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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaoy-Middepon. Ohio

I

.~--Local
I'
:

!-

news briefs---. Eastern board..

Continued from page 1
. assu~ed clear distance.
Another Meigs County accident occurred at · 9: 1~ a.m.
Thursday on SR. 124, In Rutland Township, 0.2 miles west of
mllf'post 7. Troopers said a car driven by Lorene D. Goggins, ~5 ,
Middleport, went off the road. s triking a utility pole. No one wa s
injured. Damage was heavy.

Academic banquet set May 11

I
I

''

The Filth Annua l Meigs County Academic Excellence
Banquet, will be held May 11 at 7 p.m. at Meigs High School
cafeteria.
The recognition of high achieving students is sponsored by the
Meigs County Board of Education in cooperation with the three
local school districts, Eastern ~ Meigs, and Southern.
As In years past. the banquet wlll honor the top students In
grades 4. 6, 8, 10 and 12 from all publiC schools in Meigs County.
This year 6S students will be presented awards .
Speaker of the banquet will be James Carpenter,
superintendent o! the Meigs Local School Dlstrlci.

EMS has 7 Thursday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered seven ·
calls for assistance on Thursday.
At 2:13a.m .. Pomeroy was called to Butternut Ave. for Becky
Klein to Holzer Medical Center. Rutland was called ai 4: 24a.m.
to County Road 1 for Gilbert Frltzwater who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:04 a.m. , Racine went to
"Front St.. for Brian Petrie who was treated but not transported.
Pomeroy at 10:32 a.m. went to Lick Sklllet Road for. Harry
Coleman who was dead on arrival. At 10:36 a.m .. Syracuse was
called to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Ethel Fife
who wa$ taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Racine Fire Department was called at 11:29 a.m. to a
two-ca r motor vehicle accident on State Route 124. Transported
from the accident scene by Racine EMS was Kathryn Rizer who
wa s taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Shelley McClanahan
was treated at the scene.
At 4:55 p.m . . Rutland was called to New Lima Road for Tyler
Wolfe •who was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

·job that the teachers of our
district are engaged In, on a dally
basis. It Is Important that the
community. parents and stu·
derits are made aware of the
feelings of gradltude, apprecla·
tlon and commendation that the
Eastern Local Board has for Its
. teaching staff."
The following other business
, matters were also conducted by
· the board.
·
-Accepted. witJ! regret, was
the resignation of Betty Jackson,
effective June 26, 1989.
-Approved a plan to select
annul!lly, an Eastern (,ocal
School District Teacher of the
Year.
-Approved a request from
Maida Long lor reimbursement
for two courses to be taken at
Ohio University.
'
-Authorized participation In
the Teacher Leadership Project
with the College of Educat ton,
Ohio University.
.
~Approved for those seniors
who are passing thejr courses, an
exemption option from having to
take final exams.
-Approved on second reading
a new policy on Community Use
of District Buildings.
-Approved several approprla·
tlon modifications.
·
-Approved advertising for
bids on Insurance for·rhe district
buildings .
-Tabled a proposed new pol·
Icy on the employment of class!·
fled personnel.
.
-Approved the establishment

William Hoffman

W.Va .. Opal Osborn of Cincln·
nat!. Audra Bowman oi Sabina.
Gladys Ritchie of Belpre and
Elizabeth Miller of St. Louis.
Missouri.
· He was ' preceded In death by
two brothers. Donald and Edwin
Coleman. arid one sister. Betty
Frank.
·
Services will be . Sunday, 2 "
p.m.. at the White Funeral
Home. Coolville. Burtai will be In
Sand Hill Cemetery. Long Bot·
tom. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Saturday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.

William (CeciH Hoffman. 84.
fo~mer resident of Meigs County.
died April 17 at the Columbus
Quality Care Nursing Home in
Columbus.
Born Feb. 8, 1905 In Salem
Township. he was a son of the late
Henry and Eldora Carson Hof·
fman. and was a retired auto
mechanic.
He is survived by his 'wife.
Laura; son and daughter-In· law.
William and Evelyn Hoffman;
two daughters and sons-In-law .
Mrs. Charles (Ruth) Hughes and
Mrs. Albert ( Janen Potenza; a
daugher·in -law. Mrs. Cecil
Continued from page 1
(!rene I Hoffman; a special cou·
Howard.
Metzenbaum In a race
si n. Mary Alice Tracy; 15 grand·
for
the
Senate last year, but
children, 18 great gra ndchildren.
one revamplia his campaign staff
great-great-grandsop and sev - and promised his nE&gt;xt campaign
will be differ!'nt.
eral nieces arid nephews.
"It's a different race. It's
Funera I services for Mr. Hof·
different
candidates. It's a differ·
!man were on April 21 at the '
ent
time,"
Voinovich said. "I
Jerry Spears Funeral Home In '
learned
a
lot
from the senatorial
Columbus.
;
campaign.
" I was paying a great deal of
'Harry Coleman
attention to what was going on In
'
the city of Cleveland," he said.
i' Harry L. Coleman. 79, of Lick
"That took my focus away from
1 Skillet Road. Reedsville. died
the management of my
: Thursday at his home after a
campaign." '
: brief illness.
·
Rep. Michael DeWine of Cedar·
' Mr. Coleman was a farmer,
ville. a six-year veteran of
: born Aug. 11 , 1909 in Toledo to the
CongrE&gt;ss. has said he Is running
: late John R. Coleman and Cora
for .thE' GOP gubernatorial norril·
: Bailt&gt;y Coleman . He was an
nation. although he has not yet
1Army vt&gt;teran of World War II. a
made ari official announcement.
• member of Tuppers Plains Vete·
i rans of Foreign Wars. thePome·
. Other Republicans planning to
; roy Disa bled American Veterans
enter are Hamilton County Com·
; and the Long Bottom Christian
missioner Robert Taft II and
• Church.
state Sen. Paul Pfeifer of
: Survivors include his wife.
Bucyrus.
:Carol Osborn Coleman; one son.
No Democrats have announced
; Leon Coleman a lid one daughter.
their candidacy. although likely
•Ina Coleman, both of California;
entrants Include Attorney Gen·
:one brother. William H. Coleera! Anthony Celebrezze from
' man, Reedsville; six sisters.
Cleveland and Auditor Thomas
: Neoma Osborn of Pickerington.
Ferguson from Columbus.
•Garnet Stewal"l-of Parkersburg.
'
.

Hospital news
Veleraa11 Memorial
Thursday admissions -Goldie
Hendren, Pomeroy; Ethei Rife,
Pomeroy; · Catherine Norris,
Pomeroy; · Blythe Theiss, Racine; Martha Burns, Middleport;
Russell Collums, Pomeroy;
Carol Rhodes. Racine.
Thursday discharges - None.

Plan revival
Hobson Christian Union ·
Church will be In revival from
Monday through Saturday, May
6, with Rev. 'Norman Taylor.
Services start at 7 p.m. nightly.
The pastor Is Rev. TTheron
Durham.

'

!

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:80 a.m.) .
Bryce aad Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............ :26')4
AT&amp;T .................................34')1
Ashland Oil ........................ 42'%
Bob Evans .......................... 15\4
Charmlng..Shoppes .... .......... 14'%
City Holding Co ................... 18
Federal Mogul... ................. 50')1
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 50
Heck's ................................. ~
Key Centurion .................... 13%
Lands' End ......................... 32\4
Limited Inc ........................30%
Multimedia Inc .................... 99
Rax Restaurants ... ............... 2')1
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16%
Shoney's Inc ....... ................. 8%
Wendy's Inti ................... .......6
Worthington Ind .................. 22

I

. i ~~~-~~db~~~Td~ure we' re notleft

i

··Good transportation ts·lmportant to all areas. I will continue
1 the work for Southeastern Ohio
and work with committees on
• Issues." Abel said concerning the
: completion of US 3.~.
''
! Abel said she Intends to work
·: on programs for senior citizens
1and medicare, and the· environment. She said she also wants to
work for the economically dlsad·
: vantage people.
: Abel, the wife of Richard Abel.
• was a graduate of the Shade
I Local School System In Athena
and received her bachelor's
degree In education and her
, muter's degree In journalism
1 from Ohio University.
.
I She II a fanner junior high and
: hlth school teacber In the Fe4:.eral Hockin&amp; Scbool System In
• Athens CoUIIty.
! Accol;'llln&amp; to Marsh, tbe earll·
l est Abel will take the oatb C!f
' otnce will be In a couple of weeki.
l Abel said abe will wrap up aDd
l complete ber du 11ft Ia the
I otflce before she NCiaDs.

!

!

o_oor

•

I

.

Proceeds from a yard 11leto be
held at the Lucille Gilmore
resltlenee, HllaDd Cb&amp;pe1 Road,
MODdiY, Tuelday and WedJiet.
day will be etven to tbe U. S. and
Mateo Million alid Ministry.
Tbe llle will be held all tbree
tlaya from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

·-?&gt;--·-.- . - · -- , -

tmts
Vol. 24 No. 12

...
By NANCY YOACHAM .
Tlmes-S entiJiel Staff
'
POMEROY- 1\s the effect so.!
House Bill 592, regulating land·
fills In Ohio. begin to be felt,loca!
landfill operators and county
officials have come to the reallza·
lion that tlje expense of getting
. rid of trash is going to molinl
right alqng with the trash.
'
Don Graves. of Mld·Amerlca
Waste Systems, met this week
with the Meigs County Commls·
stoners to discuss the problems of

FIIDAY, APII. 21, 1919
TUNA and NOODLES DIIIEI .........._............ 13.99

Delicious Tun• endRidl Egg Noocl•lntlwory8euct a.wd Wll:hMMNd ,._._
tOM and Hom...cltGrwy, YourCholaeot Hom ......t Col•t.w. M•IMI"onl Ill ...
or lellld ...... Hot lutWid Aoll or HomemedeliKult.

CHilD'S POinON .......:.......................................................... t1.99

SUNDAY, APIIL 30, 198.9 .
.

POll CHOP/DRESSING DINNEI-.,•• _........... 14.39

~0• Julot Pork Chop1. Pr.,.ed FM~h In our Klttih.n, ll'.wd Wh:h Delldoul
Homemade DrH•lng, M..tled htata- and Homemede ·Grt~Vy, Or..., ...., WHh

10% Dlocountto All Senior Cltlzono With Buckeye or Moum.ln- C•dol
.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 TO 8
Starting Sunday, April 20 Will Wilt CloH At 8:30

.
.
the rising costs of landfill opera·
lions and to pledge to the
commlssloners the lull coopera·
lion of his company in working
with Meigs County.
As Graves pointed "out to the
commission, "I 'm not sure the
general public realizes the total
impact down the road· of this
law."
The commissioners agreed
with Graves and dlscus$ed at
length the costs of bringing
landfills Into compliance with

ByDICKTHOMAS
.Times-Sentinel staff
GI\,LLIPOLIS - One hundred
eighty school Issues will be on the
ballot In Ohio's primary election
on Tuesday May 2, according to
State superln.t endent Franklin B.
Walter. ,
One of those Issues Is In the
GalUpolis City School District
where voter&amp; are being called on
to approve a total of six-mills,
Including one levy for 4.~ mills
for live years for operations and
,anqther levy for 1.5 mills for five

I -• ,

GM-206
GM-156
GM-191A
GM-197
GM-140
GM-176
GM-145
6A

YUR ·
1988
.1989
. 1985
9
1988
1988
1988

.

ELDERCARE NOW- Senlol'cliiHnl here will
Join thou11111ds acr011a
,slate ta ·.,_.., ot'
wearlnc pld rlbbotlllrom May HI In BUp"'rt of
the Eldercare Opliollli funding packal!le now being

"'e

•• 1

.'

)

'

CODIIIdered by
Here from the
·le~ Velma' TQ!or,
· Grice - Welch,
Middleport and Opal Tyree, Pomeroy, mak~lapel
rlbboiW te be worn by local seniOr citizens.

years for permanent
improvements.
Voters In the City of Gallipolis
are being as ked to select six
. ~ andldates, from a field of nine,
three of whom will be elected In
November to four-year terms on
the Ga!Upolis City Commission.
Candidates for City Commls·
slon at Tuesday's non-partisan
primary are Evelyn Young
Brady, William R. Brown, Robert L. Cornwell, Lloyd E .
Danner. Incumbent; Richard
MacKenzie,
Fran 0. McEwen,
.

Richard A. Moore. Carol P.
O'Rourk e . and Celes tine
Skinner,
The State Superintendent says
the nu.m ber of school money
requests on the ballot this prim·
ary Is the second largest in 10
years. "Clearly. Ohio schools are
crying out for help. Public
support at the polls Tuesday Is
crucial," said Walter.
The Gallipolis City Board of
Education voted Jan. 28, 1989, to
(See CITY, page A3)

Paving of·· us 35 to ·r esume Monday

GALLIPOLIS - Work will up $929,651 of the $4.8 million
through May with completion of
resume on thefour·laneresurfac· project.
the restoration of the second half
lng of US 35 In Gallla County for
~urrently. half of the brlilge ,of the bridge over State Route 7.
the 1989 construction season on s11rface over Stale Route 7 has.Upon completion of the paving
Monday
according
to
Mike
Lang,
been
restored
with
a
special
phase,
more than 23,000 feet of
.
.k
.Issue. This Is why our organJZaConstruction Engineer, District · concrete surface. Surface res to- guardrail will be replaced along
10, Ohio Department of High· ration Is required because of the the highway, according to Lang.
tlon Is participating In the Gold
Ribbon Ca mpalgn," said Cindy
traffic 'loads and normal snow
' The rough surface of US 35
ways (000T) .
Farson, director of the Area
Work began In May 1988, and and Ice surface treatment over will be laminated with paving of
Agency on Aging at Buckeye
suspended In November 1988, the years. HeaiLy trucks make UP, asphalt during May", Lang. "We
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
with completion set for July 31, more than 20percentoftheUS35 advise drivers to follow the
1989.
traffic volume, according to a 45-mlle per hour speed limit
Developjent District.
•'The lack of long term care
Contractor for the $4,883.~18 1988 siatewlde traffic survey.
when traveling through the conproject ts ,the Shelley Company,
. Weather permitting, mainline s.truction area, especially on
options for rural elders Is currently problern but will reach a · Thornville, Ohio. The project asphalt paving will begin Mon· bridge approaches which have a
which Includes bridge deck re· day May l. Paving cre.ws will one-and-a-quarter-Inch rise In
critical stage In 10 years. The
pairs, concrete pavement joint place approxlmatelyJO,OOO tons 1he pavement Traffic control
legislature needs to act now,"
repair, three-Inch asphalt over· of asphalt, which will require devices also have been Installed
she continued.
El'dercare Is a package of . lay and guard rail replacement. most work days In May and June. which guide drivers along the
programs aimed at giving
Repair of 13 bridge structures In Bridge work will continue work zones."
Ohioans the choice of remaining
the five- mile project length made~:-:::::::-'"--~:-;-:;;--::7':""":"::"-:':=-::...,..,=:=:=:::=-:=:::--:::=J
(See OHIOANS, pqe A7)

Ohioans ·raUy to suppori·, program
POMEROY -

Meigs ·County

~nlor Citizens will be joining

MODEL
Cadillat Sedan DeVille
Chev. Cadillac Cavalier Z-24
'Lincoln Continental
Olds Cutlass
Chev. 4 Dr.
Olds Delta 88
Chev•.4 Door Corsica

with thousands of older Ohioans
and theh)famllles In a show of
support for Eldercare program•
by flying gold ribbons. May 1·16.
Beginning tomorrow Ohioans '
of all generations stateWide will ·
tie gold ribbons on their car radio
antennas, and wear them on their ·
lapels, · to show that "We Wan.t •
Eldercare. •· Their goal will be to ·,
strongly encourage their state
legislators to support the
budget's Eldercare package.
. The Coalition for Eldercar~·
Options Is coordinating the Gol~

1983
1987
1984
1985
1983_

Ribbon Campaign, .which will
extend through May 16, Ohio
Senior Citizens Day. The coall·
tlon organized the very success·
ful "Eldercare Now" rally In the
statehourse rotunda on Feb. 9.
Coalltloh spokesperson Kathy
Teft:l(eJ.ler pointed out that sup·
port for Eldercare has always
been there, and It's visible
support has grown tremendously
. as the General Assembly dellber·
ares over the next budget.
"We know ssenlor citizens and
their families In Southeastern
Oho believe the development of
home ·care services Is a priority

a

\

PAST VFW POST COMMANDERS- RoiiOI'ed
at Friday allllt'l Loyalty Dlnaer were thelle Past
Commanden of Gallla County Post 4464,
Velel'lllll of Forelp Wlll'll, frot1ty from le~ are
Tom Thornton,· George Woodyard. John Mayes,
George Lemley, and SIIU J. Hamilton; Second
Row, Robert Barcus, Don Hemaworth, ·uoward

INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION - Students
at Rio GrUHie Elementary received a bands-on
education Friday dunac lnlerl)lllonal Art Featt·
val. Seven lllterllallonal atudenls from the Ohio
Valley I!!lernailonal Council, Ohio UnlversHy,
Athens, cune to lbe ~hool to leach lbe students

'

• All payments figured with 10% , Cash Down or .Tr~de Equity off
Sale ~rice. Must add for taxes and fees. All payments fixed rate fi·
na~c1ng. Rates may vary according to model year.
.
•'

Jim Cobb

POMEROY - In an effolt to
find affordable solutions to the
wastewater problems In Pome·
roy, the village earUer this
month subrmtted to the district
representatlve on the Small
Governments Board · for State
Issue II, an appUcatlon for a
grant In the amount of$2,972,700.
1f thl! grant application should
be approved, the vlflaee would
use the money to fund treatment
plant lmpr!)Vt!ment• and san!•
tary sewers In "unaewered areas
1 and 2" as outlined In tbe ·

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
CI\DI~LAC-GEO INC.
I

'.'
·~

- - - - -; --.

_POMEROY, OHIO

614.·992-6614 .
•

-·--

...__

__.,._

about tile 1peclal arts ol tllelr co•tey, Including
lie-dying and mualc frem ~rk:a, blllk from the
PhWppllle blllllda, and ealHIJ'apllyll'lllll China.
Here. Sakae Saito and Muae Yamapchl, from
Japan, show studenlll how to turn a pelee of paper
Into a atatue- oncunl. (Tlm...Sentlnel pbote)

Pomeroy applies for Issue 2 funds

.

MAINSTIDT

Wauch, Dovel Myers, Waraer Railey, aad Robert
Woods; back row, Frank Belville, John Jackson,
Dale Coder and Frani&lt;Ramllton. Coder, a former
emplOyee of the GalnpoUs Dally Tribune, was lhe •
first Commander of VFW Post 4464 In 1943.
( Tlmes:Bentlnel photo)

Levies slated for ·Meigs .ballot

1

'

been approved by the Ohio
Environment a l Protection
Agency , Graves expects the
Gallla facili ty will last a t least
another, 10 years and probably
much longer .
Many Meigs County trash
haulers currently use the Gallla
County site, the commissioners
said.
The J ackson County site has
only about two yeats l~n which
to operate "with no chance of
(See EXPENSES, page A6)

1985
1983

OZZY
1124A
GM-47
1009A
GM201

-

•

City commiss_ion, school issue
on Gallipolis ballot Tue8day
..

PRICES.
P.AYMENTS
TAGGED IN
VEHICLES
•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.•
H.B. 592 which went Into efflce in
trash picked up and hauled away four landfills, three of which,
June 1988. Such expenses will
on a regular basis will increse VInton. Gallla and JacksonCouneventually be passed on to the
from thecurrentaverageof$6.50 ties, are either owned or oper·
customer, which means that .- and $7 a month, to $20 a month.
ated by Mid-Amer ica Waste
local residents will have to pay a
When 592went Into effect. each Sys tems.
lot more to have trash hauled
county In the state. was required
The Gallla County landfill Is
away because trash haulers will
to form either a countt·wldesolld owned by the commissioners, but
have to pay a lot more to dump at
waste district or join with other Mid-America has an operating
tandfltls.
counties to form a district. Meigs agreement. The company has
Although It will probaQly be County is In a district which requested a longterm operating
about live years before H.B. 592 .Includes Vinton, Hocking, Jack· agreement- five to 10 yearsIs fully operational, Graves and
son. Gallla and Athens Counties. but the longterm agreement has
the commissioners predict that
Presently, within this six· · not yet l)een signed, Graves said.
the cost to the Individual to have
county solid waste district are Since the Gallla County site has

·

••

13 SectKms, 86 .P age•

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, April 30, 1989

Copyrigi.W 1919

Expen$e of trash removal to nse: operatdr.

tHIS WEEKiS SPECIALS .

HOMDIIU

Partly cloudy. High In mid

70s.

•

•

To Fit Your-,Budget•• ~

.

L

In Our Town: Boating activities
increase... Page 8-8

Jim Cobb Has The aJment

#

·Along the River ......... B1·8
Buslness ........ , ............. E-1
Comics· ................... Insert
Classlfleds ...... .. ......... 00· 7
Deaths ........................ A-3
Edllorlai ..... ................ A-2
Sports .................. , .... Cl-8

•

..

The Alzbelmers Disease Support Group will meet Tuesday, 3
p.m., at Overbrook Center. The
meetlne Is open to patients,
familieS and the public.

Proceeds for needy

Juanita Humphreys, ~me­
roy, was the winner of SundaY's
mystery farm contest. She correctly Identified the farm as that
of Gay Johnson In Carpenter. The Ganlen club 1o meet
contest Is a feature oft~ Meigs .
Middleport Garden Club will
SoU and Water ConserJ&lt;allon meet Monday, 7:30 p.m., at the
Dlstrlct. ·The winner will receive home of Mrs. G.E. S!:haekel.
a $5 check from the Ohio Valley Mrs. Schaekel and Mrs. Paul
Publishing Co.
Nease will be,hostesses.

Peid for by the Can &lt;late. John Btaettnar.
325 Wright St., Pomeroy, Ohio; 992·2855

Group to meet

'
I

Name f.lOrJiesl winner .

Page B-1

POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCil

•

Continued from page1
committment to the area," Abel
, said.
: " I think I have a good working
~ knowledge of the area and I
• Intend to bring that to the state
: house and be an active and vocal
; representative."
' Abel said she plans to focus on
education and continue to del velop economic development.
: ·'I think it Is important that we
: get fair financing for our educa·

!

Inside

Beat of the Bend: Teen dances loo
successfui... Page 8-7

Republican Candidate For

!

l

"')"

50 cents

Saturday's baseball

Looking
for ·a
home...

BLAETTNAR

.

Stocks

EsteP, Middleport, $40, Craig S. ·
Baldwin, Blue Creek, W.,Va.,and
LesUe J . Stapleton. Crown City •.
all $SO on charges of running a slop sign; Dennis W. Atkins,.
Middleport, $50, passing on the•
wroilg side of the street; Penny
Smith, Pomeroy, $100, disorderly
conduct.
Fined In the court were Wll·
!lamP. Davis, Mason, W. Va. ,$10
and costs, . expired tags; Sally
Moore, Pomeroy, $25 and costs ..
disorderly mar~ner; Rita Rous~ .
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, and ~0
days probation. disorderly
lnjlnner; Teresa Wal~r. Pomfroy, $25 and costs, , .10 days
probation, disorderly manner;
and Robbie Clonch, $100 Jlnd
costs, five days In jail, assault.

Four forfeited bonds on DWI
charges In the court of Middle: port ..,.ayor Fred Hottman this
week.
Forfeiting $450 bonds were
William C. Hammon, Bidwell;
Ricky L. Yost, Rutland; .Terry L.
Hutton, Rutland; and Lowell
Neimeyer, Vinton.
Others forfeiting bonds In the
court were Judith K. Moore,
Gallipolis, · $46, Diana L. Price,
GaiUpolls, $4P, and James J.
McElfresh, Parkersburg, $41, all
.on speeding charges; Ro1er

Muahroom1. Your Choice of • Hot BalttMM Rol or Hom.n... l .ttautt. Coff.., R•
. ,.. , orO.c.tfein~.lioth F,..hty lftW~ (A SmiiiSofl Drink orHotTe•M-v Be
lublltltuttdl.
.
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.John

.'

Voinovich ...

lAbel...

new

of a
National Honor Society
activity fund and approved the
proposed budget and appropria·
lion for the fund.
-Entered Into an a~reement
with Ohio University dealing
with the placemefll of Ohio
University students for their
student field experiences .
-Set Wednesday, May 31, 7: 30
p.m., ln the highschool cafeteria,
as the date, time and place ofthe
next regular board meeting.
-The board also met In an
execu live session on personnel
matters.
In atte.n dance at Wednesday's
meeting were Jim Smith, board
president; Kathy Manlcke, vicepresident, and members, Susie
Heines, Ray Karr and I.O.
McCoy.

•

Sunday

...;,___Middleport Court--

continued from page 1

Your Vote &amp; Support Appreciated

--Area deaths-•

Friday, April28. 1989

...

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village's municipal compllari'ce
plan, according to a letter from
Mayor Richard Seyler to Joann
Montgomery, of the southeast
district of the Ohio Envlronmental Protectlo'n Aeency, Logan.
Pomeroy has been ordered bY
OEPA to bring the vllJaee's
lleWaee disposal system .Into
compliance with state and fed·
eral re~tlons, but as yet, lack
of money ha, made compliance
vlrtullly lmpoaalble.
The erant propeul which the
village has submitted for State

..

I•

Issue II fundlq calls for an
additional $330,300 that Pomeroy
would have to contribute, brlna·
Ina the total funding package to
over $3.3 mUUon. The grant
proJIOIIll was prepared bY John
Anderson, vlllllpadmlnlatrator.
''We don't know for aure at thlll
time ju1t when the State of Ohio
will take action on applications,
but we teet that now that a State
Issue II director hu been appointed, the approval procl!lll
will beeln by mid-summer," the
letter to Montaon;tery read.

By CHARlENE HOEFLICH
Tbn...Seallael &amp;all
POMEROY - Meigs County
voters will go to the polls In 17
precincts Tuesday to vote on
school, cemetery and fire levies
In special elections, and regular
. Republican primaries In Middleport and Pomeroy.
, Voters of all precincts In the
Meigs Local School District will
be voting on a new 5.0 mllllevy
for five years for curreat expeiiJeS. That will be the only
lasue to be voted on In Bedford,
West Cheater, Rutland Vlllaee.
Eut Rutland, West Rutland,
Salem, Bradbury, Laurel aur.
and Roell: Sprlllp precincts. ·
Pusaae requires a majority
affirmative.
In Pomeroy Vllla1e, voters w!ll
cut their ballota llOt only on the
5.0 school levy, but on a aew five
year 1.0 mUI fire protection levy
where a Gil percent majority vote

is required for passage.
Scipio Township voters will
vote on the new 5.0 school levy
and also a new five year 12 mill
levy for cemeteries.
In the Republican Primary In
Pomeroy. lour ynlaee council
candidates will be selected trom
the six who have flied. They are
BettyA. BaronlckandWIIUamA.
Youq, Incumbents, John W.
Blaeltnar, Mary R. Powll, Steve
Price, and Thomu J. Werry. The
fo11r nominated lD the primary
will be tJPPOsed In the falla-al
etecttoa by Larry J. Wehrung,
Democrat, Incumbent ..
In MldlllllpOI't wbel'i tlllrt ....
at.o four IUta on vlllaee council
to be ftlled In the fall, the
. £andklates are Paul Gerard and
Dewey Hormn, Incumbents, and
Robert Pooler, wltb Bob Gil·
more,alloan lncumbftt, belnaa
valid wrtte-ln. In the fall, the
RepubllciDI will be oppoeecl by

the only Democrat candldaie
whose petition was validated by
tbe county board of elections,
E.F. Glass.
Also to be filled In Middleport Is
one seal on the Board of Trustees
of Public Affairs. Candidates are
Robert W. Duckworth and Bruce
Fisher with the winner to lUI the
seat since there will be lno
conlest In the fall.
Several volin&amp; locations have
changed, according to the board
of elections. Jane Frymyer,
director, reports tlrat Werot Ches·
111r Is oaly votlaJ thta lime

lllcall• ot tilt M1111 .LIIIII
School Dlatrlct levy. The locauoa
for votlne In thla election only
will be the Rock Sprlap Unhed
Metbodlst Church. In the faU
election, volin a will be held In the
reeular location, the Cllester
Elementary School.

�April 30. 1989

·c ommentary·. and penpective
Expresses appreciation for suppo1't

8ZII 'lblrd Ave., Gal_.,.., Olllo
(Itt) «6-13&amp;2

111 Cour&amp; St., Pomeroy, Ohio
- (114) "!-21118

BOBEKT L. WINGETT
Publlldler

~ career.

•

HOBART WILSON JR.

. PATWHITEHEAD

Exeeudve Editor

AMiatant Publlldler-CoiltroUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Alsocla,.,

· tlon and the American

Newap.~per

.
Age11cy; Bill Gray, Ohio Valley
Bank; Mike Northup, Norris
Northup Dodge: Mike, Donna
and Mark Allen, Bastille; Steve
Chapman, CPA; Bob and Sheila
Eastman, Foodland; Scott
Hinsch, Star Bank; Kirk Frazee,
The Steakhouse; Gene Johnson, ·
Gene Johnson Chevrolet Oldsmobile; Bryce Smith, Blunt, Ellis
and Lowe; Danny Mink, Coach
Gordon Baker, Coach Joe Myers
and my Blue Angel teammates.
Tliank you,
Sarah Todd
Blue Angel
Class of 1989

Dear Blue Angel Boosters,
Being chosen to represent
District 13 and Gallla Academy
In the All Ohio Girl's High School
Basketball Classic was an honor
and an exciting end to my four
year high school basketball

Publllbert Auoetatlon.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are weloome. Tbey abould be less thaa :DOw~
10111. All letters are subl ect to editing and must be stped with name, addresa and
tel.one number. No uiiJIInal l"ters will be publllhal. Letter• lllould be lo
gocd tute, addressing liSUM, not p!rscmalutes.

I would like to thank the
. Boosters whose generosity made
It possible for me to be a part of
this event and to play my final
high school game on the campus
of the Ohio SU!te University at St.
John's Arena. .
A very special thanks to: Tom
Wiseman, The Wiseman

Upset with officials

· Backstairs at
· the White House
'
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Dear Editor:
condemned us before they knew
Just recently we purchased a the facts, to them I say
horse at a livestock auction, she ." Thanks", just don't accept jury
was very thin, and headed for the duty!
.
zoo or the dog can! We saw her
The Sheriffs Department did
potential as a good gaited horse . not notify us on Friday, therefore
By HELEN THOMAS
- and bought her tllat Saturday. On we had a board bill, they called
UPI While House Repor&amp;er
that next Monday eve following,
WASHINGTON -Women advisers do not have a high prollle In the the horse went through a section the Vet (which lftheywould have
Bush White House. President Bush's meetings In the Oval Office and of fence that was down, we did notified us, was unnecessary) .
In the Cabinet Room take on the atmosphere of a men's club and not know the fence was down! We She gave worm medicine. which
meant the horse had had two
Inevitably the participants are all male.
saddled our other horse and doses with-In four days. We
But there are several dynamic women behind the scenes who have Immediately -followed her for
wormed her Monday eve!
top notch jobs on the naHonal securlt:,&lt; staff, and they have an three hours until dark.
Let's hope that doesn't!tlll her.
important say In foreign policy and advising the president. They work
My husband searched In vain· We feel that all this cotld have
in ·the Exec_u tlve Office Building 'n ext door to the White House and dusk till dawn, for three days, no
they deal with tlie nation's secrets In diplomacy and military policy . horse! On Thursday evening, been avoided If the Sheriffs ·
Department would have only ·
friends stopped a Meigs County done It's job and notified us!
Among them are Nancy Bearg Dyke. director of International deputy and reported the missing
We feel the Sheriffs DepartPrograms and Public Diplomacy on the National Security Council horse. On Friday morning (8:00
ment
owes our money back on the ·
staff. who was national security adviser to Bush when he was vice a.m.) my husband called the
room
and board since Thursday
president.
Meigs Sheriff' s Dept. and reeve
unto
we picked her up
Others are Virginia A. Lampley, senior director Of legislative ported the missing horse. My
affairs on the NSC staff. She previously served with the Air Force In husband also called the Meigs .
various Intelligence positions .
1 ·
Newspaper and placed an ad on
Nancy Y.· Menan. a Reagan administration hc~dover, Is the senior the lost horse that same Friday
HI ao&amp;LEIS
director for Information policy, and decides on Freedom of A.M.
IIAII
Information requests. among her other duties.
Sometime between Tuesday
Is Sponsol'lntt A
Judyt Mandel, a career diplomat, joined the NSC staff In 1985 as and Friday the horse was found
deputy director of the Office of International Communications and
CLASS D &amp; E
(no one tells us the same story or
Informal ion. She has been Involved In nuclear arms negotiations and account of the details). SomeSOnBAU TOUINAIIENI
has served in the U.S. Embassy In Moscow. She speaks French,
time between Tuesday and Fri·
In Galllpols, Ohio
Russian and Italian fluently, along with some German and Poland.
day ant) Sheriff's Department
MAY 6 and 7
Sandra L. Charles joined the NSC s(aff last August as director for and Humane Society were called
Awordt will t&gt;t 111, 2nd. 3rd
Near Eastern and South Asian affairs. dealing with such hot spots as and the two offices communitrophleo; 1 ot. f200 ,gift cen.;
the Middle East, as well as Southwest and South Asia and North . cated! We were never contacted,
2nd, t1 00 gift cort.; Moot Vol.
Africa. She also helped lay out U.S. policy toward Afghanistan.
. Pll'fW, t25 gift cert.
until Monday evening by a
Entrv
Fee teo 6 bill. o. ..m. Mil¥ 3
Condoleezza Rice Is the director for European and Soviet affairs on concerned citizen who saw the ad
For Info Cal 614-446-6314 .
the NSC staff. A tenured political science professor at Stanford. she is In the newspaper. I know for a
a specialist on Soviet and East European politics and helped draft a fact the J-lumane people who had
more liberal U.S. policy toward Poland In the light of Its reforms and the horse saw the ad Sunday
fortllcomlng elections.
evening and did not call us! So
Carol A. Paquette. who soonwllldeparttogo Into the private sector, goes the story and the bottom line
Is the NSC's director of administration .. preparing the budget and Is, II cost us $110.00 to retrieve our
setting up a computer system and military comlfland system data horse. We have yet to receive an
communications network in the White House complex . She joined the Itemized list for those char,ges.
NSC In 1983 and has been on the staff under the trauma of the People were so sure we had
Iran· Contra scandal.
abused the horse, they obviously

sonaAU.

.
·
.

",

.·
·'

.·'.

I·

Tuesday morning.
Also the Vet bill could ha've
been avoided If they would have
called us. Depending on when the

horse was picked up the haul bill
should be reimbursed to us.
Horrified Horse Owner
Carol Cr011s

RmRED 4-15-89

T. JAY BRADSHAW, O.D. ··
'

I Wish To Thank All the
Patients I have Seen in the Past
Thirty-four ·Years.

. MY SUCCESSOR IS

A. JACKSON BAILES, O.D.·

250 Second Awt.
Gallpoli~ OH.
4. .·3300

110 Mechallk St.
Po•roy, 01. ·
992-3279

""We'll
Be

Se~ing

Vou"

We, at Velerans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy,
your hometown hospital, mtainly hope that "We'll It
Stting You" next Sunday, ,May 7, from 1 to 4 p.m.
That's the elate and lime of our annual Open
House bting held to mark the st•t of National Hospital
WHk.
.
Our ,Open lfoun will feature free flngerstlck cho·
lesterol tesling, a free biOOfl pressure dinlc, toun of our
facility, a photograph clispiQJ, favors and refresh111111ts
on the patio'. Ancl you can look over our reclecoratecl
and remocltled lobby.
=:L!!!!l::.
We're looking forward to having you.~.;;;=;::;::

"#

6Ai\

--'&lt;7

EFFECTIVE MONDAY, MAY 1

MEIGS HEALTH SERVICES, INC.

Joyce J, Hapney

I

YOERANS MEMORIAL.
HOSPITAL POlllOT

'

'
•
:
•
~

·•
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•

at Vetera!'s
He was born on Aprll18. 19041n
Carbon Hill. son of the late John
William Kennedy Sr. and Allie
(Blosser) Kennedy.
The 1924 graduate of Athens
High School worked as a coal
mine!' for many years and was a
member of the First Baptist
Church In Athens.
Survivors Include his wife.
Carrie (John~on) Kennedy;
three sons, Ed Kennedy of
Pomeroy. Joe Kennedy of Col·
llervllle. il'enn.. and Jack

IDEAL Gin FOR
MOTHER'S DAY

'

PH. 992-6601
Think Of It As
·Gear Drive With

r.

• t2hpllriggi&amp;SUIAJnorat2.5hp

~ Kawaslklenglne.
~ • Tilt ride a 1200today.

5-..., Umilld Warranty.

•.
•,·
,.
•.

~

'·

aw. you tht
wttn tt'tt tiiY

Foot comrolllfl you:

RrKhir~Star.

RtOulate apMd In any gNr.
_ •• Stlltt
lnatantty from forward to revtrM.

-to

• Ull bott'l handl for other opffltlonl. .
...... I "0"
1110- II your Gravely
doaltr. todly.

K·Mirt Off~ake

ON THI SPOT FINAIICING WI11APPIOYID CIEDIT

(6141 1184 3000

'ChiiiPIIke Oltice

- ·10 DOWN PA

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Wedding

(6to4jll87-3t0t
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(6t4IIIII&amp;&amp;i11l

TIACTOR.

Time &amp;T-ature (Ironton}: 532-8832

'

.

Nothing Held Back. All Chains
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One-Half!
Great Gift Ideas.
Hundreds to Choose Frqm .

Diamond Fashion Rings

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Designed and Plain Wedding
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GALLIPOLIS, OH.
422 SECOND AVE.

'&lt;:

Diamond
Engagement Rings

ltlllllaiiPTION UTES
lyC......,orlllolorBoute
OOe Week ............................ 70 Cent•
ODe Year .................... ,... ,..........-.411
IINOLII: COPY

'

PJUCE -

Sunday ................................ !10 Ceiitl

No 1ublcrtptlorll by moB permitted In
areu Wbere mot« carder •rvtce II
available.

The Sumay "nm•Seotmel wUI aot be
retpc:lllible for advaac» paymeat•
mad• to corrla'l.

'Court Street Olflce-Gal!I OOIIS
I6t4J t46 0062
'Silvor Bridge Plaza Oft•ce-GaiiiOO'•S
i6t4I44&amp;9300
Spring Valley Olt•ce-Gaii•POI•S
i6tl) 44&amp; 1399

WATCHES
The Area 'a Flneet Seleetlon of Watchea
•Selko •Bulova •LoSalle
•Cara\lelle •Pulsar

20%

Off

GIFTWARE
Brass •wood •clocks
•crystal •Pewter "Silver
0

20%-30%0FF

REG.

SALE

.05 ct ..................... $149.00

$98.00
.10 ct. - ................. .$239.00 $158.00
.1s
$299.00 st99.oo
.20 Ct.....................$599.00 S39t.Oii
.25 ct. .; ........ .. ........ $699.00 · 14111.00
NICE QVALfi'V-VS.H

ct. ....................

Save

20% to 33%

SAVE

20%

ENTIRE INVENTORY!
FREE SIZING

•Earrings
0
Lockets
°Crosses
0
Pendants

20%
OFF

MAIL IRJIICBIPTIONI

.....,Otolr

.

oae Year ................................. 137.C4
t11x m'""bl ............................... $11.110

..
w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~~

Time &amp; Temt*ature iGaihOOhS • .t.06-51 AR
..:!;SANK

!Millo ConiJ

13
llt-24
HW- .................................. 13'7.H

_ _Cho_Cft..,. ..

'

fiW- .................................. fi4.JI

.

•

"

All

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OFF
Entire Selection of AriCarved

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Advertlllnc
resentaltve, Branham
01, 733 Third Aveoue,
Newopaper
New York, New York l00l7.

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today.

OHIO

Tie Tacs, Money Clips, Key
Rings, Knives, Giftware.

Our faces have changed in 43 years bqt
the quality and service hasn't. Thank
You Ohio Valley for .making us the
Area's # 1 Jeweler.

MemM: United Press lnternatloD&amp;J,
Inland Dilly Pms A11oclatton and the

STAR BANK .

operltlof'l ot hydrOitatlc 1rlntmilllon.

SALIS AID

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Publlllled each Sundoy, 82!5 Third Aw ..
GolllpoUI. Ohio, by tbeObloValiE)&lt;Puf&gt;.
llahlna Comp~~~y!Multlmedla. Inc. Second clall pollaiO tllld at Gllllpolla,
Ohio e&amp;:n. Entered u aecond claa
malltne matter at Pom«oy. Oblo, Post
Office.

You may qualify for a low interest Stafford~ '
(formerly called the Guaranteed Student Loan).
And you'll make no payments,until you graduate.
To apply,stop by any Star Bank or call532·2575 or
.
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Dltllll o n -·

UPTO

43 Years
later after
fire in 1957 location
404 Second.

Waterfall Rina 14K

(USPID-1411)

~

• 32"' or 38" mower deCk.

ct.. .......

OFF
All Strands, Earrings,
AddJA-Beads, Rings,
Bracelels, Pins

Pendants

.09 ct... ....... $175.00 $119.00
.13
$235.oo $159.oo

20%

Paul Davies
Jewelers as it
looked in 1946
-location
412 Second.

SALE
$159.00
$229.00
$289.00
$819.00

S199
II CT. T.W. Diamond

HydroslaUc Ease

•.•

REG.
.:1.5 tw ......... $245.00
.20 tw ......... $350.00
.25 tw ......... $435.00
· .54 tw ....... $1225.00

NOW

RIG. $1500

•

•

•

.

50% OFF·

3f•CT.

(Next to Dr. VHianeuva's Office)

...• .

• '

.

•

507 MULBERRY HEIGHTS, POMEROY

• H)'drostatk: or gear drMI.

