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Page-lO-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Otiio

Friday, February 3, 1995

Mother pu!~.f~.J!!~~.2f!~'!.f!.r!" relatiQnship with daughter
Ann
Lan ders
"1995, Los An;eln

Times Synduce n
CIN1o.'l Syndical•"

Dear Ann Landers: This is for
"Open Ear in California,'' who said
parents should pick up the phone and
call their kids mstead of complaining
that "t)le children never call. "
My mother calls me at least four
times a day. She phones to tell me
she has just taken a bath . S h~ calls

she calls to say she took a nap. Late~
she'll caii!O say she is watching TV
and then starts 10 tell me all about the
program that's on
I have a business· that requires a lot
of time and auention. Mom cannot
figure out why I can't close lhe shop
andbringheraquart of milk.Orwhy
I need to get olf the phone when a
customer comes in. She often drives
to the door of the shop and honks. If
d uickl enbu h she
1do not rc
continues =n~ until~ com; t~ the
car and ask her what she wants
I buy her groceries, take o~t th e

·. -----Student stoc

laundry. N~thin is enou h M 0 ~ _evcryth ong for her. .
Th ts fncnd will call me back half
brothers d . g h g · Yfi e
So, Ann, the ncxtttme some dear an hour later and tell me he was
an ststcrs ave moved out elderly woman 1 lis
h h'J•-1 h'
h' ·
' ·
of the area 10 a vord het When h
'
e you er c I wo;u
wa c mg somct ong mtercsung on
goes to v's't th.
,
hs .e don t do enough for her, please
TV or troru ng hts shtrt.
1 1
em
aor
two
or
I
rcc
remem
berlhi
s
lcuer
lt'sjustposs'ble
To me, a Phone 1·s 1·1ke a door to
1
•
days, they usually ask her to 1
th h
:
.. •
0
early The sa "She' t
cave
all . mom who IS complammg IS your house. I wou ld feel offended if
dema~dini' anl'not ve~ ~~a&lt;!:~~~ ~k0J,!~~ m~~- ·· A BROKEN I knew somcone was home and didn 't
have around ..
MEWH ERE IS come to the door when I knocked.
No, Mo;.. does no
v
MI SSOU RI
.
Sh ould n' t thi s perso n ha ve the
1 ha _e
Alzheimer's She has
DEAR MISSOURI. Your letter :ourtcsy to ptck up the phone and SJ);
and is extre ~ 1 h os~eoarthn~s ~ert;unl y supports the _old axtom,
Can I call you bac k in 15 minu tes'
e Y cavy._ . cr wetg t
There arc al ways two stdes to every I'm busy ri~ht now."
~~~car ~~~sd~~ ~~ea~~~~~~~~~~-~t~'g
~~~ry::. I'd ~o a bit further and say
I understand there are times when
1 h
refuses 10 p ; fo th
IT
t rcc ·• 1 c two tnvolveo and the a person may not want to answer the
1
herse lf. s ~e :xp~J: ~~ ~0 ed~ observer.
ph'?"eand everyone has that right, but
1sn Itt rude when you call someone
Dear Ann Landers: My friend and and ~an never get a ~1 person on
hi s family use th eir an swering the hne even when theyre home?..
machine to screen their calls. They BOTHELL, WASH.
.
pick up the phone only when they . DEAR BOTHELL: Sorry, I
know who is calling . It upsets me to dtsa~ . S1mply .because you have a
think somcdnc is siuing right there persons phone number does not
and is unwilling to talk.
'
mean that he or she must be available

·

The Community Calendar is
as • free service to
non-profll groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. Tbe calendar is not
.d esigned to promote ·s ales or
fund raisers of any type. Ilelllli
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

STOCK PICK WINNERS - Pupils in
Twila Childs' sei:Ond grade class at Middleport
Elementiry School were tbe winners In the
Stock Picking Contest by Peoples Bank of Mid·
dleporl, tbe school's partner In 'education. Students won the contest by receiving lbe most gain
on their stocks picked: Cylec Industries, Intel
Corporation, K·Marl, Tens Instrument. and
Wall Disney Company. Students shown are,
from left: front_- Donnie Wban, Erin Collums,
Joe Hindy, Kim Miller, Lisa Gheen, Lucas

FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
. Township Trustees meeting Friday,
6 p.m. at Rock Spring Fairground.

Roush, Elizabeth Well, Cassie Lee; middle Melissa Boggess, Carrie Mlchae~ Tiffany&gt; Manley, Tonda Elliott, Brandon Carpenter, Drew
Conde, Joshua Slater and Natasha Wise; back
- Daniel Thornton, Becky King, Megan Mayes,
Ashley Johnson, Michelle Neece, Adam Wise,
Brandon Chandler, Brooke Venoy. Adults
shown. are, from left: Tonya Stobart of Peoples
Bank, Mrs. Childs and Carla King, assistant
manager of Peop~ Bank.

EAST MEIGS - American
Red Cross bloodmobile visit 10
Eastern High School Monday 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. ,
'

HARRISONVILLE - HarrisonviUe Lodge 411, 7:30p.m Saturday, at the Masonic Lodge. Work
in the E. A. degree. Refreshments.

CARPENTER - Columbia .
Township Board of Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at the fue station. · '

SUNDAY
POMEROY - SpeciliJ service,
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. in remem brance of the Four Chaplains of the
ship Dorchester, World War II
fame . -Public invited by Pastor
Robert Robinson.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - !75th Anniversary of Meigs County program Sat'urday, II a.m. Meigs County courtMONDAY
room; noon, burial of the time capMIDDLEPORT -· The Middlesule near the monument on the . port Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Moncourthouse lawn.
day, borne of Mrs. Eldred Parsons.
Pro~ram will be given by Mrs.
POMEROY - Quiet Day at Dav1d Bowen. Members may bring
Episcopai.,Cburch, Pomeroy, arrangements suitable for February.
. ~,... ,

Four Chaplains Sunday to be -observed Feb. 5
In commemoration of the dra- PoiPeniy United Methodist Cburcb.
matic sacrifice of four anned forces ·
Special· programs are being
chaplains during World Warn. the planned by legion members to
American Legion will obs·erve mark the observance of the 52nd
Religious Emphasis Week, Feb. 5 anniversary of the sinking of the
to II and "Four Chaplains' Sun- US S Dorchester and the heroism
·day" Feb. 5.
'demonstrated by four valiant chapChaplain James Gilmore of the lains.
Drew Webster Post 39 in Pomeroy
Of the many incidents of World
·announced that legionnaires will War II, probably none stirred the
attend in a group the I 0:30 a.m. nation more deeply than the story
Sunday worship services at tbe

of these four men of God whose
heroic efforts were crediJed with
the saving of more than 200-Iives.
These four, a Jewish rabbi, a
Roman Catholic priest, and two
Protestant ministers calmly issued
life-belts to American servicemen
aboard the troop transpon alter it
was torpedoed on Feb. 3, 1943.
Wbcn tbe supply of. life preservers was exhausted, the four
chaplains removed their own life

College

A Multimedia Inc ., Newspaper

'

PORTLAND - Letart/Portland
171'0 will meet Monday at 7 pm. at
the Portland Elementary.
RACINE - Racine Village .
Council will meet in regular session Monday 7 p.m. at the annex .

BRAND NEW CHEVY ASTRO EXTENDED CONVERSION VAN
· Extended ChaSSIS

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'

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FIBERGLASS RllfNIMG BOARDS
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NoOocFefS

Commission
open to bed
tax proposal
By JIM FREEMAN

MIZWAY TAVERN
POMEROY, OHIO

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=
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• Delay w
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• Custom Clothlntenor
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TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 •372-2844
344-5947. 422·0756 .
' T.u es. Tags, T1r~ Fe~~1 e~tra F1Wate 1nciu0ed m sale pnce or new vehiCle IISiecl wl"'efe aPPicaDie On approw«~ errol No t respon$jble tor typograpl'l!cal errors

•

•I

r

nme•Santlnetlitaff
POMEROY ~ Members of the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners Friday said they would '
welcome a proposal from the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce supporting a countywide bed tax to
help fund lourism activities.
The board met with a delegation headed by chamber President Charles Kitchen seeking money for
promoting tourism in the county.
1'1u;p~ber ,..IJU)(j gberited touri~m d~ties frQm
county Park Director Mary Powell who.. was li'!'ited
by·'COJ!imissioners earlier thi~ year to jobs strlctiy
pertaining to parks and recreation.
"We bad no idea so much was involved," said
Kitchen.
Commission President Fred Hoffman said he does
not feel the county should bear the sole financial
burden for supporting tourism activities and said the
chamber needs to produce a tourism agenda with set
goals.
Hoffman said the chamber needs to produce a
tourism budget.
·
"(Tourism) should not be funded by the county
alone," Hoffman said. "The people who will benefit
from tourism should be willing to help," he added.
On the other hand, coin missioners said they would
have no problem supporting a bed tax like those used
by other communities to help fund tourism.
· Such a tax would not affect Meigs County residents, but only the people who utilize those facilities.
Hoffman noted.
Co.mmi~sioners told the delegation to present a
proposal for consideration at a future meeting.
Hoffman said the commission could pass a bed tax
on its own volition but said commissioners "should
not lake it upon ourselves without support from the
chamQg.'_'_ •
Kitchen said the chamber would likel..y discuss the
issue at its next board of directors meeting and present
Continued on pege A2

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

•.

't'

· :· :. "');:::¥L ~J~

The federal government dollar

uix relief and deficit reduction, the challenge for
Where It come• from ...
Where It goea ...
the GOP-controlled Congress will be to show
ilo&lt;io1
specifically how they will do better, administraSou~Mlj --, ___ .
CIIIOr___ ..,. ...... ~-"
~
... -·' I
-,
tion officials said Frida y.
, ....... ~
!
~, ~~ ...
' 12%
·" In a sense, on Monday, we will give to the
' Individual ~ ·
Congress a budget and say, 'Here is ours. Where's
yours?''' White House spokesman Mike McCurry
said.
Clinton 's ·package does highlight the difficulties in achieving significant reduction in a deficit
that is expected lo balloon in coming years, in
large part because of the rising costs of health care l.....;._ _ _..;Oihor;;.:~4%:.:,_..;·.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....J
in the United States.
Even with the proposed new cuts, it would be $196.7
The president's budget, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press, projects that the deficit billion in 1996, $213.1 billion in 1997 and hover around
will decline to $192.5 billion in the current fiscal year but $190 billion through 2005, missing substantially the goal
of balance in 2002.
begin to rise thereafter.
..

r:::-..

Negotiation fails to bring accord
between CWA~ human·services
GALLIPOLIS- A bargaining session called by the Gallia
County Commissioners Friday in the Department of Human
Services strike produced no agreement or end to the work
stoppage by members of Communications Workers of America,
Local 4320.
"We had decent discussions, but it didn 't result in any·
thing," CWA Local Vice President Jack Huber said.
"The department would be responsive to reviewing any new
proposal the union may have, and if! here is any indication that
a meeting would be beneficial, the department representatives
are willing to·meet and lr)i to resolve thiS'lllatler," Comillisslon
President Harold Montgomery, said,'
·
The apparent stumbling block to ending the strike, which
began Feb. I, is the useofclientcomplaintlelters ineval~aling .
DHS employees' job performance.
.
Huber said the local proposed a separate file for complaint
letters and a procedure for investigating grievances from
clients, ·
·
"Client complaint letters shall not be the basis fordisciplin·
ary action, but may be used as the basis for an investigation,''
according to the proposal.
'
Management rejected the proposal, informing the local that
it "would not be involved in the investigation of complaints
and thai it could still result in disciplinary action," Huber said.
DHS Director Jerry Bames, acknowledging a "hangup"
between both sides over language dealing with management
' .
control, said the agency has tried to reach accord with the
local.
STILL ON THE LINE- Picketers warm themselves with a fire in
"We have compromised on the language problem and have
front
of the Gallia County Department of Human Services, scene or a
offered a substantial economic package," he said. "At this
point we believe we must maintain our right io manage the contract dispute between management and union members, New talks
Friday failed to prOduce an end to the strike, which began Feb. I.
agency ."
The local, which requested the commissioners' intervention
to end the strike Thursday, was disappointed by the -their failure to volved," Huber said. "If they re ally want thi s thing settled, they would
take an active part in Friday's negotiations.
have to hear both sides of the conversation. rather th an depending on
'j'he commissioners declined to attend and said they would have their representative to report back to them with second-hand informarepresenlalion at the talks. They·and the DHS have been represented · tion."
in past bargaining by the Ironton-based consulting firm of Lambert
In a joint statement released Friday. the commi ssioners noted that
&amp; Associates.
.
they have "total confidence" in their representatives and "there is no
" It certainly would have helped if the commissioners were in·
on
A2

Sewer district ~se-t to sign
contract for lagoon site
'v GEORGE ABATE

Oelo-.eJ!!I'

L.!!!~LJ on Page A2

New talks;
No.res~u-lts

.Public hqrlnq planned

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$8 '688**

c1

r-_;--~----~--------.;...------------------~~----------------------------------------,

!hllrdD7''''"'nhcharnb6r

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy PTO,
7 p.m. Tuesday, school gymilasiWil. All parents invited to atlend.

·,

'

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant · February 5, 1995

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Clinton is prepar·
"In a sense, on Monday, ·we will give to
ing to send Congress a budget that keeps his pledge to
provide a middle,class lax cui while downsizing govern- the Congress a budget and say, 'Here Is
ment by targeting 400 programs for either elimination or .
ours. Where's yours?"'
sharp cutbacks.
·
White House apokeamen
Clinton's $1.6trillion spending blueprint for the fiscal
Mike McCurry
year that begins next Oct. l won't officially be released
until Monday, but many of the details became known
Friday.
$196 billion in lax relief over the next five years and
The document proposes to slash spending by $144 · ·enough spending cuts to achieve a balanced budget by the
billion over the next five years. It would then spend $63 year 2002.
billion of those savings to provide lax reliefto the middle
However, the Republicans have yet to come forward
class and use the other $81 billion to further reduce .the with details on their spending reductions, and Clinton 's
deficit.
budget was clearly crafted to highlight just how difficult
Republicans,however,immediatelyanackedthespend- and painful that process will be .
While Republicans are attacking the president for not
ing program as a pale imitation of their own budget
program in the "Contract With America,' ' which calls for going far enough in the seemingly contradictory goals of

Starting'Tuesday, February, 7th
Every Tuesday Night at 7 p.m . .
Moderator Bob Arms
.Please Come &amp; Join Us.

9888 =
u

-Page

$1.6 trillion sp~nding plan provides $63 billion for tax cuts

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star, regular meeting. Refreshments.

RT. 7 &amp; 143

results

400 federal programs on chopping block

EUCHRE TOURNAMENT -

belts and gave them to four soldiers ·
and then stood calmly on the sinking ship, their arms .around one
another's shoulders, and their
beads bowed in prayer.
Inspired. by the heroic deed of
these four chaplains, 1be American
Legion each year marks the
anniversary of their supreme sacrifice through special services and
programs in their communities.

b~sketball

•
xmts

/lave ~rouble sleeping at night and
don't want to get involved in a novel?
"A' Collectio? of My FaVorite Gems
of rM Day" l.f IM ~rfect btd-sklnd
mate. Send a u/faddressed, long,
business-size en~~tlope and a check
or money order for $5 .25 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Collection , c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562. Chicago ,ll/. 60611 .()562
(in Canada, $6.25).

SaiUrday, ? a.m. until noon, Anglican Mysltc and.renowned author
Magg1e Ross Wl\1 lead the observance.

L~10S
Details

Community calendar--;_

publlshe~

HI: 20s~

Huntington bridge comes down -Page A2

whenever you decide to eaU.
The telephone one of the miracles
·
'
·
·
of the age, can ~exllallely mtrusl_ve.
I find no fault 10 usmg an answenng
· m
· a
mac h.me to screen ca11s. It tS,
sense, an electronic secretary. In my
opin ion . your complaint has no
vahdtty.
Gem of the Day: If _you want to
have a wonderful vacauon, take half
as many clothes and twice as much
money.

nmea-Sentlnal Stan
llJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plairis Regional Sewer District officials
. should sign a contract this week for the site of its lagoon, according to John
l..entes, auomey for the sewer board.
The board already .has an option to buy about 60 acres of a 87 -acre farm
outside Tuppers Plains from its owner, Joe. Ritchie, Lentes said. A public
bearing is planned before April.
AI the hearing, residents in this northeast Meigs community will learn about
the project's status and be asked to-sign 20-foot-wide easements to hook up the
lines.
uwe're not going to wait /' Lentes said. '
•
When the sewer project is completed, more than 20.years in building bans
imposed by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency will end, said Lindsey
Lyon§, sewer board president. The state stopped all construction near this
unin~(J!Ofaled communiJy because of (lQtential health hazards frw run-off
sewage.
·
The project may be sold by the end of this year with current state funds ·
available for ,the $2.6 million project, Lyons said. The project could be
·completed by the end of I 996. ·
. ~ ~
.
_
· The potential lagoon site is located about on.e-half mil~ .west of the ~;enter of ·
this community. The size of the farm will accommodate at _least double the
l!urrent capacity anticipated, Lentes added.
Earlier concerns about arrowheads found on the site have been resolved,
Lyons said. ,
·
· ·
'
··
Four pump station sites also must be procured, but this is contingent on the
lagoon site, he added.
·
·
"We're moving along as fast as we can to get financing and approval to do
this," Lyj)ns.said.
·
In Januarv, stale officials announced the sewer district won $275,000 in the
·ninth round.oftheSI~Ie Capital Improvement Program-formerly Issue Two.
With this sum, the project has been pledged more thari $1 .2 million in state
money acquired through the efforts of local, county and regional officials:
Other fundi~g included $7S,OOO for engineering in Issue Two's round seven,
, $500,000 in round eight, and $360,000 in a low-int~rest loan from a state water
development office, Lyons said.
· ~Thedtsrrict hopes to acquire additional funds this spring through an
Continued on ll•a• A2
1 '
.
.

·r

ews capsules .
Ohio's jobless rate

lo~~~~!~s~~hi!~;~s- The

Ill""'.,- ,
,_,

....

Columbia Gas
dumps winter
billing plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Columbia Gas of Ohio, which serves 1.2
million people in 63 Ohio counties,
says it has modified a controversial
plan desi gned to smooth out winter
utility bills.
.
The decision was made Friday by ·
an , ll -member group representing
residential and industrial users, Co,
lumbia, \he Public Utilities Commis·
sion of Ohio and the Office ol the
Consumers· Counsel.
More than I ,000 customers protested the experimental billing plan in
recen.t weeks. The adjustment was
. designed to even out the "ffccts o/
both abnormally cold and unusually
mild winters on customer bills and the
gas i:ompany's j ncome
" They were demanJi n,.

lcrmina ~

lion, but this, frankly, gives them a
little more," said Columbia Vice
President Jack Partridge.
Beginning Wednesday, customers
will no longer"face the possibility of
higher gas bills during warmer-thanusual weather, but they could pay less
for gas if the weather turns colder,
Partridge said.
" We 're removing any financial
risks for the customer,' ' he added.
" I'm really satisfied with the re sults of today's meeting," said Ohio
Consumer Counsel Robert Tongrcn .
" It gives Columbia customers the
best possible situation available ." ·
The program, called weather normalization adjustment, was pari of a
$47.5 million rate hike agreed to by
the PUCO in September. It is being
applied on a· trial basis from December through April to non-gas charge~.
which account for 37 percent of customers' gas bills .
When the we ather is mild, as it has
been this winter, the adjustment adds
Continued on page A2

GOOD MORNING

Scrubber
una"t
·
nempadil!~ment back on line

[ ) OhiO
u_

Today's Times-Sentinel

Busi~:.~clions - II~P•ge~ 1

state 's unempl~yment rate fellto-4
CHESHIRE - A component of
. teehno1ogy all he Calendars ·
B2&amp;J
percent in January, the sixth con·
Ihe coa I-scru bb mg
secutive monthly decline, the govGen. James M. Gavin Power Plant Classineds
DJ- 7
emment reported Friday.
has returned to service, Ohio Power :;C~o::;;
m::;ic:::s='---.--~1 ::ns::.e:...
rt
" Ohio 's economy continues to
Co. official s said Friday.
show considerable strength in virtu· ·
Unit I went back on line Jan . 28 Editorials
A4
ally all sectors," sgid [jebra
after completion of repairs to a boiler Local
AJ
Bowland, administrator of the Ohio
that was damaged Dec. 15.
Obituar.ies
Ali
Bureau of Employment Services.
The I ,300-megawatt coal-fired unit
CJ-6
·:.This.iueflected in the fact that we
underwent approximately $5 million Sports
continue 10 experience a· 20-year
J. J A
in rePil!.r~- Insurance is expected to
81
record low unemployment rate."
cover the repair cost , Ohio Power Weal er
Al
The last lime unemployment was
:us. Dept.
AP said.
this low was in April1974, when 3.. 7 percent ofOhioans who wanted jobs ' OhioPo.w.er andAmeri ca n Electric
didn't nave thein .
·
Power Corp: have taken stei&gt;'l to pre· ·
Columns
Ohio's rate in December was 4.5' perceni.
vent" similar structure stress on both
Na,tionally , unemployment was 5.7 percent last month, compared with 5.4 · boilers at the plant, including control JackApdersop
percent in December~
_ _
_
. .
-~
system modifications to increase
FrefiCrow
The number of Ohioans with jobs was 5.2 million in January; down 48,000 equipment protecTion.
from December. The number of people without jobs was 220,000last month,
Unit I began sc rubber operation on Bob HoeDicb
down from 250,000 in December.
·_
.
Dec. 9 and was producing 750 megalim Sapds
For 1994, the slate had an average unemployment rate of 5.5 percent, down . watts of its capacity
when
the
boiler
I,S, ot.~o v.llt, hbiMW.a t:e.
from 6.5 percent in I993 . Last year the nation had an average rate of 6.I was damage d. Unot· 2, th ep 1ant ,s ot her L-_ __;.c;_
_ _ _ _ _;__....J
. percent. The state 's unemployment tate a year ago was 6.2 percent .
unit, was removed from service Dec.
Since January 1994, the number of Ohioans working has .increased by 21 for tie-in work required for scrubber operation and routine, outage-related
107,000 from 5.1 million . The number unemployed dropped by 119,000. . maintenance. ·
.

ODOT says earth should move on connector's first phase in early March ·
ROCK SPRINGS - Earth should be moved on the first phase oflht U.S . secli!Jns from Rock Springs to the Ravenswood (W.Va.) Bridge, is schedRoute 33-lnterstate 77 connector around March 7, a· regional highway ·. uled for completion by 2000, Yoacham added.
official said Friday.
The next section from the Ravenswood Bridge to Rolandus could be sold
Since the $12.3 million project was sold in December, crews have checked by the beginning of 1997, Yoacham added.'
•
gas line,s to ready the 2.25-mile section of highway, said Nancy Yoacham,
Soil borings and aerial photos will likely be done thi s spring for the next
an·Ohio Department of Transportation spokeswo~an .
phase,.Yoacham said. About $1.3 million in federal highway dollars have .
The 18.6-mile M~ i gs Co~nty portion of the cmmeclor, divided into four been raised for th is section of the road.
•

�•

. Page-A2-sunday Times-Sentinel

----

OHIO Weather

--

forecast for

conditions and high

the omm

MICH.

.

•

Sunday, Feb. 5 •
Accu.:W~the~

•

February 5, 1885

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

rom pageA1
with a request for

IToledo l1 8" I
1¥..

....-----,-......

••• ••

IMansfield Iw I•
'

• • •

...

••
•lcolumbusl1e•

••

I

W.VA.

In other busines the board:
•Approved Ihe pu hase of two new
copier machines fro the Charleslon
Cash Register Company of Charleston, W.Va., for a combined cost of
$2,664.96.
•Mel with Treasurer Howard Frank
concerning an apparent sewer gas leak
into his office. Commissioners agreed
to temporary close a ground floor
women's lavatory to delermine the
location of Ihe problem.
•Agreed to advertise for bids to
purchase a new m~al delivery lruck
for lhe Meigs County Council on
Aging.
•Paid weekly bills of $197,652.65
consisting of 201 entries and adjourned .
Present were Hoffman, Vice-president Janet Howard Tackett, Commis·
sioner Roberl Harten!&gt;ach and Clerk
of Commission Gloria Kloes.
..

.·..

....•

GALLIPOLIS -

hers' bills temporarily were higher or lower than before, officials •
· said. Such fiiiCtualions will even out over time and customa:s will
1101 be cbar&amp;ed more tban tbey are already paying, !bey added.
BREC clarified tbc latest billing notices following numerous
calls to ill office seeting explanations. Due to a cut telephone cable
on Jan. 30, BREC was unable to field all calls from customers.
BREC Executive Vice President and General Manager Walter V.
Truitt Jr. enoouragcd customen to call with their questions at 4461S32or 1·1100:231-2732.
Truitt explained tbat the new billing adds three sections "only 10
make it easier for you to see bow you are s~g your electricity
dollar."

THERE SHE GOES - The 400-foot center
span of the Sixth Street Bridge linking Hunting·
ton, W.Va., and Chesapeake feU Into tbe Ohio

Meter reading changes were instituted make BREC biDing more
effiCient and timely, he added. The change did not result in ·any
increased dlarges, but because of the time it takes to read all meters
in til!: system, some members were billed for a longer period.
·
.BREC officials will be on hand to answer questions at the community meetina_ Monday at 7 p.m. at Lawrence County's Windsor
Volunteer F'ue Department on Greasy Ridge Road.

River Frkllly. DemoUIIcin of tbe briclge, built Ia
1!126, will be completed Ia mid-March. (AP)

Lagoon site Officials suggest shift of funds ·
Continued from page A1
Appalachmn Regional Council gran I,
Lyon~ sa1d.
.
The ARC grant w.•ll defray the cost
of connectmg the hoes to the houses,
along with removal and destruction
of old septic systems. Currently, con·
over tbe sou !bern !bird of Ohio to a nectionisestimatedat$2 ()()()a house·
dusting in tbe northwest. Scattered hold, he added.
'
accumulations or an inch or two
The sewer board will hold ils
were reported in cenUal and north- monlhly meeting at 10 a.m. Feb. 14 at
east Ohio.
the Tuppers Plains-Chest Wat
.
er
er
By early Saturday, mainly light
snow or flurries were scattered Department office.
The _sewer d1stnct slretches oneover the state. ·
halfm1lefromthemtersectionofstate
The record higb temperature for
Saturday at the Columbus weather Ro.utes 681 and 7, servmg 200 housestation was 66 degrees in 1946. holds. Anyone within 300 feet of this
Tbe record low was 7 degrees li~e must hook up by stale law, Lyons
sa1d.
below zero in 1917.
SueMaison,amemberofthesewer
Sunrise Sunday will lie at 7:36
board, said the district is ·trying to
a.m.
keep lhe monthly bill as low as posWeather forecast:
siblebelow $30 a month.
Sunday ... Becoming parlly
"We would rather handle it on a
cloudy west and south. Flurries and .
squalls nortlx;ast. Additional. accu· locallevel,"saidMaison wholivesin
mulations likely extreme northeast. Tuppers Plains. "It's pr~tty well acHighs mainly IS to 20.
ce_pled. The majority of the people arc
Monday ... Snow flurries nortb- ready for it."
.
east...Fair elsewhere. Low near
AI times, this project has bogged
zero. Highs 10 to 20.
down in paperwork and bureaucratic
Extended forecast:
delays, she added.
Tuesday ... Fair. Lows 0 to 10
Don Poole, director of the Tuppers
above. Highs in the lower to mid- Plains-Chester Water Department,
dle 20s.
and members of the board agreed
Wednesday ... Fiiir. Lows S to 1S. Lindsey Lyons has been most inslru·
Highs in tbe lower 10 middle 20s.
mental in this district's eslablishment.
Local we•lber:
." J don't know anyone who would
. Heavy snow ~umulati.ons prebe
better suited," Poole said of Lyons,
!l•cted for tbe regiOn failed to matewho
also started the water district.
rialize early Saturday. In Gallia
County, highway crews· bad been ·"He's got the patience of a 90-year·
·
out since early in the day treating old silail."
roads.

Colder temperatures follow
in wake of weekend's snow
By The Associated Press
The National. Weather Service
predicted more snow SaiUrday
pight for parts of Ohio.
A heavy snow warning was
issued Saturday for nortbeast Ohio,
. with a -snow advisory in effect for
north central Ohio. Total accumulations by Sunday morning were to
range from nearly a foot of snow in
the extreme northeast to 3 to 5
inches in north central Ohio. -Less
tban an inch of snow is likely out. side the warning and advisory

areas.

.

