Carry on.
Editor's note - Long-time
Altorney Fred W, Crow is the
contributor of a weekly column
for Tbe Sunday Times-Senlinel.
Readers wishing to applaud, criticize or comment on any subject
(except religion or politics) are
encouraged to write to Mr,
Crow, in care oflbis newspaper,

Death penalties and polygraphs
-

~~
ill
1991 by ~EA .

Ill(

"Go to ths American Embassy In Port-auPrince."

I wasn't on death row- as
Robert Ke1th Coleman was when I took my he detector lest.
But after 11 was over, I walked
away mtstakenly co~vmced I had
flunked. It 1S a deb1htaung, dehumamzmg expenence •. even though
you know you are telling,the truth.
A friend of Coleman s S&amp;ld the
conv1cted Vtrgtma murderer was
" devastated" when told he had
faded the polygraph on May 20,
because n meant mevuable execu·
'

tion within hours.
Coleman strode sioically to his
death later that day, insisting wilh a

Ch k St
UC
One
quiet passion that he was innocent
of raping his sister-in-law and stabbing her to death in a tiny rural Virginiacomm unity.
Seven years ago, l had insisted
on taking a polygraph after charging a Delaware state law-enforce-

ment officer with abusive lreatment, which he denied.
Obviously, one of us was lying.
He refused to take a polygraph. I
look it and was relieved when a
slate official said I had "passed
with flying colors." The officer
was suspended for three days.
If I had flunked the polygraph,
though it would have come down
to his 'word against mine, even
though my wife had wimessed the
stale trooper's abusive treatment
The criminal justice
., system almost

never takes the word of an adversary to a law enforcement officer
especially if the adversary is black
and !he officer is white, as the Simi
Valley. Calif., jury proved.
But most suspec!S don't gel the
kid-glove treatment that accused
police officers routinely receive
from juries. Of the 739,763 inmates
in federal and state prisons a minimumof5 percenl-36,oo0-are
innocenl, according to estimates of
several nationally prominent legal
experts whom I have interViewed.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel- Page-A5

VOTING IN THE STREET - Michael
Davlovuic, left, a member or the local election
commission, collects a ballol from an elderly
woman in Basove, Czechoslovakia, Saturday.
Davlovuic was collecting votes from people wbo

could nol make il to lhe election polls. Clechs
and Slovaks wrapped up a 2-day election thai
could determine whether their country will pur·
sue swift economic reform and stay to).!t'tht·r, or
succumb to nationalism and divide. (AP).

Some unusual hopeful signs
emerge in Bosnian War
. SARAJEVO, Dosma-Herzcgovma (AP) - In a rare sign of casing
tensions in Bosn ia· Hcrzegovina,
ethnic leaders have agreed to allow
the opening of the airport m this
war-wracked capital for the delivery of humanitarian aid.
The mountain-ringed city is run ning low on food and medicine
and many neighborhoods lack elec:
uicity and water three months after
Bosnia voted to break from
Yugoslavia.
''There is an agreement on the
airport and on humanitarian ass istance,'· U.N. Spokesman Francois
Giuliani told reponers in New York
City on Friday. The pact resulted
from three days of U.N. negotiations.
Security Council President Paul
Notcrdacme said Croat, Serb and
U.N. representatives also had
agreed to evacuate armed forces
from around the atrpori. He
expressed trepidation about the
accord's success, but added, "we
are encourdgcd.''
Giu liani said the agreement
called for anti-aircraft systems to
be withdrawn from around the airport, and for artillery, mortars and
missile -launchers to he guarded at
depots by U.N. personnel.
The world body imposed an
embar go and other sa nction s on
Serbian-led Yugoslavia one week
ago to pressure the country to stop
supporting Serbs fighung 1n
Bosnia.
An estimated 5,700 peOple have
been killed in Bosma since Mus lim s and Croats in the republic
voted Feb . 29 to secede from
Yugoslavia . Serbs, who make up
one-third of Bosnia's population,
boycotted the election and have

seized two-thirds of the republic.
In another act of conciliauon,
Muslim fighters on Friday lifted a
monlhlong blockade of the Marshal
Tito army barracks in Sarajevo and
allowed 800 Yugoslav soldiers and
their families to leave.
U.N. officials in Sarajevo called
the withdrawal a major brcaktl1rough.
"We can now start talking business with Ihe two sides,'' said
Adnan Abdcl Razak, a U.N.
spokesman.
But as if to underline that
progress toward a Bosnian peace is
tenuous, bright orange fla shes
streaked through the evening sky
Friday when Serb irregulars
resumed she lling SaraJevo from
their hillside positions.
Although the Yugoslav army
officially is m retreat, an esumated
80,000 of its troops plan to remam
beh ind to join Serb irregulars, witl1
whom they have cauturcd about
two-thirds of Bosnia's territory.
Nter their release from the barracks, !he Yugoslav soldters headed
for a Serb-controlled area on th e
southwest edge of the city in four
convoys flanked by U.N. armored
personnel carriers and blue Bosnian
pol ice cars.
Bosnian forces had surrounded
the barracks to force the troops to
leave heavy weapons behind. The
troops left their artillery, but it
wasn't known whether !he weapons
still worked. In a previous episode
ai a besieged barracks, troops
destroyed their big guns before
abandoning them.
Despite the hopeful s1gn s,
Bosma's president said he doubted
European Community-sponsored
peace talk s among the warrin~

Uosn1an facuon s could be resumed.
Tliey broke down in late May after
20 people were killed in a mortar
attack on a Sarajevo bread line.
" There will be no more negotiations and talks as there were
before." President AI!Ja lzetbegov·
ie was quoted as saymg in an interview in the Sarajevo daily OslobodjcnJC.
Also Fnday. Pres1dent Bush
acted to bring the United States
into conformity w11h the U.N. sanelions by banning all exports and
imports, revokmg Yugoslav land ing rigli t.s in the United States and
suspe nding certain contracts.
The order adds to sanctions
1ssued Mondsy in which lhe president froze Yugoslav assets.
Yugoslavia now consists only of
Serbia and Montenegro. Croatia,
Slovenia and Macedonia also have
broken away smce last June.

Patrol tickets 3 in accidents
GALLIPOLIS - Three people
were cited in separate accidents
invesugated Friday by the GalliaMcigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said a vehicle driven
by Sharon L. Howell , 33, 124
Depot Road, Bidwell, was backing
out of a private driveway on Depot
Street in Bidwell at 11:30 a.m. and
reportedly struck the right front of
a northbound vehicle driven by
Raelenc C. Holland, 29, 15085
State Route 554, Bidwell.
There was slight damage to both
vehicles and Howell was ticketed
for failure to yield.
A vehicle driven by Sherry A.
Pope. 21. Kerr, reponedly failed to
stop in time for a stopped vehicle
driv en by TerriL. Killebrew, 37 ,
28 Green Valley Drive, Bidwell ,
and struck the rear of Killebrew' s
vehic le at 3:30 p.m. The acc1dent
occurred on State Route 160 in
Gall ipolis Township.
There was moderate damage to
both vehicles and Pope was cited
for assured clear distance.

turc .

The patrol also clled Vern L.
Mullens II , 19, Point Pk.asant. for
assured clear distance in a two vehicle accident on the U.S. 15 ex it
ramp to State Route 1 at 5:20p.m.
Troopers said Mullens was
so uthbound when he report ed ly
failed to stop in time for a stopped
vehicle ahead of him dnven by
Billy R. Amos, 61, Point Pleasant .
Amos had stopped 10 merge with
traffic on 7, the patrol said. Sli gh t
damage was reported to both veh i.
cles.
A Gallipolis area youth was not
treated for an injuries received in a
one-car accident on GaJiia County
Road I (Addison Pile) at 6 20 p.m.
Troopers said Graydon C Sny der, 17,4093 Add iso n P1ke, was
southbound, six-tenths of a mile
north of 7 in Addison Town ship
when h1 s vehic le went off the nght
side of the ro;.! d, overturned and
went down an embankmcnl.
Troopers listed unsafe speed as;
a cause for the accident. Snyder's
car was moderately damaged and
th e driver was not cited.

to

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state's jobless rate climbed 10
7.3 pcrcc nl in M:1y, but was the
seco nd -lowest such figure among
th e nation's btg mdustr1al states,
th e Ohto Bureau of Employment
Services said.
May' s un employm ent rate 1n
Ohio was 0.4 percentage point
hi gher than the April rate of 6.9
percen t.
The state rate remained be low
the national level of 7.5 percent for
May, which was up from 7.2 percent in Apri l.
Among the nation 's II major
industrial s l.at~s . only North Caroli·
na , at 5.7 percen t. had a lower
un e mploym ent rate than Ohio.
$5,000.
New Jersey's 9 pcrrent rate was the
Bonecutter entered a plea of nor
h1ghest among th ose states.
gui lty to the charge, and Judg e
Ke ith Ewa ld, director of the
Crow set the case for trial on Jul y hurc.:1u's labor market information
16 at9 a.m.
divi sion, ~lttrib ut c d the state' s
Bonccuuer stated to th e court
in creas e in un employ ment last
that he was mdigent and not able t momh to growLh in lhc labor force,
pay for an attorney. Judge Crow
rath er tl1an mcrcased layoffs.
appoin ted Meigs County Public
"Fundamentall y we had some
Defender, Charles H. Knight. to · growlh in employment, but primarrepresent him. Bond was set in the
ily we had a Significant influ x of
amount of $5,000 .
new people scekmg employmenl,
Bonecutter was remanded to the or entering what we call the civii custody of U1e sheriff pending hi s ICID labor force," Ewald said.
posting of bond.
He said that could re fl ect high
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
school or college graduates looking
George P. McCarthy represented
for jobs or other people resuming
the State of Ohio at Friday 's hear- job search es.
ing.
Ewa ld said the emp loyment
grow th thai occ urred wasn't strong
enough to accommodate the num ber of peo ple entering the labor
force.
The Guinness Book of Records
"The question really IS will
and Ripley's Bel ieve It or Not liSt those kinds or economic Indicators
it as the oldest and longest bummg be substantial enough and strong
light bulb in the world.
enough in the future to start hav ing
With the exceptions of power more employm ent. rather than just
failures and three times for moving extending work hours of those you
it to another station, the bulb has already have," he said Friday.
been on since it was donated to the
E wald said a question that
fire deparunent in 1901 by Dennis remained to be answered wa s
Bernal, owner of the Livermore "When will employers feel comPower and Water Company.
fortable enough ... that they make
The incandescent bulh was the decisions, in renns of hiring, 10
invented by Thomas Edison in go the extra step and bring in new
1879.
people?"
General Electric Co. detennined
The number of Ohioans with
that the bulb was made by the Shel- jobs in May was 5, 122,000, an
by Electric Company and was hand increase of 46,000 from April. May
blown with a carbide filamenl.
unemployment was 406,000, a gain
GE says there is no great mys- of 29,000 from !he previous month.
tery to the bulb's longevity. The
The civilian labor force in May
lower the wattage, the lon ger the totaled 5.529.000, up 76,000 from
filaments last. The bulb puts out April.
Unemployment was at 7.2 perabout as much light as the coils
inside a toaster.
cent in February and March. The
Barbara Fairhurst, spokeswom- state rate hasn't been this high
an for lntersouce Technologies, since March 1988, when it was 7.4
said she's familiar with the bulb. percent.
"I think it's fascinating," she said.
She agreed with GE's as sessment and poinled out that the carbide filament also helps.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
The real secret, she says, is that Township Trustees will hold a spethe lighl is always on. "Turning a cial meeting Thursday at 11 a.m. at
bulb off and on is what wears it the Shade River Forestry Building
down."
on Joppa Road in Reedsville.

Bulb has burned since 1901
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
light bulb that lasts at least 10
years' Big dea l. How abou t one
that's been burning since 1901!
lnlcrso urc e Technologies of
Sunnyvale crented a news splash
last week when il announced its
new E-lamp dunng a meeting in
Columbus, Ohi o, of the Edison
Electric Jnstilute, an a~sociation of
utility companies. Intersourcc said
th e bu lb lasts between 10 to 14
years.
Co lumbu s-based Ameri ca n
Electri c Power Co., one of the
country's largest investor-owned
electric utilities, 1s investing $6.5
million in the technology.
The people at the Livermore
Fire Department's Station One
were not all that impressed. After
all, a little bulb that's been burning
not-quite-brightly since the tum of
the century put the fire house in the
record books.
The glow of its repulalion
attracts tourists from around the
world.
"We keep a visitor's book for
them to sign," said Helen Vien, a
fire department clerk. ' 'A good
many of them stop by just to look
at the bulb, which is real dim and
hangs high up and out of the way
on an old-fashioned cord."

in Oc tober 1985 at the airport 1~ :
Rome were found to hav e bombs in :
!heir luggage and to be working fm
the May 15 group led by Baghdadbased bomb-maker Abu lbral1im , .
according to the report.
.
The notorious Abu Abba&lt;, nom ·
de guerre ror the head of the orga- .
nization that hi Jacked the cruise :
liner Achille Lauro in 1985,
"seems to have been pennitted to
take refuge in Iraq " af ter the
attack, the memo said.
News reports of these developments prompted repeated questions
from members of Congress aboul ·
Iraq's record and warnings from :
lawmakers that Iraq would have to ·
be returned 10 !he terrorism hst.
But Shultz assured them in a
1985 letter - a copy of which was
also made available - that Iraq
would be restored to the terrorism
list if evidence were found that it
had res um ed supp oning these·
groups.
The 1986 memo su mmed up
U.S. efforts to rein in Iraq's support
for terronsm as "eventually fru1t-:
ful."
,
But so me 1990 State Department cables paint a different pic- .

"The lraqlS initially endeavored
to preserve thCJT terrorist assets.
resorung to subterfuge to divert
attention from their conunued sup port for terrorist groups," sa1d the
mem o, which was declasstiJed bv
the State Department at !he request
of Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn.
In mid- 1982, for example, th e
Black June organization of Pales tinian terrorist Abu Nidal was operating out of Iraq, attacking Israeli
and Jewish targets in Europe,
according to the document written
by the department's intelligence
bureau.
That occurred after Iraq was
removed from the terrorism list and
at a time when Iraq was assuring
!he United States lhat it no longer
supported Abu Nidal, the memo
said.
After 1983, Abu Nidal was
expe lled from Iraq, it added.
"Even recently, however, there
have been developments !hat suggcst that Iraq remains reluctant to
cut completely its links to terrorist
groups," the do:ument s:ud.
For example, two men arre sted

On June 23, 1990, department'
officials summoned Iraqi Ambassador Mohamed ai-Mashat to
dcmar1d th:Jt Iraq expel Abr Abbas
after he .sent armed comma 1dos to
alL1ck an Israeli beach the previOus
month.
Four day s later, another cable
showed the department believed
Abu N1dal's organi111tion was back .
10 Iraq

Couple charged
in death of son
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A Summa Co unty man has been charged,
with murd er and chi ld endangerment and hi s wife has been charged·
wuh cluld endang erm ent in the
death of thCIT six -month-old son
la.st summer.
Boyd L. Blankenship. 33. and
Mary Blankenship, 36, were arrest- .
cd Friday.
Shcnff's detec tives began mves11 ga t1ng the death when th e
Dlankcnships dialed 911 on July 17
to report that their son. Mark, was
not breathing when they found him
m his bed at their Coventry Town ship home.

Ohio jobless Meigs units respond to 9 calls
rate climbs
POMEROY - Units of the Road for Dorcs Arnold who was
Medical Center.
Me1gs Coun ty Emergency Medical taken

Pomeroy man arraigned
POMEROY - Jasper Bonecutter,
22, Pomeroy, appeared Friday
afternoon before Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Frc1I
W. Crow III for arraignmcnl on an
mdictment returned recently by the
grand Jury.
Bonecutter was charged, according to Paul Gerard, crimmal baliff.
with one count of receiving stolen
propeny. The charge, as contained
in the indictment, is a felony or the
third degr ee, Gerard said, and
alleges that Bonecutter has previ ously been convicied of two or
more theft offenses. The charge
carries a possible penalty or one,
one and one-half, or two year s in
pnson and a possible fine of up to

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
officials knew Palestinian terrorists
were finding a safe haven in Baghdad, but for eight years the Reagan
and Bush administrations rejected
congressional attempts to punish
Iraq. newly declassified documents
show.
. In 1982, the Reagan adminislrdt10n removed Iraq from a list of
countries believed to support international terronsm. The decision
lifted a ban on U.S. trade with Iraq,
opening the way for eight years of
American military and economic
atd that ended only wben the Iraqis
mvaded Kuwait in August 1990.
. In order to remove Iraq from !he
list - enabling the United States to
help prevent an Iranian victory in
the Iran -Iraq war that began in
September 1981 - the administrat1on had to certify to Congress that
lr;•l had ceased supportmg terronst
gro ups.
Yet, a July I , 1986, memo to
thcn -Sccretary of State George
Shultz - obtained Friday by The
Associated Press - said that
wasn't the case.

Trustees to meet

Holzer

At 6:27 a.m. the Racine unit
Service responded to nine calls for
assistance Friday and early Satur- re sponded to Manuel Road for
Edith Manuel who was taken to
day morning.
On Friday at I 0:35 a.m. the Veterans. and at 9:33a.m. th e
Racine Fire Department went to Racine Fire Depmtment respond ed
Route 124 on a motor veh1cle aCCI- to Apple Grove Dorcas Road on a
dent 1n which Stacy and Matt downed electrical line.
Theiss were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Syracuse unit, at 11:22 a.m.
went to Route 681 West for Kcnda
Osborne who was taken to O'Blencss Memorial Hospital.
The Rutland Fire Departmcn~ at
12:40 p.m., responded to Z10n
Road on a transformer rtre.
PG
At 5:58 p.m. the Racine un1t
ONE EVENING SHOW
went to Trouble Creek Road for
Admllllon $1.50
Jam es Hinkley who was treated but
4*0023
not tran sported.
At 6:36p .m . the Rutland unit
went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
David McComes who was taken to
O'Bieness.
At II :2 1 p.m. the Racine unit
went to Third Street for Tim Powell who was taken to Veterans.
On Saturday at 6:07 a.m. the
Pomeroy unit was called to H1land

LET US REMOUNT YOUR
DIAMONDS AT A SAVINGS OF
30o/o TO SO%
REG. '140

COlONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.

l4K

THE CUTTING
EDGE

REG. ' l6~

u
.

14K llll/SIOH

POMEROY - The telephone
number or State Rcpresentauvc
Mary Abel's offi ce in Columbus
was listed incorrectly m The Druly
Sentinel on Thursday. lnfonnation
about the 1992 Energy Credit Program is avai lable by calling 1-800282-0253 .

DIAMOND EARRINGS

10.95

5

In

WHITE MEN CAN'T
JUMP R

We SeU 1\e Same For Less

AND

JEWELERS

SLEEPWALKER

"ServrlwtiEv

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446·1088

·-·- .......GOliXIIG
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Richard Synlcase. PIGnlst
SAT.. JIIIE ll, 1:00 p.a.
SUII., Jllll 14, 3 :00,...

Morrie •nd Dorothy HMklne
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426 2nd Ave., GlllllpoHo, Oh,

C.II446-ARTS&lt;for more lnlo.

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1:10,t: JO
II)

93

422 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Divorce sought

OttiO VfiUEY
sYMPHOIIY

nqo

2PT.14Kl

POMEROY · An action for
forec losure has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Bank One, Athens, N.A., Pomeroy,
against Helen L. Conrad, Washington, W.Va.

~!.!·

SAL£

20% TO 30% OFF

Woody Hantl1011, Wesler Snipes

Foreclosure
sought

POMEROY - A divorce action
ha s been filed 1n Meigs County
Common Pleas Coun by Betty A.
Johnson, Albany, against Gay F.
Johnson, Albany.

."\

PINK ICE RINGS
Startilg AI $17.50

FRI., SAT., SUN.

Correction

6 PRONG SAL£ '79.00

~ ! LT .

lt\TIIIm

llll-

3"

�Page--AS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--f&gt;olnt Pleasant,

wv

June 7, 1992

June 7, 1992

Second key treaty finalized;
Brazil signs; U.S. is criticized

.---Local Briefs:-......, Reclamation law spurs progress, but needs work
Thief strikes at area nightclub

(EDITOR'S NOTE - II h11s
been IS years since enachnrnl of

GALLIPOLIS - Sam Salem, owner of the Addison Club, 1691
State Route 7 NMII, Gallipolis, informed the Gallia County Sheriffs Department that the estab6shment was entered sometime early
Friday.
Reported mis~'l were two 27-inch color television motors,
register, cigarette machines and from glasses
change from the
behind the register, 20 cartons of cigarettes, snacks and a trash bag
filled with empty beer cans.
Salem also reponed that the pool table was damaged in the incident.
Roger Jobnson, 1173 White Oak Road, Bidwell, informed the
department his residence was entered sometime Friday and a VCR
was removed. Both incidents are under investigation.
Booked into the Gallia County Jail by deputies 81 1:40 a.m. Saturday for domestic violence was Rick D. Martin, 31, 3487 State
Route 141, Gal6polis.

Thai's about as long a.• it Lakes In

the strip-mine reclamation law .

rerlaim a mine. Terhniqut's rnr
doing so have matured in that
time, as cattle rattening on
reclaimed mine sites attest.

Enforcement of the law,
bas a way to go.)

lhou~h ,

Law's long jouroe~
Neat trick. And it's bemg done
nol only here but across the contim:nt in Appalachia where rain is
three times as plentiful, landscape
pru1pi1ous and topsoil thin to
nonc~islcnt.

"Take a look," says Larry
Emerson. The sweep of his arm, as
if opening a curtain, takes in a visaa
or spring green slopes alive with
birdsong. Farther off, two wood
ducks knit chevron.' on the surface
of a pond.
Emerson, an agronomist by
training, supervises reclamation at
Ashland Coal Co.'s Habet Mine
near Madison, W.Va. He is also a
weekend hiker and camper of such
devotion that he feels a personal
stake in the outcome.
If larry Emerson were to drop a
stick into Bragg Fork of the Little
Coal River in the hollow below,
and if, across the nation in
Wyoming, Mickey Slcward were to
drop a stick into Caballo Creek, a
tiny tributary of the Little Powder
River, and if Bob Moore were to do
the same 50 miles south at the Little Thunder Creek arm of the
Cheyenne River, all three sticks
would wind up in the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of the Mississippi
River.
Such is the intricate system
Providence uses to sc ulpt the face
of the entire land; creation still in
progress. A surface mine unreclaimed leaves a hurt on the earth
miles beyond its own ugly scar.
The reclamation law s journey
to passage was as long and twisting
as that of a stick in a stream. It took
seven years. It entailed volumes of
testimony, hours of congressional
debate. It met two White House
vetoes before President Jimmy
Car1cr signed it in 1977 and it took
effect May 3, 1978.
By that time decades of uncontrolled mining had left 20,000
miles of unreclaimed strip-mi ne
ruins in Appalachia alone. Nearly
10,000 miles of stinking, acid-!'lisoned streams ran between heaps
of ~feless mine spoils.
The law allows the states to
administer their own reclamation
statutes if they meet its standards.
But over the years, enforcement
has been Ia. in many states. At one
!'lint, Kentucky was found to be
citing only one in 14 observed violations, Pennsylvania conducting
fewer than half the required inspections . Last year, West Virginia
raised its per-ton coal assessment
by 2 cents only after the U.S.
Office of Surface Mining (OSM)
threatened to take over enforce-

By JULF.~ LOH
AP Special Corrtspondent
GILLETI'E, Wyo. - Out here
on the Great Plains just beyond the
city limiiS, pronghorn antelope give
birth in tall sweet grass and red tailed hawks dive on fat rabbits.
But what is truly remarkable
about this pastoral pageant is that
the hawk's nest and the rabbit's
burrow and the rich grass all nourish on vast tracts once seemingly
GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis City Police cited James L. Hamilbrought to ruin by mining, stripton, 17, 1088 Sunset Drive, for DWI and failure to control in a twomining, some of the most massive
vehicle accident in the 900 block of Second Avenue Friday.
coal beds on the planet
Officers said Hamilton was southbound at I 0 p.m. near the
Coal engineers have long known
entrance 10 the Best Western Motel when he reportedly failed to
how to tear apart the face of the
control and struck the rear of a parked car owned by Ralph D.
earth to get at shallow deposits.
Jones, 2131 Chatham Ave.
Now, I 5 years after passage of the
Hamilton's vehicle was moderately damaged and there was
Surface Mining Control and Reclasevere damage reported to Jones' car.
mation Act (SMCRA), techniques
Police are also investigating a theft complaint filed by John Barof putting it back together appear to
cus, 1541 Eastern Ave. Ban:us told officers that two speakers from
be coming of age.
the rear deck of his car were removed sometime early Thursday
It is equally apparent, however,
while the car was parll:ed at his residence.
that co mpliance with the reclamaCited by police Friday was Deborah K. Clay, 466-1/2 Fourth
tion law has a way to go to catch
Ave., for failure to pay city income tax.
up with the techniques.
Of about 24,000 surface coal
operations subject to SMCRA, at
least 6,000 of them, one-fourth,
have failed to reclaim the land and
GALLIPOLIS - The summer reading program at the Dr.
II ,461 violations remain uncorrectSamuel L. Bossard Memorial Library will kick off Tuesday at 10
ed. That's by govemmenl count.
a.m. with a visit from Ronald McDonald.
The National Wildlife Federation
The popular McDonald's character will share an hour of fun with
puts the numbers 81 closer to 8,000
an emphasis on reading and using the library. Children of all ages
and 17,000.
are invited to attend.
Pride in accomplishment
Companies in compliance ,
though, seem to take as much pride
in developing and refining the relatively new technology of reclaimPOMEROY ~ The Meigs County Board of Elections offiCial
ing the land as in their high-tech
count of ballots cast in the June 2primary will beheld on June 16.
effic iency at mining the coal.
At that time the ballots will be counted of those who voted in
"Our cattle do beuer on the
accordance with House Bill 237, which includes residents who
reclaimed
acreage than on the
moved before May 4, did not change their addresses and voted in
native range," says Mickey Stew1he Board of Elections office, and overseas military personnel.
ard, whose enthusiasm l:K)rdcrs on
According to the Board of Elections personnel, there were only nine
passion.
ballots cast under House Bill 237, and seven ballots by overseas
military personnel.
Ms. Steward is in charge of
revegetation at two AMAX Coal
Of the 13,918 registered voters, 6,739 voters or 48.42 percent
voted in the primary. That included 2,080 Democrats. 4,682 RepubCo. mines nearby. Together they
licans, and 42 non-partisan.
removed more than 30 million tons
of coal last year from seams as
thick as 110 feeL In 10 years they
have reclaimed 8,000 acres and
turned over about I,000 of them to
POMEROY - Allegrn Will of RL I, Bo• 208, Rutland, correctan AMAX subsidiary, Meadowlark
ly identified the Meigs County mystery farm which appeared in last
Farms.
Sunday's TiJrU!s-StnliMI as that of Arthur and Westina Crabtree.
If farmmg and ranching seem
She was one of three to make the correct identifiCation. Her name
odd sidelines for a coal company,
was selected by loaery to receive the $5 priu from the Ohio Valley
there's an explanation.
ment.
Publishing Co., which sponsors the contest with the Meigs County
The reclamation law requ ires
Enforcement laces problems
Soil and Water Conservation District.
coal companies to prove they have
But OSM seems to have
restored the land to its prior use. enforcement problems itself.
Here in the Powder River Basin Its latest report shows that as of
the plrun between the Black Hills to last February it had assessed $183
the eas~ where the Sioux lost their million over the years in fines
POMEROY ~ A representative from U.S. Rep. Clarence
home, and the Big Hom Mountains against companies tha~ after a final
Miller's office will be in Pomeroy Wednesday from II a.m. 10 I
to the wes~ where Custer paid the warning about violations, flouted
p.m. at tbc Me•gs County Courthouse. Anyone with questions conprice - prior use means ranching orders to shut down their mines. Of
cerning the federal government is invited to stop by to discuss them
and some haying in a realm of that amount it had collected only
with the representative.
wildlife.
$5 million. (Add in penaltie s
Just south of here, near the coal· assessed but un collected by the
spawned town of Wright, is the states and the total in unpaid fmes
largest coal mine on the continent goes well over $300 million.)
Its name is Black Thunder, a 31 And sho uld a cessation order
POMEROY - Meigs County restdenL• are invited to anend a
million-ton producer operated by fail, the law provides for the same
pre-business workshop being offered by the Marietta CoUege Small
the Thunder Basin Coal Co. on an fines against the individual corpoBusiness Development Centor.
8,000-acre lease. That's 12 .5 rate e&gt;ccutives to blame. OSM has
The workshop will include everything a new business person
square miles. and likely to be invoked thi s last-straw sanction
needs to consider in starting a business. A small business kit will be
expanded.
only 41 times. And has collected
provided to participants. The workshop will be offered June 17,
"Righi now we're grazing 30 not one dollar.
9:30 to II :30 a.m. in the McDonough Center for Leadership and
yearlings at a ratio of about three
Most companies abide by the
BuSiness on the Marietta College Campus. The cost IS $5. To regiSan•mal,"
says
Bob
acres
per
law
and many even go beyond iLl
ter. residents may call 374-4832.
Moore, Black Thunder's revegeta- minimal reqwrements and vic with
tion chief.
one another in creative restoration
"Cattle need about six acres a of the land.
head on the native range. So our
POMEROY- Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's DepartIndeed, a new fraternity of spereclamation is twice as productive. ciali sts has sprouted in America
ment received a complaint from J•m Lucas, Cherry Ridge Road, that
We plant all the native grasses that from the reclaimed soi l of strip
Friday afternoon while he was gone for appro&gt;imately one hour.
~rew here before, but not th e
When he returned he discoveted someone had opened a gate on his
mmes . They go to copnventions
mvader
weeds. It becomes a richer and swap secrets. They get together
pasture and his canle were out Lucas advised the chain used to faspasture.
ten the gate was missing.
informally and chat about grasses
(Black Thunder, incidentally, and forbs and ephemeral drainages,
even has a registeted cattle brand. topics more apt to be overheard at a
It is the ARCO Spark, the dia - Nature Co nserva ncy tea than
mond -shaped logo of its owner, beside a dragline tearing up the
POMEROY - Earl Gilkey, Rock Springs Road. reported SaturAllantic Richfield Co.)
earth at 95 cubic yards a bite.
day morning that sometime during the mght someone had spray
Re clamation on the plains
''Reclamation has become much
painted the back of his semi trailer and also the mirrors on the lrllC·
means geuing that new vegetation more sophisticated just in recent
tor.
to grow on a gen~y rolling land- years," says Mickey Steward at
scape upon which nature bestows AMAX .
only 15 inches of rain a year. Also,
"The sections we did 10 years
keeping the stream beds - or, in
ago
are perfectly acceptable and
cases, the meandering low
GALLIPOLIS - A bad check Cheshire, $20 and costs for no most
places where streams flow only we're proud of them . But compared
charge filed against Michael D. safety belt; David L. Whitlock, 30, mtermiuently - at precisely the with what we're doi ng now they
Meadows, Point Pleasant, was dis- Gahanna, $20 and costs for no same gradient as before a thick slab seem to me almost primitive, like a
missed Friday in Gallipolis Munici- safety belt; Linda L. Lanham, 44, of the earth's crust has been kid working in modeling clay."
She pointed to a rocky outcroppal Court 81 the request of the pros- 5 I 3 Burnette Road, $20 and costs removed from below.
ping on a grassy slope. "You'd
ecution. Meadows was fined $100 for no safety bel~ Ellen N. Mumty,
and costs for no operator's license.
37. 594 Franklin Cemetery Road,
A citation againSI Paul E. Byus, Vinton, no safety belt, case dis 40, 365 Circle Drive, for wnting a missed, charged costs; Verona K.
bad check in West Virginia was Johnson, 29, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, no
also dropped, but Byus was fined child restraint and no safety belt,
FAMILY PRACTICE
$100 and costs for no operator's each case dismissed; and James R.
Young, 46, Beavercreek, fmed S18
license.
Fined $25 and costs eac h for and costs for failure to yield.
fishing without a valid license were
Fined and charged costs for
Billy R. Glick, 27, and Sonya L. speeding were Harold L. Lykins,
Oldaker, 2S, both of Gallipolis.
44 , Muncie, Ind., $26; Richard E.
Ralph G. Brown, 44, 2625 Easter, 39, Highland, Va., $22;
Teens Run Road, Crown City, was Paul E. Stanley, 66, Albany, $24;
fined $1,2SO, sentenCed 10 30 days Darrell Haney, 39, 516 Gabriel
in jail and handed a 1-year driver's Road, Bidwell, $20; Alan W.
license suspension for DWI. Brown Sypolt, 37, Hurricane, W.Va., $20;
was also fined $2SO for driving Janolyn Scheez, 27, Max Meadow,
Va., $30.
under suspension.
A DWI charge against Robert
A divorce has been granted in
D. Mullins, 22, Vinton, was dismissed at request of the prosecu - Gallia County Common Pleas
Court to Kathy Jo Dillon,
tion.
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
In other traffic caaes, William Louisville, Ky., from Harold D.
G. Gilben, 18, Oak Hill, was fmed Dillon, RL 2, Crown City.
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
Filing for dissolution of mar$8 and costs for no tail lights;
POINT PLEASANT, WV.
Carol!. Jones, S3, RL 4, Oak Hill, riage were Norma J. White, 381
Buck
Ridge
Road,
Bidwell,
and
$20 and cosiJJ for no sarcty belt;
Pllillip A. Bradbury Jr., 18, RL I, David A. White, Teus Road, Gal-'
lipoli.r.
II

Driver twice cited in 2-car accident

Library slates reading program

Election count slated for June 16

Mystery farm winner announced

Miller representative slates visit

Pre-business workshop set at MC

Cattle turned loose

Mi"ors painted

--Gallia Court news,--

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

(304) 675-1675

swear that had always been there,
but we built it. It makes great
wildlife cover." A pair of ferrugi nous hawks nested in a similar one
at Black Thunder and fledged two
chicks.
She pointed out a meandering
stream bed, waiting for rain, and
the dry outline of a pond edged in
cattails and reeds. "We reconstructed an alluvial aquifer under
that flood plain. You can't see it,
but it's there."

Then there's sagebrush.
In the Old West, none but a fool
or a poet would plant sagebrush on
purpose . Caulemen routinely
burned it off as a nuisance. Now
the of the New West, the reclamation law , requires that whatever
was there before be put back,
including sagebrush.
Where does a diligent reclaimer
find commercial quantities of sagebrush seed?
It's so new a commodity that the
state of the art of harvesting it has
yet to progress beyond these tools:
a tarpaulin, a tennis racket and a
vacuum cleaner. A good sagebrush
whacker can collect about 50
pounds a day of what looks like
gray pocket lint, enough to yield 5
pounds of usable seed. It goes for
$35 a pound.
"Hey," says Steward, "whatev·
er it takes."
Demand for specia6sts
The law has created a growing
demand for reclamation specialists.
Mickey Steward, for e.ample, fm ished gmduate school the year the
law was passed. She saw an oppor·
tunity, wrote a doctoral dissertation
on the ecology of this very county
and had no trouble fmding wolt.
Bob Moore's background is in
range management. In nine years at
Black Thunder he has kept meticulous charts of 21 species of grasses
and shrubs, experimenting on
reclaimed land to find the precise
mix of warm and cold season varieties to match the native growth.
"We have it down pretty good
now," he says. "We use 12 different grasses and seven shrubs ,
including two kinds of sage. If we
plant one shrub per square yard we
find that over time it will reseed
itself and become three per yard,
the balance we want"
The balance is not arb itmry. It
was agreed 10 after hot debate over
conflic ting interests in graze for
cat~e and browse for antelope and
cover for sage grouse.
But the law allows for no argu ment about restoring the water
flow .
Before mining, engineers must
cons truct a model of the e.act
lo!'lgraphy of the area to be mined,
the gradient of every stream, foot
by fooL
After mining. reclamation
begins by replacmg the overburden, the material above the coal
that ranges from 15 to 250 feet
thick. The topsoil, which had been
removed and set aside as a first
step before mining, will be spread
later.
"You first restore the
drainages," Steward e.plains.
"You use your imagination, and
e.perience, to build up slopes
between them. The surrounding
landscape will be lower because
the coal is gone, but the drainage
must be exactly the same. If the
gradient is too flat the sueam will
silt up, too steep will cause erosion.
We can do that "
Reclamation follows along right
behind the mining shovels so the
least amounl of acreage is tom up
at any one time.
Different techniques
The terrain in Appalachia
requires different techniques.
There, streams begin as rainfall on
the mountains drains to a myriad of
hollows, then into larger creeks and
on to a river.
One strip-mining method is to
remove the top of the mountain
down to the coal and put the overburden in the mouth of the hollow.
Now the stream forms farther down
the hoUow than before, and settling
ponds flltcr oul the sediment as the
shortened stream drains to the
creek.
Then specialists like Larry
Emerson set about revegetating the
lopped-off top of the mountain and
the built-up mouth of the hollow.
"In this country, levelland is at
a premium," Emerson says. "Most
people welcome a little more of

it." Just so. West Virginoa' s newest
prison is on a 120-acre reclaimed
mine a school is on another. Otller
sites' have become popular with
picknickers, campers, bird watchers. A reclaimed m1ne outSide
Charleston is now a golf course.
It actually takes about 15 years,
the specialists say, to be sure the
rcc131med surface of the earth has
healed finally, will endure through
dry spells and floods. Bob Moore
uses no fertilizers, no 1m ported
water, not even to help his new
grasses and shrubs get started. No
friendly gardener will be around
when he's gone, nature must do it
on its own.
Companies must post bonds for
10 years after mining ends to cover
the complete cost of reclamation in
case they fail to do so. That some
states have set the amount of the
bonds too low is borne out by the
number of companies that have
simply defaulted on them and
moved on to mine somewhere else
under a different name.
Hydrologists say it will take
decades, even centuries, to know
the eventual effect of surface mining on the quality of water under
the earth, the groundwater. They
now know only that in the short run
the effect is not good, that salt levels rise.
Here in Campbell County,
Wyo., drinking water comes from
aquifers much deeper than the coal
seam, which is itself an aquifer
though of poor quality. So no effect
has been noticed.
Farther north in thi s basin, in
Montana, some wonder.
Doug McRae's family has been
ranching on Rosebud Creek near
Colstrip si nce his great-grandfather
seuled there in 1884. He knows
canle and he knows his land.
He sold a piece of it to a coal
company and says he could not be
happier with the reclamation. He
has a lease-back deal and graz.es
some caule on its thick grass, a
meadow where natural springs
were replaced with a well and
pump. In 1988, six calves died.
"Si• out of 100 is not an epidemic," McRae said. "And 1988
was the driest year on record, so
maybe it was that. I've been givmg
all my cat~e copper supplements
ever since, just in case, and have
had no more problems. Maybe I'U
never know."
To accommodate miners of the
last century, the government
removed the Siou. from the Black
Hills and promised them this hasin
"for as long as the streams shall
flow and the grass shall grow."
In classic historical irony, the
reclamation law turns the tables .
Now it's the miners who must
make the promise, and this time its
conditions are not just poetic
metaphor but tenns of a contract

SIGN DOCUMENT • Brazilian President
Fernando CoUor de MeUo, center, is watched by
from len, Aly Teymour, U. N. chief or protocol;
Ambassador Vincente Sanchez of Chihe; Maurice Strong, Secretary General of the Earth

CONNERSVILLE, Ind. (AP) Two inmates who used their special access as Lrusties 10 lake control of the county jail early Saturday released one of the three
guards they were holding hostage
today.
Ron Zimmerman walked away
from the jail where he had been
held handcuffed for more than 10
hours. The inmates did not receive
anything in exchange for Zimmerman's freedom.
"They did it to show good faith
on their part. It shows we are making progress," said State Police
Sgt. John Mull.
Earlier, inmate Bill Com said he
wanted better treatment for inmates
in jails and prisons throughout the
country.
"I want it to be all over where
everybody knows, where every
guard that's in every place will
learn to respect people as human
beings, not as animals," Com said
in a telephone interview with radio
station WIOU in Kokomo.
Connersville is about 15 miles
west of the Ohio-Indiana line in
east-centrallndiana.
Most of the other 80 inmates at
Fayelle County Jail remained
locked up loday, although Com and
the other trusty, John Purcell, had
the keys to all cells , authorities
said.
Zimmerman stressed that none
of the hostages were harmed, Mull
said. However, inmates with health
problems and heart trouble were
not getting needed medication.
The hostage-takers demanded to
see a female correction officer, but
refused to talk to her when she
arrived, said Connersville Delee-

Sal aI
141 GOLD OIAINS
llrpS.ctM

50% TO 75%

•

Washington County
official suspended
MARIETTA, Ohio (AP)
Washington County commissioners
have suspended the direc10r of the
county home for three days without
pay for pushing a resident.
The decision stems from a
report filed Monday by home resident Vernon Carver. In the repon,
Carver said he was pushed against
a wall by home director Ted
Williams during a disagreement
over an outing.
The decision to suspend
Wil~ams came after the three cornmissioners met with him for nearly
four hours Friday and interviewed
the people involved in Monday's
incident
"We met at the courthouse
afterward and decided on a threeday suspension without pay on the
grounds of inappropriate behavior
for the situation," Commissioner
Sandra Matthews said. "This will
be our only investigation."
The home provides supervised
care for the elderly , the retarded
and others. Able-bodied residents
perform such tasks as tending to
the faci~ty' s grounds and working
in its garden.

continue ihe standoff, MuU said. A
half hour later, both inmates
refused to surrender.
Police said they would shut off
air conditioning, water and air circulatio n if negotiation s broke
down.
"They are confused, angry and
not very well organized. They
don't seem to have an agenda,"
Mull said.
Corn and Purcell took over at
10:47 p.m. Friday. All three of the
jail's guards were handcuffed in a
bathroom, said city police dispatch er Robert Wentz.
"Being Lrusties they had unlimited access to the lockdown area"
and got into a control room, where
they found keys on a table and
opened a gun locker, MuU said.
"The only sta tement one of
them made was that he was fed up
with the place," Mull said. "Prisoners get that way."
A trusty is an inmate considered
1rustworthy and therefore given
special privileges.
Still held hostage were guards
Breu Briseole and Mark Steele, the
son of Sheriff Harold Steele. None
of the guards had worked at the jail
for more than nine months.
An off-duty police officer
escaped as the takeover began llfld
the sheriff's secretary was released
unharmed about 20 minutes later,
police said.
All eight exits to the one-story
jail downtown were surrounded by
units from the city police, sheriffs
department and state police, but
com munication was hindered
because the duo had the county
I'll ice radio, Wentz said.

JERUSALEM (AP) ~ Four
years after John Dcmjanjuk was
jailed as "Ivan the Terrible," new
evidence has the prosecutor admitting some doubts aboul the conviction, and a U.S. court is re-examining the retired autoworker's extradition.
Deposition s describing "Ivan
the Temble" as older and different-locking from Demjanjuk have
raised the suggestion of two !vans:
the infamous guard named Ivan
Marchenko and Demjanjuk using
the name as an alias.
Prosecutor Michael Shaked outlined the two-Ivan theory Thursday
during final arguments before the
five-judge Supreme Court, where
the 72-year-old DemjanJuk is
appealing his 1988 conviction. He
was sentenced to death.
Shaked' s presentation was the
latest twist in a case that has drawn

....••

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guards said "Ivan the Terrible"
was named Ivan Marchcnko. They
Jl so sa id Marchcnko was nint!
ycm older than Demjanjuk, ha~
dark hair and a scar on his check,
Demjanjuk was blond and had nd
scar.
The guards testified in Nazi tri:
als '" th e Soviet Union after Wori&lt;l
War II and were executed. Israel
won access 10 the files after the
col lapse of the Sovtet Union.
.
On Thur.;day, Shaked acknowl•
edged the de!'lsitions caused "an
erosion of the previOus sharp an&lt;t
uneqUivocal picture" of the case. •
But the most the depositionS:
could rai se ·· is doubt. never more
than that," Shaked said.
·
Defense auomey Yoram Shefte[
said Friday his client is "very opti -:
mistic."
Summatioos arc to resume Mon-:
day and conclude Tuesday. No date'
has been set for a ruling.

TO

~(~

Good s.lectiDI
Of
LDitn and Gents Dlamoad Rlll!l'' •
At Prlm That Cant It Btatl

worldwide attenuon and led some
Israelis to question the wisdom of
putting Demjanjuk on trial.
In Cincinnati, meanwhile. a fed eral appeals court on Friday began
re-examining DemjanJuk's 1986
cxtrJdition , saying the warranl may
have been "based on erroneous
information." The court ordered
the U.S. government to present any
evidence by July 15 that DemJanjuk is not "Ivan the Terrible.'' A
hearing was scheduled Aug. II .
The basis of DemjanJuk's conviction was testimony by five survtvors of Poland's Treblinka death
camp, where about 850,000 Jews
were killed in 1942 and 1943
The survivors identifi ed Dcm janjuk as the sadistic Ukrainian
guard who sometimes slashed
women's breasts or shot those
unwilling 10 move quickly toward
gas chambers.
But depoSitiOns by Treblinka

UP

.,0

We Have A

Bush, schedu led to arrive ne~t
Friday, had U.S. negotiators secure
the removal from the treaty df
required .reductions in emissions qf
carbon dmtde and other gases. •
Delegates fr om all 178 U.N.
members are auending th e conference in th1s South American cap;.
tal .
In a related development amo"j:
th e many ec ological activities
linked to the summit, NorwcgiaJl
environmentalisls clrumed that half
a million Siberians have been coritarmnatcd since 1948 by radioa~­
tivc ISOtopes from the plant where
the ftrst Soviet atomic bomb was
made.
Radtoactivc water from the
Mayak mlinary-mdustnal base wa);
di scharged mto the Techa and other
rivers, said Knut Erilc Nilsen, prOject manager of the Oslo-baseU
Bellona group. "If you multiply
what happened in Chernobyl by
I 00, you have the extent of Lhf
tragedy in Mayak," he said.
The b'Toup 's claim that the diS:.
aster was worse than the 198~
Chernobyl e&gt;plosion is not supported by Russian and other Wesk
ern sc icnlJSIS , though its data oq
radioactive contamination seems
con~isl.C nt with other findings.

I

.

,••II Silver,. Coi11

that would fund II.
The chief of the U.S. delegation ,
William K. Retlly, se nt Bush a
memo days ago that offered some
basis for compromise. A White
House official leaked the memo to
The New York Times.
The White House flatly rejected
Reilly's suggestions.
Reilly, director of the Environmental Protection Agency, said in
an interview with The Associated
Press that his memo offered some
basi s for compromise but was
leaked "to be sure that that was
slopped."
Other countries have different
problems with the treaty. Austria,
Switzerland and the Netherland s
want tougher standards. Nevertheless. 15 delegation chiefs signed
Friday after Brazilian President
Fernando Coli or de Mello.
More than 120 beads of state arc
cxp:.:ctcd to add their signatures to
the biodiversity treaty after they
arrive next week. Nations have
until June 19, 1993, to do so.
The other major lrcary, on global warming, was made available for
signing Thursday, the second day
of the U.N. Conference oo Envi ronment and Development. The
meeting contmues throuRh June 14 .

New evidence casts doubts
on 'Ivan the Terrible' conviction

:·;.:

SAYI 20%·30%
Kavo All Types of .

(614) 425·5153

tive Sgt. Dennis Sherck. The
inmates later requested whiskey for
all the inmates. but that demand
was rejected.
·'This has all been a spur-of-themoment thing. I don't think they
understand what they're doing,"
Sherck said.
Shortly before 5 a.m., one
inmate told negotia10rs he wanted
to give up but the other wanted to

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
- Negotiators at the U.N. Earth
Summit finalized a second key
treaty, bul President Bush was
harshly criticized for opposing the
accord - which aims to protec t
endangered species.
"I don't think history is going
to look very kindly on a country
thai watered down two treaties and
refused to sign one of them," Rus sell Mittermeier of Conservation
International told reporters Friday.
U.S. Sen. Timothy Wirth, DColo., was equally direct. "It's a
disgrace, isn't it, that we 're not
signing it?" he said.
The U.S. delegation, U.S . Sen.
Albert Gore and Democratic presidential candidate Jerry Brown
scheduled news conferences loday.
Also today, the Green peace
environmental group planned lO
visit Rio's Rocinha slum to draw
auention to the ecological needs of
slums worldwide - sewers. clean
drinking water and sanitary hous ing
.
The biodiversity treaty atms to
preserve plant and animal species
that are becoming c• tinct at an eslimated rate of I 00 to 300 a day.
Bush says the treaty makes unfair
demands on the industrial nations

..' .'•.•d. .:...

SEKIO-PULSAR-IULOVA
WATCHES

WE NEED PRIMARY CARE
DOCTORS
SMALL TOWN CLINIC
IN EASTERN OHIO NEAR.
HOSPITAL
CALL COLLECT
DAN HOLSTEIN

Summit; and Mostsra K. Tolbs, executive director of tbe U. N. Environment Program, as he
signs tbe biological diversity convention at the
Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro Friday. (AP)

Inmates seize county jail
in Indiana, hold hostages

stt• An11h1trtaty
SAYI

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--A.7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--f&gt;olnt Pleasant, WV

446·&amp;226

~,

A

Ripliqg

ltoe Co .
PHONE 675-7870
RT. 2, BYPASS
POINT PLEASANT

�Page

AS-Sunday nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpollt, OH---Polnt Pleasant, WV ,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J_u.n.e.7,•1·99~2

Gallia County apple dates back to 1859 OTHER DEALERS MAY
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - "Perhaps there
has been a greater improvement in
lhc cultivation of fruit than any other
branch of farming. The people depended largely for fruit upon wild
fox -grapes, fall
grapes, wintergrapes, wild
plums, blackberries, black
haws, huckleberrie s, and
even
crab
apples. The orchards consisted of miserable seedling apples once removed from the
wild crab apples. Peaches were only
one degree above the bitter almond
fr om which they were derived. The
ilt~ e sour apples were gathered late
in the fall and put in a pile on the
ground and covered with slraw and
then with dirt; then in late winter or in
spring, they became meUow enough
to be eaten when there was no beuer
fruit. "
The above words were written by
an early resident of southern Ohio.
He was referring to horticulture prior
to 1830.
In 1817 pioneer farmer Alanson
Gillcte developed what canne to he
called the Rome Beauty apple, which
revolutionized the apple business in
southern Ohio. GiUette lived in Rome
Township ncar Proctorville and it
through him, along with fruit growers H. N. Gillette, Cornelius Turley
and Nelson Cox that the Rome Beauty
apple became lrnown around the
world. The name, however, was ac tually affixed by a Mr. Walker in
I H32. The Rome coming from Rome

Township where Gillette began the
variety and the beat~_ty from the color
and size. Some of the later Rome
apples weighed up to I l!l pounds a
ptece.
By 1919whenaplaquewasputup
011 the Lawrence County Fairgrounds,
the Rome Beauty was the third most
popular apple in the country. Winesap and Jonathan were the only two
varieties ahead of the Rome.
Gallia County by the second decade of this century was a great producer of Romes, as well as Ensces,
Cox's, and Gallia Beauties, all of
which originated in southern Ohio.
In fact there were 5,477 acres of
apples planted in the county producing over 300,000 bushels annually.
In 1919 Gallia was third among all
Ohio counties in the producing of
apples.
The top townships In Gallia
County in onder of apple production
were Clay, Harrison, Ohio, Guyan,
Walnut, and Addison. The best fruit
was grown in Clay Township on the
farms of the McCarley, Henry,
Summers, Riggs and Plyrtl!ll: farni1ies. In 1919 the top apples grown in
Gallia County were Rome Beauty,
Ben Davies, Grimes,lonathan and
Ensee. The Ensee was developed in
1882 by N.C. Cox of Proctorville.
The Gallia Beauty apple wltich is
still grown in some Ohio orchards
dates to 1859 when Clay Township
resident William Coon set out some
Rome Beauty trees he had purchased
from the Turley Nursery of Proctorville. In 1862oneoftheRome Beauty
trees was uprooted by a storm. Soon
afterwards a young vigorous sprout
appeared from the original root It
came up about one foot from the
body of the tree. When the tree came

CONFUSE YOU •••
But here Is the straight
talk - you can buy a
1992 Chev. 5·1 0 Short
Bed Pickup at
Gene Johnson Chevrolet·
Olds equipped as follows:

into bearing it was noticed that the
apples were a much brighter red, of
more solid color, and had a tendency
for the flesh to be a litlle pinkish.
The name for the Gallia Beauty
did not come until about 1900 when
Ernest Riggs began experimenting
with what until then was known as
the Coon seedling. II was really Riggs,
Gallia County's most famous h.Jnicuhuralist that developed the Gallia
Beauty . By 1926 the Gallia Beauty
had even exceeded the Rome Beauty
in popularity in a few states.
Riggs,who died in 1959 and is
buried in the Clay Chapel Cemetery
taught horticulture in a number of
universities before returning to Gal-

lia County. Riggs was greatly responsible for the of fruit growing in
the county. WhileRiggswasthemost
famous horticuhuralist in Gallia history, coming in second would probably be P. J. Neiginfmd who had a
large greenhouse across from Gallia
Academy High School in the early
part of this century.
Neiginfind was born in Germany
and worked in a number of Europe's
fine gardens before becoming one of
the chief gardeners for the University
of Virginia. Nicknamed "Popeye",
because of his resemblance to the
canoon character, Neiginfind later
became horticulturalist for lhc Ohio
Hospital for Epileptics.

ical evaluation, restituuon: Jack
Plewes, Grove City, DUI, $450 and
costs, 10 days in jail, operator's
license suspended for one year, one
year probation, following too closely, COSts.
Brett A. Wil~ Gallipolis, speeding, $20 and costs: Michael E.
Stewart, Shade, seat belt violation,
costs only; Joseph M. Hindy, Middlep&lt;JTI, speeding, $21 and costs:
Joey Smith, Letart, W.Va., fishing
without a license, $25 and costs;
Racinda Fraley, Pomeroy, fishing
without a license, $25 and costs:
Jeffrey Phelps, Fairfield, speed,
$20 and costs; Scott A. Shafer,
Proctorville, speed, $24 and COSts,
seat belt violation, costs only;
Oleryl L. Casto, Lancaster, speed,
$25 and costs; William Barber,
Long Bouom, speed, $21 and costs.
Arthur Ray Martin, Lewt, ~­
less operation, $35 and costs: R.
lay Reynolds, Pomeroy, seat belt
violatioo, $5 and costs; Timothy E.

