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                  <text>7-:'I n·n h

Sun&lt;l;l\.

MSU SpaPtans rip OSU 81-66 - C-1
.

.

Helpi"ng
the
.homeless

Valentine's Day 'dark spot' on singles'
calender · K~vin Pinson • Page A·3

_B·l

High school reunions being planned
for spring • Beat of the Bend • Page B-6

Vol. 27, No. 52
-Copyrlghtecl1993

I

Inside
,

Aloag tbe river ····-···....8 1-8
Busilless/Farm .."'"'""".D 1-8
Claullled ""-""_"_"..Dl-7
Datba. ........- ....- .........A.-3
Editoral .......- ..................A-4
Sports.......... _ .... _____ ct-s

Weather ............,_.. _ ......A-2

15 Section 138 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. n-•paper

Mlddleport-Pomeroy~alllpoll......,olnt Pleasant, February 14, 1993

Clinton
readies • •
economzc
package

Drennan faces
trial March.
1
•.
•

Panel rejects plea agreement
·in murders of.Gallia-man, son
During the brief afternoon session, Crow announced that the
panel was "not receptive to the plea
. POMEROY- A plea bargain bargain because it limits the court's
agreement which included Fred discretion on sentencing. ~·
At that point, he announced a
' Drennan's plea of guilty to the
· murder of Jeff ,Halley Sr. and his pretrial ·llearing for Feb. 22 and a
son, Jeff Halley Jr. of Gallia Coun- trial date for March I.
The plea bargain agreement had
ty, was rejected Friday afternoon
. by a three-judge panel in Meigs provided that Drennan change his
County Common Pleas Coiut.
plea of innocent to guilty on
As the result of the judges' deci- charges of aggravated murder, and
. sion - and in accordance with the that charges of aggravated robbery
plea wording - the agreement was and kidnapping be nullified in
withdrawn.
exchange for Drennan's testimony
The first indication of a problem against William D. Lemaster, 26,
with the terms of the agreement Racine, the second person alleged·
came just before noon Friday when ly implicated in the Halley, mur·
1
a recess was Clllled and auomeys in ders.
•
the ca~e were summoned to the
According to Meigs County
'judge's chambers.
. ·
P~osecutor John Lentes, the agreeReturning to the courtroom, ment· specified a life .sentence for
Meigs County Common Pleas prennan with first eligibilily. for,
Judge Fred W. Crow ID 8JU10unced parole to be after he had served 20
that the panel hacl not JICCCDted the years. Lentes said (.hat since the
plea bargain agreem~n a5 it was judges would not accept that pan of
written. However, he said that the plea bargain, then the agreecourt would reconvene.after lunch._ ment was withdrawn.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr

.

•

1991 murders ~Jeff Halley Sr. or GaUia County
and his son, Jeff Jr. Tbe panel rejected a plea
·bargain agreement ror Drennan and slated a
trial ror March 1. (T·S pboto).

ENTERS COURTROOM- Fred Drennan Is
escorted into tbe Meigs County Common Pleils
courtroom by Sheriff James Soulsby Friday to
hear the decision or a three-judge panel. 'Drennan, 3.0, Ravenswood, W.Va., Is charged in tbe
The victims' family supponed
the terms of the plea bargain agree- .
ment, Lentes said.
He also said that by not getting
the pka bar.ain . aareeMenl
approved, the C8$C against Lemaster, also charged with aggravated
murder, aggravated robbery and
kidnappinf, has been "seriously
weakened.'

The murders of Halley and his were Judge Roben Teague of Perry
. son .Occurred in February 1991 in County, and Judge Dan Favreau of
Meigs County. ·The body of the Morgan County.
Drennan, 30, Ravenswood,
elder Halley was found a few feet
. from the old· Portland .Road in V/.Va., WIS ~b)i'l"UbUc
Lebanon Township_in September Defenders J. Michael Westfall of
1991, aitd the bOdy of his 12·year- Athens and Jerry McHenry.
Columbus. Lentes was joined. by
ol~ son in a wooded area near SellAssistant Prosecutor Charles
ers Rid~e in Aprill992.
Knight
to represent the state.
Joimng Crow to hear the case

,Happy together
.•

Valentine's Day couple takes ita day a:t a time
Mrs. Norris.
"We're very happy here," said
Ross, 93, as he talked about life
with his wif~. no~ 89, Wh!J suffers
POMEROY - No y wants
to go into a nursing home.
. . from ~,lzhem'!er s: They share _a
But when you are a couple m ro?m f11led with .PICtures of their
your 80s and one partner has c~tldren •. grandchildren, and greatAlzheimer's and the ·other is the grandchildren, and momentos of
caregiver and that person's health happy times in their lives.
Ross loves to talk about the
begins to fail, there are few choicgood
old days - when he farmed a
es.
.
hundred
acres. ()f river bottom in
'Routine daily care and safety
Letart,
and
m 1929 when . he
become factors to be dealt with by
shipped
5,500
bushels of pota"?CS
family members. Acknowledging a
to
Pittsb~gh
and
.as many turnips
need which can't be fulfilled in
somewhere
else.
one's home doesn't come easy for
those who have always .handled . Politics have alway~ b_een
1mportant to Ross, who dtscnbes
things on their own.
The lives of Ross and Marie himself as.a "life)ong Republican."
Norr-is who lived in an attactive · After leavmg the farm, he worked
brick home in upper Syracuse for many years with tl)e State Highway
many years changed dramatically Deparll!lent. He served on school
five years ago when they entered boards m _the. now S~uthern Lo_cal
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabili- Sch~ol DIS~nct and !n .everyt~mg
he d1d !IC 5!"d ~e ~arned the phil~tation Center.
.
ophy
of.~mg fair!'&gt; everybody.
, \ While making a decision to
Tradlllon~
family values have
lea,ve their home was extremely
always
bc:en
Important
to M!· and
ilifficult, it is apparently one which
Mrs.
Noms,
who
had
five
children.
·has fo'Orked out well for Mr. and
By CHARLENE HO:t:EFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff

Their son, Carroll. lives in Syracuse, another son, Virgil, in Florida. A daughter, Eleanor Kloes lives
in. Syracuse, while Mary Margaret
Weaver is in Florida, and Opal
Betz in Gallia County.
. Religion has played an important role in the Jives of Mr. and
Mrs. Norris. He describes himself
as an "evangelist singer who saw a
lot of souls saved."
"That was the most important
thing to me" said Norris "seeing
people saved."
'
Mrs. Norris spends most ·of her
time in bed now as she is in the
advanced stages' of Alzheimer's.
·aut Ross is around and about tho
nursing home. He doesn't hear too
well nor does he see too well and
he has other ailments, bu't he
doesn't let that get him down. He's
a good conversationalist, and has
maintained a keen sense of humor.
You 'II not hear him detailing his
ailments nor complaining about
things. It's apparent that he's tak·
ing one day at a time, and giving
thanks for each one.

Re~lamation
unit will slate
Mareh layoffs
\

' COLUMBUS (AP) -The sta~
office that monitors and enforces
itrip mine reclamation will lay off
an undetermined number of
employees, including inspectors
and environmental specialists.
The Division of Reclamation is
eliminating the jobs as part of a
reorganization, the Oh(o Department of NatUJ'Ill Resources said Friday.
The number of workers to be
laid off as a result of the tcorgani. • tion is uncertain, said Charles E.
!'6hultz, chjef of the department's
employee service office. . ·
Ten of the jobs being cut are in
Columbus, while others are in
Columbiana, Tuscarawas, Belmont
and Jacklon counties.
The layoffs will take place by
March 13.
Wayne· Warren, the depart·
mcnt'a deputy director for rcsourcb
protcction, said rcclimlllion inspec·
(Continued on A·2) .

Mostly cloudy. High In 4&amp;.

WINTER WONDERLAND - Two days after she supplied 60·
plus degree sprlnglike weather, fickle Mother Nature coated tbe
area with a blanket or snow. This Chrlstmu card ICftery wu captured Saturday morning In rront or the' GaUia Couty Courthouse.
But don't rret- a woman _called the Trlbu... olllct tile ~p~e day
and repqrted seeh1g the first sprlna robin. (11m...S•tlael photo
.by Kevin Pinson)

SWEETHEARTS - The 1993 Valentine sweethearts or the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rebabilitation Center are Ross and Marie
Norris. They bave been residents or tbe center for the past five
years. Tbis picture was taken on their 72nd wedding anniversary. ·
(T-S photo)
Looking lovingly at his wife as · "just wonderful." ·
· They were married on May 21,
she slept in a bed alongside his, he
described his 72 years with her as 1920.

Gallia court take·s plea
from poaching suspect
By The Associated Press
counties in the stiltc 's noithwest,
A nirith man accused of panici- central and southern regions, the
pating in a statewide poaching ring Ohio Division of Wildlife said.
that may have operated for five to
Douglas Shields, 31, of Walseven years has pleaded inn~!lt to bridge; Gary Hymore, 29, of Orecharges against him.
gon; Keith Adamson, 3Z. of NonhRon Kendrick, 34, Toledo, wood; and Rick Hymore, 34, and
entered pleas Friday in two courts. William Reetz, 28, both of Toledo,
He first posted $20,000 bond in pleaded innocent Thursday in GalChillicothe Municipal Court, where lipolis Municipal Coun.
he was charged with 10 violations,
Adamson remained in the Gallia
then pleaded innoccnUn Gallipolis County Jail late Friday on $15,000
Municipal Court and posted bond. The others were released
$50,000 bon!J.
·.
after posting bond. Pretrial hearHe faced'•42 cqunts in the Iauer ings for all except Reetz have been
court, but assistant court clerk scheduled for Feb. 26. Reetz's
Vickr. Danford said late Friday she hearing date hasn't been set.
didn t know how many counts he
Doug Andrew. 33, and Tim
had pleaded to, adding that records Ello, 30, both of Toledo, pleaded
of the case had been locked away innocent Thursday in Chillicothe
for the weekend. She also said she M~al Court and have been
didn :t know whether a pretrial • rei · . Hearin$S for thorn will be
heanng date for him had been on March 4.
scheduled.·
James Fyffe, 38, of LeMoyne,
His hearing in Chillicothe will was arraigned Wednesday in Perbe on March 4.
rysburg Municipal Court on 1S
' . Kendrick and eijlht other men counts in connection with the
·from northweat Oh1o arc accused alleged illegal sale of walleye. He
of iUeplly killlns animals such 18 was released without bail. A trial '
deer, turkey~ and walley~ in. six date hasn't been sche&lt;Juled.
)

1

ByTOMRAUM
Associated- Press Writer
WASHINGTON- President
Clinton Saturday consulted with
top advisers about his economic
stimulus package and said he's also
getting good advice from meinbers
of Congress as he prepares for
Wednesday's address to the nation.
Clinton met with more members
of Congress Saturday and delivered
a radio address - his second in as
many weeks - in a further effon
to prepare the nation for higher
taxes and painful budget cuts.
At a photo session before a Roo·
sevelt Room meeting with his eco·
nomic advisers, Clinton said he's
been !15king congressional leaders
for their ideas, "and I've gotten
some good suggestions, some of
which we've been able to incorporate."
Clinton said the plan wasn'J rmisbec! yet- "odlerwise, I woaldn't
be asking them to meet on Saturday."
Clinton plans to hit the road
after Wednesday's speech to help
sell his economic plan to the ,
nation.
(
"The president ~ill have a fullcourt press to make sure the American people understalid his economic plan and understand what it's
going to do for the country," said
White ~ouse spokesman George
Stephanopoulos .
Clinton stayed at the White
House to work on the plan instead
of going to the presidential retreat
at Camp David, Md.
In addition to the radio address·
Clinton expected to spend hour~
meeting with -~ economic advisers
and he also ~eduled sessions for
Saturday and Monday, President's
Day, to brief separate groups of
Democratic lawmakers on the plan.
Clinton's plan will have two
parts: A ".stimulus" package of
about. $31 billion in new spending
and tnvestment tax breaks is
designed to boost the economy in
the short-run, and a mix of higher
taxes and deep spending cuts are
designed to reduce the deficit in t~e
long-run.
.
.
Clinton will unveil the program
in a speech to a joint session of
Congress on Wednesday night.
"I've started putting elements
of it together. It may not be 'as
much of a speech as a talk," Clinton said during a f riday picturetaking session wi'th members of
Congress.
Clinton, Vice President AI Gote
and much of the Cabinet will barn·
storm the country after the speech
to promote the plan, Stephanop&lt;)u.
los said. Tentatively planned is a
two-day Clinton trip at the end of
next week, most likely to the Midwest.
A later bus trip is also possible
White House aides said,' although
Stcphanopoulos said a Clinton:
Gore bus tour was "very unlikely."
Many Cabinet ·members arc
being sent to their home states the
day after Clinton's speech to help
sell the package.
And, White House aides said
Clinton is seriously considering a
proposal by House Majority Leader
Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., under
which the president would return to
Capitol Hill the morning after the
speech to answer lawmakers' ques·
tions about the plan.
·
Clinton has been inviting mombcrs of Congress to the White'
House in small groups to go over
the plan.
·
According to panicipants Clititon told groups Friday that he
would Jtroduce a "burdcri table" 11
the time of the speech to ilcrnonstrate that Lhe tax increases in thO
plan will fall most heavily on the
rich.

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

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A3

•

February 14, 1993

•

wv

Times Sentinel

Powell urges .caution .
in military,reduction ··

·~

QUEEN AND HER COURT- Heather
Folden, third from left, was chosen Valentine's
Day Queen for Gallia Academy High School
during the halrtime of the Gallipolis-Marietta
bask.etball game Friday. The contest was sponsored by the GAHS cheerleaders and the new

queen was crowned by 1992 Homecoming
Queen Greta Saunders, fourth from left. Flanking them are members of the court, from left,
!\.ate Caldwell, Candy Clagg, Jenny Moody and
Amy Skinner. Escorts were Rob Drummond,
Sam Davis and Chuck North.

·::The

...

:4 :

.•.

~ottery numbers

•'•

.

':: CLEVELAND (AP)- There

were four tickets sold naming all

Uy .JIM AHRAMS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- America's
top soldier is advising against mov·
ing too rapidly to change the missions assigned to the four military
services, warning that the nation's
fighting power is at stake.
.
"If we proeecd too quickly, or
impose changc,s so large they cannot be absorbed. the ri.sk is that we
may destroy the basic fabric of our
' .fighting force," Gen. Colin Powell,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, S!lid at a news conference
Friday.
Powell saiilthat critics who contend the military d&lt;ie'sn'i need, for
example. a separate "air force" for
c;1ch of the services arc misg uided.
· "The nation is well served by
each one or our services having an
air ·component in it," he said,
describing · proposals to combine
ti.c air divisions into one service as
~ ' fundamcnk111y dumb."
Powell put his words of caution
in a 12,0-pagc position paper on the
future of the milik1ry. Such a report .
is required by law every three
years.
The blueprint set a sharply different tone from that of the &lt;;:limon
administration, which is urging
swift action to cut costs. But the
four-star general sought to minimi ze the differences, telli'llg the
news conference "there's a new
· team onboard and we're ' going to
get new ideas from lhat new
tca rn . ••
Earlier this week, Powell
appeared on TV news programs to
deny that llc 'wanted to leave his
post earlier than his September
retirement because of dil'fcrcnces
with President Clinton over gays in
the military and the pace or defense
cuts.
A ·briefing booklet given to
reporters at the news co,pfcrcncc
. said pointedly that Powell's report
wa~ nm "an aucmpl to short·cit·
cuit new administration policy "
and was not "the opening shot of
an insurrection/ '
,_
. The rcJ19rt recommends ending
some cross-service redundancies in
rnaintennncc and training, but
ad vises against major consolidation
of miliUJry roles carried out by the
Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine
Corps:
Among his recommendations: a
unified command over forces
defending the continental United
Stmcs; i1single initial trnining program for fixed-wing pla'nes; and'

five numbers drawn in Friday
!light's BuckeyeS drawing, and
~ach winning ticket is wortb
'I 00.~. the Ohio Louery said.
. The bckets were sold in Colum\)us, Fairview Park, Qeveland and
1ouisville.
: ·The Buckeye 5 numbers were 6,
jO,ll, 24, 25.
• In Pick 3 Numbers, the winning
number was 067.
i In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
number was 9482.
car and at the aame time, help students receive a
ACCEPTS COMPUTER - Gene Johnson
: Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
new Apple COII)puter. Pictured presenting the
Chevrolet .and GaUipolis City School Academic
$1,186,479.
. .
computer tq,Gallia Academy High School PrinBoosters, teamed up recently in "Driving for
: There were 456 Buckeye S tickEducation." The ·program, chaired by booster cipal Jim Pope, (right), Is Gene Johnson. (Timesells with four of the numbers, and
Sentinel photo)
'
Tandy Simpson, saw area residents lest d~ive a
each is worth $250. The 13,831
tl.ckets showing three of the num- ·
· l)ers are each worth $10, and the
140,601 tickets showing rwo or the
.
'
riumbers are each worth Sl.'
However, she said: "We nrc not motorist could pay as lillie as S3 .
By ROBERT E. MILLER
· Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
sure we need an enhanced pro- more up to an additional S23 over a
Associated Press Writer
$I,S06,08S.SO, and winners will
twb-yc•Jr period ..
COLlJcMBUS - A bill expand- gram."
receive $302,261.
The tough er standards will ' be
The state currently requires
in g Ohio's auto emissions testing
: Pick 4 Numbers players program is being redrafted to let optional, under the revised bill visual inspection s or vehicles in
wagered $326,466.50 and will the 16 affected counties adopt sponsored by Sen. Oary Suhadol- Lake, Lorain, H:1milton, and Butler
sbare $117,900.
stricter standards than the federal nik, R-Parma Heights. He is' revis- counties, to sec that their pollution
Pick 3 Numbers
Clean Air Act currently requires.
ing it at the request of Cincinnati, control devices 'have not been tam: 0-6-7
The result co uld mean that Dayton and other affected areas.
pered with or removed.
: (zero, six, seven)
motorists would have to pay more
Bas ic tailpipe testing would be
The alternatives would be basic,
Pick 4 Numbers
for veh icle inspections, but they one-shot tailpipe testing, now a extended to those four counties -'
: 9-4-8-2
would face less inconvenience requirement in Cuyahoga County along with. Gcauga, Medina, Sum·
: (nine, four, eight, two)
because their vehicles wo·uld be where motorists pay $7 a year, or mit. Portage. Lucas. Wood, Clark,
Buckeye 5
inspected once every two years, enhanced tnilpipc testing which Montgomery, Greene, Wnrrcn and
' 6-10-11-24-25
instead of annuully. "~-.......
.
takes longer, involves emissions Clermont.
· (six, ten, eleven, twenty-four,
Richard
Mendes,
Cincinnati's
Ohio's Environmental ProtcC' read ings at varying operating
twenty-five)
lion Agency docs not objec t to speeds and requires inore equip- director of environrnctllnl mam1gc·
tougher anti-pollution standards, ment.
mcnt, told a Senate committee consaid Lisa Williams, director of the
I"
Ms. Williams said cost csti· si&lt;lcring the bill that local officials
agency's auto inspection and main- mates for enhanced 1esting range arc concerned about' losing federal
tenance progra m.
from S 17 to S40.1Th)s mean s a highway mqney and a ~an on new
pollution permits if the· goals !Ire
not met. Cincinnati City Council
&lt;Continuedfrony\-1)
has endorsed enhanced testing, he
.By The Associated Press
sajd.
. Sunday, a chance of morning Lion, monitoring and enforcement Lhal.'' he said.
fl~rries. otherwise mostly cloudy.
The U.S. Office of Surface Minprograms won 't be hurt because the
H&gt;gh around 40. Chance of snow is cutbacks arc in part a· response to ing, Rccla'mauon and Enforcement
4(lpercent.
the declining coal mining industry. published a report in January which
Extended forec:ast
•
The number of strip mining permits called Ohio's citation rates a conMonday through Wednesday:
.
in Ohio has declined 37 percent cern. Sahli srud.
: Mo~day, a chance of flurries
The
report,
which
covers
the
since 1987, he said.
northeast, otherwise fair. Lows 15
year
that
ended
last
June
30,
said
He also said the reorganization
to!1.5. Highs mainly in the 30s.
the federal agency found an avershould help streamline operations.
~Tuesday. a chance of rain or
age
of three times as many strip
" The program is put together to
soow. Lows IS 10 25. Highs in the prOVIde the Same level Of service " mine violations as the state agency
3Cfs and lower 40s.
discovered.
Warren said.
'
~Wednesday . a chance of flurries.
Warren said he was unfamiliar
Richard C. Sahli, executive
Lows in the 20s. Highs in lhe 30s.
with
the report, but believed it dealt
director of the Ohio Environment.al
•
with
minor violations. He said he
Council~ said h recent federal report
•
was
unaware
that lhc federal govwas cnucal of the division's abi lity
ernment
was
concerned
about Ohio
adequate inspections.
:iirm-v ~~· • ljentind to conduct
inspectors
missing
major
violations'
"These cuts can only exacerbate
in mines. ·
.
(U8P8-)

Bill addresses .emission standards
.

OhiO' weather

,

.

Police hunt
for killers
of3 men .
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- Three young men were fatally
shot and another was wounded at
the edge of the Bcthunc-Cookman
College campus. the latest in a
series of tragedies m one of the
nation's most distinguished black
colleges.
T11e Friday night shootings may
AI~vc ~ tcmmcd fiom a tlaffic disj')41te, said AI Tolley, a police
sOcJkcsman. Police were searching
S1iturday for an unknown number
Ql';assailants.
·: ·The four victims, including two
Bethune-Cook man students' and a
former student, apparently knew
C!tCh other, police sat&lt;!.
.·: one of those killed was found in
tile street 20 feet from a car that
apparently was involved in the.
~ licrcation . The other body was
fbuml behind a college office
li:lil ding. An automatic wcnpon
V;qs :1pparcntly used in the shooti~~s. police s.1id.
.: .•"We arc not discounting anyt)ljng," Tolley S!lid, adding he
dllin't know how many shots were .
flrl:d or how many assailants were
ipvolvcd.
•: :officers spoke to relatives or at
lil:lsi one of the victims and Tolley
l!likl police have some leads.
tightly knit campus or about
21~00 students has been plagued
IIlith violcnc.c within the lust year . .
Sjx students have been killed since
Jil(le in unrelated incidents.

14,1983

consolidation of the Navy and Air•
Force command and control air- ,
cmft into· th e Navy's E-6A pro· .
gram.
1.
Clinton is seeking S60 billion in ;
miliwry cuts over th e next five;
years beyond what the Bushadministr!llio n planned. b4L Pow-'
ell's blueprint provides only a few'
specific cost-cutting recommenda-l
tir;ms.
It says $400 million to $600
million a year could be saved by ~
closing seven or eight of tl)e 30
maintenance depots around ·the
country.
Powell also recommended that
the Army remain the sole service
crquipped with Multiple Launch .
Rocket Systems - the military's ~
most modern short·r~nge attack ;
missiles - and that the Marines
not go ahead with a planned $300 :
mill ion purchase of the rockets.
•
Among other recommendations:
·, Consolidating the military ;
space mission and possibly closing :
the U.S. Space Command lll Coi5Jl!ldo Springs. . ..·
'·
:
·---' • Sharply reducing or eliminat" ~
ing the' force of more than 180 air-'
qaft in 12 Air National duard '
squadrons dedicated to the air
defense of North America.
• Keeping Marine Corps tactical :
aircraft but reducing, aircraft types 1
from nine 10 four.
.'
• Reducing the 500-ain:rnft fleet
dedicated to operational support,
. including the transport of YIPs.
. • Keeping the c'urrent system
where each service except the
Army operates C-130 tactical airlift
and tanker planes.
• Retaining both 'the Navy EA6B and Air Force EF-111 elccU'on- ·
ic jamming aircraft.
·
Powell also warned against
reducing the size or the U.S. over.sc.1s (orcc too ·rapidly. The admin- :
IStrauon wants 10 bring the level of ·
U.S. lroflpS in Eur6pc to 100,000
by the end of 1996,1\own from previous goals of 150,000.
"Further reductions in forward •
stlltioncd forces can be made. but ...
the curr¢nt rate of reduction should ·
be .maintained," Powell wrote. ;
''Going any fas).Cr. would adversely
affect the cohcs1on and readiness or ~
the overall force structure."

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
· Friday admissions ·- . none.
•·
Friday discharges - Dayton '
McElroy.
,.
· .
)

r---------~~--~ -

&amp;EPA.

(614)4411-7323

A copy ol t~• ..-rd lila, along with guidance and technical ..
tllllnlture, Ia IIYIIIII~II at tha EPA - Ragioll 5 Olftce• . Written
commenta and quaatlona on the r-d mey 1110 IM!.Mnt to:
,..
Philip Schutta
OffiCI ol Public Alflllra
U.S. EPA- Region 5 (5P·18J)
T7W.Jaekaon
Chicago, IL 60604

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William E. (Bill) Folmer
MASON, W.Va.- William E. (Bill) Folmer, 53, New Haven, died
Fridity, Feb: 12, 1993 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Born Nov. 29, 1939 at Hanford, son of the late George W. Folmer Sr.
and Cora M. Cunningham Folmer of Pomeroy. he was a millwrigl!t for
Imperial Eleciric and attended the New Haven United Methodist Church.
He was. a member of the Big Bend Area Bowhunters Club, the North
American American Hunting Club, the National Rifle· Association and the
Bas~ Anglers Sportsman Society. ·
.
In addition 10 his mother, he is survived by his wife, Erma L. Kirby
F-:olmer, whom he marrielj Sept. 28, 1965; a son and daughter-in-law,
Michael Todd and Samantha Folmer of New Haven; a daughter and l!er
fiance, Anita Marie Folmer and Jeffrey /j.. Russell, both of New Haven;
two brothers imd sisters-in-law, George (Dick) and Sl!aron Folmer Jr., and
Jim and Elsie Folmer, all of Pomeroy; two sisters and brothers-in-law,
Shelby and David ·Davis of Pomeroy, and Linda and Pearl Edwards of
Chester; and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a brother, Donald R. folmer.
Services will' be I p.m. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, with the Rev. Eldon Shingleton officiating. Burial will be in Grn·
ham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 2-4 and
6-9p.m.

UltTM
I TAOON

GALUPOUS
SECOND I SYCAMORE
446 0303

•

Margaret
P. Horden
. .
'

COLUMBUS • Margaret P: Hordcn, 90, two year resident ~f Shepherd
of the Valley .Nursmg, fo~mcrly of Columbus, died Saturday, Feb. 13,
1993, at St. ·Ehzabcth HospJk11, Youngstown.
.
Arran~em cn ls will be announced Jmer by Fisher Blackstone's Funeral
Home, G~tard .

NEW93
ALPINE
PRODUCTS
TODAY!

. POINT PLEASANT - Harry ,G, Love, 103, of Point Pleasant died
· Fnday, February 12, 1993, at Mercer Personal Care Home in West Columbia.
· He was a retired employee of Marietta Manufacturing Company, wl!ere
lly KATHERINE RIZZO
he ':Vas a crane operatOr and was a former employee of tile B&amp;O Railroad.
Associated Press Writer
He JS a member of the Point J'leasant Wesleyan Church.
WASHINGTON
· - Outside
·Born July 23, .1889 in Leon, he was the son ol\the late Charles F. and
Chillicothe,
a
national
park cut
Emma (McGuffiil) Love. He was also preceded in death by his wife, Mac
back
on
maintcrrance,
lost
two
B. (Wolfe) Love; a son. Harold J. Love; a brother, Ross Love; a sister,
rangers
and
canceled
the
spec.ial
Nont McKinney and ~ grandchildren.
·
He is survived by ~ sons, Otarles P. Love of Parkersburg, Lester R. programs it used to give on sum"
.
Love of Columbus, pH, and !;larry F. Love of.Al\lany, OH; a daughter-in- mer Saturday nights.
· " It was .kind of nice to get peoljtw, Mrs. Opal JUS!ICe of Chesapeake, OH; mne grandchildren· 19 greatple
out for something special,"
grandchildn:n; sevetal nieces and nephews.
'
Bonme
admimstrativc
FliJIU31 service will be lleld at 2 p.m. Monday, February IS, at the officer at Murray,
Hopewell Cultllre'Naiionl
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Rev. W.H. Dllrst and
al
Historical
Park in southern
Rev. Elmer C. Farmer officiating. Burial will foUow in the Suncrest Ohio's Ross County.
"UnfortuCemetery in Point Pleasant.
'
nately, those arc the first things that
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral bomb on Slillday from 2-4 p.m. go.''
and 7-9p.m.
.
For more thun 30 years, the proIn Ueil of Dowers friends may contribute 10 the Point Pleasant Wesleyan grams provided free instruction on
Cburch al2617 Jefferson Ave .. Point Pleasant. WV 25.550.
s uch things as understanding the
'
stars and t~e ways of American
Indians. Hopewell preserves earth- .
works created by the cont.incnt's
early inhabitants.
The program's had to go when
POMEROY - Homer Mills, 68, of·Lake Wales, Fla., formerly of Syracuse, died Thursday, Feb. II, 1993 at his residence following a long illness.
POMERO 'l - Five calls for
A native of Mingo County. W. Va.• Mr. Mills had moved 10 Florida
assistance
on Friday and thJCe on
from Syracuse in 1979.
·
Saturday
morning
were reponed by
He was a retired coal miner, a veteran of World War II serving in the
the
Meigs
County
Emergency
U.S. Army, and was of the Baptist faith.
. .
·
Medical
Service.
He is survived by his wife, Goldie Mills of Lake Wales, Fla.; two
At 9:30a.m. Friday, the Middledaughters, Sheila Shain and Annette McGhee, both of Lake Wales; two
port
squad took Bertha Hall from
sons. Homer Mills, Jr. and Randy R. Mills, both of Pomeroy; a: brother,
Overb~k to Pleasant Valley HosRay MiUs of Zanesville; a sister, Ulie Osborne of Darvin, 10 grandchilptlal, Pomt Pleasant, and at 9:36
dren and five great-grandchildren.
the second Middlepon unit went 10
Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. Sunday (today) at the Marion
Nelson Chapel in Lake Wales with the Rev. Ken Elkins and Rev. Andrew Overbrook for Leonard Smithson,
who as taken 10 the Holzer Medical
Parsons offiCiating. Burial was in the Lake Wales Cemetery.
Center, Gallipolis.
The Pomeroy squad responded
to a call at 12:18 p.m. to Ball Run
.
I
.
Road for Roberta Caruthers, w.ho
was tn~nsponed to Holzer. At 2:56
.
'
.
p.m. the Rutland unit went ro Com

Homer Mills

C.
. Juanita Sprouse Noe

I .....INUS,OIIO

-----

Hopewell was force to find a way
to absorb its share of a S34 million
National Park .Scrvicc budget shortage.
Park Supcrimcndent William
Gibson sa id the ·park's $406,500
opcr.ating budget was cut by 0.8 .
percent in December and then by
anolhcr I percent in .January.
"It doesn't sound like a lot, but
it is when you hav~ a small park,"
Ms. Murray sa id. "Take away scvemltho·usan&lt;l dollars, that's a lm. ~·
,At Ohio's Park Service units:
• Perry's Victory &amp; Jntcrnmional Peace Memorinl canceled plans
to expand visitor hours.
• William Howard Taft National
Historic Site in Cincinnati can't fill
a maintenance job.
• Cuyahoga \Iailey National
Recreation Area can't buy all the
s upplies its budget initially
allowed.

'

Hollow Road for Sheila Goheen
ahd took her 10 Veterans Memorial.
Gerald Moore was transported
·from Perry Run Road 10 Ve1erans
Memorial Hospital· by the Racine
squad at6: 10 p.m.
Saturday morning calls included
one at 2:44 a.f!l. 10 County Road I
with Danny Barrett being transponcd by the Rutland squild 10 Veterans. At 6:10a.m . the Middleport
uni 1 went to Boznorth Road for
Belly Frazier and she was taken to
Veterans, and at 6:20a .m. the
Racine unit responded 10 a call on
Mile Hill Road for Twila Clark
who was treated but not transported.

: , HENDERSON, W.Va. - C. Juiulita Sprouse Noe, 66, of Henderson,
~ed Saturday mommg at Holzet Medical Center in Gallipolis.
·
: Born Feb. 22, 1926, in Rockpon, W. Va., she was the daughter of the
late Okey James and Erma Barnhouse Knight. She was a homemaker and
II melilber of the Point Pleasailt, W.Va., Chun:h of God.
· ·
' Survi~ors include: 'her husband, Raben llee Noe; two daughters. Sue
~ack) Ptckens of Vm10n an~ Phyllis {Walter) Loveday of Gallipolis; a
4on. John Sprouse Jr. of Pomt Pleasant; StepSOn Ronald Noe of South
l!lakOia.and stepdaughter Pola Bishop of Salisbury, Md,; eight grandchil'·
drcn; 'five great-grandchildren; six stepgrandchildren and five stepgrand-'
&lt;lbildren.
.
• Other survivors include two sisters, Beatrice Righter or Vienna, W Va
8nd Yvonne Knighto'fPoint Pleasant.
· . _
· .,
; She :-vas pre_ceded in death by her fust husband, John Sprouse Sr., four
brothers, two SISters and one'great-grandchild. ·
,
! Services wilfbe held. I. p.m. Montlay at the Leavitt Funeral Home in
~burg, W.Va., with 1he Rev. Dale Volvoirt offiCiating. Burial will
follow at the Evergreen Soulh Cemetery in Parkersburg.
: FriendS may call from 5-9 p.m. tbday at the funeral home.

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Mr. Romantic is a staff \\Titer
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EMS units answer eight ·calls

--

UPPER ROm 7

lot of sleep.
Just k1kc m¥ word for it. I would
rather sit through a week-long rap
concert than p:micipatc in this Holl(l~y of the L1vmg Love ZombJCs.
Most of my past relat.ionships
were not worth celcbratJOg anyway . Who. in their right mind
would want to take a day 10 reflect
back on the past argument-filled
year? . . . ,
. Most flght.s were over really
•mporta nt thrngs, too, s uch as
whether I smiled too much while
~1lk in g to a friend of the opposite
sex or why I wasn't any good at
foll~wing ordc.rs.
.
I m alludmg mainly to the
deviant who demanded my .aucnLion every minute that I wasn't at
work or as lccp"and then complaincd. "All you think about is
yourself."
By Groundhog Day I'm so sick
of lillie red hearts and Huggieswearing cupids that! want 10 go on
Love Connection just so I can kick
Chuck Woolery's teeth in.
"Maybe if Kevin h.ad a nice,
sweet girlfriend he would sec
things from a different point of
view," you are tl)inking.
Nah. Well, maybe . I mean, if
you know someone ...
It doesn't matter which side of
the fence I'm on, I still hate Valentine's Day.
On off years such as this, it's
just a reminder that everybody in
the world but me seems to be
involved with someone.
On the years when 1 am dating
it's just another expense that keeps
·me from buying more compact
discs.
So all you' couples out there
enjoy your chocolates (they'll give
you zits), admire your roses ($40
weeds which will be dead in a
week) and·start saving up now for
Sweetest Day.
·
·

Buckeye parks feel
force of cutb·acks

Harry G. Love

IAllflliT£

AMERICA'S TAX TEAM
POMEROY
618 EAST MAIN ST.
992-667:4

~

·POINT PLEASANT , Arawana Anthony. 68, of Point Pleasant." died
Saturday, Feb. 1~. 1993, at Pleasant Valley Hospital' .
.Born July IS, !924. in Henderson, .she was a daughter of the late Jack
~olley, Sr. and Nma (Stanley) Colley. She was also preceded in death by
two SISters, two brotJius and a grandson
Survivors include ~ daughters, ~ L. ~h. Louisa, Ky., Linda
Walters, Johns10w_n, Ohto, Bobbie K. Boles, Pomt Pleasant; a son, David
L Anlliony ol Pomt Pleasant; sister, Betty Walters of Columbus, Ohio; a
brother, .Tony Colley of New Haven; nine gr.mdchildren and one great, grandchtld.
The funeral will be Thesday, 2 p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funerai 'Home with
the Rev. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be in the Lone Oak
. Cemetery, Point PleasanL
. .
.
' Friends may call Monday, 7 10 9 p.m., ~~the funeral home.

Happy Black Sunday.
Yeah, todafis the day when ~II
the Iavey-dovey couples cuddle up
to each other and exchange sweet
litile tokens of affection. It's
eno ugh 10 make those of us still in
our right minds sick to our stomachs.
·
·
,How long docs this have 10 go
on before everyone realizes Valentine's D~y is' just a conspiracy by
the grectmg card and florist companips of the world?
10kay, I admit the day has hccn
celebrated longer than these companics have existed, but you have
to admit they really took the bull
by the hams and changed it from a
day of minor celebration to the sec,
ond nighest credit card max-out
holiday of the year.
And one day wasn't enough for
these gree~/ so-an~-sos .. Now there
·1s some evil plotwllh thts S~ectcst
D:1y thmg. Call1t Valcn tmc s Day
Part Two- Thc'f!orror Conunucs.
l st11l have p s~c hologlcal scars
ftom the fHst umc I heard of
S:veetcst Day. S,ec, somcon.c
s lrp~ cd 11 by. f!l~ when I wasn 1
lookmg and I a~nvcd on Sweetest
~ay at a gtrlfncnd's home sans
g1ft.
Imagine sweet innocent little ol'
me approachmg thll' door, thmkmg
there was nothing signilicant about
thc day other lhan 11 ":as Thursday
and 'fhe S•mpsons ep1sat1c schcduled for that m.ght was not a rcpea:.
Now 1magrnc my greedy ex s
disappointment after scarching _my
pockets, hoping for a reward in
payment of her many loyal months
of dming services, and finding only
some pocket lint and an old gum
wmpper..
. .
My f~rst Sweetest Day almost
left me permanently deaf.
I could Sit here ;~II day and type
toe-curling stories of one of my
socially deviant girlfriends to help
ex plain why I am the Scrooge of
Valentine's Day, but reliving it all
would just make both of us lose a

•

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AIPlne lllodlt 7121
Dttachoblt Front 1'111111 FMIAM Cuteaa
Pltytr w!CO Sh111111 Conllalt, Buih-in 2514
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IIIIITUM Cln:uitry, 10 Logic, Code-In K
Thoft Rtor 1'11-(Ms, DaiiJr '8.

Arawana Anthony

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V-Day a.dark spot on the singles' calendar

I

THE UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AOENCY
ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABIUTY OF THE DYER BROTHERS
LUMBER CO. SITE ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD
TM admlnlatr.tlva ..-It tile lor the Dyw Brothera Lumber. Co.
SHe In Northup, OH. lncludaa doeumlnta that EPA conaldaraclln
•Iectton a removal ictton at thla alta. The admlnlllrltlve r-rd
file Ia available for rev!- during 1101 n•I bullne• hour~ at:
Dr. SsmuelL Bo_,d Mlmorlal Lllnry
· 7Spruce
Galllpolla, OH. 45631
-·

Reclamation unit...

--Area deaths

..•.

' .

•

�.

February 14, 1993

.

\C ommentary and.perspective

February 14, 1993'
. '
P11111 ...~

Dlvlalon of

~te
125 Third Ave., Ga!Upolls, Oblo
(614) 446-2341

111 Court St., Pom,rqy, Oblo ,
(614) !m-1156

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
'

HOBAin' WILSON JR.

Eucutlve Editor

•

•

PAT WIUTEHEAD
Allllslaat Publlsber-CoatM!Der

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the Amorican
Newspaper Publishers Association.
I,EmRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters ore subject to editinj and must he signed wilh
name, address and telephone number. No WISigned letters will he
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not

personalities.

~Clinton

revisits
l....favorite campaign
ta.
c
tic
\
•

•••

:•:
By WALTE&amp;,R. MEARS
.;.
AP Special Correspoadent
..
: •: WASHINGTON - Things were going just fine for Bill Clinton until
;that ~lection interrupted h!s campaign;. Now Preside.lJl Clinton is trying to
;regam the old touch by usmg the techmques that made hun a wmner.
t :' He started with a televised question-and-answer hour from suburban
:Detroit, styHng it after the town meetings he held while J;8mpaigning hts
•way to the White House.
.
! ·- "I hope there'll be a lot of these," Clinton said as time ran out
;\l(ednesday night. There will. The president and his advisors already have
-deculed on that.
•
: -; It is a medium the president mastered as a way om of campaign trouble

WASHINGTON frank per year.
Johnson and Johnson defends
1 Glickman isn't 911e of the 100 poli·
lhe
price, because of the millions of ·
fCY wonks re-inventing the heallh·
dollars
in .research' spent to evaluate
care system in Hillary Rodham
Clinton's White House wac room.
But his experience off~ valu·
able testimony to the challenges
and conflicts facing lhe first lady's
taSk force, whose product will create lhe centerpiece of President
Michael
Clinton's domestic agenda.
Glickman has a lawsuit pending
against pharmaceutical giant John·
son and Johnson, makers of a drug an·d modtfy the drug for· human
called Levamisole. Allbaugh Lev· consumption. To Glickman, it's•
amisole has been available for called price-gouging.
In a health-care deba~ of many
more than 20 years, a new version
conflicting
agendas, one of the
of it only recently started being
is the one likely to
bloodiest
battles
used as the fii'St effective treatment
be
w~ged
against
drug makers. So
for colo-rectal cancer. But Glickman's problem isn't with lhe treat- far, pharmaceutical companies
have been the sacred cows of lhe
ment; it ~s with lhe cost.
Before being utilized as a cancer health-care party. But Clinton
treatment in humans, Levamisole appears ready to remove the pwtch
was commonly used tQ de-worm bowl by restraining drug prices,
the
"In the last decade, of
sheep, horses and cattle. The cost
of the drug when used on animals powerful forces in the health
was about $15 per year. But when debate, lhe phamiaceulical industry
Levamisole became a cancer treat· is the only one that's been virtually
ment, the price skyrocketed more untouched," Rep. Ron Wyden, 0.:
than I 00 times - · to almost $1,500 Ore., told our associat¢ Jan Moller.

By JAMES SANDS
Special Corresf.Oildent
GALLIPOLIS - At the tum of
the·century it was estimated that while
,16 percent of white adult women
:"ere in the labor force, some 27
percent of black
women , held ·
.$teady employ- ·
ment outside the
.!Jome. In .a swdy
done·by black sotiologis~ R.R . ·
M"right Jr. about
. 1900, ii was dis·
·
t overed in Xenia that blaCk women
'Carned20j;lerc;entoftheincomeinan
average blaCk family.
: A study of lhe 1900 census for
Gallipolis will show how black
women Were employed. Some eight
. ~otenwere~hers,andafewowned .
,their own ·buSinesses, but the great
majority wete employed as cooks,
domestics, launderers and hotel
_maids. Although the Ohio Hospital
forEpilepticsemployedanumberof
blaCks (bolh male. and female) its
record for integration was no better
1han the private sector and .in some
~-nses much·worsc.
. As Helen Santmyer points out in
berbookaboutXenia, ''Ohio Town",
there was greater status for black
i,vomen to beinlheemployofweallhy
white families than ID do lhe same

By Jack Anderson
and
Binstein

all

:I.qstlnyearth.
. . al s, wtuo
··• sateII'tie·l'nked
.
.m
•
e fiust of the 199'3 revtv
1
quesnoners
'~tle, Miami and Atlanta as well as Detroit, he said it enabled him to
~leep in touch wi~ real people and avoid be "walled in" the White

:House.

.

;;· Clinton said afterwards that the holtr-long session "kind of put some
~ity hack into the bigger concerns. .•. Even when people disagree with
'nle, I think lhey feel better if they know·I' m reaching out to them," he
told ABC News' "Nightline."
Indeed some of the questions Wednesday night weren't all that com'fortable.
: Clinton was cllallenged on his move to lift the military's han on gays,
asked, politely, about broken campaign pledges, and remmded of lhe flap
. ilf employing illegal aliens that sunk two attorney general candidates.
; . Still the format enabled Clinton to concentrate mostly on the economy
..._ the issue he's spent most of his lime working on - instead of the
· ~!ems that nagged him since lhe inauguration.
•, Even so, it was easier for candidate Clinton to broadcast plans and
~ses before the election than for President Clinton to keep to them.
~· Consider, for example, the women in Atlanta who said she was war·
tfed that Clinton might be hedging on his pledge not to increase taxes on
il)e middle class.
~ - Clinton reminded her that' he'd repealedly shunned a " read - my -lip ~"
~mise a~ainst new taxes during the campaign, noted that the federal
t(:ficit projection bad i~ sinee the election and promised he'd sliD
Ge fair.
.
.
·.
•: But then· he suggested lhat he will indeed be seeking the kind of taxes
!hat concerned.her.
: , "I wish I could tell you that I won't ask you to pay any more," he
pid
·
·
.: Clinton is to present his economic proposals to Congress in a nationalf¥-televised address next Wednesday night. Then, with specific proposals
oil the table, the revived campaign will resume -with his Cabinet mem~ also hitting the road.
:• The ftrst round also included Vice President AI Gore, at his own town
~session Wednesday in Ontario, Calif., while first lady Hillary Rod·
liim Clinton was to appear today at a health care forum in Harrisburg, Pa.
•: Clinton is also using radio addresses from the White House, and plans
~lite TV appearances~s
o er avenues to average Americans.
It's a way around the fi r of the·White House press corps coverage:
He has yet to hold a,&amp;: -scale presidential news conference. Even so,
~inton said, "I answer their (reporters) questionsjustabout every day."
• Presidents have used, Or at least tried, the technique before, with varying results. Jimmy Caner held town meetings early in his term, beginning
with one in the town of Clinton, Mass., in March, 1977.
His topics.like President Clinton's, included job creation and a pledge
of health care reform.
: George Bush tried a similar format, although infrequently between
l:ampaigns. That prompted Clinton to say after the election that !he isolafion of the presidency was a reason Bush ''missed the level of misery and
~nxiety people had on the economy."
. The master of the non-stop campaign was Ronald Reagan, although he
did it largely from lhe White House or in settings that emphasized the pul·
~it of the presidency. Reagan used to say that if he couldn't make
j::ongress see the light, they'd feel the heat when he went over their heads
~the voters.
,
;. Clinton's mission is a bit different. He's out to convince Americans
)bat the Democratic Congress, and his administration, deserve support,
4ot political .punishment, for difftcult votes on his shared sacrifice eco~omic progiitm .
;, "I'm going to do the best! can. listen to what I say next week, decide
t hether you think it's fair," he said.
~
.
~ EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columOist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washi.ngton and
~ational politics for more than 30 years.

t·

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Love on'Valentine's Day
Before getting into the discus· answer that question, then you
sian,! want to give a brief descrip· should be classified with the likes
lion on lhe liistory 'of Valentine's of Aristotle and Socrates. Rupe,
Day as written by Fern G. Brown you are no Socrates. Aristotle •
in her book, published in 1983. The
daie, February 14, haS been clljSSi· .
fied as Valentine's Day throughout
histOry.
Valentine's Day was named maybe.
·
after St. Valentine, a Christian
Dr. W.W. Broadbent, MD, in
priest. According to this aulhor, St. his book titled "How to be Loved"
Valentine was hanged on February describes every conceivable emp14, in the third centurY after Christ. tion dealing with" this subject.
. He was executed for preaching Obviously he feels that psychiatric
Christianity and was later pro- treatment wouta help a husband
nounced as a Saint. There have and wife understand each other betbeen several versions a5 to how and ter after treatment, He is quoted,
why St. Valentine was beheaded. "in a world that talks and sings
Some people say that we send about love, then why is !here so Ht·
valentines, flowers or love notes in tle of it?" His students are normally
his memory. The writer doubts that married individuals who are trying
of this date many peqple send to change their partners lifestyle in
valentines to honor St. Valentine. order to make their marnages
They are sent as token of affec- work. His suggestion to the spouse
tion or disaffection for a "loved is "One of the secrets of beinl!
one."
loved is to keep your feet clean.
The writer can recall the days, Anolher quote in this doctor's book
60 years ago, when there were is a question profounded by one of
penny, comic valentines. These his students, • Are you saying .that a
were usually sent to people who good marriage. that selecting a
might have resented the message mate, is just a chance of dumb
on the yalentine;. Today there are luck?" The answer is yes.
valentines ranging from '25 cents to
However, there are other
$3.85 or more to lhe degree of the ''experts" who have written on this
sender's affection. Most of these subject. A Gallipolis expert stated
valentines sent today contain the "that the poet Chaucer probably
word "love" in various degrees.
started everything when he
LOVE • what is the b'Ue mean- observed that birds choose their
ing of love? Rupe, if you can• mates on February 14th." She also

FredW. Crow

a

r;

f:

hustled as the liberal running mate.
During that exploratory period,
Nunn, hoping to gain national cred·
ibility, flip-flopped on tlie issue of
abo·rtion, becoming a born-again
pro-choicer.
When President Bush sent John
Tower's name up as his nominee
hfgh· moral ground that Clinton for defense secretary in Febr\iary
took on the gays-in-the-military 1989 _ a job for which Tower was
issue has been bulldozed into a superbly qualified_ Nunn led the
molehill of hillbilly bigotry by the opposition, and Tower's nomina- .
Senate's top demolition expen.
The irony is !hat Nunn's opposi- · tion was mothballed. Why?
tion to Clinton's removal of the Because of Tower's ancient probmilitary ban against gays has little !em with "wine, women and
to do wilh conviction; it is strictly a song," as !he public was conned
political pay-back. Had Clinton into believing? Not at all. Tower
appointed. Nunn as secretary of had humiliated Nunn during
staie - a position that many Tower's chairmanship of the Seninformed observers say Nunn cov- ate Armed Services Commiuee. As
eted - Nunn would have dourly Tower sorrowfully learned, Nuan
supported his commander in chief.
is an insidiously vengeful man.
.
In the current gays-in-the-miliNunn's political amoralhy
knows few bounds. This is the man tary conb'Oversy. Nunn' s leadership
who four year~ ago, was being has exfoliated far out of p10portion ·
touted by a group of media conser- to the significance of the iuue for
vatives as a potential l)emocralic lWO reasons: the American media's
presidential candidate. "ro neutral- · latent racism and the American
ize Nunn's anathematic conser- public's cyclical enthusiasm for
valism, a fellow tergiversator, for- bigotry.
'
mer Rep. Bill Gray, D-Pa., was
Nunn ' s Position has been

Sani Nunn is the flrst and w'orst
mistake that President Bill Clinton
made in the early days of his
administration·. The result: The.

