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                  <text>/tllultl-ft;rceted

College
basketball
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Pomeroy woman
MrvM In Honduraa
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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Detlil .. on
pageA2

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Gall1pol1s • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • January 12. 1997

Vol. 31, No. 49

-~oof repairs b~y.time. fOr old courthouse

··y JIM FREIMAN

forced upsiaira." .
·
. The Chester Courthouse was used until 1841 wheh
.
Now that the inside· of the ' building is out of the county offices moved into a two-story frame building on
': . .CHESTER - Badly needed roof repain to the . weather, plans call to replace 19 windows, Holter.said. · lynn Street in Pomeroy at the site of the preS!!nt day
.,jj:hester Counhouse have purchased valuable time for
''That and the ·remainder of the wiring will take the Trinity Church. The present courthouse in Pomeroy was
·people wanting to ren.ovate the histori~ strUcture. . .
rest of the money," she said.
completed in 1850 and has served as the county seat
·~. The Roger l . B1ssell Construction Company of
The two-story, red brick building was built in 1823 ever since.
;Pomeroy recendy completed $23,000 in renovations to on land donated by counly commissioner levi·Stedman
Eventually the brick exterior at ' the Chester Court·
:(die building, which is the oldest standing courthouse in Wid served as the seat of county government until June, house will have to be repainted, Holter added .
"It looks super," said Dale Colburn, a historical asso., :«Jle stile, including a new roof that will prevent fUrt!ler . 1841, when the county seat was moved tci Pomeroy. It
;!IJUIIllle to the interior of the old courthouse.
sits on a' hill overlooking ~e community of Chester.
·ciation trustee.
·
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·. ~ ' In addition, conlra!:ton repaired . the cupola Wid
,11Je building se!Ved as the third seat of county gov"The cupola, which was based on old pictures of the
~ostalled eavespouts. Inside, a partition was removed emmeot. The original ~ounty seat was in a schoolhouse · building. is made of cedar and capped with copper," he
' :lnd four support posts replaced.
along. the bank of leading Creek at the community of said.
.~ ~·· ''The roof was ·the most important thing," said Pat Middleport. County government . was temporarily
The association is meeting soon with engineers to
.,}loiter, project coordinator for the ChcstercShade Histor- boll sed in Stedman's home in Chester after the school· map out additional work. based on original building
·: ~j:al As,soci.ation. "It's all been strengthened ·and rein· house burned down.
plans which even oudine what 'kind of timber was pur·

;Jim• Sentinel Staff

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chased .
For instance, some brick may have to be removed to
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Continued on. ~ge A2
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Sources of persona/income: Gal/1a County. State of Ohio comparison

!8mli•lrllm llbor(54.0%)
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Slvll!lltllnv.tment(1S.O%)

Elminp tram lllbarltS.O'lC.)

•

e.ntnge from llllor

II

&amp;ewll!llli1nvMiment

•

GoVIIIIMIII (I8VIIIIIlla

C1t.gory

College gradUIIitl (by percent)
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LOW

Slllr. oi Oltlo

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hlld served ihe past 20 yean, ,
conscetltive terms, as the elected clerk
Qallia County; one year as acting clerk
being appointed by the Republican
at the retirement of the then· incumbent clerk Mllljorie Rinehart), Wid 12 years
!IS an employee of the clerk's office,
• Gallia County .commissioner Harold
· Montgomery opened the r:etirement party
i"ith the presentation of a Gallia County'
Distinguished Service Award plaque to
Mrs. Burger on behalf of the com!Jlissioners, c~~~"='~~i~~=it.~
years of dedicated Wid impartial service to the
Oallia·l
I' ~'oun1ty • Dntll• on pqw AS
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11 Sections • 1

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Meigs neta $50,'000 .
mlcroenterprlst1grant

. POMEROY - ~«;_ls Cclunty
has f'tl!:eived a $SO~O!!\I, grant to
establish a microenteffrise' program throughout the coil~ty.
Meigs County's was one of 12
projects receiving mi~rprise
granll totaling $546,000 · ·
. The program is designed . to
assist small businesses. The busi ..

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nds growth
in $ervice sector jobs
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· Madlin

·w~.;;, lhe v6ices
enough, 'his '
"I was touched by Bartow; there was no way be wu'dllt
·bridge built." • Fulletory on pqe A4 ,

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Ga/111 County

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nessesno·
typically
'tfte o\vner
and
' more employ
than five
'other
employees.
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The miqroenterprise )i~,Qgrarn \5
a departure f(oln most ·'economic
development programs ;· which
seek to lure big businessennlployColumns
ing many pepple,
,!,
· Under the program, an applicant
Jack Apdmgp A5
will go before a review board
C4
BobHocOk;b
before taking a Ui-week course
Aon'an4.en
which· includes the creatilln of a
JJmSapda
business plan. Afterwards, ,a loan
Cl
Dgrgthysam
review · board will consiller the
B4
·S•• Wlllog .
business plan before .deciding to
a loan, not .to
C 1.997 Ohln Vall~y Puhlhlhinf Cn.
st
o,ooo,
rrom the grant
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GALLIPOLIS - Employment in Gallia
County's servi~e and ·government sectors is
increasing, while the number of jobs in the goods
producing sector is decreasing.
These facti- Wid a mass of other demo·
graphic information on the county - are includ- .
ed in the recently pub)ishcd "Annual Report
Card: State of Ohio Wid 88 Counties."
.
Covering the 10-year period between 1984'Md
1994, the report card uses data from the U.S.
Bureau of Economic Analysis Wid tile U.S. Census Bureau to analyze local economic. and population ~tends.
·
Acco_rd!ng to the report, there were 1,955 (WI

.

increase of 25 percent) new jobs generated in the work in local, state or federal government jobs.
service sector - making it the fastest growing MMufacturing now accounts for only 18 percent
segment of Gallia County's economy - during of the county's employment base.
;
the I0-year SpWI.
.
Within this sector, the largest percentage of job . The study, compiled by the Strategic Planners
growth was in the service industries (37 percent), Alliance of Ohio, shows th3t earnings per
employee in the three categories (goods, governfollowed by retail trades (23 percent).
Government jobs increased by I percent to a ment, .service) are about the same.
1994 total of 2,033. with a 2 percent increase in
Galli a County's 1994 per capita income of
state and local government employment.
.. $15,891 ranks 67th of Ohio's 88 counties, Major
Goods producing jobs decreased by 333 sources of .income include: earnings Md other
between 1984 Wid 1994 to a total of 2,567.
labor income, 54 percent; savings and investment
In 'total, 68 percentofthe.:ounty's workers ore income, 12 percent; and government payments,
employed in the service sector, while 14 percent 34 percent.
·
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Ohio ethics commission sets hearing
_
o n campaign finance law complaint ·
GALLIPOLIS - A preliminary
review of a citizen complaint against
Gallia County Commissioner
Harold Montgomery has. been
scheduled by the Ohio Ethics Com·
mission for Tuesday, Feb.. 4 at II
a.m. in the comniission's Columbus
office.
· The commission will examine a
report of an alleged violation of th~
Ohio Revised Code filed by HoriM
W. Northup and James A. Northup
of Gllllipolis.
The ·Nonhups allege thqt a viola·

lion of Section 3517.13 (P) - forbidding · political candidates from
accepting more than $100 in cash
contributions, according to Harlan
Northup - occurred during Mont·
gomery's race for a second term on
the board of commissioners in 1994.
The candidate campaign finMCe
report Montgomery filed with the
Oallia County Board of Elections on
Oct. 27. 1994, reponed total contri·
butions of $2, I00 froni seven indi·
viduals, but three of those campaign
donations ·were made in cash and

exceeded the $100 limit cited by the
Northups.
The report listed contributions of
$750 from Virginia Maynard,. and
$500. apiece froin Karen YMMatre
and Rodney Dunfee, all reportedly
made in cash. .
A copy of the report was submitted to the commission with the
Northups' complaint.
In a letter to the Nonhups. commission staff attorney Philip C.
Richter said that at the preliminary
review, the commission will review

all documents
filed · in the
complaint.
The com. mission may
find there has
been no violation. deterrr.ine that a
violation has occurred, or set the
matter for a hearing at a later date if
the commission .wMts to receive fur·
ther testimony.
.
Notification of the cQmmission 's
decision will be made after the
review, Richter s~d.

Second lawsuit fUed in deadly fireworks store fire
· IRONTON (AP)- A lawsuit was tiled Friday
incompetent to stMd trial on
a5king for $182.25 million in damages from a
charges of involuntary mWISiaughJuly 3 fire that killed nine people at a fireworks
·ter and aggravated arson. Hall,
store In southern Ohio.
.
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..o ,
who suffered brain damage in' a
It was the second lawsuit filed in 11 week over
1987 skateboarding accident, is
the fire.
being held at Central Ohio PsychiThe suit was filed in Lawrence Coonly Comatric Hospital in Columbus.
mon Pleas Court on behalf of five people who
The suit accuses the defendMts
died and four Dlhen who were injured in the fire
of actions that were negliaent Wid
at the Ohio River Fireworks store in Scottown.
demonsttated "a conscious and reckless irlditfe(·
Todd · Hall, 25, ·of l&gt;rqctorville, was found ence to the rights Md safety of the plaintiffs and

the plaintiffs' decedents." It did not elaborate.
The lawsuit is similar to a $230 mill,ion lawsuit
tiled Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati.
Plllintitfs in the federal suit are the estates of
RyM Aldridge, 24, of C011l Grove; Misty Cron,
21, Md Shelbi Cron, 3,.oflronton; Candy Lee, 31,
of Crown Ciiy; and Kathlene Wilks, 71, of Chelapeake; and fl)ur survivors - Marcia Garrett. of .
Chesapeake; and Richard Pruitt, Rhonda Fe!Ju·
son and Amy ~itt, all of Scotlow!,l.
,

mlne reclamatioo:.:Meigs has the land, needs tlje·money·
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IV CH~ALI!NE HOEFLICH
:Jlm• Sentinel Staff

reclama~on

. ''This has happened in spite of the continuing coal tax .claimed condition.
.
projei:ts in the state.
· ·
Through RAMP, Ohio hal reclaimed approximllely
"Our ,1\ands are tied because .of the lack of funding. dolll\fi 1oing to Washington for reclamati.on purposes,"
' : POMEROY - Meigs County, has more thall 4,000 We havc.the expertise to survey, design, and inspect new continued Duhl who emphasized that there is still a lot 1,750 acres at a cast of $14. n'ljllion and ODNR recla-1·
'res of abandoned &amp;trip mine lMd·~waiting recla~tipn reclamatipn projects, but are unable to complete projects of work 'to be done in Meigs Coynty as well as the rest mation has reclaimed approximately 7. 350 acres at a
. of Ohio.
·
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cost of $5 1. 7 million.
~d no money to proceed with the wprk - despite the , due to tJMilack of funding, • said Duht.
"Streams are still' ~n&amp; filled with Sediment, Wid
In Meigs County RAMP hu Jtclalmed ~i­
f.Ontinuous contributions bj( cc•aJ.'mine operators to a . "For ~aecoad straight year the Natural Resources
ly
700
acres at a cost of approldm.ly $..1.6 milHon,.Md
Hooding
problems
are
occurring
year
after
year,"
he
Conserva,
·
Services
Rural
Abandoaed
Mine
P!ogram
; ;towing rechu1111tioll fund.
'
ODNR
has reclaimed approximately !Ill additioqal 700
(RAMP)
the
Ohio
Division
of
Natural
Resources
• : Accordillll to Mike Duhl, t'Dniservatlonist with !he
said.
.
.
Duhl
noted
that
Ohio
has
approximately
75,000
IIQres
acres
al
li simillll' ~ost, Duhl said. He noted that they
local of!ice of the Soil COIIICrvation Service. Conpeas (ODNR) Reclamation program have 'not been runded,"
ContliLuMI on,... Al · · , · ,
of abandoned strip mines tbat are still le~ in the unre·
· f9r the put two rears has failed t':' allocate funding for he said. •

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CantlnuM " - 1N1f11 At
h..e primarily boCII done in tbe
West Shade River and' LeadinJ
Creek Watersheds.
•
In an effort 10 Jld thin11 moving
in Washington, i f.JI tour of
reclaimed rninelands wu hosted by
. the Noble County Soil and Water
Cooservatioo District and the USDA
Natural Resources Conservation
Service.
On that tour were Lloyd Wright,
program . director, and Brron
1nhompson,prograntmanagcrforthe
· Rural Abandoned Mineland Pro• gram (RAMP) from Washington,
DC.
Others on the tour included Pat
Wolf, NRCS State Conservatiooist
in Columbus; Robert L. First, cOordinator for the Buckeye Hills Natural Resources, Conservation ami
Development, Mariella; Karen
Sloan, lix:al representative for Sena·
tor Mike DeWine's office, Pomeroy;
and Duhl, along wit!! other conservationists from Southeastern Ohio.
First said that the benefilS of the
'massive reclamation jobs include
reduced Oooding, reduced sediment
in the strea'rii systems, increased
wildlife habitat, and water quality
improvements.
,
The emphasis of the tour was to
"show the peop)e from Washington,
D. C. that there is still much to be
done before the program ends in
2004," said First
· He pointed llur ~~at mineland
reclamation projects cost approxi·
mately $6()00 to $700() per acre.
Operations 'include grading and
shaping mine spoil, establishing sur-

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) C~ld will maintain grip
f: on region for awhile yet

':· By The Anoclllbitcl Press
:;:
1be 1\Tational Weather Service says cold weather- will continue into Sun.;.: day acro5s Ohio. The wind will dimini,shjust a bit, but it will continue to be
:.·: , very cold with highs from the mid teens in the north to around 20 in the south:
· ~·~ ; The cold.• windy weather was caused by a strong low pressure system over
· ~ ; eastern Canada. The l.ow was nearly stationary and was pumping a c0ntin·
1- · • uous stream of cold au fro.m northern Canada and Alaska southward across
'::. the Midwest and east across the Ohio Valley. This pattern will change vr!.ry
•: · p11dually through early next week.
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Wind chills during the day Si!urday averaged 25 to 35 degrees below zero.
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Afternoon temperatures were in the single digilS across much of the state.
,, : The temperature had risen to between I0 and 15 along the Lake Erie shore
• · and the Ohio River.
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Like
:: : Snow showers continued across pans of the state, especially eastern Ohio, nearly everything else ahout the
:~ : but.accumulatio~ WCI'C less than an inch. The visibi,lity .was being reduced ethics case involving House SJI!:aker
·•. atumes by,blowmg snow. 1be sun had broken through the clouds in some Newt Gingrich, the closing chapters
·:: .areas but was doing little to warm things up. ·
· .
.
· arc sparking a sharp partisan sll'llg&amp;Ie.
:. ,
, We•~r lore&lt;:ast: •
Citing research by 'the House par:• ; Sunday... Panly cloudy with a chance of snow flumes. Highs in the low- liamentarian, .DemocralS on ~thil:s
.; · cr 20s. West winds 5 to 10 mph.
· ·
commiuee accused. · the panel's ·
;; : · Sunday night.,.Panly cloudy. Lows 5to 10 ahove.
Republican chaitiNoman on Friday of
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Monday.. ,Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 20s.
exceeding her .authoriey when she
.'
Monday night .. Panly cloudy. Lows 5 to I0 above.
. canceled a series of public hearings .
:!
Extended forecast:
that had been agreed on ..
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Tuesday... Panly cloudy. Highs in the mid 20s.
~epublicans were quick to seek a
Wednesday and Thursday... Cioudy with a chance of snow showers. Lows Justice Department investigation into
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.• in the upper teens and highs in the upper 20s.
·
the taping of a cellular telephone call
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in which Gingrich discussed. plans
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tE~ucational Service Center
ijtlects,t new
~'officers for '97 .
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TOURING RECI,AMAnON SITES - Rur.l AblildoMd Mlnel8nd Progrwn officials, Lloyd Wright director.:
and Byron Thomp1011, m1nager, of Wa8hlng!Qn, D. C. -r. ,In SouthMitem Ohio recently for • tour
recltllmecl •~ndoned ml11111tn. They _..joined by atN and '-~-••IWIIonlltl tor a tour of lites Jri:
aeven~l counties Including Mslp. In thiQroup from thlllft Ire Pat Flllsy, Shawn Ray, Thompeon, Roberr,
Rl'llt, Karen Sloan of Pomeroy, :,:utlng Sen, Mllre DeWine'1 office, Mark Foml, Pat Wolf, Wright, Den•
Conr11d, Jon Bourdon, Kim Ray , G
Hoff, Steve Hlblnger .net Charies MoCJUiitey. (Photo by Noble Cou0.::
ly Journal-Leader).
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face water conirol di.versions arid
rock waterways, lime, fenilizer,
seeding and mulching.
While the RAMP program has
not received .any funding from Congress for the past two years it is still
in .effect, according to the state con-

servationist. He noted that a current
·national inventory shows that only
40% of lhe sites have been
reclaimed leaving a lot of work to be
done yet. ·
- Monies for reclamation are collected from. coal Companies through
a severance tax amounting to 15

·-: POMEROY - Jeff Harris and
:; 'Roben Parton were named president
:5;and vice president, respectively, of• tbe Meigs County Educational Ser: .vice Center Board of Directors at the
:, :&amp;roup:S organizational meeting
.: ·Thursday. '
·~ The regular meeting date of the ·
·~ educational service center, formerly .
:- knownastheMeigsCountyBoardof
r~·Education, was established as the sec- ·
~ Ond Thursday of ea£h month at7 p.m.
_:.:at the offices'of the governing board
: .11n the second floor of the Pomeroy
"' ·Municipal Building.
·
::; ' Pay for hoard members was sCI at
';:' $80 per meeting for a muimu111 of
C:: 13 meetings per year, with travel set
,. :at 20 cenlS·per .mile.

t

The governing board passed ·a resolution to authorize the payment of
warrants or debits or. clai111s for
which provision arc .m~de in the
annual appropriations and passed .a
resolution authorizing the investment of inactive funds.
In the regular meeting that followed, the hoard approved the minutes of the Dec. 12, 1996, regular
meeting and the payment of bills.
Howard Caldwell ·was appointed .
t~e legislative liaison to the . Ohio
School Board Associatio~ for 1997 . .
Present were Harris, Banon, Cald·
well and board members 1.0. McCoy
and Jeanelle Thomas. Also present
were Superintendent John D. Riebel
Sr. and Treasurer Carole Gilkey.

fRed Cross set to study
~strikers' counter-proposal

. t

••. .No· resolution to a two-week-old
; $trik~ at regional Red c;ross facilities
:: ~~expected this weeke 0d. but Satur•: day was considered a possible turn·
:0 ~n8 !JOint in negotiations, a Red
~ Cross spokcsworiian said.
J · Tammy Wanchisn said the union
• representing 68 strikins blood ser; vices workers was e.11pected to bring
: a couater'J!roposal 10 man11gement
:- S.!Uiday afternoon..
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, ~ut Red Cros.s officials will need
. time to study the viability of the
union's latest proposal, she said.
Red .Cross management negotiat·
ed with union officials through a federal mediatOF for nearly five hours
Friday evening. Wanchisn described
the meeting as produc;tive and said it
appears that both sides are anxious to
reach a settlement.
·
The talks at a Huntington hotel
were the first since negotiations
:• :broke down Dec. 26. The strike
i began Dec. 30.
•
Teresa Ball, area director of Dis·
trict 1199 of the Service Employees
International .Union, said the Red
Cross has asked employees to accept
sign incant cuts in health care coverage, vacations a~d other contract
issues.
. ·
· The average wage of ell)ployees
covered by the contract is now $7.95
an hour, Ball said.
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Continued troin Pll98 A1
provide space for windows that have
been bricked in, he' explained.
"It's all educational for me," he ·
said.
Other association trustees include
Del mar Baum, Howard Parker, Ron- .
nie Eastman, Rhett Milhoan and
Beny Milhoan.
To raise money, the historical
association is planning a benefit din·
ncr and auction to be held in March.
The group has already held one dinncr and sponsored the Chester·
Shade Days, a homecoming-like
event that will be held again this
year as an annual event.
' Once restored, the old structure
will be the subject of.tours and open
houses. Living histories a·nd displays
will be held at the building, Holter
said.

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Manball B. Douthett
and Donald
A. Cox
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Now Mwrunr New Clients In All Areas of Practice ·
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·:severe weather ,lowing search
:.~for .commuter pl$.ne cra~h cause

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TRADE-IN

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· Mrs. Johnson was at home in her
Connecticut district on Friday night
and did not respond. She decided to
rewrite the comminee schedule after ·
Democrats complained there was
insufficient time for the panel's special counsel, James Cole, to write a
final report before the House votes
Jan. 21 on a punishment for Gingrich.
She has insttucted cole ~ c9m-

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· Holiday Inn, Gallipolis, OH
Wednesday, Januf!ry 15, 1997 7:00p.m.

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Thursday, January 16, 1997 7:00p.m. ·

Grandvietvlnn, South Point, OH

Featured Speakers:
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. Pat Konen, the nf!Jdia consultant
hired by aliQmeys for John and Patri·
cia I,Wnsey, suggestel! the note could

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BOULDER, (:olo. -An outraged
county coroner asked for an investi·
gation into how six autopsy . a11d
· Let us copy your old family
crime scene photos. from the killing
., of JonBenet Ramsey landed in a
photos. Special 2-5x7'a for
'· supe1111arket tabloid.
:
$14.95. lileg. $19.95. SAVE
The photographs on the front
$5.00. We also do paqport
page of the Globe show the garrote
• used to strangle the 6-year-old beau·
photos, ·Identification pho·
·, ty' queen as well as the hand of the
tos and photo finishing.
child, which shows a rope mark on
her \Wrist.
."I' m probably a~ upset as I've
been about any procedural matter in
424 SECOND AVE.
my office in the 10. years th,at I've
GALUPOUS
been coroner." Bl!u.lder County Coro'
ner John Meyer said.
He said the unauthorized release
Need a Tux for the
of the phOtos could jeopardize the
case and asked the sheriff's depart·
·Holiday Season?
ment invesiigdte how the .pictures
- • Wedding • Party
were leaked,
Tht&gt; Globe, a 1.3 million-circula·
~ Dance • FamiJy Affair
tion weekly magazine sold 111 supermark~ts, is running the photos in cdi·
• Black Tie Dinner
. dons 'hitting the stands Mo!lllay.
.. Media repons said JonBenct, the
Htu~Tanner is the
: 1995 Lillie Miss Colorado, had been
: sexual!~ assaulted. Her skull was
place to.go
· fractured •. her mouth was covered
: with duct tape, and B cotd 'wasfou.nd
.Prices start at ~45 ·
~ around her neck.
; Meanwhile, JonBenet's pllrents
~pecial
' were in hiding becau!iC·Of "sal'ety and
lsecurity" conce~ possibly arising
\! from the ransom note found at· t~ir '
home, a family spokesman said FriToll Free Nllltlber 1-81J0.560.5314
.•day. .
·. .
: l Police have not released the con,
!~nts of the three·pllge note discovrercd on • stairway by JonBenet's
· irnolher. l&gt;ight hours later, her father
lound the his dau*hter strangled in .
)he base~enL
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GALLIPOUS - Farms enrolled vote.. :
· ··
'
in the seven-yeaF\Production Flexi- · Gtngrtch,. R-Ga., agreed td an
bility Program have until Jan. 15 10 cthtcs cotilmlllec findtng on Dec. 21
update records if they wish 10 receive that he had vwlated flou~e rules. He
an advance payrne.nt on their contract. acknowledged he. had failed to seck
Many producers opted for Decem· spec1fic legal adv1ce about t!'C use of
ber advances and have no funher tax-~xempt proJ~lS for pan~san puraction required for 1997. Contracts poses a_nd had g~ven the eth1cs panel
that have revisions effective after Jan. wro~g ·~formation. .
IS date will receive all of their 1997
Rc~ubhcan sources, speaking on
payment in Septembe(.
condition of anonymity, said Mrs.
LetterS were mailed to all pro- . Johnson and the·oth~r GOP members
d,ucers who signed to receive rio o~ the panel met p~tvately Thursday
·advance or have not designated pay; n1gh1 wnh M8Jortty Leader Dtck
ment shares for 1997. All undesig· Armey, R-Texa~,. before she
nated shares must be updated by Jan. · announced.her dectSton.
IS in order to receive an advance
payment. Farms not requesting
· advanc'e payments have until Sept. 30
to update producer shares.
Producers arc urged to contact the
Gallia-Lawrence Farm Service
'·
Agency wilh any questions concerning the Production Flexibility Program .

Attorneys
.

with fellow lawmakers and aides for
a GOP tespon~ to ethics charges
ajairst him. ·
Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-CIIIif., said
Ri:P,.· Nancy Johnson's decisi'On,
ahnounced Thul'sday night, amount·
ed to "the blowing up. of the hear-

O.J. tells jury how h~ wanted
'distance' from his ex-wife

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~ . HIJNTINGTON. W.Va. '( AP)-

. ,,
cents per ton for deep-mined coa ,
and 35 cents per ton for strip-mined:
coal.
·
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First · said, that the reclamation':
fund in Washington now has a baJ,":
ance of over $1 billion that could
allocated to the states for rcclarna-':
tion projeCts. . ·
":

Advaoce
,. payment
·
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..plete. there~rtbyJan.l~,wtthpub­ , :_:~.,rr ·~LYoli~Don'tKnoW-WhatYou're
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deadIIne nearing '" lic'ltearing planned b1!fore theHo~se .

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II)' MONTI HAYI8
· two-way radio, endiltJ a two-week violent seizure ol a f.ctory in-1978
A11a~l 1 d !I 11 Wvil
iPiJI!Ie. NeJOiiatorDomitiJO Pller· that left four people *-d. He spent
LIMA, P.N- Lookiaa Clllm llld mo spoke for IIC-.1 ·minutes with I0 moolhs in jail for iL
collected after weeks unda' ~ Cerpa. ·
Radicalized by the: cJtperience•
President A.Jberfi&gt; Fujimori said be is
JipM welcomed the resumption Cerpa joined the 1'upllc ~a few ·.
confident that his JOVemmeat wiU be 'Of Wks.
years later.
abiC 10 win tbe re~ of 74 hosc.ges · · '"lbe JllpA!IeiiC go+'emment hopes
In the interview, Fuj!mori said he
~t rebels hold at gunpoint
PfDII'CSS1owlnl a way'out of the cri· · bad turned down offers by foreign
In an interview wlth 1be Associ• · sis comes about throtall direct con- countries. to send specially 'll'aincd
ated·Press .II the Government Palace tact between the Peruvian govern· secuiity forces·d n cui a forced
· on Friday ni1ht. Fujimori said rebel ~n! and the MJU~;· said F~ig~ takeover of tbe com)lOI!nd becomes
: leader Nestor Cerpa has the prac· Mtntstry
spokesda.n
Hlfos,!lt , necessary.
;. m.tic neJOiillting style of a union Hashimoto.
.., - He also insisted on the release of
•· leader, and appeatS' willing 10 make
Fujimori silid f~to-(aco, talks • all 74 hos!lies 11 one time. The
· concessioos.
between tbe ~~- and Palermo, rebels h..e· released hostages in
' He was optimistic lbout • peace- who bu not ~n inside the com- groups, each time reqli&lt;!Sting that the
ful · o,utcome to the standoff, b!Jt pound since Dec. '28:1!Jay resume this· ex-eiptives read Buefrilla statements
warned it may.take weeks of patient, ,weekend. The last '*tage release- to the news ~edia.
..
tough negotiatinJ.
·
the New Year's Day•freeing of sev·The guemllas have demanded the
Fujimori j~ed that he wu getting en men- followed m.t meeting, the release of about 300 jailed rebels as
used to crisis situtions after 6-I/2 only known·direct iafks between the ,well as improved ,prison conditions.
years of governing this turbulent govemmcmt and the rebels.
·
Fujimori has ref~ to free guemiAndean naiion.
"I think that this second conver· las. Anll he noted Friday that the gov. "I really have .hlld so man~ chal· ·' sation wasNecy important for the rest · emment had launched a program to
lcnges," he Sllid, smi)Jng.' "This one of the meetings w(th (the' rebel$)," ·improve prison conditions- such as .
is more delicate, of course. But even Fuji_mori said. "We expect to contin- allow.ing prisoners more contact with
•, so, I am taking it calmly."
ue these conversatio~s. which will farntly members.- o~ly to susJxmd ·
•
Leftist rebels of the Tupac Am8ru probably tak' SOJ116!lime and con- tt w1th the guemlla nud.
ON THE STAND AGAIN - O.J. Simpson arrived Frldlly at the
., Revolutionary Movement stormed 'a sume a lot ofpatieni:e."
Asked wha! he would· tell the
Loa Angelel Counly Superior Court building In Slintll llonlca,
cocktail pany at the Japahcse·ambasFujimori said Cerpa appeared to hostages, who 'include his younger
CaiH., wh«e he was scheduled to testify in his own defenH Jn,
sador's residence Dec. 17, seizing · be a reasonabl'e negotiator. and brother Pedro, he said that "the gov- . ,,the wrongful death civil suit against him. (AP)
·
more than 500 hostages. ·
seemed willing to make concessions ernment is doing evet'ything possible
They have released most of the to reach a deal.
l&lt;,l find a peaceful exit (to the crisis)."
hostages, but ate holding .74 to.
"I have never met him, but he
"I don't make distinctions
demand the freedom df jailed Tupac looks like a negotiator with the style . betweeri relatives arid non:relatives,"
Arnaru comrades.
of union leaders- but ... (also) using Fujimori said. "Wha! .we have ·here
Fujimori anno~nccd earlier friday force, violence," FujiJllori said.
is the personaL security of the
. that the government had· renewed
Cerpa, in·fact, was a union l~ader hostages in general and also nation·
. SANTA MONICA, Calif (AP)- account. ~
. talks ·wifh .the hostage-holders via a in the late 1970s and took pan in the . al, securit~. It's .a matter of dealing After a J7:year relationship and a
"If this jury evaluates the evi·
·
wtth both til a.balanced manner."
messy on-a~ain, off-again breakup, de nee primarily through the prism of
O.J. Simpsot\ said, his ex-wife's tele- Mr. Simpson's chardCtcr as expressed
phone tirade in the spring of 1994 th~ugh his demeanor on the stand,
Simpson has some reason for opll·
was the last straw.
His answer to the problem, he mism," Arenella said.
said, was distance'- not death.
Jur~rs in Simpson's wrongful
death trial will soon have to decide
.
.
whether Simpson's anger and frus·
•
tration at what he described as Nicole '
·:
RAISINVILLE TOWNSHIP, frigid temperatures, gusty witids and the area reported light _to moojerate B'rown Simpson's erratic behavior
: Mich. (AP) -lnve'Stiga,tors working blowing snow. Large con~ruction 'icing, and one Cessna pilot said the meant he was responsible for killing
; in the bitter cold round Comair Flight' lighlS remained on to holster patchy · icing was severe near Findlay, Ohio, · her an~ Ronald Goldman on June 12,.
. ·: 3272's "black hoxes" 8!'lid ~isted sunshine occa!~nally breaking which is 96 miles south of Detroit, he 1994.
: pieces of wreckage in the snowy 4: through the clou.;IS.
.·
·
said. \VPather forecasts advised pilolS
From his words. · t~e plaintiffs .
•. foot deep crater whef!: the commuter
On Sattirday, investigators of moderate turbulence in the area.
could argue that Simpson's increas·
; plane plunged into.a field, killing all focused on the platie's flight control
Icing disru'pts airflow over the ing exa•peratlon over Ms.' Simpson's
: 29 aboard,
.
systems to loole~for sij!ns of mal- wings and can cause phines to stall or proble"ls - and his inability to do
• The hoxes actually painted orange functions, Hammerschmidt said, roll. Comair officials have said they anything about them -erupted into
: to make tltc:m easier to find were :idding it was stiil too early to spec- don't believe icing was a problem .
a murderous rage .
~ located Friday afternoon, encouragulate about the cause of the crash.
No problem with this plane's de·
The defense, in tum, could argue
~ ing investigators seeking the cause of
As they pored over the snow-cov- icing equipment was reported since that just because Simpson was frusThursday's crash. The flight da\1 ered C:~eld wher~ the pi'I'IC crashed, 1994.
·
trated. it didn't mean he was homiei·
recorder an
·. d cockpit voice .recorder , iitv.cstigators Friday could work for
The plane's maintenance records dal. and that the pressures he experi·
'were: sent to WashinlfiOI!, D.C.; for :1, only IS IO ·Z(}miputes J!1 a time.beforc show few significant evenlS since enced were all jwit pan of.the r!Qrmal
a11alysis.
· • · ' baNing to retreat to a warming hut · Comair bought it in 1992. The )ast pain-otlicakitig up:·· '
iiRound -Emerald
. ·.
,
"They are not as damagea is otb- because of below-zero wind chill full maintenance check was Nov. 20,
· "You ccrtainJ,Y get the sense that
•Princess .OVal
~· er flight data and-or cockpit voice . ' readinj!S. 1
company spokeSII]an Charles Curran he was frustrated 'with her, but then ·
•
~ recorders have been, where we have
"The weather conditions are said.
·
did it cross the Iinc so that he was so
! received good information," Nation-- ·somewhat severe out there - we
The propelle11.a source of concern frustrated that he would kill her? In
SAVE
: al Transportation S11fety Board mem' were pleased ·to get this. amount of on this ty)ie of airplane, was serviced all honesty, I didn' t ihink it came
• ber John Hammerschmidt said. "So information," Hammerschmidt said. a,s recently as Dec. '26, according,, to across that way to the juFy, ·: s;tid Loy·
141 GOLD CIAIIS
:. we're very hopeful that each of theSe:
The plane, an J:rribraer 120 twin- Comair's reports to the FAA.
ola University law poofessor Lauric
: ·Oight recorderS will provide us with engine turboprop operated by
The-:19 maintenance reports show ,LCvenson, who watched Simpson's
&amp;IUCELm
; information we will need."
Comair, went down at.dusk 'ijtursday, a series of problems with the pro- testimony Fri.day.in coun .
'SAVE
• Searchers also found both main crashing i8 miles shon o( Detroit peller, most of them in 1993 . .Last
However, Levenson added, it was
: landing gear and all propeller blades Metropolitan Airpon without any April, a propeller pan was replaced telling that plaintiffs' auorriey Daniel
; and flaps from the plane, Hammer; indication of troubl~ from the pilot. because of unusual vibration.
Petrocelli didn't interrupt Simpson's
·: schmidt said. The gear and flaps were · · Hammerschmiat said one witness
A spokesman with Hamilton Stan· monologues. even though t~ey often
SAVE
• in · t)je up, or retracted positions, said the plane appeared to be in a bar· dard, which makes the propellers bordered on legally objectionable
ON WATCHES AND
. : which would be oxpected for a cruis· . rei roll before crashing; another said used on Embraer 120 aircraft, said and were so rambling .that at one ..
· • ing aircraft, he said.
it was turning quickly to the right; a blades on all .Comait planes were point the judge lodged his own. objc(
BLICI HILU GOLD
'
Investigators returned to the scene third said it was "nllPJling in tbe air." repaired bJ Aug. 31.
lion.
1
· Saturday mornin~: jlreetcd bv more
At the time of the crash, pilots in
UCLA Jaw ptofess&lt;ir Peter Arcncl.
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la, who listened to Simpson's testimony in a counhouse' audi&lt;' room.
422 SECOID AVE.
said the case's voluiJ!inous physical
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
evidence also has to be taken into

·

Ethics panel cancels public
.hearings on Ging~ich issue

me

Pomsroy •lllddlspott • 0 sMipolll, ott • Point Plsaient, WV

Sunct.y,.....,..., 12, 11117 .

_Per~'s· president confident·
l of safe release for hostages

Reclamation

OHIO WPitlhet

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~ Commentary

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Bridging ·
the river

I .~unb~ ~inut· Jentintl

Cllperton says new
span sc(oa the
Kant1wha to bear

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area leader's nllmB
By ·MICHELE CARTeR

Immunizations slated for this week

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Carey schedules open door session

.. Veterans Service Commission ·to meet

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,. ·Sunday recital at Ariel postponed

Benefit dinner delayed until Jan.·19

·Two-vehicle crash injures passenger

ROI!IIJIT L WINGETT
Publflhlr

GALLIPOLIS -111c following citations were issued by Gallipolis City
Police between Friday and early"Satunlay:
·· . .
EJecta Martin, 41 , 10-112 Edgemont Drive, Gallipolis, thcf.t; John Shaf. '· ·fer, 44; 615 Third Ave., Gallipolis, driving undc~ the influence, no operator's license and left of center; and Harold W. Kemp, 33, 615 Third Ave.,
.., G~lipo~s. open container.
1.
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··ohio, W.Va. lonety piclfs
. . I

By Thtt AIICM;Iated Press
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:

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OHIO

•PiCk 3: 9-7· 9
'
Pick4: 1-\-4-9 ' '
,;h Buck~ye 5: 13-2j:2H8-31 ·
/" .One ticket mlilched all five ll!.'m. ''ben drawn in Friday night's Buckeye &lt;
'S drawing and it'i worth $100,000,
'''the Ohio Lottery Wd.
.,
;;. The winning tic,ket WIIS purch~d
l"«t Quick Chek No. 143 in Canton.
Sales in Buckeye S totaled ·
: 5398,485 . .
were 132 BuckeyeS ficktlts
with four of the numbers, and each i·s
~· worth $250, The 4,370 tickets show/.~q three of the ~II!II!Jem ~ eactt
.:..,ordl .$!0, and tl'k! 44,1~ rdckets

the- Pplnt PI lAIII llendlrlon brldglln 1111
llllmot'Y· From ~ - Leigh Nl!:holi. gflneh,
d•ughtar; Slndy Dunn, dlughtar; Cllud~
Nicholl, Shlllly Jonu, Llxil Jonu, ·C.roll!'llt
Chrll 1nd Bttrtow Jonu Ill, 111 g....,dchlklrln; ·
'

,,. 'There

~illj• IWO Qfth~ dumhenlftl~b

. ~$1.
··t
•· $ales in Pick 3 NumbC.rs ICJII!od
·Sl,....S74, and winnen.;wilf - t v.e
·~115.

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M"4N11Pibersp~£

$40!5.2'4.., ,..m sh... SU2
·1'1!1J JIOII'IlrS~~
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•Backhoe
•Dozer.
Yrork

According to VanKirk, a lot of
work has gone· into the· project since
the Nov. 19, 1991 announcement in
Tu-E"die-Wei Park about a·. new
bridge.
·
~ .
VanKirk said the bid for the north
approach has already bee.n awarded
to Ahern &amp; Associates, wi1h bids for
the $35 .million bridge to be opened
on Jan. 28. Construction should be
completed.in late 1998.
VanKirk thanked the legislators
who made funding for the structure
possible. He commended Byrd and

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.• COJOllllCJAt
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UMESTONE . . TOP SOIL · MUSHROOM
RfVER qRAVEL
.
· COMPOST

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9

qpeft MOI!daY thN Frlcliy 7:30am tli 4:30 pm.