Holsinger, Hockingport, speeding,
$27 and costs; Tonya Blosser,
Athens, speed, $25 and costs;
Edward Miller, Jr., Middleport,
DU!, $350 and costs, dm:e days in
jail, operator's license suspended
for 90 days, upon enrollment and
completion of RTP school, $150 of
fine and j.lil time will be suspended, no operator's license, $75 and
costs, three days in jail concument
with DU1; Rose E. Barnhouse,
Middleport, passing bad checks,
$25 and costs, rtStirution.
Kelly R. Kline, Pomeroy, fishing without a license, costs, license
obtained; Jeffrey Durs~ Reedsville,
consuming alcohol under age, $100
fine, suspended 10 $25, costs, probation of one year; Steven R. Barnell, Reedsville, coosum ing alcohol
under age, $100 fine, suspended 10
$25, costs, probation of one year;
R. Jay Reynolds, Pomeroy, improper starting, $100 and cos!S, speeding, $24 and costs: Robert T.

Southern, Middleport, speeding,
$21 and costs, driving under suspension, $75 and costs, three days
in jail suspended if a valid operator's license is obtained within 60
days.
Paul D. Mitchell, Langsville,
fishing without a license, costs
only, license obtained; Andrew
Vance, Rutland, no Iicense plates
on three wheeler, $15 and costs:
Charles Michael, Jr., Racine, criminal damaging, $75, costs, 30 days
in jail, suspended. one year probation, resttammg order issued; Daisy
M. Haggy, Rutland, seat belt violation, costs only; Jori Bailey, Patriot, speeding, S23 and costs; John
Brewer, Long Bottom, speed, $21
and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were: Christopher Leister, Huntington, W.Va.,
speed, $65: Deidra Keys, Lima,
speed, $65; Perry Reeder, Washingtm, W.Va., speed, SSS.

Gallia parties elect central committee members
GALLIPOLIS - Members of
Gallia County's Democratic and
Republican central commillees
were elected in Tuesday's primary.
Results were as follows:
City 1-A - Warren F. Sheets,
Democra~ 47 votes, Kenneth Morgan, Republican, 89; City 1-B Douglas M. Cowles, Democrat, 55 ,
Barbara A. Wallen, Republican,
134: City 2- A - Joseph E. Stiles,
Democrat, 35, Suzanne Moulton,
Republican, 125: City 2-B - Dottie Chesmut, Democrat, 30, Warner
M. Halley, Republican, 68; City 3A - No Democrat filed, Michael
Corbin, Republican, 74; City 3-B
- Floyd E. Wright, Democra~ 42,
Gwedolyn B. Carter, Republican,
34; City 4-A - No Democrat filed,
Robert R. Saunders, Republican,
98: City 4-B - Sheila Sue Harmon, Democrat, 81 , Sreven E. Wallis, Republican, 70: Ci ty 4 -C Carol Rupe, Democrat. 23, John S.

Rogers, Republican, 65:
Addison Precinct - Claude B.
Burnet~ Danocrat, 172, G. Gordon
Fisher, Republican, 127; Addison
Township - Barbara E. Russell,
Democrat, 153, Oscar C. Baird,
Republican, 182: Cheshire Precinct
- Gladys Rife, Democrat, 100,
James R. Neal, Republican, 79;
Cheshire Township - No Democrat filed, John E. Beck, Republi can, 75; Clay Precinct- Donald
E. Perkins, Democra~ 68, Wanda
K. Waugh, Republican, 157; Clay
Township - Charlotte F. Seamon,
Democrat, 93, Connie Hemphill,
Republican, 168; Kanauga Precinct
- Clyde D. Burnell, Democrat, 99,
Betty l . Finney, Republican, 128:
Gallipolis Township- James L.
Holley, Democrat, 74, Donald Rick
Howell, Republic:m, 133:
Green Precinct I - Ruth Gillespie. Democrat, 138, Denise A.

Shockley, Republican, 223; Green
Precinct 2 - Thomas E. Pasquale,
Democrat, 115, David T. Evans,
Republican, 240; Green Precinct 3
- Betty A. Baxter, Democrat, 92,
Jeffrey L. Snedaker, Republican,
197; Green Township- Conard E.
Hudson Sr., Democrat, 129, Carlos
P. Wood, Republican, 212; Greenfield Township - Georxe E. Carpenter, Democra~ 78, Charles E.
Chambers Sr., Republican, 29;
Guyan Township- Jeffrey J.
Fowler, Democrat, 77, Jeffrey A.
Halley, Republican, 125: Guy an
Precinct - No Democrat filed,
Thomas Myers Watson, Republi can, 101; Harrison Township Jack W. Slone, Democrat, 104,
Wayne Jividen, Republican, 120:
Huntingtm Precinct - Kathryn
Rece, Democra~ 73, no Republican
filed: Huntington Township Billy Williamson, Democra~ 173,
no Republican filed: Morgan

Township - Johnnie E. Russell,
Democrat, 147, George E. Pope,
Republican, 122; Ohio Township
- Beue S. Meadows, Democrat,
114, Mary Lou Greene, Republi can, 135: Perry Township- Larry
A. Fallon, Democrat, 112, Alma
Stauffer, Republican, 160; Centerville Precinct - Robert L. Ruff,
Democrat, 85, Kathryn Bennell,
Republican, 70; Raccoon Township
- Larry L. Shong, Democrat, 88,
Kevin D. Pullins, Republican, 103;
Rio Grande Precinct - Charles
Robert Shaw, Democrat, 33, Earl
D. Morgan, Republican, 101;
Springfield Township - Thomas
E. Sprague, Democrat, 130, no
Republican filed; Bidwell Precinct
- Bridget Phillips, Democra~ 144,
Carroll C. Brown, Republican, 137;
Walnut Township - Delores
Baker, Democrat, 115, J. Merrill
Caner, Republican, 115.

Heritage Weekend to be observed June 13-14
By JULIE E. DILLON
Times-Sentioel Staff
· POMEROY - Heritage WeekeM will offer a variety of activities
fqr the public through the eff&lt;JtS of
two organizations - the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society and the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
; Displays, exhibitions, demonstrations and entertainment are
being planned around the theme
"The Good Old Summertime."

mony.

. A display of vintage clothing,
PrCSCDted against a backdrop from
the 40's and 50's, drawn by Debbie
IVU 's Southern Junior High eighth
grade art class, accessories and
summenime memorabilia will be
p(esented in the downstairs rooms
of the museum. The Railroad Club
of South East Ohio will be on hand
with their model railroad collections in the upstain.
There will be demonstrations of
spinning and weaving, quilting
(with an opportunity for anyone
who wants to try quilting to panicip,te), blacksmithing and much

more.
The 91st Ohio Volunteer
Infantry Group, Company B, will
be camping on the museum
gtounds over the weekend. They
will be doing drills and demonstrations both days, with a ball pme

on Sunday afternoon. Anyone
interested in participating in the
game on Sunday should contact
Dave Gloeclcn« through the museum at 992-3810. Sunday will open
with a wreath laying at the Civil
War monmnent at the Meigs County Court House at 12:30 p.m.
Tbere will be entertainment at
the museum both days with band
and square dancing on Saturday
evening beginning at 5 p.m. Saturday night at the movies may be
enjoyed with a vintage movie at a
"good old summertime price."
A pie baking contest (fruit pies
only) will be held, with pies to be
at the museum by 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Winners will be announced
and pies auctioned at 6:30p.m.
The food booth at the musuem
will open at noon on Sunday with
wreath laying at 12:30 p.m. and
other activities 10 begin at I p.m.
Blacksmltblagalld
splnoing-weavinc
Herman and Nancy Schul, Tuppers Plains, will be demonslrating
blacksmithing and spinning-weaving at the museum. Questions from
the public are encouraged and
some items will be available for
sale.
Schul makes useful and decorative ironware items using old-time
methods of blacksmithing. The
forge, vise and drill press he uses
are turn of the century equipment.
He uses tbe old tools to turn out
items such as wall hooks Ill candle
holders, dinner bells to campfire
sets, froes 10 roses. He lakes special
orders and does commission wort:
for historicall!f014!S and ether special inlerest persons.
Mrs. Schul spins and weaves
wool from her Jacob sheep which
are a ..-e breed dating blri 10 biblical times. She raises the four-

Factory Retail ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 113,204
less Saver Pac Discount ............ - 2.24~
110,959
Le11 Extra Savings ...............~ ....... - 600
$10,359
less GM Rebate ........................... - 750
19,609
Less First Ti111e Buyer Discount ..... - 400
'9,209
Less Our Discount .....................- 559
I

SPINNING AND WEAVING • Nancy Scbul, Tuppers Plains,
spins and weaves wool rrom her Jacob sb~p wbicb are a rare
br~d dating back to biblical times. Sbe will be using a handmade
spinning wh~l of the traditional design, and will also be splnoing
oo a "drop spindle" which is the rorerunner or the spinning wheel.
She can be seen during Heritage Wet'kend at the Meigs County
Museum on Saturday and Sunday.
horned, multicolored animals on
the family farm near Tuppers
Plains. She will be using a handmade spinning wheel of the traditional design, and will also be spinning on a "drop spindle" wltich is
the forerunner of the spinning
wheel. Sbe also weaves decorative
and useful items from commercially spun and woven yams and fabncs. She lakes orders for special
sizes and colon.
The couple has attended classes
and workshops in Ohio and West
Virginia to attain knowledge and
skill in their trades.
They will be demonslrating in
the Meigs County booth at Ameriflora in Columbus July 16-19.
Durin~ the year the couple participates m the Mountain State Art
and Craft Fair at Cedar Lakes near
Ripley, W.Va.: the Bob Evans
Farm Festival at Rio Grande; and
Indian Summer Festival at Marietta. They also spend several weekends at Adamsville Log Village at
Bob Evans Farms, plus other smaller heritage celebrabonS.
CJVU..WAR
MEMORIAL SERVICE
Descendants of Civil War Union
Veterans who register at the Meigs
County Museum by Saturday afternoon, listing the union veteran and
relationship, may have a memorial
ribbon to wear at the Civil War
monument memorial service on
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. Some proof
of service and line of descent will
be required. Ribbons may be

Kelso said Friday that his
newest effort is patterned on the
Navy's past successes in ridding
the service of racial discrimination
in the 1970s and drug use in the
1980s.
"My goal ... is to focus my
attention so dramatically on this
problem, 10 make sure that everybody realizes that we have to fix
this togelher and that we're in it for
the long haul,'' he said.
The admiral said the program
tries to teach all service members
"how to recognize sexual harass-

picked up Sunday between noon
and 12:30 p.m . at the museum.
Ribbons will be limited to the frrst
200 regislrants.
POMEROY MERCHANTS
ASSOCIATION ACTIVITIES
Festivities sponsored by the
merchants association will kick-{)ff
Friday evening with the announcement of the winner of the Heritage
Queen Contest at the Meigs County
Public library beginning at 7 p.m.
Light refreshments will be available and the public may an.end.
Saturday's activities will begin
with a parade at 10 a.m. forming
behind the old junior high school at
9 a.m. Anyone may participate in
the parade and to register call V iclci
Ferrell at 992-5177 during the day
or 992-2612 in the evening. The
theme for the ~ is the same as
the museum s "The Good Old
Summertime."
Immediately followin$ the
parade will be the recogniuon of
the Heritage Queen and her court at
the Court Street stage.
At II a.m. there will be a performance by area clogging groups
and a western dance demonSiration
followed by Denver Rice on his
ever-popular toilet seat guitar at
noon.
A clothing fashion show complete with historical narration will
be presented by the women's auxiliary of the 91sl Ohio Volunteer
Infantry Group, Company B, at
12:30 p.m. followed by a demonstration by Company Bat I: 15 p.m.
Outhouse races will be beld at 2

p.m. followed by the musical entertainment of Dee and Dallas at 3
p.m.
Outhouse rKes
The outhouse races on Saturday
are open to the public with the following rules as guidelines.
Each team will consist of not
DIOftl than five persons, four memben on the gromd and one sitting
in the llllthome; wMlls and rollers
are permissible; there is 10 be no
form of propulsion or mechanical
power other than four members on
the ground; outhouses must remain
in an upright position; outhouses
must be six feet tall from the floor
to the roof top; outhouses must
have four straight sides and a roof
of solid construction with one
opening allowed for window or
half-moon and one door ~ning.
The official race director
reserves the right to reject any
entry for failure to comply with the
rules.
The distance of the race will be
detenmined at the time of arrival on
race day . If necessary, multiple
heats will be run with a run-{)ff f~
heat winners.
Prizes will be awardw for the
best looking outhouse and costume.
Entry deadline is Friday at 3
p.m. and contestants must report to
Court Street at I p.m. on Saturday
for inspection and briefing.
Canoe Rally
Area Boy Scout groups will be
sponsoring the Meigs Canoe Rally
on Sarurday with sign-up at 9 a.m.
at the levee area in Pomeroy.
This rally is open to the public
and not limited only to scout members.
Three events will be featured
including a milk run, slalom and
two-mile marathon. All events

require two persons rowing.
Trophies will be awarded for
f~r.&gt;l and second place in all events
and there is a $5 entry fee per
rower.
Starting time for the races will
be 10 a.m . at the levee and furtltf'S
information on the canoe rally may
be obtained by calling 992-2439,
992-5959 or 742-2010.
Other actirities
There will be antique show by
the Russ and Hope Moore in the
larger mini-park on Cowt Street in
Pomeroy all day Saturday as well
as a quilting demonstration and
sale of items by the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
Sky Cone of the Home Economics Department at Ohio University will organize a display on
an array of summmime clothing in
the window of Clark's Jewelry.
In addition to this variety of
events there will also be craftm on
Court Street selling their goods.
Anyone interested in reserving a
space for $10 to sell their crafts
should contact Dianna Lawson at
Bank One in Pomeroy, or Becky
Jeffers at Davis-Quickel Insurance
in Pomeroy.
St. Paul Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy will be serving lunch Saturday from II a.m . to 4 p.m. in the
church's air-conditioned fellowship
hall with a menu of hot dogs, sloppy JDeS, cole slaw, potato chips,
soft drinks, tea, lemonade, coffee
and dessens. The public is invited.
Trinity Church will also be servIng food as well as hosting its
annual ice cream social beginning
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Anyone questions reprding any
activities for Heritage Weekend
may be directed 10 Julie Dillon at
TM Daily Stntwl, 992-2155.

BUY NOW FOR•••

$8650

$8650

BLACKSMITI-DNG • Herman Schal, Tuppen Plains, will be
demonstrating blacksmithing at lbe Melp County Museum during
Heritage Weekend Saturday and Sunday. Schul makes usdul and
decorative ironware items using old-lime methods or blacksmithing.

$8650

LOAD CANON- Members of the 9lst Ohio Volunteer Inrantry
Group, Company B are pictured during a ft(fDI encampment as
they load a Civil War cannoa. They will be doing drills and
demonstratioas both days, with a ball game on Sunday afternoon.

?{&lt;

Navy mandates training about sex harassment
WASHINGTON (AP) - Every
sailor and officer must undergo
training this year aimed at preventing sexual abuse and harassment of
Navy women, the service's top
admiral says.
The order issued this week by
Chief of Naval Operations Frank B.
Kelso II follows reports of
widespread se~ abuse at a 1991
naval aviators convention in Las
Vegas and other incidents of
harassment at the Naval Academy
and at the recruit training center in
Orlando, Fla.

Section B.
June 7, 1992

MUSEUM ACI1VITI~
ON DISPLAY • The slpillc:aoce or 1bt Rome Beauty apple to
this aru Is rtmembtml by Ibis stooe and plaque on display at the
Lawrence County Fairgrounds. Besides the Rome Beauty, the
EIISft Cox and Gallla Beauty are apples developed in southern
Ohio

1Ihn.es - ~entinel

'

The annual dinner at the Meigs
County Museum will be held Fridiy at 7 p.m. with reservations due
Monday. The cost is $10 single,
$18 couple.
Activities at the museum on Satllfday will begin with food booths
openin~ at noon and other activities
beginmng at I p.m. The afternoon
v.jll begin with a flag raising cere-

O'Brien processes 42 cases in Meigs court
POMEROY - Meigs County
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
processed 42 eases last week_
Fined were: Shelley Barnett,
Letart, W.Va., no fishing license,
costs; Philip R. LaComb, failure to
maintain reasonable control, $20
and costs; Shane Bishop, Deerfield,
seat belt violation, costs only; Warren Green, Richmond, Va., left of
center , $10 and costs: Harold
Arrowood, Columbus, spred, $19
and costs; Delano Farley, Parkersburg, W.Va., speed, $15 and costs;
Todd R. King, Middlepon, speed,
$21 and costs; James Newton,
Logan, speed, S23 and costs.
Andrew Rose, Racine, speed,
$21 and costs; Roger Saunders, Jr.,
Gallipolis, speed, $21 and costs:
Michelle Cooper, Pomeroy, speed,
$19 and costs; James F. Morgan,
Jr., Albany, domestic violence,
costs, six months in jail, suspended
to 20 days, two years probation,
restraining onder issued, psycholog-

Along the River

OFF TO THE RACES - Area residents will be orr to tbe races,
the outhouse races during Heritage Weekead June 13-14 in
Pomeroy. Putting (orth I creal effort to make tbe w~knd of
activities a success are metDbtn or the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Sociriy and the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

ment, prevent it at their commands,
report it when it occurs and conduct themselves appropriately at all
times," whether in uniform or not
The admiral said every sailor
and officer wiU undergo the training before the end of the year. And
given the complexities of the issue,
courses will be repeated at each
stage llf advancement for every service member.
"You can't do this on one occasion and expect people to change,"
Kelso said,
If the message doesn't lake, he

said, offenders will be drummed
out of the service.
"We're not going to keep people in the Navy who harass women.
It' s just not going to be,'' he said.
As pan of the program, Kelso is
dispatching a videotaped speech
and instruction materials for commanders that include 16 case studies drawn hum actual incidents in
the Navy.
The examples range in seriousness from aggravate~ assault to
dealing with offtee chitchat
The cases also auempt to help
service members deal with possible
false complaints of sexual harassment, or even one case where a
female superior offtcer attempts to
pressure a subordinate civilian
surprised by the Comanche ' s employee for a dale.
Two investigations found that at
~boise.
least
26 women - half of them
"Sales of that vehicle have been
below what we've anticipated," naval officers - wm assaulted by
said Joseph Ricci, owner of Joe drunken Navy and Marine Corv.s
Ricci Jeep Eagle in Detroit. "We pilots at a convention of the Tad(dealers) were saying, 'Build us a hook Association, a booster club
$6,995 pickup to compete with the for naval pilOI.!I, in Las Vegas last
imp!XIS or else don't waste the _pro- year.
duction lime.'
The investigations also faulted
The Comanche was advertised senior Navy officers for turning a
as costing as little as $8,400, Ricci blind eye to such incidents. In
said. But with an automatic trans- ~nse, Kelso recendy instiblled
mission, power steering and other a ' zero tolerance" policy against
options, a typical model sold for sexual abuse and lurassment, with
$10,000 to $12,000, he said.
the ttaining program a follow-up.

Chrysler ending production of jeep pickup
DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler
Corp. said Friday that it is ending
production of the Jeep Comanche
midsize pickup truck, the fourth
Jeep product to be discontinued
since 1986.
Production will stop at the end
of the 1992 model year, Chrysler
said in a statement. The pickups are
assembled at Toledo, Ohio, but
employment there won't be affected because of increased demand for
the Jeep Cherokee sport-utility
vehicle, the statement said.
The Comanche was introduced
in 1985 by J\merican Motors

'

'

Corp., which Chrysler acquired in
Augustl987. Sales totaled 164,458
units as of Friday but had declined
in recent yean, to 6,663 in calendar
1991 and 3,142 for the 1992 model
year, Quysler said
The Comanche made its debut
several months before AMC discontinued production of the Jeep
en, the last direct descendant of
the famous World Wfll D vehicle.
Under Chrysler, the J-series
pickup truck was discontinued in
1988, followed in June 1991 by the
Jeep Grand w~.
A J~ep dealer said he wasn't

•tax and ntlt Fees are extra.
CHEVROLEI'

•

•

OI.DSMOBRE

11

*

(614) 446•3672
1616 EASTERN AR.

GAlLIPOUS, OH.

1

CANOE RALLY PLANNED· Area Boy
Scout groups will be sponsorloa the Melts
Canoe RaUy on Saturday wltb llicJI·•p at !I a.m.
at tbe ieYH area Ia Pomeroy. ne rally is opea to
tile pabllc and Dot limited oaly to sc:oat •e•ben. DrH events wiD bt featared ladadll&amp; a

milk rna, slalom .aad two-mDe marathon. Trophies will bt awarded ror lint aDd second place
In all event&amp; aad tllere Is a $5 entry ree per
rower. Plctared with Gtorae Wrlaht, oae of tbt
oraaaizera or tllte rally, ue Doua Stiat&amp; nd
Slwmoa Staats.

COMPANY B ·The 91st Ohio Voluteer
Inrantry Group, Company B, wiD bt doilla drOll
and demonstrations durln1 Herlta1e Weekead

Ia Pomeroy on Saturday at 1:15 p-111. on Court
Streel and at the Melp County Museum oa Saturday alld Sunday.

•

�nmes SenUnet

OH--ftolnt Pleasant,

wv

June 7, 1992

~~=7~~~~~====~

4une 7, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--ftolnt Pleasant,

Seniors scheduled announced
GALLIPOLIS - The following

Friday, June U

10 a.m.· Wallting club
10 a.m. • noon • an
Menus consist of:
Monday: Cube steak/gravy, rice,
bnoccoli, bread,p~le.
·
Tuesday • Sausage pattie, tatet
tots, spinach, biscuits, fruit cup.
Wednesday
Roast
turkey/gravy, whipped potatoes,
lima beans,apple rings, dinner rolls,
ice cream/cake.
Thursday • Chicken, Augratin
potatoes , green beans, bread,
neaches.

zen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, June 8
10 a.m.- Walking club
10:45 a.m. - Shon subjects
I p.m. - Chorus
Tuesday, June 9
10:30 a.m. - STOP!Exercise
10 a.m. - 3 p.m. -Quilting
12:30 p.m. - Video matinee

Wednesday, June 10

II a.m. - Binhday party and
Information Falr

1UVER 'CITIES SPEECH
and LANGUAGE
SERVICES
SIUIUiler Speech Th.,rapy .t\.ppolntment.l
c.n Be Made Beginning lane 8th

THERAPY SERVIaS AVAIWLE FOR:
oConoui!Mion
•Speechllangu•ge Ev..uatlon
•Speechllangu~~ge Sc-nlnga
•Aitlculllllon Dioonleq

DEIRA

Magnuson-Stutes
PAMELA WILLS and TODD CASTO

Wills-Cas to
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph D. Wills or Cheshire,
-announce the engagement and
:upcoming wooding of their daugh·ter, Pamela Kay, to Todd Casto,
:son of Mr. Donald Casto of Point
Pleasant, and Ms. Joyce Jividen of
uallipolis.
· Miss Wills is a 1987 graduate of
·Kyger Creek High School and is
&lt;:urrently employed at Drs. Smith
:and Jforgi.nseri, DDS.

Mr. Casto is a 1987 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and will
be graduati ng from Ohio University on June 13 with a degree in
Industrial Technology.
The open chun:h ceremony will
be held June 27 at 7:30p.m. at the
Cheshire Bapust Church. A reception will follow at the home of the
bride's parents.
The couple is registered at JC
Penney's in the Huntington Mall.

XENJA - Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam
Magnuson of Xenia, announce the
engagement and a~hing mar~e of their daughter, Judith Kay,
to Alan Matthew Stutes of
Jamestown.
Miss Magnuson is a sophomore
at Wright State University and is
employed at National Health Laboratories in Kettering, as a dam processor.
Stutes , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Stutes of Jamestown, is a

oforelgn Dlalecl
.Cleft Pallll•
•Augmenhlllve Communlc8tlon
ol.Aing011{16 Delayed
•Stllllerlng
otturlng lmp~~l,....

•Aph•l•
•B,.In Injured

JUDITH MAGNUSON and ALAN STUTES

LVIIIf, . .

CCC·SLP
.-

graduate of Gallia Academy High
Sc hool and and ITT Technical
Institute with an associate's degree '
in Electronics Engineering. He is
employed at Hazco Services, Dayton , as a bench technician. He is
th e grandson of Mr. and Mrs .
Hiram Stutes Jr. , of Rio Grande,
Esther Bush of Gallipolis, and the
late Lamben Bush.
The wooding wiU be held Saturday, Aug. 15 at the First Reformed
Chun:h, Xenia.

PH: (614) 446-3158

: COLUMBUS - St. Cecilia
Catholic Church in Columbus was
the seUing for the April 4 wedding
of Kimberly Maie Swonger and
Douglas Alan McDaniel.
The bride is the daughter of
Raben Swonger of Gallipolis and

RENT·2·0WN

4 DRAWER CHEST
1

MIAMI (AP) - Fifty years
after they began growing up with
each othec through the mail, Marilyn Lawrence and Peter Darby
have finally met.
"We are not strangers, "
Lawrence said Wednesday after
laying eyes on her pen pal for the
first lime. " After all, l ve known
Peter lon~er than I've known my
husband.'
They started corresponding in
1942 as part of a pen-pal project
staned by an eighth-grade English
teacher rn Nonh Miami. Marilyn
Ajn Cadwallader, 12, closed her
e)ts and blindly drew a name from
a paper bag marked "BOYS."
It was Peter Darby of New
~a place 8,051 miles away.
Marilyn wrote a long lener. And
nothing happened ... until a big fat
letter arri voo three months later.
He was 14, enrolled in a boarding school , lived on his family
dairy farm near Auckland, "and
wrote very well. He had nice handwriting and never misspelled a
word,'' Lawrence recalled.
"It was com~Jietely beyond the
realm of possibility that we would
m~~" said lawrence. Yet, a year
after the class project began, she
ar¥1 Peter Darby were the only ones
stiU writing.
They kept writing, through
wars, marriage, binhs, deaths of
parents, even the death of a grandchild, over SO Chrisunases and as
many birthdays.

Bunk Bed's Co111plete
1
6.29 WK.

Fish, Chicken, Chops, Steaks, Ribs, Spaghetti,

atc.......etc.......etc.
Homemade Bread - Bunches ol Vegetables &amp;
Salada &amp; Desserts
OR

Heavy Dtty
Washer &amp; Dryer

SPECIAL TODAY:

SJ]68

CHICKEN (Baked) - Mashed Potatoes, Noodles,
Dreaslng, Slaw, Green Beans

WEEJ(

s-,oo AduHa s4so Children under 12
os~:s ~'l1!1\I'V(J

Far infar11atlon &amp;
reservations caD: 446·9 545
57·59 Court St.
Gallipo&amp;s City

STORE
HOURS:

Monday lhru Sal . 9 a.m. till6 p.m.
Sunday 12 Noon tillS p.m.

Hill-Baxter

OES to meet

GALLIPOLIS - Brandi Rollin s
and Brian Pearce will exchange
wedding vows Sunday, June 7 at
2:30p.m. at French City Baptist
Church , Swe Route 160. l/4 mile
past Holzer Medical Center.
A ~ption will follow the open
church ceremony in the fellowship
hall

RACINE- Racine Chapter #134
OES will have Inspection of Offi cers on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
The mspecling officers wiU be the
Wonhy Grand Mairon of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio, Marilyn Benneu,
Rac ine is th e home chapter of the
De puty Grand Matron of Distri ct
25. Kay Spencer.

Now$29
reg. $40

... With Money From Star Bank's Money Sale!*
Stop by or call any of our Star Bank locations today. If you can'I make it during our regular hours, call
·
1-800-274-4111 Monday through Thursday from5 until8 p.m.

Slldl19 Itt saiL Na- reiiSicl stnkts H.st of

STAR BANK , N .A .,

(1111

TRI ~ STATE

MEMBE~

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

FOIC

' Certain restnctions apply

41.33s3

•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
448-8300

COURT STREET OFFICE

446 0662

Itt••lily ta pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

STAR BANK:

SILVER BRIDGE PLW

J

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

•Pay Off Credit Card Balances • Use For Home Improvements •
Consolidate Your Bills

WALK-INS WELCOME

HClJr HClJ)Penlng

RIO GRANDE- An ail-day
class and a two evening class in
WordPerfect 5.0 and 5.13 - lnuoduclion to Worclpocessing will be
offered by the Oniversitf of Rio
Grande OffiCe of Continumg Education.
Evening classes will be offered
on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings, June 9 and 11, from 6 to
9:30p.m. Adaytime class meets on
June 10 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Both
classes meet in the CoUege of Business Computer Lab, Room 108.
Cost for the class is $75. The
pre-registration deadline is Monday, June 8 for both sections.
Instructing the course will be
Chuck Clark. Participants will
receive a lake horne wttk diskette,
instructional handouts and a Uni versity of Rio Grande CEU certificate ftr .7 CEU's.
Further information on the
worlcshops and registration information may be obmined from the
Office of Continuing Education,
University of Rio Grande, Box
878, Rio Grande, 45674, or by call·
ing (614) 245-5353 e&lt;tension 325,
or taU-free in Ohio at I-800-2827201.

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

A.P . A .

Efleclrve Jure B-n 1992

G.. I•

ered

-Fr,

1
OJJ

with the seasons and with the variety of dail!. entertainers. Also th e
replica of 'San!JI Maria," Christopher Columbus ' flag ship is
moored in downtown Columbus on
the Scioto River.
Meigs County 's week is July
13-19. A number of talented Meigs
Countians will be a part of this
ra."
week. If you would like to demon: Although there are thousands of strate your skillful craft, art, or
flowers and plants from various entertam, you are invited to show '
~ountries around the world, there is
your slciU to the rest of the world.
~uc h more. There is something ftt Help show off Meigs County. If
all ages , from remote cars and you enjoy taling to people, volunboats, NASA display to replicas of teer to help prorliOie the area giving
'"'hitecture from different pans of out brochwes and answering visilhe w&lt;rld. A couple of favorites f&lt;r tors questions. A seminar wiU be
the very young, the dinosaur dig, held in order ftr yoo to be weU pre~ Disney's topiary garden. From
pared, CmiiCt Mary Powell at the
lone I to Oct. 12, the Smithsonian Mcigl County Park District OffiCe,
~isplay "Seeds of Change" wiU be
992-2239, or 110p by, 200 East Secat Ameriflora.
ond Street in l'omeroy.
: Ameriflora is always changing

Summer Perm Sale!
ADD VOLUME, CURL
AND SUPPORT WITH
A PROFOAM PERM.

Course

MELISSA SUE WOODS

SPRING VALlEY OFFICE ,
448-13119

L-----------------------------------------------------~

•

POMEROY
236l Mall St¥ 2•d Floor
992·5912

GAUIPOUS
414 Secoltll Ave., 211d Floor
446.0166
8:30 to 5:00 Mollllay·Frlday
1:30 to S:OO Mollday·Frlday 8:30 to 12 Salwday
Closed Tlt•rsdaJ
Closed Thnday
ALSO: Jack- a.sa,.alle, AIM!ts, Cltlkotltt, Iota &amp; McArtltur

into UC society

KELLY SMITH

FORMAL
IMPRESSIONS
YOU'U UKE OUR WOKS!
-Great Selection
•All MaJor Brandl

•Expert Fitting
oOn-th•Spot
Alterations
•Traditional &amp;
Contemporary Styling
You may decide to
aelect your tux from
our
own
prtv.t.
stock. 200 tuxedol on
hand In our atore It
all times. Prices awt
at

BRIANUNROE

Swimming lessons
slated in Syracuse
SYRACUSE - Two sessions of
swimming lessons will be offered
at London Pool in Syracuse.
The first session will be held
June 8-19 and the second session
will be held June 22-July 3. Class
fee is $20 per person and participants must be at least sill years of
age. David Deem is instructor.
A lifeguard training class will
also be offered June 15-30. Class
fee for this session is S25 and participants must be at least 15 years
of age.
Further information ma y be
obtained by calling 992-9909.

Cornett inducted
GALLIPOLIS - Thomas A.
Cornett was initialed into Phi Beta
Kappa on May 21 in a ceremony in
Tangeman University Center at the
University of Cincinnati.
The initiation was conducted by
the Phi Bela Kappa Delta of Ohio
chapter. Prior to the initiation, a
dinner was enjoyed by the initiates
and their families.
The guest speaker was Gordon
A. Christenson, university professor of law. Phi Be!JI Kappa was
founded in 1776 at the College of
William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va_ Elec tion to Phi Beta
Kappa is a recognition of academic
excellence.
Cornett will attend the University of Cincinnat i College of
Mcd1cine in the fal l.

110

or 111101
SILl

letllllllf Pltlllf1, All Flats 'S
......... hlklll 14,
4"

--····-····soc
6• IIRnl••• 'I

20% OFF
All Shr••Hrr &amp; " ' "

ftll AMIRICII CIICD
SOCIEtY lAYS...
Sea your doctor or clinic If ,_
notice cllangesln ,_, aida
•lassuclla:

O,.Dah9u.te5p...
QcKID SUNDAY

l

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

u

Syracue 992-5716
A MOlE ntAT RISES IN UEIGIIl

; POMEROY - If you haven't had
:me opponunity to be a world trav.eler, now is the chance you've been
;waiting for. You can get a glimpse
o f 25 countries and the cost is rea:sonable . How? Where? Between
:now and Oct. 12, just travel to
Columbus to the lnttrnation Honi~ ultural Extravaganza, "Arneriflo-

Mi ss- Hill , g randd a u ~ hter of
Ve ra Thomas of C h es h~r e, is a
graduate of Highland High School
and is an Accounting maJor at Marion Tec hnical College.
Mr . Bax ter JS a graduate of
Hi ghl and Hi gh Sc hool and is
employed as a facto ry worker in
Bellefontaine.

Rollins-Pearce

Finally, on his way to visit a
daughter 10 London, Darby
announced that he would "pop
over to Miami" and finally meet
his faithful correspondent

GALLIPOLI S - The 1992-93
Rotary Memorial Scholarsh ip
Awards have been selected by the
scholarship committee of the Gallipolis Rotary Oub.
The 1992-93 Gallipolis Rotary
Club Scholars include Kelly Smith,
Florence Tomlinson, Brian Unroe,
and Melissa Sue Woods.
The Rotary Memorial Scholarship Program , established in 1971
in mem&lt;ry of deceased members of
the Gallipolis Rotary club is an
ongoing service to youth of Gallia
County.
Awards have been made to a
total of 65 students over the 22year life of the scholarship program . Applicants must be from
Gallia County and are judged on a
combination of scholanhip, school
and outside activities, worl:, goals,
and need.
Smith was valedictorian of the
1992 graduating class of Gallia
Academy High School. She was a
member of the National Honor
Society, Key Club, French club,
and various other high school
clubs. She panicipated in marching
band, concert band, and concert
choir. She was also a junior varsity
cheerleader.
Smith plans to become an elementary school teacher.
Tomlinson maintained an A
minus grade average at Hannan
Trace High School. She was a
member of French, drama, and
library clubs and served on the
yearbook and newspaper staffs.
She was the 1991 Homecoming
Queen. Tomlinson plans to major
in psychology .
Unroe was valedictorian of the
1992 graduating class at Hannan
Trace High School. He was a member of French and drama clubs and
served as editor of the newspaper.
He played basketball and earned
honorable mention on the all-district team. He plans to major fin
civil and environmental engineering.
Woods was salutatorian of the
1992 graduating class of Hannan
Trace High School. She served on
the student council and yearbook
smff. She played on the volleyball
team and was a junior varsity
cheerleader.
Woods plans to major in political science or international relations.
The Rotary Memorial Scholarship Committee includes Keith
Brandeberry, Clyde Evans, Art
DeLamerans, Bob Daniel . Morris
Haskins, Herman Koby, and Pat
Whitehead.

Meigs County featured at coMtNc Ingels
TENT
AmeriFlora June 13-19 ..-so_o_N'-Furnitnre-s_A_LE__,

KIMBERLY HILL and BRIAN BAXTER

MARENGO · Raben and Vickie Hill of Marengo , announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Kimberl y
Michele, to Brian Glenn Baxter.
son of John and Jo Burghard of
Fredericktown, and Glenn Baxter
of Arlin~ton, Texas.

Janice Summers of Mechanicsburg.
She is employed in the hospitality
industry by Brilyn Inc.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard E. McDaniel of
Columbus. He is president of
Advantage Health Services.

Pen pals meet after 50 years

3.12 per WK.

EAT LUNCH TODAY
AT OSCARS!
OPEIIIHIS SUNDAY AND
EVERY SUIIDAY 11 A.M.·3 P.M.
Ordtr from our FULL MENU

MR. and MRS. DOUGLAS (KIMBERLY) MCDANIEL

Swonger-McDaniel

Located:
4 nu'les oH Rt. 1
on State Rt. 141
'In Cellfenary*

Sunday Tlme&amp;-Sentlnei-Page-83

Four receive Rotary scholarships

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Quilting

are activities and menus for June 812 at the Gallia County Senitt Citi-

wv

•
A CHANGE IN COlOR

A NEW MOL E

'

.
!

r

~ .

•

.

I

/• f.

!

'

': / \ ~I,&lt;

A CHANGE IN SIZE

•. J

,._

~-

'.,

. ' ......
A CH AN GE IN TH IU n£

A CHANGE IN SEN SATION

CHANGES IN SHAPE

Have your umoles" checked

-FREESKIN CANCER SCREENING

JUNE 12th·13th·14th
'RI., 12th-9 am 'til ?
SAT., 13th-9 am 'td?
SUN.1 14th-11 am 'till pm ·
*Buy Direct Off Fadory
Trucks at Wholesale Prices•

AT

HOLZER CLINIC
385 Jackson Pile
Gal&amp;pobs
8 A.M. - 11 A.M.

FINE HOME FURNITURE
*MAJOR SAVINGS ON ALL
HOME APPLIANCES &amp;
ELEORONICS

SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1992
To schedule your appointment for
this FREE screening
Call446·5773 between 1pm-3 pm daily
Jointly sponsored by the Physldans and StaH of

(lENT LOCAnD ON PARKING LOT

IEHIND INGELS SlORL)

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
, ................ llflri,OL
~

16141 MINI IOU 1B1 Ill t»-1111

,_

Ll,_,.

-

-

INSTANT CIIEDIT (Appr I - - CNdll Toclly WI~ Quollllod Credit)

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER and HOLZER QJNIC
GaiHa County Unit of
THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCinY
Ohio River v•y O.apter of Tile Assodallei of
Surgical Tecbologlsts

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt Pleaeant, WV

June 7, 1992

June 7, 1992

wv

Sunday Times-Senti

STOKELY

Beat of the Bend...

TOMATO

hy flo I&gt; I /,)('f/iciJ

JUICE

Interesting.
Apparently, you ran'! look lor
any big relief in 11K~ prit'f ol ~~&lt;l'OU
line in Meigs County. A roupk ol

I\F.;u1t

No mads, no prisons, no

111hs, uo notl11n "' . Go ahead,
ptol n l ;tile/ a lolla good it ' ll do
y;t. And, hy the way , another resi-

residents phoned- - unc n:1Jorh:tl
gasoline at $1.07 in Gallit••li.,; tk
dent phoned .'\uggcsling Lhat Meigs
otbct reported $1.(16 in LanGt&lt;to.
Several months have passed

MR. and MRS. DONALD (GLENNA) NUTTER

Golden anniversary observed
LANCASTER · Donald Kenneth and Glenna Genevieve (Bush)
Nutter of Lancaster. celebrated
lheir 50ih wedding anniversary Saturday, May 23 wilh a reaffirmation
of lheir wedding vows at the First
Presbyterian Olurch in Lancas~er.
Attending the reception from
GaUipolis were Ray Bush, and Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Roach.

They are the parents of Donna
K. Miller of Napoleon, Sharon Ann
Hilliard of Canal Winchester, and
Ronald Keith Nutter of Lancaster.
They have seven grandchildren.
Mrs. Nutter reured from Superi ·
or Floor Covenngs, and Mr. Nutter
recently retired from St.alC of Oh1o
Southeastern Correctional lnstitu·
lion.

since state officials were conlaetc&lt;i

M"~"'

not a had idea either.

In

Meigs County. We saw a btl ol
improvement temporarily . The
buck was passed to Attorney General Lee Fisher and apparently
stopped there. Supposedly, there
was to have been a survey taken,
but if it happened no one here
seems to have bcm advised of the
results.

Par for the course? You bet!

Up Racine way, the free summer programs are underway with
the first having been held at Star
Mill Park Saturday night. Others
are scheduled for Saturday nights.
7 p.m ., on July 4th and 18th and
August!, 15 and 29.
You are invited to take your
lawn chair and attend all of the pro·
grams which are wholesome family
entertainment. Refreshments are
sold at the park and alcoholic beverages are prohibited. Since the
programs are outdoor, weather conditions may cause cancellations.
Gospel and countty-westem music
are featured- a nice endeavor by
the Racine Community.
By the way, any band or group
wanting to perform on any of the
dates is asked to contact Kathryn
Hart at 949-2656. who will give
you the details.

- --

If you want to voice your protest
at the failure to Meigs County lO
get the prison, Middleport's Bob
Gilmore can help you. His latest t·

County, W. Va. Probably,

LO'ITRIDGE · There wiU be a
smorgasbord dinner at the Lot·
tridge Community Center Sunday
from noon to 1:30 p.m. Cost is $5
for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12. Public invited.

HERMAN and MARGARET GROSSNICKLE

Anniversary to be observed
REEDSVILLE • Herman and
Margaret Grossnickle, Reedsville,
will observe their 40th wedding
anni~-th a reception at the
home of
I Harris, Route 681,
on June 14 rom 2-4 p.m.
They were mamed June 8, 1952
at the Joppa United Methodist
Church by the late Rev. Roy

Deeter.
They are the parents of three
children, Robert, Patty and Mark,
all of Reedsville. They also have
three grandchi ldren, Christine ,
Dustin and Adam.
It is requested that gifts be omitted.

WPC schedules evening services
wn.KESVll..LE · Evening services have been ..:heduled by the
Wilkesville Presbyterian Church
the fint Sunday of each month
begmmng thts Sunday, Pentecost
Worshlp on the f1rst Sunday will
beg1~ at 7:30 p.m . The morning
serv1ce w1ll not he held on ftrst
Sundays.
.
Smce today IS Pentecost, a spe-

Meeting slated
POMEROY - Big Bend Stemwheel Association will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Carpenters Hall in
Pomeroy. Anyone interested in
working witb lhe festival is urged
to attend.

cia! celebration of the birthday of
the church w1ll be held. Paruet pants are urged to wear red the
color of Pentecost. and stay for a
coffee and cake birthday party following the worship.
Worship on other Sundays will
be held at 9:15a.m. The pastor is
the Rev. Kay Puckett and the intern
IS Harry Wynn. A hymn sing will
precede the worship.

Passes exam
POMEROY· Deborah Werry
Michael, formerly or lhe MeigsMason area. ..cl now of Port OlarIoue, Pia., baa recently been
licalsed as a regiJtered nWliC af~
paning the National Council
l.lcensln Exam.
She is employed with Venice
Hospilal in Venice, f1a. on the surgical· ooooiosY uniL
She i1 a December 1991 p_adu·
ito or Hocking Collejle wtth an
IIIIOCille delree in applied acic2tcc.
J

'

MIDDLEPORT . Rev . Bob
Armstrong will speak at Rejoicing
Life Church, 500 North Second
Avenue, Middleport, during the
men's breakfast in the school
lunchroom Saturday and dunng
serv ices Sunday at 10 a.m . The
public is invited.
CHESTER · The Unity Stngers
will perform at the Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Churth on Texas
Road on Sunday at 7:30p.m .

Donna Boyd has returned home
from her fourth cruise-she's sold
on cruising for vacationing. This
time she was joined for her four
day outin~ to Free Port and Nassau,
by Melan1e Qualls, a 1992 graduate
of Meigs High School, who was
given the cruise as a graduation
gift from her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Qualls of Middleport
Chuck Bailey refuses to blame
the strange weather on Murphy
Brown. He claims the Groundhog
saw his shadow for a second time
causing 12 more weeks of bad
weather, rather than six.
Pomeroy's Carolyn Grueser
advises me that even though you're
"gone", you can still keep in touch.
A firm, "Cards from Beyond"
sends cards from you to your loved
ones on specific annual occasions
after you expire-Christmas,
Thanksgiving, Easter. See-it's
really not all that difficult to keep
in touch. Do keep smiling.

POMEROY · The Meigs County Bookmobile will make the fol lowing stops this week: TIJESDA Y
· Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m., Darwin, I to 2 p.m., Burlingham , 2:30 to 4:30p.m., Wildwood
Estates, 5 to 6 p.m.; WEDNES DAY · Racine, 12 noon to 4 p.m.,
Letart Falls, 5 to 7 p.m.; TlflJRS DAY · Tuppers Plains, I to 3 p.m .,
Reedsville, 4 to 7 p.m.; FRIDAY ·
The Maples. ll :30 a.m. lO I p.m.,
Overbrook Cenler, I :30 to 2 p.m.,
Pomeroy Pike, 2:30 to 4:30 p.m..
Baum Addition, 5 to 6 p.m.; SATURDAY · Rutland. 9 a.m . to 1
p.m., Danville, 2 lO 3 p.m., Salem
Center. 3:30 to 5:30p.m.

Riverview Community Vacation

Cemla101110
Tbe populatlllll of the Rulsian Em·
plre approached 150 million in lUOO.
Reforms in educalillll, law and local
inatllutiDIII!. and an Industrial boom
otartin&amp; in the 1880s (oil, rallnlllda)
created tbe beJ(ttnlnp of a modern
llate, despite the autocratic lllrill

.......

POMEROY · The Meigs Unit
of the American Cancer Society
will meet Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 7 p.m. in the
cafeteria. Pelar Gonzales, State
Nurse of Hope. will be the speaker.

Bible School, to be held at
Riverview School near Reedsville
through Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
nightly. Classes for ages three
through adult. Public invited.
CHESTER · Vacation Bible
Schoo l at Mt. Hermon United
llrethren Church on Texas Road
wi ll be Monday through Friday
from 9:30-1 1:30a.m. daily.
CHESTER · Vacation B1ble
School at Chesler United Methodist
Church will be Monday through
Fnday from 9:15-11:30 a.m. daily.
POMEROY · The Disabled
American Veterans and the Ladies
Auxiliary will hold its regular
meeting Monday at the hall, 124
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
Refreshments will be served at 6
p.m. and meeting at7 p.m.
RACINE . The Board of Public
Affairs will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
at council chambers. Cemetery
Trustees will meet immediately
after (8 p.m.)
RACINE ·The Southern Adllet·
ic Boosters will meet Monday at
the high school. All coaches and
parents are urged to attend.
TUESDAY
POMEROY · Meigs High
School Class of 1972 will hold an
organizational meeting Tuesday at
noon at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy to plan a get-

FRENCH 500 FLEA
MARKET &amp; GUN
SHOW
Gallia County Jr.
Fairgrounds
JUNE 12, 13, &amp; 14

l

CORN

l
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8.S OZ.

s

RECEIVES HASKINS SCHOLARSHIP- Dr. William B.
Thomas, committee member, presents tbe 1992 Chink Haskins
Scholarship to Melissa Walker.

FLAVORITE BONELESS

GALLIPOLIS · Melissa D.
Walker, who plans to enter Ohio
St.ate University this fall and major
in pre-medicine, has been named
this year's winner of the Chink
Haskins Memorial Scholarship.
Miss Walker, a graduate of Gall1a
Academy High School, is the
daughter of Donald and Linda
Walker of Rio Grande.
At GAHS, she was active in the
band, Tri-Hi-Y. National Honor
Society, a member of the yearbook
staff, and played varsity softball.
Her scholastic

competition.
Melissa was a member of the
Girl Scouts of America for eight
years and has been a volunteer to
help the mentally retarded and
developmentally disabled.
The Chink Haskins Memorial
Scholarship awards $500 annually
to an outstanding senior from a
h1gh school in Gallia County who
w1ll attend The Ohio St.ate University in Columbus . Past winners
mclude: Ami Roderick, Jenn1fer
Donnal ly and Gwen Elliott

achievements

included being named to Who's
Who Among American High
School Students, National History r-::II~U~OM:r-mKI.AP!'ID:-·"'SI.A.....,""'MIS....,PWTATIOII==:-:ltt::"l
and Government Award winner,
IXIWSIYIIOUIH IIACH
All SEOAL Academic Award
- . , Vloo.~Knor,_.__
w.JWW.
recipient, and selected as an All- Wilt .. ...._
r.-., s...- 11 1
American Scholar. In addition,
Gtl-.,-...,,-~
Walker received Superior (I) ratCAlll-100·167·1909
ings in solo and ensem ble band
SOUTH IIACI II &amp; IIIITAU

r•

THANK YOU!

GALLIA COUNTY
VOTERS FOR THE
COMPLIMENTARY
VOTES ON JUNE 2nd

LOUISE BURGER
Paid lor by 1111
401 JIICklon Plkt,

PRINGLES

Hams.............................. LB.

Melissa Walker wins
Haskins Scholarship

LONG BOTTOM · Bill and
Phyllis Cadle will speak during the
Evangelistic Outreach Program at
the Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public. Fellowship will follow .
POMEROY · The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at noon at the
Pomeroy Nurstng and Rchabilita·
tion Center.

JIFFY

MUFFIN MIX

HARRISONVILLE · The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold
a free blood pressure clinic at the
townhouse Tuesday from 10 a.m .
to noon. Members are to bring
potluck roc their dinner. All members urged to attend.

arc welcome.

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE · "Team Up
With Jesus: Winners Meet on AUStar Street" will be the theme for

REEDSVll..LE · There will be a
fishing derby Saturday from 811:30 a.m. at Forked Run Sportsman Club in Long Bouom, off
Route 248 on Curtis Hollow.
For ages 5-15 there will be four
classes: ages 5-6; 7-9; 10-12; and
13-15.
Prizes will be awarded in each
class and the event is open to lhe
public. Free refreshments.

together for alumni. Anyone interested in assisting is encouraged to
atlend.

POMEROY · The Big Bend
Sternwheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Carpenters
Hall in Pomeroy. Anyone interestPOMEROY · OAPSE Chapter ed in working with the festival is
No. 448, Eastern Local w1ll hold a urged to attend.
picnic Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at Royal
Oak. Bring a covered dish. Retirees

Meigs bookmobile
scheduled listed

Fishing derby
DEBORAH MICHAEL

RACINE - The tenth annual
George Holter Jr. family reunion
will he held at the home of James
and Karen Holter Werry Sr., Sunday at I p.m. Barbecue chicken,
plates, etc .. and picnic sheller will
be provided. Bring a covered dish
and lawn chairs. Also bring pictures and mementos. Call949-2746
for furlher infonnation.

I

And congratulations to pleasant
Vem Beegle. retired president of
The Home Bank in Rae ine.
Vera will celebrate her 96th
birthday tomorrow, June 8.
Although she has had some health
problems, Vera still enjoys hearing
from friends. A card will reach her
at Box 132, Racine, Ohio4577l.

Meigs County calendar
SUNDAY
POMEROY . An AA meeting
will be held Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
1TPA office in Pomeroy.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTIDES
PRICES GOOD SUN., JUNE 7 THIU SAT., JUNE 13, 1992

( 'ounty :.:hou ld become a part or

about the price or gasoline

46 oz.