.
Chuck Stone

/)

''

hospitals. Some black domestics
resided with white families and olhpri just worlted lhrough the day.
' In 1900, Rose Smith lived wilh
iheR.P.Tiiompionfamily,LucyRlnl
~ith Judge Jeilkin Jones, EUa Steioens wilh Sam Frank, and Rosalie
Anderson with the Charles Henking
ramily. These women, all with a pri}'ate room, managed all the house·
ho)d chores.
r In the early 1900s, a few black
women did own a business. Fannie
Mitchell had a needlework shop,
Minnie Washington sold typewriters, Mrs. Lizzie Hewitt owned a restaurant,JuliaHolmeshadahairdress·
ing business, a few sold baked goods
·Bndlhereweretwodressshops. One
of !hose dress shops is still standing
at 717 Third Avenue. It prObably
dates to the 1890s and was built by
ihe Strother family.
, Samuel Strother who lived in the
~ouse adjoining at 715 Third Avenue
waS probably lhe most successful
'black blacksmith in lhe town's his: tory. Samuel was born in 1830 in
, what is now West Virginia. He came
here about the time of the Civil War.
Four of the Strother daughters, Ki!He

~ MR. ''lk~'D ~QG1lNI-

'

Corced to sit on the sidelines and
tatch history pass him by is securing his place in the history books
inOther way- with an ugly record
qr unmatched petulance and .meanIPiritedness.
Woodrow Wilson anticipated
!he pattern of Sen. Sam Nunn's
obstructionism in his famed 1917
ljescription of an !!-member sena. torial blockade. "A little group of
willful men," said Wilson, " repref:nling no opinion but their own.
have rendered the great govern dtent of the United States helpless
fK! contemptible."
·
·• Nunn could easily rebut pan of
Wilson's acerbic denunciation. The
~an of the Senate Armed Services Commiuee represents consid~Iy more opinion among Amerioans than his own; especially on
iJ1e gays-in-the-military controvert; and his IUL'lty-tempered opposi11011 ID anything that does not com)ior.t with his Southern-fried
ochialism has not rendered the
ited States helpless. Conmptible among world p'owers,
.Jler!lalll. but not helpless.
' IRJl«ing the political reality of

workforlhesamepayathotelsand~

r•N-

Nunn's one-man demolition team ·
~ A Gei&gt;rgia senator who has been

And it's .the elderly who inevitably scription drug dollar goes to
research, while 3~ cents goes to
bear the biggest burden.
'
Wyden, who has used his posi- m81keting and proflts.
tion on the Houle Select Commit- . Slill, pharmaceuticals is'one of
tee on Aging ID take a lead cxt IICV· the few areas where Americ•
era! controversial health issues, remains !be world leader in ~teW
s.aid that while doctors, patients, product development. Backed by
inswancc companies and hospitals one of lhe most powerful lobbies in
have all had to swallow !lOIIIC biuer Wasjlington, th.e indUstry recently
pills over the put decade, the pbar- Iawiched a $6 million a&lt;lvertising
maceutital industry has eluded campaign to justify the existing
reform. Echoing the complaint of price structure. The Senate special
defetise and oil industry lob~yists commiuee reports that prescripliOI)
in previous debates, the pharma- drug prices rose at four times the
ceutical lobby threatens that price rate of inflation in 1992. They als6
controls or regulation would lead ID enjoy what Senate aging commit~
less research and fewer innova- chairman Sen. David Pryor, D.·
Ark., calls lhe "molher of all taX
tions.
. In effect, Wyden says, drug bJeaks" - . a total of $2.2 billion to
companies use this argument to companies settin&amp; up plants in
"hold the patient politically Puer1o Rico. Pryor, one !If the pres~
ident's closesdriends, plans to tar'
hostage.''
get these tax breaks.
·
Though drug companie~ defend
The
law's
txiginal
intent
was
l(l
their prices by citing researCh costs,
recent statistics suggest phacma. give businesses an incentive te
ceulical companies spend far more move jobs to Puerto Rico.·While
money marketing their products lhe plan has done relatively Hule to
than developing .and testin~ rlew improve the fmunes of lhe·Puerto
ones. A recent report by the Senate Ric1111 people, a recent study by
Special Committee on Aging congressional investigators found
shows that 16 cents of every pre- that 26 dru~ makers received more ·
than $10 billion in tax credits and
sheltered more than $25 billion in
earnings during the . 1980s by
putting tlieir plailts in Puerto Rico. i
Based on their outburst over
Clinton's plan to nationalize the
childhood immunization program
- which currently leaves 90 peri
cent of inner-city children without
vaccinations - it could mack the
begilining of. a long season of dis:
content for one of America's mos't
prosperous, pampered and protectl
ed industries. Even in the face of
such an overriding social imperai
live - the National Research
Council estimates that for every $1
spent on child immunization, $10 iS
saved in health-care costs - there
was rebellion from an industry
already realizing $50 billion in
annual U.S. sales.
,
Any successful heallh-care plan
will entail gpring many differen~
oxen. Wyden and ~r hope that
the wonks in lhe White House wai'
roorn will start with the pharmaceutical industry.
'
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
'
Feature S)'lldk:ate, Inc.

accorded s'o much credence
because the media have refused UJ
give anythin~ approaching equal
time to Nunn s counterpart on the
House:S ·Armed Services Commit·
tee, Chairman Ron Dellums, DCalif., who is black, brilliant and
liberal.
.
Dellums' position on gays and
lesbians in the miHtary completely
c6ntravenes Nunn'$ . At a ·recent
press conference, Deflums. agreed
wilh Cli!llDn ·that "lhe ban ·should '
be lifted." He added, "We must
et be end bigotry. This iSsue has
b~wn out of~n and is

C.:

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related that "in some countries
unmanied women arise at sunup on
February 14th and wait at the win·
dow for a man to pass. They
believe (or hope) that the 'ftrst ~an
they see or someone who looks like
him, will marry them within .the
year."
'
Dr. Shakeum Doowright classi·
fied love in nine· stages. Namely
tepid, warm, sofl-boiled,like, tweedfedee, (sweet talk) tweedledum,
(hot talk), boom, (beginning to
sc.ore) supersonic boom .(making
out) and true 'love. Dr. Doowright
did not explain how long it takes
each individual to advance in his
love search. He did give one example as to the true meaning of love.
It is as follows: "Whenever a husband, who is a conipletc football
fan, has to leave his TV set when
the Super bowl is being played to
visit hiS mother-in-law, then this is
a true love situation, Especially
when lhe mother-in-law is not one
of lhe husband's favorite persons."
Dr. Doowright also "believes
you can love a person one day and
not love them 'the next." Do you
agree, Rupe? ·
I asked Abher Oglesby this
question? "Can a person love two
members of lhe opposite sex at lhe
same time?'' Abner'.s theory is "if
King Solomon had oodles of wives
and loved every one .Of them we
- should be able to do the same." I
cannot argue with Abner since I
was not acquainted witli King
Solomon or any or his spouses.
Abner was married nine times·and
should be an authority on this subject. Easy come, easy go.
In order to have complete love,
. the husband should not growl when
his wife asks him to empty the
garbage. Instead, when he first
anives home he shou14 say, "I'm
home and I'm ·n:ady to remove the
garbage, dear." I wonder .how long
this will last? A suggestion to lhe
wife: Never tell the husband when
you first see him, "do not !Duch me
until you have removed the
garbage." This statement may
make the husband acgulre an inferior complex to lhe gmbage. ·
The writer conducted a brief
research,on 1116 name, Valmltine. It
was discovered·. that there ore at

.

least 120 V&amp;Ientine families having
ph!lfle. service in Columbus. None
of them had the name of St. Valen·
tine. I talked to Leo Vale it tine of
Gallipolis, Ohio and he states tha~
he is not retated to lhe Saint. There
are many genealogists aroUnd and ~
suggest that many of them tak&amp;
their' ancestry back to the time of
St. Valentine.
•
Incidentally, Rupe, I saw a pic~
ture of St. Valentine and it appears;
that John Fultz, renowned busi,
nessman, looks exactly like the,
Saint. Do yoo believe in reincarnation, Ru{JC? I ~n 't, but I find th!S&gt;
companson mterestmg and 11
should be investigated. John has
. the qualities of the old Saint.
Rupe, the writer does not at this;
time intend to diagnose lhe love sit..
uation. It will be necessary to write:
a more complete aclicle on this subJ'
ject and report at a later date.
;
Furthermore, I remember whaC
Rawdog Lewis told me as to thi~·
subject and that is, "nobody know~,
where a little white rat will go.·~
The late Toad Brickles once told'
me that love is that feeling when.
every horseShoe pitch is a ringer. ".
Heathcliff Quickel wro.te ,thci;
following:
r,
Love is that feeling when yo~
ace sent reeling.
'
At first you ace in the dark bu~
later you have lhe spark.
r.
On the other hand, go purchase:
a lottery ticket, and win.
.
~~
Heathcliff h!IJ great potential.;!
doesn't he, Rupe7
~
· Rupe, you can see that the word'•
love varies depending on the indi-':
victuals and circumstance~~
involved. There are many expcr ·
in Mei~s an~ Galli~ County who!
can wnle thetr.expenenccs pertam-~
ing UJ this subject matter. Please let•.
me hear from you.
·
·'
In God We Trust
_.,, 0(1,

I

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•

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Congressman: Space plane project may be in trouble

born in 1850, Maria boo! in 1852,
Lulu born in 18'57 and Agnes born in
1862 entered lhe dressmaking business.
Oneofthepopulardresses!lfl903
made here was the ladies walldng out
dress which is describell in one catalog as having ,a "Ioose' full bodice
wilh a deep fichu dipping to a point
down the back and over each shoul·
der.Itiswornoverlhestraight-fronted
corset, which brings down lhe bosom
line. The waist is veiy tight and the
hipsllCCCiltuated. Thenecklineishigh
and boned up on the sides under the
ears. The sleeves are full from the
elbow and are gathered into a Wrist·
hand. Usually the dress is worn with
hair high over pads on the forehead
and'with a straw hat."
In many ways, the black women
of Gallipolis knew all the secrets of
the town. The persons that worked
for the white families knew all the
"goSsip:• of the white families and
shared !hose seCrets with a handful of
other black women but never with
blaCk men and certainly not with any
pen,ons'ofwhite color.
Helen Santmyer wrote in· "Ohio
Town"aboutlheseblackwomenwho
knew all theSec:reiS: "You would not
dream that here,ralherthan in librar·
ies or in drawing rooms - here, in the
memories of these shuffling women
is the best source (sealed, to be sure)
of·all you might want to know about
the people of the !Dwn, and when they
retell all they knew {while visiting
. relatives in another cily) lhey will
embelliah·withsimileandmetaphor,
· lailpter, rolling eyes and clapping
h&amp;nds." .
·
Black wanen of the early 1900s
wen:aiso~~~;tivelyinvolvedinchurch

BOSTON (AP) - A congressman says spending on a .hypersonic
plane that eould orbit the eanh, yet
take off and land at an airport, will
be severely·cut if the project survives at all.
U.S. Rep. George E. Brown Jr,
D-Calif., made the prediction Friday at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the
Advancement of Science. He is
chairman of the House Committee
on Science, Spaco and Technology.
The program to develop whnt' s
called the National Aerospace
Plane is managed at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Day!Dn,
Ohio.
'·

Former President Reagan in'
1986 ftrSt proposed production of a
plane that could travel more than
4,000 mph and ens traveltime from
the United States to the Orient to
three hours or less.
.
Several thous11nd workers,
including 150 at Wright-Patterson,.
are involved in the development
effort. But Browr&gt; said odds that
the program will survive current
austerity moves are about 50-59.
"We'll probably end up scrapping ... (the plane) in its present
configuration and go for an intermediate pro~am that would cost
half as much,' he said.
In December, the General

Accounting Office urged delay in will benefit the nation 's civilian
bllilding and testing an aerospace aerospace industry through ae&lt;lelplane. The GAO repon said its cost opment of high-performance
estimates for the aircraft have rials, aerodynamic teclnnc,IO!tte,
jumped from $3.1 billion in 1986 and ~ropuision systems.
to $17 billion. About $1.6 billio~
If development is approved
has been spent on the project.
year, hackers say flight tests of
A decision to move from prototypes could begin by
research to development of two resulting in an operational
prototypes for the plane is sup· plane by the tum of the century.
posed to be made by September,
" I think it's a good or~~~~l
but the GAO says nearly 25 percent but it is out of control.''
of the tests necessary to make that said. He said Congress may fav,ar;!
· decision will not have been made plane that could ~educe travel
by then . .
to the Oriem without going
The program's supporters say it . orbit.

4 ''

Drawerj
Chest

DRESSMAKER'S SHOP· Tile small bnUdlna on the left was
a dressmaker's silop in tile 1890s and early 191105. The Strother
siste~ who lived In th' bOWie on tbe right at 715 Third Avenue, ,
Gallipolis, ran the sllop. Tile store was one or six or seven businesses In 1903 owned by black women.

District court upholds
Morehouse sentencing

work, support of Lincoln School, in
clubs and even in political organizalions like the Afro., American I:.eague
formed in Gallipolis in .1903. The
POMEROY - The Fourth shooting his girl friend after he
League nationally waS one of lhe first Appeallaie District Court of abducted her from Columbus.
political . organizations (black .or Appeals recently upheld the senwhite) to solicit female input. The tencing of William E. Morehouse
league was organized here over black by Judge Fred W. Crow III of the
objections to a secret plan lhat was Meigs County Common Plea&amp;
being circulkted by white council· .Court.
Morehouse pled guilty 10 felomen UJ divide up the Third Ward
where most blacks lived. This would nious assault and was sentenced by
Judge Crow for 6 to 15 year incarweaken black influence in politics.
Tlle liP off to this secret plan was ceration for felonious assault and to
one secret that some unknown black three years actual incarceration on
woman working in an influential a gun specification.
Morehouse appealed his senwhite holne did relate. The plan·was
tence
because the Meigs County
dropped llue to public oullllge both prosecuting
attorney had recomfrom whites and blacks.
mended that the defendant be senJames S11n~ Is a special corre- tenced to 41D 15 years imprisonspoacle.tol'tileSuliday Times-Sen· ment:
.
.
tine!. His address is: 65 Willow
The Court of_Appeals indicaJe&lt;!,
Drive, Springboro OH 450lili
that Judge Crow could increase the
sentence above ·the recommended
sentence, since the Judge advised
the defendant that he would not be
GROUP OF WOMIN'S DRESS
Parole Board denied the request bound by the prosecuting attor"because of the impact and nature ney's recommendation and that the
victim impact statement would be
of his crime."
conside,red
prior ID the Court'~ sen·
Members of the parole board
tencing.
·
recently met with him at the prison,
Bring can food In for Food
Morehouse
fired
his
Court
Friday's announcemeni said.
Pantry,
get 10% More Off. No
Warner, 73, was sentenced in appointed attorney and was repreLtpuy.
No EJphenqt. HR
connection with the 1985 collapse senting himself when he entered
Rttyodl
on
merchandlu
'of the Cincinnati-based Home State into the plea barssain agreement.
marked down 50% on more.
Savings Bank. He was convicted in Morehouse, onginally from
Columbus,
had
previously
been
1987 of securities violations and
making unauthorized transfers of convicted'of murder, had served 15
money to ESM Government Secu- years, and had been recenily
rities Inc., a Fort Lauderdale, Flli., released from prison. Morehouse
·• convi~ted in Meigs County for
securities b'ading firm.

: COLUMBUS, Obio (AP)the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and COrrection said Friday
that former savings and loan executive Marvin Warner has been
4C~~ied 'early release from prison:
• Warner; who is serving a 3 1/J,·
year term for securities vio18tions,
sought release· from the Madison
Correctional Institution to work for
a non-profit group during the
remainder of his sentence. .
· He is scheduled to be released
Aug. 21.
· The-department said the state
••

All HANDBAGS '

25%oFF

SHOES 1ow $2.0

\

.

&lt;Carl's
shoe slore

Open Sunday 1 P.M.·til 5 P.M.

'

•

Mon. • Frt.'tll 8 p.m.
TuaL, Wild., Thur. til 6 p.m.
S.turday til 5 p.m.

HOLZER CLINIC
WELCOMES THE 1992.
ADDITONS
TO ITS MEDICAL STAFF

I

,

~~

Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the :
contributor or a weekly column •
for The Suaday Thnes-Sentlnel. ~
Readen wlallin1 to applaqd, crlt-:
kize or comment oa lmy subject:
(except rellaloli or politics) are ;
encouraged to write t!l M
· Crcm:, In Cjlre ol' tillnewsp.~er. ~

Dat

t

Sunday Times Senllnei-Page-AS

"·-·Editor's note • Long·tirae'•·'•

roday in history

,.

.

Jai,led.exec tfenied release

all

a tempest
"Take in
out the ord 'gay,"' said
•
black Rep. Crai
asbington of
nt interview,
Texas during a
~
"and aubstitute 'b ck,' and the ..
mind-lei is the same."
=
But that is the miild-aet rj Sari
'
·
By Tlte Aaodllted Prell
'
t·
Nunn. JUil u biJtory will evenlull·
Today is Sunday, 'Peb. 1ol, the 45th day of 1993. Th= am 320 days.i
ly enahrine Bill Clinton, it will
left in the~ il Valadlne'l Day.
..
harshly derogate $am Nunn.
Toda)''l
ID ~
.
Nunn's inner problem Ia that he
On Feb. 1ol,
, the "St. '\'alendne's
Malucre" took Jllace in a
knows k.
~r= UIICVIIIIpYIIa of AI Capone I PIII,_IUIDICd down.
Ciluck Stone 111a •:rnd)eateCI
writer ror New~P&amp;per Entil'prlle
In 1778, the Ameriean ship Ranier cllrild 1118 recendy ldopted Stir
AIIOdatlol!. ·
11¥1 StrilleiiO I belp ptltfar . ."lim time U lllrrbed in FranCe.
In 18!9, Orep . . admlald Ill 1118 Union. the 33nlltlle.
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Pomeroy-MiddleP9rt-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Black women piopeers in
:Gallia County work force

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Drug makers targeted ir1 health-care reform .
A

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Jon M. Sullivan, M.D.
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Pedlatr'ics
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Ronald W. Coverton, M.D.
: Dermatology
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Vlvi~n

Newbold, M.D. ,
"Emergency Medicine ·

I. Naei Bozklr, M.D.
· Opbtbalmology

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Mlcbael SorbeUo, D.O.
Radiology

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These skilled physicians join the Holzer Clinic five decade philosophy of providing high quality health care in a courteous .
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and sympathetic manner.
· Our Medical Sta" Is now 66 physicians strong • 23 seperate medical specialties in one organization. Six locations provldl,g
'
medical care for you and your family- and we're still growing/
.

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HOLZER CLINIC, ~0 JACKSON Pil{E, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
446-5411

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Pomeroy . ~dclleport GeUipolla, OH Point Pleasant, WV

AI SUnday 11mea Sentinel

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated J'ress Writer
WASHINGTON - Reports
filed last fall by Ohio Rep. Bob
McEwen's re-election committee
showed a campaign with cash even though the. campaign was
headed into the mi.
McEwen did not report a campaign debt until well after the election. despite a federal law that
requires prompt disclosure of debts
exceedio&amp; SSOO.
McE.wea is running for
Congress again, for a seat vacated
by Republican Willis Gradison.
Gene Wise, spokesman for
McEwen's new campaign, said Friday that the staff chec~ with lhe
Federal Election Commission "and
we were told we didn't commit any
violations."
But that's not lhe way lhe FEC
says it worlcs.
.
··
"There's no way anybOdyeven a commissioner - is going to
tell anybody over the phone you
have or have not violated the law,"
spokesman Scott Mox)ey said.
•:Only the commission as a whole,
looking on a case-by·case basis,
em say this is a violation or isn't a

violation."
Moxley checked FEC records
and found the McEwen campaigq
had not requested an advisory opinion about reporting its debt.
Wise did not Jcnow the name of
lite FEC staffer they contacted.
~ McEwen's campaign had repon41 being debt-free with $20,000 on
blind as. of Nov. 23.·But a report
. wvering Nov. 24 through Dec. 31
~sclosed debts totalling $68,000.
"eluding a $10,982 bill from the

$mmer.

M~Ewen's

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campaign had three
to disclose the debt for
legal worlc performed in July and
Augnst. But on each of those earliGt repons, "0"- was Wriaen where
¢bance~

•

Union nixes
.tefinery's
latest offer
•

! CATLETTSBURG,
Ky. (AP)
Two union locals representing

~

covering July I to Nov. 23
"because we didn't have any debt
through those times." The repons
were filed in October and December as required.
" When the invoices come in,
we ..-ecord them, and when the
money comes in, we record it," he
said. " I don' t Jcnow what else I can
~I you."
There are spaces· on the disclosure form to show whether debt is
new or continued from earlier
reports . Those . spaces on
McEwen's year-end form are blanJc
for all six pages of it.emized debts.
McEwen firsl revealed his
indebtedne~s in mid-January in a
·
· ed
h.
leuer to supporters s1gn by 1s
wife, Liz.
"Becauseofthecampaigndebt,
we could not send our annual
Christmas card to you," the letter
said.
. Wise said all the money general·
ed by chat letter will go toward debt
retiremenL He estimated the debt
had been reduced by about
$20,000.
McEwen. who is running in a
special election for Gradison's seat,
wouldn't detail his efforts to raise
money for the old debt and. the new
campaign.
,,
The people who were owed the
most from McEwen's last campaign _said they had no doubts that
the debt would be paid.
"I had a conversation with him
either shortly before or shorUv after

about 900 workers at Ashland
Oil's Catlettsburg refinery on Friday rejected a new three-year
pontract by a ratio of more than
·
a-10-1, a
lllin llid.
~ Members o Local 3-SOS of
'he Oil, Chemical and Atomic
•Workers Uaion voted 388·1 16
COLUMBUS (AP) - Poi ice the shooting. The couple were in
!against the pact. and Local 3-214
said a woman sh01 and killed her the process of getting a divorce,
workers reJected it by a. vote of
estianged husband at a consuuction police said.
1
1277-176, said Local 3-214 mem·
Mills started to run after being
site Thl~CS~lay, shouting chat if she
~Bob Phelps.
. '
couldn 'I have. him, "nobody else shot, but collapsed onto some
• Company spokesman Roger · will."
sracked lumber while his co-work:Schrum said a contract vote for
Jessica ·Mills, 25, was charged ers took a .32-caliller pistol from
;J.M workers at the company's
with the aggravated murder of Mrs. Mills, said homicide .Sgt.
Canton, Ohio, refinery is schedMark Mills. 30·. The shooting GlennEggleston.
ed Tuesday. But he said a vore
occurred at a construction site
Mills died in surgery at Riverad not been scheduleil for 50
where he was worlcing on the city's · side Methodist Hospital. He was
nion worlcers at t Valvoline bot·
northwest side.
shot in the chest, Eggleston saidr
ng plant in Freedom, Pa.
Wiinesses at the nearby Bethel
Mrs. Mills had gone to the con• The contract offered a 10.7
Village condominiums told police suuction site to get her husband's
jlercer\t raise over the next three
that the woman shouted, ' 'If! can't · signature on some legal papers,
~ears and company payment of
have you, nobody else will," after Eggleston said.
~rcent of heallh-care costs.
, 'We'r~ disa?.pointed that
)Inion members d1d not ratify the
~contract," the company
said in a statement "The compa·
. )ly negotiated in good faith and
offered a fair proposal that
included more than the refining
jndustry's pauem contract for
REPLACE SPARK PLUG
wages and benefit increases,
ltlong wilh changes in some local
REPLAQ AIR FILTER
work rules to match those prevalent in lhe rest of lhe indusuy."
SHARPEN BLADE
: The union's contract expired
ADJUST WBURETOR
fan. 31, bill negotiators agreed on
a rolling extension to keep the
MAKE OTHER ADJUSTMENTS AS NEEDED
t efinery running. Under the
•greement, the union must give
2 CYCLES ONLY
~4 hours' notice before strilting.
OTHER LABOR OR PARTS EXTRA
~chrum said none had been
SUCH AS CLEANING MUFFLER AND EXHAUST
Fiven.
, The v,pte was originally schedpled Monday but was delayed
The Store with "All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets,
after union officials recommend·
~d the pact be rejected . The
Stables, Large and Small Animals,
pc:Aw said lhe offer would have
Lawns and Gard~ns.
reduced pension benefits for
~me worlccrs, liut the company
said chat issue was confused.
i Negotiiuors met Tuesda'y, and
the company agreed to allow each
torrent worker 10 choose the best
399 Mail
992·2164
'blc pension plan.

union{" ..

ponal

&gt;
:

. Customer Servl~e
Whal mailers most lo you when il comes to propane?
Prompt delivery. Reliability. Safety. Energy-savings.
Knowledge and experience. Friendly. helpful delivery flllople.

Police point to possible motive· 51 J~~::n;~~~~nef.r~:;!~~vilt!~
where revenues averaged $232.

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· ,Gnllia board to meet

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~"'-:---~.

...~:::!'lf
. ..... .~ -----,·-·- -.

· Equilille'can provide cash 101 any
purpo&amp;e a new car, a vacation,
family hea~h-ilnd the interest
may be tax-deductible.

jt

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$75,000

"'...,. ~ disclosure. discuss J:quiline wi1h a
loan officer.

' $35,000

,

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• Member FDIC

• All ITT I.

AlBiNI

IILPII

LIWILL

.IIDLIPOIT

37HISS

").7761

425-nt6

""2"'

l'n-6661

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Prosecutor: no revzew

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1n police shootzng case

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NILIONYIL\.1 111 PLAI,_I TDD ONLY