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AND CALL ME
IN THE
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ble cKplosivcs.

·

All of thi s wi II likely drain billions
from the already strapped fed eral
purse. But there is an allcrnativc.
which would place the fiscal burden.
on those who reap the gains: impose
an anti~terrorism surcharge · on all
night tickets.
The proposed surcharge would
come 'to about $1.30 per one·w ay
ticket. meaning airline passengers ·
would essentially pay for their own
protection. That way, consumers can
. d.ccidc if the price of preventing tcrrorism .is worth paying..
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
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lioda'y •. n ' bl•·· .s t·o ry

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GALUPOUS HOURS:. (
. GALLIPOUS HOURS
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1'-londay through Thursday 8:0!1 a.f11, to 6:00p.m. 1
1
Ft~y
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S.turday ·
8:00a.m. tp 12:06-p.mt

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~lipolis • ·p~aone 446~2266 {JMNK) .

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"REMEMSER, MR. PRESIDENI'. IF YOU'RE
. CAUGHT IN A RIP TIDE, SWIM PARALLEl. ro

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THE' SHORE.,: •

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By Jo1eph Spear
juncture in our history is "modern ciplined during the Depression, you
But for accent, these arc the views
Robert Bork and his defenders . liberalism." which spawned a couple . know). AQd then came. that devil 's he has . espoused tbroughout ·his .
have argued Cor nearly a decade tha"'Jof evil twins called "radical cgali, tool, . the portable radio, which carccr; and.they were the bus is of his
he was dispatched to thc. nethcrworl~ !,_!arianism" and ' 'radical individual- allowed teen-agers to listen to music rcjcctibn in 1987. Yes; a coalition of
of Supreme Court reject~ by a mob of ' .
without supervision. And continued lcft·wingcrs campaigned against him.
lefties who lied about. hls record.
· ·
· prosperity bcgat radical feminists. But so did Common Cause .and the
The argument was garbage then,
·
who are little more than feisty women . National Audubon Society. So did 32
and it's ,garbage now. Robert Bork ism."Tile former ·· demanding equal with too much time on ihcir.hands. law school deans, 71 constitutional
was done in by his own hand, and outcomes, as opposed to equal oppor- He docsn 't say hnred broads, but he low professors, 1,925 law teachersanyone who doubts it can check out tunities -- seems worthy of censure. might have if he thought he could get - 40 percent of the full-time faculty
the n\ntings in his book, "Slouching The latter is idiotic, especially for away with if.
members of law schools )aca-cditcd
Toward Gomorrah," published last someone who aspired, nay lusted, to · The cur~'! Well, for; one thing, we ·by the American Bar Association.
faiL 1 do mean "check out"-· as in, . sit on the H,igh Court.
need a constitutional amendment that
For all his reputed scholarship and
from a library. Please don't waste 25
Former U.S. Court of Appeals would permii Congress to overrule academic bona fides, Ro\&gt;Cn Bork is
simoleons on this thing.
·
judgi: Robert Bork, you sec, thinks .the Supreme Court. In othCr words, · cssen~ially an angry, sour, sad ,
His premise is virtually undeni- we have too much freedom for our Bork thinks we sliould politicize the myop1c, grumpy old wowscr •. a latable: The popular culture in Amcri- own goO(!. All those lofty w?rds in law.
tcr·day Cotton Mather who thinks he
ca has become coarse, crude, vulgar the Declaration of Independence?
And we need a big dose of good ought to have th~ right to whack our
and violent.
.
They arc basically ballyhoo. The old censorship. That·ghastly Internet wrists, force emetics down our gulBut then, in the nature of a tiue founders would dissolve into fits of should be shackled, movies should be lets and 16ck. us in stocks when we
ideol\)gue, Bork takes his criticisms apoplexy if they could sec how we purified. modem niusic --well, pel'(li- demonstrate curiosity about worldly ,
a hund.red light-years too far. We arc have abused their precepts.
lion would be too good for that filth. and earthy matters.
a "degenerate society," he says. We '
The "rot" began long ago, Bork
Bork does not say who should
Yes, this free and vibrtlllt land fairare worse than pagan ; we are "sub- says, but yqu could really start to sec determine what the barbarous mass- ly crawls With dimwits, fools, free.pagan." We are "enfeebled" and ·it in the way the doughboys of World es should be allowed to see, hear and loaders lind filthy creeps. But "cen"mindless" and "hedonistic," not to War I devolved into the sassy soldiers tead, but given his obv~ous convic- soring the fruit of their evil and mi~­
mention "decadent," "degrided" of World War 11. Then came .mu- uon that he has been anoonted by God guided endeavors is not the a115wer.
and "deb•ed "
·
OJK:e, lild all the rabble 'IOl fridges . whh superior taste, he no doubt We should stigmatize it. We should
Wllll IJrotahl til 10.dlil IIIY!'Hd .lild Jlllunc$,(\we really wa1: li10I'C dis· believes hc could handle the job. educate the consumers about it.

Joseph Spear

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BUCKEYE HILLS CAREER
CENTER

By RICHARD CARELLI
AIIOCiatad P1'811 Writer
WASHINGTON -Forget leaks, background briefings and the "well"
known secrets" that abuund in most of official Washington. Tile nine ·
Supreme Court justices and their clerks know bow to keep their lips ~aled.
Once ·they have been argued in open court, high-profile disputes disappear fo.r months into a shrouded decision,nilllling process. Supreme Court
lealls alrtaost never..occur.
·
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•
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·
·, The court docs stand out in that way," says Peter Spiro, a Hofstra Uni,
versity law professor. "It can ·keep a secret.''
At a closed-door meetins today. the court's nine members take their first
vote in deciding whether states may ·ban doctOr-assisted suicides. The nation
likely will have 10 wait until late June to learn the result.
·
While little doubt remains after Wednesday's argtoment'session in assisted-suicide c~s from New York and Washington state thai s~ch bans will
be allowed, the ~urt's stated reasons will be important. ·
. Those reasons get spelled out in opinions.
·Think of it this way:' A decision is ~egg; an opinion·is the crowing.
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist presides oV.:nhe.fpitial vote, taken
·after each justice gets time to address his or her colleagues at a meeting that
only the justices attend.
..
Justice Stepheh G. Breyer;"llie ju"'ior justice; acts as di!Orkeeper- making sure absolutely no law clerk, secretary or other coun employee gains
entry.
·
~ehnquist assigns who will write an opinion for the court if be is voting ·
with t~ majoritY· If not, the most senior justice voting in the majority gets .
the assignment power. All justices are free to file concurring and dissenting
opinions if they feel the need.

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Starts January 16,: 1997

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only coincidence that the machines
are being deployed now. It is the first
anti-terrorism technology to meet
the FAA's str·ingent certification
requirements. According to tiie terms
of the $52 mi Ilion contract with
InVision, the new machines will be
installed at more 'than 50 airports
across the country by the end . of ,the
year.
These : state-of-the-art machines
borrow CAT scan technology, widely used in hospitals, to provide )hree·
dimensional views of luggage con·
tents. All "suspicious" objects are
pictured in red. .
But such equipment may just be a
starting point. Experts add ·that other
new security measures will soon
show up at airports across the country:
An exiensive computer network
will be employed in most major air-·
ports to "profile" passengers and
determine which ones should be
examined more closely. Passengers
hailing from hosti le nations (such as
Iraq and North Korea); for example,
wili be watched extra carefully by air·
line officials.
If a computer search labels a paS·
Senger as "high-ri sk," they can
expect to have their baggage checked
· by hand -- and paw. Experts recom·
mend that a .. m.inimum ... of two
teams or'highly iraincd bonib-s niff.
ing canines be dispatched to every
major airport. At airports deemed on
be. '•high risk," the FAA plans to rou·
tincly search some planes for possi -

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p E h j t·. has th
,
· _
ng lawyers who usually By BOB WEEDY .
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du.re ·. Is used dunng the ·third generauon to bear, mmus the help of believe. Just the reponed cases sho!"
1aw c1e·rks
ac
us
tee
ree
or
oour
you
.
f
.
od
· ·
· de1·1v- 1hc 36 mo'II'oon who were a hor.te d'
· • · on
· c7er~· c~JUnty except
. r ·spcncJ:ayearbelping with-reSeari:hliig and cjrafting opin(inis. ~y ma)dearn ·· · .n many ways our post-m. ern , tnmester
where the .ch'ld
1 os
. . . thc mrcclo?n
l of an initial vote soon after it's taken. Securiiy risks? Hardly. ·.
soctety has come to rely on d1spqs- cred feet first e~ccpt for the head. A .. . We already have . a senous Noble. Ohotuary stud1cs have shown
. :.
"It just never was.an issue, .. says Judge Ruth McGregor of the Arizona ·• abies. We have dosposaple table- hole os punched ·~ the back of the teenage pregn~ncy problem, what that lew love much hcy.ond 40 years .
t Court of Appeals, who clerked for Justice .Sandra Day O'Connodn !981. ware, contact lenses, gloves, razors, head, a catheter onserted, and the wolln become of the ~ge of consent of age. The current death rate " 62
: .''Confidentiality was a given."' _ _
·
d1apers, and even cameras. Th~ fast brams sucked out. The sk~ll collaps~ os lowered to .12 years? In 1994,thc percent.
.
.
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S iro a former clerk for Justice David H."Souter, remembers that "even
pace of hvong es and final dehvcry os accom - data for Gallo a County showed 56 , As Amen cans.. of we seck to
'1 taki~ a ~all from a journalist friend would raise eyebrows."
offers . some phshed. Congress voted to ban such borths to unwed teens and four aoor- rnt~rvcnc. we must rcah zc thatthcsc
. fJ . .• W:
B
ted ·•tJy and an• ·1 · 1,979
·explanatoon for atrocuoes after much heated deh~te . tions · performed on recnagc girls. arc pmhlcms.ol the heart. As wuh all
1
.ThC Iale Ch IC US 1ICC arren urger reac
SWII&lt;
•" Y In
•
h' h
p reso
· ·dent Cl.mton vetned th'•• ban, Dcpartmcnt o f Heat
( h dala f or prohi ems o t' IJC
) hcart. a sp1ntuu
.. )
I os p enomenon.
,
Lh
d
·
fbe
'
th
fABC
Ne
reports
bo
1
1 apnncro
1
wo"'n
csuspece
mg
esourceo
ws
a
u
p
'bl
f
h
d
h'l,
·
h
H
od
h
M
·
c
31
h'
h
1
·
·
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d
w
: still-pending Supreme Court decisions.
·
,
·
ro e~s o w at an w 1 c l c ousc ovcrr e t c
cogs ounty was . · 1rt s to so uuon os ·nee c . c accomp J"os h
•· · F 11· ·
h d
, Ia · · B
• h be the G
to do woth all our veto, sadly the Senate dod not.
unwed teens and one ahortitm per-. lottie when we husll and condemn
1
•• Pri. o. owong
a
calC
conoron
uon
m
urger
s
c
am
rs,
overnmen
d'
bl
'h
S
h
k
h
f
r
Offi
rde, d Iran ,_,_~ •
hi
C n 1.
1sposa es ave
uc an attac on l e respect or oormc d . For 1hc state, lhe num he rs 1hc advocatcs an d 1husc ·mvo 1vcd ·on
1
1
ntmgd !Ccempoyeewaso
re
ouf · po1ce_
.
I''1oe has opcne d othcr doors lhat per- arc 174'
. Iy. 1hc pm hi em. "'
•'
d k
heSn;uou.rom
.
dspos.
·
not becn . d.omm. 07 and 6967
,
respccuvc
we muso show a be ttcr
t_ were hor c~ edlo beep anc?nslJU1l eroovcmon t c.ommgs an gomgs 0 JOU~a1
.
. ished by the 'not haps 24 years ago could not· have · We should be working to have ahsti: way. for there arc many today w~o
,~ ISISCW 0 VISit I e £0U
·
· my bac kyard' atutu
• deof many
· cu·
been f"orcsccn:..
h 'L"'ttcr
.
ow hS press
ndle the printing
of opinions. .
·
on
. .
ncncc programs rep I.ace 1hc current have. never hcard of'..'at
way' .
1
~
ourt cmp oyees n 1i 'H
·'d the court "is !\Small institution with . 1zens.
-- As we wrote the.Supreme Court program~ that arc obviously very Forgovcncss 1s a gmid place. 10 stall,
I Court spok~swoman on\ 1°~ 581
·h
le
who
work
for
it.
·
Up
uritil
1973,
disposables
had
is
hearing
arguments concerning the counter-productive to tbc teens.
and we know that all who come to
0
1
0
a lr~ihhon~l hofh
,0~ :1~.! : in~e:.fworkinas 10 itself."
been limited to things rather than .right to dic ...or assisted suicide.
If same-sex marriage is Him: He will not turn away. A peace
•
Theresa ong tr 11 0
P g
mcludmg people. All that changed
-· .Hawan ha.' become the focus approved, what will prevent a man and freedom woll cmnc over that tor: · EDITOR'S NOTE_ Ricll,ard Carelli'covers die Supreme &lt;;ourtand · 24 yea'rs ago with the infamous Roc of the controversy of samc-sc~ mar- from marrying two women'! And given one heyond their fonde~t
'
. v, Wade decision legalizing abor- riagc.
.
why should not a man marry a hoy. hope.
.
.
: lepllssues ror The Aalodated Press.
tion. Many citizens have believed
-- Justice Ginsburg has taken a as the North American Man Boy
For a new day in America, wtly
that legality was reserved only for stand that the age of consent for sex- J.ove Association advocates'! Or. can't we love them both. that mother
I
the first trimester, but with Doc v. ual acts must be lowered to 12 years . .. 'why couldn't a man marry an ani - and her baby'! There arc those wHo
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Bolton and the definition of 'health'
-- Ginsburg has also wrluen that mat '!
can provide for them both. That si~1
by the court, we really have abortion "prostitution a.• a consensual act
And what is the "benefit" or mak- glc ·mum need not he sentenced 10
By The AIIOCIIted P1'811
.·
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.
on demand through nine months. .
between adults is arguably within ing something that is wrong. prosti- poverty in order to avoid an abor..
Today is Sunday, Jan. 12, the 12th day of 1997. TI!ere arc 353 days left
A glimpse of the attitude in the the zone of pri vacy ·protected hy· tution. to he legal'! Do we not have · tion. Hundreds of thousands of fanlain the year.
·
.
.
'70s comes from fonner President rcc,cnt conslitutional decisions." ·
enough · HIV i nfcction ~n ·our cnun- 1hcs arc sccksng c.h1ldrcn to rai s~.
Today's Highlight in History: ·
·
·
Jimmy .Caner who said "I was never
She apparently refers to the try '? Arc not enough marriages hit- and laws arc being changed to alloiv
o
On Jan. 12. 1932, Mrs ..Hattie W. Caiawar became the first woman elect- able to believe that Jesus would penumbra the court "li~unu'~ in the ting the rocks'? Arc we actually dar· for · better arrangements .bctwe4n
I ed to the U.S. Senate.
·
·
approve of abortions." But, he said, 14th amendment to justify tak ing the · ing Gc1d to dn something about our .hinh parents and adoptive paren1s
On this date:
·
he upheld the, rig.ht because the life of the pre-hom.
rchcllion'' If we would" just look Thousands of crisis pregnancy ~c~ln .1519, f:loly·Roman Emperor Maximilian I died.
courts said it was part of the Consti- · Can one hcgin ·to imagine where around, we would sec that judgment tcrs around the country arc available
In 1773, the first public museurn in America was established, 'in tution.
else this will lead '? How soon after is already upon us in many ways.
to help in many also·practical wayl.
Charleston. S.C.
Recent debate in Congress the "right to die" .is ~pproved will it
Our attention is sought when we
Bob Weedy is a corspondent for
In 1915, the U.S. House of Representatives rejected a .Proposal to .give 'regarding partial-birth . abortion become "our duty to dic"·o Will not have 16,(XKJ to 18,000 HIV-infccted tho Sunday Times-Sentinel.
women the right to Vote.
.·
highlighted the "through nine the , burden of social programs Ohioans. Rural counties arc not free
. In 1942. Ptesidcnt Roosevelt created the National War Labor Board.
months" aspect. This hideous 'procc- become too heavy for the, younger ' of infected residents, as some may

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~d.:o.:::~=~j~~::ti:~o ~~:!'!.'hey were writing ~ the majority end

'•

We Al~axs . .
HaveTtme
You

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in the United States each year.
In fact, according to the FAA's
o\Yn figures, just one conunercial airplane-related death -- worl~wide -has been attributed to a terrorist
planted e~plosive during the 1990s.
Even the explosion of TWA Aight
800, which many people aSsumed
was the work of terrorists, now
appears to have been caused by
mechanical failure.
Yet the FAA continues to step up
its anti-terrorism efforts with aban·
don. This safety frenzy is widely
assumed to be in response to the
Aight 800 tragedy this past summer.
But FAA officials claim the timing is
merely coincidental.
"We've had a timeline (for
years)," an.FAA spokesman told our
associate Aaron Karp. "It was never
said that any of this was f:leing done
because ·Of 800. The media has created .thai perception."
FAA officials add that new luggage·scanning technology· has been
in dev~lopment for years, and that it's

i!, dra~~:':':e~::~;=~i.a~;~~~~i:~~:~~~:~~·~=~ed~:e~~~f~~
sp·•r·•t
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0

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, how·. to keep a sec.ret ·

·'HOLLEY BROS.
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Lotto drawing was $8 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3:2- 1-0
Daily 4: 0-2-3-3
Cash 25:8-12-1.3,15-16-2 1

.... ......
111te e:; • r ••• .... .__....,.011•-or_,-.,.--.,.....,,.,.
·-'!Wild __ ,.•••••
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ori'A/C..,._.....,_11ot __ ",'
~
~ Coilbcller

l'lhen the job is done."
wlse for' sec_w:ing $8 million, or.22 or Russell Holland; and Dr. Larry
Mason County · Developme.nt percent of
cost, in federal fund- Parsons, Mason County superinten.
dent of Schools. •
.Authority President.Charles Lanham ing. .
• .
·
In
his
viel~me,
Hollaiod
said.
the
said, "This is a celebration for the
Several oll;cials were on hand for
groundbreaking
was
a
celebra~on
of
dedication of all .areas to a common the groundbiealdng including State
goal."
Sens. Bob Diwnar and Oshel Craigo; progress and g~owth in Masqn &lt;CounLanham explained lhe whole pro- · Delegates Jerif ~elley, 13th District, ty. He also announced.t,l'tat Fnd~y was
ject as a three-legged 'stool. He said and Kelly Given, 14th District; Dave Gov. Gaston Caperton Day in Point
·one leg was state government, one Bender of the Federal Highway Pleasant · '
leg the federal government aild one Administration; Point PleaSant Mayleg Congress. "If one leg would
have failed, the entire project wpuld
.
. .
have been doomed.''
, · ·,
· Fred VanKirk, secretary of West
Virginia Department of Transportation and commissioner of highways,
said there was a lot of hard work, several delays, frustration, and meetings
UP 01 flf 1111
~t'J"'.
concerning the bridge. but the next
meeting will be on lhe riverbank in
tho spring. when the concrete and
steel start going up and when the 66year-o\d Shadle Bridge is blown up
and dropped into the Kanawha Riv- ·

I'

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Karin Chrla, dauglltar; l!lrer&amp;Jon JOMI, .1011;
Edw1rd lftrfow Nicholl, grend1011; Nectr•
Jonu, wife; Alexlllcllr Chrl1, gnmdiOIIi Libby
llo-. dlughtar-ln-llw; Nld " - · 1011; 1nd
Fern J01111, daughtar-ln-law.lAt exb aiM right
It ~ofng Wist VIrginia Golf. Galton Cliper·
.ton. ·

FA.LY ATTENDS- Molt of S.rtow Jonq'

femlfy 1Rindlcllhli Frldly Clii'IIYIOny ~

lost to confirmed airline terrorism on
domestic soil is exaclly zero .
WASHINGTON •• Members of
In lhe entire 12-year span from
Congress say thiJ il the year they wm 1978 to 1990,lhe federal government
finally ballflce the federal budget.
But th~rc is still one word that
· always gets lawmakers 10 break out
the federal.cl'teckbo&lt;ik: (!orrorism.
· The federal govemment is in the
process of spending unprecedented
amounts inoney to. safeguard American airline passengers from the spent $78 million on anti-terrorism
threat of terrorism. Just last month. technology. But in the last si~ years,
the Federal Aviation' Administration that total has been uipled, including
announced that it had inked a S52.2 a record $39 million last fiscal year.
million contract with InVision Tech- And a whopping $52 million has
nologies, a California company that already been authorized this year. If
makes high-tech luggage scanning . Congress . and the FAA have their
machines.
.
way, those numbers will soon seem
Fighting terrqr in the sky is no pliny by comparison.
doubt a worthy task. But is it fair td
The FAA wants to spend $6 billion
· ask taxpayers -- many of whom Oy on anti-terrorism technology over the
only occasionally -- to continue pay- next dec~de . During that same time
ing ransom prices for protection they span, if current numbers hold, taxmay not really need? And what payers will spend about $12 billion
exactly are we preventing? In the last fighting cancer -- a disease that
two decades', the total number of lives claims more than half a million lives

·By Jack Andet$on
and
Jan Moller

A Gannett Co. Newspaper ·

l '

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By JIICk AndliiCHI

''.

.. Accident causes minor injuries

Gallipolis officers ticket three

. .........

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governor, Gaston Caperton named
lhe new bridge 10 connect Point
Pleasant and Henderson the ''BIIItow
RECOGNIZED - A certificate of accomplishment W11 preJones Bridge" during groundlnaking
11 ilad by Ohio Depat btMh'lt of Agrlcuhure Director Fred L. D1J. · ceremonies at the Point Pleasant ·
ley to Meigs County F1lr Bilard t;nttmberl 1t last -11'1 72nd
Moose Lodge Friday.
..
•· · lniiUII Ohio Fair Mlin1ger1 Assoolatlon luncheon In Columbus.
Caperton said he had learned the
": The ct1 IIIJcata gsva recognition .to the fair boll rei members. for
meaning of "pressure" in Mason
-.. their WOrk In staging a aucce11ful 19,96 fair. "The '*d Work and
County. According to the governor,
, , declcltlon of theie Individuals en1ble Ohio to malntllln.the repthe real pressure.came from the spir.. · · utlltfon of having the best agrlcuhural fairs In the country, • llikl
it
of Bartow Jones, who died in
- l)lltey In making the presentation. F~ left are Buddy Erwin, Ed
November
1992.
'" Holter, Leonard Koenig; Kenny Buckley, Dalley, Brent Rose and
"Wifen
the
· voices weren't loud
~ Tom Dreke.
enough, liis was the loudest," CapertOn said. "I was touched by Bartow;
there was no way he was not gojng
· io get this bridge built."
In his executive oniCJ; naming the
bridge, Caperton said Jones' "tireless
public service, unwavering loyalty to
"'
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will 11!' provided by the Gallia
the citizens of Mason County, W.Va.,
n•
.. , County Health Department at the following locations this week:
'and Kentucky, and conuibutions ben• Gallia·Metropolilan Estates. Wednesday, I :30-2:30 p.m.
efited the people of West Virginia."
,,
• Head Start (old Clay Elementary), Thursday, II :30 a.m.-1 :30 p.m.
According to ·Caperton, . l'te
Children in need of immunizations JllUSt be accompanied by a parent
received pressure·for Mason County
. , and bring a currevt immunization record with them ..
.from Sen. Oshel Craigo, chairman of
the finance committee who hilS supported a new·bridge from. the beginGALLIPOLIS- State Rep. John A. Carey, R-Wellston, will conduct
ning; from former·Sen. Ned Jones, Dan open door session on Monday from II a.m. until noon at the Gallia
Cabell,
whom he referred to as the
~· County Courthouse, and at the Meigs County Courthouse from 2-3 p.m.
only
Mason
County senator who
"
Anyone with qllestions or concerns about state government is urged
wasn't
elected
here; from one of his
~ to attend.
closest friends, former Kentucky
Gov. Brereton Jones; and from the ·
, . GALLIPOLIS -Tile Veterans Service Commission will meet on Tuescitizens of the couniY· ·
, day .at 3:30p.m. in the Veterans Service Office at the courthouse, VeterMrs. Nedra lone's and family
ans 'Service Officer Steve Swords announced.
unveiled a placard naming the 'bridge
prior to helping with the official
GALLIPOLIS -A recital by Galli a CO\Inty netivc Abra Kathleen Bush · groundbreak.ing.
"Mason County should be proud·
,. scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday at the Ariel Theatre has;been canceled and
Gaston
Caperton started and ended
will be rescheduled at a later date.
his term of governor here," Jack
Fruth, vice president ·o f the Mason
RACINE- A chicken noodle dinner planned for Sunday at Southern
County Development Authority, said
High School has been postponed until Jan . 19:
·
in his introductiol' of Caperton.
The benefit dinner is sponsored by the Southern High School cheer·
According to Fruth, one of Caperlenders. Serying will begin at II a.m. on the rescheduled date.
ton's first campaign promises was
that a new bridge would be built in
the county, one of his first guberna, GALLIPOLIS - A Pennsylvania man was injured in a two· vehicle
torial announcements was the e~pan­
accident Friday at the intersection of State Route 7 and the U.S. 35 e&lt;it
sion of ~hell, now Goodye~ in
ramp, the Gl\llia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported;
Apple Grove, and his last official act
Daniel L. Gent, 23, Verona, was transported to Holzer Medical Cen"
was the groun~breaking tor the
" ter ~y the Gallia County EMS, the patrol said. He was treated and released
·
.
bridge.
,, . for strains and contusions, a Hospital spokesperson said.
";rile
new
bridge
will
allow the
Gent was a passenger in a minivan driven by Larry~· Lardin, 33, New
world
to
discover
Mason
County,"
Kensington, Pa., that was traveling on SR 7 at 5 p.m. when it Y!as struck
Fruth
said:
"Caperton
is
the
finest
" by a pickup truck driven by Michelle S. Lemaitre, 30,.Aibany. according
govel"or in West Virginia's history.
,
'' to the report.
West VirgirWI is truly a better place
'' . Lemaitre was eKiting the ramp onto 7 at the time of the crash, troop·
now than it was eight years ago.",
•: ers said. The collision caused the minivan to roll over, the report said.
·"It's a proud day for Mason Coun" . Damage estimates to the minivan , owned by Pro Staff Inc., Oakmont,
ty - you've made it happen, conPa., and Lemaitre's pickup were not available. Lemaitre was cited for failgratulations," U.S. Rep. Bob Wise
ure to yield.
· said to the sizable crowd. "Tilc bridge
is a monument to what can be done
when
people work together."
GALLIPOLIS - Minor injuries were reported to·three people in a two·
According
to Wise, .the petitions,
car crash Friday on County Road I0 (Centenary), according to the Gal·
buttons and phone calls from a lot of
., lia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol.
people got the job done, a.~ well as
Not treated at the scene w~re drivers Joe P: Liberatore, 53, 17 Evans
work frqm U.S. Sen. Roben C. Byrd
Heights, Gallipolis, and Larry E. Fitzwater, 43, 115 Fairfield Road, Gal·
·and
other state and federal officials.
,. lipolis. and to Rita I. Roger, 31, also of 115 Fairfield Road. a passenger
The congressman quoted Caper- ·
in Fitzwater's vehicle.
Troopers said Liberaiore was northbound, eight-tenths of a mile south . ton by saying, "We will all benefit
of SR 588, at I:50 p.m. when the vehicle he drove slid left in a right-hand
curve due· to icy conditions and struck.Fitzwater's southbound car.
No Credi&amp;, ·Slow Credit
. Damalle to Liberatore's car was severe and moderate to the Fitzwater
" vehicle. Liberatore was cited for left of center.
Bad Credit, Baukruptey?

..

~irline se·curity costs soar skywar~

!

· ,..,_Tri-County·_Briefs.

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PageAS
Sunday, JenUIIry 12, 1997
I

'Esttli6N.tl in 19GO

••
•

Tlm11 S1nttn.l Stllfl
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -In his
last official. duty as West Vqinia's

I

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Pomeroy~ Middleport •

Sunday, JMuary

12,

.'·
1tlild

EM

units
answer
9
calls
POMEROY- Units the Meip
9:25
Overtlrook. .
SlroelJ·
of

County Elneqency Medical 'Service
reconlecl nine calls for assistance
Wednesday.
Respoedllg were:
CEN'aAL DISPATCH
4:08 a.m., Qepqt Street, Middleport, lvaCRmeans, Veterans Memorio! Hospi~ Rutland squad assisting;
3:SO p.m. Liheny l..alie, Pomeroy,
Avanelle B~s, VMH;
5:10 P·lll·• Hayman Road, Racine,
Charles Powell, VMH, assisted by
. squad;
Rac1ne
. ..
7:37 p.m.. 222 W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Hugh Davis, VMH;

~oseph A. Cucinotta
• GALJ:.IPOLIS- Joseph A. Cucinotta, 43, Gallipolis, died Thursday, Jan.
•9, 1997 m Holzer Medical Center.
,; Bom .Dec. 28, 1953 in Cincinnati, son of the late Antony J. Cucinotta,
- and Mane Vonderflo"de Cucinotta of Cincinnati, he was a member of the Saint
Louis Catholic Church.
.
: Surviving in ~ddition to his mother are three sisters, Anne Angelo bnd
-Mary Joan Cuncmotta, both of Cincinnati, and Sue Campbell of Marietta,
: Ga.; and s1x brothers, M1ke Cucinotta, Robert Cucinotta, Thomas 'Cucinotta, John Cucinott~ and James Cucinotta, all of Cincinnati, and Anthony
- Cucmotta of Bel fait, Wash.
·
• Se~ices will be I0 a.m. Monday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, with
. MonSignor Wilham Myers 9ffic1ating. Burial will be in the St. Louis Catholic
:Cemetery, Green Township. Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday after 9 a.m.
·
·
·
·

tharles
F. Powell ·Jr.
.
:., . LONG BOTTOM- Charles .Franklin Powell Jr., 68, Long Bottom; died
.;fnday, Jan. 10, 1997 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
· ·
:. Born Feb. 6, 1928 in Portland, son of the late Charles and Ruth Newlun
:~owell, he was a retired timberman and a U.S. Army vetecan.
:
Surviving- are his wife, Estherla Eddy Powell; three stepdaughters, Edna
: Ables, Arlene (Bob) Wood and Elsie (Delbert} Roush, all of Racine; a step, son, Danny (Sue) Roach of Wooster; II stepgrandchildren; and five broth_ers, Harry Powell and Robert Powell, both of Torch, David Powell and Del::;Pert Powell, both of Reedsville, and Randall Powell ofBelpre.
·
~ He was also preceded in death by two infant sons; a stepson, Ira Roach
Jr.; and a brother, Roy Powell.
Graveside services will be II a.m. Monday in the Bald Knob Cemetery,
Portland, with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Friends may call at the White_Biower Funeral Home, Coolville, froll\ 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

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Vetera01 Memorial
Friday admissions - Hugh Davis,
omeroy.
· , Friday discharges - none . .
Holzer Meclkal Center
' Birth Dec. ~ 1996 - Jennifer
flyers, Gallipolis, and Mike Olson,
:thill icothe, son,

New Orleans; brothers and sisters-inlaw, Junior and Kathy Skidmore, and
their children, Justin and Kristen; all
of Little Rock, Ark., and Phil and Pat
Skidmore, and their son, Josh; sisier;
Patty Sprague, and niece, Karen
Sprague; cousins, Rosemary and
David Skidmore, and their son, Robbie (Vicki) Skidmore, all of Mississippi; ~nd long-time best friend,
Donna Broyles.
The party was organized by Mary
News6me, Mary Louise Hennesy,
Sheri Shelton, Sherry Clagg, Amy
Sibley and Judy Haggerty.
·
. "I'm going to do all the things,
I've wanted to do for the last 33 years ·
and didn't have time for," Burger
said. "I'm going to have fun."
She indicated that this would
include spending time with her ouiof-state flllriily and traveling.
Burger's last working day was
Dec. 31. She left her post to her successor as clerk, Noreen SaunderS,
who.was also in attendance.

Weight Watchers
members lose 2 1/2 times
more ..weight than people
who try losing alone. •

Sfli!Cial ewnts and so mlkh more. You can't .
argue with iuccess, so give us a call. )Yhat
have you gOt to lose?.
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porrection
'! · POMER()Y -

Patricia D. Sny'ller, Racine. was fined $63 ' for
tis!Rd clear diiiCance in the Pomeroy
llll)'or'l Coun receluly, not Patrick
~ infOimllion wa iK«·
llftiy lllbmilled by the Po!neroy
· ;folice Dlpattment,

1p.

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(POINT PLEASANT MEDipAL CENTER)

21111 &amp; llffiiSOI IYIIUI

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675·1675

605 East Main
Mon: 6:30 p.m.
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~ears h1t two foul shots to tie the
At Alliance, Aaion Shipp scored.
WACO, Texas Thursday, played 10 scoreless minutes. Meroer was just
;P.me and D1ante Flenorl's layup 24 points and had IS rebounds as
Ierod 4-of-15 and totaled 10 points.
·
·. ~tth 46 seconds left gave Ohio the Mount Union beat Capital 8 1•55
Raef
N~ 41owa St. Ill, Okla......, 55- At Ames, Iowa.
as the Bobcats defeated Akron Saturday.
/·
.
and Scot Dednc Willoughby scored 21 points and No. 4 Iowa
J7~ Saturday. : . .
.
The Purple Raiders •(9-3). took
led top- State, bouncing back from its first loss, shut down
·"· · Sc~rs l~d Ohto w1th 19 pomts, over sole possessiOti of ftbt place in
Kansas on Oklahoma in the sec'ond half for an 82-55 victory
~nclud1~g etght of the Bobcats' final the Ohio Conference' \\iith a 5-1
second-half Saturday.
.
.
;)D.potnts . Oeno Ford added 17 ·record.
·
" ·
that powered . Leading by seven at halftime~ Iowa State (Il- l over' •.P.~'"t~ for, Ohio (6-5 overall, 1-2
Shipp hit 7-of-9, sh~ from the
Jay hawks past all, 2-0 Big 12) held Oklahoma (9-3, 1-1) without a bas! ~td-Amencan Confen:ilce).
field and all five of his''~ throws.
87-68 ket for the first 5:25 of the second half and used thn:e
n · · ~kron (•3-8! I -2 MAC) got 19 Neal Richards added l~fpoints' and
big runs to tum the game into a rout.
,~ts from J1.m_mal Ball and 13 eight rebounds, while SQOtt Endsley
hit a
Kenny Pratt and Kelvin Cato each scored IS points
scored 16 points.
·.&lt;~ ,
·
to for Iowa State.
·
1,.. . Georp Philltps.
Capital (7-5, 4-2) · as led by
Kansas
Nate Erdmann led Oklahoma with 12 points. Corey
::-. Fl~nprl's layup marked the sec! llpd ttme t~e Bobcats came back Tony Joseph's 14 porats. Aaron
which Brewer, averaging 16.9 points, was held to II on 2-forJromadeftctt.
Quinn added 11.
. /•
the Sland- tO shooting.
·
,•, Akron led 60-54 after Adam
~aunt Union shot 53%
the
room crowd of
· No.5 Clemson 76, Jl1orida St. ~0- At Tollahassec,
i ~~nton made a three-pointer from field (30 of 56) to CapitJil's 39% (22
largest in Fla., Greg Buckner scored 2.1 points and Mer! Code
i'lf!C riJh! comer with 8:44 left; but of 56).
·nine-year his- sank six free throws in the final 1:31 as fifth-ranked
:!Jie Z1ps made JUSt two free three
HIIIIdale 77,AIJ,Iud 71
of the Ferrell Clemson won its lOth straight game Saturday with a 76Ji!rows over the next seven minutes.
At Ashland, Clarence~lack came
70 victory over Florida State.
·,;:;· Sears took charge of the Ohio off the bench to sco~e ·~O points in
the time the
The Tigers (14-1, 3-0 Atlantic Coast Conference),
n was over. who led 33-27 at the half, built a nine-point lead on fi:ve
effense during that stretch, posting 23 minutes as Hillsdlile overcame a
I lip for two layups and drawing three 12-point second-half deficit to bell
. (16-0, 3-0 occasions in the final 5:19, including a 70-61 advantage
;.~ouls.. . ,
.
.
Ashland 77-71 Saturday.
•
12) led 56-36. with 54 seconds left.
· ·
Black hit 5-of-9 sbots from ·the
(12-3, 1-2)
.Codesank six of seven free throws in the final 91
,. , Phtlhps put-back of a miSsed
; stJot gave Akron a 64-62 lead with field, 3-of-6 three-pointers 'wid 7-ofI 0 trips seconds to clinch the victory.
:1:44 to play, but Sears dre"': a foul 8 free throws .. Jason fll',nn added 17 ·
the floor and
Although the Seminoles (9-3, 1-3) shot SO% for 'the
five minutes game, they committed. 17 turnovers and couldn't stay
:lnd made both free throws wnh 1:26 pomts: and Ttm Marttn had 16 for
.'~'eft. .
the Chargers (9-6 overall, 4-3 Great
thout .a field with Clemson on the lioards.
.; Ohto led 37-35 at the h~lf after Lakes In!ercollegiate Conference). .
until Brian
Florida State's James Collins led all scorers wilh 23
.«.vmg been down 25-15 wtth 7:58
Arttome Campbell scored .17
made a points and Corey Louis added 18 for the Seminoles.
·,1'! .lllay. F&amp;d hit a pair of three- points, James Turner had 15 and
with 13:00
No. 7 Arizona IJl, Arizona St. 84 -· At Tempe,
:p01nters to lead an 18-6 run that Man Miller had 13 for tJte Eagles (7TH B C
Ariz., the Arizona Wildcats, without Miles Simon, we~ ·
:aave the Bobcats a 33-31 lead, their 7, 1-5), who led 3748 at the half
E A K DOOR'S -SHUT- That might be whit Ohlo'l Curtll LaFrentz scored good enough to earn a No. 7 ranking. Wilh him for the
. ~first of the game, with3:1S left.
and were on top 43-': h with 18:34 Simmon• (c.nler) ,may have been thinking 11 he getl eway from 20 points for first time this season, they were even better.
.
,.,.i; La Salle 63, Dayton 51
left. .
' ·
· ,
, the dlf8nH Akron 1 Chrle Hel)n and Adem Benton tighten behind Karisas, which led
Simon, shaking off the rust -after missing 11 gam.S
" : At Philadelphia, Pa., freshman
Marietta 78, Heldelbeq66
him durln~e flret hllf of Seturde~'• MAC conteet In Athene, by only seven due to academic problems, had 18 points and seven
' ·Donnie Carr.SCOR&lt;I 2~ of his game- , At Marietta, Ben Ojttmar scored ""-the
Bobcllta won 67_..· (A )
points at halftime as s.ists Saturday as the Wildcats beat Arizona State 92- ·
; ~igli 25 points in the second half. 2(:) points and zach,1Pauley 19 as
At ayton, etc o wmg s two
despite shooting 84
'f.aturday to lead La Salle 10 a 63-51 Marietta shot 62% from the field in free throws with 16 seconds left 64% from the field. Haase added 18 for the Jayhawks,
Arizona (I 0-2, 3-0 Pac-1 0) used Michael
~tctory over Dayton.
beating Heidelberg 78,66 Saturday. gave Northern Illinois a 56-55 victo- who .have won 20 straight games in January.
Dic~erson's career-high 32 points, Simon and Bennett
f :Trailing 38-34 early in the second
The Pioneers (6- 6 overall, 2-4 ry over Wright State on Saturday.
Skinner scored 16 for Baylor before fouling otU
Davison to weather a late charge by the Sun Devils.
'ltalf, .La Salle (6-5, 1-1 Atlantic 10) conference) shot 67'llnfrom the ·.field
· The Huskies (8-6 overall, 2-2 4:42 left. Doug Brandt had 13 for the Bears.
Michael Batiste had 25 points for .Arizona State (9-6,
"!'ipped off a 19-2 run behind Carr's in the second half (! 8 -of- 27 ) in Mid-Continent
Conference)
Mississippi 7j, No. 3 Kentucky 6IJ- At Oxford, 1-2). Rodger Farrington added .22 and Jeremy Yea! had
.
·
1 t~ points to taJce a 53-40 lead. Carr dropping Heidelberg'~ut of a share outscored Wright State 7-0 over the Miss., reserve Joezon Darby scored 19 points,' including 19.
:~tt .three c. onsecutive three-pointers of first place in, the . Ohio last S:28.
·
two free throws with six seconds left, and Mississippi
Miami (Fla.) 61, No. 8 ·VIllanova SIJ _ At
, (lunng the run.
Conference. .
""·
· Dante Parker's three-pointer with shocked third-ranked Kentucky 73-69 Saturday to end ~ Philadlephia, Pa., Kevin Norris made two free throws
.! : Dayton (7-5,' 1-2), w~ich had led
Tad Secrest added 10 points for 1:54left brought Northern Illinois to the Wildcats' 14-'game winning streak. .
·
ith less than a second left after Villanova called an
· ~-23 at halftime, cut the deficit 10 Marietta, which builtjt 3! -2 3 lead at · within 55-54. Rohlwing then hit the
The defending national champion Wildcats (14-2, 2- improper timeout, giving Miami a 61-59 upset over the
•.-~-46, but Carr scored five straight the half and led by..II.~ many as 17 two free throws.
I Southelistem Conference), were playing lhei\- fourth No. 8-ranked Wildcats on Saturday.
: ~ints to give La Salle a 60:49 lead points in the second ~f.
Wright State (3-ll, 1-3) had a game in eight da,rs. Their:only pn:vious loss this season
Tim Thomas was falling out of bounds with the ball
·With 1:54 left in .the gaine. Dayton
Nate Walters scbied 22 points, chance to win with two seconds left,· wast~ C:Ie'!'s~ tn the season-opener.
' ~nder the. Villanova .basket when he signaled for the·
;rot no closer than nine points the Josh Murphy 17 and Matt Ritchie 11 but John Sivesind's jumper bounced
~ISSISSIPP' (11-3, 3-.1 Southeastern Conferen~e), . bmeout wtth eight-tenths of a second remaining.
~toftheway.
· forHeidelberg( 7-S,4-Z).
&lt;ifftherim.
·
· whtch has won only ntne of the 91 games agamst . Because the Wildcats (12-3, 3-2 Big East) were out
Heidelberg was 9-of-28 from the
Pllfll:er mad~ S-of-7 ~reo-pointers Kentucky, built a 13-point lead early in. the second half. of tim.!outs, they were hit with a technical foul and
. ; . Carr entered the game as the
-{lation's second leading scorer, aver- field (32%) in the opening half and and fintshed ~1th 15 pomts. T.J. Lux The Rebels then survived pressure defense down the Norris sank the free throws .
, ..ing 28.5 points per gf!llle.
.
finished 24-of-57 for 42 %.
and Ronald Mrnter ~h ~ I0. . stretch.
,
.
.
Norris and Johnny Hemsley each had II points for
Rr~ Perryman Jed Dayton ~itb . .~ar!etta was 7-of-9 from three- .
R~~ . ~el~~ ~nd Ke1on ,Bro.oks
Kentuc.ky s Derek Anderson and Ron Mercer, the the Hurricanes (9-5, 3-3). Thomas had 18 for Villanova,
io '011.. 11.Ad .J.4,.rebou~.J. Mtke .poJ.IIItanl!e.(78%). -:·~. · ,... '-:.&gt;"· J ~;U;~.JIL~r.U~ SBC:S toP,_tw~ ~rs~,av~ng a combined 38 points which also got 14-point efforts froni Chuck Kornegay
p~zzi added·l&gt;2 for lla Sal.te. . .
N. llllllolll56, ~ St. 55
. ta~. .
.
a game,1iiii'J~Sr.l 0, ~'llderson, who strained his back and AI viii Williams.
·

