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7:00\)68 0 WhHI of Fortune

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BRIDGE

M8niiCI ... With

PHILLIP
ALDER

08E-

Tonight
Staneo. C
IIJ Querifiim Ll•p StereO. E;l

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7:30W8 0 Jeopardy~ ·
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Slocum Is arrested when his
ex-glrllrlend claims he
assaulted her. Steneo. c'
(!} MOVIE:-Riftr of O.Mh (A) ·
(2:00)
.
III g (J) 8 Family M . Urkel and Eddie decide to
share an apartment. Stereo.

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C
IIIJD Olito Stata-lfllc:hlglon
Review Stereo.

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M_,,SIIeWR*n

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L.A6T NIGt-!T * f D4D ~
M'i. TO "THIN I&lt; AeQUT WHY
HE:

'B~NKE:D

ME.

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Vulnerable: North-South ·
Dealer: South

-

Nor.. Eut
Frank Stewart bas been writing lor ~..
P us
zt
Pus
the Los Angeles Times synclic:ated colPus
Pus
s+
timn "Shelnwold on Bridge" for sever·
Pus
Pus
Pus
at years. He baa just publiabed a book _
.
of his articles under the title "TWo- !
Opening lead· " t
Minute Bridge Tips" ($11.95, P.O. Box ·
·
96Z, Fayette, AL ~555.5). Tile book lol-l L..;;;;:::-;;;::::-:=::::-"':!::'-::;;:-:-:=.,.J
lows .a question-8JMknswer format.
Was West Wl'llllg? On tliis. lli;Yotil.
Over a double-pace spread. you are : certaiDiy. A tbird heart for East to
presented with fOUl' problems. Then · ruff gives the defense lour tri~. But
you flip the page and read the f011r col- · if South bad the same band with !).2-2umns from whic:h .thc!se problems · t distribution, the diamond · switch
were taken. For frosting, there is a would be the only way to defeat the
bidding question in every column. game. Was it an unluc:ky misguess?
However, despite the title, it took me
No, it wasn't. Tbe misdefense was
more than two minutes tO read eacb East's fault. Knowing from the open-.
article.
ing lead that Soutb baa three hearts,
Today's deal from the book features East sbould have cashed the diamODd
ex~llent principle: Try to make ac:e before retlll'lling the heart 10. This
lile easy fCII' your partuer.
mates It easy 101' We!Jt.
DefencliDc against four spades, West
U South is void in diamonda the
led the beart lour: jlll:k. ace, seftll. play will c:aet at 111011 tWo overtricb
Bad&lt; came the beart 10: ei&amp;bt. king, - a snWJ pri~ to pay.
•
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West
switched
to
the
diamond
Alw91
protect
your
partner
from
1
allowing the contrac:t to mate. enor if you can. Remember, be's only

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looks Into the death
of a man killed by bee stings.
Stereo. C

21RI.IMU
31 Will

ASTRO-GRAPH
-

Year ahead . Serid for Scorpio's Astro-

- - - - - - - Graph predictions today by mailing
$t .25 ptus a long. sell-addressed.
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 9M28, Cleveland, OH 44t01-3428. Be sure to state
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL your zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) II you
refuse a loan to a friend that you can 't
alford to make, you're being sensible.
not stingy. The Individual making therequest is out of line; you're not.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J•. 19) In matters that affect your career today, don't
bring people into the picture who aren't
directly involved. They could turn out to
be factors that could work against you.
AQUARIUS (J8n. :zci:.Feb. 18) II you are
working closely with a co-worker on a
special assignment today, equality is
Nciv.2t,19$2
extremely Important. Remember, neither ol you Is lhe boss.
The aspects indicate you might become · PISCES (Feb. 20-M•rch 20) Guard
closelY involved with someone In the against the Inclination today to be too
year ahead who could be very lortunata possessive ol loved ones or lrlends. It
for you in material ways.· Ironically, this could cause them to run away, rather

carefully.

m

TAURUS (April :ZO..M•r 20) It might be
wise today not to work with tools or ma-

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effect of the Renaissance on
= I n Florance today.

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Expo111r1 A flu epidemic
sweeps through Clcely and
ruins Jot[a plana. (A)
Stereo._Q

50 Hlgll card

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'-Your
'Birthday

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33 Dol'l Houaa

With Bill MoJera: ~ ·
Bill Moyers explores till

terials with which you are unfamiliar.

Even though you may be anxlq_u~ to get
something done, walt until yllll hafe
qualified help.
GEMINI (M8J 21-June 20) You could
a bit of an impulsive spender today
which Isn't good news lor your budgst:
Don 't let your urges cause you to buy
things you really can't alford .
CANCER (June 21·JUIJ 22) An ebbing
ollnterest Is Indicated today regarding
something about whiCh you're presently
very enthusiastic. But II you get too Involved too Quickly, .disappointment Is
likely.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try not to waste
your time and energy today on an emotional Issue about which y.Qjo cen do lit·
tie. It is something that cen be reoolved
only through objectivity and logic.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Be optimlatic
today, bul don't bank too heavily on
things that have an unrealistic premise.
may be an md•vidual who doesn' t care than toward', you . .
you could be setting yoursell up lor a
much about money.
ARIES (March 2t- April 19) Disagree- big letdown..
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You won 't ments between you and your mate LIBRA (Bept. 23·0cl. 23) There Is a
win any popularity polls today by trying could have a low boiling point today ; very line line today be-n acceptable
to impose your views on others, espe- there's a chance either party might · asserllveness and aggreulon. II you're
cially if they .are ora political nature. Get readily misinterpret the meaning of not careful, you might step over It a jump on llle by understanding the in· what the other says. Weigh your words with the wrong person at the wrong
lluences which are governing you in the
time.

Po- ollhtt

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llll 700 Club With Pat
10:30

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PROJECT UNDERWAY- Workers began
the nrst major step In conslnjctlon of one of the
two nue gas scrubbers at the James M. Gavin
Power Plant ill Cbesbire Friday by pouring the

foundation fiN' the 62-ft. stack. The 88 rt. octa&amp;onal foundation required 2,035 cubic yards or
eemenL Tbe entire project will use 120,000 cubic
yards. (Timet-Sentinel pboto by Kevin Pinson)

COUIIIIIOf'

ID College S.lklfbeU

National Invitation
Tournament, quarterfinal (L)
10:00(!} Na.,. C
·
~a (J) • 20/20 Stereo.

welL)

I .

Meigs County receives Easter Seal grant
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
36 months of age. Parents who
Times-Sentinel Staff
complete the forms and return them
POMEROY - An Easter Seal·- to Dewhurst, receive copies of the
Society grant of $16,4 70 has been results and guidance about where
received by the Meigs County to turn for help if that is necessary.
Health Department to develop a
The program is designed to
"Watch Me Grow" program for complement the Meigs County
children from birth to three years.
Early Intervention program which
Meigs County joins similar pilot helps children, birth to three who
projects in Athens, Morgan, and have established developmental
Washington Counties in Ohio, and delays or disabilities. Pewhurst
Wood County in West Virginia. will share that office at the health
The total amount of grant money department.
going into the over-all project is
The coordinator will be working
,$50,800.
only parttime for Easter Seals,
. Penny Pcwhurst of Rutland has according to Sue MiUet Smith, pro- ·
~een named the Meigs County
gram .director for Eas)er Seal Soci('Watch Me (}row" coordinator by ety of the River Cities. The proJibe Easter Seal Society of the River gram is funded through June, 1993.
,Cities. The pilot project was
Dewhurst also works parttime
· launched in Washington County in for for Carleton School.
]November, 1991' and only now is
The Easter Seal Society also
beinif expanded int() the Ohio funds the parent education program
~ounucs.
'
. at Meigs County Speech 1Dd Hear1 Any parent can sign up for the
ing Clinic IDd ill an active member
,"Watch Me Grow" ~ogram . If of the Meigs County Collaborative
[they do they ,-ill receave develop- Group of social service agencies
f!ICDtal chec:ldist surveys that help that serve children. '
p.em screen their cbil~'s devel- . Through the Children's Trust'
ppment when the chtldren turn Fund, Easter Seal Society obtained
Tour; eight, 12, _16, 20, 24, 30, and a grant for $20,000 which is being

·-'

,I
I

'•.·

Administrator John Anderson. The' project w8s
funded through a grant from the Ohio Department of Public Works.

Village sewage treatment plant.
'uP. and running', Anderson says

IIIIIDipMrtl

IIPeltdar
10 Firat lllfden

34IMI

UFO sightlngs In Russia is
Stereo. 1;1
tiJl MOVIE: Norlh D•lllia
,.-orty (R) (2:00)
N•ahvlh Now
8 l.llrry King Live! Q
9:30 W
(J) 8 C.mp Wilder
Brody brings home a
runaway teen home to prove
his ~eaponslblllty, Stereo.
llll D 0 8 lob Stereo.

a

VIRTUALLY COMPLETED • This
expanded sewage treatment plant in Pomeroy is
"virtually completed", according to Villa2e

22 ....
24 Joke up

a

a

nomenal the turnaround we saw
and the attention we goL I saw both
ends of the scale here, and 1 appreciated it a liu.le more because some
(Continued on A-1)

.

lnves~gated.

GOIN' IN
SUCH A

"I knew what it was like then,
and il was almost unbelievable for
me," Wiseman said. '1lefore Bevo
and Newt we were always hoping
for a .500 season, and it was phe·

13 Slllllleli ,.rt

8lghllnp ii flurry ol

BACI&lt; HOME
TO 61T ME

..

Francis' one-and-only season there.
Up until then, Rio Grande basketbaH was just another small coUege
team, somewhat unluckier than
most in postin~ winning seasons.

14TVIIIw-

WamenStareo.

SHORE II
WHAR YE

the 40th anniversary of its history-making ·.
accomplishments. Francis scored a record-seiling 113 points on Feb. 1, 1954, a record that '
.stiU stands.

~·=""

;':;e•·T
Q] •

I.OWEEZY II CAN YOU
WATCH POODY
FER TWO .
OR THREE
HOURS?

RECALL OLD TIMES .. Clarence "Bevo"
Francis, (left), converses with weU-wisbes during
a reception Saturday afternoon honoring the
early 1950 Rio Grande College Redmen team on

::

Pavarottl returns to Italy to
explore the traditions of

BARNEY

a while longer

.AQt06

12.....,

t:an

Ill (!) Great

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

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Elizabeth Ia afraid to drive
her new car lor lear of
damaging it. Stereo. Q
8:00 W8 0 MOVIE: 'Perrr
M•IOR: The C.H of till
Ruthlta• RePorter' NBC .
Movll of till WMic (2:00) C
III
(J) 8 Dlnaaeurs
and Baby atte;I:ting
school. Stereo.
.

a

It takes

me. No one showed me how,'' the
6-foot-9 Francis sad. "I was fortu·
nate to end up with a l!reat lll'OUD of
guys to play with a Rio Grande."
"If we could roU the clock back
·I won't say how many years • we
would have a much better record
today." he added. "In those days,
you didn't have the three-point
play or the on!f·-on-one, so the
reeords were a lot harder to break
then."
Teammate Wayne Wiseman,
who went on to coach basketball
foi more than 20 years at Springfield's South High School, agreed
with Francis' sentiments.
"There's no question the ath·
letes today are better, but when I
think about it, we scored 100 points
or more without th~ three-pomt, so
we· had to be domg something
right."
Wiseman, who hailed from the
Lawrence Cougty community of
Waterloo, home of the famed Wonders basketball team of the 1930s,
was a junior at Rio Gmnde when
Oliver and Francis came 10 the
campus from their respective high
school careers at Wellsville, where
Oliver coached Francis, a senior, in

1 Golf •111*1
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9J 1111

I'MSOINS-i06E
(9-ETTINE:iA LOT
Na&lt;E 004-NKIN6&lt;5.

SOUTH

In their day, the Redmen attract·
ed a storm of publicity, thanks in
part to the drive of Oliver, whose
goal was 10 take the team to nation·
al prominence and who handled
public relapons • as weU as coaching, athletic director, and janitorial
duties • for the team, and through
Francis himself, the quiet, unassuming yourig man who always
placed the credit with the team.
Dick Barr, a member of the
team wbo now resides in North
Canton, said that when the newlyhired Oliver outlined his plan to the
Redmen in the summer of 1952, it ·
was met with more than a little
skepticism, from a squad that had
gone 4-19 the year before. "Fifteen
~uys then fell on the floor laughmg." Barr recalled.
But with Francis' shooting sldlls
- honed by years of playing on lots
and in a barn in and around his
Columbiana County hometown of
Highl,andtown - the Redmen found
themselves competing in Madison
Square Garden, batlling such competition as Wake Forest. ViUanova
and Providence, and becoming the
talk of the basketball world.
"It all .came pretty naturally .to

. ACROIS

?ri~~·
1...5l '"-' WMic .
Stereo.

IF H 16 MOW..Ofl:'r'
ISA&lt;aSOODA6
MIN5 15•.•

.J875Z

RIO GRANDE · Ask Clarence
"Bevo" Francis about ~ow he
scored more than 100 points in two
college basketball games in his
career with Rio Grande CoUege in
the early 1950s, and he wiU characteristically point to his teammates
as the primary reason.
"If you took those guys off the
floor, I wouldn't have scored a
point, Fiancis, 60, ~ Saturday at
a reunion with the team's surviving
members and their coach J. Newton
"Newt" Oliver, on the campus of
the small southeastern Ohio institu_tion where it all began.
·
. For two years, 1952-52, the
Redmen and Francis made head·
lines and jammed arenas every- .
where they went as they scored
.astronomically hjgh game totals
against small and large competi ..
:Pon. Fmncis hit 116 points against
Ashland (Ky.) Junior.College on
Jan. 9 1953, but this total that shat·
1ered all existing records was disal-·
lowed ,byboth the NCAA and the·
NAIA. However, Francis netted
113 points against Hillsdale
(Mich.) College on Feb. 2, 1954,
and that record has remained
untouched since. ·

basketb~ll history

Tbe World AJ•a•ac•cronword Puale

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.

.753

.AKJI04

biiiiWI.

a~t;!
llll The W•llana: The
TllenktgiVIng Story A large,
Depreaalon-era mountain
lamlly gathers during the
holiday season lor a
Thanksgiving to remember.
(2:00)
8:051J) MOVIE: Bln·Hur (4:00)
8:30 III
(J) 8 Sttp br Step
J.T. and Cody go on a
double date with two sisters.

MORTY MEE.KLE AND WINTHROP

.A 10
tAQIO

!:

7:351JJ S.nlord a Son
8:00 W8 0 I'U Fly lWIIJ

i

.96
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tJ913

By PldiUp Alder

Nallonailnvltetion
Tournament, quanerflnal (L)

'

Teammates, coach recall

EAST

•u

8poolaCanter
8MoMyiiM
lllllllg -..... Jake

III

~·II

WEST

14 Secdona, 118 P•gea
A Multlmadla lno. New1p11pw

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point
Pleasant, November 22 I 1992
.

Bevo Francis 40th anniver~ary celebrated

•Ks

Ollllrdon

, wHEN YOU DIDN'T
'
GIVE A ~OO'T .

Copyrighted 1992

E~

=...
~·~N8X1

oF TtiOSf t:&gt;AYS

the missing words

ll · l't
SCRAM lETS ANSWERS
Queasy - Venom • Treat- Gravel • GAMES
"Baseball,• says gramps, "is a sport where people
Who have rested alf winter need weeks of training in
the spring fo~ a summer of playing GAMES."
.

N~.,. .

ON~

Sunday, oc:aol..,ol rola.
T..ndtnlonnsarw allo pooolble.
Hlllh In !be lower 601.

Weather............- ..............A-!

VoL 27, No. 40

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F..ditoral ..- .........f... ..........-A-4
Sports.......................,.......Ct-8

qu~ted

Complete the chuckle
by f•ll•ng

Along tbe river ..............81-8
Business/Farm................Dl-8
Classified ....................... Dl-7
Deaths. ..............................A-3

I' 1
I I lro I I I I I I

·8 ~~~~f~M8Lf FORI

liJ8C88NanQ

Dll&gt;

Jinxed riverboat known for its good
food in early 1900s;. Sands • Page A-7

Inside

vou dovelop from step No. 3 below.

• r:~~R~~J~~RfS I'

1ci1.e 0111 TV Stereo.

~eln

Early Pomeroy, Middleport football
battles recalled· Fred W. Crow. A-4

I

B0 L NY

(.'t'fl t ..,

Michigan, Ohio .State tie =Page- C-1

"One of· the hardeSt things ·
-,-1...;.,1...-.;,.1~ in life to leam,"lectured the old
"--'-"-. .Jt........l..· ..J ! school leather, "is to figure out
r-----:"-..,-.,.....--=...,which bridge to bllm .and
ARMSOS . Iwhich---to-----."
..

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.
8 World Todey
llll Pllnc:e v•nt
1:051JJ TllrM'• CompMr

BACK OF M'&lt; MOM'S BICYCLE,

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~ER.

PACSET

£VENING

'\YOO'REIW.f

OLD I AM ... t TELL

1011.......,

I

7-~

Making
decisions a
Crossroads

., CUY I. I'OUAN

........._
'-"- of the
four
-do below to form four limplto - •·

FRI., NOV. 20 . • .

YOO UlOIC. Ul'€

Sund~".

.

,

used for a program on develoPing
adult parenting skills. The Society
also contributes money to the
Speech and Hearing Clinic which
is operated by Susie Heines at the
~th Pepartrnelit and maintains a
special program for supplying
walkers, wheelchairs, supphes and ·
equipment for the disabled. ·
Vor the 13th consecutive year,
the National Easter Seal Society
ranks fust among the 40 members
of the National Health Council for
the percentage of agency program
dollars spent on direct services 10
clients.
Easter Seals show a 94 percent
spending level for direct client services. It is followed by the National
Neurofibromarosis Foundation's 77
percent, Paget's Pisease Foundation's 70 percent, Epilepsy Founda·
tion of America's 65 percent, and
·Muscular Pysuoplty, 56 percent.
East
Seafs'
total
of
$212,297,000 .spent on direct services wu more than the total of
wbat wu spent on direct client serVices by the 24 other member agencies that provide such services,
aix:onlinll to Smith.

POMEROY • A newly expand· pointing out thai no tax dollars
ed sewag() treaunent plant in the were used for lhe project
ViUage of Pomeroy is nearly comAlthough no customers will be
pleted, and "up and running·~ . added to the system right away, the
according to Village Administrator new plant wiU allow the village to
operate its sewage treatment sysJohn Anderson.
The addition, which augments tem more efficiently, and provides
an existing facility near Bob a capacity for additional customers,
Robens Field, was funded through specifically those in the Monkey
a grant from the Ohio Department Run and Coalport areas of
of Public Wolis, and cost ~pproxi­ Pomeroy. Those areas are not now
mately $1.2 million. The villa$e connected 10 the village's system,
used "amassed sewage fees" patll .placing ihe village in violation of
by customers in Pomeroy as a Environmental Protection Agency
match to the grant, Anderson said,

PREPARING FOR TilE CHRISTMAS SEA· SON • Cllrlstmas wouldn't be quite complete
without tbe rlqbta ot tbe bell at tbe kettle for
tbe Salvation Army at various locations
tbrougbout Meigs County. Salvation Army representatives will be· at designated locations

regulations.
Connecting 1hose customers to
the new plant will cost additional
money, perhaps as much as a million additional dollars, Anderson
said. No time frame has been estab·
lished for connecting those cus-.
tomers 10 the system.
The plant is now in operation·,:
and has been since the contractual
deadline of October 30. All that
awaits is the installation of equipment which has not yet arnved·
from the supplier.

•

through Dec:. 24. Pictured, (1-r), are Charles •
Jones, Major Retired Glenna Rummell, Bob •
Grimm, Josepb Morgan, Coral Saltsman and
Margarel Jones. By contributing to the Salvation Army you wiU help a less fortunate family . ~
celebrate Christmas.
·:•

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�Pomeroy Mlddlepod Galllpolle, OH Point Pleuant, wv

Tim• Sentinel

~ November

November 22,11112

·William
Local K.
deaths
·
Faulkn_e_r_...;,__"""":L=--eo._;n_a_A-:-.-:V:::-a-r-ia_n_ _ _ __

ormer senator and business
~eader, E. Bartow JOnes, dies
.
along with Marshall Reynolds and
Milce Perry's effons at First Huntington National Banlc, the first
merger for First Huntington National Bank was accomplished.
Today that operation has developed
into Key Centurion Bancshares,
which has over $3 billion in assets.
Jones has served on· its board of
directors since its inception.
The senatorial accomplishments
Joni:s valued the moSi, according to
family members, was that Jones organized the effort that removed the
toll from the Shadle Bridge across
the Kanawha River · ei~:.ht years
ahead of schedule; co-sponsored
the biU to conslruet a bridge across
the Kanawha River connecting
Putnam County at Winfield and led
it to passage; had Sand Hill Road
paved in Mason County, which
aided industrial development; was
responsible for locating Cedar
Lakes in Jackson County after the
state board of education had already voted to locate it at Parsons
in Tucker County; due 10 the
Mason County courthouse being .
unsafe and antiquated in 1952,

: · POINT PLEASANT - Well·
known Masoo County business
~r and former State Senator
~ward BalloW Jones, U, Point
Jlleasant; died Friday morning,
Nov. 20, 1992, in Pleasant Valley
!iospilal.
: Chairman of Citizens National of
fYint Pleasant since 1970, Jones
~rved in the West Virginia State
S.enate from 1948 to 1956,
representing Putnam, Jackson,
l{oane and Mason counties. He was
83 years old. and the father of Ken~ky Governor Brereton C. Jones.
•· Born July 25; 1909, at Point
PJeasant, he was the son of Edwani
llartow Jones and Elizabeth
tlamsberger Jones.
-: Having built over 1,600 homes,
. he operated the SIOCkyilrds in Point
Pleasant, Spencer, Charleston Chillicothe, Ohio, and Hillsboro.'Ohio,
and set the· state .record for dairy
cattle pri~ when he dispersed his
herd (a record which stood for over
. two decades): .
He also 'operar.ed the Two River
,Motor automobile agenl:y for 30
:YCS!'S· and throu$~ his efforts as
.chauman of C1uzens National,

•

sponsored a bill Uiat resulted in an
$875,000 courthouse completed in
1956 from surplus tax funds that
cost the county tax~yers nothing;
and, convinced ~ Aluminum ·
Corp. to build the plant in
Ravenswood, with !he plant becoming a reality after Jones initiated a
plan to upgrade S.R. 2 using prison
labor.
.
A concerted, but unsuccessful effort was made to draft Jones for ·
Governor of West Virginia in 1952.
President of rnaD,Y civic and
development organizations. Jones
was a member of Christ Episcopal
Church in Point Pleasant. .
Jones was married to the former
Nedra Eleanor Wilhelm of Point ·
Pleasant, and they had six children,
Sandta J. Dunn of Point Pleasant
and Charleston; Edward Bartow
Jones III, who is deceased; Governor arereton C. Jones of Midway,
·Ky; State Senator Ned Jones of
Barboursville; Katharine J. Morrison of Baltimore, Md.; and Karen
J. Chriss of Baltimore, Md. In addition, there are 13 pdchildren and
two great-grandchtldren.

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WEST COLUMBIA - Leo11a A. Varian, 69, of West Columbia -died
. CROWN CITY - William "Bill" Kenneth Faulkner, 65 , 207 . Friday, Nov. 20, 1992, at her residence.
·
'
HaloriecreekC Rd., Crown City, died Friday, Nov. 20, 1992, at Holzer MediShe
was
a
homemaker
and
member
of
the
Faith
Baptist
Church
of
c
eoter.
Mason.
·
He was born Dec. S, 1926 in Crown City, son of the late James Edward
Born July "6, 1923, in West Columbia, she was a daughter of the late
and Mary Almeda (Mooney) Faulkner.
James
Anderson and Nellie (Bass) Anderson. She was also preceded in
He was a farmer.
~
~th by ber husband, Harry T. Varian, Sr., who died May 31, 1991, three
: . Survivors include one sister, Betty Lu Watkins of Gallipolis; four SISters and a brother.
meces; and two nephews.
Surviving are three sons, Harry T. Varian, Jr., West Columbia James R
: ~e was precedOO in death by one sister, Virginia Belle Chapman; and Varian, Sr., Clifton, Franklin E. Varian, Cheshire, Ohio· two daughters.
~ne infant brocher, Howard Lee Faulkner.
.
R~ L. Brinker of New Haven, Delores J. Maynard of Leon; and eighi
• Services will be 2 p.m. Monday at Willis Funeral Home with the Rev
grandchtldren.
.
Jaclc ~Dey officiating. Burial will be in Swan Creek Cemeiery.
·
The f~ral wiD be Monday, noon, at the Foglesong Funeral' Home with
, Fnends may call af the funeral home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9.
the Rev. Jerry Scott officiating. Burial will be in Clifton Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call Sunday at the funeral home, 6to 9p.m .

;E.
. Bartow Jones

County ODOT rated tops -in winter inspection ;
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's
Ohio ~ent of Transportation
topped e1ght other District 10 counties in recent inspections of snow
removal equipment. Meigs and
Noble counties Blso received high
marks.
·
- According to Iohn Dowler,
deputy director of Dislrict 10, each
county's annual insp,ection (dry
runs) includes mechanical checks
of all snow removal,. safety and.
communicationS equipment.
During the dry nm conducted by
district and state inspection team
techllicians, a point system is used.
to determin~ equipment standing.
Based on the point system and the
varying number of pieces of equipment in each county, the inspection
teat:n selected Gallia County as
havmg the ·best dry nm for 1992 in

District 10.
The inspection team also selects
one truck in each county as the
cleanest and best maintained. Connie , the truck operator chosen in
Gallia County, was presented an
ODOT District 10 cap.
District 10 includes Athens,
Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Vinton and Washington Counties.
~
Besides preventive maintenance,
oil changes and grease jobs are performed throughout the year Ol) erich
truck, snow plow, salt spreader and
grader that comprises ODO'r 's
winter snow removal equipment
Training sessions are also held

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Vetenns Memorial
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS- Carl
Roac~. Pomeroy; Norman TeJ:reii,
Middle
FRI~Y DISCHARGES Anna Cornell.

·::·

Receives abatement

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·on a tour of Sotitheut Asia to seek more infor·
maiiOn about Amerk:ans missinjl in actioll dur·
lng the VIetnam War. (AP photo)

[Meigs ,grandjury indicts five men
•
: POMEROY - The Meigs Counoty grand juty has indicted five rnen
:On various charges. The indict)nents. were ~iled on Friday after!loon 10 Me1gs County Common
Pleas.~un.S
.
:·. ~~~~ orden, Jr., Middlejlllrt.
1\'BS mdicted on a count of peQury,
Bueging that he made !I false state. flent u~de~ oath dunng a recent
. ~ry tnal mvolvmg defendant
&lt;ieorge W. "Bill" Miller. The

charge is a third-degree feiony.
Charles "Rex" Justis of
Pomeroy is charged with two
counts of rape, both aggravated
\ felonies of the first degree, and
both involving a child under the
age of 13.
Also indicted was John Paul
Holley,.Gallipolis, charged with
theft, a fourth degree felony. He is
accused of stealing property
belonging to Conrail.
· James E. Bryant of Langsville
~as indicted on a charge of receivmg stolen property, a fourth-degree
felony. He is accused of disposing
or a casette case and cassette tapes
belonging to Todd Rothgeb. The
indictment against Bryant contains
,J,.a specjfication stating that he had
been earlier convicted of a theft
charge.

.' ch arged
3
5
,.
· k log
• ·
i'·nh true
f •
t e t Sting
.

:·
• • • By .THOMAS J, SHEERAN
: ·: Allloelaled Press Writer
·,~ CLEVELAND - ·Undercover
• fl!I agents recovered $19 .S million
'.in stolen goods, including cars,
'!!oats and household items, in a
-~ iing in which 53' people were
;.trested.
•: · Cbarges include conspiracy,
::olaii fraud, interstate shipment of
;Jtolen goods, theft from interstate
... hipments and altering vehicle
1Jentification numbers.

•, '

: . ji'~ 1r- · ji'entilul
' ''
(UBPB 1116-100)

.

:P,..,.whed each Sunday, 82&amp; 'l'hint ML,

}JolllpoHo, Ohio, by Jhe Ohio VoD.,
, )'DIIohi.. Campony!Mwlimeclia, IDC •
.....,. claM paoiop poid at Goltipollo,
· (lhio 46631. Entered u oecond duo
'llia!H. . -tlor at P..,.l'O)', Ohio, Pool
tJllloo,

.

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Tbe AlooCiolocl
- ·Nali-.1
oad u..
q&gt;io Nnopoper
Aooodot:ion,

\\dYII'ttlbl8 llpnMntattn, Branham

1lowopa,_ Bot.., 783 Tbi!d AYenao,

:Now York, Now Yo&lt;t 10017.

.
liUNDA1' ONLY

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Bevo..•
(Continued from A·l)
of the guys hadn't been on thC· Iosing end for as long as I had."
The heady atmosphere the, team
enjoyed eame to an end in 1954
when Oliver and Francis, enduring
conflict from bigger schools who
considered the Redmen to be
upstarts, as well as problems within
Rio Grande College itself, signed
on with the Harlem G~.
Working for the Globettotters'
foil team, the Boston Whirlwinds,
with Francis as the featured player
and Oliver coaching and doing
advance work, !ook its toll on the
two and they left after two·seaaons. ·
Francis has worked at several jobs
in eastern Obio and is currently
employed by Huntsmen Film Products, Carrollton. Oliver entered the
business world, served two terms
as a Clark County commissioner
and owns a pdvate lake and farm
near Bellefontaine.
"It's so impossible to believe we
did what we did with the facilities
we had," Oliver, 69, commenied,
adding that Rio Grande •s enrollment of·92 sbldents and precarious
financial condition in 1952 led him
to wonder if he'd have a school to .
coach for when he &amp;Ot there.
• Oliver said the financial rewards
tbe team earned helped keep the
school opefl, and'."over the years,
we've given millions of dollars of
·public relations 10 this UJ\lversity. I
don't thln1c you could have bought
that moch publicity."
Intm:st in the era is still running "
high, Oliver added, because the
story behind Francis and the team
"is so Cinderella like... my phone
rings all the time. It's probably the
greatest ll'lle baskethaii story in history, but then, nothing's ever
equal." .
J

MARION, Ohio (AP) Whirlpool Corp. received a 50 percent tax. abatement on a $7 milli~
expansion proP,:t that off'teials S81d
will create 18 Jobs:
Marion County commissioners
on Thursday approved the 10-year
abatement.
·

Can You Believe?

5 speed, air, power windows and locka, cruise,
AMIFM/Cassette, tinted glass and full wheel
covers.
411 mont~-· $500.00CioM1pluo 1.1M'illlllt, IIX&amp;IICIIIIly dopoll.
.
'111111 Clo.... 1836.114
.

.

deeclllne of December 12, 18112 to:
Me. Phyllla MMQn, PHR, Pe...Onnel Officer
Unlv-lty of Rio Grande
. P.O.Box11611
Rio Grande, OH. 46874

New executive
:director named
LANCASTJlR - Fairfield
County Children's Services will
have a· new executive director in
January.
' James Kennedy of Lancaster
will lllke the job he held from 1984
to 1986.
•
• The agency was criticized by
~tate Attorney General Lee Fisher
after the death of a 4-year-old.
Rushville.boy went undetected.
Director John Shannon resigned
in August, effective Dec. 31. He
didn't say if his resignation was
related to the death of Oiristopher
' Engle.

BE A GUEST AT YOUR PARTY AND
LET US DO THE WORK.
.

Call us today for menu
selections and prices.

Sonyas
Country 1atclien.
UCINE, OH.

UP TO 60 MONTH TO
QUALIFIED BUYERS ON
NEW VEHICLES

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New Car uept. 594·8555
Used
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Let us show you the POWER LIFT
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PRICES STARTING AT $

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BUICK·PONT·IAC
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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Home Operated

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c-pemallon For Yoa.

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"Remember to exereU.e your J'isbt ~ ehooae
your phyaieal lhel'llpiet. "• (Medle~ Law 1802)

'·

through our exclusive custom sizing •

LOOK FOR IN·SftiR£ SPECIALS IN
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810 E. E. State St. • Athens, Ohio
New Car Dept. 594-1555'
'
Used C•r
594-2114

FINANCING
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Unlvaralty al Rio Grande Ia an Eq•l Opportunity
Affll'lllllllve .Ac:tlon Employer

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•'

lWo Gallia tax refunds unclaimed

.
Applleanla ahoukl aend a letter of lnterut end reeume belore the

PRICES GoOD l:JNTIL NOVEMBER 30TH

ATHENS

·

Minimum qualHieallona Include 1 College Auoclate Degree wllh
dealred experience requlrscl with 1 bachelor'• degJM dellrable.
Grant and propoul writing. Implementation 1nd me1111gement
experience 1nd experience working wllh older pertonl 1e
prsferrecl Background In community development and -Ia!
urvlce delivery progranw le ~lrlbla.
,
·

SONY~'$

'

Six arrested at incinerator

Thla Ia a twelve month admlnlatnlllve contract to be effective on or
about January 1, · 1893. Reeponalbllltlee Include dlnJCtlng the
·program and lllllnaglnglhe offlee and volunlle1'8.

Mo...

1993 ACCORD Ll4 DOOR

·

GIVE THE GIFT OF COMFORT
THAT WILL LAST A LIFETIME

Joseph Schuler ·

The University of Rio Grsnde, lhe J)roject epontor of the multi·
county (Gellle, Jecbon and VInton) Retired Senior Volunteer
Program, le ecctptlng 1ppllcatlona for llie poallion of Director of
.

~ STEP- Workers l'rom Baker·Kokoslng Coastructioa or•
Fredncktown. pore the concrete foundation, Friday for one or two ,
~ue gas I!Crubbers to be buDt at the James M. Gavin Power Plant,
m Cheshire. Tbe b011e is .connected to a cement lruck and dangles"
fr?m a small cr!"le• The foundation or eacb scrubber wili be fiUed ,
w1tb 2,035 cub1c yards or cemel)t, enough to fill more tban 200 ·
cement trucks. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)
·

Mary Ellen Yeater

-

$19900*Per
.

periodicatt'y to update emptorees
on the safe operation and mamte,
nance requirements of each type of
equipment.
.
November 15 through the end of
Februarr is the normal snow and
ice control season. With 1,763 total
state highway miles, District 10 ha$
nearly 19,000 tons of salt and 8,000
tons of cinders in storage throughout its nine counties for use ihis
winter.
·
Gallia County ODOT employ~
ees are responsible for maintaininJ
181 state highway miles. Over
I,700 tons of salt and 450 tons of
cinderS are presently in storage in
Gallia Cou11ty. . _
.-

, DIREOOR OF RETIRED SENIOR VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
(RSVP)
RSVP.

William "Bill" Wyan't

\

: POINT PLEAS.\NT - Services will be held Monday for E. aanow
Jones, 83, of Point Pleasant, who died Friday, Nov. 20, 1992, in Pleasant ·
PATRIOT- William "Bill" Wyant, 77, Patriot, died Friday November
Valley Hospital following a lengthy illness
'20, 1992 at Holzer Medical Center.
. : ~e funefD:I will be held at 10:30 a.m. at Christ Episcopal Church on
He was born February 12, 1915 in RavenswOOd to the late Benjamin
M8in Street m Point Pleasant, with Father Ronald L. Baird officiating
and Renee Lane Wyant.
.
Visitation will be from 6 p.m. to .9 p.m. at ~ Crow-Russell Funerai
Survivo~ include~ daughters, Virginia.(Don) Lester, Judy CampHome, and one hour prior to the service at the church.
bell and S~trley Ratlt~f. all of Patriot; two sons, William Wyant, Jr. of
'f!le faJ'!IilY has asked that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Pennsylvarua and aenJBffim D. Wyant of Berea; one sister, Lorene WamsC!trist ~pucopal Church, 804 Main Street, Point Pleasant, 25550. Burial ley of Letart, W:Va; one brother, Edgar Wyant of Florida; 11 grandchildten and 21 grandchildren
'
w1ll be m die Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant
He was precede&lt;\ in death by his parents and one brother, Benjamin
A Republican, Jones served in the state Senate from 1948 to 1956. For
.
his entire .life, he lived in the Mason County farmhouse where he was Wyant, Jr.
Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. today at the Kuhner-Lewis Funeral
born, said his daughter, Sandy Dunn.
.
·
Home in Oak Hill.
Her fa~er coun~ U.S. Sen. Robert. Byrd and Gov. Gaston Caperton
Services will be held 2 p.m. Monday at the funeral home with the Rev.
among hiS close fnends. Capenon's father and Jones were once in busiPaul Stinson officiating. Burial will be in the Gallia Baptist Cemetery in
ness together, Caperton said.
Jones built more than 1,600 homes, operated five stockyards and ran the
Patnot.
Two R.iver Motqr Automobile Agency for 30 years.
Dunng his SCnate tenure, he came up with a plan that used prison labor
for road consii'Uction. It persuaded Kaiser Aluminum Corp. to build its
Ravenswood plant.
BELPRE- Mary Ellen Yeater, 84, 1419 Pullllan Howell Drive, Belpre,
Jones was chairman of Citizens National Bank of Point Pleasant arid
died
Friday, Nov. 20, 1992 at her residence after an extended illness:
Served on the board of its successor, Key Centurion Bancshares Co; at the
Born
in Little Hocking, she was a daughter of the late Harry and Ada
time of his death.
.
·
'
Tiffany
Wilcoxen.
She was a housewife.
Jones is.survived by his wife, Nedra (Wilhelm) Jones of Point Pleasant
She
is
s~
. ived by !I daughter, Juanita Johnson, Coolville; two sons,
and five.children: Kentucky Governor Brereton C. Jones of Midway, Ky.: Art of Coolville, and Bill o( Belpre, w1th whom .she made her home; eight
State Senator Ned Jones of Barboursville, Sandy Dunn of Point Pleasant grandchi!dren, 15 great-grandc;hildren, two great-great-grandchildren; and
and Charleston, Kathafine .Morrison of Baltimore, Md., and Karin Chriss one spec~ auill, Edith Erdman, Belpre.
of Baltimore, Md. In addition, he is survived by 13 grandchildren and two
. Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Corbett
great-grandchildren.
Yeater; one son, Corbett Yeater, Jr., and her step-father Andrew Schrader.
A son, Edward Bartow Jones, III, preceded him in death.
· Services will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the White-Ethridge Funeral
Home in Belpre with Rev. Seldon Johnson officiating. Burial will be in
Evergreen Memorial Gardens in Belpre.
·
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
; CHESHIRE • Joseph Schuler, Sr., 86, Story's Run Road, Cheshire, p.m.
(lied Friday, Nov. 20, 1992 at Veterans Memorial Hospital following a
~rief illness.
Jle was born May ll, 1906 in Danville, to the late Joseph and
Melvinea Eblin Schuler. lie was a farmer and a coal miner.
EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio (AP)
~ Mr. Schuler is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Joseph (Belva)
- Opponents of a recently com~chuler, Jr., Cheshire; a son, Glenn Priddy, Cheshire; three grandsons, Joe
llob and Bobby Joe Schuler, both of Cheshire, and James R. Miller, Jr., pleted hazardous waste incinerator
alongside the Ohio River plan to
Bidwell; two great-granddaughters and several nieces and nephews.
; Besides his parents he was preceded in death by his wife, Ollie Priddy cap a weeklong series of protests
•
with a rallr at the site on Sunday.
~chuler in. 1973; a daughter, Ancile Schuler Miller; a granddaughter,
Forty people were arrested in
Kerri Lynn Schuler; two brothers and two sisters. .
, ~ Services will be Monday at 11 a.m. at Birchfield Funeral Home in Rul- demonsttations that began Monday.
Six people were arrested Friday at
!and with Pastor Paul Taylor officiating. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery
the Waste Technologies Industries
mRutland.
OFFERING:
gate.
; Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9.
"We want indusaies here in the
· valley who can provide clean, safe
• Stocks
jobs, not big polluterS ~ho will
scare
other
potential
enterprise~
GALLIPOLIS - The Internal Security number, addtess used on
• Coll'orate Bonds
Revenue Service owes two Gallia the return and the amount of the away," said Ted Williams, 50, of
• U.S. Treasury Securities
Lisbon.
•
County residents money, the tax refund expected.
. agency announced this week in a
• Mutual Funds
jlress release.
• Insured Tax-Free
: Because of changed addresses
Municipal Bonds
or illegible handwriting on tax ..,
to
-1
forms, the IRS has been unable to :r
m
• Insured Money Market
:r
z
!feliver tax refunds to Jonny R. If)
m
Accounts
z
Pratt of Gallipolis and Delayne Y.
If)
:r
Coalbank of Patriot
• IRA's
0
:r
0
. · • Pratt and Coalbank are two of z
0
z
1,285 Ohio residents owed money 1&gt;
0
Contact:
\ly the IRS. The individual checks (")
1&gt;
(")
range from $1 to $29,000, the 1&gt;
]]
• Stan Evans
1&gt;
If)
APR
FIXED
release said.
]]
Vice
President
If)
: The taxpayers can claim their 1&gt;
441
Second
Avenue
returned checks by visiting an IRS ..,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631
:r
~
office or calling 1-800-TAX -1040. m
:r
z
As a security measure, the taxpayer If)
m
(614) 446-2125
z
JI\USt provide h'is or her Social :r
If)

truck during ibe local ODOT winter equipmeat .
. inspectioa. Jagers was later recognized for bav- •
.ing tbe cleanest, best maintained truck in the ·
county.
..

WAITING FOR INSPECTION • Gallia
County Highway Worker CoDDi" Jagers uses
the blade or her snow plow as a resting spot
while waiting for luspectors to examine her

Hospital news

U.S. SENATORS • U.S. Senators ·Tom
• Duchle, D-S.D., left, and Jobn Kerry, D-Mass.,
:: talk to reporters after visiting a war museum In
Ho Cbl Minb City, Saturday. Tbe seaaton are

Pomeroy-Middleport G1111polle, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

22,1982

ChriltlJUJI
Parade
· 2:00p.m .

..

Free Parking
Re/re•hmentl

!

!.

f~

~iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii.....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii

'
I

..

�-C ommentary·and perspective

November 22,1992
NcMimber 22. 111i

Peg•

,__---Local Briefs· -....,

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Nov. n

~4

Woman apprehended for bad checks

AccusWeather• forecasl for

A lllws sm fill

FLORIDA CITY. FLA.- Le!;i
DeCirlo. spwranm fcr die Feder'al F.merzency Management Agency in Miami, says dlere are no
homeless people tbat be "knows
IU'nlniM.,G ••
,ow.
lU c-tSIL,P
OJ•'*or'
in tbe lOWII of Florida City,
(614)4a-1lCI
(614)99Jsn56
Fla.. one of lbe c:ommunities bard'
R0811t'l' L WINGBTI'
est hit b~·Hurricane Andrew on
Aug.2A.
Tbal depends on bow one
IIOMaTWJUON Jl.
defines bomcless.
B he.._.
Relief wttktas oo lbe fmnlline,
'or
•••....,.e,
reiMe tbe otnrv
of an
l'
~"'I"
~I
A MI!MBII!a of 1laio Auociated Prui, llld 1be Allla'iclll
elderly
found lying
in lbe
flea 1 4 NJO ' a.•"D'iDremains WOman
f:i bee bechoom,
gazing at
the sky through a gaping bole in
ber roof. She couldn'l reach the
lZl'I1!IS 01' OP.IMJOH - •Irene. Tbey lboald be leu IbiD
3CIO wmk. All lollln 11e oabject 1o editiJI&amp; ud 11U111 be li&amp;liOd wllb
local FEMA office because she
r' '1- IDII lriiFb- anmber No IIJIJi&amp;aed letters will be
was a double amputee.
palllillled. Lellen tboald be iD &amp;ood taste, ~siol issues, 1101
why would FEMA de.liy th_e
J
•'if
rxiSlcnce of bomelcssness m Florida City? It seems 10 come ~
reflexively 10 an 1gency thai 1s
forced 10 devote !so mucb ume 10
damage cnnuol oftbe P.R. variety.
The embiutled agency has
81 WALTER R. MEARS
received
better reviews here than
AP Special Corrapoodeut
for
its
wort
following 1989's HurWASHINGTON- RqJublicans wrote lbe boot 011 reviving a battered
rii:ane
Hugo
in South Carolina.
: Politic~~ pmy. Net 111111y of diem seem to bave read iL
FEMA
has
cui
more than 44,000
• : So 1011: 1 aive GOP gc au11ioos have dcllt wid! lbe wne ills, argued
checks
for:
some
S92 milli011 as part·
: lbe divisioos IJid 1ISIIIIly prcs:ribed lbe same remedies. .
;. Rlpilli •• palbs, fir example, baYe jusl adjourned a post-election of its disaster housing program
: calfaaa: at which pmy ·Jadcrs agrml on a need ID bnJ!Idcn lbe GOP alone.
But in a JOwn wbere lbe welfare
• base. "~beT called for &lt;:0111111011-sense conservatism that accommodates
offiCe
is double lbe size of city hall,
' varyin~s - just as GOP governors agreed 28 years ago !hat the many of
Andrew's victims are still
: party ·
be •mified bebiDd a policy r:i inclusion, not an ideology !hat ,
spending
their nights in ~
• excludes eli •m.
"""'"'• leail-tos, or in Jbe dilapidat: AI tblt time, lbe lest ~ ,ns civil rights Jegisll!!joq, rebuffed by the
: a~ rigbl in the 1964 presidential campaign of landslide loser
I

......

Revival time in the GOP

· lbny~.

Now the symbolic isSue is lbatioo, and the losing GOP calnpaign
•~onn lblt says it sboolld be tw c~
~ • Ceotrist ~ of lbe '60s era wooied about lbe rigbt-wing pull

:

l!Y Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
ed remains or tbeir f01111Cl bDmes.
..._. · ,...,.
F
Some still ----v m ...._... cars. ...
!her down the road.b~Fk lite(
tbe predominately -. town o
Goulds,
conditions are bleaUr "-"
those in FJorida City.
One local mm
' t' ster in Go. ulds
claims FEMA was invisible uutil
12 weeks after 1be bunicane. Like
a scene out of SOIDe foreign wu
aftermath, cbildlal play in 1be broken .remains of tbeir homes, 1'1111·
ning arouud die ~d piles_of
uasb. The grov.,s an nursenes
!here were tbc lifeblood lo th.is
re~ion' s economy lie like wood
chips Slrewn in a~ JDIZe,
· Driving through the stricken
area, lbere are eerie signs of
humanity, but no babilllL Those
wbo liw:d in llllil« parb befon: tbe
storm are the lucky OllCS - IIIOSl
evacualed the area as !heir former
homes wae ""'""" 10 scrap metal
by Andrew's wratb. In some cues,
!he twisled ruins lie undisturbed,
looting to lbe untrained eye lite a
junk yard uulil one reahzes that
people lived lbae just Jhree lnonlbs
a8?.

~~~
~~"\
.

of 1be John Bildl Society. Today's GOP moderates are concerned at lhe
4\owiD&amp; ~of lbe relipogs riglt. puticularly Pat Robenson's ChrislllftCoehtinn
Ia 1964, die 17 Republican JOYUIIOIS who survived the Democratic
iwa:p ...., 1 sr"""CDD 1a101111Cing "1111 forms of political radicalism,
~ 1D lbe left or to lbe rigbL ''
· Tbc 1992 eb:lions t!rimw! Jbc llllb or Republican govemas by lWO,
io 18. As lbey aveyed lbe GOP situation at a cooference at Lake Genetao W'JS.. Rep. Robert Midle~ lbe House GOP leader, ~ Republ~
l)eed "1 broadsbased, inclusive American conservatism ~ IS shrewd
enoqh not 1D fall for utopiln fanli:Sies or lbe far righl 01'.~ left.' '
: 'I1ill Rqublil:an problem, of COIII3C, bas been 011 lbe ngbl, not lbe left,
Inc! OOP pollslm told lbe governors !bat conservatism bas taken oh a
.lcpove irnqt:, eveu among independeniS and Demoaals wbo bad been
ljtdy to emu party lines in pricr electioos.
r.iDa tbat in practical tttms, a fo~ Wbi~ House_ adviSer added
lhll Republit:lm bad beoer gel abow reveiSIIlg an IIIIJXeSSIOII amoog votcn tblt !bey baw: no pbm, or~ in a heallb care overbaul.
; Po11s1« Neil NewbOUJe said i11depeudent votus liSS!JCiared Republians with words lite ICSII'ictive, rigid, risJat-wiog, nmow-mindrd
• The n:sponse from goveriiOIS and party 1: iers echoed lbe words of
OOP unity conferences over Jbc past duee decW. - inclusiveness, tolerance, openness, all under one Bleil bi&amp; Republican ICDt
"We Dill)' have diffaaa:s and c!c:hetes 011 individual issues but not on
die &amp;eneral philosophy of Ibis party," said Gov. Carron Campbell or
South Caolina, "and tbalis where you J.lllllbe big~ up."
.
: "We've got ID be lbe party ollbe big lent ... biull', more llli'ICUve,
n1&lt;n inclusive," ecbocrJ Bob Dole, !be Seoalc GOP IiadCI' IJid the party's
Part One
ranking fi8ure when President Bush leaves office.
Going bact inJD lime, Rupe, do you
' '"There an: tbole wbo predict trouble onlbe borizoo and say we are on
what oa:umd 60 years ago
tl!e verze of IOIIIC 1011 of faaionsl war !bat will CIUIC our party 10 bleak know
Ibis Tbantsgiving day? To put il
~ ,. aid Vice Pu • ~ """' Dan Quayle. '"I could DOl disagrt.c more.' •
another way, what ·were you doing Ted Scou, Ed Arnold, Paul Cas!:i.
' Quayle said despite lbe Wllrioess of Rqlublicao factions, the party is
at 2 p.m. November 2A, 1932?
Ralpb Sisson, Tip Dye, Dick Wine~ kiJidiU by broadly lband beliefs in "basic,lllainsbum, woservaDo you know, Rupe, that on brenner, Bill Grueser,. Murre!
IM_]lrioeiplel.' '
Thanksgiving day in 1932, Wolfe, Bob Blackwell, Ed Baer,
IOQ, t&gt;:lloN ldluildinJ and unity effOIU after GOP defeats. The
Pom=y High Scbool beat Middle- Clarence Andrews, Carl Kloes,
~ mat left the p111ty • I a in Congn:ss 1bln it is now, wid! lbe
~ Higb School for tbe first lime Tom Poll$, Captain Ted Scou, Ken
base of llelf-idenlified Brpnblk- Jess lhln balf lbat or 111e Ilemocrals
m history by a score of 26-0.
McCullough, Don Holter, Beaney
Jllld dropping, IIIII wilb • sharp rigbl-lcft split 10 be sealed
The lineup for 1932 was; Kindle and George Joachim. Tbe
' &lt;icJIIIW.a- said it waS time fcr a realignment or lbe J*Ues liberals Pomeroy: Fred Crow, end; Charles
ui 1be Demoalis, c:oasc:rvalivcs10 tbe "Republicans. Bta die GOP eslab- Keiser, taclde; Clarence Andrews, MHS lineup follows: L. Gardner,
Ben Pickens, Rich Piclrens, H. Tuff
IGbment moved in lo reclaim party leadcnbip and pudl it toward Jbc cenguard; Ed Arnold, center; Mwrell Lewis, Carl Kerns, R. Blubber
ler. Dwigbt Eileobowa aod Riclwd Nann helped make lbe deal that put
Wolfe, g~; Paul ~i. Iackie; SJevens, Pat Gallagber, Tom Riley,
• ·- chaimiln in charge wilbout • fight.
.
.
Ed Baer,' guard. Tbe baclcs were Ike Neal, Marion Eastep, Shorty
The new man, Ray Bliss, was a orp!i=, a bland political technician
Tip Dye, Karl Kloes, Ed Guinther, Beaver, Kennelh Entsminger, M.
widl neither idedogica1 nor candidMe lies.
and Bill Grueser. The substiiutes Abbou, W. Ward, Ed Lewis, J .
·; s. Two yean Iller, the RepublicaiiJ pined 47 1C11S in lbe House and
for Pomeroy were Bcmie Kindall, Vielh, C. Smilh, Howard Eastep,
in lhc Savr. n:wninll Danoau pins of 111e 1964 landslide, and
Howard Seidenabel, AI Russell, Cub Allensworth and J. Russell.
~lqinnin&amp; lbe revivlil Jbat put Nixon in lbe White House.
Bill McQuigg, and George
In 1930 MHS walloped PHS by
~
Wbell the isu:s, particularly lbe di'Visive, eqRI'Iing war in Viemam,
Joachim.
a
score
of 45.{1. 11w was MHS 's
bmled apinst lbe Daoocna, tbe reua•iud ~wac ready.
The Middleporllineup was; fin\11 team ever and il won the
~ Now the GOP needs anocbrr m-rilcfin&amp; A new puty cllainnan is 10 be
Larry
Gardner,
Kenneth
;eleeled in laic January, 1ft! at Ibis poiotlb= is neitbec a consensus candi- ·· EnlSIDinger, taCkle; John Lambert, South East Obio League Championship by scoring 442 poiniS 10 lhe
'dille not one with lbe orpnizatinnal, non-idcological identity thai enabled
guard; Ed Lewis, cenrer; Harold opposition' s 40 poiniS. Gallipolis
Bliss to bridge Jbc Cactions.
Lambert, Guard and Marlin E. was one team that scored against
'I Dole said be will try to mate cenain Jbc party eleclS a cbainnan "who
Abbott. The backs were: .Tom MHS. Kenneth Amsbury, later Dr.
:W no ties 10 any Clmdidate fcr ,'96•. who doesn't want 10 make money ' Riley,
Pat Gallagber, Arnold Ben- Amsbury, scored one of the few
~ • tbe expense of lbe Republican Party.
.
net, Carl (Cub) Allenswortb and louchdowns against !he mighly
• "We wan110 build a campaign for '94 and '96," not an operation for a
Ike Neal. SubstituJes for Middle- Yellow JackelS. The players were
~1996 Wbitc House candidate, Dole said. "We need to el!:pand the base of
port were: Bill Anderson and Ed Gordon Harris, An Lewis,
''tbe party and reach OllliO people, ralher Jhan try 10 pick early favoriJeS."
Tucker. Ike Neal and Tom Riley deceased, Ben Pickens, Alfred
• Goklw~. telired, Wllll:bed from PbomiL "A pany is good for about
were the stars 9f lhis team. Ed "PeJe" Rousb, Lawrence Fa'ullmu,
' 20 years." be said in an ABC intaview, "lftl then tbey run out or people
Lewis, center, was also outstand- Larry Gardner, Ike Neal, William
: and lbey run 0111 of money.
,
ing.
"Shorty" Beava, deceased, Mari011
~ . "ADd dial's aboul where lbe Republican Party was a year ago, but IIIey
One final mention should be Eastep, deceased, Martin Abbott,
· cldl't realize it''
made or tbe 1932 season. Pomeroy deceased, Pal Gallagher, Tom
•
•• EDITOR'S NOTE- W.Jtao R. Mean, riu p1 'qtmt ucl colums woo all of iiS games that year with Riley, William Wud, deceased,
!he exception of lhe Galii polis Lokey Jobnson, Carl Kerns. Harold
••lit for ne Auoc:iated Preu, llu reported 1111 Wasltillcton and
game whiCh it lost 26-0. Charles "Tuff" Lewis, deceased, Jim FarHamrick, Gallipolis, Tip Dye and ley, deceased, Dallas Rousb, Blub~·
polilks for .ure tltaa 30 ,_..,
Fred Crow all p~yed fust string at ber Stevena, Hubert Eastep, ManOSU from 1935-37. Aaron Kelton ager, deceased, and Charlie Coffee,
also played excepl be broke a leg co.;b, deceased. It sbould be noted
~
.
which lmocked him oul of football. tbat LUkey Johnson was one of lbe
•
.
·
By Tbe Associated Press
Tbc MHS-PHS ganie ended in a fll'St 10 land 011 Nonnandy Beach in
: Today is Sunday, Nov. 22, lbe 327111 day of 1992. There are 39 days
lie in 1931. Ike Neal almost scored WWU and set up llaies for others_.
:left in ibe year.
a touchdown when he ran 60 ylllds
Tbis game was also famous m
: Today •s Higlilighl in Hisaory:
·
.
. .
down
lbe
sideline
and
was
caught
high
school football history. The
~ On Nov. zt 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinat.ed while ndfrom
behind.
PHS
got
a
bad
call
score
al the half was MHS 6 to
! inJ in a moiOR:ade. in Dallas. Vice Preoident Lyndon B. Johnson was from a refaee on a pass play which
Pomeroy
0. The turf was frozen
* IW'OIII in.as lbe 36th president of the Uniled SlaiCs.
would have given PHS lbe victory. and no one could stand or run 011
• On Ibis....,:
"Bl k
Cub Allensworth knocked a pass
: In 1718, Ent~~ Edwud Teach-:-~ known as
ac s out of tbe hands of Fred Crow, lbe field with wooden cleaiJ. AI lbe
halftime, Coach Bauyn, who was
: beat" - was · durin&amp; a banle off lbe VJrgiiWI COIISt;- • .
wbich
was
caught
by
Eddie
at the time,suggested that
there
"' Ia 1890, FICIIdl Pi Wer1 Cbarles.de Gaulle was born m ~·France.
Guinther over the goal line. The they gel snealcers. The sneaters
: Iii 1906,1be SOS !IJID.-Ba~ was ~ allbe Intrma11onal Radio refe«e did not see Cub bat lbe ball
were furnished by lhe Rltb'!um
t~ln~ CoovWbO!! m erlin.
iniO
Eddie's
bands.
store,
courtesy of Bud Jubhng.
• hr1
, "Bolero," a musical wodc by Maurice Ravel, was flnt perThe 1931 PHS foolball team Actually, M.H~ did nol need a
~
llUblicl in Plris.
.
; lui~~li. 1 ~yinl belli named the "China Clipper" lOOk off from was one o( iiS beat. Only one game frozen f~eld to wm but tbe soealtCn
was lost and lblt Willi to Gallipolis, did give MHS an advanlage. The
~.
!. E
· more tlwl 100,000 pieces of mail 011 Jbe fust tbe
SEOAL champs. Canoll Swan~
: t~~~~~zPxific lirmail .
., __ .. Bri"s.. ....., __ • .,_, __ w'. . son ofOellipolis ran 70 years for a writer can also penonally rememJa 1943 PW•idaM
' D. ...,._,...., ..., nu1"' ~ll&gt;IQ mber that the worst beating be ever
11011
and Cbilele leldCI'
KaisJibet mel ill Cairo 10 dis• 10ucbdown 011 a triple reverse in to01c was at lbe 'lbantsliving game
that 4ame. Carroll Swanson now in 1930. Art Lewis cWiveral most
m durin&amp; W~ W• ~: eu~~m en+uu for ddaliaa tbe
lives
m Middleport. Bob Blackwell of the clouL Tom Riley, quarter• Ja 1965 1be ••ic:ll play "Man of La MIDcba opalled m New Yort
was
also
a srar on this Jeam.
back. scored four toucbdowns in
: widl ..... Kiley in die role of Don Quixote.
.
.
Tbe
PHS
lineup for the 1931 this game and - All Soutb Easts
• In 1967, 2S yan qo, Jbc U.N. Sec:urity COuncil. 4'J!IO~ RetoiiJIIC!R
: 242, wbidl Cllls for Inel10 wi~
temJOnea ~~ Cllplured. 1n game was a foDows: Bruno Pimll- em Obio. Walter Priode played
: 1967, 1114 iDJ)Iic!d&gt;' calls 00 lnel s ad-x:s to recogmze lbe Jewish li, Bruno Casci, Charlie Keiser, first suing football ~t OU. An
Lewis was .. outRandmg 111ck1e at
~..... riP' to emt. .

•

For an IRIIbM never bad mucb 1oe11 McDonal4's, tbc ClliCk ll+lifailb in govermnc:otto begin with, ness is one or lbe few lhll's ..a:
there's alarm lbat the death toll on ill feet afta-lbe 110011.
This IOWll is fabled for ill JIOII6s
from Andrew bas been minimiffll
by federal authorities. Nearly cal coouplion,wbere ~ ~
everybody 'believes the number bave a 6istory of 1urn1ng pllllie
runs in the thousands, while the funds into private fortunu. In
official count is less tban a buns 1982, the 10wn earned ~rea-wide
notoriely after more than 1,200
dred. People here tat1t of friends
and relalives who bave simply van- pounds .o f .Mfijuana was di!JC?v·
ered missins from the pollee
islled witboul a ttace.
Relief volunteer Kim Terry, department's property room, !Jie
wbo waited out the storm in lhe local police cb1ef 11 the ume
Flarida Keys, says tbat be doesn 'i awibuted the ~ost col)ttlbiDd 10
belifNe lbe deatb toll, 1ft! citea lbe bunsry rau.
lflbe rown was bad before Hurfaa tbat IUiborities evacuated more
ricane
Andrew and worse in its
tl\an 200,000 people from lbe ICe~
lft,ermMb,
many here fear that 1he
suaighl into lbe eye of lbe bumworst
is
yet
to come. Federal
cane. A red Fiat belonging 10 a
inspectors
have
now finished
close friend was found lwisled into
inspecting
lbe
wreckage,
and have
a "lk:oricc stkk" along lbe l!igbs .
way be!l!'iDB nortb from lbe Keys. decided that any dwelling wi lh
more !ban SO percent lOial damage
This friend IS amoog tbose listed as
will have 10 be bull do~ by the·
''milsi.D&amp;.''
Othen believe the number is dty.
.
. . '
Volunteers rear that th1s will
low because many resideniS are
IJI!OOimted in census ligureS. -Many create a new homeless class out of
in these nnrtowmihips. including those who are now living in the
the migraDts who arrive each wi!t- remains of their bomes. Thou~h
ta-, live on or oear tbe canals, m FEMA promises !hal anyone 10
lllliJ« JMb or tailS, far from cen- need will gel a uailer, tbere arc;
sus tabn or ruc:ue woden.
tbose who doubt tbe ability of the'
To be IIID'C, Florida City was a fedelal government 10 help lhlfo: .
dimtn ~rea before lbe hurricane, whose bomes are bulldozed, especnnsinenl'y raled as ariloog lbe 10 cially since many are recent immiIelSt desinlble places to live in lbe grants and lack proper documentaUnited Slates, and plagued by tiOII.
I
drugs and corruption. After the
"You bave to remembei that for
many oT the people berl. !be las!
time Jbey saw someone in unifonn,
they were killing their families,"
Pastor Doyle Heinzfnan told our
associate Jan Molter. This is the
reason, he suspe'c1s, why many
people have failed 10 show up at
FEMA offices 10 collect checks
from the ~vemmenl. Since ~he
hurricane, I}Oyle has been working
with People Helpin~ People, a local
volunteer orgamzauon.
To replace lhe torn-down
homes, the local govemmeDl has
plans for bringin~ in an ouiside
architect to redes1gn and rebuild
Florida Cily into a model commu·
( nity. But Jhat also raises new ques/ tioos to some. "They want to make
Jhis area anolher Palm Beach. But
bow can lbese people afford 10 live
there7" said Anthony Jacobs,
aootber volunteer at PHP.
Jack Anderson and Mlcbae)
Biutein are writers for United
Frature Syndicate, Inc.
'

History of Pomeroy, Middleport football
FredW. Crow

, TIIII:

:•lbrce

t""

~Today

.

in history

......

: Air

Cur..

au.,

Cllalduu

J..-

fror!'

.

.

,.
r

OU. He played in tbe East-West Gino PierOlti, haltback; Red Wig·
shrine pme IDd coached at wvu. gins, fullback; Nappy Slobarl,
His honors are to numerous to quanerbact; Owens; halfback, Lew
mention.
Roush, end, Cap1ain Richar~
In 1929 MHS again desuoyed Ebersbacb, tackle, Wid Ashform,
Pomeroy at Thanksgiving. Tbe halfback, George Edward Nye.
score at !hat game was~- Again end, Walthoe Allen, guard, Ed&amp;ar
Middleoon wu undefeated. Max Reeves, center, Max Dye, guard,
Lambert scored Jhree 10uchdowns Everet Reeves, tackle and CbariC$
in Jhis game and was a llevaslaling Rayburn, end. The MHS lineup
runner. During the Tbanlcsgiving was unavailable to lbe writer.
game in 1929 lbe (idd was covered
PHS players who are not listed
with snow. Marion ·"Slilz" in lbe 1926line up but were playi
Allenswonb, deceased, was also ers in 1925 are as follows: James
nne or the stars of this conlest. K4- Cliffonl, fullback, Herbert Pender~
mil Wisem&amp;ri was also a blocking grass, CapUlin and quarlerback,
Slar. Pinky Root. deceased, was a
Harold Turnbull, halfback, Marion
tackle on this team. Albert "Pele" . Lietwilll', tackle, and Martin Elber;
Roush was a regular onlbe football feld, manager. The MHS lineup
teams for the years 1927-30. Pete was Ulllvailable at this time.
;
ill now at home in Middleport.
The above summary is the besl
There was a s10ry thai SenaJor tbe writt.r could oblain with limiJed'
Tom Jones. who lived near the soun:es. The newspapa files in Jh~
field, would !Cl his big SL Bernard late l-920s and early 1930s are
on. the field before the game and incomplele or missing. Part two.
bave to rellieve him. Tom never and possibly part three of this sto.y
left the field until the game was will be in subsequent editions in
over. The adull admission was fifty this paper. I want 10 thank Ralpb
cents.
Graves and Tom Riley for tbeir,
In 1928 MHS defeated PHS 19- assislance in COI!Ipiling infonnation
0. This game was lbe las! played in ·for Jhjs article.
.
Pytbian Park. Harlan EiselsJem was- .
For tbe reader's infonnalion, the
the captain of the Pomeroy team foUowing are tbe peninenl dates in'
thai year. Richard Reuter, JVho this hisJory: The 1927 and all pre;
JRssed away last week was a regu- ~ious games were played at Pythi·
1ar on tbal1ealll. Some of lbe other an Park in Middleport. In 1928
PHS players were Jim Fonlllna, MHS and PHS played their games
Delbert Rice, Jim Terrell, Gerald at tbe present day Junior High field'
Welker, Ted Scou. Branch Flcm- ,in Middleport ,
,
ing, Walter .Leifheit, Bob McKiy.
In 1951 lhe fll'St game between
01bo Tr,1cy, Gerald Reuler, these lwo schools was played on
Richard Reuter, Jim Clark, Ralph tbc present Meigs High School
Welkll', Gfl!lll Roberts, Coacb Ray field in Pomeroy. After thai !be
Farnham and manager Rober! games were played there in alter~
Elberfeld. Tbc write~: 'was not able • years. The last Tbanksgivill&amp;
10 secure the record of the MHS game was played in 1959. Starlin~
Jeani for Jhat year.
wid! 1be year 1960 all subsequent
In 1927 MHS defeaaed PHS by games were played during the re~
. a score or 6·0. Jeppie Swisher W. season and not on ThanksgiVlinJatepfed a pass and nn 90 y.,ds ing. The MHS-PHS fOOlball game*
for die winninglODC:bdown. Bus ceased in 1be year 1967 when lbe!t
Reichman was C!!plain or tbe MHS two a:boob and Rudand were cool
team and played fullback·. Other solid•ted.
~
'
playas Olllhat team wae Marion
At one time, we would sa
"Stitz" AllenSwonh. Dale Warner, 11omp on those terrible Yello
McClure, Daf Anderson, Bill Jackell. They could sting prett
Mayer, Dave Dint, Bruz Mills, lllldatdmea. Today, the games
Ray Nell, Shirley SIUer, Ralph blatory wilb all of us wbo plltic
Howell, Jc:ppie Swisbar, Ura Bilek, JRted llaving a gn:at deal of
·
' Ly11011 Fultz. amaw coacb, Dale for our opponeniS. The ghosts will
W~n~er, Clarence "Pinky" Root. . be congreaating at 2 p.m. lhii
Kermit Wisem1n, Frank Knopp. Thantsaivlng at the MHS fiel¢
Max Limbert and B. Harris. Man· See_you tbere. In G(\d we trusL , :
qers were Charles "Patsy" Mulry,
Clny on.
•
Gerald Luellan and Wayne McEis
· Edltot'a note s Lona•tlmt
hinney.
AttorneJ Fred W. c r - Ia tit~
In 1926 MHS defcaled PHS by · eo+trlbua. ol a weel!J d»lau
a !ICOI'C of 19.0. The Coach or 1be for Tile SF. .J Tla11zSe..~
PHS team was Coach Boyd. L.T. Retldern
IPtl II, crl.,
Weed was the manager. Some of lcbe or ,...• •, • •1
the other PHS players were: Bob (unpt relllloa or polllia) are
McKiy, gl!a'd; Harlan Eiselstein, c+enraae.I to write to Mr~
quarterback; George Faris, end; Cruw, Ill cue oftltiiMwlpJIIICI'.;,

,..._,to

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GALLIPOLIS - A Vinton woman was taken iniO custody Friday
for allegedly writing two cbecb on a closed bank account.
Francis M. Marcum, 45, ·Keyslone Road, Vmton, was later
released on a summons to appear in court.
According to the polic;e report, an emplo~ee of Ames ~Part·
ment Store 600 Silver BfldBe Plaza, Upper River Road, Galhpohs,
10ld police'Marcum had wnlJen two checks totaling $399.28 on an
Ohio Valley Bank account that had been closed since August 14,

MICH.·

FEMA flagging on disaster effort

••Jed

Sunday Th;nes-Sentlnei-Page-~5

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

· ITo1ec1ols1• I

Woman reports assault
GALLIPOLlS • A Thunnan woman 10ld Gallipolis police she
was assaulled Friday on Eastern Avenue. According to the report,
Maggie Bing, 1069 Tyhn Ros Road, Thunnan, was picking. up her
datighta- at lbe Apos101ic Chun:h, Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis when
. an acquaintance grabbed ber coal and hit her in the ri~ht side of her
head. The subjecl also suuck her daughter, lhe complamt S3Id.

• IColumbusI59" I

Gallipolis man arrested
GALUPOLIS - The Stale Highway Patrol arrested Kenneth I.
Wise 61 636 Island View, Gallipolis, Friday evening for no opera·
tor's liceiJse and failure 10 display valid registration.
·

W. VA.

I

Children Services awarded grant
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Children Services Board has
been awarded a $66.231 Independent Living I~itiatives Discretionary Grant, a press release from Representauve Mark Malone
(D-92nd DisJrict) announced Friday.
The grant was one of 28 ·awarded tbroughoul the Stale by lhe
Office of Olild Care and Family Services, Bureau of Family Ser·
vices and lbe Ohio Deparunent.of Human Services. The ~t will
be used 10 Jrovide life slcills lrllining to young peoJ!Ie malcing lbe
transition from foster care 10 adulthood, the release said.

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Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
01~2Accu·Wtd!Ot,lnc.

' V1aAssoclatodPro.,GtaphlcsNot

:------Weather----·
South Central Oblo
Tonight, rain lilcely. t-ow in the
mid-50s. Soulh winds 10 to IS
·mph. Chance of (ain 70 percent.
Sunday, occasional rain. Tbunder·storms are also possible. High in
the lower 60s. Chance of rain near
100 percent. ·
'

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Extended forecast
Monday tbrougb Wednesday:·
, Monday, chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 40s and lower
50s. Low in 'lbe upper 30s and
lower 40s. Tuesday, fair. High in
the 40$. I,ows ill tbe 30s. Wedness .
day, a chance of rain. Higbs in lhe
40s. Lows in the 30s.

Three Galtia wrecks
investigated Friday
· GALLIPOLIS - One injury
IWas reported resultiQg from three
k ·
·
d·
separale wrec ~ mvesllgale _m
Gallia County Fnday by lhe GalliaMeigs Post of the Slate Highway

lOIS license.

A car driven by a Gallipolis
woman.sustained lighl damage in a
deer-car collision on Obio 160 in
Gallipolis Township around 1;45

!leer

was

Meigs EMS
r"esponds to
seven calls

Liquor agencies closed Nov. 26
Gallipolis man cited

$1495

·

r~!: ~:.~7 2h~ fw;~'::k~nr~~ Deputies·investigate
Ve~he~iddleport unit we,nt to

·damageS at SChOOl

Coal Street at 1:02 p.m. for Norman Terrell wbo was taken to Vets
~~i 5:07 p.m. lhe Middleport unit
went 10 S10newood ApartmenlS for
Dana Longstreth wbo was taken 10
yeteA~t16 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
responded to Union Avenue for
Myron Arnold wbo was transponed
1o Veterans.

SALISBURy • The Meigs
County Sheriff' s Department is
investigating glass breakage at Sals
isbury Elementary Scbool. Acoor_d·
ing 10 a report, the damage! was dis"
covered Friday morning. A door
glass was sbol QUI and a"?'* was
thrown through a lciJChen wmdow.
Deputies are trying to conlllct
lWO subjeciS that were seen in tbe
vicinity.

OUGOI
lUI CHill

day her 1985 Buick, which she
parks at a parking spot alon~ Conoly Road 18, bad !be drivt;r s glass
broken out and lhe glove compart·
menl ransacked. She reported nolbing was missing.

Popular elzetl to lit mo.t aan.

O'DEUW.ER
1M E. MAIN It

t~ ~

,, I

01

• ...... IIi cw ..

O'DEll lAWN &amp; GAIDII
1&amp;0 UPPER RIVER AD.

,.,
"

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•

BIG
I-HOUR
,.HANKSGIVING
DAY SALE .

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26
4·7 P.M.

20% OFF

y. ct. t350

FREE
GIFT

MARKDOWNS TO 75%

Heart
Diamond
layoway

Nacklace

~

1 ct. 1525

STOREWIDE SAVINGS
•FREE CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAPPING
•lAYAWAYS WElCOME · . •OPEN EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
Til 8:00 P.M.

~
y. 350
ct. 1

H you want to save on
Diamonds, go to
Tawfley's, 422 2nd Ave. the best. place In town to
shop for diamonds.

MIDDLEPORT

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

,

Gallipolis

'

446s1615

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· ~ · ·'.~.before you snap up a
;ewelry Mborgoinw

~~~~~~ryA~r-~~u~~~r~~~~~E~uschmUore.OitaNisoRmclude~s
our

Soup, Salad &amp; Fruil Bar and a
free sl.ice of pumpkin pie! But
make sure you amve hungry.

'
·,

Our fabulous Thanksgiving buffet includes all your favorites, like
delicious ove n-roaste~ , all-white breasJ of turkey, cornbread
dressing, gibleJ gravy, mashed pOiatoes, yams, peas,_glazed ham,

..........____

'

Man charged in murder scheme
suspected in outdoorsmen slavings

cbiidrenunder 5 ea1 free. Children 5-Utal for$2.99.

""-•011 . . Ole

424 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS

U""'T' . .

1

,_

TAWNEY STU

GALLIPOLIS . The Gallia Counly Health Department will be
giving flu vaccinations aldie following locations next week:
Nov. 23, 9 10 11:30 am. -Crown City Cily Building and 1_10
· ' 3;30 p.m. -Clay School Building; Nov. 24, 9 to 11 a.m. • Palnot
Lodg~Hall. and 110 3 p.m . • Mercerville Fire Station.
Shots will also be given in the Health Depanmenl 8 10 11:30
a.m. and 1 10 3:30p.m. every Tuesday and Friday. The shots are
free 10 GaUia Counly residents 18 years of age and older.
,

ELYRIA, Ohio (AP) - A
Lorain Conoly man charged in an
aileged murder-forsh\re scheme
also was a suspecl in the deaths ·or
five men shol in eas1em Ohio, a
newspaper reported today.
.
Lorain County deputy shenffs
on Friday arrested David L. Kenney; 53; Df LaGrarige, for .trying 'to
buy a gun he allegedly planned to
use to commit a conlracl murder,
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer said.
Kenney was charged with conspiracy 10 comm~ aggt~~vated mur·
der in Holmes County, where the
plot was set up, authonties said. He
• has not been chatged in connection
with lbe live deaths.
He was being held in Holmes
Counly jail until his arraignment
today, Tbe Akron Beacon Journal
and The Plain Dealer reported.

s,.,;.,_

2-5x7

GALLIPOLIS . Gallipolis police cited Michaei"B. Lynch, 23,
740 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Friday for failure to display valid
, registration.

Becky Davidson Incident probed
RACINE - Naomi Brinker,
transported to
Racine, reported to the Meigs
County Sheriff's pepartment on
reformatory
Friday that someume dunng the

~

-topy

COLUMBUS - All suue liquor s10res, agencies and departmenJal
offices wiU be closed Nov. 26 in observance of Thanksgiving Day.

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BRING US YOUR ,''
OLD PBO'I'OS!

Health Dept. offers flu shots

· PalrOBI. dl
D'
17 Rio • a.mi.ynn D. Robinson·: 36, was
·Grande,
ra ey
mguss,
was eastbound on• Ohio northbound o.n Ohio 160 driving a
588 in Green Township around 1976 Bu.i ck Skylark owned by
7:15 a.m. when lbe Yamaha XS11 Eugene Robinson, Gallipolis, wben
Special motorcycle be was riding a deer ran _oniO_lhe roadway and
ran off 1be ri_ght side of the road sll'UCic the nght Sl~ of lhe car.
and suuck a dilCh.
The
wa. tilled.
Dinguss was transported to
A Pomt Pleasanl, '!f.Va_., man
Holzer Medical Centt.r by lhe Gal- • was Clk:'i after an accuient mvolvlia County Emergency Medical mg a piCkup ~and a m&lt;?torcy.Service wl¥;re he was admitled for cle al tbe JUnCtiOn of ~a1lroad
ueaJmenl of a fractured anlde. .
Street and Bumeae Road m KanauDinguss
hi satiSfaciOry COD· ga around ~:40 p.m.
•
.
clition as of Saturday morning.
Accordil_lg 10 Jbc patrol, a p~ckup uuck driven by George E. F1sh•
, Darn.age 10 lhe mo~n;yc_1e was er 19 Point Pleasant, was northhs~ as model'llte, and disabling.
txlund'on Railroad SJI'eel anc! made
. Dmguss was c1Jed for no opera- . a lefl tum 01110 BumCite Road saiking a mo!orcycle dri~en _by K~n ­
neth I. WISC, 61, Gallipolis, wbich
was eastbound on Burnette Road.
Damage 10 Fisher's 1991 Toyota and Wise's 1982 Honda Golds
Wing was listed as ligbt.
Fisher was ciled for failure to
: POMEROY • Units of the yield
.
,Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to seven calls
for assistance on Friday.
· At 8:23 ·a.·m. on Ftiday the
Racine unil was called 10 Barringer
~idge Road for Billy Brewer who
was ttansported to Pleasant Valley .
Hospital.
"d
'' Al 9:44 a.m. the Syracuse unit ·
POMEROY s Bec~y Dav1 son
went 10 the Pomc;roy Nursing and was transported Fr1day by the
'Rehabilitation Center for Carl Meigs ConOly Sheriff's DepartRoach who was taken 10 Veterans ment 10 tbe Women's Reformatory
1t.iemorial Hospital.
· at Marysville. The Court of Com·
' The Pomeroy unil, al II :26 moo Pleas had found lha! sbe had
a.m ., was called lo Meigs Higb viola~ term~ o~ probauon_fr~m
:School for Gary CanJerbury who her pnor convtclton of trafficking
was taken to Holzer Medical Cen- in drugs. She was sentenced to
'ier.
serve lbe remainder of her sentence
· AI 11:55 am. lbe Pomeroy unit of one year as ~ell as 10 pay the
responded to WiUs Hill Road at the costs of prosecuuon.

BUY·IHE BAR
GET THE
FREE

OUTSTANDING LEADERSffiP s Phil Skidmore, vice presisl'
dent of tbe Guilla Couuty Local Board of Education, displays bis
Outstanding Leadership Award from tbe Obio County Superin·l
. , tendents Association. Skidmore was presented the award at tbe·
a~iation'$ Seventh Annual Capillll Conference for his efforts ini
the Interactive Television Program and bis. role in tbe consollda·:
tlon of tbe county hlgb schools. Pictured wilb Skidmore are,
Jerome Brockway, left, president or tbe OCSA, and Robert Lans
ning, superintendent or tbe GaUia County Schools.

•

THANKSGIVING BUFFET BEGINS AT 11:00 A.M.
BREAKFAST BAR SERVED UNTILlO:OO A.M.

328 ·viAND STREET • PT. PLEASANT, WV.

•

,;
• Experience-4 7 years
.
-~
• Knowledge-Member American Gem Soc1ety
•Service-We service what we sell- m store
•Selection-None better in Tri-State
·
.1
•Quality-Don't be disappointed by inf~rior quality
•Value-Don't be misled by other cla1ms.
'
J
. For real value. see us.

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]'Ill AI 8owds:j 'Ba

11

s.nllnll

November 22, 199:i

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

~ember22,1992

NEW YORK (AP) - A judge assistant deputy mayor; and Deputy

: By .E DiifiM.IIliftD
'r
)\
' 5 n , . _ 1JI'fB

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'

SANK IN 1907 , The Henry M, Stanley sank
acr05111 from G"IUpolis Island in 1907 when it bit

anc

87 I[ARJiN 11411
7 I , . _ WI'IB
LI'TIU R&lt;XX,. A4.- ~
dent-elect Cliau.a aay bYe so
"•

I

coun Democralic: dolaors apia
bee lOSe die $35 Pllim pmvidal

by the government for the transi·
tioo doesn't appear to be eoough.
" I think we'll sort of cut comers
and tount pennies and make the
money last as Ions as we can,"
~Dee Dee Myers said
Friday. "But we're prepared to
=Y~me additional private

Japan officially
welcomes trade · aaedFrom
the s35 million ap)llopri·
by Congress, the transition
agree
· ment,· fears equipment
team must pay salaries, office
costs, rent, travel
and utilitieS for the 10.
n•ce ne·xt target CliJICDSeS
weds between the Nov. 3 election
w-o

TOKYO (AP) _
a Dade
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Ewopc
aw-ll:d. 1
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up today l'or an · • u• ' sllowdowa CMI' iSs
• ·rice
impoiiS.
Prime: Mi....,_ Kiidri Mi)aaawa !old acpuuas k •vi 1 1 an
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agreeme•t be
· twcc• ..., uu.u
SUlCI ..t dlc:&amp;aGptal a....;..
ty 10 Qll Ew•c
fiMm w•ejdics,
sa~ k bapes it will pas11 forward llRIMic 1 ?alb min" abe
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-..1 bi ils bm on lllllll for-

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ac:cc.ssary

.mo•"s
p ......,.'e

•'food sec:uity, .. is a
ill tk GAIT talb
, ' a IOUitC of.friczion widt

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lOT~ ally and ••'"IIJI*IM:i.

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-

•: Media waned .... Totyo' s
. . . cnuld be: llloc: Coats- wa:t.

IIIII Clilllon's Jan. 20 inauguration.

T h e - may not be enough,
u
. - said, ·...,;na
that the total is
a&amp;~~
~--e
about what the Arkansas governor
__,. - h w-,_ dun'ns the cam
.,...- ,.._
'·
plip.
" It's expensive," Myers said,
"particuJarly when the transition
imolves a change of parties."
Fedenllaw penmts a president·
ell:a 10 ~·y pan of the bill with pri·
...,
ware fW!ds&gt; she said, and noted it's
beeu ckJne before: Ronald Reagan
raised privlle funds for his 1981
llleover from Jimmy Carter.
Clinton aides are scrimping;
111111)' of them in for the transition
c:ut a sprrial, SSO-a·nisht deal at a
Litllc:Rocltholel.

On Friday, Clinton and Vice
"r:sident-dect AI Gore worked in
private, talking about their meet·
mgs in Washington the p~evious

our information on one another,"
C1intm said. posiDs for pictures at
lhc:goyalillr's mansion.
HI: brushed off questions allout
a CGilvenation between tnmsition
dira:IOF Warren. C!tristopher and

COLONY THEATRE

. :Suw'•'"* ar 111c: poliej u

RIIII&amp;IIJ THIU THURSDAY

•
Fk 1rilild's
ll!t&amp;at food iliiporan•
lias
i•l""••ialwodd's lowallevd
foodd* '5 . ).
i
~ oveall I..- is

..r.,

ASA launches
reotagon satellite

on 'Star Wars'
~.

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~:

started at Wladsor Castle, names
smoke
could be seen bUlowi!!glrom tile quee11's weekend boa!ae, west of London, Friday, Royals and

1HE lAST OF lHE

MOHICANSR

SHOW,_S:
Ftl..W........ 7:JO. 1:30
...._ .... Tllun. One EVWiing
1Mw7:JO
'td 1hn 11.50 • 4;4tM&amp;'-4111111:232:1

ON SALE

An Old-Fashioned Christmas at
Relax fireside

AtOne Of
Six CA!tstanding Hotels

~urrounded by the
charm of Charleston's

most elegantly
comfortable Inn
located in the
heart of thehistoric district.

KING CHARl1lS INNt
Hisroric Diottict

HOWARD')OHNllrnRIVtlU'IU'IT
IA&gt;wnrown Neao Himic Disaicr

RAMADA INN ·
1-16 Near Pl:lltlticro

SHEM CREEKJNNt
On:rhe-W.~&lt;r, M~ l'lealant

.

HOWARD JOHNS&lt;N INN

'

MldrownNeaoE~

BESI' WE:S'ImN INN
Not- Plantaticroand Ganlen

800-845-1004

803-722-1611

19.5 East Bay Street• Charleston, S.C. 29401

A!Y.~!·

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS- If one lived in
thC early 1900s and wanted to travel
home for Thanksgiving on the Ohio '
River, the Henry M. Stanley would
havebeenaninter,
estingboattoride. ,
It was known ... :&gt;
for its good food. ••· ·•···
The breakfast ... · ·
inenu might have '
included eggs
which
were
cooked any one of
five ways,polatoes (roasted, fried or
stewed), breads (muffins, crumpets,
rolls, biscuits or brown), fruits and
hot drinks. On special occasions the
menu would' include broiled fish,
blue-wing 1eal, sweetbreads, veal
cotellettes, beefparisienne and lamb
chops a Ia chateaubriand.
The Henry M. Stanley was known
primarily for its fried chicken. In
order to insure freshness, the boat
had a method for chicken prepara·
tion.Thelivechickenswerekeptina
coop near the kitchen.
First, a large barrel, which rested
near the edge of the boat, would be
ftlled with hot water.
One cook would grub a chicken
and rest its head on the iron rim at the
tqp of the barrel. With a swing of the
cleaver the head would fall into the
Ohio River and the body into .the
barrel.
The forst man's job was ended
when he had denuded-the large feath·
ers.
·
· The second man was called the
pin-feather man. He pulled' out, or
singed over a charcoal fue, the feath·
ers that remained. The bird was then
tossed to the cook who would open
up the chicken, cut it into pieces and

'

!lie Oswego. Tbe Staaley was known ror its good
rood, espec:lally rrled tbiden.

toss them into the-frying pan.
Thewholeprocedurefromcleaver
to skillet couJd be done in two min·
utes. ·
Roosters were not allowed on the
boat as many rivermen believed that
a rooster feather on a bOiit was a sign
of doom, Some also considered the
hauling of certain colors of pigs to be
bad lu~k. Others saw bad _luck in the
fonnauon of the clouds m patterns
resemblins steamboats.
·
It seems that one day such clouds
formed and the wrons color of hogs
got on a barge pushed by the boat.
Notmorethanafewmilesfrom where
the boat started, a boiler exploded
and h?t water ftlled the barge wh~re
the pigs were. Some of the pogs
jumped out into the river and
~wned. Eventulll:ly the barge made
It to shore. Other pigs leaped out and
ran up the bank into the town, where
the "possessed porkers" puo:nmeled
perturbedpassers-by.Somep•gseven
rail into the hills where legend has it
their offspring live to this day.
There was no question but what
the Henry M. Stanley was jinxed.
She sank five differen~ ~es ·_Char·
leston, Manchester. Cmc'!lni!I• Rising Sup, Ind., and at Gallipohs, The
boat was built in 1890 by the Bay
Brothers Line to make the run from
Cincinmiti to Charleston. In its first
10 .years the boat was very popular,
namely because of its good food. All
of its problems came after 1900. It
was in 1904 that the boat was purchased for the Greene Line. It basi·
cally ran the same route as before
except that it added stops at Middle·
pon and Pomeroy before going up
the Kanawha River.
,
It was on September 3, 1907, at
about9p.m.thattheHenryM.Stanley
wascomingintoGallipolis. Anchored

in the channel opposite Gallipolis
Island was the government dredge
boat Oswego. . .
The pilot of the Stanley did not see
the lights on the Oswego until he was
right up on the.dredge. It was too )ate
to change course and the Stanley hit
the Oswego with almost full force.
The Gallipolis Tribune reported;
"The Stanley immediately settled in
eight or nine feet of water, her head
above and her stern under water. Her
electric lights went out, plunging her .
into darkness. Some 14 passengers,
mostly women excursionists from
Cincinnati, who had not yet retired,
were thrown into a panic. Only one
passenger was in bed, Ruth, the little
daughter of the pilot who lives in
Ironton. In the darkness and confu·
sion Prof. John Williams, thinking
his life was in peril, made a rush for
the bow of the boat He stumbled
over a chair and broke his leg."

••It

Morrla Old Dorothy ..-kina

,_

_,.,,
..

TAYL.mt iCi llMS
iiOX 1077

fjp to ckln:t ... desiJOj ill I iFMiil!

• A SCOiit rocket carT)iDI !lie
IIISTI-1 llh•llite bi!"HH off from
cc.stal JDiliW} base a S:4S
PST, said Iaa Cnokse),
iJK&gt;keswOIDU fcw tile Natioul
N.tmWkl..t Sf*e Nh•injsw•

Wood Dinettt Set

;For 12 Million ~ericans the answer is YFS! Some are
unaware of their hearing loss- Others are not doing as well
with their hearing aids as they should,

-

-

CENi'D
·

.:1.0
OH «5414

I)R.

"-

IN HEARING
(614).446-7619

IBI FORD MUSftll II'

WAS

S77,ttt

Be sure to check out our Used Car and Truck Inventory. They are
trade,ins from new car and truck sales.

NOW

1188 NBD tiiS'rJVA LX 2 DB.

84•U.OO

4 cyl. engine, 5 speed trans., rear
defroster, AM stereo cassette, good
tires, local car, rear wiper and washer,
extra clean.

1187 FORD ftMPO 8L 2 DB.
4 cyl. engine, power steering, power
brakes, 5 speed trans., air cond.,
AMIFM stereo cassette, rear defroster,
local car, extra clean.

1993.5 Nissan 4x2 Regular Cab Truck

. .ilh lhe ice ajiiiiL"
,
~ e 5a;';;;To..1w••
e( In~~qp-- 1
toe _.. d
~a :7A9 ..=
mbiL
• ;The 3»tu--• is a ilew
1iiPd ar low-Gill. .......... aaR.
•llied .&amp;o test
res..: SIIIJC..Of- ,
~,art miaiabliDed CI H'll &amp;lid

:=:Tbc:•r

E

FROM

• .,.

SS791 ·

WAS
$4

Our Coats for
program has been s great success! In the last se1ian
years we have .distributed more than 2,000 coats to needy children through
,area schools, Please search your closets for unused coats, We'll take care
of the cleaning and mending, If necessary.
Drop off your coat at the nearest Bank One location:
RUTLAND
POMEROY
GALUPOLIS
SalemSt
352 Second Ave,
· .Court St

I

do 1 Ca cliO di:IIIC:I• aa:t
mcdi... - tbort-aitF Jdis.
issiles.

·" 1Tbe

is

. .. .. ••• ......

r4'mKe sue !lie

Jfj;~

I
~

lsfore llln=e o!llas
I
h:d
dilriq tile •nt IWO jUiS. aid
~ Ma«krt, MSIIJ*np·~ l'or
••ty kaaaa • die S..W1n

.......
•lf
=~

.=!:'X;··.:::.

I ?*'s I "# z::• • e I
llllnp . . . ,. ic-

,r-•z...•-Bale, Calif., Manioc\
,.,,
t ...

........ ··-.,.
roclatt~alidaads

~:::·+"·aCt'
-..,;/
·=-'
•
ca ......op. rm

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26
BREAICFAST

LUNCH .

Se~ Egge
Home Frlea
kn1geGnlvy

Turlwy I. Drwalng w/Cranberry S.uc;e
Fiah

Hlim wiRalaln S.uc:e/PinMpple Sauce

Roaat a.t
a.....a..na
Corn/CIIrrote
Sw.t Patatoea
.
MMhecl PcMI- wiGnsvy
,.........,. Pumpkin Pte, c:.nat Cake l nu:h,much 1110n1l
t'IIII1••10 l u...-_.$6.8&amp;1Chlldran 3l unc1er Mt FiWI

BIKub
Win.
8 : ai&amp;uaage
On tllla

1993 Ninan Sen1ra

FROM

$8527
INVO

WE NEED YOUR JIELP!

Whatever it takes:

7

Sic Was sillce 1913.

,iKI.aia&amp;Prr•'+M-

OiMcw ilaveadwo •d I

ell,~ais­

silc-d f

lOW

I

SPECIAL

et:llitlbal, a..sc: a11 •NiiPl

OF IILUPOLIS
446-ootO

I J) 7
~I

auto.

4 cyl. eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air
cond .•. AMIFM stereo casseue, tilt
wheel, cruise control, rear defroster,
local car, one owner, low miles.
WAS
$10,495

- dlliie - a laJa" olllilll
up dae,- wla die: aoct-

··u-

engine, P. steer., P. brakes,

control, Premium Sound air cond., 4-way P.
seat, rear wind. defroster.

~" Ms. Coat-

t

ve

trans., AM1FM stereo cassette, P. windows
and P. locks, Convenience Group, speed

uid cady Salmlay. "Cir:al-

E

.'.

YETEUNS MEliOR Ill HOSPITAL
MULBUIY AVE.. • POMEROt OH.
(614) 992·2104

435 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS, OHIO

._is

: "It -

. Bank One. Athens, NA
Member FDIC

lqql

FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

,,

"

•,

·cALL: t-80o-967·EARS
for an appointment
• No Charge hearing screening

a.•.
tba.

.I .

• Uke your hearing, hearing aid performance can deteriorate
without you noticing.

1991 FORD PROBE IL I DR.
OH-

-·

E
...,.... ....,_

C.

Would yo~r holidays .have been more enjoyable if you heard
better?
·

The wheel shaft and flanges were
Jaken to the end of GrapeStreet(Acme
Boiler Works) and there they remained for several years. The whistle
went to the Coney Island Queen.
~ames Salids 'Ita special eorrespondentortheSundayTimes,Sen, 1
tine!. His ilddress is: 65 Willow \
Drive, Springboro OH 45066

ANDENBERG AIR FORCE
a ..0. sasdfir on a $19
minion to Jac:Jp die: Patdewdop iSs "Sar WIIS" sys-

in one of four Emergency Assis· I
tance Unit offices where families ·
go to apply for ~elter. As many as
50 ~le slept m one 20-by-20.
foot office.
"None of the excuses offered by
the city justify the massive and
repeated noncompliance" with her
orders over the past seven years,
Freedman said.
The judge ·had threatened to
order Mayor David Dinkins to
spend the night, but instead named
Deputy Mayor Norman Steisel,
Human Resources Commissioner
Barbara Sabol, Jeffrey Carples, an

Thecaptainandthepurserquieted
the passengers and got them either in
a yawl or on board the ferry boat
Francis which immediately came to
the Stanley's aid.

TAYLilR 010 I i\fl,ll
,._ !1- 101'7

ct«rBUUI a.DIT IZIIOP.
OH4S?Ol

l)oi&gt;YTOII

J~ Calif. (AP)- NASA IDdaj

t~"";:~;::;-:::::7.:0T~;.~~~====:1:
5p ·

records
show families
that in October,City
more
than. 1,000
slept 1j

We are looking lor coats.
Can You Help?

SAT., DEC.S - 8 r.~•·
nckets Still Awai

A THEATER WITH A

1

COATS FOR KIDS

OHIO VALLEY
sYMPHOHY

Ariel ThMtnl
421 2nd Ava., GIIPllpoPP .. Oh.
C.ll 446-ARTS for more Info.

.

$249

sn
,
349

302

,., a.

earcll Right

•

VISIT .
CHARLESTON
SOOTH CAROLINA

IWI!.•w
· bee.n orr-1oa·d"mg
e•ve JUSt

ihnatllc: .....

I ,., GAIT~
~~IOICWiDC
wa.

Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, P·Texas,
about the Jreasury secreJary's post.
Christopher asked Bentsen, chairman of the Senate Finance Com,
mittee, if he wanted to be consid·
erect.
Aides said Clinton hasn't
offered a Cabinet post to anyone
yet.
Clinton planned 10 take most of
the weekend off and attend .j:hurch
Sunday with civil rights leader
Jesse Jackson. who was invited to
Little Rock by area clergymen to
deliver a guest sermon. Clinton and
Jackson will likely have breakfast
afteJWard, Myers said.
Jackson, who at times has had a
rocky relationship with Clinton,
isn'tloolcing for a job, said Jackson
aide Frank Watkins. Jackson would
prefer to work with Clinton in the
U.S. Senate and see statehood
passed for the District of Columbia,
he said.
Also Friday, communications
director George Stephanopoulos
said Clinton hasn't rule out a shon·
terin increase in the federal deficit
if needed to revive the economy in
January.
Stephanopoulos said Clinton
had not seUied on any specifics and
had asked advisers for a list of poli·
cy options by mid-December about the time he holds an economic conference with academics and
business and labor represenlatives.

ordered
officials towelfare
spend .fti'F-·---~---------------11
a night four
in ancity
emergency
IIW'SPC.
office, sayins they are most respon·
WOOD DINOTE SET
sible for homeless families being
s.., .... suus
forced to sleep in filthy, unsafe
95
conditions there.
State Supreme Court Justice
Helen Freedman found die officials .
in contempt Friday and said they
NEW 7 K.
have to stay in a welfare- office 1
WOOD DINmt
sometime in the next month until .
s.., hi~. $47US
every r&amp;mily that applies for shelter I
SAvt
$
5
that nisht gets it

Quisine aboard a jinxed boat

'

Commissioner Kcnnc:th Murphy.

r:

rr;rida~~~.:e:. Liz._

~3.5 million may not be enough
to g~t Clinton through transition

A1

•Judge orders city officials to spend . night in welfare office :

Fire
wrecks Windsor c ·astle
.

Palaeo spokesmaQ Dickie Arbiter van Dyck, Canale ItO and Leonarcio
IOid reponen Sallll'day.
·
da Vinci.
-r WINDDt, Fq' • - A fin:
ADdrew was the only member
The Ti~ of London said IIWIY
u WJocbd a Jqept arw-1811- of !lie royal family at Windsor objects are believed to have been
Sor- Castle _. • a mils ridl when !lie fire besan. His mother saved because they had been
ad ml'rcti- 0*. rfJD PWM R · IDived Ill« 11 the casde 20 miles removed from their usual places
S~urday, bat tile 900-year-old west of London to help ~ith the before Friday durins electrical
rewiring work. In addition, some
n:scne and survey the damage.
Andrew told reporters she was paintings are on a touring exhibi ~
~·s we 'owl raaalcbCIU)Cd a
" ab!lolulcly devas~all'JI " Elizabeth tion.
~bill -.I &amp;wad) •lw 0 d
The Times said the greatest
bad plannM 10 spend the weekend
&lt;lbec JOOIIIS. &amp;t die 1 . PDIIce at Wlllllu' - Friday was her 45th fears are for decorative works such
~· aoops8d awE
._. wedding anniversary - but as carvin~s by Grinling Gibbons,
lliicdto•we-ciins•
ca
who died IJI ·l720, the master wood
Jelllnled 10 London lalc:r Friday.
·
: Jlew• sfiw ' •
~
Arbiter denied reports that carver 10 Kins George I. ·
No estimate has bee.n issued for
" pus out piaacs, dnch, '1111ks, ~ Uoyd, Surveyor of the
OIJWI'O 114&lt; . . . piies of boob. Soi- Queen's Pictures, may have ~uf· the: damase. Royal ralaces are
&lt;Uers cani;.t out a Javy, ~ fc:mt a heart attack after i'ushing to uninsurable becaUse o their value,
the taSIIe from London on Friday. so the reSIOI'Btion bill is likely to be ·
~e tl!iDt foar OF six {paim- Uoyd
was working at the castle footed by the government'$ Nation·
i~gs) ·have beca tta.ap:d or
al Heritage Depanment
IOCky, Albitc:r said.
destroyod . . il is fa liDO ally 10
The cause of the ftre had not yet
The 1rt collection at the castle
~ wbich peintinp - 10
a west ol London includes the works been determined. Scotland Yard
~finite numbc.-."' Bw=tiwpam
of Holbein, Rembrandt, Rubens, ruled out terrorism.

Sunday nmea Sentinel Page

995

3785

NOW 8

.,

�,...'

jAlong the River.

November 22, 1112

Galllpolla, Ott Point.,....., WV

Section·B
~ Crossroads: Where decisions are made

~~iiiiiiii

victim's
.....:widow wants
$105 million
from Honda

We At Eastman~. Foodlands
.

'

Thank You for Your Patronage and
Wuh Your Family
A.
.

OSWEGO, N.Y. (AP)- A
widow whose husl1and died in a
motorcycle accident has filed a
$105 million lawsuit claiming .
Honda Motor Co. failed to notify
him of a possible defective kickstand after issuing a recall in Germany.
Tina Sheldon's lawsuit charges
Honda, in Marysville, Ohio, sent
letters to 270,000 custpmers in
Germany nine months before her
husband's fatal wreck, advising
owner the faulty kickstand was
~onside.red unsafe and caused
'several fatal accidents.".
·
, David Sheldon Jr., a fattier of
fWO, would be alive today if he had
known of the letter, according to
!he lawsuiL

.SWIFT

,. . . .

NAME -Don
Mich., a
member of the Rio Grande College basketball team led by .
Clarence "Bevo" Francis In the early 1950s, signed one of a num·
ber of basketbaDs bearing the team's autographs during a reception Friday al the Esther Allen Greer Museum at Rio Grande.
Members or the team reuaited this weekend for the 401b anaiversary celebration noting the team's accomplishments.

=~

&amp;UP

BUTTERBALL

TURKEYS

'f.eed,

UmltOne

~ouples

With
Additional

apply
for licenses

Purchase.

GALLIPOLIS - The following
~jtdiv!duals recently. applied for. a
ljlamage license m the Galha
t,:ounty Probate Court:
" Bret Allen Tabor, 22, Gallipolis,
~nd Emily Rebecca Farr English,
Marietta, Ga.; Eldon R. Thomas,
M, and Bonnie Lee Arrowood, 60,
lioth of Gallipolis; Cloyd Henry
Smith Jr., 45, Point Pleasant,
w:va., and Terri Jividen Long, age
jrithheld by request, Gallipolis;
~ Thomas Michael Gatewood, 25,
lUI&lt;! Susan Marie Watson, 20, both
Qf Gallipolis; Donald' Duane
Pearce, 20, Bidwell, and Christina
Dawn Myers, 18, Gallipolis; David
J,.ee Keefer, age withheld by
request, Ripley, W.Va., and Tracy
Wolford, age withheld by request,
1!-avenswood, W.Va.; Arnold 0 .
Higginbotham, age withheld by
request, Bidwell, and Sylvia
Allinder, age withheld by request,
lluffalo, W.Va.

•Wheelchairs
-canes and Crutches
•Walkers ·
•Hospital Beds
-commode Chairs
•Attends, Chux and
Incontinent Supplies
• Bath Safety Aids
•Urinary and Ostomy
Supplies
•Mastectomy Products

-Home Oxygen
ofnsurance Claims
Processed
.Compensation,
Medicare and
Medicaid accepted
•Free Delivery
Dee Dillon, R.N.
Certified

Flttllr, Owner

Mark Dillon,
Sales Manager

'llb~~.r?:r;., '

.

'•
By KR1S COCHRAN
::
Tillles-SeDtiael Starr
;,' RIO GRANDE - Since January,
~~ 991, Crossroads has bel~ eco:Jl?micaUy disadvantaged individu~~~Is mate tare.e r decisions in an
; effort IQ tum their lives around
.; Crossroads, located on the camtt&gt;us of the University of Rio
,prande, operates under a grant pro•~arn through the Department of
, uman Services and the Oh~o
, oard of Regents. The program, m
~ration .with Rio Grande Comunity College, is designed for stuenu who are currently receiving
:J'id for Dependent Children
{ADC), and have been dettnnined
~ob Opportunity and Basic Skills
{JOBS) eligible by Department of
• Jiuman Services in Gallia, Jackson,
·~ Meigs, and Vinton counties.
: , The ~ of Crossroads is to
• llelp individuals receive trainin~ .
' : who have the ability to benefu
: from the program.'
; "The staff at Crossroads does a
~ lot of 'hand holdin~' to get partici,
: pants started," satd Roy Taylor,
• Crossroads case worker. "We do
: what we can to keep them from not
coming back to college." Cross·
: wads has a retention rate of 82 per·
: cent, he added.
•; Some of the services available
~ through Crossroads are an assess: ment in services, life and educa• tional transiUon workshops, one•·llll·one counseling, and individual·
; ized services which may include
"purchasing required uniforms and
' tools. Students panitiJlate in Cross: roads for one year, or four quaners.
: ; Some participants volunteer for
. the program, while others are
!required to participate, said Taylor.
•' Individuals with children under
age of 5 can volunteer for the
P.JO.gratn. Those with children over
age of S, the program is manda-

10 LIS •

'cers.

'

FOODLAND
GUDE I A'
.
: 1~ DOZEN
I
I

:LARGE EGGS -~~~.
I

I
I
I
I

•

1································•••1
·

Umit olltl with coUDOn lllld 110.00 llddltlon., ourehue. Good thru 11121112;
'

''
'

l

I

565 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

I

' 446·2206
•servlat ne Ar11 Fer Orer IS flirt•

tory. Both criteria, determined at mg to Armstrong, is during the
the local level through the Wort summer if they meet three condi·
and Tlliaing Unit, ere besed on an tions. The tuition is paid if the
interview between the respective coune is fllqllited, the participant is
welfare off'tee and clienL
an acadctnic problem or 'is at risk,
· Unlike the 27 other state-wide and the course is offered out of
participatinf communily colleges, sequence, keeping the participant
Crossroads IS unique, according .10 from gxaduating on time. .
Elaine Armsaong, direeror. ,
But Crossroads not only pro·
"I feel we have a lot more to vides 11181erials. for many program ·
qfrer simply because we are locat- participants there llfll emotional
ed in a house," she said "We have needs.
·
a kitchen, a telephone, a refrigeta"Most of our participants come
tor, and a microwave. Each come from common backgrounds." said
in handy for thole on APC."
Armsaong. "Many have been told
''Crosstollds participants can use they are stupid, dumb, and they
the telephone to caD anywhere toll· won't IIIIOUIIlto anything."
fRie in Ohio," she added. "Many ol
Seminars. workshops, and
the participants have children. videos focusing on self-esteem and
Some call their babysitter or dav' . motivation can be a tumiD$ point
care center."
flll' sevcnl Crossroads partictpants.
ADC recipients are on a limited
· "Once they have (self-esteem),
bud$el and cannot always atfQrd to there's no stopping them," said
eat m the cafeteria, therefore, par· Armstrong.
ticipants have a place to eat lunch, Success stOries
she added.
For many Crossroads particiCrossroads also features a Jearn- pants, the chance to better them·
ing llib with six computers and a selves and to break the stereotype
place for students to study and do ?f welfare recipients, is very
their homework in a "home-away- ImportanL Crossroads has a diverse
from-home" atmosphere. Cross· group of participants, yet the proroads provides, at no cost, type- ~ br_ings them together like one
writers, scientific calculators, a big family.
copier, and tape recorders, that are
Theresa Wachovec, a mother of
available upon r9uest for loan to two, came.to Crossroads for herself
the program participants and may and heJ' children.
be checked out.by the Paucipants
""::el~are is ~ot something .I
for up to one quarter at a time,
want, S81d the Vm1011 County rest·
''We also have a tutor on staff to denL "But it works out. I'm reach.
provide one-on-one tutoring to inj! (children) what, I'm learning at
Crossroads participants," said Arm· college."
saong. "By providin~ these materi"I wouldn't have been anywhere
als its helps to alleviate the finan- without Crossroads," added the
cial problems."
Psychology/Social Work student.
Crossroads has an agreement "They are always there if I need
'with the university's learning cen-· someone talk to."
ter and library, allowing the participants to. use their copiers free of
A motltCr of four children, Betty
charge, she added.
Willis of Jackson feels she's a
The only time Crossroads will prime example how the Crossroads
pay a participant's tuition, accord· staff goes out of their way to help
students.
Willis has a hearing problem
and must wear two hearing aids.
During one of her classes her hearing aids quit.
"It's not easy coming here with
a hearing problem," said the Clini·
cal Social Wort student.
Although Crossroads cpuldn 't
provide her with hearing aids, said
Willis, the staff told her who she
could gei in contact with to help
with the problem.
~
''The staff even offered to tape
my classes and have their secretary
type out the notes," she said. ''They
don't tum you down." ·
In the future, Willis may help
someooe else in need since she
says she wants to work in a place
like Crossroads.