STORE HOURS
Mo11day fnw Sunday
8 AM-H) PM

' '""' trom Middleport Trophies
"''"t "Mnp County Shafted

POTATO

~~E~SfS-..--···-···-···---LB. $1
CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Steak. . . . . . . . . LB.

Ribeye Steak..........LB.
Round Steak. . . . . LB.

SWEET PEAS
orWK CORN

MOUNTAINEER 1# Roll or 10 Oz. Unks

17 OZ. CAN

s

$199

VIIDI

HOTDOG

SAUCE

SUPERIOR

Fra

10 OZ. CAN

s

GOLDEN GRAIN

MAC. &amp;

SAVE

8:00A.M. TO
5:00P.M.

GRADE A

Lg. Eggs..............DozEN

For Further
Information
CALL 245·5343

Dog Food. .2o LB. BAG
You will have over 190 styles of tuxedos lo choose
from. We have a large selection of the latest s!yles
and compltmentary accessones for this special
occasion.

Quality For•alwear at
AHorda•le Prices
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR MORE
IN WEDDING PARTY

CHEESE
7.5 oz.

Peaches._··--····-··-·la. S9c
BROUGHTON'S
$179
~iillk. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL.

All Tennis Shoes
in Stock!

II you are planning a wedding, !hen you should
come see us at Haskins-Tanner.

(

UBBY'S

JUNE IS NATIONAL
TENNIS SHOE MONTH

•

6.0·7.5 oz.

! ........................... ..

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
USDA CHOICE BEEF

39

1
Sau age. . .
$499

$ S9

CHIPS

MORTON HOUSE

TIDE DETERGENT

$699

Ill:
lui

136 OL 1111
Good~:~ At Powll't Super Value 111

Otftt

=

June 7 thru June 13, 1112
Umlt 1 P., Cullomer

II

TONY'S

GROUND
BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE
·,

$

90

''

KEMP'S

--=.;~.,;:---

111

$1

ss
2 Frozen Pizza·---·---··3
99 (
$299
99

Beef Stew. . . . . . .24 oz. aN
WITH BLEACH ONLY

2

s

BRAWNY DESIGtiR

PAPER TOWELS

5

2 1

Ice
Cream
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
sat. Pall.
------,

on MOlliE SGU&amp;ZE

I

CATSUP

II

...Jlt:=:!

Off• Good June 7 thru June 13, 1112

Umlt 1 p., c-.-

I

--------- ..II
SHEDD'S SPREAD II
(
!1
99

----~OUPON-----,•

GROUND

COUNTRY CROCK

122034V.()5(1+a139

TUB

Goad Only At Powll'a Super V•I u
Otter Good June 7 thru June 13. 1992
Umll1 Per Cuttomer

CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

s

90
.
~

&gt;
L

'

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page B&amp; Sunday nmes Sentinel

June 7, 1992

June 7, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Pomaoy; Ga1ndc Sta.Juter
R•4 ' • OdwA:; MaiDTrxy,
CooiYillc; Wr. ud lllln. Helen

*' r-oy;

ILF
Wihla, T...- Pfains;
Viola 1i
Jea11

a

Pooler Scz• 2 ' : lmlc SUJD·
mar'' Padla'.. S,l&amp;w;; MDhd
Caldwl. R 5 wilk;o Mr. and Mrs.
llmry llak. '-1._,. Doris
Ba
FD. c 5
Cllrabcll
Banocu J[aiz?lt, Parlersburx.
W.Va.; ltodi7• WiJtia• Dica,
B
A&amp;&amp; Wiams llaldcrsoa. RccdsriP?e; Mr. aad Mrs.
Hany l5ala. Re •
Mr. Dl Mrs.
Ead K -J Mi IT 5 •t Gkmuy
E. Wolf, Al6aP Wolf. P&gt;
oy;
Jack~ein.
After a steak dinner served by Lda _, PliPP WW...Lmt Botthe Chesttt PTO and Meigs County liD; llalJ Fllllllk)us. AlhWie;
Junior Leaders 4-H Club, Bob CGk- w 5 AolrtriJk; Mr. IIKI
Sulq, Wicrtoa,
Woods, president, recognized tbe Mrs.
reunion classes of 1932-1937- W •.a.; r. •llonJUr Slout,
1942-1947-1952-1957. The 8530Ci- 1'liAJca l'llill; RW I d -.1 Micky
; Mr. Dl Mrs.
ation presented gold charms on key I'd.. Laic ..
r::a-Wda.P
5 wA:;Mr. and
rings 10 lhe class of 1942.
Mrs..
no.
)US..
'--1 Boaom;
Silent pmyer was offm:d r... the
lo• I • · RjocW '~
- · Bouom .·
nine alumni that died last year.
Thanks were extended to the Tldlu BiMe ?laps. Loaa: BotPTO, 4-H Club, Garden Club, lOll!; Opll Silp . . . . Otcster,
Harold and Belly Newell for the Willu _. Rqlll Ballard. Long
programs, the decorating commit- JI&lt;Ow; 1ldrora .,... Eddy' KiDtee, janitor, and all others who buri; - - ,..., P...ooc llaoon;
1; FmJ
helped maked the evening a suc- Sib)t Slli6 a., !
Smidl,
RI&lt;Wr;
M1
Bissdl,
Long
cess.
Roses were given to the oldesl s - ; Mac llti'czl.. ...... Dollady graduate Aria Bissel~ Qass d ram; ..-. ..t ...._ PliPP Sadca Jr.,
1929; old male graduate. Earl Midd?cport; G?adp aad Bill
Knight. Class of 1923; one who Mcm!O.. Bcwaly, Dorotly and
OJ, Mr. and
traveled the farlhes~ Mary SIJ"''DD'". Hence~. P&gt;
I '· Portland;
DeGroot. Colo.; families witb mos1 Mn. s
present, Parker family, Pickens Startirl&amp; ud Salldra Massar,
ramily and Mora family, two alum- Rcc4ml!c; Mr. ud Mrs. Dale
ni that were attending for first time Kautt, ~· OJ, Marth Lee,
were Glennis Hoffma. 1942, and Racirle; l.aPa W'~ Cin:le,
Glenroy Wolfe, 1937, and those Raciec; Roy Md FrQu Riffle,
who have never missed any alumni loDJ A
llcb - ShckbJ
Howard Knight, 1925, Maxine Ga...nt, I cr · + Mr D1 Mrs.
Goeglein 1941, Starling Massar, Lclud Parker, ,.. UUf; Paal
Baa. Pmoy. fcllwr Frcctcr.
1952, and Kathryn Windon, 1957.
Officers for the new year are Racme: Rosa ad RDKmary
Baht,
Maxine Whirehead. president; Vic- K.dkl'. 1\w::ioy. Nca
tor Baht, first vice-president; Setty l'woaOJ • .1* _. lltil'ed Gaul.
Dean, second vice-presiden~ Roger 1\imaOj. a.,- APica, O...trr.
Keller. third vice-presidcn~ Opal Cleaas A3ka.. Cl&gt;i has; Cutis
Eichinger, secretary; Rosemary Bailey. Adocas, Bcuy Roush,
Keller, assistant secretary; Richa'd 1\imauy~ ~ Pat:a. I'Utw:aoy;
Fick, treasurer; Mildred Gaul, Howard ud Fkawcw Kaialu,
assistant treasurer; Harold Newell. PomCJUy; Daytw ud Sara
Howard Parker, David Koblentz. SJII'II'D.I..olc Boww D# and
Otucr; Marie
Starling Massar and Marine Goe- Kalllr')'ll Ba
Of, Bill Matlxt,
glein, decorating and nominating Halld. P.
Pomeroy; Roy Ori:siJ Oeslcr;
commitee.
leaD
Fnodorid. o T'Cr. Harold
Alumni and guests danced 10 the
and
Bcuy Nc...UI Ckslcr;
music of Ch:ulie Brown Ritz, GalKal.lorya ud Woodrow Mora,
lipolis.
Attending were Kathleen Prince
Dean, Columbus; Roben and Edna
Wood, Long Bottom; Howard
Parker, Long Bottom; William
Lester Sponagel, Crown City;
Willis Parker, F'arkt:nburg, W.Va.;
Homer and Sara Parker, Portland;
Glennis and Delores Hoffman,
Pomeroy; Norma Wright Cain, The
Plains; Esther Wrigh~ The Plains;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larkins,
Patland; Buck and Emma Rhodes.
Navarre; Joe Ritchie, Columbus;
Kathryn and Virgil Windon,
Pomeroy; Victor Bahr, Long Bottom ; Arvilla Frecker, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Helen
Marcinko Henry, Lancaster;
Jeanette Tuule Lawrence, Racine;
Priscilla Clark Bomen, Albany;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Goeglein.

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OFFPCERS • Ollkers of the HMC Volunteer
CbaplaiDB Ascorialioll recently elected were (Ito
r), Chairpersoo, Rev. Cbar!es Russ: Vice Chairperson, Rtv. James Seddon; Secretary, Rev.

Patricia Bonds-Krug; and Clerc Repnseata·
!ive-at·Large, Rev. Lutber Tracy. Not pictured
IS Treasurer, Rev.Thomas Glen McClung.

Holzer Volunteer Chaplains
Association elects officers

GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer
Medical Center Volunteer Chaplains AssocJation recently elected
officers for 1992-93 at their annual
meeting.
Elected were: Chairpermn, Rev.
Charles Russ of lhe Church or the
N81Jll'CIIe in Oak Hill; Vice Chairperson, Rev. James Seddon from
lhe First Baptist Church in Middleport; Treasurer. Rev. Thomas Glen
McClung of the Pomeroy Church
.of the Nazarene in Pomeroy; and
·Secretary, Rev. Pauicia Bonds:Krug from the Mason -Jackson
:Lutheran Ministry in West Vir·ginia.
: Also elected was Rev . Luther
·Tracy, a retired American Baptist
.minister. as a Clergy Representative-at-Large of the Association.

The Rev. William Curfman of
Cheshire, was given a speCial
recognition gift honoring him for
more than 1,000 hou... of ministry
to the patients, their families and
the staff of Holzer Medical Center
as a volunteer Chaplam. Rev. Curfman is a retired Freewill Baptist
Church minister.
Other volunteer Chaplains
receiving special recognition for
their hours of service in the association included ; Rev. R. Vernon
Babcock, Rev . Patricia Bonds Krug, Rev. Richard Bonds-Krug,
Rev. Terry M. Cavanaugh, Rev.
Keith Curd, Rev . Laura Leach
Shreffler. Rev. Ronald A. Shreffler,
Rev. Michael W. Smith. Rev. Gregory C. Swann, Rev. Dale M. Vollmar and Rev. Roland E. Wildman,

Jr. received recognition for SO
hours of service.
Chaplains honored for one 150
hou... were: Rev. Terry K. Alvarez,
Rev. Joseph Hefner, Rev. John E.
Remmenga, Rev . Charles Russ ,
Rev. Donald Scoggins, Rev. James
Seddon and Rev. Richard Vinson.
Reco&amp;nized for 300 of service
were Rev . John E. Jackson and
Rev. Donald Saxon.
The HMC Volunteer Chaplains
Assoc iation is comprised of more
than 40 clergy from Ohio and West
Virginia representing 12 denominations. Any persons interested in
obtaming more infonnation about
the association should contact Rev.
Arthur C. Lund. HMC director of
Chaplaincy Services. at446-S053.

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GALLIPOLIS - Nicole V. Sola,
daughter of Dr. and ~. Anthony
Solo of Gallipolis, graduated
recently from Western Reserve
Academy in Hudson.
She has been named aU. S.
National Award winner in Leadership Service by lhe U. S. Achievement Academy. She has been
selected to serve as counselor for
the Leade,.hip Academy sponsored
by the Ohio Center for Law-Related Education to be held at Capital
University, Columbus, June 29July 2. She served in a similar
capacity at the Leadership Training
Camp of Gallipolis for the past
three years.
Next week she will leave for an
educational tour of Madrid and
Paris, and in September will be
attending Tufts Unive,.ity at Medford, Mass.

l'llmcroy; Qeo Weber Smith, Long
Bouom; Phyllis and Marvin Glasco, Reedsville; Mary Virginia
Kautz, Pomeroy; Harry and Margaret Bailey, Pomeroy; Ronald and
Ella Osborne, Long Bottom; Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Eiselstein, Colum·
bus; Delores and David Holler,
Pomeroy; Jeanelle and Don
Williams, Columbus; Marlene
Wolfe lbompson. Columbus; Donald and M:uda Mora, Pomeroy;
Lloyd and Kathryn Wolfe, Akron;
Arthur L. and Margaret Quivey,
Sarasota, Aa.; Harold and Geral·
dine Hawk, Tuppers Plains; Mr.
and Mrs. Mary De Groot, Colorado; Betty Dean, Pomeroy; Opal
Eichinger, Chester; Pauline Ridenour, Chester; Hila Hayes Rouneliote, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Damewood, Long Bottom;
Beulah Hayes Piatt, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Qw1es Hall, Reedsville;
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead,
Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs. Gale
McCain, Coolville; and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Grueser, Logan.

CliFFSIDE LADIES GOLF
FOURTH ANNUAL
INVITATIONAL
JUNE 17, 1992
Please join us for a day
of fun and golf.

IIWFAST: 7:45A.M.
SHOTGUN TEE-OFF:
1:4SAJI.
&lt;OST:

530~00 (Wdu.'nil ll.lfol·

f-._, ..

rtf I llr lltw .lllltiO,Itt21
IIAIIDKAP IIHDED.
,.._ ..... cW: · .. ' MJ I I '~~pslll:

"-JGndf

PAio1111
c ...... 45631
IECISTUTIDN DUDUNF:

....10.1992
lAIII DATE: .._ 24, 1992
HOP( TO 5(( YOU THEREI
CllhWe Col a.t
IAIIKWAI!Gdl!loi

"-JG!Iff, ~

:

COURSE OFFERED - An eight-week course in eliquelle,
applying or make-up, modeling and building sel!-conrtdence will be
on:e~ed to girls ages 8·16 beginning June 16 In Pomeroy. Holly
· Wilhams, daughter or Allen and Marilyn WUUams Pomeroy will
· be the Instructor for the classes which will be beJd above C~rk 's
~ewelry in Pomeroy. To register for the classes or ror rurtber
: tnrormation contact Miss Williams at her home, 992-2834.

Etiquette course for
girls age 8-16 offered
POMEROY - An eight-week
course in etiquette, applying of
make-up, modeling and building
self-confidence will be offered 10
girls ages 8-16 beginning June 16
in Pomeroy.
Holly Williams, daughter of
Allen and Marilyn Williams,
Pomeroy, will be the instructor for
the classes which will be held
above Clarl&lt;'s Jewelry in Pomeroy.
the class is under lhe direction of
Miss Williams and has no affiliation with the jewelry business.
The cost of the class is $10 a
week for the class per person and
class size is limited to eight people.
two sessions will be offered. The
first is for participants ages eightiO
12 and the second session is for
c~ildren ages t3-16. The classes
:Will be orrered on Tuesday and
Thursday and will last approxi)llately one hour.
Miss Williams. who will be a
l!enior at Meigs lligh School, has a
!lei:ree from Profiles of Gallipolis
she will be insuucting partici-

,....,. uotting

=

ceuer.

Syrat:UIC Ills also played I pat
In tbe Ariel leSI0!8Doa .~· The

•

•

Grade cards available
REEDSVU..LE • Students rrom
grades 7-11 at Eastern High School
may pick up grade cards between
7:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at the
school.
~ring scmon may pick up
their IIUill8lure diplomas d!Jring the
same llou!l.

Award winner
BIDWELL - The United States
Achievement Academy recently
announced that Angie PoweU has
been named a United States
National Collegiate Award winner.
Powell, who attends North Gallia lligh School, was nominated by
Ron Twyman. guidance counselor.
Her picture will appear in the
USAA official collcptc yearbook.
published nationally.
She is the daughter of Phillip
and Carol Powell, and the granddaughttt or Mr. and Mrs. WaiJac&lt;:,
Kemper of Kerr, and Jane PoweiJ
of Gallipolis.

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY
Custom F"llted Dentures In One Day AI Our Teayo Valley 0111ce
By Our Proreaslonal.o And Trained staff
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualllled ~luolclans.

CALL TOLL ·FREE 1-800-926-0025
For An Appointment or Information.
Our Regular Service Is AvaUabfe At All OjJlces.
SAllE DAY BERVJCD 01'1' UU10:S A1'1'D REPAIRS!

DENTURES START AT *143 PER DENTURE!
SMALL ADDmONAL CHARGE FUR SAME !MY SEIMC£

West
Virginia Dental Set tlee
WUDam V. Bell, D.D.S., IDe.
IOV PCPtNI raut RD.

T

~

IW•I$7·7"1

,.. ....

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Gallia County calendar
Sunday, June 7
GALLIPOLIS
Watson
reunion. 10 a.m. unul dark , Rae ·
coon Creek County Park Shel ter house No. I. Lunch , t p.m.
ROD NEWSOME

-·

GALLIPOLIS - Homecom ing
services at While Oak Bapust
Church, Rev. Paul Taylor at I 0:45
a.m.; lunch at noon; and the Easterlings of Ashland, Ky., will pcrfonn
in lhe afternoon .

regular meeting. 7 p.m. at Bossard
L1brary . Collectors or Hallmark
1tems and othm, welcome.
. GAL LIPOLIS - Gallia County
DIStn ct L1brary Board of Trustees
meeting, S p.m. at Bossard Library.

GALLIPOLIS - Tractor Pull at
the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. 2 P.·m.. sponsored by the
Buckeye HJ!Is FFA Alumni Association. Antique and classic tractors
(1960 and older); '!'ire size a max
of 15.5"'. Pull conducted by Scioto
Valley Antique Power Association.
For more information call Roy
Warrens at988-421! or Dean Flak·
er at 988-3981.
LECTA - Homecoming ali-day
services at Okey Community
Church, 9:30a.m.; lunch at noon.
GALLIPOLIS - Calvary Christian Center, 434 Jackson Pike, will
celebrate Pentecost 10 a.m. until
the afternoon. A his10ry of Pentecost wil l be presented, followed by
a luncheon. The pastor is Rev. T.
W. Lawrence. For more information cal l 446-6308.

SURPRISE PARTY -Honored by her family at a surprise
birthday party was OJ.a Roach, Gallipolis. Refreshments and a
birthday cake were served, along with the presentation or presents.

Family gathers for birthday

DRAWER
CHEST

GALLIPOLIS - A surprise
birthday pany was held May 8 for
Ola Roach, Bob McConnick Road.
Gallipolis. She is the wife of the
late Chancey Hollis Roach and the
mother of Bobby Roach and
Richard Roach of Gallipolis, and
Doris Nolan of Rio Grande. She
retired from the Evans Packing Co.
after 28 years' service.
The party was held at the home
of her son Richard. Refreshments
and a birthday cake were served.
and gifts were presented.
Those attending included Bobby

Roach. Dorothy Roach. Richard
Roach, Clarabelle Roach, Melody
Roach. David Nolan, Doris Nolan,
Kevin Roach, Shawna Roach.
Jonathan Roach, Katelyn Roach,
Vickie Allie, Melissa Allie, Bobby
Franklin. Pam Franklin, James
Franklin, Shannon Franklin and
Rachel Franklin.
The evening was enjoyed by
family fellowship and ended with
two songs. Shepherd Boy and H1s
Eye is on the Spa"ow, sung by her
granddaughter, Melody Roach .

GALLIPOUS - The Right Eminent Grand Commander, Sir
Knight Richard G. Dennis, was
honored re«ntly by tile "Class of
Richard G. Dennis • 1992" of the
Joint York Rite Festival held at the
Gallipolis Masonic Temple, Gallipolis.
York Rite bodies (chapten,
councils, and commanderies) rmm
four counties (Gallia, Meigs, lackson and ViniOn) participated in the
restival. A total of 28 candidates
received their Capitular, Cryptic
and Chivalric degrees and were
Kai hied.
1hey were: Burord Ball,
Michael E. Blaine, Billy S. Board,
Earl Burnette, Paul S. Clay, W.E.
John Finney, Oscar E. Good, Earl
M. Guthrie, Conard E. Hudson.
Charles K. Jones. Terry F. Lucas,
Roger K. Martin, David H.
MCQuaid, David L. Rire, John H.
RouSh, M. Ray Saxon, Michael B.
Stout, Brynn K. Sutphin, Roben K.
Theiss, and Ronald 1&gt;. Wright
· Other dignitaries )RSCnt ror the
~tival were: Sir Knight Richard
Weaver, (Orand Sentinel, Knights
Templar of Ohio); Sir Knight Paul
B; Saunders, (Deputy Division
Commander or the 4th Division,
Knights Ternplar or Ohio); Right
J11ustrious Companion Richard B.
Jackson, (Orand Captain or the
Gilard, Royal and ScJca Masons of

Ohio); Illustrious Companion
Roger Gaul, (6th Arch Adjutant,
Royal and Select Masons or Ohio);
Right Excellent Companion Earl
C. Gifford, (Past Grand High
Priest, Royal Arch Masons of
Ohio, and now serving as Grand
Secretary, Royal Arch Masons of
Ohio); Right Excellent Companion
Robert V. Carter, (District Deputy
Grand High Priest of the 12th
Capitular District, Royal Arch
Masons of Ohio); Sir Kaight John
T. Jarvis, (Past Prior, of Ohio Priory No. 18, Knights of the York
Cross of Honor), Right Excellent
Companion Roy (Pap) Rinehart,
(Past District
Grand High
Priest of the 12th
irular District
Royal Arch Masons of Ohio and
recipient or the Grand Chaprer Distinguished Service Award);
Right Excellent Companion T.
Jack Estep, (Past Disttict Defuty
Grand Htgh Priest of the 2th
Capitular District, Royal Arch
Masons of Ohio and Hospitalitar of
the 4th District, Ohio Priory No.
18, Knights of the York Cross of
Hooor); and Right Excellent Companion David Fox, (Past District
DcJ)u!)' Grand High Priest or the
12th capirular District, Royal Arch
Masons or Ohio and bistrict
Deputy Prior of the 4th District,
OhiO Priory No. 18. Knights or the
Yad Ooss or Honor).

Dct:

GALLIPOLIS · GallipoliS
Christian Church annual Vacation
Bible School, June 8-12 from 6:308:30 p.m .. with classes for
preschool through adults. Nur.;ery
will be provided. Theme, "The
Journey Through Son Mountain .'"
For transportation call Mic Bowen ,
director. at 446-1863.
BIDWELL - Revival Crusade
for Christ at White Oak Enterprise
BaptiSt Church, Route 554 N1bcn
Road, June 8-13 at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday, June 9
GALLIPOLIS - Buckeye Keepsake Mcm on cs Ornament Club

Dinner planned
POMEROY - There will he a
dinner at the senior citizens center
in Pomeroy on Th....ctay with serv ·
ing from S-6:30 p.m.
Cost of the meal is $3 wllh a
menu of baked steak, mashed potatoes and gravy, succotash, cole
slaw, mil and beverage. Ice cream
will be available for dessert at an
extra char~e.
Followmg dinner music will be
played by The Classics. A free -will
offering will be taken for the musicians. The public is invited.

Gandidates Knighted;
Richard Dennis honored

ANGIE POWELL

The OVS will maintain lhe uadition or releasing tickets for next
season at this season's finales .
Concens, in addition to Sept. 26
are scheduled for Dec. 5 and June
12. The cost to regular subscibers
is $45 while senior citizens and students pay $41.
Subscription brochures are
available for those who wish to
subscribe later. Pick one up at Peddler's Pantry or the theatre when
the doors are open.

deVte

room.

• RECEIVES CERTIFICATE- The Right Eminent Grand Cornllllnder, Richard G. Dennis, receives his Honorary Membership
Certlrtcate to The Rose Commandery No. 43, Knights Templar or
l)bio, rrom the Eminent Commander or Tbe Rose, Sir Knight
Cbarles L. Tabor. Dennis was honored during the Joint York Rile
Festival at the GaUipolis Masonic Temple.

Ohio University School of Music
professor performed with the OVS
atlhe theatre's Grand Opening Celebl'dtion in June 1990. He presented a concen at the Ariel in April
1991 and directed all receipts to
benefit the racility.
Non-subscribers can still plan 10
auend lhe upooming concerts. The
ticket committee may be able to
accommodate a Saturday night
request but Sunday tickets are easier to come by . Those who have
ticlrets they can't use are asked 10
make availability known by calling
446-ARTS.
Remember that Fowler and the
OVS welcome the public's attendance at reheanals as long as the
need for quiet is regarded. Come
June 12 from 7-10 p.m. or June 13
rrom 1-4 p.m.
The adieu will be shon lived.
The OVS retun;ts Sept. 26 to kick
off the 1992·93 season.

GRADU~ TES- This rather and daughter duo will be receiving
degr""s dunng commencement ceremonies at Hocking Tedmleal
College today. Pictured are Ammy Roush or Nelsonville nd
Arthur Dee ~ous~ or Racine. F~ther Roush wiD rect'ive a
In
Forestry, ':"bole hiS daughter will graduate with a degree ia Travel
and Toumm. Amy plans to continue her education and work
toward a second degree in Hotel Restaurant Management.

Monday, June 8
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Deputy Sheriffs Association meeting. 7 p.m.. Common Pleas Coun-

$4495

GALLIPOLIS - It's time to
locale those Ohio Valley Symphony ticUts. The fmal perlormances
ror the 1991-92 season are June 13
a18 pm. and June 14 at 3 p.m.
It certainly seems tbat Maestro
Ray Fowler and !he OVS have
saved the best ror last. The aiiTchaikovsky theme includes
Polonaise and Waltz from ''Eugene
Onegin," "Elegy from 'Hamlet'"
and the "1812 Overture." The ovs
won'tsay how, but cannon fire will
puncruate tbe IaUer.
That would more than meet conccrtp:r expccwions. But to insure
e.ayonc record l'CIIIrtiS on the dollar, aowd pleasing pianist Richard
Syracuse will add the prov«bial
good measure. He'll join the
ensemble in "Piano Cmceno No. 1
in B-flal Minix, 9.P- 23.•
The OVS, QaUia County's own.
calls the Arid home. The ensemble
JlRSCIIted ill finl ·COIIcert there on
April!, 1989, when the mttoration
was about six montbs old. Ignoring
chilly condirinns and a bare bones
look, tbe OVS filled tbe facility
with beautiful sound and proved
tbat if the work went forward, the
Ariel oould
• its bearing as an

POMEROY - Rod Newsome, a
1992 graduate of Eastern High
School, has been awarded two
scholarships to the University of
Rio Grande.
He received a 2 year ROTC
scholarship and a $500 scholarship
from the Racine Home National
Bank .
Son of Frank and JoAnn Newsome of Five Points, he will begin
classes in the fall at Rio Grande.
He plans to major in nursing. At
Eastern. he has been active in
sports, a class officer each year, a
member of the National An Honor
Society, a Buckeye Boys Stale representative, active in the jurtior and
senior class plays, and helped with
the newspaper and yearbook.

pants in the areas of modeling, posture and etiquette, and she stresses
it is not just for pageant training.
Miss Williams holds the titles of
1991 Heritage Queen of Pomeroy;
Miss State Ohio Model 1989. a
finalist for Miss Teen Ohio Pageant
where she was first runner up in
fonnal preseniJition, interview and
talen~ Miss Dream World 1987. a
finalist for Miss Pre-Teen Pageant
where she was a !alent finalist, and
she was a talent winner at lhe Parkersburg Homecoming Festival. She
is head field commander at Meigs
High School, is very active in the
choral program at Meigs, is a member of the Shady River Shofner
Clogging Team, and belongs to
Who's Who Among American
High School Students. She is vicepresident of student council, a
member of the yearbook staff and
track team.
To registtt for the classes or for
funher information contact Miss
Williams at her home. 992-2834.

$69.95

OVS to make final appearances

NICOLE SOLA

URG scholarships awarded

s.._a...

Ohio Valley Symphony

Sunday nmes--Senllnei-Page-87

Nicole Sola WRA

Several attend Chester alumni
banquet; graduates honored
CHESTER • One hundred sixty
alumni and guests attended tbe
annual Chest« High School Alumni Association Banquet and Dallcc
May 30 at Chesler Elementary.
A blue and white cola" scheme
was used throughout the gym with
a false ceiling of blue and white
sueamers and American flags.
Tables were decoratod with red,
white and blue flower arrangements by the Chester Garden Club.
"God Bless America" with
Dorothy Karr at the piano and led
by Genrude Robinson was sung r...
the
followed by JDY« by

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MONTHLY SELECTIONS - Addavllle Elementary receatly
announced Its two April Student of the Month selections. Chosen
on the basis or good school citizebsbip were primary student Lisa
Bass, daughter of Monty and LuAna Bass; and intermediate stu·
dent Shawn Mercer, son of John and Shaleen Mercer.

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Times Sentinel

June 7, 1992

Sports

~hnts- itntitttl

Section C
June 7, 1992

A.P. Indy captures
Belmont Stakes at wire

ECKRICH

ECKRICH I·LB.

ECKRICH

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

ALL MEAT
FUNKS

Regular or Thick Sliced

SMOKED
SAUSAGE or
KIELBASA

c

$ 89
lB.

l·LB. BEEF or
CHEESE FRANKS

ALL ECKRICH
8 OZ. PACKAGE
LOAVES

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TURKEY SMOKED SAUSAGE

CORN DOGS

SMORGAS·
PAC

$2.19

7)

Plantier hu II homers in 148 at
bats last year, but had gone 177
plate appearances without a homer
.since his second-inning shot at
Yankee Stadium on April 7.
Clemens, 17·2 lifetime and 10-0
at Fenway Park against Cleveland,
allowed Paul Sorrento's run·SCOT·
ing single in the fourth that made
the score 3·1. Then he struck out

Brook Jacoby and Lewis with runners at first and third.
In the sixth, singles by Carlos
Baerga and Thomas Howard and a
walk to Jacoby loaded the bases
with two outs before Lewis struck
out again.
Clemens. who hasn't lost since
May 4, has pitched at least seven
innings in each of his 12 starts and
has allowed five earned runs in his
last six.
Boston went ahead 3-0 in the
second on run -scori ng singles by
Mike Greenwell and Wade Boggs
against Armstrong, who is 9·26
since starting for the National
League in the 1990 All-Star Game.

PEPPERONI ....99 c
6 OZ. SWIFT

PEPPERONI s1.59

BACON..... s1.59
oz.
SLENDER
SLICE
2

1·l8.

and walked two and lowered hiS
major -league leading ERA to 1.56.
Greg Harris pitched the ninth.
Plantier went 3-for-4 with a run·
scoring single in the first and a
two-run homer off the right-field
foul pole that made the score 5· 1 m
the fifth against Jack Armstrong ( J.

SWIFT 1·LB.

BUTTERBALL
TURKEY FRANKS

$1.49 LB.

BOSTON (AP) Roger
Clemens won his sixth straight start
and major-league leading ninth
game as the Boston Red Sox beat
the Cleveland Indians 5-1 in the
opener of a doubleheader Saturday.
Phil Plantier hit his first homer
since his first at bat of the year as
the Red Sox snapped a three-game
losing streak by sending the Indi ans to just their third loss in 10
games.
Staked to a 3-0 lead after two
innings. Clemens (9-3) scattered
nine hits and escaped JamS in the
fourth and sixth innings, each time
striking out Mark Lewis for the
third out. Clemens struck out seven

Beef, Hana,
Chicken,
Turkey

l'ourCitofee

59c

SIZZLEAN
Beef or
' Regular

12

TURKEY BACON

BUmRBALL

HATS OFF TO TOMMY - Or. Edward
Berkich (left), the starting catcher for the Reds
Dream Week Team, appears to doff his cap in
homage to former Reds manager Tommy Helms
as Helms addresses the players and crowd prior
to Saturday's exhibition ~ame between the

Dream Team and the Gallipolis American
Legion Post 27 squad at the University of Rio
Grande's Stanley L. Evans Field. Helms was the
guest speaker at a luncheon held earlier in the
day. (Times·Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS! - Provine
that the phrase isn't just a 1970s song from
Queen, Pepperdine's Mark Wasikowski (44)
raises his arms in exbuberance following bis

team's 3·2 win over Cal State Fullerton In the
College World Series final Saturday in Omaha,
Neb. (AP)

1•89

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12 oz. FRESH LINKS
12 oz. FRESH PAT!IES

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SMOKY

PACKAGE HAM
6 Oz.
Cooked......s2.09

12 Oz. Cooked...!3.49

DINNER SAUSA&amp;E
IUIWUIST. liEF &amp;
IUnfUIST ITAliAN
Y•rC•olce

s2.39

Seles following the former's victory in the
women 's finals of the French Open Saturday_.
(AP)

Pepperdine tops Cal State-Fullerton
3-2 to win College World Series title

oz

$1.49

BmERBALL-12 QZ. $

WELL PLAYED, MONICA - Germany's
Stem Graf con~ratulates Yugoslavia's Monica

1-LB.

Your Choice

A.P. Indy returned $4.20, $3.80 and $3. My Memoirs, recently purchased by Americans Barry Irwin
and Jeff Siegel, retuned $11.60 amil $6.60. Pine
Bluff paid $4.20 to show.
Completing the order of fin sih after fifth place
Casual Lies. were Colony Ligh~ Agincoun, Montreal
Marty, Robert's Hero, AI Sabin and Jacl&lt;sonport.
A.P. Indy, who would have bene the second
favorite in the Kentucky Derby to Arazi, the highly
touted Frecnh-based colt who fmished eighth, earned
his favorilc's rule in the Belmont wit.h an imporessive victory in the I 1/ll·mile Peter Pan on May 24 at
Belmont.
"He was moving nice and easy." Delahoussaye
said of A.P. Indy's stretch drive. "I gave him a look
at the stick and he really accelerated when I called on
him .
" We won by enough, and that's all that counts."
"1m pleased to be here because we couldri't make
the Kentucky Derky," Tsurumaki said through an
mtcrprctor.
C:mrnl Lies, ndilen by Gary Stevens, took the lead
shonly after the break and led the field around the
clubhouse turn.
As they entered the backstretch, Agincoun, ndden
by Art Madrid Jr., was second to Casual Lies. A.P.
Indy wa' third, followed by Pine Bluff, ridden by
Chris McCarron. With three·quarters of a mile to go,
Agincourt assumed the lead over Casual Lies with
A.P. Indy dropping to fourth behind Pine Bluff.
When they reached the quarter pale. Pine Bluff
was on top, with AP Indy second and poised for his
winning drive.
The fractions for the race were 23.2 seconds for
the fli'St quarter. 47 for the half, I: 11.8 for three quarters, 1:35.2 for the mile and 2:01.2 for the I 1/4
miles.
The last quarter of 24.8 was faster than Secretariat's time. But Secretariat won by a record 31 lengths
and wasn't battling to win through the stretch as A.P.
Indy was .
A crowd of 50,204 attended the race on a hazy.
muggy day and saw Drysdale's patience vindicated.

3 OZ. SLICED

PICKLE, OLD FASHION, cono
SALAMI, HAM &amp; CHEESE,
CHOPPED HAM, PEPPER LOAF,
BAR·B, HONEY

$1.99

win the Belmont Stakes Saturday at Delmont,
N.Y. (AP)

Boston hands Cleveland 5-1 defeat
to give Clemens sixth straight win

$1.99 LB.

$1.49

ECKRICH l·LB.

BELMONT WINNER - A.P. Indy (2), rid·
den by Eddie Delaboussaye, leads My Memoirs
(far len) and Pine Bluff (4) at tbe finish line to

By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
NEW YORK (AP) - A.P Indy stamped the 1992
Triple Crown series with a "?" by wmning the Belmont Stakes on Saturday.
Eddie Delahoussaye sent the son of Seaule Slew,
the 1977 Triple Crown winner and maternal grand·
son of Secretariat, the !973 Triple Crown winner,
into the lead with about an eighth of a mile to go for
the victory.
Forever more, the question will be: What would
have happened if AP Indy had not missed the Ken·
tucky Derby and the Preakness because of a quarter
crack in his left front hoof.
In winning, A.P. Indy ran the I 1/2 miles on a
track listed as good after being listed as muddy for
the previous seven races in 2:26. That tied 1989 winner Easy Goer for the second·f&gt;L'ltest time in the 124ycar history of the Belmont
The record of 2:24 was set by Secretariat.
Preakness winner Pine Bluff finished third. Kentucky Derby winner Lil E. Tee did not race because of
a lung infection.
The third-place finish earned the $!-million bonus
for the most popints in the three rnces for Pine Bluff,
the fifth -place finisher in the Derby, who collected
13 points. The only other horse with a chance at the
bonus was Casual Lies, second in the Derby and third
in the Prealrness for eight points. But he failed to get
any points Saturday by finishing fifth.
Delahoussaye, who rode Risen Star to his 1988
Belmont victory, had the favored A.P . Indy m good
position throughout. then drove the colt home for his
seventh straight victory since a career·opening loss
last October.
A.P. Indy, trained by Neil Drysdale. a native of
Engliand, and owned by Tomonori Tsurumali of
Japan, finished three.quar1£rs of a length in front of
My Memoirs, a British·bred colt making his debut in
the United States and on the dirt.
Another neck back was Pine Bluff, who finished
13 1/4 lengths in front of Cristofori, ridden by Steve
Cauthen, returning to Belmont Park for the fli'St time
since 1978, when he won the Triple Crown with
Affinned .

UIIS
IOOL

*1.49

,.,

By TOM VINT
Ahcarnc . C hris Powell lhen tcur draft. smgl ed Powell to third
OMAHA, Neb . (AP) - All- walked, but Carr was thrown out at and he scored on a passed baJ I_
American Patrick Aheame and two third trying to advance on a pitch
Eric Ekdahl made it 3-1 In the
Pepperdine relievers limited Cal that skipped off Pepperdine catcher fifth when he lined his firSt homer
State Fullerton to four hits and Scou Vollmer.
of the year into a 15 mph wind. It
Steve Rodriguez made a game-sa vNevin, the No . I pick (by the was only Ekdahl's SIXond hit in 13
mg defensiv e play as the Waves Houston Astros) in the recent ama- CWS at-bats.
heat the Titans 3-2 Saturday for the
NCAA baseball championship.
It was the first College World
Series title for Pepperdine (48· 11 ·
1), which went 4·0 in the touma·
ment despite being seeded seventh
in the eight·team field. Fullerton
finished with a 46-17 record after
the fli'St fmal matching teams from
the same state.
Ahearne (15-2) started, allowing
one run in the fifth and only one
runner as far as third base. Derek
Wallace got a big strikeout in a
brief relief appearance in the sev·
cnth, then Steve Montgomery fol·
lowed a shaky eighth with a perfect
ninth to earn his ninth save_
Trailing 3·1, Fullerton loaded
the bases in the eighth when Mont·
gomery hit two batters and inten·
tionally walked Phil Nevin one out
later.
After Jason Moler drove in a run
with a sacrifice fly , Rodriguez
made a diving stop of Tony Banks'
sharp grounder to second and threw
him out to end the inning .
Rodriguez hit a grand slam Thur.&gt;·
day night to beat Texas 5-4 and put
Pepperdine in the championship
game.
Pepperdine took a 2-0 lead in
the first inning off Dan Naulty (13·
4). Rodriguez walked and scored
CONNECTS FOR SINGLE - GaUipoUs Post 27's Darin Smith
two outs later on David Main· s
(19) launches a Mike Stout pitch wilhin 30 feet of tbe first base bag '
double. Mark Wasikowski fol·
into right field for a single in the second inning of Saturday's n:hi·
lowed with an RBI single.
bition game against the Reds Dream Week Team at Rio Grande as
Fu llerton made it 2-1 in the
Dream Team catcber Edward Berkich and bome plate umpire Rkk
fourth when Jeremy Carr led off
Perdue of Gallipolis watcb. (Times·Sentluel pboto by G. Spencer
Osborne)
with the Titans' first hit off

�Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

June 7, 1992

Jn the NBA Finals,

DAmNO -

Eutem [)tybkMI

Tum
PinsbutJh
SL UJui.J ...

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...... 30 23
... :1:1 2S

New Yolk

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509

... 27 26

ll
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~.::::: : : ~ ~ .:~i
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.434

Wettern DbWon

' CINCINNATI ....... 29
Sari Dier,o .............. 29
San FrtnciKo ........ 27
Atlant1 ................... 26
l..ol AnseJca
HOUilQ'I "

22
25
25
28

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!.5

.481

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.......25 29

.48 0
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4.5
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Friday's scores
Otictgo 10, Mootn:&amp;14, Ill pmc
Mm...t 6, Chloooo ~ 1nd pm•
Philadolphi• '1' SL LmQ. 5
Pi111buqh .5, New Yodt 4, 10 innint•
Atlanla 3, Sm Dicao 2
ONONNATI &amp;.l..ol Anaclm 2
JIOUilotl5, San PrtnciiCO 4

They ployed Soturday
Houaton (k.ile l-6) It San Fnnciaco
(BwUu S-2), 4,QJ pm.
~.
St. Louil (Cluk. Q.-0) II Philldelphil
. (Robinlm I -0), HlS p.m.
New Ym.k (Fem1ndez 4-5) 11 Pitt~·

bwah (N&lt;oal&lt; 2-l), Nl p.m

ClNCNNATI (Jhmmond

4-2) 1tlol

Ao&amp;&lt;Ja (Ojodo 3-l), IO&lt;IOp.m.

Atl1nt1 (GI•vine 1-J) 11 S1n Diego
{Benm

S-4), 10:05 p.m.

Today's games
New York (Schourek 0-1) 11 Pitu bwah (Tomlin 6-l), I ll p. ~
l':' IN CIN NATI (Belcher 5-S) 11 l..c:M
Angelm (Candi.otti 1-4), 4:05p.m
A1l1nta (Smoltz 5-5) 11 S•n Dieao
(Sominan. G--0), 4 i { f ; . .

5-2) 11 San frvw;y.

p.m.

c:o (Wd&amp;m 5-4). 4.

Sll.Guil (o.bome S-2) II PhiJJddphil
(Branlilly 2-4), I:OS p.m.

In the AL. ..
L
20
21
2S
2S

8011\.CII ............. --- .. 24 l4
Detroit..... .. . ..... 23 30

Cl.EVELAND ...... .21 32

Ptt.
.615

GB

.519
.510

5
55

.500

6
9.5
1!..'5

434
.396

I
IS

.s.sa

5.5

&amp;.5
9
10.5

Friday's sroreo
Daroi.t 1t New Yor:l. ppd.. rUn

Q..EVEL.\ND 118~1-0n, pp.-1., nin
I, TcmnoO
MilwJukDC '1, C.aliffta l
K-u City 6, Seattle 4
Oill111d 10, Ouc•ao 3
Tuu 5, Minne.ou 4

(Karnicnicdi 1-2), 7:30p.m.
Cllifomia (Blyk:Yc:n 1-0) 11 Ml.lwau
.kc:e CN•vum 5-4}, 8:0.'i r-m
Sallk (Jduuon 5-S or Dd11ru 1-3) 11
!Un111 Cil)' (Pichudo l-2), 8-0.'i pm.
Minne~ola (Smi le, 4 -3) 11 Te~n
(Jtyan 0-1 ), S:l5 p.m.

·.

Today's g1mes
CLEVELAND (Otto 3-3) 11 Boston
(Oudine:r 3-3), I :Cl:5 p.m.
Delloit (Aldred 2·3) II New Yurk
(Paa4-4), 1:30p.m
Toron lo (Sucb 3-4) at Baltim ore
(Mu..U..t 6-1 ), l ::35 p.mCalilomi• (V•lcrt 1-4) 11 Mil11'ai.ikee

1-2). 2J5 p.m.
01kl•nd ('-hore i-3) It Ch 1c agu
(HouatJ 1-2), 2:l'l p.m.
SCIIttlc (Han.on 2-B) •t Kan111 City
(Boddick• 0--4), 2.3.'5 p.m.
(8c:w1111

Minnuou (Ericklon 3-4)
(WiD 5--4), I :OS p.m.

11

T uu

\B ·\ hnals

RUNS - Bonda, Pitubw)h, 4:3: T .

ton,
s~

36; Xndl., Philadc.IJ:CU•, :M: Gw)'TUI,

lliooo, 36; LWI&lt;&gt;«. S&lt; u.w..

JJ,

Hollliu,
-Bmd.,
-·
ll
ltBI ~
Pittaburp.,
41 : Oant,
Atl1ntl, 39; McOriff, S1n Oieao , 39 :
Dau.ltoft, Pbil•~i1 l9'; Mumy, New
York, 39; She ac id, Stn Dieao. 31;
Pmd.lclm, Allma, 31.
HITS - Ow,m, s.n Dqo, 1l; """Philadelphia, 70; Pa.dlcton, Atlanta, 69;
T. Fern•ndez, San Dieao, 61: Finley,
HouatCIII, 66: Sbdficld. S1n Dieao. 66:
VmSlykc., Pituburatl. 63.
OOUBLES - buncan, Philldclphil,
16; V•nSiyke, Pitllburah. 16; Finley,
HouAoll, 14; Gnc:c,. Otia.go, 14; Pendleton, Atllnlll, 14; Daulton, Phi11ddphil ,
\4; Biq;io., HOUJtoa, 13; O.nt, Ailint1,
13; WUllch., Moncrul, 13; Mumy, New

Yoti,ll
TR.IPI.J!S - D. S1ndm, Atl1nta, 9:
Finley, HW'Ion, 6; Alicea. St. l.wis, 6;
Offerman, l.ol An.aclel. 4: Gnee, Oticlao, 4; Butler, U. AnacJc., 4; 7 1re tied
withl
HOM! RUNS -DODd&amp;, Piuaburgh.
14 : McOriff. S1n Dieao, 12: Man
Willilml, San FRDtlsec:l, II; Sheffield.
San Diqo, 10; Paadlctm, Atlanll, 10; L
WaJt.cr,"'M&amp;mlnlll, 9-, Ba1wdl, Hou.11oo,
8: G.tl, AllarU, I; O.WIOII,OtieiiO. S
STOU:N BASES - Griaaom. MenI~

u,.;,,

S1n Fnnei•co, 17: Robetu, CINCINNATI, 1'1; Bond•, PiltlbUtJh, 17 : D
Sand-, Atlant.r., 16; NU.on, Allanta , 13.
PIT ClUNG deci.imu) - Tewkl-

n

bwy, Sll..ooiJ,. 6-1, .857,209; G!Jvine.
Atllnll, 8-3, .727, 2.94: Olbome, St
Louil, S-2, .714, 3.07; Bwtc:o. San Fnn~ S-2. .714, 3.12; PmuPL ~
5-2, .714, 2.74; M1:9an, 6uca1o, 5-1.
.7 14, 137: Tom.lin, Pia.ti:Ntah, 6-3 .. 667,

l .il.

STRIK.EOliTS - Cone, New York,
19; Smolt:r., Ad•nu, 71; S. Fem•ndcr.,
New Yon., 78; Drabdl, PiUsburJh, 64;
xmn em.., u. Anple~~, 6J; &amp;debar,

Smith, St. lnuU, 14; Mya'l, S.m Diego,

MomreU, 9: Frmco, New Y&lt;d:, 9

Amerkon Lea&amp;ue
DAmNO - Puckeu, Minn1111ot1,
. ~5; R. Abrw, Toronto..341: 8udick,
OU!Jnd, .3:37: R. Kelly, Now YeO., .333;
K.noblaueb., Minnuou, .332: Joyner,
K111111 City, .lli; Gornet, Hailimare,
.316; MolitG, MilwJiikoo, .]16.

RUNS- Pucken. Miane.ou, -M:
McOwin, 0Ulmd ,41: M.c:k, MUn.cu,
39; Knobl•w:h, MinllfiiOLI, 37; R. Alom•r, ToronLo, 36; PhilliJN, Devoll, 36:

Mollio&amp;)y, Nn Yo&lt;k,l6.
RBI - Puckecl. Mimelota, 47: MeGwire, Oakland, 44; Oriffey, SauJe, 40;
Reider, Deuoit, 40; Andcnon, B.tl.timore,

6J

CLEVELA~TI (Arnullon 11 l -6 1nd
N•tY 6-3) 11 801ton (Clancna !-) 1nd
Viol• 5-3), 2. I :OS p.m.
()Uland (SteWI.l'l 3-.'i) u Oticago (Fr:rnandcz :3-5). 1 :05 p.rn
Toronto (Morris S-3) 11 8alHmore
.. (Mc~al d 7-2), H~ p.m.
Detroil (G.illicbon 6-:3) II 1-kw York

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

F - Sm.,...., 3&amp;; BU.. Hooo -

CLEVELAND, 65; R. Kc:Uy, New Yolk,
65: RI!II'Jil. &amp;.ton, 63; Mlck. Minnelcu,

They played Saturday

mote, 14: Ruuell, Totu, 14; Huvei,

C.lifomil, 13: Thiapen. Cbica 1 o, 1 :

ShBffield, S1n Diego, .319; O'Neill,

31: Siern., Tu.u, 3'1; C&amp;nlcco, o.kl.Jnd,
J1
HITS - Puc.keU. Minne.Oll, 78; R.
Alomu. Toronto, 7o-, Sicm~, TCllu, 67;
Knoblnth, Minnelola, 66; 8aerJI,

Baltim~

SA VBS - Ed:cnley, OU:Itnd, 20;
Aauilera, Minnuolll, IS; Olton., Btlti-

CINaNNA11, .319.

ll; Chtdton, CINCINNATI, 12; Mitch
Williun., Pllihdelphi•. 10; Weucl•nd,

.61 I

Welttrn Dhbklll
o.klatod ---------------- 31 22
51.'5
Tu• . ---·
........ 32 1j
.561
MinnclcU .............. 2'11 23
OUcaao................. 24 26
.480
Califomi.ll ............... 22 30
421
Se.tule.....
22 31
415
K.an.,.. Qly ........ .. 20 32 .385

•.

.!11: O.ynn, Sin Dqo, .3S6; V&amp;nSly.ke,
P~1t1burah • . 348; .T. Fema~u. S1n
Diqo, .324; McGriff, San Di.e1o, J21;

CINaNNAn. 6~ o. - . . auu,..
61
SAVES - D. Jonea, Ha.lam, \4; Le-

Eulml Dididon

TNm
W
BaJtirnrn .. . ........ .32
Toronto ................. 33
New Yt:d ..............27
Milw1W.C .............26

Philadelphi•,

"""- 27: Lrifool.... Lmdo.

C~icaao (Mor!•n 5-2) It Montrul
(M~runcz 6-4), I :3 p.m.

HtllllOII (Pon.

~nak,

DOUBU!S - Reimer, Tau, li: E
M.utinu, Se.ule., 17: Jefferies, Karuu
City, 11: Joyner, Klnu.t City, 16; Mll·
ungly, New Yon-., 16; 1-bll. Ne"' YoB,
16, Kmd , Bo.ton, I 5; Sa.tz.cr, Milwaukee.

ll

1lUPlE.S - Andcn-on,

E. Mudne:t, Seaulc, 3;

B.tl~

~u1 ,

5:

Balli

Friday's S&lt;Ore

Pt.dand 11 s, aua 10 104, err, M:M

riM 1-1

Future 11mes
Todi!J - C1lieqc. II PoctlJnd, 7 p.m.
w~,
buca.ao at Pl:l!Wnd, 9

.....f'rldiJ,

-

June 1l -

land, 9 p.m.

s ..d.,.,

llOME RUNS - ~ Oilland,
21: Dec:r, De1roit. IS; C1t11000, Oill.and,
13: Griffey, Se.~ule, 12; Puclr;en, Min N:&amp;OU, 12.; Tc:u.leton, Detroit. 12.; Palmer,
Tun , II : Belle, CLEVELAND, II;
O' Bncn. Suttle. ll.
STOLE."./ BASES - Ld\on, CLEVELAND, 24~ R. Hmdm~~on, Oalland. 22;
l..ts~.&amp;ch, Mllw1ukoe, !I; R&amp;incl, Chie~ro.

16: Knobl.ludl. MinncloU, 14: Anderson.
Btltim~. 14: R. AlanH, TonmW, 13.
PITCIUNG rJ dociliOIUI) ~ Flcmin$Suttle, B-1. .an, 3.17: Muaain•. B•tumore. 6· 1, .8Si, 1.77: Ju111 Gu•m•n,

TOflrllO, 6-1, .SS7, 2..51; MeOmu.J.d.. 9&amp;1um('ft., 7-1, .778, 3.80; K. Brown, Te111,
8-), 727, 3.ll ; Ocmc:ns, 8011on, B·3,

m. 1.60, Mdlow&lt;Jl. Chiuoo. H

100.
3 7l: Moc.-c. Olkland, 7-3, .100, 3.7 1.
STRIK.E01JTS ~ Ocrnen1, Bot\On,

u -

Oti.caao. 1 p.m., if MOIIUU)'
w....,.,,, jltfte 17 -

Portland

II

1\lrtllnd I t

auc.ao. 9 p.m., if llliiCIIIIU)'

Tralhacl ions
BIS&lt;boU
A..-lma Lu.1111

BOSTON RED SOX

~

w.,..snu.o_,..,.......,_

Named

.....,..,,mm.Jda;

kANSAS CTlY ROYALS - Siped
ldmylluo,
Keanelh Fitzpalrick, 8ri111 H1rri1on,
Mc.lvin Bwacb, Thomu Hcmina. hmc.
Flllltber, John Wea)an. Rkh.N B•con,
Rtymond Sal.omm, pi.tchc:n; Dnid Mar-

S.,.....

lhlll, Troy McAllia:lllr, JdT~y Antoon,
Juliul Alfon:r.o, Soon Abell, infic.ldcrL

T'EXAS RANGERS - Pwdluod the
eontriCI « DanUo leon, pitcher, from

c.Jahcm• Cily ~ thl:l American A•ocialion. Sent Lance McCullen~, piu:ber, 10
&lt;lkalba!u City.

