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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing

y ~0 'iOV

o.loNT AAV£
fO PIIY c.ASH FOR

"'rCAAALWU&lt;
~'i tWf£ loJAAf 00
fUO T~l~ FOR &lt;

TIIAT DAIIT

•

FRI., APRIL 17

mnu v\!:a

Rearrange le"ers of
0 fo'-lr
JCrombl.d words

•

B UD I NN

I I I! ll I I
V UL A E
I I ll I I' I

Ill a (I) m tlUil

(]) Vkleo Power

IZl Square One TV Stereo
(j'j ANdlllfl Rainbow Q

W~ E N

OF THE

I!JI. Nlghl Court Q
0 Smurft Q
at World Today
QJI Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. 1;1
6:05 Cil Beverly Hlllbllllet
6:30 (IIIJ 0 NBC Newo C
C!l So•ld by the Bell Q
Ill Cll (I) II ABC Newo Q
mWild America c
Squoro OnllVStereo.

YOU

LET 60 OF

BLANKET ~

T~ E COO K IE~

~

ME N I C

I;

I Is 1 I I
6

,,

\fl

':JAY 11' DOIJ'T ':JAY ll1
OO!l'f&amp;AY If'

Happy
Easter

low to lorm four simple words

1121111 0 Nowo

LET 60

OJ C!l 1121111 CBS Nawo Q
illllll Andy &lt;lttll1111
0 Scooby Doo
a:1 Up Clooe
QJI Zorro Stereo. Q
6:35 Cil Andy Griffith
7:00 r;aliJ 0 Wheel or Fortune

MAD E E N
1 I I I

8

P" INT NUMBERED

€j

UNSCRAMBlE FOR

O Complete

Cendkl camera
ill C!l Currwn1 AHolr C
I!J) .. 8101r T.... : The lleJ:1

miss~r'lg

lETTERS IN SQUARES
AN SWER

Vol. 27 1 No. 11

0111 Entortlfnmen1 Tonight

+ K 7!

WEST

ALDER

at Be a s.. r Stereo .

By Pbillip Alder

A
woman 's son draws pictures
ol the murdering ol her

ALLEY OOP

boyfriend. Stereo . Q
C!l Lead-an Man
Ill a (I) Cl Femlly Ma11ars
Laura turns her eyes on

-

JF HE Ml"\16 1 " 1'\ &gt;\N l
... ..._~ 1'\ E LL !'\._' I T
"" E'S DU"'1BE~
k'
•N l=k~'N f •'-=THAN L
~IN 16"" \ JH &gt;'1\LA..._- E ..-..Nr
H£ 15 '
'EM ••)FF ) MA k,£ A.. PU8 l1 .,.

\u;:;.

~:::::::::::~""10-,

B~o):)!;) "

Cart·s partner as Urkel surls

::.P£C TA...: LE ~'F
HE ll&lt;: E\.E._UTk'lN '

111 Hawait. (A) Stereo.

Q

CD (JJ Woohlnvton WMI&lt; In
Rovlow Stereo. Q
ill D Oil T:q;lla end
Bonetd Stereo.

I!JI• Amtrlca'o oar

Wanted A neighborhood nice
guy is charged with sexual
abuse and molestation .

Stereo. 1;1
0 Mu-. SM Wroto Q
llll Crook and Chaoe
at PrtmoNewo Q
1:05 Cil MOVIE: Operation
Pot11co.11 (2 25)

8:30 C!l Major Loogue Beoebalt
Chtcago Cubs at St Louis
Cardinals (l)

Ill

a

(I) Cl Stwp by Stop

Both

A man with amnesia
discovers he has five
tdentitles . Stereo. C
ill
(l)fll DlnoJun Fran
15 determined to keep Sa£
m the family . (R) Stereo.

a

MORTY MEEKLE ANDr'Wr-I:..:.NT.:..:H:.:.=::::.:.___ _~ rr-----~
r

TH()LI6HT THERE WA'3

A .MONST"ER UNDER .MY
BE:'D l.Aeif NIGHT

BUT IT TI.Jf&lt;NWCUT

I THINK I \'\OUL.D

ID BE MY UTTLEc
8ROTI-IB&lt;

HAVE PREFERRED
THE 1\NJNSTER .

CD ClJ Mormon Tobaml
Choi• An Enter Gift of
Muaic World-renowed
soprano Dame Kiri Te
Kanawa joins the Mormon
Tabemacle Choir and the
Utah Symphony. conducted
by Julius Rudel . (1 :00)
Stereo.

ill tlil 1121111 MOVIE: 'Murder
Time• Sevtn' CBS Movte

Speclali2 00) Stereo Q
illllll !ijghUilfiO Children and
adults ex[:Main thtir
l1ve-a"er-death expertences

Stereo. 1;1
0 Beyond Reollty
llll Chartlo Danlolo:

BARNEY

~ides

+AQ7 H

t A Jl

South

West

Nortll

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
1

Face part

4 Ruling group

9 Sixth sense

(abbr.)

onn
46 Cutting

w o rk should stan m laiC summer.

implement

A lotal of $6,693,171 was allo·
cared and approved for projects m
Dislricl 18 , Roberts reponed . In the
dislricl besides Meigs arc Monroe.
Noble, Morgan. Perry. Athens.
Hocking, Washrngron. and Bel mont counties.

49 Eared seal
53 Dawn
goddeu
54 LUIUriOUI

Knock

18 Cheera1
20 Overact

(oi.J
58 Wide shoe

22 Stupid

size

26 German Mr

59 Language

29 Guyo
30 Let tall

AN' I BEEN
FLOATIN' ON CLOUD S
ALL DAY LONG"

suffllt

60 Abraham's

34 Cooled
35 Nev . time
36 Firat·rale

son
61- Tin Tin

DOWN

(movie dog)

12 wds.l

62

37 George

Soap

1 S..innr liahet
2 Egg center

ingredient
63 Storehouse
64 Cricket

BernaJd -

38 From- - Z
39 Clare Bootl'le

3 Oppooltt or
ecto
4 lncarceralli
5 - and

poailion&amp;

It :00) Stereo.
11!1 Larry King Uval
Father DowNng Myoterteo

I

24 Made a home

25 Recite

mualcally

26 Snako'o

sound
27 Rtsound
28 True

Temporary office worUrs
chase pests in an an1ma1 lab

31 Dloordorly

(A) Stereo
0 Swomp Thing
10:0011jll (I)CI20/20 Stereo

rM~hl

32 Form•rly

33 Equel

m

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

\

~'lOur

~'Birthday
APfll 11, 1992

vou could estat:&gt;ltsh several enviable relatiOnships In the year ahead . They w1ll
be wl\h individuals who will be JuSt as
concerned abOut advancing your hopes
and desires as you will be about their S

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprillll Yoor greatest asset today is your ability to master mind the affairS of others. Ways of do·
lng things effeclivEHy, which they 'll
overlook . will be obvious to you . Know
wnere to look lor romance and you 'll
find it . The Astro-Grapll Matchmaker
instantly reveal s which signs are rom an -

long. sell -addressed . stamped enve lope to Mat chm aker . c 1o thts newspa per P 0 Bo;.; 9 14 26 Cleveland . OH
4410 1-3428
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) When wo rK •ng m close pr QJurmty w1th olhers t od ay.
keep an open m tnd and . 11 then sugges -

ttons are supenor t o yours . be wtllmg to
ad1ust your vtew s Eve ryone wtll gam
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Thts could be
th e day you·ve been w811 tng for to talk
to the bo ss about tmprovtng your lot at
work You're ho ld.ng some aces. so p lay
th orn w• sely
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don 't htde
your leehngs undtH a bushel today
when 11 comes to someone you really
ltk e but about whom you have been rett CAnt Ther e's a strong probability the
feeling tS mutual
LEO (July 23-A.ug. 22) Gtve situattons
that could mak e or save you money the
senou s respect they deserve today
These are your strong areas . and good
resu lts are likely .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) lmpresstve
result s are posstble today in situat1ons
where you have something to sell or
promo te The secret to your success
depend s on how s1ncerety you believe tn
your pr oduct

liBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Your tmaglnali on . llatr and resour cefulness tn ltnan Ci al matter s could be rather out stand tn g today All tt w1il take to tngger these
annbutes wtll bf! the rtght kmd of
challenge
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Fnends w111
lmd your personality extremely lntngu tng today· You 'll be both dynam1c and
mys tenou s But you won' t be rote -p lr~y ­
tn g. 11 w1 1! JUSt be tile r1atural you

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.

23-Dec:.

21)

44 Macabre

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18) When pul

PISCES (Fob. 2()-Morch 211) Don't diScount the suggestions of friends today
tn matters that affect you socially, but.
on the other hand . don 't take u gospel
any ftnancial advice they may offer.

50 Olalrcran
51 Narrow strep

52 Wonlo (ol.l

55 Believer In an
Iom

56 ChinHe
a~odo
57 g ntror (II.)

Atlanta Braves at Los

BIIMblll C1ncinnati Reds at
San Francisco Giants {l)

a:1 Mojo&lt; l.HgiHI Beolboll

Cincinnati Reds at San
Francisco Giants or Atlanta
Braves at Los Angeles

Dodgers ILl
11 :00 (II •

Ill

a

(I) •

1121111 ONewo
CDNowowatcll

ill 111

0 Sonkw P&lt;lA Ootl PGA

Championship, 2nd Round ,

' W S B

CNJEBV

BJJBRWLTVVG
J~LtLWMTV

R N W

N X

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L J

T

PBJJTCB

Itt X

tBZBPEWLNR,
JNULTV

IBXNtP.

L R C B.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Ufe. trs a series of mortar attack The
how you Mndle them ." - (Formet" quarterback) Roger Sta~·bach . key is

from Palm Beach Gardens .

Fla. (A)
12!1 Crook ond Chloe
11!1 Sporto Tonlgll1

Thts rs the fourth round of fund ing from the Issue 2 monies. Selcctoon of projecls for the fifth round
of funding is expected to begin in a
few week s. Roberts sard that the
village of Pomeroy and the Tuppers Plains-Chesler Water District.
neither of which asked for money
in the fourth round, arc expected 10
have projects for consideration in
the next funding round.
Meig s County, wht ch has
Roberts on the executive commit -

tee and Roberts and Meigs County
Commissioner Richard Jones on
the integrative commitlcc of the
OPWC, has had projecLs funded 10
all four years since voters approved
Issue 2.
In addttion to the money raised
through Issue 2, a ccnam portion of
gasoline tax revenue goes into
OPWC prOJ&lt;XlS. Projens selected
for funding are determined by a
point syslem, RobertS explained .
Wednesday, the executive com mince met in Marietta with W.
Laurence Bicking. OPWC drrector,
and Mrke Miller, his as.,istanl, afler
the projecL' recommended several
months ago had been returned by
the drrcciOr to the committe&lt;! for a
change in prioritizing.
Bicking in a lellcr last week
advised that he was returning the

executive committee's recommend-

10:30 Cil Mljo&lt; L11g1141 BIHboll

0 Roy Bndbury Thooter
llll Auotln EftCON Stereo.

to the test today. you'll conduct yoursell
wellm Situations where you exercise au thor ity You ' ll be lair and just . yet firm
when necessary.

under·
standing

Roblrloon

CAPRICORN

22-Jon. 111 You

48 Two word I of

I!JI • WirRP In Cincinnati
0 Tho HKchhlkor
llll On Slago Stereo.
11!1 World Newo
QJI700 Club W1111 Po1

Angeles Dodgers (l)
I!JIIII MoJo&lt; Looguo

(Dec.

45 Rollo46 Pa~ o1 a ohlp
47 lnqf.liiiUn

(JJ Morlan Anderson
Marian Anderson ' s long and
bnUtant career is full of
breakthroughs and
prolesstonal recogmtton,
endearing her to millions ol
people as she travels . p :00)
Stereo. C

Fnends w1ll respond to your appeals l or
ass1slanc e today - 11 you play to the1r
emotu)fiS Th1 s Will be parttcularly true
of two people you helped recently
may have the opportunity today to get
to know someone bener about whom
you have felt Indifferently You and tht s
individual have a great deal tn common
and could become very good friends

Go away!
Ponurr
winner

(AI Stereo
I!JIIII Hldde Video

11cally perf ec t to r you Ma11 $2 plus a

Saarinen
10
tt

23 African
onto lope

apartment is tnvaded when
the ptumbin~breaks down

ASTRO-GRAPH

7 Spanlth aunt

8 Some publicity pooplo
g Architect -

2 t Olrmplc

9:30 lilii Clleen C
!liD Bilby Taif Maggoe·s

'

down a
6 Hockey org.

19 H.,ena's kin

a

YOU CAN GLI DE
IN FE R A
LANDIN' NOW

Three Meigs County Hrghway
Department pavrng and resurfactng
projects are included. They arc
$183 ,704.14 for p:•ving to be done
on Hemlock Grov _, Pine Grove
and Flatwoods Road; $75 ,593.61
for resurfacing Wolf Pen and lhe
Royal Oak Road; and $37,807 .44
for rcsurfacrng Sumner Road.
Syracuse Village received
$55,000 and Racine Village
received $14,178 for strecl rc surfa crng proJects; and Middleport
received $29,000 for resurfacing
Hudson, Pearl. Beech, and Broadway streets. and $154,784 for a
sewer l1nc replacement along
Wheeler's Run .
Roberts said the project agree ments arc c.r..pectcd from the

43 lnfluenlial

berto 15 Collage deg
16 Mohammedan religion

More than
POMEROY $500.000 in funds from Issue 2
admrnislered by the Ohto Public
Works Commission has been desIgnated for resurfacing and sewer
projects in Meigs County .
.
Phtl Roberts, Metgs County s
rcprcs c nlative on the District I R
cx.ec utivc committee for OPWC,
ann ounc ed final funding approval
on lh e prOJect s Friday . A lo cal
maich of 10 percent is required.

OPWC within the nexl couple of
weeks. After that, the projects will
be advertised for bid and the actual

highway

12 long time
13 lnsecl
14 Author Um -

t7

Ans••r lo PreYloul Puz1le

40 lone
performance
41 Bernstein, lor
short
42 Roman

Homefolkt end Highways

LAST NI GHT I DREMPT
YOU GOT AL L "A' s" ON
YORE REPORT CAR D
AN '--

Eut

...........,= -.-.

ACROSS

I II I I

1

'I'

1

Cloud1

14 Soctiono. "

'17

ed list of projects on the basis thar
they did not meet 1hc "pnoritizing
of infrastructure projects of the
greatest importance within the di sLricl"
The genernl consensus of local
officrals was that Bicking wa s
looking to fewer and larger projects
in one or 1wo counties, rather than
smaller projects in each of the district's counties, and that this mt~ht
exclude proposals from Mergs
County.
However, after Wednesday' s
lengthy meeting and some changes
~ in arranging project priorities, the
list - including funding for aU the
Meig s County projects - was
approved Friday.

p._

A .._,.timtdillnc . ~-

B• Jt\1 FREEMAN
Staff

lly CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr

+s
Vulnerable Both
Dealer East

have the potential for

•: , , 1 ,, ,_,

\\ ta t her . ________________ :\. ~

•Ks o

good play m today 's deaL But m the
Pass
real world, the defensive coup is virtu- t+
Pass ~·
AllpaM
ally impossible to find . Therefore, lest
Opening lead: +Q
your declarer-play . Cover the East·
West cards and plan the play in lour
spades. West leads the club queen.
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J
North's raise to four spades was
pre-emptiVe, showing good playing trump. Now South made a strangestrength lor spades but a paucity of looking play: He led dummy's dia·
defenstve tricks. This bid gave the o~ mond tO and ran il. (U Easl had covponents little room in which to maneu- ered, South would have woo with the
ver. Here five clubs is likely to finish ace and taken a rulfing finesoe
only one down, a good save against a through West )
West won with the queen but was
making game. True. West might bave
made a lhm take-&lt;&gt;ul double. but oppo- endplayed. Wbalever West led now site a passed partner, it didn't look the heart ace, a diamond (into South's
lenace) or a club (conceding a ruffinviting
West led the club queen and contin- and-discard) - declarer would looe
ued witb the club jack when declarer only one beart and make his game.
What was the defensive roup? U
ducked in the dummy.
Soutll did well, finding a line thai Easl had overtaken the club queen
would work even if West beld the witb his ace at trick oue tmd trtritcbed
heart ace. A.fter rufhng at trick two, to the heart 10 (or queen), the defenddedarer played a trump to dummy's en would have tlkeu the flnl four
king. ruffed the club king high in band tricks. No way, man!
~
and returned to dummy with anotber

J T. has some explaining to
do when he sneaks out in

Carol's car (R) Stereo. Q
CD ClJ Wall Snet Waek
Stereo. 1;1
9:00 (II D 0 Fifth Comer (Pi lot!

+Alii%
SOUTH

aJ

7:35 Cil Sonlord l Son
8:00 (IIIJ 0 Moaock

+

tQ651Z
+QJ108

Some plays
are too hard

@ Mojor League Beoeball
New York Mats at Montreal
Ex;pos or Detroit Tigers at
Baltimore Orioles (L)
121 Croaalire

+J

• Q to 9
K 8 7!

• AJ 5

c

Ill Wheel o1 Fortune Q
1121111 Femily Feud

EAST

+6

•

,, 1 -

Officials work
to meet state
suggestions

Issue 2
•
monies
will fund
projects

.781
t tO

PHILLIP

Alon~ tht ri•« _............ Rt-8
Bu; mess. larm ........ ..DI -S
C la~sili rd ...................... LU-7
Dra t h• ............ __ -·--····· ... _-\ .l
F.ditorlll ·--------------'. ~
Spo rts. ··-·-----··--········-C 1-6

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, April 19, 1992

Copyrighted t 992

NOIITH
..~II
+K1098S2

BRIDGE

Inside

•
tmts -

words

you de\'elop from step No. 3 below

I)) Ill

Gener1tion C

New Meigs County video now on
sale - Bob Hoeflich - Page - B-4

the chudde qvoted

by lilltng io the

knocks once, after that, ~·s a neighbOr asking to
BORROW something."

(JJ MocNeii/Lehrer
N•w•Hour C

Cll

Major League baseball results - C-1
Gallia County farmer finds new use for
discarded paper- Kris Cochran- B-1

I

I

8

1992

Two men were talking over
the fence. The filllt guy says,
"My wife is on a new ooolllng
show.""That's great," says the
second guy, "What's rt called?"
Grinning the first guy says,
"That's--------!"

SCRAM-lETS ANSWIIS
• ·••
Grouch - II'Tibue -Jerlcy - Hollow- BORROW
1couldn't make up my mind about taking a job offer.
My elderty aunt helped me by saying, "'pportunity only

00
The Jeneroons Q_
Ill Clllnoldo Edition 1;1

Stereo. !;1
0 MecGyvor Q
a:l Sportoconter
at Moneyllne
QJI MOVIE: The Wenona: An
Eooter Story (2:00)
7:05 (l) Addamo Fomlly
7:30 (IIIJ 0 Jeopardy!
C!1 Now II Con Be tokl
lilii En1ertalnment Tonight
Stereo. 1;1
\lj 11J Merrie&lt;!... W1111 Children

75 cents

- - - - - - 14.. 4 ~.

EVEN!NG

s:oo (IIIJ

Sunday

C.~

poli l&gt;&lt; ado pted proh1boung the use
of funJ, for pohucat purposes.
• A. r("(Offimendauon l.hal a

To m .,;- ~ntintl

c~

GALLI POLIS - Galua Caunl\

A cco rdmg to lhc commission ers. t.hc count)·'s affUlTUltive action

stop' to com pl y with uncorrec te d
rtcommcndations made try the state
audnor's office duri ng thetr la st
audtt pcnod fco- 1990
The foUov.·mg rerornmendauoos

polocy os m the process of betng
updated.

Cornml,~tOOCJ"S said they arr tak.mg

were

READY FOR THE HUNT - Hundreds of
area youngsters tined the sidewalks in the Gallipolis city park Saturday morning, as they got
n•ady for the annual Easter egg hunt sponsored

by 1he Gallipolis Parks and Rl'&lt;'reation Depart·
ment. Kids also enjoyed a visit with the F..astrr
Runny and Alligator AI from Rax Restaurant.
!Time.s·Sentinet photo by Kris Cochran)

made to the commts.swncrs

by the state audltii's office :
- A recommenda uon that the
county updale 1LS affuma11,•e ~uoo
polrcy:
• A pel&gt;OO be appornted to over ~
sec cov~ nghts complamts:
• A rccommendauon ··cooccmmg the aupon: nl31la,l!:cr·s con[r.Kt~

Tll~

com missioners commented

the y arc cons1dcnng appointing a
pcf'S(Wl lO ovcrso: civil righiS com piJOnts. whi le addrng that th ey
hJven't heard any ciVJ..I rights complamts
The problem with the airport
manager's con tr ac t . the commis'\loncrs commented , IS that the aupon manager has not Signed a contrJCt. The commiSSIOOCI'"'i Qld thcv
f(ootinued on A-11

Tax hikes to stave off cuts win Regents' support
lly JOliN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The Oht o
Board of RegenLs supports passage
of ta" increases designed to raise
enough money to fully resolv e a
financial problem that may cui
state a1d 10 colleges and u01versilies by $194 million after July I.
The state faces a pTOJCCied $576
mtllion budget deficiL The regents
approved a resolution supportin g

the t.a" boost after being told how
much money institutions of higher
education stand to lo se if Go v.
George Voinovrch imposes a 15
percent spending cut.
Roo Grande Community College
wo uld fa ce a rcdu c lion of
$4 85,440, taking iLs 1993 subsidy
fr0m a prc -&lt;: ul level of S3 ,236.26R
10 $2.750.828.
Raymond Sawyer. the regents'
cha trman, sa1d cuts of that size

couldn't be absorbed wrthout dam agong the affected colleges and uni vers 1uc.s
'' We ' re very solidly m ~ uppon
o f lhe revenues (needed ) to sLave
o ff 1h e problem s that we would
otherwise race nCXI year ... Sawye r
said.
The
regents
applaud ed
Voin ov ich's call for !.a); wcrcascs
conuuncd in a $200 million rev enue package. The governor's plan

mcl udes pr oposals to boost alcohol
and tobacco taxes . eliminate paymc ms In rclail crs for coll e&lt; ling
s:tlcs la.Xc.s and conven mtl' liquor
stores to prwate operacons.
Tile regents· resoluuon mdJCa!
cd the proposal would be msuffi
CH' nl to deal wi th the b ud ge !
deficit
•
· 'G1·•cn the uncertatnty of the
s1ze of lhc problem. OOweY~ r . we
supporl any r evenu e so luti on

DeWine is looking for reform,
not a new image, in Senate race
s10nal employees.
By ROBERT K MILLER
He al so rep eated hi s earli e r
Associated Press Writer
endorse
ment of term limiLS.
COLUMBUS - Lt. Gov . Mike
He
proposed
a Iimil of four .
DeWrne scoffed when asked if he
two-year
terms
for
House members
was trying to "re-invent" himself,
"'!
ual
10
his
own
len ure there now that he is a candidate for the
U.S . Senate and hoping to unseat but said he favors two, si" -ycar
term s for senators.
ihrce-tenn Democrat John Glenn.
He said majorily Dcmocrals
The former congressman last
week was listing things he see s have boosted payrolls. He said
wrong wrth Congress . He served commillee employees grew from
there from I983 -I99t and, by hi s about 4.072 in I 950 to more than
own admi ssion, made no more than 40,1100 rn 1991.
DeWine said he was not prea Ioken effort 10 change any of
par e d to make recommendation s
them .
He mentioned the spiralon g fo r ending the spec ial privoleges
growth of the congressional pay - enJoyed by the nation's lawmakers.
roll, mostly in committee staff. Bur he tntlr cated he will mak e
Congress passes some laws rhat some. " Give us time ," he said .
DeWine's name appeared laSI
affcCI everyone but itself. and he
would like lo pul an end to that. he week on a liS! of former House
members who wrote checks wnh
told a news conference.
on s ulficienr funds on ihe now DeWone li sted labor laws overtime and the minimum wage , defunCI House bank.
He was li sted with nine over for rnstance - along with others
thai included civil rights stalutes drafts over three years although he
tltat he saod don't apply 10 congrcs- earlt cr reported 31 in eighl years

'Old stuff' looks new
thanks to Vickie Fink
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel SIJlff
RUTLAND - Vickie Fonk
has come up with a new way to
preserve and display histoncal
or prtzcd pictures.
It ' s fun, inexpensive 10 do ,
and doesn't damage, or for thai
matter even involve, the origina.l
print once a copy ha s been
made, Vickie says.
The innovative lechnique
uses a copy made on either a
black and white or color copier.
To the copy, Vickie appties
a transfer medium . The coated
copy then must set 24 hours,
during which time the image rs
absorbed into the rubbery-like
substance. That medium with
another coat will then permanently adhere to almost any surface, she explains.
Into crafts big lime for several years, Vickie enjoys experi menting to sec what works on

d1ffcrcm thmgs.
She got into transfer medium
crafts last fall when she made
se veral thrngs for the holiday
bazaar of the Rutland Emergency Medical Service.
Her wall hangings of history
have been in demand since she
di splayed the flf5t one.
One framed rn an 18 -in ch
embroidery hoop on unbleached
mu slin features lhe Blaettnar
Buggy and Wagon Factory. the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, the
Pomeroy Court House, the
Mcrgs County jail and sheriffs
offtce, and Pomeroy's Parish
and Orphanage Compound.
She also applies pictures of
Meigs County landmarks to all
sizes of stone jars.
Any picture can be trans ferred to fabric, glass or stone,
like portraits of children or farn ·
ol ies, prized family ph01os, or a
(Continued on A-2)

rowling $ 13, 195. That wa s small,
compared with hundreds of checks
li sted for other past and present
Hou se members.
De Wine, tn response toquestions. said he was not able to lix
any of th e problems because he
was in rhc minority and felt it futile
"~i add lo the long list of (minori ·
ry ) bills rhat were not going an y·
where .''
He said Hou se Repu bloca ns
offered unsuccessful amendments
to appropnations bills tha t would
hJvc reduced staff.
"I voled for them umc and umc
a g a 1n ," he said, 1n deny1ng a
rq:xxtcr's quc..~tion whether he wa.;,
Lrytng 10 run for the Senalc as an
oul s ic1cr hy "rc - invent1n g ~vhl c
DcWinc."
" il ' s not a re-invention of M1kr
DeWone," he replied. He sa td the
publrc nghl now tS dlsgusrcd • rth
Congress - much more th an he
has ever seen. He said 1992 .. ,, a
window of opportun ity We rca ll )

.'

(ramed by Oluo's elected offiCials
that full y add res ses thi s seve re
threat 10 our ab1hL'I to 5'.ef'vc stu·

.knL~ wt.o sed a ~nc r life." th e

rL"...olu tJOn

\J.u

Sa 'loi )'C r "'ouldn ' t rule o ut the

possrbth ty of leg islators appronnf
a t.u mcrcasc before lhc ' o\'embcr
elccuons.
"I' m bcg tnnin g to get the
Jm prcs.sw n lhar some members. at
(Continued on A-21

Bush denies
arms move
allegations

LT. GOV. MlKF. V.,\HNE
ha\'e an oppo rtunu y w get

11

done··

G lcnn aade Dale But .l and '..lui
Glenn. "" hom DcWtnc accused of
t&gt;Cong ondofTerenl 10 the problems.
has itlumcd S3l5.000 of hrs stafl
appropnauon Sl ncc 1985 He said
Glen n also sponsored an :Im\.'mJ ·
mcnt !ha t eucnded kdcral c1·•il
n~hrs statutes to Scna1&lt; emplovc.:s

·-.

·~

PRESERVING PICTURES - Vickie Fia• asa 1 tru&gt;ftr
medium to p~rve bistoric and prim! pic:hlres -nidi cu bo
applied to stooe jars, or used to cruk lllliqn wall llaJiciaKS-

LOS A\ GE LES (AP ) - The
RcJg an adm m1 su a uon secretly
Jllo""cd SJud1 Arab• a 10 provide
.-\mcnr J.n -madc bombs to Iraq in
1ctSo :111d faolcd to noufy Congress
:.1' rcq uncJ b~· lJ '&gt;Io', a new spaper
rc r-:)n cJ
ThL' Bu\ h adm m1 stra ti o n al so
Jllo'IAcd tl"tc Saudis to rransfer arms
tn s~ nJ and Bangladesh after the
.:nJ 01the Pcrs1an Gulf Wa~ , Lhc
n·fl,)rt SJ.Id . In ~1aJ.nc. a ..·ac.auorung
Prl'\Jdent Bush, when asked
""'hclhcr he h.ad allowed 'illC h transkf'. gave a bne f reply: " No. No
- the answer to your quest.Jon. ' ·
The Los An geles Ti'"'s. ctUng
c lJ\o;;Jflc.d ckxuments and unnamed
\nurccs. reported the secret transfm rna story publiShed Saturday
lkgmn mg m the m1d-l980s and
co nt1nutng unlll las t yea r . th e
White House ga\'C tacit appro val to
1he tra nsfers w tlh o ul nou f ywg
Congrcs.,, the paper '"'d.
The federal Arms E., pr&gt;O Con
trol Act rcqutrcs the Prcs1dcm to
no11fy Congrc ..;,~ when a forc 1gn
nauon u-ansfcrs Am m ean· suppl ted
anns to a tlurd country • iiho&lt;JI for .
mal U.S . authonTai.Jon
Congress can take acuon agaJnst
t he cou ntr )' by cancc !Jng future
arm.s s.alc.&lt;;;
ClaiOSif Jed gnvc: rnmc nt docu
mc nts c n ed by Ihe nc""' ~ p aper
.;;howcd Congress 'llo 3S kept m lhe
da rk. because th e admm1stra twn
feared congressional OjlpOSIUon 10
pendl ng arms sales to Saudo Ara
boa
The newspaper said attemptS 10
ohtatn com men t fro m the Saud1
E mbassy tn Wa shm g t o n we re
unsuccessfu l. and a spokesman at
th&lt; Stat&lt; Departme nt decl ined
com ment
A secret State Dcpanment cable
tn August 1986 said Prince Bandar
brn Sultan, the Saudi ambassador to
rhe Untted Stares. to ld U.S. offi cials the Saudis had pnlVIded Iraq
wnh an undiscl osed number of
one-ton, MK -84 bombs.
The cable admonished officials
tn Was hin gton thar " we are
required by the Arms ExJXV! Contro l Ac t 10 report promptly repeat promptly - to Congress
(Continued on A 21

�Sunday, Aprill9
Accu- Wcath~ forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH

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W VA

By DAVID MORRIS
Associated l"nss Wrilff
HAYFORK, Calif. - Republican Patrick Buchanan . proudly
deflllllt despite rilont.h.s of Jrimary
defealS, is resuming his anacts on
Prcs1dent Bush and .. hule Dan
Quayle," scornful of party leaders
t.rymg to rein him in.
"We don ' t need to n&lt;gouate
with hi s luggage handlers ...
Buchanan sa~d of Bush m an mtetview with The Associaled Press as
he toured this timber oommuru&lt;v.
The conservative commenWor
sa id he would make peace ., 11h
Bush before th e Republican
National Convention but &gt;'0.-ed to
figh t on for now, cooceno-aung on
pres1dential prirnanes in CalifJlfll13
and North Carolina 011 J 1101: 2.
Buchanan has lOS! ea:b of Ius 19
Republican conteslS againsl Bush.
H1s high-water mtut came in the
firs t primary, in New Hampsh ire.
on Feb. 18, when he captnred 37
percent of the vote.
Buc ha nan now concedes Lhe

Showuts T .-.s

Rain Flurries

Snow

/cs

Sunny

PI Cloudy

Ciwdy

Ql992 Accu -Weathef . In:

nominauon belongs to Bu&gt;h but
co ntinues to be an embarrassing
1horn to the: adminisu-alion, b1.s
att.acks doing oothing to enhance

Weather retains warm, wet pattern
By Tbt Associated Press
Sunshine was expected for most
of Ohio SalUrday. Showers or thunderstorms were possible in the
so uthwest late in the day . Highs
were predicted to be from t.he upper

weather

70s 10 lhc lower 80s. wh1ch would
be nonnal m m•d-June.
There was Jntermlltent light rain
through Oh1o Friday night . Late
mght tempemtures ranged from t.he
lower 40s m the north to almost 60
in the south.
Around lbt nation
Showers were sca ttered Saturday across t.he Plruns, Great Lakes
reg•on and 1010 t.hc NortheasL

Soulh-Cenlrai-Ohio
Sunday, mostly sunny and
warm. High in the lower 80s.
Extended rorecast:
Monday through WedoesdJiy:
(Continued rrom A-1I
A chance of shower; or thunderleast,
are
comillg to gnps w1t.h t.hc
stor ms each day. Highs in 70s
fact
t.hat
we
have real problems out
Monday and Tuesday and in 1he
there.
I'm
very
hopeful. I wouldn'l
60s Wednesday. Lows in the 50s or
want to put a pen:cntage on it," he
t.he lower 60s.
said Friday.
"But I t.hink as t.hcy ... und erstand t.he problems facing not only
higher educauon, but some of the
other
sectors, th at they will sec
(Continued rrom A-1)
there's
an imperative need to ...
s pec ial scene, accordang to
provide the revenues so that ou r
Vickie.
colleges and universities are not
· Her most recent project was
having to shut themselves down or
li-ansferring a newspaper piclurC
any parts of themselves down ,"
df the conteslanlS in the Miss
Sawyer said.
Ohio River Valley pageanl to a
Voinovich spokesman John
large stone jar. S'e presented
Meyer
welcomed the regent\ ' resot.hat to tl)e Meigs Counly Chamlution.
ber of Commerce which sponsOred the event
· Crafts aren't Vtckie's only
intcreslS. While she doesn 't consider herself an antique collec Conlinued from A-1)
tor, she admits to be interested
arc in the process of drawmg up a
in anyth1ng old . She is a firm
new contract for the aiqxm managbeliever that in "every box of
er.
old stuff t.herc 'sa treasure."
Concerning ltlc rccommendaLion
For more than I0 years Vickthat
a policy he adopted prohibiung
ie has been active with the Rutthe
use
of money for poliucal purland Emergency Squad and for
poses,
the
co mmissioners co mthe past six years has served on
mented
!hat
t.hey have never had a
Ru~and Village Council.
problem
w1th
this in t.he past.
While she is a tJained beautiUsing money for poli&lt;•cal purcian . she doesn't have a shop
poses
IS something "JuSt not done,"
311ymore . That, she says. gives
lhc
commt~ioners said.
her more time lo pursue what
"It's no problem . It will be
she likes to do hesl - crafty
t.a.k.en
care of in short order," ComSlUff and commumty servJce.
missioner George Pope added.

Tax hikes ...

'Old stuff' ...

Officials ...

A stonn thai caused flash floodong 1n Okla homa on Friday
dropped ram early Salunlay oo Des
Mo~ncs. Iowa, Omaha, Neb.. and
B1smark. N D.
Up to 6 mches of rain fell Friday across southeastern Texas. ,.\
Jomado tore the roof off a house m
Van Vlcek. Texas, aboul 50 miles
southwest of Houston, aulborilie5
said . No one Ill the houst was
tnjurcd.
Schools in Qucbsha. aboll! 40
m1lcs sout.hwest of Ot.lahoma City,
canceled classes Friday hentKr oC
noodin g in the school bus bam and
t.high-dccp wa1er in coe school.
A front pushing across the Grea1
Lakes region produced shower&lt;;
early Saturday '" Olicago, DeJroit,
Ciocin nati and Cleveland.
Wcat.hcr was less winlry Saturday in t.he NortheasL Hea&gt;-y SIIOW
fell Friday in partS of New Ellgland
;md northern New Yort state _

th• pres•dent's 1mage for !he fall
carn p31gn.
In the wide-ranging interView.
Buchanan several times spoke of
the me president m a fashion bordenng on con tempt, referring to
b1m as "lmle Dan Quayle." He
descnbed Bush and Quayle as out
of tooch with volers.
··They're in their own hnle
cocoon up there, making dectSJms
that an: ktUing mdustries and hurt~ng people," Buchanan said Thw-s-

DeputieS press
shooting probe
G.\LL!POLIS - An investigauon by t.he Gallia County Sberilf' s
Department into Thursday's fatal
shooting of Robert Louis (liner)
G1lmore. 20. Gallipolis. is cum:raly
on hold pendmg autopsy results
irom the Franklin County Coron&lt;r's office. Shenff Denms Saltst-ury satd Satwday .
An offJCer from the Gall1pohs
PoliCe Department amved first at
the shooung scene around I0 p_m.
Thursdav. followed bv a Gallia
Coumy Emergency MOdica! ServiCe f1rst responde r. According to
lhe police department report. a
Juvcmle at t.he scene said GilriDl:
was shot dunng an altercaUon.
The JUVCllliC told the responding
off1ccr Gilmore was abusing hi s
w1fe and had al so assaulted h1m.
the report stated.
A _3 8-ca hbe r revolver was
reco ..·ered at the scene by Chief
Deputy Carlos Wood.
The v1C11m's w1fe, Mechalle
Rena Gilmore. 18. JS expected to be
charged m the shooung Monday.
~-trs . Gilmore is in Lhe GaJii.a
County Jail in lieu of S40,(XX) cash
bond.
Gallia County Coroner Dr
Edward F. Berkich saJd Gilmore
died from a single gunsha! wound
to the left chest and heart. The
body was taken to the Franklin
County Morgue for a complete
lutopsy. Berkich S3ld.
A spokesman for the Franklin
County Coroner's office said
autopsv results would no1 be available unul Monday .

day. He S3id 11 was 001 the pn:sidenl'•
jcs bul his incOOlbeocy
th3l 1m &amp;a:ti jDnary voters.
''They Sla)&lt;ll with bim because

p••

bt'• liM: president, tven !hough
many of !hem agreed with mt,"
Budlan;m S3IIL
BnrMrpn struct ar Republican
Gov. ~ W'Jbm, 111ho has seen his

popularity amoog California con-

scn..m-es lliOble in the polls since
mmiog from tile U.S Senate to the
Sl.3ldlouse. Bu&gt;h has had similar
problems bat: md Buchanan said
lb.ere were dinioct similarities
betw&lt;tD !be """

Wilsoo. bt said. "is walking
from -.utmg people and he,
too. rai!l&lt;d wes." Buchanan wd.
So inialiDg 1m Bucbanao been
to tile Buslt camp dlal Republican
lWIORal Chainoan Ricll Bond dus
......a: said dlal if tile auads persist
81rhappn maY losl: his chance to
address tb&lt;: A.ig. 17-20 convention
in Honqm
It wu thai comment that
brouglu 011 Bucbaoall's angry reton
!hat bt dtd 001 have to negotiate
"'' tb Bush· s "mggag. handlers."
a"~Y

tcc.''

But a scmor SlafT member of tbc
Senate Fomgn Relations COOlDliltee said last week thai tile oommiltee rece ived no soch nolifatioo oC
the arms lrallsfer.
At the time the bombs were
transferred to Iraq . the Reagan
adminislration was about to lqm
delivery to Saudi Arabia of five
AWACS planes worth S3.5 billion
AdmmiSinltion offiCials feared tbc
unauthorized o-ansfer of bOiltbs 10
Iraq would JCOpafdize the s:ale.
Two offiCials actnowledg!:d thai
the Reagan and Busb adminiso-ations had a co- policy oC aJtDing

Saddam Husse m - then at wa.r
wilh Iran - by sending arms to
Arab allies who transferred them 10
lraq.

At the time, the Reagan adminhad a publiC policy of not
sending weapons to Baghdad.
Class1fied U.S mtelligence
rcpms also show that Saudi Arabia
transferred
American-made
armored vehJcles to. Syna without
fonnal American approval after tile
Gulf War, according to two sourc~
farru!Jar with the repms.
Last January. U.S. offiCials
learned thai Saudi Arabia also provided American·made armored
personnel carriers to Bangladesh
after the war, according 10 cla.sSJ ftCd documents and 1DleJV1CWS.
The d1sclosure of Saud • transfer; to Iraq. Syria and Bangladesh
follows recent reports that Israel
sold American weapons to third
COUJKrics withwt U.S. approval.
JstralJOII

atta c k

on

POINT PLEASANT - Fay Alma Gibbs, 80, of Poinl Pleasant. died
Friday, April 17, 1992, at Pleasant Valley Hospillll in Point Pleasant She
was the wife of the late Emmons B. Gibbs, who died March 24, 1985. She
was a member of the Morning Star Christian Church.
Born July 13, 1911 in Mason County, she was a daughter of the late
Samuel and Blanche (Hart} McKinney.
She is survived by a son, William W. "Bill" Gibbs of Winfield; three
grandsons, Michael Gibbs of Huntington, Thomas Gibbs of Charleston
and Stephen Gibbs of Gallipolis; a sister, Mrs. V= Morriscn of Poml
Pleasant and six great-grandchildren.
SCIVice will be held at 2 p.m. Monday, April 20, at the Crow-Husscll
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. wit.h Rev. James Coleman officiaung.
Burial will follow in Kirl&lt;land Memorial Gardens.
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home on Sunday frun 4-9 p.m.

the

Democrat\.
" I'm ready to work to bring the
party togeth e r tn Houston,"
Buchanan said .
Buchanan entered the race in
December with a defiant vow to
''take our country bact" from a
misguided preSi de nt wh o had
strayed too far from conse rvative
principles. The conservative commentalOr ran brutal atta ck ads,
faulting Bush fo r abandoning hi s
"no new we s" pledge and criticizi ng federal support of artwork
considered by some to be obscene.
With his 37 percent showing in
New Hampshire, he proclaimed
that he had delivered a "wakeup
call" to the Wilite House.
Buchanan was unable to claim
outright victory anywhere although
he had acknowledged after New
Hampshire that he needed to "find
a state where we can go head to
head with the pres1dent and beat
h1m cold."

Robert L. Gilmore
MIDDLEPORT- Robert LouiS (Jitter) Gilmore, 20, Gallipolis, dtcd
on Thursday, Aprill6, 1992 at his residence.
He was born in Gallipolis on Dec. 16, 1971, the son of Okey Harold
Schartiger Sr., and Georgia Louise Gilmore. bolh of Middleport.
He was a 1990 graduate of Kyger Creek High School, and is survived
by a daughler, Tiffany Renee Gilmore of Gallipolis; five brothers. Okey
(Karen) Schartiger Jr. of Cheshire, Larry (Lisa) Gilmore of Aleron, and
Rick Gilmore, Mike Schartiger and Roger Schartiger, all of Middl eport;
four sisters, Mrs. Mark (Loreua.) Rint, Mrs. Lester (Linda) WL&lt;;e, Diane
Schartiger and Connie Schartiger, all of Middlrport; a sister and special
friend, Debbie Gilmore and T1m Layne, Middleport; three half-brothers.
Walter, Stephen and Mark Schartiger. all of Middleport; three half-sisters,
Mrs. Don (Carol} Fowler of Mason, W.Va., Judy Schartiger of Akron and
Barbara Schartiger of Gallipolis; his grandmother, Freda Maynard of
Ormlle. Ohio; and several nieces and nephews.
ric was preceded in death by hi s grandparents, Earl and Be ss ie
G•lmore and James Schartiger; and a half-brother. James Schartigcr.
Services will be held on Monday at I p.m. in the Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport, with Ronald Hammond officiating. Burial will he in Miles
Cemetery in Rutland.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 7-9 p.m.
Memorial contribution' may be made to the family at P.O. Box 151,
~1Jddlepon, Ohio 45760.

Buchanan uld1C:tled he would

I
·· t.,.

Dallas Miller
/

RIPLEY, W.Va. - Dallas Rene Miller, 68, of Ripley, W.Va .. d1ed Friday, Apnll7, 1992 at Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
She was born on Feb. 29, 1925 in Renfro Valley, Va, daughter of the
late Alonzo and Missouri Deel Owens.
She ancnded Grace Gospel Church. Ripley, W.Va.
Surv1vors include five sons. Merrill 0 . Ritchie of Galhpotis, Dwayne
and Chris Miller, bot.h of Alexandria, Va. , David Miller of Ripley. W.Va.,
and Mike Miller of Evans, W.Va.; two daughters, Roberta FJCids of
Evans. W.Va., and Sandra Trail of West Virginia; one brot.her, Eugene
Owens of Westerville; two sistc"· Billy Owens of Cincinnati and Lunen
Hoy t of Groveport; II grandchildren; and five grea1-grandchildren.
Graves1de serv1ces will be held at a later date at Creston Cemetery.
ncar Evans. W.Va.
Arrangements are under the direction of Casto Funeral Home. Evans,
W.Va.

•
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A-1)
Bus h denl·es··· -(CoatinuecHrom
----upon receipt of information that
such an unauthoriztd o-ansfer may
have taken place.
" We shall be forward~ng such
notificauon in the nt-1.! few days m
classified lew:rs 10 the Speaker of
t.he House and the chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Commtl-

Fay Alma Gibbs

engage '" geslufes designed 10
divide the party at convention time
when Bush will be seeking to conthe

I

~

I

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A BL.-,.--,..'Y HUG - ~ Hllllnabs gol more than candy rrom
lhr E.a.aa- b..., ..~ I'OIIIIIed Pomeroy slrt&lt;ls Friday anerooon.
Sbr r:&lt;11 a bodiiJylnq:! ~ Wrilesrl has tojoyed lhe Easter bunny
NJit for 5r'ft ,-&gt; IIIII uaaaDy visils kindergarten classes. The
~ b&gt; fil 1ft baskd """ providtd by Krogers where Writesel

..om.

Fnday rughl 's Obio lotlay sele&lt;:t11lft~

~THY BATES AND JESSICA TAND

PdJN. .b&lt;rs
S-6-9
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Pick 4 s ..~~trs

6-7-3-8

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PG tJ\.0.

C•nls
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10 lu::o ) of Oubs
A (x-e ) oC O..!!JO!Xk
6 (su) oC Sp&gt;d&lt;:s

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.IOHN GOODMAN

~

James Milton Stewart

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POINT PLEASANT - James Milton (Jim) Stewart, 76, of Henderson.
died Thursday, April 16, at Veterans Hospiial in Columbia, SC following a
long illness.
Born December 10, 1915 in Kentucky, he was the son of the late Ben jamin F. Stewart and Elizabeth E. (Eads} Stewart Wiseman. He wocked for
the former l'fariella Manufacruring, was self-employed as an auto
mechanic, was a boilermaker and a welder. Stewart also owned and
operated Slewart's Wrecker Service in HcnderliOn for several years. rle attended the Gospel Tabemac le.
He was also preceded in death by two sisters and two brolhers.
Survivors include his wife. Jennie (Siders} Stewart of Henderson ; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Jennie E. and Wilbur Jordan of Gallipotis Ferry
and Mary F. and Alan Poling of Orangeburg, SC; three sons. James M. Jr.
of Henderson. Charles D. of Gallipolis and Robert L. of Pomt Pleasant; a
Sister, Agnes E. Barnet! of Hamilton; a brother, Hohert Stewan of New
Baden, TX; four grandchildren and two stcp-grandduldren.
Service will be btld Sunday, Aprill9, at 2:30p.m. at the Gospel Tabernacle m Poinl Pleasant, with Rev. Donald Sa. ton officiating. Bunal will be
in Zion Cemctay, Gallipolis Ferry .

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STRAIGHT
TALK

I'• ,,. •I

&lt;' I &gt; '"''~'"

lw ,,.. •"I••IM

,~

!iiii"lfl
1PC

agreed .

"It 's no1 a strppressJble crime.
We can ' t be present in domestic

sit.uatioos !hal result Ill violence ....
We can't be presenlor prevent people from handling firearms 'n a
neghgent manr•:r." Gulch said.
"We tlave become a more violent society." he said.
To date. there have been 19 people k.tUed ill the Clly tlus year. compared w1th three homicides dunng
the same penod in 1991. There
were 32 homicides .n the city las!
year.
Four of tht: 19 VICl!ms were

ktlled Thursday and Fnday.
E•ght of t.his year's slayings arc
unsolved. Most took place m mnercny neighborhoods.
" It' SJUSt nO! safe around here, "
sa id Rachel Hunter. who h"·cs in
Ravine Park Village , where QuillCY
Frallcr, 18, was shot 10 death
Thur sda~ n1ght. "You hear guns
gomg off al l the ume."
·'That's JUSt the way Jt 1s, "
ne1ghbor Sam Jones said. "We got
all kinds of stuff go~ng on wnh
gangs and drugs. but u seem s like

Century-old mine fire clouds highway
NEW S'ffi.AJTSVILLE (AP) A fJre believed lo have been SCI by
striking miners m 1884 JS sending
smok.e through a hole m the ground
ncar Oh10 216, the mayor SOld.
Smoke from th e 3- by -3- foot
hole is the first e"·idencc in a1 least
20 years that the hre su ll exists.
said Ma yor Stanl ey W1h . Mo st
people m t.he area had believed that
the blaze, also called "the world 's
grea test underground mine fue .'"
had burned out. he sa1d But smok.c
has been com mg from the hole for
abou t a mon th .

The hole 1s about 200 feet off
Oh1o 216 . h probably opened
bc&lt;:ause pan of the underlying rock
•oof of the mine collapsed, w Jlt
sa1d ErosJon from a tiny rn:cl: ncar
the hole also may have opened the
hole. he S3Jd. NeaJby, smoke puffs
from two smaller crack.s.
But H doesn't pose anr danger
w rrsitknts or propeny, unless a
~rson

inhales the carbon mono~­
odc fumes conunuously, he said.

The fire has brought fame and
drsuuct10n to this southeastern
Oh•o v1llagc 1n llockmg Valley

It wa s •gnJtcd by angry coal
mtners on stn kc, &lt;;.aJd Ivan Tribe. a
history professor at t.hc Umversit y
of Ri o Grande . Trtbe wro te Lwle
C.ries of Black Dwmonds. a history
of coal mmmg ill the area
In 1884. two un1ons, forerunners
of the Unned M1nc Worker s of
Am enca, we re m a struggle w1t.h
m1nc o perator s who brought 1n
replacement workers Tribe sa1d
t\cws a:coun lS s.11d that on two
mghts that October. the ct~hl mines
cnctrc ling the Perry County town
v.l·rc Sl' t artre.

Congressmen battle over district
rc~pondcd .
WASHINGTON (AP ) - It he go bad to sdlool and take Gov
McEwen wa s a..,lcd to clanfy
appears Oh10 Reps . Bob McEwen cmmcnt 101."
McEwen hasn't woo the nght m -.omc more . Was he '&gt;Jytng thai he
and Clarence Miller an: begmnmg
now rcprcscnh Washtngton.
their Repubhcan pnrnary fight w1t.h represent t.ha! area. \Iiiier said
\1c tgs, GaliJa and Lawrence - the
··The
game
JUSI
Slal1£d.
u·
s
the
claws out_
counues
whteh nn.1 year will be
McEwe n was named Thursday f1rst mmng and the score LS 166 to
Jncludcd
in
the 6th D1stn cl'"'
as one of t.he House members who nmhmg. · · he said.
Yes. McEv.cn \.J.Jd.
Oh10 now has 21 .;;c Jb 1n
wrote checks al the now-defunct
"It went 1nt o effect March
Hou se bank when ht s acco unl Congress. l'cxt year the mte only
didn't have enough money lD oover gets 19. To handle that. dJSlrJCt 27lh ," he ''"d
That 's •hen the 1'193 map was
th em. Hts had checks added up 10 lines were redrawn . Some or
signed
mto Lt•,~o
\1
cE"'cn's
current
terntory
was
166 over t.hrec years.
\Ltu
n.'l'rl Brown, o,;r:-lkcwio man
lopped
off
and
some
of
M1ller's
M'ller had no bad checks.
for
th
e
Ohto Sec retary of SLate's
current
tcmtory
was
tack.cd
on
to
Could McE wen 's 166 checks
OffiCL'
.
said McEwe n ts talk1ng
create a new 6lb Dtsoict in lhe new
become a campaign LSSue'
about "the legal di stncts for seet ·' In my congressional di strict. 19-scat map.
In the current 21 -seat map. Jng elec tion .. and not the dtstnct.s
where people know me, it has not
been an 1ssue. Oareoce Miller has ~1 cEwen's dlstnet cames No 6 and 1n piJcc nght now
·"The cand1datc s for Congress
so ug ht vigorously to make 11 an M1llcr's cames No. 10
Jie
runnmg m the newly drawn dtsMcEwen
was
asked
to
clanfy
1ssuc in the four counues that he
tnC!S.
Based on t.he 1990 clcct•on .
h1s
remark.
about
the
count1CS
used to rcprescnL" McEwen saKI.
\ltr
M1ller
1s rcprescnung hts dts\1•ller
"used
10
represent"
Used ·o represent'
mn
tl~rough
t.hc end of th JS calen"
The
lOth
CongressiOnal
DJS
·
"That's clear out of hne," satd
met
ts
10
Cle\·eland.".
McEwen
dar
year."
Ms.
Hrown s.atd
Miller. " I can suggesl t.hat 11 Bob
tlunks he represents those counues.

nobody care s. The only t1me .... e
\ec poll ee down here ts wheQ
they're taktng a v.a:o another
bod) ..
The latest kJUillg ouurrcd early
fnday dunng an aborted robbery at
:.1 gas lita tJ On . Auth or111e s satd
so meo ne chase-d st.auon manager
Kcn nct.h Rclchcr . :n. then s.hol tum
tn th e head a~ he beg-ged for ht"lde
£\ etche r ·~ bod~ v.as found m a
grassy area auo&lt;..\ the sU"cc t from
the

~ta LJon .

Marx s atd a bu'l drt&gt;cr sa~,~,
Betcher runn1n g out of the sLauon
scream1ng. ·· Sa\C me·· He satd
the drtvcr sa\1\ a man chas1n2
Betcher . but didn't \.CC thr shootmg.

Before bcmg kil led Thursda'
n1ght, Fraz1cr was shot \1arch 2 "l.
on a succt ncar an tnner -Ctt ) shur·
pmg stnp. He recovered from tho-.:
wounds.
Man: said pohC(' have somron c
th ey want to questiOn about Fr azie r's death but ha•·en't made an~·
arrr.st5 .
Chad H1cks, 23. of Fremont.
was found Thursday shot '" the
hack of t.hc head in an alley
A friend. Jernd Potter. 22. of
Fremon t, said the two had gooc to a
house and HICks went m'\Jdr wh tlc
he waited outs.1de m a p1ckup truck.
When Hi cks came out. ~hots v.·ere
f~rc&lt;l.

Poner sa~d
Palter was struck three umes bu&lt;
drove to a gas stat•on and called
po!Jcc. AulhorJtle s later found
H1cks' body m the aile~ .
Poucr wa s 1n fa 1r con dHJOD
early today at St \'mccnt \kdical
Ce nter
Wtlliam H:mcll Jr. 2-l . was shO!
111 the abdomen on a Cll)' street
early Thursday . He died a short
t1mc lalcr at St. \ "mccnL
A wJtnc s'~ told police a car
pulled up to Harrell. Someone
in side th e car sa1d somethmg to
Harrell. then fired a gun ll arrel~
was h1t m the stomach by the gunfire.
Pohce ha\"cn ·t made anv arrests
and don'1 have a mouvc-m Har
rc II' s dcat.h

Kindergarten registration dates announced
GALL!POLIS - Kinderganro
regislralion for the Gallipolis City
School SySlem will he held on the
followin g date s from 9 am . to
noon and from 1-3 p.m.Rio Grande Elementary , Apnl
27 and 28. phone 245-5333;
Clay Elemcnt.ary , Apnl 29,
phone 256- 1938;
Green Elementary. Apnl 30 and
May I, phone 446-3236;
Washington Elementary. Apnl
28. 29 and 30 , in the hbrary m
room 213A, phone 446-3213
For parent· s convenience, the
Washington School adminiSinluon
asks t.hat parent\ and theu ch•ldren

plan to attend aa:ording to the first Jal d1sordcrs. ThJS wdl allow school
lcucr of theu last name as follows: personnel to work. w1th pare n L~ to
A-G. April 28: H-P, Apnl 29; get any a~s 1 stancc the: ch1ld may
QZ. Apnl30.
need
If you cannot auend dunng
the~ dales and umes. call 446·
l ~ 13 to make Olher arrangements
It 1s 1m portant thai childlen be
re gistat:d dunng tlus -...d. in order
10 plan for classes and to provide
materials for all srudents. ParenlS
or guardians mam bnng their new
kindergarten children 10 the regis ., ·- .... '" •' .. .
t.rauon. Students will be screened
...... •"
for hc.anng . v1sion. s~ec h and
communications. health and mediOFFERJNG:
cal problems and for d&lt;velopmen -

The

Of)io

Companf

~'lli(J1JJU. ~wu

C&lt;Wpla Trfjisltnl .....

,_W!Jc
CDrtAU~flla'Miau

'Bttf. 'DeW -~!

GALLIPOLIS - Galhpol1 s
C11y Manager Glenn A. Smuh
announced t.ha! t.hc annual otywlde
cleanup w1U he Apn127-30.
Smit.h urged all CJUzens to take
advantage of the curbs1de p1ckup
whiCh Will be prov1ded dunng that
week.
"Cleanup week provtdes us all
w1th a perfect opportumty to do our
spring clcamng and mamtenancc .
w1t.h t.he result bemg a more atliliC uvc cit y," Sm1th added.
House hold appliances will be
p1cked up Monday . Apnl 27 and
Wednesday. Apnl 79. Construcuon
material ~•II also he piCtltl up. 1f
bundled.
The cleanup &lt;;ehcdulc w1ll pro-

Galhpolia, Ohio, by Lhe Ohio Vlllley
Plabtiahinc Comf*ny!Milltilnflllia, Int.
Seoood elMI ,..tq. paid at Gallipuha,

[":;:! ~~ r)IJr. r.r
\

I

oil

Ohio 4&amp;631. Entend u .econcl clau
~MiHna: matter at Puaweaoy, Ohio. Polt

I I

otllco
Member : The Auocial.ed Preu, and the
Ohio Newa.-per Auoriabort.. Natioul
Advertiainr RepruentatiYe, Bnllham
Newapaper Salet, 733 Third A•enue,

New York. New York 10017.