' '

I
~

Loans for

9.2°/o

APR*
.
Thru 1992

,•
'

-·--·-·· ......_,_.

--- --.

CROSSROADS
AND

SPECIAL
NEEDS

OFFICES

CROSSROADS • Pictured are stair members
at Cros~roads, located on tbe campus or the Uni~
versify or Rio Grande. From lett, are: Elaine
Armstrong, director; Roy Taylor, case 1118nager;

Tammy Lauder, computer speCialist; Llada ·
Howard, secretary; and JohD Houck, case mu- '
ager. (Times-SeDtinel photos hy Kris CochraD) .

throughout thefour counties."
· said Porter. "If they could see this
"We're beginning to work as a program, they would change their
minds,"
.
gro~p." he addOO.
· Both partl'cipants agreed, howLearning about Crossroads ever, the welfare system can make
through another program partici· it diffiCult for students.
pant. Norma Arbaugh was looking
"If you're not really into going
for a friendly face during her to college, welfare win talce the
incentive right out from underneath
divorce.
"I found (friendly face) here," rou," said Writesel. "Welfare holds
she said. "I had some anxiety about It against you if you don't use all ~
coming back to school. I was single your grants."
All grant monies, they said,
again and a non-traditional stumust go toward school and nothing
dent"
Although she hasn't declared a else.
"If you use money to fix your
major, Arbaugh is leaning toward
car
to get you to school, your food
education an!! has an interest in
st:amps
are usually the first thing
communications.
.
"Crossroads is very supportive," welfare cuts."
But despite some selbacks, both
said the Jackson resident. "I've
even ~friends with some of the are sticking it out and turning their
lives around.
younger students in my classes."
Getting organized, according to
Working hard to bre11k the
Robin
Wells, was one of the hardstereotypes about welfare recipiest
things
to do when going back to
ents are Ruth Porter of Jackson and
school.
Crystal Writesel of Gallia County.
"With a family and a home to
"A lot of people )lave a generaltalce
care of, things can be stress·
ization about people on welfare."
~

ful," said the Gallia County resident. "I dido 't have any study
habits."
.
.
With ·help through Crossroads,
Wells was able to get on llliCk and
is continuing to pursue a degRC in
Early Childhood DevelopmenL
"I never wanted to quit," she
added.
.,
Beaming with pride,

.

Arrnstronj

boasted about the Crossroads' very
first graduate, Cheryl Call, o'f

Meigs County.
Call recently attended a state;
wide fall conference wbeR she was
one of six selected to make a ~
sentation about themselves and the
program they participated in.
According to Armstrong, the 2'1
particip1ting colleges each IIUbmit·
ted proposals to do a presentation
at the conference.
Call, who had been on public
assistance for several years, IS cur~
rently a medical Jab technician at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, said
ArmSirollg.
For more information about
Cto!;sroadscall446-5353.

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November22,1SII2

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Happy Thanksgiving

five members elected
io'Meigs fairboard
.' POMEROY
- • !live members

were elected to the b&lt;iard of direc· ·
tors of the Meigs County Agriculwral Society at a recent meeting
~eld in the secretary's offi~ on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Re-elected for three year terms
were Roger Spencer and Tim
Beams. New directors elected for
three year terms were Carolyn
Ritchie, Bill Buckley, and Leonard
Koenig. The new directors replace,
Bill Radford, Barbara Fry, and Jeff
Folmer who did not seek another
term on the fair board.
-' Brent Zirkle was elected to fill
{he unexpired term of two years.
That position was vacated by Lauri
who resigned to become secletary of the bo~.
.
.
· The board will meet In special
~ssion on Dec. I to elect new offi-

•,

CHECKS QUT VIDEO • Cboosina one of tbe mu1 videos OD
at Crossroads is Helen Stevens of JacksoD. Videos OD self·
=--~ estel!m, motivation, aDd study sl!llls are available for all Cross·
•
pu11cipatJU. ProvldiDa tier with 10111e assi'*aDce Is Roy Tay·
:; lor, case maaager.

•

Single and divorced individuals
are not the only ones coming to
Crossroads. Married couples are
also going back to college.
Tooy and Augusta Stephens of
Gallia County have been married
for 16 years and they have one
child. Augusta is a Medical Secretary student, while Tony is pursuing a degree in Associate Technical
Studies.
\
"We were at the end of our
rope," said Tony, who has 30 years
in the work fon:c. ''The economy is
so bad."
''We thought now was the time
to better our education and get off
welfare," added Augusta.
Despite each Crossroads participant.! liardshi(ls. said the couple,
everyone is thinking of those who
· are even less fortunate than themselves.
''PIIrticipants are fOilecting food
baskets using their own money:
said Tony. "We are also looking to
do a toy drive to distribute toys

STUDY PARTNERS· Not"())lly are Toay ud
Aupsta Slepbetts study parlllers, they're part•
nen for life. They are amoag lhe IIIRDY •arrled
couples who .are returDinl to college to recelviDJI
lralniDg to Ret a job. Tooy, who would like to

aDd· his
a Mediad S«rretarv
help at Crossroads.

ASSISTS PARTICIPANTS • C..-.oada Me·
retary Linda Howard, ta11ts wltll a partlciput.
aboUt flttare -!nan aDd worllfhopa. Pictured
OD Howard's del1l are 10111e ol tbe Items kNIDed

to partlclpanll who can- otllenrise all'ord col· r
Jete 1111terlals. Item• illdiiCie IJPt'Milen, ldta- l
tiriC calculatora; and tape rec01 den.

Don' t let time
slip away r T his
great loan rate will
be avai lable only through
1992. ·Ideal for.. .Bill consolidation • Pay off credit card debt
• Holiday shopping and more!

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Stop by or call any of our Star Bank locations today. If you can't make it during our
regular hours, calll-800-274-4111 Monday through Thursday from 5 until 8 p.m.

.

•OHIO VALLEY Old .Rt. 35 44.6·4008
•GALLIPOLIS 3rd Ave. 446·9764
•BIG lEND 100 w. Main 992·2891

s
STA R BANK . N .A .. TRI · STA'rE

M EMBER FDIC

• Al l)ll;uls ;~ r c suhj('(l 10 crt&gt;t! •• itp prm'l'll •35 00 pwp, i• l ilni1 nrt• r h.•rge Wil l ••np.1rt AI'R. For I.'Xi\lnfll~. 0 11 a lwu• for ' \O,&lt;XIO (Of 36
rnon1 hs, llu.! P'~Y!!II!nl!i lo&lt;o'Oulrl be '310.04, the fllliHICCChitrg•· 11,.._;1 1 ~4 . !Oiitl pitfllll!nls of '1 1,52 1 . 4~ ••nd t•fh.'Ctiv1! APR of !1.44%.

•

• Ccrt ni n n •st ri ction.'&gt; ilppty.

our Community-Minded, Low-Priced Supermarket .
,,
.

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:: COMPUTER WIDZ ·Galla C-ty l'tlideat
;• Robia Wells takes ller tara at tile oae tl six
:• computers Ia the learalaalab at cr. . .Oida.
: wellrlls Itt her semacl quarter
w1tt1
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Peg• 82-Sundlly nmes Sentinel

November 22, 1112

Pomeroy Middleport Gllllpolll, Ott Point Pleuant, WV

Church to show movie

Moody-Maenz
.

MIDDLEPORT • "Eye of the
Storm", a picture starring Connie
Sellecca. Jeff Conaway llld Deborah Tucker, and distributed by
Wodd Wide PictureS, the motion
picture ministry of the ;Bi~y ~­
haln E
listie Asloc18tl011, Will
be sh=at the First Baptist
Church, Sixth and Pallnm', Middlepon, on Nov. 29 • 7 ~.m.
The public is invited to auend
by the Rev. James Seddon, putor.
"Eye of the Storm" addresses
timely issues relevant to today's
·society. It is .the stmy of a raurmng
!lllldier from the Persian Gulf War
and his stru&amp;Ble in reaching out to
his _family and .the support he
. receives from family and mends.

'

CHESHIRE - Charles and Carol Acodiana High School in Scott,
Moody of Cheshire, announce the La., and is currently employed by
engagement and forthcoming mar- Burke Marketing Research, Inc.,
riage of their daughter, Melanie Cincinnati.
Anne, to Gregory Ryan Maenz, son - The open church wedding will
of Albert and Sandra Maenz of be held at the Cheshire Baptist
Slidell, La.
Church on Nov. 28 at 3 p.m., with
Miss Moody is a 1990 gradl!Bte a reception following in the church
of Kyger Creek Hig)l Scllool and is fellowship room. The ceremony
currently attending the University will be
the Rev.
of Cincinnati.
Michael
Life
Mr. Maenz is a 1986 graduiate
Church

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ACCEPTS AWARD - From leO are Edna
Whiteley, I&gt;r. Duiel Whiteley and Pat Boyer, !IS
the Silver Award was presented by Dr. Dame!
Whiteley, president or the Ohio Division, to representatives of the ·Galli a County American

As a veteran Boy Scout, I' vc
done my fair share of camping in
the last 12 years. The weather was
usually .good, but sometimes I've
awakened to an inch of water in my
tent or frost in my hair.
Last weekend, I went with Gallipolis' Troop 200 on. an overnight
, . camp out at their cabin, the Slallley
- ... L.
In case you're like me and can't
remember
what the weather was
l
• like yesterday, let alone last week! end, let me remind you; COLD.
I
Luckily; 1 was prepared for the
l cold and Jack Frost couldn't reach
; me through my three layers of
• clothes. I've never been a big fan
: of winter, but I don't mind camp• ing in the cold if I have my thermal
: undies and an insulated sleeping

Caacer Society Unit. GaUia COUDty WIIS recog•
nizeci ror excellence In the Overall Crusade
Cmn~ during the Americall Cancer Society,
Ohio Division, IDc.'s aanual meeting or mem- ·
bers.
·

County recognized in cancer crusade
COLUMBUS .· Gallia Coqnty
was recognized for excellence in
the Overall Crusade Campaign during the American Cancer Society,
Ohio Division, Inc.'s annual meet·
ing of members held recently at the
Radisson Airport in Columbus
This award recognized the
Overnlf G:rusade Campaign of the ·
American ~ancer Society which
saves lives by providing services to
cancer patients in our communities.
The Silver Award was presented by
Dr. Daniel Whiteley, president of
the Ohio Division to representa-

Meigs math teacher
among Who's Who

MELANIE MOODY

Harrison-Coates
POMEROY • Diana Harrison
: and Roger Coates announce their
··approaching marriage.
.
; The open church wedding will
.·be an event of -Dec. 5 at 6:30p.m.
:·at St. Paul Lutheran Church in

r

Pomeroy with Rev. William Mid·
dleswarth offici~g.
A reception will follow at the
Old Amencan Legion Hall in Middleport

ROCKS SPRINGS - Linda socy Council, Meigs County InserLear, a mathematics teacher at - vice and Course of Study CommitMeigs County Junior High School, tees, Effective Schools Gnuit Comwas selected to appear in the sec- mittee, National Education Assaciond edition of Who's Who Among ation, Ohio Education Association,
America's Teachers, 1992,
Meigs Lbcal Teachers Associ•tioo,
Lear was nominated by former Chi Beta Phi, The Gallia County
student, Tammy Miller, of Rutland. Animal Welfare League, Inc., (vice .
The students' nominations were president ·and board of directors);
based upon teachers who •"made a Gold Wing Road Riders Associa·
difference in their lives."
tion (newsletter editor for three
Mrs. Lear, a teacher in the years); 'and pianist at the Bulaville
Meigs Local Sehool District for 21 Christian Chun:b.
years, graduated Summa Cum
She was a 1986 Martha Holden
Laude from Rio Grande College in Jennings Scholar and was nominat1971. Her activities include Uni- ed for the 1985 Presidential
versity of Rio Gran\ie Advisory Awards for Excellence in Science
Council for Teacher Education and Math Teaching. She and her
(chairperson for two years); Aca- husband, Tom, reside at 15 Neil
demic Boosters, Principal's Advi- Ave., Gallipolis. ·

...

1Area Agency on Aging
~- hosts annual EXPO

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. RIO GRANDE - The Area
Agency on Aging District 7, Inc.
(AAA 7), based a1 the University of
Rio Grande, recently held its 18th
annual Senior Citizens EXPO at
the Scioto County Fairgrounds.
This AAA 7 event drew over
850 people from Adams, Brown,
Galha, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto and
Vinton counties , according to
Pamela Matura, executive director
of the Area Agency on Aging.
Senior citizens took part in
demonstrations, entertainment,
contests, games, a cake auction,
senior legislation lobbying, and
exhibits. There were .more than 40
exhibits and information booths,
craft displays and sales from the
senior citizens of the 10-county
area. While attending EXPO '92,
senior citizens from the area had
the opportunity to act as advocates
for the Older Americans Act.
Southern Ohio Communication
Services, Inc. -Cellular One donal·
ed two cellular telephones and air
time for the day.
Seniors used these telephones to
call Senator John Glenn's and Senator Howard Meazenbaum's offices
in Washington, DC. This was part
of a nationwide call-in effort to
promote the passage of the Older
Americans Act that had been
stalled in the Senate for over a
year. As a result of this nationwide
effort, the Senate passed the reauthorization of the Older Americans
Act on Sept. 15. The House of
Representatives _passed it on
September 28th, and President
Bush signed it on Sept 30.
The Social Security Administra·
tion-Portsmouth Division, the
American Association of Retired
Persons (MRP) Senior Employment Services, Green Thumb
Senior Employment Services,
Portsmouth Metropolitan !-lousing
Authority, Retired Senior Volun· .
teers Program of Scioto County
(RSVP), Ohio Department of
Aging Golden Buckeye Program

and die Anhritis Foundation staffed
infonnational booths so that EXPO
participants could gather infonnation and as~· staff persons questions.
Several state and local politicians were in attendance to meet
with their senior constituents and to
bid on c;ight cakes entered by
senior citizens for the cake auction.
Molly Hemming of Pike County
took First Place in the cake contest,
followed by June Wilburn of
Scioto County in second, and DoUi
Osman of Adams County in third.
Auctioneers for the event were
Glen ·and Barbara Blevins of
Blevms Auctions in New Boston.
The Senior Expo Essay Contest
was won by Mr. James Joseoh of
Wheelersburg, who received a $10
cash prize. There were 22 entries
this year from the 10-county area.
During the awards ceremony,
Matura presented 52 Safe Driving
Certificates to senior transportation
drivers who have gone accident
free for at least one year.
Merchants from Adams, Gallia,
Jackson, Meigs, and Pike counties
donated 57 gifts that were given as
door prizes.
Those in Gallia County who
donated prizes included; That Special Touch, Thomas Do-lt Center,
Central Supply Co., Hills Department Store, J .R.' s Flower Shop,
The Peddlers Pantry, Hallmark Full
House of Cards, Tawney Jewelers,
Inc., Derifield Jewelry, Spring Valley Pharmacy, Ohio Valley Bank,
Star Bank, Paul Davies Jewelers,
Basket Delights, Lady Bug Floral,
DJ.'s Crafts, and Krogers of Gallipolis. Also donating was Big Bear
Grocery Stores of Columbus and
Continuity of Care in Pomeroy.
The Area Agency on Aging Distric~ 7, Inc. is a non-profit organization funded by the Older Ameri·
cans Act with funds administered
throug"- the Ohio Department of
Aging. All services are rendered on
a non-discriminatory basis.

lives of the Gallia County UniL
Edna Whiteley, board member,
speaking on behalf of the Gallia
County Unit said, " II was a real
honor to earn this prestigious
award. The volunteers and sraff of
our Unit work very hard for the
people in OlD' area, and this recognition is a nice bonus to the satisfaction our_work has already given
us."
In addition to the Silver Award,
the Gallia County Unit received
two other awards, including the ·

· POMEROY - National Caregivers Week will be observed this
week with a reception hosted by
the Area Agency on Aging, Buckeye Hills-HockinlJ Valley Regional
Development D•strict. honoring
family and friends who provide
care to elders
The reception will be held Tuesday from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Options
for Elders office on Route 1, one
mile nonb of the l-77 interchange.
Mary Mclntyre, director of home
care programs and sraff care managers will be on hand to distribute
information and answer questions
about resources available to care
givers.
A recent sljldy showed that seventy-five ~t of care givers are
women w1th an average age of 46.
Only 37 pcn:ent share a household
with the care recipient. Fifty-five
percent of the care givers were
employed and fifty-four percent
had children under the age of 17.
These statistics demonstrate the
need to help people deal with the
responsibilities associated with giv-

. A 1991-92 National Honor Citation was awarded to the Gallia
County Unit and the Rev. Arthur
lAind in reco~ition of the professional edUC8llon program "Is There
Life After Cancer? A Pastor' s
Opponunity". Rev. Lund coordinated tllis program with clergy
from Galii a County and the surrounding areas.
·
The Gallia County Unit's Executive Director, Pat Boyer,
remarked, ''Pil!ns bave been underway to continue to expand our
award-winning prognams in the
area. It is exciting being part of this
dynamic organization."

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-cllltP.....

oAIIIcul.alon Dt.ordera

.ungu.g. ~.,

o81'81nlnJured

o8tlmlrlng
oHeMnglmplllred

·~-·

IUC1IIC

I

435 S.co•41 An. .

O•IDpoU1

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BIIIRDPrCY

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INGELS

_,_

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FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC,
106 NORl'H SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OillO 45'760
1'14) 9?2-2635
TOLL FREE (100) 4U.S51t

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o.c.-. ,,- -

·- -·
\.orO d 'A
Mc:IIIMGd

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1-4P&amp;

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DRS. NIBEIU &amp;: MAnJSIEWICZ

·.,••••

NEW OFFICE -HOURS

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VaJWICIISymisiT,illaodJV "

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,..__._
•.,.,...'-"Cftl V'liK

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Call Now Rlr AFREE .
No Wigation Consultation

"'..

441-1177

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Mpnday 9:QO a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
BETI'Y J. FINNEY

1Finney
•

installed

: GALLIPOLIS • Morning Star
• Chapter 11444, Order of'the Eastern
Star. was honored by the appoint• ment of Mrs. Betty J. Finney to the
I position of Grand Martha of the
! Grand Chapter of Ohio for the
: 104th session.
• She was installed Wednesday,
: Oct. 28 in Cleveland, which was
: attended by several members of
; Chapter 11444.
Finney bas been the Worthy
Matron
of Morning Star Chapter
I
.
•
• and has also been very acuve m
: .various District 124 prl)JOCIS.

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Phone 446·6323 or 311-9125
1·100.300·7346

*Tuesday 9:00a.m. -7:00p.m.
Wednesday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
. Thursday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

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20% OFF -STOREWIDE!

Friday 9:00a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

'675-4580

WonderfUl lift lteiM lor tllat perfect Clarlatmu pnHDt.

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626.Main Street, Point Pleasant

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SAL

OPTOMETRIC PHYSICIANS

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A MULTI-SERVICI PROVIDER

Southern Eye Care Associates

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,~,,=~ ~

FOR INFORMATION CALL COLLECT 614-3n-9989
Youth Development CorporatiOn of Amarli:a

PRE·CHRIS~

•,.•

~!ksof

As a S.A.F.E. foster pareat yoa c• receive ., to 51240 per
moatb for eacb foster cbild II yo~r kme.

-FRENCH SQUARE
HOME EMBELLISHMENTS

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.Up 'lb .8R&gt;tJndc) Before Chmtmas

BE A S.A.F.E. FOSTER PAREN'r

Service planned

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BOIJI»AY
446-9449

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~...L.-'!.\

S....•tJ..J

SPEOAUZED ALTERNADVE FAMILY ENVIRONMENTS
.RECRUITING HOMES IN GALLIA COUNTY
'
Welcome Into Your Ufe AChUd Who Needs Your
Support, Nurturance, Guidance and Encouragement.

...

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Christmas and
New k's. •

DEIU LOIIG, M.A., CCC·SII

S.A.F.E.

:!

FACIOIY 111111

CLEANING
SERVICES!

eA8k about our
•on.r lxplrea Die.

gbo:.

Gallia County Calendar

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125"

.&amp;.~Y~t

•Augnw~tatlve Communi:8tlon

aee

The problem is that any capi!al
gains and dividends distributed by
a muiual fund during the year are
taXable. So you must pay tax on the
$1.50
share distribution made by
'~~----------------------------~----------------------------the
Can't
Lose Mutual Fund. Since
Sunday, Nov. 22
lions from the variety show. Free
Tuesday, Nov. 24
you
bought
200 shares, you'll have
CROWN CITY - Danny Beaver and open to the public. ·
EWINGTON - American to pay tax on $300. If you're in1he
.. 'Will be the guest speaker at Victory
Legion Post 161 regular meeting 28-percent marginal tax bmcket
: ~aptist
Church,
7
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
Special
OAPSE
7:30p.m.
at legion hall.
.
.
(meaning you pay 28 percent on
.
meeting, 7 p.m. in the Washington
each addiuonal dollar you make),
:: CENTENARY • Short family cafeteria.
·
you'll have to pay 42 cents in taxes
• 'Will be singing at Centenary United
GALLIPOLIS - Fair Haven for each of the 200 shares you
: l:hristian Church, with Rev. Sharon
GALLIPOLIS· American Can- U.M.C. Adult Fellowship
~ ~ iders preaching.
cer Society Suppon Group meet· craft/bake sale at Hill's Department bought, or $84 in taxes on your
new investment.
ing, 2 p:m. at New Life Lutheran Store. Starting 9 am.
.
" • GALLIPOLIS ,- Gary Warner Church, Route 160. For more infor::.Viii be preaching at Mina Chapel mation ca11446-3538, 4464895, or
: ~burch, Neighborhood' Rd., at 7 446-8657• .
RIO GRANDE • Open Gate
: p.m. Everyone welcome.
Garden Club meeting 7:30 p.m. at
614·221..0818 .
••
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County home of Bar~ Allen. Program:
: :·
Monday, Nov. 23
Council on Aging is sponsoring an Holiday Wreatlis by Pat Parsons.
L W. CENNAMO
· : ; KANAUGA - Demooratic Pany American Red Cross CPR and rust
_ Voter Appreciation rally, 6 p.m. at Aid certification course at the
AnORNEY AT lAW
(Itt fill for tlte commu11ity calthe DA V Building. Ted Smckland senior citizens center Nov. 23 and endar IIPfiiiJT two days prior to 1111
8 East Broad Str..t,
and Mark Malone will be attend- 24, and DCC. 2 and 3. The course IPIIIL Tiley •1111 bt rtetlred by
SuHe900
'
ing.
will be held from- 1-4 p.m. The tilt Gallipolis Dallf TribUIIl ill
Columbus,
Ohio
course is free to Gallia County citi- ad~IICt/orpllbUcanoll)
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia Academy zens 60 years of age and older and
1·800-886-0LAW
High School and Junior High open to the public for a fee. To reg(1-8110-886-0529)
. choirs annual fall concert at 7 p.m. ister ca11446-7000.
in the high school auditorium.
• Madrigals will also perform seleeG~LIPOLIS , Divorce Suppon Group meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
RACINE • Rev. Charles Norris
New Life Lutheran Church. For
will.
hole! il speeial Thanksgiving
more infonnation call 446-3808 or
semce
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
446-4889 . .
Racine Baptist Church.

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NEW YORK (AP) - A bandwritten fragment of Abraham Uncoln 's second inaugural address featuring the words "With malice
toward none; with cluwity for all"
- brought $1.32 million at auction, nearly three times its estimated value and a record for an American manuscri)IL
Profiles in'History, a California
dealer in rare man~ts. bought
the manuscript at Chrisbe's on lfl.
day, said Todd Merrill, a Christie•s
spokesman.
· The price b~ the manuscript
record set by a Lincoln Ieaer probe would not .epeal the
Proclamation.

End-of-the-year mutual fund
investing can be a taxing experience

=~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~================~~

Lincoln manuscript
sets sate record .

THEUPY SERVICES AVAIUILI FOR:·
o8~hll.llnguage Evalllllllon
olp11 ahll.llngu~~ge &amp;c,_lnJP

lADIS'

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"'!'h ....Jr.,..;..,;.,..
ofoNign Dialect

bag.

,
There was one night about 7 I(l
: years ago, however, when I didn't
l have either one. But I didn't fore' see 40-degree temperatures in the
: middle of) uly, either.
:
I was about 15 years old and my
troop, Minford's Troop 52, was
spending ·summer camp at Camp
Oyo near the Shawnee Statil Forest.
Scouts 'kept busy during the week
with ~urn~ activities, including
earnmg merit badges such as
Camping, Canoeing and Archery.
, • Another popular badge, which I
• was taking along with three other
Scouts from my bOOp, was Wilder: ness Survival. ·
:
One of the requirements was to
: spend a night in the woods armed
• only with a pocket ~ife, poncho
:-' and flint and steel (or some other
::"'nethod of starting a fue ·besides
: matches).
w
Lonnie, Rob, Paul and myself
: decide to build one big lean-10 and
.:~amp out together (Protection in
:, pumbeis. you know).
:: All of the Scouts taking the
-.. ll3dge met on a tree-covered hill-

Hope.

ing are to an eldedy loved one.
Cindy Farson, director of the
Area Agency on Aging, said that
often families get together at
Thanksgiving and begin to think
about care an a11ing relative may
need to remain m the home he or
she loves.

and lANGUAGE
SERVICES

oConeutt.tlon

LADIES'

Caregivers week to be observed

.
RIVEil CrtiES SPEECH
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Priority Activity and Cancer Education Award (P.A.C.E.) was presented to units who bave milde outstanding efforts to increase the
public ~ucation awareness in their
communities. The chairperson for
the Fllncation Awareness Committee in Gallia County was Edith
Baker, R.N., 1991-1992 Nwse of

· the cold drove us out of the lean-to
and to the fimside .
After that, none of us slept.
None of us, tbaris, except Rob.
Like &amp;baby, Rob bad the special
ability of being able to sleep anywbae, anytime. He was the envy
of the entire troop.
While the rest of us huddled
close Ill the fire like primitive men
4iscovered rue. Rob Ia_y in
the
ter curled up on hi$ poncho.
. He was Snoriog loud enough to
loosen the leaves from all of the
surrounding trees and probably
scmd off any wild predators within half a mile of the liii1 as well.
and Elizabeth Langona, vice president; back,
COUNCIL MEMBERS • Gallia Christian
The only "predator" we faced
Susanne
Kincaid, Junior blgb representative,
Scbool recently announced members or its 1992·
Karissa
Nuce,
president; Erin Casto, junior hip
side and were told to 1J11ke jlrepara- that evening was a colony of red
!13 Student CounciL Pictured, rrODt, (Ito r), are:
representative,
and Damian Alexander, ll&amp;'listant
lions for the coming night, lovingly ants that lived in the tree at the
Jamie Y011t, junior hlzh representative, Jennifer
treasurer.
Ault, secretary; Brandy Wellman, treasurer,
known as ''Rambo NigbL"
mouth of our lean-to.
Our group scaled the hillside
As the temperature dropped, the
and built a Jean-10 about halfway ants became more of a nuisance.
up, AU of the prime locations bad As if they held US responsible for
been claimed ahead of time, !ll1 OlD' the cold weather, they began pracsite was not an ideal campsite.
tieing tag-team biting on anyone
There was 1!0 danger of photog- who ventured near the shelter.
rapbers from The Boy Scout HandR~b, o~, course, was not affec.tUnfortunately, because you perGALLIPOLIS - Investing in a
book stopping by to lake a picture · ~- ~II.Y . ume the. ant? got wnh ~n
• If you have an unrealized loss
sonally
didn't make a profit in the
mutual
fund
in
December
can
be
of our·set up as an example of a h1s VICIDity, the vtbrations [fom hiS
on
the invesUnent, consider selling
the same as getting a Christmas mutual fund (that is, you didn't sell before the record date of distribumodel campsite.
~g probably ~nok their sensishares for more than you paid for
For one thing the lean-to was live antennae unul they thought stoclcing full of coal.
them), in realit¥ you are paying a ~on in order to offset other gains or
Mutual
funds
are
required
by
built cit a 45-dep slope. When their heads would ,be ripped clean
mcome.
law to distribute by the end of .each tax on the princ1pal you just investwe lried to sleep that night, we bad off their bodies.
.
.
to put OlD' feet against the base of a
Over at the fire, we were facmg year 98 percent of their capital ed
None
of
this
matters
if the fund
gains
(profit
from
the
sale
of
secularge oak tree at the mouth of the problems of our own . We had
is
part
of
an
individual
retirement
rities)
realized
through
Oct
31
and
Jean-to.
.
anemp!ed io level out a spot for the
account,
401(k)
plan,
or
other taX98
·
percent
of
their
investment
For everyone but Lonnie this rue nng as best we .could, but the
worked out pretty welL For hun it rocks on the downliill side' had a - income earned through Dec. 3 I. deferred plan. If it is a taxable
was a nightmare. He was a restless tendency to gi'!e in to gravity and Many funds make these distribu- fund, however, here are some
tions, particularly capital gains, in strategies to minimize this taX bite:
sleeper who rolled around a lot and roll down the hill.
· .
• Find out when the fund plans
December.
whenever he rolled over, be took
Bt;ta'!IC he w!'S closest, 1t ':"as
to
declare its distribution, and
his feet off the base of the
and Paul S JOb to f1eld the rolhng
after th~ distribution. If the
invest
If you invest in a mutual fund in
would slide out ·of the lean-to and stones.
about 50 feet down the hill.
This wasn't much of problem December, you may suddenly distribution per share is small, you
Several times a night, we would until the rue got good .and bot and receive hef~y distributions. That probably don't need to worry about
hear the 5ouildS of Lonnie's body heated the stones to the tempera- .may •sound grea1, but there's a it, and you certainly don't want to
catch-you may be taxed on wait if you expect the fund to sigslidin¥ through the leaves and ture of a weU~baked potato.
nificantly increase in its price per
snappmg an occasional fallen
Altbougb !'was completely dark money you never earned.
branch along the way.
and we Ian Slghl of Paul soon after
Let's say that on December 15 share after the distribJJtion, because
A few minutes I,ter, he would be lOOk off after one of the rocks, you invest $2,000 at $10 a share that might be more harmful than
trud e back up the hill, pale as a we ~w~ys knew when be caught (200 shares) in the no-load Can't the taxation.
• If you invested early enough to
Lose Mutl!81 Fund. The next day
With the fire behind him and up .~ilh IL
,.
have
made an unrealized gain
the fund declares a $1.50 per share
three or four leaves sticking out of
AUGHHHOOOOWWW!I
greater
than the disttibution, don't
his hair be kinda looted like some
I bet he chased rocks down the capital-gains and dividends distri·
do
anything.
You'll just be 1axed
trange 8uanJian spirit of the forest. hill 15 times that night, and he
bution. To pay for this distribution,
on
the
distribution
and nothing will
s We lay in the lean-to trying to burned !Us ~ds 15 times as well. the fund reduces its price per share,
come
out
of
your
principal.
much like a corporate stock split.
sleep IDl
. til shortly after midnighL ~~be II was the hick of sltq~ that
• If your unrealized gain is less
By tJiat time, Lonnie had slid down did lt,_but be never ofl~e con_s1dered In this example, the price per share
than
the distribution, consider sellthe hill about six times and our ~IOppll)g t~e rock wnh h•s boot will drop from $10 to $8.50.
ing
the
shares before the record
sides hurt 50 much from laughing •nslf'ad of~ bare hands. Even IabAs a shareholder of record on
date.
Then
you 'II only pay tax on
at him that none of us could get any oratory ~ learn faster than that.
the day of distribution, you will
the
smaller
profit
sleep
.
Desp1te our problems, we sur- receive the distributions. If you
. Another factor contributing to vived our night on the hill and automatically bave your dividends
our insomnia was the temperature. I~ a vall!Bble_Iesson as well; reinvested, the total value of your
In a couple of hours, the mercury Don t get lost wubout a motor shares will remain at $2,000, only
instead of owning 200 shares at
had dropped down to the-mid-40s. hom_e. .
.
.
Being that it was the middle of Ke!ln Pmson IS a. news wr1ter for $10 a share you will own 235.294
July, no one bad brought jackets, so Ob•o Valley Publisbing.
shares at $8.50 a share.

,I

Rachel Proffitt - Karen Eachus, OWnere

338 2ND AVE.

(Forme'r hom• Outpost)

'

GAWPOUS, OH.

.'

�•

Pomeroy ..ddleport ('..e!llpolla, OH Point Pluunt, WV
November 22, 1112
.···~~~~~~~~:::::::::====~====~=====~====~=======~===

~

·• PIICII 84 Sui"'cllir Th'nll Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS • Jennifer L.
lace.
Miller and Charles E. Ranegar
The groom wore a black cow- were united in marriage Sept. 26 at
boy hat with a black full dress the Gallipolis Christian Church,
tuXedo with teal tie, cummerbund with the Rev. Denny Coburn officiIIIII tell rosebud.
ating .die double ring Celemony.
Besl man was Tom Wheeler.
The bride is the daughter or
friends ol the groom. He wore a Gary W. and Sue E. Miller of New
bllck f\111 dress IUXedo with mauve Haven. She is a 1992 gradn•te of
lie, c:-"und IIIII rosebud. Ush- Marshall University with I B.S. in
Paty c.dwell n, nephew
Medical TechnolOBY.
of lhe bride; and David Lively,
The groom is tbe son of John
st pbtothet of the groom. Both and Patty Ranegar of Cheshire. He
woro pcy tuxedos with maroon is a 1990 graduate of the University
ties, .cummerbunds and rosebuds. of Rio Grande with a B.S. in IndUs~a wu Jason Wheeler, son . uial Technology.
·
of; ~t man. He wo~ a suit
The bride, escorted by her
with a navy blue jacket aild off father, wore a white, floor-length,
while pants with a IIIII'O(in -YeSt.
taffeta gown with a chapel length
Registering' guests was 'Tina train. The gown f~ a dropped
Blfl:u$, sister of the bride. Music
waist "with beaded bodice and
was provided by Cindy Besco, sleeves. Her bouquet featured casniece of lhc: bride.
cading Rubrum lilies and white
A reception followed in the roses surrounded by baby's breath
church basement under the direc- and greenery.
.
tion or Elizabeth Phillips, mother
Attendants were Paul Bird of
of the bride; Helen Barcus, step- New Haven; Amy Steves of
mother of the bride; and Peggy Cincinnati, cousin or the bride;
Besco, siSter of the !tide.
Rhea Knight of Mason; and Shelly
Ranegar of Cheshire, ~ister of the
groom. Each wore burgundy tealength gowns. Plower ~iii was
Amanda· Dye, groom's mece. She
wore a mauve ten-length gown.
Bes.t man was John Ranegar of
Gallipolis, brother of the groom.
Ushers were Brian Roush of

ers-

Cheshire; Scott Miller of New
Haven, brother of the groom; and
David Campbell of Gallipolis
Perry, W.Va. Ringbearer was
Edward Dye, groom's nephew.
Music: was provided by
Stephanie Leitbeit, soloisL Registerinjl gueltS was Jessica Radford,
cousm of the bride.
The couple raide in Gallipolis.
A reception was held at. the
Moose Lodge in Point Pleasant following the ceremony.
·

..

You:o.g -Frank

·"• ·
•
SYRACUSE • Kila Anne
:: Young and John ~vid Frank were
:- united in marriage in a double ring
·~ ::ceremony on SePt. 19 81 the Syra"
:'; cuse Nazarene Church with Rev.
:~; Glenn McMillan officiating.
-'• The bride is lhc: daughter of Ray
::: and Janice Young, Reedsville, and
-:· the granddaughter of Olen and
:: Josephine Young, Reedsville. She
• is a gradu'ate of Eastern High
~ School and Rio Grande College
·•. and is employt!d by the Bureau of
. Public Debt, Parkersburg, W.Va.
:•· The groom is .the son of Clarence
-.. and·Louise Frank, Racine, and lbc
grandson of Sol and Fan Bigley,
:: Reedsville. H'e is a graduate of
·: Southerq High Schm&gt;l and Rio
:. ,.Qrande College and is employed
-::;r b~ Jackson General Hospital in
-~pley, W.Va.
:':: Music was provided by Eloise
: • Matson, Pomeroy, pianist, with Jan
.•. Lavendar, Syracuse, and Kathy
_: · McDaniel, Long Bouom, perform:~ ing ''The Weddinj! Song" and "The
-:. Rose," during which brothers of lbc
-_,.. bride and groom each presented a
:~ yeUow rosebud to his mother. ''The
· : Lord's Prayer" was included ·in the
.;. ceremony.
.
;.
Guests were registered by Bon• ' nie and Kellie Lightfoot, Pomeroy.
·:
The church was decorated with
:. Boston fems and candelabras with
: ; yeUow candles and bows.
::; . Given in marriage by her par.•~ents and escorted to the altar by her
:=· father, the bride wore a white
·: bridal satin gown with a scoop
:: neckline featurin$ a chantilly and
·•. venice lace bod1ce embellished
::: with. seed pearls and sequins. The
:~ : lace, pearls and sequins continued
·.": down the fitted point sleeves. The
!~ back of the gown was accented
:··· with a candybolt bow dropping to a
-::· cathedral-length train edged with
:• lace. The slcirt and train featured
.;; cutouts covered with lace and
:~:· pearls. Her waist-length veil fea~~ tured a pearl headpiece adorned
' ~ with white satin roses and rear(
:.~ sprays. The back of the vei fea:~ tured a large while satin bow. She
-~ carried a cascading bouquet of yel:;· low roses, white carnations, baby's
·.: breath, ivy and fern with streamers
:·;: of white lace and pearls. She wore
: ~ a pearl necklace and pearl and dia." mood earrings.
:·· The ~m wore a black tuxedo
&lt; and while shirt with a teal bow tie
:,- and cummerbund. His bOutonniere
: ; consisted of three yellow sweet. ~ heart rosebuds with baby's breath
:' and ivy . .
:
Best man was Jeff Frank, broth: :. er of the groom. Ushers we~ Joe
/ Young, brother or the bride, and

i:

~.

Chris Deemer, Syracuse. They
wore black tuxedos and white
shins with teal.bow ties and cummerbunds. Each wore a yellow rose
and rem boutonniere.
The molbcr of the bride wore a
tea-length light aquamarine dress
featuring a brocade overblouse.
The mother of the groom wore a
aquamarine and white suit. Each
mothu wore a corsage of yellow
rosebuds, baby· s breath and fern.
Jennifer Bigley, Coolville,
cousin of the groom, and Morgan
Burt, Columbus, cousin of the
bride, served as llowergirls. They
carried white salin baskets made by
Joan Hayman, aunt of the bride.
The baskets were adorned with teal
and yellow ribbons, white lace and
yellow rosebuds. They scattered
yellow rose petals. Jennifer wore a
white linen dresS with lace trim and
a bouquet of baby's breath and
pearls in her hair. Morgan wore a
rilse, white and teal flowered dress
decora1ed with a black collar. Each
wore a heart-shaped locket on a
teal ribbon.
Steven Harris, Reedsville,
cousin of the bride served as the
ringbcarer. He wore a black tuxedo
and carried a white pillow adorned
with white lace, pearls and teal and
yellow ribbons. The bride had decorated the pillow top with needlepoinL
Monica Silverthorn, Gallipolis,
was maid of honor. Lita Burt,
Columbus, cousin of the bride,
·served as bridesmaid. They wore
matching teal satin dresses featuring sho'r t gathered sleeves and
scooped back leading to a candy- ·
box bow. They also wore matching
heart pendants. Their bouquets
were of yellow and white carnations accented with teal net and
baby's breatli.
A reception was held in the
church fellowship hall. Hosiesses
were Janet Connolly, Connie Connolly, Joan Hayman, all of
Reedsville, Sharon Matson and
Thelma Cundiff, both of Racine.
The four-tier wedding cake featured a fountain flowing with teal
water and was decorated with yellow roses. A Precious Moments
figurine, "The Lord Bless You and
Keep You" was placed between the
tiers. The top ornament was decorated with white bells,-white satin
roses and lace. The cake was decorated by and presented to the couple as a gift from Vicky Gillilan,
Reedsville.
After a honeymoon in Nags
Head, N.C., the couple rerumed to
their home in Syracuse.

Office

: ·acquainted with
tourisi/Yisitor
·":opponumty
to the
l!ecome
better

: inffn~~i~::=::~omaroundtllc
and Meigs County will be

CORN
MUFFIN Ml
8.5 oz.

s

1
Chuck Roast............~.......La. · ·
CHICKEN
$ 189.
NOODLE SOU
·Rump Roa.st................
oz.
89(
s
-Sausage......................... oz.
$ 189
$ 59

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

..

..

•

.

MR, and MRS. FRANKUN (JESSICA) ESTERLY IV

FREE MERCHANDISE

•

startl!w • low • $1.850.
Olocaun1
-kill~an--·
................
IN STOCK

c

Steaks /Roasts..........LB.

Discount Prices StOO Holda Your Purcllue.

IIIII of spa

.

PORK BUn

When you layaway your pool
lor next summer Ill 111112 Low

See •

. .

Leg·Quarters__,_u.39

:

10.75

I,ONGHORN COLBY

TWIN PET ·

Cheese........................... LB.

CAT F

$119

60Z.

s

.._..... Ull:ll;' 7 ... 1:31-1:01

SHIP U.P.S. DAIL

~

74pv$J295
Portrait Value Ever/

Bon

FRANCO AMERICAN

$1 ·39

SMITHFIELD EASY CARVE

PAGHETTI·O'
14.75 oz.

ss

s

.

BEAUTIFUL DIAMOND BUCELETS
Carat Diamonds set In 141&lt; yellow gold.
51200
. Sill$

575

OCEAN SPRAY

79(
Onions..............:. . . . .
s189
2 Yo·Mllk. . . . . . . . . . .

YEUOW

12 Portralf
Chmtma; Cord,

Identification Card

N

•'.

. BRSUGHToN;s

5~8JECT FEE 0~ $2 . 9~ PER PEII:SON, P.Qyable when portrait• ore token, not includ.d in-~ud
pr~. No depo111 requ1~ed. P01e1 for oCiwtrtiMd.PQ:rtra i! collection Oijr stlection - ori ~ choka of
bockg~ound: Your fovor•if! Pf9pl welcomed. Up to fiv. additional po~e•loken for optiOnal por:lfait
cotlect.on wtth no obtlgohon fOr purchost. Not vo!id with any other offer. One odvfiti~ fXJCI!oga
per family. Porlfoit sizes opprc»~imote, Chriltmas back........ o u ' ' h at no Ufnl cfMirte.

·

• •..,.....,.,, IChOO -·7.00 p.a.
......, , _ ~-- .. 7........

$ 129

L1te Spread";'"'"_"3 Las•

TH!N~ Y~U • CHERRY

•

If you are plaMing a ·weddinp, then~you ·ahoufif ·
come see us at Haakins·T&amp;Mflr.

SUNSHINE ·

.

.

Food..·-·······-20

You will have fNflf 190 atylea of tuxedos to choose
from. We have a large selection of the latest atylea
and COfT1IIimentarY acceaaories for thia special
oocaalon. •
· .

GROOM TUX FREE wtrH 8 OR MORE

c
GROUND

9
9
(
4
$1
P1e Fdllng~. . . . . ~-. 21 oz. aN
Burr1tos......................soz. ..
.
s
$299 .·
99(

Cusfomtv St't'&gt;'l(t', Call I 800 4..18 886 !.

'AHir4•W. Prlcu .

16 OZ. CAN

.

BL~E BONNEn

IHII AIU I IUD W A PI'M'•IIf llUDIO 0P111

Q~•-•lwnr•t

CRANBER
SAUCE

GAL

HURRY/ TIMIIS RUNNING OUrl
IIOW OPEII EVElY tlfiiCLOIEt TIAIIIItiVIIIII

.

3 LB. aAG

..•.

lnc/ucles Porlmit

HOUSE

kquisitions !Fine Jewe{ry
CorMr Second at ~St. (rope Fumllura Bldg.)
GalJIP.!ile • 441 2142

ltl WE~DING PA_RTY

·

COFFEE
$299 ~4.5 .

MASTER lUND

.

; villl8o wbicb baa bcca c:olccled.

·

JIFFY

1o

.

The pad:: dislrict will be sbow~i ng the Meigs County video
OJtroughout the afternoon and the
~ raped Pomeroy biliiOric Wllkj'jng tour will tlso be available.
"'According 10 Mary Powell, Put
"ii)istrU:t llld Tourism Dm:lcr, Ibis
. is I good IJROtunily 10 Jearn DDe
about Pomeroy, the county - L
•·She ays lhc: toUr iJ very ialenlst.:in,, as it points out the historic
:,_buildings, most of wbidl are well
• over 100 yeua old. It a1ao relays
' IDIIIII a-ni illfonn..., about lhc:

(

298 SECOND ST. .
.
PO.MEROV. OH.
1
WE RESERVE IHE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES
SUN.,
22 THRU NOV. 28, 1992

The Desert Storm retired general has joined those three in an
l)xelusive club: More than 1 million
hardcover copies of their biogra~hies' are in prinL Schwanko_Pfs
'It Doesn't Take a llero" jomed
the group with its nin_th prin~ng,
due out next week, S81d publisher
Bantam Books.

.
.
-----·
For ·r at Spec1'al 0. -ccas•·on.

::

8 AM-10 PM

NEW YORK '(AP) - Frank
Sinatra, Lee Iacocca and Chuck
Yeager, make room fit H. Noonan
Schwarzkopf.
.

,.
theloffice••.••--------;..-----~-------

.

20 oz.

thru ·Sunday

MOUNT~INEER BRAND LINKS

the

:-available as well as the Ohio Buck" eye quarterly events c:alendar and
Ohio Pass travel planner and
••coupon booklet.

Mo~tday

LB.

ing, 200 E. Second Street, ~t to
post office. The offiCC will be
open Nov. 29 ~~to S·p:~·
The park_district will~ giVIng
aw~y a Me1gs County v1deo. To
le815ter for the free .VIdeo stop by .

· ~ state

FILLING

STORE HOURS

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

::: Visitors center to hold open house
;. fioMEROY - As part of
.:: Pomeroy's Christmas Open House
-; on Nov. 29 the Meigs COWity Parte
• District at the Meigs County··:· Chamber of Commen:e
will
~; be open !O give the public an

APPLE PIE

autobiography club

tsttwns

MR.IIIId MRS. JOHN DAVID (KILA) FRANK

THANK YOU

Desert Stonn
hero enters

•

..•

,.g•

SandMI

Miller-Ranegar

Chauncy-Esterly

CROWN CITY • Jessica A.
Chauncy and Iiranklin T. Esterly
IV were unl!ed iD lll.-rilge Nov. 14
at Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist
. Church, Crown City, w1th Pastor
Riehard Unroe officiating.
The bride, was CICortcd by her
father, Melvin L. Ban:~. She 1'/0111.
a light teal taffeta gown with
matching lace overlay, aeeented
with matching taffeta bows and
white pearls. Her veil was a Wll:lllh
made of dark teal and white bab)'
rosebuds with a short white veil
over her face and a long white veil
down lhc: ~and a taffeta bow on
the back of her bead matchinJ lhc:
gown. The bouquet was made of
· dark teal roses, light teal • lilies
and white baby rosebr. with
white ribbons and white pearls.
Maid of honor was Patricia
Reese, friend of the groom . She
wo~ a tea length, mauve, taffeta
gown with matching lace overlay.
Flowergirl was BritUee Cole,
niece of ihe bride. She wore a
maroon velver dress with off white

Po;m·•·ro~y~~;•;dd;~;;;
· ~~C;•;III~po;;lla;••OH;;;P~o~l~~~~~:u::n~t,~wv~..................s;u;n~~~n~a

No
. .•.•.m.ber
......198
..2.............,............

~

OL

.
LB.

---

MARQUE!

10 LB. PACKAGE

.

MINUTE MAID fROfE11 . .

Ora e Jutce. . . . 12 oz.

---

r

lETTY CROOER

CAKE MIXES ·

3

BEEF

CHUCK

•

10 LB. PACKAGE

s

$211-18.5

oz.

90

1'flc vilitor eeDICt IDd officea
loc:aled in die CmleP Baild-

-:: 11e

·-.'·

~

•••

'I&gt;

,,

.•
f

i

.,

I'

�Pomeroy Middleport Olllllpolla, OH Point Pleuant, wv

....·

~Holiday

&gt;•.~--------~----------------------------~
Comlilualty Caleadar-ltelas
SALISBURY - Meigs Local will present plans for
Middleappe8r two
before
neat Annual Chapter 1 Pareni/Teacher port's downtown revilalization on

FURIIITURE
GALLERIES

.

.

•.

CLOCKS

",......

30%·40%

;:,.

--·..,,_

OFF

-...

,

sale •.

GRANDFATHER

..
...

.

OV• 11 . lln.nnt .....IIU
. . . . . . . . . . . . 011 ' . . .

AI ........ Genunwith ........... PriM
'IIDC'ks·~· .w-r Wid .....
Within 10m._.
~lve • gill thla C!dllll•
Jlllhlch wiH be ..ound

olenJorm•t

far,...-

-...

,.
"'.

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

...'•••
,.: .
. .. .
.•..
,...."'.

-

EWINGTON · Lisa C~r and
David Greene were united m mat·
riage Ocl. 23 in Arizona.
The. bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Cooper of Will·
cox, Ariz. She is a 1989 graduale
of Willco,.; High School and is
employed at the Willcox Child
Care Center.

..,

Jennifer
Michelle
Watson. ringbearer. He wore a black tuxedo
~ daughier of Mr. and Mrs. John with a mauve tie and cummerbund.
'f WatsOn or Gallipolis, and Gary
The mothers of the bride and
.,. Dean Warner, son of Mr. and Mrs. groom wore royal blue sb'eet-length
;:: Gary Warner of Gallipolis Ferry, suits and corsages of mauve roses.
':: exchanged wedding vows the after·
Registering guests were Kevin
; noon of Oc1. 17.
and Joshua Watson, brothers of the
•• · Pll'IIOr David Frazie perfonned bride.
. the double·ring cen:mony at Jordan
The pianist was Ani1a Hatfield,
:! Baptist Church in Gallipolis Ferry. friend of the bride and groom .
.,. The bride, escorted by her father Soloists were Vickie Workman and
" to the altar, wore an off-the· Kevin Peck, friends of the bride
::: shoulder traditional white gown and groom. Vocal selections were
:;: made of satin and lace, long "All of Me", "Circle of Two",
straight sleeves, and fitted bodice
the Only Liute Girl", 'The
ot:: sparlde with simulated ~Is and "You're
Lord's Prayer" and "Friends".
·!-" sequins. The full skirt, With elegant
A reception was held following
;..' back fan detail, extended to .a the ceremony in the chUJ'\lh fellow·
· ;:: cathedral-length train with delicate ship hall. Helping with the recep·
;:: cut-outs of lace, sequins, and tion were Connie Edwards, Kristy
~ si~ulal;ed pearls. A chapel-len~th
Eldridge, and Debbie Roberts, aU
.ir vest wsth a headpsece of seqwns
friends of the bride and groom.
and seeded pearls was worn.
The ceremony an&lt;! reception
:~
The bride carried a cascade were
videotaped by friends of the
:;;: bouquet of mauve and royal blue bride and
groom, Eddie Fisher and
,. flowers.
·
Doug
Workman.
During the
if The groom wore a complete ceremony, Bobby Nibert,
of
.. black tuxedo with a black tie and the couple, was in charge offriend
sound.
;: cummerbund. He wore a bouiOnPhotographs ·were taken by The
,,. niere of a mauve rose.
Image
Gallery. '
'
:; Maid of honor was Jill Allison,
Wedding
coordinator
was
Kay
friend of the bride. Bridesmaids Harper of Gallip&lt;ilis, Ferry, who
:} were Angel Beller, sister of the
made the flowers f~r the wed·
!!: groom, and Courtney Watson, sister also
ding
party, as well as the bridal
"' of the bride. They wore satin royal
bouqueL
, ·
: blue tea length dresses with petal
The
couple
now
resides
in
Gal~ sleeves, and a scalloped back with
lipolis
Ferry.
'
: a large bow. at the waist. Each at·
• tendant earned a mauve and royal
~ blue basket with ftowers 10 match.
:.. There were seven honor atten,. dants who received a .pink rose
S from the bride . iluring the
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - ·
•• ceremony. They were lenni Singer Marty Stpart ~ill become an
;; Dovyak, Julie Hardesty, Jennifer official member of the Grand Ole
;: Kisner, Michelle and Rachel Opry cast next week.
.
:;- Plantz, Misty Stanley and Angie
On Nov. 28, Stuart will become
tt King, all special friends of the the 71st member of the 67-year-old
counll)' music show. ·
' bride.
:J. Gary · Warner, father of the
His hit reconls include "Tempt·
~ groom, served as best man. Ushers ed," "Hillbilly Rock" and "The
::, were Rob Beller, brother-in-law of Whiskey Ain't Workin'." The !at•• the groom, and Kevin Harper, ter was a duet with Travis Tritt
~ friend of the groom. They wore
:: back tuxedos with mauve ties and
~ cummerbunds.
·
~
Carla Edwards, friend of the
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle~· bride and groom, was the flower- port Community Association will
"' girl. She wore a royal blue satin meefDec. I at 7 p.m. in the conferdress, similar to the bridesmaids.
ence room of Peoples Bank in Mid·
t.:: Jacob Eldridge, friend of the · dle11ort to discuss the Dec. 3
::i bride and groom, was the Christmas parade in Middleport.

