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                  <text>. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

, -- -.\

51\~ ... UH,

Television
Viewing

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D'fOO 1&lt;1.1~

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WH~T ~ W•Wlfl~ ~?

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FRI., FEB. 14

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Rearrange letten of
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News
(!) VIdeo Power
\ZI Square One TV Stereo.
00 Reading Rainbow r:;J
[J) II Night Court r:;J
lfll Smurfs C
all Motowoifd
9 Work! Today
QJ1 Afn Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
Stereo. r:;J
6:05 (I) Beverly Hillbillies
6:30 iJl II lllJ NBC News ~
(!) Saved by lhe Bell
(JJ (I) Q ABC News
(!) Wild America Q
~Square One TV Stereo.

l LOVE VA LENTINE'S DAY .
IT'S 50 ROM ANTIC..

~ all Ill CBS News r:;J
GriHith
lfll Scooby Doo
all Up Close
Q]l New Zorro Stereo. r:;J
6:35 (I) Andy GriHith
7:00 ~ U II]J Wheel ol Fortune
[J) II Andy

'5LIME 15 REAL G~Y.
AIJD ICKY GRtt.U, TOO.'"

'liEU, YOU KUOW.

I COUW/J'f GIV£
YOU AM05HY
0/J£...

(lj The Jeffersonl!.tJ

1:;r

(l) lrroide Edlllon
(!) MacNell~ehrer

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WELL. TAKE IT AN'&lt;WA'(
'{OU BLOCKHEAD !

be·

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all Ill
13

New SUS
computer
operating ·

~

Jayhawks, Tar Heels trium h - C 1
Nothing wrong with being just
plain folks • Bob Hoeflich • Page B-8

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ANL AT
~
Fellow m wa1ting room of
r--;·,,--r.:-lrl~
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doctor's office . "The doctor
J J J5 J6 "-0 told me 10 exercise more, so I
'":~·=~·;::::~·~·::;:::·~~ stopped walching golf on tele·
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vision and started watch1ng ...

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tht

BANOTI

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UMI

low to form four simple words.