~"'"''

~~~~r~!~H~:~~:i.

•

Will Locate To Their New Office At

Qrevely buiiJIS thll 1200 Series Lawn
- li'actOfl for the ho,_.,.r who
wants~ results. Choose:

cause of the exclusion of tax
costs . The 1.5 mllllevywill bring abatement on March 1,1988. The
In 5180,558 a year or a total of co-chairperson also stressed that
$902,790 over tllefiveyearperlod. no money from tlle- 1.5 mUI
Donald M. Robinson, 291 Jack- capital Improvement levy would
be used to purchase property fc)r
son Plke, wh0 with his wife,
AI vera L. Robinson. Is co- the site of a new highschool. Th~t
chalrpersonoftheLevyCommit· money , he pointed out, will lie
tee, said the ' district has res· used to repair and Improve
tricted (lurchase of supplies and present bulldlngs. .
equipment to save money . The
Robinson also made It clear
dl
lh
1
that
the board does spend mon~y
major expen lure 1n e annua
budget isthe payrollof$230,0001n on the school lunch program . ll·IS
26 Pays Per
· Year Or a· total Of ' self sufficient. And, The boatd
$5,980,000. Robinson said the does not spend general fu~d
school district employs 246 per· money for athletic equipment. .
."
tlfl
d
d
Thast money Is generated
sons, 1"" cer ca 1e an 81
classified employees.
through gate receipts and don,a·
Robinson also answered some
lions from the athletrlc boosters
.
questions of voters when he club.
,
pointed Out that the SC hool
Polls In the city and city school
district would receive taxes from
district will open at 6:30 a.m.
the new mall and other Industrial
Tuesday and close at 7:30p.m;

... ·

POMEROY - William (Bill)
• Kennedy•Jr., 85. of Rock Springs
;

,of$ 2•708 ,375 _Thislsforoperating

William Kennedy

RIG. S3SO

.--

City.., ___.:. .___~(~F::::ro~m~C~ITY~,:!-pa:!g~e_:A!_!l)~
- -:-:-.---:--:--:-:--=:-:-:=::::-;:::::bring In $541,675 a year or a total and commercial property be-

He was preceded In death by put the levies up lor a vote at a
his wife, Marie (Blevins) Hill, Special Election May 2 after a
who died In 1969; one sister and financial analysis revealed that
one brother.
the district would have a deficit
Su rvlvors Include one daugh· ·of $451,635 as of June 30, 1990.
ter, Mrs. Sue Siders of ColumThe board decided that bebus; th~e brothers, Buz H!ll and · cause of the Impending deficit
Grover Hill, both of Gallipolis, and Inflation It was necessary to
and Frank Hill of Marlon, Ohio;
ask tlle district patrons for more
one sister, : Helen Masters of · support by placing the levies on
Gallipolis; and three the ballot. This according to the
grandchildren.
board would enable to board to
Services will be Tuesday at 1 avoid borrowing money and
p.m. at Willis Funeral Home. The avoid dipping Into the state loan
Rev. John Travis will officiate. fund. however, ·It would permit
Burial will be at the Pine Street the board to remain competitive
Cemetery, where the VFW Post with other school districts and
4464 and American Legion Post continue to make Improvements
27 will conduc1 flag honors at of programs and facllllles .
Passage of the two levies will
graveside.
bring
In a total of $3.611.165 over
Friends may call the funeral
the
five
year period on an
home Tuesday from 11 a.m. until
estimated
dis trict valuation of
the lime of the service. ·
$120,372,390. The 4.5 mUJ levy will _

•

DR. JAMES WITHERELL
DR. WILMA MANSFIELD

•

· Kennedy of Hudson, Mass.; one
sister. Daisy Burroughs of Chilli·
cotlle; seven grandchlldren; six
great-grandchildren; two nieces .
and one nephew.,
.
Services wlll .be Monday at 1
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial Will be at West Union
Street Cemetery In Athens.
Friends may call the Ewing
Funeral Home Sunday from noon
to 3 p.m. and from 6 to 9 p.m.

VINTON - Services for Joyce
Jean Hapney, 48, Rt. 2, Vinton,
were Saturday at tlle French City
Baptist Church with . the Rev.
John Wood officiating. Burial
was In the Pineview Cemetery.
Orgas, W.Va.
.
Pallbearers were Billy Hap·
ney, Bryan Grimes, Matt Nibert,
David Long, Aaron Stanley, Buzz
Edwards, and-Russ Shaw.
Gus Hill
Funeral arrangements were
GALLIPOLIS - Gus Hill, 67,
·· under the direction of McCoy- · 701 Fourth Ave.. died Thursday
Moore Funeral Home. Wether· evening at Doctors Nortll Hospl·
holt Chapel, Gallipolis.
tal in Columbus.
He was born on March 19, 1922
Earl N. McLain
m Gallipolis, son of the late Fred
.
GALLIPOLIS- Earl Nicholas and Steva Hill.
II
U.S.
Army
A
World
War
McLain, 50, Rt. 1, Goodview , Va.,
a!
so
a
retired
veteran,
he
was
died April 18.
He was an employee of Eliza· .electrician.
. beth Arden In Roanoke.
He Is survived by his wife.
Myrtle Smith McLain. one son.
Jason Nicholas McLain, and one
daughter, Tract Lynn McLain,
botll at home.
Also surviving are four broth·
· ers. · Donald Ray McLain of
Montvale, Va .• William Thomas
. · McLain of High Point, N.C.,
' Luther Glenn McLain of Mesa.
Ariz .. and Melvin Clay McLa\11 of
Bedford, Va.; five sisters, Betty
Jean Guthrie of Roanoke, Va. , ·
Mrs. Donald (Ruby Lee) Grady
of Washington, D.C., Mrs. Clyde
(Nellie Faye) Townley of Roanoke. Mrs. Daniel (Anna Bell)
Ayers of Goodview, Va., ani)
Mrs. Dana (Sue Ellen) Cole of
Richmond.
·He Is also survived by mother·
' and -father·ln·law. Georgia and
Harley Smith of Gallipolis; spe·
eta! sister-In-law, Mrs. Howard
(Shirley) Meadows of Gallipolis.
and Mrs. James P. (Charlene)
Dalton of Roanoke; and several
nieces and nephews.
·
Services were held April 21 at
the Lotz Vln1on Chapel In Vlrgl·
nla. Burial was In the Goodview
Baptist Church Cemetery.

;

GO .DIRE.CTLY TO
STAR BANK. GET CASH
FOR COLLEGE.

Remick stars

.. HOLLYWOOD (UP!) -Lee
._; Remick will star In "Dark
Holiday." the drama based on
·• Gene LePere's true story of
.• her frightening internment in
a Turkish prison after being
accu sed of smuggl -I ng
antiques.
Also starring in the drama
, are Norma Aleandro and Roy
Thinnes for producer-direc(or
• Lou Antonio.
••
In 1983 LePere vacationed
; In Turkey where she bought
., three cheap figurines from a
, sireet vendor and was later
• detained In Customs when she
•, declared the objects. She was
' Imprisoned and p'ut on trial for
smuggling national artifacts.

A,ri 30, 1989

..

· Letters to the editor

Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.,.. A-2

Sunday Times· Sentinai- Page- A-3

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

uw.....................................::..

IIW- ................................. .,.,.

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

Page-A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

EASTMAN'S.

Your Independently Owned
Low·Priced Supermarket

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FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK
1 YEAR CUFFSIDE GOLF

FREE
1 . .

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Apti 30, 1989

CLUB MEMBERSHIP ENTRY...

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I1 Ph;~~:~.=ahi·i~.v~~·bv·v~;;;·,:~d~~~d·;.;~~i....·I1 ..
Name: .... :............................. :............

Address: ............................................

Departments. Entry Boxes located near
·
Meat Department.

I

"We Resi!Ve the Ri&amp;ht to Limit Quant~ies •Prices Effective Sunday, April 30 tlwu 'Saturdoy, lilY 6
Glodly Accepted •Not Responsible for Typo!Japhlcal Errors

I

MUST BE 18 V.EA~S OF AGE TO ENTER

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SAVE ON THESE 81-RITE ITEMS!!!

REGISTER FOI

....
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BI-RITE

"'___. A FREE

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TEA BAGS

GIVE-AWAY
MEAT DEPT

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100

12 oz.
CANS

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BI·IITE-22 OZ.

COFFEE CREAMER..

$ 129
.

9(
4
PAPER TOWELS ........

Il-liTE ROLL

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II-RITE GALLON

·

BLEACH .................... 89

(

·-IITE-4 IOU PAK

79

(

BATH nSSUE ••••••••••••

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fOOD LAN~

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"BIG. AS BUNZ"

BEEF LOIN

BONELESS
HOT DOGS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK

BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST

LB.

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LB.

Charmin

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Coca-Cola

Cottage Cheese

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ROLl

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10 LIS. OIIIOH

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Pork Chops

~119

FRESH LEAN

.T-Bone
Steak

Ground
Beef

··$489
LB.

SOLD IN 10-11 LB. QTYS. ·

10 LIS. 01 MOlE

CRY-0-YAC CENTER
BOB EVANS

Smoked ·
Sausage.

$199

.

WHOLE STICK SUPERIORS

~$119

'

5 LIS. 01 MOlE ·

•••

~ Mt.

Brand
· -- _@ologna
Ll.

EACH

! CRY-0-VAC LOAF HORMEL

Fish
Fillets

Chopped
Ha·m

,9 9

$495

$750

$1250

5 Ll. PIG.

5 LI.PIG.

10 LB. LOAF

. MIXED FLATS

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.-s

OVD 24 LBS.III

Ill For

$899

ASSORTED
.

HANGING BA

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xwell
.
Ho e Coffee

· oz. CAN
liSTANT

99
______

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CYPRUS
MULCH
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AND UP

EACH

36-39

BEDDING PLANTS

·

•REG.. •E.P. •ADC .• FRENCH ROAST

•1 0 LIS. CHICKEN
, LEG QUABDS
•5 LIS. MOUNTAINEER
SAUSAGE
•I· 12 OZ. PKG.
OU CAIOIIIA
KICID lACON
•5·12 OZ. PKGS. TENDEIIEST

YEGlTABLE or FLOWERS

-._
\79&lt;

WHITING

.Sliced
Bacon·

Full-Flats

•

USDA CHOICE

FEET
· lAGS

•

399. COW MANURE... 2/$ 5 .

PINE BARK ·3 cu•c $
NUGGETS •••••• !~!..

RICH

BAGS

$399
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PINE MULCH ..~1!!.
POTTING SOIL!.~~;.

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$399

. MARBLE ROCK.... .

SPHAGNUM

PEAT MOSS ••••••••

S6' 99

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Aho Available: Onion Sets, Garden Seeds, Top SoH and Peat

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LB.

ENGUSH ROAST

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24 oz. . :

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FOODLAND

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•SPRITE •CAFFEINE FREE
DIET OR REGULAR

Bath Tissue

••

$
IOIIIUSS

·.1 LB.
PKG.

..

FRESH CHICKEN
LEG QUARTE.RS

BEEF CHUCK

e

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. TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

TENDERBEST U.S.D.A. CHOICE

SUPERIORS

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Page-A-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

-Area news briefs.---.
Sheriff probes accident, complaint
POMEROY - Under investigation by the Meigs County
Sheriff' s Departtnent Is an accident on Rutland Township Road
174 In which Sandra Whaley, 17, Route 1, Shade, lost control of
her vehicle and went off the roadway. The accident occurred
about midnight Friday. There were no Injuries but the driver
was cited for failure to control.
Also under investigation by the department Is a complaint of a
mailbox being damaged on liappy Hollow Road. According to
the report, Mrs. Ida Smedley said that an individual had pUlled
the door off the box. Charges ar.e pending, Sheriff Soulsby
rep orts.

Residents urged to use five digits

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POMEROY - The need for five digit addresses to be on
mailboxes Is being stressed by Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Souls by. He reports that his deputies have been serving venires
for both a petit jury and a grand jury and have noted that many
of the five digit addresses are not on the mailboxes. As a result,
he says, deputies are having difficulty Jocatiqg some residences
so that the jury summons can he delivered.
To further emphasize the Importance of the five digit
addresses on mailboxes ..Sherlff Sou!Sby noted that the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service uses the numbers In
dispatching emergency squads and tire equipment. ·
His suggestion to help solve the problem Is for some group
such as 4-H clubs or scouts to undertake a community project of
numbering residents' ·mailboxes. '

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Meigs EMS answers Jive calls
POMEROY- Five calls were answered by units of the 'Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service on Friday.
~~ 5:06a.m. the Racine unit went to State Route338forZelpha
Stewart who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hspllal. At 10: OS
a.m. the Pomeroy unit transported Charles Blake from
Am~care- Pomeroy Health Care Center, to Veterans; at 12:56
·p.l1). the Syracuse unit took Sara McCarty from John Street to
V#.ierans;.. at 1:54 p.m. the Pomeroy unit transported Sam
Woodrum from Royal Oak Club to Veterans. and a\3: 12 p.m. the
Middleport squad went to the Friendly Tavern for Kenneth
Breeding who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.

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Pleasant, W.Va.

April30, 1989

_.:..(F_ro_m_E_x...:P..::EN:....SES=·~P.;;;:a1:.;;.•.::A1:.:.)_ _ _:....·:....·-----~--------

.

.,

'::: $799

•

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Fri·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK-3
. ,

Boneless
Pork

282 . .

Whole
Fryers

Sirloin
Ch~ps

PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,475,499, with a payoff due of
$410,159.
PICK-4
9599.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$253.987. with a payoff due of
$83,500.

I .509!

Redl~ve

White Mia!

69¢

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lb
lb.

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CORBIN &amp;
SNYDER

Mason Cardinal
Market

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KELLER

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Table ............. $399
Side .Chair .....$ 15 9
Arm Chair .....$199
China .............$849

••

16

oz. pkg.

lb.

...99¢
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State Bank No. 138 .

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I, the understaned officer, do hereby declare' that this Report of Condit n has
been prepared In conformance with official Instructions and Is true to the b t of
·
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my
. knowledge and belief.
Madge E. Bogas . ,
VIce President and.Co,ntfjlller
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We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condl·
tlon !Uid declare that II has been examined by. us and to the belli ot our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In conform'ance with official Instructions and Is true
and correct. .
·
·
Merrill L. Evans
Keith R. Brandeberry - Directors
Warren F. Sheets

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A· STYLE TO nT YOUR HOME - A PRICE TO m

YOUR POCKET!

CVRf&gt;IN a SNTDlR
fURNITURf
C().
,__AI
••s ....
...,.....

tltwtst Cndlt , _
Ofrtl Deliltry
•Spacial Orders,
Special Prices

lktr

lhw•y

•'·~ ...........................

-'

C~Siaw

•

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$1 69:

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lb.'

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ASSETS
&gt;,
· Cash an,d b~Jances due from depository Institutions:
a. ,N oninterest-bearlng balance~ and curren~y. and coin .................. 3,754,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ...................................... .'......................649,000.00
· Securities .................................................'. .. ........... ~. 1.'......... .. .... : ..... 50,153,000.00
•
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements
,•
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to resell In domestic offices of the bank and of Its
'.
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries; and In IBF's:
, · , ,. ,
.. Federal fund sold .......... ,.... :.~ ....................:..,. ...,-.; .......\ .,, .. :.:., ... : ..(.:. 6,300,oo0.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:.
,
Loans and leases, net of unearned income .. :....... 119,315,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and 'lease losses ............ 1,299,000'.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,'
'·
allowance, and reserve ................................................. ·.............. 1i8,016,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases) ................... 1,409,000.00
Other real estate owned ....................................................................... 26,000.00
Olh~r as~ts ......................................... .. ..... ............... :........ ,,, ....... ,,., 2,598,000.00
Total. assets ................................................................. :... :............ 182;905,000.00
Total assets and -losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C.1823(j) ........ 182,905,000.00
.
· LIABILITIES
Deposits:
·
a. In domestic offices .. ............................ ... ........... ....... .............. 167,610 000 00
(1) Non1nterest-liearing ....................................... 12,918,000.00
' ·
!2) Interest-bearing ......... ....................... .......... 154,692,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreement'
to repurchase In domestic offices of the bank and at Its
Edge and Agreement subsldlar~. and In IBFs:
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase ................................ 319,000.00
Other liabilities .., ..................... ........... .'...... :....................... .............. 1,857,000.00
Totalllabllltles ....................... ,, ........................... .............. ............ 169.786,000.00
..
EQUI'l'V CAPITAL
.
Common stock No. of shares a. Aulhorlzed .......... 417,824
.
b. Outstanding ... ~ .... 411,104 ............... 4,111,000.00
Surplus ...................................... :................................ ,.................... 5,910,000.00
Undivided 'profits and capital reserves .............................................. 3,098,000.00
Total equity cal'llal ......................................... .. ... ........................... 13,119,000 ne----... •
Total equity capital and losses deferred
· '•
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823()) ........... .. ......................... .. .................13,119
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses d~ferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(1) ........................ 182, ,000.00

ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION
SHOP EARLY
AND SAVE!

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Ham

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The Ohio Valley Bank
Company
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.• Beef
Franks

Federal Reserve District No. 4
of Gallipolis, GallIa County, In the Slate of Ohio at the ciOIII! of b"slness on March 31
1989.
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Brand •

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

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955 Second l,....
Galllpells, Ohio 45631
Phon~

16141446-1171

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Firemen answer two falsi alarms

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Volunteer Firemen answered two
alarms Friday, bringing the total number of alarms for the year
to 63.
·,
Ten firemen· and _o ne piece of ~ulpment answered a false
alarm at 8; 15 a.m. to !he Gallipolis Devel!lpmental Center. .
Seven men and one truck answered another false alarm at
1:17 p.m. to St. Louis Catholic Ch1p-ch, 91 State St. Fire Chief ,
Ray . Bush said workers In the parsonage CJ1!aled dust;
lnadvertantly actlvltatlng the automatic alarm. There was no
fire. ·

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Open door session scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - A representative ofthe office oflOth District
Congressman Clarence Miller will conduct an open door session
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday In theGallla County. courthouse
In Galllpolls. Mlller says anyone with questions concerning the
federal government. should stop by and dlscu&amp;S them with his
representative.
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Ill ( -

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Patties

$199 ~b

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State of Ohio, County. ot Gallla, st: ·
.
Sworn loand su..crlhed before me this 25th day, of .-\Jlrll, 1989and I hereby certify that I am not an ot:flcer or director of thll bank.
.. , ..
Cl~. H. Johnston, AKA Cindy L. liarrlngton, Notary Pubic
My commllalon expires March 2!1, 1991.

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GALLIPOLIS - GalllpoUs Pollee invettltated a car-ileer .
acclden t at 8: 48 p.m. Friday on Portsmouth Road, near Old Fort
Trail.
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Officers said a deer ran Into the side of a car driven .b)' Gary
Reynolds, 38, 43 Central Ave., Galllpoi!J. No one was Injured.
Damage was moderate.
The accident report did not Indicate whether the deer was
killed, Injured or lett the scene. 'l'he Investigating officer was
not available for questioning.
Pollee activity during a 24-hour period ending at 8 a.m.
Saturday Included the following citations:
William F. s.itz, 28, 244 Fourtli Ave.. ·Gal!lpoils. bench
warrant for failure to pay. a fine; Stanford E . Fulks, 36, Rt. 2,
Crown City, disorderly conduct by IIJtoxlcjlU~.n; Linda C.
Runyon, 31, Kanauga, no operator's license and squealing tires;·
Stephen A. Walters, 33, Rt. 2, GaiUpoUs, parole violation; Chuck
E. Roberts, 28, 86 Pine St., G~Jipolls, bench warrant for failure
to appear; and David R. Johnson, 18, Kanauga, picked up an
.outstanding warrant for Lawrence County.
·

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I Mason Cardinal Market I
I · EXpires May 6, 1989 . · I
1 This Coupon Is Good For I
1 SOc Off Any Item ln Ou'r I
Store With Additional :
I
$5.00 Pur&lt;hace
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99¢
•

COUPON .

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Aceident report incomplete '

Lottery numbers

· ~~--------------------------~--~

LOWEST PRI(:ES EVER!

I

·79¢
•••

GALLIPOLIS- The Gallla County Sheriff's Departtnent was
called to investigate a hit-skip accident at 8:22p.m. Friday at
the junc1ion of SR 588 and Rodney Pike.
Deputies said Ruth E. Adkins. 33. 725 Pine St .. Thurman,
stopped to make a left turn. An u~ldentlfied vehicle struck the
back of the Adkins car and left the scene. No one was Injured.
Damage was minor.
The sheriff's department was also called to investigate the
theft of a gun from a parked car at Crabtree Apartments on
Bulav ille Road. Deputies say someone took a .38-callber Ross
revolver from a parked car owned by_ Joe Johnson. Rt. 1,
Galllpolis .

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POMEROY - Chief Deputy Jlmmer Soullby and deputies
Brian Bissell and Scott Truuell have com~ a two day ·
seminar on basic narcotics conduc:led by. the Bureau of
Criminal InvesU,atlon andldenliftcatlonat tlleJack.tooel1inty
Sheriff's Departtnent, Sheriff Ja111e11 M. Soulaby reported
today.

1

FIICY FRDH PRODUCE

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Meigs deputies complete seminar

Mason Cardinal
Market ·

. 9'9¢

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Plewant.

·-Area news briefs-- Meigs

those areas were laking l9lld
out-of-state trash In order to
approval for more," according to · year.
waste from outalde a 30 m lie
meet
the
monster
expenteS
to
Landfill districts are also manGraves, because of OEPA re'
radius. However, Malone's mea·
comply
with
!he
new
Jaw,
dated by the new Jaw to blre a
quirements regarding the type
,sure
was rejected.
Graves
said
th11t
State
Rep.
consultant: to prepare a 10-year
land suitable for a landfill.
"The
average person dlcl not
Mark
Malone
(D-Wheelers·
operational plan. As yet, the loc'al
The VInton County landfill Is
was being passed,..
know
what
also OEPA approved, said •district has not hired a burg), Introduced before 592 was
the
commissioners
and Graves
passed a measure that would
Graves, and Is "the future of the · consultant.
In
addition,
Graves
agreed.
These requirements are the exclude counties with popula·
landfill business In this district."
predicts
there
Is
"a
reclamation·
reasons so many of the state's lions Jess than 200,000 from the
Mid-America owns the 200
bill" cOmlag on the heels of 592.
landfills will he forced to take stringent bll~ unless Janfllls In
acre site on which the Vinton
County landfill Is located, with an
OPEN7
. ,
Wo
option on 1,000 acres of reclaimed
Mon
.
..sat.
8
a.m.-10
p.m,
USDAFoDd ·
strip mine land to expand the
Sun. 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
·.landfill.
Stamps And
The Vinton County facility Is
WICCoupona
probably the only landfill in the
· Priees Effectln
dlst!-ict which will last at least20
LunCh" Dally
Me,nutacturt's ·
Sunday, Apd1 30
years, accon!lng to Graves,
From Our Dell
Coupons
although the entire site has not
Thru Sl,turday, May
yet been approved, Core drlllings
na-5573
Comer 2nd 1nd Horton St.
have already been done and
monitor wells drllled at the
VInton.County site, but as yet,the
long range operation plan·has not
been developed .. But OEPA offl·
cials have walked the site,
·
Graves added.
An example of the expenses
White .
Super Sweet
which landfill operators face
Seedless
VIdalia Gaorgla
with 592 Is that within 10 years of
No.1
Grapes
the passage of the bill, no land!IIJ
Maine Whlt41
Onions
. In the state Is allowed to operate
Potatoes
without being totally plastic
lb. •
.
lined. ''Like a big trash bag," as
described by Graves. Costs to
meet this requirement are expected to be In the range of
$400,000 an acre at the 35-acre
GaiUa County facility, Graves
said.
Hamburger o".
Landfills will also be required
·Hc!t Dog Buna
to Install "stacks for methane
gas" which Graves told the
8
commissioners "Is the best part
of the law."
State ·ucense costs have In·
creased too with the passage of
592. The Hcense for the VInton
County landfill went from $1,300
a year to $30,000 a year, Graves
Laundry
said. Although the Gallla County
Dog Chow
Detergent
liCense now costs $12,500 a year,
32ot.
It will be going to $30,000 next
pkg.l

Sheriff probes accident, theft

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Expenses ...__

Ohio~Poillt

$149

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Gallipolis,

Aprl30, 1989

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Ohwans... __..:.;(F:..:r.::om=-:O:=R:::IO::A:::N;:S.~
,,
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~In thelr homes as they 'grow
older. II would provide greater
access to In-home services as
options to more expensive nurs~":'ing home care.
'
.
; ..:: In talking about the program,
Susan Oliver, retired sen!Qr
volunteer program director at
the Meigs Center, noted that
411 RSVP volunteers here will be
.,
~ Involved In the Gold Ribbon .
;;. Campaign. As partners In the
· ~ Eldercare lnltatlve, we are ac• lively promoting volunteer lnvoJ-·
vement In meeting the needs of
" 'trail elderly. adults and their
:; caregivers, she said.
~
!!he explained that at the heart .
:; of the Eldercare budget package
::; Is Eldercare Options, the first
t. attempt In Ohio to create a
::
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comprehensive community service prOIJ'am for the elderly
featuring one-stop Information
and referral, assessment. care
management and service
delivery,
..
. The neeqs of lhe elder popula·
tlon and comprehensive scope of
the Eldercare package make this
next step budiet probably the
mosJ Important one ever for
senior cltlzena In Ohio, It was
emphasized.
.
In' S\Jpport of the state-wide
program, Mrs. Oliver pointed out
that community leaders, RSVP
volunteers, and senior citizens
~II he,proudly. flying their gold
ribbons from May 1-16 to send a
unified message to the leglsl!l·
tors .that .~'We Want Elc:lercare. •·

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HOME NATIONAL BANK

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s:

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of Raclae In &amp;be llla&amp;eof Obi.,

I

,,

.J

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and costs, left of center; Richard User's Tax slicker: Robert fully seJiing and furnishing beer
Godfrey, Charleston, W.Va., $10 Combs, Long Bottom, $50, unlaw· . to a P~erson under !he age of 21.
and costs, stop sign.
Fined for speeding were Roger ·
McCaiUster, Ona, W.Va.,$20and
.
costs, ~arl MltcheiJ, Pataskala,
$29 and . costs; ' Marion Mayle,
Athens, $27 and costs; Betty 1.
.
~lOre, Pomeroy,,.$25 and costs;
FROM
lcte K. Phalen, New Haven,
W.Va., $24 and costs; Timothy
Grey, White, Ivory, Lt. Blue, Black
Showalter • Long Bottom, $22 and
from our private stock.'
costs; Michael Lewis, Rutland,
$22 and costs; Alvin Adkins,
ALSO AVAILABLE FROM OUT
Proctervllle, $20 and costs; John
0~\'ls Jr., Syracuse, $25 and
OF TOWN .... styles by After Six,
ts, Randall lilckman, Long
Pierre Cardin, Dior, Lord West.
Bottom, $24 and costs; Fonda K.
:.;.e:ves, Hurricane, W.Va., $27
costs, Garry D, Turner,
Parkersbury, $26 and costs.
Bonds were forfeited by LeoDOWNTOWN GAWPOLIS
nard Stephens, Gallipolis, $55;
Katherlne Stevens, Athens $55·
Frank Haney Gallo 555 . Tb •
. dore Winter ' Nels~' vnk. ~
· Edward Rudolphe n Ca ' heli
$55 all for speeding· m£1 k '
c Y
rge, $50, fictlclous ,Highway

Look Your Best At the Prom With
For:-I Wear From Thomas .Clothiers ,
.
$2995

:s

THOMAS CLOTHIERS

ee;,

·

'

NOW OPIN FOR
SPRING SEASON

Complete Una of Vegetable
• Bedding Plante. Azal• FNlt T,_, Gerenium1.
Hanging Baaketa. Shrubbery
and Tr-.
OPIII D&amp;IL Y t All TO S . .
SIMD&amp;Y 1 te 5

Hubbard's GreenhouM

..

992-5776
SYIACUSE, OliO

Hell's Energy Efficient
510HP Heat Pump
Plus
Protection Until i'994

"CAPRI"

· The 510HP is Heil'; most po..,rful, most
II' NO LABOR OR PARTS
efficient
heat pump. Buy one now and we'll
CHARGES FOR 5 YE~ include the
Homeowne111 Extended Lahor
V' INCLum:::o IF YOU BUY and Parts program (H.E.i..l~l', a n&lt;~wo"" 5
BEFORE MAY 1, 1989 )lear protection plan that covers lahor and
llilrt." cha~o;. nn all repairs.

AU
LEATHER

. WARNER

TheUFAYmEMALL
Shoe Cafe

HEATING AND COOLING

GAWPOUS, OH.

915·t222

'

.

CHEnEI, OHIO

'

at the eloee oC he•lnen on Marell S1 1• published In

to call ml!de by CornptnUer ol tllit Carre~~ey, uder tu~ 1!; United States
Code, Seetloo 111.
· ·
ComptroUer.of the Curtene:r 4th District
Charier Number 1181$

--

Cash and balances due (rom depository Institutions:
Nonlnterest·bearing balances and currency and coln ...................... 1,260,000.00
Interest-bearing balances ............. :...................................... ,............ 600,000:00
Securities ...................... '·'···· ............................................................ 5,008,000.00
Federal funds sold .................................................. , .. :.................. :.. 3,482,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
·
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ............ 18, 790,000.0\)
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............... 331,000.00 •
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve .................................................................18,459,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ......................175,000.00
Other ·assets ........ .................................. ,; ............................................523,000.00
Total assets ....................... , ..................................... , ....... : ........... : .. 29,507,000,00
----+Total assets and losses defe~ pursuan~ to 12 U.S.C.1823(j) ...... :...29,507,000.00 _ __

i•
c

:I

Deposits:
a. In domestic offl~ ........ , .......................... , ...............................25,818,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest·hearlng ......... ....... , .......... :, ........... 2,6451000.00
(2) Interest-bearing """'('"""""""'"'""'""""'"'23,173,000.00
Other liabilities .... :.......... .. ....................... ,, ...... , .................................. 395,000.00
Totalllabllltles ............... ........................................................... ...... 26,213,000.00

..

.

Common stock .................................................................................... 125,000.00
Surplus ........................................ :........ :.............................................125,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves ..... ."........................................ 3,044,000.00
Total equity capital ....................... ,&gt; ................ : ............. ; .................. 3,294,000.00
T~tal equity capital ilad losaes deferred
·
pursuant to 12 U.S.C.1823(jl ......·......... ~.. :...................... .:............... 3,294,000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred atoQk, anci capital,
.
and losses deferred pllrauanl to 12 U.!$.C.1823(J) .......................... 29,507,000.00
I, Gary P. Norrts, 'cashl~r. of uie -.~ve·named bank do hereby. declare that

'

Approved alld C.rtlfitd

For MDIWD·MIDICAIE,
Workers Co. . oMation,
anti Prlwllto PropWia, As
Wei At Solf.Pay ._.nts.

Our "Aunt Maude" has certainly been pleased with her new
home at Overbrook Center.
are very happy Aunt Maude
is here, and we recommend Overbrook Center t.o all area
families needing the services of their friendly staff.

We

----

·-~4 ~
, GIBBS, NEPHEW

Come Visit, And Experience First .
Ha.n d the Overbrook Difference.

_...;..--1 this Report of Con!llllon Is true and correct to the bell t of my knotledJe and belief. _ __

·

'

· Gary P. Norris
April 26, 1989

We, the undersigned dlre¢ori. atteat the correctness of this statement of resourcet and liabilities. We declare tbat It bas been examined by. u.s, and to !he best
of our knowledp ami belief hu beet! prwpared In conformance with the Ins truetiona and II true and colftl:ll.
John T. Wolfe
Carroll 1\. Norrll - Directors
Marvin Hill

992-6472
333 Pap Strttt

•'

Sit.

Court _ _ _ _ _ ____;;:. . :__
.. _ _

reti(IOIIR

;i ii
. . \5

I

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A·7

"Special Care
·For People Who
Are Special To You"·

'
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDrl'ION
(lncla•la&amp; Domesde and Foreign Subsidiaries)

..~

I

,POMEROY - Judge Patrick
0 Brien reports the foUowtng
Individuals were fined this week
In Meigs County Court.
lanE. Ziegler, Guysville, $250
and costs, three days In jail
60-day license suspension thr~
·days In jail, DWlt Tim chaffee
Reedsville, $250 and costs, thr~
days In jali; 60 day license
suspension, OWl; John J.
Ginther Syracuse s1oo and
costs aO days In jail ~uspended to
seve~ days, one year probation
no operator's license· $35 and
costs, failure to control; Dave
Prlddy,$100and costs, 30daysln
jail suspended to one day six
months probation, assault; Harley E. Boring, Albany, $75 and
costs, three days In jail to he
suspended upon condition that a
valid operator's license he obtalned within 60 days· $5 and
.
•
costs, Illegal exhaust system.
Charles A. Knapp, Middleport,
. $35 and costs, failure to control;
· $100 and cosls, 30 days In Jail
suspended to seven days one
year probation, no valid dpera·
tor's license; $100 and costs, 30
days In jail.suspended to seven
days, one year probation, hit·
skip; Edna G. Parsons, Racine,
$100 and costs, fine suspended,
one year probation, littering;
Brad Robinson, Pomeroy, $100
and· costs, 10 days In jail
suspended to one day, one year
probation, assault; Terry Little,
Mld~leport, $100 and costs, 60
days In jail suspended to 10 days,
one year probation, assault;
Michael E. Morris, Albapy, $20
and cos Is, expired plates; $75and
costs, 30 days In jail suspended to
three days, one year probation,
driving under suspension; John
R. HamUton, Middleport, $75 and
costs, three days In jail suspended upon CQDdlttOn of obtainIng a valid operating license
v within 60 days; no motorcycle
endorsement; $5 and costs, no
eye protection.
· Brian Bass, Syracuse, costs,
one year probation, 30 days In jail
suspended to seven days, domestic .violence; Richard messing,
Shade, $eO, and costs. fine sus·
pended, six months probation;
disorderly conduct; no motorcy:
cle endoraement; 'L'Imothy A.
Coats, Pomeroy, $40 and costs,
reckless operation; Henry D.
Rider, Rutland, $35 and costs,
failure to wear seat bell; I;lr~!,lley
R. Russell, Lowell, $20 and costs,
safety violation; $20 andcosts;-noseat belt; Bob Lawson, Reedsville, $15 and costs, Improperly
secured load; Ricky George,
Rutland, S5 and costs. unsafe
vehicle; Roland E. Will, Pome·
roy, $20 41!d costs, tint violation;
Kenneth W. · Hickman, Long
Bottom, $20 and costs, failure to
~ntrol; Helena H. Daugustina,
AlbAny, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Diane L. Green. Shade,
$25 and co'sts, fine suspended,
fishing without a llcPnse; Ray· .
mond Klinebrlel, Nelsonville, $10

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..age-A-ts-::tt.~nday Times-Sentinel
•

THURSDAY IS SENIOR CmZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
I

•

=::: .)

nver

51Ve DISCOUNT 01 AU'PURCHAUS (

MUST PROV• R Ml BUCIEYE U. •

-'1 LICEISE

~tttlittel

April 30, 1989:

;'There are good dogs here'

I: '

What Happened to Dogs
in Gallia Animal Shelter

'Homeless Homers' ready
for adoption . at shelter

TAVERN

HAMS
FRANKIES

.

(WHOLE) Ll.

24 PK. CANS

r

CRISPY SERVE

BACON
SAUSAGE

REITER

"69C
79.&lt;

LB. PIG;

ICE· ,
CREAM

Ll. ROU

By LE!i: ANN WELCH
Tlmes--SenUnel S&amp;aff
GALLIPOLIS ·- If a dog is
man's . best friend, there were
1990 four-footed pals who were
friendless In Gallla County last ·
year.
.
Approximlltely 1990 dogs and ·
pupptes wen; destroyed by the
·Gallla County Animal Welfare
League last year, according to
Marilyn Smith, a member of the
board or directors.
On the positive side, 290 animals were adopted or reclaimed
from the shelter last year. a
sharp 'Increase over five years
ago, when that total was only 80,
she said.
·But that doesn't change the
fact only one in ten animals go lng
lntd shelters are adopted, S1lJlth
said. The res rare destroyed.
"There are ·good dogs here:" .
Smith said of shelter animals. ~
walk through the kennel l,as.i
week found chows, cocker spaniels, dobermans, German Shepherds and, of course, a large
assoriment of "Hentz 57" mixed

$300 for a puppy, when maybe
veterinarian, Smith sald. The
one is at the shelter Is just as law states they must be kept
good-looking or friendly, at a · three days before des tructlon.
small traction of the cost, she
"It's a real shame, really a
noted.
tragedy, these dogs have to be
If a person ls looking for a
destroyed," Smith sald.
specific type dog - not exotic In
Smith sald she hates going to
nature - the League can be
the shelter because to her, It's
·
called and note placed on the depressing. At one tlme, she had
board for the shelter attendant.
eight dogs of her own. It's hard
When a doi of that type, or close
tor her to resist adopting shelter
to 11, comes Into the ,shelter,
animals, but said she can't take
notification Is made, Smith said.
them all - Its just Impossible.
•
Not all dogs In tbe shelter are
Dogs are great companions;
·m utts picked up from the streets
she feels.
of GaUla County, Smith noted.
Marilyn Smith has been instruCurrently, there are several
mental in Implementation of a
owner-released animals of good
pet therapy program at area
breeding.
nursing homes, where she takes
Sometimes , the owner Is un·
animals to tite residents for a
able to take care of the animal,
brief time of companionship.
some people have to move and
Pets are thereaputic for elcan't take the dog with them. derly people, Smith said. They.
Others move from one place to provide ,companionship and a'
another that &lt;!oesn't allow pets.
;;ense of being needed, she added.
1
It costs little to "adopt a pal"
Nurlng hame residents - many
I
from the Gallla County Animal who have no family or freinds
She).'ter - onl¥, $7 to adopt or remaining - btineflt by being
reclaim a dog . •Licenses for allowed to transfer love and
adopted dogs are $4 extra, whlle affection to the animal.
b~eeds.
those for reclaimed animals are
Some special events are
"It's a shame people don't come SS. In addition, there ls a 50 cent coming up for the Animal Wel·
here," Smith said of familles charge per day for food.
fare League ln May, Smith said,
looking (or pets. People wlll go to
Dogs are kept up to one week Including Be Kind to Animals
pet shops and pay upwards of . before being destroyed by a local · Week.
/

$ 69

12 oz.
. PKG.

s

I

$329'
.

s QT.
' .

THOROFARE OR STOKRY
WHOLE KERNR, 'CREAM STYLE

COTTAGE.·
oz.
CHEESE
.

4/'. s199

CORN
F.S. CUT
15 oz.
GREEN BEANS
1

/2

Sl f9

24

'

CARDINAL

THOROFARE
WHOLE OR SUCED

$159
$139
EGGS, 11/2 DoZ.

2°/o. MILK

4/S199

POTATOES

Section

1988

•

ll'll

Adopted
De•troyed

a

1983

•
1000
Source: Gallia County Animal
Welfare League

Be Kind to Animals Week is
May 7-13, and is s'ponsored by the
American Humane Assoclalton·
and Ga'tnes Dog Foods. Thls
year's theme ls Adopt a Pet from
Your Local Animal Slrelter.
'J'he week will end wlth the Kids
Dog Show on May 13 at the
shelter on State Route 160, for
children ages 4-14. Registration
of pets ls at 1 p.m., with the show
to begin at 2 p.m.
·

1500

2500

Times Sentinel Graphlc/LeeAnn Welch
It wlll be followed by an open

house at _the shelter. where area
residents can see the facUlty and
the animals available at that
time.
Just prior to Be Kind to
Animals Week, the local League
will sponsor at petting zoo at the
French Art Colony Spring Crafts
Festival. · ·
Also ln May , rebates are
offered for spaying and neuter-

ing your animals, Smith sald.
The League can be contacted for
more Information about that
program, she said. "Prevent
Homeless Homers," Smith said
of the program. Homeless Ho· .
mer is the officla 1 spokesdog fOI'!
Be Kind to Animals Week, she·
sald.
·
Hours at the Gal Ua County
Animal Shelter are Monday
through Friday, 3 to 5 p.m., and
Saturday, 1 to 4 p.m ..

FRESH '

SNOFLOSS

TOMATOES 3/$149

'

CHUCK COMBO PACK

HOT COOKOUT BUYS

~:~~:o
~:E~UND

5 LB.! OR MORE

10 LB. OR MORE

Ll.

RIBS

s159
s1.19
s599

:$:&lt;)·59 ...

•

.....'

1

s LB. PKG.

SIRLOIN PATTIES :.~·

CHOPPED

-t

· PICI OF. THE
POll LOIN .

LB• .

COUNTRY STYLE

\

ROAST, SRAK, GROUND CHUCK

. , $149 ....

$899

-·

•

·RAMEN PRIDE

-

NOODLES

3

oz. PKG.

sI Sl

ZEST A

CRACKERS

I LB. BOX

ARGO

PEACHES

29'/t OZ. CAN •

CARDINAL

BREAD

LIMIT3

LONGHORN
CHEESE

LB.

RED FLAME OR WHITE SEEDLESS
LB.

FRESH CRISP JUMBO

CELERY

-STOKELY

srA1K

I

J.j

BEACH HAVEN

I

'

FISH STICKS .
.

21.1.
HG.

HAM .SALAD

LB.

DOZ.

Ll.

HOMEMADE

'

·HOT DOG SAUCE

$ 2 99

NAVEL ORANGES :.~·, I

$4!9

ICY GREEN

BROCCOLI

9.9C

lUNCH

CAUFOINIA TENDER

~WEfT

CARROTS
YELLOW

$199

..

S IJ.IAG

25 LliAG

COOKING ONIONS
-

-

•

TOMATOES

79C

'·

s199
$229
$16~

FAaHACKLI.

u.s. 10•.1

•

POTATOES

$169
$299

s·, .,

·.·I

.

10 LI.IAG
-

'

..

Ll.

$129

VIlE RIPE lARGE SUCING

•

'

oz.

HOMEMADE .

'

3 Ll.
01 MORE

28

'

.

GLAZED DONUTS

'

SLICED
BACON

'

oz.

·(HOPED HAM

IUU
)

31

'1·

CAUFORNIA SEEDLESS '
21/t Ll. PKG.

, Circleville

tEll·&amp;BAKERY ITEMS

IA~RD

LINK
SAUSAGE

•

CA.TSUP

u.

IKE AND MIKE! -These two little pupplet! are sitting In the
GaiDa County Animal Shelter on State Route 180, just waiting to be
adopted. They are available for adoption at $7, ,with $4 extra lor
license and 110 cents per day lor food tees. (Thl!es-Senllnel photo)

AWAmNG SENTENCING -This Germaa Shepherd Is at tile
GaiUa County Animal Shelter, waltlng to be adopted - or
destroyed. Those are the two fates of animals In the sllelter,
according to MarDyn Smith of the GalUa County Animal Welfare
League. (Times-Sentinel photo)

· "There's something under the bed" ends LBTS season

PORK &amp;
BEANS

69C
89C
99C
79C

cau•

GRAPES

VAN CAMP'S

$199

WHOLE SnCK 11.

99C-

istli-oz.

MANWICH

99-&lt;
89&lt;
29&lt;

RED SKIN

BOLOGNA

HUNT'S

AVAILABLE - This lillie mixed breed 18 ·at the Gallla County
Animal Shelter, available lor adoption. While he may he
destroyed, Its more humane than tumlag hlm out In the wild,
where slarvatlon or being hit by 11 ~ar may .be bls only tate.
(Tlmes-Senunel photo) .
•

I ,

plarw~ight's

musical cast at Rio Grande College

RIO GRAN DE- "Tbere's .SomethiDg Under'T · apprehensiQn chlklren have at darkness and
the Bed." an original Children's musical by
shadow.
'
play_wright Martha Gunder Schneider of arcleIn tbe qmr5e of a night's troubled sleep. young
ville. will be the flnal presentation pf the Little . ·,, hero victor' encounters trlehdly and not-sofriendly creatures springing from his imaglna - .
Buckeye Theatre Series at Rio Grande Colle,e,. tCommunity .College.
·,
Uon·. Tnese include monstrous spiders .and
'
The show will be presented Sltnda:V. May 7 il.t 2
' "tri¥tks • lfrpg·llke abomlhatlons) to the "Little
Dre 11111,•· a benevolent splrlt VIctor encounters in
and 4 p.m . m the Fine and Performing Arts
Center.
.
his nocturnal dream-world travels.
"There's Something Under the 13ed'' i$ the
Through comedy arid music, "There's Some·
second of two productiOns· to produced locally.
thing Under the Bed" brll)gS those frightening
The first was "Snow White and the Seve!) Dwarfs)'
Images to' llght and remlrids Its audience that
ln October 1988. The current producttorl. will be
· despite their occasionally fearsome nature,
· directed by Dr. Greg Miller, director of the Fine ,, "dreams are your friends."
and Performing Arts Center at Rio Gra¢e.
.
Descrlhlng It as a "cute little musical," Mlllen
First produced ln 1987. "There's Something
said It was chosen from the submissiOns read by
Under the Bed" takes a fanciful but entertaining
the Play. Reading arcle at Rlo Grande.
look at the fears young cblldren .expertence. at
Qeslgn-wlse, 'the production will do Its best to
The author. Wholl!. own child suffered
frJahten and amuse the audience. he added.

"We wlllbemaklngourmonstcrsandnlghttlme
scenes flourescent with a black background,"
Miller explained. "The monsters will be absurd
and outrageous, but In the end, despite all that
~appens , they turn out to be pretty friendly
creatures ."
Miller credited the as~istance he has received
from his crew, Including the work of Glenna
Hopkins. costumes; Gabrielle Dye. choreography; Tim Watts, music; and Terry Hopkins,
set and lighting. Two voluntE!ers from the campus
ROTC unit are helping the cast spiders "fly," he
added.
Heading the cast of 30 community and college
participants Is Tlm Epling of Bidwell as Victor.
Epling has appeared in three of the local LBTS .
productions - "The Legend of Slee~y Holl.~w."
"The Best Christmas Pageant Ever ' and The
Velveteen Rabbit."
The roles of the parents are being played

Grande students Aaron Mays of Lucasville and
Amy Chestnut of Marion. Mays first appeared ln
''Snow White'' and Chestnut is making her debut
ln a Rio Grande stage production.
The role of the "Main Monster'' ls being played
by Joe Wright of Crown City, another Rio student
who has been ln two recent campus offerings.
" Dr. Nash and the Resurrectionists" and "The
Fantasticks." Chris Smith of Bidwell portrays
two roles, Chickamonster and Jeremy, Sean
Byers of Thurman is Little Dream and Mark
Wood of Jackson appears as the Magician.
Mal\lng up the cast of dream creatures are
children and adults from Gallia. Jackson, Athens
and Scioto counties.
Tickets for the show are $2.50 each. For more
Information, contact the Fine and Performing
Arts Center at 245-5353 (toll-free In Ohio at
1-800·282-7201), extension 364.

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Community calendar

Bookmt)bile
routes set
.for counties

I

I

I

April30, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pla11-.nt, W.Va.

- Page-B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY
POINT PLEASANT - Grubb
Family Singers ·at Beilemeade
United Methodist Church. Sunday. 7 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Bookmobile
,Schedule lor the week of April
GALLIPOLIS - Revival at
24-29, 1989.
White
Oak Baptist Church, SunMonday:
day
through
May 6, 7:30 p.m.,
1st Truck: Star Bank 2:00-2: 20;
with
Rev.
Bud
Hatfield. Speical
Scenic Hills 2:30-3: 00; Pinecrest
singing.
3:05-3: 20; KeH 4: l5-4: 45; Bidwell Old School 4: ~5-5:30; Bid. well (Nolan's) 5:35-6:00; Bidwell
BIDWELL - Layman day
(Ph1111p;s) 6:05-6: 32; Henry's
service. Mt. Carmel Church,
6:35-6 : ~5; Deer Creek 7:30-7: 40;
Sunday, 10:45 a.m. with Rev.
Deer Creek Church 7:45-8: 15. ·
Gene Armstrong; afternoon service at 2 p.m . . with singers from
2nd Truck: Rodney V!Ilage II
4:30-5:00; Rio Grande Village
Dayton.
·
; 5:15-6: 30; Rio Grande Estates •
' 6:45-8: 00
.
CLIPPER MILLS-Therewtll
be
a public wedding reception for
Tuesday:
the
Rev. and Mrs. Rick Vilardo,
1st Truck: R &amp; R Tr. Ct.
pastor
ofChristUnitedMethodtst
10: 15-10: 45; Geiger 11:15-11: 30;
Church,
Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m., at
, Ewtngton 11:35-12 : 05 ; Dyer
the church.
: 12:15-12:30; Eno 1:30-2:15;
• Kyger I 2: 25-2: 40; Kyger li
.CROWN CITY ~ . The Rev.
: 2: 45-3: 05; Roush I 3: 15-3: 35;
Jack Parsons speaks at Liberty
· Roush II 3:40-4:10.
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
2nd Truck: K&amp;K Trailer Park
, 'Sunday.
4: 15-4:45; Kanauga · 5th · Ave.
POMEROY - Star Grange
· 4:50-5: 20; Georges Creek 5:40cleanup day Is Sunday; picnic at
; · j;: 00; Addison 6: 10-6: 30; Che12: 30 p.m., · building cleanup
• 'shire 6: 45-7:30; Cheshire Levy
follows.
7:35-8:00.
Wednesday:
POMEROY - Sign up for
•. No Route Maintenance Day.
American
Legion baseball for
;: Thursday:
boys
ages
16·19
will be Sunday, 3
:- 1st Truck: Jack GrUfln 3:00p.m .. at the Meigs High ballfield.
;._3: 20; Legrande 3: 25-3:50; Nor' ·thup 4:00-4: 30; Mudsock 5:00CHESTER · - The District
: 5: 30; Patriot Post Office
::.. 5:45-6:45; Cora 7:00-7:30; Mea- · Deputies and District Past Councilors Club of District 13 Daugh•; dpwbrook 8:00-8:20
ters of AmeriCa will hold its
2nd Truck: Cadmus 4:15-4: 45;
spring dinner and meeting on
Galli a 5:00-6: 00; Centerpoint
Sunday at 1: 30 p.m. at the
:~ 6:15-7: Oil; Centerv1lle 7:15-8:00.
Chester Lodge Hall.
Friday:
1st Truck: Banes 1: 20·1: 30;
MONDAY
Young's 1:35-1: 45; Franklin's
LETART
- Letart Township
1:55-2: 10; Myers 2:20-2: 35;
Trustees
will
meet Monday, 7
Church's Store 2: 45-3: 15; Merp.m .. at the office building.
cerville 3:20-4: 00; Swain's Store
4:15-4 : 45; G.- Shafer 6:00-6: 15;
POMEROY- MeigsSalon810,
Ohio Townhouse 6:30-7: 15;
Eight and Forty. will be having
~ Teen's Run 7:30-8:00.
its 24th annual dinner on Mon;·. 2nd Truck: Eureka 4:00-4: 30;
day, 6p.m. at theTrtnityChurch.- .-Crown City 5: 00-6: 00; Kenny's
The business meeting w111 be at
Carryout 6:30-7:00.
7:25
p.m.
Saturday:
Crousebeck 9:30-10:00; Gall1a
Metro Office 10:15-10:40; Gallta
Metro Hill 10:45-11:15; Alice
1:00.1: 30; VInton 1:45-2: 15; Mor: gan Center Road 2: 20-2: 50; Mor- gan Center Church 3:00-4:00.

___

MIDDLEPORT- The Hobson
Church of Christ in Christian
Union will hold revival services,
May 1-6 at 7 p.m. with Norman
Taylor as the speaker.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday,
7: 30 p.m.. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.
SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Association for Retarded Citizens will rrteet Monday, 7 p.m., at
Carleton·School in Syracuse.
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134. Order of Eastern Star, will
have a regular meeting at 7:30
p.m . Monday .
HARRISONVILLE - The Columbia Township Trustees will
meet Monday. 1: 30 p.m .. at the
lire station.
POMEROY - The regular
monthly meeting of the Meigs
Local Athll!tie Boosters w111 be
held Monday, 7 p.m., in the high
school band room.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club w111 meet Monday,
7:30p.m., at the home of Mrs. G.
E. Schaekel. Mrs. Paul Nease
will be co-hostess.

TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Galltpoli~ Rotary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Down Under.
·
--.,GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Lions meet Tuesday, 6:30 p.m ..
Oscar's; Ladies Night.

April30, 1989

Seed giveaway
slated in Ga/Jia
by Ministerial
Association

By DICK TQOMAS
GALLIPOLIS -It's that time
of year. Time to put the boats in
lhe water.
a drive last
day afternoon
·Ravens
od,
W.Va., via Point
Pleasant to Mil·
son, to Pomeroy, to Rac~lne
and then across thai new bridge
at Ravenswood. First time I've
been over lt. Saw a lot of
motor-boaters. The public boat
launches at Point Pleasant and
Ravenswood were busy.
That stretch of Ohio River
between Pomeroy and Racine is
a gooc).apot to take boat pictures.
The towboats are so close, It's
just like you can reach out and
touch them. I should have continued along State Route 338
. "along the great bend of the river
, through Antiquity and · Let11rt
Falls. Antiquity was the home of
., the
laie Charles "Grandad"
Shain. From 1!t;OOO feet, with the
. sun re,n ecttng on the water, that
stretch of river is so curvey that
i ttlooksUkea blgsnakeslilhering
: along. I know, I've seen it from
' up tbere.
It won'i be long until National
Safe Boating Week. This year,
it's set for June 4 to 10. The event
: is an · effort to promote safe,
enjoyable boating. In some
areas, there w111 be free boat and
·. equipment inspections. Time to
. make sure your river craft Is sea
· worthy and bas 'sutncleilt life-·
'
· ) saving equipment,
The world famous steamboat
!Mississippi Queen. owned and
&lt;Operatedo: by .the Delta Queen

or

PAT'S GREENHOUSE

MINERSVILLE . - The Minersville United Methodist
Church Women are sponsoring a
yard . sale on Wedriesday and
Thursday at the homeofDonand
Marte Rea, on Route 124. tn
Minersville.
.
Troul derby
RUTLAND ..:.. A trout detby is
being held in Meigs County
Saturday through Tuesday.

HANGING IASICETS....................
DAHUA &amp; WAX IE GONIA .......UAS~.....S12
- ........................................98( ea.
GERANIIIMS
CACTUS GARDEN ........................S250 allll up
COMPLETE LINE OF BEDDING AND
VEGETABLE .PLANTS
, OPEN '10 A.M.-8 P.M. DAILY
5. Milts Harth of Pamtr.oy on Couaty lead 19, Peoch Fork

Graage meeting
~
ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs
VINTON - American Legion · County Pomona Grange wUI
Post 161 special meeting to elect
meet 7:30 p.m. Friday, at Rock
officers, meeting at Ewington
Springs Grange Halt A potluck
Academy.
dinner at 6: 30 p.m. will precede
the dinner. Athens County, guests, w111 present the program.
RACINE - The River Valley
Herbal is~ wUI meet Tuesday, 7
p.m.. at the home of Janet
AwardadiPOMEROY - The MGM DisTheis~. Racine. Members are
asked to bring materials for
garden markers.

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VOTE YES

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POMEROY Bookmobile
Schedule- May 1"-5, 1989. Bookmobile Service is provided in
·· Meigs County by the Meigs
County Public Library under
. • contract with the Ohio Valley
: Area Libraries.
: Monday - Dexter, 3:15-3:45
. p.m.; Danvtlle (Church). 4:15: 4:45 p.m.; Rutland (Civic Cen: ter) . 5: 15-5: 45 p.m.
, Tuesday -New Lima Road (1
' Ml S. Ft. Meigs), 3-3:30 p.m.;
· Portland (Post Office). 4:15-4:45
: p.m.; Letart Falls (Ef!le's Res: taurant), 5:15-6:00 p.m.; Racine
• (Bank), 6:45-7:45 p.m.; Syracuse
: (Bali Field), 8:00-8:45 p.m .

HOOVER. EUREK/1. \EAR'
MONTGOMERY WARD, tJH·
MOST OTHER MODP'

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Martins Furniture·
hND MORE

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2 22 f "'I

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y. din"

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JOIN THE FUN CLUB

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·MiMF MI\RliN·
M" 111
P n 11 • ·

: job Bank _
: helps seniors
:·- find employment
'

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
: Citizens Center Job Bank, 220
· Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, has
~ continued to serve employers
; and seniors in the area.
:- Spring time is the time to start
: thinking about vacations, and
: fixing up your homes.
The Job Bank has applicants,
: 50 years and older seeking
: employment to help the people in
. the community with Spring time
.: home maintenance, like window
·. cleaning, yard work, and base. ment cleaning.
Call 446-7000 and ask for the
·: Job Bank to discuss your needs.
: · The Job Bank is open Monday
: through Friday 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.

LOW PRICES
QUALITY V~GETABLES
&amp;BEDDING PLANTS
HANGING BASKETS.

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'COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
BAU CAPS e BAGS .
T-SHim • &amp; MORE

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SCHOOLS

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IA;ulie.~

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·' · · · · · '· -' ··

·-

Clwin• Fabrics &amp; Faslti.or.u

417 2nd Au.

i'tt.

~~II!

Gollipolll, OH.

446-0435

1•••• 2•••• 3••• SALE!
It's Ladies Choice
Fabrics Latest Sale!

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AU fabrics are

$1.00 yd, $2.00 yd. or $3.00 p-.r yd;Nothing priced higher!
JAM PRINT INCLUDED!

3 DAYS ONLY, MAY 1; 2 &amp; 3

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417 2nd An. IAcrou from Colony Theater)
Mon., Tues. Wed. Fri. 9:30-S:OO; Thurs., Sat. 9:30-2:30

Rt. 2 Box 75 Galli lis45631

OPEN DAILY
._SUNDAY
1 pm-5 pm
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KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
94··2682

3 .... pad Sout..rn
.... School
St. lt. 124, laclne, 011.

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I••·

IJn
·••~lw•l 111•1111•
565 JAt .ON Pill• HI1Cim PlAZA• GAWPOUS, 011.45631
PHYSICAL THERAPY • SPORTS MEDICINE
BACK REHABILITATION • WORK RECOVERY
CARDIAC REHABILITATION • ADULT FITNESS

Industrial Mldicint Seminars

. Pain/Strns Management

..,

SERVING THE PATIENT .
AND THE PHYSICIAN ~OR
30 YEARS.

day. 8 a.m. to 11: 30a.m. and noon
•

446-2206
446-2225

HERMAN L DILLON
MICHAEL L. HEMPHILL
MS, PT, CO.
MS, AT
MARGARET JOHNSON, IS, PT.

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is to inspire those who follow;; •

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Leagues Begin ht
Week of May

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SIGN UP NOW
LADIES: MONDAY
MEN'S: TUESDAY
AND WEDNESDAY
COUPLES:
FRIDAY EVENING

Here's a fresh scented little channer for Mom on
· Mother's Day (May 14). This Hallmark Sachet Cat,
when placed in a drawer or closet, will bring a fresh
floral fragrance to linens, lingerie, and clothing.

!
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•.

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SECOND ITEM

Florine Mark, ·
Aru Dllec:ror, .

. . hal.
23,..,.1 \

2
PRICE
\
Of EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE

Open' Evenings
&amp;Sunday
by appointment

See Our
:.
· Many Specials

II off far Clftr ·

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prlnt.d in lvlholor "'ith tite and prices ll"ed .

~9.

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582-1399

. IIIU

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0

t&lt;lndlv hove an ou1hori1ed logon Monument Co I
r..,res.-nlotive coli 01 my home.
I

0

Pl.oq tefld ml dtltoll' about mousoleuml
obligation.

;,;;z;:SMYLY....-·

·'

((Ut llfl t\ll)

·

IT

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co.

GaUipolis
Full House of Cards
SUver Bridge Plaza
446-7330

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NOTHING WORKSUKE WEIGihWA'tCHERSI

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lOIII 161

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VINTON, OliO
OAWA COIIIft ..UY YAID
JAilS A. . . . . . . .

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OIIM "T" IN ..aPOif

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Str. .tor Route - - -- - - - - - :
C1t~ or Town
:
Phone
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... 7:00[1J11., Wtd:UILm.

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Wllho ll l

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MAY 6th
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Noma~---------- I

. \16~. l!!!!J...

MAY 1st

Find your participating Hallmark retailer listed in this
ad and come in soon - bec~use supplies of the
Sachet Cat are limited.

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COU!IC)N
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I
0 fl'leote ""d me "tEE booklett thowin9 memorial' I

lolt50lbL

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Corner C

···u--a. ·u. -ca.uaa. ..aa·.a·c. ·c. ca. . . . a
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. ·a·.u··a
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GALLIPOLIS CITY ·,_· *
IlDDlEPOil

.
FOR
SPRING SEASON

winning ·tape of 1988 sports
highlights included a play-py play of the Gallia Academy Meigs football game, the Rio
Grande-Shawnee State basketball contest, a halftime feature
on Gallipolis · attorney John E.
Ha liiday and an interview with
Gallia Ac a demy basketball .
coach Jim Os borne.

1oa ••• t1ke ro.ar phftlell therlpf
premlptlo•. to tho ellale of rour ehleel

•

; ; to 2: 30 p.m.
: · Children must be five before
I Sept. 30 to be registered and birth
cerdficates and records of lm·
muntzatton must be presented at
r · the time of registration.

FOR .

-Custom lrusftn
and Letttr,ing- .

MERCERVI.LE/HANNAN TRACE
ALUMNI DINN~R
MAY 27-6:30 P.M.
· Send Rnerwations 1$10 ea.l
· Margaret Myers

in 1983. Martin is the primary
play-by-play announcer for all
~tgh school football, bas ketball
and baseb3ll broadcasts featur Ing C:allta Academy High School
and other area schools. He is also
the "voice" of the Rio Grande
College Redm en bas ketball and
baseball teams.
Martin ' s 30-minute prize-

DID YOU KNOW?

.scheduled

J

~·

he's on the staff at Texas A&amp;M
College. He was due to start
home Saturday April 22.
Epling was on a lawyer' s
exchange ~ !sit with Soviet lawy·
ers, Jaw professors and students
in Moscow, Kiev, Tallin and
Leningrad. John wrote, " The
visU was lruly an eye-opening
•
experJence. ••
WYPC·FM and WJEH-AM,
Gallipolis, was honored recently
lor its ' 'Outstanding Sports operation in the small market radio
division by the Ohio Associated
Press Broadcasters, at the conclusion of AP's annual news
contest at Mason, near
Cincinnati.
Mark Martin, a 1979 graduate
of Ripley High SchoohW.Va. ), is
Director of Sports Programming
lor the two stations. He earned
his Bachelor of Arts degree ln
Radio,TV from Marietta College

;

POMEROY - ·Registration of
: kindergarten children or as new
f ;enroueei in the first grade In the
l Meigs Local School Dis trtct will
: :be held this wee~.
: . Registration for children in the
• , Pomeray and Salisbury areas
: will be held at the Pomeroy
; Elementary School, Wednesday,
' '9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3:30p.m.
·
Children in the Middleport and
, :,Bradbury areas are to n:gtster at
• · the Middleport Elementary
.. ,; .School on Thursday, 8 a.m. to
1· ~11:30 a.m. and noon to 2:30p.m.
, .., Harrisonville,' S!llein Center
• • and Rutland area children are to
' ,register for kindergarten at the
Rutland Elementary SChool, Fri·

JAYMAR GOLF ·CLUB
DUES: S200 ANNUAL LADIES
S2 SO ANNUAL MEN'S
· S400 ANNUAL COUPLES
SSOO ANNUAL FAMILY

The Log will be hOUSfd in the
VIsitors Center. now under conslructton next to the U.S. Navy
Memorial at Washington, D.C. A
,minimum $25 tax-deductible donation is. all that lt takes to enroll
a name in the · Log and the
Memorial will acknowldge each
enrollment with a special card
for the lather bell!!l being
honored.
The Navy Log is a computerized repository of names which
have been entered by tndtvtduals
themselves, in memory
shipmates or relatives, as· a com-·

1 '

STORE"

1/.J'~,,

memoratlve gilt. The Log will be
on conlinuous display at the
Visitors Center. Each entry will
show an individual's name, highest rank or raling held, dates of
service. date and place of birth.
The Log already holds more than
116,000 names.
Specially prepared greeting
card acknowledgement and Log
registration forms will be sen I in
time for Father' s Day for requests - with contributions received by Friday June 9. Contri·
butiot)s received alter that date
wUI be answered as soon as
possible but delivery by Father' s
Day Is not assured.
The plclure card of the Kremlin came in the mail Friday·. It
was written April 18 and ll was
from Gallla Academy High
School grad John Arnold Epling,
who wrote "Here's the Kremlin
from across the Moscow River."
John beat the card home to
College Statton, . Texas, where

!1regtstratton

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR

t·

Steamboat Company, New Orleans. La., l"as recently t)UU!tted
with 1wo WATERCOM payphones. WATERCOM Vlce.Presldent John G. Smith says all
passengers and crew now have 24
hour dii'I!Ct dialing and do not
have to watt to go ashore to make
a call. All calls can be charged to
any Bell or AT &amp;Tcallingcardor
to most major credit cards.
And not only that, the new
telephone servt.ce is offering a
new message service to !&gt;oth the
Misstsstppt Queen and her sister
ship, the Delta Queen. By calling
a spectal 24-hour hotline, relatives and friends ·of both ships
can have a message forwarded
immediately. Delta Queen VicePresident Scott Young says this
service wilt be most useful in the
event that a passenger or crew
member must be contacted
immediately.
Is there a Navy lather in your .
l!imUy who served in theNavyor
is serving now! You can honor
him for Father's Day (June 18)
by enrolling him tn the Navy
Memorial Log. The gift is a
perfect fit and wlil never shrink
in stgnUicance for dads who are
or have been in the Navy.

or

! Kindergarten
. .

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NOW AVAILABLE

SWEEPER PARTS uncl SERVICE
ON HECTROLUX. KIRBY. RAINRO\\''.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8·3

Dick Thomas

trtct Boy Scouts Awarda DIJQ~er
will be held May 11 at 6: :II p.m.
Reservations sbould be made by
May 2 by t alllng 742·2010, or '
mailing to(:atby Wortman, 33233
GALLIPOLIS - Tbe Gallta
Happy Hollow Road, Middleport. Collllty 'Mtnllterlal Alaoctation
tn·eooperatiDD with Jacluon area
mllllltertea will be dlltrlbutlng
MIDDLEPORT -The AlzheiSoftball '-Dey
mers Disease Support Group w111
Pj\RKERSBURG; W.Va.- A free~ on Tuesday, May 2, 9
meet Tuesday, 3 p.m., at the
class C&amp;D slow-pitch softball p.m.-2 p.m.
Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Seed will be distributed from
tournament will ~· held May
The meeti!lg Is open to patlen ts,
13-14 at Dugout Fl!!ld in Par· OUtreach, 662 3rd Ave. (3rd and
(amtlies and the public.
kersburg, W.Va . .Entry fee II $65 Spruce) In Galltpolll; and from
and two softballs. For informa· Calvary Baptist Chureb on Rt. 35
-~in Rio Grande.
_
WEDNDJDAY
doll, call Tim at 30f-86&lt;!·38i9.
M IDDLEPQRT- The Middle:
This procram Is avallable for
port Literary Club will meet at 2 Yard sale
all low Income persons such as
p.m. on Wedriesday at the borne
GALLIPOLIS - There w111 be unemployed persons, those on
of Mrs. Roy Holter. Mrs. Robert
general relief, social. security,
a yard sale to pay expenses
Fissher will review "Life and
etc.
No advance applications are
Edna Chapel Vacation Bible
Death in Shanghai," by Nten . School, Monday thrOIIIIh Wednes- necesiBry.
Cheng. The roil call wHI be il day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., on Route-7,
Seed wDI continue to be availapositive result of imprisonment.
ble
at these locations as long as
be low Clay Chapel Cemetery.
the supply lasta.
. ·
COOLVILLE ~ Vanderhoof
Baptjst Church will be In revival
Wednesday tl!rough Saturday
with Rev. ' Garry Kendall ' of
·.
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. $400
Toreh Baptist Church as evangeand,. up
list. Servl~es start at 7 p.m. each
evening and special singing wilt
5
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be lea t ured.

MIDDLEPORT- The reiiJlar
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will be held Tllesday,
7: 30 p.m., with work in the EA
degree. Refreshments will be
served.

Pomeroy-Middleport- G&lt;!IIipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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�Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 30, 1989

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

-Anniversaries--

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

April30, 1989

Baked steak dinner ·

--Weddings--

CHESTER - The Eastern
AthletJc .Boosters are sponsoring
a baked steak dinner on Saturday
at the Chester Fire House.
~rvlng starts at 5 p.m. and the
menu Includes baked steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy,
green b!!ans, slaw, roll, pie and
beverage. Cost per dinner Is
$3.50. Everyone welcome.

"Good. service.

goode~.

good fJI"ia·

.Thats State Fann
msurance.··_

"*•

511011081
c... of
A... &amp; Stwto Sl. ~
9 'I; ... lifo. ,
""'"'
446-ttto
_
....4!11

RETIRES - Brenda Cunlnrllam, Chester,
retired from her. dulles as clerk of Veterans
Memorial Hospital's Home Heallh N•ndng
Service Wedn~. Cunnlalllam, who hal been

~.:=~=~·

In lite pOIIItlon for 12 years, Is pictured here with
co-workers of the service who' held. a party In her
honor and presented ber with a 1Ift of jewelry.

Stall! Farm

l'lliu•anceComPintn
I .. IUIANCI

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Home Ott•c•s
ES&amp;oom•ngton. llllf'OIS

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BlUAN D. aad JODI ANN (SMITH) BISSELL
,::~·~'

MR. and MRS. DORMAN GREEN

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Greens to observe anniversary
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' CROWN CITY- Mr. and Mrs.
Dorman Green of Crown City will
celebrate their 2~th wedding
anniversary on May 1.
They were married May 1, 1964
at Crown City, by the Rev. Oma

Williams.
They are the parents of four
children, Mrs. Michael (Sherry)
Daines, Michael, James and Jeff
all of Crown City.

Prepare for
a top paying job

Dear Ann ~ers: For 15
years I've been fighting a porno
~ar with my husband. A battle
ends. 1 think I've won. A lew
months later I find more tllthy
magazines. I'm not talking about
Playboy or Penthouse. I mean
the XXX·rated trash that makes
me sick to my stomach. He then
started wit~ the 8-inm movies,
V'CR tapes and swingers' catalogues. But what upset me more ·
t~an anything was finding a pen
and pad stuck In a catalogue and
little stars next to some bimbo's
name.
:When 1 confronted "Jack," he
~ld It's normal for a man to be
Interested In these thiJ11s and
that he would never write to any
of those women.
Ann, I don't know how to deal
with this. I feel so hurt and ugly
w}len I find this trash. I used to
snoop to see what he was up to,
but I don't anymore because It's

•

1n:

•COMPUTERS •ACCOUNTING
IIUSNSS ADIIINSTRAliON

•SE&lt;RETAIIAl
. •DATA PROCESSING
•MEDI&lt;Al SECRETARIAl
•SECURITY OFFICER

WILBUR 1111d DORA BUNCE WADDELL

Waddells
note 62nd
•
anniversary
i\LBERT AND MARJORIE TROMM

[Tromm anniversary observed
.: RUTLAND --Albert and Mar·

jorle Tromm, Rutland. celetirated their 25th wedding anni'l'ersary on Tuesday.
;· The couple was married In
¥onroe, Mich. and has seven

children, Michael Tromm, Prestonsburg. Ky.; Alison Tromm,
Middleport; Philip Tromm.
Rockville. Md.; and Natalie,
Marjorlta, Carl, and Clayton
Tromm, all presently at llome.

Meigs High School reuniqn set
; RUT~AND - i'?ans for the
1989 Meigs High reunion were
advanced by the alumni assoclarion at a recent meeting held in
. ftutland .
' The combination dinner and
dance will be June 24 ai Meigs
!flgh School. The dinner will be
at 6:30 p.m. and the dance will
follow at 9 p.m. Wilson's of Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va. will be catering
the event, and music will be
provided by the Party Factory of
the Marietta area .
: Two noteworthy events to be
held during the evening will be
tne presentation of the winner of
the second annual Meigs High
Scholarship Award, and the 1969
reunion class recognition of past
principal, James Diehl.
• The 1989 scholarship will be
awarded to a Meigs High senior
or ·graduate who has displayed
eic:cellence and leadership In his
1

or he~schol career. Applicants
will
ev uated on grade point
aver ge, course of study and
extracurricular activities. Typewritten applications must be
received by June 9 and must
Include a grade transcript, current photo, the name and acceptance letter from a postsecondary school, phis a short
essay stating career objectives
and other activities.
Alumni members willing t.o
help with final plans are being
sought especially from the reunIon classes of '74, '79, and '84.
Those Interested may contact
James Birchfield at 992-2624 or
992-2121, and Rhonda Hoover at
992-6884. in the evenings. The
next scheduled meeting will be at
7:30p.m. on May 8 at the home of
James Birchfield, SR 124,
Rutland.

THURMAN - Wilbur and
Dora Bunce Waddell observed
their 62nd wedding anniversary
on April T/.
The couple married AP.rll 27,
1927, after graduating fro.h Gallla Academy High School In 1926.
He Is a 32nd dl!gree Mason, a
Shriner, member of the Eastern
Star at Thurman and a 64-year
member of Modern Woodmen.
I

Bowman's
Homecare Medical Supply

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Stop In to see our extensive selection of ENESCO PRECIOUS MOMENlS
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much tlhe Is loved.

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For Our Children's Education

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$chool PTO Supports the
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stages,when it's not yet visible by other means. And that's
when you stand
the bestchances for' cure.
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Until now, MRI was · available only in larger cities, but
PleasantValley Hospital, in cooperation with Shared Medical
Technologies, is now offering this latest technology right here
at home .
Called the most significant advance in medical imaging
since the discovery ofthe x-ray, MRI uses no radiation, is noninvasive and has no known health risks. Magnetic resonance
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patient is placed within the strong magnetic field of an MRI
system. Radio waves then produce detailed anatomical images
of the internal structure of the human body.
At Pleasant Valley Hospital, those images will be interpreted by Suresh Agrawal, M.D. and L.K. Glenn, M.D., our
staff radiologists, who will consult with your pers'onal phy·
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By expanding the scope-and accuracy of diagnostic imaging, magnetic resonance is adding important information to
the understanding ofhuman disease and how to treat it. The
diagnostic potential of magnetic resonance is just beginning
to be understood and appreciated, and Pleasa.n t Valley
Hospital is proud to be at the forefront in b:ringing this
technology to our community.For more information about
MRI, contact your family doctor, or call the PVH Radiol·
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COLLECTION

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Reedsville.
The bride and groom are both
graduates of Eastern High
School. She Is employed with
Fruth Pharmacy and he Is
employed with the Meigs County
Sherllf' s Department.

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Connie Smith, slster-ln·law of
the bride, register guests, and
Barbara Burns , Dolly Reed,
Nancy Johnson, Loretta Smith,
all aunts of the bride, presided at
th~ bride's table.
the couple Will reside In

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belonging to her sister.
Matron of honor was Teresa
Smith, sister of the bride. and
bridesmaids were Lora Wolfe,
Bet II Teaford· Kennedy, and Tina
Spencer. They wore gowns of
poly-taffeta and rosetta, with
matching lace hall mitt accented
with small rosetta at wrist. The
matron:· of hol)or's gown was a
shade of 'grape, and the bridesmaids gowns were a muted shade
of mauve. Bouquet lor the
matron of honor was a three
posey drop, and bridesmaids
bouquets were two posey drops,
all accented with matching
ribbon. ·
The flower girl, Melissa Smith, ··
niece of the bride, wore a gown
Identical to the matron of honor
with added ruffles at the lower
edge of the under skirt and
neckline. A large sash and bow
complimented her waistline. She
carried a white wicker basket of
flowers.
Ring bearer was Mat thew Bissell, brother of the groom. Rice
and scroll bearers were Shannon
Soulsby and Brandon Smith,
nephew of the bride.
The groom wore a grey tuxedo
with tails, grey cummerbund and
tie . .
Best man was Jlmmer
Soulsby, and ushers were Mark
Boyd, Mark Smith, brother orthe
bride, and John Smith, brotherIn-law of the bride. Groomsmen
wore grey tuxedos with matching
cummerbunds and ties In a
muted mauve shade.
The bride's mother wore a
street length A-line ensemble In
grape while the groom's mother
was In a two piece lavendar
street length jacket dress. Both
mothers wore corsages of English Ivy and miniature carnations
In a grape shade.
A reception was held at the
Riverview Elementary SchooL
The bride's table featured a two
tiered fountain cake. Pillars and ·
bells supported a single layer on
the bottom cake baked by Shlela
Curtis, aunt ol thi! groom. ·

~ THE -M osT .AovANcEo DIAGNosTic TEcHNoLoGY

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WALLPAPER

PIICES
STAmNG AT

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RACINE - Soil thern Local
School Board will meet In special
session 6 p.m. Thursday, at the
school, to discuss Interviews for a
football coach.

SAVE
UPTO

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LAFAYE111 lUll
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Board meeting·

ALL CUSTOM

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REEDSVILLE - Jodi Ann
Smith,·daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Smith, Reedsville, and
Brian Douglas Bissell. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Bissell,
Tuppers Plains, were united In·
marriage In a double ring ceremony March 11 at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church with
the Rev. James Kittle and Steve
·
Reed officiating.
Wedding music · was provided
by Mrs. Martha Sue Matheny,
pianist, and Mrs. Sue Douglas,
soloist.
Given In marriage by her
parents and escorted to the altar
by her father, the bride wore a
gown of wl\lte poly,taffeta with a
fitted bodice, leg of mutton
sleeves with sheer motif accent,
and open neckline with lace and
pearl trim with strands of pearls
at the back. The bouffant skirt
swept Into a chapel train.
, The bride's elbow length veil of
Illusion and blusher fell from a
halo of pearls and spangles. She
carried an EngliSh oval bouquet
of miniature white carnations,
white roses, accented with English Ivy. She also carried a
bride's Bible given to her by a
cousln,a lace handkerchief given
by her -grandmother, and wore a
pearl ·necklace and earrings

too painful. The stuff Is everywhere - In the car, the baseDo you havl queui.on• about .!lex.