J:

:r

:t

Stuart to become
71st opry member

Association to meet

:!:

The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Geiger or EwingtOn. He
gradiJIIted from North Gallia High
School and Buckeye Hills Career
Center in 1985. He is employed at
Simmons Pumps as a machinist.
The couple reside at 175 S.
Cochise Ave., Willcox, Ariz.,
85643:

For more information call or
RIO GRANDE • Bob Evans
write
Bob Evans Farm, P.O. Bo,.;
Farm will host its fifth Christmas
330,
.Rio
Grande, 45674, or call
Craft Show on Nov. 28 and 29 and ·
245-5305.
I
Dec. 5 and 6 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
on Saturday and from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. on Sunday.
Stocking Stuffers
Many handmade treasures
gleam in the lights of the old log
cabin village, the homestead, craft·
bam, and farm museiDII.
·
More than 50 craftspersons will
display their worlc, featuring wood
crafts, rugs, dried flowers, blacksmith items, je,welry, and Christmas omarnents.
If you wish to turn back time,
visit the farm for our Christmas
Craft Show on Nov. 28 and 29 and
Dec. 5 and6.

I

•I
I

Tlle$day at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
council chambers. All downtown
RUTLAND • Rutland Garden merchants are urged to aaend this ·
~~endar.
Club, Monday, 7:30p.m. at the important meeting.
home of Mrs. Doroth.r Woodard .
:.•
SUNDAY
"Maldng Herbal Gifts will be the
PO..fEROY - A· community
~, POMEROY • The Meigs Counprogram.
Thanbgivins service, sponsored
• 1)' HistoriCal Society will sponsor a
by the Meigs County Ministerial
•demODStralion on making Advent
RACINE - Regular meeting, Association, will be held II Trinity ·
using herbs on Sunday at Southern Local Board of Education Congre~~~al Church at 7:30
::2p.m. at the Meigs.Co!Jt:IIY Muse- will
be held Monday at 8 p.m. at p.m. on
y. Rev. Deroo New.. um. Mrs. Janet Thesss will present t!Je higll scho9l.
· man, pastor of Syracuse United
: the demonstration. Those wanting
Methodist O:argc, will speak. Pub''10 participate are to bring material
TUESDAY
lie invited. . ,
~ jVith tbem. For a list of materials
RACINE · .Racine Lodge No.
"
::nee,ded, call the museum at 992- 461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday,
WEDNESDAY
,•.::_,3810 between 1 and" 4.p.m.
7:30 p.m., for election of officers.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
All members encouraged to auend. Gospel Cburch in Long Bottom
-;: MIDDLEPORT ·Middleport's
RACINE • Southern Local will have a candlelight communion
~"'community, Think:f,~Jjg service School District, parent/teacher con- SCJ;Vice Wednesday at 7 p.m. Pastor
·~will be held II the ' epon First ference (district wide) Tuesday, 6-9 Steve Reed invites lise public.
.~Presbyterian Church on Sunday at p.m. and Wednesday 8:30 a.m. to
:~'1 p.m. with a canned food donation noon. There will be no school
MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant
:.to be made to the food pantry in
will conduct a bible study course,
': Pomeroy. Public invited.
Wednesday.
Wednesday, 7 p.m., Middleport
·f
MIDDLEPORT • Jean Trussell First Baptist Church.
;~· ,POMEROY· Bob Hayes, a mis·
from Mrica, will speak at
,; Hillsid~ Baptist Church on Sunday ·
:·at lla.m .

:wreaths

Pvt. Kenneth M. Cordell has
completed basic training at Fort
Jackson,. Columbia, S.C.
During the training, students
received instruction in drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map reading,
tactics, military courtesy, military
justice, rii'St aid, and Army history
and traditions.
·
He is the son of Thelma L. Pat·
ters\)n of 2034 Eastern Ave. and
Herbert L. Cordell of 990 Fourth
Ave., both of Gallipolis.
· The private is a 1991 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School.

:&gt;'There
be on
freeMonday
refreshments.
Legionwill
Hall
at 7 p.m. ·

Gilts:
Our Gift Department Is
overflowing with special
ltems.for your home!

PIN• enter my Rime In the drntlng for the 12 costumed Teddy Bears you ,,.
giving away at V8tan1N1 Memorial Hoepltal.

NAMI~---------------------------------~---------------

-

" ·, •Fine Furniture
.,

.,..,,.,

-20 Dlffe,.nt Sty!"
Large nleetlon of AmlsriCIDID
ellvar • gold colrta for nla.

446-0166
8:30 ta 5:00 Mollllay-frfday
8:30 to 12 Sa11rday
--.Ln.
Closed 11.,,_,

!::Al:SO::·:Jacbati.======A=tht=ns,=C!Ao==tht=,==&amp;=McArtiM==='

ALL ROADS LEAD TO
HASKINS·TANNER•••• FOR YOUR

SECOND a GRAPE
IN GALLIPOLIS

Sliver

GALLIPOLIS
414 r ___ _. Ave,. 2-.1 flaor
_...,. • IRI

•

446-0332
•FREE PARKING
•FREE DELIVERY

lAWlEY JEWELERS
422 IECOND AVE.
GAWPOUI,OH.

.I iiiG DU - MONDAY OI•Y

,........... aa·

leetstar To Win

WIINS·TIIINEI
CHRISTMAS
$1FT·O.RIIIl
lsi Pltn
13• Colar
TV

.

·OPEN IIOIDIY TUU II'I'URIIY 8111 'I'lL·&amp; Pll
ci.•IDIUI-

Wit~ l-It

hii'Rin

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No

Decide on a tenn, lock in a rate, you can own your
home sooner than you think! Here's a comparison
that may open your eyes!
•
'

15 Year Loan•

$75,000.00
9.23%

$75,000.00

$603.47
$217,249.20

$705.96
$127,072.80

Annual Percentag~ Rate ,
Monthly Payment ·
Total ot Payments

Stnipllat· . .lc.t

Prt-W.W • Str....llat

SUITS AND
SPORT COATS

8.08%

Increasing your monthly payment $102.49 will
save you $90,176.40 and 15 years! Decreasing the .
·tenn of your loan builds equity faster and drastically
reduces total repayment. As shown above, cutting the
· terin of the loan in half will !lQ1 double the monthly
payment! Get the facts on fixed ratei and repayment
costs-that's the Peoples advantage and the American
Dream. ·

MIN'S PUWASHID

·WUNGLER JEANS

•2099 .

•••• $32.00

Ill. $4.25 PAIR

MEN'S SOCKS
iAYI $2.11

3

NIU

DIESS SLACKS

•••s
· FIEEM.tN SHOU
TO lti.OO

•

20% OFF

....
SPORT iHIRTS

11• POPPII

99
•35ni2'1JJJ
YIII~TO •wo

lOW

OPIII
.
IIOIIDIY 1111 SAIIBIY
·tU.IILIP&amp;

Member FDIC
Atheas

Belpre

LoweU

593-7761

• 423-7516

896-2369

;.

Middleport

Nelsou~lllt

992-6661

753-1955

•30"

/

' .

MlrleUa
373-3155

•a"

WESTERN DENIM SHIRTS
99
IIIIAIII. ITOCI

$35 99 '

20%·25%

COIIPUR STOCK MEN'S

•24

lEVI'S JEANS
FASHIONS
s... -... ..... w..w

, SAVE' .

iuN'S WU,IIIUI IUP FIOIT

IH.UO.H

'Tiiese examples are based on the lixed rates shown below:
• 30 Year Loan: 9.00% plus a 2% original~ fee.
• 15 Year Loan: 7.75% plus a 2% origination fee.

115 E. ••ra.l Drive
, ...,.1

lEVI'S
JEANS

COMPlETE STOCK MEN'S

30 Year Loan•

Amount of Loan

lEVI'S
JEANS

:..~$23 99 :.~"$25 99

pure._.......,

o.l!*' Mon...fro. N

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

'·

MIDDLEPORT
509 5. 3nl Ave.
992·5912
8:30 to 5:00 MOIIday·friday
Closed 111 •.1....

, •Custom Drapery
\ •Carpet
•Wallcovering ·

1 oz. ~u,.

PHONE--------~----------------------------­
•

•

OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

Dec. 24th
-Gift Wrapping . I .
•Lay-Away

ADDRESS----~----------------------~------~

992·2104

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

•Free 'Delivery

tan~

Beary Christmas Contest

Slldlag fM salt. No 0111 refused services llecause llllnabllty to pay.

: ·' RACINE • "Talking About
' Healtli and Nutrition" will be pre·
:"s·ented at the Racine American

of Curtis L. Cox of 543' Paxton
Road Galli lis recently complet
ed r~ruit
During· the trainin,g cycle at
Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris
Island, S.C., recruits are taught the
basics of batllcfield survival, introduced 10 typical military daily routine, and personal and professional

Community Service is our co~tment at Veterans Memorial - .Your
Hometown Hospital.
Our commitment includes not only providing excellent healthcare for you
and your family but serving and supporting the community in many
directions .
We are an accredited hospital with a well-trained staff ready to help you
24 hours a day, 365 days I! year.

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

;~:

'.

s All reitruits participate in an
active physical conditioning t~rogram and gain proficiency sn a .
variety of military skills including .
firSt aid, rifle marksmanship and
close-order drill. Teamwork and
self-discipline are emphasized
throughoan the cycle.
He is a 1989 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, Gallipolis.

It Makes Sense•••

MONDAY
··; TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
. ' Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies.
::·1\uxiliary will have a special meet·
·'ing Monday at 7:30p.m. All mem: •bers urged to attend. Plans will be
· :madefordseChristmasdinner.

Marine Pvt. Robert K. Cox, son

Jfrung.

Family Planning

..

In the service

~

,••••.
.,
......
.....
.....

meeting, MOnday', 6:30p.m.

;; LONG BOTTOM· Thanks~v­
:·: ing setVice at Long' Bouom Un:tcd
: Methodist Church will be Sunday
·'.at 7:30 p.ni. Public invited.

BEF to host craft show

...."...~ r---~-------------------------------------------------------,
OUR COMMITMENT
~

dlya
ID
-~ aod the day ot ~ neat. Items
•·must be received weD In adVIIICe
·~o usure publleatloo In tbe cal·

RUTLAND • Gospel concert,
·· RuUand Freewill Baptist Church,
·~ sunday, 2 p.m., featuring Kevin
:··Spencer Family and Reflections
.~Trio. Pasta Paul Taylor invites the
;: public.

Cooper-Greene .

Watson-Warner

..z

the

~

..
:• ,

MR. and MRS. DAVID (LISA) GREENE

MR. and MRS. JOHN (JENNIFER) WATSON

;.

'

::sionary

of

-.,.,

___ . . gs ~ounty Calendar

. .. :

The Plains
797-4547

.

!, .

"

••
I•

�•
•

P11g1 as sunday nmes SenUnel

Pomeroy Middleport o.lllpolla, Ott Point Pleasant, wv

November 22, 1112

Observe 50th anniversary ·
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Weber, Tuppers
Plains, recently celebrated t/leir
· SOth wedding anniversary at lheir
home.
They were married Nov. 2, 1942
at Pomeroy by Rev. Walter R.
McArlcy, Racine. They are lhc parents of three children, Charles
Weber, Tuppen .Plains; Keith

Weber, Pomeioy; and Vida Weber,
BcUe, W.Va.
A $Urprise party was held for
them by their children during
which they received congratula·
lions from many relatives and
friends. A gold and white decorating !heme was carried out and lhree
tier wedding style cake and olber
refreshments were served.

. By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ;
Walter Taylor intercepte(l a last·
ditch Michigan pass at the ·Ohio
State 16 ~ter time had expired and
returned 11 Sl yards to end the fmal
thJeat as the !'7th-ranked Buckeyes
and No. 6 Michigan played to a
rainy 13-13 tie.
. Greg Beatty's five-yard touchdown reception from Kirk Herbstreit' and Tim Williams' extrapoint kick tied ihe score wiih 4:24
left. B·ut both teams disdained
opportunities to go for ihe win over
lhe closing minutes.
Ohio State (8·2· 1 overall and 52-1 in the Big Ten Conferenc!l)
punted ihe baU away when faced
wiih fourih and five at ihe Micbig~ 49 and 1: 12lefL
Michigan (8·0·3, ~-0-2) to.ok
ov_er after ihe punt at 1ts own rune
wnh 1:03. Jeft and allowed the
clock 10 run on two running plays.
The Wolverines, who had won ihe
last four meetings wiih their rivals,
ran. on iheir fii'SI four plays of ihe
senes bef~re backup quarterback
Todd Colhns ihrew a Hall Mary
~mplelion and ihen the inrerccp'!On to Taylor on another desperauon pass.
·
Collins' last pass for Derrick
Alexander was .p1cked off by Taylor at ihe.16 and he returned it 51

Bank One
offels small

busi~loanS

MJl, and MRS. BRENT (TERESA) COBURN

GALLIPOLIS - Teresa Jo
Tawney and Brent Charles ·Coburn
were llnited in marriage Nov. 5, in
Catlettsburg, Ky.
The bride is the daughter of
Lynne F. Sweeney and Okey A.
Tawney, both of Gallipolis. She is
a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and the University of Rio
Grande Holzer College of Nursing.

PORTLAND • Joe and Evelyn
Foreman, Great Bend, will celebrate their 35ih wedding anniversary wiih an open house on Nov.
29 from 2-4 p.m. at the Racine
First Baptist Church.
The couple was ma¢cd in Ash·

for qualifying sinal! busmess owners.

FmHA Business and lndustlial Guaranteed
Loans - Farmers Home Administration can

ton, W.Va. on Nov.28, 1957. They
have two sons and daughters-inJaw, one daughter and lhree granddaughters.
Too couple requests lhat gifts be
omitted.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Shane Matthews ihrew for ihree
IOuchdowns and 343 yards Saturday as No. 9 Florida beat Vanderbilt 41-21 to set up ihe Souiheastern Conference's first cham pionship game.
The victory clinched ihe SEC's
Eastern Division title for Florida

financing program requires that qualifying ·
businesses must create one full-time equivalent job
or not lay off a job for every $15,000 to $25,000
requested.
·

and

'

DEDICATION OF RECREATIONAL
COMPLEX

BANK:ONE.

2 p.m.-4 p.m.

By MIKE NADEL
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Mike
Tomczak knows the Minnesota
Vikings. Felix Wright knows the
Cleveland Browns. The Vikings
and Browns got to lcnow each other
in the preseason.
The Vikings (7·3) know ihat if
they beat Cleveland today at the
Metrodome, they'll be no worse
ihan a game behind Dallas and San
Francisco in the battle for the
NFC's best record.
The Browns (S-S) know they
desperately need a victory 10 keep
pace in ihe AFC Central race.

Whatever it takes:
'

Bank One. Athena NA
Member FUIC

'

\

'

.

The Answers\You Need ...

'· .

AS·CLOSE AS YOUR PH·ONEI
•

I

I

./

•

Holzer Health Hotline
~-1--800-462-5255

after the ensuing kickoff, wiih Ohio
State taking ovtt at its own 45 wiih
3: 19 lefL But on first down. Herbstreit was sacked by linebacker
Matt Dyson for a s1x-yard loss.
Two completions gained 12 yar(ls, •
but the Bucker.es elected 10 punt
from Michigan s 49.
l'bc most dramatic play of ihe
game took place on the punt as
Alexander was hit on lhc faccrnask
by the ball as he awaited it at the
Michigan eighL But after a scram- ,
ble for ihe loose ball, teammate
Shawn Collins recovered at the
nine.
That set up Michigan's last
futile attempt at avoiding ihe sixth
tie in the 89 years of ihe rivalry.
The Wolverines hold a S0-33-6
advantage in ihe all-time series.
Grbac was held out of lbe sec•
ond half after injuring his ribs on
his touchdown keeper. Collins
completed 5 of 13 passes for 52
yards wiih ihe one interception.
Michigan had not had ihrec ties
in a season since going 3-0-3 in
. 1910.
The Wolverines had already
locked up ihe Big Ten title- with
a 22-22 tie last week against Illinois - and will play Washington
in the Rose Bowl. Ohio State has
acceplcd a bid 10 the Florida Citrus
Bowl.

(8·2, 6-2 SEC) and put ihe Gators
into the title game Dec. S at Birmingham against the Western Divisian champion, No. 2 Alabama.
Vanderbilt (4-6, 2-5) opened lhe
second half wiih' an 80-yard drive
capped by Marcus Wilson's fouryard TD dive 10 pull to 21-1'1. ·
'Florida came back with

Matlhews' ihird wuchdown of ihe
day, a 36-yarder to Jack Jackson,
for "a 28-14 edge with 5:24 left in
the ihird quarter. The Garors led
31-14 lhree minutes later after Judd
Davis' fm;t career field goal, a 46yarder.
The Commodores came back
again, driving 79 yards in 10 plays,

·Browns in desperate need for win
.in today's battle with Minnesota.

.

For qualification about our small business loan
programs, please contact our small business lenders
at 1-800.677-4994 or (614) 593-6681.

Sunday, November 22, 1992

yards before being gang-IBCkled in
frontoftheOhioStatebenchauhe
Micbit~an 33. ·
. Oh10 State's !ferbstreit attempt.ed 47 passes: ihe second highest
total ever for a Buckeye quarter•
back, completing 28 for 271 yards
· and one wuchdown wiih no mterceptions.
Michigan led 13-3 early in ihe
fourth quarter, scoring on a ihrecyard run by starting quarterback
Elvis Grbac in ihe second quarter
·and a one-yard run by Collins late
in ·lhe ihind quarter. Peter Elezovic
missed the fii'St point-after kick, but
converted ihe second.
A steady rain stsrtcd just as ihe
kick went through the crossbars
wiih 1:33left in the ihird quarter.
Williams had earlier had a 38·
yard field goal attempt blocked by
Jean-Agnus Charles on Ohio
State's fii'St possession and missed
a 56-yard attempt to end lhc half.
Williams, who kicked a 39-yarder,
pulled ihe Buckeyes to 13-6 on a
30-yard field goal wiih 12: 16lefL
After Michigan was forced to
punt, Herbstreit completed a tense
fourth-and-goal pass from the five
to Beatty witlt 4:24 remaining.
Williams' extra-kick deadlocked
ihings. ·
Michigan was forced to punt

Aghakhan (90) and Matt Dyson (91) as he beads
upfield during Saturday's Big Te!l matcbup io
Columbus, Ohio, which resulted in a 13·13 tie.

TURNING ON THE GAS- Ohio State tailback RQbert Smith (26) puts some distance
be~een himse" and Michigan defenders Ninaf

· Florida downs Vanderbilt 41-21; Marshall beats ETSU

Withrow Unked Deposit Program- This state

Announces
OPEN HOUSE

Cheshire, Ohio
Refreshments
'
EVERYONE WELCOME!

November 22,1992

'

guarantee qualitY loans made to business and
industry involving manufacturing, wholesale, retail
and services. Projects must involve the creation
and/ or saving of jobs, Purpose need not be
agriculturally related.

Guiding Hand Schooi/Gallco Industries

"We plan to let ihe mall offi·
DAYTON (AP) - About 25
cials
know lhat what happened earblack people have complained to
the NAACP about alleged mislreal· lier this month is not an isolated
.
ment at ihe Dayton Mall since a incident,'' he said.
Steve
Mall
General
Manager
scuffle ihere Nov. 7 between blacks .
Willshaw said he also was surand police.
.
Ooe man, for example, com- prised by the nlPilber of complaints
.
plained ihat security guards hassled 10 ihe NAACP.
After the dispute earlier this
him when be stepped into ihe concourse area to try on a pair of shoes monih, Gooding called a news con·
he bought at the mall, said Jessie ference and said the mall was not
Gooding, president of ihe Dayton safe for blacks.
The scuffle started when mall
chapter of ihe National Association
, for the ·Advancement of Colored security guards appmac!hed a
young !D&amp;n who had been banned
PeoPle.
Gooding said Friclay he was sur- from the mall for six monihs for
prised bY the qumber of com- seuing off. ftreCI'IICke~·· and smoke
hom bs inside the food court.
plaints.
'
.

Loans- This federal gyarantee program is available

Foremans to celebrate anniversary -

Blacks corr,zplqin·over
mistreatment
.

'

Small Business Administration Guaranteed ·

MR. and MRS. JOE (EVELYN) FOREMAN

She is a registered nurse at Pleasant
Valley Hosp,ital, Point·Pieasant.
T!Kl groom is a graduate of Oallia Academy High School, and is
employed as a chemical operawr at
the Goodyear Plant, Apple Grove,
W.Va
The couple resides at 38 East
Dr., Gallipolis.

C

Ohio State,·Michigan
~ play to ·'13-13 deadlock ·

MR. and MRS. NORMAN WEBER

Tawney-Coburn

~intts- ~etrtbttl Section

Sports

What docs all this knowledge
mean?
"I don't really know," Wriglit
said.
"I still see quite a few of the
g~y~ faiyty regularly," added the
V1kings free safety, who started
for ihe Browns from 1987-90 and
still Jives in Cleveland 'during" the
offseason. "That's why what happened in ihe preseason felt really
good forme,"
·
·
"I:he Vikings' 56-3 exhibition
·victory at Cleveland was pan of a
dominating preseason during which
they outscored four opponents 140-

"I just wanted to play well, personally, to show them ihat I'm still
around. It was a good feeling to
win like ihat," said Wright, who
left Cleveland as a Plan B free
agent after ihe 1990 season. "But I
also know ihat it was the preseason
and it didn't really count
"Still, lhcy lost 56-3. Preseason
or not, that had tO be embarrassin$.
(Browns coach) Bill Belichick. 1s
going 10 use it for a motivator ihis
week.''
Not so, says Tomczak, ihe freeagent pickup who became Cleveland's startmg quarterback after
Bernie Kosar and Todd Philcox got

pulling to 31-21 when Cliff Deese trailed, rolling up 540 yards on
ran in from 15 yards at the 12:05 offense.
East Tennessee State (5-6, 2-5)
marlc of ihe fourlh.
untracked
itself wiih a fumble ihat
But Davis' second field goal, a
to
Marshall's
second toucbled
31-yarder with 6:55 left, gave
down
and
ihree
interceptions.
The
Florida a 34-21 edge, and Errict
·
Buccaneers
finished
with
their
best
Rhett scored from two yards out to
cap ihe scoring wiih 1:4 I remain- season Wider ftrst-year coach Mike
Cavan since 1987'S 5-6 record.
ing.
Brown sco)'ed Marshall's second
MarshaU 49, E.Tenn.St. 10
TD
on anoiher nine:yard pass from
At Johnson City, Tenn., Michael
Payton,
and he added his other .
Payton ihrew for ihree touchdowns
touchdown
on an eight-yard run in
and Troy Brown rushed for Lwo
the
second
quarter to give the
more as No. 6 Marshall pounded
East Tennessee State 49-10 Satur- Thundering Herd a 28·3 lead.
Payton connected with Bartrum
day.
Marshall (8-3, 5·2 Southern a second time on an 11-yard scorMIKE BARTRUM, Marshall
Conference), ranked No. 6 in Divi- ing pass ihat gave Marshall a 35-3
S catches, 59 yards
·
sion 1-AA, took ihe opening kick- halftime margin.
Pat Crust put East Tennessee on · yard run wiih 4:28 left in the ihind
off and scored the f1rst of three
ihe
board .at the 7:53 mark of ihe quarter.
first-quarter touchdowns on Paysecond
quarter wiih a 28-yard field
ton's nine-yard wss to senior Mike
In other regional action, West
goal,
and
Neil Abney scored the
Bartrum (Meigs '88) with 11:35
Virginia
beat Louisiana Tech 23-3.
Buccaneers'
final
points
on
a
12to go. The Thundering Herd never

Sanders looking to become Lions'
all-time rusher today vs. Bengals

ning game," coach Dave Shula couple of defenses and lOok a couBy JOE KAY
said.
"He's one of the best ihat's pie of shots, I felt right back in the
CINCINNATI
(AP)
6.
ever
run
ihe football."
groove," Kramer said. "As far as
Linebacker Gary Reasons has seen
hurt
Part
of
the
problems
has
been
reading
coverages and Ihrowing 10
"Minimal.' ' Tomczak said of it happen so many times, in person the Lions' patchwork offensive line the right guys, I felt real relaxed."
ihe revenge facwr. "Bill Bclichick and on film.
The Bengals' offense has had
Detroit's Barry Sanders will oo and their decision to get away from
is very realistic. What happened in
the
run-and-shoot,
which
made
major
problems as well. It was shut
Apgusl is not an indication of what dend-to-rights, cornered by several spread-our defenses easy prey for out for three quarters of a 17-14
tacklers. Then - Poor! - head
can happen in November.''
loss last Sunday 10 ihe New York
fake,
stutter step, and he's headed Sanders.
And what happened in 1991 or
The
line
has
played
better
the
Jets,
and is 100 one-dimensional.
198.9 .or 1987 is not an indication of upfield on another highlight-film last two weeks, and Sanders' num- ·
Cincinnati's
running game ranks
.run.
what might ha~li today. .
bers
have
gone
up.
eighih
in
ihe
NFL,
its passing game
After just 3 1/2 pro seasons,
Tomczak IS familiar with the
After
rushing
for
just
38
yards
second-last.
The
Bengals
rarely put
Vikings and lhc Metrodome, hav- Sanders is ready to become the
in
a
27-13
loss
to
Green
Bay,
he's
together
two
gOQd
halves
passmg
ing played for Minnesota's princi- Lions' all-time rushing leader. He
rushed
for
108
against
Dallas
(a
37ihe
ball,
and
ihere
are
a
lot
of reapal NFC Central rivals for seven needs 56 yards today against ihe
sons:
seasons. Tom'czali was with the Cincinnati Bengals to surpass Billy 3 loss) and 94 against Pittsburgh (a
17-14 loss). That's his besl two-poorpassblocking;
Chicago Bears from 1985-90 and Sim!Ds' mark of 5, 106.
week
performance
of
the
season.
- poor passing by Boomer EsiThe
way
he's
golten
there
is
iheGreen Bay Packers last year.
ason;
more
amazmg
10
RC&lt;~SDnS
,than
ihc
The
Lions
played
one
of
their
Because the Browns play four
best games offensively against the
"""bad routes by receivers;
games against that division this suddenness. Reasons, signed by ihe Stcelers,
wiih
Erik
Kramer
ihrow.penalties wiping out big
Bengals
as
a
free
agent
from
the
season, To01czak was a logical
choice when Belie hick went look· New York Giants, has seen ing for 304 yards in his fU'St start. gill?.~e have not been consistent at
Sanders' grentriess up close.
·Kramer, who took ihe Lions to the
ing for a quanerbackJ
NFC Championship game last year, all ihrowing ihe football,' : Shula
"Every
time
you
see
ihe
films,
"One or the main .reasons we
will
start again today at Riverfront said. "It's been one ihing or anoth·
you
see
somethinl!
new
from
this
signed Mike was ihat he has expeS1adium.
er . .If it was just one thing, we
guy,"
Reasons
s111d.
"He's
somerieqce, he's played in the cold, he's
"Once 1 got in ihe game, read a could fix it. But it's not."
played in ihe NFC Central," ihing. I rank him No. I in ihe NFL
as
a
running
back,
and
I,'ve
played
Belicbick said. "When be goes into
a noisy stadiuni against a good against ihe great ones.
"Io one game with ihc Giants,
team, you,don't have to worry ·
our
strong safety had him and he
about it. He's been ihere before."
spun
on ·a dime Wid left ihe safety
Alihough Kosar is getting ready .
luerally
on his face. He's excepto return. Tomczak will start today.
tional.''
He has played well. leading the
Browns 10 a 4-3 record and ranking
The club rushing record would
fifth in AFC passing. Tomczak
1
Syracuse ••....••••••......••••••• lS.lO
be
an exceptional accomplishment
passed for 219 yards and two
2 Aleblma ................... ~ ............... did not play
touchdowns in a victory at Houston in an exceptionally bad year for ihe
Lions
(2-8),
a
team
ihat
expected
10
two weeks ago and threw for a
3 · nortda State ............................ did not plaJ
career-high 322 yards and one contend for tlie playoffs 38ain. .
4 Tezu MM beat Tezu Chriati8JI ........ 37·10
Instead, DetrOit has the worst.
score in last Sunday's 14-13 loss to
5 WuhiDaton lost to Wuhlngton State 23-42
offense in ihe National Conference
San Diego.
. .
'6 Michigan tied Ohio State ................... 13-13
In seven career gap1es against and the second-worst running
attack.
Sanders,
who
fmished
sec7 Notre Dame •••••••••• , •••••••.••••••••••• did not play
Minnesota, Tomczak has completPLAYING STRIP-AWAY- Tennessee's Allan Houston (left)
ond
tQ
Dallas'
Emmitt
Smith
for
ed S4 of 126 passes for 776 yards
8 S;pracue lost to Mliml ...................... 10.16
· tries to strip the b!IU away from Seton Hall's Terry Dehere during
and six touchdowns, with seven the NFL rushing title·last year wilh
9 nodda beat VuiderbUt ...................... 41·21
· the fll'st ball ~ Saturday's preseason NIT game Saturday In ·East
interceptions. In four starts against 1,548 yards, ranks ninih wiih 729.
10 Georlla ••••.•..••••••••• ,...•.••.••..••...• did not play
It's not Sanders' faulL
·· .
·
· .· Rutherford, N,J~ which the Pirates won 72-64. (AP)
the Vikings, he is 2-2;' including
"If you give him the ball 15
11 Colorado beat Io- State ................... 31·10
'Green Bay's 27-7 victory in ihe
times
a
game,
I'm
sure
he'd
be
finale.
12 Nebrub. •••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••• did aot play
72~64 1991"They're
playing hard, really over I ,000 yards right now,'' coach
13 N C State beat Wake Forest ............... 42-14
getting after the quarterback," Wayne Fontes said. "If he'~ carry
14 Staaford
beat Callfomla ..................... 41-21
.
Tomczak said of the Vikinas, who 30 times a game like the other
15
·
Scnithem
Calft UCLA .... .-...................... late
two free throws, and ihe Volunteers have 34 sacks. "It looks like their backs, he'd have over ,100 yards
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
every week.
16 .AriHna va Artaoaa State ........... ~ ........... late
(AP) - Seton Hall beat Tenoesscc then made one of six shots and 1989 team."
"But
our
problem
has
been
get·
17 Ohio State tied Michigan ·................... 13-13
'72-64 on Saturday to earn the committed ihree turnovers the rest · Though he's in his first year
with the Vikings, coach Dennis ting behind and trying 10 catch up
'•
Jixth-rankcd ieam a spot in ihe ofihe way.
18 Mlallilslppl State ............ , ......... cUd not play
Terry Dehere; who led Seton Green knows Tomczak. When and throwing more ihan we like.
...,utn•Ja of- pracason NIT.
19 &amp;.ton CoUe•e beat Army .................. 41·24
· The Pirates (2-0) will play No. Hall with 26 points, had six free Green' was head coach at North· The key 10 us winning is Barry run- · .
20 Tenneuee bea't Kentuclty .................. 34-13
th~~s and a ihrec·pointcr in the western, he recruited Tomczak, ning ihe ball and for our offense to
~UCLA W~y night.
'•
·
control
iL"
21 North CUollna beat Duke .................. 31·28
Seton Hall struggled against deciSJYC run. He and Walker, who who instead chose Ohio Ststc.
.
The
Bengals
(4-6)
~w
it.
"ffot there kind of late. Oihcr·
22 Kaa.- IMt to MJwourl ..................... 17-22
Tenoeuee'a zone defense ~b­ scored 13 points for the Pirates; '
out the prile and trailed 60-SS Wlih co!Dbined for all but two of the wise would have had him," 1 "We've got to contain Sanders
23 Pea state beat Plttaburl&amp;b ....... :........ 117·13
Green said, smiling and rolling his and make them pass the ball.''
4:20 10 play after Lang Wi!ICIIIlR pomts.
24 Mllllallppl •...•..•• ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.dld. DOt plaJ
Allan Houswn's 2S points led eyes. "l'vc always liked Mike. He Rcuons said.
bit a threB-pointcr.
25 Wake Forest lolt to NC State .......... ;.. 14-42
"You've got to stop iheir rundoesn't mind working for what he
Jerry Walker started Seton Tennessee (1-1).
ning game first, Wid he is their rungets."
,fWl'• only run of lhe game ,wiih
.

. Seton Hall beats Tennessee
to enter preseason NIT semifinals

..

....
.

.

..

.

f

�•

•

..PIG•

C2-Sunday nm• Sentinel

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt a.mpo111, OH Point Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, WV

November 22, 1M

··1n NBA action,
By ne Alloeiated Preu
. Anotber show-stopping performance by Michaelloolan couldn't
: S&amp;OP the Los Angeles Lakm.
. . Jordan did jUSl about everydling

..

Ch·arlotte, -L.A. Lakers notch wins in overtime

he could for the Chic111o Bulls on
Friday niaht. hitting shots from all
over the floor on the way to an
extraordinary 54-point perfor·

manc:e.

But Vtade Divac lllri: two foul
shots with 22 seconds left iR overtime for the Laten to sink the
BuDs 120-118.
There - llil1 ODe tat shot left

-................... . .

ATIANrA BL\VIIS- PIMod ltlf
TNidwly _, T-J 0Na. •· aw..

.. ~2:10p.a

Ph'!e+"hitat&amp;o.tal. 7:1Dp.dL

Ni
... - .... 7&gt;40p.m• .
Newl-11 ...-.7&gt;40p.m.
Oaawa at M.r.I:Nal. UO p.m.
EdllllOilloll at Vapcau.•,l:lD p.m.

Week 12 slate
Today

-4

....-..
r...,r.......... too, ~~up.,
«sf,, : .............. a.-..;

r...,. BOy • s.. u.mi. C-40 ,...

•

T-.IIIA Aopbo, 10:40 .....
Cbicqo ll Soal- 10&gt;40 p.m.

r:..

-

willa'=*= II atd.A•d =Auoci·
adon.
I
FLOIUDA KAIIIJNS - Soot sB -•.o-.IDdtoOollmd-ID
-ploto lito Wilt Wu ...... Sipod
Luiodob~-- ... with Edmonton al ·tbe Pacific Cout

......

Floridr. SL 109, Iowa St 16

Exblbhlon

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
q...-.

Pia,..-

All.

c- Ydo. TD lnL

x.o,,BW........319 ll00:!569 II 10
Mia ....346 214 :1771 19 10
Mocm,Hou......333 211~1 17 12
O'Doonoll, Pill.:m 165 2010 12 s
r - . Clrt.tn ,., IJI3 ' 4

·-

...,...

ADonou 86, Aok111111 Ex.,.... 76
a...... 124, Jocluonville 122
Co\p~e 123, Fcllo.,hip of Christion
AlhlacoiOI
Gnmblina Sc II, VASDA 97
JamCI Madison 111, O..bla National
Juniors70
LSU 94, ~ Five Amai" 19
Minihan Oil97,1ll.auc.ao 91
Mdbal:mc 98, ArizGM SL 9S
Michi&amp;an SL 99, Adtlaelln Attion75

Foo,..,PIIL ......242 1049 4.3 '69
T.'l'boalu, Baf.l92 134 4.3 36
'Milio,Hoo. ..... l63 113 4.1 44

5
6
4
1
7

. GnN,Cla.-.IU . . 4.2 52
. Jliip. Mio. .... ,.i73 626 3.6 22

~EXPOS

-Nomod
Pujoii _ _ _ ...ST
.. JLuio
btaob eoaola. Aaaouced &amp;hat J&amp;rfJ'

_,__..___
...
ho---

--·-~--...,
...
r ....,llaooi.-...m-..
..u . - . TniW On. Wlillhcu8 and

Karia Pot&amp;er, .pkchwl, lO \JM: SoaW.

plol""lo
Toodod Al&lt;cmo
CGotU,pilclw. 101&gt;111-faro p~o,..

I

Mo.·Kians City 74, B - o 53
Moouno93,-....MU70
New Mtaico $L 95, llllmlni.a 74

All. Y._ A... LG TD

b._.. ..... "" I

Ydo. A... LG TD

644 9.9 47
656 12.4 72
m 1o.9 :10
592 11.1 55
767 16.0 67

6
0
9
0
4

-.1...
oad Mike 'l'boniu, pildloa; Rob
FiiJplld•k ..............~....... ,
oaollllb'--1,-._. .....

. USDIIL:AII Stan 109, V - 93

_, ........ -.-. ..........
r.. -

l'n·p h111lhall

-1o-- .................

COIIDIBUS, Ohio (AI') - Hae ao
lhe qioaollillw ....,. for lhe 2ht onnual Ohio Hiah SehGal Athldic Aaocia·
tioa. atate rootball p.. ,of&amp;:
•
.

y_. .

AU. c-. r ..
161 21:10
1211506
15217:19
174 2041
172~1

,..,..

-Dol. ·-·

..., .

E.

·

16 5
13 6
15 6
12 7
14 10

AIL Y._ A... LG TO
.231 1043 4.4 51 13

. lluJ,It.M .... 196 121 4.2 63

7
9
7

· I' 1 '""NYO 112 m 4.5 63
W - S.F...... I61 101 4.9 43
Cobb, T.B ........ .200 749 3.7 25

--

...,.

7

· -AIL ..........62 711 12.7 71
...... DoL .........JI 10:19 2o.4 17
· - A i i ...JI !fin 9.9 27
C.Culoo,li&amp;o.-49 642 111 44

WallaiOn 12

I

5

3
6

AtloolleDI. . . •

WLI'&lt;LGI
Odoaolo ............ .. .s 2 '714

;• Pb _____ ...........
. ..........2
. ......................... .2

.

4
4
4

.500
.500
.429

1.5
1.s
2

5
4
6

.333
.250

.'175.

2.5
2.5
3.5

C-'llloloU

' Cllil:op..................7
' M U -............5

2

2
3
4

. ........................ A
: Cbat.oae ...........- ....4
, CIBVELAND ........ .3
. ..............,.............. 2
: o-;o..................2

5

5
5

.771
.714

.m

.500
.375
.216

lJ

3J
4

.216

Pel.

4

M Mo u0 omo4
:. GoOioo S..oo ...........3
0

...

3.5
4

I
U
2.5
3

5

.444

3..S

6

.333

4.5

•:

Frlday;s KOI'tl

:.

l'billololpllia 129, Mllmi 121 (3 01')

••

Q,adcae. 117, Oolderl

·:

UW.97.W...95
101, MUm...• 100
104, 5-= rc99.
LA. LWn I :Ill, OU..F Ill (01')

. =::r.,.~

:,

••
•'

SUte II 0 (UT)

·Tbey played Saturday

•

Bollton.t1Atlanta, 7:30p.m. ·
PhiJ.W~• at New Jmoy, 7:30p.m.

•

.:•
•·•

.::

lllabll ........... 7&lt;:10p.m.

QoadoaouMiami, 7:30p.m.
011*o at New Y_., 1:30 p.m.
ClRVElAND 11 O.UU.1•30 p.m.

.·

s.n AmciUo lllloui\On, 1:30 p.m.
. _ ll Milwollbo, 9 p.m.
J fi: ' D'llt Deltv«, 9 p.m.
Dolroia " S.ul~ I0 p.m.
-IILA.Clil'P"', I0:30p.m.

•'

'\IlL

:·

WALESCONFERENCE

~

••
••
••
••

.

GB

.750
.647
I
.429
2.5
.216 . 3.5

•..................6 0 1.000
............................! . 1 .133
"', Selltlo ......................~ 2 .71-t
' · LA. LWn ..............4 3 .571
; LA. Clippora ...........4 4 .500
SiG

••

::
..•

hlrldl: ......
W L T I'll. CPGA

.,.; T • • ~ ........ - ' 14 4 3
Nfthftfy ........ 11 I 0
•' N.Y. . _ . . ... 9 I 2

=·

31 9!5 72
22 6A 66

:Ill 70 7l
..~ N:Mf#?....... I I 3 19 12 71
·~ N.Y. llliDMI-··
·~

=~

w.r· ,.x........

7 10 1
1 12 1

Somo . . . _ lllld lllmU - . .....

AI•-J'ridar

At Wai'IW Mollenkapf'Siadl..,.

U 65 71 ,
1!1: 67 12

Au.. Dhtdoa
• • ......- .... - ...... 14 !5 2 30 96 68
:-.. Qaeblo ............... 11 s 4 26 91 73
•• ................ 10 5 2 22 ?5 60

...-~-

I

....

.........

........

' . ~...... c....

, T - • y .......

• ' 1L IAolo --- -·

WLTPia.GfGA '
12 9 o ~ ~75
5
10 6 3 - - . I
t012D6465
t 9 3 21 69 '6
911 2 ~ ~ ~
6 II 3

,..DttWa.

·.

.

:·' ·

&lt;I Rogio Willilml, ....... for·

. . . : , ... . .

2 21 90 71
2 21 96 77
2 22 n 66
3 11 60 74
I IS 71 ;;
I
' 56
•

Frlday'IIIC-

-·-~,--1
Olen*'
· wrw.,.a. s

..... Nov. 19.

..

OOl 'EN STATB WARRIORSPloood
Spnonll. . - . ... injured

At Mo.t V1n011

lUI.

.

R&amp;G FEED AND SUPPLY CO.
399 W. MAIN

At Piqua Wwta SIMI.,.
5&lt; llonoy 31, Cadorvillll!

l'ran'&gt;at'l ion'&gt;

Pleasant, WV
PhOne: 675-1160

Point

'Evel}'lliuv _To Build An~'

992·2164

.._ated

oWon..., .......,...

·boet.rr- .......

IUIICNSAS ar\' ~ Rcleucd
BUI 1-.
' boot.
'

BOSTON RED SOX - l'lltdluedlhe
eontrac~. r1 Jim B)'!d, inficldu.

Y'oRl

NEW
JETS - Placed At
Toan, wide- rocoiver. an iajurod nRrYC.
AdiYiiled Dale 0.•0... wide receiver,

wish Torey Lowllo, infielder, on a
mc-ycu contnc:t.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Pur·
chucd ·Lhc conLraCU of DoaJ Harria,
'Idler, l'llillliaU. lhinl -...,., ........
calebcr, and Bob Hamelin, 6nt

....
.:g
- illjw.d
Pl.o:ed
Adam Walker, naoninJ b«k.

Starting Nou. 24, We WUI Be Open 'TU 9 P.M.
Tuesdays To Accommodate Those Who Work

on

rennin.,

buanon.
NEW YORK YANICEI!S -Apod ID
tetma wilh Mike Slanley, ca~hU. on a
tw.rear oantract.. Pwdlucd. 1!. coa&amp;neu
or Aa4y Coot ..... HUUGQ, Mariano
,Ri\'lft w Damiztao I--. pilcbm. R.UI..u Davia. thUd MIMIIDin; and Robert
Eenhoom, Uortltop. AnoOUDced that
Kma Rind. bold lrlifter .........bilill·

.

(304) 675-1675

n ....y

NallouiJiotktJ Laa•
.
BOSTON BRUINS - Cloimod Dominic Lavoi .. dclteteman, off waivon
flflll the Ollawa Sauton.
NEW JERSEY DI!VD.S - Rocollod
Dan Em.1, cca~cr, rna UUea of lllo
Americaa Hockc7 Luaae. AlliJned
Kmn Todd. eacr, 10 Utica for cOildi·
tiollia&amp; purpona. Su1pcndctl Doua

don ....,.m- in lhe ployor .............
·~· ia . . . . the cqmilat:ioo dlecU.vt Dec. 1 10 btl::a:M ......... trainer
farlhoflariU Modiao.

25TH 81: JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT

(roiNT P~ MEDICAL CEN'Il:RI

--r.
:J1Xns

B~.

fanrud. fcr..tuia&amp; 10 ~1ft
10 Ulk:o.

BLIJES-Aai&amp;ned Dave
MocbJ, lei\ ~-~.!-" .rlhe - -w~o ii1S- R.cc.ued aob

OAKLAND ATIILETICS- Pur·

clllibl&gt;lobla, Ciu-

•. r..,... s-""' DoW~ z...

-·
O'DELL$
..•
,
....
,
eo.,.,.,.
•..:r-·,,, •..,,.

cauro. pi~hcd; t.lay MQlina, cau:ber;
ancl Mar* Armu Md Soott Lydy, cut·

-..-.. ........

Joyce. left. wina, from Moncton·or the

lEW AT

F

rom The Bahamas to the~
bean to the Mexlcan Riviera,
only one cnme Une ~the "Fun" and
the bestva:ation value- Camlval!
Indulge yourself in a"Fun Ship~
vacation and enjoy Unllmlted shipboard actlvtues, exddng nlghdfe,
dazzlinglz V~e revues,
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ou~S~aldftgservlce.

.,... fantaltic gu
Ill ll!IPI'Khle ... llyll
dellgn. E'*IIY tilden~ ~
BlU, Mel ciMn bumlng. SlyiM
lnciKie
COilllllled, " lllndlng, 2 .... 3•11ded. .....

..mo..

....

cl.,.,..andln-.

. . . _ _ .... O'Dell-.

The w..nlh of wood•••

•

the convenlai'ICI
of gu.
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c.ramJc

179.95NAT

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

,

, 211.15LP

Choose from twelve Camlvalo
"Fun siup• cruLies ea:h Weelc: 3 and
4 day llahama5 cruises from Miami
and Port Canaveral. 5, 6 and 7 day
Camlval Crime &amp; Orlando Vacallons
10 The~ and Central Ronda
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cruLies from Miami and SanJuan.
7 day Mexiam Riviera crulles from

49.99

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SAVE $1 ,000 PER CABIN. STOP BY TODAY!

~e

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Phone: 446-0699

199.95NAT Glo~.Deluu229.95NAT
tl"

••I L..

O'DELL

........
"'"

Fratlsdo.k

Ml.lliLP

co.

"BEST LITTLE LIMBER YARO IN ror.w.•
VINE STREET MRD AVE.
134 E.IIIAIN IT.
' cw.iJPOLII ....1271
POMEROY 1121-

AT
(

.

RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande women's basltetball team's 82-62 win over
Spalding (Ky.) Friday in the opening round of tbe Bcvo Francis Oassic in Lyne Center was a ''perlcct
elUIIIIple," as fll1l-year roach Dave
$malley put it, of a concept that
will mart the team's future foriunes: balance.
· ."We had threC players who hit
double figures and a whole host on
our team who were in the Seven,
eight or nine point range," SmaUey
remarked. "I really believe, on a
given
we will always have
three in
ble (igures, but tt won't
always be the same three. Thatthe team has a terrific sense
of balance."
The Redwomen, who went to 2l ·and advanced to the championship game of the ·tournament's
women's division Saturday ni~ht
with Midway (Ky)., had to utilize
iheir growing identity as a welti&gt;iled machine against Spilldfug in
the Pelicans' fHSt-evcr game in the
ichool's history~ 'fhat Michelle
fries' club exercised a physical
game and matched Rio Grande's
transition approach indicated· the
Eagles will be a force to reckon
lr.&lt;ith iR~f~ture.
.
: Spalding s comeback came m
ihe second half after the Redwom·
en shot out to an early lead and
posted an 18-pointadvanlage at the
balf, with _Siqlhanie_Gudorf~hing l2 pomiS alone m the operung
iO mmutes.
: But the visitors' Holly Riney
exploded for 19 second pc:rio&lt;l
PolltlS 10 spade the Pelicans game
into a real threat. Rio Grande, getting top scoring from Gudorf,
Michelle Crouse and Lori Hamilton, succeeded in keeping Spalding
at least 20 points behind for the
remainder or the contest.
: "We ended up wiMing a decisive game with 20 points, but
Spalding came in here pil,ying
~xceptionally well in the second
~; malting us get iRto the defen-

ni!::!,

means

1hjured lisL

You mUll -

31t.lliLP

- t boosts R.edwomen
.eam. eiffi0~
'to 82 •6.2 vzctory
•
•
ov·er· .sP.a ldzng
'T'

loklermgJron a

... '1111_

• •

lncludft 1mn. 3 dlaerent

... In lJinlo

Upa,ll:llln-co•
IDideJtng al4

Ill I \I!'" I l'f 11'1 I \I\ r In I'll· 1.1\ I I\ 1111 \\ fll{ll l'
'

sive mode we needed to be in,"
Smalley said. "I'm very pleased
with the things I saw, but there was
a bit of a problem on our offense.
We need 10 be more patient in get· tinf. off our shots.
'This being our· second home
game there were a lot of butterflies,
this being the anniversary or ·Bcvo
Francis and a special occasion, but
we ticked off the butterflies and
P.layed well." the coach added.
'There was exceUent suppon from
the bench , a very good team
effort."
The poblem Smalley referred 10
on offense was reflected in the final
statistics for shooting, which
showed the Redwomen with 36.6
percent (26-71, 2-16 from the three
for 12.5 percent), just edging the
final totals for the Pelicans, who
were 36.1 pen:erit (22-61, 1-5 from
the tiRe' for 20 percent). Additionany, Spalding outboarded the Redwomen by one (29-28), with JUney,
DanieUe Burden and Angela Smith
brin~ring down seven apiece.
Hamilton and Amy Reynolds won
·honors in the reboundmg department. each credited with eight.
Rio Grande was more successful
at the foul line with 77.8 percent
(28-36), while Spalding sank 17 of
its 32 opportunities for 53.1 percenL

In women•s action w-lier Fri·
day Midway's Karen Frasure hit
16 :Oarlters to help the Eagles
reverse a halftime lead he~d by
Salem-Teikyo (W.Va.) and WID 63·

56. Salem·'reikyo, led by Regina
Marshall 's 16-point finish, met
Spalding in ihe consolation round
Saturday afternoon.
Box scores:
RIO GRANDE (82) - Kim
Sowers, 1-0-2; Gena Nonis, 0-7-7;
Stacey Ritter •. 3-1-7; Michelle
Crouse, 4-1·1-12; Amy ReYIIolds,
1-0-2; Mmiua Blevins, 1-4-6; Tricia Collins, 3-0-6; Angie Cress, 1·
2-4; Stephanie Gudorf, 5-1-3-16;
Lori Hamilton, 4-6-14; Ginger
Smith, 1-4-6. TOTALS 24-2-2882.
SPALDING (62.) - Danielle
Burden, 3-3-9; Tracy Ewing, 4-0-8;
Holly Riney; 6-7-19; LaTonya
Smith,l-0-2; Aimee Snyder, 0-1-1 ;
Saundra Brown, 1-1-2-7; Angela
Smith, 4-1-9; Tanya Farmer, 2-3-7.
TOTALS 21·1·17·62.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
43, Spalding 25.
SALEM-TEIKYO (56)- Jean
Dennison, 0-4-0-12; Shannon
Minor, 2-0-4; Genie Reese, 3-1-211; Shana Cade, 1-2-4; Regina
Marshall, 8-0-16; Pam Brown, 1-1·
3; Stephanie Shine, 3-0-6.
TOTALS 18-5-5-56.
• MIDWAY (63) - Shannon
Morris, 1-1-2-7; Margaret
Woodard, 1-1-3; Jill Karsner, 1-13; lenny Atwood, 3-1-7: Vernita
Trapp, 2-1-S; Karen Frasure, 5-6·
16; Heather Johnson, 3-1-4-13;
Andrea Brown, 3-3·9. TOTALS
· 19-2.-19-63.
Halftime score: Salem-Teikyo
29, MidWliy 21.

fullest to stop McMaster's &amp;ggres:
sive style.
"'That was a surprise to me,"
Lawbo!ll noced as Rio~ went
on to its third straight win of the
new campaign.
"From our end, we had 10 play
hard," he continued. "Our people
played hard and were much better
defensively than they were last
week. But you have to give
McMasler credit because they erealed JXOblems for us."
Tlie win in the opening round of
the 1Oth Bevo Francis Classic in
Lyne CCntu propeUed t!te Redmen
iniO the championship game Saturday night with regional and MidOhio Conference rival Shawnee
Stale, which cariier edged Pikeville
(Ky.).
While Rio Grande has rolled
over previous Canadian opposition
in the classic, McMaster employed
a "very Americanized" approach,
Lawhorn noted. Rio Grande seized
the lead early and never let go, but
Joe Raso's Eagles remained a
threat all' the way. The visitors'
attack resulted in a 22-point fmish
by Derek Howard and 21 poiRts
from Jeff Zownir, who also had
Seven of McMaster's 32 rebounds.
Rio Grande countered with its
uademarlt up-tempo style, answering McMaster's ~~~~ism with a

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GALW. COUNTY
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JAMES A•• KIMBERLY
BUSH, MANAGERS
PHONE3U 1103

strong inside pme. ,..Uttin&amp; ill a
balanced .effort from lhc swten
and the bench. Powdllcd aD olllis
teainmates with 22 poiRts, '!'bile
center Troy I&gt;ooalda1 reaSICIICCl
his dominance of ·the bmnls widl
l)ine of Rio Grande's 38 for the
game, bacltcd by ICVCIIIIICIIC lio!n
Walters~
·
. The Redmen led by 11 a1 lhc
halfandwercsnccessf•diRbolding
off their guests wi.th a 20-poillt

c:usllioa. But Rio Grmde, never
oac 10relax ill sucll.mmms,ltept
11p lhe p
e _. benefilied Crain
the inside sboolini .of transfer
I dAoal Hanis ia tbe pme's wan-

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fllft1ll

(See IU!DMJ!IIi 08 C-4)

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W RNI G
· NO UNTING
NO TRESPASSI G
This notice Is a war•i•g to any
and all persons t•at •• •••ling
or trespasslag will .. allowed on
. the lands ef Cro. . Ci!J Mi•ing,
Inc., located i• Iaiita and
·
Lawre•c• Cou•ties•
.Anyone found •••ti•g or
trespassing o• t..se la•lls will
. •e prosecuted to t•• f•llest
extent of ••• law, i• accordance
with Sectio• 2911.21 .of t•e o•io
Revised Code• .
CROWII CITY Mllllll, INC.