•

EVENING
6:00 Ill u

~~~~:t:~' s~~(llA -Z£ t-~s·
_ _ _ _;__ Edltod by CLAY I. POLLAN

First black Yale graduate taught at
Lincoln School • James Sands· A-7

B-1

Along the river ..............81·8
Business/Farm ...............DI-8
Classified ....................... D3· 7
Deaths................................ A3
Editorai ............................. A2
Sports..................:..........CI-8
Weather . .......................... A-3

Windy. High In mld40s.

•

the chuckle quoted

V by fil ling in the missing words
L...L.--l-.L.-L-.1.-..J. you develop from step No. 3 below·

•
mtts

1

~ PRINT NUMBERED

Inside

~ LE TTER S IN SQUARE S

~ UNSCR AM BLE FOR
ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

• ·IJ

Silica - Hitch - Kinky - Greasy - SIGN the CHECK

"My grandchildren came in person to thank me for
the holiday money I gave lhem. " s•ghed the grandma,
"only because I didn't SIGN the CHECK'"

Vol. 27, No. 2
Copyrlghled 1992

13 Sections, 92 Poges
A Multimtdio Inc. Newopapor

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, February 16, 1992

NewsHour

(I) Q Cendl Camera
(!) Legislative Updale
~ Current Affair Q
[J) II Star Trek: The Nexl

BRIDGE

NORTH

Generation C
1!2111) Entartii'rnment Tonight

II . .

fO~ VA/..fNriNfS PAY

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ALLEY OOP
••. WE COULD WALK ~JGHT
~ f'H' IOIWE.R ~, 'Tlt05I!'
.OUAJW&amp; WOULDN'T MY ANY
ATTENTION TO US!

Stereo. g
!!J MacGyver r:;J
all SportaCenter
9 Moneyllne
QJ1 MOVIE: Private Hlatory of
a Campaign That Failed
(2:00)
7:05 (I) Addams Family
7:30 Ill U lllJ Jeopardy! C
(!) Now It Can Be Toi!
(l) Entertainment Tonight
stereo. r:;J
Ill 0 Married...With Children
00
MacNelll!:.ehrer
NewsHour I;;!
~ Wheel of Fortune r:;J
II]J Ill Family Feud
@ Be a Star Stereo.
@Ski Worid
9 Crossfire
7:35 (I) Sanford &amp; Son
8:00 Ill U II]J-Toonces, the Cal
Who Could Drive a Car
Saturday Night Live regulars
Dana Carvey, Phil Hartman,
Victoria Jackson and guests
are more than amazed by the
escapades of the daredevil
feline. (0:30bStereo. C
(!) MOVIE: oath Willi 3 (AI
(2:00)
(JJ (I) Cl Family Mat1ers
Cupid's arrow stings Steve,
but Laura chooses to date a

ladles· man. Stereo. Q
(!) Waahlngton Week In
Review Stereo. Q
~ lllJ Ill XVI Olympic
Wlnler Games Figure
skating, ice dancing
compulsories: speed skating,
women's 1000m; ski~pi ng ,

team competition (T) L,J
America's Most
Wanied A private
investigator shoots the
producer of a movie deal
gone bad. Stereo. Q
tiJ Murder, She"Wrote Q
® On Siaga Stereo.
all Pro Snow Skiing Western
Championships from
Heavenly Valleyt;iCalif. (T)
8 PrimeNews
.
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Casablanca
(2:20)
8:30 (2) II ii]J MOVIE:
'Kindergarten Cop' NBC
Movie of the Week (PG t3)
(2:30) Stereo. C
(l) (II Q Steplly Step J.T.
and Cody dress in drag to
replace members In an
all-girl band. Stereo. C
\ZI Wall $1ree1 Week ~tereo .
[J) II

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP..----,.-------.:::---,
ONL.Y \NHeN MY MOM
CAT&lt;:;HEe MY DAD
BNEAKII'JS- IN L.ATE..

HAVE' YOU EVE!&lt; 6E:EN
A FL.YING' 5AJ.JCER

~

00 Are You Being Served?
® Texu Connection Stereo.
9:00 (l) (1) Ill Baby Talk Maggie
and James reveal their anger
toward each other at a party.
Stereo. r:;J
(!) Garrison Kolllor'• Hello
Love For Valentine's Day,
Garrison Keillor relates

lH

eKperiences ot love and

BARNEY
I AIN'T PLAYIN'
NO CARDS TILL WE

YORE SPIES
CAN PEEK
OVER MY
SHOULDER!!

SWAP SEATS!!

veals which signs are romantically perlee! for you. Mail $2 plus a long. selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, cl o this newspaper, P.0 ,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

undesirable.

Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpt. 22) Conditions
are tricky for you today in your social ina-void all types of risky ventures t oday. volvements. Don 't get drawn into a si tuPlay everything close to th ~ ve st, and ation where one friend, who has somedon 't look for or B)(pect something for thing to resolve with another pal, uses

PISCES (Feb. :ZO..March 20) II possible.

nothing.

·

ARIES (Morch 21·April 19) It could be
frustrating today to please
family members or relatives. regardless
of how hard you try. Nevertheless, give
it a shot anyway.
TAURUS (Aprii20-Mo~ 20) You may be
In a gr'!llarious mood today and a trl.fle
more talkative than usual. Be very care·
ful you don't . disclose things you
shouldn't to the wrong set of ears.
. Weigh your every word .
GEMINI (Mo• 21·Junt 20) Proper man·
' resources could be a
ogement of •our
' In the
roblem
earl•
day. Later. though,
P
'
d
you'll get a better grip on .things an
loolc· the barn door. Bul , t!te horse may
have run away by then.
CANC~R (Juno 21-Julr 22) lnsleod of
being self·dlrected today. you might
walt for others to tell you what to do and
how to do it. Unfortunately, what serves
their best interests may not serve yours.
LEO (Jul• 23.Aug. 22 ) po not .leave up
•
eKtremely

Fob. 15• 1892
You mi9ht attempt several ambitious
undertakings in the year ahead. You
have what It takes to succeed. provide d
vou operate within your means and
'
:~u~iuus (Jan. :aG-Fob. 'II) Thefo"s 1
chance today that, In order to expedite
matters. you might take on some as·
signments you're not qualified to nan~
die. Instead of advancing your cause,
you might retard it. Know where to look
for romance and you'll find lt. The As·
, tro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly re·

to chance today thing s that could adversely alfect your work . If you don't
control matters, the results· could be

you as a pawn .

LIBRA (Stp1. 23·0ct. 23) Your ambl·
lions are easily aroused today, and this
is admirable. But you may not achieve
your objectives due to poor tactic s and
procedures. Think your moves through
carefully.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) It be·
hooves you to consider the advice Of·
tered you by associates today. But,

there Is also a danger you might.be un·
sugges. tlons. Be discriminating. '
SAGITT"RIUS (N" 23 ~-- 21) 11 you
are presently
InvOlved
In a fl1nanc1a1the
ar·
1
th
t
·
rangemen
a 1s runn ng ra r
smoolhly, do not make unwa~ranled
changes at this time. If could kill the
goose that lays the go,lden egg.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jtn. 11) Try to
be diplomatic and forgiving when dealing with close lriends today. even
though their behavio r might provoke
you to do the opposite.
·
duly influenced by unsound
A

• •·

. .......

longing that almost everyone
• has encountered. (1 :00)
Stereo.
(!) Washington Week In
Review Stereo. C
[J) mFlrehOUIIHost John
Walsh shows lhe rigor and
danger of fighting fires as
seen from the world's oldest
rescue company In
Manhattan, N.Y. (0:30)
lfll Beyond Reellty
® Naohvllle Now Stereo.
0 Ladleo Figura Skating
International Championship,
artistic competition from
Atlanta (A)
a larry King Llvel
Q]l Felltor Dowling Mv-ltriu
Stereo. r:;J
9:30(JJ Cheers C
(I) II BMir Billy and Mary
find they have diHerenildeas
rais ing children. Siereo.

i

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tA10975

PHILLIP
ALDER

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EAST
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WEST
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By Phillip Alder
The dec Iarer enjoys a considerable
edge over the defenders. Though the
defenders are allowed to make the
opening lead. find1ng the best opening
lead on all h&lt;mds is a task that would
have defeated even Hercules. Yet, assuming the rest of your garne is OK. if
you could find the best lead every

By JIM FREEMAN
Times· Sentinel staff
GALLIPOLIS -Automation.
Webster's New World Dictio·
nary defmes au10mation as "a manufacturing system m whtch many
or all of the processes or automai.I·
cally performed or control, as by
electronic devices."
However, regardless of its deli·
nition automation is a four-letter
word to many Gallia County postal
service patrons who must change
their old addressing system 10 one
more friendly to auiDmation.
Area residents must now use
their street address on all corre·
spondence and, according to Bid·
well Postmaster Roger Rees,
almost everyone has been very
cooperative.
However, some confusion con·
cerning the change seems to exist.
Why change at all?
There are several reasons people
must change their addressing sys·

SOUTH

Striking
the opening blow

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
1•
3 NT

West
2•
Pass

Nortb
3•
Pass

East
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • J

tim e. you would be a bag wmner.
Inform&lt;Jt ion 1s given w1th the open-

ing lead. One popular methodnowa·
was happy with his heart
days is the lead of a mne. 10 or jack as South
holding.
promising zero or two hlgh~ r hono~s i.n
West led the heart jack, showing
the suit . At trick one. so met1m es thts ts zero or I wo nigher honors. Declarer
valuable, but more often, it seems to
well, winning with the king.
me. decla rer benefits from the extra played
Next
came
tile diamond queen: club
data dispensed. I recommend usmg two. diamond
five, diamond king.
this leadin g system only after lnck Thinking his partner
held the A·Q·J of
one.
hearts,
East
returned
his second heart.
Much more important. though, is to Declarer claimed nine
Who
concentra te on finding the right play. made the mistake, East ortricks.
West?
not being distracted by your agree· It was West. He should have dis·
ments.
the heart 10 to warn East that
North 's three-heart cue-bid is ask· carded
his
suit
wasn't running:" Then East
. ing for a stopper for no-Lrump. but would have
found the killing spadt
usually incl udes club support to fall switch.
back on in case tile opener doesn't
@ 1 - NI!WSPUI!R ENT'Iftltftlll AIIN.
have a top heart honor. Here. though.

tern.

ACROSS
1 Japanao..
American

6 Mohammed·
an religion
11 Dlatorto
13 Shipworm
14 Place to slay
15 Prooaod
16 Morulltfl at
meal
t7 Italian capital
19 Chlntle
pagoda
20 Young
pereon

22 Pickling

IPICt
23 Wa,on track
24- ood cake
26 Aulhor Anale
28 Prior lo
29 Runner Sobaatlan 30 Slangy
offlrmotlve

aufflx

1 Some Ukt

5 RoptUIIon
8 ComparoUvo

2 Took oath
3 CIOII rolotlve
4 Superlative

7 Sign IIIII~

aufflx

oul (obbr.)
8 Edlblo-d

WASHINGTON (AP) -"' A
failed auempl to force union coal
operators to increase contributions
immediately to two miners' health
care funds would nol have solved
the funds' financial problems any:
way, a United Mine Workers
spokesman said.
The trust funds that pay benefits
10 120,000 retired miners are near
collapse due 10 increasing costs and
a declining number of companies
willing 10 contribute, funds offi·
cials said. Money will run out in
April, they said.

g Lot'o Make

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel staff
· GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
has a new weapon in the war
against drugs. special agent Gam·
bier.
However, Gambler isn't your
typical agent. He doesn't carry a
giln or drive a cruiser.
.Gambler is a 14-month-old, regisiered black Labrador Retriever
and, while he doesn 'I carry a gun
oi a badge, he carries a naturally
talented sniffer trained to detect
ill~al drugs..:
' The Gallia County Sheriff's
D¢partment recently purchased
Gambler wilh_money from federal

ICCOIIOIY

IIH

34 Spruce up
35 Actor Roblrl
38 Make
accualomad
381ngttla
30 TlnJ Mid
40 Facing gllclar'a origin
45 Field
48 Cunr lol1or
48 - lor l"fo

drug forfeitures. Tlie department
planned on purchasing a n~O!ics
detection dog after rece1vmg
almost $40,000 several months
ago.
ed
Deputy Shawn Bunon attend
classes to get ~ial n:Hning. ~th
Gambler. Durmg thetr trammg
together, Burton and Gambler
learned 10 worlc as a team .
Gambler's sophisticated snout is
trained 10 home in on the smell of
marijuana, hashish, cocaine (in
powder and rock for~)
amphe~ines, methamp~ewmne

(iee), herom (and otha' op18~) .
On Thursday, Gambler v1s1ted
Continued on A-6

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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NB

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. PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Why did t write? lllcauoe I lound life
unaatlsfactory." - Tenneuee Wllllama,
C1 llt2 by N!A, Inc.

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' POMli:ROY - II Middleport village employee Is free on
' boDd after beiD~~dlcted OD rape cbarg~
.
' 'A aeeret lnd
ent ·aga!nlt Georee W. Miller Jr~or Broad·
way Street, Middleport, Will flied In Meigs County Common
·PJeu Court late Tbunday. "BUF' MiUer aarren!)y serves as the
economic development director for Middleport.
·: . Tile IDCilctmeat ~ flied by Mark Sheets, apecJal prosecutor
'·fnlm GaWpoliJ. It speellkilly cbaraa MIBer with eu.a.!~ In
, ~exuallldlvlty wltb a male under tbe age of ~3 yean. Act
na
• to Melp County Proeecutlna Attorney Stt:Yeu L. Story, a con·
: ntct prowblted him from lnvestlaatlnathe case and fillna the
• laclldlleat.
·
'Miller was a~ amlped on Thut'Bday, aDd bond was aet at
S25,oot by Melp County Common Pleas Court Judae Fred W.
Crow m. Miller - Jlenlltted to .,. 10 percent of the bond,
· llad- relmr4 after. die belrlna,
I
Miller 11 represeated by lomeroy attorney Charles H.
• Kalpt. A pre-lrlalllearlq bu been let In the cue far Marth 3,
• a Jlf1trlal• Jne 2 at 9 a.m.

•

•

l

••

Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY • While stalewide
40 percent of the ninih ~ SIU·
dents who took the Oh1o Ninih·
Grade ProfiCiency Teas in reading,
writing, 011thematics and citizenship in Novemba, 1991, puiCd all
four tests on their first at~empt,
only 23.67 percent ot Meiss Coun·
ty ninlh.gntders in the lhn:e IChool
districts IICbieved thai.

'Pi
'' ,, &gt;tttf ·lbbml ion
. . .. .: &gt;·&gt;·~~&lt;=·~&lt;&lt;::·:"·: !.: :':!;:;,: ·:.\"~,. :·: ·:;!!.:,:;: .:

N~ I!~ \I!!!!"

Example ol a properly addressed envelope
address listed in a route number.
Werts said the EMS has a list of
subscribers identified only by route
numbers or post office box.
If someone has fallen and can't
gel up, it can be difficult to find
them when aU you have 1S a route
number or instructions that say "go
three miles and ll1lll left at the red
bam,"' Wens said.
The United States Postal Service
offers several iips on how 10 get the
best service for your personal cor·
respondence:
,
• First, if you have a typewntcr
or home computer, usc it to address

Hall courtesy or Mayor Fred Horrman, lert, and
ope;ates through the cooperative errorts or
Peegy Ropsh, OBES employment spec!alist, who
conducts the training, and representatives or lhe
Department or Human Services, Michael Swish·
er, director, right.

Gallipolis OllES as·an emii!Oyment
service contract specialist repons
that since the ~rogram began on
A 'I 1 1991 0 0f th 89 arti ·
pn •
•
e P CI·
pants have found employment.
There are usually about 15 par·
t!cipants in the Jobs Club at one
U~e~ Roush sat~. T.hey are all
n:clplents of puedbl~c asthstsJIIIIIbceCanldb
they are screen aor e o s u
bv the """""..~ent of Human S«· .
,
""'~""u"
vtces. .

Roush sa1d that the Jobs Club
meets once a month for stx consec·
uu~e days,'!Sually o-:er a two week
penod. Dunng that lime the group
uses workbooks and watches
videos geared to sharpening their
. .
. . skill
ball~fbhrntmghowsio evaluate
their s~llls~a~~w best to present
those skillS and abilities to an
.
employer, ho'!' 10 fill out an apph·
Conhnued on A-li

Programs underway to help students who
failed
sections of proficiency test - Rieb~l
.
ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

. .· . ... :

,.,. .. ·:··.,;..;:·:.:{:::::=::;::.:;· . . ........

Jobs Club proving sut,cessful
thus far in Meigs County

.

I

your leiters.
• Center the address on the
envelope and keep a uniform left
margin.
• Use all capital letters and make
sure therdon't llluch.
• Ehminate all punctuation
except for the hyphen in the ZIP+4
Code.
• Make sure the city 1 state and
ZIP Code line is at least an inch
from the bouom edge.
• Spell out the city name; usc
the two-letter abbreviation for the
state.
Continued on A·S

Meigs· youth
drowns after
fall into well

COMBINED EFFORT • The Jobs Club is a
proara• wblch eomblnes the Ohio Bureau or
Employment Services and the Melas County
Department or Human Servlcu In an effort to
get individuals orr public assistaace and Into
jobs. The Jobs Club meets 11 Middleport V!Uage

B CHARLENE HOEFLICH
y Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT • A Jobs Club
·
program sponsored by the OhiO
Bureau of Employment Servtces
(OBES) and the Metgs County
Depanment of Human Services is
proving successful in assisting inll;i·
viduals on some sort of pubhc
•···-· · to · bs here they can
ass.........., lfm P '!'
become
se -suppornng.. .
Peggy Roush who IS w1th the

D

GRAPHICS

"It's crucial that we have a
long-term. perman~nt solution to
this crisis. Thai will come when
Congress passes Sen. (Jar) Rocke·
feller's legislation,' UM'Y
spokesman Jim Grossfeld S31d Fnday.
Rockefeller, D·W.Va., has intro·
duced a bill to elimina1e a $100
miUion deficit by transferring surplus money from a related pension
plan.
U.S. District Jud~e Thomas
Jackson on Thursday dismissed the
Continued on A-6

·Middleport employee faces
:-indictment on rape charge
L Z

"~~jil,l!!li

Gallia gets new weapon
in war against drugs

10 Of form, not
aubltanco
12 Work hard
13 Actro11 Oeno

31 Ulht mools •
32 Wfdo ohoe

F K W

Don't aiisume that you'll still get
your mail, even if the postal clerics
know you. According to Gallipolis
Postmaster Bill Landman, the new
automated .systems will take the
place of many human postal work·
ers .
Furthermore, with the imple·
mentation of a county-wide 911
system, it will be necessary for all
residences to be identified by street
address.
Using street addresses may not
just be a question of convenience,
il can be a matter of life and death
- especially when every second
counts.
"We need house numbers posted
and need to know where they are,"
said Gallia County Emergency ·
Medical Serv•ce paramedic Mark
Wens.
Wens said a county map provid·
ed by the engineers office gives the
EMS a rough approximation of
where houses are located by house
number. When the numbers are ·
,posted, it helps out even more.
Werts commented on another
problem that arises when people
don't use their house numbers.
Life-line services, which auto·
matically summon help for sub·
scribcrs, may be useless if the only

Judge nixes injunction
to save trust funds

18- culpa
21 Pope'oropr..
IIIIIIUYI
22 Bor:omo
moro
profound
25 ArcUc laland
27 lloltfllltton

'L U 8

.

!.be

31 Considering
33 Pottle
contraction
35 Dean
Martin's
nickname
37 Sharpnno
41 - -Clear
Doy
42 Grotnlth·
blue
43 Llkoly
44 Atom porta
47 Skin
docorotlon
40 Stndstone
50 Shows acorn
51 Examlntt
52 lnhobllsn1s
ol Denmark
DOWN

•

First, the new, automaied opbcal
Ber·ore the mail makes it to your m•ilbox, it
b·
•
th G u· li n.... om
character
reading systems emg
15
bas to be sorted. H~re, .Gary Bro~ ~t e. a 1.po s • u•• ICe sor
d pled by the postal service no
the maD. Browu said Friday thai 11 IS easter to sort mall labeled by a 0
.
r ute and
street. address. Eatb lillie slot repre:;ents. !In addre$5. ·~~l -5et~it,e ,.. ~~{ rec~.mze rura 1 0
workers, such-IS Brown,JIIIuali~Jtno~·wlten to put the matl even tr •t ,
Th
ho refuse to adopt the
is addressed! iilcorrectl.fl\owever, with lhe a~tomated systems being · ..
~fnwgled" system beware.
phased in, mail'fbust be addressed correctly With a house number and
new a
,
street to make sure it gets to the right place. (Times-Sentinel photo by
Jim Freeman)

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

WaN ttreet Weak Stereo.

11 Hlddttt VIdeo Aman
learns his support group has
primitive tendencies. Stereo.
lfll Roy Bradbury Theetor
10:00 ()) News
· II) (I) II 20/20 Stereo. r:;J
(D Blick Amortc.n
ConurvaUom: Explonldon ot
ldtll Succasslul self-help
strategies of the men and
women known as black
eonservalivls are evalualed. ..,
(1 :00) Stereo.
(J) Oorriaon Kollor'o Holo
Love For Valenllne'a Day,
Garrlacm KeHior relates
experience&amp; of love and
longing thet almost everyone
has eneoun1ered. (1 :10)
Stereo.
(!])II Hunttr C
lflllwamp Thing
o Amortc.'o Cup '92 ·
Setting sail lor San Diego.
a World Newt
Q]l TOO Club Wl1h Pol
Roblf1oon

1·11·11

• J to 3

.

.. .

In Ohio's 88 counlles only tions of the pr~ficiency tes~ a!e
Adams County with an 18 percent being giv~ spec tal he!P· he Sft!d, ~n
passage rate on the four tests preparauon for tcstmg agam m
scored lower than Meigs.
early March.
.
As .for the individual school dis·
Mei~s County Supcrinlendent
John Riebel'acknowledged concern tricts, the percentage of students
about the overall test scores from · passing all four sections ~ere Eastthe November, 1991 testina .em Local, 18 percent; Metgs Local.
released last week, and said that 28 percent, and Southern Local, 25
intervention programs are under· percent.
In the Eastern Local School Dis·
way in all dtree school districts.
Continued on A4
Students who have failed sec;

~

r

ALBANY - A Columbia
Township youth died of drowning
as a result of falling into a water
well along Erickson Road on Fri ·
· day shortly after 3 p.m.
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reports that Joseph Rupe
Jr., age 2·1/2, had been recovered
from the well prior to the arrival of
emergency medical personnel and
thai attempts to revive him were
conducted. He was the son of Ruth
and Joseph Rupc, Erickson Road,
Albany.
The Columbia Township Fire
Department and the Columbia
Township First Responders, along
with the Rutland Emergency
Squad, were sent to the scene. The
Rutland squad transported the vic·
tim to O'Blcncss Memorial Hospi·
tal in Athens, where he was Life.
Flighted to Children 's Hospital in
Columbus. He was pronounced
dead on arrival.
Soulsby said. Ji!~ "1~!1 \lias constructed of a series of 20-inch tile,
with tile extending above ground
approximately 12 inches. It was
approximately 10 feet ID the water
level.
The child 's mother had been
working on the pump while the
child was with her. When she
turned her back for a short time, the
child apparently fell in10 the well.
Soulsby reported. The mother lhen
reportedly ran to the neighbors for
assisl8nce. Soulsby said ~he was
too distraught to be questioned.
At this time, according 10 Souls·
by, the incident is being ~died as
an accidental death.

Jury finds Dahmer sane
Mll.WAUKEE (AP) - A jury
found Saturday that Jcffrey Dah·
mer was sane when he killed and
dismembered IS men and boys in a
horrifying··quest for s4lxual gratifi·
cation.
The decision means that Dah·
mer, who has already pleaded
guilty 10 the murdm, will receive a
mandatory life sentence for each
count. A judge will detennine later
when, or if,.he will be eligible for
parole.'
After deliberating for nearly 10
hours. the jury voled 10-2 for the
sanity verdic!. _T)Ie unusual trial
required only that five-sixths of the
dozen jm:on agree.

�. ...

· ·- ~

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-

·

...

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...

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- · ···

Commentary and perspective
A Division of

fi)MU.TIMEDIA,NC.
825 Third

Ave., GaiUpolls, Oblo

Ill Court St., Pomeroy,Oblo

(614) 446·2341

(614) 992-1156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsber
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber-Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publisbers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words long. A!lletten are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned leUers will be

published. Letter&gt; should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
penonalities.

:unemployed workers face
psychological whammy
By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON - People who fmd themselves out of work bocause of the
recession may risk falling victim to feelings of hopelessness that can
worsen their plight, a researcher says.
: Anita Curry-Jackson, assistant professor of social work at Wri~ht State
University, said the unemployed need to have hope that economtc recovery is around the comer.
Otherwise, she said, they fail to explore all of their options.
"They're almost taking a defeatist attitude," sh.e said.
: Ms. Curry-Jackson said pessimism about fmding a job can lead people
deeper into debt and cause them to feed on their own hopelessness.
: She said they must tackle the problem in a positive way such as workJog to reduce expenditures, pooling family resources and looking at public
assistance as earned income that they have paid for through taxes.
: '' I think we have to tell persons that we arc in an economic downturn ,
put that we can survive if we begin making appropriate plans," she said.
. ' ... If people feel they can make things happen, that helps their optiinism."
· Ms. Curry-Jackson said social workers are beginning to see a new kind
of unemployed - middle managers and blue-collar workers who in the
past have had steady employment.
. "Then, it's a new experience," she said. "For that reason it becomes a
1111umatic experience for them."
•. She said the pressures of being out of work can boil up, resulting in
~~tiered spouses and children.
:. " We're likely to see more abuse within the family," she said. " ...
'!lese persons are trying to fmd a way of directing that anger, that stress."
·: Jeffrey Brookings, associate professor of psychology at Wittenberg
Oniversity in Springfield, said research clearly indicates that peopl.e who
l!)se their jobs suffer increased psychological distress. For some peopleO$peCially those a$e 30 to 50- the distress increases the longer they are
out of work, he satd.
·&lt; Brookings said that unlike the job market in the JX!St, today's workers
o[ICn become unemployed because of economic forces they can' t conb'OI.
A&lt;nd job skills are ofiCn so specialized that other employment is difficult
tp fmd, he said.
.: Brookings said a 1984 study published in the Leisure Studies journal
showed that people who best coped wtth unemployment stayed or became
deeply involved in religious, political, community or other non-work
aetivities.
.: •'The important thing to them was to do productive things,'' Brookings
said. "A lot of the satisfaction people derive from work is the satisfaction
of aceomplisbing things. And it keeps a person connected to friends and
tbles and activities that they enjoy."
"

Today in history
By The Associated Press
. Today is Saturday, Feb. 15, the 46th day of 1992. There are 320 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 15, 1933, President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt escaped an
attempt on his life in Miami, when shots flJ'ed at him by an assailant
(n1ssed. However, Chicago Mayor Anton J. Cermak was killed.
· On this date:
In 1564, the Italian asb'Onomer Galileo Galilei was born in the city of
Pi sa.
In 1764, the city of St. Louis was established.
In 1820, Susan B. Anthony, one of America's leading pioneers of
women's rights, was born in Adams, Mass.
.. In 1842, 150 years ago, a private mail service in New York City inb'Oduced the ftrst adhesive postage stamps.
·· In 1879, President Rutherford B. Hayes signed a bill to allow female
aitorneys to argue cases before the U.S. Supreme Court
~- In 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine blew up in Havana Harbor, killing
260 crew members and escalatin~ tensions with Spain.
In 1942, 50 years ago, the Bntish colony Singapore surrendered to the
Japanese during World War II.
In 1965, Canada's new flag, with its maple-leaf design, was unfurled
in ceremonies in Ottawa.
In 1986, the Philippines National Assembly proclaimed Ferdinand E.
Marcos president for another six yean;, following an election marked by
allegations of fraud. (Marcos ended up being ousted from power.)

Berry's World

I

•••

IL

~i .... ~..... :.
ClltrlDyNfA, IIIC." -

"How many American msnB(16rS snd workers
dOM It tlkll to /ICI'IIW In Blight bi.Jib?" .

•••

much a lender-aid, or almost
lender,welfare program as it Is a
student-aid program."
As early as next week, Congress
may decide on reforms that would
snatch this perk from the banks. A
bill sponsored by Sens. Paul
Simon, D-111., and David Durenberger, R-Minn., would establish a
system of direct lending to college
campuses, bypassing the banks.
Collections would be handled by
the Internal Revenue Service as
pan of withholding from paychecks
afiCr graduation. The sponsors say
the money saved would be plowed
back into more scholarships and
grants.
Versions of the Simon-Duren berger plan are being considered in
the House and the Senate, and
would save $1 billion a year by
lending money directly to the stu·
dents through the schools, accord·
inll to the General Accounting
0 lice. Collections would be han·
died by the IRS, but would be
based on a sliding income scale so

February 16, 1992

graduates whose· education didn't
buy them a high-paying job would
not be forced to choose between
paying their loans or eating.
·
The idea has the banking industry in a lather. Money lenders and
other middlemen around the country have mounted what congres·
sional insiders say is a full-court
press to stop any reform movement. They have won over the
Bush administration, with the Education Department on record as
opposing the idea.
Simon finds himself pitted
against some old allies in the Senate too, including Sens. Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass., and Claiborne
Pell, D-R.I .. who oppose the
changes. But Simon.also has found
himself some new bedfellows
among the Republicans who are
urging the White House to back the
plan. They believe that affordable .
education. like health care, is an
issue that will win over the middleclass voters.
Beyond the big banks that do

WeLL, I DoN'T

!&lt;tlo~

aBour tli$ se~ l.iFe,
S!JT ! 1'\aVe. iT ot-.1 GOOD
auntoRiTV /'le HaD
~

CHiN iMPLatJT.

.

GALLIPOLIS · Beny Marie Betz, 82, of The Plains, formerly of Gallipolis, died Thursday, Feb.13, 1992, at O'Bieness Hospital, Athens.
She was born May I, 1909, in Milton, W.Va., daughter of the late
James Boston and Adelaide Conner McAllister.
She was a retired nurses aid at Holzer Medical Center, and a member
of the Gallipolis Eastern Star 283 and Grace United Methodist Church.
Survivors·include, one son and daughter-in-law, Ronald E. and Phyllis
L. Betz of Gallipolis; two daughters, Mrs. Arlen (Anna M.) Saunders of
Athens. and Mrs. Roger (Margaret S.) Francis of Moundsville, W.Va.;
~~CVen grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
' She was preceded in death by her husband, Basil W. Betz in 1944; five
sisters, Liza Nichels. Nanny Bias, Una Leek, Gladys Dillon, and Rene
Plymale; and three brothers, Jeff Silas, and Sim McAllister.
Funeral services will be held 2 p.m. Sunday at Willis Funeral Home,
with the Rev. Dimiel Kiger officiating. Burial will be in Pine Street Cemeiery.

Jack Anderson
Michael Binstein
most of the volume lending, there
are others with a stake in the status
quo. The Student Loan Marketing
Association, Sallie Mae, is a gov.
emment·sponsored enterprise that
makes a secondary market for stu.
dent loans. There is also a raft o{
state-level guarantee agencies that
arc fighting for their bwn survival. .
Even some universities tha\
would benefit from reforming the
system are torn. One university
lobbyist told us, "Some schools
say we like this idea, but we have
some bankers on our bOard and we
really can't get behind it."
Sen. Simon wants to know, "Is
this a program to help banks or a
program to help students?"
Those who prefer things the
way they arc have wheeled out the
big guns for the fight. Sallie Mae
has hired the Washington public
relations fll'tn of Hill and Knowlton
- a move that prompted some o~
Capitol Hill to ask why an institu·
tion created by Congress has taken
on a life of its own and is hiring
lawyers to lobby its creator.
In a hearing last year, Rep ,
Joseph Kennedy. D-Mass .,
expressed concern about what he'
called a "schizophrenic notion"
that these organizations work for
the public while pushing private
interests 100.
For its part, Sallie Mae thinks
this is no time to tinker with the
system. In a position paper, Sallie
Mae officials offered this protest:
"Students and parents are too
reliant on the flow of student loan
dollars to justify gambling that an
untested proposal will be a suitable
replacement for a program that has
provided $115 billion to 21 million·
borrowers over the past quarter
century."
The way we sec it, students and
their parents are not the only ones
who have become "too reliant on
the now-of student loan dollars ...
Copyright 1992, United Feature
Syndicate,lnc.

Geneva M. Fisher
COLUMBUS - Geneva M. Fisher. 78, of 214 S. Westgate Ave ..
Columbus, formerly of the Eureka community, died Friday, Feb. 14,
'1992, at ML Carmel West Medical Center, Columbus.
She was born Aug. 2, 1913 in Guyan Township, Gallia County, daughter of the late Connie and Frances Eggleston Swain.
She was a member of the Providence Baptist Church.
Survivors include five daughiCrs, Mrs. John (Mavadell) Thornton of
Cincinnati, Maudell Fisher of Columbus, Marjorie Gillis of Columbus,
Mrs. Okey (Marliyn) Johnson of Ashville, and Mrs. John (Janice) Burke
of Gallipolis; and nine grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Lewis H. Fisher on Sept.
II, 1981; six brothers, Buell. Webster, Curtis, Homer. Virgil, and David
Swain.
Funeral services will be held I p.m. Monday at Cremeens Funera!
Chapel, with the Rev. Ralph Workman officiating. Burial will be in Provi·
dence Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral chapel on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9.

Emil C. Janko

When you get out of bed on the wrong side ·
Rupe, I guess you would preface
this story by saying that during the
first two weeks of January I had
much difficulty in sleeping. I go to
bed at different times and I awaken
in the morning at different hours.
One night I would sleep well but
most of the time I would arise at
anywhere from 5 a.m. till approximately 8 a.m. Occasionally I would
take a sleeping pill to help me
sleep. One thing that caused some
of my problems is that I always
sleep for one to three hours after
dinner Lime. As a result I do not
always get to sleep as regular as I
would like.
I went to bed .early Monday
night, January 20, but had some
problems on my mind and couldn't
get Lo sleep. At 2:30a.m. I decided
to arise and go downstairs to sit in
my big chair. Usually when I hil
this chair I have no sleeping problems. I fell asleep sbonly thereafter
and my eyes opened at 7 a.m. The
TV had been on all this time and
when I awoke, the lights were
flickering and the TV went off.
Finally the lights went completely
off.
At 7 a. m. this time of the year,
Rupe, it is completely dark outside
and I had to be very careful I did
not trip when I started towards the
downstairs lavatory. My bladder
was pushing me and I had a difficult time gening to this room. It
was so dark I could not see where
the commode was. After much
fumbling around, I finally located
it This was the first time in a long
time that I had to sit down to drain
my bladder. I had .great difficulty
since I was wearing my bathrobe. I
finished my business in the bath·
room and got moving. I discovered
that I had made a grievous mistake
- Heaven forbid, my bathrobe was

extremely wet. Alas, I had forgotten to remove it. You can't i~gin,e
my chagrin as Lo having a wet 'eaL
Afterwards, I started back ID the
kitchen, and the only lights I saw
were the headlights of vehicles
traveling on SR 124 towards
Pomeroy. I knew there was a flashlight on the TV or on the small
table in the "Frog Room", but since
it was so dark I was not able to find
it until after daylight. When you
are in a house in complete darkness, standing against one of the
door jams waiting for daylight,
many thoughts cross your mind.
Since, for the most pan, my entire
house is dependent on electricity,
you do have a major problem if
you do not have some flashlights
around.
To make matters worse, last
week again, the lights went off. I
later discovered that some auto had
knocked a power pole or guy wire
down causin~ this disruption. On
this occasion I did manage to find
the flashlight and move around the
house without 100 many problems.
Later, however, I discovered
that I needed two flashlights, one
downstairs and. one upstairs . I
found an extra yellow flashlight but
with no battenes. That morning I
took this flashlight with me to go to
a store to purchase batteries.
It was necessary for me to take
this large yellow flashlight in order
to get the proper size baaeries. So
at noon I was carrying this large
yellow flashlight with me to lunch
at Gloeckner's Bar and Grill .
Charles Goeglein said, Fred, why
are you walking around in the daytime with a flashlight? Are you
having seeing problems? Again, I
felt terrible that he might think I
was going blind. My eyes are weak
but OK. So much _for the electric

. .
IF Bl d
light
Slluauon
at
1 should mentionrog
thai I vam· totally blind when in the dark. One
good thing is that 1 can thank God
that 1 can still see. Jn my prayers
that night 1 thanked God for my
eye sight.
Another situation happened at
my house about the same time.
That was the visit to my home by
my grandson, Crockett Crow.
Crockett, you may know, is the son
of Barbara and Carson Crow.
Crockett is now 15 months of age
and is walking . He also appears
very sb'Ong for his age. 0n this par·
ticular evening he insisted on grab·
bing every frog he could see ami
throwing il on the floor with a
vengeance. Both his parents took
turns taking things away from him.
The climax of the evening came
when little Crockett threatened to
hit the TV with one of his larger
toys.
The toy never reached its mark
when Carson intercepted. Before
the evening was over, Crockett had
nol only rearranged my Frog collection but my blood pressure was
getting higher every minute. Some
day 1 think Crockett will make a
good athlete. Rupe, did you ever
see one of those signs which read,
"Why me, Lord." Rupe, this didn't
happen at I Frog Blvd. but it did
happen. One day in December. I
was driving to work when all of a
sudden the Pomeroy Village police
officer stopped me and asked me to
pullofftheroadontothecurb. The
policeofliceraskedformydriver's
license which I gave him. After he
completed the writing of the ticket,
I asked what was wrong. He said
that he had to give me a ticket and
that I was charged with leading a
parade without a parade permit.
I asked him where Ll)e parade

Fred w. Crow

was an d hc sa1'd the parade had
passed. He stated that there were
seven cars following me and that I
was drivinf 100 slowly. There was
a great dea of honking by the other
cars so the officer assumed it was a
parade. Therefore, I needed a per·
mit. I explained to the officer that
there was no parade and hence, ~
gave me a warning ticket. Later, I
discovered that Mayor Seyler had
set me up with this concocted traf.
fie violation. What a way to start
the morning. Rupe.
.
Did you, by any chance see the
National Dog show in West Minis:
ter, NY. If you did, you would
know that the Bassett Hound won
the Best of Show in the Hound Dog
division.
My son, Rick, owns two bassett
hounds named, Muffy, a male, and
Booger, a female. Both dogs have
pedigrees and Muffy looked exactly like the winner. Now if you live
in a house which as I do and in
comes these two dogs, you become
nervous. Neither of these dogs is
house trained. They manage to
knock down any object within theit:
JX!th. I prefer that the dogs not enter
the house but in they came anyway,
Again, my blood pressure seemed
to accelerate and I am on .nerves
end until they leave. Not the indi·
viduals, Rupe, but the dogs. Note, I
do not want any bassett puppies ~
I have Bimbo.
~'
Carry on.
Editor's note. Long-lim~
Attorney Fred W. Crow is the
contributor or a weekly column
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Readers wishing to applaud, crit· .
icize or comment on any subject ·
(except religion or politics) are :
encouraged to write to Mr. :
Crow, in eare of this newspaper. :

Honoring living ~lack history-makers .
Sitting on a panel with Alex
Haley, you can get an almost mys·
tical sense of American history's
grandeur.
The usual dialogic urge flies out
the window. Instead, I found
myself wanting to sit quietly and
listen to his delightful reminis·
cences 011 growing up black in Ten·
nessee and his sa~e advocacy of
education as a U!lJfying force for
black and white Americans.
• Halfway throuah the panel,
sponsoced by Blact Issues in Higher Education, an awesome 'realiza·
tion interrupted my stream of con·
sciopsness. Alex Haley is living
black hiswry.
AJ he continues to reap so IIUII)Y
well-deserved eflcomiums, this
gentle-mannered, almost shy schol·
ar reminds us, "blest be the ties
that bind." His contributions to
America's nationhood transcend

climate, il. seems appropri~te .!O
reflect durmg this Black Htstory
Month on present-day history mak·
ers as much as on titans of the past.
The titans have already been
exalted in books and honored
countless times. A slice of their
magnitude is depicted on poslage
stamps. This month, a stamp hon·
oring one of America's most prolif·
ic black geniuses, W.E.B. DuBois,
went on sale.
DI!Bois is the 28th black Ameri·
can to be honored on a stamp.
Those honored previously range
from Salem Poor, a Revolutionary
War · he~o. to Harriet Tubman,
Marr McLeod Bethune, Jackie
Robmson, Dulce Ellington and
Martin Luther King]r.
Of that postage-stamp black
pantheon, only three - DuBois,
King and Robinson - were among
the people listed as the IOO •Most
'
'
race.
Important Americans of the 20th
. So in today's racially strained Century listed by Life magazine in

1990. Three other black Ameri·
cans, however, made the list:
Muhammad Ali, Louis Armstrong
and Malcolm X.
.
For those of you who wonder
about the recognition of black
Americans in the making of Ameri·
can history, that Life magazine list
is one departure point Somewhat
lopsided and short-sighted, it is
nonetheless instructional.
Twenty-five years from now, I.
hope that four living black legendS
will be enshrined for posterity on a
postage stamp: Maya Angelou,
Alex Haley, Rosa Parks and Gar·
don Parks.
Haley's wondrous role in
reshaping the self-acknowledgment
of African-Americans and their
two-century in~ting with white
Americans already justifies his .
inclusion.
Rosa Paries belongs in history
with .two other fearless blaclt
wotnen who transformed history

.

\

ChuckSton~
with their civil-rights leadership: :
Harriet Tubman and Sojourner :
Truth . Parks, a dignified.seam- :
stress, simply refused one day to ·
yield her seat to a white male 011 a :
Montgomery, Ala., bus. It was a :
great risk. But, as Herodotus 1
observed, "Great deeds are usually 1
wrought at great risk."
Maya Ange,lou and Gordon
Patp are bound by &amp;.creative com•
monality. Both are renaissance per; 1,

I

.

·· ~

'
1

~~

Angelou, novelist, poet (and
good Lord, what a poet!), actress,
playwright, teacher, disttngui~ 1
university professot and ~. is
a compeUing and powerful person. 1
ality.
.
'
Her epic " 'Still I Rise" joins I
~JI!!lt Walker's "For My Pco.. •
pie as two of the most eloquent l
poetic summons to blacks to Rlkin- :
die the~ of their ruaston. , 1
'

.

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..

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Sunday nme&amp;::-sentlnei-Page-Af

-------Area deaths------- Regents ·told education ·
Mary Lucille Neff
cuts 'disproportionate' :
Betty M. Betz

Page-A2

Student loans might be turned over to schools
WASHINGTON - Student
loans ran1c right up there with cred·
it-card interest as a big moneymaker for banks. The banks have
gambled and lost on everything
from speculative real estate to junk
bonds, but with student loans, there
is no roll of the dice, bocause the
federal government guarantees the
loans.
In order of profitability, student
loads outpace auto loans, mort·
gage-backed securities, adjustable·
and fixed-rate mongages and U.S.
Treasury securities. Only credit
cards and commercial and industri·
al loans ran1c higher for profitability, according to the E11ucation
Department.
But it's another story for the
taxpayers who pay when students
default. In the past five years,
defaults on federal student loans
more than doubled. Last year, those
defaults cost the taxpayers upward
of $3.6 billion.
One lobbyist for a major univer·
sity told us that the system is "as

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

February 16, 1992

-

•

J

'

GALLIPOLIS -Emil C. Janko, 68, 229 Cannan Drive, Addison, died
Saturday, Feb. 15, 1992 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born July 10, 1923 in Cleveland, son of the late John and Elizabeth Spisak
Janko, he retired from Holzer Medical Center as its chief fmancial officer in
1988.
He received his degree in accounting from Cleveland Stale University
and was a registered public accountant. A Fellow in Hospital Financial
Management. he was a member of
the Hospital Financial Management
Association, the National Association of Accountants and Echo Accounting.
A U.S. Army veteran of World
War II, where he served in the Pa·
cific, he was a member of the Gallipolis Rotary Club, and served as the
organization's treasurer. He was a
Paul Harris Fellow and was treasurer
of the Gallipolis BiccniCnnial ComEMIL JANKO
mission.
. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife, Belly
J. Mori Janko, on April29, 1981 , and by two brothers. William Janko and
Alben Janko.
Surviving are his second wife, Patsy Varney Janko, whom he married on
Nov. 28, 1987 in Gallipolis; a son, Father John J. Janko of Boston, Mass.;
three daughiCrs, Gail Klein of laverne, Calif., and Mary Ann Reiff and Marie
T. Crotts, both of Seattle, Wash.; six stepchildren, Dana Varney, Judith
McCann, JenetteFiynn, Bradley Varney, Everett!. Varney and Brenda Darst;
four brothers, Steve Janko and Andrew Janko, both of Cleveland, Joseph
Janko of Tacoma, Wash., and George Janko of Union Lane, Mich.; two
sisters, Josephine Schindler of Cleveland, and Betty Scolaro of Macedonia;
and nine grandchildren.
· Mass of Christian burial will be II a.m. Moilday in SL Louis Catholic
Church
with Father John J. Janko, Celebrant and Father William Myers,
.
Con-celebrant officiating. Burial will be in St. Louis Catholic Cemetery.
Friends may call at the church from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
. A prayer service will be held in the church at 8:30p.m. Sunday. Arrangements are by the Willis Funeral Home.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Gallipolis Rotary Club
Memorial Scholarship Fund, in memory of Emil C. Janko, the Gallia County
Cancer Society, or SL Louis Catholic Church.

.

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Sunday, decreasing clouds with
a high in the mid-40s. West winds
5 to 15 mph. Sunday night, mostly
Clear with a low around 30. Monday, variable cloudiness with a
slight chance of showers. High 55
to 60. Chance or rain is 30 percent.
· Extended forecast:
Monday through Wednesday
· Monday, a chance of rain southwest, fair elsewhere. Highs mainly
in the 40s. Lows mainly in the 30s.
Tuesday, chance of rain. Highs 45
to 55. Lows 35 to 45. Wednesday,
a chance of flurries northeast, fair
elsewhere. Highs 35 to 45. Lows
mainly in the 20s.

WSPS 525·800}
Published each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipoli1, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley

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'

Thomas E. Ragan
GALLIPOLIS. Thomas E. Ragan, 91, of 45 Vinton Ave .. Gallipolis,
died Saturday. Feb. 15, 1992, at University Hospital, Columbus.
He was born Feb. 2, 1901 in Watson, W.Va., son of the late Thomas
and Jean Ponn Ragan.
He retired from the Gallipolis Developmental Center in 1966 after 40
years of service. He was a member of the First Baptist Church and Judson
Sunday School.
Survivors include his wife, Florence Roush Ragan, whom ~e married
June 8, 1928 in Point Pleasant•. W.Va.; two sons, Paul Ragan of Wellston
and Thomas A. Ragan of Ewmgton; two daughters, Mrs. Frank (Joan)
Stewart of Xenia, and Mrs. Lowell (Betty) Call of Gallipolis; 10 grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and one sister, Freda Riffie of
Maumee.
He was preceded in death by one granddaughter, Connie Ragan; four
brothers; and three sisters.
Funeral services will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday at Lhe First Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Archie Conn, the Rev. Alvis Pollard, and the Rev.
Joseph Godwin offitiating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home on Monday
from 6-9 p.m.
.
'the body will be taken to the church one hour prior to services.
The grandsons will serve as pallbearers.

Gomer F. Smith .
GALLIPOLI~-

Gomer Francis Smith, 74, of Gallipolis, formerly of
Lebanon, Ky., died Fnday, Feb. 14, 1992 at the home of his sister, Edith
Fulks, who surv1ves.
He was born on Aug. 25, 1917, in Guyan Township to the late Arthur
H. and Celeste (Clary) Smith.
Mr. Smith served in the U.S. Army during World War II afiCr receiving his training at FL Knox, Ky. He saw action in France and Germany
during that war, and in later years served in Japan and Korea.
Others preceding him in death were two sisters, Delma Stanley and
Rena Syrus.
Other survivors include one half-brother, Lee Roy Smith of Florida
(town unknown), one half-sister, Joanne Smith Gronacher of Cincinnati,
and one stepsister, Louise Kirby of Gallipolis.
Services will be Tuesday, Feb. 18 at I p.m. at Willis Funeral Home.
The Rev. Arnold Cromlish and a military chaplain from Ft. Knox will
officiate. Burial will follow in Pine Street CemeiCry, where an honor
guard from FL Knox will conduct full military bonors.
Friends may call the funeral home Monday from 7 to 9 p.m .

George E. Woodyard
G.ALLIPOLIS ·.George Ernest Woodyard, 72. of 307 Upper River Rd.,
GalltpoltS, died Fnday, Feb. 14, 1992, at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was born July 23, 1919 in Crown City, son of the late Walter E.
and Hazel V. Brumfield Woodyard.
He was a retired Public Utilities Commission of Ohio officer and a
retired Gallia County Sherifrs deputy. He operated a trucking business
and was a rural mail carrier for the Crown City Post office, both for several years.
· ·
Mr. Woodyard was a World War II Army veteran, and was a member
of A,rnerican Legion Lafayette Post 27, National DA V, Purple Hean Club.
Galltpohs Eagles, and VFW Post 4464, serving as post commander and
pas t district commander. He was awarded two Bronze Stars and the Purple Heart.
Survivors include his wife, Opal Darline Haffel~ two sons, Warren D.
Woodyard of Crown City and George Keith Woodyard of Ashland, Ky.;
one step-son, Tommy Hawk of Reynoldsburg; two step-daughters, Bonnie
Jones of Westerville and Betty Walker of Lima; three sisters, Teresa
Joann Randolph and Patricia Hubbard, both of Columbus, and Hildrcd
Caldwell of Gallipolis; two brothers, Walter J. Woodyard and Richard
G~ne Woodyard, both of Columbus; two grandchildren; seven step-grandchildt:en; and one step-great-grandchild.
He was preceded in death by two grandchildren; two brothers; one son,
Carland Woodyard on Sept. I, 1990; and two step-sons, Fred Allen
Houck in 1980, and Roger Lee Houck in 1967.
Funeral services will be held 2:30 p.m. Monday at Waugh-Haller.·
Wood Funeral Home. with the Rev. Tommy Hawk officiating. Burial wtll
be in Crown City Cemetery. Full military graveside services will be conducted by VFW Post 4464 and American Legion Lafayette Post 27.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 7-9.
VFW and American Legion mc.mbers will serve as JX!Ubearers.

Thunderstorm damages
buildings in Ohio Valley
By Tbe Associated Press
A strong thunderstorm damaged
buildings and dumped heavy rain
in the Ohio Valley on Saturday ,
while another storm battering the
West piled snow in the mountains
and drenched coastal areas.
Snow fell in the upper Midwest
and began spreading into the
NortheasL
Thunderstorms developed ahead
of a cold froot crossing Indiana and
western Kentucky. High wind in
central Indiana destrOyed a bam, a
farm house and a mobile home,
caused a garage to collapse and
damaged roofs.
Thunderstorms and rain also
were reported from northern Florida and the central Gulf Coast to
North Carolina and southern Ohio.
In the West. a strong cold front
was producing heavy snow in ihe
southern region of California's
Sierra Nevada . Thunderstorms
associated with the cold front
moved into Southern California
early Saturday.
Snow extended from North
Dakota to Iowa and north to Wis·
consin arid the northern part of
Michigan's lower peninsula.
Winter storm warnings and
weather advisories were posted in
New England.
The low for the Lower 48 states

The sund 111 n ....senunel wttt not be
NlpoMibl• l'or 1dvanc:e paymentam.de

toeaniero.
NUULBUBSCRuYnONS

GALLIPOLIS - Mary Lucille Neff, 82, of 1113 Theodore Ave., Gal·
lipolis, died Saturd3y, Feb. 15, 1992, at her residence.
The Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home is handling local arrangements. Services will be announced later.

Affiliation corrected
'

I

GALLIPOLIS -1ohn Nibert is
ptesident of the Vocational Industrial Clubs o{ America chapter at
Buckeye Hills Career Center. Ws
organization affiliation was incor·
rectly idcn~fted in Friday's edition
of the Gallipolis Daily TribUM.

COLU~BUS, !)hto (AP) -

~ducatton ts absorbtng a dispropor·

uonate share of fundtng cuts
ordered to help balance the state
budget and cannot offset them
through greater efficiency, the
Ohio Board of Regents was told..
Regents Chancellor Elatne
Hairsto~ told the panel that h1gher
educatton accounts for up to 13
percent.of the basic state budget
but ~tved 29 percent of the total
spendmg cutback tmposed tn
December.
"Education at all levels is
expected to absorb threc·founhs of
the entire cut to the state budget,
even though we receive less than
half of total state support," Ms.
Hairston said Friday.
"In the past two years, educalion's share of the budget pie has
dropped by nearly 5 percent. This
may not seem like much until one
realizes the pie is over $13 bil lion," she said.
At the same time, Ms. Hairston
said there probably would have
been no other way to handle the
budget problem given public oppo·
sition to tax increases and other
factors.
And sbe said the regents would
continue to worlc with the Managing for the Future Task F~e that
the board created in response to a
request from Gov. George
Vomovich to find wan of opera!·
ing universities more efficiently.
Victor Goodman, the task force
chairtllan, told the regents in a
progress report Friday that the
committee is examining administrative costs, program duplication,
intercollegiate athletics, faculty
workload and tenure.
"All issues, as a matter of fact,
are on the table," he said.
Goodman said most colleges
face difficult decisions, and he
called for administrators and facul·
ty to worlc together on solutions.
"When some of the presidents
have taken the initiative to do what
is necessary, they have gotten votes
of no-confidence from their facul ·
ties," he said. "We nee.ct solutions,

not conflict."
·
:.
Goodman said faculty workload:
be one of the most im"""'•nt•
!"8Y
rv·-:-.
tssues ~o be addressed and sa1\l:
alternattv~s to tenure were IIDOIIf:
the questtons nused by task force.
m~~~s is an important issue:
since the cost of personnel is higll•
in education, and in order 10 man&lt;
age institutions more effectively;
more flexibility in staffing peaems.
is needed," he said.
·:
"Tenure, we believe, wu·
d · · ed
f tecu' ·
estgn . as a means o pro
ng:
academiC freedom but has evolv~,
over the years to _protect Job sec:un·;
ty. Thus tenure .IS of~~ perceived:
as another special pnvilege_ gtY~~:
those m. higher educatiOn, . ·

said.--"""'--"""

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Hospital news

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Friday admissions - Minnie
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Friday discharges - Virginia
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EsiCp,
Nora Pearson.
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..-.,.--------Local Briefs . ...---------.
Three Meigs youths hurt in wreck
CENTENARY - Three Meigs County youths were treated for
mjuries sustained in a one-car accident on state Route 141 in Gallia
Co~nty's Green Township at approxiinately 10:30 p.m. Friday.
According to a report from the Gallta-Metgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Wendi R. Harmon, 16, of Racine was eastbound on
state Route 141 when she lost control of her car in a curve.
The car went off the left side of the road and struck a sign post
and shrubbery, the paD'Ol reported.
Harmon and passengers Angela M. Teaford, 15, of Middleport,
and Crystal M. Hannon, 15, of Racine, were transported by the Gallia County Emergency Medical Service to Holzer Medical Center
where they were treated and released for contusions or lacerations, a
hospital spokeswoman said.
.
A fourth passenger, Mike Smith, age and· address unreported,
was uninjured in the accident, the patrol reported.
The patrol listed damage to the front and front-right of Hannon's
1979 Chrysler LeBaron as moderate and disabling.
. Harmon was cited by the patrol for failure to control and failure
to wear a safety belt.
According to the repon, none of the occupants were wearing a
safety belt at the time of the acctdenL

Vinton woman injured in wreck
VINTON- A Vinton woman was hospitalized following a onecar wreck on state Route 160 near the intersection of Thompson
Road in Morgan Township Friday afternoon.
According to spokesman from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Irene Browning, 70, of Vinton was northbound on
state Route 160 and lost control of her 1984 Chevrolet Celebrity
whtch went over an embankment and into a creek.
The roof, a door and a side post had to be cut off by the Gallia
County Emergency Medical Service and Rescue before Browning
could be extricated from the wreckage, an EMS spokesman satd.
Extncation ume was approximately 20 minutes, the spokesman
added.
Browning was listed in guarded condition with a fmctured ankle
and abdominal injuries in the Holzer Medical Center intensive care
unll Saturday afternoon, a hospital spokeswoman said.
The accident is under investigation by the patrol.

County board to meet Monday
GALLIPOLIS - The GaUia County Local Board of Education
will meet in a special session Monday, Feb. 7, at9 a.m. at the board
office on state Route 160.

Oak Hill woman shot in hip
OAK HILL - A woman was shot in a hip about 2:40 a.m. Fnday and was listed in fair condition in Oak Hill Community Medical
Center the Jackson County Sheriffs Deparunent said.
Te,;esea Pate, 29, was taken by rescue squad to the hospital after
a shooting on Bethel Ridge Road in Ltberty Township, the department satd.
A man was questioned but not charged, a sheriffs spokesman
said.

EMS units respond to 6 calls
POMEROY - Umts of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services responded to six calls for assistance on Friday and early
Saturday morning.
On Friday at 2:10p.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Second
Street for Ivan Van Meter, who was taken to Veterans Memorial
• Hospital. At 3:22 p.m. a Pomeroy unit went to Crew Road for
Clarence Boyles, who was transported 10 Holzer Medical Center.
At 3:34 p.m. the Rutland unit, the Columbia Township Fire
Department and ftrst responders were called to Erickson Road on a
repon of a child trapped in a well. Joey Rupe was transported to
O'Blcness Memorial Hospital and was later flown by LifeFlighl to
Children's Hospital.
The Middleport unit, at 3:59p.m., went to North Front for Dawn
Hawley, who was taken to Veterans.
On Saturday at 12:55 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Rose Hill
for Carl DiU, who was transported to Vctemns, and at6:09 p.m. the
unit went 10 Maple Street for GDICe Call, who was taken to Veterans and later transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Childrens' play set March 13

bankruptcy court proteCtion.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Harold
White gave his approval to the disclosure statement that accompanies
the latest version of Revco's reorganization plan, clearing the way
for creditors to vote on the plan.
A hearing was set for March II
to review the results or the voting.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Revco filed for protection from
Agriculture Department and the creditors under Chapter II of the
Agency for International Develop- U.S. Bankruptcy Code in July 1988
ment have established a telephone
hotline to assist people making
donations or sales to the former
Soviet Union.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
The Emergency Donatwn Hot- Friday night's Ohio Lottery selecline will assist individuals, corpora- tions:
tions and private organizallons. Pick 3 Numbers
Operators will be available from 9
3-3-3
a.m. to 5 p.m. EST Monday
(three, three, three)
through Friday. Taped messages Pick 4 Numbers
may be left during other hours.
5-5-6-8
Private conb'ibutions will sup(five, five, six, eight)
plement the U.S. aid already Cards
announced earlier and being delivK (kins) of Hearts
ered this week to the fanner Soviet
IO(ten) of Clubs
republics, which includes $165
6 (six) of Diamonds
million in food assistance, Vene8 (eight) of Spades
man said.

Hotline
established

Lottery numbers

&lt;

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Recreation Department wiD
sponsor the Columbus Junior Theater in the children's classic,
"Rumplestiltskin." The play will be presented at the Middleport
American Legion Hall, South Fourth Street, on Friday, MarCh 13 at
7 p.m. The Columbus Junior Theater Touring Group tours throughout the State of Ohio presenting live theater to schools and youth
groups.
Ticket prices are as follows: preschoolers/students, $1, adults,
$2. Tickets and additional infonnation may be obtained from the
Middleport Recreation Department at 992-6782.

DEMOCRATS
• Jerry Brown: "Yes. the American people have a right to know the
details of the assass!'mtion of their president. It's ano~er e~ample of .f!le
American people bemg shut out of the poliucal process m thiS country. . . ; .
• Bill Clinton: A spokeswoman said Clinton has not taken a public ; •
stand on the issue.
. !:
• Tom Harldn: "Without assessing the validity of the Warren Commts- •:
sian report or current theories, I would agree wllh Senator (Edward) : .
Kennedy that the files should be opened.''
.
• Bob Kerrey: A spokesman said Kerrey has not taken a pubhc stand
on the issue.
• Paul Tsongas: "The secret files have been looked at carefully by
impartial researchers and no surprises have been found. _Th~ ~les have
been sealed only 10 proteCt the privacy of many mnocem mdtvtduals ~d
openin$ them cannot be justified unless there is compelhng and spectfic
new ev1dence.''

Bowling tournament date changed
MIDDLEPORT - The Youth Bowhng Tournament sponsored
by the Middleport Recreation Department has been rescheduled for
Saturday, March 14 at the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
The tournament is open to all area youth, aged 8-15. Trophies
and prizes will be awarded to the winners, and Lite 92FM will provide live music from noon unti12 p.m.
Registration fonms may be picked up at the recreation depanment or at the bowling lanes on Saturdays. All forms and fees must
be returned ta the recreation department no later than March 6 to be
eligible for competition in the tournament.

REPUBLICANS
.
• George Bush: Bush has said there is no need to open the file, saymg, •
"I have seen no evidence that has given me any reason to believe the .:·
Warren Commission was wrong."
.
• Patrick But;hanan: A spokesman said Buchanan favors openmg the •
files.
• ·
• David Duke: A spokesman said Duke favors opening the files.

Board appointment clarified.
POMEROY - Henry Hunter of Chester was appointed to a full
term on the Meigs County Board of Elections by Secretary of State
Bob Taft. Although he replaces his wife, Mary, on that board, Mrs.
Hunter did not resign from the board as a condition of her acceptance or the position of ch3.l111lan of the local Democrauc Party. as
was reported in Th~day's eqition ofThe Daily Sentinel.

-·

CDL deadline approaching
COLUMBUS - Officials of the
Ohm Department of Highway Safety warned commercial truck and
bus driver s recently about the
approaching deadline of April I,
1992, for obtaining a commercial
drivers license (COL).
"The deadline for testing commercial vehicle drtvers ts 50 days
away," said Highway Safety Director Charles Shipley. He said that
after Apnl I, 1992, commercial
drivers who are caught behind the
wheel without a CDL are driving
illegally.
Htghway safety surveys show
that approximately 200,000 Ohio
drivers will require a COL, but
only 147,000 have obtained the
hcense. Shipley lS concerned abou.t
the last-minute rush of drivers
wanung to obtain a license. "We
want drivers to know that thi s
deadline is approaching and they

Court.finalizes divorce actions
POMEROY - The Meigs County Common Pleas Court has
granted dtvorces to Sarah L. Hobbs from Danny Hobbs, and to Elizabeth R. Gloyd from Douglas C. Gloyd.
A dissolution action has been granted to Randall Wayne Cowdery and Lisa Joann Cowdery.

Middleport wins ODOT grant
POMEROY - The Ohio DeparUnent of Transportation has
awarded a public transportation grant of $61,628 to the village of
Middleport. The grant will leverage $47,768 10 matching federal
monies.
"These funds will enable the village of Middleport to contract
with the Blue Streak Cab Co. 10 provide taxi service to Middleport
and Pomeroy," said ODOT Director Jerry Wray, "and support area
economic-development activities."
State funds arc available through the Ohio Public Transportation
Gmnt Fund, and are awarded to match a share of approved Federal
grants administered by the Urban Mass Transportation Administration.
·
State Rep. Mary Abel, 0-Athens, said Friday that she was
pleased with the announcement.
"The provision o( these services is especiall y important to the
people of our area," Abel srud, "and the provision of funding for
pub tic transportauon was one of my prionues in the bud gel"

Contributors to be honored
GALLIPOLIS - A United Way of Gallia County celebrati n
breakfast will be held at 8 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 19 at the Galliil
County Senior Citizens Center, according to Wayne Benson, president.
Ceruficates wtll be presented to all Umted Way contributors.
Those wanting to attend should contact the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce for reservations. A $3 donation wtll be taken and
the public is invited to attend.

FREE CLEANING and INSPECTION

.

office.
Painter, 44, a lawyer since 1979
and a judge since 1982, will run
statewidefor the ftrst time.
Pfeifer's candidacy had been
expected although he had not formalty announced for the race.

• Don't use the name of a building in place or the street address.
In Gallipolis, part of the problem seems to be confusion over
state route designations.
According to Landman, spell
out the wonl-''state" - "St." is the
abbreviation for "Street".
Leave out the directional suffix
(example - STATE RT. 7 S). The
oomputer confuses the letterS with
the number 5. According to Landman, it's not necessary to use the
'sOuth' or 'north' on State Route 7
addresses.
·Anyone unsure of their street
address can call the county engine~rs office to find their street
address, Landman said.
'Area posUnasters also offered a
tip;'to make the t,ransition process a
little easiei': Put the new address in
with bills and correspondence. In
addition, many bills have a special
pl~e just for address changes.
Eventually the time will come

when lhe postal semce must send
letters back to their sende~. At that
time, the postal service will give
the sende~ the new address.
If there is no return address, the
mail may be lost
The Bidwell Post Office has set
a deadline of March 10, 1992, for
people to convert to using their
house number and street address.
The Gallipolis Post Office originally planned a March 9 deadline, but
has since extended illo 1993. After
the deadlines, the rural route and
box numbe~ will cease to exist.
"We aren't tryin* to give anyone a hard time, Rees said.
"We're trying to make the transition to automation a little easier."
The house number and street
addres~ system will be used by the
postal service and other delivery
services, fire departments, rescue
services and law enfon:ement agencies.

Bunty, an assistant Oakland Coon·
ty prosecutor. "It wasn't easy just
to stand there and listen."
Welsh and another friend or
Miller were walking in the woods
when they were told by
Kevorkian's sister that Miller was
dead.
Under cross examination by

Latest poll shows Clinton
dropping farther behind
LITTLE ROCK (AP) - The
gap between Democratic presidential candidates Paul Tsongas and
Bill Clinton appears to have
widened three days before the
nation's first primary in New
Hampshire.
Tsongas, the former Massachusetts senator, was at 34 percent in a new poll of New Hampshire voters published Saturday in
the Arkansas Democrat-Gazelle.
Clinton, the Arkansas governor,

•

had 21 percent, a two-point drop
from a day earlier.
Thursday's three-day tracking
poll by Mason-Dixon PoliticalMedia Research , has a margin of
error of plus or minus 5 percentage
points.
Clinton's slide may have leveled
off. There was no further drop in
the last day of the three-day survey,
Mason-Dixon reported.
Tsongas jumped three percentage points from Wednesday's po~ .

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Painter.
None is expected to have major
primary oppositi?D.
The same ts true for the
Democrats, who earher endorsed
candidates who include Judge
Robe~! Gorman of the I st Ohio '
Dt stnct Court of Appeals tn
Cincinnati, who will challenge
Moyer in the Nov. 3 election.
Pfeifer, 49, narrowly defeated
for allorney general in 1990, will
make his founh bid for statewide

help from Dr. Jack Kevorkian was
detennined to kill he~elf and considered him her salvation, a friend
testified Saturday.
"She knew that she could walk
away. Never once did she say 'I'm
not sure' or 'I'm not ready,"' said
a tearful Sharon Welsh.
Welsh was at a secluded cabin
where her close friend, Sherry
Miller, and Marjorie Wantz died
OcL 23, assisted by devices set up
by Kevorkian, a retired pathologisL
Welsh· testified with immunity
from prosecution during a preliimnary hearing to decide whether
Kevorkian will be tried on two
counts or murder in the deaths.
Both women had painful but not
fatal diseases.
Mtller, 43, was "very emphatic" about not putting off her suicide, as Kevorkian suggested after
Wantz died earlier in the day,
Welsh said. Kevorkian remarked to
Miller that it had been a long day.
When Miller waved off
Kevorkian's suggestion of a delay,
Welsh said she watched for a
moment from an open doorway.
She said she walked away when
she heard Miller's labored breathing as she inhaled carbon monox-

Kevorkian's atlorney, Geoffrey
Fieger, Welsh said Miller thought
highly of Kevorkian.
"She liked him. She felt thai he