England Patriots play . the
Jacksonville Jaguars for the right to
When he looks across the field to lhe represent the conference in the
o~r sideline today, Bill Parcells Super Bowl. "But tha\" the way the
'\']II feel proud. He'll also feel business is.
'"
ur~omfonable.
.
"He is 0110 of my favorite guys I
, lfho man performing the same ever coached with. !t's.:Siml,'le, real·
cllores on the other side of FoxborO ly: I like him. Of all the thmgs that
$t.,dium in the AFC Championship .are very important in !!\Coach, be is
~e will be Tom Coughlin, a long- all of those things. A'jd he is not
tinie friend and a former assistant . afraid. That is the main thing. He's
c'Oilch under Parcells. That's great- got conviction."
'}'
·
&amp;Ad terrible.
Parcells
remem6ers
how
.~: : 'l don't enjoy it. It's not pleasant Coughlin was charactet¥ as being
for; either of us,' ' .Parcells said of dictatorial and a risid lljjktitasker in
~!!~ing Coughlin· when the New the Jaguars' firSt year.
·

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Huntington plans paradtr~
.for
Marshall .football
tearh
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.

FAMILY AND STAFF .

.,

But do'es that give these two
coaches extra insight into one anillher's game strategy? Parcells doesn't
think so.
The Patriots know they must stop
the running of Natrone Means and
the improvisation of quarterback
Mark Brunell. The Jaguars .must do
the same with running back Curtis
Martin and the Drew Bledsoe-Teny
Glenn passing combination.
Still, they· aren't likely to stop
trading compliments after the game.
•'I am proud of Tom and what he·
has done," Parcells said. "He's a
terrific coach.".

Redwomen tally 71~59 vi.c tory over Mt. Vernon

patronage.

'

his roots, How can ~. with all his
ties to Parcells, who has taken the
Patriots from the bottom of the
league to the AFC East crownZ
"Bill had a tremendous effect on .
me. He taught me how to win and
put it all together. I am ,forever
grateful,'' Coughlin said . ''He's
always been strong for· me with help
and guidance. ·
. . "It's a difficult thing to think of
playing against him,"
Parcells and Coughlin have spoken nearly every week of the season,
but not this week. There's not much
they could say.

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' ..t • .

"It's a melting-pot process,"
Coughlin .said. "People come
together and formulate a team. In
some cases, it's slower than others.
"We felt we had the right individuals. We had to ·be patient, .stick
with the guys and what we believed
in. I wanted to build through .the
draft wilh :Selective free agents who
we could build with. I never said
there was a timetable. I wanted to be
as gopd as we could as fast as we
could."
And they' are, faster than anyone
could have imagined.
But Coughlin isn't about to forget

The Packers are. the NFC's best to win the Super Bowl. · That' s who have Super Bowl rings. Only
"He' s not your average second-.
.'"This isn't an individual game;
team, 13-3 durin~ the regular Season · because Denver, the . team that two Packers have been to the title year quarterback," said Collins' it's a team game and that's' how we •
to 12-4 for .Carohri~.
'
seemed its equal during ·the regular game: wide receiver Don Beebe, backup, Steve Beuerlein, who won a always look at it,'' said Dom .
Picked by many during the pre- season, was upset by Jacksonville, w.h o I!(BS in four Super Bowls with Super Bowl ring with Dallas in Capers, the runaway winner in
season to win the Super Bowl, they the other 1995·expansion team, last Buffalo, and backup quarlerback Jim 1993. "He makes great decisions coach of the year balloting.
. came to camp with hop~s so high Saturday in the AFC playoffs.
McMahon, the starter on the Bears' and does.n 't get us in trouble. He
What can stop the Packers? Tht;ir
that coach Mike Holmgren had to
That's enough incentive for any- 1986 Super Bowl champions.
knows when to complete passes and history, perhaps.
·
i41ii~ng.
ban those two words.,from the. one.
· The Panthers are led by Sam when to throw the ball away."
"The pressure we're under is
t :History is the Packers, a team team's vocabulary.
~.
·
"This one," said Favre, who Mills, an all-Pro linebacker who was
The rest of the offense is no- immense," Jones said. "We have to
with sliper,;tars like Brett Favre and
Now, a game away from · New won his second consecutive NFL 0-4 in playoff games until last week. names- rookies and castoffs you'd win. Carolina can come in relaxed."
~gie White trying to live up to the Orleans, Holmgren has given up try- MVP award this season, •'is for
"Sam? He's 40 years old and still expect on an expansion team.
The Panthcts may be where
Ieeend ofVince Lombardi and his ingtostopsuchtalk.
Reggie and Sean Jones and Eugene playing great," said White, adding
One is Anthony Johnson, cut by Green Bay was a year llgo .when it
Clt1tmpions of 30 ·years ago. I~s
"Two tllore games," said White, Robinson, all those guys who have three years to the 5-foot-.9 Mills' lhe Bears, Colts and Jets. He rushed went into Dallas after upsetting San
.
, for 1,120 yards this season after Francisco on the road -just happy
b}jgest burdep might be its long-ago a perennial All-Pro without a Super played so well and so long and never actual age.
sll¢cess.
·
·
Bowl ring, "and:we can~ the rest been to a Super Bowl."
Mills and the defense, one of the replacing the injured Tshimanga to be in the NFC Championship. The
· ;·No histo,.Y at all is the Panthers, a of.our lives off." .
.,,
But for White, Jones and NFL's few remaining 3-4 schemes, Biakabutuka and had ·104 last week Packers lost 38-27, and the
tfttn that didn't exist two years ago. . Everything seems to pbint that Robinson to get there, the Pacl&lt;ers led the NFL in sacks this season against Dallas, 9Utgaining Emmitt Cowboys went on to win the Super ·
will have to beat no o~nary expan- with 60. Kevin Greene, who played Smith by 24 yards.
Bowl.
.
Ialheir second season, they beat San way.
F.~ancisco twice to win the NFC
Green Bay enters this 8!!1he with sion team. Like its AFC counterpan with Pittsburgh in last year's Super
Five more are the offensive lineSo the Packers are . a clear
. Wes~ then beat defending c~mpion a 17.-game· winning ~lfeak at from Jacksonville, Carolina has Bowl, had 14 1/2 to lead the lelll!ue '!'en. Matt Campbell is a converted ~avor~te, not o.nly in Las Vegas but
O.llas last week , humbltns the Lambeau F1eld, where teit\}leratgres done ·what no second-year team has and Lamar Lathon, the other outs1de ught end Signed off the street to fill m the11 own mmds.
tiiiptiest the NFL has had to offer "!e expected to be near ~rt\i.at game done before b~ adv~ing, !o a con- linebacker, had 13 1/2.
the critical left tackle .position.
·.~ It's . all.~usiness thb week,"
~decade. '
t1me today. Carohna was )Only 4-4 ference champiOnship.
.
lbat allows the Panthers to play a Norberta Garndo, a thltd-round Whtte sa1d. Brett knows 11. I know
:,o "People keep saying we're only on the road, and in its two,~ears has
The Panthers have six de_fensiye low-risk offense, led by Kerry draft choice this season, is at right it. We all know it. This ,may be the
J.hiying an expansion team," Green played at no colder a pi 'l:e than starters over age 31, 12 players who Collins, their first-ever No. I draft· tac~le, where he'll have to block last chance for some of us."
il&amp;y defensive end Sean Jones said.
Washington, whe~e tern ra!'Ures hii.Ve been to Super Bowls and six pick.
·
White.
· !': ·"They beat San Francisco. They were in the hig~ 20s and lo~ 30s in
J:ll:at Dallas. They had the second the final game last season. . .
. !t!st record in the NFC. As far as · If the Packer~ win, they'll go to
I,m concerned, they're a very good New Orleans as a .solid favorite tp
MT. VERNON- Rio Grande's women's bas)(etballteam had Stacy 112-010=3, Francis 0/0-lli-0/0=3, Brown 112-010-0/0=2, Hopper 010-010t~am. ~oweverold they are."
become the 13th straight NFG team
.
. .
Riley, Megan Winters, Michelle Tabor and Misty Halley notch double-fig: 1/3=2. 'totals: 19141-7/19-ll/17=71
Total
FG:
26-60
(43.3%)
. .
ure offense that helped the Red women get a 71 -59 victory over the host Mt.
Rebounds: 37 (Riley 10)
Vernon Nazarene Coogars.
·
Blockecl shots: none
The Redwomen (11-6 overall &amp; 5-3 in the Mid-Ohio Conference) saw
Assists: 18 (Tabor 5)
the Cougars (6-9 &amp; 3-3) shoot more efficiently from the field in the firs\
Stettls: 1.6 (Riley 5)
half (11'27 vs. Rio's 11-32 showing). But Rio's 4-for-8 showing at the foul
Tumonn:21
;
11t1NTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- The city will host a Parli'de of line helped it talce a one-point lead at halftime.
Fouls: 21
In the second half, Rio nailed 15 out of 28 field-goal ·attempts, while Mt.
C~mpions Jan. 25 to honor Marshall's f!!o!ball team. Mayor le~.Dean
Vemo'lbarely was more efficient from the field (12~ 27) .
·
·
Mt. Venioo NIIZIIftde: Seiter 8/ll..OfO..l/4=17. Aldrich SI9-215-&lt;W1=16,
Riley
led
all
scorers.
with
19
points.
Tara
Seiter
led
the.Cougars
with
17.
·
:S~ ~ Thundering Herd defeated Montana 49-2~ Dec. 21 in the NCAA
Bib,by
1/5-1/3-6/6"'11, Wright 316-010-0/3;6, Rice 011-1/6-212=5, fulo
The
futurt:
This
week's
agenda
has
the
Redwomen
traveling
to
Fiadlay
Division 1-AA championship game at Marshall Stadium.
l/2:ol0-010=2,
Poland 112-010-0/0=2. Totals: 1913f.4115-9/1W9 ; ·, ,
on
Tuesday
(7
p.m.)
before
returning
home
Saturday
to
take
onMalone
in
a
· . :. '"We've been ·wanting to do sOmething to .recognize our outs' Jling
Tolal
FG~23-54
(42.6%)
2
p.m.
encounter.
.•
ile to
Jt»otball teani," Dean said. "With the holidliys, it's taken. us a
RebOI!Dcls:· 36 (Seiter 9)
.tt&amp;anize this."
. . · ·
"
.
Blocked tibots1 none
r-After the parade, Marshall ooach Bob Pruett wtll dtsplay the champ!· IWllallll
. Aullts: 17 (Bibby 5)
28-43=71
' anship trOphy during h&amp;lftime of the Thund&lt;:ring Herd women. s .basketball Rio Grande
&gt; I
$teall: I I (Bibby 6)
Mt,
Vernon
Nazarene
27-32=59
Dean itid.
Ttlmooren:
25
Rio
Graltde:
Raley
5181/S-6/8=1~.
Wincen
6/13-oi0-212•14,
Tabor
213; ;Abo, durin1 a men's !laJketball m~tchup that niaht. pean said s11t1. will
I
FOIIb: 11 ·
Halley l/6-111-314=10, Kolcun 3/6-011-010-6. Deuaherly 012·
.~nt Pruett with !lhi~way sip hon~ring the team:· ·
.
. 318-(Y()o:l3.
~
•
.. '
'1

·I,!

. .,

"Now I don't hear much of
that," he said. ''I think the results
speak for thenl~lves. He's his own
~uy. He has done this on his own."
What Coughlin has done is simply amazing. Given virtually com- ·
plete authority on personnel decisions, he's built a title. contender in
two years. He took an expansion
team to four wins in its debut season
-even if that was overshadowed by
Carolina's seven victories in its first
year. And he's guided the Jaguars
from a 4-7 record to the playoffs,
and then to stunning road wins at
Buffalo and Denver.

By DAVE GOLDBERG
.
;,. GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - A
bliidensome history against no histor~; atoll. ·
•',Titat'. s what makes today's NFC
e gilme· between the ()reen• Bay
ckers and Carolina Panthers so

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'

.

·Packers to .haveehands
full with Panthers in NFC title bout
.

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:t 'atriots to host~~Jaguars i~ AFC cham,p ionship game .t oday
"i FOXBORO, Mass . (AP) -

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Kansas wins; Ole
Miss upsets UK

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GALLIPOLIS

.

In Top 25 college hoops,

from

. allla County cou
. rt news

.