I

· After a late 7~ Wolves' run cut
dte BuUets' lead to 102-100, Grant
sank two free throws with l:l7left
to tum the momentum. Michael
Adams hit four free throws in the
fmal minute to clinch the victory
for the Bullets, who are now 3-0 in
games at tbe Target Centu. Adams
finished with 24 poiRts, including
3-of-3 from three-point range. . ·
Chuck Person scored 23 pomts
for the Wolves (2-5).
Trail Blaaen 104, Klags 99
Cliff Robinson SCQred 21 points
and the Trail Blazcri remained tbe
only unbeaten team in the NBA
with a victory over the Kings.
· · The Blazers improved to 6·0.
Sacramento (4-S) ha~ wQn seven
Straight home games, dating bact
to last season.
. Wayman Tisdille had 23 poiRts
and eJaht rebounds for the Kings.
76ers 119, Heat 128, JOT
: Tim Perry hit a driving layup
with 14 seconds left in the third
. overtime to lead the 76ers over tbe
Heat.
.
· Jeff Hornacek had 32 points for
Philadelphia (2-4), which won its
fll'lt home game or the season iR
''
u : - : -~-•-a;ecpull.......
.......... at •'""' Spec !ium in 10 contests.
.
Aftet Pell'y m.OOthe game-win·
ninllhot. Glen Rice, who hlld 35
po1n11 ror Miami (3-4), wu fouled
with five leCOIIds to go. He IIIBde
his first shot but misJed the second.
Milnl Jebounded, but Rice miaed
.t the buzzer.

••

ZENIX VIDEO
FINDS THE RANGE -Rio Graude's Stejlbanle Gudorf.llnds
tbe range under lbe hoop for tbls layup during Friday's Bevo Fran·
cis Classic tounlllllent game against SpaldiRg Unlversltr, which the
Redwomen won 82-62. Gudorr contributed 16 pnmts in this
encounter.
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(excluding Wax Boxas) GOOD THROUGH DEC. 24, 1192•
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Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

State Farm lnsuranceCompames • ~ ome Ofl•ces: Bklominglon, Illinois

1

•

"We WllOcd bard, but I don:!
know if we did it smart." RaiD
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wekaneclfromtllaexperience19

me

NEW PATIENTS • W:ALK·IN8 WELCOIIIt

l'nmlho-l'oolbollillj
SAN FllANCISCO

McMaster University, the three
was definitely a part of the plan as
the Redmen - panicularly m Matt
Powell's six of 11 performance
from the outside - used illll the
·

..1.

(Continued from C-2)
l8d 20 in rHSt half.
,
: Schrempf led the Pacers with 22
P.Dints and 11 rebounds.
.
:Hornets 117, Warriors 110, OT
: Dell Curry scored Charlotte's
fmt seven points iR overtime and
rookie Alonzo Mourning had 34
P.Din~ as the Hornets defeated the
Wamors.
: After Billy Owens' layup ga~e
tbe Warriors a 102-100 lead tn
overtim.e, Curry made a long
_iumper to tie the score. He followed with a steal and layup and a
three-point play resulting from
~other layup put the Hornets up
\07-102 with 3:5llefL
• Larry Johnson added 24 points
(Dr the 1fomets (4-4) and Cutry had .
23, ·u in overtime. Chris Mullin
Scored 46 points for the Warriors
(3-6), losers in six of their last
seven~
.
: Jullets 108, Timberwolves 100
· Harvey Grant soored ·u of his
tiamc-high 25 points in the founh
quarter to lead the undennanned
Bullets over the Timberwolves.
: Washington (3-5) won its third
game in four outings after an 0-4
start despite missing inj'ured
starters Rex Chapman and Pervis
~Dison. The BuUets dressed just 10
P.layers and have three on the

OFnCEHOURS
Monday and Thunday, s:so ·a.m..€1:00 p.m.
Tuesday, 8:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Wednellday 81: Friday, 8:30a.m. ·Noon
Saturday Appolntmentl Available

-l'locod
~. "'injunod
reaerve. Aclivaed l.WCwa Wilaon, 1\lll-

't

tools,thethree-fx&gt;intshot, wouldn't
be used as much as it had been in
the pasL
But in Rio Grande's 112-88
defeat Friday of Ontario-based

NBA games.~.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
.. ·WEIGHT CONTROL

r.;;.;~· PACKERS
v..c. w....._ ........

· RIO GRANDE- Prior 10 the
opening of the season University
of Rio Grande men basketball
coach John Lawhorn pedicled tbat
one of the Redmen's top offensive
.

.

F.AMlLY PRACTICE

lho

Na.m:Jn, rMnaJ« 11 R~CII&amp;a' of tho
Jntc:mali.arW Lea~ to Ql undefined poloop dub.

s~~o

312 6th Street

ROBERT M.·HOLLEY, M.D.

DE'B.OIT UONS - Pkced JUnior
, tl, oa iajlnd nRrVC.
Acdvl&amp;e4 Willie Clar. C'tt±±, from

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POMEROY, OHIO

CAROLINA
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A Happy Thanksgiving Wish From

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Jlombil, t...oN. ACiiYilod Kmn J...,.
............ fnnlho ia;u..t liiL

Newark Catholic 13, Howard East

••

.• ColpJ ............ 13 6
· IAI\qll!l ....... 13 6
· • v - ........ 10 1
t" B
7 9
,.- W....... ........... 7 12
Sool-........... 415

PRO

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DETROIT PISTONS - Suopcndool
DrMio ........ '"""""· m.w;,.;lo:lyll!d .

YellowJ_S_

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COIIUOCl

c..-

. : .CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
' TDa

Tools
for the

NalJGMia.WbeU Aaloc:lal!Gn

Atlowll. . Gna~
lklkll Stadium
Libofty
:10, Fmn"'l SL J..q&gt;h

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I

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l•l!edloll

CozyGio

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Aa·

.DENVER NlJOOI!TS- Ewadod 1bo

•

&lt;

~ FRANCISCO owrrs -

.....

8

Sam Perkins scored 26 points
and Wonhy 23 for the r..kers (43). Divac had 19.
·
Scottie Pippen supponcd Jor•
dan"s scoring show with 2S points '
ror !be Bulls (7-2). .
Jordan has scored SO or more
points 23 times iR his career, tee·
ond only to Wilt Chamberlain in
NBA history. Chamberlain turned
nationally, was led by Anthony the lriclt 118 times.
By ne Alloclated P.rea
·
Th=-CIU811tn of tbe preseuon Reed with 18 points and Matt
In other NBA games, it was
· NV semilinllists have been deter- · Greene and Carlin Hartman with Utah 97, Indiana 95; Charlotte 117,
15 points apiece.
mmed, and two or the three Golden State 110 in overtime;
The Green Wave lost guard Kim · Washington 108, Minnesota 100;
Indiana aild UCLA - had 10 fig~t
off a pair of stunning comebacks Lewis, their leading scorer last Portland 104, SBCnlllleniO 99, and
yw-, with a knee injury early in the Philadelphia 129, Miami 128 in
jUSt to get tllere.
Indiana was leading Tulane by fmt half.
triple ovenirne.
No. 24 UCLA 73 .
36 points midway through .the ~­
·
Jazz97,Pacers95
.
Taas-EI·I'lllo 7l
ond half when coach Bobby Knight
John Stockton hit an 18-foot
Tyus Edney converted one of jumper with 1.6 seconds to play~
puHed his starters . .The Green
Wave answered with a 19-0 run two liee throws with four seconds lifting the Jazz over the Pacers fOf
and eventually puUed within eight remaining to lift the Bruins past the their first win in Market Square
points before the reinserted reswgent Miners. Ed O'BIIlDOIIIed Arena since 1985.
·
Hoosiers starters saved a 102-92 the Bruins with 19 points, includ·
Indiana
(4-3)
l1ad
three
oppon.u;
ing a three-point play in the fmal nities 10 break a 9S-9S tie m the
jumped out to an 18-2 26 seconds that tied the game at 72. final minu~. but Detlef Schrempf
Shon Tarver added 18 points missed two off-balance runners and .
lead, but tiTEP came bact and led
the game 72-66 before UCLA 81\d MitchcU Buder 16 for the Bru· was tied up on another drive by
.
scored the last seven points of the ins.
;
Johnny Melvin led the Miners StockiO!l.
game ina 73-72 win.
Utah's
(6-2)
Karl
Malone
led
all
In Friday's other game, No. 9 (l-1) with 24 points and Eddie scoretS with 34 poiniS and bec;ame
FloridA Stale 1311 past No. 19 Iowa Rivera added 18.
the 6lst player m NBA historY&lt;C?
No.9 Florida St. 109
Stale 109-86. ·
score
15,000 points. He entered the
No. 19 Iowa St. 86
In the semifmals Wednesday at
game
16 shy of the plateau and nctBobby Sura scmed a career-high
Madison Square Garden in New
York. Indiana (2~) will play Flori- 34 points, Doug Edwards added ~2
(See NBA oli C-3)
da Stale (2-0) and UCLA (2~) will and Sam Cassell20 as Florida State
play the winner of today's game shot 60 percent Cot the second
between Se1011 Hall and Tennessee, straight game.
bOth~~- .
.
Sura made 14 ·of 20 shots,
including
four from three-point
Forwards Alan Henderson and
range
10
go
along with a game-l!igh
Calbezt Cheaney led No. 4 Indiana
10
rebounds.
He scored 20 of his
wiih 28 81\d 21 points, respectively,
points
by
halftime
as the Seminoles
including two free throws apiece
took
a
56-35
lead.
The Seminoles
that clinched the victory in the
meed
to
a
28-9
lead
and Iowa State
closing seconds.
never
mounted
a
serious
challenge.
Tulane (1-1), ranked 17th

n.OUJ!.ctd Ill• raipalioa. of A1 R01en,
prcoidaU .... _ . . .........

Division V

.••••-.

I

'

AI Harhllle Lab Slldllnn
lndq&gt;mdaxe 22, Dol!on 14

.................. 192119576
5 13 I II 51 7'J
.~ CJaaW1 ............... l 11 1
3 43105

1

1M

Mullldpal Stadiu•
....... 4t, Tllora,.lo Sherldon 12
AI Dl,_ WelcoiM Slldl•m
Genn111lo'WI'I VaUey Viw 28, Mm:mw
Lillle Miuni 21

•' .flln(,ft ...........

,

1ob.aa., n&amp;cb•. S~ed JU¥11 Browa
and VlDDe Hani1. w "nn.ao aanlraCII
with Las Yeau or tho Pacl6c Coa•l

Holmoo6

·· -

•~

s........ Erik Sdo-

fioWooo; -

and Tim Worrell, pitdaan; ud Brian ,

- ... LoU C.lholic 24.
Unulino21
· At Mart.a
Slodhno
Uma. Bath ~3. Mil enburJ Weat

CAUFORNIA ANGELS- Aped "'

...,_. . ................2 5 .216
- Dlllu...................... l 5 .167
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cbaaed the coatnCII of Steve Diz011,

Dlvlslcm m ·,.

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2

: WESTERN CONFERENCE

. TWL
llub ........................6 2
. ..................4 2

~bio-ISf. LOUIS CARDINALS -

'

•
•

a... .,

a....,

At Trof Manorial Staclum
Sc Muys M..narial 35,1loy~on Clwninad•Jullenne 0

EASTERN CONFERENCE

11ew r .................4
• ...... ...................3
w;~$
3

PllTSBUROH PIRATES - Apod
widl Dlw
'd• Clll
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At Dublin Sta,U•m
Columbu&amp; Brooi.have~ ll, Columbus

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tocba, lltlloWoo; .,d lflllo.... lllld
Tam Nla: ·p. IIUifilld.l.

AI ron-outh Sparta•

NG. Y._ A... LG TO
llhupo, O.B .......61 1022 15.11 76 7

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~.Phil. .... .2119
-.All. ..... .253
. Cllaodlor,l'll&amp;. ..21.5
. - - -.. .211

...

I'IIILUII!LPHIA PHIU.II!S
- ......
.....
..........
___

At Y01111~ &amp;o.rdrnlln
. SputuSiollum
Looio&gt;ill&amp; 34,
6
At Fremonl HannCIIIi St.dlu•
F~ 26, Elyrio WOil 16

·NATIONAL CONFERENCE
q...-.

J. . OOIIIIICU
"
MiUMIIIIill,laPi~ lllipollllilll, Joe

10
. , .... =

R... _

PlaJOI'
No.
H... .... .65
Daoooa,Hao ....~3
Oiviaa, Hoo. ... ...s1
- S D.. ...SO
- . SD........4S

I ....... ~0- WI!V'ID

aod Bo Keaaody, .pi&amp;tbln:, to C«ltrletl

Indian• 102. Tulone 92

Leaders

Plocod '

for,..._&lt;lamaoltimhil-·
diticlaol .....,.._ Sif'olCIIrio B.......

PreseasoaNrf

WuhinJioa at New OdoM&amp;, 9 p.m.

up ..,.Do,.

CINCINNA11 REDS -

0

Sewanee 14, Lbyola, Mel. 5I

Mooday

s------CJliCAOO CUBS--- lito

- &lt; I Dow Sow I

w-.-.

South

~

... lYioo.-.-.

-PbiiDoopllla.-W,...SMou

t 'olle:..:t· ha~kl'l hall

N.Y. loa 11 New l!qlood, 4 p.m.
Dollu.
p.m.
DaaYer .. ~ · Jlaidcta. 4p.m.
S...Fnac:iloo•t L.A. ~4 p.m.
Tanpe Bay 11 S. Di4IIOa 4 p.m.
lWiu City .. - l p.m.

..-u_.. --l'luiluocl

the eoab'lcu
Brim
Bilk,
Silo"" _of.J)Ciftaiei!Uiou,.
_.... _ . . .
_

N.Y. -•c:.Jpy.I:IOp.m.
N.Y. ..._otW-I:IGp.m.

Atluu at Bull"alo. I p.m.
ClRVElAND • M
••· 1 p.m,
lloaailllaNCINNAll.lp.m.
O...B•y•QicuD.lp.m.

;$:$:~·

· lluit

Re·dmen's treys_come in handy in downing McMaste·r 112-88

in Jordan's arm after Divac's flee
•'When that last shot left my
throws, but Jordlm l!liaed a desper- hand, I knew it wasn't going iR,"
ation thlec-point try at the buzzer. said Jordan. "I was hopiRg for a
from 2s feeL
curvebllll."

Indiana, UCLA tight comebacks
to·reach NIT semifinal round

_._

Tiley playH Saturday
-

Miami. r p.m.

~· C3

In Bevo Francis Classic action,

Phi~adelphia,

a.-w. •

SUndaJ nmia Santlnel

. %MILE WEST OF HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

· OLD RT•.35, GAWPOUS • 441 2411 ar 1-ICIMJ2.0311

�'
, Noven'lber 22, 1~

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ott Point Pl....nt, WV

.

son~ ~~.T;~=y~hi:;

Notre Dame lost four starters

from coach Jolin MacLeod's first
FightinJ Irish squad that finished
18-IS tn reaching the NIT title
game.

.
assault, the affidavit says, and later
retumed IOIIIe boer·IOIIccd clothes

.
to the alleged victim and another
woman who was in.the room. . I

could be in lbe picture.
Evansville iC:. favored in the
Midweatm~CollcgiateConference.

Quinn arrested in connection with alleg~d rape ;

:Redmen win ..•

·

SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE
1

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PHONE 614-446-9777 or 446-2484

The
MOSSBERG 500 1.2
GAUGE COMBO
Wllh 28 VR ACU Choke and
24 Inch DHI' Barrel

) four-point halftime lead by
;pikeville to win 80· 76. Travis
iMury hit 19 martm for the Bears,
~bile Pikeville's Jody Thompson .
led all ICOias with 23.
: Pikeville met McMaster in the
=:'!~on game Saturday after-

0
·
. ONLY
R••.J-.aton, Federal,
· •RI, Winchester,
Active and Brenntb
Slugs in Stock'

. ~·s Shawnee State crew upset

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II
TAROIMOIOIS ·
FOR YOUR NEW 01 .·
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.

• · 110 GRANDE (112) - LaM-

.bat lflrris, 6-1·1·16; LyrideU Sny- .
)ler, 1..0.2; Brett Coreno, 0-2-0-6;

!Kyle Schroer, 1-2-0-8; Jack Mor~. J.J..()..S; Walter Stephens, 0-3li"lO; Juon Curtis, 0-2. -2; Matt
U. 2-6..()..22; Jeff Brown, 4-2·
T'IDI Christian, 1·1·2'7; Troy
iDtJNIJdf!OII, 10--0-20. T&lt;&gt;TALS 26)1+112.
.
• McMASTER (88) - Marc
:SonlfQP, 1..()..2; Jeff Zownir, 34·3· ·
:21.; Derek Howard, . 6·3-1-22;
~athan Aryev, 1-2-0-8; Shawn
!Francis; 1-2-4; cesare Piecini, 6-1~3; Jack Vander Pol, 7-1·15; Greg
Caldwell, 1•1·3. TOTALS 26·9·9·

Jl

.

• 'pa1hl.._t score: Rio Grande
lt7, McMu&amp;er 36.

.
•

.

.

·CHRISTIAN SC.ORES - iuo Grande center Tim qristlan (50)
goes between McMaster's Lauce Postma (left) and Derek Howard
(right) ror two of bis seven points during Friday nl;ht's Bevo Fran·
cis Classic tournament contest against the Canaduin team, which
the Redmen won 112-88.

/.

-' -Sports briefs--

Taylor Motors
Chrysler·Piymouth
Dodg..Nissan

A Happy Thanksgiving Wish From

state Route
13 &amp; 33 &amp; 550
Athena- 594-3528
·Horne 949-2394

l{OBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D ..
FAMILY PRACTICE ,

' SHAWNEE STATE (80)b8is Millet,.2·1-S; John Dailey,l·
-0 5; Travis Merry, 4-3·2·19; .
I Lisath, 4·3·11; Mike Hel3-1-16; Ryan Hudson;2-2-6;
~Kenley, 2-0-4; Bryan Dyer, 3,.7; Tracy Claxon, 2-1-5; .Darius
~illiams, 1·0-2. TOTALS 24· 7•
[U-11.
r PIKEVlLLE (76) - Jody
:J'bo~pson, 1-6-3-23; Danny
J'Oelinitz, S.,O..IO; Rodney Fuller, 4e:0-17; Shannon Keene, 0-1-1;
Ouis Plmnmer. o-3-3; Brian John~. 2-1~9-16; Jeff Peters, 2·2-6.
fOTALS 14-10-18-76.
, Ha11lime ~~eore: Pikeville 39,
Sllawaee
State 35.
,,

O{FICE HOURS
Monday and Thtinday, S:SO a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Tuesday, 8:30 a,.m. • 9:00p.m.
W.edneaday It· Friday, 8:SO:a.m. ·Noon
saturday Appointments Available
Starttng Nov. 24, We Will Be Open 'TU 9 P.M.
Thesdays To Accommodate
Those Who Work
.

.

BER

BAUM ,; LU
CHESTER

985·3301

{POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

WE ARE YOUR ZENITH
SALES AND SERVICE
. HEADQUARTERS
TOSHIBA &amp; DRAKE
SATELLITE SYSTEM
SALES AND SERVICE
'

wanr.ed to make the
decilion prior to the winter meet·Ina•· Tbe next scheduled m11jor
111pe n.eetil1g is IICI fOI' Dec. 9 at
~ilville, Ky., two dax~ before
~ deadline to reopen the agree·
~~ With the Ma.jor ~ Base·
1*1 Playen Aaocialion. . . .

~

Ridenour
'•\

915·3307

Rlchll'd Jacolls.

'.

·

Bay, the team •

announced.

GAS SEiiiCE
Ntlua. .

753-1955

.

,,

r

of the N~w York Y~ees. said he

plished. I have the highest regard

basic differences when it came to

and former executive VIce prendent witll. what' the team has accom ,

had. no 1mmedtate plans; and
declined further comment.
'_'The~ ~lease has to speak
for 1tsclf, h!l s_wd.
.
• Jacobs S81d m the release thll1 he
respected Bay, ~ut said tlie two
clashed over runmng the learn.
''He ha~ han~h:d his job with
the u.tmost mr.egn~. and I appreci·
ar.e the contribution·he has ·made in
the past year, but we had some

teatn on the field," JaCobs said. "I
think an of the Indians' executives
- incl!l~g .Rick and me.- 3!!fCC
on the direcuon ~ team ts.talting,
and I'm very happy with tile
pro'kl:ess we' re making. This was
strictly a disaFment as to man·
asement style: '
.
Jacobs said in the release that no
other management changes or
changes in strategy are contemplat·
ed. He could not be reached by

.

By BOB GREENE
corners and talcing contiol of. the
'· NEW YORK (AP) - Monica net.
.
·
.
;~eles, Gabriela Sabatini and Marti- ·
And Martinez began to miss.
'na Navratilova in the semifmals of
It was just the combina(ion
;!he Virginia Slims Championships McNeil needed to carry her into
:is no surprise. But Lori McNeil? ·
today's semifinals.
;I ;Seles is, after ~II, seeking her ; &lt; Th~re was .only one .service
,lhird consecutive IItle in the year- orcak m the m1ddle set, tflat com·
:ending ioumament. Sabatini won in · ing in. the sixth game. And in the
1•1988, while the last of Navratllo- third set, McNeil won four straight
:va's titles at Madison .Square -Gar- games to take a 4- I lead. After
;den came in 1986.
dropPing her serve from deuce in
;: "If ~ebody would have said, . the siXth game, McNeil broke right
.:You have a good chance to be ~n back, then held at· 30 10 close OU(
'th.e semis,' I would have said· J, the match. ·
..
·
:have to play my fli'St mlill:h ~~gainst
. Just like the. tennis 1llll:l· ~ab;ui:(~teffi) Graf. That's g!lill!! to.be a n1's game~1nst Capnau wentt
hack an~~. ·
·
.
:litg match for me," McNeil Slid. .
·: But Graf, seeded ~din this
Sabatiru .was close !0 JleTI:ec!'-0~
:~3 million, 16-player tournament, in the openmg set ~l\IIISt Caiiriau.
:1s back in Germany now, having But she was helped ID!rnensely by a
·tx:en ousted by McNeil in the O)J!In- barr~~ge of IJIIfon:ed errors off the
:mg round. Then, to prove it wasn't racketofher.opJJOilen". · ·
•a fluke, McNeil pulled off another
As much as S~ ~mmated
:11 pset in the quarterfinals .Friday ~e first set, Capnan ~as m conttOI
:night, eliminatirig No. 8 Conchita' m the second, espectally afte! ~he
·Martinez of Spain 3-6, 6,3, 6·2.
fo~ game. She broke Sabatm1. at
:• Sabatini advanced to 'the semis IS m the. fifth, game., th~n leveled
'by stopping No. 7 Jennifer Capriati the mal!:h at one set apu:t;e y.-hen
:6-1, 3·6, 6-4. ·
sl_le broke her opponcntagam m the
;. Saturday, McNeil took on nmth gamc. 4
.
• •
'Navratilova in the first semifmal at
In the tliud set, both Sabatlm
. 'Madison Square Garden. Seles and . an~ Capriati played~ ~e top of
,Sabatini met in the other match.
the1r game, w1th Sabatini correc_tly
Navratilova has won 161 tour·
ents in her career, the most of
y player, man or woman. She has
)von more than $18 million, and
she has won the Virginia Slims
thampionships five times•.
~ McNeil, on the other hand, has
\¥on e..ight sing.les titles and sur·
passed the $2 million mark in
Qareer money with her showing in
this tournament:
,, · ·
: The unique best·bf-five-sets
final is set for ~unday afternoon.
the winner ·Of t!iis $3 million, 16. lilayer event pockets $250,000,
with $120,000 going I!! the runner~p. The losing se111ifinali$ts earn
$53,000 each.
·
.
• In the o~~tning set against Marline~. McNeil seemed to be a half·
ltep slow, reactiJl8 insr.ead of a,ntic·
!Paling.• letting her ~Jlllllish oppo·
aent dictate the pom~. And Mat·
iinet&gt;ilaile d!e'm981 of it.' J?&lt;?unding
her big groundstrokes e1ther for
winners or l!nforced errors.
.
: It paid off in the openit!g set. .but
McNeil finally got her pme g01ng,
llicing her backhand deep into the.

'

~yne Center slate · ·

This week's
lctivities schedule for Lyne Ceitter
ts as follows:
·
~
Gymnasium hours
1 Today- 1-3 .and 5·7 p.m.,
iiPen recreation
·
t Mondlly - 5;30-7 p.m., college
lion
·
·
F:esc1ay- closed for women's
ftaslcetball vs. Wilmil'lgton, 7 p.m.
: W~nesday- closed
• Thursday ...;... closed
;. Friday-closed
• Saturday closed for
women's basketball vs. Notre
pwne,2p.m.
• Sunday, No~. 29-clostd

decided 10 pressure her young foe

more by taking the net at every
chance..

Johnson's Supermaikets
CO.
Paint CI'Hk Baptist Chun:h
Robinson's Gallipolis Electric Gilne &amp; Elaine Armstrong
Service
Judge l'homae S. Moulton
Tom'a Auto Clinic
Saundtll'l lnaurance Co. ·
Tlw Korner ,
Lady. Bug Floral ~ Bank One
Adklna Auto Sales
Mt. Cannel Baptist Chun:h
Wholesale Meat Outlet
Patrick &amp; Ernestine Mundell
Paul Davies Jewelers
First Baptist Chun:h,
Star Bank • The Bastille
Rendvllle
Evans Enterprlsas, Inc.
Trledstone Baptist Church
Dr. Daniel &amp; Mrs. Edna
Dr. WI.lllam B. Thomas
Whiteley
Glenn 6 Corliss Millar
Ms. Sandra J. Pleasant
The Ohio Valley Bank .
Amyl's Floral Fashions
Company
Eva!I'-Mooralnsurance
Wiseman Insurance Agency
Mrs. Lukl B. Hampton
.Union Baptist Chun:h,
New Hope Baptist Chun:h .
BlaC:kfork
McCoy-Moora Funeral Home,
Dr. Francine Childs
Inc.
.
.
· .._ _...A-.n;;;do;;a;;;;llo;;l-.nd;;;l-.v;;;ld;;;u;;;;al;,;d;;,;o;,;,n;;;a;o;tlo,.n;;;s•d•u;;;r,.lilo.~l!l~,;th;;,;e....
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Most.l.ocltlon• Alto Welcome TheM

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·

CIJI'IItmll CIJB

~ports deadlines posted

~

.

·Buy any typ. of 8mm Rim and we wllltr.lllafor up to. 50 feet of FHm •
onVHST!1f18·0FFER E;xl'IRES DEC.31,1892
.
We have bl111k video top• avaUala for purchaoa, or bring In your •
own, unuoed ouper high gredollpe.

MI!!MqFtex ·

Note: All facilities in Lyne Cen·
·ter will be closed to the public until
~ov. 29 for the ThanksgiviJii boli;day. A new schedule will be pub;lished when classes ·resume on
rMonday, Nov. 30.

tuted to give readers plenty of time
act their photos baelri from the
llciiosraPbY studio of choice and
give the sl8ffs the opportunity to '
blisb tl!ose sports photos and
. cles during the appropriale seafor !hit sport. .
· ·

ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMASf

The Haskins-Tanner Clothiers

.

•'· The Gallip(lils Dally T.rlbune,
:The Dally Sentinel, the Point
'Pleasant Register and the SwutayTimes·Sentlnel valile the contribu. Jions their readers make to the
Sports sections of these papers, and
these conttibutions wiD continue to
be published.
·' However, certain deadlines for
lubmissions will be observed. The
deadline for submissions of local
baseball· and softball-rclar.ed phott!S and related articles, from T-ball
..to the majors, as well as ~ther.
spring and summer sports, ~&amp; · the
4ay of the last game of the World
lleries (this year, it was Opt. 24).
·Likewise, the deadline for pllotos
8nd relar.ed articles for football and
pther f!lll sports is the Sat~r:;l .
before the Super BO'II'I. The
•
lihe for photos 'and related artic1ea
for b11sketball and other winter
is the. last day of the NBA

telephone for further comme.nt
Bay, 48, took over as president
on Jan. 1 of this year replacint!'!
retiring Hank PeterS. 'say had
hired as executive vice president iD
September 1991 on the undersi8Ddt
ing he would replace Peters.
:•
Bay said at the ,time he was
leavmg college athletiCs because be
was ready for a change. He also
said he was excited about returning
to professional baseball . having had a brief r.enure with th~ George
Steinbrenner-era Yankees.
l
A product of the Universiiy o/
Michigan and Big Ten cham pi(See OFFICE on c;6) · . :;:

a-

Friends of the Central State UJJiversity Chorus
. would lik
. e to sincerely thank
. . the (oll. owina
.. -..,
patrons for making the concert at the Ariel
Theatre a success: .
'

,..,,.
.,,

.

~ These deadlines have been Insti-

CHESTER ·

. ~president and chief ~rat-

McNeil defeats Martinez to become
~Virginia Slims' surprise semifinalist

C.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Sunday nmes . Sentlnei-Page--(:45

bs ~1::
ncding~ ~ar 1e · . 1!1(1 o _ICCI' for 11 .months, res1gned v.:as leavtng t!'e Indians bec!IUse of fo~ t~e team and its future,'' 'Day the operntion of the front office,' '
aco
CliJ!IIII
ro .~!&gt; Friday.
·. .
differences With Jacobs.
Slid m a news release issued late JacobS' said.
l!lke over the du~ of.tearn ~'!he f9flller athletic dir~tor at . ''I have ~njoyed my relationship Friday af~moon. .
''The !lifferences had·nothing to
dent after the reSI$Dallon of Rick Oh10 Smr.e, Oregon an~ ~ w1th the Indians, and 1 am pleased · Bay ~1d by ~lephone that he do .with the management of the

;'

to anyone-after all, y,ou're only human. '
.
Overdmft fees, settlemerit details and embarrassing phone calls
can be minimized or altogetber avoided wilb a PLC Account·
froni Peoples Bank. Checks tbal overdilw your account
.!will automatically be paid up to your
·.pre-approved line of ctedit, your account
will be reconciled, and all activity will
appear on your nlontbly Stalement
AskPeoplesBankabout PLC-it'sthe ·
Peoples advan• .

'

·~If?-L~
(AP~ 1:-b C~v~0

Pool hours
, Tod~y- 1-3 and 5· 7 p.m.,
•open swun
• Mo.nday -closed
· • Tuesday - closed
; Wednesday- closed
Thursday- closed
Friday - closed
: Saturday ..- closed
' Sunday, Nov. 29- closed

Mi~takes in arithmetic, delays in getting deposits in on time .. .it can happen

25TH It JEFFERSON AVENUE . P&lt;&gt;INT PLEASANT

hid owners

(

OPEN DAILY 'TIL 1:00 P.M.
.OPEN SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29
.
I:00 p.m. 'Ill 6:00 p~m.

ww-cost overdraft proteaion for your cbecking accoUnt.

(304) 675-1675

:' Tbe officials, speaking on the
J()ndition th~y not be identified,

y..-.,

SPECJIAI.. IIUNTERS' BOIJRS
NOVEMBER 27 t•ru SATURDAY, DICEMBER 5

•
•
~- BtnefGetlii

NEW PATIEI'ITS • WALK·INS WELCOME·

Baseball
ofllc:lals said that the decision on
wbc!ller to reopen their ~ollective
.arpining agreement probably
~ be made ·at a special owners
bleednl in the Chicago area,during
!he weelr:: of Nov. 30.
--

S.ball
~ CLEVELAND (AP) - CleveJaad Indians President Rick Bay
after ll months in the job.
tile fQmler athletic ililector at
Sllle, Olepn IIIII MlnllCIIOta
· ~ fClllllll' executive vice president
iJ1 the New YOI't
aiel he
P.ll!lleaYinl tile 'lndllnl-becauiC of
differences with te!lm owner

8LACK POWDER and HUNnNG CLOTHING
.
' ALSO IN STOCK

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

. BuebaU
, NEW YORK (AP) -

.

..

::s~ilarly pitched battle, Jim

~ICCnl:

.

. 'KUTTER~, 6, 7, 8 and 10ft.

Field ready, 15 to 80 hp.

.ir

k'

NEW SHENNIU FARM TUCTORS
.

wv

Bay resigns as Indians' president; · .Jacobs adds duties\to his j~b

Kansas, Indiana, Michigan have means to contend for N'CAA title
Penn Sllite ian 't expected to
1!17 0~ CANPIELD
back from last year' s 2l :9 r.eam, six teams in the NCAA I&lt;M•m""'""''
last
season.
but
only
Oklahoma
conr.end
for a NCAA berth in itS
•'
AP Sparta Writer
• including three stlrters. The two
S1ar.e
was
able
10
make
it
as
far
as
Big
·Ten
debut, but No. 11 Iowa,
: • In the pill three seiiOIIS, Kansas starters he lost, Damon Patierson .
the
regional
semifinals.
•
No.
20
Michigan
State Md Pwduc
llas_won 30, 27 .and 27 game~, and Brent Price, averaged 20 lind
rea:bed the NCAA ctwnplonsh1p 18 points last seaon.
.
.
pme once IDd won the past two
Guard Terry Evans and. forand
No.
4
Indiana
maile
it
to
the
·
·
Big J!i&amp;bt Collfatnce titles. ·
w3rds Bryan Sallier and Jeff WebFinal
Four
last
season,
and
both
·
MINNEAPOLIS
(AP)
- Wit·
' · Anybody care to ~ who the ster are the returning starletS for the
nesses told police that PittsbUrgh
c:onfererace faYOriee is this yeat1
lSth-ranked Sooners, who Tubbs have the means 10 return this rear.
Michigan's '• Fab Five ' are Penguins star Mario Lemieux was
• The I!l)'hawb, 21-S a yeir ago, believes will have more quickness
tetum fOlD' ltartlln, includi~~g an- lban they have had in a long time, sophomore~ now and should be . present when Minnesota North
FCJIII'Cia!CO auards Rex Walters and which he-hopes will allow them to better. Forward Jalcn Rose led the StarS forwant Dan Quinn allegedly
~ Jonlin. They rerum 84 per- become · more !lggressive on team in scoring at 17.6 per game ·. raped .a 19-year-old woman,
and forward Chris Webb« was the accooling to a coUrt docwnent flied
cent of dlelr scoring and 83 pm:ent offense.
.
. ·
· of thei!' rdlouDc!ina.
Kansas is the JXOhihitive league t()p rebounder at 10 per g~111e . Friday.
tbe ·doclimcnt c1oes not indicate
. · Tbey begin this year ranked No. favorite and otfahoma is picked .Webber also averaged 15.5 r'mts.
"It will be interesting,' coach that Lemieux took part in the
2 by The Allociated Press. Coach No. 2. although many coaches feel
Steve
Fisher said. "We are no alleged assault, and Bloomington
·Roy Williams doesn't mind the it's a !OSSUP as to who will finish
great expecf.ations, but says his ~ lhrougb sixth. MiSsouri (21· longer ihe team dOing the chasing. Police Chief Bob Lutz rciterar.ed
t1:11m will have to work hard to 9), No. 19 Iowa Slate (21-13), No. We now have the bone. Every- Friday that Quinn iS the only per·
son who might be charged m the
b:acla them.
.
25 Nebrma (19-10) and Okl.a- ·bOdy's going after the top dog."
Indi!lna
coac.h
Bob
Knight
incidenL
·
:• ."You C81l't go around saying 'I homa State. (28-8) all figure .to be
should record his 600th overall and
Quinn, 27, a former Penguins
Want to be rich, I want to be rich' if sb'OIIg. ,
.y ou're not g'oing to do the job
Every 'conference teatn retUfi'IS SOOth Big Ten coaching victories play«'!. has beeli accused of raping
this season,
· the woman Nov. 10 in a room at a
j:Very day to make it happen,'' he at least three returning starters,
· The Hoosiers have folir starters Bloomii'IJIOn hotel. Quinn was .
saiiL
·
.
except Oklahoma State and Kansas
; "I think we can be a pretty good State.(16-14). ()ldahoma Slate lost back, led by senior forward Calbert arrested ·m con11ection with the
6asketbeJ1 teatn. I sure am going to six of its top seven players - five Cheaney,whoaveraged 17.6 points alleged assault but is free on
·
$30,000bond and has not been for·
be disappointed if we aren 'L"
to grildllation - including .NBA as the Hoosiers went 27-7.
Coach Randy Ayers bas sonic mally charged
In alf, die Jayhawks return nine picks Byron Hous. ton and Corey
retooling to do at .Ohio State (26'
people who played last. season. Williams-and one to grades.
6).
The
league's
player
of
the
yC!If,
Quinn
his
maintained that the
They also have the le-gue's topMissouri has four starters back.
Jimmy
Jackson,
opted
for
the
NBA
sex
was
consensual.
He is on leave
18red newcomer in 6-foot-:7 Darrin but the one the Tigcts don't have is
with
a
year
of
eligibility
remaining.
from
the
North
S~.
.
l{ancock. .
.
NBA fust·roun4er Anthony Peeler.
1bat
leaves
Lawrence
Funderburke
According
to
the
affidavit,
the
Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs, But coach Nonn Stewart will have
as
the
Buckeyes'
only
returning
assault
occurred
after
three
women
beginning his 13t!t season, has as P.lenty of size to work with; primar·
starter as they seek a third·consecu· met a group of Penguins and North
IJIUCh experience returning as he · !ly 6-9 ju!lior Ievon Crudup.
StarS players at a bw in the Mall of
has ever had. Eleven players are
The Big Eight .wound .up with tlve conference title.
Amenca and went with the players
to their hoteL . .
.· ·
Tbe affidavit refei$ to the play·
: ers onlY·as "Mario .. and unan, ..
;. (Continued from C-3)
· but says the alleged victim and witplay honest. The game was won on
.· nesles identified Lemieux from a
r;he boards, and .we should have
newspaper photograph as the
won on the oo.ds.
·
"Mario' who was in the IOOin ilur,. ·~Rio Grande did a good job
ing the alleged assaulL Quinn ideo·
moving its offense, and I think
tified himself by name to the
Jhat's- a credit to Coach Lawhorn
women, the affidavit says.
'lind his program that they're mov"Mario" is mentioned only
~g the baD so well this early in the
twice in the l 1/2~page affidavit.
•
"he added.
.
He called "Dan" into a bathroom
~ Redmen Clearly dominated
at one.point during the alleged
)he shooting with a 55.7 percent
-showing, netting 44 of 79 attempts, ·
:including 18 of .35 from the three
'Joe Sl.4 (li'ZCCIIL G.iven rtine opporllimities at the foul line, the Redmen
teonnectec1 on six for 66.7 percent. ·
;: McMaster's similari,Y balanced
~oring effort tesulr.ed m 35 of its
:73 tries connectinJ for 47.9 per;JienL From the tluee, it hit niJle of
"" attempts fo 37.S percent, and
:.ant nine of12 shots.at the line for

Pomeroy-Middieport-Galllpolls, O~olnt Pleasant
.
'

:,-November 22, 1992

., .

.,

.

'

�•

hge C6 Sunday Tim• Sentinel

•

..

where.

Actually, the Wildcats are there
Qnce. They carry the label of
"vacated" in 1988 - the title was
taken bcc•nst. they used an ineligible player. Their last official crown
)¥as in 1986.
.
;i Whether four yesrs or six years,
If'S the longest Kentucky has ever
Jone without winning the SEC bas~etball championNtip.

Few expect the streak io continue.
The Wildcats, ·who came within
an eyelash ofknoc:king off na1icaa1
champion Duke in the East Regional fmals last season, are favacd to
capture their 37111 SEC title.
"It Sli1l huns 10 think about losing the Dulce game," Jamal Mashbum said of the overtime thriller
that ended 104-103 on Christian
Laettner's turnaround at the buzz4;r.
"It's a shame either team had to
lose. Now I know what itla)res to
get there. I have to tell the younger
guys what it takes and show them
how hard you have 10 wort 10 get
bact to where we were.

ICE MASH - . Pittsburgh's Mike Stapleton
(top) gets ready to press New Jersey's Valeri
Zeltpukln to tbe lee daring tbe third period nf

"This f"ear's alllbout winning Gimt:l MllQnez- but tht:re are
the championship."
sev111 other lllumnen 8lOIIIId 11111 a
The 6-foot-8, 240-pound junior highly reprded trio of recruits isn't talking about winning the Ton:y Delk; Jared Pdctett and
SEC. He waniS a national title.
Rodrick Rhodes
Mashburn is one of the major
Pitino isn't ready to carry the
reasons the Wildcals are faYO!Cd in favorite's role in the Easttm Divithe conference: He averaged 21.3 sion, yet alone in the league as a
points and 7.8 rebounds per game whole.
last season and figures to replace
"Outside of South Carolina,
departed LSU star Shaquille which is in a rebuilding phase, you
O'Neal as the league's most domi- can mate a case for each of five
nantplayer.
teams to win our division," he
Kentucky was the only SEC said.
team ranked in The Associated
The SEC West figures to be
Press preseason poll, coming In at
more
competitive than the &amp;st.
No. 5.
Auburn
comes oft probation
Coach Rick Pilino has only two
with
four
starters
returning. The
staners back .....: the other is 6-8 Tigers are favored to
win the division in a battle with defending conference 'champion Arkansas and
MississipPi State.
,..
Chuang I(:entucky in the East
·. ' · will be Florida, Tennessee, Georgia
and Vanderbilt. The Gators return
all five starters, Tennessee and
Vanderbilt each have four•-starters .
hack and Georgia has three.
The Volunteers will feature perhaps the nation's best walk-on
player - guard Allan Houston.
Houston, son of Tennessee
coach Wade Houston, averaged
21.1 points per game last year and
became only the fourth SEC player
in history to top the 2,000-point
mart in three years. The coach
opened up another scholarship for
has team by paying for his son's ·
senior season.
Little has . changed in the
Atlantic Coast Conference since
last season.
Duke, seeking a third consecutive national title, is the favorite,
with any challenge coming from
North Carolina and perhaps Florida
State.
· The Blue Devils lost Laettner,
last year's leader and national player of the year. This year's leader
Friday night's N~af.~me -Ia East Ru'therford,
N.J., wblcll the Pen
woo 4-1. (AP)
will be senior point guard Bobby
Hurley. the MVP in last season's
Final Four.
"I think his role expands some
because he's a little bit better,"
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski
_
with eight seconds remaining in the period. Pitts- says. ,
Eric Montross and. George
burgh swarmed the zone with Lemieux dishing off to
Lynch
give coach Dean Smith a
TocchetJor lhe score. '.
•
sttong
inside
g~ at.North CaroliIn tlie second penod. Stevens scored a power-play
na
and
Florida
Stare has Sam Casgoal for .New Jersey at 9:20 to trim the Pittsburgh
sell
and
Doug
Edwards
llack for its
lead to 2-1. Oaude Lemeiux fed a pass to Perer"Stastthe
ACC. The
second
season
in
ny, who w~ stationed behind lhe goal line. Statsny
SeminOles
won't
have
the
serviCes
lOOt two frard strides and slid the {luck across the
slot to Stevens, who tucked the shot ~de the right
po~
.
.
McEachern put Pittsburgh ahead 3-1 at .16:35 as
he popped a rebound of a shot by Tocchet orr the
stick shaft OVCf the fallen Billington.
Tocchet netted his second at 1:36 of the t!.Urd to
pad the Penguins' lead to 4·1. Tocchet fated a shOt .
that froze Stevens, who dove to the ice for a block
aaempL Tocc~ siCated around Stevens and rifled a
blast that caught the left post and hopped under the
crossbar.
In the night's other NHL game, Detroit beat
Washington 7-S.
·
Red Wings 7, Capitals 5- The Red Wings
scored three goals in a span of 4: 16, the last by Paul
Ysebaert with 3:45 left, to overcome a two-goal
deficit and beat the slumping Capitals. ·
Mike Ridley's second goal of the night had gi~en
Washington a 5-3 lead with 11:13 lefL But Stevt.
Yzenn~J~~ got his 16th goal on a 40-foot slap shot
with 8:01 left, and Sheldon Kennedy tied it on a shot
in the slot off a pass from Mike Sillinger with 4:27
remaining.
Ysebaen's 20-foot slap shot gave the Red Wings
• the !pad, and Shawn Burr capped the scoring with an
empty-net goal.
Peter Bondra scored two goals for the Capitals,
who have lost four straighL
·

of Jtaninl( point guard Charlit: ·
Ward untll January - · after his
quarterb~ll: duties end .with the
bowl-bound Seminole football
team.
Duke was ranked No.3 in the

day.

Goran I vanisevic then provided ·
another favor by beating Richard
Krajicek 6-4, 6-3, clesring Courier's way into the semifinals of the
$2.5 million evenL
Courier (2-1) beat Michael
Chang (0-3) 7-5, 6-2 but had to
wait until the end of round-robin
play to fmd out if he'd made it into
the last four.
There, Courier awaits thirdranlced Pete Sampras, the man who
beat him in last year's f10al.
Ivanisevic 1,1lays Becker, whose
impressive wm over Edberg has
made him a natural favorite in front
of his home croiJid
c

. ....

The fourth-ranked .Croatian
powered his way into the semifinals without dropping a seL Sampras is also llllllifeatecl but he lost
one set against winless Pen Korda.
"This is my court. If he wants
·to beat me, he bas to play more
than good." Ivanisevic said of his
showdown with Becker.
"I'm going to be extra pumped
tomorrow, c;apecially because I am
playing him here. So I want to beat
him bad. I am Just going to beat
him in Germany," said Ivanisevic,
who is making his rust appearance
in the event after climbing to No. 4
and winning four titles this year.

I

front

u:e...

r

'(

ing his playinJ days with the
Cleveland lndaans, joined the
Giants in 1985, the season they lost
lOOpmes.
He immediately started the
turnaround by selecting Roger
Craig as his field 11111118p.
The team went on to win two
division championsa~;f~ and
appeared in the earthq
inter·
ruPied 1989 World Series, the socallocl Bay Bridge Series they lost
to their American Leape neilhbon, the Oakland Athletics in four
games.
Giants Bob Lurie put lhe
Oiants up for lalo liter lle fallod
four timelro c:onv1nce 1oc11 voan

:"wl:t"-ed •

"! IPP'""
a
diUII
10 reoJICe
AqJl Clndleltick Park on die shore of San

Frincllco Bay.

Roaen pniNd bearty Olanta
fans wbo lftved die cold and wiDd
that made "The Sdck" anathema
to players IIIII ~~·~

•k

GALUPOUS - Reserve seating tickets for the 1992-93- Gallia
Academy's boys' varsity basketball season are still on sale for the
general public.
In all cases, !he price will be $40 per ticket, with a limit of four
per individual or business. Tickets may. be purchased in the principal's office at GAHS from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday.

' RVHS athletic banquet Monday ·
RIO GRANDE- River Valley High School's fust athletic banquet will be held Monday at 6:30p.m. at Buckeye'Hills Career Center near Rio Grande.
The cost if $4 for adults and $2.25 for children in the second
grade and younger. This will be paid at the door.
The meal will be catered by Dean Circle Catering of Gallipolis.
To make reservations, call446-2902 today.

'

.
CHEVROLET

I

2-1986

'

FORD BRONCO
II'S

BWERS
Automatic, air, 4 WD. Both
excellenl condition.

.

5 1p 11 rl, air, 4 WD. Both excel-

lent condition.

$
YOUR CHOICE

23
.. 95

1992 FORD GRANADA
Low miles, automatic, air, 77,000 miles.

. 1984 FORD TEMPO

.

~

.Low miles,
automatic, 84,000 miles.
.

1987 DODGE CHARGER
Automatic, air, 74,160 miles.

ticket sale dates posted
·
. RVHS
CHESHIRE- Reserve seating tickets for River Valley's boys

basketball home games are now on sale for team family members
and school officials.
·
Tickets fcir the general publlF will be made available on a fustcome, farst-serve basis beginning Tuesday. ·
·
In all cases, tickeiS will be $40 each. There will be a four-ticket
limit 10 any one person, as there are 200 reserve tickets. · .
The tickets may be purchased at the principal's office at River
Valley High School between 7:30am. and 3 p.m. Monday through
Fnday.
.

League deadline December 4
GALLIPOLIS - The deadline 10 place a team into the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department's Men's Basketball League is
Friday, Dec. 4;
To get a roster, contact the P&amp;R office at 446-4612, extension
37, or stop by the office, located on the second floor or the Gallipolis Municipal Buililing at 518 Second Ave.
The fee is $150 per team. The games will ~ played at the Gallipolis Developmental Center's gym on Saturdays betWeen 9 am.
and 6 p.m: begin!ling Saturday, Dec. 13. The league is limited to the
fust 20 p31d entnes.
· .
·

Reds cagers coming to Rio Qrande
RIO GRANDE - The Cincinnati Reds traveling basketball
• team, featuring Norm Charlton, Rob Dibble, Steve Foster, Tim
Pugh, Joe Oliver, Reggie' Sanders a.nd Mo Sanford as well as former
teammate Billy Hatcher, will come to the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center for an exhibition game on Saturday, Dec. 5 at
7 p.m. against a team made of mostly Redmen alumni.
In additiOn to former Rio stars such as Jimmy Keams, fonner
Marshall player Rodney Holden will join the alums.
For infonnation on tickets or anything else concerning the event,
call Kenny Coughenour at 446-5280.
.

'HoOp Sh 00t' COntest Slate d

GALLIPOLIS ~ The Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107 will spon-

sor its ilnnual "Hoop Shot" contest on Sunday, Dec. 13 at 2 p.m. at
Gallia Academy High School.
.
·
The winner of this fust-round tournament, which will feature
basketball players from Gallia, Mason and Meigs Counties, will ·
head to
second round on Jan. 9, 1993 at the University or Rio

By BETQ HARmS
was secOOd in the nation in assists conference coaches-and media
Soine of the heaviest pla:rer
AP Sparta Writer
last season with 8.5 per pmc:.
The Wildcats, who fin ished losses occurred at league chlmp1on
Basketball in the 'West will be
New Mexico State went 25-8 third last season behind UCLA and UCLA and ~unner-up USC. The
wild this season. with two new and advanced to the NCAA West Southern Cal with a 13-5 confer- Bruins, who were 16-2 in league
coaches and a new school joining Regional semifmals before losing ence record,~ led by senior Chris play and !'dvanced h;J the.NCAA!
the Bag West Conference.
to UCLA.
Mills (16.2 pomts and 7.8 rebounds West Regional championship game
And Jlison Kidd, considered the
"It's a new stan and each of the per game). .
before losing to Indiana last March-;
top prep J?layer il,l the COUD!i)' ~t guys has ~ ~gh expectations of
."It's a given that Chris ~~ ~ is lost Tfacy Murray and D.on
.SCBSO!I• will step 1010 ~ s~g job themselves, wd Rc;~:p. who sub- gomg to have~ great year re!~hing MacL:ean to the NBA, and ~k
at ~mt guard for atifonua 10 the stituted for coach Neil McCarthy at -the role of bemg a lead~r, An- Martm and Gerald Madkans tO'
Paclfac-10Conference.
media day while McCarthy's wife zona coach L11teOlson wd.
graduanon.
Kidd's p~ce alone is expect- recovered from surgery.
'1
eel to boost. Cal's fo~es. U.CLA . The other new coach in the Big
and .southern Cal, whach fimshed West, Brad Holland, is in his rust
1-2 an the Pac-10 last season, are head coaching job at Cal State
recovering from the departures. of Fullerton 11fter four years as an
several key players to graduauon · assistant to UCLA's Jiin Harrick1
and theNBA. .
.
The 34-year-old Holland has
- · Gone but not forgotten as form~r played high school, college and pro
UNLV Vegas coach Jerry Tarkani- basketball in Los Angeles.
al!• who has mov~d to the NBA
One of Holland's assistants is
With the San Antomo Spurs.
Ed Gooajian, who was on TarkaniHis successor, Rollie Massimi- an'sold staff at UNLV.
Lon11 Beach State ' s Lucious
no, faces the formidable challenge
Harris
(18.8 points) joins UNL V's
of maintaining the Runnin' Rebels'
Rider
(20.7)
and Pacific's Tony
dominance and shedding past conAmundsen
(15.9)
a,s the conferttoversies.
top
~ing
scorers.
ence's
Massimino, at 58 the oldest
·Harris,
a
senior
guard, needs
coach in the .liig West, has come
555
more,points
10
break
the conwest for a fresh stan. He left Vilference
career
scoring
record
of
lanova after compiling·a 357-241
2,127
set
by
Greg
Grant
of
Utah
record in 19 years at the Philadelphia school, including the 1985 Stare.
Nevada mates its debut in the
NCAA championship.
Big
West after 13_years in the Bi!1
"This is a monumental move,
Sky,
replacing Fresno State. The
but it's a fun move and it's been
Wolf
Pack, second in the Big Sky
exciting," he said.
the
last
two seasons, has had a
The Rebels return senior starters ·•
school-record
five straight winning
Evric Gray, J .R. Rider and Dexter seasons under coach
Len Stevens.
Boney.-Gone are Elmore Spencer,
Arizona
was
selected
to win the
who completed his eligibility. and
Pac-1
0
title
in
separate
polls of
- H Waldman, who transferred 10 St.
Louis.
The Rebels are off probation,
and eligible for postseason play.
They won the regular-season B1g
West title, but NCAA sanctions
kept them out of the conference
toumamem last March.
UNLV takes a 23-,ame winning
streak - the nation s longest into its Dec. 5 season-opener ACROSS
84 Title or respect
99 Trim off
DOWN
against Loyola ~ounL
101 Staid
87 Mournful
1 First: original
In a preseasori poll of coaches
104 Be in debt
1 Make ready
89 Fee
7Culde•,'•
and media, New Mexico State was
105 Tennis stroke
2 Repulse
92 Apportion
10
Container
'•
107 Ocean
tabbed to win the Big West. The
3 Evils
93 Burst
13 Trails
tQ8 Enzyme
4 A month
Aggies won the conference touma~
94 Veneration
19 Church dignitary
109 Damp
5 Near
ment last year.
95 Midday
20 Everyone
110 Tier
6 - Year
"I think·we can really challenge
97 Roman bronze
2i "Blame lt on - ··
111 Footlike part
7 Anton ID
98 Pine Tree State
them (UNLV), but I think we need
22 Allows
112 Observe
8 Priest's vestment
to be realistic,'' Aggies assistant
99 Strains lor
24 A~swer
114 Tuscany
9 Wash
coach Jeff Reep said. "They have
breath
25 Early morn
10 Brittle
commune
to be considered in the driver's seat
27 Exist
100
King of Judah
11 River island
118 Reveal
until one of us can prove that we
28 "Tag" player
101
Withered
12 Negative
117 ScoUish river
OF, beat them;~'
29 Twice: prefix
102
Pedal digit
13 Twirl
118 As far as
The Aggies return starters Cliff
30 Military studenl
'f 03 Female sheep
14 Hebrew teller
120 Baseball team
Reed, Eric Traylor and guard Sam
31 Simians
15 Grampus
106 Cook In hoi water

The Following Financial
Institutions Will Be
. CLOSED
Thursday, November 26th
In Observance Of
Thanksgiv,ing Day
•BANK ONE
•OHIO VALLEY BANK
•STAR BANK
.•UNITY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

.