ment, just name it.
bur: nobody you con tallc to about
I thought our sex life was
them? Ann Landen' newly reviled
wonderful for him as well as lor
booklet, ..Sex and the Teenager."
me, but apparently I'm miswill give you tlae answers you need.
taken, Am I overreacting? Is this
To recei11e a copy. •end 13 plus o
behavior normal lor a married
~elf-addressed. stamped busineu·
man In his late 30s? - Lost In a
sin envelope (45 cenu pouage) tu
World of Dirt (Buffalo)
Ann Lande,., P.O. Bo,&lt; 11562,
Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562.
Dear Lost In Buffalo: Jack's
obsession with pornography has
nothing to do with you. Stop • ----- I COUPON WORTH $100 I---- ...
feeling Inadequate because he
finds this garbage exciting. It
merely means that his development was arrested at an adoles- I·
SAVIIlOO
Alo"" GroomHools I
cent level and he Is stUI getting
Wlththlsceopoototo,...
~•.,. 111 ,.,...
I
way .., •poulllfswinto
.,...
hla jollies out of stuff that he I
"""' !!oo1 th. c..,.. u• l001nd 14
I
should have outgrown years ago, 1
w•ih $SO oo olu- II' lound
15%5
Stop snooping and stop throw- I
oloon •'""" ...._
24' lound
1695 1
Ing out his "toys.'' Accept this
'"""'.., l, ''"
I
oddity as beyond your control,
because It Is. Perhaps when you
1
stop reacting, he may lind It less
I 2973 PIEDMONT RD., HTGN. (304) 429·478B
MOs'11~~~3g:~O·S I
exc)tlng.
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_ _ Bissell-Smith _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

His problem? Hubby
pever really.grew up

·Dreaming ..
about going to
a
Private College?

Sunday Times-Sentinai-Page-B-5

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

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The family of professionals

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Page-8-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

~30.1989

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

-Engagements--

.

The J!Opulilr Columbus·
based roclt and roD band of 'l'hU Dirt and the
Dozers may not know II, butlhelr .lumber I fan
lives right here in Meigs County. }\t least Carson
Crow, Pomeroy a\ lorney, claims '\he's their
number I fan. Crow, sealed, inslsled' upon being
the fl!'St person in the county to purchase~ls ticket
for the July 4 evening Dozers concert
- on- --the\.Meigs

.

I

High football field In Pomeroy. Providing t.:row
with the honor of the buying the first llcket Is Jay
Hill, publicity dlreetor for the concert wblch Is
beinl{ sponsored by the P~meroy Area Chamber
of Commerce. Tickets costs $7 and are available
from Chamber members or at the Chamber of
Commerce office on East Main St. In Pol)leroy.

Trustees to meet

.,.,

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James Sands
BY JAMES SANDS

Natural0\gas in the early 1900's

GALLIPOLIS- "The Natural
Gas Co.'s office was elaborately
illuminated with the real thing
last night. and
a 11 evening
there was a
crowd of admirer's about It,
speculating
about the beauty
of the new and
brilliant ilhiminant. Even if it
costs the same as coalfor heating
. purposes, which you will find in a
• small way that It does not, you
· are rid of ashes, smoke and dirt
that It makes It the most
desirable of the two. The consensus of the people seems to be that
the new citizen has come to stay,
· and that it is the best and
·; cheapest light and heater we
;_ have, and that it .will not be long
( before - it will be in general use
and the leading utility of our city.
Welcome, and lei her go."
The above was taken from the
June 16, 1905 edition of the
Gallipolts . Daily Tribune and It
describes the beginning of the
usg , of natural gas in the Old
French City. By August of that
year some 100 dwellings and
businesses were outfitted with
natural gas. Among the first was
the house we picture today
located at First and Vine. The
house was built In 1893 by Mrs.
Amelia Uhrig.
'
Mrs. Uhrig was born in Philadelphia In 1841 to Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Wei!Jert. In 1862 Amelta
married Adam Uhrig and by him
she had seven children. Mr.
Uhrig died in 1879leaving Amelta
with several small children. The
house she had erected In 1893 was
large enough to house a few of the
children as they became mar-

rled. Sadly Mrs. Uhrig died the
year after her house' was com·
pleted at the realatively :,:oung
age of 53. Four of the chll4ren
still lived at home and It was the
children who continued to live
here until 1905 when natural gas
was brought to the house.
Tt was the Cheshire Oil and Gas
Company which contracted for
and won the privilege of laying
natural gas lines un,d erGalllpolls
streets in 1905. This particular
company in 1905 had Its corporate headquarters not In Cheshire but in New York City. The
company was owned . by a
number of New York Investors as
well as local people Including:
Evan D. Davis, John B. Downing,
Capt. Sam Dunbar, Sherman
Eagle, John B. Alcorn, A.S. Carr,
and Mr. Richardson. The latter
two were transplanted persons
who were sent to Gallipolis to live
by the New York Investors.
Natural gas was first discovered In Gallia County In 1861ln
section 30 of Addison Township
while persons were drilling for
oil. · In 1865 natural gas was
discovered at Adamsville (near
Rio Grande). Mostly people did
not know what to do with th~ gas
until later In the 19th century and
It was about that time that work
was begun in Addison and
Cheshire Townships of the drilling for natural gas.
·
While much of the early
natural gas thaf' cfame Into
Gallipolis' first 100 or so buildIngs came from Addison and
Cheshire Townships, it was the
Cheshire Oil and Gas's discovery
of a giant natural gas reservoir In
nearby Jackson County that
made headlines. It was estl·
mated that over 2 million cubic
feet of gas could be piped out of
the Richland reservoir every

.

Blazer-LOucks

day.
city. Actually of course that did
Tl)e Gallipolis Dally Tr!bune In
not come to pass though ·the
bold headlines in Its Ma,rch 19,
natural gas did remain a popular
1906 edition announced that "Big
fuel. Gas was, discovered to be
capitalists behind the Cheshire
cheaper In other southern Ohio
Oil and Gas Company are going . towns particularly those In the
to push this city to the front with
Hocking Valley.
cheap and abundani .fuel."
Further stated the Tribune:
"It certainly does look now as if
the long ·a waited quickening of ·
Gallipolis were at hand-as If ihe
POMEROY - Chief Deputy
tl)rongs of new people were sure Jlmmer Soulsby, and Deputies
to bring with them the blessings Brian Bissell and Scott Trussell
of large and permanent growth have completed a two day'
and a new era of propsperity." seminar on basic narcotics conThe Tribune also predicted that ducted by tM Bureau of Criminal
many new Industries that de- Investigation and Identification
pended on cheap natural gas like at the Jackson County Sheriff's
brick making, po'ttery, and glass- Department, Sheriff James M.
making would be drawn to the , Soulsby reported today.

/lttend seminar

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Blazer
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Judith Annette
Blazer, to Robert Winslow
Loucks, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Loucks of Richardson, Texas.
Miss Blazer Is a graduate of
Rio Grande College, and Is
employed by Ashland 011, Inc. In
Houston, Texas as an Internal
auditor.
Loucks Is a graduate of Texas
Tech University, Lubbock,
Texas and Is employed by B.J.
Titan Services In Houston, Texas
as an Internal auditor.
The wedding wlll take place
June 24, at Grace United Methodist Church In Galllpolls, Ohio.

. '•
LETART FALLS- The Letart
Township Trustees wUI meet
Monday at 6: 30 p.m at the
township building.

·Bob Persons
Bargain Store
eLEARAIIU !AlE

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Pll. Ev•tl•111 446-tl 55-

THE CENTRAL TRUST
"()

Timely reports on politics, science, technology, the arts,
business, medicine and world class sports.
Mondays 11:30 pm
Saturdays 10 am

6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT

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GALLIPOLIS

MIDDLEPORT

446-o9o2

99a-eee1

MembwFDIC

L AVital Link in Rehabilitation

Paper

WALL MURALS

J

!Renew~~ -~evival set in city

•
t 7-U,

GALLIPOLIS - There wlll be
Fires of 'Renewal reVIval at
. race United Methodist Church,
!\lay
with ~v., Mike SlaUfh·
, ter. evangelist. ..
! There will be workshops at
.Grace on church growth. May 9
:and 11. 9:30 a.m. and at Christ
.United Methodist. May 10 at 1
:p.m .. and another at Addison
·united Methodist Church. May 11
at 1 p.m.
' Babysitting will be provided.
• Slaughter Is pastor of Glnghamsburg United Methodist
f:hurch In Tlpp City. Ohio, where
has been since 1979. He Is also
an elder in · .the West Ohio
Conference.
,•

GALLIPOLIS _:_ On Sunday,
May 7, 1989, at 2: 30 p.m., John
Gee A.M.E . Church will present
Marian A. Spencer ·as . the
speaker tor Its first Alta and
Marvin Stewart Memoria.!
Program.
Mrs. Spencer was born In
Galltpolls, and Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School and
the University of ClnclmiatL
She has been an active com·
munlty volunteer In the .city of
Cincinnati for 41 years. Mrs.
Spencer has served the city as Its
vice-mayor and councilwoman.
Anlong her volunteer contrlbu·
lions are president of tM branch
YWCA'; member of the Unlver·
sity of Clnclnna)l's Board o.f
Directors: representative to the
United Methodist Church Union,
president o! the· NAACP, and
member of numerous boards of
trustees.
.
Mrs. Spencer was appointed by
Governor Celeste to the Ohio
Women's Hall of Fame and
honored by the State of Ohio's
American Civil Liberties UnJon.
She has chosen tor her topic,
"The Christian World As We
Approach It Today".
Immediately following the program there will be a reception at
the Holiday Inn.

Is a member of the Cincinnati
Board o! Health and Chairman of
Its Finance Committee.
Hess's presentation, which will
combine lecture and sUdes, will
be followed by a question and
answer period. Dr. Grlcoskl
emphasizes that the program
wlll be of real Interest to the
general public, particularly
those who may suffer from
arthritis or have members of
their family with this problem.
A number of advances have
been made in recent months that
are important not only to the
physicians who treat patients for
this disease, but also for those
who are affilcted.
Holzer Medical Center Is an
approver of Continuing Medical
Education for physicians and has
designated this program as
meeting the criteria for two
hours of Category I cre'dlt that
:may be applied toward the
PRA·AMA.

F1t Tb11
•Weddings
•Proms

'let Us
Show You
Our
Selection
Of
Dytablts•

~n . &amp; Fri. ' til 8 pm
(uea.'Wed. ·Thun, '1il7 pm

Sa~uut.y

·u1 6 p.m .

Gallia Senior

Center activities
are announced

DR. EVELYN HESS

Youth league
kick-off slated

GALLIPOLIS- Activities and
menus for the week of May 1-5, at
the Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Pike will be as follows:
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Monday - Chorus, 1 p.m.
Youth
League will kick off their
Tuesday - Stop/Physical Fit5eason
with a parade ·on Saturness, 10:30 a.m.; Cards/Euchre,
.
day
starting
at 9:30 a .m. The
1-3 p.m.
parade
route
will start at the
Wednesday - Birthday Party
Family Dollar
parking
lot
of
the
Thursday- BlbleStudy,ll-12;
Store
and
continue
on to General
Herbalists, 1: 30-2: 30; Blood
Park
where
activities
Hartinger
Pressure/Volunteer R.N., 10-12.
be
on-going
throughout
the
will
Friday - Art Class, 10-12;
day. Bicycles and pickup trucks
Mini-Craft 1·3 p.m.
should be decorated. Prizes for
Menus consist of:
Monday - Pepper steak, but- decorations will be awarded.
tered nj)Odles, spinach, bread,
vanUia pudding/chocolate chips.
Tuesday .:... Hot. Dogs/Sauce,
macaroni salad, baked beans,
bun, cookies, peaches.
614-221-0111
Wednesday - Turkey /Dress·
lng, mashed potatoes, green
beans, cr.a nberry sauce, rolls,
AnOINEY ·AT ..UW
chocolate cake, and lee cream.
336 S. High St. CaiiiiNNts, OH.
Thursday - Meat loaf,
LOCAL CONSULT AliON .
whipped potatoes, green llmasKNIGHT, MUI1£N LAW OffiCES;
/corn, bread, cherry crisp.
POMEROY, 992-2090
Friday - Macaroni and
cheese, stewed tomatoes, carroIn P-oy with
t / raisin salad, bread, peanut
ATTORNEY D. IIICHAEL MUUEN
butter cookies.

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA • GAWPOUS

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Gallipolis

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For..more information about our fult Ieroice care
please call ]an Buikirk, Admiuiom Coordinator

Hangera AvallablaLSeamatreaa Available
Houra: Mon.-Fri. 10:00 to 8:00
Saturday 10:00 to 4:00

•

Memorial program
set at AME chapel

llshed the Division of Immunology In the Department of Medl·
cine at the University of
Cincinnati Medical Center In
1965.
She Is a member of numerous
national societies and an honorary member of five International
societies, has been a member of
many committees at the National Institutes of Health and
was a member of the National ·
Advisory .Council for Research
Resources .
Hess has received numerous
awards Including the Arthritis
Foundation's "National Award
for Distinguished Service", and
has authored more than 100
articles and over 150 abstracts.
Her research Investigations
have focused on systemic lupus,
particularly the' drug related
· models, application of computers and data bases in Immunologic diseases, and the Immunology of the reproductive tract. She

Our price

Physical and Occupational Therapy are provided through Therapy ·
Associates of Ohio University. In addition a Spee&lt;:h Therapist and
full time Rehabilitation Aide are also on staff. Americare also services as a clinical education site for Ohio University's Physical
Therapy students. This allows the residents of Arnericare to maincain the highest level of functioning and mobility as possible. As a
result American' 11as one of the highest return to home rates in the
industry.

$2999

Potter Band.
Cost of the dinner and dance Is
$10 per person. Local alumni
may make their reservations at
either the Rutland Department
S\ore or Joe's Country Market in
Rutland. Deadline for reservailons is May 21. Reservations
may also be sent. along with the
$10 per person, to the Rutland
High School Alumni Association,
P.O. Box 125, Rutland, 45775:

,.

Physical Therapy - Occupational Therapy - Speech Therapy

First Quality Paper - No Second•

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-

MARIAN A:.·!IPENcir.i

GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer
-Medical Center Continuing Medical Education (CME) Commit. tee will present a seminar on
Arthritis Research on Wednesday, May 10, In the French 500
Room or Holzer Medical Center
at 7:30p.m.
Featured speaker wlll be Dr.
Evelyn V. Hess, professor of
Medicine at the University of
Cincinnati Medical Center.
This program Is being cosponsored by the Gallta County
Medical Society and the Gallla
County Arthritis Foundation,
and Is open to the public,
according to Dr. Allee Grlcoskl.
'resident or the Gallla County
Medical Society, and Jewell
Evans and Nancy Crossen, copresidents of the Gallla County
ArthritiS Foundation.
Dr, Hess obtained her undergraduate medical training In
DUblin, Ireland, and her postgraduate training In London,
England. She was a Registrar In
Internal Medicine, Pulmonary
Disease · and Rlleumatology at
the Royal Free Hospital ;Medical
School, London. She had further
training In Rheumatology/Immunology at the University of
Texas, Southwestern Medical
School, Dallas, as a traveling
Fellow of the Empire Rheumatism Council.
She was on the faculty at
Dallas Cor five years and estab-

pe

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.

1

The Annual
~utland High Scbool Alumni
)Banquet and Dance will be held
~lurday, May 27. The banquet
t-"lll start at 6: :!()p.m. and will be
tatered by Millie's, of MiddlePort. Tl)e /nenu will include
tlaked steljk qr ham, scalloped or
~ked potatoes, green beans,
~le slaw, rolls, with choice of
{lpple cake, pies or brownies. '
• The dance will be !rom 9 p.m.
fo 1 .a.m .'· .r eatur\ng the Ivan

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO, N.A.

and
Ohio University Therapy Associates

New Arrivals $399 Single 1o11 &amp; 11p1
All Book Orders 1OOfo 't• 30% Oft llgtllar Price

--------

f RUTLAND

ericare-Pomeroy
THE AMELIA UHRIG hoUIIe wu erected Ia ISIS, and wu one of
the first bomes In GaiUpollll to be hooked np to aatural gu. The
first natural gas piPfJB were laid In Galllpolllln 1805.

---------.

~

Thf! Bank That Makes Things Happen
c::::J

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banquet set in Rutland
,jA.lumni
.. '

&amp;IIIU&amp;L

13.000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

'

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•

Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

RATE 8.75°/o-9.11 °/o

Dear Ll~
By BOB HOEFLICH
Letter writing Isn't my long
POMEROY -The teen dances
Your Idea would be great4!1
suit.
staged on Saturday evenings at
had
a magic wand. However,
the Pomeroy
having
been a participant In past
VIllage Hall
the Big Bend Minstrel
shows
of
Audllorlum for
Association,
you know It Isn't
over the past
that
easy
..,..
and
the fiesh Is weak.
year have , apThank
you
for
the Invitation parently been
'
you
will
do
well
with
Plan B.
too successful.
The auditoTwo schools or the Meigs Local
rium just jSI}'t all that big and
especially since over 300 young School District will again stage
people normally attend the their Independent scholastic ban·
quets to honor students who have
weekly dances,
So the Meigs Dance Committee a minimum 3.5 grade average for
·
has completed arrangements for the year.
They
ar~Rutland
Elementary
using the former Elberfeld Warewith
the
banquet
set
for May 18,
house on Mechanic St., for
and
Harrisonville
,
Elementary.
dances In the futu{e. This wasn't
set tor May 22. I understand this
;~n easy process, of course, but
finally all state regulations were will be lhe third year for both of
met and the dances are now the events. The honorees will
being held at the Mechanic St., receive trophies.
Sc hoots are wise to recognize
Pomeroy, location.
their
scholars as well as other
Iva Sisson who heads the
students
who are outstanding in
dances reports that the commitother
directions.
This Is done
tee was not asked to )eave the
.Pomeroy auditorium; It was just with one banquet In the entire
a case that the dances outgrew Southern District and of course,
\he space. The warehouse is, of the county-wide event, orglnated
course, much larger and should by Meigs County Superintendent
of Schools John Riebel, will be
make dancing a bit easier.
So - the: public, and partlcu· held on May 11 at the Meigs High
larly parents of the young people School Cafeteria.
who attend the weekly dances,
Group Therapy, the group of
are Invited to an open house al
local
musl~ians who annually
the new location from 7 to 9 p.m.
accompany
the numbers of the
Thursday e\len~.
of the Big Bend
fall
musical
.....
,............. -·
;,.. .
Minstrel
Association
as well as
: w~en Rollin al)_ll Nancy Rad- provide pre-show entertainment,
ford get lptodlfflculty, they do It .
Is expanding Its scope.
lllg.
.
'.
The group played a dance at
• !Rollin ls recupi!ratlng at home
University Inn, Atbens, last
the
loUowlng a serious · .Illness but'
weekend
and was well received.
}his weetNanf;r. had to undergo
Shucks
don 't surprise me
jnajor surgety: She Is doing well
none.
but wll) "-' hospltallzed until the
The band Includes Jennie
-inlddle o! the week, at least.
Sheets
and son. Jared; Roger
~ I'.,.. sure Nancy would love
and
Mary
Gilmore and Tim
bearing from you. You can send
Glaze.
cards to Room,• F-14, Mount
· ~armelMedlcaiCenter, 793West
How about those tulips this
State Si, Columbus, Ohio 43222.
spring?
Somehow, I always
) Nancy ' and Rollin took. a
believed that tulips needed heavy
~acation. once that was absolutely unbel!evable, so many · snows during the winter to really
do well In the spring. Obviously,
things went wrong.
·
: r wish them a whole bunch of that's not true. They're beautiful
this year and I've noted that
~good luck. I know you do too.
many residents seem to have
•· Loraine and Bob Venoy ob- gone for the red and yellow
combinations. Nice.
~erved their 30th wedding an ill1-ersary on AprU 25 and with their
And we lost our beloved Lucille
pice family, , It was quite an
Ball.
In the seriousness that
eccaslon.
seems
to
surround us today, we
: The Venoy children and their
pouses somehow managed to need people like her. Her slt·com
ave a replica · made of the plots were often pretty exaggerrlglnal weddlpg c•ke -" with . ated - "but she made them so
ven the cake top bliing Identical believable aQd so enterialnlng.
·to the orlgiJI&lt;IL , ~-·'nice touch. Fortunately, reruns of her shows
will live forever - and always
t;ongratulatleni: Venoys. ·~
will
provide us with encourage'* ·
------' ment
to keep smUlng.
: Note to Lll Kennedy, Rutland. .
i

t
.

SPECIAL·

Get the latest news from Western Europe.

Arthritis program ·slated-· at HMC

Dancin' in the warehouse

meet

Sunday Times-Sentinai-Page-B-7

Pomeroy-Midcleport-Gallipolil, 01-Jio-Point' Pleasant, W.Va.

8eat of' the Bend

GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
John Loula Corned Sr. anDOUncl!
tbe eappmeat of tbelr daugbter, Pattlcla Ellen Cornett or
McLean, VL, .to Robert Davia
MeteaiJe 10 of Ai"Ungtoa, Va. He
Is the- or Mrs. ~ Davia
Metcalfe h. and tbe late RDbert
Davis ~fe, Jr. of Nortll
Palm lleub, Fla. and tbe lfand·
1011 of MH. Marton G: Peulee or
Kittery. Malae. ' y
'
Ml&amp;s Cornett a . gra~te of
Boston Co!Jeie Wltb a muter's
degree. She II employed u · a
Generic Cons11itallt for Fairfax
County, Va.
Metcalfe a gradute of tbe
University of Connecticut and
received his Jlll'll DoCtorate
Degree from the Uatveratty or
Connecticut School of Law. HeY
a trial attorney for'.tbe Ju,uce
Department In WaahlD&amp;toa. D.C,
. An A\lllllSt weddla&amp; II planned
at the Greenbrier lh White
· Sulphur Springs, W.Va.

LETART FALLS- The Letart
PTO will meet MondaY II 7 p.m.
at the school. The Courlh grade
flutophone chorus will .pl'l!lle~ .
the program. Pare!lts are 'en·
courage to attend.

JUDITJ ANNETI'E BLAZER, ROBERT WINSLOW LOUCKS

•
.Apr~ 30. 1889

Cornett-Metcalf

PTO to

I FAN -

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Ohic1-Point Pleuent. w . va.

15~h

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'

·Scarlet team
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPit
Quarterbacks Greg Frey and
Kirk Herbstreit led rhe Scarlet
eteam to a 22-19 win over the
·Grays Sa1urday 1n Ohio State's
annual Scarlet and Gray game In
Ohio Stadium.
· ".I thought it was a good game
because it was a close game."
said Buckeye· Coach John
Cooper. who watched the contest
from rhe press box.
Cooper. looking for a solid
backup to Frey at quarterback.
declined to single out any of the
three candidates for the job Herbstreit. or Gray quarter·
backs Nick Cochran and 'Jason
Frank.
"I thought a couple of our
young quarterbacks had good
games." said Cooper. ·'The good
thing Is, we don't have to judge
them right now. The thing I want
is good competition. I want them
· to improve over the summer."
Frey, who will go into fall drills
as the starter, played about half
the game and completed eight of
nine passes for 95 yards. He
guided the Scarier team on a
nine-play, 65-yard scoring drive
In the first quarter for a 6·0 lead.
That touchdown was scored by
, tailback James Bryant on a
seven· yard tun.

KRAFT

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When you buy a pair of
Gas-Malic• Shocks and
a pair of Gas-Matic"
Struts, Cartridges or
Special Application Units
or four Gas-Magnum•
Shock Absorbers.

When you buy four
Gas-Matico
Mtlll-ln Rebate Shock Absorbers.
Offer good fro"! May 1, thru June 30, 1989

•• ...·;..r.:•!lllf
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•
'

ney of Memphis, Tenn., Is sche·
duled to fight his third profes·
sional bout Tuesday when he
meets Damian Sutton of Phoenix ·
at Lake Tahoe, Nev. Light
flyweight silver medalist Mi·
chael Carbajal of Phoenix Is also
to fight as a proforthethlrd time,
meeting Camerlno Rojas of Los
Angeles.
Olympics
Blue Cross and Blue Shield, the
nation's largest health insurance
company, signed on as the first
offJclal sponsor of the 1992 U.S.
Olympic Team. The company ·
will provide a comprehensive
health plan with up to $1 million
In benefits for each member of
the U.S. team In the Winter and
Summer Games.

us .... - -

·• •

~)

yards in.J2 carries for the Scarlet
Basketball
team, while redshlrt freshman
· Indiana Pacers rookie center
irony Goodgame had 58 In nine Rlk Smits announced be will
tries for the Grays, 56 of those In donate $40,000 to Marls! College,
the first half.
his alma mater, to upgrade the
"Tony Goodgame ran well school's basketball court.
.early," Cooper said of the 6·0. .
Boxing
218-pounder from Roxbury, N.J..
WBA welterweight champion
'"but 1 think he got a little tired. Mark Breland had artllrospolc
He's been hurt some this spring surgery performed on his left
·and ts probably not In as good as knee by Dr. Norman Scott, who
shape as he should be."
discovered ligament damage
, Cooper, starting his secof1d and told the boxer to stop training
.season as Ohio State coach, held for at least two months. Breland
. ,out carlos Snow. who figures to sutfered the Injury In the second
··' be his startlngtallbackagaln this round of his successful Iitle
.
defense last Saturday against
ifall.
· "We know what he can do,.. Rafael Pineda In Atlantic ·city,
N.J .... Olympic bantamweight
gold medalist Kennedy McKln·

I

Ami

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Sports briefs

WI

$139

~Y*:t:;4•· ·

I

spring game

US IIAIIC

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.liii!OIIJ&amp;t

~9

•

SUPERIOR

IOAST

20 ll: .

0
pe~~~~%~
~
s~~~~-to be. was the
15ame's leading -rusher with

N
·
·
·
against . uggets
e

·

PHOENIX (UPI) - The Pho· lead in the final eight minutes,
enix Suns and Denver Nuggets, Majerle said. "When we're up, 1·
having dispelled the Idea that and if we're up, we have to put
their NBA Western Conference them away becauSI' they won't
series might be a giant mis· quit. We learned a lot tonight, but
match, square off in game two Sunday we've got to turn it up a
Sunday night at Veterans Mem· notch and play better. "
The close call, said Phoenix
orlal Coliseum.
forward
Eddie Johnson, "scared
The Suns, tabbed 12-polnt fa·
the
stew
out of us."
vorltes by the oddsmakers and
Moe
said
he was encouraged by
heavier favorites by Denver
the
play
of
the Nuggets. with
coach Doug Moe. eked out a
starting
center
Dan Schayes
104·103 victory over the Nuggets
~
lowed
by
an
ankle
sprain and
In Friday night's opener of the
starting
guard
Michael
Adams
b@'st·Of·flve series.
sidelined
wirh
a
hamstring
.pull.
Harassed by Denver's trap·
"I'm
not
saying
It
was
good
to '
ping defense, Phoenix commit·
ted 25 turnovers, shor only 41 ·lose. but it's better than a
percent from the floor and scored blow·out, " Moe said . "We needed
i4 points fewer •than its league· this game to give us a little bit of
leading average of 118.6 polnts confidence. It's the first basket·
ball game that we've played
per game.
"I think now everybody won't where we compete d
believe everything Doug Moe defensively. "
Denver g uard Lafayette
says," said Phoenix coach Cotton
Lever,
who had 20 points. 17
Fitzsimmons, chiding Moe' s con·
assists
and
12 rebounds. said,
tentlon "that It would "take a
"We
picked
up
our defense. Run,
miracle" for his struggling.
switch.
trap,
we
did everything
injury-ridden team .- to beat the
we·
had
to."
·
Suns.
Phoenix's homecourt advan.
Fitzsimmons said he rhought
the Suns - who have only four tage was somewhat negated by
players with playoff experience the return of Walter Davis,
signed by Denver as a free agent
- "had the jitters a little bit ."
Polnt guard Kevin Johnson, a last summer, to the building
second-year pro who directs the where he played his previous 11
Suns' offe.nse, agreed, but said, seasons as a pro.
Coming off the bench, Davis
"We grew up tonight."
Cooper said of Snow. "He's had going to have to get some people
scored
34 points in 33 minutes.
"This was the first time I felt
as good a spring as any player healthy. like !linebackers) Andy
including
long jumper from the
I've ever had and we just didn' t Gurd and Tony Closson and some we lost our composure since the right side awhich
gave Denver its
want to take a chance of getting . of our young players coming in first half of Uie season," said !irst lead of the game. 101·100
him hurt."
wlll have to fill In depthwlse. but Johnson. " We did. stupid things with 20 seconds rema ining
that we know better than to do.
· Cooper said Gral)am also was thirr!''s no question In my mind
And it's my job as point guard to Friday,
· used sparingly for, ·the same our defense wlll be better. ''
..
·jr was excited, '' Davis said .
Sl't Ue us down."
rea'~on . .. ,
Overall. Cooper said he knew
Rookie Dan Majerle - whose "The fans pumped ·me up. It was
One of Cooper's primary goa!s. much more about his team that a
steal
of an in-bounds pass pre· good ro be home. This ranks up
both this spring and In the fall. year ago, when his first Buckeye
served
Friday's win after Tom there with one of rhe most
was and wlll be to Improve a edition finished·4·6·1.
Chambers
had put the Suns . emotional nights that I've had in
defense which was one of Ohio
"I !eel more comfortable thls
ahead with a pair of free throws this building."
State's most porous ever last year than last year," Cooper
Said Fitzsimmons, " Walter
at the three-second mark - said
year.
said. "We know more what we
Davis
was just sensational. He's
the game was a learning
·; we're going ro be better on · can do and can't do. "
done
it
to me many times. He
experience.
defense," said Cooper, "We're
made some shots when we had
Noting the Suns lost a 14-polnt people all over him."
. r-----.,o;-.:..----"""'=~-~-.,.,.-------.

osu

The other Scarlet TD was
engineered by Herbstrejt, who
finished with nine completions in
1:7 attempts for 96 yards. Scotty
,Graham scored that. touchdown
on a three-yard run, capping a
;:JO·yard driv-e t n~13 pl~ys!" ··
. Sophom&lt;;&gt;ri' -John Berger ·also
kicked three field goals for the
Scarlets of 36. 25 and 17 yards.
The two Gray touchdowns,
borh in the second half. came on a
34-yard pass · from Cochran to
~reg Beatty and a 12·yard toss
·from Frank to tight end Rich
Jluffman. who bulled his way
!hrough a number of Scarlet

suns ·heaviIy favored

slooo

LUNCH
MEATS.

COFFEE

•
WinS

~~c~~~c::,.,m;,had

pitching before each was •
relieved.
In the sixth , VInce Coleman led
off the inning with .a double, but
after Ozzle Smltli grounded out,
shortstop Alfredo . Griffin snuck
In behind Coleman and Valenzu·
ela picked him off second.
Hill was relieved by Ken
Dayley in the ninth.

McGee, in his second at-bat since
.Injuring his rib cage In the second
game of the year, was pinch
hitting when Perranoskl was
ejected. McGee linect out and
Searage relieved, getting pinch
hitter Tom Pagnozzi to fly out.
Dodgers veteran Fernando Va·
lenzuela and St. Louis rookie !{en
Hill matched four·hlt shutout

~

6.5

XXXTIA·

.

Angeles in a game the Dodgers
played un,d er protest.
. .
Coleman led off with a double
to left center agatns t Ray Sear·
age, 0·2. Ozzle Smith sacrificed
him to tblrd and Terry Pendleton
was Intentionally walked to set
up a double play. Tim Crews
relieved . and Intentionally
walked Pedro Guerrero. Tom
Brunansky popped out to second
to bring up Oquendo, who earlier
a walk and
Crls Carpenter, 1·1, entered in
the 11th as the fourth Cardinals .
pitcher. Searage was the fourth
of five Dodger pitchers.
During a St. Louts threat in the
lOth, Los Angeles pltchlng coach
Ron Perranoskl made an initial
trip to the mound as Willie
McGee readied to bat. He came
out again during the at-bat and
was ejected for verbal abuSI' of
an umpire. However. 'manager
Tom Lasorda argued that Perra·
noski should have been told not to
even make the second trip as the
same batter was at tile plate as
during his first trip.
Pena was allowed to finish
pitching to McGee but was then ·
required by Doug Harvey's umPir&lt;?,· ,crew to leave the game
because two trip~ had been made
to the mound . The Dodgers
protested thar the rule book
states the pitcher must finish
pitching to a batter before
another lrip to the mound could
be made. and therefore were
arguing both Perranoskl's ejec·
tlon and the misapplication to
Pena.
.
Pena had relieved in the top of
the lOth and gave up a single to
Brunansky,. who was sacrificed
to second by Oquendo. Pena
intentionally walked Thompson.

·

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KEMP'S 5 QUART PAll

C

April30,1989

Tralllng 5·3 going Into the
PIITSBURGH ( UP!l -Kevin 1first run In the second, giving San
Mitchell and Terry Kennedy hit 1Francisco a 1:0 lead. Walks to seventh Inning, Atlanta scored·
three limes to take a 6·5 lead.
ninth Inning solo home runs .·1 Maldonado and Kennedy and a
Saturdl!y, en a bUng the San Fran· ·~ single by Uribe loaded the bases, Lonnie Smith walked, stole se·
cli;co Giants to snap a three· and after a strikeout by Mike cond and went to third on Gerald ·
Perry's base ..hit. Dale Murphy
game losing streak with a 4·3 Kr!lkow. Butler walked on four
scored both runners with a
victory over the Pittsburgh pitches to force In Maldonado.
Pirates.
F The Pirates had took a 2-llead double and then came hOme with
the sixth run on a Jody Davis
Mike LaCoss, 1·1, after allow· j.ln the 'fourth off Krukow. also
lng the Pirates to go ahead 3·2 In }making his tlrst start of the single:
Atlanta opened the scoring
the eighth: earned the win with season after being activated
with a run in the first inning . .
two Innings of work. He didn't ~from the disabled list Friday.
Smith walked, stole second, went
allow a hit and walked three With two out, Bobby Bonuta
to third on . a Dlon J;lmes
while striking out one.
walked and R.J. Reynolds hit the
Jeff Robinson , who came on in · first pitch from Krukow Into the grouni:lout and ~cored on an error
by shortstop Owen.
·
the nintll lrlnlng. was tagged for ,right field seats for hlsfjrst home
Montreal tied the game 1·1 in
two home runs and a triple as his run this season.
Its half of . the first . Raines
record dropped to 2·3.
Expos 9, Braves 7
· Gary Redus' eighth lnping . At Montteal. Tim. Raines drove walkM, stole SI'Cond, advanced
to third on Otis Nixon's sacrifice
sacrifice fly 'scored John Cange- In four runs Saturday and Mont·
bunt and scored on a sacrifice fly
lost to give the Pirates a 3·21ead. .ffeal rallied .for four runs In the
by Andres Galarraga.
But Mitchell hit the first pitch 1 ,seventh inning. lifting the Expos
Davis put the Braves ahead 2·1
from Robinson in theninthforhJs to a 9·7 ·victory over the Atlanta
with his first home run of the
sixth home run of the season. and Braves.
two outs later Kennedy hit a 1·0
With Montreal trailing 6·5, season in the second inning, and
Evans made It 3·1 In the fourth.
pitch to right for h1s second Hub1e Brooks led o(f the seventh
connecting
for his second homer
homer of the season. •
with a walk off reliever Charlie
of
the
year.
Cangelosi. a pinch· hitter. led Puteo.Jim Acker, 0·1, came on in
Montreal took a 4·3 lead in the
off the eighth against LaCoss }reJief and yielded a single to Tim
fourth. Wallach hit his second.
With a walk. After pinch·hitter ·1Wallach, putting runners on first
home run of the season. Mike
Ken Oberkfell sacrificed. Barry •and.· third. Damaso Garcia
Fitzgerald walked, Owen s ingled
Bonds was lntenrtonally walked. · singled home .the tying run and
and the runners were moved up .
Jose Lind then walked on four '·Wallace Johnson singled to
to second and third · on a Bryn
pttches to load the bases and knock in his fifth run of the
Smith sacrifice bunt. Raines
.
Redus followed with his sacr ifice season as a pinch .hitter .
brought them both home with a
fly to center field .
! Spike Owen then walked to load
single.
The Giants tied the game at 2·2 the bases and Paul Assenmacher
Raines increased the Expo
in the sixth. chasing Randy came In to pitch. giving up a
lead to 5·3 with a sacrifice fly in
Kramer. making his first start of single to Nelson Santovenia to
the sixth, bringing home Owen
the year after being recalled make the score 8-6. Raines
who
had doubled and moved to
from Buffalo.
'brought home his fourth run of
third
on a groundout by
Candy Maldonado walked to rhe game and seventh in two
Santovenla.
open the inning and was forced at games with a sacrifice fly.
Cardinals 1, Dodgers 0
second. Singles by Jose Uribe " Darrell Evans hit two homers
At St. Louts. Jose Oquendo
and ptnch·hitter Tracy Jones ·for Atlanta. the second coming
slapped a two-out single to right
loaded the bases am! . chased tyith two out in the· ninth.
in the 11th inning Saturday ,
Kramer . Bob Kipper got Brett
Montreal reliever Joe Hesketh,
Butler to force Jones at .second 3-~. pitched one inning ·tor the . driving in Vince Coleman -from
third to lift the St. Louis Card!·
with Kennedy scoring the tying victory. Tim Burke wenttheflnal
nals to a 1·0 triumph over Los
run. .
. two innings and picked up his
Butler also drove in the Giants fifrh
save.
·
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�Aprl30, 1989. '

•

Times-Sentinel

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

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-3

.

Toron_to stops no-hit .bid; Tribe ends four-game losing skid ~-

By United Pretts International
Kirk McCaskU! mowed down
the Toronto Blue Jays with his
fastball until Toronto manager
·Jimy Williams sent up fastball
hitter Nelson Llrlano.
Llriano opened the ninth with a
double to left-center. breaking
McCasklll no-hit bid Friday_,
night. Still, McCaskill's second
career one-hitter was good
enough to lift the California
Angels to a 9·0 victory aft
Anaheim, Calif.

McCasktll, 4-1, had faced Just
two batters over minimum before Llriano's hit. He walked two
and struck out nine In his first
complete game of the season and ·
sixth career shutout.
·"I didn't realize he was going
to be the hitter until he stepped up
to the plate," McCaskill said. "i
Just tried to go after him. I
figured he'd be swinging and I
tried to get him to hit a ground
ball. I got the ball up a little bit,
and he got a nice hit on it."

McCaskU! pitched a one-hitter Shawn Hlllegas, 0-3, took the loss. Moore, 3·1. walked one and
he added a sacrifice fly In the
against Texas June 25, 1986.
Royals 8, Brewers 1
struck out , six before being third Inning as the Mariners butl~
"McCasklll pitched a great
At Kansas Clly, Charlie Lei· replaced at the start of the
ballgame. I did not put Llrlano in brandt and Jeff Montgomery seventh lnn,ing by Rick Honey - a 5-0 lead. 'Reed, 2-2, the thll:d
Just .to break up the no-hitter," combined on a flve·hltter and Bo cult, who retired all six batters SeaHle pitcher, walked two and
:
WUI!ams said. "Llrlano's a great Jackson went 3 for 4 with a triple he faced . Dennis Eckersley struck out four.
Rangers
6,
Red
Sox
6
(curfew)
fastball hitter, and that's why I
and two RBI to l!ft the Royals. pitched the ninth for his AL·
At Arlington, Texas, Cecil
put him in."
Lelbrandt, 2-2, gave up five hits leading eighth save. Loser Paul Espy smacked a two-run single
· McCaskill has given up just over eight Innings, walking one Gibson, 1·1, allowed only six hits
in Texas' three-run eighth which
three earned runs In 36 and 1/ 3 and striking out two. Montgo- and two runs In five Innings.
tied the score. The game was
Innings for a league-leading 0.74 mery retired the side In order In ,.
Mariners 11, Orioles 5
halted after 10 innings by the
ERA . After a dlsappoinllng the ninth. Bill Wegman, 1·3, took
At Seattle, Dave Valle drove in . AL's 1 a.m. curfew. The game,
spring training, he seems to be the loss:
four runs and Jerry Reed pitched which was delayed two hours and
fully
recovered
from
the
radial
2,
Tigers
1
three and on~tltlrd Innings of two minutes by rain, was sche·
Athletics
1
nerve lrrltatlolt In the right arm
At Oakland, Calif. , Mike Moore one-hll relief to llft the Mariners.
that placed him on the disabled pitched a two-hitter over six Valle's bases-loaded .. double duled to resume at 7:35p.m. EDT
Saturday before the regularly
list last Aug. 18.
Innings to lift the Athletics. scored three runs In the first and scheduled Boston-Texas Po•nP
After Issuing a two-out walk to
Rob Ducey In the second Inning,
McCasklll retired the next 15
i
batters he faced before walking
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - · the wind, which traditionally_ Fred McGriff with two out In the
Dan Pohl, _g etting an unusual piCks up in the afernoon and
seventh.
break from traditl.o nal late- sends scores soaring at the
Jack Howell drove In four runs
afternoon winds, fired an 8· unprotected Spanish Trail, one of for the Angels with a double and a
under-par 64 Friday to take a 1. three courses In play this week.
home run. Todd Stottlemyre, 0-3,
two-shot lead In a record- , Stadler, Hoch and Wrenn all
took the loss.
breaking third round of the $1.3 J played at the Las Vegas Country
In other AL games:
-million Liis Vegas Invltat!onal. , Club, which wlll host the entire
Indians 9, TWins 7
The 11-year PGA tour veteran i; field the final two days.
At
M!nneapoUs,
Oddlbe McDo· .
from MI. Pleasan I, Mich., 1. Wrenn said a doberman, bark·
threerun
homer in the
well
hit
a
started slow with a bogey on the · ing vigorously In Its backyard
seventh
to
help
Cleveland
break
lOth hole of the Spanish Trail golf ·bordering the Las Vegas Country
a
four-game
losing
streak
and
course, but quickly rebounded , Club fairway , appeared to quiet
hand
Minnesota
Its
sixth
straight
with five birdies over the back i down to let the 29-year-old pro
loss. Starter Tom Candlottl, 2·1,
side and then.fourmore over the take his his sE.:ond shot at the
gave up six runs , nine hits and a
par-5 eighth hole.
front to finish at 17-under 199.
"I started out like I was going 1 "! get !I three feet into my walk with three strikeouts In six
Innings for the win. Doug Jones
· to h,ave a tough time," said Pohl, 1, backswlng and there he goes
worked 11-3 scoreless Innings to
who hit a bunker on his opening aga!n,"Wrennsald. "I was about
get his fourth save. Twins starter
· par-4 hole, but bounced back by ready to go bite the dog myself."
Shane Rawley, 1·3, took the loss
· sinking a 12-foot birdie putt on
Wrenn hit the shot into a
No .. 11. "That got me In a good f bunker, butrecoveredwlthoneof after giving up six earned runs
and seven hits with a walk and
frame of mind."
his five birdies' In the round.
three strikeouts In six Innings.
"I hadn't been driving all that
Pohl, who had been locked in a
Yankees 3, White Sox 1
seven-way tie for sixth place , well today ," said Wrenn, who
At
New York, Roberto Kelly
: after the second round, finished almost hit two shots out of
cracked
his second double of the
. late In the afternoon to take the bounds. "! felt pretty tentative
game
In
the seventh Inning to
. lead away from a trio of players wlthmydrlver. I'mgoingtohave·
break 1·1 a tte and lift the
at 201.
to attack It the next couple of
RRBEK SCORES- Minnesota's Kent Hrhek Inning of Friday night's game In Mluneapolls.
Yankees. Andy Hawkins, 3·2,
Robert Wrenn, overcoming days and not be afraid to let it
sUdes
safely Into home plate as Indians catcher Hrbek's run wasn't enough to keep the Twins from
gave up five hils and one earned
tentative driving and a territor· fly."
Andy
Alla118on
watts for tbe throw In the .fifth
losing to the Tribe by a 9-7 decision . .&lt;UP I)
run in seven and two-third
• ial doberman, tired a 6-under 66 , Hoch, who said he felt tired
· to tie Craig Stadler and Scott during his round. wrapped It up Innings for the victory, walking
five and striking out two. Dave
: Hoch for second place In the ,. with bogeys on Nos. 14 and 16.
five-day PGA tournament.
' "I'm comfortable, Just not Righetti retired the last two
With the weather still provld· encouraged with the way I batters · for his fourth save.
-: Ingperfectcondltlons, the field's finished up today," said the
, •. three-day total Is the best unqer- 33-year-old from Orlando, Fla.
:: par score In the seven-year 1 "But I don't foresee that again. ·
history or the event.
This course !sIn excellent shape,
"Looking at the leader board, the best I've ever seen."
tberearea tonofplayerswhocan t
· shoot good rounds," Pohl said.
. "I'd prefer this to be just one
; more round, rather than . two.
,
·· You'll have tosbool4· to 5-under, ' ANAHEIM, Call!. (UP!) · or people will pass you."
, The Toronto Blue · Jays anPohl said he got a break from
nounced Friday that pitcher Jeff
Musselman plans to enter a
~e
alcohol treatment center in the
Toronto area next week.
''V ..
Musselmau, 25, who plans to
:·· . RIO GRANDE ,;. The schedule
begin 28 to 35 days of treatment
Monday, said he approached the
of events for the coming week at
team's Employee Assistance
·Lyne Center is as follows:
Program this spring to ask for
Gym IChecluJe ·
help for an alcohol dependency.
Su~ay -1-3p.m. and6-8p.m. ,
"! have recently decided I
wanted · a more Intensive pro:open recreation
. Monday '- closed for lntramu·
gram and have 9E!en provided
with the finest specialists availa·
ral volleyball
ble," Musselman said In a
· Tllettday -CLOSED
Wednesday - 6·8 p.m., open
stat~ment Issued In Anaheim,
·
Calif., where the Blue Jays were
recreation
Thursday -CLOSED
playing the California Angels.
Friday - 6·8 p.m. , open
"This will ensure the most
AAA invites you to enjoy a
recreation
, efficient and quickest solution to
truly relaxing, hassle-free
Sa&amp;urday - 1·3 p.m., open , deallngwtthandma!ntainingmy
vacation
on our Maine's
: recreation
·
alcohol-free life, as well as
Rocky
Coast
Tour, August
fulfilling my potential as a major
Sunday, May 7- 1-3 p.m. and
5-13.
Bargain-hunters,
beach·
: 6·8 p.m., open recreation
league pitcher."
'
goers,
and sightseers alike, all
Musselman started the season
enjoy Maine's unrivaled beauty
Pool IChedule •
in the Blue Jays starting rota·
and New England hospitality.
Sunday -1·3 p.m. a~:~d 6-8p.m.,
lion, but complied a 0·1 record
Meander through the pictur·. open swim
with a 10.29 ERA while pitching
egque coastal villages as you
Monday - 6·8 p,m., open swim ' only seven innings In three
visit Portland, Boothbay HarTuesday - CLOSED
starts.
bor, and Bar Harbor. Enjoy
Wednesday - 6·8 p.m. , open
Alter his last start, when he
naturall!eauty at AcMaine's
swim
las ted just four batters in a game
; . Thursday - CLOSEQ
adia
National
Park, plus a
April 18 against the New York
sumptuous
New
England
~
Friday - 6-8 p.m., open swim
Yankees. the · Blue Jays an·
Lobster Bake.
• Saturday - 1·3 p.m ., open
nounced that he had been opti·
"" swim
'
: oned to Syracuse of the Interna·
Sunday, May 1- 1·3 p.m. and
Call Today!
Ilona! League.
, 6·8 p.m., open swim
But he did not report to· the
farm teain. the club announced
•
Home athletic contests
IALLIPOLIS
Saturday that he had been placed
1
Tuesday - Softball vs. Ma·
on the 21-day disabled list eftec·
~
:n'avelltQency
: rletta, 3 p.m.
•
t60 s-.4 Aw. cw,.11. D1L U6oJ1
live Apr!! 19, with a "personal
: ~,:;:!ay, Friday - Special
emotional problem that requires
446-0699
01
professional treatment."

·Pohl takes two-shot
lead after two rounds

WINS TOURNAMENT- The McDonald's co-ed voDeyball team
caputred the 0.0. Mcintyre Park District's voDeyball toumii!Jient
by upaetllng Porter's Exxoa 11-4, 1H3. KneellnJ are (L-R) Mark
Groves, Chuck Boyd and Keith McGuire. S&amp;andlng behind them
are Jody Householder, Janet Groves, Karen Sprape and .S heri
Howard.
'

Rio's Dowler, Norris
compete in tide meet
RIO GRANDE Two
members of the track teams at
Rio Grande College/Community
College competed in recent, All·
Ohio Track Championships at
Miami University.
Mary Dowler, a senior from
Jackson, and Eric Norris, a
sophomore from Newcomer·
stown, represented Rio Grande
against collegiate teams from
around the state.
Dowler, one of the school's top
distance runners and the 1989
Mid-Ohio Conference champion
In the women's 1500 and 3000
meter event, finished third in the
3000 with a time of 10:26.42. The
event was won ' by MiamI's
Melinda McCarthy with a finish
of 9:57.30.

CAPTURES ZO·POUNDER - Raymond Bays of Rt. 1, Patriot
(Cadmus area), captured this 20-pciund wild turkey Thul'lday
morning. Wild turkey· season, which started last Monday, will
continue untO Sal urday, May 13 In 36 Ohio counties, Including
GaiDa County.
'

Around the Park District••.
: GALLIPOLIS - The 0.0.
• Mcintyre Park District is offer·
· : !ng a dance aerobics program In
: the Gal!lpolls Developmental
• Center's multi-purpose room
: that wlll start on Monday, May
; 15.
- The class will meet on Monday
: and Thursday even lngs from 5: 30
• to 6: 30p.m. and will run for six
:consecutive weeks. The cost of
: the course, which will be taught
; by Donna Mitchell, is $18. which
• will cover her expenses.
; To pre-register, contact the
• Park District office at 446-4612.
: e-xtension 256. The registration
;deadline is Friday at 4 p.m. ·

·grips, volleys and serves will be
taught.
For pre.- registratlon, which
will be conducted on a first-come,
first-serve basis. contact the
Park District office, located on
the first floor ofthe Galli a County
courthouse. at 446-4612, exten·
s!on 256.

Overall, Rio Grande finished
eighth amoqg nine Division III
women's te·a ms competing. The

The Park District has scheduled the organizational meeting
for its Women's Softball League
for Wednesday, May 17 at 6:30
p.m . in Sh~lter No. 1 at Raccoon
Creek County Park.
The league is open to women 18
years of age or older who are no
•
longer participating in high
; The Park District is sponsoring
school athletics. The fee per
: a free tennis camp for Gallia
team is $90, with a $3 out-of.
• County adults and juniors (six
county fee for players' living
: years old or older). with the !irst
outside Gallia County.
• of two sessions running
from
Depending' on the number of
.
.• Monday. May 15 to Fnday. May
teams entered. all games will be
played on Tuesday (6: 15 p.m.)
: 19.
.• The second session will run
and/ or Thursday (7:15p.m.) at
:from Monday, May 22 to Friday . . the park.
·: May 26. Both sessions will havl'
The registration deadline for
• classes from 6 to 7 p.m . and !rom
submitting team rosters Is Fri·
:7 to 8 p.m. at Raccoon Creek
day. May 26. To get a roster form
:;county Park.
or a copy of playing rules, stop by
'• Basic strokes of the game, such
the Park District office at 446·
::as forehands and backhands. 4612. ex tension 256.

other schools included Malone,
Ohio Wesleyan, Baldwin·
Wallace, Findlay, Denison, Ce·
darv!lle, . Wittenberg and
Wilmington.
Norris, who won the MOC
champions,hlp in the 100 and 200
meter dashes, competed in sim·
Uar events at Miami. He placed
sixth of eight runners in the 100
with a time of 11.29 seconds and
finished eighth in the 200 with a
time of 22.62 seconds. Both
events were won by Tom Fenner
of Ohio University, who posted
tirries of 10.67 and 21.42, •
respectively. · ·
In final ' judging, Rio Grande
plated last of the 14 men's teams.
competing. They included Bo·
w!lng Green, Miami, Ohio, Ma· ·
lone, Central State, Mount Union,
Cincinnati, Baldwin -Wallace,
Toledo. Findlay, Cedarville,
Muskingum .and Wilmington.

{~'
1\ J

:~ Golf tournament slated for May II

::· GALLIPOLIS - S~&gt;veral area earns a SIU.OOO shopping s_p ree
;: businesses are sponsoring prizes sponsored by Empire Furmture
·: lor holes-in-one on four holes al of Gall!poUs.
;. the Boy Scouts Scramble Golf
A hole-in -one, on the 13th hole
·:Tournament. scheduled for
will earn a days Interest on two
:; Thursday. May 11 at Cliffside $1 mllllon COs (certificates of
:• Golf course.
deposit) paid by Cit!z~ns Na~:· To decide teams. the tourna·
tiona! Bank _and People s Ba~k.
:• ment drawing will take place on
both of Pomt Pleasant. wh1le
:: Wednesday. May 10 at 7:30 p.m. such a shot will earn the same
.; The lour-man. blind draw scram· prize from Farmers Bank and
:• ble tournament will beg in with a
Bank One.. both of Pomeroy. .
;: shotgun start at 1 p.m.
A donatton of $50 per part!CI·
.; A hole-i n·one on the fourth hole . pant w1ll take ~are of green fees,
:• earns tht&gt; successful marksman
cart. food. dnnk and prizes. as
;: a new car from Norris-N9 rthup well _as a1d a:ea Boy Scout troops
.; Dodge of Gallipolis. while a
contmue the1r work.
:• hole- in - on~&gt; on the sixth hole
••
,•· NELSONVlLLE- The Athens
the top three teams, and individ·
:: ~ounty Senior League of Nelson· ual trophies for players on the top
•: ville will hold a Class D and
two teams I limit of 15) .
:·men's pickup softball tourna·
All proceeds will go toward the
·: ment on Saturday, May 13 and
purchase of new uniforms. For
:; Sunday. May 14 at Buchtel Field.
more. information. call Ron Love
;. The entry fee Is $60. and ali , ·· at 1-'753-2620 or Yogi MacGregor
•: teams will hit their own sof!baiis.
at 1·592-5346. The entry deadline
;. There will be team trophies for
is Wednesday. May 10 .

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565 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631 PHONE (614) 446·2206}

resigned aiter the l!rst regular
season game. He returned 29
kicks for a 21.9-yard average in
1988.
The other players released
Friday were receivers Bobby
Bankston and Randy White, a~d
running back James Chamber.

During all of ·1989 we are celebrating our 40th year at bring·
ing better hearing to our
friends-clients . .It is gratilying
to know that we have dtvtl- •
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and dependability. We were
here yesterday, expect to be
here tomorrow; and ourollliAation to you is to be available
(every day I as you need us, with .
the most up-to-elate technolo·
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problem? Hearing aiel problem?
Call the reliable OlliS - WE
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Herman Dillon, M.S., P.T., C.O.
Marg.rat Johnaon, B.S., P.T.
Mlchaal Htmphill, M.S .. A.T.

Browns release four free agents
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns Friday re·
leased kick returner Glen Young
and three players signed as free
agents since the end of last
season.
Young was also released by the
Browns last. year. _but he was

.,
I,

CYBEX

COLUMBUS - The Ohio De· through Jan. 31, 1990
partment of Natural Resources
Badger, fox, opossum, skunk
mistakenly stated the opening· and weasel trapping- Nov. 13,
dates for several hunting and 1989 through Jan. 31, 1990
trapping seasons in a news
Raccoon, mink and muskrat
release sent out recently.
trapping- Nov. 13, 1~89 tl)rough
The corrected dates are:
Jan. 31, 1990
Fox hunting - Nov. 6, 1989
The 1989 wild turkey hunting
season, which started last Sun·
through Jan . 31, 1990
Raccoon, opossum, skunk and day, will continue unt!l Friday,
weasel hunting - No·v. 13, 1989 May 12.

••

,•

Sports and Rehabilitative Medicine
Back Rehabilitative Program
Cardiac Rehabilitation '

Hunting, trapping season dates posted

.

'

BAGS WILD TURKEY Bt.
GaiUpolll
at8:10 '
(AddlsoniU'ea)captured
a.m. In AddiiOD Twp. The
. 10~ luella. It
was Harl'l&amp;on's flnt attempt at wild turkey huutlng. WDd tatkey
season lA beinl observed AprU ~May U In 38 Oblo eouatles thll
spring.

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Page C-4-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

. April 30. 1989

April 30, 1989

~McGaughey

Pippen, Hodges lead Bulls to 95-88 win over Cavaliers
By United Press lnlernatlonal
Michael Jordan came up with
only an average performance,
but Scottie Pippen and Craig
Hodges gave the Chicago Bulls
an extra dimension Friday night.
Jordan scored 31 points and the
Bulls hit seven of nine shots from
three-point range to take a 95-88
victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers In G;1me 1 of their first·
round NBA playol! series.
Game 2 of the best-of-five
series Is Sunday at the Richfield
Coliseum, and the following two
games are In Chicago.
The Cavaliers had beaten
Chicago In ali six regular-season
meetings between the two teams.
They held Jordan to his average
over those sllr games, but could
not contain the long-range shooting of Pippen and Hodges.
Pippen hit ali four attempts
from three-point range and fin·
!shed with 22 points, while
Hodges scored 15 points, Including three of four three-pointers.
"I'm not going totellyouguys l
told you so," Coliins said, "but I
said the difference would be If
Scottie Pippen was making his
outside shots. They're going to
give him that shot. When he
shoots like he did, It makes an
altogether different baligame."
The Bulls . led throughout.
building their advantage to as
many as 24 points late In the third
quarter. The Cavaliers countered with a: 15-2 spurt In a
five-minute stretch of the fourth
quarter, but could get no closer;
, "I had a good feeling about our
• guys," Bulls coach Doug Collins
· said. · 'l sensed a togetherness In
• practice this week that we had
• not had In a long time."
The Cavaliers, meanwhile,
. didn't have a true marjtsman on
the floor without injured point
guard Mark Price, wj&gt;o didn't
play because of a pulled hams I·
ring suffered 11 days ago.
Craig Ehlo. who started In
place of Price and led the
Cavaliers with 19 points, made
Cleveland's only three-point shot
with 5:39 left. The Cavaliers hit
just one of six three-point
attempts.
1
Price shared the Cleveland
scoring lead this season with l8.9
points a game and was thltd in
the NBA in three-point
percentage.
Cleveland Coach Lenny
Wilkens said he wasn't too upset
that his team lost the home-court
advantage.
"I've always felt that the home
co,1lrt advantage Is a little bit
overrated In the playoffs." Wll·
klns said.
In other playoff action:
Pistons 101, Celtlcs·9l
At Auburn Hills. Mich., Joe
Dumars scored 21 points, ·Mark
Aguirre added 19 and Detroit tied
a playoff defensive record In the
second quarter to defeat Boston
in the 1st round opener.
Detroit extended its home
court winning streak·to 22 games,
with a team defense that held the
:celtlcs to only 10 points in the
, second quarter. It lied a playoff
'jecard for fewest points ever
' allowed in a quarter.
~ John Salley blocked five shots
;ln t-he second quarter to set a

one-period Detroit record. Salley
finished with 15 points, 11 In the
final quarter.

McHale scored 27 points for
Boston, Reggie Lewis added 20
points and Robert Parish contrlb-

u ted 18 In a losing effort.
Sonlcs lll, Rockets 117
At Seattle, Dale Ellis scored 25
points and Alton Lister blocked
eight shots to lead Seattle over
Houston In the first game of their
playoff series.
Sedate Threatt, who came off
the bench to score 22 points, hit
an 18-foot shot while falling
. backward and Derrick McKey
hit two free throws with 20
seconds left to put the superSon·
lcs ahead !or. good.
Seattle held a 104-98 lead with
2: 51 remaining, but the Rockets
scored seven straight points to
grab their first lead since early in
the third quarter.
Akeem Olajuwon, who led all
scorers with 28 points, made a
ihree-polnt play and Buck John·
son foUowed wfth a pair of 20-foot
jumpers to give Houston a 105-104
lead with 1: 20 to go.
Suns 104, Nuggets 103
At Phoenix, Tom Chambers ·
sank two free throws with three
seconds remaining to cap a
26,polnt performance, lifting
Phoenix to a 1·0 lead In thelrNBA
playoff series.

GREEN BAY. Wis. (UP!) The Green Bay Packer.s are
breaking with NFL policy by
inviting all of their unsigned
veteran free agents to their first
inlnl-camp which begins Sunday.
Tom Braatz, the club's executive vice president of football
operations, said the Packers will
ignore the league policy on
unsigned veterans. Previously
the NFL's Management Council
had recommended veterans not
under contract not be allowed to
take part In drUis because of
possible liability problems.
· "We've never done this before," he said. "But when Plan B
came along, we signed 20 unpro- ·
tected free agen ta to compete
with our own veteran players for
spota on the roster. We felt It
would be unfair to let them come
Into camp and not let the other
veterans in also."
However he said the unsigned
veterans will have to sign walv·
ers before taking part In the
mini-camp and he expects most
ot the veterans to show up despite
not heiDi signed.
Rookies and free agents will
1'11*'1 Sullday and take part in

By PORIA SMmt
UPI Sports Writer
ELMONT, N.Y. (UPI)
Claude "Shug" McGaughey III
~t himself some impossibly high ,
standards lor success In 1988:
· • Eclipse Award Cl\ampion
tTainer. Handler of two Eclipse
Award champions tho·
roughbreds - lnoludlng Per·
sonal Ensign, the first racehorse
tc;&gt; retire uninjured and undefeated In 80 years. Winner of 20
graded stakes. 15 of them Grade
I, and nearly $7.2 million In
purses. McGaughey won 'r1 per·
:cent of his 215 starts a,nd hit the
board In 64 percent of them.
And all with a stable that never
liad more than . 30 horses In
training at one time.
, How could any man dream of
making a respectable encore in ·
. 1989? .
So far for McGaughey, It's
b~n Easy- as In Easy Goer, the
chestnut colt he guided tathe1988
juvenUe championship and has
shipped to Churchill Downs as
'the odds-on favorite to win the
May 6 Kentucky Derby. ~
Juvenile champions trac;lltlonally don't do well in the Run for
'the Roses - the last one to win
the Derby was Spectacular Bid In
1979.
. Easy Goer, however, appears
to be a cut above the usual
•juvenUe champion and the usual
Derby. favorite. Something speclal. Like Spectacular Bid, who,
Ironically, also was the last
favorite to be listed ·In ))erby
future books at odds-on, or a
less, than-even-money price.
• Some folks are even daring to
• compare Easy Goer to another
" chestnut Derby favorite, 1973
. Triple Crown champion Secretariat, probably the greatest horse
,of all time.
• But McGaughey doesn't spend
all his waking moments with

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AUSTIN, Texas (UP!) - AI
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teamed up to fire their second
consecutive 61 Friday and take a
three-stroke lead after the second round of the $650,000 Legends of Golf tournament.
Bob Charles and Bruce DevUn,
who were tied with Gelberger
and Henning after Thursday's
first round, were In second place
:In the seniors field with a iwo-day
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COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!)
Brian Turner, an outfielder-first
baseman from Grand Valley
High School in Orwell, c;lhlo, has
signed a national letter of Intent
to play baseball at Ohio State
University.
Turner, a three-time all-league
selection, batted .435 as a freshman, .464 as a sophomore and
.487 with 11 home runs and 35 RBI
as a junior. He also was a
standout football player, but
turned down a NCAA Division I
football scholarship offers to
play baseball with the Buckeyes.
"Brian has tremendous power
as a hltter, and Is a very versatile
player," said Bob Todd, OSU's
bead baseball coach. "He has the
potential to play first base, as ,
well as the outfield."

·

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4 MILES NORTH OF POMEIClY

bracelet

ON ST. IT. 7
(Across FroM State Hlghway·Garap)

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By PORIA SMri'H
would break down. wh'e n I didn't about myself," said Antley, wlio
UPI Sports Writer
think I had a reason for living," said his usage was limited to
NEW YORK (UPI) - While Antley said April 22, the 58th social gatherings .
fans and the media were count- straight . race date on which he
At Smithers, Antley said, "theIng the days of Chris Antley's had won at least once at Aque· re're people from all walkS of life
Aqueduct winning string, he was duct, andcountlngfrom the start with all sorts of reasons. Some
tracking a more Important of rehab, his 140th consecutive blamed having no money, some
streak- the number of days he's ·day off drugs .
· blamed having too much money,
been drug-free.
Antley found his reason for some blamed their families.
Without the latter skein, begun living In the same rules he
"I couldn't blame It on any one
when Antley entered Smithers thought had ended his career: he thing," he added, "but there's a
Alcoholism and Drug Treatment could regain his license by lot of stress involved In this job.
Center In New York Dec. 4. there completing an approved People think you just go out, win
would be no riding s'treak. There substance-abuse program and a race and !Ill a bank up with
might be no Chris Antley either. keep It by passl·ng regular drug money, built's not like that.! had
The 23-year-old Antley freely testswhlleattendinggrou(koun· gotten drawn away from my
admits he considered suicide seling sessions.
•
family. I left home at 15."
after he was indefinitely susThe 28 days at Sm lthers were
He paid many dues at dreary
pended from riding last Nov. 24 gut-wrenching but liberating.
tracks on dreary horses In dreary
for his second positive drug test.
"At rehab, they make you races getting to the big lime, put
(The second was for cocaine; the · think. 'why do you use It?' I did a
first for marijuana).
lot of soul searching. They laid
"I went through times when I my life on a map, taught me a lot

CHICAGO (UPI) - A federal
judge Friday sentenced Los
Angeles sports agent David
Lueddeke to 26 months in prison
for lying to a grand jury about
violating NCAA rules.
·
The perjured testimony came
as Lueddeke, 37, was being
q ues Uoned In a federal probe that
uncovered a scandal involving
top agents, superstar athletes
and major universities. Author!·
ties found evidence of wldespread fraud stemming from
violations of NCAA rules that
forbid · college athletes !rom
S
I'OUD signing professional contracts
while they are stU! In school.
Lueddeke pleaded guilty to
perjury and obstruction of justice
for telling a grand jury he
Four teams are· tied for third
had
not paid or signed to a
place with scores of 126 contract Ohio State
professional
Gardner Dickinson and Dave
wfde
receiver
Crls Carter during
Hill, Bruce Crampton and Orville
his
junior
year.
Moody, Tommy Jacobs and Ken
Lueddeke also admitted forgStill and Billy Casper and Gay
Ing
documents Intended to supBrewer.
port
his false statements whlle
Moody and Crampton are the
flying
to Chicago totes dfy before
tournament's. defending
a secret grand jury tor the second
champions.
time In eight days.
In the Legendary division,
''I am sor.ry . I Interfered with
featuring golfers over the age of
(the)
Investigation." Lueddeke
60, Jerry Barber and Doug Ford .
In
asking for probation. "!
said
posted 63 on Friday to lead with a
am
sorry
!lied to the grand jury.
two-day total of 130.
I
have
suffered
Incredibly."
The first-place team will win
But U.S. Dlstrcit Judge Ann
$120,000, while the winning team
In the Legendary division will Williams said Lueddeke "knew
what he was doing and the effect
receive $35,000.

d

h 'J S Y CAM 0 R E
Gf,LLIPOLIS OH.

of what he was doing."
She·sentenced him to 26 months
In prison and fined him $10,000.
She also ordered him to receive
psychiatric care and stay out of
the sports business for three
years.
Carter took $5,000 from Lueddeke In October 1986, as an
advance on Carter's anticipated
pro salary. But unbenknownst to
i.ueddeke, Carter already had
signed with two other agents Norby Walters and Lloyd Bloom,
from whom he had taken $5,000
the previous spring.
Carter was fined $15,000 and
sentenced to 600 hours of coin·
munlty service for his guilty plea
to mall !raid and obstruction of
justice charges stemming from
lies he told the grand jury about
his deallngs with Lueddeke.
Walters and Bloom each were
convicted of five counts of
racketeering, conspiracy and
mall fraud earlier this month.
They face prison terms of up to 55
years each.

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Indiana, Minnesota among Big .
Ten women's tennis semifinalists

CCI 0

out Its oppenent, defeating lOth·
seeded Iowa 6-0. No. 3 singles
player Lynn Nabors )lad a 6-love
sw~ep for the Wildcats. Iowa
advanced to the quarterfinal
with a 5·4 victory over No. 7
PUrdue.
The Wildcats will play No. 3
Wisconsin In Saturday's semlff.
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In many 1~·hour days that begin
with riding workouts in the '
morning and ended after riding
afternoon and night cards at two
different tracks. Somewhere
along the line, Antley forgot why
he had pursued his career in the
first place.
.
"I took a lot of things 'for
granted. I took the game for
granted," Antley said . ."If I
would walk' out of here and have
had three winners, I wouldn't be
uplifted. I wasn't happy Inside.'' ' .
But Antley swore he Is now,
and his clear gaze and the sincere
expression on his freckled,
peach-fuzzed face made his oath · ·
believable. So do his racing ··
(See ANTLEY on C.e) .

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.... NOilWr D'lk Araloltlr ....

He wem our on nts own In 1979 ·
and built up a huge public stable,
training Vanlandingham to the 1985 older horse championship :
for Loblolly Stable. Then, ~eek· ., '
lng to cut down on his travel, he '·
went to work as the Phipps
family trainer In 1986.

(UWT t CASE).

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PEOPLES
BANK
BaYeD· Point

Tbe wteran free agents In·
dude •••latarten Ukeall-pro
1 Tim Harrll and cor·
Lee.cboll:el except '
An of .Mark
. draft

McGaughey returned to LexIngton, where he got a job as a hot
walker at Keene land. Gradually,
he moved up the ranks as he
moved from track to track,
becoming a groom and finally an
assiStant trainer to Frank and
David Whitely In New York.
-. . ..

kept him outdoors.
" l had three things on my
mind," McGaughey says . " I was
either gonna be a horseman, .
work on the race track; be a golf
pro, or be a fishing guide.
"I think ," he adds drily, " that!
chose the right one."

..•

Antley credits drug ·rehab for win streak

signs to
'play for OSU

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as a teen finding tellers wllfing to
take his bets. His real passion at
that time w&amp;s golf, which he
played with a three handicap.
After high school, McGaughey
went south to Ole Miss to study
business, but he soon decided
that he'd be happier In a job that

~Turner

S~1a I

tit ·

10• the rookies and

r

Easy Goer. He's got too many
other good horses to look after. In
fact, one of his major Jobs this
year will be trying to ffnd races
good enough to prevent two more
stakes-winning 3-year-olds Remsen Stakes winner Fast Play
and Flamingo Stakes victor Awe
Inspiring -from bumplhg heads
with Easy Goer before the Nov. 5
Breeders' Cup Classic.
"Sometimes I ask myself,
'Why does It "'ork for you? Why ·
was I the lucky guy who got
Personal Ensign and she won.'l3
In a row? Why did Easy Goer
come Into my stall,"'
McGaughey says one Aprtl mornIng as he reflects on the path his
life his taken. "Sometimes I have
to ask myself that ,"
Thebes t and shortest answer Is
Intelligence and hard work,
though some critics and rivals
scoff that McGaughey's boss,
Ogden Phipps, makes his job
very easy.
All·of the horses that run In the
Phipps family's blaCk and cherry
silks are homebreds, and Phipps,
the 1988 Eclipse champion Owner
and breeder, obviously has given
McGaughey some great ra,w
material to work with.
But It takes a goOd trainer to
keep good horses healthy and
running well, and a great trainer
and manager to keep a horse
undefeated over three seasons
the way McGaughey did with
Personal Ensign. She won most
of her races after six screws were
Inserted to hold together a,
broken pastern. ,
, ·obviously, McGaughey is dolog a lot of things right.
He learned to do them the hard
way, coming to the sport after be
was grown. Though , he was
raised In Lexington, Ky., the
capital of thoroughbred breedlng, his only connection to horses
was the pleasant hours he spent
,

, SEATTLE, Wash. (UP!)
Jackson, who lettered on
Canton (Ohio) McKinley's 1981
, state champlanshlp football
team, was one of six free agents
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)
,signed to contracts by the Seattle
- Indiana, Minnesota, Wiscon','leahawks.
sin and Northwestern Friday
The 6-foot-4, 244-pound line,
advanced to the Big Ten women's
:backer started the first two
tennis champion.s hlp semifinal
:games far West VIrginia's fifth·
with
blowout victories.
"ranked Mountaineers In his final
Indiana,
the top seed, defeated
collegiate season. After sustain·
elghth·seeded
,Illinois 6.() with the
•lng an ankle Injury before the
help
of
two
6-love sweeps by
"Maryland game, however, he
Stephanie Reece In No. 3 singles
gave way to Renaldo Turnbull
and Amy Alclttlln No. 6 singles.
, and filled a backup role.
Illinois defeated No. 9 Ohio
The !our-year letterman had 57
State 5-3 earlier Friday to ad' individual tackles and 27 assists
vance to the quarterfinal.
his junior season In college.
The Hoosiers advance to face
,Noted as a pass rusher, he had 17 .
fourth-seeded
Minnesota, which
Individual tackles and six assists
defeated
No.
5
Michigan 8-l.
,on an unbeaten WVU team that
No.
2
Northwestern
also shut
' lost to Notre Dame In the Fiesta
' Bowl.
Jackson was the starting cen·
&lt;ter on McKinley's 1984 champion·
ship OOhlo high school basket·
,ball team.
~Dale

Free 5 Year Parts
and Labor Warranty

•Plowing Contest
•Corn Planting
Contest
•Sled Pulls

confident in Easy Goer's chances in Derby

'be
H
•
1 d m
•
' GeI rger- enrung team ea
...... d
f Golf toumiUtlent
' ·.' ·
.two of I~..,n
S 0

-=:n101D
-·· Mollday
and
ay. On·fleld
drllll beiln

~ to take part In

'

Schayes countered with a run ·
ning hook with seven seconds left
to give Denver a 103-102 advantage. Chambers was fouled by
Wayne Cooper while driving fora
·layup.
Kevin Johnson also added 26
points for Phoenix. Waller Davis
led Denver with 34 points.

McKEY SLAMS- Seattle's Derrick McKey (31) slame the ball
through the hoop after getting past Rouslon's Akeem Olajuwon In
the first quarter of Friday night's NBA playoff quarterfinal opener
In Seattle. The SuperSonics won 111-107. (UPI)

~Packers·

to
·invite unsigned
free agents
to mini-camp

· Rookie guard Dan Majerle
preserved the victory by stealing
Darwin Cook's lnbounds pass al
mldcourt. Game 2 of the best-offive series Is scheduled for
Sunday night In Phoenix.
Eddie Johnson hit a jumper
from the top of the key with 12
seconds remaining and Danny

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-5 •,

Pomeroy-Midcleport-Gallipolis, Ohio......: Point Pleasant, W. Va.

{I

....

.! •.
l

•

···~

�Page-C-~Sunday

Times-Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio Point Pleasant. 'It(. Va.

April30, 1989

Clwnges labeled 'heavy-lwnded'

•

Cowboys~ chiefs guide teiun to new path With draft 'picks
By MIKE RABUN

I
'

UPI Sports Wrller
DALLAS (UPI) -In the space
of a little more than 24 hours last
weekend, the Dallas Cowboys
turned a historical corner and, to
the surprise of many, pointed
themselves in what appeared to
be the right dlrectlon.
They are doing so wlth an
almost complete transfusion of
new blood in what has been a
revolutionary and, in the opinion
of some, a heavy.handed
takeover ~
,
But as the Cowboys' new
administration made lis first
major decisions and took part In
the NFL draft for the first time,
the heretofore irate fans and the
always ·s keptical media gave
high marks.

; By JONATHAN FJl;RZIGER

I

I

•

~n(Jeyooo

SRring
Sale
.
.

s tatistics : · His race-winning
reaehed 60 days April 24,
and during that period he won 140
' .:. or3lpercent-ofhls450races.
• "I don't ever want to lose the
feeling I have now," Antley said.
•:God gave me a gift to ride
horses, and before I took it for
granted. Now I get up every day
and I pray, and I thank him for
tr.tttng me learn this fast. I was
very fortunate."
: Antley credits his frame of
mind, rather than the absence of
rihemlcals inside it. for the great,
~!ding.

• "1 wasn't screwed up by drugs.
t wasn't doing cocaine between
J!aces ... but I had a Iotta things
~:oing on in my head," Antley
said. "I'm just more consistent
an everyday basis and more
focused on every mount Itself."
: In case you missed it. ..
•
The Top 10
: ThorougbredRacingCommunti:atlons' Top 10 for the week
~nding. April 23 : Easy Goer,
Sl'nday Silence. Equalize, Open
Nlind·, Cryptoclearance, Nasr el
Arab. Slew City Slew, Western
etayboy, Seeking The Gold and
~nshine Forever.
•,
Bits and Pieces
: Denis McGlynn, president and
e EO of Brandywine and Dover
Downs, wanfs the Delaware
·General Assembly to OK slot
:machines at tracks as a means of

dn

.........

more••••• •
•••••
•••••

JOHN'S MONUMENTS

(Continued from C-5)

~reak

competing with Atlantic City for
bettors .... Winners in the U.S.
Trotting Association's annual
Broadcasters "Awards competition are WCSH -TV of Portland,
Maine, fo~ the program " From
Foal to Fldish Line, ' • and reporter Tony Doucette of the CBC
Radio Network for a four-part
series on harness racing In New
Brunswick, Canada . ...
Totally Ruthless has been
projected the fastest three-yearold pacing colt of the season on
the 1989 Experimental Cham·
plonshlp Ratings; compUed ·by
Harness Tracks of America
executive Stan Bergstein, · the
ratings predict the defending
division champion will pace a
mile 1:49 2-5... Despite a down·
pour, Longacres Race Course in
Renton, Wash., drew 11,316 fans
who wagered an opening-day
record $1,752,837 April 5...
The Meadowlands wlll begin a
two-phase, $10 million renova. lion in August; Ellen Harvey,
formerly of NAHRMA, takes
over as the Big M' s director of
media relations and publicity·
racing May 1. ... NYRA has
established the Mike Venezia
Memorial Award to annually
honor a rider for "extrardinary
sportsmanship and citizenship;
the first award will· be given to
Venezia's family In memoriam
at Belmont May 29.

Pair

MDR·FLd

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1989 season.
Dozier, an Infielder In high
school, has been playing left field
for the Mets' Class A South
Atlantic League team in Columbia, S.C., where he Is hitting .313
with five triples and one home
run.
Dozier said he is not bein~ paid
by the Mets now but would like to
sign a contract "as soon as
possible." He also said he plans

Easy Goer keeps '· perby field to 15 horses
By PORIA 8IIJ'l'B
speculatlDi that the field might Derby, many observers had
,
UPIIlporta Wrlllr
end up as small aa 10 to 12.
rated him either as co-favorite or
: LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPl)
It might ha~e madetor a better second choice for the Run for the
The lrnprelllve Pl'l!ll victor-lea of ~alaDced·, more ~ompetltlve Roses orr his 10 1-2-length trlearly tayorlte Easy Goer and top Derby If It had. But, as usual,
umph in Aqueduct's March 25
challenger Sunday Silence have "Derby Fever" prompted a few Bay Shore Stakes.
scared trainers away from the OWDers and trainers to ship In
Lukas said post-Santa Anita
May 6 Kentucky Derby,·keeplng ~Jonea who probably would h11ve . Derby blood tests showe~ the
the field to between 13 and 15 bj!en better oft racing at another horse suffered from dehydration
track · than ·Churclltll Downs on and an electrolyte Imbalance - ·
horses.
.
' By April 28, a total' or, 11 Derby Day. ,.
'•
·
possibly caused by the stark
probable starters, Including 'f. ''This grou'p apiJI!ars •IO me to '' difference between the early