··

e

·'"'ad

of

Promote Wellness

::J.n Ohio college basketball,

hnt~·••w

~~~~~..~_?-~!.~~..

Clerk
Courts B_urger
honored upon retirement

Bar

I

;

.DU rallies to hand

.
ON RmREMENT- LouiH Burver, who,..... the ..
position ot Gallle County clark of courta for 20 y•re, wei honored by G•n• County Courthoua 1taff, flmlly end frlende lit ·I
. retlre11181lt party blf- IMvlng office Jan. 1.
·
··

]cy roads blamed for rash
-of accidents in Pomeroy

.

Middleport, Fred Bias, VMIH,us1~1
ed by Middleport;
I Q:36 p.m., Stale Route 124,
cuse, RuueU Reiber, VMH, Willlect
by SyracUJe squad.
POMEROY ·
8:02am., West Main Street, Ien-:
nifer Cross, VMH, auto acciden!- ~
7:36 p .m., West , Main Stree1. ·
Pomeroy, Hugh Davis, treated, n .
tran~rted.
'
, , ,
· RUTLAND
1
8:04a.m., Overbrook Center, 333;'
Page St., Middleport; Maxine Phil~
so~. VMH.
:

...

GALLIPOLIS -:-- Louise Burger
celebrated 33 years of service in the
Galli a County Clerk of Courts office
on Dec. 27 with a retirement pany
hosted by clerk's employees.
Burger had served the past 20
years, five consceutive tenns, as the
elected clerk in Gallia County; one
year as acting clerk (upon beins
appointed by the Republican Party at
the' retirement of the then- incumheni
clerk Marjorie Rinehart), and 12
years as an employee of the clerk's
office.
·
·
Gallla County Commissioner
POMEROY - Officers of the · Emergency Medical Service ambuPomeroy Police Department investi, lance suffered minor injuries in a one- Harold Montgomery opened the
gal!'d six accidents Thursday and Fri- vehicle accident on West Main Street retirement pany with the presentation
day. Most of the accidents were near Locust Street Friday &amp;round 8:03 of a Gallia County Distinguished Serattributed to icy roads.
a.m .
vice Award plaque to Mrs. Burger on
' Sally L . .Ervin, 38, Racine, was
Jennifer Cross, 22, Racine, was behalf of the commissioners, comdriving through the Pomeroy Parking responding to a call for assistance mending her for the many years of
Lot Thursday around 9:15p.m. when when the 1989 Ford ambulance she dedicated and impartial service to the
jler vehicle · struck a parked 1996 was driving slid on ice and into a wall .citizens of Gallia County.
jJMC owned by 1\:fichael' J. Trent, age on the right side of the road, sustaiR. "L9uis~ 0 xem1Jiified true profes~nreported. Pomeroy, police reported. · ing moderate damage.
Slonabsm m the druly operation of her
Ervin's 1995 Dodge sustained
. She was transported by another office," Montgomery said. "Louise
heayy damage while Trent's vehicle squad to Veterans Memorial Hospital will be truly missed by the commisreceived light damage. No citations in Pomeroy, where .she was treated sion, the other county offices and
)"ere issued.
and released.
. ...
departments, the attorneys an~ the
Friday around 7:26a.m., Chad N.
No citations were issued.
citizens ofGallia County."
.·
Sinclair, 26, Pomeroy, was driving on
At 8:40a.m. #riday, a 1993 Ford · State Rep . .John Carey presented
Main · Stteet and slid on ice while driven by David Averi on, 28, Mid- Burger with a certificate signed by
. attempting to- turn onto Butternut dleport, slid on ·ice on Union Avenue, Ohw House Speaker JoAnn DavidAvenue. ·
and struck and broke a fire hydrant, · son.
, His 1989 Ford truck went into the causing mod~rate damage. to his .
Lawrence County 'Clerk of Courts
Dale Burcham, representing the Ohio
Farmers Bank parking lot and vehicle.
Jnocked over a no parking sign,
No injuries or citations were ·Clerks Association, presented her
.,.ceiving light damage. No injuries or reported.
.
with a plaque from the association. .
~itatiqps , Vf!l'i' f~p9rted . .
; . , · Aeavy dB!Rage was i~cu~d to
Attorney Douglas Cowles, repre" ~o injuries or citations were two vehicles in an accident on Lin- ' senting the Glallia &lt;:::ounty
Asso. feported in a two-vehicle accident coin Heights late Friday afternoon, ciation, presented Burser wilh.a cer.Friday at 7:58 a.m. in the parking lot. police said.
.
tificate for round tiip l!irfare to New ·
··'William 1. Nicholson, Middle• Orleans, La.; for a·visit·with her son
: Stephanie McCarty, 27, Letart,
W.Va., ~s turning onto the parking . port, was northbound when his vehi-. and his family.
.
ot when a vehicle driven by cle collided on a narrow curve with
Gallia County Common Pleas
Christlyn Hill, · 48, Racine, was a southbound car driven by .Greg . J:ourt Judge Joseph L. Cain presented her with a certificate.
Jmable to stop and struck the left side Stewart, Pomeroy.
'llf her car, causing moderate damage. · · The vehicles were towed from the
She · also received a resolution
fiill's vehicle sustained light damage. s.cene. !here were no injuries or cita· . from State Sen. Jan Michael Long.
~ No injuries or citations were lions m the 4:09 p.m. acc1dent,
In addition to the 'several digniJ eported.
according to the report.
taries. on 'hand, several co-workers
" The driver of a Meigs County
and friends were in.attendance.
'"G'
. •
·
·
Family members present in.ciuded:
herhusband.Robert"Bucky"Burger; her son and daughter-in 71aw, Mike
"
Common Pleas
ond Ave., Gallipolis, charged with and Stephanie Burger, and their
,. GALLIPOLIS -· The following disorderly conduct was fined $100.
daughters, Rachel and Tori, all of
'~ctwns were recently filed in the Galj ia County Common Pleas Court:
·~ Dissolution granted '-- John R.
benney and Joyce L. Denney, no
_addresses available.
-. . Dissolution filed - Earlie Can'
~.950 Bullskin Road. Gallipolis, and •
·· _l\udree Carr, ·same. address.
:; Divorce filed - Ivan L. Lane,
4165 Bladen Road, Gallipolis, from
..Lyla I;leth Lane, New Castle; Steven
~wens. 705 Starcher Road, GallipoJis, from Viki Owens, same address.
""unlcipal
.
~ GALLIPOLIS - · The following
)ctions were recently resolved in the '
j}allipol,is Municipal C&lt;iun:
• Angela Ferrell, 1566 McCormick
:ftoad, Gallipolis, charged with pass:ing a bad check, was fined $150 and
~ne year probation.
~ .
,
'
.
·:: Gerald Hall, 40, 1419 State Route
:88, Gallipolis, charged with driving
·"!lnder the influence, was fined $750,
..;a days jail, one year probation and
'it two-years license suspeRsion.
:2 To'" C. Holderby, 34, ProctorVille,
' harged with DUI, was fined $750,
0 days jail, one yearprobation and
'S)ne year license suspension.
,
- Jeremy , L. Williams, 19, 36L
. :)Ieasant Hill Road, Gallipolis,
.4harged with theft, was fined $150,
~ne year probation and 40 hours ~om'1\tunity service.
·
· ': Morris F. BlazerJr., 37, S09Sec-

!;$ ports

Section
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Sunday,,......., 12, 1117
Pomeroy • FUddl1port • Q II$.GII, 0H • Point Ph111nt, WV

• r ,

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WAIWIU.(4S)
I'Q, lilt P'hC.ATr T

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s. n.:ter

I

EASTME~GS-Atypical

oflhe
inaer-county rivalry of lhe pasl four
decades. Friday's Easlem-Soulhcrn
boul again regislered high on lhe
Richler scale for exciament. as ahe
Tornadoes claimed a hard-foughl
• 70-61 vicaory befroe packed house
'· 81 Easlem High School.
'·
Soulhern, again playing ils tradition hard game, has rebounded lo a
· 3-7.overall·mark, 2-5 in the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking' Division.
: while Eastern dropped to 6-4 and 3. 3, suffering its first back-to-back
. losses of the year.
Southern was led in scoring by
, senor Jamie Evans, who scored at
will a1 crucial momenls in lhe game.
notching 20 poinls as well as lead the
Tornadoes with seven rebounds.
Ryan ·"Butch" Norris, who always
lakes a Iiki ng to the Eastern hardwood, posted 16 poinls and six
rebounds, while Adam Roush
notched I 0 points.

a

.l

Easlern was led by Daniel "Big
Cat" Otto's 19 poinls and nine
rebounds. Olio 11ickcd up ihc slack
levied on the Eagles' when ace guard
Eric Dillard went down in foul trouble. Josh Casto had a solid 17-point
pcrforrnartcc. while Rickie Hollon
neltcd 14 points and seven rebounds.
Teammate Sieve Durst grabhcd eight
rebounds and had seven points.
Dillard. the Eaglcs' leading scor- ·
er wiah an 18-poina average, scored
the game's first two points, but that's
all he was allowed 1he remainder of
the conics!. Dillard's play was limited to 14:23. less than half of the 32
minute regulation. when he got in
early foul trouble.
. Roush came right back to lock the
score at 2-2, initiating a see-saw
scoring rodeo that saw Southern take
ils first lead at the 2:38 mark when
Evans hit · conseculivc baseline
jumpers for an· 8-.6 tally. Durst ·
retuned the favor to knolthe score at
·8-8, lhen Jerrod Mills hil a free throw
at ahe I :49 mark: as Dillard exited

. :~

with two fouls. Easlem neglccled to · season. Friday .was no exception.
box the boards and although Mills The Tornadoes had on lheir game
missed he got lhe important carom. faces and .whipped up some nasty
Mills flipped to Evans, who made lhe weather of their own in the Eastern
return pass to Mills back door for an , Biosphere. The Tornadoes also rec11-8 SHS lead. ·
pgnized a golden opportnity and
After Roush canned a jumper, soughtlo blow away the Dillard-less
Jeremy Kehl lifled Eastern with a Eagles.
back door cut. Then Hollon drilled a . Mills, Evans, .Roush and Norris
three-poinler al the buzzer-for a 13- all hopped aboard .the. scoring bliJ1d
13 dea~llock. ·
wagon .and pushed forward to the
Within minutes of lhe stan of the game's biggest lead, a 31-22 SHS
second canto, Southern had a 7-0 advantage. Eastern slipped to 40-29 · ·
No.,-is-led run on the Eagles to on -two plugs by Roush and a Pete
prompl an EHS time at the 6:00 Sisson jumper.
mark. Otto took charge and lifled
Casto hit a lane driver, and Otto
Eastern to within ahree al 20-17.
neued two free throws with 33 secThen, at ahe 5:27 mark Dillard onds .left in the half to poll Eastern
picked up his third foul o( ihe game, • 10 within seven al 40-33.
a rare chargin foul in the right corRenewed by \he halftime break,
ner. Dillard sat out the remainder of Eastern got to work quickly with all
the half as lhe call was one of many of ils components on the floor, CasqueSiionable whistles bringing dis' to hit a lane jumpe! and Otto canned
pleasure to EHS mentor Tony a three to cutlhe SHS lead lo 40-38. 1 ·
Deem's bench.
·
t:;:aslo grabbed a aheft and had a
Southern, despite its record, has chance to tie but 11,ndet: pressure
played very hard ~roughout the
(See TORNADOES on B·3)

I= I, Jac~ie Parker 2-0-0=4, Chasatie
20 fouls.
Hollon 2-0-0=4, Angie Wolfe 0-2=2.
The future: Eastern goes to VinThtals: 10.0.1M1=30
cent to play Warren Local Wednes~
day.
·
Federal Hocking: Karrie Trudo
Oulrfc[ hltab
1·0-0=2, Carrie Russelr 5-0-0=10,
Ljndsay Han S.O,O=lO, Terella ·
turnovers• .
Eastern. ·
~8-9-9=30
Fo;deral hit26u59, 0-31hrees, 2.6. Federal Hiickitlg· 12-10-16-'16=54 ·•Waderker 4-0-0=8, Dehbic ·Buck 5at the line an!l grabbed 27 rebounds,
Eastern: Becky Davis4-0-2=10, 0-0=10, Jessica Hahomey 1..0·2=4,.,
Beth Elasky 2-0-0=4, Gretchen Linled by Gretchen Linscoll with cighl. Stepanie Evans 1-0-2=4, Jessica
FH had nine sleals, 14 turnovers and Brannon 3-0-3=9, Ann Wiggins 0-0scott 3-0-0=6. Thtals: 26-0-116.54'

with I 0 points. '
Easlem hil 10-39 shots, 10-21
free throws and grabbed 25
rebounds, led by"Brannon's nine and
Davis' six. Eastern commilled 25

Southern girls beat Trimble 53-::38 to claim tou,rney title
OLOUSTER - Led by senior
: Renee Turley's 22 points, the South: em Tornadoes claimed a 53-38 lri, , : umph over the Trimble Lady 'Cals to
• clai.m the Trimble Holiday classic
tournament tide on Dec. 30, 1996. .
Southern · mlled to a 16-8 lirst
: period lead before leading 26-20 at .
· the half. After three frames, Soulh: em opened il up 44-291hen rolled on
; lo the 53-38 win.
_ Turley led the way with 22 points
· and 10 rebounds wilh six steals, and
.! a team-high seven assists. Brianoe
. : Proffill added 10 poinls. .
; Sherry Davis and Misty Lent
·: each had 12 points for Trimble.

-.

.

---~-sports

.
'
Southern hit 20-49 for 41 percent,.
hilling 3-10 threes, and ·wa.~ 10-13 at
the line with 34 rebounds (Proflill
II). SHS had 12 steals, II assists, 10
turnovers, nine fouls and four blocks.
Trimble hit 18-41 for 44 percent,
hit one of four threes and 22
rebounds. THS had live steals, five
assists. 21 turnovers and .15 louis.
Reserve notes: Souahcm won the
reserve contest 35-24 to claim the
Junior Holiday Cla.-.ic. Soulhern
wa.~ led by Stacy Lyons' 19 points.
Tricia Shifnet had 12 for Trimble.
Ou1rkr ll!llb
16-10-18-9=53
Southern
8-1·2-9-9=38
Trimble ·

Southern: Renee Turley 6-24=22, Cynlhia Caldwell, .1-1-0=5,
Jenny Friend 3:0-0=6, Conny Horst
0-0-2=2, Brianne Proffill 4-0-2= I0,
Erica Amott 3-0-2=8. Totals: 17·3·
10113=53

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. 'The. Daily Sentinel and l~e Sunday of the NBA finals .
The deadline for submissions of
· 7imes-Senrinel value the contribu: tions lheir readers make to the sporls local baseball- and softball-related
•!leCtiotis of these papers, and they photos and related articles. from T. ball to the majors, as well as other·
: will continue 10 be P4blisbcd.
• However~ certain deadlines for spring and summer sports. is the day
of the last game of the World Series.
i submissions will be observed.
These deadlines are in place to
; The-deadline for photos and relatallow
contributors the lime they
: cd articles for foOtball and o1hcr fall
; sports is the Saturday before the need to acquire their photos from lhe
photography studio/developer · of
' Super Bowl.
.
choice
and to give lhe staffs the
' The deadline for phf?tos and relllled articles for basketball (summer chance to publish these iaems in the
basketball and related camps · fall appropriale season for those sports.
, u~der the SU!IIIJ!er spOrts deadline)

.

'

Trimble: Missy Richards 1-0- ·
0=2, Sheryl Davis 2-0-0=4, Sherry
Davis 3-1-i=IO, Misty Lent 6-0, ·
0= 12. Bobbi Lent 4-0-0=8, Amher
Six 1-0-0=2. Totals: 17·1·112=38

Januaey SVPIR Sale!
'97 NISSAN lEG. CAB 414. TaUCK

.

134 hoi'Hpcnoer, 5 .,., powlir .teerlng, r•lder fiii'H, 3 yr.·
36,000 mi. billie coverage, 5 yr.~.ooo inlle limited power train

COVIflllll.

.

'97 115511 SINTU 4 DOOI IE
5 1p11d wHh llr, AMIFM etereo eauette. Plul .-11, mUCh
morell
·

-

.

"'J

-

~

-

........

"':..

~,

$11,995'

lAVE •tfi ON·AU. IIEMA.INIMi
. . NJ88AN81N 81'0Q[

PUzzle on ·.o 2
'

By GARY ,CLARK

2

0 0 1·2 I
30 • 12-22 . 72

·'

.•

'

1ZJ4Tot
. 16 21 22 13 72
8 14 7 J6 4S

• , BufW
Wah

JlJNIOR VAltSITY

16-8 fll'll period lead and never
looked
after 11
iacr
advanutp io 37-22
lhc
y

1

I

..

• II. ••Pagelit'....
·-

.

the evening witb Seth Howard and
Corey Johnson collecting lix apiece .
but the detcnniaina f..:tor was the
pltysic.:llllaiJI!i and bulk possencd
by the Bi1411L S~stics for. Buffalo

to claim a 79-64 decision from tbe
local jayvee 1q~
· WHS led for tbe bq:ter part of
tine periods and ttailcd by three
~ pnJ into the 6nal stanza befCR Buf.

on the SCIIOii. .
,
Matt Wilson sarcd 29 poinls, 1'ui-- .

Harris 18 and Josh Fouch -12 for~
point of the COIIICII Any lhouJbts of
winnm wbile Ryan Ruisel nolcbecr
IIOC•Mwl bllf'Wbile FllcaD o•• ...k
25 and Slerling Shields 12 fo;were quickly
by the Wayne were unavailable.
.
~
falo Wayne exploded for 32 fourth Wiiuima.
Bilonl a a 22-7
period outbta1t
In tbe pn~llininary contest coach quarter tallies with 12 of those comThe White Fakons will IIICmptto: ~:
by Buffalo Wayne iDCreaSed the FI'IDir. Capehart's Wahama junior ing 81 the free throw stripe. The set· reverse its modest two game losing
home teams advantaae to 59-29 vanity· saw ill,winning streak come back was·the fmt of the year for the skid next Tuesday evening when theY..court.
.
.
throa&amp;b tine qlllrtcn of play.
to a conclusion as the Bisons erupt· White Falcon junior vanity and left uavel to Elk Valley for a return mate
WIIS cleared the bench in the · eel for 32 poin~ in the final quarter tbe Bend Area team with a 4-1 slate with the Eagles.
Wlhama pl.:ed only .oae player
:...
in double fisure scOO!If while sur- final eight minUICI and tbe locals secfcrinl., ita lowest offCIIIivc Showing ODd ream unit managed to .outscOre _ _ _,;.__'!""-....;,_ _ s~orts briefs,--------...:.
~·
or tbe ieaiOn in falling1D 3-4 on the Buffalo Wayne 16-13 during the peii{
.
. . ' ...
1996-97 lwdwood Cllliplign. The od but the huae defeclt proved to be
SYDNEY, Australia (AP)- Sec- I Saiurday at the Sydnciy Interna- Henman, 22, became the first BnusliBead Area team shot I poor 39'11&gt; and too much to overCome with the ond-seeded Martina Hingis collect- tional.
player since 1902 to win lhe men·t committed a dlsbessing 2A turnOvers Bisons prevailitig by a large 27 · ed her third career singles title by
singles
title when he heat Spaniard'.;.
Hingis, 16, won the women's
in the CODICil wbicb pmvcd to be a point margin.
-::.:
beating Jennifer Capri ali 6u U -7, 6- final in 84 minutes. Earlier, Tim Carlos Moya 6-3, 6-1.
Buffalo Wayne placed .four ·
major {actor in the oae..lcled defeat.
"We had trouble all night long startcn in double figun: scoring
with the BiDII bulk In lhc paint," a with Seth Deerfield leading Ill scorde~ Falcon coach Lewis Hllll · ers in the contest with 16 points folDEADUNE FOR
OF 1897
are Four Dollare
llali!d- "1bcir big DIU lllltlcmeath. lowed by Plymale with 13 and 10
eaeh
from
JoSh
Gibson
and
Justin
for
each
dog,
male
or
female.
Kennel
F
,,.
'TWenty
Dollare
($20.00).
To obtllln · :
($4.00)
Plymale. pretty much. had his way
Trent.
Wahama's
lone
double
figure
llcanaa by mall, complete and return application to: . Nancy Parker, Campbell, Melga County
witli ua !oiiight. Bulf-'o Way}le got
several olfenaive rebo!tiMis which led scorer was Kevin Shields who
AudHor, P.O. Box 551, Pomeroy, OH 45789. Encloaa a -"-aclcll'lllaacl, llamj)td envelope wllh
to easy bucketS ucl that es8Cnlially notched II marken while Keith
a cttecl( for the price of the llcenaa. .
. ·
.
·
·
·
Wll the Story Of the game the Vctcr· Cundiff came off the ·bench to add
eight tallies for the White Falcons.
···········~························· .
an &lt;:110 IDelltor added."
.Wahiuna totaled 26 idlounds on
Buffalo Wayne jiiJ!Iped out to a
OWNEROFDOO------~----~--------~--~------------------ :
. '

..

_

.

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

. • , WARAMA (64) , Ru.11 (3)8·
• 0.1·25; Sllie1da 4-4+12: Hulf
• ·: 2-3-4-7; Uoyd
(1)0-3-4-6;
:· ~ (2~

TOWN8tiP

y':t,=
:2
IJ:l:P?"'
1~3-2;
H ·
• .. ..().().2; Martin CJ..O.O.O; Roosh

HAIR

Breed
If Known

·;.~ CJ..O.O.O;
. Hams -U"'V"'U"t
"" n n. 1,.AAI
ro-.
'
: • aolly ()..().().0; 'Thlfmon 0..().().();
: ~ -Totals (6)1&amp;-10.11-64;

Feel
Paid

•

:

BUFFALO P (79) • MA. Wal1011 11..().7-10; Harris (1)4-7·10:. 18; Pouch 3-6-6-12; Malt-Wal-

11115 PON11AC GRAND AI
GNtn, AIC, NT, AIIIRI
Cllllllt, Ill, crulle, P. wlnclon I P. i~M~•"-"'"""-.....~
1119 PON1IAC GRAND PRIX SE - ·
Clllllll, tilt, crulle, P. wlndowll -•·-·--·-11M FORD TAURUS GL H288, 35,000 1111111,
AIC, A/f, AI/FII C111., till, crulle, P. windows,
lacbiP.
11M POH11AC
All6275, Red, 211t'. 44,000 1111111,

,

...

AIIIFII cat., 111t, cntiu,'P. wtndowl, P.lacb..••."""";$1G,810

1995 OLDS ACIIEVA 16274, Red, AJC, NT, AliJFM CIIS., Ull,
crui•, P. windoWs I lockl .........................._................$10,915
1995 FORD CONTOtiR GL 11315, llulgundy, A/C, NT, AII/AI
Cllleltt, dllllllllron, dlllllir INiga '"""'"'"'"·--... $11,195
1!1112 HONDA ACCORD EX IC45, AJC, AfT, AII/FII cat., till,
crulle, P.1111100f, CUIIIIm wll1lla, P. w~ldowa,locb l

mlnOrs......~...................:......~.·-·-···---.....................$11,915
1eM CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 16267, Red, A/C, AfT, AII/FII
cat., Ull, Cllllu, apart whlell, llr big, lllli-lhtfl system, P,
........ locki ..........................................................$14,185
11115 PON11AC GRAND PRIX SE 11343, Red, A/C, AfT, Allft
P. wlndO\illlocb,
...

CAVALIER 11367,

.. ·

t..().

•'
,

Score hy Qlutrtcn:
1 2 3 4 Tot
';

&lt;'

' ; Wah
BufW

.
~.

... '\

AIIIFII- tit. crulle ••- •••. - ...........-···-··-·...- ....S1o,a&amp;O

.11M FORD TAURUS GL 11332, Glien, ¥:1 eng., A/C, NT,

1011 3·1·3-7; Blllllley 2·2·3-6;

; . Gibloa (1)1..().2-S:. Stepder
=. 2-2; 'lbtals {2)25-23-36-79.

19 IS 11 19 64 :
. 18 11 18 32 79

~;Tornadoes

wlh.,.

•~
(Continued from B-2)
'.
· : &lt;missed the break-away lay in, spark·
; ~ ing a coast to coast drive from
&lt;Evans and a 42-38 tally.
·
: - Durst scored on an inbounds play,
; ; (42-40) then ·Evans went back door.
·:Casto retaliated for a 44-42 .score,
: :lhen Dillard picked up his fourth foul
: •at the 4:07 !'n¥k of lhe third round. ,
; :Dillard relreated to the bench where
• :he remained unlil lhe three minule
: ;mark of the game. ·
: • Casto came back with a score (46-·
t,:~): . ~n_, a Durst buc.ket. · sand- .
~ 0w1eh00 iUliun&lt;! a Evans dnve brought
. : ;t~e score .th 48-47 with I :20 .left in
· ; ;lhe fiame. On Casto's score, a charge
• •was called, bul the buckea was good, : ;forcinJ .COach.Caldwell to argue his
: •case and cbn'cctly so. At this poinl
; : tlic game wentlhrough some physi·
; :cal stages, on the ragged .edge of :
• •unconltol. Two Souahern players ·
; :and·two EaSicm·playeis dove for a .
; ;l&lt;iose.ball. A whistle broughfjoy to
• :the homelown Eagle crowd, but the
; :call brought_forth a lot of dissalis~· faction.
·.
; : btto was whistled for a foul, lhcn
' ' several seconds later- as if in response
i ito a remark, Ouo was whistled for a .
: rlcchnical. foul, bring lils game to.tal ·
; ;to four personals.' Deem questioi)Cd
: •official Scoii Moore, saying "What
· ~ idid he say'!" and the official respond) ;ed, "He didn't say a thing... he pushed
; *when got up."
·
~ : Allhough Soua~ern missed both
• !ends of the technical and had a
_;:turnover on the inbounds. play, no
::more scoring took place the remain: ·der of ahc"quaner, which ended with
• :southern ahead 50-48.
..
: : Casio hit.a jumper and Ono tied
:;the score at 51-51 after an Evans~
: -throw. Jesse Maynard hustled
: ~hrough the lane for a short jumper.
• :Otto fouled out an an excuse me foul
· ; )lnd halfcourt (6:24) !hen Evans look
: -con1rol and led SHS to a 58-52
· : :.ctvant&amp;ge. Sotithem then ran the
· i:ldck down ·from 4:30 to 2:16 and ,
·: 13&amp;s1ern helplessly watched from its
: man-to-man pressure until Casto
: 4rew a foul to stop the clock.
·: • No.rris and Billy Sheppard then
: ;went to town"l!'ith greal foul shoOt·
: 1ng as Eastern tried 10 force a come• l&gt;ack bid by puuing Southern at the
; ·lirie. Hollon hit a three and a long
but il wasn't enough as .Souah- .
; ern's ftee throw expertise'pushed the
' ··kore lo lhe 70-61 finale.
:.1 •ReaeLte notes: Southern won
t the reserve game 55-43 led by Adam
i·:btmings' II points, Troy Hoback's
itO and Russell Reiher's scvcn.1oey
~ Dii)Qn had II for Eastern while Jere• iny, Casro had nine points and live r
}ssists.
·

NOTicE: Llcenaa muet be obtllned no leter.than January 20, 1987, to avoid paying panaliy. After thll ·
dltao panaliy will be $4.110 for llngl~ tag and $20.00 for Kenlllll'-.
. ·
·

'

i

.~t::=

..

2

:.two.

$13,495

'

0 0-0

1 0 0-2

~

-

.

T-8 Corrllfl Mdanl
KENOVA WV--&amp; !be IOCOild
ltnli&amp;bt OlltiDa the WllwM White
Falcoas fell bebitid -tyad newr
reconnd 111 Bufl'alo Wayt» mjoycd
an cay 72-45 c:ep lriumph over
cwch LewU IIIII's Bead Area squad
'ThuRday niaht 011 the Bisons home

6 0 1-4 13
0 2-2 10
0 2·3 10
0 2-2 li
0 2·2 8
0 2-2 2

4
4
3
3
0
1

• ·· Score hJ Quarters:

•

Federal Hocking girls hand Eastern 54-30 loss
EAST MEIGS - The Federal
: Hocking Lancers broke open a ~lose
• game to defeat tlie young Easlem
: Eagles 54-30 in a Tri' Valley Conference girls' varsity basketball con·
- lest at ~tern on Jan. 2.
, Three Lancets· .Carrie Russell,
· -: Undsay f(an and Debbie Buck - hil double figures 10 lead the way
: with 10-poinl efforts. For Eastern,
Freshman Becky Davis led the way

T. Hlnia
J. Giblon
D. Ward
M. Wlbon
'llltall

:

I :! .Southern hands Eastern ·70-61 ·-.loss •' By SCOTT WOLFE
' T-5 Correspondent

0 0 0-0

'

'READY TO PASS.- EMiem'l Stelle Durat (40) prep8l8l to pau
• tile bill In S1ride during Frlcley nlght'a Hocking .Divlalon game
: 8glllnlt Southern, In which the vlaltlng Tarrilldaee walked - y with
~ a 70-61 victory. (PIIotO by Scott Wolfe)

1 0 0-0

•

J. Giblon
J. 'neat
B. DiDpa

'

o.o

•

Buffalo-Wayne tatlies 72-45
win over Wahama
.
.
'*"
:eta
zmed

~

s

4
4
4
4
3
2
0
0
0
0
45

BUWAi.o W (72)
JG Jpt PTM·o\Tf 'f.
S. Dee field
8 0 0-3 16

:

• FIRES
-Southern's Rpn Norris (Mft) t1rw the
bllll to an out of view lelunm8ta •• Ealtllm'a Eric Dillard (12)
clehnds on tile play during Friday nighfl game at Ealla 11 High
School. The JOI'IIIIcloel' 70-61 victory made the Eagl11 ..rr.rlhalr
flm COIIMCutive 101111 of the yeilr•.(Phclto by Scott Wolfe)

8

0 0 0-0
15 2 ,.14

B. Sbillz
': Tolall

I

11

2 0 1·2
2 o 0-3

C.Je• •••

D.JUaa

t•

3 1 2-2

2 0 '-S
1 0 2-2
2 0 0-0
2 o
0 1 0..0

s.~

.f

Pomeroy •lllddleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pie aunt, '!fV

1111111

13-27-10-20:70
•Easlem ' .
· 13.20-15-13=61
, : .Soutbem: · Adam Roush 5·0·
:&amp;.=10, Ryan Norris 2-2-6110=16,
•Jamie Evans 9..().215=20, Jesse May- .
:iiard 1-0-114=3. Jarrod Mills 3-0:~/6=11, Billy Sheppard 1-0-617•8.
Sisson 1-0-0=2. Totall: 2Z-l·:illt'3la70
.
: . ·Eufeni Eric. Dillard i~Q=2,
:tosh CillO 7-0-3/...,17, Rickie Hoiloll 2-2-1417= 14, Daniel Otto S-2··
"3/5:-19, Steve Dlat3-0-113oo7, J - ,
·lly Kehi.I..().(JII).2. 'l'utl!ll• 17+

:Pete

.

:a111w1
•

.··

,,

. P.O. Box 551 Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

1

,

·

NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
Meigs County Auditor

·

EXPLORER 4 DR.
1997 NISSAN SENTRA GXE
Air, caaaette. tilt.

ONL'F

ONLY ·

1997 NISSAN 4X4 XE

5 apd., alr, cass.,

rear slider, alloj1 wl!'~ls.

ONLY

ONL'F

·1996DODGE
RAM4X4SLT

1994 FORD F2SO XL·4X4 TRUCK
351 V8 angina, 5-IPeed; PQwer st'"ring, PQwer brakes, AM!FM
stereo, 8 foot bed, trailer towing, ,rear ~tep bumper, running boards, .
.ball hnch In bed. ~ one owner. 49,881 miles.
•

1996 CHEVY S-10
CLUBCABLS
V6, al power, 1111, c111iae,
low mile&amp;.

only

ONI.'F .

ONL'F
1994
·COROLLA

1993DODGE
CARAVAN
Aulo., alr, st...O, 7 pasoi8f111tr,
1-()wnet,

oNJ.r

ONL'F
1996DODGE
INTREPID

1996 CHRYSLER
SEBRINC LX

•

�I
p •• 84•~

,

Sunday, Jan'*Y 12,191'7

Pomeroy • llldcl1p0rt • Glllllpoll8, OH • Point PI 1111nt, WV

p ........ II I

C~O$S Lanes
g~t$
83-40
-

~h excit~ng

.

·~ turn ·of events

GAU.IPOUS- Po-.1 by 43
points from Avon &amp;lid AlldRw

Georae. Cross r - a.;.- rollecl

Julof .......... Obio Valley

won the precedin1 junior hilh eontell by a (IJ..67 IMrli• in overtime.
• Chris BllmeU led the DefendeR
with '1if points. Te1111mate Adlm
Holcomb IIIII 14, while Bnd Bowman and Ioeh Sanders tumed lll I 3point effons:.·
Cross Lanes • Heath CUrry led all
· scorers witlt 29 points. Teammites
JO$h King and Roben Weaver had 1.4
and 10 points, respective(~.

In SEOAL

basketball-lrctlon, ·

o........

-·-

.. ..

"--

~Y..t .. , .•.JJ

w...._. . . . . .

l8 1~
.................. 12 18
New l&lt;ney .............. 9 l2
llootoo..................... 8 24
l'ltilodolphio ............. l 26

t
!

·II

a.-.
............... t8
Mii...W. ............. Il

-·-

•
..

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•

•'

••

•• '

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'

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•

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.

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.529

.:100
.500
.lll

16
T..- ................. 11 22

-·-

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._90._77
~ 77, Tol. Chriltioo 7l

!loy. -7~. Colotl!l Wblte 68
!loy. Oolowoorl69, l!otoo62 (01')
Illy. hncnoa 67, Dly, •1 J Adik
64
•
. lleCltaf! RIYenldt 6f, W. Liberty

6&gt;
II
14&gt;

16

.:m

16
17

· -................... t6

17
'

I-.
-

l!. J. l&amp;l.

................. 21

I

Ytah .............. ......... 2.1
Ml-o .............. l5
Dott. .....................tt

.771

II

.676
.44t

19

.m

20

S..A-o .... :........ 9 24 .27]
.Denver ..................... 9 '2j :26S
voneou,... ............... 7 28 .zoo

:.a

I&gt;
s•
12

-13
ll .
II&gt;

.S43
.412

.«10

GoldeaStMe ,.,. ....... ll 20 .394
ll 24 .JI4

"""""x. . . . . . . . .

Gil

44

l.
11 .
17~

20

I~

7

11&gt;
12
12
15

I

s,.......

Oloftwood $0,
Val. 46
IJr.&gt;nd Val. 65, Newbory 44 - ·
GntoriYiew ~ ~~]
o...nlteld~. L~ Clay $0
Hamihon !6, Cia. $yamon:! $1
'111. Auron64

c.-

..

61

' Hudoon66.11ish1Jtnd 61

2 Dr., ABS,

PL, treyleas 1ntry,
Clll., Sport lnt Pkg.

Hunti ..... Ron 10. Z...1'nt&lt;e 61

~·

Huron 66. Pon Clinton 4!
c'a rindlan Val. ~j • .Canton Timkcn Sl
l""ksua C-14.14wt Loromlel1
Jefferson i.~. MilliN Vnl. 4-'
loha Oloo 94, W. lotookinpm 48
Ketatoo 69, Sotoo 63
·
Kc,._ RidF
tm .. S

hd.O...AIIW.

$16,490
Dol Tate Disc111t: .........$1.094

$173

16,426

Alo.tW.Prb 5

"· :st-i..,. Norlhwal·

Alo.tW.Prkt SJ

$11,199

'GniiD=l

5300

hd.......

5,396

AI o.t We Prict 5

1

Keyttone 53. A._ Sl
Kirtt.nd Sl, BerksiUre 47
LaB,..ll, B....... 42
' I...Mniew 66, .......... !J6
·1 M "ood .S$,,GatiNid Has. 53

.

NCAA Division I
men's storeS

.L•••tcr66. M~Franldin$9'

·l.ceobutJ Falrf\itd ~9 . Middlcrown 4~

Friday's action
Ea..

. Boston U. 70, Hofllra6!1i
Dartmouth 75, Corliell66 •
H1111rord 91, Drlawure 62
Hmvan16:l, Columbia 49

l~ .

.

l..cbanon 7t Middlatown Falwick 66
l..elaon-Monroe6.1, Franklin 60
lelllnJ1Qn53.MijrionHanlina41 . ,
Uberty J'enton 40. Hardin Nonhern
Lktina tha. 5Z. Bemc Uni• 47
Uma Bath 6.l, St. 'Mit)') '$ 4
U• SMwaee 54, Ke!Mon l5

~onheuletn $7, Drexel ;\41
"""" 10, Vald4
.
Pri~oo 44. Browa 4o
Tow10t1 SC. 92, Vmnonl 82 (01')

Una St. 68. Mlllonl52
Uttte Miami 49, Cia. Norwood Jl
Lopn Elm'5l, Cin;ltoilte &gt;18
Lonift Coth. 62, Jllldylow 49
~IIYille 59, hld)oaakl 56
Madi1100 49, AlhlobUa 38
Madi100 Pt;iD1611, Wayneayille SS
Mooslleld Sr. 66. -.,,.,.. l\ladj10n

Mldw"'
91. Miami {Ohio) 61
FarWtll

Wu
0. Tete Dllmll.

' Chr. 69, Open
Mandic:ld Temple
.• Door Cllr. l6
'

M•-18. Sooaulky.Porki!'l 7l

()hlo H.S. ·boys' Kores

Mtwietra "lJa:bo. JO

Frlday'sactlon

--

""'"' 6:\'

Akron Firestone 611, Akron Ellet 42
Akron Oarfidd 67, Akron E. 62
Ate•"""' 84. Fedonol tb;kina"
r Allim.:e 48, Nc:w PbiiU=Iphia 36

.&lt;2

Dadalt Dlscmt.

5

'Aio.tW.~ 5 19,505 .

- Marliolfon 65, Conulhon 52
Mattins Ferry 6.'\, Steubenvillo CDtb.

.

Maeys•lllc 10.Dolow... llo!'O' 61
-MaiN 7•. Wilmlltll.c.i )6
•Mauillon 62, Qrrv.t11c M •
Mauillon Jackson 60. UniontOwn

w,.,._ omitk
Momcwon.S. R.qo72

!Ill

Mlediu7~.

·

t..Udl

Alkr6.1, Cin. Puft:tii.Cin. M.-iDn44
Amhent ~9. Fnirview 49
An:hbold 49. MollfJICiicr :\9
Arlillf,IOR $4, Van Bun:n :W
A•htabula Edllcwood 70, .h:IT.:rM~n 62
Ashtabula. H;wbor M , Conik.~l ·f(a
J\u,.inluwn-firch 49. W1arrcn Hardin~

,

MM.-. River Val JO, N. Unloa S2

·

· Akro• Ccm.·Hower 8:'. Akron Ken-

. .

$21,330
$1.825

Wa · ·

$29,615
$1,261 .

.:-~w.Prtt ~8,417

··Mtple Htt,.71 . Moyltelrl5~
(01')

' · Power aea1, remote trunk, 1uto.,
1lr, mr,o,-.

V8, all power,
lelllher.

·~

N. AriUJU 79. MontiiDII S1. 74
Pcpperdine 12, San OicJO 66
San Fmncisoo 86, Loy~la M•ymou•

4l

szoz

an44

Orlaftdo at Ton&gt;nlo. 6:30p.m.
Gokieti State Dt Milwaukee. 8 p.m.
Chcwlolle MSac:tamChlo. 9 p.m.

•

4 Dr. 1uto., 11r, PS, rnr defog., ate;reo. l
$11,906
.,. Tit.._

' w. . .

Was.

------517,299

Krttaint Atler 6.'1 , Oa. PUrcell Mari-

Tonl...l's pmes

72

01 SELECIED,MODELS
FOR AUMITED liME - "HURRY"!

'APR .

-8l,UtoatyUnioo41

...

. Cinc:inm~ti

MONTHS

OlottOU 53, N.•Cattloo.- 4 4·

SGL'f'lll'M!ntoal Vanc:ouYer, 10 p.m.

:

60

UPTO

Geoqct:ow-.66, WC'I..,. lrowa $6

Utah 111 DcnOir, 7::10 p.m.
Boston a1 New York, 8 p.m.
LA. Clippen at MinneiOia, 8 p.m.
HO\IJion • tbi~p. 8::i0 p.m.
Denver at DaJias. 1:30 p.m.
lnditu~~ at Seattle, 10 p.m.

lI

FINANCING

Homlack Miller 61 , Trirnblt&lt; '9
Hillcrat 87. Cio. Clwl•
59
Hill- 71 , Smiltwille 58
Holy N..,.. 67, Cttonlon ND-CL 66
Huber HIS. Wayne 66, Sprina. Soutb

Toronto 41 New.Jmcy, 7:30p.m.
.
San Altlonio a1 Atl~ta, 7:30p.m.
Wuhln1ron ar CLEVELAND, 7:JO

•

1 ·

Olntnl5l. NUa 41

They played Saturday

••,••

s35. lOO

ALL REMAINING
96 MODELS MUST GO

ODELS

96

Fairfield Unioa 70, Hom!troo Twp. J5
Fairleu61,~amwt~Val.40 .
FaiJt'Oft 69, l.od.....,.l9
-Cod.. 62. 11111"'-' 52
Folloria St. Wendelin "'· C1111y 66'
Fnnklin H11. 66, Whllthnll S4
Fremont Rosa 74, Foltoria 67
, Ftomont St.lrqqlll 50. Old Fort &gt;18
oa~; .. 56, a..,.,., 48
Oalloway WOI!Iood 69, Newrolt 61

14
17

Detroit 84, San Antonio 78
OliRto 116. Milwaukee 101
lndi ... IOI, Donwr89
PhoeniX, 102,Ctlartonc90 .
L.A.I.alcers 94, 1diaml 8$

j'l.m.

· lOW

. Euclid
11, - · 64
Foirbottb 62. Beniomln l.rlpa 57

NowYot\ Ill. Bonon98
-120.Phi. .lploitt99
Wuhio.... 102, L.A. Cllppen 91

.

ON

U..57. Yaa Wett-41
Flnt llttpc. l), ~ ll.... 2'1
Erie (Pl. I Pt&lt;p. ll, Lenin Mo. ~~ ..

Frldoy'oocores

••

Conv;, red, white top, red int.

E. .. 65, - W...Uoioo
" $0 •
.·Browo75,
-.,Pile BZ. - t h E . 70

Podltllki-

Por1laod ..............•..19 16
L.A. CUppen ......... l4 . 20
Sammoioto ............ l4 21

NEW 1995 CORVERE ....--...W.•$41,674

DIJtle58, M - • - . . , . ,
llol&lt;er 51, St. ClolnYillo tOT)
· llublio Cot!.- 5l,llllllanl4l
Dublio S&lt;loro 51. a.- City 5!
E. Crtorort 76, """"'eo-try 69
E. o..drtod Show76, Normondy"
E. u..rtpool74, - Y I I.. 4l
E. UYCtPOCII 74, S I oillo 45 ,

••

L.A. Labn ............l1 tO .730
Seattle ................... ,2$ II .694 ·

~·

Solem 52

WPSrERN CONFERENCE

SALE PR ICES IN EFFECTIVE THROUGH 1/31/97

J

.l'JO

~

Cbi"'JOl0.......... ,.... 4 .882
-Detroit .................... 2l 8 .758
Cl.EVELAND ....... ll 12 .636
Atlanta ................... 20 II .645

•

t

-~
.«&lt;Q

42

li.l

CtntraiDiYIIioft ·

Lyne Center slate-e- - -

' -• ----Cage standings-s-".:...

:I

t Ws
10 .714

...... .................... 2l

.

- ........

c-tioo 67, _ , . c-.156
~'JV, -I.Aai-46
Ctoyoltop Fallo 12, Keol-lt

1!.ASTDN CONnUNCE

Pntlat Gr11• Prix srm

Alu
'
_,_,_ ...._._

Cv' ti•0....61.u...d~
c-v~ . 57.~49
c.diM I It oiea 66, ...... 56

NBA liCaDdinp

.

'

I

..

c-. en.t...J l ' l . l l - 51
c · must,......._ ..

Ollio v.tley: Pollud 3-l-2/4z 11.
Lanier 4-0-112=9, NewJ. ld 2-02//4=6, Wolfe 2-0-2/3=1', M~ . '" 24
112=5, McCleese 0-0-"12=2,l 'all 00-112=1. 'lbfall: 1JI!~iJ5.10fl.'....
Total FG: 14-6' (23%)
Rebouuds: 27 (Meyn &amp; Wolf, 6
each)
Assists: 8
Steills:6
Turnovers: 33
Fouls: II

,,

!.

I

Foaltn 22 ·

,9so·

~I

,.

.

end their home stand on Tuesday
..ainst Teay,s Vlllley Christian.

Warren·Local: and Marietta ·notch wins - ,

'

. ,.

'I

Pomel Of • llldclllport • Glllllpolll, OH • Point Ple!lunt, WV

win over
oyc'
.

to an 83~· will over auo Valley
Cross Lanes
19-20-24-20=83
Christian ia the third illllalbncnt of
Cotr11pondent
Ohio Valley
14-S.7-14=40
the - Defenders' four-alDie home
The wonderful thing abouttoda~ NFL confer-•I
stand.
. ·
ence championship games is that Buffalo, Dallas
c-.u-: Aaron oeorae 8-IJunior aiw-d Bo Polllld led the
• llld San Francisco are watching diem with us. For
5/6=24, Andrew George 9-J-()1'2:,2 I,
DefendeR with II poillll, wu their
! the rust time in nine years; none of these teams are
Webb 6-1-011&gt;=15. Wilt 3-0-00.:6,
only dquble-fi~ acorer. He wu
playing for the opponunity to go to the Super
Hyre 241/2;5, Bailey 2-0-010=4,
Bowl.
. .
.
-held to four points in the fir1t half.
Oppeniian 2-0-010--4, Oree_n 1-0: · I am glad there will be two new teams to watch in IWC?. weeks, but you Senior center Ryan McCJ~. in his .
0/0::2, ,,Yalentipe 1-0-0/0::2. TotaiJ:
34149-3111-&amp;'11):.83 . .
.
·
have to acimire the successes of second game for the Defenders since
Totai;,FG: 37·60 (61.7%)
these franchise~ over the : past rewming to OVC from River Valley,
got
his
first
two
points
for
the
hosts.
decade. They just do it right. All
'
three of them made the playoffs
boys~
this year. Injuries probably cost
another
shot
at
the
title.
Dallas
•
' I
Some franchises, such as Arizona, haven't been to the play-· · l
I
offs since the late '70s or early By ODIE Q'DONNELL
Vukb.-lc snired 15 of the 42 Tiger
Marietta: ScQtt Strahler 240=4; Oo=2; Craig Sturgell 3' I -0=9; M~tt
'80s. So although I'm glad to T·S Corre1pondent
rebounds _while Shane Shanton net-" Adam 'I.'rautner 0-2-0=6; Joe Jenkins. 2-0-0=4; Shane· Shanton ~­
see the bi~ three gone, I have
· GfuiPOLJS--Friday's wintery '·ted live of the 21 lronmen grabs. Vukovic 8-0-0=16; Laramie F~rin t- 0-3=11; Rodney Cao:tpbell Cl-0-2=2;
great respect for their organizations.
kiss by Motlier Nature forced the Shanton also led his twn in scoring 0-0=2;. Jeremy Albrecht 1-2-0=8; Jon McDonald 1-0-0=2. Thtall: 10. ·
.Another . exciting tum .of events is the possibility that two expansion postpo11ement · of half of the ; four with II points.
.
'
· Rick SIUh:t' 1-0-2=4; Reece Watson 1·7·30
teams, Jacksonville and Carolina, have the oppnunity to meet in the big Southeast~m Ohio Athletic League QUarter milia
0-0-1=1; l,arred . Edgar 2-1-2=9.
Reiervescoi'e:Marietta~2,Jadc.dance. There is a strong possibility that at least one of them will advance. · basketball games on tap, forcing Marietta
Totals:
15-5·5·50
"
:
·
.
·
son
4S
22-12-8-S=SO
This would be great for football. More imponantly, it should help expansion some re~scheduling for later this J~kson
Jaebob: Andrew Lance·' 1-07:7,10-6 =30
in all spons.
·
. · . month. ·
•
•
It's imponanttb remember rhat the success being enjoyed by Jacksonville
,
The contest between Glllia Acad~
and Carolina is just another in a series of success stories for expansion cmy and River Valley in the Newt
• teams.
·
Oliver Center at Rio Grande plus the
:
Two years ago, the Colorado Rockies played in the National League Point Pleasant trip-to Logan '\'ere
: Divisional Series. It ·was the Rockic,s' thi~d year of existence. Last year, the victims of the weather.
: Florida Panthers, one of hockey's recent expansion teams, lost to the ColHowever, Marietta-made the tOOorado Avalanche in the finals for the Stanley Cup. Consequently, expansion mile trip to Jackson and won by a S0no longer means years of desolation for cities and fans with teams mired in 30 score, and Warren Local made a
last place for generations.
·
60 mile run to Athens to win a 71Naturally. there are NFL owners whp are upset over the success of these 43 verdict.
•
·
expansion teams. Let me try to understand how they feel. They cllarge new
It was ·announced. Saturday that
owners a $140 million fee to join their exclusive _club. (This fee will the Point Pleasant at Logan game haS
, undoubtedly go up the next time !he NFL expands.) After paying this fee, the been te-set for Tuesday, Jan. 28, with
: old established owners expect these new teams to behave. like the '62 Mets the reserve game to start at 5:30p.m.
: or the Tampa Bay Bucs: They should lose_regu_larly for at least a decade.
and thC varsity at 7 p.m. The GAHS• . If an ownership group can raise the $140 million expansion fee, they will River Valley contest has been re: have no problem competing in a' sport, or more appropriately, a business, scheduled for Wednesday, )an. 29 at
~ which has free agency.
_,
the University of Rio Grande.
:
Just look at the signing spree of the Florida Marlins during the past few
Warren Local 71, Athens 43
: , months. Their contracts with Fernandez. Bonilla and Alou will pay them
At The Plains, the Warriors con: more money next year than whiuthe entire Pittsburgh Pirates team will earn. · tinued their hot sliooting to overBriiUUilm
: Expansion teams feel they must win immediately to build fan su'ppon ·ahd come two early Bulldog loads to run
keep interest. American spans fans want immediate gratification. These their league-leading record to 9-1
: owners y;ork diligently tO' give it to them'.
·
and 6- I. Four Warriors broke into
• '1-8 ,.,_
'en;. Ccrmll
' • 4300 Vodec '1-8
• Crulie'Conlrd . .
•~
Let's cheer for the Panthers and Jaguars. After all, hasn't the NFL double -digit scoring, with Chad
•AliomaJIC
•TUllllring'
•~ "
· • Cut1tom Cloth interior
-Ai' Condliul
•Air Cardllon
• 4Clfltlint Chairs
•
P!Mwpromised Cleveland an expansion team in ·1999? That means .Browns fans Spence ·and Dan Greenwalt each
.....
Wlndoos
•A*Sofaiod
•AlrCondllion·
"""'""'•I'!Mwt.odm
could see their team in the 2001 Super Bowl. The Baltimore Ravens will meshing 15 points; Shawn Taylor
..... lncis
• Alnin&lt;.ln Vtlleel8
•~ ~
• l.oMedl •Dual AiiJous
probably !Je' a .500 team by then. Maybe!
·
getting I 3 and Mike Warden adding
•IM'FM Cisi1t1o
•I.Dolledl
• Tilt Sleerlng ,,
. , Nom~ Ca1oat1e
.
.
·
S.m Wll1on, Ph.D. 11 an a11oclllte prolesoor of history 11 the Unlverelty of ' 10 points.
Rio c;lronde. An avid fan of all sports - and a near maniacal follower of buket- Warren connected on 22 of 43 field
·
. Hurry Last Weekend!
· ball- he 11 1 native of Gary, Ind., and a graduate of Indiana Unlverelty- whlcll goal anem'pts, including eight of 15
3.9% APR Up to 60 Mpnths On Selected MOdels•,
·llhould tall readers something 1bout where h" head (and Hoosier heart) Is.
from three-point range. Spence
accounted for three treys; Greenwalt
•
~-'•
and Warden each had two, and Tay''
Fitness center, gymnasium
.
-Pool
.
lor one. Nathan Meyer led Athens
'
,
and racquetball courts
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
with I0 points.
:
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.
Monday -6-9 p.m.
Athens jumped, to a 2-0 lead, forged
.;
•· ' Monday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Thesday- 6-9 p.m.
three ties, and enjoyed its last lead at
-~
Tuesday:..:... 6 a.m.' 10 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
16-1 S in the _second quarter before·
~
WeiJnesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.n\.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
the Warrior firepc:Jwer took over fnr .'
Thursday- 6·a.m.-IO p.m.
Friday- 6-9 p.m.
a 27-18 halftime lead.
.
Friday6
a.m.-9
p.m.
Saturday1-3
p.m.
Behind
-Brendan
Weigly
and
Nate
• S!lturday - 1-.6 p.m.
Sunday, Jan. 19 - 1-3 p.m. and Noel, each with six l!oar&lt;fs, Athens _,-:
Sunday1Jan.19-1 ' 3 p.m. and·- '6-9p.m.
held the edge in rebounding 26-16.
• 6-10 p.m.
Thomas ·also grabbed six for Warren.
•
Ouarter lldlill
•••
Warren Local
13-14-24-20=71
i
Athens
10-8-7-18,.43
·~''
Marietta ............. .... 6 1 ~76 344
'
1986-97 All games
Warren ~: Chad Spence 2: Team
W L TP OP . Gallipolis ................ 4 2 316 311 3-2,. 15; Josh Craddolph 1-0-0=2;
• Chesapeake ........ 10 0 710 478 Jackson ..... ............ 3 3 283 291 &amp;rl Tidd 0-0-1·- J; Tim Stacy 1-0Warren Local. ........ 9 . 1 715 449 · Point Pleasanr. ..... 3 · 2 299 291
, Whaelersburg ........6 2 614 526 Warren Local.. ....... 3 4 389 378. 0=2; Josh, Covey 2-Q-5=9; Dan
• Graenlield ..............7 4 616 551 . River Valley ........... 3 3 293 339 Greenwalt 1:2-7=15; Mike Warden
· j Ohio Valley ............ 5 . 3 552. 563 Logan .................... 2 4 328 332 2-2-0:; I0; Chris Spencer 1-0-0::2;
, Point Pleasnt ....... ..4 3 404 396 ~~:;: ................. ~ 2~ 2~~ 2~~, Sh~wn Taylor 4-J-2,.13; Jeremy
• Eastem .................. 5 ; 4 647 567
Thomas 0-0-2,;2 .' Totals: 14·8Friday's results:
: Logan .............:...... 5 4 552 455
19=71.
• Portsmouth ....... :.... 6 5 - 691 646 Gallipolis vs. River Valley at URG,
Athens: Brendan Weigly 1-0ppnd, reset Jan. 29
'
; . Gallipoli$ ................5 . 5 518 521
2,.4;
Jot Sp.arhawk 3-1-0=9; Chad
: Marietta ..............·... 5 '!! 552 55 · Marietta 50 Jackson 30
Etheridge 2-0-2=6; 4:hris Roach 3-0Warren Local 71 Athens 43
• South Gallia ........... 4 5 529 501
: Athans ................... 4 6 &lt;163 528 Pt. Pleasant at Logan, ppnd, reset 1~: Brent Horst 2-0-0o=4; Nate
Noel 0-I-O=f Totals: 14-l-9""3
• Maiga ..... _.. :........... ..4 6 435 558 Jan. 26
SEOAL reserves:
Jackson ............... ..4 · 7 631 626
• Fairland ..:.............. 3 6 583 616 Marietta 52 Jackson 45
Reserve sco.-.: Athens 49, War• Southem ............... .3 7 536 559 Athens 49 Warren Local 32
ren 32
'· ·
Others
: River Valley ........... 2 8 474 618
Southelfl 70 Eastern 61
• ·
SEOAL VARSITY
~
Marietta 50, Jackson 30 .
: TEAM
WL
POP Minford at Wheelersburg. ppnd ·
At Jackson. big 1oc Vukovic
: Warren Local ........ .6 l 506 . 327 Greenfield 58 Lynchburg 50
• Logan ......... :........ ,.4 2 345 SS9 South Point82 Fairland 70 .
scored 16 points, had 15 rebounds.
Chesapeake 58 Coal Grove 43
: Gal1lpolis ................ 4 2 335 311
three steals, and two blocked shots in
Cross Lanes 83 Ohio Valley 40
: Point Pleasant.. .....3 2 266 281
"NEW' 1887
leading the Tigers (4"3) past the IronSaturday's games:
• Athens ................... 3 4 310 367
"YYIU
GOT'rAmen,' who are winless in six leagile ·
NorthwestaJPortsmouth
: Marfettfi ..., .......... .·..4 3 397 373
Tlllr
outings.
Zane Trace at Greentield
• River VaHey ..•........ 1 5 266 357
The Tigers raced to a 22-7 first
: JacksOn ..........., .....0 6 239 329 Logan at NelsonviUe-York
period lead and stretched it to 34-14
Tueadtlly'a games:
' TOiale
26 . 25 2684 26&amp;4
Gallipolis at Logan
:
SEOAL RESERYJ;S
at halftime in reaching the SOO mark ,
: TIAM
W L P OP Marietta at Athens
in 16 games at 5-5.
Warren Local at River Valley