was her hope. He was her salva·
lion."
Wantz, 58, who lived in Sodus,
and Miller, from Roseville, died on
adjacent cots in the cabin at the
Bald Mountain State Recreation
Area near Rochester Hills, a
· DeD'Oit suburb . .

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after a leveraged buyout.
Revco 's plan is now the only
one left, following an agreement
reached Thursday between Revco
and rival drugstore chain Jack Eckerd Corp., whtch had made a b1d to
acquire Revco.
Revco agreed to pay Eckerd
$7 .5 million to cover Eckerd' s
expenses in postponing its plan
indefintely. Eckerd's plan would
have merged the two drug store
chains.
Revco, based in Twinsburg,
operates 1,150 drugstores in I 0
states. Eckerd, based in Clearwater,
Fla., operates I ,675 drugstores in
13 states.
During a hearing on the disclosure statement, Revco Chairman
Boake Sells said he was anxious to
have just one plan for Revco's
future.
He said the future of the company has been in doubt as the various
parties to the case proposed and
counterproposed plans. The worst
outcome would be the absence of a
clear majority for any plan, he'said.

related story). Here, a trooper of tbe Gallia·
Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol investi·
gates tbe scene or tbe accident.

Court lineup set for fall,
barring primary upsets

'

Jewel••

COMPLETE STOCK MEN'S

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WRECK SCENE - Three Meigs County
youths received minor injuries in this one-car
wreck on state Route 141 Friday evening (see

Continued from A-1
Change···-------

SPECIAL ATTENTION

When your j"welry
needs Special Attention
Let Our Experts give it
the attention it deserves.

ROCHESTER HILLS, Mich.

(AP) - A woman who inhaled a
"I knew she was dying," Welsh
fatal dose or carbon monoxide with said under questiomng by Larry

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Both major political parties have
now endorsed candidates for three
seats at stake this year for the Ohio
Supreme Court, indicating that the
May 5 primary is likely to be ceremonial.
The Ohio Republican Party on
Friday endorsed Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer's re-election bid.
The party also tapped Sen. Paul
Pfeifer of Bucyrus and Hamilton
County Municipal Judge Mark

should not pultt off any longer."
The CDL is a testing procedure
required by federal sJ,andards to
insure that operators of vehicles
weighing more than 26,000 pounds
are qualified to drive. Experienced
drivers having a driving record free
of serious traffic violations for two
years prior to applying are candidates for "grandfathering" the skills
test only. All drivers are required to
lake a written test Driving experience during those two years must
also be proven.
Knowledge tests are given b)
appoinUnent at the State Highway
Patrol's 94 driver examination stations, and at other locations within
communities to groups of 25 or .
more. Skills tests are administered
at a facility 10 Columbus and a&lt;
other "third party" testing si tes
open 10 the public.

Sunday Times Sentinel-Page-As &lt;

Friend recalls woman's
determination to die

Kennedy assassination tiles ~~:

fiNAL

SPORT SHIRTS
MEN'S SHOES

:;·

EDITOR'S NOTE- The Associated Press asks the major preslden·
tial candidates a question each weekday abouttbeir views on a partie· ::
ular issue and ai!iembles their responses.
.
. . ; •.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Here are the views of the mBJOr prest~ential ·~ ·
candidates on the question: "Should the government make pubhc the :; :
sealed CIA, FBI and congressional files on the assasslJUlllon of John F. ; :
Kennedy?"
•'

Rev co gets 0 K for vote on reorganization plan
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Revco
D.S. Inc. on Friday moved a step
closer to becoming an independent
company after 3 1/2 years under

The Issues:

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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Jobs ...

ContilluedfromA~l

funds trustees' request for an
injunction to forte the Bihlminous
Coal Operators Association to
more than double its members'
conttibutions.
··
Jackson scheduled arguments in
the case for June IS.
Gri&gt;ssfeld, emphasizing that•the
trustees were separate from the
UMW, said the union supports the
trustees trying to make the funds
so! vent.
"The funds have to lake whatever action necessary to insure continuation of benefits," Grossfeld
said. "There isn't a perfect solution
that's going to emerge out of Htigations or collective bargaining. The
arena where this will be solved
once and for all is in Congress with

JOBS CLUB - Finding a job is never an
easy task but the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services and the Meigs County Department of
Human Services are trying to make It a little
easier. Through a Jobs Club which meets at
Middleport Village Council, individuals on pub- .

lie assistance are taught techniques to sharpen
their job bunting skills and advised of ways to
financially manage during the transition l'iom
unemployment to employment. Here Peggy
Roush, ODES employment specialist wbo con·
ducts tbe program, pictured standing, assists a
group of Jobs Club enrollees.

Continued from A-1
Programs· · · ------------

ttic~

only II of the 62 students taking the proficiency test passed all
four sections. A total of 22 (35 percent) passed writing, 52 (84 percent) passed reading, 24 (39 percent) passed math; and 32 (52 percent) passed citizenship.
In the Meigs Local School Distric~ 44 of the 157 students laking
the test passed all four sections. Of
the 162 students laking the test in
writing 93 (57 percent) passed; of
the 161 who took the reading test
127 (79 percent) passed, of the 169
taking the math test 70 (41 percent} passed; and of the 167 taking
the citizenship test 99 (59 percent)
passed.
In the Southern Local School
Distric~ 19 of the 77 sbldents laking the test passed all four sections.
Of the 77 a total of 56 (73 percent)
passed the writing section, 55 (71
percent) passed !he reading test, 29
(38 percent) passed the math section, and 38 (49 percent) passed the
citizenship section.
Also laking the test, or sections
of it, in November. 1991 were lOth
graders who had not earlier passed
all four sections. They were
required to retake the tests in the
areas where they were not earlier
successfuL The November testing
program provided a third try for
sophomores to pass !he proficiency
test.

Scores there showed that in the
Eastern District, eight of the 25
who took the writing test passed it
on the third try, three of the nine
who took readin~ passed, 25 of the
67 who had earHer failed the math
test passed it on the third try. and
II of the 36 who took the citizenship passed.
In the Meigs Local School District, seven of the 24 who on two
previous occasions failed the test,
passed it on the third try, seven of
the 13 taking the reading test
passed the third time around, 25 of
the 67 taking the math test passed it
in November, and 15 of the 39 who
had earlier failed the citizenship
test passed it on the third try.
As for the Southern Local
School District, 12 of the 21 failing
the writing test in the first two
times around passed it on the third
try; four of the 19 retaking the
reading test passed it this time; five
of the 46 wbo had earlier failed the
math test passed it, and II of the
36 were successful in passing the
citizenship test.
Next month both ninth and lOth
graders will be given another
opportunity to retake any sections
of the proficiency test which they
have failed.
Ohio law enacted by the !17th
General Assembly requires any stu·
dent who receives a diploma after

•:
:;

.

Driver pleads
innocent to charge
.
1.

.Kristen Farney, Alisia Walton, queen; Dena
:Greene and Tracy Reapp. Miss Walton, daugh,er of Jim and Angela Walton, was crowned

'

~lisia
•.

Council to meet

week.

Council to meet

l Members of the queen's court
were Deanna Evans, Kristen Farn:oy, Dena Greene and Tracy
Rhpp.
.:. ·Jason Kopack, Keith Koby and
M'ark Notter, co-captains of the
(l(\HS wrestling squad, served as
e~rts during the evening's festivities. Kopack crowned the queen.
; ;The 1992 GAHS Valentine Ball
)~las held Saturday ni~hL
:'Prior to the vars1ty. basketball
(!ll!lle, paren~ of basketball players,
clteerieaders and managers were
ct¢ognized by school officials.
•;Introduced were:

Judge ...

Court news
GALLIPOLIS -The following
people were fined recently in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court of
Judge Joseph L. Cain:
Kim Bates, 3i, of Gallipolis,
$100 plus costs, no driving privileges; Michael Carter, 23, of
Crown Citr,. $750 plus costs, 20
days in ja1l, one-year operators
license suspension, ordered to
F.A.C.T.S. for testing, drivinj
under the influence; David ij.
Smith, 26, of Point Pleasant,"
W.Va.. $450 plus costs, three days
jail, 90-day operators license suspension, drivmg under the iilflue~; Susan A. Doss, 21, of Vinton,
$100 plus cos~. operating a motor
vehicle under fUWICial responsibility action; Melissa D. Games, 18,
of Bidwell, $450 plus costs, wee
daya jail, 90-day operaiOn license
suspen~ion. drivmg under the influence.
Athold Satdtt, 61, of Galllpolls,
~!&amp;Ius costs, speed; Roger 0.
• 48, of Point Pleasant, w:vL,
$31S plus casu, five daya jlil, six- .
month• operators li~n~ suspen:
1ion, lfrivmJ under the influence,
$1.00 plus cost1, no Oj)craton
licente; Jodi R. Ria«, Ill, of Galllpolil, $17 plus COl til pllliDI
.wltbiD an intersection, ~I~
CCIII," no opntcn !iea_ll!; ..
.

::uNITED NATIONS (AP) Plzhting in Somalia reportedly subsj4,ed b"y m_idday Saturday after
~g fac~ons· ~ 1!&gt;'\lfld·,a
IQ'r til at has left ·an esumated
3JJ,OOO dead or wounded in three
il(lnths.
:• Western aid groups are planning
a· ~uge relief ef(ort in the ravaged
ell)t African nation if a truce
i~ached Friday at the United
~tions holds.
,+, Rebel forces heavily shelled the

:tf.

:a
·r

Chad Barnes, BillclStlaronBames· Adam
Blair,Jirn &amp; Teni Blair, David&amp;Norailager.
Bryan Hall. Linda Hall&amp;Jean Shamblin· Eri~
Hoffman, Carl .t Dorochy Hoffman: Soou
J.v.den, Mark .t ll!wnaJiviclen: Bob Mabry.
PauyCra•g:NothonMiller HO)t&amp;NcllMiller.
Brad Mu'J'hy. Bernie .t J~yce Murphy: Dam:
Powell. Lillian Powell: Ryan Yoong ~ph .t
Mary Youns: OuistinaZarnoch, Ted&amp; Linda
Zamoch 1nd Amy Conaday. Kim G:anadoy.

JV BASKETBALL
Jasm Castor, Jean Reese; Mike OonnaUy,
Bob Dam.tly &amp; Sue DonnaUy: Mike Eachus,
Bill&amp; Karen Eachus: Larry Howell, Larry .t
Teri Howell: Tom Morgon. David .&amp; Mary
Morgan: Ryan Null. John .t Bed! Null: Jeff
P~ . Jeff &amp; Carol P~ : QuiJ Roctlker,
Sheila Roeuker. 0\ris Sanervillc; David
Sanerville &amp;. Looise Woodall; &lt;luis Wallen,
Ea~ &amp; Cha~oue Walre11: Jason Williama,
Charles &amp; Ouistine Williams; Carey Edwards,
Myron &amp; Mary Edwards and Shlna Ferrell.
Bill &amp; Kiny Griffith.

GIRLS BASKETBALL
TandraAdams,Jack&amp;AnnAdams:Tooya

sporadic shellfire by midmorning,
said a U.N. official m Kenya, quotina·.~iipf workers i.n Mogadishu.
Tlie\'e~was no immediate word
on casualties, but another U.N.
official in Kenya said that by Friday ISO people were killed and up
to 500 wounded around Mogadishu
since the peace talks began
Wednesday.
The agreement Fridsy between
Somalia's interim government of
President Ali Mahdi Mohamed and

~incoln school

teacher
~rst black Yale ;graduate

VARSITY CHEERLEADER
Emily Cantrell, Carol Clntrcll; Amy
Gatewood, Charles Gatewood &amp; Sandy Gatewood; Heather Huestis, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Mike
Pohlman &amp;. Or. &amp;. Mrs. Robcn Huestis; Nicole McConnick, Jim &amp; Jeri Allie; Cindy
Marcil, Emma Glbson; Jennifer Peck, Pete
Peck &amp; Sandy GiUs; Tracy Reapp, Lanny &amp;
Tere~a ReappandAli1ia Wahoo,Jim&amp;

Angela

Walton.

RESERVE CHEERLEADER
Kendra Casto,MargieCasto; Joella Fisher,
McGhee &amp; Carolyn Fisher; Lindy Hood,
Johnny &amp; Candie Hood; Leah Johnson, Bill &amp;
Loreu.aJohnson and Mandy Willoughby, Julie

Lane.

in U.N. effOJts to expand its peacemaking role.
.,J:b!l, a~cord is als~_.among the
flrsl'nl'aJOr accomplishments of
U.N. 'Secretary-General' Boutros
Boutros-Ghali of Egypt, who made
settling the Somali civil war a top
priority when he took office the
flfSt of the year.
But the agreement Friday leaves
a number of loose ends.
Both sides did agree to halt
clashes at once and sign and a formal truce this month in the warbauered capital, Moga~hu.

By FRANCES D'EMILIO
Associated Press Writer
V.ATICAN ~ITY (~) - The
Vaucan on ~nday demed ~ews
repo~s that ll helped Naz1 war
cnmmals escape from Europe at
the end of World War !I.
The reports allegmg that th~
Holy. See 1ssued passports to Naz1
offiCials and others w!'o persecu!OO
Jews have appeared 1n the Itahan
press. and other European newspapers mrecent days.
· They followed last we~k's
an~ouncement that Argentma,
which 1~ known to have harhored
I!&gt;P NaziS,_ would make 1ts flies on
th~ p~b~c. . . .
..
. Th1s 1dea 1s h1stoncally 1)11se,
Vab~ spokesman Joaqum N~var~? sa1d,m a st_a~ment on ~nday.
What s_certat~ IS that dunng the
war an4 Immediately after the war
··:the Holy See effectively contnbu~ to savmg lhe hves of many
Jews.
.
Charges that the yaucan and
Cathohc_ Church off1c1als sympathized w1th, or actually llelped. the
Nazts have surfaced for decades.

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•

On Friday, the major Italian
daily La Rtpubb/ica quoted Nazi
hunter Simon Wiesenthal as saying
that the documents the .Dotorious
Josef ~engele used ~o flee to
Argenuna were provided by the
secretary of an Italian cardinal.
Mengele adopted a new identity
and died in Brazil in 1985.
Last month, investigators
appointed by the French Catholic
Chun:h concluded that French cardinals, monks and nuns helped one
of France's most infamous Nazi
collaborators, Paul Touvier, evade
justice for decades until his arrest
in a priory in Nice in 1989.
A report written by a Jesuit the,
ologian in 1944 and published for
the first time this month condemned most of France's Catholic
hierarchy under the Nazis for supporting the pro-Nazi government of
Vichy France.
In his statement Friday, Navarro
said many Jewish organizations
sought Vatican help in obtaining
transit documents, "for example,
through Italy and Spain and across
the Balkans."

By ALAN COOPERMAN
Associated Press Writer
MINSK. Belarus (AP) -Three
former Soviet republics. including
Ukraine, refused Friday to preserve
a unified conventional force casting doubt on the commonwewth 's
future and handing a sharp rebuff
to Russia's Boris Yeltsin.
The. ~eclarations by Moldova.
AzerbruJan and Ukraine at the commonwealth's third summit meeting
pomted to continuing disputes
among the ·It states and raised the
prospect that Russia may form its

The dispute involves the 3. 7 ·
million members of the former ·
Soviet forces and conventional
weapons.
.
" Conventional forces in .
Ukraine are independent. We do
not want a unified command," ·
Ukrainian delegate Dmitro Pavly- .
chko told The Associated Press
during a break in the closed meet- :
ing in this dingy industrial city, the ·
largely ceremonial capital of the 1
new commonwealth.
.
Asked whether Ukraine would .
accept any umfied control, Pavlychko answered "No, no, no."
Apparently in anticipation of the
split, the crews of six Sukhoi fight·
er jets based in Ukraine flew their ·
aircraft on Friday to Belarus and •
· later were brought to Russia, the ·
!TAR-Tass news agency reported. ,
The Ukraine-based pilots had 2.000 people and wiped out dozens
warned
last month that they were ··
of villages. An eruption in 1965
ready
to
defect with their planes to ·
killed 300 people. There were no
Russia
if
the commonwealth lead-,
casualties reponed .in !he last erupfailed
to preserve a unified
ers
tion, in 1977.
force.
The Philippine Institute of VolThe one-day meeting "at times
canology and Seismology declared
took
on·a confrontational characa volcanic alert level three, wbich
spokeswoman Leyo Bautista said ter," said Azerbaijani spokesman
meant seismic activity "may cul- Rasim Al!ayev. But he cited a ·
minate into an eruption within "construcuve spirit and a desire to
closer
"
weeks. ••
Taal includes at least 35 cones
and 47 craters on an island in the
middle of a lake that itself was
Hometown customers, Bill
formed during a gigantic eruption
Hupp
at Taylor Motora In
thousands of years ago. About
6,000 people live on the island, Athens, Is offering
although it has been declared a per- hometown customers the
service they can ever
manent danger zone.
experience.
Bill may be
The volcano institute closed its
contacted
at
seismic station on the island and
ordered residents to move to Tal594-3528 or 247-4772
i say and other towns across the
lake.
Vic Tomasar, a director of the
OffJCC of Civil Defense, said more
than 1,000 residents had been taken
off the island and the rest were to
be evacuated within the next two
days.
He said the evacuation was proceeding slowly because of a shortage of boats.

own military.
Wrangling over·military issues
has preoccupied the commonwealth since its birth nine weeks
ago out of the disintegrated Soviet
Union. Disputes between its
biggest members, Russia and
Ukraine, have (lvershadowed olher
pressing issues such as !he coordination of economic refcirm.
Leaders reaffinned their commitment to joint control over
27,000 nuclear warheads, most of
which are based in Russia,
Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan.

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
MANILA, Philippines (AP) Thousands of people began fleeing
a volcanic island south of Manila
on Saturday after scientists warned
that earthquakes and steaming fissures indicated there could be an
eruption within weeks.
Scientists recorded 406 rockfracturing quakes during a 29-hour
period at the Taal, one of the
Philippines' most active volcanoes,
about 35 miles south of Manila.
Taal has been among the most
violent of the more than 20 active
volcanoes in this island nation,
located in tqe Pacific "ring of
ftre."

In 1901 a Taal'·· erul&gt;ti_on

AnENTIONfll

.:.:·

==~ Thea~!:/*

earlt=

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the~claybad51/2bourlof

••

.I

I

-- He noted that Pope Pius XII ereaiel! the 1'9ntifical Commission for
Assistance after the war with •'!he
aim, flfSt of all, of helping !he Italian people. and then the refugees
who, With the suppa1 of the Allied
military authorities, were seeking
refuge outside of Europe."
He said the Vatican commission :
was overseen by Allied authorities, ;
who ''continued the search for ·
Nazi leaders and other war crimi- :
nals.''
Navarro said that it was possible .
ex-Nazis lied about their pasts and
obtained travel documents.
·
Navarro rejected arguments that
the Vatican helped war criminals,
even though many had persecuted
the Roman Catholic Church,
because it "wanted to use these exNazis as a ... shield for the future .
agai'nst communism."
. ·
That, he said, is "a fiction
which, doing violence to history,
tries to deny Pius XII and the Holy
See the recognition due as great
benefactors for thousands of people ·.
wandering in Europe after the tragic events of World w~ II."

Volcano eruption nears,
Filipino authorities say .

::: BY JAMES SANDS
1908 he served as teacher and busi• Special Correspondent
'•:GALLIPOLIS _
B 1 a c k nessman, coming to Gallipolis from
Lawrenceville, Va.
!lil)ools in Gallia County date back 10
Wbile at Lincoln school, Bouchet
(~t the 1830s when Elisha Barnes was not only the principal, he was
~lished a private school on Pine also the science and mathematics ·
~e.el. Private
teacher.
·
SC!Iools were also
In the fi!St decade or this century·
uctedinMorand SpringGallipolis high schools, incliiding
Townships in
. Uncoln, taught English, Latin. Ger~h buildings.
man, Greek, history, spience, matheJust following the
matics, music and drawing. '
The four years of math were diCivil War, public
vided as follows one and one-fourth
schools were
LINCOLN SCHOOL LOCATED HERE- The ten half of
opened in GalHpoHs and Chesbiie. yearsinalgebra,oneandlhiee-fourths
what Is now a furniture store at the corner ol Third Avenue and
years
in
geometry,
and
one
year
in
The then-named GaiHpolis Col- trigonometry. There were seven dif- Olive Street in Gallipolis was completed by•1~ as the Gallipolis
ored School opened by-1868 iD !he ,
colored school. The most,famous teacher bere was Edward
hoilding that today hoUSCIII furniwre aerent science courses required A Bouche!, the first black in Amerkan history to earn a doctoral
store at Third and Olive. Grade school studenthad totakeforone yearphysi- degree.
·
·
·
ld L - 'I 1951 Th h"gh
ology, botany and astronomy. Gcol1
be
was · ''"'" unu
• e
ogy,andphysicsweretajlghtforone
sehooldepartmentofwhataftcr 1890 and one-half .,....,. with chemistry
was knoWn as Lincoln. School was
,_.
begun about·l877. The last diploma and physical geography req~ for
was awarded in 1918.
one-half year each.
.' '
ThcflfStgraduatingclassfromthis
Bouchet would haw IIU&amp;ht all of
school was the class of 1882. There these subjects plus drawing. One of
lt'a lilY
ln ·the Great
were four ~ualt'S {three women · the elemenllry teacbers ~ the
GetiWiy Giveaway. Choose from
andoneman).ln thefusteightgradu- bighscboolmusic, while one teacher,
over 70 Getlway Vacations tours ·
adnl classes there wero wbo matricu- 1. Henry Lewis (later a profeaor at
to Europe, Great Britain, larael and
lal.ed (25 women and ei&amp;ht men). ()( West Viqjnia State College), taught
·
·
Egypt departing between April 1
the 33 graduales, 11 went on to bo- all the i11181118CI and history.
and October 31, 1992ln conjunc-.
come teachers.
,· In n:pids I!&gt; languqes all"stuThe Lincoln School. through hJi.. daiiS bad 10 like four years of Bng- · tion with any publilhe'd roundtrip
. tm'y, a11rac1Cd ~ numbtt of bigbly lish, three years of~ llld rour
TWA airfare. Pay In full for both
educated teacheis, several even had yean of Lalin. If ycu wen; ln tha
!WI and air by March. 10, 1992
doctoral degrees. Probably the mOlt college prepllltory ella; ycu also
and deduct 8160 per person from the land
lito o.eet for two yean.
famous was Ed.......
w•n• Bouc het, who hadInto......._
__n Enn"•", .... ,.,......,., . . ~price. Remember, this Giveaway expires Marcl! 10,
wU }"U"''tow~..M-1 and telj:ber a Lincoln st1tdled
.._"""
.... - ·
Amerlcln tilallmeac:om1992... 10 book early I
.
schoot from 1908.to 1913. ·
.....!t!cn The next ..... Eitgl• 111•
Bouche! Wll born in New Haven, J - ,_
• Dloooooot.oy.. loolllllla!OIIooctiOowMkf""•'fiPIIFfl)llibll,l-llllllcl....t•"""
Conn.ln18S2.Hla.-rentsbadmoved thon wcm •udlcd. Tho dlinl year
...,..,.TWA.«oct~ot,..__.,.r•lfMr-tiooaloHnAititllo.,.lolaalol
.__.Chari
s
c
Jl'11818111includcclconcenlrlledstudy
11r
llolowq YlciiiHi.
·
.
·
to New Haven uuu•
eaton, • ·• ofMillllii,Pope,CWdsmilhandScotL
$H your AAA Travel Counselor about these AAA
ShaM..., boescorted group tours:
lbc falbar•of Edward, becllllo quile CIIIIC...,
COWie.
inlluentlll in the black COIIIIIIUllity of In c:onu•eo lllday'a hl&amp;h IIChool
Lond9n &amp; Countryside
1 S!lldl:~t
New HaWD Through lbcinfluence of · curriculum die
June 18-26, 1992 ·
. · Rob'·- D~be badtocompleteaix
COIDCIIIR
Judp A. Heaton . "'""''• ...- t fouryeantoplnadepee, 'nlel.ewu
&amp; October ..24- November 1, 1992
beclme OliO i:l the 6nt Afro.Ameri- American billaly the flni , . fol
*'IOenrolla!YaleCollep.In 1874 lowed ·by Baglilh history
Alpine Wonderland
Bollcllel became the Drst blaCk I!&gt; world history tivil ~
September
11-24, 1992
ewr pduate ~ Yale. In 1876 be IDPicalilrdPtlon(~ludcdastudy
enedaPb.D. m Jlbytlcsfrom.-v:ale. Of ~~thltec:IUI'e) end political econtbul beeom~lbc filii Amencan om ·
·
10m:;,_.a:,:.uqhut
die Qel- 1111 r.dlule bColarect laalruclillll - tbo S!ltden!J 801 •
Youdllll PbiJitleiJihll. Plotl1902to Clllllpiell bQw olf for lllll:b.

*:.

'.

Three former republics reject
concept of a unified military ·

'E•

Miami University
president retires

GALLIPOLIS - The following · Pearson became Miami's presicouples recently applied for mar- dent and a prof~ of zooloay on
riage licenses in the Gallia County July 1, 1981. He S81d that tO years
Probate Court:
· s~ld be the limit for a university
Worthy Cremeans, 75, ahd ~Sidein and that he &amp;a stayed a
Beatrice Elizabeth Cremeens 67 little longer to enaure the succesr of
both of Vinton· Grady Oscar JOhn: a $100 million fund-raislna drive.
son, 22, and Vera Dawn Rossiter,
"II has bee~ exhi!ualblg 10
Ill, both of Crdwn City; Jeffrey Wo/k .and woc11te wnh lhe fine .
Ray Wauon, 211. and Patticia Ann Miamt ~ull)', sllf~. students and
Beam, 37, both of Crown City; alumni, ~euwonllid. .
.
James Walter McCarley, 49, and
.~e sa1d he aad h11 w1fe,
VlYIIn Kay Thompaon, 33, both or Wlnirred, plan to MlliD in Oxford.
OllliDolls; 11motby Ray Smldl :M
Pearson, who II"' liP iii Lab
of Bfdwell llld Mara L)'llll Odver' Worth, ~IICCIWII diJiitta 6um
i9, of Oalllpolis; Timothy Lowb tha Unlv
ot FlorldL Ho lplllll
Beldler, 20 of Oak HID and Kim-' 26 years • I pro' II Of llld admia·
bfr!Y
.
18, of Pllllot; lltrator II Rutpn Ullivenily Ia
Milk
Plelds, 111 and Tra· . New Jersey, wlleJe be Ml ICdq
cie 1111111
20, bali oi P'llri- prelident &amp;om Juu 1971 10 Jill·
at.
lilly 1979.

VARSITY BASKETBALL

Biland,Mr. &amp;. Mn. Chuck Bunis; Kari Drown ,
Kenneth &amp; Becky Brown: Misty Coleman ,
larry &amp; Tena Coleman; Batina Dennis, Kevin
&amp; Sandra DeMis; Samantha Douon, Susan
Wilkins; Dena Greene, Darmie &amp; Carlene
Green; Suzy Greenlee, Rex &amp; Louise GreenIce: Amy Hemby. Larry &amp; Terry Hemby :
Amy Huffman, Jerry &amp; Lmda Huffman; Amy
Kolcun, Andy &amp;. Debbie Kolcun; Meghan
Kolcun. Andy &amp; Debbie Kotcun: Amy Morris, Man.ha Morris; Slephanie Spence, Paul &amp;
Lisa Spence; Kim Tackeu, Chuck Tacken and
Rebecca Thomas, Earl Thomas.

VI~TORIA

Continued from A-I
high schools throughout Gallia
County where he was a hit with the
youngsters, Sheriff Dennis Salisbury said.
• Gambler loves children and. is
strictly a narcotics detection dog,
not hkely to attack anything except his food which is donated
by the Purina Company.
Special agent Gambler's main
duty at the sheriff" s department
will be to execute search warrants
and serve as a deterrent, Salisbury
said.
He added that Gambler comes at
little cost to the taxpayers of Gallia
County. The dog was purchased
with federal drug forfeiture money
and the dog food is donated to the
departrnen~ Salisbury said.
Gambler will be performing
Monday at 7:30 p.m. for the
Kanauga Neighborhood Crime
Watch at !he Holiday Inn in Kanauga, Salisbury said. Interested people or organizations are invited to
auend.

CCSS&lt;lr.

PARENTS NiGHT 1991

~ighting subsides in Somalian war
'!•:• ByAssociated PressGRAHAM
capital Mogadishu Saturday mom- ret&gt;els led by Gen. Mohamed FarWriter
ing, byt the banage tapered off to rah Aidid could mark another step

Daf~ age unreported, of GalHpolis,
$50 plus costs, disorderly conduct
by intoxication; Brian K. Bailey,
22, of Ewington, SIOO plus costs,
no operators license; Angela
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) -The
Quillen, 27, of Pa"trio·t. $450 plus
costs, three days jail, 90-day opera- president of Miami University has
tors license suspension, driving announced his intention to retire
Jan. I after II 1/2 years in the posL
under the influence.
Paul Pearson, 65, said Friday he
was malting the announcement to
.give the university's board of
trustees ample time to fmd a suc-

Couples apply for
marriage licenses

during balhlme ceremonies of the 'GARS-Warren Lcieal basketball game by Jasoa Kopack, a
co-captain of tbe GARS wrestling squad. The
GARS Valentine Ball was held Saturday night
.ID the GAHS gym.

Walton crowned Valentine Queen

; ·GALLIPOLIS - Alisia Walton
was crowned 1992 Gallia Academy
lliJih School Valentine Queen duriltg halftime ceremonies of the
Gt.HS-Warren Local basketball
$'arne Friday night.
; :Miss Walton, daughter of lim
lii1!f Angela Walton, Gallipolis, was
&lt;fie of (ive fmalists selected from a
field of 18 candidates earlier in the

Gallia ...

NEW SPECIAL AGENT? - The Gallla County Sberifrs Department recently acquired a new weapon in the war against drugs - a
narcotics detection dOl named "Gambler." Here, Deputy Shawn Burloa poses with Gambler, a 14-montb-old black Labrador Retriever
(Times-Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)
·

VA-LENTINE COURT - Members of the

:1992 Galtia Academy High School Valentine
;Queen Court are, len to rlgbt, Deanna Evans,

July I, 1993, to have passed all
four proficiency tests in addition to
meeting all curriculum requirements set by his or her school district.
Sbldents have the opponunity to
retake the proficiency tests each
November and March through their
senior year.
This means that students have at
least eight chances to pass each of
RACINE- Racine village Coon-.
the tests.
cil
will meet in recessed session ·
Students who are unable to pass
Monday
7 p.m. at Council chamthe ninth grade proficiency test
will receive a certificate of atten- bers, Star Mill Park.
dance instead of a diploma at graduation.
MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeting of Middleport Village
Council has been called for Monday at 7 p.m. at village hall, Mayor
Continued from A-1
cation, prepare a 'resume, dress for Fred Hoffman announced today.
an interview, do both telephone and
direct employer contacts, and generally to sell their skills to an
employer.
In addition they are given tallcs
by representatives of the Meigs
County Health Department on various topics including personal dress
and hygiene, and are infonned by
Crossroads of the University of Rio
Grande College on what is available in the way of suppon services
and financial assistance if they
want to continue their education.
The availability of day care services and what parts of public
assistance can be retained when
they begin employment are aspects
discussed by a representative of the
Department of Human Services
with the Jobs Club enrollees.
In some instances. it was noted,
the enrollees who go into part-time
jobs can retain their medical cards,
and even a partial ADC check and
food stamps until they can become
self-sufficient.

Sunday

Vatican ca·lls charges it helped
fleeing Nazis 'historically false'

pasS!IIIe ofRoclcefeJler !)ill."
tors instead of li"om !he association'.•
Coal Opel8lors now pay $2.50 to
But trustees lawyer Ed Weir(
the funds for every ho~r a miner berg said that money would no;r,r
works, Under the proposal, associa- save the funds because the numbefi
tion membeB would pay $5.42 an of association dropouts was t~
hour.
small.
•!
Association lawyers said the
Rockefeller's plan also calls fcf.
higher conttibutions weren't ni;Cd· ail industrywide tax of 75 cents per
edbecause of U.S. Disttict Judge worker hour to pay benefits to peoThomas Hogan'sJan. 31 ruHngthat pie whose companies h~ve gone
the funds-are owed about $50 mil- out of business. Existing com palion from several former assoc:ia- nies would be responsible for their.
tion members.
'
own retirees.
Association attorney. Peter . Several telephone messages to'
Buscemi said the trustees should the trustees • office were no~
seek money riom those.coal ~ relurned Friday.

MIAMISBURG, Ohio (AP) A man who bad seven previous
drunken-driving convictions bas
pleaded innocent to a charge of
aggravated vehicular homicide in
the death of a woman.
Darryl Adkins, 29. of Miamisburg, pleaded innocent Thursday in
Miamisburg Municipal Court.
Judge Roben Messham Jr. ordered
Friday that Adkins rem~in in the
Montgomery County Jail in Dayton
under a $250,000 bond

wv

OH-Polnt

If ,
R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply Co~.399 W. M ·

. 992·2164
·
•

.
Pa•eriy

The Store with "All Kinde of Stuff'' For Pete, Stab111,

Large and Small Anlmlls, Lawns 1nd G1rc1tn1.
;)

I.

�Page-AS-Sunday nmes Sentinel

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

February 16, 1992

Along the River

Section B:·
SHS computer lab provides valuable . expertence:i

Four killed in cargo ·plane crash near Toledo
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -A DCplane crashed in a c001field
early Saturday and burst into
flames as it tned to land at the
Toledo Express Airpon, killinJ! all
fo ur people aboard, authonties
~·cargo

Cuba raises
•
pnces on
some foods
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Cuba
plans 10 raise prices on some foods
for the flrst time in 30 years, giving
further evidence of the nation's
economic hardship since the Soviet
collapse cut off Havana's main
source of aid.
The government of President
Fidel Castro said Friday that the
price increases are pan of efforts to
slash subsidies and encourage
domestic food production to
replace imports that once came
from the Soviet bloc.
Castro said Friday that impoQS
have been reduced by half since the
fall of Communism in Europe and
fuel consumption is down 60 percent, reported the official Prensa
Latina news agency, monitored in
Mexico City.
The fonmer East bloc accounted
for 85 percent of Cuba's foreign
trade and nearly all its oil.
But Castro vowed to mainl!tin
Communism in the island nation,
which is under a U.S. trade embar·
go.
"We remain frrm here, committed to maintaining the ideas, the
conquests of the revolution," Castro told a group of Brazilian visi·
tors in televised remarks carried by
Prensa Latina
To conserve fuel , Cuban offi.
cials have ordered drastic cutbacks
in public transportation, factory
operation s and heating . Many
items, ranging from milk to tobacco, have grown scarce and
rationing has been tightened.
The Communist Party newspaper Granma reported the government is also raising prices for 25
agricultural products - including
bananas, tomatoes, potatoes - by
15 percent to 30 percenl Some of
the items have been at the same
state-subsidized price since the
early 1960s.
Cuba has for years concentraled
on sugar production, importing
other crops from socialist coon·
tries. The Soviet bloc paid inHaled
prices for the sugar as indirect aid
for Castro. The loss of the subsidized sugar markets has forced
Cuba to encourage food self-sufficiency.
Castro decried "a wave of savage neoliberalism" sweeping the
world, "throwing people into
hunger, into the street." He called
such free-market policies "the
most brutal violation of human
rights...
Cuba has cracked down on dis·
sent in recent weeks, arresting a
number of noted human rights
activists and government opponents. Last month, a firing squad
executed a ·Cuban exile convicled
of leading a Miami-based terrorist

said.
As many as 20 police and ftre·
fig hters were injured fighting the
blaze.
The four-engine Burlington Air
Express cargo plane tried to land
twice before it crashed about 3:27
a.m. in Harding Township, about
two miles north of the alf)JOn in
Lucas County, said airport director
Jim McCue.
The plane, traveling from Scat·
tie, was owned by cargo shipper
BurUngton Air Express Inc., based
in Irvine, Calif. All four victims
were employees of the Air Trans·
port International of Little Rock,
Ark., which operates the Burlington hub, said company spokesman
Glen Beecher.
The identities of the dead were
being withheld until their families
were notified.
Authorities said they mistakenly
said earlier that five people were
believed to be on board.
Beecher said the plane was carrying general air cargo, including
about 30 gaUons of hydraulic fuel.
Firefighters from Toledo and
Swanton had a fire at the wreckage
under control. Officials from the
Hazardous Materials Unit also
were on the scene.
Area residents described hearing
a loud noise when the plane
crashed
"I got home, and I was ready to
go to bed when I heard a loud
boom," said Diane Barnes, who
lives two miles from the crash site
and works from the Swanton rescue unit. "At t)le same time, the
house shook. My son said: 'What
was that?' I said: 'I don't know. It

felt like an earthquake.' "
Pans of the plane fell in Betty
and Richard Cundick's backyard,
less than 150 feet from their house.
"We just heaid an explosion. I ·
though! it was lightening, and I
looked out the window and saw fire
scattered all across the back field,''
Mrs. Cundick said. "We didn't
know what happened. We were

PLANE CRASH • Members of the Toledo
sberiiT and fire departments look toward the site
or a DC-8 cargo plane crash about two miles
north of the Toledo Express Airport Saturday.

J nuarv through
~ecember 1991
erN

for

By,JULIE E. DILLON
. Times-Sentinel Staff
RACINE· Students at Southern
High School are laking advantage
of a new ~mputer lab which was
made posstble by funding from
Chapter 2 monies as well as donation.s of time and mc_metary contributtons of o~hers, mcluding the
Southern National. Honor ·Society
and Student Council.
·
. Two teachers, in particular, Kim
Phdhp~ and Don Dudding, are
~ponstble for the creation of the
lab and they take a special interest
mIL
The computers were purchased
with a three-year innovation grant
_through Chapter~ funds. When ~e
three year plan wtth Apple Leasmg
is finished the computers will
belong to the school. The grant
made it possible to purchase 14_
computers as well as a scanner and
pnnter. Th~ total co.st. of the pro·
)CCI, accordmg to Phillips, is about
$211J90:
.
. ·
Phllhps, a scten.ce and b10lo.gy
teacher, and Duddtng, an Enghsh
teacher, have such an in~erest
because they both have MactniOsh
COII)puters of their own and they
want the students to have every
opponunity possible in regards to

computer knowledge and capabili·
ties.
Students use the comp.uters for
word _processing ~nd computer
graphicS an~ Du~ng says many
are now savtng thetr class notes on
the computer. He staled since the
st~dents are becoming familiar
With !he pro~s they seem .to be
more c.reallve. and a~e takmg a
greater tntcrcst tn leanung.
A ·Silldent. lab assis~a!tt is in the
roo.m at all.umes 10 II:'SISt s~niS
while. working~ .vano~s pro.JCCts.
Dudding and PhillipS ~mt Wf that

~hcom~program ISeq~

w1th a tuiOrial program to atd m
learning. Lab as.sistants inclu~e
Todd Grace, Tern Haym~. Davtd
Ihle, Dawn Shuler, Jamte Holter,
Kellie Ervin, Michelle McCoy and
Nicki Beegle.
.
Although this is the ~d year
the computers have been m pi~.
the lab has been completed thts
rCI! '!'rough the effc5ns !If lf}any
!ndtv!duals ~nd organtzattons
mcluding Harris Farms an~ Green·
house, Portland; Adams Farm, .
Letart; ~orest .Run Block and
Ready Mix, Racme; Racme Home
National Bank; Farmers Bank,
Pomeroy; Tom Lewis Drilling,
Letart, W.Va.; Bob and Leah Ord;

·Gary and Kim Phillips; and Mil·
ford FrWU:k iuid Joseph Foreman

1

·

•

wh'&amp; built the specially designed
computer tables.
Many of the:supplies necessary
for running the lall are funded
through studenl council. Each student bas a computer pass which
entitles them 10 wor;tc in the lab as
well as a printing c8rd which costs
them $2 and allows 20 items to be
printed. Each student also has his
or her o:wn disk which they can
purchase for $1.
DudcUng and Phillips caution
that the lab is not just for play.
They stress the importance of
learning the programs but admit
that much of the learning ~ess is
accomglished through 'playing
around on the computers.
Now that the students are
becoming comfortable with the
computers, Dudding and Phillips
are hoping to assist other teachers
in learning through an in-service
day which they are encouraging.
The computer lab provides the
smdents with the necessary advantage in loday's world of technology
and Duddin~ and Phillips say they
are only domg what they can with
what they have . .

. ..

..
'

''

COMPUTER LAB • Fourteen MaciDtosh
computers have been purchased through a
three-year Innovation grant witb Chapter 2
funds at Southern High School. The students are

taking a real interest in tbe computers are pro·
ducing work that is more creative. Pictured are
David Smith, Aaron Hoback and Terri Hayman.

A RANGE OF POSSIBILITIES • Word processing ID!l computer graphics are but a portion
of the work that can be accompllsbe,d in the
computer Jab at SoutberD Hlgb School. Tbe
$21,000 computer lab is equipped with 14 com·

puters, a printer and a scanner. Here, student
David Shuler reviews a photograph be bas .: .
scanned as Kim Phillips, science and biolo~y
teacher, looks on. Phillips bas taken a spec1al
interest in tbe lab and assists when ever possible.

ia's

IR~ING

MESA
SUGAR LAND
LANGHORNE
DALLAS
RICHARDSON
IL
lo\IOLOTHIAN C
GRAND aLAN
N ANTONIO
~~MBRO~E PINES

s #15 Truck·&amp;

JAC~SON~ILLE
TEMPE

RIPLE~
TULSA
oNTARIO
MIAMI

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Year 1991,

HEMPSTEAD
HOUSTON

~-

~··

(~ ..I nl I.vI~
I I )I

\ I

I~A

•••
l
•,

OFFERING ASSISTANCE • Don Dudding,
:l aD EDgllsh teacher at Soutbera Hlgb School, bas
:. taken a special interest in tbe computer Jab ·
:: there. Here be assists the student.t, Terri Hay·

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,. .

•

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Beegle ud Hayman are lab wistants who help
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range or computer programs.

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•ttfiiO. IKIItllftQ Hilt.

Pl•te.rono. Plbrl~..

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BRAID NEW 192 PONTIAC
GUilD AM SE COUPE

BUilD lEW 1992
OLDSaiLE EIGHTY IGHT
POIIIK •IMI:LE SE

BUilD lEW 1992
S-10 TAHOE PICIUP..
Alf Condilior lfl9, V-4 Power. SALE PAIC£ •.•• ,, ... ' " "

T1110t f'llg., fMt&lt;; Wl'lllll, GMAC FIRST TIME BUYERS
AMIFM cut., cuslom clclfl ALLOWANCE TO
binc:h sell. Mil lqlll!lpect! QUALIFIED BUYERS .. - 400

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The plane went down in a cornfield and burst
into names as it tried to land at the airport
about 3:27 a.m. All four people aboard were
kiUed. (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Bush administration is speeding up
distribution of more than a half billion dollars in dividends to veterans' life insurance poUcyholders.
About 1.6 million veterans with
U.S. Government Life Insurance
and National Service Life lnsur-·
ance and who receive annual tlividends under a cash option will be
affecled,
About $560 million will be distributed, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.
"Accelerating these payments
means that veterans won't have to
wait until the policy anniversary ·
dates to get their dividends," said
VA Secretary Edward J. Dcrwinski. "The result will mean that more
than half-a-billion dollars will be
injected into the economy."
The department said the action
marked the first time since 1977
thai the payment of the annual dividends has been accelerated.

February 16, 1992

Ill

windows . power locks. aluminum running

cal

The bodies were to remain at the- .
crash site until the investigators
from the Federal Aviation Admin-·
istration and the National Trans.'
portati~n Safety Board arrived,.·
authorilles said.
The airport is operaled by Toledo-Lucas County Pon Authority.
Harding Twp. is about 15 miles
west ofToledo.

up insurance dividends

AutomatiC , a1r cond .. Ptsteermg, AMtFM
cass. 1111 steering. crwse con1ro1. power

CHEL YABlNSK· 70, Russia
(AP) - Secretary of State James
A. Baker liJ is promising to help
nuclear scientists in the former
Soviet Union find ways to stay
employed and convert their skills
to peaceful uses.
Baker met Friday with the very
scientists who designed the
weapons of the Cold War as he
toured the secret core of the Soviet
nuclear arms program in this forti ·
fled military city.
Chelyabinsk·70 - named for its
postal code in western Siberia - is
one of I 0 top-secret cities hidden
by Josef Stalin behind the Ural
Mountains to design and build the
Soviet Union's mighty military
power. Until recently it did not
appear on any maps.
The 6,700 scientists at the institute Baker visited make no more
than 1 500 rubles a month, the .
equivaient of $IS at the official
exchange rate, said the institute's
deputy director Vladislav Nikitin in
a briefmg to American reporters.
Baker told 30 senior scientists at
the Institute of Technical Physics
that he had been discussing with
Gennany and with Russian Presi·
dent Boris Yeltsin lhe establish·
ment of a clearinghouse in Russia
to fmd money for peaceful projects.
Baker aides have been flushing
out the proposal in Washington and
will bring their final plan to
Moscow on Monday so that he can
present it to Yeltsin, said an offiCial
traveling with Baker.
The West is concerned the sci·
enlists might be lured away by has- ·
tile ..tiont aying to develop nuclear weapon~ JIIOIIIIIII..
Baker mille clear to 30 senior
scientilll at the lnstinne (J Technl·
Phylic• thai any
help was
nOta handout but l1lher in the best
inrerest of the WaiL
'

Fire Chief Lewis Taylor. Hospital
officials said none of the injuries
appeared life-threate.ning.
Toledo Fire Chief Mike Bell
said those injured were the first rescuers to arrive at the crash and
were overcome by fumes from
hydraulic fuel that caught ftre after
the crash. 11)e fuel was part of the
cargo, Bell said.

Administration speeding

team.

Baker tours
nuclear site

scared.''
She said her husband, who was
in the bedroom when the plane
crashed, was struck in the head by
plaster falling from the impact.
Three State Highway Patrol
troopers and up to 17 firefighters
were being treated at area hospital
for smoke inhalation, said Swanton

.,

• JOILflll

l.-a224417

344..st47

Pem alld Dick Md)aqld, clautbter ud loD·
ln-liw1 Jrlta and Carolyn Boo\man,Jrand·
cla•lllter; Stefl Story, P'aldaoll 11 aaest
speaker at. tile aHtlna, Karen Butta ol' tbe
ROTC ......... at 0Wo Ulllnnlty.

POMEROY - Leo Story, a
Meigs CoUnty resident and a veter·
an of World War I, was honored
Friday by the Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution.
Storr was presenled a citation in
recogmtion of service during the
war. Following is an article written
by Cpl. Leo R. Story, Company
"C," 112th Field Signal B1118lion,
37th Division, in regards to hi~
experiences: .
"On April6, 1917, the day Pres·
ident Woodrow Wilson declared
war.on Gennany, I enlisted in the
U.S. Anny. I was 18 and one-half
years old . I remember that my
older brother, Elba, was married
that day. A few weeks later I was
called to report for duty to Camp
·Hunker in Middlepon. The camp
was named for the mayor of the
town.
Later in the fall the Meigs
County soldiers who had been
!dining at CamJ' HWiker joined the
. Company "C," ,S-ignal Batallion
from Camp Pmy. We then traveled
by train to Camp Sheridan in Mont·
g0111Cry. Ala.
At the time of Company "C"s
arrival, the camp was one more in
theory than in fact, for it was
incomplete in every detail. The
next month was devoted almost
eij:lusively to the il,'orlt of building
the mess-hall and kitchen and Pldina the street. Even before ihese
wta were ICCOIIIpiWied we .re~Pred to picl:: the COitoll.growtna
in !be ftcldl where tho bulldlnp rA
Cllllp Sheridan wao 10 be Jocated
After CJirisanas, intenSive IIIIo·
ins for overseas duty bosan In
earneat. Tbls trainins Included
drlUa, visual aipalina, buzzer prac·
lica, code wort, aaa warfare,
mancuven, hltes and the building
of aii'CIICh system under the lUper·
vllion of Flench Anny iatlnlcllln.
Ia May 1918, the Dlvialon lei\
Camp Sberidln for Camp Uo, VL

__ ___,

After about a month at Camp Lee constant, cold rain.
On the morning of Sept. 27, ·
we moved to Newpott News. We
spent one night at Camp Stuart. Montfaucon, a German stronghold
Early the next morning, June 23, which had been considered impregwe filed aboard the steamer Duca nable, was seized by the men of the'
D'Aostr and headed for France at 37th Division. From a tower in the ,
city the Crown Prince of Germany .
Jasti
The three-week trip across was had direcled the attach on Verdun · .
an unforgettable experience. I can but, with the fall·of Montfaucon, ·
still remember the agony of the the Hindenburg line was broken. ..
·seasickness, the cramped bunks, Just before ,entcring the city that
the terrible smell and the feeling cl September morning, I remember -:
relief when we fust saw the lw1xr seeing at the foot or the hill Capt. ..
Tom Jones from Middl~
.,,
of Brest. France.
Early
in
October,
reltef
came
to
.,
From our landing in Brest we
moved by train toward the front. Company "C" and we marched out.:,
There we were issued our signal of the Argonne ForresL I immedi·
corps apparatus, gas masks, and ately entered the Base Hospital in &gt;"
special uniforms, and blmed in our Limoges, France, for surgerr. I was .•. ;
bamlcks bags and extra unifonns. a patient when the Annisttce was .;
On 1uly 21 the division was mobi· signed on Nov. II, 1918. The hos-·, •
lized for its first trip into the . pi tal was located in the Haviland·"
China factory in Limoges. While in • ,
trenches.
As signal corpsmen, our job was the hospital I met another patient, ,,;:
to instalf communications. We car- Gabby Street, a professional base·
ried reels of telephone wire on our ball P!ayer who was catcher for the•.,:
back!, walking and laying the lines Washmgton Senators. He was thC·,•.
by hand. Company "C" took pan in first person ever to catch a baseball , ,
several encounters before the allies dropped from the top of the Wash- , ,
began the final offensive in i~g,ton Monument. Gabby orga- .
September, but with the beginning nized a baseball team cl recuperat. •
of the Meuse-Argonne offensive ing patien~ and I .otto'i&gt;tiy&amp;t the
our work began in earnest. For the team. While still m the hospital I ...
fli'SI three or four days we had no became sick with mumps and: n,
artillery proteCtion. It was neces. almost missed going home with my·; '
·i•
sary to k!leP up the existing tele· company.
In March we left the harbor of;• ,
phone stations ca~~ from th.c
Brest,
France, for another almost ,
enemy and alto 11111J11aU1 ~..
unbearable
two weeks or seulckcations with the fast advancing
neas
aboard
ship. We irrived in .'"
line. Tea of us from Company ''C"
jlnhnten,
NJ.,
!ben wac ICRIIO a •, •
received cltalions for heroism in
DOIIby
Cllllp
10
be put through the .~ •.
iDstalllna telephone lines while
"Sanitlry Procea" Ill mate 1111e we ,,~
uncllr file.
Our work was made doubly had no lice. We were then illliOd •, -•
hard by the abnost impUsable 1;011- puaes f&lt;l' New York City, Each of
ditlon of tile roads. Wire carts, us had picked cotton at Camp ··~
artillery an.d supplies had to be Sheridan was givt111 $5 1P spend in ,, 1
puUed lhrouah quaamlrea formed the city • tho ptoceedt rrocn tho 111e ~
by continual rain, mod, retreating rA the COIIOnl
From New Yode we .travelod by , •
enemy 1r00p1, land mines and abell
train
Ill Cblllicotbo. Oa Aprill4, I ...
holoa. Ni&amp;IUI - Jplllt slaepii)J
1919,
we were tlilcharged froaa ,.,
on the around wltb ao abelter
Camp
Sherman...
~f
except own:oat and lllcbr ill tho
I

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�nmn · SenUnel

-

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV
. ,

February 16,

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV
,j

Where the wheels were and the ruts are
GUERNSEY, Wyo. (AP) The ~ from the wagon wheels of
bound pioneers on the
Slil1 are visible in the
nearGuauey.
mid-JSOOs, it is esti·
mated more than 50,000 ~le a
year used this pioneer tratl to
mignte West. The trail is 2,000
miles long and originateS in Inde-

pendence, Mo.
Leaving Missouri in May, the
averap wagon train would travel
12 miles a day and not reach the
West .Coast until Thanksgiving. ·
A government estimate put the
migration's death toll at 17 for
every mile of trail. The rut m81ks
are a Registered National Land·

GALLIPou~.- Barry ·~.

mart.

THIRD ANNUAL

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Spring
Dinner and Dance
SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1992
ROYAL OAK RESORT
STEAK DINNER-6:30
DANCE-9 PM-MIDNIGHT
TICKETS: $30 Couple; $15 Single

JAMES SMITH and ROBIN SMITH

Tickets available at the Chamber Office,
Farmers Bank, Home National Bank or any
Chamber Board Member.
RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY
MARCH 18, 1992
Will Reserve Tables For Parties
of Four or More Couples

Smith-Smith
TUPPERS PLAINS • Mr. and
Mrs. William A. Smith, ParkersDEBRA SNYDER and DANIEL FOLMER
burg, W.Va., announce the engage·
ment aod approaching marriage of
their eldest daughter, Robin Renee,
to James Roben Smith, son of Mr.
and
CHESHIRE • Mr. and Mrs. reception will follow at the Old PlainMrs. James R. Smith, Tuppers
Roger Snyder, Cheshire, announce American Legion Hall in MiddleM~ss Smith is a 1983 graduate
the engagement and approachmg port
of Parkersburg South High School
· Clarlc
Miss Snyder l·s a 1987 graduate and • employed by Camden
marriage of their daughter, Debra
15
D'inJa
· B1'ble School. She
Lavada, to Daniel RaY"'
roImer, son of West vu·.,...
Memorial Hospital.
of George "Dick" and Sharon is a 1990 graduate of Hocking Col· ~-:'15 m ith is a 1982 graduate of
Folmer, Pomeroy.
lege where she obtained an associ· Bastern High School and is
The open church wedding will ate degree in applied science-medi· employed by Fairmont Supply
be an event of March 14 at I :30 cal assisting.
.
.
Company.
p.m. at the Rock Springs United
Folmer is a 1991 graduate of
The open church wedding will
Methodist Church in Pomeroy. A Meigs High SchooL

Snyder-Folmer

TOPS, KOPS winners announced .)
CHESHIRE • Catherine Little,
Cheshire, was KOPS best loser of
the week when members met on
Feb. 10 at Cheshire United
Methodist Church. Kathy
McDaniel, Longbottom, was TOPS
best loser.
Each received a gift from the
gift box and a celtificate of recognition.
Janet Thomas, leader, presented
a program titled "How To Stay
Thin After 25." TOPS prayer was
led by Annabelle Sisson, Cheshire,
and Catherine Little led the Pledge
of Allegiance.
The TOPS pledge was led by
Emogene Johnson, with the. KOPS
pledge being led by V1rg1~1a
Voight,
both
of Pomt
Pleasant,W.Va.
' Helen Trout, Cheshire, read a
verse titled ''SP,rings a Comin'." An
article titled 'Diet Sticks to Your
Ribs" was read by Virginia Voight.
Songs were led by Edith Gardner
and Trout
During the Feb. 3 TOPS (Take
Off Pounds Sensibly) meeting the
best loser of the week was
Annabelle Sisson, Cheshire .
Thomas was KOPS (Keep Off
Pounds Sensibly) best loser.
TOPS prayer was led by Catherine Little. Pledge of Allegiao~e was
led by Sisson. Kathy McDao1elled
the TOPS pledge and the KOPS
pledge was led by Thomas.
Trout read a verse titled
"Aware." The program "Walking
Away From The Table" was pre·
sented by Thomas. "Never Quit~'
prayer was read by Emogene John·
son.

McDaniel was January TOPS
best Iosee. January KOPS best loser

was Little.
TOPS prayer was led by Sisson,
and Helen Hill, Long Bottoin, led
the Pledge of Allegiance. TOPS
pledge was led by Jan Burns,
Cheshire, with Catherine Little
leading lhe KOPS pledge.
Trout read a verse tilled "Old
Age." McDaniel was TOPS best
loser of the week, and CatheriPe
Little was KOPS best loser.
A program on food and fitness
was presented by Thomas.
McDaniel was the winner of the
Hang In There contest. She

received a TOPS charm and a certificale of recognition for losing
weight six weeks in a row.
Anyone interested in losing
weight is invited to attend a TOPS
meeting. There is no obligation.
TOPS members meet on Mondays
from 10:30-11:30 a.m ., with
weigh-in from 9:30-10:30 a.m., at
Cheshire United Methodist Church,
located on SR 1 and 554, Cheshire.
For more information on TOPS,
contact Janet Thomas at 367-0274
or call toU free (800) 932-8677 or
932-TOPS.

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

be an event of April 25 at ·12:30
p.m. at the Calvary Memorial·
Church in Parkersburg. The Rev.
Lee Hammond will officiate.
A reception will follow the cere·
mony.

GALLIPOLIS
414 Seco•d Ave., 2nd Floor
446·0166
8:30 to 5:00 Manday·Friday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Uursday
ALSO: JackSOII, Chesapeake, Athens, Chllkotht, Logan &amp; McArthur

WE'RE
OUS ABOUT
YOUR TAXES •••
•ELECTRONIC FILING
AVAILABLE
·•DIRECT DEPOSIT OF
REFUND,. CHECK

"'

'·

-

ON MARCH 11, 1992

..'·

"STEEL MAGNOLIAS"

..,.,
..

When the ladies of Chinqupen, Louisiana gather at Truvy's
Beauty Salon, hair isn't the only thing that gets teased, fixed
and arranged. Lives are changed, secrets revealed, and
throughout all the gossip and wisecracks, a strong bond of
caring and love is created in this hilarious and touching
comedy. ·An award-winning off-Broadway hit, and a movie
blockbuster, "Steel Magnolias" is a show built arouitd the
I

tradition of T.V.'s Designing Women.
Reservations must be in by March 2nd.
Departure Time: 7:30 a.m.
Price: $50~00 per person

.."'

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...
,__ ...,

"PHANTOM"

····!

'""

THE REAL STORY
Based on the novel, "The Phantom of the Opera", this
chilling, dramatic; bittersweet. st~ry ·of a beautiful, young
soprano and the tragic, disfigured outcast who adores her, is
one of the most popular love stories of all time. There .have
been many film and stage versions of the timeless classic,
including the versions now on Bro~dway. La Comedia is
excited to pre~ent a BRAND NEW MUSICAL VERSION of
this immortal tale ~f love and betrayal ml~d with thrills,
excitement, and atmosphere. An unforgettable theatrical
•
expenence.
Reservations mwt be in by April 17th.
Depariur~ Time: 7:30 a.m.
Price: $50.00
per person
.. ,

.

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.

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" . ........all""'''lu
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Wt· ~ ~t ·~;m:(1Ud

SltPnt

1'.0 llox 626
' Polumoy, OH . 45769 '
6,4-992·2136

used suz"c·z'de·machine

. .··

.
wife operate the devi,ce that killed ,

ByRON LESKO
Associated Press Writer
ROCHESTER HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - The husbaild or a woman
who used Dr. Jack Kevorldan's sui·
cide machine to end her life testi·
fied that the physician "didn't kill
my wife."
"She did it herself," William
Wantz testified Friday at a prelimi·
riary hearing to determine whether
Kevorkian should stand trial for
murder.
Kevorkian, 63, a retired pathologist, is charged with two counts of
murder in the deaths of Marjorie
Waotz, 58, and Sherry Miller, 43.
BARRY M. DORSEY
Both women suffered from painful
friendships wi'th other persons but not fatal diseases.
If District Judge James P. Sheeinvolved in hospital ministry and
hy decides there is evidence to sup·
provides an excellent O()llOnunity port
ttie charges, he must decide
for the hospital to express tts app~­ whether
Kevorkian should be
ciation for the many hours of dedi·
charged
_
with
first-degree murder,
cated service given by the volun·
second-degree
murder or
teer chaplains.
manslaughter.
Joining these chaplains will be
In a similar hearing last year,
other special ~uests 10cluding volanolher
district judge dismissed a
unteer orgam~t~, m~mber of th.e
hospital's admuustrauve and medi- first-degree murder charge against
cal staffs and persons from other Kevorkian for helping another
departments that related to the woman kill herself 10 1990. That
chaplains on the hospital's healing judge noted that assisted suicide
isn't illegal in Michigan.
team.
Wantz testified he didn't see his

her. The machine has a strin~ that
is pulled lo open a valve that 1ritn- .
venously deliven an anesthesia. A. .
the patient falls asleep, the falling .
arm triggers another valve, \'o'hich
delivers a fatal dose or 8' cilig sucfl
as sodium pentothal. ·
"I was not in the ropin when
she pulled lhe string," Wantz said...
"When I left the room she wQ in
the process of ,trying to pull ihe.
string."
·1'
Lawrence Bunting, an ~d
County assistant prosecutor, askelt
Wantz several times to re!Case liis ~
wife's medical records, saying he·
believed her pain was psychological, not physical.
'
Wantz refused and disputed
Bunting's claim. He said his Wife
had many unsuccessful operations
to try 10 cure her chrome pelvic
pain.
·
Bunting also introduced evidence from the remote cabin in .
which lhe women died on adjacent
cots Oct. 23.
One photo~raph shows Mrs.
Wantz lying tn a be4, her eyes
closed,,a device with three intravenous bottles at her side. Miller
died after opening a valve on a canisler of lethal carbon monoxide.

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15 STYLES

lftiRIWIDI
! OUR STORE . ·
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LARGE GROUP

:woMEN'S WINTER

·: SHOES

t=t~
1 jJ PRIQ

PLUSH CARPET
-Encfura CoHectlon
-Soil Resistant-FHA Approved

OF CARPET
ON .SALE

LEVEL LOOP CARPET
-Guardian 10 BCF Olefin
-Actionboc -Soil Protection

SJ499
SALE
SQ. YD.

SALE

$999

SQ. YD• .

.JNSTAUED

REG. 517.00

REG. $19.00

-9 Calars

-8 Beautiful Colors
-Dupont Stalnmaster
-S Yr. Stain &amp; Wear Warraaty

-Scol~anl Stci• Release

J

CHILDREN'S

-Perfol'llllllcSRaled

ot1C0

•

lARGE GROUP
WOMEWS

_

OFF

PRICE

No Penollll Charvtt
No srcrm Orders ·

.

1H. &amp;FrL IIIP.I.
tl6 p.M
S.l.., II 5P.1..

............ n.n.

I DIY
I
OPEN MONDAINIGHT

1118 P.M.

$1799
SALE
SQ. YD.
INSTALUD W/PAD

REG. $18.00

REG. $14.00

DEEP SCULPTURE CARPET LEVEL LOOP DESIGN CARPET

-De~t Certified Slainmaster

-8 Colan

-Easy (are, Low M•tettance

OlO
1C

SQ. YD•

INSTALLED W/PAD

TENNIS SHOE

~

"19

ls

SALE

'

5~:~cE
SLIPPERS 15
LAaGE:GaouP

'

REG. 511.00

REG. 516.00

OFF REG.
. PRICE
OR MORE

DIRt I BIND II

.

FREE NO. OBLICATION ESTIMATES

TUE,MAY05toTUE, MAY 19

T:he Southern Local School
Boaid will hold its regular meeting
on ljlonday at 1 p.m. at the high
school.

"

JANUARY SAtE
PRICES ON QUALITY
CARPET FOR YOUR
HOME!

and SAT, MAY 09to SPJ, MAY 23 ® $1965
Includes air fare from Clllrl• 11 J'i, all tranaportatlon in Europeii!II!~­
SHlng, accommodations and 26 meals. Operated by HMME !I UIIIQ,
of Grand Rapids, Michigan. For lnfonnatlon and reaaJVallons, please
call

Nol.lylwlyi

},

.
...'

$1945

Board
to meet
•

..

,,'

SCULPTURED CARPET TRACTLESS CARPET

.

lhun•7
P.O. !lox 3:19
TuppQis Pklir1s. OH. &lt;15 783
614·687·3181

SALE

If

INSTALLED W/PAD

I

4

~;tCOif C CARPET

Pinecrest completes first
ever certification survey

.

&amp; S,avings Company

Galllpoll1, Ohio 45631

·

FFA alumni

•
•

Bank'
.

' ' I

•'

Your B~nk ~Jil,e;. ,

•;

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~

PARKING AVAILAnLE AT FARMER'S' 8ANK PARKING LOT
Call Joanne Williaiqa at ~92-2136 For More Information

(614) 446·1677
Open 9·5 Weeltdays, Evelings and Saturday by Appointment

'

.~

ON APRIL 30, 1992

Certllled·Pu•nc .Accountant
736 stc•d Awtn"

.' -· '

. ..
··'···

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LYNN E. NG·ELL.

IU f -

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.· ..... •'.

For complete, professional individual and
1Jadness tax preparation assistance call

·

hold meeting

'" .

Slldlng fH sale. No one refused servkes be&lt;auH of lnahllty to pay.

POMEROY
236 E. Main St~ 2nd Floor
997-5912
8:30 to S:OO Monday-Friday
Closed Thursd~y

.,

THE FARMERS BANK TRAVEL CLUB
INVITES ALL CUSTOMERS TO THE
.
FAMOUS LA COMEDIA DINNER
...
THEATER OUTSIDE OF DAYTON

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

Dorsey, Ed.J?. pre§dent ~the Uruversity of Rio Gnnde, wtll be the
featured speaker at HOlier Medical ·
·Center's Volunteer Chaplains'
Association Appreciation Luncheon and Annual Meeting on
Tuesday, Feb, 18 beginning at
noon in 11\e Freneb 500 Room.
Dr. Dorsey ean\ed his B.A. in
Political Science at Wake Forest
University, his M.A. in Inte~ti?R·
a! Studies at American Umverslly,
and his Ed.D. in Higher. Education
Administration at the University of
Virginia. He ha!been active !n
church life over the years and will
speak on bis experiences as an edu·
cator &amp;nil administratOr in relation
to pastoni ministry.
· .
The Rev. Charles Russ, chanperson of du\ Volunteer Chaplains'
Association, emphasizes lhe importance of this annual meeting which
will include the presentation of
individual awards of merit for 22
volunteer chaplains for their chap·
Ialncy service, the election of officers and a clergy
representative-at· large, and ·reports
on the continuing wort; of the association.
Director of the chaplaincy program at the hospital, The Rev .
Arthur C. Lund, reminds all of the
45 volunteer chaplains from a six
county area in Ohio and West Vir·
AMY JOHNSON and "WILLIAM CLARK
ginia who are acnvely 10volved 10
the program, that this annual event
promises to be both pleasant and
1mportant. It offers a time for the
group to be together and enrich
Bill
is
a
1984graduate
of
Point
Mf. and Mrs. Stephen Johnson,
Pleasaot
High
School.
He
of Point Pleasant, would like to announce the engagement aod graduated Summa Cum Lauda in
fonhcoming marriage of their 1988 with a bachelor's degree 10
daug_hter, Amy Leigh, to Dr. Wil- animal and veterinary science fnn
liam, Ray Crank, son of Mr. aod West Virginia University. He
_.;
received the professional degree of
Mrs.' Jack Crank of Henderson.
Amy is a 1989 graduate of Point Doctor of Veterinary Medicine
Pleaiant High School and' is cur· from the Ohio State University in
rcmly a marketing student at the 1991. Bill is currently practicing in
,..... . .
.
University of Rio Grande. She IS Mason County.
GALLIPOLIS • Members of the
Plans are in progress for a May Gallipolis
employed at Pleasant Valley
FFA Alumni recently
30wedding.
Hospital.
held a reorganizational meeting
with Joe Faster repolting on events
thai have transpired since the
Vocational Agriculture program
was discontinued for the 1991-92
school year.
During the Jaouary school board
meeting, the school board and
administration ensure the group
GALL!POLIS · Pinecrest Care interviews of residents, families that students would have the oppor·
Center recently completed a deli· and staff and tours of the facility 10 tunity to sign up for vocauonal
ciency free Medicare certification observe the facility and its staff at agriculture in the spring, and gave
surVey. The survey, conducted by work.
the group permission to recruit Stu·
the Ohio Department of Health, is
A very small percentage of dents for the program.
conductrc~ in accordance with the facilities 10 Ohio receive no. defiThe VA program will be offered
regulallons set forth by the ciencies during this survey process. during the 1992-93 school year
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation This is Pinecrest's first such sur· provided a sufficient number of
Act:and the Federal Life Safety vey.
students enroll in VA, and the
Code.
"This survey is a reflection of group receives full state funding. ·
~e survey, whic!J is an unan· the goals and mission of Pinecrest.
Alumni also discussed the new
nounced survey, is conducted We are constantly striving to pro- curriculum that is recommended
annually in a time period of not vide better care and ~ better guali.ty for VA by the State Department of
lesS' than nine months nor more of life for our restdenls, satd Education . The new curriculum
· than fifteen months following the Pinecrest awnlnistrator, David Sny· stresses agricultural science, and ·
pre.Jjous survey. All long term care der. "These results are a direct · the class will be offered on class
facilities that participate in either result of lhe impro,vement and car· period per day.
the !Medicare or Medicaid pro- ing attitudes ofour staff.•
The next meeting will be 8 p.m.
~s are surveyed.
Pinecrest Care Center is a 116 Monday, Feb. 17 in the library at
1fhe survey covers the following long term care facility operated by Gallia Academy Hi$h School.
are•: resident rights, admission, North American Heallhcare .or
The public is inVIted.
lrlllllfer and discharge rights, resi· Monticello, Illinois.
den( behavior and facility practices,
quality of life, resident assessment,
,quality of care, nursing services,
die$)&gt; services, physician services,
spei;ialized rehabilitative services,
dent81 services, pbarmacy services,
inf~tion control, physical environ·
ment, and administration.
Holland, Germany, Austria, Haly; Switzerland, France &amp; f\elglum .
the surveyors are registered
n~. dieticians, and other profes·
sionals. They conduct a review of
all r«:ords at the facility as well as

Johnson-Crarik

,-,

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

Dr. Barry M. Dorsey to
Judge hears testimony .
·address volu,:iteer chaplains .from husband whose wife

I

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SALE

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STOlE HOURS
tJW:OO
T...rSttw4ay
9:311-5:00

99

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-1 0 Yr. llmlled Wea
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SQ. YD.
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SALEs
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1299

FUIUIJTUlE, APPLIANCES. 1Y'S, FLOOR COVERING
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INSTAWD

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�Pomeroy--:-Middleport....Galllpolla, OH...Polnt Pleasant, wv

February 16; 1"2

·Friends, family mourn :
·Haley, 'Roots' author .
By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)- Alex
· Haley's grave site is just a few
paces from the porch where he lis.&amp;ened to family stories from his
grandmother and aunts. Those stories sparked his interest in his roots
and broadened the nation's under$1311ding of family.
Friends and family gathered Friday at a Memphis funeral home to
remember Haley, who died of a
heart attack Monday at age 70. He
was to be buried today at his childhood home in Henning, .about 50
miles north of Memphis.
·
The grave site IS on property
formerly owned by his maternal
grandparents, Will and Cynthia
Palmer. It is now a st.ale museum in
recognition of the author's international fame.
William Haley, the author's son,
said the srave site is just a few feet

R~~:e':J~~~ys.

RODNEY·
Coen and Phillip David Bailey .
were united in marriage Dec. 7,
1991, at Faith Baptist Church, with
MR. and MRS. DONALD (PEGGY) CASTO
the Rev. Jim Lusher officiating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin C. Coen Jr., of
MINERSVILLE - Peggy Davis Paul Rowers, Jody Rowers, Dar- Bidwell. She is a graduate of Kyger
and Donald Casto were united in lena Flowers. Brenda Teaford, Creek High School and is a senior
marriage on Feb. I at the home of Vonda Wolfe, Jody Wolfe, David at Ohio Universily majoring in Ele·
Richard and Georgia Smith, par- Wolfe, Melissa Teaford, Anna Tay- mentary Education with an empha·
ents of the bride. The groom is lhe lor, Ruth Taylor, Paul Smith, Stan- sis is early childhood. She is a
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Buck- ley Wells, Juanita Wells, Angela member of Kappa Delta Pi and was
ley and the late Robert Casto, Min· Teaford, Ronald and Jean Swain, Miss Gallia County 1987. She's an
ersville.
Jim and Bryan Wood, Debbie and employee at Ohio Valley Bank.
The double ring ceremony was Dave Dailey, Jeffrey, Georgia and
The groom is the son of Mr. and
performed by Rev. David Dailey.
Richard Smith, Nathan and Kim Mrs. Scoll Bailey of Mercerville.
Judy Rowers, Racine, served as McClure, Rebecca and Talon He is a graduate of Hannan Trace
matron of honor and Paul Smith Jr., Roush, Nathalie Gainer and Wilma High School and Ohio University.
He is an electrical engineer for
brother of the bride, was best man.
Jean Buckley.