- - - - - - ·Wl UlflfllAH\ AW-'ILAIU AIIOIOH!U
0 0 0 I I I I 0 0 I

BUNDA!' ONL1'
8UBICIIIP'I10N llATE8
., c...... •llolor ..,...
One WeeiL............................................. 90f!
One Year.................................. --··$46.80
811'1GU COPT
FlUCK
Sa.nday.................... - .............. - .75 Centa
No •...t-riptioftl by mail perlMUed in
ar-eu when motGr curie!" ~ee ia
a.-ailatNe.
The Su.nday 'Mn.Sentinel will ftot be

...........

tuporw;ble

(or .dTanat

,.J"'''eftla made

MAJL 8U88CIIII'TIOIIII
One

........ Oalr
Year............. ~-····-···-·····--····-··· ~-'7 . 84.

Sia Mont.hl ........ -.. ·-···-·-·······-· ..·----124.79

MAJL~=NB
looolde c-..c.-

13 Woeb .........................................S2t .84

llll w.............................................. w .16
/12W.................................................76

..... o.-c-..c.-

13 Wtlllkii .......................................... S2!.40

llll w-.......................................... IU6JIO

/12W.............................................. I83 . ~

_

l

SACRAMENTO (AP}- Actor
Neville Brand. a real-life war hero
who made a career out of playing
tough guys m movies soch as Sralag 17 and B~rdman of Alcatraz ,
rlied Thursday of emphysema. He
was 71.
Brand joined the Army after
graduating from high school and
was discharged in 1946 as the
fourth-most decorated Gl of World
War II. He received 1he Purple
Hean and Silver Star.
He appeared in more than 40
films. but is probably remembered
hcst for a role on the small screen.
In the late 1960s NBC television
series Laredo, Brand played the
rowdy, gravel-voiced Texas Ranger
Reese Benne!L
In 1953 , Brand starred in the
POW fUm, Sra/ag 17 w&lt;th William
Holden. His frrst leading role came
in 1954 with Rtturn from tire Sea.
the only romance ftlm he ever did.
His most acclaimed film role
was as a convict in the 1954 prison
drama, Ri01 in Cell Block 11, and
he played opposite Burt Lancaster
in 1962's Birdman of Alcatraz.
Brand portrayed gangster AI
Capone three limes - in " The
Scarface Mob," the pilot episode of
The Untouchables which aired on
Westinghorm: Play!JolLie in 1959;
"Alcalraz Express," a two -part
episode of Tire Untouchables; and
in the 1961 feature The Georg&lt;

Rafr Story
His olher f1lm s JOCiude D.O .A .
1949; The R&lt;rurn of Jack Sla&lt;U.
1955; M ohawt. 1956 : LMr Mr
Tcndrr. 19 56: Cry Trrror, 1958;
lluckltbrrry Finn. 1960; T!Jru
GJUJJfor Temi , 1968; The Desper ados, 1970; and Tora ' Tara! Tora'.
1970.

cecrl as touo.. s
WARD 01\'E . \lmda~ . Apnl 27
- CHv hmus on Garf1ek:l Avenue
to
s~rnet
WARD TWO. Tuesday. Apn l
28 - Coon SUttt to Ptne Street.
Thll'd Avenue to the Oh1o R1ver.

coon

Fmt Avenue.

WARD THREE . Wednesday .
April 29 - Coon Street to NCJI
Avenue. Third A\'CJIOC to t.he cny

Corporat e Bonds
U.S. TreaSUI")' Securit ies
Mutual Funds
Insured Tu-frer
Municipal Bonds
Insured Money Market
Accounts
IRA' s
Conlarl:

••
I

ODin~-!lot~~

,.u. Jfflm.,.,.

Srock.li

Cleanup dates Apri/27-30

War hero, actor Brand dies
!USPS os.IOO)
PUblilhed each Sa.nday, 826 Th.i.rd lflle.. ,

BUYS SCOUT-0-RAMA TICKET· Larry Boyer, gtnrral
manager of lhe Gallipolis Daily Tribunt, buys a 1992 Scout-0 Rama lickel from Jimmy Caudill, or Boy Seoul Troop 222, Bidwell. The lroop is sponsored by Trinity Uailed Methodist Church,
Bidwell-Porter. Tickels ar• btiag sold by area scouts for $1 apioct.
Th• event is Saturday, May 16 at tbt National Guard Armory,
Poinl Pleasant Tbis year's 1992 SOR begins at 10 a.m. and will
end at 5 p.m. All proceeds will go to support lbe local Meigs-Gallia-Mason scouting program.

By MITCH WEISS
Associaled Press Wrilff
TOLEDO - Law enfon:ernem
officials say they don't know what
they can 10 do to stop t.he city ' s
escallating homic"le rate , wluch has
increased more Lhan 600 percent
when com pared with last year at
this time.
''I'm not sure what you can du
to stop th e kdl~ng ," polic e
spokesman Art MID said Friday.
Poli ce Capt. Thomas Gulch

1o- l ""' I " \ 'IOo" '"

IDMIIIION S UG
441·0fll

CINEMA
·"
"' ..•.
.,
-~

1n_~ .. ~r

~·

011 IVIIli(C lltOW 7JO

S~RIN6 ~A L LEY

U! '12'

GALLIPOLIS- Carrie A. Patterson. 69. of Gallipolis, OH, died Friday,
April17, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center following a brief illness.
Born June 2, 1922 in Hendmon. she was a daughter of the late Thomas
and JoAnna (Blake} PaltersOn. She was also preceded in deat.h by three
sisters and four brot.hers.
Survivors ioclude three sisters, Virginia M. PattersOn of Gallipolis,
Rorence McGrath of At.hcns, Ohio, and LouJSC Bobo of Jacksonville.
Oh10.
Service will be Monday, April 20, at I :30 p.m. at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating. Burial will follow at Concord
Cemetery, Hcnder,;on.
Fnends may call at the funeral horne on Sunday from 7-9 p.m.

FRI. lHRU lHURS.

O.EVB.A'ID (AP)- Hen: are

(Si l . ~..,n.

Carrie A. Patterson

C.PLONY THEATRE

Louery numbers

Tlme~ntlnei-Page-A3

--Area deaths-- Escalating murder rate vexes Toledo police:

not

ce ntrate

Sunday

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

Aprll19, 1992

Defwnt Buchanan still needling Bush

OH IO Weather

IND

Aprll19, 1992

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

Page-A2-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

~

Wfl kno w axa~ what hty want in
a weddng or shower gtfl W. ~
dale th&amp;~r list as g~fb arv
purt:-hasad
VtSII u5 when shopping tor a

gift_

W&amp; -~ hel.p roo ~ ~ gtl ....,
tllo bndo ~ally ....., .. We~ gillwrap 1t We ·y wod It W lhe
SQf'VICQ IS lree 1

Jay Coldwell

lun1ts.

WARD R)UR , Thursday, Apnl
30 - Pine and Ouvc smxts. NCJI
Avenue 10 the Sliver Bndge Shoppmg Plaza: Fm&gt;~ Avenue. EAstern
r\'o'Cnoc. Otno R1\·cr 10 the cuy hm ·
Jts.
\o bot&amp;hold appb""'es will be
Jcccptcd. tncludiD~ hot ....·atcr
heaters. washers. dryers. stoves.
rcfngeralO!S. etc.
All matmal JS to set at the curb
hnc . Matmal must be JWtllOfed for
easy handlmg Y:.II rnatenal needs
to he c0lllaJ11en.zed. WJth trne hmbs
and chppmgs bundled Sm1th sa~d
the cuy Js asking for the full COO!'eratiOn of CJUzcns to have theu
trash SCI out by 7 a.m. on the dav of
the scheduled pd.up.

Account Erecutive

Libbv Hotel, Su it&lt; 100
4-W"srcond .:\nnue
Ga lli polis, 011 ~ 56.'1
( 61~1 ~.\6-2125

1 - 800-~87 -2 129

MAYO MONUMENT CO.
DECORATION DAY DELIVERY
GUARANTEED

00
FROM

.IOK
GOL.D

101( QGD

~

~

Nl.l.CIS

1-4 S'f'N'Il£OC S'TO'IIE_S

\r/! !Rsmemfjrance

coaection
for 9olotlius
IOK &amp; 14K gold witb
C.rnuior or S}'"Dtbdic

birtbslooes

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 SECOND AVE • GAl.U'OUS

QUAUTY WGBER, BUT PRICE LOWER
LARGE SELEcnON
OPEN 9:00 A.M.-5;00 P.M.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 5 DAYS A WEEK.
CLOSED SATURDAYS
OPEN SUNDAYS 9:00 A.M.-5:00P.M.
Located on Rt. 141 at Centenary, 2'!. Miles from
Gallipolis, Ohio

PH. 446-7039

�April 19, 1992

Commentary and perspective

Blue Cross ...--Local briefs------. Crime victims fund joins list
Commodity distribution tmnounced
loses battle
of agencies needing more cash
in court

Aprli19, 1992
Page-A4

Gingrich starting to rankle his own party
A Division of

825 Third Avr., GaiUpolis, Ohio
(614) 446-l.J4l

111 Co11rt St. , Poml!'foy, Oh..lo
(6141 m-2156

ROBERT L WINGETT

Publisber
P.\T WHITEIIEAIJ
Assistant Publb.hf'r·Controllu

A MEMBER of The Assoc u.ted Pres'i. and th e Amen can
Newspa~r Pubhshe n A.s.socaaoon
LEITER S O F OPINION are welcome The y ~ho uld fie less lhan
300 words All lette rs are subj«t to ed1Ung and mu st be s1gned wilh
name, address and telephone numbn No uns tgn ed Jcne rs will be
published

Ltttl!rs shou ld be 1n good taste , aJ Jr e ss tng 1ss ue s, nO!

personalities

Envirosafe tries to end 8-year
fight with $11 million offer
·

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
OREGON, Oh1o - For e1ght years, thiS Toledo suburb and envlfOnmental groups have been fighting the expans1on of the sL11&lt; 's only hazardous waste landfill_
The bauJe may be neanng the end thanks to an SI I mil !Jon offer by
Enmosafe Services o( Ohio 10 settle the di.spute.
llut some opponenlS say the city shouldn't tal:e the money and run.
·'I don 't hke iL I still have a lot of questions about the deal." said
Joann Schiavone, spoteswanan for Hazardous Wastes Leak Po1son.
" It stinks," said fellow acuvist Judy J unga.
Some c1ty offictals say they're wilting to diScuss the pro ~sa l
' 'I don't think we should give up trying to reach a c omprom1 ~e,' '
( 'ounctlman James Seaman said
But some otfteials say they weren't sure they would suppon the deal
'' The consensus I get from lhe members of cooncil and the community
IS that they 're opposed 10 any paymcnl from Envimsafc, " Council President James Haley said. "The people I've talked to say, 'They're trymg to
buy you out.· And what price do you pay for the environment'''
The feud between the City and Envirosafe began in 1984 wheo the
co mpany announced plans to build a 42-acre waste p1t at tiS I 35 -acre
landfil L OpponeniS clalmed the proj«t woUld threaten the envtronment.
Sm eiO then. Oregon has spent millions of dollars in legal and other fees
! 1ghung the proposaL
fh c Ohi o Hazardous Waste Fac1lity Board approved Enmosafe' s
. plans last year . The coty has appealed that ruling. The case ts pendmg
· hdorc the OhiO Supreme Court
[nvi rosafe is offering the money in exchange for lhc city dropping 1LS
:~ ppeal , company spokesman Jack Murphy srud
Under the agreement. the ctty would be proh1bited from filing any
1u1ure lawsmL'i against Envirosafc. Oregon also would have to repeal a
Sl-a-tOII fee it charges the ccrnpany, and butld a water and sewer lmc to
1hc landf1ll. The company also wants to divert some of the landf1ll ' s
runoff mto the city scwcr system.
The agreement also calls for the company to move its corporate hcadquartm 10 On:gon from Toledo and take new steps to ensure the landfill's
"' fety.

WASHINGTON - Newt Gin gnch talks li!te a leader who should
go by the title general and whose
garb should be bauJe fatigue s, not
the pinstripes he is wearing thi s
afternoon. He wanls everyone to
lr.now he is "launching the revolutionary wing" of the Republican
Party that ts seeking a political
overthrow or the democrali cally
conuolled Congress.
"I walk down the hall knowing
that a signiricant number of
Democrats dislike me intensely
because I represent a force that will
end theu- careers," he 10ld us.
In his framing of the debate.
Gtngnch has said more about himself than the ISSue: "I think it (the
deadlock) can only be broken by
electing a Democrat and going
Socialist or by electing a Republi can Coogress and really tal:ing the
risk or free enterprise and real
reform."
Gingrich is pessimistic over the
chances for any reform as long as
Dem001lts rule because of what he
describes as an almost "Italian sys·
tern of a conspiracy of collabora tion."
lalely, Gingrich has been proVIding fresh proof that he is willing
to employ every rheiOrical weapon
at his disposal in pursun of what
seemed JUst months ago ltkc a
quixotic quest of Republican con tro1 or lhe House.
The fuey minonry wh1p lOOk w
the House floor last mooth to smear
the new sergeant-al-arms, Werner
Brand~ as a man who "may have
been involved in actions" blocking
Capitol Police from investigating
reporlS of cocaine selhng in the
House Post Offtee. Newt had gone
nuclear.
Rep. John Lewis. D-Ga. cal le&lt;l
Gingrich "the Joe McCarthy of the
House ." Rep. Vic Fazio, D-Calif.,
said Gingrich was suffering either
fmm "filS of rage and paranoia or
delusions of grandeur." ·
Gingrich. who had JU St
1mpugncd Brandt's reputati on,
brushe&lt;l off hiS colleague's cnu Cism w1th a shrug; "I think that
Fazio and Lewis look i1 a linle 100
sincerely."
But this time even Gingrich may
have ovmtcpped some lines within
his own pany. His rlletoric over the
House Bank and Post OffiCe scandal s becomes more shrill in

Good old school days recalled
Rece nt ly, we 've been listening
10 ..;ome "old -timers .. abou1 educal HHl m thc1r day . We hear that lhe
one -room schoolhouse of y~ ago
~a s n · t so bad aflc r all First
~~r:ulcr..; stMtcd lcammg what lhey
wo ul d ha ..·e to kn o w 1n second
gra !lc ~ 1mply by listening . Fowth
;md fi fth graders were listening to
"hat the ~i g luds - 6th , 7th and 8th
grJ dcrs were learmng and reciting
in !he front of the school room . The
ht tle ~u y s were bringing in wocx1
""d"~ I "hole the 8th graders kept
the f111: ~ o mg . The "b1g girls," 7th
Rth graders, helped with tbe
l!rs1 grade g1rl s who were frighl·
r ned and loncl y m the early days of
Sr ptLmhcr
The "one -room schoolhouse ..
teacher was a master or delegation.
Sc hcdulc s and duty rostro showed
who was Ill chaJgC Of SWeeping,
l.ceping cloak rooms neat. carrying
wa ter. wood and coal, keeping the
hathroom clean. and the library in
orde r. School children had never
heard the word "Janitor."
Easter, Halloween, Thanksglv ·
'n g and Christmas provided more
opportunities for "linle kids" learn ing from "b1g luds" under the guid nnc c of the 1cachcr. It also taught
the b1g kids how to help little kids
enter the lofc of big kids. Christmas
plays especially, taught little luds
how valuable the bigger kids were
in helping with lines and costumes.
Th e b1g kids experienced th e
rewards of coaching and gu1d1n g
the little ones 10 success.
K1ds wen: eager 10 stan sc hool.
They couldn't wan for September
to come . September meant even a
slight rel1cf from painung house s
or farm buildings - or . from weed ing the garden, helptng w1th can ning fruits and vegetablcs or canng
for farm an1mals . Boys bragged
about how much wOfl&lt; their fathers
"allowed" them to do . Gtrls
bragged aboul canng for young
s1bl1ng s. cousins or ne1ghbor ' s
k1ds. learning how to can or operate a sewing machine. Scrne helped
in the fields with harvesung.
The teacher, knowmg that her
j 1r ~ t graders woutd be her neu
year' s seco nd graders, the second
would be her next year ' s third
graders and so on. made swe sludents in each grade were well pre·
pared for the next grade. There was
no one else 10 whom she could pass
an unprepared student.
The counly school superintendent would visit perhaps twice each
year - 10 "check up on the school."
Everyone was scared , most of all
the teaehcr. He couldn't slay long.
There were many one-room schoolhouses in the county.
The kids weren't too good in
spons. Usually two or three softball
baiS - small, medium and large.
there was one softball, not count-

""d

ing the one the teacher kept h1dden
Boys had to let the girls play. There
weren't enough big boys to make
up two 1eams. The big guys and
girls taught the first, second and
third graders how to play There

Greg Hargett
SIFE president
was one fo01ball. There were no
uniform s. Most of rhc rule s were
"made up" for fairness . If the teams
couldn't be forme;! equally by st1.e
and speed. the slower or li~ht e r
team was g1ven a break._
Bullies never lasted lon g. If
some b1g kid pushed a little ~u y
around, two or three medwm -w..cd
guys would put a stop 10 h1s bully mg .
There weren 't any bands . Some
parents would teach thc1r own k1ds
musiC. and maybe a netghbor's lud
LOO. Others would hirr: someone tn
lhc area if a child showed lalcnL
Kids were taught , and learned
what was nece ssar)' to make a
decent living for them selves and
Lhcii families and to become dcrcnt
citizens. ParenlS aske&lt;l about rcpon
cards and homework . Books were
carried home every ntght. Books
were carried back every monung
A teacher who did no t a 1i~ 1 g n
homework would not have kept her
jOb .

Klds ate breakfast at home. and
c arried lunch boxes co ntam1ng
s andw1che~ and fruit. Tracl1ng
cookies, cake and fruit was fun
Reading, writing, arithmetic ,
geography and history were leame&lt;l
and re -leame&lt;l. Econom1cs' ParenlS
taught that "If you want the new
Jacket, you'll have to wear your
brother's old shoes. If you want the
Jacket, you better do your chores
everyday." Physi~l fimess? Ptcktng potatoes or apples. shoveling
grain , puch1ng hay, cleaning the
bam or mowing lhc family yard or
neighbors' yard s kept kids in
shape. Riding horses and climbmg
trees added to dexterity .
The kids "thought up," planned,
organized and e~ecuted their own
recrealion . They didn't need or
want someone to manage their
recreation.
High school wasn't much differenl There was a football team and
a band. ParenlS knew they had to
conlribule for the stuff !hal went
beyond education. Baskelball and
football ranked a far distant third to
grades and after school work.
Every kid worked. In laundries, gas
stalions, family businesses; on
farms, food processing planlS, factories, doctors' and deOiists'
offices. 5 and 10¢ storeS; anywhere
they could earn a few dollars a
weet. high school kids worked.

Where are these mistreat ed
overworked and undirected kid;
IDday' A few ane farmers, most are
not. You'll find them heading up
engineering fmns , or chairmen of a
chemical engineering depanment
m a major university, or directors
of personnel, finance or accountmg. doctors, dentislS, nuncs, teachers. professors. ministers, prl csL~ or
rnbbis. Some may be ~b drivers or
on the other hand, airline pilot.s or
corporate or university prcstdenL&lt;~.
Do they have anything in common ' And what would they say
was 1mportant in elementary and
high school education' Not necessanly in this order, but here \ what
they would say . the wriltcn and
spoken use of the Engl iS h lan guage, anthmeuc and mathemaucs.
getting along with people - every
lund - color and religion; knowing
when I was gellUig a good deal and
when someone was trymg 10 "put
one over me," knowing the difference between right and wrong
without referring 10 the law; understanding that I and I alone am
responsible for my words, deed s
and actions and I must accept the
consequences for what I say and
do; understandtng that the hiStory
of mankind is n01 dates of when
things happen ed, but what hap pened in man ' s inhumanities to
man as well as man's assisl1nce to
fellowman in the unending que st
for individual DIGNITY , FREE DOM and LIBERTY whi ch can
ooly be earned as a result of exercising the Inner spirit.
The exercise whtch develops
spiritual, emotiona1 and intel lectual
muscle. They will also tell you that
no government, no subsidies ,
allowances or grants can provide
this. Only an open society in which
people are encouraged to, and
rewarded for struggling , will the
youth of a nation take oo the chal lenges and opponuniues to forge a
nation equal to or greater than
America's forefalhcrs envisioned.
Only when we discard the practice of "Do unto him before he can
do uniO you" and readopt the gold en rule, "Do unto others as you
would have them do uniO you" can
we begin to battle the cynicism
which acts as a cancer upon lhe
American spirit.
They will also add - and sad! y;
what have we done - what have we
allowed - 10 let lhe eduutional system in America to get so badly
screwed up?
The rollowing article was submittfd to the Sunday Times-Sentinel by tbe Students In Free
Enterprise (SIFE) University or
Rio Grandt. Opinions e.pressed
in their IDI!erials and presentations do not necessarily renect
I bose or tbe Universily or Rio
Grande or SIFE ltK.

restxmse to indications that there is
a political opponunity 10 exploit.
Never mmd that Gingrich has 30 of

By jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
hiS own bounced checks 10 explain.
"It was just a bonehead move,"
one House Republican strategist
told us. "That's what Newt does.
He gets so carried away that he
loses his leg1timacy tn the froth of
hi s furor."
Gingrich can fend off the s~ngs
and arrows from Democrats. whom
he has kept on the defense for more
than a decade. But if he someday
dream s of becoming the f1rs1
Republican Speaker of the House
since 1954, he has to win over converts within his own camp.
A number of Republicans rationalize Gmgnch as the kind of necessary cv1l a trampled minority
needs. " It's kind of like the odium

of the hu man, " one GOP opcr•tive explained. "He can make you
powerful, but you don't want him
around nccessaril y.' '
Gingrich is quick to point out
that the DemocralS have had conuol of the House for 38 years, five
years longer than Casuo has held
Cuba. Gingrich is now leading a
well -funded offense 10 capture the
52 sealS that could make the GOP a
maJority pany.
If Gingrich and the GOP
achieve victory. some pany strategislS predict a bloodbath - not
Democrat vs. Republican, but conservative Repub~can vs. moderate
Republican_ "This pany itself is
very fragmente&lt;l," explained one
GOP insider. "I have this deep fear
they would mess up if they did gel
control. They'd wan11o retaliate,
and they're just more splintered in
a lot of ways !han even the
Democrats."
Gingrich was one reason why
some Republicans were chagnned
that Rep. Yin Weber. R-Minn.,
recen~y announced htS retirement
rather than face down attaCkS over

his 125 overdrafts at the House
Bank. Weber was seen as an antidote to Gingnch. a kinder, gentler
version of a thoughtful conservalive who was on speaking terms
w1th most of his colleagues.
Weber, who ranks fifth in the
GOP leadership, leaves the conservative field more to Gingrich .
Weber 's retirement hit Republican
leader Bob Michel hard. Michel
described himself as "crushed lo
hear" Weber's dec1sion . The pam
may have been more acute in the
wake of Michel's discomfon at the
way Gingnch has been indiscnminately fanning the fames of scandal
- creating sparks that are likely 10
burn down mort: than Democratic
houses.
In a thinly veiled reference to
Gmgnch and his bounce&lt;~ checks,
the venerable Michel sa1d; "You
beuer be doggone sure you are pore
yourself bcfon: you take on all this
aura of purity." Others m the GOP
high comma nd could almosl be
heard muuering; " Amen."
Copyright 1992, United Fea·
ture Syndicate, Inc.

CHARLESTON, W_Va. (AP)
- A fedcml JUry on Friday award·
ed $22.4 million to ll West Vir ginia hospitals that had sued Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Ohio for
unpaid claims.
The U.S. District Court Jury
awarded the hospitals $7 .4 mtllion
in actual damages and $15 m1ll1on
in punitive damages.
The hoopitals alleged the insurer
owed $7.5 mtllion in btlls that
weren ' t paid by Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of West Virginia
before the Ohio counlerpan took it
over. The lawsuit sought $ !0 mil lion in compensatory damages and
$30 m1llion in pwtitive damages.
The juror.; considered testimony
from aboul a dozen witnesses and
more than tOO items of evidence in
the suit filed in January 1991.
The hospitals contended the
Ohio insurer sought to get control
of two West Virginia plans wtthout
paying debts owe&lt;l by the state systems.
Attorney Gregory Luce, who
represents the hospitals, told juror.;
in his closing argumenlthat the
msurer "wanted 10 get rich in the
dark ."
"They wanted to make $300
million ror an investment of $5
million and they wanted 10 get this
company free of its debts. They
were not dealing in good faith,"
Luce said_
· ·Set an example and send a
message that lhis is not acceptable
business practice in West Virginia,
not acceptable anywhere," Lucc
sa1d.
OhiO Blue Cross spokesman
Andrew Junicwicz said the ..·crdict
will be appealed.
"We saved insurance coverage
for 300,000 West Virginians, and
we also saved the jobs of Blue
Cross employees there, " he said .
"This verdicl would also force us
to bali out the hospitals and that' s
Simply unreasonable ."
The law suit alleged a Pitts burg h-based Blue Cross system
was locked out of negotiating with
the West Virginia system because
the Ohio insurer obtained an exclusive negotiating agrecmcnl with
officials of the West Virgmia sys·
tern .
The 1n surcr's attorney, Paul
Lefkow itz, told the Jury no other
Blue Cross systems were "interested and no other plans were affected
by the exclusive. No other plan s
camcforward."
·'The Charl eston plan wa s
broke. busted, and never an opportunity for anyone," he satd.
He said the dcf unct insurer lost
S2 .5 millton in th e first half of
1990 and was more than a year
behind tn processing medi cal bill
clai ms.
U.S. Dtstnct Judge Charl es
Haden II on Fnday outlined to le law
in the case to the eigh t-member
JUry before u began dclibcrauons.
Haden said Friday the Ohio
msurer dropped its countersuit
against the hospitals. The suit had
alleged the hospitals agreed 10 can·
eel their debts from Blue Cross of
West Virginia before the Ohio
insurer took it over.
Haden said a sel~ement Thursday in Kanawha County Circu1t
Cour l doesn'l affect the federal
court SW I.
Judge Charles Ktng approv ed
the settlement Thursday between
state ~quida10rs of the failed plan' s
a~'"IS and the nauonal Blue Cross
and Blue Shield Association in
Chicago. The settlemen t says hospitals and doc10rs owe&lt;l money by
the now-defunct West Virginia system will be paid 50 cents on lhe
dollar.
The settlement calls for th e
national ass ociat iOn to pay $8 .6
million, whiCh will be added to $7
million receive;! from the sale of
the West VHginia plan' s
Charles10n office butlding.
Individual policyholders cov ered by the defunct insurer will be
paid the full amount of thcH
claims.
The hospitals tnvolved include
St. Francis Hospital of CharlcsiOn ,
Cabell Huntington Hospital ,
Charleston Area Medical Center,
Ctty Hospital of Marunsburg, Fairmont Gcncr•l Hospital, Monon galia General Hoopital of Morgantown, Putnam General Hospital of
Hurricane, Raleigh General Hospi tal of Beckley. St. Mary's Hospital
of Huntington, Stonewall Jackson
Memorial Hospital o f Wes ton,
Thomas Memorial Hosp1tal of
South Charleston. United Hospi~tl
Center of Clarksburg and Wei non
Medical Center.

I HINK I FOUND

THE

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-AS

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--f'oint Pleasant, WV

P~BlEM.

About Roger Stewart, a success story
Th1s spnng, I have witnessed a use and is extubu.mg u to numerous
never ~en one man who with lim story thai " w1thout parallel in my coaches . Coach Corho ne is the
ited funds has been able 10 manuc:t.pericnce. This involves the story chief subject m this batting film
facture a product, sell and market it
of how Roger Stewar t overcame
with such rapid success. Roger
many adverSities concerning hi s
proved one thing to me _ If your
batting machine known as the
h~rt and mind arc right and you
Power Swing Trainer.
have the Lord behind you, you can
Th1 s story about h1s mvention Carbone shows the viewer of the overcome JUS! aboul anything.
appeared several Sundays ago tn
Rupe, I hope the Easter Bunny
film how lhe mach1ne works.
the T1mes Senttncl For the past
1reats
you well and you receive
About two weeks ago Roger
several months I have been associ - ordered 24 of these batllng many colored eggs on this holiday.
ated wtth Roger in his invenlion
machines from Delta Fabricators. Also. Rupe. you should remember,
and have tried to lend some fonn of
The writer was scared to death that don't carve th e turkey unless it is
support in th" project. Frankly, at he had gone out on a ltmb too fast dead
fir st, I felt !hat lh c odds were by buytng that number of
Carry on .
agamst htm in manufacturing and machines. But, Roger. with hlS fmn
Editor's note - Long-tim•
retailing thi s battin g machine. He is be~cf m his product and h1s ability Allorney Fred W. Crow is lb•
no1 completely ou l of the wood s to sell 1t , has won thiS battle . To contributor or a wetkly column
yet, but he has ovcn:nme so many date, about a dozen machmes have ror The Sunday Times-Senlin•l.
obstacl es, I be li eve his succcs.o;; 1s bocn sold or ane under contract.
Rnders wishing lo applaud, critnot too far away . Hrieny lhis is lhc
irizr
or commrnt on any subjtct
Roger credilS d1vme gutdance
s10ry
in making h1s dream come true . I (exeepl rtligion or politics) are
F~rs t of all it wok a great deal of
would like to repeat that I have encouraged to write to Mr.
umc to bwld this batting machine_
Crow, in carr of thts ntwSpaprr.
It LS of a rather large size and
umque deSign . The purpose of this
inverRion is to teach the ba.'reball
player how to swi ng his bat on an
even plane It also strengthens the
batler's arms. After assembling the
By Tbe As.'iOCialed Prcs.s
parts of this baiting machine Roger
Today is Easier Sunday, Apnl 19, the I lOth day of 1992 There are
contacted Delta Metal Fabricator.;,
256
days left in the year.
owned hy Jim Frecker, to build il
Today's Highlight in HistOI'JI'
After the ftrst baseball mach10c
One
hundred years ago, on April 19, I892, the prototype of the first
was built, Roger exhibited it 10 Mel
ccrnmcrclal
ly successfu l Ameri~n automObile was completed '" SpringClarke, formerly of the Philadel field.
Mass.,
by Charles E. Duryea and h&lt;s brother Frank (The automophia Phil lies. Mel was so impressed
bile.
a
buggy
powen:d by a smgle-cylmdcr. four -horsepower engine, was
w1th It that he muoduced Roger to
publiCly test-driven m September 1893.)
Joe Carbone and Bob Wren, base On thIS date :
ball coaches at Ohio University .
ln 1775. the American Revolutionary War br.g;m with the Rattles or
Roger also contacted Jim Vannen.
Lexington and Concord.
Cmetnnau Reds baseball coach . All
In 1782, the Nethcrland."i rccognu.cd Ameri can IJidcpcndcncc.
of these people were impressed
Through his contacts Roger
sought and received invitations to
baseball clinics and audiences wilh
d1fferent h1gh schoo l coac hes. Pnor
to th ese visits Roger employe;! the
serviCes of Dr. Dwight Pugh of the
busmes s college at Oh1o Un1vers1 ty . Dr . Pugh ha s helped Roger 1n
both the promotion and the market ing of his product. Within the past
month, Roger has dcmonstnlted his
hatting machine to several coaches
at cl1mcs and schools.
In the mtddle of all these problems Roger jowneycd to Columbus
and had documents prepared for a
patent. To receive a pat.ent, a search
of the patent records IS required
and thiS search reveale&lt;l that there
was no other patent for this type of
batung machme . It may be a year
or more before he receives his
patent, but in a short time his
mach1n e can bear the words.
"patent pendmg." This sbows that
he has flle&lt;l for a patent and no ooe
can copy his invention.
The amazing thing is that Roger
not only invented tbis product but
is the chief salesman of iL The s~r ·
cess he has achieved is amazing.
Roger also has two or three indi7
viduals in the basebaU world helpli) I!MI1 by Nf:A
tog him. The list of boosters IS
THE
LARGEST
LIVING
THING - A
growing at a fast rate. He has made
GIANT FUNGUS - IS DISCOVERED
a video tape wilh lhe machine in

Fred W. Crow

Today in history

's World

CHESHIRE - The Ga!lia-Meigs Community Action Agency
wtll disuibuting butter, flour and green beans to persons holding
food commodity cands Tuesday, April 21. at the followmg locations:
Meigs County - Meigs County Fatrgrounds, Tuppers Plains and
Racine fire stations, Pageville Town Hall.
D1suibution will begin at 9;30 a.m. and last until noon or until
the supply is exhausted, whichever comes ftrSt.
Gallia County - Galllll County Fairgrounds. Gal leo m Cheshire
and the Crown Cuy Fire Station. Persons previously receivmg commodities at the Bidwell Mt. Carmel Church are asked to go 10 the
Gallia County Fairgrounds.
Distnbution will begm at noon and last until 2: 30p.m. or until
!he supply is exhausted, whichever comes first.
Persons picking up for others must bring a signed note from that
person, along with their food commodily card. All persons must
have a valid card,to pick up commodities.

Township cleanup date announced
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Litter Prevention Program
has set SaiUrday April 25, as pickup day in the townships. for thooe
panticipating in Clean-Up-Week, April20-25.
Terry Hemby, program director, said several township trustees
have volunteered their trucks 10 be available at tlesignate&lt;l sites for
tlcpositing collected debris.
No household trash will be accepted.
Any communiry groups or clubs who wish to adopt-a-road or site
to clean should notify the litter prevention office. All those partici lla~ng w1ll be g1ven 30 gallon trash bags:
Cheshire Twp. will have a truck avatlablc at the Cheshire Twp.
garage the entire week, April 20-25. Walnut Twp. will be partictpating April 23,24, and 25. The Walnut Twp. truck will be parked at
the Cadmus Community Center. All other IOwnships participating
will have their trucks parke;! at the following sites SaiUrday, April
25, untiiS pm.
Hemby said, "If your township is not listed. contact your
truStees."
GALLIPOLIS TWP. ·Jaycee building.
GREEN TWP. ·Tony's tires, Centenary.
PERRY TWP.- Perry Townbousc.
RACCOON TWP.- Raccoon Township building.
SPRINGFIELD TWP. - Evergreen town house.

Meigs officials attend seminar
POMEROY . Several Meigs County officials attended a rocent
hazardous malerials seminar in Glouster last woek_
Emergency Services DireciOr Robert Byer, Shertff James M
Soul sby, Salem Townshtp Fire Ch1ef B1ll Lambert , and Danny
Davis, pres1dent of the Meigs County Fire Assoctation, atkmlcd the
meeting on Tuesday. It was sponsored by ConraiL
Specifically, the program dealt w1th management of hazardous
matenal sp1lls resulting from tram accidents. Don Roach, safety
superviSor for the railroad, was the speaker at the sem inar, wh1ch
was attended by various emergency personnel acro ss the area.

Gloeckner arrested, jailed
POMEROY - The Fourth Dislrict Coun of Appeals has rc)ecte&lt;l
a Pomeroy woman's request ror a stay of sentence and she has now
bc;;n arrested and Jailed on drug charges.
According to a Common Pleas Court spokeswoman, Beth
Glocclmcr had filed a motion for stay of sentence and a request for
bond !X'nding her appeal following her February sentencing on drug
charges, and those rcqueslS wen: denied by the appeals coun. She
was arrested and jaile&lt;l on Friday.
Gloeckner pled guilty to two counls of ~afftcking in marijuana
'"October, 1991. Meigs County Common Pleas Coun Judge Fred
W. Crnw III sentenced Glockner to two consecutive six months jail
tcnns in February. Gloeckner's appeal is sull pending.

TP-C district to flush lines
CHES1ER - Water lines of the Tupper.; Plains-Chester Water
Districl will be flushed nexl week and could result in some decrease
in pressure, a spokesperson said.
If discoloration results, customers arc advised lD call Lhe office,
1-S00-686-3747.

IY76.
About $4 .9 mi Ilion more is
be1ng awarded annually than IS
going into the fund. sa1d Sally
Cooper, head of the crime victims
section for Ohio Auomey Gcnerdl
Lee Fisher. At that rate, the fu nd
will run dry by June 30, 1993 , she

COLUMBUS (AP) - An offi cial of the state ' s crime victims
fund says it could go bankrupt in a
little more than a year 1f 11 docsn'l
get more money.
The fund has awarded nearly
SIOO million to 27,000 vi ct1m s of
cnme and of drunken drivers since

Incidence of gun-toting youths
prompts AG to call for action
ents or otl1e" who fail to properly
store handguns.
Civil suilS could be fded against
gun ow ners for punitive and compensatory damages if a child under
16 gained access to a gun and used
it to shoot someone. Under Fingerhut's bill, an exceptio n cou ld be
made if the weapon had been kept
in a securely locke;! box.
His proposal also requires that
any prospective purchaser of a
handgun undergo a background
check and complete a handgun
safety course

COLUMBUS (AP) - More
young people apparen~y are taking
guns to school, and that has
prompte&lt;l Ohio's auomey general
to call for quick action on btlls
pending in the Legislature that
make panenlS more responsible.
Attorney General Lee Fisher
aske&lt;l the state Senate on Friday to
stan hearings on a bill allowing
parenlS to be sued for damages if
their negligence resullS in a ch1ld
getting possession of a gun and
us in~ it 10 harm himself or other.;.
F1sher said a similar bill tn the
House has the correct intent, but
goes 100 far in allowing parents to
be charged as felons.
Fisher, a former state senator,
has unsuccessfully advocated gun
contro ls for years. He said he
beli eves enough public outrage
now e;(ists to get a gun control law
passco.
"It's dJfficuliiO pick up a news paper or magazine or watch a news
program wnhout hearmg about a
child who gets a handgun and huns
himself or another child" he said.
He said sta ti stics show that
150,000 young people carry guns
to school every day across th e
nation.
Ftshcr endorsed a btll by Sen.
Em Fingerhut. D-Cicvcland,
wh1 ch would set penalues for par-

A Woman's
Special Needs ...
Because we recognize and are sensitive to the special needs of women who have had breastcancersur~ery,
Pleasant Valley Horne Medical Equipment is offenng a
special-purchase promotion in con junction with Airway,
a leadin g supplier of posl-rnaslectomy products and
fashion accessories for over 25 years.
Please join us on

Wednesday, April22
from 9 a m to 12 noon

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Freda
Elam , Pomeroy; Roger Rec h,
Racine.
Fnday discharges - None.

for a special showing of new products by
Airway represenlalive Betty Spangler and
Cathy Wilson, LPN.
Come in and take advanlage of our

BANKRUPTCY

Special-Purchase Offer.

614·221·0888
LW.CENNAMO

PLEASANT VALLEY

ATTORNEY·AT-lAW

Home Medical Equipment

8 East Broad Street, Saite 900
Collmb.s, a.lo

caedlted by the

LOCAL CONSULTATION

joint CommJs.s/on on Accredlt.at1on of HealthcMe Org.anlzat1on.s.

992·6417

In Pomeroy With
ATTORNEY D. MICHAEL MULLEN

lOll VIGnd

POMEROY -Marriage licenses
have been granted in Meigs Coumy
Probate Court to John Wayne
McKmney. 26. and Sheila Diane
llendricks, 21, both of Middleport;
to Mikel Kraig Young, 21, and
Christine Beth Lamhen, 21, both of
Long Bottom; and Charles Lee
Sm ith, 19, and Rebec~ Jean Kauff,
19, both of Middlepon.

~~
lfo&lt;;

.l -

s..... t, Point PleaMJnt, W.Va. 2.5550

(304) 675-6100

UD slates coffee hour at Rio
RIO GRANDE - The Univcrstty of Dayton School of Education will host a coffee hour from 4-6 p.m. on Thursday, April 30 in
Ann iversary Hall at the University of Rio Grande for those Interested in regiStering for graduate e&lt;lucation classes.
Advising and registration for th1rd term will occur at th ts umc.
Classes arc at the University of Rio Grande. and will begin May I.
The classes wil l end the week of July 31.
racully members from UD will be available to answer quc slions
and assi st with t.hc n:gistrntion process . For more Information. caJI
Paul Lloyd at tbc University of Rio Grande. 245 -5353 , or contact
the UD School of Edocation at 51 3-229-3 146.

WAH
D

Prisoners taken to Orient
POMEROY - Meigs County Shenff James M. Soulshy n:poned Sa turday that dcpu~1es transP?rted three prisoners to Orient
Rccepuon CcniCr on Fnday lo bcgm scrvmg sentences im~scd by
the Mc1gs Counry Coun of Common Pleas. They were Donnie L
Edwards, 20; TerT)' L. Brewer, 45; and Eric M. Pnddy, 22.
Edwards was sentenced for grnnd theft and escape , Pnddy and
Orcwcr were sentenced on drug charges

I'll

IIIII\ till' I ill il l

Deputies investigatin.g thefts
POMEROY - Debbie Spurlock of Tuppers Plams re~ned 10
the Mc1gs County Sheriff s Oepanment on Fnday everung that her
son's basketball and football card collection had been taken from
t.hcir rc.'\idcncc.
Invc.'\tigation is continuing.
Gary Noel of Albany reponed Friday evening that a weed trim mer and a chain saw had been stolen fmm h.is ham .

EMS responds to two calls
POMEROY - Meigs Emergency Services units answered the
follow ing call.&gt; on Friday: R:45 a.m ., Racine unit to Hayman Road .
Charles Ohlinger to Veterans Memorial Hospital ; 9:30 p.m.. Rul·
land unit to Meigs Mine 31, Hcrbcn Wolfe to Holz.er Medical Cen -

May Schedule of Events
Ma~J . 10, 17A24 POl D A I 5 10 "1 1 f( HHY
L nto v r • C• I•rl(J IX lkl n l;t t r. hf'&lt;, f'FI Cil S lln dFi y .--.

Mav 7f,6

6:'!111

May 7 &amp; 6 (1 1,\Of L 0 11 E'::.S P A!MD! "''' "
mP&lt;" all r~'lrl 1 1 ·~ I ,•IM!r" 3 4 ) p m ur1 lhlll

1 ' ,1 "' c~r~1 .I n• n on

r,

!la st r&gt;ar iK!e unl •l

Sep t , i XJH Tl(&gt;'Y.:f' rf)('&lt;.l May 91 "'a ildrrll ~~oon
c h •HIJ '

C . t r&gt;e.('l~-..:1 'r' the Pvf&gt;flt o r 'nclement

wPillhf'' 1 eoo 866 DAwe 01 79 ':' ~ 006

Ma¥ 21 \ 1 ASII)f S vM PHQN Y Tnt&gt; ( ha rteston
S yrn ]_II'-.:.)Ol y O r O'I(!~t r /1 per 1 01 m ~ a !.t)IX: oill ovr

Cent&amp;
Da·1 Jctr,.,l l(' •, lhl• ~ ~ l and

1100! r;oncer• at K•il w M• ISICif'd '&gt; T own

hi l l/ /(' \

(;.--' l,il/1/1 1

a s part o i

Me mrv r ~ l

at:&gt;OtJrXl ~ ,n na lur , r l tw •o lr l~ I rom e-nclle.,~ an r",
o l ma rsn t0 llrH k lnor•sl'&gt; ol ptrl(&gt;~ rn&lt;~qrroka &lt;,
ana m ao;•, rv P hvr oak ~ 1GB J J OO

May 21

Junr 1 SPOL f TO f 1- Slt VAl. US A
An ontema tron,t!lj· ,lCC I&lt;! rmet1 art ~ r ~str,. tl l o tter

FREE BROCHURE

rng 17 d ilY'• ol Cjr(',:rt peri Ofmances
ope•a
dane(' 11)1'.1l r &lt;- rafl Srlarnt;.er mu siC ilnd tn \JCrl
nlOfe 1 01 ,1 r:w•rl ()l rnance &lt;;&lt;:r-.eduiC cnnra c t
~ [X)Iet o F e~ t ·~ ~~ ~ U :O il. P 0 Bo• 15i C ha r ~~

1011

BEN(]IMARK
p,• Box 773 • Johns Island

SC294 57

800-992-9666

sc 29J 0?

' "' 27 64

Jurte 6 rrCC OLO SPOL£ TO

May 2l

Com

te ~ to~ar

and ri.J('Inrng concurrenll) .vrth
the w0(1(!1~ acc Larrned Spoiet o Fe":oti,.&lt;JI f'l iCcOO
S ~ : O ShoWCOI 'rt' ~ s.(li !IC u l l rrf• t"!P.Sl ](x".al ,1rx1
rogl()n al l aM~II I lrom r' IQSI Cl rt rs t dt SC !f&gt;h ne~ ~or
rnl ormat+On
de taM, con tac L lhl'! Cr ty o l
Charl(&gt;slllrl Cullural Att atr s O lloee 133 Chur ch
J)ll. &lt;lii.)Ol

.:tm

sr

Cttilrlest\71 5C / 940 t 72 4 7305

~---------

NEAR HISTORIC CHARLESTON, SC

ter.

GALLIA CO. REPUBLICAN CLUB

SITE OF THE

MEET THE CANIDATES
Licenses granted

said Fnday.
:
John Annarmo, direc10r of the
Oh1o Coun of Claims, agreed with
the asscssmenr. "We're able to
compensate more victims, but of
course more money is going out,"
he said.
Fisher is trying 10 rally supporlc
for a House bill sponsore&lt;l by Stale
Rep. Johnnie A. Maier Jr., D-Massdlon, which would boost court·
fee s so the crime vi ctims fund
could grow .
·
" By 1993, we're gomg to be·
faCing serious problems," Fisher
said. "The fund may soon be insol-·
vent''
The fund has about $12.3 mil -:
lion but is awarding more Lhan tha~
each year.
The bill would increase court
fees paid by defendants, which provtde most of the money that goes
into the crime victims fund . Thefee in misdemeanor cases woul~
increase to $1 1 from $6, while the
fcc in felony cases would be boosted to $30 frum $20.

THURSDA'( APRIL 23
7:00P.M.

SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER
COMPLEMENTARY REFRESHMENTS SERVED

EVERYONE IS INVITED TO ATTEND

fniOv a ou•et esca))f; 10 K~J""'ah l slanrl O•sr. o~~er our 10 m•les
ot seclu~l e () beachrs w1lh pr •l'alcty ownec'l ~ • l i as CO llage~ &amp;
~ ome~ Golf 1enn•s iJn() o1arme{l ch•ldren s ac l• v• t•r'o; MP
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SC 29~ J )

19~ 1

RYDER CUP MATCHES

Th rrr col orful guldt·s ft- atunn~ mile s of
beachr s. eight champion s hip golf course s.
tennis. bike trail s. bo.11mg shopping and dming
All 10 a srm1·Iropical riirnalt· only minutes fr om
Hi stori c Charlesto11

KIAWAH 1-800-845-3911
SEABROOK 1-800-845-2233
WIW DUNES 1-800-346-0606
Ravenel Associates
IWIIH I.Al ii\\'ALKI.HIIKIVE. KlA WAH ISlAN D.'.!. 1Y41'&gt;

�Aprll19, 1992

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

Page-A6-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Along the River

Voice problems plague candidate Clinton .
lly JEFF BAJR
rcmrumn g rival for th e Dcmocrauc
Associated Press Writer
nomination, did some environmen PIITSBLJRGH (AP) - Demo- tal vote hunting of hi s own Friday,
cra tic front-runner Bill Clinton is blaming Pennsylvania's pollution
having trouble with his voice agai n, problems on politicians who arc
JUSt four days back on th e prcsidcn- " bought and paid for."
tial campaign tra il after taking a
Brown said he was sometimes
week off to recover from chrontc called a "nake" because of hi s
laryngttis.
environmental efforts during two
The Arkansas governor canceled term s as California's governor. But
scveral interviews Friday and was the gains were solid and "not.raspeaktng mos~y in closed sess•ons nola and kmd of off-the-wall, he
to small groups. After a visit to th e satd.
.
market distnct here Saturday, he
"It's a moral outrage that httlc
was scheduled to ny hack to Little chtldrcn' s brains are affected by
Rock for Easter.
Cltnton sucked on a cherry
cough drop as he spoke to passers by outside a newspaper offtce Fn WASHINGTON (AP) - A forDUll T IN 1937 - The maio part or what used to be Elliott's
clay and he now has a voice thera mer
House Post Olfrce supervisor
Appliance was built in 1937 ror Burnett's Gr~ery . In later years
pi st traveling wuh his campaign.
Spriegel Feed Store was here. Elliott's occupted the corner ror
He acknowledged that ht s vo ice was charged Friday with cocaine
more than two decades.
"is not aU the way back yet" and possesssion and conspiring to cover
up embezzlement at the post office.
~t id he is still taking medication for
A two-count crimmal mforma a sore throat.
tron
charged Dorothea Nilu Risen If anoth er rest at home is just
hoover,
33, of Alexandria, Va .,
reform the banks eroded by the nood. what the doctor ordered, it's going with possession of a controlled
By JAMES SANDS
The nooctand tlre fnct Easter came to have to be a shon one.
Special Correspondent
With Pennsylvania's pnmary 10 substance and consptracy to con GALLIPOLIS- Easter tn 1937 carlv was a big di.~appoinLment to
ceal a material fact.
fell on March 28 and area ch urc he s one ;ncrchant- lrv1n Uumctt. He was days away, Clinton's schedulers
A criminal tnfonnation means a
have him back on the campaign cirhad a friendly di.sagrecment on c.•- a]] SCt 10 orx~ n his fll'W S(OfC at Third
defendant
has waived her right to
and Prne in MJrC h of 19 37, hut had to cuit Tuesday with a rally at HarriS- have the case presented to a federal
actly the time for sunrise.
burg and what is billed as a major
watt unul April 10 because of the Ean h Day speech on the envtron- grand jury, and that the defendant
The Baptists ~.
flood .
claimed it was 6
mcnt Thursday at Drexel Universi- is ex pected to plead gutlty. Her
The Pmc Street Market was lo- ty in Phtladclphia.
attorney was not available for com a.m.andscheduled
here
for
St:vcral
years
before
cated
their first Easter
Je rr y Brown . Cl int on's lone ment. srud an aide in his office.
~ i1 ing way to Sp ri cgel Feeds and
serv ice accord ..... i
later Elliott's Appliance. Some of the
ingly. The Meth- . . . •
open•
ng day bargains at the Pine Street
odists reckoned it ·
Mark
et
were pork chops at 23~ a
tobe6:30a.m. and
pound. vea l cutlets at 35~ a pound.
the Presbyterians
suspected it to come about 7:30a.m . It am. 37~ a pound, tomatoes at 13¢ a
Some of the country churches dtdn 't poullll. bulk soda, two pounds for9¢ ,
bother with this theological debate as kr:tu l pcars. homtn y and sugar corn at
they had services at 2:30 in the after- 1Oc a ca n and bananas at 5• a pound
RAVENSWOOD, WVa. (AP) had "engaged" Pete Nash, forn1er
noon- just as they had every Sun- ·nc store advertised that it had I 0
National Labor Relations Board
fee t of parking space on 2strecls with - The United Steelworkers of general counsel, to rud m
day.
America issued a news release on
At the Methodist church. the pro- no ~affic lighLs interfering. Theyalso
Friday
saying
Ravenswood negotiations .
grams for Easter were under the dt- del ivered.
"We stand ready to commence
Aluminum Corp. chainnan and
Other news of that week in Gal - chief executive officer R. Emmett negotiations immediately and to
rcctions of the foUowing: Ehzabe~•
Niday, Mrs. Starbuck, Mr.; . HolliS ltpolis dunng the opening of Ptne Boyle wrs "tn the process of work toward a mutually sausfacWood, U.l. Lloyd, Dorothy Lani er Street Market included: plans to res- resigning."
tory agreement and the prompt
cue the J.C. Rawn whtch had been
and ~-John Newton Davis
Unron members say Boyle has return to employment of our
According to the Gallipolis Dail y stranded on the river bank oppoSite been an obstacle in wage and safety locked-out mem bcrs," satd George
Tnbune, more than I ,200 people at- Spruce Street (m West Vtrgmra), there negotiations between the union and Bcc~er. the Steelworkers' internatended the seven different services was a big story mvolving Jack son company, and was responsible for tional vice president for adminrstraheld at the Bapllst church. Sunday County native and formcrCincumati locking them out of thetr jobs and uon.
Union workers and thetr farntltcs
School attendance was 40 I and the Reds outftcldcr Pat Duncan, the replacing them with younger, noncame
and went from the union hall
union workers .
Easter offering was $315.
annual amateur program was held at
Company offietals wouldn't Friday afternoon, according to a
The fac t that there were record Wa shin gton School and th e
story in the Charleston Gazette.
conftrm
or deny the report
crowds in church on Easter in 1937 Etsteddfod at R1o Grande was a hu ge
"We
busted the boil with
More than I ,700 union memocrs
may be partially attributed to the nood success.
solidarity,"
they satd.
of 1937 which threatened the tives of
Aunt Emma Kerns wrote of her have been orr the job at the Jackson
Jim
Bowen,
director of the
many people. For some, fear IS a tr.lvcls to Florida Plans were moving Cowuy aluminum plant since Nov.
United
Steelworkers
of America
great motivator. As persons motored ahead for the r:ving of Dam 26 whtc h I, 1990. The union and company District 23, told the members not to
to church that Sunday along Firs t was no lon ger necessary bc&lt;:ausc of haven't ncgouatcd smce July 1991.
"There arc developments occur- cclebrme too soon.
Avenue. they would have seen pan of th ccomplc uon of the Gallipolis Roller
''ThiS is just a battle," Bowen
the street closed. There was also a Dam that year Dam 26 v.as con - ring, but we can't confirm anythmg said. "We've got two or three more
at this time," said Linda Arnold, a
gta nt steam shovel on a barge m the structe&lt;! in 19 11.
spokeswoman for Ravenswood bat~es like thiS." He said union
river. The shovel had been lrytnR to
In Cc ntcrvtllc, the DaviS and
negotiators are ready to talk any
Aluminum .
Edwards store was hav1n g ;1 go ing·
time
the company is.
The Stcrlworkcrs also satd
out-of-business sale. Thisstorc. which Ravenswood's hoard of directors
so ld dry goods, grocencs. hardware.
shoes, notions and general rncrchan disc had been in business smce the
1890s.
One article that mtght ha ve cou~ ht
GALL IPOLIS- A Proctorville
GAL LIP OliS - A Ja ckson mncy was. c1tcd lor Ia! lure LO main man was arrested and placed in the the eyes of everyone under IK was man was cued afte r a four -vehicle uun assured clear distance.
the one that said the school s tn Clay
Gallia County Jail Friday eve ning.
A Chtllicothc man wa s Cit ed
:tmdc nt on Upper River Road tn
and
Spnngflcld Townships wou ld (;;tll t[Xl lts f'nclay at 4:09p.m.
Robert Joe Hensley, 31, wa s
aft er ;1 two-car acc ident on Pin e
charged with domesti c violence close Apnll6,1937.and not rcopc.n
Accord ing to a rcpon from the Street tn Ga lltpolis Friday at 5:13
and drivtng under the innuencc by until after Labor Day. St udenLs ~ "" C;tl lt[Xllis Pol tee Department, Ran - p.m.
the Gallia County Sheriffs Dcpan - attended sc hool s along the Oh '" R11Tr cl:t ll K Wheeler, 26, Jackson, wa1
Acco rdtng to a police repo rt,
and along maJOr strc.1ms had to make northbound on Upper Rtv cr Road James E. LewiS, IR, Ch tlli cothe,
mcn t
Elizabeth A. Gloeckner. 26. up the nearly one month of lost Sl'hwl- Jrld ~ t ru ck the rc.ar of a car dnvcn was westbound on Pine Strt:.el and
Pomeroy was jailed Friday after- mg ca used by the flood closm,: h1 Rt cky A. Thomas. 31, Galltpo- \ truck the rear of a car driven by
noon for the Meigs County Shcr - sc hool s. On Apnl23. all ctghth grad · 11 -&gt;
Rebec ca C. Irwin, 25, Gallipolt s,
tlf's Department on a charge of crs in lhc cou rHv had to Lake the
that
was stopped for traffic.
Thomas' car was for ced for trafftckmg in drugs.
Damage to Le wi s' 19RR
etghth gra de test .to sec if they had w:mls mto the rear of a th trd car
In addition, four people were lcamed enough through eight yc;tr s drt vc n hy Lillian J. Myers. 66 . Gal - Chev rol et Cavalt cr was lt sted as
wed Friday by th e Galltpoil s of "schoolin" to ge t an etghth grade llrolls, wh1ch was forced into the moderate. Damage to I.rv.·tn 's !1)91
Pol ice DcpartmenL
diploma. For about half or more ol rear of a fo urth car driv en by Ri cky Pl ymouth Laser was listc&lt;l as lt ght.
Ctted were: Karen S. Filson, 41,
Lcwts was Cited for failur e to
the students tn tn the county, 111&lt;· ,\ Swa m, 33. Galltpoli s
Gallipolis, failure to display ~ccn sc
1
main
tain assured clear distance .
~ o InJuries were rqxmcd
plate ; Paul D. Burgess, 22, Bid - compl ctton of the eigh th grade wa.1
D:t magc to Wheeler' s 1987 Ford
well , defective exhaust; Billy G. as far as they wen t in cducauon .
lrllrk.
Thoma s ' 19 77 Chr ys ler
One articl e Lhat poi ntS up arwtllcr
McGull y II, 20, Galhpolis, squcall.l'ILtron
ami Swru n's 19K9 Pontiac
tng tJrcs and no seat belt; Howard (ti ffcrc ncc OC tween then and now wa_" (; r:tncl Am was liSted as ltght.
R. Wells Jr., 21, Crown Ctty, reck - tile one that tuld how during prc- ll;tJtJ:t gc to \1y ers' 19R7 Cad illac
F;t'-. !Cf St: r.tcr~ at W ~1.~ hing10n Sc hool
less oocration.
Hruugh;1m was listeO as mcxleratc.
under the thrcc uon of th e revere nd ~
Wheeler was c tt cd by pol tee for
S:t~ c n . W1lhur , and G1shlcr some fl.!
l.111urc to mcu nta1n ass ured clear
U d~ l cs we re prr~n tcd t.o pr tnc1pal
di '1ldllCC .
Ben Ev:ln'i.
A Crown Cuy woman was Cited
Dunnt! the progmm Rev. S;Jgl'n af tl'r a two -ve hi c le at:r 1dc nt o n
t :ppn Ktvc r Road FrJda y :tl 1 24
GALLIPOLIS - The Galltpoi iS s.:ud "Al l cducaL H1n had 1ts lx:)!.lfl
r11
ngs
1n
the
Bthlc.
Modem
cdurauon
Police Department recov ered a
p rn .
C111tl y Lou McKtnn cy, 14, was
stolen pickup truck Friday morn - began w1Lh m\'n and women whn h ~ul
goucn thc1r m&lt;;p trat.ion from the 81hie no rthbound tn a 19R 2 Chevrol et
mg.
Accordmg to a police rcpon , the and :to.; a result cs t.abl1shcd sc hcxJb. Chl'vc tt e and stru ck th e rear of a
1972 Dodg e was stolen fr om Our Arncncan government OCgan l'IX4 f'ord Bronco II dnvcn hy Lon
Tough Ttmes Auto Sales m Kanau - With th C nihk (}S itS foundation and A Loomi s, 27, Apple Grove.
W Va .• caus 1ng li ght damage to
ga the morning of April I0
1L~ mspJrall()n ." The program con The theft was originally repon - cluded w1th J \o ng by Mrs. Dean h&gt;th vehicles. police reponed.
No InJUries wl'rc r('por1cd . M cK ed to the Gallia County Shcnff' s DaviS " llol y Hthlc, llook DJVtrte".
Department.
The vehicle was found be tween
Chestnut Street and Farm Road .
Gallipolis, police reported . The
vehicle was removed from th e
scene by Baird's Wrecker Servtce
and taken to the sheriff depart ment 's impound lot.
FAMILY PRACTrCE

baltcnes and toxic dumps put there
because pohttctans are bought and
paid for," he said while campaigntng m Lackawanna County, host to
two landftlls that take m R,OOO ton s
uf waste a day. .
As accomplrshments , Brown
satd Caltfornra now has the lowest
auto emiss ion standards of any
state m the counlry 'and a $1 btU ron
wtnd turbtnc tndustry that generaK'S enough electncrty for I mrlhon
homes.
.
Clmton focused ht s fire on Prestd cnt D ush tn campaign appear -

ances earlier Fnday tn Phrladelphta
.
"We need a presr dent that represen ts real people and wrll tum
thrs economy around, who wrll
work wtth the people and make
sure th ey com~_frrst, OOl some for ctgn country, he sard durmg a
visit to the city's Italian market.
In Southwest Phtladelphta, Clinton toured a drlaptdated rowhouse
that tS berng renovated wtth the
help of ACORN,_ a communrty
development organ11.auon founded
22 years ago tn Arkansas.