797-6547

~~~=yo~':t"h::~ :,en.::. =~:or.:.~'!.tr...• If!
a~hou
boiS drusPCPiahiJbloodadleti£o
•
.

376-7113

GALUPOLIS, OHIO

;{;tralaod with
around the neclc.
c

1,1

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Adlllllves ($4.00)

(Rope Leith«)

FoiliW

Whll LIQIIbllng

Sal II COlin

Kleen Sheen

...

Supplies

....... a
............

'

'

.-co

lila

"5-1"5

Groomi~g

l"fo .on Lyme's. pisease available

~ CL~VELAND {AP) - T~c
Cuyahop County CoiOiter EliZI'Cuyahoga County prosecutor has .alieth K. B~ ruled that PiJ*ins
(.eJ~ctOd a call for a grand ju.ry d~ed when • nerve reflex ~
~;CVtew of the case of two wbtte , hts ,heart.'The reflex corild have
lioUce officers who were cleared in occurred when the blood Sllllllly to
lhc dealh of a b1lclc maa while in his brain wu cut olf, she 11iir
ilollce custody-.
·
"I fmd no basis to nivicw lllll. ~ · The announcement Friday i)y tera that ba" been revlewocl by
~tor S~c Tubbs Jones another aaency," MI. Joaes llid a
held a decision by city l'rolecu- the end of a 0110-hour IR!
Barbin Danforth that the offi. before the City Club COIIIIIllllily
n wouldn't be charsed in the forum.
, .
· · .
Ms. Danforth ruled tblt ofli:cn
. 28 death of Michael' Pipldns,
-Michael Tllllcenley. 28, 111C1 Jef.
~ Pipkins had been arreltcd on' f~ey Olblon, Z7, hldn't uaed ezces•

Peoples a.;k wUI waive dosing 00815
on EqUiUne undl Aprill5, 1993.

II

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SLOW

AND

·-

Once lhe account is set up, special EquiUne checks will be issued
~·~~! ... . and
your line of credrt will be avail'
-~...;~~ ~ for any purpose 1!1 any time.
...._ --~~ .
EquiUne is a mulli-purpose line of
··· '
Payments can be made in monthly in·
cred~ based on thA equity In your .
_ _. _. _
stallments or in lump sum. Simple in·
home. h works like a checking 1~
terest is charged on the aooount's
account for homeowners.
~ ~
-~-:-"' daily balance at the rate ol1 .5%
11 you qualify, l&lt;'eoples Bank Will
Jl8HfS
'
over. the ~all Street Prime Rale
set up a line of aedrt of up to
i - llllm ~-#·
and rs §ubject 1o change monthly. ,
75% ol the appnised value of
...,,..,_.,~..,--::;;..
Once you have EquiUne you can
......
the
.........
.....a
I
.......
~
-'
your home """'
"""'"""''ng
, ..;;... ~wnte checks based on lhe' equity in
mortgage balance. For example:
. ~ your hclme Whenever you wish-ro
..~"'""Val
$100000
-"~~ needtoapplyforaloan.ForluR

PQI8ntiaJ line of aed~

446-2532

.

Jividen's Fcir111 .Equip111,ent

See Her., Smith or Vemoa JlarvQ'

; 135 PINISTREET

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Lass balance of_rnortgage $40,000

.sGMC TRUCK ·CENTER,

Herman L. Dillon &amp; Associates

Police probe murder-suicide

' ' V-8, stand. trans., air, AMIFM stereo w/ca• .
14.3
; ~~tte, SK &amp; SC, CIR, sliding rear window, full
:size truck with what you're looking for.

~

DID YOU KNOW?

PHYSICAL THEUPY • SPORTS· MEDICINE
BACK REHABILITATION • WORK RECOVERY
. CARDIAC REHABILITATION • ADULT FITNESS

,GOP panel to meet Tuesday

75% of appraised value

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PJUCD TO SEU.

. POMEROY- Forty-seven peo- Lutrella F: Schoenleb, Pomeroy, Reynold Steger, Durham, N.C .. Rutland, failure to display regisua,."
,.
· pie were fined and five forfeited assured clear distance, $10 and speed, $67; and Michael J. Eblin, uon, $60.
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bonds in Meigs County Court on costs; Cindy ffi!ye, Rutland, seatWednesday by Judge Patrick belt violation, $25 and costs;
O'Brien.
Tammy Walkins, PQmeroy, DUI,
Fined were Larry E. Curtis, $500 and costs, six months jail.
Rai:ine. seatbelt violation, $25 and operator's license suspended indefYeu e~n take year phytle~l thtr~py
costs; David A; Crow, Racine, initely, two years probation, failure
speed, $20 and costs; Tony M. to conuol, costs only, driving under
prtterlptlen t1 the ellnle If yeur ehtlet? .
Quillen, Pomeroy, DUI, $350 and suspension, six months jail, concurcosts, 10 days jail, suspended to rent with DUI, $100 and costs, two
seven, operator's license suspended •, years probation, expired registrafor 90 days, one year probation; lion, costs only; Debra Albenson,
· 1480 Jacksoa Pie • Galipols. OH. 45631
Tracy Lee, Pomeroy, seat belt vio- Pomeroy, two charges passing bad
'
lation, $25 and costs; Sonja Stan- checks, $50 fine, suspended upon
446-2206 '
ley, Pomeroy, seat belt violation, restitution paid within 30 days,
SIS and costs; Sherry Smith. · costs; Matt A. Eblin, Middleport,
GALLIPOLIS - Betty P. Coldwell, 39, Middleport, was talcen
Cheshire. speeding, $26 and costs; DUI, $350 and costs, 10 days jail, ·
; into custody Friday morning on· a municipal court order for !fCS·
Todd M. Price, Rutland, seat belt suspended to three days, operator's
: passing. She was Inter released.
·
.violation, $15 and costs; Edward license suspended for 90 days,
'
Thaclcer, Middleport. seat belt vio- upon enrollment and completion of
lation, $25 and costs; Michael J. the RTP school, $150 of fine and
Seroing the Patient and the Physician fo-e
Eblin. Rutland, speed, $22 and jail suspended, failun: to conirol, .
; GALLIPOLIS - Michael F. Carter, 24, 11·112 Coun St., Galover 30 Yeal'B. ·
costs; Karen F. Thacker, Middle- $25 and COSts; Gene Johnson, Mid·
, Jipolis, wns citcd .enrly Saturday by Gallipolis police for public
port, seatbelt violation, $15 and dleport, disorderly conduct, $100
~ inloxiculion.
·
We Accept Medicare, Insurances, and Workers
'
costs; Julia M. Fahrion, Gallipolis, fme, suspended, costs, restraining
Compensation for you.
speed, $25 and costs; Jason P. order issued; Paul Bailey, Middle- ·
Hogan, Rio Grande, speed, $21 and port, disorderly conduct, $100 fine,
· HERMAN l.
MICHAELL.
MARGARET
. GALLIPOLIS -Joan Roberts, 781 Kemper Hollow Road, Galcoilts; Sandra G. Southern, Shade, suspended, costs, restraining order
DILLON
HEMPHILL
JOHNSOII
. lipolis, filed a theft complaint with the Gatlia County Sheriffs
speed, $20 and costs, seabelt vioissued; David Millhone, Tuppers
. Department. She reponed someone removed four center, caps from
lation, $25 and costs; Joseph C. Plains, DUI, $350 and costs, 10
MS, PI,
MS, AT
IS, PT
, her vehicle Thursday while it was parked at Foodland Grocery
Taylor, Long Bottom, seatbelt vio- days jail suspended to three, opera·
1Store, 520 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. The caps were valued at $45
lation, $5 and costs; Angela K. ,tor's license suspended for 90 days,
l each.
. •·
Payne, Middleport. speed, S22 and ' one year probation, upon enroll";:.\:")f.;;:':.·:::
.. • •
~ ·!J
. ,,. .
.Is Sttn
costs; James M. Burris, I;etart, ment and completion of the RTP
On TV
W.Va., unsafe vehicle, $5 and school, $150 of fine and the jail
costs, failure to stop at a posted will be suspended, left of cenrer,
GALLIPOLIS -The Galiia Counti Local !lonrd of l;(lucati.on .
stop sign, $10 and costs, seatbelt costs only.
has called a special meeting for 5:30 p.m. Monday at the adminisViolation. $25 and COsts; Joyce Fan,
Dee Canter, Racine, passing bad
-· trative offices, 230 Shawnee Lime, Gallipolis.
Athens, speed, 530 and costs; Win- checlcs, costs; Timothy Whitlatch,
Hems on the agenda include n possible tax levy and action on
ston C. Saunders, Gallipolis, speed,
New Haven, W.Va., crimina) teescollective bargaining a~,orccmcms.
, $24 and costs; Brian K. Bailey, passing, $100 fme and costs, three
Reedsvilll'l no registration plates, days jail, suspended, six months
$10 and costs; William J. Lydic, probation. restraining order issued;
Zanesville, ~It violation, $25 Kim Lee, Cheshire, passing bad
'
POMEROY- Clarence Kjng, 40, Charleston, W.Va., was
and costs; Christine L. Sheehan, checlcs, costs, restitution; Christina
arrested Saturday by•the Mei~s County Sheriffs Department on a
Smyrna, Ga., speed. $26 and costs; Bissell, Middleport, two charges
warrant on a bad checlc.cluirge fro111 the Meigs County Court..He
Benny .Branham, Pomeroy, seat passing bad checks, costs, restitu"!iU appear in coun on Tuesday. Meanwhile, he is being held in_the belt
v10lalion, $25 and costs; Floyd tion; Debra Mullins, Guysville,
county jail.
·
·
.
Hawk,
Reedsville. aggravated men- passing bad checks, costs, restitu·
. , In action overnight Friday, sheriff's deputies were called to two
.
acing,
30 days jail, suspended, tion; Johnnie Harrison, Rutland,
· disturbances at the parking lot of a local establishment. However
$300
and
cos!S. two years proba- DUI, $350 and costs, 10 days jail,
Most drain openers are mufli·purpose; they at·
since officers did not observe any violations and no one was willing
tion,
restraining
order
issued;
~ary
suspendlld
to
three,
operator's
tempt to clear all types of clogs but don't do an
to file a complaint, no action W!IS tal&lt;en.
· .
Pomeroy,
seatbelt
viOlation,
license
suspended
for
90
days,
one
Curtis,
effective job on bathroom hair clogged drains.
A deer-car accident report was tal&lt;en by the departtnent Friday
$25 and COsts; Richard D. Stewart,
year probation, driving under susevening. Richard'Fi~ns, Lancaster, reponed that he was tlltveling
•r•i• C•r•'• new UflfiOOM "lAIII
Pomero_y, petty theft, co~ts, six pension, three days jail, concurrent
on State Rou1e 338•10 Letait To\vnship shonly before 7 p.m. when ·
Mflffl is the only, patented Bllzyme formula
months )311, suspended to SIX days, with DUI. •costs, parked on roadhis 1992 Toyota truck suuclc and killed a deer that ran into the road·
designed to break down hair clogs so drains will
two years probation.
way, costs; Kathy Hetzer.
way. Damage, to the right front fender of the pickup was listed a
flow freely. independent lab tests have shown lila I
Don A. Stephenson, Racine, • Reedsville, passing bad 'checks,
moderate.
Bathroom Dra•n Opener breaks down ha&gt;r clogs overnight. Many drain openers contain ·
seatbclt violation, $25 and costs; $25 and costs, restitution; Gregory
caustics.acids.or other strong chemicals which may be very c1ngerous louse an.d may
Steve A. Smith, Logan, spCed, $24 Smith, Huntington, W.Va., speed·
cause damage to plumbing. DrainCare's IArlfiOOM •utlfO,IfflcOfltains no
and costs; Fredrick V. Dagrava, ing, $22 fmc, suspended to $12 and
Westervi)le,
speed.
$24
and
~;
costs.
.
heat producing caustics or acids.
• , POMEROY - The Meigs Couqly Republican Executive Com- .
Michael :I'. Ward, Racine, speed,
Forfeiting bonds were Edward
miuee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the {rfeigs &lt;:;oimty Court. $20 and costs; Jason A. Riggs, Miller, Long Bouom, no registrahouse.
,
Pomeroy, seatbelt violation, $25 tion, $60; Michelle Cooper,
and costs; David W. Palmer, Pomeroy, speed, $65; Joe A. RusAthens. speed, $25 and costs; sell, Crown City, spced •.$65 ; .
MARlETTA (AP) - A man shot his wife four times and th&lt;;n
turned the gun on himself in ~n apparent murder-suicide, police said
Seaps, pHn, •1141 ....,
Friday.
.
erttllk •••eri•l r•• coet
Dead are Susan Hill, 40, and Gaiy Hill, 44, of Stoclcpon. ·
I
Police Chief Roger Phillis said Mrs. Hill ha!lleft her husband
and lhat troubles with their marriage probably led to the shooting
dr•l• pipe ••• •••••
Thursday night.
.
.... drtlll.
Mrs. Hill was pronounced dead at the site, the home of a sis~et.
To fi• slow drains, yciu need to
Hill died Friday mooting at a Parlcersburg, W.Va. hospital.
clean the inside of your pipes.
Sound dilficull? lt is difficult tor L..::.:..::.a:.;.:.;;::...;;::.;~:..::...::.......;.:.J
· mostchemlcaldrainopenersthat
GALLIPOLIS - The Lyme Support Nctworlc has information
work only on clogs. They are not designed to remove the buildup along the pipes that
(614) 446-1675
available on Lyme's Disease, a bacterial infection caused by the
causes clogs and sto¥l drains. The enzymes digest and liqu~ 1 .he burldup !lthal your
bite of an infected tick. Symptoms include severe and chronic
drain is restored to maximum flow. Continued use of Drain Care wrll remove years of
headaches, fatigue and joint pain and/or stiffness.
organic buildup in your plumbing. Drain Care is safe lor your plumbing. Drain Care is ,
Don't put off buying the supplies you
· For.mon: information call I .80().666-0285.
also great for cleaning and deodorizing
.
.garbage disposals.
.
need until showtlmel ·Listed below are a
E!Jitor's no~: Names, aaea and addresseS are printed'as th~y
few of the Items we stock:
appear' on oindal rttorll· •
·

!Center caps stolen

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SPRING TUNE~UP SPECIAL
ON LAWN MOWERS .

1193 GIIC SIIIRA

Forty-seven people fined in Judge O'Brien's court ·~~

·'· Deputies a"est Charleston man

po

w•.

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: Man cited for intoxication

~

R&amp;G .Feed &amp;Supply Co.

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iWoman taken into custody

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Ferrellgas

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POMEROY - Jim Freeman, a
reporter for the Ohio Valley Publishing COiftlilny's GallipoUs Daily
Tribuae and formerly of Meigs
County, starts work at The Daily
.I
Se111t11el Monday as a general
1
assignmalt reporter.
~~
Freeman, 28, is a 1985 graduate
of Soutbem High School and grad- .
I•
'1131ed with a bachelor's degree in ·
.ioumalism from Ohio University's
1
ll.W. Scripps School of Jcunalism
&gt;l
in 1991. ·
.
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"I look forWard ID wodcin with
the The Daily SellliM/ staff.liiFreeman said ·"I view at it as homecomins of sorts."
"The people of Gallia County
haVe been uuly fantastic." Freeman
added
Freeman interned at TM Daily
. Se11ti11el during the summer of
/,
transferred
from
the
Tribune
to
The
DaUy
Sen·
,
1990.
.
BON VOYAGE - Ohio Valley Publishing
tine I in Pomeroy. His last day at tbe Tribune
His writing has been published
general assignment reporter Jim Freeman baQds
in the Gallipolis Daily Tribulle,
a balloon to. his 2-year-old daughter, Chelsea,
was Saturday. Freeman starts work at the Sen· ..,
'The Daily Se11ti11el, the' Poillt
Friday at a goine away party beld at the Gal·
tine! Moaday. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin
P/eas11111 Re&amp;iiler and the SIUiday
lipolis Dally Tribune office while his youngest
)
Pinson)
Ti~~d'Cian:nce and EYelyn . · daughter, Victoria, watches. Freeman is being
Freeman of Racine, Jim and his well with their two children ; he serves as a sergeant in the U.S. Engineer Battalion in Parkersburg.~
~.
Wife, Mary, curn:ntly n:side in Bid- Chelsea and .Victoria. In addition, Armv Reserves' 463rd Combat W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS -Local authorities made five arrests between
: Friday and Saturday.
.
.
Opic E. Moore: 46, 1496 Patriot Rood, Patriot, was arrested early
' Saturday morning by G:lilipolis police for disorderly conduct by
' I iiud~cmion-Ulinble' to ciiCe fot self; Ralph A. Butcher, 64, Middle: port~ was arrested Friday on a warrant from municipal court for
: menaCing; Ronald L. White II, 34, 567 Vance Rood, Gallipolis, was
• arrested early Saturduy by Gallipolis police for driving under the
; fnnuence and no operator's license;. and Tammy T. Setty, 22 •
Z:mcsville, was arrested Friday evening .by Gallipolis police for a
felony charge of passing _bad checks.
1 .Lacides S. Maldonado, 36, San Cris~1bol, Venezuela, was arrest·
t ed early Saturday by Gallia County shcrifrs deputies for resisting
arrest :md disorderly conduct by intoxication, but was not jailed. He
was later released on a bond.
·
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·'I•

Call loday and ask aboul how these services can
help you-·
Level Payment Plan
·• Ferrellgas lnstallalion Review • 24-Hour Emerg~ncy
Service • Automatic Keep-lull Service
~

614-4~6-226~

GALLIA - No serious injuries were reponed following a two"chicle wreck on Gallia Road in Greenfield Township Friday
r around 3 p.m.
·
·
.I
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, a westbound, left-of-cenw minivan ·driven by
Gory L. Oiler; 44, Oolc: Hill, met an eastbound dump truck, a 1991
1 GMC Topkick owned 'by the Gallia County Board of Commission. ers and driven by Burl C. Burchfield, 54, 8726 Hannan Trace aoad.
Crown City, in o curve.
Burchfield braked and sli\1 off lhc right side of the roadway and
· struck an embimkmcnt. The impact caused Burchfield's vehicle to
· rol.ate into the side of Oiler's vehicle, the patrol reponed.
Oiler s us~1in'Cd minor injuries in the accident but refused treat' ment, the patrol reponed. No other injuries were reponed.
[)mnugc to Burchrield's vehicle and Oiler's 1984 Plymouth Voy,
(•gcr w ~(S listed as modcratc:·Bmh vehicl~s were driven from the
scene.
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No ci~1tioils were Iistcd on ~he report.
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Authorities arrest five

Il

When you call Ferrellgas, you get all this and more lor your
p1opane dollar. Your delivery team is salely train!!d and
expetienced in providing prompt delivery and emergency
service. We also oller special budgel·minded cuslomer
programs thai help you save money and eliminale worries
about running out of ptopane.
·

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Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive

TOI.J, RI!E 1-100-4188-2264

~ Patrol probes two-vehicle wreck

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$1,546; Youngstown, $730 and
$809; Parma, $400 an&lt;!- $408 and
Canton, $776 and $832.
,
Statew•de, the average cost of
city taxes and fees was $795 per
person while the cost o~ providing
.services was $837, sa1d Donald
Demo, COIJ!ICiliJi'e:sidenL
•.
In Orrv•lle, which has .a populalion of 7,712. the per capita cost of
P.!Ovidi'!g services was one of the
h1ghest m t!'e state 1!1 $3,049. How~v.er; the city runs 11S own clectnc
uuhty plant and coll-:cted $2.~11
per person for. serv1ces. ~h1ch
mcluded electric•ty, Bemo SIUd.
1be study found chat the largest
per cap.ita expenditure in the state
was $3,333 in the Oeveland suburb
of Independence, where charges .
and taxes were $2,201! per penon. .

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New study finds Ohio cities'
spending exceeding revenues
By ROBERT E. MILLER
less than the value of services they
Associated Press Writer
.. received in 1991, the latest year for
COLUMBUS - A new study · which comple,te .figures are availshows that Ohio's cities received able. the study said.
$5 4 billion in revenues in 1991
. In Columbus, taxes and other
while spending $6.2 billion.
charges averaged $1,035 per perHowever the surv~y_ of cities son, compared.to CJtpenditures of
with populalions of 5.000 Qr mon: $1,465 per person for police, u~lidoesn't necessarily mean the;y ~es. welfare, parts,~·
operated iii the red, the Ohio Public mterest on debt and other semces.
Expenditures Council said. ·
In Cleveland, the average~
Donald Demo, president of d)e shelled .out 51.•443 and _re~e1ve~
non-profit research group, said m $1,630 m serv~es. In qncmnab,
releasing the survey Friday that the the average re~1dent _pmd $1,334
figures may indicate use of money andgot$1,525 m serviCes.
left from previous years or rev~n Tolo:&lt;!o, taxes averaged $806. .
enues derived from notes and wh1le serv1ces cost $822. Figures
for the rest of the state's nine
bonds.
In aU of the state's largest cities largest cities were; Akron, $1,064
and· in mos~ others, residents paid and $1 ,196; Dayton, $1,378 and

GAL!-I~LIS .- A G:lilipolis man ~as arrested early Saturday
• ~ by Golhpohs pohce after he and another suspect were allegedly
; caught in the act of stealing lumber and concreiC mix from a local
store.
Accord ing to the report, police on routine p.aii'Ol saw ,Donald E.
Sheets, 38, 230 Linwood Drive, and another man loadinl{'lumbcr
l from O'Dell True Value Ll!mber, Third Avenue and Vine Street,
)nlO a truck parked al Johnson's Supermarket, 85 Vine SL
~. The other subject ned the scene and Sheets was .arrest for
theft. Police patrolled lhe area in search of lhc second subject, but
., were unable to locate him.

...,,,

When You Need Prompt
Dependable Propane·Delvery...

Sentinel staff

Man arrested i'n lumber theft

land Oil Inc. was l'repared to pay Vugm•a communmes of. ~ayne •
some of the plaintiffs who senled l\1111 C~~· ~here the ma)Onty of ~
pollution lawsuits with the compa- the plamuffs h~e.
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ny,ID auomey said Friday.
.
~terms orthe settlement were ;
Marc William$, a Huntipg~n not diSClosed.
.
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lawyer representing Ashland Oil,
"Settlements 10 th1s type ~f )
said Friday the funds had been put mass cases are usually conf!den~ ~
in an escrow account and would )le at . t~e req~es~ .of b~th S!des , 1
uansferred til Charleston attorney Wilhams said. In tlus case, there ,
Rod Jackson.
• is an agreement between IJlaintiffs •
Jackson represents 272plaintiffs lawyers and As~land ~~ 1t would
in two lawsuits settled Wednesday be m everyone s best mterest to
with Ashland Oil.
keep it confidential."
S~urces h~ve. said it includes a -~
Cabell County Circuit Judge
Dan O'Hanlon directed Jackson medical momtonng package !ind a ~
and Ashland Oil attorneys earlier to cash payment of several thousand
worJc l)ut the delai)s of bliiiSfeaing dollars to be adnlinistered by plain- :
money into escrow:
tiffs' attorneys. ·
:
Williams .said settlements to •
· The settlement was offered in
January to the plaintiffs, who have minors will not be completed for ~
filed ·four separate lawsuits against ~veral days.
.
:
Ashland seelcing millions of dollars
The proposal offered by Ash- ;.
in health and property dalllage.
land re«Juired at least 95 percent of ~
They said the damage was the pla•n~ffs to accept the. senle- ~
by pollution from Ashland's ment for 11 to talce effect, SIUd Ash- •
Ky., refmery.
land Oil lawyer Alben Parnell of ;
is
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Sunday Time~ntlnei-Page-A7 -•

GaiUpolls, OH.....Polnt Pleasant, WV

Local News in Brief:-- Freeman joins

1

the November election," Pappas
said. "I'm confident I'll be paid ...
The b.·
-A :
c 1
•ggesl~·~torwas uress .
Printing in BJarjchester, Ohio. The
company handled a 348,600-piece
mailing for the campaign in Octo·
berDon Hadley. executive vice
.
president and general manager,
said the bill was about $40,000 but.
1 weeshotagoed.
thatME$!6~ WIB_!l!lireportd
c wen s year-.....
w
the debt at $24,000.
He .said McEwen had thought
that the National Republican ConCommiuee would pay iL
"He said 'I'll get this thing
siraightened ouL' He agreed to pay
me, if necessary on a weekly
basis," Hadley said. "In the meantime, I' ve done other worlc for Bob
and he'~ paid along, no problem."

Pomeroy Middleport

February 14, 1993

1
t~~V~!!!~AP~~s! e!~!':!rfft~ West ~

BOBMtEWEN ·

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AOI readies payments .,.~

Commission questions late
disclosure of McEwen ·debt
the debt would have been dis·
closed.
•
Campaigns are required to tell
federal authorities where the,Y got
their money, how they spent u and
any debts. They file disclosure
repons according to an FEC schedule.
The law malces allowances for
campaigns that do not Jcnow exactly how much they owe. It tells
. them to repon an estimated debL
The Ia w gives campaigns an
extra 60 days to repon debts of
$500 or less, but anything over
$500 must be listed for the period.
A campaign that does not comly wilh the law can be fined up to
~5,000. It can fined
1 up to $10,000
if it Violated the rules intentionally.
McEwen's campaign owed
$10,982 to the Columbus law ftnn
of Calfee, Halter &amp;. Griswold for
worlc when McEwen's opponent in
the June primary challen~ed the
way some ballots wen: counted.
McEwen and fellow ReP'\blican
Rep. Clarence Miller ran against
each other in southern Ohio's 6th
District because of 1edistricting.
McEwen won, but the margin of
victory was so slim that a recount
was required.
Tom Pappas, an associate in the
law fmn, represented the McEwen
campaign. He said the campaign
got the final bill for his services in
August or September.
McEwen said he disclosed no
debts on lhree mandatory reports

•

February i4, 1993,
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Show Boxes
Rubber IIIII
Grolll Cllutll
Cllpplrl ~ •
Clrallllllr

Show Shun
Flnll BIDom

Yllcro Super

(SII 1111 n .._,.,
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·Show Sllcltll
·• Fna~~
Sllll Dlvldirl
Cllu'Witlps
Show Bloom
Combelllrulhts
BucktliiPina

HocuiPacus

SWI

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fiNKS

.

GIDGIIIIII

Use ENFORCEih Ifni( FDI FlfAJiifllf, lhe lir•l
treatment for your septic system certified by Scientific Certification
Systems as environmentally biodegfa~. Works to reduce septic'
system back·up and helps to reduce costly pump~ng . 2 month
treatment
Enlorce(s EnvironmBitially Biodegradable plumbing products are
· so elle&lt;:tive thai we offer .you·a nioney • .~uarantee. Simply ,
retum unused portion to Enforcer ProductS, Inc. We want to thank
the foilowing retailers for their sensitivity to our growing envilonmen·
tal concerns and salute them for purchasing INFORCER&lt;t
plumbing care producll:

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT
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31371NGALLS RD.
GALLIPOLIS. OttO 45131
(114) ~1175 .
v

�...

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaeant,

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February 14, 1993

-Along the
River
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Council, l$rael compromise on exiles' fate •
By PJ. SPIELMANN

in· a private meeting betWeen remaining men will have the right Lebanon. The others have been
'•
Snoussi and Israeli Ambassador of appeal .
Associated Press Writer
hospitalized or returned because
UNITED NATIONS -The Gad Yaacobi after Snoussi consult· Israel promised to review the they were deponed by rnistlllce.
•·Security Council on Friday .ended ed all council members. There was security information on those who
'
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its clash with lsr;~el over the exile no resolution or slatemen~ though do not appeal. holding out the pos·
of more than 400 Palestinians by the deal was announced publicly.
sibility that even their exile will be
GALLIPOLIS -Friday's edition
l accepting Jerusalem's offer to repaThe l;'LO's representative, M. .cut short. .
·
! triate 101 men as a fmt step toward Nasser al·Kidwa, commented that
In the end, none of the parties of the Gallipolis Daily TrlbKnt
• bringing them all home.
. the deal was "completely meaning· wanted to prolong the crisis by incorrectly identified a Middleton
: · The. PLO's permanent represen- less. We do not agree with the continuing to insist on literal Estat~ resident greeting Senator
: tative to the world body called the assumpti.Pn that was agreed to implementation of a Dec. 18 Secu- . Jan Michael Long. The resident in
, council's deal with Ismel "mean- today."
rity Council Resolution 799 the picture is actually Delores Hanj ingless."
He said he would continue demanding the ''immediate ley, not Marlene Hurt. Hurt is an
j
S.till, the compromise would Palestine Liberation OrganiZation return" of all the men.
employee of the facility .
enable
Palestinian
negotiators
to
efforts
to
have
trade
sanctions
1
Israel deporied 413 men on Dec.
• ; return ·to Middfe East peace talks imposed on Israel unless all the 17 to south Lebanon, saying they Licenses issued
• without losing face. Arab nations deportees are. returned immediate- were ringleaders ·: of Muslim
POMEROY - ~e licenses
; had said they would not return to ly. The PLO had asked the Security extremist organizations that killed have been issued by Me1gs County
; the bargaining table until all ti!ll Council to impose the sanctions.
six Israeli security officers that Probate Coun to Charles J;ugene
' men were repauiated.
•
. Palestinian spokeswoman month. None had been charged Hayes, 18, Point Pleasant. W.Va.,
• U.S. Secretary of State' Warren Hanan Ashrawi said she bad no with a crime. ·
and Cara J o Gillbpie, 17, P9int
' Christopher leaves next Wednes- comment, saying·she would have to
About ~94 remain in a tent Pleasant, W.Va; and to Eric Todd
~ day on a visit to Arab countries and study the deal ftrst. Earlier Friday, · camp near lstael' s self-proclaimed Smith, 22, Cheshire, and Christi
: Israel to try to reopen peace negoti- she said "We will be willing to "security zone" in southeast Marie Brumfield, 21, Middleport.
• ations.
deal with whatever the Security
'
Security Council President Council decides" on implementing
; Ahmed Snoussi of Morocco said he its resolution calling for an imme) hoped the tallcs resume soon. "This diate return of the men.
·: is my deep-seated hope. and I have
Snoussi, the council's on)y Arab
·. been guided by that.'
·
member, said the IS-nation council
: The council urged lsmel "to fol- would take no more public action
; low through expeditiously to allow unless the situation flared up again
• the return of all deportees."
in Israel or Lebanon.
; The men, deponed in December
The deal stems from lsr~el's
·; for alleged links to Muslim extrem- offer earlier this month to lake back
1 ists, are camped out in Lebanese
101 deportees and reduce the twoWeiCOIIe
Ufe
Your
territory. Lebanon has refused to year banishment of the remaining
: accept them, saying it won't be a men so that all of them would be
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• dumping ground for Israeli depor- home by the end of this year.
: tations.
One lcey to the deal's acceptance
- There was no immediate word appears to be in a Feb. 9 letter from
on the deportees' reaction to the Yaacobi in which he affirms the
U.N. move.
The understanding was reached

.
Co"ection

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F. E.

SPEOALIZED ALnRNATIVE FAMILY ENVIRONMENTS
RECRUITING HOMES IN GALLIA COUNTY
Into Your A Qld Who Needs
Support, Nurllrance, Guidance aad Encourag•eat.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.

A

River

RUNS THROUGH IT

. . .... ...!

A.~gt=I-·
Prom Style Rl¥tlw Feb. ~, 2 P.M.

- . THAU "!HIJRS. .
ONE EYEHING SHOW 7:30

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OUR SPECIAL
VALETINES DAY
THANK YOU.

J·
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DONATIONS APPRECI·
ATED • Pam Jefrers, right,
· director or nursing at SceDic
Hills·Nursing Center, donates
items on behatr or the center ror
use' in the PATH program 11
Woodland Centers, Inc. Also
pictured are Debbie Smith, stu·
dent intern, and Janet Downie,
L.S.W. ror PATH.

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of adequate low cost housing. to Mrs,_ Downie, if the mentally i.li
Tbosc homeless arc sometimes dif. have accessibility to assistance they
ficullto get along with and there- can manage quite nicely in the
GALLIPOLIS • If you were to foro thCi~ families c.1nnot deal with community.
.
A big' problem for Mrs. Downie
sec a homeless person, or someone Lhcm. This, Mrs. DOwnie says, is a
you t]Jought was homeless. what. 'typical profile of someone who is is lhal there is no place for the
homeless to stay once .they arc
would you do? Would you be homeless menmlly ill .
among the majority lhat shuns such
Mrs. Downie is conduclinc a located. She says there arc three
people or would you. bccom.e pioneer effort in this community to . motels that she uses in the area and
mvolved and take an acuvc roll IS ' develop a program for the hometl1at Serenity House in Athens. will
asSisting thal person?
less. She says there is no such pro- house some of the women. There
Sadly, there are not enough peo- gram iry the area. She is the only arc however, more men that
pic involved in the fight against worker in the program but she docs women. according to Mrs. Downie.
· homclcssncss. There is, however, receive assistance from an intern,
Mrs. Downie became interested
one person who is doing her part to Debbie Smith, who is working in' the homeless while doing a
combat the growing number of toward a bachelor's degree in paper while enrolled as a sludcnt at
• 1hosc who become homeless in this social woik at the University of Rio tlic University a( Rio Gmndc. She
Grande. Mrs. Downie obtained her says this was her first in-depth
orcranet K. Downie, Pomeroy, a Bachelor of Arts from Ohio Uni- study on the homeless. She feels
licehscd social worker, works with · versity.
there needs to be someone out there
the homeless through a program
· Clients for the program arc advocating for the homeless, fightknown as Projects for Assistance in reached by conmcti~g agencies in ing the sysq;m and trying to coordi:transition from. Homeless ness Gallia. Jackson and Meigs counties nate evcrythi~g.
:'.Q&gt;ATH),I divis.)on of Woodland through ~h OFgl!)izatiQJIS as the . . She .says she would love to have.
~enlcrs,lric., in Gallipolis.
Qepartment of Human Services, a shelter 10 Meigs County because
' The PATH progmm has ~n in police and sheriff's departments, there is no housing of any sorl in
'existence for abou1 one year, state highwat patrol posts. church the county. A dream of hers would
~qccording to Mr~. Downie who has groups llild ministerial associations, · be for someone to donate an old
~lso been with Woodland Centers welfare aild Social Security ofrteeS
house which could be turned inlo a
•lilr about one·year. PATH is a pro- as well as the Ohio Bure~u of homeless shelter. Mrs. Downie
~gram of outreach funded by f\XIcral Employment Services. Mrs. Downstresses lhis is a community prob:dollnrs from 1 th¢ McKinney Act·of · ie says she has· gotte~ referrals lem."She also strongly feels comt l988.
.
· from au of these agencies but !hat munities wou.ld benefit in the long
,1 You may Lhink homclcs.~ness is some arc less willing than others to run by getting involved in the rehadot a problem in this area but make necessary referrals.
bilitation of the homeless.
1iiccording to Mrs. Downie it is
Mrs: Downie has also located
There is an advisory committee
thoro 'prevalent than anyone would some homeless peoRie sqmcwhat in Meigs County which is attempt!P. innk.
i She stated she is cuircn!ly by accident. One such story she . ·ing IQ connect· various services in
pving aboutl2 clicniS.
related goes like this: She was stop- the county. Members of this comAccording to Mrs. Downie, the ping at a grocery store to get a mittee include Roger Grace, Hilda
omeless ore in the woods, und~r sandwich when she saw a person Tirado, Rim Fields, Rhonda Dailey,
~ridges, in cars, etc. She also said a with a t.in qan and a knaps:~ck. She
Father Walter Heinz, Debbie Ellis,
rural report stated in that in immediately contacted the police and Dr. Bernard Nichm and Mal• • hio there arc 147,000-152,000 and they accompanied her to see if colm Arbaugh both of Woodland
.
clcss person identified per .)'Cllli .she co~ld offer any ass1stance Centers.
=\lnd that there arc three million , through_theJ':ATHJ)rOgra~.
Mrs. Downie says she .would
::qationwidc. . ,
,
In .situations ltke th1s, Mr~. like to see the PATH program
• • She says a person is eligible for bowme alWo~ys res~hes to see tf expand to· include educational
:lhe PATH program if they arc the person actually IS homeless workshops of some sort. Not only
;J\omclcss or without adequate before she makes any conli!Ct ~uh do the homeless need shelter they
• Uousing and if they exhibit Ina- them. She says she also real~es she need support of kinds including
- :'aonal behavior or .if they appear 10 .!flUS! go to them because ·~ most ·friendship and a way to develop
)ave problems in dnily living. 'f!le ·. mstanccs the homeless will not slci!ls they may already possess.
Mrs. Downie says she is willing
"I' ATH program is geared toward come to her.
tthc homeless·mcnmlly ill.
Some .homeless ~o. however, to speak to groups about the PATH
ptogram. She will be speaking at a
;~ Mrs. Downie says a ,lot .of the come to Woodland, a~~ s~me are
,~ 0 meless mentally ill, suffer men- reached through ihe Cns1shne at 1- conference this month in Columbus
about service delivery to the home~lly llccause of the deinstitutional- ~00-252-5554. A 24_-ho~r co~nscl.
1iution of the 1960's and the fact mg and refcrral.8CCY1ce IS a.vatla~lc less in rural areas.
Having
received
40
calls in the
•lliatthcrc is an inadequate
through the Cnsls)me. Accordm~
. supply
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ITOIIWAI 1•
1'\IHii l l f . I

N a m • - - - - - - - - - - P h o n e _ __
A~~

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· By JULIE E. DILLO.N
Times-Sentinel News Stal'l'

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VALU!Y CINEMA.

1

Helping the homeless down a ·' PATH' of recovery

tbo

City

FOR INFORMATION CALL TOLL FREE 1..acJ0.331·9989
Youth 08Yelopment Corporation of America
A MULTI-SERVICE PROVIDER

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•••••••••
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As a S.A.F.E. faster parHt y01 caa receive 1p to $1240 per
-·~ for eacll foster old •• yoar ....;
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r....,.,

llorrta and DorolhJ Haald111
Arlei'Thealre
426 2nd Ave., Gallpolla, Oh.
CaD 446-ARTS lor more Info.

ADIIISIION $UO
t18 Jib

I

February 14,1993

: '
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LOUNGE in hill&lt;lric downtown Ootlipolis.
Drawing will be held Matdl I, t993 at tbo SPRINO

BE A S.A.F.E. FIS,.ER PUEN'

..

,.

01111y

SAT., FEB. 20_, 8 P.M.

FRL, SAT., SUN. 7:30, 11:30

--~

CINEMA boo ollice for a chance 10 WIN a diMcr for
two AI lhe
'!ITOWAWAY RESTAURANT 8t

Gllitarlst, ksW Ualv.
Admlaalon F'"

-

WIN I WIN
I WIN I
Please rerum this
fonn 10 SPRINO VALU!Y

Leo Welch

SHOW nilES.

•

Section B

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last year, Mrs. Downie feels she is
doing something wonhwhilc. She
also says she believes God works
in mysterious ways and Lhat He had
a hand in placing her in the PATH
program.
The PATH program is currently
up· for renewal of a three-year
grant. If ihat gmnt would not come

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through, Mrs. Dow)lic says the pro- lion from the National Coalition Cof
gram would cease and many people the Homeless which as been sent til
would never receive the assistance ·President. Bill Clinton which r~
they need. She also says donatioris "The undersigned Americans insist
of any kind - monetary or material that the Clinton administration aci
-would be grea~y appreciated.
with a systematic plan to swift!~
Mrs. Downie is doing every- and decisively end homclessncss in
thing possible to assist the home- America"
;
.
less. She has even circulated a peti- . Arc you willing to do your part?\

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''Sell '.em Cheap and.Let 'em Go!.' '
•

JUST ARRIVED~ FRESH SHIPMENT OF 1992 LOW MILEAGE UNITS.

BY PBOG

GABS

OVER 100 TO CHOOSE FROM

.

1992 CHEVY CORSICA$
AND

QUILTS DONA TED • Gladys Casto, Mary
Yoho and Eleanor Fadeley are members or the
· Crochet Circle which meets rrom 10 a.m. to
noon on Wednesday mornings at the Gallia
County Senior Citizens, Center. The Crochet

t f.:

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1992 OLDSMOBILE ACHIEVA'S
ALSO IN STOCK! .
//
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LOOK.AT THESE ... JUST ARRIVED!
•4" 1992 Olds Royale 88 4 Dr.
1-LS Brass Hat, ful~ equipped.
3-Royales- All power.
NOBODY BEATS OUR PRICES!
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!

,

· Cet Your Beal Deal NOUJ ·
See, Larry 'I'haxton, Jim Wllker, Erie Splete
- - - - - - • or Gary T1Wa Today!
•

GEO

8

9LDSMOBILE

")K.·.~

1616 EASTERN IVEIIUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

(614) 446·3672

•
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or

Gal/lpolls' Hometown Dealer

1-100-521·0084.

She Is preienlly being assisted by Debbie Smith,
fronrthe Unlvenlly of Rio Grande.
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~

Gene Johnson Says:

CllEVROLET

•-

}

1

student Intern

'

Circle group is busy working on arghans ror the •
homeless. They are crocheting squares and thea
putting them together for afghans. The. arghans '
are given to the PATH program at Woodland
Cente~s.

�Page-B2-Sunday llmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

February 14,1993

.

wv

February

Pomeroy-Middle. .rt-Galllpolls, OH Point Pf

14,199~

TurnerBrillhart
POMEROY •
Dottie Tum-

Quivey-Lee

''

POMEROY • Christina J. Quiv·
ey became the bride of Lawrence
R. Lee Jr. during a December 13,
1992 wedding ceremony at the
'Helen Mauck Galbreath Memorial
Chapel on the Ohio University
campus in ~!hens with Roger WatSill offic~ng.
The bride is tho daughter of
James and Connie Quivey, Shade.
~ groom is the son of Larry and
Cora Lee, Pomeroy.
Mus!c was provid~d by Ruth
Anne Q1lders. A receptiOn ~held
in the ballroom'pf the Ohio Univer·
sity Inn.
Escorted by her son, C.J. Estep,
the bride wore a formal gown of
ivO!)' Satin and schiffii embroidery
with simulated pearls, sequins and
.dainty simulated pearl drops. The

Mrs.
Point Pteasant High School. He is
er, t'omeroy, announces .the employed at Ravenswood Alu;
engagement and approaching mar- minum Corporati111.
;
riage of her daughter, Monica
An open ceremony will be held .
Layne, to John Kenneth Brillhan, July 3 at 1:30 p.m. at lhe Heighis
son·of A.G. and Carolyn Brillhart, United Methodist Churtb in Point·
Point PleaSant. W. Va Miss Turner Pleasant, W.Va. A reception ·will
is the daughter of the late Roger C. follow in the church fellowship
TUIIIC(, Sr.
·
'
room.
Misk Turner is a 1989 graduate
of Meigs High School and will
graduate from the College of Busi·
CHESTER • There will be a
ness Adminisuation at Ohio Uni- special
meeting of Shade River
. versity in June with ~ in man·
Lodge
No.
453 F&amp;AM on Thurs·
8gCIJient and 'international business day at 7:30p.m.
Work in lhe maS'
and: a minor in political science. u:r mason degree.
Refreshments
She 'is employed at Ohio Universi· . will be served. All ·m
aster masons
ty. '
.
invited. .
Brillhan is a 1985 graduate of

'Meeting planned :

Community band to be in concert -~ MIDDLEPORT •.The Big Bend
Commllllity Band will present a
Pl!blic concert S-ept~ 21 a1 ·the
Me~ Junior High AUditorium.
Selectjons .. will .inclljde: The
White ~ose byJ .P. !rousa; Ovenure
in B-flii by Glovanninl, The Van·
• ishett Army by 'K: Alford; Selections from Mali of LaMancha by

.

'

shoulder
r.eckline,
short
pleated
fitted bOdice
featured
an off-thesleeves and an open back. The full
skin flowed into a chapel-length
'train held by a double bow at the
waist. Her v-band headpiece was
designed with ivory simulated
pearls and ivory sillc rosebuds; She
earried a bouquet of ivory silk

~h/Ericks01o, Themes _Lilce Old
T1111es by Baxter, Am~ncan Folk
Rhapsody by C. ~rundman and
America, IJ!e Be,utiful by Samuel .
Ward/Carmen ~on.l!ffilllger.
· The CC?OC:~ w!Jl begm ~ ~ P·ll_l·
The public IS mv1ted. Admiss1on IS

......

"

••

Houchins-Eason

•

'~

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
. Stephen Houchins, Middleport,
~ announce the eng&amp;gement and
~ approaching marriage of their
: daughter, Susan Elizabeth, to
-~ Hubert A. Eason, son of Mr. and
~ Mrs. Robert Eason, Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 1991 gmduatc of Meigs High School and is

currently studying Hearing and
Speech Sciences at Ohio Universi·
ty.
.
Eason is a 1987 ~raduate of
Meigs High School and is currently
srudying civil engineering at Ohio
University;
A December wedding is being
planned.

t

.
••

'

I

VINTON - Becky Wray and
Steve Skidmore' will exchange
wedding vows Feb. 27 at 2:30p.m.
during an open church ceremony at

'

:
GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mrs. Littlejohn, to David Michael Jones.
: Joseph ,Linlejohn .or Gallipolis and
An open church ceremony will
" Mr. and Mrs. Dick Kau£man of · be held Satw'day, Feb. 20 at 6:30
~ Bluefield', W.Va., announce the p.m., a.t the First Church of the
· '.; e.ngagenient.lllid approaching mar, Nazarene. A reception will follow
~ nage of $err daughter, Indira Lea
at the Elks Lodge.

'

SPliNt IPICIAL

.

ALL PERMS ON SALE
NOW REG. $40-$65 :
-Effective Feb. 15~27. Walk~ins ~lcome

"14 n POOl (SO Yl YIAHliOTIIA-, I MP lAND 111111, VACIIINI
1111111, 511111111, IISIIR, PUI$1W ·~·

s'ILVER BRIDGE PLAZA • 446-3353

. . HOLIDAY POOLS1 INC.

•n.-Frl. 1:311-5:110, Sit 1:30·2:00

..

WE SHIP U;P.S. DAILY

'

'

R~member PROM NIGHT Begins In
•

GALLIPOLIS, 01,110
YOUR

NIGHT OF

The below merchants have plenty to 'offer
to help ~ake your Prom Night a sp.eci~ one!
.

t'

':t. ~-

•

'

D R·E AM S
•Boutonnieres • Specialty Wrist Corsages
•Arm Bouquets •1928 Jewelry
•Hair Pieces •Arm Bouquets
•Nosegays •Specialty Ribbons Available
All Available In Either Fresh or Silk!

SEQUIN PROM SHOES
Whits

Black
Silver

Red
Blue
Green

'

Purple

iS

Mon. &amp; Fri. Ill 8 P.M.
Tun., Wild., Thur. Ill &amp; P.M.
S.turday Ill 5 P.M.
Sunday 1 to5

Let Us Make
Your Prom
N.:tght .
Special...
·Over 100 styles to
choose from

•Color coordinating ties
&amp; cummerbunds
·Free brochures

•Free consultation
•5,Employees have over
_., y•r• of experience .

In fitting tuxedos

10% DISCOUNT IF ORDERED Af
LEAST ONE WEEK PRIOR TO PROMS.

Fuschia
Teal

•-------------------------------'1

3 · Wedding policy

......

The Sunday Times-Sentinel editoial de~ent from 1-5 p.m.
weddings of Gallia, Meigs Monday through Friday at 446• And Mason counties as news and is 2342.
· ·~
·-app.'y 10 publish wedding stories
· ·photographs without charge.
! Howeyer, wedding news must
jlet general standards of timeli·
·. Jl,he newspaper prefers to ·
1
ish accounts of weddings .as
__ r
as -possible after the event.
J.lnn
...
o be published in the Sunday
r!f!ition, the wedding must have
en place within 60 days, prior to
publication, and may be up to
428 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis, OH. • 441.0500
.,
words in length. Material for
;'Along the River must be received
"Let w show your loved ones how
ocby ·the editorial department by
: Thursday, 4 p.m., prior 10 the date
much you care."
: of publication. ·
! Those .not making the 60 lkly
• deadline will tJe published during
1 the daily'paper aS space allows.
1
, -Photogmphs of. either the bride
:. or ththride and groom may be
: published with wedding stories if
Discounts available for Senior Citizens and
· desired. Photographs may be either
Students.
··
olack and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Designers: Jiml Reynold~J,
.: Poor quality photographs will
Bonnie Stutes &amp; Opal Sa~nders
1101 be accepted. Generally, snap·
4hots or instant-developing photos
'.\re not or acceptable quality.
. :; Questions may be directed to·lhe

''''''''~'''~
icliael
s!FforlU

••••••••••••••

~

STOP BY FOR OUR

·, 441·0500

~:~-----------------·~ The Venu$ orbiter Magellan was

,.

~unched May .S, 1989. By mid-1991,
,-1olagcllan had mapped all of the planet
,'Ji~''e· pt for a small fraction near one

Mon.-sa.. 9-5:30
Valentine's Day ~

C••
q size i1 1:1
Serta premium models ami then pay
just; one mr price per piece i1 each style. All bedding sold 1n

sets mly.

·corlrinllllll

· tsswa ...

(6 141 4141 1171

-

-

Flowers, Baskets &amp; Gifts

74a.t ,.\fi '
(\)

.

. .

~ ·' S~ecta,{

'•

?t,etc4 · ·

336 2nd Avenue .

Ga_Hipolls, Oh.

3

'll:k.111HII

PROM GOWNS
.

ow.

' Iii

--

..,
#' '

HOLZER HEALTH
HOTLINE

'

·Alyce Design
•Loralle Originals
•J. Reynolds ·s8n Martin
•Flirtations
oGunneSex

Furniture

the poles.

We C•rry A Beautiful
Selection Of ..
'

piJIIei:iiiSe.

.

•!

PROM SPECIALISTS!

He said the tuna likley would
smell and taste bad.
·
The punctures may have hap:
pened at an independent conlraCior
m Los Angeles where cans were
shrink wrappect for sale at tarcer
~cry stores, Sullivan said.

·Swe.,theart Speei11ls

H81r H8PP9fllrlQ

2973 Piedm011t Road-Huntington, WV

1'111111: 314-421-4781

f'Radle-.JialBirtleson of.lhe
state BcaJth Department said
Dllriilay. B~ can crow in
1 1 u1 ~
Tile woJ 11aWJ recall was
on1ae4 after Food and Drug
Jldwiwiql...,. officials noticed

• ' (jJ .

Fellowship Chapei,.Vinton.
A reGeption will follow in the
church 's fellowship room.

··wrr..t.n.~.s-··

OL YMPlA, Wash. (AP) _
leaking luna packs at a Cos teo
N•rwoltllr:Scaisn:callin&amp;cans wholesale SUire in Seltde llld noU·
of IDa iw U.C western states fied Van Camp; said Dan SulliVIII,
lla:l--cas-pomctured. Van Camp senior vice preti;t,rt ol
ne nail alkts Cbicken of die production operations.
Sea iw 6 J./11-ouDce cans $Old
"Chances are most people
iw . - w 4 , ~ I1Kb in Wash· would just get flu-like symp101111,"
...._. ~ ldlllo..Cllifomia, said ·state Health Department
Allllb. Mw , N'cYida, Hawaii spokesman Dean Owen. "In the
.r lJall. ~ v.. Camp Seafood · worst case scenario it could be
QLIII:..
botulism, though we have no evi· ·
· DcK wae no tqJOr1S of illnes$ dence of that"
.

POMEROY • Edward F. King
will celebrate his 90th birthday
Sunday with an open house from 1·
4 p.m. at his residence in Pomeroy.
The event is hosted by his children.

::1,

'

Littlejohn-Janes

and lllby's llladi ai ned
with heart shlpcd no., JKe. nbbon and sjmuJMcd ph.
Matrpn of 'l toaor- Mrlwie
Glassmire, Millfoelc! Site- 1
peacoc~ lice,. $8lill ~lrw&amp;t"
.gown wlih i ~ w 1 -r
an open !-d hi&amp;N 2 '~ ......
She canicd a bwp• I ol a-r -r
teal silk roees.
.
Best mau was · Jo... DaYIS,
Pomeroy. Uslaen !'ae Na~
Gilders ~d J.R. ~of the~~ ol~ _
The bride IS · qloj 1111 by~
Umversity in tile Gllili: ol Alillwli
Infonnation Sc:nia:s.lllep•• is
employed by 1'llor BoJ C.S. .
The couple bone)u• d . . ~
Pocono Mounl3ius IIIII ac n 'iDe
their home in Shade.. ·

King,birthday ·

•

~gards

•

Wray-Skidmore

MR. and MRS. LAWRENCE (CHRISTINA) LEE, JR;

,

MONICA TURNER and JOHN BRILLHART
'· .

•

ro~s

Chicken of the Sea tuna recalled
because of can punctures

$1. ·

•

HUBERT EASON and SUSAN HOUCHINS

Times . Sentlnei-Pege-83

•

•

'

The Answers You Need...
·As Close As Your
Pho·ne!
.

Gowns seen In Seventeen &amp;
Your Prom magazines.

.

•

SPECIAL ORDERS WELCOME

@;;n!MyA
~~111re • GalllpoUs

~DESIGNERS

SIIVICI SAL Oil
.·fULL
"

'

.

••••••

•ILLNESS
9R INJU-R Y • PHYSICIAN REFERRAL
.
.

'

'

•HEAlTH . CARE OPPORTUNITIES • SUPPORT GROUPS

�-

'

·F~e;b;;ru;a~ry~1~4~,!199!!3~!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~;;;::;::;~=~~0~H::.;~P~o:ln~t;;;.:~-----..--=::; Times
Meigs community,
calendar of events

.

to our
STORE HOURS .

We're Having_ ABirthday Party
· · All Day
- Monday. February 15thl ·
· We Cannot Tell A Ue. We .Did Chop
·Down The Pricesl

MONDAY

RUTLAND - The Leading
Creek Conservancy Dislrict Office
will be closed Monday in observance of President's Day.
.

~

.
'

The bacJeria killed a 2-year-old
boy and sickened at least 400 people in Washington state. Other
cases were reported in Idaho and
Nevada. At least nine children
remained hospitalized, including
two in critical condition.
Foodmaker has promised to pay
all medical costs for lhose fnfectcd,
Goodall said.
The company will spend about
$2 million annually to improve
inspections to prevent a recurrence
of the conuumnation, said Robert
Nugent, president and chief operating officer of Jack in the Box.
For the two weeks after health
officials publicly linked the chain
to the bacteria outbreak on Jan. 18,
Jack in the Box sales dropped by as
much as 35 percent compared to
the same periodJast year, Foodmaker said. ,.
The chain initially suspended all
advertising, but recenlly aired ads
explaining its response 10 the outbreak.
..,
•
·
Goodall said customer loyalty
will help ensure that sales recover
'after several months.

By BRIGITTE GREENBERG
Associated Press Writer
SAN DIEGO - Sales at Jack in
the Box restaurants dropped by as
.much as 35 percent last month atier ·
hundreds of customers were sickened by tainted meat, but executives predicted the fast-food chain
will soon recover.
"We have a very wonderful,
wonderful, loyal base of long-term
customers," said Jack Goodall,
chief executive officer of San
Diego-based Foodmakcr Inc~. the
chain's parent company.
Foodmaker's annual meeting
opened Friday with a prayer for
those ajJected by the bacterial outbreak.
" If there were any way in God's
will thai we could go back and
undo this, we would give anything
in order 10 be able to do that,"
GoodalliOld shareholders.
Heahh officials have said the
bacteria strain E. coli 0157:H7 was
. . spread through contaminated. and
undercooked hamburgers serVed at
Jack .in the Box restaurants in
Washington state.

ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
HEAT PUMP SYSTEM
•;
•

LISA, COUGHEN9UR

The Most Efficient Heat Pump in the
Manufactured Housing Industry.

: Receives 'osu,
.~. CSU scholarships
GALLIPOLIS • Lisa Ann
: Coughenour, daughter of Faye and
: Hany Coughenour, Jr., of Gatlipo• lis, has received scholarships from
Columbus Stale Un•verslly and
Ohio State University.
A 1989 graduate of Kyger Creek
, High School, Coughenour graduat·
: ed with an A.A.S. degree in Early
• Childhood Development in 1992
from the University of Rio Grande.
She ·is currenlly attending Colum . bus Stale University, working 'on
her B.S. in Child and Fl!Iflily Stud-.
• ies, and in the summer quarter, will
• e111er Ohio S~ University, antici. : piling graduation in 1994. ·
Whilci attending Columbus State
; Un~ty and living in Columbus.
, llhcJ'Is also teachjng allhe Riverside
Methodist Hospital Child Care

Cenrer.

'

Followin$ graduation from
DSU, she anuci~s working with ·
;,carpbaned, terminally ill, abused
:J11i1 bollleless children. If possible,
~ will continue her education 10
. ...... a JIIISim degree.
·
I

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*' r=n nr=n1r1•
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298 SECOND ST.
.
POMEROY, OH. _
WE RESIIYI THE RIIHT TO LIMII QUAITITIIt

llouljngllolilng •

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Towels..~. . . . . . . . .-..~_...ou 6. ·
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Burritos..._.____s:. 4· sl
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DEW FRESH

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STORE HOURS

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2 %Mllk. . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL

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$4 29 .
T·Bone Steak...........La.
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$

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$ .
20 OZ. BAG

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SALTINES

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FROM OUR IN·STORE BAKERY•••• 26 OZ.

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·Strlotn Steaks..................La•• · 2
Leg Quarters___. . 39

$ 69

U~DA ~HOICE BEEF

PARKAY MARGARINE

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In
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HEATING &amp; COOliNG
Spocllllotl

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THAN·K YOU -CHERRY ·PIE

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Cubed Steak___. ._...ta. 2

ROYAL CROWN COLA

RACINE - Recertification classes for currently licensed pesticide
applicators will be held .at the ·
Southern High School Voag Build· ing in Racine on Tuesday from 7·
IO p.m.
·
PAGEVIUE _ There will be a
special meeting of the Scipio •
Township Trustees 00 Tuesday at
6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Town·
hall.

Jack in the Box hopes
customers will come back

$499

19930NLY

TUESDAY

mac her and Wynn Wicksell,
friends of the groom. Ushers were
Patrick ana Paul Wright, cousins of
the groom. .
Guestbook auendant was Cor~
rine Hauser and greeters were Amy
and Katherine Sherwin, cousins of
the l)rjde, from Chevy Cba$e, Md.
d Vfrioealdis1Sfwth.erbe ~de' .fJudil'f Liner, en o e n s am y and
Dr. Keith Sheets, father of the
WEDNESDAY
bride.
.
'
RUTLAND _ The Rutland Fire ·
The recep110n was ·h~ld at the Depitrtment Ladies Auxiliary will ,
Hyatt Regency at the OhtO Center, . meet in regular sessiOil Wednesday
Columbus.
. .
31 7:30p.m. at the fue station. All
The couple res1de at 1588 members tlrged ·10 altend
Waltham Pd., Columbus.
·
The bride is employed at HickoMIDDLEPORT _ The Middlery Knoll School in Delaware, as a port Literary Club will meet
speech thetapist. The groom is w d d
30
h
completing his fourth year at The
e nes ay at 1: p.m. at 1 e
home of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
Ohio State University Colle~e of Wilson Carpenter will review
Medicine and will begin a res1den- "Maria Callas" by Arianna
cy in neurology at the University of Swsinopoulous. For roll call memKentucky Medical Center in Lex- bers are 10 tell of a favorite musical
ington , Ky. upon graduation in performer.
June.
·•

'

· Limit 5 Coupons 50' or Less Value

MR. and MRS. DOUGLAS (LIESL) WRIGHT

:·· ARLINGTON - Lies! Marie
·•• Sheets, daughter of Dr. Keith and
::: Sara Sheets of Gallipolis, and Dou·" glas Alan Wright, son of Dr. Frank
:~ and Judy Wright of Columbus.
:z- were united in !Jl31riage Dec. 19, al
·• the First Community Church in
:: Upper Arlington.
::. The bride, given in mamah
·_ge by
-;: her parents, wore a 8 tanc 1 lu1•P
: ~ sleeved ~gown of candlelight silk .
:: sha~tung with a fitted bas~ue
:~ bodtce of alenceon lace, sequm.s,
• pearls 11Dd a cathedral len~ train
:; e~ged m alencC?n pyramtds. _Her
·•' tnple rosette B1anch1 headp•ece
:~ alSo had a catl)edrallength impon.: ed illusion veil edged with pearls.
: She wore the pearl necklace her
mOiher wore at her own wedding.
..
A bouquet of heirloom handker:: chiefs was added Ill her floral bou.• quet of holly, ivy, white roses and
: ~ gardenias.
;
Maids of honor were·her sisters,
, Kristin Leigh Sheets and Erin Lynn
Sheets. Junior bridesmaid was her
: cousin Jennifer Sherwin Storck
:. from Potomac, Md. Bridesmatrons
·: were Laura Weiner and Lauri
:. SchUI!Iacher and bridesmaid Molly
:; Sweeney, friends of the bride from
.;. Columbus and Cleveland. All the
:: anendants wore Waters and Waters
: hunter green velvet suits 'with long
. straight' skirts and veed neckline
, jackets with long filled sleeves and
: alenceon lace capping the shoul' ders with a flounce at the back.
: They carried sprays of evergreen,
:. holly, ivy and red poinsettias.
• Besunen, brothers of the groom,
were David William Wright and
~ Frank Creamer Wright IlL
• Groomsmen wert Craig Leesman,
' Gregory Peterson, Richard Schu-

PRODUCTS

TRIPLE VENDOR COUPON

POMEROY - The Meigs County Republican Executive Committee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Court House.

:~

RCCOLA
24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

RACINE - The Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet Monday at
7:30p.m. at Southern High School. ·

' h
Sh eets- Uyyl rzg
t

. 89(

PRICES GOOD MONDAY, FEB. 15, 1993 ONLY!

POMEROY - Edward F. King
will celebrate his 90th birthday
.sunday with an open~ from 14 p.m. at his residence in Pomeroy.
The event is hosted by his children.

'

2 LITER BOnLES

.Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

·PRESIDEN,.'S DAY ,SALE .

SUNDAY

M1DDLEPORT - Zamperini: .
Still Carrying the Torch, a docu'menlary film featuring Louis Zam.o ·
perini, will be shown at the F.irst
Baptist Church in Middleport on
Sunday at 7 p.m. Public inviled.

'•

PEPSI COLA
PRODUOS.

••

Commuaity Caltlldar items
appear two da,s before aa eveat
aad the day Ill that evenL Items ·
must be received weD in adYIIIICt
to assure publication in "e calendar. .

Sentinel-Page

.

CLOROX BLEACH

-~·

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CHARMIN

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TOILET nsSUE

.89(

19&lt;

4ROLL ;
PKG. I

~0:~ At Pvwwll'e SUper ¥die
l'tb. 14 tllru M. 20, 1113

Offer

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' IJIIIIt 1 ,... CuiiOIMr

I

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·GROUND

CHUCI
· 10 LB. PlCIAGE

SJ690

/

�Page-86-Sunclay Times-sentinel

OH-Polnt

'

February 14,1993

Pomeroy-Middlepon-Galllpolls, OH-P~Int Pleasant, wv

Receives 4.0
Beat of the Bend...
Already hi!lh school alumni
reunions are bemg planned for this
spring.
Up Racine way. the Southern
High graduating clii!!S of 1968 is
making plans for observing its 25th .
anniversary with some special
activities. Members of the ·class
living in the area are asked to
attend a planning session at the
high school at 7 p.m. on Feb. 23.
Meantime, four .members of the
class have 'been "lost", They are
Carolyn Weinburg, David Thorpe.
David Cole and Jenny Sellers.
Anyone knowing how to get in
conlaet with any of the four, please
cai!Joyce Ritehie, 949·2900.

MR. and MRS. CHRISTOPHER (TRACEY) BURNETTE

.'

Jenkins-Burnette

':. GALLIPOLIS

- Tracey
;Michelle Jenkins and Christopher
-bean Burnette were uniled in marnage Dec. 19, at Christ United
iMelhodist Church, Gallipolis, with
!the Rev. Michael Smilh officiating
'!he double ring ceremony.
:: The bride is the daughter of
Milce and Mary Jenkins of Crown
tity. She is a 1991 graduate of
;Hannan Trace High School and is a
i unior at the University of Rio
Grande, maj9ring in Elementary
Education with a concentration in
•Science. She is employed at Bob
Evans Restaurant, G3llipolis. ·
·:· The groom is the son of Larry
'iod Brenda Burnette of Gallipolis.
lie is a 1991 graduate of Gallia
:Academy High School and is a
junior at the University of Rio
,Grande, majoring in Elementary
Education with a concentration in
Humanities. He is employed at Bob
Evans Hidden Valley Ranch.
The bride wore a white satin
dress. The bodice was fitted, featuring pearls and lace appliques.
Her skin was straight with pearl
and lace appliques accompanied by
a big bussel bow.
_ '
· She carried a bouquet of gold,
burgundy, and, pink flowers with
gold, burgundy, and pink ribbon,

all arranged on a bridal,Bible.

aecoraled with flowers and Cards
marking the anniversary. Congrat·
ulations, A. R.

---

groom

KENTUCKY • In tune with
Black History Month, Cora Dunsmore is on tour with her collection
of Black memorabilia. The Black
artifacts date as far back as the
early 1800s and range from toys,
postcards, slave documents and
kitChen collectibles.
She will be speaking at Morehead (Ky.) University on Tuesday.
Although Dunsmore has been
collecting for approxi~R~tely eight
years her collecuon runs 4,000 to
5,000 pieces strong, primarily
because of ber Jl!lfCIIIS involvement
in a antique business. !!he is a ~­
quent sought after ·speake( for
· museums, universities, middle
schools, community centers and
churches. This years touring exhibit has included Veterans Merncrial.
YMCA' s, Departmen\ of Prisons,
and West Angeles Church of Califomia.
·
Originally many of the collectibles were us¢ to sell a product, or to promote a stereotype. For
. example Aunt Jemima syrup pirchers, salt and pepper shakers and
creamer and sugars,• were used to
promote the pancake mix. Dunsmore is regarded as.an expen on
the subject of Black Collectibles,
but regards herself as a "serious
collector" with a- real desire and
love to acquire lhe unusual. Acquisions are purchase4 through. auc-

She was valedictorian for the
Class of 1991 at Meigs High
School.

· Sqe is majoring in nursing and
Well, I didn't know that.
I ran into Mickey Hanenbach is a !l'resideotial scholar, a member
Russell downtown Fri dar- oh of the National Honor Society.
come on, not literally, it's JUSt an
.She wiU graduate with ai CRNA
exp~essioil, , I hadn't known that
and
Mick underwent hip replacement attics.plans to specialize il) pedi·
surgery at a Parkersburg, W. Va.
hospital t)le first of December.
(Some Christmas pres.ent, huh).
Mick said she had been in so n\uch
You're aomebody .pecial al • ••
pain lhat she knew she had to get it
done. She's doing nne and would
you belie~e it was the rust time in
her life that she 's ever been conFined to a hospital?

Pomeroy's Guido GQ'olami was
in Toledo last week to visit wilh his
Motorists and residents of Mul•,
brother-in-law, John S,trickland, berry Ave. were a bit surprised by
formerly of PDmef1lY.
the appearance of Five deer about ,
John is suffering from conges- · noon time one day this we.ck ·
tive hean failure and is in need of a between the Davis and McCulbean transplant His condition has lough properties. When the street
been critical and he has b,een con· got a bit busy with cars, the five
fined to the hospital since J1111. 4.
deer took off to the hills behind the .
A 1958 graduate of Pomeroy McCullough house.
·
High School, John is m~ed to the
former Lily Girolami ahd the couNBC and General Motors are
ple has four sons. John worked on kissin' again. That's incredible.
the production line with Chrysler NBC Dateline rigged a GM truck
for 23 years. ·He and Lily reside at explosion. Boy, lhat made General
433 W. Main St., Woodville, Ohio Motors real mad. It sued NBC and
43469. Pandora S. Collins of withdrew its advenising from NBC
Pomeroy is John' s sisters.
news shows. NBC Dateline did an
John would like to hear from his · on-air aPQiogy. GM was satisfied.
former classmates as well as other The suit was dropped and advenisfriends in Pomeroy. The address is ing restored. All lhis within a few
. Medical College of Ohio, -Room days time. Can you believe that
3152, 3000 ArlingtOn Ave., Tole· things got settled that easily?
do, Ohio 43601. He can be That's incredible. Do keep smil·
reached by phone at419-381-3866. ing.
,

Maid of honor was Beth Mills,
friend of the bride. Bridesmaids
were Stephanie Dillon, Penny
Speakman, Amy Pugh, Kimberly
Johnson, Christy Shon, and Andrea
Meigs County will host for the
Sickles, all friends of the bride.
They wore tea length, burgundy, first time the Gallia Area Ostomy
taffcta,-velvet and gold lamia dress- Association for the ftrst time next
es. They carried brass Hurricane Sunday at Veterans Memorial Hoscandle lamps, decorated with flow- pital in Pomeroy.
All interested Meigs Couiltians
ers and ribbon.
are
invited to attend the meeting
Flower girls were Katie Mathwhich
begins at 2:30 p.m . in the
ews and Jessica Allie. They wore
hospital
cafeteria. Meigs residents
flower crowns with ribbons, and
planning to attend are asked to contea length dresses.
The
wore a black tuxedo tact. Rhonda Dailey, RN, BSN,
director of nursing, at the hospital,
with tails.
,
- Best m'an was Brian Burnette, 992-2104 . Veterans Memorial
brother of the groom. Groomsmen Hospital will provide beverages for
were Terry Burnette, Ed Mess, the social hour while members will
Alan Elliot, Trevor Thomas, Mark provide olher refreshments.
Jenkins, and Timmy Jenkins. Each
wore black tuxedos. Ringbearer
Retired Pomeroy businessman,
was Patrick Saunders.
A. R. Knight marked his 90111 birlh·
Music was provided by Pam . day Saturday lit his home on LinMathews . Ann Butler, Nancy coin Hill Road. His home was well
James, Lisa Lemley, Kate Saunders, and Jatnie Allie.
A reception foUowCd at the Pallia County Senior Citizens Center,
Hostesses were Tanya Shon, Bev
Jeffers, and Brenda Wells.
Tbe couple resides in Gallipolis.

Cora Dunsmore tour~ with her collection of Black memorabilia :

MIDDLEPORT · Krisaen Ayne
Slawler. daughter of Jeanne and..
Ben Slaw~er, Middlepon, rec~ved .
a 4.0 average for the fall semester
at 1he University of Akron.

by Bob Hqejlich

ON T~E FRENCH SQ.ARE
446·2323

NOW!

tion houses, antique shops P,nd graduate of Wittenber~ University,
through private collections. This Springfield. Her religtoqs dedicahobby has future relegated itself tion is wilh Morris Memorial Bapinto a small business in which she tist Church, where she serves as
· manufactures her own line of church clerk to the congregation.
The purpose of the exltibit is to
reproduction kitchen collectibles,
ethnic jewelzy and dolls.
She is a former Small BusineSs
Officer of Lear Astionics, S311ta
Monica, and is presently a procure·
ment administrator for Northrop
Aircraft. She is a~so an honors

INTO YOUR HOME .AND VIDEO YOUR

POSSESSIONS.
BE SAFE, VIDEO FOR
PERMANENT RECORD.

·

~ ~· tc..,..,

CORA DUNSMORE

Rev. Paul Lintem tq address
HMC volunteer chaplains .

MR. and M.RS. HARVEY (EULAH) JIROWN, JR.

Anniversary to be -observed
.
.

,.

.

Third Ave., Gallipolis, will celebrate their 50tlt ·wedding anniver·
sary Feb. 17, at their horne.
They were married Feb. 17,
1943 in Miami Beach, Fla.
They are the parents of two children, Gary Brown and Peggy
Huber, both of Gailipolis.
·Mr. Brown is a retired employee
of Cqlumbia Gas of.Ohio. Mrs..
Brown is a retired receptionist and
former assistant manager or Gal·
lagher's Drug Store.

. NOW

•Dresses ~~ •Suits
•Sportswear .