Natloul Leape
CINCINNA n RIDS - S~ Tuno-

th~ B•lk, Jeff A1hton, infielden , 1nd
Ch1d Fo1, Willi1m SWlivu, utd Cecil
Picb:tt, . tc:hm..
FW~A MAJilJNS - S;p.l Ilouo
....... ond ................. ~""""' Eddie O!.riatiln, outfielder, &amp;Ad Juon Fn-

MONTKRAL EXPOS ~ Optioned
OW: Haney, pitcher, lo lndimapolil of
iht Ameri~ Auol:lttion. Clllod up Pltc

y"""··-·-ln..........

NEW YORK METS - Sent One
oulfiald..-, to TMiew•\GI rlln·

Galla~,

tcm.t..~onal

Lap on 1 rdubilitation u-

ngnmmL

Pl-DlADB..PI-DA Pl-m.llES - Optimal s~ Sc:anma, infialdcr, utd Ju.Go
Pqucro, wtficlda, Ia SQ'lnton W'Like~­
Bun. of lhe lntem1ti011-11 Le.p. Senl
Su:ve Searcy, pileher,

H•=

to

Scnnton Wilkci -

PnTSBUROH PIRATES - Signed
Sun Lawrence, Dcnni1 Konuuewlki,
Rodney Dtvid•on. Ted K.llmm, John
DilHnger, Michel i...aP1..mo. MaJ:k Fabela,
('lll:hm~~; Alltltl C1MU1y, Jalm Tw-llia,
J...my Sa.hlhocfcr, ctldtcn; Dan Oybwn.
Tra via Palmer, GhtinbriJ Huril, Adrilo
Brown, Tim U&amp;ct. outficlden: hmu
KPlef'B, Brian WOl!, John Cllllford, Seul
NoL111, Olanoe Sanford, Macthew laroCII,

Lnficldcn.
ST. LOUlS CARDINALS- Placed
Omu Olivua, piLCha-, on the 15-d&amp;y dial blcd lilt. C•llod up RhCIIl Conruct. pitch·
er, frun l..ouU:Yilk fi the American A~~&amp;­
cuUon.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -The
1993 and 1994 Mid -American
Conference men's and women's
basketball tournaments will take
place al Batlelle Hall in downtown
Columbus.
The 6,500-seat arena in the
Columbus Convention Cenler was
chosen over five other sites following a vote by conference athletic
directors and is subject to approval
by presidents of the conference's
10 member schools.
"Columbus is a great basketball
town within the geographic center
of the MAC," said Karl Benson,
conference commissioner. "Our
fans will find Columbus enjoyable
and hospitable."
The 1993 tournament will take
place from March 11 to 13 and the
1994 tournament from March 10 to
13.
''We think this is a great opportunity for us and the Mid-American
Con ference," said Cliff Reiser,

SIERRA

French City
USSSA softball
Team
W
C&amp;D Trucking ..................... 2
Sideline Sporu ..................... 2
Old Brick Tavern .................0
Country Carry-out ...............0
Rebels ..................................0

L
0

0
2
2
2

June 2 scores
C&amp;D Trucking 16, Country Carryout 6; C&amp;D Trucking 12, Country
Carry-out I
Sideline Sporu 16, Rebels 2; Sideline Sporu 14, Rebels 0
Old Brick Tavern -C&amp;D Trucking
(DH), postponed
This wetk 's games
Tuesday - Country Carry-out
vs . Rebels; Sideline Sports vs .
Country Carry-out
Wednesday - C&amp;D Trucking
vs. Rebels (DH)
Thursday - Sideline Sports
vs. Old Brick Tavern (DH)

'liNTON RACEWAY
Open Every Sunday,
Absolutely no alcoholic
beverages. Not responsible
-for loues or accidents.
For more information call
388-9617 or 388-9300
Gatet open at 11:00 a.m .
Races start at 1:00 p.m.

Sliding Rear Window
Wldeslde Body
4.3 Liter V-6
5-Speed Manual Transmission
Radio

INDIANAPOUS COLTS - Sipod
JOOn Baylor, ddenlive btck; Tony Will -

er •nd Mau v~.lineblckc:rt.
NEW ~GLAND PA.TR.JafS ~ Ro118f1od ~McMurtry, wide ra:ci-.-er.

Hockey

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N•llonal Hod.t}' l.eat:IM

NEW JERSEY DEVILS - Rcpl.•ced
T001 Me Vic., c04Ch, wilh Herll Broab.

College
ADELPIII -

N•med Jerry Foley
mm'• and womm'••wimmina eo~ch
FLORIDA - Named Chris Mar1in
me:~' 1 swimnung coach.
HARTFORD - Amwnced the TUI.J·
ntllon of Rob Quinn, men't hcrGUC
cC&gt;ach 1nd D1n Gooley men'• b.netw.ll

VAN

~"'
UBfo."RTY

'17,988

~ N1mecl Randy Dunton
uailtlnl bl1htb'\IJ. COidt.
OHIO STA1E - Announced Ute ra ian•tion ol Lu Fetti~, men'• aui1un1
bu.ketball COld!, drta~ve lu!e 30
TIJlANE - Sipted Kev1n Whi~ ath·
lctic ditcct.Gr, tot mulli)'CU cmtnct.

men's

10 IOC IDI

tlllnlll

80; Ju1n Ounnan, Toronto , 72 ; Peru,

111111 ...
lt92 011&amp;1101111 CUIIAII
JUPIIIIUOIITIIC IUIII Pill
01 CllhOLIT WMIIIA IUIO
ll ......
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PLAN TO AnEND •••

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14,988

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southern Ohio Day and Pasture Day
at Jackson Branch O.A.R.D.t::.
Just South of Jackson on S.R. 93

10 llOC IIIL

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10
CAPRICE
I OTO CIOOII FIOM
Y-1, Ut.,lllllllllin&amp;

........... rt:rr.
11:ra8

Afternoon 3·5 p.m.· Field Demonstrations
Including: Bale Wl'llppara, large Balers for silage hay and with aurface Wl'llp; Disc Mowers;
1'111181; Bale movar; Water Sylltems lor Intensive grazing and High Tensile Fanclng Suppllel

3.9% FIXED

Mini Lectures

un FINUCING

Toplca: "Comparing Hay Harvesting and Storage Cost"
"Moving Cowa with Elec:trtc: Fane."
"Determining Forage Quality"

Evening 6·8 p.m.· Repeat of Afternoon Program

UP TO 41IIOIITIIS

On al new '92 PonHac Gland Ams,

Buick Skylark~ and Clds Adle'ria
HOURS: Monday-Friday II to II • Saturday lito 6 • Sunday 1 to 6

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.,_..!:!: ,.. ,_ ,.. ....

2 • 8 p.m. Equipment Exhibits on Display
Food Available

.

~":'..:!,:::;.
0.--~

wm ua

''ILIIIDTIIIW'I, 0111., 1'011111(, MI. •

I

..........
•It

I

00 ~
J.ai22-G417

I .... ...

• - YIIIUIII.If. :n som1 Mil'

344-5947

.

.

~~-,
r-· ~
'
--~

~

m-em m-1144
I

\}

the game wiih the thud-best ERA
in the major leagues at I.99, gave
up six hits in seven iMings and Jeff
Montgomery finished for his lllh
save.
Jones (2-2), who had made 46
relief appearances before getting
his first start, gave up three hits and
two runs in five innings, but also
had five walks and a wild pitch.

Elyria West, Ottawa Hills post ·
wins in state baseball tourney .

Wtn .

Mall Flack hit a double, scori~g
Mall Chadwell and Kris Coop&lt;!)-.
Keith Cooper (8-1) took the loss. ·
Morral-Ridgedale S
Fostoria St. Wende~n I
.
Mau Rowland went four f()r
four Wllh one run scored and ode
run balled in for Ridgedale.
.
Rowland's perfect day from the
pla1e led a nine -hit Ridgedale
a1tack lhat was more than e::ough
fo r Rockets' starter Steve Burchett
( \0-1 ), who allowed two hits and
one unearned run in seven innings.
He walked two and strUCk out two:
The Rockets scored one in tl:c
first, lhen added two runs in tl:c
lhird, bo1h off a passed ball by Sl
Wendelin catcher Mike WellrRodgedale added two more runs ill
1he founh .
Craig Nyc (9-2) went the dislance for the Mohawks. He gave up
mne hill and five walks while striking out five.
Toledo Ottawa Hills 7
Portsmouth Notre Dame 0
Todd Ferris (11-2) gave up twt&gt;
h11S m earnmg the victory and givong Ottawa Hills (22-10) a berth iii
the stale finals. Ferris walked Oilj:
and struck out six.
Scott McCain came on in the
se venth and preserved the victory
against Notre Dame (19-5).
The Green Bears broke the
game open with a three-run fowt!l
inning. They added one run in the
sixth and two in the seventh.
Chad Buckler (6-2) took the
loss.
Only one of Ottawa Hills' run$
was earned. The losing Titans com·
mitred six cmrs.

Wes tern Brown (21-2) scored
twi ce in the fourth innin g when

:Logan's Smith
sets new discus
:record in state
:track meet
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) · Logan's Katie Smith won two
· events and set two of the su meet
: records Friday on the opening day
. of the I &amp;th girls and 85th boys stale
· track championships at Ohio S!adi ·
um.
Winners were declared in 20
events Friday, with 76 more finals
set to be contested on Saturday.
Heavy rains and ligh1nin g
: foreed a suspension late in the day
· wilh just two preliminaries left to
. be run.
Smith. named Ms. Basketball m
·Ohio in March, won the Division I
discus wilh a stale-record throw of
157 fee~ 6 inches, then came back
to take the shot with a mark of 46-3
1/2. She broke the sta te meet
record of 157-4 in the discus, set by
Juli e Victor of Youngstown
Austintown Fitch in 19&amp;9. and
bested th e 45 -6 3/4 of Niles
McKinley's Jodi Riedel set in 1982
in the shoL
Smith had finished third in both
events a year ago. But thi s year,
she improved in the discu s by
exactly 10 feet and went a 5 feet
and 1/4 inch fanher this year in the
shoL
Old Fan's Julie Brueggemeicr
took the Division III hi gh jump
with a mark of 5-7 1/2, breaking
the meet record of 5-7 1/4 sci by
Karen Larke of Malvern in 1985.
The Caldwell qua net of Bryan
Cama, Steve Carna, Jason Vensel
and Brian Hesson won the Division
Ill 3,200 meters in 7:54 .83 to
eclipse the 7:58.34 established by
Frankfort Adena in 1985.
·The Cleveland John Marshall
400-meter relay team of Dorian
Green, Arehie While, Elige Longino and Jonathan Burrell was timed
in 41.48 sa:onds in iiS preliminary
heat 10 snap the mark of 4 1.53 set
by Dayton Patterson in 1985.
In a Division 11 girls 100-melcr
dash preliminarr. Cincinnati Purcell Marian's Dmila Mitchell wss
timed in 12.26 seconds, breaking
the meet record of 12.3 seconds set
eight years ago by Columbus Hanley's Theresa Diggs.
In final events, there were f1ve
individuals or teams that successfully defended their stale championships from a year ago.
The MiddletOwn Fenwick 3.200
relay learn of Debbie Vonderhaar,
Julie Costello, Shannon Noonan
and Carolyn Long made it three in
a row when it won in 9 :3 3.67 .
Long and Vonderllaar have been a
part of all three titles.
In Division II, where only two
event finals were contested, the
Genoa 4x800 team of John Eimers,
Pat Jones, Jason Balduf and Bill
Werner also made it three in a row
in a time of 7:53.5 L
Also in Division Ill, Mary
Domiuovich of McDonald won her
second straight discus title with a
mart of 133-10, and Bruggemeier
repeated in the hiRh jump.

Smith's GMC Truck Center

Abbott (2-8) allowed a seasonhigh six runs on eight hilS in five
innings, losing his fourth straigh1
decisioo.
Royals 6, Mariners 4
At Royals Stadium, Wally Joyner and George Brett hit run-scoring
doubles, spoiling Calvin Jones'
fmn major league start.
Kevin Appier (5 -3). who began

By The Associated Press
With the bases loaded in th e
boltom of lhe lith, Elyria West's
Shawn Kilgore sleppcd up to th e
plate and drew a waJk. It wasn't as
dramatic as a home run or even a
solid single, but the run gave Elyria
West a 2-1 victory over
Steubenville in the Division II stale
baseball semifmals Friday.
In other action, All1ance Marlington defeated Mount Orab Weslem Brown 3-2 in the other Division
ll semifinal , while in Division IV.
Morral-Ridgedale downed Fostoria
St. Wendelin 5- l and Toledo
Ottawa Hills topped PortsmoUih
Notre Dame 7-0.
Elyria West 2
Steubenville I
Elyria West (20-4) scored its
first run in lhc eighth inning on an
RBI single by K:lgore.
Steubenville (23-9) scored on an
run -scoring sing le by pinch hitter
Scou Rabc in the lop of the eighth.
II scored Rober! Boyd, who had
walked.
Tarrence Stalon slruck oul 15
and walked 10 in 10 innings.
Kil~ore went three for live and
drove 1n both runs, while Jim Clark
was two for four.
Alliance Marlington 3
Mount Orab Western Brown 2
Curus Bryant's fifth-inning double scored Joel Nichols to lead the
Dukes.
Marling10n (25-2) started the
scoring in the third on a two-run
homer by Travis Middleton. Jim
Farrell (9-1) struck out 10 for lllc

I 0 games for Chicago, coming off
a 1-&amp;road trip.
Orioles I, Blue Joys 0
At Camden Yards, Cal Ripken
drove in a run with an eighthinning single and Rick Sutcliffe
pitched eight scoreless innings. The
. victory pushed the Orioles into first
place in the AL East, percentage
. points ahead of the Blue Jays.
· Jimmy Key (3 -4) retired 12
straig ht batters before Brady
Anderson beat out an infield hit
with two oul in the eighth. Mike
. Devereaux followed with a single.
· sending Anderson to third. Duane

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(Rain Date: June 12)

scored on a wild pitch by loser
Willie Banks (0-1).
Brewers 7, Angels 1
At County Stadium, Dante
Bichctte drov e in four runs and
Chris Bosio potched a five -hitter as
Milwaukee bea1 slumping Jim
Abbott and Cal1fom1a.
Bosio (4 -3 ) struck ou1 four and
walked none for his first complele
game of the season.

The loss was the ninlh in the last

YOU CAN BELIEVE IT!

Ke1th Woodai.de., runnin&amp; bKk.

Ward replaced Key, and Ripken lez hit a home run and a tnpl e.
singled to exlend his hitting streak Guzman (5-3) scattered eight hits
and ~ave up two runs.
to 14 games.
F1ve Texas pitchers allowed 15
Sutcliffe (8-4) allowed four hilS,
walked one and struck out four in runs, 14 hits and 10 walks in losing
eight-plus innings to win his third the previous game 15-12 to Mmstraight decision.
nesota.
Rangers S, Twins 4
Ruben Sierra gave the Rangers a
At Arlington, Jose Guzman qui · 4-2 lead in the sixth with a one-out
eled Minnesota's hot bats with 7 solo homer and Texas got anolher
1/3 strong innings and Juan Gonza- run when Gonzalez tripled and

stan.

FootboU
National F'oott.lll.a1ue
GREEN HAY PACKERS ~ Waived

mo~ 3: BwU, 8011:\on, 3; P\ld:dl., Minrx:lllll, 3: Rainol, Chiu.ao, 3; 24 ue tie-d

M.L

Junt

Oticaao 1t Poo-

MAC cage tourneys now in Columbus

By The Associated Press
The Bash Brothers h11 the
Windy City hard.
Jose Canseco and Harold Baines
each hit three -r un homers and
Mark McGwire hit his major
league-leading 21st home run as
1he Oakland A's overpowered the
Chicago White Sox 10-3 Friday
night at Comiskey Parle
"They've been saying that
Mark and Jose give this learn a big
lift and are expected to hit a lot of
home runs," McGwire said. " But
expectations are high for both of
us. I know he really has a good attitude about it, so whatevu happens,
happens."
Elsewhere in the AL it was Baltimore 1, Toronto 0; Milwaukee 7,
California 1; Kansas City 6, Seattle
· 4; and Texas 5, Minnesota 4 .
Detroit at New York and Cleveland
at Boston were postponed by rain.
Baines, who also had an RBI
double, finished the White Sox off
with his third homer of the season
against reliever Donn Pall in the
eighlh.
"A lot of people are contributing," Baines said. "It's amazing. It
really is. Tony (LaRussa) has been
doing his best trying to juggle the
outfield, giving guys days off."
Ron Darling (5·3) won for the
fourth time in five stans, allowing
six hits and three runs in 5 2/3
· innings. Vince Horsman and Gene
Nelson finished for the A's.
Loser Kirk McCaskill (3-5)
gave up six hits and four runs,
walking five in four innings while
making hiS 2001h major league

·

Better See These •••
1989 GMC JIMMY 4/4
Air, auto. Local OWner.
COMING THROUGH -Por tland's Terry Porter (center)
drives to the hoop between Chicago's John Paxson (left) and
Michael Jordan during tbe third quarter of Game 2 of the NOA
Finals Friday night in Chicago, which the Trail Blazers won 115104 in overtime to even the series at 1- L (AP)

NBA Finals...
~o

(Cont:nued from C-2)

look at a lot of film to see who
1s," Adelman said of Poner, who
finished with 24 poinl&lt;.
. Ainge _scored 8 of his 17 poiniS
1n overtime. He also had four
assists and no turnovers .
Drexler who had 26 poin iS,
eight ass ists and seven rebound s,
said comebacks arc more typical of
the Trail Blazers than collapses are.
" II is a trademark of our team,
pulling togelher laic run s lik e
lllat," he said. "I fouled outlhmking we were still in iL"
The Trail Blazers are in the
series in a big way. The ne~ l three
games are at Penland. Games 6
and 7, 1f necessary, would be a1
Chicago Sladium.
Jordan will be looking to make
amends. Despite his 39 poin l.l, he
faltered at critical junctures. He
missed two free throws down llle
stretc h, shot long on the po1cntial
winnmg jumper, went 0 for 4 from
three-point range afler going 6 for
10 in Game I and

turnovers. His coach, Phil Jackson,
said Jordan 's technical foul gave
Portland needed momentum.
"Fortunately," Ain~e sa id ,
"Superman's cape fell off. ·
Olher Bulls also struggled. Seallie P1ppen missed 13 of 19 shots.
John Paxson made three three poomers to help the Bulls rally from
a 54-45 halftime deficit bul missed
SIX of his last seven shoiS.
Bu1 to say that Chicago simply
choked the game away would no1
be giving the Trail Blazers their
due, which is something the Bulls
arc now willing to do.
"We ran out of gas and lhe
other team jusl kept coming al us ,"
Jackson said.
"We've always been a good fin ishing team. With what was a1
slake, we're very disappointed 10
let thi s slip away . They finoshcd
strong and we did not. And 1ha1
was the diffcrence. They wanted il
more lhan we did.''

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133 Pine Street
Gallipolis, OH.

In Pomeroy With
ATTORNEY D. MICHAEL MULLEN

RIDE a E-Z PAY

614·44&amp;-0736

SMITH GMC TRUCK CENTER

992·6417

Auto • Rentals

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-

Notional League

In the NL ...

R.-

New Yodt, 66;
s-J., 64; K.
Brown. Ta.u, 60; Appier, Kanau City,
H; J01e 0aman. Tu.u, ~9.

Leaders

" I should have known better,"
said Jordan, who had his second
successi ve39-pointgamebutmade
se veral critical errors.
With Drexler out, Poner took
control of what had been a disorganized offense.
He scored II of 13 Portland
points in one stretch, assisted on
vice president of marketing for _the Kevin Duckworth's shon jumper
Greater Co lumbu s ConventiOn that made it97-97 with 13.2 secCenter. "Baltelle Hall is a great onds left, played tough defense on
arena for basketball because there's Jordan's failed 18-footer at the regnot a bad seat in the house.' ·
ulation buzzer and hit a nail-in-theThe Columbus sile will be the coffin three-pointer with 1:31 left
sixth for th'e tournament since it in overtime.
began in 1980. The tournament
"If he's not one of the best
also has taken place in Ann Arbor, point guards in the league and one
Mich .; Rockford, IlL; Detroit; of the best clutch players, I have to
IIB.;.ow•l;,in,:g;.G;,r.;.
ec;.n.;a;,n;.d.;.T;,ol.;.ed;,o•.----·(~S;;,ee;.F;.'lN-AIIIILoiS•o•n•C•·•3),__ _,

_

Basehall

fident"
Jordan wasn't willing to let
choking dogs lie. Re feree Je ss
Kersey whistled him for cursmg
about a foul call and Porler made
1hree free 1hrows to begin a 15-5
Portland run.

,

Scot·eboard

92-82 with 4:36 left in regulation,
they had only made two baskets in
the fourth quarter and All -S tar
Clyde Drexlcr had fouled out
"We had them right where we
wanted them," Adelman said,
laughing. "We had them overeon -

_

second time, Michael Jordan quesLioned the Blazers' intelligence.
Then, before this series, Chicago's
scouting repon said the Trail Blazers would "self-destruct" if the
Bulls let them do it
In Game 1, a 122-89 Chicago
victory, Portland did indeed fall
apan in the second and third periods.
It appeared the Trail Blazers
were dead Friday, too. They trailed

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Page-C3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Home run power drives A's to 10-3 win over White Sox

Portland evens series with Chicago with 115-104 OT win
game apiece. Game 3 is Sunday.
By MIKE NADEL
"I can't control perceptions,"
CHICAGO (AP) - The ChicaPonland
coach Rick Adelman said
, go Bulls, who Uterally wrote the
after
Terry
Porter and Danny Ainge
book on Portland's tendency to
led
the
Trail
Blazers post the Bulls.
. :'self-destruct" in big games, fell
"We won 70 percent of our games
· ~part down the stretch and let the
;Trail Blazers back into the NBA over the last three years and I'll
' take that Every team in this league
Finals.
The Trail Blazers beat the Bulls has problems holding leads some115-104 in overtime Friday, and times.''
The Bulls beat Ponland twice
beat a path back to Portland with
during
the regular season. Afler the
the best-of-seven series tled at a

June 7, 1992

~

• .Page-c2-8unday nmea Sentinel

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NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIOAY, 9:30Au·8 PM
SATURDAY, 9:30 AU·5 PM; SUNDAY, 11 AU-6 P11

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, POINT PLEASANT

•

•
•
•
•

•

,.

�Page C4 Sunday nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

June 7, 1992

Ohio fishing report

Dow Lake, Lake Hope offers good chances at largemouths, bluegills
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weeldy fishing repon as
provided by lhe division of wildlife
of !he Ohio Depanment of Naturnl
Resources:
Southeast
DOW LAKE- This 160-acre
Athens County lake offers excellent opportunities ror tak:ing chan·
nel catfish. Fish at night or during
early morning for best results.
Good opportunities also exisl for
bluegills, redear sunfish, largemooth bass and go lden trouL
LAKE HOPE- Try the upper
end of this Vinton County lake
using imilation baits or pork rind
combinalions to take largemouth
bass. Shoreline areas offer good
opponunities for channel catfish
anglers. Bluegills and sunfish are
presenl in good numbers and can
be laken on larval bailS, ned worms
or meal worms.
Soulhwest
CAESAR CREEK LAKE Fish !he shallow woody areas, !hen
1ry deeper watcr around submerged
stum ps and drop-offs to take
bluegills . Use jigs, spinners or
cmnk bailS in open water areas to
dcplhs of 20 feet to take while bass.
PAINT CREEK LAKE -The
1ail wa1er areas provide excellenl
opportunities 10 take channel and
flathead catfish. Rocky areas are

mosl productive for bass anglers.
Crappies up to 15 inches can be
taken on minnows in areas of
flooded timber.
Ohio River
Hybrid striped bass, up uo five
pounds, are being laken in !he New
Cumberland pool and tail water.
Anglers are using one-quaner
ounce chartreuse or while jigs ,
spoons and spinners in the pool,
and one-half ounce twisters and
crank baits in lhelail water. Try !he
C on f) uence where t he Ye II ow
Creek enlers the river for hybrid
stripers.
In lhe Pike Island tail water,
anglers using live minnows are lal&lt;ing smallmouth bass up uo 16 inches, channel catfish up 10 20 inches,
and wh1te bass and hybrid striped
bass. L1ve bait works well in taking
small mouth bass averaging 15 to
18 inches in Pike Island Pool. Try
th e embaymenls, using surface
lures, 10 lake largemouth bass averaging 14 10 19 inches. Walleye up
IO 25 inches are being laken on jigs
and minnows fiShed near !he dam.
Cenlral
DEER CREEK LAKE - Use
shad or cut bailS fished along the
bouom in the creek a! the upper
end of !he reservoir 10 lake channel
catfish. Areas wilh submerged
brush piles or downed trees arc

....---Area sports briefs-First Rio Grande cage camp open
RIO GRANDE - The University or Rio Grande men's basketball program is stillaccepting applications ror ils summer basketball
camps.
The dates for lhese camps, open only 10 boys, will be June 7-11
and June 21-25 for grades 5-9 and June 14-18 ror gntdes 9-12. The
June 28-July 2 penod will be reserved for varsity competition.
For more information, calll -800-282-7201 .

Weighlifting to start Monday
BIDWELL -:- Weighlifting sess•ons for River Valley's inaugural
foolball team w•ll begm Monday, accord10g to Raider head coach
JaclcJames.
Sessions are scheduled for Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
from 8 10 II a.m. and from 610 9 p.m. at !he old Bidwell School.

Marauder boys cage camp Monday
ROCK SPRINGS - The 1992 Marauder Baskelball Camp, for
boys entenng grades 5-8, Will he held at Meigs High School from
Monday 10 Friday from 9 a.m. 10 noon.
Daily camp activities will include instruction in defensive and
offensiv~ techmques as well as i~dividual slations SlreSSing shoo!mg, p3SS1ng, dribblmg, ball handling and rebounding.
The camp w•ll feature !he Me•gs coaching slaff and members of
!he 1991 -92 basketball team.
Application forms will be passed oul 10 all schools wilhin !he
Me.igs Local School Districl For anyone outside !he district, applicauon forms may he obtamed by conlaeting either Phil Harrison at
992-6451 or 992-6248, Rick Edwards at 992-6174 or 992-2158 or
Rick Ash at 992-5960.
The camp fee is $30 and T-shirts will be given 10 all campers.

Open gym to begin Monday
GA LLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy boys basketball coach Jim
Osborne Saturday reminded individuals !hat open gym w•ll begin
Monday, and will conunued lhrough July 23.
The gym will be open for all individuals from 10 a.m. until I
p. m. on Monday, Tuesday and Fridays. II will be open from grade
school youngsters on Wednesday from 10 a.m. until 12 noon.
Osborne also said !here is still time 10 sign up for lhe summer
coge ca mps. The camp fees arc now $55.
Sign up will be Wednesday for lhc buddy-ball syslem .

Tennis league to start Tuesday
CENTENARY - The 0 .0 Mcintyre Park Dislrict will sponsor

a learn 1enms league 10 run from Tuesday until July 23.
The league will play ilS mmches at Raccoon Cnx:k County Park
fro m 6 p.m. unul dark on Tuesday and Thursday evenings, dependIng on !he number of teams.
A team will consic: of a minimum of IWo boys and 1wo girls 18
years old and younger divided 1n1o two a~e divisions, IS-andyou nger and 14-and-youngcr. The matches will consist or five 10 six
no-add sell. Some experience is required, as !his is not a beginners'
league.
The deadline for regiSimuon IS Monday,
For more infonnalion , conlacl Danella Greene al !he Park DistriCI office al446-4612. exL 256.

Meigs Chamber slates linkfest
POMEROY - The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will
hold ill annual golf tourramcnl Thursday at I p.m. al the Meigs
County Golf Course.
The 10umamcn1 will be a four-person blind scramble and !he cost
will be $50 per person. The cos! includes hot dogs at noon along
wi lh green fees, cart and a sleak dinner.
For more information, call !he Chamber om.. eat 992-5005.

Officer election Thursday
GALL!POLIS - The River Valley Athletic Boosters Club will
hold its regular meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. at !he Gallia Conoly
Local School Dislrict office ofT Oltio 160, about 2 1!2 miles northwest of Gallipolis.
:
The purpose of !he meeting is 10 elect officers for !he 1992-93
: sc hool year.

:Swimming practice scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - Practice for !he Gallipolis Municipal Pool's
: swim learn has been rescheduled for Monday, June 15 at 9 a.m.
: Team members should be ready 10 swim.
• Any new members can regisler and pay the $15 membership fee
: at that time.
For more infonnation, contacl Kim Canaday at 446-DIVE.

;Southern cage camp set

,•
: RACINE - The fifth annual Tornado Bastclball Camp will be
: held at Soulhem High School from June 15 to June 19, from 9 a.m.
• uo noon at the Charles W. Hayman Gynmasiurn in Racine.
: The camp wiD feature the fundamentals essential10 prodliCt win,: ning basketball. These fundamentals are lhe same ones stressed at
&gt;Southern's varsity level. The cosl or the camp is $40. All checks
:: should be sent to Howie Caldwell, Box 263, Racine. Ohio 45771.
• Each camper will receive a camp T -shirt

ltkely h1dmg spots for crappies.
Focus on !he. rocky shorelines and
drop-off pomts to locale largemuulh bass.
BUCKEYE LAKE- The Cranberry Marsh and Clouse Cove areas
are popular spots for bass fishing.
The lake also has good numbers of
hybnd stnJ&gt;ed bass. Use sofl craws
or slmk ballS fished along !he bot·
10m 10 take charmel catfiSh.
Norlbwest
WILLARD RESERVOIR _
Drif1 a night crawler harness or
troll small crank baits near lhe
wave-washed shorelines to take
walleyes. Shoreline areas are also
good places to take smallmoUih
bass when fishing with sofi craws.
Drifl fishing with night Clllwlers or
chicken livers in early morning or
evemng hours works best for laking channel catfish.
PLEASANT HILL RESER -

VOIR - Good numbers of smallmouth hass are presenl!hJS nme of
year. Try fishing around shoreline
cover and areas w11h vegela!lon .
Brown bullheads and channel catfish ca n bcsl be taken during
evening hours using lraditional catfish baits fished along !he lalce bottom.
Northeast
BERLIN
RESER VOIRAccess may be limiled due 10 low
water levels . Anglers, however,
will find !hat excellenl numbers of
white and black crappies are present. Use minnows suspended
benealh a bobber and fish at depths
of six uo 12 feel. Look for while
bass feeding ncar the surface.
Many of lhese fJSh average eight 10
12 inches. Smallmoulh bass average 10 to 18 inches and can be
lal&lt;en on jigs and twisters.
SPENCER LAKE- Fishing
opponunities for largemoulh hass,

blue gills and channel catfish are
rated excellent. Bass are protected
by a 15-inch minimum Icnglh limiL
Blueg1lls are abundant and offer
good opporlunities for shoreline
anglers.
Lake Erie
In the western basin, walleye
and smallmouth bass fishing are
rated good. Top walleye areas
mclude 1he reef complex, Toledo
Shipping Channel, soulhwest of
Green Island, the area between
Kelleys and South Bass islands and
near West Sister Island. Anglers
are trolling
crank baits
and

Tha1ks to Family, Friends
and You, the Voters of
Galha County, for your
support In the Primary
Electl01 June 2nd

Victoria C.'s lawsuit
vs. Bengals stands, but
two claims dismissed
By TIM KLASS
SEATTLE (AP) - A federal
judge has let stand a lawsuit filed
by a woman againsl the Cincinnati
Bengals and as many as 15 players
she accused of raping her.
But the judge struck down two
of her claims.
U.S. District Judge John C.
Coughenour on Friday ruled the
plaintiff, a Spokane resident identified in court papers only as Victoria C., could not pursue claims that
the Bengals violated her civil rights
and hired a player known to be
assaultive.
But Coughenour rejected argumenlS by lawyers for the Bengals
that !he suit should be dismissed
altogelher because of a release documem they said !he woman signed
in exchange for $30,000.
In the suit filed April 10, the
woman said she was gang-raped at
a suburban hotel afler having con·
sensual sex with one of !he players
Oct. 3, 1990, two nights after an
NFL game here between !he Bengals and !he Seattle Scahawks. No
criminal charges were filed.
The suit said Victoria C. was
unable 10 identify all of her attackers. It described !he plaintiff as !he
mother of four children who was
going through a divorre at !he time,
and lived in !he Seattle area before
moving 10 Spokane a year ago.
Her lawyers have challenged !he
validity of the release on several
grounds, including an assertion thai
!he version they were senl was nol
!he one she signed.
Coughenour said !he team " has
nol mel i!S burden of demonslrating
that Vic!Oria C. cannot prove a sci
of facts consistent with !he allegations in the complaiint"
He also left intact her claim lhat
the Bengals could be held accountable for what occurred in a player's
hotcl room on a floor rentcd hy !he
club.
· "We're entirely pleased w1th
!he order." said Richard C.
Ey mann, the woman's Spokane
lawyer.
"No, we were nol terribly surprised," said Craig P. Campbell, a
local lawyer for !he Ben gals.
An appeal of Ihe ruling is
unlikely, Campbell said.
None of the players has been
identified
publicly ,
and
Coughenour said "great care
should be expended" 10 avoid
harming the reputations of any who
are innocent
The judge granted !he woman's
request 10 seal her own pretrial
deposition, prohibit release of her
address and phone number to the
players and bar any of them from
contacting her.
Bengals' lawyer Raben Stachler
had urged !he judge 10 restrict discovery to !he issue of the release
document until its validity is determined, but Coughenour reJected
!hat request.
The Bengals' lawyer also
argued !hat !he release was valid
and that going 10 trial would be
needless and wasteful.
"Vic!Oria C. was really rnped.
She has a severe psychological
condition" from !he episode, said
Victoria L. Vreeland , a Seanle
lawyer who also represented lhe
woman in court. "This is not
wasteful litigation."
In an affidavit filed last monlh,
the woman said she accepted the
$30,000 under pressure but never
signed !he release agreemenl
Instead, she said she signed a
document 1ha1 summarized the
episode, discussed the players
wi!houl naming them and noted !he
$30,000 payment wilhout absolv ing any of the players from liability.
The case initially was filed in
King Counly Superior Coun but
was transferred uo federal court at
!he team's request. A Slallls confer·

Sports shorts
Golf
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Bobby Nichols and Jim Colbert
frred 7-under 65s to share !he first
round lead or the Paine Webber
lnvitalional seniors golf tournament
I

tipped wilh nigh I crawlers. Top
smallmoulh bass areas include the
Bass islands, Kelleys Island and !he
nearshore rocky shoreline s.
Anglers are doing the best using
leaded-hair jigs and !wister tails
fished at depths of seven 10 15 feel.
. In the cen1ral basin, walleye
fiShmg IS rated fair. Anglers are
!Tolling Dipsy Divers with spoons
al deplhs of 50 10 60 feet in the
area of Ash1abula to Conneaul, and
al .the Grand River to Geneva.
Smallmouth fishing is rnled good
in bolh cenlral basin areas. Smallmouth anglers are fishing in shallow waters around breakwalls.

June 7, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Rijo's arm propels Cincinnati to 6-2 victory over Los Angeles
J By lhe !l.~o;ocialed Press .
a bled ilsl after an inflamed rig hi
ose .,•JO, a cruc1al p1ece 10 elbow.
;mc~~~u s pennant hopes, finally
Rijo f2-4) threw 108 pilches,
e cady 10 as,sumc h1 s role a.• some clocked as h1gh as 96 mph ,
..~ tflhe Reds P•~.hmgslafL
and ended all sn mmngs wnh a
F ·d·
awesome, . RIJO sa1d slnkeout. He allowed only seven
. n ay a ler gomg sn shulout hilS, struck out e•ghl and walked
mnmgs~gamst Los Angeles 10 ~~s on~ .. ,
.
~s11
ormance of the season. I
II s so much eas1er when you
~c
~rcem tonlght,;or maybe don't h~vc a pitch counl o~ you
t e secon Ume all year.
and you ve go! a clear mmd, sa1d
Wllh RIJO mow•.ng down the Ri]O, who'd been limited 10 60-loDod gers and Paul 0 Ne11l hghung 90 pitches in previous slal1S.
lhem u~, !he Reds coastcd to a 6-2
Norm Charlton pitched rwo hi IVICtory a! Dodger Sladmm, mcreas- less innings before giving way to
mg thw lead m !he NL West to I Rob Di,bble, who allowed the
1/2 games over San D1ego. The Dodgers only runs m !he mnlh.
Padres losl3-2 to Atlan!a.
.
O'Neill went 3 for 3 with his
.In olhcr games. Phdadelph•a seventh home run and a two -run
healS!. LoUi s 7-5, Ch1cago and double and Barry Larkm added
Montreal spill a doubleheader, lhe lhrce hits. O'Neill ltil the f1rst pitch
Cobs wmnmg 10-4 and lhen losing of !he sixth inning off Kevin Gross
6-2; Plllsburgh beat New York 5-4; (3-5) to right field for his fifth
and Houston beat San Francisco 5- career home run against Gross.
4.
Gross allowed lhree runs and
Reds manager Lou Piniella did four hits w lhe hrsl mnmg. He
no! pol a p11ch limit on Rijo for !he wound up giVIng up .five runs and
firs! time since he came off !he dis-

l.ra

cc;

loo

nine hi Li

m seven mnmgs.
Braves3,Padres2
AI San Diego, lefT Blauser hila
gamc- lymg home run 10 lead off
1he n1n1h and Greg Olson drew a
bases-loaded walk from reli ever
M•ke Maddux 10 lift Atlanta.
. Blauser's ~omer spoi led the
Cra1g Lelfert s b1d for hiS fmt
career complete game .. Lefferts (64) gave up seven h1LS 10 e1gh1 plus
innin gs, the longest outing of his
career.
Juan Berengucr (1-1) got two
outs m!he eighth inning and earned
I he v;clory, wilh Mark . Wohlers
pnch mg the mmh for h1 s second
save.
Phillies 7, Cardinals 5
AI Philadelphia, Darren Daulton
drove in five runs with lwo hom ers,
including a three- run shol in 1he
eighlh inning.
DauliOn's seventh homer of !he
season spoiled Cardinals reliever
Todd Worrell's bid for hi s first
save since Aug . 28, !989.

LARRY M. BETZ
Galr.a County Treasurer

ence before Coughenour is set for

June 23.

The 1st Anniversary Sale At

DO

Barry Jones (4-2) got !he vic!Ofy co in the lOth inning uo hft homesand Mitch Williams his lOth save landing Pmsburgh 10 us fourth
afler quelling a St. Louis lhreal in straight victory againsl NL East
!he ninth.
foes .
.
.
Dave Hollins and John Kruk
Jeff lnms (4-2) re!lred all fiv e
opened the Phillies' eighth with batlers he faced until Bell hoed a
si ngles off Worrell (2-2), and tnple down the ngh1 -f1eld line.
Dauhon hil the first pitch he saw Franco walked Andy VanSlyke
for his second home run of 1he and Barry Bonds 10 load the bases
game 10 complete the second five- before yielding McClendon's hiL
RBI game of his career.
Stan Belinda (3-2) pitched a
Cubs 10, Expos4
scoreless lOth for !he victory, and
Expos fi, Cubs 2
VanSlyke hit his second home run.
Danny Jackson, backed by 1S
Aslros 5, Giants 4
hits, won for the first time in
Jeff Bagwell hit a rwo-ou~ twoalmo st a year as Chicago beat run bomer ofT San Francisco relievMontreal in lhe first game of a dou- er Jeff Brantley 10 !he nmlh to hfl
blcheader at Olympic Stadium. The
Expos came back 10 win !he night cap, 6-2 , behind the combined
pitching of Chris Nabholz (4-4)
and John Wetteland, who earned
his ninlh save.
Jackson (1 -7) allowed three runs
and eight hits in six innings for the
victory. Bob Scanlan pitched the
last three innings for his second
save.
Ryne Sandberg had three hits,
three RBis and sconcd twice for lhe
Cubs. Sammy Sosa hil a three-run
homer and Doug Dascenzo and
Mark Grace added two hits and lwo
RBis apiece as the Cubs pounded
Mark Gardiner (3- 5) in !he opener.
Montreal's Moises Alou had
three hits and an RBI in !he first
game and added a double, triple
and lhree RB!s in the nightcap,
while le3mmate Tim Wallach fin ished lhe day 4 for 5 with four
RB!s.
Greg Maddux (5-6) gave up six
hits and five runs in losing the
nightcap.
Pirales 5, Mels 4
Lloyd McClendon followed Jay
Bell's IWo-out triple with a single
off New Yori&lt; relief ace John Fran-

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MOLER STEALS - Cal Stale-Fullerton
Jason Moler (in while) slides into· Miami second
baseman Dave Berg for !he steal or second base

~--'"'B&gt;

during Friday nighl 's College World Series
semifinal game in Omaha, Neb., which Fullerlon
won 8-1. (AP)

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302 V-8

Pepperdine, Cal State-Fullerton
win NCAA baseball semifinal games
By TOM YTNT
OMAHA, Neb. (AP)- Pepper-

Marauder football
Camp Slated fOr juJy

dme and Cal Stale Fullerlon have
come halfway across !he, country 10
fmally delermme who s lhe besl
team m Soulhern Cal1forma.
This malchup, thoug~, will
mean a. hule bll more. II II also
dcterm10e the besl learn '" I he
country.
CaiS
.
. .
tate Fullerton and ILS hm h•llmg star Phil Nevm eliminaled
Miami 8 I al the College World
S .
·
.
enes and advanced 10 !he champ• -

ROCK SPRINGS _ The 1992
M
M de f ball
.
e1gs arau r oot
camp w1 11
beheldfromJuly6toJuly!Ofrom
.
. .
.
.
8.30unul 11 .30 a.m. al Mc1gs H1gh
School for boys entering grades 48
·
Basics will be taught by the
Meigs Marauder football staff on
ball handling for lhe backs. receiv ing, proper stance for backs and
linemen, kicking, punting aod !-':'+'=+':+§~
throwing drills for the quarterbacks
The cosl of !he camp is $30 and
it includes 15 hours of instruction
and a camp T-shirt to be given oul
on the first day or the camp. A
piu.a party will be held on the last
day of !he camp.
Tim Hinlon, defensive line and
strength coach for Oh10 University, 1-'-'-t'::'-E
will be one of !he guest speakers
during the camp. Hinlon, who has
finished two seasons with the Bobcats, is a graduale .of Amanda
Clean:reek High School and Wilm- 1-!='+=+=ington College. He was a graduate
assistanl al Ohio Slate in 1985 and
1986 and was head coach at Zane !-'-'-+=
Trace and Van Wert High Schools · !-'='+-"'
before joining Tom Lichtenberg's f'!'~t-'slaff al Ohio.
· More information is available at
Meigs High School's office or by
calling Marauder head coach Mike
SlalJIS at 992-2 158.

onship game againSI neighbor Peppcrdmc.
The vicwry Fnday mght set up
!he first CWS utl e match between
IWO learns from lh c same Stale and
ended tl• e dream of Miami coach
Ron Fraser, who wished 10 end his
..
·h
h
·
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ac amp• onsh1p.
E
d
·
ld ·
d vcNn a s ~ ea y rah•n cCoWu Sn t
ousc ev m s score mg
as
(See SERIF.S on C-6)

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June 7, 1992

June 7, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

McDonald's-sponsored Doll Brother's Special, Racine driver Bob
Adams Jr. bolted from his pole

starting position to lead aU 35 laps
of the STARS sanctioned "Earl
Hill Memorial" Friday night at

Skyline Speedway, where he
claimed the $2,000 top prize.
The win was Adams' first of the
year, after three consecutive sec·
onds at Skyline, and carne against
a fast freld of 28 cars from si&gt;. difDon Pooley, a fooner winner of ferent states. All six states were
this event, completed a 67 and represented in the feawre.
A fast time of 12:51 was set by
reached the tournament halfwday
point in 135, one stroke behind Lowell driver Bruce Dennis, in the
en Rayburn, was the only thing
Henke and Sindelar.
Mike Standly was next among that kept Adams from a clean
those who completed play. He was sweep. All 28 cars clocked in the
12 to mid-13 bracket, exemplifying
at 137 after a 68. ·
the
fast track conditions.
Bob Gilder, Jeff Maggert, Davis
Love III and Keith Oearwater fol·
lowed at 138. Gilder scatltred nine
birdies across his card in a round of
67. Love, with three titles and more
HELENA, Mont. (AP) - A
than SI million in earnings already
federal
prosecutor confinned Frithis season, shcJt 68. Maggert had a
day that New York Yankees relief
67 and Clearwaler 70.
Nicklaus, the tournament's host pitcher Steve Howe has agreed tD
plead guilty to one misdemeanor
and founder, had a 69 that put him
cocaine charge in return for the disat143.
missal of a second charge.
PGA champion John Daly strugAssistant U.S. Atlorney Kris
gled IDa 75 and was certain to miss
McLean
declined to provide details
the cut for the fmal two rounds at
of the plea agreement. He said a
153.
Spanish star Jose Maria Olaza· description of the agreement Howe
bal. at 147 after a n, and British gave the New York newspaper
Open titl(}-holder Ian Baker-Finch, Newsday was accurate.
Newsday, quoting unidentified
at 146 after a 76, were probable
casualties when the 112-man field sources, said the plea agreement
is trimmed to the low 70 scorers calls for Howe to do no jail time.
after the completion of second- Instead, the newspaper said, he will
be fined and ordered to do commuround play.
nity service and undergo mandatory drug counseling.
McLean said the maximum
penalty for the single misdemeanor
c barge would be a year in jail and a
$100,000 fine. He added, "The
sentence is UJ' to the judge. I don't
want to speculate on what he' II
the Triad fWlS. She had to go the
d
0 ."
rest of the way on the mound after
Howe told Newsday he is "tak.
Strasburg's best pitcher, Kelly
ing
responsibility for one of these
Krantz, aggmVllled a rib injury and
charges,
for the good of baseball
left after two innings.
and
my
family.
I want to get this
Jrromesvillt Hilkdalt 8
over
with.
It's
been
a nighunare."
A.shland Crestview 3
Howe also told the New York
Jodi Garn had two hits and
Post
he would plead his case to
drove in three runs for Hillsdale.
Gam singled in a run in the second and hit a two-nm single in the
fourth. HiUsdale put the game away
with four runs in the second, when
Holly Eggerton, Jolene HostenJer
and Gam hit run-scoring singles
and Mary Myers drove in a run
with a sacrifice fly.
Winning pitcher Lori Bach (152) limited the Cougars ID four hit•.
struck out nine and walked one .
Crestview's Heather Sweet (17-7)
struck out seven and gave up one

Henke, Sindelar in first in Memorial
By BOB GREEN
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP)- Joey
Sindelar says he's coming out of a
slump.
Nolan Henke says he's afraid
he's headed into one, despite his
high standing halfway through the
weather-disrupted Memorial tournament.
"I hit it, look up and say 'where
did it go?' I have no idea," Henke
said Friday after salvaging a 69 and
a share of the overnight lead
despite hitting two shots into the
water.
''The swing could go at any
time," Henke said. "Maybe it will
last 'til Monday. Maybe It won't. It
could explode. I'm justlcind of tinkering out there, getting away with
some goofy shots."
Sindelar, who played in the
same threesome with Henke, can
sympathize. He's been there. After
scoring two victories and winning
more than $800,000 in 1988, he
went into a decline.
"I know what he "s going
through with his swing, because
that's the same thing I've been
fighting so long," Sindelar said.
'_'lt's a bad feeling, I can tell you."

But his fight, Sindelar said, is
almost over, as witness the 7under-par 65 that lifted him into a
tie with Henke at 134, 10 under par
on Jack Nicklaus' storm-ravaged
Muirfield Village Golf Club

course.

"It's been a long time for me,
but I finally feel I'm there 88ain.
I'm very pleased," Sindelar said.
The leaders finished their
rounds hours before il series of laleafternoon storms disrupted play
and eventually caused a postponement.
Paul Azinger, taking a nm at the
clubhouse leaders, was among the
33 who marked their positions on
the course and were scheduled to
return early this morning to complete play.
The third round was scheduled
later in the day.
Azinger was 5-under-par for the
round and birdied the last two holes
he played before the round was
halted. That put him at 9-Wlder-par
for the toumarnent - only one off
the pace -with eight holes to go
David Edwards was eight under
for the tournament with one sec ond-round hole to play.

tournament.

Barker ( 12-0) struck out nine
Sprin~f!Cld defeated Sylvania Northview 1-0 in eight
innings in a Division I high school
softball semifinal Friday at Ashland.
In the other Division I semifinal,
Piqua defeated Westerville North
2-1. In Division II, LaGrange Keystone beat Richmond Edison South
4-2 and Akron Hoban blanked
Springfield Northwestern 3-0.
North Lewisburg Triad downed
Strasburg 12-1 and Jeromesville
Hillsdale
topped
Ashland
Crestview 8-3 in Division m.
Akron SprinEf"~eld 1
Sylvania Norihvinv 0
Heather Carney singled, then
stole second and third in the eighth
before Angie Morckel drove her
home for the game's only run.
Deanna Kreide! (25-4) took the
loss for Northview (23 -2) . She
gave up six hits, struck out one and
wallced three.
Piqua 2, Westerville I
Cara Berger scored on a wild
pitch in the bottom of the eighth to
help Piqua to its 24th victory of the
year. Berger had singled and
advanced ID third on an error.
Piq_ua (24-3) scored first in the
fifth mning with two out. Tish
Stambaugh was hit by a pitch,
reached second on a throwing error
and stole third.
Brandy Fraley hit a ground ball
to second and Stambaugh scored
on a throwing error.
Brandi Vogler (19-3) was the
winner. She gave up nine hits,
struck out two and walked one.
Jenmfer Holsinger took. the loss
for Westerville North (23-5). She
gave up three hits, struck out seven
and walked one.
LaGrange Krystonr 4
Rkhmond Edison South 2
Jami Cendrosky's third-inning
triple drove in Amy Johnson with
the winning run.
Missy Kocsis hit a two-run single in the second and Jen Accavallo
singled in Cendrosky in the third
for Keystone (27-3). The runs for
Edison South (26-4) came in on an
error in the first inning and Jana
Jenkins' fielder's choice in the sec ond.
Winning pitcher Johnson and
losing pitcher Jami Bendle both
struck out four and wallced two.
Akron Hoban 3
Springfield Northwestern 0
Margo Ruther hit into a fielder's
choice in the fust inning to drive in
the first run and that proved to be
all Hoban needed.
batters as

Hoban's Angie Townsend gave
up four hits, struck out 10 and
wallced two while Jorli Noffke lost
despite limiting the Knights to two
hits. She struck out five and walked
five.
North Lewi&lt;iburg Triad 12
Strasburg 1
Carie Herron drove in three runs
and won her 17th game without a
loss.
All of Triad's scoring came in
two big innings. The Cardinals
scored three runs in the third and
nine in the sixth.
Carla Yockey's firSt-inning single drove in the only run for the
Tigers (17-8).
Herron struck out seven and
didn't walk anyone. losing pitcher
Emily Erenbarger (3-3) went the
final five mnings and gave up all

elimination contest

Fraser, like Garrido. was trying
for a third CWS champiooship.
"I thought Cal State Fullerton
has a great baU club," Fraser said.
"They deserved to win the game.
They got out on us early and we
had a hard time catching up."
Just like Wednesday when the
Tttans ran to a 7-0 lead, Fullerton
grabbed the early advantage Friday. Jason Moler had an RBI single
in the first, Nevin's ground out
scored another in the third and he
doubled and scored in the fifth.
Miami ell1)rs also allowed a pair of
run s to score.
Nevin's two hits in five at-bats
dropped his CWS average 100
pcints 1D .562. He also has II RBis
in four toumarnent games.
The rain started in the fifth
inning, causing a 22-minute suspension, before the game resumed
to finish in a steady shower.
''I'm not using the weather as
an excuse and our players aren't
using it as an excuse, either," Fraser said. "You should be playing in
ideal conditions. That wasn 'l good
for college baseball. I don't think
that if I was on the Baseball COOImittee, I would have continued to
DUBLIN - Reedsville Eastern play."
"After consulting the coaches,
head track coa::h Arch Rose reportthe
umpires, the committee and
ed that two of his athletes everyone
else, we felt the integrity
Michelle Maynard and Letitia
Holsinger - recently gained two of the game was intact," said Ron
berths in the Division UI regional Masteri, a Baseball Committee
member. He said the NCAA has
track meet 1D be held at Dublin.
rain
insurance so losing television
Maynard won a trip to the
revenue
was not a factor in continregionals in the 400 meter run with
uing
play.
a qualifying time of I:06.
"It was like wearing ice
Holsinger won a trip to the
skates,"
Miami first baseman
regionals in the shcJt put. where sbe
had a qualifying throw of 31 feet I Kevin DiGiacomo said. "There
was a lot or mire, but both teams
inch.
The mid-1980s was the last time were playin~ in iL The footing was
any Eastern girl made it as far as VC?, tough,'
'It was getting muddy at the
the regionals, said Rose.
end,"'
Nevin said. "But it didn't
"I am extremely proud of these
have
a
bearing
on the game."
two girls and the effort they have
"I was quite sure we were going
put iniD their evenu. I am proud of
to
finish
tonight," Garrido aaid. "It
the whole track team for their effort
was
the
importance
of playing the
this year," responded Jl.ose.