~~G;rand~;e·~s.¥.~i~=~=~=::;;;~=~==i~C~ra:w~~~o=rd, a S-foot-8 senior who

CTACU
_ BUNTING -~~~
.

'

-

f p!~~!E!~~~2 -~
Jtmbigton.

870 Express w/
Rifled Barrel

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•GAUGE PACKAGE
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~CRUISE CONTROL

32 Fireplace part
34 Three-toed sloths
36 Hot cross .,.38 Roman emperor
39 Hindu cymbals
40 You and l
41 Convey
44 Swayze lD
46 Part of RSVP
47 Teutonic deity
48 Criticize sharply
49 Small child
50 Small rug·
51 Airline info
53 XVII x Ill
54 Compass point
55 Mr . Musial
57 Spinning toy
59 Succor
60 Chicago player
61 Mr. McMahon
62 Sour
64 Publish _
66 Military awards
68 Hearing organ
70 Theater boxes
72 Vast age
73 Eagle's nest
74 Large cask
77 Mr. Wallach
78 Pencil ends
80 Declared
82 Macaw
83 Limbs
85 Kitchen warmers
86 Streicher
87 Cut
88 Strike
90 Before
91 They: Fr. .
92 Insane
93 Sponsor
96 British streetcar

.

122 "Wayne's World"
word
123 Sharpen
124 Equally
125 Eastwood to
127 Sun god
129 Pliant; limber
131 Berate; upbraid
133 Hypothetical
force
134 Father
136 Article
137 Small bird
139 Also
140 Crimson
141 Young boy
142 Nega1ive prefix
143 Free
145 Swab
147 Subtle variations
151 Tavern
152 The long - of
lhe law
153 - benedict
155 Affirmative
157 Killed
158 Opening
159 Turkish regiment
160 Printer's measure
161 Behotdl
163 Winged
165 Contests
167 " - Cid"
168 Tellurium symbol
169 Having branches
171 Toil
172 Make amends
173 Pigpens
175 Location
176 Squandered
177 Revolutionary
178 Beau and Jeff.
to Lloyd

16 Country of Asia
17 " Oestry -

A:gain"
18
19
23
26
29
32

"The - Cuckoo"
Talks idly
Impassive
ca1cher's glove
Drive headfirst
Members of
Congress
33 Jog
35 Sanford 10
36 Wire nail
37 Swifter
40 Woven work
made
of sticks
42 Above and
touching
43 Leave oul
45 Put on a play
48 Greek leiter
52 Metric measure
56 Nullify
58 Iron
59 Cancel
60 French novetisl
62 Most brilliant
63 vacation place
65 Maiden loved
by Zeus
66 - Bailey of the
comics
67 Norms
68 Moray
69 Ginger 71 Culs
73 Clothing
75 Swiss canton
76 ShOrt sleep
79 Concerning
81 Agave plant

- _
__
_____
_.,
...

___
-.-·------·--·----...···
---------

.

109 Slafl
113 Intertwine
115 O'Brien ID
116 Venturesome
119 Morsel
121 Kind of collar
123 Garden tools
124 Sum up
125 Calling
126 Puzzles
128 Goal
130 Home of lhe
Astros
132 Having scalloped
edges
133 Paddle
134 Team for Dave
Juslice
135 Military units
138 Plaything
141 Circuit
144 Gregory tO
146 Tolls
148 Wldeawake
149 Sodium symbol
150 Corona or
panatela
151 City in
Swilzerland
·152 Mr . Pacino ·
154 Narrow. flat
board
156 Strike
158 Mr. Hackman
159. Choir voice
162 Corrida ch164 Mr. Vigoda
166 Crowd
167 Curved letter
170 Ingels ID
174 "-Living Color"

.,
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year tenure in which the team went
from a 100-loss season to the
Rosen resigned Friday as president World Series.
and Jenera! manager of the San
Rosen said he felt that with new
Francisco Giants, ending a seven- ownership coming in, it. would be
best that he "step aside...
Indians'
"I've decided that it's time for
,/r.
me to retire and I wanted to make
OJJ
my decision public immecli•tely," ·
Rosen,.IS8, told a news conference
(Continued from C-5)
at Candlestick Part.
onship. wrestler, Bay coached the
Rosen said he didn't p1u to be
Wolverine wrestling team after very far from baseball, blit added
_.-aduation, then accepted a posi- he would "never so to work for
uon in 1981 as athletic director at another club in the same role I am
the University bf Oregon. He took here."
over a troubled program - the
"I'D be avaUable," he asicL
IChoo1 faced NCAA proba&amp;ion and
•'The Jut aeven ICUOu with
moliey problems - but was lead- the Glanta bave featured IOIIIC of
in1 1 sanction-free, financially • the belt dmel r1. my many yea il
secured proJlllll when he left in bue!wD,''Ilolen laid. "We've bid
1984 10 ~ llbleric direclor at a chance to be a Jlllt of 1 apeclal
Ollio Stile. · •
·
time in San Francisco baseball,
He left Ohio State three years highlighted by 1 pair of divilion
Iller in 1 cll~p~~~e with lhen-univer- titles and a Nationill Lequc pen~tl!d J ·
over the NIIL"
~g of footblll C:C::a;tl Bruce. · Rosen, a four-time All-Star dur-

'

GAHS tic ets on sale

.

1993 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

Rosen resigns as Giants' preside·nt, GM
By JAMES 0. CLIFFORD
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - AI

14.
. ;
"The Meuo had tw~ ~f .has ;
favorileS ranked - Lowsvalle at ..
13thandTulaneat~.17.
'

READY FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON.·
IT'S A GENE JOHNSON CHEV.·OLDS.

Courier, Becker, Sa:p~.pras, Ivanisevic
win to .advance to ATP semifinals
By NESHA STARCEVIC
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)
- No matter what happens in the
last two days of the ATP Tour
World Championship, one thing is
clear: Jim Courier will finish the
year as the No. 1 teMis player in
the world.
Courier is the first American to
end the year on top since John
McEnroe in 1984.
Boris Becker eliminated the
threat posed to Courier by Stefan
Edberg by beating the secondranted Swede 6-4, 6-0 and tnocting him out of the tournament Fri-

--·- Area sports

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Pittsburgh, Detroit NHL's victors
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) - The
defense-minded Pittsburgh Penguins?
Everyone knows the defending Stanley Cup
champions can sc~. They led the NHL last season
with 343 gQals and currently are second in the league
with 95.
But this season, they've also carried over the
• defensive discipline that carried them 10 their second
consecutive Cup last season.
"We're a lot betler (defensively) than most people
give us credit for," said goaltender Tom Barrasso
after Friday night's 4-1 victory at New Jersey.
"When our forwards apply themselves in our zone,
we are very effective.''
Pittsburgh's close-checking. victory on Friday
night followed a 4-2 win over Buffalo on Tuesday.
· The Penguins were very efficient against the Devils. Rookie Shawn McEacliern and Rick Tocchet ·
scored two goals each to provide Barrasso with all
the cushion he needed. Mario Lemjeux' assisted on
three of the Penguins' goals to boost his league-leading total to SS points..
·
Barrasso made 33 saves to post his leaigue-leading
12th victory and his ,89th as a Penguin, erasing the
previous mart held by Denis Herron.
The Devils had a three-~ winning streak halt·
eel and goaltender Craig BilliDgton saw his personal
five-game winning streak come to an end.
McEachern opened the scorin~ at 10:03 by flipping a shot from the slot over Billington. The scoring
sequence began with BillingtOn trying to dump the
puck off to teammate Dave Barr in the right comer.
Barr fumbled the pass and Ron Francis came up with
the interception. Francis backhanded a pass to the
wide-open McEachern.
Tocchet gave .the Penguins a two-goal advantage

preseason poD, North ~!ina 7,.,

Flori~ State 9 and Georg11 Tech '

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2-1988

Sundey Tim• Sentinel Page c:1

UNLV, Arizona among quintets to chase in.Western title races

Kentucky looks to capture SEC crown for ·first time since 1988'
By ED SHEARER
AP Sports Writer
, ·The Southeastern Co.nference
bas toSSed traditioo out the window
over the last six years. Glance at a
list of champiom during that period
and you don't spot Kelllucky any-

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SATUADAY,SI:30 All-5 PM; SUNDAY, 11 ...e ~ r

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POif4t PLEASANT, WV

''Ea~

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(-ell C8 SI.N if 11m II . S111Gne1

•

In other NFL «lion,

~

November 22,11191 .

Carlson to lead Hou~ton in~O\ ba~tle today against Miami

By De A• ' ' 'Pnss
H ~Houston Oilers beat tbc
DolpbiDs today. diCR WCD't be any
clever he"''ines suc:b as "Moon
Over Mianti"
"Carlson over Miami' ' just
doesa't have tbe SMDC lin&amp;. but it
certainly would be good n:ading
fortheOikn.
Cody c.bDl.
Warren
~at ~a~ wiD have to
tbc H.__ offease 011 the
at Miami iD Ol1lcs 10 bdp the
Oilers defense c:oalnll Dolphins
quartt:rt.;k Dan MxUn
Carlsob ~ ~ "'!"iR&amp; the sev·
enth sllft 10 h1s SJX·year NFL
career because Moon suffeR~~ a
bn:Un left (aoo dKowing
in
the f~ ~or ':he Oilcn' 17. 13 VICtory ovc:r Minnesota last
Sunday. The Oilersare4-2 when

rep!'"!'&amp;

=rs

Carlso! bas smru:il. In four games
!his sra.u~, Cadsoo bas completed
39 of 43 jiiSSeS for 3&amp;3 yards, with
thn:e touchdowns and two in'ten:eptious.
·
.
Marino completed 22 of 33.
panes fot 321 yards and two
toucbdowns Monday ~ght agl!inst
Buffalo,bultheDolphins{1-3) lost
~6-~0 and ~~op~d -?DC game
bdnnd the leading Bills m the AFC
Elm. f!oostm's win over Minnesota kept the Oilers (6-4) a game
behind the Steclers in the AFC
Calllal.
.
'
In other action today! Atlan~ is
at Buffalo, ln~apohs a't Pllts·
burgh, San Franc1sco at the Los
Angeles Rams, Dallas 81 Phoenix,
CJevdand ar ~· De~ver at
tbc. Loo Angeles Raiders, ~1ph1a at the New York G1ants;

-&gt;

Tampa Bay at San Diego, Green
Bay 81 Chicago, Detroit 81 Cincin·
nati, the New York Jets at New
England and iCans&amp;'l City at Sealtie.
Washington plays at New
Orleans Monday rughL
Fak:oas at Bills
Now that .the Bills (8-2) have
sole possessiOn of the AFC East
lead, it would be a good time ~or
them to break a tluce-game loSJDg
streak against Atlanta (4-6). They
would do it with a 22nd straight
home victory. .
•
Colts at Steelers .
The Steelers (7-3).will be without quarterback Net! O'Donnell
when they try 10 remain unbeaten
in seven games against Indianapo:lis (4-6) at Three Rivers Stadium.
O'Donnell suffered a hamstring
injury in a 17- 14 victory over
Detroit last Sunday and will be

=·Farm/llusiness

has a 4-6 record, and the winner
would take O'YI:f second place in the
to Denwr 1.- Sunday, is expected NFC Central should Tampa Bay
to start for the Giants.
lose to S111 Diego.
;.
Bucc:neerut Char1en
.
Jea at Plltrlafs
. The Buccaneers (4~ 6), who
The winner will have two
snaoocd a fivo-gamc 108111g :Streak straight victories for the f!I'Sl time
last SIIJI!Iay with a.20-17tnwnph this SC~;SOn. lol_ew Eng!and (1:9)
over Ch1cago; run JDIO the. hottest beatlndianapolts37-34movertlme
team in the Jea&amp;UC in .San Diego (5-f last S~;~nt!ay, 'fibile the Jets (3-7)
5). The Chargers have won fiv~ o . beatCIDC1111181117-14.
their last six games and three m a
Cblell at Sattawks
row at home.
.Should Denver lose to the
Packers at Bea'fS . .
Raiders in the afternoon, Kansas,
. It will be the 145th mce~ng m City (6-4) could move into a lirstthe NFL's.oldest.rivalry, whtcb bas place lie in the~ West with the
been dominated m recent years. by Broncos by beaung Seattle. The
the Bears, who have. won .f1ve Seabawks arc 1-9. It will be a
straight~ 13 of 15, mcl~g a homecoming for Chiefs' qUifter30·10 victo.ry Oct. 25. Chtcago back Dave Krieg, who played fot
1
leads the senes 81-57-6. Each club Sealtie from 1980-91.

replaced by Bobby Brister, who Quarterback Jeff Hostetler, who

· ·
&lt;t9ers at RaJDs
" San Francisco (&amp;-2) will be
seeking a second straight season
sweep of t1f Rams (4-6) and will
be. uying to s~t coach George
Seifert toward his second 50 regu!It-season wins. Seifert got No. 50
m a 21-20 comeback victory over
New Orleans last Sunday. ·
Cowboys at Cardiaals
The Cowboys (&amp;-2) will be try·
ing to rebound from a 27-23 loss 10
the Rams last Sunday with a ftfth
s!J&amp;iBht victory over the Cardinals
(3-7). Phoeoix quarterback Chris
Chandler passed for 3&amp;3 yards on
2&amp; cnmplelions in 43 attempts in a
31-20 loss to the Cowboys Sept.
20.
Broacos at Raiders
II shoud be close. Of the last 18
meetings between these clubs, 15
have been decided by six points or
less and 12 have been decided by
by vinue of Monday night's win · three points or less. Denver (7-3)
over Miami (7-3). It has a better beal the Raiders (4·6) 17-13 in
division record and an easier tbeit season opener.
schedule - the Bills get Denver at
Eagles at Giants
home, then fmish at New Orleans
Despite a 27-24 loss 10 Green
and Houston, while the Dolphins Bay last Sunday, Randall Cunninghave consecutive games at New hwn again will start for the Eagles
Orleans and San Francisco after (6-4) as they seek the 350tb victory
playing Houston at home this in franchise history and a fourth
week.
straight win aginst the Giants (5-5).

Nowmber 22, 1112

•

Northwest Airlines trying
to avoid runway· No. 11

pw.cd for the winning touchdown suffcnd bruised ribs in a 27,131oss
10 that game.

By PETER ALAN HARPER
AP Bus! !II Writer
The air is getting thinner for
Northwest Airlines, scrambling 10
fly with a $4 billiqn debt-load and
avoid crashin~ into what has
become a fam1Uar place in the
industry: bankruptcy court.
Representatives of the nation's
fourth -laq~est airline, which· lost
$263.8 million in the first three
quartaa of 1992, met with bankers
this past week in attempts to
arrange more fjnancing.
Northwest's cash and credit are
dwindlinJ fast. The airline dipped
recently miO the last $107 million
of ill credit line.
·
.
A week earlier, Standard &amp;
Poor's Corp. credit rating service
downgraded some of the debt securities of the airline's parent company, which will make 11 more expensive to borrow.
The downgrading "indicates a
risk of bankruptcy," said S&amp;P analyst Philip Baggaley. Companies
head for bankruptcy protection
once they run out of cash &lt;ir credit
· or access 10 them.
Northwest has said there are no
plans 10 seek banlcruptcy protec·
lion. But if Nonhwest were to ftle,
it would be the seventh airline 10
go that route since 19&amp;9, following
Continental, TWA, America West
and the now-defunct Midway, Pan
Am and Eastern.
Northwest's financial burden
has led it 10 lay off 1,440 worlcers

NFL playoff picture getting clearer
By DAVE GOI.DIIEil~
APF....... Writer ·
OK. let's get il O!il ol the way.
"It - a bad loss," Ray Handtey ~d aftcl Den_. aushed the
GiaDis Sunday !ligiiL
: "BUT WE STill. CON'IltOL
OUR OWN DESTlNY.''
Meaning their bacts aren' t 10
thewaliYICL
! Bef~ the cliches gel out of
.WDilol. hm:'s a loot a the ptayo1r
pi&lt;me, whidJ is sa.bng ID c:Jmfy
with~ pmes 10 go.
NFC

n•es rnt...., e it
a1..,s . . - dte s.per llowl)
• Despite tbc unexpected Slum·
bling iD the East;it's still a f,0011
bet that the playoff ants will he
the six ants dill wac in position
six weeks ago - San FnDciJco,
New ~ Mirmesota, Dallas,
• (wiUdt

Pbilw"
IIIII WadtingiOn
EAS : Dalllls (8-2) slPdd win
the divisioa and remains lied with
San Francisco for the ultimate
bomc-ficld llh•d 1:
• Am lhe QJWboys too young 10
get 10 lhe Supa Bowl? Maybe, but
their )'Oimllc:gs arc refreslting in a
llivisioa ~ the ~ Red·
Skins (6-4) and I1Jdderlcss Giants
(S-5} are old and the Eagles are
lging IIIII still tr.yiD&amp; 10 figure out
if they have a qoaa:t!JICL
The Gil!llts (sec above) can
indeed mate it oo their own with
two g.-cs qliDa the &amp;gles and

one against' the Redskins. But
they're banged up, probably not
good enough and poorly coached.
CENTRAL: Minnesota (7-3)
will win a division in whicli every
oae else is mediocre or worse. The
best thing that can be said about it
is thai Mike Ditta and Sam Wyche
provide plenty to write about
But the Vikings probably will
be the tbinl-ranked division winner
and have 10 play in the wiJd-c:ard

IO!IDd

WEST: So what else is new?
The 49ers (8-2) effectively have a
two-game lead because they've
beaten the Saints {1-3) twice. San
Francisco will battle Dallas for the
overall home field and have t1uce
toughies - Philadelphia and
Miami • home and Minnesota on
tbe IOIId.
AFC
Wald! DU1 for San Diego, which
has won five ol six to reach 5-5 and
plays nobody with a winning
record. Tampa Bay, the Raiders
twice, Phoenix, Cincinnati and
Seattle remain for the Chargers,
who started 0-4. A 10-6 finish
could gel them a wild-card.
Buffalo, Miami, Pitt~l&gt; urgh,
Kansas City and Denver' should
make il. leaving San Diego 10 bat·
tie Houstoo and maybe Cleveland
for the last two spots. And, once
apia. the AR: tide game is likely
10 be frigid- the playoffs will run
througb Buffalo.
EAST: Buffalo (S-2) has control

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•

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Fe::a~p .

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fi?ec)ples Bancorp
. ,. .
'·••

feports new record

.

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i\

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•: MARIETTA • ~ Banmrp
reponed a new record in p1·
y nine months earnings of
.74 per share, according to a
~~ ws release today by Robert
m1 ~f Execu·
I .

t¥yans,OO::dent

AWD., air, ltl-, N. PW, Pl., crul8e, Ill, loaded.

IS

Third qUifter earnings for PcoBancorp were $1,191,000 in
?92 compared to $911,000 last
~.For the nine moatbs ended
~ptembcr 30, 1992 net income
:Wiis $3,270,000 compared to
42.574.000 last,-. ~yearn­
,per share incleued 13.3., 10
~.94. Year 10 date earnings per
fiare inaeascd 16.6., 10$2.74. On

s•

1992 OLDS lCHIEVA

Auto., air, Qwtd engine, llereo.

•lully.dJlu~

basis, eiminp pm-

lhu'e for the third qllll1ier iw s e ~

*11 899 OR *249 DOWI, *249 PIR

~! f&gt; to $0.90 and year-to-date
.,.U.gs per share increasal22.9'1.
tb$2.52
~ : Net interest income increased
~rn $11,000,000 for tbe nine

flonths ended Sepecmber 30, 1991
~ $12.900,000

at September 30,

·1!92, an inc:lease of 17.3%. This

:O.Crease in net inte~est inc- is

f~etor 10
~ rise in overall net income in

Jtic largeit contributing

1992 CAYIUEII/S
AS LOW IS

Ar•,

*·

1992 OLDS CIEU

1992 OLDf9-fitEGENCY

v.e, auto., air, llereo, crulle, tilt.

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LOMied, clualc IIIIUry.

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1992 CHEVY

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•".. 1993 CADILLAC
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1992 CHEVY FUU SIZE STEPSIDE 4X4 PU, all oplions••••$18,999
1986 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC BROUGHAM, looded ......... $6490
1989 FORD lANGER XLT, 2wheel drive, .keiiiW............$7990
1988 CHEVY CORSICA, auto., air, stereo, more ................ $3981
1984 OlDS CUTlASS SUPREM~ runs &amp;looks good .......... $3990
1983 FORD CROWN VICTORIA, loaded, 2ltoor.......:.........$3490
1986 CHEVY CAVAUER, low miles, auto., air ...~............... $3827
1988 CHEVY FUU SIZE PICIUPSILVERADO, 2WD ........... S4Bi2
1990 CHEVY LUMINA, auto., air, pow. windows, ~ed ... $7391
1990 CUTlASS SUPREME 201, extra dean, low mdes ..... $7850
1989 CAPRICE 4DOOR, sharp........................................ $7999

308 EAST MAIN

fiUIGII AS LOW AS 5."'

yean or serric:e. Left to riJht they are: Sally
Beuett, Killl Williams, Kettb Johuon, Cathy
De . . , aad Bill Gray. Not pictured - April
AAIM ud.Buz Call, director.

RECOGNIZED - Tile abn e.pto,ft. or
: the Ohio Valley BMk ill Gallipolis, pict.rcd
: withJ-L D 2 J,ript,pt !Ur t -~
• executive oftlcer, l!ave ben re&amp;:f'll'hed for 11ft

";'-':·

1992 ClOY LUMIIl

over the past several months and
sell spare parts. Another S65 jobs,
including 3SO management posi·
tions, were eliminated this past
week. The airline reportedly is
looking to sell valuable landing
slots and gates at Chicago's
O'Hare Airport. .
Unions representing 42,000
Northwest employees gave a c:mditional commitroent to m- years of
concessions worth $900 million
this past week. However. they
expect job security, new labor contracts and other compensation in
return.
OLYMPIA &amp; YORK:
The Reichmanns of Canada,
once the world's richest commercial .landlords, have played their
real estate cards oh, so close 10 the
vest. But now their bluffs have
been called and they are on the ·
verge of paying up wtth their most
valued chips, the Olympia de Yort
real estate empire.
0&amp;Y has seen irs holdings para·
lyzed by lack of cash. Some specu·
late that af~ all the court proceed·
ings, the Reichmanns will be left
with $300 million .and be real estate
managers, no longer developers.
They were once worth more than
$12 billion.
Everybody brings their chips
Monday to a Toronto bankruptcy
court and antes up.
COMING UP:
The Treasury announces the
budget deficit for October on

Monday.
· On Tuesday, the Commerce
Department reports on durable
goods for October, domestic
auromaters announce mid-Novem·
ber auto sales and the Conference
Board releases its conswner confidence survey for Novemb5'.
On WedaeadaJ, the Labor
Department announces wcet1y jobless claims, the Commcrcc Department reports third..quaner revised
gross domestic product 111111 COI(IDmte pufits, and the National Association of Realtors tepo!ls on sales
of existing horpes in October.
The Commerce Depar·tmcnt
releases personal income and
spending for October on Friday
and the Federal Reserve releases
weekly moaey supply figures.
TICKER:
AT&amp;T and three JapiiiiSCS electronics makers will jointly make
tiny devices that combine a mobile
phone and a comd:.~r•••Geaeral
'llac: division
Motors Corp.'s
is scrapping the seven-year-old
AJJante, Its $62,000, two-door Jux.
ury coupe NationsBank will
acquire most of the assets of
Chrysler Corp.'s Chi'Jiler First .
Inc. unit, crealing tlllle aatlo•'• \
second-largest consumer flnanci ·
business owned by a bank •••
Monsanto Co. announced it will
cut 3,200 jobs, sell some businesses and refocus research to become
more competitive.

Utility firm offers recommendations
.for saving energy during heating season

Call today and ask about how these services can 1
help you-Level Payment Plan
• Ferrellgas lnslallalion'Review • 24·Hour Emergency
Service •.Autornalic ,Keep·full Service
~
·
61~-~~6-226~
~
TOI.I. FREE 1-800-~88-2264

Section D

~imts - ~ead:inel

:~92. Loan volume ·remained
(dona dtrough the nine tnOD'bs, ....
~ cued somewiW in the begin-

Qina d the fourth qa ta.

~: Peoples Bancorp, wilb or
~3 Million, inCludes The l"ecclib
•
and Trust Compll!y wilh

m ~ Belpre, l..owell,

Middlepon. NelloBYillc,
and The Plains; IIIII dte Filla

·

I Bank of Southcastefll
Qbio with offices in Caldwell,
· =.terhill and McConaelsville,

.,

~~oney Ideas

Wiseinan· installed·'vic.e
president of IIAO

GALLIPOLIS • The weather is
perfect for football. hay rides, and
gulping apple cider.
And according to officials at
Columbus Southern Po.wer, it's
also the perfect time to prepare
your home for the colder wmter
Weather ahead.
• "The winter heating SCMOO officially began on November 1." said
Roo McDade, Manager of Colwnbus Southern Power's Gallipolis
Area Office. "Colder wcatbcr can't
he too far away, and a few minutes .
of pr~on now can help keep
elcctnc bills lower in January or

COLUMBUS • lndepeadent
inswanc:e . , - Thomas E. Wisemm o( Glillipolis - insulled as
vice pn:sident of the lndqlendent
Insuranc:e Aaatll of Ohio (IIAO)
dl!fina CCI'CII!OI!iea 111 the association's 95th •twal coavenlion Oct.
13 in Cohnbus.
Wia 'W", peaidea' of the Wiseron Agency lac., 451 Second
Ave., {l!llipnlis, .,.mously aerved
is &amp;reasun:r ud as a member of
DAO's oo.d of lnJIICU for three

yean.

.

.

.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - U.S.
C:J.porlS of honic:ultural JlrodUCIS
IDialed $435 million in AUIUJl, 7
pm:eu1 bi&amp;ber thin ihc- month

ayararGs-.

.

The sharpest iacreases in
AQI!Il WID m •• · d wgaables
liuillll!d 't l:ille juic;e.
II! the fint 1 PIOI!Ibl oC fiscal
1~ the llltll value or u.s. loti·
cultural
$5.5 billioa,
13 J'C!"II' bjper than the same
period.

..r

r

.....,..u ,_..lier.
Equities

McDade recommends that customers ftrSt look at thj:ir heating
syslml to begin their home wcatb·
erization efforts. A number of
actions will help keep customers
warm while lowering their electric
bills. For instance:
Make sure you clean or change
your heating system's filter.
Clogged or dirty filters reduce the
syslml 's eff1ciency.
·
Clear any debris from the out·
door element of your heating syslem.

In addition to his position as
trustee, WiSCJDao bas served as
vice cbailmu ol the Oltio Agent~
Political AclioD Commiace. He Ills
also been active u a legislative
ambassador 10 the Ohio LegisJ•htre
milO lhe u.s. Coagreas.
In 1990, he RICeived the associa·
.tioo's Yoliog Cl!liger Award for
THOMAS E. WISEMAN
outstanding youna agent in Ohio.
the Community Improvemmt CorWiseman bas served as presi- poralioa. In addition, be is a past
deM of the Gallipolis Rotary Club, director of the Oallipolis Golf Club
as direcf« or the ('.aJJipolis a-.
115' d O~nmm:e and as dira:tor of ml of Holzer Vl!llg!Rd, Inc.

Horticultural exports
up over 1991 mark

February."

Join~

sales staff

POMBROY - Sherry L. Riffle
ol Racine bas joiDed the sales slaff
at Teaford Real Estate, Pomeroy, '
having received word from the :
Obi!» Real Estate Commission of'
succeasful co.:rletion of the all
teqUiremeniB
the cum. She is
now engaa~ iD all fat~ of the
real estaic bulin err
Riffle graduated in 1989 .from
Soutbem Hip Scbool, and coatinucd her eclut:atim at Southeastern
Business College ia Gallipolis,
studying real estate criteria. She
also e•rcnded ibe Hondros Career
Ceitl« in Columbwi.
. Riffle and her b~, Shan·
noa, tellde Ill •aetw

Check all registm and air return
vents to ensure good air circulation.
Drapes and furniture can block the
free movement of air.
Get a professional "tune-up" for
your heating system if it hasn't had
one recently. Just as an auto tuneup increases mileage, a heating syslml tune-up ~ efficiency. .
Set your thermostat as low as IS
reasonably comfortable. Turning
the thermostat down one degree
can reduce your annual heating
costs by about t1uee percent
.
Once your healing system 1s
operating at peak efficiency, you
can look at other ways to save
energy around your home, such as:
Applying caulk a~d weather·
stripping around extenor doors and
windows replacing or adding wher·
ever there seems to be an air Jcak,
Adding pre-cut insulatinll foam

pieces behind switch plate and out- SMART Pac can help reduce annulet covers on outside walls.
al electric bills by $50-60. The
Insulating the water heater and SMART Pac: conSISts of a water
hot wa1er pipes to prevent unwant-•. heater wrap, an energy-saving
ed heat loss.
· · showerhead, a compact flumsccnt
Installing or adding insulationiO light bulb, pipe insulation, and
prevent heat loss through walls, switch aitd outlet insulatOrs. Cusceilings, and floors.
tometS can obtain a SMART Pac 81
McDade also urged customers a special discounted price by call,
to coatact the company for an ener- ing l-800282-211&amp;.
gy-savmg SMART Pac. The

Farm Flashes

Ohio corn harvest
behind schedule
ByEDWARDVOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS • The wceldy
Crop-Weather Report released
November 16 estimated that Ohio
Corn harvest progress has now fallen 10 over four weeks behind normal. High winds a week ago forced
corn to break at the boUom causing
varying degrees of lodging. The
Ohio Soybean harvest was set at 98
percent complete.
The soybean price bas been on
"shaky" grounds due 10 increased
supply and export trade problems.
Some economist believe that the
market may ignore the larger soybean supply in light of revived
GATT uade talks and talks of
progress in the U.S. and EC trade
dispute. A soybean price increase is
a good news/bad news story for
farmers in Meigs and Gallia Counties. Ca$11 grain producers who sell
soybeans welcome any price
improvement, but livestoclc producers that must purchase protein supplements will experience higher
COSIS.

A ~Y ot bam oa every table
for ThankSgiving! That is not a
leftover campaign ~· Calculations in "Doane s Agricultural
Report indicate that supplies of

.
'

''

ham and turkey are large Mough 10
provide one or the otlier to every:
twt? people in the United States; .
dunng this quarter.
'
What is NAFTA? The Nortli: .
American Free Trade AgRement ~
commonly called NAFfA. Im~
of the free trade agreement aro,
uncertain. Some individuals andi
businesses will gain, .others wilt
lose. Much of the increase irt
U.S./Canada trade has already.
occurred since that agreement in'
1989. The most significant irlc:n!asq
in U.S. trade because of tbe
NAFTA will be with Mexico. Mel.~'
ico is one of our fastest grow!~~
markets for fresh and proces ,
meats. Me1.ico is the world's
largest market for milk powder,
Rcslrictive policy has ca~. us. 1q.
ship almost no tobacco to Mexic:q1
in the past. MeJ.ico is currentlY.
over third largcsl export maket foi1
wood products. Not evcryoae winsf,
~ procc:ssing veg~ .industr1:
will face intense compeuttoo lrorif
Mexico. An increased number or-.
feeder calves imported from Mcxi
co could lower the price of U.S:
produced calves. Dr. Allen LinesExtension Slate Specialist for Pulil
•
Continped on D-8

1111111........ 1!0111'1 are MOIIUJ, ..... , ,
Weda'l'daJ ad ll'rlday, 9-.31 .,., tD 5:31~:.:
Sldaa11Q, 9-.31a.e tD 1 ,...; .... claleA
'

POMEROY

day Md S•adaJ. Tlte .pl!oae •••IMr II 9922141. Goodwllt 1 lle1 lit Mlddlmp•t ..... 1111
· wife, Situ r,, al!d twa teeaqe - . Nick lllld
NMJtatt

'

CONVENIENT HOURS: Mon..frl. 1:011-8:00; Sit. t:00-4:00; Sun. 1:00-1:00
r.... aTitle,_ Not lnelucMd- All II 1 •• tD Dul•r

. ..

••

I

I

:
•
:
'

�P8ge

D2-8undt~Y T1m11

Pomeroy-Middleport Oalllpo118, Ott Point n

Sentinel

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

8

&amp; Auction

ISAAC'S 'AUCI'IOIHOUSE

.HUTCHINSON AUOION INC.~

J"'SSO St. .......

SAnelt-Dr7.P.a.
_,.,a.....,

.

I ID JDWJ I, I . . . . . . . ...

... cs

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

-..ldMt-a~comeoutaentar--s

..............
.....,al_,
........
Daor,.. ..........
1

•

,

•••

•

tDocL

POLICIES

2

• Ad• ooa.Nie the county jour ad I'UILI!

•lUl

Brlntin' l~~r._..., .., ..u
••
Auc:ticwJtJr Flnle -..- ..._
Lie. &amp; Bol 1 1- Ill 1510 ar Ill IIIII'
Not l'elpCiilellle tiw ' i 'a • IIIII ....._

In Memory

be prepaid

• Receive dWcouat for ad. paid ia advaDCe.
• Free Ad. : Civu.way and F9und ad. 111..der 15 ~onl. will be
fUll J day1 at DO ebarp.
• Price of ad for aU capil&amp;llet&amp;en U double price of ad e01t
• 1 poiatliM type only u..ed
I Seatiael Y, aot ,_poDI!ible for CITOI'I af&amp;er far1l clay (check:
for erron far1t day ad rwu La paper). C.U hefore 2:00p.m.
day after puh.lic:ation tD make correction
• Ad. that Mlllll be paid ia advance are:

C..rd of Thaau

Pill'S
WAREHOUSE

••o
BUY-OUTS- QOSEOUI'S- SECOIIDS
WELISIOI,

Happy Ado

Ia Metnori.t.a
Y"rd Sale~
• A cl... itlllld .d•ertilemeat placecl ia the CallipolU Daily
Tribu.De (except ClauitNid Duplay , Bu.ineu Card or Le,al
Nobcea) will alto appear in the Point Pleuut Repter and
the Daily Sentinel, r•chint over 18,000 hoNOI

ClAD DOUilE HIIIG WINDOWS. Yws w a.

IOih Wwddlng AMw.r-y

:copy DEADLINE

No-18111, 11142
ROLAND IIIII TAESSIE STElMEII

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thwsday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Papet~
Friday Paper
5Wlday Paper

There ,.r• ptu1 thlll" h.:l .... • .,..., QDI to do.
But, Blbe.thlre'a onethlntl knowroreure
I will •lwlf• bvtl lnd ~you.
1 -....~ '
Lawd and Ndly ....._. by huobond, Ao-...
.
anclohlkhn.
ond PMty

r...,

Clouified po.g~s cover the
fo~ing telephone exchanges ...

,,

RATES
Days

: . G~a County Melp County Maao11 Co,, WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-GolllpoH•
367-Cheoblre
388-Vlalen
1 241&gt;-Rio Gnade
. 256rG•y•• Diol.
643-An!Ha m..,
379-'Wolaal

671&gt;-PI. PleuaDI
458-leon .
576-Apple G.....
773-Muoa
882-New H•ven
895-Letan
937-Bu/Falo

992-Mlddleportl
Pomeroy

985-Cheoler
843-Porthnd
247-Leta" F.U.
949-Raclae

742-Rutland
667-(oo!.ille

1
3
6

10
Monthly

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00

$ ,20
$ .30
$ ,42
$ ,60

$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

$.05/day

\ILl\( II \\1&gt;1"1

wx•

--..--.Food

1oa'x41•pcs.&lt;*sM14

••s1us,...

-~

IIOW $3.95 PC. 0150 PC. $1
INnRIOI AIID BI&amp;IOI PIBMIG
DOORS- BIIUIKE SO'S.
litS.w'sjs,
614-314-3645

...,

On the abova data, lnte,.atad p•rtleil muat
IBIIlld.
~ lnfonnatlon on the prilperty 11111y be
oblaltlad at tha office of the TIUiurwr of tl!•
Board of Education •I 23D Sll•wnu Lane,
Ce''f!DIIa,Ohlo.
r
The Bosird of Education ah•ll raaerve tiM sight ·
1D SICCipl Or r.fact any or all bide at tiM regular
Board llaatlng hwld In Dlcamber, 11M12, TIM
...alng will be ltald at 230 ShnwnH Lana,
Jewll

SATU~DAY,

•

Wa would llka to
thank everyone that
helped us celebrate
our 50th wedding
annlvarsary, and for
gifts we received.
Special thanks to
our daughters, Mar·
garet and Charlotte,
grandchildren . and
their wives.
All ware able to
aHerid but Mlchail
Eduraulo wl\o le
I . leeching school In
Jacksonvlllw, Fla.
Giles &amp; Beatrice

.

Real Estate Gener:al

51- HoUHhold Gooclo
52- Sportias Gooclo
53-Aati&lt;J54- Mioe. Merohaaclile
55- Bwldi"« Supplieo

' 3-- Auouocenteall

HIDALA

I 1I I I
5

PARTIAL UST: Oak hutch, glass front w/doora and
drawers; china, glassware, 6 pc, sterling silver tray
(Carmeill!), phcher (silver over copper), 4 pc •.,bed:
room suite, oak table w~h 2 captain and 4 aide
chairs, gun rack, console, stereo aet w/8 track, tumt,
able AMIFM, approx. 1,000 new egg cartons, com,
pact stainless steel freezer on casters, electric dryer,
larrj)s.
Gas tobacco heater, Williamson Heater Co. , 1931
furnace, milking equipment , glaaa lined pipelines,
lnternat'l 8' hay rake, lnternat'l 2 bottom plow , 3 pt.
hitch 14", 930,A Ford finishing mower, Grain Maater
mixer and grinder 2 ton, 8' aatell~e diah, 2 tracior
Wheels 11nd tires, 8' truck cap tops, 2 wheel carts, 2
motorcycles for parts, tractor hoe (pull type), John
Deere hydraulic rubber lire disc, pull type,
lntemetional disc 3 pt. h~ch 6', buah hog 3 pt. h~ch
6', Ford plow 3 bottom 3 pt. hitch, tractor 830 Case
diesel, 275 fuil tank, hog furrowing crate, pull type
manure spreader, 300 gal. cherry brill milk tll!lk. air
compressor, free standing atallt, Univeraal vacuum
purr.,, new pipe, new 5 hp motor, Copllland refrigera,
tor motor pu"" with new compreaaor, Solar 400 gal.
stainless steel milk tank, stainless steel sink, 2,24"
compartments, Oelval solid state pullator control box,
4 stall automatic head locka, alec. Oelval pulutors,
Chore Boy pulsators, Univeraal glaaa milk lines,
Chore Boy milkers, cinder .blocks, MANY MOI'IE
ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION.

I

While waiting in line at a

':::,;::,
==·:::,::;::·~ government
agency I heard a
r
new immigrant say to his lei,
TH R U N E

I I' I I

~::W;A~M. ~R~O:;R=!

I

.1

.....,'::-~.;.;.,.;,:,;;,,:,:,~
9
I I I 11 0

.

.

.

.

.

birds have their"' "'"'" '"

0

Llcenaed and Bonded Ohio 13721 • W, VL It 030
Available for houethald, fertn, •tate and
chllrlty auctlone.
Not f411ponalble for accldenta or !oat lte11111.
Ref,.ahmenta and.Food will ba avalllbla.

ESTA7E

AUCTION

Auction

~ ·9- Wuted

k&gt;

Buy

1 \11'1 m m \T
-.J I;\ I&lt; 1.:-

Complete lht chuckle qu &gt;ltd
by filling In tho miulng words

32 Locust StNet,

15-- School. &amp;: lnllructioD

16- Bad», TV &amp; CD Repair
i1- Mioc:ellanoo.. •
18- Waated To Do

1'1\ \\(I \I .

B..a.- Opportunity
22- Moaey to Loan
Prol. .ioul Service~

*" 21-

GaThPoll•

446·1066

LOCATED AT 2002 CHATHAM AVENUE IN
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
TO SETTLE THE ESTATE OF THE LATE HILLARD "DUCK"
WALLIS THE FOLLOWING ITEMS WILL BE SOLD
,1989 Chevy ~1 0truck 2.51uel injoction, 39,354 actual miles.
•1981 Chevy Cilation 4door, not running
·~zard Ridi'9 Lawnmower, 12 HP, 42' cut, 7speed i.~ . nice condition.
,Older mod&lt;&gt; small Trulest riding mower
•21 ' Statesman self propelled lawnmower with bag , Uke New I
•4 h. Bush fbg, MF.
•6 h. Salenile Dish &amp; Raceiver Amplifier

14- 8Uiiaea Tr~ns

1. GREAT STARIER HOME located on Falrtiald Lane
offers 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, central air, vinyl siding,
fenced yard, 1 car garage. Only $44.000.

~

2. ROOM TO GROWl Very nice family home lo,
cated off St. Rt. 7 has up to 5 bedrooms, 2 1/2
SCRAM LETS
BURROW
PANTRY
DAHLIA
OBTAIN
HUNTER
MARROW
OWN BATHTUB

Allen C. Wood RaaltoriBrokar 446 4523
Ken Morgan, Raaltor/Brokwr 4 41 0171
Moae cantaltl\!ry, R•ltor 441 3401
,
Jeanetta Moo,., Realtor-256-1746
Tim Wataon, Aueic.- 4414027 ,
.;

•

'"

A

'

AUCTION CONDUCTED BT

:33- Farm~ for Sale

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

34- Bwtlr~N~ Buildiap
35--IAio &amp; Ac.....,
36-- Real E.tate Weated

ATTENTION HORSE ENTHUIIASTS - 27
tann an Wooda Mil Rotld otl•ra a.xeo
bam Wilh 5 ho....... and 2 IMding ......
~ on
IMtu,.o 3 BRo, ball!, LR,
ltilchon. FP. ..... hMI. new IDOl,

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON ...
ADMIMSTRATOR: STEVE WALUS
MASON.• WV
773,5795

J;J·:YI \1.:-

REDMAN DOUBLE WIDE IN QUAIL ·CREEK, 6
old, 3 bedroom, 2 batho, living roam, dining
kildlen, ulifl!y room. Priced at $29,100.

'"r...,l

TEAMS: Cesh or Check with 10.

'

:n -:- HoiiHI for Real

While waiting in line at a govern,
ment agency I heard a new lmmig,
rani say to his fellow countryman ,
'This is a great country! Here .even
lhe birds have their OWI\I
BATHTUB!"

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

"12- Moblle Homel for Real

NORTH

BRIDGE

+K 9 52

NEW USTING • VA ASSUMABLE l»droom doublawidt situated on t.59 aorelot
located 3 mllao IIDm town . Large detachtld
recraation roam. Priced at $55,000.
t701
·''I,J
·1

SUPERB CONDinON - Beautiful ranch in

lmmaculete oc&gt;ndition. Ovarlooki~g tha river,
thfa 2700 oq. ft. plus home oHers plenty of
IDDIIi lor !he tamly. Featuf9s Include Vll'f nice
aat,in kitchen larga lamlly raam plus rec.
""""· 2 fi~~~placeo, bulti.,l living raam. Allo
hu fngiDUnd pool, ..1'1111 patio al8&amp;. l.arga 1
ocra /ot. Cell for an appolnlm..,l todayf SPRING VALLEY HOMEI - Supar neighl~c&gt;r,
$134,100.
1204 hood, great location. Colonial 2 slOI'f h.0 !"0
offers 4 bedrooms, 2)1 baths, formal hvmg
raam and dining room , den and large tamlly
n&gt;Om. S1al8ga shed. Extra large lot 'Reduced
Ia $87,5001
1213

NEW UBnNG IN SPRING VALLEY • Yoor
family will •nj'oy all the apace this 3 l»droom
hao Ia oHer. ncfu~o extra larga family roam
witlf woodbumer, living room with warm
fireplace, tormal dining room !'.nd , eaHn
kiltchen, 2 lui bath a. Outtidt amo1111~1 tncludt
Iorge deck and palfo. Good · otze yanl.
Outbuilding. Priced to •II at $78,100. 1221

EAST

.7

I:R'''""~"A

••t

:' The book
·:.. of the big.one

HOUSE AND I ACRES M OR L Local8d on
588 Houoe hao 5 raamo, 2 bedrooms, 1
AT 125,000,
.

1 nvt&gt;Ynl

Vulnerable: North,South
Dealer: South

Pbilli)l Alder

Soutb
Pass

West

2 NT

Pass

z•

Nortb
Pass
3NT

Eatt

Pua

All pass

Opening lead: • 10

rather than the queen. In with tbe
spade ace, West switched to the club
six. Fischer woo in hand with the ace,
played a club to dummy's king,'tlUhed
dummy's heart ace (discarding a dla,
mond), and played off her other three
club winners. This brought East down
to five cards. When she opled1to keep
the Q.-10 of spades and A,K,9 of dla,
montls, Fischer played a spade to
d'l"!my's kiDg 8DCI anotber spade.
Back came the diaiiiOIId nine, l!Ut Fi,
scher had no choice: She put up the
queen and made her game.
If East bad retained the ~10,8 of
spades and A,K of diamonds, declarer
· would bave e1iled with a diamond tmd
collected two spade tricks.

end._...

Owner hu .-tired
~
er. Thil 4 or 5 BR hallie hu 2 bdla. II': • . ~. caniJ8I ... and much · Lac • Ill
4143n1Avs.l52,100.

--

11571. ~ NOGE ROAD- IU&amp;all
lWP,.- tann, 3 pondl,
--.
55x1op bam, w/conc- lloo11, m.,o COiiilldso
tplil
1818. LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
. BUSINESS, • SR 180 n.ar Bu..vile Pika,
llpiDX. 20Cfr200' lot, .. u1i1Hin IN
I

2

-

. , ._ _ .,.. -·jlllgst.-,..,

CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN

1

--"'

Kylene,

Happy First
Birthday,

Qa 7 6
+AQ9H

• If you enjoy reading about World
: Bridge Championships, buy the book
• of the 1991 event. It is published by
: Apsbridge Services 'Limited, a British
~ company, and is available for $24.93
• from The Bridge World, 39 West 94th
Street, New York, NY 1002&gt;7124. The
text was written by Englishman Brian
Senior and Canadian Eric Kokish.
;
The winners were Iceland in the
• Bennuda IIOwl, and USA II in the Ven,
~ ice Cup (the women's event), Even
though today's deal from the Venice
• Cup Final res~! led in a game swing to
• Austria , I liked the way the declarer,
: Doris Fischer, took her chances.
,• South's balancing two no--trump af,
• ter she had passed showed a minor
: twa.-sulter. Perhaps p)qued that her
• partner hadn't doubled (which she
might well have done), North raised to
• three no-trump.
,
The opening lead was won with
·: dummy's heart jack. Declarer called
. for a low spade, finesSing her eight
when East incorrectly played the four
1

HAPPIN6SS BY THE ROOMFUL
Com,
pkltely satisfying 4,5 bedroom, 2 bath bl,klvel
with malntananco · - vinyl siding, Large oving
raam and dining room, huge family 100111 with
pool table, comfortable kitchen with wooden
dock to enjoy your summer mtNifs on. NiC8 liz•
lol in gl8at noighbolhood Ia raioo child~an in.
Now add a 1 car gerage and large cloaela
thiDUdlou~ •••l'fthing your family could want
$77,500. .
1604

CLOSE TO GAVIN &amp; RIVER VALLEY
HIGH SCHOOLII - Two small &amp;efliaga lola on
blacktop 10ad. Water available. $5,900 each .
PERFECTLY PRICED FOR YOUNG FAM., Pattee! lor mobile home. Both for $10,000. Call
1214
UESI _ Smart 3 bedn&gt;Om vlnyt oidtld ranch tor more delaifs.
homo with attached garage. You wtl ~­
INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY
tho care this homo has boon gtven by
particular owners. PriC8d Ia •A al $411,500t5o2 Good in lawn location cioN to ochool keapo
this double ,..,tad, Good cancilion. Nice lo~ on
aunt patking. $44,500.
1213

1508

• Q 10 64

ALDER

.,

EASY TO LOVE KITCHEN - Is just one ol
the feabJf9s that you Will l'I&gt;Praciata in this 3
bedroom ranch on 6)1 acres, mn. Others
Include new carpali':ljl. electric heat pump, 2
car gerage and salalhla dish. Calf today This
price: $59,900.
isoe

U·ll·IZ

SOUTH
+J83

~ By

r.=rs

CURB APPEAL ISN'T ALL YOU'LL AND •
In this 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick and vinyl ranch.
You'll appreciate the large master bedroom
with his and hor closets and its own lull ath.
This immaculate home is priced at $84;500.

tAK953
+J 10 2

•'

OAK SHADED LOT- Clooo to town location .
R.,..,;y bi4oval homo. Family 100m started In
lower lave! (nat much to finish1, 3 bedrooms,
aat~n kitchen, living room . Pncad lo oelf at
$49,900.
1205
THE KIDS AND YOUR POCKETBOOK
will ihank you when you became the piDud
ownas ot this aftoldablo beauty. 3 bedrooms, 1
b th large living raam and kllchan, 1 car
a ' huge deck and large tencad yrud. The
right al $49,500. G1'8&lt;111 Elem,/G.A~

DON'T SETTLE FOR A HOUSE .JUST TO
UVE IN., ,From the momont.you atap into the
larga toyor you can "tear your l~ily living in
thio clauic. Fonnal hvmg room, dtntng roo,m,
ouooy 1&lt;ilchen, very livable family 100111, 3 nt&lt;:t
bedrooms plus 2 tuU batha. Storage gelora 1n
th• larga attic, 1 car gstl8ge, tuU baoemont If
thara not enough, In town convoniencoo. f&amp;Oi

,;,~

.AQJ65
• 10
+K83

PHILLIP

Real Estate Genaral

GETAWAY, IIDEAWAYI ·Hera's an out of the
way 32 IC18S of ground. APprox. 8 acres
tillable, balance pastul8 and woodland. Utiily
polo, septic syal8m and dug well on property,
Bam. lnoxpanaivo property. Portee! tor mobilo
ho""' oet up, $19,500.
· 1212

Not Responsible for accidenls.or loss of property
. Uc:ensed and Bonded in Ohio, Kentucky, and Wes~ Virgin~a 166

~ U- Farnu for Real

2

baths, new vinyl siding, new roof . large farced In
yard and a 3cargarage. Pticed Right at $56.000.

AUCTIONEER'S NOTE:
BE ON TIME! THIS IS A COMPLETE LISTING,

•,. 32- Mobile Home~ for Sale

•

Serving Mason and Gallia Counlie•

you develcl) from ttep No. 3 below. ,.

·

Wootf 1?J,ilftu, Inc.

FRIDAY,
NOVEMBER 27, 1992

-11- Help Waoted
:12- Situatio111 WaD~
1.3- la.uranee

•

Real Estate General

REALTY COMPANY

Michael Watson, Broker .
Residential &amp; Commercial Real Estate

11 · 11

: 4--- Givuway

: 5- Happy Ado
· 6- Loo1 aad Fouad
: 7-IMt ud FoWKI : 8- Publ;c SUo &amp;

•

.. ·~~~Wo
•

I

A7SON

low countryman, "This is a

1-~.;-:.r.:.:.Ti~i-=:,-l
great country! Here evjln the
7
[

Card of Thanks

Real Estate General.

ANTOBI
16 I 1 I I

I

Pllga D3

Mr. end Mre,
Howard English
would like to
everyone for their
loving kindness
extended to hla
wife, Phyllis, durlng her recent
operation end
hol!piJal stay.

Campbell

Auctioneer Flnls'"lke" Isaac
614-388-8370, ,388 8880,889:6151,
245-511311

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

NOV. 28, 10:00 A.M.