Easter in Gallia County, 1937

Resignation may end
Ravenswood battle

Officers issue
six citations

By KRIS COCHRAN
Times-Sentinel Staff

GALLIPOLIS - Three generations have lived on the 88-acre
Car michael farm, and the gre.atgreat-g randparents never would
have believed what's going on at
the fann today.
Perched high atop a hill off
State Route 35 near Spring Valley,
the French Hill Farm has been
using a new bedding system lor the
dairy cows the past two months,
using shredded and chopped news papers, and things seem to be
working out weU .
"I talked with some people in LeslS."
nonhem Ohio who were using the
But the cows aren't the only
new spaper," said John Carmichael , ones benefiting from the newspa the only farmer in Gallia County
pers.
currently using the process. "The
Approximately a year ago, John,
cows seem to like iL'
Marilyn Shealy of Riverview RecyThe Carmichaels currently have
cling; Ed Vollbom, Gallia County
100 milking Holsteins, 275 cows
Extension Agent, Agriculture; and
totaL In what is called the "loafing
Pat Whitehead of the Gallipolis
shed" there are 36 cows which are
Daily Tribune, did some brainmilking heavy and producing more
storming in hopes of gelling the
than 120 pounds a day. The paper
project underway.
is also used in the calf hutches and
"We've just been waitin~ for
box and free stalls.
someone like John to express mterOthers helping out on the farm
est in the project," said Vollborn.
arc Ron and Loralee' s two daugh"The only stumbling block was
ters, Renee, 15, and Relle, 12;
finding a machine for the newspaSteve Dcam, herdsman; and Dennis
pers and John just happened to ftnd
Nonnan, pan-ttme hand.
one.··
Grandparents Charles and
Obviously the newspapers have
· Margie Carmichael are still very to come from somewhere, and
active on the farm.
that's where Riverview Recycling,
Being at the right place at the located on the Gallipolis Developrtght ttme, John came across a mental Center campus, and the Trimachine at an auction, and after a bune come in .
few modifications he was in busi Extra newspapers from the Triness.
bune office are dropped off at
"The machine we have is really Riverview by Herb Rowland,
for corn," said John. "There are according to Shealy . Newspapers
actual machines that are used for are also picked up at Riverview's
shredding and chopping newspa- nine drop-off sites, including Gal pers."
lipolis, Rio Grande, Centerville,
Whatever happened to good old Vinton, Cadmus, Crown City, Censtraw? Well, that may soon be a tentary-Northup, Cheshire. and
thing of the pa~t
Bidwell-Poncr.
"We've found that newspaper is
"We appreciate John taking the
cheaper, more absorbent, and packs initiative to purchase the machine,
down a lot tighter than straw," said said Shealy. "This is a learning

talktoyu
about life:~

Readf_ln

·~ !~·:lfliP l~·.lfl ,

h.ti .J •"litlr 111'-ltr-LilCt lo,ltl
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5 MINUTES

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Marv1 n Doxdorfcr

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

44H 2nd Avenue

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GatlipotJS, Oil
44 t-1104
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FILLING THE BARN- Putting newspapers into the shredder,
Rene Carmichael fills the loafing barn at the French Hill Farm.
Doing chores is definitely a way or life on the rarm but Rene

truck ts first weighed empty at
River City Farm Supply, and then
weighed again with a full load on
the way back to the farm .
"It takes more time using the
newspaper," said Loralce, refenring
to the labor and traveling. "But it's
still cheaper."
Ranked in the top 500 in the
Unrted States for genetics and pro-

duction, and a recipient of the Progressive Ge netic Herd award in
1991 -92 from the Holstein Associ ation, FHF ts certainly leading the
way for area fanners, economtcally
and environmentally.
"At least I know my cows are
educated," state s Loralee, as she
throws a copy of Wall Street Journal into the shredder

doesn't seem to mind, too much. Approximately one ton of newspapers is used to fiU the barns, including the free and box stalls
and calr hutches.

Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds,
Thursday, April 23rd - 6:30 p.m.
Free Food!

Meet the local Democratic candidates!
Guest Speaker: Thomas E. Ferguson,
Auditor of State
Door Prizes Given Away
Everyone Wel(ome!
NEW BEDDING - "Babe" as she is lo1·ingly
rderrcd to, is pictured gelling new bedding
from John Carmichael. According to
Carmichael, the rarm also rtcrivrs shredded

EASIER.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

FINISHED PRODUCT - Arter running
through tbe shredder, the newspaper turns out
light and nu«y, as displayed by Retle, (len) and
Rene, (right). Dotb girls work bard on the farm,

Photos by
Kris Cochran

according to their mother, Loralee, and have
named every dairy cow on the French Hill
Farm. Their grandparents, Charles and Margie
Carmichael, are still very active on tbe farm.

lt '&lt;~ood
for Amem:a.

t:,,
'I

llll215SXA

• Conver1 s lo mulch or side
dt sc h~rge with optional kit s
• Easy -st;Jrting Honda's 4.5 liP OHV
Commercial Enwne
• :l -S peed Shaft Drive Tr.msmtssion
OTHER MODELS STARTING • ROlD-STOP" (Stops blade with enwne
AS LOW AS $349.95!
runnin~)

(304) 675-1675

- • .
1"

Kanauga, Ohio

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RESTING COMFORT ADL Y - More cnrlous about tbe camera
than tbe newspafl!r, tbe 36 dairy cows In the loanng barn don't
seem to mind !herr new bedding. Frenclj HiD Farm bas been using

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Upper Rt. 7

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25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

Carmichael, he was drtrrmined to make i1 work

and it seems to be paying ofT.

ri'

Equipment

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAl. CENTER)

paper from area banks, already ba~gcd.
Although the newspaper bedding was new to

Rt'CfCit•.

M. HOLLEY, M.D.

1''' "'1'·i• ·1.,.,. ,.,, , ·,l .. ol, o, ;•"''

'

''I want to

stage for us and we were fonunate ers are welcome join in the proto have a private owner."
JCCL"
"It may not be for everyone but
Shealy also sta ted that
Riverview was losing money ship- il' s an alternalive to check into ,"
ping the newspaper to be recycled she added.
and by selling the newspaper to
The Carmichaels travel to
Carmichael, $10 a ton, the center is Riverview about three times a
week to pick up the newspapers . In
geUing a little something.
"We're glad the product is used a cffon to keep track of just how
locally," Shealy said. "Other farm - much newspaper is being used, the

1

i ROBERT

GALLIPOLIS - Three inci dcnls ofvandalism were investigat ed Friday evening by the Gallipolis
Police DcpartmcnL
Steve Smith, Vine Street, repon ed an unidentified person, while
apparently intoxicated, fell through
the from wtndow or his residence.
The subject then left the scene.
Nonna J. Martin reported she
was driving past The Happy Comer
Bar on Second Avenue when a
black male standing outside the bar
threw a bot~e at her car, breaking
the windshield
William Dillard, Gallia Hotel,
reported someone threw a rock
through his window.

be charged in the post ofrtce inves tig ati on.

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS

Loralee, John's wife. "We usc
about a ton of paper a day, both
shredded and chopped, compared
to 15 bales of straw per day."
"We bed every day just like
straw," she added.
Not only is the newspaper bedding cheaper, there is less chance
of disease and bacteria as is the
case with straw or sawdust, said
John, who is aware of the current
landftll situation.
"Newspaper is good lor the soil
as far as organic matter," he said.
"Some were concerned with the
heavy metal in the ink, but nothing
harmful has turned up in research

Three ticketed in accidents

Police recover
stolen truck

Vandalism probed

Ms. Ri se nhoover was ac cused

April 19, 1992

Gallia County farmer finds new use for old newspapers

Ex-PO supervisor faces drug charge
of conspiring to cover up missing
stamps and money from the stamp
drawer of post ofllce clerk Wendell
Magruder. He was charged last
week wtth se lling crack cocaine,
cocain e and marijuana to fellow
post offic e employees.
Prosec utors said the conspiracy
lasted frorn about December 1988
to July 1991 and involved under
ltnidcnlificd co-conspirators.
The consptracy charge carries a
maximum penalty of five years m
prison and a $250,000 fine, wh1lc
the cocaine possession count carries a ma.x.imum one year imprisonment and a $100,000 ftnc.
A spokesman for U.S . Attorney
Jay Stephens said no coun date had
been set.
Ms. Risenhoover is the daughter
of former Rep. Theodore M. Risenhoover. D·Okla., who served in
Congre ss fmm 1975 to 1979.
She was the fir st superviser to

Section B

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the chopped and sbredded newspapers ror nearly two months, and
is the only farm In Gallia County u.&lt;ing the proces.~.

UNLOADING THE TRUCK - Gellin~ ready to put newspapers
in the shredder, (Ito r), Rette and Lora lee Carmichael, and Dennis
Norman, part-time help, untie newspapers that were picked up at
Riverview Recycling in GaUipolis. Riverview charges $10 per ton
ror the newspapen, wbicb ha.~ turntd out to be henerrdal to both
the recycling center and FHF.

�OH-Polnt
April 19, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-B3

4-H kickoff dinner slated
POMEROY · The annual kiCkoff dmner for 4-H acUv!Ues will be
held Sa turd ay at Easte rn Htgh
School.
The banquet ts for 4 ·H mem bers, advisors , and their famrlies .
There will be door pfi7 CS . Ham,
turke y and hcn:rages wtll be provided and eac h farml) 1S asked to

take a covered dtsh, dessert, and
their own lable service.
Scaung at the potluck will be by
clu bs. Advisors are asked to contact the Extension Office by
Wed nesday with the total number
of club members. advisors. and
family membe" planning 10 aucnd.
Fred Dec! . Gallia-Meigs 4·H
Agen t, wdl be the guest speaker.
Spcctal ro::ognttion will be given 10
the National Report Form partici pants, JuniOr Fair Board member.
Fashton Board members, and Com m 1t1Ce offi cers_
The door pnzcs include a cordless telephone, answering machine,
33 mm ca me ra , and a walkman
radio .
Add•ttonal tnfonnauon may be
obt ain ed from Chtp Haggerty,
AssoCiate Agent, 4 - H, M&lt;ig s
Cou nr y Ex tens ton Ser.·icc.

Police uncover
fraud ring of young
computer hackers

*'
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and ADA KING

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King- Herdman

J

LEANNA JO NIBERT and R. RICHARD MARTIN

Nibert-Martin
Mcintyre-Jacobs
POME ROY - Patm " Matson

rc n1l y a student Jt the University of

Ferg uson, Chester, and C. D. Mcin t y re, F1v c Point s, anno unce th e

Ri o G r ~1nd c maJo ring in soc ial

engagement and approach1ng marnagc of thclf daughter , Kyrttbe rlie
Diann Mclmyrc, to Ronald Gene
Jacobs II , so n of Mr . and Mr s.
Ronald G. Jacobs l, Racme
Ms. Me lnlyre is a !990 graduate
of Eastern H•gh School and IS cur-

wm k
Ja cn lts 1s a l9RO graduate of
Easte rn H1 gh Sc hool and a 1990
graduate of Ohio University. He is
emplo yed by Ohto Power Company a .~ an c lcc uical engineer.
An autumn wcdd1ng is planned.

GALLIPOLIS - Jerry Nibert of
Gall ipolis and Janel Nibert of Dar·
win, announce the engagement and
approach ing marriage of their
daughter, Lcanna Jo, to R. Richard
Marttn, son of Rusty Martin of
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Pat Splcte of
Gallipolis.
Miss Nibert is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School. She
received her bachelor's degree in
Elementary Education from Capilal
University and is currently taking
graduate cour.;es at Ohio Universi -

SAN DIEGO lAP ) - Authont.i cs say lhey'\'c cracked a nation wide clcc tron• c network. of young
computer hack ers who wert able to
make fraudulent cred n card pur chases and break mto confldcnliaJ
credi t rating fue ,_
''These kid s can gel any mfor mat.ion they want on you - pen oct ," San D1ego police Detective
Denni s Sadler &lt;at d " We didn't
believe it unul it was demonsD'aled
to us."

ty . ~he ts currently employed as a
ktnderganen teacher in the Athens
City School DJSUict.
Mr. Martin is a gradwte of GalIta Academy High School. He
rccetvcd his bachelor's degree in
Civil Engineering from Ohio
Nonllem Umvcrs1ty and is current! y working towards a mas1er' s
degree in Environmental Science
from Ohio University_
The wedding will be held July
II in West Columbia, W.Va.
A reception will be held July IS
at the Elks Lodge. Galtipobs.

MJDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Allen (Kay) King, Middleport,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Ada Louise, to Charles
Lee Herdman, Huntington, son of
Hcrsal Herdman, New Haven,
W.Va., and Pamela Lane. Broadrun.
Mts s King is a graduate of
Meigs High School and is
employed as a dietary aide at Overbrook Center.
Herdman JS a graduate of

Dressel-Easton
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
William E. Dressel of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Julie Marie, to aarence
Hillman Easton II, son of the late
Clarence H. Easton of Cheshire,
and Mrs. Bonnie Davis of Springfield , Ohio.
Miss Dressel is a I989 graduate
of Ga llia Academy High School
and is a student at the University of
Rio Grande worktng towards a
degree as an Executive Secretarial
Specialist. She is an employee of
Spring Valley Pharmacy.
Mr. Easton of Columbus, is a
1988 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and a 1990 graduate
of De Vry Institute of Technology
where he received his Associate of
Applied Science in Electronics
degree. He is employed at American Electric Power Company as an
operations technician.
Wedding plans arc mcomplete.

Sisters team up
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP)Stngcr Crystal Gayle said she
hopes a country music album she
and sister Loretta Lyon are record·
tog together wiU help dispel rumors
they are quarreling.
"People ask if we're feuding
and fi~hling," Gayle said recently
in an mterview. "Loreua just told
me today that blood runs thicker
than water. That phrase says it all."

C. H. EASTON and JULIE DRESSEL

Wahama High School and is fmish ing his tllird year at Marshall Uni ·
versity where he is studying mdustnal psychology.
The wedding will be an event of
Aug. 20. The couple will reside in
Huntington.

The mvesLJga Lron has led

MR . and MRS. JEFF (ANGELA) DELONG

Duffy-Loucks
TUPPERS PLAINS - The open
church wedding of David Maahew
Duffy and Lori Jean Louks will be
May 2 at 2:30p.m. at St. Paul United Methodist Church. A reception ·
will follow at tbc church.

A TOTALLY
UNIQUE DESIGN

Kennedy-Delong
RUTLAN D - Jeff and Angela
Delong annoum.:c their marnagc on
Valcnttne's Day (Feb. 14 ) at the
Rutland Church of the Na.-Mcnc.
The groom ts the so n of Carl
and Sue Delong, Pomeroy . The
bride is the daughter of KC!th and
;:Irene Kennedy, Rutland.
: Pastor Samuel Basye Jr. per .&lt;orrttcd the clouble-ring, candlelight
~ crcmony. Beverly Adkins was
;jl1an tst and Aroka Priddy 'egistercd
~UC.Sl~ .

• A seven-branch candelabra with
:mauve bows flanked the altar deco:rate&lt;i with pink dogwood, greenery
:and ivy. The couple also ltt a untty
:candle during the ceremon y.
• Given 111 marriage by her fat.h cr.
br ide wore a dress of ivory lace
:over satin . a victorian neckline with
:emphasis on the shoulders with
-stmulated pearl sprays. The neek:lrne and long lace sleeves were
:Complimented with sca ll oped lace
;:on the edges. The blouson la ce
-bodtcc w1th open folded back was
:accented by a wrde saun cummer.:hund around the waisl with large
:amuching satin how in had. The
-bodiCe of the dress featured trides:C ent appliques and sequins with
:Stmulatcd pearls dipptng to a "v" 111
,:the back. The shmlmc lace skirt
·-over satin fealurcd a sca lloped
::tx:mlinc.
: The bride' s headpiece wa.~ stm ;tlialed pearls and ivory sets with
-lace net and ivory ribbons . She
:wore a diamond necklace, a gift
:from the groom. She carried a bou ::quet of white, red and ptnk roses
...-..vith carnations, Simu lated pearls,
::Cascading 1vy and white and pink
j;bbons surrounded in lace .
.. Matron nf honor was Barbara
:Triplctl, Pomeroy, who wore a
:cor&lt;~! gown with cascading lace
•

:me

NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS WnNG
AS APERSONAliZED lWlORIAL
FROM LOGAN MONUMEIIT CO. IT
IS AWORTHY £XPI£SSION Of
LOVE AND RISPta.

LOGAN
MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.
POMEROY
IIEIGS COUNTY lllSPU Y YARD
NEAR POIIEROY-IIASON
BRIDGE
JAIIES A. BUSH, IIANAGER
PHONE 992-2588

VINTON, OHIO
GAWACOUNTY
DISPLAY YARD
JAIIES A. &amp; KtiiBERl Y
BUSH, IIAIIAGERS
PHONE 38J.8603

over satm and long torso wrlh scal loped lac e sleeves. The folded open
lace back featured a large satin bow
dipp ing below the watst She carried a bouquet of mauve, white and
red roses with a mauve headpiece
of simulated pearls and cascadmg
mauve flowers and ivy.
Hollie and Heidi , daughter s of
the bride, were nower girls. They
wore Jdcntical dresse s of co ral
polyester with layered lace rufncs,
sa tin bodice. lace trimmed puff
sleeves and a !ace jewel neck with
bow in back.
The mother of the bride was m a
beige coral and green drc..'\.o;; accent·
cd with a wide coral belt and a
white rose corsage with green nbbon.
The groom's mother wore a
two·piece navy suit accented with
lace trimmed white co lla r and a
white carnation corsage.
Mtkc Triplett, Pomeroy, wa s
OCst man . He wore a dark suit wi th
red carnation.
•
The groom wore a gray jacket
with black plants, mauve striped
shin and a mauve tie with a rose bud boutonniere.
A reception was held at the
church fellowship hall. Mauve and
white crepe paper ascended from
the cei ling to the corners of th e
bride's table which featur ed a
tluce -ticr wedding cake on pcdc..~tal
with ceramic bride and groom on
top and accented wllh doves and
mauve nowcrs. The minlS and lhe
bride's garter were made by the
groom's motllcr.
The coup le honeymooned at
Blue Stone Park and Pipestem
Resort in West Virgtnia. They will
be making their home on Route
143 in Pomeroy.
The groom IS employed at Twin
City Machine, Pomeroy.

Ramsey-Dailey
lJrk..:onnng marriage of their daugh ter. R.tl\l:mar y, to ~ark Rantl all
I b dLv. \O n of Mr. and Mrs. LLIT'!'

F 1).J-ilrv of Gallipolis .
'!h e· wed ding wtll be hel d Ju ly
!&gt;-. .rt Clovn Prcshytcnan Chu rL11.
( ' 111\l'f , \ ('

\J r, ~ R.tmsev rece ive d th_'r
IL1, ltclor 11f An.1.; 'degree frnrn h n -

rn :ll1 l ' r t t w r ~ lly ,
1r1

lq~;..:

Grccnvtllc . S.C.
and her MBA from th e

of Sou th Carolma.
Ctilumhra. S.C. rn 1990. She is currcnrl~· em ployed by Electronic Data
.\~ " ll' m _~ Corpor ation (EDS) as a
~ ~ \ ll'IIl\ engtn cc r at Delco Elcc tmnr l \ rn Ko k(1 mo . Ind .
.\l r Dc~ tlq tl'L' civnl his Ilachc hlr nl Sl"rc ncc degree from the Um \ \' 1 \ ll\' nl R.ro Grande in \9R6 and
r11 , \\ A I I ro m MrJm r University,
(h l 111d rn IIJ 1JO. Hers currently
\' rr 1p l11\t' d hy I: DS .1s a s ystems
~·~~~ ·_1 11 \ 'l' r :11 rhc OL1o Tec hnical
\ I JI' ~li'·ll Cl'l l tl' f , Da yton .

POMf- ROY · Homer and IIcnc
HJ)(, tcr. f''omcroy, announc e th e
cng:tgr nwnt and approaching marn;Jge of th crr daughter, Li~ Dawn.
1n Ctn.:y Lee Loar, son of Robert
:md Lrnd:t Loar. McConnelsville.
Mr s:-. lLt'l;tcr is a reg istered nur.&lt;.;e

;rnd Lo;rr IS rrc.~c n tly employed at
Longe berger Baskets ar;; a weaver.
The open church wedding will
I)(' :m eve nt ol May 2 at 4:30p.m.
;It 1hc Middleport Chun:h of Chnst.
A reccp twn wr ll follow at lhc
Americ;m Leg ion Hall•n Pomeroy.

A .P . R .

... With Money From Star Bank's Money Sale!*
•Pay Off Credit Card Balances • Use For Home Improvements •
Consolidate Your Bills

Pleasant, W.Va., wiJI official&amp;.
Ms. Gooderham is the dausJ!!er
of Mrs . Barbara Glassburn and
Thclmcr Wolford , both of Vinton.
Mr. Stover ts the son of Mrs .
Ruth Ann Stover of Point Pleasant,
W Va, and tlle late Clyde Crabtree.
He is emp lo yed hy Kal Kan,
('o lumhu s.

FDIC

Rl 2, BOX 9, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .t5631
W~K • 446·7390 • HOME • 4-46--6939
7t

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COURT STREET OFFICE

446-9300

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film onto VHS Tape.

natronwJdc

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SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Laurel Cltff
Free Methodist Church will present
the cantata, "Come See the Place"
by Joe E. Parks on Easter Sunday
at I0:30 a.m. The cantata is under
the direction o f Anila Sayre . Pastor
Wrlham R. William s invites the
publi c.

s · :~

FREE
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.-.

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Monday at 7 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW Hall. V.N. era veteran s encouraged to attend. Call 84 35286 for infonnation.

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POMEROY · Monday Ntgh t
L. adJCS Go! f Leag ue at the Metg s
County Golf Course will have an
or ganizati onal meeting Monda y ::tl
7 p.m. at th e golf co urse. Team:-.
must be regis tered by April 27
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Southern Local
Hoard o f Ed ucati on wtll meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m . at th e h1 gh
sc hool.

NOT TO BE USED tN
CONJUNCTION WITH OTMER
DISCOUNTS
_ _ _ _ _ _ .J

Open

1115:30 For Prom Orders

Tues, Wed.,
Thurs , Sat.

Mon. &amp; Fri.
'IiI

POMEROY - Drew Weh stcr
Posl No . 39 wrll meet Tuesda y at
th e post home . Dinner at 7 p.m. and
meeting at 8 p.m .
WEUNESllAY
PINE GROVE · Revtval at
Pmegrove Ho~nc.ss Church wtll be
held Wednesday through Sunday at
7 p.m. nightly . Rev . Steve Manley
and family, Summersvi ll e, N.C.,
will be evangelist Special stnging
ntghtly. Rev. Odell Manley mvncs
the public.

BOWMAN'S

COMPLETE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
FOR HOME USE.

SALES RENTALS
REPAIRS

SPA SALE

lOW DISCOUNT PRICEI

8:00

EASTER
BLESSINGS
TO ALL OUR
GOOD FRIENDS

Locally Owned &amp;
Operated

24 HOUR
OXYGEN SERVICE

We have blank video tapes available tor purchase, or bring in your
own, unused 1uper high grade lape.

Offer Exp!r..
Aprll30, 1982

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'Cerb1n resmetJons apply

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Sting in any type of 8 mm film and we will transler up to 50 feet ol

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makmg the 191!4 film "Ctty Heat. "
The pain from the injury was so
inLCnsc that he took five to six: pills
at a time and as many as SO a day .
Hale ion came under sc rutin y
earlier this year, when President
Bush. who was takmg the drug to
get to sleep during an overseas tnp,
vom it ed and collapsed at a sta te
dinner m Japan.
The popular sleeping atd, whiCh
has been linked to memory loss and
hallucinations, was banned in Great
Bnta in in October. The Food and
Drug Administration IS reviewing
tts safety.
Reynolds said that during the
ume he was coma tose in a Lo s
Angeles hospital, doctors brought
in his wife, Lont Anderson. so she
could say good-bye to him.

two

FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE Will COME
INTO YOUR HOME AND VIDEO YOUR
POSSESSIONS.

Slop by or cail any oi our Star Bank locattons today If you can'I make tt dunng our regular hours, call
l-800-274-4111 Monday through Thursday from j until8 p.m.

STAR BANK , N _A _, T RI - STATE

Hurry, Do
It Now!

rn~

Meigs County calendar

I

Stover-Gooderham
SOUTH
CHARLESTON,
W.Va .- Debra Gooderham, for merly of Vinton, and Tim Stovc,r of
Ga lloway, will be unlled in n\arnagc at I· 30 p.m . Saturday. Aprll
25 dunng a semi -private ceremony
aboard the West Virginia Belle in
South Charleston, W.Va.
Rev. Wtlliam Bank s of Point

NEW YORK (AP) - Burt
Rey nold s near ly dtcd fr om an
addiction to Hale ion, the controversial prescription sleeping ptll , a
new spaper rcport£d today.
The actor, who won an Emmy
award last year for hi s perfonnancc
111 the TV show "Evcnmg Shade."
said he was addicted to the drug for
more than four years and wcm into
a coma when he uied to quit cold
turkey .
"I went into a coma for about
eight or nm e hours," he said.
Reynolds told the story of his
addiction in the upcoming issue of
TV Gu ide. The details of the story
were publtshcd '" today's Datly
News.
Reyno lds satd he began takmg
Hal cion after he hurt h~ jaw while

MONDAY
TUPPERS PLA INS · A mcctm g
to form a Chapter for the Vtetnam
Veteran s of America wJII be held

WINNER ANNOUNCED - Chester Arthur, Pomeroy, was the
. winner of a Coleman cooler, given away recently during tbe Meigs
· County Specia l Olympics. All money raised ror tbe event helps
S&lt;'nd the athletes to lhe regional games to be held in Albens on
. MaJ' I as well as lhe state games in Columbus this summer.
, Am•pting the cooler on bebalr or Arthur are his children, Chester
· and .Jennifer.

furd, Ky .
The groom rs the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry E. Bradley of Galltpo hs.
The coup le IS statiOned at Camp
LeJeune, N.C. They re side at 230
Bm:h Rd , Pines, Ilubcn. N.C.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Bookmobile will make tbc fol Iowmg stops thJS week: WEDNf.S.
DAY - Racine, I 2 noon to 5 pm.,
Portland, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m .;
THURSDAY - Rutland, II a.m. to
3 p.m., Dexter, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.,
Bradbury, 6:30p.m. to 7:30p.m.;
FRIDAY - Tuppers Plains, 12
noon to 3 p.m., Success Road, 3:30
p.m. to SJO p.m; Keno, 6 p.m. 10 7
p.m.: SATURDAY- Syracuse, 9
a.m to 2 p.m , Harrisonville, 3 p.m.
to 5 pm

arrests tn Oh10 and seiz ure s of
computers and related matcriaJ in
New York Cny, the Phtladelphta
area and Seattle , Sadler saJd. But
those cases are JUst an offshoot of
the main investigation , he saKI.
lie refused to d1 sc uss detail s,
'\ayrng an mvcsLJ gaLJon IS conl.murng and scores of arrc.sL&lt;; arc pend·

Burt Reynolds says he nearly
died from addiction to Halcion

RUTLAND - Rutland Amcncan
Leg ion will have an Ea ster egg
hu nt Sunday at I p.m. at the post
home on Beech Grove Road sponsored by Post 467, the Rutland F~re
Department and EMS .

cllrrCJHI ) employed by Sctller and
ll ;1ndm :t kn
Atlorncy's
of
LH tt\ \·rlk. Ky
1\-lr l. :lllll!ll ~: r\ a l9R6 graduate
1
! 1 /.;mel r:tu· ll 1g h School and a
f i)IJ(l ~r; ldu ;t t l' nf Mo rehead Stale
v. rth ,t h,ll tk-IPr \ dq.~rcc m Soc ioi'' ):&gt; il l' r... ('fll[llt)yc d at Drsmas
llPu\C I !1111'\vtl k , K y
Thl· l!) llplc wrl l oc h;m gc vows
\-by I (\ at St. Lou1 s Catholic
Chunh. (iJIIrrull\.

Baxter-Loar

CHESHIRE - Kimberly Jo
Young and Cpl Larry W. Bradley
were united in marriage March 2 1
at the Ches hire Baptist Church wtth
the Rev . Harold Traccwe ll officiat ·
rng.
The bnde IS th e daughter of Mr
and Mrs. Jimm y Young of Stan -

POMEROY - Easter revival
Sunday through Friday at 7 p m.
ni ghtly at the Bradford Chun:h of
Chri st wrth Kevin Yeager, evange list. Spccral mu src and nursery pro vided.

t ' nt\l' r~tty

Davis-Lanning
MERCER VILLE - Mr. and Mr s
\Valt cr Davi s of M erccrvr l l ,· .
:rnnoun ce th e e ngagem en t and
:rp proachrn g mar riage of then
d;mghter, [lrz.abclh Ann, lD Rolx'fl
Lanning. so n of Mr . and Mr .\ .
1Jav 1d Lanning of Chrllico thc .
Ms. Dav1s is a 19H7 graduate~~ ~
lfann ~m Trace High Sc hool an,J a
t9ll l grndua tc of Morehead St;!le
lJ nr vcr'i •t y where sh e earn ed &lt;1
k~t· hl'lor' " d eg ree in Parale gal
Studr c~ and Gove rnm en t. She r:--.

Young-Bradley

POMEROY - Rev . Eddie Buff.
mgton will preach at the Naornr
Baptist Church 111 Pomeroy on Sun day at 10:45 a.m PubliC mvitcd.

MARK DAILEY and ROSEMARY RAMSEY

CI 0\TR, S C - Mr. and and
\1 r~. ~tlrt1n A . Ramsey of Clover.
S ( · . :trmouncc the cngagemcm and

MR. and MRS. LARRY :KIMBERLY) BRADLEY

10

Meigs bookmobile
schedule announced

SPRING VALLEY OFFICE '

446-1399

Smith's GMC Truck Center
133 PINE STREIT

GllLIPOUS,OH. 45631
614-446·2532

•

Locally owned and open1t8d by Herb Smith for the past 15
' years.

�Page

84 Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

April 19, 1992

Boy finds mastodon molar
Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

MR. and MRS. THOMAS (ETTA MAE) REESE

Couple to celebrate 50 years
GALLIPOLIS · The choldren
and grand ch oldr en of Thomas
Emerson and Eua Mae Rrese are
hosrmg an open reception m honor

of lhc couple's 501h weddong
ann1vcrsary on Sunday Apnl 26
from I 30-4 p m. a1 Holoday Inn.
Kanauga.
The coup le was mamed April
'!.7, 1942 a1 Louie Kyger by 1he
Rev. Emory Ellos.
Mrs . Reese IS the daughler of
1he late Tolbcn Hundley and Gar-

nell Hundley of Hurncane, W.Va.
Mr. Reese 15 lhe son of lhe late
Wdlard and Faye Reese o f
Cheshire.
They arc lhc parenLS of Carolyn
Cremeans of Weslervolle, Judy
Harris of Gahanna, Michael and
Tomolhy of Cheshire and lhe laic
Edward Reese . They have seve n
grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
The family requestS !hal gifls be
om iued.

You're gonna love the new
video on "Meigs County, Heart of
lhe Valley".
The video done by tal ented
Roger Gilmore has jusl been completed and is now on sale at several
locations. You nol only will wanl a
copy for yourself but you 'II probably wan1 to send a copy or two 10
friend s or relative s who know
Meigs County bul no longer live
here.
Believe me, the video-gorgeous colors-takes you "lo all
!hose old familiar places !hat yoor
hear! embraces" and then some.
It's qui1e professionally done and I
lhink you are going 10 be surprised
Lha! a producl of !his qualily could
be produced here by a local resi ·
den I.
The wildlife and rwal scenes arc
quile impressive and you'll glimpse
lhe Meigs Counhouse, lhe Sheriff's
building, Sacred Hcan Chun:h, lhe
rom Ohio courthouse still sumding
a1 Chesler, Forked Run Lake, Portland Park, fantastic river scenes
comple1e wnh 1he Della Queen
passing by, Pomeroy's picluresquc
Main St., the springs al Rock
Springs, lhe fairgrounds, lhe Meigs
Museum-and more.
Roger narra1es lhe piece, quite
well, by lhe way, and docs the
musical backgrounds whi ch are
original. The video concludes with
Roger's original song- lhe lyric s
concluding with "The valley 's in
my hear!; the river' s in my soul ,
and lhe hean of lh e valley is my
homc-Meogs Coumy home".
Like I say, llhink you're gonna
love it. I did and mosl of your
know I can be pretty cntical. Cost
is only $6.95 and you can secure
copoes al the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., which helped fonanc e
lhe video; lhe Meigs Dislrie1 Parks
Office, localed in the former
Pomeroy Lobrary buold ing , and al
Gilmore's Restaurant
Movong righl along, I wanl 10
advise you golfers lhal lhe second
annual Meigs Band Memorial Golf
Classic has been sCI for May 23 al
lhe Meigs County Golf Course.
This year the four-person, IShole scramble will be dedicaled 10
1he lale Nolan Swackhammer, pop-

A paleonlulogisl has identified
1he fosl-size 10o1h, which Stanley
found last summer, as a mastodon
molar. Mas10dons, now extinct,
were large, hairy, elephant -like
creatures .

LATROBE, Pa . (AP) Twelve-year-old Stanley Stepanic
thought the rossol he round near hiS
famoly's pond and broughllo show
his classmates was a turtle shell. It
turned oul 10 be a 15,000-year-old

ular long-time coach and teacher.
His widow, Lucille, also a long time vocal music teacher, and his
son, Richard, will be on hand for
lhe classic.
There will be a new car awarded
any golfer making a hole-in -one,
probably on number nine. Anyone
accomplishing !hat feat will have
lhe choice of a car (mvided by one
of lhree local dealers. Slarting time
is 9 a.m. and !here will be coffee
and donuts oo hand for panicipams
and a chicken barbecue will be held
for players at lhe close of lhe event
Every player gets a 1-shin and there
will be scads of door prizes awarded.
The enlr)' fre is $45 and golfers
are urged 10 regis1er right away so
Lhai lhe number of participants can
be deLemuned. This IS importanl
especially ID lhe aulD dealers who
will be providing a car if lhe holeon-one, ondeed, does occur. lnci dcnlally. lhe 23rd IS expecled 10 be
a busy weekend wilh a lot of people coming in from ou1-of-1own. If
you have golfer friends comong on
you mtght want to advise them of
the classic and geL !hem logged in
also. You can sign up a1 lhe golf
course or by calling by course al
992-6312.
Tbc Meigs Hlgh Band, direc1ed
by Tony Dingus who ha s done
greal lhings with the mu sic 1an s,
receives the proceed s from the
class ic . Dod you know 1ha1 1hc
band earned a spol 10 co mpele in
lhe stale marching competition !his
year and will be Laking pan in stale
concert band competition 1n
Col urn bus on April 24?

toOlh.

KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) - The
new John Goodman movie abour

MR . and MRS . ROBERT D. RfJBER

Anniversary to be observed
POMEROY · Mr and ~1"
Rohcrt D. Rc1bcr arc celcbratJn ~
their 50 wcdd1ng annivcr s ar~ on
Apnl 26 a1 Royal Oak Reson from
2-4 p.m.
They wer e marncd Apnl 25.
1942 on Columhus hy Rev E P
Rudnlrh
Mrs. Reiher JS the former Wtlma
Eyr-.:&gt;n, daughlcr of lhe laic Mr. and
Mrs. Reed H. Eyr-.:&gt;n
Rc1bcr is rerircd fr om Ka1 scr

Alu mmum m Raven swood. W .Va _

They arc th e par e nt s of two
soos. Randall of R&lt;&gt;::me, and Terry
of Pomeroy .
They ha'&gt;'c f1vc grand chaldren.
Rac hel. Robert . Russell, Vonccn1
and Jcs.s ~ea Rc1bcr.
The event is hosrcd by their sort-.;
and co -hostc.s.scs are Hattie Ridg way and Kalhlccn Bo.,o;cll _
The couple 1s requesting that
gofLS be om111ed.

Babe Ruth oncludes a re-creation of
a los1 song played allhc ballpark of
1he BoSion Bean Ea1ers, lhe learn
1he legendary slugger played wolh
during Lhc 1914 seaso n
Compose r Joe Ldcs, o I, sa od
research for lhe fil m "The Babe"
found that a barbershop quane1
called the Royol Rooters regular! y
sal atop the dugout wnh mega -

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1- 1Ox 13, 4-Bx I Os, 4-Sxls,
20 wallets, I 2 All-Occasion Caption
Portroirs;"' J9 Keepsake/ Mini-portraits
and a Portrait Identification Cord

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Pr,re onclurfr , $( dep O&gt;II pc-d :rl rhoiU(jH lph, [m h
I ~ ub , ec t p ~O ICJ9rOphed
cwd; ~ ~ 11) rh(· r.·o dqge p; oce po•d o t ph oro~:p ophy Pm e &gt; !ru odw •i h\t•J '&gt;p&lt;&gt;uol p o rtro11;
,,n ~"'"' cho•t e of boc ~ around l"ou r !avor .te pro p&gt; w ~k nruPd Uf.l to hvl:'
uOcl oliC)IICJI po1r~ •a ~e n for oproona l cu; rom collecr.on worh no o b log oT oon fo r pur c hm e N ot

ou • H•l('r lo(H'

void

v. T'• rl'ly

c&gt;!h,·r o4er One adve n•sed po c ~ o ge per lamoly Po r i&lt; Qol l• i e ~
1*- Will Gladly Match Any Lower Pric«&lt; 0/kr.

app ro.o omate

5 DAYS ONLY!
WED., APRIL 22- SUN., APRIL 26
ALL AREA K MARTS: WED.-SAT. 10 A.M.-7 P.M.
On Sunday from Store Opening to One Hour Before Cloolng

GALUPOUS
Customer Saris,action Gua.-an,ee
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Margaret and Harry Lee Ba1 lc y
!hank you for malting the obser vance of !h eir 501h weddong
anniversary laSI Sunday so s pe~
cial-they loved lhe cards, gifiS,
nowers and your support in being
lhcrc LO make !heir day.
AmcriFiora ha s gouen more
publo c ily !han lhe discove ry of
America . I hope it hasn 't been
oversold and becomes anolher one
of !hose evenLS for which lhe tax payers have 10 pick up lhe tab. I'd
prefer my tax dollars to go overseas. Do keep smiting.

Applications
being taken

PET PROGRAM - Marcella Baker and pet poodle, Tootit,
recently took part in tilt Pet Therapy program sponsored by the
Gallia Coun ty Animal Welfare uague with the Gallia County
Senior Citizens Ctnler. On lilt last Tuesday or the month at 1:45
p.m., pets can bt brought to tilt cent_er, r;aniers can b&lt; provi~~·
and be taken tu PinMrest and S&lt;:enH" Holts cart centers to vosot.
Those wanting to share their pet with someone wbo no longer bas
"
a pel, can call 446-7000.
I

•

phones and sang " Here Come 1hc
Bos tons ·' whenever a Bean Ealcr
hll a homer.
Liles, dorec10r of lhe Socicly for
the Preservation and Encourage men! of Barber Shop Quarlcl
Singing in America, said lhe film's
producers scan:hed for lhe song at
~1e Old Songs Librnry at Harmony
Hall, headquaners of Liles' group,
When lhe song was nm found on
lhe 750.000-poecc collcCiion, they
asked Liles 10 creaiC one.

MIDDLEPORT - Appli cations
are being Ulken for lhe McComasMoore Scholarship 10 be awarded
al lhe Middleport Alumm Banqucl
on May 23.
ApplicanLS must be lhe son or
daughter or grandson or granddaughler of a Middleport High
School graduate and musL plan 10
major in education. Deadline for
applying is April 30.
Applications arc available from
Judy Arnold , 992-5172; Joe
Young, 698-8241; Carol Brewer,
992-6147, or Jerey Van lnwagen,
992-7551.

Husband tired of being rejected by his wzfe
Dear Ann Landers : After 10
years, I am ready 10 call 11 qutLS. I
married a woman wilh 1wo children.
One died lragocally. The olhcr child
and I never go1 along. He left home
recemly and now a chasm c;c; iSL&lt;;
belwcen my w1fc and me because
of iL
"Meg" has a succc&lt;&gt;Sfu l business
and leads a foercely mdependcnllife .
She always has made more money
than I, but 11 was never a problem .

We ea1 on fron1 of the TV every
nigh!, do each other's lau ndry and
rarely go ou1. Our se' life has all
bul disappeared. Her desire for me
is nil. and I am sick of Lhc rcjecUon .
I had a vasectomy, lhmking il might
help, bul i1 d1dn'1. She wanL' se'
eigh t or nine Limes a year in the
dark wolh her c lo~&gt; cs on . I long for
passion. which I nO \\' rea lize is an
cmp1y dream.
I broug ht home some book s on

GFWC/INT Rover so de Siudy
Club mel recently al the home of
Jonnie Lou Gabrielli with Elaonc
Rees as co-hosless.
Pre sodent Doro1hy Hanl ey
presided over the business meeting
which included discussion of the
national increase in dues to be
voted on during the convention in
June and a change in lhe localion
of meeting s for the coming year.
Gabroello will coordonale 1he
change s.
The following officers were
elecled: Dor01hy Hanl ey, presi dent; Jonnic Lou Gabrielli, vice
president; Elaine Rees. secre tary;
and Lorena Webb, treasurer. Instal ·
lation of officers will be hclli during lhe May meeling. Hanley
lhankcd lhe comm111ee of Gai l
Sprague, Beny Koehler and Wanda
Parsons.
The ne&gt;l regular mcctin g will be
al lhe Hol iday Inn May 12 w11h
Hanley and Irene King as hoslcsses.
On May 6 Lhe c luh will be
gues1s of the Middlepon Literary
Club al the home or Mrs. Bernard
Fuhz. Members are 10 meel al lhe
home of Made Eachus for carpool ing al 11:30 a.m.
Hanley introduced Rccs who
reviewed lhe book, "All !he Prcso denLS' Ladies" by Peler Hay.
Hay has galhercd IDgcLh er hun dreds of anecd01es aboul lh c
women of lhe While House . The
book covers eve ry faCCI or lhc sc
women's lives: childhood , educa tion , romance, marriage, family
hfe, polilical and charitahlc aclivo ti es and !heir role as hoste sses Lo
lhe leaders of lhe world.
For over I 00 years Ihe prcso dent 's wife has been called lhe
First Lady. Some resoden1 s have
sought counsel from their w1vcs
only privately; olhers have publo cized lhe fact; slill olhers received
!heir wives advi ce whether lhey
wanted it or not. It was obvious
Nancy Reagan was the key ally
needed 10 innuence her husband .
When Ronald Reagan ognored !hat
wisdom and hung up lhe ielephone
on Nancy he learned from TV news
!hat lhe Fm1 Lady was mlcrvoewing his successor.
John Adams infonned and consuhed Abigaol on everything he
did. Jimmy Caner scheduled regu lar working lunches wilh Rosalynn .
Eleanor Roosevelt was her hus band's eyes and ears in her conSian! !ravel s. Nellie Taf1 was

accused of schemong lo pul her
husband in 1he While House; War ren Harding's "Duchess" openly
boasted of having done jus1 !hal.
When Woodrow Wilson lay paralyzed for almos1 18 monlhs, Edilh
ran Lt&gt;e country. Insiders infonnally
referred to her as the "Assistant
President".
The women who became FirS!
Ladies did no1 as a rule set ou1 10
marry a future Presi dent (Mary
Todd Lincoln and Nellie Tafl were
notable exceptions}. Many nev er
omagined !hey would end up on lhc
While House . Spouses arc often
thrust mto the limelight without
preparation and sometimes against
the1r will, unlike royalty who arc
1raoned from binh 10 play Public
:mel ceremonial roles.
Many have rescmed lho s sudden
cha nge in lh e or life, and made
lhemsclves sick, allowing olhers 10
lay !h eir public role. Some, hke
Dolley Madison or Louisa Adams,
scm !heir entire life basking in 1he
soc oallife of lhc Capital, bul olhers,
lik e Pal Noxon and , surprisongly
Jacq ueline Kennedy, felL menaced
in 1he public arena. Belly Ford,
who found herself suddenly and
uncxpccledly in lhe WhiLe House
rediscovered her real self in a publtcly played-nUl idcn111y crosis
Woodrow Wilson said, on his second marriage in 1915, "I really
1hink !here should be a training
school for Presidems' wives 1ha1
would give !hem a chance 10 lry
1hei r fences. The long lone of dead
and one wives who have graced
this ancient house have set up standards, involved codes modified,
expanded, duplicated, and gener.ol ly lef1 a posi1ion nominally very
simple, bul aclllally very complex.
Forsl Ladies have numbered JUSI
37 who have lived in lhe same
counlr)' during a brief period of jusl
over 200 years. They arc connecled
mainly by the accidem lhal !heir
husbands achieved, or fell inlo, lhe
highesl ofr.ce of lhe land. Because
First Ladies have been treated, or
have regarded themselves, as
appendages of !heir husbands , !heir
personabues have been blunted and
their abilities often reslra1ned .
Anecdotes tend to be rcscr ..·cd of
!hose who are walched or liSiened
to most
This book is a wondrous collec tion of such anecdotes and provides
the reader w11h msights imo 1he
Forsl Ladies lives which cannol be
obtained elsewhere.

Egg hunt slated
MIDDLEPORT · Ahoul 1500
eggs. many cont.a.inmg money, wtll
be hod around Harting er Park for
1hc ann ual Easier egg hunt 10 be
held !here Sunday a1 2 p.m.
The grand prize of $50 wdl go
1n 1he fonder of lhe golden egg,
while a S25 pnze woll be awarded
10 lhc fonder of lhe silver egg.
In th e event of ram. rh c egg
hunt will be postponed a week
Mitch Meadows is general chanman of the even t which 1S spon sored by the Middleport Communi ly Assocoauon .

Sunday, April 19
VINTON - Fellowshop Chapel
revival April 19-26,7 p.m noghlly ,
wolh Rev . G.S. Tjion.
VINTON · 80th bonhday ccle brauon of RUih Evans a1 Vinlon
Masonic Hall 3-5 p.m. Friends wel come.
GALLIPOLIS - Easier commu noon service al Sl. Pclers Episcopal
Church, 8 a.m. Communion service
and the 10:30 a.m Holy EuchanSI
with Easter mll'\ic.

Course offered
A lhree-night WordPcrfec l 5. 1 II
class will be offered a1 Buckeye
Hills Career Cen1er. Thos class os
designed 10 gel lhe beginning user
10 upgrade !heir documenLS.
Some of lhe malerials lhal woll
be covered are tabl es , co lumn s,
fonLS, and graphocs. This will be a
fun class 1ha1 will Ier lhe user enjoy
WordPerfecl 5. 1. Thos will help
you look even more professional
using WordPcrfecl 5.1. The class
lime s are Monday , April 27, 6-9
p.m., Monday, May 4, 6 p.m. lo 10
p.m., and Wednesday, May 6, 6-9
p.m. The cosl for lhe class is $25 .
Call Adull ServiCC&gt; al 245-5334
for more information . Or send a
check or money order lo Gallia Jackson -ViniOn JVSD. Attention:
Adull Services, P.O. Box 157, Roo
Gmndc , 45674 to register

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

Riverside elects officers

People in the news
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) Singers Tanya Tucker and Alan
Jackson will be co- hnsiS of lhc
TNN -Music Cily News Counlry
Awards Show.
The awards, voloo on by counl!y music fan s, will be televised
live June 8 from lhe Grand Ole
Opry House on cable TV's The
Nashville Network.
Tucker IS known for suc h hoLS as
" Down ID My La51 Teardrop" and
"Some Kind of Trouble ." Jackson' s songs include "Don'! Rock
lhe Jukebox " and "Dallas."
Th e awards show IS one of the
cvcnLS dunng Fan Fair, the week long country music festival held
each summ er in Lhc ciry.

Aprll19, 1992

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446·SAMS
OHIO RIVER PlAZA
BofWOtfl Hils ' Big

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GALliPOliS, OHIO

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9 to 9 P.M.
Sat.9 to 6 P.M.
Sunday 12 to..S P.M.

~ J O f f ! f'O IN ! Ull~ l
I~ L CESSNIY

GALLIPOLIS ~ JohnsiDn Famo ly woll be singong a1 Clark Chapel
Church, 7 p.m . wilh Rev. George
)uhnslon ID preach .
Sunday sunrise services
EUREKA - Chris! Uni1cd
Method is! Church, 6:30a.m. with
Pearl CasiD preaching; 7 a.m. Easi er brcakfas1; 10:30 a.m. Cantata.
GALLIPOLIS - Elozabelh
Chapel Church, 6:30a.m.; Sunday
sc hool al 9:30a.m.; worship a1
10:40 a.m., and Easier play al 7
p.m.

CROWN CITY - Vi ciOry Baplisl Church, 6;30.a.m. wilh speaker
Dean Warner; singing by Janelle
!lineman.
CROWN CITY - Kings Chapel
Church, 6 am. wilh guesl speaker
Rev. Donnie Johnson .
KANAUGA - Silver Mcmonal
Baptisl Church, 6 a.m .. wilh Rev .
Charles Curry.
BIDWELL - Prospect Church,
6:30a.m. wolh Pastor Carl Basham .
BIDWELL - Harris Bapll sl
Church, 6:30 a.m. breakfas1 10 fol low; Sunday school al 9 a.m.; worship a1 10 a.m. Speaker Larry Wal ters .
C HESHIRE - Old Kyger
Freewill Baptisl Church al 6 a.m.
Rev. Robert Thompson , paSior .
Public inviiCd.
NORTHUP - Northup BapliSI

Church , 6:30 a.m . wolh guesl min osier Rev . Kennelh Sanders.
BULA VILLE - Bulavillc
uan Church, 6:30a.m.

Chns~

GALLIPOLIS - Church of God
Church al church hall , 7 a.m. Larry
Drummond 10 speak .
CROWN CITY - Edna Chapel
Church. 6 a m. Randy and Sharon
Shafer 10 song
Monday, April20
GALLIPOLIS · Gallopol"
B&amp;PW meCIJ ng 6:30 p.m. a1 The
SIDwaway. Program will be "Goris
of the Monlh".

.~NN

B&amp;PW selection

and unabl e to ex press he r gn d
Suggest counse lmg
Do not, repeat no1, hJvc an affa1r
You have enough problems to dCJ.I
with without add1ng Infidelity to th e
rnix . Good lu ck.. l hope L11ings work.
out for you bOlh . I hJvc a fcclm g
Meg needs you more th:.m you know

Ann
Landers
LANDERS

" lt91 , Los Anr;eles
1\me~~ Synclcau and
Creat0f"11 Syndicate."

sex from t.hc library, hoping lOshJrr
!hem Wl~l Meg . She •as orrcndcd
and said I was "pcr.cned. " The
thought of spcnd!llg aJiothc r decade
wah thi:. woman IS dcprcssmg
I have been completely faiu&gt; ful
to my wife, but I'm reac hin g the
)X! Int where a's d1fi1Cult to resist ar1
aff11r. Some of tl1c wo men who hJ-.·c
been co mir~g on to me arc prctt:
tcmpung
I h:.~vc Lncd to g ~·t :d ung w1tJ1 rr1y
w1fe but we seem to be dnfu ng
farthe r apan I hale 10 so und corny,
Ann, but can tJns mamage be saved?
-- SOMEWHERE IN GOD 'S
COUNTRY .
DEAR SOMEWHERE: II sounds
grim but plc.asc try JOint counseling
before you throw in the lOwe!.
I suspe ct your w1fc's loss of h::r
ch ild had a sLrongci unpactthan you
rcaloze. Sl1 c mJy be deeply dcprcSSC&lt;J

David Merrick
ruled competent
NEW YORK (AP) - A judge
ruled Davod Merri ck is compe tent
10 handle his affam despue cl;ums
by 1h c Broadway produce r ' s
cSirangcd wofc 1ha1 a s1roke has lcfl
hnn at th e me rcy of hi s !tvc - tn
lover.
Merrick, 80, is in lhc midsl of a
bJttcr divorce from his Wife, Etan,
who ril ed a petition dem anding a
conservato r be named to manage
lhc showman' s estimated S!O mil lion fortune .
Merri ck, who won a Tony
award for "llcllo Doll y," was lcfl
with slu rred ..;pccch after a stroke in
1983.
Mr s. Merrick matntamcd that
her husband 's gorlf ricnd, Nalaltc
Lloyd, mi shandled Lhc Broadway
show. "Oh Kay'" and coSI Mer ro ck molloons of dollars.

GALLIPOLIS - "Spring Fever"
a1 Holiday Inn, noon, sponsored by
1he Gallipolis Area Chrislian
Women's Club. Reservations call
379-2321. 367-0583, or 446-0761.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Loons
Club regular meeting , 6:30p.m. a1
Oscar's.

--~

llii!IJ
1

CHEST
Sug. Reta~
$69.95

David Rou sh, son of Shorley
Roush, Middl e porl, and Bobby
Roush, Pomeroy, is now stat.ioncd
a! Mtnol Aor Force Base in MmOI ,
N.D.
Roush lefl on October for Lack land Air Force Oasc m Texas and
upon graduation from th ere went to
Shepard Air Force Ba.sc for more
tram mg.
Roush grad uated from Shcrpard
Air Force Base as an honor student
nnd went for more rramtl)g in Platsburg, N.Y .
Ulhln returning hom!f for a visn
he and hi s wofc, Sherry Carl Roush,
whom he marned on Oclober. lcf1
for Minot Air I-oree Base.

$4495
SAVE $25

OPEN HOUSE
APRil 22 THRU 24
8:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.
All UNITRON
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Certified
Mammography
LISA KOCH, MS
Licen~Wt.l

Clinical

Audtolo~l

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446·7619

MAMMOGRAPHY
HOLZER CLINIC

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43S Second Ave.

Certified

DAVID ROUSH

Galli olis OH

Teclmologist
Jessie Beaver

In One Of
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The Local Area's FIRST
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The Plan For Fighting Breast Cancer:
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ciJ Appointment With APhysician
C1J Mammography

GALLIPOLIS -Local Hallmark
colleciDrs club fonnoo, firs! mee l·
ing at Bossard Library, 7 p.m. Public is invited.

GALLIPOLIS · Lafayelle Whole
Shnne installabon of officers, 7:30
p.m.; bus iness meeting al 2 p.m .
Members bring salad or sandwoch cs.

S PC. SOLID WOOD GROU__P_,~~•

4
DRAWER

Tuesday, April 21
VINTON - American Legion
Unit 27 Auxiliary mceling, 7:30
p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Mrd Ohio Val ·
Icy Amateur Rad10 Club monlhly
meeting , 7 p.m. a1 Fors1 Church of
Go d, !09 Garfield Ave . Talk -in
frequency 7.06.

The Gallipolos Busone ss and
Professoonal Women's Clu b rccenl ly named C1 ndy Sheets as April
Gorl of 1he Mon1h. She os 1h e
daughter of Donald a nd Nancy
Sheets and resides in Btdwcll.
Sheets' sc hool activiues include
Siudent Cou ncol , Nauonal Honors
SociCiy, volleyba ll . choor. chee r ~
leader and ycarhook smff. .
She is also active in the Fa ith
Baptist Church youtll , Soble sc hool
and nursery .
ShceLS plans 10 pursue a degree
in physical th erapy or early ch tl d ~
hood developmenL

Roush stationed
at Minot AFB

ENO - Morgan Cen1er Chnsuan
Holiness Church revival April 2026 . 7:30 p.m. nigh~y . Evangcli SI
woll be Roc ky Jeffers.