Commissioner Fay Vincent
"I have the full intention of
explaining every single thing to
Fay Vincent," Howe said. "I think
baseball deserves it. I think Fay
Vincent deserves it. I think I
deserve it."
Howe was arrested last Decemher for allegedly trying to buy $100
worth of cocaine from an informant
outside an automobile dealership.
"I asked Steve Boyd (a Drug
Enforcement Administration informant) if he could get a gram
because I wanted to party one last
time before spring training, and he
said yes." Howe said in a handwritten confession on file in in
Missoula, Mont.
" ... I talked a lot of crap to
Steve Boyd because I felt J.J .
(identified in testimony earlier this
year as Jerry Jones, another aUeged
drug sup~lier) had let me down,"
Howe said. "I was just trying to
gain his confidence so I could get a
gram if he had one.·'
"I couldn't get him to leave my
office," said Boyd, who was work·
ing at the time as an auto salesman
in Kalispell . "I told him he
shouldn't be here. He said that
because of the holidays, there was
going to be a break in the drug testing, and that he'd be able to use

and not get tested for 72 hours.' '
"Who's coaching that dirtbag?"
Howe asked. "Why is he hiding
out in Las Vegas? Because he's so
credible. "
Boyd, who now lives in Las
Vegas, told the newspaper that he
has known Howe for eight years
and previously used cocaine with
him.
"I dido 't go to Steve Howe to
sell him cocaine," Boyd said.
"Steve Howe came to me. I was
working for the DEA. It was my
responsibilty to repon what happened."
Newsday said that as part of his
plea to the commissioner, Howe
will claim various infonnants tried
''for weeks" to set him up.
"They tried to give me tons of
stuff,"' Howe said. "They were
trying to get a known addict.
They're trying to paint me as the
bad guy ... for one moment of
weakness.··
Howe will appear Monday in
U.S. District Coun in Missoula for
a hearing on the plea agreement he
signed the night of April 30.
Howe's defense anorney, Pat
Sherlock, did not return a telephone
call seeking comment on Howe's
comments.

The Farmers Bank Invites All Its
Customers To Two More Fun-Filled Trips

AUGUST 11·15

wallc.

college World series ... (Continued from C-5)
the college player of the year lined
a pair of doubles and drove in two
runs to lead the fourth-seeded
Titans (46-16).
Fullerton won its only other title
games - 1979 and 1984, while
Pepperdine reached the championship game for the first time in
two CWS tries.
"The scouts have told us all
year that Pepperdine was the best
team in Southern California,"
Fullerton coach Augie Garrido said
of the seventh-seeded Waves (4711 -1). who are undefeated in three
games. "We're surprised to be
here, ID move forward in this competihOn."
Fraser's Hurricanes (55-10) had
lost two games in a row to the same
opponent only once this season to Florida in February. But then
Fullerton claimed a 7-5 victory
Wednesday night before the fipal

two -time champ Mike Balzano
wagered an exciting duel as they
worked their way through the pack.
No one knows the groove at
Skyline better than Adams. The
seven-time track champ clung low
to the inside and began to pull
away on the 12th circuit. Only two
yellows slowed the event, which
saw 18 cars finish the race.
On each restart Adams slowly
pulled away despite constant challenges from Combs, who himself
was fending off challenges from
(See RACERS on C-7)

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Fivetime world champion John Smith
suffered his fitStloss to an American opponent in four years Saturday, Jeopardizing his chances of
making the U.S. Olympic freestyle
wrestling team .
Smith, the 1988 Olympic champion, lost 4-2 to John Fisher, for merly of the University of Michi gan, in the fust match of the bestof-three 136.5 pound finals of the
U.S. Olympic wrestleoffs. The
finals were set for later Saturday.
Smith, the most successful U.S.
wrestler in history, hadn'tlost to an
American opponent since an
Olympic trials loss to Randy Lewis
in 1988. Smith later defeated Lewis
in a rematch and went on to win the
Olympic gold medal.
In Saturday's wrestleoffs, 1991
U.S. national team members wrestled the survivors of last month's
Olympic trials in Philadelphia to
determine the 10 U.S. Olympic
team members and alternates.
Four of the 10 top-seeded
wrestlers lost their first matches,
including Smith, 105-pounder Tim
Vanni, 125-pounder Brad Penrith
and 220-pounder Mark Coleman.

Howe, prosecutors agree to plea bargain

Barker's gem puts Akron Springfield
into Division I state softball title game
ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) Pitching a perfect game in the regular season would be somcthlng to
remember. Akron Springfield's
Alanna Barker took it one step further by pitching one in the state

The fast car dash saw Adams'
J.D. Drilling-DoD Chassis take the
win over Concord, N.C. driver
Rodney Combs, earning the duo
front row starting slots and setting
the tempo for a dogfight in the feature.
At the drop of the green, Adams
got the jump on Combs as the duo
battled wheel to wheel for the fi!St
10 laps. Multi-groove racing
throughout the pack brought much
excitement to the 35-lap event as
STARS point leader Freddie Smith
of Baton Rouge, La. and former

games. But I feared someone was
going to get hurt."
The conditions were bad enough
that Pepperdine coach Andy Lopez
didn't stay around to scout out his
championship opponent.
"I left," Lopez laughed. "It
looked like it was pretty wet. If I
was on top, I would have said it
was OK, we can finish it If I was
behind, I'd say it was raining too
much . It was a tough call"

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Paid for by the c.ndldllte, Ron Calhoun, 633 Debbie Drive.

Sunday 11mes--Sentlnei-Page-C7

Smith's chances of Olympic glory
slimmer after loss to Fisher in trials

Adams leads from beginning to claim $2,000 prize at Skyline
By SCOIT WOLFE
T·S Correspollftnt
STEWART - Driving the

wv

QUALIFYING IN FLORIDA - Tbe Win·
ston Eagle, driven by Mark Tate of Detroit,
Micb., nies along lbe water orr Key Biscayne,

Fla., Saturday during qualirying runs for the
unlimited bydroplane radng regatta. The Eagle
is one of tbe favorites for today's final (AP)

Courier, Kroda capture victories
in men's French Open semifinals
By DAVID CRARY
PARIS (AP) - Peu Korda says
Jim Courier is only human, that
any player can be beaten on a given
day.
However, even Kroda's coach
thinks it'll take "something
strange" to beat the world's top
player in the French Open final.
Courier, whose 22-match winning sb'eak has entrenched him
No. I, heads into today' s final as
one of the heaviest favorites in
recent Grand Slam history.
Though Korda is seeded seventh, he's never gotten past the
third round of a Grand Slam event.
In Paris, he progressed through his
half of the draw without facing
another seeded player.
Now, Korda's first seeded player happens to be the fi!St seed.
"I'm hitting the ball pretty well,
hitting with a lot of confidence,"
Courier said after dismantling No.
II Andre Agassi on Friday.
1
'When I'm doing that, I don't

a•

worry about the results.
"I like my chances on any surfa ce against any player in the
world."
Courier's counterpart in the
women's field, top-seeded Monica
Seles, was seeking her third
straight title Satunday against No. 2
Steffi Graf, the French Open champion in 1987 and 1988.
Korda, unnappable in his 6-2,76 (7-4) 6-3 victory Friday over
crowd favorite Henri Leconte, was
asked if Courier was unbeatable.
''I'm going to play him, hoping
I can play as well as I did today,
and try to enjoy it," Korda said.
"We are human beings. Anybody
can beat anybody."
Korda's coach, Vladmir Zednik,
said the 24 -year-old lefthander
from Prague will have to vary his
patient baseline game to have a
chance against Courier, who uses
similar tactics but hits the ball
harder.
''Maybe some drop shots,

skyline racers ••

. _ (_Co_mi_nued
_ fro
_ m
_ c_6l_

Dennis and Moran.
. Following Adams and Combs
across the line was Bruce Dennis,
defending STARS champion Donqie Moran, who carne from seventh
to fourth; Imperial, Pa. driver
Davey Johnson, Balzano, Smith
(up from 13th), Parkersburg,
W.Va.'s Steve Shaver, Larry
Nloore and Harold Redman.
Donnie Moran claimed the first
of three exciting heat races over
Booper Bare and Freddie Smith.
Davey Johnson took the next qualifier over Balzano and Chub Frank.
The next heat saw brothers
Larry and Andy Bond going three
wide with Larry Moore for all 10
laps. The younger Bond, Andy,
pulled off the victory while Moore
nosed the elder Bond at the finish.
Racine dnver Scoll Wolfe, in
the McDonald's of Gallipolis #14,
won the consolation event over
Pennsylvania driver Bob Bergess
and another Chris Diddle of Racine
in the Pomeroy McDonald's #55.
Wolfe's Mark's Auto Sales-Eber's
Citgo car fended off numerous
challenges from the pack, then
posted an easy win over Bergess.
Wolfe and Bergess advanced to the
feature.
In the companion modified fea-

ture no one could keep Adams,
from a clean sweep as he set fast
time, won the dash and the 20 lap
A-main event. Adams defeated
Andy Bond, Allen Hfbbard, Brei
Dils, John Burdette, Kirt Graves,
Dave Balzano, Ray Plants and
Thad Mankin.
Aaron Fleming claimed the
Sportsman main over Benny Thieman, Kevin Haught, Roben Staek·
pole, Rick Hudnall, Gene Johnson,
Jim Amick and Ed Venham.
Rick Venham won the Street
stock feature over Don Casto,
Roger Dunlap, Nolan Miner, David
Hackathorn, James Cash, Todd
Wolfe, Mitch Brunton, Ralph
Gardner, David Hilton, Mike Burdeue, Eris Miller and Greg Ferrell.
The fii'Sl three drivers in all divisions received trophies in memory
of Earl Hill.
Skyline will come right back
next Friday night with another
STARS late model show paying
$2,000 to win and $200 to start; the
Whaley's Auto Parts special. All
suppon classes will also run a regular program.
Summary
STARS LATE MODELS
Fast time: Bruce Dennis 12:51
Dash : Bob Adams Jr., Rodney

Shula unhappy with no-shows
at Bengals' freewill mini-camp
CINCINNATI (AP) - Most of
the Cine innati Ben gals volunteered
for the first week of the team's
two-week voluntary minicamp. But
eight players were absent, and that
made coach Dave Shula unhappy.
"I'm disappointed it's not 100
percent (attendance)," Shula sard.
"I don't think it matters whether
you're signed or unsigned, and
other guys are not here for reasons
I don't consider sufficient.
"Based on the attendance I've
seen for other teams at camps like
these, I think we could do better.''
The camp closes this week.
Last week's no-shows included
two signed players, linebacker
Alfred Williams and nose tackle
Tim Krumric, and five unsigned
players, tight end Rodney Holman,
defensive lineman Naru Tuatagaloa
and defensive backs Rickey Dixon,
Rod Jones and Mitchell Price.
One draft choice, safety Darryl
Williams, who was picked late in
the first round, also dido 't go.
General manager Mike Brown
termed Darryl Williams' absence a
contract ploy on the part of his
agent.
''This is a case of an agent overreacting," Brown said. "If they
think not being here is going to
have any effect on gelling more
money, they're mistaken . He
should be here.''
Alfred Williams, who had a
mediocre 1990 rookie year as the
club's No.I draft pick, missed
camp because of some family mat·
ters, Shula said.
"But what bothers me more
than him missing a week is that he
didn't caU," Shula said. "He said
he would be here and he wasn't.
I've tried ID make a point to everyone that it's vital we communi·

..

cate."
Shula said Pnce was excused
last week because of a death in the
family.
Jones "had some commitments
he didn't bother to tell us about in
advance," Shula said.
Shula said he was surprised by
Krumrie ·s absence.
"We had been under the
impression he was coming ... He
said he was working out on his
own," Shula said. "Rodney said
that, too, and we know they're both
hard workers. But in both cases, we
think it would be better for them to
be here, working with the team.''

Vanni lost to lellow Phoenixarea wrestler Rib Eitcr 3-2; Penrith,
of Boise , Idaho, lost to Kendall
Cross, of Stillwater, Okla., 6-3; and
Coleman , of Columbus, Ohio , was
beaten by Bill Scherr, of Evanston ,
111 ,3-2.
Bruce Baumgartner. of Cam bndge Springs, Pa., trying to
become the first U.S. wrestler to
win a medal in three Olympic s,
defeated Tom Erikson, of Stillwater, 5-0 at 286 pounds.
Baurn ganner, the 1984 Olympic
champion and 1988 silver medalist.
hasn't lost to an American heavyweight in 10 years.
Here are the results of first round matches in the best-of-3 U.S.
Olympic freestyle wrestling finals
at Duquesne University:
105 pounds
Rob Ener, Sconsdale. Ari z ..
dec Tim Vanni , Phoenix, 3-2.
114.5 pounds
Ze kc Jones, Bloomsburg, Pa .,
dec. Jack Griffin, Iowa City, Iowa,
4-3,0T.
125 pounds
Kendall Cross, Stillwater, Okla.,
dec. Brad Pcnrith, Boise. Idaho, 63.

something like that," Zednik said.
"Petr has the ability to play any
shots in tennis. It's htS only chance
-do something strange.''
Courier's coa::h, Jose Higueras,
offered lillie encouragement for
Korda, saying of Courier, "I don't Mickelson captures NCAA golf crown
think he can play much better than
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) of the toumamenL
he is now."
- Phil Mickelson, his putter ice
Arizona, with Rudolph and
Both Leconte and Agassi picked cold but his lead too big, won his teammate Manny Zennan finishing
Courier ID win.
'third NCAA golf title with a final second and third behind Mickelson,
"I wouldn't put my money any - round 2-over-par 74 Saturday at captured rts first national golf title.
where else but him," said Agassi The Championship Course of the The Wildcats finished at 1129,
after his 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 loss. "That's University of New Mexico.
seven shots beuer than Arizona
where the money neeJs to go,
Mickelson, who began the day State's 1136.
because that's the way he was play- with a nine-shot lead over Ariing.'
zona's Harry Rudolph, had only
Korda said his main task Satur- two birdies in the final 18 holes but
day would be to stay relaxed for survived a mild charge from
the final.
Rudolph by parring the final seven.
"I 'm going to go there, enjoy
Mickelson finished at 271, 17myself, to play the best tennis I under-par for 72 holes.
can, and try to make the people
Rudolph got within four shots of
happy," he said. "I'm going to Mickelson after he eagled the 550start thinking about the match a yard, par-5 lOth hole. But Rudolph
couple of minutes before the bogeyed three of the next four
holes and that paved the way for
match ."
Mickelson to jom Ben Crenshaw,
who
played for Texas in the early
_ _ _ _ __
'70s, as the only three-time winners
Combs, Mark Banal, Bruce Dennis,
Steve Shaver and Harold Redman.
First Heat: Donnie Moran,
Booper Bare, Freddie Smith,
Bobby Hill, Scou Wolfe, Chris
Diddle, Doug McAtee.
Second Heat: Davey Johnson,
Mike Balzano, Chub Frank, Bill
Childers, Ed Shuman, Bob
Bergess, Clair Sullivan.
Third Heat: Andy Bond, Larry
Moore, Larry Bond, Rob Keith,
Frank Tucker, Kenny Johnson,
Buck Lamb.
Consolation: Scou Wolfe, Bob
Burgess, Chris Diddle, Kenny
Johnson, Ed Shuman, Buck Lamb,
Doug McAtee, Clair Sullivan.
Frank Tucker.
FEATURE: 5th Annual Earl
Hill Memorial - Bob Adams Jr.,
Rodney Combs, Bruce Dennis,
Donnie Moran, Davey Johnson,
Mike Balzano, Freddie Smith,
Steve Shaver, Larry Moore, Harold
Redman, Bobby Hill, Andy Bond,
Booper Bare, Chub Frank, Bill
Childers, Larry Bond, Bob Keith,
Mark Banal, Scott Wolfe and Bob
Bergess.
UMP MODIFIEDS
DASH: Bob Adams Jr., Andy
Bond, Allen Hibbard, Kin Graves.
FEATURE: Adams, Bond, Hibbard, Bret Dils, John Burdeue,
Grnves, Dave Balzano, Ray Plants
and Thad Mankin.
SPORTSMAN
HEAT: Aaron Fleming, Benny
Thieman, Ed Venham, Kevin
Haughl
FEATURE: Aaron Fleming,
Thieman, Haught, Raben Stack pole, Rick Hudnall, Roger Dunlap,
Jim Amick, Venham.
STREET STOCKS
First Heat : Ralph Gardn er,
David Hackathorn , Eris Miller,
Mitch Brunton.
Second Heat : Roger Dunlap,
Rick Venham, Don Casto, Nolan
Miller.
FEATURE: Venham, Casto,
Dunlap, Miller, Hackathorn, James
Cash, Todd Wolfe, Brun!Dn, Gardner, Hilton, Mike Burdcllc , Em
Miller, Greg Ferrell.

I36.5 pounds
John Fosher, Ann Arbor, Mich·.,
dec. John Smith, Stillwater, Okla.
4-2.
'
149.5 pounds
Tow nse nd Saunders, Phoenix,
dec . Joh n Giura, Newtown Square,
Pa .. 6-2.
163 pounds
Kenny Mond ay, Stillwater ,
Okl a .. won by disq. over Greg
Elmsky . Philadelphia, OT (three
passiviiy warnings).
180.5 pounds
Kev in Jackson , Ames, Iowa,
dec. Royce Alger, Iowa City , Iowa,
1-0, OT
198 pounds
Chri s Campbell. Fayeueville,
N.Y., dec. Dan Chaid, Newtown
Square, Pa., 3-0.
220 pounds
Bill Scherr, Evanston, Ill., dec,
Mark Coleman, Columbus, Ohio,
3-2.
286 pounds
Bruce Baumgartner, Cambridge
Springs, Pa., dec. Tom Erikson,
Slillwatcr, Okla., 5-0.

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NCAA can impose rules
to govern college sports,
according to McKibben
By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - The
NCAA's ability to impose its own
rules to regulate college athletics
has been upheld by a federal judge.
U.S. District Judge Howard
McKibben on Friday ruled against
a Nevada law that would have
forced the NCAA to drastically
alter its enforcement Fedures.
The ruling came m a sull filed
by the NCAA against the state and
former UNLV basketball coach
Jerry Tarkanian. NCAA executive
director Dick Schultz said the
Nevada due process law was
·'meant to gut the enforcement process."
"Investigative and enforcement
procedures, followed by sanctions
if warranted, are an tmportant corn·
ponent in the NCAA's ongoing
effort to foster fair play in intercol·
lcgiate athletics," McKibben wrote
in a 27 -page opinion.
The ruling clears the way, bar·
ring appeal, for the NCAA to go
ahead and resolve a pending com·
plaint charging the UNL V basket·
ball program with a variety of vio·
lations under Tarkanian.
The complaint had been stalled
because the NCAA had been
unwilling to follow the Nevada due
process law in trying to resolve the
case.
The ruling will have a direct
1mpact on Similar laws in three
other states.
"We're very pleased l.hat the
court has acknowledged what the
NCAA membership has believed
all along, and that is the adminis·
tration or intercollegiate al.hletics
should be left to the members of
the NCAA and not to indiv•dual
states," NCAA spokesman Jim
Marchiony said.
MeKibben ruled that the Nevada

due process statute, enacted by the
state Legislature in 1991, violated
both cornmen:e and conuact 1J1&gt;Vi·
sions of the U.S. Constitution.
McKibben noted the NCAA is a
voluntary organization, and said
the Nevada law would give universities in the state an unfair advan·
tage over other schools and could
~ut the NCAA's ability to enforce
•ts regulations.
"If all the members were not
bound by these agreed upon rules
and regulations, the effectiveness
of the NCAA in attaining national
uniformity in compliance with
these rules and regulations would
be severely reslricted," he wrote.
McKibben said the Nevada law
would have mandated procedures
"substantially different " from
those currently in NCAA bylaws
and would have imposed a burden
on the NCAA's objective of
"maintaining a level playing field
within intercollegiate athletics."
The law would have forced the
NCAA to use cowt-like procedures
in gathering evidence and produc·
ing witnesses and would scrap
closed-door hearings in front of 1ts
Infractions Committee in favor of
open hearings before an impanial
arbiuator.
At the lime the law was signed
last spring by Gov. Bob Miller,
UNLV was involved in an NCAA
inquiry into alleged rules violations
by the Runnin' Rebels basketball
program. Many of the charges
focused on the recruionent of for·
mer New York high-school star
Lloyd Daniels.
The NCAA Committee on
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the bearing indefinitely because. of
the threat of legal acuon stemmmg
from the Nevada statute.

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The Division has been collect·
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"We set very high standarth for
our dealers, and we honor only the
best with mentbership in the Presi·
dent's Club," he said. "To receive
this award, a dealer must achieve
excellence in all areas of the busi·
ness. In addition, l.he dealership's
customer satisfaction performance
must consistently meet or exceed
Nissan's requirements."
Larry Schey, president, accepted
the award on behalf of the dealer·
ship located at 11339 S. R. 13,
Athens. He also announced that
Taylor Motors will celebrate l.he
achievement with speciaUy reduced
prices on all new Nissans for the
month of June.

investors suffering from volatile
swings in the marketplace, because
typically, one or more invesunents
in the portfolio offset any down turns in a single category."
The Stellar Fund is the brainchild of Star Bank executives, after
noting a Wall Strut Jounwl article
in 1990 which oudined the success
a multi-asset mix had during a 20year period. The article showed
that a diversified portfolio, similar
to the Stellar Fund, produced a
return within .0 I percent of the
S&amp;P 500, from 1970 until 1989, at
about one-third the risk.
Bank officials said another
appealing feature of the Star Bank
invention is that it is a "one-sided
investment." As a result, investors
need not worry about having to
auempt to protect their investments
by switching back and forth
between asset categories, as the
market ebbs and flows. The Stellar
Fund concept decreases both the
guesswork and risk for investors,
while offering stability in the form
oflong-temt potential gains.
The Stellar Fund started being
listed in the Wall Strut JoiJTNJi on
June 4. Other publications are
expected to carry the fund's tisting,
whose symbol is LOSTX.
In addition to Star Bank's oust
group, the Stellar Fund is currently
offered through three other firms:
Morgan Keegan &amp; Co., Legg
Mason Wood Walker. and Cowen
&amp; Co. The minimum initial investment in the Stellar Fund is $1,000.
For additional information, call 1800-677-FUND.

JOHN M. KOEBEL

GALLIPOLIS · JOOll M. "Jab:"
Koebel, area manager for
Columbia Gas of Ohio at Gallipolis, has retired, effective June I,
following 44 years of servia: with
the gas company.
A native of Columbus, Koebel
began his Columbia Gas career
there as a meter reader in 1948. He
wu Jlllfllored to seDior meter reader in 1952, then to meter reading
and rerouting specialist in 1957.
Koebel became disuict accounting
supervisor at Athens in 1966, and
has been area manager at Gallipolis
since 1970.
Koebel is a gntd~ of Columbus Aquinas High School and
attended the Ohio State Univmity.
He is past president of the Gal·
lipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, past president of the Gallipolis Rotary, and a board member

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Growth potential seen in
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ot the Outreach Program, the
American Red Cross and
Riverview Productions, an active
member of the Knights of Colum bus Council 3335, Elks Lodge No.
107 and a member of other civic
and charitable organizations ..
He and his wife, Betty, also a
Columbus native, have two children and three grandchildren. They
reside at 3541 Route 141, Centenary.

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~~

....ll!:J

McCoy said.
"In addition, return on stockholders' equity has exceeded 10.5
percent for the past five years while
their equity to assets ratio is in
excess of I 0 percent," McCoy
said.
Among Key Centurion's assets
are banks along the Ohio border
that serve residents of both states,
saJd Donald L. McWhorter, presi-

dent of Bane One.
Bane One plans no wholesale
changes in Key Centurion's man·
agement, McWhorter said.
"AJI we will r-' to do is pro·
vide them with OW' dala processing
and financial management systems,
and ... we betieve they will be able
to rarchet their historically excel lent rMtlings performance to Bane
One standards. Moreover, we can

provide them the opportunity to
continue to expand their franchises
in West Virginia and surrounding
areas," Me Whorter said.
The takeover will allow Key
Centurion to tap into "middle market lending opportunities" of
almost $2 billion among West Virginia companies, said A. Michael
Perry, president of Key Centurion.

FEATURED IN NATIONAL AD. Debbie
Kubn, ol Orlando, Fla~ a 1985 Gallitt Academy
Higb Scltool graduate and daughter ol Mr. and
Mrs. Donald M. Kuhn, Gallipolis, stands lo !be
immtdiate right ol Mickty Moust (with slacks)
in Ibis recent advertisin&amp; photo for Delta Airlints. Kubn, who bas been employed by Delta
for tbe past 5 l/2 years, was chosen for tbe ad

"Meet Our Orlando Ground Crew' becall5f ol
ber previous modeling experience. During' the
past three years, sbe bas bun mode~ng for the
Budweiser Beer Co. In 1990, she was the "Bud
Ligbf' poster girl. Next montb, she will complete
her secood year as a cheerleader for the Orlando Thunders footbaU team ol the World League
of American Football. Tbe picture above bas
appeared ia ~vera! aational magazines.

Gallia County forestry
field day planned June 13
GALLIPOLIS · The Galtia Soil
and Water Conservation District
will hold its ftrSt Forestry Field day
on Satunlay)une 13, from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
The Hollybrook Farm, located
off Kerr Road on Viney Lane will
host the event Owner Phil Cline
has made many improvements to
his land; two of which are a 22 acre
pine plantation and a select-Qit har·
vest in a 90 acre woodlot Although
the greater scope of forestry in general will be covered, lbe main
emphasis will be on private woodland management A professional
foresler will inform landowners oo
how to best utilize their woodland
whether it be 5 or 50 acres.
Other interesting subjects COV·
cred will be lumber brokerage, forest wildlife management, bow fmished products are produced from
raw materials, (some furniture will
be on display) and how herbicides
and pesticides can be used in a for·
est or pine plantation.
During the day individuals will

view a select-cut harvest and a pine
plantation. They will also see how
tree shelters accelerate growth and
protect trees from weather and
wildlife
during
their
seedling/sapling years.

Coffee and donuts will be avail·
able al 10 a.m. Cold drinks will be
provided for lun ch. For more
information call the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation Office at 446-

&amp;687

Raccoon Sweep slated June 20
By CONSTANCE WHITE,
GalliaS&amp;WCD
GALLIPOLIS • The Raccoon
Creek Commiuee is planning on a
clean-up project to coincide with
the Ohio River Sweep on June 20.
The area being worked on this
summer is from Vinton to Woods
MiD near Tycoon Lake.
We are asking that any
landownm along this streleh of the
creek who do not want the volun·
teers to clean litter/t:rash from their
creek banks to contact the Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation Dis·
trict offiee at 446-8687.
The event will begin at 9 a.m.
with registration at l.he Vinton Park

and end around I p.m. We will be
going down to the park front in
Gallipolis to join in with the other
volunteers for refreshments.
Thi s is the second year for the
Raccoon Creek Improvement Com.
mittee to conduct a clean·up event
with la st year's project cleaning
from Ewington to Vinto n. The
plans arc Ia work on d•ITerent sections of th e creek each year. The
committee will be ass isled by the
Bass 8 usters.
If you have a scout troop, 4-H
Club. church youth group or would
ju st like to volunteer, contact our
office, or John Holcomb at 388B0 53

MICHAEL HAYMAN

Hayman promoted

RACINE · ITT Corporation
recently
promoted W. Michael
By STAN EVANS
forthef~rsttwoweeks,morerecently
the wait was areasonable 20 minutes. Hayman, fonnerly of Racine, to
GALLIPOLIS - There is a The restaurant was slighdy remod- Director of Product assurance for
growth potential for the restaurant eled to allow for more har area and a its Defense Aerospace/Communi·
cations division located in Fort
segment as Bob Evans' new concepts larger royer.
Bob Evans' entry into the Mexi- Wayne, Ind.
are expanded.
m is a multinational corporacan food market is well·planned. The
Both the Gen·
tion
engaged in products and ser·
Mexican food business was the fastera! Store and
vices including Sheraton Hotels,
est·growing segment in the restau- fluid technology, elecuooic compoCantina del Rio
rant business in 1991 atl8.3 percent,
are designed to
Continutd on D-8
the next higbestgrowth area was pizza
attract Iunch and
with 11.3 percentln order to create a
dinner crowds,
quality
restaurant and menu, mantherd&gt;y diversiagement picked Philtip Torres, the
fying the company from dependency on breakfast owner of the successful Guadalajara
business.The General Store is a com· Mexican Grille and Bar (located in
bination gift shop, bakerfand fam- Houston, Texas) to head the opera·
ily-style restaurant The Cantina del lions. We anticipate that the Cantina
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
Rio features moderately priced concept will be a success because of
Gallla Coa•ty
Mexican cuisine in an authentic Mexi- the restaurant's atmosphere and reciAlftll, Azriculture
pes.
can atmosphere.
GALLIPOLIS • If you are
In order to ensure the efficient use involved in a diversified farming
Although it is a competitive in·
dustry, management's experience ofcapital, managentent created sepa- operatioo, this is certainly a busy
should assure competitive returns. rate division vice presidents for each time of year for you. There just
The company has tremendous flexi· new restaurant concept. The success aren't enough hOIII'S in the day to
bility in financing expansion, histori- of the division managers will detez. get everything done.
Livestock concerns can easily
cally Bob Evans has funded all capi· mine bow mucll capital will be inbe
put on the "bacl: burner" this
tal expenditures via free cash flow. vested in their divisions. This comtime
of year. Breeding season
Bob Evans has no bank debt other petitive environment wiU promote
should be Ulldcrway for beef prothan an 8.3 percent bank note (due the efficient usc of funds.
We estimate the restaurant ~g­ ducen wil.h a spring calving sea·
December 1993).
There wen: six General Stores ment to generate sales of $398 and son. Twice daily observations ror
cows to recycle can curb problems
open as of the fiscal year ending $431 miUion in 1992 and 1993, relerious~occur.
April 1992. The fil'$1 General Store spectively. l'le-w. income is fore- before
A Blue M d Wlfdl is tn effect
was opened April 1991. Currently cast 10 be $47 million in 1992 and for all of Kentucky. According to
there is no financial data available fC{ $51 .72 million in 1993.
Dr. Bill Nesmil.h, conditions are
From 1987· to 1981 Bob Evans favorable for blue mold to develop,
the performanceoftheGeneral Stores.
The first Cantina opened in Co- Farms diversified its food products but has not been found in Ken lumbus on Apri120. Management is line mainly by bland extension (such lUCky. He says that growers should
pl~ed with the initial results, but IS the breakfast biscuits and burri·
inaease preventive efforts. Special
di• not release ay details. Waiting tos). However, in the last two years attention should be given to plant
bed sites. Regul• fungicide SIXIVS
C.tilt.edOIID-3
times ranged from one to three hours

Farm Flashes

12 HP,

:~:83

Bane Oni pez share stock price of
$46, McCoy said. The purchase
price represents 175 percent of the
book value of Key Centurion, said
McCoy.
"We are particularly impressed
with Key Centurion's earnings
record, which has generated a
return on assets in excess of 1.1
pen;ent each year for the past five
years in diffiCult economic times,"

John M. 'Jake' Koebel ends long
career with Columbia Gas of Ohio

48"
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When you call Ferrellgas. you get alllhis and m01e lor your
propane dollar Your delivery learn is salely trained and
experienced in providing prompt delivery and emergency
service We also ofler special budgel·minded customer
programs lhal help you save money and ehminale worries
aboul running out of propane

Taylor Motors is named
member of President's Club

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Whal mailers mosllo you when il comes lo propane?
Prompl delivery Rehabihly. Salety . Energy ·savings.
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CINCINN ATl - The Stellar Fund, which has proved to be an
Fund, Star Bank N.A.'s fi!SI relai1 atuactive investment for40IK plan
mutual fund, has achieved a fman· and individual retirement account
cia! milestone and as a result is customers, is diversification. This
now lislcd on the National Associa· diversification creates a lower
tion of Dealers Automated Quota· overall portfolio risl: by investing
in equal portions of U.S . stocks,
lions (NASDAQ).
real
estate securities, international
. Since its inception eight months
aao, l.he Stellar Fund has grown securities, U.S. bonds ands
from nearly $13 million to a cash/precious metal securities.
''The success and growth of the
plateau of $25 million in assets
Stellar Fund is a true testament to
needed for listing on NASDAQ.
The Stellar Fund, managed by the unique aspect of spreading
investment specialists in Star investments across multiple securiBank's capital management divi- ty categories," Randy Bateman,
sion, was designed to maximize Star Banl:'s investment officer,
return on assets while minimizin1 explained . "This investment
the risk. The secret to the Stellar approach lessens the risk of

•Cash and carry

~For Interior rough electriCal applica1100 170111

June 7,1992

Star Bank Stellar Fund on NASDAQ

•20-year limited warranty

Columbus. finishing flfl.h and qual·
ifymg for the Olympic Trials, set
for June I 1-14 in Baltimore.
Still, all the attention seems to
have caught her by surprise. Not
long ago she she was watching the
Olympics and boping to someday
get an autograph from one of the
gymnasts.
"That's when the dream start·
ed " she said. "But all little kids
thi~k they're going to l.he Olympics
someday . .. . It' s just in these last
two years that I realized I might
real! y be able to do it"

Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
Customer Service

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) B. McCoy, chainnan or Bane One.
- Bane One Corp. of Columbus,
Key Centurion has assets of $3
Ohio, will acquire Key Centurion billion and operates 16 banks with
Bancsltares, West Virginia's largest 54 offices in West Virginia and
bank holding company, in a $536 Kentucky.
miltion SIOck -swap deal, the com .
Bane One has assets or $48.7
J)anies said Friday.
billion and operates 56 banks with
The takeover calls for the 869 offices in Illinois, Indiana,
exchange of 0.4783 shares or Bane Ohio, Michigan, Texas and WisOne common stock for every share cmsin.
of Key Centurion stock, said John
The a~reement is based on a

Standard Welghl
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Section D

Key Centurion merges with Bane One of Columbus

ATHENS • Taylor Motors of
Athens has earned membership in
Nissan Motor Corporation's exclusive 1991 President's Oub.
In malting the announcement,
Earl Heslftberg, vice president and
general manager, Nissan Division,
said Taylor Motors earned the Cor·
poration's most prestigious recognition award for outstanding per·
formance in sales, parts, service
and customer satisfaction.
According to Hesterberg, only
144 of approximately I ,200 Nissan
Motor Corporation dealerships
throughout the United States
received this award. Of l.he honorees, 106 are Nissan dealerships,
while 38 are Infiniti dealerships.

1wx25'

Borden realizes Olympic dream
FAIRFIELD, Oh10 (AP) When Amanda Borden showed up
for her afternoon practice at the
Cmcmnati Gymnastics Academy
recently, girls who were tumbling
across the padded floor moments
before stood perfectly still.
"There's Amanda," they whis·
pcrcd, glancing sideways at the 15·
ycar·old. The girls then broke mto
a chorus of: ''She smiled at us 1 she
smiled at us'"
Borden, of Cincinnati, bounded
mto the b•g-time last month at the
Champions hips of the USA 1n

BOX

Framing Lumber
8'
10'
2x4
$1.98
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2x6
$3.00
$3.59

Woodchucks often overlooked
by hunters as worthy targets
By JOHN WISSE
Division ol Wild~fe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The largest member of the squirrel
family, the woodchuck, 1s generally
overlooked as a provider of good
hunting opportunities during spring
and summer.
The woodchuck is an excellent
small game animal found close to
home for many hunters and a wary
target that tests the best marksman.
Farmers often consider the wood·
chuck a nuisance that frequently
eats crops and burrows near farm
buildings.
Past and present management of
Ohio 's woodchucks by the Divi ·
sian of Wildlife has been aimed at
ma:&lt;imizing hunting opportunities
and harvest.
The number of woodchucks has
not been estimated, but few would
disagree that they're quite abundant
in Ohio . Just talk to some rural
landowners, airport officials, or

1-lB.

~imts - jentin.el

COMPLETE COURSE • l'bese Reliance
Electric employees completed a 4.5- hour computer-aided drafting course at tbt Univenity of
Rio Grande recently. Pictured are, lint row, left
to rigbt · Harry Bierhup, Tlm Lambert, Rick

Riggie, Patty Daniels and Bill Smith. Rear .
Randy Christian, Scott Radcliffe, Claude Cornelius, Don Bolden, and Tim Cundiff. (Not pic·
lured. Dan Johnson).

It's a busy time for diversified farm operators

I

with a tank mix of Ridonil 2E pli.s
3 tablespoons of Ferbam 76WP or
2 teaspoons of Mancozeb 80WP
per 100 square yards of plant bed.
Apply this mixture weel:ly and
continue it until l.he plant bed is
destroyed. Blue mold activity has
been confined in Robertson Coon ·
ty, Tennessee. This is the County
nor1h of Nashville where our local
group went on the August tour a
couple of years ago. Robertson Co.,
Tennessee is also the home of one
of the major wholesalers for the
plug and transfer noat tobacco
plants.
Tobacco aphids are· alive and
well already this season in Gallia
County. Dr. Lee Townsend, Exten·
sian Entomologist at the University
of Kentucky, says that the reward
from a good aphid control program
can near an aventge of 300 pounds
plus more yield per acre compared
with no aphid control.

A key to success has been rec .
ognizing the importance of pre ·
venting unrestricted aphid buildup
during the middle third of the
growing season . Acephate
(orthene) or endosulfan (Golden
Leaf Tobacco spray{Thiodan) have
given good control. Good leaf cov·
erage is necessary because most
aphids appear to be killed as a
result of direct contact with spray
droplets. Aphids tend to remain in
place, so don't plan on them walkmg onto a treated surface.
Plant to attend the Southern
Ohio Hay and Pasture Day on June
10 at the Research Farm JUS! south
or Jackson. See details in separate
advertisement section. Recent
weather has given rise 10 interest in
bale wrappers . It appear s as
though three different brands of
wrappers will be among the equipment to be demonstrated.
The Forestry Field Day will be

held June 13 starting at 10 a. m.
The event will be held at the Hollybrook Farm Location off Kerr
Road on Viney Road . For more
details, call Cindy Jenkins, SWCD
Forester, at 446-8687.
Mites in bird nests that arc
under eaves, on windowsills, and
elsewhere around the house can
crawl into the living area. A large
number of mites are left behind
when young birds leave the nest.
These mites will feed on people
and pets. causing a rash and ttching
sensation. Although mites feed on
people and ol.her mammals, l.hey
are unable to reproduce and die
within several weeks. Several control measures can be taken. For
additional information on this
topic, ask for Home, Yard, and
Garden Fact Sheet ''2102".
Reminder. Get your tickets for
the June 19, Galtia County Cattlemen's annual meeting and dinner.

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Page D2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 7, 1992

June 7 1992

OH

Position wanted: anger rises along with unemployment rates
ByROBERTDVORCHAK
AP National Writer

The jobless rate isn't 111e only
lbing rising. So are anger, frusttation and disconlml among those
wbo feel left oul of the recovery
while they languish in the unemploymt.olline.

· You can hear it in the voice of
Joa:ph LaRusso, 36, a lawyer from
ilaiDn who has been out of wort
since November and is worried
about the financial future for his
wife and 3-year-old daughter.
"That was the reason I went to
law school -job security. I was
always told if you work hard and

get a good educauon, you would
always bave wort," LaRusso said.
"We're treading waler right now."
You can sense it in the words of
Lea GibSOII, 25, trying in vain 10
land her flfSI job despite having a
masler' s degree in communications
from Texas Tech University.
·'Never in my wildest dreams
did I think I would be here (coDecting unemployment),'' said Ms.
Gibson, of Lubbock, Texas. "It's
devaswing. I feel like I am losing
some of the best years of my life
because I haven '1 got my career
going. h gets a little frustrating
after the lOth refusal, but you bave

10 keep going."
Moods were especially sow Friday. Thai was the day lhe Labor
[)epartment announced the national
job1ess lllte reached 7.5 percent in
May, the highest level in nearly
eight years.
Fresh-faced college graduates
are finding the worst job climale in
nearly two decades.
"I see anger flaring out in all
directions," said David M. Bales,
executive director of lnlerfaith Reemployment Group, a support
group for the jobless in Mount
Lebanon, Pa.
"Pan of the anger and frustra tion stcm from the belief that things

Heart valve maker proposes
possible $205 million settlement
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI - A federal
judge has been asked 10 approve a
S21f5 million seulemenl that would
compensate about 20,000 bean
valve transplant patients worldwide.
Lawyers for Pfizer Inc., a New
:York -based health care company,
asked U.S. District JudgeS_ Arthur
. Spiegel on Friday to certify their
proposal to resolve a class action
lawsuit involving lhe company's
Bjork-Shiley Convexo-Concave
heart valves.
PCizer said the "C-C" artificial
:hean valve, which was sold from
1979 to 1986. was implanted in
nearly 86,000 people. It has been
blamed for aboul 300 deaths lh:n
resulted from the breakage of a
·mellll wire dial makes a disk inside
·the valve open and close. Such a
:defecl is called a strut fraciUre.
. Two out of three patients who
:experience strut failure die. PrlZef
:has set aside an additional $300
·million to pay claims associated
wilh Strut failure. anomeys said.
Spiegel noted that FfiZCf denied

aU liability and said the purpose of
the hearing was 10 discuss whether
the proposed seulemtnl is fair, adequate and reasooable to all parties.
He said the bearing would continue
Monday.
"Obviously, nothing we're
doing here will make those people
whole in the sense of restoring 10
them healthy heans with no wmy.
but we are trying," said David
Klingsberg, an atlooley for Prtzer.
"We have made a genuine
effon to do something thai will
give them
of mind."
About 0~ &amp;om the proposed seulemenl would go toward
research and payments for valve
replacements. About S80 million 10
S130 millioo would pay for consultation and for a general distribution
to aU 20,000 people who are considered 10 be plaintiffs in the suiL
They are people who have received
the valve and fear it may fracture.
Cincinnati lawyer Stan Chesley
filed lhe suit He said advertisements bad been placed in 50 U.S.
newspaper.; and in publications in
17 other nations inviting C-C recipients to jOin the class action.
Pfizer has successfuDy defended

:me

The Justice Department has reported! y demanded up 10 SI00 million

'" fees and penalties from GE
while the company has cornmiued
10 no more than S30 millioo.
The GE contracting suspension
Slemmed from a scbeme involving
an l.sracli general, Rami Dolan, and
a former GE marketing employee,
Herben Steindler, 10 di veri $40
millioo in US funds inlcndcd for
lsrnel Of that. Sll million wound
up in Do tan 's bank account
Steindler was fired in 1991 and
Dot an is serving a jail term in
Israel. The case is under investigation by the Justice Deparunenl

ASTRO·GRAPH

More successes than usual are likely lor
you in the year ahead . You've learned
valuable ktssons that you will use to

your benefit, and you're not apt to re-

peat old mistakes.
GEMINI (lbJ 21-Juno 20) Yoo could be
in lor a p~asant surprise today when
you discover that your apprehension

NORTH

&amp;-&amp;-tz

.KJ7~1

"K 83

•n

.,

tQ Ji
. )912

• AQI076

• !7

PHILLIP

ALDER

.Q tot
tAO I

~

4

;-If J11U could bave cot a sood result
:by mu1n1 lour spades. Wilen West
:leldl the diamond queen. East wins
:wtll 1M .ce and nrilcbes to the heart
..a. Well wins witb the ace and re:t.m a low bear! to dummy's kin&amp;.
...,. _ , to bave lour unavoidable
;Jalen: two bearts, one diamond and
- dllb. Is there any d!ance to win 10
~

)!mptift, sbo1rlng a band witb offen-

potenti.al for spades but limital
¥&amp;1-.

· Soutb pw up witbout a ll&amp;DL After
~ wltb dwnmy'l heart tin&amp; be
. . . lnlmpl eodinc Ill the dummy and
i:ailed fw the clllb e!PL Howe.er,
But wu aWIIte. He ...., witb !be club
ice and eubed the beart queen to de-

4.

wi1h whom you're closely associated
On the surface, it might appear to have
only marginal value .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In order lo instill

want them to stand by y011 .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) OIJe 10
events you'll have little control over . a
portion of your day might be a bummer
However, the part that is productive
should more than make up for it .
tertaining a business prospect today
and want things to go smoothly. con duct your affairs in a place with whtch
you're familiar. This will put you, as well
as your guests. at ease .

5. WlnchttW llodal 1817

12 11'1111" tho9Jn.
6. Wlnchullr Super X
Modal 1 1 2 - ahotgun.

7. Wlnchelw llodll 12,
12 11'1111" alootgun.

I. Browning 1111 ~pro­
:duc:llon, Clllbor 451111.
· I. Vanguard V61.., c.tlber

N-0 linkup
Mournful
Roman four

48 - Cruces
49 Diocese

50 Existed
51 Mountain pass

53 Earth goddess
54 Neon symbol
55 Six every inning

57 Range ol
knowledge
59 Dress border
61 TV's Sullivan
62 Sets firmlv
64 Giver of gih

.. _ Son"
On behalf ol
Sends torth
Metal
Mr. Cuomo

105~

107 PigeontOll

Go__,

109 Ollspi ••
110!'oMI
111Bom
112 tnl&amp;lwine
114 Aal--0111811

-

116 YCIUitgs'MS

117Music_...,
118 a.artes· PIPiriliw:eiS
120 Jog
t22JuM's...,
123 Country"' Alnca
124 Equally
125 Conc•1•'11
127 Mysoll
129 TJIM! st)4e
131 S.A. 133 Thi ..
slolh
134 .. _ 109"
136Mam8lo10
137 Equlliljl
139 Billy- w lb
t40Mimtc
t 41 In - . """'
142-t 43 Very: 51).
145 OUtfil
3

..,

7

147 Rei • · -.s

151l.olboicale
152 llilker"s produd
153
155 SW1
157 Oucboe
158 limb

Genus.,_

159 t.-.gT._
oily

74 Circuit
77 Metric measure
78 Reduce in rank

160T_,_
161 Beryllium , _
163 Boring-

80
82
83
85

167-lreKo
168 Hyputl .

Speech
Gu1do's high note
Cincinnati -

Facial
expressions

86 FIXed portion
87 Bad
88 Eieclrifiecl
panicle

90 Rear ol shop
91 2.000 lbs.
92 Airline Into.

165~
&gt;I

foroa
169Qea · 4
~
171"--~"

172 TaiJ
1731-

175House-15
176Pod&lt;177 Cl&gt;oir _,.,

5 0-T linkup
6 "The- ot
Uvtng
Dangerously"
7 Sanford ID
8 Girt of song
9 Cl1y for the

Heat
10 Not gentle; harsh
11 Away
12A, -. -, O,U
13 MUSICal
instrument
t 4 Ealty morn
15 Cover
16 Kind ol collar
17Stories
II Place for
sahll&lt;eeping ol
goods

19 Dried grape
23 Wan away
26 Jumps on one

loot
29 " Hapj)JI - "
32 Sports
33Sewndays
35 Above
36 British streetcar
37 Pllrueotogy
40-ed
42 Willis or Rex
43PIIdJer
45 Magic substance
48 Game at cards
S2 Bulgarian

currency
56 Marll of disgrace
58Merno&lt;anda
59 Fame; good name
60 Ross ol 29 Down
62 Fcncast
63 AJiorcalloo
·-symbol
66 "Focethe - "
(i1 Up and down
compar1men1s
68 Distant
69 Nmlwt metal
71 like some

_..,ts

: .270, wllh - - Leupold

&amp;X fCOP"·

. to.

Eul
ADpaa

-

~

Smith

Cutor Boane, To Plon1 Or To
Got Aid 01 lin&gt;und -

114-

'*7071.

a -

carpll

....... .... -~ndlng
,..... - - opo&lt;lallz-

5

. .

.

=
•
Wltft Equipment Ta
ct.liwq .... ·
- . - . . ..... ........... 5
Apply : To:nonow,
• n
Hoy In llclnll. 114-311&amp;Tope f&amp;rnii:Ln, I!JI s.:c.:d A•on•.. Ga•lpolil. No , . _

._
....

lioollo, Ohio, OM-+11-n50, Pick-

"'OIorlpClf.

"P

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Old mo.-,loyo, eomlc llnt~mS, pk:tur.. and tumtt.......,

a-tna:

llr Counory -

Wl1h Privoto Room, 12 .,_,

Exporlonc:o. 114~56-1071.

Hairstylist

HaM 1ac!s ..•

&amp;

GUIJinl...:l

~

......._

4247.

HOME WORKERS

-

dodlloo--

1112-387_

7D2-5!It.32U -

N"' -

Lorry Llvoly_ 814-308-1303.

3 Announcements

U . Dotkocll Hendflun

AIIIIMnt wNI be evllllllll
lor lnepooUon from 1:00
a.m. unUI 10:00 o.m. on
Solunlly, June 20, 1182.

Tenn1 lor purchue ••
c11h only. Pereont

="··

s.u. aid, S-1&lt;1
•1WI2·
Pan Lob, pottGonnon
Pupptoo. BJftlony, Booglo miL

14

Business
Training

RMn~ln

Now!!!Southau1em

Piau. c.n Today, 814-446-4367.!
Aeglst•rat kxt 190-05-1274 8.

18

~...

By lurlher Orchr of lhe
Court lh• brCIDI 'h of the

11le art
SECO _

-~

rL-

rcler- lo ...,.

... Tllk Foree

Avoliablo. Rodney Aroo. Call

Commercllllltndu.trilll
and Agri. IICCOUIIW In

114-24&amp;z5887.

lhe GAWPOUS . - .

E I A TREE SERVICE. Topping,

Excellent
Cornrnlllalona &amp;
Bonu-. TIWining
provided. For Interview
meet MIKE FRANKUN,
THURS. 6111 7:00 Pill

311l-7V51

Georg• Pottable S.wmlll, don'l
tt...,.
logs to the mill ju.t
call
75·1t57.

.J.O:

11

_..;:..._
HelpWanted

~~~ rJ=~= :,:.~~ ~~c-•!.and IICI=r=:l
,?: a. ofiiTIIilq pkbp. trtKk aad brush!toi. Positio• r:tn .....rtt; II

=
I

tiMne wlltHr co.diiM•s. Medta~kal aptlludt necnsary aid valid drivers lkHH

Wostervllt, OH

M/F"
Real Estate General

t 01 ACRES MOSTLY WOOO.
ED .
LOCATED IN OHIO
TOWNSHIP. SEVERAL NICE
BUILDING SITES_$23,000.

APPRO X. 25 ACRES. OLD
HOUSE NEEDS REPAIRS,
SMALL BARN, RURAL WATER TAP,
NICE SITE FOR
NEW HOME OR MOBILE
HOME. OHIO TWP. 115,000.

I~~~-·~~~~~~. . . .~. .~!ii~

Lost &amp; Found

21 ACRES, 1&amp;11.., IIUL.AYIUEPORTER ROAD.
PAVED
ROAD. APPROX. 600' RO~O
FRONTAGE, SOME V«JJOED
AREA, $18.~00. OWNERS
WILL CONSIOER FINANCING
WITH $4,000 DOWN PAYMENT.
BAL.t.NCE AT 10'llo
INTEREST. 10 to 15 YEAR
TERM

Third Awe,.., O.Uipola. 1141h

11 :15A.II.

(lWo-120 IIIIIs) K You
81g Hoott, Tuo To
GroceryStoro, -ontl

ANY HOUR

Ha,. l

&amp;.ES1DENT1AL-COMMERCIAL
fAllMS
INVES'TMENT PROPERTIES
5A1.ES • APPRA.IS.US
U.LOCATION

~j~

~~~~

and Trim P1ckagn •Khchen C1binets

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

i

tops
c..t.• t.. :

2 Fomily Y-y Yl&lt;d Solo:
~unol~
Claohee,
Oddooft-UGo, 22 .,,.... s~ H

rown.cn v• nor ~~Or 114

SMI'!1 _

Rain Canclll. llondoy, ,.._.,.