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- As ·Gilligan, Bob Denver had to
worry about hurricanes and tropical
storms. As a guest TV wealherman,
things were much calmer.
Denver, wearing his trademark
floppy cap, joined WCHS-TV
weather anchorwoman Melanie . - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' : : - - - - - , - - . : _ - - ,
Walters on Friday to give 1he fore~
cast - mostly clear - clown
arouqd and promote a miniature
•'
golf program he runs to benefit
handicapped people.
·
•
"I feel like Superman over the
'
city," he said as he danced around
the -radar maps and computer
images.

.

.

ACCEPTED - Former Gal· .
!!polis resident, ~arae C. Buab,
bas received notification from
U.S. Colftressman John Xulcb
qf ber nomlaatlons to botb tbe
United Statu Naval and A'1r
11orce Academies. Admission to
tbe academies Is orrered to I~
than 10 percent or applicants.
Bush, a senior at Tbomas War·
thlngton High School, is the
daughter of Kala Sue Bush of
Worthington and granddaughter
ofMr and Mrs Calvin W. Waugh
of Crown City.

'

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Pkk Three Fot$5.99

.)

REV. PAUL LINTERJ\1

GALLIPOLIS ·The Rev. Paul
Lin tern, associate pastor at First
English Lutheran Church in MansField, will be the featured spel!lcer
at the Holzer Medical Center's
Volunteer Chaplains' Association
Appreciation Luncheon and annual
meeting on Tuesday, Feb. l6.
He will speak on the topic
"Humor and Pastoral Care".
'
Rev. Lintern received hisJI.S. in
Journalism at Bowling GlWI Stale
University of Ohio and his Master
of Divinity at Trinity Lutheran
. Seminary in Columbus. He is the
current editor of lhe Northeastern
Ohio Synod Insert in · the
LUTHERAN a national magazine
foriner humor columnist for the
DAILY RECORD in Wooster
Ohio and author of "As Ancieni
Wor!'d Ttirris", a Genesis radio
script. .
The Reverend James Seddon
Yacting Qhairperson of the voluntee;
chaplains' association, emphasizes
the importance of this annual meet. ing o;;plunteer .chaplains for their
chaplaincy service l;&gt;y Charles I.
Adkins, Jr., chief executive officer
of Holzer , Medicai·Cen~. the elec·
lion of offtcers and a clelJy repJ'9sentatlve-at-large, and repons on
the continuing wort ol the association.
· •
'
Tbe Rev. Anhur C. Lund, director of 1he chaplaincy program at the
. Hospital, reminds all tif the 47 volunteer chaplains from a seven
county area in Ohio and West Vir-

Hurry, Do
,, llowl

FRE'E VIDEO TRANSFER

'

~·

educate, enhance and project an'
appreciation of lhe Blaclt art form
regardless of its originally miCOded
purpose.' A hisrorical and piclorial
review is presently being"
researched for a book.

Bring In any type oil mm film and w•wiU tntnolor up to 50 INto I
·
film onto VHS T·
We have blanlt vlcMo "'PM wolllble lor purchuo, or bring In your
own, unuaed auper high greda tape.
FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WILL COME

.

A SALE THAT'S
REiLLY A SALE

Gilligan gives
the forecast

Sunday Tlmes--Sentlnei-Page-87

Places Honor ·
In Your Cemetery ...
express your regard in beautHul

grani~Jt~e~.&amp;~~i:J

. ginia who are actively involved in
the program at lhe Holzer Medical
Center, that this annual event
promises to be both pleasant and
important. It offers a time for the
' group to be together and enrich
friendships with other persons
involved in hospital ministry and
prov1des an excellent opportumty
for the Hospital to express its
appreciation for· th~ many hours of
dedtcated serv_1ce g1ven ~y th~ ':01·
unteer chap!atns,_ he sa1d. Jommg
!hese c~plams w1ll be other guests
tncludtng volunte~r prgan~S!S,
member of the hosp1tal s admmlstrative and medical staffs and persons from other departments that
relate to .the chaplain~ on the hospi·
tal's hCaling team. . . .
All members of the association
received a joint letter from Adki~s,
Rev. Lund and Rev. Seddon, w1th
an enclosed reservation card for the
·appreciation luncheon at noon on
Feb. 16, !n the French _500 Room at
the hosp1tal. Reservauons .must be
conf1rmed by Monday, Feb, 15.

COUPON

Logan

M-••t Co.

Logan,

~io

:: Pleas• send me FREE bOOklets
showing memorials printed in !ull
color witn sills and ptieel tilled.
:: K indiy ha¥t an authOrized Logan

Monument Co. reprt&amp;entalive CJII
at my home.
~

Please send me details about
Mausoleums wi ti'IOut ObliQitiOI'I

11'10!0! Roul!! _ _ _ _ __

.•

.
..£..,,
~

~

I

••

..;:,

D Grilhl~ D -Frifd~op;

asecon. . . .
•
•
:~one ·me.1s as
muc a uxury as...
asecon at ·room.

D Grilled91rirnp D rnrlShrimp
DGrilhlfffi
D furfFJsh
I

(Hint:llmAre No Wrong,Amwers.)
Deciding which to have won't be easy:Will it be the grj!led scallops, the
fried fish and the grilled shrimp' Or the grilled fish, the ft:iecj shrimp and
the fried scallops? If you can't decide, don't worry- they're all great and
· cooked to be mmst and tender. An'd served with Potato, Bread and the
All-You-Care-To-Eat Soup . Salad and &amp;JIONR~
Frun Bar, no matter what you get ,
you'll be a winner. . · ·
.
,
· Offer avatlahlt: lor al1m;t~d timl' Jt pantop~ttn?,:~hnnry s.

PRESENTED PIN • A 70-year Masonic pin was presented to
Sam Williams, 92, of Burlingham Friday evening by Harrisonville
Lodge 411 Worthy Master John Martin. Martin wu joined by 10
other m~Qtbers or tile lodge for the presentation ceremony. Otbers
Ihere. included Williams' wife, Clara, Wi!Hams received his muter
mason degree from Harrisonville Lodge on May 26, 1923.

FLORIDA - tisa Jean Taylor
and Jimmie Eugene Parker were
united in marriage Jan. 30 in Flori·
da.
The bride is the daughter of
Kathy Sirbaugh or Cleveland, and
the granddaughtec of Ruby Taylor.

The groom is the son of Jimmie
and Alma Parker or Vinton. He is
the grandson of the late Orville and
Hannah Parker of Vinton, and the
late Edward and Gladys Myers of
Gallipolis.
Tbe couple resides in Florida.

,

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oCon~p-wlwlliwe . .lllaent

aac

CaunHIJng ''"""""'
Oildren'l" .,, ....
- · Qd-PIItnl Ti... INI\1

-24 Hr. Em11001ocr . . , _
oMiirlogo&amp;FomiJrCiunulFicl

today it's a necessity.
And today, m'any husy

families find a second
phone line a m;cessity.
· too- for all the times
you need to ~se the
phone but can't because
one line is tied up. By
your spou~. Your kids.
Your computer modem. ~
Your fax.
Call ALLTEL at
.349-Ss;I for all the \
details. (When you can
finally get everyone else
off yout phone.)

-'IAIIIIIMOI~

·P~blhtllcwi

RESIDENT
PSYCHIA'JRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS
1..

.p.,_opy
-EmpiDV••AIIt ProcPm•

-1111

-GilIa Molp
.CU.Momon.,il

.

•StnlorS.n.iGH

.£-liOn I TOlling •

•

~WtComnutltrTrllining

lui I Mild Houalng far
Emll\f&lt;lnollyOioablod

·

MEDICARHEDICAII&gt;TillE XX•SUDING FEE SCALEoCERTIFIED BY STATE OF DHDEVENm APPTS. AVAilABLE

JACKSON
200 IIIAII IT.

I.

second bathroom was
· considered a luxury;

Addlcllon ltld lllolnlaf . . fth - -

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIAUTY .
, PROTECTED

44-Hr.Crtlll''"' ... ~
-1'111

••
f.
•

Thirty years ago, a

' -·Drug

I

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·'

ONE OF THE MOST COIIPII:HEHStvE &amp; PROFESSIO!w.IIENTAL HEALTH AGE!jCES IN SOUlHEASTER-1 OHtO
WOOIIIIM Cint. . le funded In put br lhe 01. . '•oh - llelgl ao.n1 ,t

s.no-·. A dulll. Clllldttn

24HOUR
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IJANKEONE.

446-5554

Dilly 11:30-5:00
&amp; Fri. 9:30-1:00

411 WfTCIIt fliiCI

CA~'"'AARI.A

.,....

POMEROY
MULUIIRY HIIOH1'8

t;,

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•

Member FDIC

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01993 BANC.ONE CORPORAl~ . Loans subject 10 q.red1t approval. "Monday-Fnday a.m.· Bp.m. EST: Saturl:iay 9 a.m.· 3 p.m EST

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Th learn more, come into Bank One.today or.calll-800-395-0070' for a free biochure
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GALLIPOI,.IS

.'

~

Wood£ancf Centers, Inc.
PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED

)ACK &amp; 1ILL'S

.

..

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- Bakers prepared a 10-foot guitar-shaped cake to honor singing
cowboy Roy Rogers and his wife,
Dale Evans, for lheir half-century
of work on behalf of children.
The couple blew out the cake's
50 candles lit ,by youngsters, before
attending at a gala in their honor
Friday at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.

,•

'·

Seafood Bar Fri.-Sat. Starling At 5 P.M.
. ~21 Yhlld.St....l• Pl. ,..., ••,, wv.

Big birthday bash

Taylor-Parker

S afi IOd CanJ:xj

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Times SenUnel

OH Point Pleasant, wv

Sports

Mrs.·Marie Hope to present one-wom3:n
play at. Paint Creek Baptist .Church ·
GALLI POLIS - Mrs. Marie.
Hope will perform a one· woman
monologue of Harriet Tubman at
Paint Creek Baptist Church on Feb.
20, j.n eonnection "!ith Black History Month,
Tubman's mission was the suecessful freeing of hundreds of
blacks from the bondage of slavery.
Mr!. Hope's mission is to bring
history to life during the onewoman 'presentation of "Harriet
Tubman: A Moment in History."
Mrs. Hope, 65, a retiree of the
Columbus Public Schools, is the ,
writer, producer,and director of the
show.
"Within Harriet Tubman's life
are lessons that still hold true
today," said Mrs. Hope. "Her life is
a restimony of how a person with a

spiritual conviction and courage black history project, and has
can overcome any obsaacle."
grown to a 15-minute perfonnancc
"Just as people have pitfalls in with costume,changes and props.
their lives today. Tubman· had to She has performed at a .number of
overcome many obstacles, includ- Columbus IRA elementary, middle,
ing freeing herself from slavery, and high schools; churches, and
convincing establisfled abolitionisiS civic and business organizatioos.
that a black woman could be of use
"I have a love for hislllry," she
l'o the movemen t, and of going said. "I believe having a firm
back into the slave states over and ~ledge of our jlast helps us live .
over again to help others to ut the Jnlenl and also places us in
escape," she added.
a better position to accomelish
The amazinR thinR is that inspite
successes iii the future.
of. her having the highest price on
· Mrs. Hope is a gqduate of Benher head as any person during the _nett Collese in Greensboro, N.C. A
time period, Tubman was never teacher for most of her career,
caught, said Hope.
·
Hope is most proud that she was
It has been seven. years since . teachin" Bl!lclt u:..~ to siudents
Mrs. Hope began performing the before it beeam~j;~lar to bave
play. She began with a 5-minute Black History classes within the
monologue writle.n 'as part of a · schoot~. ·

sre-er

MSU Spartans sting
osu·Buckeyes 81-66

'"l'hcn: is nothiu.JDIOie important than educaliaD, she aid "We
are living in a \odd where more
al)d more you cannot survi~ed
without the tools that educauon
providestilr you."
Mrs. Hope an'd hc;r husband,
George, a retired postal employee,
have One son.
Mrs. Hope says she has ·never
had acting ~s. · ·
· "My gift comes (rom God. God
talks to me and I talk to God abot~t
Harriel Tubman.~ •
MrS. Hope will present.l~er play
during the ·Black History ~gram
at 10 11-m. Memorabilia will be on
display at 9 a.m. The public is
invited

·~

SPF;AKS TO DESCENDANJoS • Mrs. Marte Hope, (ceat"), , :
' .who Mil be pr~t1D1 "Harrlet'I)Jbma: A Momeat In History," &lt;•:,
Feb. 20, is pictured with two desc:eudants or Mra. Tubman. The ;
one-womaa _play by Hope wiD be preseated at Paint Creek Baptist
MIDDLEPORT - Zampcrini: ' Cburcb bellnlliag at 10 a.m. Black history memorabiUa wiD be on .
S~i.ll Carrying the Torch, a n.cw
display at9 a.m.,
, ·
·
',
documentary from World Wide
Pictures, will .be presented at the
First Baptist Olurch Of Middleport
tonight (Sundar) at 7 p.m:
The movie IS about Louis Zamperini, a nationally known Iiigh
l
school track star, an Olympic run'
Confidential
S.nrlces:
ner, a World War II hero and a
) .
prisoner of war.
Birth Control
,.'
I . .,'
He returqed to Japan to share
Screening
the love and forgiveness of Christ
Cancer Scre~ning
with the very guards who had tor·
tured him in the prison camp not
Pregnancy Testing
· .too many years before. He developed a wilderness program in CaliShdlng '" scale. No one reluHd ·services ~ause of lnaWhty ta pay.
fornia - worlciqg with disadvantaged ·youth, after which the later
"Outward Bound" would model iiS

Family Planning ..
··It Makes·Sense•••
v.o.

PLANNE·D PARENTHOOD

program~

Today h~ is in his 70's, has a
ministry. in Hollywood providing
meals and fellowship for senior cit·
izens. lie still actively works with
y~mng ~ple through such avenues
as downa~J skiing, mountaineering, skateboarding and rescue and
survival skills,
Rev. James Seddon invites the
public. Further i!1f()rmatiQii may be
o~tained by calling 992-2755.

BRANT ADAMS
Music degree (I 977) in piano performance from Capilljl Univ~rsity.
Columbus, a Master of Music
degree (1980) in music theory from
the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, and a
Ph.D. (1991) in theory from the
University of Texas at Austin.
From 1980-1983, Adams was on
the music faculty at Mereer University in Macon, Ga. ·
In 1987, he accepted a position
at Oklahoma State University in
Stillwater, where .he serves as coordinator
of
,
the

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO
MIDDLEPORT
S09 5. 3rd Ave.
992·5912
8:30 to S:OO MOnday· Friday .
(lased Thursday

GALLIPOliS
414 Secollll Ave., 2ttd Floor
446-0166
8=30 to S:OO Moldar,Fiiday
8:30 to 12 Satvrdoy .

Closed Thrsilay
AtSO: Jacks~in. Chesa,.akt, Athens, Chlllcodtt, ~n

',
&amp; McArtllw

Sunday, Feb.14
MERCERVILLE • Green Family singing 7 p.m . at Bethlehem
Church on Rocky Fork Road off
Oh.io 218. Eyeryone welcome.

Monday, Feb. 15 .
GALLIPOLIS - Episcopal
CENTERVILLE- On Fire For Church Women meet at noon at St.
God revival, 7 p.m. nightly, at Vic- Peter's for lunch and wine lilsting
tory Lighthouse Church, Route 279 wi lb. Bob Marchi.
going toward Oak Hill, about 3 1(2
GALLIPOLIS • American Canmiles out of Centerville on the
cer
Society Support Group meetright. Preachers will be Roy Grifing,
2 p.m. at New Life Luiheran
fith , Dennies Williamson, Harry
Church;
For information call 446Fannin and Wayne Balcom.
3538. 446-4895, or 446-8657.
BIDWELL • Chili dinner and
Tuesday, Feb. 16
Valentine's Day church services at
GALLIPOLIS
- Indoor picnic,
Bidwell United Methodist Church.
6-8
p.m.
at
Eilts
Lodge
11107 downDinner, potluck, at 4:30 p.m.; serstairs
level.
Cost
is
S3
per
persoli.
vice begins at6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette White
VINTON • Fellowship Chapel
Shrine
meeting, 7:30p.m. for cererevival begins at 7 p.m. Rev.
monial
.
Tjiong of Florida, formerly of
-,Indonesia will be speaking.
GALLIPOLIS · Gallipolis Area
GALLIPOLIS • Henry Hatfield Christian Women's Club preseniS
will be preac~ing at Mina Chapel "A Clean Sweep," noon at Holiday
lim. Program features WOJkEnders, ·
Church, 7 p.m.
Judy Linder. and.Sara Sheets, Cost
GALLIPOLIS • Willing Work- is 57.50. For reservations call 367ers of Bailey Chapel Church 7687, 367-0583, or 446-0761.
Valentine potluck, I p.m., at Clay
OAK HILL - Cardigan Welsh
Townhouse.
Club of southeastern Ohio meeting

.

GALLIPOLIS - Hallmark Oma- •
ment Collectors Club meeting, 7
p.m ., at Bossard Library . New
members welCQme.

DAY

CLEARANCE
SALE

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EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) 11, 70-59, before Stephens was Miami (Ohio) 65,
- In the first haff against Ohio " ejected for a Oagrant foul on Fun- lllinois St. 55
S tate Saturday, Michigan State dcrburkc with I :40 10 play.
NORMAL, Ill. (AP) - Miami
guard Shawn Respert decided to
"It was a Oagrant techn ical foul,
.
o
f
Ohio used a balanced scoring
play more unselfishly.
and an ejection," said referee Ted
The Spartans' leading scorer Hillary. "He threw an elbow. I attack led by Chris Michaelis and a
took just four shOts in the half, and don't know why he did it, I just smothering defense to overcome
Illinois State 65-55 on Saturday.·
his team led by just four points, 38- called it.' •
Michealis had 15 points, fol 34, at intennission.
The technical free throw and
' 'I'm not sure why Shawn ensuing basket got Ohio State with· lowed by Scott Belyeu and Lando11
'didn't shoot in the fim half,"
·
·
"'
Hackim with 12 each and Jami e
Mahaffey with 11 poiniS and eight
Michigan St:uc coach Jud Heathrebounds to lead the Redskins (14·
cote said. "We always want him to
5).
•
put the ball up. There is no such
thing as a bad shot where he is conIllinois State (13-8) enjoyed ail :
cerencd.".
early_ lead but fell behind ~9-24 by ;
In trie second half, Rcspcrt went in eight, but Respert hit two halftJmc after an 11-3 M1ami run .
back to his old style, seating 24 of straight lay-ups to clinch the game. over lhe last 5 minutes 56 seconds. :
"We got good ball in streaks Hackim keyed the spurt with a pali
his 28 points to lead Michigan
from
a lot of guys tonight,'' ·Heath· of 3-point jumpers.
State to an 81-66 Big Ten victory.
cote
said.
"We still haven't had
" I'm getting more comfortable
The Redbirds never regained theone
game
where
were get four or
with my game, and I can do more
edge and were limited overall to.
now than just shoot," Rcspcrt said. five guys to play well all night."
41.1
percent field-goal shooting,;
Respert led all scorers, while including
" I didn't force anything in the first
4-of-18 on 3-pointers.
half, and they kind of fell asleep on Pcplowski added 19 points and 10
The Redskins made 52 percent
rebounds for Michigan State. Fun- of their shots.
me in the second.''
derburke
led Ohio State with 24,
After his two-of-four first half.
Illinois State was led by Mike
and
Anderson
added a career-high
Rcspcrt hit nine of II sliots iij-thc
VandeGarde
with 13 points.
•
se
.. cond, including three .3~
· ..inters, 16 points.
Heathcote was very impressed Wittenberg 113
to help the Spartans (13-7 · -6 Big
by
Anderson, a freshman from Oberlin 41 ·
Ten) move u game a~c d of ihc
Louisville.
Buckeyes (11-9, 4-7) in)'caguc
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) ...:..
"I hate to make predictions like
standings. .
,
Wittenberg
had 14 players score,
'.'1 knew Mike (Pcplowski) and this, but I think he's going to be a including six in double figures, and
D.J. (Dwayne Stephens) had a great player," he said . "He used a 36-0 run in the first half to
tough defensive job with reminds me a lot of Michael Ray · beat Oberlin 113-41 in the North
(Lawrence) Funderburke, so I Richardson, who I coached for two Coast Conference Saturday.
knew it was my job to stc·p up," years at Monuma."
Tigers (16·6 overall and 11The game had a very slow start 3 inThe
the sophomore said. "We can'tjust
the·
NCAC) had more assists
rely on those two because they arc Both teams missed six of their first (36) than Oberlin (I-19, 1-13
seven shoiS.
the seniors."
.
·
Michigan State recovered first, NCAC) had rebounds.
Michigan S tntc had the fourThe
72-point
margin
was
the
point lead at halftime. Ohio State using an 8-0 run to take a 10·) largest ever for Wittenberg, sur-.
· tied the g~mc at 46 with 15:12 to lead.
the 63-point difference in a,
The Spartans led by 10, 36-26, passing
play, then took a ·54-51 lead with
121-S8
victory over Maryville
with 2:34 left in the half, but six
11:51lcft.
(Mo.)
during
the 1990-91 season. :
But Respert's 3-pointcr started free throws by Anderson sent the
The
Tigers'
71 rebounds set a·
an 11-0 run for the Spartans, Buckeyes on an 8-2 streak to end conference record.
•
putting them ahead by eight with the period.
•
Michigan Sta.te outshot the
seven minutes to go. Respect hal)
Ohio Northern 68,
five of the points and Peplowski Buckeyes 57 percent to 4 I for the ·Mount Union 46
game, hitting 13 of their last 20
. four.
ALLIANCE, Ohio (AP) "That's been our problem all first-half shots, aod 18 of 29 in the D' Artis Jones scored 25 points and
year," Ohio State coach Randy second. The Spartans also had a had six points in a 14-0 second-half
Ayers said. "We play well for l2 35-25 advantage on the boards, run as Ohio Northern beat Mount
or 35 minutes, then we can't finish including 6-3 on offensive Union 68-46 Saturday to clinch a
anyone off. Rcspcrt hit the big shot rebounds.
, .• UP .i\ND OYER - Ohio State's. D~rek ,_,. State's 81-66 win a.l th.e 1\r~sliiJ. . Stti.dent }:vent
"We wcren 't agressive at all on share of iiS first Ohio Conference
to tic it, and we fell apart defen1\ilderson (23) goes up and over. Michigan , Center in East Lansing, · Mi~h., Saturday afterthe
offensive glass; and you just title in five years.
sively."
Aaron Madry added 17 points
Stale's Kris Weshinskey (3) durinjl Michigan
noon. (i\P Photo) ·
·
Ohio State was back within five, can't do that," Ayers said. "When 11nd Mark Goodcn ·ts for the Polar
64-59, with four minutes left, but you only shoot 40 percent, you Bears (20-1 overall and 15-1 in the
Derek Anderson missed the front need a lot more than three of(en- OAC).
end of a one-and-one, and Funder- sive rebounds."
The victory assured Ohio NorthOhio State next plays Tuesday
burke was called for goaltending
em
of at least a tic for the regularat Iowa. The next noght, Michigan
on
Dwayne
Stephens'
jumper.
season
championship and the top
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -.
with 3:08 10 play and Missouri (15- fell short.
.
State hosts Northwestern.
Michigan
State
ran
the
lead
to
seed
in
the
postseason tournament.
The victory put t~e $eminoles41
When No. 2 Kentucky fmally 8, 4-4) twice pulled to two points
stopped Monty Wolhams on Satur- back in the final minute.
half-game ahead of 1dle North Car·
,!lay, Notre Dame had nowhere to
Melvin Booker scored on a olina atop the Atlantic Coast COntum.
,
'
drive with 7.6 seconds left to make ference. Florida State (19-6, 9-2)
•
; Williams scored 26 points in the it 65-63 but Richard Scott hit two has won 10 of 11.
game's first 24 minutes, but man- free thr~ws after an intentional foul
Evers Burns scored 24 for
aged just two foul shots the rest of with 3.3· seconds left for the final Maryland (10-ll, 1-10), which has
•
\he way .while the Wildcats (18·2)
lost six straight and 10 of 12.
progress, including contacting pre- will hire a community rclallons·
CINCINNATI
(AP)Commuused deadly second-half foul shoot·
nity activists' say Cincinnati Reds dominantly black Central State coordtnator who could provide:
ing for an 81-62 win.
Minnesota 91,
owner Marge Schott doesn't seem University and Wilberforce Uni- communny groups with continuing:
Jamal Mashburn scored 22
.
No.131owa 85
to understand the concerns other versity and other colleges to locate ~ontact wtth the·team's administra-points for Kentucky (18-2)1 which
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) .. ,
races and cultural groups have participants for a new minority uon.
lost to No. 14 Arkansas ·on margin.
.
.
.
Vashon Lenard rebounded from a about her racial remarks.
internship progrnm.
" We're making progress :
Wednesday. Mashburn had eight
Kansas helped M1~~un s~y 10 3-of-27 shooting slump in his pre"There nrc things that arc being Wc 'v~.got the main components i~ :
"It sounds like, 10 me, she still
straight iQ a key second-half stretch . the game nea.r the fmosh wtth' a vious two games to score a career- really docsn 't understand," Arzcll done," said Sheila Wilson, prcsi·
Bowden told reporters after •
after the Irish (9-12) pulled within turnover, a miSS by Walters on a hi8h 32 points Saturday, leading Nelson, director of the Cincinnati dent of the Urban League of place.
the
private
meeting.
:
three.
·
bo_nus free throw attempt and two Mrnnesota to a 91-85 Big Ten vic- Human Relations Commission, Greater Cincinnati and a member
He
said
the
community
groups
:
. Gimcl Martinez and Travis Ford missed .free throws by Greg tory over No. 131owa.
of the coalition meeting with have been helpful. Both sides •
said Friday.
combined for 15 straight points- Ostertag m the final 1:20.
The win snapped Minnesota's
He was responding to an inter- Schott's representatives.
agreed to meet again in about a •
12 (rom the foul line - after
four-game losing skid against the . view Thursday with Schott on
The Reds also arc considering mOnth.
•
Mll$hbum went out with four fouls No. 10 Florida St. 87,
Hawkayes (14-6 overall, 3-5 con- ABC television's "PrimcTimc ways to increase their financial
Baseball's
executive
council
:
with 10:36 to play. ford finished M!'ryliind 84'
fercnce) and extended Iowa's los- Live" in which she blamed the Sll[lport of inner-city youth baseball
with 17 points and Martinez had
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP)- ing strealc to three. ·
, media for talk accusing her of pi'llgram~ and arc try(ng to market also ordered Schott to undergo 8 :
13. ,
Bob Sura won a scoring battle with
The Gophers (13, 7, 5-6) held racism. "Well, I think it is created tn mononty commumue.~ and publi- cultural d!versity training program :
After Williams hit a jump hook Kevin McLinton and No. 10 Flori- Iowa's tQp two scorers, Acie Earl by the press ... that it isn't really catoons to attract more fans, Rapp the council must approve. Bowden .
told the coal ilion that the Reds are •
to pull Notre Danrc to 48-45. with da State won iiS 'sixth straight Sat- and Val Barnes, to a combined 21
saod.
·
there." she said..
soliciting
bids for such a program
15:44 lcft, •Mashburn hit a foul urday, surviving a late Maryland poin1Son5-of-24shooting.
During the interview with Diane
said.
•
Nelson said he hopes the Reds
shot, a putback, a 3-pointer and &lt;WO rally for a 87·84 victory.
Minnesota made six of its first Sawyer, Schott said she thinks that
more foul shots to make it 56·45
Sura scored 23 of his career- nine shoiS to start the second half, almost everyone has used racial
with 12:23 remaining.
high tying 34 points in the second including two 3-pointers by slurs and that her situation has been
Mashburn went to the bench half, but the Seminoles blew a 15- Lenard, buildin!l its lead to 58-47 blown out of proportion.
with four fouls with Kentucky point lead before coming back to with 15:30rcmaming.
Last week, baseball's executive
leading 58-48 and 10:36 left.
win. Sura's free throw with 42 secBut the Gophers then went cold council suspended Schou for one
The WildcaiS managed just two onds left proved to be the-winning and the Hawke yes battled back,
year beginnmg Maf~:h 1 and fined
baskets over the next six minutes, point. ·
closing to 67-65 on an 8-2 spurt.
her 525,000 for using slurs against
but Ford and Martinez hit 12 of 14
McLinton had a career-best 32
Another 3-pointcr by Lenard
blacks, Asians and Jews. The counfree throws to build the lead to 77- points, including 21 of the. Terrap- helped the Gophers regain control, cil said her usc of the terms had
58 with 3:47 remaining. The Irish, IDS' final 27, but his potential and the Hawkeycs never got closer embarrassed baseball.
who hav.e lost seven of nine, did game-tying 35-footer at the buzzer than thrc.e the rest of the game.
"I think that she stiTI docsn 't
not hit a field goal in that stretch.
seem to understand that words hurt,
'
thnt they have a life' of their own,"
No. 7 Kansas 67,
said
Michael Rapp. executive
Missouri 63 .
director of the Jcw1sh Community
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - Rex
By The Associated Press
Relations Council. "I walked away
Florida St. 87, Maryland 84
·Walters scored 16 points as No. 7
EAST
with the impression that after three
LSU 75, Auburn 73
KanSllS ran its winmng streak to six
Boston U. 82, Maine'73
months
of public diversity training,
Marshall 85, W. Carolina 81,
·in a row against pesky Missouri
Bucknell 82, Anny 63
she
still
docsn 't understand."
OT
with a 67-63 victory SaturdJiy.
Delaware
88,
Vermont
73
Nelson said Schou should make
N.C. Charlotte 84, Va. Com. · It was th~ second victory over
Fairfield
61,
Loyola,
Md.
57
an
effort t&lt;5 meet and communicate
monwealth 70
· Missouri in 12 days for K:ali'Sas
Fordham 93, Lehigh 74
with
blacks, Asians and Jews to
Tn.-Chattanooga 93, VMI 70
(20-3, 7-1 Big Eight), which won
Holy
Cross
97,
Colgate
95
improve
her understanding.
·
MIDWEST .
86-69 qn Feb. I 111 home. The JayL!lfayctte 65, Navy 60. OT
"Sociali:tatibn
is
really
the
key
Ala.-Birmingham 44, Mar.hawks lilso became the first team to
Long Island U. 76, Fairleigh quette 38
for her. As we all sec more cultural
win thlce suaight at Hcarncs CenDickinson 73
styles,
we expand our awareness,"
Bowling Green 49, Kent 48 ·
lcr.
., .
. .
Manhattan 75, Canisius 55
Nelson
said.
Kansas 67, Missouri 63
Kansas had shot 40.4 and 40.7
Massachuseus 68, George
Rnpp,
Nelson and other commuKentucky 81, Notre Dame 62
percent in its previous t'I\'O games
Washington 65
·
llity
activists
met Friday with~eds
Miami, Ohio 65, Illinois St.
and lost to Nebraska ori Sunday.
Northeastern 73, New Hamp- 55
general
manager
Jim Bowden ·and
Tbc 1ayhawks broke that slump by
shire 45
'
Chip
Balcer,
the
team's
marketing
Michigan St. 81, Ohio St. 66
• shooting 50 percent.
.
'Rutgers-Newark at Rowan,
director.
Schou
didn't
aucnd.
Minnesota 91, Iowa 85
The rematch with Missouri was
ppd.,snow
It w.as the fourrh in a series of
N:
Jowa 81, Bradley 76
a. lot tougher . Kansas led 30· I 5
Temple 79, West Virginia 62
monthly
meetings since Nov, 20
SW Missouri St. 65 ;
~rly and shot 54.2 'percent in the
SOUTH
between
Schott's
representatives
6~
·
fmt half (13 for 24) but 1evon '
Charleston Southc,rn 49, CreighlDn
and
a
coalition
of
black
and 1ewish
W. Michigan 60, Akron 44
Crudup kept Missouri close in rhe
N.C.-AIIteville 45
t:ro~p$.
They
nrc
pressing
her to
, SOUTHWEST
'
second half. Crudup scored 24
, CiWiel 75, Appalachian St.
1mprove
hiring
of
minority-group
Houston 93, Texas Tech 76
polnll dcspito pl11ying most of the
71
' '
members and firtllncial support for
Oklahoma
St. 77~ Colorado
half with four fouls.
·
Davidson 76, Furman 64
minority
community activities
.59
.
Crullup scored In the lane with
E. Terlne$sco St. 93, Georgi11
through
the
Reds and her C11f deal,
Rice 68, Tcxai Christian 50
7:QI to CUI tho liP to S6·52, ~
"'Crships.
So~m88,0T
Allllns' l·polntcr cut. it to 61·58
Rapp said the Rcds.Jiave shown
.

Ohio results

Activists say Marge Shott doesn't
understand concerns of her remarks?

._.,.. .

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V.lerans Memorial Hospil•t

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Remember ....
Our Heart's In It!

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,•

No. 2 Kentucky bombs Irish 81-62

RUTLAND - Grubb Family
Singers will he at Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.

.

Section .C
February 14, 1993

Movi·e to be
BrantAdams receives. MTNA award presented

GALL I POLIS - The Music
Tetchrii National Association has
announced that Oklahoma State
University assistant professor Dr. .
Brant Adams has been named the
winner of tl!cir 1993 National Distinguished Composer of the Year
Competition.
He is a former resident of Gallipolis, and is the son of Mrs.
George Adams of Lower Ri .er
Road.
,
Each year, state Music Teachers
Associations across the country
commission a piece by a composer
from their state. Each work is automatically submitted to the national
, competition, and the winning work
is selected from these entries.
·Adams' composition, entitled
"Masque and Bacchanalia" for
woodwind quintet and piano, was
commissioned last spnng by the
Oklahoma Music Teachers Association as Oklahoma's entry . The
work was premiered at the state
, convention at Cameron University
in Lawton last May.
I .
Ada,ms will be officially presented the award at the national
convention in Spokane, Wash., on
· March 22. At that time. the Concorde Quintet from Oklahoma State
University, along with Adams at
the piano, will perform the work at
the general session of the convention.
Adams was a 1973 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School, and
studied piano locally with Marion
Ford. He . holds a Bachelor of

1rintts- :ientinel

Saturday~s

.

,n

7

college scores

�'

.

·Page-C2-&amp;Inday Times Sentinel

I

.

.·

February 14, 1993

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

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

February 14, 1993

.

s~~~~n !!~!!~t~.e~,g~,,~,!,::§~ ~~!~~ ,;

'

GAHS_knocks Marietta out of first place
GALLIPOLIS - "We felt if we
could hold Marietta below 50, we
could beat them."
That was Gallipolis Coach Jim
Oshorne 's remark Friday night
shortly after his Blue Devils defeated visiting Marietta, 47-40 ; to
·remain in a two-way tic for fi rst
place in the Southeastern Ohio
League standi ngs with Athens. .
Marietta, a tri-Jeague leader
prior to Friday's k..y contest before
a packed house, was averaging 81
po ints a game this winter cnroutc a
13-5 record . During th e past 10
· days. Marietta had reached th e
century mark once and the 90-point
figure twice.
"We played awful up there in
January," remarked Osborne.
"They not on ly shot layups all
night, they outhustled us and outrebounded us," he added.
"We revised our style of play
· after that game. We began stressing
defense more and more, and
ton ig ht it really paid off." .
The Tigers were held to their
lowest output of the season, hitting
· only 16 of 56 field attempts for 35
pcrccn r. MHS was held to 28
rebound s, six by Ben 'Kroft and
was guilty of II turnovers during .
the 32 -minutc contest. The Tigers
had 20 personals, losi ng Kroft late
'
MILLER DRIVES • Gallipolis' Nathan Miller (with ball)
in. th e gum c. M HS was three for
:: drives past Marietta's Cam Mcintyre (22) for a layup during Frithree at the line.
' day night's. 47-40 SEOAL win over the Tigers. The Blue Devils
Mic hael Smith, one of the
.
remained tied for lirst with Athens arter the victory.
region's top scorers (more til an 20
pojnts. a gmnc) hit only seven or 28
field goal altempts and wound up
with 18 points to pace the Tigers,
who dropped to second place in
SEOA
L play with a 6-3'rccord.
•
SEQ, opponents
Jackson 39 Athens 36
Ryan Robin son tossed in II
:
(All games)
Warren Local 46 Logan 36
markers while Kroft wus hciJt to
Area results:
: Team
W L
P OP
six. Cam Mcintyre, who was aver• Chesapeake ....... 18 0 1244 1050 Southern 68 Meigs 55
agi ng 10 points a gum e, was held
: Southem ............ l3 · 4 1169 1022 Russell 78 Portsmouth 66
sco reless until th e final five minPt. Pleasant 78 Wahama 55
: Marieua ............. l3 5 1414 1091
ut es of action , and finished with
-- oallipolis ........... l2 5 1098 884 South Webster 59 Wheelersburg 54 only three murkcrs. .
Point Pleasant.... 12 5 I053 1014 South Point 90 Fairland 63
"G ive Marietta credit. They
Chesapeake
73
Rock
Hill
h~ vc u class progn.un with an excel·~thens ...............ll. 7 1022 1029
; iver Valley ...... 10 7 1191 1156 Vinton Co·unty 88 Trim be 60
lent coach. They also played a
Last night's games:
• reenfield ........ .1 0 8 973 879
grc:u defensiv e game," Osborne
Gallipolis
at Wheelersburg
:;inton County :.10 9 1220 1133
s:t iil after it was pointed out that tl1c
;Jackson ................9 9 1200 1193 Waverly at Athens
Gallians' top scorer, Nathun Miller,
w;ts held s~ orcles s until the third
•.Wheelersburg ......9 9 1166 1127 Groveport at Logan
period and finished with only seven
: Fairland ............... 5 12 983 1084 Jackson at Wellston
points.
:L.ogan .................. 5 12 915 1136 Greenfield at Adena
Chad Barnes paced the Blue
·•J&gt;ortsmouth ......... .3 13 1016 .1149 Waterford at Southern
Devils with 14 points, four assists,
:warren Local ......3 · 16. 1073 1353 River Valley at Fairlarid
Chesapeake at Huntington St. Joe
one steal and tlucc rebounds. Eric
;:
(SEOAL VARSITY)
· Hofi'm :tn :Hided 11 points, was
Tuesday's games:
··:ream
W L
P OP
cred ited with. three assists, two
:Gallipolis .............? 2 568 446 Vinton County at Meigs
stea ls and six rebounds. Ja.son
Buffalo at·Fairland
;:Athens .................7 2 527 483
Wil liam s chipped in· with six
·1&gt;1arletta ...............6 3 631 526 Pt. Pleasant at Ripley
points. Dave Hager added five and
:Jackson ............... .3 6 590 602 Portsmouth at Ashland
Jeff Pope four. Pope picked off five
;Logan ..................2 7 461 614 Greenfield at East Clinton
•warrenLocal ......2 7 485 591
rebounds .
Marietta at Parkersbu' g
Gallipolis, now 12-5 overall and
;!rOTALS
27 27 3262 3262
.
Frida;r's ~ames :
7-2
inside the lc:tguc, connected on
•:
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Jackson at Gallipohs
:'l'eam
W L
P OP
17
of
32 field goal attempts (mostly.
Warren Local at Marietta
layups against Marietta's man-for:Marietta.............. 7 2 467 333
Athens at Logan
·~thens ................ 6 3 415 406
Chesapeake at Buffalo-Wayne
:Gallipolis ............ 5 4 428 389
Fairland at Eastern
;\1/arren Local..... 5 4 375 458
Alexander atRi ver Valley
FOOTBALL
•J..ollan................ 3 6 . 425 395
Wheelersburg·at West
PHOENIX (AP) - Police
:Jackson............... I 8 262 391
Pt. Pleasant at Wayne
arrested Phoenix Cardinals wide
·TOTALS
27 27 2372 2372
Ironton at Portsmouth
receiver Ernie Jones after discover;. .
Friday's games:
Federal Hocking at Southern
ing crack cocaine and marijuana in
·' ·
SEOAL varsity
Feb. 20 games:
hiscar.
Qallipolis 47 Marietta 40
Gallipolis vs. River Valley at Rio
Jones was arrested Thursday
: "''thens 61 Jaclcs9n 59
Portsmouth at Worthington
night after police stopped his auto•Warren Local 61 ·Logan 47
Southern at Trimble
mobile following a license-plate
: •'
SEOAL reserves
ChiUicothe at Logan
check that indicated the registration
: t!alllipolis 43 Marietta 40
had been suspended.

Cage standings

Sports briefs

mnn defense) for 53 percent. The
Gallians were off nt the line, hitting
only II of 18. GAHS had 12 personals, 28 rebounds and II
turnovers. The Blue Devils finished
with I 0 assists, six steals and had
onc blocked shot b~ Terry Qualls.
Gallipolis built up a 9-0 lead
during the first six minutes of play,
and led 9-5 after one period. The
Gallians trailed )()-15 at halftime.
Gallipolis outscored the Tigers
.17-5 in the. third period to take a
32-20 advantage into the fi nal
quarter. The Tigers never got any ·
closer than $CVCn points in the final
period, trailing at one point by 14.
Gallipolis played at Wheelersburg Saturday night. Friday, the .
Blue Devils conclude home play
again~t Jaekso~ . Saturday, GAHS .
will mke on R1ver Valley at Lyne
Center in Rio Gmnde.
Marietta plays at Parkcrsbnrg
Tuesday, and will host Warren
Local Friday.
,
·
In Friday's reserve game, Gallia
Acmlcmy 's Blue Imps knocked off ·
league-leading Marietta, 43-40.
Gallipolis led 12..8 following the ,
first 'pcriod, and 17-13 after two
quancrs. The Imps were still on top
28-27 going into the final period.
The Imps built up 38 -31 lead
with 2: 50 remaining before MHS
rallied to knot the count at 38-38
with I :4 I left. Greg James' threepoint goal with 50 seconds left
proved to be the game's winning
bucket. A pair of free throws by
Ryan Barnes with 17 seconds left·
iced the victory.
• Barnes led the winners, now 9' 8
overall and 5-;1 inside the league,

All-Star basketball
tourney planned •
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Parks and Recreation Department
is sponsoring an All-Star Basketball Tournament beginniQg Mon-·.
day, March 15, thru Saturday,
March 20. The event is open to the
first eight teams to regisrer in ea~
of the following categories: FoUrth
grade bOys; fifth grade boys; sixth
grade boys.
Each game will be played at
Washington Elementary School
Monday through Friday from 6
p.m.-9 p.m. and all day,Saturday.
The cost is $20 per team payable
the night .of the drawing whiCh is
Thursday, March II, at 7 p.m. in
the Parks and Recreation Department office located in the Gallipolis Municipal Building,_518 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio45631.
To ob.tain a roster or enter a
team, contact the Gallipolis Parks
and Recreation DeR.artment at
614-446-1424, ext. 37, or phone
evenings at 614-446-8755.

with 12 poinL~ .. Josh Cook added son, 0-0-0. TOTALS 11-(5}-3-40.
nine and Dylan Evans eight. Greg
GALLIPOLIS (47) • Jason
Thicss paced the Little Tigers with . Williams, 2-2-6; Chad Barnes, 418 poinL~.
.
·
(1)-3-14; Mike Donnally, 0-0-0;
Varsity box score: ·
Nathan Miller, 2-3-7; Adam Blair,
MARIETTA (40) • Michael 0-0-0; Eric Hoffman, 3-(1)-2-11 ;
Smith, 5-(2)-2-18; Nathan Stutler, David Hager, 2-1-5; Jeff Pope, 2-01-0-2; Josh Offcnsbcrgcr, 0-0-0; 4; Terry Qualls, 0-0-0. TOTALS
Cam Mcintyre, 0-(1)-0-3; Ryan 15-(2)-11-47.
Robinson, 2-(2)-1-11; Darrell
Score..by quarters:
Shuss, 0-0-0; Tom Palmer, 0-0-0; Gallipolis 9 6 17 15 - 41
Ben Kroft, 3-0-6; Spencer Dcnni- Marietta 5 10 5 - 20-40

26-28

Stele Frgncla.
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u

~ay

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1

·~

WAGNER SHOOTS•Melgs' Bobby Johnson (11) sboofl wblle
• two.Soutbtrn players attempt to defend. Soutbera ilelated
• Marauden by a 68·55 .margin Friday aigbt before a .packed
' bouse at Larry R. Morrison GyJQnasium.
•

BENJAMIN C. UND~lP
&amp; ASSOCIATES

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT &amp; FINANCIAL
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.

tile

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'

Times-Sentinel Starr
ROCK SPRINGS • Southern
outscored host Meigs 18-10 in ihe
second period and held off a Meigs
COI!Iebackto post a 68-55 wi~ over
the Marauders Fnday evenu1g at
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium .
So.umem improved its record to
13-4, Meigsdroppedto8-ll on the
season. It was the first boys meeting ever oil the basketball court
.between the two Meigs County
teams. It was a well played game
between the two teams in front of a
sellout crowd of approximately
1,600people.
The Marauders drew first blood
when John Bentley hit a 12 footer
from the right wing 40 seconds into
the contest. But Southern came
storming back and took a 7-4 lead
when Mari -Allen drilled a three
pointer at the 5:16 mark.
Meigs took the lead again when
Eric Wagner hit a three with at
2:46 mark to give Meigs an 11-10
lead. Todd Dill's bucket m the 2:18
mark and Bentley's three pointer
13 seconds later gave Meigs their
biggest lead of the night at 16-10.
Jeremy Dill tied the game. up
with 51 seconds left in 'the perisxJ
on a bucket off the offensive
boards. Dill paced Southern in the
first period with six point. Todd
Dill hit one of two .free throws to
give the Marauders-a 1:7·!6 a,ctvantage. Michael Evans h1t a long
·thrce pointer from the top of the
key· with five seconds left to five
Southern the lead at the end o the
period 19-17.
1
Bobby Johnson tied the game at
21 when he hit a six footer with
6:41 left in th\) half, but Evans
drilled adother three as Southern
scored 12 of the next 14 points to
take a 33-23 lead at the 3:53 mark
of .the perio1f:' Twice Southern
increased the lead to 12 but John·
son's bucket with 57 seconds left
made it a 37-27 score at the half.
Each time the Marauders tried to
cut into the lead in the third period,
·Southern would answered it with a

the period Meigs cutlhe lead to ball, We just !lidn't execute on By quaners: .
·!
eigh t, but the Marauders couldn't offense."
.
.
Southern 19 18 16 15.68
::
get any closer. Evans hit a short off
John Bentley led Me1gs w1th 19 Meigs
17 10 15 13 . 55 .'•
balance jumper with one seconds points, he was joined .in dou~le fig;
SOUTHERN-Mark Allen
left t~ giye Southern a 5.3-42 l~d ures by Trevor Harrtson ~1th 14. 1=7, Ryan Williams 2-2-4= 1~,
head10g 10to the final e1ght m10- Other Marauders mthesconng_col· Jeremy Dil14 ·0·2=10, Mieha).l
utcs.
·
umn were.Jay Cre!"~s WI~ e1gh~ Evans 2-3,0= 13, Andy Gruescd. Southern increased its lead to 14 Bobb&gt;: Johnson w1th stx, E":c Wag- 0-0=2, Trenton Cleland o.o.o.:o . .
wllh4:1~ lert m the contest on a
ner w1th five and Todd D1ll w1th Robert Rieber 5-0-S=IS, RussOil
Ry~n Wtlhams three pomter. But
three; .
..
Singleton 3-0-1=7. TOTALS 17~2Me1gs was able to cut the lead back
Me1gs hll 24 of 57 from the 13=68.
.~
to single digi~ (62-53) on &amp;:~t, floor for 42% a~d only three of
MEIGS -Bobby Johnson 3-~ley bucket wnh 1:53 leftm the seven from the lm~ for 43%. The 0=6. Todd Dtll 1-0,1=3, Jay eregame. Me1gs had a chance to cut Marauders pulled 10 35 rebounds m.cans 4-0-0=8 Trevor Harrison ''/the SouJ!!~m lead to s_ix (62-56) but with C~means grabbing ~2. Meigs 0-0=14, John 'Bentley 5-3-0.,tQ.
Todd.Dills three pomter spun out turned the ball over 16 wnes, and Enc Wagner 0-1-2=5, Aarttn
with 1:35 left. Williams and Raben had four steals led by l!entley with Prummer 0-0-0=0, Brad Andersjln
Reiber scored 13 of Southern's 15 two. Wagner had . t:ovo of ~he 0.:0-0:0, TOTALS 20·4·3=55 -: ·
points in the period. Williams Marauders seven asSISts. Me1gs
·•
scored seven including four of four was called for-20 personal fouls.
from the line to give Southern the
Southern hosted Waterford on
68-55 victory.
.
Saturday evem~g. and Will host
"Defensively we played as well Federal Hockm~ on Fnday
as we have all season," winning evemng. Me1gs wdl dose on the
coach Howie Caldwell said after season at home agam st Vmton
the game. "Offensively we were County on Tuesday.
not as sharp but on defen se "'e
. In the reserve contest Jeremy
were."
Hill poured ~n ~0 Jl?lllts m leading
Robert Reiber led four players Scott W!ckhne s LtUie Tornadoes
in double figures for Southern with over M~1gs 44-36. Brett Newso111e
15 points. Other Tornadoes in dou- led Me1gs w1th 12 pomts. It was a
ble figures were Ryan Williams close game all the .way, but Southadded 14, Michael Evans added 13 em outscored Me1gs 24-14 m the
and Jeremy Dill 10. Mark Allen
and Russell Singleton scored seven
Stay ·warm All Winter
each and Andy Grueser two. Tren- BASEBALL
.
For Just Pennies A Day.
ton Cle~and and Mason Fisher also
NEW Y.ORK (AP) - Gregg
saw acuon for Coach HowLe Cald- Jefferies, the centerpiece of Kansas
well's Tornadoes but did not score. City's 'major move after the !991
Southern hit 24 of 56 from the season, was traded to St. Louis for
floor including seven of 16 from outfielder Felix Jose.
Where America Goes 1&gt; Relax"
three point range for 43%, while
Jefferies, 25, hit .285. with 10
hitting 13 of 24 from the line for homers and 75 RB!s. He came to
54%. The purple and gold pulled in the Royals from the Mets with
32 rebounds with Evans, Smgleton, Keith Miller and Kevin
Reiber and Dill grabbing six each. McReynolds in the Bret SaberhaSouthern had seven assists with gen trade.
Allen leading the way with three.
Jose, 27, hit .295 with 14 home
CHESTER
Williams had three of Southern's runs aod 75 RBis last year. He will
seven steals. Southern turned the play right field for the Royals, who
915·3301 ' ''
ball over eight times and was called also got infielder Craig Wilson and
for 13 personal fouls.
sent minor league outfielder Ed
"We didn't get the ball inside," Gerald to St Louis.
Marauder coach Phil Harrison said
afrer t!Je ~e. They (Southern) did

oJ

Sports briefs

®~

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BLOCKS SHOT·Trevor Harrison(35) o( Meigs attempts to
· knoc:k tbe ball away from SOuthern's. Robert Rieber as tbe
Thr•adoet! rl!Ced to a 68·55 vietory over tbe Marauden Friday
niabL·

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Page C4

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

Sundlly nmas Sentinel

February 14, 19q

february 14,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

"

- b y Mad&lt; Goo.gi

.

• . W~~G HA~ • Point Pleasant High School's Kevin Boyles
~:
IS PICiu~ with a look or determination on his race during
the Wabama White Falcons on the Big Blacks'
..
• are PPHS's No. 32, Dejan Kablar, and Wabama's
Dpug HufJ. The B1g Blacks went on to beat Wahama, 78-55.
••

30:
c6u"::!1.:m'
sm::.lh
•

Ohio High School scores

Ry Th~ As.soclattd Pral

,.

Friday'i Games

• . Akron Ella41,Akrun E. 44
Akron Fuatonc 13, Alaon Cent·
I lower (6
• ' AktM Garfield 74. J\kl'OI'I N. 68. OT
•• Akron Kenmore 68, Akron 31.1Chtcl
4l
·
•: Alex ander 7S, Ncl.sanvillc-York 59
;
Amanda-Clcarcrcclt 7~. HamillOI'I
1

Cin. Indian lli\1 54, CLn. FinncylOwn

53

.

47

Cin. LaSalle iO, Kcucnng Alter 59
Cin. Maricmorn 57, Cin. Loveland 54
Cin, Moeller 80, Cin. Koger Hacoo 70
Cin. l'rinccton 68, fairfield 63
Cin. Sl. Bernard(,(,, New ~1iami 63

Cin. Summit 11, Cin. Lockland 41

.,
;.'

•' A•on 73, Kcy'tonc 62 J! Datbcnal 92, Springfield 62

_.
Cin.WimonWoods69,Cin. llu[I)\C5 ·

55

Cin. Woodw.ird I \0, Cin. T utfrin 51
Cin. Wyoming 44, Cin. Tay lor 39

Circleville 65. Teays Vall. 62
Clc. Ilcncdictinc 95, Mcr1tor Lake
Cath. 5!1
Cle. Calhnlic 76, Trinity 51

~ Day48, Avon Lake 39

... lltjJ~chwood 6&amp;, Cuyahoga llts.. 58
"" Redford 67, Mayfield 48
: • DcU airc 63. Weir. W.Va. 60
~· IJcUbtoC.Ik 76. Valley Vicw47
~ · Ocllefontainc 53, Spring. Northeast-

ct'h42
~.

Cin. Tart92. Amelia 69
4)

Ansoni189,Twin .VaUcyS. I1 '
Arcanum SO. Tri Cowaty N. 34
Arlington 73, Pando111-Gilbol 54
Ashland 50, Mansficld Sr. 4S
Athens 61 , Ja.ckson 50
.Aust.irnawn-Filth 53, Boardman Sl

~

C\c. llay 69, Clc. Kennedy 46
Clc. ~anhwcn65, Carrollton 44
Clc. Soulhcast 711, Mogadore 65
Clc. St. Ign atius 59, Clc. St. Edward
53 20T
'
' C\cnnorn Nonhcastcm 63, llclhcl-

T:m! 39

;, Jl er1in ll iland9j,Gmway6l
, · Bcdcy 11 , Liclting VaU . 65
lllanch~tcr ~ l.Fcl ic ity63

.;.) ll lnom-Ca rroU 77, Canal Winchester
~f

JHoomficld 69, Lodgcmrwu53

'. Hnlkins 68, ' F.:~irlawn 48

46

~. ll n.:cksvillc 80. 11nmswick 79. ar
•' Jlridgcron 72, Torooto 69
.1 (I Ad;.lyn 57, Columbia 53
ll rook~ide 76, Ciearvie.w 66
~~ Urush 75, l'!uclid 67
:. Calvary'Olr. GO, YO\Ing. Wilaon 48
~· Cambridge 67, Meadowbrook 66
.• Canal Fulton 1\'W 65, C.rmllton 44
,• C~~tlield 65 , Campbcll Memorial 58
•~ CanLOn l.lcriugc 67 ,Cic. Soulhwcsl·
cm5J
• CantDn McKinley 54, Akron St. VSt.M Sl
~. Cardington 78, Mount Gilud 60
:. Cedarville 66, E. Clinton 59
~· Celina 71, Lima Bath 62

,!

,• Ccni.Ctburg 78, NontuidJ!.C S4
. ~ Ccmervillc 57, Fairborn 33
•: C.."hampioo 8J, Young.. Liberty 51

·

Cloverleaf 42, llc11:;t 44
Col. llccchcml't RS, Col. Miffiin 50
Col. Brookhaven 79, CnL W hc\,;\01\C

Relprc63, Wcll$ton SO

•, Benjamin Lot:an 85 , Ridgemont 53
1'

.

Cin. Walnul llills 59, Cin. North~~cst

• ' Amhcnt 69, FairYie• 52
.. • Amu.6S, Rilllia4&amp;·
~
~

·

Cm. Landm:uk. 49, Cm. Sc\·cn l li ll~

Iwn· SS
~

.

so

CDI.. Easunoor14, Col. Briggs 45
Cal.llanlcy 80, Cal. DeSalea78
COL Independence 73, Col. West 48
Col. Lindcn·M"Kinley 6\, Col. East
Cd.. Northland 60, CaL Centennial S4
Col . South 92, Cot Walnut Ridge 64
Col. St. Otarlel 56, Col. Watterson
Col. We5tland 68, Dublin 52
Columbiana 76, Coiumbioma

CrQtvielll67

Co1umbus Gtove 7), Bluffton 50
Conneau l 80, A1h1.1bula H11bot 65

Conotton Vall 7&amp;, Jewt.tt·Scio 77
Cawoy Crestview 68, Delph01lc£fmon 53
Coshocton 58, Sl. Clairsville 52
Cra.twood 72, Slted.lbora 67

Day: Chaminade.-lulienne 90, Cin.
M~Nicholu

54
Day, Dunbar94, Day. Colonel White

8l

•, Ch.1ncl &amp;3, Padua 611
' ·. Chl...-u~ltc 73, Rock llill 7l OT
:,.. Chillicot.hu 5 I, Wonhinguxt Kil-

bwmc44
, 6 Cin. CA PE 9S, Cin. Reading 16
,1 Cin. Colerain 77, Ci.L 0Jk llills 54 .
I' Cin. Coumry Day 85, Uauvia 58
; Cin. Deer )•ark 66, Cin_ Madci~ 57
, Cin. I::Jdcr77, Jiamilton lbdinS4

-Day. Oakwood 62, Preble Shawnee
48
D.1y. Pauerson 64, Day. B"lmant SS
Dclawarc: 70, Marysvill~ S4
Dovu SS, MarlinglOOA2
E. Cantm 46, Sandy V1ll. 33

E. u..,.,..In. Edisoo s. 56
Eaton 1[, OWe: 57
EdF'OO 45, Ayenville 40
~aintcld

Union 5.5, l..og.an Elm .51

35 going into the final stanza but a
pair of 6-0 spll't!l by Point Pleasant
kept the White Falcons at bay. The
Bi~ Blacks scored nine unanswered
pomts in the final minute to lead by
2S before a Falcon bucket concluded the nights scoring with
Point Pleasant staking claim to a
78-55 victory.
.
"Elliot Do111ey had a great game
and missed only one shot and the
way he was playing I'm suprised he
missed tha~" B11J11Ctte S31d. "I've
had players who maybe could do
thipgs better but I've never had one
who could do it alllilce EllioL He is
probably the best player I've ever
had Barnette said of his cage star.
We seem to be improving each time
out and if we learn to be more
patient and move the. ball offensively we have a charu!C 10 beat just
about anybody added Barnetre."
WHS coach Lewis Hall also had
. praise for his ream as well d~ite
the loss. "We have played some
tough competition over the past ·
few weelts and 10nigh1 was no !lllception. Point Pleasant is a good
basketball ream and we could have
lhrown in the IOWel after falling

POINT PLEASANT WV-EUiot
Dollley, the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks phenomenal all-state basketball candidate, registered yet
another outing that bordered on the
unbelievable Friday evening in
leading coach Lennie Barnette's
PPHS cagers past visiting Wahama
by a 78-55 margin before a stand·
ing room only packed house on the
Point Pleasant hardwood.
Daisey scored a game high 28
points on the night, by connecting
on 12 of 13 attempts from the floor
and four of six at the free lhrow
line to pace the hoi shooting Big
Blacks as Point Pleasant swept the
1992-93 series with its Mason
County rivals with the victory.
PPHS sl1ot a blistering 53 percent from the field for the game as
the Big Blacks appeared 10 be a
team on a mission. Coach Lennie
Barnette's crew was on fire from
the opening tip behind the scoring
df Dorsey. Kevin · Boyles, Dan
Kabler and Austin Moore which
enabled the hosts to jump out to a
commanding first period advantage.
PPHS scored 15 of the first 18
points of the county rivalry enroute
to a 21-;6 lead after eight minutes
and the Big Blacks never looked
back in notching its twelfth win of
the season·against five defeats.
uwe played about as well as we
could play in the first quarter and
that was important in that we
needed a good beginning." said
Point Pleasant head coach Lennie
Barnette. "We · might have in·
timidated Wahama somewhat early
on with our defensive pressure and
that seemed to set the lOne for us on
both ends of the floor added the
veteran cage coach."
Wahama experienced a ·disastrous start as the White Falcons
shot a dismal two of 12 during the
games first eight minutes and
scored just six points. "We simply
couldn't mall:h up with their height
and that·was the difference in a nutshell,: Wahama coach Lewis Hall
sWed. '"We played a Jmtly solid
game considering the height disad- ·
vantage we faced "but we aug
ourselves a hole in the first quarter
when we couldn't get our shots 10
fall and we just couldn '1 recover
added.Hall."
The loss was the sixth setback in
its last eiglit decisions for the White
Falcons with all six coming against
some tough competition in Class
AAA Point Pleasant, third rated
Vinson ,and ·Southwestern Athletic
ConfeJenee co-leader Duval and
left the Wahama cagers with a 9:7
IDIIIk on the season.Throughout the
first half Point Pleasant dominated
and built its lead 10 18 points at the
5:30 mark of the second can10 at
27-9 before the White Falcons cut
the advantage 10 11 at 28-17 midway through the period. A 1rey by
~oo.e and a goal by Dorsey made
1t 33-17 before Huff closed ·out !he
first half ~ng with a ~ throw
10 make the count 33-18 at the half.
Huff carried the .White Falcons
lhroughout the third canto with 13
points in the quarter as Wahama
closed 10 within 13 at40.27 before
the Big Blacks went on a 6-0 run 10
thwart the Bend Area reams come- ·
back effon. The score siOod at 53-

SERVICE
, ~TIRE REPAIR
~ $18 95 OIL
~ INCWDES:

CHANGE
·; eUp to 5 qllrts of Yalvolte
: IOW30
: •Filer
~ •LUriadioa
'
:-FIIId Level Qedls
:• •Brake Filii
: •WWslield WAr Filii ·.
•
: •lllllator Level
:•Ptwer SteMitg

AND

.ROTATING

•
!•I• Etd Grtased

••

;.• •T.-.SIIissltll
: -&lt;Hck Behs, Htses, Air
! Filer, Tire Pres~~re
CHANGE HOURS
•1' OIL
Mon. 9·5, Tues. 12·8 .
•

• Wed. 9-5, Thurs. 12-8
Fri. 9-5, SJd. 9-12

LLER'S CUSTO ·BENDING
47629 STATE ROUTE 248
;1% MILE OFF ROUTE 7 THRU CHESTER ON .ST. RT. 248
...
I ' 985-3949

wu.ma

.

2;

cart King ().()..()..(); Tony Roush:~

0-0-0-0; Jason Weaver 0-0-0-0.•
TOTALS 16-.5'-8-5.5.
!•
. POINT PLEASANT (78) - T1
Elliot Dorsey 12-0-4-28; Dan1j
Kabler S-0-1-11; Austin Moores.:,
0-0-11: Parry Casto t-t-t-6: Ryan::
Bec:lcner 2.{)..().4; Wally Smith 0-1 ·
0-3; Matt Rieger 0-0-0-0; Ryan.'
R'oush 0-0-0-0; Bubb)! Austin ().(),.•:
0-0-0. TOTALS26-~-il-7!.
'·

Save on
heating and

cooling bills*
by Installing

·Owens-Coming
Pink FlbergiM'

lnsullllon In
your attic.

COUN,.RY CORV..
i'l-1..,·•1
LETART FALLS, OHIO

1963 Corvette Conv.......................~....$19,900
1.964 Corvette Coupe..........................$21,500
1968 Corvette Conv................~......-$11,500
1970 .Corvette Coupe needs restored-- $3.500
1930 Ford Model Astreet rod ......- ..... $18,900
1971 Uncoln Cont. 1·owner, 4 31................$5,995
1971 Chevelle original454 ................... $13,900 ·
1f154.Ford Sky6ner (glass top) ................ $9,500
.

.

1977 Ford F-150 414 .................:.~-.$1,995
1984 S-10 Te~hoe loaded, AS IS ••••••"".......$1,750
1984 Monte Carlo 1 o~, 56K......- .....S3,895
;1987 5-10 Blazit 1.1acly ow................ $7,395
1988 Uncoln Cont. Signature 44K •• ~... $1 0,500
1991 Un. Town Car Sig. Has it alf..._ ... $18,900 ·

Whtn you buy Owens-Corning Pink ,\
FiHrglaJ insula1ion. This NBA Team •
Jacket has a nylon shell and fleece linin&amp;.
And you can choose from a1127 NBA
teams. Hurry ! Offer ends February 28.
1993. ·Add $4.00 for shipping and handling. Serfour in-stqre display fOr full offer
detail!!~ and qualifying R-valuc-5.
Caiii·IIOO-.GET-PINK ror tht
latnt RDnrnrMnllnsulltion
nc:ommend8tiom;.
•

World indoor track
·records established
LIEVIN, Fmncc (AP) ·- Sergei Ihe womcn.' s 200 meters wi th a
Bubka of.the Ukraine and Merlcnc Ii mc of 21.87 sccomls.
Her previous record was 22.24
Ottcy of Jamaica smashed world
indoor records Saturday at an inter- sc1twicc in ' l 99 1 -once at Sindclri ngcn, Germany, and equal ed at
national track and field meet.
B uhka, the indoor and outdoor Ihe World Indoor Championships
wo rld reco rd-holder, soared 20 m Seville, Spain .
: PASSES OFF- EaStern's Wes Arbrough (32) passes ofJ In FrlEarlier, Lud mila Narozhilenko
·feet, I 3/4 inches. sh:mering the
~ay's basketball game against Waterford. The Eagles lost, 54-46.
of
Russia
equaled her wori,I record
mark of 20-1 1/4 he set Feb. 21,
of
7.69
in
the women's 60-mctcr
1992, at Berlin.
hurdles.
II was th e 33 rd time he broke
th e wo rld record , th e 17th tiin e
indoors.
Beulah Par:k results
· Bubka w:as pushed to !he record
by, Rus~ia n Rodion Gmuullin, who
GROVE CITY, Ohio .(AP)cleared 19-8 1/4. It was th e first Life In The .Big, ridden by Juan
tl!lnc two men had cleared 6.00 Sow. won Friday's feature race at
fuetcrs (19-8 1/4) in the same meet. Beulah Park.
Otley ·broke
in
Life In The Big covered six fiJI'·
. her .world reeord
.
longs in 1:13.81 and paid $15 .20,
$4.60, and $3.40. Bold Buck Eye
finished one-half length back in
SKAHNG
second, returning $2.80 and $2.80 •
HAMAR, Norway (AP) - Two while Killarney Blarney paid $4.00
time Olympic figure skating cham- ' for finishing third.
. pion Katarina Witt was allowed ' A .crowd of 1,252 wagered
back into the Olympic fold and will $334,906 at the suburban. Columbe allowed to compete in next ·bus track. '
.
year's Winter Games if she qualifies on the German team.
Witt became eligible again
under a rule set up by the ISU last
:
BATTLE FOR .nAtL: - Eastern and W~terford players bailie
June relaxing the "amateur" sJatus
, for a loose ball durmt: Frtdoy's ·hardwood COJ!test won by Waterto allow professionals performing
: ford, ?4-46. Eagle player.s in dark a're Charlie Bissell (40) and' in shows and competitions :back
r Robert Reed ,(34). Wildcats·are Kenley Schwendennen (42) and
into the Games.
: Steve Miller (34).

''

Carollaa Lu•ber Co.
•, 675·1160
312 6111 St. Pl. Plta•t, WV.

ss

0 SP1~

,-~~ f"UIP.I\"'1
•It) in•ht !OC'Il~n r."
W~1 ' '" R ·. ,~t ur• Htfhtr
R · ,3IIM'~

mun ,...."
in'llllliftJ f'\""'t 'f

Farmers.Bank and Saving~ Company
of Pomeroy, Oblo And ForelgD aJJd Domesdc Sub.sldlllrtes, at lbe clole of busllless December 31, 1991, a
state bankiDg lnstltQdOD organized aJJd operad1111 uader the bonklag laws of this llfate and a member of
lbe Federal Reserve ~ystem. PubUsbed Ia acconlaJJCe with a call made by tbe State Baaklag ,\ulhorlty
and by the Federal Reserve BJ!nk or Ibis District.
·

Federal Reserve .Dlllrlct No. 4
·

ASSETS

Cash and balances due from depQsitory instiwlions:
a. N~~terest-bearing balances and currency and coin ..:................................................................. 2,8!5,000.00
Secunues.................. ,................................................. ....................................... ,................................ .24.1211,000.00
Feda:al funPs sold &amp; securities piii'Chased 1111der igrecments
10 resell in domestic offices of lbe bank &amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries &amp; in mF's:
Federal funds sold............................................................................................................................:.600,000.00
Loans and lease fmancing receiv abies:
Loans 111d leases, net of unearned income .......,.......................................... 35,89S,OOO.OO
LESS: AUow111ce for loon111d leaselosses.................................................... .364,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned income.
,
allowance, and reserve .................................,. ...................................................................................35,531,000.00
Premises and flXed assets (including capitalized leases) .................................................... ........ ........... 1,376,000.00.
Other re&amp;l estate owned:................................................................................ ~ ...........................................37,000.00
· Intangible assets ......................... .............................. .'................................................................................. 44,000.00
Other assets ... ........................................................................ .......................................................... ..........729,000.00
Total assets ................................................................................................................................,. ......... 65,860,000.00 Total assets and losses deferred punuant 12 U.S.C. !823(j) ........................................................... 65,860,000.00

LIABILITIES
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ........................................................................................................................ 59,449,000.00
(1) Noninterest-bearing ...............................................................................7,569,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing .................................................................................... 51,880,000.00 ·
•·
Other liabilities ......................................................................................................................................... 198,000.00
Totalliabilities.................................. ......................................................... ;.........................................59,647,000.00

.
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of Share a: Alilhorizod ............ l.s..20,000

Gahanna 83, W.-aville S. 51
'• CiaUi,_u. 4?lMarilw 40

SPECIAL!
1419 State Route 7
GaiUpoUs, Oblo 456,1
614-446 0/36

Near Kanauga Dl'lv•Ja

MasterCard

I

Girard 7:5, Sttuahea: 66

MARIE I I A. OHIO
..

III*I&amp;DJIT

,, · · ' ·

,

MID Otto VALa.rt·M~utlNE DEALERS AssoetATlON

OnndYlow 57, l.Gndoo 56
Granville 59, Fimer C.lh. 45
I Grcc:n 70, NCWIIl 59

. WAS

'

' CitDCIIetie" 77, Wa)'MI'tille~7
Groenp Co.. IC)'. 60, ln~ntcm 46

$13,995

•

Grove City 13. Upper Arlinpn SJ
Orovcpott70. Tbanu WonhinJ'OII

1~12

.. .
~

~

II....... 74, Millon! 58
JlardU.,.Northcm 72. Vanlue 56

llcndoclc. Millet &amp;2, Federal Hac:k.ing

llubbin16ol, Rodp Sl

llunUnawn14, Adcna47

•
,.•

JluJUt77,Sand!UySLMuyt61
In~ 42, Richmond llu. 39

• " Indian Ukc 66, MeehaniabutJ 54
Indian Vall. 64, Tuallw 48
;

Jackson Millon 60, Mincnl Riqe 57

"t lcffCI'IOfl 52:, Alhllbul• Edaewood 43

WAS

John Clem 56. Tri·Valley 51

"'

Riclr.

$9,995

oi KCIIlDl'l
.51, Urbina 41
~ 1.10... 74, ooalf..W 58
•

l..ncaltcl' 63, Z.nosYille 49
,f LocloniaGI,E. Palistinc45

•~ l..olpsie 1~. Ara.di.a 4.5
~ l.ihcn.y lltam 66, Cor}-Rawaoo 44
Uberty Union 70, Dcml Union 60

Liekil\a Uta.. 4S, ~ew Albany Y1
- ~ LimaSr. 91,W.O...I..akou69
~•~ Lincolnvicw 86, Lima Perry 15

•ow'8,91&amp;
...

'

3.8 VS engine. power steering and
brakes, automatic trans., AMIFM
stereo cassette, tilt and cruise,
power windows and door locks, air
cond., rear wi~r and washer,
· luggage rack, cast aluminum
wheels.
Was
$16,8911DW

'*--46 .

,t !-*'bon 64, Snulhcm Lacal S4

Lon.in Calh. 72, Elyria Ca\h. 59
·
Lorain SouUwiew 61, Lonin Admirll

ar.o·

' LouiJvillc 59, W, Branch 56 .

lueas 72, Danville 48

LUcuvWc Vall. 99. McJXnnou NW

'

Luthctln W. 11, Aurort SIJ

'1

.. . Lynchburr. Clay 88, Ea11etn Brovm
Madison Plains 88, Janalhan Alder69

Malvcm 97.Suubuq. 76
' Manchcl1ct6l, Twcarawas Vall. 37
•
Manaf'idd. St. Pc:tcn 48 , lc.tin&amp;lon 43

·1112 FORD TEMPO BL 4 Dil.

Maple Hts. 63, Meauor 42

to

MIJ*wood 69, Orillei :.o

4 cyl. eng.. power steer!ng and
brakes. auto. trans.• AM/FM stereo
cassette, .air cond·.• tilt and cruise,
power windows and power locks,
power driver's seat, rear window
defroster. Two to choose from.
Around 14,000 miles each.
WAS
$9,995
lOW

Maric:.JimlinaSB.ManAidd Madi.·

;

45

l
i

Marion Pleallnt 76. Jjdpdale .53

Marlins f-erry M, Hannibal River 54
Mauillon 14. Youila. Raycn62
• Mauillon On. .54, Kidron Or. 43

Musillan J•cltson S6, Mau illon ~-

I
oy52

.

• Mathews 60. Bertin Wcttcm Reserve

50
~
t

3!

McOortaW C5,lowcllvillc 44
Motdvillc Calvary 61 , Hcwland O!.r.

( Medina 61, N. Royal1.0n 51

-...z:
t'

Total liabilities, limibKJ...Iife prefened stock, and equity capital,
· ,
·
'and J..ses defened p1D1URIIt to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j)...........................................................................65,860,000.00
MEMORANDA: Amount. outstaadlag u of Report of Con4111on date:
'
letters of credit Tolal...............................................................................................................!1.!2,000.00

J_Midcl1clown Fenwick 6S, t.anon

t

McdillaF~t~tllapt. l l3, Kina',

..

~~UhlAnd 79. """""' 60

Miami E.1J,lliy. Ouistian 60
; . ~TraceSI,Coi. Acl~y47 .

i

·11• OLDB.
CUTLASS
SUPREME
.
'

Millnk"'f165,D.oy.J!o!..,.aod56

t MiddlaloWn n, Cin. s'"mon46
~ Mid41 r •l' Chr. 4l.,.CiD. Christian

3t

....

.

'

VB ,eng., P. steering, P. brakes.

·~

: :&lt;..

~-57
1

auto. trans.. AMIFM stereo
cassette, air cond., tilt and cruise.
rear window defroster, .cloth split
bench seat, styled road . wheels.
56,000 miles. Local one owner.

Middlllown Madison 'T4, C.riisle 63
Midp~S63. ~~7

t_ - 5 6 , Lonin Sr. 39
~ loiWot Cioy 61, Kalido 59
• uy• ipOU 71 H01th 6t
•• MiawQ 63, Catacn s. 60
0

Minleoll6,-lhW.71

' ldMipOiicr63, Ev...- 62
' Motp11 II, Ri W11' Y.cw 60

Wee

• Mount Vomon 76, W•lkinl Memori•l

t

$5,995

N.Adam•61,1AihlmW.etn.53
N. ~IIIIOft 13, Can\01'1 Timkcn 6S
! N.C...... 9l,PouUvillc73
_f , New. lloiUM'I 61, Ftanlc.lin fum1ce
(hen 57
.
t

the omdenianed direc~ms. allelt tho couectnelo or the Report or Condition and decl11e thll it hu beat
e&lt;omined by \II and to the bat of Ollllt:nowledae and belief and hu beat jNepored in conl'onnance with ofrii'W
inl1nlc:tiono and ia 1n10 and correcL
THE~EON JOHNSON

BI!N H. EWINO- Dlncton
D!)UOLAS W. tm1.B
Swe of Ohio, Coun1y of Meip. as:
~worn 10 and oubocribed before me lhls 19th day ~f. lll'IIJGY, 1993, llld I hlreby cenif)l thu I lllll 11111111
off'~ or director of this bonk.
,
.
··
Jo AM,Criop. Nowy Public
JoAMCrilp.Notary Public, SweofOhio. MyoommiuionnpireiJuly 17,1993.

.

'

••et

New Kno.!tviUc 73, Dc:lphol Sl. Johns

•! New P!Uludptu. oiO.

Uni-

Lfko36

• New JUchmund 41, Wea&amp;cm Brown
44
• Ne-* 64, FiMiay St
NowolkCJih.61,.Z."""'illoR&lt;. .
S6
NeWlOn falll45, COrWnd-I.Abvicw

'tor;
•

Nonlonlo7.. 1CM.'I

... ~

,.,I ="'"a..-U.::~
·.
..

lOW ·

:&amp;ria&amp; Ia )"OUI' belt deal on a New Car or Tnok and we
wiD t17 to
or a.t the DeaL .
.ro• A GOOD IliA'
SEE .JACK BOUSB, BOB 8088 or liBYAN 8411,

I Ncw8rane.t71,, Pa!S.way36
~

499
.

MERCURY TOPU IS 4 DR•

.. ~ Linaly. W.Va. 61; Hudson Wcaern

""' ,

,

1112 FORD TAURUS GL STITIOI WBI.

I
~