Marietta shot only 35% on 20 of
••
Jackson at Pt. Pleasant
51, and made only five of 21
•
Southam at Meigs
auempL~ from three-point range, but
.5'
Chesapeake at South Point .
••
Jackson
was even worse. The Iron. Northwest at Wheelersburg
.... u.u. .
Eastern at Wellston
men fired 41 times and· ooly con:
Teays Valley at Ohio Vailey
nected on II field gollls to finis!'~
.
••
with II' 26% ·

~!!'-::'~

-

Mouillott

.

62.

M&lt;Dermon NW 84, Akroa Spri... 61
N. Ro)'dol.41

. Medina Firar Bap1. 83, Oe. Herimae
6J

Mentor Ute Cad~~. 68, Elyria Ca:ih.
fJ7 .
.
Mlumlobura54, Cumill :ll
.

J\¥cml..IIU.61 . Da~ ~I
8:ll'l'll.'!ivillc 66. Rntl(li.!JIM 44

Milbd OW. 6:Z. Hamilton 0.. l3

Benven..'ft.'Ck 62. Fakhnrn 47
· Bedford ~I. Eustlab N. 4~
ll&lt;diMI. MiCh. 12. Tol. Whii""'M
Bellaire H. lk:lmont Onion l.ocnJ 49
O.llhoMOk 64, Brooblllc 60
BelleYue K2.l'I'P'f'Sandusky ~7
Berlin Cent« W(lltern Rc..:rvc 72.
Jackson MihOO 62
Berlin Hiland n. kwetl ·&amp;io 70

Mi-.'flll RirJ,e47, SJwin~ . Locnl42

MirM.'I'Va 63, W. BrMCb . 1

.

Moun1 Vcmon S6.. w-.tldn~ Mt:rnoljlll .
40
'

C:tlib cab, auto;, air, cea1., 1lum. wh.
...
$16,565

N. Adtln 9b. Fqyettcvillt 4~ .

.,. ... -.-.

N. c.:.troll•, 5nyk&lt;f 52

. N. Rid,Cwllle 61, Vermilion ~9
N.w Aloooy 62, Oron'lilte lO
f.ok:w l.oo&amp;kln 66, AllhilrMJ Cmrview

Btlllcy.67. W. Jdfmon !i3 ·
BiJ Walnur41 , OleniMI)' l9

I v,.....-.:

AI ci.t We Price s

Alo.t~Prkt 51

11,79

OIIW. Prkt 5

Black Rl~~.-or 6.1, 8U\:kcyt 60
Bloom·Carrnl) 6!1. Amalld"-

'hmry ••--:--:-:~!!!!

'fllltry Wett----aiWIIII

~llltryl._•------~wa

Bi!horl (W.V:a.) Donahue 71. Bclbirc
St. JOOru 64

Gnlt-----

$15,339· . '

Gnlt o.l

$12,797

Gnlt D=l

w....:·- - - - -

0.."" IJhcMi, _ _ __

J.!..m

Ckar~o.'reft. ~

lkitkin~ 64. HclUJion SK
Bm.:ksviUe ~. Clu~rll!uf .~7
Bristol61, Mnpkwnod ~
Bfookc. W.V;a. MS, IIkliun Crcd. 70 .
Bnuuwick ~ . Berea 47
Buckeye Lo&amp;:i116l. RetiVI..,. Lt-.:al ~I
C..ltlwl.'ll62. Mnnl'l).! (\'Utral ~I
Canal fullon NW M-1, Akr1111 Sprin~.

61

• Conlfcld IW. Salt:m ·4~
Cumnn C.uh. n. Lnui•villc Aquinm1.
49
Cnntoa G~ ~J . N. Cunmn 44
Cnn!on S. U. LouisviUc .oW
Crin~•n 72. Mariot1 Plcaaalll11
Cc:darvtl~ 62. CliRIG~t-Mnnie -'1
C~rg -17, U!:u 41

Cenrmoii~:U. Fai~ 31
C'hallc164. OllffidtiHb. Trinity 41
67. """"60
CheJ:~ S7. Co.1l Circwt 4~
Chilhco.rhe 12. W()rthin,:ron Kil·
.bourne 37
.
Cin. Christian 79. Middlduwn Chr .

3i'd dr., VI, luto., 1Ir, much mora.
$21,262
Gnlt IIIII
S11.399 ·
'hnyl•

a-

.

~2

w.
.

Cin. kings 68. Hamilton Rou4~
·
Cin. McNh.:hult~8 76, D:a)' . Chumi·
na&amp;Je-Julicnne ~ ,
·
Cin~ Moeller 6J. Ci11. St. Xnvitr 52 '
Cin. Nolthwnr ~9 Cin. W:dnut Hilla
~l
.
Cin. Prim:e1~m 69, W. Chttttr Lakota
6l

17,599

AIOtts.liPrkt 5

('in. Rclldin&amp;69, Cin. Taylor 4H

Cin. Roaer

THE $HOE CAFE

&amp;.din ~9

St. Rt. 7, Cheshire, Ohio

Cin. S.:v~n HUll

•'
••'
••

•

.~' !'~~~~~~~~~~~

30 &amp; 35 TON ~AQVE ·
ROUGH TEA,"AIN CjitANES
DOZERS 07_• D-9 • 1150
.'.L?ADERS 11888. ·Me ·1845
~. · 'TWO 831C
SCRAPERS.
.
' . ......
.
•· . ·CASE NO BACKHOE
' CAt 320 TRACK HOE '•
WA1ER TRuCKS ,
31110 TON' LOW-BOY SERVICE

•

'

$35SJ.99

·, liACK

llitJ MMK

•........,..

Col.'2
...
Col._,.,,x....- l ' l·
~I

79. Col. C -

.Wlu.oc) ~nat!RCW. ,1

, ·

.. 1996 CORSICA
Auto., air, 111r10, nice.

Cin. N. C'clllt~

Cin. Woodward HI . Cin. Andman 7.1
Cin. Wyomint: 62. Ci11. ~ Pllfl. ~~
Clliymon110. C011hoci\'Ml 6ol
Cl.:. 8c=111o.'dit.:linc f)(), Ck. VA-SJ 5.1
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Cle. £11rTa:h 87, Ck. UIIColn•Weat
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Cit. O~nville M9~ Cle. Mlll'lhllll f:ll
Cte. Hay 80, Cle. Kennody 69
. de. lndepeMkr...-e 66, Brooklyn '3
cte. Luthmrt E l9. Late Rldl&lt; l2
· C1e. Southellt ~I. Roor11ow• &lt;19 •
Clearvlow 90, llroobido "
Cte.dond E. 49, Cle. - 4 8
. Clyde ?0, Mild Ediaon 4S .
Col. A'*"'Y ~1. Manoneld St. I'&lt;·
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FAX: IIOW-,..2111

.1995 BUICK SKYLARK
1995 OLDS ACHIEVA

All RebttiS

To Deller

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Outdoors

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OWA official says ·plans. for Tycoon Lake fishing pier in progress.
3

down from 295 in the previous year, said that members of various aniand bow-hunters . checked in 328 mal/bini rights groups are attempting
- GALLIPOLIS - At the regular deer. 11le total for all three seasons to gather I 00,000 signitures to have
this issue placed bef01e Ohio voters.
meeting o( !he Gallia County Con- is 3,852 in Gallia County.
As a result, all conservation
l:rvalion Oub this week, about 45
President Ed Clary introduced
groups
in the state are planning a
Marshall,
division
manager
of
Jini'
fllembers heard
on !he new
jjshing pier to be constructed at Ohio W!!dlife Agency, who told the massive fund-raising drive to create
'l'ycoon Lake, .a proposed lake group that the fishing pier now a $2.5 million war chest to pay for
planned for Gallia County's,'JYcoon television, radio and newspaper ads
~lanned for Cooper Hollow, com:
l!"terization of hunting license and a · Lake will consist of an earthen struc- to combat these liberal groups. Marpossible referendum on dove hunting ture for some distance before a shall stated that each of Ohio's 88
wooden pier is attached over the counties will be reql!"sted to pllrticill Ohio.
; Mike McConnell, Gallia County's deeper water. He said !here is no ipate in local fund-raising projects ·
·
'
wildlife officer, gave the final figures completion date for the pier at this for this purpose.
As an added incentive to get more
oo the number of deer checked at time.
Marshall then reported on the people to eonttibutc· toward this
official ~hecking stations in the
county from the 1996-97 deer sea- Ohio dove season issue, that if . fund, the Ohio Wildlife Council has
$0n. McConnell reported that'lhe gun placed on the N9vember, 1997 bal- targeted 40 acres of land in Morgan .
$:ason for deer kills was 3.313, lot and passed by voters, could mark County that will contain a cabin-kit,
cjown from 3,708 in 1995. Muzzle- the first step in gradual elimination to be promoted as the grand prize for
in Ohio. He .the winning ticket holder.
,torulers shot 211 animals in 1997, of all wildlife
. Marshall also reponed that an atti, tude survey will he conducted by the
Ohio Council to .receive input from
citizens on how they feel about wild
· game hunting seasons in our state.
Regarding the proposed lake at

repons

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U.S. BOI,.DIERS ATTACH fual containers to a hovertng 'Army.UH-41011111Ck·
hawk helicopter. The ~ontalner8 •.re
ttan1portld to remota 11t11 and used for
fuel by U.S. mlllt8ry medical teema.
Treatment ceflters are Ill up In 1111 Ho~
duran Interior to care far people who
normally would receive no medical
attention.

·•

. Congratulat~ons,
. C arl ·Sanders

'

Gene Johnson Of
· Gene Johnson
CheMY;.()Ids-GEO
has . nounced that
C rl Sanders
has earned ·
Sa.man of the
,.onthfor
December.

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Come sn oar large
display or call toduyl

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1616 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
446-3672

Amulti-faceted mission

''•

-Pomeroy woman
serves in-Honduras

••

What you
should
kAow
·about
the.ln ew signs
at W1relefss One
stores. Besides
the 'fact that
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BUCK - Juetln Brewer, 13, of Chnter killed 1hle
buck In November. He l:tllled the elaht·polnter Into err- range
ualng rattling enllera and e grunt calf before taking hie ehot at 1o
' 'f'erdl. He eredlta hie merklmenehlp to hquent praetlca et the
Chnter B~untera Club end hie hunting kn~ to hie father,
·Charles. He recorded hie flret bow kill on a doe earlier In the ....
'eon. Archery eeeeon contlnuee until Jan.. 31.

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KEROSENE
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By Clint Wlnlam1
Army Hometown News Service ·
Special tti tlie _,....,. *""-Jhatt&gt;al
--·--&gt;&amp;"1··
SOTO CANO AIR BASE, Honduras - At first
glance, it's easy to visualize this lush. ·fragrant countryside as paradise. Under clear . blu~ skies the foliage bursts
with brilliant floral hues of red, violet, gord and green, as
well as clusters of citrus truit and banana trees nurtured
by the rainy &lt;el\son's daily showers and tropical sunlight.
. Traveling near the air base the daugliter of a Pomeroy
couple observes villages and single family dwellings
nestled among forested hills .and mountainsides, their
inhabitants going about daily chores or worki~g bullpowered plows-through rich soil:
.. ,):!\1\ lUI Army 1st Lt. Angela K. Sloan travels along
ARftiY 1ST LT, ANGELA K. SLOAN of
· ;~jiitlr(,pds and thro~. SI\ smal! ·vil.lnges near the air reyjpwa ap upcoming conatructlon project l_n,
bilse, t~e hl!rSJt~!ili!i~s.,gflife; :~~f11!i!~e. ctesc~nd~!S of· fllglnaelfng dlvltlOn offtce:-stoan 18 an englneet offt· ·
tier who jolned 1 5110-tneniber Army· and ~r Force
· the anctent Mayan empire"'becol\10 all-too obvaous.'
learn
dubbed Jolnl Tliak FQrce-8r.ct, which haa a
Poverty, disease, _and meager livin~ conditions are a way
mulllfllceted
of 8ilpportlng U.S. and Hon·
of life among most Hondurans, but Sloan traveled here dura11 mlllt8rymillion
cooperatiOn, illegal drug lntardlctlon
to help change the plight and quality of life of the poor auppon, and humanitarian assistance In Canlral
in this econorilically strapped Central American nation, America. (Photo by Rolando Gomez)
Sloan, 26, daughter of Robert W. and Karen S. Sloan,
37383 Rock Spring Road,· Pomeroy, joined Joint Task wet ;;cason brings daily torrential .rains, but the tropic.il
Force - Bravo, a 500-member Army and Air Force task · clinlate and rich soil produce a bounty of agricultural
'
.
force deployed with a multifaceted mission of mainlain- produce,
such as coffee, vegetables. bananas ru1d vanous
ing U.S. and Honduran Air Force operations, illegal drug citrus fruil s. The balmy environment proves quite a coninterdiction SUQpon, airborne search and r~scue capabil- trast from back home, said Sloan .
ities, as well as conducting humanitarian and civic as.&lt;is·
· "It's much warmer here than in Ohio or at Fort Bragg, .
tance throughout the Central American region.
N.C.. where I deployed tram, but less humid than my,
.. A inajor aspect of the task tj&gt;rce's miss10n involves home station. There's a six month rainy season where,
assisting Honduras and ·other nations in the area in build- . lately, we've been getting some very hard afternoon rain
, ing their infrastructure, ~uch ·as roads and schools, in · showers," said Sloan.
Though Honduras boasts a wealth' of natural
addition to providing basic medical and -surgical treatment for the poor and people living in remote, inacces- . resources and agriculture, avasl majority of the people,
of mixed European and Indian descent, exist in a grind·
sible areas of the country.
Sloan serves pn the JTF 'as a member of the .task ing environment of poveny .und poor health conditions.
force's Army Forces engineer. directorate.
Few homes have the·modern conveniences most Ameri"My job generally involves serving as the plans offi- ·enos expect as standard, such as indoor plumbing. refrigcer for all engineering projects under way here at Solo erators. televisions, or even electric power. Coming from
Cano, and in othf!r areas of Central America," said a world where convenience is the norm to a country
Sloan.
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-~ whe.re people literally struggle to survive day-to-day was
• Honduras is the second largest country in the rela- a rude awake'!ing, Sloan admitted.
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lively .narrow strip · of land dividing both Nonh and
"The population here is very poor. Most families· live
South America, and theAtlantic and Pacific 0\;eans. It is . in block house or adobe huts. The work is mainly agri, : TWO u.s. SOLDIERS TAKE TIME out to lalk wllh Hondurari.ehlldren from 1 nearby village. Aalde fi'OI'I! largely mountainous, and.because of its proximity to the cultural, and childre1i begin very early to help their (amwith IMdlcal and elvle aaslatance In Honduras and other Centrel American countrlee, u.s. aer·
eantrlbula eonalderable off duty time In orphanegea .and relalad cbarttable organizations . equator, the tropical weather and climate are major in flu- · ilies. Their getting an education suffers because of the .
Continued on page C2
ences on the enviroiunent: The May through . October
the quality
of life tor people In theH developfng
nallone. ··
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· Sunday, January 12, 1111

Cooper Hollow, Manhall said thlt ciiiSSCS ud therefore did not beCome membership dUes of $5 are now :
various land owners in !he area are • bunren in 1996.
beiq collected.
:~
being conracted for the purchUe Or
Clary abo said !he next meetina :
Clary thanked Bob ud Varginia
new grounds for !he relocMion of the Donnet and their daughter, u .. wiU be held • the GaJiia County Gun .,
wild life habitat cncompassins about Foley, for
· the .-1. He · Club on Wednesday, Feb. 12116:30 :
240 acJ;Cs to become a wet-land pro- also
that annual p.m.
ject. Once this is accomplished, pre..
liminary work on the new lake could
begin.
Concluding his re~. Marshall
reported that studies ~underway to
c.
provide more public boat-launchins
facilities along the Ohio River, that
bids are being prepaied for com·
putors to speed up the hunting and
fishing license purchases and should
be in place by 1998 ..
It was also learned that about
$300,000 has ~orne_ available for
!he cleanup of the Little Raccoon
Creek area An e~on is being made
to get more instructors cenified to
teach hunter safety classes in the
area.
' One member stated that many · .
young prospective hunters refused to
drive some distance to take tht

SPAS- SPAS- SPAS!

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Section -C

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8y ODIE O'DONNELL
T-8 Com.spondelll

long the River

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A VIEW OF SOTO CANO Air BaH's
· ~ : llvlllg querter8 In the U.S• ..C.o~. Nlck
·
named "hoocllee", theM living quar·
111'1 have no plumbing, but eho- ·
. and tollel faellltlel are avalllble-ln
Hvtrll building• throughout the com·
pgund. The Y..r-round -tropical cllr
melt axtllblt8 alxrfllonth long wet and
.drY -•one, with temperet"'" rapgr
1ng troni the mld-70'• to the mld-to'a.
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lundly, J'"'*Y 12, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport • a.lllpolla, OH • Point P11111nt, WV
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fish and the fish hani around wllil· tired by the time we puffed up the . fona. antl the Royal Navy Dockyard.
We were in St. George's port for ing. Most of the fish Weft Clip about Jut short hillt&amp; the prdenJ, but we In St. Oecqe''- they visilcd the
24 hours before we moved to Hmtil- 20 inches lona. Retumina, we did arrive just in titlle for one of the Duckinl ·Stool, w~ in lhf put
forthe
2-tndays. We slept passed a m'oored · 202-foot yacht onlylhrectouneachweek.
nagin1 wivel, aouipt and IIDIUiy ·
aboard the cruise which the c8pl8in said belonaed to a
The l-In hour tour took us people had been publicly duUed for
ship 111d ate multi-media mop!. The lllOIUI hu throup fonrlll aardens, u well u puni,hmellt.
'
. most of our a residence in the same ·area of viewina nati\le and endemic woodThe tower of The Bermuda ·
meals on bolnl, Bennuda where Ross Perot hu a land, and the Bennuda premier's CatbNtrat, or calle&lt;H'athednl of the :
· but we felt com, vaeation homei alona with a third official residence, "Camden.• One Most Holy 'l)inity Church, domi~
pelled to sample billionaire.
of the ·hiahlights of the tour was the nates the skyline in Hamilton.
som~ . of the
George and poe of his friends Garden for the Blind. It was a Stones to . build the hqge aothic
Bennudan cui· enjoyed the Br\lt . Gold C"p of walled garden with a lovely fountain architectural church came ·· from
sine. ..
·\ Bennuda .sailboat races hOS!ed by for the sound of water, pebbles on Scotland, Nova Scotia; Indiana,
remained wann, ·the Royal Bennuda Yacht Cub. The" . the walkway.·for the sound of walk- France and Be"lllliia.
. . .
sunny, and humid While we were in races were held very close 10 when: irig, alid many fragrant herbs
1be church lectem·and pulpit are.
Bennuda. During ·the stonn we htid our cruise ship was tied. We ·could throughout the garden for smell. The repli\:~1!5 of St. Giles' Church ill Ed in·
experienced at sea, . Bermuda watch from the decks aboard ship or guide! was a very knowledgeable, burgll, Scotland, which we had seen
r':"eived five or six ·inches of rai~ in go to the Yacht Cub grounds • 10 pious lady. We later found out she two yean previously. The large
one day, but rt had . cleared by the • watch, which George and his friend was · the Premier's "'ife, Christine sanciuary was beautiful, with elabotime we arrived.. ·~.
·.
di~. ,I enjoyed sunning by one of the Saul.
.
· rate stained glass windows and
The first day · tn Hamrl1on, ships pools, reading, and visitina
After our· guided tour. we sj.ent imported, p.:~lished wood. Climbing
George and I set off exploring and with the other passengers as well·u :time in the, greenhouses for cacti; the over' ISO steps to the top of.the
encountered a glass-bottom boat going on shore. ·
'
ferns .and exo~ plants,. includina . ·tower revealed a )60-degree view of
· ride service..We decided ~o g'o and it
One of my selected adYentures .orclrids. wlcaupt a b.us bec:k to the .Bermuda,
·
,
was an excellent expenence. ·The was an outing our friends from Den- · .ship. The bus ri!le cost $2.SO each · 1 Wh!;ther from lack of breatli afll!l'
, water was so clear we could see hun- ver chose to go on with George ..d and the routll it took couldn't bave the clitilb or the lovely, spiritual
dreds of fish .and sev~ral types of me. I played leader and promptly got taken more than five minutes! Our . experience, the yiew was dazzling ..
coral. T,he, captain dJTected Us over ' us off-course (that is a very nice walking route to the ganlens took an Even the cruise ship looked tiny
• "'; oi,d shipwreck where thousands , term for "lost"), but in a place the 'hour....
.
from the tower. I fpund it easy to
o tsh congregate. Bread was ·size of Hamilton, you can't err too . Other outings included ·a ·British leave my. he8rt 'in piaces other than
passed out to the passengers and the . far.
·
tea at a Hamilton restaurant, and vii· San Francisco:
feeding frenzy of the fish com· . We finally ~ired our ·c!Cstina- iu tq Barr's Bay Park and Par-la·
(Dorothy Sayre · IIIII her hulmenced. .
bon of the B&lt;itamcal Gardens, which Ville·Park. The latter is a most'spec- llllnd ca-ge, formerly of Melga
The ~ater boiled. It . remi~CI\ ~preads over 36 acres of breathtak- ,. iacular waiiM re\Ie81 in the middle County, mowcl bacli ~ three
. me of vtdeo documen~es ~f ptra· mgly beautiful, landscaped grounds. . o( .o}{amjlton. Our Denver friends ,..a 11110 •net now raeldl In •
nhas feedtng. The captatn .satd four We were extremely hot, sweaty and visited other attraCtions including ~ teeing IIMi Ohio RlvW luet
or five tourists boats a day feed the
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By DOROTHY SAYRE

Dennis-Corvin ·

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Flynt's visit ··
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ca.uses stir

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SUN DAY PUiZZ.·LE R

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from the dock he fell Into the river.
GALLIPOLIS - In the 1940s,
When Dr. Lupton arrived at the
Dr. Ella Lupton .wrpte about her house, she found Dr. Lusher unconexperiences of being a doctor in Gal- scious in one bed and a woman
lipolis for over 50 yeat1. Most of her screaming in pain in the other bed.
memorable calls were those she made ·.Dr. Lusher had gone to the house to
outside of town, however.
anend a woman who was to give
Qpce she remel)lbered being birth. He had been there for two days
·ca11ed to a house to deliver a baby and had gone into a diabetic. coma.
where the only chair in the house was He had run out of insulin. Dr. Lupmade of pressed tin cans.
.
ton told that she attended Dr. Lusher
One adventure rook her into the fi.rst and then she got to the mother. ·
hills of Clay Township. lt had rained Dr. Lupton had called Dr. MacElfresh.
all day on a ~unday and Dr. Ella said in ·Point Pleasant to send insulin. It
·that he~ knees had become stiff afrived too late as Dr. Lusher died.
About 8 that evening, she gota tele- What iS more, the woman delivered
phone call to come and deliver a a dead baby just about the same time
baby. Dr. Lupton always refened to that Dr. Lusher died.
these calls as "confinement cases."
To .attend patients in Gallipolis,
"The man told me that he lived a· Dr. Lupton rode a bicycleuntil about
· short distance from the main road but 1906, when she bought an electric ·
he would'. come for me and bring me car. In 1912, she purchased her. first
back. home. When the auto stopped, gas-driven car, a Chevrolet.
he said th;lt we would have to walk
About riding her bicycle, Dr. Ella
a little ways. It was raining hard, but wrote: "Visualize a young woman
..
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ALFRED AND MA~JORIE CROW. .
as I. had my galoslles, umbrella, wearing a long skin, high-necked
.
,
flashlight and bags, I started to follow shin waist and sailor hat riding a
not~·
him. and the man driving tlfe auto bicycle; balancing an umbrella with
went on .
one hand and a physicians' bag in the
POMEROY - The 50th wedding anniverSary of Alfred and Marjorie
"!had the man to carry my heavy other, together with the handle-bars.
~row, 220 Alden Ave., Marietta; will be celebrated with a reception on Sat- ·· bag. As he carried his lanterns, I had
"In my first year of practice 1
u.rday, Jan. 18 in the Betbany
of Trinity Church, from 2 to 4'p.m. to carry my small bag. After I had accepted every call 1 had. But at the
· Mi'. and Mrs. Crow
·Jan. 18, 1947 in
W Va. slipP.,d and stumbled, waded in rnud end of that first month. the doctor is
Te·xas; for 40 or 50 feet, I asked the man if · surprised to find that the majority of
Rei:&gt;Cc&lt;:a Trent we. had much farther to go. He 'he calls were from those who never
assured me we were close. I heard paid their bills. Yet this was a means
. water ll!nning and splashing and told of advertising as we became known
the man that if I had to walk across for willing and satisfactory service.
a log I couid not do it. There was
"Our first epidemic of influenza in
rail on the lo~.
1917 was serious. Every doctor had
"By that ume I was so mad that it but me,.and I was fortunate enough
the man had deceived me, but I not to have it. We were overworked.
walked the log and· on and on we I even asked people for something to
· · went. My feet were ~o heavy I could eat and slept whenever I had the
scarcely pull them out of the mud, chance. Sometimes I caught myself
and still it rained. At last, we reached sleeping while 1 was standing up. 1
the almost empty house. In the room · wouldn't get to my home for two or
was one chair, a double bed and a sin- three days at a rime. Whenever pneugle bed. In a half hour the baby was monia developed, many deaths
born. The man never ·even thanked resulted,"
.me and I have never seen either him
Dr.' Lupton lived into her 90s. She
or his wife since ner received a pen- was active in a number of civic
ny for my service." (Dr. LuptOn)
endeavors, including the public
On another occasion, she was library.
,.
.
called to West Virginia at 2 a.m. Her
(Jam8• Sandi te a coneaponfirst problem was in waking the fer- dant for 1hl Sunday Tiini•Senry boat pilot. The pilot was a little
groggy, and in gettinll his yawl out tlnel.)

:. Crows to

GALLIPOLIS - Batina Kay · match the dress .
·r
· ------~
'" -~··~---------:--,........:..:_.....-:-.-..:......---,
Dennis and Richard Daniel Corvin ·
All wore a gold necklace with a
were united in maiTiage Dec. 14, bow an4 pearl in the center, and
1996 at th~ Faith Baptist .Church, matching earrings, gifts of' the bride ..
.
. '
.
:· Rodney.
,
The flower girl, Annette Vallance, '
.·
The double-ring candlelit cere- wore a Cinderella tea-length dress
mony was perfonned by Pastor Jim with daisy lace and pearls to match
Lusher. Also participating in the cer- the bride. She carried a white satin
75 Helper: abbr.
eO RMir In France
-153 Multy
' emony were Pastor Jim Deeter of the basket with gold cowboy boots on it.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Larry Fly- ACROSS
154 .Pildlels
77 Fender apoller
81 Newt
' First Baptist Church of Wellston, and
'The groom was attired in a black nt can still cause a stir in Cincinnati.
78 Wllllh
82 Hard to find
1 Postal item .
Doug Homer and Ken Dady, both western tuxedo with tails and cowboy
Nearly 20 years after being conDOWN
79 sea bird
83 TITM of dily
6 Having legal force
.: former youth,pastors of the bride and boots . B_est man was Mike Murray, victed here on pornography charges,
82
Foray
1.1 Parrot
84 -Vegas
. 85 Meager
1 Ulre a razor's edge
83 ~e(a platform
·:· groom.
.
cousin of the groom, while grooms- the publisher o~ "Rustler" magazine
16Fragrances
88 Rescue
2 Dnunlcard .
21 "'dyllley" poet
84 S/!OWa.the"Y
'The bride is the daughter of Kevin men Jllson Wright, Jeff Hendershott, returned to attend Tuesday's premier
89
8eaSQnlng
.
3
Monllhal)
~uate
22
PointleSs.
·
85
;, · and Sandy Dennis of Gallipolis. Scott Edwards, Tom Stetzer and Jim of the movie depicting his irail.
.
so Ones who owe'
.4 Glbton of "Rannom'
23 Last Greek letter
/
; Grandparents are Alfred and Zel· :Walker, all friends of the groom, also
And 'love him.or. hate him,.'Fiynt
98 Egypt's capital
5 ~·.
./ . 94 11'8 capital ill 67 .
• . malee .Vallance, and Wilbur and . wore black western tu~Odos . The ring always draws a crowd, as he did in . 24 Piece of tu11
Acroes
· 6 Clamplng devlc8
' 87 Wualck.
2S
·Puton.
. : ,. Louise Dennis, all of Gallipolis.
bearer, Kyle Winland, cousin of the the lobby of the Cincinnatian Hotel
j.
95 Bakery ttem
:, 1 DIII1CIIr P.a~a
till II wifl
"
26 Naaty
groom is the son of Richard groom. also wore ·a black western before being ·whisked off in a limou88 Wro- doWrl '
98 Bucket . ,
8 Secutar27 Hills of sand ·
'I'· . .;.:; ;· andThe
Jean Corvin of Wellston. Grand- tuxedo with matching black cowboy sine for the local premier of "The
97 Close tightly . .
· 9 ~ offensive
'90 MQI:~
28 Wor1&lt; by Rouaaeau
91 Command .,
~ : parents are Helen Myers and Grace hat and boots.
People vs. Larry Flynt."
98
Fish
eggs
·
10
Sandta
or
Ruby
29 Aunt or uncle, e.g.,
i:.. Coi'Yin, both of Wellston.
. The mother ·of the bride wore a • "It's great," Aynt said just a few
.' 92 ' llineniry
'
• abbr.
99 Lubricant In cans· ·
1 1 ,.... operandi
.
~
100
HOu8etloid
118M1111
12
Kind
of
pai1c
:;; '
Given in marriage by her parents, long navy dress with jacket, and the block from where his original "Hus30 "Give - a chanca"
93 Meaning
. '
i8 landing piKe . !·
1Q2 Sows
. 13 Penny
31 Reddish-brown
~- the bride was escorted -by her father. . _groom's mother wore a burgundy tier Club" once sat. "This is where it
T'1U•ddle or Atonlic
117 Falsecotn
103 Clearing ·
color.
;. • She wore. a long and full white Cin· lace overlay with two-piece suit. all started, so it's appropriate that we
104
Demand
payment
15.
Squander
101
Reply
32
Cask
··: derella-style grown with a sweetheart The fathers of the bride and groom have·a premier here."
from .
16 City In Denmark
34
Wedding
1021
1~
:~ · neckli.ne and long see-through net fit· also wore black western tuxedos.
· Flynt Qow lives in Los Angeles.
.
1
05
Avert
17
ShlldowY
&amp;!lftOUncemenl
word
103
·
- Wtlh the Wind~
:. ted sleeves;
Music before the ceremony was His Larry Flynt PublicatiOns includes
107 War god
,
18 Of fleecy beutl
35 Ukt the most
108 VIIHI!Qt~ · ·
!
The bodice was covered with by Kyle McCarty and Doug Homer. Hustler, five other adult magazines
. 108
apo8ed '
. 18 FunctiOn&amp; .
38 Gtilnn- of '101· ·
'
1.07 !11g1J,rmtta!n
·•· daisy appliqu~s with pearls and . friends , of .the groom. Sara Miller and 15 mainstream publications.
'I
Datmattona"
108 N.V.~Um .:•
20 ef1911ll!IILII · .J • ,
l o8 Moirrldli:Ulous '''-'
sequins, with a few st:attertid on the passed out programs and Michelle
·"'Jlle People vs. Larry Flynt,"
11 o Kind of lountiln .
· 30 Quid- quo
40 ·Gaztara, et al.
1011 Graduation month
111 Vandor
·
31 Fishing Hem
:.. 'sl~eve and sktn'ofihe dress. 'The bot· . Davi~on registered the guests. Bpth which has received critical acclaim,
41 Slxlh sense: abbr.
112
Fate
113
Drunkan
carousal
33
Fantaatlc
:: tom of the dress was lace' and pearls, are fnends of the bride:
stars Woody Harrelson as Flynt.
42 WoodWind •· '
114'
Thick
soup
36
Whafe
to
eat
· 113 Feather scarf ·
which also went around the semi- ,. A reception was held at the Uni- Rock star Courtney Love plays Flyinstrument •·
115 Drag
37 ~ tide
44 Marah plant
114 Frun stone
cathedral train. Her fingertip veil was versity.ofRio Grande with a hot and nt's late wife, Althea.
117 Make a Choice .
39 Shettered aide
45 Actrep Wast
a band covered ·with white daisies,- cold buffet and soft music from a OJ.
James Carville, President Clin116 Made a speech
118 Pl!rlotalion ·
40 Wager
47 GOP member. abbr . .
pearls and sequins. The bFide earned
The three-tiered wedtling cake, ton's 1992 campaign consultant,
118 Embrace
119 Drizzle
43 Merited
49 St. ·John's breed
· a bouquet of cascading ro5es; mini- deccirated in .burgundy, navy and plays Hamilton. County Prosecutor
·
120
Cigar realdue
121 Paved ways: abbr.
ll4 Optlmiltlc
52 Make expiation
roses, mini-carnations, baby's breath, hunter green flowers and ribbo~ with Simon Leis Jr.. who later became a
.
121
Hils
124 What remalns
46 Make Inquiry
54 Mortarand• stefeniotcs, mini-daises and ivy.
a fountain underneath, contained a judge and now is county sheriff.
126 Pear
46 Item for a coOk
122 NeighbOr of India
58 Cry of sorrow . ,
The IJI&amp;id of honor was Jennifer sweetheart cowboy and cowgirl topFlynt was cast as Hamilton Coun,.
128 &amp;nbezztas
49 Ru.stic dwelling
so Sour substance
123 Sl1aron Of 'Casino'
Crabtrce, best fncnd of the bnde. She per. Cake was served by Stephame ty Comnion Pleas Judge William
132 Clever fellow
50 Shatp
61 Wave tOp ,
125 Fright'en
' .
133 Curved line
51 WIISh tightly ·
62 Financial jr)Sfllution
wore a floor-length dress made of Vallance. Heather Lemponen,' Sara Morrissey.
•
127 Search
134 Not at allloo88
53 Youlhfulaullix
63 Sincere
• ·
Flynt was convicted in February
• burgundy velvettop with a crepe bot· Miller, MiehelleDavison and Kathy
129
Ole down
135 'When- Eye8
. 54:R8duce
65 Roll of hair
~ tom. ·Matron of- honor was Wendy · Keenan. The punchbowl was· taken 19n ' of . pandering obscenity and
130 Sudsy d(ink
Att Smiling'
55 tlka a lettuce
66 Term ,of IJ!dearment
' McNeal,' sisier of the bride, and ·oth· care of by Karen Stapleton.
engaging in organized crime: Mor·
1311
Contemptuou~
ay
'
57
CertAin
contract
131 Molts
67 - -au·Prince
:. er bridesmaids were Micki Shaffer
Following a· honeymoon iri the rissey sentenced him to seven to 25 . 68
'
140 Concerning
58 A flOwer
Fellow
134 ~part
~ and Heidi Evans, friends of the bride, Bahamas, the couple now resides in years in prison, the maximum term
· 142 Battery l&amp;ll!llnal .
59 Boutiq\18
69 From '-&lt;- -Z
136Costiland Becky Corvin, sister of the Wellston. Tile bride is a student at the {pr the offenses.
,
144 Juvenile heroirut
61 Ceteatlal bOdy
70 "-"- a boy!" .
137 Gt&amp;ven image
groom.
.
University of Rio Grande, majoring
Flynt spent six days in jail·before
145 Saying .
82 Auto part
71 Word·of agraemenl
138 Scc!na
They all wore dresses matching in elementarY education, and the an a~pellate court _granted him bail
147 Taut
~ Truatwol1hy
72 Go underground
1:41 E~ .
148 t,4akea.angry
66 Game lntermiAI\lll
• the maid of honor's, only jn hunter groom is employed by Western- pendmg apP,Cal. Hts convtcllon was . 73 Dummy
143
Say "'lo'lo
149 Neck scarf
67 Heap
74 Light-ray device
~ green. navy blue and burgundy. All Southern Life Insurance Co., Jack- . overturned and a new trial was
150' Otd·fathloned
68 Gredtlln IChaol
144 P011111..
• caiTied bouquets of roses, baby car- son. .
·ordered, but it never took phicc.
. 76 Teased
151
Horse
that
ill
ridden
·
72
Charter
78
A
flower
·
14_5 Fruity drink
: ·nations, baby's breath and ribbon to
Flynt said he harbors no ill feel152 PUt IOI!h llfon
73 Ove_n
79 Busey. the actor
~
•
ings toward Lei~ and Morrissey.
146 .Crowtlke bird
"I have fond memories of Cincinnati despite all the adversity that I've
had here," Flynt said.
TUPPERS PLAINS '-A wedding reception honoring Mr. and Mrs. Tim
;. Dorst will be held Saturday, Ja11. 18 from I to 4 p.m. in the dOWIIStairs fel' ..
• lowship hall at St. Paid's Methodist Church in Tuppefl Plains for relatives
·.. and friends. · ·
·
•
Mr.' and ·Mrs. Dorst were married on Dec. 21; 1996 at Buenos Aires, .
Continued from page C1 '
necessity to help their families," said
l : Argentina.
: : Dorst is the son of Helen Wilson of Tuppers Plains, and the late Robert Sloan. a I 988 Meigs High School
; : Dorst. Mrs. Doll! is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emilio Rudy Odorisio of graduate.
.
Wirh the help of JTF-Bravo avia~: : Argentina.
· ·
'
tion, construction . .and medical
r '
teams, people in the Honduran interior, as well as neighboring nations,
are rece.iving essential medical and
construction aid · in the country's ·
most remote and inaccessible areas.
Because :Or U.S . medical .participa. '
White
got
his
stan
in
vaudeville
tlon,
diseases such as polio have
ay DEBORAH HAST::s
and
burlesque.
He
reached
Broadway
been
all,
bur eradicated in Honduras.
AIIOCiatld PreP W
However; poor sanitation and
LOS ANGELES - Jesse White, in 1944 with a supporting role as a
love-struck
asylum
attendant
in
the
environmental
conditions continue
• the character actor best known as
Mary
Chase's
Pulitzer
Prize-winto
breed
debilitating
diseases, such
television'slonely Maytag repaif111811
•
ning
play
"Harvey."
He
played
the
.
as
mosquito-borne
malaria and
whose phone never rang, died of a
same role in the film version. .
water:bomc round wonn parasites '
· heart atlllck at age 79.
Often
cast
as
a
Cigar-chomping.
affecting
the children:s health and
·
White d~ Wednesday nig~t fol·
whiny-voiced
thug,
and
sometime'
as
de.veloprrient.
.
• lowin&amp;IUIJCIY for an undisclosed ail- ·
a
pushy
agent,
White
also
appeared
Serving
in
a
remote
pan
of
the
. : mcnlat~·Sinai Medical Center,
~ spokeswoman ~ie Lahaie said in such films as "Bedtime for Bon- world is always a challenge for U.S.
zo," "Maf.jorie · Morningstar" and service members. But the common
I Th~y.
:
.
,
. •
· hope and desire for nearly everyone
''
Born Jesse Marc Wel~nfeld in "~th of a Salesman."
His television series .. credits serving·at Soto cano is to get b.Ck •
Buffalo, N.Y., he -~ in more
thin 60 films, including the 19s0 film included agent Cage~ .Calhoun in the to .the familiar ~ights .aird sounds of ,
19SOs show "Private Secretary;" home, and especially reunitina with ¥;,
~ veniorl o4 "HIIV')''' starring Jimmy
Oscar
Pudney' in "The Ann Sothem family and friends; Sloan said. , . ·;'
• SteWift, lllld ~~ of television
Stww"
and Jesse Leeds, the agent of
"I'm looking forward to seeinJI .
, · shows. .
.,
·
Danny
Thomas,
in
"Make
Room
for
II)Y
parents and my ·extended family
But he wu best known ai dte stirat RQC!k Sprinp United Methodist
c:razy l'rfa)'lli ,repairm111 who had J)llddy." ·
He
was
a
han!
worker,
suppleChurch."
Sloan said. •
notbiqlo do, or so dte television ads
•.
mentin1
his
television
and
film
rqles
Performing
such a delnllndina
· ' claimed. beciUSe Ma)'lal~p~~liances
.,
: were so ~1-built ·they ricver broke. with c:ommercitlb. For Q1un Ki"', he 'humanitarian effort 'can be an exer·
:
White .,.-ed ill 68 o( the ads prdlcd clrow'mein, For llalia\ Swiss cise in patience and delennination,
. · and is dauntin1 at times, but Sloan
!l•u• t!f67 11!!1.~9~:•• Cllieded COlony, he hawked Wine.
health
in
the
lui
yem
o4
his
' said wimessina .the grateful fac:cs of ..
•
·;by _.,'Qonloi11ump• who played
li,.
apt
him
frqm
~~
Sleldily,
.•
~
people,whorr.ceive
needed
med•
·b
t!CIIIio,l JIMIIIIO" Arthur
;c.t- on the sitA:OIII "~ In antl Ilia fipal film roiO- an 1993'1' teal auenuon !If attend their newly ·
"l'rfllineti" lla'ri"'1obn Goodman. built school is well worth the effoa...:... .. _
.
ClaeiRtllli. ~·
r

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50th ariniver_'sary

1

Golden anniversar;y celebrated.

DAYTON· Lafayette and Freda (fulk~) Barry Jr. receinly celebratell
their 50th wedding anniversary and renewed their vows.
·
A reception was hosted by their children at the Marriott in Dayton with
family and close friends.
'
They are originally from the Crown City area and were married in Ironton in January 1947.
.
· They are the parents of a son and three daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Randy
(Melody) Barry, Dr. and Mrs. Stanley (Carolyn) Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. Russell (Deborah) Malbis and Kelly Barry. They have nine grandchildren a)td

u' ac

[

..

I

•

·. .

••

.

•

r

.

· ;: ,. ,

. , ATLANTA.(~~)-,Brajq injuries
that result in hospital !;ire or death
appear to have dropped i" half in·four
states, the Centers for Disease Con·
trot and Prevention reponed.
For every I 00,000 people in Colorado, Missouri, Oklahoma and Utah
between 1990 and 1993, 102 died or
were hospitalized with brain injuries
from car accidents, falls or ilcts of
violence, the CDC said Thursday.
Bet.,...een 1974 and 1986, the rate

MI$SAGE TIEUPY

in six comparable states was 200 of
every I00,000 people. ·
·

After Inventor~ Red~etion!
WE DAVE -TAKEN OUR ANNUAL INVENTORY
AND FOUND WAY TOO MU~B STOCK·

. ANNA MARIA LOPEZ, M.T•
Licensed &amp; Certified • AMTA Member
Olft.Cnt................

OFFERING THEUPEUTIC AIID
REUUTIOIIAL MASSAGE
Congralulallons Tracy S.undera
Wlni'Ntr of the Ma11age Glft~skel

,WI IRE MOVING OUT 1111

CALL 441·0200 TOllY .

CLINIC

·DUSTIC REDUCTIONS OF

·" ·

60th, annjyer5aiy.
celebrated Jafl. 5.

OFF
UPTO
, ALL FURNITURE &amp; BEDDING IN .STOCK

Rlll'!-A~ ,_-· Mr. and

Charles\, £lh~inFr

60th weddinjl
·
., .
with a party · held at the
American Le.gion.
· The Ohlingers .were 11\arried
Jan. 9, 1937 at
,
They now reside at Lati2S'Vil~c ~
· The celebration was host:!!~!. .
their nin.e children, their spouses '
friends, Qonna and Tiny Bentz,
O~linger and Nancy
Goldie and Jim .Wolford,
Ohlinger ' and Sharon
Eunie and Gary
Bob Hawkins, Dorsey
Judy Parsons. Jackie and
hower,410d
and
Or~..S
the ce
were :rammy.
Joseph Wines; Rick, qy:stat.
mon, Cassie. Megan
Mcfarland;, Phillip Smith;
Justin and Oaltbn Riebel;
er, John. Wendy and Siena CJhliing«";
Paul Duff and Bobbi Jo; Ch(isty
Christopher Taylor and ;lach
Gochoel ; Dwight and Kayla Icenhower; Cain McKinney; Helen and
Cliff Icenhower; Richanl, April, less! and Baby Icenho'l'er; Shorty Kuey,,
· Betty Van Matre, Juanita._ ~;~1;:~:!
Orland Boyd; ~e!inda, B
Alexa Venoy and Crystal Bailey.

(Not S•blect to .Prior Sal••)

•

&gt;n)e~~~:~h'JI

-

J•

Is· ·In this case nol
·
.:But for other'tinusual spots call the

HOLZ£Di
.n:_·-H.., A. y .&amp;I HOTLINE
'
at I ~800-462-5255
TI,W·

~.I.

.The RN am help answer your queat.lon8
anv.day of~wee~ from 6 am until·, am
(7'-M .._,_ Dr~«'......, ~Mil fl r •n

I

"

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ROOM FOR 1117

TO .

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•,

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five great-grandchildren.

'

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;:,-

~-"

Pomeroy woman
serves in Honduras ·

Answer on B-2

WHERE THE DOCTOR WAS IN- The Lupton Building held the
doctor's office of Ella Lupton for many years. Dr. Ella's r1111111m-, ·
brllnces of doctoring from the 1890s to the 1940s In the Gallipolis area wera first recorded for The Gallle Times In the '40s.

· CDC reports., fewer
.
.. . •-l severe brain injuries
.

Reception slated Jan. 18

.m

11

a

'·"*'· •\,'

~ TV's first Maytag repairman,.
~ Jesse White, dies at age 79

,

By JAMES SANDS

''

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Dr... Lupton's 1110st
interesti·ng cases
were out-of town

.

Natural beauty impresses visitors' on jaunt to Bermuda

M~. AND MRS. ~!CHARD CO~VIN

, ...

Pomeroy • Middleport • a.lllpOIIa, 0H • Point P11111nt, WV

'•Ptgect_
•

i•

w)

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17

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Polneloy • MldcliP9ft• G_,Upolla, OH • Point Plunnt, WV

Families trace records for slave
ancestors
'

~

•

••

Beat of the Bend ...

•••

••
•

for lite FIUqUi«Cotil\ty Circuit Court •
and an _.._. FneaiOJist who

ByiAHZACK

by Bob Hoeflich

O.ly Proglue

Wllile the histcriuiii'C lliii buly
~ inlaviews IIIII piecina
totetber stories IDd illfonulioa
~ •od on onlly ~ six 01' - -

lUIIi. Hi• - - ud h b d Ktiw in tbe Uhdup&lt; nd Rlilrold,
tbe somlive IIII(WOit dill biipM f•·
ry slaves 10 freedom ill the Norda and

CHARLOTIESvn.LE, VL (AP) brouabt 12 mendleisofhtre•tnW
- A fondness for horticult~~R Nos fanlily 10 MOIIIicello for 1 privlfe
deep in Karea Hughes white's fam· ro. in July. "It- very n:w81'1fia&amp;.fl ca peenlions. sewn! lbemes t.ve iD Ceede
ily, a ttait whose roots she now can
... Plul E. ''Qenefl Hams. 40. Syra"Many African"Arnericens Iwvc bepn 10 emers~: tbal the slaves of · Midi- and Eatoll Hetainas.
•
emphasis being on long distance trace to a long-lost ancestor who cui· been told that they Clll't find Out 'lllolus Jefferson and their children slaves freed. in Jeffa-'s will;
cue, bas really seriouS heallh prob- telephone service and cledit cards. tivated the flora at Thomas Jeffer·
about their families befon: slavery," vlluod edUCIIion, music, n:lipon moved 10 Olillioothe, Ohio, where
.. lems u ""' n:sult of his fall from a · I'm apptllled at the approach of son's Monticello.
· said Dianne Swann-Wright, the pro- and public .-vice, as well as family. Madison was a fanner ud CIJPCII!q' ·
llee stand wliile bunting near Syrathese people who get you on the
"lben:'s a great love of garden, ject historian. "These families feel
"From Jeffe~n's records we and Eston wu a fiddle pla)!W. One of
' '' c- on Nov. 28.
phone and !hen stan talking a JRile a ing,'' said Ms ..White. "My dad and pleased and proud that there is evi- have ideas t!Jx1 understandings .OOUt Madison Hemin3s' descendants,
Paul was taken 10 University Hos- minute to convince you to be a par- aunt have wor)&lt;ed with flowers for denee or their ancestors' existence slaves' working lives,': Ms. SwannFlederiek Madison RobeiU. in 1918
pitatin Columbus following lhe acci- licipant. there's . never a q~stion years ahd I, too, have a taste forlhat."
belote I 86S."
Wri}!ht ~d. "From the descendants became California's first elected
dent and now has been taken to a r:used as to whether you have tune to
Researchers wprking witll Ms.
Jefferson, who wrote the Declara-. arid from their own words ... we've black representative.
'
" rdu!bilitation center in Pennsylvania. hsten to the p1tch, let alone want to. White at Jefferson's mountaintop
lion of Independence, o:wncd about been able IO•AY they were full and · Of course, no oral history projec!
Paul baS been at the rehab center
I don't know about you •.but I'm · home discoveled last year that her 130 slaves at his death in 1826. He living people ou!Side of Monticello cte.Iing wilh Jefferson's slaves could
for two weeks. He is paralyzed and getting w~ary of the bit and althou,gh great-great-great-grandfather was freed five slaves in his will, Many and we also are beginning 10 underfail to~ the disputed '!aim that
Clll move.only llis eyelids, lips, and· I hate bemg unkiml. and rude, lve Wormley Hughes, identified in JefJeffenon, following his wife's death,
others were later sold to pay Jeffer- stand their values."
can turn his head from side to side. gently hung up the telephone on the ferson's slave records as a gardener. son's debts.
·
"In a sense, what we've been sittd up io eight children '!&gt;' Sally
He n:lilains on a respirator and has last few calls and proceeded w1th the
Two Monticello historians have
Ms. Swann-Wright . and Lucia exposed to: js the entin: African. Hemings.
:
undergone a bout with pneumonia task at hand, like eating dinner or vis- spent the past three years tracking
Stanton, Monticello!s senior research • American experience from the 18201
Although many ~If~ histori·
since the accident.
1tmg the bathroom.
I
down and interviewing descendants historian, have conducted about 3S to the ~1-" Ms. Stanton said.
ans have'expressed skeptiCISm about
The center staff, however, is
of Jefferson 's slaves. The oral histo- taped interviews· with . about 70
Accordi1111 to research and infor- the liaisoi\, oral tradition amona Ms. .
encouragiag about his prognosis so,