Brisk northwest winds were
expected to develop over tbe state,
· resulting in dangerous wind chill
Saturday night. Lows overnight
were to range from the single digits
in tbe northwest to tbe mid teens
near the Ohio River. The wind chill
index Saturday night was expected
to range from 20 to 30 degrees
. below zero 'statewide.
Lake effect snow showers were
to continue over northeast Ohio on
·Sunday. Additional accumulation is
·expected. Partly to mostly cloudy
:skies arc expected elsewhere.
: Highs will be in the teens, witb tbe
· wind chill below zero in most

areas.

. A suong area of low pressure
·passed to the south of Ohio
:overnight, resulting in widespread
:light snow. Accumulations since
· Friday ranged from 4 to 6 inches.

·O hio, W.Va. lottery picks
· ·By The Associated Press
· The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries: ·
OHIO
Pick 3: 0-8-8
Pick 4: 7-9-9-6
Buckeye 5:6-11-12-19-34
There were three tickets sold
. with all five numbers drawn in Fri_day night's Buckeye 5 drawing.
·Each winning ticket is worth
:$100,()()(), the Ohio Louery said.

(USPS SlS-100)
Publi!Md ~.a c h Sunday, 82.5 Third Ave ..
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the O hio Valley Publi~hlng
Company/M ultimedia. Inc. Srcond cla.~s pg5!·

age paid al Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Enten::d n5
second clas5 mailing mnner ot Pomeroy, Ohio,
l'oSI Office.

...

Mrmbtr: llle Auocinted Preu,J!llillltt: Dtlio

· NC:,wspapt:r Association.

SUNOAVONLV
SU BSCRII'TION RATES
Ry C•rrier or Motor Routt

:.g;: ~c;~::::::::.·.·:.·.·:.·: : : .·:.·.·.·: :.·.·: .·.·: .·.·:.·.·::.·.·:.·s~~:~

Columbia Gas

Continued from page A1
The winning tickets were pur- to gas bills.lflhe winter is colder than
chased at a Daicy Mart in Wester- normal, as it was last year, the adjustville, the Apples store in North ment would reduce gas bills below
Canton and Cardinal Food Gallecy what they otherwise would be:
This winter, the plan added about
in Pataskala.
There were 236 Buckeye 5 tick- $4 to the average residential bill, Coets with four of the numbers, and - lumbia said.
each is worth $250. The 7,022 tickPartridge said the company will
ets showing three of tbe numbers .continue to track utility bills under the
are each worth $10 and the 70,548 program in advance of a review oflhe
tickets showing two of the numbers pilol project somelime after il expires
are each worth $1.
in April.
The Ohio Lottery will pay
The company has notestimaled how
$561 ,940 to winners in Friday's much it might lose by not adding the
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales upward adjuslmenf lo bills.
for the game totaled $l,6S8,650.
" That depends on the weather,"
In !be olber daily game, Pick 4 Partridge
said.· 'There was a problem
Numbers
players wagered
oul
there
we
felt we had to address. It
$369,792.50 and will share
was
worth
it."
$101 ,400.
. Despite the public relations p;obSales for the Buckeye 5 game
lcms with the plan, Tongren said he
totaled $588,743.
·
.
The jackpot for Saturday's hopes il continues.
"This program is in cff~ct j_n 14 __
Super Lot!Q c!!awing wa1 $1 2 mil,lion.
.=
state's, and nothing ·like this has liap·
pencd," he said. " We need to figure
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 2-3-6
out a better way to get information
Daily 4: 6-2.{}-1
across.' '
Cash 2S: 2-12-16-21-22-25

COYINGTON, !'Y· (AP) - A
state highway ofriCial says federal
fun~ approved ru~e
~o for a
Covmgton-to-Cmcmnau bndge
need to be ~sed soon ~efore
Congress decides to reclatm the
money.
J~bn Carr, deputy state highway
engmeer for the Kentucky trans·
portation Cabinet, is sugge~ting
tbat the _money be convertec! for use 10 buildmg a span at Maysville..
. He discussed the res~uffbng
Thursday with U.S. Rep. JIDI Bunning, R-Southgate, whose district
includes both bridges.
Shifting the $31 million to
Mays.ville does not mean tbat tbe
Ohio River bridge in Covington
·would not be buil~ Carr sllid.
It could mean tbal the bridge originilly envisioned as a span for
cars - would carry a light rail
commuter train system instead.
"I think you'll have a bridge.
Now, whetber it's going to be a
hig)lway bridge or a ligbi rail
bridg~: I £ea!ly don't
Carr
srud. The~ sa need for addttional
(!'aD~~uon) capacity across the
nver. ,
Carr s proposal comes as a new

know::

CWA
strike
Continued from page 1
A

need for the commissioners to sit at
the table."
The job action marks the first strike
againsllhe DHS in the 10 years since
agency members joined the CW A.
The local's old contract expired Dec.
31 and managemenl's final offer for a
new pact was rejected Jan. 27. Of the
54 people employed by DHS, 32 are
on strike. ·seven non-union workers
have refused to cross the picket lines.
While CWA pickets are stationed
outside DHS locations, a staff of 16
has been operating the agency. Security guards were also hired to protect
the sites.
·
"We have enough people to maintain lhc oJieration at Ihis time and all
clients are receiving benefits, espe- ·
cially since the employees who are
working are putting in extra hours,"
Barnes said.

'

time~·Seruinel

will

001

-

....................... $96.20

·Certified PUblic Accountant
736 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-8677
Open 9-5 Weekdays,
Evenlnga and Saturday by appointment

••••••••••••••••
: CHOCOlATE CHAMPAGNE AFFAIRE :
&amp;

•

· at the Ohio University Ion
331 Richland Avenue in Athens

•

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Saturday, February 11
6 to 9 p.m.

•

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••
•••••••••••••••••
to benefit

.Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio's
Family Planning and Related Programs
Join us for
Good Company, Good Food
and a Good Time

PATIENT •'
CONFIDENTIAUTY
PROTECTED

INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED
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SoiVI&lt;oo

-coniPlet•wt.. AdolaiCMI

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~·o R-Iot

24 HOUR
CRISIS LINE

286-5075

OUTSIDE OF
GALUPOUS CAWNG AREA
TOLL FREE DIAL f
AND THEN

GALLIPOLIS
3086 STATE RT. 160

446-5500

... -

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o£.-.-, &amp; r-.g

800-252-5554

-

..'

LOCAL CRISIS LINE

446·5554
TDDAVAILABLE

District profile available at office
.
•.

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

992-'2192

·

GALLIPOLIS - The 1993-94 profile of tbe Gallia County
Local School District is now available for public inspection, according to Debbie Ratliff, clerk·treasurer of the Gallia Local Board Of
Education.

Two face charges in Meigs
POMEROY - Two RuUand men were charged witb petty tbeft .
and criminal mischief in tbe alleged entry or a Pomeroy man's car
early Friday, Meigs CoWJty Sheriff James M. Soulsby said. .
.
Charged are Jerry I.ee McDaniel, 19,, Hysell Run Road, a~d
• ;7· Danny McDonald, 21, Beech ~ve Road. The two WID appear m
Meigs County Court, Soulsby wd
··
The car, a 1987 Chevrolet owned by Joh!i Cremeans, was p!Jked
outside a Union Avenue residence when llCighbors spotted two men
at the vehicle. When neighbOrs approached, one of the two men fled
and the other was detained, Soulsby said.
S001e of tbe items taken from the vehiCle were recovered, Soulsby said

Deputies cite driver for DUI

POMEROY - Rick D. Bays, Vincen~ was cited Thursday night
by Meigs County sheriff's deput.ies on charges of t:riving under tbe
influence and driving under suspension,
.
Both are Sealnd.offenses, Sheriff James M. Soulsby srud.

Truck theft under investigation

.•

••••

li••
l•

.·:••
~

·••.

.••
•

~

24 HOUR .

POMEROY

· · RIO GRANDE - Enrollment of children for tbe summer ·
months at·the University of Rio Grande's Cbild Deveiopment Center is now underway, director Eliumbcth Walker-Knauer said.
· The Jl!Ogram begins June 6. The center's surnmerbours are 7:30
a.m. to S.30 p.m.
•
.
.
The program is open to children wbo have completed kmdergarten, or first. second or !bird grades. It features field trips, art,
musk;, science conce~&gt;ts. sports, aeative movement and recreational
activities. There are also opportUnities to refine and expan«! malb
and reading skills, and an enrichment prog1'31fi, based on availability .
Two daily snacks are provided. Parents may also opt for a bot
lunch, The cots is $75 per week~ if-the.child brings a lunch, and $80
if the center provides the lunches.
.
·
.
Early enrollment is recouitnended. For more information, call
245-7477.

•

•

· GALLIPOLIS - The theft of a Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck
from a Gallipolis woman's residence is under investigation by !be
Gallia County Sberifrs Department •
Connie E. Young, 1392 Neighborhood Road, infooned deputies
tbal tbe 1992 model truck was taken sometime between 8:30 p.m.
Friday and 1:45 a.m. Saturday.
.
Deputies are also investigating tbc !heft of a shotgun and electronic equipment from tbe home of Trevor R. Small, 2334 Brum. field Road, O'own City.
Small informed deput.ies Friday tbat his home was entered some·
time earlier in tbe day .

Police _issue five citations
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police cited Ronald K. Campbell, 3S, Point Plcasan~ W.Va., for-driving under tbe influence, left
or ~ntg !!Dd driving un.der suspension early Saturday.
·
· Also cited early Saturday was IUChar!l L. Wille~ Point Pleasan~
for driving under suspension.
Cited by police Fridlly were Joseph C. Duree Ill, 44, 1to First
Ave., Gallipolis, assault; Wilma Hazlett. 75, 144 Portsmouth Road,
Gallipolis, no operator's license and improper lane usage; and Terry
L. Joonson, 32, 538 King Road, Gallipolis, open container.

H0 LV SPI RIT
SEMI NAR
.
.

.

Feb • 5th
·
• 8 th
ker :J~aStOr_ BJIL

·-

I

"where you can have Vtctory in your life"

--· -- ---

(614) 446-2631
1·800-468-6682

·--

FEBRUARY ···
POMEROY - A groundbreakGALLIPOLIS - Five people for strain, tbe spokesperson said.
~
Police
said
sbe
was
a
passenger
ing
ceremuny
for
a
planned
expanwere taken to HOlzer Medlc:at cension of !be Pomeroy Nursing aQd.
ter Friday by tbe Gallia County in a car driven by Thomas Hoover,
7S,
Blue
Creek,
tbal
exited
Airport
Rehabilitation Center, 367S9 RockEmergency Medical Service.,fol ..
Road
at
5
p.m.
to
bead
north
when
springs
Road, Pomeroy, bas been
lowing a two·car accident at tbe
it
was
suuclc
from
behind
by
a
.
c
ar
for
Friday,
Feb. 17 at 2:30p.m .
set
intersection of State Route 218 and
driven
by
Ronald
L.
Newell,
34,
·
According
to
a release from tbe
County Road 96 (£lay Chapel), the
Evans,
W.Va.
Center. the construction project will
Gallia-Meigs Post or the State
Damage to both vehicles was expand the center's square footage
Highway ~trol reported .
to include new physical, occupaOda Martin, 68, 690 Little Bull- severe, police said . Newell was
skin Road, Gallipolis, was admitted cited for driving under the influ- tional, speecManguage and respiratory therapy treaiment areas.
witb multiple injuries, a hospital ence and assured clear distance .
In another Friday ¥Cident, the
The project, aceoroing to tbc the
spokesperson said.
Treated and released for contu- patrol cited a Crown City man for release, is a part of an overall plan
sions were Tamara J. Griffith, 32, making a prohibited turn on a road- by PNRC to provide tbe communiAmanda L. Griffith, 9, and Keva way in a two-vehicle accident on ty with a wider range of services as
well as the most comprehensive
M. Bing, 6, all of 4812 Bladen SR141.
Troor.rs said Jeremiah J. Par- rebabilita~on and therapy programs
Road, Gallipolis. Cary L. Bing, S,
also of 4812 Bladen Road , wa·s sons, 1 , 17880 SR 7, was soulb- available.
The expansion project wiU also
treated ,for medical problems not bound in Walnut Township at4:15
related to the accident, the p.m. when be altempted to make a allow tbe facility to .increase tbc
spokesperson said.
· Uctum. A soulbhound pickup truck outpatient therapy programs curThe pauol said Martin turned driven by Christopher L. Stamper, renUy being provided, it was DOled.
Architectural Designs of Mil left from Clay Chapel onto 218 at 24, Pedro, was unable to stop in
Digital clock limer. 2·hour shul·
1:OS p.m. and collided with a time and collided with Parsons' waukee, Wis., is.!be architectural
off. Pause 'N' Serve. Automatic
and consuuction management fum
northbound car driven by Tamara car.
keep-warm setting. Free starter ·
Damage
was
s_light
to
~
vebi·
overseeing
tbe· project. ConsuucGriffith. The collision sent Mar·
supply of Mr. Coffee fihers.
tion will be completed 1by local
.
tin's car off tbe west side or !be cles, the patrol S81d.
(SRX55)
(5816-202)
The Gallia County Sheriff's contl'actors working un.der the
road and it struck a guardrail.
Department
cited Walter L. Slayton direction of Architectural Designs.
Martin"s car was severely damJr.,
22,
Apple
Grove, W.Va.. for no The entire expansion project is
aged and tbe Griffith vebicle bad
6
seatbelt
following
a one-vehicle scheduled to be completed and '5WN·HARDWARE 1'
moderate damage, tbe patrol said .
The accident remains· under investi· accident early Saturday on Georges ready for use this summer.
Tbe public is invited to join ·
Creek Road.
galion.
'
state
and local officials in the
Deputies
said
Slayton
was
west·
Gallipolis City Police reported
17 Court St. Gallipolis, Ohio
.
ground
breaking ceremony.
tbat a Kanawha County, W.Va., bound at 2:53 a.m. at the intersec'
446-2374
woman was Injured in a 'two-car lion witb McCully Road when be
attempted a rigbt·-hand curve, slid
crash on Upper River Ro'ld Friday.
Marguerite Hoover, Blue Creek, off tbe left side of the road and
was taken to HM C by tbe Gallia struck a ditch. The car was slightly
EMS and was treated and released damaged, according to tbe report .
Indiana Firm Discovers:

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Oiabet.;~S and Exercise ........... - ........... 11
Do It!. ...... ................ .. ........
.. 11

Avoi ding Bacteria In Your Food .... ....... 1135
Cancer Pre"Wention .......... .... .. .............. 1136

Eignt Steps To Improve Ybu r Walking . t1
E&lt;ercise E•cuses............................ ...

Don't Be Angryt ................................... 1137
Lowering Cnoles1erol .... f ........ . ....... 1138

Guide to Goals For Walkers................

The Prescr,i"p tion for

How To Be Consistent Witn E&lt;ercise ..

HEHReBaiiShcA
arN
e"'-.DReVIoiTrmA.M
.. ·I·N
···S.... ..... ,.......1139

Low-Intensity Workou ts............ ..
More Willpower · Please! ..........

Being Cautious About ; Vllamins ... ;.....1140
Health and Ute Pre&amp;eNatlon .! .......... :." 1141
Smoking and Vitamin C ............ .......... 1142

One Year-Plan............... .............

Twelve Ways lo Gel Calcium .............. 1143
Understanding Anti01cidants
and Free Radicals..

cial cream that relieve.., arthritis pain

relieving pain and mnging comfort
tt)t.'ftUllrnJ knoucd jtlints.

in minutes. e ven chronic anhrili !-'1
pain-&lt;lcq:&gt; in the joinLs. The producl

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which is called PAIN 8US'I'•Ril .

mu~~-whcrc

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1

l.1mg-1ime lll1hritis sulfcrcrs will be
glad to know thai !his r.. rnula wi ll

tight against arthril is.

help ~ut an.end In agnni1.ing day"
and sleepless nighl,. It i.l ltighly rccpmmc ru.l cd by users w ho lravc
resum ed dai ly uctivitics and arc
enjoying life again.
·

tic l&lt;mnul as ever Jcvclo~''
in the
,..........
Immediately upon application it
"goes to work by JX!IlCln.tting deep to
the areas most :.tffc~..:md-thc joints

themsclves- hringi ng fa sl relief
where relief is needed most. Men

and women who have suffered

arlh riti' pain fnr years are
reporting incredible n:sull' with this · •

l -l+~~~'t~:~~a~s~in~g~lc0 ~~~~w~e~l;;1 , ,.;~

Breakfast Recipes ............................... 1130 Don't Kid YOurself .............................. 1148

.FoodYa. DiseesQ ..,, .., .. ,.., ...... ,............ 1.131

Helping Your Spouse lose Welgnt.. ... 1t49

Is. Meat Really That Bad For You ... .... . 1132

Immunity with Proper Nutrition ............ 1150

HEALTH

Maintaining a Healthy Welgnt.. ........... 1151
Negative Calorie Foods ......................1t52

A More, Hea11hlul Approach

Performance .................................. ;.... 1153

ToWeignt Loss .......... :..................... t133 welg'ht oain HeredltaryL .......... ........ 1154

What The Food L..a.bels Mean .............. 1155

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UPDATES, IMPROVEMENTS, ADDIT.IONS-MADE MONTHLY.
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.

)rig inaiL~.

is l»lC of the fa'\U...~t ~octin g thcrapcu~

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Twelve Week·Walking Program.......... 1
NUTRITION
Walking Facts .............
AND WEIGHT LOSS
![)_d-+~w~o~rk~T~h~ose~A~bd~o:m:ina~ls~··::::...::::...::::...::::...::::...::::.. ·~·~~~~~P~re~fe~rr ri !~~-... ··.~".elt~ ~:".t ;{~~
FOOD .
Oietary0uidelines ........................ :.... 1t47

Gallipolis, Ohio
Services Nightly at 7:00pm

Groundbreaking
set for expansion
at Meigs facility

.Crash leaves five injured

Pool Aerobics ...................................... 1
Successful Aging ............. ................... 1
The Pleasu re Princlpal ........................ 1

·3773 Georges Creek.· Rd.

\

explained.
By GENE HOLT
. Sgt. F'Jrst Oass Oran Barry, the
POINT PLEASAI'IT, W.Vaunit's
motor sergeant, indicated
With nearly 200 members and roc· ·
'
!bat
only
a few of tbe current mem·
ognized as one of tlie IMgl!l:t units-in !be West Virginia Army Nat.ion- bers were part of the unil in 1983,
al Guard, tbe 3664th Maintenance when the unit made its l~t trip to
Company of Point Pleasant will Germany.
''This will be a good-oppmunity
uavel to Kniserslautem, Germany
for
unit members to travel overseas
for its annual training Aug. S-26.
and
it bas bad a noticeable effect ,
The unit will be one or several
on
morale,"
Barry said.
' •
maintenance groups from the U.S.
A
lot
of
extra
work
and prepa•
to be uansponed to Germany to ration is required by everyone to
assist in tbe repairing of equipment ensure
we succeed a1 our mission,"
from deac~vated units formally staexplained
Capt. Terry Cole, comtioned in the European theater.
mander
or
tbe 3664th. "It is easy to
"The unit will be repairing see that most
everyone is excited
everylbing which is awaiting transand
willing
to
put forth tbat extra
fer ·to the U.S. that doesn' t work
effort."
properly," LL Jeffery Perkins, supIn ad4ition to the preparatinn fa'
. ply plaJOO'n leader, saicj.
AT,
tbe unit is spending extra time
"Given the vast amount of
working
to increase unit strength .
equipment once needed in Europe,
"By
going
to Germany, we can
~e anticipate repairing everytbin~
show
people
who
are interested in
from electronics to track vehicles, '
the
unit.
the
types
of
missions !bey
Perkins added.
·
could
take
part
in
as
a member of
Once repaired, the equipment
the
unit,"
Perkins
explained.
"We
wiD be reissued to National Guard,
bave
a
number
of
openings
in
variReserve and active duty units.
"This will allow us to work on ous areas in tbe WJit. such as track
·
equipment wbicb could be issued vehicle repair.''
For those who might be interest:
to Guard units in West Virginia,"
.
ed
in joining tbe uni~ or would like
. Perkins said. .
CLEARIN,G THE WAY- While heavy snowfall predicted for
to
discuss
the many benefits of
Unil members will occupy !be
tbe
are~~ dldn t 11111terlaU:r.e early Saturd•y, there was enough of the :
maintenance facilities in Germany. joining Ibis type or unit, contact tbe white slutr that feU around to 11111ke lnoveli"'! less than comfortThis will provide tbe unit witb an . recruiting ·office at 1-800-642- •hle. The dr!ver of Ibis F•rmalltractor, who declined to be identl- .
opportunity to perform other mis- 3619, or tbe unit at 304-675-3950.
lied, 1111ed a small plow to clell!r the way for &lt;!lstomers lit the Super(Gene Holt II • first lieutenant
sions.
.
America In SpriDB V•lley. (T-S photo)
"In order to make the necessary In the t53rd Pabllc Arralrs
repairs on !be equipment. a large Delac:hmenl of the West VIrginia
number of various parts will need National GWlrd. The above orlgito be ordered to maintain adequate n•lly •ppeared In ilie 1 S3rd 's
levels of required parts," Perkins pubUc atralrs newsletter.)

It Doesn't Have To Hurt To Be Good ... 11
. Keeping Wal~ing Mulli·Productivo .. .... 111
Lack of E&gt;~ercise .......................... .....1

NEW LIFE VICTO~y
CENTER
·
·

v ALLE·Y BANK
'

.'

~ 1'riiMig

'

fiJ@JIJV &amp;@M/lJ$·
IJ!Nfl i1JtiJ!IlU!IJCIJ
·11 fiJUCIJ $fPf!JJ~t/JI

u·

'

·

@JfllfN

1

..

•

.

Summer enrollment set at center

.,' '

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS

.Palh-SIIvlcalorlhiHomtllea
~
·
Eqlto)WI - · Pn1gromo

oncvwOII-PIIIoniTrNimont

200 MAIN ST.

--

'

Donation: $15.00
Information: 593-3375

JACKSON

OHIO

·.

..

Ti~:ket

~.~- PRIVATE .

be rcspon·

2973 Piedmont Rd.
304-429-4788 • 9:30- 5:00 M·F; 9:30-2 :00 Sat.

•

Lynn E. Angell

oGolloMiolgiiHo IIIIMI
~-.g ...
Counselng
-Vk:tm'••=w·noeProgrwn
-c.,Mu..,•u•ll
EmaacMIIIJ""elah~
('..
.
MEDICARE-MEDICAIOoTITLE XX•SUDING FEE SCALE-CERTIFIED BY STATE OF OHIOoEVENING APPTS. AVAILABLE

13 Weeks..........................
...... $23.92
26 Weeks....... ......................................... $47.06
S2 Weeks ... ............................................. $92.56
Races Oubtde G•lli• Cou nly

·,

·~

Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Gallla Coumy

52 Weeks

For complete, professlonallndlvldualllhd
business tax preparation aulatanca call

RIO GRANDE - Open registration for !bose wl)o bave not y~t
enrolled for the spring term at tbe University of Rio Grande and ~o
Grande Community College is Monday, Feb. 27 from 3-6 p.m . m
tbe E.E. Davis Technical Careers Center.
Late registration dales are Feb. 28 lbrough Mareh 6. Those wishing to register during tbat period should go to tbe OffiCe of Records
in Allen Hall.

•

'&amp; .

sible for OOvaoce payments made to carriers

13 W«ks ........................................... ....$25 .6 1
26 Weclu ................... .............................. $49 .M

•Electronic Filing Available
•Direct Deposit of Refund. Check

ONE a' TIE MOSTCOI.I'Afi£NSM &amp; I'Rl'EJ;SIONAL II:NTAL HEALTH AGENCES t1 S001I£ASlEIIj OHIO
Woodlani:l c.ntara II; funded in Plrt by tM a.-....a-. n " tg• 8oMd 01
Alcohot,DrugAddlcllonond--h . . &gt;l 1

&lt;Manlll1lO&amp;FIITlllr

No subscripti ons by mail pcrmiued in area~
where molor carrier se rvi~ is available.

Open registration set at RG

Congress,"' Carr~ tb!s weet to
Jim Duane, execuuve dtreetor of
the
Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana
Regional Council of Govenments,
a regional planning agency.

Wood{an.tf Centers, Inc.

-24 Hr. E"-"&lt;Y Servtcoo

.................................... $!.()()

T1lc Sunday

Republican majority in Congress
looks for ways to cut ·tbe federal
budget.
" These funds need to be used
soon before tbey are reclaimed by

rears

SINGLE CO PY PRICE
:S unday ..

bUll sent to Buckeye Rural Electric

Cooperative cuatomen only explain rall:s in greau:r detail and are
1101 a change In the raltl euatcmers pay, BREC officials said Friday.
Due 10 a change in the scbcdule for reading met.en, some mem- .

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A 3

-

-Tri-County Briefs:---. Guard unit planning
: BREC clarifies latest b_illing
sojourn in Germany
New

a d tax.

•

Regional

February 5, 1995

MC'C~~~~~~~· Hanning, A. Ph.
Mon. thru · . 8:00a.m. lo 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. lo 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh. ·
'till 9
. Week ·

l

�••

•
•

(

Commentary.

February 5, 1995 .

A Dl.talon of

Sl5 Third Ave, · GolllpoU., Oblo
(614) 446-1342

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 991-1156

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher

HOBART WilSON JR,
EsecuUn Editor

MARGARET LEHEW
CoDtroller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the
Newspaper Publishers Association.

American

LETTERS OF OPINION .,. welcome. They should be lesi than
300 words All lelkn are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, adckess and telephone number. No unsigned .lett~n will be
published . Letters should be in good taste, addressmg tssues, not
·
personalities.