VINTON - Vinlon Fnendship
Garden Club meeting at lhe home
of Beatrice Bu sh, I p.m.: s dcnl
aucuon.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-BS

•Sales, Rentals,
Repairs
•Wheelchairs
• Hospital Beds
•Canes &amp; Crutches
•Commode Chairs
•Walkers
• Home Oxygen
•Bath Safety Aids

• Urinary/Ostomy
Supplies
•Insurance Claims
Processed
(Medicare &amp;
Medicaid Accepted)
•Attends and Chux
•24 Hour Service
• Free Delivery

min• IDnaaJiaal llnmpfl• lma.
S65 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

446-2206
"$mint The Aru FDr Ovtr 14 'la111"

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May Detect Abnormalities Two
Years Before You Can! Make
Certain Your Mammogram Is
From An Accredited Provider.

HOLZER
CLINIC
446·5289
"Tht Leader In Women's Health Cart" •

�Aprll19, 1992

Page-86 Sunday Times-Sentinel

Christians, Jews mark holidays with
Good Friday, Passover observances

Aprll19, 1992

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

Robert Post peforms at GAHS

HEATHER SPRAGUE

JASON CLAGG

JAMIE BOND

Seniors named OVB 4-H scholars
GALLIPOLIS - Four Ga lh a
Cou nt y stud ents are among a
record number of Ohio Valley
· Bank 4-H Sc holarshtp winners
: rrom Gall ia , Ja ckso n and Pike
: counttes for 1992.
The Gallia County recipients are
Elizabeth A. Blevins, Brian R.
Roberts, Kelly S. Smith and
: Heather D. Sprague.
_ "We're delighted to increase the
• number of sc holarships. With our
· entry into Jackson and Pike Counti es, we felt it was necessary to
expand our program both in boundaries and doUm," said James Dalley, OVB president and chief executive o[ficer. "We thtnk the program is reaching a new level, one
which will provide more opporrunitics and greater recognition for 4-H
throughout our service n:gion."
Scholarship winn ers receive
$2,000 over four years. The bank
gi ves $500 annually to scholarship
winners to help with the cost of
their college education . This year
OVB will pay out $9,000 tn schol arship funds to 18 winners. Si nce
the program began in 1986, 30
recipients have shared in $45.000
of s&lt;holarship money.
Background
Blevins, daughter of James and
Nancy Blevins of Bidwell, attends
Ohio Valley Christian School in
Gallipolis. Her maJor project in 4H has been showing market hogs.
The I 0 year 4-H veteran was her
cl uh 's ftrst Junior Club Leader and

helped her club earn the distin guished Gold Club award.
Blevtns plans to attend either
Miamt University or Cedarville
CoUege majoring in secondary education or engineering.
Roberts is the son or Rodney
and Peggy Roberts of Gallipolis.
He attends Gallia Academy High
School and wiU enter the Universi ty of Rto Grande this fall to study
architecture. He has been in 4 -H
for six years with major projects
includmg woodworking, vegetable
gardcnmg and creative arts.
Robcru, who is a member of the
Nauonal Holl(l" Society, is listed in
Who's Wh o Among American
High School Students.
Smtth , a semor at Gallia Academy High Sc hool, is the daughter or
John and Martha Smith or Gallipolis. She has bcell a 4-H member for
nine years where she has concentrated on market steer projects. She
has been a Junior Leader for two
years and has served on the Junior
fair board.
Smtih has been accepted at the
Uni versity of Rio Grande where
she' ll major in elementary education .
Sprague, daughter of Herman
and Aliena Sprague of BtdweU, is a
senior at North Gallia High School
1n Vinton. She has been in 4-H for
nine years with major proJects fea turing photograph y, electricity and
clothing. She has attended Club
Congre~s . Conservation Camp and

Leadership Camp dunng her 4-H
career.
Sprague will further her education eith er at Marshall University
or the University of Rio Grande
majoring in education or psychology.
Additional sc holarship winners

By EDNA WHITELEY
GALLIPOLIS- Many' folks will
tell you that nobody does anything
for free nowadays. But more than
400 six th , seventh and eig hth
graders in th ~ Gallipolis City
Schools know different.
They were in the audience at
Gallia Academy Wednesday to see
entenainer Robert Post ~ive them a
show of talent seemingly as big as
Ohio and not charge them a dime.
Post started with three-ball juggling, a skill that impresses most
kids. He said it might not be too
good since he doesn't juggle much,
but of course it was. It takes only a
few minutes to see that for all his
joking ways, Post takes his an very
seriously.
Whtch brings up the obvious
question - what is Post's an?
Post is an actor. Post is a
humori st. He's a comic. A clown .
A mime. And almost never him self.
Post portrays a host of characters confronting true to life and off
the wall si tuations. He showed the
student s "Burglar Bert." Mad e
them believe that on a totally
emp ty stage they were watchin g
Bert break into a house, get beaned
with a window, encounter th e
angry dog, trip ov-:r the cat, check
out the snoring homeowner, exam inc the homeowner's ring, remove
1t, comfort the screaming baby
down the hall, change the baby,
bllfJl it, tan~le with the pets again
and, forgetung about the window,
take another blow to the head on
his way out. He also showed them
just as bclievcable pieces he calls
"The Daydreamer" and "Ace
Wingspan, King of the Sky."
Ev idently at least one stude nt
had been pondering Post's altruISm. So when Post invited questions, the boy raised his hand. " ...
why arc you doing this for free?"
he asked.
Remember, Post is a
comedia n, so of course hi s first
answer was "because I'm sweet
and generous."
But then Post did something he
doesn't seem to do very often

Jason Cla gg, son of Clarence
and Be1 ~ rly Clagg of Oak Hill,
who is a senior at Oak Hill High
School, has nine years experience
in 4-H . His major projects ha ve
in volved market st.eers and hogs.
Twice he has been named hi s
cl ub 's outstanding member while
also serv mg I wo years as prestdent
of the Jackson County Junior Fair
Board.
Clag g plan s to enroll at The
Ohio State Umversity and major in
the field of animal science.
Jamie Bond, son of James and
Rebecca Bond or Beaver, Will
graduate from Eastern High School
in Pike County this spring. He has
been ac tive in 4-H fur over 10
years and plans to stud y anlffial and
agricu lture science at The Ohio
State Umversity. Jam1e had th e
1991 Grand Champion Market Hog
at the Pike County Fair and was a
member of th e Eastern States
Exposttion repn:sc nting Ohio.
A luncheon for this year' s hmt orccs wtll be held Saturday, May 2
at th e Univ ersity of Rio Gra nde
with specia l guest Dal e Safn t,
Associate 4-H Leader for ~•c Swte
of Ohw.

und erstand why young people
dnnk.
"To suggest that kids get
trained by non-alcohol bn:w flies
against what we know about why
young peo ple drink," said Jeff
Becker. a spokesman for the Beer
ln stitutr in Washington. "They are
dnnl&lt;ing beer ror the erfcct.''
Becker SJJd allegations that beer
companies market the products to
lram young dr1nkers we re lu di ~
crous.
Miller and Anheuser-Busch offictals couldn't be reached for com ment because their offices were
closed for Good Friday.
Shee ts, who sa1d he was
responding to the concerns of parents in the working-class suburb.
ec hoed critics around the coun try
who say the brews arc alli11CDve to
young people.

Confidential Services :
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
Sliding '" 1ale. No one refuHd 1mkt~ btcauw oll.. billy to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
POMEROY
236 E_ Main St., 2nd Floor
992·5912
8:30 to 5:00 Moaday·Friday
Closed Thursday

GALLIPOUS

414 Secolld Ave~ 71111 Flaor
446.0166
8:30 to 5:00 Mollday-Fritlay
8:30 to 17 Sa"rday
Closed n,rsday .

ALSO: JacQon, Che1apeake, Athens, CY'-atht, laga• &amp; McArtl.r

sa1d Alfredo Jiminez, 16, of Bay
City.
Another man who re·enacted

Chri st' s su ff cn ng was Charles
Hi ckman Sr .. who ignored his doctor's orders and was strapped to a
cross in Akron, Ohio.
"Occasionally you have to do
some thing you shouldn't do, no
matter who you are," sa id HICk man, 44. He suffers from a heart
condition and was exhausted by the
c .q~nc ncc .

· 'Th•s worlt: 1s 1n trouble right
now," he said. " I thtnk if there
long marches to holy shnncs and w•s a httlc more faith and believpassio n play s dcpi ctm g Chnst's •n g in God and peopl e caring for
death on the cross. More services one another. it would be better. "
were scheduled for Ea.\ter Sunday .
In Oakland Cou nty, Mich., sevAt sund ow n Friday, eight days eral recently amved families from
of Passov er ce lebra tions bega n, ~1 e former Soviet Union took part
with Jew s marking the &lt;'&gt;cape of in Passover ce remonies with local
thcu ancestors from EgypL
families.
In New Mexico, thousands of
The gathcnngs gave the holida y
Christians marched to Santuar10 de
Chimayo m the tiny vt llagc of Chimayo, 30 miles north of Santa Fe,
Christ with church services, miles-

When You Need Prompt
Dependable Propane Delivery...

HONORED - Pictured above are Rio Grande
Elementary students who were named to the aU
As honor roll for thr third grading period.
Below are students wbo received As and Bs. AU

the students were honored during the school's
recent Pride Assembly honoring tbem for their
efforts.

tains healin g powers.
"God sacrificed his life for us,
so we should give a little sacrifice
back," said Dia nn a Gama, who
wallccd 13 miles.
In Sagi naw, Mi ch .. people
strapped thcmse lvcs to crosses for
a re -enactment of Christ's cru cifix-

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Ferrellgos

IOWOPEIFOI
SPillS SUSON
CoiiiPiete bne of Bedding
and Vegetable Plants,
Bloominl and Foliage
Ha119ing askets, Large
Selection of Slvvbbery
and hes.
Opea Dally 9 ll.ll. lo S p.111.
CLOSED IASTII SUNDAY

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Syrmse 992-5776
1991 HONDA ACCORD

"From my partiCipation in thi s I
hav e learned to love life more ,"

Pride Assembly recognizes Rio
Grande Elementary students
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande Crysta l Clonch .
Elementary School recently held
Vtston unit : Matt Bcha. Amy Jo
it's Pride Assembly recog ni zing Davis, Adam Miller, Darren Wolfe,
students who were named to the and Donny Boggs.
honor roll for the thtrd gradmg
Students with As and Bs were
Fi rst grade: Matthew Bell,
period.
All of the honor roll students Dustin Burke, Shayne Gay, Ale•
received a badge. Straight students Hami lton. Jes sica Hawk s. Andy
received a badge saying "Excellent Patterson, Daniel Roush. Charles
Work " and A and B students Bu rn s. Jes sica Plantz, Corey
"Great Job."
Young, and Eli Pugh.
Students receiving awards for
Second grade: Brandon B cn~cy .
str.ught As were:
Dustin Caudill. Gretchen Faudrcc.
First grade: Brandi Burlr.e, All en Jcss tca Hamilton, An gel Kingsley .
Curnutte, Ashley Davies , Niki All ison McNemar, Amber MorriThomas, Amanda Wothe, Megan son, Joshua Perry, Matthew Roush.
Young, Sheena Ferrell, Stephanie Tami Taylor, Jason Martyn, BranCain, Tiffany Dickson, Derek don Rocchi, Emi lt Payne. Beau
Foote, Jacob Frazier, Morgan Hal- Harrison, Brittany Hamilton, Lyns•
Icy, Aaron Lawhon, Katie Mulhns, Hudson, and Wendy Enghsh.
Sarah Russell, Brandy Rupe, and
Third grade: Brian Ferrell ,
Joshua Jones.
Jonathan Simmons, Ashley Adkms,
Second grade: Kara Adkins, Jessica Gay, Scottie Nida, Sandy
Cay la Caldwell , Bethany Elliott, Patterson, Amy Stout , and Steve
Chris Jackson, Bobby Jones, Ryan Swords.
Matura, Andy Plants, Samantha
Fourth grade: Ginger Canaday,
Scarberry, Dustin Beach, Jo hn Beth Colvin, Jaso n Elk ins, Jesse
Dtxon , David Finney, Tim Fisk, McC loud, Raymond Rob•e. Jeff
Kristin Meyer, Andrea Neff. and Blevins, Colleen Caldwell. Grace
Jenm Plantz.
Cochra n, Bre nt Elkins, Randy
Third grade: Mary Clo uch, Fulks. Scott No lan, and Jo sh
Holl y Eplmg, Dennis Hurt , Yestcr.
Jonathan Lawhorn, Sara Beaver,
Fifth grade: Sarah Bowshter.
Bnan Bickle, Gennifer Henderson. Chns tv Caldwell, Brad Fisher,
Randi i-Jamilton. Emi ly Hamson.
Lindsay Maynand.
Fourth grad e: Becky Bated , Tracy Jackson, Summer Martyn ,
Rachel Halley. Jennifer Skidmore, Tarin Mink, Sharon North. and
Ni co le Tennant, R.J . Finney, and Nathan Weatherholt .
Jason Pugh.
Stxth grade: Beth Fellurc .
Firth grade: Aaron Bickle . Jon Brandy Bahr. B.J. Hatten . Meagan
Mill hone.
Matura .
Sixth ~rade: Rettc Carmic hael,

Vt ston unit: Mary Marcinko.
and Brandan Webb.
SBH Anthony Nolan-Knox.
Pnnctpal's lmJXUvements were:
F1rst grade: Brandi Burke, AshIcy Dav1cs, Gregory Cook. Candace Shaver. Corey Young, and
Joey Smith.
Second grade : Jessica Hamilton,
Samantha Scarberry, Andy Smith,
Jason Martyn, Lyns1 Hudson, and
Wendy English.
Third grade: Katherine Allen,
Zach Beach. Jacob Wood, Holly
Peters, Jodi Merry, Holly Epling,
Sara Beaver. Jessica Gay. Gennifer
Henderson, Erica Hessinger, Mary
Houck, Regina Lee, Lindsay May nard, Matthew Roberts, and Amy
Stout
Fourth grade : Becky Baird,
Jeremiah Alison, Ginger Canaday,
Beth Colvin, Jason Elkins, Rachel
Halley, Robbie Mannon, Jesse
McCloud, Jennifer Skid more,
Ntcole Tennant, and Raymond
Robie .
Fifth grade : Tommy Barry,
Aaron Btcklc , Chris ty Ca ldwell,
Randi Hamilton, Emil y Harrison,
Ron Haynes, Tim Howard, Tracy
Jackson , Jessie Lyo ns, Jon Millhone, Sharon North , Amanda Pattcrson. Nathan Weatherholt. and
John Vance
SLJ;th grade: Kara Beaver, Crystal Clonch , Be th Fcllure , Beth
Allen, C hri stina Hall. and Josh
McFarland.
SBH: Anthony Nolan-Knox.

Host families
needed for
youth program
MEIGS - Host farmhe s are sull
needed for th e month -long
Japanese c.&lt; change program.
The stude nts are boys and gtrls
between the ages of 12 and 15 who
will arrive July 10 and retu rn Aug.

23
The on ly requi rem ent on th e
month long exchange " that the
host fam1 ly must have a child the
sa me gender and app r o.&lt;~matcly
sa me age as the host child.
Famil1 es arc al so needed fur the
month -long adult chaperones. year
long Japanese youth (ages 15-1 R)
and !FYE exc hanges from vanous
countries (ages 19-25) for a threeweek stay at each family from May
to November.
Anyone interested in becoming
a host family should co nt ac t the
local lntemauonal Cou nty Coordi nator Faye Chfford at 992-7201 or
the Meigs County Extension Office
at 992 -6696 for further informa uon.

$3100 OFF

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SECOND CRANCE
SALE

1992 HONDA LX
4 DOOR- LOADED' Stock 192-087

s2500 OFF

s2500 OFF

SUGGESTED SALE

VETEUNS
__,___,~-'-- MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

\V

Veterans

Memorial

~tal

115 East Memorial Drive
992·2104 Pomeroy

MON. APRIL 20
TUES. APRIL 21
&lt;o
· ·:::::&lt;:
WED. APRIL 22
::-:
·:·.. :·:·:
.. ..
..

HERE'S HOW!

FOOTLONGS - FISH -STUFTSHIRTS • SHAKES •
FRENCH FRIES, ETC. • EVERYTHING WE HAVE

IETAIL PRKE

10.95
26.95
54.95
89.95

The entire staff at
Veterans Memorial Hospital wishes
vou and vour family a Joyous Easter
and a Beautiful Spring.
Year-round, we stand readv to help
vou with any health care problems.
Don't hesitate to contact us.

ON YOUR
TOTAL BIG WHEEL PURCHASE!

1992 HONDA ACCORD LX
1 DOOR - LOADED! StOCk #92029

APRIL Z3, Z4 and ZS, 199Z
3• TRICHLORO TABLETS

To You

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(614) 992·6402 OR 1·800·552·1990

Our Wish

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e•perienced '" providing prompt delive•y and emergency
serVIce We also offer specia l budge! minded cuslorner
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aboul•um11ng oul ol propane

POMEROY - The American
Leg ion Auxiliary will mee t April
28 at 7:30p.m. at the post home in
Pomeroy.

253 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
(614) 992-5724
CALL 1-BG0-552-1990
FULL SERVKE POOL OPENINGS
CALl FOR All APPOIIIIMEIIT.

a speCial connection wtth tts roots.
said organizer Gloria Cohen.
In Birmingham, Ala .. Lazar
Yaker was celebraung hts third
Passover smce emtgrating to the
Unit ed States from the former
Soviet republiC of Moldova .
He is among more than 100
Jewish families from the former
Sov1ct Umon who have arnved
si nce 1990, many knowtng hulc of
thc~r Jew•sh roots.
" It was against th e law . We JUSt
d1dn't know how to practice,"
Yaker said.
In Miami. people who needed
advice on what to do could call a
Passover hot ltne Rabbi Ed Farocr
ftclded such questions as how to
prepare a microwave oven for
kosher coolung.
Not every holiday celebration
was somber. Workers at the Detroit
Zoo hid I0,000 Easter eggs for a
hunt this afternoon.

where some believe the so il con-

Auxiliary to meet

2.75 lb. Container Chlorine._____ .14.50
7 lb. Container Chlorine.---·--·34.74
16 lb. Container Chlorine.---··".....76.1 5
26 lb. Container Chlorine.-.............. 154.00

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

By JOHN ROGERS
Associated Press Writer
Chri stian s across the nati o n
marked theu most somber holtday
this week en d wuh pass ton plays.
pilgrimages and other acts of devotion, whi le Jew s took part in
Passover gathenngs ce lebratmg
their centunes-ago march to free dom.
Religious ce lebrations began
Friday - Good Fnday for Chris tians - with thousands of people
paying tribute to th e li fe of Jesus

Post has done something for them
and they liked it.
Robert Post will do a show for
all ages at the Morris and Dorothy
Haskins Ariel Theatre at 8 p.m.
April 25. Tickets are available at
Peddler's Pantry and at the door
JUSt before showtimc. For information caii446-ARTS.

were:

Official says non-alcoholic
brews tempting youngsters
Ry CECI CONNOLL V
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON - A suburban mayor
whn wants to ban the sale of nonakoholt c beer to mtnors SJJd Friday the seemingly harmless beverages arc g1ving youn gsters a taslc
for 1hc real thmg.
"By allowi ng the sale of non alcohol ic beer we arc mdced promoung and !&lt;aching the youngsters
to really partiCipate 1n dnnking ,"
sa•d Qumcy Mayor James Sheets.
Shee ts hopes to paS&lt; an ordi nance no t week that would pro htblt the .sa le to minors of such
non-alcoholiC brews as Sharp's by
Miller Brewing Co and O'Doul s
by Anhcuser-BtLsch Cos. Inc .
An industry ~~:presentative says
people who worry about the effect
the brews have on mmors don't

onstage. He got senous. "I told you
I grew up in the small town of
Plain Ci ty, Ohio. I know I would
have liked it if someone had done
this for me."
Judging from the periods of
hushed quiet punctuated with
applause and laughter throughout
the show, the students understood.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-B7

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

•Shop at Big Wheel J Big Days-Mon., April 20 thru Wed., April 22
•Bring in your Secret Mystery Discount Envelope or get one al the door
•Cashier will total your purchases, then open your envelope to reveal
your secret discount and instantly deduct it from your total

"Home of That Old Fashion Goodness"
1991 HONDA CRX HF
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ABOVE
GROUND
POOLS

~~~i

P1tUa11 a poal dlriiJg1
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Start Up Qemkals.
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VISIT OUI4 LOCATIOIIS
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A,ril73, 1997

POPULAR
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41300 LAUREL CLIFF ROAD, POMEROY, OH
9 AM·9 PM DAILY II AM·6 PM SUNDAY

ATHENS l:teU!•lJ CARS
"THE HAPPY HONDA

PEOPLE '~

RT. 35 WEST

BOTH LOCATIONS

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594 8555

,.

�Page

BB Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

~imts- ~tntintl

Sports

Final Wee• 18th Anniversar)t

Section C
April 19, 1992

Yanks score 10 runs
!8th

in fourth, wallop Tribe

Town .............................. .

Anniversaey
Customer
Appreciation
Sale!

Deposit Ticket In Store
DRAWING APRU.. 26,

7-UP

HOURS Monday thru Sunday 8 AM·l 0 PM
298 Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES

PRODUCTS
2LITERS BOTTLE

PRICES EFFECTIVE APR. 19 THRU APRIL 25, 1992

(
HUNT'S

TOMATO
SAUCE
15 oz.

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(
Sausage Links.............. ooz. 89
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Wieners. . . . . . . . . . . . . oz. 9
MOUNTAINEER BRAND

l

WILSON'S CORN KING

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Steaks. . . . . . . . LB.
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$ 79

ARMOUR

VIENNA
SAUSAGE
5 OZ. CAN

12

1
$499

PRINGLES

Ribeye Steaks. . . . .LB.
CHICKEN
39(
Leg Quarters ...........LB.
$109
nch Meat.. . . . . . . . . LB.

POTATO
CHIPS
6-7.5

oz.

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FLAVORITE

0
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16 oz. ans.

omatoes..__. .-.. . . . . . .La.69c

CHUNK

VALLEY BELL

2°A. M

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$ 59

Spaghetti. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Las.

1
p;;;~~£-···-··-·-·-·-. . oz. 2 $1

FRANCO AMERICAN

DAIRY LANE

_Cheese Singles. . . . 12 oz.
IDEAL ELBOW MACARONI or

. tti 0'5..... 14.75 oz. 2

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•••• ARMOURTREET
LUNOt MEAT

...
~~

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1201.

99(

7.5

6.5 OZ. CANS

M

BREAKING IT UP . Baltimore Orioles
sbortstop Cal Ripken throws to first base as
D&lt;troit's Cedi fielder (45) slides into second

.
. .....
.· . ......,·couPON·····
NORTHERN

TOILET TISSUE

12RouS259

mort WVG (&gt;.I. ( AP)

Trevino retains Seniors lead;
Nicklaus, Player drop back
PALM BEACH GARDENS. exc uses.
Fla ( AP) - Two-thirds of a Hall
" I JUSI got caught up m rnaktn2
ol Fame threesome floundered and bogeys," he satd.
'
failed Sarurday, O(X'ning the gate to
Whatever the rca'&gt;llt.lhe OC&lt;bne
a new set of challengers to Lee of Nicklaus and Player belm lhe
Trevmo tn the fmal round of the largest gallery of lhe day _proVJdcd
PGA Seruors Championship.
an O(X'ning to last-rowd challeage.
While Trevmo was fighting hiS by Mille Hill. Da.c StockiOil and
way to a thtrd round 71, good Chi Chi Rodriguez, tJed I&lt;J' SICCXllld
eoough to retam a three-shot lead, at 210. three behind TreVIllO·s leadJack Nicklaus and Gary Player mg 207.
drifted back mto lhe pack, all but
"Close enough to make It mtcrtabog lhemscl&gt;'CS OUL of title COO · csting," Stockton satd after hus 4tmtioo.
under-par 68.
Nicklaus, the defendtng champi Stockton. captam of the 91XCSSon. shol74 and Player, a three -ume ful 1991 U.S. Ryder C~ ttam and
winner of this event, had a 3-()ver- a rookie on Ihe over-50 cirtuiL
par 75 . They were lied at 215. a found himself m btle mnttnbOIIIIlf
single stroke under par at PGA the first time 1n mort lhan a
NanonaJ and eighl off lhe pace.
decade.
"I don't tiUnl: Jack was feeling
" It' s been a long time, " be said.
vcry good," Trevino said. "I think "It's fun , fun to hit some good
his bad was bothering him . He shots under pressure.··
was qwning on shoo, spinning ouL
Can he conunue to bandk the
"That's very unusual."
pressure?
Arnold Palmer. wbo has been m
"We'll find OUL tomOrrow," be
sunilar situations himself. offered said.
aootber theory.
Rodriguez shot 68 and saJd u
"You geL three guys like that "could have been real good . I
togoetber, they just get caught up m missed SIX puns inside eigbt feet_
playmg each other instead of the But the one on No. 18 wiD mate
golf course. I've done JL, too." me sleep better."
Palmer said
He 2{}-fOOief lllf birdte tbeR md
Nicllaus, however, declined 10 broke into a crowd-pleasmg. stiJ&gt;tal:e refuge in either of !he handy ping little victof)' dam: beSide tbe

GoH Ottly lt Powol's Sopor VcM
Olfw GooHpr. I 9tln lpr. 25, 1992
Uotlt I Pw

green_
Htll, the 199 I seniOr plava ol
the year and w mner of more than
S I trullion. closed up Wlth a 67 that
put h1m withm range of Lhe first
map utle of hiS career.
" Anybody that plllys tlus !'liill&lt;
feels lill.e you hve to wm a map 10
get any rccogmoon." he saJd.
South Alrican Harold Hennmr
was next a1 212 after a 70. and
followed at 213 by lefty Bob
Charles of New Zealand and AI
Kclley. Otarles' bogey-fret 65 was
tbe lowest round ol 1M day. and
Kelley shol 70.
Trevmo. lhe ooly double """""'
on lbe sertior crrcu.it this sc..ason.
wmt one over par when be lhrttpwt.d lor bogey oo lhe fdth.
He !01 lbal stroke bact -...111 I
two-putt binlie-4 on lhe I001. but
then hit iuLo the Qtcr and mad&lt;
druble bogey oo lhe 11m.
Birdies on lhe 12th and 13tll. til&lt;
IaDer with a t&gt;- iron shol that hit the
cup and spun out. got him bad. ..
even for the day and be bokd 1 251001 butlie put on lhe 17th for a bttle mort ln:aihiDg room.
"It'D all c:ome do...., to the laslt
lour holes tomorrow ." be s:&amp;Id.
"What I Deed to do IS get a goo!
lrmt side. two Of tlrt.e under. and
g:m: myself a bnk cusloon. · ·

was

National Wildlife Week underway
By JOHN WJSSE
DivNoll of Wildfifr
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Endangered Species: We're All In
This Together is the !heme fllf this
year ' s observance of Nalional
Wildlife Woek.
Nauonal Wildhfe Week Apnl 19-25 - is sponsored by lhc
National Wildlife Federation and
Its state affiliates, which includes
tbe League of Ohio S!XJrlSmen.
Non-game and endangered
wildlife management conunues Lo
be a priority of !he Ohio Division
of Wildlife.
During an April 2 rneeung, me
wilcDife council, on recommendation of Division Chief Richard
Pierce . adopted a proposal that
adds the cra:ting pearly ring pink,
TIJUgh pigtoe, white wartyback and
winged mapleleal mussels to
Ohio's endangemJ wildlife.
The division also reJXlr!S Ohio's
19 pails of nesting bald eagles arc
0

successfully hatching eagl&lt;t5 at
nest SiteS across D&lt;Itbem Obio and
on Killdeer Plains WilcDife An:a in
norlh-rentral Ohio.
Wildlife biologists cootinue LO
mooitor nesting activities .-.1 apn
plan to take blood samples. attadt
leg bands. and pJa:e l3dio tnmsmit ters on some of the eaglets laler

this year.
Peregrine falcons have been
building nests in Dayton and
Cincinnati. Some ollhe buds diScovered in these two cn~e~ n:.suluxl
from earlier falcon relc.as.cs in

enhance t.bese wildltlc species "'
lhe beSI of our abilib""- lli fiXII&lt;
of NallOilal Wildlife Weel SO"VeJ&gt;
as an tmponant reminder fllf ~ ­
on&lt; that Lbe needs of wildlife art
perhaps greater now than r.vu
betore," said Paul Schiff, supenlsor of the division 's infOI"IUUOD
and educauoo section.
Taxpayer conmbultons to the
stat&lt;' s nongame and endangered
~- ildlifc fund have helped . LaSl
year , 1axpayers conLrihuted
5609 .253 tc the endaneere.d
wildlife fwxl
-

Cinci nnau and Columbus. The
Division plans 10 release more caplive- raised peregrine falcons 1n
Akron next month. Puegrine fal cons are on the stau: and fedual
BJ Rid: Simpkias
lists of endangered wildlife.
Sports Cootespor..S..nt
"We believe mon: peo~~le art
becoming aware of tbe unponanu:
POJ:IoiT PLEASANT. W.Va. of protecting endangered wildlife
T""
Point Pleasant High Scboul
and lhc Division of Wildlife con- fOOiball qanclonts have signed I lettinues to work to preserve and ter of intmt to play thar oolk-w
football at Fainnoot Stalt Colqe.
Man Neville, the SJJI1 ol S1&lt;1&lt;0
and Donna Ncvilk, and Bmy
J\:asoo, the son of Strvt -.1
Yvoonc i'l:arDl, signed tbe lcst:n
Friday a PI:Jint PICISIIII Hi£lt

A· s 5, Ranger.; 3
ARliNGTON, Texas (AP) DOl« Carusew hll a long. two-run
hlmt:J, "'''t''ng a three-run ro!lly in
ok &lt;ig~o/1 innmg and lifting the
Oli:bM Athletics over lhe Texas
~5--3 Saturday.
Cms«:o's 431&gt;-fOOI shot to left
fdd. Ill'! sum of lhe season. came
lg3.1""' "'liever Terry Mathews .
'"""' Gozman (1-2) left after an
RB I smgt.: by Mike Kingery with
t:or Oll1. and Canscco followed by
""""""ung on a 2-2 pitch for a 4-3

'""d.Mike Moore (2-0) gave up e1ght
hi ls in 7 1-3 innings. He struck out
seve n. walked two and extended
his winning streak to seven over

AL roundup
two se asons. Dennis Eckersley
puched the ninth for his ftfth save.
Orioles 6, Tigers I
BALTIMORE (AP) - M1ke
Mussina allowed one run in eigh t
innings and Leo Gomez Singled
home the go-ahead run In lhe sixth
inning as the Baltimore Orioles
beat the DetrOit T1gcrs 6-1 Saturdav.
·Mu ss ina ( 1-0) gave up seven
hiL"i, walked three and struck out
four. In ht.s 14 major-league starts,
th e 23-ycar-old right-hander ha s
allowed two runs or less on 10
occasions and has an ERA of 2.66.
Yet his career record is only S-5.
Gregg Olson got the last three outs.
With Lhe score 1-1 in Lhc si,;lh ,
Randy Milligan drew a one-out
walk from Frank Tanana (0-2) and
Mike Devereaux sing led. T1m
Hulelt lined out. but Gomez It ned a
smglc w center to score Milligan
After a walk to Bill R1pk cn loaded
the hases, Mark Leiter replaced
Tanana and walked pinch -hiller

Ch1 10 Maninc1 to fon.:c m a run.

lllue Jays 2, Red Sox 1
BOSTON (API - Todd Smulc myrc pllched threc- hu ball over
seven inn1n.Rs to outduel Frank
V10la SaturdJy as Lh e Torom o Blue
Jay;; beat the IJ os.to n Red Sox ~ - I
for thc1r IOlh VJClory m 12 game\.
Stottl c myrc ( 1- 1) won wtth
rcl tcf help from Duane Ward and
Tom Henke , Wl\h Henke gcttu1g:
the last three Olli S fo r ht s st'.cond
save.
Viola (0-2) allowed only "'
hill, but the Uluc Jays had three ol
them in the second inning 10 lak e :t
2-0

'""d.

Mariners 5, Brewers J
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Harold
Reynold s squeezed home the go ahead run in lhe seventh innin g and
Mike Schooler cscpacd a bases
loaded pm m lhe eigh th Sawrday.
givin g th e Seattle Manners a ~ -3
vtctory over t.hc Milwaukee Brew ers.
Scalllc trailed 3-2 when T1n o
Marun cz sta rted the seve nth
against Dan Plcsac (1- 1) w1th a Sin gle, his third lut of the game . One out singles by pinch hitters Dave
Valle and Henry Couo produced
o ne run , and Reynold~ bunted

home anot.hcr.

Browning knocked out of box
in first; Pirates, Cubs, Expos win
SA.,. FRANOSCO (AP) - San
fumlnsco rocted Cincinnati starter
T(!11[1 Brownmg for StX runs m the
fars:.~ mn.mg Saturday e ventng m
~ Part.

looped a smglc that fell between
left fielder Ruben Amaro and
shonstop Mariano Duncan.
Pirates st:ulcr Zane Sm•t.h ended

Tilt Rods were still trailing 6-3
&gt;in 6 and one-half mnings.
Cllhs S, Cardinal&lt;; 4
ST . LOUI S (AP ) - Dwight
Smnll droohled twtce and drove m
1brtt nos and Andre Dawson

NL roundup

an 0-for-22 streak by Plfates' pitchers with a double in Lhc second.
Expns 8, Mets 6
MONTREAL (AP) - The
.added 31 ~ wo-run homer as lh e
Onego C~b&amp; beat the SL Louis Montreal Expos Look advantage of
two Mets' errors tn the c tghth
C..r..t&gt; 5-4 Salw:day .
Willi St. Louts leading 4-3 tn inning, inc ludin g one by center
!h.: .U.., Ryoc Sandberg and Daw - fielder Howard Johnsoo, LO break a
sa. adt ~iogled with lwo outs tic for an 8-6 victory over New
b&lt;Cor&lt;: Smitlt doubled to put the York on Saturday.
Wtth one out and Lhc score !led
Cabs ilbolttl.
Fiour relinas shut out SL Louis
0\tt !h.: fmal frve mnmgs. Shawn
no.tr (2-lJ) J11rdted 2 1-3 innings
fa lin&lt;: rcuy and Chuck McElroy
'IIUikal I 1- J innings for his third

5-5 m th e e Jghth , larry Walker Singled off loser Jell Innis ( 1-l ) and
scored when l1m Wallach 's smglc
to left-ce nter was booted by Johnson. Wallach went to SC(Ond on Lhc
play and advanced to third on MarQUIS Gn ssom's smglc.

Rick Cerone th en grounded into
10 score Wallach
and Grissom scored from second
when third baseman Chris Donncls
threw John VanderWal's grounder
past Bill Pocola at second mto the
right -field comer for another error
Bill Landrum (2-0) was the winncr tn rel1ef and John Wetteland
worked the nmth. allowing an RRI
single to Bobby Bonn !Ia

a f1elder's choice

~~

Tltr Oth! took a 1-0 lead in the
oeooal itmmg w~en Dawson was
~~~ by Omar Olivares' pitch and
S• •dl. wbo bad been 2 for 20.
&lt;ldnur:d a TUD-scoring double.
~ 9 PlliDies l
PmSBURGH (AP) -Cecil
E$l~T hit • three-run pinch triple
JJDol Bin} Boods added a two-run
boatttoer 11 the Pittsburgh Plfates
roaiJD«d th~u best start tn 19
'~.IrS s: ltb 3. 9-2 victory over the
~ P!till~es on Saturday.
Tltr l'm1ta - the NL ·s worstIIDibtmg !Jt.tm entenng the game •00 f.. e str.ught and SIX of
dttm IN ~..,. and are 8-2 for the
ftm """""""" 1973, the only year
bel......., 197'0-75 !hat they didn't
' 'ill II&gt;: Nooocal League East.
l'tldl"" S~arter Tommy Greene
IJ . t) -~by Bdl wim one out
tD t1ttoc hm and Andy VanSlyk e

lu•"'

OUT AT HOME - New York's IJavr Gallagher is tagged out
al home by Montreal's catcht'r Derrin Flelcher whil{· lryin~ to
scurr on a single by Met\i Macke}' Sas.lit:r durin~ si _\th inning action
in Montreal Saturday. Umpirr nane OeMuth makes call at plate.
(liP

Two PPHS gridders sign letters to attend Fairmont

School.

GROUND

BEEF

SJ290
GROUND

RI[J

CHUCK

1.4

I 0 LB. PACKAGE

PIG.

'' I I

basJr bl'ftliag up a doublt pl2y attempt durin~
Sotrood ~ pia y in Baltimorr Saturday_Haiti-

10 LB. PACKAGE

Ice Cream. . . . . . . . v, GAL

•

STAR-KIST

\
&gt;'

l'o'EW YORK (AP) - Mel Hall
&lt;mghl lrome two runs during a I0""" IO&lt;It1!! uming and later added a
Rto-run homer Saturday as lhe
s.-.. York Yankees ended a four 9D" klsing streak by rouung the
o.:-.dll1d Indian:; 14-0.
l1te Yankees combined seven
~- lWO walks, two errors and a
Ibn b-auer for their b1g inning
~" pitchers Dave Otto (1-1)
.llld Ted !'ower. The fiTSt II bauers
r&lt;:ukd base. nine of !hem scoring,
"' lfit Yankees' biggest burst smce
~ 12-nan mning on April II , 1987,
'" Kamas City _
Greg Cadaret( 1-0). backed by a
IN!!; l&lt;:ad. plli:hed New York's ftrst
~re game since last July II ,
awbtg a major league record Slrcak
ol 9l games between complete

RA NDt i
TO PLAY FOR RIO GRANDE- Statty RiHtr, studao!J
pan~ ror H - Hi&amp;~ Scllool ill Slltlby CllllldJ, wil ,t.r ror
Ullim-sity ol Rio Gnlldt women's baskttbaD . _ litis fal. W'dll
ller is RtdwclltD Co.dl DoUII Foote.~ story . . C-'

*

New Fainncru ~ COld Doolg
Samms was happy to have siped
botb ol tbem. he said. 'The!lc are
tbe kind ol young lllCil we ,..... a
Fairmmt.- said Samms. "We blow
they will be tbeR for four yr.m.•
llolb plaJIO&gt; wm tw&lt;&gt;-1112)' - rm for the Big Blach this Jll!1
IOOiball ..,...., and both played k:cy
mlcs fo- PPHS.
Neviik was lhe leading f'Ulilo
lor tbe ~ one ol tbe lradm£
ta:tlers 011 defense, and also 11"'ted for a40-y.-d avonge.
J\:asoa W2S paired with Mall 111
tbe lpctfjc:Jd fo- most o{ the .....
11111 .... the thinllcaling rum ..
tbe 11311. I'Cirsou also playal ill tk
,......,.., m defense .-.1 was 0011sistatdy ncar tbe tqJ of the ddCII!ive cblrts.
COidl Samms Slid be bas , .
projected a position lor euber 1111&gt;iete.. bd wiD let tbem makl: tbe
da:isitwl - 81 k:ast Hr tltc:ir Crt::.bman y&lt;:ar.
, liU to let tbe l=hnwt play

..t.ae tllo:]l want 10 play. Makmg
tbe ...,., co coUege alhlcucs ts a
JHIIJ "'' aofjustment and we try
Dot 10 COIIpO&lt;IDd that by forcmg a
pb}O" 10 p1&gt;y where be is not comronal*- Footltaii is lining up and
I "" j1bJ1.. and we doo 'I feel
)01 &lt;=-do tiW if yoo are not comfa ..... wbm: yoo an: lining up.
"'8.1 ofla tk first scason, the
"'" I - uafJ will cvaluatt: each
pb)a - t tbe:a we will make some
ohcu1 Ill'! lulllre position.

-

.. ,*'**'

Ba.&lt;~cally , we rccrun athletes and
&lt;.~c.adcmi cs . "We .stress cdur.;auon ..
we think. we have rccruiled 1wo said Samms. "We wam these youn'g
very good ones here," contmued men LO gel thCJr degrees ftrst, !hen
lhc forme r Canadian F&lt;KJihall football. We arc not gomg to send
League Coach.
very man y football players w the
Fairmont has a long tradition of pros. Our philosophy JS 'cooch 1ug
compcuuve football. havmg only t""chmg, dcvcloptng · eac h player.:
'
had fouu losmg seasons m fifty added Samms.
years. Last year they finished 1-R- 1.
Both yoWlg men c xprc~·d lh c u
although four or five of the games ~ratitud c LO Samms for hJ ) llll..i:.' rrs t
were decided by three points or '" them and they bolh said u~ey an:
less.
looking forward to playmg cui lege
One of the most important footbal l for htm for the next YC&lt;!IS.
ao;pocts of tbe Fairmont program is

I [

.
. . "fj.
·-

'·
~

FAIItMONT BOND- Point Pleasant High
Sd 111 fool.:oll st..douts Barry Pearson, ldt,
_. Non ~illt, siped lttttn ol inttnt Friday
10 plaJ 'oollnP at Fairmont State College. Pic...U .n.l'tu!OIImd Neville is Fairmont head

coach Doug Samms, who s.aid bt wall not projected a position yet for either player, but will let
them play wbert they want during their fresh·
man year. (OVP photo by Rick Simpkins)

�Page--(:2--Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH

Point Pleasant,

wv

April 19, 1992

April 19, 1992

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - It's
aU ova boa !be niting for !be Iroi-

anaPacers.
lndiaDa l3llied from 24 points
down in tile lirsl period 8lld by 12
early iD lbe final qwmr, bUI Qeveland bq oo fo" a 107-102 viaory
Friday niglu in die PaceiS' regular-

sea.on finale_

The Pacers lost a chance to
clincb lbe sixth Easrern Coofen:oce
playoff spot, leaving them a halfgame ahead of New Jmey for the
benh.
If lhe Nets win a1 borne api!!SI
Orlaodo tonight, the Pacers will
play eilbet Bosrm or !be New Ycrt
Kllicts in the playoffs. If New Jersey loses, Indiana will face a
rcmacb with the Cavalim.
Reggie Miller is anady anociJllling a playoff rematch with the
Celtics, who bear Indiana 3-2 in the

II

number all year and we wanted to
really go at them, but we wer e

"I'm ~ a1 it lib: a movie
sequel. There was 'lndiaoa vs . flat."
The Pacers never fully recovBosrm - die OOgioal zios.' Now
ered
from their worst frrst quaner
it's "!be eaemy figOO bad - Pan
II,"' be said. "We'll have our of the season. They tied a franchise
balds run no .....,. wbo we play. low by scoring only II points on
but I'm aci!ed abOII the possibili- 19 percent field-goal shoo tin g
ty of renewing our rivalry with (three of 16), while the Cavs hit 60
percent
Boston.''
"If we had not had such a cold
Cleveland 's victory gave the
Cavs a 5.() swa:p of the Pat=, the firn quaner, we could have won
first time since 1989-90 they """" this one," Person said.
Even with a horrid forst period.
swept by an Eastern Conference
Indiana
CUI its deficit to 12 by halfteam.
time
and
was within seven after
John Williams scored a seasonthree
qllllflm.
htgh 30 points and ued a seasonA three-point play by Miller
high with 16 rebounds and Steve
pulled the Pacers to 92 -91 wnh
rem added a carttr-lugb 24 for !be 4:43
remaining, and rookie Sean
Cavs.
Green's
tipin gave the Pacers their
"They're a bog test for us."
lim
lead
of the game, 94-92.
Miller saod. "They've bad our
" They came back and got the

UK releases massive
report on NCAA probe
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)- The

University of Kentucky found
" credible and persuasive " evo dence that somoone in the school's
basketba.l.l otroce placed SI ,OOO on
an envelope being mailed to a
reauit's falba', aocording to an inbouse invesogation.
UK on Friday opened nearly all
tho pages from an NCAA investi gation that led to a three-year probation of the school's swried baskelball program.
The univenity released the massove 3-year-old repon after the
Kentucky Supreme Court ruled &amp;-I
on April 9 that it wasn't exempt
from the state's Open Records
Law.
: The official JeS!lOOSe to NCAA
~ of recruiting 8lld academic
R!les violations contained 4,333
~es in nine volumes and weighed
44 pounds.
On the NCAA allegation that
former coach Dwaoe Casey sent an
Eme1y pachge oomaining a videotape and 20 $50 bills to Claud
Mills. falller recruit
Mills,
the university said "then: is mdible and pelSuasive evidenct" that
money was enclosed wben it left
1hc bastelball oiTx:e on March 30,

or

aru

t988.
: . But it DOifd that "infonnatioll is
sharply dispuled" and "the lnfractiom Comminee should give careful coosidera!ion to all of the evi~ce before determining whether

ters.' '

Larry Nance had 13 points and
12 rebounds for the Cavs, the third
seed for the Eastern Conference
playoffs with the third-best record
in the league at56-25.
Vern Fleming led Indiana with
23 points. Person bad 18 poinos and
13 rebounds and Miller added 17
points.
There were two ejections and a
technical foul in the fmal 3:06 of
the first half. Indiana coach Bob
Hill was ejected after his second
technical, and Dale Davis left the
game with a second flagrant foul
against Cleveland's Henry James.
Assistant coach George Irvine
followed Hill's forst technical with
one of his own less than a minute
later.
Kerr had a big game on a night
when both teams had key players
out with injuries. He hit three of

the onformauon contained in the
allegaoon os subst•tiaUy cmta as
10 Coach Casey and 10 Mr. Mills .•.
The report recounted the hour
the package was picked up in the
office. who handled u and Claud
Mills' reaction when told by an
Emery employee thaJ it conlained
Casey denied ID iovesti gators
that he sent any money because
" Mi. Mills bad oqna:la saics of
JnRk calls from UCLA or UNL V
boosten. Coach Cu:y said be did
not take the information seriously ... the rqnt said.
It also Slid !bat &lt;llris Mills, wbo
played one Jea!IOD a Kmnrky, bad
been "firm in bis denial of any
knowledge of any IDOIIC}'" lCDI by
the Wlivr:rsity.•
The rc spouse said il rooiSWred
a ·'third pany conspiracy " for
placing the nmcy in the eoveJope.
but there was "no evidence that
any employee was particularly
aware of the takrus of Oms Mills
or hartx!red any animosity tnwanl
the University of Kcnnrky."

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· ROCK SPRINGS - The second
aimual Meigs Band Memorial Golf
Classic will be held on Saturday,
May 23 at 9 a.m. at the Meigs
County Golf Course.
: This years tournament will be
held in memory of longtime Middleport and Meigs High School
teacher and coach, Nolan Swackhamer.
The tournament, which is open
to men and women. will be a 18
hole scramble with a blind draw.
The entry fee is a $4 5 donation to
the Meigs High School Band. The
fee includes a !-shirt. use of a golf
cart and a chicken barbecue. Those
"'ishing 10 take pan in the luncheon
ohly, may do so with a $5 donation
10 the band.
Prizes will be awarded to the
golfer with the longest drive, and
Closest to the pin, and a puuing
tOurnament will be held prior to tee
i&gt;ff. Drawings for door prizes will
follow the luncheon and gift ccnifieates will be awarded to the first,
&lt;eeond and third place teams. The
Marauder band will be on hand to
provide music for the luncheon.
: For one lucky golfer, who
makes a hole-in-one on the par 3
number nine hole, Smith Nelson
Motors, Don Tate Chevy, Olds, or
Tri-County Ford will offer a choice
of a new automobile. Other special
prizes are being planned for the day

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Mike Hargrove said of Nagy.
" We knew he was going to be a
challenge. He forced us to make
adjustments," Yankees manager
Buck Showalter said.
Alben Belle, Carlos Baerga and
Sandy Alomar also homered for the
Indians. Alomar had four of Cleveland's 15 hits.
New York took a 1-0 lead in the
first inning on Mel Hall's RBI single but the Indians scored five runs
on the fourth off starter Scou
Sanderson (2-1) as Belle and
Whiten homered.
Sanderson held the Indians hitless until Baerga singled $ith one
out in the founh and BeiJelrpllowed
with a 400-foot drive ;t&gt;to the leftfield bullpen. Paul Sorrento then
singled, Alomar doubled and
Whiten followed with a line-drive
homer to right. ·
Baerga's homer made it 6-1 on

•

63 Watt (306W6:1A/EC)
67 Watt (30635/67A,IEC)
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cheon by calling the goU course at
992 -6312. All those interested in
the tournament should sign up by
May9.

the fifth and Alomar's homer fol lowed Sorrento's single on the sixth
to make it 8-1, chasing Sander.;on.
It was the for,;t four homer game
agaonst Sanderson since July II ,
1982, when the right -hander, then
with the Montreal Expos, gave up
four to lhc San Francisco Giants.
Cleveland added two runs in the
seventh off eliever Russ Springer,
makong hos major league debut, on
RBI singles by Sorrento and
Whuen.
Alomar doubled with one out in
the ninth and scored on Whiten's
sin gle.

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Galli

Noles: Nagy pitched his second
com plete game. He and had only
six all of last season . ... Whiten had
four RBis last April 30, against the
Rangers at Texas ... In Friday's win,
the Indians had 15 hits and are now
2-2 in games on which they had 10
hots or more .... The last Yankee
potchcr to allow four home run s m
a game was Andy Hawkins on July
17, 1990 , when the Royals' Bo
Jackson hit three homers and Bill
Pecota another ..... Hall ha s II
RBis in his last eight games .
Charlie Hayes is the only Yankee
to have played every inning of the
club's forstlO games.

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:- Mr. Swackhamer is one of a
select few coaches who had won
two state championship teams in
two different sports. He coached
the 1941 Glenford, Ohio basketball
icam and the 1957 Middleport
baseball team to state championships. Mr. Swackhamer came to
ihis area shonly after his 1941 basketball championship and belp run
a family farm for almost fifteen
years before he began teaching and
fOaching in Middlepon schools.
After the consolidation of
Pomeroy, Rutland, and Middlepon
~chools, Mr. Swackhamer taught
and coached golf in the Meigs
Lo:al Schools until his retirement
iti 1975. Mr. Swackhamer died in
· . A plaque will be presented, in
memory of Mi. Swackhamer, to his
wife, Lucille, herself a longtime
lllacher and his son Richard , who
will be on hand for the tourna menL
The Meigs High Band BoosterS
encourage any alumni who were
students of Mr. Swackhamer to
sign up for the tournament or lun-

SportS briefs
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Mario
Lemieux, who missed the Piusburgh Penguins' last two postsuite games with a sore shoulder.
sdll hasn't recovered and may not
be ready for Sunday's playoff
opener against the Washington
Capitals.

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1987 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

c
en
&gt;

•I

talked witb Sanderson in the fourth inning while
catcher Matt Nokes stood by. Cleveland won,
11·1. (AP)

Second annual Meigs Band
Memorial Golf Classic May 23

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NEW YORK (AP) - Even
though he was off to a slow start,
Mark Whiten wasn' t wonied a bit
Now, it's the New York Yankees who are a bit jittery.
Whiten drove in five runs,
including one of four homers by
Cleveland, as the Indians routed the
the Yankees Il-l Friday night.
After a 6-0 start, the Yanks have
lost four straight games.
"'I wasn't worried. I always start
out slow," said Whiten who came
into the game with only eight hits
in his for,;t 40 11-bats and Just tbree
RBis in 10 games.
Charles Nagy (2-1) pitched a
si x-hiuer and benefited from the
Indians' forst four home run game
since Aug. 4, 1990, when they also
hit four home runs at Yankee Stadi um .
"He seems more in conuol of
his abolities, more sure of what he
wants to do. ' ' Indian s mana~cr

HARDBODY 412 TRUCKS

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Indians humble Yankees 11-1

Sports briefs

Gl

"I'll be back Saturday to skate
and I have two more day s for thcra-

py," Lcmocux said. "I hope I'll be
hack Sunday ."
Lcmicu1.. was injured in the Pen·
gum s' fir st pos t-sl!i ke game on
.\&gt;l onda y agaonst the New Jersey
Dcvol s li e sa t out Wednesday's
gam e aga on st the Ca pital s and
Tlmrsday 's game agamst the New
York Rangers
The Penguins won Lhc Stanley
Cup b st year even though Lemieux
- ''" Most VaJuable Player in the
pl ayo ffs - mos scd one game and
\1.-~ S pulled from several others with

·/1)~ ' M

DEPRESSING DAY- New York Yankees
pitcher ScoH Sanderson blew on his bands in 45degree weatber Friday night at Yankee Stadium
in New York. Pitching coacb Mark Connor

A&gt;IDICAN UAGIIE

....

ton.

Auto Club

1992 NISSAN

HlLTON HEAD ISLAND. S.C.
(AP)- Mark O'Meara. Davis
Love mlDI Olip Bed tied for the
lead through two rounds of tbc
Hcrttage amc_
O'Meara bad a 6-undo--pu- 65,
as did Beck , while love bad bis
second 6 7 and wen: all a1 134 on
the llartxu Town Golf Lints.

go very w el l for Pcngu 1ns co:1 c h

Scouy Bowman .
"I ' m worri ed ahout Marro ··
Bowman said.
·
Lemocux. the NHL 's lcad1ng
scorer with 131 pornts m 64 games.
underwent therapy aft er practice
and will recc1vc trcat rn cnJ s agam
Sa ourday and Sunday. T he Pen gu ms open Lhc first round of the
Stanley Cup playoffs wo th games
Su nday and Tuesday in w_,hing -

Give ~ the best
protection possible ...

ND

money.

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Mano
who m1s sed the Pitts burgh Pe ngui ns ' la st two poststril&lt;:e games with a sore shouldcr,
still hasn' t recovered and may not
be ready for Sunday's playoff
opener agains t lhc Washington
Capitals.
Lcmoeux pulled him se lf from
the icc before the end of the Pen ·
guin s' practice Friday, say ing he
dodn 't fee l right.
·' It was very sore,·' Lemieux
said . " I Iried to skate a louie but!
co uldn 't move my shoulder very
welL I took a couple of shots and
that didn ' t go very well either."
And that meant practice didn't
L~mieux,

four 3-pointers:
•'The strength of this team is the
depth ," he said. "Hot Rod
Williams was killing them down
low in the forst half. In the second
half, he was double-teamed a lot,
and we got a lot of open outside
shots."
Missing for the Cavs were Mark
Proce (straoned roght thigh) and
Brad Daugherty (lower back
strain). The Pacers played without
soxth man Detlef Schremp! (hyperextensoon of right knee). point
guard Michcal Williams (left knee
tendini tis) and center Rik Smits
(injured lost).
"' It didn 't take away from the
excitement," Cavs coach Lenny
Wilkens said . '"They got back in
the game because they put them selves there, not because we let
them back in."

TAYLOR
MOTORS

Scoreboard

. ...
-

lead, but we kept our cool," said
Williams, who scored 17 of his 22
points and grabbed six rebounds
before haUtime.
A 3-pointer by Kerr restored
Oeveland's lead at 95-94 with 3:46
lefi.
George McCloud's basket ued
the game at 98-98, but the Pacers
couldn't get ahead. Miller's two
free throws got Indiana wnhin 104·
102.
But Green 's Jumper bounced off
the rim and Person fouled Mike
Sanders while going for the loose
ball. Sanders hu both free throws to
put Cleveland out of range.
"We just haven't guarded
Cleveland all season," Hill said .
"It all boils down 10 if we play
defense and we did for three quar-

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel-Page--C3

Lemieux may not be ready for playoffs .

Cleveland Cavaliers outlast Indiana Pacers 107-102 in finale
fust round las!

wv

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..•

�Page

C4

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Aprll19, 1992

Giants pound Rijo for
seven hits in 7-3 victory
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Jose Rijo said the pain in his elbow

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weekly fishing repon as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Depanment of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
LAKE ALMA - This 73-acre
Vinton County lake offers excellent
fishing opportunities for largemouth bass averaging, I 0 to 21
inches. Good opportunities exist
for taking redcar sunfish, bluegills
and channel catfish. Usc red worms
or wax worms fi shed in shallow
water to take bluegiUs and sunfish.
OHIO POWER RECREATION
AREA - Anglers have a variety of
small ponds they can fi sh which are
ncar and far from authorized parking areas. Some of these ponds arc
home to some very big largemouth
bas s and good number s of
blucgills. A free recreational users
permit must he obtained in addition
to a valid fishing license to fish on

..-- A rea sportS bfie f:S

and seven hiLS over su. mmngs m a

RIO GRANDE - Two members of the University of Rio
Grande women's basketball team were among the 39 athletes from
around the country named to the NAJA Division I All-America
Scholar-Athletes listing.
Ann Barnitz and Kathy Snyder were the only two players from
Ohio to be included on the list, which recognizes athletes who have
achieved 3.5 or more of a possible 4.00 in their cumulative gl1lde
poml averages.
Barnitz, the daughter of Gary Bamitz and Ann Alloway of Belpre, was a stalling center for the Redwomen and is the second-highest scorer m the history of the program. The end of the 1991 -92 season, in which the Redwomen wem 25-7, coincided with the oonclusion of her studies at RIO Grande, where she majored m marketing.
Snyder, the daughter of Bob and Beverly Snyder of Gahanna,
was a starting forward and was twice named the team's most

1mproved player during her four-year career with the Redwomen .
She is maJonng in physical education.

Rules meetings Tuesday
. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department
will hold rules mtcrpretauon meeungs for coaches and intereswd
parents looking to participate in the T-hall and Pee Wee baseball
progl1lms Tuesday , April 2 I at the Gallipolis Municipal Building at
51S Second Ave.
The T-hall meeung will start at 6 p.m., and the Pee Wee meeting
will stan at 7 p.m.
For more mformauon. call the P&amp;R office at 446-1424, cxtensmn 17 .

Boosters club meeting Tuesday
VINTON - The North Gallia Athletic Boosters Club will meet
Tuesday, Apnl 21 at 7 p m. at North Gallia High School.