Easy Goer and Sunday Silence, . j:Je stJ;ong at,.the top, with n9thlng spring temperatures In New
"Vere stabled and training · at ~n the .mlddll?; an4 then·'a lot of York and Southern Calilorrtla.
Churchill Downs, andatleuttwti ,r alnbow-chuers,t!, 'said trainer
"II was 44 degrees the day -:ve
more wer@ scheduled to ahlp In D. Wayne L•s. wh(lse Winning
II&gt;' the end of the month. '
Colors won the Dre~JS&gt; last year.
Up to 20 starters are allowed to
"Maybe I'm one of them
run in the first leg of raelq's ~ralnbow-ch&amp;ll[l'f) too,'j Lukas
Triple Crown, but the last Jlme added, "but I d011't think so.''
the gate was full was In 191N/Still,
Lukas, who has raced as many
,
a 'fleld or 15would be the smallest three •starters In 'one Derby,
DALLAS (UPI) -New Dallas
since SJli!nd a' Buck defeated 12 'p lans to sad!ile one this ye11r Cowboys owner .Te!'ry Jones,
challengers in 1985.
Houston, the'S2.9&gt;mUllon Seattle saying the team's front office is
Considering how handily E;asy Slew colt he co-owns with Lloyd "fat" and oversta:ffed, makes no
Goer won th~ Go~am Slak~ and french and):!arry Ileal. .
. , se~ret that every employee he
WoOd Memorial · and' Sunday ·· Barring a bad performance by inherited does not have a guaran·
Silence the Santa Anita Derby, Houstb.n ln the April 29 Derby teed contract.
- h'owever, 111any observers were . Trial, few WO!Jid argue his right
"Make no bones about it ,"
surprised to see the number of to challenge 1988 juvenUe cham- . Jones told reporters Friday, "we
probable atarters go as high as it pion Easy Goer In the Derby.
are looking at, and should look at,
had.
'
Until Houston's shocking fifth- the business of making the
Only two weeks earUer,:llorse- pia~ fiDIIIh behind Sunday Sl- Cowboys lean and mean.
men and rac11111: writers were lence In the Apl'll 8 Santa Anita
"The Cowboys are fat. I'll say
:
,
· ··
it. It's hard to really make the
~rump
(Continued from C-6) ·
point that we want (341-pound
r1 1
•••
•
guard! Nate Newton to get down
e first American to win the cllmbthrqh. Cat~tin Mouni\aln to playing weight if we don't get
"'
,
down to playing weight ourur de r rance.ln 1986, tbe race . National. Parllil~ W~tern ¥ary- , se\ves 11 starts at the top "
h'as attracted such cyCIIngluml- laDd and ~t . down the Blu~ · . J ~s a Little Rock · Ark
ll)lries as Belgian Eric VandeRidge Mourilalns of Virginia . ·ou;:n.'moved his busine~sope~:
raerden, Colombian Alvaro Mebefo~ concluillng the _,seventh atlon Into the Cowboys' Valley
jla, Dutchman Stephen Rooks day in Richmond.
Rimch complex after he purand Russian Vyacheslav
i\(ter . a 4.2-lr!IIE' circle race chased the team In February for
:E!kimov, considered the best through Arlington, Va., wbere s146 million from H.R. "Bum"
amateur racer In the world .
the largely forelp flock can Bright. He immediately put Into
• LeMond. 27, has suffered a run ca!ch a glimpse o.f the W~shlng- practice his promise to oversee
of bad luck since his French tOll Monument and the White th team down 10 the "jockO: and
victory, breaking his hand In House, the tour will move to
ek ..
.
wh
100
000
soc
I
ted
Ba
Italy and then getting bas
In . ltlmore,
ere • spectaOns.the day he bought the team
the guts with buckshot while torsareeKpectedtobeoutforthe Jones llred coach Tom Landry:,
hunting wild turkey with hi~ opening festival day of Prea- who had directed the team's
brother-In-law In Lincoln, Calif; kness week. ,
,
on-field efforts since the CowHe said he has about five years
Trum~s ultra-luxurious yacht bo
ere
nded 29 years
lef,t In his cycling career aDd he ~II be ciQc!led IIi the harbor,
/~erw and hl~ed Miami coach
wants to devote that period to . • replete with' a bevy of celebrity ~~~my Johnson.
Y(aking Americans up to · the pals, ICIIft!e.l the racers for a gala
The next major figure to leave
. cel~bratlonoftheTouron the eve was Tex Schramm. the team's
sport.
In a typically Trumplan touch. of Its fiDBI day •
president and general manager.
the race will begin with a tlml!'
In fra~. the Topr concludes Schramm was consistently left
t f the decision-making protrial May 5, set against , the . ~th several clrcujts around the
backdrQP of Albany's fu"!J'Islic cltyoftiarlswlthaflnalsprlntup ~so and resigned 10 run the
Empire State Piaza. The com- the magttltltent . j\venue de Interilalional Football League, a
plex of government skyscrapers Champs Ely~. .
ring effort that has the blessing
was built by former VIce PrestTrump picked ·his new hotel-. sf th NFL
dent and New York Gov. Nelson casino on -'tlantlc qty's ,Board- 0 Jo! Baiiey a Cowboy vice
R:ockefeller, who also had a few walk as the climax to his bicycle-. president In ~barge of negotlatbucks.
race, Wh!!re the.,winner will be lng contracts, resigned last week
Trump originally toyed with crowned and rec~lve ~.000 in 10 join Schramm in the IFL.
slarting the race In the Big Apple first-place prize .~oney. 'With
This week Jones fired three
!\self, but was laughed out of the $200,000 In addlll,ollil priZes, the · long-time employees, treasurer
city by newspaper columnists. race will be - ~e acond-rlchest Don Wilson, public relations
They then looked about 150 miles cycling race In th~ "prld.
director Doug Todd and Bob
up the Hudson Rlver,and settled
Trump said be was Initially F iedman who was lri charge of
on Albany - .- a city not so reluctant - even· shy .,- about
1~ tapu; all of the Cowboys'
accustomed to the International attachlna hll ~me to the race, v eo s anlpractices.
spotlight.
but not anymore.
game
, Leaving Albany, the race will
"It's going to be a monster
Dallas newspapers and broadsnake down the Hudson River to event," he said.'
cast outlets reported Saturday
Jllew Paltz, pick up at the Plaza
..
Hotel (which Trump recently
·
bought) lnNewYork,City,crulse
through Central Park and theQ
.
cross the George Washington
,., ,,
GAWPOUS, OHIO
Bridge into New Jersey. .
,
•After ·traversing'; the Garden
State, the bikers will move Into
Pennsylvania's lush Lehigh Val·
~ and wave to the Amllh
farmers in Lancaster before
ending the third · stage at the,
•
.,
statehouse In Harrisburg.
1 Then they will jump from the
of ~t cysbl_l~. Pa.,

left New York," Lukas said,
"and it was over 100 when we 'got
oft the plane. When he got to
Santa Anita, the water was
running off ,him.
Lukas was confident the colt,
who was given electrolytes intravenously after the Santa Anita
race, would prove himself
worthy of earUer accolades In the
Derby Trial.
"He's got an excellent chance
to repeat his Bay Shore race In
the Trial," he said,
f

COUJboy.s , emp l oyees. have
· no
d
t •l
guarantee COntraC S. JOneS

t

that another of the well-known
names associated with the team.
GU Brandt, will be fired, probably early this coming week
during .a meeting between the
two men ..
Brandt~ who has a
longstanding friendship with new
coach Johnson, for 29 years ran
the team's scouting operation.
Jones also Indicated the 11employee scouting department
might tk over-staffed. particulary with the completion of the
college player draft last week.
Brandt made a wide reputation
for hims~lf by compuierlzlng the
scouting operation and, In earlier
years. finding excellent bu I obscure draft choices or free agents
despite the fact the Cowboys'
·success gave them repeatedly
high choices in the college draft .
The high quality level of the
team's draft picks has declined,
recent
·

to report to the Vikings' min·
!camp In Eden Prairie on May 10.
VIkings coach Jerry Burns has
said 1989 ts going to be an
important y~ar for Dozier, who
was drafted, out of Penn State.
•'There has been a lack of
determination 'on his part,"
Burns said Tl)ursdy night. "We
rated him a big-time player when
he came out. He has a bad
attitude In practice at times and
Is somewnat moody.
"We need more production at
the halfback position and we
were disappointed when D.J.
decided to give baseball a try
with the New York Mets. He
should be here getting ready for
football."
And how do the Mets rate
Dozier?
"He's got great speed and he's
making contact with the ball, "
said Bobby Floyd, who coordinates the Mets' camp In Port St.
Lucie, Fla. "He's been somewHat
holding his own with the breaking '
ball, so that's kind of a telltale
sign. Some guys go up there and
not even come close to the
breaking ball, but he's fouUng a
couple oft and even hitting some.
" He's got some fundamental
gaps with his swing that would
take a- little bit of time, but
nothing that can't be overcome.
"His arm strength is not quite

C-7 -

t'8Q8

what you'd like it to be, but he
hadn't thrown a baseball In five,
six years.
"I would say It he were a high
school player now, he definitely
would be a big-league prospect.
At his age, and having been out of
ball for a while, I would have to
put him as a fringe right now."

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SALE

P1 '

bec;auae I'm going back to (the
Viklnp') training camp. To
make thlnp easter, all we have
to do Is stan a contract, and when
football season starts, I leave.
That's it . It's not a diffiCult
thing."
Dozier, 23, missed several
games with tlie Vlldngs last
season with Injuries. He rushed
just 42 times tor 167 yards and
two touchdowns. The Vikings
have h,ln'l under contract for the

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looill aoocJ for a CODirect.
Minnesota VlklDgs running back
''The only thinll have to work
D.J. DOzier, who Is playlq the out~ to makf 191'8 everythll!,&amp; Is
outfield In the minor leapes this OK Wttll Ule Vlldqil.''
spring, says chances are good
Dozier, Who wu the Vlklngl'
he'll slgtt a contract with the New No. · 1 draft elloll:e ID 1987
York Meta, It was reported lllllleated be would like to play
Saturday. ·
both aporta profeuloaally. ala Bo
"Everything looklgo«ld," Doz· Jac~ of the_ ~saa City
ler told the St. Paul Plo~~ter RoyalaaJ)dLoa~lesRalclc!n.
Press Dispatch. "They (the · ''They (tiMiVlldDP) can'tstop
Mets) feel that I can play and I me frcill. p~ (buebllll) ," '
feel l can progTeaa. And that Dozl~ •1!2· "Burtt' a no bli ~eal,,

1

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RIG
IMW. . .

nmes- ~.net

Dozier says chances are good he-'ll play for N.Y. Mets

A

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Special Someone. Now In
Stock and More Arriving
Each Day!! .

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S26995

LAWNBOY LAWN TRACTOR

Aprl30, 1889

.llL1II HOLES
HOW OPEN .

warranty

t71 ,NOITH SIC-

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It was ironic that the first big !fowntown and wave· to Landry. day of the NFL draft, Johnson not' was wise to select players who
Landry was forced out and
splash by Cowboys owner Jerry
More tba·n 100,000 people did so In only traded Los Angeles Raiders , mleht be looked upon as, "pro- Schramm lett his post ot preelJones and coach Jimmy Johnson · what was one of the most chlef AI Davis out ·of an extra · jects." They would find big, fast dent and general manager volun- '
came as tbe clty of Dallas was
heartwarmlqg sliows ot affection diaft pick, but made one seem- . people with l!lllendal and try to ' tarUy (slllce he no longer had a '
swept by a wave of nostalgia for In the city's history.
lngly proper decision after create great players.
role to . play With ' the team). ·
deposed coacb Tom Landry.
In a way, It was Important for another In slicking to a game
That Idea failed far more than Brandt continues to hang OD, but'
Landry's star pupU, former
the tans of the football team to plan that he and his assistant · It worked.
for how long remalnl a questloa
Cowboys quarterback and cur- see Landry that day and to coaches had devised.
''I didn't want to get Into the,
since he made no public appear-:
rent real estate developer Roger realize that his replacement by
"I couldn't be happier with the 'might be's.'" Johnson said. "l ance during the draft.
'
Staubach, organized a tribute to the Cowboys' new owner had not ·. way thlnp went,'' Jolmson said. wanted players I knew could
The CowbQys chanaeover,
Landry and In theearlyorganlza- caused the former coach to "I think they went about as well play.'.' ·
·
therefore, Is complete. ADd as·.
tional phase It seemed the whither a~ay. Landry, relieved as we could have hoped. I would . The draft also &amp;howed that the much as the old guard was
project might turn Into a fiasco.
of the dally pressure .ot his job, be disappointed If we don't have last of the long-tlmeCowboystrlo admired by theteam'sloyaltans,
The date was changed twice, the seemed to look years younger at least three . or tour ot the . ...;. Landry, Tex Schra11111'1 and Gil the realization Is beglnnlq tor
organiZers ran out ot money and and within a few months will fellows we drafted start- as Brandt ..... may no lonaer play a ' .take hokl Ulat the changes wereJ
1
there was always the concern likely be ready for some new rookies."
key
role
In
the
team.
.
·'
·~rbaps for the best.
·
·
·
that bad weather might muddle task.
Duringofthe
course of
the draft,
the whole thing.
One day later, the pressures of ·several
Johnson's
moves
were II·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
On a bright, warm Saturday, the job fell on Johnson's questioned by the always present
however, tens of thousands of shoulders and he responded with second guessers. He was ready
people decided the best thing for une~pected cunnlpg. .
·
with answers each time. ,
them to do would be to go
During the course of the 'first
- ·why, since the Cowboys
need defensive help so much, did
'
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Dallas choose a fullback with its
second pick? ·
•'This team has four or five or
six major needs,'' Johnso.n said.
little more than a stunt hy the tlve Saturdays, t~ther • with
"And fullback Is one of them.
tycoon, the Tour de Trump video profiles of the top racers
which runs May 5-14- already and the mos~ scenic stretches of Daryl Johnston (of Syracuse)
'
boasts some of the best cycling ·the 837-ritlle race. In addition, will make Herschel Walker a
lnaulldlng
talent In the world. It's also · ESPN, the cable sports clrannel, better player."
backed by $2 mUllan from the will televise several Individual . - When de(enslve back Louis
more wuthertlght
Oliver ot Florida began to sUde
pockets of ·Trump, NBC televl- stages of the race.
slon and Jefferson Pilot TeleproLike the 86-year-old French late Into the first round, why
more lock ..-cura
ductions, a powerful syndication Tour It hopes to emulate, partici- didn't Dallas try to move up to
outfit.
pants in the American race will grab him?
claalcbftllty
"We dldn' t think one player at
"I loved the Tour de France, brei!Zf! through roiHng countryI
but otherwise I knew nothing side, climb gut-wrenching moun- that stage of the drat! was going
80X88
about bike racing," Trump said. tains and sprint through high- to make or break our football
team," Johnson said. "We
"Now ·I see this thing growing pressure time trials. '"
STOCKSI~E
bigger than my wildest . But unlike its Gallic ancestor, needed to acquire draft choices,
•
I
.
expectations."
·t he Trump tour.wlllalsonavlgate not give them away (which
SALE
PRICE
,.
What' Trump lacks In cycling •the sooty \ streets of m ldtown Dallas would had to have done to
Lock l At!nWinl,
expertise, he has made up with Manhattan, brush through Am· get Oliver)."
The Cowboys draft also showed
money, Influence and a team or ish Country In Pennsylvania and
a
major shift In phUosophy from
top promoters who are already end up at the Trump Plaza Hotel
the
old regime. For years, when
committed to run the race for and Casino, named for the brash
Cowboys were winDing and
the
three years and hope to make lt .a
billionaire.
late in each round,
drafting
staple. on the international
Behind LeMond, who became
Dallas
personnel
director Gil
circuit.
(See TRUMP on C-7)
Brandt and Landry agreed that II
NBC will devote two complete
Installments of its Sportsworld
program to the Tour on consecu-

rJ'our de Trump' to begin Friday
: ALBANY, N.Y. (UP I) -Tour
~e Fran,:e star Greg LeMond
leads an International field of
~ycllsts next month. in a 10-day,
$250,000 romp from the quiet
state capital of New York to the
~langtng
casinos of Donald
Trump's Atlantic City.
; Peddling up .and down the
Jl:astern seaboar!J tiJrough five
states, the 120 racers, who hall
(.rom Belgium, Ireland, Celombla, the Soviet Union and a dozen
opoother nations, wlllcompeie
!pr the leader's yellow jersey in
an event dubbtid- what else?the "Tour de Trump."
They wlll also be vying for the
attention of American sports
fanatics on both network and
cable television, hoping to woo
baseball, basketball and golf
enthusiasts with a sport thai has
already captivated the rest of the
world.
' Though earlier written off as

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HOURS: 8-1 Mond•y-Saturclay
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Times- Sentinel

Area

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.Rijo hurls Reds to third
•
In row; Cubs top Padres,. 3By United P ress International
As usual. the Clncl nnall Reds
wo n a game when Jose Rljo
started Friday night.
This time, Rljo was the pitcher
of record.
Rijo, Rob Dibble · and John
Fra nco combined on a· four-hit
shutout to lead the Reds to their
third straight victory, a 3-0
triumph over the Phillles in
Phlladelphia.
R!jo. 1-0, allowed three hits
over the first six •innings to pick
up the victory. his first despite
tour solid previo us starts. Rljo ·
towered is ERA to 0.83 and
Ci ncinnati is 5-0 ill his starts.
' 'The runs felt good. •• said Rijo,
who received just live rUI)S .in
support in his previous Ol!tings .
"They gave me something to
work with. We have been hitting
the ball good, it was. justa matter
of time until I got some runs."
"We got him more runs in the
first three innings than we did in
four previous starts," Reds Man·
ager Pete Rose said. "I'm glad
he final.ly got a win, but the big ·
thing is we are 5·0 when he
pitches."
Franco pitched the ninth forhts
seventh save. Cincinnati's runs
came on solo home runs by Kal
Daniels , Paul O'Neill and Eric
Davis off Phlla'delphia starter
Don Carman. 1-3.
"I just have to overcome the
homers." said Carman. who has
given up nine this season. "It is
very upset ling to give up so many
i

Rick Rhoden, 0·2,' allowed lour
r uns and six hits In fou r lnnigs.
Cubs 3, Padres I
At Chicago, Ryne Sandj&gt;erg
slugged three hits, including a
two-run homer, and l"aul Kpgus
pitched a three-hitter over ,g 2·3
innings to lift the Cubs. Kllgus,
2·2, held the Padres hitless until
Randy Ready grounded a ~ Ingle
In the AL. it was California 9,
to center field with twoouts~n the
Toronto 0; Cleveland 9,' Minne- sixth inning. Loser Dennts; Rassota 7; New York 3, Chicago 1;
mussen, 1-4, surrendered •three
Kansas City 8, Milwaukee 1;
first-Inning runs.
1
Oakland 2, Detroit 1; Seattle 11 ,
Expos
Braves
Baltimore 5; and texas 6, Boston
At Montreal, Anders alar·
6 in a game halted by curfew
raga homered and drove n four
after 10 Innings.
runs and Tim Raines ' tr o-run
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 3
triple broke a ~-2 flfth-!mjing til'
At St. Louis. Don Heinkel and lifted the Expos. 1 Kevin
pitched 5.2·3 innings for his first
Gross, 3-2, gave up two ru~s over
major-league win and Ozzle eight innings for the win. ~tlanta
Smith homered to lift the Card!· starter John Smaltz, 3-2, tj&gt;ok !he
nals. Heinkel, 1-1, gave up three loos.
1
runs on seven hits. K~n Dayley
Pirates l, Giants ~
·
retired the last two outs for his
ATTEMPTED ·PICKOFF FAIL'O - Pblladel- "' rOeSller on failed plcko~t a&amp;te~pt In Veterans
At Pittsburgh, John Smiley ·
TIM! Reds won, 3.0. (UPI) ·
phia's Chri&amp; James dives back lo 1ee0nil J!l•t." · Stadium Friday nlgbt.
second save. Los Angeles starter fired a four'hitter and Jo;;e Lind
'
'
•
before lhe lag of Reds' second baseman ,RoJI , "' · '
Tim Leary, 2-2, gave upfourruns scored on a bases-loaded ,watk to
In four innings.
give the Pirates the onl~run of
Mets 7, Astros 3
the game. Smiley, 2·1, itched
At .Houston, Keith Hernandez no-hit ball for six Inning before
drove in four runs with a Will Clark led off the ~eventh
•
three-run homer and RBI single with a single to center field. Rick ·
MEN'S IPW
and Kevin McReynolds added a Reuschet, 3-2, allowed five hits
Nyletl/
two-run double to lift the Mets to , over seven innings, walking
'
'
Leather
CINCINNATI (UPI) - An
Offlcla~Jn Ute baseball·comtheir fifth straight victory. Sid three and striking out live. He
former friend of Pete Rose mlsslone.r's • office also refused ·
Fernandez, 3-0, allowed three walked Lind with the' bases full in
" lied" to investigators that Rose comment on the ~ort.
runs and four hits in six-plus the sixth.
! ·
bet
on baseball games after
The Post's sources said that
innings. striking out two and
attempts
to blackmail theCincln· Janszen, w.ho bj!came a friend ot
walking four. Roger McDowell
WAlliNG
nat! Reds manager failed, sour· Rose several year.!i aso, aske!l
pitched the final three innings for
ces
told
a
newspaper
Friday.
SHOES ·
for and receiVed· a $10,000 loan
his third save. Houston starter
"It was. extortion and black- from. ~se last summe~..A couple
WAS l39.9S .
mall,' ' th~ Cincinnati Post
MONTREAL (UP!)
With quoted an anonymous source as of months J,ater, said the sources,
Janszen sought a $40,000 loan
left-bander Randy JohJ son tern· saying.
from
Rose although the $10,000
porarlly relegated to; bullpen
The Post based its story on loan bad not been repaid.
duty after three straight poor " four sources close to baseball's
Rose told his lawyer, Reuven
outings, the Montreal Expos inquiry." However. the news·
Katz,
"to toss Janszen out the
A,riJ !1- Mlhn.ukl'rl&amp;t Alknba,ll p.m .
LAFAYETTE-MAll. GAWPOUS ,
apparently have ~caine Inter- paper chose to keep the identity
M!Q' 2- Atlll.nta Ill MIIWIWiu&gt;t', 11:30
door,"
the
Pos
I
said.
ested in Seattle lefl-harider Mark of the sources secret.
p. m .
lli·MII,v ~- AtiMta Ill Mllwauket&gt;, ll p.m .
Langston.
,
Rose is under investigation by
lli.·MM...\' 7 - Mllwaull'r at AUIUita. TBA
" -t!'I!Wrn Collft'l't'lll't'
Seattle General t.!anager
the
baseball commissioner's of·
Porllallld \'II Loa An ..,.I'll
Woody Woodward sat~ he had
ILoK An~oif'!l k-a61 i'if'fil!l' 1·0)
flee for gambling. If he lstound to
April r.- Los An~f!!l 1211, Portland
talked to the Expos, "b4ti am not
have bet on baseball games, he
at
liberty
to
say
which
players
we
could bP suspended one year. If
April 31 - Po 'r tlud at L~l!l ""-"£'!'1,
!I: :Mt p.m.
I ·
talked about."
he is found to nave bet on Reds
Muy :t - Los i\IIRf'(f'!l at Portland, 10 ; 311
"Langston is a fine ~allplayer.
p.m.
games, he could be banned .f rom
lli·May il -Los All~l'fi IU Portlland,
There is no doubt alljlul that ,"
major league baseball for life.
II: :10 p.m.
x-May ; -Portland ll1 Lo11 Anrl'li,
said Dave DQmbrorski, the
The Post's sources said that
:1:30p.m
Expos' general.manag;er. ''But to
Paul Janszen "threatened"
Utah
Goldr11 Slalit'
(Goldfoll SlM.lt' lralloi Mrl'il'lo 1·1)
mention specific naJ1leS is the
Rose, was "rebuffed" by Rose
April %1- Guldrn Slall' 1t3.l'tw.lt Ill
same as tampering." •
and "then lied to the commissionApril !I - GoldPn Slalr at Utah, fl: 30
p.m .
... Pascual Perez. Whose driver's office that Rose bet on
Ma)' :! - l:lllh Ill GoldPn Stilt•. II: 30
ing
problems
while/
with
the
baseball games, including Reds
p.m .
x-MMY -l- Utah .. Golden Slatt•. II: 311
Atlanta Braves are legendary, is
games."
p.m .
Canadian
attempting to land
"He (Janszen) cried when he
x-M~· 6- GaldPn Stat• atll&amp;ah. TBA.
Ph~ba; n~ . O.nwr
drivers
license.
to«&lt;'tltt&gt;rtr;-"'11
solirctttatli. "They
IPho.nb: It'D ~rif'H 1-11 )
The right-hander '/!lade head·
AprU 211 - Phot'als 101, ()(onwr IO:i
(baseball Investigators) lapped
AprU :10 - DPa"'r a.~ PhoeMx.. 10 p.m .
lines
with
thl!
Braves
whenhe
it
up~,~ ,._.. ~.....
,~ . . ·· ··-'i·""'' Mn.v t - Phot'llb et O.nwor. 8: :141 p.m .
x·Mii..V .f- Phoenix lit lk•nwr, TIA
'missed a start beca11se he forgot
Sources
told
the paper that if
•
x·Ma.v 6- Denwrllt r ....nl!l . Tft,\
the
exit
to
Atlanta·F
!ton
County
·
Suttlf' \'!1, HouNI.on
Rose is called before baseball
tS..aUho h-1161 .,,....,. I-t)
Stadium and drove · ontinuously
investigators he wlll tell them
,\prU !K- !W.IIlllf' Ill , Hea•onll1
around Interstate 285 that loops
,\prU • - Ho1111ton at Kc&gt; •Ill', I p.m.
that "Janszen· contrived the
Mau· S- Sul.lt.-' HoUIIon..K: JII p.m .
the city until his c~r ra.n out of
betting story."
r.-Ma.v 5- St'allk&gt; a1 Houlllon.ll p.m.
1
gas.
x-Mat,y ': - Hoa!lfo11 M1 St' .. lk•, TBA
Janszen is serving a six-month
X·iiiWt"f'l'•l")'
Perez. who is re.A•iarly tested
sentence
for income tax evasion.
TIA-co bt· anm•nra·d
for drug use as i part of his
His, attorney refused comment on
rehabilitation earli~r this year.
the report and refused to permit
must pass· the Quebec driving Janszen to be Interviewed.
NID.. Plllyotfs
Dlvhion fl.aJ11
J.
test.
Bet!t-oJ.Sr\'u

Sources claim Reds'.·.
Rose was blackmqiled
'

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$2995

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san Dh·~ ut C'hltllJO
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Aprl U - ...... I, Mo lireal 2

Aprl U - · Honf.rrall. BHIMI
Campbell CoalerKCe
Clllcaro -v11. 81.

F1rlit Round

Bl'tlt-oi-Fht&gt;
Confprent•f'
O.tmlt VK. BoAIOft
1Detrolllnd11 !ll'rlft; 1·0)
,\prll :!II- IJHrolt 101, BoMton !U
1\prU :M - .BoAton lLt Dt•l rolt, :i: :Jf) p.m.
E~U~il•rn

Ma.v :t- DetrvU at Botlton. Kp.m.
x-M~ .a- Detrollal BoAt on, A p.m.
)[· Mil)' 1 - Bo!tlon 1d DPtrvll, TBA
Nt&gt;vr Y•rk \ '11. Pblllldelphla
(Nt'W V•rk.leadK llf'l'lrflll·t )

i\prii'I'J - NPW \'ork 112, V.II..,..,Na
April 29 - PhlldC'Iphlaat Nl'W Yort.,

{Chlcap .wiM lllfl'il!!l.a.l)
i\pl'll Ill - ('lll('ap J, St. Lo•• I
1\prltt-81,
5, Chleqo4 fto'l'J
Aprl n- Qltcaao s, St . Loalll t

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April U - Cllleap S, 8t. LoW!
Aprl 2e- Odc:uo .a, St. Lou .. :1
Srn~llto Dlvhltln
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(Cal pry IWiM aerk'fl4·1)
Aprl 18- C&amp;IP")' t , Loa All piN 3

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7:31p.m.

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Mo-.rell. 7:,JI p.m.

Mar .J- ,....,..,...,. Phi1M4!111111aat
Mar I - . . *'till at PUW..r~:ll or
PIIIIIMel ... a, 1':SI p.m.
M..,- 7 ~ M.llll&amp;ftal at Pll;tiiMrsb. 1:11
p.m ., or Phil. .el,e.ta1':11 p.m.
k·M.r I - Pltllllllrrh or r-..IUerplia
at Molllrelll, 7:SI p.m. '
x-Ma,r II- Mo..-,al at PllWIIIII'h etr
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MoMrul YL P'll**tth or nllaclelllllia

Jt·MIQ' 7- PhU.delpllla at New York.

Mar 3- l1C"'eland at Chlcap, K p.m .
,;.M-,y &amp; - Cll'\'c&gt;l ... alChlcqo,ll p.m.
X· MIIY 7 - Chlci&amp;I[O al Cle\lfland, TBA.
A.Uuta v "- Mllwau.ltflr
(Allant.a lf'&amp;lil ll'r~ J.fl)
AprU t1- Allanba~ ltO, Mllwaull'r ft

AGUCON EQUIPMENT CENTER

c.~n.a.

MoMre.a, 1;JI ,_m.

Clt'Vl'hlnd \'1, O.lcaa:o

A priJate psychological agency
offeri~g Individual, Couple and ·
Family Counseling for a sliding
.
fee 1 Medicaid cards accepted.

WM Collferenee

x·M..r .&amp; -Nif'w \'orkatt PIIUatlriphla. R
p.m .

tCIIIt:qo le..,. .erkll I·Ol
i\prU ~ - Ollc._,. II. Clft'Piand 1111
i\priSI .- ChleapatCI.vPI.cl, I p.M.

•2 Year Warrahty• ·
ovn so ums IN noCI
7, II 11, 12 liP ·

lOT)
Aprl 1:0 - OaJ pry II, Lo11 An lf'lf'll 3
t\prl %1- cal prJ I, l.ol AftpiM I
Aprl U - cal PrJ 5, Loa All plea; I

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TBA

Lo•

Nol'rill ...llln

PI.'B.\ Ph&amp;JOH K

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· Aprl tl - Me•rral I. ..... 4

Playoff results .

While Supplle•le.t .

Dl~ildon

lktlllon " · Monlft'al
tModlrflll Mtu• Htl'il'll-1-1 I
April
Monlrul IIGMto. t
Apl'llt - Mo•ruJ 3. ..... 2: (0TJ

Los ·.tn~ t':-l al Sl . Loulo;
,\llunlU Ill Mont"• ILl

'· $799 ::::

..

William Whitney, Ph.D., Director

!I - PhU.dftpbla al Plttlhtl 111:11.

t\danul

Phll"dt'lphla

Announcing....
A BETTER CHOICE

)

l

'' I I t

'

!i I 1.1 I lo

j ' y

.

.

'l

I

HMC offers free .·screening
GALLIPOLIS - I! your suffer
leg aches ot cramps when you
walk, II may not be just a normal
.part of growing old. You may be
one of over three mlllion peojfte
suffering from P.A.D., Peripheral Arterial Disease, a paten·
Hally serious circulatory
conditlon.
·
On Tuesday Holzer Medical
Cente(. wlll sponsor a free "Leg
Alert". This is a medical eduction alfd screening program to
help people determiJIE' If they are
suffering from P.A.D. The event
wlll be conducted in the French
5\)0 Rocim at. the Hospital, from 9
a.m. until 2 p.m. Holzer nurses
!"Ill conduct this screening,
. under the supervision of Dr.
. Thomas W. Morgan and Dr.
: Daniel H. Whiteley, both vascu ,.lar surgeons on the

medical staff.
P .A.D. is 'a blood circulation
condition that. affects old people's abllity to walk even short
distances without sutferlng ,paln
that forces them to stop and rest
untU the pain goes away. As
Morgan and Whiteley point out,
while this type of leg pain may
seen harml,e ss early on, l~t .
untreated II can become progres·
, .
s(vely harmfu I.
· 'Tlie early'symptoms of P.A.D.
ar so lnn&lt;K:ent,inostpeople think
they are just little aches and·
pains of &amp;rowing old, so they may
Ignore tl:lem.
·'
The screening at the Holzer
Medical Center on May 2 from 9
a.m. untU 2 p.m. is free, it's
simple, and no blood samples are
required. ,You'll be asked some .
qUestiOns that wUI
deter·

•

HOWAlD BAIER .
SAUNDERSINSUIANCEINC.
uleum•

SliCE

for ln&amp;t.mt stalll
power. Tht porfoct

1951

ut.. durablr

With autoc,_u,t, .,,,•.

only

.....

lfJ I'Y.~''·

-

446-MCM

~~

- -

I

'M

1""

.,.

j

....

v

\

year
"alncvtJtlrur thai Doats." Rules
parade on July 4,
for the race, which
will be released by the flrsl of May. (Times· :
Sentlnelflle pholo)

!
•

distribute
commodities

.......... . . . .. ...;,.:.,.,..;.._ ,. , . ._

.~.,...

A.'iiYtiiiiii:rhal Floats
Race last year was a success In
alllhe crafts
floated down lhe river - one way or another. Of
the elghl cnli'les In the Galllpolls Area Jaycees
spotlllored event, only one (nameless) craft was
upset. Any club, company or organization

Agency to

•.

I

'

mine if a ·full examination is
indicated. It will take less than 10 ·
minutes of your time. No ad·
vance appOintment IS necessary.
For any additional information
on this free PAD screening,
contact Mary Harrison, R.N., In
the Staff Development Depart·
ment · at the Holzer Medical
Center by calling 446-5247

CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
Meigs Community Action
Agency · will be · distributing
USDA Food Commodities
(grapefruit juice, canned pork
and egg mix) on Tuesday, May 9.
'Meigs distribution sites are the
Meigs County Fairgrounds , the
Racine American Legion, the
Tul)pers Plains Fire Department
and the Pageville Town Hall.
Time of distribution is lOa.m. tol
p.m., or until the supply is
·
exhausted.
Gallla County distribution sites
are the Gailla County Fair·
grounds. Mt. Carmel Baptist
Chfi!'Ch in Bidwell, Guiding Hand
School and the Crown City Fire
Station. Time of distribution is
noon to 3 p.m. or as long as the
• anpply iaata. Therit Will be no distribution at
· Mercetv!Ue in GaiDa County.
Residenls must have a valid
Food Conunodity Card to reclve
commodities. Persons may pick
up for tll!nlor citizens, or for
individuals who are working or
sick, if tht! food commodity card
is presented, aloll&amp; with a •lgned
note authorlzlll&amp; someone else to
piCk up the commodities.

at Mnltreal, a: II p.m.

'"We ManlltJfl Your Rl1k"
437 S.C.......... , ......
Opposite 1M Pelt OHa

and a cast of teenagers of Rydell .
High.
The director is Anne Fischer,
as.sisted by Sharon Weyant.
Orchestra members are David
Phlllips, Tom Phlllips, Danny
Perkins, David Edelmann, Matt
Wltlls and Anne Fischer.
Sound technician is Mike Null;
lights, Mike Dyer and Steve
Haner; and sets, Jim Bennett,
Steve Rose, and students .
The stage crew w!ll include
Marlene Hoffman, Jackie
Knight, Bobby Gordon, Tony ,
Blht, Lisa Saunders, Jeff Sanders
and others.
• ,
The car and signs, as well as
other set materials, were loaned
by Ripley High School and Kay
Goodwin.

Flscber. Reserved tickets are on sale In the choir
room for U. General !"lmlsllon tickets will be sold
for $8 a1 lhe. door lor remaining seals.

REHEARSING - GaiDa Academy Hlp School
Choll'll rehearae for 11\e upcomln1 Broadway
perfonnance, "Grease." This will be lhe.26th year
for musicals by GABS undt:r the direction of Anile

ELECTRIC START

AprB n - Plhotiiii'Jh-1, rhUad .. pblal
f(&gt;r)
AprO U- Phllaftlplia .a, PltbltN 1'111 I

Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey. It
is presented th rough arrangments with Samuel French, Inc ..
New York.
. The cast, in order of appearance, is: Amy Jackson, Miss
Lynch; Te rri Tawney, Patty
Simcox; Aaron Seamon, Eugene
Florczyk; Amy Mlller, Jan;
Tracl Sisson, Matty; Minda
Miller, Betty Rizzo; Keith Koby,
Doody; Charlie Young, Roger;
Greg Dilley, Kentckle; Brant
Pauley. Sonny La Tierr!; Ann
Valentine, Frenchy; Heather
Hastwell, Sandy Dumbrowskl;
Chris Broyles, Danny Zuko; Joe
Roderus, Vince Fontaine; Tony
Vance, Johnny Casino; Ann
Adkins, Cha·Cha DIGregoria;
Travis G!tlesp!e, Teen Angel;

SALE!

7 "' ••••156125

•

April I!- Phi~Hdptda'.f, PIUIIburwht

·GAHS Choirs to perform
Broadway musical 'Grease'

'

LIQUID A

" 'llll'N C'ollf«f'••...
Plllrlck Dlv~lon
Phllolldflpllla n. PUbbur~:h
!SerB tif.d S-3)
Apr1111- PtttQI'lh -1. Phllatll!lpiMa:l

burg, W.Va. were lhe 1989 Girls o!the Year,left to
right, Kay Adkins, Xi Gamma Mu, Patty Pickens,
Xi Gamma Epsilon, and Susan Clark, Ohio Eta
Phi.

GIRLS OF THE YEAR - Announced a&amp;
Thursday even lng's Founder's Day dinner In
celebration of the 581h anniversary of Bela Sigma
Phi held at lhe Blennerha•sell Hotel in Parkers· -

GALLI POLIS - The annual
spring musical by the Galtla
Academy Choirs will be May 5
and 6 in the Washington Audita·
rium beginning at 8 p.m. with the
Broadway show "Grease."
This will be the 25th year for
musicals by GaiDa' Academy
High School under the direction
of Anne Fischer.
Reserved tickets are on sale at
the choir room of GAHS for $4.
There will be no advance sale of
g('neral admission tickets. These
remaining seats will be $3 at the
door on the nights of the
performance.
The show is a 1950s Rock 'n Roll
musical, with book and lyrics by

1

lh·. gnnw ••all;•d

Section· D

'

THE SHOE CAFE ·

Majors

'times- ientinel

April 30.,.j989

POMEROY - The ·58th annisle Hill, corresponding secre- She has been an active member
ve'rsary of Beta Sigma Phi
tary; and Vicki Au!t, treasurE'r . of the group for 40 years .
SQroi'lty )Yas celebrated ThursNew 11tncersforXi Gamma Mu
The 1988-89 Valentine Girls
day night at the Blennerhassett are Kay Atkins, president; Kal' were recognized and each spokE'
Hotel In Parkersburg at the Logan, vice resident; Barbara on the influence ol sorority and
its activities. Susan Clark was
annual Founder '~ Day banquet Welsh. recording secretary; Nel·
·hosted by members , of Xi sel Gerard, corresponding secre, · valentine queen for Ohio Eta I:'hl.
Gamma Epsilon Chapter.
tary; and carolyn Grueser. Sharon Pratt for Xi Gamma Mu,
Patty Pickens, presidentotthe treasurer.
and Mary Mora for Xi Gamma
host chapte!', welcomed Ohio Eta
After officers were recognized.
Epsilon.
Phi, XI Gamma Mu, and Precep- Brenda Hlll led t~e group in the
The 1988-89 pledges were intrator Beta Beta Chapters and led Founder's Day Pledge, and ducedandinclude, fromOhioEta
the group . in the pledge of Kathy Doidge gave a message Phi, Jamie Blaetinar. Julie Dil·
allegiance, paradeolstars.open- from International.
ton, Kathy Haley, Lori Powell,
ing ritual, and grace.
Girl of the year awards went to Tina Nelgter. Vanessa Sidwell,
After dinner. e&lt;~_ch chapter Susan Clark, Ohio . Eta Phi, and· Ann VanMatre; from Xi
recognized its current o!llcers presented by Cathy Johnson. For , Gamma Mu, Merri Amsbary,
and announced newly elected Xi Gamma Mu, Maurisl)a Nelson · Barbara Black, Niese! Gerard,
officers. For Ohio Eta Phi . •presented th'e award to Kay Sandra Hanning, Paula Haynes,
Chapter the new officers aree ·Atkins. Phyllis liackett, sponsor Jacquellne. Hoover, Debbie.
Lind~ Jones, president ; Betsy or Xi Gamma EpsUoh, presented
Miller, and Barbara Welsh; and
• Jones. vice president; Julie the award to Patty Pickens.
from XI Gamma Epsilon, Susie
Pledgeoftheyearawards went Hlll and Shelly DuBose.
Dillon, recording secretary;
Kathy Haley, corresponding se- to Julle Dillon, Ohio Eta Phi,
Recognttton and gift presentacretary; and Judy Will!ams, presented by Becky Triplett. t!ons were made to Charlene
treasurer .
CaroiY.{I Grueser, Xi Gamma Mu Hoeflich, sponsor of Ohio Eta
PrecE'ptor Beta Beta Chapter's presented Barb~ra Welsh with Phi. and Phyllis Hackett, sponpreskllng officers for this year the 11ward , and Brenda Hlll, Xi sor of Xi Gamma Epsilon.
are Norma Custer. president; Gamma Epsilon , presented the
The annoupcement of the 1989·: Clarice Krautter, vice president; award to Susie Httt and Shelly . 90 theme was made, "Gifts From
the Heart" , and the closing ritual ·
1 Maida Mora. recording secre- . DeBose.
tary; Velma Rue, corresponding · · In a special recognition, Velma was repeated by alt.
After the closing ritual, Kathy
secretary; and Ruby Baer, treas• Rue and Donn~ Jones, Preceptor
Beta Beta, presented Nanna Johnson, Xi Gamma Mu , read a
urer.
• · xi Gamma Epstlon new offlc· Custer with a new sorority pin special memorial tribute to
• ers.are Kathy Doidge, president; and recognized her as a charter Evelyn ~ ' Knight who was the
of group's ·sponsor up until hE'r
Judy Gibbs, vice resident; Darla member of the first
Staats, recording secretary;_Su- .Beta
death In November.

4fn

Expos interes~ed
in lefty LangSton

junba~

Chapter celebrates
58th' FOunaer's Day

home runs, but it is something I
have to fight througll. "
In other NL games, St. Louis
tripped Los Angeles 6-3, New
York slammed · Houston 7-3,
Chicago clipped San Diego 3·1,
Montreat pounded Atlanta 10-4
and Pittsburgh shaded San Francisco 1·0.

10,

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iiriiii -

I..Dqtlme motor cll'ller ftr fte
DaiiJ. IMMinel ... tile Suada, Tlm•lleldlllll,
Arlllur L MIDer, of the Ratlud area, bu
deltvwed 1m lui paper u of kllday mo1'111111.
Miller II retlrlnl alter 18 and o-balf yean of
dellvatdnllbe loGal lleWIIJI&amp;P8U. Miller IAJ8 tbal
now lle'll have more lime to acluaily read the

_ __ _ .:.,_ _ _.,.,..._ _ _ _ _ __

•

IIHIIIUq

lite tl
&amp;boat'* ..... .., ..

WOII't ...... lie N

ud IU klldQ Jlllrl- Me
bome• .Jolla Fonmu, ol
over Miller' a IMpily reufle.

.,,
"

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••

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•

�1

~P~•~oPu~a~b1~:~-:~ot~:~u~n~~da~yfli~m~~·:~~~ic~~:~:~ice=?==f==jPu~b11c~~=I~"~u~bllc~N~a~~~.~ce~J~·-·~---~·Gii~-~m~=-~.oa~:.~-~~~-~-·~-~~~t.=W~.v~·~-~~~1
LEGAL NOTICE
TIMro will be o public'-·
ing on tho too otNCturo for
tho Alhono, Gollio, Hocking.
Jodloon. Meigo ond Vinton
CountySoiidWMtoDillriCI.
'The public hooring will be
:holdMoy 30. 18Bht7p.m.
•the Wolloton City BuHdlng.
; city Council Chamber• -:. :Znd Floor. 203 E•t Broad·

be .. -ilod to co- Mid
'"' • - in - . . . .
with tho provloion of O.R.C.
Section 1303.33. Tho po&lt;·
tioo 1u.- - · lhot pur.,..t to o rMolution of
Morch 23. 1881 !hot o
unonimouf ovotoo!}1hornernbero o tho .., ddloport
ChurchofChrlotlnChrilllon
Union -'flcolly v - ond

wey StrNt. Well awn. Ohio. ..thoriled thia requeeted

. Tho Pfopo•d foo otruc· CORV8Yonco of '"' · - · o
•ture is to be M foltowe:

copy of the R•olution ia et~

DINbll-ieo.
cop;. of Mid .........,._
tlono lft8¥ be olimlnod fr«&lt;P.'
tho offl.. of tho Golfl.o
County - d of MR/00,
P.0 . 110l114.C-e.Ohio
4HZO u - lho ...,..,.

..::' ,!:;:

:&gt;:-,.~':"')

"""""*"

10 111o Molgo County

Cou-•

: •1 .00 . per too on oil
wooto gonorotod inolde tho
•.: ,continued on Page D·BI
•·
Public Notice

I

JOII
111.--·IJIIflil. Col 11 .. U- IRIIOR

n•· U'Iflft • • • •

:L''""t:"t':.;:

...........

,._._...._OPIIOOit-.

......... '

'r.•

•

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t.nd-nol - ........ I
.... • ....... 6fiDIIIIw . . . . ...

Bllllnllt
Opportunity

I .........._.,_,

r
... _,...
~

::..t.
71't1 .

. - -... CUIIII4-1422171.

,, mt . . . ,__ til Dllr

.,...

........ I • -n!lt/, Pllmzor.

1ooo WOllf'

!

.,.,,••nd truall driver

............. "'E:' 72t••c.
,.. ~ - Pbeswur.aw.~

AVDII · AI . _ Coli

-.,n

EMil MONEY flo-g .,._.1
...
Dotallo. (II 80·117·1000 Ed.

...-oa

..

ComOfttttlei-H... e TMnhlt

. . . . . . . , . . . . . . . J .....
U4f , lOIIIPO·~Ot fo•a ·

Cll ~- Pile
c;:,';'a
1·100-2za.

,,

Olifo LOtto. D·1 •

.

15-z.
- ...............
and food
_
Col

,.

'··

TRUSTEES
141 16. 23. 30; 15) 7, 4tc

The County will undortoko

the project

de~cribed

above

mont Block Grant lunda.

under Trtle 1 of tho Houllng

and Community Develop-

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids will be re·
ceived by the County Com~
minion of Gallia Counly at
Gallipolia. Ohio until9:30 e.

m., May 2. 1989 ond ot thot

time opened as provided by
lew, for the purchue of fur ·
niture and equipmenl to be
deltvered to the Gall co Work
Center,
Stale Route 7.
Cheshire, Ohio in •ccor·
dance wilh lhe equipment
lisl end specifications dated

April1 B. 1989 now on file in

the office of Dr. John 0 ,
Riffe. · Superintendent. Gel ·
· County Board of Mental
and Oeveloo-

..

ment Act of 1974. Tho
County it conifying to tho
State of Ohio thot tho
County of Mlligo ond the
Meigo County Cornmioolon·
are. in their offici• cap.clty,
u commilsktnen. con~ent
10 accept ht1 juritdiction of
the Federal couns If 1n ac·
lion is brought to enforce
responaibilhiH in relation to
environment lo
environ·
ment1l rwiewa. decision·
mlking, 1nd 1ction; and that
lhese responslbiUties have

boon ..tloflod. Tho legol of·

feet of lhe certiflutton it

thot upon ito opprovol, tho

County of Melga may Uli

tho Blocl&lt; Gront Fundi, end
tho &amp;toto of Ohio wNI hove
ootiofiod ito rMpunoibility
under the Nadon• Envlron-

Matt Weaver
who left us 1 year

momol Polley Act of 1919.
The State of Ohio ,.,MI occopt
on objOCiion to ito opPfOVIII
of tho rei-• of fundi ond
occeptorice of tho conlfico·

ago today

1-ing bMH: 111 Thlt tho

In memory of

During the brief ill·
ness and death of Ray. mond S. Pierce, I would
like' to thank all of those
who helped in any way,
for their prayers, took
him for treatments. pre:
pared food he liked,
visited. called, CJrds,
bed. walket, wheelchair,
and the benefit and all
you took part and pve
Also the churches which

April 29, 1988.

Soltlllm School, fl.

Cllty, ..,..,,lll,llolrd
1nd tilt atadlnts fiW
thtlr
· · · htve
llld flowen (Ill-WOIId
bltn

proll4) ltld tllon wllo

.......1'11111 ...

I wiiiii..,.I'IIIIRI·
11011
':"

"llauss.
Htlwlll.

.....

oertlficaUon was not In f•ct

•ocutad 1&gt;\' the chief .. _,.

ttve offl cor or other officer of

opplicant opPfovad 1&gt;\' tho
ototo of Ohio; or lbl thot OP·
pficont' o onvironmontol r•

view record for lha project

pwe.

The
Syracuse ~M
Squad, Veter1ns Menlo·
rial Hospital. Ewin&amp;s
Funeral
Home, Rev.
Ro1er Grace for his consolin&amp; words, orpnist,
PlllbHrers.
flowm,
food, 110n1y llld CJrdS.
T~OH who CIMt to tht
fuHrll hollt, called.
visited IIIII htlptd II
llollt. rtlltivn, Dr. D.
Hltllll'
and atlft.

tion only if it il oneofthefol-

I never knew wllat

was ·
Until I loll you.
It feels just u bad today
As It did I yur qo,
People, placts, thinp

wtdld
Art 1 dii'Ytmlndtr of 1

I

t~:'et ~t lift

AtMftllld 1111111 I day.

Wt Ill htve our llltliiO·
riH
&amp;Ia It's )1st not tilt s•
At ltut •• hlft each
otlltr,
It htlpa to talk
Wt min JOU durly
I love JOU.·

indicotH omioolon .of a ro·
qulrod doclofon. finding. or
otop oppllcoblo to tho "'"'
jOCIIn tho onvironmontaio•
view prOCMo. · Objoc:tiono
mull be preporod ond - ·
minod In occordance with
tho required prooodurw 12&lt;1
CFR Port 118), ond 1118Y be
oddr01ood to tho &amp;toto of
Ohio, Office of locol Go·
v"''mont lervioOI, P.O.
Bo• 1001. Columbua. Ohio
43211.

JOHNION-MOOIIE F.WILY. I

1m . . .Cihlng b

fttarrNdoft 01
Lum.n Johnson
{1838-11141 ., hlo wlfo. Mory
Moore II 840- 1127). Pl-o
write Steve Johnlon. 110 Pltn·
lotion Pl-. Perry, Oo. 310U.
picture~

4

of

Giveaway

2 ~ttl- to Div• .,.., to toOd
hcHNI. 1 wllh fluffy fur tnd 1

with ohort fur. cal e1"-4411743.
'

•Fern•
--1111; ........

white • · leen •Pid•d

Coli

814-3117·0111.

koptlnoldo.

2 cat1. to good home. 1 ftml&amp;e
yellow liolr; 1 yr. old.. 1
Mllltilll biiCk mila: 4 .,,., ald.

..,.
.._
__ ...._Coli..,.
t - ZIJ-411-8017, ed. 2101.
AttOFIIIorl R.N.'o • . LPN'ol

.......,. to hllp wllll hau•

1'711-7:111.

23 ,.,._IIIOnel

Vloi&amp;y'o Cloenlng ..,...,.

.

foe. a•- '"""'

.....

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- •• • v• liouM It •
-•ooattlowerllta\T

••er-Colll4--

,....................,.w
'

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••Ia• :11114-l11-4:tH
n ·
f· Clll Mr.
""
,~
-~ .E..

I, I:OG"

1:»

31

...., '"""'Slop .. _....,..

Homea fOi' Sale .

· - - C o l 787-11317 ...

-

110&gt;&lt;100 loto. 22 ft. Yollow12a12 Cab.. a.
BolO Ollll(oulcllng. Bundocll.
Bow•. - · · oloe. Holidoy Hill
R•••IDnll ,_k. 1. rnle up

.t....,....

• • Run Rd. anltacooanCrwk.

·

houM.~

Po-.

Ohio, I'LOOD
PLAIN DIVILOIIMINT '

............
:~;=~-:-·"
......... .
EARLY PUIUC NOTICE.
The Mlial CaulltY Com·

~ konclt »4-175-74a

tiDn. u1 .ttw 1:00 and w•
•trll

114-441-

'

lmnttdiote opening
·

- .....
lnlldo
Out
.
. . . . .or. . .
. . .8. ."""'
of

3

Colll14-117--1.

AmouncefTIIrttl

-::....,--....... _

Sale

:':'

1----------------

..d .......

.. Clillldll ••

' NOTICE
lam coasldtrlna
fluildlna u eunit

CORdOIIIItlum,
centfiiiJ located
oa Second
Avtll...
.Gallipolis. If~
11'1 llltlrtltM Ia

5

bo

HIRING

NOW
PUBLIC

RELATIONS
$150 wk .•

Mo '

nU$.
vmg
expense. Competitors
salary. Excellent
working conditions.

plus bonus.
No travel required.
Must enjoy working with people.
G9od personality
aild car. Willing to
work.
(614) 286-6422
Ask For Pam

(614) 992 -6669
271 N. S.Cand An.
Midlla! ort, OH. 45760

~======-==::.J.=========:
.~

114-UI.OOO. -·2BU
. -Col

Alltt
Btl•• hwle

te 7SI
ll•"f llrt~••r

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION .

Public Sela
&amp; Auction

THURS. EVE., MAY 4, 1989
6:00 P.M.

Located on St. Rt. 7 south of Tuppers Plains, Ohio
take the Suct:ess Rd. Walch for siJn. This is the personal property of Raymond Holsmpr.
''AUTOS &amp; CAMPERS"
1971 Aristocrat Lo·Liner trailer, Serro Scotty Sportman
camp er 1981 Pontiac 4 dr., 1978 Chev. Chevette, 1977
Chrysle; Newport, 1977 Chev. 2 dr., 1976 Chev. Vega, 1973
Olds. Toronado, &amp; others lor parts.
" HOUSEHOLD"
2 apartment s~e gas ranges, refrigerator, desk, table, chesl
ol drawers, metal cabinets. bed, sc hool chan, ant1que chau,
misc. linens, pots, pan s &amp; dishes.
'MISC."
Lawn cart, lawn mower, May lag washer, fuel oil tan~. appro•.
2 ton lump coal.
GRACE HOLSINGER : EXECUTRIX
DAN SMITH -AUCTIONEER
Positive 1.0.
· Cash
ll'!(.§§H:lo 1
Ohio #57-68-1344 w: Va. ms
ucensea 1 bonded in !IVor of the Stites o! Ohio &amp;W.Va.
Member of Ohio. W. Va. 1nd National Auctioneer
Anocilllions.
"Not Res~onsible for Accidents or loss of Property"

FRIDAY EVENING MAY 5, 1989
7:00 P.M.

Corner Nye Ave .. &amp; E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio .
Due to limited parking space at t~ house. the fol·
lowing have been moved tQ Molden s Auct1on House
for sale at Auction.
HOUSEHOLD: Avocado Frigidaire matching refrigeralor and
30'' elect. range w/self cleaning oven, 2 pc. l1vmg room
suite, matching coffee &amp; end tables, Sylvania 25." color lloor
model -IV, Speed Queen wringer washer, occasional chaus,
oak cu.ved glass china cabinet(not antique but ~e1y mce),
G.E. microwave oven (like new) , 21win beds (complele), metal wardrobe, 2 window air conditioners. dressers, tea carl,
glass top picnic table, baby bed w/matlress, electric lan s,
Hoove1 ~acuum cleaner, Ulfrasonic humidifier.
·ANTIQUES: Several tin types, antique &amp; collectable glass·
ware, stands, hand lools.
MISC.: 4 drawer lile cabi nel, 2 drawer lile cabmel, 3 glass
front showcases (I is kghled, all are 6'). Concord model220
Reel to Reel tape recorder, chain saw, several small kitchen
applian ces. pots, pans, dishes, pressure cooker, plus many
more items too numerous tc ment1on.

·Eats

Sale Conductld By:
MOLDEN'S AUCTION SERVICE
. Auctioneer: Coi.W. Keith Molden
614·742·2048
Ohio Lie. #57-894-318
Now Booking Summer and Fall Sales
Cash
Pos. I.D .

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
SAT., MAY 6, 1989
10:00 A.M.

Located on Co. Rd. 28 (Bashan Rd.) at the Sutton M.E. Church near Racine, Ohio on St. Rt.
124. To raise money for the building fund.
There will be open keHie soup, homemade
noodles, pies &amp; lots more food!
"TRACTORS &amp; MACHINERY"
Farmall 300, Farmall Super M, J.D. 12' A.W. disk, 16' hay
wagon, 25.0 gal. field spraye r, Herdhnmartm manure
spreader and more to comel
"TRUCKS, CARS &amp; ETC."
19 ch1y ~er Newyorker, 1959 Chev. '" ton, 6 cyl./4 speed,
1954 GMC 2 fon !ruck w/ 12\7' steel bed, 1983 Kawasaki
K550 w/ LTD drive shaft, Honda ATC 70 3 wheeler, (4)
8:25x20 Ills &amp; nm s. Baker 8' utilrt1 .bed. ·
"HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC."
End &amp; coffee tables, rollaway beds, bean bag chair, new
throw ruRs. dishes, elec. makeuo ll!irror. Ma gnus chord or·
gan &amp; mu s•c books, 4'•6' lapeslry of the Lasl Supper, gas
heating slo~e. walnul grandlalher clock w/Weslm1nsler
chimes wood &amp; coal heater w/ blower, G.E. double wmdow
fan , misc. pots &amp; pans, pictures, boom boK. pictures, clock
radio, hangmg plant toee. Channel Master AM·FM 8 track le·
cord player, Re gal AM rad io. GE 408 radio. RCA model75 U.
z. record playe1 , 121pme wall shelves &amp; more.
. "GUNS &amp; ETC."
.
12 gauge Savage model 220A single shol, 20 gau ge S.S.
Kresge Model 151 smgle shot, Sible "1890" A.J. Ho.lmon,
Co.·&amp;S.H.Kerns &amp; Co , Columbus, Oh lo. old Webster's New
l~ter nat10nal D1 ct10rary 1929 published by G&amp;C Merrian
Co .. Springl~eld, Mass. trailer hitch·. bicycles, floor jacks for
auto work. wheels &amp; lire lor 198301ds 0mega, blueql.&amp;ars,
alum . slmm doors.
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER-'-614·992-7301
"The ladies' will have a rummare sale and the youth a
bake sale!"
'Consignments will be Ia ken Fri., May 5th &amp; Sal. , May ~th .
Cash, Positive I.D.
•
Eats
"Not RespoRsible fo1 Accidents or Loss of Property"

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1989
10:00 A.M.

Located: 20 miles South of Gallipolis and 20 miles
North of Huntington, W. Va. on State Route 7.
Owners are relocating due to. employment. The fol lowing will be sold:
·
REAL £STATE: 4·ac. m/1,older farm house wrth new 35k24 add•·
·lion. and 3 outbuildings. Beoolilul view of le Ohio River. The real
eslale will be offered at 11:00 A.M. The pr~rty w111 be s~d subject ol owner conlormalion. Terms on Real Estate: 10%down on
Sale Oay and the ballflce due upon delivery ol deed. Phone 2551584 lor appoinlmenllo view the Real Estate.
EQUIPMENT: 1972 MF 135 (gas), 2-14" Dearbom plow. 6!
pick up disc one row cuRivafors. one 10w lobacco seller, 7
row sprayer' w/pump and boom, boom pole, 6' scraper
blade, 3 pt Ca rry All, 2-275 gal. luel tanks, aallic "Tub"
ferlilizer spreader, Hbmelile 2" water pump w1th ~u1ck connecling hoses, 4 door hog feeder, 3 tobacco baling boxes,
and miscellaneous items.
VEHICLES: 1981 Chevette and 1974 Chevy pi ckup.
HOUSEHOLD: Large dining table (picnic slylel. Precision coal &amp;
wood healing stove, GE ~edric range, Frigidaire refrigeraiOI,
chesl type deep freeze, Norgewasheo and dryer (2 yrs. old.J. several beds, chesl, dressers. end ,tables and dher ~ems.
Terms: Cash
Charles l. Wauah. Owner
Real Estlte Auction Conducted by Century 21, Southern
Hills Realty Inc. and Accent II Roaltr.
Lee Johnson
AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740
Not Responsible for Accidents oo Loss of P1oparty

POBLIC AOCTIOH
Saturday May 6.1989

10:00 a.m.

Hame c-t ... Ohio Wllttt t-

Pill"-

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

8

Utllklll pold. Coli 014-44114418ofi•7P.M.

IOG-1211-07112.
~ANDIHDME DEVELOPMENT

"

o.•

8 Lost and Found

11

fu time. stlll'l
choin. Southtast•n
Oh1'o' 4D•44 hr ' /wk'
,.0 Sundays. No "
Holidays. Medical
benefit plcg. Signing

F.,nktwd ~pt. · 1 lr., 243
J ...•on Fttka 1221 • mo.

-n _,.. .

plrtlol - - fill ........
-lnton1.t-aPNII'*'Y vto-. • · out .........

15

B

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES_
Oak oval library table ca 1890, oak tables, chests,4 coun.·
try Windsor chairs ca 1920, pressed back rocker ca
1880 1884 Ohio &amp; Mississippi RR time table, pottery,
graniieware, tin war e. oil tamp ca 1880, pitchers, pic·
lures. stoneware, jar &amp; jug, glassware, glass msel wash·
board. kitchen colleclibles, serving trays, Santa Coke ad,
hull, dep1ession, and lots more coming in Satu1day.
Consignments ~aken 1·6 P.M. Saturdays, other days
call for info.
·
FINIS ISAAC
VINTON. OH. - 614·388-9370
APPT. AUCT.: LESLIE LEMLEY
•
ROGER FETTERLY
"Check Us Out For Your Sale"

afi•7P.M .

.. . .,.,.-.. ....,c--

- · Rt. 141. _
• ...,...
hood, II&amp; 100. 1-ilo ooDiponar. Coli ,,.,....,_

--..................... --...··-,...
... _

MAKE MORE MONEY
FULL OR PART-TIME!
Men and women nHded to
sell our Profitable line of
Calendaos, Pens and Adver·
liSinl Gifts to Business
Firms in rour immadille bu·
siness lrta. Earn Weelllr
Commissions. Sef rour own
hours. Prompt, Friendly Ser·
vice from 80 Ya• Old AAA· I
Company. No fnvestmanl.
No Collections. Previous
sales okperience not re·
quirad. Write: Ricliord Lowe,
NEWTON MFG. CO .. Oopt.
Hll976.
Newlon. Iowa,
50208. (515) 792-4121.

~

AI t\rpo of ................ dena. "" _,.or _, 1•.. homo on
- - ,. . . . . . . . . 110.
Rd. Col 114Coltor•-·11'4--1811
orl14-. .1171

oto. Cill14-446-3114

H-;;ip Wanted

Expanding Multi-line
OM ...... bMift'ltftt.
Dealership, centrally located to
aral• and' cerport.
r5028
41.110o. oo. eon !104-773malor markets, 111k1 ambitious
.... 5:00.
carMr minded .technician. ,
32 MobileHASE and/ or Franchise
for ,Sale
Certification a Plus.
liiv
ohort fmo
Send lesume To
P.O. Box 7290
plng ¥OU frorn buYing a ho-1
Coftoidero-- 14wldo
'
Oh'10
or
Ide.een
woMlpll.._
h.,,,_ · L_________
Po1111royr
w1••- • •...
We
.;..________
_.

l y -. ll..-nr.1 1/3..,"

. . . Col

ST. LOUIS, MO.

M81an. WV. 2 IIOfY. 3 be6

.......
-.....
-.
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
I........ -·--foe.-.·-.... - ... ,... ·...~
._
__ ,,.._....
Nol-'

nlca Me.._..oakAddi-

be

nationally accredited AI A·
LINE training school!

HauM .... lila . .mnd Btr-.

18, Wanted to Do

Publ
ic
• Auction

••111

014-446-83~.

PHARMACIST

foe.

22 VIITDI ST.

old port ' lluo S
MahHo kltteno. 304·175·

17~.

•

we·re proud to
Am•ica's largest

0936T

oondllion. Large fenced v•rc:l.
nM c~rp«.
ScHool

"'"*

uoo. C.l 814-311-

lAY Itt AIID ZIMI, 9-4
2 FAIILY CMPOI'I SALE

..............................
w.;r•

Molge County

1111.

-d

Pl-. 304-87&amp;-

Dip.,

ESTATE AUCTION

Airline training inter·
vi.-s are being sch•
duted now in your area .

41 Homes for R.ent
, - - - - - - - _ ._ _ _
Soii/R"" 28R r.,c:ll, ucoli...

• On•to .....
_..•in
...... r - . - I~- old~ &amp;.dfar
flutlond •'lbwnohlp.
CoR 814.
. . , _ . _..........
_ _ to IIIZ·3143oii•I:OOp.rn.
lewol.l-t11-olwiut for -lnMiddoport.
.... No
r• Col e1•812
71"·
tuoad. Coli 114-IIJ-1174 .,
~
• D~
114-1'42-2880.·
Trolor lot on Mldcloport. Con
""""houooln
·
114-112·7811
1
Ohio. On
tOfl ·"'"" v. A. • ..ding ond loti on Aov·.
plot,
....,..
,
......
illty
·
·
llu•n
1101111.
30
.. 875-52113.
,...11 · Co. lmmeclll:t poee. f
,
•ti.OOO. 816-717·2744.
Aohton booulilul ono ...,., ioto
wfth rlv1r fronwg• publicwat•.
3--brldlhornowtlhl•ga Clyde Iowen, .J,. 304-571Mid- Drlvt,- Hovon. 2331.
·
,
Cloodooocl »4-77~11&amp;81.
, ..... ,., .... prtcod lo'o.' 11 Help 'W ant-'

Moot 11t ond 2nol. lal""' lit.,
Autfanol. 9:!10 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
lWolomlr. '

Obleotlonl to '"' , .....
AUCTIOIIIIIII
of Iunde on b - othooE-~ Yt1Mer ,_, ltcallfne
............. 1 7 _ .....
theM 1t1toc1 above wll not
rfonoi. Phono 104-27.3447
be oono-od 1&gt;\' tho 8l8te
Ra•w IU If W.Va.
of Ohio. No olljoc:tione ,.
oolved ott. Mo' 31, 1118
W.Va•• Cli- A,..
wHI lio oonoidtfod by tho 7
Vard Sale
...
111114
1-otOhlo.
- - - - - - - - Ollfo
AI JUt I 10+
1711
Momin9 Aouoh. ""'ldlnt.

Comn lulo..- Court

-3 houeo . . . . • • -

Help Wanted

AIRLINE
CAREERS

Henlals

,_DI....I ....

Boby

"

e75-!431.

a-_. . . . " '•

clothn. wooden tabl• and
choln, D'""'irl C.omlo Klo. I

11

100 ..,. on Jericho Ad. AI
min ... rights. own• tn~ndng.
C1ll 30~171-3030 or 30 ..

Rurel moble home lot Wet•
3 - - . Z .. IIbllho.ful locludld
o78/mo. eotl . .,._
·
·
·
.,
••
BOO.
Col
11
..
4411-1177.
.... 21121.

1100/Stc.

leiO.

Hllf ~aelot compt•e hoc* up,
Routh f«rttl Rold. Camp C~

11

*

o16-3117· 7111!0.

&amp; Clf.lr•ed. .

INTERNAnONAL
All ACADEMY
1-800/950-IFLY

dlstrico. Call

f200/mo.

AI

All interntod candi·
dates ahould call today I

1.,, Point
7511&amp;.

T•a TowmOu• A.-rtmentl · 2
Br. , ·1 1/ 2 Nth&amp;. ·cA., dl•·
twv11tt.. diJPQIII. privlte tn·
clooed polio. poo( pl.,pound.
Will«. tr&lt;Ner, &amp; t,.1h int.Aided.
Slart5ng It 289 per mo. C. II

elld:rlclty,

Ashton. l•ge buldlnt lots. mabHe ho..,._ f*mltt.t, pUblic

2w-.. tulclngloto. _.,.;.
mal* Zacr•Melti O.J-. 'Mttt•
Rd. CwA 114-2411-11615 oft•
&amp;:!IOP.M. '' ·J ·•

·---ord-

IDCCflpt

Dep. Ae.o 3bectoomtrahr. C.l
It 4-4411-1151, or 816-445-

ltont trll•.

.. '

I famlv \IIFd ....: Mon. •d
Tu•. May 1 •d 2. Main lt..

Rol. rocf'ed. Coli 114-44680&amp;7.

Newtv l'lldeoorllt.d

2

Situadona

Wlnted

Rutltnd. lib¥ ltiiM. CWI ...
hdii:IF 1 , Wk&amp; chaln..W.

..

10 o.m. • 8:00 p .!ll.

12

brldolmold · - - joono.
Bfomlly ""rd oolo. Maw 1.2 Md
loth .,. ".., ...... good.,.. .. 31'11. 141 South 2not.. Mid••
on. houoetrolnod. • lowing. C.H port.lfroln, wll boholdn..tdoy.
116-446-11211.
llomlly ....d ..,.. , , llridl81.,
z -..o colco- lwlco. Pom•ov. Ohio.
lupr
old. Coli 11 .. _7732.
Run Mil. Mon. Tua.• Wid.
9:31).4,00.
fomolo lrtltony lp..lol dog.
FrM lo gDOd 'home. Cll It 4241-flt17.
To aoocf hoN 4 yr. old t.nlle
lrl1h letter·Wonclllrful with
otlll . . .. Coli 114-3'11-2711.

Two "'""""

1•-.

Ow- tronoforrad. till 814Form otong - ..... c...._ 24
111-11701 oR• 8:00 p.rn. ·
ooreo 1~0 II&gt; tobocao bon.
·For oolo II¥ - · 2 Btl lioueo. Coli 814-44.4272.
t% ec:ra. lyriCIUH. Ohio. ly
oppolnemom .....,. 114-141·
35 Loti &amp; Acre~ge
2174.

...... - - - - f o r .........

Mov 111 on d Znol. lalom It,

2 I r. tr•l•· 1.1 111 mo. Plut

utlttl• peld

35 Loti It Acl'lltlge

1171 121110 Uk'ry, a4000.
116-741-27114
--·
... _ "fornf . ."" . . . Iorint CUll
oR• 1:00
p.rn.
· - . . fl.
1171 loyviow ...... homo.
b
• - 2 . .4 rnl• from , .. 70 with 7112t ..... do,
l.,cltoopod
304-87..1141.
-"""' off At. 38fllort- lu-lolol\ Col 12Jc 80 MobHe Home wrax. lh
aorolonol. Bo22 ~
oond. port
flir•o..u•• a lr...... for lila olr
Ownw fln~n• C81 ID4-e7&amp; ai.OOO. Col !104- 1-2111.
1104
Fann1 for Sale
4 tt il ....... 2 INilhl. . ..,• 33

Services

....., •.,.

on-cutrood.F-oigno.
11"-HZ-7110
Cor Port 8olot 1228 College St.,
~-· Moy 2llcl, 3rd. 4th.
IIWn ~thifle.

ment . Stove and refrig ..

Colllt4-3711-2431.
fully furnlohod g ..IIO opt.

1'

2bllh. . . . . . , _ ...h ...

. 114-H:f.

Nino tDIItho rnllo ooulh of
f t - g llglito on Rt. 7 . Turn lilt

answer cell 114-441· 0102

Forlolr.A... olhouool-...o 101t4SIIamodlladlo01~•- Call wotor, prl.. ..-.coo~. Clyde
- - , 114-.HI-1100. . ~ Sl4o37t-2418. ·
- · J r. 304-871-23311.

••o
oponlngoaolory,
. . olfloe
· IIIIo
COrliplthlvo

FUt"nilhld apll'tnwwt: for rent in

Oop,

'

I'

Apartment
for Rent

iAC-KSON· ST., VINTON

SALE TIME: SATS. 7 P.M.

c•p« for one or • - - - on
TNrd A\11. 11811/mo. Call Aid!
ot 814-441-~02 or 814-812-

.-Int.

6

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

-ah ........... '"" .....
lnwlltlgotodtlw_...

· - Ollllldf'en.
... """'
dotlilo
(adult.
m•ernlty,
bobyl.
Mw 1oi, Znol. :lrci ltO!nor-o.
0\lt.... .... dot-. mile.

,., llooott. """lloogtomolo. 2
¥Hrl old. lA• to run Nbbltt.
_.. .... CoR 116-7.2-2107.
COUch ..d ch*· In fino_ ..
tlon. Col 114-111-.11.

I*

-

:Z.tmyhou•. On Gr-eHolow 3501att• 8 P.M.
Rd. Rent .310/mo, Utili:!.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
lndudtd. Call 114-H?-0413
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
10 Krti of bottom lend on C.rr SON ESTATES, 11311 Jor:l&lt;oon
Pike from 1192 1 mo. Wllk to
Rd . No. 231. 11h mil• e • of 1hop
end movill. ,,,._ . . .,.
Attred, along eMt Jldl of Middle
_.., oiBhodaC-.
2888. E. 0 . H.
'

44

•

Located at the Flab Hook Lake on Rt.
87, Jaat offRt. 2. Midway Between Ravenswood WV a: Point Pleasant WV, 12
Mlle1 weat ofRtpley Wv on Rt. 87 offRt.
33, 12 mllea eut of Point Pleasant WV
on Rt. 87 off Rt. 2, Watch For Signa.

84 LUMBER
PLAN. we·w gat Ill Your new
MANAGER TRAINEE
,....- - lioma from EL·
filA HDME CENTER on ·tho lot , 84 lullb11l;o .. the flllast crowinlllllionallumbet chain
has c••• opportunities todiJ. Advancement is 11pid and
""chooee. Your*""" aome
Corne ... uo ......,, No·
all promotiou m from within. &amp;,n•fits included. Holbi·
wMre cite .. bUt ELSEA·
Profit Shtrin1 ~nd more. If yOtlenioy a combi·
c... ,..... col 114-474-11710 tllillliol,
nlll011
of
11111
ild pilystCJI work. 1nd hiVe completed
or Clrd..ao 816-772-12:10.
hi~ sc~l (some collqe prafwlld), then you may qui·
LAND/HOME DI!VELOPMENT
ify. No knowlldp of blildinJ mllerills necessary. We
PIAN. Wo'• got •1
lllin. Will in&amp; to IIIOCIII Within tile Tr~State a10a.
.,..,u-urod ho- from EL·
SEE DON WILSON
"SEA HDM! C!NTEII on tliO lot
aho011. Your driiiM eo me
TUESDAY. MAY 2
I Com• •• ua todlrl No9 A.M.-1 P.M .
t.re ells .. bul ELSEA·
84 LUMBER CO .
lcotlw ... 114-474-11710
,.. Clrdwa.-t14-77a.luo.
RT. 2, GALLIPOLIS FERRY. W. VA .
il tMayllia t41l7D. 3BR. I~
'liath. •colant -io" F~

-r ,_

Anliquas &amp; Collaclibles: 7ft. wicker swing, 4 pc.
&gt;wicker set, wicker buggy, wicker doll cra&lt;!le, oak
china cabinet, WMe Mounlain oak ic9 box, denial
cabinet, Fallwall cabinet, 7ft. all glass front cabinal,
Hoosier type cabinet, flour bin wilh glass cabinel,
dressaN., 4 rose back chairs, ice cream chairs,
corner sink, cedar chest, Viet. marble lop dresser. 2
Viet. marble top lables. 2 cane his &amp; her rockers,
quihs, buffet, oak piano, Mohair couch &amp; chair, ban·
quellable, primitive banch, mission oak folding bed,
metal bed, maple labia, oak chairs painted wh"e,
smoklt\g stand, old stools; child's desk &amp; chair,
needle point chairs, dining room su~. end tables,
coffH table, disks, oak manilas, maple bad, theater
saals, old trunkl, old wooden swing, baskets, old
dolls, oil painting, old scales, Gran~ewara , glassware, old blue, hull, deprauion, 11n1ique butter dish,
platta11, oil lampe, UllUSal M! moon d•ign crock,
old wool iuge, old Coca Colalray, old chanclllers,
atone Jn. mlmn, picturH,eornetoola,IBwnc"-irs.
waterhlllflr,llll-.,pht*ldwelop.-, phonograph,
mayteg wuher, plus mui:li mora.

·-••
.,......., •-• c~
irati sua CII .I 1...... 11AG.

--

&gt;1181 NOihut ........ 141l80
w•ft '71121 &lt;llpondo, 2 Ill, ol
fnrn
Qil 114-:U•t1'41 or

........ fo..-.
e. ....

,.......

--

'·

'

~r.-= :::::::\"111' r;::

SUPER AMERICA ®

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141. turn left onto Rt. 775.
. turn right onto Patriot R.oad. Watch for aigns .

NEW CARPET AND
FURNITURE AUCTION

CUSTOMER SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVES

.....
-~·-·
......
........
ndorplnoln\
tlf-441~Olla'MII
»1 .... P.M. 111,100
oo,awwt to ,.,......

StlperAmerlcala rapidly ••ponding In lh8
gaoolinalquick service food alore
butlneaa' ond olfera ground floor oppor.
tu~lli" tor ambiliofls lndlvlduala seeking
growth orllntld coreeoa.
lndlvidulla mutt be lrlindir ond outgoing

-u-.

OVH 100 ROW OF IIEW CAIPO
DIRECT FIOM FACTORY IN DALTON, GEOIGIA

THURSDAY, MAY 4-7:00 P.M.

in order to MM our Cllltomera. Reapon·

tlble lot IIDuaeileaping, poperwork for
lhoir panlcultr ehlfl, 10me ordering of
mercliondlal ond other dutlea 11 in·
otructod by the atoro menoger. Must be
eighteen reara old. Prater o high achool
oducoUon.

pun:e...... ...c:. ..

1109 JACKSON PIKE

GALLIPOLIS, OH .

Your

448-17411
I

. _&lt;J . An

. Emp Ioyer
Equal Opponunlly

"

'

-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ISAAC'S AUCJ.ION HOUSE

814-44 .. een.
Nl'* oN 111 offtdonc:y with

lown. COli 816-441-t42:t
2 Br., apt. , n.,., pluJh c•pllt.
utHtll• .-nllllv Plid
2 BR moble home. Furnilhedor Nice 2 8A op . .. - irl dloplok n•
unfurnllhlcl Ref. • dtp. r• · houll, MaJn St. Ct. ..&amp; Pw· t171a mo. c.ll 304-875-5104.
No P«l. Csll I 14-.,_&amp;. ~oily filrnlohod. wot• pold or !104-e71-5381.
3ulrld.
I 200 o month. Coli 014-245805.
Furnlohod offlclenav. 1107 Se·
&amp;818.
oond Aw.. GoHipollo. 1180.
Zlr. tnll•wlth•l*'dMUvlnv
Room. CIU.I14-:J79.Z'f()t ifno
Un'llrnished 2 IR t•IIIIPirt· Bh•oboth. Cali 814-4411-44!1

Complole iho chuckle quOI&lt;id
by filling in' the m;ssing words
• yov develop from lioP No. 3 1&gt;,\ow.
lf·J'• • -......"'""'...

3.1 Ham• fOj Sale

•-•hor. ,.,,._.or, ""*·.

Autlond. g,OO·I :OO.

I•

8

Apartment
for Rant

Mobl• Home tDr rent. 2 bed- $acand floor. 738 S.CDnd Ave.
roon"l t181S month. You .,_, 2 lA , utMita. induded. CIM

3

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

co. JIGIIOUUI. . . . yw

- · ond NOT to ion4-

120 ... No ........ no.

4 P1f1 Siam•• kltt.,. to otv ..

woy. Col 81"-441-4287
Whko mole pk bull Col 814448-0124 .. 814-446-0744.

So. Mlddloport. OH
Coli 304-182-2118

Answers lo Seram·lels on Page D·5

""'fur-.

A. A.

I · IOQ.~3-1105t .

au"'

trlll•••tor•. • wHI .. IIan
-C!'f·.
lond I.A.I.I. P. 0.
•• a:n«.••• .. ,.... wv

· Aw( , _ , - . . ,

dnp•.

•bov•

with Community Oevolofl'

Public Notice

Announcement~

I 0.

I'

EXCILLINT PAYI Homo·
,....

ING

""""'·

I• I• I•

.............. Oww 7 ......

HOME WORK-IMIIE TIME.

ANDON. Aln•lcer•Pontet'Of.
1171111o*QIIif.. -

S 0 MA C I

''

lncludod. el6-882·

bedroom. fur'*hld tmma R•f.

only to wait until 1118 boss arrived to open the door. "You
know, boss," 1 smiled,. "the
trouble will\ being punctual is
that nobody,is there t o - it..,

'DIMJif111,

on""""

3

LltM~I•

3t22.

I had arrived early for work

co1or
ut210

INCITICEI
Till DIID VAU.IY fiUBLIIH-

Y·tOt ...

--···-·dey.
-

3 room hou... Furnilhed. 1225.

· I

R U I NJ Y

'

Nd.a:~r•ed.

two be*oom houu, Off 1trllt
P•kln• COII14::.,PI2· 2304

217. .21121.

• .. -.-yr. " ' - _

...,ma.

Oldaker, Jamea Mohlltf'

For rn: Nwrlr;'

LEOPYN

T~GTAall

11 1oo,

.,._ood

Signed thio 4th day of
May. 1988.
Dwight Haley, luther

ELSE .N T

GRANID

••

44

42 Mobile Home•
for Rent

iocotiul\ 8
ullkl11. lt4-H2-3t22.
~~- .... 306-875-10711.
2 -oom houoe for - · CAll 43 F ar1111 for Rent
~14-H:!-2371.

CAP PAY

.. __.,.•, _ . . , _ 21
1111221' ....

""'"""·

......

til Revtew Record i1 on file
1t lhe
1ddres1 end ' Ia
.vail able for public examin•
tion •nd copying. upen r•
quest.

.?f

- - ........... , ... No
.... • • ~.J: Clll .,.

- . .. c_, .. ___ i1o..Ohio
.... a,,

to project. Tho Enviro-·

..,.,._good
mil• AOflh flloint

.... .CIIillo
••, .. _
• -· 114,..1 Opportunity

.......Pomerov...........

The family of Lowell
Swisher would like to
extend their apprecia·
tion 'to those who were
so kind and helpful dur·
ing the illness and re·
cent loss of their loved
one. to those who sent
flowets and food. to th.e
management and em·
ployees of Federal Mo·
gul and GPW, also to Dr.
Sholtis and Dr. Linder.
the nurses and staff of
CCU and
Emergency
Room at Holzer Hospi·
tal, to Middleport EMS
and Willis
Funeral
Home .
Our special thanks to
Pastor Steve Fuller.
Wife, Bonnie: son.
Michael and daughters,
Connie , Lena and
Carolyn.

3 bt ... oorn. ful •

G¥.

114-741-2481.

Hom11 for Rent

2 Br., 11 /5/mo. 1100 depotit
Wat• fwr. .hed CaH 114-44&amp;.
2419. Atk far Dartena .

CLAr I. PDILAJI

-or-•-Dill- ............ --- --·
.... -· ,, ..
1*1111
ln- -....- . -.
.......
··--.:.c:
rl'lll I
-or-.. -on
..:•::r.=
....
._.
__
......
.... . . .
I
IIIII
I
-lve
_.
I••
"".,.......-·-Goa.
I r
,,
____...
I* I" r I' 1· I' I
I I I I· I I I I I I I
-·..··... ..._......... _
---IOWa.-•
......... .. . . .
"""-·--hal.
.
.
-ilr•lwl·4-_.,.
-·--of.
-c-.. . . -. -.........- ......
........---flit........
.--Churdl.
. __ . . . -d '-" •
........,...
.........
................
...
-.-·-. _.
..............
v---···--r. .
. . . ··--Int-.
=.::
llfii.IIO&amp;:b:.
.,.,_..
.•
..,.
;;fig'
&lt;-~:if=

.........

the envifonmenUI ~eview of

~r

.......... iiiiiioi... -

. . _ . en .......... IMatr
17, 1... In 11M Molgo
County c01 1hDu-. AI~

tachodhoreto.
tiono.
- - • • iooclnoloo
&amp;t- L. Story,
81-o -1 oloo note w .... ~ 31. 1...
. ·.,
!hot tho Ruloe ond lloguloPrwldont. Rd. '"" ~.-:n:
StatoAnomoy
of Ohio,for Petitionoro tiono
on Equol Employment .....,... Rouoh,
Melat
County
County of Motgo, SB:
Opportunity eliall be modo a
Cornmio-._ Certllyin9 " wood
Dwight Holey, . J - ,., oflhlo oootFKt.
Oftl-. Oor......., ...., 11t. 21111. •
Mohl•. ond Lu- Oldal&lt;or.
No bl- - w i t - NOTICE OF EXPlANATION 7M.I--GI=RL
. . , _ ...... of,
being firot du .... - . hie bid within iililty 110) doyo FLOOD PlAIN DEVELOP·
thot they oro tho Pod-a: after tho ectuol dote of tho ~ENT
lnE-,.Iiolilnd .... oioop.Mov
IN THE COURT
thlt they oro unitod in lnt•· -ing -eot.
Tho Moigo County Corn· Zlld. • lrol. 10 ......
. OF COMMON PLEAS,
•t with tho Pot-ionH In tho opinion of the mloeionoro inW&gt;d to
•· MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
•a: thltlhey oro du"" .,tho- Ow..., end tho Diroctor of ., oiow- tor u• 1&gt;\' tho Al-of ................. t .
:ttl THE MATTER OF
rizod to ""oouto thlo Potkion; tRhe Dd.-rtiomonth'·~Udod oiclorly ond hMol 1p 1d In
•The Applicotion of The
Rt.
ond thlt tho oilogotiono conet n or • .....,...
tho CourthouOI. T1llo pooject 7botoro211. LHt
"TrustMI of the Middleport
talnod
in
lho
forwFlng
Potirep-.rtlvo,
tho
_
.
11
16-d
In
tho
100.yur
Church of Chrlot in Chriotlan
Union to trenafer rtlltltllte tionorotruo•tlie¥-ly... -ceofthol-tbldionot .._ ploln. Prap, d lmpro- ru.., Wod. •1hurc 1-1. 2112
lifte.
in the b!M;t lnt•e.tot•l.,.,.._. v•aiNta annot be u..,.. rnla . . cl P'ortOf' 0111&amp;4 Oft
to the Middleport
Dwight Hoi8Y. JamM corned, tho Ow..., oc· .... In .,;., -ion.
Community Church. 1
Mohler ond Lut- Oldoll• Copt, with tho oonou- Thoro io 1 1 0 - pnalaolile
rion-profit corporation.
PETITIONE~S
of tho Director or hio doto 111o propooocl
PETITION
Sworn to before mo ond legotod .._....totive. ... project. Follurt to provldl
:- Petitioners, Dwight Ha,
Middleport
,(oy, Jameo Mohler ond oubocrlbed in my .....- . . ot- propouloo -odor thlo ~npro••01.-.t -ld,.
thio
2
11t
doy
of
Morch,
roject
oil
propCioolo
ond
od·
oullln
tho
continuedt:uther Oldaker NY that they
&amp; Vicinity
vonloe for otiMr bido. Tho rot1on of tho Wloge', Pfi'aro tho duly quolified end 1989.
.J•nice Y. H•ggy. OWI'W withcancur,.,aeof "*Y co""'*'alll clietrict.lt
-.voting tru.tees of the Mid·
Notary Public tho Director of tho 0 -· io tho Molge County Comdleport Church of Chrlot in
RESOLUnDN
- t of Mental R-dotion mio...,_o' judg,_. !hot
Christien Union, an unincor·
WHEREAS. on tho 23rd ,.,,_ tho right to weiue tho Cotltlnuocl viobillty of
poreted religious tociely,
-oiblllty
and that the church is the dovofMorch1-.omiiOiing ony informeUtioo. AI-· Courthou•
·owner of reel e1tflte by deed ing w01 hold of tho majority bid upon ore to be clollvered - g h o co-.Cion of
membero of tho Mldoi8M ondinoDIIodlnptacewithoil E-lM 0-o 11188
; ~corded in Volume 164,
of Chrlot In Clirlotion poi:.,.glng mltorlol removed ond 11810.
·Page 92 of the Meigo Church
A more dotoilod - i p - c._. ........ i.Z.12441.
·c 'o unty Deed Records of the Unionrog•cfingthodiiOioo- from premiow. By ord• of
ciltion
of
thlo
church
with
the
Boord
of
County
Corn•
tlon
of tho pi'Ojoct .,d FLA - d A... llofdl_., Ohio.
:following described real 81·
lhe MIOCi.tion of Church of million.,. •nd ProiHUting flood rftiPI.,. av.allble for w..................
iete, to-wit:
'. Lot In lower Pomeroy (now Chriot in Chrlotion Union. Anornoy of Gallia County, cltllono -low ot tho Malgo
County Courthou01, Com· 2 lomlr Oorogo ..... Fri., lol.,
Middleport) numbered three 1426 LonCMtor Pike, lo• &amp;toto of Ohio.
30,
Circleville,
Ohio43113.
T.
Koillurloeon/
4-11·89
mioeio-oOfllce. PornorO'f, - - -Of-fl111to11..
hundred
and ninety-five
County Comminlon
Ohio 41719.
..... ·~--- ....
Plng
......g
·13951 on plot of Mid lower ond
.......
WHEREAS, h propBrent A. Soundou Monnlng Rouoh. P-ldont. Ulbl.. food pr
"Pomeroy, recorded in vot
by C. Jotfr8Y"Adkino
Meigo County
:first page 121 of Plato' of ony movod ond - poc, porch ~. bl""d.;
·
thot lhio church dioMoociote
Pro01cutlng Comminio...,o. Canillying --o.IJr.olot
~ Meigs County, exCept the
....glwith
tho
Church
of
Cliriot
in
Attomoy/4-20-89
Offl-.
oh..W•,Ioto-..oloon. . .
"coal end olhw min«1l1 connow
Cooh ....... 47042
14) 30 1tc
:trained therein with the right Chriltian Union effective im. , April 23. 30
modiotoly ond thot tho
PubliC' N ...,1.ce
io mine the Mme {without in- tru-""'•
.. rn ...
At. 1 on ForlltRdRun.._.
1\t o11
on
· of the church,
"'
jury to the surf.ce) toget._
-ninO
.....
......
Dwight
Hoi8Y.
Jom01
MoPublic
Notice
with ell ways 1nd ·rtghtl of
NOTICE OF FINDING OF
ways along any mi.....a ond Luther Dldoll• be div.d...._...,,.,dZ.
Bo.rn.-3p.rn. % rnlo _.. Flwo
seem, which co.a and other rectod to inform tho Church NO SIGNIFICANT EFFECT
LEGAL NOTICE
ON THE ENVIRONMENT
: minerals, together with said of Chrilt in Clwiltien Union,
Thoro will be o public hoar·
· mining righ1a and righte of 1426 Lonc01ter Pike. Bo• AND NOTICE OF INTENT lng on lho too llruCiure for
30,
Cirdevile,
Ohio
43113
TO
REQUEST
A
RELEASE
way. were reserved by S•m~
tlun thio church will be OF
FUNDS
MEIGS the Athena, Gollla. Hocking. 11th. 1:00 a.m. toMoy
41tiond
uot Wyllyo Pom•O'f. hioheiro known
•:00
p.m.
Jocko011, Molgo ond Vinton
•
the
MiddiiiPOI't
COUNTY
COMMI&amp;SIONI·
-ilnd assigns Jorever, in lhe
_n..NG PDR EVI!IIYCIIIEI
County
SolidWMte
Diotrlct.
Community
Church
ond
EllS,
COMMISSION
OF·
deed to the Trutteet of the
Tho pulillc h - g wll be
Society of the New Jwuu ~ woukl not Ianger be .tfilialed FICE. COURTHOUSE. Po· hold~ay30,1988et7p.m. 110-h-.Midol-.
Jem Church,, dated February with tho Church of Chriot in merO'f, Ohip 457119. Date of lhe Wollot011 City Bulding. ..., ,.. - . - . ..... lmol
26 , 1878. and recorded in Chriltiwl Union in •nv men· Public:otion: Apoil30. 1Ill. City Council Chambero To _., lnternted Agenclee,
·Meigs County Aecordl ot ner, 1nd
_._ ...._ furnf.
2nd. Floor. 203 Eoot II rood· WHEREAS , upon 1 vote, h:
Groupo ond Poro011o:
. ,Deedo, Vol. 48, pogo 374. wu
tliiW.
loti
mile. Flrlt ~ vw.
W8Y
StiHI.
WoMoton.
Ohio
.
)Jnanimouoly
decided
by
On or aboul May 15.
~ Plaintiffs
furthfN' rapre·
The
foe
llruc·
the
members
of
the
church
1989.
the
obovo·nomod
..unt thai lhe memben in ofMondoy ond Tuaecloy, Mov 11t
lo to be • ton-•:
ond
21tol. 10:00o.m.·I.'OO p.rn.
j ice detlre to transfer Nid thot lhe Middlepon Church County will request Sute of turw
e1
.00
per
ton
on
•H
Fodarol
2rnll•frornLM..... OI)It. IlL
•ieal ettate in order that lhe of Chrilt in ChriltiM Union Ohio to rol-•
wate genw1tad ineide lhe 328. flt.h pi- on rlghl. Glorlo
membership lh811 diUIIOCi· ohould be di. . eoclotod from lundo undor Title 1 of tho alx county diotrlct.
lhe
MIOCiation
of
the
Church
Oif•.
Houling
1nd
Community
ete comple1ely with lhe
*2.00 · .,... ton on all
Church of Christ in Chrittien of Chrilt in Chrillian Union Dovotopment Act of 1974 WMte g.n•ltad outlide the 4 fornlly • ...,. 1st ond 21111. Rt.
Union. 1462 Lon COlter Pike. and henceforth the church IP.l. 93·3831fortho foil-· diotriCI but whhln tho Stoto 241 In - · lionorn crf
ing proiect .
Bo• 30. Circleville, Ohio should be •nown H the Mid01-HII.
dleport
Communh:y
Church.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPE· of Ohio.
:43113. The property ohall
U.OO · per ton on all Moot 111 ond 2nd. Noi- Rd ..
IT IS HEREBY RESOLIIED
MENT
BLOCK GRANT
·be trantferred to a non-pro· thot.
waite gen•ated outlicM the fluttonot. ...., ....... the
Midoleport
Church
FORMULA
PROJECT
..
~'fit corporation which sh1H
bllce Oven. ,.._. rlllfllllll'
of Christ in Chrislian Union
1 . Elevator In Courthou• Stote of Ohio.
:be known 11 the M iddlepon be
For mor11
inform .. ion.
·di. . IOCilted
of the
to onoble hondlcappod ac·
•communily Church. which
pl. .e com.ct M1yor Sare
Church
of
Chrilt
in
ChrtltiM
COli
'
~ lhell be made up of the preMoy 100. 21111. ""' v - . h
Locotion: Meigo County, Hendricker. Pr81ident of the flood.
sent members of I he Middl• Union In any manner and
Roclno. Clothlng.oloSolid W01te Monogemont
Ohio
·
lpon ChUrch of Chrisl in henCeforth the church be
Policy
Committee.
Athen•
known
u
the
Middleport
Roin
- tl
Elllmotod Coot of ProjaCI:
Chrlslien Union.
City
Builclng.
Athono,
Ohio
Community
Church.
•121.690.00
In
ltutl.,ol.
flrlt houoo
· Petitioners pr11y that they
41701 1814) 1112-3331.
'FURTHER RESOLVED that
An Environmenu.J Review . (4)
RDad.
May 211d throuth
:tO lie
•i:-:::--7-:'=':-.-- the real IStete presently Record r•pecting the1for•
lith. Clothing. ..10¥1.
:3
Card of Thanks
bl diS!
Ill • Nlllnd ......
titted in lhe neme of Church
mentioned project hM been
of Christ in Christian Union made by the above n.med
AIIIIU llll CI~ Iill' C I&gt;
Moot 2oc1. ........ evr-..
be trentferred 10 a non-pro- County which documonto
fit corporation to be formed
end known •• the Middteport Community ChurcJ,.

l&lt;liiH

llmplt words. Pr int letters
each in ils line of squares.

-VIJIIIIMIIIT

,

.

ReoriO~ iho 6 tcrombled
O word•
bolow lo moko 6
t

Conu I ' PIOii-. Ohio 487•. Comoot. Docu-•m8Ybeolt- - - b e - • t h o •
talnod 1&gt;\' .... or in,.,..... .... _.,.ofthoc-nloo

AI bkk mu• be lll8de on
tho F - of Prop 111 In·
duclecll with the ..,edflce-

.

jlet-ponillhllllo-1119
--····-

41

WilD

loi

·•·••· ••• · ••· ·•••••·•••••••·••••••

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-3

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

'==' s~~&lt;lllA-~£~s· ....

l_;;j~ij ;,:;=:=~~~~

&amp; VIcinity

to 11M prDjoat .,d _.
ourlnt
pulollc ~lono of
,-. -_ _ ,....tn.nlllo- ·

Aprl30, 1889

IIEW FUINIIUIE
Living Room Suites, Recliners, Bedroom Suites, Dinette
What-nots, and much, much more.

EATS

CASII

fWCIIOtti~II-IUdl Ptanon
MIII~WV
·
OWitiRoM .d II S. Po LAir

Sets, lamps,
POSinVII.D.

Lunch

MAlUM.WEDEIIEYEI - Auctlo1111r
614·245·5152
Apprentice DavW lo.-, 614·446·7750

~785

TERMS: Calli • Clltck wllll LD.
Not AIIIFD&lt; th For J ulda11tor LoN o1 Plap•nr
Llolnlld lfiCI Ban did In wv &amp; Ohltt .....

Lkl111ed and a..dttlln State ef Ollie
I'

'··

�Times-Sentinel
44

Apartment ·
for Rent

Furn. Apt, n•t to U ...-y
P•ldno • A.C. Ref. reQ'td.
Sull.-,! e for 1 pet~ on. Call
114-MII-0338.
O.r-c~e apt. 3 furn'ed. roonw •

Mlh. Wlll•h•. dryer.

*· dun.

44

Ohio

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

44

NOfl~

4th Aw. Mldcl ....... 2
room ..,.,,_,,, 1·304-8822&amp;&amp;11.
Fwnil:t.d ona t.•oom ..,to
t 200.00 plus .. ectric. phone

.

Pui•t Pluaant.

w. Ve.

30. 1989

Puzzler on D·7

q..-~~ 9L f?/J
~~~