Washington Today:

GOP budget cutters
savor the moment
By JD.L LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
.
WASHINGTON :-The Republican ~arty's premier budge~;cutlers
s110Ded out on a Capttol balcony overlooking the National Mall. Sbould
we get up on the rail like w~·re going to jump off'!" one jokec! to the
. other.
Kas' b bainD
f
. Not a chance. Sen. Pete Domcnici and Rep. John
tc , c
en o
the Senate and House budge! coouniuees, respectively, have waited years
for this momenl
: . Tbe Republican revobttion is at hand and they ;u:e the battlefield slralegists . Their budgets will be tantamount to marcbmg orders as the new
Republican House and Senate majorities pmder wbicb agencies to kiD,
Which programs to senjl packing to the stales, which Americans should
~et taX cuts.
. .
As President Clmton prepares to_send his budget to Congress lin MOJ!·
&lt;)ay, Domenici and Kasich are working t~elber closely ~d spoofing thett
respective images as staid veteran and youihful fiscal r3dtcal.
: "He's slick as a wbis,tle today," Domenici, 62, said Thursday at a
photo session while straightening Kasich's lap,els ..
. · ''I wore my best suit to stand next to you, rephed Kasfcb, 42.
: · "I'm the old grandpa and be's the OIOver and shilker," r&gt;omenici said
1alcr with goud humor.
: Kasich ·elected in his central Obio district in 1982, is a c!Qse any of
House S~ilker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and a firebrand in the Gingrich
J!i(&gt;ld on fiscal mailers. His biggest splash was in 1~3 when be teamed up
wjth conservative Minnesota Democrat Tim Penny and nearly got the
House to pass $90 billion in spending cuts.
· : "He's a bard-charger," said Penny, wbo retired last year. "John
comes straight at you. And be's wiUing to raise issues that others would
jitst as soon avoid."
. .
. ,
.
· In past years Kasich has untated bJS party by proposmg to cut consressional pensions and woddng to kiU the B-2 bomber. He's also insisted on
offering detailed. GOP alternatives to Democratic budgets when others
fuvored an attack-and-generalize approach.
.
. : Already this year Kasicb is stirring controversy with plans to put
defense spendin~ ulJ(JcQ. microscope and ~e a.more, detailed !ong-lerm
spending sccnano than siiine-pliny-.elders belteve ts pohtically wtse.
"I know that John wants to develop an honest budget," Penny said. "I
li.lso know that there are many leaders in bis caucus who are trying to
undercut that effort.''
: Domenici, like Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan .. is identified
with the pragmatic wing or his party. The New Mexico Republican, elected in 1972, was budget chairman for six years in the 1980s when the GOP
ran the Senate and Ronald Reagan was in the White House. ·
. Like Kasicb, Domenici has sometimes bucked prevailing GOP winds.
. He was skeptical from the start about the supply-side economics Reagan espoused. In the mid-80s, concerned about swelling deficits, be and
other Senate Republicans went on record in favor of cutting Social Security cost-of-living adjustmCnts and other sensitive programs.
"Domenici bad very grave reservations about the Reagan tax cuts in
}981," said former Senate Blldget Commitree Cbainoan Jim Sasser, DTenn., who was defeated in November. "Later on be bad to look for
Democrats to help biro pass budgets and try to stop some of the massive
hemorrhaging of the federal deficit." .
,
So far Ibis year, Domenici has disagreed with Kasicb on at least one
tenet of tbe House GOP ''Conuact Witb America" - a bigbly conlroversial proposal to require three-fofths majority votes in the House and Senate
to raise iooome taxes. Domenici is against it.
But the two agree complete! y on a couple of fundamentals: Tbe federal
government must be severely reduced in size and Congress must cut
spending before cutting taxes in Older not to aggravate the deficit.
(Jill L•wrenco covers Congress and politics for The Assocl•ted
Press.) ·
·

Tod_ay ifl hi_s tory
By The Associated p.,ss
.
Today is Sunday, Feb. 5, the 36th day of .1995. There are 329 days left
in the year.
.
·
Toda)"s lligbligbt in Histmy:
·
On Feb. 5, 1937, President Roosevelt set off a conuuversy by proposing the U.S. Supreme Cowt be enlarged. Critics charJed Roosevelt wes
. auempting to "pack" the court with justices l!llbo ·WoUld rule jn his favor.
Tbe proposal went down to defeat in the Senate.
On this date:
In 1631, the founder or Rhode Island, Roser Williams, and bis wife
arrived in Boston from England.
In 1783, Sweden recognized 1be indepelidencc oflbe United States.
. In 1881, Phoenix, Ariz., was incorporated.
.
· ln 1887, Giuseppe Verdi's opera "Otello," based on the' tragedy by
William Shakespeare, premiered at La Scala
.
·
In 1917, Congress passed, over President Woodrow Wilson's veto, an
immigration act severely curtailing the influx of Asians.
.
In.l917, Mexico's constitution was adopted.
In 194Q. Glenn Miller and his crcbestra ~"Tuxedo Junction"
for RCA Victor's Bluebird label.
.
1958, Gamel Abdel Nasser was- r01111ljlly nbminal!:d to OOCOrile the
ftrst president of the new United Arab Republic.
In 1962, French President Charles de GauDe called for Algeria's independence.
-- --'- ~ In 1973, sc:rvices were held at Arlington National Cemetery for Army
Lt. Col. William B. Nolde, the last American soldier killed before the
Vietnam cease-fire.
. In . 1983, rormei Nazi &lt;leatapO official Klaus Barbie, expelled from
Bolivia, was brought to Lyon, France, to stand trial. (He was convicted
·arid sentenced to life in prison - be died in 1991.)
,
· In !987, tbe Dow Jones industrial av=ge ended the day above the
2 200 level fer the ftrst time, closing at 2,201.49.
':Ten years ago: Tbe Senate Judiciary Coouniuee voted 12-6 to approve
the nominalion of Edwin Meese m to be atfDrD!:y general.
•
:Five years ago: Soviet leader Mikhail S. GOrtacbev told the Communi$! Party it had to give up irs unchalleosed rigbt to rule in favor of earning that righl
,
.
.
. One year ago; Sixty-eight people were .killed when a mortar sbell
exploded in a marlce1pl¥e lit SW19evo •. B05J!Ili·Hcrzcgo~. White separatist Byron De La Beckwith was coavtcted tn Ja.;kson, Mtss., of murdering civil rights 1lcader Medgar Evers In 1963, and was immediately senteJ)ced to life in prison.
·
.

Jn

I:

lonll-forgotteu.
r.My party is dqxeued," Bynl
said . "I am depressed . Who
wouldn't be in my shoes ... I've
been here before wbeo we wm: in
the minority.: But Ibis tloxi, we've
aot a big minority, a Wgel' miDority than the Republicans bad in die
last Consress. So we can be 10
effCCilve minoritY."
With an office full of polldtal
memorabilia, Byrd .c hooses to·
show off a framed picture of old
grocery-store receipls. "Four cans
of milk for a quarter. Two cans ot
cherries, 20cents. This was 1938."
Tbe Senate was debatiDf the
"Contract With America,' but
Byrd bad an.other contract on bis
mind. "I signed ·a contract for a ·
bedroom suite- $189.50. I was to
pay $S down, by cash or script, .
taken from my payroll, and $7.SO
every two weeks for a period of
something like 13 months until I
paid it off. So much for those who
say that the American family balances their blldgets,"
Byrd was referring to the.bal-

AND WHEN YOU FINjgt

THE LAUNDiY,CINDEREUA ...

anml bud~ ameodmcnt, wbicb Is
popuillr with the voten yet somctbillg be allbon 111d bas vowed to
llgbt tmdl die blner end.
HiJ effons have struc:t a cbonl
amona Senate Republicans, wbo
paid Byrd a backhanded complimcatlaSl week when they formed a
nine-member "rapid-response"
team to fiJbt for passase or the
amendment. Even with nine senators &amp;~ainst one, Ibis fight is a mismatch. AJ someone wbo peoned a
2,000-page history or the ·Senate
while servins in its leadership,
Bynl bas fOIJOI1eD more about the
Senate rules 10d precedenll' than
these nine have Ieamed.
. Some may lind it ironic that the
Democrats aR looking to their oldest warrior for new life. Yet those
who dismiss B'yrd as a parochial
pork-peddler are milkinJ a Jrave
mistake. In an age wben stampsfor-cash , sexual harassment, and
savinss-and-loan sc8ndals have tarnished and toppled so many lawmalr.ers, the worst thing aaybody
can say about Bynl after nearly half
a
in public life is !bat his
interest was his hardcoastltuency.
I was, Appropriations
chairman," Byrd told our associate
Jan MoDer. "f could belp my stale;
I could help my nation. I could get
funds for education, these things.''
He is a man of regal airs wbo
at the notion that be bas ·
(Or,O!ten his roots.
of aU, 'I m gettins tired of
self-flagellation that goes on
Iaround here every day. We've got
go out and whip ourselves every

or so."

1

TEARFUL TESTIMONY - Denlle Brown, sister of murder
vkt1m Nlc:ole Brown Siqllon, wiped her eye wltlle teslllying Friday IInder direc:t exalnlnatloo or the pr011eellllnn In the OJ. SimplOll clouble-mw'der trial In Los Angelos. {AP)

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Prea Writer
LOS ANGELES - Tbe abrupt
end to· the tearful testimony of
Nicole Brown Simpson's sister was
an unfair way to cap orr the court
week, and ·may liave been staged
by prosecutors, O.J. Simpson's
attorney says.
"I saw it coming, and we kept
trying to say it's not fair," Johnnie
Cochran Jr . said Friday after
Denise .Brown's dramatic testimooy about bow Simpson abused and
humiliated his wife.
Wben asked what be felt was
unfair, Cochran answered: "If it
was planned, is that fair?"
Brown, wbo has stated publicly
she believes Simpson ltilled bet sisier, detailed two incidents..:... one in
which Simpson grabbed his wife's
crotch at a crowded bar and
declared ''This is mine,'' and
,another wben be threw Ms. Simpson and others out of his mansion
after a night of drinking at a Mexican restaurant.
She broke down in tears as she
described the second incident.
" Jue you OK, Ms. Brown?"
Deputy District Attorney Christopber Darden asked.
" It's just so bard," she said,

. With so much s_enSeless turmoil
O.J. Simpson be 00 trial for
I switch on the television and movie, · . ·
·
·1 ·
m. the news, I needed the e~y killin' bis wife and her friend - thought I be watcllin' Mr. Clinton · Lord, even if they prove OJ. did '
wtsdom of my Harlem frtend, Susan Smith be goin' to trial ~ · tell us bow be soin' to do better it and the Jury convict biro, it still '";
Booker Malco~ Bethune. Booker killin' her lwo baby boys. Presi~~ !ban the Republicans. Somebody aip'i right cuz b~llo.n't be gettin' _
Is a deeply religJous man, ~tven to
on the floor below me, Lord, be no death penalty. And be ougbta. ••
~ling prayers, more a dtalogue
"'huck ~tone .
playin' they record player rea11oo4 The diltrict attorney be axin' for
'I'!!!! QQ!! tban..a P~ f&lt;W ~ip. But
~
~
. and they wuz playin' the song, "I 1be death penalty for Susan Smith. ~
B~r refuses to share bis prayers
surrender, dear."
I don't see no difference in what ;;
wtth anybody .. Afte_r b~ bas goo~ Clinton done been put on trial for
President CUnton's Stale ot the them two Ji!Cople did, Lord. They ·
out to play bts d~ly number, I -~~~: a wors_er job than George Union was one so{r)' state of jes' be dotn' it in two different ·~
s~~ 11: l&lt;XJ!c. I ilon ~ biow whether
affairs. He stood there so pitiful. It states.
'·
u s divme ~tercessJOD, but Booker
And Newt Gingrich, be done be like be bad lost an election .10
Lor:&lt;J. I know you taught us to "
sure does bit the numbers a lot .
tol' the wbole ,Democratic Party the Republicans and they soctal "rorstvc us our trespasses as we •
Yo, Lord- It be me agaJD, they ALL gom to stand trial for "Contract With America.''
forgive those who trespass against ·~
Lord, your man, Boqker Malcolm jes' one reason .Bcin'
Mr. Clinton talked about a us."
·~
B~une.l bope you be_digsin' my De~~~·ewt, be be one mean "new social compact." But be · And Jesus say, I was in prison ~
name-cb~ge. My m~n squeeze,
ain't got enough votes to do noth- and you came unto me. When O.J. •
Beulab, 1satd I was seXJSt cuz all of Bubba. He so~ that wben be in' . That's all be can do is talk. so to prison, I be visilin' bim like •
my names be names of black meo. get ~· 10 the morm~g. the sun ax Bubba be lilre Gen. Robert E. Lee Jeaus said I should.
·~
So, I now be Booker-for Booker T. btm 11 be ~K to slime that day.. , bandin' ova his sword.
Now, Lord, I don't be tryin' to '}
Washington, Malcolm for Malcolm
And that s what be botherm
But that ain't right either cuz run your business. But if you be ~
X and Bethune for Mary McLeod · me, Lord.
~
to be Newt Gingrich be B ubba, too. I popular, you can kill somebody and -•
Bethune. At least it shu.l up ~eulab. ~~ty to treated~ otherw~ be changed the chan!ICI and watched a the district auorney don't be axin' ~
But I has to check 10 wtth you, c
• we
wee. movie.
for no death penalty, only becuz
The ocxt day; Lord, I want to you be popular.
.·~
Lord, and ax you to comfon me Now, everybody ma~l. Not just
cuz there don't be nothin' but had mad. "'!1 mad at each other. Mad at see bow they be soin' to pitt OJ. in
Is that fair, Lord?
-.
news in the newspapers and on the . they wtves. Mad at they cl!ilrin, prison. But them lawyers got to
(Chuck Stone is • cotu nist ' 1
111
television. And· I mean, BAD, Lord.
. ,.
; arguin' and carryln' on and I don't ror Newwpaper Enterprise Asso- ~·t
Lord!
And theo, !bey kill em.
knoW what an. i found me another elation.)
~

=C

....

sniffmg and wiplos bet eyes with a
tissue. 'TUbe floc."
Darden then asked if tbe session
couldend IOminutesearly,andthe
judge asreed . Deputy District
Attorney Marcia Clark put ber arm
around Brown and comforted ber
asjunrs watcbed.
Defense attorneys suggested that
1be sceoc wasn't as spontaneous as
it might have appeared. Carl Douglas said trial attorneys always
want to end a week "on the best
foot forward."
"So I'm not surprised at all that
(wbeo) Ms. Brown lilst her contposure that 1be decision was made to
end ii," Douglas said.
Simpson is accused of slasbing
to death Ms. Simpson and Ronald
Goldman on June 12.
Brown was the .first family
member of eitber victim to testify,
as prosecutors try to show a motive
for the ltillings. Tbey contend that
Simpson murdered bis ex-wife in a
jealous rage and that Goldman was
killed because Simpson mistook
biro for a potential suitor.
During a break in questioning,
Simpson looked across 1be room at
Brown and sbcx* his·bead disgustedly. He appeared to try to catch
her eye, but she stared straight

ahead.
.
Simpson's borne. Again, Simpson
Defense lawye~s . ObJCCI~d and others bad been out drinking.
repeatedly as Bro~ m)ected opm" I told bim be took Nicole for
tons mto ber tesumony, such as granted and be blew up," Brown
"He loved the attention'.' and "He · testified.
,
b!15a big ego." Juro~S --:ere told to
_ "J!e staned ~elling at me , 'I
dtsregard su~ coounents. .
don't take her I or granted . I do
Darden tned to start bts oarra- everything for her. I give her
live of the Simpsons' relationship everything," ' said Brown, break~
with accounts of abu~ dating to ing Into tears. "And then a whole
1977, but the defense objected.
fight broke out and pictures started
Instead, they began in the late nying off the walls, clothes started
1980s, when Brown recalled a nying. He ran upstairs, got cluthes,
aathering at Santa Ana restaurant started flying down the stairs.
with Simpson, his wife and friends.
'·And (be) grabbed Nicole, told
''We were all drinking and her to get out of his bouse, wanted
soofmg around and being loud and us an out of bis bouse, picked bet
dancing,'' Brown said. ''At one up, threw her against a wan, picked
point, OJ. grab~ Nicole's crou:b her up and threw her out of tbO
and satd, 'This ts where babtes bouse.''
come from. And this belongs to
The jurors and alternates were
me. And this is mine.' .
.
sent hack to their hotel until Mol);
"And Nicole just sort of wrote day; wbeq Brown returns to the
it off like it was notbmg like, you ·stand .
·
know, like sbe was used to that
" It was a very emotional last
kind or treatment,'' Brown said, thing of the week to leave the jury
her .voice choking. "I thought it with," said University of Southern
was really humiliating, if you ask California law professor Erwin
me."
·
Cbemerinsky. "It is 1be image the
Brown broke down while dis- jury will keep with it through ttte
cussing another inciden~ this one at weekend."

Toppli11g O.J. 's image prosecution's goal .

Simpson
trial update

By LJNDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspoodent
LOS ANGELES - By 1be time
prosecutors are through with OJ.
Simpson, they hope his triumphs
will be buried and jurors will no
longer remember the heroic feats,
the dazzling smile and the charm.
The ·destruction of Simpson's
image tops the prosecution's agenda in his murder trial. And legal
experts say they may bave accomplished their goal in the fJJ'Sl week
oftestimony.
· In openmg statements, ,Deputy
District Attorney Christopher Darden told jurors: "It is not the ilctor
who is on trial here ... There is that
other face. And that is the face we
will expose to you in Ibis trial, tbe
other side of OJ. Simpson."
The athlete's one-time friend,
~on Shipp, may have summed up
the silllatilll;l best when be stared at
Simpson across the courtroOm and
sighed, "This is so sad, OJ. This is

iitlt!!'!lf~~-W%
IJio Denise Brown wept as she
told of O.J. Simpson beating
her sister and humiliating her
In public. .She recounted
lights· as Jar back as 19n.

IJio A new w~ness told
prosecutors he saw four
men in Ms. Simpson's
neighborhood the night of
the killings, but they didn,
seem suspiciOus.

re3ily sad."
with the public persona or OJ.
Here was Simpson, foroed to sit Simpson would not evaluate
grimly silent as Sbipp made him incriminating evidence if they
out to be a wife batterer and narcis- weren't disabused of those impressist wbo used his friends as "ser- sions," UCLA Law Professor l'l:ter
vants" to enhance his own ego. He
said Simpson confided dreams or Arenella said. "They bad to
' desbUy O.J.'s character and paint
IeiDing his wife.
as a very violent, meoacins
And here was Simpson's him
pen&amp;.,"
lawyer, Carl Douglas, accusing the
then, be said, would the
friend or being a lowlife, rhanger- juryOnly
be abie .to evaluate a patcbon and a liar. It was not pretty. And W!lfk of ~ysical and scientific evitt Was only the beginning. ·
which pro&gt;ecutors believe
As Simpson shook bis bead in dence
will convince jurors of Simpson's
dismay, his ex-sister-in-law por- guilt.
trayed him as a cruel, violent man
Their circumstantial case, likely
who not only abused his ex-wife
to
be
savaged by defense attacks oo ·
but humiliated her in public by
police
methods and DNA analysis,
grabbing her crotch and declaring,
can
succeed
only if jurors believe
''This belongs to me.' '
that
perhaps they have been tricked
Why the attack on SImpson.' s
character before any other evidence by' Simp son all along, Arenella
said.
is presented?
'
"Tbe prosecution Dlade tbe
judgment thai their greatest vulnerability was that jurors ·enamored

..........

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Booker offers prayers for O.J., Susan, Newt ~-

,·--- -- ·.-:·-~=--

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

IJio Neighbors of Nicole Brown
Simpson said they had hoard
'
· arguments between the
couple after their divorce.
Also, they said O.J. Simpson
had triad to look in his
ex-wife's house lrom
the front yard.

. Etupe, you wtU ~em~ some won't wort. How aR you goiiJI to are good at- it should form a the writer's ftrst experience of evi-;
ume a~ that I men~ooed ~ one ol get the vegetables and meat Slurpers' Club and give each slurp- dence of Ibis type. It would appear ,
my arttcles about slurpmg your through the straw? Tbe straw user era membership cw:d. Thi~ club to the writer that this evidence '
soup:: To me, this can be very would probably take ,two or th~ could-an:ange for contests alnong should not have been lldmitled as
offenstve when you are try_lng t~
its members. One .contest could · .evide~ce and it is probably a
enjoy yourself at a. meal. Tins aru.Fred W.
determine tbe nqisiest slurper. reverstble error to admit it. There
c_le should be constdered as educaAnother could award a prize to the will probably be 10 psycbics who
tional.
days to get tbe soup siphoned most unique slurping sound. There will testify on dreams. No t.,o of
. Some of my readers also feel through it. Tbis would eliminate are many others but these two them will agree as to what a dream ·
thts way. One wrote that you can our problem; however, that would come to mind. · ·
means in later life
have. s~me effect on the no~ by be a disaster ·since our slurper
The slurpers wbo want to overAnyhow, the ~fer had a dream
provullng the ~p sl!J~~ wttb a would miss the 0..!. trial.
'
come this blid habit could form a the other night which is difficult for ,
smal~er spoon w~cb diminJSbeslbe
There are several other ways . Slprpers' Anonymous group to me to intapret. My wife's maiden
slurpms. The wnter also suggested that might be more effective to our meet monthly. The participants' name was Karr and sbe came from
that tbe bost ~ut down on the soup slurper. One would be to have names would not be revealed to the a large family . Nearly each year
amount of broth':" the ~up and p~t a special room set aside for our public. This would be similar to the there is a Karr reunion. In the ,
more sohd material m tl Rupe, thiS problem slurpers. Actually, the AA clubs now in existence.
dream 1 was playing ftrst biiSCIDan
last idea .l!'alces me wonder as lo room should be ·soundproof, but
The only true way of curbing on ~ Karr team. A bunt, which I ·,
the .delimtion of soup. If wbat we this should sufftce to keep our wor- this offensive table manner Is to tell should have handled, escaped me '
are tryin~ ~ digest ~s m~stly solid thy guest in harness. Anothet way your guests to cut dowq on the After that, all members of the ~ •
and not liquid, then ts thiS concoc- to keep the 'uest from slurping · noise, You might make your guest · family refused to talk to me '
don soup? We will probably ~ve might be askmg the restaurant to . mad, but wben be realizes you are · because we lost the game. When I
to go _to a btgber court to determine post the rollowing si§ns. "Smok- rigi!t, be will calm down. .
approached each member of the ~
wbat IS soup, .
.
ing," "Non smoking,' "Slurping"
If my readers have any o.ther family, be or she would disappear i
. If the soup t~ so g~ lh~t the and "Non slurping." This would way of curbing this habit, then futo space and refuse to talk to me. -~
dmer wants to mbale It qutckly, require two more rooms in each write to me so we can pass it on to I tried to placate them by offering •
then we b~ve a soup slurper. Tbe restaurant marked specifitally for other sufferers such its yours truly.
them a sallon of lemonade. Tbis ~
faster the ·mtate, th~ gr~ater the the diner's bealth, safety and slurpThe other night wbile in Crow's did not cbange their attitudes. ,
nouftsne . One suggestio~ ts to put ing.
Restaurant both Charles Chancey, Rupe, what do you make of this? ~
m ers on tbe slurper s mouth to
Headwaiters in restaurants will former Meigs High School coach; Should I consult a psychic at one or ·
cut d~wn the noise. Now be care- tell you that a person who wears and Jim Vennari, the master coach the 900 numbers or should I take a '
ful, thts may cause our hero to suf- dentures can avoid the slurpias of the single wing offense at Rut- Rolaid and forget about it? Rupette '•
focate.
noise by removing them. Apparent• land, were present. These two men should I apologize to the Karr ram: '
Rupette, you bave to remember ly tb.is soup glides tbrousb the are on my IJSt as two of the gn:atest ily for the material in the article?
'that there .are worse things than mouth for these individuals without coaches of high school football Always before I was welcomed by :
slurping your soup. One is drinking teeth. There are several disadv'an- during the time I either watched or the Karr family. Now71?
.
~
from the bowl or the saucer. This is tages in removing your teeth and play¢ football. I have to lbink bow
In God we 1rusl "
a no-no wben you have company· ·
placil)g them on a table, as follows: . great it must have been to play
Ciury on Fred W. Crow ~.
How about permitting the soup I) Other diners may look at them football under eitber of these
EDITOR'S NOTE- Lon11- ~
SIUJ1!e! to .use a straw and put lbe and may develop indigestion or coacbes. For some sttange reason, time attorney Fred W. Crow Is ~
soup m a glass? Rupe, you know faint. This migbt eause a lawsuit 2) the following came to mind. "Old tho contributor of a weekly col- ~
that woo't wodc What is be going The dentures can be broken by coaches ocver die, they just can't umn for The Sunday Times-Sen- ~
to do with tbe vegetables and meat placing them in a position where beat the spread." Bu~ they do have llnel. Readers wishing to '.
in tbe ~oup? If a guy is going ~o the waiter or someone can't see 1be pleasant memory of a '1ob well applaud, crldclze or comment on
sl~rp bts soup from a .bowl, be JS them, Ob well, Rupe, Ibis is getting done.''
any subject (except religion or ~·
gomg,to do the~ Vta the straw. ridiculous. How about eating a
Thursday night, the presiding politics) are encouraged to write .~
I don 1 feel tl\at thts would be an . banana and avoid the soup?
judge in the O.J, case permitted to Mr. Crow·ln a~ro or this news- '
irnprovemenl Rupe, you know this
Those slurpers wbo tbink they into evidence a dreain O.J. bad paper.
about murdering his wife. This is
·
:
·.
··

i

•

.

continues: "I know a goud
aboutlbe problems that John Q.
Cilirzen bas to live with. I started
in a sas station ... I was a pro- :
salesman. I was a meat cuuer.
was a welder ... So I've bad a
bii of experience in the' life of
common man. I've never gotten
myself above 1be life of a common :
man. I still weru: the same size bat :
now that I did wben I came to ·
Wasbinxton."
.
'
(Jack Anderson and Michael :
BIM!eln ..-e columnists ror Unit- :
ed Feature Syndicate.)
'

On sl~rpers, Chancey, Vennari and dream~rs .

.

February 5, l99S

An old Senate warrior springs into action
WASHINGTON Until
The 77-year-old B)'ld is SOUDdrecently, Sen. Roberi Byrd, D- ins the charge by prtaebiug some
W.Va, was often· greeted with deri- old-rasbiooed values: Fealty to the
sive snicla:n from some concagues Constitution and the' institution ot
when be would launch into a
spcccb at Democratic Slralegy ses- By Jack Anderson
stoos. Now when the former majority I~ and Appropiations Comand
mltlec cbalrmao rises to speak at a
Demoaatic caucus,luncheon, " it' 8
Michael Binstein
pin-drop time."
"Nobody laughs an~ at the 1be Senate. Having already served
historical references, ' says Sen. in nearly every Senate leadership
Jobn D. "Jay" Rockefeller, D- position, be may be on die va-ge ol
W.Va., Byrd's home-state col- bis grealest legislative victory if be
league . "An~ there was a time can unite a sbeU-sbocted party that
when people would do that''
looks scared and confused.
Famous for long orations sprinSitting in the nearly vacant
kled with obscure historical refer- offices of the president pro temences, Bynl was viewed by manY pore, Byrd sat down with us one
as a quaint throWback.•a mao from recent afternoon to reflect on the
another time whose formality changes of recent months - both
seemed out of place in the modern · personal and !;X'litital. All around
political era. With Democrats bim lay the stgns or turnover searching for new answers after the . half-packed boxes or pictures and
Republican blowou~ they are bank- paperwork. On 1be wall behind biro
ins on a former butcher and gro- bung lbe pictures of an his predecery-store owner. now in his 49th cessors as president pro tempore,
year of public service.
some of them legends and others

Nation/World
Sister's testimony heightens drama

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel/A4

Rebels aw~it
more attacks··
on position

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SAMASHKY, Russia (AP)-

Cbecbeo fighters tw'ned a stnllegic
town on lbeir rebel republic's west-

ern booler into a fortified camp Fri-

day, anticipatiog an aU-out Russian

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They dug new trenches throughout the town of Samasbky, set up
large-caliber machine guns and
brought in fresh forces to shore up
their positions after several days of
Russian sbe!Ung. ·
"We expect an assault by the
Russians any minute," said Rashid
Tatiyev, 28, a volunteer wearing a
camouOage uniform and a comha!
helmet with a green Muslim ribbon
on it ·
Also Friday, tbe 33 -nation
Council of Europe suspended
membership talks with Russia until
Mo5cow ends its :.var on the tinr, ,
'bn:aQway republic. Tbe council s
assembly, meeting in Strasbourg,
France, condeomed the "indiscriminate and disproportionate use of
fOI'ce by the Russian military" in
Cbecbnya.
And in Moscow, there were
mon: signs that one or the architecrs of the bogged-down, widely
· unpopular war was in trouble.
An inOuential newspaper said
President Boris Yeltsin bad confronted Defense Minister Pavel
Gracbev abou 1 a secret b~nk
account in Germany . It said
Gricbev, who is hospitalized for
whal aides called :1 routioc cbeckUD, came down with a had case of

•lc:owardi.ce.''

Neither the Defense Ministry
nor Yeltsin' s office would comment on tbe report in tbe daily .
Sesodnya, wbicb said more than
$20 million from 1be sale of Warsaw Pact military eguipment was
flashed in the account.
.
Gracbev has been intensely crit. icized since Russian IIOOps rolled
Into Cbechnya to suppress the
aouthern region's three years of
aelf-proclaimed independence. ·
· Tbe war bas embarrassed tbe
umy, wbicb has made few
adv10ces against the Cbecben
irregulars . Thousands of people
have been killed and most of
Grozny, lbe Cbecben capital, bas
ltec:n deSIIOyed.
Ruasian troops invaded Checbnya oa Dec. II and Uied to storm
Gromy on Dec. 31. Despite their
vasUy superior force, tliey DOW
.. conuol only part or northern
Cbecboya and the north ' &amp;Ide of
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Along the River

------Area Deaths-----Walter 'Pete' Grinstead·

Ola M. McDaniel

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Walter "Pete" Grinstead, 88, New Haven,
died Friday, Feb, 3, 1995 in !be Pleasant Valley CaR Center.
Born Jan. 3, 1907 in Nc.w Ha'll!n, sotl of die late Ricbard and Elizab!lth
Roush Grinsread, be was a lab teclu)ician for Foote Mineral Co. and a
101111- time employee of tbe Riverside Golf Coone.
A U.S. Anny veteran of World Waz II, be was a member of the New
IJavcu Uniled Methodist Church, Smilb-Capeban American Legion Post
No. 140 in New Haven, and tbe IOUAM.
Surviving are his wife. Polly Staats Grinste ad~ two sis~s. Alice
-~ iller, or Mlll'iel!li; ·aoo EIJaROOsb of New Haven; and several nieces and
'nepbews.

.

'

,

Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Fogelsong Funeral Home,

· Mason. W.Va., witb tbe Rev. Eldoo SbingleiOD officiating. Burial wiU be

in tbe Grabam Cemetery. Friends may call at tbe funeral home Sunday
from 6-9 p.m.
'
.
· A mililaty flag presen1ation wiU conducted at tbe gmvesite.