Little League tryouts Wednesday
GALLIPOLIS - All children entering the Gallipolis Parks &amp;
Recreation Department's LitUe League baseball prog111m for the
first time arc urged to attend the pre-seaso n tryout Wednesday.
Apnl 22 at6 p.m. at the water treauncm plant fields.
Those who played Little League in 1991 do not need to attend.
For more mformation, call the P&amp;R office at 446-1424, extenSIOn 37.

Athletic physicals scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - Athletic physicals for students m the Gallipolis
City Sc hool DIStrict planning to participate in sports for the 1992-93
school year will be Saturday, May 16 at 7 a.m. at Holzer Clinic.
Students m to use t.he side entrance to the new clinic unit.
According to Gallia Academy athletic director BiU Wamsley, all
mformatiOn regarding physicals, athletic phySical cards and urine
cups may be picked up in tlhe principal's office at Gallia Academy
High School.
SiudcnLI now m seventh grade who have a card on me for lh,is
,;c hool year need only 10 have Ihe questionr.airc form completed by
their parent(s) and turned in to the GAHS office.
Physicals are reqUired by the Ohio High School Athletic Associ ation for athlcLic part1r.:1pation.

Basketball camp dates posted
GALLIPOLIS - Dates for the 1992 Gall1poils summer youth
basketball camps were announced today by Jim Osborn e. camp
Cc()rdinaror.
Children entering grades 4-8 tlus [all will attend camp June 15
IR. and youths entcnng gl1ldes 9-12 will attend June 22-25.
The sessions will he held m the Galha Academy High School
varslly gy m. Registration forms will be available at vanous schools
1n th e ncar future . Additional details will be announced later,

7-3 loss to the San Franci sco
Giants on Fnday night
"I've got no fastball. no slider,
no forkball," Rijo said. "Tonight, I
had a lot of suuations where I
should have thrown a slider, and I
can't. I can't throw it like I want
to."

Rijo got Will Clark and Man
William s out, but rookies Jim
McNamara and Royce Clayton
were a different story. Clayton had
a triple and three RB!s, while
McNam8!11 went three for four with
two RBI singles off Rijo and a tworun homer - his firSt in the majors
-off reliever Dwyane Henry.
''You pay auention 10 Clark and
Williams, and you let the other
guys beat up on you," Reds manager Lou Piniella said. "Rijo got
hit around. I don't think he pitched
particularly well."
Rijo is 0-3 With a 4.30 ERA to
start the season. He said the pain in
the elbow, and the treatments
required between stans, keeps him
from being able to mentally focus
on his opponenl
Giants manager Roger Craig
chose RiJO as McNamara's next
chance to make his splash. McNamara was 0 for four in his majorleague debut at Atlanta
"I wanted him to get some playing time, and this guy is really
to ugh on right -handed hillers,"
Craig said of Rijo.
" I'm not being a martyr or any·
thing," McNamara s01d, "but I
learned a lot in those four at-ba ts in
Atlanta. I'm playing a role here.
I'm a backup catcher, and I'm
happy 10 play whenever my name
IS on that card."
McNamara figured m all tlhree
scoring rallies off Rijo.
Bryan Hickerson ( 1·1 ). who
relieved starter Kelly Downs when
the Reds tied the game with a tworun rally in the suth, was credited
w1th the victory. Rod Beck, who

ROOKIE GETS HIGH FIVE- Glaots
catcher Jim McNamara gets a high nve in the
dugout after scoring on Royce Claytoo's fourth

CHES HIRE - Reg istration forms [or tl1is year ' s Kyger Cree k
L11tle League Tournament are now available to !lie publiC from the
tournament directors.
For more mformauon, contact KCLL ch01rman Mark Werry at
992 ~ 611 R daily [rom 5 to 9 p.m.

Southwest
ROCKY FORK LAKE - This
scenic 2, I80-acre lake in Highland
County is a favorite for crappie
anglers. Most lish average eight to
I I inches with some as big as 15
1nches . Fish around the brushy
shoreline areas for best results.
Largemouth bass, walleye,
muskies, channel catfish and Oathead catfish arc also present here.
PAINT CREEK LAKE -Try
the flooded tim her areas or brushy
shoreline areas for the best results
in taking crappies up to I 5 mches.
The tail water area also holds
saugcyes averaging 10 to 16 inches . Use jigs and twister utils fished
along the bottom for these fi sh. The
tail water pool also orrers excellent
opportunities for taking channel
catfiSh.
Central
DEER CREEK - Good num-

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C.
(AP) - Mark O'Meara just can't
seem to get the spotlight to himself.
' 'I've been pleased with my
play all year long ," O' Me3111 said.
·'I know Freddie had a tremendous
year. But I'm not too disappointed
with my year."
Well, Fred Couples isn't playing
at the Heritage Classic this week.
So what happens? O'Meara ha.1 to
share the limelight with four others
- despite a record-tying performance on ~1e back nme that helped
him grab a share of the lead gomg
11110 today's tlhird round.
F1rst, there· s his r.:o-leadcrs at
I 34: defending ciilmpion Davis
Love Ill, who had his second
st•a.ig ht 4-under-par 67 Friday, and
Ch ip Beck, who made a late charge
and duplicated O'Meara's secondround 65 , thanks to an eagle out of
the bunker.
Then there 's Raymond Floyd .
All the 49-year-old Floyd did was
tiC the Harbour Town Golf Links
record
w1th eight birdies and no
has pitched nine scoreless relief ·
bogeys
for a 63 that made sure he
innings this season, pitched the
final three innings for his first save. d1dn ' t mi ss the cut after an openTied 3-3 in the sutlh, the Giants ing -round 74. Instead, he's JUSt
took the lead for good on McNa- three stroke s off the pace .
Finally, there was Bob Gilder,
mara' s RBI single. Clayton 's sacri whose
ace on No. 7 with a S-iron
fice fly made it S-3.
was
the
first at the Heritage since
Consccuuve one-out singles by
1990.
Gilder
fmished the day with
McGee, Thompson and McNarn8!11
a70for
l41.
gave the Giants a 1-0 lead in the
O'Meara was in the clubhouse
second.
before
Love, Beck or Floyd were
The Reds tied it in the fourth
eve
n
on
the cou rse. What tran when Downs tlhrew a two-out wild
pitch to score Paul O'Neill from
third.
A one-out single by McGee and
two-out walk to McNamara set up
a two-run triple by Clayton in the
fourth. giving the Giants a 3-1 lead.

spired over the next few hours
shifted the focus off O'Meara,

which is typical of what has happened to him this year.

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Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-C5

with some fish exceeding I 5 inches.
Lake Erie
Anglers are having good success
in taking walleyes on the reefs in

Anglers are taking male and female
walleyes up to 33 inches. Use oneeig hth - to one-quaner-ounce Jigs
with white, yellow or chanreuse
Lw1stcr tails . Fish from the Conan t
Street Bridge and Fort Meigs
access up to the 1-475 bridge .
SANDUSKY RIVER
Anglers have also found th e wall eye action much slower than a
week ago, but are still taking fish
up to 30 inches in downtown Fremont between Brady's Island and
the Hayes Street bridge. Fishing
melhods here arc the same as on
the Maumee River. Legal fi shing
hours on both rivers are su nrise to
sunset until May I.
Northeast
ATWOOD RESERVOIR Saugcye fishing opportunities in
thiS I ,540-acre lake are rated as
excellent with fish averaging 14 to
28 inches. Use jigs tipped with
minnows or long twister tails
fished along the hottom during late
cvcmng and early morning. Large ~
mouth bass average 12 to 23 inches, and ma y be taken on a variety
of common bass lures.
LADUE RESERVOIR - Try
fishmg in ar~ wilh growing vegeLatJOn or with submerged slructurc
to take largemouth bass. Artificial
worms, small spinners and plugs,
or other artificial baits can work
well when presented 1n a quiet
manner and rct.ncvcd slowly. The
outlook on walleye is rated good

Preeeesentlng ...

WAS ..............................$10,122.00
TRI COUNTY DISC ............-560.00
FACTORY PRICE ...............-500.00

GRAVELY PROF16-G

hers of white bass are being taken
on small rooster-tail spinners north
of th e Cook- Yankeetown Road
bridge above the reservoir. Cra~ ·
pies are being taken on minnows m
the lake around submerged brush
piles and drop-offs. Some channel
catfish are being taken on n1ght
crawlers, chicken livers, and small
spinners in the creek and upper end
of the lake.
DELAWARE LAKE - White
and black crappies averaging eight
to 12 inches can be found around
shoreline cover and lakcn on mm nows fi shed beneath a bobber.
There is a !0-inch minimum length
limit in effect for crappies. The
same areas hold largeinouth bass
up to 20 inches. Look to the tail
water area and ncar Cap Cole bay
for saugeyes.
Northwest
MAUMEE RIVER - Fishing
acuon is beginning to slow.

Three share Heritage lead at halfway point

Opening day Sunday, April 19
and every Sunday thereafter.
Absolutely no alcoholic
beverages. Not ruponrible for
loms or midenh.
For more information call
388 -9617 or 388-9300
Gates open at II :00 a.m.
Races slarlat 1:00 p.m.

Registration forms available

thiS area.

inning, two-run triple against the Reds Friday
night in San Francisco. (AP)

'II NTON RACEWAY

Osbomc said.

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

Largemouths, redears, b~uegills among Lake Alma's fish treats

just won't go away when he pioch- es, are just as painful.
es. The results, three straig ht loss''I don't care about the money
o
or anything else; I just p111y 10 God
I can..have one, full, healthy seaso n.
satd the Cwc1nnau
righthander. who gave up five runs

Barnitz' Snyder honored

Aprll19, 1992

�Pomeroy

Page---C6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport-Gallipolis, OH

April 1 9, 1992

Point Pleasant, WV

By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Opera·
tors of Ohio's thoroughbred race
tracks say !hey are being squeezed
by the economy and competition
from neighboring states, and they
resent lawmakers' refusal to give
them more ways to make money .
Two bills that died in me Legis·
lature this year would have allowed
race tracks to operate betting par·
lors, accept wagers by telephone
and race at night, a time reserved
for harness racing.
Sen. Roy Ray, R-Akron , spon ·
sored !he Senate version of the b1ll
- !here was identicallegJSlation m
the House - until it became clear
that Gov. George Voinovich
opposed it.
Voinovich obJected to more
gambhng m Ohio. He also smd me
proposal would produce little addi tional revenue for the state.
"It's dead in the water as far as
I'm concerned," Ray said.
The State Racing Comm1ssion
presented a study of racing in Oh1o,
and tra ck owners lobb1 cd for
changes.
"I don't thmk they made their

case," Ra y srud. " During !his peri·
od of difficult f1scal crisis, we have
a lot of other problems. We're con·
cen!Ial.ing on a lm or other tss_ue_s.
most important being me deficit Ill
th e econornv , health care, the enviro nm ent, Cducat!On and other
things . Hors e raCing is not on the
screen.
The amount of money wagered
on racing in Ohio is declming. 1l1at
IS resulting in rewcr horses, rcwcr
patrons and rewer races at River
Down s for th1 s su mm er's meet,
which started f-nday .
Jack Hancssian , general manag er of Lhe Cuu.:innati track , eliminated one race a day .
But he 1S bringing 1n two simulcast races a day frnrn a ChiCago
track in hopes of drawing b1g bet·
tors agam. The simulcasts arc being
integrated wilh merged p&lt;x1l wagering, in which the pools at both
tracks arc combined
The appeal of the merged pools
1S that bettors can make larg e
wagers without affecting th eir
chance of return, smcc there is a
much large r number of bcuurs.
" With th e merged pool. th e

opportunity for an individual to
change tlle odds is not really tlJcrc.
We're betting into me lllmois system. and that's a pretty big system. " Hanessian said.
ll isn' t done elsew here in Ohto.
Thistledown near Cleveland and
Beulah Park ncar Columbus offer
simulcasts but crcare their own bet-

ling pools.
Hanessian said R1vcr Downs
started merged pool betting to com·
pe te with Kentucky, wh1 c h ha s
intcr-Lrack wagering ,
Under that sys tem, only one
track in the state runs live race s at
any g1ven tim e. The races arc
simulcast at other tracks, wh ere
bets ca n be placed . The tracks wkc
turns with mcing dates.
Ohio docs not have int er -track
wagering. Therefore, various tracb
are running mccs al the same ume ,
competing against each otllcr.
Hancssian sa1d his plan should
help bolster purses for Ohio horse·

purses will go up."
Night racmg would help River
Downs because it has to compete
wi~1 Kentucky racing in me after·
noon. Turfway Park. 10 miles from
Ci nci nnati in northern Kentucky ,
handles wagers for Churchill
Downs during the summer.

Beul ah Park, !Jke River Downs.
so metimes run s short of horses:
because trainers take their bellcr
stock to Kentucky to compete for
larger purses.
.
"Our fields have gotten a lu~c
smaller," srud Dick Wilson, man ·
ager. "Why wouldn't you go to

because n's " more concerned about
acad e mi cs than anv of the other
sc hools I have visited."
During his v1 sitto the southeastem Ohio campus , Morgan met with
members of the Redmen team and
felt very relaxed around them . He
also n01ed that Lawhorn and Assis·
tant Coach Jeff Lanham, the team' s
offensiv e coordinator, conducted
more vi sit s and spen t more ttm c
w1th h1m dunng h1 s senior year
than any or the other schools where
he'd VISited.
After his visit, Morgan received
letters from professors in the Col -

lege of Mathematics and SCience.
and a letter from Dr. Barry M.
Dorsey, president of the university
" I found R1o Grande to be a
very fr iendl y and caring campus,"
Morgan said. "The style of bJ.~ ke t ·
ball there is very much 10 my hk ·
mg.
Morgan. th e son of Jay and

CINCINNATI (AP)- Chris
Hammond's emergence from relauve obscurity as Cincinnati's fifth
starter is due to his sharper control
thi s seaso n, Reds manager Lou
Pi niella says.
Hammond is 2-0 with an earned
run average of 2.57 after beating
the Atlanta Braves, 3- 1, on
Wednesday. The eight-mning,
four -hit effort was his longest as a
men.
maJor leaguer.
.. S1mulcasL1! allow you to generTwo turns through Cincinnati's
ate purse money wilhout paying
rotation, Hammond's record is
ou t purse money," he srud. "If the ma1chcd only by Tom Browning
program goes- a..11 we expect it to go. and his ERA is topped only by that
of Greg Swindell (2.25).
But the most telling aspect of
Hammond's perfonnance is tllat he
has walked only two and strUck out
I 0 in 14 innings, including one
walk and five strikeouts Wednes Margaret Morgan , 1s the seco nd day. A year ago, Hammond walked
player lO sign with Lht.: Rcdmcn this 48 and s truck out 50 1n 99 23
vr.ar. The first was Eric Bums. 6-R 1nnmgs.
"One walk," Piniclla sa id.
ce nter for Logan ~ligh School. in
"That'
s the key right there. If he
March.
keeps
his
walk total down, he's a
The Redmcn were 22- 10 last
good pitch er He knows how to
SC&lt;L) Qn , the 12th ror La whom , who
has led me program si nce 1980 and pnch. aod I've said before mat 1f
currcnJly hold s a record of 293 you look at 11, he 's always better
1hc second year in a league.' '
wi ns and In losses.

Ohio Valley Christian honors
athletes at sports banquet
GALLIPOLIS - Oh10 Valley
ChmtJan School recently held its
annual sports banquet to honor athletes and cheerleaders.
The following alhletes received
letters:
v·
Soccer - Jerry Back, James
Black'. Ja son Beaver, Shane
Blam'. Andy Brumfield, Dusty
Hill, Mike Little. B1lly Miller•.
Dann Peck (MVP)', Noah Smith
(Most Improved Player) and Joshua
Wood, statisucian Holhc Bartel
and scorekeeper Amy Icenhower
Players not earning letter s bul
receiving honor roll p1ns were
Micah Lanier, Nathan Smilh and
BenJamin Taylor.
Junior high volleyball
Ra chel
Cochran•.
G1n gc r
Franklin', Jam i Giancchmi*.
Rachel Hamrick' . Amy Pollard•,
Anc sa VanMatre• and Nan
Williamso n.
Varsity volleyball - Beth
Blcvms' (MV P. Scmng Award ).

Lyne Center slate

!!)(li e Hager', Pam Holley' (Pass·
ing Award), Jenny Hu ghes•,
Meredith Po llard• (Spiking
Award) . Ni kk i Saunders and Ci ndy
She ets•, sc oreke eper Sandra
Adam s. stati sticians Mclame Bllztard and Chri sty Mock. and video
tec hnician 1Ill Mock: . Players not
earning letters but receiving honor
roll pin s were Jenny Hager and
Anna Hamnck .
Junior high basketball Nathan Blackwood'. Darren Har·
ris, Aaron Holley•, M1cah Lan1cr',
'\alhan Lusher• , Gabe McQueen'.
Rilly Miller• and Taylor•, and
video tec hniCian Jill Mock . Not
ea rnin g a lc llcr but receiv ing an
honor ro ll pi n wa s Trav is Black wood
Varsity basketball - llcaver.
ll rumfJ cld ( Hu stle Award). Hill
(Rest Free Throw Percentage) .
Pratt , Sm ilh' (Rcboundillg Award )
:md Matt Swain . S(Orckccpcr Icenhow er and SUiliSLI Clan Anna Ham nck.

After going 0-2 with a 3.32
ERA, 13 walks and f1ve strikeouts
in five starts at Tampa (Class A,
Florida State League) in 1986,
Hammond improved the next sea·
son at Tampa to II - II, 3.55. 60
walks and 126 strikeouts. After
going II · 7 with a 3.38 ERA, 96
walks and 142 strikeouts at
NasllVIIIe m 19R9, he improved to
15 - 1. 2. 17, 63 walks and 149
strikcouLI! Lherc in 11}(}0.
Piniclla said Hammond's situatio n pitching beh1nd Jose RiJO,
Browning, Tim Belcher and
Sw mdell is ideal for a young pitchcr. And two other pitchers. Gino
Minut clli and Mo Sanford, arc
waiting at the Reds' Class AAA
Nashville affiliate in case Ham ·
mond, 26, falters.
"It's good w have four starters
like we tJ~1vc, to watch them
rnch," Hammond said. "And it's
IITI)JOrtant to know mat If I don't do
the jOb, we have two good starters
m Nashville who can."
Hammond allowed a lead -off

Standout guard to join
Redwomen in 1992-93
RIO GR ANDE - Swccy Ritter,
a 5-6 guard for Hou ston H1gh
Sc hoo l and th e Shelb y Co unty
Player of the Year for I ~ 9 1 and
!992, wi ll play for the UnJvcr.slly
uf Rio GrJ ndc women ' s txlskctball
tc.::1m UtJ S fall .
R1u cr signed a letter of 1ntent to
:Htc ntl R1o Gra nde in a ce rem ony
v.'hl ch in cluded her high sc ho ol
coach. Greg Ward . and ~ cdwo mc n
mentor Doug Foote .
"S hl: 1S a kid who can step right
1n and play, who can run the team
for you," Foote remarked . "S he's
ve ry athl etic, very Jntclhgc.nt and
mature enough to take a lcadcr:.hip
role with the team _·•
The da ugh ter of Mr. and Mrs.
To11 y Rit te r of Sidney, Rlltcr will
he a point guard for Rio Grande,
whiCh went 25-7 la..; t sc.a.son for ~lC
hc st to -d:ll c .sca-:o n record in lhc
program'&gt;; hi story. Foo te , wh o
a..; sumcd coach mg duties w1th the
1eam Ill 1989. 1s currently 65-29
'o\' ith

April 19, 1992

Stockowner habits changing

homer to Atlanta's Dcion Sanders
in me first inning Wednesday. But
Hammond struck out the next hit·
tcr, Jeff Blauser, and gave up but
two more hit s before Sanders
tripled in the cightlJ.
By the end of the second inning,
the Reds had given Hammond the
lead he nursed unul Norm Charlton
retired the Braves in order in the
ninth for his fiflh save.

WANTED

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her senior campaign. With a four year total of 1,568 pomts scored,
she holds me sc hool record for me
most number of crurccr pomts set by
e1thcr a boys or girls alhletc. She IS
also the record holder for the most
number or assists.
The recipient of numerous hon ors for her basketball prowess, Rit·
tcr was named All -Di.strict9 and an
alternate for me Norlh-Soulh game
as a scn1or. In addition, she was
named to the Southwest Distri ct
First Tea m and the Dayton D111iy
New.&lt; All-Area Team.
Riucr has not yet decided on a
major al Rio Grande.

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five percent

SPORTS CARDS PLUS

I

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446·2220

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NEW HOURS

I

Monday thru Saturday 11 a.m. til 8 p.m.

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GRAND OPENING

I

20 /0 OFF
0/

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SINGLE CARDS
&amp; SETS

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ALL
SUPPLIES

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Exludas All Wax Packs &amp; I
Wax Boxes
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WITH THIS COUPON
GOOD 4/t 8/92 TIL 4122192

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•••••••• • .q_'f ~~-\V~ • • ••••••••

the Red women.

FREE MINI VACATION!
ORLANDO, MYRTLE
BEACH AND MORE!*

"" .

.

·- --·------------ - - · ----...

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GALLIPOLIS

·,;,·

GRAND OPENING • Frencb City Maitre&amp;&lt;,
241 Third Ave., GaiUpolls, opened its doors Friday afternoon witb a ribbon cutting ceremony.
FCM, operated by Tom Young and Frank
Naskey, offers name-brand mattresses including
Serta, Namaco, daybeds, bead boards, pillows,
ensemble sets and bunkbeds. According to
Young, they offer free deliver in a SO mile
radius, free set-up and removal or old beds. Also

COUPON

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PBL results

. . "'-:.;

Anyone knowing the
address or telephone
number of BOB HAWLEY,
formerly Rt. 1, Box 20
R, Northup, Ohio.
Call Coiled
301-845-2536

403 SECOND AVE.

/
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- - - · - .- ·
~.!!
..

, ........•.•......•.•.. ••

ass islS per game al Houston during

An accomp!Jshed runner in h1gh
sc hool who ha s lrequen~y comrx:t·
eLl 1n the state wurnamcnt and
AAU -JR OlympiCS, ~mer w1ll al so
t&gt;c a mc.rnOCr of the track team at
Rto Grande coached by Bob Wll ·
ley. She holds Houston' s records in
the long jump and the 200 meter
run .
In basketba ll. Rtttcr a ve rag ed
1~ . X po1nts . ."i .() reboun ds and 4 . ~

POMEROY - These arc 1hc
Spt•cial awards- Beth Blevins
r
es
ult s of rcrcnt action at th e
(Femal e Athlete of th e Year).
RIO GRAI'DE - The acllvities Sm!lh (Mal e Athlete of the Year Pomeroy Bowling L1nes.
AprilS
.sc hedu le for Lync Center 1s a.'i fol - ;IIJd Sp~ritual Leadership Award) .
Early Wedne sday
League
lows:
Shee ts (Fema le Sp m1ual Leader·
Mixed
Gymnasium hours
~ 11 1 p Award ) and Nancy Blev ins,
Teams- Mike Sel ls (74 -]8 ).
Sunday- closed Easter week · who rccctvcd an honorary varsily
Tony'
s Carryou1 (68-44). Hackett 's
end : 6-8 p m., college rcc reauon
le n cr for hc1n g nnmcd Athl eti C
Roofing
(57-55 ), Shamm y's Carry ·
Monday- 6-8 p.m.. co llege nooSin of 1h c Year
o111
(55
·
57), Bank s Cons tructiOn
recrc.:ilion
Th e foll ow in g chee rl ead ers
1)0.()2) and Rooters Bowlers (32·
Tuesday - 6-R p.m.. coll ege rccc 1vcd award.o; :
recreation
Junior high
Me l1 ssa i:01
High .series - Dotttc Wtll
Wednesda)'- 6-X p m , col - 13rown*. Coc hran•, Gi:111 cc hint"'.
(.
I
IJ6)
and J1mmy Joe llawlcy (539)
lege recreation
Jenny J-la gn"', Amy Po llard* and
Second-highest
series -Pat
Thursday- closed for classes
V ~u1Matrc* .
Carson
(508)
and
Larry
Dugan
Friday- f&gt;·R p.m .. open recre ·
\'arsily ~ Beth Bl e v1n.\•
(129)
(C heerl eader of 1h e Year), Jodie
au on
High game- Dotue Will (222 1
Saturday - I J p m .. open Hager•. Ch nsty Mock•, Mcrcd1th
and Jimmy Joe Hawley (2 14)
recrcaiJon
Pollard". SJundcr\• and Stle-cLS* .
SHond-high garnr- Dolli e
Sunday. April 26- J. J p m .
The awards were sponsored hy
open rcc rc.~ui o n : fl -K p.m.. ..:ollt:gt: Jeff and Vera Snedaker, owners of Will (20 1) and Larry Dugan (196)
Team series- Tony' s Carry recreati on
the Sh ake Shoppc of Gallipoli s
out
(I R71J)
F&lt;xxl fm th e han4uc t wa s pro v1dcd
[loot ers
Team
game
Pool hours
by Wil son\ Catering.
Ho
wlers
(652
)
Sunday- closed : f&gt; -R p .m.. • - honor roll rccip1cnt
w llcgc sw1m
Monday- closed for classes
Tuesday- 6-8 p.m .. coll ege
swun
Wedne.sday -closed for classes
Thursday- closed for classes
Friday - 6-8 p.m., open sw im
Saturday- closed for classes
Sunday, April 26 - 1·3 p.m.,
open sw1m : fi-8 p.m.. college swim
NOTE: There will be a $1
charge per person at me pool dur .
mg open sw im hours for me public.
Students and staff are to use 1D
cards.
Because of construction, please
enter Lyne Center through tlle rear
doors facing the back parking lot.

or a customer's sale will be donated

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to tbe cburcb of tbelr choice. FCM is open Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Saturday,
10 a.m. to S p.m., closed Sunday. On hand for
the ceremony were, (I tor): Bobby Kormanik,
Lori and Tom Young, Glenn Smith, city manager, Naskey, and Mrs. Glenn (Gail) Smilh.
Youngsters on front row, left to right, are Heath
Rothgeb, TeSSll Rothgeb, and Alyssa Young .
(rimes-Sentinel photo by Kris Cochran)

Maximizing alfalfa yields and profits
By Patty Dyer,
the early bud stage sets opcrauons
in motion ror an optimum numl:x:r
Distrkt Conservationist
of cuttings and higher yields . An
GaHia S&amp;WCD
Someone once said, "Give me earlier harvest often means one
an alfalfa field the size of Te.as extra cutting during tlle growing
and I will grow enough protein to season. Remember also that feed feed the world." Alfalfa popularity ing value is highest at !hose early
IS not surprising . ..it has dJe highest
growth sta~es. Farmers often put
yield potential and the highest olher jobs Ill front of alfalfa har·
feeding value of all perennial hay vest Under lhese conditions, alfal cro ps. Alfalfa's high energy con- fa will not perform up to its genetic
len t mak es this crop a valuable pot&lt;ntial and profits wiU suffer.
• A second frequent mistake :
.component of any animal raoon.
Today, average alfalfa yields are lnadequat&lt; fertilizalion ...especially
potaSSIUm.
ill the 3 to 4 tons per acre range in
Typical fertilizer practices
1he humid regions of the U.S. and
Canada. Yields two 10 three times include topdressing alfalfa annually
.higher are consistently produced in witlJ 200 to 300 pounds of potash
JCsearch trials and by top growers. (K20) per acre. Considering that an
Alfalfa yields are often at or below 8 ton per acre yield will remove
·the cost of production ... a wast&lt; of 500 or more pounds of potash per
1ime and money. Higher yields acre, higher yields require higher
-mean lower production costs per rates of fertilizer application. Plan
.ton. Farm records in Pennsylvania an alfalfa fertilization program
show a 3 to 4 ton per acre yield which will supply 15 pounds of
costs about $70 per ton to produce. phosphate (P205), 65 pounds of
That figure is reduced to $45 per potash, 5 pounds of sulphur, and
ton at a 7 to 8 ton per acre yield one half poWld of boron for ever
lev el. That $25 lower cost per ton ton of e~pected yield. Monitor
results in a hefty improvement in nutrient levels in the soil by soil
returns for your management skills ~&lt;sting and keep alert for nutrient
Achieving higher yields requires deficiency symptOms.
close attenuon to ALL production
• A third common mistake:
fa ctors involved in growing alfalfa. Failure 10 establish a scouting proNo single factor will give high ~am for
yiclds ...all interoct with one anoth· lllS&lt;Ct pests.
Alfalfa is subject to yield, stand,
er in a management package. Three
and
quality losses when insect
of the most common mistakes in
managing an established alfalfa pests reach threshold levels. Profits
lost ID just two of !hem, me potato
stand arc:
•First: Late first cutting which leafhopper and the alfalfa weevil ,
reduces tlJe number of cuttings dur· run into the millions of dollars
ing me growing seasons.
annually. Properly controlled
Alfalfa has a tremendous genet· through a scouting program, time! y
ic potential for rapid regrowth after harvests) and appropriate chemical
cutting. Starting the fJrSt cutting in use, losses can be dramatically cur·

tailed. Management dec1.~ions
based on pest scouting take the
guesswork out of deciding when to
spray or cut because of mscct num bers. Like all sound management
decisions which increased alfalla
yield and qualny, scouting docs not
COSl..Jt pays.
Farmers who properly manage
these three factors and integ rate
them wit
other management deci sions are
rewarded with more tons of top
qualuy alfalfa .. .and more opportu ·
n1ues for profit.

Coordinator named
POMEROY · Lenora Le1fheu,
R.N., was recently named the new
coordinator
of
the
Alzheimer/Related Disorders Program at me Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.
The program will begin again
with a get-acquainted party on
Wednesday from 1:30 to 2:30p.m.
at me center.
In addition to provid1ng an
opportunity to meet Leifheit, the
party Will a[) OW dJe pubtic tO diSCUSS ideas and topics for discu ssion. Refreshments wiU be served.
Quest1ons may be directed to
Le1fhCJt at !he center, 992-2161, on
Wednesday afternoons.

CableVison promotion
will help local schools
customers who elect to participate
You · Money for our Schools" in ws annual promotion.
"We are commiUed 10 strengthsponso red by Cable Vision will help
ening
our educational resources in
provide fund s to Meigs County
the
community,"
stated Errett "We
Schools, it was announced Friday
already
provide
free
cable service
by CableVision General Manager,
for
all
schools
in
our
service area
Lester L Erren.
throu~h
our
"Cable
in
the ClassSubscribers during the May pro·
motion, which runs from May 4 to room' program, and ws is just an
24, will have the opportunity to additional way we can help support
write a check -equivalent to the education.
Last May, Cable Vision nation first month's service fees -directly·
wide donated more than $100,000.
to Meigs County Schools.
CableVJSion wiU waive me nor- to schools, of which subscribers in
mal connection or upgrade fee to Meigs County donated more than
customers, as well as forego the $700.00 directly to the Meigs
first month 's service fees for those County School System.

0

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Money Ideas

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When we said wete doing
it tokes to make home "uity
loans, here~ what we had1n m1nd.

Make, ,.,"' th1nk. docstit n~ t\n Pncr llkr thh. loan may he tax clcducuhlc.··And no maHer how
long you'vc owned your home. we have an eqwry
l Cllllhl ncd ~v 1 Lh JlrC&lt;:-,cnt Interes t ralc". m:1k1'"
cq uHy hm~ a smart w~y \(1l-x•tTI1w n 11 ll"ll') , \nd lmn to fn you r needs li1 apply, just ca.llJ-R00you L·.;m ll.:,C your cquny loan tn con.'.nl td:ltnlcht~. 727.{)5(l5orvtsllthc
r,111k
l.)nc
offKc
ncar
BANK
:ONE
make ht lmc 1mrro\'cmcn1sor m:l lt wpun,fuc.,r'"'
)•lll fnr full clcta1ls
V/halnrrtl whe,
lk'st llf :dl mt r rc'-'l nn J Hcmk ( )nt· h\)IJ11 "l 'l (ll ll &gt;
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Swimsuits and'Sports Illustrated'
By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS -In 1964, Sports
11/ustrat~d began publishing a special section fealuring women's
swimwear. The first edition covered
SIX pages and generated little attention. It was a good
enough idea, however, to continue
the next year, and
it gained a little bit
more notoriety.
Now,thefeatureis
a huge success, covering 38 pages
and generating fame for any model
chosen to grace the rover of the
magazine. This year, the event even
expanded to include a video entitled
"The Making of the Spans Ulustrated
Swimsuit Issue". Once the popular·
ity of the issue became eviden~other
magazines began !heir own issues,
but met limited success. These 'follow-the-crowd' magazines did not

participate in the dramatic growth in
the popularity of a swimsuit edition
and are not lhought of as pubLshing
THE swimsuit edition -only Sports
1/lus/raled can claim that starus.
Investors are always tempted ID
apply the follow-tbe-=wd strategy
to their stock selection. However,
invesunent problems surface when
the headlines capturing the success
stories become the source of invest·
ment ideas. lnvesunent llJliUWnities, on !he other hand, emerge from
obscurity. Sports 11/ustraled bei!J"
their swimsuit edition in obscunty.
Today others seek to emulate that
success but are relegated 10 also-ran
status. We will continue to seek out
those cornpanie$ wbo today may be
in obscurity, butt11c making the prod·
ucts/services th;~ "'ill be in demand
tomorrow.
[Mr. Evans Is aa IDvestment
broker with lbe ObloCompaay In
its G~IUpolls olllce.)

By JOH_N CUNNIFF
AP Busmess Analyst .
NEW YORK - For 12 stra1ght
years Amcncan households hav e
been net seUers of corporate stocks
- shares .they own dlfectly - a
trend mat m some respects 1s oppo·
SJle totlJea&lt;Sumpuon.
. Many assume that never before
m Amencan hiStory have ordmary
fo lks been more acuve mvestors, a
consequence, IllS explaUJed, of the
h1gher level of d1screu?nary spendmg m many households.
Perhaps, but the dollar amount
of corporate shares owned dtree~y
d~s not support that assumpuon.
\\ hllc ownership through mtenne·
d1an~s such as mutual runds and
pens JOn funds has mdeed grown,
d!fectownershlpofshareshasnot
In fa ct, Federal Re se rve data
show hou sehold s have been mas·
s1ve ~ellers 1n recent years, the
annual total s rang1ng between
&lt;14 . 2 b'll
' m
·
JJ
1 _J' On an d $135 b'll
1 10n
the past f!ve years, and a total or

$550 billion in the pa st seven
years.
But somethmg happened late
las t year that oould mean a s1~mfi cant, very meanmgful change UJ!he
pattern. Late m the year, the pattern
of se lling was disrupted . In the
fmal quarter, households began
mvestmg dtrectly agam.
When any trend changes, marl&lt;ct
analysts watch closely and try to
un cover the reason ~hy . In th1 s
mstance, they haven t yet determmed how 1mportant the chang e
might be.
.
. All they know JS that the buy ·
mg. at a $27 billion annual rate m
the fOUrth quaner. was as sudden a
change as any they had seen in
many years.
It could, they rea son. hav e
superfJCJal roots, a change forced
on households by fai!UJg .CD r•tes
and an attempt to obtam better
returns m stoch. Or 1t could have
been the attraction of' a record num ber of new 1ssues.

Nobody reaUy knows yc~ but in
a recent study of household behav1or there could be a hint of just how
substantial or ephemeral the change
m1ght be . And it could have imporcam ramJfJCauons for stock prices.
Household s are selli ng again ,
acco rding 10 Sindlinger &amp; Co .,
which conducts about 5,000 telephone interviews a month The
chan ge became apparent 1 ~ late
J•n uary, says Albert Sindlinger,
and it con11nued at least through
Apri l II .
In that week, household ownershtp of stocks and mutual funds fell
to 52.5 million , down from an all ·
11me high of 55.6 million'" the
week ended Feb 1
In percentag~ ~nns 32 rcem
of households in the l~tter~urve
were owners compared with 34 ~
~rcc
,,... n t at me' peak . 11 means 3 ·m1:1lion households abandoned th e
mark et · 10
k ·00 aim
"'athe late-1991
·wee DCn1rend
ost
reversing
·
·

Congress funds new cost share program
By CINDY JENKINS ,
Distrkt Forester
GALLIPOLIS · A new cost
share program has recently been
funded in congress called me St&lt;wardship Incentive Program . Under
S.I.P., landowners can reCCJve up
10 75% Of dJe COSt tO JX:rform SCV·
era! difrerent forestry practices .
The most popular practices in thi s
area will be fencing to deep livestock out of woodlands, tree plant·
ing and me usc of tree shelters, and
wildlife habitat enhancement.
Other pract1ccs include manage ment plan development for wood·
lands, windbreak establishment.
soil and water protection/improvc l~cnt.• riparian and wetland protcc llo n/unprovcmcm. and fores t rccre aUon enhancement.
Practice applicallon s will be
ac cepted at the ASCS office, and
t~c Service Forester will be rcSJXInsJblc for approving applications
For more infonmation caU tlle Gal ·
l1a Soi l and Water Conservation
District at 44fi-8687. the Gall1a
ASCS office at 446-8686 or The
Division of Forestry in Jackson at
286-5900.
All programs and assistance or

the Gallia SWCD and the SCS are
provided regardless of race, creed,

color, sex, age, handicap. or nation al ong1n .

Blackwood, Stewart
retire from KC plant
CHESHIRE - Vernal E. Black-

Stewart jOined OVEC in 1955
as a La borer in the labor depart·
and George R. Stewart, ass istant ment. In 1956 he transferred to me
shift operating engmeer, retired opcr;H ion s department as an auxil April I, from the Ohio Valley Eli&gt;: · Iary equtp mcnt operator and in
tric Corporation's Kyger Creek 1971 was promoted to equipment
Plant according to Norman H. Tarr. operator. He advanced to un1t
plant manager.
supervisor in 1976 and to assistant
Blackwood joined OVEC in &gt;hilt operating engineer Ill 1981.
Stcwan is a native or Mason,
195 6 as a laborer 1n th e labor
department. He transferred to the W. V:\. , and served Ill the U. S. Atr
maintenance department in 1957 a.) Force from 1951 to t955. He JS a
a maintenance helper
In 1966 member of the Mason Methodist
he was promoted to maintenanc e Church and th e VFW Ill Mason.
mechanic -C. and in 1971 he was Stewart and hi s wife, Gladdie. live
promoted to maintenance mcchan - at Rm: 255. Ma~on
ic- IJ . Blackwood, a native of Meigs
County, served in the U. S. Army
from 1954 to 1956. He JS a member
of tlJc Laurel Cliff Free MetlJodJSt
Church in Pomeroy. Blackwood
and his wife, Betty Lou, reSide at
3 1945 Minersville Rd., Racine .
wood, maintenance mechanic-B.

June forestry camps planned
GALLIPOLIS - The Oh10 available for pnvaJe consultation.
Forestry Association holds 1wo,
Each student will also parllCJ ·
one-week summer resident camps pate in a field trip and th ere IS
for h1gh school students each year. always plenty of recreatioo time for
It 1s located at Hidden Hollow eac h camper.
Camp JUSt south of Mansfield near
1lle Gallia Soil and Wat&lt;r Con·
lhe Mohican State Forest in Rich- scrval.ion District will provide one
land County.
sc holarship to send a student to
Any boy or glfl who has com - forestry camp this year. Anyone
pleted the eighth grade may auend. interested in attending tllis year's
The students attend classes cover· forestry camp during either the
ing tree Identification, silviculture. June 7-12 SCSSIOn or me June )4. )9
ecology and forest products. Spe · sess ion should call the Gallia
cial evening acuvnies arc planned SWCD at 446-8687.
throughout the week.
All programs and assistance of
Camp instructors are profession - the GalLa SWCD and SCS are proal foresters employed hy botl1 tll c vided regardless of race , creed,
public and private sector. They stay color, sex, age, hand1cap or nation·
at camp wuh Lhe studcntc; and arc a! origm .

GEORGE STEWART

Margo Swisher promoted

PO !NT PLEAS ANT - "Cable &amp;

See Puzzle on Page D-2

Home athletic event•
Tuesday - baseball double ·
header vs. Mt. Vernon Nazarene. I
p.m.; softball doubleheader vs . ~.f-.'..-1-"0hio Dominican, 2 p.m.
Friday - softball doubleheader ~+-'-l-'-'-F.f-.'..1-'=­
vs. Tiffin, 3:30p.m.
Saturday - baseball doubl e·
header vs. Walsh, I p.m .

Kentucky where they . hav e
$ 130.000 a day in purses , ~~stead
of come in here for $35,000'
Bad weather and a bad economy
have hurt Beulah Park, where the
spri ng meet will end May 3 with a
modest decline '" handle, Wdson
said.

Hammond's rise to Reds' pitching
rotation credited to better control

Barberton guard Morgan will play
for Rio Grande Redmen this fall
RIO GRANDE- Jack Morgan,
5-X guard for Barberton High
School and the Akron All -Metro
Player of me Year, wiU play for me
Univ ersitv of Rio Grande men's
basketball .tcam tllis fall.
Morgan, who averaged t6
points and seven assists per game
as a se nior under BHS Coach
Roger Cramer, is "the type of
young man we arc looking for to
fill our pomt guard position," Red ·
men Coach John Lawhorn noted.
"He is an C&gt;cellent student who
understands work habits and comes
from an excellent basketball program," Lawhorn continued. "He
understands the sacrifices it takes
to be a wmncr."
Morgan JS ranked first in a grad·
uating class of 386 and intends to
major in pre -medical studies .
Wh ile he had visited such sc hools
as Northern IllinoiS, Davidson,
Woos ter, Denison and Kenyon ,
Morgan said he chose Rio Grande

Section D

Farm/Business

Race track owners resent alleged roadblocks by lawmakers to $$

MARGO SWISHER

GALLIPOLIS - Star Bank, NA
Tri -State reccn~y promoted Margo
SwiSher to assistant branch admm ·
JStrativc officer for Galha County.
Her duti{~S will be to assist a!l three
offi ces in Gallia County .
Swi sher was employed at Star
Bank in 198 1. She started in book ·
kecpmg and has smce held several
~si tion s including teller and c,;ecutive secretary. She was promoted
to personnel officer and secretary
to tlle board of directors in 1987. In
19R8 she was appointed customer

service and loan orficcr worKing in
hotlJ deposu and loan prodlk:ts
She has attended several bank 1ng classes and seminars and has
succcs.sfully completed training in
real estate, retail and commercial
lend mg.
Swisher graduated from Galha
Academy H1gh School. She resides
in Cheshire wuh her husband
Thero n (Wally) Her daughter,
L1 sa. reside s in Columbus and 15
attending Columbus State Un1ver c;11y.

VERNAL RLACK WOOD

Star Bane rejects Fifth Third's offer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Star
Fiflh Th1rd and Star Bane Corp.
Bane Corp. has reJCcted Fifth lh1rd arc the c11y 's two largest banking
Bancorp's offer to buy i1 for as firms.
much as $1 .2 biltion.
Fifth Third operates 226 bank ·
"It would be an e.cellcnt fit. ing offi ces and its M1dwest Pay We would be Fortress Cincinnati." ment Syste ms subsidiary IS a lead·
George Schaefer Jr., president and tng su ppli er of electronic fund s
chief executive officer of F1fth transfer services.
Third, said at a news conference
. Star 1s a bank holding company
Thursday.
wllh 16 bankmg subsidiaries,
A letter Fifth Third received including Star Bank, which has 176
Thursday from Star Chairman offices in Ohio, Kentucky anr!lndl·
Oliver Waddell dismissed the pos- ana .
sibility of talks about a merger.
F1fth Th1rd's offer was for $38
Star executives and direc10r s to $40 rx:r share. Star Bank's comdeclined comment.

moo SJock closed Thursday on the
New York Stock E&gt;change at
S2R.5 0 per share . Fifth Thlfd's
common stock closed at $46. 75 on
the NYSE after a three -for -two
SJock split announced Thursday .
For Fifth Thrrd, the proposal to
buy Star's nearly 30 million shares
in a stock swap represents a chaoce
to forge a banking fum witlJ almost
$16 billion in assets.
''Our intent is to focus on share holder value and what's in this for
the shareholders," Schaefer said.
"And if you look at what the (Star)
shareholders get out of this . they

will he richly rewank.d "
Sta r' s stod:. re~..:c nt!y ha s been
lradtng recent ly at about $28 a
share . F1f1h lh1rd 's 'lock swap
ofrer wou ld rrrrc.scnt a premium of
)4 percent lo 42 pcrccm. Schaefer
sa id .
" I th1nk 1Im deserves careful
auentton hy the !Star) board . It's a
very scnous offer ... said Anthony
Pol1n1 , an mdustry analyst with
A G. Edwards &amp; Sons m St Lams.
" It '.s a lot ~1f money, and by any
~ta nda r cl 11 s a good pncc . They
have to rC!'PJnd."

OBES creates office of workforce development policy
COLUMBUS · The Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
last week announced the creation of
an Office of Workforce Development Pohcy to research and imple ment policies, develop stratcg1es
and markel workforce development
concepts to me private sector.
The new office will have goals
similar to those proposed yesterday
by President Bush in his Job Training 2000 initiative.
"This reflects the need both at
the national and state level to con-

centrale more on economic com·
petitivencss and the changes in me
workforce and. w~lace required
to be compeuttve," OBES Admin IStrator James Conrad said.
1lle sharoo goals are to:
• promo!&lt; broader adopt1on of
high perfonnance
. workplaces:
.
promot&lt;mcreases m the quality and quanuty of training for the
current and future worHorce
unemployed wort&lt;ers and econom1:
cally disadvantaged individuals;
• develop strategies for further·

.

ing the development of 21st centu·
ry marketplaces; and
• promote the involvement of
labor and management in cooperative solutions to workforce and·
workplace issues.
1lle Office of Workfon:e Dcvel·
opment Policy will analyze and
develop poticy regarding the workforce, welfare, employment, training and education ; develop and
implement a comprehensive workforce development strategy for
Ohio in conjunction with other

state agcnc1es: develop and implement a workplace literacy inJtiatJVe
to rocognile outstandmg prognuns
mcrea se workplace literacy pro:
grams. and enhance the coordination and resources of such programs; and develop and maintain
comprehensive resources regarding
workforce development policies.
programs and mfonnalion.
In addition. the office will creat&lt;
a resource library, develop resource
documents and provide clearinghouse functions.

•

�Page-02-Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 19, 1992

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

Rival rebels outside Kabul

·\F&lt;;!IAN REFUGEES - Afghan refugees,
.lion!,! \\ifh thetr belongings, watt hy a roads1dc
nl'ar """r llagh for transporl.tlion back 10
\fgh ,tnislan Saturday. Hundreds of Afghan

families wbo Oed Afghanistan to Pakistan dur ·
ing rigbling between rebels and government
troops are trying to migrate back as rebels close
in on the Afghani capital of Kabul. (AP Pboto)

Introduction to democracy;
a tough course for Kurds
B~ G.G. LaBEUE
Assoc&amp;aled Press Writer
S \LAII UDIN Iraq - As !rJqt

i--. u rd~ J'rcp.trc lor t.ht."li flf-,t dcrno , r l!tL L'ill t ron" nc,w. t month, th crr

1.. ,iller" J rl' ~ 4uabbl1n g ove r
'II ether to hold autonom) t.IIb
\~ 11h rh t.: L.:ovc mmcnt and lhc mtlr -

dtsLrust

ttJS

l'.adl

other

,\l.t hmoud Osman of lll c Kurd"
t.tn Sou.tltsl Pany proudly ou~m cd
plans for the vote, th en acknowl cdl!.cd. ·' I h.1vc neve r seen clcc
11\lrl\

L .td: uf \U ltn g ex pcrt cncc ts
lllll) the ltr\t worry for the 35 m tl

eta! to co n;tncmg the West 1ha1
Kurds ca n run a democracy and
mana ge lllc lorctgn ard needed 10
rebUild llletr dcva.,l;lted economy
In Banant's vtcw, Iraqt Kurds
need Turkey as an ally tf lllcy are
to acht cvc real freedom from Bagh·
dad He say s he wtll nor tolerate
c· ross · bordcr allacks from hrs
rc gton by scparal tst Turktsh Kurds
or th e Marxt s l Kurdtsh Labor
Party
Ja l.tl Ta laba nJ or the PaUJOIIC
Uruon or Kurdt stan . Barzant' s
matn mal. has a mu ch drfrcrent
Vl~·.tOn

1\.urth tn nort hern Iraq that

1r!ln

At Ius mountam compound out -

g ttcrrlllas were able to
thc tr gra '&gt;p, ~n.h US and

std e Sul.t yma ntyah, he sa rd he

I .tr&lt;&gt;Jk".llt he lp .11u: r a fa,J cd rebe l

Saddam rcrn,u ncd tn power. Domg
Sil. he -;;!tel. wou ld make the Kurds

~ tJr \li'&gt;h

.,·,·p
I1L

nl

111

L~ t \ l .•H

l..m loy,~l
ttl'~ \1.tny hesttatc to gtvc up the
drc.tm o l tndcpc nd ent Kurdt st.an
.111U .llLL'P t more au.amablc autono I he' .trc dn·tdcd by

t

ttty "ttlun Ir aq Others natv c ly
l''umc clcc ll ons wall s udd e nl y
the Ku rch' many problems
In theory. after the May 17 clcc
I IllO l raqt Kurds wall have a um -

,o lv~

wnulc1 not ncgotJdlC: v.1t.h Iraq
.1 tool ol the d1ctatnrsht p ·'

Fingerprinting to end for
some foreigners in Japan
lly K.P. HONG
A~soctaled Press Writer
TOKYO - Japan's legiSlature

ltcd govern ment and a smglc arm y
l,t\ htnncd frum nva\ mt\tttas That
\\nul,\ put them m a suongcr post tlor t tn nego tiat e autonomy ~lth

l'rcs" lcnt Saddam Hussem
Ru t 1h c tntcrnal co nflt cts arc
r' .tl .md the Kurds' cxpcncncc o f
g\1 \. Crnmcn ts a nd armtcs
ru. J1nly from

co m es

rcbcl ltn g aga tn st

[/ll'rt\

'\'o wonder

tha t Ma sso ucl

ll.tu.tnt kaclc r o l th e dom1nant
1\ ""'"l'" Dtmoc ra~ c Pan y. plead

, d .11 .1 cJrn patgn rall y for ..tn

&lt;' rtkily clcc ~on " As he spoke. a
~ u n ~cnt off by acc tdent m the
lll. t'l. tl) .mncD crowd, woundm g d
Jnhcrttcd lca dcr shtp
Irl'fll ht \ f.tthcr Mu stafa Bartant ,
!Ltr/J ill

.~lin v..1" tht m,un Kurd1 sh c h1cf
lr\l lll th l· 11)111\ until hts death tn
'lh- lf1 ]&lt;l79
'.1 1~\o tu l R.Jrt.m t a 4~ year -old

nl t-:CopoltUC'i, 1:-, hardl y the
!ltL iltl!lll d Kurd1 sh gucrnlla leader
•,,,k 1l up tn an 1\0iatcd m o unL1m
lr\Hl l'tw ld llts mou nt a m head
ii!ddl t

former luJiury hotclm
\ , ,d111 d n, ,J resort nam ed for t.h r
f\ urd1 ,l 1 ~hJ,Itm warn or knov.n to
1t 1rt' r' 1'
1

&lt;.1

l11' \\ ,•, [ .1~ S.1l .tdJn
q I l l t ill rea l til'\ the U ntt cd
\t 11 , .tnd f uropc do not ~,~,;.ull .111

Jhkn t lr.141 Kurdtstan th ,lt
•uld lhr ,·.l tL'n rC\O it 'i tn Kur dt\ h

lllL I .. JIL

I l L",. , !] Tl t t~htxmn g

People of Korean, Chmese and
other

forcagn

extraction born tn

Non permanen t re sidents would

Japan do not automaucally rccetve
Japanese etuzenshtp. They face
drswmmallon m schools, employ·
men!, hou smg and other areas.
All long-term foretgn rcstdcnts
here must register pencx!Jcally wtth

' " II l1 avc tube tin gcrpnmcd. how·

the government and r ecetve al1 en

l'\L'f

reg1strauon cards.
Under the new law, non -perma·
ncnt rcSidenls would no lon ger
have 10 be fmgcrpnnted at that
lrme fmgerpnnung would be
replaced by a system usmg photographs. Sig natures and orrtctaf
ramtly re cord s, Jusuc c Mtntstry
offic tals sard

end a controvcrftn gc rpnntang rcqutrcmcnt for

I!HJi.Cd F11d.1y to
\ I,Jl

!l1.lndreds or tho usands or forctgn
pt.:rm~m c nt res 1dents m 1993

The btl!, a reviSIOn or llle Alien
Rc gtSUJit on Law . was passed by
lower llflusc of Parltamcnt The
uprx·r hou.....: 1s expected to approve

tl1c

II
Cm mctiC ami mmJmal,' ' K1m

1\)ong ptl , leader or a Korean res•·
\ ll

ll\ ' '~u ulcr

while

Talabam, 57, sees K.urchstan as a
base for opposruon 10 Saddam.
He srud ousung lllc lraqt leader
would be "nor very dtfftcult" ,r
the oppos1Uon could unrte Revolts
by both the Kurds and lraqt Shute
Musltms, however, faded to dis lodge Saddam after llle Gulf War
Barzam and Talabant drsagrce
on llle furure powers of the elected
leader and whether the army should
be a regular force or a guernlla
band striking from llle mountams
They agree that llle more than
I00.000 guernllas tn the vanous
mtlllras of the umbrella Kurdtslan
Front must be reduced tn number
Bur fighters m llle Banant and Tal abanr mtliuas scorn thetr nvals and
seem unready 10 grvc up the gun s
that mean prcs~ge and power tn llle
Kurdtsh mountains

nts

gm11p ,

..,,ucl of Lhc measure.

· f·orctgn rcstdc nts wtll sttll
h,t\ c 10 &lt;. ury thct r re gistration
L, lrth .H ,t!l tt me' th e same harsh
p~·n.1!1y for vtolators wtll rcmatn
IIHl Jl\lll

h.l\L' 10

rK rm Jncnt rc s tdcnts sull

lx· ltn gc rpnntcd"

Ju ,l tLr Mu11~try offtc 1al s sa1d

til e 'hJngc wou ld atrcct 640,000
lnrt.'tg n permanen t rcsu1cnts, most -

!) 1\orc:tns desce nded from labor"'' lnmhly hrough l 10 Japan dur·
tng World Wa r II. Japan rul ed
Kmc.a as a co lony tn 191()..45
Atvout 120,000 foretgn reSidents
wlln ha ve ltv cd tn Japan ror more
tit 1n ,1 yr.1r

hut arc not pcnnancnt

rl't dcms v.dl stJII IX' fingcrpnntcd

A lower house comm tttec rcc

ommcnded thai the fingerprtnung
requtrcmenr be abolished com pletely five years aher the rcvrs10n
takes crrect.
Ron FuJtyosht , an Amencan of
Japanese descent, has bat~ed m llle
co urts for 10 years over the
requtremenl, whtch he says wa s
mtended 10 conuol Astans m Japan
and force !hem to assrm1late
The government made tl lmpos stb le for htm to remam legally tn
Japan Smce 1987, he has has lived
tn Hawan, returnmg under a spec tal
15 -day entry permll ror tnal sessiOns

I urkcy, Ira1t

111 1\ \•, r1.1

f , r lh.l li L\ l\On, he
, ., 1,,

prepared to
1 1t 1 tlllllno m y wt thtn Ira q
\ 11hl.tm l1fts th e cc onom1 (
J'&gt;

Now...Protein/Fiber Balanced.

By JOHN JENNINGS
Associated Press Writer
KABUL, Afghanistan - A
rebel leader negotiating wuh the
government ordered his fighters to
nng Kabul !Dday to protect the cap·
ttal from nval guerrillas. But nval
factions were closing in on llle city
rrom all srdes.
Today, sporadtc gunfue erupted
and many shops m central Kabul's
bu slltng bazaars qutckly closed
thetr shulters Tracer bullets and
explostons had nashcd in the sur·
rou ndtng mountains ovcrntght as
the government auacked runda mentahst rebels.
Thursday's ouster of Prestdent
Naj tbullah, followrng a stnng of
rebel victories m the 14-year-old
ctvtl war, has heightened fears of a
bloody showdown rn the caprtal
between nval guemlla facuons.
NaJJbullah surrendered power 10
a COaitttOn or generals, CIVI lian
leaders and rebels, rncluding repre senrauves of guerrilla commander
Ahmed Shah Masood. The Untied
Na~ons was sard to be negollatmg
for Najibullah's safe passage our or
the country . The SovieHnstalled
dtctator was tn htdmg
The Unllcd States and other
countnes that supported the Mus·
ltm rebe ls' war agamsl a commu ntst-sryl c government urged th e
guemlla.s to seck a peaceful sct~e ­
mcnt 1n th e CIVIl war, wh1 ch has

Icrt 2 people mtllion dead and more
than 5 mtlhon homeless.
Ma sood sent a message today to
other rebel leade rs based tn the
PalmWnt border Ctly of Peshawar.
urgt ng them to form an tnlenm

\.:ud the clccuon

SUNDAY PUZZLER
See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-6
ACROSS
1 Lawmaker

6 Soapsto ne
10
14
19
2I

Blem1st1
ln1t1 al
VISigoth kmg
Butter substl!ul e

colloq
Dnnlc heav 11 y
Last act
Smaller
Ton so nat art1 sts
P•oneer colo n1 st
29 All About ~
30 PEUBdiSE!
32 Banana or plum

22
23
24
26
28

33 Flesh
34 Ham11ton b1ll

35 W1thered

40 Whtp
41 Mounta1ns o1

44
46
47
48

50
52

Europ e
Mmeo
namesakes
Brands
Lo ved one
Regrets
Country of As1a
Spla shed
Baker s product s

53 Equally
55

Memm andum
57 Spamsll artiCIP.
58 Narrow openmg

59 Rage
60 - the
62 -

64 Speech
66 Ander son 10

namesakes
73 Walked
unst ead il y
75 Los s

77
78
80
81
62

Mon

sctzcd 421
op iUm and arrested I X
. d lr~c d ' mugg lcrs '" a drug swcc.p
1n til L' ~ nuther n Fars prov1n cc,
II..Lnll ltn~ tn !raman new s reports
t' ()ll!hh 111

1mpl em en1s
64 Hear ken
66 Sca tt er

do'wn on drug abuse began three

years ago.