1 btdroom aplrtnwn: tar Nnt In
Mldcl-. t121. por ....,.h
..... utili- Doys. 114--812-

-

J

April30, 1989

&amp;141; evenlnp:. 114-141·
2217.

-

.

304-1711-3800.

48 Sp- for Rent

~~a
S 'MMMINO POOLS· t1188

Eorly bird oPK!ol on 119 pool~
Hugh 1t•311t. - '· Huth-.
fenot, ftttlr, • wenlnty. lnlteJ.
lotlon a lln.,cing ovollol&gt;l• CoH
24 ""'- 1 - ~3411-_0141.

Fwniltied lrffid.,c;v. t 1 50, utif.
IIi• Plh1. there blth. 701 4th
Ave. O.lllpolt. Call 614-4-te4416 1ft• 7 P.M.

Furnilhed Apt., 1 br.. t240,
utiUtl• paid.. 920 4th Aw.
Gltlllpolil. C.ll 614-44&amp;-4416

· '\

BrooklldeApwtments; ti)I!Cious
living, l•ge kitchen wilh hoo.
lwp. Tout elec:trie. no pitt. Call
d.,.•814-448-4&amp;08 o: .,....
lng~81 ..... 446-M27.
Now 1ccepting applic.tions for
Z bedroom IPM'tmertts. fultv
Wpeted, •pi1r1ta, ._.., tnd
trllh pidwpt provided. Mlinten.nce free living dose 10 lhop.
ping, benks and schools. For

more informatton c ..l 304-882·
3711. E.O .H.

Onebedroomfurhithed.,t.verv
nlct •nd cltan, aduft1 only. no
Ptll, phone 304-876-1386.

f!.Wnil~

one bedroom IIJt.
UpouO... Aduht O~ly t:!OO por
momh. Utlhioo'pold. 304-17119710.

2 bN'oom Apts. for rent.
Ctrpllod. Nlcetetting, l.undtV
fedlltl• evailable. C.ll 814992-3711 . EOH.
Or.cious lvlng. 1 •d 2 bedroom •.-tment1 11 Vdl-ue
,._or .,d Riv . .lde Apartment 1 in Mldcleport. From
t1a:t Coli 114-992-7787.

2 be&lt;t'oom,. flunlthtd. Remo.
doled. n - .· J&gt;loyground. lergo
potlo. S.curity dopoolt. CAl
114-992-UIIIIft•lp.m.

1 btltoom •• · for rent. t225
month. dtPosit required. 614-992-5119.

c..,.....,

2 urrlurniaMd. 4 room~. blthon
MuU•ry Aw.. Pom•oy. Mdta
....,_ No - - Doolotlt ..d
Nlor...,... 814-J92-2271oftor
5:00p.m.

-o.

Furnilhed room e12&amp;/mo. AI
utl-1• pole!
bah. 919

i9

3941.

Ewnlng dr...: siz:e 14 Ml11"
Pethe; lace overl., m~~~ve in
oolor. 140. CoN 114-4411-1188.

For Leese

24.000 llfU W•tinghou• Air
Cond./ t7S.OO Coli 114-441·
3073 oft• 5 P.M .

Slooplng ""'""' with oooldng.

1314 pd . tob.,tcco b .. • ·
1 .21/por pound. Cosh....,. Coli
114-441·3277.
•

AlloTr.. •..-ce. Alhook-~a.

CAll ofter 21J,m. 304-773'

lar:ge mltlll lift¥ offict d•k.

...
.,.,1q.... olll buffet.
114-241-8871. .

F~m.Nd. 3 room IP.tnHinf:.
Firat floor. private flntr.na., no

Clll

For rent 2 bedrQOm funilhed 12ft. S.oro boot a motor.l250.
blo ho- •188.00 monlh 10•14 tent. •eo. R. .e httch,
1 utlltl•, Will Kc.pt Hud, e11.
COIII14-3117·7111
4-8711-&amp;&amp;12 or 1711-3800:
194"1:, Formol Clb w-h belly
-12100. JD 1 10 GordM
trHtor·l700. Or tr.Se for 18
horN . . . . . ti'IIDior. can 814441-9341. .

plltl. Clll 814--948-22&amp;3.

fJ

Vl'IIA PUIINITUAE
I
a API'IJANCES
lit. 141 lr!eo.-ory. 1/4ml. on
Unaoln IItke. Oll~n ·7 d.,l 1
- · IIAM-IPM. C.lllor oppt.
~"" llour:o 114-4-tll-3111.

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER!! Thts is a cute home on a good
street. 3 bedrooms, level lot '" Middleport. ASKING
$19,500.00.
.
ABOVE TUPPERS PLAINS ON Sl RT. 7- FREE GAS on 8
acres. Water tap in place wrth electric avaolable. Convenient
location, nice building stte $25,000.00.
POMEROY- BEECH STREET- Quality brick home, working fireplace. hardwood floors. large liviorg room, washer &amp;
dryer, garage, full basement $35.500.00.
MORNING STAR ROAD- Afresh newly built home is just
the ticket lo enjoy the coming spring. Qualrty construction
ranch wrth 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, elec. heat pump, Andersen
wmdows. beautiful front porch, and garage on a large lot.
located tn a growing development on Morning Star Road.
$59,900.00.
.
POMEROY- Abeautiful modern krtchen compliments this 3
bedroom home. Full basement. newer back dec~ lots of closet space. Nice woodwook! PRICE REDUCED!! $41,900.00.
POMEROY_ 2 story trame tiouse woth 2 bedrooms and
bath. with wood floors and some vinyl coverin• ASKING
"'
$6.000.00.
.

LAND CONTRACT - 3 acres. m01e or less. $6.600 askong
pnce. $750.00 down. 10%ontereat rate.
·

OWNER WANTS TO SELL -IIAKE OFFER! MIDDLEPORT_
Beautiful Colonial home' level lot. 2 car garage, has ornate ,
trim, attic studio w/skylight. Well insulated. REDUCED,
$49,900.00.
·
MIDDLEPORT- 6.09 Beautiful Country Acres close to town.
3 bedroom mobile home, small barn, and hookups fol 2nd
mobile home. $21.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT
AN G h
- 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms, bath, carpet, F.
eat recently remodeled and in good condit ion
LAs4N7G·.o'ovo.LoloE.' c
• · b 'ld. IOO'
, t·
1o.
125
5 1 - ommeretal store uo tng
x
Has water and electric available. Has had some remodeling.
REDUCED TO $6,000 00.

---.c-

DEXTER - Building with 3 lots. Has many potential uses.

"*"

t248. I

nee. v.. .,..,

IIIDDL.EPORT- Grand older home on a good street. 3 bedrooms, large Jront sittong porch. PRICED · TO SELL!
$23,900.00.
.

a•

nolrigorotor, 1110.

&amp;-goo rolrlgorotor,l25. Wil-

t• 1"'"1'-125. Coli 114-8127789.

Whlto 'Wodclng with troln.
Nw• bHn worn t40. Size
8-10. R•d .,dwhitefornwl. liM
9-10. Woro onco 120. Coli
114-992-7401 .

47519
Spacilliling In Pole
lui dingo.
Dooigll-.1 •o m.., your

_,._A"ny1111.

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on
po11 bl lf9t. ond ,-ogo
dull. S:ave hundracla,
IIY•n thou•nda of

$11,995

Call 304-733-1651
For Appointment
A. MORTON

l.o&lt;al Scol11 Ropr-tali..

V
IIWJifGS, INC.
Euf'llf'nt'P-Sintt&gt; 1903

'PH. 614·%511."6511

Call Toll Fr• Morton, II.
1-100-447-1436

doloro.

DONNA CIISIN.IY
LU. loa lt•6
GaiiJ oil. OW. 45611

3617 Rt. 60 Eoil
·~·tiotir ille, wv 25504

4,000ftlllllll lpweonJ8Uulnow

Uvlng room 1ult.. 2 mini blinde.
7Chtl2 Inch• . 4 tlr-. 1 linch.
Coli 114-94&amp;-2527-

All Popular Sizes ·Avcrilabl,.
QUALITY STONE COMPANY.
Three Miles East of McArthur, Oh.
on St. Rt. 50.
Ph. 596-4756 or 992-6637

'

66 Building Supplies

QUILTS WANTED
Buying old quits. Muot bo 21
oral... ' tt.ndqulled ontv.
·Any condHion. '-vlng top doU•
cuhl Call collect 304-472·
15192. Will come to you.

vw••

Bulltlng -orlolo

Blade, bridt. - • pip•. window1. lint. . . .c. ClaJde WinRia aran•. OH. Coli
....
114-2411-1121.

flogo. 304-273-&amp;&amp;55 .

lls Black Co., 123112PineSt..
Oollloolls; OH. Coli 814-4-4112713.
.
.

201 Bloclc lrld Whlto Comou·

tndlvldu.. SPJII•r l••orw. be-·
gin'*'· Hriou1 gubrilt. ln.tic•dll Muelc. 814-441-0117.
Jeff Wam1lert ·inatructor, 1144411-8077. Llmitod cli&gt;W~Ings.

Sitm. . kltttn• ... _point. •eo
...... Coll114-379·2113.
Femole Ch- . 1100. Coli 614379-2501.
A.K.C. Do.._mon PuPPV: red
female/ f7&amp; . Cell 814· 448·
1927.
Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breedi ... AII
nya.. l•m• ,.. Food Deal•.

Surpk.ls,. Army, Rentel. Denim
alotl*lg. Sn San_, ....... Nu
Ere WV. Junction ln...,_01
Rood. Old Rt. 21 . Fri. Sot, lu"
- · 1111 8 :00PM. light
wolghl. Acmr c.m ..Aomy
~~ogo
forTurlcoy -1Aorll24· Mjy

..

LIMESTONE:
FOR SALE ·

UIIOO. c011304-1711-1111.

Cock•Sp.nlel.. 8mo. old. Mile,
bull oolor. Colll14-448-3993.

JulleW.bbPh . I14-446-0231.
Or
ooc&gt;nwvnd Cottory Konnol.
Per1i., Md Siam•elnd Him.,
lav~~n khttne. Chow stud
vice. C.ll tli14-«8-38.W.aft•
P.M.