Norman D. Haggy
: - . COLUMBUS - Norman Drew Haggy, 61, Columbus, died Thursday,
Feb. 2. 1995 in Columbus from injuries received in a tmffic accident
Born .Feb. 25, 1933 in Pomeroy, son of Martha Haggy and tbe late
· Alvin Haggy, be was a retired Columbus police officer and was employed
by tbe State Teacben Retirement System in Columbus. A U.S. Anny vet. etan of tbe Korean War, be was a member of Capitol City Lodge No. 9 of
· 1be FOP and tbe AS IS.·
· · He wai also preceded in deatb by his wife, Zelma Haggy.
· Surviving in addition to his motber are a daughter and soil-in-law,
Debra HaaBY and Saul Himelspeln; a son and daughter-in-law, Dwane
Gad &lt;luis H~y; and a grandson.
·
··
Services wdl be 3 p.m. Monday in the Schoedinger Norlb· Chapel,
SSS4 Karl Road. Columbus, with Ghaplain Richard EUswonb officiating.
Burial will be in tbe Nonblawn Memory Gardens, Westerville. Friends
·may call at the cbapel Sunday from 1-4 and 7-9 p.m.
· : An FOP service will be held in the chapel at 7 p.m. Sunday.

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. - OiaM. Mc:DarUel, 93, West Columbia, ·
died Friday, Feb. 3, 1995 in tbe Veterans Memorial Hospiral Extended
CaRUni~
.
Born July 17, 1901 in Southside, W.Va., daughter of the Jail: Boyd and
Mary Taylor Wears, sbe was a homemaker, a member of the StewartJohnson VFW Ladies Auxiliary, and attended the Christian Brethren
Churc.b, Mason, W.Va.
She was also preceded in death by ber husband, Clarence Leonard
McDaniel:-and by two sous, tbn:c&lt;laugblm, two siSters, a brother and a

Charles M. McGrath
POMEROY - Charles M. Mc:Gralh, SS, Long Bouom, died Thursdliy,
Feb. 2, 1995, near Long Bottom.
Born March 22, 1939, tbe son of Earl and Minnie Bratton McGrath, he
was a truck driver.
·
He is survived by bis daughters and sons-in-law, Rhonda and Benton
PbiUips of Long Booom, and A)lil Harris of Rutland; sons and daughtersin-law Charles and Karen McGrath, and Anthony and Rebecca McGrath,
all of 'RuUand and I ames McGrath of Lake City, A a.; brothers, Otis
McGrath of nie Plains, and Larry McGrath of Guysville; and nine grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by bis father; and a son, Steve McGrath.
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with the
Rev. Lamar O'BI)'lll!t offrciating. BuriaJ will be in the Riggs Cemetery,
· Pageville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. Sunday.

•

.

RE,'\DYING FOR RACES - Area Boy Scout troops are

•

preparing for tloe annual Klondike·I'IICel at Camp Klaslauta next
weekend. Members of Cbe Pomeroy Troop 249 ready tloelr sled for

the race. On len Is Scooter Fryar, !!rat clau; on right lo Adarn
White, life seoul; and otandln1 In center II Ad•m Smltlo, eagle
scout. The d•y-lo"' evenll will bring Cub Scout ·•nd Boy Scout
troops from Meigs, GaUia and M..on counties together, •ld Bob
Arms, regloaal coordinator. Re1lotratlon begins •t 8 • .m. Feb. 11
at the Cb01ter camp. (T-S plroto by Geo'lle Abate)

Meigs County Court

Deaths elsewhere

log book, $80 plus costs; James W.
Bias, Bidwell, disorderly conduct,
$25 plus costs; Bret A. Christian, .
Albany, then, $500 plus costs, one ·
year probation, 30 days probation, :
30 days jail suspended, 24 hours :
community service;
Frank E. Yom~g, -Pomeroy,.DUl, ·
$500 plus costs, 180-day OL sus- ·
pension, 10 days jail suspended -to
three, one -year probation; driving :
under fRA suspension, $500 fine, ;
10 days jail suspended to tl!ree ·
days, one year probation all _~: on~ :
current wilb DUl, costs; Richard D. :
Bay, Reedsville, stream littering, ·
$50 plus cosrs, tbree days jail sus- ·
pcnded, 8 hours community ser- ·
vice;
·
Brian Hays, Pomeroy, two
counts. disorderly conduct, costs
only on each; resisting_ arrest, costs, .
90 days jail suspended to 64 days :
with credit for time served two ·
years probation; two COIUits as'sault, :
cosiS, six monlbs jail suspended to :
64 days, time served, two years ·
probation on each charge.
·

.104 Years Of Service
Mosl of our b~- oomes
lhrouoth people we've

lhoughlfully ....Ytd. Tho
rason - wu:lentamllng,
oince19 gilldance ond

dependabiUty
In helping you
select allile
monument

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·

__

Bm!l!3:1•

from
~·~
Rock of Ages.
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MONUMENT

Meigs Counly Dlaplay Yard Near
Pomeroy-Maoon Bridge

GALLIPO,LIS - Is Gallipolis
boy Scout Troop 200 the oldest
Scout organization still in existence? It's possible. Though "The
Boy Scouts: An American , Ad-

992·2588

VINTON
Gallia County Dlaplly Yllrd
155 Main S1.
Jay &amp; Joe Moore, Manager•

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Respiratory Therapist - 24 Hour EmergeiKy Servke
We Bdl Medicare, Medicaid, tf(., for the patient.
Home Owned and Operated

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r1ca
Doing a good turn through the years
taught woodcraft, nature,
tracking, camping and
other skills and then
divided into four patrols
to compete and test what
they had learned.
Camping was a '
unique experience for the
boys - at that time in
England, it was something soldiers did out of
necessity, not something
youlhs did for fun .
Baden-Powell
deemed the outing a
success and published his
manual, Scouting for
Boys, in 1908.
The book 's popular·
ity spread through
England like wildfire and
even jumped the ocean to
the United Stales. · ·
Besides covering the ·
. subjects boys participated in al the Brownsea
Island campout, the bQok
established "Be Prepared

George Hout, one of the
troop's Eagle_Scouts, has the original charter. J. Harley-Bovie was
the first Sco11tmaster and the spon'
sorwas a group of Gallipolis businessmen.
A fire at
the Huntington district
council office back in
19Z8orl929
resulted in
the loss of
many rec ords and the
mix-up of
other rec -·
ords. After
the- smoke
cleared ,
somehow
LOCAL SCOUTS • Troop ~o. 2 pose for a
the district
picture In 1937 at McCormick Farm, Fairfield.
people as signed the
,
number 200
venture" says several troops claim to the Gallipolis tniop. chartered
to be one of the· first troops, in- continuously for 48 years.
Lost in the blaze and are the
cluding Troop 2, Bloomfield, N.J.
The Boy Scouts of America : names of the early leaders. But·
the national organization - was two are not forgotten Edwin R.
organized and incorporated Feb. (Pete) McCormick, a 50-year
8, 1910 and the Gallipolis Troop 2 Scouter who .was scoutmaster
when the troop had 80 members
was chartered March 12, 1912.
TroopNumberOnc,clwtered and George A. (Pie) Hout. Both
in,lllinois, is no longer in exis- are now dead but att;lined the distinctive Silver Beav~r award in
tence.

Kalle Miller, Manager

.Olga Schwartz

.
PRE-NEED PLANNING FOR
• MAUSOLEUMS • WESTMINSTER CRYPTS
• MEMORIALS • LOTS • VAULTS

•

as the Scout molt\),
suggested the first
uniform and explained
the Seoul sign, salute and ·
handshake.
For two years,

helpful young British boy
ipspired millionaire ·
publisher William D. ·
Boyce to form Boy Scouts
of America. .
·Boyce was visiling

Scouting in )he U.S . was
an informal hodge podge
of organizations sponsored by YMCAs and
churches.
The combinalion
of a
t
pea soup fog and a ·

London in 1909 when he
losI his way in the city 's
famous fog . A 12-year-old
boy approached and
offered to help. After
being led 10 his destinalion, Boyce offered the

boy a shilling. :
The boy refused.
"No sir," he said. "I am
a Seoul. Scouts do not
accept tips for courtesies or .
good turns."
Boyce was so
imp~essed I hat after
his appointment he
had the youth lead
him to the cily 's
Scouling office where
he talked wilh organization officials.
Boyce relurned lo
lhe U.S., and on Feb.
8, 1910, filed incorporation papers with
Washington, D.C.
Boy Scouts of
America was developed to "promote through
organization and cooperalion wilh other age ncies the
ability of boys 10 do thipgs
for themselves and others,
lo train lhem in Scoirtcraft
and lo leach them palrio·

Local ·troop enjoys long history

POMEROY

81 .·

RT. 7 &amp; EAGLE RIDGE RD.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
614-992-7440

PACK OF .THE PAST- Cub Master Rev, Gishler of the First Presbyterian Church poses in 1935
for a photo with his pack The group is now Cub Pack 204.

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their lifetimes.
not for their longevity but for their
Pete McCormick had a troop ac.cQ.mplishmems. Since 1978
camp on his fami on·sR 588 near nearly 30 members have become
Fairfield Church. He named it Eagle Scouts, the highest rank in
Camp Hoot. When the Scouts the scouts. On the whole only two
wanted to camp out they did it at percent of all Boy Scouts make it
CampHout.
. .
.
to pagle, says Kevin Pinson, AsPie . Hout, with the help of sislant Scoutmaster of troop 200.
·
many other area Scouters, ~elped
The troop is under the leader- ·
build Camp Arrowhead at Qna, ship of Scoutmaster Dave Walker
W.Va., the summer camp that and Assistant Scoutmasters Kevin
served hundreds of Tri-State area Pinson, John McCraw and AI
· Scouts every year since the 1930s. Earley .
A log cabin tllere serves as a lodge
· for the Order
·
oftheArrow.
ll was built
and dedi cated to the'
memory of ·
George A . .
(Pie) Hout.
Troop
200
now
owns the
Stanley L.
Evl!IJS Cabin
at Raccoon
C r e e k
County Part:
SCOUT wEEK - Boy Scouts Walter Straf•for retre~ts
ford, Jeremy Eulon and Brian Sang of Gallipoand camp lis Troop 200 hang th_eir troop nag In the window
outs.
of Haskins-Tanner Clothiers, 332 Second Ave.
T h e · The window display is part of the tr.oop's Scout
troop today is
W~k activities,' which began today. (Times·set
apart
Sentinel photo) \· 1
from others
."
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tism, courtesy; selfreliance and kindred
virtues, using lhe methods which are in com·
mon use by Boy Scouts."
Scouring has since
played an active role in
·:hislory. During World
War I, Scouts sold '
Liberty Bonds, collected
peach pits for use in gas
mask respirators and
participated in other
patriolic campaigns
during the conflict.
When the country ·
plunged into World War
II , Scours were rhe
backbone o( scrap metal
drives, bond sales and
viclory gardens.
Community service
remains an important
duty of Scouls today .
The youths plu ticipate in
numerous charilablc
activities, including food
drives ,

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Euolll""'l 1810

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
FOR HOME USE

MEIGS MEMORY GARDENS

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~--CUM..NY

Hospital news

:. THE RUTLAND FIRE DEPT. Will BE HAVING A
: REPRESENTATIVE GOING DOOR.TO DOOR IN
:: THE RUTLAND FIRE DISTRICT SOLICITING FOR
PICTURES THRU .THE MONTH OF FEBRUARY.
ANY QUESTIONS CAll:
II.ERlY
WILLFORD, 742·2103
'
DANNY DAVIS, .742·2372

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By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
Editor's Note:
National Boy Scouts of
America Week is
observed Feb. S
through 11. This year
marks the
organization's 85th
year.
!thollgh firmly
1ooted in lhis
. t:entury's American
history, the Scout- ·
ing movement actually
began in England as the
br~inchild of a military
hero .
Robert S.S. BadenPowell was a soldier,
artist and author. At the
tum of the century , he
became a h~ro defending
the Bechuanaland village
of Mafeking against
Boer invasion.
·Baden•Powell and
700 soldiers, police and
volunteers held the
7,000-man force at bay
for 217 days until
Brilain could
send a relief
force. One of his
innovations was
lhe use of a
young corps of
boys he employed as messengers an!! lookouts. ·
When Baden-Powell
returned home in 1903,
he found boys were
using an Army manual
he had written, Aids to
Scouting, as a guide in
ll)eir outdoor adventures.
The war hero, at the
urging of schoolleachers, began contemplating
wtiting another version
of the manual aimed at
English youth. He
studied the ideas of
Americans such as
Ernest T. Seton imd ·
Daniel C. Beard~
founders of the outdoor
youth groups Woodcraft
Indians and Sons of
Daniel Boone, respeclively .
In 1907, BadenPowell decided to put his
research to the test. He
invited a group of 21
boys from varied social
classes to a two-week
campout on Brownsea
Island .
The boys were

A

Whitney Rae Tucker

Samuel Lewis Lutton

February 5, 1995

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POMEROY -· The foilowing
cases were processed last week in
the Meigs County Coon of Judge
Parrick H. O'Brien.
. Ftned were: Thomas M. Parker,
. GALLIPOUS -Marion R. "Tex" Harrison, 64, Gallipolis, died Thurs, Long Bottom, speed, $30 plus
day, Feb. 2, 1995 in Melbourne, Fla., while on a can1pirrg
costs; Julie Jobnson, Chillicothe,
; · : Born in Grrllipolis, son of the late
six counts of passing bad checks,
Robert E. Lee Harrison and Belva Dale
MASON, W.Va. - Wbitney Rae Tucker, 1, New Ellenton, S.C., died costs and restitution, six months
Friday, Feb. 3, 1995 in tbe Medical College of Georgia, Augusla, Ga.
Lemley Harrison, heatlended Washingjail on each charge suspended to 30
Born Ju~e I, 1993 in Aileen, S.C., sbe was the daughter of Ray A. and days concurrent, five years probaf.llll Elcmenlllry School and graduated
Tonya R. Speed Tucker Jr. of New EUen10n.
from Gallia Academy High School in
lion; WiUiam H. Safranek, Atbens,
l~.
Also surviving are a brotber, Dustin Trevor .Tucker, at home; maternal seat belt, $25 plus costs; Perry E.
grandparenrs, Ricky and Wanda Jo Burckbalter, and Ray and Judy Speed, Kennedy, Pomeroy, driving under
· He reliJed from CQiumbus &amp;: Soullhall of New Ellenton; paternal grandparents, Ray A. and Virginia Jane · the influence, $500 plus costs, 10
. em Blcclric: Co. after 2S years of'..,.,..;r..
Johnson Tucker Sr. of Mason; 11181emal great-gmndparents, .Arlbur and days jail suspended to three days,
and was the founder oflbe Tex Harrison
Betty Speed of Williston, S.C., l!"d Robbie and Catherine Robinson of 180-day operaiOr's li~nse _s~spen· 8nd the Valley Boys COWIIry·westem
New
EUenlon; and a patental gi'!:Bt-grandmotber, Margaret V. Johnson of slon, one year probaiion, Jarl and
!llusic group which played in the area for
Mason.
·
$250 or frne suspended upon COD)·
: rriany years. The group had performed
Services
will
be
3
p.m.
Sunday
in
the
Corinth
Baptist
Church,
New
pletion
of residentiallteatment pro: on the Gallipolis parlcfront preceding
EUenton,
_
wilb
the
Rev.
Brancle
Stephens
officiating.
Burial
willli
in
the
grani; . .
· : the an11ual Fourth of July fueworks dis· Corinth Baptist Church Cemetery. Arrangements are by the George
Robert J. Chamberlain, Poirit
. play for the past 29 years.
Funeral Home, Aiken.
Pleasant,
W.Va., disobeyed traffic
: • · A U.S. Anny veteran who served in
Local arrangements are by the Foglesong Funeqd Home, Mason. ·
device, $20 plus costs; Timothy R.
:Germany dUring the Korean War, he
In lieu of flowers, donations,may be made to lhe Medical College of Musser, CoiWI\bus, speed, $30 plus
·was a member of VFW Post No. 4464
Georgia or the Corinth Baptist Church, 800 Main St. N.W., New EUenton, costs; Kathy I. Ritterbeck, Long
: ~!Ad Vinton American Legion Post No.
S.C. 29809.
Bouom, failure to control, $20 plus
: 161. He was a Boy Scout leader, served
costs; Roben J. Post, Glouster, seal
:as a volunreer for tbe Gallia County
belt, $15 plus costs; Scott Pierce,
'TEX' HARRISON
. ·Emergency Medical Service, and was
ViniOn, contributing to the unruli:an auxiliary Gallia County sheriff's deputy~ He was a member and past
ness or delinquency of a cbild,
:president of the Gallia County Fair Board.
costs,
restraining order, six months
He also performed with Fats
Philip Bonos
jail
suspended
to three days, 16
·.- : In addition, he was a member and past master of the Morning Dawn
British Waller's orchestra, James P. John,
VANCOUVER,
months
probation;
F&amp;AM LOdge Jllo. 7, a 32nd Degree Mason, a member and past patron of the Cohimbia (AP) - Philip Borsils, a son, Benny Carter, Teddy Wilson
Vickie L. Pullins, Portland,
Gallipolis Order of the Eastern Star Chapter No. 283, lind a member.of the director whose works include Far . and Lucky Millinder.
.
Aladdin Temple, Gallipolis Shrine Club, and the Kentucky lfillbilly Shrine. .From Home: The Adventures of · James led b'is own bands rn DUl, $250 plus c:osts. $500 forfeitHe was also a Kentucky Colonel. He was a member of Grace United Yellow Dog and the Academy Pittsburgh, Delioit and New York ed to the Meigs County Coon Jail
Award-nominated sbOJI Nails, died before touring internationally with FUnd, 30 days jail suspended to 10
Methodist Church and the Good Sam Camping Club.
.
Clyde Bernhardt and the Harlem .with option of house arTest, one
Surviving are his wife, Marcella Walker Harrison, whom he married in ofleukemia Thursday. He was 41.
year OL suspension, one year pro1953; a son, Mark (Cindy) Harri,son of Gallipolis; a daughter, Marlene (Tom) . His other crediiS were The Grey Blues and Jazz Band from 1973 to bation,
90-day vehicle immobUizathe
early
'80s.
Radvanyi of Gallipolis; five grandchildren; tbree brothers, James Harrison of · Fox, The Mean Season, starring
tion;
driving
under financial
·
WUiard
Waterman
Maranlar, Fla., and Lawrence Harrison and Robert Harrison, bod1 of Gallipo- Kun RusseU and M!!fiel Hemingresponsibility
action
suspension, 30
BURLINGAME.
Calif.
(AP)
lis; lhree sisters, Iris Cox of Gallipolis, and Irene Thivener and Peggy way; One Magic Christmas, and
days
jail
suspended
to
10 days conGiUespie, both of Columbus; two half-sisters, Freda Fitch of Columbus, and Bethune: Ponrait of a Hero, slat- Willard Waterman, a radio and current with DUI, $250 fine conring Donald Sutherland.
televison personality and fouDding
~uise WeUs of LaVerne: Ala.; and a sister-in-law, Mary Lou Harrison.
·
B
orsos
wrote
and
direcled
Far
member
of the American radio current, costs, one year probation;
. He was also preceded m death by a brother, Paul "Chubby" Harrison.
From How, .about a shipwrecked union, died of bone marrow disease Mark E. Brooks, Albany, sealbelt,
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday_in the Grace United Methodist Church, boy
$25 plus costs ; Robert L. Maim,
and his dog. It was released Thursday. He was 80.
~ith the Rev. David Hogg and Pastor James Lusher officiating. Burial will be last month by 20th Century Fox.
Waterman began his radio Lakewood, Colo., speed, $30 plus
oh the Tyn Rhos Cemetery, Rio Grande. Friends may call at the McCoyThe short documentary Nails career in Chicago 1934, performing costs;
Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, on Sunday from 3-6 was nominated for an Academy 40 shows a week. His shows
Pamela L. Hogan, Tuppers .
p.tn .
Plains,
seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Award in 1980.
included The Great Gildersleeve,
Daniel
W. Dinsmoor, Athens,
· Miliwy graveside rites will be conducted by VFW Post No. 4464.
Fred Brlgp
Guiding Light, Ma Perkins, Amos
·Masonic services wiU be held in the chapel by Morning Dawn Lodge
BOSTON (AP) - Fred Briggs, 'n Andy, The Whistler, Li'l Abner, speed, $30 plus costs; Gary A.
.F&amp;AM No.7 at6 p.m. Sunday.
Gabriel, Athens, seat belt, $15 pi!IS
an Emmy-award winning news cor- My Friend Irma and Helen Tre111 .
·Pallbearers wiU be Steve Harrison, Terry Harrison,Junior Lemley, Bobby respondent for NBC, died of cancer
He also had a role on lbe televi- costs; Willie W. Wilson, Vinton,
Cox, !ieaford Jordan, Don Mink, Eldon Thomas, Frank Gillespie Jr., and Thursday. He was 63.
sion show Dennis the Menace and speed,- $30 plus costs; Wendell B.
Donald Buker.
Briggs joined the network in tbe 1950s TV veision of The Great Derifield, New Haven, W.Va., fail- .
· ·In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made 10 lhe Grace Cleveland in 1966 after working Gildtrsluve, which made its debut ure 10 control, $20 plus cosiS; Gary
W. Brown, Libeny. IU .. no current
·
United Methodist Church, the GIoria Young Nursing Scholarship Fund or the five years 3S a reponer and anchor in 1941.
WSB
-TV,
tbe
NBC
affiliate
in
The American radio union,
Ariel Theatre, in care of Cindy Harrison, 1636Jackson Pike, Bidwell, Ohio
AUanta.
45614.
'
which Waterman helped found in
He worked rwo stints in Chica- 1937, is now ~ailed the American
go from 1970-74 and 1979-83, with Fedemtion of Television and Radio
VETERANS MEMORIAL
assignments in San Francisco and Artists. He remained on the nationFriday
admissions - Emma
Berlin in between . He was sta- al board until1990.
Jane McClintock, Racine; Paul
· POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. · Samuel-Lewis Luuon, 88, Point Pl~- tioned in Boston since 1983.
Waterman also performed in the 'HoudasbeU, Pomeroy; Belly ·Jo
ant, died Friday, Feb. 3, 1995 in Holzer Medical Center. . · ·
He won an Emmy in 1969 for . film .and slage versions of Aunlit Willis, Racine; Edith O'Dell,
-Born March 27, 1906 in Poipt Pleasant, son of tbe late Samuel F..and · repOning on black lung disease.
M~ and appeared as Hassler in
Reedsville.
-EUa Jane Selby Lutton, be was a retired C81penter in tbe construction busi'
He is survived by his wife, the 1973 Broadway revival or The
Friday discharges - Ira Vanness-and was a !ltaftsman for more than 30 years with the Marieua Manu- Dorothy, and a son, LoweD.
PajamaG~ .
Cooney,
Pomeroy.
facturing Co. He was a member of tbe Good Shepherd United Methodisl
Albert Elsen
Waterman is survived by his
Church at Flab'OCk, W.Va.
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) wife, Mary Anna; two daughters;
He was also peceded in death by a sen: Roben.Sarnuel Lutton· and by Albert Elsen, a Slanford University three grandchildren an~ a greatfour brothen and two sisters.
.
'
art professor and expert on sculptor grandchild.
· Surviving are his wife, Freda Mae Kincade Lutton; a son Lewis E.
Auguste Rodin, died Thursday of a
Lottoo of Gallipolis; three daughters, Sally Lou Workman; Nancy Jane
heart attack al67.
Bowser and Ida Mae Milstead, aU of Point Pleasant; and 10 grandchilElsen taught at Cari_IQn CoUege Squads log 4 cans
dri!t. four stepgrandchildren, 13 great-grandchildren and seven sten,great- in Minnesota before heading to
gr}llldchildrcn.
"·
Stanford as a visiting professor in
POMEROY - Units of the
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
1963. He joined tbe faculty there in Meigs County Emergency Medical
1968.
.
POint Pleasant, with Rev. Paul Suder and Rev. John Icenhower officiating:
Service logged four calls for assis"
B'!fial wiU be in tbe Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends may call
He helped established a Rodin tance Friday . Units responding
at tbe funeral borne Sunday from 2-S p.m.
·
sculpture garden on dle Stanford included:
SYRACUSE
campus and is credited with reviv.
I
2:29p.m., Dusky Street, Mary
ing public and scholarly awareness
Lang, lteated at scene.
of Rodin's wort:.
RACINE
George Richard James Sr.
3:16p.m., Greenwood Cemetery
G~LIPOUS - Olga Schwartz, 79, GaiJjpoJis, died Saturday, Feb. 4,
COLUMBUS (AP),.- George
1995 m Holza' Medical Center.
~
.
Ricl!ard Jam~s Sr., a Jazz saxo- RQad, Betty Willis, Veterans
'
''Born May 5, 1915 in Cleveiind, sbe w:is the daughter of the late Sig- phonist who performed with Louis Memorial Hospiral.
TUPPERS PLAINS .
miiDd and Amalie Steindlcr Schwartz.
·
Armstrong's original lOuring band,
5:08 p.m., Umberger Ridge
· · ·Private graveside services will be conducted in the Higbl~nd Park died Monday. He was 88.
Road,
Edith O'Dell, VMH. .
Canetery, .Cleveland, 81 the convenience of the-famlly;· James played witb Charlie
MIDDLEPORT
ArrancJ:::'eots are by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Welberbolt Creath and Jimmy Noone in the
Chapel,
ipolis.
'.
5:43
p.m.,
Hobson, false fire
1920s and Armstrong and the
alatm
at
unknown
origin.
Savoy B~ durinR tbe 1930s.

:·Marion 'Tex' Harrison

Section B

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grandson.
·.
Survivin~ are five sons, Thomas F. McDaniel of Eastlake; Obio, Boyd

R. McDantel of Hartford, W.Va., Dale H. McDaniel and Ralph J.
McDaniel, both of Pomeroy, and Rankin L. McDaniel of Point ·PJeasan~
W.Va.; four daughters, Lm:ua E. "Sis" Rogers of Pomeroy, Rulb Busb of
Hartford, Peggy L. Edwards of Mason, and Alice F. McDaniel of West
Columbia; 29 grandchildren and 58 great·grandcbildren; a brolber, Boyd
C. Wears of Nitro, W.Va.; and four sisters, Thelma Asbley, Mabel Angel
and Ada Bailey, all of Nitro, and Levia Rousb of New Haven, W.Va.
Services will he I p.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, with the Rev. Rankin Roach officiating. Burial will be in the Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Monday .from 6-9
p.m.

~hnts~~tntintl

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Scout Facts
Scout Oath and Promise
On my honor I will do mY best
TQ do my duly 10 Go!!. an!! my Country
And to obey the Scout Law;
To help other people at all times;
To keep myself physically strong,
mentally awake and morally slraight

Scout Law
A Seoul is:
.Trustworthy, Loyal, Helpful, Friendly, Cour.
· icous, Kind , Obe(lient , Chee rful, Thrifty,
Bmve, Clean and Reverent

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Scout Motto

1

Be Prepared

:1

Scout Slogan
Do a good turn dally.

Famous Boy Scouts
President Ge rald Ford
Baseball player Hank Aaron
.
Olympic cham pi on Mark Spitz .
Actors H e n ~ Fonda, Richard Roundltee and
Hames Stewan
Astronaui/Ohio Senator John Glenn.

,

Scout rank
A rank in Scouting is a position or degree .
earned by passing tests. The six ranks 8!1!
Tenderfoot, Second Class, First Class, Star,
Life and Eagle

I:

Becoming a Scout
A Boy Scout must have completed the fifth 1
grade or have earned the AITow of Light
Award or be II years of age but not yet 18.
He must find lroop near his home and·
complete the Boy Scout joinging requi rements.
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~ February 5, 1995

Meigs bloodmobile collects 57 units
POMEROY - Meigs County
residents donated 5'1 units of blood
wbeo tbe American Red Cross
Bloodmobile visited the Senior Citizens Center Wednesday.
First time donors re ported to
give blood were.Jeff Frank, Pete
Tremblay, Ani!&lt;\ Sayre, and Ivan
Powell.
Multiple ga llon donors were
Bob Coucb,.-18.; William Radford,
· 14 ; Sarah Fowler , 13 ; Char les
Bush, 4; and Cyodi King, 2.
Otber donors by community
were:
Racine - Harry Holter, Charles
Busb, Marit Busb. Freddie Sim-

mons, Clarence Frank , Loui se

•

Marr, Dan E.Foll rod, Alad ine

Corder, Gladys Cummings, Belly
Sayre andJeaneueLawreoce.
Venoy, Ge rald Rought, Cyn di ,
Ed Cozart and S.andy Mitch
King, Dayid Kin g, B&lt;u.bara M,__sery~~-~()lunt_ee r donor utten~ _
Crow, Tracey O'Dell, Patricia Bar- dants. The canteen was served by
· ton, Dennis Gilmm:, Dale Thoene, the Xi Gamma Mu Cbaptet of Beta
Drema Braley, Pamela Hoffman Sigma Phi Sorority.
and Ivan Powell.
Tbe bloodm obile's nex1 visit
Syracuse - Kat by Cumings, will be on April 5 atlbe Senior Cit·
Darla Thomas and Tammy Cbap- izens Center from 1-6 p.m.
man.
-- -- ·
· . - - - Glady s Cumin·gs·of Pomeroy
Rutland - Marta Blackwood.
bas been bas been named blood
Minersville - Mary Voss.
· cbairman for Meigs County. Donna
RSVP workers ass isting at the Grate; who needed more time for
bloodm obile were Jane Walton, her family , resigned from lbe posiPeggy Harris, Aorence Ricbafds, tion effective Jan. I.
Ted Hatfield, Don Mauer, Joa n

...