107 Sun god
108 Attract
110 Health resort

t 11 Streep 10
112 Foot pari
113 Depresston
11 5 Compass po 1nt

120
121
124
126
127
128
130
132
133

Fng1d
Ch1et execut1ve
Float •n a1r
A - 1n the arm
Cr1pple
Chmbmg dev •ce
Undergarment
Let 11 stand
Mus1cal
ms trument

134 Everyone

135 Leak lhrough
13 7
139
140
141
14 3

Mast
Nat1ve metal
Locatton
Sally Capucllm

monKeys
14 5 Spamsh gold
146 Ptt!sburgh -

148 Wedded
150 Meal s
152 Mus1ca l dramas

153 Speck
154 Black
156 Sola
157 Part ol
l ~B

lort1hcal10n
In a sleepmg

quarter
159 Cook slowly
160 Run -down

DOWN
I Soupy ~
'2 Mart1n1

colleague s m orgamzed cnmc,

11 Harbor

12 Harvest goddess

90 Hold 1n h1gh

' 1l c.ncc r

13
14
15
16
17

regard
91 Connery and
Young

8 Book page
9 Change from
good
IO bad
10 Beer mug
Tellunum symbol
Decree
Hostelry
Baby's playth1ngs
Slumbers
18 Gull·llk e birds

20 Gtve up
23 Level
25 C1ncmnat1 ~

Sec Inc
83 Unused
85 Sou nd&amp;d a horn
86 Hurned
87 Aromattc
perfume

46 Mate bees
4 7 Stunted person

127 Small rugs

PUBLIC NOna;
The
Oli._t Townahip
Board of Trusteea h ..

NOna; OF PUIIUC

53 Word ol sorrow

129 · - Wtndow

IXCell

54 Patnlul

131 Separated
132 Deep sleep

1973 Dodge Von (Can be provi•ion of Section
tnopectod ol tho Roedovillo 3734.55 (A) of lho Ohio
.... .-. tt.. •---,
Ftro Houoo). TIHI vohlclo io Revi!Md ,..
~
......
to be aold "u is" with no Golllo, Hocking, Jocl!oon,
won ontieo. S..lod bldo wUI Molgo ond Vlnlon Joint
be occeptod until Moy 5, ao ltd Wut. ...neg.,.ent
t992 ot 7:00p.m. llido moy Dlolrict will hold o PUBUC
be 10111 to Pout Ulo 311060 HEARING on tta Dnft Sold
Succooo Rood, Roedoville, Wato llan-..,1 Pion.
OH 45772 . Tho Olivo Thio hoaring wtl be hold Itt
T-nohtp Boord of Trua- lho Wollolon city Building
rHerve the righl to retect on Eoot Broodwoy In

133 Hastens

134 venltlaled
136 Bakl!f s prOducts
138 AGner
140 Mr Laurel
14 t Doom
142 Amount Owed

144 Goddess of hope
147
148
149
151

Macaw
Crowd
Female deer
Consumed

property:

PUBUC NOTICE
HEARING

In accordance with the

ony ond oil bido.
Kolltl-. Hoyman
Clerk of Olive Townah1p

,
Wellaton. Ohio. on U.v
-, 1

(4)

lor rnl- ol ... following

u. 26

21c

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE

1912,. II 2.1)0 p.M.
The lln!ll Pion lo ..olloblo

w-

H~·~UHi~·R·r::

1

electric

·---------------.;,

I AJI. Olld ,,30 P.IL

card at Thanks

Wo Willi lo tlt111~ evoryooo
who t ... tho d111 to stop io of
PloiO'tlf C.t &lt;oator • 2-9-

91, ... htlp .. tlltlnlt ..

......

Vulnerable Nortb·South
Dealer South

Today's band hnds you 10 a contract
that seems desl!ned to be defeated
Buill you bunt assiduously - If that's
the word I wanl - you wrll hod a diS·
tnbull!ln that allows you to succeed
1'o see If you can spot rt, cover the
East-West canis Agamst your su·
spade contract, West leads the heart

Soalh
2 NT

West
Pi!SS
Pi!SS
Pass

5.

4+

3'
4 NT

Eu!

LIBRA JSopt . 23-0ct 23) Genera lly

PBliS
P;w

6+

All pass

speakmg thmg s should go rat her wet1
for you today 11 you have any probl ems
th ey re lik ely to be due to your ,mpulslveness look before you leap

Nor til

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 22) Have lun

Open10g lead ' Q
c__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.J

queen You wtn m band With the ace t10n and endplay You ehmmat.e the
and cash the A K ol spades, East diS· red swiS and then endplay West wtth

canhng a beart on the second round !tis trump W10ner
How can you

avOid

losmg ooe tnck m

each blaclt su1t•
North's three-beart response was a
trall!fer bid, sboWJDg spades South
Jumped to game because he bad sucb a
swtable hand for play 111 spades North
u3ed Roman Key Cant Blaclt.wood,
and after learntng that !tis partner bad
four key cards (three aces and the
spade king), be bid the slam
When tbe trumps break 3-1. the unfortunate dupticalioo of distnbutroo
leaves you staring at two losen How ever, if West has at most two clubs,
you can succeed by way of an elimina·

6

Announcements
3 Announcements
Cuc\tL Mot•l N•w ...n11~.nl ,
Remod•IMi Rooms, C.ble, ~·­

counts

Rounlons,

Fr.

&amp;

Funanlt ,

location

1380

East1m Av!Mlu., G111tpolls, 614446-2501

J--==-==-c-::c.--GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS

HOME I'S
1·900.773-1oo6, S2 os Min 18 ,
Call Today, M"' Tonlle

a.. tatal, Cosl:a Mua, C.lltomla
LIVE I UVE' LIVEI
1-900-454-9800! (t8 •I SSTEL
0" Fl $3 95/M n
1,-----,,.---- - - -

Un•tt•ch8d7 MMt ArN Slnglu
Through Our Slngln NIWSiettar Write SlnQIII, PO Box

1043, Go illpolio. tln!o 456:11.

4

fie..

Courtflouae, Alh-,

Nl\lt1red, Male To Good Home!

Lost &amp; Found

After the heart ace and A-K of

and en1oy yourself today because you
certamly deser\le 11 However stflve to
do so as mexpens1vely as poss1ble You
cou ld be a bit ex trav agant at th1s t1me

SAGinARIUS (Nov 23-Dec. 21) In or
der IO perform eHec!lvely today your
ObjOCII'IIBS must be clearly def1ned 11
you choose to slloot randomly rat lle1
than locus on th e target your results
won t be 1mpress1ve

spades, play off the beart king. Now
you musl try to maiinuze your
cb.ances lllat West won't rutr m until
yo• bave completed the eltrrunatton CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jon 19) You
As you are assummg West IS short 10 m1ght be pr 1vy to some very 1mportar11
and conlident1al 1nlorma110n today
clubs, IllS best to cash dummy's three Don't
attempt to comm11 11 to mem ory
dramood Wlllllen befon! the A·K of though wnt e 1( do wn lor futur e
clubs Fmally. ent With a trump
reference
If things nave gone according to AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob 19) Thtngs
plan, West must lead a red card. con· should work out successfully lo r you tocedmg a ruff·and-4iscard You pttcb day - 11you operate w1th1n the para me.
dummy's club loser and ruff m band ters of your capab1ht1es 11 you try to do
somethmg you weren t tramecl lor fa ilDummy has only trumps left
@ - . . . . .AI'IR&amp;lCU

IIAIIM.

aion. .'

omc.., eour..ou-.

22S ....... Sl.,

1

Mh0fty Ohio

Pupplet

To Good Horn. can

6"14-446-7157 Ah.,- 4 P:U.

..,..,,atst ltlrft4oy.
111thdnfy of Morlt Got

-· r

•-

llnlt It wisH, tlllld cards

Of l'IIMIINrlllllrt their

Pf'Yirt, while I was a
patient at Hoher
Hospital anti Pltlerresl
Cart Center. AI your

thaughts and prayers
Wtl'tltrymuch

apprtdatetl.
. . . Gothard

1

Card of Thanks

WI Ire deeply gret•
ful to thoH who Hnl
flowora,lood, money
.nd In other wayo
expreSHclthelr aym·
p.1thy on the dllllh

ol our mother .nd
wlla, EVELYN MAE
KEYSE BOGGESS.
Our thanlte to Mr.

.ndMra. Emeat
Buoh, Ewing Funeral
Homo, SyracuH
EMS, end the trllnda
and nelghbora lor
their 1Upport.
From the tamlty of
EVELYN BOGGESS

7

Yard Sale

9

Found Amg G1urd, At Oh~ Y•llay Bank, (Jackson PUce, G•tllpolls) Par1ung lol Call To

ure

IS

ltkely

WST ne1r Comslalk area,
StMr1en Huskay, d•rlush f9d &amp;
~~7s6 ~;nlht old, reward,

24

Don '1 Junlc 11 1Sell Us Yoor Non
Work ing
Major
Apptla nc"s
Color TV's, VCR s, Microwave -;
Etc 614·256- 1238

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-0.C 211 You
could be on rather th1n 1ce today where
personal relat lonshtps are concerned
Be very careful how you deal w1lh oth·
ers
Don 1 be too asser11ve or
d1ctatonal
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22·Jon. 18) Do nol
exceed your au thonty today m a Sltual•on where you rea part1c1pant but not
!he boss II you step over the line , senous complica tiOn s could result
AQUARIUS (Jon :ZO..Fob. 18) The&lt;e's a
poss1b1l1ty you mtght step oul ol character today- and cater only to those you
th1nk can do you some good Unfortunately you p1 c ked a bad day to cl1ange
roles

PISCES (Fob. 211-Morch 201 Be caretul
today that you do not ahenate two peo·
pte whose support you may sl1ortty
need Th 1s cou ld occur 1f you act before
you thmk
ARIES (Morch 21-Apnl 11) lndtvtduals
1n m1nor roles could severely reduce
you r opt1ons today Instead of getting
•nvolved w1th subord1nates take your
case to deciSIOn-makefS who can g1ve
you a qu1ck yes" or · no

TO THE tiERSON WHO STOLE
MY PUPPY II Your Not Gomg To

Top Prlc91 P11d All Old U S
Cams, Gold Ring !!I Sliver Coins
Gold Coins M T S Coin Sh op
151 Second Avenue , Gallipo lis

I

Return Him

8

PS

I Hope Somebody Steals Someone You love Som~•y, So You
CIA SM How II FMII It Found

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PLEASE Call 614-446-02"25

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1992 at II
ALBANY, OHIO

Card of Thanks
The family of

CHARLES F.
WILDERMUTH
would llka to expre••
our elncere ~r.c:•
tlon for ell the preyere,
to ell who Mnt flowere, lumlehed food,
aent a lovely c:ard end
for ell the comforting
worde during hie II~
ne•• and death.
A epecl1tlthllnlte to
Dr. Mia and Dr. Levert
end to the nurMe Ill
Holzer Medical Center

(upeclrtlly Sheila
Court and Helen
Honer). Rev. Roy
Myera, the paiii&gt;Mrere
and Ewing Fu~~Mtl
Home. ll8y God Bte..
you all.
Wile, Kmhryn. dltughtere, eon•l,..llw and
grandchildren.

a.m.

Take US 50 &amp; 32 W. and axil onto 50 W. towa rds
McArthur Auction Ia located a quarter ot a mile
on !he loll Si gns will be posted.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS · 36 tn GE eleclrtc range
small sunr ay gas range , refugerator, upr 1ght freezer
k enmore dtshwasher, 2 full s1ze metal beds . couch
and cha1r, couch, recltners , occa s1onal cha1rs. d1nette
sets walnut cedar hned wardrobe , cedar wardrobe

RCA B&amp;W IV , 4 drawer ftltng cabtnel melal ch tna
cabtnet

11

Help Wanted

_ _ __.:__ _ _ _ __
AVO N 1 AI! Areas I Shntey
Sp&amp;ars, 304 675 1429

8

larry lively 6"14 -lBB-9303

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

Alleast G.t H11
St"tole There Due Thlt WMk He
Way Olt Without Them

Employment Services

Wanted To Buy Junk Au1 os
W1th Or Without Motors Ca ll

A1 ck Peal'!oon Auction Company,
full limo auct1oneer, complala
•uctton
service
llcansed
J66,0hlo &amp; Wesl Virginia, 304 -

m -5785
lost C.mster V1cuum CINner
Fall From Van, At7 North Bel· Wedemuyer • Auction Servlc1
ween
Add1.on,
Cheshire A1o Grand" Ohio 614-245-5152 '
Thursd•y Reward 1 114-367-7123
lost Tan Wale Puppy Blulc
Spot1..:! Tongu• Blade. Nylon
Collar
lost Around Holzer
Hospit.1l !Gallipolis)

wanted to Buy

Complete Houuhold Or Eslates l Any Type Of Furnlturo
Appliances Antique's E1c Al so
Appr11UI Avallab la l 614 24&gt;5152

Al l Ya rd Sales Wust 81 Paid In
Advance DEADLINE 2 00 p m
Identify BelWHn Th1 Hours g the da y belor• lhe ad Is to run
Sunday IKI1tlon - 2 00 p m
A M &amp; 2 PM 614-4-46-6"M7
Fnd•y Mond•y edition . 2 oo
Found
Short
H11t, Small p m Saturd&amp;y
Hom111ek BNgle Tor. llghi 1_ _ _ _..:..__ _ _ __
TontB&lt;own And A Lhto 'Whho 8
PubliC Sale
We Ar. Trying To Get H•r To
ut 614·38 .. 0092
&amp; Auction

Col......,..,

llloncloy lhlough Thuradoy.
(4) It ltc

i' . . .

• 764
+A K 4 2

By Phillip Aldrr

Giveaway
Board of I·,- ,.-_,
--c-,-,.-t-2_11_:on_t_h_o_O_Id_
County Commiulo-.' Of· Spade, Fomolo IS llonth Otd
Iocollono:
ATHENS ··-

;===:::====::;

.

'AK

~~~

121 Peel
122 Dawdles

Bldo wUI be op-ln llo 1 card of Thanks
T,_,..,.o
olllco on April
23rd.
ltomo moy be oHn ot
I would Mkt to tftlnk
e..torn High School bel- evorv- wht ~-L the

Visit Your Nearby Purina &amp;Ws Outlet Today/

--- - •... _._

Keep the foot
on the gas

encouragement

bldo.

.........:::::::::::::::::.
.......
.
''
...
...
....
..
......
...
.. .'

SOUTH
t AK83

Cron1es colloq

Public Notice

loot bai lers
72 Fac1al expr esSIOn
74 French arttcte

,96432
• J 10 3
+Q to 7 6

120 Shouted

Public Notice

67 Pa1d nollces
69 EXISt
70 Los Angeles

t9

'QJI08
• 9 8 52
+J 9

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl. 22) Instead ol
1ook1ng tor solutions today you might
seek ou t a scapegoat on whom to
blame what goes wrong Th1s IS not a
formula lor success
LIBRA (Sopl 23-0ct. 23) Oocrs&lt;ons you
make today where your work 1S con ce rned should not be based on emo·
t•onat prem1ses Let your log1c r~de herd
over yo ur feelings
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) II mtght be
d1fi1Cull bui ll you handle thmgs proper ly today you should end up 1n lhe profit
column 11 you behave 1rr&amp;t1onally, you 11
be courtmg red tnk

Farm mach1ne
F1n1shes

maneuver
126 Colored band

65 Sharp

• Q to 5

CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) You could
be lhe rec1p1ent of a supenor's toler ance and co mpassiOn today However,
when 1t s your tu rn to deal w1th a subor dinate you may not be as k1nd as your
benefactor was
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If rhere tsn 1anythmg of matenal value at stake today,
you t1 De a det1ghtfut tnd1v1dual wtth
whom to be 1nvotved However, tf someone ups th e ante tt could be another
story alt ogether

Owls cry
Faucet probkwn

pronunctat10n
52 R1d1cule

umntent1onally

an acllve •magmat 1on and your 1deas
should be rather good to day However
wh ere you may fall short• s when you try
to translate your thoughts 1nto act1on
LEO (July 23- Aug 22) EHect1vely man
agmg your o wn f1na nc1a 1aMa1rs or th OS4!
of another IS not you r strong su11 to day
You could end up w1t h less than what
you start ed o ut w1th
VIRGO (Aug. 23- Sept 22) Be op t1m1SIIc
t odav regardmg en dea'llors you d1rect
but by the same token be rea l1 s11c
WIShful th 1nk1ng 1S not necessa r1ty pos1 11ve tlunkm g

be good and bad 1n partnership ar rangements today You may accom·
phsh wha t you set out to do but there
could be some negattlffl atter~ffects

Courts

123 Golfer 's needs
125 Fencers

63 Delayed

CANCER !Juno 21 -July 22) You have

EAST

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) There mtghl

102 Makes lace

- Trek
51 Om1t from

56 Fundamental
59 Comes !rom the
scene agam
60 ' W1seguy ' sta r
61 Lamprey s

WEST

r ather to rtunate today when dealing
w1th 1ntangtbles , but you must be car•
lu i when 11 comes to materlat maners If
you 're 1mpuls1ve vou could be penalIZed Mator changes are ahead for Taurusm the com 1ng year Send for Taurus'
A stro·Graph pred1ct1on s today Mall
$I 25 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
thiS newspaper, P 0 Box 91428, Cleve.
land OH 4410, -3428 Be sure to state
your zodtac s1gn

446·

hydroullc .,.,.. 45640.
MEIGS COUNTY_Jioord
1-Grwelt'of County Cotll•lalonoro"
7- Royol oloctrlc typ• Ottlca,
Courthouee ,
wrltoro
t&gt;omoroy, Ohio WQ.
1-1811 oloclric rr-•IW
VINlON COUNTY-.Bo.d
t-Thormolu
of
County Comnlleelonore•
All lhingo ohould be oold Offlco,
Courthouoo.
"aa·l•" and we r.erv• the
ltlcArlhw,
Olllo
right lo rojecl ony ond Ill April It, 111t2 4515 I.

Rabbit Choi.C'

TRUSTWORTHY~

lion a year earlier, USDA satd .
Imports of sp1ce oleoresms essences of navors and fragrances
'" a natural ot! base - totaled
another $32.6 mtUron, a record.
Vanrlla bean shipments totaled
S69 mtlhon, rollowed by black and
whne pepper. $60.6 mrlhon; capsrc um peppers and paprika, $41 6
mJtlton, sesame seeds, $40.6 mtl ·
l10n; and cass1a and cwnamon,
$27.8 mrlhon.
USDA sard food manufacturers
and mslllutwns use nearly two ·
thtrds of sptees consumed m the
United States, up from 40 percent a
decade ear her Retarl stores make
up most of llle rcmrunder
By value, lndonesta, India and
Madagascar are the maJOr sources
of U.S. sptce tmporl s Imports
account for two-lhtrds of sptccs
used m llle Unr!ed States.
USDA said mcreased demand
for clhntc foods has conmbu!Cd to
the nsmg use of sptces, while !he
ucnd toward less salt m foods has
sLi mulated more condiment use to
compensate ror flavor loss
The Untied Stales also exports
spices - $86.6 m1lhon last year,
up from $80 .5 mtllton tn 1990.
Dehydrated on1ons were the most
tmporrant sptce export, totalmg
$37 5 mrlhon , followed by dchy ·
drated gartic. $7 5 mrUron

PHILLIP
ALDER

111e too senously today but by the
sa me token don t treat ser1ous matters
1n a capn c1o us manner Yo u ll be wrong
1f you step over the 11ne e•ther way
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) In order to 11r•ahz e an ongo•ng and anno y1ng development you m 1ght do somethmg w•lhout lh mk1ng today that w1ll so l'o'e your
Old problem s but , 1n so d01ng create
new ones

April 20,1Qt2
TAURUS ~Aprtl ~oy 201 You may be

105 Beat repeatedly

49

good·naturedly

.AKQ
• 8 53

TAURUS (Aprti2G-Moy 20) Don' t tak e

97 Juncture

109
11 2
113
114
116
118

Fonda
43 Black substance
45 Wooden hammer

t-1.1-tl

You musl be pat1ent w1th your 1mpor
\ant en ter pn se s 1n the year ahead A
slow start could unn erve you but hang
1n there and tel man er s unfold at the1r
own pace
ARIES (March 21·Aprtl 18) If you re
designated to llandlo a com plic ated asSignment toda~ be e~~.tra cog n1zan t of
deta1 ls and lnstrucllons It will be the IllIte \h1ngs tllat co uld pack a wallop Ari es, treat yourself to a btrtllday g1f1 Send
for Anes Astro- Grap ll pred1ct1ons for
the year ahead by mat11 ng $1 25 plu s a
long self addressed sta mped enve·
lope to Astro·Gr aph c/o th1s newspa
per P 0 Box 91-428 Cleveland OH
44101 -3428 Be sure to state your zod1
ac s1gn

96 Pmches

33 Fermen ted drmk
36 Verve

mgred1ent
41 Jane, to Br1dget

NORTH
tJ1S42
'7 5

Apnl 19, 11192

94 Pac1n0 10

100 Hayes 10

40 Borscht

,;c rvauon DtSUICI wtll present some
ravonte s Ttmes and selec~ons wtll
be announ ced
There wtll also be a drsplay on
lhal week wrth mformatron about
"Our Treasured Trees " Bookmark ·
crs and poems wrll be di Stributed
dunng lllc week as part or the ccle·
brau on
We mvlle children from lllc sur
ro undrn g area to aucnd

waste a lot of time and emollon today
wa111ng tor someone to help you with
someth1ng you can actually do on your
own Stn ve l o be self . suff~aent

~'Birthday

92 Go astray
93 Plagued

27 E&lt;plodes
28 Bose
31 Insect eggs
38 Btnd

department tS capable of compilmg
a li st or regulattons pendmg on a
gtven date, parllcularly those ror
whrch publtc nol! ccs have been
ISSued

BRIDGE

PISCES (Fob. :zo..March 20) You mlghl

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

l~uge&lt;

The Nutritional Adoontage ofImproved

BROWN'S

\\on' t get delivered th1s year,

J[lcr poltee round guns '" lar ge
cllix-olalc eggs all egedly meant for

88 Rubber trees
89 Behold'

6 As tar as
7 Pnest's vestment

77 Fnghten
79 Su pplemental

GaUia SWCD
The Soil and Water Stewardshtp
Wee k them e or "Our Treasured
Trees" wrll be the focus ror a spcc tal story relhng program at the
Bossard Memonal Ltbrar y on
Thursday , Apnl 30
Durrng the story tclhng um c
Chns Ebltn , chtldren 's hbranan.
Bossard Memonal Ltbrary and
Conmc While, Program Admtnts -

Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-03

~'\bur

Stewardshz'p 111
1eek progr·nm
"
P' P'
theme z•s '0 ur 1'T'reasured 1'T'rees '
By CONSTANCE WHITE
uaiOr, Gall ta Sot! and Water Cun·

holot

Ca1ch Great

'

106 Tan talum symbol

,~n

lfL\ U\

ocoftold

(614} 446·8128
Classificds'

Egypt tan god
of crea t1on

NAPLES, Italy (AP) ~
li.tlt an ca re owners Easter

1-Economy -

St. Rt. 160 • lkil, •
Buys In The

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ A yen
ror cthntc foods and the trend
I O~&lt;.a rd sp tccs mstead or sail arc
hcaltn g up Ihe co untry 's demand
ror rorctg n navon ng s.
Th e \3n tll a bean rs lhe mosl
tmportanl sptcc tmportcd 1010 the
li nHcd S rates. says the Agnculturc
Departm ent ilul pepper - while
and black - ISa close second.
Imports of condimenLs, seasontogs aod navonngs wtaled $362 3
rntl!ton tn 1991. up from S355 mrl·

Itt,

76 Iron symbol

,ify regulatory burdens deSigned 10
save Sl brllron, mcludtng a oneyear delay m regulauons requtnng
new label s on meal and poultr y
products
Leahy satd he bclteves th e

Condiment imports up in '91

o..-.

'\c~-~.,

th~· \ U'i ptt l~

A

s

man or th
N
The chatr C
e cna1e gn c ullure
~ n.t mii! Cc says th e Agnculture
Dcrpartment docsn I know - or IS
re usmg to tell ~ what rood and
rarm mg regula!J ons have been pul
on hold under a prcstdenual order
Sen Patnck Leahy, D-YI., f11&gt;l
soughtthehslofre gulauonswttha
March 23 letter to Agnculture Sec·
retary Edward Madigan .
M~.drgan responded April 3 say·
mg: We do nor have a comprc ·
henmc list or regulaaons that have
bc.en delayed or canceled "
Prcstdent Bush announced Jan
28 that pendmg federal regulauons
would be suspended ror 90 days
Severa l e•e mpllon s were also
granted , such as for regulauons that
promoted economrc growth or
arrwed pubhc health and safety
A congressiOnal source said lllc

Bush admtrustr31Jon now IS coostdenng extendmg the moratonum
beyond the end of Aprtl.
Leahy contends the preSident' s
weU-pubhcized announcement was
nothmg more !han a public relauons effon.
" What bothers me mosttS thai
the admmis!rlluon has no rdea what
regulaLJons wtll be afrected" srud
Leahy. "Andiftheydokno;., then
they're afr.nd to tell the Am~ncan
people."
Mad12an told Leahv that rather
than ~sung llle rcgulauons, USDA
has used the 90-day period 10 pan
to speed up consrderatron or progrowth proposals
The department has also been
revrewmg and 1mprovtng regula·
uons and programs to Improve ser·
vt ces and make program s mor e
"user-friendly," Madrgan has sru d.
As pan of that errort, Madigan
announced 13 steps to ease or mod -

MISC. FOR SALE
Ohio 45701 .
614-446-2338
Tho Euliorn Local School
GAll lA COUNTY_.Bo.d 6mos old, long halrld, black
wtll ull by uolod bid lito of County ComMI11Ia n«a" cal, lltlar tr•ln.cf, comH whh 111following ilomo:
Olnc., CourlhD'IM, locuot ,., box, 614- 992~508
1- 12" Crollomon lablo SL.
Gollltl Dlo,Ohlo 45131.
Aua1rlhln s~.phlfd pupp.... 8
• .,. • motof no good
HOCKING COUNTY-. wk1 old 304-615-4156 1fter dart..
l~ocino pow«- ...
Boord ol Coullty CotiiMio- hmall Autlrallln Shephard,
1-Kollof pow• hockolonttn' om...
614-379-2798
1-Crafhman b•ll/diac
I Eat lbln SL. ~Ohio
...--tor,olc.
43131.
Full blooded whil1 ,.rn.1le
1- Yoloo Arn•lcon wood
JACKSON COUNTY.. -- slda
Poking
..., hiS boon spade, Indog, 304-576-2364
!oilto - n-motor
Boord of County Cotllmlo- I ----"'-_:__:__:__ _

S39S

lltnl.t \

cot 1cs vwlauons since the crack -

~

Sew1ng border s
Encounters
Japan en d1ng
Wr111ng

25 LB.
BAG

nr.tr t ,~·l urtty for ces

l lndc r lr antan law. anyon e
, ,,11 gh1 wtth even small quanuucs
or dru gs rcce tve s a manda10ry
tlcath sc n1cnce. More than 2,000
lramans have been hanged for nat·

i~~f''U ER DIXON

WASIIINGa;~ Wnter

reportS sa1d Samrday.
Ac~ng on a llp, pollee on Fnday
ratdcd 1he care or Grovanm Mas·
trobu ono, allegedly a member or
the Camorra, a Neopolt!an orga ·
nrzcd cnmc group, said !he Rome ba.&lt;ed ne wspaper II Messaggero.
1 he eggs were wrapped m colmcd rot! and nbbon s and tagged
··sold.' · so that unsuspecung cus·
tomcrs wouldn 'I try 10 buy them ,
S.1td L' Umta newspaper Four gWis
were found . mcl udmg one with a

mgred1ent s
3 To the s•de
4 Morsel
5 Atver 1n Atnca

wv

USDA
blasted
by
Leahy
for
regulations
By

153 Mother
155 Compass potnl

lrJ -

llw " ' rll tal IslamiC Republic
r\ r.;c ncy. monitored m
\. 1, mt,1 ~ahl ra1d'i were conducted
rr tJtc' t ll~nso f Abadeh and Darab.
r hl' ~l r' ttHn \!I.-as concealed m stx
.. trs I he .tgcncy dtd not tdcnory

Color

70 - Dawn Chong
7 1 Car ney

Iranian
.
.police
setze opzum

"' 1

People
Angeles

68 - L1vmg
69 Twtsled

105

I 19 Marl1n 10

39 Vase

42

8 7 Gold •n bars
89 Brown ol mustc
92 Publ1c storehouse
95 Smg1ng birds
98 Toward shelter
99 Indolent
10 I Iterat e
103 Great Lake
104 Conduc ted

11 7 Hall

37 Redact

1s nu -

'-It OS!·\. Cyprus (AP) -

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Different kind of egg

If,,,~ ,.I. ltr 1mposed last Ouohc r
.,, !l or,,· ltl\ ' 1\urd s mto line
f J, "It . 1r /..chart, B~Lant ~ Lhtcf
h ·k , [II u1

government because "the siruauon
•s geltmg out of control."
Masood ordered his Jamiat+
lslami fighters and drssident sol·
dters who joined them 10 form a
protective ring around Kabul to
keep nval guemUas from stormmg
the city, said Abdul Rah1m, the
commander's Paktstan-based
spokesman.
Masood held talks Fnday wtlh
1he government. Today his group
sard It had struck deals wrth demoralized miliua and anny soldiers and
no" contro lled the provinces of
Herat, whtch borders Iran, and
Kunduz, near the former Sovtel
Umon, and the country's secondlargest air base, at Shindand in
western Afghanistan.
On Fnday. firebrand guernlla
leader Gulbuddin Hekrnal)'ar of the
Hezb·t·lslami guernlla factiOn
1ss ued an ulumatum 10 the government and the army - surrender or
hts fighters would attack.
Hczb -i-lslamt's Pakistan-based
spokesman Saeed Quribar said
10day that thousands of ftghters
were poised on the southern edge
of Kabul, and columns of tanks
were movmg from the north, west
and east toward the city
Foretgn Mm1ster Abdul Wakil
on Fnday traveled mto enemy tem·
tory to mee t wuh Ahmed Shah
Masood, known as the "Lron of
the PailJShtr" after the northeastern
val ley regron where he has h1 s
stronghold.
Last week, Masood's Jarmal+
Islam• forces took control of strate·
gtc garnsons, the mam htghway
ltnktng Kabul wuh the rormer

Sovtet Union. and the country's
mam atr base.
The leader of Jamtat's mam
nval among the rebel groups,
Hezb·t·lslami, ordered hiS forces to
take up postuons on the outskirts of
the capital. They have held off on a
full-scale otTensiYe.
Many Afghanis fear Najlbullah"s departure will open the way
to a power suuggle.
The talks between Masood and
Waktl ratsed th e prospect of a
showdown between Jamiat-i-lslami
and Hezb·r-lslarm. The government
may be lrymg to exploit the bitter
d1fferenccs that plague the rebels,
also known as muJahedeen " hely warriors."
Throughout the day Fnday. as
the governmen 1 fired on advancing
guernllas, the dtstanl crackle of
guns and !he dull thud of artillery
and rockets could be heard. After
nightfall, tracer bullets and exploSions illuminated the sky over the
surrounding mountams .
Gulbuddin Hekrnaryar, head of
Hezb-I·Islami, threatened to auack
Kabul unless the army and the rem·
nanrs of Najtbullah 's government
surrendered. He and another rebel
leader. Abdul Rasool Sayyaf,
moved !herr fighters closer to the
Ctly.
"lr the present administration in
Kabul fruls to transfer power to the
mujahedeen, then no one can stop
the muJahedeen from entenng
Kabul," Hckrnaryar told supporters
m Shamshuroo, h1s heavily forofred headquarters on the Paktstan
border.

April 19, 1992

maytag wr1nger wa sher, dryer, dresser

ltn e n ~

fan s, new cha!Kware, qutll s, loi s ol mtsc
glass ware and other 11ems
FARM EQUIPMENT: 532 Fo rd batler used 2 yrs.
513 Ford stde delivery rake. 3 po tnl post hole dtgger
Ford corn planter, ferttltze r, 3 patnl boo m. 3 po1n1
mower 14 tn plows , 2 wheel lratler. pull diSC. ptckup
stock racks
Auct to neers note Thts auctton cons•st ol seve ral

parttal estates and cons1g nmenl s lrom ol hers Farm
machrn ery Will se ll prompt ly all1 a m
Term s of Auclton Cash 01 check wt1 h postltve ID
Ou l ol stale checks wtth bank fe ller only Not

MAKE IT ARUlE..
USE WANT ADS.
AHANDY
TOOl

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

ABSOLUTE ESTATE AUCTION
10:00 A.M.
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1992
ESTATE OF KENNY ERICKSON
ERICKSON RD., ALBANY, OHIO
DIRECTIONS TakeS. R. 32 (Appelachlan Highway)
weal from Albany, Ohio approx. 6'.&gt; mi. to Meige
Co. Rd. 7. Left on Co. Rd. 7 approx. '!.mi. to lot
road to right (Erickeon Road). Firat farm on right
REGISTERED BELGIAN HOASES: 5 Reg Belgt~n
mares I w/2 week old foal Others due Wtlh tn neJ&lt;I 2
months All are well broke 2 wtll be sold as a learn
olhers wtll be sold separately 5 yr old Purebred
Belgtan Stud (proven). broke lo work rn team. Yearltng
Purebred Belgtan Stud Co~s
HORSE DRAWN EQUIPMENT: Olr ver Rtdtng Plow
Parade Wagon, Cu"1vators (rt dtng) , Corn Ptanlo;
(needs repatr), Fore Carl. Complete sel ol Show
Harness. 2 Adjustable Collars. Several Hailers. 1 sel
Harness . lots of M1sc Horse Equtpment . Leather
Sewtng Machtne (needs repatr)
TRUCK &amp; TRAILER: 1978 Dodge Y, ton Truck
w/eleclnc Dump Bed (engtne knock) 16"Tandem Al&lt;le
Ltveslock Tratler
TRACTOR EQUIPMENT: Vermeer 540 C Round Baler
New Holland 467 Hay B1ne, Massey Ferguson Squar~
Baler, A C PT 0 Rake . Complete Ballsaw Sawmtll
48" . I H Gram Dnll. 2 Blm Pull Type Plows, 3 Blm.
Pull Typo Plows, Rolary Hoe 6' Pull Type DtSk, Loader
lor J D 50, j D 50 &amp; 720 Dtesellor parts, several pes.
farm equ1pmenl for parts
MISC. ITEMS: a· Shde tn Truck Camper, 2 Truck
Toppers, Ladder Racks lor PICkup, 6" Wood Planer
Anltque Dtnner Bell (Penn &amp; Gaff , C1nn .. Ohio), Grind
Stone, Anltque Ortll Press, Plus several small rtems
!rom autbUJidings.
Note: Horse&amp; to aell at 10 30 sharp.

EXECUTRIX: PAUlA BREWER

respo ns1ble for loss or accidents

Meip C.. Pr....• Can t272SS

AUCTIONEER: Mark Hut[hinson
614-698·6706
U[ensed aad Bonded in the State of Ohio
" Asm. Frank Hutchiaso1 614-592·4349

AUCTIONEER: COL W. KEITH MOlDEN
614-742-2048
• CASH

Ohio Lie. 1863
LIIICH

•

POS. LD•

�Page-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel
11

Help wanted

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant,

5

11

Happy Ads

8

Pat~nt Service Assistant, Approrlmataly 20-25 Hours Ptr
Wookt Mullt 81 Enargatic And
Abitl o Wof'l( Flexible Schedule
Including Day, Evening And
S..turdly Hours. Medical Otllce
Exper61nct Helpful, W11t Train
Mature, Rasponsible Person
Who It Sensitive To Birth Con·
trot And Reproduetlve HaaHh
Clients Must Be Well
Needs
Organized;
Aecurata
W1th
Flgurn And Record Keeping,
HaYti Superior Communication
Skills Must Be Able To Work
Undtr Guldelln" Wllh M1n1mal
Supervision Requires Reliable
Transportatl'"2 Ability To Work
In Melgt, lillllla, Lawrance
Counllee And Othar Sltas It
NMded Time And Out Ot
County Travel Paid Slar1 $5 50
Send
Rnume
And
Two
Emplo~mtnt
Reftrencet
To
Planned
Parenthood
Ot
Sou1httsl Ohio, 396 Richland
Avenue, Athens, Oh1o 45701 By
April 30, 1992, EOE./ESP

Assistant Director o f Nursing
fOJ 68 bed loog term care
tactlity Must have registered

charge

nurse

background

Prefer

Gerattc

Computer

perience a ;Mus

••·

Apply Care

Haven of Point Plusant, Rt 1
Box 326 Potnl Pleasant, WV
25550 EOE..cons1derable salary

and beneltts
AU STRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
Pily,
Benellls
Transport at ion,
407-292-4747
Ex t
571
9a m lOp m
To ll

Refunded
Babystt1er In my home,

!5 days a

week , Monday -Fnday, 614-992-

3257
Baby slt1ar 3-!5 Cays Par WHk
Varied Schedule
References
Required
614 245-9415
Bat-

ween 8PM &amp;IOPM

BARTENDERS / CASINO
WORKERStDECK
~AN0S if1ostasses,
Etc
Postllons Aboard Crutse Shtps
. $300($900 Wkly FrM World
Tra11el No E1p Necessary 1·
206-736-7000 Ext 1594N8
Ctly ol Polnl Pleasant is accept
lng apP'tcatlont for car1thed
lifeguards lor the 1992 swim·
ming season Apply Ctty Hall,
400 VIand St, Point Pleasant,
WV 25550 r.ta~or RusHII V Holland
Easy Work l Excellent Pay' As
semble Produets AI Horne Call
Ton Free, 1 800-467-6566, Ext

313
Home Worker~ Needed By 150
Ftrms Top !=Ia~, $339 Weak Or
Mora Rush $1 00 Self-Addres sed Stamped Envelo~ 110 O&amp;A
Supplies, Box 11143, Fairborn,
01145324

No
l.&amp;adsl
l.&amp;ads'
L.aadsl
propos1l1on e11er enroll Union
Members Supplement 1n your
area Insurance hcanM preferred but will treln 2 hard wortr.lng
conscious people looll.lnl tor
pernment full lime pcn,itlon
Compan~
benefltt, complete
lrammg provided Call ~rsonnel 304 342 4849
Interview

con Udent 1a1

Mid Oh1o Valley Health Depart ment s.ekmg contractual RN to
work
case
management
program Jackson C ount~. WV
Must han cumml WV ltcense
and ba ahg1ble lor WV Chtll Sar·
vice Must have minimum ot
three years nursing experience
Pos11ian reqwras knowledge ol
nurt•ng assessments
Must
have
vehicle
Salary
plus
mileage Please send WRITTEN
resume to D1x1a Showaller, RN ,
D!rtclor
Clmmcal
Services
MOVHD,
211-6th
Sl
Parkersburg, WV 26101

Estate of the late CHESTER MOTZNIK
19656 Mill Schaal Road, Guysvdle, Ohio.
Directions from Athens, Ohio. Take U.S. Route 50
Eosl (toward Belpre) approx . 12 miles (past the
village of Guysvnle) to Count~ Road #4 2 (MUI
School Rd), follow lor 1-mile to auction.
Easy to locate.
THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 23,1992 at 5:00pm
M F 11 LOADER, d1o sel (usod 1n saw mill
cper ,Jir on abl 20 years old) Bu ckel w11i sa il
separately will F1IB1Iher loader or bul l dozer'
2 FARM TRACTORS: M F 65 &amp; M F 180 both
drese l (1 80 need s trans repa11 ),
SAW MILL POWER PLANT &amp; COMPONENTS:
Del rort Derse l mod PTA 11485 power pl ant Cable
cr1ve 3 bu nk Cdrrta g e Trac k D rag cham to remove
sa .v du st Saw mrll edger 60" blade
FARM EQUIPMENT: Olive r 520 bale r. M F 'Dyna
Balance 7 mower 3pl Danu ser 12' post hole auger,
M F 4 gang hyd diSC Bush Hog 502 mower, M F. 3·
1&gt;3 plo ws M F 16 tractor bla de. round bale mover,
Lely br oadcas: er . 30 gra1n elevator 16' hay wagon
(n eeds wood) , N H. 404 hay cond•troner , New Idea
raKe. spr1 ng tooth harrow,
FLAT BED TRUCK : 197 1 ln1 ern at1onal Fleel star
20 t 0 fl at oed tru ck w/20 bed w1n ch, 5 ove r 4
lran sm rss ron, ga solme AND lnl Fle el star 1910A

TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 7:00 P.M.
LOCATION: Gallipolis Jaycees Building ,
Rt. 35 By-pass at Kanauga .
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES : Wicke r doll ca rnage
liErweplrron&lt;lll , datrng back to 1910), Oak p1 ess back chau
• «noll wood cabmet, Sellers ch1mney cupboard, ornate
bed , 2 dressers ( 1 wtth mtrror d epresston ) d rytn g
corn er shelf, book shelf Queen Ann e cha11. Seth
homas alarm clock, stone Ja rs, mdk c ro c ~ s. several
glass kitchen •tems. hand -pa•nt ed lamp s
1g~~~~~ a ::. to tnclude 40+
depress1on blow n, Ble nk o
pressod, Carnival, severa l preces McCo y, McCoy
l cln•" cookte Jar, Wanware bowl s, shtp cast 1ro n door
op (orrg pamt), gray granlle dbl borler, 011 lamps ol d
she s Gall1pohs postcards, small adv t1em s from
Galllpol• s. Pomeroy. Parkersburg Ra venswoo d,
Gallrpolr s Forry adv s1gns, Jew elry, cas1110n lrgures,
skillets marbles, stoneware llem s, linens. bedspreads,
1 es, chalkware, J1m Beam bonle s, ptctur es, Curner &amp;
lves ch1na. mov1e memorabilia, political Items. Mr Pea nut
arm br ac lat, kttchen uten s tl s , old ltn s, salt &amp; pepper s,
l r l,il r n·, lunch boxes, old bonles. cams. toys. sliver plated
ttems, ht stoncal news Items, candl e ho lders, ol d wooden
boxe s sh•p lamp, TH IS IS A BRIE F LI ST IN G WITH
MORE THAN THREE HUNDR ED ANTIQUE &amp;
COLLECTIBLE ITEMS •
MISCELLANEOUS : Nrce 3 pc oa &lt; be dr oo m su11e,
maple roc ke r, small stands, table s k n1ck k n ac k shelves
Home lnt enor, MUCH MOREl
THIS WILL BE A VERY INTERESTING SALE WITH
MANY ITEMS COMING FROM A FINI': GALLIPOLIS
HOME'
LESLIE A. LEMLEY, AUCTIONEER 614·367·0171
Lkensed &amp;Bonded in St. of Ohio
Cash/ Approved O.ed&lt; EATS
NOT R!SPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOSS Of PROP!RTY
THANKS lOR NOT SMOKING"

'A11on' all arau The sky 1s the
ilmll with new aam1ng s tructure
1-800.992-6356
Pe rson To Work 1n Har dware
Store As C lerk Apply C LA Box
1 t2 c,o G all •po hs Da•l y Tnbune
825 Th1 r d A.va nue , Ga l lipOlis,
OhiO 456]1

ReJ)ortor iPhotograph er
l or
growmg weak ly n11ws pap11r ••
penenca nece ssary, mu s t have
wrltmg and lay out 1k1ll s Send
resume lnde~ e nde nt
Herald
Box 100 P1 nav111e WV 24874

BULLDOZER MF 200B crawl er loader, d1esol, lrnal
cr1ve out of th1s unt1. so me pari s mt ss,ng, sold " as- t s~
SILAGE BLOWER &amp; GASOLINE ENGINE : N H
sil age blower and p1pe Waukes ha portable 4 cylinder
gaso lrne engrne
MISC . FARM ITEMS: A1r co mp &lt;esso r Craft sman
lobl e sa w. luel l ank w1hand pum p, keg s ol na1is, 40'
Frue hauf cargo trailer (stor age shed), wood leed
Dunk s &amp; storage

un tt s,

stock ta nk. Palco head gate

only 2 y na rs old

ptpe stoc k g ate
unl1 sted tlem s l

c hatn s , btnders,

scrap tron
LUMBER &amp; POST. Abl 760 bd 11 rough sawn oak
lumbe• 34 rarlroad Ires. 22 · 2 'x6' xl0 board s. abl 60
l• ealed lench pos t Plu s a lew modern hou sehold
11e ms 1
DON'T BE LATE, MAJOR ITEMS WILL
SELL EARLY IN SALE'
NOTE Some of th e equrpmenl will need repa11,
exce llenl oppan un•ty lor the ha ndym an ' Term s Cash
day cl sa le or chock wnh po srt•ve ld All 11ems sold
as- 15 Without guarantee or warranty! Brmg snack, no
lood
MRS. FAYE SAGER, ADMINISTRATOR W.W.A.
ATTORNEY FOR ESTATE: PAUL

J. GERIG

Athens Co.Probate Court
Case #37-848
AUCTIONEER: OTIIE OPPERMAN
P.O.Box

Oh.43138.

Phone:

95

TERRELL FARM AUCTION
13777 Kincade Road ATHENS, OHIO Directions
to farm: Exit U.S. Rt.33 onto Stimson Ave and
County Road #25, follow (o.Rd.#25 about 2
miles to stop sign, go straight ahead onto Co.Rd
#90, travel 1 mile on #90, turn onto (annan
Twp.Rd #92 and follow about I mile and turn
onto Kincade Twp.Rd. #93. First long driveway
on right. Signs will be posted.
SATURDAY, APRIL 25,1992 AT I 0:00am
Th e u nde rs 1gne d w II sel l Her lovely country fa'm
and homo. the rol or o mus t se ll b elo w listed t!Bm s l A

3

Announcements

REVIVAL
Morgan

Center Chriallan

Holinen Church

Aprii2G-26-7·30 p.m
N1ghtly
Evag. Rocky Jollwa
S,.OI Siotlorf_,_ W*-

se at s ma hog I lie ca btne!

GLASS &amp; CHINA Exceplr onal so rvrce for 12
Early Amer1can" Duncan dtn ne r set, Fostort a
Amencan~ bowl s Severa l p1eces of Fent on Glass
Jowel Tea coff ee pot &amp; mrx •n g bo wl s. crystal "Mrss
AT1enca". cracke l glass p1tche r &amp; compote, small tea
pots, decora ted cupstsauce ts. Occ J ap an f1gure s

ltt::!ms

Flowers,

PAPER &amp; PO STAGE 1891 Chn stm as "Lad1 es
Home Journol" t 877 pos t card . 1953 frrst 1ss ue Ohro
Sesqu,cen·e nn1a l cove rs. fore1gn stamps po stcards
coo&lt;books. othe• rle ms' PL US 2 Good carpent ers
tool lxnes, bl acksm11h v1se glass butter churn, l1ne
plated tea serv1 ce, v e ry small llat top trunk, stone
tar s/bo wl s. and a lot m o re l
FARM EQUIPMENT &amp; RELATED ITEMS : (Farm
equ• pm enl w1i l sta rt sellrng al 12 00 Noon) I Very
goo d In! 420 bale r Case hyd 4 gang p1ck-up d1sc.
J D 415 A plows J D srde del1v ery rake. lnl "100
Balanced " mowe•. New Ideal 14A spreader, V1con
3pl Seed e,Sp rea der hay elevator, Dunham
cul11packer, (Well ma mt arned equ1pmenl) TROY·BILT
fray Bhp 'Super Tomha wk CHIPPER/SHREDDER"
used vary l•llle. f ray B1lt 'HORS E MODEL" 4-112 hp
lrller . Gardenway g a~d e n ca rt
LUMBER, POST &amp; FENCE: Stacks of oak &amp; m1sc
lumber ; locust &amp; metal post , snow &amp; cham lmk fence,
ba1b w1re PLUS Tractor cha1n s long handle tools,
10 workbench , new flore scent co1hng lights. other
electnca l llemsl Plu s a good selec11on of MODERN
FURNISHINGS, Appliances &amp; Accessories!
EVERYTHING VERY CLEAN and HAS HAD THE
VERY BEST OF CARE!
Lovely Country Sell•ng I
Terms Cash Day ol Sa le or Chock W1lh Po s1ilve
ld, Food I
OWNER: MRS. DOROTHY TERRELL Widow of

Everlastings,

the late GERALD TERRELL AUCTIONEER: OTTIE

ROSE
OREDBODSI
NOWOPD

1 mile north of Beahan
on Co. Rd. 28
Vegetable Plants,

Baskets, Herbs,
Boxes, l'lata.:

...

GUlP wl\o tui'Md 301

"llappy Birthday"

Davy/
Mom lOad

Real Estate General

OPPERMAN Box 504, Logan, Oh. 43138
• (6141 38H19S

N
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1992 at I 0 a.m.
Follow St Rl 7 thru Tuppers plams Ohio go 112
mile to Ath ens1Me1g s county line. Sign at end of
driveway.
Leav rng slate w1ll sell Pme Harvester table wolh 8
charrs (2 Captarn) and hutch. Coldspol 17 t cu fl
dou ble door relng~roozer. Lazy Bo y sola sleeper,
(like new; 3 Lazy Boy rocker/recliners enle rtammenl
cente r coffee &amp; end tables, ottoman, lam ps small
desk Ea rly Amencan sola and love seat. Whtrpool
5000 btu atr cond1110ner
Bedroom su1te ktng s tze beds. d ressers, beddmg
Stevens 410 gage s1ngle. Model 37 Wrnc hesler 12
gage srngle, Model 72 Wmchester 22 (t6 shot )
Remrngton 870 12 gage pump
80 used 2x4s used redwood srd•ng (parntedl. 2 1
p1eces rebar, 16 It 8 1n long
Flowers barrels stone JfU sledge hammers. elec

drr ll s rrgrd 3" p1pe culler post hole drggers, p1tch
lor&lt;s levels log cha1ns. scythe. elec motors hand
saws, ~n dex ca rd l•le cab~net (good part s cabm el)
Alu m. exte n s•on ladder Hams ace tylen e &amp; oxygen
gag es, 6" bench gr 1nder C r a ftsman b a nd saw 'll ..
lorque wrench (t50 h lbs). a~r rachel. sander, &amp; d1e
gnnd er, B lack &amp; Decke r beH sander. 1ack stand s new
3 H P Brrggs &amp; Stratton engone (sode sh aft ) Hom elite
XL cham saw (14") Echo S R N DA Trrmme r Bru sh
Cutter fa rm wagon runntng ge ars
Ice tongs . hand corn sheller. nu t cracker 1 man
crosscut sa w, horse rake teeth Good Luck g as s l ave

Othe • 11ems not l•sled Lunco by Fed eral Hockmg
Band Boost ers Not respons1ble lor acct d ents Cash
or check wtt h posttNe 10
OWNERS: Herman and Barbara Black
Rt. 2, 39 SR.

7 Coolvale, Ohio

AUCTIONEER: Jim AHoway

Aprll19, 1992

Needed. Someone To Run Hoi
DD$J Concession Stand Appomlmenl Only 614-367·0689

VERY GOOD CLEAN SALE

12

RESIDENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS ·COMMERCIAL· FARMS

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

Cape Cod OOme has app 1800 st~ n and overlooks
the Ohio Rtver snualed on 2 1 acres mt1 Property also
features a 36)(48 metal buldtng and a 14k24 building

Business

14

tor a small business PRICE REDUCE D Call lor more
l'llorma!lon

wnl. REDUCED

$49,900 Down SA 7 overlooking
the beaulll ul Oh1o RlveJ Bnck and 'l'lny l spill 3
bodrms 2 baths tamlly nn . 2 car garage, sat ellite
and c omponent s ThiS home Is clean and
comfortable Cozy LR OR k1! city schools TakA
actvanla~ olthiS l1r.e oll er

1765 RIO GRANDE - Home Is prk:ed !or Immediate
sale 3 bedrm bath has heal, carport Approx '/, at
an acre Beauttlut trees and spot to bul!d a new homo
Located on SR 35 $30 000
11630
EXCEllENT APARTMENT

BLDG
INVESTMENT Good money maker IN TOWN large
apt bldg With 3 two bedroom apls , 2 one bedrm
apts plu s a conn ge w11h two aparlmenls Thts
property has been well matntaned Reduced price

IGGO REDUCED $25,000 - 2 o r 3 bedrms k1t
range ml SUfllOrch lull ba ~ menl and garage W ell
tnsulatod Vtew ol Oruo RN er
H86 KYGER CR AREA. - 3 bedrooms. 2 bath s
ranch home and carp or1 outbuildings garden spot I
ac rrv1 $24 000
M735 SUBURBAN RAN CH - FHA VA, a very mce 3
bath co unlry kll
LA an d 1am11y rm
Wl11replace 1 ac rn.1 $.J 5 000 Rod ney B Rd

hetlrm

f7SO HANOVMAN SPECIAl - MAKE OFFER Larxl
GOfllrac;l You II go baCk In lime II you 111/ e lnl hl:s larg H
2 stury ho rne 3 Oodrms bal rl kfl dm1ng rm ullhl f
rm cellar Bam NlapproM 3/4 at an acre

1780

the Ohm Rtve r f'l Gallpotts. 01 Very elegant tum-olthe-cenl ury hOme 4 bodnn 3 balhs. libfaf)'. useful
alhc and c.omp4ete basen.:tnl, S l~replaces, gas he81
w11h cert ral a1r garage Romanbc gazebo. patk)s,
bea utilully lan dsc aped AU tov1ngty maintained
Potert1ili bed and Dreakfast: or remain resklollllal

R 1
ag sttrellon t9(l.()5- 12748

17

Miscellaneous

Ptastk: Drums JO Gal &amp; 50 Gal
$3 00 And S6 00 614-367-7802

lor price

Mobile Homes

sI
tor a e

Car

Fialwood Area, Pomeroy, large
Country Homo, New Kitchen,
Bath, &amp; Carpetmg Low $30's,
Ouailf1ed Buyer 614-446-2359
Musl Move Quick, By Owner,
Gractous One Floor Brick In
Pomeroy Erlras1 Below Appralsal 614-992-5979

18

Spill-entry,
3
bedrooms,
l111lngroom dlnmgroom, family
room w/11raplace, 3 baths,
covered deck, palio, double
garage Sand Hill Rd, 304-6151258

Wanted to Do

1n

my home, 304 -

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
t1 000

Rebala Sehult 14x76 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Den Special
low Price French City Mobile
Homes, 614-446-934(1.

14x74 Govemar, 3bdr, deluxe
bath, front kitchen, 8x18 porch,
vinyl underpinning, uc condl·
lion, S15 ,000, 614-992 -7410
1Q78 C&amp;G Baron, 14x70, 2bdrm,
all
electric,
heat
pump,
scre11ned porch, carport, all
kltchon appliances, Jne tudln9
dishwasher, vary good condl·
lion, 2 acres located on Rockspnngs Road, 614-992-7283

1980 Buddy 14x70 total electric
Concrete porch, 21ull Baths,
WID DW, garden bathtub,
CA 15x30 above groung peal
3ml oul ol Porter Cell 614&lt;188-

8352 . s·oo

HousecltN~mng

446-8406.
Wlll do yard work (mow &amp; lnm)
and lUI gardens 304-675 759$
avaningt

Financial
Business
Opponuntty

r.com~Mndt

MEIGS CO FARM Located on SR 160
Restorable 3 bedml bnck homo w'\Ja serne nt Also a
19 79 Academy mob•le home has 2 bedrms k11
dtnmg area LA and bath !Jarn wtsta lls t out shed
ct1 k:ken hou se 50 ac mr1 mostty tillable HeducNl1o

1779

1785 POINTS OF PERFECTION around thi s
gradou s home lOcated rt an m:d USive area EEven
loC al rooms wtth three baJhrooms Foyer wnh open
slarwa~ W90 INflg room wtlh W'OO&lt;b.lfnl"9 firvptace
format dfung room. gourmetldtdlen. !amity wom and
QamB room shiilre an open liftlplaee S olatium willet
~ ou erlfOy Four Seasons r our oversUed bedrooms

sso s

1762 FOUR BEDROOM HOM E, 2 BATH S -Roo m,.
ranch home located en lha country Extens~Je work
compl eleel as l ollows new Thermo Alls1de w1ndows
secu rity doo rs steel sid•n g heavy roo! kit cera m•c
ttle entry c ~endocJ In to the k11cnen 16• 53 deck
ce me nt walks ana pad See tn1 s home and stnr
looking elsewhere

Ma sler be&lt;WQm has calhedril.l ~. whi'\)001 baitl
and bea ulllul archeel windows F~ floor laundry
Anacheel 2 car garage Two heal pu~ dh badnJI)
5 44 1 Ae mJI n you like irdvldually your na me can

00 on the ma~box Ouall ted Buyers oofy

-----

1992 Breezewood 14x60, 2 Bed·
rooms, Still Under ManufactunH 9 Warren.,- 6l4 ·319-2293 Af·
ler 6 p M

f7Q1 NEW LISTING RIVERFRONT PROPERTY 1 8 ac m/1 (220 !I lrontag e) wnn 14 x7o O ~kwood

Classtc mobile home 'lll'l!h 2 Bn s Ln kncrte n (onll
caDIOfltS) wtlh dln!ng area ') lull baths u11111 y rm
etoc HP C1 A 1 car gara ge outbldg P lace lo r
ptcnlcldng or t&gt;oatmg on lower edge ol property on I he
riv er This pruperty Is In A- 1 co ndition Call l o see

2 Bedroom

House,

t..ool&lt; ol II* prb S16 .000 Oil

1783 FARM HOUSE tocated In Bktwell Good sue lot
66x166 Good lamly home oo rerial $14 ,000 00

Cf.DAA RANCH HOllE· S lualec:l on 47 aaes
rn11 T h•s home lealure s 5 BRs. and or ofiiO&amp;
p~yroom
v, balhs ut l lf'y room calhotrai ceilings
ove r living ro o m dmmg room and kit chen
convcrsallon pil1n Irving room w!slone l•eplace Fre
and seo.Hity alarm system Rnished t ili'Jl~ room wtth
l veplace OOal pufl1&gt; and central illr 2 car garage
covered patiO bam vr.ilh 2 MI'Se st alts and tad! room
stoc ked pond Home has approx 3000 sq n lrvtng
sp ace a nd many more amonmcs Cal l l or more
l'li [)(Tfl,ll:IOn

,

1

S~racuse ,

Road 1-304·273·2940

w-~ld -UkoTo Rant A Houso
Wtlh 3 Or 4 Bedrooms Would
Llka To Have Housa In B1dwell
School 01slnct Area 614 367-

Tn3

1 bdrm
$225mo
lncl udu
Ul11111e s, se curiTy depos 11 req u~red no pet s, 614-992 -2218

$225/ Mo

2 bedr oo m apt, ulli !lles pa1d

$100 Deposit , Wate r

_Fu
_'.:.".:.ls.:.h.:.
ed:.:·.:.6.:.14_-4.:.4::6-::3:.:
8 71l::......:=..lH:u:d:':P:P':o:"::d

Furn1shed 3Br House, 1 Floor,
$350 .Utilities, Uppet' Four1h
Avenue, Gallipolis, References,
Security Deposit 614-446-4416
After 7p m
Hou se lor rAnt tn
992 7689

2
Bedrooms,
Stov e
An d
J1 Atrl g er ator Fu rni shed 614-446
394 0
2br Garage Apartment l oc ated
106 Loc ust Street, Gallipol is,

FOR RENT
Ocean Front Condo .
Garden City liNch, S.C.

54

304-67 5-272 :2.

Miscellaneou s
Merchandi s e

(12ml •outh ofllyrtla Beach)

614

2 B Rl2 ,ba1ha, complete

kitchen &amp; laundry
Call 4~-4248

N1co efflclenc~ conaga, un1que
and beautiful, 304-675-6042
One Bedroom House, Furnished, Deposit And Referen ce
Requm1d , No Pats 614-446-

Country Slider

CHANNEL MARKER RENTALS
Now making reservafian•
lor spring and summer.
Sleep• 6, overlooking
ocean, near Resfaurant
Row and rlf courses,
privote poo . Spring role•
available. For inlormation
ond/ or reservafion. call
The Medical Shoppe, inc.,
446·2206, Mondays thru
Friday•, 9· S.

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

2 bedroom , 1 bath, pnvate loca·
lion on Radman Rldga Hender
son area $200 monlh $150
depos1t, 304-T7'6-{i059 or 304·

763-5252
2br Unfurnished, Ai r Cable
Beautilul River V1ew, Reference
Deposit Required
Foslar s
Mobt1e Home Park 614-446-1602
Mobtla Home unfvm CA , 32 2
Th1rd Ave 614-446-3748 Of 614
256·1903 Barore 9 PM

!~Ill I [ L\~~
Centurydrain TMroofing and s1dmg from
Wheeling Corrugating sli ck l ooking, to uf~h,

economi cal
•H1gh tensile galnn1zed Jterl f or strengt h, du r.1 bll 1ty
ch.ann~l and light lap ! for snu g.. d ry .ntH1or s
•W1dt' ••IKho n of bnghl, baked-on conte mp orary r olo n
• Sitek look 1ng. cost t HI Cirnt, u tr a d ur J.bl e Cl' nlu rydrJ 1n

•Du11n

RIG POST FRAME BUlLDINGS
PO

Bo~

#46

Real Eslale General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

V 1nton , Oil 45686
6 14- JBB-831 4

Schull Homestead 19Q2 14•70 2
Or 3 Badrooma, 2 Balht VInyl
Siding, Shingle Root, Special
Price
$18,995 French City
Mobile Homes 614-446-9340

33 Farms lor Sale
Farm near Glenwood, 100 acres
+lnlce rancher, good road, lot&amp;
levellllllabla land; $79,900 Kat~ ­
le&amp;n Lave 304-ill3-6206, Ullom
Really, BH&amp;G, Realtor, 304 -7369955
Farm Wanted On Ohio River
Vegetables
Milton
H
For
Ren1ck , Aeal Estalo Broker 614983 -2134

34

Business
Buildings

Must S.ll B~ Ma~ lsi 3 St••l
Buildings
40x60,
50x100,
100x100. Faclory Deals, Call
Naw &amp; Save Bob 614-446-0721

watarbad, garden tub, all appliances, 10x20 deck, $14,500
Must move, 304-675-7960 or 6753594

25 acres 111 Wilkesville area,
beau!1ful sight for home &amp; partially wooded area, 614-669-3402
Of 614-Jtt2-2536

1985 Wlnd5ar 2br, Fully Fur·
nlshed, Dishwasher, Disposal,
T \1, Stereo System Throughout ,
Washer &amp; Dryer, 2 Bedrooms Of
FurnHure And Living Room Furniture, Microwtve, Refrtrrator
And Stove 614-44&amp;-354 , 304743-4356

32 112 acres, 14x70 tn.ller
wldeek, enclosed porch &amp; carport 3 outbuildings, gas well ,
near Racine, asklng $30,000 ,
614-247-2622

you are selling or buying or just have aquestion, talk to
one of our real estate professionals. Ready to help you
with any of youlr Real Estate needs!

34 acres with trailer &amp; gar~ge in
Chaster
Township,
Sumnar
Road, 614-237·4583

Real Estate General

992·2259
Real Estate

31

POMEROY, OHIO

188 Acres
81 Acre s
6 2 Acre s
80 Acre s
16 Acre s

THIS NEW USTING IS CUTE AS A BUNNY! Thos ranch
stylu home wtth 3 bedroom s carport app latnces &amp; cable
t10ok up1slocatedatLeeCtrde1n Syracuse One look you tl

!all1n love' ASKING $34. 900

EJirtmtl~ nul, ready to mo11e

Into, 2bdrm, h..l pump, greal
starter home or tor couple,
FMHA tpproved, 614-992·1496

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~o~us~e~~~~~ ~·~~:~~~:~j~~~~1~
ROLL YOUR EGG TO THIS UTILE NEST· Located on
Apple Grove Dorcus Ad Small! story block homew11h B G

Raccoon
Raccoon
Ham son
Huntmgton
liunbngton
Huntington

To 'o'Wn sh 1p
To wn s h1p
Townsh1p
Town ship

Town sh•p
Town sh1p

CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION!
116 ACRES

w 1th remodeled older home ol B
ro o m s (4 BR) w1th centra ! heat an d a1r Ha s
bam o1h er bu1ldmg s to ba cco ba se all 1n
secluded bea uttlul se 1t1ng on well ma1nt a tned
t o wn s hip road a nd 1s only 8 m1l es from
G a lltp ol,s 1n Harr1 son T w p
M a k e on
appomtm en1 today
•433.

bedro o m country fl a me fea tunng heat pump
large tam 1ly and d1mng ro o m co mb o 1/ bath
sm a ll room lor nurse ry o r se wmg room lot s of
storage ruml w a ter and m uc h m uch more
Sttuated on 20 beauttlu l rolhn g acres m/1 Al so
horse bam
t375

MINI FARM - Nea r

1752

furnanoo appl tances, carpet &amp; drapes on 4 + ac res m
eludes extra Mob1le Home nook -up space wlsepllc and two

SPACIOUS MODULAR (VIndoloj Wllh 3 BA

l g LA DR. kitchen wrth lirmg area, range, rei aw'

dispo sal eklc heal A C, 2 baths (1 showero
enonnous FR. woodbumer (heals elllre house). 2
garage , 1~round pool. enclosed palio on 1 08 acre
ml1 Cl!y SChools Cal and lei us show J'OU lhis home

cai

wl 'h wuy comlortable living

11n

NEW LISTING, DOWN CROWN CITY WAY _
Very nice 3 BR older homo wth aa1 In kitchen bath
luel Oil heal , new roor, 2 oulkliiOngs on 5 nvt S30s'
Call for more no

THURSDAY, APRIL 23,
1992
7:00PM
Ross County
Fairgrounds
(L~ off Rl1M, 5 IRII norft

01 Chlllc:GI\8)
Aucuonear: Marlin Woodrun

Stilling 120 Barrows &amp;

&amp;

Jadl:eon Co.'tllld AIL Or. at

-Co.
Ptp ...
ot ....,..., or 't1
~

Feyette Co. Jr. f*lk Ot.
FotmcnhwnWCf •canllct

Perfectly
GET MUCH MORE when ,-ou buy this Jreshty
painted 3 BA ranch wilh LR , Kllchen wtlh d1n area
range, ref . I '!', baths, elec 0 13 heat AJC, frUit trees
patio and carport In e.M cellent conc11!ton 40 s

oil Stolt ~~ 3151nd S , _ Road, 1. 7 mle trom
~lo Goandt UnMtrsly Reolltcted Lois Gal lot price

C tty

BUDGET MINDED - $26 000 buy s !h rs neal
remodeled 3 bedroom hom e o n OIJer 1\/£ acre s
m R a ccoon Twp BealJ!Jlut ground s Call tod ay
1432
COUNT!lY LIVING - In thrs remodeled 3

pool ALL THE GOODIES FOR $57

tn5. BUU..DINO LOTS • 2Y. ac m1 on a corner 1o1

Noco lovol

nnd sewage C all to day

80 Ac re s

ton,

1768. VERY NICE HOME localod In Cheshire Twp

1771. BEAUTIFUL RANOt HOME situated on 2'l,
acres In a ~let seftlng In Twl'l Pines SubdMslon
Homelealures 3 bidiooms, 1~ balhs, utlly room, I~·
lng room, dlrMlg .,..., ldlc:hen, fuJI bUIIiment 1 ear
attached g~~n~ge Abo, 1 ct1 detached ganga ·

Cathy A. Wray
Sales Agent
Eve 446-4255

Broker/Agent
Eve. 379-2184

LANDI LANDI LANDI

This home fealura:s app 1J.« sq n 3 la'Qe bedrooms, 1Y. btttll, futl basemen~ and 1 c ar garage
Make appolnment !188 ttn anraatve home

•

J . Merrill Carter

=~~ol!i City water

3 Unn Apartment Rental Excel·
lent Condition, Butavllla Ptka
Road Reduced! Call For Appointment &amp;14-441&amp;-8568

Hls1orical Area Corner lot • 816
Main Sl Pl. Pleasant , W Va
Complete ly Renovated 2 Full
Baths, 3 Large Bedrooms, New
HVAC, New Carpet. Ava•labla
June 15 614-446-2205

1763 VERY NICE SPACK&gt;US BRI CK wi1h 4 BA&lt;&gt;
bath ear In kitChen , FR. erdosed porch . tuma cu and
hoi water lai'V&lt; (new) 2 car garage on 1 87 acs m11
A~ional aaeage at IO:ilonat price Low 60"s

Cheryl Lemley
Me1gs Co. Agent
Eve. 742-3171
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL -

cornl0f1 able home S20 000

1760 2 OR 3 BEDROOM, 1 bolh, lYing room llllnlly
room, sateUe dish wlh ~q.~~rt $40

Phyllis L. Miller
Sales Agenl
Eve. 256-1136

butldtng lof 100x150 o n Debbie OniJ e

1oca110n faslem A11e ~ unfy Ia COfllbjne home
a nd bu s1ness OhiO River lronlag.e Very nice 3
b e-dnn home wlapphaoces lull basement This is a
money making proposl ton C all l or IIAX'Inlme.-.

S( CLUOED COTTAGE FOR TWO - 2
t&gt;eelrooms large LA , lull balh eat 1n kitchen 'l
porcl10s new repai's have ooen rMde lo make lhls a

608 EAST MAIN

Homes for Sale

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE

!!7 S4

Pal rick A. Cochran
Office Manager
Eve. 446-8655

Gentr·Ganellct, Don Black

(6141086-&lt;;465
Jtdy $wine Farm,

Jooy DrHboch 11

1739. TREES, TREES AND MORE ffiEES•I 12

acres rn1 Atso 2 BR home wah ~~ room tlrepla~
klchen. bath. paho and n.ce backy;vd

Martha Smith
Sales Agent
E VB. 379-2651

800-9SS-03S4

or RESIDEN":'"IAL - Pnme

1736 COMMERCIAL

Russell D. Wood
Brokor/Owner
Eve.446-4618

Vending Routt Local We Have
Tha Newest Machines Making A
N1ct Steady Cuh Income 1·

'It J\AOI f . Ck. Ch't .t a.l..

on 1 ac 1M $40s

ESTATES, 536 Ja ckson P1ke
born $192/mo Walk to sho p &amp;
movHHI Call 614-446 25 68 EOH

1bdrm ap! In Middleport, w atar ,
sewa'1• · trash patd ~ou pay
electn etg as S1 50'mo, 6t4 -949·
22 17

Tablt And Chain~, M1sc Equtp·
ment 614-245-9033

and large rms throughout Thrs well conslrudM
homo ol1 ers 4 bedrms 2 balhs upper and IOWflr
IIVIOJ 2 wb hrep4aces l am•ly rm butn·•n kitchen
wihalbecue' 2 cai garage I ~ lloor laundry

t772 HIOO E N TREASURE - Surprmngty Jow price
ot $11 0 000 l..tort1 than 5.000 sq n ol IMng space

1675. TAKE A LOOK AND YOU WILL BE
SURPRISED TO FINO this doublewlde ranch lo be

carpo~

BUDGET PRICES Al" JACK SO N

Efhc 1a n1 Apar1mant For Aenl
Counly S1tl1ng 614-446.S720

Reslaur~nt Equipment For Sale
3 laytor Soft Serve Freezers, 2
Door Freezer, Step In Cooler
01spla~ Fr11zer; Menu Board

~YIIk,OW'K.
Cr~llbredt. PUrtlndl)

1695. SPACIOUS DOUBLEWIDE RANCH wlh 3 BA
LA. DR kh w.bar, range rei , lg lro11 pord'l , back
deck, elec . heat pump, CIA, 2 car garage, 2 car

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

tor Rent

Repossessad Mobile Homos ,
Great Selection, Stngles, S500
Down And Ooublts $1,000
Down, W1th Approved Credtl!
Call 1-800·58~5'710

sheds $25.000
RAISE VOUR LAMBS, CHICKS 6 BUNNIES· on thos 80
acre farm tn Aacme Includes older 2 story frame home wl
112 bsmt &amp; 3 bedrooms You can ra1se the famtly tool
IMMIOIATE POSSESSION I $49,000 Make An Ot1erl
YOU'LL JUST BLOOM WITH EXCITEMENT· Over thrs 2
story block home tn Pomeroy 6 rooms 3 bedfooms, large
front porch gas heat, plenty of storage closets. basement,

large Iron! porch $19 ,500

30 Giht

harmonized In every way LR!FR. DR. 3 BA, 2 baths.
kit wrbar, range , dishwasher wood::oumlng llreplace,
~ec HP, CIA on approlt 1 ac MIL CaiiiOda~

Furni shed Apartment 1 Bed room , Utlltllas Pald, $260/mo
920 Four1h Avenue, Galltpohs
Ohio, 614-446-4418 After 7p m

for Renl

New mobile home with central
ai r, garage , lot, priced to ull ,
304-895-3876 or 895-3534

3-4 beaooms features tull
appliances fireplace , heat pump,
great locabon wtth ntce landscapmg .

lor

Spm

tor Rent

Acre land, lreller, 2 bedrooms ,
deck , porch, outbldgs, Jerrys
Run Apple Grove, 304-57'6-2145

NOT Ia s.nd money throu9h the
mail until you have lnvest•gated
I he oHerlng

once and locaUon

more than lusl what you are looking

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei - Page-05

614-446-1615,614-446-1243

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

thai you do bust-

A-Frame Ca~n 16'x37', MartinWV Williams Greebriar
River N11rby; Monongahalia Natk&gt;nal ForHt, Nut To Handley
Flubllc Hunting Araa, Great
Hunting, Fl&amp;hlng (Turkey, Deer,
BearJ Uodtm Cabin For 8-10 ,
Mountain
Set11ng
Beautiful
S'lD,900 614-379-2i'IB

*n l RIO GRANDE HOM[ OR INVESTMENT - 3
bedrooms 2 stOf)' 11, balh. pan~al base ment city
wale f andsewer Deep tot 85x 170

for 110 and 220 HfVIce Inventory of garage and
olllca equipment on tile Hollyp•rll: mobile home
65x1". like new Home and busneu SIIIMII!Id on~

1727. LEVEL TO ROlliNG LAND - 3padcage s (I)
2 ac wooded, lronts on At 35 cable rural wat er
C&amp;S elec ai'allable (2) 3 acs (1 wooded) 160.
frontage 2 acs dear&amp;d (3) 5 acs on lop all doaroo

3 BR home for ntnl In lawn,
$300 month plus daposH 30467&amp;-3433
304-675-1109 aher

42

RostdenHal Building
Acreage For Qualily

26 Chil-

1983 Nashua, 3 bedroom, 14x70
with 7x12 expando, CA, Queen

6292.

SA

1767 FOR SALE OR TRADE: Brick n11nch homer. .
turing 3 bechoms, 1~ ba!hl, basemen. and 12 car
g&amp;rliiJB Slualed on 0 8161C rrv1 Owner wlltraOelor
home In lhe oour1ry

Or

2br House Furnished, Deposll
And Reference Required No
Pets 614-446-4879.

buy tot suitable tor
home, w1!1 pay cash

licothe Road, Gallipolis $8,500

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
New Commercial, Home Units,
From $199 00. lamps, Lot tons,
A.cce ..orl" Monthly Payments
Low As $18 00, Call Today FREE
NEW Col« Catalog 1-800-228-

17811 LEASE 3,000 sq II and have your own carpa(
shop Very good oa1es Col lor delais

1787 PRIME DEVELOPMENT lAND Land lays
well Older 2 !lory brick home wttn 4 bac:lrooms and

lots Cai!Of'

32

Garage, $45,000 614 -446-6J 2 5

nan wHh p410pil you know, and

and tocauon

1766 BUSINESS FOR SAlE 30&gt;50 block garage
with 1 car garage boys STATE APPROVED Wired

Wanted

oD 1991 oy NE"' 1nc

INOTICE 1

Call

bulklngs Home In need ol repair 121 1C m1 011
35, 00. 1o Ptna ~ Nurl4ng Hom~

wv

OHIO vALLEY PUBLISHING CO

1 extra lot wtlh properTy 66x166 Bkiwel Por1MKiallia

Ga.l~olts

mobile

2 bedroom house, kllet'len, bath,
llvlngroo m, no pets, 304 ~ 75 1365

2543

Real Estate
Wan:ed

Want to

Would You Like To Sea What's
New With Amwa~ Or Restock
Your Supplies Call 614 -446-

21

17&amp;4 SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER TNs larm Is ntadj to go 80 ac wlh approx 2500 I&gt;
tobacco bMe. 2 bams, very lovety oouriry 54Jt11ng wlh
8 room oouriry home Cal IOJ delals
1782 2 STORY FARM 110USE wlh total ol 7 rooms

1181 5 TO It ACRES rM 6 mles lrom

-

36

Nowi'!Soulhoa.lem 31 Homes tor Sale
Plazo Coli Tod.oy, 614·446-43671• 3 Bedrooms, 2 13alhs, 2

In Gallipolis Area $4 50 Par Aour 614·

f741 MIDDLEPORT ANYONE? - $2 3 000 wtu huy
thi s exceptiO nally nice 3 bedrm 1 ,~ baths 2 story
home Lovely ncN CMpe t range wa sher and dryer
I /, car garage No r&gt; I and clean home loca l ad S07
Sycamora St S26 000

1510 LOCATtON IS THE KEY 10 this 2 story home
localed on Fnl A.venue .f ba'm. 1'1, baths ramily
room Mvlng room buamert, and smal 1 b&lt;hn bath
kftctlen , living room conage 011 lot Home Is sluated
on a oomer k&gt;l Ctllor an appolrtmenl

r

Business College, Spring VaiiiiV

Will Co

1790 LOCATED ON 2nd AVE - Excelle nt lUI
buSine ss otl tces Of neal clean ho me 2 bedrrns LH
lg dining rm equipped khchen full bas.emtlnl
Parking r.the reat Pnoo d to seu

Schoo~

O.J White Road, 18 Acree,
Mostly Wooded, Wlth A Beautifu l Building Site That Has A
View For Miles Nice Level
Orll'away,
Rural
Wafer,
Electricity, And Phone Service
Available 3 Miles From Holzer
Hospilal, $39,000 614-446-4127

Rolraln

Localtd Near Clay School 614 -

NEIGHBORHOOD pl us comenteni iO
5hopplng ha5pnal, etc Lovety homo onors 3 b cdrms
kll tamlly nn comb 2 baths anacherl garage ;md
In-ground pool The lot backs up l o a woode d area
and otters prtv acyl
1781 NEW LISTING A SUPER BUY IS wh at !! us
lovely an bnr:X 2 3 BR rnach IS w~h eat -1n kitchen
carpet 1'/, baths 1uel 011 heat aC Shingled rool
carport l ull basement on 1 ac M1t In a q u ~e l
ne1yti.Jort10od CaM lor location $:&gt;4 900 00

2722.

Training
1-:==========-T::==:::=~~~====~~~
Homes
Must
Ba With1n
5 MtiH
::--:- -,-....,....,.:---1
·
01 Halzar
Hospital
On Blacktop

256-6869

CHOI~E

lots Jo!mng Point • 100"4 owner
financing at $101 46 par month
buys all IMrM lot• 304-675-

lot

Odd Jobs, Reasonable Rales
614--388-8491

~011 READY FOR OCCUPANCY - NATIONAL
REG ISTER Vdonan e• celkml concliiiOO ()Qwn by

675-2n2

304-67~984

wtlcoma 614·446-8224 New In·
!ant Toddler Care, 614·446--6227

bedrms vinyl rancn

Lots In New Haven - 100%
owner fina ncing at $1Ctl41:i per
month buys alllhrea lots , a304 -

I

29111.

Wtll Do Babystlltng In My Home

LA dtnlng area kitchen IJath on
l1rst floor DIVIded base men! w,4 rm s l a mll~ rm
sl orage laundry wort a1ea 112 bath and out side
entry Co11ered deck, carport and garage Garage has.
220 eledrlc to work on car and trucks t r2. acre mA
with beautiful tree s Lol c1t y ut1ll1tes C1ry schoo ls
$41 900 00 DONI DELAY SFF IT TODAY '

I

Consunant W1th In
dultry Experience Can Prov id e
Support To Your Company Or
Ofganlzalton bperience W1th
CP/M DOS, UNIX Networks And
Mosl
Business
Sohware
In
Securtly
Spec:lallzlng
Upgr8dn, Training, Preventa ·
tlvt Maintenance And Problem
Sol11ing C W Clark 614-379-

Will Do Bab~sltllng In My Home
Good
Carttried Nurses Atd
LocaUon 6l4-446-2fiS2
all the qualities ol a lnendty home atmosphere J
large bedrooms oN1ce 2 lull baths living roo m w11h
fireplace elec heal pump and cent an Th1 s bnck

)

Miss Paula's Day Care Center $500 Off Purcl'\asa Prlct or Any
Sat., affordable, chlldcare M F New Home AI Elsea Homs Cen6 a.m · 5 :30 p m Ages 2'h-IO ter, Greal Selection, Free Set-Up
Before, 1her school Drop-ins And Delivery! Call 614-m-1220

3

month any one of four lois
a vailable, 304-ti75-2722

Computer

W1ll care lor elderly or wtll do
house cleaning, hav&amp; reteren cn tor both, 304-675-5288

t7d7 DON'T OVERLOOK THIS REAL VALUE

lots In Gallipoli s Ferry - 100%
owner financing at $98 64 pa r

Wanted

Will babysit
675-5330

1662 CUALITY-lOCA TION SPACE - This home has

table 304-675-2722

Situation

House Cleaning For Par1t&amp;s
Showing Or Any Occas•on, Also
Clean Weakly Or Mon!Mtv•
References 614-446 3681, 614
446·3368 Leave Message
EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR , 446-1197
RUTH BARR , REALTOR. 44H722
DEBOOAH SCI TES, REAL TOR, 446 6806
LYNDA FRALEV, REAL IDR, 445-6806
MI CHAEl MillER REAL TOR. 446 6806
PATRICIA ROSS, REAl TOR, 245--9575

for sa le, trallert acce p-

l ots

Woman: make more money 1
Frn alghl week Job preparation
program aboul nontrad11 1onal
employment (ONOW), call i 800637-6508

Georges Por1able Sawmill, don t
haul your logs to !Me m tll jus!
c.all304 -675-1957:

Real Estate General

Wo~T Nl(:,f\TMA~E :

Wanted SaiH position lor \ocat
business
Ottenng
benatilt, must be aggressive
and tb1t to work wuh public
Sand complete resume Box B18 eart PI Pleasant Register,
200 Main St, Pt Ph, WV 25550

Will Babys11 In My Home Rod ·
ne~ Area. Refarences Available
CAll 614·245-588l

614·667·3391

A~T'S

trN

3303

(oolvnle, Ohio 45723

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-~~
- ~~~~=
11
Help Wanted
KIT ' 'i " CA RL HE ' h~ Lar r y w ~rnh•
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
41 Houses tor Rent
44
Apanment
44
Apanment
44
Apanment