lt is ironic and tragic that 'Charles ry project, called "Getting Word,:' js descendants of slaves in Massachu- mation culled from interviews ·Of 1Hemings' descendants. 'many of
' perhaps, he will continue to improve . . Jones of Pomeroy d1ed domg what he an attempt to bring into focus people · setts, Califo(nia, Alabama, Ohio and descendants!
whom come from completely dislinct
.Prayers BJe needed on his behalf. did best - helping other people.
· and families blurred by the institution Virginia.
Wormley Hughes' son Robert · family lines, strongly suppons the
• These will go along with Paul's phi·
Helping others was what Charles of slavery, they say.
·
.
· About two-thirds w.descendants . helped: founil and became the f1nt claim.
, losophy of life. Can he count on did all of his life. If 3Jiyone around ·
"It brought back to life the histo- of Betty Hemings, a slave house ser- pistor of ~ .Union Run Bllplist '
lohn Q. Taylor King, the 7S-yearyours? .
hirnhad a problem, Charles was right ry that hild been omitted from us," vant and matriarch of one of the · Church in,SII!ldwell. His SiOn became old chancellor and president cmo;ritus
Thanks from )lis family for the there to help 1f he could. And he per· said Ms. White, an office associate
largest slave fanlilies at Monticello. a preacher in Fauqqier and Loudoun of Huston-Tillo!$on · College in
cards and encouraging messages you form~d countless odd jobs over the
·
counlies.
•
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Austin,
Texas.
recalled · for
have sent thus far. Paul does need a
The slave Peter Fossett, bOrn in · researchers the time when . he was
yearsfornumerousresidents-cutlot of encouragement right now. His ting
Ja~ns, trJmming shrubbery,
ISIS, learned how to read while at about 6 years old and an elderly aunt
new address is Paul Harris II, Room painting -just odd jobs that someMonticello and, after his famjly pur- in Memphis, Tenn., told him· of .his
•
30S·A, Health Soulh, 2380 McGin· one needed done .
The Community Calendar 11
Monday, Jan, 13
ch8ied his 1 freedom .. much later, relationship to Jefferson.
• ley Road, Monroeville, Pa., 15146.
At the time of his death, Charles publlehed ae a free earvlce to
CHESHIRE • TOPS lfOH 1383, ·became a Baptist minister.in Cincin•
i.
was running across the highway to try non-profit groups wiehlng to weigh-in, 8:30-9:45 a.m. Meeting,
:
And again we lucked out with the to help a motorist whose vehicle had announce meetings and spe- to- \1 a.m. at Cheshire United
'
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: weather. The heavier predicted' snow stalled and ran into the path of an cial events. The calendar 11 not Methodist Church. ·
• .'' .
· ·: didn't getiO us again; allhough the icy oncoming vehicle.
·
designed to promote sales or
• rqad conditions did create a problem.
Everyone has somethil!g good to fund-raisers of any type.' Hems
' '
•• ·So far this winter we've been real . :say about Ch~les. Small wonder.
1\Jesday,
Jaa.
14
are printed as space permits
,.,
: fonunate . However, one can only
and cannot be guaranteed to
: wonder aboufthe Jaw of averages
There are undoubtedly a lot of : run a specific number of days.
'
.. GALLIPOLIS - PERI, 3 p.m.,
: catching up with us. However, Tom "proS" and "cons" on the current conGallia County Senior Resource Cen: and Carolyn Grueser spotted a robin troversy involving physician-assisted
. Sunday, Jan. 12 ·
ter. Installation of officers and a
: at their bird feeder on Lincoln suicide. There's something to be said
speaker
on 911.
Heights, Pomeroy, and feel that for ending one's life when the qualiGALLIPOLIS . Jack Parsons will
: spring is just around the corner. I'll ty of that life has gone to zilch. On . preach at Debbie' Drive Chapel dur: buy that dream.
thc other hand, where are the lines to ing the II a.m. services.
GALLIPOLIS - · Gallia County
-be drawn? Some of life's problems •••
Library District Board of Trustees, S
I .
With .t he new year, it seems that have just got to be played by ear. Do
CHESHIRE • ·Rev. Charles p.m., Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memothe telephone sales people are really keep smiling.
Daniel$ will preach at Oljl Kyger .rial Library. .
, IJ!OVing into high gear with the
Free Will Baptist Church during the
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I 0:45 a.m. S.rvic.es.
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GALLIPOLIS • Auditions for
CROWN CITI • Carl Black will ''The Thming of the Shrew," 7'9 p.m., .
. -~- ,.,
speak
at Good Hope United Baptist . Ariel Theatre.
./
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The Community Calendar Is Southern High School cafeteria to Church during the II a.m. and 6 p.m.
• publiehed as a free service to non- . help ·parents of high school seniors services.
GALLIPOLIS ·
Alcoholics
• prv11t groupa wllhlng to announce complete Fl\fSA forms to secure .
***
Anonymous,
8
p.m.
Woodland
Cen'
GALLIPOLIS • Glen . Mathews
: meeting and special avents. The financial aid for college. For more
/
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·ter
Multi-Purpose
Room.
will be speaking at Elizabelh Chapel
: calendar Is not designed to proinformation,
call
Shirley
Sayre
at
Loclll Artist
' mote sates or lund raisers of any
Church, Gallipolis, during 6 p.m. ser: t,pe. Hems are printed as apace 949-2611.
vices.
JOSHUA PAUL J.eBEJID
• ~Ita and cannot be gu4!ranleed
• to run a specific number of days.
· RACINE - Racine Board of .
CENTENARY. Rev. Jack Holley
200 PriDu alped,
qted ,.
.
Public Affairs meeting Monday, 1 will preach at the Centenary Un.ited
:
·r-' .. :. ·. - • Noiecam. . ··! ., ::~~'t····-'·d ...-~.,uJ ~~ ,
: .
SUNDAY
"
p.m. in the municipal building.
Christian Church during 7 p,m. serMIDDLEPORT - .,,.,angelist
POMEROY _ M'eigs · Local vices. ·christian Ministers will sing.
:
av•tllb1e at:
: John Els~i~k will preach_at the Hob- Board of Education organizational
***
• son Chnst1an Fellowship Church, _ meeting Monday, 7 p.m. '!l the cenVIN'IDN - The Sincere group will
'
:: Sunday, 7 p.m. The Jubilee Tr:~o will tral office in Pomeroy: Regular meet· sing at Vinton Baptist Church during
"we mea&amp; ~ts"
: smg.
ing to follow.
7 p.m. services Sunday.

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•"'Dhitad,

lnus 40 ·a.oots

25% off

THE CANDLE COMPANY

&lt;-tk Slwe

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: ' RUTLAND .- Meigs County
: Bikers, Sunday I p.m. at the Ameri·
·: can Legion hall in RutlaJ)d.

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Soon, -the ordinary phone
will be asked to do .more.

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USA Today
· LAS VEGAS - The phone is
about to undergo a multimedia meta·
morphosis.
Several new, easy-to-connect
di:vices using ordipary phone lines
for home video conferenci.ng, e-mail
and Web surfing are on display at the
Consumer Electronics Show, opening
heJe Thursday.
·
.·
"'This is an attempt to get beyond
. the early adopfers,'' said Gary Arlen
of Arlen Communications. · "The
phone is a device everyone is comfonable with.''
,
· The ~uality of video pho~nes,
which let users see each other while
aarrjing on a conversation, doesn't
match that of VHS tilpes or TV but
iJ more than adequate for long-dis""" Jfllndpalents to g~t a .g;)od look
. • ,he arandkids.
.
·
,
Although tt~ey were first' demon1tnlled at the 1964 World's Fair, on!y
recently has lhe cost of technology
made a III!ISS market video phone
pouible, said Daniel P. Aohr, CEO of
C-Phone Corp., Wilmington, N.C.
'"'bo interell has always been there."
His comp111y's C-Phone Home set·
IGp ~~oa will ielt for $349.95when it
· JitliiUnl next month. Abollt the size
typicel cable box, lhe c-:Pbone
~ ,._ conllins a modem ~ digi141

***

TUESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education organizational
meeting Tuesday, 6. p.m. at the high
school. Regular meeting will follow
at6:30 p.m,

·•
MONDAY
:
MIDDLEPORT Disabled
: American Vetera!IS and Auxiliary, 7
POMEROY- Regular luncheon
: p.m. Monday at the hall. Refreshmeeting of the Meigs Cqunty Cham: ments at 6:30 p.m.
•"•
.
ber of Commerce Tuesday, noon at .
: . POME~OY -:- Metgs County the Trinity Church in Pomeroy. Guest
• Rtghtto Ltfe, Metgs County Ltbrary, , speaker wi 11 be Connie Freeman,
: 7:30p.m.
director of procurement .. at the
Lawrence County Economic DevelPOMEROY - Big Bend Farm
opment Corporation's Outreach Cen·
Antique Club regular meeting Mon- ter.
day; 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs High
School library.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of EJections, Tuesday, 9 a.m.
RACINE- A college financial
regular meeting.
aid workshop Monday, 7 p.m. at the

By MIKE SNIDER

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JEFF SHRIVERS

Meigs r}ative wins
Ph.D. from OSU

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IN 3 DAV$·
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All Nllurlil C.H. 2001
-CIIIooi!um PlcollnaM

~BACI{GUARANTEE
t.._..Cifi'COIIPON·LMr•l

FIUTH PHIUICY

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01-Htpol-a,OH- - 411-1620-_.

Fit ,...,0 edether·
AEROBICS
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llank . J)iS('llURI ll"l'Cr.IJ(&lt;:
rqlm"':nla.t in:. hac.l . t • ·
pko:tsttr\' (~· pn.•Sl•ntinR the ·.

pl:il'l' winn~o:rWilh :I ICII;tl ~lin
.·c,f'){tl (?l'ints. lll' wcm S~lll .
' IIi.~ purtliJiicl !ndm.L:d llri'ilcJI·
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J(amt'fl'\llaSI plan.- hunur!\,
Sill· w·J ~ a )tood spon ahuul
. 11.wi\'ln~ her &lt;i&lt;ll.l:n
mmplimc.:ma'l' wnl4.:a~luw
-mull1n•{ fmm l'amx:r lk~1.

.Farmer BQb's portfoHo pk·ks gam,.,..,d him thcuuhiuusdi.qim1iun ufhcing

.in Hl~th plurc with a JlHin ~~·lH. points . He l'Xild n&lt;a he II.':Kh&lt;'ll for mmmcm. hut his
wif&lt;· "&gt;mmcnt&lt;'ll- "1bm:&lt;wbal )I" I~oe/U'be!IJ''" cb&lt;'""' illll&gt;lnwlll.&lt;)t'ilb 11 J&gt;ilcbfo~l"

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Galllpolls · !liddlepon l'otneroy

416-0902

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992-2131 742·:1888 376-7123

992-6661

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ENTERTAifiNG KIDS- Bill Sample, w.ndarlng muelciltn from
Lebenon, Ohio, recently en1ilrtalned children lit the Dr. Samuel
L Bouard Memorial Library with hl1 rendHionl o« favorite chlldnln'l IOIIp. Sample lll8da a IUrprjM.Viltlt to Story nme; con~ at the libraryFor
ru.sclaye ~ Wednesdayl lit 10 a.m., and
ThurMaYIIIt. 7
more InfOnnlltiOn abOut llbtwy programs,

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By ED BLOI'IZ. Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLONZ: I have been
cutting back on the fat in my diet as
· well as the diet of. my family. I am
concerned about my children, however, aged 9 and 14. How much fat
does a child need in his diet?_ c.P..
H b k . NJ
0
D~1~ c:P.: As more folks take a
leap to the Jean side, it's imponant to
understknd that some fats are essential to good health. This goes for

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make note of the potcmtial benefits
insulin-dependent diabetics ·may
experience by eating more fish.
Having sufficientEFAs in the diet
may also play a role .in two disorders
involving the immune system. In sepatate controlled studies - both pre·
Jiminary - symptoms of rheumatoid
arthritis and ulcerative colitis
,_.
improved when vo1unteers ·were '""
high levels of omega-3 EFAs tn capsule form. .

Join
the
Smithsonian
for
~:;!se::e=~/ f~.~~~~~!il~t:;~~ pol~~~m~g·~~f:~~i~~~~;e:g::.
.
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a tour
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your diet can help against many of While the PG• produced from ·the
today's major maladjes, including omega-6 lend to increase tumor
hean disease, high blood pressure, growth· in experimental animals,
·
rheumatoid arthritis,. intestinal ail- those from the omega-3 from fish oil
.
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ments, psoriasis and the cornplica- do not
By USA FAYE KAPLAN
acts as comedy teams Harrigan and tions from diabetes.
.
lt';tl]oughtlhat diets high in fat
G~ Newa Service
Han, W¢ber and Fields, and minstrels
Let me c&lt;xplain how the essential represent a risk factor for cancer. Yet
The leading ·players in weighty Williams and Walker.
fats work.
.
in those populations consuming a
disciplines such as politics .and gov·
• Cu~ain Up: 11Je Rise .of the . At present we know of at least two high-fat diet based on fish, the canemment know the eyes of hiStory are lmpresano, 1907-1927, details the 'types of EFAs, the omega-3 'and cer levels are low. One study involvwatchin!l. Presidents, for in,tanq.. reigns of·
•., .Ziegfeld Jr. ·. omega-6. The omega-3 EFAs come ing 26 countries, discovered that the .
keep each ' drill't ot'their inaugural · ("Ziegfeld follies'' and "Show prii)I&amp;Jjly frpm_fish &lt;&gt;i.ls but·.c analso incidence ofb_reasl cancer decreased
I address. Generals and scieiltists•lelvo ~oai"); Lee and JJ. Shubert ("May· . 00 fourid in flaxseed (linseed) lll'd to 'as fish consumption rose.
: each lurch and digression on !he way tim~" and ','The Student Prince"); ·, a Jes~r·degree in walnut aM canota · · It is evident the omega-3 fats have
: to victory and discovery.
·•
· and looks at such performers as Fan- ·Oils,
a lot going for them. This .underscores
~~
Then, of course, there lire the dis-· ny Brice, Eddie Cantor andAIJolson.
The omega-6 EFAs come primar-· . the need 10 include·a dietary source,
ciplines that don't take themselves_
• Light the Lights: From Broad· ily from vegetable seed oils, such as such as fish. in your diet.
.
seriously, keep nothing, recycle way -to Hollywood, 1927-1942, com, soy and safflower. We have
But don't get the idea that one
everything, and evince surprise when explains the. western trek. of Broad· learned that the body uses the EFAs BFA is good and the other is bad. We
.the future is indeed interested.
_way talent and starS after the. inven- 10 make powerful, hormone-like need both of them. In fact, a study in
The American musical is a good tion of talkies. This er~ spotlight~ the compounds, called prostaglandins the Annals of Internal Medicine told
·: example.
·
talents of di~eetor Busby Berkeley; · (PGs). These P(ls help determihe how a · special omega-6 fatty acid
~ "When you say, 'American·musi~ performers Fred Astairi: and Ginger how the body operates.
extracted from the evening primrose
cats,: people giggle and think 'a lit· Rogers, Shirley Temple and Judy
The typical American diet tends to and borage herb was effective in
. tic song, a little dance, a little seltzer Garland; · and SO!Igwriters George be high in the omegao6 EFAs and too treating symptoms of rheumatpid
down the pants,"' says Amy Hen~er- aM Ira Gershwi!l: P,le Poner, Moss . low in dietary omega-3s. This is an . arthritis. Althou~h most iodividuals
5on, a 20th century·cultural historiall. · Han, Richard ·Rodge"\ and ' Moss . important point, because while both can make this fatty acid, called gam" It's a great deal more. than that.'·'. ' Han.
. .·
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EfAs are essential, they have dra- rna linolenic acid, it's believed that
· Henderson, of the Natio!llll Por• The Heights: B qadway and matically different health effects.
trait Gallery, teamed. with Dwight Hollywood, i 943, 1960, dc;,tails t.he
For example, a heart attack 1s
Blocker Bowers, of the American golden age of the American musical caused when a blood clot blocks the

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h ~~~h~n;t.~ flow of blood through an anery. The
. themArnet .. ntanMns.'alu. arouse' " odut "ThCJ ISC, d . f omega-6 PGs tend to encourage
lton s. ute to
ne~ USIC , .Km~ ~?d I an · e oun o . blood clotting, while those made
on d1splay at .the ponmll gallery Mus1c. .
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· ht'b · the process
3s tn 11 ·
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omegathroug h J u IY 6 •·
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shown that when·
(The curators also wrote the i~on an~ Revival, 1960-Present, · xpenmen s .;.~~taining fish are
show's 268-page catalog. Smithson· shows how the 1960s cultural revo- ,more o~ega d ' blood clots form
1
. ian Institution Press; $39.9~. "Star · lution - civil rights and · feminist . prese~t m !be · ted the incidence of
Spangled Rhythm&lt;' a C?mpi!ation of .. "__OVe!"ents, ~exual _liberation, drug ~~ a .s owerk:a~ ~n nificantly less.
songs from Amencan muSica,ls on, .. expepmentauon -Influenced mus1eartBI aodttac
g, nother topt'c of
· d'ue ln.
·• 1997)
' - an d· msptre
· · d "Las· Cage .
o pressuretsa
CD an d casse1te, ts
. ,'"· ·' caL"
.nJStory
,
be
·
·ning to look as if
_
The displ.y; p,esen!ed Iinder a ' aux .• Folies," "Hair,'' "A Chorus mterest. 11 s . gm
3
constellati(/n of ~i'llmatic 1\gll.ts, con- . Line.''·. "Follies" and "Kiss of the the PGh s co~~ng fro!;3m
. hthcblooodmcgapres~
.
f 400 .
. . s· 'd "'
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can . e 1p mvuera1e 1
s1sts o .
tt~ms - gowns, song- · p1 e~ ~ornan.
sure. Both high· bl
. pressure and
sheets, vtdeochps,,post~rs-t~ tell . ·. He~derson and Bowers &lt;!cvotcd · blood clotting arc involved in many
the sto~ of the Amencan mus1cal.
!iiX. y~~ to c?llectmg hundreds of
lon -term health complications seen
The musical, as embraced by Broad- anlfacts t,.tglve ~hape and votce to
. ~ diabetes . Three recent repons
way and la!fr Hollywood, tells the
the Ame,n can mustcal.
wtl
story of the ' re.inventiO!l of ~meri~an
Begin opli~l trim or. b~~akout .
culture in this century," the curators · Included. m the exh1bmon arc:
believe.
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· · •AI Jolson's tmt contract with~
For several generations of 1mmi- Shubens (1911), and a note askmg
grants. musicals provided "the W?rds ~or.~ I,SOO a;:-veek for his appearance
and music to a new Amencan m Sin bad, (1917-191 8);
dream,". Henderson says. "What
• Irving Berlin's transposing
we've done is change the way you piano; · ·
· . ·
.
.
can look at Arnerican musicals
a
.. • Fled'.Astaire's lap shoes from
way to study American culture,"
. "Top Hat" ~193S); .
,
. Musicals, especially the. most pop• Inv!tauon to · Shtrley Temple s
iJlar ones, often were extravagant, birthday pany (1938); ·
glitzy, rainbow -colored manifesta· ' •.Ruby slipPers from :·The Wizard
tions of America's yearnings and con· of Oz;"
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cems.
· • Red velvet dress Judy parland
" Oldaho'ma" (1943) and "Meet wore in "Meet Me in St. Louis;"
Me in St. Louis" (1944), for exam·
• Martha Swope photo of Michael
pte, were nostalgic escape~ for a· Bennett rehearsing "A Chorus Line."
The show also features audionation in the thick of war; "Guys and
Qolls" (1950) and "West S!de Sto':Y" , visual clips of early and n:cent per·
( 1957.) reflected a country s grpwmg formances including:
· . ·
• Fanny Brice singing, "I'm .,
"embrace of lhe urban landscape,''
. the exhibition 's catalog says. .
Sash&amp;; the Passion of the Pascha" .
"Rejl Hot and Blue" (the title is . (1929);
' ,,
. , Elhel Merman singing' I ve Qot
taken from Cole Poner's 1936 musi- ·
Nllll"hlitfonal
cal), tells the story of this cultural Rhythm" (1930);.
.
.
phenomenon through bi_ograph1es of
, Mary Manin and Ez1d Pin~
the impresarios, songwnters and per· singing "Some Enchanted Evemng
formers who gave the musical theater (1·9S4);
.
form and life.
·
. • "The Jet Song" from "WestSide
The exhibition is divided into Story" (1961);
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five sections:
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• Chita Rivera performing the title
• Setting the Stage: Street Scene, • song fiOf!l "Spider Woman"· (1993).
.
1866-1906, which looks at the proThe show's lltifacts come from
. '
ducers who elevated variety enter·
museums anjl private lioDections.
tainment from saloon fw to' vaud~ville, which spawned 5uch famous .

some are unable to make enough. The
·problem with esseinial fats is that !he
typical American diet is way out of
balance.
·
The omega-3 fat~ are available a~
a food supplement Approach these
with care, though, as the bl!&gt;od flotsuppressing of the omega-3s could
leave one more susceptible to . side
effects ranging from nosebleeds to an
increased risk of hemorrhagic stroke ..
It's best to rely on food as the source
of these healthful fats. Fish containing high levels of om~ga-3 EFAs
include mackerel , sardines, salmon,
tuna, herring, yellowtail and trout.
You and your family can get all
the essential fats you need on a diet
in which about 20 percent of the calories come from fats. For a 2,()()().caloric diet, this would translate to about
45 .grams of fat per day.

,

1995. 1.ol

Dear Ann Landers: · The letter
regarding evil people who n:moyc
valuables from bodies struck a chord.
During World War II, I was stationed in Chiria. On a mission, one ·of
our pilots was shot down and killed.
His body was recovered by the Chi·
nese , who reverently \fansponed· it
from village to village, through many
hands, until it arrived back at our
bilse. The pilot's wallet, ring, watch
and fountain pen also were given to
us, intact, in spite of the fact that
these items represented a greill deal
of money to those poor Chinese viilagers. Does that show a lot of char·
acter, or what? - Harry in Mi ami .
· Dear Miami: It does , indeed. The
Chinese have long been considered a
most honorable people . Why? •.
Because they learned it at home.
(Send questions to Ann Lan·
ders; Creators Syndicate, 5777
W. Century Blvd., Suitel 700,
Los Angeles, Calif. 90045.)

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Fo.mily NYJhe Is
Boek••• Only Beeeer!

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mRY TUISDAY IIGIT

Hlncanon, wv

GIIJjipalll It Rio Cklncle, OH

BIG BOOT SALE!

•All MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S BOOTS •••• 25·50%
OFF.
.
.•All CHilDREN'S SHOES •
AND BOOTS •••••••• ~~.25·50% OFF'
....DW~I':, .

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Your FamUy's Shoe Store ·
388 Second Ave.
Across from the City Park
Michael I. Hardway, Jr. ·
Owner

Gallia- Jackson- Vinton JVSD
Buckeye Hills Career Center
f614) 245-5334

Blueprint Reading for lnduilfy
.
Dnflf11 Allva•cad Welding .
Adult Bask Uteracy
Classes
Explcwllg
MR@D Disallltles .Aw•. .ss Trahti11
Carrldlt!as · ·
F-IAL ds PI• kg Alalysls ·
W/Sdelce, ..t C•• Optlols
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GAUl POLIS
34911tird Avenue

POMEROY
Lynn &amp; 2nd Sts. ·:·

MIDDLEPORT

I UllAND

97 N. ind Street

Salem Street

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For more Information or Pf81'e91atratlori
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In some ·cases, .eliminating an
dietary fat isn't the best idea

Ann
Landers

Check out these ,upcoming dasses:

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DfiHn(wil of""JJIe• l!iiU.
for • COIIfp/afrrll•ry ~ mMrr•
People• JMq.ojJb ·
Peoples lllnk DlscoorM Broke~c Semces are offered through Olde Discount
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ROYAL 0 AI IESORT·

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Mary j.l.Jp.:omb . .

IIIW 9 Will SfSSIOII
. 'lio Begin·
· ·January . 3th •
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Hi~t':j ~.~~~ms ~~~~~:·~ 1~ot ~~~~ pr;'!!u.~~

"Video phones have always been
a pan ol our visi.on of the (uture,''
said 8x8's Chris McNiffc .
Other visions of the telephone's
future, such as a minia!ure personal
computer, also are being demon- .strated.

J,

ents in Detroit and took her out that When we are at home, we can deter
weebnd. They were married two her wilh a water-filled spray bottle, ·
years later. Next June, they will eel- but we both work long hours, and
ebrate their 50th wedding anniver- Sabrina is unsupervised. I've tried
sary, - Dee in Lansing, Mich.
sprays, pepper, hot sauce- nothing
Dear Dee: Wartime romances works.
always seem to me the most exciting.
Friends have suggested that Sab· ·
Maybe it's because I've lived through rina be declawed. I don ' t want to·do
one myself. Thanks for a letter that is that, but I can see that. Walter is
sUJe to rekindle a good many mem- beconling very upset about his shred·
·
ded "•urru't ure . "'e
ones.
n· ha ve agreed to
Dear Ann: My fiance and I will be abide by your decision, Ann. manied next summer. We get along Harms Beach, Calif.
fine and communicate well. We have
Dear Harms Beach: Although you
one sticky problem - my cai, Sab- lire not in favor of declawing Sabri·
rina.
. na's forepaws, it would cenainly put
When I moved in with "Walter" an end to the furniture shredding. You
last spring, Sabrina carne along. Wal- should discuss the pros an4 cons of
ter knew nothing about pets, but he this procedure with your vet before
and Sabrina made the adjustment, · making a final · decision . (Keep in
and now he loves to play with her and mind lha\ ·a declawed cat must. never
feed het and doesn't even nlind·tak- be allowed outdoors.)
ing care of the litter pan.
A.s a last-ditch effort, try covering
The problem is that Sabrina is ter- the s6fa with plastic - cats hate plasrible about scratching lhe sofa. She tic. Even though it's not the • lat~st
has a scratch pad •. which she loves, fashion, 'it just might solve the probbut it doesn't seem to be enough. lem.

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MIDDLEPORT - Jeff Shrive~s
was awarded a doctoral~ in psycho).
ogy from Ohio State University in
'
-s.;
ceremonies held Dec. 13.
He is the 'son Of Mr. and Mrs.
remote control·. Users pay a monthly
Bernard
Shrivcrs of Middlcpon, and
fcc of$19.95 and can connect tooth· ·
a
graduate
of Eastern High School.
er own~rs of C-Phonc Home units
Shrivers, his wife Tammy, and son
and compatible PC video phones.
·
Ben
reside in Westerville. ..
A competitor, Santa Clara, Calif.·
. based 8x8, will introduce the ViaTV
Phone this month ($499, (888) 843-

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... 1591 S.R. So., GaJUpoU.
(614) 446-1603
'
Open 11-F 10 am-6 pa; Sat.' 10 am-4 pm ,

Lafayalle Mal•

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By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I hOpe it's not
too late for another seat-mate story.
l'd like to tell about how my parentS
met.
My father, a Marine, was stationed .
near Chicago at the end of World War
ll. My mother was wo.ting in Chica- .
·go,.living with some girlfriends. On
Labor Day weekend, 1945, the two of
lhe m were both wru·u· ng t o board a
train 10 Detroit.
· My father first saw my mother
from the back and admired her legs.
He wanted to find a seat next to her·
but lost his nerve and sat in front of
her instead. An Army captain took the
seat beside her. My father was angry
with himself for chickening out and
n:solved to take over the captain's
seat at the earliest opponunity. When
lhe captain got up to use the n:stroom,
Dad slipped into his seat.
.
The captain returned and said, "It
looks as if I've lost my seat." Dad
· . replied, "Yes, it sure &lt;!oes:" He went .
on to charm my mother, met her par-

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It's never too,late for a "good
story about. first encounters

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JlniWy 12, 1117

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Section ·

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Sundlly, January 12, 1H7

#Once agairi, ·CBS tries to re-inv~nt · the network
By ..KE HUGHES
Servlee

~nnect News

I

PASADENA, Calif. - Barely a year after re-inventing itself, CBS has
.
changed again. .
lt's .out with new, in with the o.ld. The network has decided the past isn't
such a bad thing, after all.
Of course, that's especially true when you're CBS, with a glorious past
and a shaky present.
.
.
. ·
Now the network i~flaunting memories. Reappearing - in movies or
f!li'niseries - will be 'Knots Landing," "Dukes of Hazzard," " Rockfor~
Files" and "Murder, Sh Wrote"; others, including " Dallas," may follow.
, , " The audience is nostalgic fonhis ," says producer Michael Filerman.
His " Knots Landing" brought glamour and glitz to '70s suburbia.
" There's nothing there to take its place now, " says Joan Van Ark . one of the
stars.'
·
Not all the nostalgic viewers are old-timers. 'Tom Wopat says he runs into
" Dukes" clubs on college campuses. " It's something that was big in their
childhood."
. That was when CBS was always No . 1. .Then it starte(l to crumble.
The network found few new hits .. . and found that its surviving shows
had older audiences.
'
.
. .
.
• Advertisers disapproved. They wanted to mold lifelong habits of younger
viewers.
.. The other networks bega11 aiming young and mocking CBS.niey still do.
"To th~ amazement of everyone, CBS' audience actually got older," says ·
B'rad Turrell , of the upstart network called WB.
His research department says the median WB viewer is 24.7 years old almost the exact age o(the typical Fox viewer in ·I988, when that network
started to take off.
:: By comparison, the F.ox age now is 33. That compares to 33.3 for UPN,

38.4 for ABC, 39.4 for NBC ... and 49.9 for CBS.
For years, CBS argued with advertisers. Baby boomers, it said, would not
age in the way their parents did; they wo'!ld keep tryingnew products.
Then it gave up. In September 1995, it swept out such old shows as
Angela Lansbury 's "Murder, She Wrote," putting in such new ones as
"Central Park West."
Viewers fumed ; so did Lansbury. Then the new shows craShed and tBS ·
re-thought its re-tiUnking.
·
"We have a deal with Angela to do four 'Murder She Wrote' movies over
the next two years," says CBS program director Leslie Moonves. "Our relationship with her is back to being spectacular."
That was bOosted by· the fact that her "Mrs. Santa Claus" has been the,
top-rated Sunday movie this season. Quickly, that night has returned to its
old image.
. That starts with "60 Minutes," then goes to "Touched By an Angel. "· In
Lansbury's old time slot, it has recaptured some of her fans ; "ER" is the
'
. ·
only TV drama with mclre viewers.
"Touched" and its spin-off, "Promised Land," speak to traditional val- '
ues. Martha Williamson, the producer of both' shows, tells of one viewer she
met.
"He said, 'What I like ... . is I hear what I used to hear from my folks and
grandparents ... I miss being reminded that goodness matters, that truth mat-

.

for a new time slot thi.s spring.
,
Now he thinks the new "Orleans" can prosper in the same slot (IO).m.
Wednesdays) where "EZ" died.
~
".I t is a very different type of show· than 'EZ Streets,"' Moon~ iaY•·
"(And) it luu a well-known CBS star."
fl.
That's Larry Hagman, who thrived during the "0'81las" days. ilhat
show's first reunion movie did well and he's ready for more;
"I would like to see ' Dallas' ·(movies) 11\liybe tw!ce. a ye~." HalftW\

says.

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That is a deal that already has been struck for _Lans"ury 's "Md~r· ·and
a new batch of James Garner's "Rockford Files" fiims . Meanwhile; fday
will bring the first reunion films ot'two more shows.
.
.,
-"The Jjukes of flazzard" will have movie. "It's nothing more ~we
did hefote, •: says John Schneider, whQ stars with Wopat, "and nothing'!'·"
· Mell\wbile, "Knots Landing" will have .a four-hour miniseries. "~'s
life there and I' think it could tiave gone on for decades." sll)'s WiPiarn
Devane, one of the stars. ·
. ,
CBS will need extra movies, as it patches the holes lefl by can~led .
•
.
.
X
senes.
·'
· ·,
¥:
·
.
·
..,
. It fixed Fridays Aly .inserting ·''JAG, ... which NBC had can~eled! Its
W~nesday. solution is spl~ndid, but temporary; CBS ordered tryoul~f!S of
se§.nweeks for "Orleans"•and six for the "Coast to Coast" magazine illo.w.
~st ot'the bench strength includes a so-so drama ("Feds")' ai\11 an
ters.• "
·
.
ordi
'
ry
comedY ("Temporarily Yours" ). Still, CBS h8s those "EZ Stthts"
Such themes also show up ir the Saturday series and the Sunday movies .
.
episOdes,
plus otl\er glimmers of hope.
" They are very. very different from the other guys' Sunday mo'\ies."
"life ... and Stuff," a clever comedy by Rick Reynolds, is waiting for a
Moonves says.
.
In fact, one of the Sunday failures came when Moonves showed the two- tryout. Moonv~s also has promised a better time slot for Ray Romano's~~roll
·
.
, •
'
. "E:verybody Loves Raymond."
hour opener to the gritty "EZ Streets" series,
That
sbo)Y
made
several
top-·10
lists,
bl!t
Romano
had
trouble
conviricing
It was the wrong place and time for the show, Moonves grants. He yanked
"EZ Streets" after one one-hour episode; there are eight more hours waiting a clerk at the ·cBS Store that he works for the network and qualifies fcir a
discount.
.
r
Thti CBS Store? That's in New York, Romano explains, and is filled1'il)l
items from the network's popular shows, "It's a very small store:" ~.~
Some day, it might have to expand. In the 1960s lind '70s, it could have
.
·hired, the di~ector explained that this
The couple met when Holly ·co- and all that. But, if that were some- been enormous.
l•
.wouldn't be a . glamour role. "He starred in "Dumb and Dumber" in how the case, I'd give it all up to go
Mike Hughel cover• lelevlalon tor She Lanalng (Mich.) &amp;Ute Jolirnitt
said any 'damage' I sustain, I'm 1994. A long couriship followed- back to before.
and Oannlltlilaft Sarvlce.
•
. '·
,,
going to look like that for the rest of reportedly with a brief coolin~-off
Though she would say no more,
·the film. This won't be one o{ those period. But then they were married she presumably · is talking partly
movies were the lipstick and the hair on Sept. 23.
about the death of her 14-year-old
are never mused. I thought, 'This is
"Yeah, it'• bizarre," she sa~s of brother, Alexander, in a fire.
so cool. 1 won 't need to spend time the circus that now swirls around
"I think you have to keep .perin hair and make-up in the morning. • them.
spective. Whenever I have . really
.
Little did I realize that 'bruises' and
But she insists she manages to joyous moments. or I'm really over- ·
',
all that take a lot of time in make- keep both feet on the ground. "I still whelmed by everything that comes
·'
• Birth Control Services
up." ,
keep in contact with people I grew my way, there is always a catch. I
''What I like about my character up with, my old frie.nds.
have certain memories that are real.•.
• Eme~ency Contraceptive ServiC!ts
is that I'm just an .ordinary girl. I
"I'm really close to my family, ly hard."
• Pregnancy Tests and Counseling
haven:t had any special training in and that keeps me grounded. My
Holly says she views !Jer small- .
anything weapons or whatever.
family and Jim's family are quite town roo_ts as both a .plus and a
• Diagnosis and Treatment of Sexually ··
"I don't have poison darts shoot- similar, and .we grew up within a few mmus.
•
Transmitted Dl~ases
.
;
ing out of my shoe, •• she adds, ''I'm hours of each other. I grew up quite
"Being raised in a small town
just an ordinary girl, thrown into an close to the Canadian border (in the · with loving family and friends, I
• Anonymouii/Confldentlal HIV Tests · · .,
extraordinary situation."
·
Finger Lakes region of Upstate New tend to be very open and friendly.
• Prenatai ,Care/Athens Site
The same thing can probably be York).
I'm trUSting. We didn't have a lot.of
t
said about her private life. The
"We watched the same TV Sta- crime; .our '-door waS' usually
.
!
Mid
Life
Services
.
.
;,
daughter of two Ge~eva, N.Y., col- tions and vacationed at the same unlocked. I'd go to the grocery, and
Gallla County: 414 Second Ave., Galllpolla, Ot(
lege professors, ·and a former high pl~ces ,when we were kids . Our know everybody there. It was a great
;,.
school cheerleader, she was gradual- backgrounds are in some ways inter- 'way to grow up as a kid.
'
ed from Sarah Lawrence College changeable."
"But now I'm 11nding I need to
VISA/MC, Medicaid, Private Insurance accepted
•
with an eye toward law school when
But as her career and private life be a little. more guarded.".
;,··'
Sliding
fee
scale
lor
those
quslifi8d
•
she decided to try acting.
both continue .to skyrocke\ • .Holly
As for her future with Carrey,
But even though she's achieved a remembers, . "I've ~so hod tremen, Holly says they've bOth pledged to
. commendable degree of successj~ : dous . trag~y i.ll. n\)' life, --;. th,!UJ ctryo• \cC!1 dge~as
'""~m-~".r: ~as
""~"""ssscthedl
"e".~lletJo•.
•'
more than a decade of screen worK, won't elaborate on - in two cases
~
~vs.,p
nothing· matches the public impact that I would wish on no one. ,
... '' J\nd he h8s decided tlla:t aft~r
or' marrying comic sup~~;~t.J.ilJl •. _. • ;.'Sprof&lt;!,Uu~~(!rnub!l\,~llllte · his ..!iF.itt~£211i,;~g,;ilk~,ill~"t~t'2~~.e.,
Carrey, the .manic movie :star with . I suffered in the past,"Y'mno.w .~ven yeaii.'O'ff aiitl' lic! me goOiJ"guy wru o 1 ·
· the $20 million per movie paycheck. (success) so I can help my family work."
·

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JACK GARNER
Gannett News Service
"- If Sandra Bullock can drive a bus
;nd Geenli Davis can command a
pirate ship, by gosh, than Lauren
Solly . figures she can .land a 747.
~D fight off a psycho killer.
::: Both are requirements for her
~aracter in "Turbulence," the new
m;tion film that makes the actress
!:Jollywood's latest female action
hc;ro.Actually,lightingoffpaparazzi'
and tabloid journalists as the realliie wife of superstar Jim Carrey
jl'tobably was good preparation for
ilte 33-year-old Holly.
". " I really loved the idea of an
Ql:lion movie, I wanted to do something physical," Holly says, during a
rdt:ent interview in a Los Angeles
&amp;&lt;itel.
.
~. As an actress who has initially
labored in supporting roles, liolly
~J~o welcomed the opportunity to
~!!tTY a picture as a lead performer.
"But now there's a different feeling,
since it is all done," she says, "Now
!!)ere's a little bit of ierror
im(olved."
·
· In "Turbulence," Holly stars as
11!1 airline stewardess who must save
the day after a psychotic killer (Ray
L)oita) kills the pilot and co-pilot
and takes over a jet airliner.
Holly says when she was first

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Gannett Newa Service
PASADENA, Calif. · Let's
meet two·big-deal movje stars.
They ·have everything in common, including Oscars, causes and
bankrolls. They also have nothing in
common..
~Iizabeth Taylor is preceded by
fanfare, flustering and a little white
dog. Meryl Streep isn't.
They ~rc separated by a generatioll •.. and by the changing functions of stars.
· Qne studied at Yale, 'learning
from the best profs. The .other studled in Hollywood; she learned from
Lassie (who bit her) , Montgomery
Clift '(who show.id her how to act)
and '!tic hard. Burton (who made her
laugH and cry).
Stilt'.. they have common points.
Both:
,
•· Will be on ABC in · February.
Thai's ·why they happened to be in
the same place, within an hour or so.
• Have medical causes they're passiomite about. Streep talks of an alternative approach to epilepsy; Taylor
PIIS .talked early and often .about
AIDS.

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VALENTINE

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263 N. Second Avenue ' •
Mtc:tcitiiPOR. OH 45760 .
. 61-4/992•-4055
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RING :IN THE NEW
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. OFFER.OF1 · OFF. . . ..:.
MONTH.
FOR.6·MONIIISt ·
•WE'RE

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THE

The scrubbers produce thousands of pounds of this
.non.. hazer&lt;!l&gt;us rnnterinl every day. but it has to be
C~t
'•
remov~d ffom the scrubbers.
-For nearly two decades thousands of
,
VFL TECHNOLOGY DOES 1'1'
:i!~tm·istk traveling past the vast complex of the GenerEariy in 1995 AEP entered inio a contraet with n
. James M. Gavin Power Plant on State Route 7 at Penn~ylvania based corporation to handle the tons of
hesl1ire look .with awe at this sprawling giant that pro- waste from the scrubbers. This cpntract was for three
duces millions of years with an additional two year option, and resulted
kilowatts of elec- in 'the 1opening of a huge landfill that covers 80 acres in
trlcity; but they an an~a in and adjacent to the former Ohio River Coldon't see it all.
leries strip-mining operation in Cheshire Township.
About one mile · Vf!L Technology Corporation. based in West
~~~;t~~~~~l)ehind the main · Cliest~r. Pa. moved in, along with employees of
plant, snuggled oqt Kokosing Construction Co. of Fredricktown, Ohio.
of sight on a hilltop The h~ge earth-movers and other large machines began
that overlooks the· creating ponds and the opening of the landfill, and
hisiori.c al Gravel compl'eted it by mid 1995.
Hill Cemetery is
VFL and AEP opened offices at the landfill with
another.
related Fred L. Parker serving as site manager, John Gwinn
operation that is equipwem superintendent, Ed Wright as landfill fore~~:~to the operation of the recently ,installed man. Ronnie Campbell as master mechanic, plus about
that enable the plant to genera.te.electricity 35 o~r employees to operate the equipment and staff
ABOUT ONE
the main plant,
out ot slght on a hlll?op that overlooks She hlatorlpolluting the air.
.
.. the office.
.
cal
Gravel
Hill
c-tery
Ia.
another
related
that. ls Important to the operation at the recently
The scrubbing imi.ts do _a great job of cleaning the
Members . .of the AFUCIO operating engineers,
Installed ."ecrubbera" that enttble the plant to generate electricity without polluting the air.
emitted by th~ high-sulfer coal mined in the teams,s,' and laborers from the immediate area are
the plant is mixed and more lime is added to help "fixmines operated by American Electric Power in em'plo d at the site.
, . · and close to Gra.vel Hill Cemetery.
The
sludge
goes
into
absorbers
in
the
bottom
pf
the
ate"
the material before it begins the long climb up the
Coul!_!y. . ·
·
AE assigned Dou!l Workman of Point Pleasant as
new
stacks
at
the
plant,a
lime-slury
is
mixed
in
to
caphillro
the landfill. ,.
·
~
while .performing their cleansing of the landfilt·supervisor, assisted by several others· who perthe
sulfer
dioxide
(SQ2),
then
to
live
thickness
At
an
area
called
Haga
Drive
(all of the roads atop
·lUre
hi'gh-sulfer ·coal, the scrubbers produce a by-product form numerous duties related to the daily operations.
30
percent
of
the
sol
ips
settle
out.
the
hill
have
been
named)
about
12,000
cubic yards of
tanks
where
abou!
.~ finown as FGD, officially known as Flue Gas DesulferFGD IS-TREATE!)AT PLANT
.Large
rakes
then
push
the
material
into
another
'
concrete
was
used
to
build
the
"Stacker
Pad".
lt·is here .
· ization Sludge. This sludge is wet, heavy, and hll$ the
'T~~- FGD undergoes a series of drying/purification
rlgpearance of dry•wall material used in home building. treatmttits at the scrubbers.before beginning a one-mile pipeline connected to the Centrifuges that operate like the conveyor pours out th.e sludge which is then loaded
onto huge industrial trucks named Pay hauler. These
:: AEP engineers knew this heavy material had to be jou"'!Y. to the landfill by wa'/ of a conveyor system the spin-dry cycle on a washer.
A
Pugmill
is
the
next
stop
where
fly
ash
produced
by
·
huge trucks can haul up to 50 tons, but generally are
~~posed of in a safe, environmentally clean manner. that stretches like a giant serpent.across Kyger Creek
loaded with '37 tons of sludge, and ·driven to the first
, . landfill opened under Phase One.
Since 1995 the trucks ha:ve hauled four and one half
millioo tons to the landfill. There are 10 of these giant
trucks, four D-6 Caterpillar dozers, four Volvo dozers,
a huge Komatsu shovel. pi us numerous other industrial machines in use at the landfill .
ENVIRONMENTALLY SA~E
.
The Phase 0)1e landfill is now at capacity .and has
been covered with two feet of clay and one foot' of topsoil. All liquid drainage from it flows along "benches"
at measured levels into two settling ponds,. where biodegrable chemicals are added to purify the water before
it returns to the Ohio River by way of Stingy Creek,
·
Turkey Run, and Kyger Creek.
At each end of the landfill , overlooking Turkey Run
Road', two huge drainage ditches call~d "Grout Bag
Ditches" carry e«ess rain water into the pon(!s. These
ditches are rilade of concrete without gravel and placed
into container bags.
.
The Phase B landfill is now open while construction
on Phase Cis underway, and when completed, will provide adequate storage until early 1998 . By exp_anding
the operation into available land there will be enough
area to accommodate the landfill for another 20-25
years.
Operations atop the hill are directed from a large
building that houses VFL offices, AEP offices, and a
';r""'i .. ..r.r·
garage fully equipped to handle maintenance on·the big
machi~ .
.
The complex has "i'veral main roads and streets that
carry very simple names such as Landfill Street, Connector Street; Mountaineer Drive, Meigs Mine Road,
Haga Dri've, and Lookout Point, from where one is
awed by the panoramic view of the Gavin Plant. Ohio
River, Cheshire. and the hills of West Virginia.
by