• Phones:

\11 '\ T.~

" 1- CardoiTh...U
~ :2- I• MeMOty

I
I I I 1I ·
I
I 1 I' I I
2

3

Owner, Onvld Crittenden, It no longer oparatlng
dairy buelne.. •nd will be eelllng hit dairy buol,
na.. and will be eelllng hla dairy equipment,
aome farm equipment and houMhold 1te11111,
DIRECTIONS: From VInton, Ohio tek• -tl25 N.
appi'Ox, 4 mi. to Andrew• Ad, (which It 2nd rcL on
left from VInton) go lol. mi. and watch for •uctlon
algna,
From Pomeroy take 124 W, to SL Rt. 3258, fallow apProx, 6 mi. to And,.wa Rd,, g0 wpprox, lol.
ml, Walch lor •uctlon elgna,

of li.du~. 'I
'

I

PUBLIC AUOION

Callpolla, Ohio,

Gallla County Local

Public Sale

1

Card of Thanks

Thank You
We wish to thank
everyone for cards,
gifts and money we
received, also the
ones that helped In
everyway for our
Golden Anniversary.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Hen

Print letters of

NARPTY

Aeaac, Frank Hutchln.On 614-682-4348

The Galla County local Board of Education
hold • Public Auction to dlepo• of th• NORTH
GA" •• tiGH SCHOOL, Stata Rt. 110, Vlntoa,
Ohio. Ttte public auction ahall be ·hald on
lilmi'IIIIW', Dlcember 12. 111112 at. 10:00 a,m,
on the
.

1

eqch In Its llne of squares.

&amp; Auction

"'·
oak solid
aide minor,
cupboard
w~ ·14framea,
pane::~=~·~
bweled
hanging
plctu,.

NOTIQ OF PUBLIC AUOION

(2.14"11'-$1.90) (M:4"X12'-$2.75)
55 GAL PW1K IAIIBS $1.95 .._
Two for $15.00 Ft. t. $21.00
FIBERGlASS IIICISIDIII6

8

Tab us so n u w.t of Athena Mel
omoa
so . - t loasd8 McArthur, Auction !. a quarter
1-• ,..,. 011 the leiL Signa poat.d.
Oak secrelaly, oak eiTfllre lideboartl, oak five
aquare tabla,. ut of lix chaira, oak chiflorobe,
dn , _ with mllror, oak - h atand, 2 door book,;l
CMe, HI of 26 alelgh belll,lrUnk, oak end Olhtr r~~, :1&lt;1(

J

'::~~~;~' S©\\~lA-~t-trse WOlD
141totj by CLAY I. POllAN--- - ~~~·
-0 words
Reorronr;Je the 6 scrambled
below to make 6
simple word:5.

Sentinel

T1m11

RUBWOR

SUNDAY, NOV. 29 AT 10:00 A.M. :

CASfJIOB •
8
Public Sale
;
p Very low 11..--:._.=::::&amp;=A=U=CII=on==---...fw
~

pri~ or •ike ...
11EA'IID SliUCIWAl WMIEI

Rates are for cOllsecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

CLASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FASn
I \ \Ill \(I

Words

••
•

nirror, hook rvg, forge, chum, atone jars,
tine, llin1Ms, milk bottl•, agg bukets, potbelly atcive,
woocbumer, coal heater, chlcklln feeders, chick11n :1
·10011, other amaU antique&amp; and collac:tilles,
T-= C..h or chKk with . poaltlve 10, Out
.... buyw~ need blink letter for chl&lt;ck
.vllllable.
.
Auctlon11r llark .Hutchlnson 614-898:6708
LlcanMd and Boncleclln Ohio

·

[NTHI·

•

CONSIGNMENT AUOION

Al.tyleealdDia,
ht . . . . .
_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . al ....
JOU -

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, oH Point Pl11sant, '1IV

you want it...
you·ve gotiL.

. Public Sale

'

......
fo"'

22,1982

November 22, 11112

,_..., .........

I . . . . etalohr

ingiJIGiorjlll.., .......... dan'tlotllia

-01\ t:: t '!'
Cs1o11. 11JW

IIOVE YOUR FAIILY INTO THII LOVELY
4 . 1 - 1?1, s 8Ro, IIIII, LA,, HOlE lacatod .. 711 Sec, Av.., doMID oto,.,
__.. e. • 1 • • AI~ ~ 1 n chua~&amp; lhoppil~g. 3 liRa, 2 balla, LR, FR.
CIIIWIIar- dtltlo. .... Fl*lldlcMI, 1111 hoe~ -.t. air.

.-z•

Int._..... Cit..,....,-.,..,
LD1' OM 7
- a . . . ...._
C'Pm ROAD -

....... - 0wMr ,

c llli. N, af Rio Oral*.

~
. ._
. . "'
-•ojed w.cant t.nct.
Jdiol
_al
_
.,.,_
•.

..

•

IMO. PLANTZ SU8DMSION - Nioe olsl1lr

II'ODIUa - 4-r" D AIR ULE-

•

Gaad

i II I 1:.11 Wlillwa2 1118,. I.R,Iilchan IIIII
holM.,._ 3 BRo. 111 ball, LR,Idl., W .._. baiLC:IIar-illar
f
rnent w/outofde entiY, caipOII. 1111 heel. ~ ·
utititll.

11111, 71 ACRES MIL, SUgar c-k Road Wa18r tap and bam on property. $32.000.

.••._,a.. "" =· ....
~.
o.Mr •

tLi&amp;9 .. .. •
11.

Ads

......

•

REMODELED ONE ANO ONE·HALF STORY HOME,
Locattld on Slilla RoUIB 7 al Eureka) ! bedrooms, living
100m, clnlnQ 100m, ldlchen and bath localed on 32.9 sera
mil, CALL to BEEII
,

PROPERTY LOCATED WOODSIDE ROAD, 2 mobile
homea, one a 1976Allen, one bedroom, one 1873 Caolte,
three bedraama on a t50'x455'1ot. Cal tor Information.

'

17,5 ACRES llll. RACCOON TWP. • Fronts
on SR 325 N, n.ar Rio Grllllde. NK. holM

OWN YOUR OWN IUSINESS•Located an Rt. 7
{Eureka), 30'x36' block building with alorage In baoement
7o It frontage on Rt 7. Lofruna I) Ohio River. Was uiled
as convenient mart. DRASTICALLY REDUCED. NOW
ONLY $32,000.

124,423 ACRES 11/L; · GREEN and
8PfiNGFIELD TWPS. • Juat oft Sl At. 35, d
. -lind, lcMel farciMiopmlnt

YOUR "GET aTalm
inla thlo hom•y · three badiDotn with
tenoad backyald. You'l lov• 1M ..1'1111 kilchen
and adjoining oozy family room . Priced at
$37,100.
I5GI
S.~

I

.

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS In Rodney Village If. Call tor
infonnalion.

SR 110. Sma• home Wid .818 8':18 mit

'

REAL FStroE 1l'C
~44

nro.aT&lt;'n IN OALUPOUS •VIne Street, 4 rental 101111,
Qocdlncon1epropeny. Call for more lnfomiltion,

0..,... ....... 1111. m.ooo. c:Mny Drive, edgo of IDwn oft
will 20'llo
1

f

BUILDING FOR SALE IN JACKSON, Put busineia
downoltlirs and II haa a 3 bedroom aparll!lent upatal11.
Slalt your aun buslneao and Nve upstairs. CALL ABOUT
THISONEI

12M. CO.-eACIAL PROPERTY - 1.4 A.
IIIII, 248 flonlllga 1llong SR 7, justocrosa 11om
Olio River Plua.
.

....

NICE LOCATION FOR A HOME, 12 acreo M or L.
Approx. 1 112 mile,from new Ri- Valley High School, on
blackiOp road. Rural water &amp;l'llifobfe. Prioad al $15,000.

DEEP IN THE WOODS - Natural beauty.
wildlife and a lftde tofltude enhance th11
COiotom lallc:h on use acl8o. mn. 4l»&lt;&lt;roomo.
2!-i batha tannol living and dining 1001110, fa~
kitchen with dining area, .. ~ family roam wtth
~~ inMrt. Oversized 2 car attached
honte stall, large wort..hop, aloraga
A majestic retreat from crowdo.
1610

DON'T MAKE ANOTHER MOVE,..,
WITHOUT SEEING THIS HOlE FIRSTI II
Locatod . In a quiet family ori•ntad
·
noidlbalhootf,
this 3 bed100n1 homo ohrs a lot
EXCELLENT COM'~BICIAL BUSINESS
without aoking for a lot l.arga kitchenllamify
GINt polanlial tar mall My lype ol butiiMU,
raam al8&amp; with cathtldllll CIIUing and of&lt;yfighta,
Thia 3,112 oq. ll buiking mt .....,ly btoodlt in
$500.00 par month. 2 bedroom apartment living room, 2 lull batht, ocr..ned in pon:/1,
attached garage, Largo lot. City ochoolo.
ovelhead. Building could ba tranotarmad into
1200
reoidential property vel'f eaaily. Priced at $59,900.
$75,000. Run a buain•ss balow and five
upllllh.
1210
LANDSCAPE ARTISTS AND NATURE
LOVERS I -This window,ful NStic cednr lanch
on
23.8 ac~a, m!f, is awash wtth light and.filled
· QUIET COUNTRY UVING - Mov• inlo tho
country and onjoy lhio baautilul liW. 111 up. A with views of wooded grandeur. Fa~tunng 3
larga 2 acra lot with pt.nty of good ftal ground hugo bodraama, 2 baths, tormal llv1ng 10om
·tor onimalo. 3 bedroom .-mOdoled hOlM, 1111111 with ft18placa, 22 ft. family room, large kitchen
., buliding wHh 3 high overhead doors, pluo with dining area, :i car ga~ , and 18'x30
lng10und pOOl. If you want quaoty and comfort
lntclor and implomentl. All tor only sso.oootZol
in a priva!. wooded oetting, you better call on
thll ..... $108,100.
1202
'
WANT A HOME AT AN AFFORDABLE
l'fiiCE? - Then you need to tab aloo~ allhil DO YOU WANT IT ALL BUT CAN'T
.....tv. ..rge fiVIriWdining roam combmation, AFFORD IT ALL? - This home io lor you.. 4
nklt lcltchon with foundiY- 3 bedroom a~ badraamo, 1 beth, lalll" living roo":', lam1fy
2 'batho. Newly paint.cl ceilings and extanor. room klll:hon with dining 118&amp;, Ullhty 10011)
Combine. thlo low price with low in..,.., 18too ~ocate.. in a graal neighborhood on.an o..r,
and you can fulfill your homCIDwn•~• di'HII1. oized lol g1811 tor kids. J&gt;riced at only $43::0
$28,100,
. 1613
.
·.

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·9555
Loretta McDade- 446-7729

Carolyn Wasch- 441·1007
Sonny Games- 44~-2707

B. J. Hairston - 448 4240

•

•

.

'I •

,..

,:;.,

.

.. -·· ..

..

•

•'

I

7

'

�''

•

I

11m• sem1ne1

wv

OH Point

11182

NoVember 22, 1 •

'

..IT'S NOT·TilE
PRICE·OF
THE CAR BUT
THE DIFFERENCE
YOU _PAYI"

CALL
RICK TOLLIVER,
TOM MILSTEAD,

DR

TIGER SAYRE
HOWl.
1-800-964-3673

244 SOUTH CHURCH STREET
RIPLEY, WV
'

'

1992 F150 XLT
V-8, AUTO., LOADED

$14-,995°0
19

ESCORTQT

POWER MOON ROOF,
LOADED WITH OPTIONS

$11 95°0
1992

3

$12,995°

0

1993 RANGER Xlf.
AC, SPORT SEATS, LOADED

$11,495°0
. 1992 F-150 4X4
XLT, LIMITED SLIP, LOADED

$14,995°

0

1993 GRAND MARQUIS
AUTO., AC, CRUISE, POWER

$19,995°0

.$'20,849°0

Announcements

HELP WANTED
· "

4

Giveaway

.

3 Yoor Old Dog. Nlco Ptl,
MOving Ctn~ KHp. Coli 814&lt;

4 CYL., 5 SPED

FFM Dryw For P•rt1 To
GIVIIWiy Call AH• 5 P.ll. 114367-7873.

Outoldo Long Htlrod 10 Morlh
Old llolt Col, Grey With Whho
Uarldng!c~ontlo Good llouoor,

POWER MOON ROOF, LOADED

$15,995°

4411-4850.
Adonoblo Bordtr Colllo /Col lit -.
Mix Puppln. 8 Wtiko Old. To
Good Homoi614-256-156L

·$6495°0

814-371'"""'·
Sm•ll bl~ek 1errlerajc;t trained

0

ho..o dog, qulot, .

6

1992 F-150 4X2

2-3488. .

w-

$10,995°0

Found: IIIIo Block Lob, Vlclnhy:
AppfOL 114 01 A IIIIo On Stole
Routo 218.114-446-13116.
LOST 7 mo old klaon, blk w/3 ·
whlto opoto on choot, vlclnfty
Zllh I 24th Sto I Jtllon&lt;&gt;n AYO.
304.e7SoS1211 or 875-44111.

1992 F-150 "NITE"
V-8, AUTO., ALL OPTIONS

7

. $15,995°0.

Yard Sal.

ALL.Yord Sotoo lluot .. . Plld In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 pm.
tho dty botoro tho od lo to tvn.
. ·sundoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldty_ llondoy odllon • 2:00
p.m. Sot-y.

8

DIESEL. AUTO., LOADED

$22 495°0

&amp; Auction

'

1993 f·150 SUPERCAB

1993 ESCORT WAGON

Rick Paonon l.uotlon Compony,
lull time ouotlonoor, camptott
•~Cilon
oorvloo.
Uconood
ISI,Ohlo l · Wool Vlrglnlo, 30477M711.

AC, CASS., JUMP SEATS

ALL OPTIONS

V.lod-or'o Auction - o
Rio Orondo, Ohio 814-24J.5182, '

.

$14;495°

0

$10,995°0

-19_9_3-P-RO_B_E_V-+-19_9_3
FULL OPTION VEHICLE

$14 '995°. 0

lull limo IUCIllconood I bondod ototoo oi
0hlo l Wool VltVInla, 304-lln2271 or 113~2121.

Cootoo

4dr.

9

Wanted to Buy

Comploto Houoohoid Or 'e.
tolool Any Typo 01 . FumHIWo,
Appllonooo, Antlquo'o, Etc. Aloo
AOIIIOio.o1 Avolloblol 114-245Sis2.
Don~ Junk kl Btll Uo Your NonWotldng llalor Appllancot,
CTV'o,_· Rofttgorotoro,
FM~t VCts'•, lllciawave 1 ,
Air ""'"'llonoro, Gultol . _ ,
Eto. 1114-2Sa-1238•
Or Almoot Now WooolburI10f 1-rt Prof• Buell. 114-4461142.
Outdo«llghtod notlvlly oot, 814D4I..2lllt.
.Wintod To Buy: JUntc Autoa
With Or Wltho.. Motoro. Coli
Lorry LIYOiy. 114-3118-1303.
Top Prien Pold: All Old u.s .
Coins Q0 ld AI
Sll Col
•
ng!f vor nt,
Gotd Colna. II.T.::o. Coin Shop,
151 Socond Avonuo, Oolllpollo.

V-6, AUTO., AC. CRUISE,
.LOADED

$11

ALL VEHICLES LISTED ABOVE AFTER REBATE TAX, TITLE EXTRA

TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING
THAT'S RIGHT!
AT DENBIGH GARREn
FORD·MERCURY, WE'VE SOLD SO
MANY .NEW VEHICLES IN THE LAST
-J5 DAYS THAT IT'S TIME TO ROLL
THE TUDE·INSI
.

lnllnt lob¥otttor In lly HOmo
Joe- Plu Aroo, w-,0
Call $14 44 .. 411110.
·

" - CotnPOftll hoo lrn-loto
~
lor -mot
...,··
doblo
workorw
In tho
-·
1_
_,.,, lfoldt. if you oro
lnf-d In joining 1 ~~~~~
too~oond rooumo 1 ,.....,.~
- · X H-17, alo Pt. Pl. Rigfo.
!!!!t 200 lloln Ill, Paint flloooinl
wv 251180. EOE
'
MONEY -MONEY -MONEY
$400 Wk. Or lloro Moiling· Poo!
Cordo •
. ~tulllng Erwtlo!IOo At
Holilt. Auoh II I Solf-Addroo.
luood Slomoocl Envelope: DIA
pplloo, llax 11, H!Utboro, OH

Notdod: tOO Pwoplo To ' Wolaht - · No Wll P Nrot"':k
Oourontood.
Hooilod. ~
Blond
- · - Coli

3113-4

Oomo
Wonlorlo,
loQirltr
1111111_,_ Eto. Na Exp.
N--ry. l:or InfO Coli 21t711.e141 "Ext. 1710 t A.ll, To 1
11
·;7;
· Do;yo,::;.;8u;H;i"F;;;;-&amp;u:
S a - To lulld Fonco, 1142 - Botoro Noon.

:.:p·;

Sporto ""!~doni to onond
• wrfto .....non High 1a11oo1
botktlboll . . . . . Pild by ·tho
ortlclo1 flluo_ mil-. lloal hon
good ..._odgt of book•boll,
~ct lllndJ K - -Edhor,
~· P - Aoalot•, 200
lloln It or ool 304.e15.1333.
Stoy i - . moko OIOnOYf A-.
-1110 our . . - o oncl oom
up to 113311.84 por woo1t. Amoz.
. Ina ruarded m~ revul8
dolollo. 304 3-!l.eiiOII.
Iiiii Tlrno To lllllo Chtlatrnoi
!IOftovl Fh.t S To Sign Up To
Soli Avon WUI Aooi1n $35
FREE Produoto. 114-4411-4228-0r
1
801
.:.-aoo.&amp;51=;:;::-4::=· : : : . · - - - - - . : . • 18 .Wanted to Do
AHoroUono: Bowing a llondlng,

114-4411-4834.
El A TREE SERVICE, T-ng
Trimming, Troo AomOYII, HOclgo'
TrimminG. Froo Eodmolool 1143B~7051'Aft• 4p.m.

:II'~~to

Gllil~p~ PortdM S.wralll

Employment Services

WE HAVE THE NAMES AND PHONE NUMBERS OF AU fREVIOUS
OWNERS FOR RUERENa ON OUR ENTIRE USED INVENTORY,
SO WHY BUY AI'IG IN THE POICE111
TOP DOLLAR TRADE·IN AlLOWANCES!'
REMEMBER, IT'S NOT THE PRICE OF THE CAR
BUT THE DIFFERENCE YOU PAY! .

. ·'
11

tuot

/OutdOor
. ~~-·Et~ $4.00
""' How, 114-241-

$:100- $100 WEEKLY

-mblo PfOduato • homo.
Eooyl No oolllng. You'ro 1101c1
dlroct. Fully guoron-. FREE.
lnlarmollo,.. 24 hOur hotllno.
(11011371-21100.
Copyright
IIOH48YDH.

NOIOD!
BEATS
-OUR -DEALS!
-

tho min

HontiY!tlon! Odd - . , , _

Help Wanted

EARN

don._·

FOR

llloo Poulo'o Doy Coro Coni• 1
Block WOOl Of IIMC On .loclcoon
Plko 11-F I A.ll. ..:30 P.ll. n
~y Al!d Exporto- lo Tlto
11 Ccinoom For Y- Chlld'o
Coro, Coli U. Far A VloM. lnlont
n'oddltfl 114 Ul 1227. p,_.
ahaa11ra AJchool Age' 114-441-

1224.

Soli Avon.

----- -

51

• :-' •

6~-Gn.

Corpot b12 $110; VInyl 8112 $411.
Solo On All c.rpot In Stock
h.OO U.. ' llallohln Fumllure.
1114-416-11144.

Biro St- Door, $10. Ito At

· Floor morlol • - TV $150. 304-

N..rllon ProdUC!p
loolurlng Amino Acid Bod~

GE -hor hi; Konrnoro
W1.Mer Ill; GE Dryer ••;

burnll 'lannui"M. Avalllble II·
cluolvo!J at Rlto Aid Phormacy.
Tho oolo woy to dlot.

Drtor Uko 1 Yt• WononiY
$110; 30" Eloctrto Aongo $1111';
Frigidaire

Relrlgerator,

Froet

Froo, tH; Rolrlgtnlor Sldo lly
Sldo Horvoot Gild $185; Bmoll
Al&gt;ortmont 11M Rolrlgtnlor
tl50; llkoago AolllloncooJ. :71
~

.... su.r, .,..,....7311

\II'

1·

Business
OpponunHy

32 Mobile Homes
tor.Sale
$171 por month Including I
montho .... lol rontl 14170,
dollvorod l •
up, lld~lng,
tltpo, only $l'UCI -n. 1.aoo;
113llte28.

--~,.,k.-1ond

mal- you thoo-a.
Locol

tn-rgatod

lnoOil-

·

Smol ~I Doll Lacalod In
Oolllcrpla. llil-od Pan&lt;&gt;no
!'1- R a - To: CLA Bax
210, c1o Goillpolle DeQy Tn!Mino,
825 Thlnl Avonuo, Galilpallo, OH
41131.
VENDING 'ROUl£: Oat Rloh
Quick? Na Wayl But Wo Hovo A

. '

2 bedroom mobile 11omt1 In,.
~

11111 ShuHz 14170 TIR Out, Total
Ele.rdrloi Ret, Stv:, w.p, CA, un.

2 llodroom tnllor 111r nnt, 'lllct.. '
dltport, depoell requlrad, 1141124431.
4 ' ~- • ~

TWo ' bedroOm •.r:::..,.ment on

614--378-

2484.

2 llltlloome $250. ~ month: ~
$1&amp;0. _ ...., dopOolt, tr-·.

11118 Slcyllno Holly Aldgo 14x70,
11 ellc, . 2 beCiroom., AJC,

pold, ~~~.\" tokonJ. ~ ,
ptlt,
11111:00.Pll.
2 mabllo homo- lnto"_QIIII.
wnln bodroomo, loool8cf. Olllo. ·

Racine area,~~

$8,500.

COYOI'od· _... kltchon lolond,
llorogo · blda. undt1J1011nlng,
IIU new,_304-ln.~414. .
.
111118 Skyllno Holly Aldgo t4x70,
d 111M:, 2 J.bHroome, AJC,
- - porch, kltchon ltlond,
• llorogo
!'!"*P""nlng,
llkonow..
,_14,
3bdrm.,
Ux~
tumlahed;
~ra111r, aklrt~, wUI tln8nce,
$100 -!!. $1311 mon., 114-11122117, 114 ..1 ~7. .
l.oGiclng Far A Doll? Contldor A .
Pr..O nod llobUO Homo, Lo191
So!Ktlan. Low !lontY Down,
Froo lot-Up And Dollvory. 1-IOQ.

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Now - - · Homo! unno,
From ""-OO==IAtlane,
lA: II lee.
a~a
Low Ao 811.00, Col
FAll
NEW ~ Cotalag. 1-.:ra.
1282.

1114-381'-71138.

33

a-:.
El,alrlc.::

Nlco 2 Bod-, AN
With CA AI. 1110 AI E~,1271 Pw llo. Pluo SoiuiltyDopooll. Col 114-441-1188 Oro•'
"114-441-11188.
' · • ;w-;

Farms tor Sale

houao nowiJ romadalod. 211rgt
bomo, oummor -~ gorogt,
•udlo, h\mllng collin. y -ntr.
Agonto - - · AoduCodl Don
BlOck, JM--0.

1511 .Sq. Pl., .18 ooro lot, 2xtl
WIHe, 2 _,..... botho, •nll!t
-.lYing-. Sbrlrm., wot~In - . , lutiJ' oorpotod, 2 por. -· /IC1 ....o.
Nlrlaerltor, et•10.'W".NC!t
Home
Hol'rctank, lloalno, OH. o14-MII-

Pt.OOO.

8JS.3131.

114 Ul 1171 Of

•

IEAIIfiFUL -

s ..,,.o Thompoon Rood, Rt.
150, Will Conoldor Lond controct. 15 lllnutoo From Krg•.
814-381-lllltl.
'
lxotO Z Bedroom Trivet .Trailer,
And 1 Aero Lol.l14 ·31111 8301.

*"'

In -ntown
flnanoei
molrllohOmo lolo In .Pomoror,
-with - 1 wotor, 111
wnh oltctrlclty, Aloo oon ,.nt.
Lo18 far oompon In OIIVt
T-llohlp, llllgo Counly, .dur
ond turtloy hunt!ng orooo, Coli
O'Brltn I
Ct- Roofty,

FOR BALE

Building 1oto

Poiw•ur, , oan

Hlltoric .. .,_ Comer Lot • I'll
lloln Ill. Pt. ~' W. VL

c:-plolo!l' llonoYitoo: 2 Full

llotho, ll:o'l'! ll•droomo, ' HV~ C.-~ AVO!Ioblo
lmmodlotly.ltl Me412011.
.I"
old 11r1o11 homo,•lroomo,
2
1roomo
In -IIIOill.lO ..,... pond,

C'ho,

=:J: ~14-11112-zm or

114,1100. IOt-I'JI.aiO.

814-

B - y 81, llldcl-" Twa
SEVERAL ~ ACRE PARCELS:
•-~
llokll County, Solom Twr.··
otory, I
bolh • gu •-••
$IISGI oc... Romoto, booutl ul
nloll ·loll
I Mklhboltlqadi r Jandi wooda. llUtura end hiiiL
8
Coli lor good mop. 1.a14-51137207. • l14-ld'-31 :S. ll4;;;::;~:;;;;=====~
11845, At liMo.
OOVEANIIENT HOMES From $1
::,Smo:..:.:::U.:..;I::cro:;:llo=r-_-:.. ,- wll
--:1 -. ..,.-11-on(U Ropolr), Dollncl- Tu
""'"
Property. lhrp cvvlone. Your
ilnd contrMt, 304-17UII2 after
Aroo C11 111111111 1000 Ext. QH8:00 Pll.
4112 F a r - R- Uol ,
Wontlna To Buy: t-1

:.Z.

In•-·=·

Lond, ~ 114-21N'124.

Home . Or
2 Bed·-Lorgo IAt
In .....
Ewlntlton1114-31111-1710
Wllh AJC
Or 114-411-71112.

Apartmeilt ; _-,. --. r:
for Rent _ . _

1 bodnlam unturnlthod 1P\:';
wtatove a Nt, nlol neltlh~-t .
hood, 304-871-1010.
... --: j

1 Sodrac&gt;m, Convonlont T•
Hoot,

Qo

~

HOUI81.1or Rent
Bodroom........,

•filL. ,....

52

114 4~11110

-.Up.II14-258-8M7.
Mobile fiomo lot lor ,.,.. In
Choohlro. 814-448-11788, 114-1112- .

Coi!nt!Y
.. . •

53

•g

- -, -

FumiiMcl, 3 ADOIW I _..... ,.
Cllln, No Pill~ Rlhr•~i'! ·=

Wantad to Rent

W.ntod- To Ront: Motor Homo
For - Wt..._ Trip To Soulh
BtndJ.~ Nov 13-11. Coli Pat 8144411 ..1110.

r:terchandise

54

LotVO I · - ~~~~ iii""·•'
Mklil-. Coli ~-~ ~· ·
114-44f-17811.
·. ··"'
·
· · ,..
Now He"'!r
1 BA............
toorlmont
. ...poolt
-' ·
. 304-112-21181.

__......_

Antiques

Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Wuhoro,

11ar'o
lael• ~-.
·""'~.e; · a;"Ba.. ~ 'P~
Or 4 lllloo Out 141 On Lincoln
Oryon,.

Plica.

.J. , ·

No • llopooll On Ront4-own;
E Pr
IOd
. I
VWI bbi 0
•:; "'lA ......
luU boll with
b
h ~ n1
•

Not~

Bob Whlto Ouoll For · Solo.
- : 114-2M-1171.
Cooi .Woodb!.mlng Slovo lric:ll
Unod $130; Bnoo Fino (Scroon)
OIIM ONII $100 1 114 ~·· 8486
lottor IIP.II. ·

Flbofaloaa Ford Truck Top, SlidIng WI-. Samo loO · - ·
Whlto, $2211. 114-371-2122.

~Far Solo- Bnnd. Sytyonlo
111.. ID04or TV, ...,..o, 8UPir

2118 So. Fowth Avo.,lllddltpon.

APPLIANCES

Wa~
. dryon, rtlrlgorot~

rongoo,
go Appltoncoo "'
Vlno 11-,
114-441-7iN, 1100-4-111.
_ _ _.;..::__ _ _ __

Slgnri: P!&gt;rlable llghlod olgn
Qlll, · - · FrM dollvory.
Plutlo ...... $47.&amp;0 box, 1 - 533 34!1

5Ul. Annuol Ctwt•mu Sttol
Y.I.P. Chtlolmoo Fobtto 1.71 Yd,
u· Whho 0r IYorr 1o11n 2.111 Yd,
0..... Stlllco 2 llg Bundloa
$3_;_41" Collco FUIIC tt.4t Yd
·'"' To a.-t From)
ory R.,...nto $1.48 Yd.
OuiM 1Jn!nt qnly U Yd.
QtiiOI Boloo:. ~.Me, CitH Sup.
1111oo. llllk ~ Solo Lollt
Thtu.30th. Hurry For Boat
lei1DIItnl
Gun loloo lly Llllort! Bordora
Hunllng Shop,_.. A211. .

-Colli,·--~
Ton
DllwMed.11M41o0141.$411"..\
Kloto Looon And Gonion
TI'ICior, 4 Whoolllrhte With End
Loodoi24HP Eotro Qood Concl~
'""" 2 114 y.,. Oltl. Wo Bouaht
• 11100 Houro) h,411S...,....
314314

!,argo WOod ICaol lumlng
BtoVo, W Whllo Both Vonky,
And Sink, Solo And Chtfr,
~io

T•••illielon

61

·'

.

Uko SLiving Room
lufto,
Lora! - ·
LoYi Soot
&amp;
Rocllnln!O:hllr,
-lont
CondMjon,
Uko IEiaouiiYO
Doolt, $100t' 30172 Folding Toblo
W; I4K loci- Plua 1100;
lluolllrlo Tol~ Ampllllor
~L~!- ll•lo ltond · $211;
........ BobJ Onnd Plono
$3,1100 COIIOI R... Eloctrlk
a...... ttO; -MtW_Typlng lionel
$10; Coli ~tm.
.

MoO,--·

oorMUilon,ltOO,
lllytog · " -..,.l'G•2'113.
.- - · good

VInYl lntulotod oldtr ropltc..
morl window, M"x21"; 114-7422138.
Worm llomlng Gu lloYo,
40,000 ITU Uoid 1 Yoor, $270.
Soddln: Brldloo And llonkoto,

55

llotol rooting ond aiding, 304-

64

Pill tor Sale

lomo Pal Food Doilor. Julio
Webb. CIIIIM 441 0231.
A K C - PUPf'IOO, I Wooko
OI!'J. Good Homo! Only! 114-44101.... .

-on

.' ::;Eo;.::.:. :ChPh-':101.:;-;.;;.'":..:114,;.:::-4..::*;:-1052.=:-----:
:'
lllxod hoy -41.50. Oott I rod

clover o$1.71. Allalla -$2.50. 3045llo2311 or 304.e75oll873 ollor
8pm.

Tonlor Pupploo,
Roody To ' Oa Doc- 8th.
Hold With DopoOII. 114-3118o
t:ll2.

Ti

•c:= r.·

2 leinll. ., 2

Fo.Solo: Flrop-lnoott. Exeolo
1ont Conclltlonl Phono: 814-3712425.

oltin
- " " " ....
tat.-Non-lalltilf
... -lol
$311.
OIIOolol $211&amp; ,,.. Clolvory.
PIIIOIIo lolloro Cbuy - boxlono
box ...., .......... on. oxplrn
lloY. 30. W Slfno HI00·533MUonrt'· lklor A-or IEioteloo llochlno

Autos lor Sale

11161 Bulall LoSoln, ...,....
llblo, now top, dno, blttoly,
runt groo~ $1200 080; 114-112·
3471.
111lt J~vtln SST 2110 V.., AC,
· PI, Automotlc, Flo« Shll~~
Rootonllon Prvloct S500 r.m,.
114-318ot700.
1m Chovrolol lmpolo, 14,000

LESS THAN 40,000 ACT. MILI::SI

4 OR., AUTO., LOADED

$4995°0

1989 CHEVY
BERETTAGT
AUTO., LOADED •

LOW MILES, AUTO.
POWER MOON ROOF

.

1991 CHEVY S1 0

1991 F-150 4X4

MIT, Bi:DLINER, RADIO

15,0000 MILES

$55QQOO

$11,99500
LX

MIT. AC, AMIFM CASS.

AUTO., RADIO, 2 DR.

ONE OWNER, LOW MILES

$249500
1985 CHEVETTE

4X4, LOW MILES.
LOADED, ONE OWNER

MfT,.AC, LOW MILES

s995oo

mU•, UO lour II, turbo 400,
01 080, 30467&amp;oZ714 or 1'11-1177.

1991 THUNDERBIRD

rnalel, 814-MY.nl'l.

LX
1tM Chryolor Fifth Avo, loodod,
oxtro nlc4t I out, $2,118.
304,t71o41t:t.
11111 LTD Broughom, Englnt, Tlroo~.Roclotor 1 Eollouot
$1100 Aloo wilntod To8uy: Ouod
llotOtCrcle.l14 31111 - ·
11711 Aucl 5000 1800, Dr -

Ollor, Col 114-441-1111.

1991 TOPAZ GS
4 DR., AUTO., CRUISE, TLT, AIR

V-8, POWER ROOF, LOADED

$11 95°0

$6995°0

1992 510 TAHOE 1988 ESCORT GL
4X4, AC, CASS., SRW

$10,999oo

4 DR., AC, 5 SPEED
47,000 MILES

1110 llonto Corio $4~\f"" 114441-1021Drl14-441•

~ -,_,...PO Eoch,
Cln-. ...... Chw, Without
Papon, Allor 4 P.ll,_AnJIImo

- - 114471-22'!"-

1111 VW Joltl Dloooldllonclorrl,
I Clwno!, _Good Condmon, $1180.
114-441... -M .....

441 1144 After7:00 p.M.

1182 ...- . Comoro 10,000
1111..,
Cruloo,
Till,
Air,
Aut-lc, To Bolli Non

DttvelbiL 114 Ul GIOI.

1tp llulall !loP. 11111 Lotuo,
GOod Condlllon: .,.zse m 1.
•

1114 lluotong v.a. ~~~ Alr.L PB,
PB, tt.soo. oao. •
~""
11184 T - . runo good loob
now Uroo, eaoo, nt:iM~~o

J:t•

For Sale. 111 Ul 1551.

1989 OLDS CALAIS

... oond, tt.200

DroOOf'WV!III Cottory: CFA Porollno I S - o Klftont. 114-

Slgno: Lorgo portoblt Nghtod

4X4, TAHOE, V-6, AC
AUTO., CRUISE

Transportation

llorolo, ...lot- 1100.
careona
F11111, -.m.a33:Z.
I~ waad1n bedroom
oub, 8121; 114-14WI07.

Morven

Exr..., u.eo lou,104-171o2171.
Hoy, oquoro boloo 112." I 112.&amp;0llolrnd boln $20. ooch. Soturdoy pick up only. 304-111-3150.
Lorao Round Bllor 01 ttor $12

o,_,
ond au.,.., . ~
Q,_,lng. All llioido, otyloo.

--I

1984 F-150 4X2.

$3995°0

&amp; Grain

AlllllaiHoy tolle f25.

- lllioploonlRodpu-t
a-t.......,_..,
&amp;'Rid

1100;

Hay

Farm. Rl. :.1, 3D4G7·Z011.

2 - - tlgltl toot ....... 1ft
long, 2 - . - · thon

Quaon oloopot oola &amp; chair,

Anrtlmo,

z...-,

372-20tt.

$12,995°0

1990 TAURUS GL 1984

William~~,

Holttoln dolry cowo1 Ill otogoa,
grodo " roglotoroo. Com tor
oolo, Bumgomor Dllry, - 2068.

AKC roglotorod Ulnoturo Doch· .
ohuncl, loklng dopaolll, roody
Doc. 10, :ICI4-t7W1t3.
AKC loottloh Ttrrltr puppln,
.....a, non.ell8ddlng, flr.c ehol,
wonmod1 _ hoofth Hf~,::;tood,
$200,AIMM; tl4
.
AKC - l o pupo, 10 wko old.
Vol a-..!, .. 1 molo, 2
. 1144...7:188.
.

•

.Chuck

Block, brlc)c, - • t&gt;lpot, wl,..
dow,.Jintolo. oto, Olairdo WI,..
ton, 11lo Orondo, OH Coli 814-

AKC Aoglotorod Chlnooo ShtrPal pupo, loto of wrlnlltooL $300,

•

Heullng:

Anywheni.

1171 CSD Troo Former lklddor
wHh Dout&amp; onglno, $12,000; 114tn-7110.

~·~4-6i :Sortouo
" n etothoo:
Slu
lrnoH
luyoro Only.

Cottlo

=~ Ct- Trucking. 814-~45-

56

95oo

LOADED, LOW MILES
ALL THE TOYS

Livestock

Building
Supplies

......
1fterl
p.m. - · 114 441 3421

-

$899500

$1

AOHlo 1111 Ooldl1!9 Bl: .......,
Eochot Big 111110 Oioy P-tn
Gtldng SUpor · 814-21611122.

cut, ..... -ch or wlllto pln~1
$12.00. , AYIIIablo 11127,28,B
only,lt4-ttl2-5815.
•

AKC Roalotorod Boolon Torrltr
lor o t u i f - only, 114-tt12- ·
&amp;0511.

.401'1. Log T'1."/o: $3.BOO Aloo
15. ,...,.,.
' 10. s.r.
Rodlol Ann . . . S2(10. 114-441-

63

x.,.._ trMI: eut your own IDI' w•

AKC Cocker Pupo 1.! Wooko, 4
Btocii/Whho, 1 wnho CBuff
Eol8), Colll14-4411-4110.
AKC IIIIo Cocker Sponltj, Butt,
1 112 y..,. ()lei. $75.00 ••molo
e monlho, tn.
•
AKC Rog. Rotwollllr. pupo.
,._on promlool. Chomp!On
- - 11250. 304.e7J.1377
onrtlmo.

~··--~h,

$3949 00

AUTO., AC, CRUISE, TILT,
V-6,4DOOR

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon ·1210 Sooond
Avonuo, Ooll!polto, Ohio, 114441-43311.

Bod 8lu Bod
Portoblo
Stono,
114 441 231~
Nlko alr-fMI'!'JI. .!~~~ _-._
olrt13, $110. ~·
Pilot HI. Fl. T - Rodlo Sy•om
Good ConciHionl $100, 814-2811·
1882.
Plottlc Andllldol CI!IYort 8 Inch
Thru 10 Inch In Slocll. Ron
Evono, Joe"- Ohio. 1 - .
•

AUTO., AC, LOADED

SILVERADO, LOADED
ONLY 3200 MILES

11C.3 ......2

llotlahon c.rpoeo, 11112 $110, 814441-'11144• .'•
.

l31oiii2L

ml••·-

OohiHg,_
Holland tit lily bind. /IC - no till oorn fllonl•. AC 10ft
lronalor diu wlhonow. 304-27'So
4215.
Groin blno tor ront~S. • por
buoh~ llorgono .Forft\ AI. 21,
304-1•1..2011;

UIIIHy Polo. .With Elocttlc Cut
Oft .... Wiring. $250. 814-3712414.

AKC

. Fromo, -

Fann Equlpm\tnt

AUTO., AC, 4 DOOR

202Q JD DIMol Troctor, c:r.om
Pull $1.3&amp;0· 131 IIF DIMol
Shorpl $4;ii0. 114.11MBZZ.

For

luloll. L8nlo Rot... Wood C.rt,

114 4o4Md7 A. . ("P.M.

1990 CORSICA LT 1991 S10 TAHOE

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; L1vestock

Fabrfa Stora. HurOn
Jackaon ONo 114·281-

~rllt,

For s..... 8111 fMdlum. taclee
winter CCNit, dllnlm w1 ..atMr

lrim, flonnolllnlng, IIIIo ..w, ulllng see. prold mo; olooit'~
ladlilo clcitlllng• 011 I
•
2155, e.apm1or i14-t4P.2204 o~
lor8pm.

Plloco Ptl Shop.
locllod In Q.C:. llurohv Ca. GaiUpallo. opon. li4-141-0404.
Ailbblt l.alori For Solo, .Good
Dogo. 814-311 11331.

0otr1 .lo•lrY. AlngoJ._ Eorrlng,
Nec~llcee, If' nwew.
Quhl'•

Pets tor Sale

Puppy

ond lot

..mot•.~_ never UNCI, $271, 1141112-2too, uk lor Brion.

n.~II&amp;U • dea..,
.~
IM""'(10
"lll*lond,$2110,
Wtt
- *lth
ond link- $2110.
h

O!X!I). USED

1811 Chovy lloii!MI, 4dr, kYI,
outomo!lc1 no ruol, ttlllng $4ft;
21a cna1n nwa-11'" eua. $100,
11 cut, $121; two 33x5 1250
tlroo on Dodao rlmo far pick up,
PO; 114-tt12-7Na, .

Flrwwoocl For Solo-'-All Ook, Inl-Ion: 114-317'11111.
Flrwwoool: All Henlwoodl Splh
Dollvtrod $31 Plck.Up l.Did.
814-280-1310.

DtDt!P~ot~ft~R~oqo~u~lrod.~lt4~~4~41~!_!1.~ •
.,..
- - ....... 1 ond 2 liorl' " *~'""• :ljlm.
room opo~- • Vlaaa. ·:
.' ·
ond
Ahtlftliti" , Clotil· :..._ I Rolrlaonlor:
llonor
AIJIIImonto 1n 11-11011. l'reiii • · ' Pr....,_,' llolna u...r. $225
till. Co11114-112-mt lOlL - _•. ~ Totil. l14.t4a.oolll.

_,

Goods

Buy or ooll, Alverlno Antlquoo,
1124 E. lloln SIIHI, on AI. 124,
- . , y , Houro: II.T.W, 10:00
1.m. to 1:00 p.M., lundlr 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114-tt12-2&amp;211.

IIIS7: •

....--,

Elllclono~port...,. l'umlehooll. ,o
WIConlnl li •!
Air, ~~tltittoo Poltl . - .
llopooll. l14 441 2815.
' • · . ,_
'
.l'l&gt;.
FOR AlENT: ~
$300 Pol Month. somo IJI!IItl• ; :
lncll- Ooltlpotlo ·.._kiP.." :

..

Sponlng

Shotc

=.If.-~t':"N:."'~

- ·. :J Cholro ~;

'

Freuer,

Loolllna For A Chrlotmoo
Prooon1'7 IIIah a.. And
. Hlah
QuoiHy Mill S10 PTololt, 22 Allloo, SKI Nlloo, AKB
Rllloo l A Cou1110 01
And""'- MootUoorl a.. Ao Loy Awoyo
Avolloblol 10 A.ll. THI 10 P.ll. 7
Doyo A Wool!. Hock, 2210
Eotttm, 114-441o1122 Or C61444W5tt Loroltl Only~

' ~~~?J:" • rot ~~:; ~= ~";"..~.'r,.=WII'l!':

Hon Aol.,....
..... 3141
..i
- · - ·&gt;Dopaoll,
1114-

.:

noon.
Ro!lirlo lor ront - - or month.
Sl~!ta II $120/mo. Oollo Hotol.

47

FumHuN,

Aolrlgtrllor, W•-· Dri!!r
~ Wat• p...,p. 814-245-S!oo
Alter 4 P.M.
Woohoro l llryoro tiOO I Up. All
Sold With worn;:~ ~II Woohor
• Drywr " 1-21144.

Actododotlono far lhroo !lltn,
televl•lon.
1how1r,
r1ifrig•or . 1nd microwave,
prlv~t• entrance and otf•ltrMI
parlllng. Coli 114-11112-7791 oftor

'til :.

~

Dooom~J.II.,.

-

u..d

-·

-·--~ -_.,..
I&lt;"T"•~

41

-I

Jlurnlshed
Rooms

cable

45/mo, Ploa Ullllllfo::
"'Pt
.114-441-21117.

jM2tl 1040.

2

4S .

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., Oolllpollo,
Uoorl
lumltLn, Mat.,., WMtem &amp;
Work-o.814-4411-31H.

oy ; 114-

2bdrm.
~
51 ... wousehold
plioncoo lumlohod, . loundry
·' , I '
room 1ac1111oo to ochoot
Goods
In town. Apt&gt;lloiilono .......,__
::::'''::
' -~-,;,
· ~~:,;;,..,~~~
II: Vlllogo Groon Apto. ..., OfP' 48' . Rbund Ook Toblo Wllh 2
coll--m\ EOH. ·:;' • · ·'' - l.olvoo Ancl4 Arrftbock Chtlro
~-.,. :f;:~cuoo,
1750~
- ' 'Cur1od Qlooo Chino
•• 2bd- 311~oa .... ,. • ·• Ca
. , 81101~ At: $17&amp;.
-· 1114-1112-f
'"~
- '" "· AI ~ ::II oy Oo"• urn H~·· 1114d-'t;
oltor"'P'J
4411 . 31.:;,._ _ _. - , -___;_ _
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS Jr v ,::::,..;:
BUDGET PAICEI AT JACICSON '
VI'~ . ~=~~~S AND AP•
ESTATE!,.. $31 Joe-· Plio!•
ltr~ 1 , j 428 OR 114-44J.315I
from $11&lt;U1110. Wilt to ....., J
moYioo. Colt 114 441 211111;_E!JII; ";
Ent•lllo_.. Conlor'o $148 Or '
u.sa Week\.,Ia =lllheln• Blertlloor:h Stroot Uldcllopor1,"0hiD ' lng all: fltalnooo $121-.._Sola
• fumlohod 1 room opt, utlllllD' '. Mel· Chon $2111 . 11r 01 o.a

Rent&lt;JIS

MW

Mulboll)' A.. nuo,
111241151.

ror~ot, Economlcll;.~

..,,.. ,

Aecenu, r~mad111d 2 etory ol·
der hom. In Pon..ror, 3bdnn.,

lull bonmontl otUo. booullful
.tone flrwplll~ cioN to
town, Uldng $24,100, 114-802·
7512 ol• lpm .., moro dotallo.
· Throo Bod- Raneh Homo
On Stoto Routo 8110, 11424W443 Or 8twa34413.
Two ltory, Qlraae. OM ICFI,
loclted In- U.la&amp; Counly, low
two'!'::':14-Mt-2358
lnd
ndt.
. ovtnlnga

44

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

2210.
'
24140. loa -~ 2 rn. old. 4
ocroo. I .inl. lroril Nolzor,

•• ' -

mont, ulllllloo Included, •14-m5941.·

LotVO Aportmorlo For ~!oint tn:- Slltlllna room. wHh - n g.
Alllci lrillor - · All --upa,
Golllpoi!O, 1~-me:,. )1f.- ·, Cill
'oftor 2:00 'p.m., 304-Tn•.-an.
"-~'· .. ... IIISI,IIo- WV.
llolllo Homo! 14x70, 2 ....._~
roorna. FumlaMd, c.ntr•'Air
Hut.•,. 441 2115.
_... - • " ' - Space tor Rent

II • .,. country ootato with
IIOftd, VInton. Calonltl farm

Homes tor Sale

.:·

Fumlohod, 2 «lbdrm., lol.rinf .
In Courlry llobllo Port&amp;. WUIIilrt, dryor, olrJ.}2351 mon., IM-IP2•,
2117, l14=iR&amp;!122'7.
... ~... - •

118N710.

Real Estate

.