The couple will reside on Eagle
Mrs. Rebecca Roush, sister of . Ohio Power in Portsmouth.
Ridge Road in Long Bottom.
the groom, baked the wedding
The bride escorted by her father,
wore
a gown of white satin illusion
Auendin~ were Judy Flowers, cake.
and beaded Alencon lace and fined
basque waste bodice. The high illusion neckline with beaded lace colThe Sunday Times-Sentinel Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to lhe date tar was centered with pearl drops
and beaded appliques.
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs of publication.
The headpiece was a contoured
Pllotographs
of
eilher
lhe
bride
and Mason counties as news and is
wreath
of Alencon lace, rosettes
happy to publish wedding stories or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
and photographs without charge
desired.
Photographs may be either
However, wedding news must
black
and
white or good quality
meet general standards of timelicolor,
billfold
size or larger.
At independence in 1966, the
ness. The newspaper prefers to
Poor
quality
photographs will landlocked African country of
publish accounts of weddings as
not be accepted. Generally, snap- Bechuanaland named itself
soon as possible after the event
To be published in the Sunday shots or instant-developing photos Botswana, after its dominant peo. ple, the Batswana.
edition, the wedding must have are not of acceptable quality.
Questions
may
be
direcled
10
the
The United States and lhe Sovitaken place within 60 days prior to
editorial
department
from
I
to
5
et
Union
signed an agreement in
the publication, and may be up to
p.m.
Monday
through
Friday
at
1963
to
set
up a "hot line" com600 words in length. Mawrial for
munications link between WashAlong the River must be received (614) 446-2342.
ington
and Moscow.
by the editorial department by
In 1632, the English crown
granted the second Lord Baltimore
settlement
rights to an area surThe Gallipo~s Junior Woman's P.O. Box 911, Galhpohs, postrounding
Chesapeake
Bay, most of
Club is offenng a $500 scholarship marked no later t~an March I .
which
would
later
become
the swe
to any female senior high school ~mal~ts will be n~tified and selec· of Maryland.
student residing in Gal1ia County, uon wtll be made m early April.
to assist the recipient of furlhering
her education after high school
HAPPENING · ..-~-----,
graduation.
Applicants must have a 3.0
grade point average on a 4.0 scale.
Along with the application, students are asked to submit a short
paper explaining why they have
SUSAN SISSON
chosen their particular field of
study and why they feel they
should be the recipient of this
scholarship. .
Applicants are also to send a
Ca11446-3353
copy of their transcript of grades,
along with two letters of reference
from non-relatives and a recent
billfold size picture.
For more information, contact
your high school guidance counGALLIPOLIS, OH.
SILVER BRIDGE PWA
selor. App~cations must be sent to:
Gallioolis Junior Woman's Club,
) !'r""• ,....,.. · -

Davis-Casto

Wedding policy

News notes

....
....

•

:

Matron of honor ~as Ju~e Bays.
Bnd~sn:'ruds were Jill Drummond,
Chnstma Edge, Juhe Guthne,
Dee anna Henderson, Tammy
Holler, Laura Kenny, and Wayneen
Neville. Junior bridesmaid was
Melanie Cocn, sister of the bride.
Flow_er grrls was Anna Pyles and
Kasste Thompson.
.
~atron of honor and brtdesma1ds wo.re black long sleeved
dresses wtth emerald green satm
full skirts. The junior · bridesm~id
wore a emerald green dress w1th
full skin. T_he flower ~iris w~re
dresses 1denucal to lhe bndesmrud.
Best man was Trevor Small.
Groomsmen were Alan Batley,
Deke Barnes, Jeff Barnes, Enc
Lloyd, David Small, Billy Swain,
and Tim Watson . Ushers were
Chad Barnes, Ryan Barnes. Chris
Coen, and Len Sheets.
Taperlighters were Eric Lloyd
and Len Sheets.
Soloist was associate Pastor
Leon Holderby; organist was Sandi
Hardesty; and p1amst was Mane
Boggs.
Registering guests were Melissa
Pettry, Janet Stilner, and Julie
Wamsley.
A reception followed in the
Faith Bapust Fellowship Hall.
The couple reside at 7632 Ohio
River Rd., Apt. B, Wheelersburg.
45694.

MON.

•

TUES .

HAlJl
WE.tc:OMES
NEW MANAGER

ForAn
Appointment

HAIR HAPPENING

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PHYSICAL THERAPY?

•

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YETEUNS
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HOSPITAL

115 E. M111orlal Drive

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992·2104 .

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

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THURS.

LB.

SUPERIOR •

$119

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steaks/Roasts •••

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Belpre
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593-7761
423-7516
896-2369
Middleport Nelsonville The Plains
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797-4547

LB.

Mr. Fr1tter Patt1es

12 oL

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oil Saus

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Co.
. (304) 773-5592
2ND STREET

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$ 179

BLUE BONNET •

$ 119
ll8. TUB

BR

Burritos••••••••soz.

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$1
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MORTON FROZEN

99 ,

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Margar1ne•••••••

Crackers...........LB.~x 99

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Onions•••••••••••
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VEAL, BEEF, ~HICKEN or CHUC~WAGON

Feder11l reg~.~ Lations raauire subslantial WI and inLetUt penalties ror early withdrawal of
IRA ~posits.

LlmKid tlmnayings'on a aelect~ 1of Serta mattieasaa SERTAPEDIC'
'
and foundatloris. Every size, 8V81Y COIUio!l Is iale- TWII
FW., Et. Fe. QUEEN, 21'1:. Set 1CNJ ll'tc!•l
priced. EY111 famous Serta Perfect SJHPe( models Eo. ~
, 369
ggg
14·:iii
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are InCluded. Bener hu~, thlseale ends Saturday! Rig. ,11111
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lb.

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Rump Roas_t•••••••• 2
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Bacon................. 1
Frank1es••••••••• 99
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MIX ·

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... the IRA Experts.

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PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 16 THRU FEB. 22, 1992

~
~

'h GALLON

298 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OH• ..

Call the IRA Experts at Peoples Bank today! We're mak- _ •
ing IRA's simple to understand and easy to open. In fact,
we'll take your application by phone and have the
paperwork ready for your signature at the Peoples Bank
office most convenient to you.

Sure!

fMl\

STORE HOURf
Monday thru Sunday ·
8AM·10 PM

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SAT•

Of course, we offer Physical Therapy at your
..- Hometown Hospital - Veterans Memorial in
•
Pomeroy.
In fact, our Physical Therapy Department staff
. sees a wide variety of patients - Monday through
~· &lt;, Friday' each week - patients with neck, shoulder,
~ upper and lower back, elb,ow and wrist, b.ands and
fingers, hlp, knee, ankle and fo(lt problems.
. The department has at it• disposal a wide·range
• of equipment with which to provide treatment
~ and rehabUitatlon for both outpatients and in
:~ patients.
·
.
While written prescriptions from physicians for
:: .both lnpatienta and outpatients are required, we
,:. are happy to advise you of stW another s·ervtce
'~ provided at your local hospital.

. '

..

You have until April IS to open your Individual
Retirement Account and you may qualify for a 1990
tax shelter.

~

PUNCH

..

,•-~

: Women's club offers _scholarsh_ip
..·.

TAMPICO
CITRUS

You (an write a
(he(k to the IRS ••• ~
or to your IRA.

MR. and MRS. PmLLIP (ROBIN) BAILEY

f~·
. ·, "· r ' .
,:,.·•.r.,

from the porch where his father [is.:
tened to liis grandmother and aunu
talk of family and was inspired .10.
write his Pulitzer Prize-winning
novel, "Roots: ,The Saga of an
American Family."
:
"The things that shaped him~
into the person he was happened;
there," he said.
Haley was born in Ithaca, N.Y.,:
but raised from infancy in Henning;
by his maternal grandmother. His:
father, a college professor, was
studying in the North, and his
mother, a grammar school leacher,
died young.
In "Roots," Haley blended fi!la
and imagination in tracing his fam·
ily back six generations to Kunt&amp;
Kinte, a West African slave. His
rich descriptions of his ancestors•
lives set off a wave of interest·
genealogy, lasting long after the'
book faded from best-seDer lists. .

.'

.• .
.. .....

PAPER'TOWELS

ULTRA TIDE

$499
700Z.

30USE

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Olftr .... J... IU... F&amp;22, IH2

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OM 1111r 11 hwii'•S.,.
Olftr .... J.. 16 . 1&amp;22, IH2

· TOILET Tl
4ROLL
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69(

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ARMOUR
POTTED
MEAT
. 3 OZ. CANS

DEL MONTE·
TOMATO

JUICE
460Z. CAN

(

�, ' Commt~nlty Calendar Items
appear two dil,s before an event.
and the day ot that eveat Items
must be ft(tived weD Ia advaace
t!) IIIIIUre publlatliOD iD the Cal•
eadar.

C;.RPENTER -.Special singing
reaturing local talent will be held at
the Mt. Union Baptist Church,
three miles soutb of Carpenter, on
Sunday at 5:30p.m. Pastor Joe N.
Sayre tnvites tbe public.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buffington will be tbe guest speaker at
the Naomi Baptist Church in
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:45 a.m.
The public is invited to attend.

POMEROY • All persons inter·
ested in singing in the cantata,
."From Olioet to Calvary" are to
meet Sundily at 2 p.m. al Trinity
Church. The cantata will be per.
formed Palm Sunday afternoon .
Ralph Werry is organist and Lois
Bun is director.
MONDAY
RACINE - The Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the high school.

niPPERS PLAINS - There will
be an open bouse in horior of Opal
Harris on her 80tb birthday at the
VFW Hall in Tuppers Plains on
Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.

MR. and MRS. THOMAS (MELANIE) PATRICK

Schoolcraft-Patrick
GALLIPOLIS - Melanie Rose
Schoolcraft and Thomas Charles
Patrick, were united in marriage
Dec. 28, 1991, during a double ring
ceremony at the Prospect Baptist
Church, witb tbe Rev. Carl Bashan
officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
Hazel Schoolcraft of Gallipolis and
James Schoolcraft of Ocala, Aa.
The groom is tbe son of Kathy
Patrick of Gallipolis, and Kenneth
Patrick of Ocean City. Md.
Esc orted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a white satin
gown featuring a stand up collar of
appliqued lace ov ~ r an organdy
bodice that formed a sweetheart
neckline. The back yoke also of
organdy . was fastened with tiny
satin buttons. The fitted bodice
Basque waste and modified Elizabethan sleeves had hand appliqued
venise lace.
The full skirt slightly gathered
at the waist, extended into a chapel
length train , trimmed in venise
lace.
The veil was knee h;ngth with a
'headband or white pearls and tiny

red and white roses.
The bride carried a bouquet of
silk white roses with lOUches of red
flowers with green, red, and white
ribbons.
Maid of honor was Lynn Mayes,
sister of the bride. Bridesmaid was
Cindy Newell, sister of the bride. ·
Flower girl was Becky Drummond, friend of tbe bride. Leighanna Patrick, sister of the groom, registered guests.
Best man wa s Luke Patrick ,
brother of the groom, and Darrell
Patrick. brother of the groom, was
groomsman.
Jeremy Drummond, friend of
the groom, served as ringbearer.
Steve Skidmore, friend of tbe bride
and groom, was tbe usher.
The groom wore a white tuxedo
with a red cummerbund and bow
tie. The groomsmen wore black
tuxedos with red cummerbunds,
bow ties; and boutonnieres.
Pianists was Donna McGuire.
A reception followed at Krodel
Park Clubhouse in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.

Lena's mom: What's so funny?
NEW YORK (AP) - Comedian Jay Lena ' s mother says she
doesn't understand why audiences
laugh when her famous son jokes
about the way she irons socks.
In a recent monologue on "The
Tonight Show," Leno said about
his 82-year-old mother, Catherine:
" I've got the ki~d of mom who

irons socks."
In an interview in the March
issue of Woman's Day, Mrs. Lena
said, "In my day we always
starched and ironed the men ' s
shirts. And while your iron was
hot, why wouldn' t you also do the
socks?"

POMEROY - The dedication for
POMEROY . Planned parent·
the new piano at the Meigs County hood of Southeast Ohio Patient
Inrumary will be held Sunday, Fer · Services offices will be closed
23 at 2 p.m. An open house for th Monday in observance or WashingInfirmary will follow ulllil 4 p. . ton's birthday. Drfices will reopen
Plans for ruture projects wi!V e Tuesday at 9:30a.m.
announced and refreshments will
be served.
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
POMEROY - A singles gather- Local School Board will meet
ing will be held Sunday from 4-6 Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the high
p.m. at Royal Oak Resort in the school.
lounge of the Horace Karr Center.
The cost is $3 per person and reserWEDNESDAY
vations should be phoned to 985POMEROY • The Middleport
4312 by 2 p.m. on Saturday.
Literary Club will meet Wednesday
at 2 p.m. at the Meigs County PubPOMEROY - A 12 step AA lic Library in Pomeroy . Mrs.
meeting will begin Sunday at 7 Robert ·Fisher will review
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West "Onslaught." Roll call·is "someSecond Street in Pomeroy.
thing famous built at great cost."
RACINE • The Racine Ball
Association will meet Sunday at 3
p.m. at the Racine kindergarten
building. Election of officers will
be held. Anyone interested in urged
to attend.
POMEROY - The Trinity
Church of Pomeroy is taking orders
for homemade vegetable and chicken-noodle soup. Orders can be
made by calling 992-5480, 9923777 or 992-3222 by Sunday. Soup
will be ready for pick·Uil after 4
p.m. on Monday. The pnce is S2
pu quart.
POMEROY - "Voices of
Praise," a singing group from Kentucky Christian College will perform at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ on Sunday at 7 p.m . The
public is invited to attend.

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Arts Council will ofrer anotber
beginner' s class in Texas style
dance beginning Wednesday at
7:30p.m. Cost is $7 per couple.
Call Mary Wise at 992-2675 for
information.
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club will
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
usual place. For the doll, bring a
two-inch Styroroam ball, small
dowel, two packages of black or
brown rug yarn . For the towels
bring a kitchen terry-cloth towel,
lace and material.
RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
rrre station. All members are urged
to attend.

.•,

..
•

ART BY THE HANDI·CAPABLE • A special exhibit curated
by Choice Acceats for the Freach Art Coloay, will .be oo display
through March 3. The multimedia exhibit iacludes the work or
Norcen.WoodS, Louis RotbsteiD, Janet Clay, Deanis Harkaess, and
Louis Gruaewald. AU artist involved are haudicapped. CaD 446·
3834 for more detalls. All FAC programming is otrered through
the support or the Ohio Arts Couacil.

FTHEWEEK
'

'

DO MY DEPENDENTS NEED
SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS?

JACK and SUE PICKENS

Will you claim an exemption for

•a•

Pickens open house slated

1 dependent who wu
one or
older on December 31, 199171f oo,
you muot 1111 tho dependent'•
ooclal oecurlty number (SSN) on
your lneomo tax rotum. The oocial
oecurlty number roqulromenl
•r,pllea to each dependent
c aimed on your Income tax
return. ltiJipllea to aduHa u well
nto chlldrM.
Tht purpoaalo to eneure thatatl
exompllono on a tax oeturn
re~reoent actual people ond that
only one taxpoyor clalma a
particular dependML
To obtain a eoclal aecurlly
KARL KEHLER, EA
number for 1 dependen~ you muot
fill out a Form SS-5. You .can obtain lhlo form at your local H&amp;R Block
office or from your neareotooclal oocurlty office.

VINTON - Jack aild Sue Pickens, 12283 SR 160, Vinton, will
celebrate their 2Sth wedding
anniversary on Sunday, Feb. 16.
An open house wiD be held Feb.
16 froni 1-4 p.m. at their home.

Whenever you have question• about how the tax laws affect your .

H R BLOCK618 EAST MAIN

992·6674

POMEROY

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LOGAN MONUMENT CO.
POMEIIOY
IENII COIIITY IIIIPLAY YARD
NIAll P\'IIIIIJIO\I.IIAION
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.AIIAGIR

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ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC .
WEIGHT CONTROL

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. (POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT, WV.

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(304) 675-1675

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When you bring lh~ coupon in. you'll get
these special prices on these excep~onal
Serta' sleep sets. Hurry in, coupon expires
Feb. 29, 1992
IERT~
PERF~CT SLEEPER' SEITAPEDIC'

,.... ,0.., $159

f\AUO i&gt;&lt;;

.

$21 0

""'" '"' ,., $539
. IIING. li&gt;&lt;;lol

$725

~ c:m King -

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$129
$169
""'"'"' ,., $399
I'M"fo I'&lt;

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sold In

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Corvin e::;5~~1~~vf.umitur~ _ . .
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GALLIPOLIS, OH. 446-1171 z ,
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-POMEROY -- The Meigs
County Bookmobile will make the
foUowing SlOps this week:
Tuesdar, - Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabtlitation Center, II :30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; .Darwin, I p.m.
to 2 p.m.; Burlingham, 2:30p.m. to
4:30 p.m.; Wildwood Estates, 5
p.m. to 6p .m.; Wednesday ~
Racine, itoon to 4 p.m., Letart
FaDs, S p.m. to 7 p.m.; Thursday Tuppers Plains, l p.m. to 3 p.m.,
Reedsville, 4 p.m. to 7 g.m.; Friday
-The ¥aples, 11:3 a.m. to I
p.m., Ove~k Center, I :30 p.m.
ib 2 p.m., Pomeroy Pike, 2:30p.m.
to 4:30 p.m.• ~aum Addition, S
p.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday -Rutland, 9 a.m. to I p.m., Danville, 2
p.m. to 3 p.m., Salem Center, 3:30
p.m. to 5:30p.m.

Young wins Miami U.
OXFORD, Ohio - Sophomore
Jennifer Young, of 246 Debby
Drive, Gallipolis, has been selected
to receive the J. Page Hayden
Memorial Scholarship at Miami
University for the coming academ·
ic
Students receiving Miami Universlty and Alumni Scholarships
are selected on the basis or superior
·
personal merit from
each

n•.

OTHER PIECES AVAILABLE

You will have·over 190 atyln of *ux·
edOI to chOOII from. W• It eve I l•ge
allectlon of the lateat atyln and compllm~~~tarv ecceuoriM for thillpeclal
occalloli.
·
.Quality Formalwear
at Alfordable Prleeo.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 8 OR

c~ ~peered 10 be tbe last

one," V: ·Homer Wilson said
· bolo.e reeelvlna t1te bottle Thursday. "I'm very joroud or this."
'!be club's next-to-lalt member,
Atlpl AIJDibool, dleiltwO weeks
II&amp;Oil bls ilon!e Iii WKO, Texas.
Willaa'&amp; Lilt Mall's Club, one

SAVE ON VINEYARD OAK DURING THE
FACTORY.AUTHORIZED· SALE •
HURRY, SALE ~NDS MJ\RCH 10 '
•.W• (qverl1g
FURNITURE . •lattrlor Dtslgl
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MOllE IN WEDDING PARTY

GALLERIES

""*Car

0,. Men. I Fri. 'tl I

(1.111.1

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•D11xel Herlflle Dealer e&lt;.stam Wlldew Trea-.ts
446-0332

1&amp;1 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS,' OH.

T-., WM. 'lhtln. &amp; Sat. 'tl ~ p.m.

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SALE

Rice Carved Bed................ $1410$1055
9 Dr. Triple Dresser................ 925 690
Trl View Mirror........................625 468
qomrnoda·............................... 425 319
Chest on Chest...................... 840 630
5 Dr. Chest........... ~ ................. 615 ! 460
High Boy............................... 1340 999

Special OCC81iOnl require special preparatione. If you are pl1111ning a wedding, annlv. .ary or prom, then you
ehould co"'e 111 ua at H11kin1-Tan-

97-year-old man has become the

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F~nds for tbese scholarshr~ are
p~ovided by g1fls. f~ alumm and
fnends of the untverstty, alumnae
of Wes!em College, co~auons,
f~un~uons, and communtty orgamzauons.
~or more infonnation on Miami
U~rvefSlty and Alumm S ~holar shtp~, contact tbe. scho~arshtp area
of Sluden~ Flnancr!!l J\!d. Edwards
House, Miamt Umverstty, Oxford,
45056, (5 529-5757.

For That Special
Occasion ...

sole iurviyar or a World War I Last
Man's Club, making him tbe recipient or the' ~·· botlle of vintage

lllitll1lll'I.'IDCilldiDC 10 poll IIlja·

SALE!

scholarsh~p

Reg.

Springfield man
is last member of
World War I club

ok ~ot limiilr pouplllart·
ed bJ W 1#/tt I velllllt~, wu
formed bJ 1tiW M• l.elian GoltdBtQ!apr flllt 69 It the bellnnlnJ
of.1M Will, 11 which wuion dla
IIMikn
die Nlvy.
Tilt olllt oriliDally bad 781

Factory Authorized'

groups ~lstaace. Receiving the priat oo behalf
of the Uaiverslty are Library Director David
Mauer, (right), and Reference Librariaa Tim
Snow (letl). The coaservation club also has
priats on display at tbe Bossard Memorial
Library and the GaUia County Courthouse.

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) - A

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For best selection and special prices, see us now.

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Bookmobile
Slates Sto1:'lnS
• Wee k
Or
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FURNITURE
GALLERIES

ON DISPLAY AT DAVIS UBRARY ·Larry
Betz, (ceater), of the Gallia County Conserva·
tion Club,.preseats au origiDal priat for display
to omdaiS of the Davis Libra11 at the UDiversity
ot Rio Grande. Tbe prlat, "Sunrise at O'NeiU's"
by Christopher B. VVIklen, was awarded to the
coasenatlon club .by Duck's Uallmlted for tbe

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Monday -CLOSED
Tuesday - Macaroni and cheese,
spinach, fruit salad, bread, vanilla
wafers.
Wednesday- Chili with crack·
ers, hot dog. with sauce, coleslaw,
bun, applesauce in lime jello.
Thursday - Chicken and gravy,
whipped potatoes, green beans,
bread, lemon pudding.
Friday • Ham loaf, sweet pota·
toes, Kale/vinegar, bread, cake
with cherry toppinl!·
Make reservatrons by calling
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
you wish to attend.

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\hoon ng mP•nor ooll

GALLIPOLIS - The Job Bank, the Job Bank or a counselor is on
located in lhe GaUia County Senior hand to answer any questions.
Those interested can Stop by the f,·,'._
Citizens .Center, is se~ld ng more
job orders for applicants 50 years Job Bank on Wed_nesday 11 a.m. to ~
of age and older, as well as appli- 3 p.m., or Thursday and Friday ::
from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., or call A46cants for existing job openings.
Applications can be filled out at 7COO. _ "

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We have all colors of granite - beautiful blacks,
deep reds, pinks, greys, brown - . every brand name
available! Choose your memorial now and have it
beautifully sculptured or personalized with an et·
ching. Stop in and see our professional people at
Work. All of our carv- r ••••••••••••• •• • • • • •••••• • ,
ings &amp; lettering are
COUPON
:
r"l l'loO'II \1!11(1 me fAH b" olo. l•tt
comp Ieted IocaII y by l , ....... :' ,,, " ' ' ' .............. .... ,...., • :I
experienced craftS• c.... lt •nlllr hov~ OncDII 01Ou!~orued
logon Mo11um.;"' Co I
hom.,
1
men. You do not r.• obltgoro
Ploou ~oncl mv de•ooh obo ... ITIO&gt;IIOI~..m• ... .rnovr :
on
I
have to wait while ••m• .. _____ . ___ __
o
your order is being ,,•• ,,,,,,,. __ ____ _-_ :
lettered and Shipped City odowo - -.. -- - - · :
1
L •Phor.t
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-•••••
- - -•-• I'n fOr Setting .
•••••••••••••••
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They were married Feb. 16,
1967 at the Parisburg Church of
Christ, Parisburg, Va., by Pastor
Duke Gregory.
The couple has four children,
Molina, Scott. Jackie and Denise:
and six grandchildren:

are activities and menus for Feb.
17-21 at the Gallia County Senior
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday,Feb.l7 ·
CLOSED -Presidents Day
Tuesday, Feb. 18
10:30 a.m.· STOP
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. - Quilting
10 a.m. to noon - Auditor Ron
Canaday will hold 15 minute
a_Ppointments; Homestead exempuon tax.
10 a.m. . Video matinee (Gone
With tbe Wind)
VVednesday,Feb.l9
10 a.m. ·Walking club
·1
10 a.m. to noon- Crochet circle ·
I 0 a.m. to noon · Blood pressure
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Pool (available
everyday)
Thursday, Feb. 20
10:45 a.m.- Bible study .
12:30 p.m. - Rag basket craft
class
t :30 p.m. - Board of Trustees
meeting.
.
Friday, Feb. 21
10 a.m. - Walking Club
10 a.m. 'to noon - 1-3 p.m. - Art
and craft class

return, call your local H&amp;R Block office. Better yo~ otop by the one
neareot you. We're hereto help you.

ORDER NOW FOR SPRING SETTING

SAVE UP TO $800

The following students from
Ohio Valley Christian have been
selected as Outstanding Citizens
for the month of January.
Kindergarten: "-lana White,
Hannah ~urleson, Colby Richards,
1
and Kevm GuUey.
First grade: Chelsea Gooch and.
Kelsey Salisbury.
Second grade: Dawn Chamberlain and Michael Jenks.
Third grade: Melissa Rossiter
and Joey Johnson .
Four~h gra~~ : Wendi Watson
and Christen ZmUe.
Fifth grade: Lisa Bowman and
B~e Newell.
.
Srxtb gmde: Deanna Martin and
Leah Hall.

Seniors'
scheduled
announced
Menus
consist of:
GALLIPOLIS - The following

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WINTER SALE
IN PROGRESS

r ~pr,.oen l o"v•

GALLIPOLIS - The Outstand·
ing Citizen Program, one of eight
Education First Programs sponsored by Hills is being implemented in over 410 elementary schOols
to date. 'l'be purpose of the program is to give elementary school
reachers a tool for recognizing and
. rewarding students' accomplishments to help build self esteem.
"Outstanding Citizens" are
selected by teachers. Teachers may
recognize and reward students as
an "Outstandin~ Citizen" .~or
improving academrcally, correcung
a behavior problem, assisting a retlow student, or any other reasons
they feel are appropriate.

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�Times Sentinel

992

Beat of the Bend...

Upcoming gospel sing to
benefit injured Jamie Barr

by Bob Hoeflich

VINTON • A gospel benefit
sing is scheduled for Saturday, Feb.
29 from 7-9 p.m. at Vinton Baptist ..
Church, 222 Main SL, in an effort
to niise funds for medical expenses
for Jamie M. Barr.
.
Barr, 19, of Bidwell, was seri- .
ously injured in a car accident Oct.
11, 1991, and is still in intensive
care at Grant _H05Jl~!al! Colum~u_s.

J~~~~~~:&lt;~~1~~:that
we usedwe'
to re get pretty.

point in time when you know
you're not rich-and ain '!\likely to
become-rich; when you know
you're not famous and never•will
be; and you ain't an aristocrat iiJ!&lt;I
realize "it ain't gonna .happen"
because no one can make a silk
purseoutofasow'sear.
With these revelations, you
decide with some consolation that
you're Just Plain Folks. And
there's nothing Wrong with thatin fact. being Just Plain Folks is
kinda neat-you don 'I have to
worry the small stuff and hopefully, you're with the majority.
It was no rude awakening when
we came up with the determination
that we're Just Plain Folks.
It was a simple deduction which
we reached by just looking around
at our surroundings. Let me point
out just some of the indications
we've had beyond the criteria of
not being rich, famous or aristocratic:
F.or example, our carpeting has
been down some 25 years. At a
place or two, it's worn completely
through. We cover the worn spots
with throw rugs which have seen
better days. Hardly anyone looks
under the throw rugs so we live
with it nicely 'cause we're Just
Plain Folks.
Most all us are coffee drinkers
and some people, I'm told, partake
from elegant cups. We take ours
from oversized mugs-oh no, not
those with the beautiful Currier and
Ives pictures on the side or replicas
of beautiful flowers or animals. No
sir! Our mugs are from People's
Bank, Overbrook Center, the Meigs
Historical Society and other
sources. Some are chipped, some
are crackled and some are both.
Restaurants dispose of these-but
we enjoy our java from the unsight·
ly mugs with absolutely no shame.
Why QOI? We're Just Plain Folks.
Oh, and did I mention that our .
dishes are a general assortment left
over from numerous sets which
have become broken for the most
pan ovez the years? A few pieces
from each set make for an interesting color combo at mealtimes and
it beats going "paper". You think
we care? Naw! Werre Just Plain
Folks.
Then there's the liv.ing room
couch with its curling cushions
resulting probably from too many
naps and too much age. The cushions are crunched and curled as
though they've taken the brunt of a
herd. of elephants for many years.
Time was when we used to beat
them around a bit before company
anived to get them to regain some
degree of proper shape and form.
we:ve qu11 doing that and most
people appear not to notice our
curly cush1on couch. Guess they
expect these imperfections 'cause
they've come to know we're Just
Plain Folks.
Over the years we've decided
that a dining room table isn't exclusively an eating location . What?
Use it for eating and lose all that
stora~e space? Our dining room
table IS a catch-all for anything and
everything. It's lhe first place to
look for news notes, letters, business papers, car keys, · books, pamphlets, photos or whatever. It, at
times, nears the point that a filing
:system should be established to
help determine just what lies
among the clutter. Sure, dining
room tables look great with the
bouquel of flowers and the porce- .
lain figurines . But with the
approach of Just Plain Folks, I ask,
who needs that?
Now before coming to the full

8 &amp; 40 partnefS
attend meeting

NEWARK. Ohio • The Winter
Pouvior of 8 &amp; 40 was recently
held in Newark, Ohio, with members of the Gallia Salon 612 attending.
Attending were: Louise Green,
Petit Chapeau ; Joan Wood, L
'Aumonier;
Bette
Ryal,
LaConcierge; Becky Pasquale,
LaSecrelaire; and Beverle Clark,
partner.
The meeting was called to order
by Alice Landon, Petit Chapeau of
Salon 7S7, who intrllWced Depart·
mental d'Ohio Chapeau Elzena ·
Waper. Guest speaker was Rose
~.departmental Chapeau of
-"n 8 &amp; 40 business meeting
- held with reportS by c:ommiuee
. chainnal. Following a short break,
:~£!edge was recited and the
g WMidiowned.
·
. Tlie U: 4&lt;1 group a1Jo held i
meeliaJ Peb. 13 at lhe home of
Beae ltyal with seven pa1111en pie·

...

Chlpelu LouiJe Green opened
tlllmeu'na, followed by commit-

• npona, new llld old bulnea

beiiiJ beinlllllde.
dlac:u11ed, and announce,_

1oM 1'lllct« of EwinJIOa, ad
. . a.ltofVInlon -..-..
no obliprion - . ; . , 1114
,....., -lldjoamed.
, .......-111111u were MtVed by
.,., .S Oreen. A 1U111riN birth·
'lliflliltY -lleld I« )• Waod
• Vile~- JilU were h'D'kd

-

uptight about cracks. in the plaster
and the chipped paint at various
locations about the house. Now that
we've faced reality, we just don't
worry about these things any
more-they are now accepted as a
necessary evil which goes with a
house. But we will have you under·
stand, however, that our plaster
crack-s and chipped spots are
among the best in town. We may
be Just Plain Folks, but we still
have pride.
Then there's our dog, Kizzie.
We are a bit amused when anyone
a1ks just what breed she is. · We
don't bother to explain that she was
abandoned years ago and that we
took her in at the request of the
Meigs Humane Society. We just
reply that's she's a Just Plain Dog
who belongs to Just Plain Folks.
A great attitude accompanies
being Just Plain Folks. I mean, we
don't worry about the ugly, big nail
in the center of the front door. It
was to have held a beautiful Victo·
rian wreath. It's no major corq:m
that our clothing isn't the latest
fashion nor from the "designer"
lines. Our cars are outdated. So
what? We'reJustPiainFolks.
I'm not even going to ask you if
you're Just Plain Folks? Heck, I
can tell you are without even looking at your surroundings. I can tell
just by the way you keep smiling.

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Beatity.~·;i,.Beast

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·Sniders to speak Feb. 20

PERFORMERS RETURN • Marsball University Tbeatre ·
Department will be returning to tbe Ariel stage 8 pJD, Feb. 22 witb
a production or ''Cole," the life and times or American song-writer
Cole Porter. Porter is famous tor wriling such bits as ''Begin The
Beguine" and "Night and Day" and such Broadway musicals as
"Kiss Me Kate.'' Featured wiD be JuDe Parsons, a 1991 graduate or
Gallia Academy High School. Tickets for tbe performance are $5
and are available at Peddle(s Pantry and the Ariel box office. For
more information, caD the Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre at 446-ARTS. Philip Wilcox and D. Scott Eads are pictured
rehearsing ror their upcoming performance.

Cole Porter
Marshall Unlv. Theatre

••1

IMfiNiis W. Til tllH 1 5111.
. Tlll6THAU:OOP.M..
OIIIYIII.G SHOW 7:30

and

POMEROY , Dr. and Mrs. K.
Lavern Snider, missionaries to
Japan under the Free Methodist
Church, will speak at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church on
Thursday at 7 p.m.
The Sniders consider Japan to
be one of the world's most chal·
lenging mission fields. Since 1957, when the Sniders
first arrived in Japan, they have
been affiliated with Osaka Christian College and Theological Seminary. Dr. Snider has served the
sc~ 00 1 in various ~apacities: col-

The LHe and Timea of

Saturday, Feb.22, 8:00 p.m.
Morrlo ond Dorothy Haklno

Arlo! Thootro
426 2nd Avo., Galllpollo, Oh.
Caii446·ARTS for more Into.

ADIIISSION$1.10
44Ht21

lege president, chancellor, dean of
the seminary and professor. Mrs.
Snider taught English in the college
and had a strong ministry in counseling students.
The coUege and seminary have a
combined enrollment of about 800
students.
During his years in Japan,
Snider was also involved in many
phases of evan(!elistic outreach:
home Bible studies, extension education, personal evangelism, training sessions, church planting and
pastoring. He has authored four
books, the most recent of which is
"Back to Basics in Church Administration."
In addition to his responsibilities
in Japan. Snider served as Director
of Missions for Asia. In this capacity he regularly visiled churches
and missionaries in Hong Kong,
Taiwan and Korea.
Prior to missionary appointment, Dr. Snider served as president of Lome Park College, Port
Credit, Ontario. He is a graduate of
Toronto University, holds and
M.Div. degree from Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Ky.,
and an M.Th. degree from Knox
Divinity College in Toronto, Canada. He earned a Ph.D. degree from
Michigan State University.
The Sniders, both Canadians,
have two married children.
The public is invited to hear ·
about life and the church in the Far
East.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524
. ;, •

I~RG.I.IIll

fiATIIIEts SATUROo\f/SLIIIOo\1

6

IOI~W.

S&gt;'R&amp;AJJI Jl/(illl l l.IS QI.I .

9

9

Hours
Only

Houu
Only

·-

CROWN CITY • Victory Baptist Church will have speaker Steve
Fuller beginning at 7 p.m.

p.m. at the horne of Judy Kennedy.

ONE DAY ONLY
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17TH-9 AM TIL 6 PM

S'OREWIDE SALE

GALLIPOLIS - Diabetic Education classes, Feb. 17-19, 6-9 p.m. at
Holzer Medical Center, Room 501.
For more information call 4465313.
Tuesday, Feb. 18
GALLIPOLIS - Lafayeue White
Shrine meeting, 7:30p.m.
VINTON - Vinton Friendship
Garden Club meeting, I p.m. at
Fellowship Chapel.

HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES:

YOUR .DENTURES IN ONE DAY
Cuetpm Filled Dentuns In One Day At Our Teays VaJ!ey Olllce

By Our Prof••lonala And Trained Staff.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualllled Technicians.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-928-0025
For AD Appollltllieat or lalormatloa.
Our Regul4r Serutt:e &amp; Amth!bl,e At All O.flb!s. .
...... DAY IIIIMCII OIW DUI'ID AIQI DPAIIIJl

D£N'tURII ITAilT AT '134 PBR DENTURE!
SMAU.ADDnT&lt;WAI. CHAROB POR &amp;WE DAY SERVICE

wen

Gibson$

GolciStar-

VCR

GALLIPOLIS • Lions Club
meeting, 6:30 p.m. in Holu:r Pvfedical Centez's French 500 Room ..

CROWN CITY - The Gabriel
Quartet wiU be singing at the ElizaGAUJPOLIS - Ope!lltiOn Lift·
beth Chapel Churcll beginning at 7
Off
meets at 7:30p.m. at Columbus
p.m.
Southern Powez office.
.
Monday,Feb.17
KANA_UGA • The Kanau~a · GALLIPOLIS • MACE meetNeighborhood Crime Watch w1ll ing, 7 p.m. at Grace United
meet al 7:30 ~.m. at the Holiday Methodist Church concerning solid
Inn. The Galha County Sberifrs waste disposaL
Department will demonstrate their
IRONION • Lower Ohio River
new narcotic detection dog. The
Valley
Basin Olapcer No. 8 of the
public l.s encouraged to attend.
Archeological S"ociety of Ohio
meeting,
6:30·8:30 p.m. at the
GALLIPOLIS - American
Briggs-Lawrence County Library.
Legion Auxiliary 161 meeting, I

CABLE READY

16 CU. FT. FROST
FREE

ON SCREEN
PROGRAMMING

Refrigerator

.$198
GoldStar
-REMOTE
CONTROLJ9•
COLOR

Television

ELECT"IC OR

.•

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a

'
•

'

-1.

GAS

Ranges

$269
Ito DAYS SAME A! CASH.I

CABLE READY

$229

-•

-1

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Ill# APPLIANCE
'

liD 10 IIYIUIOII IOIDI

,,

Thunder birds lauded as the cars
to beat in today's Daytona 500
.

UPNIIt74C6-IOII
~I

urday.
LEXINGTON, Va. (AP)- Tyrone Phillips
The Tar Heels (18-3, 8-2 ACC), who beat Clemscored 17 of his 23 points in the second half Saturday
son
by 34 last month in Chapel Hill, saw a 17-point
to help Marshall wm for just the second time in 16
lead whittled to 70-66 when Sharone Wright scored
games, 79· 72 ovez Virginia Military Institute.
on
a three-poipt play with 3:10 left.
Phillips put Marshall (5-17, 2-8 Southern Confer·
But
Nonh Carolina, which pulled within a game
ence) ahead to stay on a layup that made it 41-39
of
fust-place
Duke in the Atlantic Coast Conference .
with 14:24 to play.
with
the
victory,
made I0 of 14 foul shots in the fmal
The Thundering Herd pushed its advantage to 10
three
minutes
to
seal
the victory.
points before VMI (8-14, 2·8) cut it to 68-65 with
Hubert
Davis,
who
fmished with 23 points, and
2:07 left on a pair of free throws by Lewis Preston.
Derrick
Phelps
both
hit
four free throws in the final
But Marshall made nine of 10 foul shots the rest of
moments
to
help
the
Tar
Heels defeat Clemson (12-9,
the way.
2-8).
Malik Hightower a.dded 18 points for the ThunWright dido't start but came on to score II points
dering Herd.
and
grab nine rebounds while showing no ill uffects
VMI's Jonathan Penn had 22 points and Preston
from
a bruised right knee sustained in Wednesday's
added 21 and 10 rebounds. The Keydets also got 17
game
against Wake Forest.
·
points from Bobby Jones.
.
Andre
Bovain
led
Clemson
with
,18
points,
while
No. 4 Indiana 91, Northwestern 60- At
Devin
Gray
added
12
and
II
rebounds.
Bloomington, Ind., Damon Bailey sparked Indiana's
W. Virginia 78, St. Bonaventure 70 - At
comeback from a I0-point first-half deficit as lhe
Olean,
N.Y:, Pervires Greene scored 23 points and ·
fourth-ranked Hoosiers used two big spurts for a 91West
Virginia
was 11-for-11 from the free-throw line
60 victory over Northwestern on Saturday.
in the game's last 1:47 as the Mountaineers defeated
Indiana (184, 9-2) entered the game trailing firstSt.
Bonaventure 78-70 in the Atlantic 10 Saturday.
place Ohio State by one-half game in the Big Ten.
West
Virginia improved to 17-6 overall and 9-2 in
Northwestern (8-13, 1-10) lost its 52nd straight
the
Atlantic
10 while St. Bonavenwre fell to 7-15 and
Big Ten road game and remained winless in Bloom1-10.
ington since 1968.
The game featured 21 lead changes and five ties.
Calbert Cheaney aqd freshman Alan Henderson,
The
teams were tied at 29 at halftime.
starting in place of senior Eric Anderson, scored 17
With
the Bonnies up 35-34 with 13:53 left in the
points each for Indiana, while Greg Graham added
game,
Lawrence
Pollard hit an 18-foot jumper to
16 and Bailey 12.
start a 16-7 West Virginia run, capped by Jeremy
Northwestern's leading scorer, Kevin Rankin, was
Bodkin's two free throws with 9:46 to go, that gave
averaging 14 points, but he didn't score until 8:50
the
Mounlaineers a 50-42lead.
was left in the game and fmished with six.
David
Vanterpool hit two free throws to start a I0Cedric Neloms and Todd Leslie led the Wildcats
0
run
that
put the Bonnies ahead 59-57 with 4:25 to
with 16 points each.
play.
The
teams
traded baskets for the next two min· The Hoosiers trailed by as many as 10 points
ures
until
Bonaventure
took its last lead, 66-65, on a
before a 26-11 spurt helped them take a 39·32 halfKenrick Hamilton three-point play with 2: 18 left.
time lead.
With 43 seconds left and West Virginia up 70-68,
· Graham drove the baseline for a layin that tied the
Bonaventure's
Harry Moore was called for a techni·
game at 30-30. Bailey scored Indiana's next seven
cal
foul
for
reaching
over the boundary line on an in·
points to give the Hoosiers !heir first lead with 2:07
bounds
play.
Chris
Leonard
hit the two ensuing free
left in the half.
·
throws
and
Tracy
Shelton
added
two n1orc nine secBailey, who was replaced in the starting lineup by
onds
later
to
give
West
Virginia
a
74-68 lead.
Todd Leary, had nine points in the go-ahead run,
Hamilton
led
Bonaventure
with
18 points while
making up for his scoreless performance in a 71-67
Nii Nelson-Richards added 16.
loss to Minnesota four days ago.
Ball St. 60, W.Mkhigan 46 -At Muncie, Ind.,
Northwestern opened with a furious 8-0 run.
Keith
Stalling scored II of his 13 points in the sec·
Leslie and Simpson combined to score Northwestond
half
as Ball Stare defeated Western Michigan 60em's first 13 points and a three-pointer by Leslie put
46 Saturday in their baUie for fust place in the Mid·
the Wildcats up 13·5 with 14:17 remaining.
American Conference.
Indiana, meanwhile, turned the ball over on its
Both teams had cold shooting performances. Ball
first possession and then missed four straight shots
State (19-4 overall, 8-2 in the MAC) shot 27 pen:ent
before Cheaney hit a three-pointer.
in the second half (7 of 26) and under 32 percent for
Already visibly frustrated by his team's tentative
the game. The Broncos (17-5, 8-3) shot30 percent (8
play, Indiana coach Bob.Kni~ht charged on the court
of
27) in the second half and 33 percent for the game.
to deliver a profanity-laced tirade after a foul call on
Ball State lr8iled early as the visitors made the
Anderson. ·
game's fust foor points. The Cardinals took the lead
Referee Sid Rodeheffer called a technical on
for good with 12 consecutive points that ignited an
Knight and Leslie hit both free throws to give North·
' 18-3 .sp~~ .ti\Of1BI~ ~ ...
Mtestern'a 21-13 lead. ' '
•
• ' •• ·
Bill Gillis made a layup to start the sueak with
The Hoosiers responded with a turnover and an
14:34left in the opening half. Chandler Thompson's
airball by Bailey. The turmoil continued with teamjumper put Ball State ahead to stay 1·6 and the Carmates Cheaney and Jamal Meeks exchanging heated
dinals led 18-9 after Darri Brooks made a layup with
words after a missed fast-break basket.
8:371eft
in the half for Western Michigan's first field
Henderson settled the Hoosiers down by launch·
goal
since
the 17:50 mark.
.
ing the decisive 26-11 burst with three straight
Ball State led 33-23 at halftime. Western Michipoints.
gan cut its deficit to 41.-36 on three-poinrer by Ebon
The run continued early in the second half with 18
Sanders with 12:53 to play, but Ball State responded
straight points. Henderson scored six and Cheaney
with II consecutive points as the Broncos went
four as Indiana led 57-35 with 13:40 to play. The
10:20 without a field goal.
lead increased to as many as 31 points.
Virgil Grayson was the only player in double figNo. 4 Kansas 82, Colorado 45 - At Lawrence,
ures
for Western Michigan with 12, while Gillis had
Kan., Rex Walters scored 22 points Saturday as No.
II for Ball State.
4 Kansas handed turnover-plagued Colorado its
.Iowa 80, Purdue 68 - At Iowa City, Iowa, the
worst loss in nearly three years, an 8245 rout just
Hawlceyes have something to show for its hard work
three days afrer the Buffaloes upset No. 2 Oklahoma
-awin.
.
State.
· "I thought it was another real good effort. We had
Colorado, which lost by a point to the Jayhawks
two good efforts last week and didn 't get much
this year and on Wednesday beat Oklahoma State 57reward
for it on the road," Iowa coach ·Tom Davis
53, had 30 turnovers, one shy of the school record.
said afrer the Hawkeyes' 80-68 victory over Purdue
The Buffs shot 25 percent and in the first half had
Saturday.
more turnovers than points - 18-16. Making just
Acie Earl scored 16 points and Val Barnes and
five of 23 shots gave lhe Buffs 22 percent from lhe
Chris
~treet each had 15 points to lead the
field as Kansas (19-2, 7-1 Big Eight) took a 42-16
Hawkeyes. The win followed two losses last week by
halftime lead en route to its ninth straight home vicIowa, including 79-14to Michigan and 81 -66 to Inditory over Colorado.
ana.
The Buffs (11 -10, 2-6) have lost 29 of their last 31
"This was a big game for us," Davis said. "We
games at Allen Fieldhouse and since 1949 have left
worked
real hard and we see some signs that we're
Kansas with a victory only six times. The 37-point
just
going
to be playing beuer and better."
margin was their worst since a 38-point setback at
Purdue head coach Gene Keady said the
Nebraska on Feb. 22, 1989.
Hawkeyes
outhustled his team all afternoon.
Eric Pauley had 14 points for the Jayhawks, who
•
'They
played
harder than we did," Keady said.
had 29 turnovers . .Pancho Hodges and Joe Srephens
Purdue
gol
off
to a slow start to start the game and
had nine points each for Colorado. .
feQ
behind
38-29
at intermission. The Boilennakers
No. 6 North Carolina 80, Clemson 72 - At
then
spotted
Iowa
the
fust nine points to stan the secClemson, N.C .• Brian Reese keyed an early secondond
half
and
fouhd
themselves
trailing 47-29 with
half run and No. 6 North Carolina made its free
16:54
remaining.
throws down the slretch to beat Clemson 80.72 Sat-

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Sunday, Feb.l6
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Historical Society will hold
a board meeting at I p.m. at the
Episcopal Church. At 2 p.m. Betty
Kratz will present a program. The
public is invited.
CROWN CITY - Rev. Everett
Delaney will be speaking at the
Bethlehem Church, Rocky Fork
~~: off SR 218, beginning at 7

'ihnt$- ~mtinel

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KIIIUII, OHIO•

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By MIKE HARRIS
Mark Manin and Davey Allison
AP Motorsports Wriler
right behind.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
The GM teams refuse to believe
-A week filled with racing, quali- that speed alone will win the 200fying and practice has done nothing lap feature. They are pinning their
to change the obvious fact that the hopes on a combinatiOn of speed
Ford Thunderbirds are the cars to and handling.
·
beat in today's Daytona 500.
"It's going to take handling and
Other .than two-time defending sbme teamwork," said Ernie Irvan,
Winston Cup champion Dale Earn· . the defending Daytona 500 winner
hardt winning one of the twin 125- and a fourth-row slarter aftez helpmile qualifying races Thursday in a ing feUow Chevy driver Earnhardt
Chevrolet Lumina, the General to his victory Thursday by drafling
Mom teams haven't had a whole with him to lhe fmish line.
lot to smile about at Daytona Inter·
After nanoing against Marlin
"national Speedway.
and Martin in his race and watCh·
Despite some crashing and ing Elliott, Shepherd and Alliion
banging on the 2.5-mile oval the run so well in the second 12S,
• 1a1t cOuple of days, five of the top Earnhardt slid: ','1 don't 1ee any
' six ears in the 42'C81' lineup are the reason to thinlc the Fords aren't
• sleek ThunderiJirds.
going 10 be tougb,llld I think Mari S~rlioa Marlin won 'the pqle • tin II the ~ !llhe bunch. If
J)C)Iition for today's race andJunlDl it badn't beea for Ernie. I WOitkln'l
' Johnson '"mmate Bill Blliou, a bavo boen lble 10 bold Mart off at
• &amp;tQo-time Daytona winner, e8med the end."
• ~ outaide 1p01 on lhe front row in
Manin said: "It was pretty
' !!me trials.
. tou&amp;h out there. I had to guanl the
• Banthlrdt boldi lhe thlrd start- fronlllld the beck. DaJe and ~mie
.IDJ spat with Morgan Shepherd's did a good job. Dale'• car l.s han·
: .r-111n1 aloopkle and the Pards
dlinJ load and JOinl down the

or

straightaway good.
"But I'm real pleased with the
way our car's handling. We've got
a nice piece (car) for the 500, by
far the best piece I've evez had."
Ricky Rudd, another Lumina
driver and Irvan's row-mate today,
stuck with Elliott for ·a while on
Thursday before fading to fourth at
the end for lhe lack of a small chassis adjusanenl •
"We were good ·for about the
fust 12 laps," Rudd said. "Then
the fltHit end quit sticking and I bad
to feather lhe ear In lhe corner. At
least wo'vo seen that we can run
with the Fords now. We've just got
to get our car handling a .little bit
better."
l&gt;anell Waltrip, 'the driver who
beJan tbe CIII'!OIIt string of three
stralflll Daytona 500 victOries by
LIID~ in 1989, was sixlh in his
quaUfiCt, Wlll:binJ Fords dominate
up front.
"I lhin1c we Cl1l ldjust our car
and be u good • mybody.... SeeIng Earnhardt and Irvan
there, 81le81t we know those
-.•t invincible,'' Wlllripllid.

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Section C
February 16, 1992

Marshall hands VMI
79-72 defeat Saturday

The benetn w111 teatured New
Beginnings and free will offerings
will be appreciated. ·
An account has been opened for
the Barr family at Ohio Valley
Bank, and any donations would be
welcomed.

COLONY THEATRE

"""h&lt;•f"' '"u nm Plllf~lltil'lll -'ot•

Sports

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(1'

•
WE'VE GOT THIS - Northwestern forwards Cedric Neloms (4) and Matt Purdy (lower
right) screen out Indiana forward Calbert

Cheaney (behind them) for the derensive
rebound durinc Saturday's Big Ten malchup in
Bloomington, Ind. (AP)

U.S. hockey team posts 3-0
win., over Poland in.. Olympics
By MIKE NADEL
AP Sports Wrjter
MERIBEL, France (AP) -The
U.S. hockey team, shut out for
more than 34 minutes by patsy
Poland, got saved again by goalie
Ray LeBlanc and won 3-0 Saturday
night to remain one of only two
unbeaten, untied OJ ympic teams.
The United States (4-0) can earn
the top seed in its medal-round
group by beating or tying world
cham~ion Sweden (3-0-1) on Monday n1ght. The teams met Feb. 5 in
!heir final pre-Olympic tuneup,
with the U.S. team winning a hotly
contested, 3-2 ~·
Canada, wh1ch plays in the other
group, is the only other 4-0 team.
LeBlanc, who made 24 saves,
has allowed just four goals in th~
tournament and one in the last three
games. He's the only Olympic
goalie with two shutouts.

Without his outstanding play,
the United States would have been
behind when Shawn McEachern
scored at 14:47 of the second period.
.
The Americans were expected
to have no !rOuble with Poland (~
4), the 12th seed of 12 teams going
into the tournamenL
The Poles, who started thirdstring goalie Mariusz Kieca, had
been outscored, 23-4, and outshot,
98-58, in their first three games.
They had been~ 7 in Olympic play
agairist the U.S. team, having been
outscored 57-15- including a 234 loss in 1948.
But Poland conlrolled play until
momentum shifted in the second
period, as the U.S. team's superior
speed and talent produced several
good scoring chances. Still, when
Kieca wasn't makin~ saves, the
Americans were mlsfmng.

Ted Donato had a woeful hat
trick in the period's fust 13 min·
utes, passing when he could have
shot mto an open net, shooting
wide at an empty goal and faillng
to get off a shot at an open net
before Poland center Miroslaw
Tomasik stole the puck off his
stick.
Finally, McEachern capitalized
after a loose puck hit the skate of a
Polish defender and rolled on10 his
stick in front of the net. It was lhe
first goal of the tournament for
McEachern, who led tbe team with
26 goals and 49 points during the
pre-Olympic schedule.
With 2:21 left in the second,
Tim Sweeney scored on a rebound
of Scott Lachance's shot, his team·
high third goal of the 01 ympics.
Marty Mcinnis scorcd.on a
wraparound with 6:53 left in the
game.

Reds boast new faces, attitude
to join them in spring training
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - This will
be a different training camp for the
Cincinnati Reds.
No Eric Davis. No hand
grenades. No complacency.
The Reds' off-season overhaul
has given them a significantly different _look going into spring training this week in Plant City, Fla. exactly wbat they wanted after finishing a dispirited fifth in the NL
WCSL
"We added .the pitching we
needed. We added some speed and
defense to the b81lclub, and some
left-handed hitting. I couldn't be
more pleased with the changes,"
manager Lou Piniella said. ·
These isn't the same team that
swept Oakland in the 1990 World
Series. More importantly, this isn't
the same pitching-poor team that
unraveled while trying to defend its
title last year.·
A lot has happened the last few
months.
Davis was uade!l' to Los Angeles, and will be training with the
Dodgers on Plorida 's other coast
this spring. "Nasty Boy" Rilldy
Myers has cleared out, ioo, liking
~is hand grenades and ~unting
btives to San Dieso.
No more lack Annsuong, no
Scott Scuddu. They're with CleveJanel:
· lnsteld, the Reds now boesl of a
rotation that includes GreJ
Swindell, Tim Belcher, lose Rljo
1114 Tom
Brownlag;
a batting onler
'
.

that starts with Bip Roberts; and an arthroscopic surgery after the seaeveryday lineup that still ranks son.
among tl.e besl
The rest of the competition will
General manager Bob Quinn, be for backup roles, middle relief
criticized for refusing to make a and the fifth staner's spot There
trade as the team collapsed last sea- arc plenty of candidates: the Reds
son, is now ge,tting praised for turn- are taking 58 players to camp.
ing it around.
.
"We've got a lot of people to
"They should he very proud of see," Piniella said. "We're going
what they accomplished at the win- to work these guys hard, get them
ter meetings," reliever Rob Dibble in physical shape to play and mensaid. "It's tremendous."
tally m shape to play. It's going to
"We recognized that we needed be a tough camp."
to make some changes if we wantl&gt;iniella was tough last year,
ed to stay as competitive as we when t~e Reds were coming off
were the year before, " Piniclla their improbable World Series
said. "Bob did a heck of a job. We sweep. But the message didn't sink
had a game plan we put to~ether in. Several players admitted they
starting at the World Scnes m lost their edge, contributing 10 the
Atlania, and it was followed flfth·place finish.
.
through."
Those who wa1ehed from a disExpect a few more moves in tance could see it wasn't the same
training camp, which opens Thurs· team.
day when pitchers and catchers
"I think that might have hapreport. At'least two starting posi· pened a little bit last year,"
lions are open.
Swindell said. "They' say, well, we
The infield is set with Hal Mor- were there in '90, why should we
ris at fi!St base, Bill Doran at sec· try this year? I think they got a
and Barry Larkin- now a $5 mil· taste of wbat it's 1~. and hopefullio~-a-year player- at shortstOp ly they'D be ready to try to get that
and Chris Sabo at third. Roberts, feeling back."
obtained in the Myers trade, will
Just what PinieUa has in mind.
start in left, and Paul O'Neill is
"We've got a lot to prove this
back in righl
· season," he said. "I really don't
.
·
want to dwell on last year an)"IIIOre.
Davis' centez field position will It's history. We need to get back to •
be filled by either Billy Hatcher, business this )'Ul.
·Reggie·Sanders or Dave Martinez,
"We'~e got the talent here. It's
acquired from Montreal. And a btllclw thll Cl1l beat )'llllin ~Jot
catcher loe Oliver could lose his 1 of ways. Wc'vcjust &amp;OliO pt t1ae
job if he's not m:overcd from the. JUYI in shape IIIII get theni to play
ann problems that interfered ~th toaether • a team, and we're goina
bis ~\ving laSt year ll1d required tobe fine."

1
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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page . C2-sunday Times Sentinel

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February 16, 1992

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OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Strong second half earns GABS atleast s!!!r.~ of SEOAL title:
GALLIPOLIS • GaU!polis Local28-19 during .lhe ~eight
erupted for 47 second half pqtnts 10 minlllCS of play to WID gomg awa,.
post a 67·51 vi~tory over visiting
The victory upped Gallipolis'
Warren Local Friday rught '
season record to 13·5. The Blue
~ biumph ~Coach Jim Devils are 7-2. insid_e the ,conferOsbOrtlc's Blue Devils of at least a ence. Coach Jeff Sb'lctletl.s War·
tie.for the 1991-92 Southeaste':'l riors dropped to 7·11 on the year
Ohio League basketball champ•- .and 3-5 in league play.
onship. A victory 81 Jack5ol! ln the
·Three Blue Devils finished in
league finale Friday will ~1ve the double figures in scoring, led by
Gallians this year's undisputed Hoffman's 17 inarlcen. Scou Jivichampionship.
den added 13 and Chad Barnes
Marietta kept its title hopes nine. Hall had niile while David
alive by ourscoring Athens 71-64 at Hallet ftnished wilh eigiiL
Marieua Friday nighL Tile Tigers
Oallipolis connected on 23 of 48
finish up at Warren Local this Fri· field goal attempts for 47 percenL
day. Logan eliminated Jackson · The Gallians were 15 of 20 at the
from the tide picture with a 52-37 line, had 13 personals, 29
triumph.
rebounds, nine by Hoffman, 11
"Our defensive play kept us turnovers, 19 assists, nine by
alive the fust half,' said Osborne as Barnes and five by Ryan Young,
the Gallians struggled through the eight steals, two each by Miller and
first 16 minutes of action. It was Hall.
10-10 after one period. GAHS held
Warren's Chris Ruble was the
a slim one-point halftime lead, 20- only player in double figures with
19.
II. Gallia defenders held high·
It was nip and tuck in the third scoring Jason Harris to eight and
period until Eric Hoffman hit back· Ryan Dennis to seven tallies.
to-back goals· one a driving layup
"You have to give the.ir defense
(6:25) and another a three-pomter~r'ttoo," Osborne sa1d. "They
f.rom out front (5:28). That.pul · a real good .ibb on us in the firSt
GAHS on top 28-24. Th~ G~
, holding our rop two scorers to
were never headed. GaU1pohs led just one point;"
39-34 going into the fmal period.
The Warriors finished with 21
Gallipolis, ignited by Nathan field goals out of 47 for 44 percent
Miller's two three-point bombs and The Warriors were seven of 12 at
Dryan Hall's driving layups and the line, had 17 personals, 20
rebounding, outscored Warren rebounds, four by Andy Merrells,

and 15~C?ven:

.
Gall1pohs will playtts S!l¥on
finale at home Saturday agamst
Wheelersburg ~ the league ~de 81 Jackson Fnday. MC&amp;Dwhile,
;Narren plays at Jackson T.uesdaY
1n a. mate'!p game, and willhost
MarieuaFriday.,
In Friday's reserve game, V~,arreo Local held a 26-24 lead gomg

into the final period butlh~ Blue
Imps scon:d the firSt 14 pomts of
the final quartet to post a 48-~7
victory, The loss avenged an earlier
overtime loss at Vincent on Jan. 10.
Phil McGraw led Warren w1th
nine points. Jeff Pope tossed in 12
and Jason Castor nine to pace the
Blue
now 9-9 overaH and 4-5
inside

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BLAIR SHOOTS • Ga!Upolls' Adam Blair (3Z) shoots a short
~umper over Warren Local dertlldtr Jason Harris (14) during Fri·
ay's SEOAL hardwood contest iD the GAHS gym. The GaUians
Svon 67·51. On left Is Warren's Chris Ruble (44). On right is Eric
:Uarper(J4).

LOGAN- Logan held Jackson
to five points in a 17-minute span
in the second and third quarters 10
notch a 52-37 Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League win over the Ironmen Fridsy.
Logan is now 9·10 overall and
5-4 in the league. Jackson falls 10
I 0· 7 overall and 4·4 in the
SEOAL.
Jackson led 14-11 after one peri·
od, and sliD led 21-19 with 5:24 in
the second period. But the lronmen
didn't score again before the half as
Logan took a 26-21 lead at inter·
mission.
Jackson didn't score again until
Mall Walburn hit a three-pointer
with 2:36 left in the third quarter.
During Jackson's scoreless span
the Chieftains scored 13 straight
points to lead 32-21. Logan led 34·
24 after three periods.
Jackson cut the lead to six
points in the fourth quarter before
Logan put the game away at the
foul line. The Chieftains hit 12
straight from lhe line over the final
three minutes 10 pull away for the
win. ·
Joe Hanning led the Chieftains
with 15 points, with Chris Conrad
adding 12 and 6-foot-8 Eric Burris
getting II points and 16 rebounds.
Logan clinched the outright
SEOAL reserve title with a 49-44
win in the preliminary game. Chad
Zimmennan scored 15 and Dustin
Dennis 10 for the Chieftains, 9· 1 in
the league and 13-6 overall. Dennis
Crabtree led Jackson with 17

SEO, opponents
-:
(All games)
'4am
WL
POP
Qesapeake ...... .l9 0 1372 1049
W.averly ............. l6 3 1419 1307
11airland ............. l4 4 1220 1007
Qiillipolis .......... .l3 5 1020 901
5\)uthern ............ ll 6 1208 1065
Jlctoon .............. IO 7 1023 1040
lt1arieua ...............8 9 1006 1015
Wheelersburg ......8 9 1173 1125
l#Jgan ..................9 10 1163 1178
Portsmouth ..........7 9 1145 1069
. Greenf~tld ...........7 10 805 818
'o}'arrcll Local ......7 II 1237 1220
Point PleasanL.....4 13 1024 1240
'linton County ....4 14 979 1103
~s .................2 16 1003 1215
•
(SEOAL VARSITY)
T.caur
W L
P OP
O;illipolis .............7 2 518 465
lotarieua ...............6 3 558 510
................54578SSI
................4 4 451 435
Loca1 ......3 5 498 SS6

Last night's games:
Wellston 81 Jackson
Trimble at Athens
Worthington 81 Portsmouth
West Union 81 Greenf~tld
South Point at Wheelersburg
Fairland at Huntington East
Tuesday's aames:
Warren Local at Jackson (MU)
Pt. Pleasant 81 Ripley
Rock Hill 81 CMsspe•ke
Southern at Kyger Creek .

71Adlw64

'

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McCULLOCH.

NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY, 9:30 AM·S PM .
SATURDAY, 9:30 AM-5 PM; SUNDAY, 11 AM-6 PM
: . THE BASELINES were among the ravorlte shoollllg areas ror
Southwestern postman Chris MandeviUe (SO), who takes the shot in
:the paint while Kyger Creek's Chris Crace (22) derends on tbe play
)lurmg Friday night's game at Southwestern High School, which the
Highlanders lost 60-41. Mandeville led bis team wilb 19 points.
:(Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

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Magazine remembers Rio
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Quarter totals
., .
Kyger Creek .......22 16 16 6"' 60 •.
Soulhwestcm ...... 13 8 18 2 = 41
KYGER CREEK (60) - , .
Crace 7·2·1=21; Covey 2-5..0.19; ,,
Bradbury 4-1,2:13; Kingery 2..0' .
3=7. TOTALS -15-8-6=60
,.
Field goals- 23-48 (47.9%) ~·
Three-pointers 8-IS, :
(53.3%)
..
Free throws - 6-8
Rebounds- 21 (C111Ce 7)
Assists - 6 (Villanueva. 5)
Steals- 12 (Crace 4)
(See BOBCATS on C-4)

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{i) RU(iER

60-·41

'

overtime came on the sixth and
final three-pointer by freshman
c~nter Mik; Bradbury, who led all
scorers with 18 points - all on
treys. But a basket by Trevor Ash·
worth, who finished with a team·
high 14 points, cut KC's lead to
one, and turnovers ill the last
minute of OT preceded lhe whisde
on Bobcat Eric Greer, who was
called for a foul away from the ball
with no time left That sent Massie,
who finished with six points, to lhe
line for the game-winning free

MARlETT A (71) - Mike
Smith 6-0·5=17, Ryan Robinson 0·
3-0=9, Josh Offenberger 1-0-2=4,
Cam Mcintyre 0.0·1=1, Chad Lin·
coin 7-0·8=22, Doug Zoller 4-0·
8=16, Ben Kroft 1-0-0=2;
TOTALS- 19·3·24=71
Field goals- 22-40 (55%)
Three-polnters-3-7
Free tbrows-24-42(57.1)
Rebounds -17
Assists -17 (Robinson 7)
Steals - 23 (Lincoln 8)
Turnovers - 19
Fouls -18

-sECOND ·LOCATION--

*99''

with one of the$e symbols •••

ASsists-15
Steals -12
Turnovers- 13
Fouls-22
LOGAN (52) -Joe Hanning
3-1-6=15; Chris Conrad 2·2·2=12;
Ian Riddlebarger 1-0-6=8; Chad
Stivison 1·0-0=2; Eric Burris 5·01=11; Tom Smith 2-0-0=4 .
TOTALS 14-3-15=51
Field goals -17-49 (.347)
Free throws- 15-25 (.@)
Rebounds - 41
Turnovers - 15
Team routs- 13
Marietta 71, Athens 64
At Marietta, Chad Lincoln and
Mike Smith put the roar in Mariet·
ta's offense by combining for 39
poiqts to pa~e the Tigers to a
.' sevetf-poini win over Athens.
The Bulldogs were fueled by
Pat McHugh's 14 points, 13-point
effons by Sunny Kalu and Jason
Reed, and a 12-point effort by
Jus tin Scholl.
In the reserve game, Marietta
beat Athens S4-51. Andy Divin led
the Tigers with 14. and Troy Bolin
led the Bulldogs wilh 12.
.
Quarter totals
Athens ................... 8 10 2026= 64
Marieua ................ 8 15 2226= 71
ATHENS (64) - Justin Scholl
6-0-0=12, Pat McHugh 5.0-4=14,
Jason Reed 1-3·2=13, Dan Kiger 2·
0-0=4, Scott Hillli:irk 2·0·0=4,
Sunny Kalu 6-0-1=13, Kyle Lonas
1..0-0=2. TOTALS - 24-3·7=64
Field goals- 27-56 (48.2%)
Three-pointers- 3-10 (30%)
Free throws -7-12 (58.3%)
Rebounds- 32
(Kal u
&amp; SchoolS each)
Assists-15 (McHugh 6)
Steals- 12 (McHugh 4)
Turnovers- 35
Fouts-35

: Scoring 116 points in a single withdrew his support for Oliver.
s,ame. Putting Rio Grande on !.tie
Also included are events follow·
map. Pushing the Redmen basket· ing Francis' college dsys, such as
!Oill team to heights previously .llis and Oliver's signing on with the
unknown for a club spawned by a Harlem Globetrollers before the
oollege founded by 19th-century two drifted apart and went their
Baptists.
separate ways, and how his disiUu·
~. That's what Clarence (Bevo) sionment with fame eventually
F.rancis meant to Rio Grande Col· caused him to leave basketball in
lege nearly 40 years ago, according the early 1960s for employment in
ui "Bevo's Odyssey," the opening construction, trucking, etc.
alticle of the February-March issue
of Timeli1111 mll$azine, published by
tfle Ohio Histoncal Society. .
• Though the article focuses on
I
Francis, a. 6-foot-9 center whose
jilmp shot W\IS virtually undefend·
. 447 .Second Avt. • GALLIPOLIS • 446·2924
able, it also mates reference to
Newt Oliver, his cpach, and the one
tl)ing they had in common - .roots'
in· the coalfields of Appalachian
Ohio..
·
: Francis, who averaged 30.6.
points per game in his final year of
h1gh school, had his first brush
"'ith fame shonly after achieving
rccoginition by the International
~ews Se1Vice and The Associated
Press. His being named the teeipi·
ent of the Helms FoundatiQn award.
~ the fust Ohio high school ath·
1~ so hon«cd -ft was the flCSI of
many honors anil trophies that
tOday, in Francis' homQ in eastern
Qhio, are packed away.
• Francis' 116-point ~e in Jan·
$)', 1953, aJainst v1siting Ash·
land (Ky.) Jumor College at '!JC old
CommJauty Hall - a feat still not .
f0r111ally recognized by lhe NCAA
r:Jt the NAIA - turned the eyes oC
· America to Rio Grande. Banner
~li~ on newspapers !ICf0$5 the
cquntry, magazine arucles and
~ENGINE REPAIR eOIL CHANGE .SHOCKS
newsreels in their fmal days durin~
, - - · · infiiiCy lOUted Francis
•STRUTS.•ALIGNMENT -MUFFLERS ·
: Qblovomeql, and from there, th~
·.COMPUTER BALANCING •TUNE·UP
I(edmen were heidcd toward the
!~light.
.
. • QUALITY TIRES
•• Tbo article also addresses the
that Rio Orando'a pres!·
dint, Charles Davia, f.culty mcm... bon. alumni and trustees shared
tout the fame tho behhalltcam
·\jill rec•lvlnJ. Alao mentioned
the conciliatOry Davis, ·
to keep the Otristl8n Ira·
wbo aupported the COl· .
,
I~ bappy wltile lnaldq 111n1 the · ·
Aidmeli weren't hampcied durinJ
' tlfllr day In tho 1un, eventually
446·2924
lidod with the conservalivea and

'.•

od.The Bobcats' only points in · · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

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HUttTER'S HEfiDQUfiRTE~S

.

the waning minutes of the first
quarter before the scarlet and g111y
began to apply pressure-cooker
defense and an offense that reUed
as much on three-pointers (Kyger
had three of its ejght in lhe second
· quaner to keep its lead permanent·
ly in double digits) as it did on bold
drives in lhe paint and passes into
the lane for jumpers and layups
(Bradbury, who finished with 13
points, was as much a practicioner
of those deeds as Crace).
The Highlanders, in spite of
solid offensive efforts from Man·
deville (19 pointS) and Morse (12),
found themselves ·victimized by
Bobcat stalls in the second half as
much as by KC's smothering
defense. Otherwise, both teams
would have not combined for four
fewer points in the fourlh quarter as
Crace had in the rust.
This week's agenda
Kyger Creek, who hosted Iron·
ton St. Joe Saturdar night, will
entertain Southern in liS final home
game Tuesday night before hitting
the road Fridsy night as Oak Hill's
guest team. Southwestern will head
west to face Qak Hill Tuesday
night before playing Southern at
Racine Friday night
Southwestern
reserves win in OT
In the preceding reserve contest,
two free throws by Jimmy Massie
on a one-and-one situation wilh no
time left in overtime spelled a 4645 victory for Southwestern.
Chip Haggerty's Bobcats took a
34-26 lead into the fourth quarter,
but Jesse Ehman's Highlanders
outscored their guests 16-8 in
crunch time to force an extra peri-

SE0 AL gameS ... ~&lt;C::::on::::tin::::ued=fro:.:::m.::.C·::I..2)_ __

NI!W IIOD!L 2SIIN

t'.w. . . . . i ~ ~~~
:
(SEOAL RESERVES)
t:
........ ~ ~ ~
~ ............. 6 j '42i 418

.i ·m..
eu·::::r:.':

The McCulloch TITAN! SO Cha1n Saw 1s a pa.overful value
• 3.1 cuboc-orch eng•ne

Free throws - 4-7
Rebounds- 27
on

East Clinton at Greenfield
Vinton County at MiUer
Friday's games:
Gallipolis at Jackson
Marie!IB at Warren Local
Logan at Athens
Ponsmoulh at Greenup
Waverly aiMinford
Southwestern at Southern
Hillsbbro at Greenfield
West at Wheelersburg
Fairland at Buffalo

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Starr
GAGE - In Friday night's
SVAC game between Kyger Creek
and Southwestern, Kyger Creek
had three hot hands. Southwestern
had two. Any question as to who