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L.-----------------------""
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: 25 .JEEP GRAND C.HEIOKEE
IISTOCI

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10

::·RIADY TO GO lN·TBI SNOW!
'

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1

.

'

~

:

of Southeast Ohio .

'

~

Planned Parenthoqcft

Watch fo·r TV programs·.
starring Taylor; ·Streep ·
By MIKE HUGHES

~

I

.

';Operation makes by-prod.uct_ ~_.:..__,.:___:____..____ _ _ _~~
:b f Gavin plant scrubbers
~~nyironmental'ly·
~. safe
.
.

With 'Turbulence' it's ·Holly's turn at. t.he top.
·~··
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• MORE:IA11 PLANS
. ·MORE·

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TOLL

D-6 ·caterplllar . dozers, four Volvo dozera, a huge Komateu
ahovel, plus numerous olhl!r lnduatrlal· machine• In uae at the

landfill. These huge trucktt can haul up to SO tone, but generaJ..
ly are loaded with 37 tons
sludge. .
.

of

•

•WIUGM·YOU
-OFA
.

•

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'

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Call ()t stop 'in at CeUularOne®
.
and take advantage of this special offer.
Better hurry! Offer expires January 31, 1997.

'?,"'

Some resnictiom aflllly, · ,

~

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'

ALL PRICED 10 SELL
.VARIOUS EQUIPMENT
au.,ao · ·r

•'~~~~.,.••

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.

CELLULARONE~i
Clearly
the
Best.
.

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.

•·:r A PUQMlLL, FLYASH procluoecl by the
II fiiiQCI a"d mo,.
.. Ia lidded to ,..,p
'-·• ''fi..W • ,,_ ·m·~·•
........ 1 "'ator. it "--Ina ~
lon"'
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climb up the hHI to lite landftU. ~I an callacl Htlglt DriveL about
t~,ooo
c~c
yarda
at
concma
wile
URd
to
build
the "Stacker Plld." it
~

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t. here the aonwyot pours out the aluctge, ltbo-. WlliDII Ia lhln
loacMd onto hup lntluetrtal trucka named Payhauler, Ill aw."""

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Pomeroy •lllddleport·~ Ott. PGint .......... wv

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co~fortable

Adaptable and
(

--Soling . . . - . . .

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T.V.'s.

a-,
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4 ma,re choirs

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Ill C A l l -

~-Dry« 175; G.E. 40 InchWl!irlpOol
Eloait:
Ill"" 115; Toppen :10 loch
Eloclflo Ill"" ttH; Hotpeinl
. - , . , _ liD ""'"""'"' 185;

viaiti ta cHerU's r.m..
Tho..,.,....,.1111- u
a c a a o - in mulli-41ocipli·
mittant

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1125; -......... Flofrieanatolt
Frotl Fr. . Sl5o; G.E. AlmorMII

rwy-

Cui to 1325 1 Yaar W.rraniJ;
WoaMr U05 1 Y•r W.rraniJ

s-r.l T o - fR&gt;m. ~
18 Vinl Snll.pOia, ··~·7391,
811-

Furniahed Eltidonty A!lo.-.c,
C&lt;ln1nll Hoell Ill:., ,. "'
prlnlll Partolng, ~~~

:;r

- ............. you
--you........

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i BIDRII i
ll'-O"oi7'-0C
1'10 :
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12' -&lt;1'.t5' -t

·Willing • LPN-

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s-.. :JO+e75-1429.

completion ol a

'

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, D---,eslsn
o.-57 has.-a llvlns
room, foyer, kitchen, din-

l)lrilnOe

· fS' -4.•1!.. -2.
' ,. auc;

·Good clinicll skills 11 well 11
OOOd
Oi'll and wrilllr1 illilla oro a
11\111
. .
~
·Recent home ·c1r1 "I IJ*'itnce

omcr ..

11'•0'oiJ'·O"'
,. en,.;

•

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. bedrooms. An L-sbaped kitchen reatui'el a work Island and .hu a
aunny, bayed lnrormaJ' dlnlns nook ·on one side and a two"car,
: sarase. on the other. 1'he.laundry r.o om Ia lust steps from the
. kitchen, and shares'
. . . a hallwily
. with a doublesdoored pantry.

(For a more delailed, 1CIJW1 plan
qf lhU ho~qe, Including BuUia 10
ertlmaling coslr and /inaneing,
1end U 10 HoUle qf 1M Weelr. P.O.
lkJz: IJ6Z, New York, N.Y. 101161J 6Z. &amp; oure 10 incla 1M plan

• drilled.· Fil.l the dam with light the cuuing surface. The particles
machine oil. Keep extra oil in a squill will come up when you pull the put· I£ you plan to drill. file or saw can on hand to rep len ish the supply ty or tape off the file.
, metal in your workshop, here arc as needed.
.. When using a file, cover the side
.
some tips to make the job easier:
.To' drill holes in tubing, secure lbe of the file th'lt you are not using with
Clean holes
,
tubing in V-grooved wood blocks duct tape to keep it from accidentalDrilling sheet metal can cause held in. a vise. Insert a snull,·fiuing ly scratching your work.
bent or rough edges. The trick to pro- dowel inside the tubing to remforcc Saw power ·
: ducing' clean holes is to clamp the the thin walls and to guide the bit
Befote making a hacl&lt;saw cut,
· metal between 1wo pieces ()f scrap . slraight through to the other side. nick the piece at the cut line with a
: wood before drilling. With a pencil, Make sure the bit can exit the bouom 'file to make a starting notch. Use a
: mark tbe exact hole locations on .the end freely.
thre~-cornered file to.cut a potch in
wood. Then drill through the sand- FIJ,ing
round metal.
. wich. This will produce clean. holes • When filing metal, it,'s imporiant
To cut a piece of angle iron, clamp
:whether you usc a portable drill or a . to keep the file grooves dean of fine '
it
in
a vise with the bouom of the V
· ·
' drill press.
metal particles. A clogged file . will
facing
pp. Your hacksaw will then cut
: If. you have' to drill a hole in sheet . slide over work instead of culling ii.
through
both sides of the angle iron
:·metal and.can 'I sandwich it in scrap
The best way to clcan a file is with
· wood. you can still get a clean hole. a file card, a ,wire brush in a metal at the same time, making a smoother
. ·'
. · Jusl puta countllrsink bit in your drill : frame available in hardware stores. . and more accurale cu!.
and twirl it in the hole a few times to So!fle models have a removable pin ._ T.o cut an ovethead pipe will) a
:remove the burrs.
·
. that you can usc to clean out tough hacksaw, simply remove the. saw
When drilling in a thicket piece of debris from fi.li: teeth •.To use 1~ card, blade and reinsert it in an invened
:metal, you can keep the drill bit from pull it parallcllo the file's Ieeth. o' ' position with the pipe inside the
: wandering off center by dimpling the
. To reduce dQgging from soft met~ frame of the hacksaw. ·
:surface with a center punch. Add light als, such as uluminum, copper and
•'
· ;motor oil to tile hole to keep the bit brass, rub llllcu!'l powder or chalk ·
Aiuminum and other sofi s~t
,from ~verheating. The oil .will also · across the file:teeth before filing. lliis metals are best cqt with a saber !law:
;speed cutting time and keep tile bit will let you clean out the metal par- that's CC1ui~d wi,th ~ lin.c-tooth
ticles more easily with a file card.
•from getting dull.
blade. Apply hght inach1nc 011 along
~
If you're drill,ing .thick melal, a
Ncvci~~o blow on a file to remove the cut lirie to keep the blade teeth
; good way to keep the bit lubricated metal pariicles -th6y may wind' up fromclogging. The oil will alsp keep
: is to form a~circular ~am from IJlod- in your eyes. If you don't have a file the blade cooler and sharper.
;,elirig clay around . tbe area to be card, (ll'l;lll' puny or m'!-&lt;king tape onto

1·.

I

Giveaway

70

Yard sate

Mutt i. Paid

In

AdYanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the diY·.,.fort tht ad it to run.
5\lndly.ocll~llli • 2:00 1&gt;-m. Frtdof.
MondiiY lldlllon • 10:00 a.m. Sal·
urday.
.

Poineroy,
Mldcllep~)rt

,

· &amp; VICinity
All Yard Sa los Mull Bo Paid In
AdYanco. Dndlino: 1:00p!il 1ho
dor before !he lid il ., run, Sun·
day I Mondoy odilion· t:OOpm

Frlolot

.

:111-.

month depoail &amp; utililies. 304~5881.

'

.

450.

See* Tanks,
2,000 G•IIGns Rori
Jac::kaan, OH

&amp; Plaslic

. 8002 Ext. N'c
9amto9pm
7Days

1100 ..LES RADIUS •HOllE EVERY WEEKEND
F~Y 118URANCE PAID BY COIIPANY
(DENTAL, EYE, PRESCRIPTION)
. 401K AI!TIRI!MENT PLAN
RRST It • FIAST·OUT i:HsPATCH
LATE MOD£L CONY. TRACTORS
WITH FlATBED TRAILERS
COIIPE1TT1VE PAY· PERCENTAGE OF GROSS

'

GRANT TRUCKING, INC • .
5418 SR 13-OAK HILL, OHIO 45831

-

·Rooms ,.·
. CoonllMtor
.
FUIJ..tlma....,. ·Continuation
conUngint upon grttnt funding
. r.. , , Ohio IJI'I!Wrllty Coli• .
·of.o .teopalttlc Mldlclns
.~.000 plus excellent benefits
·:ti;~lm~rriedtalely=
·
fallowing search ·
BSN · required; AN with
extensive public or community health nursing
expeiience will .be considered. . Minimum three
ye8rs' clinical nursing experience required.
Administrative and teaching .,xperience highly
desirable; exceHent in1elpers0nlll l[lkiUs essent~.
RESPONSIBLm!ES: Coordinlitiis the CtlildhC~od
ImmuniZation ·program (CHIP) and other mobile
heal!h programs as directed thi'oughout 21-county
I 11101~111 . May .have alternate hours 'which includes
weekenda and evenings. Duties encompass
pediatric public health nursing; proViding education
for parents and osteopathic medical students and
·
other duties as asaigned.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: By Jimuary 31, 1997,
~ resume ahd three professional reference&amp; to
Anita M. Dunfee, Human Resources Administrator,
Ohio University college of Osteopathic Medicine,
013 Grosvenor West, Athens, Ohio 45701. (614)

. , _ . . . ... . 7;1100. 3114·

l ""'""''r ..

--an._.,...

rAERCHANDISE

auH, ·3 bedrDama, 2 ·

0

..,.....•• llving.raorn, lorgo
·
a - • • off ol SR 33,

YOGA
.. BEGINNING
~POUS ·

DAYS ·

•

HOusehold
Goods ·
.limited Offer! 1997 doublewide,
+3br, 21Jarh, $1799 down, $2191
month. Free deli\lery &amp;
Only ar OakWOO:d HomeS,
:!(14-755-5885.

wv.

•

LIMITED OFFER!
lor

wall, will
Ull II

Moo.-Fri. ·
·• · 10 a.m.· a p.m.
Saturday
10 a.m.- 5 p.m.

Rest&amp;Ui'1¥1t open

GRAND RE-OPENING .

.

?t~;::. tiom~s 1 Nii!O,

..

Bed Framee
Recliners

$58.00
$18.85
'$98.00

4 Qrawer Chest

$48.1!6
$298.00

•'¥.

WV.·:30•-·

Very nic~ 1Dl~ . tfa;70· Wilh ~
balho. larve ialand Milchon l"l~
110rio rtoor. can 8!4•385!8121 alk
' ·lor Mille.
.
..

.

· 33o · Flllrrill fcir ·5alt
Mason Co, 88 acres, 3 hamel,

oil your W2 and talC lnformalion. ·
R~ provldedl _ ·.
. ~ ret:IMn glftl

. lreo ve•- :!0•'•58-1918.

away,
-· .1an.ll, 1996
Has~n one yea&lt;-!11110,'-1
since 1 yOu·. were
away;.' But the pain is still
in our beans as if It
yesierday.
· Sadly mi~sed by (amily
rill •
and friends.

350 ·Lots &amp; Acreage. .
BRUNER~~. · :

Gallipolis Ferry, WV

114-77So~\~ .

.

I

R. Mei'ry turns 70 on :
MOndayll COme celebrate hla
.blrttJdaY with family &amp; frtel\da,
. Sunday, Jan. 12- i :00 pm at
lhf R9dney Grange.

"'"*'*"I·

ot ' Donf; ~~trle H"le
Ihlroulld Uke Jo thank evenope for:their
ira,verl!l.
'

ldnd words, foia, Dowers and

•

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FOR MORE.
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. webiir,

Public

AUOION ·.
Friday,....., 17tht 7:00 pll

·.

AM YDS POST 1231N GAWPOUS, OHIO

Come and Join Us For Some .·
Gteat Bargains
We will have B'i&lt;1 0' wool. rugs, Computers,
Carncorc:jers, Stereos, VCRS, Collectibles, •.
Dolls, linens as seen on the shop at Home
Channels. 100's of name brand items such
as Cobra, RCA, GeQrge Foreman, Sharp,
JVC. All major Credit- Cards Accepted. '"nrl;
More Info Call Crowder Wholesale

.-

axtt onto 50 west towards McArthur. Auction Is quanei
mile on left. Sigas posted. ·
Approx. 100 pes. of furniture lo include; Hlghback

beds; . victorian and other dressers; marble top
washstands; desk; sets of chairs; Jackson press
knlght$1ands; ice ,box; and many other pc:S. Roseville;
· Weller; Hull An; McCoy; Peters and. reed and other;.
Glass ol all type~ . Siag glass 'table laltlps and other
lighting; tongaberger Baskels. Very brief listing see
January 12 Antique Week.
· Tenns: Cash or check w/positive ID. Food avallallle,
Heated building w/clean restrooms.
Note: WE have managed to put an excellent aucllon
wHh many quality Items, mark your calendars you
won't want to miss this one. Wanted consignors for our
monthly antique auctions.
·
A~.oneer Mark Hutchln,son 614-698-6706
UcenHCI and Bonded In Ohio
'i»llll1ner r=rank Hutchlnson.614-592-4349

. . . .
' G)
~anaday . -~

•

Realty
'25 LOCUST ST.· GALLIPOLIS

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker · ·
Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383 ·
ROOM TO"ROAM...
HUNT AND "THERE IS
STABLE FOR YOUR HORSE! 46 ACRES MIL.
STORY FARM HOME IS VERY COIIAFCIRTI~BLIE I
WI•TH · FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM.
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS... KITCHEN
URI:sl
SNACK BAR, ·RANGE WITH GRILL.
AREA. BARN...PONO...CALLSOONI

,

We eapecially want to.
thank the [llembers o1
1he Meigs Co. E.M.S.,
Potneioy and
.
Middleport Fire and .
Rescue, !lie Ohio
:State Highway Patio!.
Meigs County Sherifl's
~ment, ·
MJ4dleport PoliCe

· · ,pepartment, Health .
Ne1 air limbulance
. Cha!~Mton Area
Medical Center llalf,
Paatora Archie Conn,
Jam•Ka••••·~
s..-t and Alvis

·Pollard.

LARGE COUNTRY •H0,..E ... 10 ROOM ~OM~
FEATURES A FIREPLACE IN 'l'HE LIVING ~ '
AND F~ILYROOM .... FbRMAL DINING, LARGE EAT
(N KITCHEN: BASEMJ;NT... 2' CAR An'ACHEQ
'
GAR-'GE: ·PLUS·. ADOI~IONAL 24'X20~ GARAGE;

APPROX. Ql'4EAC!RE

DenniS; Dean, Dorma.

.

': ......,,. . [luanjjo
,. ~y- ~_:~

...

~

~-·

. I

.

. firln*}l s:zt: N

·.··Call446-2342 or . 992-2156
'

"~~CENTER

the:

.

0

~lil~ MEDIC~L

We Wish to !hank our
friends llfld relallves
for all the prayers,
cards, ~ephone calls,
food and flOwers given
• us after
aJ;Ci~nt .
and passing' of our
mother, Margaret B.

$498.00

ForCori$!111, Ptulmlullll .
·lind au.;ASKUSTill
.

FAIRFIELD

·. ~46-3636

12.800 firm..304-67.5';1000.

NEW LOCATION .