~~~

brakes. aulomatic transmission.
AM/FM stereo cassette, . air
cOnditioning, tilt and -.cruise: power
windows and locks, power driver's
seat, rear delroster.

J1nwlan4 61, )'ouna- Eul65

~&gt;t

.

lOW

4 cyl. engine. power steering, power

•D 11o~lftd Sflrinl- 10, Anlhony Wayne
~

3.8 6 cyl. engine, power steering,
power brakes, auto. trans., air cond.,
AMIFM stereo casseHe, liK and cruise,
power windows and power locks.
power driver's seal, power ll)lnor, rear
defroster.
•

• '' ~ - •

Gom.. 5Hprin...... 52

• · o......,6i',Tippl:ior60
f

1112 FORD'

WASHINGTON COUNTY F~GROUNDS
1

r • tH:ncva 56. f!lbd;.on .S2

b. Outstanding.. :..........., .. 20,000)...........................................................,.500,000.00
Surplus.. -....................................................................... -....... -............................................. ., ................. 1,000,000.00
Undivided profits ond capital reserves ........................................'...................., ...................................:4,713,000.00
Total equity capital........... ,...................................................... :••··"~''"'''""""''.'....................................6,213,000.00
Total equil¥ capital and losses deferred
•
·
..
pursuaru 10 12 U.S.C. !8233(j).................... ......,.............: ........"...................,.....................................6,213,boo.oo

I, Roger W. Hysell, Vice Presidmt-Cuhier of the above-named bonk, do· h=by declare thaJ the Repon of
Condition bu.beat prepored in oonfornlance with official insJnJ&lt;tions and ia uue ond COJJect to me bat of my
lcnowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell -Vice Preiident ... Cuhier
Date Sianed: Jonuay !9, 1993
• ·

FRIDAY, FEB. 12,!) P.M.· 9 P.M.
SATURDAY, FEB.13, 9 A.M.· 9 I!.M.
SUNDAY, FEB. 14, 12 P.M.· 6 P.M.

• 1 Ftonlitr66,Ca\dwdt_;l

~
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON FOR

Field 72, Winclaam 40 .
Firclands62, Elyria W , 51
f-ort IAnmic 67,•11oust.on 58
Fon Rocovcry 60. Mlria'll..oeal40
f nnlc.lin lhs. 14, Whikhall65
Franlc.Jin Monroe 60, Covington S4
Frodcrickwwn 72,. Ddd.cyc Central

; r.....,..t Lalce!Jnd 64, Ridacwood 58
fn:m0111 SL. JUHpb 71, Fol&amp;oria SL.
'\'ondclin 69
.

1 t

PHONE: 614·247·4861 ' 24 HR. FAX: 614·247-4371

'

. Rodgers E-Z Ride
Auto-Rentals

BOAT SHOW

F•irlcssl4, Ccwcnuy 77

$6.06,.ral
R·25 Attic Blanker
Aberglas• Insulation .
8"ltllck115" wide
22.5Cl'sq. ft .

Ooor for 36% and cashed in on 11~
of 17 from the line for 65%. Th~
Eagles had 18 rebounds with Clino
grabbing five and Bissell adding, .
four. Eastern had five assisiS w1th
Wes Ailia ugh and Cline getti ng' '
two each.
,J
In the reserve contest Eastern _- .
defeated Waterford 48-44 in an'
exciting overtime contest. Jasmi J
Sheets led the way with 13 points •
Jeff Stetham and Eric Hill added 1i
and Micah Otto seven for the Litde '
Eagles. Shawn Hess had 22 for· the Wildcats.
Eastern will host Federal Hock-·
ing on Tuesday.
4,
Eastern 15 15 8 8. 46
:
Waterford 11 12 16 15 -54
'
EASTERN • Jeremy Cline 1·2·
2~ 10; Chad Savoy 4-1-3~14 Pat•;
Newland 2-0-2=6, Wes Arbaugh o~·
0-2~2. Roben Reed t-0-1~3, Char;•;
lie Bissell5-0-1=ll TOTALS u•••
J-ll=41i.
' ·
~~
WATERFORD-Tyson
•
•
.2=10
Eric
Doak
1-0.0=2
12
McCutcheon 1·4-3~ 17 Ton
Schwendemen 4-0-0=8 · s·····li'
Miller 5-0-5~i5 Kenle ~t~Iwe1n~:
•
Y Jo
demen l-0-0=2, TOTALS
10=54.

.friday's scores

INSULATE NOW FOR
EXTRA ENERGY SAVINGS!"

PARDAL LISJINcHOR FU-RTHER INFORMADON:

State Bank No. lOS OX

Waterford outscored Easiern in
the third period 16-8 to take a 3938 I~ heading iniO the !inal peri- .
od. Mi!ler p~ced. the Wlldc~ts m
the penod w1th su pomts. Bassell
scored four in the period for the
Eagles, Newland added three. .
. Miller added ~ven more pomts
m the founh penod as Waterford
had. a 15-8 scoring advan~&amp;ge in the
penod. Roben Reed, Clme, Savoy,
and Bissell scored two points each
for Eastern.
Eric McCu!cheon led Waterford
with 17 points, he was joined in
double figures by f11iller with 15
and Tyson ?owers wtth 10. Waterford pulled in 32 rebounds led by
Miller with· nine. Me Cull:heon had
five of the Wildcats 12 assists, they
tumedtheballover14times..
Chad Savo~ led,Eastem With 14
potnts, Charh.e Btssell added ll
and Jere11_1y Ch~e 10. Pat Newland
added s1x pomts for Eastern,
Robert Reed three and Wes
Arbaugh two. Oth~r Eagles ~mg
acuon but not sconngwere Mickey
Goode, Jeremy Buc.kley, Randy
Kaylor, Matt Martm and Ryan
Buckley.
The Eagles hit16 of 44 from the

Sports briefs

NOW OFFERING THE FOLLOWING:

.

By DAVE HARRIS
Chad Savoy arid Charlie Bissell
Times-Sentinel Stair
combined to score 12 points as
WATERFORD - V'( aterford Eastern ~umped out on top in the
' outscored ~tern 31-16 m the sec- fust p~nod 15-1 ~· Savoy scored
ond half to post a 54-46 victory seven In the penod for. Eastern.
· over the Eagles in basketball action Bissell added five and Pat ~ewland
Friday evening. Walerford's strong the other~second twf revers¢ a seven point
Jeremy Cln~e got the hot hand
halftime deficit for the Wildcats. for the Eagles m the second penod
Steve Miller scored 13 of his IS scoring eight points as Eastern
- points in the second half 10 lead the outscored the host .team 15-12.
cometi&amp;ck.
Eastern went iniO the locker room
with a 30-23 halftime lead.

we fought 10 the end and played as 13; Danny Hudson 3-1 -1- 10;
hard as we could play said Hall. Tommy Mayes 0-1·0-3; J . C .~
Doug (Hull) and Mike (VanMatre) Albright 1.{)..().2; RJ. Roush 1..0.0.:.

MIX BILL'S

.

•OIL AND LUBE

behind as much as we did early bul 6·3·4-25; Mik;e VanMatre S-0-3 ~

did a good job inside considering as
bill: as they we.e."
.
was not witbQUt its
standouts also as junior forward
Doug Huff nearly IIIIICbi!d Dorsey's feat by soorchinglbc liCII for
2S l!lll'kln on Dine of 13 from the
floor and four of from the
line. Huff was joined by junior center Mike 'VanMalle with 13 . II
. . Juanl Danny H~111
and lllilllor
with 10 rallies offensi~ly for COIICh
Lewis Hall's Ben!! Area FIICOIII. '
Point Pleasarit inade good on 31
of 59 field goal llleiiiJIIS for S3 percent while Wahama ovcrtamc a
four for 23 first half 10 finish with ·
21 of 60 tries for 35 pen:enL PPHS
held a 39-28 edge on the boards
with the Big Blacb committing 14
turnovcn and Wahania 12. Kabler
ted an rebounders With n white
Do111ey IOtaled "ni!Je for Point
Pleasant while VanMalre · and
Tommy Mayes paced Watwna with.
six boaads eadl. '
WAHAMA:' (SS) - Doug Huff
.

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

Waterford downs Eastern ·q·uintet, 54-46~~.,

·Pt. Pleasant tops Wahamafot 12th win :
By Gary Clark

wv

Our Service Department Ia Open Mon.·Frt. H; Sat. 8-12
Muffler Shop Mon.·Frl. N; Sat. 8-12

SIIFI.BY •
Proulll'f~re$enrmg The SIHIIby Insurance Comp;Jny

.,

i·

r.

\

I.J

'

VISA

..

�•
Times Sentinel

•

.·

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-G.IIIpolla, OKH-P

~ebruary 14,1993

35th .Daytona 500 scheduled toqay
DAY10NA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- As many eyes will be on the
seoond.row as on the fii'Sl for Sunday's 35th Da)'IDIIa SOO.
There, to the inside of five-time
NASCAR champion Dale Earn- .
hardt, will be rookie Jeff Gordon,
who
figured to get a lot of
auention thiS year.
Rick Hendrick - lllready fielding Winston Cup teams for Ken
Sc~ and Ricky Rudd - spot·
ted Gordon driving in a Grand
National race taft spring and liked
what he saw.
'' I was more than ·impressed. I
was blown away," Hendrick s&amp;id.
He signed him on to drive Chevrolc!ts on a third Winston Cup team.
Problem was, Gordon bad been
driving Fords, and there were some
h.,.d feelings with his switch. Gordon felt redeemed with his victory
Thursday in a Daytona qualifying
race.

alreadr

~thens,

ena.

•, ATHENS 61 JACKSON S9
;. JACKSON • Sunny Kalu and
Yat McHugh combined for 45
pPints with McHugh icing the contest with a goal and' frcc throw in
tJie fmal 50 seconds 10 assure the
important road victory. After
A:thens had taken an ll: 10 first
JleriOd lead _the Ironmen battled
b$ck to post a 29-22 lead at intermission. AHS scored' the fii'St four
~ints of the third stanza and the
~was tied 11133 and 35.
. • Athens mlinaged 10 build a 403:S lead on a three-pl)inter by
McHugh before Jackson's Dave·
Seymore answered with a three in
~~ fmal seconds to make it 40-38
•ij'ter three quarters.
·
~;. The hectic fourth quarter saw
~e score see-saw back and fonh
-irtth JHS gailling a tie at 49 on a
~ · · of free throws b Dennis Crabat the 4:29 m~ Athens then
~ on top and mainiaincd a one
~ four point lead the remainder of
~ contest with McHuah putting it
,._,ay with a field goaT at 44 scc~·ds, and·adding a foul shot at 41
~nds. Jackson's Brad Howe got
.qn a two point shot attempt in the
~osing seconds that woold have
'lted the game, but Bulldog Nick
•Toth grabbed the rebound to prer:ierve the win.
: :: Athens was led in scoring by
1Calu's 24 poiniS, McHugh finished
·with 21, and Justin Scholl added
-II. For the lronmen, Matt Walburn
&lt;was tops with 19 markers, includ' in$ one three pointer, and Howe
~Jed three treys enroute to his II

i:

•

bliscmun, on a one-year conW1ct.
: ~ NEW

YORK METS-Agrccd
o tenns with Eric Hillman, pitcher;
eff Kent, infielder; and Darren

lI

•

'•

•
•

A

~

£ •

.,

.""· .

•Electronic Filing Available
•Direct Deposit ·of Refund Check

.. '•"'..- .

\

Canucks Cliff RODnin (7) during first period. act,ion Friday
night in Buffa!() Memo~ial Auditorium. (AP)

11y The Associated Press
The Penland Trail Blazers, who
'I
.finished a six-game winDing streak
and then lost four straight in the.
midst if a sex scandal, are finally
getting a chance to put their troubles behind them.
f '
•
.
.
"We, definitely needed a win,"
RANDERS, Denmark (AP) Christodoulou of Cyprus called it
Penland
coach Rick Adelman said
n Bo Jacobsen of Denmark won "a fair decision" .and rejected Galafter
a
11l-!04
victory over the
nanimous decision ov~ Ameri- loway's requesifor a rematch.
Los
Angeles
Clippers
on Friday
Manning Galloway to capture
"The bout got the right win"It's
been
a
distracting
two
nighl
the WBO welterweight champi- ner," .Christodoulou said. "Ga\weeks
for
us,
Ill
say
the
least."
.
.
onship. " · ·· .
, · loway did too little in the beginClyde
Drexler
scored
32
points
. ··The third bout between the ning."
aghters WQS close,. but Ja~obsen . . J)ICobsen 's trainer' Terry-page, and Terry Porter 25 as the Blaters
bitpoinli:ll, Galloway, of Gahanna, said the judges· favored Jacobsen rallied ftom a 10-point deficit in
(tbio,. on all three · cards Friday. "because Galloway had fooled the fourth quarter to snap their
longest losing streak in three years.
O.s. judge John Steward scored it around like a clown in the ring."
Danny Manning matched his
i'l5-113, Nelso11 Vasquez of the
Jacobsen said, "I want 10 have
season
h1gh with 35 points for the
Onited States had it 116-113 and Galloway out of mind and go on
Clippers before fouling out late in ·
ijoratio Bakeman of the Domini-. now with rily career."
C)m Republic gave Jacobsen a I 15Referee Wiso Fernadez of Puer- the game. Mark Jackson finished
~12 edge.
·
·
to Rico separated the fighters every with 26 points, IS assists and nine
:; A partisan crowd burst into time the[ held each. other 10 avoid a rebounds.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
· lause and started singing when repcat·o their last bout.
·'
Charlotte
116, Miami 107; Cleve~
jud~ tuinouriced their decision
Last November, officials called
land
120,
Milwaukee
98; Minnesoowing·tlle 12-round ooul ·
the bout '' no contest" after Gal" .
ta
102,
Indiana
100;
Detroit 106,
1 Galloway, who suffered his first loway and Jacobsen knocked heads
New
Jersey
97;
New
York 104,
s since 1986, sa•.'d he would in the first round, opening a deep
98;
·Boston
109,
Dallas
Chicago
test the decision.
·
gash in Jacobsen's forehead. When
1Q0;
and
Denver
126,
Philadelphia
., . "I was set up to lose," he said.
the bout was·called off, ~tators.
.
• However, WBO official George threw empty bottles and mvaded 122.
The game marked the forst of a
the ring.
,
. e S ln
OmS
Security was tight for Friday's
· '- '
. fight, and no violence was repon1 CINCINN,._ TI (AP) .;.... first cd.
·
'
asema~ Hal Morris · and the
· incinna!i Reds alfCed to a onecontract .worth $1,,275,000,
arly •triple his ,$430,000 salary

Jacobsen wins over Galloway
by unanimous .decision

..

f

d . kM

•

•

Michael Jordan's absence to move
into first place in the F,;tstem Conference standings ahe«i of Chicago.
Patrick Ewing had 36 points, 15
rebounds and six blocked shots for
the Knicks, who ended the Bulls'
five-game winning streak. It also
was Chicago's fifth defeat in five
games since 1986 with Jordan out ·
or the lineup.
Jordan was suspended by the
NBA earlier in the day for throwipg a punch at Reggie Miller of
Indiana in an altercation at Indianapolis on Wednesday night. JarContinued on C-H

1178 CORVE I IE
ORIGINAL MOTOR. PIS, P/B, T&amp;T, AJC, 4-sp.,
White/Bed, AMIFM, PIW.
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'86ChevyConv. Van ... 159"1amt
'90 Dodge Dynasty.• '112"~

$mith nets 19 .
in Bucks :Win 4 oooR
., . .
. . , ., ·ag Chevy Celebrltf~.

roints

I

BASKETBALL
Nationalllaskctball Association
NBA- Suspcndcd Michael Jordan, Chicago Dulls guard, for one
ga me without pay and fined him
SIO,OOO for iltrowing u punch in a
g:omc on Feb. 10. Fined Reggie
Miller, Incti:ona Pacers guard,
S6,000, for fighting. in a game on
Feb. IO.
DETROIT PISTONS-Signed
Melvin Newbern, guard, to a con-

5
• ....,;,~.. '1"'""-----·
tatie Smith's !9 points led ObiQ
tallonWagan7..-.• . &amp;V'-.umt
. ~ale's scoring as th~ Buckeyes '88 Chevy Celebrity;
' feided Indiana 99-58 Friday, givStallonWagons-'7s·.... ____ _
· g cOach Nancy Darsch hec tOOth
.--- ....,.
ig Ten ~nf~rence victory.
. 't Dar$Ch is 100-35 in the confer- Monthly
Upon
· ~ce and 157-68 overall in eight
'1.ooo.oooa,wn Pr
jprs 111 Ol)lo State. .
Equal Value In Trade-In
'l Averill Roberts and Nikki ·Keyand Balance Fin811Cf1d Th;u
tOn scqred 17 points each, Stacie
Lending lnstitutiofiS.
lloward II ·antf Erin lngwei'SCII 10
Taxes &amp; FHI Noi Included
'r 'O~io State (15-3 overall, 7-2
~ferenee). Emma UI21111.00 Kim
~had 10 points apip for the
J1Qdsicn &lt;12-6. 3-6).
: ·Keyton Scored her l,OOOth point
OhiO Slate wben she 1111de the
t shot in a one-and-one situation
th 4:34 to play. She has 1,001
~ints for her career.
·
,
, , 'Ohio State iOOk a 22-3 lead with
Dl:26 10 play in the flfSt half. lndi·cut the margin 10 40-31 wi!h
, remaining; but the Buckeyes
on a
to make the half.t_ COLUtf[BUS, Ohio {-AP} -

tract for the rcrnuindcr of the sen-

son.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERSSigned Alex SLivrins, forw:ord, to a
I0-day contmct:
!lOCKEY
N"lion:ol Hockey Lc:1~ue
HARTFORD WHALERS Named Steve Weeks goaltcnding

Sale Ends MondayHurry in for best selection!·
•
•
•
•
•

t.

com.:h.

NEW YORK RANGERSCraig Duncanson, left wing, from
Binghamton of the American
Hockey League.

ALL home and car stereo speakers
ALL extension and PA speakers
ALL CB and scanner speakers
ALL replacement speakers
ALL subwooters &amp; amplffled models
on1~

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•.·---1,....
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~LISTie_',

'

PRESIDENT'S DAY
MONDAY, FEB. 15, 1993

SILVER ·BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS,OHIO .

.. .•

.Ohio VaHey Bank

.Unity Savings &amp; Loan Co.

IT'S BUSINES8-A8-USUAL AT ALL oTHER AME'S STORES .
SALE CONDUCTED BY NASSI BERNSTEIN COrJ1PANV INC AS AGENT

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(POINT ,PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

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•Star Bank

Sorry. rto •aon c nec~~cs

ROBERT M. liOLLEY,
M.D •
'

•

I

three-game suspension for Ponland
rookies Dave Joh.nson and Tracy
Murray, wj10 were reprimanded
and fined by the Blazers on Thursday for violating team 'rules with
their involvement in a teen-age sex
scandal last inonth in Salt Lake
City. .
Jerome Kersey and rookie Reggie Smith also were fined. The Salt
Lake aitomey' s office decided not
to file criminal charges against the
four Portland players following an
investigation for alleged sexual
misconducl
.
,
Knicks 104, B11lls 98
New York took advantage of

Rookie Andre• Kovalcnko, Mats
Sundin and Owen Nolan also
scored for Quebec, winless ' in i1~1
last three games.
1c

·a9

The Following Financial
lnsti.tutions Will Be Closed

.

if~iri:r:...-::~

avo1ded
.. .. v.
~~
· arblti'&amp;tion hearing that liad been '
t f~ Tuesday. ··
· .
'87 Ford .E-150 Van.•.'13r-.,.
' .
~ Morris had asked for $1.6 mil- .
Ford~ LX......~
Jlon iq arbitration, while the Reds
4000R• I . ~
~offered Sl.l million.
.
:~ He bit .271 with six home runs
Ford Escort Lir. ;..~ .
J¥1d S3. RB Is in 115 gaines last 1 '90. 2000R
~BI:, going on the disabled list
t~ice. He fractured his right hand
'89 Oltls
.
J.
ihen he,was hit Atl!il•15 by a pitch
Defta
88
Royale
.
.:...
ftom the. Braves' Cllarlie Lei brandt
.
.
iild pUlled his left. harnsbing Aug.
l( while Strell;hing in fhe on-d~k I 'A!I•r.I=O Metro........,_..'63"-nt
Clircle.
..
.: Second baseman Sip Rolicr.ts ·
1
!fid llitc~er Ti\11 Belcher are the '90;Dodge Spirit...: ..... 115111Dnt , .
remaming Reds in arbitration. .
.
1
.

SILVER.BRIDGE PlAZA

these stores:

~rd~~':o:~t~w:J~:rJo;~
Calgary defenseman A1 Ma¢1n1 ,

.

t~.. .. ~ -~ !'-,/1·..... ~
~,qreement Fnday

. On/yat

until giving up all three Islanders bling Winnipeg.
goals in the third period .pn 12
Eric Weinrich, Pat Verbeek:2 .
shots.
··
Yvon Corriveau and Terry Yake''
Sergei Nemchinov also scored also scored fo r Hartford. Burke
for the Rangers. Brad Delgamo had made 43 saves, several fron1 closei!
the other Islander goal.
range.
·
·d
Canucks3,Sabres 1
Rookie Teemu Selanne scored"'
Pavel Bure assisted on all three both Winnipeg goals in the third•
goals,.and Vancouver kil~ed three period.
penaiues m the last 10 mmutes to
The loss was the third in a row"'
hold off .Buffal~.
.
' for the Jets, 1-5-1 since a 10-game2
Pat LaFonuune ~ot h1s 35th goal unbeaten string last month. Win-•l
for Buffalo. Anatoh Scmenov, Petr nipeg's last victory was Jan. 30 ai'
Nedved and Doug L1dster had Hartford.
.,,
goals for Vancouver.
Flames 4, Nordiques 4
Whalers 6, Jets 2
Calgary, getting two goals•
Goaltender Sean Burke was out.
j!
standing and Nick Kypreos scored ap1ece from The.oren F_leury anu,,
· as _Hartford ended a .our,
Gary
Roberts,
tw1ce
en streak
to sox
· extended
games. Its unbcatgame lo song str eak agams1 s1urn. Martin Ruciri$ky saved a poini ..~

.

~ver

t'

Reed, outfielder, on onc-yc:or contnlCL'i.

.... -

~

Rangers 4, the New York Islanders
3; Vancouver 3, Buffalo 1; Hartford 6, Wimipeg 2, and Calgary 4,
Quebec 4.
Rangers 4,Islanders 3
The Rangers, getting two goals
from Adam Graves, brote ·a sixgame winless streak.
The Rangers' top line of Graves,
Mark Messier and Tony Amonte
accounted for seven points.
Messier had three assists and
Amante added a goal and an assist
as the th ird-place Rangers snapped
1
an 04-2 sump.
·
Derek King and Jeff Norton
scored for the Islanders in the-last
six minutes.
Mike R'chter
· ·
'
was th e wmmng
goaltender and looked unbeatable

,

'
.
o BLANKET PROTECTION - Buffalo Sabres Wayne Presley,
lel't, looks on as teammate Brad May (27) rides the back or VIlli- ·

Certified Pdblie

WARREN 61 LOGAN 47
. LOGAN - The Warriors raced 10
a 17-9 first period lead and gradually increased the margin to 25
points in posting their second
league triwnph of the season.
Warren led by quarter scores of
17-9, 35-21 at halftime, and 51-28
entering the final quarter. llie only
slats available on Warren showed
the~ shooting 45 percent (25-56),
making seven of 15 free throws
and grabbjng 19 rebounds, nine by
Jason Harris.
·
The Chieftains connected on
just 17 of 52 shots .for 32 percent,
II of 19 at the line, and raking off.
36 rebounds, led by Dustin Dennis •
eight.
Jason Burroughs took game
scoring honors with 21 points for
the 'winners while Tim Mauck led
Logan with 17.
·
Box score;
WARREN (61) - Chan Wentz
2-1-0-7; Chip Robinson 2-r-2-9;
Jeremy Gaul 1-0-2; Jason Pyatt 30-6; Jason Burroughs 6-2-3-21 ·
Jason Harris 4-1-9; Scott Spence;

.

,......

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer ·
The San Jose Sharks have a
chance to make NHL history on
Sunday. Of course, they would
rathef not.
·•
With a 17-game losing streak,
the Sharks have tied the futile
record of the 1974-75 Washington
Capitals in their expansion ,year.
Now the second-year Sharks can
break the dubious-mark at Winnipeg, putting their franchise into a
class by itself.
"We ~bably felt the pressure
of the millstone that is being put
around our neck," Sharks coach
r ...nroe Kingston said after Friday
-:-;-h:trs 6-01oss at Edm onton,
mg
Elsewhere . 1.t was the
. New. York

Tral.l Blazers bou.nc·e
back with 111-104 win

"

· L~~· Angell

614·221-oa••

Sports transactions

;':Friday's Sports Transactions
• :•
BASEBALL
!
American League
~= BALTIMORE ORIOLESIri:&lt;.ited 11-!i~c Flanagan, pitcher, to
s~nng traonmg:
• .· KANSAS CITY ROYALSAcq uircd Felix Jose, omr.clder, and
Ciaig Wilson, infielder, from the
~~. Louis Cardinals for Gregg Jeffdrics, third baseman, and Ed Ger!olil, outfielder. Designated Rico
~ossy, infielder, for assi gnment.
1 ~ SEATTLE
MARINERSl'&gt;$rccd to terms with Jay Buhner,
outfielder; and Norm Charlton,
)~n Cummings, Reggie Harris,
~(&gt;ger Salkeld and Dave Wain~~u se, pitchers; "nd Greg Pirkl,
tirst baseonan-c:Hcher, on onecyear
t ontntcts.
• ::
Natiunul Lea~ue
; ·' CINCINNATI REDS- Agreed
~&amp;terms with H"l Morris, first

··

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

m

Sunday Times-Sentlnei- Page-C'l=!

Sharks have chance to make history today ~

start

Wa"en Local post SEOAL wins

· With just one league contest
remaining the SEOAL championship race,now feaJures Gallipolis
Jllld Athens at the top of the heap
f9!lowing Friday's action which
!{lw the Blue Devils slip past Marlefta 47-40, Athens edged Jackson
M-59, and Warren Local blast the
J!;opn Chieftains 61-47. Both the
&amp;Iue Devils and Bulldogs stand 111
1-2, Marieua is 6-3, Jackson 111 3-6,
.,Yith Logan and Warren tied at2-7.
.· In next Friday's league finale
~ackson will visit Gallipolis,
· A:thens goes to Logan, and Warren
Local takes the short jaunt to Marl-

~;:

"the guys to beat." Pole-sitter
Kyle Petty in ll Pontiac and Dale
Jarrett in a Chevy rail strong
enough to finish third in their qualifiers, even though their starting
spots were secun:.
Six former Daytona 500 winnt!'S
will be in the lineup Sund$y. Three
of them are in the next four spots
behind the Chevrolets of Gordon
and -Eamh;trdt.
Former winners Bill Elliott and
Geoff Bodine have the third row in
Fords, with Ernie lrvan on the outside of row four in a Che&gt;'y. Ken
Schrader. the runner-up in 1989 to
Darrell Waltrip, will
inside
1rvan on the fourth row.
. FATAL CRASH· Debris ftlel ofrtlean of
Davey Allison, last year's winRodney Wblte (!J5) and Joe Booher (91) after
ner, has the inside of row six irt a
tbey coUide enter11111 tum ODe OD tile secoild ..p
Ford. Waltrip will start 26th in a
or Friday's Florida 200 Dash race at Daytou
Chevrolet and '1990 winner Derrike
· ponracc.
,
Copewill start 35th in a Ford.
B.
o
oher,
51,
was
inyolved
in
a
Activities
at
the
traCk
on
Friday
beat.'•
The front row could include · were marred by the death of driver three-car crash on the second lap of
Joe Booher from injuries in a sup- the Florida 200 N AS CAR Dash
series race. He was pronounced
dead of massive intemal and head
injuries at Halifax Mec!ical Center.
For complete, professional individual and
poiniS.
2-1-5; Steve Shotwell 1-0-2.
business tax preparation ~sistance call
Statistics show Athens shooting TOTALS 21-4-7-61.
"
50 percent (27-54), inCluding four
LOGAN (47) - Tim Mauck 4of nine from three point range, hit- 1-6-17; Ed Downs 2-0-4; Chad
tin~ three of eight freebies, and Zimmerman 1-1-3; Dustin Dennis
·-~ L W. QNNAMO
clauning 26 rebounds ..Jackson fin- 0-1-1; Tim Nessley 0-1-0-3; Ryan
ished with 18 of 52 fielders for 34 Carpenter 2-0-4; Tom Smith 4-1-9;
AnORNEY AT LAW, .
Accountant
percent, including five of 22 from Brooks Burris 2-2-6. TOTALS 15long range. They converted 20. of 2-11-47.
736 Second Ave. ·
\ · Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
B t:nt Broad SlrMI,
24 at the li~·'alid pulled down 31
Score by quarters:
SuHe900
' (614) ~8677
rebounds, HQwe getting II.
Warren . 17 19 15 10-61
Columbus,
Ohio
Opeo 9-5 Weekdays; Evenings and Saturday by
The box score;
Logan
9 12 7 19-47
OLAW
'
1
·800-886
ATHENS (61)- Nick Toth 2Reserve score; Warren 46,
appointment.
(1· 800 886 052e)
0-4; Matt Bucey 0-1-1; Sunny Kalu Logan 36
12-0-24; Justin Scholl 2-2-1-11;
'
Pat McHugh 7-2-1-21. TOTALS
23-4-3-61,
.
By O•cle1 01 US B~nkruptcy Cuc,rt So D1stroct of t j ! Ch· .. , '·''fll'.', 1 fill n ql1 '&lt;IIEl·lllh .Hr:tl
JACKSON (59) - Dave Kight
3-2-8; Matt Walburn 2-1-12-19;
Dave Seymore 2-1-1-8; Robbie
Travis 2-0-4; Tommy Hill 2-1-5;
Brad Howe.l-3-0-11; Dennis Crabtree 0-4-4. TOTALS 12-5-20-59.
Score by quarters:
Athens
11 . 11 18 21 -61
Jackson 10 19 9 21 ·- 59
Reserve score: Jackson 39,
Athens 36

"It proved to a lot of other people that maybe Jeff did make the
right decision," Gordon said. "I
definitely think that I did."
The win gave the Vallejo, Calif.,
native the third starting spot on
Sunday and made him at 21 the
youngest driver to win a Daytona
qualifier.
,
The 1991 Grand Nationaii'I)Okie
of tbe year made his Winston Cup
debut at the final race last year, fmishing 31st because of a wreck. ·
Eamhard~ for one, figures Gordon could be a factor on Sunday.
"He's good, he's been consistent. He's been good 'all week,"
Earnhardt said. But he won't predict the top competitors. •
"It'~ goirig to be a mix of different ones I thirtk," he said. "You
really don't know who you're
going to be racing or the guys 10

,.::;

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

I

, . ,•• t:l
a NH 'It
• Ideal tor camping .
travel or too Sites

05--

...... -

• All40 CB channels
• HiiiO power awilch

saves on blllenes

""· ,._. •21·111S

�•

Page

ce

•
Sunday Tlmea Sentinel

February 14, 1993

W"'

OH-Polnt

lead in .Hope Classic

Kite, Elkington Saa•
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP)- By wilh a different ~man amateur
his own estimate, Torn Kite is play- team before lhe field is cut for the
ing some of lhe best golf of his 22· pros-only finish Sunday at the
year pro tour career.
Arnold Palmer course at PGA
"I hate to say it and jinx myself, West.
but I've been on a stretch for lhe
But even some of lhe best golf
last yeilr where I've shot more low by lhe man who holds lhe game's
scores- 62's, 63's, 64's- than ali-time money-winning title and
I!ve ever had," he said Friday. "I the U.S, !)pen championsllip w~
wouldn't go so far as io say it's an not enough to separate him from
easy game, but right now it's the lhe rest of lhe field.
Ten others are within three
easiest it's ever been for me:"
As a demonsuation, he scored StrokeS ilf the lead wilh IWO rounds
eight birdies and an eagle in an S- to go, ancl seven othUs ·_ includunder-par 64 lhat lifted him into a ing Curtis Strange and Mark
tie with Steve Elkington after 54 O'Meara are only four back.
holes of lhe five-day, 90-hole Bob
. As a furlher illu1uation of lhe
exceptionally low .overall scoring
Hope Classic.
Each has a 198 total, 18 under - exceptional even for lhis tradipar under lhe format lhat has lhe tionally low-scorinj! tournament pros playing one round on each of is the projected f1gure needed to
four desert resort courses. each day make the cut for the finn! round

Sunday.
" It's a track m~t ouuhere. You
, After three days, that number just run as fast as you can."
•
stands at 8 under par. It projects to
Despite their fast pace, Kite and
10, possibly I I under, being neces- Elkington held only a two-sttoke
sary to play the final round.
advantage over Masters champ
;
','It's pan. of lhe lltitude here," Fred Couples and six olhers.
Elkington S8ld after an eagle on the
. Couples had a 68 at India'
f1rs1 hole touched off a 66 at Wells and was tied with Payn~
Bermuda J?u!les. "Xou get in a · S,tewart, Wayne Levi, Billy Glas•
funk.- a birdie funk:
.
son, Bob ·Lohr, Kelly Gibson an~
· Kne, who comp1ied h1s 64 .at ' Scou Gump.
;
lndf:ln Wells, agreed.
./
Glasson 'and Gibson had 66'~
. These golt' ,courses are '!?' eli • and Gump 67 at lhe Arnold Palmer
f•c.uit ~Y today s ~dards, Kite . course at PGA West; Lohr and
satd. They don t have the feaJ: Levi each shot 66 at Tamarisk!
factor.
. .
:.
Stewart 64 and Couples 68 at Indi"They're m great cond!llon. · an Wells.
:
:ne greens are great The.,weather
Veteran Lanny Wadkins shot~
ts greaL There are more gliod play- at Indian Wells and was tied at 201
ers. The courses have no defense.~· with Dave Runimelis and Grani
he S8ld,lhen shrugged. ·
Waite of New Zealand. Waite had
64 and Rummells 69, both at·
T$1flarisk.
:
·_..:::.co::::n:::.:rin=ue:.::.d.:..:.fro::::m.:..:C::...:·7:..;..
·· - - - - - - - - - - - · Suange slipped to a 71 at th~
dan was fined $10,000 and lost SeanRooksadded,l4pointsitnd 13 and 10 assists and Omzen Petrovic Palmer course, but remained in
anolher $48;480 because of lhe sus- rebounds for the Mavericks, who scored 20 points fOr the Nets. Terry touch wilh the lead lit 202. Marlt
pension.
. .
have the worst record in lhe NBA, Mills had 22tu:
'points · and 10 O'Meara, who has lost thilltoumai
ment in a playoff each of the Jasi
Scottie Pippen, like J ordaii an 4-42.
rebounds for lhe tons.
two years, had lhe same total after
All-Star starter, scored 35 points
Robert Parish, c(!arged with Cavaliers UO, ucks 98
a 64 at the Palmer course.
for the Bulls; playing at home after possession of marijuana Friday in Nuggets 126, 76ers 122
a nine-game road trip. .
Boston. took his regular sPot as lhe Hornets 116, Heat 107
Celties 109, Mavericks 100
Celtics' stariing center and had
Boston )"On at Dallas as Alaa eight points and I 5 rebounds.
Abdelnaby scored 24 points and Pistons 106, Nets 97
Reggie Lewis 22, including seven . Detroit snapPed a five-game losin a span of 1: I I late in lhe game.
mg streali:, winning a remateh wilh
Terry Davis, who left the game visiting New Jersey behinll Isiah
in the fourth quarter with back Thomas' 21 points and 14 assists.
spasms, Jed Dallas wilh 21 110ints.
Kenny Anderson had 24 points

"Farm/llusiness

~im.es - ,.eutin.el

Februa,Y 14,1993 .