Fom~ i: Solo: llondar
1111112, 0
er... Road, 1
ComorPolo l
4

Wt want tt take tkls
apportnlly to lknk
IVIfJOII for f~tJr .IIJ
ads of kl1dnss d~rlag
the ID~t~s and loss ol 11r
lovtd ORI. SpedaltHiks
to Dr. David han, Dr.
Carol S~olds, Narsts, aad
all ~ospllal ••ploytes
wko ca11d lor ker wl~
- • klnd1ns aad carl~g.
Sptdal t..1ks to Mc&lt;oy
Moore lunral ko1111 lor
lktlr kladuss 11d tkt
wo1dtrhl servlct t.. y
vlded; to ln. Cl!tsttr
lty lor kls CDI!fortlag
words, tt Da1 lv111 lor
kls raaA!J alii to al oar
frlt1th lor their praytrs
alii alpr Wt wll always
Itt ••ltltlto ~ ol f11.

ALL Yont SoiH llueo Bo Pold In
Advance. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m .
lho cloy boloro lho od lo 1o JVn.
Sundey -on • 2~ p.m.
Friday. llonday adMton . UO
p.m. Saturdlv.

r'llfO'W t;IMIIJ&amp;'l:l'l lf'l tho! I&gt;UIICM'I{) oiiiJUSll)'
lllr1 MIIN ~/) t~r I'MI"'M'I ant!i

SH an M Lumber Auoclatt tor dtt•lls

~I!~!I!~.R
(~i::
1-800-359-8484
l_$69 19

w.-.

Fona, Blc-. Wl1ngor
llony lla.. lrond Toolo,
StOMW..., Cui Iron, lampe.,

=.='r~.~»

Gonion Toolo, Chi,.....

- · Sli'fw
,_.,, .
o•u....,.,
O.rlllklin,
aa..
Po11ory, 8 TiociJ Pllyon, TOJI,
Boby fumM.... Juno 5ih, llh,
7th, 81h ...... Spnoco St. Ext. -

llpolio, Ohio.

LOOKING FOR ICC satoOl DIS'L7 VERY NICE
FRAME RANCH WITH FUll ANISHED BSMT. HOME
HAS 3 BR'S AND Ill BATHS. NICEL'f DECOR.VED
WITH OVER ONE ACflE LOT: BASEUENT HAS LARGE
FAMILY ROOU WITH AREPLACE. OFFICE SPACE.
SMA!,L WORICSHOP AND STORAGE GREAT PRICF

-

E•llr

I

5

HappyAds

STEP BACK IN TIME! THE ABOVE T\JRN OF THE
CENTURY SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL OlD
HOME...PROVES IT ONCE W.t.S ONE OF THE MOST
EllollORATE HOMES IN GALUPOUS. IT COULD BE
NOW WITH SOME WORK .t.ND !Mf&lt;GINATION. IF
RESTORING A VINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM.
CALL US FOR A TOUR OF TliiS ONE ... AND lAAKE
YOUR DREAM COME TRUE. $63,000.
NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL- SPUT FOYER DESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
OINING AREA, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR, FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCEO
AIR FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR COND. 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE. 165,000.

DF$49.900.

Rt-lterlll 1M wor4s

'

L SHAPeD RANCH ml JAT lAVE. WARM. INVIT·
lNG RANCH HAS NICE ENTRY WITH STEP DOWN
INTO FORMAL u-. ROOM. KITCHEN. DINING
ARE.t. FLOWS INTO FAMILY lfJOII WITH AREPLACE PAllO AREA J 8EIJRO(lUS. 2 BATHS, 2 CAR
GARAGE. GAS HEAT. Aft COICl QUITE A BUY AT
$58,000.
CAMP AND ASH .. 'RQI 01111 BAat 'fN'D- AND
WHEN YOU ARE T1RED OF ROUGHING IT, WALK
ACROSS THE PASTURE TO YOUR VERY
COMFORTAIILE 3 8EDfiXlll 21WMIWICH HOME.
FAMILY ROOil HAS FIREPlACE. NICE KITCHEN. 2
CAR GARAGE. APPRJL 24 ACAES. NEAR CITY
CAPnYATlHG VIEW- 3 IJEDR(l(lM. 2 BATH RANCH
HAS 1eoo SQ. FT LMNG AREA FAMILY SIZE
KITCHEH HAS NEW DISHWASHER. SNACK BAR.
LENNOX HEAT~ 1 N:RE V.Wlt 160.000.

r:

of
Dlcktutl
"ltcattse COIW nt ~
far deatk1 H1 kldly
stopped tor ••· lh
carrla11 kald b•t Jilt
nrulus,
ad
lll1101tGJty.•
1H
lhabe'

E.O.E.