success. , Thanks
in~nY' ·..d~nations
hllrd '.·work
Volunteers. All orders
were filled.

~~~

-~411111.EIIInglllnlat,
~. Oltlo 43130. An EqullllflporUily
~.

,

Sc..,ll 12xus. lair cond., 2br, refrigeralo&lt;, 110\it I 2 WindOW IC,

· sunday
.to than~ eve•rvone I
~- E.!emAWI!U8 .
. 12 p.m. • 5 .pm.
I\Nt11n
helped
Tour lhe' ~ Ofllcas, leem what
II4IMcea 111e prOYicied, evan c!rop
II ·~
· "~·d·w~e~·m~ak~e~·~g~=:J "Co'&amp;ts ·. for Kids
$AVENOWI

Sacriftco

blewides. SSSSAVEtsS Free SOl·

Thur$day, Jan. 18th
12-3pm

Peoples BaQ,k.

_ . . , " " ,..._.,(6l4)1187-8833cwF-FIELD IIEDICAL CEIITEJI,

MuS! Hll 5 ·disJ)tar model Oou·
up &amp; delivery, free cenual air.

Fri-Sat 4-12.Tue-'rhur4-11.
For reservations'p1Bis8

cal.l

Bank Aepo:a, Owner fi ..

narwcingavalabli11 $179/mo. Fialt
delivery &amp; ....,. .,. 304· 755'7191, .
.

·

593-2546.
.OHIO UNIVERSITY IS AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
~n·1an priority Is placed on the creation of an
environment supportive of women, minorities,
vetel'llll8; and
with
·

&amp; Dr1er Good
For The Pair,

7Weeks-$35
61+256·1428

Iron Gate Fine

· uper . ~n

Looaled lnalda the NEW
· ,Gelllp(ills Foodland

,.

.WEDNESDAYS
6:30 - 8:00 pm
Jan. 22-Mar.5

A WEEK
B'ANKINGI
OhloValley Bahk's .
B ·k ·
S

Rel[lillory - . . .

_____ ... _prirln
__
lii:t_
" '_
·-.
., •

DRIVERS WANTED

FurniShed

line 1

La·Z·BOy Recllner8
4 pc. Bedroom
Slllte

E.ceHen1 C"~ition Complete,
.5o,814-441-CI815.

. . _ _ 31)4..875-2495- 5prn.

2 8 I t ......... ten•t IIOuM-Ift

·BULLETIN ·BOARP.

See:ta Mattreaa

eos.tN $1.- Singlt Wal1 v.., Old, Bookca'" IHHd·

POSRlON: Communlt)' Hitalth Nt.rH

675-1371 .

&amp;VICinity
ALL Yard Saltl

·z Biedfobm locared on Broaci Run
Rd, i~ . N8w Haven, . 12fl0 per

FLAIR FURNITURE

Gallipolis-

Frlendlv
Mai&lt;o

P.M.7DirL '

•

ll=

Chest of Drawers. 11..379~

272D AFlER IP.M.

$12.68/hr. to start
plus benefits.
For exam and
applicatiQn info.
' call1-8oo-270-

.,.., A.llA.

_,., .... - - . .. -.Dogo.. in~
_., - . . .. Roglllr-. wilt! , . NIIRC. lit
ART, RIITE, or ClifT.

-rGSTAL

u~r,n1ilhed duplex, 3br. _
b ath &amp;
112, 1300/mo. plus utililies~ Ret-

i22 Higl!!and Avo. _ _ _ 2 . ·
.. bofl,-iltgu

HMng. l'or 11'1111 Colf'21f.,.,._
0010 Eat 8710, t A.M. -To 11

\IOCA Co&lt;i&gt;ofalion • CM
5565 A I - Cirdt
Suilt2.. .
Dublin, ONO 43017

~-)

er,

-

.NEW YEAI1111AV~~ AJITIQUE IIKTlOII SUNDAt
IANIWY 19 AT 11:00 U.
AliAJit OHIO
RIRNRURE, COilKTIIlES, POmlt 1111
LONGAIEIGER BASKm
Take us 50 &amp; 32 11 miles west of Alhens, Ohio and

..

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS •.
.· For AP Spec;l8f ·Featu...
. ·

ic Ice Mater, KenlftOfe Ml·
.• ·rowave, Tippen MicrowaM,
Twin Bods. 5. o-r Doell Wilh
c.... Konmoro AU- Oryor
Heavy DuiJ, G.E. ""IOmolic
Woslltor Htavr Du~y;aagf11vox
T.V.- R - Canlrol. Dron-

Tower, naw

numbe~.

Metal working tips
for.the workshop

,,'

--.e~e.NoE•N

-....--IIC.-lor

Cold- s..r. Side
Side
, . . _ rfreo•.Wilh -..~

appliclllono lor 1br.'HUD
l%od apt lor elderly and
capped. EOH 304.fl75.88711.

lull ~-1. $45,500:
J. . .......
:IDW75-1131.
.

-

..,--.-~. --.-.g. -. ~--

.~~o- i ;1:;1~0=Help::::=w::::an=~=
.. ==
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HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC. ·

Game Wtoodona, Soi:urilr, IIIIJn.

VOCA CorporoiioQ, A Loaclef In
Te. MRIOD Fitlcllt LOoking for
. To Prtllfido Q~eliiJ
lndividillll Who

_

Public Sale.&amp; Auction

310 Homaa.filr Slit
'

...... ..-,g_... _..,. _ _ ..

(304)925:-8107) .

REAl ESJ,HE

.

-.. __- --.-.....-·-----..,pa&lt;bp--.--Ind--.
,..._ID:
.............
...
.................

HARTS MASONARY · Block, .

1-800-138-0188 ind/1111

....

_..,_2J--fiC~7:J

80010 By RO&lt;Iwirlg, Chi_.,
Rock~. Tonr LarM. GuarantMd
- ·. - . OOOd- 1200,- ~-AI Sfloo Cafa. Galli~-·
"
"
lipolis.

-·--.311,_..--. ..
...-.• • · lrH . .tlmataa, liletime
. . .- :IDW$2145. .

.

......,
.._...,_..........
_.,,.._,_Carolop-.yOaPaar-j
.........,.,.,......,_ . .,......, ....

. . Compuw Wilh ~­
~DBJ&gt;~411·31144 , . , ••

540 lllecelllneous
llln:hanclll!e

one.

Avon S8 -$15 IHr, No· Minimum
Order, No o- .To ·Door. No In·

WllOI.JFI.-...ncitt

~-CEIIIEII,a_l_llad_

PIN....._ WV, Maift
304-871-4185.
· Pl.

·death of our loved

proofing. aH baeement repairs

I w;.;;;.;1:iii·

BEYOND TilE HUGE FRONT PORCH, a Ions foyer branchea out to
the formal llviq room, adaptable·dlnins room or master bedroom
and bltlh upstaln. Down the hall are a 1\ill balb. and two spacious

dcictors afttolzet

..

2nd Edolion. Clol!ing I riK 50'Io Oft All Coalt &amp; .,.., 405 Second Avenue. GanJ.

expressed-dt.ing.the

7318.

AVON .Sales. te ·•15 !Hr. No
Door TitOoa·r, •aanuaa1• Fun &amp;
Euyi 1-800-827·4&amp;40 lndiSiar .
Rep. ·
IIEHAYIOAIST

COYERID PORCH

Home, the p8JI
bearers, the stall and.
Clinic anc1 Ohio State
Unlversil.y HospHal,
and to Pastor Alan
BJacl!wOOd for the
kindness they

- ••BIG. - Lil'iftgaiDn'l buernenl &amp; • • -

ven~ry. _

0

__ Antiquo &amp;

_ _ , Ollar 8:00pm, no jab ..

You're Nat .Making U.SO /Hour
Cell TiM Toll Ftee At 1.18&amp;-432-

.•

.la(W$F~

hald.-.... ---lor
-lion.

Asai-~-·
Apply Tada'y. Start Tomorrow. H

DINING/, -G-·3-7_ _ _ __.

friends, neighbors,.

,-

-~ ·

FAIIILY RM

to express·our
sincere thanks to our·

·One rear ·practical nursing IX·

Avon Rapraaenratives
nMded. Earn mDMJ lar Chriat:
mil bill II homl(at work. 1-800812·835e .or 304-U2·2845, Ind.
Rep. .

Ing room, ramlly room, AlaaU . Job1l Earn Up To. polanlld
.
· · Someone "' · ... ' in -dOIIf
three bedrooms, two 1nd.one-halr 130,000 tn Ttwee' Uonlha Fllhing
"'"'-n 10 holp ow..-llo. . .
AI.., ConSiruction. Can- Alllf!PkOnll . . . . . . . job """'
baths, laundry room •nd a utility Salmon.
norieL Oil Flolda And Mor.. Coli
room, tollillng 2,088 square reet . 7 Daya 407-1175-2022 · E1L '*1Uirtmll1tl wilh or tfitMut · ,..~
or living space. This plan Includes 0528All2
For prOmpt Cllfllidoralion .,....
.'
a standard ballement, crawlspace ARE 'IOU TRED, .liORED. REST- . cal Of....:~ .........:
or slab foundation, and offers llx4 LESS? n """ oro 111y a! - · ..
e.terior waiUramlns. Its two-ilolr . ean help. Ira your tinw. . .put il tD
work in telephone Hilla. PARTgarage provides 50!! square reel TIME
WORK. Cail814-lltl2-1115!5.
or space.

' ~

The family aJ
ROwland Dlas wllhesl

-~,_-.
---CXJM
·-722-SMia Or' i=ITTP:\1

Pharm~~cotoer

......,.........,..
c.." -· -

ofn....b

to••-

.,._.
. .

a-

--~·-

Tile .......... -

lla11d, Aiklng '150. Baby 80&lt;1

.Rominglan 1100, 12 - . 11
_
........ 814-:~&amp;f..;'lfi:L
..

Earn U,IOO Parl·diM 11,000
flol-nM " ' " ' - "'--ing
Clalma F01 Health
Caro ProvldOia. Sol-re Pur-.

illlriiO ..

.f'rofttioncy in MniiiUncture and

AVON I· Ail Areu I Shioioy
~bl•

''
'
~ -- -- -- --'-"'' .

Fumiahed EftlclionCJ A!lortmont
~ Clllllipalia $2051Mo., AI hrt , .., 11. . . .1. . .

OHIO vw.EY PUaiSHING 00. ·
• - d &amp; I M I ,.. olo 111!11·
luloW, ....
.IICJI' • lhroo!llt ...
1-'igallld

-~--- - ---.,
•

T- Spc

Chol( ....... llod .....

.

- ~=.:~
.... ...._cold
~·
.... - ...
:~

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2pc . . . . -

RESPIRATORY
THERAPISTS ·

l'!orlleroy. Heu111: M:T&lt;W. 10:00 Rali 'And Tilt Bod 1250, 81~
ID uti !""'- Sundar UIO •
a:oo to.m. 114-H2-2528, Ru11 11137.

Good u..a fllrniiUro. 2pc ootid

Non--~
W.-s. Ory01s. ·-~~~-~
llatpllll, Ia
~-

WE'RE GROWING !!!!!!

1Uft.

~F..-

DIIIMr . . .

Duo ....., . . - . . , . . _ ....

wv

Bur 01 101. fll1rorino AnliquOL
1124 E. SINo!. ., At. tU, e Foot Ttailet Wilh 4, FL Side

R&amp;l,_
ID7M-IL
-WY-11S-!11111

-.....__--··..

--

---

0

Do

tiiCIII'II..-IIEMlll

I BJ BRUCE A. NATHAN
-.-liq-.-.-.-,.-,-ni-,.-,.-,
.
AP Newwfeaturea
.....!!::._--··fOialdd, - ·
Plan 0-57 by llomeStylea
Deslsners Network, offers the
jars. aid - · freedom to adapt every Inch or Its
- - - milllllobloo. .....
Couoly AdYOtdaomen~ Oaflr
!1,088 square feel of llvins space
...,.·et""'2-JoMt.
to Bt llle llfeslyle and Ialiie of ill
· Wan10&lt;1 To Buy: .22 Beilll ""·
(!CC:Ujllnts;
-lie 111-*'0 Rille, - I n
Balgim. 114-441-4053.
The larse, covered front porch Ia
complemented by a more formal
spac:lousiiYinl! niom.
The lwo•car sara11e Is a short
walk to the adjolnins kitchen,
which features an Island. An em- .
clent pltntu shares a hallway
wll.h a laundry room.
A Breplaee Is llle 'centerpiece· or
a family room that offers many A COVEJ\ED FRONT PORCH oll'en ll'lldltlonal cbum, while laJp
p1111td windows and quaint dormers pe llle exterior ...Iller looiL
options. The .addition of an lnfor·
mal dlnlns .area makes It possible
to convert llle fonnal dlnlns room
tO an olllce or den. ·
Ei.1PLOYr.1rrn
Comfort and space ·are featured
SERV ICES
In the larse upPc:r-lloor mailer
bedroom, just around the comer
from
lll'e lllafM;ay. The entranCe · 110 Help wantecl
IJ!&lt;f,.SI&lt;D
to a hose walk-In closet spllu 'ATIN : Pt Pluunl' Potlal po. [III'I«SSINLOrl
PIA'IIIII/81114
dual vanities in lhe malller balll.
sitions. Cterkland sorters. No
A larse balll and two bedrooms expenenc:e required. S.netita.
are down llle hall from llle m~ For oum. salary. ond IHiing ifl.
..
lormalion call 1·(1130) !108· 5570
te~ .bedroom.
OICt 381U.IIIm-Bpm.
: UlotiDD:

r

.....,,.......,12..1117
110

House of the Week

.·)

Ponlltoy• ~·~Ott. Point PIMunt,

• Sunday, J8nu.y 12, 1117

.,

.•

Webii!l' I

. lnd
'
._.~

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. I

: .•

�.'
~tf!l ..,..,.. Janu.ry .12,1SII7

BIG . BEND REALTY,

'W ood ·Realnr., Ine.
LOOKING TO SELL OR BTN'AliOME?
U!T US WORK FOR. YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

Pets for~~~

- 8 1 4·74:!-11100.

3 U ale Yorkshire Tttritr Pups,
Blue l Gold , Dam &amp; Sire OA
Premi101 $200 Each, COl Allor 4

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs.
Tunod? Coli the
plano Dr.........525

A Groom Shop · Pet Grooming,
Featuring H_ydro 81th. Don

-? -

Good eiM:Irlc dryer : de1con's

l

litO.

Coli Ron Ewill,

&amp; Robuih In Stock.

t.aocJ.537-9528,

Ruth Ban...................................446-1093

Kirby IWttptr wlattacflments.

· Colllt&lt;-9024,.2 after 5pnJ.

I

Ken Morgan, Rellltor/Bnlktr-448-01171
Jeanette Moore, Ruftor- 25&amp;-1745
11m WIIIOD, RMllor·258-8102
Plllrldl Rota, Rtellor

WHY WAIT 011 ·lutLDING
'OIAT NaW HOME, WJtiN

THAT'I ·RUOY TO MOYI
INTO? .GorQIOUI apecloul
home with a 3 car attached
ri
and •s pluo wooded acreo. COUN\1IV 80CIAIILI I
Fully equipped, k~. 3-RR: 2 The ker amenlllel Include.
balh, 10 much more! can at fOrmal IMng room &amp; fOrmal

Lhasa Apso Female 1 t/2

Years Hou•ebroktn, In Season

oncal 1120
812I,IOCI

8t4-258;890ol.

AKC Reglslered mala Oal~ tlan
eleven weeks old, sholl
and wormed, 1150, 814-902-5118
after 6pm or anytime weetcends.

tlllfll.,.

pu~as .

UTTIHQ.
Rtmlc one IIOry, wlth 2 BRa,
carpeted thrDuifhout, deCk,

-to·

garogt, .... yeo,
tow
30's. 1132
lioo7 · 12" acr" m/1, mottly rollng, public utlltin avllabll •. Aulor

AKC Regiarered Golden Retr11Y8r
Pup1 , . I Weeks Old, , Shots,

owned. Cillfor .... - . . -. .

'

8851, 814-448-2899.

Ui1ed Firewood, $35 Vou Pick AKC Shallle pupa, - uble •nd
· whi.,, $250 &amp; up. 810-992·5073.

Up, Or Ootlvery Available, 8U
311U818.

AKC 'NIIow Lab Pupt, $300 8 ,..
NEW COMPUTERS With 258-13311 Aher 8 P.M.
mon!loral 411, 581, 881 +
tOgal rank HI up specials. Fllh
- tllortlng '" - (304) Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 ~ac;oon
77Nt12.

Lillie things are Worth A lot
in the Classified Section! ·

Ave. Point Pleasant, 30-4· 675·

PIIIMr Wood And Some Timber 2083.

8t.-.8tSO.

PONEROV THRIFT SHOP· llaby CFA Himalayan Kinens, 8 Weeks
Umo. jeena, llble &amp; t:halro, turni· Old, Ca.ll After 6 P.U. 614·446·

Real

turo for rontolo. 8t4-992·3725, 3188,'
220 Ealt Main, Pomeroy, Oh ..
T~.·Silt01m-4pm:

BONNIE STUTES

au..n lilt waterbed, bookshelf

badt wllh rase mirror, Hib&amp;rnation
full wave miUtress, 12 srorage
dtMwrs underneath, 2 112 years
otd. 11kina $300, call &amp;t:.C -742·
Doberman Pup1 AKC 11 Weeks,
IOIG after Spm.
Males, Females, Black And Russ,

.

~fflgerltort,

Stoves, Wathers

StSO Each, 8t4·379·2 t28.

And Dryera. All Aecondilioned

Golden Retriever Pups, AKC 10
Weeks Shots &amp; Wormed, Uale

WllllolrM. 814-8119'e«t.

St25 F&amp;males SHS eu-ue.

And G.ourantoedl StOO And Up,
ROYAL JELLY With Siberian
Oln..na

eo Capaulea, S20. Call

et4 4&lt;8 &amp;308; Hll0-291·0098.

Sony flandycam VIdeo CameraComplete Set, _llke New. $300.

304-875-321 • A"-&lt; 8:00pm..

4782.

'STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises.

..llc:kson. Ohio, t-800·537·9528.

446~4206
WINDING CROSS ROADS
Galllaa newest platted subdivisionGreen twpc Cora Mill-Pleasant· Hill
Ads. Acretge- Flat. rolling and
some wooded. Excellant aile lor
your new D!!WI! Hpme.'

8651 , 81.4-448-2899.
Pets Plus, Sliver Bridge Plaza .
614· 441.0770.
•..

570 .

Muslcil

Instruments .
,..,.,.,~

Special Septic Tank Aeraition
Motor• S3i9.00 Installation
135.00 Plul Material. 614· 446·

'·

. 1B

r•

sponslble patty wanted to make
low' monthly paymenta on plano.
seolot:al~. Clll

SARA WINDS
Also a new development. Fairfield
~ntenary Road. Green Twp. Land
mo•stly all flat. Acreage size vary.

NIOW LISTING- $44,000:- Cute as
can ball Loveiy bilck ranch. 3 BR,.2
baths, Lg living room, separate
dining room from the ldtchen. 1 car
garage and s~ad. Newly · painted,
new carpet. Beats paying rent.

HI00·21/8-62t8.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

WOLFFTANNlNG BEDS

2C81=

room. llhached
Over 5 with the
of purchQing 11
II
acres. lmmediatll pOIUifioll.
Owner out of town ..!. wants
~SOLD" I
~
1m.

" cozv couN111Y

Wormed, Aa.king 1150, 814 ·448-

•,

REDUCI!O dining each· whh a co~
llreplace, family room,
-rwlzed Nl-ln ldlchel!. 2 fall
bathl pfuiiWO 112 bathl. Full
ball
II kiNI fvr rae.

wooded lot.

'

Falrflekl Chu!Vh
Acreage- ·Selec1 the amount you
need. Green Twp.
· ·

Tan At Home

Buy ORECT and SAVEl
CommlrCi&amp;IIHome Urlto From
-- . ,_ $t99.00
Low Month~ Paymon11 FREE
Color Cllllog Clll TODAY
1·IOCH1 t-1)158.

NEW -LISTING! HANG YOUR
HEARt: HEREI Enjoy .the
warmth this wrnter from the
ICOzy atone ftrepl~. Super
nice comfortable home with
large · maeter b~room,
catheral celllnga·, .lots of
cabinet apace I~ .kltcltan , 2
bathl. Eloctrlc heat pump, 1
ca( detached garage , and
a&gt;Ctra sized 101 baii!Q llppro•.
1.8· acres. Call for more
Information. $60'1
filii
"
NEW LISTING I MA!IIY
POTENllAL · • ·
OI&gt;PRoTuNITIESII!Iver 1:5
acral that hoe road-frontage
along SR 180 &amp; Airline Road.
EHctllent for ,rnldentlal or
commercial. Land can be

HUNTING/RIC.
Then why not' consider thla
e&gt;rtra niCe cabin that ell~
easily ba cmov,d to your
location, or would make ·a
nice oHice. itc. Nice
woodwork, bath, kitchen,
living room, bedroom, 12lc16
front porch. Lei ua show you
hoW cute. New prlc8 $15,000

-1

t

SNUG &amp; ·com Unique 3ft
bedroom home, flri'tlly roor!l.
walk-out rustle : baeement,
niCe kitchen w/newer oal&lt;

cabiitltl. Private locltllon that
Is dose to arnanltleo. More at
en allorctablt price. SolO's
.

8113
1

OWNER AEDUCEO PIIICII
On this large troct of land.
Appro•lm~tely · 251 acres
more c;r less. Tobacep
allotmant, 2 ~8tna, lde41
hunting land. ·
lf7N

t'
IRICK!
Immediate
poas,sslonl 2 bedroom&amp;,
bath. utility room, kitchen.
Newer replacement windows.
Nice lewtl city loi; off atraet
parking.
11112

::: .:~~nl!' .~.~f."::

mobile home with 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, electric
heat pump, covered front FARMI Over 10'7 acres
deck, vinyl , underpinning, """""'wlfl!lhls one. Fencing
alorilge building.
nt.1 tor ll,voatilcl&lt;, hayfleld; Iota pf
,
.woo~ed land too. 2 1tory
'·
homa:: w~h vinyl siding, heat
MAKE AN OFFER ON T111S pump, 3· bedrooms, blth,
US ACRE TRACT OF LAND? dining room, klichen &amp; more.
Vllu might be aurpriZedl Asking Large barn &amp; misc. shed:
prk:e Ia $55,000. Ideal hunting Immediate poss8181onl188:1
hind.
Ohio
Township.
IWVC
·
• YOU'LL CALL IT "HOIII"I A
·. ,
d'-'·h9me feel po/vedes this
BUDGET ITRETCHERI Cozy Inviting' brick ·ranch. ·E&gt;rtra
3 bedroom home. Vinyl sided sized rooms Includes living
on. nice lized lawn••, Modern room, kitchen , 2 bedrooms &amp;
I!Jtclten, L-shapecl dlrilng anoa
Breezeway attached to
Uving.room. Allached carpOrt garage. o...r 2.5 acres. and a
.
1121 ;!0'•40' barn. Plua more. Clole
•• ·
.to amenities.
11175

m.or•·

I'AIEliQ!.V AS CAN ll.tlii,.
Is Ptei!SIInt In tltls 3 bed,IOOI'!I
ranch excellent floor · p!an,
lncludet dining area;k~clten,
living room, 2 large 'detachell
garage 'juot super to at.o r•
those recreational
this winter. Nice lawn.
.

vehlc';:.,'t

'!:

COIIIIERCIAL
RIIIOENTIAU 2 dWelllnQ!Ii
altualed on Second A and lots situated at Ihlri
A - . Lots of pol8ntlal'flnjl
poetlbiiMin. Let ua tell y!JO
ab®llhls one. Call today! __ /_·
, ....
_
·
•

tW3 ClEO'exc. cenot..
5-103.

(JSI, ~.
1..-.
104-e75,

Ioiii,. out· 32 head of collie,

1tl4 F110 .... leVI. 4li&gt;tt. T•

v•-·

Ilea, &lt;IIIII . trHt, lookl IfNI,
11 .- . nH lit
:104·
171--

mlxotl : 10 round bolee of
;lwtr;11·702-.

'

T~

1W3 8-10 -

lmprovementl

Talloe LT 4dr,
•u ro.

..,_,

New
tanQ, 1 tOI\ trwck .._rr·a UphotaiOry, atr'flnt
- • I rMIIrora. D I R Auto. IIH tor :.111
lor trH as:Alploy, WV. 104-372·31:13 or I•

PIN·•'

111• To,.to
F011r
W~aol .l)rtvt 21,000 Milot If&lt;·

-Z7Ma.

810

1113 Z·21LTI, 8 IIPOod .•• 000
:110 Autoa tor Selt
,..., Boao CO p l -. ..cotlent 1917- Rlntler pick"" 57,000
•ts.ooo
lt&gt;l-99:!- OriQirAI mllee. Sopd, VII. good in; 111111 Chomtttt EICtmlno PeriJ -lion,
7312.
lorldo 'I paiN, no ruat. $3,100 740
Motorcyclta
OBD. . . . .."23. . ·, . '
Rot~
""''
Good.
Ral~
l'lhtoto Wid! Rln91 And Ctntor 1(115 Dodge llooo 4 Door, Auto.
apt, INIOda·wrrlng Htlrnooa) AC, Crulao 30,500 MIIOI·AIItl,. 1818 llo~, Oaluno, twd, V-8,
I,OOOt1.+owt-1053.
17,e&amp;O 080 '"·251-t300. 1,.. ·U L autO. oil H11 of rinll, 3 1t1f
Uttr
.., ClilvY 10 218-W7. '
. or tlt11. Jolt f txwos, .,., ·~· 1987 KX-10 KawiHkl, IXC cancl.
.
28
,., !Ia PB, ~!~!lOot 1t77 414 1008 Ford Muttant. GT, brlghi ~rf7Sl8. •
'·'·
31M-571-9907.
" Food,31• 'ron D..., Willi Fla- IOngorlnt, 8700 mltea, toadotl, { ·:. :
,
•
.Dump •1.000: 1915 1 lon CM¥y .1G,OOO. Coil II~·IOZ· 701t ·tiUt For/ Rangti, StsndOrd, ,t GU CR 125 Honda Exc~lltnt
Condition 12,100 Call Alter 4:3;0
',Fiaibtd Dump 15;000, 114·251· -kdOyo alter 5:00, wooktndJ 14,000 Milos. 2 .whaol Drlv•. ·P.U.
II4&lt;317-Q(I28.
• 1021.
uNt to;oo. -•lniP,riloonty.
t:l.lOO.:RBO. eto~-He-tm. 11 ,._
:.1913 Ford LTD, good work car, U Citeory 2 dr, Sotlon,' goo~ l·4-:4~&amp;.,.o.,t!l.,.._-::;o-'·-.,-·-=·-=-~ tt98 Yallama Tlm~orwalt 4·
2wd. under 10 hours: rid\VI auto w/od, $500. 30•·175· .,.,., 12,400; 10 Grand ¥fix, 2 !912 Nloaon Pl~·Up, 5 Spetd, .........
lnt, nctll(ont cand. &amp;3.200 OBO.
i·~''·
dr., ouio, nlce,, $3.~; 2 largo AMIFiol Sporty, 8t&lt;Oiotot-4782.
31)1-l'iS- i823 ., 304-875- ••113.
·
.
,
.
1how c•Mt. gOod lhapt, 814 ·
" ~11113 Nlaoon. autontllk:, PS, PB. , MI-2015Gtl1.._2138.
· t0G3 Ch.. y Truck ·tsoO W:ork
Auto Parts &amp;
......... good- '"'· 114-9112- .;..;;.;;.==:.:..;~=-- Truck1 Runa Graat $8,500, 81 ..
,2888.
·
G• Dodge Ent,.Pit ES. Loaded I 25&amp;-1488. 1 ' ...,
AccellliOrles
•
37,000 · 110,200. 080.11+
'j,1
11t84 Crown Victofll, hlgh' milll, 258 8310orl14·258-1411 "
1

.
1

·,•
•

l

..·

i .,
'

.txc,tlttr,l ccindition. OII'Wi;. kept,
·•price r'aoo.noble, ,nil 014·992·
· ~~'2012. ~ •

1

~~IN() '
WATE

814 Ul 1308, wv 002945.

FrM E•llmatet. 1·800·291-0008,

Unconditionaliiletlint gu11antee.
Locel rererfn~tl turnlthtd. Et·

••a-

Roaldenllaf or commercial wlrO..
new 1ervk:e or repeirt. M1111r u.

'

Electrical, WV000308 , 304-175-

taltllahod 1875. Call (81•)
or t -800-287·05.78. Aoflll•

W.ttr,.wmg. · · ·

c.ensed el•etrlclan. Ridenour

1711.

C&amp;C General HOme M•ln·
tenenc•· Painting, vinyl 1ldlng,

Cllrpentr)', doors, wind9wl; bathl,
home ropolr and """"· For
fr• ntlmate call Cher, 81•-802·
11323.

Auto Loono: Auio Dealer Will Ar·
r11nga Fln~.nclng Even If )'ou

a..n TUrned Oown Before.

Spaces.

I •file•

: &gt;1312.

: ~iiiBt lltral!a GT Rod SUnroof, 2
~
ne I •ronamltllon,
E~
'I .' l.SIC. $4.1110 ,13-57•2539.

• Doara.

'¥

Cheryllemley..............742-3171

~

Downtown:

1 Large · Room, 2
Roome, 3 Rooms,
Rooms, or all 11
RooiTI$. ·

4-wheetet'l, mo10r hOmtl, lurnl·

turt, otoctro'!_".!, computora ..tte.
bf FBI, IRS; IN\. Avaw.tlio rouo
aroa now. Call t·IOII-513·4343
EIIL S«&lt;lff .
.
~·
SEIZED c•Rs F-"'
ft
.-m • I 75·
Poroc~01, Codillaci, Ohovyti,
BMW't,'Corvonoa, AIM .loopo, 4
WD's, Your AfH . Tall F.reo I·
800-211-~ E.•t: A!n .t.• Far
Cur-llo~ .t , ·t · ..
Upooo Uud'Cora Rt. . 3 Miltl
South of teon. WV. Flhanci~O
Avai!IIH. 304-~111811. ·.• • ·'· .

ra RUSSELL D. WOOD, BRQKER ~

Downtown 2nd Ave.
near Courthoi!SB
City Building,

I

l1200:

· (614)142-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

IUSIIESS
SPACE IEITAU
Eastern Ave. Sales
Room or

: ;.PS; 90~ ActuaiiiMeo. 814-245• Bod Crotll! A!'d · ~nkruptcy Buy' f187. . " ' .
.... COli Diane 814448-tl 72.
:·~887 Tiuruo, \1-8 autamatlc, ~ CARS FOR' $1001 Toucka. bOota;
-door, loatled, lookt and run1

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

ms.

~ 11185 Otdl98 R - PW, POL. loan• Avollabte For No Credit,

I ;,aod,remoclol,.•'831000;
Ford one ron,
810·247·

Page05

French Cltr Martog. 114· 441· Ollla.

760 .

Haw

e

Realdentlal Or Commercl1l Wfr·
Appliance Partt And S.rvlce: All lng, New Setvlce Or Aepal,.. Ll·
Nome Brandl 'ev.t 25 YHra Ex· c:an1ed Elecrricl1n. Welah Elec·
perl ence All Work GuartlntHd, trlc 814·••8-Gaso. Galllpqlla,

·

'

Improvements

LAWRENCE EHlE-S
Hoot Pump1, Air Conditi..tng, II
lllu Don1 Call Uo We Both ~ul

0170

tr eel

MEIGS COUNTY

RIESCERTFED DEAWI

Homt

oeo.

~

840 E11c:t1 lUll and

sr RviCF s

1917 Ford R1ntW • Crll-. 5
....... ._.. C1 1'11 110 .2.300.
•u ue aD'II..

'",'.',I'()Pff,rtn~~

.•

CIID1111~FOIAIL YOlll

t••

'""· N.ooo·111Roo. Y·8,
lt1,100.»4-17S-1117.

'

HOme

810

s-

V0U CAN HAYI TH. ONI

laly Bo1 Lounger Trendla Bed,
Rongo /Oven, Cotlae Tallie, Exer· A~C 'Roglorarod' Engtllh Sptlnger
CIH Bike, Bar Stools, E•cellenr Sponiel Puppies. All Shots, Fe·
malto S350; Uoloa $300, Call
~. 814"'4932 •.
Borw~en 1 l 8 P.M. 814·281·
.
Uft 'chalra. Electric Wheelchairs, 8230.
Stair llha. Van Lifts, Scooters,
New !VHd, Bowman's Homecare,
......... 7283.
.

!
j

AKC Chihuahua Puppy, 7 Weeks
Old, Shols, Wormed, 814-388"-

-

I:

eaner.........................

AI*! c. Wood, Rtl'loi/Bf'Oker 448 t 5 23

Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
8t44ol6-023t .

A~C

'1 . 830

Judy DeWia .............................. 4tl-0262
J. Merrill
379-2184

0002.

JET
AERATION MOTORS .

AR"'IP'"II"'od,;;i -

REALTORS:

,

H..ter I

:

~18

32LOCUST STREBT, GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631

P.U.8,.,...-8947.

Help Wantecl Part· Time Paper
Carrier; For Ront Mabile Home &amp;
Mobile Home Space. 814· 448·

a

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

An~a

l ..riCI

I

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

446-1066

3 AKC lemlle Bo.urL Two 4mDI

F i t - lor llle. locutt t.ilco aiel, t •rr old, S2001o. 30&gt;1-875·
'""~ lh. 1..0·5' on amall ond. 2074.

:111&lt;-ns.-.

II

r.610 Farm Equlp~t
~01!1,814 -·701.
llveltoclc

G.

~

11 Joep· ~anoor Cuadra·
·~J WtHI
Gaacf Cantli·

Or.,.,

!lai\ ~ 311D E...... Coati..
Ovor•U,OOO, Monr New Perro,
·N~ Trantl!llsalOn Work UOO

For Information

Phone
.
446-7699 day·

OBOII....._7017.
.
•
) ifll ~ lllaztir' ..41 new 1!10' .
jlir, ,itft trlil!lmlnlo~. liking

ot - ~ ClL. 4 Door, 5 Speed,
·,.c;, Sunraaf...!l_u.ntrond .Drlveo
:Gniot.$1,SOOUIIU8t4-379-2805
"2!Cif1~"'742·2574,
'
t91S-Fard Ranoa&gt; With Tapper
.l '•too FOld Eacort Good Condl·
j . tion, St,109, 814448-9552.
4U ri·8, Rebuilt Auto Tranomla·
·I )tl90 Cllond Am 5 Spoed, AMIFM
aion A(ld Tap II~ ~f·;Matar, Now·
! l:•11etio, La fl . Of Now' Porto 720 - · k. .... .... ,_.
Pelnt Job 12,1100 Form, 114-258·
! •Runt Or-11 13,000 114·258· '
oruC
11100.
'
l- .••· '·
t985 Clltvy 314 Ton Truck. Run~" liiOO~t · .,, Jinmy K-1500, lui
'-1080 Olda Toronldo. loaded, Great, For Sale Or Trade, 283 •rt•:ralr. tiit, cruiH, •utomatit,
1
Motor 4 Speed Tr'ana. H.. A $4800080.e14-7•2'2574.
WW~tlll ... oharp, 81,000 G'"t F -.1S800 or T - For
·'
.
1~500. 304·882-3825 aftet Auto, Car Or Truck, 114· 441· · 1081 DodGt Carav•n l,E, ver)

446-9539
, Evenlnge.

s_,.,.,_,. '

orlliftmpauge.
lett Olda Cullan Supremo,
· L~odod, Uich. Tires, .Hi·
lllleo; Exco!ltnt . Co--'1ion,
#1.1100. 080114-+'8-33:11. ·
~1112 - .,. Cylinder..,.,.,.,.
1e eo.OOCJ'MIIeo. Ntotll Minor
Work •• Pointed. lt.IOO 080.'
' · '
' ~1.,2541-t231..

. ..-_,..· :• ,_-,--::----:--I nice

cond., loaded, run1

area~.

high ,.,u.-.-uklnG $8,300. 814· .
toia Mack Truck Tamdern Dou· Ut-9136.
ble Frama :!00 Entino 5 Spoed, ::..:..:,;;,;,~--.,-~--­
Good Silapo, $7.000. 114•371. 1;8:1 Ford .555·c'. ~• BockiiGo
2978.
.
3000 Houra Cloeri, Under Wilr·
=-.::..,..'Oo--dg-- - -.-. .;.,-. - . - I ronrr,"·S2f.JIOO Firm,
Evans
11 lui lllo, ~yl, 3100 .Enlo!'P.ril&amp;l, Jackoon. 1-8001537·
181)·,
- W/Gd, JOG~ . cand; S1,80Q. 30~- 9528, atol-21141·5930, ..... '
I?J-20 ~·
'
1103 Chevy Short Bed 4x•. 4.3 ,

Ron

11031
CONVEN IENT
CQIII'OIITAIILE I CLOSE TO

lovely DOWIIlOWN. 2/3 BR lull

.=.:..~~:.~~~~~~~~· :m. t:!~~.:.~ ,e,•.: ~::~~~~= ~~r~::~
614···1 ·e893

n~.. , ,

.

......-

26' kit. bailment and garage apt.
1110 PflviCy fence completely around
... ""'":r , ... ,
. • 24' lbOYI QfOtlnd pool. Call ..

Cleudt for on if&gt;t&gt;Ointmern. , ,
tz053 LANO CONTRACl·
6 rent• I units, · great

,.

EJCTRA4IIECIAL
TOUCHES! You flnd them
throughout this bricK
!tome. 3 badroom1:
baths, living . room •.
taom, ·2 car ottached pr;ajfJ
w/eloctrlc
.
.- ... ·

I ncome
&amp;low
maintenance . New rooJ,
sepllc . &amp; Windows . Call
Virginia 388 -8826 or 446 ·

'
OFFICE 9.92~2886

6808
for
Information .

·openers:

further

•

Tappan 30" nahnl or boule a••
illnge, white. Hot Point Automatic ·

Maher, white. Osage sell chmbinv tree stand. like new. Fishe•
portable OD player. Counlry I

Kathleen M. Cleland 99Z.-61!tl

rock CD'L VCR tapoo. Sony-Beta

VCR movie "idao record8r. Col•
man tent Audiovo• 300 car amp.
Ctlftlmln 8" table sBw. Sears
VCR wuemote. Mossberg 500·
12ga. 3in chamber, pump that·.
gun. Remington 7400..30106 With
ac;ope &amp; mount. Panasonie paa;
er. Suzuki 3 wheeler. Honda 18:»

3-wheelar. Klfolun·. square heal·

er w/blower. KefOIUn, round heat."
... 300-875-7183.
/(

992-2259 ' '

Variable rasltt41-nce exefcise
blkt, tile. cond., 175. 20· solo
· chllntaw, good cond., $100. Ma-

gic CIMif dryer, good cond .. S50.
304-8115-3022.
'

.z.,ox ~rsonal Copier 3 Months

Old.

with 2
and aria IJalh. H18 •
the living room. Al8o lnetudeo large
back deCk. Home has_, Will taken
ONLY ti3,IGO

J4W~ area,

Lns Than tOO Copies Made

S250 Walnut 3 -Way Stereo
SpoaiiOfs SSO Eaoh. Cal 810·~•• ·
1871 M.f, G·5.
~ulktlng

550

CORN HOLLOW RO.· A feed atore complele wtth atoctc,
Hu a ·tmaH block bulldlrtQ and I hugo blocf&lt; ·bUilding
il8lfliiiY finished, an 'old bani end approx. 1.3839 Acrel.
qd tor your appointment.
-

Supplies·

t•xt8 Buildinp With .Por&lt;h Elec·
tie. SO Sq, Shinglea lumber, 614·
448 3228 Aher. 5P.M.

sso.ooo

.

POMEROY·~ bettlnd the City Hall is a..large 2 story
home wtth 16 roOms lltd ~ bathl. Could~ 4 ~IS or
a large horne. Has aome n - carpet and ceiH~gs. a
,_,deCk, end I Carport.
'
,
MS,OOD

.-

BINGO
POST 467
RUTLAND
MON.&amp; WED. .
'

6:,30 P.M• ..

STAR.BURS

:$900.00
$50.00orM •
'

hr.GIIIe\.,:/

' .ECH

'

RACCOON CReEK LOVERS· Finish this beauty and
return to quiet and peaceful living. This 1 112 story
semi-chalet oilers 4 bedrooms, 2 112 baths, oversized
equipPed 1&lt;nchen, sunken living room, heat pump and
much more. You must see the 60 to 900ft. cl'lltk view
.
from this 6 acre tract. $119,000.

dining room,

-

EWINGTON AREA- 42 acres MIL lronttl St. Pt. 160:'
Mobile home site, old house. Get out your tractor and
bi.lsh
This one can be clean8d up. Priaed- at
$39,900 with financing available.
.

ho!i.

Base ·"......
·
'••ooo
.

·

larg4i toyer, 2 enctOied porches, and a part

•

'

$311,000
- •

I

story home

··-

wllh aoine hardwood floors, wrtparound porch, full
basement, attached carport end beauty lhc:lfl· Mas 3·4
. - r cabinets ln·ldtclten and liltttJO on 1 1/3 ·
bedr-

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

BIJILT IN . FINANCING WITH A LOW· DOWN
PAYMENT OF $1.,800. Rodney l,lll[age home has 3
BA's, bath, living · rooin, kitchen 'and laundry and
attached garage. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.
.
'.

'

·COMMERCIAL LISTING- Rio Grande areil, 1.6 acrt1
rn/1 located on the NE comer' of U.S. 4 .lana 35 and
SA 325, lots ot potentl~t $49,000.
.
•

-~

IIGmo, greot rm, equipped kll.,
new carpet, 3 bay wintl6ws, 2
car oerago. 588,000 · VLS 388- ·
182B/448·8808.
.
11034 10 acre• 1'1111 of prime
.development land close to
koeway and State Route. Public

utlltltl avalla~le . Laricl te'ietto

rollng. Exceltnt fOI' Clt'tllopment
commer.clal use. 1155,000.

or

Cll Patty Hayt448 3884.
-VACANT LAND 1.13 10.
mil. gently alopld. RecCooli Ad.
- t o bOI1 ramp oo Aoccoon

Creek &amp; poltclnt for your boot
tt-. 8eautllul lot to build your
dream home or to place your
traloft Call Patty Hays 11141-38&amp;1

120011 BAAGAINI Remodeled

1973 12 x 55" Stardust mobile
horne wilh explndo. 3 BR'a,

largo living room. Situated on.t

ac.

mn

with · a hook' up lor
another mobilt home. Just 10
mlnuttl front ·town. con Pany
Heyi448-381M.

j.

OHIO RIVER PROPERTY· .located at and of White
Avenue oil Garfield. Several lots $20,000.
·
EXTRA NICE BUILDING·or Mobile' Home lot. Mature
'
'
OFFICES, OFFICES, OFFICES· Tbtft. what !hit
Plna Trees on the three sides: Access to Raccoon
Creek. Located In Hobart Dillon SW!I. $11,900
3,000 sq.llt. building oilers. Locttad on SR 160
OWNI!B FINANCING- 108 acres In Guyan TOW!tlhlp, Holzer. Ideal · lor mtny uaet. · Call

·
IDOIIIy vyooded

:

POMEROY· Union Ava.·.A nice old8r 1 1/2

'

'

'

trine holne wllh..3 bedrooms.

· STARTING A IIJIINI88? Hli'e'l your bulldlngl 'WHh
~ 314- 1uat Outside ot Porneroi on Rt. 33
a 30x40 metal buldlng with 220 V, 10 NAP breaker.
.
ONLY $11,000

WD- 20 acres $19,000.

RACCOON CREEK FARM· Lcicated ·on State Routti
160 In northern Gallla Counly. Approx. 1 mile creelc·
frontage. 30 11at lots surveyad. Water and el~ric
available. $88,000.

.

.building lite with approx. 3 acrn.
• :

NEW LISTING- 2 BR, 1 bath local~ on 127 River St.
Roof 'S yrs., double pain windows, large siorage
building. 2 lots each t~~~~asure 50x150. Call us today.

.

·r

bll'ement. Has a nice carport ll1id an extra septiC tanlt and

.

GREAT HUNTING

"' •

'MtDDLIPORT- A .2 alllrv

located In town w/6 JtC. rnJI
3 bodrm., 2 baths, Mod .

NOT PAR FFIOII TOWN, ichool. 01 shopping. Room to let

· Information
. ..

111e.lddl'run In th4a yard. • bedroOinl, 1 ballt.home on 1/2

. , . lot. -

..

1117,000

'. .

~- Paltc St. • A nice 1 atoiy ranch with 2-3

l!tdloom• lilting on • terve -

nJ

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
.~
.446-3644
"'
'
'
DAVID WISEMAN,'BROKER,GRI- 446-95~5
~Mehle- 446-77%9

.

a - car
pnJ._,-;:·

lot. AIIO

=-~ wor1c anoa. Hll t.noec1 kl bad&lt;

IYIIACUR· A4!81 -...~- . A 2 bedrOOIII ~· with
lipprOX. i and 2 1rder hoolt upe OM 14x70 . ~
~oaioooom lltGblle holM alrMdr on- ol1hl loll.
,
.~ ·
,
ALL PCIII ,I ,, II

""'"'. ·

•afJr.......~.......:..... l.lllll

Clnly1l WUda .lft-1111

· o.iietMWcdae·lf41~
.~

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