~.---~--

N ew

Accountants are at
root of huge losses

Trail Blazers...

NEAR MISS • Australiaa Steve Elkla&amp;foD arlmaces after missa birdie putt at the 18th bole at Bermuda Duai!S Country Club
l':c1&lt;'r111•n• during ibird rouad play or the Bob HoJ)e Classic. (AP)
•

fsmoking will be banned .·
jlt OSU stadium, arena
Afena. All smoltiDg in !hose buildCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) king will be banned at Ohio ings will be eliminated under t.he
urn and SL John Arena effec· new policy, which was announced
· .,.i(ve July 1, Ohio State University Frid3y.
The stadium and the arena_bolh
: ifficials have announced.
have
a "no-return" policy pro•J'i The change stems froQI a policy
: .11pproved Feb. 4 by university hibiting smokers or anyone else
stees. The policy. which gradu· who leaves from re-entering.
Paul Krebs, Ohio Swe assistant
y will lake effect during lhe next
athieti.
c director, said information
!:~!x montlis, prohibits smoking in
about
the new policy will be
liJirnosl all university buildings.
included
in football and basketball
'"'"' Smoking had been permitted in
ticket
applications.
concession areas of Ohio Stadium
and in designated areas ef St J'!hn

COORDINATES

SACRAMENTo, Calif. (AP) Mitch Richmond, the 'Sacramento
Kings ' leading scorer, will be sidelined 3-4 weeks wilh a broken 'light
lhumb. . •
Richmond was picked for his
fim NBA Ail-Star game. He was
replaced on lhe Western Conference team by Portland ' s Terry
Porter.
An examination revealed the
fracture after he banged it against
his knee in Thursday.'s victo)')' over
Atlanta. Richmond is averaging
21.9 points per game, 3.4 rebounds
and 4.9 assists.

Rac.1ne,
Ohio

CHAMPIONSHIP
RINGS.

-----Sports briefs _ _ _ _....
BASKETBALL
. DALLAS (AP) - Boston
Celtics center Robert Piuish said
the discovery of marijuana in a
package addressed to him would
not affect his role wilh lhe team.
Parish, who started Boston's
109-100 victory over Dallas, was
charged wilh marijuana possession.
Criminal complaints against Parish
and Healher Graves ·were filed in
Waltham Disuict Court in Massachusetts. Graves, 24, of Atlanta,
was with Parish at his home in
Weston, Mass., when police dis-'
covered lhe marijuana.
·

\n•

WELL WITH

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White or Black
Available At

THE SHOE CAFE
G~LLIPOLIS

LAFAYETTE MALL,
•·

hock I 21002, Loatlotl!

WAS
'11,61.9" NOW

?

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,

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1993 ACCW. :t

1993 DAKOTA 4x2 SPORT

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IWJITIIWICI RIIICif 01 'fill rw•
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1993 DODGE RAM 1SO
Sto~k t 37003, 2.9 V-6, Auto., Air Concl.
WAS
'14,775..

.
NOW

0
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199J CIUYAI

i ... t JHU, a.1t1at1 ... latr.if

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l.ttdl • 11002, ...... 11c. c·,.., "· n

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Weekly observations

,,

·u

.,

. a-.

Farm laws important :; ~
to all area landowners~~

·PTOlJUCeTS reminded to
check compliance plans

Chapman, Abels atte~d
session in Maryland

_f....

Stock t 21001, 2.0, 1·6. LOt• Of btresl

Stock tl 36016, 3.9 V-6, Air Centl.

WAS
'12,26011 NOW

POMEROY' : Davis-Quickei needs of its clients," Kirk said.
;;o.gency,Inc., lias recently contract; • "Our newest associates at Davisto represent Afrtrmative Insur- Quickel Agency Inc. are uniquely
Com~y. according to Jef:
qualified to represent Afftrmative
A. Kirk, CIC, dirt1ctor, sales and will provide an opportunity for
marketing. Davl&amp;-Qulckel more people to benefit from the
Inc, is now licensed to sell programs we offer."
insurance products HarrisQn retires
CHESHIRE • Norman H. Tarr,
II 111 organization
well knoWn for II$ pofessionalism manager at lhe Ohio Valley Elecand service 10 il5 cllen15. We ,re tric Corporation's Kyger Creek
pleased· to ·expand out sales foree Plant, rec~ntly announced the
throu&amp;h the appoinlmcnts of Davis- retirement of Clyde 0. Harrison,
e1Tective Feb. 1.
Quickel Agency Inc,," Kirk said.
Harrison joined OVEC in 1955 .
. ; Affirmative, a member of the
as
a laborer· in the labor depan-· ST
Shelby Insmance Group. is cUJmlt·
broker or Wiseman
ly represented by over 1000 dePen· ment. 1be foUoWin~ ~ear. he transEstate,
Inc., announces the
bent agents located throughout ferred to the O)ierations department
addition
of Patrick Cochran 10
Florida, Georgia, Iilinois, Indiana, as an auxiliary equipment operator.
Its
sales
staff; C6cbrlin Is a
Mississippi, Ohio, Tennessee, Vir- He advanced to equ•pment Operator
.
veteran
or the real estate
in 1967 and to unit supervisor in
ginia and Wisconsin.
industry
witb experience in
"Affltmative is well known for 1979. He is a native of Middleport
5!1les,
maria,ement
and t4ucaproviding outstanding service to its and served in the U. 5. Army .from
lion.
He
was
previously
omee
policyholders, as well ~ offering a 1953 IQ 1955. He and his wife,
manager or a local real estate
program geared specifically to the Nancy, reside at Rt. I, Middleport.
firm and c._urrently teaches
Real Estate PriDciples &amp; Prac!ices at the University or Rio
Grande. He Is a past president
.
'
.
\
or the Southeastern 'Ohio
•
. By STAN EVANS
time. Moreover, yields on intermedi·
Board of Realtors, Cochran, a
GAUJPOLIS--'Wbyislhisstock ate Treasuries have moved down
native or Gallla County,
resides with his wife, Joyce,
market so s.ttong and is it likely to again~ Any financial intermediary
an.d daughter, Sarah, on
remain so? The answeri appear to be which bot mws atlhe money market
M•lcbell Road.
cash and probably yell
rate and lends long will find !hose
1
Two forces are
spreads unsustainable. Thrifts, those.·
supporting highCr
~ebankerswhoarebeginning
iltock prices:
to hold their long term mongages and
ing money ratei.
irisuiance stocks, are likely to i:onimd strong cash
tinue to do well. The reinsurance
now
growth
industry in particular is an early canGALLIPOLIS - John·Chapman,
among businesses.
~for a cyclical turnaround.
M.T.
and Gene H. Abels, M.D.
In shon, cash is
Second, lhe Purchasing Managattended
a course on Echocardio·
· ers' Index for January was quite grapy and
buildingrapidlyin
Echoes at the
ihis ecat0111y.
positive for consumer cyclicals and, Heart House,Suess
a
learning
.of
' Write-oft's and FASB related ad· sooner or later, for capital spending. the American College of Center
Cardiolo·
· jusunenu are seriously distoning We still think resuucturing cyclicals gy, Bethesda, Md., in January.
!*Dings perceptions. While Standard will be a major 1993 market theme.lf
Sttess echo cardiography is a
t; Poor's SOO reponed.eamings per companies close operations that)ose melhod if visualizing the effect of
share have increased from $15.36 in cash, cash balances will build up. If exercise on the contraction of heart
1981 to a mere $18.04 for lhe four they subsequently pay down debt. muscle. This is used, in addition to
·quartt:rsended~l!ec.l~,after shareholders end up with greater infonnation from .the electrocardiotax cash flow rose 3.2 times over the equity value. New orders were the
gram done during exercise, as well
same period.
•
strongest in years and inventories as other info~tion, such as time
Dividends may be 70'1&gt; of unreal· · ticked down .. Buildiria, Malerials- of exercise, rise in BP and achieved
istically low repened earnings, but ·Cement, Media-Advehisina. Auiil heart rate.
The combination of exercise,
they are 30% of cash flows, weD Related, selected Airlines, ::Jc!!.~
EKG.
, and echocardiography
towardlhelowerpanofthehistorical Machinety,andRetail~
enables P.hysicians to more accurange. &lt;;orpOrationi are investing in sll6uid tJe. benef~,eiarics.
inventoriesandtechnolcyoutofinter·
Third, weslillthinkamajorchange rately dtfferentiate normal from
nally generated Cllh flow and they in lllll'kel elllfhasis is uaderway in abnormal coronary artery flow. It is
are also payina down debt. BqUity Heallh Care. Drill and Hospital well known lhlt the coronary disCIS!\ is the largest killer of people
~ . valllllion may be modest Supply StoCks are peskipg while
in lhis coulllry, so this comb1111110n
based on cash .now levels. Banks, Nursing Care anil'clllier heallh care Clll
be a quite useful teaL
fmdins llt1lo need for deposits, are IIW)a&amp;ement issues are caiTying the
This method avoids the expense
tumln&amp; them into mutuatlunds.
dlf. ·
and radiation involved with other
We $lill think tbo best equity stnll·
Foufth, smaller and mid-capstpeks exen:ise le8tS that are JocaUy •vailegy is to remain lvith Seeton whose are likely to eontiniJello ouqierfonn
proftunarginsarestronsandimprov-· their larger capitalization brethren.
Stephenson promoted
ing. We c:an think oC four dlslinct
We are modeltly Jllducing our
TechnQIOI)'sectcr~elghtini. Weare
CHESHIRE • Richard K .
Pint, in flnlncials, "go with the becomitlgco11cemedaboutthellkeli- Stepbenson has been promoted
Spread". A pnptlar view is that. the boodlhatthe~ofpersl1nal from 'equipment operator to unit
. ·Federal~ N"11nd the de- . computeuhlpmentlsunsustairulble. supervisor effective February I, ·
dlineiuhortnllllliDonlerlDhelpthe ~llmlllt tecb~ foe
. 111 11 on l993, at the Ohio Valley Electric
~~-.
Corporatioll'a Kyser Creek Plant,
'1""-,.systelll. A~llllliylisoC
let Services lltd CATV. We ~eeildlng to Nonnl!l H. Till', plant

Money Ideas

spend S4 billion over lhe next sev- Thursday ... The federal govern·
By DAN BLAKE.
eral
years to embellish its stores...
ment reports consumer prices, real
AP Business Writer
CcmiDgUp
earnings
and industrial production
NEW YORK - American corMonday
...
all
U.S.
financial
for
January;
December's rnen:hanporations have been reporting lhe
markets
are
closed
for
Presidents
dise
trade
figures,
and weeldy joblargest losses in history in. recent
day.
Autoiilakers
announce
sales
less
claims.
Federal
Reserve Board
weeks, but most of lhe dam~e has
figures
for
early
February.
Chairman
Alan
Greenspan
reports
been lhe result of a change m lhe
Wednesday
...
The
Commerce
to
the
Senate
Banking
Committee
way lhey add !heir numbers.
Nearly all the $23.5 billion lhat Department announces January on monetary policy.
General Motors Corp . .lost last housing starts. President Clinton Friday ... Treasury Secret3ry
year, for example, can be uaeed to pirches his ecOIIOmic slimulus plan Lloyd Bentsen speaks at National
the rulemaking of a little-known to a joint session_of .C ongrcu. Press Club luncheon. .
group lhat accountants call by its
acronym; FASB , (pronounced
FAZ-bee).
The seven accountants on lhe
Financial Accounting Standards
Board establish lhe rules lhat lhe
rest of the profession follows. The
idea is to take lhe creativity out of
creative accounting.
Under lhe old standard, companies didn't have to record their
obligation to pay heallh benefits to
retirees until the empioy,ees ·
' 1';,, 1
stopped working and started colJ.!U•I•' 1 ' I.
'
'dt '•'
lecting the benefits. That meant
\\'
·..
that while the companies knew
· they were .facing large e~penses in
the future they were delaying
recording it in·!heir financial state·
ments.
The new rule known as Financial Accounting Standard 106,
which companies had until this
year to adopt, makes them record
lhe expense of providing a benefit•
OVRC&amp;D RECEIVES $5,000 • ne Soli Cooserv1tioa Serviee•
as each employee earns it, rather
has givea tbe local resourc:e conaervation aDd development councU"
than when it's collected.
$~,000 to expaad their activities. Tile council has decided to use
To catch up with lhe new rule,
Ibis money to estabUsb a demonstration dry lire hydrant in eachcompanies also have to record the
county. Funds wW also be IYallable to soil and water OOIIservation
benefits you already earned
districts to sponsor ed!Jcational pro&amp;rams in natural resource '
That's where lhe h~ge one-time
management. RemaiDing funds will bt used to promote improved
charges come in:
forage management u weU u supporting other eouucil objectives.:
Companies can either record
accordlllg to Cbalrmu Danny Montgomery. The Obln Valley'
those previously earned benefits all
RC&amp;D Council senes Adams, Brown, Gallia, Highland, Jackson, 'J
at once, like GM did lhis past week
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto, and Vinton Counties. Pictured is'''
with a $22.2 billion charge, or
Pliul Whyte, council representative, receiving tbe check from Joe ,
spread it out over 20. years. Ford
Branco, soil couservatlon servke, state conservationist. Also in the •
picture Is Lowell Edminster, council coordinator.
'.
Motor Co. also recorded lhe bene·
•
fits charge in its $7.4 billion loss,
the second-largest in U.S. corporate
' history.
Some companies have reacted to
.the rule by reducing insurance coverage for workers, or. asking
employees lb pay higher premiums
ty agent wilh OSU Extension and. is
and deductibles. Some companies
By Constance Wbite,
currently the Chief · of the
are eliminating benefits for retirees.
GaUiaSWCD
Tic:ker
GAJ:LIPOLIS -·On Tuesday, Appalachian Improvement ComA busy week for General February 16, at 7 p.m., a program is mission. He 'is also the Farm BusiMotors.. Aside from its staggering being presented on farm laws. The ness Planning Analysis instructcr at
1992 loss, the automaker won an claSs is sponsored by lhe Gallipolis Tri-County Vocational School in
apology from NBC, which admit- FFA Alumni and Glenn Graham, Nelsonville.
ted its "Dateline NBC" program farm business planning analysis . We would. like to invite every· had rigged crash tests of lhe com· program Instructor of Buckeye one to this public meeting. The .
meeting location is the Gallia
pany's pickup tiucks. GM initially Hills Career Center.
pulled its advertising from NBC
Guest speaker for the evening is Academy High School Vocational
news shows, but reinstated lhe ads Don Davis. Davis is a former coun- Ag classroom.
and dropped a defamation suit. In
Michigan, a j'udge blocked GM
from closing. its Willow Run
assembly plant. ·... Germany
acknowledged it is in a recession,
predicting a shrinking economy
!his.year and higher joblessness....
By E.A. (Lisa) Collins,
Contact the AS CS Office at
Sears, Roebuck and Co. lost
GaUia ASCS County,
446-8686 wilh any questions.
·
$3.93 billion' last year because of
Executive Director
NOTE• The final date to appJ¥
trouble in its retailing bU$iness and
GALLIPOLIS - Producers are ror new farm burley tobacco quotas
lhe effects of Hurricane Andrew. It
reminded
that in Jnparing'for their IS Tuesday, February 16, 1993,
.
couldn't blame accounting
changes, but said it intended to 1993 crops they should review
!heir. farm ·plans to insure compli- R. C. Harrison retires ·
ance with lhe highly erodible land
. GALLIPOLIS - Richard C. Har.'
provisions.
nson, of 1712 Jackson Pike Bid:
Each producer who participates well, concluded nearly 35 'years
in the feed grain or conservation w1th Ohio Power Co. with his'
programs or raises tobacco has a retirement as an assistant shift ·
Soil
Conservation plan on all high- operating engineer at Gavin PlanL :
able. The Medical Plaza has been
ly
erodible
land. Please remember
performing lhe suess echocardioA native of M'!rgan County,.
when
planning
1993 c~ that lhe Harnson started hiS career as a.
gram since August of 1989.
Gene Abels, John Chapman and Sodbuster Provision of lhe current laborer at Muslcin&amp;Jim River Pilllt
Charlotte Gilley, R.N. have been farm law requires all HIGHLY in 1958. He progressed through:
performing Dobutamine echo tests ERODIBLE LAND (HEL) be various joh classifications in ·the
since May of 1992. This involves cropped according to a SCS farm Operations Dept. there before·
lhe adminisuation of·Dobutamine plan. Now is. a good time to get uansferring to Gavin Plant as a unit
·
lhrough lhe vein at varying rates. plans out and study them. Produc- supervisor in 1973.
ers
who
fail
to
follow
their
plans
Harrison was promoted to
This simulates exercise by increas·
ing pulse. blood pressure and lhe will be ineligible for any USDA assistant shift operating engineer in
force of musCle contraction. This is benefits. (including burley tobac~o 1992. Alt~ough one career has ·
especially useful in people lhat price sullpon) on ALL farms lhey ~nded, .Harrison will be plenty busy •
cannot exercise, such as !hose wilh have an Interest in, even if the farm 10 retuement as the full-time ·
arthritis, back problems, circulatory in violation is not in lhe program. owner-operator or a local driveRandom spot checks are conducted lhrough and carry-out store.
problems and fung disease.
He enjoys bowling and is a
The Medical Plaza is the only by both the Soil Conservation Serfacility performin&amp; this within a 40 vice and the Agricultural Stabiliza· member of lhe Fraternal Order of
Eagles.
•
tion 8i. Conservation Service.
mile radius.
;

insurance firm
represent AIC

Lot!"

1993 DYNASTY L.E

?'

The recently completed 50
by 100 square-foot building at
252 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, (top photo) contains
modern equipment for tbe
Norris-Northup Dodce-Jeep
Eacle dealership's new body
shop. Chris Stanley is manag. er or the raciUty. Stanley said
''we now bave new paiDt•making capabJUties (baked on) and
can baadle up to 10 vehicles at
a tinie." Stanley aDd NorrisNor~hup Dodge-Jeep Ea~;Je
dealer Mike Northup satd,
"the new ·body sbop is avail. able for all makes and models." Three body men are
employed in tbe structure,
located&lt;bebiDd the main facility • Kerry Ours, _Gallipolls
(left); Roy McCarty, Oak Hill
and Cole Bartrum, Gallipolis.
OperatinJ, hours are trom 8
a.m. unhl 5 p m., Monday
tgbrough Friday•

Ran
Can
''Save
You

Resides

Section D

' .,

,-.....,

.... M

i!OW ~r ~ 111 ~~
4urina u~ tee : IXllltpr¢11 u...

1111

~g ~-~· ~m

~.,.t to .,,..,.... w.,....t. •0

~-

I

'S1ephen10n jo'Jned OVEC in
w.Partboflnttlme,d"fn''r~~~~e~ makeupthedJlfaence,modesllddl· 1978 as a laborer in the labor
below the Fed Funduue, ulp dons are belni llllllll .to Buildins deplianent Ia 1979 he aanafemcl
. theprivalellllllteJicdllleldoWR. Credit Cydicala aild Consumer to lhe operations department u a
I;lcpolit-colllplt!d"'can•bor; G~ (dill Extended Care llld utility opentor. During lhlt same ·
rpwina coll&amp;pled. So loti&amp; u the Media poups). ,
year. he advanced to auxiliary
~ life on depolillliti at or
(Mr. Evant II a nnanc181 con· _ eqtllF-rator. In 1985 he
llelow the fed finis life, ~ •ltaat ror MerriH LJ11cii·Jia their wu
to equipment open.
lj)reltds are likely to rent11n quire Gllllpolllollkt,Hecanbtreaehed · tor. tephenson resides at S69
favonble. That nlay be for I long 11 446-11 "1
. ROUIII Lane, Cheshire.

'

.

"

Doni .ud Rollirt E. lAe, ll't prt~et~ted c:ertlfl.
caltl tor e!*pletwll tM l.ltn 11oJ he~ Ser·
vice Scltoal by AI DittwC 1 , w=alfr.

FACTORY SERVICE ftAINEP • O'Dell
Lumber, loeated oa 1111 Mala Slrett In
Pomm~y, llal opeaed a 11111-11 e Mnlct center.
Here JeR to rlabt, ~ ol ~ emplo)Pees, Crall

\

r

'

)

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, ~oint Pleasant, wv

February 14, 1993
Page D2-8unday limes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport G•lllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

February 14, 1.1183

WASHINGTON (AP) -Lean·
er iamb may be on the way for
health-conscious consumers as a
result o( wade done by AgricUitural
Research Service geneticists.
The researchers are working
now on a way 19 predict whetherlambs will~ fat or thin.
"One way to do Utat is with a
genetic marker - a specific gene
that correlates with how lean an
animal .will likely be," said AR.S
.genetictst Gary D. Snow'!et. who IS
at the, U.S. Sheep Experunent Sta·
·lion near Dubois, Idaho. ,
The genetic marker could help
researchers select the best animals
for future breeding, and also guide
fll!11lers in feeding their lambs diets
that keep them trim, ·says a report
on Snowder ' s work in a recent
' issue of Ag~iculturai Research

'

ma~~~er and colleagues at Utah

;

'

sheep and iamb inventory in the
United States at the first of this
year totaled 10.2 million head,
down 5 percent from a year earlier,
the Agriculture Deparunent reports.
However, the valLIC of sheep and
lambs rose 10 $716 million, 9 percent above a year earliea', according
to the Agricultural Statistics Service.
.
. .
The 1992lamb crop of7.2S mil·
lion hC!'d v.:as do"f" S percent fn?m
1991, tt satd. This com~. v.:•th
the lowest level of 7.21 nnlhon
head set in 1988. .
'
.
The 1992 lambing rate was 1!)2
per 100 ·4i~one. year old and
older Of,lliand !an. 1, 1992, compared wtth 103 m 1991. .
_
The n~mber of operauons wtth
sheep dunng 1992 totaled 101.040,

1·I

N

and~

down 4 percent from 1991
a record low.

1

WASHINGTON (AP) ..,.. U.S .
dairy expOrters may ftnd 1993 mar'
li;eting opporwnities in Mexico due
to trade liberalization, improved
economic conditions ~ -peso sta·
bility, say trade experts.
·
"U.S. cheese exporters may
expand exports if they offer a prod·
uct that· is competiuve in quality
and price," says a recent report in
AgExporter magazine put out by
the Foreign Agricultural Service.
It added that U.S . exporters
"should find good opportunities
among the growing Se$meitt oC
pizza shops under francbtSC agree

I

••

.

•

h t ·
t
ew-fiea
pump
c
u
s
,
'
.
costs . or·consume··~

!

.

;

.
.

r

.

SU_N DAY p,u zzL·ER

.

:Kyger.Creek employees are honored

.

GALLIPOLIS- The second
major phase of reconstruction work
at the Ariel Theatre was launched
this week when carpenters began
making repairs and removing old,
damaged plaster from the structure.
The workets, mostly volunteers,
h,avc been replacing the old wood
lath lattice work with lath made of
metal in preparation of plaster
work which will begin later this
month·.
The Ariel's 14-inch-thick plaster
coated walls are
responsible
for the historic theater s acciustics.
. Every ~!tempt is being made to
replicate the look and finish of the
original walls. Tite piaster formula
has changed slightly over the years,
but the application is still the same
laborious three-layer method that
was used when the Ariel was ftrst
built in 1895.
- Starting Feb. 20, volun!CCI' work
parties will meet every Saturday at
the theater to strip and finish wood,
paini and do other tasks. For more
infonnation, call the Ariel Theatre
at 446-ARTS ,

HAMMER TIME - Ariei voluateer Joe
Frank of Rio Grande b!mtmen itp extra-dense
• dry wall in the baleonv or the Ariel Theatre

recently i,tt preparation ·ror plaster work whieh
·
_wiD be done later Ibis mnntb.

Gallia-Meigs Head Starters learn
lesson in assault prevention

,. Ei',':::.red

lty tlte Gallla Soli and Water
·~
Diltrkt, Is located 110111ewbere ia
-,,
C011aty. ladi•iduals wl5biag to partlci·
1• • tile WNIIIJ eoatat may do so by&amp;UfSSing
•, ille ,.,.,, owaer. Jast ••II, or drop off your
~c
tlte l)all)' Sentlael, Ill Court St.,
,
.,, Oltlo, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
TriH8e, US Tltlrd A ¥e., Gallipolis, Oltlo,
dQI, ,_. 7011
wiD' a $5 prize from tbe

..

I"''

STATE Of OHIO
DEPARTMENT o.TRi.NsPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio

GALLIJ'OLIS
Keeping
strangers an atm's distance away
was just one of (he many Jesse . s
children of the Galiia-Meigs Head
Start Program learned last week
from Monica Dodrill and Phyllis·
Honchul of the Community Assault
I'fevcntion Team.
·
. Through song, skits and the use
of dolls, the CAP team taught, the .
children they have rights in regard
to the unwanted touch of others and
that they should not be afraid 10 tell
someone they trust if such an expc- '
~)'icnce should ever happen 10 them.
• The service is )ust one of many
; such events prov1ded by the local
; Head Start Program for children
: qetwccn the ages of three arid five
·whose family income falls within
'·the Head Start guidelines.
In addition 10 the CAP program,
Head Star_t contracts with a number
of other local health care agencies
to provide children with serviced
such as physical and dental exams
and follow-up, urinalysis, appropriate screenings for blood lead and
.iron levels, Tuberculosis testing
and immunization updates and
speech and heating services.
The program also proxides families with requested health and
nuuitional information and informs
them o'f other availa·bie service
agencies which might be able to
assist the family in meeting their
own needs.
Head Start continues to accept
applications for enrollment to fill ·
vacancies as they become available
throughout the school year. For
more information, contact Gallia
Center Manager Lillie Murray at
256-6186 or Kay Rowe at the central office in Gallipolis at 4466674.

. ASSAULT PREVENTION - Monica Dodrill, standin'g, and
Phyllis Honchui of the Community Assault Prevention Team .perform a skit Friday afternoon for chii\lren in the Gallia-Meigs H~ad
Start Program. The skit was to educate children concer01~g
unwanted touches from others. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevm
Pinson)

RVHS' student ·attends
national conference
~

...

.

'

Cont-ISaiM

Utlaf Catly ~*&gt;· IS.12e

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
BRF~ESt81(8)

Saoled propaoolo wUI be
r-rved attM ollldo of tlie
Director ol th'o Ohio
Depo;tmont of Trine•
porlotlan, Cohimbua, Ohio,
until 1~ :00 A .ll~ Ohio
Standard . nmo, tueeclly,
!Iorch 2, 1113, for lm·
prov-onll In:
Gafllo Co~nty, Ohio for
lmpro'ilng HCdan GAL·2111..55, Stole Route 218 In
Horrloon Townohlp, by
grodlng, drolnlng, paving
wllh oaphoU concroll on •
bllumfnouo oggr-te bne
end by conafiuctlng Bridge
No. GAL.-21~&amp;2, I lingle
1p11n prntrnHd concrete
box bum bridge on oeppecl
pile obutmonll (1p11n •z•-o•,
roadwoy 34 '-o•, bo1woon
guordrolla), over Bulltkln

WASHINGTON, D.C.· Andrea
Hudson of Cheshire attended the
National Young Leaders Confer- ·
ence from Feb. 9-14, iii Washington, p.c. .
1
Hudson is a junior at River Val·
ley Higli School. Her clubs and
activities include Arts Club, Beta
Club, Drama Club, FHA/HERO.
and softball. Making a donation
toward Hudson's trip was Old
Kyger Freewill Baptist. '
Having demonstrated academic
achievement, leadership and citizenship, Andrea wiD bo among 350
outstanding high school stu~nts
from across the nation at the c:dn·
ference sponsored by the Conpcs. sional Youth 1 eadenhip councll.
The theme of the National
Youni~ers conference was ·
of Tomorrow Meet·
"The
ing ·the Leaders of Today".
Throughout the silt-day conference,
student$ met with key leaden and
newsmakers from ll!c lhree bronch·
es of government, the media and
the diplomatic corps.
'
.
Hijlhiights of the program
included welcoming remarks liom
a Member of. Congress on the Floor
of the United State~ House of Representalives and a panel diaeUSiion

•-btr

Creek.

Bidding 11
Blcldlng on thl.o proJect to
reetrfclld to Dlndventoged ·
Bualnou Enterprlau
(DBEt) cerdfted 11 DBEt. In
occordonce wllh the Sur,_ Tronaportollon Uniform
Rotocotlon Aulollnce Act
of 1887, and 41 CFR, Part 23
and qualified to bid with
ODOT under Chopter 5525
of the Ohio Revtaect Code.
Tho Ohio Deportment of
Tronapartatlon hereby noll·
fin ,111 blddora tho! It will
afflrmotlvoly lnauro that In ·
any contract entered Into
purauont to thla · adver·
tla-n~ minority bualne11
onterpriiH will .b e offorded
lull opportunity to aubmlt
blda In roepon11 to 1hla
· lnvltollon end will not be
dlocrlmlnlled agiolnat on
1ha.grounda of rece, color,
or notional origin In
con•ld•lllon for en eward.
Minimum wage ro)el lor
thla proJect have bean
predetermined 11 required
by tow and are ••• forth In
tho bid propo.. l. "The dote
oot for completion of this
work ahalf be ott forth In
the'blddlng/ropaul."
Plana an Spaclflcatlona
ore on ftlt In the O.pllrtmont
of Tronapartotlon and the
office of the Dlotrlct Deputy
Dlractor.
JERRYWRAY,
Director of Tronoportotlon
FEB. 7, 14,1~3

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

NORTH
2-IJ.II
+KQJt097
.,AKJ9S5

....

J~ f '~·•, •;·•·t:•"' .:.~"-•" •~

'2: ......

--.,p@·-1'1~-lJi.. ~~

"r' .. ...

~ ~..: ~.,. .,\-

I•"'' '•

.. .

veer

Do everything in your in the
ahead to increase your number of bwi•
ness contacts. Friends you make in the

wort&lt;aday world could turn ouno be a
big halp.
.
AQUAAIUI (.1111 • . , . _ 1t) Avoid ifl-

uatloris that emphasiZe comll)lrclallsm
when dealing with lrlenda today. You
could come out on the lollng ond In
business matters. Aquarlua; treot yourself to a birthday glfi::Sond fQr Aquarius' Astro-Graph predlctlonolor the veer
ahead by mailing $1.25 ptua along, 181f.
-addressed, stamped onvolope to AatroGraph, c/o this newapaper, P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland, OH·«101-3428. Be
sure tO state your zodiac sign.
PIICEI (Fob. ell 10) Put

your
chips on uaocia1ea 1odoy ~ you feet
their luctc Ia superior to you,.. You
might have a chance to ride In on their
coattails.

ARIEl ( - 21"April11) H aomeone
whoso judgment you truot regarding social' Issues ollars you advice todey,
don't let it go in one ear and out the oth-

er. You could benefit from what you've
been told.
TAURUI (April-or 20) It 18 belt not
tQ rock the boat in. a joint venture today

if your counterpart haa situation&amp; un(Jer
control. Your input could be dllrupllve.
GEMINI (MeJ 21-.1- 20) Be support-

ive of your mate today, especially when

he ~or she makes a pr8$8rltation in front

ol others. If you disagree on any poin1a,.
discuss them privately.
CANCER (J- 21-.luZJ 22) ·You could
be rather lortunate todoy in developments where you subordinate your in-

terests to others' concerns. Thinking
solely of yourself will produce the ilaat

1

benelits.

1

LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22)1:1ave fun and enjoy yourself today, but keep moderatloh
in mind. Your chart Indicates that yo~&lt;
are Inclined to overindulge to your del~
riment.

VIRGO (Aug. 23--.pt. 22) Your bM,t
probabilities for personal gain are llkety
to come tater in the day. Earlier yo\,1
might be a bit too il1decislve to make

advantageous judgtnenta.

'-'

UIRA (hpJ. 23-0cL II) You're a q.study·today. and you have the lblllty .a
mold others' ldeea into aomelhing
promising tor all concerned. Untortu..

natoly, however. you might not - th~
gift properly.
·
SCORPIO (OcL 24-Now. 22) Matarlll
conditions might 'fluctuate for you ·tO:
day. You could be fortunote in adding tb
your resources, but you may IIIIo de;·
plete them with u..-..ry extrl'l.,.
gance.
•
DAOITTARIUI (Now. 21 Dee. ll~
Something that you .,.. hopelul aboUt
can 'be achieved precisely u you lla~
envitlk&gt;nod II, provided you don't al'nagative companions to convince yo0·

WE8T

., i

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22......._ 1t) Fotio.tlf
your instincts todor when they ttl ~­
tho tronda are running In VOl!' fa-. If
you will too long for lddltlonal lVI' ,
dence. the tide may hove alru6/·
turned.

+2

EAST

+s
+863
... .
...Q7 431
.QJ74
fA
+AQJ98763 +Kt054
SOUTH
+A 12
., 10 6
tKt098H32
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

.

't

Fob. 15, 1113

The year ahead could prove to be an ex~

indicated.

'

•

AQUARIUS(,_,, 1111-F,o b. 11) You could
be a bit of a dreamer todoy, butthat:S
OK, because what you will ~ 18
feaSible.

Your

lmaginingl

cah

be

The beauty
of l~nguage
By PldiUp Alder

accordance with your r-lgheat stan:

Soot•

Nortb
6+

Wet!

s+

7.

7.,

Db!.

7+

Eas1

7+
Db!.

Redbl. Allpa.ss

Obi.

Opening lead.:+ A

vided you manage your Involvements in

dards at all times. Don't cut any cor-

Eagllsh Is a difficult lanJIU8ge, but
one lull of variety. I particularly eqjoy
the divet'IO! woys one can play witb the
words: anagrams, puns, homophones,
spoonerisms, malapropisms, and so
on. In particular,l'like malapropisms.
Mrs. Malaprop wu a character in
Richard BriiiSley Sheridan's "Tbe Ri-vals." Sbe had the bablt of using a
word close to the one sbe really should
have employed. For example, she
spoke of •aD' allegory on the baakJ of
tlte Nile." See bow many maloproplams you can find in the rest of this
columa.
·
Today's deal cornea from a rubberbrld&amp;e 11me In whiCh the stakes were
exJiansive, very expansive. North had
jltttt bid and made seven ao-trump.
this is the second deal.
.... Uti a . _ , pre&gt;emiMftt

ners.

TAURUS (April 20-IIIJ 20) Focua your
effort and attention on meaningful of&gt;.
jectlves today, ragardl- of how dlfll·
cult they might appear. You could be In
lor some pleasant surpriaea.

GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) Participatory
endeavors that require a totat ,..., ef.
tort hold more promise lor you than any
involvements that call for independent
action. Don't go II atOf)l.
CANCER (J..,. 21-.luly 12) Tlke pride

In your wi:lrk today, and tie wilHng to do
a bit more than what Ia liked ol you, A
good JOb will provide yay ~
grotlflcatlon and unexpected - e l l.
LEO (.luTJ 21-Attg. 12) Othn wll till
willing to cooperate with you ~ i
they understand lhll what you -.1 ret
youraeff, you IIIIo wont 10{ lheln. BucJ.
coasful oupport nelda motivation.
•
VIRGO (AUg. 23-ltpT. 22) If you
yoursetflodey, you'll not only lie 1
.
starfer.
you'll
be
il
atrong
·
n
•
·~:':! of nve dlba. l'IOI'Gt Ibid six
•
sltDw a stropnoff t,.ooeulter: well. ~et continuity and ooo-•"'t
but not nee erUy that Bltapely and serve as your watchworda. •
atropnofl. The ....-1,of the blddJn&amp; LIIIRA (-.pt. 21-Gol. II) Thl.... .an1a
eontalned three lll-advertiJed doubles. be dull or· un-lrdlng ~ If' ttiW
Declarer thumped the club-aee lead tlons - e you're lncttnld to mali
your pr_,ce felt , You're the
Jti hand. .He dulted two rounds of that
can tnOYe de'wM• tMill kt a
tnunps. When tbey broke Sol, he tive dlrec:110n.
twlldted 1t11 atteatlon to lturts. Wilen ICOIIPJO(Oct.M lie? . .,~·~
Welt ableonded oa tbe flnt routl, II ty todoy·to moliere of Nnpllotwillti to you
- u ·uay job lor Soutlt to ruff out financially Qr ,..illllr. If you hanctiJt
Eut'abeart CJIIHD. Declarer retrained things alfectlvoly. peraonal IICqUiattiOn
to
with a dlamoncl ruff, drew Is likely.

·

.

tremely busy one for you, due to .._·
new lntare-'• In which you may become
involved. More travel than uaualls allll

brought into existence. Major changaa
are ahead for Aquarius In the cpmlng
year. Send for Aquarius' Altro-Gr"P..'
predictions today. Mall $1.25 plua 'a
long, setf·llddressed, stomped on~
lope to Astro-Grapn, c/o this _ . ,
per. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OK
44101-3428. Be sure to state yourzodl.
ac sign.
•
.1
PIICEI (Fob. -.Morell 20) You might
fare better today II you Intuitively c1p
what you feel is bell for yourself lll1d
those in your charge, instaect of doing
traditional things that could fail.
··
ARIEl (March 21·Aprfl11) SubotontfA'I
things could happen for you todoy, ~

=

=t

l7ld cbilmed.

new ICOriDI ntlell.
a redoubled CCITitracl.)
They co.:rected 10 much a_,. that
tbey were aucldealy effluent.
•

Fob.14,,_

otherWise.

....

II :30 a.m. • Blood pressure
1:30 p .m. • Board of trustees
meeting
'
Friday, Feb. 19
10 a.m.- Walking
10 a.m. to noon and 1·3 p.m. •
Art and craft class
Menus consist of:
Monday: Center closed.
Tuesday • Macaroni/cheese,
spinach, fruit salad, bread, vanilla
wafers.
Wednesday -'- Chili/crackers,
hot dog/sauce, cole slaw, bun,
applesauce: in lime Jello.
Thursday • Chicken/gravy,
whipped potatoes, green beans,
bread, lemon pudding.
Friday • Ham loaf, whipped
potatoes, Kale, bread, cake/cherry
topping.
-Make reservations by calling
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
you wish to attend.

PULLMAN, Wash (AP) ·Mary Von Wagnen is on a first·
name basis with President Clinton.
Washl1ngu)n State Universi·
-i·or
Iter head into

Ohio Valley Publlshlaa Co. Lene yow •••e,
address and tellfpltoae
w1t1t , _ aN
or letter. No telephone calla . . 1te ~ All
contest entries sbould be twrn t ~ ..
_..
paper otllce by 4 P·•· nell Wed z '•, eztie
or a tie, the winner will be cltoten by lottery.
Next week, a Meias Couaty rarm will be fea·
lured by the Meigs Soli and Water Conservation
District.

e

Seniors' schedule announced

. GAlLIPOLIS • The following
are activities and menus for Eeb.
led by prominent joliiTU!lists at the. 15-19. at the Galiia County Senior
National Press club. Students also Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, Feb. IS
visited foreign embassies and
Closed for President's Day
received a policy briefing from
senior go¥ernment officials. In
'
Tuesd ~i Fe!?• 16
lOa.m.-W8 ng
addition, scholars met with staff
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.- Quilting
members froq~ their senators' and
10:30 a.m.- STOP/ExC!'Cise
representative's offices to discuss ·
12:30 a.m.· Video matinee
important i8sues .facing their comVVednesday,Feb.l7
munities and the nation.
10 a.m.~ Wallting •
Culminating the National
10 a.m. to noon- Crochet
Young Leaders conference is The
10 a.m. to 3 p.m . - Adult Day
Mock Congress on Guri Control .
Care
during which Scholars assume the
T0:30 a.m. • Bingo with Tom
roles of United states RepresentaHopkins
tives by debating, lobbying. and
voting on proposed handgun legis- _ 12:30 a.m.· Video matinee
Thursday, Feb. 18
iation.
10
a.m.
• Walking
Founded in 1985, the Congres10
a.m.
to 3 p.m. ·Quilting
sional Youth Leadership council is
10:45
a.m.
• Bible swdy
a non,profit, non-parttsan educa-.
tional organization. The council ois
committed to recognizing outstand·
in! youth and ~viding them with
a hands-oo" ctvic learning oxperi- '
ence in the nation's capital. Over
250 Members of the United States
Congress join in the commibllent
to educational excellence by serving 11 members of the Council's ·•
Honorary Congressional Board of
Advisors.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

. ........,. :It, 1tt3

MEDINA, Ohio (AP) - High
school students protesting a pro·
posalto ban a book from the school
library have designed a T-shirt
comparing the move to German .
censorship (juring Worill War II.
The front of the gray T -shirt
reads: "Germany, 1943-Medina,
1993 ... Cclebrating 50 Years of
Censorship" and has a drawing of
a kneeling student gagged and
bound. The back of the shirt lists
33 most-frequently chal·lenged
books.
"We wanted to do something
peaceful but that would also get
across how we feel," said Phil
Dicuich, 17. the senior class representative to the student council at
Medina High School.
Student council members voted
to design and distribute the shirt
after learning that several parents
sugg.csted at the dislrict's board
mcc1ing last month that a book by
Ken Follett be banned.
School officials have removed
the book, "Night Over Water,"
while th~y consider whether it's
· too sexually explicit for ~igh
school students.
The book, whiCh takes place in
1939, includes passages that
describe sexual encounters.
"Even th.ough we know this
isn't as severe as the book burning
that went on in Nazi Germany, we
wanted to draw a correlation," said
Melissa Thompson, 15. "No one
has 1hc right to ban books."
School officials arc taking a
neutral stand. .
"Of course. we allow the
expression of political views by
students," said Principal Charles
Pfeiffer. "This whole issue has
allowed a good, healthy exchange
of views on both sides."
Students said they've sold the
first 50 shirts they ordered and
h~vc ordered an additional SO. So
fai, at SS each, they've earned
about S200 for the student council.

jacket," Ms. Rivers said.
The contest winner, Jacque
Kendail, o33-ycar-old ·flight attcn·
dant from Virginia Beach, Va .. will
be host of · ~The Joan Rivers
Show" on Feb. 22. The show,
including a tape of Ms. Rivers'
lligh~ Is to air on March I.

, MYSTERY FARM - Tltitt week's mntery

NOncE TO CONTRActoRS

Students protest book
ban with T-shirts

Names in the news

,

Public Notice

partir

j

•

·Funds available for SIP program

)·

ments.''