:' fjfi

~~~~~~~~
Dollnltoly Loll AI Foocllnd,

3 Announcements

Card of Thanks

HOUDAY INN
450 Pike SL, GeUipolla

Ctllttt•il Gls Traa•lsslo1 us 011 OJIIIIng lor a TraaSlllsslo• Pl~bt Medtalk 11 hs
. . . C:..ty, Po•roy 0•1o UtW. fM lob dutltS lndudt: pthol alii rtpttlr of ~
f!
1 •Iifll gas pipallts; aulsling II pipeline tonshtldloa; IICIIualy ~-~

Announcements

1

Motlvated pe..an to
cell on

Will BabyeH In My Home. Fen,
ced In ~lay A,... A•l•rencu

"An

to be Ullltlld In ace crdlr• Found: blod&lt; &amp; ton Foil hound
wllil ilecllon 2133.43 ol die or Caan hound WI while on
Ohio Rwlotd CodL
nose. 114-0U-4141.
MAY 31; JUNE 7, 14, 1182

Fre• Adult T. . UJW.
l·l'M-162-7037
u..... One On One.

SALES REP

Wanted to Do

Pl.... Clft 3CJ4.87S...IC11.

realclent ol the lillie ol
Ohio, and ahow poeltlva 6

Help Wanted

11

lusinon Coilogo, Spring Yoll:r,

- · 21 ,... of 1(11; bt a

102
103
106
109
113
115
116
119
121
123
124
125
126
128 Hearing organ
130 Seesaws
132 Framework of
wood atrlps
133 Everyone
134 Corrupts;
perver1s
t35 Walks on
138 Inlet
141 Direct at target
144 - Olde Gltle
Shoppe
146 Clutch
148 Poetry
149 Running
150 Smallest number
t51"lawand -"
t 52 Greek leHer
154 Son ol Adam
156 Bishop 158 Danish Island
159 Entreaty
162 Bitter vetch
1M Long, slender fiah
186 Actor JohniiOn
167 Prieat's vestment
170 Unden ID
174 Near

My Horn.. Nw• Anla'ant
Training. Cell 6...._...1-1226

446-1887.

Robert S. McCulty, W.M.
G.Gonlon Fisher, S.C.

pur..,_,

and allow poelllve ldenUIIcadon. To purchall 1
handgun rou muet be •1

PM

...u 114-1112-l:nof.

Wonlad To Do: laby•hling In

NMd
O.ytiiTiol
Babyalner,
Aelaranc:•. Call After SP.M. 114-

Trimming, Tr• Removal, Hedg•
Trimming. Fr• Ealimat••! 614-

Morning
Dawn
Lodge Nor 7
F&amp;AM
Monday, June 8th
7:30p.m.
F.C. Degree

ea...

Situation
Wanted

-,a. tarlots rtportt and paperworlt Is rttJUlrtd.
n.l potiliH affers 1 CDI!ptlltlvt wag• and btneflts package. OuallllM appllcuts
sW YM tleir 1'11-S to:
ulumltia Gas Tnmsnission Corporation
AlltniiCMt: M.S. VenltSIIIOS
P.O. l01 6164

Wanted To Buy: Junk Aula.
Whh Or WtthOUI Molors. Call

Knhwill~c....

time epeelal), lnclt.adltt mowing

12

TRANSMISSION PIPEUNE MECHANIC

Standing limber, WIH PlY lair

Jo&lt;rr Runyon, a14-

•.......,.,.
·-ng.

912-5135.

-~·r-Eom-

Ool&gt;y llorlln, 814-4112·11141.

prlcoo, """

814-245-5588.

- , - - - - - - - - - -Total lawn CIN, tallf pra, (1.

...-....___ __ ____
Woutd Vou Ad61ua &amp; . . Envelop" For.~' 101111 0.... C..

_.__tic

.

Hno

Home, fU FUM C.. ~.

Will Do Babysitllng In Wy Home
Pr1ten~bly Ag~~e 2-5. Call 114-

I ,.._ 0.•'- Apply To Vw,
Dill............,.. To Arran~• An
7
isa PM-111M And Full...._ "-'Uon. Anllabfe In

Wanted to Buy

Don, Junlo h! Soli Uo Ycu NonWortdn; llolor Applian&lt;:01,
CokK TV"a, V'C!R'a., Mkrowavn.
Air Condlllon.,., Elc. 114-:zs&amp;.
12311.

11. Uanoa
plllol, Cof-lnvn.
12. WMiern llodll W77

purchlolng • - - muel
•:;1'1wllh Ill tlltla and
I
llln. To
aholglln or rifle, rou muet
be at !tat II ,..,. of 1(11

•

·aa.'JaSiilrtNaw

•"smhed u..,old 41 1100p1.
Substance
Former boxer
Crony
Down: prefix
Sun god
Drunkard
And so on
Cozy corner
vast ages
Cooler
High card
Rage
Exp. rm.
Writing tablet
Lawful
Anger
Extinct ffighttesa
bird
Harem room
Corded cloth
Weary
Epic sea tale
Related
Providence's st.
Heavy volume
Demon
Row
Lights 01111
River Island
- control
Rival

b..

lloggo Auction Sorvlco, Gol-

ru_.,.,.,

• Clllber .44 Magnum wllh

I

... t'

lip S.nk:e Anll.•b4•.

:n. hktknobPo.ilond, Oil,

..

.._,__Ano:
,.,

c.~lla.

,_.._

9

...ton.

.......
lncludoe
";~
-.- _
44111(, pold
..
..., _
ton,
.... ...._~.. Salary ta
- - tor ... p':'a, $30,000
wu. For Interview Clll
A hablillWion s,.dallsl at 411Ml-3111. .._.,... Hassen.

...,.,. To Waoll

Comp'-le HouMho&amp;d Or &amp;lal"l Any Type 01 Fumhura,
Appllonc:oo, Anltq,.·o, Ele. Aloo
Appr~ie.. Avallabael 8,..,2455152.

Rood.

1

Rio Grondo, Ohio I14-24U152_

SIIYerhtllo Road,
1-?

1..-~ • pen of

tumhure

Wadomoylf'l Auction Service,

Apple Gr... • Doreoo Rood.
Calel ldtt-. nrtety ol colora. One
mUe lrom Southern HlQh
&amp;14-1112-31111.
School, o1t Aouoo 124. ltlliomlir
F"""to Pioll Coon hound dog. clo4hlng. lnd Inion! lhrv oduh
clo4hln0- ~ al oChor mloc.
1~r. old, 814-1112-31111.
ji...._ June I, I, 10 tn.n 10-e.
F,_ Oonnon llhephonl pupploo Rain c . - 10111 n111 dry dor.
la. good hotM, 114 8a.M21.
Chucil Evo.., , . _ , Juno I,
County

ExpMilll

773-5785.

· Moclll 121 lt.inleu Steel,

SCORPIO (Ocl. 2oi-Nov. 22) Matters

-ell.

'

Circumference

66
68
70
72
73

could get things oH track .
CAPRICORN IDee. 22........ 11) Tempo.
rarity HI aside lrlvotoos pursuits today
- It they lnterlore with something that
Optrung lead t Q
could make or save you money. Go out
and play once you've put the bread 1n
lhe box.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
11) II you're
presently Involved In something with
others that you lee! is being mismanfeat the COIItnct.
Declarer didn't spot his faint cbance aged, asaume greater responsiblllly
for "'ICCPSII He sbould !Lave tried toes- Y011r belt asset today Is your ability to
be an eflecllve organl-.
t.ablisll dummy's diamood el3bt.
PISCES (Fob. ~ 20) Doing
After winning with dummy'• beart
something for salf-aggrandiJement Is
kiJ11, ~Y a spade to your ace and cub not
to mollvalo you today, but
the dia!IJMd kin&amp;. R.etun 10 dummy whenlikely
It caneolo helping friends or famwitb a trump and ruff a cliamoad, Ily, you'U pull out llllhe stops.
wbidl fortunately IJriDp down lbe ARIEl (........ 21-April 11) The projact. Lead a lrUmp 1o dummy and diJ.. 11'8S8 of a ,_endeavor you're working
can! the heart niDe oo 111e d'•IIMI!Id on can be dramatically enhanced today
ei&amp;bl
- 11 you locus on 118 bask; rudiment a inlbvoe yuu DOticed tbal West ean pve aleld of He totality. Concentrate on
declarer a guess' U be drops the dla- -.11811.
ID&lt;IIId jad llllder the kin&amp; Soulll bu TNJIIUIIIApril....., 20)11 Ia imperallle looinc option of I ruffiDC o - tive that, today. you have ciearly-delpinllt East's hypothetical dwi!MI!Id ltnod obtectlvel-e your male&lt;ial atlliDe. It il anotiW I!DIIIple of piAJinc lain are concerned. Once y011 know
exiiCIIy whal you want, you'llligure out
the c:ard you are known to bokl.
OOwiO get it.
c -.waa .... ••
..._.
N•..

Bow ol a ship
Coffee C\Jp
High
Roman tyrant
Transgress
Father

$1 25 plus a tong, sell-addressed.
stamped emelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
!his newspaper, P.O Box 91428, Cleve·
land. OH 44101 -3428 Be sure to slale
y011r zodiac sign.
CANCER I June 21-July 22) Something
opportune might develop lor you today
through the auspices ot an individual

another today, make it strictly business
eliminating small talk. Irrelevant topics

Dealer South
-.
Pus

c...... .-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick PM-. Auclton Compony,
lull time auc:tloneer, compW.e
euctlon
NNk..
UcWIACI
1166,01Jio I Wool Virginia, 304-

w-

SAGmARIUIINov. 23-0.C:. 21) II you
have a serious matter to discuss with

Vulnerable Both
Soo,.
1•

32
34
36
38
39
40
41
44
46
47

thoughtful
2 Cil'lin Illinois
3 Dregs
4 Sollor: colloq.

.-,

'laGOut--

8

,..:. &amp;

"""''t. . . "' ......... -

Slilp

Cari-n.
· -~
~
No np neoM..,,

Soocc-tul auot._ 0wnor 32,
Sooldng Fo. .lo Componlon 0 ,~ Solo: Juno ...__.
W1Uiotf To
Retoc.te
To
...._
loochlront Homo Wrlio: W.yno, (lion,_ T - Wod) lo.m.-ep.m.
17101 L l k - 205, Clovoland, m •Ito Out OaoJgM CiMk
OH +llll.
Rood, From Atl loby, CN!dron,
criDIInal cuM, ohall be
Adun Ckllhina, Olo-•'"c s,.
Tho lloigo Coun1y Cot Shollor And P - Shallors, Ali """'
auctioned 18 1M publlo on hu n11ny kii111W 11111 ,,. _11_1..
_.M_-.
__
R_•I_niSh_lno.
_ __
1
Slllunlay, June 20, 111112, II roady 1or adoflllon. 81WII2- 1·
10:00 Ltll. on die Galllll 8843.
pt. Plaasant
County CourthouH ...,._
&amp; VIcinity
1. Wlncl!eew llodal 70,
C.Ubor .223, with -heel 4
Giveaway
t03 H. TNnl St, 111.-.. Juno
12X......
~.....,.....,,..,....-..,....,.;,.,......-=.-- 5,5,1; roln ...,. 8,1,10. I,QO.?.
2. ~ 11oc1a1 711, 3 lomaloo I 1 """ ldnon, lllor 1185 Novo, A-1 cand. E11Nd10
_......
.. ~ tn~IMCI, 7 wile old, 304~. bl"- bl--'- mora
Clllbor .3110, ... u, allacr-. · · - ·
·
Leupold IX eoope.
4 lloniiJ Old Puro- llooglo, 2!01 Jo- Avo. Friday,
3. Prt-14 WlncloeeW To Good Homo. 814-441-7'130.
Sal,.doy. Llrtl" _ . lwomono
llodal70, Callfber .2711, will 1 woo~~ Pu:r.'oo, Gonnon • Elk clo4hing,
a. mon.. Rain cancele. vtoa-•
attachod Leupold 12X Hound Mix . 114-441-1814.
•cope.
Auolrolian pupploo, 8M-t41Pomeroy,
4. WlnchttW llodal tOO, 2014.

PUBUC NOllCE
' By orchr of 11oe Galllll
C
ty C
PI
oun
OMmon
•••
Court die tt...,m, lleled
bllow, whiGh,... Miadln

~ ~,!".,.""i

CNIH

Ill!; ...... . . - . . - .

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

- . . _ . . .......pit&lt;

5N:111r

-,.ldeo, .gll ohclfl-3 Announcements

Thenlp.t. Oa:u,...
'lJcenMd ...

....... n. ;'

AVON ! AI ..... •
SpoolS,----12,000/mo,
·
Round. - -

which could be meaningful to you finan cially should be given top priority today
't'ou'rellkety to be much more fortunate
in tllis area than you will be in others

t K 10

.K

31 Wife of Osiris

60 Speechless

UBIIA (llepl. 23-0cl. 2:1) II you're en-

·9 ~4

When you seem destined to fatl tn
.your contract, don'l gi.., up. You
.ftli&amp;llt fiDd a dislributioo of the oppo. 1101111' canis tbal pernuts the contract
' Ia be made.
- Toda~dul occurred in a tourna:. - t ,
the East· West canis and

•

4

SOtJ'Ill
• AQ 1094

: By~lpAkler

•w
lleflllllw

~

EAST

WEST

• • Jll

The wall
might give way

;trlcb!
• N~'s four-.pade raise was

•s

29 Fulllll
30 Griet: poetic

abOut something is based on groundtess fears. The lesson won't be forgot ten. Mator chanoes are ahead lor Gemini in the comklg year. Send tor Gemini's
Astr~raph predictions today. Mail

loyalty in others today, you must be prepared to exhibit such a quality yourself
Stand by your friends as you would

BRIDGE

28 Guido's low note

tor ....
1G4 Pelblh

q I ice1

lirM wfth ....._ YOU''I law h
oampany. 1100-112*N

-Conditional approval for the
president's request 10 end the B-2
program at20 planes. The S2.3 billion aircraft originally was
designed 10 locate targets in lhe
former Soviet Union after a nuclear
attack.
-A one-year moratorium on
U.S . testing of nuclear weapons,
provided the former Soviet
republics continue their unilaleral
ban. The administration opposes a
haltiO testing.
-A series of measures forcing
U.S. allies 10 shoulder a greater
share of the burden for their own
defense, with two different methods for reducing the number of
U.S. bOOps overseas by 100,000 to
350,000.

1 Dreamily

wanted

Help

"AVON' AU. JUIEASISO... ,._

SUNDAY PUZZLER

June I, 1112

GE fought the suspension,
mamtaming thai il had rooted out
the fraud through its own internal
mvestigalion and informed tbe Pentagon immediately _GE representauves spent mos1 of the week 81 the
Pentagon meeting with Janet Cook,
head of lhe DLA' s office of conll'liCting mlcgrily.
The DLA IS the Pentagoo agency charged with investigating procuremenl fraud cases.
The Pentagon decision removes
a potentially disastrous financial
aochor for the maker of jet engines
that power the B-2 "Stealth"
bomber, the F-16 and F-18 fighte~,
the C-5 "Galaxy" transport and a
host of military helicopters. Last
year alooe. the jel engine division
was awarded S2.7 billioo in government contracts.

11

House approves $270 billion military budget

99 Hold on DPirG--IIYr
101 TVsQdare.

Wanted to Do

To: CLA 222, &lt;io Oollipolls Oollr. Mill Paula's Dey Care Center.
Tribune, 125 Third A.....,., Ga · Solo, offonloblo, dl.-ro . lll.f
llpolio, OH 45131.
6 o.m. - 5:30 p.m. " ' " :m-10.
OTR Hat bed drlver1 wanted, 25 letorw, eft• achool. DrotHM
,,. 111 m•. New 1ft.
,n ot okler, 2 yra 11perl.nc•, walc:onM.
111 141 122'7.
mUll han COL.'s. 1-aoG-5418 lanl Todcn•
4221.
Need Your ~wn MowK1' Comptooo -ing And Trlrnmlntl.

Employment Serv1ces

·-•IU

73
75
76
79
81
84
87
89
92
93
94
95
97
98
99
100
101

18

c.,..

••o

ollbe defcag: authorization biD in

Help Wanted

11

mm,e,.=ut

itself againSI 51 C-C lawsuits in 17
the coming months. Differences
states. About 380 similar suits are
bdwrm lbe IWO measurtS eveniUpending. Most of !hose are in CaliaDy wiD be~ by a joint confornia.
rc:n:ncz committee.
One provision of the sealement
Tbe major provisions of the
provides thai P!izer would guaranHouse bill.:
tee full payment for valve replace-Approximately $4.3 billion
ment surgery and a lump sum of
for tile SDI progron, commonly
$38,000 for anyone who qualifies
knowD as Star Wars. Bush had
under guidelines set up by an indew.,.bl $5.4 billion for the antimispendent panel 10 be appointed by
sile Jll'l«i*ii
Spiegel.
nep..y Defense Secretary DonPatients would retain the righlto 0cL I.
ald J. Alwood lllld a Sena1e Armed
reject those payments and could
The biD was approved by a nar- Smoicu 511bcomminee on Thurssue FflZCl for damages, K.lingsberg row 198-168 margin Friday, wilh day dlllllhe ~ has delayed
said.
112 Republicans joining 56 deployment ol the SO! system by
Pfizer doesn 'I want 10 encour- Democrats in opposing it Only 30 at least I year, likely to 1998,
age JWA!Iess surgery in whieh C-C GOP lawmalc.ers voted for iL
bu • c» COIICaM over possible
valve recipients would have the
The Senale will wrile its version trdmical pol&gt;lcnu and cost overdevices replaced, Klingsberg said.
runs..
"ll's important to send a message oul thai the company thinks
you ought 10 bave the operation,"
he said. "We do ~ wantiO be in
the position of CIICOUnlging or providing fmancial compensation for
unft!V!!~ replacements. ''
Answer to Puu.le on Page C-5
About 5 C-C valve recipients
addJessed lhe coun. About as many
93 " T h e - -"
178 Flying mammals
people spoke in favor of the settle- ACROSS
96 Morays
ment as testified against iL
1 Skins. cotlocttvely
DOWN

Some 20,000 workers at GE 's
main plant in the Cincinnati suburb
of Evendale, Ohio, and in Lynn,
Mass., depend heavily 011 military
work for their livelihoods.

Help Wanted

11

Hood Ex-Hoot Pump
S.rvk:• MaR. M~ Know Hut
Pumpa, Fumacee, Air Candhionors, Sond WortJ HlslO&lt;J

Public Notice

7 Doctrine
10 Fish eggs
13 Menservants
19 Let go
20 Capuchin monkey
21 Yes. 10 P~erre
22 Ape
24 Enrage
25 Hepburn 10
27 - Crosse. W1s .

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page 03

nt,WV

wanted to Buy

9

blloncy," said Fmi Ulmer, 35, of divine intervention. She clutched a
small Bible in one hand as she
Ba "' ~N.H.
wailed her tum al a Missouri unern o.e
ol dJc wom
beiDa widuujob is lhe
it plo~ent offtee.
'We have no income right now,
does 10 self-esteem, said Louis
so
we
try 10 s1re1ch our food
Dudet.. • ex-alll3truCiion worter
stamps,"
she said. "I ask God 10
reccady gradua1ed from
make
a
way
for us. I use lots of
Sowle• Maine Teclmical College
prayer
to
get
us
lhrough.''
bar saiD an't find work as a pipe
AI
least
one
line of business
lilltr.
'I
suffering
in
the recession.
isn
'"Yoa sun 10 feel bad about
)'Oiedf." said Dudek of Porlland, Business is booming at Pappy's
Pawn Shop in Columbus, Ohio.
Maine.
"I've never seen anything like
..,, - 1 a jib can be compared
it,''
said Evelyn Pappas. "Many
10 a deadt ill die family. People
people
are coming in and trying 10
tab: iliD jltllllttiilly," said Carla
sell
anything
they can, just 10 get
lfi&amp;ld.
of the unemployenough money for gas 10 drive 10
olfil% ill Tulsa. Otla.
R . _ Ruffin, the mother of work or diapers for their kids .
Times are so tough."
twO small cbildren, bas asked for

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
House is sending the Sena!c a S2i0
billion defense budget that cuts
near Iy $11 billion from President
Bush's request but still provides
most of what he sought for ma}OI'
weapons syslems.
Nevertheless, the administration
opposes the measure becallliC c» the
overall money figure, reductions in
U.S. troops oveBeas and a cut in
the antimissile Strategic Defense
Initiative for lhe fiscal year slal'lin&amp;

:Pentagon lifts GE contract suspension
By JOHN DIAMOND
Associated Pr~ Writer
. WASHINGTON - The Pen·
: 18g0D CUI short a polelltially dam·
. aging contract suspension against
:General Electric Co. Fnday after
·the company pnmised 10 repay the
:government for fraud in a jet
:engine deal with Israel.
- The action came five days after
:tbe Pentagon's Defense Logistics
:Agency barred GE's giant Aircraft
,Engines division from btddmg on
;govemmcnt contraCts.
GE also said it would set up an
:internal, anti-fiaud wau:hdog group
:and aUow government agents unre'stricled access to any company
:facilities. II gave details of its !tiscl ;plinary action of employees
;involved in the lsrneli case.
, "DL.A is satisfied that appropn•ate action has been taken with
:regard 10 employees poSSibly
:inwlved in the wrongdoing," S31d
·agency spokeswoman Patricia
:Miller. Neither GE nor the Penlagon would say how many
:employees were involved_
: The company satd tn a state ·menl thai it "apprec181es the quiCk
·lifting of the June I suspension."
.Cootracl suspensions lypically last
several weeks and somet1mes
:.Oooths. In a few cases. small fmns
·bave been driven oul of busmess by
penally_
: The promise by GE 10 promptly
'I'Cpay lhe government appears 10 be
:me key to the Pentagon decis10n .

would gel beaer in an election )aT
because politicians would make il
better in the interest of winning 11)election. But it's not gelling betlei''" Bales said.
Predictably, much of the WBib
was aimed at the While House,
where President Bush bas pegged
his hopes for another term on a
revived economy.
"I hope we gel a beuer president," said William Jackson, 38,
the father of lhree children who bas
been job-hunting for two mondls in
Austin, Texas. "Give the working
man a hand."
And job seekers don't believe
economists wbo say the economy
already has rebounded.
"I think they're full of

PolntPI

•'

- -.-

Here.

'Jtap;pq 4th

'Birtfuiay

Resident Assistant

'l(sfsea 'Dawn

Manager

Sayre

shelves and displays lrresistlllle - we'd like )00
to consider joining Amesl We're enlhusiastic
about a brttlhl tuture that will take us Into lhe ninelies and bo)md. And now's a trraat time lor )00 to

Lori&lt;,
~
&amp; 'llndt

How can this
little one he
ABig "33"?

tf you can fill in the blanks -

and make our

join • dynamic ..... I! leader.

As ~-~Assistant Manaeer. )00'11 supervise o llal! In restocl&lt;ir'C and spruclr'C up shelves
and displays. K )OU hove two l'O"" ol college "'
equivalent management or supeMs.ory &amp;KpelieiK:e ,
)OU to opply.
can ptOYido you with a competitive
satory, an excetlont bsnof~s poekage Iincluding
generous assoolate dlsoountsl) - anc: o chance
to advance )'tU' career. Ft. more information
lllllltr In penon at:

we.........,

AIMe O:p b:aat Stor.. Ina.
eoo Slllief Bridge Plaza
Stale Route 7
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Love ya' Kid
Ames is an equal ~ity employer M/F/H/V.

COUNTRY ATm eESn llllii.AOUS AFRAME. HAS
BRASS AND LEADED GlASS I..IGH'TWG. ANDERSEN
WINDOWS, ITAUAII nLE IN FOYER, BUILT~N
STEREO INTERCOM SYSTEM, I ROOMS, 3
BEDROOIIS. Zll BATHS. FAIII.Y ROOU, FORMAL
DINING, EQUIPPED KITCHEN . FIREPLACE.

EXCEPTK&gt;NALPFCA OCI'r

CONYENIEIIT LOCATIOII 011 STillE STAEET IN
GAWPOUS - WAIJ( TO OOWMTOWN SHOPPING,
CHURCH AND SCHOOL 3 BEDROOUS, 2 STORY
HOllE HAS LARGE lMNG ROOII AND DINING
ROOM , EAT-IN KITCHEN. IIASfMENT. VERY
AFFORDABLE AT $35,000

CHESIGRE TOWNSHIP APPROX- 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME . NICE COUNTRY
SETIING. $39,500.
845 SECOND AVENUE IN GALUPOUS 2 STORY
VICTORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENTLY USED .t.S A 4
UNIT RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVElY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE. $48,000.
7

7

.t.T LAST A PlACE TO !UlD YOUR DAEMI HOllEI 2
ACRE BUILDING SITE IS ON PAVED ROAD. HAS
ELECTRIC. G.t.S AND PIIILIC WATBI AYAI AAI ECONYENIENT LOCAllON. RESTRICTED. 111,000.
AESIDBICEAIGWPE 1.-: Mfl{- VERY NICE
'BEDROOM. 2 BA1H &lt;XliMTR'f HOME ON APPROX
23 .t.CES. IIACIC POACHES. 2 CAR GARAGE. 8
MOBIL£ HOME lOTS WITH IIOIIA..E HOliES AND 5
MOBILE LOTS _ AU PAESENnY RENTED .
EXCEU£NT LOCATlON CAll FOfl COMPLETE
DET.t.ILS.
JUST USTEDilWO 'lUll OlD f l l ' • AANCtt WITH
BRICK TRIM ON LARGE. LEVEL lOT. HOUE
FEAT\JRES CHERRY IIITCHEN CABINETS. SNACK
BAR, 3 IIEIJROOMS, 2 BATHS. 2 CAR GARAGE
ELECTRIC HEAT PUll'. PRICED 10 SEU. FAST AT

S57.aoo.

PRIVATE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINES
SURROUND THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME.
iNFORMAL
F.t.MILY ROOM/KITCHEN N1EA
BEAUTIFUL FORMAL Ll VING ROOM AND OININ&lt;l
ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS ONTO DECK ON SECOND
FLOOR. FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM,
WOODBURNER IN FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAOE. 7
ACRES. $115,000.

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Page 04 Sunday Tlmea Sentinel

SCRAM-LETS

My neighbor was at the local
lnttrnal Revenue Office. He got a
liHit niiVOUI when he overheard one
~~Gtnt announce to one fellow,

fACIAL

OHIAB'I

WREtCH
EFFACE
COOoliR
tHESIS

"That's the PQint, 1lr. We do ~ian
make a F=~OERAL CASE of lt.

to

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

41 Houses for Rent

41 Houses for Rent

Lind For S.ll: Porter Aru. &amp;:

lcM lor eale, trallerl acceptal*. 30ol47&amp;-2122.

Nice mobile home apace nalloblo, ttll Mu, H-7-32311.

5 acrH ,.ttricted no mobile
homn, 10 min. on Fb . :z N, prie.
ntgotlablt, 304-t75-7768.

3 Bedroom•

N~

On Lind

lower River Road,

Contract. LU4-':'117-3044 .

loll Appro:a. 5 Ac. U . 11 Ml SW
Of Galllpolla, Harri10n Twp. 200
Ft. Road Frontage. County
W1t1r. $6,000 To $8,000 Ea.; 21

Loto In Clolllpotlo Fony • 1otnlo
owntr fln.nclng It SM.84 per
month, any one of tour lola

aval'-tM, 304-175-2722.

Loti In New Haven • ,ell:)%
owntr financing 11 $101.46 per
Ac F"" $20,000; 614-83H484, month bup alllhf'M lola, a304-

675-2722.

Roy.

8

21

Business
Opportunity

For

INOTlCEI
OHIO VAI.l.ET PUBLISHING CO.
ru: uam•n• thll you do butJpeople rau lr.nlllt', and
NOT to oond monoy thnough tho

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Business
Buildings
Renl:

Wooded, 5 Partura, 2 B.lrna: 1

Commercial Bldg.

New 32x32 Whh H•r Loft, Olher
Old Tobacco Bam. P1etura : 2

Included . $25,000. Days: !13324-6682, Evenings: 513-M-4-111,

0111 ""'' you howo lnvootlgotod

tho oflorlnO.

8

2 FCA 124 Fl WOLfF TANNING
BEDS For Solo. Sold Tagothor

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Or~oly.IM-441·1021.

Prime P•Y PhoNe For Slat
Choop, t.ocol 1-800-'N.._,,. . Ell

BOGGS AOOIO"
SERVICE

202.

YENDING ROUTE: Gol Rich
: Quick? No Woyl But Wo Ha,. A
. Good, Stoody, Affordoblo, 81101·
Lat. l.aD0-284-

YiNO.
Vondlng Routo: Locol. Wo Han
T h o - Modolnoo, lloklng A

PQBLIC fiOCTIOH fiHD
COHSIGHMEHT SfiLE. Rt 35

Sloody Cooh lneoono. 1·

-

1100 155 0354.

EVERY FRIDAY 7:00P.M.

WOlff TANNING BEDS
Mlw Commerdll, HcMM Un"s,
. Fta~~~ Stii.OO. Lampe, Lotions,
Ae
I 1.... Mont~y P1yrnent1
.._ Ao $18.00, CoM Todoy FREE

NEW
0292.

~

Cotolog. t.aoo-228-

I

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale

--Pt.

1,400 oq ft botck. 3 - - " ' ·
10rg0 11vtng room brick polio,
""" wol•loopllc, t.;;;t pump, 5

SM.IOO. 30W75-5301. Plo-.

· bom,
utNitr lllllkllng. '""· 1rom
Mkl-

.10 - · - . . , -

dloport.
Honc!Yman - · low
--.~oo.

2 t J WU'ta, corn« tot, priced
In
101 ......... Sl, - · ·
-.on,20'0,
3104-67'5-7111.

Conalgnment taken d.oy ol aale from 10:00 to 6:00
New and UMCI MerchandiH
New Uncoln Weldor, hood, rods, Sears buih in seH·
cleaning oven w/dig~al controls, Hilda rotor harrvner
bils, 2 nail guns, 1 Hilda, 1 Uniset, Green Thumb
rear tiller, lawn sooder and spreader, 2 lawn
s~:· recliner chair, space heater, electric stove,
Craftsman 12" wood lathe and knives, exercise
hand tools, jars, desk, Home Interior, fireplace
7'/. circular saws
!.omatlhlr•u tor everyone. - $25.00 Drawing
Tenno: C.ah or Check with proper 1.0.

Door Prlzn
Auctioneer: David Bogga, Lie. No. 4596
G.olllpolla, Ohio 614-446-1750
LlcenMCI and bounded In State of Ohio
Not ,.ponalble for eccident1 or loll ol property
We do Eatate Auctlona. Houaehokl Auctlona and
Farm Auctlona. Hauling aervice available.
Building lor Rent (grut lor yll!'d HIM, II•
marketa....C.IIIor detail•~

'2 otory, I ,_,~ 113 :~ hMt,

Aft., 304• 31)1.7'7)..5771.

2t121 llorquollo Avo, 5 yrs old,
.a1 bricll ninlan~nce free
.Jtolne. 4 ' ' ma&amp;, un~~ll living
_ . , olnlngroornllomlly ooom
·eoc:lbhiiiUon, kitchen, utll"y

room, .. one •wet, oover.a

jootto In bock, prhocy lonco,
..
...
. """"" loy """"''" ......
.....,
1044~1231.

-8EAIITIFUl HOUSE FOR SALE

ecom. Lotw.• 816
tloln Sl. -P\. Ptoaoom,
Va.

'Corn;' .,, Renovated: 2 Full
J1ot1oo, J IMp hlnoomo, Now
.H'MC, .... C.tpriC. Available
...... 11114 111 220&amp;.

_

.. , _ . ,, -

&amp;

~

On ApprOll . 1r.l
....... Lo&lt;otion, Good
Ccwt •r , Appro• $1,000 P.r
llonlh Income. Will A.. urn ln-

. uwb:wclt Le.. Thin 5 v..rs,
Pc utble OwMr
New
. Hawn,
wv. F'n:o'f~·-2486

. Anytlmo.

· At. 2 North, 3 mil• from Pt.
Pt
nt. AI brick, 3 BA, lull
a.-.r:1 wtlh family room, 2
On 1 acre. Shown
'"""' onty. Call 304llor lpon.

From~­

Bring your lawn choirs
Auctioneer: Rodney Howery
614-594·3780 Days; 698·7231 Nights
Apprentice Auctioneer: Tim Henderson
Refreshments Available

FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE

2 BR hOUH fori renl, 1300 Hogg
Sl. 304-675-4030.

rnut11

Mil ,

Public
dfuctLon

" " Rorctol 12d5 3br, $3,000:
oeo.
12ote0, 21&gt;r,
1t11 14170 WI Elop 3br, 2 Bolho.

mz

u.&amp;OO.

11,000010.114-311--.
~

Dub l1d&amp;, 2 a.&amp;ooms,

Furnilhed, CA, UncWphlnlng.

-

Olloo.lt4-44H782.

1P Wtndeof 14170, pat.., room,
.. .,_wtlng. bulft~n chin.~

coblnot, nlehed I

hoot, portly lUI·
pert new eafl)ll ,

P,!OO. Btodl I Urn

lnelud.d,

114-241-!501.

Nahua. 3 bedrvom, lh10
with h12 oapondo, CA, a.ttl3

wlerbtd, oarden t\A), Ill IP-.
o~-. 1fh2o dod, t14,200
...... move, J04.t71-7180 or 67&amp;:1514.

18M Lllooo1y Mobllo Home
14•10, 31&gt;&lt;, Eac. Condhionci!::
U Acroo c-ooy Wotor,
LamUon On Hlnnan Trace
Rood. 114-248-5130.
1117 Cloyton IIICIIolto homo,
- . . . 11112 both, loundry
....... r7VOO
fl.

·-:1110
""'"· t-..!ni2
oftor lpm.

-

14d0 Jllt'o. 2 llotho,
0r With 1750
- . .... eo-odii14-441-

m.-,_

IS:II.

AI,DIIIIIIIf Doubl...,.dst: s
- - Only $1,000 o-o.

::

111 ~: 31 A¥1U·
Clnlr 1500 DOwn Willi Ap.

...11110. t..dlt. Coli · - -

Thursday, June 11, 1992 At 7:00P.M.
Anliques And (oil edibles
Secret ary Desks. Marble Top Dresser. Oak Chesl.
Oak Desk. Trun ks . Stand Table. Cedar Che sl. Oak
Book Case, Wooden Ckl !he s Wr~nger . 1/2 Oak Bed
Wilh Hogh Head Boa rd, Table W1th 6 Chairs, Buftet,
Wooden Ashtr ay Sland, Siratghl Back Chairs, Small
Oak Table, Wooden Wall Phone. Sofa Day Bed,
Ouean Ann Bed, Stnge r Treadle Sewing Machine,
S1oraga Boxes. Belmont Treadle Sowing Machine,
Assort ed Rockers. Des k Chatr, Kitchen Chairs,
P&lt;:turas. Wooden Ctale, Sc hool Desk. Mirrored Hall
Seat. Ko lchen Ca bin el . Old Hats , Apple Bunar
Pa ddl e. Saddle Bag And Shoes. Assorted Crod&lt;s.
Outl! s. Assorted Stone Jars, Music Pipe Holder, Oil
Lamp s, Scoop, Smal l Metal Tin, Halls Superior
Pitcher, Baskel s. Silverware, Dressel Scarves,
Magaz ines From The '20' s Old Books, Tea Ketlle,
Assorted D1sha s. Assorted Glassware. Pots And
Pans. Whal -nots, Waigh! Clod&lt;s , Manlle Clod&lt;s,
Pictuoe Frames, Old Wall Phone, Mirrors, Old Hand
Tools, lamps, Stone Jug, Scales, Old Books, Crock
Tea Pot, Jewelry, Buggy Foot Warmer, Wash Board,
And Much Much Mora.
Lots Of Misc. IIams Not listed

EATS

CASH

Not Responsible for CKcidents or lou of property

~~ S.vlnga On All Vinyl I Car-

Pomeroy, &amp;14-467-3271.

Now ...tdtt raservl!laas

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Call Us To List Your Home

Real Estate General

tf

RESIDENTIAL· INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL · FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806
COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAl - LAND

Ia corrtKne home and business. Ohio
River lrontaga. Vary nice 3 bedrm. home

wlappllances, ful b•m&amp;Jt. TNs R a money making
~lon Cal lor 8Jl!X&gt;H"""'·
tn3. RIO GRANDE HOME OR INVEST-MENT - 3

be&lt;i'ooms, 2 story, t 112 bath, partla.l basement, ctl"t
walet" and sewer. Deep 101. 851x170'.
1802. CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Neal clean
conage onertng 2 bedrma .. 1 b&amp;th. good lnsulaUon,
metal sktng. nev.1y decorated. 1 outb!Jidlng, garden

spot , 1.61 ac. m.1. Hook1.4J lor mobUe home . Thklls lor
me ond "'I gal. Gr.,.locallonl
1787. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND: Und lays
wei. Otder 2 story bftck home with -4 bedrooms aM
buUdlngs. Home In need of repair. t21ac. nVL on SA
35. close to Pine~ Nur'li'lg Home.
1780. CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD ptus conventenl
to shopping, hospital, elc. lovety home oHel'l 3

- . ..' kllchon, lamly nn. cooro .. 2 botte . ... _
g&amp;l"lge and l"iJ'"OUnd pool. The k:tt biiCka

up lo I

wooded ..-ea and offers prtvacy.
1755. RIO GRANDE - Home Is pnced lor lrrrnedale

salo. 3 ·· balh , has heal, caoport. Awrox. l/4 ol
an aae. Beautlultrees and spot lo buld • new home .
Localo&lt;l 011 SA 35. $30,000.
t754 . SECLUDED COTTAGE FOR TWO -

2

bedrooms . large LA , luM bath. eal ·ln kMchtn, 2
porches, new rapalrs ha~e been made to mike I tis a

cotNonable home. $20,000.

MIOOLEPORT ANYONE? - $26.000 will blly
ll'b Uceptlonaly nice 3 beam .. I and 112 bolhs, 2
!lory home. Lovety new carpel, range, washer and
0741 .

dryer, 1 and ,12 car garage. Ne1l and cl&amp;an home
localee1507 Sycamore Sl .

0630. EXCELLENT APAIHliENT BLDG. INVEST·
MENT: Good money maker IN TOWN . larve apt.
bldg . with 3 two beO'OOm apls., 2 one beltm. apla .
pkJs a conage IM!h lwo apartmeru. Thts property has
been wei maiialned. R6&lt;iJcad pnce.

@
-

~'!'~.~

17BS. POINTS OF PERFECTION around this
"Bclou!l home located In an exck.Jslva area. Eleven
lolal rooms wtl:h llvea bathrooms. Foyer wtfh open

Slalrway, lilrtlO Mig """" wth wooct&gt;umlng llmplaoe,
lonnal dlllng room, goutmtt ldlc:hen, ltmly room and
game room share an open llreplace. Solal1um wll tel
)'OO

enfoy

0803. QUALITY - LOCATION- SPACE· TNo homo
hU olllhe quoiKies ol o !rlen&lt;ly horne attuoophoro. 3
large bedroom!, oftQ , 2 lutl balM. lllllng room wlh
llreplace . Elec . heat pu~ and cent . air, lhls 8:1d:
cape Cod holM nas app. 1800 8Q. n. an&lt;~lovel1o&lt;&gt;U

Four Seasons. Four overslled bedrooms

Ma9191" bedroom 1\u caltwMh.l ceMing, wh~l balh
ana beauUiul arched wlndowl . First noor laundry.
Anacfl&amp;d 2 car garage . Two heal pul1l"5 wttn bacla..lp.
5.441 N:.. nvl If you Ulot lndiYkklallty your name can
De on the malbox . Quallled Bu'yer3 orty

1762. FOUR BEDROOM HOME, 2 BATHS - Roomy
ranch home locllld In the country. EXIen!IYe wort
COI'f"1JIIIId u rolows : new Thermo AIISIOO windows,
searrty ~.steel Siding, he.vy roor, kit ., ceramiC
tie entry ex1ended Into the ldlcflen, 16x53 deck,
cement walks and pad. See this home and stop

Apartment
for Rent

1 bedroom tur.,.shtd apl,

ture, 304-615-2406 .
1 Room EHiec:ient::y,

Paki .
bc•IJI
Olspod/Aefll'.nee.

114-&lt;4&amp;-7130.

UtiiHtoo Pold, 114-441-71104.

Aolwonco And Dopooll

2 room ap~l1mant. $125. mo ... h.
Utllhloo pold. 304-47S-5709.

211 Spring Avenue, Porn.roy,
2bdrm., w1terl'l:raah paid, 61444f-il42.

2bdrm. apta., total .t.etrle, appllancea tumShed, laundry
1oom t.cll"les, clou 1o .choot
In lown. AppUca:Uone av1Ua!He
at: Village GrNn A.l)le. 141 or
u.II514.0Q2-3'n1. EOk.

from S1t21mo. W1lk to shop l
:nov•. Call 614-446-2568. EOH .

DeluJ:e , br, 2 Car Glarage, CA.

tn6 . BUILDING LOTS - 21Q ac. m.1 on a comt1 lol
o1 Stale Route 325 and Shellon Road 1.7 mla !rom
Rio Gronde UrMrsly. -r'dod lob Col lor P""'

Aet.-.ncee., AvailabM 6115. 514-

256-152i.

bedrooms. 2 lui balhs. ldlchen and dining area, 2
bedrooms, utility room. tamlly room. kHchen In
bas&amp;menl . 3 c. garage and • 6 car detached gartiQ9 . •
Cai!Of more Wonnallon

1510. LOCATION IS THE KEY

lo !his 2·Siory horne
located on flrsl Avenue . -4 bOOn., 1'lr balhl. larNiy

morn,

lvlng room, basemsnt, and smal1

tQm ., balh,

klchen, IMng room oonage on lot. Home Is dUlled
ool!l conw klt . Cal lot an !ppOlrtmenl

1760 . THIS HOME II located on I ac. nv11eal:ur\ng 2
or 3 bedrooms wtlh lamll)' room, kllchen, bath .
co.-ered carport, large storage bulktlng. Tilts homa II
an 6tOII.r1 s&amp;arl&amp;f home priced lrllhe $30s. Cal lot
monl l~ormalk.ln .

H11 . INVESTMENT PROPERTY.... uoelenllocallon

Fumlahed , bedroom upslalra
sp(, .. . Vernon Ave, $225.
rnont:h ph.ll eiKtric. Aelerfilce

Fumlahed Efficiency Apartment,
Pri¥Ky, Ertr• Clun, Quiet
See"rity I
Ret.rencn A.
qulred. 114w441-2602..

Graclout living. 1 and 2 t.d·
room apertmen~ at Vlllag•
Manor
and
Al'llrtide
Apartmenla In Mtddteport. From

ltM. eo11 &amp;14-m-mt EOH.

Ill. Vernon Avs one bedroom
apl IXC cond, IIOYI 1: rtf h.Jrn)h~, print• erttranc• a park·
lng, 304-t75-4S80 or 675-1162.

Nke 1 bedroom apt , lsrge
tlvlngroom, $250. month utilities

pold, 304-675-3!168.
Nice studio apl, tumlehltd, nice
tocatlon, ¥ery, very unique
lmu.l 111), $185. mon1h, plua
depostl, you pay electric, has

IOcalad on Eutem Averll9 . ltD propetty 8 ~ly
bolng used as a -4 bay car wash . Lol slle Is 1S8xl50.
Locallon Is lte key to this lrweslment. Call k&gt;f" men

5:00PM

lnlormal:lon.

anytime S1t I Sun.

caba.,

I .

.

I!

hOme wtlh 2 car garage, a brdm. 1 "/,baths, kflchen.
lormaf cl~ room, ltvlng room with llreplacs . 40xl50
lol wllh utiMy hoolcupa . • ChciSO lol wllh I 25 .51C39.5
bloCk 2 cor gooogo. COl lor potco ond locollon .

ftr

"'\1 . Must $Ct 1

1675. R.£-D-U-C-£..()111 LOVELY 21'x70' "'FRIEND-

SHIP" OOUBLEWIOE RANCH wlh 3 BAs, 2 baths,
LRIFR, DA, ldtehtn wl'bar, range , D/W, utility room,
llec. HP, CIA, ffraplace , vinyl sklng , dty schools on .9
IIC.

MA..

0711. t 0.11 ACRES MIL BEAUTIFUL ROLLING
LAND can be !Jvldld 11110 and purc:haHd •• lolowt

t . 2 ..,..,..-. 2. 3aaoo(t oc. woododond2
ocroo ctoorod); 3. 5 - cloorod ond ~ - Tolol..._

C.ll lftlf 2:00 p.m., 304-

5651, U1eon WV.
tiOt . A 0000 BUY AT 127,100. E""""', 2-3 BRa,
1 bath., LR. Eal·ln ktlchan. Y, btmt., gas furnace, t
out&gt;ulldlng 30'1:14'JIPP'OX. on 5.88ae. m1.

Aeltlf Or Otflca Space Av1i11ble.

loloyotlo llaU. 114-441-4222.

1781. REDUCED TO 135,000. RIVERFRONT

.47 Wanted to Rent

PROPERTY - 1.8 •c. m11 (1 BO n . lronlawe) with
t4'x70' Oai&lt;WOOCI CIUslc mobllo home wtlh 2 BRa.

LR. callle&lt;lfOI ceNingo. kftchon foek Clblntll) wlh
~ng .,..., 2 rua blithl, utllty rm .• eltc . ....,, CIA., 1
cat gorago, oullllg. Ploc. lor plcnlddng or booUng
011 IOMr odgo ol proporty onlhe otvor. ~ pr-'Y II
In A· 1 condtion. Cll to ... .

1777. HANNAN TRACE SCHOOLS. Cozy 3 BR
ranch with LA, DR, e&amp;! ·ln ktlchan, I bath, 1wo
o:rtblc9., tuel olhlat, new roof, oo .5 aca. m1 .
1775. BUILDING LOTI- 2V, oc.
oft Stato
325- SholonRoood,

Nk:41,

._an

-

eai

0783. LOCATED IN BIDWELL - 2 otory homo with
lvtng room, tlnlng/1clehon ooinlllnod. • -......, 1
balh, go- t8&gt;t2•. rool oollr lilt tO, lilrtlO lot . Allor
$14 ,000.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., JUNE 13, 1992

Buy or aell. AI.,... Ant)qun,
1t24 E. Matn SlrMI, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. Ia t :OO
p.m., Sundly 1 :00 to 1 :00 p.m .

6M-992~2526.

BEDROOII: Bunk Bodo S9t
C2llll; 4 O..Wor C'- 01 Chaw coning 1 -..mg. ho
Drawn $44.15; Twin ,..ttreas quds, rueonable pricn, slnc.e
SIMI Sot.
1m. ~15--2538 or 614-256-

1300; ..d plono, 115; 22
long llflo, SSo;lilWU-5101.

, . _ lultor K -. SOirwr, And

SOond. Antiquo

- ·· - ..
. And

bol Boc:kboord, Rim, -

BoN; 1171 Contln..tal Dolla&lt;, 2
Amlquo Quilts, 240 Homotila
Chalnuw. 814-388..,.35.

tiS,

1 bunk DIG, $25, 304-Tn-

5418.

Dl:1 T•mpen, 1 M•lll•, 1 Robin,
614-37H403.

149 Cub Cadet Hydrostat w/11 hp converted
I
behind mower, plows. disk. &amp; blade. 5 Lawn Mowers,
Ridtng Mowers, RotoTiller. 2 12 Hp Kohler Engines. 2
Hp Briggs Engines. 30 Hp Wisconsin Engine, 18
Wisconsin Engine, Gas Powered Air Hammel, 4
Saws, Air Tank, Compressor, Weed Eate1, Press ,
Visas , grinders. snow blade for garden tractor, ladders!
hand &amp; gar~en tools , 3 wheeled bike.
"Motorcycle &amp; Boat"
1974 360 Honda Motorcycle (very nice), 12' Flat
Boat, 4 Hp Sears Motor.
"Household"
4 pe . Bedroom Suite, 2 Occ. Chairs, coftee &amp; and
lta,hl•·• Maytag Auto Washer, Hydabod, Air Cooditionor,
metal
cabinet. Zoneth Color Console T.V..
TV, Li"on Microwave, Mink Stole, Cherry Poster Bed.
Linens , Bed Clothes, Kitchen Appliances. Lawn
Furniture. Fila Cabinet, File Cabinet w/sale, Jewelry.
• Antiquo &amp; Co llectablea •
Round Oak Table w/3 chairs, Oak Desk &amp; Chair.
Corn Sheller, 4 Horseman Dolls, K.R. Barbra Jo Doll
24" W~in eye sockets, Several Barbie Dolls, Plasticville
toy Hospital dtd . 5· 17·52 N.I.B. (used wnrain sets),
Metal Tootsia Toys, Roseville #582 Vase. Hull, Pink
DepressiOn, Aladin Table Lamp wlhand painted shade,
Anniversary Clocks, old portugal oil lamp, art decca
print, Fisher Print dtd. 1940, Several pictures &amp; frames
(some leather Early 1900's). German Coffee Grinder,
Colloid Bank, Vary nice Wooden Adv. Box Joe Spidel
Groc. Co., Wheeling, W.Va. Fountain Pens. 30's
beaded purses. Victorian Sawing Box Knitting Basket.
Empire chest of Drawers, Walnut Dresser, Wood Occ.
Chairs, Bona China Cups &amp; Saucers, Wadding Ring
Ouih, Star Ouih, both in very good condition.
Note : This will be a vary unusual auction wigood
quality throughout. Some was moved here by Mr.
Oilers daughter tram near Columbus, so is still in
boxes. Will find mora goodies as we set up sale.

KILLS FlEAS! Bur ENFORCER
FIN KiUers lor pe&gt;ts, homa &amp;
y•rd. Gu•rantMd •n.ctW.t Buy
ENFORCER 1t
Baum Trua
Y1lu. Slore, 11 West Ma1n
Sl r.et, Chesler O h. l Yiill•y
lumber &amp; Supply Corp., !:155
P~rk

Slrwt, Mkldt.por1 , Oh

D. C. •tal Seles, lie.

dooo-10\Adoor, Now I Uood. Uft
Chairs:. 8cMman'a HotneRre
6~n83 , 1..&amp;00--458-6844.

KILLS FLEAS!
Buy ENFOR CER Flt~a Kln.,.s ( or
Pets , Home I Yard . Guar1n1Hd
EHsc;tiv• ! Buy ENFORCER AI
Bmwns Trustworthy H.lr dw•r•
St 11e Rou:• 160, Bid._ll, Ohio .

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIIIMING POOLS

New 65H Howard rotoll¥al or , 9"

Desogned lo meet your

dump bed lruelt ; A C Jpl. 3 bot ·

needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON

Eteetrie 3 ~ld Scooctn ln-

Onty $1'99.00 BNUI:Itul Above
Ground 11x31J4 Poot Includes:
Fitter, O.Ck, Ftnc~. LAdders,

1om

plows;

~l'tltDf ;

•

Kina elu Wier bed, Mk1 MW,
hooil boord Wl!nlnow I a/loiVOO.
,._..._. wldrawlfl. Twin bed.
304..7HI08.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comptoto homo lum~:J:·
Hourt: ~. 1-5. 1
0322. 3 mltoo out lulovllto Rd.
FrM Delivery.

Now Curvod Gino Ook Chino
Co-o. Llghlod Minot lock.
~ llhoiQo, l..oodod Gluo In
Door, Sfter• S&amp;za I"M-4U4318.

Agri-

Powe r

19n F'"ord

Bronco
4r4; 5x10 uti! it) lrail•r , 6 50
Minn. Motin. gas lract or, 6 14 ·
)1]2-2455 or 614:'14 2-2580.
New 818 barn t yp~ bui~
$400. 1975 Ford vs n, body
,

engln. nl9ds work. S-500.
67S-5413 .

3()4 .

burner tomn.lu. Anllabl. ••- Pittsburgh

ctueivety II Rite AkS Pharmscy.
TM ute w1y to diel.
Hospital bed $10. a . .

r."9' $10.

l04-6n-7942.

Camelbu19, Inc. 45719
Specoahz1ng in Pole
Buildings.

p.~int s.ale now In
ptogrMS .. c.iling p1int $8.99

Posl Buidings and

Package Deals. Save
Honlreds, even Thousands
ol Dolars.
l ocal Sales Representative

DONNA CAISENBERY
11366 S. St RL 7
Ganipolis, 01-1
PH. 614-256-1633

gal, ar1•nor whfte lll•r $13.99
~1. lurpH
50'Jo oH. Pa int
304~l~~~kson Ave, Pt. Ptl ,

•Met•

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

j

YOU'VE ADMIRED IT FROM THE ROAD
ond lhought H would n- be lor Nlo, but
now wo'ra oftering thos beautiful home lor the
firwt lime. Older loomco loaded woth lots ol ehann
ofering 3 bedrooma, 2 baths, living mom ,
dining room, family room and large kilchen
owllooking a largo pond. Alllhs oilualod on 3
(m~l bNuti1uC wOoded acraa Call Carolyn lor
your showing loday. $79,000.
1603.

SPUT LE11EL
Throe lewla !hal provide zoned aoeas lot "!ff·
rata activitiea of llmily living, yot comi&gt;Nd
gives spa.. with a good trallic Row. 3 bedouoms, 2112 baths, dining 100111, livinll room,
tolficient kilehen and large L·shaped lamily
room. Heat p&lt;.mp , centoal air, 2 car garage and
o10rag0 building. Localod in Cloarview Esla!os
SubdMoion. City ochools. $69,500.
M08

AFFORDABLE HOllE IN GREEN
TOWNSHIP! - Picluro yourself in this 3
bedroom ranch locatod in a lamily onented
nei1&gt;1ooc!oood that your kids wollovel You Will
like tho convenienoo t&gt; ohopptng. lx&gt;'!"!al, ek:.
Home olho,. fonnallivlng room, lamoly room,
large oat -in tcitc11en, 1Y, baths and 2 car
garage . Call today to view thts home.
1232

AFFOAOABLE BRICK RANat - V.ry nice 3
b"'*oom homco olla10 much mora than mool ol
tlio pnc.. l.a~g~loving mom with lirapla&lt; •. for·
mal dining room with china cabinet, •t-in

kitcloon, don. plus lull basement with lamily
room and rae . room . Very privata backyard
wilh inground pool and large palio. 2 car
garage, gas heat and central air. Nawar roof.
Priced m move "'ockly al $79,900.
1701

f

VERY PIIYATE I WOODED!
Peltoct Mlling monjoy tlio newly conotructed
log home. Large front porch to onjoy cool
surnm•r btMn•; •Hract:ve woodbumer _and
hear1h to wann your soul on those cold WWllor
n~IJ . Approx. 2,300 sq. II. ol comlortabl&lt;l
living Ill*» inctucing 3 bedrooms _(room lor
411), ""''Clllraciw ....,by lott.oo, living room
with pine ceiling, newly ~nished family room
and 2~ bathl. L.arve 2 car garage W1th
overtooad storage. Apprnx . 5 years old
f2tt

FWAU.V A STARTER HOlE YOU DONT
HAVE TO AX UPII -You Will need lo -1m
3 badmom with """"'tly replaced vinyl oidi"'J.
roof ond gunoring, plumbing, 200 amp. electric
service and new gas lumaco. Laova !amity
room , 2 lull both a. convenient loundry room
and private patio . Th•s opporb...nity

11

only

monulos !rom wn on St. At 141 . City schools.
$45,500 .
• ...

Owners: Mrs. Doris Jacks &amp; Others
Auctioneer : Col. W. Keith Molden
614-742·2048 evenings
Ohio Lie. #4318
Cash
Lunch
Pos. I.D.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., JUNE 13, 1992

BIG Feeling Fot A Utllo t&gt;m-1
.
H()I'M_I like this rarety come on lhe market T~m ~~ 1ttt c.nturv home featunng 4-5 largs
bedrooms. huge living room and dining room, noco lotchen, rwmodolod both. 1 car attacl1ed
garage with mud room , largo ublily ooom. Nice large lo! in quiol community only 19 mlos lrom
!own . Now for the old-tome price tog of only $38,000 .
KOO

DON"T SETl1..E FOR A HOUSE JUST TO
LIVE tL F1001 the momonl you slep into tho
large loyt11 you can
your family iving in

,..,r

this classic. Formal l1v1ng room, dining room,

WJnt'IV ldk::hen , very llvat»e family room, 3 nice
plus 2 ful baths . Sk&gt;rage ga:lont in
tho large attiC . 1 car garage, luH ba........,t II
that's not eno ugh, in to wn convenience .
~a.

~

10:00 a.m•

located on St. Rt.78ypass from P011eroy, Ollie at 31711
M&lt;Gulr• Road. Watd! lw auctlot signs.
"Household"
love seat &amp; malching chair, recliner, single bed
complele , gla ss top round stand labia, book se~. 5
drawer chesl of drawers. round &amp; long coftea tables ,
desk , bulle!, flower stand, floor lamp, mtsc. slands .
misc. wood chairs, loot stool, king walerbed. lamps,
while oak picture frame !hal holds nineteen 8x10
p&lt;:turas and other misc.
"Antique or Collectors Items"
Selh Thomas 8 day mantle clock wlfancy wood trim,
McCoy gravy boa I, 1895 Canada 1~ Piece, 192t
stlver dollar, trunk, army cap, paper roller lor
newspaper. htgh chair, stands, white freddie sawtng
machine, several old quihs (Flower garden, necktie &amp;
Nine Patch), small round building, china dishes.
approx . collection ol 25 tea pots, slipper collection,
several sugar &amp; creamer sets , candle holders, plates
&amp; dishes. wood !able, and logging screws for leather
shoe so lesl.
"Campers"
Like new 1987 Alp ine 20' Sleeps 6, gas furanace,
stove &amp; refr igerator w/roll up awning and 1971
Corsa1n 19' sleeps 5.
"Guns"
410 model K4111 High standard, Glenfield model
60, Marlin 22 Wiscope, 22 Marlin w/Bushnell 4x32
scope, 12 ga. Mossburg 24" cylinder bore, Tasco
scope 3·932 w/rrtle barrel, and wall gun rack.

"Misc."
Ladies full length lur coat, mens leather, waslern wind
and London Fog Jackets and Ect.

Owners: Betty McGuire &amp; Friend
Campers &amp; Guns to be sold at noon.
"Antiquo"
Wicker Picnic basket &amp; egg basket and block Plane .

"Tools"

.Owners: Goldie RadcDH
Dan Smith • Auctioneer
614-949·2033 Ohio Uc. #1344
John Smith· Apprentice
Auctioneer #5518

100..(

Merchandise

"Lawn, Garden &amp; Shop Tools"

USED APPLIANCES
)YoolooroL. dryoro, roltlgorotoro,
.._
.._
Appll-. 71
Vlni ~1":8eCiii814-446-73N, 1·

54 Miscellaneous

Dlrtdlom from Pomeroy, Ohio: T..a S.R. 124 W11t tbrt
Rutl111d &amp; 1A1t.J:I•, past M1igs MiM I I to lsi Rd. oa loft
(Hctnplot H ).left on H-..1• Holow II!'PI'OL 3/4
mi. to Salt Sltt on left. Will be sillllgtu pwstitial property
of the late Gracia Oltr I. otiMn.

Household
Goods

51
GOOD

$26,000.

Antiques

19'79 Honda molorqde,185c;c,

Etc . Don 'I S.l'-" 111 ea• BPI
114.15 (26") Taboo
54 Miscellaneous
Chalra $121.
1-000~B-1m
Public Sale
Merchandise
OPEN: 7 Doyo A Wook, I A.II. • 6
&amp; Auction
NulrM lon Products
1 ·13" TV, 125; t-11· TY, 125; Genetil
P
.M.,..,
S-12Noon
Amino Acid Body
Rt.
4 lila.. Oft Rt.-5P.II.
7 In c.n- llghtod r-----=========----~ tenary.
otans, 8301oup, Mlo luturlng
Ja&lt;kot, 14: vcA, . - . hooda. Building, wo1.-,o lou and 1at

8

Picnoc labia, Exercise bicycle. aluminum laddor,
Homalile XL chainsaw, heal lamp, Lamps, &amp; ice
cream freezer.

· Toles o loot lodoly.

66•166, gu hill, rural wallr. C&amp;n'1 beallhe ptlc8.

LIVING AOOII : Sofa And Clvllr
$171 And Up; cott.. And End
l1ttt. 179 And Up; Swinl
Rockers $7'9.

53

B.r Slools
And 4 Poddod

Merchandise

1101. NEW LISTING. COUNTRY LMIIG AT Ill
BEST - 73 1cras 11\11 ol belutlul ro11ng land, all
lsnnoblo, wlh • BR homo, t ~ bolho, Ool·ln - n .
LA, DR, FR. tul trralllfl, newlumace, M'Olw AJC
wm. tldl'lg. Allo
'&lt;55· mo1111 bam ont1 2

114-4&lt;1-3151

DINETIES: Wood

112 &amp; 314 electric drills, Sabra saw, electric skill saw,
12 volt . battery charger, hodge lrimmer, vice, grinder,
drill bn s. lool boxes, electric skill saw, &amp; misc. hand
tools .

ftO&amp;n...,,

0787. WONDERFUL BUilDING LOT - 2V, oc:ro o1
lnl&gt;rovad land, uUUtles ovaltoblo , oopt1c llloldy 011
..-.r. Convonlonl locallon lo llrWMtly o1 Rio
Gl1ndl, euy aocus lo new lnlew.y. Cll tot mort

H10. NEW LllnNG - Thlo ono won'l otoy longl 3
btdroorn homco, 2 bafho. llvi"P, room, dining room,
kltchon, !ornly room ond utllly. ~ oc. In !JOOIIocallon,
to Rio Gtonclo. Col lor oohowlng.
MIG. REDUCED 12&amp;,000 • 2 or 3 btdr . .. , kll.,
rongo, rot.,""""""" lull-mont a n d -· w..
n.talod. vtewuiCJoloRivor

cfNn 2 01 3 be.droom

llooao, proto&lt; privoto -Ina!
114-992-2428, l•v• m.... ge l

TOWNSHIP - 1 room, 2 liory homl, do• to I'Ott1
G&amp;Mia H.S. Good 101 size 661168 plua 1 utra k)4

-.n. lor_.. . . . .

new management.

loiO. f$5; homo ,.,.olo, U35;

1712. IT. AT. 554 LOCATED IN SPRINGFELD

.. ho"'''laa. Col

CounliJ Mobile Home P1rk, AI.
614-912-2167

-·
0712. OWNER WANTS houM oold. Homo hu 3
1 balh, liVIng room, dining room. Ulllll)'
morn,
Voty cc&gt;rw.-. loaotlon, R . 180 CloiO

46 Space for Rent
:llN., undar

"' t0.12 m.1 ...... 135,000.

bodn&gt;oml,

15110.

Sl.-ping rooms with cooking.
Aleo trtiler epece. All hook·~

$400.

Rlf on I

Furnished
Rooms

~=~~~ at 1120/mo. Glllia Hot11.

6

1716. GET MUCH MORE WHEN yetu buy lhls
hMhly pUlled 3 BR ooncl\ wllh LR . kldw\ wlh dintAg 1re1, ranga , ret ., 1'/, blllhs. tlec . BB heal, AJC.
patto, carport and frufl treea . In excelleli condiUon.

oaraoe.

1fler
mettlg•,

Rooms fOf" rent • WMk or monllh.

· HOI THIS PROPERTY can be bo"!11
a pacU.ge or separate. 1836 sq . II . brlctl ranch

appontments wtl:h lennaAs.

w.b•. 2 balhs, range, rei ., eowrtd Iron poo;h, bKII:
OOck, 2 car
~'x28" carport . elec. ~. c:e!Val

INn

&amp;75-2218.

45

0607. OOUBL£W10E RANCH WITH 3 IIRo, klehon

304-675-4001
Of

One b.*oom apt tor ~t . 304·

. 0101

Now SKS Rllloco, With .......
$115. Ammunition,
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12 1151100. J-ngo 380 Auto .....
$105, 2 Boondo AmOtr.. Sl., Gon!pollo. - • Uood lola,
tumlhn, healers, w... em • m1H1Hion: SW100 S20f100 CoN
to A.ll. To 10 P.M. Koop Trying
Worio boolo. 114-446-315!1.
We're In And Out Conltantty.
YrAA FURNITURE
6,.._1822, 7 Doyo Wook.
BARGAINS GALOAEI

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lolodom, 2br, Corn- 1'--------~---------1
pMitl Kitchen, WuMr, Ory11.
Carpet, CA, ,,.._..~3i .

Fumi1Md Ap.~rtment, tbr, next
to Ubrary, p~rklng, central hal,
air, referencea. 614-446-0333,
BefQt11 7p.m.

Rl. 7 close to shopping center. no home leiblum 3

52 Sponlng Goods

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-05

Downown,

• dopoolt roqulrod. 304-475-2651

lor me lnlormatlon

landlOrd averaging 130 1 mor1h . Tolal square leet
1440. Owner needs 24 hr. no1lce lo am:~e lor

R•

Flret .-..., a.alpolle, O.poetl •

1713. BRICK RANCH: Stlualed on 1 IC. m.1 UJlPif

bulking tor a smaH. buslneu. PRICE REOI.JC£0. C&amp;ll

CJNn,

&amp; lath, OownSialre,
No
Pets,
Quiet ,

ldl.., Ill lloor laundry. back porttl ard lull bue~Mnl .
Deep lol wth 0n1ry loom alloy. Bel you'lloYo I, loo.

PRICE
VACANT LAND MAJOR SUBDIVISION KNOWN
AS 'UKEVIEW ESTATES"

1801. BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN wJth constant
Income. lovely resl hOme plus !aparale living
(J.Iarters. l.Jc::eMed tor 10 resldenls. Alllu~ure and
~lpmtnl lndud&amp;d. al:ta 2 bedrm. Fairmont milt
home w~ tlJ) and fuiTVIure . 3 ac. rw't

Room•

bednns ., 1 bath, LA wnlreplac., llnklg rm.. bu•·ln

buem001.1~b-.bulklng . ~ .

Lol 11 2 .25 ac. MA.. Pfk::e $15 ,900 .
Lo112: 2.348 ac. Mtt... Prtce $21.900
Lol t3: 2 .3-48 ac. liM.. Price $1 5.900
OUT LOTS FOR SALE ...

2

BE.wTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 5341 Jocluoon Plko

ac. mil. $24 .000.
LAKEVIEW LOTS: C hoic e lol!l
With
spectacular view. You wMI want more then one. OM,
maple, dogwood and evergreen lr'"" make lhb a
IUbul'bM para€1se . Also klls lrontlrQ on Whhe Ad.
Easy access lo ag out lob aTKJ subdivision tots via
Lakeview Court on approved township owned aOO
malnlalned road . U!HIIIe! available . REDUCED

E*=ltlc .

$155/Uo .

=•od.. 30HIS-7t31 "" ~~

1751. HOME · CABIN &amp; RIVER BOITOM ovanook~ Ohio Rtttr. $37,000. 3 bedrm. rancn. tul dvlded

1638.

Utllltlu

10'1 SIJ:th snd Main Sl, newly
new appliances,
'Utllhles nol lncludod. Dopooll

loolcrog - -..

17M. KYGER CRK. AREA • 3 bedroom!, 2 bath!,
ranch home and CIIIJOI1 . outbulldWlg!, garden ~I 1

$20~ .

mo plus etec, Bordman Furni-

Nrnodeled wHh

REDUCED $45,700 • In lown location, 2

175. Stuo!HIO AOIII._, 71 Vlno
St., 51t-«I-'73M.

Hampton Hollow Rd., Salem Center, Ohio

1 bedroom apts. good loeaUon,

1710.

rongo, lw· Konmoro
1115; Wloiilpool dryor,

Hie. 2br, Mobile Home For Rent
Out St . Rt. 218, 8 Miles Ref I

2 BR apa&amp;11M11t• W1 Middteport,

REGISTER: Vldorian , excelent condUon. Down by
the Olio Rlveo ~ Gal_,..., 01\. Vel"/ e~nl tunHJI·
ttte-century hOme . 4 bedrm .. 3 balM, lbrary. useful
alii&lt; and CO"l'leiO -..111. 5 llr09lac;etl, gllS heal
wllh central air, gara~. RomantiC gazebo, pat6os,
beaullluly \landscaped . AI lovingly m11n1alned.
Pote:1M.I bed and breakl1151 Of 11HTWUn residential .

gold

10:00 a.m.

,_ly romodolod, low utllltlao,
1\o p.lls, $220 per mmt1,
depMII rtquiNd , 614-992·2381
do yo

ttvlng, 2 wb rrrep61ce5 , laml~ nn., buln· ln ldlc:hen
w!barbecue. 2 car garage, 1!1 Roof llundfy.

....

Furnished 2 bedroom mobile
home, all elec, 304-6"75-6512 If
no •nswer '-•"~~• message.

1*441-2583.

ffl'l. HIOOEN TREASURE • SU&lt;pr'Algtt ~w P""'
o1 $110,000 . ~.~ ... 111an 5,000 sq. n. oiiiVIng spooe
and large rms . throughout Thll wei constructed
home oilers 4 bedrms ., 2 balh:S, 14)per and lower

_

Household
Goods

16Hi.

2 Bedroom., Upstalrw Apart ment, Untumllt.d, No Ptts.

0608. READY FOR OCCUPANCY • NAnONAL

the ONo RIYer situated on 2'!. acres rM. Pr~rty.
also lealures a 3&amp;"8 melal bulkllng and a 1-4x2-4

t7H. GREAT INVESTMENT - 3 l ·lledroom
apartmenls. Ful balhs. lvlrtg room . kitchen . carpet In
llvhg room, vinyl noor cover1~ In kllchen and bath.
Preeentty ranled lor S235 • monlh. Weier paid by

614-

EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 446·1897

1771. VINTON CO . FARM : Located on SA 160.
ABSiotabJG 3 be«tm., bnck home Wibe.9emenl. Also I
1979 Academy mol&gt; lie home has 2 bedmls .. kl .,
dining area. LA aoo bath, bam wJstalta, tool shed ,
dllcbn hOuse, 50 ac. rM . MostfV ttlabta.

30"

lng condition. 304-47S-N&amp;e .

514-446-3697,

qulr.cl. 6~·1511 .

RUTH BARR, REALTOR, ~~6-0722

$150·

245-4223.

VIRGINIA SMITH, HROKER,388·8826

OEBORAH SCITES, REAL TOR, 446-&amp;81)6
LYNOA FRAlEY, REAl IDA, 446-6806
MICHAEL MILLER, REAL TOR, 4~6 -5806
PATRICIA ROSS. REALTOR. 245-9575

-

Evergr. .n.

2 ballroom apt, $350. month all

DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 4~H806

AoltlgoraiD&lt; ff, SU5; relrlg .,
harvoot g;;id, $115; rolrtg. oldo by

WoohOf,

utllhloo pold, no HUD, 304-67S2722.

,.,.-:::) /
rQJl 17'. /
~ /) CR
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKESTHl DIFHRENG
~(/~ ~, ~md
.· ~ (;;)~.I.e

5341.

....;..., ..... ~i 30" ho..-

tbr Counlry S.nlng, $225Jt.lo.

Real Estate General

coli 304-475-1450.
R. a s. Now, Uood ond Amkluo
tumltwo, Uooon, W'Y. 304·1'13-

Vonlly • Top $21; 831; 141; 151.

you could all&lt; lor • ond

a 2 ·29

Wellston, Ofdo 4Satz. '" Penn's
WarthouH Cornp&amp;a1 . 17.:11 MIN

NowNood
HOUIIhold fumlshlng. 1/2 mi.
Jorolcho Rd. Pt. Plouonl, WY,

GE Aetrlgentor, Sun111y electric
stove with 2 ovens. Good worll.·

44

8/1-1/a]· a IS·8/22;

Lane,

PICKENS FURNITURE

1 bedroom trailer, ~y Ollll'n
utilities plus d•poslt, 304-6752535.
1Zd0 2 Bedrooms, lociHon :

Nice 3 bedrooms snd 2 bedrooms, large y.rd, comer A1nd
and Ptrth St . Kam.tlgll , &amp;t4-44671173.

I
clylmtoon4~m.1omo
Ihoi ol!o
o lol sot up 1 troller. In tile rnM&gt; oedlon ol
lho homo you wll lind 3 BR, t balh, LR. 011-!n klchon, lomlly
room, buament and 2 car garage. Pbs several addl:tonal rooms
lhal ooukf be opened to the main Medon or lad as a 111f11811Jual.
II*"&lt; - your llouae can provide you a home ond mo1&lt;o lho
P"''J1101U lor you, lool Priced lor o quk:lt sale. Call us todayl

WlrehouM : 114-384-

4115, 2232 Hooey Suck..

2br MobUe Home FOf Rent , Tol1l
Elec. No Pete. 6M-367·11138.

SI..P1 ortdookleg
OCitll, -Reli-t
Row .d aoH -SIS.
jl'lvall poal. .... rafts
IW.... L f•lihrilaflot
-,~;:;van..
cal
ft.
I SMt.a, ilK.,
446·2206, Mottlays tin
frWayt, 9-5.
Illest darts •• tWalaille:
S/30-6/': 6/6·6/13;
1/4-1/11;~2S-I/1;

Real Estate General

Cabinet

Dopooh Roqulood. 614-256-6251.

"'spriq--·
f.

In Stoc;k. 55.00 \Jp. MoUohan

mltwa, 114-4*71M4.

pletely tumlsh~ . washer 6
dry11, air cond, no pelS, 304·

CHANNEL MARKER RENTALS
Mort~ Myrtle ltad!

POSITIVE I.D.

Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer
614-245-5152
Li(. 3S16 and bonded.

Very ntoe 3 bedroam hou.. In

IM8·252fi.

t714, VACANT LAND w/some llmb6r Cheek thl!l
oul. Clay T~ . 45ac . m1.

1117 . - lrall«, 12ft. X
!lOft. In good condhlon, 114-992·
lllf7

UIIIHies. 614-446-1804.

2 bedroom mobile home com-

Call 446-9786
or 992-6637

C- Froozor,

Air Conditioners, Refriger..ors,

51

Household
Goods

51

Dryor I~--.
Color T.V., Microwave, 814-2581238.

2bdrm ., 8135 11'111..- on Itt. Ohio
Alwr Campground. Electric,
water, tr111'1 ,· and tot paid,
$.250r'mo, 6M-98S..256 or !514-

0171.

_. to apprtcate,

Mt. Vernon Ave. 1m1ll home, 2
bedrooms, b~tement, garage,
no pets, reference &amp; depolh ,._
quiNCI, 1250. month. 304-1752651.

Unfurnished 2br House, No lnskle PMe, Aeferenc.s Atoqulred .
O.poe;h 1
1250/Mo. Ptu1

1637.

.-vallable.

$14,500. 304-4~.

5054 .

eHtclenc:y cott•g•, unlqu.

2 Uoblle HomH, Good loulion, Call 614-446-9786, 614-992-

LOI: C S acres 1M - S27 .500 .
SUBDIVJSION LOTS TO SHARE tt6 CF ELECTRIC
INSTALUITION. - WATER AVAILABLE

From Gallipor.s, Take Rt. 141, Turn Left Onto
Rt. 775, Turn Right Onto Patriot Road.
Watch For Signs.

Dayton~

BMCh: 1br, Oceanfront, bilhwsahet",
Mictowave,
On
PremiSM, WID, Pool, Holtvb,

Household
Goods

ond boautllul, 304-6~~42

All

Fatrmont 2br,
Conlnol All, Uloo- Goo, Hut,
Froo Sol-Up! 18,1150. 614-446~

-wooct ...,.
ln&gt;n1 porch,
lfied,- outbulkl6ng,
utn
a :1 burn.r, major app' :c... ~· of extrn, must

71n-18. Condominium,

51

173-5958.

flJIO

rooM W

8~3.

Real Estate General

t715. VACANT LAND - 011 Sl. AI. 160 clo~e to
lown. 10 ac:. rWI. Seduslon lor a hlllop home. Utllles

11a:lroorM on pt'lvlte ~. b4-t.v~

A1nt: $350. • O.poeft. 1514-448a

HouM In Clifton, WV. 4 BA, $225
mo. plus ullllll•. Must have
relerenc. I deposit. 304-Tn-

2 bedroom hou• wlbalh, 5
miiM on Rt. 62, 1200. mo plua
daposll, 304~75-3298.

LolA 5.322 1M · 532,500.

l1170 tnabt.. home, e1e eond, 3

B1Hm.nl, 4 Mllea From Town,

s...... &amp;14-3118-rnltl.

Houses lor Rent

41

2 BalM. Full

State Route 7
Near Ohio
River Plaza

Auctioneer: Mark Hutchinson
614-698-6706
Licensed and bonded in Ohio
Assoc.: Fronk Hutchinson
614·698-6706

Cl&gt;Pof1unlly

Approx . 75 pes . furntture including Oak Hall Seat;
Excellent spinning wheel; hoosier cabinets; walnut 6
drawer clark spool cabinet ; yarn winder ; washstands ;
3 drawer oak file cabinet; desk; Jolly cupboard &amp;
more excellent furniture.
Stoneware; Lg. freehand churn ; other freehand
pes. marked pes.: donaghhos; 1 gal. Marrisburg, Pa;
1 gal. Wheeling, W.Va. Jug; 2 Gal. Freehand
Gallipolis, Ohio Jug; Palanlina W Va. Jar with horses;
Greensboro, Pa. Jar; 10 gal donaghho Churn; and
mora. Brass Cash Regislar; Brass dovetailed kenla;
largo set of Sterling Silver Tableware ; Roseville
Uncle Sam Bank ; several other rosevtlle pes.; 20 hal
pins: ktds 2 pe. riding train ; 2-Shirley Temple dolls &amp;
olhors : granno : oxcellent buner mold, good
glassware including 2 Epergne's old marbles : good
old Coke trays &amp; 44X50" Porcelin Coke Cola S&gt;gn ,
and much . much mora.

Rentals

412!

These items have been moved from storage in a
garage and basemenl ol an Athens home. Good
collectible auction.
Two highboy dres sers. desk . victro la, old bed ,
sorpentone dresser bases, other dressers , buggy seal,
wagon wheels. stands , rod&lt;ers , old army field stove,
small pot belly stove, dovetailed dough box. early
dovetaoled copper bowl, caned wheelchair, old
baskets. campaign torch, quilltng frames, drying racks,
pictures, graniteware, birdcage and stand, hat boxes,
candle drying rack , wood advertising boxes, flour
lamp, stone jars, old iron1ng boards. rag rugs, hook
rugs, old dishes, 10 speed bike, bird houses, other
small ant;ques and misc. rtems
Terms cash or chock w11h positive ID . Not
responsible for loss or accidents. Taking consignments
for our June 28 Antique Auction.

CONTRACT - Prime location . Eastern Ave.

HOWERY'S
Antique and Colledible Sale June 14, at
11 a.m. at the McArthur Co.
Fairgrounds in McArthur, Ohio 93N.

With 310 FL A01d Frontagt. Call
614-44&amp;-3H2 Or 114-446-111138.

ltr Holphal, $39,000. 814-446-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
"MIM

Av.lllble. 3 V2 Ulln

Sunday, June 14, 1992 at11 :00 a.m.
Take SO &amp; 32 West of Athus a1d exit onto SO
W. towards McArt~ur. A~etio1 is a quarter mde 01
the left. Sigu wdl be posted.

1736.

·2 Badrootne. F~ml; Room, Full
"Siae , ... menl,
oodbumlng
~11444111H.

ful Building Slit. Niee lAYII
Drlv.w•~.
Aurel
WaiM,
Eloctolchy, And Phono Sorvlco

Hut(hinson Auction In(.

25 Ac:rta: OH Lincoln PUta, 20

Fenced. Wooded: 2
1450 Sq. A. Couot 51, Goltlpolls. Creeks,
Driveways,
Elaetlic &amp; Water T1p.
Kon MOfllon, 614-441-0971, 614· EIMrMnl To
Raccoon Cniek
446-1066

,_ '*"

. ...... Won,

O.J. Whlto Roo.~" 18 Acroo,
- l y Woodod, woth A Booutl· Over 2 Acraa Ot Surveyed Lind

46 Space tor Rent

34

Oti--Polnt Pleasant, WV

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

FEDERAL CASE

Fmanc1al

June 7, 1992

June 7, 1992

AU. DECKED Ol1f
Fronl and noar docks enhanco this 3 bedroom
rancto lituated on a droadond slr8ol You11
"P!'nociato lha large lamtly 100111 and officiant
lcitohen and utilily af80. Pnood within yoor
moans at $59,500.
1512

VALUE • ThE MOST SPACE FOR YOUR
MONEY - And the"''" just no comparioon to
lhis ... 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, large lrvin9 room ,
don. Iorge lomily room or dining room, 20x40
inground pool, large bam lllld several build ongs, al this p4ua 6.190 ocn.,, m~ . Ready for
you to move onto lor only $69,000. Dial !hal
phone now!
K 17
LOCATION · LOCATION - LOCATION
Aslc anybodyl "'.ocaboo is most importanl """"
sah ctillg 1 home.· H8f9's a 6 room home on 1
acno with a great voew ol lho river and orly 5
miles !rom i:lwn. lrcludos 3 bedrnoms.
firaplaoo. Nil basoo&gt;ent. lj8l899 and bam.
$59,500.
1238

UNIQUE STARTER HOME
Not your -oago ,.., cl the mill starter home.
Thia ocllogonlf ohaped home ofton a diflononl

SHUT YOUR EVES - And imagine your
family enjoying lhio custom homo featuring 4
badrooma. 3 batho, living room. dining 100111.

floor pion. 3 bedroom•. t bath (plumbing lor
socond in ba-t), loving room and lamoly
room. Wooded lot. DMd and straol close lo
t&gt;wro. Pric:ad lor.,. budget minded at ~4.900.

family room, 2 kitchens, den or offioa .

1234

Prnfeuionally landacaped 2.24 acreo. mil, 3
car garage. Now add a ratrslhing inground
pool. Irs not a dnNlm, its a new way ol i'- .
CaN Carolyn loday for your priv•t. viewing .

Kl4

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS
And let income '""" IWltal holp with paymenta.
Cone- bloclc building wilh --fiN lor
c.r1)'00AI inducing .. -ipmonl ond inventory.
FllonWI income '""" double- 00 prnperly.
Cal lot mora details.
ts13

FIRST AVENUE - Vory nice 2 olory home is
waiting lor you ond , " " lomily. This homo has
been oompltltefy ren'l()jJIId in very fine taste.

Foallrao inWdo 4 - s. 2t/2baths, lami·
~ room, lormol dininV room ond lonnal living
room. Boautiluf loilchon with ciMny cabineb. 2
firapiacel and .. ry OtlractivO ollie lllai!C41M.
Boautilllty ........._. ingruund pool in b.o: ~
yard. Of slnMII partdng. ~ us o coli lor an
appoinlmont.
1205

OvERiLO()i(iiK; RIVER - Charming home
located along Rt 1 onoro a p4eaaant way c1
life. Whilo the boautifU Ohio RiVIIr atrob along
in the Iron~ you can enjoy o ralaxm~ dip on tho
inground pool . Well decorated insodo with 3
b"'*ooms. wcodwoolt with cl1aoacter and a lull
basement.

Garden

spot,

wrap -around

12t7

driva""Y $5&lt;rs.

RURAL RARITY
home or1
SL At. 554 jusl 5 moles !rom Cheshino Enjoy
13.9 acnas goes Wtlh this 4 bedroom

the prrvacy and con'llen•ence at a price you can

alloro. ~7 . 500

t501

WAHl A BEAUTY OF A HOME W1TH011T
A BEAUTY OF A PRICE? - Than tlis 1988
Fainnont Town:!houoe ( 14a70) os lor you. Largo
kvmg room , d"ng area With built-in butlol,
large ma!lar bedroom woth bui~-in dosl&lt; ond
d......,r, 2nd bedroom, lame bath woth ""'"""
~ - Enclosed taiO'ldry aroa woth new W1itfJx&gt;o1
washer and &lt;*yer. Outdcx:&gt;r anta offe,., ni&lt;»
dock. concAII8 block sidowaNca and storago
bu~clng. located on a ranted lot or move to
your own lot Ofter&amp;d at a p nce that can 't be
beaL 0~ $1 5.500!1
KtO

WOODEO LOTS _ Just off Rio GrancM
Centerpoint Road. 2 .5 acres to 5 acrea .
Pmt&amp;ctive :wstrictionll. All tree covered tota.

Ideal location near college. Lot_us ohow you
the t&gt;IJ in tois quiel ..,oood setting.
1237

"Misc.·

Lkensed &amp;Bo1ded I• favor of t~e
States of Ohio &amp; W.Va.
Terms: Cash
PosHive ID.
Refrashmeats
•Not respo•s•le for ocddtats or
loss of property•

'
I

\~llSB1AN 1~ &amp;12\1~ K~
~&amp;t4

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch - 441·1007
Loretta McDade - 446-n29
Sonny Garnes - 446-2707
B. J. Hairston - 446-4240

•

•

�Tlmee Sentinel
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

63

63

Livestock

2 Cf'Oe.lbrN OCIWa Whh CIIYII,

• • - rnllkoro, 114-1142-3020

Cancoolo l Plullc Soollc
T,onllo, Jot Aoratlon Tonko. Aon

lhtri,WHkAyll.

63

Livestock

pol-

Livestock

71

u~ Regl•
bolly plgo, SIOOoo., 814-1112- to&lt;od puoot..od, 114-lm 1110.

FOf Nil: miN•ture VlllnamtH
2050

Umoutln c:.nt. lor

Purebrld Umoualn Dull, $800,

814-8111-m!.

Evant EntlfDfh II, JIICbon, 0H

l.-s37-M28Aegllttred Oulrt., HorMI,
Ptootlo And 11oc1o1 CUI-' atnch
54 Miscellaneous
Pofnt - · 114-24!'&gt;11235.
thru sa 1nc1t In Stock. Ron
Merchandise
1Evont, Joel&lt;- Ohio. 1 . - I _ _ _ _ _...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;._ _ _..., Two burro yNrllngl, hilt mlnj..
' 131'11528.
Atlnhow cleaning ay.tem wtth

atura, cell 114-112-2630.

I

1411.
Aecondhklned

l
d&lt;yo10, ooch f100 ond up. Wo
urvic11ll mak11. The W11h1t &amp;
Dry• ~. 114-441-21144.

w•hlrt

Surptua Army C.mflllug• cloth-

doyo-houoo. 304-273-511511.
Building
Supplies

Block, brick, MWif' plpe1, win·
dowl, llnllla, 1tc. C\1ude Wll'l·
tm, Rio Grenell, OH Call ~
245-5121.

STEEL BUILDINGS: Focta&lt;y
Oloeounl!, Dopooft Fortloto,
Oddl l tndl, SIVI $$$ 1,200
To 20,000 sq. ft. LlmHod kupply
Mull Sell By et.:JO/e2. 814-4460721.

56

Pets for Sale

G.-o ond Supply Shop Pol
0.-olng. All lwoodo, otyloo.
lima Ptlt Food O..llr. Julll
Colil14-448-0231.
AKC Box•
1200 Eoch,

Pu-

w..llton, Ohio: i514-3M-Si11.

AKC Chi.- Pugo, Polclng"!'o1
Mlnlotu10 P l - . hond ,..
Cocttotlol, boby nbbi1o, 3041'111-2207.
AKC
Choco1111
Llbr1dor
Fomolo 1 112 Yoooo Old, 4 Wk.
Choc:ololo
PUPfl'l.
1400
lloliVSOII Soporolo. 114-441-8111.
AKC Reg. Enatloh bulldog pup-., 1450, e~n M-F, a...cpm, John

w.m.r. 304-453-6352 ••kdl)"'

only.

regt.t..U Blll.nhlua
Donnon Shopho•d pupploo,
to go June ZBlh, 614-318AKC

:;2'

llnlpowynd CoHooy' CFA p,._
Uana &amp; Sllmne Ktnena. 614148 3BU Aft• 7:00 p.m.

71

Autos lor Sale

1976 Monte C.rto, Runt Good
Englno, $350; l.oworj Double
Koyboood, Hoildoy Modol $300.

114 448 4&amp;12 Ell. 260 Aolo FO&lt;
Lori.
1988 Ford FMtlvl c.pd, AMIFM

St•eo, Approx. se,ooo uu., 10
1111• Pw Oollon, Eloollonl
Running Condhlon. Pay ott AI
13 200. PERFECT FOR BEOIMNING DRIVEASI Coli 814-1111221!15 Dop, 814-MI.ntM Alto• S
P.M. CliiEAT CAA AT A GREAT
PRICEI

72

Autos tor Sale

June 7, 1992

Trucks

for Sale

71

1
,-1117---Piy-.,.mout-h-T..
-. .-,,.-55-,000- 1m Font F-150 tnocll. good 300
Mlieo, Root Good C«dflon, -or. :10-3011.
$2,000; INa Font LTD, V-t, 1m QMC Til-Axle 15 Fl. Alum
Good ~tlon, 13,000 Mlleo, Bod Boll Wtth/WithoiO Bod{· tm
tl 1~; 1111 Plymouth Aollont QIIC 5500 Sorioo With A, Uft
Sw, 55,000 lllloo, Aool Good Choot.,, CoM Afto• 7 P.ll. 514Condltlon. f3,100; I 1111 Font PU
325
Root Good Condftlon, $150. 114- 2511-6 .
251-12St
1173 Gnnd Prl.- Pontiac, Good
1181 Chew
Condition, Rune Good, $800.
tUI Pont ~l., 1 r·~ eon Aft"' 2,oop.m. &amp;t4-&lt;4&amp;-31N.

Nl••n

p~95;

S.ntn1

1887

Buldl Slcrflowl&lt; $2,191; 11117 11171
V.lllowogon
Aobbi1
Font Eoc"" OT $2,315; 11188 Automol~ Tra,.mloolon, GCOd
Pono. Oron Am tt,7D5; 111115 Font Condition, I150.1M-441.o&amp;20.
Tempo S1,1IS; 18815 Okls Ciu• 1182 Ford Thunderbird, SJood
$1,895;

Transportation

1. 17x Ihitl vllllty &amp; lop $29, $39, $49, $SO.
2. 30xlhllllty &amp;lop $79.95.
l36x27 or 36xlhlllity &amp; top $119.95.
4. 41• vCIIItles fr• $109.95 lo $199.95.
S. Ovor 125 wCIIItlos Itt slocillo choose frOIL
II. 30• 4oublt door ••dldnt cabinets, Modi• Oak
$59.95 ar 21or $100.00.
7. 16.. Slagle door 11ttldno cabmol, 11~11 oalt $29.95
or 2 for $50.00.
l8' 4• kitchen starter unit, lito oalt, 2-33• bm; 1-33•
slnkllast; 1-8'4• (0111111' Top; 2-3330 wall $499.95 111tlt
prlct.
9. 5' slll'ttr unit, hto oalt, 1-60• baso; 1-60• couotll'
lop; 1-60" woll unit, $319.95 unit prlco.
10. 10' Kltchoa Slll'ttr Unit, Uto oalt, 2-48• Bast; 136• slnlt bast; 1-10 ft. counter lap; 1-42• wall; 1-41•
wal, $579.95 tm1t prko.
11. 5' Chaclwoocl Starter Unft, $351.00
6' Chadwoocl Start• IW~ $385.00
12. 57. Kitchen Startw Unit, 1-57"' base; 1-57• counter
lop; 2-12• walls, S179.9 5 unit prlco, Medium oak
w/whitt doors.
13. Utllty Cabloots, $89.95 wltlte; 18• Wldt, 1r dtop,
u· ht!lh.
14. f• Kitchen Slll'tll' Unit, Motlu11 Oalt, $299.95 Unit
Prlco. Untlttd a-try.
IS. 8' Kltchon St•t• Unit, Motlwtt Oat, $329.95 Unit
Prlco, Unttd a-try.
16. 10' llltche1 Stll'llf Unit, Mttlu• Oalt, $479.95 ~It
Prlco, Ullllttd auantty.
17. Ovtt' 4000 fool of (oualtr Top II 5toclllo Goose
from $5.00 por loot.
18. 33•r22• Double lowl Sttinloss StHI Sink 6 1/2
Dtep, $34.95.
19. 3rrw Doablo lowl Porcoltia slnlt, $1195 wltlto

Ing, Sm111 comblll gear, le1tt"r
bootl {FIMII IUJpiUI clothing
otoollft9 polco tl2. doan plocool
Sam somtrvln1'1, our 281h yMr,
5 mll11 Eut 1-77, A1veniWOOCI,
by Sondyvlllo Pool Olllco, Frt,
Sit, Sun. Noon-1:00 PM, other

55

Young plgo, I -lcl old, good
too~cma, ral1ed by 444 member,
lt4-2a&amp;:l272.

CABINET WAREHOUSE
384·4115
2232 Honeysuckle Lane
Wellston, Ohio 45692
In Penn's Warehouse Complex

ltlechmenta, ltiU under waroonty, lllcl , _ f750. 304-tJS-

wv

OH Point

1tae

Ford

M~o~lt•ng

condlli!l!'z 11,000 mllel, $1300

tt,llll; 111111 Dodgo Dortono; 080, ..,._773-!130 or 114-11112Iuick Slcyhowlt, tt,!9!;
7.
BlD Auto Soloo, HWY 160 N. 1141 ·
01-4 4-40 IBel.
1U3 Plymouth A1U1nt. NMd1
lUI ~
c•- t•- ~ 4 Motor Work. 1N4 Plymcdh
""""vy
,,.vi ... r .- ·1 R•lltnt Otmt~d Front End.

1uto., to.d.d, I1,000MI, neea

r.r.::~· 114-112·111'111 ...

B

tua..

... ~·~·· ,,._ 8-8788.

1184 Okla BrGugh•n, 4dr., til U·

Font T - 2 d- ... 0
. . . . . . . .ygood condhlon, ti900,
-·....-.good ' cond.,., Pome&lt;
loet1N It 132 BuH1rnut •
olr,
.......,
85,000111, 13e00, 114-DII-4418
oy.
1110 C.mera T·Topt, 30,000 18815 C.mlrG, Y-4, 1 utomtllc
-2112 Aft 01 5 p 11
looke good rune good, 12500'
Ill•-• -·
•~•r
' '
514-1112-238il 0&lt; 814-"U-2357. '
1980 Cullaaa Cetal1 U,OOO
Mil-. I Speed, M1lntanance 1155 Dodgo Sholby Cho•go•
Turbo, 5 aptMt, r~tltver, good
K•n· ~~ a.. ut~oogoo. eon mpg &amp; ohotp, okolng 12,500.
11 4
8.

304 ... 7~306.

19tl Z·211U1o S.7, $11,300. new,

1p..:lal order, mu81 111. S.tllng Hl85 Mercury Grind Mtrqul•
below whol...te 112,800,. 30rf:. 302, Y-8., AY1omaHc. Full Power:
Cuatom WhMII, Very Shlrp
875-2332.
Co•l 13,600. 814-446-7215.

1888 A1nger, 1985 112 Eaeort
Wogan; Both Good Condhlonl

11,1111. 114-161-4623 Coli Aft11
1p.m.

Autos tor Sale

76

1183 OIIC hotllon pickup, .....,

M A . Alum. loll $225 ; 12 fl
Flbergt.•• But I Trailer' Wilt.
Motor, I TroUing Motor $5.50.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

6pm .

bod, _ . ""91no, 4 opood,
4x4, new banery, $1,150, good 6M....1.Q811.
cond, 304-882-3713
16ft Gl111tron IMMI, Votvo,
Pente, lnbollrdloutbolird tnd
lr1Uer, $2l85, l14-te2·3SU thtr
1982 Ford £colin. V1n E-150, 1985 B•r Liner C1prl eueon
$990. 304-67S.2218.
readv, tfl Ktlltotia, $8,500.
304-41S..&amp;M7
"
tt"'55:::--::F:-ord
-:--E
=-conol
--::l:no--::2:5:-:0:-.,.~ negolleblt ,

oJS-3m.

averMnga l•ave mesuge.

S.1ray Mid CatMn,
-4 , lndotld
HNd,

1986 22Ft

1917 .IHp Cherak11, 5 Speed, -4

Sleep•
Load~

Wl!h E.rtrn!

Eil:~lltAI

WD, AC, Ono Ownoo, 614-446- Condition, ti14-lti1.otl5ff
1721 For Oony Or Cllrtnce.
1981 Chevy 4x4, Air, AMIFM

C1111t11, Century Topper, PS,
PB, Hitch, 5 Spd, And Mor1!

5!,000 Mltoo. v...-,
114-446-88711.

N~ol

sa,JOO.

1988

lf.ft

Johnson,
power lilt

tirm,

Four.Winna,

AM-fM

a..,

BOATERS
J.S. Mtrine Service, S.vlng All

Your Boating HHdl, P1r11, k - ·
cnsorl11, Two Cycle Oil And
S.rvke. 614·256-6160

304-t7W0'111.

1885 Hanc:t. XA 350, Excellent

11117
4WD
Fonl B""""'
II Eddlo
Bowo&lt;,
Exc.Nent
CondHion,
2.1
EA SI,IIINI. 614-4-13.
1888 Fonl Touruo l, ol•, AIM'II
ct.IHIII, FWD, 111cellent condJ.
lion, 1fter 5:00 614 US 3044,
814-448-4434.

llcllo •P'•Yod wllh HAPPY
JACK OROPOEAD FLEA-TICK
IIIST? Thoy lkop doodl FD&lt;
doOI I Cltl. Weier bliNd.
SOUTHERN STATES, :104-tJS2710.
~._..,...
Blut~ Tk:k Coon
HDund pupa, wonned I Ytc-

- • · • 10

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

51

53JI.P528.

Instruments
W.med To Buy: Good Used
Plano, ANSOnably Prh::ed. Call

814-387-'11171.

58

Fruits

STRAWBERRIES- You Pick, Wo
Ptck. Cont1ln1111
Provldld.
Opon 8-f 11-f, Sol 6-!, Cloood
Sundly • T1Y1or'1 Berry Patch,
Kerr Rd. 114i4e 8692, Or 814245-6178.

59

For Sale
or Trade

For Sill or Tr1de for c1r, nlc1 12
n tllhlng bolt, tully equipped,
$800. 3114-375-5001.

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME - 2600 aq. ft. ol ~ving space,
3 badoooms, 1112 ball1s, localed on 1o acras end botdors
Raccoon Croek, Groon and Gallipolis schools. CALL
NOW. PRICE REOUCEDIII

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

HOME LOCATED IN GALUPOUS - 2 bedrooms,
bath , living room, kitchen, nice larga moms, 3

61

Fann Equipment

180 AC Trtctor Wl1h H..ston

ltound 81111 $7,950; 606 lnt'l
Tractor Whh 3 Bottom Plow
P,UO. 114-288-6522.

1MI DluliZI.IU. 5215 compact/l'lnch

tractor,

like

new,

tlhp dlolol hydrootatlc dlivo, 4
wheel drive, Itt rNr blade, front
end loeder, !1ft re1r mower
whell, WllghtsL.. 105 hf IOtll
time, ~-aere after s~noPM .

comblnallon
lloc* I horN tl'lll•r. Good
conclhlon. Low mllugo. Go~
24'

~neck

nNzed w1U1 I t.nderl, rubbtlr
nocw mill, rntny Olher flllurt • .
$2800. 304.e'IU40II.

Bnuohhogo, con doll•w, 814-843UII.
Fot Sail Or Tndl For Clttll lntemltkmll Tractor Model BU4

Olooot 11.600. 814-4411-1012 Aftor
1:00.
Fot 8111: PTO Mtnure SprNdtr,

Com

~'tan,

Pllntm, Culllvalarl 1
D11kl, N.w HoJ/111a

&amp;.l.,.,e And RDUnd B11ef1,
RaD•, Hly IInde, Mowen,

Condltlonoro,
- Equfptnont.
· Com
PlciiMo, Otlw
- · • Fomo lladol_,, Jocll-

eon, ottla, IM~..al44.

Wonlod: Form mtoltl_, ol ou
ltlndo. Got !""}'lnayo&lt;o wont to
loll Coii8144M 1040.

63

porches, nic&lt;&gt; lot. PRICED AT $32,000. Roma Wood Owner - Realtor.
HOME AND 2 ACRES M or L - 3 bedooomo, 1 bath,
living room, kitch1n, firepl1ca , and unfinish•d
basemonl. PRICED AT 136,500.
LOCATED ON UNOOLN PIKE - 3 bedrooma, living
room. kitchon, tamoly 100111, batlt, now caopet, otorago
b&lt;Jildng, Y, ocno M or l CALL TO SEEII
HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553 - II rooms, 4
bedrooma, 2 bath•. living room, dining room, ~
kitchens - one in baumant; almost 3 acres, lru1t
traea, collar, garage and storage b&lt;Jilding. CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENTTO SEEL
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS - Local8d on Rt. 7
(Euroka), 30'x38' block building will1 otonogo In
basomonl. 70 ft. trontage on At 7. Lot ouna to Ohio
River. Was uMd os convenient mart. OAASTICALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY S34,900.00.
FOR SALE - 40 aero fann locat.d 8 mioo "" Slota
Routo 141 on Uncoln Pi"-. Tho homo haa 7 roomt
and ball1. Tho no ia a bam ond olhar oulbulldingi- Aloo
a lonn pond and lllba«X&gt; bolO.
NICE BRICK HOME - Locattd on Bultrtlltl'load - 3
bedooomo, living room, kilchon with dining area, I
boll1, utility room, and a 2 car lllfaiiO unattachtd. TV
Sat*lita. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
HOME • ACREAGE IN WALNLrr TWP. - 2 bedroom a,
img room, kildton and ba!h. HouM ramodolad II
ago, oloclrlc, b. hN\ 78 acnoo m or I will1 tobocco
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

40 -10 lb. piGo lol' oolo, 514-M..
2017.
Anaue And Chi-Anau• Bl1clc
1u11t R....,.bly P,lcod. Siolo

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERnES
NEW U8TINQ. SPRING AVE . ;I" thia

4
bedroom, I ball1, wood end brid&lt; nutdo ,.;111
f11mily room, dining ooom, don, lull ba....,.,~
finopfa.-, and gu hot water "-•~ buU.r'a
.,.,by, oncloood lront pordl, baaulilul bow
window wlwindow lOot end much more. Only
$32,000. call today. II ...,, loll long ot that

· -

·

·· - ~ ..... - ~ . .-

·-

-

·

·

· -

-

- - ·-

- ....

- - ·· -

TOWNSHIProom modom houM, 2 full bath, 4 Ia~•
bedroom a, tamily ooom (22'126'), all cedar wtll1
bakony, much more. Wait until you He thia
one. A large bam wlmilkhouse, silo, unload.r
and toeding oquipmonl, ll"od paotura. The
potantial hora is graall Ba•c tobacco quota f&lt;X
1992 sal at14,6691bo. Mako your appoinbnonl
aoon aslho cropo need to ba planlad.
1436
CLOSE TO TOWN - 4 badroomo, 2 ball11,
iving, dining, famly roomo, naiiJral gao hoal,
&lt;»ntral air. Aolcing 174,900.
t42•

..,.._LAND AND LOTS-.....
NEW USTINGI- BUILDING LOTSIIt
4 loto baing each approx. I and 113 acra,
county walar ovaiablo, road lrontage along SR
554. Ctlloday tor mora lntonnationl
1441

31 WOOOED ACRES in Soull1woatem
School• al88. Alooacly hat wator lap. Six miloo
to Rio Grando. Cal Now.
f4211
ACREAGE - From I to 5 acnzo in city - ··
Reotriclod. Rural wator avaiablo. Gooon Twp.
1417

city-··

NOT REBTRICTED - Mobilo homo or horne
I1Nidy acruga on olola hqowoy in
county water and ooptic alroady thora. Cal
loday
1411
Raocoon Townohlp ........ao acru ..........$36,000
Raccoon Twp ................ 70 IICNa........... $45,000
He~oon Twp ................81 acNo .. ......... 52t,500
Huntington Twp............. 62 ocrao........... $25,000
HunWlglon Twp........62.(13 OCNI........... $17,600
HunWlglon Twp ............ 12 acraa ........... .$10,700
GEORGES CREEK AD.- 1.16ac,.. rn.1 with
IPP.rox. 90' mad frontage. Ready for you to
build. AIUog only
Calloday.
1411

sa.soo.

CITY SCHOOLS- 10 acNa ol vacant land .
Convonionllocalion. Aoi&lt;ing only 120.000.
1448

MINI FARM - Noar Crown City has 1)I atory
ho1111 will1 • bedrooma, kitchen and living
room. 1 car dttacload garage, shop b&lt;Jilding
end shad. M on 17 acraa of wooded gt0101Ci
only $36,600. A good buy!
1428

..

· -

·

~.

.. . . . . . . . . .

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

-

, , ·-

·

-

· ·

·

- ~M

storage. Home is fully carpeted an d has 3 bea'ooms, 1 1/
2_baths, mea deck, screened 1n porch, eq..~ippad kitchen,
d1n1ng room, Anderson windows, and a hall basement.

r r I' r r I' r r 1

• r=·M r I' 1·
~
Plumbing

Somelhing lor DAD : A detached 2 112 car garage will1
WANT PERFECTION? HERE IT lSI Located in Baum

&amp;
Real Estate General

NEW LISTING- DEXTER CR 10- Older 1 1/2 stol'f home
with 4 bedrooms. Home has newer paint &amp; paper inside.
located on 1 13 acres th1s property 1ncludes drilled well ,

lruit cellar. sheds, porches and garden area . IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION I $15,000

Oolllpollo, Ohio
814-446-3888

FLATWOODS RO.- A BEAUTIFUL 2 STORY CONTEM ·
PORARY HOME woll1 4 bOOroom s. 2 112 baths. equrpped

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

kitchen, lire placa,

bay windows , pine walls , ba sement on

-

3

t/2 acres. ASKING $104,900 Make an offer.
POMEROY- A THREE STORY BUILDING dose lo town .
includes a 50 + x 100 parking lot. Cons ists of frame con·
struction w1tll gas space heat . A good investment property .
$29,500

R'EroSviw::Ri~ Cre•t Manor-A spacious sptitlevel5
lull bath s, 1car garage . woodbwner.

won"'"" TPC water. and a family room.
$59,500

POMEROY- SA 7- 1979 Barringlon Mobile Home 14 ' 70
INGAWPOUS
Walk into entrance with open staircase to th,..is;.'" '""'
complelely radocoraled homo !Mthin walklng
to shoppmg area. 3 bodrooms, 2 tuH baths
charming largo kitchen, living room wtlh lire(plac:e .
This gractous home has a natural gas FA. furnace.
1146.

87
Upholstery
Will build polio covon, docllo :-:11,..-ow-ooy-,.'o-:,U...,phol,..,.-ot-ortna~~....
-le-.......,. .._.., I"" up ~r~;;;l Inti trl county .,.. 71 yoooo. Tho
tam-llpm.

BUSINESS OFFICE l SALESROOII FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2nd AVE. CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

boOt In l\lmKun upholotoring.
Coli :104.e711-41114 '"' "" 11llmiiM.

Real Estate General

w1th 3 bedroom s, 1 1/2 bath, deck, appliance s. co ntral a1r ,
panel , carpet. 12 x 16 storage building on Approx. 1+ acre
ol ground $18 .000

THIS IS THE TIME OF BUYING AND SELUNG ... IF
YOU WANT TO BUY ... WE HAVE THE HOME! IF YOU
WANT TO SELL .. WE HAVE THE BUYER I THIS IS
THE PLACE TO BE FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE
NEEDS ....CLELAND REALTYI
HENRY E. CLELAND ...........................................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER ................. ........................... 94~2439
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................94~2660
OFFICE.. ...................... .......................... ............. 992-2259

POMEROHloborno St.- A 2 bedroom. I ball1 . 5 year old
home w11h vinyl siding, city wa ter and sewago and a 20 x 20
storage building oo a 63 :o~ 90 lot

FOR $18,100

HYSELL RUN ROAD- Pomeroy - Hunt.,'o O.eem - 7 II
2 acres of wooded land on a mce black lop road.

SB,500
DOTIIE TURNER, B•oker .................................992-56i2
BRENDA JEFFERS.................... .. ...............992-3056
DARUNESTEWART.. ......................................... 99H365
SANDY BUTCHER ..............................................992-5371
SHERYL WALTERS,Cheshloe ... .. ...................... 367-0421
~ERRY SPRADUNG ...............................(3l'41 882-3498

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

POIIEAOY AREA - Cha-r. ~ counlty
1

STORY'S RUN ROAD
7 YH' old homo ..., 3 bldroomo, 1 bath, 2 car
garage, 33 ..,.,, bttm end lhodl. Aaklng orly
$45,000.
1140$
BEECH ST. - Approx. 24 ICI'N with t btautfful"
two llol'f colonial home overlooking Pomeroy.
Exocutive alyla homo ,.;111 lonna! anby, family
room w/tiroptaco, tormal dining room,
b a - hal NC. mont with llont firvplacl,
in-ground po&lt;&gt;l, 2 car garage. Many mort
amonitioo. Reduced 1o a tow price ot $139,500.
1413
MAIN IT., RUTlAND - lo 111ft anovcti.. 3
bedroom ranch IMII1 ball1, kitchen, dining room,
and living room, 2 car attachtd garege,
firaplaco, goa,_., Contra! air. Only 545,500.

-·

1235. 00 YOU LOVE THE OLDER HOMES
IN TOWN? - This one is located juat across
from GAHS. 5 BAs, 4 ball1s, LR, kitchen,
aunroom, oomer k&gt;t.

VACANT LAND - Lol IS Charolaio Lako
Ettall. 2.083 acrao 11111 tor $16,500.
H41

1110. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
BACKYARD - Vel'f nic&lt;&gt; all brick home offers 3
1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THISitl - Located
on Second fwo., walk lo sloov, church, ochool BRa, LR wNiroplaco, oquipped kitchen, lull
and shopping. 2 olooy homo oftors kilchon, LR, basement.
DR, FR. 3 BAa, 2 ball11, gas hoa~ .-ntrai air.

. , . ....

· · ~· . -

• •• ,

o 0

0

0 -

·

00

-·

..

1245. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THII
ONEI -Largo log homo can bo puiOhued will
162 acrw• or 2 acnts. Thia home ohrs &lt;4 BAt
3 baths, oquippod kitchon , LA . FR, ;
fireplaces. hoal pumlcant. air (backup ayat&amp;m)
overllized 2 car attached garage. Frontago oo
Raocooo Cowolt

HAPPY HOUOW RD. -It tNt 1 and 112 lloty

log homo "'Itt batomon\ 3 bldlooma. 2 and
112 bath, r.mly mom, lYing room, lillchon faun ·

dty araa, tkyligh~ ntellita ayallm,' coYerad
porth, IIHI pump, conlnll air, 12'x12' b&lt;Jitding
ll1d muc:ll mora. Cal tor dotaio.
M25

1173. 8EWR WANTS TO RELOCATENa mini fann tor tho family. 3 BR home
oflore 2 batltt, LR, OR, kitchon and oll1er
extrae. Own&lt;~r nyo bring uo an offo~
24'lC32' gerago.

1731. CALL AND ASK ABOUT ME - I'm a
very nlca home in lown end my ownora are
oh~ng mo a( a

FARM ON LONG HOLLOW ROAD - Thlo
homo hat 2 bldooorno, 2 ball1o, living rm.l,
clring rm., kilchon, tcrHMd front porch, heat
pump. carol air, lltJ:JIY polo shad. All tltla lind
mora on 107 acooo rnA. Only atking 158,1100.

M23

good price. Altracllvo
kltchon, dining araa, OW, oven, range,
diept, LR, laogl ball1 wllaundry, gao heal,
oanllir, coiing font, laogo toncad bac:l&lt;yaod
f01 tho klda or pets.

f!72. UNCOLN I'(KE- WELL KEPT HOME
- 3 BRo. 1)\ batho, oquippad kitchon, LA.
atlachod gaooge, dock, partial basomanl,
foncad yatd.
PLEABAHT VALLEY ESTATES, SA
35
AREA --convoniont to HMC and ohopping,
brick ranch offora 3 BRo, 2 ball1t, LA. laogo
ooHn ~ . attached garage, gas hoa~ ceol
alr.

H&amp;2. IN TOWN LOCATlON cioN lo pool and
golf. l.aogo 2 car unattachod ganogo, wall kept
horne offen 3 BRo, ball1, LR, OR, kitchon,
move in right away.
1203. OHIO TOWNSIIP- 53:\ ac,.., more or
lesa. Vtl'f nlca ranch atylo homo offol! 3 or 4
bodrooma, LA. kllchon , bath, lull basamanl,
caopet, dock, garage, aiding. Tobacco base
and lobocco bam. A&lt;lditionalland.

1733. EXTRA NICE MOBILE HOME FOR
SALE - '116 Holly Pal1&lt; 14K72, 2 BAa, LA.
kitchen, DR. central air and lola of oxlro
INIIJooa.

ttl•. 521,000 - 3 lois + oldor homo,
Bidwell, 3 BRo. ball1, LA . kitchen, wcl1&lt;ahop
and garage.

Ill 0. WHITE ROAD - 20 ocreo, MIL,
v - I land. ~~ll•liol from Chlrolalt

t20t1. RIO GRANDE AREA - 2.S7 ac,.o 11111 ,
lovoly 2 ototy homo w1111 3 BRa, 1:.1 ball1t,
kilchon, LA. ldtaly localod near n&lt;IW highway.

1200. GREEN TWP. PORTERBAOOK
SUBO., WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3 BRs.
LA , kitchen, ball1 and halt, 2 cao garage ,
firaplace.

1711. NICE HOlE LOCATED II PATRIOT
-Quiet na~~t&gt;bottlood. 851&lt;172 lo~ 3 BA, ball1,
LR, kllllhln. nice carpal, altachad garage witll

t1113. GOOD ~TOWN LOCATION - Just a
bloc:k hom groc:ory elora. Na homo olio" LA,
kilchen, BAs, ball1,1argo front porch.

MOBILE HOME just al lha odgo ol town
oiiiJat.d on .56 acre IM111 a largo blocl&lt; garage,
city utilili01, gao hoal end carol air.

1142. S311,10011 _- WHY PAY RENT? - Ranch
ttyll homo on SA 180, 3 BAa, LA, kitchen,
bath, id1lchad geiiQI, I OOX300 let

LaM. $20,000.

opener.

· --

workshop, concrete drivewa~ . maintenance tree siding,
and new root . Somelhtng for ktd s: A I 8 acre yard ~Uld tree
houso
$47,900

garage. lireplace, cenlral air ASKING $57,900

IN apecl•l~, Include• mowing 3'11-2278 An~lrne.

iM:

oak rruling _ Half of a cathedral ce11ing gNes this home an
atmosphere of roominess . Has 3 bedrooms. a large bath ,
utility room, new carpet, and a kitchen loaded with cabu'let£ .

Subdivision .. .a brick/frame ranch style home with 3 bodrooms . full basement with recreation room 26 • 14 attad1ed

Rlll•mLII
Of
commercl1l
wiring, new MtVIce or nptlrt.
Ron'• TV Sttvlet, specializing Muter Ucenud •lectrtcian.
In Z.nlth 1tla UJYiclng moil RidO&lt;OOUr Eloclricol, WV000308,
ottwr lnnde. Houst cell•, alto 304-671-1768.
oi&gt;m• oppllance 10p0i10. WV
304-57'1-23111 Ohio 614-446-2454. 85 General Hauling
S.~lc Tank PumrNfEsao~,.Galli• S.nd, o,.v~. Umettone, Dirt.
Co. AON EVANS
APHISES, Wlck'o Houllng S..Vieo, 3&amp;11!0
Jockoon, 0H HOII-637-i528.
Boll Run Rood, Pomon&gt;y, Ohio
Dovlo
Sow-Voc
Soovlco, 457'18, 114-11112-3470.
a.org.. Cf1lllll Rd . Plrla, •up- We Da Hauling Anytime,
Pll11, pklkup, lnd delivery. 814- Anypllce, No Job loa IDg Or
~-.
Too lftllo. Buomont Cloonlng,
1'CIIol town ..... hoil prico, (tot Oonooal Worlt, Any Kln&lt;ll &amp;14-

oldlllfl "' l•ollo&lt; ololtllng.
:U!4152.

Now $45,500

RUTLAND- Salem Street- Somelh1ng lor MOM: A &amp;J&gt;iit
level home with an op&amp;n ra1sed haUway that has a beaubful

tm. 11.5 Ac. 1111.. Perry Twp .. Symmes
Creek bottomland, 1111111 hill, tobacco baoa.
...000.

· -

HEMLOCK GROVE - Appro&gt; 48 acres will1 small lnlit
orchard , grape vines, workshop &amp; la rge shed tor equipment

Wu $54,900

1438.

ac,.• in Raccoon

ON THE RIVERI
1.4 ecovo and 2 bedroom homo will1 3 c.or
gtrage. Nooda Iandor loving care, good
onveobnonl property. Col nowl$13,000.00
14311
MERCERVILLE AREAl
3 bodooom homo will11orgo oel~n kitchon, 11110
largo laundty araa. Attachod I car garage,
collar houM. Ccmoa will1 1 acra of ground.
Sao 111ial $24,900.00 .
14~
NEW UITVIGI- TAKE YOUR PICK
You con purcMM thio 11183 Schult Mobile
Homo w"h 4.8 ac••• or owner will allll
MP.aratoly appro•. 2 acra lol will1 molal
b&lt;Jtlding and bam. Mobilo horne conalllt ol 3
bedroomo, living 100111, ball1 wlganlon IIJb and
a1 appliancaa. Clooo lo Holzer Ho&amp;pital. M34
PRICE REDUCED - t&amp;UOO - 3 yr. old hoine
IMII1 graat room, 3 badroomo, 2 ball1o, kilchln
,.;111 cherry cabinoll . Heat pump and contra!
air. 2 c:ar QIIIIQI.
,_

· -

JUST $16,000

L-..L...--L----1.-1-..1-__J

OWNER ANXIOUS TO SEU - Nico level
building lol 100x150 on Dobbie Driva. Cily
ochooil. Cily wotor and 11woge. Cal today.

To_IO!Iohip, I&gt;Nutitul grounda. C&amp;llodayl 1431

-- ~ · ···

compressors &amp; welder s Lots ot shelves. cabinets tor
storage, and has big parking area Set on a big oomer lot.

~~';18~~~·.:r::oh':, h~a~ ~d~~·2

Polrlck A. Cochron
Oftlco Monagor
E•e.446-8855

. . . ...

SYRACUSE - CollOQ• Road - MECHANICS SPECIALTwo bay GARAGE Wlth working outdoor hoist wired for air

local

ball1o, wrap-around porch, Mveral buildings.
Situalad on appmx. I adn 112 ocraa. Rock
Springs Road. Price raduced 1o $55,000. Will
lake MH tor down peyt~W~nl
1345

HOUSE IN G.AWPOUS - 3 roomo and btltlt, wlllldng
datancolo ochoolo and otoras. Pricad al$16,000.00.

· · ~ -· - ----

the

!little nervous when he overheard one
_agent announce to one fellow.

Real Estate General

NEW USTING - 4 bedroom, 2 ball1, Jaouzzl,
pool and much moro. Close to lown. Sao one
ol our
1451

NEW LISTING - OWNER AEAUY SERIOUS - Wants hooao SOLD III Asking 525 000
for this apaciout older 2 tlory hom~. •
bedrooms, largo dining room, iving room and
kitchon . Walk~n clooot. Call today.
1453
PRICE AEDUCEDI To $49,900 on 111ia nice 3
bodroom vmyllidod homo will1 2 ball1o, living
1m ., dining nn .. family nn .. don, heat pump,
oentral air, baaemant, 2 bams and mucf1 morw.
On B.2 acre• m.1. Call today for appoin!IMnt.
14241
BUDGET MlNOEDI
526,000.00 buyo thio noal remodolod 3
bedroom home on ov• 1Y,

1445

CREW RD. - lolhio unlqU8 cooillm~l'f with
3 badrooms, 2 ball1o, family nn. dining area,
living 1m. and kitchon. Two docko all way
around houte. Ful batomant end mora. Only
$56,900. 1427

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ffiy
OUATOLLFREENUMBER

·j

. , OCE O
G
"

• wooding, coli 814-11112-3314,

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS In Romoy V~lage II. can
for mo10 infonnation.

Run Forrno, Joclloon, Ohio, 614UW31111.

at

me.

LOCATED IN OALUPOU8 - Vino Straet- 4 ranlal
unit1, good income property. Call for more
infoomalion.

Uvestock

I

82

1~~"lWorlt

NEW USTING - WHAT ABOUT ME? I'm a
111roe bedroom ranch oitting on a 721l&lt;l50/
lanced in lol I havo a lone car attached tatpOrt
plua a 12ix15 alorago building and moro
Within minutes of Holzer Hospital . Call to ue
mo today. Low 30s.
1452

WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE OF aTY POOL - 3
bedrooms, living ooom, kitcMn, ball1 and a family
room, bedroom and bath in batemant. Twa car
garage end ..need in backyaod . POSSIBILITY OF
LAND CONTRACT FOR QUALIFIED BUYER WITH
DOWN PAYMENT.

was

1--,lr--"Tira"""TI-1"'9-,Ir----l"Thal's
the point, sir. We do plan to
make a ------- ----oil! ."

llolloblo Wollpoporlng, Corn,.,.lol And RnlcioiOiol.
&amp;4
.,,. Eotlnootoo
'lixporioncod

91rt-rloo, Pick Your OWn.
C.fl 01udl Winters,
Rio
Grinde, Ohio. BM-245-5121.

neighbor

FDUrth lnd Pine

NEW USTlNGI COlY, COUNTRY HOME And within minutes of Holzor Hospital.
Beautilul homo will1 21\ ball1o, 3 bedrooms ,
loogo kitchon and dining room. Iota ol closot
opaco, large shtdod porch, dolached garage
end atorago building. All 111ia and lois moro
induding 4+ .....
1446

Vegetables

My

Carter'• Plumbing

IN CITY - 3 bOOroom , 2 ball1 ranch close to
cily. Pool, 1 car garage, 1 car oa1p0rt, big lot,
central air, end mora. Asking $50s. Call today
tor dotails.
1455

&amp;

_

Heating

GALUPOUS aTY - Ia where you find 11111
attractive and well malntalnad homo with
toncod in backyard, alum. aiding, two
badroomo, one ball1, a large encloood back
po!Ch tor 111oM wann oum1111r nighto or enjoy
111e conlral alr. Alto a on&lt;~ car garago with
atorago and much moov. Call for mora lnlo.
Only 548,900.
1444

~'ling

home to cook supper in the beaubtul kitchen and lhen relax
in l:he tront of the fireplace . This is sitting on approx . 1.5
acres .
AaiOng $45,500

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. t-8011-

BEAUTIFUL ALL BRICK HOME siiiJated on
50 acrN 11111 with 3 bodrooma, iving rm., dining
and family nn., 3 batlta and lui ba_,l Heot
pump and .-nlrll alr, 2 car attachod and 4 car
dolachodga111gt. Asking 5124,900.
1412

IN GALUPOUS - BRICK HOME - 3 bedrooms,
room, kitchen with dning aiM, 1)I ball1, finished
basement will1 family room, ball1, utility room and a
slooage room, 2 dod&lt;s and 17'x32' in-groond pool and
a storage building. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEEI!I.

Musical

TUPPERS PLAINS- Rice Run Road - Instantly appeafing
is 111is 3 bedroom modular wilh 2 balhs . You'D love Ill come

L.-L-.J...__J__.i.__-l-..Jinternal Revenue Office . He got a

Rooting,

JET

NEW USTING - Ownor baing translorrod out
ol a...a. 5 BR, 3 ball1, in-ground 20x40 pool.
Beautilully decoralod. Coli now.
1454

RlloO Food l SupplY. 514-9922114

TREC\lH

CAFEEF

Home lmprov1m1nt1:
Worlt,

rI I

I I'

I
I1---.-1-...,l&amp;~~,o-;;.~....;...,~

01
night.
Wsterpr~

Alr.Uon Malon, ,.,.lrH. New
I r..buiR moton In atoc:k, RON

Allen C. Wood Re•horiBroker---446-4523
Ken Morgen, Reahor1Broker-U&amp;-o971
Mote C•nterbury, Reehor--446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Reeltor-256-17 45
Tim Watton, Reehor- «6-2027

dlltoronl obout tho

614-237.Q468, doj
Rogtn IIMn.nt
ling.

And AI Typoo 01 Ellotlo&lt; And
Interior Parntlng. Will Give Low
Bid. lleonood. r14-245-50'111.

Real Estate General

price.

Happy Jlck J.X fila colltr1 n
woritit Conlll,. NO synlhlllc
pyrethrol*. For doo• &amp; Cllll

Unconditional lifetime gutrtn·
tN. l.ocll refnncn tumlshed.
FrM ... lm1t11. Clll collect 1·

dltiCHW, Aaols, Decks, Siding

446·1066

2710.

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOANQ

And Overhlng. lO YNra EK·
po&lt;loncod. Froo Eotlmotool !14448-411211.
J.W. Conotoudlon. Aocm Ad-

Street, Gallipolis

clnotod, :104-ttl&amp;-3470.
Whlt'l ID clft.,.l'll lbDul the
HaPOY J.ci 3-X 1111 collar? It
Wlrilill Contolno NO oynthollc
ll'tl0111&lt;•1da For " - l cotol
90UTH£AN STATES 304-tJS-

I

Home
Improvements

Home Remodeling, VInyl Skiing,

71Jood 1?sa{ty, Inc.
32 Locust

81

for rou. No lob too 111'11111,
WV llcenM no. 021-3187..001
478428. 304-675-2911.