23875 Brimstone Rd.

Real Eslate General

. ,. , 111 our btn and sptce Ja rs (Will nee d re stor ed) b akers

covers m ai Art ;] l and o the r l1ne n s p lu s unmenttoned

C&lt;&gt;mmorclal
Fr• Eatlm.ot.

~
Whanhewu aL.s
Ht found four 1811 dow•r•
lor Mom l Dad
Now .... miiTied lnd doing

C.Jb&gt;nP I olso reeds •es lored LODGE CHA IRS
Aboul 20 Frrehouso" tv pe lodg e cha11s, 5 "E astern
s·ar" arm charrs 27 lold rng woo d &amp; melallhealre

LINENS · Bolt ol pu re lrnen, Lace &amp; lmen table

614-949-2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fertili~lng, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
RMldonlllll '

..J,;

pan ral l•slrng follows
ANTIQUES
&amp;
COLLECTOR
ITEMS
CUPBO:-&lt;lOS Waln ut blrnd do o r CORNER
CUPBOARD oak ex1·a tall Hoos rer kitc hen cabrnel

lot more

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

pes

Happy Ads

ltuc k for par1 s

Nattdad man ar couple to 1tay
tull-llml every other weak, lo
care for an 88yr old man 614 949·2306 or 614 - 985-39~ bel ween 2 8pm
Now acceptmg applications lor
w a1tress or wa1lar and or
dallvenng Apply ln pers on NO
phone c alls ploase
Village
Ptua, Jac kson A11e

5

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION

ESTATE FARM AUCTION

nursing license In West Virginia

Respomubte for admtmstratlon
dulles &amp; some floor work u

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

April 19, 1992

Help Wanted

or

8

wv

(6141 884-4647
Ride Sttrr
~14) ttiB-2515 pm or
198-5~7

am

Crown Ci t) h as 1;, s to ry
home w11h 4 bedroom s kttc hen an d I1 1J1ng
room 1 ca r detached g a rage shop butldmg
and sh ed All o n 17 ac re s of wooded g ro und
•428
A sk1ng onty $35 800 A good bu ~ 1

IN CITY SCHOOLS

IS th1 s a1t rac!IIJ 9 ranch
home s1tttng on eo oi an a c re Has tamtly rm
and dm1ng m1 co m bo ltvmg nn , 2 bedr ooms,
lg bath custom bwlt k1tc hen Wllh oak ca b1n e ts .
basemen! has large bedroom on gmund level
Beaultlul tnten o r and land scaped ground s,

good garden area

1415.

CLOSE TO TOWN - 4 bedrooms 2 bat hs
1tv1ng, d1mng, l a mtly roo m s . natural ga s he a t,

HERE'S A DEAL IN AN EGGSHELL· I lloor home w1th
2 81 acres located on Wells Run Rd rn Portland $8.500
make

an oHer

THE EASTER BUNNY KNOWS WHERE TO GO,
TO FIND A DEAL ON THAT NEW HOME.
HOP ON IN AND SEE US SOON I
WE HAVE A HOME THATS RIGHT FOR YOU.
HAPPY EASTERI
HENRY E. CLELAND...................................... . 992·6191
TRACY BRINAGER............ .... .. .................. .949·2439
JEAN TRUSSELL........... .. . . ................... .... 949·2660
OFFICE............................ .. ...,..... ...............992·2259

central"" A•king $74,900

1424

115 ACRE FARM -

B as 1c tobac co qu ot a
14,669 lbs for 1992 ye ar A plus lo r any farm
today State H1ghway. rural wate r lt ke ne w
fences Large bam 1n good cond 1t1o n 18' x 65'
s11o . unloader, elevator s modern sy s te m
Beaubtullarm settmg Large Bight room house.
modem tn everyway Four bedroom s, two full
baths New lamtly room. 22' x 26', W1th balcony,
all butlt ol cedar Th1s sets 1t o" Thi S needs to

sell soon as tobacco base ts 1nvolved One ol
our better farms - Ca ll for appomtmenl
1436

ADAMSVILLE RD - A noca 2Bx60 Bndgepon
DW wtth 3 bedrooms, 2 ba tll s, fam tty m1 l1v1ng
rm and kitc hen R u ra l w a 1er and oth er
ame n1t1e s on 337 ucre m 11 AS kt ny o nly

$39 000

toda y
•4t6
NEW LISTING - BEAUTIFUL ALL BRICK
HOME Situated on 5 0 ac ro s m /1 w1th 3
bed rooms, hvmg nn , d1n1 ng and lam1ly rm 3
bath s and lull bas ement Heat pump an d
mr, 2 car atta ch ed a nd 4 car dela c had

garngo Ask1ng $t24 ,900
31

WOODED

ACRES

1412
tn Sou thw es tern

Sc hools area Alre ady ha s water tap Six m iles
1o Rt o Grand9 Call Now
1429
PRICE REDUCED - $59,900 - 3 yr old homo
wtth greal room 3 b edrooms 2 b aths k1tchen
w tlh cherry cab1 ne ts H Aal pump Rn d ce nt ral
a1r 2 car garage
M405
NEW LISTING - 2 o r 3 bedrooms 1 s tory
hou se wt!h k1lch e n ll vtng rm ba th la u nrlry
area O n 1 53 ac res m/1 Goo d garden a rea

Asktng onl y $26 000

U31

PRICE REDUCED! To $49 900 on lhos nrco 3
bedroom vmy l s1ded ho m9 w tt h 2 ba th s hv 1ng
nn d1nmg rm fam1ly rm . den , heA t pum p
c9ntral atr ba sem e nt, 2 bams and m uch more

On B 2 ac res mt1 C all today tor ap po1ntm en1

1426
NEW LISTING - LOG HOME ON SR 7
overlook.1ng th9 nver Ltvtn g rm
k.1tchen 2
bedrooms , bath Ask1ng $25 900
1410
CAN'T BEAT THIS ONE! - 4 bedrooms 1\',
rm , family room, de t a~he d
gamgo For 0111y $25.900
1420
b ath s , dmmg

HOW ABOUT $49 900 lor B llal ac ros and a 3
OOd room 2 b ath home? Ex tr al 1000 fe et o l
ro ad f rontage m~ 2 bams i 1 otd t meta l) and
Jots o l f resh coun t ry a1r Call today

f42ti
MEIGS
BEECH ST

COUNTY

PROPERTIES

- A ~prox 24 ac res w1th

a beautJiul

t NO s tory co lo n1al home OIJ eri ook tng Pome roy

ExAcu l lve Jtylo home 'RII h tom1al en try fi.lmll y
room w !t rflp l a:::e
formal d1n 1ng room
busernenl has fec room wtlh stone It rep lac e
1r g ro und pJol 2 ca 1 ga rugo
Mcmy mn re
trnen t!I9S Rgduced to a CN pnco of $139 500

N4t3

1402

1 1 ACRE Mil an d n 1963 mobile home 1n
gno d cond111o n on f"l1lc hfo rd Rd A l so 2 cor
ga rage a nd sl o fage b uddmg Ctt'y schoo l s :.a ll

cenlrnl

Tamm1e DeWitt
Sales Agent
Eve. 441 -1514

POM EROY AREA - Char3ctor sly l o co u n try
ct,nrrn Th 1o:; home h n&lt;; 11 nil OlrlAr h ome
complu te ly u;d urb tshed has J ~t~droorns 2
b C&gt;ths .,._rup &lt;J i i.l lH 1J tJCI&lt;..h Sl:l.'ttr&lt;JI bUII dlllQS
S it uated on a p prox
1
acres
Rock
Sp nngs Road Askmg $59 :JuO Wt l l take MH
for do wn payment
1345

CREW RO - Is 1h1s unK•ue

cc,niGmiJO mry w1th
3 be droo m s 2 ba~hs l amil\ rm d 1n1n g a rea
tl\11n g rm and k ltt;hen Two deck s alt wa y
aro u n d house Full basemfln t Lind mo ro Only

$59 900

#427

FARM ON LONG HOLLOW ROAD - Thos
home ll as 2 bedrooms ? baths l t. mg rm 1
d 1nmg rrn kit e~ en scroo ned tronl porc h h9 a l
pum p cen 1 a1r 40 x30 po le shed A ll th1 s an d
mo re on 107 acres m11 On ly nsk1ng $59 900

M423
NEW LI STIN G -S TORY S RUN ROAD - 7
year old home wt tll 3 bedroo ms I ba th 2 ca r
garaga 33 acres bam and shed&lt;&gt; Ask1 ng only

$45 000

1406

MAIN S T . RUTLAND - Is lh1s. on rac llve 3
bed room ranc h w111i b3th k1t chan dtn tng room .
and l • ~ • ng 100m 2 c:11 nltnc h od gar ag e
fnep lace gas heat Central a1r On ly $45 500

M403.
HAPPY HOLLOW AD - Is thos 1 and 112 story
log h ome With ba seme nt 3 bedroom s. 2 and
112 b ath . ta m1l~' room !tvmg roo m ktt chen laun
dry ar ea skylight sa tel11te sy s tem , covered
porch, heat pump, cent ral atr 12 'x1 2 b u1 tdmg
and mU&lt;;h morf' Ca t\ l o r delat ts
111425

�.,

Aprll19, 1992
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnl Pleasant,

Page--06-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel
Apartment
tor Rent

44

Fumlthlcl A,.rtment, 4 Rooms

And Bath, Centrally Loeated,
Rtfwtnee And O.po1it R.qu"**. No Peta 11~44
Furnished

Ap~rtmtnl ,

1br, next

to Ubrary, pirtllng, eent111l hell,
air, Nfarencea t14-446-0338 ,
Btfcn 7p.m

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bedroom lpirtments al VIllage
Manor
and
R1varau:1a
lpanmants In Middleport From
$196. Coli 614-!192-7787 EOH.

Complally Furnished mobile
home, 1 mila balow town, o'ltr·
looking rtVIIr No P.ts, CA 614446-0338.
and
two
bedroom
apar1rMnts tor rent. 304-675-

One

2053 or 875-4100

One bedroom tumlahed api ,
Point PINunt, very clean, no
potts, 304-67~1386 .

'~:~:t;~' S©R4\!1J-~£tr~®

Household
Goods

51

R.c:lalner 2 end Table• 1 Cotter
Table Ex cell. Condlllon 614~4&amp;

Furnished
Rooms

45

words
Pr ml letters
each m tis hne o f sq uar es .

!1 mple

9205 ar 304-67S-7575
2 Ooor Refrigerator Frost Free,

Harvnt Gold Was l150 Cut To
$95, Rttrlgtrttor- Whitt, Frosl
frM, w.. $150, Cut To $125,
Sidll By Side Harvest Gold, Uke
New, W11. $265, Cui To $195, 30

I

Inch Electric Rtngt Whht, Was

$125 Cut To $9.5, 30 Inch El~tetrlc
Range, Av.cdo, Waa $150, Cut

Starting 11 $120/mo Gallla

~otal.

814-446-BMO

SIMplng rooms wlt h cooking
Alto tralltr lpact All hook-ups

w..

To $245, G.E O~er Was $125
Cut To $75, Ho1polnt Washer
Was $150 Cut To $95, Maytag
Dryer, Whitt, Like New, $150".
~:fgs
Appliances , 614-446-

Call 1ft1r 2·00 p.m . 304-713·
5651, Maeon WV.

I

46 Space lor Rent
Counlry Mobile Homa Park, AI

112 Aerts,

At 2 North, 6 Miles

Private

From Point Pltasan1, WV 614446-9340

Office 9~ Modern 0111ce
Sulta AYtllabla In Busl nast And
Proflulonll
Building,
414
s.cond Annua, Gallipolis. Morris H11klns, 614-446-2631, 614·
446~!112 .

47 Wanted to Rent
Young coup~ wanting to r.nt
small houu or trailer, with land
fOf dogs, will PlY $200mo., nMd
by May 1tt, 614-992-7460

49

For Lease

S.cond

Floor Apartment For

tMta· l A, One B.R , Bath,
Kitchen W/ Stove &amp; Relrlg
Water Fumlthl&lt;l No Pals Corner S.Cond &amp; Plna, Glillpolls.

$230. P., Month, O.pos1t R..
qulred. C1ll 614-446--4249, 614·
446~325, Or 814-446-442!.

Merchandise
Household
Goods

Nutrition Products
Amino Acid Body
Building, weight lou and tal
burner fotmufu Aval11bl• ••·
elusively at Rita Aid Phannacy

G.neal1
featuring

I

I
II

1~

5

I

I

1

6

Tht

IBM

Stock Cuh And Carry, Mol·
Iehan Carpata, 614-446-i't44 .

I

APPLIANCES

dry•rs, refrigerators,
rangn
Skaggs Appliances,
Upper q111•r Ra Besu:le Stone
Call 614-446-n9a,

1-80~99-3499 .

Each. Complata Living Room
Set 614-446-8325.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliva St., Gallipolis Ntw &amp; Used

I

1

h~p

614-446-3158

BEDROOM
Bunk Beds S91
(2x6), 4 Drawer Chesl Of
Orawtra $44 95 Twin Mattress
$99 S.t

Wood Bar S1ools
$14.95 (26" ) Tab!. And 4 Padded
Cha1r1 $129

OPEN . 7 Days A Watk, 9 A M · 6
PM Sunday 12 Noon • 5 P M
Ttal Gr"n Recliner, 19 · Color Rt. 141 4 M1ln 011 ru 7 In Cenf II Wt1h R.mot1, 614·245-5233
lanarw

lamps, tape player, chairs, card
11ble wft:hal,.., lawn turnttura,
humldilltr, braided ruge, can-

Post Offlca Wild
Turkey Seaaon Soon, Has full
range of alzas , Woodland or
Treebark Camllauga , 1rmy pal·
tern clothing, tmall equipment,
rantal surplus clottllng F'rl, Sal,
Sun Noon~:OO PM. other days,
hours 304-273-5655 Busintss
imprinted
adYer11slng
speelaltiag; up to 25% discount
Sandy&lt;~llla

by

Sean high eftltlency alr-eond,
25,000 bh(, Ukt new, used one
summer, 304-458-19'17
Sears smooth lop stove, $125;
black slate counter lops, $100,
5hp gu air compressor, 614985--3~73

Tire shop aqui pmenl tor Pll 1
co1t1 4Q.40sa tire changer, 3 yr
old $1000, 1 eoata bubble
balancer $15o All tlr•• In slock
wlll sell a1 cost you pay tax ,
cash 'n carry Evary1111ng c1n bl
sean at Riverside Bait &amp; Tackle
et ol R1 7 and R! 218, Gal·
!polis 614-441-0101 or 379-2601

l

gas elolhes dryer,
Bryant gas furnace, 304-675-

Whirlpool

3871;.

WHITE 'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron
Allison,
1210 Second
A11anue , Gallipolis, Ohio, fi14·
446-4336

55

Building
Supplies

ning jars, 304-675-2915

~ ·\ ~

Complele the chuck le quoled
by fdl.ng m fhe m1!.smg words
de¥elop from 5lep No 3 below

Plastic "nd M•dai Culvert 6 Inch
Thru 60 Inch In Stock Ron
Enns, J1ckson, Ohio 1-800-

Block , brick , sew•r pipes, windows, li ntels, etc. Cl1ud1 Wlntars, Rio Grande, OH Can 614-

537-9528.

245-5121

53

Antiques
a~l

Dalmatlons For 5118, 614-4461156

Groom and Supply Sho~ ~
G..,.,.lng All brood•. otyln.
lams Ptt Food ONitr JuHt
Webb Call 614-446-0231
A K.C. puppln, ChineN Puqs
and most all br.eda art avail·
able, 304-576-2207.
AKC labrador RatriiVIf puppial, slfl I dim. 05.0. ca,lflad
&amp; on prtmiMs REAO't' FOR

EASTER. 1400. 304-rnl-5'160.

Farm Supplies
&amp;livestock
----

61 Farm Equipment
1851 John Dtlre Model B, Allis
Chalmers, H.D 6 Dour, Hyater

Eloctric: Forilllft. 614-4ota-2359

2 Row Corn Plantara, 614-245-

5508 Evenings.

DachsMuncfs. 614-388-a'TM.

3 Fuel t1nka, 2- 3polntherd
aprtldera, 806 lntem~~tlonal
Olnal U'lclor, 614-MS-3373

Aus1rallan puppiu, 7 &amp; 8wks.

8 Ft Drag Dlac, 3 Point 01r1

RtQIIIII~

MlniiiL,..

old , excellent brwdlng, 814-949-

2014
Fish Tank, 2413 Jaekaon A&lt;~• ·

Poln1 Pleasant, 304-67S-2063,
tull lint Tropical flshl tHrds,
small animals and suppl n .
Puppies

moiMr-

Schnauzer, father·?,
135, 614-m-5949

AKC
&lt;~trY

reg
cute,

Reglsterad Poodle Puppy, $200
614-446-8321
Shih Tlu Puppl11 AKC Reg
F1rst Shota Beautltul Loving

Pols, $200

614~43· 2285

What's so different about tha
Happy Jack 3·X Ilea collar? tt
work:!l! Contains NO synthetic
pyrethrolds For doga &amp; ca1s 1
R&amp;G F11ed &amp; Suppry, 614-992·
2164

57

Scoopar Buck.t, 18 Fl Electric
Ht)' EtiVtlor, Bunk Beds. 614·

379-2798.

Musical
Instruments

Piano, Pta&lt;~ty 4
Channel 100 Walt Mixer 2 12"
Black Widow 12 Speakers ,
Mlcrophon1, All New 6 Months

Hom11r Elec

Ago' 614-44&amp;.3969

Prom dresses, slza 315 , 2 call
length, blk &amp; while, $25 &amp; $50
Ona lang-full blue-while sal!n
$120 . One long-flounce black
sequlna $200 304-675-1697

Lawnmower. 614-367-Jt37.

72 Trucks lor Sale

74

Motorcycles

1983 Dodge Ram pi ckup LWB
whtt topper, psfpb, new !Ires ,
•.tra good. $2500 Anar 5 00

1982

Hon$

Shon Or-Ivan, Watar

uumv Bldg SJ*:Ial JO'x40 'x9',
1-15'x8' Slfdlng Door, 1-3' Walk
o- Palntecf St•l Siding &amp;
Root 1ng $5190 iron
Bldrs. 1-800-352-1045

HorN

814-288-6522

1988 Chevy Matt ton pickup 304615--5332 or 614-992-3488 .

1983 llow... IIJ 150 ex, F&lt;il
o........ $1,300 . 614-317-12!11.

614-446-2015

Truck Topper 8R lear Topper
$10 614·367-7196.

1989 Dodge Shadow ES, A1r,
P$1PB , Elec Wmdows, 38,000
Mllu, Good Cond111on, $4 ,700,
1987 Oodga 0-50 PU , $2,600

814-256-62S1

1i90 Ft•tiva, std , new paint ,
low mi , 1987 N11san, sunroof,
tid , low m!, 1985 Lvnx, low
milts, std, runa great, ~984
Oalaun, auto 4dr, AVB mileage,
614-446-7278

or

614 -446-6980

evenings.
For Sale 1970 Ford $600 Runs
Good , Has New Tires 614· 446 ·
1029

73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s
1981 Plymouth Voyagar van ,
loadl&lt;l, labia, revers1bl1 saats
mak• bed, 12,500. 304-67S-2088
1984 Chavy 4 Wheal Orlva,
Short Wheal Ban, 305, 4 SpMd,
4" l1ft, Alum Wheels Call 304675-7623, Or 614-446-4015 .
1984 Chevy 4 Wheel Drive,
Short Wheel Bue, 305, 4 Speed,
4" Lift, Alum Wheels Catl 304675-7623, Or 614-446-4015

1986 Ford A.arostar Van, one
1985 Ford Tempo, 4 owner,
4
cylinder,
Ssp
Door, Excellent Condition, New transmission, 614·742-24 27 aMer
Tires, $2,500 Call614·446-4638
6pm

72 Trucks lor Sale

Riverine An1lque1,

Hlit 1-tonda. 300, 4 ........ 4
wheel drl~• . 304-U2-2625.

1U7 Hordo 250X 4 -

· U-

ctlllnl ConchHon! $2,300. 114446-7644

Wo Buy, Soli, T.-, Uotd Hoileys, Parts ~ '
Avallab.. 6~1055.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

rcn.

Unconditional l1flt1m. gu.ran·
Loc.11 r•t•rancas furn iShed
BOATERS
FrM as1tmaln Dill c~~ 1Gukvts Ylreury Uartne Sarv1c1 614- 237-0488, di!y Ot f'll ghl
Mercury, Mariner, Mercruiser Rogers Basement Waterproolpldalisl: ...rcury clf11t..a . hng
Wobill!, We come to you 6l4-

259-&lt;i91'l.

76

Cunis

1989 Fotd Aeloalar Convaralon
Van, Aulomallc Ov.rdr!ve, Air,
Till, Crutse , Vary Good Condl·
lion, Catl 614-446-n11, After 5

P.lol

1990 Glauport 16'5"' Wflh 88 HP
EYinrud• Motor, And Triallr 6M-

1980 Jeep pick -up w11h 1opper, 4
WD, prlca $800 31)4-67S.1659 or
675-4515

1989 Ford Aerostaf Van XL,
am/lmlcasaette, lilt, air, cruis•.

441-0n4 , 614-388-8728.

lmprov~ rt l

I r•bu•H moiCM'I in stock , RO N

EVANS JACKSON ,
537-9528

~

1-800-

Ohio Yalt.y Wa1erproof1ng, 1114

1n Z.nrth also MI'Yidng most
other brands House celTs , als.o

104-67 ~ 1786

AOfl 's TV S.,V1ca, speciaiLZJng

some

•PP~ Iance

,..,_trs

WV

304 -576-2398 OhiO 614-446-2454

85 General Hauling

S.ptk: Tank Pumping $90 Gallla
Co RON EVANS ENTERPRISES ,
Jackson . OM 1-800-517--9528

We

Ganeu l Work, .A.ny Kmd' 614·
T7'9 ·2278 Any'!Lma

S.W -Vac
Servw:t ,
O..vts
Georges Crwek Rd Parts , supplieS , ptekup, and de~IVII)' 614·

6M-2U-56n, 814-992-6293

J W Con51ruc1ton Room Additio ns, Roots, Oack.t , S.dmg
And All Typts Of Erteriot And
ln1enor Painting Will Grve Low
Ltcanst Bid 614-446-lS.S1

446-0204

Replacement

Cr-ash

&amp;

tront

axlt, $200, 6'14-992· 2418

....-days,
inp

79

614-992~349

awen-

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

197'9 Tropie1na Tn1v• Tra1ler 27

Fl With Root Air. $3,800 614388-91 t5

Will budd paho covers , decks.

screened rooms pu1 up vtnyl
sKt10g ex tra11ef slur1tng 614-

Do
Haulmg
Anytime,
Anyplac e , No Job Too B1g Or

Too LJ!tla Basement Ctunmg ,

87

Upholstery

Mowrey s Upholslanng strvlc mg tr t coun1 y aru 2ti yaars The

best 1n h.Jtnllurt upholstering
Call 304·67s-41S4 for h'M 11-

2 4 ~ -91 52

llmat•s

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-LETS
ELATED
SULTRY
VOLUME
IMPACT
JESTER
HOPPER
SMART PEOPLE

- -- -

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Restdtntlal
or
eommerelal
wiring , new sarvlce Of rep1ir1
Mast•r Ucenaad .aectriclan
Ridenour Elec1neal , WV000306,

llma1n

1ima1es' Retetenees , No Job
Too B1g Or Small' 614· 367~516

P.rts At Wholesale Prices Nc
Hastlt R..ums. frM Oehvery
To AIM And AOl.lle Body Shops
Call For O..alls t-800-253-6358

84

V"1.t.od St, POVJI PINanl , WV
25550, J04-fi15..l049 Fr.. ea-

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Caner's Plumbing
Founh and Pine
Galltpolis, Ohio
614-446-3888

JET

l.lrahon Motors . repaired Hew

B~ Transmlssklns , Used &amp;
rebu1tt, startl~ at 199; tron1
wheel drtva S1art1ng at $149 00

Oualily

198i 18ft Pontoon, 1M1 60hp.
Evlnrudl rnolor, tua1 camas
cover, lish l1nder, PIOO, 614992-6641 days., 614-992-2627
evenings

Hcmt

82

Home
Improvements

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ota38.

19n GMC 314 ton H 0 , 350,
1u1o, pa,pb, lilt, sliding window,
reese hitch, !opper S1500 614·
245-9454

I had been ass1gned to help the
new woman rn our oH1ce get
acquarnted wrth her JOb and all the
equipment "Boy I'm glad you 're
tra1ning me rnstead of the boss ." she
srghed , "I get real nervous around
SMART PEOPLE!"

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

l

_j

46,500MI, $8800, fi14-992·T769

Real Estate General

18~7.

81

VNrs E..perl.,.ce On Okler &amp;
Nawtr Homes Room Addntons
Fo unda1 1on
Won, Roofing
Kit chens And Baths Frwe U-

CheyaMe's Truell Auto, Rt 50
llcAttht.u, Ohio New Prsm1um

40 hp Manner rno4or, 304-57'62553

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
1M

t975 16ft s..
But Boll
With 65 hp Mercury llotor I
Trolling Motor, $2,100. 6...._....
1985 Checkmate Doet, 2911:, 235

Home
Improvements

"'*·

rflas

Johnson 08, Rail.- S.S. prop.,
custom haul ,,...._, $7,800 :J04.
675-3436

Livestock

1 Year Old R~l:~r.d Black
Angus Bull. 61470.
1~300

Lb.

Holal•ln

SIMI,

Dehorned, 614-«6.()373.

Real Estate General

20th Annual Benl11y Pig Sale:
F.tdoy April 241h, 7.30 P.M.
Fayetta
Co.
Fairgrot.~ndt,
Washington Courthouse Selling
200 Mad of Barrows &amp; glhs For
~roy

3 Hampahlrt Yurtlng Ewes,
One YN·rl~J Ram Rtady For
Show. 81
1158.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Color TV's Por1able And Contoll, $60 Each Microwave 0111n
$90, Electric Ciolhtl Dryer, $65

9mm semi-automatle handgun,
very good condition , $200 nrm,
614-992-6921 after 4pm

614·256-1238.
Concrwt• &amp; Plastic Septic
Tanka, Jet l•n~tlon Tankt Flon
Enns En11rpriNt, Jackson, OH

1-80o-537-952ll.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Craftsman 6hp rolo !Iller, 304 ..{

67S-3603

1 Bilek &amp; Gold Prom Dress For S.la 3 Formals Slzas · 7
Slzl 11, Worn Once , $50 614· 1·A
_n_d_13_._61_4_-4_4""
6-"308
_ 7:.
441.0009
Franklin Typa FlrtpiiCI Stove,
Cut Iron, With Accnsori11,

-=-

2 Salf-dafrostlng refrigerators , 1 $'100 Phone 61 4-446-31511 Aher
whitt, 1 brown, SiOO each
Kenmore wnh•rldrytr ut, al· 6 PM
mood
cofor,
$200,
GE Rawa.lgh
produclt,
ttuk

washttldty.,, white, $150
N ..onlng, vanilla, medicated
8 prom drnsn, 1izaa 7!8 1o ointment,
antiHpllc, salve,
1111'20, under $40, 614-247-2711
splets, bowl clqnsr, pi1 Ill·
lings, 614-992 -2200

FOR SALE:
4 Pan~ Ums;

2 oblong (1St alu11inum
an legs; many flower
pots, Featon glass;
Fostoria glass; I -1900
~tnlury wire bench
with batk-new poln~
I - wheel barrow;
2 - winter 1oats.
tbl4l m-m 1

lngua And Chi-Angus Black
BunsL Aelaonabty Prlcld. Slate
Run l"lmta, Jacksot~, Ohio, 614--

D. C. •tal Salts, l1c.

281-6385.

CannebJf9. Inc. 45719
Speciahzrng rn Pole

Buidings.
Designed to meet your
~s-Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post BlildinQs and
Package Dears Save
Hundreds. even Tlxlusands
ol Dollars.
Local Sales Representative
DONNA CRISENBERY
11366S.SlRl7
GaDrpohs, OH.

Flbrulry 1818 AOHA Sorrell
... ,., June 1990 Ftnlastlc Palnt
Con, 1112 12 Ft Stock Trailer,
$1,715 114-288-11522.

REDUCTION
OWNERS NEED A BUYER- For a nu tn-lo¥ol homo on
a 100x150 lot tn a 111stncled aubdvtston 3 bedrooms, 2'/l
baltls, lormal d1n1ng room, largo tamoly room. ubl1ty, pabo
and 2 car garage are somo olltle features Located only 6
moles from the city, 1 milo from elementary ochool and 11
mtles to H.M C Convement, apactous and aHorOO~e
Owner1 will gve qutck possesSion as they are anx10us to
head West RiQJea&lt;j to $69.500 .
1408

Good~

rooms. 3 bedrooms, 1'11 baths, lull bo.sement , white
I stding, front and rear pon::hes. garage . concrete dnvewav., e•lm lot What more could you wan! m a home
See 1 now
1698

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE ., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

PH. 6t4-256-1633

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

SetUe tnto thiS tlomey thraa bedroom Wllh
loncod backyard You'l lovo the largo lotchet&gt;
and adjom1ng cozy famtly room Pnced al
$37 .900
1505

&amp; FFA Club Pigs For

A WORTHY REWARD -For thoso who havo
ach1eved success . we orrer th1s supremely
spaCIOUS (over 2,700 •q k 1 and boauti1ully
h andcrafted home on 2 21l acres m/1. 4
bedrooms. 3 baltls , livong room . donong room.
room . 2 kitchens den o r effie»
ProfessiOnally landscaped . 3 car garage,

tam•ly

Rt-OU\rf ·

ongrouoo pool For lhoso who havo oamod rt.
call Carolyn lor your pn¥1118 ¥00Wing.
1614.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

Sa ... 814-388-9033 AH11 6 PM
Hettlfotd Cow with Umousln

colt, 104-458-1817.
Hollt~n

Real Estate General

hllten, A.I. brHdlng, 6

brwding age, 15 long yearlings,
4 reglsterad, David" Ko~entz ,
814-*-3D8i

Wood 1\ja{ty Inc.

Haretord Bulls 1-3 Yrs
Old. Top BhMMSIIn• TayiOJ &amp;
Polled

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

REDUCTION- YoAIYe odinirod ~from rho road
and ltloughl1l would ,_., M lor sale. but now
we' re offenng f\is baautJful home. 0ki1r home
loaded woltllots of chatm ollonng 3 bedrooms.
2 baths. IMng roan. dirW1g mom. tamoly room
and Ia rge lotcllan OYGrioolung a Ialli&amp; pond All
ltlos sotualad on 3 (mil) baaublul wooded acros
Call Carolyn loJ your showong today Pnca
mciJood to S79 000
troJ
J ' ~ICI-.

1

Toylo&lt;IIW43~285 .

32 Locust Street,

Zlppo Dill Plneber, Chestnut
mart, eyrs. okl, $1500, &amp;14-698·
2118

Gallipolis

446·1066
Allen C. Wood. Realtor/Broker--446-4523

Real Estate General

1986
250......
·
runs grwtl,
$1,60CI.
304-T'D-5214
or Tn-5730 bath aftw S~ PM.

81

BO.lTERS
J...S M.arine S.Vke, Servmg All
Your Bolting Naeds, Par1a, k ·
~•
Two Cycle Oi l And
s.nne. 614-256-6160.

For sa Dodge 318 enQine with
1965 Radar Bass Baa.t. '15 \12 ft , lip_ auto. trans.; tunSler easa

MaiM';' Ferguson 124 square
baler, exc eond, $1,600 304-458-

63

Boal , lrai&amp;tr 1 112 hp mol or &amp;
ot her al'lru, 304-17'3-5836

1989 Celebrllv Eurospor1 Alr
Conditioning , Cruise Control,
59,000 Miles, New Tirn $6 ,200

IH Model 80 Pull-Type Combine,
Very Good Condition, $900
Taylor Farm 614-643-2285

JD 1530 Diesel Traclcr, $.5 950,
800 Ford With Plow &amp; Disc,
Blade And Bush Hog, $3,850.

MUtt, $1,250.

3,000

Services

tor Sale

Cl500

8253

FARII TRACTOR SUPPLY· Ohio
Valley Ser'olia C.ntlf. Buy, Sell,
Trade. 614-2~0 .