58

Fruit

8o Vegetables

For Nle. Sw• potato pllnt1.
tomato plants. 11.00 dozen.
614!-7•2·2220 or 814-742·
2773.
I II B Gr~~~~nhou111..Rt. 2 , Alp I.,.
Rotd. vegetable and flow•
pl.,tl, hanging
3046711-4163.

b•k••·
Concrtte
alltizft.
.-rd II=========~========:.
ordeiWery.btodlsMll•on..,cl
Gelllp~

64 Mi1c. Merchandise

DODIILL~S·
AUTo· PARTS
'
VIN1011, OHIO
"Your Uaed Parts Supermark~t: ~

Scram-lets on Page D-3
ANSWERS TO sa:R.fl'!A-a'f.'Z..S

SCF!AM·LETS
NESTLE
PAPACY
DARING
OPENLY
INJURY
MOSAIC
APPRECIATE

~-

I had arrived early for work only lo
wait until the boss arrived to open the
doer. "You know, boss," I smiled,
"the trouble with being punctual is
that nobody is there to APPRECIATE
it." .

Motors. Transmlalona, Rear-enda.
Sheet Met•l. Glaia. Betterlea, Brake
Druma, Rotors, Startera, Altern11tora,
and a wide eelecton of Uled tire1.
INSTAU.AnON AVAI.AKE
.
AI Parts O...ntwd te fit n 1e Good~

wood group-

losoot-1241.

'IRADE~NS TAKEN.

ljorry's llorgoln Hou•. Furnltui'IJ, ,,_._,._ gffl: Item• •
mile. J.aban St. k1 *'on.

. SR. 681- ACREAGE- 17 acresolvacant wooded ground.
Great home site! $10.000.00. ·

Houn:: Mon--TtalndJ¥ 10·1,
,....., . . . .u.... 10.7.

MIDDLEPORT- 3 bedroom 2 story home. Nice kitchen, W.
B.F.P. and much more! REDUCED TO $16.500.00.

Plclc.,. Uoocl F.. nlturo
114--175-1410 or 114·381·
1773

OLD FOREST ROAD~ FLATWOOD, 17 acres. pond, garage,
lull front porch and pnvacy. Spacious home wrth 4-5 bedoooms, fireplace. new carpet, large windows and ceiling fans .
$47,000.00.
.

Moplotobl&amp; 4cholro/wltl&gt;-o.f.
motchlng moplo llutah. l o dlnnlng tallle/wlth-le•t. I

ook-.

"""""·Antiquo
llr....._ 112 mle out Jen'lcho

E~,

SOUTHERN HILLS R.

INC.

Put Number 1 To Work For You!

Rd.PointPioMMt.

SAL.EII TWP.- Appro•. 50 acres of vacant land. immodiate
possession. Old dug well, mtnerals. no coal. SELLING PRIGE' .
$18.000.00.
.
POMEROY ·- One story frame house, five rooms, 2 bedrooms, and bath wrth carpeting. Approx. 150' frontage with 4
lots. Cable available. ASKING $13,000.00.
MIDDLEP~~T- Approx. 12 acres oiFwoodtlnd plus a seven
room bric. home. 4 bedrooms. FA .0. heat plus a wood burner. PRIVACY• $27,000.00.
POMEROY -; 4 lots with an older home thai needs lots of
work. Fox rt up or tear rt down and put your own home that
yoo want there. ONLY ~lO.O.OO,_~O.
HENRY E. CLELAND ...................... ................. II92·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................. ,.............949·2660
DOTTIE TURNER ............................................ 992·5692
JO HILL
985-4466
OFFICE .::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::992·2259

IWAIN

a

AUCfiON
PUIINITUIII 12
Oho lit., Clolllpolo.
NEW•IfiC.--p-•:11111.
U.lng ............. t11 ......

·
-- m
-- ·-..
t-n
.
FIM
toU
....... 1111. ................

•••
---b.-..
..- ..

USED--· . . . . . . -oom

campi•• line of ullld IYrnltufei.
.NEW- _ . _ -to- 1311.
-WIItldooolo •11 a up. (ltool a
·-too.! Coli 814-441-310.

51 ACI£ FAll- Remodeled 6 room house w~h both.
Ab•n lor stontge or cattle 1nd workable garag~ Some
lillable land, fenced pasture aM somelimberland.Ruoal
water recent~ installed. Clllj Township. All mineoll
rights included. Ouo reduced listingpriceony $48,500.

moo

'Countv .....,...,.... Inc. Good
:u1ed tppMiftOII 1nd T.V. . . .
Op., 8A.M.to8P.M.Monthru
••. 114-441-1199. 127 3&gt;d.
A•. Oolllpollo. OH.

NEW LISTINGS NEEDED - We h.Vt buyers for Mtip
County Proplrty. List with us for btsl rtsults.

,.:f.....

GOOD UI!D APPUANCU

;w.-..
c~~yon.
,, ....... ......

A

'*

,. . . ..

u - Rlwor lid.
ltono
er• -~~- 114-4-411-7388.
LAYNE'S FUIINIT'UIIE

,lof• ..wd ah . . . priCid from
U85 to fttl. Tobl• teo .,d
1111 to 1121. HldH-- · ~to
ttedln .. t22&amp; to
' . ,.. Lompo t21 10 •128.
DlnoHII 1101 .. d up 10 1481.
Wood toblo w-1 altolro •211 to
t791. Dook e100 up to t371.
t400.,dup,bunk-

•••e.

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. Attractive 3 bedroom,2 b~h

loomal dimng area, 10'1120' porch and 9'x14' deck:
Mony more. feolure~ all on 28 of an acre m/1.
$29,900.00. Call lor more lnloomation.
.2732

112728
NlW liSniG1 HOI SUMlER DAU We don't mind and
you won·~ when you m... into this spacious ranch w~h
16'x32' .introurd pool. Economic healing and . co~ing
would lit any budget. Make your appcjntment today.
$62.000.00. You'll fall in lo""!
,
~
112745
CONIEIPOIAR.f AT ITS 8ESI1!!- $89,900.00 Lovely
newer home. 3 bedrms., 2 baths, fully equipped kitchen.
Great room wtlh skyhgltl~ cathedral ceilings, in-11ound
pool lor you toen1oy thiS summeo.lo,.,ly setting by-Bob
Evans Mill.
· 12702
BEAUTIFUL fAll SETTING- Seven ooom brick home .
with 2~ .baths. Apaolment bu ilding used lor caring lor
elder~ and hanticapped people. large modeon barn
used as leedeo pog bustness,localed in Guyan Township.
AppooK. 50 acres lllYel tila~e land surroul'lls farm
lxJ ildin gs. Call'loday lor show i n~
112602
AS YOU lUll UPON THE CONCIEIE DAIVlWAY you
will nat ice the manianed appearance ol this 3 bedroom

bath home. Gee at room wtth calhedrol ceiline Aluminum
sidin&amp; Gas heat andcenl10lair. Closelocity, c•y !Chools
system. $44.000. Call lor appoint-! todllj.
12691

12731

HOllE within Vinton Village 1.5 acres. 6 rm.
ltouse. $27,500.00.

REDUCEO TO s:n,soo.OO. Appro•. 24 acoes w~h frame
and vinyl sided oancll style home. fetiurinl4 bedoo001s.
2 baths, lor1111l dinin&amp; i!i\chen wiTh dishwasher.
basement plus much more. Kyger Coeelt !ehods. Call ilr
details and an appointment today.

. . .au--4--.. .

......,.
,..1110.
... M--•ltco
-t-. ....t280.
n&amp; ..
d
up,

ICing tHO.

CJun -

• • • 14a.

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills
Village. Call for more information.

a

loci fr..,ll t:IO, UD
Icing
, tromo teo. Good ~~~- "'

tcnn ....... m~~~~.wn...

.•

- • · • uo ..duptot•e.

..

HANDYMAN'S SPEClAL: I older house, 3 parcels oi land, in
Weibert's Addition (Gallipolis!. All for $6,500:00.

a'....

' 10 DIJo ..,. 11 • h wtlh
~ IPPI'O old
3 Ml• out
, ....... lid. Op., I A.!!'. to &amp;
P.M. Mon, t1W Ill- 114,4441-

.......... "" , .

~ 0322.

Voir.,

1.,
.......
".......

' Nlw lnd

__
___
................... ' PICKENI

u•o PUIINITUII!

Compllll hou-d "rnlol&gt;I _ UIColi
· 104·171-1410,
- · 1/2 .......I14_.:..
,, 1773.ov-.._

Uocoll ....,._

,wwo

0 Wide roof overhang .

avM~.

w.-. ..,_...

KM"IA..._-.

floi-.

217 I . Zod IL,
. 814--11:1-13111 or lt4--8P-

o lnground pool
o 3 car garage
o Excell,erit nei&amp;hbors

...
: .............. v..........

o Picturesque setting

:ft.....
llolrigthlo ......
···--- - 10
,, . - . . flO ydo

·Itll1-

:..:.
••.:...:...
• ..,.....,,----..-d-Corp&amp;--

. No.

OM~..,_,.,..

' ....... Cl•d ..... Iiiii-&amp;
'IWo la•lo:• 111 VIMd a
-~.W.Yio.IO
....,._
.....
. . .....
1111-

o Paved parkin&amp; for 6 to 8 cars

"""'""""I·

D Heavy insulation

ArPIOll. 25 ACIES w~h a 3 year old ranch style home.
3 be«oorns. 2 lull bitlis. SJllcious living oo,.. w~h
bolt-in hoolll:ase, Attached garage w~h wookshop.
Located al Leadin1 Cree~ Road.
·
M27lj5

lOW THIS IS LIVINII Appr01. 125 teres w~h newer
home. 2 stone lireploces, lerge S(llcious equipped
~~chen, '"" bosement with lami~ room and doive-in
prag~ There's also a mobile home pooperty with rental
oncom~ 5 stocked lan Its, free gas and much more!
Rut~nd area.
112730
llW liSTING! fMI approK. 119acoes w~h solid older
.2 stooy home. Barn and several bu~dings. Salem
Township. $55,000.
·
llW LISnNGI 10 ACRES WIIH 2 STORY H01:l~
be&lt;l"oom~ dtning area. balh. located in S.lem
Township. listed 81 $45.000.
.
1127J7
PI ICE REDUCED - Appro•. 40 acres ofth lwo gas
wells. 2 be&lt;l"oorn frlme dwelling and detached B••g~
Additionol troieo hookup. Reduced to $35.500.

.

-----------------'

A,.kiuee

5[I . ~d holno w/31111. l~blllls.

FOR rSlRS.!! .

'

'J

...

2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES S/D. One is 84'x148', the
other 75'1148'. Purchase e~her lor $5,500.00. ·
75 ACRES located along Glen Summit Road. Older 5 rllll'
house. $20,000.00.
VACAIIT LAIID- 18.80 ocres in Goeen Townslllp. Hos
- suOYOyed. Par1itlly wOOded and smoll pond. Rural
water and electoic milable. Needs tn sell at $13,000.
112693
CAIRE AIID TOIACCO fAIII- Modern 5 room house,
oemodeted b11n and severol •prings for water supply.
160 acres now u,.d lor lvestock and tciiiCIIIIarmin'
Joins WayM Nalionol Faoesl C.lltooappoinlmenl
M2703
LOCATED JUST ONE Ill£ FIOI TOll- Ranch w~h
living ooom, dininl areo. ulily room, storage buodin&amp;
covered polio, and Ca"port on 1.88 acoes mooe ooless.

II ACOUIITIY SETTING is this 4 be&lt;toom ranch with 2
baths. formal dining area, liv ing room, Mchen. eteclo~
hu~ woodbuoner, 2 car 1111g~ all on 4 acres mil of
~~..::.:.~:n ~:dd a~;::~:nt$ 49· 900· C.ll lor mo,.
112733
42 ACIIES II HUIITINGTOI TOWISHIP - Rood
"-Up 1ppr01. 4 acres cropland wilh b~ance being
wooded. for mooe deta~s and ex1ct location 1ive u• a
call today.
112705
SU.OGO IOIE IEDUCIIOIIII on rhis q.. l~y buil h- ·----llllll!-------··27ii2lii.~ $305.
ond oppr01. 6(1Coes wooded and po51ure l.,d full 2 '
.
M27M
•orv housa,' 4 bedrooms. 21111 bitlis. equipped k~cilen
EUIY litE POOL THIS isiii1EIIIIIdthecomlortintl1fs
ROOI
TO
ROAM
in
the
I~ story home wK~ ooer 21
111d II cllllllls-2600 sq. fl. ill house plus dec~ing on•
3 biGoom, 2 bllh home. Living room, lomilv noom.
ocres. Home includos 51Hdr_, liYongroomwkh biW
2 sides. 3 bay •••aeend •oraae areo or business.lormol dining11ea and m.... Oveo 2acres Call ilr mOll!
window, tar..l dining raam, 2 c• otloched prap.
3.600 sq It- well insulated and wired.lo- le¥et In
detlils.
portia! basement. Newer furntca C.ll too mooe dtllfls.
fPI ""'hinery slqa Listed al $92.000. REDUCED
12725
''
G7:M
S(LlfiiO PRICE '70,000. Owner anxious ID sell- call
Pill( DlYElOPIDT PIOPfm- Sft,.ted on bacll
50 ACID - Close to SR 35. Appr01. 6 miles to ''"'"loolhoWinJ
• 2711
ond too the ~de of Pinecrest Nuning Homa 0... 74
Coli todoy. •
1271J
•
ai70S. Call too mooe inlonnotion.
·
112712

JUDY DEWm

53

'74 HOLLY PARK MOBILE HOME - 2 bedrdoms, 1 bath
lo1ced • air, 0.785 acre, located on Floyd Clark Rd:
$16,000.00.·
79 ACRE FARM located in Langsville. New 4 bedroom, 3
bath, 2 car garage, barn, pond &amp; landing strip for small
planes. Price $171,000.00.
64ACRE FARII .Io~ated on Fairview Rd. 3 bedrooms 2 baths
finished basement. 6 years old. Custom woodwork in the
home. Check it out!
118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP., Graham School Rd.
Super V~ew! $~.000.00.
_
PROP ERn IN PORTER - Grocery store, 3 bedrm. home, 5
bedrm. home. Call for more information.

INVESTMENT. OR LIVE IN - Double hoose located along
4th Ave. Good condition. Buy lor $32.000.

....... • ·10 . ...

....,. IUJIUI

o Wall-to-wall carpet
o Well maintained
o Office, den or nursery
o Living room
o Outstanding kitchen
o 2 baths .

.

• tor more information.

•d up to t311. •lor -

CHECK THESE FEATURES•••••

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE -

PLEASANT VALLI.Y ESTATES- You'll find this lovely 3
bedroom brick ranch w~h formal dining aoea, liv ing
room w~h fioeplace, complete k~chen w~h newer
appliances. 2 car allached garage and more! Call todllj

• • • • w-malb ... ~ 1211

t

(614) 446-3644

Whlrlpool

~.........

..d wrl•tl• . 304-175-5417.

Musical

Instruments

vi81t.
.......
- - ..d ......
v...,...- -....

This is an outstanding property and the owner is most
an_
?dous to sell. We welcome the opportunity to show
you this home at your convenience. Please don't be
shy. We would like you to compare this home to
everything else available and make an offer.

Very clean, ready to
move into
o Paved driveway
Handsomely decorated

!.go rock cHI P.-1178.
Centurz pr•·•merg•nce
~I 1110. Cllll 114-4411-

D. C•. Metal Salis, Inc.

42xl2x60 ·
13068 Walk Door
4 SkyliJhts,
2-12xll single
end doors.
Totally erected on
your s1te within 40
miles of office.

For ..le: HouMPiant• - AI k_,ds

57

-t11.111orao-.eurla coblneto-f271. IOJAI:

'

o 4lfz acre of privacy
o Marble sills

Saturday, May 6

lttftjl, 147.50/ box. CODI.UPI. Coli t-eoo-133-3453.
Anytlmo.

llrd1/llue Front Amazon.
Tolks. • oings. Aloo o Molician
Codtlloo. Col1114-2111-1411.

...._ . ..-1-1411 Pot. . . ..,tahl. W.allln lftloll•

MOST PEOPLE
-WANT TO BUY THE BEST HOUSE·
.
THEY CAN FOR THE MONEY!

o 2x8 rafters
o Huge rec. room
·o Green Elementary

AKC Reg., Alredlllepuptfor 1811.
Call 11.-· 211&amp;-1413 anytime.

Bentwood
rocll.er·•ll.ll.
.,d
· "liD&lt;*
'··
·· - 11uo
a...dlothlr
tN.ts.

Call today. $8,500.00,
'
.
MIDDLEPORT - Unoque 3 bedroom home in good condition. Equipped kitchen. washer &amp;dryer included. Fireplace,
ftont sitting porch. 1~ baths. $17,500.00.
. •

'''----------~~~~~------------------~~~~~----------

o Quality construction
o 4 or 5 bedrooms
o Beautiful Great Room
o Limestone fireplace
o Central air

Flth TWik. 2413 Jocks'"' Aw.
Point PINitnt. 304-175-2083. .
10 1111 stt up t1~19 Md 10 (Ill
complete ••3. 21.

,.,..ble Ufhted •lgn w/I.U.,.,
UB9.. F- dollweoy. Pl_.lc

. . . . mlttr. . . . Cllbin••· •·
ble and curUin-. etc. from fold
- n _,.,_ Coli 814--11111131101.

Pete for Sale

Yaung parrot, not yet lllldng.
t711. Coli 814--742-21107.

2121.

OPEN HOUSE

66

lrnporlol. _..,.,. -

~~~~~~~~~~~R~~~I~Es~t~at~e~G~e~n~er~a~I~~==::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~R~e~a;I~E~~~~~e~G~e~n~•~•I~::::::::::::::::~J

.'\ ~

*·

cllllt. 944-tl.lotylll &lt;If
bunk otortlna 11 t17tl n - g bo-g. Ful lin
m-MI.81. au;;,;-lnritlniOJ:
mo~ttNM--•71. twin ...

-·-

NEW LISTING- 2 bedrooms, I bath. carpet. electric base- ·
board heat N.eeds some work. $12,500.00.

CITY PROPERTY - Nice olde1 home, great view of the city
and provacy, plus 2 acres. more or less. Living room w/ fire·
place. Modern kitchen. Price $45.000.
THIRD AVE
G
.
.b-d reat tloRra1se a family . Children can walk to
schooI. 3·4 e rooms. .. w/ltreplace, I&amp; family room. Mo~~6~o~tin kitchen. large ga1den area. Bi g backyard.

......__

~

POMEROY - Older 2 story home, gorgeous woodwork. fireplace, nice kitchen cabinets. 3 bedrooms, equipped krtchen,
central air, garage and storage. $39,900.00.

NEW LISTING- POMEROY- 2 or 3 Unrt Apartment Bldg.
in Pomeroy. Needs some repair. Located on a good street.
PRIC£0 TO SELL! $16,900.00.

=

Wa~tw and ~r. •100.
lng OM hiMir, • . ,. Com
lor baot_ t40. CoH 114-Mt-

Itt of IIIII loddw t41.
T - for ....8 pldt-1111 '21.
Cottle rocks MI. 814-112·
3122. .

•I•

Aoorrw for ,.,.._.... or month.
Stlfting et t120 1 mo. Odla
Hotei-11 4-4-411-9180.
·

5851, M11on WV.

Ntw M8ftea ltOYI. 1200. 11499~-3181 .
.

1.:_:.:..:_·~----'--­

Hom.-nM• qultta for
full •
q__, slzo. Coiii14-2411-121S.

-··

46 F...-nished Rooms

Sh••
Seoond At.Mul. Call 814-UI-

wheeled electric 1cootw1. Call
Rogon Modlcol. 1 IIOD-181•"
2 1 044

ftT 911 Tr.,s .....lon, RT 910
Trons..... lott.IIY71TC-o
onglno. IY82MA Compo. . .,_
gino. KW Oldorldo. SQHD4 . 11
CUt•oll. 237 Mock Eneln• Coli
114-119-1101.
'

Soors Ln_.., 2. 000 multlfuct~on ovm. Seme u
now / 171.00. esn 114-4411188 or como by 11o All-ion
Shop behind tho Now Bob

47 Wanted to Rent

NEW
- RACINE- 2'h miles out CO. Rd. 35, ranch
style home on paved rd .. sitlmg porch, 7 rooms. 3 bedrooms,
recreatioe room, fireplace. large living room, landscaping. 1
m.iles from Ravens,.ood Bridge. $59,500.00.,

••

on aor,., of

Mol!llo Homo Pwk.
Rout• 33. North of Pom•oy.
l,ots. rontoll,
ool•. CoH
8'14-192-7479.

Real Estate General

~

bu • • •

Sooond Wid Pin&amp; Golllpollt. can
114·441-4421. 114-·UI4249. or 814-44&amp;.2321.

2 bo4'oom. Cl-. """'•nohod.
No pel a. New Hwen. W. Va. In
town. 81 ..... H2-7 ... 1,

Wh_.ct...,.n.w or uad . 3

Pete for Sale

66

64 Mile. Merc;handl11#

FOr R.n : Large one-c•e•ll&amp;

,.. of

Efficiency el)t . ldul for 1
p . .on. mobile home below
town OYartooldng rW•. CA It
he•. Ref . Cal 814-446-0338. 8

64 Mile. lliierchandise 54 Miac. Merchandise 64 Misc. Merchandise

450 2nd AVE.
446-6106

PIOFUSIOIIAL SERVICE lAKES THE Dlf~£.CE

114-MII-1119.

Sunday Tlmes-Sattinei-Page-D-6

Ohio-Point PleMant. W.Va.

AUI[lliNIW. · INVUTMENIS · ~ACTAic · · -

no pet~. Ref. &amp; Oep. req'ed. Caft

tfter 7 P.M.

-- - ------- -

.

BROKER

..

J. Merrill C.rt• .......... ,.AEAL1"0R .................... 371·2184.
Petrlcll Cocllren ............REALTOR .................... 44-1·1111
Phylle Lovtdly .............REALTOR .........:......·.... 448·2230.
IOt'ft\' G.,...••..•.••••.•••• REALTOR-••.. ~ ............... 441·1707
Cheryl &amp;.mill¥ ..............REALTOR ................... , 742·3171

21.5 ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALUA SCHOOL No structures.
Located along Frank Rd. $18,900.00.
3 LOTS LOCATED NEAl TYCOON LAKE 150'xl15'1. Can
purchase on land contract. $2.000 down. 10% Interest. pay
$129.69 for 6 yrs.
5.6 ACRES located below Gallipolis Dam, along Hazel Ridae
Rd. $4,900. (Can purchase on land contract.l $1,500.00
down, 10% interest. pay $100.00 per month.
APARTiiENT REIITAL: 2 bedrms. $175.00 to $225.00
month.
IIEW LISTIIIG -' 2 BR RANCH s~uation on '~; acre. Hardtqp
raid. Hannan Ttace Schoal District. $26.500.
flEW LISTIIIO.- 2 Bi WICII srtuated on II acre. Hardtap
tatd. Hannan T11ce School District. $26.500..

ft~~~:i:iim~~q~~~:;~~~:

8AI.LIPOLIS
.YOU sq.
can
Ill TOKYO 1 833
lor $65,000.00!!
We hm
livinlfdlnina
rooms,
modern ~tdl~~h~ii;.:::~
~r
&lt;IIIIIGTl,·•
lhe cemfurtS of home....can

�r

lfHI ~~U!!!Ji1PS

&amp; LIVI'Sirlt:k

61 Farm Equipmant
UTILITY ILDG . IPL:JQ'x40'xl'
1-1~d' .aiding door,
1 -wolk doof· l4999. ~ ECTED ·
~~~~7~gRse 8LDRS. 81 ""

&amp;71-4410. Col 1:00 tM

e.v•.

11115 MF with Ktlly
lDMI• / 84,750. 3000FordDI•
ul/ 13,119!5, 4010 JD/ •4.550.
5ft. finkt.dmower/ 1795. PCMt
hole diuw/ t295. Own• witt
firtence. Caii1S14-28a-H22.

M••••
Ferguaon 50, 14 inc:h
J)lowt. 6 fl . biMie bush hog. 3pt.
Hutctl. . •••d. a. fertlllrer
lop...df'. t3.300. Cllll 304882-2221.

JohnDe•eZrowcornpl.rtlll', 3
pt. hitch. good condition. 814742·2808.
f'&lt;Md 532 blilll' 12.250.00.
Gravity bed 127&amp;.00. Two row

r .... ooltiltMora UOO.OO. AlleMc
cond. 304-175-2933.

62 Wanted to Buy
Mattie Ftr1Jiton btl«, 11,000.
lnternation11l tll't' rlka $600.

Farm.. S..per C wtth 2 row
ultluttort. I 1100. 2 row tobacao ttltt•·high b•ck •••·
culttvlton, II rubber preta
wheell ~ llkanew. t1&amp;00.Squ.-e
Bollw. Coli 814-245·5688.

1984 Hondl Accord. 2 door
hotchbock. AC. AM·FM, 0
opood. 87.000 mil•. Oood
...... !em *3700. 011(1. 114..... 228&amp;

Good 11:rew t1 .10 bele. 30+

4:oo.

I r dllSIJillldllilll
71 Auto's For Sale
19 Ch.,.y lmplla. 327. 2 door.
Fair to good co ndiUon. C:.U
&amp;14-446-IIIOoftw 5:30pm."'
814-446-1100 M-F 8-5.

1873 Codllloc lodJn Dovile.
Sll••· or. lull
84.000

p-.
ml•. QOOdcondhJon, newtirM.
e t4-446-oen.

•

-o

83 Dodao AMI
1!. 82
Chavy Ot .. ~n. 2 79 Ctt.y
~nl. 2 Dattunc trueka. 18
Chwv 'l'UCk. Win tlket'"• Clll
tl4-44f.2518.
1978 Fo•d ''" .....
814-44f.8941 .

1310.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh&gt;
d• from 1100. For•. u.r.
eect.. corven ... Chwy1. Surplus. luyen Guide . 11)
80f.517· &amp;000 Exl. S-t0181.
1911 Hondl ()dytii'V wtth roft
boor, 1900. t913 Sludobol'o. 11
II 8900. Coli 814·446-3073

1981 LeCir. lowMIIMge. Aunt 1981 CitMktn 4 ~t auto .. pw,
oood- Mollo oood worto-. Aok ' cwuile oontrot. htgh nifllll&amp;
lit• Pot. Colll14-24f.lt20.
, E.,. boctt. ""'" good. good
ltlc*•. tMO. Negotilbla 3041t84 Plymouth HtKIIon. 5 57f.281a
- · PI/PI, AC AM/FM, 1911DmnialcAM/ FMII-..
High mil•. 11215. Call &amp;14Pion ... tpMk•, 4 doof, good
~465.&amp;
cond. Tille over ~ments. C.H
1981 Ford s18r cruU "-~tar 304-182-3794 or 304-773Vm. AM/FMc•••.. Clov•· 1070.
cWIVe V-8 A.C . O.r1ge kiiPt.

o1178 C'-•olol Pl'*·up wit~

72

Trucks for Sale

COIIIII4-11f.1111

&amp;14-317·7813.

Mot0t1. 4mH•NonhofHolrer.

H~w..-

teo. 0111 114-446atl&amp; .. lt4-44t-etll.

HO luzuld Ouod Roc.-. t1 4742·2101. ' .

· -Jtolloon.Oitlei14-:ZU.
4111 for Wom II n. Dt..._
for bltl Mor 11. 1111.

tIll lU.H 112. Clndt l"'um
ootor, nc cond. 3,100 mi-.
I 3.100.00 . fl•nt . 304-882·
25.&amp;1.

*
. ... ~........ - - Pro-

XI.T • ..,

- - Y · I - - 191111.

- · 11110. A..... o ...d'""
- · 81. ., I. t:IIOO. Colt

1117F.. dRMgii'IUT. 14.911:
1112f&lt;Hd4a~-up. t2.891:
1112 ' I""" ...... 11.111:
1171 Cltwy / 4 - pilk·up,
t2.ote: 1113 c~..,. c tton Ven. very Nee. I a 0

,.n ,.,, _..,

1110 ............ v.n. 11 ,...
- - Aootpllnt
- ...c
111o o.... . .c...

1971 ct-v j!lck-up 'hton. 3to
onalno. PS. PB, ..... tt4-Mf.
22)7.
'

-min.

1171 FOI'll · -· VI Milo"*'",.Polr. Coli
lt.IWZ.I221 114-7·2-2101
ond•IDriM.

tll2 F2150 j!l...p tNOk. Club
eeb. Edt• aondltlon. Runnina bo•dL Jl&lt;, Coli 114-7422809.

74

Motorcycle•

lt4-24f.l148.

1:00- 4:30 P.M. -

mil•.

t983Cutloi.Sup,..,., 75,000

1970 'VW c.....,w. ll-1 5.
Excelltnt oondhJon. t998.8t.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE .
~- coli oevlclng OE. Hot
Point. ....... dry•• •n d
· - 304-171-2111.

Auto Parts
8t Acca110ries

Coli 114-94f.2621

AMIO; RM500iuzuldmot-..._ 3 bike ...... . 304-17f.
32114.

Boattand
Motorl for Sa!e

IUDOET TRANSMISSION·
Uted •
r1built 111 tyr.•·

W-·10 dovl. Pn- I t•
up. Uood • •obult 1or~JM~
oorwertert. ltlndlrd clutch•.

pr ......... pl ...... eve }olntt·lll
tv- luvlna •-million• to.
p ..... Coli 114-371-2220 ..
304-17f.l751.

SWEEPER •d~M~Winlmechlne
•opolr, pw1a. ond ......... PI'*
up .,d dtlw...,. Devil VIICIUum
Cleener, one hllf mile up

t95.t Clmllw. ooll IM Robort·
son. 304-1'7f.3207.

440214.

12.000. 304-773-5.&amp;21.

1888 32 It ...... 1ntll.-. lorgo
""1-ltor. tt•eo. miCI'o-

*·
Mv.. front khchtn wtth

booth,

lui boUt. -lllct f9,150. Clll

lmprovemants

POOR lOY 8 TillES
HMdilraon. W.YI. Now doing
frant ..,d ellgnmentl t18.115.
New •d u... tlrll. 304-'1715-

333t.

For Sele 8 foot audt top~.
··.:'

II... I 1111 CDniWned. lo(l,

1873 ' 22 ft. ~""" ......

Ch•IP•&amp; Ohio. t-&amp;14-914&amp;321 .

•-.

,.

tiding
- - - - · 30481111-34110.

... ,

.,...._ ao-.n:J.95tob.,__,
1 1:00ond 3:00.

'

78

A.lmp Ml• .,d ..va 304-

llf.3102

-·~~~~

c.-

· -·a.--1117 ~- te'8"
wit~-

31 .... ,_.. wtlh

poww trim end •to ollnjectlon.
MeriUIV Trellng motor, lhor•
llnotrol• oluomora. Allin tood
.. - ...... toll 114-912-2770.

s.,..lc T., k Pumpinlt tiO, 011·

79

cw-

;::e.,..
_.._ p.,
. '*'"*"g.

R.. nbowPIInt•. AI worlcgul•

•-tid.
lntwlor ond Pt-•.
Col 814-112·2388.

y01r little hou•? This
new carpet in llvi!lg room,
dining room and hall can solve your problems.
GorgeOUs tongue and groove hardwood floors in
bedrooms. Full finished basement boasts family
1oom, 12xl2 bedroom, laundry room and kitchen.
Full s~e attic wijh pull dOWn stairs tor great
storage · space. 2 car garage and 2 stprage
buidings located on .a double lot. Remarliably
priced at $59,500. Call today tor appointment!

«703

RANCH STYLE HOME WITH COUNTRY
ATMOSPHERE - But very close to schools
and shopping. This home offers 3 BRs, LR,
eQUipped kilchen, family room, woodburn·
tng stove. covered rear patio Two loi s.

KRISTI DRIVE ..,. BEAUTIFUl BRICit
RANCH - This home offers several
attractive features including a 12x30 family
room, LR. kitchen, 3 bedrooms I ~ baths,
fireplace, cent. air, carpeted, attached
garage with electric door space.

CHAROIAIS HiLLS - 3.24 acres. m/1 A GREAT PLACE TO START - Ranch style
frontage on St. Rt. 160. Nice building lot. home offers 3 BRs, LR. kitchen, bath,
laundry, woodburning 'stove, I car garage.
THIS HOME HAS BEEN GIVEN LOTS OF
TLC .... This home and 1.112 acrem/1 offeres LOOK AT THIS. OWNER HAS REDUCED THE
3. BRs. I \7 baths. LR. equipped kitchen, PRICE $35,~!- Very nice homewrth lots
dinette. altached garage. br·ick front, steel of room, ve1y large l·Shaped LR . with
fireplace, equipped kitchen w~h patio door~
siding.
3 BRs, bath, LR, fenced yard, deck. Call now.
THE WORD HERE IS "LOCATION"- Older
home located just one block lrom downtown. MAKE A SPLASH WITH YOUR FAMILY Home has been remodeled and offers 4 01 5 Lovely brick home wrth pool just off Rt. 35.
bedrooms, LR, kitchen. 2 baths. unattached Other features include equipped eal-in
kitchen, LR, 10x27 family room w/stone
garage and shed.
fireplace, gas heat and cent. air.
4 ACRES More or less. Harrison Twp. Call
tor details.
LOT FOR SALE - Morgan S1sters Rd. and
Cheatwood Wagner Rd. Call for details.
2.4 ACRE TRACT. COMMERCIAL SITE - '
.
Located on Upper Rt. 7 across lrom new EXCELLENT HOII£ FOR STARTERS - 3
shopping center.
· bedroom not .tar from HMC..Eat-m k1tc~en.
, l .R. bath, I car atuched garage. Vmyl
36.5 ACRES 11/1. CLAYTWP.- Frontaaeon s1dmg.
·
Friendly Ridge Rd. Old house on land. 1• 5 .... ES ll/l 1
Cr ,
· hS
$19 500
•· """
1onts o ymmes ee~
• ·
Bottom tiled. Tobacco base. $10.000.
YOU DES EWE TO OIN A HOI£ LIKE THI*
- Just oH St. Rt. 35. COnlll lot. Th1s hnm•
offars Uchen, Jenn Air tanae,IW(, double
-s, l1111ily room wrth FP, LR w/flreptece,
dinma room. fenced re1r patio, HP/cent.llir,
carpel
11111 carllltlclled

..-aae.

•••y

GET
FIOI TH£ HECTIC CITY
"'""
.
LIVIIG....Very nice .home locat~d 1n
Country Air estates ollen 311Rs, bath, eal·lfl
kitchen, I~W~g room. family room, giS
heat/cent. 111. KC school diSirict

J &amp;J

CAII~'S

•

APPEARANCES CAN BE DECEIVING - as you
will find wrth this starter home in Vinton on 1 acre
of land. 2 big bedrooms. bath, large living room,
eat-in k~chen, utilrty room. All. appliances stay.
Totally redone on inside and insulated 2 years ago.
Don't miss out by just driving by. Priced right tor
you to dress Up the outside at $26,500.
NIOj9
' MIDDLEPORT - Excellent starte1 home with ·
income lrom upstairs apartment. House needs a
little fixing up, but when you are finished, you can
srt on the big front porch and enjoy the 1i'ler view.
Priced at an affordable $25,000.
, N501
LIKE NEW - Brick and frame ranch has 3
bedrooms, I bath, family room wrth cathedral
ceiling. beautiful fireplace, above ground pool
with deck for only $49,900. •

«704
35 ACRES in HuntiniiOII Twp, Excellent for
remote hunting camp or hide-away. $25,000.

#112
CORNER LOT- in asubdivision close to town is a
definrte ,plus which provides your own space for
outdoor activrties. 3 bedrooms, large family room,
eat-in Uchen, front porch and deck. $41,900.
M09
VINTON - Older 2 story home in need of repair
but could be a beautiful home. 7 rooms and bath,
lull basement wrth shower, large metal buildinfl.
garden space, located on 0.7 acre directly across
from a new school. Priced at $29,000. Make an
• offer!
AFFORDABLE HOUSING Doesn't Have To 8t
Borin&amp; - This spotless 2 bed 1oom ranch has so
many special features rt will not be possible to l1st
them atll)l!le. But, here are alew- amaster surte
that is a real retreat, anew 97%efficient gas pulse
furnace wrth add·on heat pump, an above ground
swimming pool, art~t's studio or home office w~h
its own heating and ai1 conditioning system above
a2 car garage, 4.75 acres wrth frurt and nuttrees.
All this and more lor $60,000.
N509
COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING SITE - 1.2 acre lot
w~h appm. 220 tt.bl road frontage on Rt. 35.west
of tile cinema.
11505

w-.. S.vice. Swimming

, ............... -11. Ph. 8t424f.l215.

Real Estate Genaral

,..

Real Estate Ganaral

........

_

10 112 ft. cabo¥• eMnpw.
MAKE OFFER. C.H 114-387·

0124.

Tr• • ltump, IWRO'IIel. ,.,.,dgh.
lhlld&amp; ....... ,....

. . . . . g.

ez•ll•. rolodtndrena, ev.,

gr11n, trees . Don't
LM-Initt14-446--.

Sell your lawn mower and enjoy life more by moving
into a modern two-bedroom, two-bath, 1.012 sq. ft.
condominium. located within Gallipolis along
G11pe Street, one block from grocety sto11s and two
blocks from the business center. All elelctric witlf
modern heat pump. (Winter electric bills have been
under $60.00). $45.00 monthly maintenance fee.
Tax abatement program permits you to enjoy the
comfort of modern living and save those "extra dol·
Iars" lor your
Dishwashers and disposals
mall units.
or Russell Wood ( 446·
1066 for

r

•

AT ITS BEST at this
yr. old, 3 bedroom 1anch nestled on an
outstanding 8 aae lot on a good paved rllld JUst 5
miles from Holzer and 2'h mtles from U.S. 35,
Features include a large living room wrth
Andl!lsen bow window, a la1ge family kitchen,
bath has tub and separate shower, lots of closet~
plush carpeting and as neat and clean as a pin.
Thl!le is a separate overs~ed 2 car ga1agewith a3
workbench shop, a woodburner for heat plus a
2nd·story for hobbies, kids plil)'house or storaae.
The 8 acres is all clean, fenced pasture w~h a
·- small wooded area witll a·marked.hikin&amp; trllil lor
those who enjoy walking. This is a perfect place lo1
horses or a few beef cattle. There's a small barn
and a little chicken house. Owner is being
transferred ?pt of state and desires a quick sale.

A·l.
. tidy
on and on about
· · of th1s
bedroom home in town. Located on the river,~ has
all tile conveniences you're looking lor. Ml
appliances stay induding washer1and dryer. Full
basement. Well ~ndscaped lot., ~ntenance free.
Easy to heat. 1 car garage. $5\ 0.
,
226

Upholstery

remo-

OWNER WANTS TO SELLB~DLYINYESTIENT PROPERTY IN GAlliPOLIS
Brick business building wrth 2438 sq. ft. of space~····"·~·
on 2nd Ave. m Gallipolis. tor sale. Two l2) bedroom
menton 2nd tloor. Walk-in cooll!l on first floor. All·-··--,
present time, good steady income. Buy the building and
the rent pay lor it. II mterested give us a call.

THIS
YOUR DREAM HOllE Owners
tllis beautilul Cape Cod
style home
of TLC. Features include 3
BRs, 2 balhs, LR, eat-in kitchen, dinette, FR,
lull basement, 2 car garage, heat pump,
central an. Located in Mercl!lville area. Call
lor turthl!l details and appointment.

LET'S GO TO THE RIVER! - That's what
you'll be saying every day when you own this
beauty that fronts on the river. Living room
w/stone fireplace, cathedral ceilings, kit·
chen, dining. family room, rec. room, 3 balhs
and much more. Call todil)'.
•

Plumbing

8t Heating

Restored home, 11 rooms &amp; 2 baths.
In-ground pool. 1% acre lake, 2-car
garage. Barns. Acreage.
. 448-1269

514 Second Avenue
•
ll A:"fN\' HI.AC:K RURN Gallipolis, Ohio 4563:1
Brn!&lt;•·.r
{614) 446--0008 . --.

PRICE REDUCED' ~ If you have been
looking tor a home that will give you room lo
stretch out, this is it. Fealures in this home
are equipped kitchen, formal dinin&amp; den,
lovely living room with fireplace. dineMe.
balh, 3 BRs. The full basement is finished
and offers bath, laundry, roomy, attractive
family room.

82

FOR SALE - CHAROLAIS .HILLS

REALTY

PRICE REDUCED BY $17,000!!!- 73 acre
larm in Perry Township. Very nice home
offers 3 BRs, 2 baths. LR, krtchen, carpet,
electric heat. woodburningstove. Thl!le is a
40x60 ba1n, cellar house and several other
buildings included. Call for appointment.

87
Dlhrd W•• Service: Ppola.
Clot..,., Weill. DlliY""' A"''·
tl-. C.ll II 4-441-7404-No
~nd.. col II.

clollng compiOio. Colt &amp;14-441' 712~. '

Motors Homes
8t Campers

«214

f:

General Hauling

lllng. dry

tlec:lr~ll.

WHAT A PLACE!! Very well manicured lawn will ell
is nestled in a 1sllnd of malure pine trees
overlooking beautiful count1y view. A-frame home
indudes 4 bedrooms. 2 full baths, very nice living
~~om/dining area combination with fireplace. new
carpet throughout most area combination with
fireplace, new carpet throughout most qf home.
Also fealures large 3 garage. and 43 acres of
ground. Priced at $89,900 with all the acrea1e.

I

TRANQUILITY.... 6 acres, m/1, ovetloo~na
beautiful green valleys. This home is located
just south ol Rio Grande and features 4 BRs,
2 baths, LR-FR combo, kitchen, stone
fi1eplace. Very private.

85

PWMIINO
ANDHEATINO
Car. Fou"h •d Pin•
• ()Jtllpolo, Ohio
Fetty Tr.. TrtmrNng. .rump Phone 814-441-3111 .. 814, r - 1 . Colll04-17f.1331 .
441-4477.

BLACKBURN

YOU ALWAYS WANTED A BEAUTIFUL
HOllE ON FIRST AVENUE? - Make plans to
view this home which offers 2 baths. large LR
with lireplace and view of river. l ·shaped
kilchen, formal ently, FR. summer porch,
lovely lawn on river.
MAKE THIS YOUR CHANGE OF ADDRESSAttractive home just minutes from town
offers 1368 sq. ft., 3 BRs. 2 baths, eat-in
kitchen, dineMe, family room, living room,
laundry, calhedral ceil ings, fenced ya1d. Call
tor an appointment.
·

....... W, Va. 25110.

Me Co. ~ON EIIANS ENTE.R·
PIII8E8, Jockson. OH 1-1100137-1521.

Jim'• Ocht Job's. Sundedl:a.
oiling. oolnllng. 10ollng.
buMcln .. dol• wrwlc. Frw
OJti-11. Collet4-37f.2418

t•.

Mogle TOIICh

PointlngClM ut color your wortd. lnl:ertor-at8rior, C.M K., 304-t$.757237. Ill. t 1,. 10 A, Point

General '

•

A REAL CHARMER... l.87 acres. m/1, and an
attracttve country style home just acouple of
miles from HMC on Rt. 35. Features tnclude 3
01 4 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, D.R and FR,
lireplace, gas heat, 2 car garage. There IS a
30x30 barn and mobile home pad on
p1operty. Call tor more details.

11c1. eo~ 114-

RON'S Telwlalon Servin.
Hou• e• on RCA. Qua~r.
OE. SpJdollng In :r.nklt. Clll
304-571-2318 or 114-4482484.

mllll. Tilt. AM-FM c•aene,

CLEARENCE SPECIAL!
t 987 ChoYv Calollrlly e...... t9801ul'* Roell- 2do... IP~
Wll'lt«&lt;: Hand hewed log eebin port. t5,3915; 198701d1Cutl••
Coupe. Vll'i' -JI- All t""
or pott b•n. Call 81 ... 448- Cl .... 11.391, 1111 Ponti8C oquipnwd,
Y8 .,gina t119S.
114-112·8719.
'
7:sn=.= = = = = = = . Ieooo.
14.311:
1911
C.mwo.
5.311: 1115 Fa.d Tompo,
:
13.211: 198&amp; Dodge 800 SE.
Jllo: 1111 Vorl*
83
Livestock
fl411: 1984 llonaoM ~n-o. For
IJnclal. 31.000 ml•. 30411.411: 1111 Po,.lec ' T'"no 17f.430t.
Am. 11,91&amp;; tl71 Pontlec
Bonnaolt&amp; t1,215; 1879 Mu• 'T1 Dodae Mon.uo/ t700. 00.
Golllt for 111e. C.ll 614-261- IMg t1,018; 1111 Oldt Cut614.
tl-. tt.411: 1184Fa.dLTOI. """"" 3CI'4-89f.34tl.
W., 81.215. 8 • D MotON. 4
7ve• oldq'u .rterhortegeldlng. mH• North of ttolltf', Hi·W~~t t980C.m•o. Hop, 30SV-I, 4
tpee.d. 17,000 mil••·
UOO. Coiii14-992-M74.
180. Cltl 814-446-att&amp; .. 13,80000,
304-112-2737 ••.
I 14-446-8189.
1wi!:OOpm.
·
Good riding ho..O t Y"· old.
e300. Part Arl~., .,d plft 1977 .Mu•••n·r ao.soo
OJiltrt• Horn. Cllt 3014-8715- ·· miiJ0/1950. Cll lt4·4-tl· 1182 r-28 V-8, auto. laMed
7546.
Exc. Cond. 304-871-3111 · ·
4721 .. 8t4-448-2t17.

... .............~.a.;-.

.

'

1115 Ford EtCort. 43,000
ex:cellent eoncltlon. II liCk
w~h . . . lntorlo•. ueoo. Coli
114-28f.t3te mor 7p.m.

1982 - ..... LyM. 2 dr.. 4
.,.dltiOO ...... Coli ., ..

&gt;.~

OPEN SliNDAY

1970 Dodge 0.&lt;1 C.otom511.000 ..... mil• ..... good.
Or• worlltW. Oood condttion.
. .00. Coli 114-24f.5120 oft•
8 P.M.

.tt• 5 P.M .

1915Hondo Moello V-30. ._,
t.... 1200MI1•- Colt 114-2-f.
1:117 d.- lpm. or 114-24f.
1114.

.. ' .'

1978 CNioO A~ 211ft, mot ..
home. Air, gen.mar. CaM e14982-3t81.

m.._ tiiO.OD.goocl ooncl. c:lll

I04-17f.3511 ........

AotiiV or Clblo lool drllln,.

15 lt. Ol•ltron lkl-bollt with
treK•. ,II H.P. hauy &amp; Skit.
11100. COli 814-31f.ll54

1111 y.,aho XT 210. 3.000

75

1987 Dodpo ~- low miloooo. Ro• dot.OII AM/FM
e.Mittl •c. Cond. Alk lor
Vlddo. Coli 814-441-8179 ..
304-t71-44eo.

t981 Dldl Cud., Su,.wno.
Oood co.,...lon. Aoldng price.
t2000. C.II814-14:J.S30a

2415-5884.

11HMudoplall·up-wlh
A.C .. aoulll oo-.
AM.PM • . , . •d aun roof,
114-91Z.2112 or 114-tiZ.
1&amp;41 olt•lp.on.

1981 AM C llplr II. vory good
17,000 utual mil-.
u.ooo.oo. 304-91f.7871 of.
tw 5:00PM .

oand.

_.-. ' ..Ji4

.

.

LEADINGHAM REAl ESTATE
Phort1 446-7699 or 446-9539
to
almosl
A-lrame.
this property to

SUNDAY PUZZLER
Answers to Puzzler on Page D-4 '
1 Shy
6Fr11 Beat AC11'8811
1or "Two .
Women''
18 Attempt. to

overcome
21 Angry

22 Walks wllh
-.oredotepa
23-Giodden

24 StadiUm
25 Lad

211 Spce of ttme

28 Unadorned /
30 Strong wind
32 .Nick.. aymbol

33- gardl
34 Sc:had.-ebbr.

Nll7

·'

35Mllllary..td.

38 F1lly per cent
37 Vllllfal

38 Grain
o40 ln•.;lel"'r11""wl""nee
..
.2 Tltre&amp;-toed llolhl
43 Pllrtner
44 Garment

$47,500.

HANDSOIIE NEW LISTING -:- litO:::~
Houw on the St!Ht!- Drive up . 16
North Galli a High School, and see whal you
.
Very attractive bi·level wrth 13 acres. Th1s
beautiful 5 11edrooni home features an
outstanding krtchen. large fam~y and rec. roomarea, 2 fi1eplaces (one wrth Buck msert). mce
carpetin&amp; lo1mal dinmfl. oversiZed 2 car garage
and inground pool. Plenty ollrontageon Rt. 1.60 lo
m•intain your privacy or sell2 bu1ldmg lots 11 you
desire. Priced at $106,000. Look and see what you
think it's worth. The owne1 is moving out of state.

«106

WE DO ONE THING WELL ~
Aiul That's Selling liousesl
To save yourself time.
worry, effort and
, expense ... take
advantage of our
experience.
We're at your seNicel

GREEIIlWP. AC.~E - 10 acres wilh approx. ·
' hall 111 thole cleared end.ftlll. rem11nder wooded. r
·Cr11k runnin&amp; through p1operty. $16, 500.
';

11411

50 That woman
TIEAT YOUISELF AND -YOUR FAMILY TO A, BEAUTIFUL
HOME IN THE COUNTRY, CUSTQM FRAME HOME. ON 5
ACRES, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE. $68,000,

•i
' •·

LOTS FOI SALE II SU"IUST SUBDtVISIOI- 2 '_·,
lots side by side each ll6 K 177. Just oil Rt. 35 in '. ·'
qual~y nei&amp;hbolfiQOd. ElectriC and water on • •
property. $4,000 eapr. '
.
•
~

•

1202

.

/flj

· ACROSS THE STREET FROM FOOOlAND- Yeh!!
on 4th Avenue. $29,900. Walk anywhere
downtown from · this well-kept bungalow. New
vinyl sidinfl. storm window~ modern fo!Ced-air
gas furnace. This 2 bedroom home is in very good
coridition. Excellent for retirees, sint!les. new·
lyweds. Ownl!l in nursing home.

~

STOCII£0 1'010 II BACK YARD - WANT FISH FOR DIN·
NER. JUST THROW IN ~ LINE. FLOATING DOCK. OVER 2
ACRES WITH NICE 3BEOROOM HOME, COVERED PATIO, AT·
TACHED GARAGE, EQUIPPED KITCHEN, PLUS DETACHED 2
CAR GARAGE WITH WORKSHOP. THIS ~ROPERTY IS
LOCATED IN GREEN TWP., JUST 51; MILES FROM CITY. HAS
A LOT TO OFFER fOR $55,000. NEW ON THE MARKET!

r

SICK &amp; TIRED OF IEN_TifiG? - Get sllrted on ;
hollMIOwnenllip now with this 19812 bedroom, 2 ?
bath mobile home on 1.8 acres. This is a dean.
nicely deco11ted home wlh a ,large kitchen
featuring a buitt·in hutch. $21.500.

11!104

WHAT A BUY ""-1s IS! - With interest rates
• bumping up a little snd the cost of &amp;etling a new
loan, the loan assumption on this atlllciiVI
bi·level home looks even better. 3 bedroom home
on level lot includes I full and 2 hall baths. living
room, spacious eat-in kilchen and large family
· room wnh fireplace. 1 car garage, nice co~~e~!Jd
b~k porch and patio. Must n« overlook tllis one.
$46,900 is a bargain price.

N201

WHO COUlD ASK FOR AllnHIIIG 1011:1 Owner ·h• moved to Aorida and ctens 111 ,
immediate sale o( tllis oulstl~din1 r-and 10
acres. This 12 yr. old qualitY hoOIII h• 211111 sq. II.
olliving space whic:ll in dud• 4 lledro OlliS. f1111iy
room With woodbumer, hup II'IUJII IMI 11c.
room, wile appratll!d •-chen (allriln.. stay
atona willla pool table and JUnd'PianDI, larp
in wound poOL •otelluresan oultlandln&amp;401110
2-story eara&amp;t Tile 10 acres is a ftll to ..,tly
rolling mllldow loclted in tile city sthao! diltrict
near Rio G1ande on a stile hiilway. Not many like
this on today's marlill. $11(500.
·
.
\
' N101

114 ACI£5 WITH liVER FIOITME- Very few
·like this oubtandingl•m just S milts from town.
Appr011. 500 lett ol river frontageofl.nnl3or4of
the best homesift in the county.
on lhe
river. Plus 110 lcriS of hi~ land wllic:ll indlldes a
bta~liful rldp overloollina tile riwer 111d the Ohio
Valier. A
farm f)OIUI in lite . middle
sum1unded wtll wOIIII mtll• this ualillll in
lliHie Clunty. Golll 3 lledro om. I!! stary ~ome
wnh lonmsf dlnift&amp;. fireplace, new fumac:e. full
baement. 2 cer ....., t•p bin 111d tw.Cc0
blse. Owner will NOT Sell river konlllf MP~r~te
lrom the term.
. .

E. M. Wi11man, lrtk•r

'

.

lilt

eo Chtwcll bench
li2 Or-out
54 Damage
85 F...ncll llrtlcte
88 Running

117 Uncooked
118 Narrat81

98 Warmth
.98 lnaecta
100 Hoggard heroine

102~

103F

101 Cfolh ..-..-.
105 DtatriC1 In
• Germany

t08.Mika amends
108 Lamprey
109 Clk:lum symbol
110 Su.n god
111 Mix
112 Make ready

114 Pigpen
116 FOOIIIke part
embroidery hole

·120 Ill-hUmor
122 Sarcarn
124 Short IWim
125 Auction w&lt;ird
126 Folds
128 Fall behind

129 Merry
13~ Army rrieol

132 - Wee Herman
133 Mother of pearl
135 Dec;lare
1-40 'Mothers

t43 Hebrew mOI)th
144 Mine vein
145 Henry of bMeball
147 "- Dancing"

' 148 Be Ill
150 Famed
158 ,._ Heart"

85 Not one
1111 Abound
68 Tidy

Yoong hog
Jury Nat
Calm
Bef1e of comedy
Skein of wool
Type style
MOftllter
Need
Cui ~ort
Pl1
"Stormy - "
70 Perceptible by
lhe touch
71 Dllldose
73 Nagatlon
..,.
74 Care for
75 Woody plants
77'Crown
78 Narrow Olrlp
1
.~ yofwood
" 80 Protective
51
52
53
55
56
57
56
61
63
64
68

14t Ex11nC1
!Ughtless bird
142 Concerning

152 Forgive

64 Bteckblrd

49 Slrollw
50 At thlo place

138 Mllelheep
138 Church part ·

70 Pilch

82 "- WornM"

31 Tavern stock
36 Rabbit
37 William of
"Body Heat"
39 Bad
40 Retain
•1 Pintail duck
42 Eagles' nests
43 Planet
44 JunC1ure
46 Negative prefix
48 Animal coal

t19 Couple

71 Edge
72 11Cheefl.','·atar

74 Doctrtne '' .~ .
78 eon-.d to dog
77 " - R8dlo"
78 Mother ol Apollo
711·ROldtrnentary

29 Den

1p Small

t54 Pointless

158 Evaporalll
158 Questionable
1110 Heavy volumee
181 Repast• .

DOWN
1 hallan

'

rtvw

2 Lampoon

3 Prod..- Elaine

3 STORY COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING LOCATED ON OOURT
STREET, DOWNTOWN GAI.LIPOUS. FIRST FLOOR PRE·
SENTLY RENTED. UPPER 2 STORIES WOULD MAKE EXCEL·
LENT RENTAL.
COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING LOCATED ON IT. 71N ~H
FIC AREA. SUIT~BLE FOR ONE 0~20_!~SFINU~'CE. CENAPPROVEI) MASONRY STRUCT un•, """ """ ,
TRAI. AIR CQND., INSULATED UnUTY BILLS ARE LOW.
PRICEO BELOW REPLACEMENT COST. JUST LISTED!
HAIDIIAII£ STOlE - COMPLETE WITH INVENll!!!.Y,~
EQUIPMENT AND REAL ESTAT£. ESTABliSHED BL~IS.t.:~:~IF
LOCATED AT COURT AND THIRD DOWNTOWN GAL ,..,.,
YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING fOR AGOOD INVESNENT, CALL

SOONI

'

l.ONtie MoDade, 448-712•

·oavkl Wileman,
· 8. J. lfefmon. 441-4240

Phylfe Miler, 441·8~8

'

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.,

ANY HOUR
.... j

..

'd~dl

81 Affirmative
83 Pennn.

J{lt{[

'

(614) 446-3644

51 Steepleo
54 Prophet .
55 Mo. Wlnnlncjham
56 Warmed
59 "Barney MNiet"

94 VIctoriOUS

COlA IIODUY lOAD - VERY NICE AREA. PLEASANT
DRIVE THROUGH THE COUNTRYSIDE FROM CITY. 3 BEDROOM RANCH, ALUM. SIDING, ATTACHED GARAilE, ONE .
ACRE LOT. Nf.WLY PAINTED LIVING ROOM1 .~P,V TILE IN
KITCHEN, NICE DECORATING THROUGnuuT HOME.
$39,900. SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOLS.
•

''

·11H .

Wisema·n·Real Estati ~. ;.,

5 YEAR OlD CAPE COO, 3 BEllROOMS. 2 BATHS, PUllMAN
STYLE KITCHEN EOUIPPED WITH RANGE AND REFRIG.,
LARGE.fORMAL Dflil!IG AND LMNG ROOMS, FUU BASE·
MENT, ATTACHED 2 CAR GARGE. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
AND THE HEATING AND AIR OOND. BILLS ARE VERY LOW.
LARGE LEVEL LAWN, GREAT LOCATION, KYGER CREtK
:SCHOOLS. $7tlJOO BUYS THIS BEAUUFUL PROPERTY!
$&amp;1.000 - -FIVE ACRES- QUAlm BUilT 3 BEDROOI, 2
BATH HOME HAS SOUD FIR SIDING, CENTRAL AIR OOND.,
ESUIPPED KITCHEN HAS OAK CABINETS, SNACK BAR,.CAR·
P RT PLUS 2 CAR GARAGE. CITY SCHOOLS. GREAT tOCA·
liON FOR YOUR ~ILY THIS SUMMER!
BRICK UNCH RANCH IN GREEI TWP. JUST MINUTES
FROM CITY, 3 BEDROOMS. 1~; BATHS, LARGE KITCHEN
DINING AREA WITH SNACK BAR. RANGE AND REFRIG.•.
BEAUTIFUL FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM WITH INSf.RT,
lARGE LEVEL LAWN WITH PRIVACY FENCED BACK YARD.
JUST LISTED! $53,000
PI£TTY 3 IEDIODII IAIICH WITH ATTACHED GARAGE
CENTRAL AIR COND. LOW COST GAS HEAl~ AND EVEN AT
THE LOW LIST PRICE OF $45,000 THE WASHtA AND DRYER
RANGE AND REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER ARE IIIQ.UOEii!
LOCAT£0 ON JAY DRIVE, JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM
HOLZER HOSPITAL

ri_.

-ne

..

LOAI ASSUIPTIOI IIAY BE ,OSSIBLE ON THIS HOllE - .
2 STORY FRAME, liAS 3 BEDROOMS, BASEM(NT, DECK,
'BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS. KYGER CREEK
SCHOOLS. $35,000.

'

.,

'"e.esa&amp;

•&amp;Contend
47•a·tage
49 Peel

11!107

4 That thing
5Condensed
molalure
6 Entllu!liaam
7 Mooth parts
8 High card
9 Tellurium symbol
10 "The alxlh aenae"
11 Jumps
12 Mlxlure
13 Kuroeawa fllm
14 Spielberg allen
15 Nullify
18 Leg part
17 Native melal
18 Hebrew letter
19 Boredom
20 Susan - James
27 Chicken

89 Surfeit
90 Group ollhree
92 Composition

,,

84 Transponed
with dallght
87 Title of reapeet
89 Two-year-old
sal mona
90 At lhat place
91 Kind of'lool
race
92 Rend
93 "Little - of

Horrors"

-'
•

95 Rubber treas
96 Keener
97 Plague
99 Badger
101 Empower
105 Walk
106 Dry
107 Great Lake
1t1 Skidded
1 12 Cronietl; colloq.

113 Verve
1 15 Ivy League
unlv8f'llty

1 16 "The Threa
Little_ ..

118 Kind of chee•e
Attllude
Loouly woven
cotton
Tantalum
symbol
125 Cuts
126 Mexican currency
127 Talllea
129 - Ole Opry '
130- Day
131 Insane
132 Social galherlng
134 Rodent
136 Fairy In "Tho
Tampeot"
137 Shout•
139 Bows
140 Servant
144 Remick of film
145 Ora. org.
1461na8ctegg
147 ObetruC1
148
potato
149 Mohammedan

1 19
t21
·
123

s-1

leader
151 Agave plant
153 Humperdlnck ID

155 Negative
157 Noon aymbol

•

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Pilge-D-8-Sunday 1imes-Sentinel

-

.

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

Municipal court------·---.....-..
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth L. speeding were: William P. Grlf·
Mannon, 31, Rt. 5, Gallipolis, was tlth, 25, Canal Winchester, Ohio,
fined $500 and costs Friday In $47: Amy S. Rayos, 36, 12 State
GalUpolls Municipal Court on a St., GaiUpoUs, $45;
charge of driving under the
Samuel A. Thurman, 67, HunInfluence. He also received a tington, W.Va., and Kenneth
~0-day jail sentence and a 180-day
Clarke, 38, Cincinnati, both $44;
license suspension.
Robert M. Frazier, II, 20,
Man non also was fined $100 and Richwood, W.Va., am! Steven P.
costs lor no operator's license.
Birchall, 24, Columbus, Ohio,
He received a suspended sill· both $43;
month jail sentence and was ·
Deborah J. Davl$, 30, Middleplaced on slx months probation.
port, Wllltam D. McPherson, 26,
Ashan B. Givens, 22, ColumSophia, N.C., and Joseph W.
bus, also was fined $100 and costs
Foreman, 29, Groveport. Ohio,
lor no operator's license; handed
all $42;
a 'Suspended slx-,month jail sent·
David B. Ikovtcli, 29, Galthers,
ence and placed -on six months
burg, Md. , $41; Jon B. Walta, 28,
probation.
Bryan, Ohio, Michael L. Little,
37, Rt. 2, VInton, and James W.
Forf~IUng bonds on charges of
Needham. 61, Greensboro. N.C.,
. .