Rl.143, 304-1824104.
- .. ~ •••
3 Bodroomo 1 '1'2 IIIII!, Total"
Eloctrlc Addloon Aroo, No ~oti,' ;

=t'-

~~~·~~'~·-----

furtllohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlc:ho
Rd.
Pl. - · WV,
Clll304-l'/l-1410,
TlwN" room fumlohod oport-

derplnn ng,

Good,
......... ·-~~~~~
liMO. - ' ( LooL I
21413811.
Vondlng Aouto: l..ocW. Wo Ho..
Tho N-•llochl-, lloklng A
Nlco llloocly Cooh " - - 1·

31

..... le...

1173 Moon 12J60, $4,000.
614-3811-87'11 Aftof.S P.M.

Aouto Eom
,.., .._,, Low
Coot. t·

~.ooo
-o37~END.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploto hotno hlml~l~o.
Houra: Yon-Sat, •s. I ·
t
0322, 3 mlloo Bulovlllo Rd.
FrooDotlvory.
PICKINI FURNITURE

56

Miscellaneous

Merchandise

For Solo: Uko NtW Standard

lulldlncl. Wllaht -

1100o4-lll.

21

54

Merchandise

Keni1\0IW DrYer •71: oE w..t.r
Lillo Now ,221 CUI To $1N; QE

Financial

Miscellaneous

Goods

1711-2722.

equlppod kltchofl, 12&amp;0/month
plll'l 'lllllbieo; 114-817·3271 M

Win .... 111r lodv 1n my homo,
Invalid bod pollorl ....,......,,
' ,.oonablo, Good c.814-Mt2211.
.
.

54

Household

- • lor Rent

Nlcl 2bdnn. 1parunent1, rice
nNQhboltlaad, grut locltlon.

3

=--=:;;,:;·:_,.,==-PARK RANGERS

~.

fl4.441-1101.

I

Cort Hevon a1 Point Ploooont

-:-;--:~7=:.::..:=:__--.....,._

• · Apartment

HOUses lor Rent

3 Bodroomo: Palrtot. 1 1/ll Cor
Oorogo, LAJ. Klchon, !1o1Jo. 'All Corpltod. ....,.,.to Drtv,IWiy••

Hurolng
Homo. e.
perlenelll a ....,.. ..·..., Avt~~-·
olllo. Aft• 4 P.ll. 1141441-7712:
Wll ...... ""*"Inhotno
. ,. . . . .,
m;r

NOT to ooild 11!0MJ t..._n tho

mullContact
_ . ~hor
-·
ont1.
lllr
~
304.e71-30011. E

41

-. eo,.tn- .

,IHOJICEI ,
OHIO VALUY PIIBLISIIHG CO.
rwcamn.ndl tMI you do bual-

...kina_,..k*11 ortnted Aegl..
lorod Nuroo lol 3 dor -k,
floor -k, mUll hon o1 bo'

Homes tor Sale .

N01ICI
Wo oldn, ""' I • •· $30. 1
$35, ~~~a.·
Hen.

"AVON• ALL AAEA!If Shiro your
llmt with ua. You'll lovo tho
compony,1.eoo.tn-f358.
AVON I All •-- I Shl
--o
rioy
Spoon, ~75-llobyotttor
In lly Homo,
Evtnlnao For Chlldnon 7 1 10
114-24UOII3 8o1oro Noon.

451 3
~
:;:::t.:=-:--==--=-....,....;_,...._

PubliC Sate

31

Help Wanted

• :':Do~YI=·-:-:-,..,-==---

~'":.':.w:~:'.191:!:.l:;

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Full Grown IIIIo Otoy
And Whlto Cot With Ambor
Eyoo, Vlcl::z; Hunon Cor
Arot, 614
1517.

CUSTOM, WORK mUCK

• POSTAL JOB$ •

$1\41 . IHr To Sltrt, .Pfuo
8-IHa. Pootll Corrlan, Sor- •
t•rt:, Clerke Maintenance, For
An 4ppllcatlon And Eum ln· formation, Colt 1-2111-7311-1107,
Exl P6432. I A.ll. To t P.ll. 7

LoOkl Like BtnJI. B14471-27U.

1993 FESTIVA L

11

Help Wanted

Loco! Bronch Qf II lloro Clioln
Expondlng I Noodo 22 PIOPLE
To Stort Worlllmrr!odlotoiJ. 111101
Bo - . lloponcloblo, 1 'AmbH'-. No· Eo_porlonco oory, Wo Will Tnln. ., .._r
11o. To --· &lt;OuoUIY.
~ If You
Phono Far lntorvlow llondor •
~~=:~ 10 l 4 P.ll.

2 Yoor Old, lllxod Brood llolt
Dog, To Good Homo, PloYiul,

1993 F·350SUPERCAB 1993 F·250 SUPERCAB
DRW, XL T. EVERY OPTION .

11

No hunting or l - I n g 0n .
Roymond Smllh'o form, OolllpOIIo Forry, WV.
No Hunting or T-lng. II
llllt CroOlc
Rood proportloo,
bohioon
Jowloo
I 91-no
troopo-ra will bo -utod.

1993 THUNDERBIRD LX

4 DOOR, AUTO., AC, V-6

Announcements

1989 TOPAZ 4 dr. 1984 BUICK REGAL
ONE OWNER, AUTO.. AC

AUTO., AC. CASS.

1991 TEMPO GL

1986 510 4x4

AUTO., AC, CRUISE

AUT0.,4CYL

$5995°0

$1995°0
$599500

$699500

'

1992 F'!'150 XLT

1991 TAURUS GL

*V- B

1992 RANGER XLT

*Automatic

*Only 3200 Miles

• Air Condition
*Cruise/Tilt
*Umited Slip
*Power Windows
*Power Locks
*Two-Tone Paint
*Overdrive Trasmission

• Air Condition
*Cruise
*Ti,it

.

.

*Power Windows
*Power Seats

. -,

*AM/I=M Cassette
. •4.Cyl. Engine
*Overdrive Transn1ission

·v-s Engine

*XLT Decor

• AM/FM Cassette

•cast Aiumnum Wheels

1989 MUSTANG GT

· 1992 F-150 SUPERCAB
•xLT

.

'Air CondHion
*Captains Chair
*Cruise/Tin
*Power Windows/Locks
• Fiberglass Topper
•rwo Tone Paint
• Umlted Slip
•rratter Towing
•Low Mites ~ ·

*Bright Red
• Air Condition
*CrulsefTiit

.,

1992 TAURUS or SABLE
• Automatic
·
• Air Condition
*Power Window/Locks
*Power Seat
• AMIFM cassette
Motor
• Rear Defrost"

·v.s

• AMIFM Cassette

•sun R,oof

*Automatic

*Extended Lenglh

• Air Condition

•Automatic

·cruise/Tilt

*Air

*Power WindQWS

·cruise/Tilt

•power

*SAVE THOUSANDS!
*Low Miles

1992 AEROSTAR

1992TEMPO&amp; TOPAZ

Locks

*Power Windows/Locks

•powl'lr Seat

• AMIFM Cassette

•AMfFM Cassette

*Low Miles

."15 TO CHOOSE FROM"

;,10 TO CHOOSE FROM"

sa,949°0 {

I

I'

·'

•

..

'

i·

l

•

�•
Sentinel

November 22, 111.2

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

fllTHf

~~ur

·
W'Birthday

•.

ltM Toyota Supra, I oyt1 5

; apeed, naw tlrw &amp; tiatttnH.

Poo,

1185 Dadoo Alloo Automatle,
Air, Excllfom Condhlonl &amp;14-

.,

Ull55?

:· INS Fonl Crawn Vlcloria, 302 y.
auto, new tlrw I u:hau.t,

• a.

• ~. . . . cond, $3,100. 304-11112-

: 3no..

:• ::,....
:=--Oida:::-:----:Doll:-::-a---::ae.=--:-:v-a-=-,
IUIOinltlc, full

1•

:as-..:....

t•DLil

.

, 1185 2 Door Fo&lt;d EICOII
, Fair (:Gndftlon, 114-2!11-1112.

pow•, new lira•,

:: :?C. condftlon, $2100; 614-

In the year ahead your potential for succetll will be enhanced sub~tantlally by
. your new .-ttwn.... Second place
wllllote italuller while belf19 first caiJid
' be uppermost In your ml ~ .
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec. 21)
Something of real significance that has
subjeCted to lruatratlng delays
·• could break for you today thrOUgh a
conlicl.-ate oily. It should be well wort!&gt;
waiting lor, Mijor changoa are ahead
lor SlliJIHiriusln the coming year. Send
lor your Altr~raph predictions today.
t,lall $1 .25 plus a long, sell-addressed
· · etamped envelope to AatrO-Graph, ci~
th'- newopaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. a, sure to state
your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dtoc. 22-.lon. 18) You're
not apt to be In a mood today to be
Unked to l~ivlduals who land to drag
their teet. Seek associations with persona who are as energetic as you are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) The do, termination to succeed is your greatest
IISII8t today. , Once this Impulse Is
' aroused, objectives you establish will
, be achievable.
PI8CIS (Feb. 20-Marcll201 Plans that ·
require bold measures should go
smoother for you today than they will
· tomorrow. nma Isn't your ally In endellvors where action Is required .
-AlliEs (March 21-Aprlt 1t) You'll ba
great once you get going today, but you
might need_a push to glva you a jump
stllrt. Worktng In close conjunction with

CAPRICORN (Dac. 22......._ 11) 11 you
do a favor lor a friend today, do 10 In 8 , . Nl (..., 2 1 - 8) Do the liard
Now. 22. 111112
way that does not make thlo tndlvtcluat llull firll today; If~ delay doing them,'
feet obligated to you. If you don't handle Cllancea 1r0 you won I get I~ done a(
48'~ ACRES- NICE FAAII'ItoUSE
The possibilities for · increa~lng your this matter tactfully, 11 could mar the 81. You need an agenda that 1 lndullrlNice 8 room country home, up ID 5 boldrooms ~ needed.
earnlng power look vary good for the relatton5hlp
ous and productive.
l.b new shingle mol - t l y inlllalled. Rural wallr oyayear ahead. The type ot Income you'll AQUARIUS ·
CANCER
1"- 21.-Ju!J 22)11 your •
llm, new Vtnyl White aicing, Insulation blown ln. Work·
be able to produce will nave long-range
.
(Jan. ..,eb. 11) Your manda Item from an unrealistic per •
llhop, com crib, C&lt;lllar hou;~e, and storage builcing. All
pro~abllltlea.
friends wlll ·be gled t o - you tod!l)', but opactlve today It will be,_, difficult I ~
ICOIIPIO (Oct
your wetoome could wear out qultkly _ · loved
• . . ·~ •
oo
mineral rights go, fruit tnoes, Col. &amp; So. Power Co. elec• :M-Nov. 22) Conditions If you start tooling y&lt;iur welgh.t around 'tlonl D~contilldoll~autep to your expecta~
tric. Be tpa fir8t to 1M and buy this farm.
1701.
In general look gqod lor you tuday, but b t 111
h
· ""'
there's a chance you mlQhl ~ prompt· d~ I~ ng ot ers what to do and how to , LIO (oluiJ 21-Aue•. 221 If a dlaagr.,.;
BUSINESS OFACES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
ed to create a problem whore none PISCES (F-~
M
•
ment arises b e ' - you and your mate:
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE
should exist. YOu'll be sorry If you do.
- · 20- orch 20) In order to today take actions t
Ill)' It
Scorpio, treat yourself to a birthday gilt. accomplish your alms today, alternatiVe ly. A ,;lsunderstandl~~ld ,.:;n~~
Send for Scorpio's Aatro-Graph predlc- courses ot action may ·be required. To grow worse wlllltime
.
lions for the -ar -~·-A by mailing be on the safe side, have back-up plana viRGO' (A"I
22) G. d
,. -~
ready - justin case you need them
,
·
...,...
uar
$ I .25 plus a tong, self-addressed, ARIES (~rch 21 .Aprll lt) ~t a gatr*- ~~eal~~t the Inclination today to critlclz' .
orts ol those who are trying to
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o lng today, one of your friends might be
thts newspaper, P.O.- Box 91428, Cleve- more of a manlpulilllve busybody than a help. II yd\1 aren't grateful, they might
72 Trucks tor Sale
land, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state cl)nveraaUonallst. Don't let this lndlvld· find excuses lor putting down thalr
your zodiiiC sign.
· ·
tOOls
....,
SAOm•RtUS
ual
use
you
lor
personal
purposes:
UBR.
.
.
,
1987 Chevy S.IO pick up, 4WD,
Ill
Till
~
(Nov.
23-0ec.
21)
GenTAURUS
(Apr1120-Mey
20)
Be
eenslble
•
A
(tlept.
23-0ct.
23)
Usually,
v.a, 5ap, nry ahlrp, 614-992erally speaking, you're more of an opti- regarding_the objectives you ·hope to you re a g-ous person Who has no
5868.
mist than a pessimist. However, this achieve today. You have substantial po- . relthuctanTce about Sharing thlnga with
could be one Of those days where the tenttal, but II your expectations are un- o ers. oday, however, you might t&gt;ll
gloomier facets or your personality realistic, you could be disappointed.
so P,,rotec:tlve of your OWl) inl-ts,
- - - - - - - - - _P_r_ev_a_lt_
. ...__ _ _ _ __ __ __;__ _ __ _
you behave In a stingy fashion.
:

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

, 11
Autos for Sale
.:_:__~:..::..;.::..:....::::;.:___

tm lntematlonal Dump Truck
!;1¥0 Tandom Alit, (Air Brakas)
•'~ lnglno, 14' Bod 1000 By 20
Tlroe.
l'alr Condition•••
~ 995
114-~5.
, .

tm Chovy

nr

Real Estate General

Real Estate Genera(

Real Estate General

112 Ton 8 Ft. Bod,

Good WOfk Truck, $950, 614-

t48-8111.
-:::::'-::':--:-~-~

1112 314 ton heavy duty Ford
pk:k-vp truck. good cond., 614·

'Jit:il:-2147.

11114 hoH ton F-150 ohortbl&lt;l, 8

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
1180 Ford F250 van, lcyl, auto,
$700 OBO; 14 112ft, dual ulo
~boy t_ra_llllt', $550 OBO; 614-

cyf, 3 ePMCI. overdrive, ••c

....,-3(78

1185 Ford F-150, 4x2, full tlze,
btdllner, 4tpd. wlovtrdrlve, ••·
collont condition, $3500, 614-

1882 podge Voy1g1r Extended
Yan, El:tr• CIHn, Wtll Equipped, Excellent Condition, With
Extrul Price: $4,200. &amp;14·367-

cond, $3,200. 304-875-20101;

qr~

9!. Q/m:d ~~Ahz4

an Uiler-beaV... COIJ!d do the trick.
TAURUS (April 20-Mar 201 Even
though you'll be en !&lt;)dependent thinker
today, your companions will have a
strong Influence over your attitude.
Their Input Will be constructive not
conflicting.
'
GEMINI (Mar 21-June 20) If you're in
sales or marketing, this Is a good day to
s1rlve to make some extra calls Your
possibilities for getting prospeCts t o
sign on the dotted line are very
favorable.
CANCER (June 21-Julr 221 Your leadership qualities will be evident today In
various areas of your life, such as business and social situations. When you
take charge, tl\lngs siart happening.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) l?ubstantllf accompltshments are possible today, P:.
~ally In developments where your
compassionate lnatlncts are aroused to
do uaefulthlngs for lhose you love.
VIRGO (Aufl. 23-llept. 22) Your beat asset today Is your ability to deal effectively with others. You'll know how to
bring out their ftner qualities and they'll
make you feel appreciated.
LIBRA (hpt. 23-0ct. 23) Devote your
efforts and energies today to ways and
matters that help.you careerwlile or add
to your resources. These are your
strong SUits II you apply yourself
properly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. ~) Instead of
wasting time today worlylng about
whether your Ideas will work or not try
them, and if they fall, try again. Aciton
begets success.

I·

Real Estate Genen~l

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 381-1121
EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR, 446·1107
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 4411.0722
DEBORIIH SCITES, REALTOR,~
LYNDA FRALEY, RE~LTOR,tt6-1106
MICHAEL IlLLER, REALTOR, 441.. 801
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, .245-1&amp;75

23 LOCUST rST.
446~6806

SMALL
WANT ADS

5I 0 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS

ON DURGAN ROAD Is this 3 bedroom mot.ol
sided ranch with 2 baths, llll!ndry. living ""··
OWNER SAYS MAKE OFFER! IIIIIEDIA1E .
. POSSESSION - Juot waltfng lor youl 3 bad·
room ranch llyle home, living room, family
room, 1 car garage with aulD. door opener and
mora. Excellent 1oca•on1
1481

OFFICE 992·2886

CHESHIRE VILLAOE is this w..l allabllshe&lt;j
uNd car buslnau . on Rt 7 With two bay
' garage and ~- A mobile home that hu 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, lYing rm., dining nn..and
' kitchen. Aslcftg 5811,500. Without mollie home.

A00 PUNCH!

$89,500.

Ml'"rc

·-

na. F.OUII IEIIIIOOII

M30. CHARMING HOllE - LOCATED .AliT OFF
~ 35 - lrnmla.lal8 ranch wttl! now ,.,.........,
now
lhroughliut, n.w-. rool3 yeori
• olltoo
' 2 bodrmo.. LR, din. nn.,ldt., onctoood ,., POfd1
rm. or~ and balemeN.
'

::."oty

._t

-

p;=
......

·- - .

;-

tno
12.1100.

115,000

H

.'
Real Estate General

1. . lllfcury Couw, Aulo. AC,

,· Psn&gt;B, ~ lltt;'j' ~500, Coli
• 114-251-w.., Dr 8 4 -1110.
1881 llorwty Tro- 4 Door,
, SUMIOI, Auto, n,iiOi\, 814-UI·

till SPECIAL NOTICE - PRICE REDUCED- •
TOTAL AOOIIS - TU!IIully docorltod. 11 tolol
rma., 415 bodroomio, 3 b-. LR, DR, ldt., ut111y im
luldMdod
bonnll&lt;ll wlh ,_,.,room
··•
pool ond polio.
~·-·
' 2. . ATTENTION HOllE BUYERS E Q UA L
OPPORTUNITY - NO DOWN PAYMENT - LOW
INTEAEST LOANS quality lot thlo program ond
nwl&lt;o you ltndlord. -lllnoonoo .., buy In sea.
Donl- out. Col 4186806.
·

t731. FOA RENT - $325 .llo. - Prime location. ·
Elllern Ave. Opportunity 10 Qlmblno homo and
bullneol. Ohio River lronta1111. Vory nlco 3 btqnn.
.homo wlh fii'Pionooo, luU -mont. Thla Ia o money
moktng proposllon. Col fOf lppo!ntmonl.
'
11138. A SCENIC OUIET PLACE TO LIVE - 3 lola
1n Lakovlow Court Slb&lt;llvlolon. - o d only. ~to Holzor _ , CarHr. Drive to WNta
Rd., to Chorolalo Laloo Dr. to~ Ct. AI ut.... $17,400.00.

1011Urlng2013bodrooml-~--~ ·

Iaroe
·-'".....,-priced
In

bath, covond catpOrt,
homo Ia.,
Cillo&lt; mo lnlonn&amp;llon.

IIOfiOO buldlng. Tlitj
tt. S30'o. •

SA 160, Portor. Col !Or lppo!ntmonl. $t0,000.

~-~~~-

!f''

•!t:"j
... ,...~.~~~
•.bothNom. -

••

• Auto Center, luy AClr, Rtcefve

FOR RENT

'

Large high--ceiling
ga~type C91ft·

•

•
'
•'

liNd 1G-foot doors
CaU 1192-6637 or

Recently remodeled office •pace
for rent In
Pomeroy. 1200 to
3000 •quare fill

IVIIIIble.
Good locetlon.
Cell 992-6637 or

446-9786.

FOR RENT
COMMERCIAL
OFFICE
BUILDING
in Gallipolis.
Good Location.
call 882-6637 or
446-9786.

Rod Hill
you who wanlllt "All:... Here It Ia:
Gorgeous modem brick ranch home (comfort), 3
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, lull finished basemen~ attic space
fireplaoo, appianoos, 22+ acres (room to move) bam
pond, fencing (gotta have crit19rs) an extra traltel hook-up
{m~ybeln-laws) ... maybe noll Plus a 2 car garage (his &amp;
hers) Want More~l Come aee to qellove. Privata, pretty,
coontry, modem.:.Yoursl
$138,500

HENRY E. CI.ELAND ............................

.atl1

H ............

a--

'TRACY BRINAGER ..............- •••••••••.o.- ..-

.. 111 2431

JEAN TRUSSELL, ...............;__ , ............ --IID-:IaO

OFFICE..................... - .............- ......................112-2251

--·· · -- ~ ~ -- ... --- · ..... -...

•

- •.

t

-!on.

_,.,._
.,..,..,..,
___,.. --For.- dolollaII o41&gt;ty,
on prioo and
~IIIIIJM-'Y

~

HOI. QUMJTY - LOCATIOII - IPACI - C1uo11y 11
In . . Cope Cod homo ........., . , . , - .
llniOIPhwl........... 4 bllhon• 2 h-...; ........ ...
room wlllllr rto,
pump'ond-;,;j*'
-~~. 1100 eq. l. lac:llon .. CJUer'
~
lver ond a largo 1a1ro typo bocly of .....,.
--.lpooolaa381o41-~

- ·hoot

'*" ... . .

............,,_,.... ,.,..-Will

•

Cllll441 8101.

~--·~
lumooo, 2 BR. N1 f-rO.
·-·~•X&lt;optTVIrldll-.

.

HAPPY HOLLOW AD. - 11 thlo 1)I olory log
home with ~""~ 3 bl!di'OOI!Ia. 2)1 bath,
lwlliiJ room, IMng room, ldlchan, leundty - ·
lkyllltt~ oalolllte IIYIIMII, - e d porch, heat
pump, canlntl air, 12'x12' building and much

mora. Call lor dolailo.

fM21

·

RUSSELL WOOD- BROKER/OWNER- US 4818
TAMMIE DEWI'n

441-1514

.

MARTHA SMITH .
371-2651

CATHY WRAV

PATRICK COCHRAN

446 4255

448 B855

CINDY' DRONOGOWSKI • 245 118117

'""'''IN"

Eatate General

.~- I 71 1 And leMoo. RIP
~ Certified. AI

I

1

••Lit+al-111t

., ~;.;..;.;.;;;;..;;;.;.;;.

OVER
- 3 ~E!~~~
HOME HAS
BASEMENT,
CARPORT. APPAOX. 5 M~S FROM

____
....

'

eo.••

:83 Excavating
:'•CJtlil.
IN7 AIIN
Yan. CIMomlz~~
Clioln, C.l. IEic. ......

CONVENIENT LOCATION ON ITA1E ITREET IN
GAWPOUI - WALK 10 DOWNTOWN SHOPPING,
CHURCH AHD SCHOOL a BEDROOMS, 2 STORY
HOME HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM. EAT-IN KITCHEN, BASEMENT. VERY
AFFORDABLE AT $35,000.

ANY HOUR
IUISIDBI'('I'IAL.oCOMMBRClAL
PARMI
INVIISTM8NT PIIOftiTIIlS

OFFICE:

2~

.

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - APPAOX. 25 ACRES WITH
LAROE a BEDROOM HOME. NICE COUNTRY
SETTING. $38,100.

LOCUST ST.

GJILLIPOLIS,
0 45631
.

flU. UNUIUAL IRICK FWICH In tip-lop
COl II n - 3 BR, 2 b11110 lUI boomont LA. DR.

car

inue, anct ;, rh.J Ji
-IOd gooagi · N1

RESIDENCE AND IIIOIIIL.e HOME PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACR£S. BACK POACHES, 2 CAR GARAGE. I
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 6
MOBILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY RENTED •
EXCELLENT LOCATION. CALL . FOR COMPLETE

•

~. 1111-lo a 28ft oportlttMtl wlh LA ...

In IIIOIIIn,
- · mol.
Allo 1ll .,..
on I.A.'!.,.,

Real Estate Generel

•

:ac · Electrical &amp;

HI-In kllctten, FR. 2

Reel Estate General

•

•
.•...,.._.. .-..And Coollna.

--·-·

-.v

on
IIIII 12'1185' (Dotrvlor) ma111t homo w1111 LR lilt-In

neocloa .

torgo . . . . - - Pluo, • .141124 butldtng ... be UIIICI lor • illhc:wvoom or • 1m111 ·r 1rr • Cal'- '
inlor dllal&amp;.
·- •
-.

t731. UNIQUE ~WI. IRICK &amp; ALUM. will 3
BR, 2 botha,
C0111no1o In oqu....._. ldtcho
Clooototownllldwllh4 . . . too. ..,....
n,

tho -

ON . . LAND

G:t
·--

Real Estate General

'""' 111111111 to_,,."""'*"'" homo.
611. LOCATION. • •LOCATION. ..LOCATION! SU,_ of
Ia
TIIIO comtJIOh::lal
pn&gt;pelly 1511150, fH4 of ..,... loclllld on

IIIII. ICOTT SCHOOL ROAD Ia

USliNOI - · IUY

OFFICE.......... _ ..... _ ••.••- ••••••••••••• - ..............,._112-28111

ti04. ENJOYAIILE TO LOOK AT - Fun ID !lVII In,
hlo tpoce fO&lt; flllllty onlortolnmOIII In • ou'*'n
· rocn11tllon """" wlh largo ~. )-4 - ·
·-In patlq Gil IIIChln. TIIIO hotnl
•
you
01111
,..r
lamlly, I .,..._,... your - ·
Slualld on 1 ec. m1. PftCit ReduDid. Cal lor an

11n. NEW LilTING. HANNAN TRACE ROAD _
cozy 3 BR ranch with 11Hn LR DR bath
::!.!loll. now!""'· Jull right toi nel.tywido .;

NIW

CONTRACT! 3 bedroom, ball, IMng kltchan, .1150 lor $36,1100.00. Owriera . .
malra ., ohr. Wll llao .a on land COIIIn!CI
wfll $5,000.00 down.
1411

.

JEFFEAL-.....................,_.__,,,,M2..aos&amp;
AALiiiE ITEWAAT:.................. _ .................... 812~
IAIG)Y IPIWltJN0..,,
aJT'atER...-....___
- ·········-·····- -.112--1371
JERRY
_ ,,, ... - ........(304)
IIZ~M

1102. CLOSE TO RIO CIAANDE - Neat c,.1 n
collaao ollorlng 2 lll&lt;trno., I bath, good lnoulaUon
11111111 slclng, nowty decofalod I oulbuldtna,!IMIO&lt;i
tpgl, 1.~11C. mil.,_.., IOf ._homo. fhi Ia f«
mo -ll'f gal. a - -1$45,000.

Deerl Appro1. 20.05 acres with 40x28 hunting cabin ·
surrounded try turkey and deerl GREAT HUNTING SITE I
Seduded, rustle. A Grizzley Adams kind ol place I
(Hunting seasons near.... won11astlongl)
$17,000

IT'S A GOOD FEELING TO DEAL WITH PEOPLE WHO
CARE. AT CLELAND REALTY WE' RE ALSO THERE
TO HELP WITH YOUR BUYING /SELLING NEEDS.
STOP BY AND SEE US TODAYI

,.,... i!IOOfN. 1482.

~ftiJA

Middleport- COnvenience to The Key To This Home: t
noor frame ~ with 3 bedrooms, lull ba118t1'1ent. one car
garage, apptiancas, F.A.N.G. heat attic spaca. Clotelo
shopping, banking, schools, &amp; post oHieel
$22,000 .

SR 33B:True lt'o Not Tho TAJ 'MAHAL... But it has lots
of posstbilityl 63+ acres with wei and cistern bam
'!'jUiptment building, com Qib and fruit trees highl~hta
thts. 6 room home with 2-3 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces. Close
tci "'.':.r.
·
$53,500

J. MERRILL CARTER
3711-3184

Wills Hilt Rood- 2 acre set with a large pond, overlooking
the goW COI.rW, water and electric available. BeautiluiMustsee.
,12,000
DOlTIE 1\IFVEA, Brotr.r... ________ _________, .. .-56112

tMI. HARAlSON TWP. -lilac. mil, rninorof rlgtn.
Ul&lt;o, poncll - and oldar home. l.ocalld on
Homan Trace Rd.

offices. T1vw over-

.~====
FOR RENT

Pomeroy· Eliot s - d Street• You need to see tlis 2
112 baths. Walling
dtstanca to stores but 1101 right in midjle of town. •
.
$21,000

lplo.

Approximately 3,000
81111111'11 feet. Two

446-9786.

Avenue, Pometoy. 4 bedroom ranch llyle
don, tpmiiJ room, kitchen, dining room
and lYing ftlOIII, 1 car garoga and mora. 1417

· ~~oma.

•!DrY· 2-3 bedroorri home with t

H14. LAROE COMMERCIAL BULDINO on Sllllo
Route. 2 bodnn. opt. on 1ot·floor. Polllllo 3 moro

merclll building In
Middleport.

•

PRICE REDUCEOI_Now $28,500. 228 Spring

•.

Goocllrr·•-

I OAK !ITREET - f13,000.DO - Ill otory
hCHIHI, With 3 badroomo, living room, cinlng
room, Nice back lawn opprox. IOO'X94'. Front
ond aide porch110. Immediate po-.ion. 1481

PHYLUS MILLER
258-1136

•

REDUCED AOAIII NOW •1,000.00- WAS
ASKING SM,OOO.OOIII - OWNER WANTS
OLDI property oillalld ..
3nj Avenue. 4 bedrooms, 2 boths, - r gao
fum.ce. Mobile home ..., lncblod. Good

Ma

.. """""' · -

M32. FAIILY, HOllE - Wllh
S·P.R·
E·Ml O.U-T. 4 -...,, bolh, Ill., DR. LR, fam.
om., 111ftoor bodrm. &amp; 3 '41· Endoood - ond bact
pon:h, fuU booment, OIIIChod 1111r11111. I oc mil

REiltJCED $42,500.

PIKE - 841
acrao, email poild, plus 181124 tho- houM.
Alking $26,500.
M7S.

llllchecl. Alklng ontv $52,500. Cal today.

In loL

--to

1·

1471

.VACANT LAND ON LINCOLN

mn

•
•

~ W•'re T•Uclna T~l Kenny's

S1 I ,1100.00. MIL

here.

room, cining room and kitchan. an. carV...

Home
Improvements

•

CLOSE lilt Enjoy a view ol tha rW&lt; Inn tha
groat room of thia '-¥ 6 y- old. 3 baLl oono,
3 bath homo with lamiy room and finilhed
ba-t. nine clo ..... 2 .,. wale-in. Ta 11M
lor nine- yoa ... Too many amenitiallo no~~ !lion
Call for mont information. AlltintJ IO'o.

ON FRANK AD. - A partial brick ronc11 on
1,03olac.
111113 bettnoma, 1~ balho living

Servtces

;~

M7t

SHERYL WALTERS- 367·0421/992·6583 OFFICE _ 1 _80~58 5-7101 CHf!:RYL LEMLEY- 742-3171

;·

$50.

w...

now!

MEIGS COUNTY

•II•

• FilE£. ~ton- 24 '-r hot·
: ~~2121. Copyright

•

.

• wrrhM
1n111M INca a
• bedJ ~Asking
tot . .
: ':4'f
lpm.

• 1181 ... . -.. $200; 1986 '1/W• $50; 1N'7 Mlfc 1111 a $100; 1M5
. ... . . , _ $50; lronl

I

.

·-·==·oink, 2

CHEAP! FBI/U.S. SEIZED

·- - ~lf-1510.

roomo. living room, kitchen, bath, olum. aiding.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1487

• 1183 Ford .. _.. von. :1111
; llfotGr, iluto., AC, 11!1.. .!'!'· till.

,. 2411 tieton i :OO Pll.

em.

Motor Homes

, CotorT.~IIIci,_vo, FUll loth,
Carpol,

•

• A frM lurker, 114 t18

NEW USTINGI - PICTURE YOUR HOUSE
HEAEI 1/acanl land. o, J. Whb Roast 2.392
acres, loll of . __ Good bo!iklng oills lor

COlY • CU1EII1 t,IOO.OO - Whethar otartlng out or retiring thla hama lo lor youl 2. bad-

11111
Nonad 31 Fl. llh , ~ CompllloiJ fumlohod,

., mlloal!", wllllako - · 304-812-

at

campeni &amp;

: miiM=13i3i.

:: 111'1 86aclr. &amp;colt, ....... .....
:;,':'."~ cruta.J...rur da,_, 5
·
, Anv... cauett1, 1
:.• owner, 5 monU• old, low

. .,lng

BllWELL AREA - Well kapl corj two
'*~room ronch with two lalga loll. 1 car
~ garoga, 1 w dolche&lt;j g&amp;~aga. New
pump. P&amp;lllol ba__,t Asking
139,500.00. 1478

BTOPI ntiS IS rrl - 22 acreo, rnA, mini !Mn.
Hu pond. bam and~~ I'MCiy l o r horaft. 'Include• 3 bedroom ranclt ' - with
1~ baths, dining room and mora. ~
garage and a 32'x48' delllched. garage, - ·
age building . PLUS 3 room Mel bath &amp;pMo
m.,l Ownaro moving out ol aroa.
oold

3

; :;.,--~~ ~~

11111 Ponlac Sun~rd Talle over

NEW LISTING - COMMERCIAL - 470
JACKSON PIKE - I acra lot approx., 36'lt56'
bullcing with two bay garaga, asphalt peltdng
tot.
1481

31 WOODED ACRES in Soulh~stom School
eroa. AlroadV hu water tap. Six miles to Rio
Grande. Call now.
14211

: rt 112 ft. Carwalr puii-4JPO .....

.

IF CITY UVING IS FOR YOU, THATS
WHAT YOU'LL GET with this wall maintained
two bedroom home with alum. siding, fenced in
back yard. a large enclosed back porch for ·
those 'Warm summer nilttll.or •njoy the central
sir. Ona car garage wlstorage, walking ·
distance to clinic and much mora. Reduced to
$46,000. cat1 for your appointment.
1444

1488

7J.a214.

;, !",!'
. oampor, "'"- ~~~mooo,
--. tlllle, now tlno,
304-

1'77

Other email game abound, including wild
turkey. Thera ara · building elteo with no
i..trlctiono. Timber hu not been heNMiod lor
y..,., On county roed w1t1 lllactric av all ollie.
At:! now, and you !Oil have a place 1o hunt Mil
call your own.
Mt8

Rocln• Make your appi&gt;intment today 1o ..., this
shingles
a~ w~nng, a wonclerlul garden spot with lots of
strawberry and blackberry ptan111hat brings in ., axtla
tncome each year. All this on approx. 2
olland.

bedrD?!" home with a two car gar~~ge, -

ton truck

~ 713-SAOI.

3Qot..I7U111.

thouuridl:

or parta.

mn

foot above ground pcloi, TPC wal9r and a 2 car garage.
Only $26,000

: TeyOI&amp; 22~ c y l , - -or

•
: 79
• ·'

mn

Eolglo Rldga Road- Want a home with lots o1 potential

: *.DiR~~T.~
.

"~

$46,5000

dining area, 2 car attached gera1111. Can be
oold with t acre
or 5 acraa
and bam.
caM today for more Information.

HUNTERs PARADISEII Appmxlmately 81
acroo. Can be yours by deer gun' ....on.

a~ 23 acres of land? It has 4 bedrooms, utellill dish,' 24

: m-a»or1

H31. LAND CONTRACT - Looking for 8 ac. mil,
largo doulllo-. *'"go butldlng1 Located on old

rarrnm cimng room room with bay windows, 1un basement
Syriacuo• Fourth Street• Need an extm income? You
could have it if you buy this 2 famWy duplex. h has 2
bedrooms in each apartment has a big lot and i• close to
tho park and !)Dol.
.
$28,000

~
BUctaet Tronomlaalono, Uood &amp;
"tiuln, Ill - · ol011lnl II IN:
owner 114.-241-1177. ~14-3712213, Pamon&gt;y: 514.ft2-8100.

· ~ tanka, -

: Paymonlo, 614-2t5-5632 After 5
, P.ll.

f\

:
:
,
.
.;

Middleport, OH

Ulddtepon- S. Filth- Has 8-i rooms, 4 bectooms, and 2
~H. baths, Look at the Extlllt-Haa mainlenanca free
sidtng, he~t pump, fencad bac:kyllld, open llairway,

and 11 close to the schools.

: tm 11179 Ford 314 Ton 4••
' Porto,- 1150 Ford "FialhNd V.f,
• ~~~ Trafta.$250. 114 311 miOI.
.
· Ita Buick V.f &amp; Automatic
' 'Ilona, 45,000 lllloo 1300 Firm.

' 1721.

,

Auto Pans &amp;

Accessories

1787. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - land laya
.., •• Oldor 2 oto&lt;y bllck home With 4 bedrooms and
. homo In nood ol AIJI)r, 121 oc. mil. on SR-. to

•• 1111 Eagle Pnmlor loodod,
; $1,500. OIC cond. iN7 Toyota
• $3,200. ~2722.
1111 Ford Eocott lJ( $3,200, Ex! «*lent Condtlon. Call 6'J4.448.
~

_________

1473

IN VINTON VILLAGE! - Hera you will find
this 3 bedroOm 1112 bath one 1101y home with
living room, kitchen, laundry and den. A
detached one car garaga blown~n Insulation
and mora. On a t27xt15 comer lot. Asking
only $30,000. Call today for your appointment.

205 Nor1h Second Ave.

: 76

lool!lng--..

Ml7. SWEET a LOW- CGmlortoblo llft013 bodrm .
homo. Lot 88x118', rural wotor, b. au t.ll on llalo
101111. $15,000.

' 0001.
• IIIII Cavalier AS. black. 5
: apMCI, .unrOof, Unt, new tfra1,
,, MK, runolloolo Oood. $4,100.

•
~

tho·~;~~=~~~

Qlmplolod • f - : ""!security doors, IIHI oldlng, heavy roof, ldtct.n,
coramtclllo t'*Y oxtondocllnto kltchon, 18x53 dod&lt;.
comonl wd&lt;o and pad. S.. this home and 11op

11130. EXCELLENT APARTIIENT BLDG. INVEST·
IIENT - Good monoy rriotor IN TOWN. t.algo apt,
bldg. wlh 3twa bodroo&lt;n 1pt.s.; 2 one bodnn. 1pt.s.,
pluo a oollogo wlllllwo liportmo!U. Thla propolly ha
boen we1 matro- . Roducodprioo. ·

:=·

:~

:

c.11

---In'

.
•
:•

'

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Real Estate General

fWJ&lt;

446·7101
or
·800-585·7101

•..

n

•

'*

;·-ao

Real Estate Gener'll

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKlS THE DlfHR£N(( .

RESIDENTIAL - INVESTMENTS · COMMERCIAL - FARMS

:. ::1111;:::. -;Hoo;:-'--tda-:-Acc:-ard--:--:D:::X:-A-:-111-,--o, 112-3184.
04t7 01' 614-367-G..S.
.
Air,
Cnlloo, AJ&amp;IFII C.-to,
1
• Elccelle.. .Condlllonl 71,000 1987 Chevy 3/t ton pick-up, 305 1183 Ford Bronco. 1uto., PS,
trw, 4op., PS, PO, 138,00011L, PB:,;.!liW tlree, new muffler,
•. llloo, Vory 0~,!109,
fair, tnQine IXCIIIINII, n."""' low miles, $3300 oao,
•• Dr
Ollor.
.
; INI Fetid 3/4 ton pick· 614-892-7733
. :: 1111 ,._ Yorlw, 17,144 IIIJaa, up, 381 onglno, a..o., PS, PO,
,' AH - . Dlallol, llolro~ In 12t,OOOUI., body fair, engine ttl! F-150, 41t 302 Auto,
( Very Good 'tooidltlon. "·000 good, hOOOi 1078 Ford Ft50 $3,800. tl4-388.fl'l4.
·olck-up, 3!11 011G.Inl, auto., PS,
•. Finn. 8orlouo cau... Only.
1910 Ford F·150 414 Auto, Alr1
PI, 11\000111., $1200; 514-892· Tilt,
:CruiH, AMIFM Sttreo Bea
• 251-1443
P.M.
- • A.ll. ' 10 1411, a.m-Spm,
UnorL. Sliding Roar Window,
tt8l Okll Deb 88, one owtw, 11178 GIIC olck-up, 6 cyl, :i Haw llrM, St(ll Unct. W1rrantr.
kot&gt;t, V.f, "-"1!.1. PD, apood, $500. 3o4-578-2103.
21,000 llltoo, Rod In Col«, Coo :
PW, AIIIFII--'-- poyor,
$18,900 Now Will Solt For
:· wlpoo. $111,000 mlloo. 11171 Ct.vy I 112 Ton Truck, 12 $12,500. Will 'toke Car Dr Truck
, $41fa. ca• t14 4 ce 1223.
Fl., Groin Bod, t Sllood, Exeat· Ao Trada ln. Cllltlt t4&amp; OMO.
toni Condition, 514-2~24 .
•' till Pont. Flroblnl, • Cyt, nr.o. Elccollonl Contltlon, 11171 Dodge 112 Ton Pick-Up
: $4,100. f14-26U710.
~"f. Condition, $1.250, 614"'.._ :;74=:-u.M~ol;:::o~rc;::y=c~le;:s~~
"' 11i7 Ford Tempo, AIC, AMIFII,
cntloo, tiR, 5ljl.. 4cyl., now tlrH 111711 FOrd Plck-!Jp Truck, 4 1183 Honda 110 th- whlolllt',
·- and uhauot, $3000; 814-tm- - · Tot&gt;PO&lt;: 32,000 Actual 304-11715~103.
1110. •14~56-1274 ' I 983 ondl CRtaO..:.r:uno aood,
•. ::-115~·:::··=::· =::-::-=::--:c=- Dr I Uiso,o.
$525. allor t:OO I'll 30c:a&amp;2:• 1817 Ponlloc T·IOOO AT, PB, AC,
, tow onltugo: 1114-Mtl-3421 altlr 111711 OIIC; Cab Over, cummins 2844.
Engine; 1972 Ravano 42ft.
Aluminum Trtller, Homt Nat'l Honda 3 whMier 200 Big Red,
cadUiec
FIMtwood Bank, Raclno,o Ohio. &amp;14-9411- oiOc ota~rto
ohoh artvon,
n - , hi
range, now
'• Broughman~. Top Cond~ 2210. .
tlno
•
...
$800. -..78; tlonl11,000 Milot.- Cilia
• Only, IIUII-M«&lt;.
1N7 Chevy hilt lon, auto, air, 1351.
,.,000 mlln, asking $5,800.
. ••
: 111oo,
- Dodao Omnl. · -Ptymouth
· 1'1,000 304-fl'W:JU.

-t

•

Pllll• D7

CLRSSFED f\DS

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

,,"

Sunday 11m• Ssntlnel

Read the Best Seier
Read the

•

CIA~~HD Aot ~7

"·200.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleuant, wv

Real Estate General

\

Rrm. 30U111-1121.
1184 Z2l Camaro1 iiOS auto, PB,
PS, PW, 12000n1. Run. good,
$38110; 114-1'12-26715.

.i.lovemblr 22, 1182

II&amp;Q.OIE IN. - 1'tto-of~lonll.

DETAILS.

.,

&lt;\

.EXPLOA! lliE WOODI- RELAX WITH A BOOIC ON
THE SECOND FLOOR DECK OR TAKE A DIP IN fHE ,
POOL ntiS HOME WAS BUILT FOR OOMFORTABLE
FAMILY LIVING. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BAniS, NICE OPEN
FAMILY ROOM,
KITCHEN
ARRANGEMENT,
BEAUTIFUL BRICK FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM.
SECOND FLOOR STUDY OA HOBBY ROOM,
ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, 2 CAR GARAGE, 7 WOODED
ACRES, CONVENIENT LOCATION.
I

WATCH

OlE 1HE otiO IIVIR

FROM

a BEDAOOM HOME,

2

EQUIPPED WITH

�Page DB

sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH . Point Pl. . .nt, wv

November 22, 1182

Ohio Lottery

Corn.. .coatlllued trom n.t
cy and Outlook summarizes the

;:
. MYSTERY FARM - Tbis week's mystery
.- farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
- Conservalloli District, is located somewhere in
_ .Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly cODtest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
.- guess to tbe Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
r Pomeroy, Oblo, 457119, or the GaUl polls ' Daily
;; Tribune, 825 Third Ave;, Gallipolis, Obio,

45631, and you may win a $5 pri~e from tbe
Ohio Valley PublisbiDg Co~ Leave your name,
address and telepboae number with your card
or Jetter. No telepbODe calls will be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to tbe news·
paper off'K:e by 4 p.m. each WednesdaY. In case
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lo!tery.
Next week, a GaJUa County farm will be featured by the Gallla Soil and Water Conservation District.

~Break
•

with tradition and nuke
your Thanksgiving turkey
·

~ WASHINGTON (AP) at 50 percent power for approxi-Let the bird stand for 20 min~Tbanks~vil)g cooks looking for a
mately 7 to 10 minutes per powtd utes after removing it from the
.(break wtth ·lladition can microwave
-less than two houn for an 11· microwave. This is critical because
;lhis Thanksgiving's turtey, sug- poun~ turkey. 1JliS prevents over- . food completes cooking during the
!3esis the manager Qf the Agricul- coolcing outer areas.
standing time. Final temperature
:ture Department's meat and poultry
- Always use a meat ther- should be 180 degrees FahrenheiL
·:llot line.
·
mometer to determine doneness.
The USDA's national toll-free
• Susan Conley lists these safety Check the bird in sevellll locations number for more information on
tips for microwaving a turkey:
before letting it stand. The turkey preparing meat and poultry safely
: -Choose a bird that weighs should be at least 170 degrees 1s 1-800-535-4555. For WashingJess than 12 pounds. There must be Fahrenheit when taken from the ton, D.C., area n!Sidents, it is 202'at least three inches of clearance microwave.
720-3333.
:between the bird and the sides and
:wp of the microwave oven.
Crossword Puzzle Answer
; If you try to squeeze too large a
bird mto too small an oven, the
iurkey will not cook properly.
Some pans may be overcooked,
others undercooked.
· -Use an oven cooking bag. !.:=+'::-¥=Specially designed nylon bags pro- L':f~
mote even cooking, which helps a r::
turkey reach a safe temperature 17-E
throughout.
.
- -RDIBte the bird and dish sev.eral times, even in ovens with a 17-P+'-'tumtable.
• -Don't microwave a stuffed
turke~. The bones and density of
the bird may not allow stuffmg to
reach a safe temperature.
-Microwave the unstuffed bird ~+.;;~

Little things
· Art Worth A lot
in
the Classified Section! '

· impact in the following way. "The
winncn will find it difficult to pin1 poiDt gains from the NAFTA, but
the loaers will clearly see the p8in. •
A mmii\der to farmers who need
to become certified as private pesticide applicators in order to purchas~ restricted-use pesticides. A
class will be held Tuesday, Novemher 24, 7-10 p.m. at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center in.
Pomeroy. The training will give
special empbasis on vegetable and
greenhouse categories. Farmers in
Meigs and surrounding c:ounties are
welcome· to perticipate. Farmers
who currently have private applica·
tor certification but need renewal
classes will want to attend sessions '
to be planned in both counties after
the fJrsl of the 'jUII. Call the Meigs
County Extension Office (9926696) for further details on the
November 2A class.
Now is the time when most
homeowners cut or purchase, and
begin to bum fuewood. Firewood
is a source of warmth and comfort,
but is also an important avenue for
pests to enter the borne. Most pesis
living in fuewood post no threat to
people, furniture or to the slruCture.
Nonetheless, homeowners often
becom"e concerned when· insects

emerge from wood which is
· brought indoors, and crawl or fly
about the house.
.
Control of f~wood pests is bell
accomplished by management of
the firewood iuelf. Spraying ~
wood with in4ecticides is NOT
necessary nor recommended and
could result in harmful vapors
when the wood is burned. A much
better approach is to: Store rue·

Bevo Francis .
classic ends

wood outdoon, only bringing in
what you plan to bum immedi•tely
or widlin 1 few holn. Position tite
woodpile away from the house and
off the ground. Bum older wood
first in order to minimize the time
during which new infestations can
become establislled.
.
Ed Vollbon Is the G•lll•
Couty Elltenlioa Aae•t, Aari·
culture.

PageS

LETART CORPORATION
PLANT ~3
UPPFR RT. 7, JUST PAST

•

Super Lotto:
6-U-14-15-35-36
Kicker:

'

5-4·2-11-0-9
Pick 3:
4-S-8
Pick 4:
1-2-2-9

•

•

I&lt;ANAUGA, OH.
BURLII.~ 011.
Vol 43, No. 1411
Copyrlgh~ 1992

ALL SIZES LIMESTON.
PLUS RIP RAP
•

&gt;

•Mason Sand
•Top Soil
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
.•Pit Run
•Shredded
•Drainage Gravel
Top Soli
•Pea Gravel
c •Straw ·
•Drainage Tile
.Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix

WASHINGTON (AP),.... The
flfSt estimate of fall pota10 production in the Unit¢ States is 364 mil·
lion hundredweight, 2 percent
below last year's record. _
Harvested acreage declined 5
percent while yields averaged 325
hundredweight pa- acre, 3 percent
more than the record of a year ago,
says a USDA report this month on
vegetableS.

OTHER DEALERS
Say They Have The Lower Prices•
OTHER DEALERS
..Try To _Say They a·ave The Best Deals. /

THE BEST DEAL IS S'tiLL•••

THE HOMETOWN DEAL!
Crossword Puzzle on Pas~ C-7

By DAN EVEN
slalion reported one death in South
Associated l;'ress Writer
·Carolina, but it couldn' t immediTornadoes skipped across 11 ately be confmned.
..
The unusual condJtJons were
states in the South and Midwest .
over the weekend, killing at least .caused by a. low.-movil)g southern
23 people and injuring hundreds. flow of mmst au off the Gulf of
Rescuers used dogs to search for Mexico that com~ined _with !"luch
victims in the twisted wreckage colder westerly wmds higher m the
that had been peoples' homes.
atmosphere •. said Henry SteigerThe tornadoes were pan of an waldt, a N~u~ "!'eather .Serv1ce
unusual November storm system meteorol~t ~Indianapolis.
that swept from Texas through the
In MJSSJSSlppl, a tornado
Southeast and north into Ohio and smashed through a Brandon mobile
Indiana
home park late Saturday, then
The rJISt toflllldoes hit Louisiana slcipped across town to ~ ~pscale
and Texas on Saturday, damaging neighborhood, where It k1ll.ed ,a
about 300 homes in Houston but . father, h1s son and ~wo of the boy s
causing only minor injuries. As the Cub ~cout ~udd1es who were
system spread east, brutal winds · spep,din.l! the 01 \lht.
smashed thousands of homes and . lt.JUSt whiSked ~~ough here
businesses caused scores of car like s.Jicmg hot b~tter, Constable
· ·d
'd
h h Marlln Mann sa1d. "We've got
acc1 ents an . e-:en tore a c urc _ two-story homes .not bigger than a
st;ee~&gt;l~ loose during a Sunday ser bag of firewood . They're wiped
v1ces m Woodstock, Ga.
,
"It was absolute total devasta· out
.
tion," Mississippi Gov . Kirk / ~h.e mob1le home shared by
Fordice said after touring hard-hit Sheli1a Rowell, .her husb~nd and
Rankin county, where 10 people two daughters. fl1pped on us roof.
died six.in a trailer park.
They were bruised but surv1ved.
O::.W from the storms and tor· . "It was all ~~ could _do .If hold
nli!oes included 15 in Mississippi; onto each oth.er.. she .SBJd., It was
six in Georgia; and one each in the most tem~rmg thmg I ve ever
Tennessee and Kentucky. A radio hved through.

At least 10 peopl~ were killed
and 86 injured in Brandon, about
15 miles east of Jackson, according
to Charlie Wilkinson, civil defense
director for Rankin County. Sixty
houses and dozens of mobile "·
homes were damaged.
Five storm-related deaths were
reported elsewhere in the state. An
elderly couple was killed when
their hQme in Clarkston was
destroyed. More than 200 injuries
were reported around the state. ·
About 75 ~pie at·the Mount
Carmel Bapt1st Church in Wood·
stock. Ga., escaped injury when a
twister blew the steeple off, throw·
ing it 200 yards into the church
cemetery.
Ann Cleveland said worshipers
had just finished singing "Amazing Grace" when the .tornado hit,
forcing them to duck under their
pews for cover.
Deputies used tracking dogs to
search for injured peOJ.&gt;Ie in the
debris of sevellll homes m Putilam
County, northeast o£ Macon, Ga.
In western Tennessee, a tornado
early Sunday overturned a mobile
home near Toone, killing a.n It year-old boy, officials said.

,t

•

'

I.~

·-· -~

~~

impending ruling.
,
COLuMBUS (AP) :_ The Pub· produce waste sludge.
But
in
a
statement,
the
company
Other criiics said scrubbers
lie Utilities Commission of Ohio is
said
specific
customers
costs
are
scheduled to decide Wednesday would cost more than lhe company
difficult
tb
estimate
because
they
whether American Eleclric Power calculates and endanger up to 7,000
depend on liow regulaton allocate
.
Co. will be allowed to install scrub- manufacturing jobs.
scrubber
costs 11mong the compaSWitching the fuel would lead to
bets at its Gavin plant in Cheshire.
ny's
seven
operating companies.
The $800 million cost of build·. closing the company's two coal
The company, an umbrella or,gaing the scrubbers to remove sulfur mines in Meigs County and elimidioxide emissions would increase nating I ,200 jobs, more than one- nization for Ohio Power wh1ch
residential rates by at least 4 per· third of the United Mine Worker.;' owns Gavin, predicted rates
cent or about $22 a year, the com- 3,000 remaining members in Jhe wouldn't go up more than 6 percent.
Ohio-West Virginia dislrict
pany said.
The controversy began because
"These scrubbers are of ultimate
The Ohio Chapter of the Sierra
Club opposes the plan. The group iinponance," said state Sen. Roben of the Clean Air Act of I 990,
believes switching Gavin to low- Nay, R-Barnesville. "For every which orders utilities to drasticaJJy
sulfur out-of-slate coal would be a coal min.lng job, there are six reduce sulfur dioxide emissions ,
better way to help the environment spinoff jobs. If we can't scrub the beginning in 1995.
The company is trying to make
coal and retain the jobs, the end
and would raise rates J.(i percent.
Some have said scrubbers are result will be monstrous welfare . Gavin meet the regulations. The
plant produces 400,000 tpns of sulenvironmentally unsound because and unemployment."
they make the plant less efficient, ' The company officials declined fur dioxide a year, about 25 percent
produce excess carbon dioxide and to be interviewed because of the of the company's total.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -Bill
Clinton filled a book with his many
campaign promises. Now, his
strategists are trying to identify a

handful of ''signatur(l ideas" apart from economic and health
proposals- that he'll promote
quickly after becoming president

".Let Us Prove To· You We Rave The Best. Deal"
1616
EASTERN
AVENUE
.
'

ON THE SPOT .
FINANCING!

•

GBO

•

Hometown Dealer

GALUPOLIS, OH.

(614) 446·3672
OR
1·10.521·0014
Mo1.·FrL 1:00·7:00 ..

Sat.. 1:00-4:00
.

Clos... Su•~J

A llultlmedla Inc. Newopaplf

NOT MUCH LEFT • P. . Joyner, facing,
gets a bug from 11tr siscer Sllerl7 Giordano out·
side Joyner's deslroyed • - Sanday in Bran-

CHRISTMAS FOR THE BIRDS · ·strings or popcorn, and
miniature orange rind baskets along with pinecones filled with ·
peanut butter and covered with bird feed made this a tree .for the
birds. The tree w8s prepared by tile Jade Junior Garden Club for
display at the aanual Cbrlstmu flo11oer show of the Meigs County
Gardea Club AfiiOCiation beld ·at Carleton Scliool over the week·end. Gl:vlng Joshua Bolin, a club member, a helping band witb
decorating tbe tree is his sister, Adrian Bolin. (See story on page
10)
.

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
· ARCANUM - Residents wen:
allowed back into their homes
today to chect damage following a
tornado that S&gt;¥epl tluough town,
injuring eight poople and damaging
dozens of houses and buslnes$cs.
The tornado was one of several
funnel clouds reponed in Ohio
Sunday night in westml and southwestern Ohio. No deaths were
reponed.
Another twister swept across
Preble County on the Indiana bor·
der, ·damaging about 20 buildings
and causing ~ injuries. authori·
ties said.
Residents who could not stay in
their homes in~ . in wtsiCm
Ohio about 25 miles oonbwc:st of
Dayton, had been taken to a shelter
in another town.
Police and Darke County sherifrs deputies were stationed at the
borders of town today, allowing
onI y reSidents inside, said a man
who identified himsdf ooly as corrections offJC« Miller at the sher·
iffs depanmenL ·
Jake McGlothin and was inside

~·

I .

his home when the storm hit about

6:30p.m.

" Inside it was like a bomb went
off -"'g lass everywhere," said
McGlothin, whose wife was treated
for cuts at Wayne Hospital in
Greenville.
Eight people were taken to the
hospital, said a nursing .supervisor
who wouldn't give her name. One,
a 22-monlh-old girl, was admitted
and was in fair condition today.
The others were treated and
released. The hospital had said
Sunday night that two people were
admittt.d
Arcanum Fire Chief Bud Grny
estimalal that 25 to 30 houses were
darnagecL
.
Trees and power ·hnes were
down throughout the village, and
residents' belongings were strewn
across lawns and streets. Water
beaters and dishwashers were in
the sbeets. Aluminum siding was
blown into treetops.
"It's the biggest thing that ever
hit this town for a long time, " Gray
said.

Electric power and telephone

service was out over much of the

village of ahour2,000 people.
Gray said utility crews turned
off natural gas lines in the village.
An area of I 0 to I 2 blocks on
the village's east side sustained the
most damage, Gray said. Residents
were taken to a shelter at the
Franklin-Monroe High School in
Pitsburg, about three miles east o.f
Arcanum.
.
Gray did not know how many
people s1ayed at the shelter.
.
Brad Flora, 26. was inside his
house when the storm hiL
.
" When we heard it, it was just
unbelievable. We just b)lsted our
butts to get down 10 the basement
as soon as we could," Aora said.
"It just came up real quick."
·
Forrest Harshbarger, a village
firefighter who was off duty was at
home when the tornado hit.
" The whole place staned shaking. You just heard what a nightmare was like," Harshbarger said.
A tornado hit Preble County, ·
also in western Ohio, about 6:40
p.m., said sheriff's Capt. Ron
Layne.

Jan.20.

One leading candidate is a vol.untary national-service program
offering college students federal
aid that could be repaid later by
community service as a teacher,
law enforcement officer, health·
care worker or school counselor.
Other front-burner ideas are
campaign finance reform, welfare
reform and shaking up the bureaucracy to make it smaller and more
'accountable.
Clinton campaigned on the
theme that he's ••a different lcind of
Democmt.••
The task now is to identify
"what are the ideaS that can Jeally
give definipon to your administra·
lion, that can reinforce the effon to ·
make change," said AI From, Clio·
ion's assistant director for doinestic
policy.
J'hose programs are known in
Clinton's transition lleadquaners as
the "signature ideas."
.
In an interview, From said the
"signature ·ideas" will proceed on
a parallel uaclt with other key elements of Clinton's agenda: reviving the economy and creating jobs,
and putting in plllce a comprehen. sive healtll-catc system.
·
Each of Clinton's campaign
promises has a politica) constiJuen·
cy that wants the new president to
put its priorities fmf. It is
inevitable that some interest aroups
wiU be disappointed.
. "In 10.weeks (before Clinton
takes offJCC) you can do a few initiatives," From said. "You can't
do the world. I'm not ftOing to
every groun and asldng, What do
you want?'f'

THE PILGRIM WAY • Shdeets ill andes
one uc1 six • Salaa c '« .n
tuy Sdtool
joined toptller • t'ridaJ lor • T•awqiYilll
program for tlleir ~ A tratlilioul "pil·
grim" meal was ~~ted, ~ sllls ud '""i•p

I.

---···

doo, Miss. Tornadoes passed through the area.
Saturday night killing 15 people and injuriqg:
more than 150 otben. (AP pboto)

Tornado
strikes
western
.Regulators set to decide
Ohio
town;
eight
injured
on Gavin scrubbers·

Aides making a 'promise'
list and. checking it twice

Ill Progra111 Cars have
bala ..ce of
ile•

1 Section, 10 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 23, 1992 ·

Killer tornadoes rampage
across .South, Midwest ,_.~

...,. DeDver aad Spread JJmedoae"

Potato production down

Cloudy and colder tonight.
Low around 40.

wtrt perrormed. Here, ftrst graders turn to ·
play a piJerlm pme, "spOOII ball", as tbelr Pllf·
nts watc•. l:lctured are Adam and Pamela
Jones, Stephanie and Connie Joees, and Brenda
and Misty Handley.

....,.

.

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