won?
·
The solid shooting of sopho·
mores Chris Crace and Paul Covey
and senior Phil Bradbury paced
Kyger Creek to a 60-41 win over
Southwestern in the Highlanders'
final game (Parents Appreciation
Night) at Soutliwestern High
School.
The 5-foot·ll Crace, who was
moved.to center from his usual forwardposition,madethemostofhis
new assignment by chatting up 12
of his game-high 21 points -a
season high fr:Jt him - in the fust
quarter. He was just what the Bobcats needed to help put offensive
distance between themselves and
their hosts, whose lead - an
advantage created by a Chris Mandeville 12-foot jumper 19 seconds
into the·game-lasted 43 seconds.
At the expiration of that time,
Bobcat forwll(d Paul Covey floated
in a three-point shot from the left
comer to give his team a 3-2 lead.
And even though Crace's expansion of thai lead to 5·2 on a layup
with 6:51 left in act one was erased
on a Mandeville layup and a bonus
foul shot (Covey's fust traffic tick·
et made it possible) that tied the
game at 5·5, the Bobcats reeled off
II unanswered points before the
Highlanders brought their guests'
ltiad back down to single digits
with a Jamie Morse trey from the
right corner with 4:30 left.
from
ninethat,
to five
nine in
After
KC'sback
lead tofluctuated

points.
Quarter totals
Jackson ............... 14 7 3 13 = 37
Logan .................. ll 15 8 18 = 52
JACKSON (37) - Matt Wal·
burn 1-1-0=5; David Seymore 0-1·
0=3; Willie Woodard 4-0·1=9,
Brad Muon 2-1-0=7; Mike Morgan
2-0·2=6, Brent Jewell 3 ·0· 1=7.
TOTALS 12·3-4=37
Field goil.ls- 15-50 (30%)

~.,·--------Cage standings----------

..••

UNWAVERING CONCENTRATION is what Kyger Creek center Chris Crace (22) shows as be goes to the hoop against Southwestern's Cbrls Mandeville (50) and Jamie Morse (right) in tbe
third quarter or Friday night's SVAC game a) Southwestern High
SchooL Crace scored a game·bigb 21 points to belp push the Bob·
to 60-41 victory. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

POWER
AND PERFORMANCE

Logan, Marietta also post
SEO AL victories Friday

•:

3: ·.

.' .

CLINCHES SHARE OF SEOAL TITLE - GaUipolis dereated
visiting Warren Local 67-51 Friday night berore a large Parents
Night crowd to cUncb at least a share or the 1991-92 Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League basketball championship. In the rront row are
(rront row, L-R) Bryan Hall, Nathan Miller, Chad Barnes, Scott
Jividen and Adam Blair. Standing are bead coach Jim Osborne,
Bob Mabry, Eric Hoffman, David Hager, Rusty Mobley, Brad Mur·
pby, Ryan Young and varsity assistant Roger Brandeberry. Not pic·
lured is Darin Powell.

Sout~western

·Kyger Creek downs

WarrenLocal ...... IO 9 1517 = 51 51.
;:
Gallia Academy..IO 10 19 28 = 67
GALLIPOLIS (67) • Chad ·
WARREN LOCAL (51) . Barnes, 4·2-10; Scou Jividen, I· ::
Scou Brackenridge, 3-2-8; Jason • (3)-2-13· Nathan MiUer 0-(2)46· •·
Burroughs, ()..(!)-0-0-3: Chris Car· Ryan YOung, 1.()..2; A~ Blair, 1: ·:
penter, 0.1·1; Jason C111vens, 1.().. 0-2. Eric Hoffman, 5·( 1)-4·17· •·
2; Ryan Dennis, 3-1-7; Eric Harp- Da;id Hager, 2-4-8; Bryan HaD,
er, 1·(1)·0-5; Jason Harris, 4·0-8; 3-9· Brad Murphy 0·0·0· Darin ··
Aaron. Merrells, 2-2-6; Chris Po~ ell, 0-0-0. TOTALS '17·(6)· . ·
Ruble, 5-1·11. TOTALS 19-(Z)-7- 15-67.
•·

nmes-Sentlnei-Page C3' ,.

�,..

.,p

•

C4 Sunday nmes Sentinel

Page

.

'

February 16, 1992

Pomeroy-Mfddleport""'-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt P!Usant, wv

'

P~meroy-Middleport-Galllpolls,

Southern knocks off Oak Hill.74-58 to tie for first in SVAC
By DAVE HARRIS
T·S Correspondent
RACINE~ Southern shot a
blistering 67% from the floor and
placed three players in double fig·
ures as the Tornadoes defeate4 Oak
Hill 74-58 in SVAC basketball
action Friday evening in Racine.
The win avenges a 67-59 loss to
the Oaks back on January lOth in
Oak Hill.
The win put the Tornadoes back
into a fltSt play tie with the Oalcs,
as both teams own 9-2 conference
records. The loss drops Oak Hill's
overall record to 12-5 while Southem owns a 10-7 mark.

Oak Hill jumped out to a early
8-2 lead on a bucket by Bill Potter
at the 2:15 marie of the firSt period.
But Michael. Evans started the Tornadoes comeback with a 15-footer
with I :12 left in the period. Billy
Davis completed a three-point play
with 34 seconds left in the f.riod
to cut Oak Hill lead to ·10- . Roy
Lee Bailey's bucket with two seconds left pulled the Tornadoes to
I 0-9 at the end of the flfSt period.
Oak Hill came out in the second
period and jumped on top 17-13
when Mike Turner hit a threepointer with 5:10 left in the half.
But Southern went on a 8-2 run and

went on top 25-19 when Jeremy
Roush hit a 12-footer with 3:0lleft
in the half.
Southern increased the lead to
29-23 with 45 seconds left in the
period when Evans hit a pair of
free throws. But Devin Hale
answered with a three-pointer with
33 seconds left in the half, followed by a bucket by Benji Lewis
with three seconds left in the half
to cut the Southern lead to 29-28.
In the third period, Southern
took a 42-35 lead on a bucket by
Roush at the 3:55 mark, but Lewis
drilled a three-pointer with 3:25
left in the period to cut the lead to

42-38. Southern took a 50-44 lead
in the final period when Joshua
Codner scoretl with I: II left in the

.

~rioo.

The fourth period started with 6foot-7 Oak Hill center Chris Simpson on the bench in foul trouble
and Lewis trying to get the Oaks'
offense in gear, but to no avail.
Southern built up a 62-50 lead at
the 4:03 mark on a bucket by Bailey. Potter scored with 2:38 left in
the game to cut the Southern lead
back to 10, but Lewis picked up his
fifth foul with 2:00 left. The last
two minutes of the game turned
into a foul shooting contest as the

·Tornadoes pulled away down the
stretch.
It was an outstanding team
effort for Southern as every ope
who played conlributed in (llle way
or another. Evans, who had an·outstanding $arne to lead the purple
and ROid m scoring with 18, also
pulled in a team-high 10 of Southern's 37 rebounds. Bailey added 17
points despite sittinf out a good bit
of the game in fou trouble, and a
steady Roush added 15 points.
Southern hit 26 of 39 from the
floor for 67% and cashed in 19 of
26 from the line for 73%.
Lewis led all scorers with 25,

hitting on a variety of shots. Potter
was the only other Oak in double
figures with 10. Oak Hill was 20 of
52 from the floor for 38%, including four of 12 from three-point
range, and cashed in ()n 8 of 12
from the line for 67%. Oak Hill had
22 rebounds, with Potter pulling
down 10 and Simpson getting nine.
In the reserve contest, Scott
Wickline's Tornadoes jumped out
to an early lead and rolled to a 57 40 victory. Ryan Williams led the
Southern attack with 17, Robert
Rieber added 10. Wes McCorkle
led the Oaks with 10. ·
(See TORNADOES on C-5)

In th!! NBA •••
EASTERN CONFERENCE
T...
WL~LGB
NewYad£ .............. 31 17 .646

o.........................21 21

Jimmy Brace en route to a 82-69
win over the Hannan Trace Wildcats in an SVAC game Friday
night.
In the first quarter, Eastern
made the early connection from

Symmes Valley hands North
Gallia 80-73 defeat Friday
AID - North Gallia's Pirates
and Symmes Valley's Vikings each
put four players in double figures
in Friday night's game . So why
didn't the Pirates drop an 80-73
decision to the Vikings, thus failing
once again to follow up a win with
another victory?
The Pirates, who stepped up
their offensive production in the
fltSt half to take an eight-pointlead

SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
OakHill ............ 12 5
Eastern .............. 10 6
Southern ............ 10 7
Hannan Trace ......9 9
North Gallia ........6 9
Kyger Creek ........6 10
Symmes Valley ...5 12
Southwestern .......2 16

PF
1131
1110
1198
1128
905
865
1005
992

PA
989
1115
1075
1187
1023
956
1099
1251

(Confertnce)
Southern ..............9 2· 830 639
Oa1: Hill ..............9 2 767 650
Hannan Trace ......8 4 819 755
Eastern ................7 4 744 720
North Gall ia ........6 5 723 728
Symmes Valley .. .3 8 648 713
Kyger Creek ....... J 8 587 679
Southwestern.......0 12 651 885
TOTALS ••••••.••45 45 5769 5769
(Reserves • SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ........... .IO 0 629 370
E~tern ................9 I 517 438
Symmes Valley ...6 4 478 498
OakHill ... ...........4 6 456 471
Kyger Creek ....... .3 6 380 421
Hannan Trace ..... J 7 452 538
North Gallia ....... .3 1 402 494
Southwestern .......2 9 419 503
TOTALS ...••••...44 44 3733 3733
Friday's scores
(varsity)
Southern 74, Oak Hill 58
Eastern 82, Hannan Trace 69
Symmes Valley 80, North Gallia
73
.
Kyger Creek 60, Southwestern 41
(reserves)
Southern 57, Oak Hill40
Eastern 57, Hannan Trace 49
Symmes Valley 46, North Gallia

39

Southwestern 46, Kyger Creek 45
(OT)
They played Saturday
Eastern at Waterford
Ironton St. Joe at Kyger Creek

at halftime, saw their oiTense all
but disappear in the third quarter, a
frame that saw Valley reversed its
trend in offensive production with
27 points en route to the win.
Sophomore guard Jerome Fuller
and senior frontman Andy Lester
paced the Vikings with 25 and 20
points, re~tively. Senior forward
Darin Sm1th led the Pirates, who
once again failed to win their second straight game of the season.
with 21.
This week's action will see
Symmes Valley play at Hannan
Trace Tuesday, rerum home to take
on Eastern Friday and play at
Kyger Creek Saturday in a makeup
game. North Gallia will .host Eastem Tuesday before playing road
games against Hannan Trace (Friday) and Oak Hill (Saturday).
Quarter totals
North Gallia ........ l8 21 7 23 = 73
Symmes Valley ..16 15 27 22 = 80
SYMMES VALLEY (80)Fuller 8-1-6=25; Lester 8-0-4=20;
Dillon 1-2-4=12; Blake 5-0-0=10;
Pierce 1-1-2= 7; Jenkins 2-0-2=6.
TOTALS -25-4-18=80
Field goals- 29-64 (45.3%)
Free throws- 18-26 (69.2%)
Rebounds - 31 (Lester 9)
Turnovers - 17
NORTH GALLIA (73)
Smith 6-1-6=21; Hunt 7-0-2= 16;
Peck 7-0-2=16; Canady 6-0-1=13;
McCarley 3-0-1=7. TOTALS26·3-12=73
Field goals- 29-62 (46.8%)
Three-pointers- 3-6
Freetbrows-12-15 (80%)
Rebounds - 23 (Hunt &amp; Smith
7 each)
Aasists - 21 (McCarley 5)
Steals- 9 (Peck 3)
Turnovers - 15
RESERVE GAME- Symmes
Valley 46, North Gallia 39
Leading scorers - Todd
Robinson (SV) - 12; Jeremy
Belville (NG) - 22

..

Orlondo ••...........•.... t2

goal range for 53. 7%. The Eagles
were9-!8 for 50%.
In the reserve contest, Eastern
posted a 5749 win over the Wildcats. Eastern was led by Robert
Reed with 20. Wes Arbaugh added
14 and Jeremy Cline had 10. Hannan Trace was led by Heath
Hutchinson and Brett Cremeens,
who scored 10 points each.
Eastern is now I 0-6 overall, 7-4
in the SVAC. Hannan Trace. is 9·9
overall, 8-4 in the SVAC.
Quarter totals
HannanTrace ..... lliO
69
. . . . 1929=
. . .

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tum

Mldw•l DIYIIIon

WL

.S71
.S20
.3118

4
6.5
13

Dallal .....................14 3.5
Mmnoo... ................9 39

.216

18

.118

22S

Pocllk Dl"'loo

14 .714
IS .674 .

11
20
24
2l
32

.640
.l92
.S20
.490
.347

2l
3.5

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•••ar.l•g·•,_.,l

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mal offlce.

to
uotlw
Is
lllurt ll't rulllllags of ••cadtlact101 wtt•
ada!lnl1tradon. It - • thlllt ••
II favor ol •r rtllrl to

,

WuJUnatona! PbotrUJ., 9:30p.m.

Seaalc It Goldm Sta.te, 10:30 p.m.

Today's games
Delroit It Pltiloddpltio, l p.m.
Milwaube at Orlmdo, 2 p.m.
Miomi 11 Chot!- 2:30 p.m.
B01um at LA. Llkrn. 3:30p.m.
San Antonio 1t Saaamc:nto, 9 p.m.
l...A. Cippa~al Poola.nd, 10 p.m.

•

Transactions

BasebaU

Al'l'lfrkan t.naue

MINNESOTA TWINS - Apod to
with Lenny w~. catthcr; Rob .
WU~«~ut, ptthcr, and Terry J~

tt.mll

em me-year can.EII.cu.
SEATIU! MARINERS - Apod 1o
tcrm1 with Bri111. Holm.ln, pitcher, on 1
infield~.

IWOo)Ut CODUIQ.

PU. GFGA
69 Z3l 192 ·

61 182169
l9 194190

53182189
45 158 204

Smjlhe)ll"'loo
VanC(I.IVCf ......... 3011 a 68198172
Edmontm .........• :IS 26 7 . 51 210214
Wimipcs .••..•...•• 23 :tlll S7 174172
t...An 1o~......... 22 22 13 l7 200212
Colgoey ....•... ,..... 2216 I l2 :Wl201
SanJ01c ........... .. 13 40 4 30 1492.54

thfte.yeu conlnct.

Natlonall.aaue
ATLANTA BRAVES - Ag=l to
term• witb Donnil Burlina•mo, Pat
Gomez and O.vid Nicd, pi&amp;ehm, tnd R1,
mon Carablllo, infielder; on one-year

"""""'·
CINCINNAn
U:rrtll .tlh Paul

IEDS - Aareed lo
outtklder, 011

O'Ntll~

a three-yur contract.

MONTREAL EXPOS - Apod to
terms will! Mitt Slain and John Vander
Wli, outfielders; Kent Bottenfield •nd
Pete Youna. piu:hen; 1nd Bob N1111,

cai.C:bct, on onc-vcar CC11tncll.

Hockey

N1tlon1l Hockey ~~~e

MOI'ITREAL CANADIEN$ -

s,..

pcndcd Shayne~· 1~ wing. in~­
nitcly, for h.i1 pan m an oil-tee lltereltlm.

· CoUege
MARIETTA- Announced tht resl&amp;nadon ol Georae Freebenyatr, men'a
buketball c:o~ch, errecthe at the end ot
the atuon.

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Two
pla~ers ~ot big ~ictories in salary
arbitration wh1le three others
avoided hearings by agreeing to
multityear contracts.

Seattle .outticlder Jay ·Bohner
and Baltimore pitcher Bob Milacki
won in decisions announced Friday.. .
.
.
Cmcmnau outfielder Paul
O'Neill agreed to a $10.5 million,
three-year deal and Toronto outfielder Devon White agreed to a
three-year contract with an option
worthatotalof$!0millionguaranteed. Seattle pitcher Brian Hohnan,
who probably won't pitch this season following surgery, agreed to a
$1.55 million, two-year contraeL
Boston infielder Jody Reed and
Texas pitcher Kenny Rogers went
through with hearings Friday, leaving22 remaining in arbitration with

-" · •
11Offluuf!eS
wm...

(ConunuedfromC-4)
Southern will travel to Kyger
Creek lo tangle with the Bobcats,
while Oak Hill will host Southwestern.
Quarter totals
Oak Hill .............. IO 18 1614 = 58
Southern ...........•...9 20 2124 = 74
OAK HILL (58) - Benji
Lewis 8-1-6=25, Chris Simpson 40-0=8, Bill Potter 5-0-0=10, Mike
Turner 1-1-0=5, Devin Hale 1-10=5, Gene Hall 2-0-1=5. TOTALS
-ll-3-7=58
SOUTHERN (74) - Jeremy
Roush 4-0-7=15, Mark Allen 2-02=6, Roy Lee Bailey 8-0-1=17,
Michael Evans 5-1·5=18, Scott
Lisle 2-0-1=5, Joshua Codner 1-00=2, Ryan Williams 0-0-2=2, Billy
Davis 1-0-1=3, Michael Russell 20-(}--4, Russell Singleton 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS- 26-1-19:74

PinaburJb at Minncaota, 8 p.m.

~~at Montrell1 8:05 p.m.
WWDpcf.lt Toronto, B:OS p.m.
Calp.ry at St Louil, 8:35p.m.
Wuhington 11 Loa Angela, 10:3S
p.m.

Today's games
N.Y: Ranacn
pm.

It

New Ieney, \:35

lloftlanl ot Buffalo, 7:0l pm.
Pit~aburgh at Philadelphil, 7:0S p.m.
F.dmantm It Tormto,7:0S p.m.
Cl.!guy 11 Chieaao. 8:3S p.m.

Major college
basketball scores ·
East

AI R

one week remaining. Owners have · ·-' .
won eight of 12 cases decided thus · : •
far.
.
.
·. · •
Arb1!rator G1l Vernon chose · •
Buhner s request of $1,445,000 •.'
rather than Seattle's offer of . ~
$750,000, g1vmg the outftelder a -..·
five-fold increase from his 1991 . · .
income of $247,500. Bu~ner hit
.244 in !991 with a team-leading .... ·
27 homers and 77 RBJs,
,
In Baltimore's first hearing :--.
since 1980, arbitrator Anthony •· •
Sinicropi awarded Milacki $1.18 .. • ,
million instead of Baltimore's ?ffer •
of$700,000. The 2~-year-old nght- :•
bander was 10-9 w1th a 4.01 ERA ·'
last season and made $280,000.

THE FOLLOWING FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS WILL BE

CLOSED

Don't Trip
n The Rim!
sas"

. · ·~

..

· ..,

•••

...

•'•

MONDAY, FEBRUARY. 17
IN OBSERVANCE OF
PRESIDENT'S DAY

p.m.

Tbey ployed Saturday

honest111d

T
9
II
9
5
S

Tbey plaved Saturday

New lel'lt)' at C~wl•nd, 7:31p.m.
lndilna 1t Minnoaota, I p.m.
New Y&lt;xk atOicaao, 8:30p.m.
HOUitoo at DaUu, ! :30 p.m.
Deaver at Utah, 9:3(1 p.m.

'!;:..••••

W L
lO II
2l 21
2l23
Minneldl .......... 2426
Toronto .............. 20 31

Edmoni.Cilat i'twaddphia, J :OS p.m.
Hanfmi1t New Jcney, 1:3.5 p.m.
SanJc.uLDeuoit, 7:35p.m.
Vancouver at N.Y.lllaoden, 7:35

I.A. Cippen I Ol.l'booniJ. 97
Wultin&amp;toaiOI,l.A. Lokm 92
Podlancflf11, S•cramcnto 106

lwtl¥1 yean I hd th plmort ol
HfYiag your c-nlly •• Hs.Sl!idlf. It wa•
ay prlvlllfl to lllpl..•t ••IY U.tlldal
prtvtltltl
--lfy ''"""'
cam as tllo r
patrol ol canty riaols, a.dd
Flai'!JI'!It Prorill, CrJ.. Alert·HIII;.illlood
Wale• Progra-. Spook O.t lJGllst Dr•t•
..,,.., HaRow111 candy ••trliotlos, ••11
....ly I•IIt• II &lt;lllltlut •d ,., luraotloo

Tum
llctmiL .............•
Oticogo............•
SL Louil ..........•

Buffalo7,SanJOI06 ·
N.Y. Ranacn 9, N.Y. ldandcn 2

Atlanta. 112. Odtndo to1
lndilnai07,MilwaukBD 100
HOUI!m 10S,BOIUII!o99
Dot...-lll!.llollu !l

as.

I

11

New-, 101, Philoddpltio 99

Gonup 81. Son FnhoiJoo 74
SL Muy'o. c.t. Ponlond 69

TORONTO BLUE JAYS - Apod

Frfday'sscores

18

Far West

w ICDnl whb lllriolt White, OUlficldct, on

6

9~

Friday's scores

·•..

·.
. .,·

•,_

..

•OHIO VALLEY BANK
llack
Block/White
N•·luck
•STAR BANK
Block
•UNITY
SAVINGS
&amp;
LOAN
CO.
THE
SHOE
CAFE
Laf:~"::aa
L---...:..:..::..:........:;___;,_ _ _
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ . . ·..
Air Bound

Wlllte/Purpltl

...;.:;;;t.;;;;:..~

Col.umbil 9-t, HarYard 76

•-r

In con•ldwllt _all Httados u4 ,., ...., of lltMJ u4 - • IHI woold ..
l'!kJIIIIIIt o~lulllfy It thlllk tfat capparlllll u4 YOIIII~ hot. Jl!llt
aad prtltlll, f.al mt ... iid Wlllt """"' It worll II IllY ...all. Unl111t... tfr, duo
to drcullltllllctt llntlll IIIJ cootrol. I do aotiMI I cu coduct o IICctnlul CIIIIJiolgo
llld wlaot 1111 '"' ~-'" "' IIIII tftcllol.
ThaM '"'" l•t lml '" ...t ..rtowtd llfl'l at.
t~u4ecf. !111

.....

"•.
&lt;• • •

..

.

' '

..

((:ontinued from C-3)
Turnovers- 7
SOUTHWESTERN (41)Mandeville 8-0-3=19; Morse 3-20=12; Massie 0-1-0=3; Simpson 00-3=3; K. Ashworth 1-0-0=2; T.
Ashworth 1-0-0=2. TOTALS13-3-6=41
Field goals-16-42 (38.1%)
Tbree·poillters - 2-7
Free throws- 6-10 (60%)

.

....

.&lt;

·'
••

Ama .

~

••

On page 7 Tof the February 16
circular, the sale &amp; regular
prices for the Mens &amp; Big Mens
Lee® Jeans were inadvertently
reversed. Lee® Mens Jeans
should be regular price $24.99
with a sale price of $19.99.
The Lee® Big Mens Jeans should
be regular price $29.99, sale
price $22.99 ..We apologize for
any Inconvenience.

'

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cooperatiVes don'.t invest
in technology. ..

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cuetomer,
we want to give you better service while we help
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CUSTOMER PROGRAMS, inci!Jdfng our level Payment
Plan lllCithl Ftrrettg• Installation ~lew.
~

Ferrellgu

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.Ul II

GB

.647

Ponlond •......••....... .ll
Ooldon Sllle ..........31
Plaocni.l. ..................12
L.A. l.Wn-···-······29
Soottle •.•.........•....••. 26
I.A. Qippen ......... 24
Sacnmmto .... ~ ...... l7

.
S~FETY••• w~ have one of the most ex~rienced propane
·deltvery teams in the busint81. We give ygu more for yqur
money when
ft COIIIII,IO. safety and dependability.
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Utoh .•........••..........33
San AnUiftio ...........28
H001tm ................ .26
DotYCr ......•• ~ ........ .19

yOiir 1ank. You get propane PLUS •..

---.

13

.
Ad.- Dl'lllon
M-..1 ..........• 34 21 • n 193145
Bootan.............. _ Z122 I 62 19l194
Buffolo .............• 22 26 10 l4 208 216
llortfonL.......•.. 16 Z110 42 I(&lt;; 188
Qu................... 1231 6 lO 164 229

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

:. Ferrellgas gives you a lot more than just what we put in

....

8.5

:IS .SOO 16 ,
MilwaukeB .............24 2.5 .490 16.S
lndlono ...................21 30 .412 20.l
Cborlouo ............•..IS 34 .306 :IS.S

Ferrell gas provides you with a long-term
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,..,

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Adonii ...•..........•••.:IS

PROPANE!

~

.240

g:.t:.;"d::::::
: :Jl.: :lf.
DotroU. ..............•••.21 22 .560

ANYONECANSELLYOU

l

· .347 14.l

CunniiMYidOft

Eastern ................22 20 22 1!1 = 82
EASTERN (82) - Tim Bissell
5-2-6-22, Terry McGuire 8-0-0-16,
Jeff Durst5-3-4-23, Chad Savoy 32-1=13, Charlie Bissell3-0-1=7,
Mike Newland 0-0-1=1. TOTALS
- 24-7-13=82
HANNAN TRACE (69) Jimmy Brace 1-12-0=38, Chad
Swain 3-1-1=10, Brian Unroe 3-10=9 , David Polling 3-0-0=6,
Shawn Cox 1-0-0=2, Matt Davis 10-0=2, Bryan Brumfield 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS -13-14-1=69

our collllltlllty I coHocltd •

-,·

'

I
I
II

Norrll DMa&amp;on

wort lportd
'~;~·~di wat aodt pullllc tit,,des
day ..fort
't tltc"

SCREWDRIVER SET

;

31

l.S

.480
.480
.420

Patrktr. IM._

TUII!
WL T PU. GPGA
N.Y. a..,....... n i&amp; 3 77 231186
w.................. 3319 l 71243191
New Ieney ....••• 2911 7 6S 208168
PitllbwJh ••.••.••~ 26 n 6 sa m 214
N.Y. blondcn ••• 22 26 7 ll :za7 22A
Plilloddpltio ....•• lO :IS 10 lO 1631112

Bobcats win ...

C9Z·1

This week's slate
Tuesday - Southern l!l Ky~er
Creek; Southwestern at Oak Hill;
Eastern at North Gallia; Symmes
Valley at Hannan Trace
Friday - Kyger Creek at Oak
Hill; Southern at Southwestern;
North Gallia at Hannan Trace;
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Saturday - Southern at Easterri; North Gallia at Oak Hill;
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek (all .
makeups)

three-point land as Bissell hit two quarter for the Wildcats , but it
three-pointers and Durst connected wasn't enough. Eastern got eight
on one. Terry McGuire added six points from Tim Bissell in the
points to help the Eagles took a 22- fourth quarter as the Eagles held
off the Wildcats.
lllead.
Brace's marksmanship froni
Tim Bissell and Durst continued
their runs in the second quarter as beyond the are reportedly put him
the Eagles continued to execute one away from a state record.
well on both ends of the floor. Han- Teammate Chad Swain added 10,
nan Trace could only manage 10 and Unroe finished wiih nine.
For the Eagles, Jeff Durst led
second-quarter points, and trailed
Greg Ullman's crew with 23
42-21 at the break.
The second half wa s "The points. Tim Bissell poured in 22
Jimmy Brace Show." The Hannan points for..Eastern. Terry McGuire
Trace marlcsman left flames on the added 16, and Chad Savoy had 13.
The Eagles had 20 assists (Tim
~rimeter and net, hitting 10 threeBissell's
six), 12 turnovers and two
pointers in the half. Brace hit four
treys in the third quarter to pull blocked shots.
Eastern won the battle of the
Hannan Trace closer. Eastern countered with the shooting of McGuire boards, outrebounding the Wildcats
and DursL The Eagles led 64-40 at 36-27. Bissell led the Eagles with
13 boards, and Durst added seven,
the end of the third quarter.
and
freshman Charlie Bissell had
In the fourth 'luarter, Brace confive.
Hannan Trace was led by Cox
tinued his shooung clinic, hitting
with
10.
six threes in the final quarter. Brian
Eastern
was 22-41 from field
Unroe added seven points in the

.m

Milmi ................... l4 26

Del.lware II, JWtfcr~l'69
PrinMOn 79, Brown 54
Venncnt63, Drexel 55
Yale 73, Penn 61

WALES CONFERENCE

Atlanllc IMJIIion

Philoddpltio ...........24 26
New Ieney ............ 21 29
Wu!Unaton ... ........ .l7 32

Comoll 60. Dutmoulh 46

In the NHL. ••

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Peg$ C5 ·:::.

.

O'Neill signs three-year con-tract
with Reds for $10.5 million
· .

Scor·eboat'"d

Eastern survives Brace's shooting to hand Hannan Trace 82-69 loss Friday
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Ea~ le s, behind big efforts by
semors Tim Bissell and Jeff Durst,
JUmped up to a 22-point halftime
lead and escaped a game-high 38point night by senior forward

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

.

'

446-2264

OVER TOD LOCATIONS TO SERVE. YOU • CHECK YOUR LOCAL .
.·, DIRECTORY OR YELLOW PAGES FOR THE STORE NEAREST YOUI

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._..._. .. ........=··...
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BUCKEYE

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In addition, some cooperatives are equipped with other computer systems so advanced they can detect- then correct- potential costly electric
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�Page-C6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

33-24 edge on the boards which in
all probability was the determining
factor. Mike VanMatre collared 13
rebounds to come away with game
high honors while John Zuspan added six boards for the Whatc ·Falcons. "We're nol very big and
Wahama did a nice job· inside,"
PPHS coach Lennie Bamcltc said.
"VanMatre controlled the boards
for them especially in the first half
and Zuspan came up with a couple
of big rebounds in the second half.
We just couldn't get our shots to
fall tonight," said Barnette.
After Wahama raced lo an early
12-1 lead Point Pleasant played
catch-up the remainder of the evenin~. The Big Blacks closed to
w1thin five at 13-8 after one quarter
and cut the lead to a basket at 21-19
on a three-pointer by Austin Moore
midway lhrough the second canto
bul a three point play by VanMatre
with :01 second left in the firsl half
gave WHS a 26-20 lead at the inlermission break.
'I)lird quarter action saw Kevin
Boyles pul on an offensive show
that saw ahc senior center make
nine of 12 of his second half field
goal attempts. "Boyles played a
real good game," Hall said . "We
didn't expect him to be that sue-

:Despite injured toe, Drexler leads
Blazers to 107-106 win over Kings
By The Associated Press
When il was time for the game
lo start in Sacramento, the referees
weren't there. Fortunately for
Clyde Drexler and the Portland
Trail Blazers, they were there at the
end.
.
. .
Drexler, playing wath an tOJured
toe, convened a three-point play
with I. I seconds left and ralhed
Portland past the Kings 107-106
Friday night.
• The game was delayed a halfhour at the beginning because the
lhree officials could nol get to the
ARCO Arena. Sacramento, along
with most of Caltfomta, has been
hit by heavy rain this week, and the
bad weather caused traffic probterns thal prevented 1he referees
!'rom roaching the court in time.
. Dre~ler, who lefl the game late
tn the farst half after hurting his big
left toe, scored on a short
turnaround to tie il at 106. Wayman
Tisdale was called for a foul on the
p,lay, and Drexler made lhe free
lhrow. After a timeout, Mitch Richmond's inbounds pass hit the back·
board' and the clock e~pired.
: In other games, Washington
beat the Los Angeles Lakers 1089.2, the Los Angeles Clippers
defeated Phoeni~ I 04-97, Seanle
stopped San Antonio 108-91.
Jiouston beat Boston 105-99, Denver downed Dallas 105-85, Indiana
~efeated Milwaukee 107-100,
Atlanta topped Orlando 112-107
and New Jersey beal Philadelphia
107-99.
Bullets 108, Lakers 92
. Washington won at the Forum
for the first time since Feb. 17.
1987 , as Pcrvis Ellison had 24
paints and II rebounds.
• The Bullets had lost seven
straight on the road, and 14 of 18
overall. Los Angeles dropped its
fCCOnd in a row.
. SuJ!frSonics 108, Spurs 91
: The Spurs entered the game
)Vith the best defense in the NBA,
limiting opponents to 43.5 percent
shooting. But the Sanies shot 52
percent, becoming only the seventh
team this season 10 shoot 50 percent or better against San Antonio.
Rockets 105, Celtics 99
, Houston took a 16-1 lead in the
{ust four minutes and went on to
slop its six-game losing streak
against Boston.
· Houston, which had lost its last
four on the road, won its sixah
straight home ~arne. The Celtics1
went 0-3 on thetr Texas road trip to
Dallas, San Antonio and Houston.
Nuggets 105, Mavericks 85
· Dikembe Mutombo had 18
points, 19 rebounds and five
blocked shots as Denver won its

19th game ol the season, one short
of last year's en~ totaL
.
The Nuggets 20-potnl vtctory
was thetr baggest smce a 26-p&lt;lmt
roul against Charlot1e on March 6,
1990, a span of 155 games.
Clappers 104, Suns 97
Ken Norman made two foul
shots with 1:32 left for the lead as
Los Angeles outscored Phoenix 122 in the las1 two minutes and won
at home.
The Clippers, trailing by 14
points in the third quarter, got within 95-94 on James Edwards' lwo
free throws with 1:52 logo. Afler
Norman pul Los Angeles ahead, he
stole the ball from Kevin Johnson
and fed Gary Grant for a layup.
Nets 107, 76ers 99
Talc George's layup put New
Jersey ahead wilh 1:41 left and the
Nets beal Philadelphia for the second time in three nights.
The host Nets outscored the
76ers 14-4 in the lasllWo minutes.
Drazen Petrovic made two straight

cessfultaking the ball to the basket
like he did." Boyles brought the
PPHS cagers to w1thin one at31-30

·.

Meigs, Rock Hill to play second
game of Oak Hill sectional

Goll
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)- Bruce
Rleisher, who rejoined the PGA
t.our last season after seven years
Of a club pro, birdied his last lwo
holes and moved into the lead
· tllroligh twO rounds of the Northern

I'

9 19
5 14
I 9:
6 4.•
3 3·
0 0·
24 49 ,

..•

1 2 3 4 To{;
8 12 12 17 49'
FOM-A.TI' ,._ATI' FI'M·AIT Rtb lbt
13 13 14 18
C.Coon 5-11 1-4 4-4 4 17
•
VanMatre 7-10 0-1 3-5 13 17 Total Fouls: Waharna 12, PPHS 16
D. Hudson 0-0 3-9 0-0 2 9 Fouled Out None
D. Huff
3-6 1-4 0-1 3 9 Officials: Mike Rogers &amp; Doug 1
J.
Zusp:j.n
2-8. 0-0 1-4 6 5 Luke tic
.

PPHS
Wah

sa..

.

'

GALLIPOLIS - The Division IV Gallipolis girls sectional,
• scheduled lo start Saturday, Feb. 22 al Gallia Academy High
· School, will have Southwestern going against Kyger Creek at 1
: p.m. The winner wiU take on top-seeded Hannan Tl11Ce Thursday,
: Feb. 27 at 6:30 p.m. for the upper-bracket title. Following that
· game, second-seeded North Gallia and Symmes Valley will battle
: for the lower-bracket championship at 8: IS p.m.

•Basketball makeup date posted

FOR A LITTLE CASH

EAST MEIGS .:.... The Southern-Eastern boys basketball double. header, postponed from Jan. 25, will be rescheduled for Saturday,
: Feb. 22·at6:30 p.m. at Eastern High School.
The reserves will play fust, and the varsity game will follow al 8
. p.m.

.Southern basketball team
:to sponsor men's cage tourney

88 HONDA ACCORD LXI

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4 ooor, aU10tlliltic. air. power wind&lt;Ms &amp; moonrooL

RACINE- David Grindstaff, a member of the Southern Athletic Boosters Club, announced thai the Southern High School boys
basketball team will be sponsoring a men's independent basketball
tournament scheduled for Feb. 22 and Feb. 23.
The entry fee is $100 per lO-man roster. Trophies will be award. ed to first· and second-place teams, and thete will also be farst•.and
~ second-place sponsor trophies to the champion and the runner-up. ·
For more infonnation, please cai1949-202S (Racine).

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· NELSONVll.LE -The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking Valley
: chapters of the National Wild Turkey Federation wiU host the Ohio
i State Turkey Seminar, Calling Contest and.Banquet on Ma!:ch 7 and
18 at Hocking Technical School in Nelsonville.
••
; Featured speakers will be Dan Stuckey, lQ.time Ohio state call·
' ing chamfion and past grand national champion; Wayne Bailey, the
: "Dean" o America's turkey hunting; and Rob Keck of the NWTF.
! For more information, conlaet Dave Gmber at 373-9613 after 5

Convenienl Fold-and-Carry Design
Sale Price Ends
2/17/82

lndudes
VGA Color Monitor
2MBRAM•nd
Mouse

:p.m.
•

:Softball team being organized

I\IIICROIIITA"

Fold·IIP MUitlmlter

cur
ges
33"' 1

GALLIPOLIS - Plans ror a 13- to 17-member girls traveling
; fast-pitch softball team, which is tentatively being scheduled for
' Salurday and Sunday games this summer, are being made.
•' Interested girls may contact Joe Harmon at 446-3406.
.

Reg .
122·21' 28.115

,. ;I'!Ome/Car

EleCtronics

See Puzzle on Page D-2

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:Turkey hunting seminar slated

'

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CutWith·31°/
tet.;~o~:;er
RemOte :rurn-On Function

CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek High School Pep Club will
· sponsor a men's league basketball tournament scheduled for Feb. 29
: and March I.
The entry fee for this double-elimination toumamen~ which wiU
: be open 10 the farsl eight teams who enter, is $100 per team. ·
: For more information, call Tom Riccardi at 367-7377 (Kyger
: Creek H.S.).

: Rinky-Dink girls basketball
: tournament dates announced

Save s4o 4·Band~E:ALIShe!J
Sllortwa

0

:KCHS club to sponsor tourney

, BIDWELL- The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District and the Bidwell. Porter Rinky-Dink Association will sponsor the fifth annual Girls
: Rinky-Dink Basketball Toumamen~ scheduled for M;m:h 7 and 8 at
: Bidwell-Porter Elementary.
: The entry fee for the '10umamen~ open to all R-D girls teams in
· grades 4-6, is $30 per team. Registrabon is open until the Feb: 21
deadline.
To register a learn, contact Danella Greene at the Park District
• offace at 446-4612, exL 256, or visit the Park District office, located
, on the first floor of the Gallia County Cou((house.

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By Quarters:

3

2 0
33 58

KCHS, Southwestern girls to open
:Gallipolis sectional Saturday

get a

Hanks's
Plaee

59=.,.

0-0 0-0 1-2
0-2 0-1 0-0
17-37 S-19 9-16
POINT(49)
K. £loyles 9-14 0-1 1-2
E. Dorsey 1-3 2-8 6-9
A. Moore 0-1 3-9 0-1
C. Wood
2-5 0-0 0-0
B. Barnette 1-1 0-3 1-2
A. Childers 0-0 0-0 0-0
Tot
13·24 5-21 8-14

S. Ross
C. King
Tot

Wcuvcr.and Ton y Roush eight e&lt;tth
for coach Frank Capehart's crew
while Wally Smith tall ied IS.
Bubby Ausiin eight and Ryan
Roush seven for Dave Bodkin 's
Point Pleasant junior varsi 1y.
Point Pleasant is scheduled lo
return to the hardwood next
Tuesday wbcn the Big Blacks
travel lO Ripley for a PAC contest
with the Vikings )!~~!itt Wahama
journeys lo Institute for a SWAC
encounter
with
Charleston
Catholic.
WAHAMA(58)

VINCENT- The SEOAL freshman boys tournament will commence Tuesday, Feb. 18 at Warren High School.
Warren Local and Marietta wiU play the first game at 5:30 p.m.,
and Gallia Academy will take on Logan at 7 p.m.
The Warren-Marietta winner wiU play Jackson Thursday, Feb.
20 al 5:30 p.m. That game will be followed by a contest belween
Athens and the GAHS-Logan winner al 7 p.m. The Feb. 20 winners
will compete for the championship Samrday, Feb. 22 al noon.
Admission is $2 for adults and $1 for students.

,•

r&lt;~t.l[WJY

novers and Point Pleasant nine with
. the While Falcons holding a 33-24
edge in rebounding. Boyles led the
Big Blacks on the boards with nine
while Chip Wood added si~ .
Individually Danny Hudson and
Doug Huff contributed nine points
each for Wahama in addition to
Coon and VanMatre with 17 tallies
apiece. Point Pleasant received a
game high 19 points from Boyles
with 18 of those coming in the
second ha)f while Elliot Dorsey added 14 markers and Austin Moore
nine for the Big Blacks.
Wahama also captured the junior
varsity contest by a 53-40 score to
also avenge an earlier loss to the
Lit~e Blacks. Tommy Mayes led all
scorers with 16 points with J.C.
Albright adding nine and Jason

SEOAL.freshman tournament
to commence Tuesday

Weleome to••• ·

47 Court Street
Gallipolis

(ConlinlledfromC-6)

..--Area sports.briefs____,

OVER THE DACK-Wahama's John Zuspan (#40), goes up and over the back or Point Pleasant's Elliott Dorse_Y during last ~~g.ht's h~rdcourt ~ction at Wahama High School, where the White Falcons posted
a 58-49 wm over the vasahng Bag Blacks an the second or the annual two-game series between the two
county schools. (Register photo by·Dan Adkins.)

jump shots after Gei&gt;rge's basket.
Hawks 112, Magic 107
Kevin Willis had 28 points and
15 rebounds as Aalanta won at
Orlando.
Rumcal Robinson added 24
points for the Hawks. He also had
two assists in the final minute.
The Magic lost for ahe eighth
lime in nine ~ames. Scott Skiles
scored 22 potnts, but Robinson
held him 10 just two points in l.hc
fourth quarter- a layup with one
second left.
Pacers 107, Bucks 100
Reggie Miller sc~red 25 points
and Indiana sent Milwaukee to ats
ninth strai~hl road loss. The Bucks
have lost sax in a row at Indianapo'
lis since 1989.
Miller's .three-pointer tied the
score at 58 m the thtrd quarter and
sparked an 18-4 spurt. A brief
shoving match between LaSalle
Thompson of the Pacers and Alvin
Robertson seemed to ignite Indiana

Sunday Tlrnes~nllnei-Page-C7.,
.,

Po.meroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Wahama lead to jusl three al 47-43
canto as the Big Blacks just with 4:40 remaining but that would
period.
Boyles continued to carry Point wouldn't ·concede. Successive be as close as the Big Blacks would
Pleasant offensively in the final buckets by Boyles cut a seven point . get as Coon scored seven of the
Falcons' final II points to hold off
the charging Point Pleasant cagcrs.
"We probably didn't gel the ball to
Boyles .enough and let him go the
basket," Barnette said. "We had our
chances lliough. We were at the
foul line late in the game and had
two oahcr opportunities in key
situations
but we just didn't capital·
OAK Hll.L - The Division II girls sectional basketball tournaizc
the
veteran
cage mentor added."
ment, staled to begin Monday, Feb. 17 at Oak Hill Hi~h School,
Wahama
shot
39% from the floor
will have top-seeded Jackson taking on Vinton County m the 6:30
(22
of
56)
and
converted
56% (nine
p.m. opener. Second-seeded Meigs will face Rock HiU in the 8:15
of 16) from the free throw stripe
nightca~.
while 'Point Pleasant connected on
Galha Ac~demy and the Jackson- Vinton County winner will
40%
(18 of 45) from the floor and
play Thursday, Feb. 20 at 7 p.m., with the finals pitting the Meigs57%
(eight
of 14) from the charity
Rock Hill winner against the Feb. 20 winner on Saturday, Feb. 29 al
line,
WHS
committed eight lur7p.m.
The Division IV Meigs sectional, to begin Thursday, Feb. 27 at
Meigs High School, will feature Eastern and Southern plaring the
6:30 opener. Miller and Trimble will play in the 8:15p.m. naghu:ap.
The victors of lhose games will advance to the district toumamen~ slated for March 4-7, at Jackson High School.

but a trey by Coon, a two point Hudson vaulted the Falcao lead . to .
basket and free throw by Zuspan 40-32 by the conclusion of lhc lhard
and another
point.
by
(See WAHAMA on C-7)
·

Sports briefs
General
PORTI.AND, Qfe. (AP)- The
Oregonian newspaper will stop
using sports teams names that may
be offensive to racial, religious or
ethnic groups, such as the Braves,
~edskins, Indians and Redmen.
Editor William A. Hilliard
aimounced the decision. which will
be published today.

Wahama wins..

•

Wahama beats neighboring Point Pleasant 58-49 Friday ,
By Gary Clark
ae's free throw gave the Big Blacks
Sports Correspondent
a bnef 1-0 advantage whtch would
MASON-Craig C~n and Mike ultimately bec~e lhe ~isilors only
VanMatre scored 17 poants each to lead of the naght. Pomt Pleasant
lead coach Lewis Hall's Wahama would later trim the deficit to a
While Falcon basketball team past single point behind a spectacular
county rival Point Pleasant 'Friday second half offensive exhibition by
evening as the Bend Area team the Btg Blacks Kevin Boyles but a
avenged an earlier season setback 9-2 run by the White Falcons
to its Mason County rivals with the negated Boyles' performance and
host While Falcons _securing a 5~- the PPHS comeback rally.
49 hardcourt win over the Btg
"Its hard to point to jusl one kid
Blacks before a large turnout a1 the as ou~ star performer loni!;hl," an
Bend Area school.
ecstatiC WHS coach Lewas Hall
Soon, the White Falcons 5-10 said f?.llowing ahe hard fought consenaor sconng leader, aook charge test. We were really confident
in the final period with 10 .of his goin~ into the game even af~er
team hagh 17 markers comang an comang off a 30 ~1m loss to Vm,~c fourth quarter wh1lc Van MaliC, son on Tuesday naghl. and thal says
a. 6-3 sophomore forward added 17 somclhtng about lhas team. We
points and 13 rebounds as Wahama were in focus and ready to do what
.snapped a strang of fi~e consecuuve had to be done. Il's always a Joy
Tosses to ats county nvals. The vtc- when Y?U can wan a game agamst
tory advances the Bend Area teams the caliber of team that Poml
.!991-92 hardco~rt record to 8-9 on Pleasant always has. They compe1e
the season whale Pomt Pleasam m one of lhc toughest conferences
falls to 4-13 on. the year.
in the state and its become a big
Wahama spnnted lo an early 12- cou.nty nvalry for both learns soia's
.I advantage but had to weather a a bag plus for our kids, th.c school
mulutudc of Pomt Pleasant efforls and the community anyume you
throu~houlthc 32 manute contest as can come a~ay w1th a wan over ahc
the Bag Blacks refused to surrender Bag Blacks, Hall added.
to us Mason County nvals. The
Waharna dominated the games
Whttc Falcons scored 12 un- rcboundmg staUsltcs by grabbmg
answered points after Brad Bamcl·

February 16, 1992

February 16,1992 ·

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

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and was a stroke ahead of Keith
Clearwater, Duffy Waldorf and
(iurtis Strange. Clearwater had a
Waldorf a 66 and S(rallge a 69.

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�nm" .Sentinel

O~olnt

1992

Pleasant, WV

FIRST PLACE TEAM-Pictured above is the Gallipolis biddy league basketball team, which won
first place in the Loyai .Order or the Moose.All-Star Tournament at Point Pleasant High School. Front row,
left to right, are: Jeremy Cremeans, Jimmy Gilmore and Andray Howell. Second row: Josh Atkinson,
Jasnn Johnson, Ryan !ferdue and Nathan Cremeans. Third row: Bob Tillis, Governor of the Moose; Seth
Davis; Do Pollard; and Rick Perdue, coach. (Photo by Rick Simpkins)

B DAVE HARRIS
T: S Correspondent
~OCK SPRINGS _ Trevor
Harrison scored 29 points and led a
trio of Marauders in double figures
as the Marauders defeated Federal
Hocking 69-66 in Tri-Valley Conference basketball action Friday
eveningatl.arryR MonisonGym·
nasiurn.
·
The win broke a two game los·
·ng streak for the Marauders and
~ives Meigs a 9-6 mark in the TVC
and a 11 -8 mark overall. Federal
Hocking the defending TVC
championS fell to 6-10 in the rvc
and 7-13 ~verall to complete the
re 1ar season.
~hawn Hawley and Harrison
scored 14 of the Marauders 18
fii'Si-period points as Meigs jumped
out to a 18·14lead. Federal Hock·
ing used a balanced scoring attack
to slay with the Marauders.
Hanison scored six second-peri·
od points and L.J. Mitch added
four, as the Marauders went into
the locker room with a 31-25 lead
at the half. Chris Viney led the
Lancers first half atlack with six
points.
Harrison was just getting
warmed up for the Marauders as
the 6-foot-1 junior came out in the
third period and poured in II
points as Meigs increased their lead
to 51-41 heading into the final
eight minutes.
Meigs held off the Lancers
comeback attempt in the fourth
period, Meigs hit 10 of 14 from the
line down the stretch. Federal used
a balanced attack in the fourth peri·
od placing eight players in the scor·
ing column to outscore the
Marauders 25-18 but it was too lit·
tie too !ale and the Marauders had
chalked up win number eleven.

Beside Harrison and his 29,
Hawley had a good game for Meigs
with 19, and Mitc h added 10.
Meigs hit 24 of 44 from the floor
for 55% but had no shots from
three-point range in three tries. The
Marauders hit 21 of 34 from the
line for 62~ . Meigs pulle;&lt;J in 34
rebounds, with Hawley, Mitch and
Hanison geaing eight each. Meigs
had nine steals led by Harris~n.
John Bentley and Frank Blake w•th
two each. The Maiauders chalked
up 10 assists, led by Mitch with
four. Meigs was called for 20 fouls.
Mitch Gillian and Viney, who
led the Lancers with 12 P&lt;!ints
each, were followed by Brad
Bentz's II and ~ike ~ollohan's
10. Federal Hocking hu 28 of 72
from the floor, including 3 of 12
from three-point range fo~ 39%,
and sank 7 of 15 from the !me for
46%. The Lancers pqlled in .31
rebounds, w•th Mollohan grabbmg
10. .
. .
.
Me~gs chmched a least a slice of
the Tn-Valley Conference reserve
crown as Coach Rick Edwards~
crew rolled to a 81-52 wm. Me1gs
·placed five players in double fig·
ure, Brad Anderson led the
Marauder attack with 15 points,
and tearnmate Jack S1anley·had an
outstanding game with 12 po•.nts,
seven rebounds and seven assists.
AaronDrummerandHeathHudson
added 13 pomts, and Drummer
added f•v.e ass•.sts. ,wh•le C~ns
Kmght chipped m with 10 pomts.
Myron Hart led the Lancers with
18 pomts.
.
.
In other TVC actiOn ,Vmton
C.ounty upset Belpre 49-48. The
nmth ranked Go!den Eagles went
mto the game With a 16· 1 record
and a 16 game winning streak.
Their only other loss was in the

season opener at Me•$S. Elsewhere
in the c~nference, Miller defeated
Nelsonville-York m double over- ,
Un_Ie 84·72 and Alexander defeated
Tnmble 54-48.
Me•gs wdl close out,the re~ular
season Tuesday evemng. with a
game at Nelsonville agamst the
QBuckeyes. Is
uarter tota.
_
F~eraiHocking.IO 15 16 25:66
Me1gs ................. .l8 13 20 18 - 69
FEDERAL HOCKING ~66)
-: ~rad Bentz 4·0·3=11, Mitch
Gillian 3-2·0=12, Chad NelsonO0-2=2, Myron Hart 1·0·0=2 M1ke
Mollohan 5.0-0=10, Bnan Bennett ·
3·1-.0=9~ Shan Mollohan 4-0-0=8,
Chns Vm~y 5·0·2= 12. TOTALS
- 25·3-7-66
MEIGS (69) -: Shawn Hawley
8·0·3=19, L.J . Mitch 2·0·6=110,
Trevor Hamson 9-0·11=29, John
Bentley 4.0-0=8, Frank Blake 1·0·
0=2, Jack: Stanle~ 0·0· 1=I.
TOTALS-24.0-21-6?
Cont.

By Flq:DERICK STANDJSH
AP ,4:uto Writer
DETROIT ~ Sales of domestically made cars and
!ight trueks jumped in early February, fueling some
hopes that automakers may finally be headed for
recovery.
Automakers on Thursday reported sales 'lOse a
sharp 22.7 percent in the first 10 days of the month.
Some analysts said the sales gain was an important
sign, even though it compared with the depressed
rate of a year earlier.
''There's no doubt about it,"' said Torn Webb,
chief economist for the National Automobile Dealers
Association in McLean, Va. " Those tentative signs
of strength that we saw in January were real."
However, industry analysts generally cautioned
that the strength was exaggeraled because sales were
softened last year by America's anxiety over the Per·
sian Gulf War.
Webb said a sustained improvement in vehicle

Owrall

W

L

W

Belpn: ................................... 12
Alexander .... ......................... 10

2
4

11

Trimblc ......... ...................... - ..9

S

Mele-----·---- ---.. 9

'

Wd.Lsl.on .............. ....... ............7
Fodonl Hocking .....................6

1

).tiller ...................... .. ..... ....... ..S

10
8

Vinton Coun.Ly ........................4
Ndl mville-Ymi ........... ....... .. 2

11
11

16

L

z

7

II
7
7

8
10
13

6
4

II

l

14

II

Friday's scores

By JAMES M. KENNEDY
· AP Bilsllless Editor
NEW YORK (AP) - If you
make moie thai\ a million bucks a
year and heaven forbid you've got
stock options as part of your com·
pensation package it was definitely
not your week. '
With days to go before the
nation's fii'St presidential primary,
.it is open season on lhc rich.
. Against the backdrop of politics
and the recession, the Securities
and Exchange Commission proposed plans to increase scrutiny' of
executive pay. Meanwhile,
Congress mttlled legislation to do
the same thing.
On the tax front Democrats in
the House readied package that
would cut taxes for the middle
class at the expense of the wealthy.
The proposals came in response to
President Bush's State oflhe Union
call for tax relief to spur the econo-

Melp 69, Ftdtral Hodc.lna"

AleunderS4, Trimble 41
Vinton Coun.Ly49, Br.lpR48
Wellston - idle

They played Saturday
Trimble at. Athms
Welllton ll Jacklon

Tuesday's games
· Aleundu at Belpte

Mtlp at Nelsonville-York
Trimble at Wells1m
Vin10n Counly 11 Miller

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

NEW ARRIVALS!
At Gene Johnson
Chevy-Olds-Geo

sales depeftds on wider progress toward ·economtc
increased 23.8 percent compared with the same peri·
recovery. .
.
.
od last year. Sales of Japanese automakers' vehlc:les
"Newcvehicle sales will gain momentum qutckly
built in North America rose 13.4 percent during the
if a few more pieces of the economic ~e fall iniO
period.
place," he said, "namely fewer layoffs, aaother
. Automakers have heen cuaing costs and Stream·
m~t-rate cut and passage of an economic growth
lining their operations to deal with the recession. but
the Big Three still lost billions of dolliirs last year'.
package."
The early February 'sales were .fueled principally
Ford, for example, reported a record $2.3 billion loss
by big iilcreases in light ttuck sales by General
for 1991 on Thursday.
Moten Colp. and Ford Molar Co. ·
Despi~ the higher sales figures for earir Febru·
Overall, GM said its sales of North American·
ary, many dealers have said they'te only seemg more
made vehicles rose 23.4 percent and Ford's sales
browsers, not buyers.
"They come in and shop and evemhing. They're
i~ 21,3 percent during the period.
CIUysler CQrp. reportS sales only monthly, when
just a little bit nervous," said Tony Viviano, owner
irnponed vehicle sales figures are released. ~wever,
of Sterling Heights Dodge in Sterling Heights, Mich.
"We're doing better, bUI it's like there's 200 peoan Associated Press estimate of Ch'1'sler s early
February sales showed a 30.6 percent nse, The esU·
ple out there who want 10 buy a car," he said. "But
mate is baSed on Chrysler's average monthly market
they're all just standing by waiting for the other
guy."
share over the past 12 months.
.
· Collectively, Big Three sales for early February
Through Feb. 10 of this year, ear and ll'IICk sales

a

~

The DcmOCilllic· bJit would grant

credits to ease 'the ·burden on
most ~paye~ an~ also cut t;axes
on ~ptta,l gams aad ~uon~.
But 11 would finance all that by
raising the top tax tate for individu-·
als and imposing a surtax on mil·
lionaires.. .
. In addiuon, the plan would ~roh1bit a companr from deduct!ng
any execu.u~e s compensation
above $1 million.
.
ECONOMY:
.Some P01.l~ve Signs
While au~onues fiddled ov~r
how to rev1ve the.e.con~my, II
s.howed some surpnsmg s1gns of
life.
.
.
The govemment said retail sales
impr~ved in January, and t~e
nauon s automakers reoorted a Stg·
nificant jump in earfy February
sales of cars and trucks. . .
The unemployment line also got
a little shorter as the number of
tax

CHEVROLET
Gee.

·" ·

1992 ~~evrolet
S·Biuer, LT Models

·SECOND PLACE-Pictured above is the Meigs biddy league basketball team, second place winner or
the Loyal Order or the Moose All-Star Tournament, held at Point Pleasant High School recently. Front
row, left to right, are: Steve McCullough, Brad Davenport, Jason Roush, Clay Crow, Jason Frecker, and
David Anderson. Second row, left to right: !lob Tillis, Governor of the Moose; Tom llillingsley; Mark
Friend, coach; Mick llarr; Josh Harris; Steve Hysell; and Ken McCullough, coach. (Photo by Rick
Simpkins.)

Friday's high school basketball scores
AkfCitl E. 60. Akron Ccn·Hower49
Akron FlniiiWne 73, AbM Kenmcre SO
Ak1a1 Garfield ~2. Akron Buch\d S?
Akron Mm::hestcr 70, TI.IIWIWU Vall. 67, OT

Akron N. 51, Akrm Ellr:l S6
AJc-.mder 54, Trimble 41
Amanda.Cearcrock 60, Jhmillon Twp. 55
Anthem 74. N. OlmrLed 69
Mn1 56. Ruuil39
Ansonia 6!!, Bradford 49
An1bony Waync.66, Millbwy Lake 51
/ltW1Um 7~ Belhol 63
Aa;htabula Harbor 74, Conneau160
B•""""" 82, Abvn Sprin~ l6
Boy 71-, Otmaed F.U.I6
Budtwood 83, RichmcruJ Hll. 66

Bcavc:rercek 60, Xenia 55
Bcodlord 71, Mayfield 60
Bedfcxd, Mich. 49, Sylvania NIXIhview 46
B.UW.69. Brida-62

Bcllcfool&amp;inc: 95, Sprin.. Nodheulan 36
Bellcvue71, T.J!inColum...,ll
B"'jomiA lAton 60,1Adian Lake l9
B crc~ SI,Cicwala!Sot, OT
Berlin Hiland 66.1'ufeuJ•u Calh. "
Bo.dey 57, Li&lt;lin&amp; Voll. S4
Big Walnutl8, Olorlunpll
Bl•ck RiYer 72, Maplea. 70
Bloom-Carroll 54, Canal WinchMcr 52
Bo&lt;lcino ll, Flirllwn ll
B ~Una £mw11'l. Sylvania Soulhview 51
B"""fldd S6, Hubbud S4
Bndlyn
Lulhotan w. 69
BN!llwici 19. Brecl&lt;IYille S6, OT
Bnuh 7l. Eu&lt;U~60
Brym 73, Swant.Oil 68
Combrid8•97, Meadowlx"'*li
Canfodd 68, Clmpbell MemoriJtl7
C...., S. 66, Minerva 6l, OT
Cedanille 64, Eu&lt; Clinton ll
Colina q], Lim• 81th 6l
Clupin F.U.l6, Solon ol4
Charnpioo 44, C'.oft1and L&amp;kcMow 34
Clun~ 66, Padua 57
Chwpwell, FaiJian&lt;l l O, lOT
ChiiiJ""'el7, WOIIhin""" Kilboume 41
Cill. Aiken 11. Cin. We~WIIn Hilk 62
Cin. BIQ:lft 69, Cin. McN'LCkolu S9
Ci&lt;L CAI'll73, Cin. Rudin160
Cin. Colerain 70, Cin. O&amp;k HiUI50
Cin. Counuy Day 14. B•tnia 62
Ci&lt;L FinncyiOwn l3, Cia. Indian Hill4Z
Cin. en. EM 62. Cin. Alwlenon 60
Cin. M.alion 44, Cio. Deer Pam 39
Cin. Moeller 12, Cin. Eldtr 75
Cin. N. CoiiCFllllll2, Cin. OuiJ!ian 61
Cin. Nonhwaall , CU.. WalnutlllliiiO
Cin. PririCIIIOft 70, Hlmil\CI\ 61, Of
Sev., Hilla sa. Ci.n.l..anct1Wl57
Cifo.
1.. 60.
t.a s.ue S6
Cin. Tal\ 61, Amelia l7
Cin w....., Waodl76, Cio. ll»p01 l9
Cin. Withrow 69, an. Mow.t HIU&amp;hy 41
Cin. lNoodwanl 6l. Cln. Tw!&gt;in ll
CildeviU. 90, Tuya Vall. 50
Cb)lon NGIIhmonll9, PiQua ll
C1L -icri•ei3,1Ake t.lh.!l, OT
C1o. C.illelicll, Oot!\oW U... TrioP&amp;y S6
Clo.
~ 70, Clo. "'' 66 4!
Oo.IWjloii'IS,-,...,....,

n.

em.

s, x..

cu.

C1o. !l.lpliut II, Clo. VAS! ll

a.-- ... 52, l'olidlr-fnolllln 44

Cei.Briul IOI ,Cel. W•66
Coll!tli12. Cel. - 6 1
ColiiAnJor 64, Cal. o.s.Ioo 5I
Col ~·lldliolo110, c.L B - l7

Col Mailll-fiWllA7S,Cel. -11
Oil WifiUII7&lt;4, Col.
62
Col '""""""' 31, c.L c-.u;..lll

'"*-"

h.,

Ccj. RoMr l9. Sprin.. C.lhc&amp;l7, OT

CcL Soullt 69 Cql
t .. 6'4
Cei.Ik. a...~oo 6.!b~-w...... 4l
Cci. W........ 70,
61, OT
Cdd-56, ~53,0T "
enw(anl74, Onlado46

c-

gr:;:;.•,u::::"

41

Ct Sn· O.riw S4, Soudllm l.ocll.t9

"-'-64.-"
WI
67,11. CaimiDe"

Coriajpaa 61 , ~ 43
I
CIIMn!llo Pam .,,U 1 """ 76, OT

....

~-?3.s
l4
C.,...lllt.J7.A-S6

J;loMIIi 7t.

-ca..,

,

Day. Ch.lmin•de-Ju(ienne 7S, HunillOrl B1din 60
D1y. Chrilt.ian 70, Nttianal Tn.il69
Oty. Dunbul4, Tot Sl. John'• TT
D1y. Mudowdde 104. O.y. ColooeJ Whitt 99

D•y. OU.woodi3,CuWJ.e 47 ·
D1y. Pn1mcrt 18, D•y. Bdmont 71
Defiance~.

lllid• 41

Ddaw•re 69, Mll')'lvillc )S
Dc.lphl'll Jeffcraan 70, Ccmoy C!UMcw 49
DoYa 68, Mtrlingi.On 46
E. Con"" 12. Sandy Vall. I I
E li""J&gt;J&gt;I 90, Ediaoo S. 64
E, Pal..W.. 61, Uoitcd Loulll
Eutlakc N. 9S, Willou&amp;bby S. S8

Rut wood 67, Kanut l..akou50
Eaton 83, BrGOkville 74
Elgin 54, Cardin&amp;tt'lft 49
Elyri1 W. 68, WcllingUI162
FWfiold 84. Cln. Sycunono II
Ftidaa 62. Akron CoYcntty 59
Field 81, S~bQro62
Fi&gt;dands 71, L&lt;nin Brooluido 64
F~tcria St. Wmddin II, Senoca E. 42

Fnnklin 74, c....u6I
Franklirl Fuintce Omen 52, New B~Uil 51
Fn.nklin Maruoe 59, Twin Valley S. SS

Fftldaic:bo"'l 7S, Buckeye Ccntnl 67
F...,..Lakelandll. JoWdi·Scio 28
Fnmom SL 1 - 7~ Hopewell· l.oudon IS
F....... 90. Col&lt;fwdl68
Ft. Loramie 5~ . H001:tm. 53

Fl. Reccwcy 10, Mendon Union 49

Oallipolil 67, Vioo:nt Wurcn 61
Ocncva IS, Mad.ilon 74
O...oo 64, Olqo ~9
OeoiJ&lt;O&gt;wn 69, SanliNI l!ulem ll
Onnvillell, F""" Ca&gt;h. S4
Orceneview 76, Wayn11Villc47
&lt;lnwq&gt;oo!.l7, 1'ha!w Wllllhin.... 41
IWniiiOII !lou 63, Killp ll
~ Hardin NOI1hft 66. Arlin
59

Howlmd 10, Y"""'.l!ul

fa"

HubcrHu:. W1ync6l, Keclc:rinaFainnont42
H,.._ 73.o-.bwJa-l2

HWI '

17, Uniou:l M

H....,T,Sanduokr SL Muy"a 73

Indian V.U. 71, B"'*"" Tnil ol4
'""""' 7:1, ....hlond, l(y, 72 '

I•"""'·Mll""' 19. Mlnenlltidae 60
Jodi...... ·~ ....... bull E4t••ood 66
John 0 .... 60, RiYW y,..SQ
1-IDWnN~n,.:-70

Kalldl 63, Miller Citr SJ

Kln&lt;JI-12. Naolaniall
Kon .... Rldao49, lhbono 47
ICtsleoio&amp; AYlor 6!1, Cio. l'looell•Maoion ., '
KY&amp;•·Cioet 60. Potri«S.Oih- 41
LaB1M72. N"""" F.U. 50
Lolt........t$6,P,..ll

Lancooi« l&gt;l. :z-wo

Manlno=,

Mid-,.

... ,.... 60

Lan1n
JAi; oil
Lan1n s... 61, ~ 11oa"
LaWYillo 64,
tm.londl7,Mm
l4

"·-56

I NWS7

Lutbono E. 7), Onool Voll. 47
Ploino "· . . . .••55
. AIM'
Malwm
60,Nt
ManolleldCir.'M,.-....-C
uloo:lt
__

56

7,~M

w;;;;'IsM·
ht a.. •• XI* Or."

Mtft6Wir.8'
Jcloplolfll. 71,
3
Mspkawi54 ..... 4S

-7·.-..JL
-!:if. ::t;; ..........

:l=:,.;...""'.c,.4l.-:57

W.....,_.,, YIJ!IIIo ..,_41

_ ,..... Color_ ..... ,

•

OT
Rlvcnidl66i, Wa
.OO.hen 65
Roc:l&lt;r Ri"' I~ lin!ow PutiiJ

s.c..nt 65.-l, l'aul63

Londan 10, a.... dww ,.
.
Loni,t Call&gt;. 75, EIJOio CaiiJ. 70, OT

- 7 1,1'§ t , ,

We are your local
hometown Chevrolet· .
Olds-Geo
Dealer.
..
No high pressure
sales·tactics!

S, ,...,17, llullolo, W.VL II
S. R-11, ........... SPiin&amp;.IO ,
Salim 95, w...,altlaiely '1CJ

LopnS~I-!7
Lopnl!bn7J,Fuillold~61

-

Tht All Ntw 1992
Chevreltt S•hrh• le
hart. SEE IT NOll

d l2

-ltJ.
12. 11.1mn
Mooo-70
Rooelllll.
... SU"'J'h 43
Reoof""' 63, Hollaad Sotlnl. ol4

"

Many Tahoe modela.

ReedPille &amp;oo..., 12, lllman r .... (/)
Jleynoldobwa!l, ~
·
49

Ubony Unlan61,-Unleoll
UdaH... 60. Now Albonr&gt;!O
UmoSho-~ .... -56
L.iml Sr. JP. Mi"d'r wn 10
l.iulo Miami 10'3.B' ±rrS9
LaQlond l2, Clo. . . . . 50

~Vo111Y73,Mc0

1992 Chevrolet
5·10

NOilhrldae~l

ltlveo 71 ,

Lanln~

Rw.

Rlelno Sauohem 74, Oak Hill ll
Rn..,. SB I~ Oomarv!llo 64
R.oyland B-)'0 63, Oak Glat, W.Va l&gt;l

t.alham w-10. Whlrooot 65

~FaldleW90, W. Uniaall
Ldpoic ~. W.C..b S7, OT

1992 Chevrolet
Berettas 2 Dr.

1992 Geo Metro LSI
Convertillle

....... , 13.1!1,ao71

-"·~·

.

'

..._llrlt. 91, L* wood Sl. BAulll
_,59, Oolldo49
Sbm t M M,.W....,._... 46

.,..,.."··-"'

'J

-77.1 II dll
...... Goo.-75,1..... - - ,
....... !0, c:.iooolllo47
.
_ ..._19.T-63
.............~,~"" 63

Money Ideas

Economic
conditions·
.

.
..
kind f
exerung consuamt on ~Y
o. an
economic reviVaL As expected,addf.
GALLIPOLIS' The 'watch Is on! iionll
time and actlon 11 requiled for
The Federal Reserve's SUJprish\g
thO
necessary
bolJiering of finances
moves in mid-December to ·reduce
interest rates produced lllimmlidille ~ canfidence ID build the fciunda..
and drarilatiC MIIODiiomwhich!Midllmtogtowtb
Yival of the Ill·
Clll bo fllhlonM
.
.!mponandy,lhereareu.emtlnthe
lion's financial
lllesl. inOitly llllinsplring data thai
markets.
thli
heallnaproceu 11 movillallhead
.
Unfonu·
lila
....m.M way:.
' 1
nately, given bo!b
I);
lnf1adocl
contillues
to
tiJoder.
w~inelfectcif
ate: 2).laWer ilitereat rates are_powae actionl ..S
dncinJIIOiiceable,lmmediale~
the jmnal !)elay
.In measuring ecxliiOIIIieiCiivity. evi.. in ldec:ted oirclllllllaDCes • CGr exdeneoofasimilarreviVIIlnthep· ample; the contiinJatloD rl tho arad·
amy is not &amp;J,P.rellt in lbeliiMdata, Ulll'mpoyementia
of
The llllioR remains in lbe lriP of ar: 3), die I)(J!!~
t'efiMiciDinow.
belq
the slUmp that Cbn:ll:rized IIIOil of .
'j 991.Speciflcally,lbe"tp'DCythat by botll COIWIIId hwh elm Ia
111o •na lllf Of\.far COli·
6ocamc acute in Aua'* and Ullbllsbfna
H
al&gt;lo
blniiNIIIdlllapo;ya.IDl
Sepcelllbor llngon. Connmen,
Jihole walleu and oefttera lli ..,. "'' h'tbeei'a • .0 .......
BySTANEV~S

tile=

., - llklna ....

.

·~=-~=IIIII·

·to
dotableolwbkb
COlli ..

~ee::c:v:~t::rta·

tile .... .......I&amp;IIIJlt«'·nt~·

tromec..mea.NIIIIIIP....,.w

45
... ...,7t,Nowa-41 '
.
..........,. Co6, 51, Woillal (W.Vo.) Modlalo

.....,.M,•&amp;wwl50
- 6 1 OloliUZ
1
vd:·110, N. 0o111o 73
'M-11Wo1101d63

'

EVANS HONORED • Stanley K. EYIDI (ri.lht) vice preildellt
wllb .Tile Oblo Company In Its =olll oltlce, recently was
appointed to.the compan)"s 1991
eat's Club ror oulltllnd!aa
achievement. Tbls Is the elahth year E\'811J IW received tile awa'rd,
which Is presented annually to the C~Dpuy'a top account ex~u·
lives. The Oblo Company, beadquar.tered In Columbus, Is a
· regional lnvestlllent b1Dkln1 and ruu service brOkeraae firm, ~th
• 50 offkes lalix states. Tbe nrm II a •ember' ol the New York
· Stock Excbanlf and the Securities lillllton Prolectloa Corporatloa. MaldiiJ the appointment (left) Is Walter Cbaniben, pnlident
and cbld financial ol'lker.

llill+elw . . . . tonlalilhe
'..........llld
IJlCIIIdlnl,._

~.,

:w--·r

'

topdler for a . _ olecoloi11C

E
lMr·--w:=
IIIM

iiQIIItMCtrd

rs•r "'"

t1111flth
tNt
.lime,
llpaofaacltalfi9Ml
:

lZ"c.mi.~·: .

::r~:.n LMor"
T... CIJIIoliM 52. Olo!N IIIIo 51

.. . . . .'nil

.

•

Ill

MOSp&amp;

T... ~ .... ~_,LIIiooWt41

I

.

'

It

CHESHIRE • Two employees
have been promoted at the Ohio
Valley Electri.c Corporation's
Kyser Creek Plant according to
Norman H. Tarr, plant manager.
Effective February I, Thomas
A. Davis was promoted from unit
supervisor to assiSiant shift operat·
ing engineer and Robert L. Spears
was promoted from equipment
opera10r to unit supervisor in the
operations departmenL
Davis joined Kyger Creek Plant
in 1973 as a laborer in the labor
department. Two years later, he
11111sferred to the operations department as a utility operator. In 1976
he was promoted to auxiliary
equipment operator; in 1979, to
~uipment operator; and in 1985, to
unit supervisor. Davis and his wife,
Marlene, and two daughters reside
at 239 Neighborhood Road, Gal·
lipotis.
S
. . ed K
Creek Plant
. pears JOin
yger.
· In 1967 as a !abater !!1 the labor
departmeat. The follow!ng YfM, he
transferred.to the operations departm~ as ' utility operator. In 1971
he was promoted to auxiltilry
equipment operator. and in l976 he
wu III!IIIIOICd to equipment opera·
tor. SJ)ears aad his wife, Shirley,
·reside at lOS Liberty Street, Pt.
Plelsunt, 111d !hey arc the parents
o( one iJau&amp;hter and one son.
·

'

.'

February 18, 1992 : ·,

were running 8 percent ahead of the war-affected -~
period last year. Bi~ 1"lne sales were up 7.1 percent :•:
and Japanese sales~ 15.9pertenL .
: ::
GM said its early February car sales rose 17.8 p«· ::
cent and ttuck sales increased 38 percent compared =:
wilh' a year ago. For.the entire year, GM's combined
car and INCk sales were up 6.4 percem.
•
Ford reported a 13.9 percent increase in early :'•
Februarv car sales and a 32.3 percent rise in truek ;;;;
sales for the period. For all of 1991 , Ford's sales :~.:
wete up 10.1 pen:enL
.~ ..
Among the Japanese automakers, Toyota's early . .,
February sales of North American-made cars and ::,
light trucks increased 65.8 percent compared with • ,
last year. Year-to-date Toyota sales were up 33.5 per· "'\
cenL
·
..,
Nissan's sales rose 10.2 percent in early Febrilary !~
but deClined 1.6 percent for the year. 'Honda's sale$:•"
increased 24.4 percent for the period and 35.4 per-.:::
cent for the year.
::
• w

.'

..
•••

-••

'•

.

•

.I

fli 'i'
l'.

....
...'·
~

WALESKA WRAY

SHEILA WOOD

ELIZABETH RUMLEY

Wray, Wood, Rumley earn promotions
GALLIPOLIS • Waleska Wray,
Sheila Wood, and Eli7Jibeth Rum·
ley have been promoted to new
positions in Star Bank, N.A., Tri·
State.
Dan Davies, senior vice presi·
dent of Star Bank said, "Waleska
Wray will hold the position of
manager ·at our Sprmg Valley
office, while Sheila Wood will be
reassigned to manage the Silver
Bridge office. Elizabeth Rumley
has heen named to the new position
of real estate originator. Her duties
will include serving real estate
agents and home buyers. She has
received extensive training in port·
folio and secondary market loan
facilities as well as VA and FHA
programs.•
Wray has been employed at the
bank since 1971. She has worked
in various depanments of the bank

Davis, Spears
receive OVEC
promotions

1-b.red.

0

·

•'"'• I
.....
......

News.

•

,_.....,E. 6 1 - N""Dame!l
,_......,w.
r&lt;, Miolanl61
'
Pr&lt;i&gt;le Shawnee69,0.r.

JUd~alelf, SJIOI!l

sz

,,

1992 Chevrolet Z·24
Cavalier

Red, V.f., aunrool.

...

Cola•te·Palmollve Co. agreed to
to acquire Mennen Co., with the
No. I deodorant brand, for $670
million ... Peter Kalikow, publisher
of the New York Post, said he was
considering a bid for the Daily

f·red, f·whlte.

McDonald 59, Lowtl..lville 55
Mead'lilk (PII.) Chr. 63,11owland Chr. S4
Medin• 93, N. Royalton SA
Mdp (/), F&lt;d&lt;nl !lockina66
Miami Ttaco 55, Hilllboro 45
Milmilbu1J63, l.cmon·MOMMO 6Z
Middlecown Fa! wick 61 , Edac:wood 43
Middletown Mldi.ton 65, Dcllbroct 63
Midparl&lt; l9, Stm&gt;~ 46
Midview 5S,l.m.in Sr. 48
Mil.. l!disen S6, Clyde ll
Miller 14, Nellmville-York 72. OT
Millc:a:port 69, HCI\b 67
Miltm-lJnion 72. Vcnaillca 62
Mi.uiuinawa Vall. !iJ, Tri·County N. 47
Montpelier !it, Evmpen 39
M"l'" 77, Ft. F.,.62
Ml Verncn 48, W1tkin1 Memori1l 33
N. B1!timore 85, Carty 82
N. Bend Taylcx 41, Cln. Wycznlng 41
N. Canton 62, New Aill•6elphil S4
N. Ridpille71, Vermilim S2
N. Union 67, Mt. Oi.lead 46
N•polcat 79, Fmnmt Rots S7
New Kn01villc 63, Pldr:w•y 61
New Miami 11, CUI. St. Bernard 76
NewRidunmd 80, BMe.l·TIIoe 62
Ncw11k 69, Fmdlay S9
NOI1hmor61 , Buckeye V1ll. S3
Ncnhwood (/), OibombwJ 66
Norwllk 61 , 811Cyrw: 53
Norwood 66, Hmilcwt 49
Dolt Hub« 16, Ma!J....,. l4
Oberlin 53, K~)'IIMD S2
~on Clay 96, Tot Whianer 67
0...on Sai...,_60, Tol. Cartnl ll, OT
OU.wa-GlandCif 64, Van Wat 57
Ott.oville .56, Contina"ltaJ SO
Od'ord TU.wanda 86, L.eblnon 61
Painenillc Harvey Jt)t, Alh.tabul• SL John 80
Paincavillc Riwnicle 69, AlhtabW.• 42
Ptim. Vall. 54, Adau 52
Puma Holy Namo 53, Otardon NO-CL 42
Pubic. 17, P•rctteviUe 70
Pbilo 77, Mayoville 66
Pik«on ll, RWunuod Dale South..., l7
I'leuall&lt; 10. Ri"' v.n. 50
Pl)'I!IOIIlh 1(1~ M.......W.Il
Pol.~n.d 51, Nile~ 41
Puo\ CiniOII ~7. """""' 5$
- C l a y 7l, lka¥Or Eulem 73

laid-off worlcers filing new claims
for benefits fell for a second con·
secutive week. .
.
Sof!!e economiSts S81d. the num·
bers hmted at a recovery m the second quarter, but other statistics
showed evidence of lingering
weakness in ind!lstrial production
and wholesale pn~.
.
Corporate Amenca also connn·
ued to cut back. Sears, ~oebuck
and Co. announced more JOb cuts,
bringing to ~0,.00~ th~ number
marked for elurunauon sm.ce 1~.
l:JAL Corp., parent of U!l'ted ~hnes, ,announced a cut m cap1tal
spending plans that put some new
plane orders 011 hold.
Ford Motor Co. reported record
losse~ of $2.26 billion for.1991,
despite a narrower loss m the
fourth qua11et.
TICKER: .
Macy Gets FIDancmg
In other business headlines,
R.H. Macy &amp; Co. Inc. was grant·
ed $600 million in interim !inane·
ing by a bankrupiCy /'udl!e ... CBS
Inc. reported a pro ita6Ie fourth
qlianer but a $85.8 million loss for
the year ...
American Telephone &amp; Tele·
graph Co. said it formed a joint
venture to sell phone gear in Russia
.' .
chain Re~ D.S.Inc.
com~titor Jack
million to drop
iis

1-b.red.

1992 Chevrolet Lumlaa
I-34 2 Dr.

Sectioll Hi

With first primary·coming up,
·it is open season on the rich

I

10

'

'

TVC cage standmgs

Team

1kimts- ~entmet

Farm/Business

Meigs edges Federal Hocking 69-66

••.

earning the title of branch administrator. For the past two years she
has head the real estate department
of Star Bank, Tri-State, Gallia
County.
.
A graduate of die University of
Chile, she obtained a Bachelor's
Degree in Secondary Education
with a Major in English. She is a
1990 graduate of lhe Ohio School
of B~ng at Ohio University, as
well as an affiliate of the American
Institute of Banking.
· .
She is a member of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce
where she ·served as past chaitper·
son of Leadership Gallia County.
She resides 'in Gallipolis with her
husband, Roy, aad children, Jessica
and David.
Wood is a 1983 graduate of
Hannan Trace High School. She
received her Bachelor of Science
degree in Accounting from Rio
Grande College in 1987. A 1991
graduate of the Ohio School of
Banking, she has served as Secretary of the Hills of Ohio Chapter of
the American lnstiwte of Bankin¥.
Her involvement in commumty
arfairs includes membership if the
Gallipolis Junior Women's Club,
whete she is treaSUrer.
'In 1991, she was named the
Young Careerist of die Year by the
Gallipolis Business &amp; Professional
Women'sCiub.
Sheila is married 10 Allen Wood
and resides in Gallipolis. . .

•
•
•

Rumley was employed by th~::
bank in 1983. She has worked in··.
numerous areas of the bank. lri•:
1989 she was made customer ser, .:
vice representative/lending. She ;~
was Star Bank, N.A., Tri-State's··
Employee of the Year in 1990 and:~
the following year promoted to:·
customer service officer.
;~
She ~raduated from Kyger,'
Creek High School in 197S and 1s·~
currently attending the Universit~ •:
of Rio Grande. She has receivCIJ .:
numerous· diplomas from the:•
Argerican lnstiwte of Banking.
.::
Currently, she holds the·omce:
of vice president of education for
the Hills of Ohio Chapter of AlB, a ..
member of the Gallipolis Bus~
and Professional Women's Club, :
Gallipolis Emblem Club No.l99, .:
and Cub Master of Addison Cub:
Scout Pack 250.
She aucnds the Addison United
Methodist Church and is a member . ::
of the ·women's clwrch group. She :
and her husband, Richard, and chil·
dren, Hannah aad Jacob, teside in
Gallipolis.
Davies commented , "These ..
three outstanding employees are ·
indeed deserving of their promo- '
lions. Their hard work, dedication
and loyalty to the bank are nole; ,:
worthy. These appoinunents will ·
insure our customcn the high level
of service that we are committed · ;
to. I ·exlend them my sincete con- ·
gratulations. n

Thacker attends conference
POMEROY • Paula Thacker,
Executive Director of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce and
.Meigs County Economic DevelopHEADS BOARD • Gallla ment Director, recently atlended
County native Patrick Cocbran the inld·wlnter conference of the
was recently Installed as pres!· Chamber r:J Commerce Executives
dent or th.e Southeastern Oblo of Ohio in Columbus.
According to Thacker, special
Board of Realtors. Cochran bU·
programming
was offered for
been active In tbe board alnce
join ·Ill 19841. Her served • trea·. directors of small chambers, like
surer in 1990 and vice president' that in Meigs County. Presentations
or the board 1nd chairman or the about economic development,
Rtlltor Political Adioa Co-lt· downtown development and com·
tee In 1991. He is otnce ma01ger munity analysis, along with mar·
or Century ll, Big Bend Realty keting, program of work, budgeting
Inc, 510 Secood Ave, GaUlpolls. and ne1!o'sletter and community
He and hll wire, Joyce bave one packet programs were made.
daughter, Sarah, and they reside . Presentations dedicll1ed to small
chambers is very important,
at335 Mitchell Rd, Gallipolis.
according to Thacker, becaii.IC the
problems facing smaller orpni7JI.
lions arc different from those expe·
Butter production up rienced
by metrqXJ~i~~n chambers.
"The conference gees all of the
.
state's chamber executives together
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. to discuss II!Ciribership expansion
butter production was 130 million and motivation and promotio~ of
pounds in December, 7 percent our individual communities,"
above December 1990 and 20 per· Thacker said. "Economic ~Yelop­
cent above ~ovember 1991.
mentis a major issuo at these con·
The Agnculture Depanment • ferences aad executives are told
also said in a report tliJ moath on how to ~· their areu. They're
~ products that American·lfll.C . ·
·

r~~~=~:~
1990 but IS percent·
DC~:ember

above November 1991.

.... ,
•'

.' .'

PAULA THACKER

also a great opportunity for net· ..:
wo~
. kin , an.d. activilies are::,
desi
10 fac:Ibtate thaL
''l
information about member- :•
ship ex~sion will be espec)ally"'
useful 10 Thacker, since ~the Meip:~
chamber is about to begin its annu.r,
al membership drive.
:;:;

,,..
,..••

Tree sale offerings'

•
By CINDY JINKINS,
Dlltrlct F• I'Sr
OALUPOLIS • Tbla 1¥eik 'a