•

April 30, 1989

both $39.
Forfeiting $41 boilds on other
traffic vtoljitlo111 were Matthew
I. Palmer, -20, Sprtngfleld, Ohio,
failure to maintain control; Johll
F. Buttrick, 38, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
Mark W. Hatfelt, 22, Rt. 3,
Bidwell, and Arthur C. Brooks,
85, Rt. 2, tlldwell, allforfal'ure to
yield the· right ot W¥-Y: Anthony
W. Jacobs; 27, ESR, Ga!Upolll
and Ernest W. Jacobs, ESR,
GaiUpoU~, both for window tin~
violations.
r,
Charges of bot wear!ng ll seat
belt were dismissed : agalns'l
Robert I P. Hatfield, 20, fll. '1~
Rutland; Ohio, ·and Ernest
Stump; 65, 450 Flamingo Drive,
Ga!Upolls, both viewed a film 011
seat 11!!11 safety.

F&amp;rm/ Business

1!itntt- ientind
•

E

April 30, 1989

Gallipolis f¥ A takes part .
in livestock judging contest
GALLIPOLIS - Three
memberS 9f the Gallipolis FFA
Chapter competed In the recent
State FFA General Livestock
Judging Conies~ at Ohio State
University.
Competing were: Matt ·
Church, Jim Baughman, and
Eric Lesler. Approlltmately 170
other teams from across Ohio
participated.
The general livestock Judging

Weather
By United Press International
South Central Ohio
,
Sunday. partly cloudy. High in
.
.;
the mid 70s. West winds 10 to 15
place, son of Mr. and · Mrs. Frank ~hoemaker,
~
POSTER WINNERS - Winners In the Gallia
mph , Chance of rain 20 percent.
County Utter Control Program Poster Contest
fourtll grader at Cheshlre-Kyrer Elementary.
Sunday night, Increasing
• were (left to right) Kelly Atkinson, lied for third
cloudiness. Low near 50. ·,
The posters will be used for promoUo~ purposes
place, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. RAin Atkinson, a- by the IIIIer control program. All other entries will
Monday, mostly cloudy. High
sixth grader at Green Elementary; Jeremy
be displayed In local busm-. (Times.SenUnel
70 to )5. Chance of rain 40
percent,
Woolf, second place winner, son of Mr. and Mrs. • photo)
Robert Woolf, sixth grader at Washington
Extended Forecast
Elementary; and Ralph Shoemaker,lled for third
Tuesday through T!lul'l!day
Fair with highs In the i!Os
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday
and between 55 and 65
Friday Admissions; .Charles
Wednesday
and Thursday. The.
Blake, Pomeroy; Sara McCarty,
low
will
be
In
lit!! 30s Tuesday and
Middleport.
Discharged: Carol . Rhodes . . between 3.5 to 45 Wednesday and
Thursday.
John Metzger, Carolee Batley.

Section

contest Is an educational activity production.
The Gallipolis team. members
designated as a practlcal'rnethod
of teaching students to recognize were selected to represent the
quality meat production antm· chapter based upon their scores
als. The skills vocational agricul- at a general · uvestock judging
ture students should learn In contest held recently at the
judging general livestock makes Fayette County Fairgrounds In
them better livestock producers Washington C.H. Other Gallipoand consumers by giving them lis members Included Eric
practical ellperlence In tdentlty- Kemper, Denver Garber, and
lng and understanding c!larac- · Jeff Provens.
tertstlcs that affect quality meat

.

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l

Hospital news

·NOTICE.

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i·
"'

RAZING ~ERWAY - ll,pbert GUienwate"
IUid '·&amp;Jna, GaiUpolil, 'bePII tearlntr ,de~wn the
home tol'lilerl' owned b:t: the U. A. Corbett family
oiJ ·tlle~biUC!koltillniAvenlll!laatwee'ktomalie
, Jor Olllo Val.., BIPii~• propo~d new t~t

'

•

:: TOP WINNER- Jason Dunlap, (right) son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
• Dunlap, was the winner of the Gallla County Utter Control
~-; Program Poster Contest. Ohio Valley Bank will sponsor putlln~t
~ Jason's picture up on the billboard on Eastern Avenue, across
!_ from The Steak House, In May. Pictured with Jason, a sixth grader
! at Southwestern Elementary, Is Bill Gray of OVB. (Times-Sentinel
•. photo)
~

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~

t

GALLIPOLIS Brian K.
.• Newell, 20, Rt. 1. Gallipolls, was
i Injured and treated at the scene
~ after an accident at 4:06 p.m. ·
Friday on SR 7 at the entrance
ramp to US 35 at the Silver
. Bridge. ,
~- The State Highway Patrol said
1- the accident occurred when
l Doris D. Duncan. 20, Point
~ Pleasant, W.Va. , headed north.
:t attempted to make a left turn
~ onto the bridge and colllcted with
~ the southbound Newell &lt;:_ar.
~· There was moderate damage to
{ the Newell vehicle and m inor
:; damage to the Duncan car.
~ Newell sufler~d a minor visible
't' Injury and was treated at the
} scene by the Galli~ County
..: Emergency Medical Ser vices.
The· patrol cited Duncan for
•

l

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:1,

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failure to yjeld the right of way.
No one was injured when cars
driven .by Mary J . Hodge, 22, Rt.
2, Gallipolis, arid Shannon D.
Bevins, 16, 2018'1, Eastern Ave.,
GaiUpolis, sidedswlped at the
end of a one-lane on Clay Chapel
Road. 0.3 miles south of Bear Run
Road.
Damage was minor to the
Hodge Vehicle and moderate to
the Bevins car. There was no
citation.
Water on the road was blamed
for an accident at 2:50 p.m.
Friday on SR 325, 0.3 miles south
of mile post 8. near Rio Grande.
Troopers said DottieL. McCiel·
land. 28, Rt. 2, Vinton, drove
through water, lost control, and
her pickup truck slid of! the road,
striking an embankment. Damage was moderate. There was no
citation.

Public Notice

,~

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(Continued from Page 0-21
six county district .
•2.00 - per ton on all
waste genef""ed outaide the
di•trk:t but within the State
of Ohio.
·•3.00 • P8f ton on all
wuta generated outside the
SUitt of Ohio .
For more

information,

please contact Mayor Sara
Hendricker, President of the

Solid · Wooto Management
Polley Committee. Athens
City BuHding. Athena, Ohio

45701 1614) 692-3338.
All'il 30

.......

*· ~

I
.'1:~4.·,.,

and l)perations center, a two-story facility to be
conatructed adjacent to the bank' a main office. An
addltto,nal 15 parkln!t lots will be available when ·
·
_the project Is completed.
..
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' ~.

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••'

VO·AG II PARTICIPANTS- Pictured above
are members of lhe Vo A!t II claas at Gallla
Academy
School wbo participated In a

':x

~as~;~~~:~

was

l!i'alid prize

·

week

daughter

em.ploy~s . are

ALHANY ·, -

Tile following

emp\Oyees frOill Gallla County
11re tieing recognized tor their
rears of service at _Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
this mont~:
11 YEARS
Roger· D. Jackson, longwall
machine operator at the Meigs
No. 2 mine. Jackson resides In
aldwell w,ltll his wife, Carolyn,
and daughters, Sherr!, Michelle,
and Heather .
Charles S.

...

an4

be

recognized ·

American
_
Law in Maryland.
will be gl3d~g .

utllltyman at the ' Meigs No. 1
rrilne . .Keeton resides in VInton
with· his "ooiife, .Diana, C\&amp;ughter, Carolma S~ Umvemty as_1\1_1
Nikki, and son, Brian.
.
dustnal EnRmeer on Mav 6.
Raymond C. Llevlng mine
51 Foodl(lllds throughout West
superintendent at the Meigs No.2 "'V.irpnia, .O.hio, K~ntucky and Vrrmine. Llevlng resides In Bidwell gmta paructpated tn the Mononpoly
with his wife, Vlkkl. and child· Game which ran for two sessions.of
ren, Carla, Brian, and Brooke.
13 weeks each. In addition to tne
Michael D. Massey, diesel grand prize, prizes included a Ford
mechanic at the Meigs No. I Bronko which was given away
mine. Massey resides In Patriot three weeks ago, cash awards from
with his wife, Lo(l, and daughter, $5 to $5000 and product prizes.
Shaya.

V()-AG I PARTICIPANTS - Pictured above
are members of the Vo Atr I cius at GaiUa
Academy High School who recenlly represented

'I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)-Farm researchers have come up
With another use for discarded
newspaper, which could prove
tmportan t since other nations are
not buying as much as they used
to.
Used newspaper Is being tested
by Ohio State University as
bedding for farm animals, In a
study that Include horses, cows,
pigs, sheep and turkeys .
•'Several sizes of shredded
newspaper are being tested as
antmal bedding," says Joe HelmItch, study leader. "Newspaper
shredded In 3·1nch by 5-lnch
rectanates seems to work best.
This size breaks down quickly
and moves through farm-waste
systems rapidly.
Longer and lhlnner shreds of
newspaper
caleb on animal
· ,GRAND PIDZ, ;.Da\lld
center, won tbe lf&amp;nd ptlze ol$151 000 in Ute Foodlalld Monopoly
hooves
and
clog la&amp;QOn·type
Game. Oo tht,IWt are Director of
Brent Easllllan ilnd Polnt.Pieasant Foodland Ston Manager Joe
farm-waste systems, Heimlich
Cal;:.~ tilt ,.._ are Bob Eastman, owner and pner•l manager· or Foodland; Steve Ferrell, a
says.
They also SPI'f!ad out thinly
rep
!Vt oiW'etdran, a Foodland suppUer; and Dlfector Operations Larry Howard. ,
when
an animal tries to lay down
)
and they're hard to shovel.
Smaller shreds qulc,!dy become
dusty.
Mortgage rates mixed
Animals In thestudytendednot
to graze on tbe paper unless It
WASHINGTON IUPI)- Rates ended up In their feed, Heimlich
GACLIPOLIS - With the exWhile the rtse In short term
for
30-year, fixed mortgages rose says. And ink didn't appear to
ception of tbe past week, short Interest rates has been quite
0.04 percentage points this week rub off on lamb's wool.
lerm Interest ratea ...ve risen rapid, the pace of tile climb has
wlilte adjustable-rate mortgages
sharply over
bel!n slowing, lndlcatln&amp; the
But HelmllclJ Isn't ready to
felt
0,0~ percentaae ' polnts, the
rrlQnths.
recommend shredded news·
potential for an 111termedlate
, Federal Home Loan Mortgage paper above straw aa bedding.
·The ra
peaJ&lt;, at least.
,
Corp. said Friday.
climb In
We have long maintained that
"Straw II stUl the choke of
The agency, which buys mort- most farm operators.)! lnaulatea
term lnte
a ·tlat yield curve WI\S one of the
gages from lenders and pack··
~portant Ingredients newell and most farming ·~
rates ~n·~~
ages
them as secul'tlles for sale are dealped for lt," he
by
;;.
.·lii!tlaly to slow the rate of
to Investors, said Interest on ''Sbreddecl newapaper Ia a COOd
moves to sloW
eeoiiOilllc expanalon. . ·
fixed-rate
loans rose to 11.03. alternative If straw ltll't' avalla·
the overall
The topping proce~s for the 13
percenl
ihll
week from 10.99 ble. Fann~u cqllld alao mix the
of economic.
week rate of change In Treasury
unnoticed by the
BUll ·may suggest' that ()Ur . percent the w&lt;-'ek before. two types or beddiJli...:
Adjustable-rate mortgages averpublic.
forecast for a first quarter peak
Positive qualltls of newsaged 9.:18 percent, down from 9.41 paper are that lt'a Jnnpenalve
Individual lnves tors ~Jaw pur1ft ln~t ratell'\BY lie realized.
last week.
chased U.S. Treasury Btl._,ln
However. It Is quite p()SIIble that
and make deelleat llllulallon,
The filled-rate average Is for a Helmllcb 11)'1. llowwver, the
-tartte amount and have In~
thll peak could be testell as we
3()-year loan covertaa 80 percent study shows abrtddlld new•·
tecord amounts In money
approach mkl-year. I
market ftn1ds. J\11 )'ltldl ap(Mt. Evans Is an Investment of a home's cost. The average paper hat~ ..,.,tiona.
JII'IlllCh double diJ(ts, the couuBroker for The Ohio 1mpany In adjustable-rate mortgage also Is
"It lelldiiWI bt llloMllr¥ wind,"
for
30
years
bpt
tor
75
percent
of
itler Ia. optlag to la&amp;:reaae his
Heimlich
..,.. ,,t aiiO' decom·
their Gallipolis office.{ ·
the home price.
·ovlng, rdller than spend.
~ tuter thq lll'IW, ape-

I

Money Ideas

General and Gynecological Surgery
8eeiD8 patient•
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. • 5 p.m.
Suite 211, PYB Medical Of!lce BUUdiDJ

(304) 675·1460

PLIASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tlte family of profeu~

,
'

Polnl Plu•a'llt, W.Va. IIIlO

the FFA chapter In a teneralllvestock judging
conteet held In Fayette County. They are: (L-R)
Jim Baughman, Eric Kemper, and Eric Lelller.

Newspapers good animal beddmg

or

Dr. Jack M. Levine

seneral livestock Jud!tlnt contest held In Fayette
Count,. They are:· (L·R) Jeff Provens, Denver .
Garber, and Matt Church.

O'Neal cops $25,000 !~~~Ro!!ri~

.

iGallipolis man injured

...

•

. ' LYNNE HOPKINS

-

li' • .,

GALLIPOLIS - Lynne Hop- to make this announcement.
ktns has be~n named General Lynne has been an outstanding
Manager of Paul Davies Jewel· member of our staff for many
ers, Inc., of Gallipolis, according years. She ts'elltremely capable
to President Dal) Davies. Shewm of maintaining the stor11' s reputaassume her l)ew dulles May 1.
llon for otfertng quality mer}lopklns, , who has been em· chandlse and outstanding ser, pjoyed by th~flrm tor lhe past13 ;, vlce.lt lsflttlngthat she assumes
years, will oe responsible for her new responsibilities as we
operation, purchasing, and sales.
begin celebrating our 43rd annt·
versary of serving' the Ohio
'.She ls a 1978 graduate of Gallla
AcadeD)y ~Ugh School, has atValley.Ihopethatourcustomers
tended Rio Grande College, aild
will share In ,the joy of her
has received tralntn~ from the
promotion. _
Gemological Institute of AmerHopkins and her husband,
lea, In Santa Monica, California. " Tom, reside In Gallipolis.
Davies stated, am delighted

WILL REMAIN IN HIS
OFFICE UNTIL SATURDAY,
MAY 20, 1989.

'~l ..\•110·..... --~---&lt;.,.

.

·Davies as general manager

•

J

, .... .~- - ~,_~·
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'Jr"" . .~ ~

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Lynnie Hopkfus·,to succeed

Dr. Rankin ·R. Pickens, D.O.
• •

f

Short ten:it interest rates

NY•·

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4.

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clally after It becomes wet.
Sh!'e11ded newspaper doesn't
took good In animal stalls and It
gives farm fields an unattractive
look when It's spread with
manure as a fertilizer. "
This Is Important on some
farms, such 'as those that raise
horses. where aesthetics play an
Important role with clientele. '
More commercial newspaper
shredding machines mu.st be
made available If this use of
newspaper IS to Increase, Helm·
Itch says. Machines that chop
straw can be modified to cut
newspaper. Their ellpanded use
Is being ellamlned In the study.
Using discarded newspaper as
animal bedding would be a good
way to make up for some of the
reduced demand by foreign coun-

tries for recycled U.S. newspaper, Heimlich says. Foreign
countries buy It to meet their
paper needs, but there's currently a newsprint glu.t. Some
newspaper being collected for
recycling Is actually going to
1andfllls.
The study Is In Its sixth month.
It has been conducted on commercial fanrui and at Ohio State
fadllttes. Financing comes from
the Division of Utter Prevention
and Recycling In the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Standard newspaper Inks are
not considered toxic, according
to standards of the Occupational
Safety and Health ,Administration. Ink type varies greatly
among newspapers, but previous
studies show animals have no
adverse reaction to the Inks.

Meigs employees are rec08flized
ALBANY, Ohio - The follow· Judy; and daughter, Amy.
Bernard J. Might, roof bolter
lng employees from Meigs
County are being recognized for operator at the Meigs No.1 mine.
their years of service at Southern Might realdes In Pomeroy with
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs his wife, Sherr!,
Robert L. Reeves, assistant
Division this month:
general mine supervisor at the
UYEARS
.Gary R. Acree, mobil!! equip- Melp No.2 mine. Reeves resides
ment operator at the Meigs No. 1 In Chester.
Rudy A. Stewart, welder first
mille. ~ree resides In Middleport with his wife, Roberta, and ctau at the Melp No. 1 mine.
Steward res Ides In Middleport
sons, Jeffery and (;ary Lee.
Ferrell W. Day, mechanic at with his w1fe, Rollalyn, and has
the Melp No. 1 mine, Day two children, Robyn and Rodnl!)',
and two atep-chlldren, Shannon
reslds ID Rutland with hll wife,
and Brett .
Patricia.
10YEAR8
Tbomaa M. Drake, diesel meDebra L. Pierce; clerk at tbe
chanic at the Melp No. 1 mine.
Dralle realclea In Racllll! wltll bla
No. l mine. Pierce reald6
tn Dexter With her. 1011, Juon.
wife, Debra, llld d•upters.
Chrllty and Jamie.
Ga•dll
Jaclt W. HallY, plant meCOLUMBUS. Ohio (UPll chanic at the
No. 1 mJDe.
HaaY realdlt Ill. Pomlroy wltll Tile Allrtlibula·Oe~
. 111111
Ilia wife. Janice, alld !laulhlfra, ud ~p~oyment
ud -.. Delaware
Deana• llld Alicia.
Jlavt . bHII aQrdfd
FrUit H. Kral&amp;tter, lllfdWIIc
arants
tO.- tile Jobl for
at tbt!Mefpl'fo.1!ftlne.Kratrt•
011t11
raau.tes
PJ'OIJ'&amp;m.
reallltiiD PomeroY wlfllltll wlft,

Me'-

Me'-

awarded

�Aplt 30. 1989
Page E-2-Sundey llmee-Sentlnel

•

·New relief from razor bum
HOUSTON (UPI) - A derma·
.tologlst who Is one of 10.8 million
men In the United States who
suffer from a skin condition that
causes razor bum and bumps
after shaving bas developed a
system that makes the dally
shaving rltuai Jess painful.
Dr. Milton Moore suffers from
Pseudofolllculltls Barbae
(P.F.B.) , a skin condition that
affects 15 percent of all males. He
hu developed the "Moore Tech·
nlque Shaving System," which
br lngs the skin condition under
control.
,
"I needed some help of my
own," said Moore, 35, originally
from New Orleans. '1 was
suffering from a condition that no
one could do anything about. I
wu not able to shave, but being
In the profession I am In, a beard
Is somewhat acceptable. Stnl, I
prefered to be clean-shaven·and I
know there are others who have
to shave and might suffer rldlc·
ule because they are not .c lean-

shaven."
The problem can be so severe
that people with P .F .B. can end
up with small cuts on the areas
they have sha~ed .
"It affects all men, but with
black men Is a · more serious
condltlon, " Moore said. "P .F.B .
Is actually a medical condition,
not just a cosmetic problem."
About 65 ·J;ll!rcent of all black
men, or about 6.5 mUllan men,
suffer from P.F.B., with 40
percent of those chronic suffer·
ers, Moore said. Among whites,
15 percent are afflicted, with as
many as 8 percent chroniC'
sufferers.
"Most black men have It
because their hair Is coarser,
thiCker and curiter," Moore said.
•Their hair curls up and grows
bl\ck ln. That Is followed by
Irritation and little red bumps
where . the hair Is trapped. It
does11't start out as an Infection,
but bacteria can form and II
(pimple) eventually ruptures.
"The couar Is the biggest
problem
area. because of the
.

angle," he said. "I couldn' t even
button my collar after 1having, It
wu that bad."
There wu no treatment for
P.F.B. and shaving powder recommended by d~tor. Irritated
hll •kin, Moore said.
•'I really don't know why more
study had not been doae," he
said. •'Maybe there was juat not
enough Interest,, but thll piqUes
enough people. There !l!'e a lot of
skin conditions that really don't
have anything that works very
well In treating them."
·
So he developed a pre-shave
lotion that !!Oiks the akin and
softens the hair, producing a
closer shave while reducing the
number of skin cells taken off.
That also cut down chances the
hair would penetrate back Into
the skin.
''My own problem started to
get a little better." Moore said.
"I modified It .some more and
once It cleared on my skin, I
started giving It to 400 of my
patients. About 98 to 99 percent
showed remarkable Improvement and said It wu much better
than anything theY used before. ••
Moore bas added a special
patented tool that lifts trapped
and Ingrown .hairs so they can be
shaved off at the surface, and two
special creams, one to treat
lnfiammatlon, Irritation and
Itching, apd theothertomakethe
skin smoother.
Moore . has found that with
continued use, the Moore Technique Shaving System can bring
P.F: .B. under control and make
shaving less lrrlta ble to the skin.
He found no side ef1ects to the
product and use of the system
does not make shaving more
time consuming.
Moore said It Is Important to
shave with the same stroke.
The system can also be used by
women and has been featured In
several women's magazines,
Moore said. ·
The system Is designed to work
best with a razor, but can be used
with en electric shaver, said

Moore, and an extra·atrenllh
formula II available through
dermatokl(lltl.
The product went on the
market two years ago and has
been a auccesa, ea!M!Ctally atnce
the mU!tary took an Interest.
MQore wu Invited to teat bll
product on eight mWtary bues
and received aucli tremendous
respoue that the Moore Tecb·
nlque Shaving System Ia avail&amp;·
ble to all Army and Air Force
personnel. with ·plans to expand
to other branches.
About ~.000 units have been
sold, and Moore reported about
tn gross ~alee 1ut year.
He expects to surpass 11 mUllon
worth of buslneu over the ne~t
year.
The system comes In two sizes:
a trlel travel abe that retails tor
$6.95 and a two-week supply that
coall $15.95. The ' package also
Includes a razor. •
,
The product Is produced on the
Weet.C out, butf!nll assembly Is
ai a plant In Houston.
"It bu really expanded, far
beyond my expectations," Moore
said. "It really Slll'PI'IIed me that
It would gain such tu t recognl·
tlon.lt lmpactedmesomuchthat
my medical practiCe Is taking a
' back seat."

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Fam·
lly planning groups Friday
hailed, an advisory committee's
recommendation that the Food
and Drug Adlnlnlstratlon ap·
prove a long-lasting, Implantable
birth control device.
By a unanimous vote, an FDA
advisory panel Thursday urged
the government to approve Nor·
plant, a device consisting of six
rubber capsules containing the
same hormone used In many
birth control pills. When the
match-sized capsules are lm·
planted under the skin of a
woman's upper arm, they gradu·
ally release low doses of the
hormone, protecting the woman
from pregnancy for up 10 five
years.
In making Its recommenda·
lion, the 11-member advisory
panel said studies of more than
55,000 wotnen In 44 countries
Indicate Norplant Is as effective
and at' least as safe as birth
control pUis.
The contraceptive implants,
developed by the non-profit Population Council. . are alreadly
approved .for use in a dozen

uoo.ooo

countries. .
the lmpJan!sL said It has a greed bu t expects it to be "very
Sandra Waldman, a s pokeswo·
to marke t Norpla nt ln the United reasonable" compared to the
·
man for Population Council, said States.
cost of five years of birth control
An FDA spokeswoman said If pills.
about 355,000 wome n worldwide
are using 'Norpla nt. Waldman the agency agrees with the
Jeannie Rosoff, president of
advisory pa nel's recommenda·
said the Implants can be reAlan Gu ttmac her Insltutu te, a
moved at any time by a minor lions Norpla nt could be approved non-profit reproductive health
surgical process. and the effect " wit hin a year."
group based In New York, said
The hormone-laden capsules she was particularlly encour·
of the contraceptive wears off In
are inserted under th e skin of the aged by Wyeth's decision to
two days.
· Women who discontinue Nor· upper arm thr ough an Injection· mar ket Norplan t.
like surgical method done under
plant " bestime pregnant a s r~·
" Ma ny U.S. drug man ufacturpldly as women who have never local a nesthesia. The ca psules er s really d ropped ou t of J?roducused contraceptives, " Waldman usually a r e not visible, but can be ing even cont r aceptives known to
felt underneath the skin.
said.
be safe and effective because
Nor plant Is not recommended
Studies presented .to the panel they don't want to bother."
for use In women who smoke, due showed the major drawback to Rosoff said.
to .the possible link betwee n Norplan't Is Its tendency to cause
The family pla nning expert
contraceptive hormones and car- irregular · menstrual bleeding. safd s he did not know how many
diovascular. problems In smok· Other side effects Include head· of the (i() million U.S. women of
ers, she said. She also noted tha t . ac hes, weight changes. skin child -bearing age would opt to
Norplant's contraceptive effect rashes and nervousness.
use Norpla nt if it is approved.
may not last as long In women
About 20 percent to 25 percent
" It would seem to me to be a
weighing more than 154 pounds, of women who received lm· good method for wome n who
and heavier females should get pmlimts had them removed don't wa nt to get pregnant for a
new Implants E:Very three years. before their five years of effec- long time," Rosoff said. But she
In a move Important to making tiveness was over due to such ques tioned if J?eople who ar e
the drug widely available to side effects, the panel was told.
sqeam lsh about shots or those
David J . Andrews, executive who are cautious a bout using
Americans, Wyelh·Ayerst La·
bonitorles of Philadelphia, the vice president of Planned Par- hormones would choose the ·
drug firm that makes levonor· enthood Federation of America, method.
gestrel - the hormone used in , said he was " delighted" with the
advisory panel's s upport . of
Norplant.
"At a time, when people In the
United States have fewer contra·
ceptive options available to
them. this Is realty good news,"
Andrews said.
Andrews said he has not heard
Prosecutor Dan Rizzo said
how
much Norplant would cost
tests showed the half-gram of
powder was cocaine. Hayes was
arrested Wednesday , char ged
Mini-series drama
with possession of cocaine and
held In Harris County J ail in lieu
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - "I
of a $5,000 bond.
Know My ·First Name ls
During a brief court hearing
Steven" Is the title for a
Thursday, state District Judge · two-part JIIBC·TV mini-series
AM/FM
Ted Poe asked the prosecutor,
relating the true story of
'•Are you sure this Isn't delivery
.Steven Stayner, kidnapped al
of €ocalne. Mr. Rizzo?"
age seven and reunited with
Unamused, Ha yes · stared
his family seven years later.
ahead stoically and said nothing.

•

HOUSTON iUPii - Wilson
Hayes watched helplessly as his
freedom went down the tube
because he Inadvertently in·
.eluded a packet of cocaine with
the check at a drive-In bank.
Pollee said Hayes, 42 , over·
drew his luck when the packet
went down the pneumatic tube
along with his check and driver's
liCense. A Texas Commerce
Bank teller noticed the white
powdery substance and called
officers.

Fuel
efficiency
saVes money

Stereo Rack System

CHICAGO ( UPI) - Suspect.ed
syndicate hltnianHarry Aleman,
who mob watchers say earned a
reputation as one of organized
crime's most feared killers, was
paroled Friday from a prison
where be served lime for racket·
eerlng anctbluglary.
Aleman, 50, was released just
· after 8 a .m. Friday from the
Federal Correctional Institute at
Milan. Mlclf.',saldU .S.Bu·reauof
Prisons spokesman Ray Hooker.
During his 10 years and 10
months In prison, Aleman also
bicll'll'ce~ated at penlten!lar·
les In Marlon, Ill., Atlanta, and
Oxfo~, Wis.
.
. "He .w as a tough guy and he
kept his mouth shut." said Jerry
Gladden, •chief Investigator for
the Cl!lcago Ctlme Commlssio·n. •
He added . Aleman Is not cur·
rently the subject of any major
Investigation but likely will be a
target of future probes.'
•
"I'II bel they'll have him In
front of a federal grand jury
'Inside 30 days," Gladden said.
Formerly of. Melrose Park,
Aleman will work as an $8-per..
hour emj&gt;Joyee 'at a South Side

A ~ew generation
faces Vietnam war

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Built-In 11-actor

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STARTING AT

Slup

warehouse and will live In the Roszkowski.
At his 1978 trial, Rose said
posh suburb of Oak Brook,
i\'ieman
had "made' no expresfederal prison authorities said.
sion
of
guilt
or acceptance of
A suspect In at least 20
.
responsibility.
That's the code by
syndicate slaylngs but never
which
he
lives
."
convicted ofanyofthem, Aleman
Federal and local authorities
was described by J flsllce Depart'
suspect
Aleman had a hand In the
men! Prosecutor Robert D. Rose
kUIIngs
of free-lance bookie
in 1978 as "a man who kills
Anthony
J
. Rettinger, who was
human beings In cold blood."
Brought to trial in May 1977 for shot to death In 1975 by two
the slaying of Teamsters Union masked men In a Northwest Side
steward William Logan, Aleman restaurant. and Richard Cain, a
was acquitted - despite testlm· former pollee tlftlclal and reony from an eyewitness- at ,the puted mob figure who was
end of a eontrove~al bench trial assassinated in·-.lmllar fashion
by Cook .County Circuit Judge at a sandwich shOp Dec. 20, 1973.
Aleman's reputed ties 'to organFrank Wilson.
Ized
crtme run deep, according to
A nephew by marriage to the
enforcement
ol!iClals, and he
Jaw
late Chicago mob boss, Joe
never
cooperated
with investiga·
Ferrlola, Aleman was sentenced
to 30 years In prtsO'n following a . tors or sought favorable govern·
conviction on federal charges of ment consideration In his
· ·
conspiracy. racketeering and sentencing.
"
He
was
Ferrlola
•
s favorite
Interstate transportation of
nephew
and
he's
of
Mexican
stolen property. The case indescent.
'He'
s
the
Mexican
con·
valved an Interstate home lnva·
nectlon
to
the
organization,"
sian and burglary ring.
The Justice Department had Gladden said.
:Ferrlola died last month at age
sought the maximum sentence of
62
after undergoing a heart
50 years fpr Aleman from U.s. :
District Judge Stat;1ley J. transplant.

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Suspecteq hitman Aleman paroled

Yes, After 8
Yean Lynn Is

MILLBROOK , N.Y. (UP I) -The only secondary school In the
nation with Its own private zoo announced Friday that an
endangered r uffed lemur- a monkey -like primate- has given
birth to quadruplets,
The birth of four black·and-whlte ruffed lemurs was proudly
announced by the Trevor Teaching Zoo, situated on the
sprawling 600-acre grol.lnds of the Millbrook School, .an
exclusive prep school in Dutchess Cou nty perhaps best known
as a filming site for " The World According to Garp."
Lemurs, of whic h there are 22 va r ieties , are t.ree·dwell lng
pri mates related to mo nkeys, assistant zoo director Mark ·
Car tland said. .
'
·
All 22 species of lemur are found exclusively In !he forests of
Madagascar, he said.
Car tland desc ribed ruffed lemurs as having " long ta ils and
big chunks of black a nd wh ite patches. Their patter n is
particular to Individuals.
"It looks like we had th ree males and one female. It's hard to
tell In young a nimals. Even whe n they're a yea r old its difficult
to tell, " h~ sai d.
,
" Le mu rs are an enda nger ed species," Cartland ~ aid.
"They' re fro m Madagascar and the rate of forest dep letio n is
tremendous. Mos t of the wildlife In Madagascar is in trouble."
However , he said, the animals breed well In zoos. Indeed, bo th
th e mother and fath er were born in captivit y in Millbrook,
Ca rtland sald.
·
"This Is the lar ges t Utter we e~er had. We had two bi rths a nd
they were just twins. "

Man's freedom goes down
the tube with bank check

'
· M!Hft alllfers from peeudofoUleuUdll barbae, a
aldn coDdllloalllal afteds11 pereent of all malel.
Moore, left, dell)o•tn&amp;es his ayatem oa ·paatnl
Glenn Soler. (\JPJ)

SPECIAL SHAVER- Ho..aoa dennatoiDpt.
oae of 10.8 mUion mea In the Valted S&amp;lltel who
sutter from a skin coDdltloa trrttaied by.llllavlnl,
hu developed an over the cooter ~JBtem thai
makes dally llhavln1 leu palldul. Dr. Milton

•

COLUMBUS, Oblei (UPI) Farmers should remember fuel
c:osll when figuring their spring
planting bills, and Improving fuel
efficiency IN an obvious way to
save money.
·"There are things a farmer can
do right now to Improve fuel
efficiency. but there first must be
an Interest In laving fuel and In
looking tor ways to Improve
!!f(lclency ," Randall Wood, agricultural engineer at Ohio State
University, saya.
There are tour things a farmer
can do to Improve fuel efficiency.
These are to match the tractor to
the job, tune up tractors, control
ttre traction and operate equipgenerated interest In the war ment properly, he ~aya.
· By DOUG MAULDIN
among young people," Shl said.
When matching the tractor to
; DAVIDSON, N.C. (UPI) -A "Students have seen the movies
the job, a farmer muat renew generation of Americans . Is 'Platoon' and 'Full Metal Jacket'
member an oversized .or an
.fighting the VIetnam War, the and the TV programs about the undersized tractor lor the Job will
waste fuel, he sa)'a. Uatng a
conflict that traumatized the war.
" And there Is the generational properly sized tractor will lm·
soldiers who fought It and left the
factor. These young people are prove fuel efficiency.
·
United States sharply divided.
•Trying to romblne operations
: Every day , 11 students gather terribly curious about what hapIJI history professor David Shl'.!; pened. They know It was Impor- In one p&amp;~~all another way to keep
classroom at Davidson College tant and they want to ground fuel coall down," Wood Rys.
for his seminar on the VIetnam their curiosity In a better under·
"Eibnlnatlng one trip across a
War. In a sense, they are reliving standing of how :we got Involved field can save a significant
and how we got out and what It all amount of fuel, especially on
the strife.
large acreages."
. The .class, like coun ttess books . means."
Shl does not pretend to be .
and movies on the war, Is a sign
Wood's second Up Is to tune up
Americans are coming to grips objective about the war and the tractors before spring Ullage.
· •"The combination ot dirty air
\!lith a subject they have avoided U.S. Involvement.
"I certainly don't bring to It filters and carburetors plus bad
for the past 14 years.
Shl's students are captivated any crusading Ideological spark plugs· can reduce fuel
by the subject. Sometimes they stance, " Shl said. "In my own efficiency up to 40 percent,"
mind, I'm very amblvalantabout Wood says. Keeping Injector
shed tears.
Shl , who began the class In . our motives and our policies and nozzlea on diesel engines clean lg
Septe mber. said an explosion of our experiences.
critical In saving ftiel, especially
"My fundamental purpose Is If the tractor has more than 600 to
literature, film s and articles
about the VIetnam War Is partly not to preach evil or nobiUty of 700 hours on lt.
res ponsible lor the Intense lnter- American lnvovement bu I to get
Proper tire traction Is the third
es t of college students In a painful them (the students) to appre- way that will ultimately save
ciate the complexity and moral fuel, he says. To get good
- some say embarrassing ambiguity embedded In that traction, a farmer must first
war.
,
" But the most Important lac· involvement."
choose th~ right Ures for the type
Shl, whose class size will of load, then be sure not to
tor," Shl said, "Is It's something
students can Identify with. It was quadruple next year, assigns overload them.
a war in some respects fought on reading on communist leader Ho
Adding the correct weights to
the )&gt;attlefleld of college cam· Chi Minh, the VIet Cong and the tractor wheels Is Important In
his !Dry of VIetnam.
puses with student protests.
Rvlng fuel, Wood says. Farmers
His students also read about can check the weight by deter"It was also unique in that the
average age of soldiers was 19, the anti-war movement In Amer- mining how much the wheels are
when It was 26 in World War II. It Ica that led to social and political sllppblg In the field . Maximum
was a young man's war and most changes and the decision by fuel efficiency for a two-wheel·
college students found some way President Lyndon Johnson not to drive tractor means no more
seek re-election In 1968.
to get out of lt. "
than 10 percent to 15 percent
The bulk of the readings, wheel slippage.
After the last America ns left
_
·
however.
are
written
from.
the
Saigon on April 30, 1975. the
Check wheel slippage by look·
country went through a period In American point of view .
lng at the print the ttre makes In
Students read a general history tbe soU, Wood says. U the prlnt ·ls
which It chose to put the war and
alllts painful memories In a dark of American Involvement. They very distinct and the soU doesn't
·also get a sampling of analyses of move much, there Is probably not
closet, Shl said.
· But now America has bound Its policy making during the Nt~on enough slippage..
wound s and Is able to deal with and Johnson administrations,
Remove some weight. u there
the war and Its consequences . . and read novels and flrat person
Is no definition to the tire print
Now the nation Is ready to admit accounts by men and women who and the 101lls ~~eattered, the rear
.the loss of 58,022 l)ves and the were In Southeast Asia .
tires are slipping too much. Add
Sometimes, Shl said, the stu· some weight.
:wounds suffered by another
·303,704 soldiers, who came home dents' reactions .demonstrate
It's especially Important to
that even though long over, the check this when working In soft,
to less than a hero's welcome.
"The old saying Is that time war still stirs strong emotions.
wet solla because conditions
"I've shown them videotapes change the optimum amount ot
beals wounds," Shl said. "I think
It is true the na lion passed about the war-and they cry In the weight needed, lie uya.
·through a period of collective middle because It Is so vivid," he
Another way to Improve trac·
·
said.
:Smnesta about VIetnam. "
tlon II to have the right amount of
Shllnvited tour VIetnam vete· air In your tires, he says.
. "There was the poignant,
•'Checking tire lnfiation Is
tragic collapse of VIetnam In rans on the Davidson campus to
;1975. Images of chaotic scenes at come ln. and discuss their war uaually neglected but needl to be
;t'be American f:lnbassy as peo- experiences.
a routine bablt," Wood uya.
Veterans often are reluctant to "It'a particularly Important to
•J)le ~~erambled for the last hellcdiscuss the war, even with tllelr cbecklbelnltdetlreofdualaeven
:Opters out," he said.
.
· "Then there were revelations tanllllea, as one a student from tbolllh It's bard to get 10. "
:Ot tlte holocaust In Cambodia. All Fort Leavenworth, Kan., found
Selectlq tbe blat kllld ot tire II
:Ot this ~curred In tlte mld-1970s out.
Important In COIII8r'\'lq fuel. be
"On tile spur of the moment, I
1n tile mlddleofWatergate. Many
aaya. Radial-ply tires eoet more
Invited ber father to come to thaD blu-pJy tlrel, but .lave
peop~anted to forget . Wounds
.were still Optlll. But It's been a class and talk to us about the IIIOIIe)' In the loJtg run.
.
'decade and IJI)'I:hologlcally we war," Shl Rid. "It wu the flrat
''TIIae II a S. to 6-perceat fuel
macb more able to look back time In detJll be bad ever tallred
IIVillll ,._ U1lli radial t1re1
In tront of ber about tllewar.llle compand to blaa tfrel," Wood
~rtalllll."
• What IW (ollowed, Sbl Rid, II learned everything abe kJiew &amp;ayl. "Ia pnerai, radial tlrell
~ outpOUrlq of workl by about Iter father's war days from
aJao pniYide better traction aad
lutlOIIIIl'...
.
'Writ• trGm a rerllcttve and that Clul nperlenc:e."
Tltret other etudata Inter·
anal)'llcal . . . . .
OperallfW ·equtpmeat In tile
'1'1lere Jw bHft a DOPII1ar viewed wteraaa at die VIetnam prop11 par and at tile rtpt
culhtrel npiDitoa lltftb.-TV and War Memorial In Waalllnlloa • . lpltd for tile job II aaotller way
~
the 111111 md~ .aiCII baa Sb!Ricl,
tarmen cu co~ fuel.

:are

It's quads for prep
school's little lemur

Pcln•ov-Middlaport-OIIIpolle, Ohio-Point Pltttl st. W. Ve.

•

-

--·

...

-

~

I

\ol

~

�Pomaloy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio Pt.iltt Plarrr tt. W.Va.

llrnes- Sentinel

N~w · process

•

••
.'. ....."'......
~· ~

'

'

'

-

91,

~ .~.

: · -~
PLACED IN COMPETrriON - Melp \1CA students Meently
: :-:·participated In the Southeast Regional VIOA Sktu Contests held at
: : :: Columbus Technical College. Students compellng were Abby Fry,
: • . In cosmetology; Dale Johnston, hand calculator; a11d John
• : : Brickles auto mechanics. The two other students participating
: • • · were Se~ Braley and Patty Helzer, pictured. Braley placed third
• , : tn welding and Hetzer second In O.W.E. job skills. Helzer will now
:.
compete al state VICA competition In Columbus. Sam Rife, John
•• .,_.• Brlcktes and Tricia Davis,
southeast regional officers, look parlin
tl
• . • the awards presents on.

30. 1989

keeps tomatoes fresh longer

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A and ' other qualities are on par
new process developed by an with other tomatoes.
Ohio State University researcher
However, once any tomato
may extend the storage Ute of comes out of storage and l.s put on
fresh tomatoes by one to two
a grocer's shelf, It wtlllast justa
weeks.
few days.
Food scientist Santi Bhowmtk
Allowing tomatoes to be stored
stored mature green tomatoes In
tor a few extra weeks WO!!Id be
two types of containers, Six . helpful to both sellers and consu·
weeks later, one group was ripe.
mers, Bbowmtk says. Dtslrlbu·
The other tomatoes, stored In a
tors would ·have more time to get
.strictly controlled environment,
the products to their destinations
still were tquched with green.
and may be able to reach more
' 'They'll last at least another
markets.
week, maybe two," Bhowmtk
Large grocery chains could
says. The slower ripening proorder extra tomatoes before a big
cess actually Improves the taste
hoHday, for example, and be able
of the tomatoes, and their te11ture
to keep them tn storage a week or

two If they don•t sell. People who ators set at :&gt;t oegrees - a
normal storage tempe~ature.
shun greenhouse tomatoes, com·
Some containers were premon tn winter, could enjoy' fruits
from fields a few weeks longer cisely controlled tn their relative
humidity and carbon dioxide-.
after the last harvest.
In previous work, Bhowmtk oxygen content. That's what
extended tomatoes' shelf ltte by extended the ripening process.
In the future, Bhowmlk hopes
wrapping them In plastic. But
to
design a large-scale environ·
that process was expensive,
mentatly
controlled refrlgera·
labor-Intensive and, because the
tlon
unlt
for
d.tstrlbutors. Add!·
plastic overlapped In places,
•
ttonal
testing
needs to be done
wasn't easy to control.
belore
that
happens,
he says.
The work did give him a good
tdea of what factors were neces·
sary to store tomatoes longer.
The busiest airport In the United
In hl.s latest project, Bhowmtk States in Chica1o's O'Hare, wbtcb
stored toMatoes In four·gallon, handles over 5? ,000,000 p8lllellpn
containers In darkened refrtger·· eacb year.

Rlvltrll 2 door, '"""r wllh moroon cuo!Om cloth lnltrlor,
IIMring l - H , VI,IUiomolic,lln. DNIIO, llllmO
111111-. whit-t r.ollllt, wtrt- ""'""·,..defog.
gor, power - · locl&lt;o &amp; wlndoWI, fiOiory olr, AMIFM

0

••••

:

•

0

••••

'4115

AagaiZ - · brown wllh brown ~loth lnlarior, foctory air,

lttreo, loqal owner new Chevy tr....

AMIFM llarto,lllt, .,lornatlc,lllll40 opllt Mal, wlro whttl '
._., wllltowall' rodlalo, w.

85 OLD8 .................. 14195

81 AIIC .•.••.•.. •• . •... . . •11495 .

Cuttuo 8 u - 4 door, block wllh gflll' cloth tntlftot,
.llttllng lbnkn, 'III,IUiomollc,IIH, AM/I'M lltreo,
fiCiory olr, wllltowlll rodlol ttros. wlrt ,..,... - ·

Spirit 2 - · - wllll bluo lnttrlor, powor olnrlng &amp;
brlkto, IIH, opth folding roar-· whllowlll rodlllt, oporl

II-

whilla, automatic, AMIFM etereo Clllttle, 4 cylinder.

18 CHEVY • • • • • • . • • • • . •.••• '5115
c.tebrtty EUIOIPOit • door, roMwood with roMIIIOOd cloth
ln-. power OIM!Ing I brlkn, fuolln)oclld 4 cyllndor,

aulomatlc,l- carrlor, AMIFM alorwo,lactory alr.llll,
roiiOd while ltlltrtd radial tlrtt, rolly w..... o.

4-

'

78 BUK:K ................... 795

1
Century 2 door, ~~~low with brOWn Interior, power ttMr·
. lng &amp; Dr-. VI, automatic, AMIFM 11eroo, rolly w-o.
whltewll! rldlalt, factory •r. locll owner trldt.

.

85 CHEVY . . . • .. . . • . • • • • .•• '1315

84 MERCURY .... .. ......... '3295

Clprlct Landau 2 door, whHe with '-'cloth lnltrlor,-

Topaz 4 dOOr, Gri!Y metaUic with g,._ cloth Interior, power
otnrtnu &amp; br'!'&lt;"· loc\ory olr, outomatld, AMIFM otoroo
CIIMHt, whitewall rldi.Ja, lull wheel covers. Local owner
· 'trade.
:

84 DODGE . . • • • . .. • • . • • • • • •'27,111

Colt2 door, rod wtth gflll' lnttrlor, 4 cyllndor, Mllornatlc,

Clqloro 2 - · red with black lnttrtor, powor IIM~ng &amp;
~rllcn, 1181 ""lornatlc, T·topo, foclory llr, lilt, AMIFM
ttereo, rail~
,.u., tlrtt. fOlding rew Mat.
•

rwllo, f-a tory etr, ,.. Clefogoer, fOlding ,.. eut,.whltwlll
radlal1, Ju•t ofl 1....
·

•tiM!•·

- ·black

~4
wtlh maroon ctolh lnlorlor, roof rack,
4cytlndor, .,IOmatlc, wllhowlllrdall, AIMFM olorwo,loc·

86 POifflAC ...... . ......... '5595

Bonnowllte • door, chlrcoal wllll mllchlng clolh lnlorlcr,
power Mat, wfndowl &amp; IOCkl, till, CruiN, fiiCtory llr,
. AMIFM lter80, power atetrtng &amp; brlkea, whltew1U 1'8dlal1,
lull w- """"'· W, -defogger.

tory air, reai defOOQtr. Locll one qwner new Chevy trede.

86 CHRYSLER ... ... .... . ... '4895

L.IBiron • door, light blue with ~UI cloth Interior, powar

Pickup, btlge wllh oporl llnplng lind bttgo lntorlor, 4
cylinder,
manual, rodlll llrn,oporl wllnl cowort.

ttMrlng

neur who Is chief executive
officer of MPW Services. The
topic will be "Self Gener~ted
Rewards /Self Sacrifices."
In addition, members of the
School of Business Managet:nent
will be on hand to lend their
expertise to the proceedings. For
example, Dr. Charles F. Palmer.
the school's dean , will discuss
''Pricing In a Free EconoliJY and
What It Does For You," and
WilHam S. Medley , assistant
professor of · economics. will
speak on "The Federa,l DeficitIts Effect on Consumers: Solu·
lions? Less Spending, More
Taxes. "
· The week's activities will also .
Include recreation activities, a
cookout. a talent show and a
s peec~ and essay contest. Stu·
dents and teachers will be housed
in dormitories on the Rio Grande
campus, with meals provided In
the college cafeteria. The week
co ncludes on the morning of June
23 with an awards and gradua·
tion ceremony.
"We hope to provide a broad·
based picture of free enterprise,
one tha t will give a clearer view
regarding individual liberty, dig·
nily and freedom to those who
participate In the workshop."
said Jerry Gust, director of the
Loren M. Berry . Center for
Eco nomic Education.
"Previous wO'rkshops have
been successful in educating our
youth and In inspiring them to
make. the system work· for
them." Gust added. " That is the ·
purpose of this year's activities."
More Information on the work·
shop can be obtained by writing
to the Loren M. Berry Center for
Economic Education , Rio
Gra nd e College/ Community Col·
lege. Rio Grande. Ohio 45674, or
by calling the director at 1·800·
282·7201, extension 381.

~ ~·:COLUMBUS, Ohio rUPI) -

· more calcium and vitamin B·l
· ··
d
tdered pesky
than raw cabbage.
·. Many wee s cons
Th
eds of lamb's.quarters
• 011ceheldmorenoblesta!.us,says
.e se
r
:· £ 111 Regnier. weedsctentistat taste like buckwheat . They wee
~ 0 ~tate Untversily.
.
dried and ground Into flour.
.; Although the weeds sttll pas· ~toneers added them to breads,
:: sess thequatittes thatmadethem
pancakes, muffins and cookies.
:· popQlar. they lost favor after
Lamb' s·quarters' popularity
.: other plants with more desirable
dropped
after spinach was Intro.. qualities were found . Most of
duced from Asia In the 16th
. tliese weeds are European na·
·: ~es Introduced in the United century. Lamb' s·quarters leaves
are a source of ascartdole, an otl
. :: ·s fates b y colonists and
used to treat for round worms
: tmmtgrants.
and
hook worms. Europeans also
·• :· Regnier warns against using
:: .file weeds for food or medicine once valued lamb's.quarters as
•' lllllen you're postttve of their an Important animal fodder.
~ }Gentlttcatton and of the proper
• ~~y to prepare them .
-Crabgrass. Crabgrasses
• : • 8he Usts some weeds and their were the first cultivated grains.
: htiltorles: ..
They were grown tor food for
: •. ·-Lamb's-quarters. This Brit·
thousands of years and are still
• tlh native and spinach relative considered Important cereal
• Gas once considered oae of crops tn parts of the world.
~ pi\ture'• most deltctous vegeta· CrabKI"asses have very nulrl·
+! ·~Youq plants were ga· ttous seeds. Large crabgrass was
re4 and boiled, used In salads once Kt'OWD 11 forage Ill the
~.
made IJtto soup. Lamb's· southern United States. But the
·.
'
IUtt mprelron, protein, ab!Uty of cra'bgruses . to spread
• \i
111 84. afid vitamin C than hu made them a wldetpread
~ raw.cabbap ot ...ptnach. Jlt bas nutsance.

· ::/o

TO

·-·

oteroo. r.ollllllm.·polnlod -

-1,

PlekuPt yellow wtth brown Interior, • cylinder, S .-c1
manual, r.ollll11ret, Chrome
AMIFM lltriO, bod
covers, painted rw bumper.
·
'
'

alereo, f.ctory llr, whltaw•l 1'8dlala, lull wh•l covert.

87 DODGE .... ; .. . ......... '4995

•Arlee • door, whUt with blut cknh Interior, power atMr·
tng • brakoo, fuolln)eolld 4 cylinder, aulornallc, IICiory

olr, AMIFM otoroo, whltowlll r.olllll, full w.,... cover..

rilly-··

S-10 pickup, rod wllh rod lnlerlof, fuolln)oclld •cy11..,,
4111J01d manUIII, rtdlllllrH.
polntad,.. olop,
local ono ownar new ChiV}' II'OIIo.

84 . CHEVY ••• ••••.•••. • ••• •'4295

88 CHEVY ................. '7115

82 PLYIKMirH ••• • •••••••••• '1995

.

Caprlco Claulc 4 door, bluo with
local 1 owner, now car lrodo.

S-10 piCkup 4x4, blue wllh bluelntofior, power IIM!Ing &amp;
brlkH, 'Ill,' 4 optld manuel, foclooy llr, r.ollo on rotldiofl
•

$75

Ju~t
Say
Yes

luggage cwrter, whitewall r•Ual•, 1port whMI Ccwtrl, ,..,

dtloggor.

81 CHEVY ....... . ......... '8715

PULSAR .

0·0

To CASH BACK

81 CHEVY ... . ........ ; •••. '5195

Sll,.rado ~ ton pickup, lwO tone bluo wllh blue cUllom
ciOih lnto~or. power OIMring l brlkft. faqlory II&lt;, till,
crutoo, V8, automallc, rill)' - a . AMIFM altreo - ·
llldlng -wlndoWo,chrome -•IIP.wllllowlll
· rodlolt. Local one owner now Cllovy tlodo.

S.to•x4 pickup, r.o1 wllll r.ollnlertor, VI,IUiomotlc, powar
IIMring &amp; brlkoo, AM/I'M o-, on ratdlolf roodwllhtltll- r-,oNng- w~-.. 1111-11101
btiOW oyollnt mlmlfl, palnlld - llep, IIH, CNtiO, bod
rlllo. Locol one now Ptymoulh II'OIIo.

88 MERCURY ••••.•.•••••.•• '5111

84 CHEVY ... .............. '5915

M-lo 4 dool, whllt &amp; 111¥« wHh groy clolh lnttrlor,
power otoortng &amp;· br-. wl" ._,.. wllltowall
rodlllo, lilt, CNIM, w, .,lornatlc. AMIFII 11-. foclooy
olr, power wlndowo, locko &amp; 1tat, ro. defogger.

Urn.

85 FORD ........ , ......... 13785

84 FORO ••••• ;' .. ... ~ ••..•.. '1915

El CWnlno, -with bluo cloth lnl-. -

IICIOry air, AMIFM lltriO -lie, roll)' whoolo, r.ollol

LTO 4 door, cltaroool wllh gray lnttrtor, oltortng &amp;
br-. 118, .,tomallo. rtdlo. faclooy elr, wlltl-1 rodlolo,
· lull wlloal covoro. locol owner lradt.

gor, AMIFM lltfiO, foclory air; crut10, IHI, VI, aUiornalto.

87 MERCURY •.••••••.• • •••• '8885

87 CHEVY ....•••••••• • •••. '6115

Lynx XR3, 2 door, r.o1 wHh gray cloth lnlartor,- II-·
lng 1 brlkoo,luollnjeotod • cyl-r. 5 - manual, foe·
tory air, AMIFM oloroo c-lio, rMr defogger, aluminum
whttlo, rodlllllm, tllt.locllont--Chovyii'OIIo.

Coprlct Ciaulr 4'door, - n wllh brown.clolh lnttrlor.
ttttrlng &amp;brakM. \18, outornatic wllh overdrive, IIll,
CAIIIt, riCICJOY llr, AMIFM lloreo - e . -locko,
whllowlll rodlllo, lport COYIII, dtfoggor.

65 CHEVY .. • • • • .. • • • •.•••• '1415

) 81 FORD .............. .. .. '1715

COrtalr 4 door, oliver with bluo lnlertor: powerotltrlng &amp;
PIICI

85 MUSTANG LX ... . ..... ."'H95._
87 CHARGER ............ ~
89 SENTRA . . . .. . . . • . . . . . ."tf99.5..
86 LYNX
-~
86 ARIES . ...... . .....•..~
84 ESCORT ....... : . ......"1399.5..
84 OMNI ...•....• .' .... . •~
86 SENTRA
-~
82 SENTRA
~
84 TOPAZ ... •. , .... ·· .... ln95...
87 CAVALIER ........ •. ••• lt995_
84 SENTRA •......... ... ..~
86 SKYLARK .............."79-96..
81 NISSAN 4x2 ........... ~
II MAZDA MX6 ......... i1l;m._
86 ESCORT .....••..• .•.. ••"'3991...
85 NISSAN 4x4 ........... ~
•••

0

•••

••••••

0

•

•

•

•

0

•

0

0

•••••••

0

0

••

0

•

0

0

•••••••

I .

ccwera, bucket eella, eJCtra nk:e.

Granada 4door, whitt wtlh blue cloth ln-. poworotnr·
lng &amp;- · 1111, cruiM, radio, e cyllndor, loctooy olr,
.,lomalle, wlllltWIIIIIrM,Iull- oootrl, ~ dtloggM.

75 IIINDA ......... ; ....... '1491

80 CHEVY ....... . ......... '1815

brMu, .,tomttiC, redlo, whitewall rldllll, full whHI

JUST SAY NO
I'IICI

'4999
15991
18998
14775
15179
'3184
1 3991
'3991
12990
12988
16181
14695
16986
17777
'lUll
53668
'5191

liT AIL
PI ICE

sx

JUSJ. SAT.NO

PIICI

85 200
........ _
.......""69~f 15989
85 200
........ ... .. ... 'b-aa• .• *6888
16 200 sx
~
"7'995.. 1 7788 '
1 3797
84 T·BIRD
-~
84 II VIERA .............."8flJ. '6888
85 T·BIID ............. . ~ 17919
85 OLD$ 98 .............. lJt9$.. '1898
14 ARIES : ....... .. . .... .'il99f._ 5 3883
86 NISSAN 4x4 .. ......... ~ 1 7997
87 NISSAN 4x2 . ~ ......... ~ 16888 .
86 NISSAN 412 ..... ... ...
'5817
87 NISSAN 4x4 · ... ........ "1991- *1787
86 CHEVEnE . ............ l3'991- 13774
88 SENTIA .... .. . ..... .......1991... . ' 58787
15 SENTRA .............. ~ . 14774
83 FIIENIA •..••• •• •...•.""3 '''"" 1 3813
87 · FIIENZA ............. ~ '69~6

sx

Gold Wtng Motorcycle, -

•

•

0

• • •.

•

•

•

•

•

•

0

••••••

•

•

•

•

0

•

•

•

&amp;

Ctllbflty 4 door, brown wllh brown cloih tnlartor, 1)11,
crutoo, AMIFM oteroo, fiCiooy llr, 80140 optlt - · · olnrtng &amp; br-. luol lnjeotod 4 cylinder, wirecowors, whllowall rodlalo, lug- earlier.

•

77 CHEVY ••••....•...••••• 11815
lmpola 4 -·brOWn ,.llh brown lnttrlor, powor ol..tng
I brlioto, factory air, AMIFM al-, whhowoll r.ollllo,lull
whttt ..,.,..., .,lomatic. ve.

14 MERCURY . . • .. • • • . .... .'.13811

Morquto-,11'-wtlh bluelnltrlor, -dtiOIIIfl, lug.
- - · wllllowallrtdlalo. full--lcyllndor,
.,tomatlc, AMIFM llartO, laoiOI)' olr, !iOISIIIpllt - · loc'!l
one owner, new Ptymouth trldt.

81 CHEVY . •• •...•••.• ••• •• '2211

MaUbu 2 door, m1r00n with m1r00n cloth lnttf1or, power
otMrlng &amp; brlkto, 118, outornlllc, foctooy llr, lull w.,...

covero, whllowall rodlllt. LOCal one Olllntr Chi'()' lradt.

78 CHEVY .................. '750

-..."

maroon cloth ln-r,
-er olttrlng lbrlkn. factory olr, r.ollo, rtdlal Urtt, full

88 REIAULT ............... '2995

87 FORD ............ ... ... '1215

Aorot.. van, btlgt wtlh malchlng lntlftot, power •-ng
&amp; brlkoo, fuot lnJactod 4 cvllnder. outomallc, AMI~M

oloreo,r.ollllllrn.

II -

................ -· .. '1685

1 tan dump lrucll, bfiCk with bleck lntertor, power •t•r·

lng l brlkn. 4 lpood monuol, VI, g101geo, ouililaoy fuel

••no oul mirrora.

t1nk, radl• tiNI,

wh... covtrt,lugg-oe n1ck. Loc.t owner Ptymouth tfldl.

80 OLDS ...... : ...... l' .... '2450

12 FORD . . . . .. .. . . . . . ..... '2311

&amp;

brownlnl-.
4 cyllndor, 4 optld manual. AMIFM otoroo .-tt, below

eyellnt mirrors, whltewatl tlrtt.

II PONTIAC . • • .. . . . • . • ..• •. '5115

Fiero BE 2 dOor, brown with boown clolh lnllftot, W.
automatiC, foclory elr, 1111, orul10. ounrool, aluminum

whMia, 1'11111 Urea, AMIAIItww Cllll tlw. gaugll, power

:atetrlng&amp;-.

DtltiU 2 door, white with brvwn lnt1rtor, PQWer IINrtng
br-. VI, aulomalic, rodlo, loclory air, wl,. - 1

COYIII,

-tr

81 BliCK .. ! .:.............. '2195

Conlury 4 door. bl.,. wtth blue lnttrlor,
olooMg l
brakto, automatlo, f"!!lo, foctooy llr. ,.hltowlll lodlllo.
LOCII owner trD. '

Coprlco !IItie wagon, maroon wllh

Courier picl&lt;up wllh cube body, ,.hilt Willi

..
I

lmpola w-'&gt;. whitt with moroonlnltrlor,- eloo~ng ·· ·
brlkn, Crullt, rtdlo, toctooy llr, wllll-1 r.ollllo, lull ...
whool - . aulornatlc, VI tnglno.
·

wuh txlru, bluo mtllltlc.

86 CHEVY .. • • .. • .. • • • ••••. 111110

·a~

ototrlng &amp;

brlkoo, VI, IMI, cruilt, gaogt1, 110140 opth - · automatic,

LTD wagon, Ill¥« wllh r.o1 cloth lnlortor,- IIIO~ng
· &amp; br-. lull- O&lt;Mrt, whHowan rtcllalo, ,.. dofog·

liT All

bluo Interior, cru110, lilt,

Roltanl · - · groon wllh groonlnttrlor. power IIMring
&amp; b.-.., 4 cylinder, a~tamatlc, CNIM, f.:tory .. ,, rldlo,

roacl r.:flall, tOPI*' pelnted ,.., &amp;tep. 1 OWMJ· new 4*
tredl.
f
"

•

'•

.••••.•••.•••• •• '18111

85 CHEVY ................. '3415

•

'{

Rell1nt 4 door, btul with blue cloth Interior, PGWif atiler·

lng &amp; brlkeo, futl lnjoctld 4 cylinder, outomollc, AM/FM

tng l brllcto. VI, .,tomalic, wllllewell rod!Wo, full covers. ftctory air, AMIFM ~tereo, oruiM. Local owner
trldt.