Long Bottom - Henry Babr,
Laura Hawley and Bruce Hawley.
Shade - William Cook.
Middleport - Sarab Fowler,
Anita Sayre, Donna Hawley ,
Norma Wilcox, Sam Rayburn
Judith l;lunter and Gloria Peavley. '
Pomeroy - Linda Eastman ,
Donald May,. Harold Nonon, Marvin Taylor, Pete Tremblay, .Cbristy
Dill , Bob Couch, Debra Mora
Wilma Mansfield. Rebecca Newell:
Penny Brinker, Mindy Brinker,
Thomas Hart, Betty Lowe, William
Radford, David. duPtantier, ·Paid

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Soccer
Ass oc iation meeting 3 p.m.
Bo.ssard Library.

...
...

GALLIPOLIS · Bell Chapel
communion and foot washing with
Rev.,Truman Johnson at 10 a.m.

CROWN CITY • Candlelight
service wilb tbe Representatives
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.- · singing and pon Spillman speaking
Narcotics Anonymous Tri Counly 1 p.m. Edna Chapel Church.
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.

•••

Invitation out for All-Ohio
State Fair Band members

MR. AND MRS. HAROLD WEAVER JR.

· Weavers to mark 50th
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
HarOld E. Weaver, ]r. will observe
their 50tb wedding annjversary
Tuesday.
Mr. Weaver and tbe former
Mary L. Winebrenner were .married
·on Feb. 7, 1945 at the Federated
· Cburcb in Pomeroy. He is the son
of tbe late Harold E. and Leqa
Gaskins Weaver, Sr.- and M-rs .
. . Weaver is the daughter of Maggie
Merritt Winebrenner and the late
Roy Winebrenner of Syracuse.
He is a 30 year retired USN'officeJ and also a retiree of the Newark

Air Force Base in Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Weaver. have a
daughter, Linda French of St.
Louisville, Ohio, a son, Michael
Weaver, St. Louisville, and a soo
and daughter-in-law, Thomas and
Jean Weaver, Syracuse, along witb
eight grandchildren. They also
have a daughter, Peggy, who is
deceased.
Mr. and Mrs._ Weaver reside .at
11686 Rocky Fork Road, N.E.. St.
Louisville, Ohio 32071 . An open
bouse to honor the couple will be
held in the spring.

· CLEVELAND -· Tbe Ohio
State Fair is \)n the lookput for
musically talented Obio high
school students, gr&lt;~des 9 lbrougb
11 to apply for membership in the
1995 All-Ohio Stale Fair Band.
The All-Ohio State Fair Band
bas been a featured attraction at the
Ohio State Fair since 1925. It is
comprised of 250 of Ohio's finest
bigb school musicians, making it
one of the largest marching and
performing bands in the nation.
Participating in the All-Ohio_
State Fair Band is a unique musical
·an&lt;! social experience. The 21-day
camp offers an opponunity to perform ~ore than 60 pieces of music ·

of varied styles and periods. Band
members work with a superior staff
of I 5 music educators from
lhrougbout Ohio.
Interested blgb scbool musi- ·
cians, both young men and women,
may obtain an application from
. their local school band director, or
may write directly to:
·
Omar P. Blackman, Director .
All -Ohio State Fair Band, 5190 ·
Wes t 151st Street , Cleveland,
Ohw, 44142-1741
·
Applieatiotis must be submitted
by March 24, 1995.
The 19.95 Obio State Fair will
be held Aug. 4 through 20.

· Tourism development tips to be offered ·' at symposium
COSHOCTON -Steps in getting billion to the U.S. economy. Travel
staited on a heritage tourism pro- in the U.S . generated 6 million jobs
··gram and various resotirces avaiJ.r dtrectly - and another 6.4 million
able will be a feature 'o r a Heritage indirectly . In addition to creating
Partnership Symposium at Roscoe JObs, ne~ businesses, and higher
Village; March 121brougb 15.
pro~ert~ values .. well managed
The Symposium will focus on . tounsm tmprovcs quality of life
· lbe principles of ilnplementing her- and !Juilds community pride.
itage tourism on a community,
Symposium sp&lt;insors point out
region and state basis. It is being that communities. throughout Ohio
sponsored by Ohio State Universi- 31!d the nation mal' be missing sig. ty Extension, National Park Ser.- ntft cant economtc developin·en.t
vice, Ohio Department of Natural opportunities by failing ·to recogResources, Ohm Historic Preserva- nize the heritage tourism develoption Office, Ohio .Association .of men t potential of thl!ir own area.
Convention· and ViSitors Bureaus, The largest impediment to mean. and the Roscoe Village. Founda- . ingful growth for many communition. Additional information on the tics is simply the lack of cooperaprogram. is available from any of: tion amon g all tbe partners i.e.,
'the sponsors, by calling (614)732- · public, quasi-public and private.
· 2381, or contacting the Meigs .
One challenge is ensuing that
County Extension Office, 99 2- tourism does not destroy th.c very
6696. .
hentage lbat au.racts tourists in the
Tourism is big business, accord- first place. Furt11ermore, tourism is
ing to the sponsors, who noted that·· a· competitive, sophisticated, and
in 1991 touriSm contribut.ed $344

.MGM-UA pulls video of
· World War 11-era Bugs •
cartoon mocking Japanese

•

. fast-changing industry that presents
tts own challenges, but the spon sors say, it is generally a clean
industry: no smokestacks or dangerous chemicals although it does
put demand on lbc infrastructure . on roads, airpons, water supplies
. and public services like police and
fire protection.
Roscoe Village as cited an
excelient model of heritage tourililll
and that ts why the symposium is
being held there.
.
The workshop is designed for
the leadership, public and private,
and special interest groups to gain
·an understanding of heritage
tounsm. It will also provide an
update on the federal partnership
n~tional initiative. Tbc workshop
wtli be held at the Roscoe Village·
Inn located in the historic restored
canal village of Roscoe. .
Heritage Tourism means traveling to historic and cultural attractions to learn about the past in an

'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
World War IJ-era cartoon that
sbows Bugs B'unn y passing out
bombs to Japanese people he calls
"slant-eyes·" and "monkey face"
is being pulled from tbe Golden
Age of Looney Tunes video.
The 1944 "Bugs Nips the
Nips" is one of several canoons on
tbe MGM-UA Home Vi(lco. tape,
which bas been in stores since
S e~tem~ e.r 1993 . ' About 8,01JO .
coptes have been sold.
One scene shows Bugs giving
ice cream cones concealing bombs
to a crowd of JaNnese as he ·
remarks: "Here's you flo bowlegs,
here you go monkey face, here you
go slant-eyes, everybody gets
one."

" We are. very offended," said
Lori Fujimot o ·or the JapaneseAmericans Citize n's League. ·" It
hurts that a large ·corporation is so
insensitive to re- re l ca~e this video
to cb ildren."
Spokeswoman Anne Corley said
the cgmpany received one com plaint. The tapes will be recalled
and no longer distributed; the other
cartoons,.on the tape probably will
be rc-rclcascd. · ·
. " When w.c were compiling rbe
vrdeo, we were putting together a
history of animation,' ' Corley said.
"As much as it is distasteful, it was
part of histo r-y at the time and
renected Hollywood1's part in the
war effort.' '

'

enjoyable way. For insta~ce, in
1993 the Travel Industry,of America found 35 percent of fall travelers
planned to visi t a historical site and
29 percent expected to take part in
a cultural activity.·The main reason
is enjoyment.
The Sym posiulil will start on
Sunday, March 12 with a walking
tour of Roscoe Village . Tbe Symposium keynote ·address on the · ·
"Southeast Ohio Story" will begin
Monday, March 13. This will be ·
.followed by a presentation on the
philosophy, principles, and process
for implementing heritage tourism .
Tbe Symposium will conclude on
Wednesday, March 15 with presen. lations on financing 3J1d the benefits of heritage tourism. Tw 0 postSymposium tours to The
Longaberger Basket Company/Village of Dresden and historic community of Zoar have been planned
for those who are interested.

TURN YOUR TAX REFUND
INTO A NEW HOME!
We will pay arrangements and
pay for your rapid income tax ·
refund to use towards your
down payment.

IVERDALE
HOMES

Beat of the Bend ...

Frank. Jeff Frank and Gloria !Goes. . Baker , Janet Pea vley, Loraine

---__,....-Gallia community calend~r-----Sunday, .Feb, 5

1-800-466-.7671

Episcopal Cburcb.
Monday; Feb. 6
GALLIPOLIS . - community
POINT PLEASANT; W.VA.Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. New ·
Narcotics
Anonymous 7:30p.m.
Life Lutheran Cllurch .
61)
Viand
S.
treet.
•••
Tuesday, Feb. i
CHESHIRE - Guiding Hand
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics parents organization meeting 6
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peter 's p.m, Guiding Hand School.

•••

•••

•••

by Bob Ho.eflich
Wbether your team won or not, Va., 26101.
you' ve gotta admit the halftime
Tbere will be a party in bcr
show at the Super B.owl was bonoc and aiJ or her Meigs County
friends are invited to drop by the
tremendous.
You will be interested in know- center. I figure about .2 in the aftering, I'm sure, lbat the young man noon would work. Olive was quite
playing Indiana JoQJlS in the spec- active in community affairs tluri!lg
. tacular is Brian Friday who is the her years of re sidency in Meigs
son of Mrs. Nancy Moose, post- County.
master at the Portland Post Offioe.
And also on .Feb. 12, Glada
Briali did some modeling before Davis will be marking ber 97th
going out to Los Angeles in 1991 birthday . Cards will reach ber at
wbere be enrolled in some acting Elam HO!!Se , 209 .South Fourth
classes and did some wodt in some Ave., Middlepon.
of lbe comedy clubs.
He got an agent in 1992 and
The next meeting of the
since then bas been working in lbe Pomeroy Area Diabetes Support
·role of Batman; doing die required Group bas been set .for 7- p.m. on
stunts; in a presentation done sever- Tuesday, Feb. 14, (that's Valenal times a day at the amusement tine's Day) in the cafeteria of VetJASON AND DAWN BELVILLE
park, Six Flags Over Texas, in Dal- erans Memorial Hospilal.
las. He _bad a spealdng role in one
This will be the fust meeting of
of lbe Texas Ranger sbows, filmed the support group Ibis year and
PORTER • Dawn Marie Gil ben ·sweet-heart roses white pearls and in Dallas, and bas dun~ quite of bit Erico Tan, D.P.M., will be speaker
of extra work in movies. He's now for tbe evening on foot care .and
and Bradley Jason Belville green and white velvet ribbons.
exchanged wedding vow's Dec. 23.
Tbe groom wore a black ruxedo into scuba diving and llcy diving there will be free of charge foot
The double ring ceremony was with tails and bunter green satin lessons to enhance bis lalenL~ and is screenings.
· now pondering an offer be bas to
The meeting is open to all resib!:ld at Trinity United Methodist in glass vest.
·
go
to
Holland
where
he
.would
be
a
dents
having diabetes and their
Porter with Rev. C.J. Lemley offiBest man was Shawn Hawks,
stunt
mao
at
a
theme
[lllflr&gt;.
He
took
families
and .supportive friends .
.
·
.
cousin of the grooinc Groom' s men
ciating.
his
stage
name
of
Friday
because
it
The
organization
bas steadily
Dawn .is !be daughter of Donme were·Dan Shortridge, uncle of the
is
the
maiden
name
of
bis
mother
grown
since
its
start
last
year. .
and Tenna Gilbert of Thurman . bride and Josh. Caldwell . Ring
and
seemed
to
fit
well
into
the
.-.
Bmdley is the son· of Donald.and . bearer was Cory Gilbert, brother of
.
Jean Will, of 815 E. Main St.,
LARRY AND KRISTI POWELL
RobinMartinofBidwell.
the bride . Guest registrar was image.
His
molber,
Nancy
Moose,
has
Pomeroy,
an'd Parkersbur~. Is. a
Tbe bride, escorted by ber Amber Belville, sister of the
·been
in
Meigs
County
since
1989.
patient
at
St.
Joseph Hospital m ·
father, wore an white off lbe _shout- groom . Reception servers were .
She
was
working
as
a
secretary
in
Parkersburg,
W.
Va., where sbe bas
der satin gown witb white irides- Darlene Ferrell, aunt of the bride,
the
postal
service
ljlld
her
job
dis·
undergone
surgery
for a fractured
CROWN CITY - Kristi Alane holly, white tights and red and gold cent pearls and sequins and a light Wendy Bel vile, sister of the groom,
appeared
in
a
revamping
.program·.
upper
arm
received
in a fall earlier
: Van Matte daughter of Wilbur and bows.
fitting bodice flaring at the knees. Penny Breakiron and Lori
She
took
special
ttaining
and
a~ed
in
the
week.
No
doubt
Jean would
: Karen VanMatre, Crown City and
The. groom wore a black double- The long train was trimmed in Williamson . Organist was Gwen
to
be
assigned
to
the
Portland
Post
appreciate
bearing
from
you. She's
• Larry Sco.u Powell, son.of Larry ·. breasted tuxedo with white tie and pearls and lace. The waist-length Phillips.
Offioe.
Nancy
says
she's
a
country
in
room
247
and
the
zip
is
26101. ·
: and Jean Powell , Pomeroy were cummerbund. His boutonniere was veil was bigbtigbted with wbtte iri- · · The' bride is a graduate of River
girl
at
heart
and
just
loves
the.
Port:. united in marriage Dec. 3, 1994, at wbite ros~ .aci:ented with holly ~~ ·. descent pearls and sequins.
. VaiJey High School and is attend- land area.
· ,. ... . .,.. ·. .. ,.... · ·Weather predictions for the lbird
: Grace United Methodist Church, , gold beads. Best man was Steve
Maid of honor was Cassie . ing the University of Rio Grande
weekend in a row are NOT good· wilb Rev. David Hogg orficiating. - Fusser. ..
Petrie. Bride~s .maid was Jennifer majoring in medical laboratory
Fomier
.resident,
Olive
Weber,
so on a dark cloudy Friday aff.Cr·: The cburcb was decorated with
Groom's meDwe~ Marty .Cti~. Gilbert, sister of the bride. Hower . technology.
.
·
wlll
be
marking
a
birthday
anniver-,.
noon, all I can do is hope lbat lbe
: white
gOld Jiew bows, Victo- .HueyEason, Raymond Rider and girl was Ashley Holliday, cousin of
The groom is a graduate of
•
sary
on
Sunday,
Feb.
12,
attbe
predictions are wrong and that
: rian' Cbristmas tree, red roses·wilb ·Jared Sheets . Ushers were Lee the grpom. They wore bunter green ' River Valley High School and is
Ohio
Valley
Heallb
Care
Center,
whatever, you can keep smiling.
· holly ani! Christmas greenerr vase Powell, Todd Powell, both brothers . velvet dresses with gold and white ·employed at Luigino's of Jackson.
Route
5,
Box
146,
Parkersburg,
W.
: bouquets . Seven branch cande- of tbe groom and Josh Dunfee, triin.
Tbe couple resides in' Rio
: Iabras .were adorned with holly, cousin of lbe bride. They a1J wore
· The bouquets consisted of large Grande.
: Cbristmas. greenery and wbite matching tuxedos with black tie white roses intertwined wilb white
· bows.
and cummerbund. Their boutonRACINE - Racine Chapter
. SUNDAY
..
.
~ · Tbe bride was escorted to the
nieres were a red rose, bolly and
POMEROY
Special
service,
134, Order of the Eastern Star, reg~: altar by ber.father. She wore a
gold beads.
.
.
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
ular meeting. Refreshmen!S.
: white satin v-neck gown with
Music was provided by organist
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. in remem ·, puffed sleeves of applique accented Editb Ross and piano soloist
brance of the Four Chaplains of the
PORTLAND - Letart/Ponland
: wilb pearls and sequins. The bodice Sharon Shafer.
sbip
Dorcbeste·r, World War II
PTO wili meet Monday at 7 pm. at
::was decorated with. pearls and
Hostess was Lana Nichols,
fame . Public invited by Pastor the Ponlllnd Elementary.
: sequins falling into a basque waist- cousin of the bride. Guests were
Roben Robinson.
·· line. Large c!Jantilly lace appliques greeted and registered by Lisa
RACINE - Racine Village
: covered the monarch length train Nance. Program attendant was
MONDAY
Council will meet in regular ses: that was topped with a box bow. Brandy Miller, cousin of lbe bride.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- sion Monday 7 p.m. at the annex.
: She wore a fingertip veil adorned
. A reception followed in the
pan Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Mon• with crystals and pearls with a church fellowship room . The
day, home of Mrs. Eldred.Parsons ..
RACINE - S.pecial meeting,
large pouff in tlie back. She carried bridets table featured a lbree-liered
Program will be given by Mrs . Southern Local Board of Educa: a b?uquet of white roses, ivy, marble wedding cake decorated in ·
David Bowen. Members may bring • tion, 7 p.m.' Monday at tbe bigb
white -with red rose petals and
Christmas greenery and pearls :
arrangements suitable_for February. school.
; Matd of Hi:!nor was Lon D. pearls. The cake was topped with
i\. .: C~ur~b, c,ousm of the bnde : ·red roses, Cbri&lt;tmas greenery and
TUPPERS PLAINS -· Orange
POMEROY - OAPSE Cbapter
· Bn~ s Dl3lds ":ere Lorna Sydn~r, white ribbons.
.
Township Trustees, Monday. 7:30 448, Monday, 7:30p.m. at Eastern ··
\
: cousm of the bnde, Step~ante DtlTbe bride 1!raduated ·rrom Hanp.m., borne of Clerk Patty Call- High School (No school, no meet.: Ion, Tan~a Shon, ~ Gmny Dun- nan Trace High School and the
.
away.
ing)
I · f~. cousm of the bnde, .
'
· University of Rio Grande Holzer
, .T hey wore matcbmg floor- College of Nursing . She is
EAST MEIGS - American
. SYRACUSE - .· Sutton Town· length_ red velvet go.wns featunng a employed as a Registered Nurse at
.Red
Cross
bloodmobile
visit
io
ship
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
.portrait neck! me wtlb alecon lace. RiverPark Hospilal OutPatient SerEastern
High
School
Monday,
10
at
lbe
Syracuse Municipal Build: They c~red arm bouquets of red vices, Point Pleasant, W.Va. The
a.m.
to
2
p.m.
ing.
and wbtte, gold beads and red 3Jid groom graduated from Meigs High
'.
, gold bows. .
Scbool, Ohio University and The
CARPENTER - Columbia
POME ROY - Meigs Band
Flower glfls were Megan University · of Detroit-Mercy
1 : Nichols a~d Sarab Beth S ydn~r
Township
Board of Trustees, Mon- Boosters, Monday, 7 p.m. in band
Scbool of Law. He is an Assistant
day, 7 p.m. al the ftre staiion.
room.
· . both cousms of tbe bnd~ . Th~tr Prosecuting Attorney in Mei):s
· dresses were gold lame skirtS wtth County and is also employe\~ wtth
: a red v.clvet bodtc~ and a red, &amp;rec:n · little, Sheets and Warner Attor-and gold sash wtlb .a bo• .bow m neys at Law, Pomeroy. The coupl_e
Have you ever found yourself... :
the back. They carrred wbtte basresides in Syracuse.
' kets decorated with red roses,
- wondering why you have problems in a
relationship?

Gilbert-Belville

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC .
·WEIGHT CONTROL

Van Matre-Powell

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
1304) 675·1675

and

.

This silver Key can
get you $1,000 closer
to your new home.
•

Purchase an All Americ.~n Home
during our Silver Anniversary and
you c.Jn do the celebrating with a ·
$1 1000 manufacturers rebate .
Choose the home that meets your
ne~ds, lifestyle and budget from a
wide variety or affordable floor plans
and styles. ·
. Rebate explratloil dates v•ry ·
between styles, so ... visit our
model borne today ror full details.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

----Weddmgpolicy----

Model Home Located at · ·
of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewi•t~Houn 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Tue.-Sat. Or
Call614-992-2478