featuled ne In the Oallia Soil and
Wlllll CoDieMiion Diltrlct'a ne .
sale II dlo Doullu fll' {PIMOtp
menzimll).
One of lbe 11101t iDiportlnt llld
Vlluable tlmbeupeclea Doqlu llr
~:·.!.~•lvely tbroqabout

Total cheele output, ucludiag
e cbeese, wu 538 million
, 3 percent abcM December
990 llld 8 pen:ent abow NDWIII·
berl991.
&lt;:mmed CCJ111F cheese..-.
don Will 35 million pouocll, 1 per-'
cent below both December 1!190
llld November 1991. Low-rat cot·
tage cbeese was 22.1 million
DOUIIda, 7 percont abcM DN:ember
,.........
· 1990 but 3 penlCIIIll&gt;elow Ncn1111· •
k prefon a mild bullld ollm•
ber 1991.
·
I!ICit u we bavo t.eldaut•m~

.

~·,,·

·,
·
•."l
em Ohio. It arows beat In flirl~l
ac:idlc 1011 wlilch II well drliaett'.'
J'k!u&amp;lu Fir requiRa llga W"''t•
of sunlight and would pow bell til :,
a southenl Oltpolure. 1'111 ~~··
fir .is very !o•a·llvad: 1101 ta.:l
exceu of 500 JOII'I 11M 11114 beel
and IOIIIIIIM eacold-'·'
'.'
lnfOI'IIIlioll alloll.;

or

ol • Oilier
0111

liM::;
·•1

I•·
.,.

, ·r

�•

-

·'

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

Page D2-5unday Times-Sentinel

Japanese methods touted
FORT MITCHELL, Ky. (AP) I00 executives and workers from
- Americans ought to learn from around the United States and two
the Japanese instead of criticizing other countries attended his work·
them, says a University of Dayton shops last week.
instructor who teaches Japanese
Tattershall also runs a business
business methods.
called Production Solutions Inc. in
Japan-bashing is a sign that Dayton.
Amel\l;311s are realizing they have
Kaizen, a Japanese word mean10 change 10 become more competi· ing change for the better, emphalive in the global market, said Steve sizes cooperation, common sense
Tatttrshall.
and elimination of waste in the
Tattershall, who conducted · workplace. Tattershall said
workshops last week in northern Japanese companies used techKenlllcky, said U.S. business lead· niques originally introduced to
ers would benefit from Japan's suc· them by U.S. companies to become
cessCul bilsiness methods.
industry leaders.
"Instead of improving what
A major problem in the United
they do, a lot of Americans hide States is managers' reluctance to
from reality," he said. "They pre- change, he said. Many cling to outfer to find seapegoats. They say the dated practices that are no longer
Japanese are playing unfairly.
productive, shutting workers out of
"You don't get anywhere by the decision-making process, he
looking at it that way. You do get said.
somewhere if you look at what
" You can go into more and
they're doing well and emulating it, more factories and see banners pro·
and figuring out what you're doing claiming employee involvement.
better than they are and doing more What's rarer is finding employees
of iL"
who feel they're being listened to,"
Tattershall is director of a Tauershall said.
"Kaizen" program at the universi·
" It's easy to mistake frustration
ty' s engineering school. More than

for laziness. And the fact is, most
American workers would like to
work very hard and do good things
for their company, but they've been
frustrattd for many years.
"They're frustrated by worlting
for American management that 's
respOnding as we all do - IO··What
they're rewarded for. Labor has
been rewarded for shutting up and
doing what you're told. Management has been rewarded typically
for protecting the status quo."
Tattershall said his workshops
try to instill confidence to make
radical changes in the workplace.
"The big thing is confidence,"
he said. "They'D go through these
programs and learn what you need
to do is you need to reward people
for teUing you the b'Uth.''
Tattershall hopes Americans
accept the challenge.
"People are paying attention to
the problem. The Dick is, are peo·
pie going to pull down under the
covers or are they going to get out
of bed and realize some of the
potential that made the American
way of life so great for so long?''

OPEC nations work to clinch
a deal, reduce oil output
By SALLY JACOBSEN
put cuts.
Associated Press Writer
Iran 's oil minister, Gholamreza
GENEVA (AP) - In a desper- Aqazadch, said the arrangement by
ate bid to prevent a worldwide col- the 13-nation Organization of
lapse in oil prices this spring, Petroleum Exporting Countries
OPEC nations struck a tentative would set a new output ceiling of
deal late Saturday that would slash 22.98 million barrels a day, effectheir excess production by more tive immediately.
It would remove about 1.4 milthan a million barrels a day.
But moments after word spread lion barrels of crude from the world
of the agreement, officials said market.
Hours before the agreement,
Saudi Anlbia and Iran, the cartel's
two largest producers, expressed OPEC's president, Jibril Amino of
reservations about the provisions. Nigeria, had said such an accord
Saudi Arabia killed an earlier was imminent and would send "an
agreement Friday, pulling out at the important signal!D the markeL"
The ministers have been struglast minute.
The latest accord, which must gling since Wednesday to negotiate
be formally approved by th e pro- an arrangement that would pull at
ducers, would mark the first time least a million barrels of oil a day
since the Persian Gulf crisis that off the market to try to push up
the nations have pledged sharp out- crude prices.

Prices are in a slump, and the
producers fear a further slide if out·
put is not curtailed.
The average price of a basket of
crudes monitored by the cartel has
been running more than $4 a barrel
below its $21 target.
The cartel has been pumping at
high levels since Iraq invaded fellow OPEC member .Kuwait in
August 1990.
After the occupation, OPEC
scrapped its quota system limiting
oil output so the members could
pump as much as possible to
replace lost Iraqi and Kuwaiti
crude.
OPEC nations are: Algeria ,
Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia, Iran.
Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates and Venezuela.

Bank reports $15 million loss,
departures of three officers
By KEN KUSMER
AP Business Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A
$15.2 million quarterly loss and the
departure of the senior management team at Lincoln Financial
Corp. fueled speculation Friday
thai the holding company of one of
the state's top I 0 banks is closer to
being bought out.
·
One analyst predicted Lincoln,
troubled by bad loans, would with·
in 60 days join the growing ranks
of Indiana banking companies purchased by out-of-state interests.
The Fort Wayne-based parent
company for Lincoln National
Bank and Trust Co. reponed that
during 1991 it had added loan loss
reserves of $71.5 million, including
writ.e-offs of $29.6 million, that led
to an annual loss of $21.2 miUion,
or $2.96 per share. That compared
with a profit of $20.5 million, or
$2.97 per share, for )990.

The fo urth-q uarter loss compared with net income of $6.5 mil·
lion, or.93 cents per share, during
the three months that ended Dec.
31, 1990. Lincoln Financial
announced in December it would
not pay a fourth-quaner dividend
because of insufficient reserves.
In over-the-counter trading Friday, Lincoln Financial closed up $2
at 24.25.
Robert J. DeLancy Jr. , 61, the
chairman, president and chief executive officer of the holding company and the bank, was granted early
retirement by its board of directors,
which elected director Paul 0 .
Schinneycr, 70, to be interim CEO,
the company said.
The board also accepted the resignations of two senior executive
vice presidents: Alvin R. Moll Jr.,
45, who also was chief financial
officer, and John P. McBride, 45.
Lincoln Financial announced

Rise in grain prices seen
By tbe Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
grains anillyst says she is "guardedly optimistic" that U.S. feed
grains prices will rise in 1992.
"USDA's projected $2.50-perbushel com price estimate probably
is on the low side," Katharina Zim·
mer, senior grains analyst at Merrill
Lynch, told the U.S. Feed Grains
Council's board of directors this
w~ in ·Tampa, Aa
She said U.S. feed grains prices
are low now because export sales
are lagging, especially sales to the
former S,oviet Union. The former
Soviet counlries need the grain, she
said; the obstacle is cash.
"Given tight grain stocks, high
projected usage and relatively low
cunent prices, I am guardedly opti·
mislic IIIII U.S. feed grains prices
will rise in 1992," she saiiiZimmu said that wben exportS
begin 10 rise, prices will respond in

kind.
TumiD&amp;IO foreip productiOn,
Zimmer predicted that China, a
llll,jOr U.S. competira ill the Asian
mullet, will not repeat the high
IMI!t ccm producliOa it achieved

lllt,ar.

.
Slle aid the IDdian lllbcontinent

-.::icra .._ dnJu&amp;ht

and

ill COirle IJiinl prodbc·

•

tioD duo· to Bl Nlilo, • warm,
i ' IJII,. ,; c1y a.. dlat pericidlCilly cu uve • devutalins
effll:t aa •Iller and cropa. She
doea DOl apeet El Nino 10 affect
t

dlo u.s. Jllll crop.

RJGAR DEMAND
WASHINOTON (AP) - Tbe
I 1 1611 will iJiue

ApicAII,
• 'brbr

111..-.rrtyiUPPly
ud •lllld Ndllaw for
IUJir awd11 March II, It
• a tcttllllil week. .

o:s.

The change responds to the
industry's ex pressed interest in
more frequent release of sugar
information by USDA, said Daniel
A. Sumner, acting assistant secre·
tary for economics.
Total supply of sugar is defined
as beginning stoeks plus production
and imports, while total use adds
up domestic deliveries, exports,
miscellaneous uses and ending
stocks.
The new estimates will appear
in the monthly "World Agricultur·
al Supply and Demand Estimates"
report published by USDA's World
Agricultural Outlook Board.
TOMATO PRODUCTION
WASHINGTON (AP)- Toma·
toes ror processing in 11 major producing countries are estimated at
18.5 million metric tons for 1991,
down 6 percent from the 1990
level, says an Agriculture Depivt·
mentreporL
It says ~liminBI}' data indicate
1991 harvested area m the II COUll·
tries wu down about 5 percent
&amp;om the previous year.
"The decreue in area occumd
mainly in the European Comf!lunity," therepott said. "Production of
processing tomatoes in the
Mediterranean Basin (five EC
counaies plus Turkey and Israel)
declined sharplv in 1991 due to-

smaller hlrYcall. (,

Stoc:kl of tomato pute and

c._ct tomaiOeS IR lltlheir ~

levels ~ 1986, the report iaicl,
rneanlnJ produetion •forecutl for
tbele itclllla down~·
In the l1nieecl Swea, pr« llllljj
·10111110 Jl""'" tion 9.9 million
tons, S percent above the 1990
level. The harvested area .w u up
slighlly and favorable weather
boolled yields, the rqxxt said.

Dec. 13 il had retained the invest·
ment banking house of Goldman
Sachs to study merger possibilities.
Craig Berry, a spokesman for
Lincoln, said Friday he could not
report any r,rogress toward an
acquisition. ' I think the process is
ongoing," he said.
The loan loss reserves and
write-offs are concentrated in commercial business and real estate
.loans in the Fon Wayne market, the
company said. At year's end the
loan loss reserventood at $60 million, or 4 percent of IOta! loans and
68 percent of non-performing
assets, compared with I percent of
total loans and 97 percent of nonperforming assets at the end of
1990.
" The measures we have taken
followed a comprehensive review
of the loan portfolio by management in conjunction with a re~ula­
IDry review of the Lincoln Nauonal
Bank's loan portfolio," Schinneyer
said.
"The additions 10 reserves and
write-offs of problem loans have
overshadowed
fundamental
improvements in Lincoln Financial
Corporation's business during
1991. The majority of our affiliate
banks had positive results, with
most of'Our problems centered in
the lead bank," he said
Robert K. Chapman, appointed
Friday as senior vice president and
new chief financial officer, said
there was nothing unusual or
extraordinary about the regulatory
review.
"'It's not a special review. It's
their normal annual examination,"
Chapman said in a telephone inter·
view.
Lincoln Financial is also the
holding company for banks in
Rochester, Angola, Bluffton, Shipshewana, Wabash, Decatur,
Rushville, Monticcllo and PW, as
wen as in Three Oats, Mich., and
Van Wen, Ohio.
Raymond Diggle, director of
researeh 111 RaffwpergCI', Hughes
&amp; Co., an Indianapolis brokerage
house, said the quarterly loss fell
within lllliysu' ellimates lpld "our
feeling is blsicllly they've cleaned
up wllatever raidull.,.oblellllollll
they bad." I
DiBP. Slid be Cllpecled Lincoln
FilllllciiiiO be ltlld for lbout $31
per lltare, or lboul I 112 lima ill
..... 1loolt
Cll $20.86, wblch
be C! 11h11lliMI I bllllla far I blot

OH-Polnt

February 16, 1992 • ,
•

Three..
iers are slain in rare
attack on army camp inside Israel

Cities worse for wear from recession
Trees in New Orleans look
ragged since the city quit regular
trimming.
Garbage piled up last month in
parts of Buffalo, N.Y., after New
Year's Day pickup was canceled,
making a stinky stan 10 1992.
A blue-ribbon panel found Los
Angeles police overworked, but the
city can't afford to hire new officers and it lets vacancies stay
empty.
In Seattle, some libraries remain
dark longer and some parks close
earlier.
Around the country, it's another
year, another shortage of dollars for
basic services. Urban America con·
tin ues to suffer corrosion from a
lack of money.
No region is spared. They only
differ in severity.
"Nobody's rolling in clover,"
said Randy Arndt, spokesman for
the National League of Cities in
Washington, D.C., whose recent
survey of municipal officials
reflected a discouraging outlook.
So city officials punch another
notch in the belt and yank iL Hiring
freezes, jobs lost to attrition, locks
on pay and dipping into cash
reserves arc common. Streamlining
for better efficiency and putting
fewer workers ID more tasks, set·
ling priorities by triage.
Ingenuity and humor also help.
When Lynch, Ky., fell $40,000
into the red last year, the mayor's
wife opened a thrift shop in City
Hall and organized bingo games to
ratse money for the town of 1.100
people.
Zcv Yaroslavsky, chairman of
the Los Angeles City Council's
b~dget and finance committee, says

Psalm: ''Though I walk in the valley of the shadow of the deficit ... "
The'sprawling City of Angels,
with 3.5 million residents, faces a
projected $200 million deficit for
fiscal 1993 on a budget likely to
nud~e $4 billion.
' A lor of cities have this problem;" Yaroslavsky said, "but we
have it really bad."
Some say it's time 10 seize the
day, and the peace dividend
Like people in the former Soviet
bloc, U.S . civic leaders see the
chance to take back money and
power that shifted elsewhere since
World War II. They're rallying
new coalitions of politicians, academics, community and business
leaders.
The American Cities Initiative
met in Philadelphia recently to
draft a plan for more federal spending on cities and the people in
them. Other such effons include
the National Urban League's Mar·
shall Plan for America. U.S. Rep.
John Conyers, D,Mich,, is pushing

his live-year $40 biUion Local Part·
nership Act. Nine urban universities are hammering out public poli·
cies outlined at last year's New
Yark summit of mayors.
Meanwhile, pessimism is
widespread.
A National League of Cities survey of municipal officials released
last month found 51 percent reponing overaU economic conditions in
their cities worsening in 1991 com·
pared with 36 percent the year
before.
These wnes result in pan from
the shifting human landscape. For
the fJrst time in U.S. history, slight·
ly more than half the population
lives in a meuopolitan area of at
least I million people.
Older, larger and tired cities in
particular divide into alien countries of inner city and outer city,
had and good, poor and rich, unsafe
and safe, said Professor Mark Alan
Hughes, who teaches urban affairs
at Princeton University.

EIN ffiRAIDM, Israel (AP) Arab attackers armed with axes and
knives killed three Israeli $0ldiers
and wounded another at a training
camp for immigrant soldiers near
the occupied West Banlc, the military said Saturday. The assailants
escaped, and a huge manhunt was ·
launched.
Officials blamed the overnight
attack on either Palestinians or
Israeli Arabs. It would mark the
first time during the 4;yea_r-old

'

,;

"

Palestinian uprising that toea!
Arabs raided a military base in
Israel proper.
The attack, which carne on the
Jewisll' Sabbath, was expected to
prompt a public outcry over military preparedness. Two of those
slain arrived only recently from the
former Soviet Union and had been
in the army a few weeks.
The IdDings were lilcel y 10 cause
political re~rc,us!ions that could

"'

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In business for yourself? ···-•-

-.....--;:;••

.-.
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Put America's Tax Team to work for you!
POMEROY
618 EAST MAIN ST.
992·6674

GALLIPOLIS
SECONDt SYCAMORE
446-0303

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

POINT PlEASANT
419 MAIN ST.
675-1637

h~ls~sta~f~fu~rs~M:e~a~m~en~d~in~g~th~e::23~r~d--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:· ~

SUNDAY PUZZLER
See Answer to Puzzle on fage C-7
ACROSS
1 Departs
7 Female: colloq.
10 - Hill
13 "Ships olthe
desert"
19 Flag
20 Harem room

21 - League
22 Charms
24 Laughing
25 King or Bashan
27 Actor Marshall
28 Richmond 's st.
29 "The Two ol -"
30 Ship's crane
31 Princely Italian
family
32 Badger
34 Be In debt
36 War god
38 Roman tyrant
39 "Curly -"
40 Father
41 Abating
44 Per cent: abbr.
46 Baseball SIB\
47 Roosevelt 10
48 Teacher's favorite
49 "- and Order"
50 Washington bill
51 Rubber tree
53 Spielberg allen
54 Faroa Islands
whirlwind
55 Informers
57 Circuli
59 Collection or
facts
60 Walk
61 Susskind 10
62 Strike out
64 Distance
measures

66 Sell to consumer
68 "- to Billy Joe"
10 Muse or poetry
72 Mr, Durocher
73 Paramour
74 Mountain on
Crete
77 Suitable
78 Holds back
80 Schoolbooks
82 Nod
83 Perceive by touch
85 "Move troops"
88 Church oHlcials

8 7 Apportion
88 Female ruff

90 Agnus 91 Those holding
office
92 Sailor: colloq,
93 Recommit: send
back
96 Trade lor money
99 Barracuda
101 Easter highlight
104 Actress MacGraw
105 Ben)i, lor one
107 Fish eggs
108 Brown of music
109 Indian weight
110 Game at marbles
111 Pale
t 12 Narrow opening
114 Baseball park
equipment
116 Bank transaction
117 Hurricane center
118 Printer's measure
120 Fat or swine
122 Seed container
123 Warmth
124 Statton break ·
125 "- Kildare"
127 "- Thee ISing"
129 Tavern game
131 Besmirch
133 "Magnum, 134 Running
136 Sun god
137 Prohibit
139 Deface
140 Possess
141 Unruly male
142 Mother
143 River In Germany
145 "Adam's-"
147 Prison officials
151 Policeman
152 Permit
153 Encourage
155 Play on words
157 Clock faces
158 Novelty
159 River In Asia
160 Landon to
161 Babylonian deity
183 Blackbird
165 Coral Island
167 Greek tetter
168 Teutonic dotty
169 Automobile style
17t Masts
172 Stair post

.

173 Winged
175 Stupid person
176 Taut
177 Evaporates
178 Obtains

71 More unctuous
73 Females
75 Speck
76 Solemn wonder
79 Bond nemesis
81 "- Cid"
84 Meadow
87 Deface
89 Finishes
92 Mountain lake
93 Uncooked
94 Guido's high note
95 Plaything
97 Tennis stroke
98 Jumps
99 Winter vehicles
100 Footllke part
101 Fuel
102 Doris or Dennis
103 Female sheep
106 Urge on
109 Float In air
113 English streetcar
115 Therefore
116 Spare
119 Crowd
121 Attract
123 Chops
124 Succor
125 VIsions
126 Roamed
aimlessly
126 Distant
130 Dealers
132 Enormous animal
133 Son food
134 Egg dishes
135 Estence
138 Tear
141 Food llsh
144 Selenium symbol
146 Explode
148 Wash lightly
149 Proaecutor: abbr.
150 African antelope
t51 Halls
t 52 Anderson tO
t 54 River duck
t 56 Back of neck
158 Elcape
159 Christmastide
162 Pismire
164 Large truck
166 World War II
agcy.
167 ScOld
170 FuHlll
174 Near

DOWN
1 David or "Empty
Nest"
2 Growing out of
3 Meara or Jackson
4 Tub
5 - garde
6 Portico
7 Proceed
8 Fruit drink
9 Nigerian seaport
10 David or Kip
11 Eggs
12 Preposition
13 Crate
14 Early morn
15 Mire
16 Verve
17 River bank
18 Mixed
19 Magician's word
23 European
ermines
26 Liquid measure
29 Solicit earnestly
32 Smashed
33 River duck
35 "- the People"
36 Indian currency
37 Utter,s
spasmodically
40 Totted
42 Move from side
to side
43 Etectrllled
particles
45 Nets
48 l3efore: preltx
52 Slender finial
56 Declared .
58 Paralysis
59 Worship
60 Cuts .
62 Decide
63 PubliC
S1orehouses

65 Concerning
66 Mice, beevers
or equlrreta
67 Freed
68 Away
69 :·-Hard"

'•

AFTER THE ATIACK • An Israeli soldier walks away, bead
down, from a group or fellow soldiers being briefs by army commanders following tbe.attack on their encampment near tbe occu·
pied West Bank by Arab assallments armed wilb knives early Sat·
urday morning. Tbree soldiers were killed. (AP)

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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Public Notice
ldjuotoblo otwr pocloot.l;
Clb artlculalad wlfronl
frame.
lnatrumontotlon: Mounllcf In
lighted panel; hour motor;
Yoltmotor; fuel gouge;
ortlculatlon Indicator;
tnglno ott lolranamtuton
oil lomp and prnaure;
onglno oil prouuro and
water Jamperaturo.
Llghta: (2) head; (2) atop 6
tall; (2) back-up; turn
algnala w/harard ewltch'
(2) blecfo llghW (1) reo;
worldltgllgh~ .
Copocltt•: Full tonk (70)
gattona· hrdraullc oyalam
(25) flllkma.
Operating Weight: 21 ooo
Iba
'
Sp~lal Equipment Back up
ataim; angina hood atclea;
vandallam protoctlon lor
voroua fluid flU ancl chock
polnto; SMV 1 tgn; anll·
fr-; rMr tow hitch.
"ONLY MACHINES
MANUFACTURED IN THE
U.S.A. WILL BE
CONSIDERED
Delivery Tlmo: lmmecfloto
Offered 11 Trade In: (1)
WABCO 444 Serial No.

..

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....

•••t;

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

NORTH

1-1'-H

tlO Z

"Q653
t64
tAQ742

Both at work and at play, you're Nkely to
EAST
be tn the llmetlghl In the ~ ahead .9643
whether you Htk It or not. Keep thllln
"J9872
mind, so you'll always pretent a good
t K tO 8
Image In public.
+3
AQUARIUS (olen. 20-FIII. 11) A partFob. 11, 11112
SOUTH
nerahlp you're Involved In could prove
.Q J 8 7
to be counterproductive today; each
Substantial progress can be made in party may have an objective that don
lhe year ahead by shartng the good not support tho other. Major changes
tAQ7
things that are forthcoming with those are ahead for Aquarlua In t11e coming
t K J 10 8
who have helped you In the past You're year. Send lor Aquarius' Astro-Grepll
Vulnerable: North-South
In a new cycle and, In order to succeed. predictions today. Mall $1.25 plus 1
Deater:
South
you must be unseHlsh, not sell-serving. long, Hll·ecfdrllled, atamped enveAQUARIUS (olin. 21H'ab. 1t) Dealings lope to Astro-Grl))h, etc this newtpl· Sou.WHI Norlb Eost
with others on a one-to-one basis might per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 1 NT'
Pass 2+
Pass
not be your strong suit today. Tho fault « 101·3428. Be 8111'8 to state your zodl· 2+
Pass 2 NT Pass
you - In your counterpart might be ac llttn.
3 NT
Pass Pass
Pass
due to the mote In your·eyt. Aquarius, PIICEI (Fell. »-Morell :Ill) Try not to
'IH7 points
treat yourself to s birthday gin. Send lor bale judgment• on your emotlilna toAquarius' Astra-Graph predictions lor day, especially - e your work to conOpening lead: t 3
the year ahead by mailing S1.25 plus a cerned. A departure from prectlcallty
tong, sell·addressed . stamped enve- could Invito problema.
lope to Astra-Graph, c/o this newspa- ARIEl (llaloh 21·Aprll11) Hpossible,
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH speculative tnvotvementa lhoutd be
44101-3428. Be oure to state your zodl· avoided today. Lady Luck MIY be worlc·
ac sign.
lng on behalf of your oppoaltlon lnd,
PISCES (Fell. 20-Mwch 20) YOY might without her help, you might not be able
be more Inclined to lind excuses why to makolhlnga work on )'O!Jr own.
something can'l be done Instead of do- TAURUS (April »Mer :Ill) Usually,
Ing what needs doing today. Unattend· you're Inflexible once YOY havt lr1'lved By Phillip Alder
ed duties will only got wor1111.
at a decision. But todoy you could be InARIEl (lllatch 2t·Aprtl11) In social slt· fluenced by on lndlviduot whooe will Is
When defending, if you think the
uatlons today, you might not dlsptay stronger thllll yours lind whOM deslreta contract mustjo down, take your time
your customary Ingratiating qualities. In to do """"'thing counterproductive.
to ensure tbat you find tile right
fact, lrlenda who get on your bad side GEl . . 11181 21...._ :Ill) II you want But if declarer will succeed by
might be dealt with rather harshly.
others to be supportive of your lflorta
d b
1 he
ds
TAURUS (April 20-Mar 20) You're today, you mu1t pr- their parttctpa- ing out the istri utlon o t car ,
good at achieving your objeCtives to- tlon rather than pick them apart. Crlt~ try to play in tempo, not making any
day, but, unfortunately. you might se- clam could coot you attt..
revealing hesitations.
After a simple Stayman auction,
lect targets thai produce hOllow vic· CANCIR (June ,21......, 221 You may
tortes. Strive lor meenlnglul goell.
not .bt too lkllllutaHn~~~~glng your ra- West led the diamond tbree: four, king,
GEIIINI (Mar 21-.luM :Ill) Don't oper· sourQOitodoy, lnd pe&lt;Npa even leM seven. Back came tbe diamond 10. Deate under the IISIUmptton today that oo II you anomptto handle the lflllra at clarer won with the ace, crossed to
you:re the only person on the ~ Cl· MOther. Don't creote compllcatlona dummy with a club to tbe queen
pable at conceiVIng brlghttdou. Com· you Clln'lresQive.
led the spade two to his, ~;;:~1
pantona will reaont It If you belittle their LIO (o!Uir 21-Aug. 22) Clrcumat- then
Knowing tbat
p.a
·concepts.
.
mlght prevent you from following your wouldn't matter on this
West,
' CANCIR (olline 21-.lu!J 21) Cautiously agenda today. L~tlnG yoUr omotlonl New Yorker Sy Feldman, w011 with
t&lt;:rutlnlzo lnvolvtmenls today - . It Nil YO&lt;Jr bellavtor wilt only makt mat· the Ia!. Then he cleared the diamondl.
locka like you•can generate big returns
W«M.
Now South ran his club !lru~n
from nominal ~manta. Your aeed tera
(A... 21-Sapt. 221 You might throwinc aspade from hand. West 1
money could be just the tlp of the YIIIGO
havt 10 dell whtllln lndlvklual yau cfil.... todly. H - . you cen Ol**te to make two dlsclirda, coming down
Iceberg. '
LIO (Julr 21-Aug. 22) Thoil yOY pal elfecll1111y - tf you dOn't turn the event four cards. H be kept one d~';~~~~~
around with today will hlvt aatrong In· Into a gllidgt match.
'
spade king and both bearll,
. _ on your lllltudt. eomp.n~ona ~ (lapt. »011.11) n your lrleiMI• realiled he wouldn't beat the CCIII!ract.
WMJ to do _,.Ill todly that you Declam would lead the spade
whO reachinO
- on!Y 10(
"'""
equid
you
~aloudl
umbttlla.
too.
!*1'1 ~tty afford, try not to Ill yaur aafely establilbing his ninth
VliiGO lAIII· :11-lapt. :Ill There'e an ago glltn the way - untaae, o l - . Ravine aeen this cominc, Fel•!maJ!I
tndMdull you're tnvoMd with wilD II your pail are PNPINd to Pll' your amoothly discarded the beart 10
aatlellecf, regardlell ol what you
c1o. Thlal!!dtvlduot " tlklly to be pound· =:--0111'10 (oat. ......,, 221 A dlfllcult · spade five, keeplnc boUI hll dlalnoncll
. lng on the oampllint Clalk again today. objle!MIIIICIIII\able today, prcMdecf ~ South could have made
LliiiA ,....., ..-,a) 1t vwy Cltl· yau dOn't ,.... " ..... cllllloull
'
iul you do not fllllllln a ........ lrland In then HICIWJlly II. Unforlunlllly, llln'l CCII!Il'let by. e~ I bear\ to the
t1tt p r - of ot1ttr1 toclay. II you do, 1 a.- you might do )ult that.
bul be llacl
milled by !he
""'-'• a Ghlnellhlt wlllt you lilY wttl IAOITTAMII (111M. 11 Llal 11) You ac:e. He ealled for the tpade 10.
putllleloc:ulonyourown Jllllhllle l8aecf wlllla arttlalld.u111~ dllmayed wbta West llllmtlll' 10
kirtC aad Cllabed two dlamoad mc:u ~•1
~ ...... ll)llthnll
wllll • m 11 You ~ dlfeat !be coatract.
aonJellllllll q1 ~ you Wlfll to .
~ lhln, but INI '• WeJt defellded '~fell, but SOuth
do todaY. H'Ueeii)Olto lnvoNe 04herL ,
llllled Eut:' AD upert Eut woutdl
T1ltr ooutcl ictulliy retlfd your pro!lave put up the spade klaa at
~ llllteld of yau reiCil your lhll WOikiCl
not four to trt to win the Irick aad .P"(~ I
. .-.
·
berlM!Itnraurtt~er hla par...,• 111try llefore
. IMIYTAIIIII. ,_, • IIIII 11) M . . ;;IOdlftld to U1 your naecta. ~ 1IIOIIdl
were establllbed.
: yau'na Jlt1llllllllti .lfalli IliOn IIIII you may not be tllaciClvt.

446-3636~~
HOMES , FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25. LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
GREEN TOWNSHIP -INCREDIBLE VALUE, APPROX.
25 BEAUTIFUL ACRES, MOSTLY FENCED PASTURE.
CABIN WITH FIREPLACE, BESIDE STOCKED POND.
WELL MAINTAINED 3 BEDROOM, 2 BIII'H HOME HAS
FORMAL LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY ROOM WITH
BRICK FIREPLACE AND CHERRY PANELING.
SEVERAL OUTBUILDINGS. JUST LISTED! $120,000.

iiU

($)

=. . "'

REALTOR 579-2888

-

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-rau,..

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.,•'·

RltALTOR 446-3:183

'

$27,500 - VERY NICE 1188 MOBILE HOllE SPACIOUS 14'X70" HAS 2 BEDROOMS, 1Yo BATHS
LARGE LIVING ROOM, AMPLE CLOSET SPACE DECK,'
STORAGE BLDG. t.SS ACRE GENTlVSLOPING LOT.
L-SHAPED RANCH ON JAY DRIVE - FEATURES NICE
OPEN KlTCHENIDINlNG/FAMlLY
ROOM
ARRANGEMENT WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL LIVING
ROOM, 2 CAR GARAGE. NICE VIEW OF THE
SURROUNDING AREA FROM THE POOL DECK.
COVERED,PATIO. LOTS OF HOME FOR $58,000.

•

AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
LINDA G. SKIDMORE
MARYo..\'. n.om

Try to assess
South's fate

~

~

Notice
Public NOtice
provemanllln:
office of tha Dlolrlot Ooputy
Athono, Gollla, Hocking, Director.
·
.•.
Metga, Monroo, Morgan,
Tho Director riHniH the "•
Noble, VInton, Woohtn~on right to rojocl any and all .:1
CounU• andd othar. var bua blda.
route• on aoct 1ona Y
JERRY WRAY, . . 1
opptylng rotro-renocttvelut
Director ol Tronaporlallorl
dry pavement marking FEB, 1&amp;, 23, tH2
matenat lor contar llnll,
lanolin• ond edge ttn11.
...
Project Length: 0.00 lnt
.Public Notice ·
·•
or 0.00 mllM.
. Work Length: Vorloua 1•1
PUBUC NOTICE
To: lntor•lad CompMIII ..
or varloua mUll.
Pavemtnl Width: varl11.
From: Elol11 Boa ton, ;
Bidding on thla projoctlo
Treuurw
:,.,
mtrlcllcf.to Dlaecfvanlagecf RE : Speclflcallona lor . ··
Bualneaa Enterprloll
butldlng ond conlonla ., .
(DBEI) cartlftecf • DBEa In
tnau111nco.
accordance wlth. the Sur·
Plene bid the buldlng ::.
face Tr.anaporlltlon Unl· and conlenll lnaurltiC11 on •,"' '
lormAotocaUon Asololanco on all rlak AND on a named ;,\
Acl 01 11187, and. 48 CFR, pori! baala (fire, wlnclotorma •.
Part 23 and qualified to bid . ond hall, oxploalon, amo~~t, ~ :
with ODOT under Char,ter aircraft and vohlct11, rio~
5525 of tha Ohio Rev nd rio .. attending a etrlko or .,,
civil commotion and ;. ·
Code.
The Ohio Department of vandallam or mallclouo .:.&gt;:
Tranaporlation hortby noll· mtochl..
··
fiea all bidder• tho! It will
The 1pitclflcationa ore:
:·, ~
affirmadvely lnouro lhll In
'Replocement coat
any con.tract entered Into coverage lor building ond ""
pur~uant to lhla ad- grounda.
vortiaemon~ minority buol·
•Agreed amount ondorao444C22345.
neu ontorrrl••• will be ment aa per atalamanl of · .,
:.",
Bidder lo aubmll dotollecf afforded lui opportunity to valu•.
apeclflcallollll ol equipment aubmlt blda In r11ponaa to
'Comprohonalvo !Jinorol ·
offered. Tha Board of lhla .lnvllallon and will not llablflty ($500,000.) , wlth ~
Trualala r•erv• the right I~ be dllcrlmlnated aglinat on combined alnglo.Umlll.
~
rajoctany orall blda.
the ground• of race, color,
'tOO% co-lnauranca · per._ .~·
Sand blda to: Paul Life, or nallonal origin In cantago ohall apply to both ·
38060 Succan Rd., co.~•!deratlon lor an award. building lind conllnta.
'Theft lnouronco , on all ..,
Roedavllla, OH. 45772.
Mmlmum wage rotH lor
By order of tho thla project hove bean bulldlnga contenta IS1DOO ·l)
BaardoiTruatllool determined •• required by dequctible).
-·
Olive Township law and ara ~et lorth ln !he
'5% lncroaao In voluo of
Bulldlng 1111d Contonta.
Kal•n s. Hayman, Clerk bid propont. ·
Note: II any of tho abovo
Pout Ule, Ernoat Barringer,
Tho dote · Ill lor
Randall Booton, members. completion ol thla work connol be lnaurld, pluao,
(2) 16 23• (3) 1 3tc ·
ahall bo aol lorth In the ao lndlcole and explain on
' '
'
blcldln•• propoaat."
your bid.
PubliC Notice
Each blddor aholl be
Eaatern Locli
required to nta with hla bid
School Dlatrlct
degree.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS 1 certified chock or
38100 St. RL 7
Drawbar: T·fhllpecf, welded
STATE OF OHIO
c11hlor'o chock lor an
Rtecfovlllt, Ohio 45772 .:::
conatruction 6'XUS"xl8".
DEPARTMENT OF
amount equal to live
614-186-4331 • I•
Blade Ranao: Lilt above
TRANSPORTATION
P!II'Cinl of hll bid, butln no (1) 26; (2) 2, II, 16, 41c
d n"' 1 h 1 35
Columbua, Ohio
even! more thon fifty
groun
; P tc ango
February 7, 1812
thouaand dottara, or a bond
degree; bank cutting angle
Controct Salta
lor ten per cent of hla bid,
Public Notice
:~.. ~egru; cutting depth
Legal Copy No. 112·174
payable to tho Director.
' '
UNIT PRICE CONmACT
Bidder muatappty, on Ute
PUBUC NOTICE
Controlo:Hydtautlc.
STG-OOOP(&amp;)
proper forma,
lor
FORSALE
, .,
Scarlller: Cutting width 46 ";
Sealed propoaata wlll bt qualification at Ieaal ton 11183 Plymoulll v.n lor Sate. :~:!~5 :~:~~: front received at the office ol the daya prior to the date nlfor Sealed blda will be I'ICIIvect :··
Dlroctor ol tho ·Ohio opening blda tn accord~nco unlit February 24. Rlghllo ~:
Cab: ROPS w/tlnted glan; o:J~J:~~~~;lu~;~,,Trana- with Chapter 5525 Ohio r•erved to rofuu otl blda. ··
(1) 40,000 BTU heater; (2) pc
Ohio, Roviood Cocle.
Contact Wanda Vlnlng ~
delroater fona; Iron! and
Ohio
Plana and apoclflcodona
t92-21611or mora
;,,,
...
rear wlpera; Ina ida mirror;
are on file In the Oopartrnant
Information.
1\, I
air auepenalon
T
(2)
16
17
18
3tc
of ranaportatlon ond tho
• • •
------------..o.::=:::...=...:.:=~~~ ;;;;..;..;="'·==;;...;;=-.;;;."..;...-:---------- ·.\~
Real Estate Genel'81
Real Estate General
•

Public Notice .
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Board of Oliva
Townohlp, Mllaa County of
Ohio, will raoefve bldo unit
·7:00 o'clock P.M. t1tt 5th day
ol March, 1112 lor the
purcholl of a Ulld
artlculollcf motor greeter.
With opoclllcatlona aa
foltowo:
ARTICULATED
MOTOR GRADER
Engine: (6) cylinder w/nal
hp of 145; acoaler·
atorldocolarllor; dry type
air cleaner with pre·
cl•nar.
Tranamllllon: Full power
ahllt wlUt .Integral torque
converter.
Broku: 4 wheal aoll
adjuatlng hydroullc with
power booater.
Rear Axle: Spiral gura with
no apln dlllerondal.
Front Axlo: To bo aolld
conatrucuon·weldod
oocUona; wh•llun anglo
lalt or right (not lou than
17") oaclllatlon total (not
le11 Utan 32 cleg.).
Tandem Drtvo: Oaclllallng
welded ateet box ooction
with oil llghl houalng
20"x8"; aprockot drive
chain 1.25.
·
Tlrea: 14:00 x 24, 10 ply on
10" rima; rima to be
lnterchongoallto.
Steering: Hrdroatotic; mini·
mum turning recfluo 24'4".
Frame: Articulation (mlnl·
mum 20 cleg.) right or ten
aoctlon welded unll11.50:
x11.50".
Moldboard: Type 1T' redlua
w'hydroullc power ahill;
(2) power tilt cyllndera,
12'x24"x75".
Clrclo: Oullkle dlllmoter &amp;0"
w/otructual IIMI aocUon
lloma hordonod tooth;
hydraulic control 3&amp;0

"A4

-·"·

wltb S2.4 lliJIIaa In . _ ilu aood
miiUt u:llu Fait WIJIId'l.
"I feel the bank wlli be sold
witbia 60 days, if not aooner. In
fact, I would empbuize 1001161', I
tbinlt they WIIIIIO ptiCI!IIdJocly 10
buy 1hitt tbiDa
Ar:l.oJ.Iu " Dl •
. gle llid.
very ~~ 0 I
POlen~ buyen would include
F'lftb 1binl Bm:arp ol Clnt:inaad,
PNC F'UIIIICial Qlp. of Pi_
llllbuiJI!

want olhers to believe today, be certain
you have facts at your disposal. You
may may be both questioned and
enallenged.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) Old ob·
ligations have a way of resurtaclng at
the most Inconvenient times. Something you've been trying lo keep oubmerged may come up out or the water
today.
Fab. 17, 11112

affect the Middle East peace tallcs.
Army radio reported thai Parliament would hold a special session
this week 10 discass the raid.
The military chief of staff, Lt.
Gen. Ehujl Barak, uaveled 10 the
scene by helicopter and called the
incident "exuemely serious."
•
Military officials said the
assailants stabbed and hacked two
of the victims 10 death around mid·
ni~t as they slept in their tents. A
thud soldier was fatally stabbed
with a pitchfork when he heard the
commotion and ran to help the oth·
ers, they ·said.
An AP reporter at the camp saw
a cot in one tent covered with
blood, and a puddle of blood out·
side. News oC the slayings was held
up by military censors for nearlY, 16
hours while the victims' families
were notified.
Troops descended on the area to
launch a search. Flares lit the
green, windswept hills around the
camp, helicopters flew overhead
, and Bedouin uackers were called
in. Police said about a dozen Israeli
Arabs were rounded up for questioning in the nearby villages of
Ein Ibrahim and Muawiya.
The carny is about 23 miles
southeast o the coastal city of
Haifa and 2 1/2 miles from the
West Bank.
Army radio quoted residents in
the nearby West Bank town of
Jenin as saying a claim of responsibility was made by the Black Panthers, a local PLO militia, but radio
reports said Islamic fundamental·
isiS were suspected.
Barak said it was not known if
the attackers were Israeli Arabs or
Palestinians from the occupied ter·
ritories.
Attacks on military bases inside
Israel are rare and are usually carried out by infiltrators from Jordan
or Lebanon. The last fatal attack on
a base was in the annexed Golan
Heights, when an infiltrator from
Lebanon ltilled an Israeli reservist
near the Syrian frontier on July 3,
1991.
Right-wing lawmakers and Jewish settlers have repeatedly called
on Israel 10 pull out of Middle East
peace talks because of attacks in
the West Bank and Gaza Snip.

..

-

RACCOON ROAD - 38 ACRES, MOSTlY WOODED,
WATER TAP, 2 SEPTIC TANKS, ONE TRAILER SITE
PRESENTlY RENTED. $20,000.
CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP- LOOKING FOR SOME LAND
IN AVERY PRIVATE LOCATION? LET US SHOW YOlJ
THIS PROPERTY! COMFORTABLE, SPACIOUS 8
ROOM HOME, 25 ACRES. $3i,500.
RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOME PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNmY HOME ON APPRQX,
23 ACRES, BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE, 1
MOBILE HOMES. ALL PRESENTLY RENTED,
EXCELLENT LOCATION. CALL FOR COMPLETE;
DET~~.
.

'

"

,.

�T1 mea

Ott-Point Pleasant,

Sentinel

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrl&amp;bt

11

Help Wanted

--.:.....---1

18

Wanted to Do

WV

18

a-goo Poltoblo S.wrnlll, don'l
haul your loa• to the mill lult
coli ~7S-1t57.

Wanted to

Do

8

Donco lnotructlon.
Profaulonal young couplt
Po~norohlp

luchlng Co\lillry Wootom
Ballroom, Lltln 1nd Moclerrl
parlnorwh/p donclng. S/ngl01,
Sill, offordoblo, chlldcorw. M·F CoupiH and groups Wlcomti.
8 Lm. • ! :30 p.m. Agoo 211-10. For Info p..... call after 7:00
Btfonl, afttr ach~. Drop-In•
wllcomt. l14-44f.8224. New In· PM uk tor Anno Of Jim, 304·

Public sale
&amp; Auction

Fmancial
21

Mill Paula!• Oly Clrt Center.

lent Toddler Cart, 114-44M22l

paint garage,
haul

.wav

SWAIN'S DAIRY DISPERSAL

171-3U4.

CH.

304-4175-8413,

or 895-3062.

8

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
SUNDA'( FEB. 23, 1992 AT 11 :00 A.M.
Locattld 11 miles west of Athens. Take US 50
&amp; 32 W. of Athens and exit onto 50 W.
towards McArthur. Auction Is a quarter of a
mile on left. Signs will be posted.
Matching bed and dresser, twin 3 pc. bedroom suite,
30 ln. LP range, 30 in. electric range, drop-leaf office
chairs, recliner, occasional chairs, platform rocker,
antique floor lamp, stone jars, and other small
antiques and collectibles, 8 in. bisque figurines,
Wesilnghouse double oven stove, small kitchen
appliances. dryer, beauty salon equip., wet station,
hydraulic chair, hair dryer. cast iron tub, coal stove, lg.
bay window, 20 in. bike 4-14 in. tires off Dodge mini
van. truckload of molding, lg. base 1,000 &amp; 500 watt
light bulbs, 1,000 watt runway bulbs, fluorescent
bulbs, motorcycle gas tanks, Hoover upright and
canister sweepers, new sweat shirts, other misc.
hems.

12

9

Wanted to Buy

Complete Mouunotd Or Es·
11111! Any Type Of Furniture,
Appllanc:11, Antique'a, Etc. Also

Appra/111 Avolloblol 614-2455t52.
Portablt Rafrlg11111or, Call 614·
446-8594 1fter 5 p.m.
U11d Mobile Hom.t, Call 614·

446.0t75.

call 61C·94J..228e evenlna•

14

TOOLS: Electric cement mixer, Craftsman 6\\ joint·
er/planer, electric welder, 10 in. table saw. 6 in. vise,
hydraulic floor jack, Skill saw, electric drill, router, 1/30
&amp; 1112 electric motors. Craftsman tool box, hand tools,
electric fence charger, two new 7x9 garage doors.

Business
Training

Retrain
NowtiiSouthustem
Bus!neas College, Spring Valley

PIIZI. Call Today, 6,4-446~3871!

18

Wanted to Do

W1n1 1d T0 B L
R d Will OobyoH In My Homo. Rod·
uy: arge o~om
ney Area. References Avlllable.
Ba/11 01 Hoy, $5 A Bolo. 614· Call 614 • 24 5- 588 ~
446·1052.
E 6 RTREE SERVICE: Topplng,
Top Prlc:et P1ld: All Old U.S.

Trimming, Tr11 Removal, Hedge
Coins, Gold Ring•, Sllvar Coins, Trimming. Fr11 Ettlmateil 614·
Geld Coins. M.T.9. Coin Shop, 367-7115T.
151 Second Avenue, Galllpolla.
W1ntld:
lndl1n
Artifact•,
W1ncheslar Model 300. 614-446·

11

Help Wanted
• POSTAL JOBS •
YOUR AREA

..

lnlormotlon Coli 1·21t-736-IIS07

304-675·220l

Lost : Brown, White Sp1nial
Nama And Phone Number On
Colltr, VIcinity: Kan1uga!MIU

AVON • All 1r111, Call Marltyn
Wllvtr 304-382-264!.

lost: While Bird Dog Wllh Black
Spots, Rtward OHtredl VlclnHy:
Georges Cr•k Road, Gallipolis,
614-446·2445, Ask For Paul.

~

Wo Troln You. SPANGLER
AUTOMATED MEDICAL SER·
V1CES, INC. For Into C1U

t.aocJ-722-BAMS (24 Hrs).

VEND.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

Ntw Commercial, Home Units,

AG/ Hart Associate Agent poti·
tlon, 75% FTE, B.S. rn agrlc:ul·
turt, hor11cuhure or rel1tta tltld
requirtd. Leadership and com·
munlcatlon aldlll euentltl,
$15,03Q..16,~, cont•ct Malga
Cooper•tlv• Exlanslon lor more
Information. An Equal Oppor•
tunlt~ Employer; application
dtldllntla Feb. 25, 1992
Alto
slngar
needed
for
"Rtfltc:lion• Trio". Plene reply
to Rt. 2 Box 3t4·B, Lltan, WV

,.
\! ! l

\..."

_ . ,~,-"

.
)

-- ~

I

'

•

5852 14th

&amp; VIcinity

Excellent
P•y,
Benetht,
407·2t2-4ill7,
Tranaportation,
Ext. 571. 9•.m.·10p.m. Toll
Retundad.

Moving Sale: furniture, 1ntiqu11, loys, dl•h••, 304~75-

AVON I All Arwao I Shirley
Spooro, 304-875-t4:!9.

6979.

-};'&lt;

:&amp;.

'•

Real Eslate
31

A HEART FULL OF
THANKS
Ufa ha• Ito atrugglll
Ita trouble and car..,
But burden• are fighter
With good frlendl and
prayer.

.

To our family and
frlanda who have lither
taken turn• taking me
to the hoiopllal each day
for treatment, brought
ua goodlea to eat, gava
a hand with tha farm
work, or helpad u1
complete the green·

MYHRE BEACH'S
5G'tetlLCHICES
• IIIAT UICA.._
e IIIAT FACIJTB
e IIIAT RATEJ

Cosmtlologlsl NHdld: Gaur•n·
tlld $'170 Per WHk, P1ld
Vacation•, Calll14~446-7267.

DRIVERS WANTED
Eorn To $620 Wkly. Smoll Pockogo Doltvory, All Shlfto Pl.fl. 1·
S00-452-6841.
Drivers
11rn to se20 wklr·· sm•tt pack·

ogo do/Ivory, 11 lhlfto,

PI~·

l lmt, lull-time, 1-800-452-6881

1717. FOR SALE OR TRADE -Dwnll'w/1-lor a
homo /ocolld n lho .......,. Hll homo II 13 bodroom
Mck ranch, 1 car glrt(ll, 111.1 balhl, buomenl.
Situated on 0.816 of.., 1er1 ~ .

1711. VERY NICE HOME
In C..lhlro T-op.
Th/1 homo loa/uroo opprol. 1344 aq. n .. 3 ll'llf
bodiOOIIIII· r, bllhl, lui bllh, lull -ment ond 1 cor
=

.

.··

..
•

..

....
.

~.

-

·~

•••

.......••

....;.,.
~

••

......·, ~

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

WeThankYoul
To Paator Deliver, the
Reve. Grace, Hoback,
and Salllrflald, the churchn, ancl frlanda
who IIIYe comfot1ld Ul
through prayer~, vlaill,
phone calla, or 11111
oanla which I enJoy 10

-tlonll .Upport and
unclen..... W.'I'IIInk Youl
And.tlnllr. .. IIIJOlll
wllo 11M Upl ualn their
tnwlltd
villi •· or llfougllt •
Utili IUIIIIIIM Into our

liMI.......

- .........
..,,.... ,..VOid
~

••
·~

18

.,_ liMI•f!""1-•

·-118-goiiiL

. Vlrgl HAl I flmlly.

I

5710.
1111 aaton 12dl, '2br, '2 AC,
llndolplnnln;, Woohor, Dryer,

bedrm., vinyl ranch cloie to !OWn, t'.; baths. LA. kit.,
din. atea, lull basement wwith -4 rms. Faml~ rm. and
'1. bath down with outside entry. Owner works on cars
in 26'•32' garage wlred at 220 alec. 0Nnet" aakl •se1r.
Gosh, whol a buy/

1.. oo-m-

304-m.ssaa.

btdroomt, 1 blih wlgard1r1 tub
• .. ~ · thowtr, flrepiiCII 111 tiiCtrlc,
: ... . outlkll dick Inc uded, very

Romolnlng Loin, 814-441!-l1321.

1111 S1011hlno 14x85, 2br 2

Bolhl, Now On Ronlod Lol, 614·

814-441-1018.
,441-o313,
.

1838. LAKEVIEW LOTS: - Choice loll wllh
specllcular view. You will want more than one. Oak,

ouperb quali~.

For lull parlicu*• caiiiD 1n1poc1.

kitchen (wllh cherry cabinets), dinette, elec. heal
pump, C ~A. ref., range, dishwasher, disposal ,
s'!eene.d-n baclt porch, 2 car garage on &lt;4 11r... FT\11.
Priced nght Takealook al quwl ~.
lor ep1.

caa

t714. HAVE YOU BEEN LOOKING FOR A L.t.IIGE

FARII?'Hava wo got,..lor you. I O - -.co

l:'ud!.~C:~~=
.::.0"=
In PO!Chol. Fl'llll traol. HOMon TIIICI IChoOI IIMitcl.
Col/lor~.

1810. FREE GAl, 28 oc. ri111 aid lorm homo 2 gu

-Pill' 1118 ollho- nccm..$18,000.

..

' ' IIHHI limo 011 Joll? Pool Crodll
'.' HIItory A Problem? Mony

· 'Ropioooooood Mobile Homo• To
From. Bmo/1 Down
· , Poymonl. Coii1-800-!D-5711.
Eooy Ao \ :Z. 3. Fl/o Yoo'rw Tun
Hort And Buy Hore. Klos You'ro
I landlord Goodbyo/ EIHI Homo

PRICE. 3 bodrooma and ioom lor
, 5 fireplacea, ccmp/olod bolemonl
rm .,
FP, oqulppod kilohon, bolh, ~IC

special about this fashionable contemporary home.
Harmonized LR, DR, 3 bedrms., 2 baths , lg. master
bedrm. Loads ol cablne1s In Kit., new family room with
a Victorian touch . Wall unit built In wlbar area and
extra storage. Back door patio and garage. Lart~e lot
with ll'HI in a lovely neiQhborhood. This home is ol

Dillinclion and difterenl
4bldroom bi·level wilh 3 bolhs, LR, FR wii/1 fireplace:

contr1ct, 1-800.221-811tt.

· a-

an additional room wllh gu fireplace. Posanalon on
lho dose ollhe ~ran...Uon.

~

.,5

VACANT LAND MAJOR SUBDIVISION KNOWN.AS
"LAKEVIEW ESTATESLOI rt 2.25 ac. !M.. Prloo $18,500
LOI t2 2.348 ac. !M.. Prloo $22,500
Lo1113 2.348ac. !M.. Prloo $16,500.
OUT LOTS FOR SALE....
Lol A5.322 ril/1434,500
Loo B5aau rno1-t34 ,liOII
LOI C5 OCJII mo!-211,500
SubdMiion loiiiD lharo 1/llo/eltclrlc inltllai/on.
Wolll available.
'
t754. IECI.UDED COTTAGE FOR TWO • 2
bodroomo,
tal-In tnllllthle
2
pon:hao. 111111 LR, luU balh;-10
I
Cornor1lblo horrio. 820,000.
171&amp;. RIO IIIWIDE. -

..... 3 boctm., boll, gao holl, cotpOII. ~- " ol

...

~

on .... __..._ondopollobuld · - -·
L.ocllod on SR 36.
LOCATIOII. LOCATIOII. LOCAafoi Dlliar
~~=~...,....,.·
One Wl'f ~ BA. 2 - ·
oo
ono MM pod on t ...
Can

•,••
,

ler M...., Gordonl. Cio Oroa
Oodoy, lSI Lo Onncla ltvd., Oil'
l/flollo, Ohio 48131.
Announctmlntl

220.ifWlllttGIY Ill-~~~~~.......,. on lo.
141114 ~ tgUrao 2 - - · /lvtng room,
kllc:l1on,
bolh,
fhlotoorM
lllronow.
,
me. NEW LISTING. TREES, TREU AND MORt
TRID/1 12 acroo mil. A/10 2 BR homo wllh Qrtll
=~ :~IIC4, kltchon, both, polio ond nice

.

INL::.:I:..-:-".-.

ond

GJIDN'I
.r..nllg......

..r..amC.r•

JN«=w,mra ·
VAJ.Im OP TOIJB
IIODAND
IVIINUI ,

---root.

n11.
- - -aoiiY 110- goraga Willa ..
gorago ,boya. &amp;TATE APPROVED. WINd 110 and

Happy Ads

now...,.... __

II pJIOO&lt;IIOr - ·

-.-....MIGII-.AI
onl.·• · too.,...._Io

o/oowlh--lor-.. . .

HIO. OVERI.OOIONQ TilE •AUTifut. OHIO
RIVER • COzy lind 11111111 (!unglloW. I 01 a ··
••t·n kltclllll, rengo and ~ttg.. ~. 1u11
blltmtnt, ol and --minO 111111100, ...
-

-tblolond1 - - ·
~41, MloDLEPORT
AHYONlt UI.OOO- Will b;_,·•

lhls aapllonii!J nlc:i 3 bodnn., 1\t bl/ha, 2 ltDIY
homo. LO'Mif now eorpot, rongo, w dfYtl,
1~ ""' - · N111 ond cloon .-· .- 107·
$ycomoro8t
mi. OOI"ITIICIAL 011 fthiiiiNT!AI, - Prlml
A... ~ •
ond b\rolnlll. 01110 Rivlr lrGidlle· Vt!y nlcl I
bodnn. ho/nl Wllltpi'IW~ '!11'1 ~ lhlalt,
II'IOftiY~prapaiJ!Iat\fiillflr Cf 'Ttfll. .

-

·e....

oDmlllnl""""

TOWN.ILDG.
t.qo
!t:~~~-~=RTII~IHINT
2 ono ~T/li

And Dor..•lt. 614-446.0338. Cal

Fumlohod offlcloncy oponmonl

whh kltchenlltll 1nd b.lth.
O.I»&gt;OIt and rllftranc. ,..

SCRAM-LETS
DEGREE
LIMPID
VISION
TURBAN
JUNIOR
CENSUS
PURSE STRING

Real Estate General

Single Etfleleney, Partially Fur·
nlshed, Water lncludMI, Deposit
Required, Caii614-44S..S720.

2 · 16

TO

"W/1at's the term to describe
the hard to break bond
between mother and child?"
asked one Grand-mother. "I
believe," laughed the second
Grand-mother, "that it's called
a PURSE STRING!"

•

..

Loole ond see
111fa0 U 23!
Happy Birthday

D. C. Melal Salts1 11C.

Cannelbu'l!,lnc. 45119
Specializing in Pole.
Buildings.
Designed lo meet your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Bt.ildings and
·•
Package Deals. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars.
Local Sales Represen~live
DONNA CRISENBERY

11366 S. St. At. 7

Gallipolis, OH.
PH. 614-256-1633

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

4p.m. 614-446-3697, Or 614-245·
5223.

LOll for llle, lrlilers ICC:Ip-

positiOn

llblo. 304-875-2722.

Of

Socrotory. Thlo

Trailer lot for rent. Water, 11w1r
and 11nltation Included. $110

month. 304-875-t&amp;CMI or 175-5037.

112 acre, 3 112 milts from town,
hook-up for mobile home,

13,000. 8t4-446-1842.

Real Estate
Wanted

N11r Holzer Madlcal Center 3
badrocm, 1 112 b1lh1, kllhcen
living &amp; dining roornt on at
leuf 3 or more acrea, moatlv
flat with main road frontage.

304·576-2631.

EXICUtiVI

poo/1/on

••rvn 11 secrtt1ry for bolh

the Plant Man•a•r 1nd
M1n1ger lncSullrtal Relallont.
This poaltlon requlrea a
Secrelarl1l Degree or
commensur.te ew:perlence In
••cratarllf duties. Good
commun1c1Uon 1nd typing
tkllls lrt rtqulrld along wUh
PC and IBM m1tnfreme
npt.r lenct. Shorthand or
tpetd writing ·would bt
beneficial.

FIFTY, REALLY NIFTY!
You'll count yourself lucky to own thio goodlookirljj bi~ovol with one car garage end foncad
yard. There are 3 bed moms and one bath, and
!he handy person Is the family will onjoy

MAKE AHOME FOR
Affordable 3 bed1room
Oown to oarth livability
·
3
town
in city
offers eat-in
bedroom all brick ranch. Large living room with
fireplace, niC4 eat-in kitchen, 1\o2 baths, full • kitchen, utiilty room, remodeled room porloct
for sal&gt;ing room or nursery. New gas forcad air
basement. Vory nico lot with option to buy
fumaC4. Vinyl siding makes maintenanco aasy.
ad&lt;ilionallot. Friondly na'&lt;!hborhood sening for
Detached 1 car garage. Situated on 1 acre lot,
your family. City schools. $59,000.
1612
mil. Owner very enKious to sail. Call today for
land contract terms.
t801

hnish1ng the lowar laval into a •recreation

rbom

for the family. Don't wail- the price is $39,900.

150&amp;

A full r~nge at ComplnJ
blntfttl It provided. If you 1r1

OHklng 1 chal/onglng pooH/on

whlrt you c1n become 1n
Integral mtmblr of lhl locll
buslntll t11m, aubmll your
rnumtto:

Rentals

Mlchool L. Horrlnglon

Employment Manafl_lf

41 Houses for Rent
2 bdrm. houn, no Ina ida pets,

dopooll roqulrod, 814-1~2-3090
11

THE GOODYEAR TIRE
&amp; RUBBER COMPANY
St1t• Routt 2

App/o Grovo, WV 25502
""Equll OppGI'IW\Itf ~ ~fltw

Help Wanted

:========~========~

WANTED

Oulstanding potential on /his drivo·lhru carry·
out. Groat location along St. Rt 35. 3 bedroom
residence includod in sale. Lots of road
hontago. Will include inventory and equipment.
'
t513

Can your PRESENT CAREER make
your DREAMS COME TRUE or will you
owe your soul to the company store?
Ground floor sales opportunity with
exploding International company.
Looking for LEADER/RECRUITERS to
develop
&amp; train sales force.
(Administrators .need not apply_.
Commissions $50K plus 1st year
should be obtainable.
Company benefits package lo those
who qualify. Entry level positions also
available.
Call MONDAY ONLY from
9 A.M.-5 P.M.

614-992·6225

INVESTMENT SALES
OPPORTUNITY
. Financial Horlzans Dlstr.utors ·Agency, Inc., a
su~sldlary_ of Nationwide Cerp., a mulll·blllon
•aar holding wmpany, Is s..chlng for uniiJMir
qwlllltd Acwunt Execllllves to counsel anl sell
lnvestmtnl and lnsunnce products to customers of
a majcir regllnalll•ndallnsiHutloll.
Baietl whhln a llanklttg ~nnch environment, the
Ideal candidate will provide 'profnslonol
consulfatln financial uptrllu, utilizing a
comp~l• lne Df 11utual funds, brakerigt strvkes,
attellnvestmllll-orlented lnsunnct and annullr
pretlucts.
The posHion requires a currtnt NASD Serits 6 er
7 lktnst, as wtll as a stile lnsur!IICe lk111se.
Previous ~anklng experltiCI Is desln~lt. In
addition to your pra¥111 alllltles, we wl pnvldt
an exlltlsln tnfnlng PI'Dtlnll!t a lead IIIIIRiion
prognm and an attractive ,...~~~~ pttckage.
Yeur prolessllnallmagt, ,.-s~tet~ ca~~~Mkallon
skills alii a~lllly te work Independently art
eslilltlaL You wm have llll!•g•me•t support and
carlll' tttUIIty within 1n l•vatlvt atMI rapid~
.

EASY TO AFFORDII
Ramodeled 2·3 bedroom home located one
milo from town is ready to move into. New
furnace, naw toel, new caJpet and much mora.
Large flat lot. City ochools. Priced at $38,000,
il's easy to aWord.
1215

decorated living space wilh axtrat like

hardwood floors, cherry kitchen cabinets. large
spacious rooms and large country fireplact.
You'll fall in love quickly. Outside enjoymonl
can't be bettor wilh brick and conc111to patioa,
breezeway and la'lle comfortable fmnt
1111
secluded from • wolld by trees. Call _, ,1 ·~·
an appointment.

Call Toll Free 1-800-634-1684

IX. . . I8tttp!II!J•

Stop and sao this reconUy built home nnUtd
on a 3.67 acra landscaped lot. Vory will built
home with ovar 1700 sq. ft. of gracious, well

,.

VERY AnAACnVE HOME for the family
moving up or starting out. For $48,500, you're
buying 4 bedtoems, 2 baths, living room and
family room, \lory nice eat-in ldtchon with oak
cabinets. Garage and nice dock. City schools.
1206
IT HAS EVERYTHING YOU NEED AND
WANt•.AND IT$ AFFORDABLE TOOIII
Very nlco 3 bedroom homo with 24x24 family
room that has a built-In stereo, fl111place and
wm.n dock edjacont. Tho kitchon foatu111s
oak cabinets and .built in mic~wave. You also
get a \o2 aero lot with la'lle 30x30 metal
building, 1&amp;x32 ingrcund pool and lots mora too
numerous to list. Located 3 and 7/10 mllealrom
Galllpola and pricod to soli/
170t
WANT 10 BUilD BEFORE SPRING?
Before you build, ovon ~you alraady o...., a lot,
please look at the so outstanding 5+ acre oitoa.
Wo have two of tho but lots in Groen
Township. Aat, lovol lots in a quiet country
surrounding. City schools.
16110
SPUT LEVEL - Throe !ovals that provide
zonod ar11111 for ooparata activitiaa of family liv·
ing. yot combinld glv01 apace l&gt;ith a good tral·

f!c. naw. 3 bedRJ?m•, 2:-i batlls,

·

,., Ohio

......

center, 1-800.58t.57IO.

maple, dogwood and evergreen b'M• make this a
sul:)tJrban paradlae . AIIO lots fronting on White Rd.

17ii.IIIVER FRONT LOT W/CAIIIII. M,OOO.

=

2br, LoCittd In Evergreen, After

Serving area for over 21 years.
100% financing

814-446~S71

"' Homl 3br1 2 Bath1, P•y Ott

1738, MARK OF QUAUTY -

Llborera wanted, Nm to
will train. Pltct work, 1110

YOjl Ho" ,._ Yooro Di-·
Bo/oi Exl*lonct, Hlvo Tho
Allllty To Soli In Volumo, And
Aro Looking To Eorn OV.r
$21,000 Tll/o Y-, Wo May Hove
Tho ~r Oppo~un/tl You Aro
FOf. Conllct Oo AI 114For An lmorvlow, Or
lend Yoor Rooumo To Ohio Vol-

Business
Buildings

1171 S.nnybrook 14x7U mobil•
homl, modo IW Hol/ypork, 2

Oood" CondH/onl

•
: :•1H7CioytonRidr.-·3BR,2
, , • full bothl, po~lot J lvm'od. Now
. • ' on ronlod loi.St4-448-1147.
: :;. •·~~~--~~~~~
1181 Plnocrook 14x70, 2 bod·
• room, 1 blth, total IIIC, hilt
P"mP. olumn oldlng, 121120 lronl
poreh, 304-!71-21f~ oftor 6:00
:PM.
·110 • Rodmon O.nvlilo 14x72 •
•on ram..r lot. 2 full bllho-2BR.
' Colt (114)3f7-013hftor 5 p.m.
1111 14lil0 Sunohlno Mob/11

·

Fumlshid Small
HouR, $250/ma. Plus Utllltlnl

qu/rod. 614-446-t519.

Allor !p.m.
:117:1 14x7U Folrmonl mob/It
.homl. Romodolod. Nlco kltchon.
Throo bodroomo. $8000. Coli

RtrrltMmor, Slova, Part Fum.,

11687. CEDAR RANCH HOME ~ Sirualed on 47 acres

1718. CEDAR &amp; STONE RANCH - Everylhing'o

ANSWERS

Fumlthld 3 Roam• And Bath
Up.-talr., Clun, No Pets,
Reference And Deposit R•

5 homes In netld of vinyl siding or lnsulaticl
vinyl wlndowa, to Introduce new products to
this area. All prices on work will be sharply
discounted, also, reduced prices on rools,
gutters and awnings.

..

lui bob, ltvilg room wttR
fropiaca, eltc. heal pump ond cera . air. Thll brick
Cope CCd hOmt hU IIPt)roX. 1800 oq. ft . ~
ovtr1ookl a. Ohio Rlvtr olualod on 21&lt;1 oawo rilll.
ProptfiJ lloo lootu... 1 38&gt;&lt;48 molll bulking ond 1
14X24 buld/ng lor a smolt bus/nell. l'RICE
REDUCED. Coli for more /nlonnll/on,

$198. Call 614-1192-778~ EOH.

mobile

Ownll': 614-256·1243, Aftor 6 P.M. L1t1 model mobile tlomt, balh

Mobile
Un Pr11owntd
Your T1x · r"
Tu
AndHomn.
THie Dawn.
Rolvnd. 50 Homoo To Choooo.
EIIN Home Center, 1e800.58,_

·.,'t i

f707. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS AGAIN - UNDER
PRICED AT $41,800 - Own your own homo, 3

glnMrlng S200,IJUO, oil 1/okl

muchWe 'Tbalik Youl
To our river and
aohool ....rk. . and
....... whO ..... dilly
giYtll • muoh n 11 dt d

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

·e. Make appointment to " ' lhls attractive

houa"-

WeThankYoul
To Dr. Sholtla, Dr.
Khoala, Dr. Whiteley,
Dr. Walker, all the
nur••• (llpeclally In
the radiation and
chtmolherapy depart·
menta) at Holzer, the
Home C.. nW'Ma, and
the Racine Squad
membara for their
wondlrful medical care

004·Ql2..Jal01 614-387..()649.

1882. QUALITY· LOCATION· SPACE- Tlil home
nu 11/lho qulllteo ololrtendly hOfno alii ........ 3

Apanment
for Rent

qulrod. No poto: 614.o448-467V •

For Sale: Commlfclal Building
And Lot In Eureka. Contact

• roorMt fuN baurnent, 1·V2 bath,
1t11ched 1·112 car gar1ge.
Cantril h11t 1ncl 1lr. Evenings

CoiiiM-4415-8707.
Roducod To Botl: S4~,90o,
Choohlr'!t. Ohio. ~04 -932·8959,

1a1g1 boQ-oomo, olltco, 2

Jobl In Kuwait tax tr11, con-ttruetlon workt'!.t...l75,000, en-

workert ttoo,ooo.
1!55ol1. 1572.

Mobile Homes
for Rant .-

, • • good cond, 30W75-3471.

3 Announcements

1

Homes for Sale

3 Unit Rental, Slluat.d On 112:
_ Acre LothMalnttnlnc• FrH, Ex·

• m/1. This home fea1ures 5 BRs, and/or, office,
playroom, 2'~ baths, utility rOom, cathedral ceilings
ewer lovi~ room, dini~ room and stone fireplace, fire
Md secuflty alarm system. finished lamily room with
fireplace , heat pump and central air, 2 car garage,
coverOO patio, barn, atocked pond. Home has apprOY.
3000 sq. h. living apace and many mOtt amenitin.
Call lor more iniOnTlation.
·

446.0338.

Belort p.m.

Alvtr •nd At. 62, 304-675-6979.

2 Mck homoo, 4 ml/oo ouo Rl. 36
82, 304-175-61179.

f&gt;''

space, 228 sq. ft . m!l porch, 12x21 COV8fed patio, 1
C?B~ garage, 3 _
large bedrooms, 2 full baths, spacious
1t111ng room wuh Strauss chandeliers, lormal dining
room, lam ily room, with woodburner. Sltua led on
4.652 ac. mil app. 2 miles tram University ol Ria
Grande. Cali lor appointment.

gat In on tha ground lloor
-----------------1 atAVON
Avon• ntw earning atructurt.
1-B00-992-6358.

card of Thanks

Wast Brldtn·
813·751·3300, Or

1113-151-3200.

"''

25253.
.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Pt. Pleasant

Str~~t,

' ton, FL 34207.

MICHAEL MILLER, REAl. lOA, 448-1101
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 245-8675

'
mo. BRICK RANCH HOME wilh 2\12 sq. ft. of livong

Gracious living. 1 and 2 btd·
room apar1menls 11 Vlllag.
Minor
and
Alveratae
Aptrtmenta In Mlddlei)Oft. From

Furnlatled

home, 1 mila below lown, over·
looking river. No Pets, CA. 614·

and half, Sand Hill Road, 304·
From $1H.OO. t.ampoc Lollono,
671-3634.
AccHIOI'In. Monthly t~lymenls 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Low Ao $18.00, Coli Todoy FREE
NEW ColO&lt; Cololog. 1-100-228· 48 A. 8 Room Brick A1nch, Lr &amp; 11 H I W t"d
1292.
DriFp, O.nJFp, Kc, ark. Room, 3 -===e=p==a:n:"':::=:;;
Dr, 1 112 Bolh, Full Flnlohod r:
Baumenl, Fuel OU Fumacal At·
a.crelary
22 Money to Loan
lachod Woodbumorc Slnglo At·
EXECUTIVE
GET A MAJOR CREDIT CARD tachtd Gr/Oper.r, l'lua 2 C1r
SECRETARY
THAT CHARGES 8 1/2% INTER· Gorogol Work Shop, 2 Largo
B11n1, Crib/Shed. 3/4 Mll11 OUt
The Goodyur Tire l Rubber
EST.
Send A SoH Addrooood En· At.2'18. 614-446·2360, Evenings company'• Point Plea 1anl
Plant hat an opening for thl
,vo/opo, No Monoy To: w.T.P. Attar 7:00p.m.

EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 446-107
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 441-0722
DEBORAH SCtTES, REALTOR,LYNDAFRALEY, REALtOR,-

,

614-446·3537

458 acres between Ktntwha

nen. Won't L111. ,-800.284·

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER,38HI21

,.

42

· . Good, St11d)t, Aftard1ble, Busl·

DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR, 411 IICMI

=·~

Roqulrod.

Ev~nlngs.

.VENDING ROUTE: GOI Rich
Oulck? No Wayl Bul Wo Havo A 34

Real Estati General

=

2-bdrm,

Schools, $400fmo. Rtfertncts CompiiiiV

. No Experl•nct NtCitllfY As

3 bdrm. houH for 1111, 5 ICrtl,
dick, garage, fruit trtH, garden

(:/tJ«Ne

Now!)' Rodocorolod,
Nlco
Nolghborhood And CloH To

33 Farms for Sale
n. . Opportunity And RequlriS
A Sollwlro Purchuo 01 $6,995.

CR. / _/~ PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ~KES THE DIFFERENCE

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

Po1111 C1rritrt, Sorters, Clerks.
For An AppUcallon And Exam

Ext. P-6432 0 1.m. To 9 p.m., 7
DIJI.

Crook, Golllpoils. 614-446-9535.

\::!J7JUIA,

qutll:te, 3br House, Carpattd,

o/ono/1. Thlo /o A Sound Buol·

Not Reaponalble for Accident• or Loaa of
Property

RESIDENTIAL· INVESTMENTS · COMMERCIAL- FARMS

$23,700 Per Y11r PIUI Btnetlla,
LOST Flalrock 1ra1, Blk Lab
wlWhlle under n~ck, male, wllr·
lng red collar draglng chain,

~,

A

Point Pio0 anl A"': 2010 Mor· 44

Doing Billing For Physicians
And Other RllhhCII'II Praln·

" In town, two story, thr11 bed·

CU.~· O. R. t r.,f ... ..1# f":i?)

Comptelly

Spm

Slon Full Or Po~·Timo. A Fow
Houro Por W..k Con Provldl Up
To $5,000 Exlro lncomo Monlhly.
Wo "" A Hollonol Compony

collonl S opo, 614-446-156&amp;.

Employment Services

air, rtfarancal. 814·44S.0338,
8tlort 7p.m.

pirl fum 1pt, newty

9-h Sl, 2 bod·

room tumrlshed apt, uUUtlu
paid, reflr~nclt &amp; deposit ,..
quir1d, 304-882·2566.

2 t.droom 1p11 In Pdnl
Plea11nt1 modern, clean, Hud
rtdiCOI'IIted,
WfO hook-up,
Pomeroy, 6,4·992-6886 1fter

Now 1.aocl-234-2151.
MEDICAL CLAIMS PROCESSING

1t42.
And

lo Ubrary, parking, central heat,

·Local Snack Vending Roula
· . R~e~ulon Proof lncom• C111

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

Real Estate General

Furnished Apanmtnt, 1br, next

ICCOpiOa, 614-446·2200.

opol, 614-7(2·2326

Real Estste General

Mlddlopo~.

tho ollorlng.

71 GRADE HOLSTEINS &amp; EQUIPMENT
CATTLE AS FOLLOWS:
46 mature cows, 25 first caH he~ers. (25 head have
freshened in December &amp;January, 10 more will fresh
by sale date)
NOTE: This is a young, clean herd ready to work lor
you, with a 51 lb. production average per cow. All
caUie have been veterinary checked lor pregnancy,
TB, and ready to ship anywhere. Cattle info sheet
and health papers will be available on auclion date.
EQUIPMENT AS FOLLOWS:
1,000 gallon Mauler bulk tank wnh automatic washer.
15,000 kyit. WINN pto operated generator.
TERMS: Caah or check (with pro~r 1.0.)
1
LUNCH STAND
VERLIN &amp;: JOANN SWAIN, OWNERS
CROWN CITY, OHIO 45623
PHONE: (614) 256-1686 (residence)
(614) 256-6900 (buslnau)
''Anyone wlahlng to vlalt the larm before. aala
date 11 welcome. Pleaae call prior to vlalt 10
arrangement• can be made to 111i1t you.

AUCTION NOTE: This will be a fine auction to au end
with good clean merchandise. Consignmants still
arriving. Food available . Taking consignments for
upcoming household and antique auction.
Auctioneer: Mark Hutchlnson-698-6706
Llcenaed and Bonded In the Stale of Ohio
Asaoc.: Frank Hutchlnaon-692-4349

675-6042

mall unlll you have Investigated

Regltter1Uon t00.05-1274B.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto&amp;
With Or WlthoUI Motors. Call
Larry Lively. &amp;M-388-0303.
Beaullful Sleek Blick Cal, Very
Friendly, To Good Home For In·
side Pet Onlv. About 1 Year Old,
614·256-1713, leave MeSiage.

Situation
Wanted
Will houl grovel 6 do odd lobo.

Efficltnc:y apt . lor rent, beautiful
ear pet, nlct couch and btr, 304·

recomrMnda that JDU do buelnHt wllh ~· you know ond
NOT lo oond monoy through tho

Will sell on the farm located on Sheet's
Road, Crown City, Oh.
~ •• taka SR 7 south to SR
218, approximately 15 miles south on 218 to
the Intersection of SR 553.
From proctorville, Ob., take SR 7 north 12
miles to SR 553, turn left and taka .SR 63
approximately 3 miles, at Intersection of SR
553 and SR 218. Watch for auction arrows.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Business
Opportunky

INOI1CEI
OHIO VALLEY .PUBLISHING CO.

WEDNESDAt FEBRUARY 26, 1992
11:00 A.M.

Wanl to do hOUHCINnlng I
office ct..nlna. Have reteran·

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

·.

(luallflitl catidltlites shapld HttCI a resume ancl
salary listory to:
· .
Mark.w.l
. Ge11!111•11111r
. ·
h•ndal Herll1nl Dhlt...,_l A!JHcy,lnc.
. 425 Waklt
• 2f25 ..
'
45202
•

dining room,

l1v1ng room, tfl1clont kitchen and large L·
ohapld fsmly room: Hoat pump, oontrat air, 2
car gara(ll and 110111(11 building. Located in
Cloarview Eotalla Subdiviaion. City schools.
$72,500.
t408
WANT ABEf.UTY OF A HOME WITHOUT A
BEAUTY DF A PRICE?
Then thia 1i88 Fainnonl Townlhouso (14X70)
Ia for )lOu. Large living toem, dining ar1111 with
buffl-ln bullet, farge maatar bedroom with buUt·
In duk and droner, 2nd bedroom, 11'111 bath
with garden tub. EnciOHd laundry area with
- Whl~ waaher 111d dryer. Outdoor area
oflera nice deck, - I a block sidewalks and
and slorago buiding. Located on a 111ntod lot or
move ~your own lol OHertd at a price that
~'be bael only St5.500111
f6t0
ANALLY A HOME WITHOUT HOMEWORK
Ira all bien donel Thio 2 yoar old homo Is
INdy and waiting for you. sug,t contemporary
dltaign provld11 1 very apeclous IHI. La111•
complement of casement window• lot the
aunahlne In even on cloudy daya. llllutiful
kitchen, 3 bldrooma, 2 full batha. Nlco dock
overlooking llal profollionally lendacoipod
yanl. City achooll: $70,900.
1211

DON'T smLE FOR A HOUSE
JUSTTO UVE IN....
Frcm the moment you step into the largo foyer
you can."fNI" your f~ily living in this clas~c.
Fonnallav1ng room , d1n1ng room, suMy kitchen
very livable family room, 3 nice bedrooms plu;
2 full baths. Storage galore in the largo a/tic, 1
car garage, lull basement If lhars not enough.
in !Dwn convonionco. Priced at $63,000. $609
WANT AHOME AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
THAT YOU CAN MOVE RIGHT INTO?
Thon you ne8d to tako a look at /his beauty.
Largo living/dining room combination, nice
kitchen with laundry ar1111, 3 bedrooms and 2
baths. Newly painted C4ilingo and exterior.
Combine this low price with low interest rates
and you can fulfil[ your homoowner's draam.
Only $32,000.
1613
HllE.AWAY OVERLOOKING CITY
Looking for envacy? But atil want to be close to
town? Hera a the perfiiCt homo for you. \lory
lovely aanch locatld at the end of a dead-end
stroet. Plonty of living opaco with over 3,000
sq. ft. 4 bedroomt, 3\o2 baths, large family
room, study and farge living room with beamed
coiling and 1 wall full of windows ovonooklng
town and W. V. 3 fireplaC41, /algi ocr..ned in
porcll and much, much mort. Kids can walk to
school or town. Would you believt all this for
under$100,000?Callu•now.
1201
VACANT LAND.. ... 10.14 acres located oil
Jackson Pike....one oil well which pays royal·
ties. Owner will sell with or without mineral
rights. Atking$17,500.
1709
CHARMING HOUSE IN TOWN
Affordabiit)l II only ono of the bonUM I /hat will
attract your intaralt. Tho owners have
complttaly ..modeled thlo home trom top ID
boiiDm. New bathroom•. boiUtifui new kitchen
with brealdaol nook, new caJpet and ctoc:orating
and new fumace leavo very little for you ~ do.
lncludll 3 bedrooma, 2 batha, liv1ng room,
dining room and fsmiy room, 2 fi111placaa. Vory
nico backyard area lor kida. Located on lot
Avenue. Pricod at $79,800.
1208
LOOKING FOR SOIETMING THAT IS
AFFORDABLE?
Wen we've got iUt Nice 11183 Mansion mobile
hom'• on ·BOx230 lot. mn. Offering eat·ln
kitchen, living room, 2 bedrooms, t bath ,
Nlctly Jlndacaped lot ID enloy from /he dock.
Can be bought fumiohod at $14,000, or
unfumiahtdat$12,500.
HOB

AMOVE IN THE RIGHTDfRECllON
Slap up to becoming a homeowner. This 3
bedroom ranch l&gt;ilh desirable in-town locali9n
is waiting lor your inspection. CaU today to soo
this affordable home priced at $39,900. 1511
HOME I LOT FOR $21,110011
Quiot country surroundings make this 3 badroom home attractive. Located close ID ahopping. Featu111s 2 fult baths, la~ga living room,
oat·in kitchen and dining aroa. Plenty of pork·
ing. Not m!lny places available lor this price in
good condition.
1218.
85 ACRE FARM ALONG RACCQON CREEK
Complete with 2 barns, 2 ponds and a very
nice brick home. Comprised mosUy or poaturo
and tillablo acreage. There's a 2,000 lb.
tobacco base and good spring. Ext111 2 car
detached gara(ll also. Quill a111a in tlroon
Schools. $120,000.
1202
GET SOME GROWING ROOM
This 3 bedroom underground house altuated
on a dead-end mad In the Rio Grandt area
could bo expanded upward for the gmwing
family. Introduce your childran to tho joys or
country IKo on this 12 acre, m~ . mlnl·fann Get
ba&lt;:k to basics lor $47,500.
H10
"THE PLACE· TO LIVE" - Arrive somoplaca
special and stin be only 1o mlnu/es from town.
Situated on a 3 mn wcodod acros with tcctll
to large fishing pond. Older, very channing
home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 batht,living room,
dining ~om, family toem and larga kitchen.
You will ba proud tO call this place home. Uatad
at $85,000.
H03

We Have Bu,ers!
.We Need
Listings!
.
.

'

'

.

Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-36.44

Davld ·Wiseman, 8ro..r, 446-95S5'
. LORmA McDADE·; 448-n29 .
B• .1.,!4AIRITONA48•4240 ·

I

\nS.CH ::1·1~·
$0MNY GARNI!S;
·.a-107 · c

4

C'AROLYN

t

�~P~ag~e-§0§6§S~u§n~da~y~11Em~e~s§Se~n~t~ln~ei~=E:===::::;;P::o~m~e~ro~y~'~"l~dd~le~p~o~rt~-G~a~lll~po~l~ls~,O~H~~Po~ln~t~P~Iea~sa~n~t,~W~V~===;;;;;;-;=====~=~~~~16~,~199~2::·; '
45

Furnished
Rooms

5I

Household

Goods

114-44~95110.

Gl~o

Whlto Conopr Bod, WHh

New 801 lprfrtgll And MIHNII.
114o318-85117.
Sloping room• with cooking. Twin s~..
Also traller space. All hook-ups.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·'773-

m.

Nowillllod
Houllhold tumll!lfi!G. 112 mi.

5651, Mlson WV.

46

Space lor Rent

Jtrrtcho Ad. Pt. PI•Nnt, WV,

coii3Q4.871.14aG.
Someone to ahlr• my houn
SWAIN
with, Golllpollo Fwry, 3D4o6J'S. AUCTION I FURNITURE. 82
1239, 9:00AM tiii11 :DO PM.
Olivo !4., Golllpotlo. N.- I Uood

Merchandise

Work boote. ll4o448-31H.

53

Antiques
Buy or ooll. Rtvorlno Antlq-,
1124 E. Moln Stoool, Pomeroy.
H
T
11

Household

5I

lumlturt, tit1ttr11 Wain 1

Goad S