;·1·

........

87 PLYMOUTH .............. 14715

Clprlct 2door, g,_ wllh gNOn ctolh Interior, power,._

CASH BACK ·

olep, f!oc1 11-. local owner

Crown Viclorla 2 door, chan:oll wllh r.o1 '"'"om cloth lntt~or, ttoonng &amp;brlkoo, VI, Ill~ crut10. loclory elr,
outomattc, AMIFM oleroo, wire whnl """"'· ,.hllowlll
radlato. power wlndowo, nal &amp; loch, !!01!0 opllt Hit.
•

85 NISSAN ...... . ..... ... .. '3315
~

cover~,

87 FORD . ..... . ......... . . '8715

Colebrlty 2 door, light yett0111 wllh brown cloth lnllftot,
po- llnrtng &amp; brlkn, AMIFM r.ollo, foctooy elr, W,llll.
outomallc, r.ollll tim, lull c.....

74 CHEVY

wheel

87 CHEVY ................. '77911

88 CIEVY ............. : ... 144111

DUD.LEY P. KffiCHER

1~n

Cuetom O.luxe \'\ton pickup~ rad with gray cloltl Interior,
IUiomallc, VI, IIMring &amp; brlkn, foclory llr, AMIFM

tory llr, tilt, oruiM, wlrt - · whllowlll rtdlill,
r- defogger, AMIFM 111reo.

00

Drakta, fuol ln)eolod onglno, outomatlc, 1111,

whllowlll r.ollalo.

88 PONTIAC ............ .'... '4995

UP

&amp;

crul.., factory -'r, rur dltOQDIJr,

11000, 4door,llglll yellow ,.llh brown cloth lnlertor, power
IIMrlng I br-, fuot lnjoclld 4 cylinder, IUI...,.IIc, lie·

STANZA

·

AMIFM aler.o CIIMttt, wl,. whHI covera. Whltewlll
radllli, power lockl &amp; wlndowa, !01'50 I!IPII1 Hit.

85 CHEVY , ......... . ....... 17295

' .........
.
82 .CHEVY
: . •• .. .. . '995 .

I brakH, VI, IUiomolic, 1111, CMIO, loclory II;,

IIIO~ng

88. ISUZU ................. ; '2995

)~ ~always undesirable

•

14 ...ck ......

5th A - 4 door,
with motchlng ltollltr In-,
till, crultt, Iacko, - &amp; wl-. ,.. defogger,
wlrt--, wllllewollrodlllo, VI, IUIOmlllc,AMII'M
oteroo CIOIOtto,loclory olr, !!01!0 oplh -•· oltor·
lng &amp; brlkn.
·
·
·

'
aren t

.. ....
~: Weeds

.

Aot Now - T h e - Prloea Good Por
LlwnHecl Tlwne (M•w loth)
All UnHe eubJeot To Prior ••lea

85 CIIIYILER . . . . . . . ... . ... 'IHI

·: will ·

.J.;a ncas ter Glass Co rp.; and
"Profits - How They Af!ect the
• ~ndividual and th e America n
: · t'conomy." by William J. Lhota.
•.. presiden t of Columbus Southern
: power Co.
•• Another feature of the work·
: 'shop will be an inlerview with
Monle Black. a you ng ent repre·

"

84 BliCK ..• .. • ... • ........ '1715

.

for

This Is a real life situation. We have over 75 good used cars
and trucks on our lot.
The truth. Is - WE MUST SELL THEM NOWI The prices are a
stealllt would be a crime If you ml~sed out. 11 That's The Story'·
C.ollfr • door,llght yellow wllh llghl brown- ~.
power et-g &amp; brlktl, futl ln)Oclld • cyllndor,
outomolic, toctory elr, AMIFM otoroo, whllowoll r.ollllo.·

.

; m.aflufacturing opera tions

•• ••• • •••• • •• •

88 CHEVY ... ..... ..... ~ ••• '4215

~~~Announce theme for
t~~June
19-23 workshop
..

: · •· RJOGRANDE-Stresstngthe
: : .:importance of the American
: :·economic system to students arnd
• • t&gt;ctucators will be the focus of the
:: _15th American Free Enterprise
:- 'Workshop June 19·23 at Rio
•:: ' :Grande College/ Co mJDunlty
, · College.·
.
: ;-; A ser ies oflectures, ftlms and
··- -:·j\lorkshops on a variety of topics
: :itealtng with free enterprise wtli
"&gt;;.. :&gt;be presented during the week.
~. ·...':['he theme of this year's event Is
;. · "What 's In It For Me?''
~
The event Is co·sponsored by
•: the Lore n M. Berry Center for
;. " Economic Education and the
;' .:J;merson E. Evans School of
:. )'Justness Management at ·' Rio
.- .~ Gra nde.
~ ~ . A course on tea~hing basic
, . ·economic education for elemen·
:;. ··.)ary and high school leachers
be offered concurrently
' 1hrough the School of Business
:· ~a n agement and the School of
•: , Health. Education and Physical
~ "'~ducalion. ·
~ .~ • During the workshop. students
~ ~wilt es ta bUsh their own firms and
' ·Jearn abou t funding. manufac·
:: '1ur ing a nd marketing a product.
'•• This will serve as a practical
'i!emonstratton of how the free
'• : '·t&gt;nterprise
'
system opera tes .m
• : Kmerica.
.• / ·Meanwhile. participants will
; •also hear a ser ies of gues t
~
lectures and presentations on the ·
: · sys tem.
.
.
.
•
Foilowing regts tratwn. onen·
; .t~tion and an introduction . to
&lt; eco nomics on June 19. ac•lvlhes
: ~begin that night with a dinner in .
• ' \('hlch workshop participants
: ~eet community bu siness lead·
: · ers. After a we lcome by Dr. Paul
' :t. Hayes. presid ent · or Rio
' ~rande, a keynote address will
.. 'be given by Dud ley P. Ki rc her.
·····'vice presldenl of corpora te co m·
~ .:munications for Mead Corp.
~ ~ :special gues t at th e dinnerwili
: 1)~ Warren T. Hacket t. author of
• ·" How We Prosper Under Free·
: dom" and "It 's Your Choice ' Freedom or Prosperity. Or Ty·
I
,ranny and Pover ty. "
·
~ ~: Lecture topics Include "Capi·
• ;)ai Formatio n: · by Dr. Richard
• .Vedder. an Ohio Universi ty pro·
• .lessor of economics and regu lar
: "Contributor to th e Wall Street
: . Journal: "Productivity: li s lm·
j . pac t on the America n Eco n·
· amy." by Gus Link. director of

-

Apri 30. 1989

83 CHEVY • , ·' ••••••..• : •... '5995
Corwtrtlon ,.,, bluo "fllh bll!l clollllnlo~or. power llnr·
lng l brlkn, VI, llilomatlc, 1111, arutot, roctory llr,

owom.acr lllfhtlng, ~!jtr:M a - _ ,, 4 caplllno
chalrt,- CG&lt;oOh loldllnlo bod,_. w - &amp;locko,
tug- carrltr,l-r, nonnlng -.ro. roily - . , rtlt·
ld wht1o lot- r.olltlt, ..., wl-. d~nk Ifill'•·

wllll-1 radlall. .

. 1.

81 CHRYSLER • • .. . . • . . . . .. •'1195
etn Avenue 4 door, brown with brown !either Interior,

P1'Wfr 11-ng I brlkft. \18, Mllomollc, till, CNIM,

-lqoko. wlllttwall r.ollllo,
wl_l_,_M - - e . - defogger,
optN -·lira..._.• ,......,.. car.
lluml,... . . - . ,

1

power

81 DODBE . : . .............. '7515

cnvan I.E. -n "''h.bovwncuotorn -1.-.-

oyl-. - ·

IIMri"' &amp; bnkn, •
till, crulot, ,_
wiper, foctooy llr, ...:..t ·- . wllll-t r.ollalo,
diOp tlntod gl-, 1ug0agt - · ,....... locko, AMIFM
oitrto oro Ito. Local ono • - Dodge

....

1

Alllanco 4 -·blue ,.1111 bluo lnleriof, aulomattc,lactory
Ill, wiiHowlll r.olllll, AMIFM lltroo, powar atoorlng I
brlkn.

81 CIEVY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. '1295

Nova 4 door, gold wllh brown lnltnor, e cyllndtr,
aulomollo, powor alnrlng &amp; br-.

80 CHIIYSLEI • • • • • • • .. • • .. •'1115

1.e11aron 4 -·g..., with grttnlnttrtor, power otoortng

automatic. e cytlndor, w1111aw111 rl&lt;llalt, wire
..,.,..., AMIFM 11-. factory air, roar defogger.
locel owner tradt.

1 brlkn,

71 FOlD . . ................. 'Ill

G - 2 - · wllltl with groonlnl-. -llllltng
&amp; bfllk.., I cylhlder, attomattc, r'lllo, w,_.ttwall radl.. l ,

full w- -

· Local . ._ Plymouth lrado.

71 JEEP .. ................. '2415
Cllerakn Wago- 414,

..

brown &amp; btlgt with brown In·

~-.
_
.....
~'If • '"·:·:·~~s:•:cv~~~~:r:·
radio, fociOI)'
II&lt;.
-111111

.... full ....... -~.~~a~~-

lradt.

�Aprl 30. 1989

Page-E-6-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Ple11ant. W. Ve.

Fonner Te8mster
LE ETON, Mo. !UP!) - Roy
Lee Wlllla ms, the former preside nt of the Interna ttona!Broth er hood of Teams te rs who we nt to
prison for br ibery a nd fraud and
later acknowledged the union
was Infl uenced by orga nized
c r ime, died Friday at his Missouri fa r m . He wa s 74.
Wllll am s . who suffered fr om
e mphysem a. died at 7:55 a.m.
Friday, said longtime famlly
frl~nd Rosemary Des Combs.
The exact cause of death was not
a nnounced. Funeral arrangement s were pending a t Ne wco1
mers Cliapel ln Blue Springs , Mo .
Willia m s was convicted In
December 1982 for attempting to
bribe a U.S. se nator with a Las
Vegas real estate deal. He wa s
sentenced to 55 years In prison.
later reduced to 10 years because
of his falllng health. He was
released from the Federal Medi cal Cente r for Prisoners In
Springfield, Mo., and retired to
his farm about 55 mlles of Kansas
Cttv.
Williams, who assumed the
$225,000-a-year Teamsters pre·

presid~nt,

1::0LUMI!US, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service w111 mark Its 75th birth·
day next month with a series or
open houses and other special
events.
"The Cooperative Extension
Service has been Investing In the
future of Ohio since 1914," says
Bobby D. Moser, director of the
Ohio Cooperative E xtension Ser-·
vice. " The Smllli·Lever Act
directed us to take knowledge to
the general public . and that's
what we're doing. "
On May 8 the Cooperative
Extension Service celebrates tlle
75th anniversary of the signing o!
the Smith-Lever Act. This 1914
federal legislation created the
outreach arm of land-grant unl·
versltles In all states .
Members ofOhloState Unlver-

·1942, serving In Europe durtng
World War U. Following t he war ,
he worked at several trucking
jobs until Hoffa, then chief
organizer for ·the union, picked
him In 1948 to be business agent
for a union local in Wichita, Kan.
In Aprll, 1952, he became
business agent for Local 41 " In
Kansa s City. and later its pres!·
dent. In 1967, he was elected to
the union's General · Executive
Board, the top pollcy-maktng
arm. and four years later becall)e an lnternaflonal vice
president.
W1111ams Jed bargaining wfth
the trucking Industry that forced
the Carter administration to ease
wage-price gulqellnes. In 1982 he
accepted a contract without any
wage Increase, because of the
crumbling state or the lndttstry
and massive layoffs. . · ,
He was active In fund for
muscular dystrophy and honies
to care lor retarded children In
Kansas City, where he was
viewed as a kind mari ·who made
sure the children had apples and
.oranges lor Christmas parties .

slty:s ExtensiOn faculty serve
ever y county. Their expertise Is
In agriculture, home economics,
youth development, community
development and natural resources. But those areas ar e broadly
defined. Moser says.
"Congressmen Smith and
Lever never dreamed that the
Extension Service they proposed
would one day give advice on
exotic crops or run Inner-city
nutrition programs; " Moser
says.
.
.
' 'Who would have thought that
4-H would grow from that one
club In Clark Col!nty , Ohio, to the
world's largest youth organization? And hpw inany county
agents In the early 1900s would
have even considered sponsoring
programs' to help bring new
businesses Into communities? ·

Our expertise Is much· broader
today."
But that doesn't mean Extension Ignores what It used to do.
Farmera still get baste advice on
crop and llvestock production.
Homemakers still find out how to
process home-grown fruits and
vegetables nutritionally. And
there are more 4-H clubs today
than ever.
" Even though we' ve modernized and are constantly reachIng out to new audiences, this Is
sUI! the Cooperative Ex(f!J1Slon
Service," Moser says. "The way
we reach our new audiences Is
the same way we reached out to
farmers In the 1920s - one-onone with expert Information."
Most county Extension offices
w111 be holding an open house or
other special event on May 8.

Some counties are planning other
events later in May a nd throughout the rest of the year.
"We're not as Interested In
wishing ourselves a happy birthday as we are tn reintroducing
the cllizens of Ohio to what we
have to -offer and giving them
some Idea of what they ca n
expect In the fu ture, " Moser
says.
' 1 think a lot of Ohioa ns are
used to ~omlng to us for answers
about farm, home a nd garde n
problems and don't realize that
we can help them with more than
that," he says.
"Our research base Is muc h
broader these days and we need
to be providing the kind of
information that makes Ute eas·
ler for all Ohioans and the
communltles tlley llve ln."

Dazed Bangalesh begins task of burying tornado dead
HERGOZE . Bangladl'sh
1UP[) - Dazed survivors of a
tornado that kllled at least 1,040
people In central Bangladesh
burled 498 of the dead Friday In a
mass grave amid the scoured
and putrid landscape. offici;~ls
and witnes ses said.
Felled trees and the debris of
t hatched dwelllngs blocked
roads and preven ted access of
equipment needed at the site of
the Wednesday evening disaster,
50 miles nortllwest of Dhaka.
Survivors said the tornado
lasted only six minutes but sliced
an 8-mlle-long and l·mlle-wide
s wath through 20 densely populated vlllages.
.- Officials reported 1,040 deaths ·
Fiiday from across the devastated area and said 498 bodies
were burled without coffins or
covering cloth in a mass grave
set amid the decimated village of
He rgoze.
···Except for my house, everything was just wiped away," said
a weeping village headman,
Abdul Gaffer, who lost four
relatives. "We dug with shovels
and pu t them In the big hole. Most
of the bodie s were
unrecognizable." ·
Other survivors told how they

helped bury bodies beneath
freshly tilled eartll. Five bodies
silll lay scattered on the soggy
soli Friday, addlngtothesinellof
decomposition that. )Vaft~d over
the decimated landscape.
Gaffer said he had few people
to help him bury more bodies
because most of his village' s
survivors - among the esti·
mated 100,000 left homeless by
t)Je tornado - had left In search
of food and water.
Among the' few buildings left
standing were a mosque, a school
and a Brltlsh-bullt bungalow, but
the storm's fury made short work
of the flimsy dwellings In which
most residents lived near where
they grew rice and potatoes.
A Food Control Department
offlclal said the government was
trying to provide food and water
to the 100,000 people Jell homeless In the area, already short of
food because or a drought.
At the destroyed Shaturla
village, where offlclals reported
394 deaths , about 30 soldiers
brought In a crane and two trucks
with equipment to break Into the
remal ns of three collapsed warehouses that' were belleved to hoW ·
numerous victims.
The soldiers forced residents to

move the concrete and Iron they are not all in there."
debris by hand but called off the
All estimated that 1,200 to 2,000
search at sunset when it began people were crushed to ·death.
raining. They said the operation The- warehouses were being used
would resume Sat 1urday.
·
to dlsirtbute food to drought' 'There were a large number of sti'lcken vlllagers, and many fled
prople Inside whep the bulldlngs , Inside the 111-fated structures
collapsed," said Akkas All. the when the tornadwhlt.
manager of the three state-run
After hitting ManlkganJ disbulldlngs. "I pray to God that trict. the twister left a 20-mile

stretch of farmland ttntouched
and then descended with less
power on two other districts,
causing severe damage and
lnjurle$ before dlsslpattng.
Officials reported 200 people
dl~d aboard a ferry that capsized
durtng storms spawned by the
tornado, which came after millions of Moslems prayed for rain

In accordance with an appeal by
President Mohammad Hussain
Ershad.
About 10,000 people were InJured by the tornado, some 1 ~ 000
critically . The Independent .In
Qullab newspaper quoted local
oillclals as estimating the tornado had caused . $16 million In
property damage.

.Local 84 employees -trot the globe'

mental hospital and then banished from the Soviet Union In
1970 for hIs crltlclsm of Soviet
science. He now lives In Britain.
Roy Medvedev's "Let History
Judge," a detalled crltlclsm of
the purges and aftermath of the
Stalin era, was behind his expulsion from the party 20 years ago.
His writings have also been
highly crltlcal of Soviet leaders
that followed Joseph Stalin Including Nl klta Khru&amp;hchev and
Leonid Brezhnev .
·
However under Soviet leader
Mlkhall Gorbachey, Medvedev
has been rehabllltated, appearIng at official news conferences,
on television and at public
meetings.
Since January his once banned
works have been published on a
regular basis In Znamya, the
official magazine of the Union of
Writers.

,

HARMAN LEAP

'
Bellone
announces
new product

NEW DISC BRAKE PADS

• By EPA.
• Shoes wi,th exchonge.

~~ SEMI~METALLIC PAD;

... ............. 13.88

QUAKER STATE

MOTOR OIL

• Umll 12 q,uarts

• ol oolo Pfl&lt;'l·

PENNZOIL
MOTOR OIL

• Unlit 12~m
ot taM-

•

•SAE 30

• SW-30.

lOW-10,
IOW-40

•*

.

i'lle ume court i'rltlay ruled
that autborltlel ~ Oat alate In
.1

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commitment to providing
your family · ·
with quality health care.
That's what Dr. Dan Trent brings to the people of the Bend Area
with the establishment of his pJ:i~ate medical practice in Ne~ Haven.
. It's the same commitment he's made at Pleasant Valley Hospttal, where
. ·
he's been an Emergency Care Center physician f£?r the
' · ' ··.
past four years alld where he continues as an active
member of the Medical Staff.
A West Virginia native, Dr. Trerit graduated from
Marshall University with a degree i.n biological _a nd
general science. He earned his medaca~ degr~ ~ro~
the West Virginia School of Osteopathtc Medtctne tn
1983. and completed a rotating lntemshiE at Traverse
City Osteopathic Hospital in Michigan before
re-focating with Jlis family, wife Linda and children.
Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
Dr. Trent Is looking forward to bringing a
continuity of care to his patients and their families •
and working with the commt~nlty for. the good health
and welfare of all its residents. Appointments and w'lk-tns are welcome
from 9 a.m. to S p.m. Monday. TueSday, Thursday and Frl~ay, and 9 a.m.
to noon Wednesday.

.,

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'
-:

..,.,,

.,
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' '

'

,,''
'
'

Daniel R. ·Trent, D.O·.

mentsaldmanydoctonwentncn
complylq with t11e1r requeeta tor
IIIII ot patleata.
.
' Juatlce V•Jra•acballalab said

Family Practite
· 138 Main St., New Haven, West Virginia

tile JUdi•'• deelalon 011 ellltbiJ. .
lty "'" "OIIb' a partial piOture
aDd not a "'II I' etatiVe ~
t1o11 of tile natlll"e ind ateat of
lDJurtlel auffered by tbe
victlma."

:__________________________

__t

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central India must pay within a
month a one-time sum ol $193
apiece to 773 people who need
medical help because they In·
haled the toxic gas methyl
Isocyanate, and a $31 montllly
payment to four otllers left
totally disabled.
However, the judges refused a
plea tllat Interim relief also be
granted to 29,953 victims who are
registered with th~ government
as having suffered temporary
Injuries In the disaster.
The government holds that
more than 3,300 people have died
as a result of Inhaling the gas,
which also Injured some 200,000
others.
The judges said they arrtved at
their figures of who deserved
lnterlin relief frOI!I partially
completed llata tieing complied
by the aovermnnt of tbose
ellllble tor compenaation.
The reptratlon procen has
been complicated by many Ineligible people applying, and an
attorney for tile state govern-

J

Economic education
course. set at RGC

RIO GRANDE - Area .educa,- . Gallia, Jackson, Meigs. Vinton
·tors desiring more instruction on and· Lawrence counties.
teaching baste economic educa- · " This course wlll replace the
tion methods w111 receive an mystery and theoretical jargon
opportunity to do so through a of modern economics with com·
GALLIPOLIS - Being seen
and not heard may be the rule for
summer program at Rio Grande monplace 1anguage and prlnclCollege/ Communlty College.
children. but when speaking of
ples which can be used In
hearing aids, hearing and not
A course of Instruction has teaching elementary and high
been arranged by th e Loren M. • school students." said H. Paul
being seen is the Ideal.
Berry ce·n ter for Economic Edu· Lloyd. dean of the School o!
Making powerful hearing aids
smaller and less noticeable has · cation at Rio Grande In conjunc- Education .
tion with Rto:s School or Health,
been the focus of the hearing
Elementary and high school
Industry for 50 years and the
Education and Physical Educa- teachers participating In the
tion .and the Emerson E . Evans summer program can obtain
motivation behind Bel tone's new·
School of Business Management. graduate credlt from the Univer·
est in-thE!-canal hearing lnstru·
The course · will be offered sity of Dayton at reduced cost .
ment, the Opera, according to
concurrently with the American
Harmon · Leap, manager of the
For more Information, call or
Free Enterpris&lt;' Workshop at Rio write to the Director .. Loren M.
Beltone Hearing Aid Center in
Grande June 19-23:
Berry Center for Economic Edu·
Galllpolls.
Statistics provided by Hearing
Stalled by education a nd bustcation, Rio Grande College/ ComIndustries Association state that ness facult y member s. the
munity College, Rio Grande.
more and more hearing· course will tr ain teachers how to
Ohio 45674. 1·800-282-7201. exten·
·Impaired l'ndlvlduals are de- implement basic economic edu sian 381.
manding the most cosmetically- cation methods In schools in
appeallng- hearing Jnstruments.

RELINED BRAKE SHOES OR

Court orders government
pay victims of gas leak ·
lllEW DELHl, India (UPI)
The Supreme Court Friday told
an Indian state government to
pay special relief to 777 people
ln_tured In the 1984 Bhopal gas
le3k -Its second order gnintlng
fln)nclal assistance to victims
and relatives of those killed In the
wo~ld's worst Industrial
accident.
The ruling came amid legal
moves by gas vlctlins to annul a
se\tlement reached Feb. 14 between tlle government and Union
Cal-bide Corp. under which India
r~lved $470 million for ending
all• clvll and criminal lltigatlon
over tlle leak from tlle u.s.
multinational's Bhopal pesticide
plaOt.
VIctims are contesting. as unc09'tllutlo!JIII a 1985 act that
gave the goveriUIIent the sole
rl&amp;'lat to repruent thoae affected
by·; the world'• rnost deadly
ch$11eal dlla1ter, and they have
ai• IIIIIYed petitions calling tor
lindletllate financial assistance.
.t lllree-Judie paael Aprll 21
OJ oa.rtd-tile pelililletlt of Madby~! ~ ,.._ capttal II
BiliDal. to M' the DeXf-of-kbl of
UOI ' fiJOiplll I moadlly
ol • ·III .Uie ftrt
. t cub
tfllee ... Pic. 8, :lt8&amp;,
d
.. ·
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EIGHTY FOUR, Pa. - Im·
travel Incentive program In·
aglne basking on the warm ·eluded In 84 Lumber's upper
beaches at a posh resort. For
management c~mpensatlon
most of us, that's just what we do
packages for top performance.
- dream . But for 84 Lumber
Winners from the local area
associates and their spouses,
lnclud·e:
these trlps ''are reallty. Ninety
Joe Frallc, Manager, ManManagers; Area Managers and
ager, Huntington, W.Va. andB111
Operatlonal Vice Presidents just
Underdonk, E:ontractor Sales Re·
returned from exotic Casa de
presentative. Huntington, W.Va.
Campo In the Dominican
"We llke to reward our people
Republic.
for a job well done," said, Joe
Many companies now use
Hardy, Sr., President and
travel Incentive programs In- • Owner. " We have found that
stead of cash Incentives. 84
Incentive travel Is better than
Globetrotters Is a bi-yearly " cash. People don't really re·

a

Dissident historian's party
~embership restored: Tass
MOSCOW (UPH - Dissident
h lstorian Roy Medvedev. who
was expelled from the Communist Party In 1969 for criticizing
Its leadership, has been reln~tated, the offlclal Tass news
agency said Friday.
:rass said the re-admission of
Medvedev. 63, was backdated to
the year he was expelled. He was
admitted to the party In 1959.
During the early 1970s, Med·
vedev, Nobel Peace Prize winner
Andrei Sakharov and dissident
w~lter Alexa nder Solzhenltsyn
fol'llled the spearhead of the
di ss id e nt human rl!\-hts
m twement.
Medvedev was ousted from the
party and all his historical
writing banned whlle Sakharov
was placed In Internal exlle and .
Solzhenltsyn was forced abroad.
Medvedev's brother L.uun:~·:;, a
g~etlclst , was pla ~~d In a

~

Sunday limes-Sentinel Paga E-7

Extension Service marks 75th birthday SIFE team gears up

April 30, 1989

Roy Lee Williams, dead at 7 4 ·

stdency In May 1981, was con·
WUlla m s, a Hoffa protege, gangland-style outside a subur"Rancher" because he raised.
vlcted along with organized became president of the union
ban Chicago restaurant 'Jan. 20,
quarter horses on his 380-acre
cr ime figures In the bribery case. following Fltzslmmons·s death in 1983, whlle appealing his
ranch at Leeton.
Williams was allowed to re· 1981, and . tried to centralize conviction.
The name "Rancher" was
main as president of the Teams- powe r In his office.
W1111ams Invoked his Firth
found on a scribbled note· obters pt:ndlng an appeal of his
A cblor photograph of Will ia ms
Amendment rights 23 times In
tained during F131 raids on the
conviction but resigned In Apr il and P r.e sldent Reagan ador ned a
Augu st 1980 in refusing to answer
home or Clvella's brother and
1983, after his sentencing, and 1982 cover of the union's house
ques tions o? a Senate committee chief lieutenant, In Its tnvestlgawas succeeded by Jackie organ. It showed Reagan and
about organized, crime connec- tlon of a operatlon to skim off
Presser, who died of cancer In
Williams chattin g' In front of a
tions with the union.
proflts from Las Vegas casinos.
1988.
.
fireplace a t the White House.
He admitted a 30-year relationAccording to a longtime friend
Willlams and the others were
The Teamsters ,was the only s hip with Nicholas Clvella , reand banker, Robert Brown, Wllll·
convicted or trying to bribe Sen. major labor unlon :ln the country
puted boss of the Kansas City ams' only hobby was raising
Howard Cannon, D-Nev .. to op- to suppor t Reaga11 In his 1980
underworld. When Clvella was quarter horses.
pose trucking deregulation legis· -campaign.
Investigated In 1979, the FBI
"He doesn't drink, doesn't
latlon wlth a lucratlve Las Vegas
The ardor of that relationship
wire tapped homes and orrtces of smoke, and doesn't play go!t."
real estate deal. He also was later cooled because of the
Wllllams and other Teamsters Brown said.
convicted of conspiring to de- niltion 's economtc lrecesslon and
officials tn Kansas Cl!y .
Williams had a sturdy appear·
fraud the Teamsters Central the Teamsters' l~]&amp;blllty to get
One of the founders of the ance with sucked-down black
States Pension Fund.
the admlnlstratlon to change its
scandal-ridden Teamsters Cen· hair and a square jaw.
Two of WUUams three imme· mind abo!Jt i trucking
tral States Pension Fund and a
Born March 22,1915,1n Ottawa,
dlate predecessors as Teamsters deregulation.
trustee lor 22 years. Wllllams. Iowa, the seventh of 12 chlldren,
boss also went to prison. Dave
ThroughOut his career with the
resigned In 1977 under govern· . W1111ams moved with his tamlly
Beck was convicted of fraud In Teamsters. Williams had conment pressure. He was subse- to a southeast Mlssourt farm
1957. He was followed by Jimmy nections with lndlvlduals cons!·
quently sued for recovery of three years later. He qujt school
Hoffa, who was convicted of jury den!d by law enforcement offlmllllons of dollars allegedly In the lOth grade to help support
tampering and mall fraud. Hoffa ctais to ·be tied ito organized
squandered In bad loans, lnclud· his famlly and had his first
dJsappea_red In July 1975 and his crime . Including A)Jen Dorfman, .lng several to Las Vegas casinos. ste!ldY Job when he became a
body was never found. He was a Chicago Insurance executive · · Some government lnvestlga- truck driver at the age of 20.
s ucceeded by Frank who was convict!ld with W1111tors bel1eved Wllllams was
He first joined the Teamsters
Fitzsimmons.
ams. Dorfman was gunned down
known In the underworld as In 1938 and went Into the Army In

•

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

+ (304) 882-3134

Formerly Bend Ar11 Medical Center

member the cash Ince ntives, but
the memories from a trip are for
a llfettme. It bullds company
friendships and loyalty."
"We really enjoyed meeting
other 84 associates from around
the country," said Frallc.
" These trips are part of what
binds 84 Into a lamlly . They are
an 84 tradition. To win an 84
Globetrotter trip Is a real honor."
According .to Cecll Brunton,
Director of Publlc Relations, 84
Globetrotter trips are deluxe. All
of the detalls are planned from
the airfare to group activities.
Golf and flshlng tournaments,
dlne-a-rollnds and beach parties
are some of the activities arranged to make sure everyone
has a good time.

for national contest

RlO GRANDE - As a llnalist
In the Appalachian Regional
Competition, the Rio Grande
Students ln Free Ent-'rprlse
(SIFE) team has been Invited to
compete In the natiOnal SIFE
competition May 14·16 at Kansas
City , Mo.
The Rio Grande SIFE team
won all three awards at the
recent regional eompetltlon at
Lexington, Ky . In addltlon to
being chosen as a finalist, for the
ftrst team the team was ·a lso
awarded two other trophies.
The team won the Business
Roundtable Award tor Halt the
Deficit projects and the General
Foods Fund Award for the
Liability Crisis projects.
In the six years that Rio
Grande College has had a SIFE
team , It has participated In the
national competition five years
and placed In the top 10 In the
nation each year.
Throughout the academic
school year SWE members de·
sign projects about free enter·
prise and present them to
schools, and civic a nd business
groups. Many of the projects
measure knowledge of.free enterprise before and after the presen·
tat ion to determine the extent of
awareness that was created. · .
These projects are then presented to top corporate business
executives from across the country who act as Judges at both the
regional and national competl·
tions. SIFE students are judged
on their written report and a
24-mlnute oral presen tation
given at the competitions.
More than 100 teams compete
in the 10 regional competitions
where 24 teams are chosen as

finalists. Of the 24 teams, eight
are chosen as flnalists at the
national competition . E ach
team 's Halt the Deficit proJects .
and the Liab111ty Crisis projects
are Judged separately. In add), ·
Uon, 10 rookie teams compete. .
SIFE Inc. began In the mid·
1970s to establlsh and direct
student-generated free market
economic education programs on
college and university . cam·
puses. This Is accomplished·
through the student SIFE teams'
outreach projects and the presen· :
tation of these projects at the
regional and national
competitions:
SIFE Inc. Is a not-lor-prollt
.c orporations sponsored by Individuals,_foundations and corporations. At the national level,
some of the sponsors are Holiday :
Inns Inc., Wai-Mart Stores Inc. ,
Ashland 011 Foundations, the
DuPont Co., KlmQerly-Clark
Foundation, the Standard 011
Co., and General Motors Corp. ·
College and u.nlverslty SWE
teams typically generate flnanclal support from business and ·
Industry In their local
communities.
.
Sam Walton, founder of Wal- ·
Mart 'it ores Inc ., said that SIFE ·
was "the most Important program to come to the United .
States In the last 50 years."
Rio Grande SIFE competition ·
members for 1988·89 Include ·
Angelo Forte, Bill Hull, B111
Mangus, Tim Bishop, Mimi ,
Re ntz, Laura Haverkos, Lisa ·
Mar.tin and Melinda Ramey . · ··
Advisers are Jerry Gust, assist- .
ant to the president and director
of the Economic Education Center , and Nita Dailey, assistant
professor of communications.

AWARD WINNERS- Dlaplaylng trophies won by
Students
In Free Enterprise chapter at Rio Gralide College/Community
College during recent regional competition are, from left, Lisa
Martin, Melinda Ramey, Tim Bishop, Angelo Forte, Laura
Haverkos, B111 Hull, adviser Nlla Dalley and Mimi Rentz.

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CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION FOR

Farnters Bank and Savings Contpany
'•

of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of business
March 31, 1989, a state banking inslltutlon organized and operatlngulltler the bank·
lng laws of this siate and a member of the Federal Reserve System. Publlaed In
accordance with a call made by the Slate Banking Authority and by the Federal
Reserve Bank of this District.
Federal Reserve District No. 4
Stale Bank No. lOSOX
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from deposlto!'y Institutions:
·
a . Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coln .. ..... .. :.. ...... 1,806,000.00
b . Interest-bearing balances .. .... ....... .... ............ .... ...... .. .... .... .... ........550,000.00
Secu rltles ..... .. .. ... ... .............. .... ........ ..... ... ..... ........ ......... ... ...... .. .. ..... 21,276,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to
resell In domestic offlces of the bank &amp; of Its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries, &amp; In IBF's:
--Federal funds sold .. ... ........ .... ............ ..... ... .......... .. ...... .... . ... .. ....... 1,625,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ..... .......... .30,597,00().00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses .......... .... ..... 223,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve ..... .. ..... ... .... ...... .. .... .. ......... .. ... ........... .......30,374,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capltallzed leases) ........ ... ... ........ 685,000.00
Other real estate awned ... .. . :..... ..... ....... ..... ... ............... ... .... .... .. ...... .. ... 64,000.00
Intangible assets ... ... .... .... ........ ......... ..... .. ..... .. .. ..... ... ... ............... ........ 111,000.00
Other assets ............. .... ... .. ......... ................... .. .... .. ... ......... .... ... ........... soo,ooo.oo
Total assets ..... ............ ..... ... .......... ... .. ... .... ... ............ .... ............ ......51 ,291,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ....... 57,291,000.00
LIABILITIES
' Deposits:
a. In domestic offlces ........... .. ......... ........... ............ .... ...... .. ...... ....52,023,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearing1 • • • •• •• , •••• •••• •••••• • •• • • •• • •• • ••••••• 5,167,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing .... ..... ...... ...... .............. .. .... ....46,856,000.00
Other Uab111Ues ...... .. :... ... ...... ... ...... ................. ... ...... ........ ..... ......... .....478,000.00
Totalllab111Ues .... :... ..... ............. ................. ..................... .... ...... ...... 52,501,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of shares a . Authorized .. .. ........... ... .... 200,000
·
b. Outstanding ..•.... ......... .. ..100,000
500,000.00
Surplus . .. ........ ......... ........ ..................... ...... ............... ...... ....... ... ...... 1,000,000.00
Undivided proflts and capital reserves .... ........ ......................... ......... 3,290,000.00
. Total equity capital .......... .................. ..... .. ............ ....... .......... .. .... .. .. 4, 790,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred .
'
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(1) ................. .... ...... .................. .... ......... 4,790,000.00
Totalllab111Ues, llmlted-llfe preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(J) ..........................57,291,000.00

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I, Roger W . Hysell, ·Vice President/Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby de. clare that tllls Report of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the In·
structlons Issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the
State Banking Authority and Is true·to the beat of my know~e and bellef.
Roger W. Hysell-VIce ~tsJ¥nt-&lt;:ashler
•
We, the undersigned dlr~ors, attest the correctness of thlll'leport of Condlllon
and declare·that It has been examinectby us and to the belt of our knowledge and belief hal been prepared In conformance with the lnatructlou iuued by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve-System and the State BanldiiJ Autborlty and Is
true and coJTeflt.
Richard C. FoUrOd
Leslie F. Fultz - Dlrecton
Paul G. Elcb

., ,

..
-~

li •

. -·.

State of Ohio, County of Meigs, u: . ·
·
Sworn tq and sublcrtbed befllre me thlllllh day of Aprll, 1M8.
•
Jo Au Crllp, Notary lllbllc
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Pu~lc. State of Oblo. My commllltnexpbn July lT,lllta.

.'
L

.......

~

--~-~-&lt;

___________________, ________________ ~

-

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j,

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'

�Pomaoy-Midclaport-Gellipulla. Ohio-Point Plusant. W.Va.

Page-E-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

· ~ingling's

.

'

gorgeous Gunther makes 2-year . farewell tour

the audience say, 'The animals the current 119th edition or
look great but thetralqer looks so · Ringling Bros. began Its tour In
old' ."
Florida in January. Thetourof92
Ringling's gorgeous·hunk with cities In two years before audlen·
the toothy smile Is known simply ces totaling 12 mllllon people will
as Gunther to his legion of fans end In November 1990 In
around the world. Ringling's Pittsburgh.
·press department claims that he
This Is one city more than was
nas played live before more visited by Bernhardt , the notorpeople - 150 million -!han any Ious French actress with the
other performer In history, and wooden leg, on her two-year
that's probably the.truth rather "farewell" tour which started In
than circus .hyperbole.
.
· 1916. Only the Dl11lne Sarah
According to the records, C·heated, and kept on giving
Gunther had given ~ore nearly farewell performances Into the
11,000 performances and tra- . 1920s. Gunther swears his retireveled some 300,000 miles when ment wlll be final.

:NEW YORK ! UP! l - Gunther
~bel-Williams ; who Is makhig
the longest farewell tour since
Sarah Bernhardt's 70 years ago,
opens his final season with
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp;
13alley Circus at Madison Square
~arden Thursday at the topofhls
term as wild animal trainer and
all-round showman.
~ "I've always wanted to go out
at the top," said the 54-year-old
Lord of the Rings, still bleached
blond, yout!tfully slender at 140
pounds, and tautly muscled,
lzefore the opening."! don't want
t~ walt until I'm 65 and people in

"Sarah Bernhardt was touring
forever and Frank Sinatra has
retired several times, but they
are not me," he said. "You
cannot tell the public you are
retiring and then not go.
"After 40 years, I think It Is
lime to step down. I've been on
tour 50 weekS a year all those
years and hav~n't missed a
performance 1.!120 years. I'm still
very · strong but when you get
older your eyesight begins. to go
and I have to wear glasses
offstage. But I can'twear them In
the ring."
·
Gunther said he will remain in

Ringling's employ, becoming a
spokesman for the company and
helping In the training or new
acts. He will be able to take a
vacation for the first time In 22
years of taking care or his
animals, a full-time job thai
allows for only a fewdaysoffat a
time.
.
The most (amous circus personalltyofthe20thcenturybepn ·
his career as Gunther Gebel, .
acrobat and bareback rider, In
his native Germany when he was
12. He added the ,W illiams to his
name wh~n he married a daugh-

.

ties and held ac~untable. "That
elim !nates the hierarchy, the
bureaucracy," Kanter said.
A Harvard University researcher believes cynicism and
faith In large companies has
leveled' off.
"There was a big trend of a
decline In faith In large·organlzaUons In the early '60s. That

.

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people can get behind."
. •
Kanter cited Hewlett-Packard, ·
IBM and Digital · Equipment ..
Corp. as companies trying to .
eliminate cynicism. He named •
Texas Air Corp. owner Frank
Lorenzo, who took Eastern AJr ...
lines Into ·bankruptcy, as &amp;II ~
•'extreme'' example of cynicism . .'

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4' X 8' 1/2" COX

\ WIBftRI

..Rowe: ·one of 34 who
escaped captivity .

'•

i

..'

. remained In the '70s and has kind shifted to a more recent trend of
of leveled off," says Charles . optimism, Heckscher said .
Heckscher, assistant professor
"l think people have defined
of human resource management the problem, the notion of compeat Harvard University's Gradu- titiveness," he said. "They unate School of Business Adminls· derstand In many companies
!ration. "It's been there."
tlltt putting the shoulder to . the
Among middle managers, a wheel -and becoming more effidecade or cynicism from the cient · Is something tl!!lt mpst
mld·l970s to mld·1960s has

..

•
• WASHINGTON (UPll -Army Stars and two Purple Hearts.
:coL J a mes "Nick" Rowe. killed
Rowe was a 25-year-old lieu ten' by suspected communist guerril- ant In the Green Berets on Oct.
clas in the Philippines. spent five 29.1963. when he and members or
:years as a prisoner of the VIet his Special Forces group dl·
·Cong and was one of only 34 reeled South VIetnamese special
:Am er icans to escape captivity in forces on a miss ton near the town
:vietnam.
of Le Coeur In the VIet Cong• A Green Beret member of U.S. domlnated southern Delta region
::-;pec ial Forces . the highly deco- of South VIetnam.
:rated Rowe detailed his 1963
"The dis lrict chief had gotten
capture. his years of ~ aptlvlty information ... that a small
'and his esca pe on New Year's enemy unit had moved into Le
' Eve 1968 in hi s book. "Five Years Coeur and was . establishing a
~to Freedom. "
·
, CO/llmand post there. The possi: The Pentagoh said Rowe was bility that It would be used to
:one of only 34 Americans to direct attacks against us exls ted
·escape ca ptivit y in Vietnam. He and we were gOing to hit the
:was awa rded. among other deco- village. dr iving ou I or kllllng the
:rations. the Silver Star, the VC," Rowe wrote 'in_hls book.
'Legion of Merit, two Bronze

•

ter or the Williams family, :"
owners of a classic European_
one-ring show or which he became star and manager.
.'
:
He developed his skU! as a ·
trainer of big cats and·elepha,nts ;
with the Circus Williams and ~
became famous tor his abtuty to .
control animals wlthoutthe usual ;
.whip, chair or pistol. Hi! soon ~
attracted the attention or Rln- •
gllng Bros ., but Gunther refused ~
to become a Ringling star unless ~.
they bought the Wlllla!llS opera- :
tlon outright. Ringling did, for $2 '::
mUIIon.
"
.:

America's cynics· alive and well, living in tite wQrkplace
• BOSTON (UP!) - Americans
In the 'typical cynical com·
l!I'e so terrified of being taken for pany, managers lie about the
suckers that their cynicism jobs they 're hiring for and pit
threatens the nation's competi- workers against each other on
tive edge, a nd the workplace Is
asslgnmen ts.
!he bes t 'place to attack the
"They treat their clients like
problem. a researcher says.
jerks, as If they were fools," he
, Donald Kanter, marketing pro· said. ·'This means shoddy protessor at Boston University, ducts , · shoddy service. By and
(t&gt;und In 1983 that 43 percent of large. our competitive edge has
American workers were cynical been dulled tremendously by our
;;;bout their jobs. He now believes · absence of quality."
the problem has worsened.
The manipulated "are terri; " '! think people are becoming
fled of being taken." They
Increasingly disillusioned," he Include blue-co liar workers who
!uiys. "I think the Reagan years •'live on th~ hard edge of life and
!lave left a legacy of haves and feel their dignity Is being
liave nots. People are just not squeezed'' and young professiongetting their hopes up at all. With als• convinced the system has
everything that happens, It's prevented them from moving up,
always, 'Well, lrjust goes to show Kanter said.
•
you .... "'
Kanter and Mlrvls hope their
Kanter and Boston research book will move more workers
~o ns ultant Philip Mlrvis "Jiave from cynicism to skepticism.
eo-authored a book. "The Cyni- While a cynic always assumes
ial Americans - Living and another person's motives are
'&amp;'or king in the Age of Discontent evil; a skeptic . doubts the mo~tnd Disillusion," that Identifies
tives. but Is willing to accept a
O:y nical workers and offers some. · reasonable explanation.
'
solu tlons. The book, published by
"That appears to be the more
a. subsldiary of Macmillan Inc .. healthy route," Kanter said.
fiOes on sale in June. .
He blames cynicism on society
• ··cynics are far more mtstrust- as a whole- citing news reports,
lilg of management a'nd their . television shows that "glorlly
(.ellow workers.'' Kanter said. street smarts," and advertising
"They feel opportunities are tor grooming Americans to ac••
•l-Imited. T)lelr basic fear.ts being cept betrayal, hype and greed.
:taken as a sucker.- Cynicism
The problem can be attacked in
serves as a shield to protect them the workplace- a microcosm of
;'rom really being disappointed s ociety, Kanter said. All workers
·9r hurt. "
should be offered stock owner- .
• Cynics come in two main ship or profit sharing, for
'lypes: manipul ators and the example.
:(Ranipulated.
·
"Ford (Motors) started to do
: Maniputa:tors, usually com- It." Kanter said. "My God,
:Pany bosses. ·"operate on the they're producing better au tomo-basis that people are no damq, biles. In the retail business,
;f:ood and unless you treat them eve~ybody says you can 'I" get
;~s no d~mn good . . they'll run
workers. How do you motivate
·amuck," Kanter said.
them? They've got to be part of
-~ They are managers who hire
the action."
.)vorkers on false 'promises, play
Management should be decen:peopie off one another and use tralized. with employees split
:their own mistrust. as a weapon.
Into groups . .given responslblll·

•

April30, 1989

95

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Page 3

.

•

•

at

e

.

NOT ONE BRASS-WOOD LAMP
NOT TWO BRASS-WOOD LAMPS

'

Chance of rain 90 percent
ltoJnlgltt. Low near 51. Tueaday, 60
percent chance of showers. High
near 60.
·

1 Section, 10 Pages 2-6 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Ohio, Monday. May 1. 1989

BUT

A SET OF THREE
BRASS-WOOD LAMPS

.........,.,._...,b!d..,..,.,.nr-oo FOR

$9 9

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YOU GET

1 Tabte\amp
1 Tebl• L1mp
· 1 Floor Lamp

LAMP .SAL£

Beautiful DIW t1bl1 tempe In en errey
of colore and atyl11. Sraa.,·Crylltll.
·Crockl and Gla11 ,
Reg. $18.96 LAMPS •• ,.,8elt'1'&amp;.19
Reg. '24.96 LAMPS ..: .. Salt '19.99
Reg. '34.96 LAMPS ..... Sale 127.99
Reg. '44.96 LAMPS ..... Site '36.99

S99

3 LAMPS FOR

Captivating oak finish!
~,

·BERKLINE RECLINER SALE

Open stock savings on the entire All-Wood collectlonl

·Berkline 'stands for quality! .

• All .. v.·ood
consrruction
• Rich Country
oak finish

Choose waUaway recliners.' rocluir I recliners or
swivel rockers. Beautiful yet durable fabrics at
prices you can 'afford. ·

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

'239
'339
•a69
'399

POTENTIALLY DANGEROUS - Hazardou1
mlderlals experts take nece!181U'Y measures to
pump off hydrochloric acid from a leaklag
railroad tanker. The leaking tanker was discovered al Addison In GaiDa County and then

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~

~

and NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
. Families In the lower end of
MlddleJ!'&gt;rt were rousted from
their homes early Sunday mornIng after a chemical leak was
discovered In a tanker being
shlpped,by Conrail .
'I'he leak was reported to local
authorities at 7:24 a.m. and
residents from Railroad St. In
Middleport, down to about Gllbert' Service Station on Route 7,
and all along the river, were
Immediately evacuated from the
area. · Middleport Elementary
School and the Rutland Civic
Center were designated as evacuation sites. Residents were not
permitted to return to their
homes until about 4:30 Sunday
attenoon.
· Bob B;ver, director oflhe Meigs

CViqtage
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DAYS

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controls •Electronic volume control •Highly efficient 6"x4" speaker •Casters •Puoh Button electronic tuner •Cable ready •Oak, pecan or maple finish.

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$4 9 9

Gran~~~~enlnt

'

Buy the pieces that fit your sleep, study
and scorage needs. Each piece sale priced!
Double Dre..er. Reg. '319.00 ....., SALE
Venical Mirror. Reg. '88.00 ............ SALE
Twin Captain's Bed, Reg. '499 ..... SALE '399
Night Stand, Reg. '1159.00 .... ...... . BALE '127
4 Drawer Ch11t. Reg. '267.00 .....: SALE '207
Bachelor Ch11t. Reg. '169.00 ....... SALE '127
Small Hutch. Reg. •169.00 ........... SALE '1 ,2 7
Student D11k, Rag. '299.00 ......... SALE '239
llrge Hutch, Reg. '239.00 ........... SALE '191
Reg. $232 Ful or a.-t Panel Bed ... SALE '1 811
Reg. •29911-Drewer Chest .... ... ..... SALE '239

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

County Emergency, Medical services and head of Meigs County's
Emergency Response Commission, reported that the leaking
tank, carrying hydrochloric ·
acid, belonged to Reagent Chern·
leal and Research Company,
Nitro, W.Va. By~ said the leak ·
was noticed when the train
moved through the Addison area
In Gallla County and was brought
Into the Hobson railroad yard In
Meigs County to be checked. A
hole was discovered In the side of
the tanker, Byer said, but what
caused ·the hole, he didn't know.
The tanker carried about 28,000
gallons of the hazardous chemical, he stated.
Residents were evacuated
from the Immediate vicinity of
the railroad yard to preve!ll
possible breathing of the cheml-

'

cal vapors. which was a major '
concern of authorities on the '
scene. Explosion was a minor
concern of au thorltles. Traffic
was routed away from the site.
Authorities "set up a· water
screen to keep the vapor cloud
down" as •the hydrochloric .acid
leaked from the tanker, Byer.
explained. A truckload of lime
was also brought In to be used to
neutralize the chemicaL · The
tanker was then "pumped off
below the leak," Byer explained,
Into Reagent ChemiCal tanker
trucks, four of which were
brought to the site. Byer was not
sure Monday morning where the
trucks took the hydrochloric acid
after they left Meigs County.
Once the chemical was pumped
off, "authorities secured the
scene anc~ left," Byer said. That
was about 7 p.m.

'299 Single DrMIIII' .. ............ SALE '239
'309 BooltceH Haadboerd .... SALE '247
S368 Triple Dte111r ......... , .... SALE 1 284
'182 Hutch Mirror ................ SALE '146

COOKSBETIER
ON A ROPER RANGE

Sale!!

30" PORCELAIN OYENS
ELECTRIC [ ·~~ ~~TS s~ as CAs~]
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• Scf""ned metal
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8"surface elements

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YOUR CHOICE

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TWIN

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Storage drawer

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• Solid oven door

• Three 6" and one

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Greet new covert in trlldltional contemporary and

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Berkline, Craftm11.ter and othera. .

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Two ice cube trays
Three glide-out. tipproof shelves
Twin glide-out crispers

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ButterlqJiee~ racks

Ooorshelves
Revet'lible dooB

•

ice maker

S679
• 24" undcroounler

$499
.

JUniUS er IOXSPIIIIOS

. SJ·

FATALfTY SCENE- A GalUpolls area man
was fattiiiY Injured ln'a head on crash onSR JU at
11:30 p.m. Saturday. James L. Davison Jr., 46,

-12 Ft. Width

•

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• Severi-qoclc selc:ction
• Two wad! Ieveii
• Shippad with panels for
olmond, wliile, biiiCk
~

'

CHEMICAL TRANSFER - There was plenty
of action at the 11eeae of the chemical leak In the
··Hobson r.allroad yard Sunday. Here firemen
spray water onto the railroad tank from which
hydrochloric acid was leaking as the transfer of

the liquid Is made to a trador-traller tank which
was brought In by Reagent Chemical and
Research Co., Nitro, W.Va. AccordlnKto firemen,
·the water was uoed to dilute the spUied chemical
making It less harmful as much of II changed from
a liquid Into a vapor.

Families ·a re evacuated after chemical leak

RECLINERS .... NOW ONLV 1 191
RECLINERS .::.NOW ONLY 1 271
RECLINERS .... NOW ONLY 1 287
RECLINERS .... NOW ONLY 1 319

! CASK
'
SYLVANIA
25" COLOR-CONSOLE
•

brought io the Robson railroad yard In Melp
County to be cheeked. Trucks from the cheinteal
·company which owned the tanker were brought to
Hobson for transfer of the chemical.
·

SUMMER FURNITURE
SALE
Reg. e11~.10 LO-IACK CHAIR ........ '7&amp;.
Reg. e130 HI-BACK CHAIR .......... 'I&amp;
Reg •.•247.10 LOUNGE A ............. '11&amp;
Reg. •211 2·8EAT GLIDER ......... '18&amp;
Reg. '341 3-SEAT GUDER ......... 023&amp;

-ACtion Back
-Lfwn 0-. Ivy or

BrownTonaa

-3 to &amp; Year, No-F1de
Warranty

This Is l "Itt'*'
Qul!lity'' T•f

. ·

*~;tS

-~~- .

SQ."·

I'SR GaiDpoUs, was Gallla County's fifth trafftc
fatality of the year,

Scipio resident to vote on
one-half milllery, not 12!
Scipio Township vote~s will go to the polls tomorrow
(Tuesday) to vote on a new five year . 5 (one-half) mllllevy for
cemeteries, not· a 12 mill levy as was reported In The
Sunday-Times Sentinel. In addition the voters of that precinct
will be voting on the U mUIIevy for schools In the Melp Local
School District.
Several votln1locatlons have changed wttb Jane Frymyer,
· director, Meigs Local Board of Elections reporilng thai Bedford
Precinct wtll be vot1a1 at the Bedford ToWMhlp BuDding; West
Cheater lor this · eleclllln oaly at the Rock Sprlllp Ualted
Methodist Church; Rutland Vlllap, Eut Rullatld aad West
Rutland at the Rutland Civic Center; Salem at the Salem
Volunteer Fire Deparaneat; Middleport Flnt Ward'* Vlllale
Hall, Mltl41eporj Third Ward al the Library, ud MI.Ueporl
Feurth WaH I&amp; Overbrook Ceater.
In ro!Mroy Flrllt. Ward voters wttl vote al Vll~lfl hall,
Pomeroy SecoiMI Ward ~· l'clmeroy Elementary Sclaool;
Pomeroy Third Wlll'd I&amp; PoaMror Fire Department; Bradbury
at the Bradbul'J' El_...;. School; Laurel Cliff al the Utter
Celltrol BaiYIIIC; Bock llpl'fDp I&amp; the Rock Sprlap Melhodlllt, ,
Cbtlftlh, ud llelplo I&amp; the Scipio Velattteer Fire Department.
Polllal place~ will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 1: 88 p.m.
Tuesday.
.
.
'

Authorltl.es on the scene Included fire department personnel from Middleport, Pomeroy,
Galllpolls and Mason, W.Va .,
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby and several deputies, the
State Highway Patrol, Middleport Pollee, hazardous materials
experts from the Nitro plant, the
state fire marshall's office and
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, and a crew from
ConraiL
As required by a new federal

law which established the Ohio was coordinated by the MiddleState Emergency Response port Fire Department Auxiliary.
Byer commended the sheriff's
Commission, a representative
from the Public Utilities Com- department and other agencies
mission was also on the scene, involved In Sunday's potentially
Byer reported. And Veterans dangerous situation for their
Memorial Hospital personnel "tremendous amount of
were put on a standby basis "just cooperation."
As of about 10 a.m. Monday
In case," he added,
In addition, several area res- . morning, there had been no
taurants donated food and bever- reports from residents or emerages for emergency and cleanup gency personnel of respiratory
personnel on the scene, as welfas problems or related health ailfor the evacuees. The food effort ments due to the chemical leak,
Byer reported.
·

Gallipolis man fatally injured
in Saturday night accident .
A Galllpolls area man was
fatally Injured Saturday at 11:30
p.m . In a three-vehicle accident ,
marking Gallla County's !lith
fatality of the year.
Two Gallla Counlians also
were Injured In the wreck,
accordlng to the Gallla-Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
James L. Davison Jr., 46, PSR.
Galllpolls, was killed when his ·
1979 GMC pickup truck· was
struck head on by a 1985 Chevrolet Scoitsdale pickup truck
driven by Joseph E . Russell, 19,
·psR, GallipoliS. ·.
Russell and his passenger,
Brian E. Salyers, 23, Rt. 2,
Patriot, were taken by the Gallla
County Emergency Medical Services to Holzer Medical Center,
where they were admitted to the
Intensive care unit for tl'!&gt;atment
of bruises, scrapes and cu Is. AI
las I report both were listed In
stable condition.
No charges had been flied by
the patrol In connection with the
accident late Monday morning.
Davison was driving west on

EMS responds to 14 calls

the straight portion of SR 141 In
Green Townslilp, between Saf-' ·
ford School Road and Debby
Drive, when Russell, who was
driving east, went l!&gt;ft of center
and hit Davison's truck head on.
A third vehicle, a 1987 Ford
Ranger pickup truck driven by
31-year-old Vicki L. Kern of
Cheshire, was struck by debris
from the collision.
Davison's truck came to a rest
In a yard owned by Eldon J .
Gates, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Russell's truck stopped In the
center of the road, and the
Impact from the collision threw

Russell and Salyers from the
truck , as neither was wearing a
seat belt.
Kern 's truck stopped between
the heavily damaged trucks.
Davison, who was not wearing
a seat belt, was trapped In the
truck, and the Gallla County
EMS sent its Jaws of Life unit to
free him. He was pronounced
dead at the scene by Dr. Daniel
H. Whiteley of the Gallla County
Coroner's office.
Also on the scene ·was the ·
Gallipolis Fire Department, ·
which was called In the event of
fire, though none occu ~red.

Rt. I Reedsville man .
hurt in S:unday wreck .
A Reedsville area man was
Injured In a one-car accident
Sunday at 5: 30 a .m. In Olive,
Township on CR 46, half a mile
south of SR 7, according to the
Gallla·Melgs Post of.lhe State
·
Highway Patrol.
Mark A. Gillilan, 28, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, was taken by ambulance to St. JQseph's Hospital In
Parkersburg, W.Va., where he
was admitted lor ·treatment of
multiple fractures In his left leg.
At last report he was llsted In
good condition.

The Meigs County Emergency Gillilan, assisted by the Coolville
Medical Service responded to 14 unit, to St. Joseph Hospital In
calls over the weekend.
Parkersburg, W.Va. AI 7:24a.m.
On Saturday, at 11:41 a.m. the . the Middleport, Pomeroy, and
Syracuse squad was called to Mason fire departments re·
Hubbard ·st. tor Iris Baker who sponded to a' hazardous material
Gillilan, driving a 1986 Dodge
was taken to Veterans Memorial spill at Hobson. AI 12:50 p.m. the
Daytona, · was d.rlvlng south
Hospital. A.t 2: 19 p,m. the Middle- Syracuse unit went to Amerlcare
thrOugh a post-rain tog when he
port squad went to South Fourth for Annie Diehl who was taken to
fell asleep at the wheel. He went
In Cheshire for Budd Darst Veterans Memorial, and at 12:58
off the lett side of the road and hit
transported to Veteqms Memor- · p.m. the Pomeroy unit took
a bridge at the edge of a
lal, and at 4: 38p.m. went to North Mattie Warner from Amerlcare
right -hand curve.
Second Ave. !or Bill Lundsford to Veterans Memorial.
The Racine unit, at 1: 03 p.m.
who WB!I treated but not transporll!d. 'A,! 11:06 p.m. the Middle- was· called to Bashan for Mary
port squad went to the pollee Holter, taken to St. Joseph
The Melp County Sheriff's .
department where Larry Rider Hospital. At 6: 25p.m. the MiddleDepartment was at the ~c:ene on
was treated but tran~rted, and port squad went to the pollee
at 11: 28 p.m. the R lne squad departnient tor Rick Johnson Sunday during the hazardous
and fire tepartment as called who was transported to Veterans materials spill and emergeacy at
toRoweRoadonanautoaccldent Memorial. At 8:05 p.m. the Hobson Yards when a railroad
In whiCh Keith Picken• was taken Pomeroy unit went to Liberty tank car leaked hydrochloric
. · Lane for Nancy GrlffiJh who was acid causlna area residents to be
to Veterans Memorial.
On Sunday, at 5:.a a.m. the takentoVeteransMemorlai.The · evacuated and traffic to be
Tuppers Plains sqllad responded Tuppers Plains squad. at 9:01 rerouted.
In other matters, the aherlff'a
to an auto accident on Success p.m. responded toacallonSR681
depariiJient
Is lnvesUaatlna a
Road and transported Math
Continued !JD
1o

A Racine man was Injured In a
.one-car accident Saturday at
11:28 p.m. In Letart Township on
TR 97, just west of TR 98.
Keith F. Pickens, 33, was taken
by the Meigs County EMS to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where he was admitted lor
treatment of multiple bruises
and possible fractures. At last
report he was listed In stable .
condition. .
Pickens was a passenger of
Brian Bass of 30479 Roy Jones
Road, Syracuse. Bass, driving a
1980 Dodge Omnl, was traveling
north wben he went off the left
side of the r&lt;,&gt;ad. hitting an
embankment before overturn-,
lng. Though neither man wore
seat belts, neither was ejected.
The accident Is stU! under
lnve~ttgatlon by the patrol.

Sherifrs aep.aties have busy weekend

page

complaint from Kenneth Haaer.
commallder of til!&gt; Tupper&amp;
Plalu Poal, Veterans of Foreran
Wars, ,Plat a subject had ~
aolll:ltlq
for m.aa·
azlnee
and

several
believe

the Post.
1111 to contlllct
Continued on .pep 10 .

••

•

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