State University have found tllat
two g~nes important in f.at
metabolism may be useful markers
I .:J
,
to _identify leaner iambs. '"!ey are
RIO GRANPE _ More comfort nationwide, the u.s. Government
aclipocyte P2, or AP2, and ltpoprofor 1~ money is the key to. a new enacted the National Appliance
tem ltpase, or LPL.
h
d - · ed b ·
·
Conservation Act (NAECA). · Th~
. Other researchers a!ready had
eat pump estgn
Y IOtemauon- legt' slation set minimum efficu.....,
dtscovcred. both ge.nes 10 humans, · al heating and cooling nianufactur· standards •orall-·'dential .au'-con-'._
t1
db d B s
er, Lennox IndUstries Inc.
''
·cat, e, mtce an tr s. ~~ .nowThe affordable HP23 offers ditioners, beat pumps and ftuiiiCC!j,
der s study, the repo~ satd, 15 _t~e cost-saving economy. while satis- · "By purchasing the HP23, home•
ftrst to lm~ them wtlh spect.ftc fyin$ homeowners' comfort n~. owner:JC~il do their part to conl
effective when used with· medicated snampoo to
DOG BATH - A wet·bellind·the-ears client
used to determme It will be marketed through yates serve energy while savin$ money
charactertsttcs
aid in the healing of skin conditions. It also
:at the Groom aad Supply Sllop pet &amp;rooming
10 lambs.
fatness
.Heating &amp; Cooiipg of Rio Granjle, on their utility bills • satd Steve
increases dip effectiveness by 50 percent. The
,, fadlity, 3961 State Roate 141, Gallipolis, experi·
"We
found
_
that
fatter
lambs
and other independent Lennox Yates.
• •
"
shop has been providin&amp; service for almost 20
· ences a thorou&amp;h cleaning in the shop's new
tended
10
ha&gt;:e
higher
levels
of
AP2
dcillerBhips
internationally.
Every
HP23
is
rested
extensive-years and serves nearly 2,000 clients from Gal. " hydro batll pet cleaaiag S)'$tem. Owner Julie
gene expresston, yetlo~~r levels of
~he :HP23 is spec,jfically iy at Lennox' Research &amp; DeveJop;.
lia, Mason, Meigs a.n d Jackson counties .
,•Webb, pictured, said tbe S)'Siem is the first of its
L~L
gene
expresston,
S~owder
destgaed
to exceed the national ment Laboratory. Lennox is so con~
(Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)
" kind in Ohio. The $1700 system removes all
· loose hair, skin nakes and neas and is most
sa'~e also plans to test five other e~gy standards. For homeowners,, fident of the HP23, they are offerJ
, ·
.
this lranSiates into outstaiidio$ sav- ing a five-year parts warranty.
genes. When he determmes whtch ings on energy bills. "This ts the, . ,. Consumers wanting more inforgenes are the.most accurate fat pre- heat pump for 'the' futJJre.~ said mation about Lennox' HP23 air.
dieters, he. satd, ~ stmple bl~ test Steve Yates, .'president of Yates conditioner or any LeMox equip-:
take.n at. b1 m1ght
~I tl takes Heating &amp; CoOling. . , , . .
. men! can contact Yates Heating &amp;•
bilirles for SIP at the national and menlS landowner obJectives and to pmpomt at·J?rone am s.
By CINDY JENKINS
Faced with growing · energy Coolin~ located at 296 West CoJ:,
state level, respectively. Each State practices to meet them
District Forester
" ,
WASHINGTON (AP)- The demands and limi~ec!_ resources lege, Rio Grande.
GALLIPOLIS • Non-indusuial Forester, in consultation with the • 2. Reforestation and Afforestapri vatc forest (NIPF) lands make State Forest Stewardship Commit· lion - tree planting and use of tree
tmpottant CODtributions to environ- tee, will detennine cost share .lev· shelters
3. Forest and Agroforest
mental quality and raw material cis, practice priorities and mini:r.equirements of the nation and mum acreage requirements. Agri- Improvement • fencing for exciudOhiO.
.
cultural Stabilization and Conser- ing.livestock from woodlands
"
·4. Windbreak and HedgeFCw
Growing pressures for public vaiion Service will provide admin·
isttative assistance by accepting pstablishment, Ml\intenance and
l~tnd policy have focused on the
See Answer to ~zle on Page D-8 .
heed for more intensive manage- applications and arranging tor dis· Renovation • establish or renovate
bursed payments.
field windbrealcs with maintenance
~ent of natural resources on pri"
173 Declares
90 Diocese
73 Reputaes
Technical responsibilities for for the first four years to ensure ACROSS
vate lands. The benefits of
175
Trade
for
money
91 Finish
75 Beard of grain
1 \'Brer - "
enhanced management may include SIP practices may be assigne·d to establishment
92
Ginger176
Rlata
•
76 Affirmative
5. Soil.and Water Protection and
babitats for ftSit and wildlife, aes- other agencies and resource profes·
7 Unyielding
93
Vl!rltina
tablets
177 Walks ulll'teadlly
79 French article
10 Scrooge word
thetics, recreational opportunities. sionais through memoranda and Improvement · establish erosion
178 Dampens
96
~etfall
81
Concerning
13 Come Into view
increased tii'ilber supply and oUter cooperative agreements. USDA control devices on old logging
99 Swing
84 Speck
agencies, among others, will be key roads and trails
DOWN
jlroducts.
,,
119 ~lberatlon
101- bag
87 Santa's helper
20 Ms. ~upino
6. Wildlife Habitat Enhance" . The Food, Agriculture, Conser- · partners in developing and impie·
104 Moray
1 Meditate
21 Model Carol 89 Occidental
ment · Planting trees and shrubs,
o{ation and Trade Act of 1990 menting SIP.
105 Soak up
2 Place for worahlp
22 Arbiter
92 Female relative
Qualifying NIPF land includes creating fo,rest openings, snag
authorizes Ute cooperative Stew107 P.etltlon ·
3.,As red as a 24 Later
93 OCean
ardship lncelltive Program (SIP) 10 rural lands with existing tree cover recruitment and artificial nesting
108 Bitter vetch
4Ta-n
25 Berenger ID
stimulate enhattced management of and other ;woody vegetation or land muctures, developing green tree
109 ,Noise , '.
5 Exists
:: ~=:wreath
27 Printer's measure
i'
qonindlljltrial private forest lands suitable for growing such vegeta- marshes and fencing for wildlife
110 River In Russia
6
Pierre's
head
28
Farrow
ID
97
"-Town"
lion
and
owned
by
a
private
indi·
purposes
JltrOUJh cost-sharing of approved
111 Belli
7 "MagnuA"!, -"
· 29 Jackson or Derek
96 Tolls
7. Forest Recreation Enhancepracuces. Nationally, funding is vidual, group associauon, corpora112 Decorate
8
Fruit drink
30
Crown
"
99 ~awful
114
Roam
Indian
tribe,
or
other
legal
priment
Creating
scenic
vistas,
manlion.
aUthorized, up to $100 million
9 Ms. Grimes
31
Real
estate
map
100 Anger
116 Stunted person
annually, through 1995. Each stale, vate entity. Eligible landowners aging ~cenic corridors and estab·
10 Deer of books
32 Scorch
"
117.
Corded
cloth
101 Eat
iliciuding Ohio, m:eives an annual must have an approved Forest lishing scenic forest buffers
11 TV allen
34 A queen of fairies
118
Old
pronoun
102
Piece
out
Stewardship
Plan
and
own
a
mini_
For
additional
information
conallocation. The companion Forest
12 Elevation: abbr.
.,
36 Orient
120 Athletic group
.
103
Circuit
S'tewardship Program was estab· mum of five acres and a mllllimum tact the Ohio Department of Natu•
13
God
of
love
'
38 Mix
122 Meadow ,
,."
14 Mytelf
106 Baker'a product•
lished to develop a written of 1,000 acres of qualifying land. ral Resources Division of Forestry
39 Cash ending
123
Horse's
neck
hair
'
15
Newt
109Pr-for
l;lndowner Fcrest Stewardship Plan Payments may not exceed $10,000 or Wildlife, Agricultural Stabiliza40 Torma ID
124
Faroe
Islands
16
Former
payment
that provides and documents per landowner per fiscal year. tion and Conservation Service
41 Maze
whirlwind
Portuguese
resource management direction and Landowners must maintain and Office, Soil Conservation Service
113 Small ruga
44 Laughing sound
125 Concerning
practices, while the SIP provides protect SIP funded practices for a Office or the Gallia Soil and Water
11.5 Neon symbol
money
46 After noon : poetic
127 Switch position
Conservation District.
47 Washington, 17 Rasp
116 Rajah'i wife
subsequent tools and incentives 10 minimum of 10 years.
129 Heavenly bodies
Ohio SIP Practices include:
Don't forget the Woodland
18 Moet uilcanny
implement practices recommended
48 Chinese pagoda
119 \/all ago
131 Bank
19 GrBI]d -, Mich.
49 Russian village
l. Management Plan Develop- Management Workshop on Thursin this plan.
121 Charts
transactions
23 Merited
·
50 Baseball's Mal ...::
r
- USDA Forest Service and State ment- develop a Forest Steward- day, Feb. 18 at 7 p.m. in the C.H.
123 Planet
133 "- Living Color"
51 Airline info
26 Soothing totlon
Foresters have leader.;hip responsi- ship Management PI~ that docu - McKenzie Agricultural Center.
124 Single
134 River in ItalY
53 Compass point
29 Thai money
· 125 Mend
136
- garde
32 Posts
54 R·U linkup
126Empowwt~
137 Insect agg
33 Foray
55 "- Thin Air"
128 Pinch
139 Health retort
· 35 Rechlna ID
57 Hoover 130
Two-edge swords
140 Swiss canton
59 Poem
36 Kltchet! ender
·
132
'
exterior
141 Female deer
60 Carry
37 Speculations
133 RnuH of: aufflx
· CHESHIRE • Seven employees safety and environmental ideas (retired), for an ar.ticie they co142 Alternalive word
61 Danson 10
40 Mickey- .
'
134Muaa
'at tli Ohio Valley Electric Corpo- among the AEP operating compa- authored entitled "Beaded Ceramic
l43
Cal's
foot
62 Retreat
42 Boast
·'ration's (OVEC's) Kyger Creek nies and the OVEC-IKEC system.
135 Commands
1146 Moccasin
Material Prolongs Tube Life."
64 Profits
43 Bows the head
138 Hit lightly
Plant recently received 1992 oper147
Dashes
A $1,500 award was presented
A $250 award was presented to
66 Most unusual
45 Be present
· ating idea annual awards for their to Edward (Skip) McGovern, per; Bob Caruther's, maintenance
151
Chicken
141 June ~onoree
68 Wine cup
48 Stalemate
:.:.
articles published in "Operating fonilance engineer, for his article, mt'1:hanic-A. Paul Hesson, mainte152
In
addition
144
You and t
70 Burdoos
52 Roman bronze
153 Encourage
Ideas." the official magazine of the "Rotating Coal Feeders at Kyger nance mechanic-A, and Philip
'•
'46
Conspiracy·
72 - Angeles
56 Speechifies
155 Crony: colloq.
American Electric Power (AEP) Creek Converted to Variable Speed Ohlinger, .maintenance mechanic-A
148
Drive
73 Dark brown
58 Men
"
157 Specks
~ervice Corporation's operating Operation for Better Efficiency."
59 Beginning
149 That thing
'
·
(retired), for their article, "Precipiorganic
158 Nickname
•
ideas program.
.
60 Experienced
.150 Lowest point
A $1,000 award was presented tatQr Altitator Modified For Quicksubstance
159 Broad
' OVEC and its subsidiary, indi- to Jerry Lewis, maintenance er Beanng Replacement."
62 In a
151 ;roua
74- laver
160
Negative
prefix
ana· KeniUCicy Electric Corporation mechanic-B. Chris Smith, mainte152
Three-toed sloth
t~roughgolng
•
77 Evil
Awards were presented by
161
Diphthong
(IKEC}. participate in the AEP pro- nance mcchanic-B , and Larry D.avid' E. JOnes, vice president15'4 Clllnesa currency
78 Give a right to
manner
183 Founded
~ram, which share cost-saving,
Stewart, maintenance supervisor operations of OVEC-IKEC.
156 Tibetan priest
80 Built
63 Revised
165
Kevin Bacon film
'•
82 Fem~le sheep
158 Transaction
65
Malden'loved
by
' 167 Armstrong ID
83 Dry
159 Flutter
Zeus
168 Teutonic deity
85 Mediterranean
162 Cloth .meaaure
66
Lately
formed
169 "- WllhOUt'a
vessels
67
Consequently
184 Dls!roas Blgnal
Cause"
86 Indian tents
68 Arabian garmenl
166 Born
171 Love in Rome
B1 Sea eagles
69
Detace
·
167 Ordinance
172 Perfect model
88 Farm animal
71 Guides
110· "Let II - ..
174 ~atln conjunction

.

Ariel preps
for plastering

'

Genetic research ·produces leaner lamb '

Sunday Tinin Senii.,.I----PIIge D3

'.

.. . .-..
'.

~

e-.. .......,. . . . .

. "" ": -.r ~ ;,. · !"" · · ·"' •.!:- '"' ---- ~ ·· -·~ .... . ... ...

I

-·'' ,,

IAOITTAIIIUI (llw. a 11M. 111 Thll .
Ia one of t!IOee c7ay1t where till
to do. thl better you ore likely to
perform. EataDflah 1 bully IQII1dl eerly
In 1he day lind ltletc to n. '
cu Ideo• to. a ,_ 1t) Lilly
~ letocll'lo ,._you tudaJ 1n Indirect
woya. n-•a 1 o111no1 ·good
lhlnge might happen lot you IIIII you

hi,.

won't be....,. ol unllllater.

more,..,

�.. .

.;-

.

•

p

•

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

,.

.'

.

'

'

•
February

14; 1993

'-

1993
51

Household

51

Couch • Cllalt t210, 114-241-

New o.k Fumlt..-., Tablle,
Chairs, China'.. Hutchll, Elc.
Alver Vder Oak FumHurt,

t'URNITUAE

AND

CRAFTS

PICKJNS t'URNITUR£
NIWI\Jiad
Hounhold fumtthlng. 112 .mi.

114-441-1422.

Jontcho Ad. Pl. PI-nt. WV,
caii30W75-1450.

Hmltadon or dlscrimlnalion."

-t

· NOTICE 10 CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRAHBPORTATION
CoiUinbua, Ohio
Flllnl
5 1883

proving tectlona ATH 33·
5.80 on United Sto,_ Routo
33 ond other ..rloua rout•
ond aectlona by lnalolllng
and lurnlohlng ral11d
pevement marker molerlolo.
Cot~ Sor..
"Tho dole oel lor
Laaol COpy No. 83-143
completion of lhla work
UNit PRICI! CONTRACT
oholl be oa oat forth In the
IStoled pro-11 will be bidding propoaol. •

:~' 1Dlrootor
lead at of
the otfiJ=e
the
the of
Ohio

: Deport11onl of T"'na•
.• portolion, Colu.,-ua, Ohio,
• 11
Ohl 0
' unIll 10 :00 ~. .,
: s ..ndord Timo, Tueadoy,
· lloroh 2, 1883, for lm·
· pro-taln:
: Aiheno, Gallla, Hocking,
• llelga, Monroe, Morgan,
: Noble, VInton, Woohlngton
• Counllaa, Ohio lor lm•

.•:

___

:1

_;__

card of Thanks

,_ ;:::::::::::::::=::::;

8

Thiii new.peper will nor
knowingly
ad\411i~~tnenta fot real lllllll
. which lain Yioladon ot the
.... Ou1 Nadorl lrlilo&lt;fbV
inlo.. od 1hai.OI-qings
~ advertised In this new~aper
are aYailablt on·an equal

Wantod: Anponalblo /Saito
Pa-n Nlodt&lt;l With Good Orlv·
1ftt Record, AeferencH Necn·
oary, Mutt It Alilablo, Honoot
A-nti
To: CLA 257, CioSend
Gol·
IUpollo
WIH
DoMy .TGroomod,
rlbun!1,1125 Third
Avonuo, GOIIIpollo, un 411831.

Planafl 18
on1nd ISh~catlon•
""'on
e ...,..111rnen 1
ol Tronaporlotlon ond the
olllce ol the Dlotrlcl Deputy
DlrriCior
·.
. •
JERRY WR•v,
~··
Director of Tranaportollon
1:.FE:.B:.·..:1..:4'_:2_1,:..1_883____

';,,~~~~:;~·:~ Grande,
428,
oopholl
by
concralo.
The Ohio Deportment of
T
I h b
II
ranoporlll on ere y no •
flea all blddera thai II will
alflrmetlvely lnouro thol In
I•
any contract anlered Into
purauanl to thla advar·
PubliC Notice
llaement, mln.orlty bualneaa
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS ;;,:;,l.;;l,ria.:a will be afforded
lull opporlunlly to aubmll
STATE OF OHIO
bide In reaponoe to thla
DEPARTMENT OF
Invitation and will not bo
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
dlacrlmlnoted ogolnot on
January 29, 1993
the ground• of roce, color,
Contract Salea
or nollonal origin In
Legal Copy No. 9 :~- 125
conalder1Uon lor on oword.
UNIT P!!ICE CONTRACT
Minimum woge rates lor
thla project have been
Fy
)
STP· 93(2 ·
Predetermined u required
S81led proponla will bt by, low and ore ael lonh In
the bid propooal. "The date
aet for completion of lhlo
1 card of Thanks
work aholl be 111 forth In
tho bidding propooal."
Phina ond Speclllaollono
Pastor David
aro on filii In tho Deportment
Dailey would like of Tranaportollon and the
office of tho Dlalrlct Deputy
to thank all tha~
Director.
JERRYWRAY,
gave donations or
Director of Tranaponallon.
helped in any way FEB. 8, 15, 11193

"A BIG
THANK YOU"
Sharon . Bailey,
Matron of the Meigs
:. Counly Home and
· Resldenls of lhe
- home would like lo
thank all churches,
ministers,
all
organizations. Boy
Scouls, individuals,
The
· Midnlghl
Cloggers, The Big
Bend Cloggers, Frulh
•· Pharmacy slaff and
menagemenl,
Syracuse Elemenlary
School slaff, Michael
• Boso, Keilh Black,
•·. Sorortiy, •
The
· Farmers Bank staff,
:' the Primacy Class of
• Carlelon School, The
Eagles,
Racine
Ameri~an Legion,
The Kroger Store.
American Legion
Feeney-Bennett Post
&amp; Unit 128, Meigs
High School Cos.
Girls, Linda Yonker,
Kay Profitt, Carolers,
Meigs County Bikers
Club.
A speciaf thanks to
Eugene UndenNood,
Gary &amp; Flossie Dill,
Freda &amp; Chester
·Howe, Norma Jean
Thomas, for not only
at Christmas time but
all year long. Also,
Rev. Keilh Raider for
the candle light
services for my
·residents and me on
Christmas night.
Thanks to Mike Wills
lor Santa Claus, Rev.
Lawrence Bush, The
Trolley Slation Craft,
and a big thank you
to my staff at the
home for the time
they put in to make
this a nice Christmas
for our residents.
Thank You,
Sharon Bailey,
Matron
&amp; Residents

2

Ntw

LOCATION: From Gallipolis take St. At.
141 SOUth approx. 25 miles, turn West
on ·Enta-Waterloo Rd. to sale site.
Watch for auction signs.
REAL ESTATE SELLS AT 12:00

&amp; homl, 1 rnlle bMow tow.!ll onr·
441.0338.

·

~::. ~'rgtAT'lrrrlou~:oi. =~-:::~rd~1:'..:~ro~~~~

nlohod opt. Dip &amp; rot. - 2 ·

IM-44e-3644.

Chtohlro: 3 BA
hlrdwood floort

1·112· both,

iuu

21181.

•

bastment,

bedroom

1putrnent,

corpon,
aiding,
CA, ~14•36J.1i78
na1uro1 gltl~;;;raq~u~lro~d,~no~
po~to~,PI~.
hut, cable,
$47.000.
IM-112.PU.

Froin Ga111polla, take Rt. 141, turn left onto

ns, turn right onto Petrlot Rd. WeiCh for.ligna.

0&lt;441-3532 .

Furnished
Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CQ;
21

-.far-·
f1201mo.

wolk or monlh.
Gallto Holol.
111180.
• .
' Houu for a11e wllh 7 room1, 2 I
full bllhl, llrlpllce, new Lenox Sl11plng rooritl wHh 'cooking. ~
'::~1:2' 01

rtcommendl lhlt you do butl·

hut pwnp, 2 c1r garage, brlck
front w/elumn aiding, 100x200 ft
kit, 304..-.2~3287 after 4.:30 PM. ·

nHa wll~ poopll you know, ind

olH..IIona, Sowing, Minding, NOT to 11nd money througn Ute
mall. until you hlvt lnvttt&amp;gattd
114-241-112113.
tht offering. .
1
Child CU. ·provided ill my

Ranch ll)'la hom•, 3 bedrooms,
,1 bllh, att1ched praga, Na.w
And"rsan windows, central air,

home, warm nutrhlout m"''
phil 8n1Ckl ttructurld ac-

good

day Clrl, 15

. yuro tlporlonca, ~ oponlnga
1111. $31. pot child or $55. tor 2
children 11om lamlly por
wMk. ltckv for appointment
W4-11$o715t

304-773-!11!10. '

Like ct,cGfatlng· I ..wlnj?
Make uer S24,Gao. year. Wark

~2

at hOme. EnUre · bullnttl,
uwlng · room tqulpmtnl, lUI
tnlnlng 11,700. Huntington

5:n.5672.

M
. ason.

WOLFF T~NINO B~ •
Ntw Commarclol, Homo Unlla,.
Fram $1119.00. Lamt" Lollona,
Ac-loa.
~'""'""
Low Aa•$18.00,Month
Coli Odoy
FRU '
NEW Color Cotolog. 1-111~

12xiD Walher,

~ry..-,

R'lrigoralor, 13,000.

7104.

One story modem 3 bdnn. home w/1 IIIU both, lull basement, ~- RJdning room comb. Home IM1Ures forCed air M·
nace, concrete porch rear &amp; front wlawnings. Sldga~ lnclud­
ed are 27130'113' gal~anized me1al open ended bldg.; a
40'148' tobacco &amp;·Msloci&lt; bam, corn crib."1f11oka house.
Property lealures pri•ate drive, malure shade, wiMin wire a
wood plank fencing lor livesloci&lt;. All thie selling on apfl(o•.
1.81 acres, mora or less, in a piclure perfect cooolr)l se1ting
· and w/lovely viewa of the IWrrounding ..uey. . .
.
TERIIS &amp; CONDITIONS: tO% al purchase price on real
eslate to be paid on the day of sale, balance at dosing.
Closing shall be on or belora 30 days after date of auellon,
April 6, 1993. This it a wonde~d oppor1Unily 1o purchaee
real estale and it aels aboolule. oPel HOUSE: Feb. 19,
lrom ~-:00 10, 7:Dq P.M., Sal., Feb.' 20th &amp; 27th lrum 11;00
A.M. to 2:00P.M.
ANY ANNOUNCEMENTS .MADE DAY OF SALE WILL
TAKE ., PRECEDENCE . OVER
ANY
&amp;
ALL
ADVERTISEMENTS. SELLERS OR AUCTIONEERS· ARE
NOT ·RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR . LOST
ARTICLES.
W81ch lor tulll'e publication or contac1 Wilson Reallors
office for tree brochure ollhe personal properly.
.
Lunch will be served by S1a~ile 4-H Club.
OWNERS
HEIRS OF MR. &amp; IIRS. REX HERRELl, -.oec~
Sale Conducted by:

Prolaaaloroal Couplo Wont To

Aont1 3 BM.~!".!i...i!. Bolha,

Mobile Homes
for Sate

No

Merchandise

Stave,
114·3&amp;~

,•.-

51

Household

Goods
AI! Corpot I VInyl In Block On
Balli. llollohan COrpoto, Rl7 N.
114-441-11144. .
VI'RA FU:~~~~ AND ~·
114-4411-4421 OR 114-441-3151

'
Real Estate

31

1111, llaaon WV.

Chllann I~IVIf.

$152.17 per month Including •I•
montha:lreelot rant , new 14x70,
delivered end eet up, aklrting
IOd 811pt 1 1·800-8374825.

!,

9107.

nalgnborhood,

SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 199UT 10:00 A.M.

AIOolrollar - · All hook•Upt•
Call altr 2:DG p.m., 304·~

¢7 Wanted to Rant

Homes for Sale

.......

In Memory

MildredEv_..
211...... 8122188
After the t.... of 10now
Splrlll wUI ft'MW ad a lmtlht
tomormw WIU. ~od'• help .,e

I Room HDUH, RDdn.y ~llage,
Largo Lo1, Now Palnll. earpolo'

Coblnllo,
Root, .!••mll:l(\81..
$35,000 114-319·21186.
''

..

.ad family

vows once again after 50 .
In Memory of
years . Also thanks to
Mabel Triplett's
Cindy McMillin lor the
70th Birthday
beautiful 'songs which
Once
upon
a
she sang so bea utilu II y.
memory
a
small
girt
Thanks 1o my Father ancj
Mother lor being here to cried a tear, you
give me away again after
smiled at her and
50 years. I wish to lhank wiped it dry, Thank
my father lor the
you, Mother Dear.
beautiful prayer he gave
Now you've been
as the three ofus held
gone a year and a
hands. Thanks 10 all our
big girl cries a tear,
family and friends for
she sees your smile,
the nice gills and
you loving face and
beautiful cards~ you
misses you mother
made us feel so special.
Thanks to our two sons, dear.
tWo daughters, two
Phyllis
daughte-in·laws and
two granddaughters lor
alllhe hard work it took 5
Happy Ads
to pu 1 our lovely :..__...:.;.::!:!:!....:.:..:...__

11

Help Wanted '

0r l'14-tt2 ••• '·

'

.

·,

Hour.: Jlon.Sat, N _. e
0322, 3 mil• oYI BullVIlle Rd.

flor
Pr..OWilld lloblll Homo, ..... Frao DliiYiry.

I
.1

t

Wrllo

Bucom, OH

receplion together. Also
t" .anks to our friends
who helped, we love all
of you so much.
Darrell &amp; Dorothy
Dodrill

:.a

P.O. 801 2111,
4'1H35-0787.

! Lodlol Who Would Uka
Soli Avon C&amp;lll14-4454:158.

C.~na. Gon11t" Middle
To WorOod:
Apd Waman To C.re .-or A 3
Month Dkf B1by On A Part·Time

IIIII, Welkdtya Only, &amp;M-441·
AVON I All Aroat I . Shl~oy 0411.
Spoaro, 30W75-1429.

NATURE
ENDING
CACTUS
PANTRY
DEBATE
OSSIFY
SUSPENDERS

)115.2434 otll tar Mlko,
)luhua 14170 E1panr1o, 3 lad. - , 80ih 1 11~ Garaan Twb,

~.......... Front -k, 114·241.,.173, 114-24e-f234.

'••'IVP d tnL !P 11

c

,~,; n nr

.

ill 1 )()(I d .. ' 1. II( LX'

U,•(VJl'('ri 10 .IIlli j•!1) r1110'l

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

,,

WELCOME ALL LOVE'BIRDSI This frame ranch home
wilh 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, carpellvinyl Hooring, aloe. heat
pump, side decking, 2 slorage buildings and ·12ft. above
ground pool on 1.053 acres makes· a nice love nea11
Includes most appliances. Located on Nichols Rd.
$42,000

THIS WILl CH.IIRM YOUR HEARTI Coun1ry larm home
located near Chesler, 76.33 aaes with I 112 story lrame

.

DON"T DODGE CUPIDS ARROW WHEN HE AIMS
YOUR HEART TOWARD THE HOUSE OF YOUR
DREAMS!
HAPPY VALENTINES DAY I

t \'

,

'

Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY
OWNED.

Real Estate General

(CALL

CHESHIRE VILLAGE - 2 STORY HOME ON LARGE
LOT. NEEDS SOME WORK, BUT THE PRICE IS LOW.
$21,000.

·ANYTIME)
BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
. 51 o SECOND AVENUE, GIIUIPOUS, Ott 45631
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROK_
ER
Cheryl Lemley....................:.................... 742·3171
Shervl WRiter ..........................

1-800-585-7101
(614) 446-7101

a

"'

U~

I

The family of Joseph C. Evans would like
to th~nk our many friends, neighbors, and
rel!lliVIlS who showed us their concern and
l•A·-~ during the toss of our husband, falher
grandfather.
A special thank you to Dr. Mark Walker and
wonderful nursing staff in the On90iogy
Department at Holzer Clinic; Rev. Hanna,
Taylor, Rev. Channell, and Rev. Earley;
Stan Lewis. Jack Thomas, and Peg
11IM~n118S at Kuhner Lewis Funeral Home.
deeply appreciate your many flowers,

we

•--·· food,

visits and words of comfort.
Sincerely,
Imogene evans, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Sian Evans
~amlfy. Mr. &amp; Mrs . Steve Evans &amp; Family,
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert Chemas &amp; Family

MJa.

&amp;

~ SPECIAL AUOION

~.s-

THURS., FEB. 18, 1993 AT 7:00 P.M.
At Boggs Auction House, .
~·· _35, Gallipolis

@IJML.il

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOUS, OH. 45631
Ru...n D. Wood, Broker ...... 446 .4&amp;18 Judy Dewitt............- .............. ~ 4465
Phyltle MIU•r .......................... 256-1138 Marth• Smlth ......................... 378-2651
J. Merrill C.n•r ..................... 3~2651 c.thy Wray ............................ 446-4255
Tflmmle Dewltt .................. :.... 441·1514 Cindy Drongowald ................ 245-9687

6~~E~~Y~1.

BEDROOMS. 2
CONVENIENT LOCATION.
APPOINTMENT. $72,000.

..
..

Lordy,
Lordy,
Cathy is 40!
from Riclt, I
Kenn:y, Betlh.l
and Chad

Large Iron ketlle with stand;'wii,Jh tubs, cro~s. old
feed sacks, lard paddle .,laundry stove, horse collar

ALIVE
MIKE .
PLYMALE
15 .45!

Margo,
Happy Valentine's

.

I Love You ·
Now and Always

Bob

INilh harness, 'fVOOd plain, nietal doll house, shoe
lathe, Wagnerware, old wooden boxes, ice tong,
bachelor cheat, sewing machine, washboard, old
end abies, brass hamme(, wood recipe box, hog
scraper, silver dollar, 2 dollar bills, ball canister set,
old Louisville, Ky. corn knife, small drop-leaf IIIIC18·
tary, oak rocking chair, oak dresser, cross cut saw,
wu'h stand, Hllleboro No. 2 dinner bail, old rildlo,
1'940 Hawthorn 28" boy's bike, Daisey butler chum
(metal), cream crock, !ard praaa, depression glass,
old wago'n, bicycle built for two, Fanton, Carnival
glass, jumbo peanut butler jar, antique parlar alovit,
much more.
·
'
Terme: CUll or check with proper 1.0.

AuctiO!Mf: O.vld llogge Lie. 48118 ,

LlceriMd llld bonded In ltlt. 01 Ohio.
Ph- 448-n!IO.

Not reeponelble lor ICCidlnlt or 1011 of

.

.·

projlarty.

EMERGENCY ROOM
.DEPARTMENT .
MANAGER '
LoncoOIIr.folrllold Communlly Hotpilll, a
qualily 195-bed acU1e care lacilily ,Is seeking a
dynamic lncjyjdui( lo manage our Emergency
ilepallment
. .
This individual Is responsible tor supervising
ond eootlll.,ing fl18 nursing aclivlties ond
oparailonll upac1S ollho Emargerlj:y Room.
The qualified ...-te J11111 potM11 Pcelleni
organlaflonll and eomiiUllcation sldlla,alOng
with a wooong knowledge ollho dolly opertl·
lions olen Emorgency Depanment wilh l1,000
viails per year. The fldividual- wtll !'01·
MSS prev10u1 manogementexpenance willla
BSN cnterred. '
We otter a eom~r aalaly, progroaaive
, bonelll ·p~an including heal1h and lift ·lnlur· •
once, denial ond vision relmburoarnen1, a
unlqUI paid time.otf ~m, lick child care,
. ohorf.leml dllabllily proleqtion, tulliQrl . . .
lonctl, andrnuctt rnm, Forlntormolion, ~
._-.c~ will resume lo: " - R. lllr!y,
Pnotolll~

I

COMMIINTY HosPITAL
401 N. Ewing lllrMt
La..,..,,OH43130

w~

NEW

sided born slyled home
1~
family
room, living room. kiiehen, lull basement: gorage. Land
rolling, appro&gt;ti 20 tillable acres, fencing, pond, bam and
other oulbuildings. Exlm nice. Callloday.
; 1510

42

NEW USTINGI (POMEROY) UNCOLN TERRACEIII This home has loll al character &amp; the lady of the house
has lois of good laslll when it·comes 1o remodeling. Irs a 2
story home wlth 3 big bedrooms, nice sized living room
Mel plenty of ipace In the kitchen &amp; dining araa. Full bal8·
ment a Iorge alllc. Root just 2 yrs. old. Taka.a lool&lt; lor ohly
$24,900.00
1522

Mobile Home•
. for

Rent

Fumlahed, 2 or Sbdnn., tor rent
In Counlry- Pari!. -hlrl
. d!J'Irc.'!'~S2311 mon., 114-1112·

..

"
:~

•••·•

.'

1 ~ ;I

:J: ..,....,, ....,.,
Call

..

.....

•••

.... 1

...
,.
&lt;I

. . -•14-111-

110&lt; ·~-:.z.
In ·
on,

IUIIIIIID&lt;-

44

opportunlllea. Black building with 2 apart·
menlo. o....r 1 ..,._Moblll holl18 alto with
eeplc and water. P8rlect for a~ grocery
,.,,._ Greoot mom and pop OfMII&amp;IIoi1. 111a

FANTASTIC RIVER VIEW with this quality built 4 bacf.
room, 2~ bath rench home. Ba-lhaa finithecl family
room . Siluoled on 1 acm with paved crivt. Po""roy ,,.,.,
Cell for appointment.
· 1501

NEW USTINOI LOOKING FOR A HOME 6 A FEW ACRES? lloo, then enquire aboUt lhla
lla*tg. 2 •torr 3 ~home conaialing of iving room, kitchen wllh plent)lqlc.binell, din·
lng . .a or r.mHY room, bat&gt;, ullllfY ...... loll of dooell. Bam, clelached 2 car gnge.
Fenoed
In paature. ........ 8.680..,.. olland. Ioiii. Pricld righl $34,100.00.
.
. . Cal lodly.1111

ON FRANK ROAD- A pai11a1 brlduanch on 1,034 ac. mil
with 3 bedrooms, 1~ balhl, INing room, dini"'l room and
kitchen. One 'C8I' garage attached. Alklng only $52,500.
CaiiOday.
.
1482
,
•
HAPPY HOUOW ROAD -Is this 1~ story log home with
basemonl, 3 bedrooms, 2~ baths, family (OOm, living
room, kitchen, laundry area, ,11\ytigh~ ntelfite ayalllm, COY·
erad parch, heat pump 1 central air, 12'•12' building and
much more. Call lor detail&amp;.
1425

-Aoqulrod.
· No 114-7f7.
Plio,

Why a...,
.......
,.,.. whh
own
, _- 14110
hdlnan
lklnlng,

Ap.nment
, torRent

~ni-~';ilv:..

:=

2Forry,
IllWV:IOU~.
- - ClrllllpoUo

ME.... _ _ I _

.

dining room,

.

•-x.

~"~hiD
JZH ." ' ftiOnlh.
114
t11 OMI IIor 10W71-1110.

•

NEW UST1NOI FAMILY FULFILLIIIENTII The opacioua tamily room helghlanathe pleuu"'
of thla tulelully cllcoralld !ri-11'191. 4 bedrooml, 2 lull bella. 2 (~) batha, equlppad ltllchen
wl1h -'Y repiiiCed r.,. Mel rwrrlgermor. Roc. room, a-...r 2 car gontge, deddng, In·.
pnd pool. Stoutge bulldng. Pluo much more. Immaculate condlllon. Molc8 an appoint·
rnent ~FOR MORE ..~IIATION ON OUR ENllRE U8TINOS PICK UP THE FREE QIJAUTl
HOIIII BROCHURE AT SOliE OF TH£ LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STOREI,
IUPI!RIIARKEti.IIDTILI AND REITAUIIANTI.

RodneY-·

'

...

f'OA MORIINI'OIIMATION ON ouR ENTIRE LIITINGI PICK
W' THII'IIIII Oiii'UTY HOMES IAOCHURE AT SOliE THE

'

,,

OYER AN .
LAWN - 3 BEDROOM 1~ BATH
HOME HAS FULL BASEMENT, ALUMINUM SIDING.
'?"FIPORT. APPROJI. 5 MILES FROM CITY $48.800. '
GREEN -TOWNSHIP -INCREDIBLE VAlUE. APPROX.
24 BEAUTIFUl ACRES, MOSTLY FENCED PASTURE
CABIN WITfl FIREPLACE, BESIOE STOCKED POND.
WELL fo!AINTAINED 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME HAS
FORMAL LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY ROOM WITH
BRICK FIREPLACE AND CHERRY PANEUNG
SEVERAL OUTBUILDINGS. $120,000.
.
RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOllE PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPAOX
23 ACRES . BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES liND s
MOBILE LOTS . ALL PRESENTlY RENTED
EXCELLENT lOCATION. CAlL FOR COMPlETE
DETAILS.

a

25 ACRES Mli. - LOCATED IN CHESHIRE TW1' NICE
PRIVATE SETTING . LAND IS PARTIALLY woODED
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME . EXCEF'TIONAL BUY AT
$39,500.

=.:.~~~L=t=TOR=U.=IU=PI:R:u:IIKITW:::':HOTE:::Lt~ L-~~-P-PR_o_x_._25_A_C_RE

SMALL BARN. RURAL
WATER
TAP. NICE SITE FOR. ..J·
___s_-_o_LD_
.H_o_u_sE-NE.:..E_D_s.;,R.;E.;PA,;;IR;;.s.;.
NEW HOME OR MOBILE HOME . OHIO '!Wf'. $15.000.

We e r a - booking ulae.

L

1429

I OAK STREET- .13,000000 - · 1~ alory homo, with 3
bedrooml, living room, dining room. Nice back lawn
app/o•. 100'&gt;&lt;90'. Fronl and side porches. lmmadiale poal&amp;stion.
.
.
' 1481

2117, ~ ...am
N&amp;W 2 ltd,_... I 1 Bedroom
4MI.

ROOM:

kitchen. dining room and living room. 1 car garage and

more.

MOIIIII
-

COUNTRY ESTATE: - GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE
PRIVACY THEY DESERVE I 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
FAMilY ROOM, PLUS RECREATION
LOVELY
FORMAL UVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, EQUIPPED
KITCHEN, FORMAl .DINING ROOM, REAR DEC!(,
SECOND FlOOR BALCONY. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP
NATURAL REDWOOD EXTERIOR. 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. SURROUNDED BY A 9 BEIIUTIFUL
WOODED, ACRES . SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.

PRICE REDUCED! - Now $38,500, 226 Spring Avenue.
Pomeroy. 4 bedroom ranch style home, dan, family room,
1

T'

LANCASTER-FAIRFIELD

3 BEDROOMs:
IN FAMILY ROOM.
. CARPORT,
NICE PROPERTY.

!)

1111\1 I fl

u'E:. p..ND COLLt:cr,

"&lt;&amp;&lt;:

IN COLOR, • NOW
OFFICE FOR rilufl

( J

AMERICAN DIRECTORY SERVICE CORP.
EOIE

~,o

'

8HOWINO NEiofii.Y AU

HENRY E. CL1:LAND..............................992..181
TRACY BRINAGER.................................Hll-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL..................................849-2880
KATHY CLELAND..................................9924191
OFFICE....................................................992·2258

'1 .•

Thanks to all my co-workers
and friends at Holzer Medical
Center for making my
Retirement Day a success after
39 years of service at Holzer
Pharmacy.
Ralph Durst

•

COZV UP TO THIS HOME IN MIDDLEPORT· Fulures 3
badrooms, 2· baths, bar, built in shelving, newer heat
pump and CIA, Includes a large enclosed rear porch
along with a storage shed. Greatlocallonl
,
.
ASKING 29,900

'

Lady to the panhandler: "If you're
trying t9 beg for a favor you should
take your hands out of your pos:kets."
The panhandler shrugs and says:
"The truth is, lady, I'm begging for a
pair of SUSPENDERS!"
.

..

Rentals

. '

[ ,

l.' 1'1

.' ''''
'

''l 1 ' ' ' ' '

•l

Real Estate General

No ~rlence Neceeeary
'", '
Deliveries Start Lite FebNary
90 people needed to deliver the new Ohio
f
Valley Telephone books In town and
rural area lh'
all Gallia and Meigs counties including AJ:Jarrj
and Coolville.
;~
To become an independent contractor yoll'
must be at least 18 years old, have the use of an
Insured car, van or truck,and be available a mini·
mum Of 5 daylight hours daily.
T(, Ill

,,

I ,I

,

' ,. I ., ~' I '
1 , Ill'
'''I t•

Afl!ISWERS TO

~~n~~~~.""c!al~

"

A SWEET NEW LISTING I SR 7-Pomeroy-2 ~~!ramo •
~ome with 3 bedrooms, carport,atonn doortlw1ndows,
msulollon, eenlralalr, carpel flooring, basement.
1\SKING $39,000

,

DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS::

Or

'I

,, I

.....,,_ whh 5 year w1rnntr. Jn.

4,000 sq. ft. Budding near
downtown GaiUpoRs.
Includes 1,500 sq. ft. office space
and plenty af parking.
Call446"3497 after 6:00 p.m.

ceremony as we took our

•i;oOklng••m A0..1? Corialdlr A
.-.... -~nco. 1na 14170 Ald-

FOR LEASE ·

DoapterVodo

'1 1 , I I .'I

1

Soloc11oro, . Law Monty Dawn,
FrM loi.Up And o.JI•"'Y· 1 .IIN710.

yoathn&gt;op
l.o¥1aJIIy_..._

s - JlldGa, 3bntm.,

Is in very
and leaturet 4
baths, N.G.
range, decking, pan
yard. slorage bullo~no ; CIA, 314 aae lol in a very nice
communi1y. '
ASKING $47,500

Accepting consignment for farm machinery tractors:
dozers, backhoes, cars, triiCks, !railers, lawn mowers, .
tillers, motorcydes, and tools.
SERVICE FOR PICK-UP MERCHANDISE
AVAILABLE
614-245-5152
Eatate Auction, Filrm Auction &amp; Hou..hold
aveiLibllat your reeldenla.
C.ll for Delllle, 614-245-5152
MARUN WEDEMEYER, AUCTlONEER
614-245-5152 Uc. 3&amp;15 &amp; Bonded.
Not ReiiJIOnalbll for Accld111t or Lo.. of Pt opa;tr.
---"-Real Eatate General
'

home 3 bedrooms, bath, appliances. Includes ponds,
pasture, fenced land, tillable ground, sheds, silo, mill. milk
. hous~. bam, 2 water sources-well aTPC.
$8S,OOO

DON

No Dlpooll On Alnt-2-0wn;
Nolhlng Evtr -nod.
112 bath, hall pump, Move,
LAYNE'S FUANrTURE
j:'f:l'llor, all -riC, $14•1100; Complolo homo ·tuml~l"a:'

11110

At.;

FARM EQUIPMENT ETC.
AUCTION

Rooms

Ia memory of

Rev. &amp; Mrs. Darrell &amp;
Dorothy Dodrill wish to
thank everyone for
making our 50th
wedding anniversary so
special. We would like to
thank our pastor, Rev.
David Marhoover for
performing
the

Wlndawa

lnaulatld

Hut I Air, Newly Hemodlltd 1ft..

Fmanc1al

18 ,Wanted to Do

I

·

Siding, Gao Hnl" Now C.nhl lOoking "-· No Palo, .... 514·

r

.

tlvhlee ivn II"

0331. •

CHESHIRE 3 Bodroomo, 1 Bolh, Complolly Fumllhod mobllo

'

TrM topping I trimming tX·
perltncl, lrH ntlmetn, 304·
895-3486.

lind OWn ·Tron_..lon Coli
614-3811-8108 COnly Toklng Apo
plliltlono Until Wodntoci•Y Fob
17).·

Small

HouM PGOimo. + Ulllhlllt. No
- · c.;ll Botoro 1 P.M. 114-44&amp;-

31 Homes for Sale

WIH
~~~~~~~~~:
ood

Worbndere Now Hiring Eam
Up To $7.00 /Hr Aaxlbll Daytime
Houn Man ;:"~ 1 • II You Have
Good Worll """"'· Rolorlnc11

I

for the Christmas
dinner at the Long
Bottom
· Community
Building

114-24$.1254.

Fumlahod

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1993
BEGINNING AT.10:30 A.M•

$1 • . COli 114-la-AH. ~DH. .

•

Aoiloblo llolhor 01 Dnl WIU
Provldo . Child CU., In Hor
Home. tt.ve Rei., w en C,H ·

Womem Uak• more mone~l
F,... eight w•k lOb preparatioR
program about . nontraditional
:;tm.••nt, (ONOW), 1-800o

Ohio .for
of SR
ondTR

Minor
and
Rivoralila
Apanmtnto In MlddiiOIII'i F"""
CompllfiY

w.

ABSOLUTE AUOION

Onclauo Uvlng. 1 and 2 bod.-

room aport- 11 VI-

opponunllybalio. ·

Help Wanted .

At.

Located on St.
124, Portland, OhiO
approx. 3.5 miles from the Ritchie Bridge •
Ravenswood,
va. Will take CDIIIIgnmente
from Noon till Dark on Fri., Feb. 111 and sat.
A.M.
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
•
Ohio 1344
W. Va . 515
John Smith - Apprantlce
.
Refreshments by BB$han Ladles Aux.
cash • Positive 1.0. .
Not responsible for accidents or lola of

A•• S. FumRUI'I. Ntw, UHd, an•
tlqu11. HcK a hold tumilhlnge.
Mlaon, wv. -713-5341.

ux famMialstatu• or national
origin, or 11r1 intsntion to
malo! 01111 ~ PNforanca,

Public Sale
&amp; Aucti on

CONSIGNMENT AUOION
SAT., FEB. 20,1993
10:00 A.M.

OlD~ Crtillc R01d, Oalllpofl8,

iniradon or dileriml!llion
buod on ,_, oolor, roliglon,

11

8

Ohio 14-441-4:111.

Wo Buy And Soli Good Ulod
Furnllura. 22311 Slllo llouta 141.

of t Q68 wlll&lt;llmatcao It ilagal
1 0 - "01111 prolorenoo,

S u nCiay Tcmes-sen

Real Estate General

Goods

COUNTRY

thla newapap.r It subject 10
tho f-11 Fair Houoing AC1

Household

Goods

-·

All raal tltate adwrtlaing In

Public Notice

wv

OH-Polnt

,

,.

.'

�'

Times
Househo~

51

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Sentinel
KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Building
Supplies

Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. U
Olivo SC, Gollipollo. Now &amp; Und
tumlluro, holt.,., Wlllwn I
WOitlbOC&gt;Io. 114-441-,51.

71 Autoe

Sale

_..:.;.;;,:,.;;.:.:.....:..::;;.:,___1

Block. brkk. HWer plpas, win·
dowli, UntM, ale. Claude Wintwa, Rkl Grandt, OH Can 114·
245-5121.

~ February 14, 1993

71 Autoa for Sale
72
------1

•

117,000 '"''"· t3250.

Molal roof ond oldlng, ba~od
INmet and galv. 304-"'372-53118

.. 171
Ownor:
·
...
lllloo,1117
......Food
loll Aolilng
Q,IOO.IM-241-1771.

72 Trucka tor Sale

AkC R~ltlartd Calmatlon Pup1
With Sltota $200, 814·318·8322.

Antiques
~-clllac

-

Con

~
• 1•••
a.ooo. ,.._..m.
Antl:qu.

-

vena

bl0

•

Mdroatn

auHe, In-lull .... hood • fool

. bolrda. bed tramt,

.rn~nr...

6

bOll aprtnao, dlotl of draworo,
vani1Y "wlr&lt;HIII&lt;I mlrrow. $300.
.. 304-176-2811.
: Bur ar '•II. RlveriM Anllqu.a,
. 1124 E. Ualn Bt,..t, on At. 12_4.J
~ Ponwoy. Houn: II .T.W. 10:ou
•'a.m. ta 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
' ta I:DG p.m. 814-112-2528.

2

AKC

Regltttr.ct

Shophord Pupplto. Shots. VII.
c~~eckod. 114-317·70!9.

1111 4 DoOf
~•-.
Q.tS. Turtto, t14\4e1•.
1111 Rod F l - - . Homo,

BNgl• pupa, ou1 ol good running doSJa, $60, 114·192-7823. .
Flah Tank. 2413 Jackaon Ave.

U.IOO, Call 1~7141.

Point Pleooa,.., 304·675-2063,
tun llno Troplcol llshl birdo,

tn,IIOO. 30W71--.

' ' " LlncGin Contlnlntol llorfl l

2 ~- lmmwocullto 1:.il

eu .. GtO. •

-·

1111 Pontiac llunblnl, Ownor
Ou1 Of Worlo, ..... 114-241-

amall anlm111 and auppl u.

1tt0 Food

11117 PIYf!IOU!h
·2.2, I
llpMd,
PS, PI,
At;,-llaldng

NEA Inc

buying machlnaa,
old llntema
TreUie~~~!;!~~~~~.:;::..:
..wing
ala broklln

Hay &amp; Grain

tum11ura, Oobr. 114-112-11141.

64

54 Mlscallanaous

lllxod hay, 300 aq baln 12.
-h. 15 round bal• 1,100 II,

a-rt UIL_!.Doof, Air

' ·

1111 S-10 truck, $1100, 114-1412311.
CMvrolo1, Ford, OOdg• pickup
-. or lang. No rull.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1870 Col-I

1111 Chov ConfCI, good cond,

~Ill.

Dalmatlon Pupa,
;tm CJI Mp, nede body WormN, Sholl, $200, 814-388good driva.troln1• honl1op, t.13_2~-----~-3ilp., 251 lcyl., whnl spoke 1

.211o., _..

1:00.

111&amp;2 Aeroster LX. Lonl!ld,
11,000 Mlln, Warranty, All
POwer~, Ukl Naw, $14,500,

080, 814-441-111C.

223 callbt.tr, l400i 118'1 Ford boo
- COif, good condKion, l"'lnt
· !Of!, nrnot groat, NOD ftrm; Fen. dol 1alocaotor, Smoo. old, $1100;
:. 114-Q&amp;-1221:
· S HP Raar TIM Tlller $200, 7 HP
· Front Tine nnar $125, call 304·
: llS-5711 Aft0&lt; 5 P.ll.

· lu,.. s..dl on aale at Palnl

.

-·

..

,, .

.

.

.

I

1

OAK SHADED LOT - Clase 1o town location.
Roomy bi-level home. Fanuly room atarled in
lower level (not much 10 1inish), 3 bedrooms,
eat-in kitchan , living room. P.riced to sell at
$49,900.
1205

5

.

.

\

~:"
tJ:
;I

1

I

64

8 ~~fr\wo

"''1

4

IIII

1

II I I[II

Real Estate

May, oquaro bolos $2. l $2.10.
304-G75-31160.
114-1!12-31126.

Llrge round bl:ln, $111, will
IOicl, 614•ft2-5313 ar 814-141-

2754.

~~ ~ f'd"md ~~alak

Real Eatate General

:;1231.

101. Local r...,.nc.. lllritltltocl.
COli 1-i00-217-G11711 Or 114-2370488
A.,.
It m.nt
W.lo,_lfnil,
Curtll Home lmprov.mentt:
Yllrl Expotlottce On Dldar 6

.I

--··-..--·

F-lon Work, Aooll!!fl,
•Kf1chono And Balta. EitlftlltNI .... •1011, No Job
Too Big Or-HI 114-3e7-0S11•

Davlo ~ lladllno And
Vacuum Cleo- Repair, Froo
Acceaao•Jes
Plcfi.Up And Dtlivorv. aaorg~~
CtMk ROMI.I14 411-aM.
t...-lonl.
Uoad I
, TV •-•-·
~~~
1 rellultt, an fYpoo, otortlng a1 $11; Ron •
- · opoc I
•- r 114-241-11177, "114·371- In 'Z.nlth aloo w

Auto Pans &amp;

VI RONA IIIlTH, 8-.;R_................. 1121
EUNICE NIEHII, AEALTOR......._.........441-1n7
AIITH lARA, AEIILTOR.......................44M722
OEBORAH ICITES, AEALTOR............4 - . -

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

tlonda 4 Whlllor, TAK 250, Uko
$2,400. 814-4414115.
Yl Ya.. ho 400. Nloo, _.rtul,
""" ....... 304-171-5088. .

••

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

RESIDENTIAC. ·INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL· FARMS

OFfiCE 992-2886

.. '

..

wAft::J:JJ.NG

Uncond111onaf Ulotl.,. guanln-

•,,ItO Yarnaho 11011• $1,111. 114-

Real Estate General

Improvements

•,1100 Or loot Offer. 114-3tl441 IMI1 114-441-7501.

Big round bi!IH of mixed hay,
$15/blla, 114·,..2-3064.

:a-

'' .'

LYNDA IIRALIY, REALTOA ...........- ...A1t IM
IIICHAEL IIILLEA, AEIILTOR ............. 4tl 1101
PATRICIA ROllS, REALTOR.................2*11571

'

• z2n, l'll(noroy: 114-112·!1100.

'·, Nllw:.r." tankll,
ella-

ITEVEJI SOT. IWOADS. .........-,........ 241-5101

..,., bnlnda. -

tan lruck
11oo1
I

Dnl

WILIIA WILIJII..-, A880CI-TI.••.24MOTO
.1111111 WILUIIIIION,IIIIOCIII'IE.• .MMiml

UUII1y . lldf Spl: 30'a40'xt'
Polnlad - . Qolvol.... Roof, 11'd' Stall Blldar, 3'
Mlln 0.., IIM4 Er.cled. Iron
plclgo. -3112-1045.

__ Fl.,._..,, lnc:Tudod,
llah1s 121, tour
24x41

!....,.________

ln-

Cowl,J;..Ollk
kilchan,rltnc~ala~
a lind mo. leave you

with lillie 10 do. F- 11111 . __3 bedloomo, 1
lurgo balh, iving room, dining room. Born and
oulbtikllng. $58.900.
«124

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

f-man'o Hll1fna And Cooling.
-"-•IJtar:tlal,
And Se!viOI.
ASEll
c.rtlftld.
comn-..
c:IIL 114-2511-IIU.

'"*'"
•ITo, -

eome IDDUince ....,..,., WV
304-1'114tll Ohio 114-4*2454.

84

EI8Cirlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

AMidlnUal or commen:lll
~llfl, - • - or ropo 1ro.
lla. .r UoanHd oloelriclln .
IUdoriour Etec1rlcol, WV000308,
304.e7!1-1711.
w1r1

VA ASSUMABLE - 3 bedroom doublewide Iii·
uated on 1 59 acre lo1 located 3 miles from
town. Large clo1aehed recreation room Pnced
at $55,000.
1701

SMAU BUT SNAPPY- Exceptionally clean
and uncluttered 3 bedroom ranch. No honey-do
projects hllt'o. Don't miss this one- call for an
eppoinlmont today You won't believe lito price
of $37,900.
1501
AFFORDABLE UVING - You're not going to
believe how much house you can buy for or1ly
$43,500. Thts home offera 4 bedrooma, 1 belh.
iving room, lamifr room, large ki1Chon wilh dining area situated on an oversized lot.
Comfortable family Irving at an affordable price.
Hurry before if&amp; too late.
JAY DRIVE - II FAMILY NEIGHBORHOOOI
- We oHer this home with an exoellen1 noor
plan - zoned 1rea1 for diping, onter1aining. IIisure time ond olaeping. Among lho ~rea: 5
bedrooms, 211 batho, large family room,
equipped kitehon, living room and dntng ....,
and out&amp;ide accommodations for jus1 ~
back and relaxing. City schools. $89.500.

We Need Listings!
. _. .
REAL FS WE 1l\C .

34lft2.