~~~:.·v~~~~ ~~~~;:,;'~~ p.C:.~~undi~' ~~:»,!·~:: :::.

lohan Corpoll, 6t4-446·1'144.

6!4·992·2521.

Full Size Bod, $85.00, 614·245962l
·
Full elze t.droom eulte, $200.
304.&amp;75-3099.

54 Miscellaneous

2.600 boord ft 1112 'No.4 ohoot.
lng 25 cent• ~ ft. 30 pi a••
GOOD USED APPLIANCES wotw hooter SU. lnlllfor Jill
dooro 140. uch. 3D4o6J'S.
Upw Rlvor Ra. Booldo Slono ;;::;:::::;~;;:-:-:7--,;-:--,...,.
Crtst Motel. C.lll11f.446·7318.
8x12dlt. Portable chain link

~::."· A1~ ·~~~f.=: ~'1

d~ ktnnel $150. 30,0008TU
Worm Morning goo hlotor $30,

Beds.

1tlc.

lnsur~nce

And ltred

Ad•••·

=

1

rvlll1'1 Iince 1864, betide San·

drvllle Poll Offici, Jacklon
COunty,

R

wv.

---•

5. mllll Ellt 1·77,

F1

Aultl'llllen

U:00 All. '':;~n m•de PollllcelIIIII•Mitchll).

:========-L:~=========-

Dreams tan tome true.

••••on11'1 piHicol, fill till flhlo
466·1910.
Don't I""'' this OIKHrtofl-llfttl•• opportunltr.
II 1011fd bt ftH11 flrea• IMI fr11/
1 ''"

HGIIIIIIJ 1111111(1 . , _ , . , (6141

f,,,,.,,

~~orro.n,

.,, •• ,,.,,,,,., ,,.,,,,,..,

ol ralf, fOior, ''"'''''' notlo11111 origin, rellglort,
ser or physlnll hortdltop

Middleport, OH
CHESTER - Baum AddlUon - Hay, with the right wom·
an's touch, this split level home could be boautilul. It has
two big bedrooms up and two dovm. Has a apacloul fam·
ily room and 2 baths. Also closota and storage every·
where you look. With a one car garage and a patio. All
sits on approx. 1 acra.
J\IST $58,100

....;;·
GETAWAY RETREAT- Owner financing with dovm pay·
mont, approx. 7 miles from Gallipolis. Ideal location.
Excellent condition, overlooks Blue Lake and Raccoon
Creek, 23 ft. travel trailer, sundlck, rurol water, septic
system, and electric fishing, boating, hunting or just
~&amp;laxing .
1584
VACANT LOT 82/100 OF AN ACRE-oWNER
FINANCING. Graat place to, build e new home (a Ol8am
Home) or place e trailer on is lot Tho Rural Water
System and Electric Sarviee is available at tho property.
270 feot frontage along Eno-Vinton Road.
fill
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BUSINESS OFFICES l SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

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82

Complete Mobll1 Horne Set.IJp1,
Aepalrai Commerical 1 Aniden·
tlal lmprovtmtntt. lnciYdlng:

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Corter's Plumbing
.Fourtllond Pint
Golllpol~re.lo
114-44

Pl:umblna, Ellctrlcal. IRS&amp;Arlnce
R.novatlonl. Add

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On., Repair 84

Pointing, GuoiHr Workl C.li
Rogir At: .14-440-eSN .

I

EGREDE

Home
Improvements

Cl•lmt 4Cctplld. •14·256-1611.

1988 loland1 XA200. IIC cond, FOil' 0..15· Buckshot redial tlr. .,
30&lt;!-675-45011.
now, $425, 114-1115-39411

·:

992-2259

79

campers&amp;

DIYia

Slw·Vac

Ron'• TV Strvlce, tpeclellllna
In ZlnHh 1110 terviclna motl
other brlndt. HoLtM celfe , tlso
oomo ...,lonco ropolro. WV

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Rulcllrllal or comrneral•l
wiring. MW urvlce· or i'wl)l;lr..
M1sllr

UcenMd

...

tllctrtclen.

Ridenour Eloctrlcll, . 304-e75·

S.Vice, 304-671·2:198 O.hlo 614-t46-24S4. 1788.

Goorgoo CrHk Rd. Porto, oupptln, pickup, ond dollvory. 614·
446.02114.

Curtlt

Home

Improvements :

Yooro E1porlonco On Oldor &amp;

WDI build potlo covon, docko,
acrwned roomt, put up vinyl
oldlng "' tralllf oklrtlng. 614245.ot52.
.

Newer Horn11. Raam Additlon1,
Foundatlon Work, Roofing,
Kitc:htnl And Batha. Frtt E..
timatMI Rettrenc... No Job To

Big Or Smollll14-441-0225.

87

Upholstery

::-::=::-=:-;::--~·~!.-:=­

Mowrty'l Upholltering NMclng trl cc:IUI11Y aru 28 _yura. The
but In tumllufl upnolaterlng.
Cell 304-675-4154 tor trH ...

tlmotn.

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608 EAST.MAIN

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-·rl 17
1

1-;6 BUNART
-.-.::~-.• .:...--1
"What's the term to describe
. . _ . 1 1 the hard to break bond
between mother and child?"
ONJ 1 UR
asked one Gran·d-mother. "I
1-.....=:---;.,~:........:.,-:.;..,._.-1
believe," laughed lhe second
L..__..l_a_.._Ig__..I--JIL...-..LI--.~· ~~:~~---~~-trer, "thqt it's called

I

LAINGISVIILLE -St. Rl 124- Approx. 60 acre fann with
a big bam, pond, and about 10 ac~&amp;s tillable. Aloo has 111
story frame home with a big carpori, satollito dish, end a
7 room house with 3 bedrooms.
$47,100
ISN'T THIS WHERE YOU WANT 10 BE? - 1976
Barrington Saotion - 3 to 4 bedrooms, EA. elec. heat, full
base., patio, appliances, 1y, acre, in -ground pool.
ASKING $57,000.
INSIDE LOOKING ·OUT ... THROUGH THE GLASSED
IN FAMILY ROOM of this 3 BR brick ranch home. 2
baths, WBFP, good location on Flatwoods Rd. ASKING
$49,900. Come soe ... mako an offer.