NEW 1995 70X4
2 or 3'8edrooms

~~~· $18036Mm•Tn

-

L

DAyin G. SURDYKA, .M .D.
Announ ces t~e OpenlniJ of His Medical Practice In

Sports lnjurl_
e s • l'ractures • Work Injuries

'
TTeaUng a variety of joint and muode diSonte~ .

2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. West Virginia
. Office Houl3: 9 a.m. . :) p.m., Monday through l"rrday

THE BIG BEND COMMUNITY BAND WILl
RESUME REIIARSALS ON MONDAf.
FEB. THE 13TH AT 7:00 IN THE
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL BAND ROOM.

.' .

DepoProvera-injection

(304) 675-5971 '

Birth control pill
· Condom/Spermicide
· Sliding Fee Scale

'.

ToO Fr.., 1-8Q0.333-1784 .
\

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rhe lomify ofprofeuionofs

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We accept Medicaid and private ins~rance.
414 SECOND STREET
1 509 S. THiRD STREET
. OALUPOUS
MIPDLEPORT
446-0166
. 992·591~

- feeling misunderstooll or unappreciated?

Shaver- Putne
·y
.

Those not making tbe 60 -day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper~ space allows. .
.
Pbotogmpbs of either lbe bride
GALLIPOLIS - Bobbte Jean
or the bride and groom may be Shaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
published wllb wedding stories if · . Roben E. Shaver of GaiUjiOUs and
desired Photographs may .be either Jeremy Wayne Putney, son of Mr.
black ~d white or good quality · and Mrs. Roger W. Putney of Point
color, billfold size.or larger.
plea~ ant, W.Va. were united in
Poor ·quality pl)otograpbs will marnage Dec. 17, 1994 at Grace
not be accepted·. Generally, snap- United Methodist Church . ,Tb ~
shots or instant-developing photos c!ouble-nng ceremony wasoffictatare not of acceptable quality.
ed by Rev. David Ho~g.
..
All material submitted for publiMustc was provrded by K•m
cation is subject to editing.
Mayes. .
.
.
Questions may be directed to
The bnde was escorted to tbe
the editorial department from 1-5 altar by her father and given in
p.m. Monday through Friday at marriage by her parents.
446-2342.
Matr~n of bonor was Angela

for females &amp; males.
.tMedical Exams ___ .
•Pap Tests
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
•Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling·
.
•Methods and supplies for birth contrQI and safer sex

ror appointments calh

RJ.i
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
V"1

The Sunday Times-Seniinel
. regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason coonties as news
.and is happy to publish wedding
storie,s and photograph s without cJjjii'ge.'' -~ "
· However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli. ness. Tbe newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material .for
Along rhe River must be received
by tbe ·editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to .lbe date
of publicatiou.

JEREMY AND BOBBIE PUTNEY

Lanie. l:lride' s maids were Lisa
Newnham and Sara Wilson. Aowergitl was Jennifer Angel.
·
Best man was Bry~n Faber.
Groom's men were Michael Lovejoy and Tim Connett. Ushers were
Robert Shafer, Jr .. and Todd
Wooten.
.
Chris KQs to distributed pfograms and Stephanie Kosts registereU .guests. ·
·
After the cenneony, a reception
was held at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
..
The couple resides .in Cincinnati.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
or SOILTHIAS' OHIO

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

knee and hlp replacements.
rracturea al)d 'adu~t reconstruc~ve surgery

a

Meigs community calendar

Interse~tion

*TAX TIME SPECIAL*

I

sunday Times-Sentlnei-Page-B3

·

· ~~
.

~.

·l

- having trouble making or sustaining
· friendships?
- not caring for the

person you've beCome?

YOU 'ARE NOT ALONE '
.

.

The help you need in addressing these ~ery' real
problems may be found in a special, relationship4lased
therapy group now being started by Holzer Clinic
psychologist Richard Boone, Ph .D. ·He is available for
consultatiCIIl~ut his·group. Mcmbcrsoip will be
limited, so don't delay calling .to schedule a free,
personal consultation. All inquiries arc treated with
"the utmost dignity and confidentiality of the individual.
FREE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTATION IS
AVAILABLE TO DETERMINE IF GROUP THERAPY IS . .
FOR YOU

.

----~~~-

If you are planninlf a weddinlf •
rhen you ahould come 1ee "' or

Hmkins-Tanner,
You ,.ill ha"" over 190 otoyle• of .
I~Uedo•

to thoo1e from , We have a
lnrse •eletrion of the-late•• ttyl~•
, and complirrumlary acceuori•u
thit special occa1ion.

/or

Qualily Formallllel!r al,
Affordable Pricea

can .ua Toll Fraa

1-800-56().LEVI

Rick Boone. Ph.D.
Psychologist'

. HOLZER CLINIC
Depanment of Psychology
· 90 .Jackson Pike
Gallipi&gt;H~. Ohio
446-5379

\

I

" •

�'

'

~P~a~g~e~B~4~su~·~n~d;ay~n~t~m~e~s~Se~n~tin~e~l=======:;~~~=~~~~~~~: OH-¥oint Pleasan;;t·;;:YfY:;::============·==~Fe=b=ru=ary====1986:::::=

ements

Heart attack demands:·:_
immediate attention

AMY JO TAYLOR AND KENNETH RYAN

Taylor-Ryan
. DIANE ALLOWAY AND tODD RICE

Alloway-Rice •
RACINE- Dr. and Mrs. Clyde
H. Alloway, .Jr., Belpre, announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Diane
L., to Todd J. Rice, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil W. Rice, Racine.
The bride-i:lect is a 1989 gmduate of Belpre High School and
·graduated in December from the
U11iversi1y of Aleron with a bache·
lor'sdegree in elementary education.

COOt VILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
Don Taylor of Coolville announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Amy
Jo, to Kenneth E: Ryan, of
Coolville; son of Mr. and Mrs .
William Ryan, Grove Cily, .Pa.
· The bride-elect is a graduate of
Federal Hocking of Stewart in
1990 and is a senior majoring in
music education at the University

of Rio Grande. Her ftance gradualed from Grove City Higb School,
Grove City, Pa., and Obio Wesleyan Universily in 1992. He gmduated cum laude with a bachelor of
music education and is employed
as director of instrumental music at
Trimble Locat Schools.
The wedding will be an event of
July 15 at Brown Chapel, Muskingum College, New Concord.

· Rice is a 1990 graduate of
Southern High Scb.ool in Racine
and is currently employed as a
security guard for Pinkenon Securily Agency.
·
The open church wedding is
THURMAN • Mr. and Mrs .
planned for 2:30 p.m. Saturday , James P. Burleson of Thurman
Feb. II at Porterfield Baptist announce the engagement and
Church, Little Hocking. A recep- approaching marriage of their
tion will follow the ceremony in. daughter, Judy Pbaye, to Bret
Michael Lit~e. son of Mr. and Mrs.
the church fellowship ball.
Michael R. Lit~e of Thurman.
Burleson is graduate of Southwestern High School and University of Rio Grande. A registered
nurse, she was formerly associated
with Veterans Memorial Hospilal
at Pomeroy and is employed as
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
Admissions Marketing Director,
· Gallipolis.

Burleson-Little

.

Little is a graduate of LaGrange
High Schooll LaGrange, Ga., and
attends University of Rio Grande.
He is a Rio Grande Volunteer Fireman and works part time at Gallia
County Emergency Medical Service and at Radio ShaCk, Athens.
The closed wedding will Saturday, Feb. 18 at Thurman United
Methodist Cbutcb. An open reception for their family and friends
will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 26 at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center 351 Buckeye Hills
Road, Rio Graride.

a

Buckley, Torres nominated
for heath education summit

CHELLA DEAL AND CHRIS BARNES

Deal-Barnes
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.Leonard and Doris Deal of Point
Pleasant, W.Va. announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Cbella to Chris Barnes, son of Jerry
and Connie Barnes of Gallipolis.
Deal is a 1994 gra&lt;\uate of Point
: Pleasant High School and a fresh- ·

man at the University of Rio
Grande majoring in nursing.
Barnes is a 1993 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and a
freshman at Hocking Technical
Colle·ge, where be is s tudying
Wildlife Management.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

POMEROY • William Buckley
of Pomeroy and Norma Torres of
Middlepon have been nominated to
become the Meigs County repr~­
senlatives to the American Cancer
Society's Oliio Summit for Comprehensive School Health Education (CSHE) 6:30 to 8:15p.m. Feb.
8 at the Center for Science and
Industry in downtown Columbus.
They join a slatewide group of
educators, school administrators,
scbool board presidents and community leaders who are coming
together that evening to learn more
about the Ohio Action Plan for
CSHE and the role they may play
in local implementation.
The American Cancer Society
adopted Comprehensive Scbooi

Health Education. or UiHb, two
years ago as part of its strategic
cancer control plan. The idea is to
teach children bow to lead bealtbier
lives so they will have less chance
of contracting cancer or other serious disease.
·
The Ob·io Action Plan J s the
result of a meeting sponsored by
the Society's· Ohio Division last
year, in which representatives from
more than·40 universities, communily service organizations and government agencies created a
blueprint for strengthening the
health education curriculum in all
Ohio schools by the year 2000.

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writing off
life."
Accordmg to statistics more
than 250,000 of the ovel' 48S,OOO
Americans who died of a beart'
attack last year did not reach the
bospital alive. This, said the local
chairman, emphases the impollance
of getting getting proper medical
belp immediately because the earli"
er a bean attack patient is treated
the greater the greater the chance
for survival.
Residents should !mow what to.
do if they or someone around them
show any if the signs.
"First," lamarelli
"be prepared. Choose a bospllal nearest
you 'home or office. Keep a list of·
emergency numbers near you telepbone, in your car, on your job and
in a prominent place in your pock- ·
et, wallet or purse. Take a cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
Class With yOur family and CO·
workers."
The American Heart Associ;~­
tion offers free litemture on various
heart related topics such as "Controlling Your Risk Factors froin
Heart Attack." For a free copy Or
other information, contact the AHA
at 1-800-AHA-USAl (1-8002421!721).
.

sars.

Tbe American Heart Associ'l.:tion spent more than $226 million
during fiscal year I 992-93 on
research support, public and pro.:
fessional education, and community programs. Tbe AHA is _tbt
largest voluntary health organ~:zar
lion figbting heart disease and
stroke, which annually kill mory
than 923,000 Americans.

_200-pound cat fuels fears
. HUGO, Okla. (AP) - A tiger ing Wednesday morning after it.
that escaped from a circus' was on .squeezed out of an opening in its
the loose for a third day Friday, cage. By Thursday, it was all the
eluding searchers and givmg frigbt-. talk at the school, which bas 3®
ened children a safety lesson.
youngsters in kindergarten and
Searchers found fresh tracJcs Fri- flfSt-grade. .
.
day but there were no new sigbt"I beard the children talkin)l
ings, said Linda Lingo, office man· about it. They'd say, 'I couldn't
ager for the Carson-Dames Circus.
sleep last night. I kept hearing the
The circus bas wintered in Ibis tiger outside my window,"'. said
southeastern Oklahoma town for flfSt·grade teacher Katie Eudy. ,
more than 50 years.
Thursday was tiger day in M~.
"We're a circus town so we Eudy's class. Youngsters drew
probably take a different view of it tiger pictures, wrote about tigers in
than other towns. But we're very their journals and practiced what
cognizant that our. 5 and 6-year- they would do if they encoun~
olds might wony," said Katherine the 200-pound cat outdoors.
Covington, principal. at the town's
"We kind of tallced through tlie
Early Childhood Center.
fear," she Said.
· The tiger was discovered miss-

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204 East Main St.

Pomeroy, OR

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POMEROY .If you or scmeone
you arc witb is having a bcart
attack, denial and delay can be
deadly . •
That is why Sandy lannarelli,
president of the Me i-s County
Division of tbe Amencan Hearl
Association, encourages Meigs
Countians to respond immedialely
to one or.more of these bean attack
warning signs.
-Uncomfonable pressure, fullness, squeezing or pain in the ceolet of your chest lasting more than
a few minutes.
-Pain spreading to your sboulders, neck or arms.
-Chest discomfort with ligbtbeadedness, '.fainting, sweatfng,
nausea or sbonness of IRalb.
Not all of these sympums occur
in every attack, sbe said, but
advised immediate medical attention if some occur.
According to the American
Heart AssociaUon, a heart attack
bappens when the blood supply to
part of the heart muscle is severely
reduced or stopped. A major cause
·is a process called atherosclerosis.
Deposits of cholesterol and other
substances can narrow the insides
of the arteries that feed the heart A
blood clot that forms at such a narrowing can cause an anack. In
these cases, the heart muscle is
damaged and death can be imminent.
"Only a 'victim knows bow it
feels to have a heart attack, so
don't chance it," urges lannarelli.
"Writing off these signs as indigestion or
something less serious could mean

FRUTH PHARMACY . •

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·:Sands.looks back at
:Gallia's African-Americans
By JIM SANDS

Special Correspondeat
An interesting saga could be writ-

over the rearing.
- According to one writet, '"Aunt
. Mary was refmed and lady-like and
she· became a good mother to the
Naretchildren . They never forgot her
kindness and motherly affection."
When the three children were
grown. Mary went to work as a nurse
for William H. Langley. Mrs. Langley was an invalid for many years
and Mary was largely responsible for
rearing the Langley children as well.
Mary married twice, flfS!tO a Mr.
Gray, by whom she had a daughter,
Ella Gray. Her second husband was
York Washington. Both men died
quite young,leaving Mary without a
husband for her last 43 years. She
lived to be 97.
York Washington was involved
in a tragic and mysterious episode. It
was in 1864 that York was employed
tO. Clean OUI a well at the corner Of
Third and Pine streets. He was down
in the well and a pole was being
lowered to him when it slipped from
the rope, and struck him in the head.
· . 'Qle blow knocked York off the
ladder and he fell to his death.
According to historian P.T. Wall,
"It had alway's been thought that a
great many men had been murdered
in the upper end of town during the
war and this well was said to contain
many a dead man's bones.
"The story went that York was
killed purposely in order to cover up
what might be revealed were it

. tenaoouttbeAfriean-Americanswho
-carne to Gallipolis with whites or
who worked as valets or maids for
whites.
Among the number we would
include Mary Washington, Coston
Jones,
John
Casey and Leah ~..._--...,
Stewart, who
- was the fiiSI person of color to
reside in Gallipolis.
Leah carne to
Gallipolis about
1805 with the
W!!!'lh family. John Casey and John
Gee weie valets far J .P.R. Bureau;
Gee even accompanied Bureau to
Columbus when he served in the state
government.
Both ' Casey and Gee became
prominent citizens of Gallipolis, as
did their.sons and daughters. While
Casey and .Gee were largely selfeducated, their children and grandchildren became very highly edu·
cated.
One of the Gees was a professor at
Tuskegee Institute and Casey's son
became both a lawyer and a minister.
. Coston Jones was for many years
tbe valet of Edward Delatombe. His
lien, Hinton Jones, perhaps learned
abouttbeworldfromDelatombe, who
cleaned out." ·
was a world traveler.
The slory was so well believed
Young Hinton graduated from
York's death that the city could
after
Lincoln High School in Gallipolis at
age 14. He then attended music con- . never find another person who would
servatory schools in Cincinnati, godo'wn into the well. The well eventua IIy was abandoned. It had been
Boston and London.
abandoned
for several years when in
: While in London, Hinton Jones
·
t898,
as
lhe
city was preparing to
;became a stage director at the Adel;Jlhi Theater as ·well as becoming a pave Pine street with stone curbing,
.writer in the London Society of Au- that unknown persons filled up the
lbors. In 1930, he moved to Paris well with thel)l curbing."
The first black person to live in
·,where he 1aught singing until 1939.
When World War II broke out, GaUipolis, Leah Stewart, had many
.Hinton Jones went to work with the prominent descendants. Her tombJnternational Red Cross as a linguist stone in the Pine Street Colored
i!Dd interpreter. He served on the ship Cemetery, erected· by her ·descencalled the "Grispholm" iri 1940. . dants, is one of the best in the county.
Among the more interesting names
; Mary Washington, called "Aunt
of
African-Americans who worked
Mary" came to Gallipolis in 1848
for
whites in Gallia County History
~ith the Naretfamily. Mary was born
would
be Caesar Augustus and Vir11 slave in 18!0 in Winchester, Ya.
ginia
Snakeroot.
,
· In the 1840s, she was given her
The latter was in the employ of the
i'reedom and went to Wheeling,
LcCierqc
family, working in the large
W.Va., where she met Dr. Pitrat.
brick
house
at the comer of First
When Pitrat became a doctor in BufAvenue
and
Court
Street
falo, Ya. (now West Virginia), Mary
Sands
is
a special correJames
inoved there.
When Pitrat's daughter married SJ&gt;ondent or the Sunday Times-Senpr. Naret, Mary went to work for the tinel. His address is: 65 Willow
Narets. When Mrs. Naret died, lea v.· Drive, Springboro, Ohio 45066.
ing three small children, Mary took

Dave Barry may get call
in flaming toaster case

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- A man
more accustomed to the newsroom
than the counroom may ftnd be's
invited to a legal skirmish over
flaming toasters and burning PopTarts.
Attorney Sam Petroff said Friday there is a "remote possibility"
be may try to contact syndicated
humor colu'mnist Dave Barry for
help in a case tbat involves the
snaCk pastry and a kitchen fire.
"I suppose we could attempt to
qualify bim as an expen," Petroff
said.
Barry said be would be willing
to testify. But be added that putting
a humor columnist and "known
liar" on the stand would probably
be a breach of legal ethics.

He said anyone who docs so
"should get the electric chair, at
the minimum."
In a June 1993 column, Barry
wrote of bow be ignited Pop-Tarts
in a toaster as an experiment. That
was after be read that burning PopTarts caused a bouse fire in Dover,
Ohio.
Since his column, Barry said be
has received about 20 letters or
newspaper articles describing simiiar experiences.
Enter Thomas Nangle of Springfield, a guest at a rental home Oct.
29, 1992.
.
He put a strawberry Pop-Tart in
a toaster as be was prepanng for a
job interview . The Pop-Tart ignil·
cd, causing a kitchen fire that
resulted in about $3,000 in damage.

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SYRACUSE - Maggie N.
Winebrenner celebrated her 92nd
birthday on Jan. 7 with a party at
her home in Syracus~e.
Attending wer,e ber children ,
. Mary L. Weaver and Gordon and
Susan Winebrenner, Syracuse;
· grandchildren, Tom Weaver and
Chris, Syracuse; Allan. Mary and
·Andrew Lundell, Gallipolis; Jim,
:Paula aild Danielle Daugberty.
Mason, W. Va. and Becky Wine- ·
beeMer, Syracuse.

~xpenenc1ng

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

MARY W•hlnt!ton, a well-known Afric:an-Amerlc:an In tbe
Glllllpolls community, lived In this neighborhood of the 700 block
· of Third Avenue yean ago.
·

S1.1nday

By TOM BRIGGLE
Special to SuiMiay Tlma Sentinel
POMEROY - Imagine visiting
a foreign country with no knowledge of the language and not a sin·
gle person that you lmow ...as a volunteet.
Making friends was tbe easy
part for Carlos Gustavo Alfaro
Briceno because be bas a humorous
side to him. Learning the language
was more difficult. After all, his
introduction to the Englisb language was through listening to an
American rock-and-roll group,
· Metallica, and by watching old
movies of the Three Stooges . He
used the taller as humor to gaJn
friends. However, once be learned
the meanings to the words of the
rock group, be admits now that the
songs make litde sense.
Alfaro, the name be uses as his
last name, is from Costa Rica as
part of the student exchange pro-.
gram of Rotary Club International.
A lot bas occwred since be learned
be was sponsored by the PomeroyMiddleport Rotary Club and be
landed at Columbus Airport,in ·
March of last year. For one, 'ois
flfSI name Guslavo was too bard to
FAREWELL GATHERING_ Tbe Middle·
The Kotary excban11e youtb I• oeated aecond
pronounce for his ·new friends so
port-Pomeroy Rotary bust famllln beld a
from left, with Tom Brigle; Darla and DouJI
his classmates at Meigs High
farewell gathering for Carlo.l Gustavo ·Alfaro
Staals, front, and left to right INocll, Unda Brig·
~~~. nicknamed him "The
Briceno of Costa Rico wbo spent 10 months In
gle, Jemd Cook, Shannon Staats, and Jennifer,
· Since be bas been here though
M~i~ County a~ attended Meigs mgb School.
Jim, Adam and Jared and Aaron SbHts.
be bas visited more states than weekends with Saturday trips 10 the a summer trip that stretched from · other exchange students from
m06t pepple bave in their lifetimes. market in Athens.
Ohio to California. Traveling with around the world. Tbis exposed
By planning vacations between hiS
Since his interest was teaming 180 other exchange students. be him to . otber cultures. It also
three host families, be bas reached computers, he was able 10 help visited the sites ·of famous· land- exposed bim to bigger cities in
nearly all corners of the United with the development of a m3J1u- marks sucb as Mt. Rushmore, the Ohio and the problems that came
States and bas met such notables as factoring accowtting and inventory Grand Canyon, Salt Lake City, with city life. For Ibis reason be
Michael Jordan and Mario Cuomo. package that was in process at Alcatraz, tbe Badlands, Disney valued his slay in Meigs County.
"America is great, it is a large Screen &amp; Type, a Pomeroy com- Land and Reno. It was in Chicago
"Meigs County is small with
country" be said with a distinguish· puter consulting ftrm operated by during this trip west that he was small towns but the people here are
able Latin American accent "I like his third host family, Tom and served lunch by Michael Jordan at really nice. They make me feel
it and learned a lot about the cut- Linda Briggle. Guslavo helped set ·his reslaurant. He was grateful for very welcome," be comntented.
the travel experience.
Gustavo also was able to visit
tlire, bow the ldds live in America.
1 learned that they are the same, not up the program for a Toledo com"Thanks to the Rotary, the guys the Costa Rican embassy .while
too much difference between Costa pany. He is enrolled in computer are really grea~" he said. '"!banks traveling to Washington, DC. He
Rica and United Slates."
science classes at the university in for all the suppon. They have a lot visited Niagara Falls where he met
Tbe Rotary exchange program San Jose, the capital of Cosla Rica, of great programs. It is tbe best stu- then Governor Mario Cuomo seckseeks to locate three families that. where he will start in the spring dent exchange program in the Unit- ing reelection in New York.
the student will live with during his quaner.
ed Slates and my country."
.
Now be bas returned to bis
And if all that didn't keep him
·Once a month the slate Rotary country but vowed to return here.
stay in the slates.
His ftrst family .stop was a visit busy enough, be worked out with program would sponsor weekend That would be conside.red, "returnwith the family of Jim and Jennifer the wres\ling and football teams to conferences where be would meet ing home," he said.
Sheets. Their he was introduced to keep in shape . Under Ohio High
Jerod Cook who helped him learn School Athletic Association rules,
the English language and ~climate be was ineligible to participate in
Alfaro to scbool. He also met the interscholastic sports because be
· od uced Ri
used up bis eligibility in CosJa
Sb eets • son, Adam , wbo mtr
bim to more friends. Adam himself
ca.
. was an exchange student last year • . The sports parallel~d tba'. of
as be spent lime in Italy. Sons Jared Shannon Staats, the son mb1s ~cc_­
and Aaron Sheets visited on week- ond host fam1Iy. Doug and Darla
ends to help entenain tbcir guest.
Staats of Pomeroy took Gustavo
It was not all fun though as Gus- mto tbe1r home wb~re he also
tavo jumped in to help with the became one of the family . .
f~ly farm and bakery business in . . All tb1s f1t around h1s travel
Pomeroy. He helped out mostly on · Umcrary.lbe Rotary Club financed

92nd 'birthday
celebrated

'

Unwanted or abnormal hair grow1h is a disorder m.any women ar~
today. There are two types of hair· vellus (light} and
terminal (dark} . Most vellus.hairs are soft and downy, sometimes they
become accelerated meamng they grow longer. Terminal hairs are
dark, course and deep seated in the follicles of your skin.
If you have a hair problem be very careful what you do to the hair.
Li~ht hair can be stimulated into dark hair by tweezing, waxing or using
hair removal creams on your body. Waxing is Just a faster way of
tweezmg. ~ven lf 'you have dark hair and you tweeze . wax or use
creams you re 1n for a mghtmare of hair and skin problems. Tweezing
or hair removal creams will irritate the skin. The only defense the skin
has IS to grow morecleeper ha1r and maybe more hair than you had
before. Stop and think about the hair rem 0val creams. If they aie
strong enough to take the hair off your face, what is it doing to your
skin . Creams and tweezmg can also lead to ingrown hairs that are
infected and can scar the face or body. If most of the people had the
money they spent on devices , creams and waxes, they could have
il)vested it into electrolysis treatments, the only permanent hair
removal method . The devices you buy from magazines or department
·
stores- do they state they are sterilized (meaning germ free)?
As an electrologist 1-hope 'this Information help"S"YoiTWith your hair
problem. As a compassionate person who had abnormal' hair growth
f~om an adrenal deficiency at age 14 that led to a beard, mustache and.
Sideburns on.the face I know exaotly how you feel.
If you have unwanted hair, electrolysis can help rid yourself of the
problem. Our equipment is the best that is available- our treatments
almost patnless . If your treatment at this office hurts then you elm
leave wHhout pay1ng.The old tale of electrolysis no pain, no gain isn't
true. Our electrologists technique and equipment using slerilized
Instruments offers you 'the best treatment m electrolysis today. The
only people that come to our office have a hair problem. The
etectrologtsts on staff at Candy's Electrolysis have ail experienced their
own battle with unwanted hair.
•
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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

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February 5, 1995

Entertainment

February 5, 1995

--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - -

People in the news

--·.,

Style Takes. Interesting Turns in Modern Ranch

ACCEPTS AWARD -- Joe BoUn, left, a member or the MeiWJ
SoU and Water Conservation District, ~pled on behalf or the
district a superior service award from Federation President
Edward Elliott, 0.

Meigs SWCD receives
superior award rating .
.1 HE RECESSED front enoy makes a strong impression with its stylish gabled arch.