.

446 :E~4

.

1:::r

~·
Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007
Sonny Garnes - 446-2707

DAVID WISEMAN BROKER· 446·9555
LoreHa McDade- 446-7729
B. J. Hairston - 446-4240
Pat Cochran- 446-8655

Dlln Thomas- 446-2336

__!:====-::=::::.! ---""":-"~~---- ---------

Real Eatate General .

chll, $35. oach. 304-175-1!504.
For Sale 10 State Plain 1m

nicely remodaled home resting on 3.84

.,... ol Glilla
bethroom. new wi

WAf - tid poUo·· docka,
.....
put up vinyl
.. · - akl111ng. 114-

'
o 18
ma s, '"'"'"Tank Pumalna fiOiiGallla
• ole. D • AA~~· WV. 304- Co. ROlf EVANIINTEAP liES,
\ 3"12-H33ort
8321.
Jacklon,ott.--,...

;w

•

PRIME ,LOCATION -What are the three most
important constdorati01"1s in buying raal estate?
LOCATION. LOCATION. LOCATION. ThiS is
especially importaril in commercial property.
AVAILABLE - BEST LOCATION 1n town.
Comer of Stale Street (Rt 588) &amp; 2nd Avenue
(Rt 7). Graa1 &amp;Kposure from stop light. Comor
displll): windows . (Great condrtion. Over 2,000
oq h. of remodeled retarl space). Plus office
t!fl8C8 and storage. Rental space on second
loor: 3 room apartment and 4 room office sel
up overlooking lhe pari&lt;. Call Dave Wiseman
lor more inlonnation.
11201

the

3

·. ita Yarnaham Th- w..-.

Hay &amp; Grain

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY ON 10
ACRES I - Buf for investment and buiking lo1
potential. Close ID town . Small pond. Duple•
type unit provides good income $29,900. «122

duwi!town, lhl&amp; home's location is great. While
allhe ir• loca1ed 1n a quiet location
- d up by """" and acres of woodlllnd.
Llrllo 4 bedl00111 home- ovbor 2100 ":'!· It,
~bathe, IMng room, dining room, oat-10 kitchon and t.mi1y room. Sai8Red in po[Ch , Iorge
patio lind above ground pool 2 car buQt-in
garage. Good 110n1ge.
«117

Ie Compl~te chu.~kle ' qu~led
,
. you 3:v~~~~,~~ ~=p N~~"f:b=~
r ·I' 1 1 r .I' I' I' I' llO I

m~::11.
.-t. runs.llu nowu
1·:......

LEADIIGHIM HAL ESTATE
'
PH....,.,

=.000

PRICE REDUCED TO ... ,,,UUUI
BOY, COUNTRY GIRLI a house that
will ..daly both. Wtlhin walking distance to

;::;;;~==;::::~~

~i .e &amp;3;:..

Livestock

room, nloo kitchon. rtmodllod bath.
garage w11h mudroom, largo U1111ty
foam Nee large lot in qutat community only 11 iTIIIH
1rom """'·Now loilhe old·•mo P&lt;IOIIIII ol

1 car

Lady to the panhandler: "If
you're trying to beg for a favor
you should take your hands
out of your pockets." The
panhandler shrugs and· says:
"The truth is, lady, I'm begging
for a pair of ---···--·"!"

F0 ssyI
II 0 I I I

9

•=

11t1a raroly como.cr lite market Twn ollhl 011t111ry
1torn1 loaarrino H Iorge bodrooma, hugo llylng

'•·:t· :!~=.;~;:~~==~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir:::::::::::::::____
::?4 Motorcycles
81
Home
::"',m=-""-,....,.;;..;..;,.k,,;;..;,cs:::.,A,;,·2,;,.sa,.,""'boll"""
Home
Improvements
.' - o.- blkl, 2,400 actual 81

63

~~=~~J~- That'o ~~~All!~&amp;
AI
you11 ..Y wl*l
you view this ranch beauty. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, large living room and kilchen W1th huodack to spend your free time on while the kidl
play in the largo leneed yard. Everything you
need and lhepnce is right Only $38,000. 1612
BIG FEELING FOR A LITTLE PAICEI Homol Nka

.

...~----.._·- ' - ·.....&amp;.-.&amp;...__.

':. I

Soars -10hp;~~-Liooka
good, rWII
, $400, Hlclna
Mower, 114- t-2:1111.

Hay for 1111, aquar. bile Uta.,

..-"'" - - -...,.h,

1~

ABETE0
::· · 18 I 1 1 1

•

=·

3
~I~1

:. L-.....__....__,____,__....___.

One pair of 15.5x38 rear tnctor
tii'M, like nn, $400, fM.M.,
2181.

~ BTU,_ -~~~ condition, work&amp; J.D. 7:10 • B ~.0. 1000 4 • Row
. ..U, UOO, 114·115-3383.
COm Pllntar, 114-251-e011.
: Couch with 2 maiCitlllfl choirs Locu.t Potta, $1.00 I Up, Aleo
• 1121. 30,...7HM7 toavo mao114-25H318, Or 114-31-

I
lr--T""'I--..---~1

PENNIG

.

&amp; Livestock

· Chur&lt;lt kb11a1ry tor sato,
· 11'144', two tnlriN, gta• fronl,
: $1110, 8'14-311'0401.
: Coloman a• lwnaco, 81,000

_llll._

.. r6-,-lT_A,...I..,;.Ny-:.1P_RT::I7....;.Y,I·..-l'

12.200. ~....

\

· Ph.ll, 2101 Jack...., Ave, Polnl
: PIMUnl, l¥'lt 30M71-4084.

Real Eatate General

room

71

Farm Supplies

1122.

Real Estate General

114-441-ml

'

Bunk Bad Sot WKh Plato Top
an-br~or.r SIOnd,_ A,..lquo
: -lA
Wilh Marl&gt;lo In- Ford Dlnol ~ .. Wllh
•AntiQuo
314
Bod, Fonl Loaclor_. $1,100; 2010 JO
• Woollotand. ~5-5021. Aftor Trector W/ti&amp;J Loadlir, $4,100.
Financing Available, 114·21111· 3P.II.

Real Estate General

Real Eltat8 General

Rnl Eatate (leneraJ

·1111; 2 Judy Garland P1a111,

•• Price Renonabla,

51~52 .

~ For Salt· Lidia wlnter.coat, full
, tortgth, gny w/plold'..oco~. hoa

205 North Second Ave.

· bMn drj eleaMCI, $30, 114-992·
·:. 2428.

Mlddleport, OH

; For saa... Size mectfum lacln
~ wint.er cOli, denim wl tl.thlr

• trim, like new, Wll $15, now
'"" $40, paid $150: alao mlac. ladiH
clothing; c:1ll 114-992·2155, 1, 5pm or -114-9411-2204 ahar Spm.

WELCHTOWN ROAD- Need a trailer lot or a home site?
This 3.38 acre parcel has eleclnc, older septic, and spnng
water. Pubtic water available. Just move your tra1)er in .

JJ.

, Oannla Nutrition Products
featuring Amino Acid Body
~ Bulldlngi w•lgl'lt lou and tal
,. bumtr ormufat. Available IX•

.,_ ci~Jtlvety at Rite Ald Pharmacy.
: Thl Hfl way to diet.
, H.O. monltorl TV, buill In VCR,
wllh ramol•, $300; Cold Spot
S.1ra freezer, $100; 614·9923200.

I B Toc~not011Y ,614-441-0950,
UMd T.V. a, VCR 1 For Sale:

~

Z.rwlh 4 Moad VCR $119.D5;
Emo..on VCR $7t.D5; Shsrp
VCR $79.11; RCA Consolo T.V.

$141.111 Sylvania COnaolt $125;
Tuan COA Computer Monitor

(Color) $'12U5.

'u-

388 ·16 IIhz W/ VGA
Monitor, 40 MB H1rd Drive . New
•Ovar $1,800. Only 1 Vtar Old

·Juot $150. 614-446·6181.

New prom drlst, lizt 14, peach
In cOlor, worn only once, 614·

1!12-5704.

$1,000

1111. I'OA liE AND MY GAL - A lovoly
homo and ono aero of lind Foncod lot V.,. ....,
and road!' 10 occupy. EdQiol DWn.

IIU2. IN TOWN COMFORT- V.,. woll malntllinod 3
bedrm., kit, large living nn., dining nn , front poni11D
put a twing on. range, rtf., walhw &amp; dry•. ou hM1
~.A., 2 car garag•. great neighborhood. Cloae 10

RACINE· Elm Sf. • Live in the two story section ollhis

'W!'fihlllfl.

home and rent the one story rear section and ltve free
Front has 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, and bath Tho rear has 4

t858. NEW USllNOI - 25 acre farm In Clay

rooms. 2 bedrooms, and bath. Large nice lot

$20,000

MIDDLEPORT· Poarl rSI. ·You'll have plenty of elbow
room-in this 2 story, 3 bedroom homo. tt has 1 1/2 bath&amp;,
vinyl siding, new w;nclows. central air and a 2 car garage.
ASKING ONLY $35,000

RUTLAND- New Ltma Road- SpaciOus lo~ 3 1/2 aaes 01
tawn and a cute gingerbread lnmmed, 1 112 story home
with 3 bedrooms, 3 porches and equiped kitchen which
has been remodeled.
ONLY $25,000

Townahlp lor only a43.000. Thlo form include• all
minerll rlghta,tobacco bue. batn , cellar, above
ground pool ond ...,lito diah. Tho houoo hu 3 10 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, lR, FR, Wid utility room. Hurry
end call now for an app0in111t0111.
II-LEVEL HOllE - 3 bodrma .. eot·ln lclt .. ig
211:! balha. 1 oc. mn.lmmOdiate poaoeaion.

. nn.,
1st

&amp;

lind beck

up.

nn. or lllldr and baoomont.
'
.. 10 . . COUNTRY COTTAGE WITH PIIYATE
LOCATION - 2 BRI, living rm , kit , w/counlry

porel'l, full baumen1. anached garag.. 1 K . mil .
REDUCED a42.500. MAKE OFFER.

Stove Soordo 245-51

o,...... 114-44f.l158.

oa.

1133. S BEDROOM IRICK RANCH, lui baHmonl.

Prom Dl'lllltt, Bndtd Royal
Slut Sequence Long Gown 10·
12, 2 Black Shart Gowns, 8-12,
614-367-7821.

IMng room, dining room, kitchen, 2 car garage,
....,mning pool. Great locaoon. A rn.IIIID . ..

PRICE REDUCED TO IMI,IIOOII
,. 3 BRa, 2 bllthl, LR, DR, FR, 2 firepl808&amp;,
heal pump, above ground pool.
(1041)

eablnett, ttoriiQe building wJcarporr. 2.8 acr11

tll,lllll. Villllnla 3811-U26.

IIIIUTY
- Tho romorkallio
Mw ol . . CIIUntry. llaliln 1111
~. oolhldral
.
wldt balcony. 3 BR, 2114
- · living 1110111
- l n g lirtpt-. aqllifl.
kltolton, breaklut room hal a Ia. w~.-. storoo

••kerl

O.llvar~.

FLATWOODS ROAD- Approxrl1]alely 4 112 acres w1th a
great tar,ing buildtng stte TPC waler available and e18ctnc
availab e Almolf ready to go, just needs you Three
acrvo tor $8.000. or 4 112 acres lor only
$12,000
MIDDLEPORT· Beech St.- Thrs home IS fUSI what tho
nowlyweds need to get sta"ed ln . Has two bedrooms
upstairs w1th ntce-sized kitchen and hving room down.

-

· CL08E II. 5 acroo mn of rotino land

..14. LAROE CDIIIIEIICIAL IUILDINO. On SIOIO
Route 2 bedrm . apt. on tat ftoof. Po11ible 3 more

IIST.IIAKI A OEAL-o.r.rwan11ac11011 . ..~laton
the market, 3 bedrm., 1 Nih, porch, 2 car ...,aa..
Nice modular. 24d•. Rur111 wat.r 2.4 ac.

m'n.

$32.500.

ap11. Wlhodo.

_ ,, lUI' ONE I GET 2 FAll- 3 10ntelsln nood

olropar.

.

NIW UITINO - Nice

eta. IIIIUTI'UL IRICK RANCH - 3 bedrooms,
1112 balhl, tul .......,nt livlllfl room, dlring room.
ki!Chan, 2 cor fiO!ogo. 11x311 lngr""nd pool. Clll'
- ·· f79,0fi!I.OO.
.
-1

~'•

•

~

~.

ranch otrt- home offera 3 llRli, I K balh&amp;,
LA, full ballm&amp;RI, garage, heal pemp,
rear.deck. Just greet lor n8tll home ·
414 TH"D AVENUE- oilS IIRI, 2 bathe,
kitchen, DR, LA, alum. aiding, gao ._,
CIIIL air, new oarpol
(103)

WHITE ROAD - Near hotpltal,. very nice

•
,.~v:x

,.

~

home llllualed on .559 acN, 3 BRI, 1112
bath1·. LR, kilehon, DR, 1 car attached
garage, aiDrage bldg. In the 40's.
REMODELE;D OLDER HOME, 111s1Dry,
3 BRI, kl1chon, math, FR. oltualed on 4

acre1, ~Call Rulh loi loca1ion.
11114. BEAUTY and tho IUT anractlve 1rtd
dellrabte country homlo with MIICI'M mil, 3llllclr'n.,
huge LA &amp; DR, larrily rm. M cc ~ umftg llreplloe, 2
bails, ud~ll' rm. I .,.,._ pon:h. Equlppod ldtchln,
,_ 30xotO - · Lovoly 1-.
You,l ba
proud of this property.

R:~~:~· Family needed tot this 1 1/2 story, 3 or 4
"'
home W1th 4 porchea, 112 basomen1. dining
room,
room . and a small oulburld;ng. Good-sized
lol.
$28,500
DOmE TURNER, Broker........................992-5692
'BRENDA JEFFERS..................................992-3056
DARUNE STEWART. ................................III2-eH6
SANDY BUTCHER&gt;...................................III2-1311
JERRY SPRADLJNQ. ......................(304)812-34H

I

.

.

,

"PIKE STREET· - Formerly
House Ceramica. 2,060 sq.
kttchon, 10X52 mobilit home used u

ATTRACTIVE HOME IN VILlAGE OF
CENTERVIUE - Conveniondr localed,
ownenohave clone worl&lt; 10 malo! thia a
comfol18ble home

...tal.

·
•padoUI hame

throughout, brau light li..rurn and muc:tl
- . . 2 .., 011,..... ,..,..,.., attic a10&lt;11g0, 2 ..,.,
nvl. Thlo houoolo nflttiHnonoo ll'oo ol boll quail.,.
Make your appolntmontond - I I )OU dool · -

Quln For Slit: $90 814o446-4208.

Two Com tlumlng Dove Ttdt
ttov11, new, Margan Farm, 304137·2011.
Wash... &amp; Oryors. $75 &amp; Up, 30
Day Warr1my, Call Washer &amp;
D!'for Shoppo, 11.-448-2944.

CHAAIIING HDIII - Locattd jutt off 8R SS.
lmmuulalt ranch With new l"'rovementa. Lovety
,_ - t tltrougltout, deCk, roots ¥Nil old. 2
boOOns.. LR, din. rm .. kit., anclooed Iron! poich om"'
-

- · IRICK IEAUTY - 3 BRa. 2ll balho, 2 car
oar-oe. 4 Ktn mtl. 4,000 lq. ft. c:ommerall bUilding

Prom Drtll, Loralla Orglnal.

Saquant Black &amp; Gold. Size: 7-8
Wom On~:~~ . Alto S.autlfui Pany

&amp;7H871.

•

- · FOUR CITY LOTS - BURKHART LANE 50'a:13S' eedl . Nice apot for 1 large ftoor pllin Don't
pauupthioRARE .JEML.

allll und•r warranty, $750. firm,

!Rate top pool table , $800. 304-

11111. NEW UI11IIQ - 2 or :1 IEOROOII RANCH
-lend loml~ room -...,n - .. Prlcld 10 1011.
Col lor loclllon end pnco.

beautiful kitchen has new cabmets with an Island, 3

304-G75-1725.

S.noned Wood, $40

v.,.

ROCK SPRINGS ROAD· An older homo with the
downstairs completely renovated. Ha&amp; an enormous Wving
room wtlh 2 bay w1nclows and a nice stone fireplace. The

On• Rainbow all allachmant1,

114-445-0770.

· - · NEW 1JITINGI Loll of apaco In thla 4
bedroom homo-... on MI. T-Read. Haa 1.5
..,., of lend Including a pond.
rioo locatloo
1144,000.00. Col lite Saigo. ..

bedrooms With large walk-in closets , din1n~ room:
wraparound porch. and many oulbuild1ngs, sitting on 1
112 aaas
$55,000

OFFICE........- ..•••.••.•.•..•...._,, ....................tt2·2818
•

CillO-·

17U. I'OUR 110110011 HOME, 2 IATHI- -.,.
ranch homo locolad In lite OOUIIIIY. Eldlnoive worlc
eorn"PIIIId u lot-: now Thonno AI- wlndowt,
oocunty dooll, IIHI ·oldrllfl, heavy roof. klldlon,
ooramlc llo antry axtendld lnDkl-.,, 18153 - .
oomont walks ond pad Sao thlo hor!lt end oiOp

looklno o1-.;.
*848. LOOKING FOR A PLIIC&amp; TO HAVE YOUR
OWN .BUSINESB "IN YOUR HOiiE,thln lhlolslho
proper" lor JOU 2·3 bodroorno, 2 balta, LR. FR, OilIn ki1cl1on, llac. B8 ,..,, r:Nt, udllty room. con 1110
ba •

lovolr 3 BA homo.

IGI. CL.OIII

it. I;..... rrv1 of rolling land.

.

1110 1.00111101 Is .. kor ., dtll 2 SIOrf ltOmt
1oca11d on Firat awnue. fhlo homo ,...." 4
bed;ooml, 1M l:talhl, famllr rwm, ll'lfnt room,
bn lall.IIIDMurakM•a1 bldwu....-.
110:1. If II

ta. 01'

H1CIH IJYLI AND LOW
MAifi'INMCI 11 In wow hdure, ••ldar lhll ~
bed:oom C. Cod brlclk hlme. HDrM 11 lhualld an
21&lt;. end hal 1100 aq. ft. olllvlllfl - · .....
-lltrlldlng. end • 1oll24 IIUildlng ..... lor • ..,..,
bl It,

I

..... A/INCH ta. -ted on SlOta Route 211.
Thll home '-tu1e1 4 bedrooms and llnlat'lld
bMJ , ... c,l tor mM . . . ..
I D 1 . - 10 IILL T111oltornii\U 1000 aq.IL
olllvlllfl - · :lllodloomt, otr1buikllllfl ond

...... ...12.........

.

D7

2

.. I I I

Transportation

61 Fa

Sentlnei-P8jJI

.

.•-. r....,;.s,T__,U;,-;-C-T::C_Ar.-11

glldo, auto trano, 1 ~o.34~U.I$4.
lnmod rabbit I'

::,y,aoi.::""~"rns;~l:1':

I

poY!ft01110.. 1N5 $-10 Chevy 4x4
llliior, 304-175-257t 1:00 1111

, - · drf- quo- ond tiack,
· atlo baeh rutm.r lnt•r fencMr
•. - · t200 080; 1111 Iuick,

.f'll; I -

Sunday Times

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words below to make 6
simple words . Print letters ol
eoch In Its line of $Quores.

4x4, 12400, I'M-1112-2574.

, . . 5-10 Chevy 4x4, t.ka over

037-2018.

Musical

0

.

3C4-571-2S05.
11U lubaru Gl, AIC, POL, PW,

Premium Hoy Rollo $25. llorgon'o Farm, lit "· Pliny, 304-

:.-"o

OH Point Pleasant, wv

Real Eatate General

Edited loy CLAY I. POUAN - - - - - - -

~~-r-T-r-u_Tr-A""TN_E-r.:l--tl

~aop.

Real Eatate General

CondKion, Auto, M,ouu I -

'::~;~;~' S©~~~ -I£ t,~S"

-

304-GJS-52M.

117. uch, 304~11-X71.

R~l81ered

' oklo Ford truck bad, -•ngor
• oklo quariOr off, ..... gOod

$5,100. 114-3e7-l'I01.

~.,._

OIII.

LIM II._,

..-. noo: 1m 1" 11ralght 57

!)odeo c - Plck-(Jp
With TllfiPI!.' Auto, Air, AIIIFII
All Eloc1rlc P-r. 1 OWner Ea·
cotlonl Concltlon, A - HKdl,

3044 .

..,.

t2,100. Aft0&lt; I P.ll. 114--ml 1tt0 Olda T"""'ado l,oadad,

1

Merchandise

-rythlna. -~VL SIONO,
a.thtr lnllftor, lumbtlr 1ut1,
1111 -~ ....... CCin110f.

c-

O.rman

' Fumhura Npalr 6 rtflnlsh.ct,

.·

Food Th-nl lupor
C... · - .......... I crt.,
-

1NI OIIC Pick-Up 3011, AT, Paint, Exhlult, SUnvlur, Rwt·
nina lllnnoo Cover,
a,fOo. A•• I P.ll. 114-ZN-1772.
114-ZN-1oel.
1tl4 Cllovy S-10 plakup.
·-uo, wtlh
am.~oon
Raclllfl c - whaota, ::':~
S1111G,I1W4W313orl
1134.
.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla,

Tru~:ka tor Sale ·•

1171 Cllovy 1 112 Ton Truck, 12
Ft., Cllaln Bod, 4 Excol·
lonl Condition, 114-241-1124.
1117 Ford Aongot, 4 crl.. I sod.,

ar372.tM2.

; 53

•

•

Autos tor Sale

71

.

INVESTORS!- R._.., Fad, 40 II. mil,
mostly wooded. $1110 per month Income
from mobllo home padt.
PATIIOT AREA - ·3 BRo. living room,
kitchen. bath. carpet, attac:lted flllntflll,

otorm w-Mdclocrl, 811x172loollat

111.M ACRES MIL. 121,100, greet for
hunting and camping. ~Oiion1 17 ;and

PAHDIIAIK VIEW OF OtiO RIVEJ\
VALLEY - 2,484 oq. fl., 3 liRa, 3 ...... '
grHI 10om combo (klldwt, LA, DR), 8'
deck all around houoe, heat pump,
building• on property. Too much to
advenise.

c.!.

RACCOONNYitiN ROAD
3 BRo. bath, kilehon, dning rwrn, 211 car
unonached garage. be.,tilul . . - 4.5

acreo.

(IMI

1'9 TOWN - Nice
propeny fealuiM 3 BRI._bath,

31 ACRES, MINUTES

home on

LA, kllchen. bilm, tab"'""' ba&amp;a.

LOOKING FOR A LOT FOR YOUR
MOBILE HOME? - 824 of an acre,
wa,., tap and septic tailk on propeny.
$8,500. C1ou 1o Green Elementary

School.
CARMEL ROAD - 4 mi. N. of Rio
Granclo. Approic. 24 acras of turiered
-land. Ideal for , hornl. $11,11®.

.

e.aae AGREI + 7011211 me•l building

LOCATED ON
ROAD - 181,100- 4
I,:~::. kilchen. LR. FR.
pump, co
air, 2 car allached
garage, 21oll wi1h house.
CHERRY DRIVE
2 BRi. 1 beth, LA. kilchan, gao heat, city
- · ullld a 11111tal property. $29,000.
(Ill)

'
OF

CORNER
SR 325 AND SHELTON
ROAD- 2.2S.ae•. rn.1. Nicre lo1.
·
1224.

TAKE A LOOK AT lfl811

'--lid "" Second Ave., walk 10 110re,

church, school and aho.Pf&gt;lna, 2 &amp;lory
home dllera kllchln. LA. DR, FR. 3 BRI,
2 ..... gat hl•\oei•al air. .
.

'

124.421 ACRES MIL, GREEN AND

SFMIIP I D TWPI..- JU11 all St Rt.
35,_al -llrld. Ideal far drMicpmoN!l
, . 17•• ACIIID 1111.. IIAcx:oclll 1WP. .Fronta on SR 3211 N. ,.. Rio Gntncilo.
N10a home 11111.
m.,. •

LAROE HOllE offers 4 BRa, 2 baths.
kilx:hen, LR, FR. gas fu~. fireplace,
Clllnlllir, anached Qll8fll, pool.

WOODI MILL ROAD - 3 bedrooms,
bath, LR, kilchen with range and
relrigaralor, barn with ~rae stalls. 27
- ··
.
(10531
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 mn,
248 fronlllgl along SA 7 just across from

Ohio River Plaza.
3 BR RANCH ON ST. RT. 7 South. Nic8
of river, 3 BRI, LR, kitchort, beth,
new hlmeoe. Priced in 1he 20's.
LOT FOR SALE ON ST.

RT.
1110,
NORTH OALUA ESTATES • llppoort. 314
..,., mr1. ~~ea~•u
tor a home . •

'P!I'

equipped wi1h kllchon. ba1ha. oflice, .....
Cloeiol bualnltl.

3.117 ACRES, Mil. Rodney Cora Rd ..
nice home IIIIo, ...•.

tOI ACRES, OuyM Twp., -

-·

11. H111ting10n Twp.

hllp-.

PLANTZ IUIDIVISION - 3 BR1, 1112
batlta, kl.,..., whlttflll and ralrigaraiOrl,
--In ba-l. Cl!rporl.
(1110)

BT. RT. 141 - Julf mlrtu* 10 town,llOfM
ollara 3 BR1, 111 bathl, LR. DR&lt;
uM118Ched ga.-ge and nice garden lfiCII·
Cell lor me details.

I

PLEASANT VAUEY ESTATES

78 ACRES 1111.. lUGAR CREEK RD.,
-11r lap. bam on pi'OFIIIJI.

llARTER

HOllE It IIOiitiEY
AREA - 3 BAa, LR. FR. '*II, kllchen,
laundry, a~ llftUO. l&gt;rlced right!
NICE

llAOCOON CREEK LOT, near Cora.
tilptic lank 01"1 prop8!1y, nrral wa11r and

FOR IIILE - COAL TIPPLE with all.

loading fltciities. 1,987 ft, nverlront. Call

lor more dolails.

'

SETTING FOR A
HOME - All brick ranch.
2.374 acres mil. 4 BRo. 2 baths large
kitchen, 2 covered patches,
heat

dock,

pump, 2 car gorage.

FIRST nME ON lHE MARKET - Ju&amp;1
Narghborhood Rd C1ty schools, all
large rooma, 3 BRs, 111 baths. LR,
kilchon, only 8 years old.

o•

JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
1WP. - 386 ..,.. firm, 3 pondo, ........
baoe, 55x100 h 'bam. wHh concrlo1o
floors. May consider split
(frll
LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A
NEW BUSINESS? - SA 180 near
B~lle Pike. Approx. 200'x200' lol AI
ulilitll&amp; 1vaHiblt.
(..,
OLD CHEYY.OLD8 aUILOINQ ~ 420'
front on Second Avo and 112" frol 11101 on

~-

'

.DW!U.- Elfdat

121,010 YILUGE C1F
homewtlh 31oll, each81l11M.

FIFTlf AVEJCUE - City, 207' Irani on M1
Ava. and 150' front on Spruce 81
$1f,800.
.
PATRIOT AREA PRICED It 1HE
20't ~ Ranch w/part brick Iron~ 3 BAa

bath, LR, ~~combo.

'

�.•
page D8 Sundar llme• SanUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH Po.l nt Pleasant, wv

February 14,1993

Farm. Flashes

.

Third annuaJ.open steer, heifer show to be held Feb. 21
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN ·
GALLIPOLIS - Nice weather
the past couple weeks Iended to
pulllhe season forward. I found
myself
pulled
between
preparing/conducting the traditional wiruei"Classes and doing spring
type peak work load Ia the last 10
days. the Gallia County Exiension
office has had more than 70 soil
samples submitted for testing.
Keep up the. flow, this could be a
reco(ll year.
.
A spcciallhanks to the SO-plus
· people attending the Monday
(February 8) beef meeting. Dr.
Tom Turner, Professor of Animal ,
Science at O.S.U., instruciCd local
producers and youth on topics such
as "Quality Grade" and "Yield
COMPLETES TRAINING • Semi aemben or tile Reliance
Grade". He used these topics to
Motioa COIIb ol Mala••aace lllall' ftftlldJ a~~~~pletecl 31 bours of
traiDIJJ&amp; ill balk illdlllltrial ca~~trols. ne training program was
help exphoin cattle j~in!l. 4-H
desiped by Reliaace M_Oiioll CODtrol ud the University or Rio
and FF.~. ~embers !1fe mvt.ted to
Graade. Tile flllll' llolus ptr wwt progrua II beiJII coaductecl by
attend a Judging pacbCC scsston on
iiiStnlcton rr- tile lllllm sity. Tile ~Uft,.part program illcludes ·
Monday evening, February 15, 4
Basic Indastrial Controls, Prograaaallle Controllers and
p.m. at the Bob Evans Hi~ Val- ·
Hl'dra•llc Compoaeats aad SysteiiiS. Left .to ri&amp;llt ate: Dave
ley Ran~~ show barn on Green
Valleyotive.
Meaige, Doll Blab. Mike ~ Bobby HW.., Ivan Powell; Dave
MapesoD lUld Jact Grilli.. .
.
A member of the O.S.U. Gener·
'•

al Livesaoek Jlldgina TCIIII will tie

on hand to discuss the practice
classes. The Gallia Co!Jnty Cat11emen's Association has agreed to
pay ~entry fee Cor youth !*licipaling in the March 20 Judging
ContestattheOhioBeefExpo.
The lhitd annual .Gallia County
Preview Open Steer and Heifer
show will be held February·2J at
the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. In its short ll'lldition, this
show has been able to auract some
of the top show01en and cattle in
the country. Heifers shown in last
year's "preview" have gone on this
season to win some major shows
including a breed, c()ampionshiP. at
the Norlh AmeriCan in Louisville,
Ky.
I have also heard that the champion steer at he recent "Denver"
show, waa shown here la~t year.
The owners of bolh the Ohio State
Fair Cham{Jiop and Reserve steers
were participantS in the 1992 Gallia
County Preview. The local e-:ent
allows our youlh to show agamst
some of lhe most competitive cattle

Various types of mills used by early·· settlers
By WENDELL TOPE
Eartll Team Voluteer
GALLIPOLIS - The water
wheel was used by a variety of
mills as a source of energy for wet
and dry milling of maily products.
For instance, oil mills. paint and
graphite mills were for grinding
materials for paint tanbark and
gunpowder. Mill consuuction
began with lhe up and down saw
mill followed Iaterby lhe ghrist
mill, carding and fulling mills. The
paper mill, woolen mills. plasler
and lath mill and other mills came
along laler as the need for them
developed. ·
The need for wooden broads
was appareilt from the very beginning of the fust seulemeots in our
country. Food and shelter were the
first priorities. Food was the easiest
10 get since the forest was full or
wild animalS and wild pwns, but
boards had to be hewn from _logs
CUI from lrces. The logs were heWJ1
into boards before proper shelter

.
could be builL ~ thing." The amazing thing the saw water rX&gt;wereo canllng mill. The
Many of the;61d log cabins and mill was perhaps used in America mill consisted .of cylinders to which .
barns are still standing today as a commercial tool before·il was were attached leather cards carrythough they are hard to identify used in Europe where it was . ing a great number of tiny hooks.
because they have been remodeled invented.
Tbese cylinders revolved close
wilh modem siding and finished on
Howeve~. the circle saw was together, but did not touch. This
the inside wilh materials lhat have not used .until some one decided' to permi!ted the cards to draw the
covered their existence. ' \
build one inside a ghrist mill and .w.~l,fibers into slubbings (slightly
The up and down·sawmill was power it with the water wheel that twtSic;d strandS of textile fibers) for
_possibly invented and used in ran lhe ghrist mill. Once the idea 'the W9fkers to pick fi:om the yam '
either France or England in the caught fire huildreds of them were creating a product that could be
16th century. The human race has build across our couruy.
·spun into wool cloth. The common
Ibis hard to understand chancteris·
Anolher type of a mill was the name for 1he cloth was linseytic,we have always been lhc last to carding mill. It was used in pro- woolsy. However, the proper name
accept the new and the last to cessing wool after it had been for it 8fter it was colored by cloth·
throw away the old So it was with , cleaned and picked. II was neces- ing mills was ser~e, a beautiful
the fust saw mills in this country. sary that wool be carded before it · colo~ when woven miO a dress suit
When the first up and down could be spun i!"' ~ This was a from bolh men and women.
sawmill was used in this counuy no
one knows, but a wild guess places
it in the middle of the 161h century
and was called the "Devils 'Play·

Business briefs.;.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton asked A.mericans . 10
. rally behind his economic plan,
Find potential market including an increase in lhc top tax
WA:SHINGTON (AP) - The raiCS for both individuals and corU.S. Feed Grains Council says an porations.
He also told business leaders
elhanol trade team that recently
traveled to Japan found a large Thursday to expect some form of a
broad-based energy tax.
potential market for the fuel:
.
The team met with Japan' s
WASHINGTON (AP)- While
EnviroomentaiProlection Agency,
the
well-to-do will pay higher
the Jap811CSC Auto Research Insti•
income
taxes under President Clintute and lhc Minisuy of lnterna·
ton's
deficit-reduction
plan, most
tiona! Trade and Industry (MITI),
Americans
likely
will
feel
the sting
the council said in a m:ent release.
mainly
in
the
form
of
higher
energy
Team members "learned lhat
prices.
global warming is the primary
Any of the proposed enerlly
problem to address in'Japan. and
taxes
being weighed by the adminare convinced that educMillg MI11
istration
would raise prices of gasoon the benefits of ethanol over
line,
heating
oil. gas and electricity
melhanol will lead to the opening
and
those
taxes
would nudge up the
of a large, new market for the Unitprices
of
most
consumer
gOOds. .
ed StateS," it said
' PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
February 6,1993
STOCK STEERS:
60.00-109.00
300-undcr
57.50-107.00
300-500
•5()().700
65.®-8125
60.00-71.00
IIO().over
STOCK HEIFERS:
58.00-99.00
300-undet
55.00-80.00
300-500
50.00-79..50
500-700
47.00-63.00
IIO().over
STOCK BULLS:
5&amp;.00-1 04.00
300-undet
54.50-104.00
300-500
5~ I,~~- ; j(l
500-700
4i .: :~• -t • ~. 1 5
Slaughter Bulls
525.w-lll0.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
40.00-63:00
Bred Cows By#
325.00-815.00
Bred Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
•
46.00-49.00
High Dressing
42.00-4(&gt;.1 I()
Utility
39.00-41.(1()
Canner &amp; Cutter
75.00-105.00
Veal - choice
69.00-74.00
Medium
..
58.50-68.00
Good
35.00-161.00
Baby Calves BH
44.50-66.50
HORSEScwt
80.00-300.00
Ponies B.H.
36.00-40.00
Hogs· 300-500
22.00-25.00
Male Hogs
6.00-49.00
Goats
Horse &amp;Tac Sale Fri. Feb. 19th, 6:00 .m.\

in the county without hav\ng to or .current certified applicators
leave home. Plan to attend.
wan,ting to add a category should
The Annual Tobacco Producers'
attend. A similar tasting session
meeting· has been scheduled for
will be held in Meigs County on
Tuesday, February 23. 1130 p.m. at F~ 24. Call for details.
Hannan Trace Elemenl.liry School.
. Don t forget the Forestry proLast.year's annual event in Mergram tlfbe held Thursday, Febnlcemlle attracted more than 200 · ary 18, 7 p.m. at the C.H. McKenproducers. The primary speaker for
zie AgricultWlll Center. The Gallia
-the evening will be Dr. George
Soil and Water District implementDuncan from the University of ed a forestry program several
Kentucky. I)r. Duncan will cover
months ago to help both farmers
concepts of tobacco housing design
and the forest industry in Gallia
or renovation that help in the curCounty. The Thursday program
i~g o~ quality IObl!cco. He will also
offers several really good speaten.
, h1ghhght new ideas with tobacco
Call Cindy Je~ns - {446-8686) for
cutter&amp;. .
dttails. Plan to attend.
The A.S.C.S. County Director . The Gallipolis F.F.A. Alumni
and a representative from the
will be sponsoring an educalioaai
O.S.U. Plant Pest Clinic will also
meeting on Tuesday, February 16 ··
·give shan presenuuions. The 1992
starting at 7 p.m . in the Gallia
tobacco crop is almost all marketed
Academy Vo. Ag. classroom. M,.
· wilh only a few markets still open.' Don Davis, instruCtor at the TriThe February S market report County ·Vocational School will
showed season net sales of over
speak on the topic of Farm Law.
689 million ·pounds, some $Z. 70
Attention Dairyrilen! A mid-day
pc:r hundred higher~ last year, · piogramisbeingplannedforSatur-·
w11h 18.4 perceru gom~ to the pool
day, February 21. Bruce Brocket,
(5.5, perccnl a year earlier).
Extension Dairy Specialist from
A reminder of the Private Pesti- Canfield. Ohio, will be the

Lucst

~1r'r!~~;~~~~~:~i: ·~i~~E:!~~~
McKenzie

Center.

Edward M. Vollbonl II Gallili
County's exteiiSion •ce•t. agri·
culture.
·

Pe~s~ns

.
trammg sess1on,

Ohio Lott~ry

Southern
defeats
Waterford

Pick 3:

990
Pick 4:
9344
Super Lotto:

•

1-2-13-14-21-29
Kicker:
733864

Page4

l.cM tonight In tow 30s. Saow.'

Tuesd!ly, rain. Hip near 50.

•
.
VaL 4S, No. 207
Capwilghllld 1913

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 25 coni•
A Munlmedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 15, 1993

Icy road conditions cause of three weekend accidents
Ice covered bridges were responsible for three
aa:iderus over lhc weelcend,lhc Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol reported Ibis morning.
An icy bridge in Salisburr Township was the
cause of tWQ accidents jusl mmutes apart Saturday
night oo State RouiC 7. Two injuries were the result
of the accidents.
A Syracuse woman was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by Meigs County Emergency
MMic•l Service following a two-vehicle accideni on
the bridge.
C.OiynJ. McCoy, 43, Sixlh Stree~ Syracuse, was
trealed and released. a hospital spokeswoman said
this morning.
According to lhe report, Mrs. McCoy was was
northbound when she lost conrrol on an ice covered
0

bridge. A semi truck fol19wing behind her, driven by
Barry W. McCoy 11. 23, Sixth Street. Syracuse, was
unable 10 stop in time and struck her vehicle. ,
· Mrs. McCoy· s vehicle sustained heavy. disabling
damage and was tOwed from the scene. Mr. McCoy's
vehicle sustained moderate damage and was driven
from the scene.
A Tuppers Plains woman was also transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital b~ Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service followm'g a second two-vehi·
cle accident minutes later.
Nancy R. Cole. 48, a passenger in a vehicle driven
by Homer E. Cole, 51, Tuppers Plains, was treated
and released, a hospital spokeswoman said this mom·
ing.
·
A£cording· to the report, Cole and a vehicle driven

No citations were issued. The vehicle sustained
light damage and was 'towed from the scene.
•

by Victoria s : Rood. 39. 41803 State Route 7, Tuppers Plains, were northbound when Cole stopped for
vaffic and Rood struck her from behind when she
could npt stop on the ice.
Rood's •chicle sustained light damage aild Cole's
was not damaged.
No citations were issued in either accident

A Middleport man's vehicle sustained light damage Sunday evening when it struck a deer on State
Route 124 in Salem Township.
.
According to the report. Hugh D. Thompson, 51',
38044 Zuspan Hollow Road, Middleport. was eastbound when he struclc the deer:- which then left the

A Rutland man escaped injury early Sunday
morning when he lost control of his vehicle on an icy
bridge.
According 10 the report. Jason R. Black, 21. Rl. I
Rutland, was westbound on County Road 174 when
he slid on an icy bridge, regained traction on the far
side or the bridge, went off the left side of the road
and struck a ditch.

~ene .

No injuries were reported and the vehicle was
driven rrom the scene.
A New Haven, W.Va., woman was cited by the
state highway patrol early Ibis morning for driving
under the influence. Sharon R. Edwards, 40, was
cited in Salisbury Township.

Veteran Rotary Club member

.

I·

Rice receives Paul Harris.Fellow Award

GaUipolls.·••

my neighborhood.
for the put 28 Y-1, I'VIIIIIti helping my nelghborl .
herein GallpoU• )lro1ec1 the lhlngelhey value with
Stalll F - I n - . i'm praud ollhil Cllllllllunlty
and g,...ful for my many friend• hn. .

CAROLL SNOWDEN
342 s--ui Ave.
GaiDpol... Oh.
Phon1 44&amp;-42110
Home 448 4518

John Rice, long-time member of
the Middlepon-Pomerpy Rolilry
·Club, was presented the Rotary
International Paul Harris Fellow
Award at a recent meeting of the
, local club held at Healh United
Methodist Church. .
Club President Gene Riggs
made lh.e plaque presentation to
Rice. The award includes a $1,000
gift of money to Rotary International in the name or the recipient
to be used for vario\ill Rotary projects.
The plaque presented 10 Rice
cites his years of exemplary service
and commitment to lhe precepts of
·1!-otary in the theme "He who
serves best. profits most".
The retired Meigs County extensian agent has served 12 years on
the VeteranrM'emorial ·Hospital
Board. is currently on the Meigs
County Liller Control Board. has
served five years on the Mental
Retardation/Developmental Disabled .Board, and is active in St.
Paul's Onited ¥ethodist Church.
on the second nonr· Sunday in Cieveland:the
FIVE KILLED· Job WWilims, a neilbbor,
He also ·cUrrently serves as a direcchlldrea ranged in age from 1-6. (AP)
loob Oftl' the charred remalas of a hoii!C where
tor of the Mei~s Soil and Water
~ ud • boy died Ill a fire while trapped
Conservation DtStrict.
The making of a mandolin, from
the rough wood to the finished
product, W!IS explained by Robert
White of Near Alfred in a program
he presented at the meeting.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Five nery today identified lhe victims as floor without a battery, Lee said.
•
White said that he used curly
The
fire
sUllied
around
8
a.m.
on
cbilcRn wae tilled in a bouse ftre Gaylen Lavelle Stafford, 6. and his ·
for 1he sides of the man·
maple
the
first
floor.
where
the
caretaker
that apC:tly began when an brother Jerred Emanuel, I; Sytima
dolin.
The
wood was cut into thin
eb:lrit:
ignited a couch. ftre StOwers, S, her brother Eric. 4, and lived. An electric heater was 1.00
strips
and
lheil
soaked in hot water
close to a couch and set it on fire,
ollicials -said
sister Nicole, 3.
,
before
he
used
a
hot iron 10 bend it
Fire already had engulfed the 2 ·
Doris Stafford escaped wilh her . Parries said.
The caretaker, Luther Mason. into the shape of the mandolin.
112-story. wood-frame bouse on lhe two other children. William. 7, and
city"s SIIIIJiheast side when the firSt Bryant, 4, said Fire Department tried to put out the fire, then tried Bass wood can also be used for
fare crew arrived shortly after 8 spokesman Jonathan Parries. Ms. to pull lhe burning couch out the mandolins White explained.
a.m. Suaday, a Cleveland Fire Stafford and the two boys were front door, Parries said. When the because it is eaSY 10 cut and flexes
fire began to spread, Mason ran out easily.
DCpanmeat official said. The treated at a hospital and released.
·
bouse lacked a functioning smQlce • Ms. Stafford. her sister Ametra of lhc house and called 10 lhc fami- . The top of a mandolin can be
made from spruce, cedar or fur,
clr!can".
and the children lived on the sec- ly on lhc second floor.
Parries
said
Ms.
Stafford
and
the
White
said. Some of the wood
"When the fust fm: truck rolled ond floor of the home and a caretwo
children
jumped
out
a
Window.
uses
in making mandolins
White
up onro die scene; there was fire taker lived on the firSt Hoar. ArneMs.
Stafford
told
fue
investigatorS
from
Alaska on an island
comes
coming out all the windows," tra Stowers had gone to the store.
the
other
children
panicked
and
called
Citca
and is called cilca
Assi-Qiid'BillLeesaid.
She returned to find firefighters
would
not
jump
out
the
window.
spruce. The finger board is made
The idealities of the victims searching for her children's bodies.
waelllll n1l rd pending comple·
The youngsters had gathered in By the time firefighters iurived, the from ebony and comes from
Africa, he S8Id.
tioa of the Cuytlhop Co!lnty, coro- a front room, just a few feet from a fire had spread through the house.
A ·neighbor told a Cleveland
As a part of the program Bob
- · · illwniptioo. A man 111 duty · porch roof lh&amp;t could have led them
television station that the fire played on a mandolin he and a stu•
' at tlae coroner's office Sunday to safety, ftrefighters said.
illghl said 1111 inbmation W&lt;Juld be
A smoke detector was found in department did not ·respond dent made that has a value of
$3,500. It was made during an
n:l · duntiliOday.
the upstairs suite. but it had not promptly.
"The problem we h,W was lhat apprenticeship program wilh Rick
F"dib 1\analioo ChiefEilerd Kin- been mstalled. It was lying on the
the company that would be normal- Boring of RCC!Isville. Funding for
ly first to arrive was on another 1he apprenticeship came from the
alarm and the company lhat nor- Elijah Pierce Graru. White was the
mally would come second was the first recipient of the granL He said
firSt to arrive," Lee said.
, that making that mandolin took
Lee said the frrst frre crew was about lhree weeks of work.
on the scene eight minutes after the
Discussed by Gene Riggs, presi·
fire was reported.
dent, were several projects of the
BARNESVILLE, Ohio (AP) to organize companies other unions
Damage to ·the home was esti- local club. One is sponsoring Adam
mated at $60.000.
The United Mine Workers of might pass UP·
America is trying to increase mern·
In ·Barnesville, lhe union target·
benllip in the coal mines, as we!l ·ed 39 workers at Shamrock Conas otllcl' indoslries.
duit Products. an electrical equipTwo Meigs Countians have by the Board of County Commis·
Ill southeast Ohio. the victories ment maker in eastern Ohio.
include worters • a nursing home
"I doubt if a lot of unions been nominated .by the Meigs sioners as charter members of the
for the mentally disabled in New would have made the time and the County Recycling and Litter Pre- advisory board and are now start·
Lcoillgton. a fal:tory in Clmbridge effort to organize something like vention Advisory Board for the ing their II th year with the pro·
aad a small water authority near this," said Jim White, who over- "Keep Ohio Beaut~ful" award, a gram. Wiggins said that during this
Aihens.
·
saw the UMW Shamrock drive.
period, Meigs County has received
suite wide recognition program,
The union abo bas organized oil
The UMW said it got raises
Nom ina ted for the award were comprehensive grants from the
Wlllkeii ill Utah and city employ· 55 cents an hour for most employVictor L. Brown of 42960 Su11e Ohio Department of Natural
ees ill Wyomin&amp;, Slid Larry Deeds. ees during the first )'l:l!f of a thrc.c- Route 124, Minersville. and Roy·E. Resources, Division' of Litter Pre·
the UMW's • t11em regionll din:c- year pact. wilh smaller raises the Miller of 45610 Miller Road near vention and Recycling, totaling
over a hlllf·million dollars.
··
a.
.
next two years.
Chester.
Xeilll a.nhudt. deputy director
The union plans to emphasize
According to Kenny Wiggins • . Brown, long-time area business·
of tbe UMW"s nonhcast region. · job security when it giles to ·the program manager for Meigs Litter man and. community leader, resides
t :I' oa the union caa reQDit tens bargaining table wilh the Bitullli- Control. to be eligible for an award' in Minersville with his wife. Alice,
ol•IIM• ••'1111 or WCIItaS oatside of nous Coal Operators Association, the nominees mllsi be involved in and has four children. He is active· ·
lXIII.
an industry grOup that employs activities lhat c~ange communi~!&lt; ly involved in his church and lhe
waste handling habits ,' thereby Meias County flistorical Society.
In tbe 19!101 and 1960s. tho most UMW members.
unioll W .,..., 200,000 members
• To pressure lhe industry for job reducing litter and also encourag· He is a former Board of Education
a t•He *'coal indu!lry, including security. the UMW struck the i~g r~ycling and promoting bea~· member. ·
Miller, well-known lhroughoul
New Yodtcabdriwen. Union lead- nation's largest coal producer. llficatlon.
.
as 1a1er decided to sUck to coal Peabody Coal, when its contract
, Both' no!f!inees have been lhe county, has been involved with
llllllalllld 0¥111' llllli-lltlniiiiiiiiii!J:erl expired earlier Ibis month. About actively involved in the Meigs the Meigs Soil and Water Cohser·
todllllgin!SII!eiWCIIbn.
7,500 miners in West Virginia, 1111· County Recycling and Litter Pre- vation Cooperative Exletlsion Ser·
.uon - says il is willing nois. Indiana· and Kentucky ar'e on vention Program .since it was start· vice, Farmers Home Administra-'
strike.
ed in 1982. They were appointed lion, Buckeye Hills/Hocking Val-

.
RECEIVES 'A WARD.
' Rice was presented a Rotary
International Paul Harris
Award in recognltloa or bls
exemplary work and commitment to the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club at last week's meeting. Gene Riggs, president, made
the presentation.

roar

Insurance Companies • HomeOIIices: Bloominglon . lllinois

Five children die in house fire

like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.®

~

YOUR
CHOICE

S-··'"''''
'·ot

ONLY

~ ''''! .

f\\ s"'''" s-~·

I

·UMW expanding
recruitment drive

..

'

FULLY
•Power Windows
•Power Door Locks

•Tilt Wheel
•Cruise Control

Sheets as a RotarY Exchange Student to Italy. Adam is the son or

James and Jennifer Sheets of Rutland.

Brown, Miller are Meigs nominees for state award

1992 BUICK CENTURY
-

MANDOLIN MAKING • Robert white explained the process
or making a mandolin lo the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
and then entertained the group with several selections.

•Balance of 36/36
Bumper to Bumper Warranty

BUICK·PONTIAC
1900 Willi IVIIUI
iAWPOLIS, 011. 446-2212
·,

.

of

no

ley Regional Development D·istrict,
Farm Bureau, and the Gallia· Meigs
Airport Authority. He is a 50 year
member of the Pomeroy Masonic
Lodge 164. R. and A. M. and Yqrk
Rite and Scottish Rite Masonry. He
resides in lhe Sumner community
with his wire, former teacher, Maurita, and they have one daughter.

awards will be mailed to the rccipi·
cnts while the awards or excellence
and distinction will be presented at
the recognition luncheon to be held
on April 2 at the Holiday Inn East
Hotel iQ Columbus.
·

Driver cited

Charles Van CoonH, 76, of
"Bolh nominees have made out- Middleport was cited for improper
standing contributions to lhe suc- backing as the result of an accident
cess o( the Meigs County program. · on Page Stroet. Middleport, Sunday
They have been active in site coor· afternoon.
dination activities of the Ohio
Accordillg to the report from
River Sweep and the elementary Middleport police, Van Cooney
recycle poster contests. They have backed into a vehicle driven by
bolh also been actively involved in Mary Coleman. 48, Middlepoh.
the numerous clean-up, beautifica· There was minor damage to bdlh
lion and recycle projects of the pro- vehicles. police said. Barbara Colegram over the years." said .Wig- man, a passenger in the Coleman
vehicle, was taken to Veterans
gins.
Memorial Hospital where she ,q.
The "Keep Ohio Beautiful" treated and released.
I
'

.

'

•

'

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