DARWIN- Farm- t51 acres of land with older 2 story
homo. Has six rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 bams, and !roe ges
to heat your home. Approx. 20 acl8s tillable.
$70,000
EAGLE RIDGE - Approx. 40 acras of land, of l&gt;tlich
about 20 acms ara tillable. Has a bam with hay loft and
an equipment shed. Public water and electric available.
Many g~&amp;at building sites and water lor animals. $30,000.

u N s CE s

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I 0

THE ONLYlHING THIS HOME NEEDS IS.... YOUI One
story ranch style In Riggs Crast Subdivision. 3 BR's, 2
baths, att garage, olae. FA. Ready &amp; waiting for you.
$42,500.
HELPI WANTED ... USTINGS, WE NEED LISTINGS!
SUBMIT YOURS WITH US TODAYI GET RESULTSI WE
HAVE SERIOUS BUYERS FOR SERIOUS SELLERS!
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................912-61 91
TRACY BRINAGER...........................................9411-24311
JEAN TRUSSELL............................... ,.............11411·2660

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•Sf.~·rdr

2 · tb

G)

Complele !he chuckle quoled
by filling In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

i

r r r I' I' r I' I'

ro

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REDUCED'! SPRING FEVER? READY TO PLOW THAT
GARDENI GRAZE THOSE COWS?... Hero you gol A
frame farm homo w/90+ acres, \1) basoment, cistern &amp;
TCP water available. Immediate possession! $49,000.
Make an offori
VACANT LOT - Pomeroy - 60xt00 on Main Street.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Asking $3,900. Make an
offarl

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COMMERCIAL LOT - Pomeroy • Main St. - Gl8at silo
for various pot&amp;ntial uses. Drastieaily ~&amp;dueed to $40,000.
Make an offeri

Governor

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Musical
Instruments

Bundr Clorlnol, 114-146-8720.

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Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

POMEROY- ST. RT. 124-31\ ac~&amp;s with olactric on site
and waler &amp; gas available.
ONLY $4,200
SALEM STREET - RuUand - A 2 story homo with 4-5
bedrooms, nice front sitting porch, carport, cute litUe play·
house sitting inside a fenced back yard . Homo has a
brand naw roof and gutters, central air, and some new
carpeling, and a storage building.
NOW $211,800

61

Fann Equipment

4020;Jo Tr~ctor, loader, $5,950;

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DOTilE TURNER, Brokor.................................H2.SII2
SANDY BUTCHER..........................................HZ·5371
SHERYL WALTERS, Cheohlro .................... .....317-0421
DARLINE STEWART....................................... HZ-6315
BRENDA JEFFERS.........................................IIIZ-31156

Loto, Model 4000 JD, $7850;
Long 410 Dloool Troctor, Buoh
l!og;. $4,450. OWnor Will
Flntnce. 614-aa..522.
0111vtly prden tractor Wflll It·
tochlltonfo, 304.f75o6979.
lntorhotlonal C..b Wloh cu~
tlvotO.., Good Sltotpo, 614-44834VII,

72 Trucks for Sale
Pick-Up Truck, 1986 Bronco II, l~yl., etand1rd,
Tlrn; 44,000 4 wm.-1 drlv•lt sunroof. $3500,
EncOfe, 114-1'12·2357 • ., 6pm
. 114-446· 1988 Dodge 414, 53,DOOMI, 614·
949•2221
1989 Cheverolet truck, 2500
72 Trucks lor Sale
..,111, club cab, 350 cu. ln.,·
auto, •lr, $7600 obo, 614·192·
1971 one ton Dodge tlatbed, 318, 11881
$1200, 614·7112·254l1Htr Spm
F·150, Bodr groot ohopo, oo,
1977 f·l50, 414, 614·992-6983, Auto. PSfPB, engine need•
ook tor Joff
oomo -'&lt;. $1,600. 614-3881981 GMC 1500 Sl1111 Gr•nd•, 8293.
4tp. on the lloor, duel tenks, V·

a.

---'::"""":~--------- - - - - - ----=---=~---------'&gt;
, ,_·,~~~
~~~
~~~
--~-=;,.;::;,;.::.::.......__....,

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New low ralee now
available wilh difCerenl progra me to Cit
your neede. Cell on
one o£ the Real Eeute
Profcuionab at Cent·
ury 21, Big Bend
Realty today £or

a

Woo !R.f,a[ty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446-1066
Allen C. Wood, Reahor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446.()971
Moll Canteltlui'Y, Reahor-446·3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
Tim Watoon, A1soc. - 446-2027

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2·3 bedroom ranch
baths, kitchen, · room, larga fa~ily room,
fi~&amp;placo v.ith insert, porch and ou!butldong on 2 ·
lots. Only $29,500. Broker owned.
1407
NEW LISTING -.Beautiful all brick home
on 50 acres mil with 3 bedrooms,
and
room, 3 bath and full
~:St~~~. a11d 4 car detached
~~
1412

1

Wooilod: Uood lann equipment,
·~tqs"';' ~U Wlnl Ia Nll. Clll
1301, 251-8040 thtr I

p.m~~

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2

NEW USTING - Sumner Rd. i . this ni~ 2
bedroom 1 bath ranch with alum~num sodong,
living room, kitchen, !emily room, lull
basement, woodbumer, one car garage, and
more on .84 ol an acre mn . A•k~ng only
$4CI,OOO. Call lor inlo.
1393

Real Estate General

28WI44.

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63 :

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INTEREST RATES DROP!

IIU-42'76
1916 Chill)' 1 Ton Oollvory
Truck. 350 Ena.lne. 12I8 Ft. Box,
Good Shooo. S5,7DD. Mork Bot·
Wlln 5-7 P.M. 814-367~11 . .

Wool Golllootlto, 114-446-8777;
Wkll-lon ,_I uood "'"'
troctoro I ltnplomonto. Bur,
loll, trodo, 1:00.&amp;:00 wookdoyo,
Sot. till Noon.
MF ~ Trootor, Shlrpl n,eaoj!·
1130,MF Tnctor, U BaG; 35 M
Tr., ' U,IM. OWnor Will
Flntf.".,l14-2111.f&amp;22.
Nooi-lond 457 hoy bind 7 ft.
Now' Hollond Super 717 torogo
ltotro)otor,' Gohf 115 grlnt!Or
mil¥, !lflvor 10 ft tronoport
dlotiJ All' good cond. 304-n3421f&gt;
flollo Hollond Hoy R1k11, ~nd
SqUifl BIWI, Moworo 2 And 4
Rei( Com Plonl"!!l c.utlpock·
.,.,• CuMivoloro, , _ Dloko
llo:f!lpr11dua, Other F'-kf
A
E..lpmont. Howo'o Form
llolill ty, Jocklon Ololo. 114-

8

POMEROY AREA .- 'Character, style,
.
chann:. This home has II all. Older home,
completely refurbished. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Wrap·around porch. Several buildings. Situ!lted
on approx. t and 112 acres. Rock Springs
Road. Asking $59,500. Will take MH lor down
payment
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1345

VINTON VILLAGE - Very nice one story brick
home with 2 bedrooms, bath, dining room,
living room, laundry and equipped kitchen,
hardwood floors, car attached garage . Walk·in
attic. Nice back patio and L-shaped
coveredfront porch. Asking mid $50o.
1382
WAITING FOR YOU -Is this 1900 +sq. ft. ol
living space and 1965 Recman dlw..Nicelot.ln
Centerville. Has heat pump, huga ltvong room,
3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, 3 car garage. Call today.
1396

good cond., $3200 firm, 614-

Jlm't Ferm Equlpm•.-.:. SR. 35,

Real Estate General

Home

Motor Homes
1983 C-Roy, 21 A. Cucldr Cobin, t975 Nomod, 31 ft., Nlco, Clan,
V-8, Exc1lltnt Condition. ln-- Air Awn. Must Movo. Opon For
cludll All Equipment, C.ll After OHoro. 1818 Chathom StrOll,
8p.m. l14-441·t763.
Golllpollo.

BRs, 2~ baths, 2+ acres, garden space, 1 car garaga

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for Sale

wlwoo1&lt;shop, CA. deck, fioeplaee. Only $31 ,9001

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11,r \:)

75 Boats &amp; Motors

TRULY THIS HOUSE IS A SUCE OF PERFECTIONIAt an unbelievable prieal 2 story frame, lull basement, 3

Endorsed by the Stilt ANI Ellllt Supertntendtnl
Equal oppon..,nr Houolng
George V. \blnovtch,

I

205 North Second Ave.

Medicine Agelnll Hook, Round

Real Estate General

-

simple words. Prlnl letters of
each ln. its line of squares.

&amp; T•peworms In Dogs And Cats.

ned

\:)~

81

Services

~Q. ® WORD
~ [:.
GAME

O words
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
below to make 6

~:e:fP~~h!l~ Br~=~~~~C:.r:~~:~'fJ~;~
U:S. Contor For Votl&lt;lnory

Buslnlll

PUIZUI

f'} 'C

Qffil

Edited by CLAY R. POUAN

Shepherd

Pupo, Rodk Btuoo, And Trio,
From Wor lng Stock, R11dy
Fobruory 201~. 11192. 614-4463845.
Delmetlon Puppln! 1 WHke
Old, Hod Sholl, BHn Wormod.
AI&lt;&lt;&gt; Roolotoroa. Bl I WH. 614·
446·2608'.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jocklon Avo.
Palnl Pluunt. ~75-2063,
lull Hno Troplcol lloh. blrdo,
lmllllnlmelsand ·~piiM.

;;!!,'::,

for

; THAT DAILY
.

For ulo- Croftmollc bod, good
cond., $850, 614-lt2-3387
For Solo: Good Uood Oooro, Ex· AKC Fornttlo -on Tor~or. 4
to~or Dooro ~nd Potlo Docto, rnantho old. Block &amp; WhHo.
Ruoonoblo Prlco, 114o446.:!303. 1200. 304-178-5731.
roglotorod mlnloturo
Ice Crum Parlor Table l Chair AKC
Schnluztr puppr, un &amp; poppor,
For Slit. 114-448-1720.
ho•• broken, 1150. 304-875Modtcol Supptloo; Now And 2588.
Uood Whotlcholro 3 Whlolld
Scootoro• llftchllro, Ellctrlc ASCA, NSBR, Doublo Roglo·

GrHn Topon Goo Rongo, $125;
Wood Chlpo For Boddlng And Avolloblo O.T.C At J D NORTH
G. E. Rohlgorotor, Whllo, $125. Uood chicken cogoo $1.00 por Mul&lt;:h For Slll, S14-25lo6t18; PRODUCE. 6t'H46-11133.
614-44HJIJ9.
hole. t-Fith
Aft
•2••
Wood
rollo 1qu1rlume
tor ptck-upSII.OO.a.
truck
· or 1p.m. 61 ~
-·1353·
Hoppy Jock Trivormlcldo:
HIT apt. ref.• $95i ringer wellhlr. S&amp;" high 111 Mldn , 30, UvlnQ
R~nlztd 11tl &amp; ettectlw by
55
$159; outomotl&lt;: wolhorl drv«, rm cltotlr •-. PorT&lt;~ co:p,;•
Building
U.S. Contor lor Votorlno'l
150·, 1'1"&amp;25• color TVa, wlotond ....
.,.~
Medlclnearu~l,.thook, round,
Bor ltool $1D.
Supplies
tDDDBTU Lonno1 Funnoco, $395; Dog tronopoMtlon
boooo.
lopowormo~In dogo l cato,
Haggony Appllonco Storo, Millo pr!Cod to llzo, 1114-14:J.I211
Block, brick, oowor olpoo, wt.. ovolloblo O.T.C ot R &amp;G Food &amp;
dleport, Ohio
dowt, llnlelt, lie. Claude Win- Supply. 614~112·2114
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
~ :~~~~~~~: tors, Rio Grandt, OH Coli 614- LAST CHANCE Portoct Volor,Compl•t• home tumlshlngl. OJUIHir::.-lhl.
245-512t
tine Gift: Boeton Ttrrltr Pup.
HOUrs: Mon-S1t, 9-5. 614445IHI, Now Available, Will Tekl
0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd. Flrowood Will Dollvor, Coli Aftor
llopooho. 614-446-21113.
56
•F::"':.:o.::•:::l'"::"~~·_ _ _ _ _ s:aop.m. 1114-441-321o.
:---P_e:.;ts.:..;.fo:.;r:.;S:.:a:.:.le:...._
1
Squirrel doa ...
for .. ,, Ptrtnta
O.F.A.,
1300.Brad,
AKC
Aott Wellll'
PupM111.
German
304:~o6:75o6::1:tlf.:·__________· ~R=~=I=IIo=rod==.6=1=4-2=4=5-=~=6t=.==~

Tho Ohio Houolng Rnance AgMicy lo Mlplng !*!Pie
across tho alate realln the drMm of owning their own
homea at lffordabla, comfortable mortgage ralel.
Loan• through tho Agancy'a Single Family Mortgage
Revenue Bond Program are offered at 7% percent - the
loweat lntereat rate In tho hlotory of the progrom. Thla
equal opportunity program oervea ollglble homebuyere
statewide on a ftret-come, flret-oerve bulo.
Eligible appllconto Include flrot·tlme homebuyera and
those buying hom•• In terget arua of the alate who
meet standard credit requlremenla, Income llmllo ond
maximum niH prt... ror the home to be purchaold.

•.

after t:OO PM.

SUrlllua ormr comllaugo, donlm,
C.rhlrt, rtnlel clothing. Jr.
olz11 comllougo, Som Som•

Merchandise

'"rJ"J..

Flrowood, ook
lovol Dick _up lcod, 304-e7'i.12t7

Modtcoro A&lt;co::Od. Coli
togo Hotnh, 1
1111-1020. •
Rocondhlonod wuhlro 1
:::,~tcS:.0 ~~!':,;,~:
Dryor Shoppo. 614o44641144.

Sunday

Peta for Sale

q_, ond
Shop-Pol
Grooming. All
o, olylto.
lomo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
tiS. Wtbb, Coll114o448'0231.

Merchandise .

Roome tor rent. wuk·oi monlh.

Stilting ol $1201mo. Golllo Holtl.

!Ill

54 MlacallantOUS

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

ON BULAVILLE PIKE- is this anrac~ve i
sided homo with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, largo
living room dining a18a, kitchen and laundry,
s heat 8 ~ control air, a 2 cor carpori w/loft.
ratio and storage buidings. All this and mo~&amp;
on over )I acl8 priced in low 40's. Call for
13118
your appointment today.
,
BULAVILLE PIKE - Is this 2 bdrm. home with
bath, kitchen, large living room and laundry,
haat with natural gas, wood or coal,, 1ul!
basement, 2 car delached garage "!'d 16 x20
bYilding. All on ovtr 2 acl81. Low 30 s. I t

MAIN ST., RUTLAND • Is tills . .
3
bedroom ranch with bath, kotchen, d1n1ng room ,
and living room, 2 car attached garage,
fioeplace, gas heat. Central air. Only $45,500.
1403
RUTLAND AREA - t985 Sizzler doublewida
with 3 bedrooms, t balh, living room, kitchen
and laundry, 2 car attached garage. Gas well
with income, 2nd homo has living room ,
kitchen, balh, and 2 bed_rooms. Call lor moro.
information. Only $30,COO.
1371

remodei:J'~

l,.lvestock

HiiiO' AOIIA
Trol~tt0 ,:,ux•, am:
g, Youth

I~

Horloi 01 Tho YNr, 2 Sliver

Roylll Show Sodclloo, Brood
llorio. I14-21M522.

CONDO IN CITY- All bri&lt;k with 2 bedrooms, 2·
lull balhs, equipped kitchen, living room, dining
room, laundry w/washtr and dryer, heat pump,
cent. air. many extras . Very nice . Must sea .
Only $65,000. Broker owned.
1388

64 .: Hay &amp; Grain

coUNTRY UYING - In this
bedroom country home featuring heat pum~,
large fatnlly and d)nlng room c:ombo, 1i1 bat ,
smaH room for nil~ or ti8Wtng room. lots of
storage, rural watw· and '!'uch much n1ore.
Situated on 20 b&amp;au~lul rolltng acres mn. Also
horW ~.
' 1375

PRICE REDUCED - Located on Sycamore
Street in Middlepori. Ranch homt with .3
btdrooma, lovol lot wilh above gr~u~
Only $25,COO.

..-··'

·~.~

,

RIVER - 3
, LR, equipped kitchen, fuel oi fumaca,
air, full biHmant, atlached garage.

I
bldlllomt, 1 bath with dock across front 00:MT.TlM
block garage - tobacco poundage. CALL
ONEill

;

Transportation

WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE TO CITY POOL - 3
bedroome, living room, kitchen, bath, with a family room,
bedroom and bath In bllomont Two car gerage, fenced·
in back yaod. MUST SEEIII

1873 MOBIL! HOME- A 12x65 mobikt homo on ~&amp;nwd

lfM, PRIVAOY SEEKERS LOOK AT
OHEI - Largo log homt can be pulthased
wtt! 11121Cral or 2 ""'"· This homo offoro
4 BAt. 3 baths, equipped kitchen, LR, FR,
2 firopiiCII, hut pump/cent. air (backup
I)'IIMI), ovoraizod 2 Cit' attached garage.
Frontlgo on Flaccoon C1111t
.

1153. REDUCED TO Sl4,to0 - Older
homo and 1.75 acra mil, on Nolll!bolhood
just olhort distance from 141. 4 BAt, llilchon, LR, DR, unattechod geregt.
Thonnopone windcWI, gu hHI.
,
1110. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUII OWN
BACK YARD - Very nice .. bric:k homo of·
ors 3 BAS. LR wnirii!&gt;IICI, ...ulppod ldldl·
on, ~I baoott'Mint
STOPIII New on the market. 3 BR home in
tcwn. Kitchen, LR, OR, large 2 car ~e,
gas hea~ cent air. Ci!ll for more dlllilo. . .
EXTIIA NICE MOBILE HOMI FOR ',
~LL'86 Hollr Park t 4x72, 2 BAI, LR.
kotdlen, DR, cent. air and loll of extra
laaturn.

ftlf, IEIGI CO., 240 A., mil, lledlard l
Cloeow Twp. Old original log homo wtt1
odditian eddod, Drilled well, COUIIIy _.,
IVIIIoble. Hat boon owned by ~
lor 4 generallont.
Hl2. 101 ACRII 11/l, Quylll ,..,.;

=~~~rly. Moy hllp

1154. NICE ITARTER HoME - LOcated
JU•t o111te odiiO of town. This home foaturaa
3 btdtOOtttl, bath, living room; kitchen, din.'
ong room oncl a lull besement. Fivt.,minutoo
10 downloWn.

112t0. OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT
210 IECOND - Olllco down and 1 BR

101 located on Nolgilbooltood Roa~. 2 bedroom, wtth
w~shor'&lt;fl)'er hook•up In Bathroom, 13Y.x11Y• otoroge
bulldng. PRICED AT $S,COO.OO.

2 story olfort 3,8Rt, ~~~:i!~~~i
gas heo~ 2 firtplacu

B~a~~:~r~:
be the(master
place.
1M
log
4 BRs
bedroom has a fireplace), 2:.1 baths, LR
w/FP, kitchen, dining room, FR. Second old
homo on property.... 112.5 acras, m~ .

'111t. EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT
- This HCdonal home 11 located jutt a taw
oninutQ 11om Oreon Elom. School, 4 BRs, 2.
balht, LR, ...ulpped kilchon, DR, flraplaee, ;
central air, 18K32 pool whlaater, covorod
pitio,. 20lC24 thellar h~ ...

1183. GOOD IN·TOWN LOCATION • Just'
a block 11om grocery store. Nice homo off·
ers LR, kitchen, BRs, bath, largo lronl
'
polth.

' acre.

lfl8ttmtnl upalllra. Vtry nice bYiding. Call
lor Mia.

BUILD YOUR OWN BUSINESS HERE Lol approx. 200x200, located on SA 160,
H1nervllle area.

ft7e.

WOE FARM - 3H aero mil
5elol10.bam, 3 poncl1; tobacco baM. Caii
lor~·.... GIT COZV IN I'IIONT OF THE
FIRII'L¥' Alllotlvt h - olert a

IIAt, IIIII, Jdllhen, 12112A f1m11r raom wllh
ftreplaot and IIVtno raom wttfi nr.p~-.

tllliidldon t.lll-.mll.

•

ttae, tii,W ..,_ lhlglila, 3 BR, LR,
...,, 111111, 111111111111'-

1305. 10.5 AC. 11/L. Raccoon Twp.
Gam111 Ford Rd. Pond and bam, lovely
11*1 lora new homo.
1301. 30.5 ACRES MIL. ·Raccoon l'wp.

Gamora Ford Rd. Pond and bam, lovely
~ tor a new hOfll•·

taU. 5 ACRE LOTS. Oreon Township~
·Falrfltkl Vanco Rd. and Wiaon Bostic Rd.
Beautiful piiCI ID bYild o homo.
11586. KUCKEA ROAD - Lot'contalns .824
aero mn, water tap and septic 'tank on
pow.rty.

,t2t2. 1.41 A., m/1, Section 34, Raccoon
Twp., Iron.. on SR 325. $26,000.

1510. WHITE ROAO - 20 acres mil
viCIIht land, approK. 1 milo from Charolais
lake. $20,000,
1110. COIIHIA LOTI. Very nice homo of·
ora lAo, btdl, ltllchtn, cerpet, llrtplaee, 1
cor dlllahld g~~~~ge.

a

HOI, 71 - • .., llugor Crook. Vacant
lind, Wlltr lap on praptr(y. llmd lwn.

me. .It A. miL (Hobart Dillon Subd.)
along Rlccoon Crook, graot for 1 mobile
homo. Laoga pine tNos on 3 slclt11. All lOYal
Hll I t RT. 325, VInton, 116 A. mn,
$33,100 vaeent land, owner may help with

lnonc!ng.

A·FRAME located In G.- Tovmthlp on 2.5 acra lot, 2
bldtooms, living room, both, with a bedroom, family room
and Utlily room In biHmtnt. CALL FOR APPOINlMENT.
. on 4.
S•~:.~:~LOOK
walk to 1toro, cnu•n:n,
school and .ohopplng. 2 ltory homo ollora
kitchen, LR, DR, FR. 3 BAs, 2 baths, gas
hM~ centrallir.
1173. OWNER HAS AEDU.CED THE
PRICE BY II 0,000111 Vo"f nlee 11omo ol·
ert 3 BRs, 2 baths, Lfl, kitchen. This finn
Is ailualld on Sugar Creak Road. Ohio
Townihip, and hat 1 ' new 28x40 bem,
tobacco biH. Call for mora dljlils.

HOME l ACREAGE IN WALNUT TWP.- 2 bnldroorits,
living room, ki(chon ond ath. Hou~tromodeled tl y..ro
ago, oltictti~ b. heal, 71 acras m or I with tobacco base.
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
.
100 ACRES II or Lon Fllendly Rklgo in Cllr Twp. Water

and olactric avoiiiiH. Priced at $32,500.00.

FOR BALE- 82 ..,,., in La~ County.
PRICE REOtiCED -..,soolllocllod 2Yt mlltt ol of Stoll
Rouill 211. Log homo with 10 acret m or I, 3 bedrooml,
lli beth, firaplace, basement: laoga polth, bem •nd
t1t111ge thecl. CALL lODAY.

H78. 17.1 A. mil, Pony Twp., Symmtt
Clllk boltom land, oome hil, tob-.&gt; baie.
$9,000.
•
'
'
065. APARTIENT COMPLEX ...South Point
aroa. Cal lor moro detail a.

..

LOQ HOII!-2100 .... fl ojlivlng apace, 3
bells, located on 10 aero• and bordo,.
Gl'lln l Gallipolis schools. CALL

1141. 151 Fourth Avonue..3 BRs 11;1!
baths, kitchen, dning room, LA. ges' heat
carpet, cloto to •hopping ond 1Cho611,
'
'

1114. 121,000 - 3 lots + olcllr 11ome,
l!ldMII, 3 BAt, beth, LR, kilchan, worbhop
and gerago.
GREAT ITARTER HOM! OR
IIIYEITIIEHT TO RENT- BR 141, 3 8R1
LR, kllllhen, DR, llundty, !argl ball\1G~~t~

School.

IN
- 2
garage,
'f&gt;'tlldng d1tance lo P."IY• gat halt and
equil'lltd rwmodolod kilche&gt;. Nice garden
area.
1408
53 ACRE FARM - On Rt. 160 on edga of
Vonlon County v.ith old brick ho~o and mobile
home. Thirty-two acros tillable with bam and
other buildings. Asking $74,500.
1399
FARM IN llAARISON TWP.- t48 acres- mn
with 4 bedrooms, t bath home. VInyl sided wilh
newer kitchen with walnut cabinets, sawmoll~
and other equipment go with !ann. Don~ delay.
Only $65,000:
1369
ARE YOU A WATER OOG7 - Hero's your
ohance tovm Raccoon Craak frontage at Bl~o
Lake plus a 2 bedroom well maintained mobole
home with clack and lots of shrubs and. treos. 3
lob, 1)l ear gerage, picnic shelter, 2 dOcks, one
m~t1rom ri ...r. See It todayl
· t383
CLAY SCHOOL - 3 bedroom, lamily room,
alec. heat, attached gerwge, with opener, all on
.6 ICFIII m~ . Tool shed. Immediate posHIIIon.
SM ~today .
1_3t2
.
- LOG t!OIIE ON SR 7
riYtr.
nn., kitchen, 2
1410

It OAUIPOUI- VIne StrMI- 4 ~tntalllllt,

1
1

~=·

a

:.

property. Col lor mora lnlonnatlon.

GALUPOUI - 3 room• and beth, walldna

IChoolt onc1 '"'"'· Priced aiSte,ooo.oo.

FOR DIYELOPMENT - 40 acros lor tole
of Galipofis. Check thlo one outll

PHYWS L . MILLER
SaleaAgent

Evt. 256-1136

•

,.
'

0-'

24 acras will a boaiii!U
home ovotlooklng Pom•"')'·
style homo with fonnal entry, family
room wnlroplect, formal dining room.
ba....,.nt hat rae. room with otont firaplaca,
lniJround pool, 2 oar garogo. Many more
amon1t111. Ro&lt;llcld to a low prico of $139.500.
.
1413

MARTHA L. SMITH
salle Agent
"
Eve.~1

CHERYL L. LEMLEY

Malgl eo. Agent
742-3171

�wv

OH-Polnt

1992

Ohio Lottery

Grinding
grain
was
earliest
industrial
occupation
•

By WENDELL TOPE
Eartb Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - Grinding grain
was the earliest industrial occupation. Its discovery dates back to
Remote Antiquity. It is as simple a
. grinding food between ones teelh.
The fust millstones were nothing
more than a large flat rock upon
which ancient man crushed seeds
by pounding lhem on top of such
Stones.

GAI.LJIA FAIR
• The Gallia County
fair board was awarded a ''Certificate or Achievement" during tbe
·recent Ohio Fair Managers Convention. Fred L. Dailey, lert, Direc·
. tor or the Obio Department or Agriculture, presented tbe award on
behalf or Governor George V. Volnovicb . Dailey bestowed the
recoanltlon before more than 1,000 Fair supporters during the
anaual meetinc between tbe Director or Agriculture and the state's
94 agricultural societies. The Gallia County award was accepted
by Gary Roach, right, on behalf of the fair board.

Farm Flashes

Second annual open
steer, heifer show Feb. 23
By EDWARDS VOLLBORN
Gallia Extension Agent
GALLIPOLIS • The Sec.ond
Annual Gallia County Preview
Open Steer and Heifer Show wiU
be held on Sunday, February 23
starting with the Heifer show at II
a.m. and lhe steer show to immediately follow at the Gallia County
Junia' Fairgrounds.
Animals may arrive anytime
after noon on Saturday and before
10 a.m . on Sunday. The Gallia
County Caulemen 's Association
with the cooperation of several
local businesses started lhis show
last year. 'The activity provides a
nice mid-winter family activity for
both exhibitors and spectators.
We had estimated that Gallia
County would increase tobacco
production last season by about
450 thousand pounds. Some of lhe
preliminary figures from marketmgs indicate that we have slightly
exceeded that goal to bring the total
production in the county above the
2.5 million pound level. Final fig.
ores wiU be announced by the local
ASCS office in the near future.
The Annual Hannan Trace
Tobacco Production meeting will
be held at Hannan Trace High
School on Tuesday, February 25
starting at 7 p.m. Tom Hutchins
from Rickard Seeds in Winchester,
Ky., will be the guest speaker. His
presentation will focus on variety
selection and curing quality tobacco. He will also cover remodeling

barns, insect control, float plant
production and market outlook.
This meeting has enjoyed a big
attendance in recent years. All producers and friends of lhe industry
are welcome. The meeting is spon·
sored by the Hannan Trace F.F.A;
the Gallia County Pride In Tobacco
Association and the Gallia County
Extension Office.
An industry sponsored meeting
will be held Thursday evening,
February 20 in Gallipolis. The
meeting will review several of the
corn, soybean, and alfalfa varieties
that are available locally, including
a new alfalfa variety and some new
com hybrids. Call for details.
Winter is flying by and spring is
just around the corner. Tum-around
time is still good on soil samples.
Cost per sample for farm -field
samples is still $5.50. If you have
questions regarding soil samples,
call the County Extension Office at
4467007. The local Soil and Water
Conservation District provides
notill drills on a rental basis . If you
want to use the drills this spring,
contact them (446-8687) now to
get your name on their lisL
A special thanks to all those
who attended the Wednesday after·
noon' session to discuss lhe stock·
yard issue for Gallia County. Tbere
were no immediate solutions, but
we began pulling together ideas
and started to see some trends in
thinking.

This was followed &lt;by using a
saddle stone, which was a stone
with a slighlly concave surface.
Grain was placed on the concave
stone and crushed by rolling the
grain against the concave stone.
This was many centuries before
mankind learned to accomplish the
task of grinding by revolving an
upper stone on a lower or stationary buhrstone.
For ages the milling of seeds

was done by slave labor or prisoners. Maybe, this is an explanation
for lillie progress in the milling
industry.
In the 1211! century individuals
were allowed to build and own
grist mills, soon afterwards the
Bohr Mill we know today was
invenred.
The first flour mills in our
region were built on the Muskingum River late in !he 17th century. Their existence was short lived
because of marauding Indians
burned these early mills and murdered many of the owners.
.
For instance on January 2, 1791
the settlement at Big Bottom, IS
miles up the Muskingum River was
attacked by Indians killing founeen
settlers. Other Indian trouble continued until General Mad Anthony
Wayne defeated the Indians in the

battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. cleared and readied for grain.
Mills were sometimes built in
This action only deepened the
anger of the remaining tribes and peculiar places in onlel to take care
roaming bands of angry Indians of sufficient water to power lhe
mills. Many were located in tight
· continued to strike the settlements.
• In order to save their lives near· valleys or on edges of cliffs wilh a
ly all of lhe white settlers in the mill pond or dam to power the mill
nonh east section of Ohio either wheel. A mill race was dug from ·
moved to West Virginia or those the dam or pond to the mill. A mill
who could get transportation by gate was placed at the mill end of
barges moved down the Ohio River the race to regulate the speed of the
andestablished homes in soulbeast· mill wheel.
ern O.hio. Many of the people we
Mills built on nat land someknow today living in Meigs, Gallia times had a long mill race to supply
and Lawrence Counties are descen· the necessary amount of water to
daiiiS of those early settlers.
supply the wheel.
"Those new settlers in southeast·
These early mills provided an
ern Ohio built saw mills, as . interesting and vital chapter for the
described in other issues. Before development of the economy of our
they could build homes however, state. Many are now forgotten, but
lean·tos and sheds were build with the village or city that sprang up
logs as there was an abundance of · near the site of the old mill still
timber. As soon as shelter for the bears its name.
families was provided, fields were

February 17

!992 burley tobacco program are:
• A crop marketing quota of 670
million pounds, down from the
1991 quola of 726 million ~unds.
Determination of lhe quota ts based
on purchase intentions by domestic
manufacturers of 445.5 million
pounds; unmanufactured exports
(3-year average) of 187.6 million
pounds; a reserve stock adjustment
of 36.9 million pounds; and a disCrelionary adjustment of zero
pounds.
. A suppon level of $1.649 per
pound, up 6.5 cents from !991.

affecting specific products, the
report said Japanese orange juice
imports in the 1991-92 marketing
year are forecast at 70,000 metric
tons, 89 percent above the previous
season.
"The lifting of the orange juice
impon quola on April I, !992, in
accordance with the U.S.-Japan
Beef and Citrus Trade Agreement
of 1988, is the major reason for
expected higher imports,'' it said.
The report also noted that in

recent years, Japanese consumer
demand for 100 percent citrusjuice
has been growing significantly, in
part as a result of an increasing
preference for more natural foods.
In late January , th e Spanish
Ministry of Agriculture agreed on
procedures permitting entry into.
Spain of apples and pears from the
Pacific Nonhwest, lhe repon said.
The procedures include preventive
measures to fight bacterial blight,
cold treatment and in&amp;I'Cction .

'

• A basic quota decrease for
each farm of about 7.5 percent
from 1991.
• An effective quota of about
830 million pounds , 16 million
pounds below 1991.
• A marketing assessment of
0.8245 cents per pound pn both
growers and buyers, for a total of
1.649 cents per pound, under
requirements of amendments con·
tained in the Omnibus Bugget Reconciliation Act of 1990.
Tbe no-net-cost program assessment will be announced later.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Muslim fighters and Israeli-allied
forces traded rocket barrages in
south Lebanon today, a day after
Israel killed the leader of the proIranian HezboUah in a lightning air
attack. At a funeral procession
today for lhe slain leader, mourners
screamed: "You shall be
avenged!''
In the artillery duels, rockets
landed in northern Israel for the
firs) time in nearly a year, Israeli
media said, but no damage or
injuries were reported.
The fighting began Sunday,

The report noteo that since
1988, imports by the European
Community of canned sweet corn
from the United States have
climbed from 17,372 metric tons to
a record 29,286tons in 1990.
"The trend is continuing as January-November 1991 U.S. exports
totaled 41,907 tons," it said. "The
United Kingdom , Germany and
France are the three largest EC
consumers of U.S. canned corn."

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) Columbia Gas System Inc. reported
Friday that fourth quarter net
income rose 34 percent and managers said the results show the natural gas distributor' s bankruptcy
filing hasn't hurt.
.
.
:rhe company lost $694.4 mil.lion in lhe whole year.
The fourth quarter was the ftrSt
"weather-sensitive" CJ,uarter sinCe
Columbia and its principal pipeline
subsidiary, Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., each filed for Olapter II bankruptt:y protection m
July.
"These results demonstrate the

basic soundness of (Columbia) and
its various subsidiaries and that
Columbia ' s business operations
have been affected very little by the
bankruptcy filings," Chairman
John Croom said.
Fourth quarter net income was
$81 ,5 million, or $1.61 per share,
compared with $60.8 million, or
$1.25 per share, for the same period a year earlier.
Columbia said it was forced into
bankruptcy because of long term
contrai:!S with natural gas suppliers
that were signed before natural gas
prices plunged. The contracts
. required Columbia Transmission to
buy natural gas at above-market

.

fem~L

The square batteries hang from

beltS wilh cables stretching up our

l!leks to the flashlights. When we
don the getups, we look l_ike
Jefugces from a McDonald's p1ck·
up window.
The lights themselves rest atop
11e1mo1s ihat resemble those worn
by •iaen about to tunnel into a
.,. tr'n.
earns.
We Ceel u If we were about to · McMahon g!Yel us an example.
' do ICIIIIIdlin~ similar. Wllhin 15 He urges hiJ mule, Driftwood, atop
tn11u1ea we re wnneling into the an embankmenL "Watch this," he
• ...._ Tbe pllce: McMahon's Mule says.
·
·
linn. 1be pi: To hunt raccoon.
He turns the mule and walks it
Aclually, the hunl serves as down a bank so ~lhat a human
JIICiftl rA • ucuse than a JOII. 'f!lis try~o de~cend 11 would have
111 biRt OUI rA tile ordina,ry. Unlike tu
onlid down.
llulllerl who ~ 81110111
'"U lhlt ~ been a horse," he
dltlllladrt 111111 on foot, we ritfe llyl, "llpubilbly would llav~aot·
• • ltllri
!MIIInOI!I1 JfiiiiCked and tned to
Wllill die aperieace II IIIW 10 JUIIP doWiJ IL ·'
·
. . .., ~her Mlke Noll· - We crols the suelmbed of anm
l .

shonly after the killing of Sheik
Abbas Musawi, leader of Hezbollah, or Party of God.
Hezbollalt vehemently opposes
Middle East peace talks, and the
killing raised fears that intensified
Arab-Israeli violence could cripple
peace efforts.
The group, which was founded
and primarily financed by Iran, is
the umbrella organization for the
extremist Shiite Muslim factions
that held American hostages in
Lebanon. The release of almost all
the remaining Westerners last year
may have emboldened Israel to

strike out at the fundamentalist
group with less fear of retaliation
against hostages, although two Ger•
mans remain held by a Shiite
group.
In Lebanon today, Muslims
staged a protest slrike in mourning
for Musawi, 39; his wife, Siham,
33; and their 5-year-old son, Hus·
sein, who were killed along with
him and four bodyguards in the
Israeli attack. Schools, banks and
businesses were closed in Muslim
areas throughout the country.
In Beirut's southern Shiite
slums, 50,000 male mourners,

some wearing black headbands,
took pan in Musawi's three-hour
funeral rrocession today. Thousands o wailing women waved
white handkerchiefs and tossed
flowers from balconies and
rooftops onto the wooden caskets.
Musawi supporters clenched
their fists and shouted: ''Death to
America and Israel!"
The coffins were driven to east
Lebanon's Bekaa Valley town of
Baalbek, where another funeral
procession was set for Tuesday
before the burial in the neighboring
village of Nabi Sheet, Musawi's
hometown.

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Stall'
A six-month-old infant died Saturday night in a trailer ftre in Huntington Township near Vinton in
Gallia County.
The Vinton Fire Department
responded to a call at the Rosa
Brewer Lawrence residence at 410
Sherman Road at approximately
7:40 p.m., according to a re~n
from the Gallia County Shenfr,

Quality not included
in disaster aid relief

WASHINGTON (AP) - Some
lawmakers are urging lhe Agriculture Depanment to take crop quality losses into account when calculating a co110n farmer's payments
for disllster relief.
.
According to Rep. Larry
Combest, R·Texas, current fCderal
prices.
U.S. Bankruptcy Court allowed disaster aid calculations measure
the pipeline subsidiary to break the only the amount of loss, and not the
loss in quality.
contracts last year.
The annual loss of $13.74 per
Combest said many cotton proshare, was due primarily to the ducers with signifteantlosses in the ·
high-priced contracts, spokesman quality of their crop will not
H.W. Chaddock said. In 1990, receiye disaster aid because much
Columbia earned $104.7 million or of the cotton will be harvested:
$2.21 per share.
"Quality equals price, and the
Robert Gillon, a natural gas ana- quality of much of this cotton is·
lyst with John S. Herold Inc. in practically worthless," Combest
Greenwich, Conn., said the year- said.
end loss was expected.
USDA is taking applications
. But the fourth quarter "is a bit from farmers who lost crops to bad
better than what we have seen most weather in 1990 and 1991.
of the gas pipeline companies do," Congress has approved near! y $1
Gillon said.
billion in aid to covu !hose losses.

. PRESIDENT'S DAY • Tbe Lions Club was out earJY Monday
morning displayinl American flags in tbe V~lage or Pomeroy in
observance or President's Day. Pictured is Bruce Teaford as be
places a Rag at tbe corner or Court and Second Streets.

Ohio Supreme .Court
OKs new voting districts

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) • prise a majority of the five-memj)er
Ohio's Supreme; Coun ruled late state Apportionment Board.
Frida&gt;; t¥t .a R~publicait·d~awn
• State Audi!Or Thomas Ferguson
De~ll.
P.im crea~~N..new ,di~cts fm:,lll~ . and.&amp;p. JJ~U~CJ~.Quiltu, ,D-Iole....
· · ., U.Piin arrival;-tht"ttre- ·depan•..,. Ohio General Assembly does not do, lhe tioard's·.Democratic mem' m~n[ discove[ed the trailer was violate the 6hio Constitution.
bers, were named defendants.
ertgulfed lit ~s and was advised
HoweVei-, the decision apparentQuilter sought to remove the
that the infant. Paul Brewer, was ly does not affect a pending federal case to U.S. District Coon, but the
inside.
coun case in which a three-judge federal court said it lacked jurisdicFirefighters extinguished the panel ruled that the Senate and tion over state issues and remanded
blaze and discovered the body in a House districts violate minority it to the state court.
bed in the living room,the report voting provisions of the federal
Quilter is the plaintiff in a sepa.•
stated.
Voting Rights Act.
rate federal lawsuit which led to a
According to the sheriff's
The Supreme Court vote was 4- · rulill$ Jan. 31 that the plan violates
repon, Susan Doss, a neighbor, 3, with all three of the court's fedeial law. The three-judge panel
reported_that La~. carne to her Democrats dissenting.
gave the GOP majority on the
residence to get CigaretteS and that
Tbe coun ruled at the request of Apportionment Board until Feb. 20
some children discovered the trailer Gov. George Voinovich, Secretary to make corrections or show that
was on fire . Lawrence and Doss of State Bob Taft and Senate Presi· the plan does not dilute minority
approximately 7:40 p.m. and discovered tbat tbe
.FATAL FIRE - A 6 1/2-month·old infant
were unable to enter the trailer dent Stanley Aronoff, who com· voting strenglh.
inrant, .PIIul A. Brewer, was trapped Inside. The
died In this trailer rtre on Sherman Road near
because
of the heaL
iarant.'s mother, Rosa Brewer Lawrence, was
Vinton Saturday oi1ht. According to a report
Two
squads from the Gallia
transported to Holzer Medical Center where sbe
rroiJ!
Gallla Counly Sberllr's Department,
County
Emergency
Medical Ser·
was treated ror trauma. (OVP photo .by Jim
the Vinton Fire Department respooded at
vice
were
dispatched
to the scene,
Freemin)
The remains of a nude, lalloocd Department reported it is handling
an EMS spotesman said. Lawrence body found in an open field in the case as a homicide. Sheriff Watwas trans)XlltCd to Holzu Medical Franklin Furnace, Ohio, Saturday terson stated the victim was shot
Center where' she was treated for has been unofficially identified as five times in the back of the hcnd.
trauma, according to a hospital Michael Oliver, 40, of Point The time of dcnth has not yet been
spokeswoman.
Pleasant, who was reponed missing determined but it appears the subThe Ohio Fire Marshal's Office in November 1991.
ject may have been dead for apwas called in to investigate the
Although official identification proximately four to six weeks, the
blaze.
will not be determined until an Scioto department revealed. The
The
Wilkesville
Fire
Depart·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- netic weekend spin through the this state substantially" in Tuesautopsy is completed in Hamilton body was also missing three apment
provided
backup
\0
the
Vindent Bush is winding up his drive state that left his advisers cautious day's New Hampshire primary. But
County, Ohio, Mason County pendages, including a right hand,
for votes in New Hampshire by about his prospects.
·
his aides sought Smday to discount ton Fire DeparllliCnL
Sheriff Ernie Watterson reponed left foot and penis.
The infant was transported to today that he is positive the body is
Oliver was reponed missing by
long-distance telephone after a fre.
Bush declared he _would "carry what could prove an embarrassing·
his sister, Jeannie Fellure, who
ly strong showing by challenger the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home that of Oliver.
in Vinton.
stated the last time he was seen was
Patrick Buchanan.
Paul
Brewer
was
born
July
24,
According
to
Sheriff
Waucrson,
Friday,
Nov. 8, 1991, ap,
Buchanan predicted ~e would 1991, in Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., the
Deputy
John
McCoy
took
proximately
2 p.m., when he left.
do "extraordinarily well . ... We son of Rosa Brewer Lawrence and
photographs of the many lattoos home with Wonhy Siders, Jr.
stand a chance to shake up this
Danny Saxon.
Oliver had to Scioto County and
The Scioto County Sheriff's
nation.''
In addition to his parents, he is matched up three from a video tape Department reponed that Saturday,
.
A Pomeroy man won $200,000 in Saturday night's Cash ExploBush today was back at the survived
by two brothers, Noah the Scioto County Sheriff's 10 a.m ., the department received a
•. · siOJI television game of the Ohio LoUery Commission.
White House, spending part of the
Jake
Robinette
and · Joseph Department had · of the body. call from a subject who was in the
: Rob Landers, making his third appearance on the show, came
federal holiday in telephone interLawrence
Jr.,
and
one
Crys- Among those matChing were a car- Franklin Furnace area looking at
closest to .the target number when he spun the lottery wheel to win
views with New.Hampshire news tal Dawn Lawrence, all sister,
at
home.
:· lhe $200,000. He- was competing against two other contestants.
media in a final effon to shore up
toon-type devil on the chest area propeny adjacent to the land where
Also
surviving
are
paternal
.: . Landers ftrst appeared on Cash Explosion on Feb. 2 and came
holding a pitch fork with "hot the body was located. The subject
supp&lt;in.,
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cluirles stutr' inscribed below the devil: a spoiled
:; : out·the top winner"' the game with $10,800. In aecordance with the
body in lhe field but at
Suon or Bidwell, and maternal tattoo on the left shoulder area, and the timethe
:: .· rules of the game, that amount was doubled. That night he vie~t on
thought
it may have been a
The president was expected to grandmother, Doris Brewer of Vin·
:· · to take pan in the wheel event and came out the new $50,000 chamone
other
tattoo.
deer.
When
he
approached
the area
win the primary, but his campaign ton,
·: . pion which qualified him .to return to the show on Feb. 9 to try for
Along
with
matching
the
tanoos,
closer,
he
discovered
that
the
would take .a setback if Buchanan
Services -will be conducted It a St. Christopher .medal and a
: , $100,000. He again was a winner qualifying for Saturday night's
remains was that of a white male
managed to get a share of lhe vote a.m., Tuesday, at the McCoy·
:· , spin whm he won the I!!P prize of Cash Explosion.
double heart nng th't Oliver wore subject, and contacted the sheriff's
in
the
range
of
35
percent
to
40
. '
.
Moore Funeral Home in Vinton at lhe time of his disappearance
deparunenL
percent or more. ·
with the Rev. Elmer Geiser offici·
·
Both departments are continuing
Bush campaign chairman ating. Burial will be in the Brush were also on the body.
The
Scioto
County
Sheriff's
their
investlgations.
Roben Teeter predicted only that Cemetely. .
~
Two.guilty pleas wac entered 'on Friday by defendants charged
Bush would wm "comfortably."
Friends may call one hour prior
with felonies in Meigs Cbunty Common Pleas Coon.
He siid, N~w Hampshire " always to the service 81 the funeJa) home.
• According to Meigs County Pro~uting Attorney Steven L.
has been a :tough state,"
·
SIQIY, Owen Miller, 27, of Long Bottom entered a guilty plea on
"We'~e had a very difficult
Friilay to a felony ch.qe of rape and two counts of .gross. sexual
economic tlme in this country, par- U. S., Russia agree on
imposition. Miller was accused of the 1991 rape of a m1110r gtrl.
ticularly In this state, for the last international center
Jud&amp;e Fred W. Crow In scntenced Miller to 1 term of seven to.
year
atid·• half. And when that hap· 2S yean on the rape chargea, and ,\WO years oo the count of grou
pens,
the p-esiden.t's .~proval ~t· ' MOSCOW (AP) - The United
Incwn~t~~sCOOnty~
.; · scxual impoeitiorl. ·Thoee .sen~ will be!served co~tly, or ·
mgs
read 111 JO down, T~!e!et wd 1 States and Ruuia agreed Monday surer Howard B. Frank has filed hiS
· at the IIDIC tlme. • " ·
.
.
on ABC·TV's "This Week With 111 establish an intern81iona1 centot petition of e~ndidlcf for the
Lisa Whltlni pi~JUilty to four counts of forgery on Friday.
Dl!vid Brinkley.'~
to help nucl.- ~elontim flllm tile Republican nomination 11 1ho
Accudin_(10. Story, Whilinll wis accused of forging ~er81 stolon
Cormot
Soviet Union tum their pany'a treaurer Cllldidale with the
.; ·checb. Whlllllg. who is pregnant, will be sentenced by Jtidge CrOw
White House chief or staff skilli to peacei\11 ....
Meigs County Board of Elections.
; at allier dale.
•·
,
1
Samuel
K.
Skinner
urged
repllda1·
Tho
.two
sldel
also
epecd
dw
;•
I
•I
oot to focus on the mar&amp;ill pf the the United Stain woald provide
likely Busb viclory.
Ruala with 1111 c:ara llld otllcir tools
~ Racine B&amp;E
"We'll
do
well
.•.
but
this
is
to uanspon abon·ranle nuClear
·~ Tho Melp c!owuy Sheriff's DepaiW1ent repoited ~ n:\()M·
New Hampshire and New Hamp· weapona to storage and eventual
~ ina dill die V~ Oiler realdeace on Sixth Street in Racine had
sbire hu a record of talking 'pracll- destruction.
'
beetl onlllled on SII!ICfay aflemoon. .
··
· •· .
'
cally,"
Stinner
said
"Some
voters
·
·
'ibe
accords
were
reached
at a
j' .
Oller told lbo ~tmcnt thai the ~ wu made at ~li·
Frank is ICICkin&amp; thC ~..:
nomtnl'ion In the May 5
•r !IIIIIIY l p,!JI. yi&amp;lisJiy, and ..... itemt wore srolen,:induding -. . i" Now Hampahlre YOlO 'QilPOiitc" three-hoar meotlnJ betweon ~­ and
If llotlinlted will nat b elec·
the ~bent. bo ~tary of Stale James A, Baker Ill
~ tnournlirttcolnj;:r .
.
. 1'' "\ ; 1 •
·lion
to lbe post in the November
• Buc:hiDan, ~While, is keep· and Runlail President Boris N.
: , . depl:nmebl ~ to investigate the ineidenL
/
HOWARD FRANK
Gentnl
Election.
' I'"
I
~'
· ••
?l• ~. •
' ing up a slwpJ~ on Bush.
Yeltsin.
..
'
., ~~;t".
If\) '
y

Pt. Pleasant man found dead

the

Raccoon hunters rely on mules in southern Ohio
between some hills. Warmer tern· cles to start working again.
peratures have brought a thaw that
McMahon unstraps a saddle bag
causes the mule's hooves to sink and removes two thermos botdes.
about a foot deep.
"Anyone for hot cocoa?"
We arrive at another nm arid my
.Before we finish the drink, the
mule, Cimarron, pauses' and, before dog is bafing. "Where's the cam·
crossing, moves a couple of feet to era man?' someone yeUs.
the left of where I had directed her.
We tether the mules to some
· Was this contrariness or did she trees and, while McMahon and
notice something I hadn'.t?
Gilbert look after them, Neilson
A log looms acres$ a po~ori of and I stumble through the leaves
the pathway. When my .miner's hat after Crites and Gatrell.
·
illuminates i~ CimllllOn, Jteps deft·
The baying leads us to a huge
ly 10 the riaht llld detours tL Why oak which the hound is guardinl as
•Joa when you can step it throws back it's heail and bays
. Anotbu 30 mlnuta aerilss the with such 'force its front paws seem
..... ··-• bri
the P,nd. .
s....
_ ... n np as to an old to leave
"There 11 is," Gatrell says,
roadbecl. Mcl.1ahori decides to stop pointina to a spot about 40 feet
~.meaL
•
"Why·don't you fellows step above the pllllld. The beam of my
dow~," he says. "Maybe if we miner'slighllttikes it, but all I can
wall llele far • while, llio do&amp; will see iJ the orange glow or it' aeyos.
Pl bared and., iiUilllna-"
It is the momen1 Cor which the ,
Tho cold ltll.lllnled my Jep to hunter waltl. Blll, fer tonlaht, 11 is
1lua 111d, wllin my feetllit tho onOQJIIro hive IOOIIIL Tho rae·
lfllund, illlba about five back· coonln • tloeen't COIIIJIII' with
wWitepl down a hJJJ far my mill• , the effort to find llint. ·
.
'
'

A lluhlmedlll Inc. Newtp8per

.

infant dies
in blaz.e

'

son, it's old hat (but still fun) to
McMahon and his friends - Lou
Crites, Dan Gatrell and Edward
Cilben.
As we head away from lhe ba,rn,
the miner's lights reveal a surreal
landscape of the winter woods at
night.
Mules bear the burden of an
undeserved negative reputation,
McMahon believes. It is not espe·
cially stubborn, just sensible.
But the mule's agility brings it
the .llrgest portion of the respect it

1 S.Ciloll, 10 P1111• 25 011111

Galli~

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
sheep and lamb inventory in the
United States on Jan. I totaled 10.9
million ~d. down 3 percent from
a year earlier.
The value of sheep and lambs
totaled $666 million, 9 percent
below a year earlier, the Agricul·
lure Department said this month,
and the average value per head was
$61.40, down 6 percent from a year
earlier.
· The number of operations with
sbeep during 1991 totaled 105,710,
down 3 percent from 1990.
The lamb crop of 7. 70 million
head was down fractionally from
the 1990 lamb crop . The 1991
lambing rate was 104 per 100 ewes
!-year-old and older on band .Jan.
I , compared with 101 in 1990.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to the news·
paper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In ease
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be rea·
lured by .the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
Distri".

Rain tonlghl. Low In mld40s. Tuesday, high In mid-50s.

·Palestinians still planning
to continue with peace talks

Columbia Gas quarterly earnings
up 34 percent; posts year-end loss

CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) The moment Ray McMahon hands
us the lighting gear, we .realize
we're in for something really dif-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 17, 1992

Sheep and la.mb
inventory down
three percent

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, reatured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
\V[eigs County. Individuals wishing to partici·
·]late in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win_a ~5 pme rrom the

AGILE MULE - Ray McMahon encourages Driftwood to
demonstrate the agility of mules to jump over blgh obstacles last
...tllln Cambridge. The mules are used to scamper among tbe biDs
d•ID&amp; ...Ccoon hunts In the easkrn Ohio woods. (AP Photo)

11-19-2641-4246

Vol. 42, No. 199
Copyrlgh1.,. 1992

Horticultural exports up 14 percent in November
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
horticulwral exports totaled $551.6
million in November 1991, 14 percent above the same month a year
earlier, the Agriculture Deparunent
says.
Fresh citrus, apples and tree nuts
registered the largest increases,
more than offsetting declines in
wine and dehydrated vegetables,
the deparunent said in its February
Horticultural Products Review.
Looking at some developments

Super Lotto·

Kicker:744090

Burley farmers to vote next week
GALLIPOLIS •
Bur Ie y determine whelher growers favor
tobacco growers will Vote February lease and transfer of burley tobacco
24-27 in a mail referendum on poundage quotas across county
whether marketing quotas on a lines. If more than 50 percent of
poundage basis will continue for producers voting in this referendum
burley tobacco for the next three favor cross-county leasing, then
beginning wilh lhe 1992 crop, lease
years.
Quotas will remain in effect if and transfer of burley quota from
less than one-lhird of the voting one farm to any other farm in Virproducers vote no. Burley tobacco ginia will be permitted.
If 50 percent or more of the
1s grown in Kentucky, Ohio, Tengrowers disapprove, then lease and
nessee and surrounding states.
In a separate referendum, Vir· transfer of poundage quotas will
ginia burley tobacco growers will continue only within counties.
The following provisions of the
vote Feb. 24-27 by mail ballot to

Pick 3: 856
Pick 4: 8100
Cards:
3-H; 2-C; 1-D;
Q·S

Bush WQrking phones on eve
of :New Hampshire primary

--Local briefs---

·. Landers wins $200,000 in lottery

... MiUer, Whiting enter pleas

Frank seeks treasurer's
post on R~publican ~icket

:..Sovr:,

•

-

EXPANDING BUSINESS - TOIII R-D rA To•'• Alto Clillct
recatiJ auoUKetl tile ..,...... ora ll4.'!lllll '"" • Ia •lm • "'
Stcoad' Aftllf,..,. , _ tile pOll olllct. A~ Jo ........ :
Eric R..U,IIIon llert, tile IIIW bl'llldl of T• I AlltO Ca.tc ,._, •

npelr'-'::"

~..:_II~!!f-lub'!#'::~ ..~.
.,... ,,
1111'"cfra,
""' ••.,.. • · - - - rilf er.• ..,
11rUe .,. ,•
.vice• Tile lfW locltloa ~~~~~~ ftJr lllllfa• MtJMI,J, Pft. 10.
l'

·-

~~

'

1

.'

d \

probed ""

. .

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.

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