By PAT LUKAS
backyard and the expansive ter·
AP Newsfeatures
race.
A smartly angled &lt;tyle and livThe dining room extPnds into a
ing plan makes the most of this
den. entered through folding
modestly sized house.
doors. The den features sliding
glass doors that open to the ter·
De,s ign F-32, by HomeStyles
Source 1 Designers Network,
race and a 14-foot sloped ceiling
encompasses 1,728 square feet of
with a glazed sunroof and an
living space. Double doors open
optional skylight.
A casual dinette .flows between
from the gabled entryV;ay to a
luminous two-story-high recepthe den and the angled kitchen.
tion area. Traffic flows around a
The nice-sized kitchen area
freestanding· coat closet to the
expands·to the front of the home,
ending at a sink that overlooks
. spacious pentagonal central living space.
the front yard. Nearby are a
The living room and formal dinpantry, a stairway to the optional
ing room are combined, taking
basement and a mud room area
advantage of a high-efficiency
that includes laundry facilities
firepla~e . and a 14-foot-high
and access to the two-car garage
and the backyard. If the slab
domed 'ceiling with skylights.
foundation is chosen, the area
Glass walls o'ffer views to the
~~~-J'/"____:_771

reserved for the basement stair·
way is it sed for utilities and a
half-bath or extra storage.
On· the opposite side of the
home, the hallway in the sleeping
.wing is brightened by another
skylight. The master suite features dual Closets, access to
secluded terrace and a private
skylighted bath with a dual-sink
vanity and a whirlpool tub. Three
secondary bedrooms share
another fu II bath, complete with a
garden tub.

a

(For· a more detailed, scaled
plan of this house, including
guides to estimating costs and
financing, send $4 to House of
the .Week. P.O . Box .1562, New
York. N.Y. 10116-1562. Be sure to
include the number of the .Plan.)

F-32 Statistics
Design F-32 has a living room,
dining room, kitchen, dinette,
den, four bedrooms, two baths
and a receptiqn area, totaling
1,728 square feet of6ving space.
There is a double garage, mud
room and a pantry. Doors from
the dining room and the den
open to a rear terrace, and a ter-.
race is also just off the master
bedroom. Finishing the standard
basement option would add 1.545
square feet of living space. The
plan is available with 2x4 or 2x6
exterior wall framing. Foundation
options include a standard'basement .or slab foundation. Generic
foundation conversion diagrams
may be requested when ordering
blueprints.

POMEROY • The Meigs Dis·
assistanc~, infonn~tion program,
trict received a superior service
conservation educa~on and ove~l
award rating at the 52nd Annual
p~ogr~mi~g . Tb~s year 81 dtsMeeting of the Obio Federation of tricts m Obio received "superior"
Soil and Water Conservation Dis·
~seven received "excellent" ratmgs. ·
tricts (OFSWCD) held Jan . 17
Jbrougb 19 in Columbus. Tbe
The OFSWCD was organized in
award is part of the Distinctive Ser· · 1943 to strengt.ben natural resoDR:e
vice Goodyea·r Conservation conservation pr~;&gt;grams in Ohio's ·
Awards progtam:
88 coutlt~·bas~d ~oil and Water
Jo~ Bolin, a member of the
Conservau_on Dts!ficts. The annual
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation · meeti~g g..,:es ~oil and w_ater conDistrict,· accepted the award from seryation district supervisors and
Federation President Edward t.berr staffs an opportunity to gain
new insights into local program
Elliott 11.
The Distinctive Service Pro· development as weU as Jearn· about
gram. wbicb is sponsored by the . natural~ management offerGoodyear Tire and Rubber Compa· mgs available at the county. state
ny. pmvides district supervisors a and federal. level.
way to evaluate their natural
Attendmg tbe meeting in
resource conservation program on Col~mbus we~e Supervisors Joe
an 311nual basis. District programs Bohn, John Rice, Mru:co_Jeffers
are rated in a number of areas or and Charles Yost, and District Conservice to county landowners tmd . servationist M~ke Dubl. District
residents, including conservation PJ:og~ Adnu.ru.strator !Jpal _Dyer.
education. delivery of technical Distrtct Tecbmc1an B~ Wmdon.
Education Specialist Diana Kimes
and spo~ Janet Bolin. Jackie Jeffers and Nita Yost

Eag IeS
wi.ntering
in Ohio

1111\ PENTAGONAL living opace unfolds into a livable house for

its I, 728 square feeL The fonnnl llvili!l area has a domed ceiling
ond Areplace. lltc dining rumn and den both have access to the
rear terrace. The muster suite features a whirlpool tub and sky·
light, with a dual-sink vanity.

area.

--Staff addition -----.

II

I

To Order Study Plan

Full study plan information on· this house is available in a $4 IIsby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Sell lt. Ranch Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
feature; P:atical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
problems; nd, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Sj~ d check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.

I

OAK HARBOR, Ohio (AP) The recOrd number of bald eagles
wintering .in Ohio is proof that ibe
national symbol is making a strong
comeback in t.be state, a wildlife
offiCial said Friday.
Tbe siaie Wildlife Division
counted 98 of the birds in Ohio t.bis
winter, 57 adults and 41 immature
bald eagles. Last year. t.be tolal was
76.
.
.
The count was pan of t.be annual
Mid-Winter Bald Eagle Survey ·
conducted. nationwide to determine
t.be population in North America,
The record count could be
because of a mild winter wbicb
may have kept some birds from
migrating, said Gilda Tori, supervisor of t.be Crane Creek Wildlife
Research Station. ·
Tbe eagle bas been endangered
or lbreatened in t.be lower' 48 states
primarily because of pesticides and
pollution.

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Enclosed Is $4 for plan .No. - - - - - - - - - - - - Enclosed Is $4.95 each for lhe booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
'· lAUREL

WELCOME • The staff and doctors of the Medical Plaza of
Gallipolis welcome Dr. Thomas P. Price as an addition to the
plaza. On hand for the reception were Dr. Valle, left, Dr. Subbiah,
Dr. Price and Dr. Abels.
·

Name•------------------------------------

lnOudl?s de/u)(e
features 5uc!1 as

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Slate ( Z I P ) • - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - -

FDA probes bogus baby formula
•

.·

By DAVID DiSHNEAU
87532RB APR96 0341 87532RB
AP Business Writer
APR96.
CHICAGO (AP) - Similac is ·
Consumers can tell t.be fake for·
fake milk, and fake Similac is a mula from t.be real thing by t.be
real mystery.
counterfeit's clear scoop and milky
The Food and Drug Administra- \\fbituj)pearance, tile. IDA said.
·
lnvestlgatl~rg
imilac is creamy yellow and bas a
counterfeit cans of the popular green scoop.
. baby formula that turned up in
The lot number is "the single
Non.l)em California Safeway gro- best way to know whether you
eery stores t.bis week.
have this counterfeit product or
Tbe bog~s Similac does not not." O'Hara said.
It turned up only in Safeway
appear harmful, FDA spokesman
Jim O'Jiara said.
stores 10 Northern California
"We have bad no reports of · according to Cathy Babbington, ~ "
injuries w date, and .wc life contin- spokeswoman for Similac manuuing to analyze the producV' he facturer Abbott Laboratories of
·said. "It appears to have some North Chicago.
Safeway Inc. removed all Siminutritional value, but obviously we
don't know wbat it is yet.'.'
lac wit.b the suspicious lot number.
It is packaged to resemble. Simi- about 4,000 cans. from its stores
lac powdered infant fonnula with throughout Northern California on
iron in 16-ounce cans. righC down Wednesday. Safeway spokeswomto an identification number copied an Debra Lamben said, Sbe said
from the real t.bing.
·
cans with 'that num'*" were found
The cans ·are labeled "Simi lac in 25 ~rcent of tbe company's 22o
with iron, powder." The botwm cif stores m tbe region.
.
each can b~ars Ibe lot number
No other cans were found in a

Stone DeSign

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA •
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nationwide check of 900 Safcway •
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
•
(S2 CO OFF COUPO N - U""'IT ·1 )
stores, Lamben said ..
~3283
Abboct informed ·Safeway and • FRUTH PHARMACY •
the FDA of t.be problem after con· •786 N. 2nd
Mlddlepo~
RT.
sumcrs called the company about
t.be pmduct:s unusual appearance,
. Babbmgton said.
MARK EBLIN
"Moms really know t.be color.
PAM EBLIN
When it's different; they know it
right away," sbe said.
·The company said consu111ers
(614) 441·0177
should have no qualms about SimiWE SELL APPLIANCES:
lac concentrated liqui~. liquid
ready·to·feed formulas and other
Whirlpool, Kelvlnator, Roper, Glbs()n, Frigidaire, Crosley
powdered infant fonnulas.
·
1 Year Free Financing on Approved Credit Applications
The FDA also received a consumer complaint. Hara said. He
"STOP IN FOR DETAILS"
said the agency's office of criminal
investigations was trying to find
WE ALSO HAVE IURNITURE
t.be source of t.be fake product.
· Abbott is the nation's biggest
We Service What We Sell &amp; More ·
formula maker. lls Similac and
lsomil brands account for half of·
tbe industry's U.S. sales.

-········
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'fi '-l s\\~t.f EBLIN'S PARTS &amp; SERVICE
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TriMotor is t.be proper rulme of
a three-engine airplane once made
by Ford Motor Co. ·
1

KEITH EBLIN

(614) 441•0178

262

Parts ~anager, Bill Bercus
3RD AVE.~ALLIPOLIS OHIO

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)- Barbra Streisand got a standing ovation at
Harvard University withQI!I singing a single note.
.
Streisand told a crowd of 650 students', facqlty and staff Friday that
conservatives in Washington are threatening the arts in America. She was
especially concerned about moves to cut funds to the Nati911al Endowment for
· the Arts and the Public llroadcasting System.
"By trying to cut these arts programs. which bring culture. education and
joy into the lives of ordinary Americans. they are hurting the very people they

I

45631

CHRISTINE EBLIN

else.

After more than a decade of appearing in ads for Lancome cosmetics, the
llalian actress and model will be released from her contract at the end of this
year.
She plans to announce a De\\: venture with an unidentified cosmetics
company Wednesday in Paris.
L'Oreal, owner ofLancome. is still permitted to use photos and video of

'
SAVING
Painter) •ttempts to revive
Felix (Gre11 s•rader, seated) while poker pals Vinnie (Doug
Adkins) and 'Speed (Sam Wilson) watcb after the group believed
Felix tried to kill himself In one of tbe comic blghllgliis of Nell
Simon's ''Tbe Odd Couple," to be performed Feb. 10.11 at the
Ariel Th..tre In Gallipolis.
fessional photographer instead
· of a network news employee)
and got progressively sillier, it
remained a fixture on tbe ABC
schedule fer five seasons. Widely seen in syndication today. the

er? Yes, I do." "Ob, all right," she
answers.
Kudrow, a Vassar College graduate wit.b a biology degree wbo
decided to become an actress,
learned Ursula's style at ber day
job, working as a receptionist .for
her father, a beadacbe specialist.
"I found it was a lot easier to be
pbony and really nice," she said.
"You're noi really paying atten·
lion . .. . It's just phony service
speak."
Thus Ursula, who gave Kudrow
virtually aqtomatic
to the ·
auditions
of L.A.'sinvitation
pilo! seas(!n,

''Her mother was a suicide
when she was .14. her fatber we
don't know anything about, her
stepfather's in prison, and she came
to New York when she was 14 and
•Jived wit.b t.bis guy. and then that
guy," Kudrow said.
''The great thing about her is
t.bat all these hideous things have
happened to ber and sbe just shrugs
and goes, 'i\w, it's no big deal. It
happens to a lot of people.' If you
said w her, 'No. it doesn't.' she'd
be puzzled."
·
Phoebe
was but
an ~y.
one-paragrapl!
l!lldition,
Kudrow
bad no

when studios film new shows for
t.be next season. "They were look·
ing for people who were on televi-'
sion," she said.
Kudrow wanted to keep work·
ingfor "Mad," so she very sensibly went looking ftw a well-written
NBC pilot. She found "Friends"
and t.be character of Phoebe. who
plays acousitic guitar and sells barrettes in the streets.

idea bow the pilot would rum out.
"I knew ("Cheers" co-creator)
Jim Burrows was directing, but I
didn 't know wbo else was going to
be in it," .she said,
Luck was wit.b her, sbe said. in
t.be fonn of co-stars Jennifer Ani.~­
ton. Courtney Cox, Matt LeBlanc,
Matt.bew Perry and David Scbwim·
mer.
Sbe said lbe cast seemed to real·
ize what they bad to do: "We've

:Talk show host defends
father of sex harassment

The award, established in 1977, honors ac hievement in comedy. Other
recipients .have included Johnny Carson, Steve Martin~ · chevy Chase. John
Belushi. Rodney Dangerfield an~ George Bums.
Nielsen appeared in numerous dramatic roles before his comedy career
took off with the 1980 spoof" Airplane" and starring mles in the "Naked Gun"
comedies.

show bas (X'Ompted audiences to
permanently identify Randall
and Klugman as the classically
mismatched roommates.
The Odd Couple will be pre·
sented each night al8 p.m.

just met) We've a week w do this,
so let's bang out every minute and
talk, and at least appear w be close
friends. like we• re supposed to
be."
"Friends," which began life in
the protected "hammock" between
•'Mad About You •' and ••Sein ·
feld" on NBC's bit Thursday
schedule, has finished in the Top
10 for the past three weeks.
On Feb. 23. NBC is moving t.be
sbow to lbe 9:30p.m. EST slot, fol ~owing "Seinfeld." ·

Name dropper.
.
To some. "name dropper"
migbt start a fight. but it's a can·
pliment to Conrad, wbo operated
Jbe El Matader nightclub in San
Francisco fmm 1953 until the early
1960s when tbe topless c:raze took
off.
..
"I finally gave up wben they
opened a topless sboeshine place
nearby," he 5llid in an interview ..
Like Rick's in t.bc flint classic
"Casablanca.'' everybody came to
Conrad's club, whicb was pari
saloon, part salon.
Conrad. 72, recounts bis recol·
lections of such luminaries as
Frank Sinatra. Truman Capote.
Noel Coward , Lenny Bruce,
Jonathan Winters and many. many
more in bis book, "Naine Drop·
ping."
Conrad, who now lives in
CarjJinteria in Soul.bem California.
served as a diplomat in Spjlin. He
tried. bullfighting and lived to tell .
about it in his best seller, "Mata·
dor.''

The 1950s. be recalls. were an
''innocent lime, before \!rugs . I
remember t.be '50s. We bad booze.
The '60s had drugs. If you remember the '60s you weren't tbere...
The consummate host, Conrad.
t.be aut.bor of 25 books, befriended
stars who visited the place and
even did their portraits, several

published for the first lime in
HName Dropping.''
"She really wasn't that attractive, you know," Conrad said, displaying bis sketch of Marilyn Monroe.
At first. people came to t.be club
because it was a pleasant place to
go before or after dinner. But after
it was "discovered ," people
showed up at El Matador to gawk
at celebrities.
"One never was quite sure who
would be in El Matador," he said.
"One night we hosted the unlikely
·potpourri of Noel Coward, Henry
Fonda. Marilyn Monroe. and bronc ,
rider Casey Tibbs, none of them.
together."
Many of the quotes attributed to
the high and migbty visitors are a
little too colorful for a family
newspaper, but one of Coward's is
a fine example of the level of
sophisticated wit tbat can be ·
expected.

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Fri. &amp; Sat.
Feb. 10 &amp; 11 8 p.m.
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Ariel Theatre 428 2nd. Ava , Galllpolll, Oh

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MICHAEt:;:~l.HJ!eR~MOORE

' NASHVILLE Tenn. (AP)' .:_

daughter's alma mater- Wit.b ber

the kind of man who would

t.be woman get financial aid. but

DISCLOSURE·R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Qprab Winfrey says her father isn't financial belp. He sai~ be helped
&lt;$emand
sex for
from
a college aid
student
in
exchange
scholarship
•. The TV talk show bost l'fl!Cted
1l!Jursday.w news reports that Ver·
n~n Winfrey. 62. is accused by a
28·year-old student of exposing
b~self and asldng for oral sex in

· LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Leslie Nielsen •s comedic talems have earned

By JAMES 0. CLIFFORD
· Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Matador, diplomat, author. painter,
bon vivant and raconteur Barnaby
Conrad can add another talent to
his long resume.

'Friends' Lisa Kudrow 'waits' for big break

and acts like she's doing a good
job," Kudrow said. " She even
wants W do a good job, but doesn't
notice that t.bere are buge prob·
Jems.''
' Problems? "She says. wit.b tons
~f confidence, 'Do you want
cheese on t.bat burger?'~ ' Her cus·
romer replies: "On my cbeesebur~-

YORBA LINDA. Calif. (AP) - Likeany
other ldd, Richard Nixon had w fight with his
brothers to be tbe one in the tire swing.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower shared her f~·
tiler's childhood wish Thursday during he'r
frrst visit tb the Nixon Library &amp; Binhplace
since his death last April.
Mrs. Eisenhower unveiled artist Charles
Wysocki 'spainting"The YoungNixons. Home
Sweet Home.'' which depicts the four Nixon
·brothers playing outside their Orange County
farm house in 1920.
The painting is based on a Nixon family photograph showing the Nixon
brothers posing near a tire suspended from a pepper tree . Ni w n loses the
coveted tire swing w·brother Harold.

What's in a name? a
new book, that's what

GALLIPOLIS - Can two
The Ariel production beadtotally opposite men share an
lines Brad Painter, repeating bis
aparuoent wit.bout driving each
interpretation as the endearingly
otber crazy?
irresponsible Oscar, and Greg
The above paraphrase of one
Shrader as the allergy-wracked,
of the catchlines from its popu·
hopelessly controlled but equallar television incarnation
ly lovable Felix.
describes the comic conflict
Bobby Gordon steps in as
behind Neil Simon's original
Murray. while Sam Wilson ,
stage version· of The Odd CouBrian Pack an4 Doug Adkins
pie, to be presented Feb. 10
are ·back from t.be original pro·
through 11 at the Ariel Theatre
duction as, respectively, Speed,
in downwwn Gallipolis . .
Roy and Vinnie. Cheryl Basil
The Ariel Players production,
and Tricia Zalewski are on band
originally seen last July, is being
as Gwendolyn and Cicely
reslaged under the direction of
Pigeon.
· Amy Clifford and remains faithThe Odd Couple debuted on
ful to t.be hilarious yet occasion- · Broadway in March 1965 wit.b
ally reflective nature of Simon's
Walter Matthau as Oscar and
work.
Art Carney as Felix and quickly
The Odd Couple is t.be story
became one of the comic suc. of "divorced, hroke and sloppy"
cesses of t.bat season. The film
· Oscar Madisop, a carefree New
version followed in 1968 with
~ York sportswriter. who lakes in
Matt.bau repeating as Oscar and
• bis friend. and weekly poker
Jack lemmon co-starring as
• partner Felill Unger after Felill . Felix.
.
: and his wife separate.
Mattbau and Lemmon bad
Oscar then finds bis life
clicked wit.b movie audiences in
turned upside down wben neat·
ihe 1966 Billy Wilder farce The
. ness freak Felix not only relent·
F orrune Cookie (which also net·
• lessly cleans slovenly Oscar• s
ted Mattha11 lbe Oscar·as Jbal
apartment, but unconsciously . year's best supporting actor) and
• reminds Oscar wby he got
t.beir success·in The Odd Couple
: divorced in t.be f~nt place wben
led to several more pairings of
Felix's choking ministrations
the veteran actors, the most
, ; become 100 much:
recent 1993's Grumpy Old Men.
Interwoven in the plot are t.be
:
In 1970, The Odd Couple
: bemused I:eactions of t.beir poker
premiered as a balf-hour TV sit·
&lt; pals. Murray. Speed, Roy and
uation comedy wit.b Tony ·Ran·
~ Vinnie, and Oscar's attempts to
daiJ as Felix and Jack Klugman
•, renew his buddy's Interest in the
as Oscar. While the series
:. opposite sex by introducing bim
changed some detai Is from the
: · to t.beir neighbors, t.be giddily
play (e. ~ .• Felix became. a pro·
: · British Pigeon sisters.

afSCOTT WD..UAMS
q Television Writer
· 'NEW YORK (AP)-- You've
beard of stars who wait on tables
id\tiltheir bi~ break comes. And
!lien t.bere's Lisa Kudrow, wh!&gt; did
it backwards.
,
Kudrow plays sweet. damaged
Phoebe, the New Age naif of
NBC's "Friends." but ber big
break came playing Ursula, the
Waitress from Hell on NBC's
1
'Mad About You.''
; 'ursula's not a rude, sarcastic
cruel~ aiiQ~ed
waitress;
sbe. just
.: atili
Sliollk!n'l
)Q serve _fOOl!

Rossellini beyond 1995. That's good. because
the company says tbere's no new face yet w
replace her.

· him this year's Jack BCllny Award from the University of California, Los
-PARIS (AP)-- Isabella Rossellini is taking her pretty face somewhere Angeles.
.

Ariel Players to
stage 'Odd Couple'

to customers. It is beyond her.

ChO!a-'. Fovome
Acli vrty, Ln serVue

IIICII l)t i,.IIJ

WASHINGTON(AP) -- VicePresident claim to represent." she told the crowd at the John F. Kennedy School of
Lettennan? Why not - he's already got a cam- Government
paign slogan.
Streisand, who's known to suffer from stage fright , said she was more
David Lenennan offered Sen. Bob Dole nervous speaking to the crowd of professors and students than performing in
a campaign buttOn on Friday night's show with front of thQusands of people.
their pbotos·and the slogan "Dole and Dumber."
"I might say you were notmyf~nti:boice,"
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Patti Davis says she patched things up with her
Dole quipped.
parents, Ronald and Nancy ~. after her father was diagnosed with
Dole made anotber"i.nfonnal" announce- Alzheimer's disease .
.
ment of his bid for the Republican presidential
"llhinkifyou're lucky in life in any kind of challenging situation there are
nomination on Leuennan 's show. He won '1 make . also miracles, also rays of light." Davis wid "Entertainment Tonight" in an
it official until April.
interview for broadcast Monday, Reagan's 84th birthday.
Perhaps getting an early start on cam·
"In particular. the fact that my mother and I have a relationship that we
Patti Davis
paigning, Dole offered the Top 7 ways to cut the haven'treally had. We'vehadglimpsesofit, butnoueally.l feel very blessed
budgel He said a Top 10 list was out of the in thai respect. We have reached a level now that we hadn'treached before;"
question because Republicans "~~recutting everytl)ing 30 percent."
Davis said.
. SomeofDole'smoney-saving tips: Stop paying Clinton speechwriters by
In previous interviews and writings. Davis criticized her parents as
the word; Save government ink by rcplal:inglong William Jefferson Clinton . abusive and emotionally distant. The Reagans have denied her claims.
signature with 66 percent shorter Bob Dole signature; Make Gore and Gingrich
Reagan announced in a November letter that he had been diagnosed in tbe
pay for those good seats at State of tbe Union addresses.
early stages of Alzheimer's, adegenemtive neurological disease characterized
And No. I: Alkansas? Sell il
by memory loss and disorientation.

~ : "(Ursula) is really in earnest,

Personal Name.

City _ _ _ _- - - : - - - - - - - - - - - -

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B7

sh~=as=k=ed:~:or=m=o=rc=b=el=p=las=tw=ee=k~.~~~~~~446:.{):19::23===~f
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h00,9 : l0 DULY
MA1'11if!ZS SA'I' I 8 •
1 ; 00 l : lO

~ The woman's complaint was
filed witb .Nasbville pollee,- but ·
W4nfrey has not been formally
ci$Jrged.
·
.
• "My father, Vernon Winfrey. is
·one of t.be most honorable men I
. kilow." Winfrey, one of tbe
world's wealthiest entertainers,
said in a statement. "In his profe&amp;·
sional and personal life, be bas
. allfilys tried to do. wbat.is right and
belp people."
:The elder Winfrey adminis~rs
I&amp; scholarships to Tennessee State
tl]iversity m Nashville - his

"

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POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD FEB. 5 THRU FEB. 11, 1995.

99

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS..

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC C

2 LITER

(

Section.c

ports

February 5, 1995

In Top 25 colleg' ~~ops,

. ·

ll5~tnQt(
........,. , .· ~ou de

·

-

George washington · upsets UMass
WASHlNGTON (AP) - With President
out top sbot-blocket Marcus Camby. wbo baS
Cllnton looking on, Kwame Evans scored 27
,an injiJ!OO bamslring, ooo~ued its ~lion of
points and George Wubington broke Mas·
Slr!!lllllmg !!g~t tbe Colooials on GW s ~OIJ!C
sadluseUs' 16-game winning sllalk with a 78·
court. ~ ~mutemen, "'!'bo .had tbe nali~ s
1S upset of tbe No. 1 Minutemen 00 Saturday.
Iopgest w~g streak gomg !n, bave won ~ust
Massachusetts (17-2, 9·1 Atlantic 10) rallied
~woof ~ulastl9 games agmnst the Colomals
from a six-point deficit in tbe last 38 secooc1s to
m Washington.
.
.
.
come within 76-75 011 Edgar Padilla's lhree· .
GW stretdled a stx-pomt halftime lead to a
point basket wilh 10 seconds remaining
47·381cad wilh 16:30 to play, butlhe Minute·
But the Colonials (14-8 7-3) stayed 00 top
men began getting the ball inside and outscored
as Vaughn Jooes bit two
tbrows with 4 6
George Washington 21·11 in tbe next 7:34 to
seconds remaining for the final margin. Wb~
go ~ S8-S9 on a lhn:e-point play by Lou
Derek Kellogg's half-court sbot fell short at tbe
Roe wtlh 8:56 ~pia~.
buzzer, fans stormed the coun and hoisted
Roe, who f1lled mat ce~ter for .lhe 6-11
Evans overbead. The cniwd then stood for sev·
Camby, led Massacbusetts wtth 21 poants. Kel·
era! miDutes, cheering and waviDg 31 CliDton as
Ioq_ adt!OO 17·
,
.
the president smiled and waved back.
George Wasblngton s defa:nse held the Min·
11 was the Colonials' rust game asainst a
utemen to 37.5 percent shooung from lhe floor
top-ranked team. Mamrbusetts, playing witb·
in the rust half.

'Jones and Nimbo Hammons each scored 18
points for George Washington.
.
No. :Zt Georaia Tech 100! No. .5 M•rylimd
91.- At Atlanta. Ga., Trav1s B.est scored 30
pomls and freshman Matt H31p1111g 28 as No.
21 qeo~g1a Tech ~nal?ped fiflh·ranked Mary·
lands Sl~·game wmmng ~treak 100-91 Satur·
day.
The Yellow Jackets 05·6 overall, 6·3
Atlantic Coast Conference) e~tended their
bome floor winning streak to IS games and
beat lhe Terps at Atlanta for tbe 131h time in
the last14 games.
.
,
,Maryland (17-4, 7-2) twice had Ieads .of 11
pomls m the rust half and led 66-61 m1dway
through the SCC?nd ¥f bef~X7 Best started tl!e
Yellow Jackets come~ck w11h a 12-footer m
lhe lane and a ~-pomter from the top of lhe
key for a 66-66 ue w11h 9:32 10 • •

iree

Miami Redskins 80, OU Bobcats 69
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.

BGSU and Muskingum among victors
three-pointer and a free lhrow to
pull lhe Falcons up 70-64. Antonio
Daniels made 5.,of-6 ffOm tbe l'ree
lhrow tiDe iD the rmat minute to put
the game away.
DL·Chkqo 94, Wript SL 83
At Chicago, Ill., Sberell Ford
scored a career-blgh 37 points and
grabbed 12 rebounds Saturday in
leading !Uinois-Chicago to a 94-83
win over Wright State.
Illinois-Cbicago remained Wide·
feated at home in tbe Midwestern
Collegiate Conference, improving
to 14-6 overall and 8·2 in lhe con·
ference. Wright State dropped to 8·
12 and 4-S.
Musklngum 71
Ohio Northern 58
At New Concord, Kevin Troyer
64.
· scored 2S points Saturday afterKomives responded with a noon as Musk_i~gum gave Obio

BOWLING GREEN (AP) Shane Komives bad 25 points.
.iDcludln&amp; six three-pointers, to lead
BowliDg Green past Kent 79-76
·Salllrday In a Mid-American Coo·
·ference game.
The Falcons' success from the
arc, 9-of-17 for S3 pen:en1. was the ·
key to holding off a second-half
push by the FI3Siiel.
A three-pointer by Ray Lynch at
7:40 stretcbed lhe lead to 12, 60·
48, for Bowling .Green (12-6, 6-4
MAC). '
But led by Nate Reinking, Kent
(5·13, 2-8) came hick from a 36-27
halftime deficit to close within two
wilh 3:53 lefi in the game. Reink· .
ing, who had 16 points, hit three
ftee.throws a jumper to make it66-

Northern a 71·5H defeat - its rust
Obio Athletic Conference loss.
Muskingum (10..10, 6-8 OAC)
led 40· 32 at the half and used an
·eight-point run in lhe second balf to
take command wilh 7:34 left at S9·

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14.75

Reserve, which led by as many·as
33 points in the second half, witb·
stood a late Earlham rally and beat
the Quakers 97-86 Saturday.
Dante Brown scored a career·
high 37 points and grabbed 15
rebounds for Earlham (5· 15, 3· 10
North Coast Conference).

Heidelberg 80, Hlnm 63
At Tiffin, Matt Adams scored
0Uerbein88
22 poinls, including nine in the first
Mount Union 70
balf to become Heidelberg's third
At Alliance, Scon Davis scored
all-time leading scorer, as the Stu·
dent Princes beat Hiram 80-63 Sat· 24 points and Dan McAuley bad all
of bis 15 points in lhe second half
urday.
.Adams bit a lhree·pointer wilh as Otterbein defeated Mount Union
6:56 remaining in tbe rust half to · 88-70 on Saturday.
Otterbein (10-10, 6-8 Ohio Con·
put him in lhe record books. He
ended lhe. game wilh I ,490 career ference) led 30-28 at lhe half, but
lhe Cardinals took over with two
points.
scoring runs in lhe second half.
C.Se We~tern 97, Earlbam 86
At Cleveland, Brian Arenschicld Mount Union (8-12, 4-10) led only
scored 25 points as Case Western once.

·By besting Lightning 6-3,

oz.

:By ALAN ROBINSON
Penguins regular-season and play·
. PmSBURGH (AP) - Tomas off games after being Uaded by Los
· Sandstrom Mil two ·goals and two Anaeles last season.
asalsts. as the Plusburgb Penguins
Sandsuom got Piusburgh going
remained the NRL' s 'ooly UIJbeaten after a acoreless fust period, firing
· team with a (;.:3 victory over the Martin Straka's cross-ice p8ss past
.Tampa Bay Ugbming Satunlay.
backup Tampa Bay goaltender J.C.
The Penguins' 7-0 record Bergeron at 3:1·8 of the second .
matches lheir 1986-87 ~ for lhe Bergeron is 0-2 and bas allowed II
best stan in tbe fnmcbise's 28-yeat' . goaJs in his two starts.
Sandscrom lhen assisted on two
history. The Toronto Maple Leafs
set the NHL record wilh a 10-0 goals in a 1:39 span followiDg John
stan last season.
Tucker's fourth of the seasoo for
. Sandstrom twice staned three· Tampa Bay, setting up Jaromir
goal Pittsburgb periods wilh goals, Jagr's power-play goal~ his sixth
giving liim four in seven games...;. ~ atlO:IO and John Cullen's thlnl
only two fewer than be bad in 33
at 11:49. Roo Francis deftly set up

.

·..;

Jagr's goal, faking a·sbOt before
sliding lhe puck to Jagr, who was
skating in from the left circle.
PittsJNrgb again got solid anti,
somelitnb, spectaCular goaltellding
from Ken Wregget, normally the
backup but now 7-0 as a staner
wilh Tom Barrasso out un!il April
with an injured wrist
Wregget again had a busy day in
goal, turning away 37 of 40 shots
as~ ~nthgui.ns ~erethoutsh&lt;&gt;! 40-fS
- uoe Sill tune m eu seven VIC.tories lhey have been outshoL
Roman Hamrlick dribbled a shot
between Wregget's pads at6:48 of

lhe third to get Tampa Bay wilhin
3-2, only the Ligbtning' s fourlh
power-play goal in 32 opponuni·
ties. But Sandslrom scored his second of the game at 9:06, making It
4-2. and lhe 'Penguins !ben. put it
away with two goals in 15 seconds.
Francis • third .of the season
made it S-2 at 10:32 and Cullen
followed with his second of lhe
game and fourlh of lhe season at
10:47.
·
Pittsburgh's Joe Mullen bad a