International 56, 4-row com
planter, 614-94g..2876 or 304-882·
2023

75 Boats &amp; Motors

6t4-J&amp;J.gm

For Sal•

Bentley (513)584-2398 or

POint PINIInt, WV

Buy or

Pets lor Sale

AKC

Autos lor Sale

Larrick 513-780-4802

614-992-2526

LIVING ROOM Sofa And Chair
$179 And Up, Coftet And End
Tabln $19 And Up, S wivel
Rockers $1'9

Plano, bedroom suite, tlerao,
hit cabinet. end t1bln, speaktr,

Sam Somarvill•'• Army Surplua,
5 mlltt East 1-n Ravanawood,

71

mort lnfonnatlon contact Rogar

Moul'l: M T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6.00
p m, Sunday 1 00 1o 6 00 p m

BARGAINS GALORE'

thi'H 22ft uud trusaaa S8
each; kids 1prlng horH good,
kids 161n star1ar blke; 18ft 1lumn
h1rd top boat, 75ttp motor; 10ft
alumn Jon Boat1_P•llnn 3 man
paddle boat; 12n alumn V bol·
tom llshlng boll: Ford 7ft Rail
mower 3p4, Engine ovarhaul kit
tor AC We 45 1ractor; Ferguson
2 row cuhlntor 3pt, one row
cunlvalor 3pt, pig pole. 304-m5680.

Dryer Shopp11 614-446-2944

56

For Sale
or Trade

59

1981 Grand AM , low mila&amp;, PS ,
Ont Good Uud S Ho,.. PB, AM/FM cassa111 , ••c cond,
power\Jnlco R~otlller, For On• $4,200. Of 1rtda tor auto pick up,
Good
IJeH
Small
Pueh 304-675-1221

f'll l C'P f&lt;EDUOil

1124 E Main Str'llt, Pomeroy

VI'RA FURNITURE

Disk,

814-256-1026 Bator• 1

7ft Bush Hog disc 3pt; 8hp
Briggs &amp; Stn1tfan motor; TWenty

r I' r r I' r 1· I' r· r 1

Big Rivet Antiqun, 510 Main St,

tumlture, haa1trl, Western &amp;
Work bools 614-446-3159

Color

Reconditioned
washers
&amp;
each $100 and up. Wt
aarvlca all maket Tha Washtr &amp;

d~t..,,

~

Frw Dellnry
PICKENS FURNITURE
Newrused
Hou.. hokl furnishing 112 ml
Jtrricho Rd Pt Pleasan1, WV,
call 304~75-1450 .

Hard Drive
And Printer,

Mauey Ferguson 50, AC WD-95
3p1 hllch; c ... Vac 3pt hitch,
Maasty Harris Ferguson Pony ,

I

·~;,;."r

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Compl1l1 home furnlg;hlngs
Hours Moo-Sat, 8-5 614-4460322, 3 l'riiiH out Bulavlllt Rd

to diet

P.M.

1HE ~~r 1 I~

Hld•A-Bed Sofa Queen, $150,

PS1

Monl1or

_M_

_

ute way

$1 1 ~00.

""""""
_ theI "''
newbeeo
woman
in ourIOoffice
get acquainted with her job
and all the equipment "Boy
T RE J E S
I'm glad you're training me
8 1 1
1 19 instead of the boss," she
1
_ _ _ _ _ _ sighed , "I get real nervous
around ----- ------1"
_

DINETTES

51

1-800-548-1923

I r Flc i I I

Complete 5 Pc. Bedroom Sutte,
33N., undlr new management . $250; lawn Mowers, RaMan
Lola, 185; home rwntale, $235, Dlnnelte Tabl1 Glass Top &amp; Rat·
814-38W227
tan Backs, Washer &amp; Dryer, $100
Mobile Home La!,

I

MUVLOE
I

Big Savlnga On All Carp9t In

Crest Motel

I

l

6'3 " Oth• Secllan 7'2" Mui1 1S1rlpe Velv.t Excellent Condition, $800 Antlqu1 Oak Oren•r

USED

1

of

RUTSLY

S.t, Marvesl Gold, Was $300 Cui

w••n.....

2

II I

To $125 Washer And Dryer Se1
1
,245 Cut To $190
Whirlpool
her And Orytr

GOOD

1

FREEINSTALLATK&gt;N
SWIMMING POOLS
Only S62.1VMo. ~For 12 Months
19x31x4 Poo4 lncludn Filter,
llddera, Huge Oeek
Etc
("Bued On Selling Price Of
S698. $14 45 APR, Tolal Deterred
Price . $754.92) Don't Btlla¥elt7
C.ll BPI

I

OALETE
1

$150; Am1n1 Window Air Cond
614 .... 46-3969.

Rooms tar rent · waek or monlh

GAME

the 6 !(rambled
below lo make 6

words

4 Piece living Room Sullt
Tara TownhouM Aper1mtn1t, 2 Au.UBrown 1150. 614-446--04 81
Bedrooms, 2 Aoo,., 1166 Sq. Ft
LNvtA Menage
1 112 Baths, CA, DW, Disposal, 2
Pools, UtllttiH Paid heap! BustU 2 Pc. S.CUonal Sl•eper,
El.ctric, No P1t1 614 -367-7850

S4 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

O Rearrange

9oK Springs.

Couc:h &amp; Love Seal, Chair &amp;

w..

April 19, 1992

Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN

\ Outllt"V 10/ld Maple King aide

t..d, Mal... I

WORD

wv

Sunday llmes--Sentlnei- Page--07

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

Ken Morgan. Reahor/Broker--446-Q971
Mote Canterbury, Reahor--446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
Tim Watton, Reahor- 446-2027

Transportation

Real Estate General
71

Autos for Sale

NOT ONLY WILL YOU LOVE THE HOME,
YOU'LL LOVE THE PRICE! OWNER
REDUCED PRICE BY $7,0001t - FOI' $59,500
you'l enjoy tws 3 bedl00111 rWlCh m one of the
araa's nrcesl noiglb&lt;&gt;thoodo Oversaed lamiy
room ard olliaenlw- mal&lt;&amp; lor oasy lamoly
trvong Froot ond rear dodu to """" ard onroy
rho outdoors. Don't pass ths one by. call today
lor an IPI&gt;Oin""""~
1512

BEST UTTL£ RANCH AROUND - Tak o a
look and you'll be s~d on th1s spot!&amp;$$ J

bedroom 1 'It bath bn cil. With one car anached
garage Not far Irom town on 8 deadend street
The pnce JUSt $46 500
1502

CHILDREN GROW. HOUSES OON'TII

Ill

th1s age of shnnlung space , you'll f1nd a
2 11:13 b'img room . 23x13 kitchen and 2 6x16
unhn1shed fam1ly room. J bedrooms. 2 baths

Plus 2 car garage, 1 2 5 acres , m/1 , n1 c e
covered pabo If your present ho me IS cramped
and oonfinOlQ. call today l59 ,000
1615

'80
C.lebrHy.
2 8l-FIJOO.
l.oodod. U.400. 814-:lliY-0122 .~
t... 5.00PM.

1NI Mustang, good body, runt
g,..\ wae uNd tor thow car,

n..cte frame work, $900.
T73-52a. or Tn-5730 both

304attar

5.00 PM.

WHERE GIWI)IIA usm TO

1971 Chl'llllt euper sport, 350
nigh porlormonc:o engine, Cowl
IMuctlon hood, call 304-882·
2215

1m Ford

Glaan 1 and 112 slory home olong Roura 7
oftoro lots o1 charm. 3 badroomt. firaplaca .
.-.ong room and ful basomont .,. fUll some ot
ltle toabno 1.66 ...,.. ird.dH 2 .,... garago
and bath Now gas lu,_ inslallod ,_,tty
also Beaull1ul nv01 . , . . lo - y from tho
sheda of tho maplo- Prio«&lt; al $59,500

Van, &amp;&lt;yllndlf, atan-

darcl, n1"18 good, 1515, 1i81
TvyWI CorroiLt Hlllcnbock wllh
air, 1600, 1915 Honda CB360
moloreyc.. , 1275, amall 110,
IOomp. oloc1ric: wold.,, 145. 614-

1111i

1112~

1m Cadillac:, 2dr.,

runs good,

$30CI, &amp;14-t82·lll21

1ffl Ford LTD Good Cood11lon,
$80G. I14-406-3969.

1m Flreb4rd,

nevw englna, new
lraMiftltsion, needs brakes ,
$1.oqtl. 304--11'15-7967
1f71 Musttng, All New Parta!

RotMII lloiOO', Rodone To Look
Uke A •· 302.1.. Auto, Haa Minor
Eloc. 9hcHI Hoducod To Solll
SI,OOO. 814-4oii-IIU7
1912 ctwvy Cav1Uer, 4 door, 4
cyl.
oood. body !Htlo
fOUllh,
. 30{-1182-3343

""':e:""

1245. WOULD YOU UKE TO GET OUT BY
YOURSELF? - Thos could be tho place ,
beaultful log home offers 4 BAs (master

1235. LET YOUR IMAGINATION TAKE
OVER woth 11111 large homo Siluatad across
!rom GAHS thts home offers 5 BAs, 4

1246. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
ONE I- Large fo9 homo can ba purchasod ,.,,h
162 acres or 2 acres This home offers 4 BAs
3 baths. oquoppod kitchen LR FA
fiR&gt;placeo, hoar pum/e&lt;~nl. aor (~kup sys..;m).

bedroom has a fireplace). 1~ balhs. LA w!FP. oversiZed 2 car aHachad garage Frontage on
kJichon donong room, FA Sooond old homo on
proporty t12 5 acres. m~

HOME AND 2 ACRES M or L - 3 bodroom s. 1 balh.

1883 Pontiac:: Bonnavillt, good

WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE OF CITY POOL - 3
bedrooms, hvmg room , IQtchen , bath, wtth a famdy room,
bedroom and bath 10 basement r~ car garage , fen ced·
on backyam MUST SEEIII

ohopo, "'""· $1,700 304173a5284
or 773-57:10 anar s 00

Raccoon Craok.

""'- Chlveua,

good molor
powar trane - wn..ll, l400 3041914

baltls . kJtchon. LA. 16x16 FA II yoo want
extra room this ts the one for you

room. k1tchen w1lh d1nmg area, 1'11 bath ftn l!hed
basement wtlh fam ily room, bath , uhhty room. and a
storage room 2 decks and a 17' x 32 tn-ground poo( ana
a Slorugs DUIIOing MAI\t. AN A~ t-'VIN I Mt:N I I 0 SEE III

Okll 88, 307, Has Most
Lux"ry Options. Very Clun,
S.Mce Records $2,700 6143ll7-450e.
1883

2

IN GALLI PO US - BRICK HOME - 3 bedrooms . hvmg

175-1170.

1184 Dadga AriM, 4 dwr, block,
A~,

c....na, 4 eyl, aUio ,
814-1112-7231, .....rng.

1N4

~

llv•ng room, kitchen, fireplace , and unfin•shed basement

PRICED AT $36,500

LOG HOME - 2800 oq It ol lovong space, 3

Omnl, IUIO, 4 cyl,

1a&amp;4 I.e Baron, cendy machines ,
1 pop mechlne, 35 ft . 51 h

· - · 304-173-56~

MILLS VILLAGE SUBDIVISION - Lanai
Drive , just mtnutea from hosptlal and

ohoppong on U S Rt. 35 3 BRs , " ' baltls
LA, OR, kttchen w/owm, range , d•spl , OW
anached ganoQO wlopooor
1201. OWNER HAS TOLD US TO BRING
AN OFFER - Very mce home localed on

SR 35 near hospital and sho pping , 3 B Rs

LA.

kitchen bath, at1ached garage

EXTRA NICE MOBILE HOME FOR SALE 'Bii Holly Por1&lt; 14x72. 2 BRa. LA. kitchen DR
cent Blr and lots of extra f&amp;abJ!"is
·
1203. OHIO TOWNSHIP - 53 \\ acrea. moro or
leu Very n~ee ranch style home offen 3 or 4

bodroomo, LA, kotchon, bath, lull basamont.
carpet, deck, garage, siding. Tobac co base

ond tobacco bam Adclbonal laoo.

1161. LaGRANDE BOULEVARD - Alii brick. 3
BRo. LA. k1tchon, bath, rull baoemont, gas
forced air, attached garage, city senoots
1228••11 A. MIL (Hobart Dillon Subd.-elong
Raccoon Crook. Gr~~at for a mobile homo.
Largo pino trees on 3 aides. Alllovol

1540. GET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - Anraclrve homo oHars 3 BAs
bath, kttchen . 12JQ4 fam•ly room wsth firepta~
and hvmg home wnh fireplace
1 12

S•tuated on

acra, m!l

1173. SELLER WANTS TO RELOCATE N1ce m1m !arm fo r the fam•ly 3 BR home
offer s. 2 baths , LR, OR kit chen and othe r
extra s O wner says bnng us an o Her

1146. 6!;8 Fourth Avonue. •.3 BRa, 1112
baltls. kitchen dining mom. LA, gaa hoat,
caopot, close lo shopptng and ochoola
1724. PUT THE HORSES OUT TO
PASl\JRE ON THIS 30 ACRE MINI FARM
- 20 ac lonc;Q(j, now bam wltix stalls,
horso nng. Also oloro a 3 BR home. Woodt
Moll Road . Call lor pric:ol and lu"""r dotailo
1150. OWNER HAS GIVEN THIS HOME
LOTS OF CARE - 3 BRo. bath. ~tchon ,
LA. firoplace, 1 car unana&lt;:lled garaga
1578. LARGE FARM - 386 acre mA. 55• 100
bam, 3 ponds. tobacco base Call tor details

1731_ CALL AND ASK ABOUT ME -I'm a
very mce home 111 town and my ownars are
oHenng rna at a good price Attractive
k.1tc hen, dmmg area, OW, oven, range,

dospl LA. lafljo bath wAaundry, gas heal.
cent oor, C$1hng tans. largo toncod backyard
for the kids or pets.

tU7. NICE HOME, EDGE OF TOWN LOTS
OF POSSIBIUTlES - LA, kllehon, DR.' 3 BAs,
bath, laundry Priced for begmners Green
School
1510. WHITE ROAD - 20 acnoo. mA, ¥acant
land approx

1 mtle from Charola1s laka

$20,000
1316. MEIGS CO., 240 A, mA, Bodford and
Chester Twp. Old ongtnal tog nome w1th
addotoon added Dnllod woll. coonty water
ava1lable Has been owned by same tam1ly for
4 generations
1142. $35,110011 _-WHY PAY RENT'? - Ranch
stylo homo on SR 160, 3 BRa, LA. k1tchon ,
baltl , onached garago, 100X300 lol
t212. &amp;.48 A., mil, Section 34 RIICCOOO Twp.,
fronts on SA 325. $25,000

1988 Dodga VI ... 12,900 1987

1190. RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN
BACKYARD - Vary mce all bnek homo offor11 3
BRs, LR wlf~replace , eqUipped kitchen , full
basement.

1305. 30.5 ACRES MIL Aa cooon Twp
Gamars Ford Rd. Pond and bam, lovely
place for a new home

STOPII Now on tho mar1&lt;ot. 3 BR homo in
town Kilchon, LA, DR. large 2 car garago gao
heat, central an Gall for mo!V details .

1200. GREEN TWP PORTERBAOOK
SUBD., WITH VERY NICE RANCH - 3
BRs . LR. kotch on . balh &amp; hall. 2 car ga rage,
fi replace

NICE HOME LOCATED IN PIJRIOT _
Ourol nooghborhood, 85x172 lor, 3 BA
bath, LA , kJtchon. noce carpal, attached
garaga wloponor
1675. EXCELL£NT INVESTMENT PROPERlY - 4 SALE - 3.4 ACRES, mil, on ltlo
crty of Galhpol01. Fronta on Vinton St , Noal
Avo &amp; SA 160 (Iormor solo of stock sale)
Homo oo P"'f"'rtv at polllont oltoro 7 rms .
2 baltls, now kill:hon. now wtndowa Call lor
mono detaJis

1209. RIO GRANDE AREA - 2 87 acres rnA,
lovely 2 story home w1th 3 BRs, 1Y1 baths,
kotchen LA Ideally located noar now htlllwav
1154 NICE STARTER HOME - Locatod JUSt at
the edge of town Thts home leatures 3
bedroom s, bath , llvmg room, kitchen, dmmg
roQm an d a fu ll ba sement F1ve m 1nutes 1o
downtown

1201 . PRICE REDUCED TO '55,oo01 - 3

ISH. KUCKER ROAIH..ot contains 824 aero
mil. watM tap and a.plle lank on property
1126. $28,900 - _ Evan• Hooghrs , J BR. LA ,
kltchon, baltl, Ml basomant

8R h om&amp; Situated near HM C and Rt 35
shopp1ng area Call lor more details

It 14. S21 ,000 - 3 lois + older home,
BicfwoN . 3 BAs. baltl, LA. kitchen , wor1&lt;shop
and gamQO.

Okta Cutta. . $2,700. 19811 Chevy
c.v._lier station wagon $3,200
t911! Fan! ll.ongor 4•4 12,600
1184 lronco 11 ftn $2,800. 1985
Ford
F-150
S2,3txr
1985
Plymouth Vvyogor $2,700. 191M

Flonl 111Jf!10 miiM $2•500 191M
T llrtl
11115 ""d EXP
11011. tN5 Fifth A•enuo 13.000
1184 Fan! F-1oo "ilooo "'""
$1,111 11187 Fopnl ronco full
.... &amp;4,100. 11117 Cltowy Co•.... t\400. 1t85 04da Dena 88
12,381. IIIH Iuick Sky Howk
Sporl ft,IIM. Scollyo UMd
Ha.,.n, 304-112-3752

._soo_

Co••·

1888 Oldl Flrenu, 5 •P"d, air,
ami fm ltlf'IO, lilt wMHI, 614·
182-8521 call after 6pm

11117 01• Ootto 81, VInyl Topl
' - 1 EKcolllnl CondKiol1
S&amp;,OOO. 1~225, Aftorlp.m
1tll7 Trono-Am, T-Topo, loodod,
30C-117NIII.

NEW LISTING

HOME IN CROWN CITY - 3 bedrooms , hvong room .
kltchon . baltl , rull basemen~ e.ntral heat and aor condlloon. 2 car garage Rentad mob~o hom8 on back o1 lol
CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION
batha k)caled on 10 acres and borders

AIC 11187 S-10, 4 cyl, 4 opood.
AIC. 304-t7&amp;-7158.

G,;...n and Galltpohs schools CALL
BRICK HOME - Located on Bulavollo Road - 3
ba&lt;lro&lt;&gt;m , hvtng room , kitchen with d1mng area, 1 batt1 ,
room , and a 2 car garage unattached TV Sa t&amp;l hte
FOR APPOINTMENT
YOUR OWN BUSINESS - localod on At 7
li~~~~=~i . 30'x36' block bu1ld1ng w 1th st o 1aga 1n

lb

70ft. frontage on

Rt 7. lot runs

as convenaant mar1

to Oh1o Arver

DRASTI CALLY

H~IJU~;tu . NOW ONLY $34.900 00

IHOME 1 ACREAGE IN WAUIUT TWP. - 2 bedroom•.
room kittllon and baltl Hoooo romodolod 11 yoars

' b.

aa.s m or I with tobacoo bas,e

HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553- 11 rooms . 4 badlrooom,l
2 baths, living room, din111g room, 2 kitchans - one
basement almost 3 acrea, fruit 1rHI cellar, garage and

storage buildong CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEEIII
00 ACRES M 01 Lon Friendly Ridge rn Clay Twp Water
oloetnc available. Plicod al $32.500.00
LOCATED IN GALUPOUS - lllno Slleel - ~ rent al
unots, good Income property. Call lor moro tnlormallon

118f Chivy Colobrtly, loodtd,
12,100. or boa! otlor, 304-117S-

HOUSE IN GALUPOUS - J rooms and bath , walk ong
ldiotanc:oto schools and slonos. Pnea&lt;j at $16 ,000 00

Q32

IGRIEEN ACRES - Two Iota, 1 larga level homo site

-~--

11M Fonl - · oulo, 4 cyl,
11,300 mtiH, cond,
14,1410. """· 3IOU15-181l
1MI
Oklemlobllt
CutliP
1""'11hllm, JOl V-II loodod,
never damaQNi. unbelievable
condition, high mUug•, prleMI
OCC«dlngly. 114-7'2-29711, 11411112-33114

DOES A LARGE UVING ROOM with a siDne
fireplace, apaciout kilc:Mn, tul besemanl
sound rp;41 Wei. I oo. we r - tho home lor
you L.oealod fUSI......., lnxn IDMl. Yoo Wll
also QOI cenlral aor, _,j-inod . - r closols.
oxtra largo tamoly room and oil at a vo'Y
anon:lablo pnce. ~.900 Col lor your showing
todoyl
1704

HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Roalty V~lago II Call lor
Information

_

6

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TR~
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER L:J

J-...--~~~--- --------

--·..

A NICE STARTER HOllE OR . a quoet placo
to rebra. ~ 7• aa.s olland. 3 bedroom homo
wolh large nocoly decorated krtchen . 2 car
unattac hed garage , 2 ceil.ng fans . h~ nc•ng
around most of land and rooro Prcod to soil
1710

NO MAYBES...JIOT EVEN PROBABlY.
Undoul*dy the Beal Country VIew

85 ACRE FARM ALONG AACCOOH CllEEKComplete woltl 2 barns 2 ponds and a vory n""'

Ideal lor the s1ngle pe rson, ttus 1 bedroom . 1
bath home IS kx.ated 1n E u~ka and often oft
street pa rking and a small stomge bulid1ng

FOR STARTERS. ol has all ol tho """"balo

AFFORDABLE HOME IN GREEN
TOWNS HI PI
Plduro yoor...r111 flu 3 bedroom ranch locatod
11 a lamrly onentod n..g,borhood ltlat your kido

tncludmg a very raasonabki pnce tag 3
badroom ranch m a convemenl loc.al 10n
1ncludes hv1ng room, famdy room , aat ·m
kitchen 1111d bilth. Newer carpet 1n most lOOmS
Hoat pump with &lt;»ntral ao&lt; Largo flat lot with on
2 miles ot town Prx:ed to !!181 at 542 .000. f5.00

RRST AVENUE ADDRESS - Vory rvoo 2 story
home IS wa•tJng for you and your fan·uty Th1t
homa has be&amp;n completely remodeled ll 'lery
fine taste Features 1ndude • bec:Wooms. 2 and

1f.2 baths . tarmly room . loomal dir.ng room ond
loomal lovong room Boeutolul lulchon woltl choir;
cabinets . 2 fi replaces and very artracbve oak
staon:aso Beaublully landscaped ongnJI61d pool
•n backyard Off street parto ng G1ve us a call
for an appmn tm enl

A DOUBLE YOU'll TR EASURE
Ideal rvtuvmen t horns w1th poten t1al 1ncome
Conven1anl locatmn . a xcellen l condthon low
ma•ntenance and attached garag es a re
feab.nes you w1ll approoate Q wne( s snX. has
2 yr old eiGC heal pump and 1'h ba!hs Call
today to v1aw thts un•qua pro pe rty pnc&amp;d at
$94 ,500
ISU

llw.g mom, l&amp;ml!y room 1Bf98 HI-in kl\chen ,
t '11 barhs and 2 car garage Call today to YHIW
th•s home
1232.

NEW USTING OVERLOOKING RIVER
Charm1ng hom e loca!ed along At 7 offe~ 8
pleasant way ol ~19 Whtle ltle bQ.8u t1 ful Oh to
R1v9 r stroll s along m the front. yo u can enJ OY a
re laxmg d1p 1n the m grou n d pool Well
decorated 1n sKie w t!h 3 bedroom s, woodwor);
With charac ter and a tuU ba semen! Ga rden
spo l. wrap around dnvaway SSOs
1217

DON'T SETTLE FOR A HOUSE JUST TO
UVE IN -From lho momonl yoo 11op 01ID rho
largo loyor you can ,..,. yoor lamoly limg on
thiS datn:: . Formal IIVlnQ room , Ontng room ,
sunny kitchen. very hvable farmty room. 3

new wturlPQCW wash11 and dryer Outlhor a rg.a

offers ~ d.ck. concrete bl ock s•dew alks and
storage bu1lding Locat9d o n a rented lor or
move to your own lot OHer&amp;d al a pnce th at

rwoe

bedrooms plus 2 lull baths Slo,_ garo.., .,
the larg~~ albc, 1 car oonven.eoce Pnced al
$63,000
KOt

1610

•

EXCEUENT COMMERCIAL BUSINESS
GrMl potenbalt for moat eny

rype of'bumess

Thoo 3,112 oq ll lxJiking most NCOntly brought
on $500 00 par monltl 2 bedroom opart,.,.,t
overhead Bu11dng (X)(Jid be transforrMd 1nto
rvsidanbal property very eas•ty Pncad

1n

the

SO's FU'le bus..w.ss bebw and kve Up!ta•rs
11210

GS!!!

N REAL ESTATE INC.
446·3644

......
-.
-p

David Wiseman, Broker, 446·9555
LORETIA McDADE, 446-7729
B. J . HAIRSTON, 446-4240

·-

IS for you Large lrv1ng room . dmmg araa Wi th
buln... n bu fte t. larye master bedroom W1 1tl built
1n de sk and dras.ser, 2 nd b9d room . la rge ba th
With garden tub Enclosed laundry area wtth

can1 beboal onlyS1 5.500"

WE NEED LIS

WISE

will love• You wdl hka the convenience to
shopp1ng ho sprta l etc Home offers formal

WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOME WITHOUT
A BEAUTY OF A PRICE7
Ther1 th1s 1988 Faumon t To wn sho u se ( 14x70)

Anlund. PBIIODI

BUSINESS OPf'ORTUNITY IN
EXCELLENT LOCATION
Outstanding potonliol on !his ditvo 1hru carry
out Goaat location olong SL Rl 35. 3 bed room
res•dence 1ncluded 1n ule l ots of road
lrnnlago. Wll include n_,lofy and oq ..pmont
1513

1504

1205

E•ary lime you drN9 tho strM:Io ol mad, you
marvel at how boaulilul and wol k"'J( rho aoaa
os lmagone ownong -rtv 7 acnos. pon;llod on
a knoll. owrloolong the Bob Evans Farm at Rio
Grandol Whal a ploasure rt 1l&lt;l&lt;lld bo lo waka
up each mom•ng El'lfOY watching the horses
and cattle graze Enpoy an ou1standng s!S!sel
every ev&amp;nmg. 00... 2 bedroom home and
pond 1ncluded Fenced Gel Oe.ve tor mo re
~nlo rmatlon.
1201

TIRED OF APARTMENT LIVING?
Stop up lo homeownor1hop lor JUSI $12 .000

bnck home Compnsed mosrty ol pastunt and
bllabkl acreage There's e 2 ,000 lb lobacco
base and !Pod spnng J bodmom homo wo1h lui
basement and 1 car gara94J Extra 2 c ar
d4iillached garage al t o OUiet e raa 1n Green
Schools S 120,000
1202

CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007
SONNY GARNES, 446-2707

• ______
• _
_ _ _ _ __ __:_____ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _:___

•

p

•·

·~

�Mineral Wels, WV

April II. 199!

STOCK. STEERS:
75.00-llO.OO

JOIHmlb
)()0.500
S00-100

7~ . 00-90.00

TJ00-82.50
56- ~ -00

~

STOCK HEIFERS:

62.00-93.00
W.00-81.00
65.00-75.00
5200-61.50

JOO.mdt.r
300-500
S00-100
lm-&lt;JYel

STOCK BULLS:
JOO.mdt.r
300-500
500-100

65 .Q0-94 .00
69.5~84 . 00

05 .()().. 71.50
52.50-67.50
•5000-865.00

Slaogbta Bulls
Coon &amp; Calvt:S B H

~2. 00-53 00

BmiCowsBy•
BmiCcwsBH
Shqb!r:r Cows:
Hip Dressing

1&lt;0JJ0-765.00
~7

50-53 .75
-10 OO-U.50
Y2 00--ll 00

Utility
Cmner&amp; Cuner
VEAL

75 Q0-95 00

Choice

--o Q0-80.00

Mediwn

65.00-7750

Good
LAMBS :

58 Q0-64 00
52 00-0()_00
-!.(]_ 00-2 10.00
35 Q0-64.00
:!:5 .oo-58.00

Blue
FccdrJs
IWiy Calves B H
HORSES cwt
l'bnies

HOGS:
200-250
300-500

35 ()()..4() 00
28 Q0-35 00
:::2.75-25.00
1200- 28 00

Male Hogs

BH

1\J~reerl Producuon Sale Fnda, , Ma' 8. ~-(~&gt; P_\!
JA CKSON CO. LIYESTOCI' \l-\IUUT
Ri pk&gt;~ . W\'

April 9.

199 ~

SLAUG ifiTR STEERS

62. ~.00

Good .t: OIO!ce
S••twd

54.00-62.00

SLAUGifiTR HEIFERS
Good &amp; Cboice

66-~7 .00

StweWd

58.00-62.00

SLAUGifiTR COWS
O•••WJci.ol

46.00-48.00

IJiilay

~00-47 .00

BuDs ova l,(XXl lb.
VEAL:
&lt;::lrice .t: rrnne 190- 22 ~
226-265 lb

90 00-99.00
85 1)}97.00

c..cr .t: Cuuer

35.00-41.00
5200-59 75

HOGS:
190-240
240-260
Sows 300-500
BoiiSID500

32.00-35.50
lO.00-35.00
28.00-32.00
25.00-28.00
22.00-]() 00

Pip(byil&lt;3!)

YEARLING STEERS
Good .t: choice 500-600

75 Q0-86.50
72.00-79.00
65 Q0-7400
5200-6500

(Jffi 100

100 .t: up
FccDr Bulls 700-ICXXJ
YEARLING HEIFERS.

70 Q0-79 00
65 .oo-n.so

Otoicc &amp; good 500-600
(Jffi 750

SlEEk CALVES

'JC.OO-lO 1.00
85.00- 104.00
!10.00-95 .00
n. 00-81.00

Good &amp; choice under 300
~

400-500
5ro{JOO

BUlL CALVES

8~. 00-91. 00
T) Q0-8200

Good .t choice '00-4(¥'
400-500
5ro{JOO

05 Q0-75.00

HEIFER CAL YES ·
Good &amp; dlotce l! ndcr 300 1h

70.00-9100

n.oo-noo

~

65.00-79.00
.L 5U00-320.00
}25.00-700.00

400-500
Cows &amp; Calves (by head r
Coon (by head)
BABY CALVES (by head !

J5.oo.m.oo

Dairy

Official outraged
by firm's action
CHARL ESTO S . W\'a . (AP r
Th&lt; ctwrwoman of the Hou se
Health and Human Rrsourc es
ComJII!IICe says she· s an gered b)
Moun~rn State Blue Cross and
Dlue Sh re ld 's dec rsron to can cel
oovuag&lt;: lor 400 famtlres.
Delegale Pat Wbtte. chauwomu o( dre heallh eommtllee . '"'d
some peopk \osmg the msurance
~ban subscnbm more than '0
yean

S o-.. !U llo&lt;y ' re no longer
rot.a l:tn llhr CnJr!3 •311£1 ID dump
lhcm · Dclrom&lt; P.lfl Wbiu:. D-1'111nam saJ.l. ---If s &lt;lll!lolutely uncon" oona tll' filn onD lla:ome part
o: 001 ~ ptpii;Hion. wluch
1~ : ~ pe-a-ec111u b•gfla than the

nau om] lr&gt;'CJZ@t 010'11 .
· Thr ' o•h want to Insure
health' ~-- •!~Jell defeats the
·.o. ho. r ;'L~ of Ul3aran ce to
'X'pTI -. ·J!l- - \\h!r: md..

M.arc l

magazine. That has permitted Chile
to supply fresh fruit for the Nonhem HemiSphere during the wrnter.
The United States buys more
than half of !he grape exporu from
Chile, wh1ch may soon surpass
even Italy to lead !he world in such
expons.
Chile' s second largest fruit
export is app les. It surpassed the
United States in the late 19&amp;0s as

the largest apple exporter outside
Europe.
Wine expons from Chile tnpled
from 1980 to 1990, reaching $52
million, wrth the biggest markets
being oilier Latin American coun tries and !he United States.

COLUMBUS - The state's
27 th annual spring wild turkey
hunting season opens Mond ay,
April 27 in 38 Ohio counties
mcluding Gallia and Meigs counties, according to !he Ohio Depanment of Natural Resource 's Div isiOn of Wildlife.
Legal shooting hours are onehalf hour before sunrise until noon.
Hunters must possess a valid huntmg license and turkey permit to
hunt. The season remains open,
except Sundays, from April 27
lhrough May 16.
Last year, hunters took a record
5, 009 turkeys, a 20-percent
mcreasc over !he 1990 harvest fig ure of 4.096. Top counties in which
turkeys were harvested last year
mclude Vinton - 486; Meigs - 237;
Ross- 189; Pike- 185; and Perry180.
Noti ng very few wild turkeys
were present in Ohio 50 years ago,
the Division of Wildlife began a
relocatio n project to improve
turkey numbers. Relocation effons
m !he 1950s and 60s were limited
10 heavi ly forested counties in
southeas t Ohio, but in 1970, the
division's turkey relocation project
was expanded into counties which
contained less forested habital
Since the relocation project
bega n in 1956, the Division of
Wildlife has trapped and relocated
more than 2,CXXJ wild turkeys. The
birds inhabit about 400 townships
tn more than half of Ohio 's 88
counties. The division estimates
Ohio' s wild turkey populati on
between 40,CXXJ and 50,CXXJ birds.
The DivisiOn of Wildlife sold
28.974 n. -key permits this year and
issued 36,88 1 free penmits. About
one-third of those receiving permits
actua lly hunt. The division esti·
mates about 42,000 hunter s will
parUcipate in this year's turkey season.

Most successful turkey hunters
(953 percent) report using a caller
10 lure turkeys within shootin g
range, according 10 a Division of
Wildlife study . One of the mos t
cautious of all woodland creatures,
the wi ld IUrkey gobbler is often

attracted to the sounds of a yelping
hen. Oilier hunters, however, may
also be alented and drawn towards
!he yelps and clucks lhinking perhaps a gobbler mi ght be nearby,
instead of another turkey hunter.

"The value of Chile's agricultural expo rts is mor e than four
trmes as great as its im ports of
about $280 mtllron annually," th e
report sard . " In its agricultural
tra de with the United State s, the
value of Ch ile 's exports is more
than eight-fold thai of tts impons.' ·

7aylor
s
Sale Going On
NOW! See Ywo of tile Best Hometown Salespeople

See Dalas Sayre at Taylor Motors 11 Atbeas for tkis great car equipped witk avtomatit trans., V-6
e.giae, tit, a.ise, cassette, gold wkeels, stripes allll receive $

"New
Office-

~t:.1

See Dave Crow at Taylor Moton 11 Athm for this great
casieHe,tlt, rear defrost, ..U more Clld receive $

CCI'

eq1ipped with S·speed, AM/FM

AT SMITH'S, THE SERVICE IS GOOD
AND THE PRICES ARE FAIR.

LET US PROVE IT!
1992 SUNBIRD 2 DR.
ONLY

s19311 =;:am~

c.s11 Downt

lraad 11w car witii air coaditioaiag a1d AMIFM/casstltt!
SALE PRICE $10,150, $9,600 Ami. Fi1a1ctd, 1.75% APR.

UROU

Gollpol ~ Ola.

~

ClH-t.A'Sol! . .'\..ur:nan sa ta .
Th ~ 1mm~ ~ w-as removed
Irom th' .. ~- •lRI and tnserted
1nto ncm--ihileall&lt;-&lt;an.mlg !owl pox
' 'IrU&lt;. ul'O&lt;l "' • am..- w 1!"1 the
lv\arcl: ·; ~!U IICll!l k c!rictm

111UW14N(I

I '. .

l
'

.

·-.
....
·'

6 Park Avenues :::~ s1 000 Rebate!

I. IJ1Jtl!\1 . ~1

9. J!d'
Rod of AgRs oftwl you • choice of 6 different colored
U'anita. Wlal¥- your requirementl may be, complete
wt id• m
· •• il _,IWd with Aoclc of Agea.
Open Mon .• Tues. . Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9 :00 a.m . "t111:00 p.m.
0~ Noun by AppointiiiMit-ti93-1151111 or"" -~,j;L1

DAEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
lSI'IIttinll.._

PfL 446-IJ27

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Supreme Court today appeared to
rein state for !his year 's elections an
Oh io legis lative remapping plan
adopted by a Republican-controlled
board.
The court indi cated rn a brief
ord er that the GOP plan for new
di stn cts co uld be used while the
justices stud y !he case funher and
dete rmin e whe ther the plan can
remain in effect for the rest of the
decade.
Today's order appeared 10 allow
Ohio 10 hold all primaries on June

2.
But the JU Stices drd not say
whe ther they would grant full
review of a ruling !hat invalidated
!h e Republican -drawn plan and
ordered a new map drawn .
Ev en if the high court granted
such review, a ruling on the meri ts
woul d not be c. pee ted until sometime in 1993.
Gov . George Voinov ich and
other Republicans on the state
Apportionment Board asked the
JUSUCCS for help.

Gullpals, ON.

A three-judge federal court in
Ohro , voting 2-1 on Marc h 10 ,
ruled th at !he Republican plan rll cgally diluted mrnonty votin g
power
Th e lhrec-Judge court said the
plan packed big -c ity distn cls wuh
m1 nori1 y volcrs 1n a manne r th at

drlutoo thetr mflue ncc m adJOtnm g
suburban districts.
Th e lower court then appo tnled
a specral master 10 draw a new map
and ordered !he state' s legrsl at.v c
pnmary elec tions bumped fr om

1 Section, 10 Psget25 cenlt
A Mullimedia Inc. Newspaper

COLUMBUS . Ohto (AP ) The internat iona l flow er show

Am cnFlora '92 opened today ,
beg inning the natio n's offrcra l
commcmora lJOil of Chn stophcr
Columbus voyage to the Amcncas
500 years ago.
Ou tsrdc the gates to !he R8 -acrc
park where !he exhrb1Uon is being
held, about 1SO people demonstrated agam sl President Bush's poli crcs and oppos ing !he celebration
of Columbus' arriva l in th e New
World .
Presrdent and Mrs. Bush were 10
attend openmg ccremonres later m
the momi ng_
"Bush repre sents 500 years of
1mpcri ali sm. That IS part of wh at
Amc riFlora repre sents," sa id
Sleven Kanner, 32, of Columbus.
"Th&lt;S land had crvilized people
and culture s es tablished hundred s

COLUMBUS . Ohro (AP) - A
fonmcr assiStant state school superintendent says real reform in !he
melhod of paymg for schools wrl l
oc cur only rf Ohio spe nds a lot
more on education.
William Plullis srud the fonm ula
for d&lt;Stributing state aid to local
school s hasn't changed conceptually since 1935. It requ ires the LegislaJure to set a level of funding .
He said !he current amount of
aid is insuffic ient to al low all the
state's 612 school disoicts 10 operate quality programs.
"To correc t th e problem you
have to ratse !he foundati on lc vel
Where do you get !he money" You
C!lhcr tak e it from somebody or
yo u put it in from the state ," he
~

"Now there isn 't anyone in this
state who believes !hal sc hool dis tricts arc going to give up massive
amounts of local revenue. Therefore, the on ly conclusion is that
more mone y will have to be generated at the state level . I doubt that
that's going 10 happen ," Phillis
said.
The fo rm er tccc her. principal
and superintendent left the Ohio
Depanment of Education last week
after a 16-year career in which his
duties included being !he agency ·s
lobbyrst in !he Legislature.
Phillis appltcd fo r th e state
superintendent's JOb last year, but
the State Board of Education htred

May 5 to June 2. Subscquen~y. !he
prrmary for the state Legt slaturc
was pushed back to Sepl. 8.
The state 's presrdentral and con~ rcs Siona l pflmary elections al so
were reschedul ed from May 5 10
Jun e 2 beca use of d&lt;Sput cs over
congressional redistricting .
Now, all primanes could be he ld
Ju ne 2.
Th e three-judge US . Dr stf! Ct
Coun panel had reJected argumcnLs
hy Voinovich an d olhers that ov erturnin g th e Republtcan plan violat -

cd pnn ct plc s cs Jabli shed by th e
Supreme Court tn 1986.
The high court that year made it
c.as1cr for blacks and olhcr mmon ues to chall enge remapping plans
!hat may dilut e th eir vottng
strength. The JUSUccs struck down
mos t of a North Carolrna lc gi slauvc rcdt stn ctmg plan, rul ing !here
wa s suffici ent evidenc e it hun !he
chances for electin g black s 10 !he

wa..;

~11

v. ork th ere The co urt

~a 1J

the Rcpuhlt can plan rn Ohto co uld
ca use ra CJ al pola r!J at ton b y
dc:. Lroyn1g ' '&lt;;oaJ 1LJorml voting" m

which ~l ac k candidat es ge t the suppan of white s
'· Subs tan t1al cuallliOll 3l voun g

swtc Lcg1slaturc.

between the races exr sts tn OhiO,"
the three -Judge court sa id. And the
issue " " whe ther the (GOP-controlled) board shou ld be penmuted
to destroy what is right rn Ohio."

13 ut the three·JUd'c court tn Jh c
Ohto case sa rd a ddfcrcm process

tc·r, 91-lo lK.

Th e case ~~ V oinm' ICh vs Qutl -

AmeriFlora '92 opens

Ohio school

POT HEADS -A pair of costumed employres strolled through
1he AmeriFlora '92 grounds Sunday in Columbus as last-minute
preparations for the international no.-alexposition were completed
for toda)"s grand opening that included a visi t by President and
Mrs. Rush. The exposition tbat ,.ill run into October has been met
with opposition by neighbo". (APl
Ted Sanders, a candidate backed by
Gov . George Yomovich.
Phillis didn't display bmcmcss
upon his dcpanure last week.
'"If 1 h•d any regrets, it' s that
we as a board and me as thctr chrcf
lobbyist . have not been able to
convi nce enoug h people that we

need to treat every ch tld w!lh a faJr
and equitabl e program .· · Phd Irs
'-11d

He al so vo1ccd regret at bcmg

rcqutred

10

spend so much ume on

1 s~ u cs of governan ce. s uch as
whether the state board 1.., elec ted

or appomtcd.

Activists pledge to refrain from
violence during abortion protests
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Abortton -right s acti vr st s shouted
obsceni ties and chanted '"Opera uon Rescue Go Away '" in a con fronta tion today with !he leader of

showed up at !he clmic . he was surrounded by opponents who vilifr ed
hrm and chanted "Operauon Res cue Go Away'"
Police led Tucci across the street

strators pracueed drrlls to escort
women seeking abortiOns IntO the
c l•nrcs. About 25 olhcrs rail icd out sr de a thutl clinic .
Opcratton Re scue spoke sman

an anti -abortion group atmmg to

whil e a woman screamed al h1m,

shut down abortron clinics in [)uffalo .
About 300 abortion -fl gh ls
demonsJra tors ga the red befor e
dawn outSide one of the clini cs that
Operati on Rescue ha s targeted rn
protests planned 10 last two to four
week s.
When Kerlh Tuccr , leader of the
natio nal anti-abort io n group,

"Nazi. Nazi!" No vrolence was
reponed
Leade rs on bOJh srde s of th e
abortron debate have said the y
would avoid violence duf!n g the
prote sts, but one women ·s group
threat ened to usc an y mean s to
keep the cl inics open .
At one clinic thi s mormn g,
ahout 100 abortron -ri ghls demon -

J e rry Retter s a1d ant1 -ahorti on
ac tivi sts were •n...-olv ed in a 24 -

A Racme m ~~ was treated Saturday e veni ng for inJun cs sustamed rn moJOh 1 cle awdcnt on Ohio 124 near Rau nc SaJUrda y

UIGE SILECnON

r .'

70,.

Ohio may have one primary election date

'"o;, urance Coml)an •e s.

H Qm P O l' •l .,., Bloomongton i lt.f"\Oos

.

,....," near 60 . C hanct' of ra in 70
percen t. Tu e-.d aJ, hlgh in mid -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, April 20, 1992

Motorcyclist injured in wreck

•

'-&gt;'.-J! P '~,...,.

Vol. 42, No. 249
1992

Copyrighted

.--Local briefs

tl4fl ,.. ••

~

Page 4

sa id.

SNOWillM
J42 s-.1 lvt.

""-m-mo

Super Lollo :
5-11!-25-27-33-40
Kicker: 757366

be costly

"My new off1ce

means I can better
se rve your family
rns urance needs
C all or drop m
an y lime

2-11 ; 6- C; 2-D :
A-S

reform will

Hired farm workers total
up from February mark
WASHINGTON (AP) - There
were 286.000 hired workers on
farms and ranches in Califomra,
Florida. Texas and New Mexico
during the week of March 8-14, !he
Agriculture Department say&amp;. That
compared with 254,000 workers
during !he February survey week.
Average March wage rat es
received by hired workers in the
four surve yed states ranged from
S5 .13 an hour in Texas 10 $6.80 in
California. Wages were higher
when co mpared with February
except in New Mexico.

Pick 3: 513
Pick 4 : 1!731
Cards :

Fre sh peach export s climbed
from $10 mrllion to $55 mtllion .
The largest buyers were !he United
States, Saudi Arabia and Sweden.

H.o44t-4Sll.
•
L rl&lt;e a good neoghbor .
S tate Farm rs there

Progress cited in fight
against poultry disease
WASHINGTON (AP I - ".f!Tl ·
caiDDt Dqmtment screnusts hav'
cJUilld the fltSt geneucalh r.ngrncmd vaccinre agatnst the hrghl )
OOOiaJiouS Marek ·s dr sease tha t
strikes poullry .
· 'lllis vaocin&lt; has already been
...,.., in lab ~ to rroteet chiCk r:as apinsl Maid' s dlseas&lt; ." sard
Kryvan Nazenan. a USDA veten ~ medical officer who works at
the Avian Dtsease and Oncolog)
I..Jiixnlor}' in East Lansmg, Mx:h
·"Now tt"s b&lt;mg eval uated for rts
c:flica:y cornpasro to other exrsung
va• a• •.
Vaccines have kept c hr cken
llods relalivel y free of Marek· s
•i
C1Ytt the last 20 yan. The
•'i• •p c.. till lar~ numbers of
birds if they are not vaccmated at
OK day ol age. It pre viously cost
U.S. poultry producers S200 mrllioa lltllually.
Bul cum:ntly used vaccme.s use
the ..t1o1e VICUS, and some mcludc
aaoes that may cau se dr sea" as
wdl•ll"""' thai Jrolllpl unmunt ty.,thedi..,...,
111e new vaccine coowns only
the F*' that~ immunuy 10

for markets, according- to John B.
Parker Jr. of USDA" s Economic
Research Service.
The United States is Chile ' s
largest market receiving roughly
40 percent of it s agri cultur al
ex pons.
"Ex ports of excellent quality
fresh grapes skyrocketed because
of the reverse season," Parker said
in a recent issue of ERS' Farmlme

Turkey season starts April 27

85.00- 175.00

Bttl

-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Chile
has become !he leading exponter of
agricultural produ cts in South
America, jumping from less than
S400 million m 1980 to about $1 .3
billion in 1990.
That spectacular growlh is due
to such factors as economic poli cies that encourage agricultural
production, modernization of fruit
marketin~ and an enet'l(etic search

Ohio Lottcn·
•

Giants
sweep
Reds 8-2

Chile's farm exports are booming

PARKERSBURG UVESTOCii JolAilKET.INC.

PI

April 19, 1992

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

Pal!! D8 Sunday Times Seutlnd

around 8:30p.m.
According to a report from !he Gallia -Meigs Post of the SJ;JJe
Highway Patrol, Ronald E. Freeman, 38, was eastbound on Oh ro
124 and struck a dog !hat was attemptin g to cross the road . Freeman
was thrown from the motorcycle, which slrd off the left srdc of the
road.
The dog was k.iUed, !he report indicated. The owner of the dog "
unk nown; it had no collar and an area resident s.aid it wa s a stray ,
Jhe report srud.
Freeman was transported by the Meigs County Emergency Mcdtcal Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was treated
and released. Freeman was wcanng a fuU -facc helmet at the ume of
the accrdent, the report said.
Damage to !he left side of Freeman 's 1986 Kawasaki ZG-lCXXJ
Concours was hsted as light and disabling .

Dividend announced
The Bob Evans Farms board of directors declared Friday a quar terly dividend of $.0525 per share on the corporation's outstanding
common stock $.01 par value. The dividend is payable June I to
stockholders of record a tthe close of business on May 8.
Bob Evans Farms owns and operates 269 full -service . family
re staurants in 16 states, including two in Gallta County.

hour prayer vigd and probabl y
would not bcgrn their protesls un ti l
Tuesda y.
Ope ratt on Re sc ue said th e
protes ts ar c pancrned afte r las t
~ u mm c r 's

siege out std e cllmcs 1n

Wr chila , Kan , that res ult ed rn
2.600 arrestS.
Organizers on both srdes sa rd
they e'pect thousands of people 10
tak e pan rn the protesLs
The Nauonal Women 's Ri ght s
Organizing Coalition, a group thai
dcsc nbc s ns m e mber~ a~ militant

feminiSt S, vowed Sunday to do
whatever is nece ssary to keep clm tCS open .
" We ar c her e to mrltt arit y
defeat Opcrauon Re.sc uc and show
them !hey are not welcome tn th e
strccJs of Buffal o." satd Tani a
Kappner

to the

~ 1tc.

two miles to tllc cast.

With thc1r ve hi cle light s on

ll ob llop e. Gov. Geor~c
Vo rn o v. c h and Mayor Gr eg
Lasilutk a we re amo ng sc hedul ed
~ p c ak c r s dur1ng opcn1ng ccr crnonJ cs.
Amcri Fi ora 1s the prcmtcrc of

cv enJ s endorsed by th e U S.
Christopher Columbus Qurncentenary Juhil ee Comm&lt;Ssron.

The srx-month exhibit is expec ted to aJtracl as many as 6 million
peopl e to the lar gest city tn th e
country named for !he explorer. It
ends Oc t. 12.
TWenty -two nations arc repre SCII ted aJ e'htbt ts that include gardens and dru ly cntertamment. Vtsr tor s from many of those nation s
;wend ed open in g day .
The SY S mrllron botanteal theme
p:trk is !he frrst rntemauonal floral
and gard en fest ival in the UnJicd
Sta tes sancuoncd by th e lnl erna -

tJonal Association of HoruculJurc
Pr od uce rs, which se ts indu stry
standard s.
Th e Paris- based group conducted its annual indoor ho rticultural
dc s1gn compc lltlon Fnday . The

des igns wil l remarn on di spla y
through May 3.

Appeals court overturns
stay of execution for killer
SAN FRANCISCO (i\PJ - A
tedcral appeals court lifted an order
hloc ktn g the execu tion of doub le

murd ere r Robert Alt on Harn s,
open1n g the wa y for Ca ltfornta' s
lt r\l execution 1n 25 years.
Th e 9th U.S. Circu rl Co urt of
Appeal s late Sunday ove numcd a
temporary rcstra1mng order ISS ued
Sa turday by L: .S. DIStri ct Judge
M:rn lyn Hall Patel.
Th e decrsron. annou nced tn a
st atement
read
by court
, pokeswo man Guen llap" s Jc ,
mea ns Harris cou ld OC c,;ccutcd a~

planned ear ly Tuesday for th e J9n
mu rde rs of two San Dtc go tcc na ):!.cr~ - Cali forn1a 's ga s chamb er
hasn' J hec n use d srncc 196 7
The oppea ls court on Sunda y
a ho 1.1 g rcc d to hcJ~ a se para te
:rp pc al by defense auomey s The)
had :rppcal ed a San Diego lcderal
JUd ~c's

rulin g reJecting a reques t 10

bl oc k IIam s' c&gt;rcuuon based on
con tcntJ ons that prosccutOr"i with ·
he ld cvtd cncc that Harras' brother

Dan ny may have shol one of th e
boys
No men tion was mad e of tha t
appeal Sunda y nigh!
State auomcys appealed rmmcd&lt;Jtcly after Patel rss ued the tem por ary rc st1a tn1n g order barring
California from usmg gas for executi ons until an Apn l 28 hcarmg.
In rc spon .;c to a class -acti on
lawsua fi led by J11 c Amencan Civil
Ltbcnie s Unwn on heha tf of Hams

Stat e and federa l court s ha ve
e'pirccl Tu es day. 11 would have
effeclrv cly clc layect hrs excc ul!on cl en red numerou s oilier appeals for
unlil al least ear ly Jun e. The state Jb rn s, 39, whl l was conYJCLCd 1n
would have to grv c 10 day s' noli ce Februa ry 1979 of kll lmg 16-ye arfor another death warran l hearin g, o lci fri e nds Jo hn Mayeski and
:rnd an cxccu l! on coulrln 't be held Mi chael Haker so he cou ld usc
unul at least 30 day s alter th at.
thw car for a bank robbery.

Wilkinson reacts
to prison rumors
In respnnso to comm ents from Slate Senat&lt;&gt;r Robert Ney (R·
llarnesville), Reginald A. Wilkin ~t on , ll irrrtor of the Ohio
Department ol Reh abilitation and Corrertion . has responded to
n&gt;t:rnt rrportt; thai M e i~s Count)' i.'- no lon~t·r heing considered
a ~ a potential state prison 'iih•.
. .
.
\\'ilkinson 's office transmiHM a faro..,1mdr lrttrr lo th e Mr1gs
Cou nty C hamber
Commrrrc ()II Monda~· morn in~. drnying

or

~n· \

remarks.
have not yet recei\'rd &lt;1 rHomm1·ndation from lhl' prison
o..,ilt' se lection commit1('{'. The rommittt•t• is rnnlinuin~ In l'valuate th e proposed sites, and all three counties indudin~ Meigs
Cou nty are st ill under eonsidrrat icm.' ' \\' i lki n..,nn · ~ ltltrr said.
" It is my understanding thai Fn·d Forbi'S. rhairman of the site
. ; t'fr rli on rommith.'{', has also communicntcd this position to omria ls in your county, and ha."'i stat rd lh.at pres~ rrport'l infrrrin~
t h all\1e i~s County has br{'n eliminat rd v.err uroneou~. · ·
~'I

Two Meigs Junior High
pupils advance to state event

:.111cl other death -row inmates, Patel

sa1d there was enough evidence for
the court to consider wh ether death
hy gas co mti tutcs cruel and unusual pun rs hm cnl
If the orde r hadn ' t hccn overtumcd he fore Harri s' death warrant

Two Mc1gs Jun1or H1gh Schoo l
'\luclcnt s will Lak e thc1r av.ard w J!l ·
n1n g su cncc proje c ts tnto stat e

eompeuuon aJ Ohw Wes leyan l lnr,·ersil y on Saturday .
An gtc M. Hall and Teresa D.
S1 rnpsun wdl be amon g ROO JUil tor

sheriff' s departm ent reported .
McKenzie was nown by LtfcFl rght to Grant Medical Cent er
when: he dred a few hours later.
McKe nzie 's body wa s th en
token to !he Franklin Cou nt y Coroner' s offr ce, th e shenff's depart ment reponed.
The incident rs under tnve suga uon . SaliSbury sard Monday mom -

and se nio r hr gh sc hoo l studenJ .s
co mpetin g for top honors tn the
Ohro Acedcmy of Science 's 44th
:r nnual State Suencc Day .
Hall who rc .s rdes at Dexter wrll
show her proJeCt, "Do Plants Produ ce Mor e Oxygen in SJr ongcr
Sunl 1gh t. whdc Simpson's proJecl
rs "How Docs Water Temperature
Affcc t th e Re sprratron of a Gold fi sh".
The scvenlh through 12th grade
sJUde nt s qua lrficd for state-level
competition by carnr ng s upcrror
ratrngs al 16 drstrict sc ience days
throughout Ohio. Their prOJeC ts
will he judged by more than 600
r rofeS&lt; ional s in medicine, cduea -

mg.

tJ On, mdu st.r)', and scJCnc c.

People arc being questioned and
stat ements arc being taken , he concluded.

At Ohro Wesleyan for the I Slh
con sec ut ive year, Sta te Science
Day is spon sored annually by the

Gallia County man dies
after gunshot wound
Another Gal ha County mrur died
Sunday as a result of an apparcm
gunshot wound .
Dead rs Larry R. Mc Kennc, 21,
of Dry Rrdg c Road , Gree nft eld
Townshrp.
Th e Gallra Count y S he riff' s
Department rcccived a call around
II a m. Sunday mornin g in reference to a gun shot wound, Sheriff
Dennis SaliSbury said . It was Gal liJ 's third shooting fatality thi s
month, and second in four days.
Depuues found McKenzrc with

of years be tore Columbus so-called
' tJI Sl o vcr cd ' Amcr 1Ca . He took
the m as sla ve s and sJolc thelf
land," said Richard Boylan. 21. an
Ant ioc h College student.
The demonstrJtors mcluded resId e nt s ncar Frank lr n Park who
opposed th e park' s closin g for !he
cxhibit1on
Prot es ter s ~!so demon strated
Sunday by driving from downtown

a gunshm wound to the head, the

Otll n Acad em y o f S u L~ ncc. a not -

I\H·pro fJt mrmt'tcrshlp organ t:t..atJon
!oumkd 111 I X() 1 to advance sc tencr

tn Ohto.
Spcu:r l :rwarth provrded by 81
colle ges a nd twt vcr sittcs. profcso..: ton al S(X"J(' ttc". corporal1on s, and
gm: cmmr nt.a l unt t_&lt;.; w11! tx: prcscml'd Im ludcd m the spec tal award s
;He C L\h, sav mg s honds, (flps, and
~ctwi:H s lltr s worth mor e th an
)2W.WO rn cludrng th e opponumty
10 parll c ip;-tlC m the InternatiOnal
Sc tc ncc and Englllcrnng Fatr tn

Nashvill e. Tenn ., dunng May.
Al l studenls with entrr es m State
Sc ien ce Day wt ll rec eive superior.

excellent, or good certificates from
the Ohio Academy of Science, and
rncdaiiJon s from Frey Scientific of

Man sfield .
The competition wi ll be in !he
llran ch Ric key Cent er on Ohro
Wesleyan 's campu s, where studcnls will hegin arriving at 7 a.m
Jud ging wi ll run from l'i:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Public viewing will be
from t2:30 p.m. to 1:10 p.m. when
the awards ceremony wr ll begrn .

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            <elementText elementTextId="33372">
              <text>April 19, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="163">
      <name>gibbs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="371">
      <name>gilmore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="703">
      <name>mckinney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="228">
      <name>patterson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