~~~;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Knew whit hlppMW ID tll11 &amp;

SARGYE

Services

205 North Second Ave .
Middleport, OH

992·2259
608 £A.Sl MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

M~h

Morol Excollont Condftlonl 814367-416!8.

p.~lnt

20. lssortod Wal Cabl11ts 30r14, 36118, 39114,
39r14x24, from $39.95 to $54.95.

' 1
In
I Clt1.
Avolloblo ().T.C ol AlO Food l
Supply. 814-1182~14

SIIIPI 0, Air, Awnlngt,

Hie &amp; H..- Conatructlon wowld
like to build your addition or
deck, roofing, put on tiding or

Real Estate General

_ •=••
........doa•
-. -nd,'

1111 20ft Wlklomooo Compo•,

Too Big Oo' Sonolll814-367-4518.

Point Ploooonl, 304-&amp;JS-2063,

HAPPY
JACK
Rocogn~od
ooloTAIVEAMICIDE'
l ollocllvo by
U.S. Coni• lo&lt; Votorinoty

304-411&amp;-1843.

Kltch•n• And Blithe. Fr11 &amp;tlmat .. t Aeter.ncee, No Job

Ftth Tank, 2413 J~eklon Ave.

full llno Tooplcot lloft 0 bll'do,
amollonlmoto oncl aupplooo.

AFLAIC

Newer Hom11. Room Addttlona,

&amp; almond.

Flnchoo (blodol, mole l fomolo,
ItO oodt, 514-1112-31611.

&amp;

11171 Toyo10 mot&lt;&gt;&lt; homo, oloopo
4, Mtf cont1lntd, 47,Q(M) mll11,

Foundlllon

Good CIHn Und Clr, Upptr 18711 Fold LTD Noodo Bott«y
•
River Road, llalllpollt, 114-446- 114-446-7055,1400.
8111.
1988 Ford A~er Van Sl,.215;
1991 Ford Rongw XLT PU; 1188
Nluan PU $3,200; 1i88 FOfd f.
,.,,.
Ctdllllc, FI 1r Condltl on, 150!_$2,885; 11188 Joop PU 414
Auno Oood,l600. 814-448-6751. 13, ...5; 1984 Fold Bronco II
12,28!; 11117 ChoY. S-10 4x4 PU
1i85 Otdo Dolta 88 Royole 13,11115· 111115 Dodgo PU $2,815·
Brougham, 4dr. H&lt;11n, bt1utlful 1187 Mazdo PU $2,415; B&amp;D
t1mlty Clair, Ill options, new ti,.a, Aulo Sal.., Hwy. 160 N. l!lC-446307 V-3, f2300, 114-1182-67ti.
618!.

1886 Trane Am~IXCII!n condi-

Rearrange the 6 Krambled
words below to make 6
simple words. Prlnl letters of
each In lis line of 1quaru

V11r1 Expert.nc:a On Older &amp;

81114.

OFFICE 992-2886

Motor Homes

Cunla

Condition, 11,100. Finn. 814-388-

Real Estate General

WOlD
GAM I

0

J04-67~- 1'bn

Shop Kenny'• Auto C.nl• For A

tion, 15,800. 14". Johnoon boat
!10 HP 11.700. Coli onjll,., 514441-1021.

campers

cneatlt, ·

1983 Honda 70 3 WhooiO&lt;, 1350.

Cllll1~4.....a1Ahw4:00P.M .
1883 Hondo 200 Big Rod, HILow, new llru., brakH, bel&amp;ery.
Elec: ltlrt wtthout riV'IIfWI, S700.

79

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Pag&amp;--07

Edited by CLAY R. P O L L A N - - - - - - -

whMI drive 1t1rtlng at $14'11.00
614-245-MTT, 814-112-3293.

a lrlm, ...., ... . 57,000

Motorcycles

...

T~~:t:~y SCC:\t~lA-~ttfS®

BudGet TransmiMiont, UMd &amp;
rebuln, ltartlng 11 IH· front

QOhp. ·

1990
Tracker Full)' Equip-ped, More lnlorm1tlon 614 ·446·
lm.

_'"'=.,--:--=-,_.:,::-,-=CO'
::

&amp;

Accessories

for Sale

wlladder, r.cka I thllvlng. 304·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Auto Parts

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1970 Buick Skyto•k. V-3, wtoho, 4

door, good cond, S04-t7S-1271.

June 7, 1992

1m. 1.•1 A.

mil, Section 34, Raccoon
TVoll., Ironto on SA 325. $25,000.

1506. 71 ACRES MIL, Sugar Creek. Vacanl
land, wollr lap on property. Smail bttm.

1540. GET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - Attractive homo offal! 3
BAs, bath, kilchon. 12x24 lamiy room will1
fireplace and living room will1 fireplace.
SiiiJattd on I 12 acre. mA, approx. 10
minutes from town .
*154. NICE STARTER HOME - locatod fUSial
edgo ol lown. This home toaltJraa 3
bedrooms. bath , living room, kilchon, dining
room and a full basement Five minutes to
1110

downtown.

CAAIIoEL ROAD - Rio Granclo Aroa - 5 acre
lots lor salo. $6 ,900 oach. Call for dolails and
directions.
1512. 108 ACRES MIL, Guyon Twp.,
vacant land, opring on property. May help
finon.- lo qualiliod b&lt;Jyor.
S33,000- EXlRA NICE HOME closo to town,
largo kilr:hon, LR . ball1 . gas hoa~ Groon Twp.

1168. LoGAANDE BOULEVARD- All brick, 3
BRo LA kitchen . bath, luM baM1111nl, gao
lo~ ai;, allochod ge111g0. city ..
1316. MEIGS CO., 240 A. mil, Bodlood &amp;
Chesler Twp . Old ongonal log home with
addiUon added . Dnilod wall, county water
tvaiablo . Hao baon owned by..,. family
for 4 generatons.

Kfl. NICE HOIIoE, EDGE OF TOWN, LOTI
OF POSSIBIUTIES - LA, i&lt;ilchon, DR, 3 BAa,
bath, laundry. Priced tor beginn•rt. GrHn

School.
t228, .98 A MIL (Hobort DiMon Subd.)
along Raccoon Crook, groat for a mobilo
hoiNI. Largo pino traeo on 3 oidta. All kiYol .
11.50. OWNER HAS GIVEN THIS HOIIoE
LOTS OF CARE - 3 BRo, batlt, kilchln, LR,
firaplaco. 1 car unattachod ga~~g~.
BUILD YOUR OWN BUSINESS HEFE - lot
oppltlll . 200x200, located on SA 1$0,

1578. LARGE FARM - 366 acoo rnA, 55K100
HanaravtillareL
bam, 3 pond~ tobacco ball. Call for dolailo.

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

June 7, 1992

0 hio Lottery

Reds drop
1-0 battle to
LA Dodgers

Pick 3:
103
Pick 4:

4290
Super Lotto:

12-35- 37-39-40-46
Kicker:

Page4

NEW LOCATION - Valley Diaguostlc Laboratories recendy moved into its new olrKes at
1504 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. A full -service
medical laboratory that bas been in lbe GaiHpolis area for 11 years, Valley Diagnostic Labora-

oew

tories beld an open bouse at its
location last
Sunday. Pictured outside tbe new offices are
left to right are Ali Golj~ owner· Sberri Jarnu'
Jeff Golji, Jim Goldcamp, Kim Gold camp:
Susan Canterbury and Shirley Golji.

Growth ... __c~on..ti~:. .nued=.;r:.ro:. :=m:..:D=--·=--1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the company achieved 1111e diversifi- company pale ntcd technology to million in 1992 and $21 million in
calion by acquiring companies that produce a new line of gas grill bri- 1993.
(Mr. Evans is an investment brocomplement, and yet are counter- quets thgat provide a hickory or
fla
vor.
ker
for The Ohio Company in its
mesquite
seasonal, ro the sausage lines. Those
Gallipolis
office).
The
Zesti
Flavordi
vision
produced
acquisitions wi II provide synergy, and
liquid smoke flavorin gs to the
thus increased earnings.
Sausage produclS are made at meatpacking and the processed food
seven processing planlS and deliv- industries. MaJor customers are
ered fnesb daily to 8,000 supermar- Nabisco, Kraft, Carnation and Heinz.
Continued l'rom D-1
kets and groceries located m the The commercial navor prod ucts arc
Midwest, Southeast and Southwest. used in the manufacture of suchitems nents, automotive, Hartford InsurDetiveries are made daily by Bob as polatochips, pel foods, nulS, phar- ance and O!her fmancial and comEvans' fleetoflrucksandroute sale- maceutical, smoked hams and barbe- munications units with more than
100,000 employees and $2 billion
speople. The company makes every cue sauces.
in
sales annually worldwide.
Hickory Specialties will provide
elfon to deliver a fresh, high quality
who has served with
growth as a result of having 70 per- the Hayman,
extensive distribution network.
company for 20 years in variThe Mrs. Giles acquisition pro- cent of the liquid smoke market and ous locations involving engineering
vided Bob Evans with a line of refrig- the promotion of the gas grill bri- and management capacities, was
erated fresh deli salads, such as pasta, quelS that impart a hickory or mes- division manager for materials and
seafood and tuna, and are sold main Iy qmte navor.
inventory control prior to his curSales for the Food Prod ucts dtvi- rent position.
in the Tennessee and Virginia areas.
Mike and his wife, Jenny, reside
We estimate sales from this division SJonare forea~sttobe $ 1 58 million in
1992 and $208 mill ion in 1993 Pre ~ in Fort Wayne and have three chil10 be $25 million m 1993. Because
Bob Evans is delivering the product taX income is expected to be $16 dren.
10 SUlfe doors via ilS truck fleet. we
expect operating margins 10 improve
asthesaladsaredisaibuted to a wider
area. In May 1992 the company
See me for a State Farm
upgraded several of the Mrs. Giles
recipes and marketed them under the
Bob Evans brand in Columbus and
Cincinnati. The plan is to eventuall y
have the product served in the deli
department with a Bob Evans ladle
and bowl, thus capitaltzing on the
quality and freshness im age of the
Bob Evans brand name.
Hickory Specialties Inc. was acquiled by Bob Evans in March 1992.
It s a no-cost revtew of
Hickory specializes in charcoal prodyour tnsurance coveructS, grills, liquid smoke seasonmgs.
and application systems. The comages and needs
pany has IWO major divisions. NaCAROLL SNOWDEN
lltre-Glo Charcoal and Zesti Flavor.
342 Socond Ave.
Nature-G lo produces several lines
GaUlpolls, Ohio
of griUs (under the Champion brand)
PboDe
446-4290
and charcoal, hickory and mesquite
Home
446-4518
wood smoking chips. The charcoal
""''
and smoking chips are sold under the
Mr. Quick , Old Hickory, and Mountain Hardwood names. It also manuINUIIAIIICI
•
facrures the Jack Daniel's line of
charcoal and smoking ch1ps. The

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soil and Water
Conservation Distrkt, is located somewhere In
GaUia County. Individuals wisbinc to participate in lbe weekly coolest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop olf your
guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or lbe Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 pr11e rrom the

&amp;

MARTIN
SENOUR
PAINTS

Vol. 43, No. 25
Copyllghled 1H2

.

· ·-BOUND FOR EUROPE - These Meigs students left today to begin a lour of Europe. Students participatinq in tbe trip and some or counse!o~ acco"!pany10g tbem are, front row, Joy
0 Brten, Ahson Gerlach. Second row, Carrie
Bartels, Susan Grueser, Sharla Cooper, Tara

Gerlach, Jennie Dorsey. Third row Deb Gerlach, Mike Gerlach, Kevin Lamb~rt Rusty
Triplett and Jason DellavaUe. Absent at' time or
photo were Allison Gannaway Adam Sheets
Jason Witherell and Yvette You~g.
'

Thirteen Meigs High School
French students to tour Europe
Thirteen French students from
Mei•s High School accompanied
v
•
byf Eetght adults • left IOda Yfor a tour
o urope.
Their voyage will take them to
E
d h
. ..
ng1an , w ere they will visit London, Oxford, Slrlltford, Canterbury
and Dover. Highlights of th e
English tour will be Buckingham
alace
.
P
, the Tower of london, Btg
Ben and the Houses of Parliament
and Hard Rock Cafe It time permilS the group will aiso taken in a
London Theatre perfonnance
·
Upon arriving in Calais, France,
the group will travel 10 Paris where
they will visit the Louvre the Et' f.
'
fel Tower and of course Notre

V'~19,990
'91 REGAL

HOME STYLE A'" Exterior
Alkyd Gloss House Paint

Dame among
oth
·
da 's
. manyil er sttes. One
Y excurston w I take the tra
. v-.
e1ers to the Palace of VersaJiles
After three days in Paris th
de 1 .11 n
th
• e stu" . swt Y sou 10 the French
RIVlera and Nice France Wht' le
visiting the Cote d: Azur the
will travel to Monte C~lo ~up
the -11 · . h
. ere
Y.WI VISit l e place of Prince
Ranter and the royal family of
Monaco.
After da
. .
denlS wil~ Y f~ RIVIera, stu Alps and MtraveBiancugh the Swtss
ont
tunnel whtch
marks the hi hesl
. •
They will s gnd ~ m Etm?pe.
in I he 1 k ped . dayf anGd mght
a est e city o en eva
which is famous for its Reforma'-

Bener quality
Good h•d•ng

Excellent acheSI(Ifl

• Mildew res1stant

SAVE

We make gal.
your place
someplace
special:M

$5.02

$

Orlg. Ust $25,146, 12 Pass.

$17,990

97
Per

Gal.

GREAT LIFE
SATIN LATEX

$2479

Just A Few ol Our Quality Used
Cars That Your Neighbor Traded ln.
GREAT LIFE
ALKYD GLOSS
'17 IUICI LISAIIE

$2719

1.111111111, ~ .....
conlrMIIng aupw diM lnlorlar.

......

lOCAL 111101

•&amp;497
YOU SAVE $6.20 Per Gal.

YOU SAVE $6.10 Per hi.

-

cmra rwr

IIHCT Ill IIIII

'90 POIIIAC JUISPOII
c:.::::.~--.r
Drlnr .... lnt.........

HOME STYLER
SATIN GLOSS lATEX

$19

HOME STYLE
ALKYD PRIMER

GaL

$17!~

YOU SAVE '5.02 Per GeL

YOU SAVE 14.40 Per GaL

97

Central Supply Co.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

17 COURT STREET
446·2374

_,...ln.....

'19 POITIAC SSE

llll

.... rool....tiM&amp;r.-.ae,atl
mho. l.oool Nlw Pnlwe. Troda,
8tWIPt

'13,990

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

'II IUICI SIYHA....,
....

~~:,:.,~•.Jozt.,ol•l•t.l't2c.
.......

$

NICE!

5995

'17 CHR•

!~-pci'!IWwlndoa:,
-......,-..-.

I It PI

- · 111111. r&amp;'JP ~.:

?9ts ·

~----5-0_M_ORE USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM!

With Approwtcl
Crttllt

for the aged population of the state.
Susan Oliver, executive director
at the local Senior Center, said
there has been some talk of a cut of
between 10 and 20 percent in proposed program funding and that the
purpose of the Wednesday rally is
to appeal to Gov . Voinovich to
"remember us when you start cutting the budgeL"
Oliver said that Passpon slots
are due 10 increase in the next fiscal year but that now due to deficits
there is a possibility of cuuing the
number of slots or the number of
new clients which can be accepted
into that program.

Suspect in Mason murder free

._--av r...:::.:....:..
=, -iiG)P
.0
L&lt;L.ooc*i-ld willl

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stalf
About 20 Meigs County senior
citizens and staff of the Senior
Center will join thousands of supporters from across lhe state in the
Statehouse Rotunda Wednesday
morning in support of Eldercare.
The event bas been organized by
the Ohio Eldercare Coalition .
Emphasis of the rally and press
conference is 10 focus attention on
Eldercare issues and to serve as a
reminder to Gov . George
Voinovich and the legislature of
the importance or continuing services at the current level or above

Local Briefs:-__,

...:i'JJ\

60 lltw Cars In
Stock It Dlscouat
Prlcts

CoMpare Our

Prices. Wt Sell For
Less

·

uon Monument and water display
f th J d' Ea
o Leaving
e et Geneva
u.
the voyagers
·u
Paris ' h the ·
wt return to
, w ere y will
board their night home
·
d
·· · · ·
.Metgs
stu ents pantc.tpaung tn
tht s study tour are. Came Bartels,
Sharla Cooper, Jason Dellavalle ,
Allison Gannaway Alison Gerlach
T
G 1 h s'
G
'
ara er ac , usan ~ueser,
Kevtn Lambert , Joy 0 Bne n,
Adam Sheets, Jason Witherell.
Rusty Tnplett and Yvette Young .
Adults
· th t
·
. accompanymg e our are .
Jcnme Dorsey . (teacher-counselor),
Debra and M1ke Gerlach (coon1 ) M
nd W dell Ge
ohrs
'J
argaretBa
en , Mary
rac , eanne ra db ury
o· Bnen and Jennifer Sheets.
s
i c

Meigs County residents will
take part in Statehouse rally

•1

.

A llulllmedlo Inc. -oaoer

Delegates resume
earth summit talks

GM FACTORY PROGRAM CARS

~--

1 Section, 10 Pogo• 25 conll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June a, 1992

"Over 38 Years Of Dependable,
Trustworthy Service!"

':i.\
~

near 80.

344227

Doe Smith Says:

Hayman ...

....

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telepbooe number witb your card
or letter. No telephooe calls will be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to tbe newspaper olr~te by 4 p.m. eacb Wedn~ay. In case
or a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm wiU be featured by lbe Meigs Soil and Water Cooservation
District.

Cltar tonight. Low near 60.
Tuesday, partly sunn y. High

A Mason County man bas been released on $75 000 bond fol lowing his arrest last week in connection with the m~ of Bobby
Joe Pulhns, 36, Pmnt Pleasant, ac cording to the Mason County
Sheriffs Department.
. Robert Eugene WaUace, 29, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant (Fiab'OCk) had
hts bond set on the charge by Circuit Judge James Holliday.
Wallace was arrested June 2 by Sheriff Ernie Watterson and
Deputy C.E. Stearns in connection with the death or Pullins whose
body was found outside lbe Southfort. Inn May 30.
'
Waneoon said Pullins's body was taken 10 the West Virginia
Medicai·Examinet's office for an autopsy. It's alleged that Wallace
beat Pullins to death wilb his fists.
Wallace was arraigned before MagistraJe Leonard Shobe who
set his bond 81 $100,000. However, the bond was objected 'to by
Wallace's attorney, Raymond Musgrave. Shobe later tbopped the
bond because magistrates cannot set bond in fmn degree murder
cases. The bond can only be set by the circuit court, which was
established Friday by Holliday.

3 weekend accidents investigated
Three accidents involving ~ehicle ctamage but no injuries, and
only one cntallon were mvesugatcd by Pomeroy Police over the
weekend.
Continued on page 3

•

The Options lor Elders program
is currently being phased out and is
to end on June 30, 1993. That program which provides home assislance to the aged allows them to
remain at home rather than going to
more expensive nursing homes.
The service.• are paid for on a sliding fee sc hedule geared 10 th e
income of the recipienlS and not on
Medicaid income guidelmes as is
the Passpon program .
Whil e many of the Options
clients are being tran sfe rred into
the Pass pon program, many will be
without scrvtccs once the Options
program is phased out due to th e
income guidelines.
A decline in the number of former Options as well as new elderly
clienlS which can be accepted into
the Passport program will be delri menlal to keeping the frail elderl y
in their own homes, Oliver said.
Eldercare programs which provi de home care are an alternative to
more expensive nursing home care,
she explained.
At Wednesday's rally to be held
at 10 a.m. Cindy Farson, Director
of the Buckeye-Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District's Area Agency on Aging, and
Marnie Frey, Director of the
Athens County Visiting Nurses
Association, will explain the
effects of projected stale cuts on
home care services for the elderly.
"Cuts to home care programs
are expected to increase depen dence on Medicaid nursing home
expenditures ." said Farson, "and
Medicaid is currently the fastest
growing segment of Ohio's budgeL"
Senior Centers from Athen s,
Washington and Meigs Counties
are supplying transportation to
Columbus to help rally suppon for
Eldercare services.

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
- Wtth three workin g days left,
delegates to the U.N. Earth Summit
turned today 10 one of the triclciest
iss ues at the gathering: wh o will
pay to clean up and protect the
environment.
Developing countri es want
industriali zed nation s to provide
the money and allow recipient govemmenl• to decide how it will be
spenL
Th e United States and other
industrialized nations, however, are
strapped by tight budgets and are
unwilling to give up control over
what funds they do provide.
Delegates from all 178 U.N.
members were to resume sessions
today following a weekend recess.
They are racing to complete three
treaties by Wednesday so that they
are ready for signing by the more
than 116 heads of state, including
Prestd ent Bush, who is due to
arrive by Friday .
. Delegates also are crafting the
Rto Declaration of environmental
pnnciples, which include the princtple th at polluters must pay for
cleaning up their own pollution,
and a document called Agenda 21
that spells out how the principles
would be enacted and enforced.
The summit' s coordinator, Maurice Strong of Canada, says cleanup
coslS could top $125 billion a year.
. Delegates are also lobbying for
s1gnatures for two treaties fini shed

SENATORS IN RIO- Sen. AI Gore, D-Tenn. left and Sen.
Ket;ry. D-Mass. talk I~ repo~lers Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.
A btparltsan Senate delegatton is 10 Rio to talk wilb international
leaders during UNCED. The Democrat senators support EPA
Administrator WiUiam Reilly. (AP)

Joh~

last week, one on global warming
an d the other to protect plant and
ammal species in danger of extinc~ on .

Both almost certainly will
rcce tve th e minimum number of

signatures by heads of state, includmg those fr om Europe and Japan,
10 be enacted . That made opposillon to th e latter by Bush, who
msists it m1ght hun U.S . business
hard to explain even to allies.
'

Appalachian Highway has
~£!.~~~1!.~~ Adams gounty
Appalachian Hi•hway
was sup ~ b
d
l
f
I
pose
. b o ·unne
· bJO · s to southern
Oh to Y gtvmg
usmess access
•
· to
lh e s la le s poorest countte s. It
has n't worked m
· Adam s c ounty.
The two-lane road has brought a
few motels and small businesses to
th e county with Ohio' s highest
unemployment rate.
" One way or another, tran sportation is still our biggest probIem, " said Mary Jane Campbell ,
director of th e county' s Human
Resource DcparunenL
It 's a famili ar problem across
southern Ohio wh ere develo .
ment-poor c ou~ties depend u~n
'" f d
th thro h A
ug .
Sta ~ un s 1o pu 11 em
Cincinnati Enquirer study of state
spending and revenue collections
found that 29 poor southern counties reIy on money from the urban
counties.
The 29 counties received about
$500 million more in slate serv ices
last year than they sent ro the state
in taxes, the newspaper reported
Sunday . The money came from the
urban counties.
The 28 other counties are Clermont, Brown , Hi ghland, Scioto,
Pike, Ross, Lawrence, Gallia, Jactson, Vinton , Hocking, Meig s,
Athens, Perry, Morgan, Washing ton, Monroe, Noble, Muskingum ,
Guernsey, Belmont, Coshocton ,
Holmes, Tuscarawas, Harrison, Jefferson, Carroll and Columbiana.
Adams County, 60 miles east of
Cincinnati, is a good example of
the counties' collective problem .
County officials say government
and th e schools couldn 't provide
their current levels of service without slate aid. The county's unemployment rate was 16.3 percent last
April.
The county 's actual unemployment rate is much higher when
those who have stopped looking for
jobs and those who have been without jobs for a long lime are figured
in, Ms. Campbell said.
"It could be as high as 30 pet·
cen~" she said. " We don't know."
The lack of transportation and
business development make for
bleak job prospeclS.
" We keep trying to get industry, " County Commissioner Paul
Rothwell said. "But it's difficult to
auract We have gotten a few fastfood restaunmts in the last year or
so, not 100 much else."
As a result, the slate pours much
more money into Adams County
than it collects from county resi -

Ms. Campbell said her departmcnt receives· about $25 million a
year · with slightly less
· than half
that amount corning from the state
to pay for public assi stance pro-•
grams . The county contributes

$2~~.000.

.
.
money IS mostly g~~g to
provt~~ '."ed1cal servtces, she
satd. I ve probably had 100
chents tell me they moved here
from Kentucky ~r some~ state
beca use they can t gel medical bencfllS ·"
.
.
The poor counaes get a disproportwnate share of state funds
because they have htgher unemI
than
.
.th I
P oymcnt
counues wt arge
The

1

less disposable
.
s anddh
mcome
an 1ave
ess commerce
Th
.
1
mean s ess money gomg 10 that
•• 1e m
·
· tax co 11ectiOns
s~
and m e
I.
.
ore
re tance upon state assiStance programs.
"I Jik
think r·
c to
ve helped pay
for these programs :"hen I paid
taxes all those years, ·.said Steve
Johnson, 42, whose cabmet shop in
Adams Co.~nty fell vtcum 10 rhe
recesston. Sun, J'OU hear people
say, welfare _rec ~tenlS should go
out and get a job. ·1 ~at huns.
"PeopIe don ' t understand that
there are few jobs out here in
Adams County. I'm just a plain
country boy who wants to ........ ,
he said
wu.•,
.

Well-known SE Ohio
business leader is dead
Well-kn own business man, contractor, developer, industrialist and
in ventor AJ. Stockmcister of Jac kson died Friday in Oak Hill Commun ity Medtcal Center at the age
of 74.
A na tive of Se nec a Co unty ,
Stockmcistcr and his wife, the former Bernadine Bennett, had rcstdcd in Jackson smce 1946, where he
began A.J . Stockmeister Inc., a
plumbing, heating and cooling
bu siness that has develope'! into
one of the largest mechaniCal construction companies in southeastern
Ohi o.
After completing an apprenticeship program in Cleveland, Stock meistcr worked on the piping of the
TNT plant at Point Pleasant. He
also served with the Seabees and
was stationed with the Marines in
the Aleutian Islands.
Stockmeister opened the Jolly
Lanes Bowling Center in Jackson
in 1959, which now houses th e
Jolly Lounge and the Ponderosa
Res taunmL He also opened a bowling fac ility in Bellevue in 1960.
He constructed and put into
operation the Stockmeister Mushroom Farm in 1972, which was
bought by the Campbell Soup Co.
in 1977. The farm now employs
more than 250 people.
Between 1972 and 1985 Stockmeister developed other small businesses and commercial lease propenies, including the Green Acres
subdivi sion adjacent to the Fairgreens Country Club, the purchase
\

and re nova ti on of th e historic
eight -story Bane Ohio building in
Portsmou th , the construction, lease
an d sale of Ohio Vall ey Area
Li brari es in Well ston , and the
building that houses the Office of
Empl oy men t Services in Jackson.
He made a personal drive to
oblain fin ancing to purchase and
renovate the old Cambrian Hotel in
Jackson in 1984. Finished in 1985
the buil ding is now a landmark i~
the city's downtown.
Other projects credited to Stockmcistcr include the Four Winds
Nursin g Ho me and the 52- room
Comfort Inn.
Not onl y active in indu stry ,
Stockmetsler was heavily involved
in ctvt c activities. Working with
co mmitlees see king economic
development in the area, he participated in the placement of Goodyear
Tire &amp; Rubber, Jackson; Federal
Mogul, Gallipolis; Cris-Craft, Gallipolis ; the Jackson Corporation ·
and Jcno's Inc/Pillsbury, Wellston:
He served on the Jackson Community Improvement Corporation
and was a member of Holy Trinity
Church , a lifetime member of the
Eagles and the Elks, and a member
of the American Legion . He served
17 years as a director of Bane
Ohio-Jackson and was a member or
the Fairgreens Country Club.
Educated in a one-room school
at Rcedtown, Ohio, Stockmeistet
bought and restored the structure in
1975 and later presented it to the
Seneca County Historical Society .

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