· f · and eeds t po'nls
pall 0 assiSts
n
wo 1
to become tbe 42nd player in NHL
history to reach 1.000 poiDts.

After cradling glory days of Hull, Jordan and others,

;ChicagovStadium falls to wrecker•s ball
ByRICKGANO
CHICAGO (AP) - The wreck·
ing ball dangled for momentum,
zeroed in on its target and then
with a loud thud pulverized the
ancient wall. Bricks scattered, win·
dows shattered and dusl rose to the
sky. A small crowd booed.
William Wirtz didn't want 10
watch. But he just had to venture
into the cool morning air and see
the beginning of the end for his
beloved Chicago Stadium, a build·
ing that had been in his family
~ince 1936.
"I said I wouldn't be here, but!
wanted to. It's like going ihrough a
wake, but it has to be," an emo·
tiona) Wittz said, choking back
tears.
.
,
Chicago Stadium , where
Franklin Roosevelt twice accepted
his pany's nomination, where Elvis
rocked, where Sinatra crooned,
where the two real Rockys Gratiano and Marciano - fought,
as did Muhammad Ali and Joe
LoUis, began to ·crumbie Friday.
· It was a building where Bobby
Hull rifled pucks at unseen-before
speeds during his days wilh the
Chicago Blackha~ks. It' s where

Michael Jordan swooped above the who began going to the ·stadium as
floor, seemingly suspended in air a child to walch hockey.
" You could still have ice
as he Jed the Chicago Bulls to three
capades here . It's still better for
NBA championships.
There were circuses, track concerts than that place acmss the
meets, bike races and skating exhi· · street. I'm glad my kids got to go
in· before Ihey destroyed it, that's
biiions.
Now, no more. Just debris and a why I'm here gelling pictures. It's.
a bunch of bull. It's a money game.
crashing of ball against wall .
They 're putting up a parking lol. "
The sound of progre ~s .
Some of lhose watching Friday
The stadium, a landmark building in .a city known for famous fetched so uvenir bricks.
Anticipating the souvenir seek·
sporls venues, has been passed by .
"It just could' not survive 2000 ers, the Blackhawks and Bulls,
and beyond,'' Wirtz said.
issued a pr~ss relea~~ promising
The stadium cost only $6 mil · season ticket holders a complimen·
lion to build way back in 1929. lary brick and also promoting the
Where it stood will be a parking iol sale of stadium memorabilia to the
publ,ic in a United Center store.
10 serye itS state·of·the an succes·
sor, the $176 million United Cenler
The demolition is exjll:cted to be
that sits across the streel.• replete completed by mid-May, said James
with revenue-generaling luxury L. Werner, a vice president for U.S.
Dismantlemenl Corp. Because of
suites.
· The Uniled Center, whic h its steel and concrete structure, the
opened in the fall, just doesn't have building was not a candidate 10 be
lhe same f.eel, the same atmo· leveled quickly with dynamite, he
sphere, the same closeness lo the
•
.
action.
"It's sad when everybody else
in the NHL says il's the best s(adi ·
urn in the league and it's being tom
down, " s&amp;id Dennis Slaler, '35,

said. The wrecking ball was also
the cheaper choice for destruction,
he added.
The stadium, known as one .of
lhe loudesl sports arenas in lhJ
country, wa·s called ''The
Madhouse on Madison, " the street
on which it sat on Chicago's ncar
west side.
Blackhawks fans became
famous for their clapping and thun·
derous roar during the singing of
the national anthem.
" II was unbelievable to play
in, " • said former Hawks star Keith
Magnuson, also .walohing. (he
wrecking ball perform its inex·
orable duly . "After the national
anthem, they would continue the
roiu the whole ga me," he added.
One fan held up .a sign in trib·
ure:

.·

KIDN~Y BEANS

1: :

:i1soz.3 j S J O O i : :

.

I
I I
I I

4 II

1

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Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu
Ofler Good Feb. 5 thru Feb. t1,1995

I I
II I
II
• I

BEANS

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Good Only At Powell'a Super lflllu
Offer Good Feb.' thru Feb. ·11,1995

I I I
II Ill

SUGAR
5I

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'1 1 Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
1I II . Offer Good FEB, 5 thru Feb. 11,1995
1

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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ., I - ---- ------ •, ------- • • • • • • • • • •~ La • • •

: :1

$)39 :::
•

Cowboys &amp; Steelers
ruling Pro Bowl field .
By KEN PETERS
.
.
HONOLU~U (AP) - Dallas coach Barry Swtlzer, whose
Cowboys couldn' t get past San Francisco in lhe ·playoffs, bas lhe
49ers' best players on his team lhis week.
.
Switzer will be al lhe helm of tbe NFC, stacked wtth all-stars
from lhe Cowboys arid lhe 49ers, for today' s Pro Bowl game.
"It's a great team," said SwiiZer, wbo will be making his Pro
Bowl coaching debut. "But of course the AFC also bas a great
The NFC team will look familiar to Switter because 10 of his
Cowboys are on lhe roster. Eleven were voted onto the squad, but
running back Emmitt Smith L'n't playing because of an injury.
Dallas' offensive starters are fullback Daryl Johnston, tight end
Ja.y Novacek, center John Stepnoski and guard Nate Newton.
Cowboys slated to open on defense are end Charles Haley, tackle
Leon Leu and safety Darren Woodson.
Wide receiver Michael Irvin, voted in a.' a rese rve, will start
because of injuries to Jerry Rice of San Francisco and Sterlirag
Sharpe of Green Bay.
·
The 49ers had nine players selected in the Utree-way balloting by
fans and the league's coaches and players.
Steve Young, the MVP of lhe 49ers' 49-26 rout of San Diego in
lhe Super Bowl, will open 'at quarterback for the NFC, with Dallas'
Troy Aikman and Minnesota's Warren Moon the backups.
Olher 49ers in lhe starting lineup for lhe 251h renewal of lhe Pro
Bowl are tight end Brent Jones, cornerback Dcion Sanders and free
safety Menon Hanks.
.
Despite lhe presence of lhe high-powered stars from lhe 49ers
and Cowboys ori the NFC side, the AFC, which basn't won a Super
Bowl since the Los Angeles Raiders did it in 1984, bas played the
NFC relatively even in lhe Pro Bowl over that same span.
The AFC has won five of Ute la't II all-star games, although the
NFC won 17·3 a year ago and leads the series 14-10.
Bill Cowher, like Switzer making his Pro Bowl debut, and his
Pittsburgh assistants are the AFC coaches.
The AFC quarterback 00rps will counter the NFC trio of Young,
Ailanan and Warren wilh an impressive lhrcesome of its own Denver's John Elway, New England's Drew Bledsoe and the Los .
Angeles Raiders' Jeff Hostetler. Miami's Dan Marino was
scheduled to stan, but Marino is ailing and can't play, so Hostetler
replaced him on the roster.
The Steeiers, who lost 10 Sao Diego in lhe AFC title game, have
six players in the Pro Bowl, most for the conference. Pittsburgh
staners are cornerback Rod Woodson, linebacker Greg Lloyd and
center Dcnnontti DawSon .
Altbougb lhey won lhe AFC title, lhe Chargers bad just four
players named to lhe all-star squad: linebacker Junior ~eau , running
back Natrone Means, defensive end Leslie O'Neal and kicker John
Carney.
·
There's little concrete at stake in the game, and niost of the all•
stars play for considerably less !ban they get paid for a regular·
season contest. The Pro •Bowl winners get $20,000 each and tbe
losers ·$10,000. That doesn't necessarily mean·, however, lhat the
game isn't competitive.
"It's a fun week and a fun game, although everybody here is a
competitor, and wben tbcy get out there, they tum it on," said lhe
49crs' Jones, appearing in his third consecutive Pro Bowl.

' .

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... ...

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RE-D -::

:: ..

In NFL 's final game of 1994·95 season, ·

"The Old Barn, lhe Sistine
Chapel of Spons. Thanks For the
Memories.''

CREAMEnE

PBATIO -.

WE DID IT! - George Wasington's Kw•me Ev.111 sits on the .
hoop while the C..onlals' rans cclebnte tbelr team's 78-75 UJI"'t win
over tojl-nnked Masacbusetts Satorday In Washilll!ton, D.C. Eva111'
17 points helped the h..ts brak the Minutemen's 16-game winning
· streak in the Colonlal'l' first game agaiDst a top-rankec! team. (AP)

tealn . .,

-

Sausage ••••••••••••••••~!:. 1·
MOUNTAINEER BRAND
·.
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6
9
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T~AN.UOU

•

Penguins still NHL's only unbeatens

4601.

129
Country Style R1bs ••••L:. .

In Ohio college hoops,

I I I.
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SH~:~~~~NG

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.

BEEF

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II

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1'- •• - .UII!It1.P.Jir C.li.,QilU!r ·
I
.• _
Umlt 1 PerCuatomer
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•••••••••••••••

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,

;.__~-=""~ ,._'+-I--- ACCEPTS SPONSORSHIP- Rio Gr•nde men's b.sketb•ll
- - - - - -·- -- -- - - - - ---'
c011ch John La whom (left) ~~c:cepts tbe sponsorship ol the McDo1utld's ·
AFTER DECADES of serving •s the home or the Chicago , bypassers and fan s alike, was puformed to make parking space ror
restaurants In G•lllpolls, Henderson and Rio Gr•nde of Tuesd•y
Blackhawks and tater the ChiCIIgo BuDs, ChiCIIgo Stadium fell vic· the nearby United Center, the new home or the .Blackhawk.• and the
night's men's buketiNtll g•me at Lyne Center •ll•lnsl Mt. Vernon
lim to the wrecking ball Friday. The demolition job, witnessed by Bulls. (AP)
Nalllrene. Presenting the sponsor's check Is f!rlan Decker, the Gal·
llpolis., McDonald's manager.

'·

•

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�'

.P.ge C2--sunday Times--Sentinel

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

February 5, 1985

. February 5, 1995

. Sunday nm~SeoUneJ-Page :Q

Pomeroy-Middleport-:-Galllpolls, OH Point Pleasant, WV

.Alexander breaks late tie to .hand ·Southern 82-77 setback .

PUBLIC NO,ICE
SE

EWITH MICHAEL PANGIO
I SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
CANCELLED FOR TODAY, FEB. 5,
AT 6:00 P.M., DUE TO BAD WEATHER.
RESCHEDULED FOR FEB. 19 AT 7:00 P.M.

. Marietta hands Warren
: third loss in SEOAL play
•
For the second time in three
: · weeks the Southeaslem Ohio Albletic League basketball schedule .
was a victim of a severe wealber
.: speculation, resulting in lbe post: . ponement of one league con.test
· : and one non-league game Friday
: · night
. : In the two games that were
. : played, the Gallipolis Blue Devils
: · traveled to Jackson and came away
· :with a squeaky 51-47 win, while
.: :Warren Local made the short uek
: · to Marietta and ·got buried 70-37.
· :The scheduled game between
: :Athens and Logan was re-set for
: .Wednesday at Logan while the
. :non-league tussle featuring Fair. ·land at River Valley was moved to
:saturday, Feb:ll.
: · · Marlett. 70, Warren Local 37
: At Marietta, a capacity crowd of
:more than 2,000 braved the ele10erits to ·see the two Washington
:County teams coUide for the sec:ond time this seasoh. The standing
-room only crowd in the Sutton
:Gymnasium, recalling Marietta's
':narrow 60-53 victory 81 Warren on
Dec.20, did not see the titanic
·srurgglc lbcy anticipated .
. . The league-leading ·Tigers blew ·
.Warren's do&lt;n off with a 26-4 farst
balf run sparked by bot outside
:sbootiog and a great effort by
.fresbman center Joe Viilmvic, who
:dominated the paint, forcing the
Warriors to shoot from 1be pcrime·
¢c. Warren thus fmisbed the game
.wilb a 35% shooting elfon on 14 of

~JC's

·

40 shots while the Tigers swished
20 of 42.
The Tigers, now 12-.5 overall
and 8-2 in lbe league, led by quarter scores of 15-7, 37-13, and 51·
24. The Warriors (10-5 and 5-3)
finished lbeir season series wilb the
Tigers.
Ryan Robinson led Marietta
scorers with 2·1 points, Vukovic
bad 12, and Josh Harris added 11.
Scott Hendricks, Warren's leading
scorer, led his team with eight
points.
Warren was slated to host the
Belpre Golden Eagles Saturday.
Reserve notes: Marietta intlict·
ed the flfSIIoss of the season on the
Warriors by a 67-57 score, who
bad owned a 14-0 record entering
the contest
·
_._• .:._._
WARREN LOCAL
(7-6-11-13=37)
Joe Greenwalt 0-0-1=1; S~ott
Hendricks J.J.J=8; Chad Canfield
1-0-0=2; Chip Robinson 3-0-0=6;
Steve Elder 4-0-3=11; Seth Barritt
2-0-0=4; Erick Reusser l-0-1•3.
Totals: 13-1-11=37
·

..

•

I ~

KUHN GRABS REBOUND • Ga11lpolls' Richard Kuhn (40)
plc:ks oil one of bill &amp;:after-high eight rebounds during· Friday's
SEOAL cage game at Jacbon. He abo p11mped In a career-high 16
points In the Blue De~ils 51-47 ~lclory. Jacllson defender in mid·
air Is Shane Sbanlon (SO).
·
·

NEW 1995 NISSAN PICKUP
Air, Cassette, sliding rear window, chrome wheels

Per Mo.
•'

MARIETIA
(15-ll-14-19=70)
Ryan Robinson 2-2-11=21; Josh
Harris 0-2·5=11; Greg Tbeiss 2-04=8; ·Brad Kroft 1-0-2=4; Jason
Albrecht 1-0-0=2; Tim Binegar I·
0-1=3; Tim Heslop 2-1-0=7; Mark
Vukovic 1-0-0=2; Joe Vukovic 50-2=12. Totals: 15-5-25=70

Jackson at River Valley (ppd)
Alexander at Meigs (mu)
·
Athens at Cbillicolbe (mu)
Feb. 7 games:
Gallipolis 81 Athens
Jackson at Warren Local
Logan at River Valley
Buf-Wayne at Fairland
Vinton County at Belpre
Parkersburg at Marietta
Southern at Eastgern
Pt. Plcilsant 81 Meigs
Oak Hill at Wheelersburg
Rock Hill at Soulb Point
(See STANDINGS on C-3)

:W L If ill

Iulll

· Wbeelersburg ......ll 31116 . 913
· Greenfield .......... .11 4 978 829
· Logan .......... ........ ll 41049 906
Marietta ......... ...... 12 5 1150 893
· Fairland ............... ll 51090 1041
Chesapeake ......... ll 61058 858
. Warren Local ..... .IO 5 876 843
southern ............. .10 71168 1099
Portsmouth ............9 6'1054 972
Point Pleas3nt........8 6 852 799
Albens .. .............. ...6 8 810 846
River Valley .. :.... ...6 8 870 936
South Point.. ......... .S 8 847 825
: Meigs ................... .5 8 809 878
Gallipolis .... ~ .. ... :... .S 9 740 818
: Jac!&gt;son ...............,..4 10 844 885
· Vinton County ...7.73 12 904 1167
(SEOAL ~arslty)
:

.»:

IwD

lwD

.

.»:

Pt. Pleasant at Gallipolis, ppd, reset
· Feb. 15
.
Belpre 81 Warrea Local ·
HiUsboro 81 Greenfield
Portsmouth at Williamson
Lancaster at Logan
PorUmoulb ND at Wheelersburg
.•

'

-·-·-·-

SOUTHERN

I

NO PAYMENTS,
NO INTEREST*
FOR SIX MONTHS!

AND GARDEN
150 UPPER RIVER RO.
(Acroa from K·Mart)
GALUPOUS
446·7826 ·
TRADE-INS WELCOME

TA:KINIG CHARGE- Aaron Sheets, 1hown loc:ldllll up Mount
_llnlon'l hearywelgbt, Is bavlng an outstanding season as a member of
John Carroll's wrestling team. Sheets owns a 17-5 record for the
14tb·nmked Blue Streaks.

O'DELL
LUMBER
634 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY
992·5500

WINTER SPORTSMEN SPICIAL$11

(Continued from C-2)
Chesapeake at Vinson

Feb.8pme:
Athens 81 LOgan (mu)
; Feb. 10 pmes:
ltiver Valley vs. GAHS at URG
Warrea Local 81 Athens
·
Marietta at Jackson
Nels- Yl)(k at Vinton County
Greenfield 81 Miami Trace
Miner 81 Southern
Pt. Pleasaot 81 Wahama
Wbeela1burg at Northwest
South Point at Coal Grove
Chesapeake 81 Buf·Wayne
Meigs 81 Belpre

POMEROY

618 EAST MAIN ST.

GALLIPOLIS
. ,SECbND &amp; SYCAMORE

992·6674

446..()303

Feb. 11 games:
Gallipolis at Warren Local (rpu)
Waverly at Albens
Alexander 81 Portsmoulb
Logan at Cbillicolbe
Ironton 81 South Point
Fairland at River Valley (mu)

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 9-6; SATURDAY 9-5

_ ..J.AS V!IDAS (AP) - Figures
released showed Nevada's 105
legal spons books toot. a record
$69.6 milliOn in bets on this year's
SuperBowl. ..
The bettors came out slightly
ahead witb, lbe books losing a total
·or $396,674 on the

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Payments with $1000 plus tax &amp; t~le down,
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SALE ENDS 2· 11 ·95

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Annual Percentage
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This CD is automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdray;al.
A.f .Y. is available a.• of the date of this .issue, but is subject to change.

POINT PLEASANT, WV -25550
STORE IIOUIS1 llj)IIDAY • fRIDAY, 91341.All-6100 PM
SATURIIY, t1JO All-5100 Pllj SUIIDAY, 11001-5:00 PM .

PLUM STREETS'
PHOJIIE

--

BINOCUOIRS

~GNLM

PHOII (3041 675·2911• LOCATED NEIT TO MASON COUNTY FAIIlGIJ43UNI~S

WHARTON JEEP/EAGLE
,J..,,..,,.

ALEXANDER
(24-2.4·16·18=112)
Pete Williams 0-1·0=3, Kenny
Waggoner 3-2-0=12, Chad Jarvis
3·5-1=22, Josh-Mace 1·2·2=10, Joe
Grubb 3-2·2=14, Tr.tvis Rice 5· 1·
6= 19, Th9mas llaskitl 1·0-0=2.
Totals: 16· 13-11/17=82

I

College In Williamsport, Pa. earlier
in January. Twenty teams from
seven states took part in the twoday event. John Carroll finished
seventh, with Sheets winning two
matches and losing his third.
Sheets' record this season stands
at 17 -5 as be looks ahead to th.e
Ob10 A.thleuc Conference cbampl·

· 4X32
3X9X32

c..w..,o ...

(20.15-31·11=77)
Jeremy Hill 4 -4·5=2 5. Ryan
WiUiams 8·3·0=25, Jamie Evans J.
0-1=3, Mason Fisher 7-0 -0a 14,
John Harmon 1-0-2=4 . Tot.ls: ll,_a/19:.77

O'DELL$ LAWN

Cage standings•••

17'S YOURS FOB '390'4
1995 GRAND CHEROKEE

.1

grabbed 32 led J:&gt;y Williams' seven,
Har10on's eight and Mason Fisber·s six.
Alexander bad seven steals, 21
turnove rs and· 15 fo uls, while
Sout hern bad 14 s teals,, 13
turnovers and 16 fouls.
.
Southern will go north to face
Eastern Tuesday.
Reserve notes: Alex woo 6 1·39
led by D. Guthrie' s 18. For South·
ern ,-Ryan N orris bad 13, whi le
Jesse Maynard had seven.

'

L I l ill

.

· Feb.4pmes:

.

Carroll a 15- 13 victory. After the
match, John Carroll bead coach
Kerry Volkman said that Sheets'
superior conditioning"was evident
and that this was one of the best
matches be bad wrestled in his
career.
John Carroll also pani~lJialed in
the seventh annual D1v1S1on III
National Dual meet at Lycoming

Friday's score
: Alexander 82, SOUTIIERN 77

FOR ALL .SEASONS ·

L If ill

:Marietta .................9 I 558 385
·Warren Local .........7 I "'39 279
)ackson ..................6 3 384
I
'Aibens ...................3 5 251 21
(Jallipolis .............. .2 6 302
Logan ............... .....2 7 311
ltiver V31ley ......... .! 7 260 3
tOTALS
30 30 1459 1459
· ·: Friday's res.ults:· ~
Gallipolis 5l Jackson 47
. .lactSon 53 Gallipolis 48 (ot, r)
Marietta 70 Warren Local37
Marietta 67 Warren Local 57 (r)
Athens 81 I.Osan. ppd. reset Feb. 8 1
Fairland at River 'Valley; ppd, reset
Feb. 11
Alexander 82 Southern 77
~enburg 76 Waverly 43
Rod: Hill 64 Cbesapc:ate 61
Wi:llston at Meigs, ppd, reset Feb.

t3

:' ADA- Wrestling for the John Mount Union, Muskingum and
:carroll University Blue Streaks, Ohio Northern.
•)ienJQ[ heavyweight Aaron Sheets
Sheets pinned his flfSI opponent
:{Meigs '91), the son of Jim and from Muskingum and then received
'ieonlfer Sheets of Pomeroy, woo a forfeit from Capital because of an
!an six of his matches at the Ohio injury to its heavyweight.
!:Atbletic Conference Duals held on
His next three matches were
:il'an. 27 and 28 at Ohio Northern · with Baldwin - Walla~e . O~io
·University.
Northern and Mount Un1on, wbicb
:~ Also panicipating in this two· be won by scores of 9-2, 5-0 and 4•d'a y tournament were Baldwin- 3. HiS last matcl.l was with Heidel. :wallace, Capital , Heidelberg, berg and Sheets again pinned his
opponent to belp John Carroll win
21-17.
·
John' Carroll also defeated
~age S
M4skingum 46-3, Capital 48-0,
Oblo Division
Baldwin-Wallace 36-6 and Ohio
·
Div. Overall Northern 24-12 before losing 20-15
•....0_
·
to eventual champion Mount
.:Belpre
........,. .......................R7 .,L.2 R9 .L.5 Union.
John Carroll finished secd
·Wellston·...................6 4 8 ·7 on week earlier, the Blue Sueaks
:MEIGS .................... .4 6 5 8 were at Ashland University for lbe
:Vinton County..........3 8 3 12 · annual contest between these two
· ~elsonville-York ......2 8 3 11 wrestling powerhouses. John Car:;
Hoalag Division
·
· roll is ranked 14th in the latest
NCAA .Qi.Vision .Ill poll, while the
3~::.~.!........9 . 3 10 . 6 Divisio.lt:ll Ashland Eagles are
fdWallfocldiig .......1 2 9 4 rated eighlb.
~ller.....,..................6 4 6 7
As ellpected, the match .went
Alexandet.::..............6 4 6 8 down to the heavyweight bout,
EASTERN.......:........ 3 6 4 9 which Sheets won 4-l to give Jobn
l'rimble ..................... 2 8 2 II

Sports brief

Marietta ............ .....8 2 6S I 505
:Logan ... .................7 2 602 534
:warren Local ........5 3 442 446
River Valley ......... .3 5 477 547
.Gallipolis ....... ... .... .3 5 371 435
:Athens ........... ........2 6 434 514
Jackson .. ............... .2 7 533 559
:TOTALS
30 303540 3540
(SEOAL mervu)

left. William s co un tered with a
three for ·a 75-74 ll:3d, but Mace's
three just seconds later knocked the
socks off the Tornadoes. ·
Fisher came bact to tie it 77.77
(1 :33), but Rice broke lbe ice-jam
as Harmo n exited with hi s fifth
foul. Rice bit lbe firs t, but missed
the second to put AlellaDder 78-77
with 1:24 Ieft.
Alex really stepped l!P the pres·
sure defensively, while Southern
struggled to get the shot it wanted.
Southern missed and fouled quickly, sending Grubb to the lin e,
where be too missed. Then the play
o r the game ca me wh en Mace
stepped .into the lane and grabbed
the rebound and jack-hammered
the balllbrough lbe hoop for an 8077 tally with 35 seconds left.
SHS missed but got a break
wben Alex was called for a charge
wilb 25 seconds. Jeremy Hill got
off a shOt; but it was deflected and
went out-of-bounds off Southern.
The Tornadoes strate gically
fouled and bad another chance wilb
17 .3 seconds left wbeli Grubb
missed another free lbrow, but did
not get the rebound. SHS bad to
foul again, but Grubb drilled the
last two to clinch lbe game.
· Soulbern bit 23-48 twos, bit 822 threes and was a sub par 8-19 at
tbe line. Alexander bit 16-38 twos
and 13-22 threes for 48.3% wilb an
11-17 night at lbe line.
Alexander bad 27 rebounds led
by Rice's 13 , while Southern

A

SALE s1 0,832
USED VEHICLES

and ph ysical from the onset, but
what may have been a questionable
call on the court, quickly became l\
wake-up call for th e Tornadoes .
Mild-mannered Mason Fisher bard·
pressed along lbe right sideline was
whis tled for an offensive fo ul (a
forearm) while on the dribble.
Disgruntled by a few earlier
calls, Caldwe ll became incensed
with this unlikely call a quickly
drew a technical in ' pro test.
Although Southern fe ll further
behind when Rice nailed the free
lbrows to give Alexander a 53-39
lead, the antics brought the Soulb·
ern fans bact into the game and
sparked the Tornado players.
Soulbern went on a 17-5 run,
sparked by steals from Harmon,
Hill and Williams. Jeremy Hill
made it 55-58, Alexander, with a
big steal and ensuing lay -up and
was fouled with 2:24 left. Rees
called a time out to stop 1be chaos,
but Hill drained the free .tbrow for a
two-point game.
. Jarvis bit a three-pointer, but a
Fish er goal and Williams three·
pointer (set up by an Alexander
turnover) tied the game 61 -61.
Alex went.up 64-63 wilb 25 second
left, but Southern went for the last
shot and Hill drilled lbe long three
at the bozzer for a 66-64 SHS lead.
The fiRal round was tooth-and·
nail as 1be game was eilber tied or
wilbin two points. Tied at 72, the
lead changed on.c e again as Rice
put bis club up 74-72 with 2:24

Sheets balloons personal· record to 17-5

:-rye b · ·, · ·
··•
oys
''
I · d.i
an ngs

.Cage standings
111M-115-IIIIgamea

ALBANY - Another emotion- game was bigblighlal by seven ties
· al roller-a.stcr ride on the South· and eight lead changes, plus the
·em express ended when the host drama of an adventurous Southern
Alexander Spartans deraile d the canebadc.
Tomadoc:a 82· 77 in a last minute
C had -l~vi s and Jerem y Hill
· sboodog banage Friday night in a traded three-pointers to start lbe
boys' Tri-Valley Con fe re nce game, bu t after a 5-5 deadlock,
· matdlup.
Alexander slowly began to take
Alexander's win was bigbliglil· charge. Travis Rice came up with
ed by a record· tying performance two big steals to initiate a fa st
in wbicb Jay Rees' lads pumped in break, which often led the Spartans
13 NBA lbree-pointers, including 10 pull up-and shoot the threenine In the farst half.
pointer, Kentucky style. . Alex held
The Tornadoes ; meanwhile , · leads of 11 · 8 and 13· 8 before
.. poured In nine lbree·poiotcrs of Evans and Hill tightened the gap at
their own, but Josh Mace's long 13-12..
bomb late In the game helped
Alexander was sizzling bot the
deflate Southern's comeback bid as first half of play, but despite their
'Ryau Williams three-pointer bad bulls-eye accuracy could no( shake
just given Southern a 75-74 lead lbe Tornadoes. Ryan Martin bit a
aod a tremendous amount of SHS lbree-poioter with 23 seconds
m1111entum.
left in tbe first frame to cut Alex' s
Alexander placed five JOCD in lead to 24-20 at the period' s end.
double ligures, led by Olad Jarvis'
Much lite Eastern, an 83-76
22 points on five three-pointers, winner, picl::ed up the intensity on
,.Travis Rice's 19, Joe Grubb's 14, Alexaoder Tuesday night," the Spar·
• ~enoy Waggoner's 12 and Josh tans did the same thing to Soulb·
: Mace's 10.
em. Alex went on a 14· 4 run to
• Soulbem had 25-point efforts lead 38-26, forcing SHS bead
· : .from seniors Ryan Williams and coach Howie Caldwell to call a
,
: Jeremy Hill. Hill tossed in four time out.
• three-pointers, while Williams had
Southern ended the frame much
: three. Teammate Mason Fisher net· stronger, but after Williams bad cut
' .ted 14 points.
the lead to 46-35 with . 12 seconds
:: The game, still representing a left in the half, Joe Grubb drained a
:torrid fight for the Hoclcing Divi- lbree· pointer 81the buzzer for a 48-~ion's top spot and a chance for 35 .Ale" lead. Alexander bad bit a
:~oday ' ueed in the Division III 65% plus first half clip iii part
; tournament drawing, was very because of nine lbree-pointers.
!~ompetitive from the onset. The
The game was bolb competitive

Eagle

j

.

I

I

�Pomeroy-MiddlePort-Gallipolis, OH · Point Ple...nt, wv

Page C4 Sunday Tlmea-Sentinel

•

February 5,1995

;. __~~~~~~s~.~~~~s~.----------------------------&lt;:)~·~~~~t~(l~()~()~r~S=-------------------~s~un=~~y~TI~tm~es~-s~e~nti~ne~l~~s
NBAstandings
55

Allao*DI-

Canlinaloo 6$, -

l! L l&lt;t. · Ia

IIoa

. . w.......-...-.. .

.. ..
•
•

11

11
11.!5

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·
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CI.I!YI!UND ..... ..26 II

CbiAso--·---.22 23

22

.,·.

.605

2

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2..5
1
9
12
12..5

.419

ALlanla .... - ......... _..20 25

.444

Mllw•ukec: ·-·-·-·- 11 21
DouoiL ....... - - ..... IS 21

.371

.!57

ea.......,.

••

.,••

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•l Dl•lllon

·.

d'l~........... ...... 1 I~ ~

•

·:·•-•

San An.umio .. ___ ..2J

HouaiM ·-··-·-·-.:J:I
o...................... ..20

14 .667
IS .643

:14 ...,

..·.••

o.nu .....................l7

·:••

Pbomi.l. ........~ .........l6 9
Selule ...................:n 11
L.A. Lilin .......... .26 16

.619

11
PuWnd .................23 20
Ooloton s.... .......... IJ 29
L.A. Clippea " ..... -..7 31

.Sil
JJl
.310
.156

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26
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•'

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S1c:ramcnlo ...... .... ..l.S

••

:·••

so

.100

15

IJ

, 10
12
21.5
29

New Yodr: I06, Atilaclolpbia 16
Miomi 105, Wuhinpn 9S
Cluloac 117, Milwaukcc 91
lndianl 111, Orlmdo J06
Saalc 121, Atlant.a 91
Pwolond 112, ~... !1'1
San AnlaiW:rl14, Dl11u 103
PhDenia II 0. Oticaao I 00
Denver II, LA. l.Uea 74
Ooldea s.... 106. L.A. ClippOn 19

•'••

..

~=
'•

::

:-..

~hey

•

played Saturday

·-

Today'sga"""

New Yott ll Odando, 1 p.m.
Se~qle It Miami, 1 t:'c,
W11hingtoru1 Ow
2 p.m.
HClUI&amp;Cln" Phocnil., 3:30p.m.
MinnCIOCa •• 8Gitm, 1 p.m.
Chica&amp;O It Odden ~to. I p.m.'

.·.

,.
•

Eutlake N. 10, Mlyfidd 66
Elida 83, l.im8 Bath Sl

Elyria 6 2 ; - 60
Elyria W. 79, Av..,lliJJ&gt; 11
Eoclid 71, acdfont 67
Palrlaa tiS, B. C:W.. 64

Fairportllonlina59, Led- 45
Fdicity 99, Betf.l·Tate 1l
f'onclloy 57, Newull ol6
f'ordoodo 57, Lonin a..mc., 51

North Coast Athletic Conf.
Caac Wca1cm 62. WiucnbcrJ 59
Kenyon 10, Oberlin 53
OtUo Wcdcylll14,
DatDon
.S8
.
.

•
•
,.·

..
..•...

Calvert 41

·-••

Iow161, Ohio SL 61

58

Dd'ooul 9S, Doylen 79 .

'·

North Coast Athletic CoDI.
Wittmba:l11, CUe wman ~ 1

OIUo W..!Cyon 70,1laWon 51)
Kenyon 70. Obe:din 42

•
,.
••

...•.
...

A1uon auclooei7S, Akron N. S3

Akron Cl:ni.·Hower 16, Akron Ken ~
mon40
Akron Covonqy 10,lnd.ian Val. S4
•
Akron F'ustme 12., Akron Ellc:t 57
Aluon Gufoeld 65, Aluon E. 41

..

..•'
•

67

Sports brief
Cup challenger trials, beating
oneAustmlia by 2 minutes, 6 sec·
oocls in wind of only 4 knots.
·

&amp; Join Us.

Please Come

MIZWAY TAVERN
RT. 7 &amp; 143

POMEROY, OHIO

S1

461

8-

Obcdin 74, Loain
5!
Ontario 15, Fnxterld:town 41
0...,. 79, Lm!oa 6!
Oranp Olr. 69, Oalt.a Milia lbwtm

SOUTH THIRD ·.

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Fnnk1ln63""'· "
Plquo 66, w."·
Comllllnn
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Ha.nnibll.River 78, )bpolia,
W.V• .
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ParlomoulhB.91. -aolhCloy5!

CONfiNINtAL

Ravaw. Soulhcaat 63, W atcdoo 60

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Rc)'DOldtbut:a 71, Delaware 64

~

Rii:hinond Dale SoulhCallcm 61,

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'21 ,995

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pen.;,. 75, Ridlmond Edioon 60
8ellofomainc 65,1Ccnm Ridac 66

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llaUhUo 42, Cmlinol !9
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Sports deadlines
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Times-Sentinel value the conlribu·
tions their readers make to the
sports sections or tbesc papers, and
tbey will continue to be published.
: However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and
related articles for football and
-~------ou~er fall-sporu is the Saturday
before the Super Bowl .
The deadline for photos and
related articles for baslcetbaU (sum·
·mer basketball and related camps
fall under the sununer sporls dead·
line) and other winter sports is the
last day of the NBA finals. The .
deadline for submissions of local
baseball· and softball·related pbo. tos and related articles, from T·ball
to tbe majors, as well as ~tber
spring and summer sports, 1s the
day of the last game of the World
Series.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors ·the time they
peed to acquire their photos ft'om
the photography studio/developer
of choice and to give the staffs the
chance to ptiblish iliese items in the
appropriate season for those sports.
..

•-n••

IIRDS,.IR

I PASSENGER

2 Dr., PS, PB, V-6 engine, power steering,
~~~~~~~~~~~~ brakes, auto. .. =
. ·= • - ffi
cond~ioning, full wheel
covers.

SPICIIL

'

liAI1

Sat. 8:30-6:00

us

~ow 13,995
IIIONRD .
AEROS,.ia XIII'
7PISSENGER

2,485

8

SPECIAL

'1,995

Just Arrived
2 Fantastic
70'x28'S

Between Logan and Nelsonville

•

"Where Service Means Your Satisfaction"
•

•

••

'

sister Snow were abancloned by
their mother Ulu soon after their
births. A keeper spoiled them lying
on the cold, damp floor of tbe
Northern Shores exhibit.
They are the first polar bears
born at tbe zoo since 1977. If they
reach adulthood. they will be the
fmt to be successfully raised by
humans to adulthood in a U.S. zoo
since 1982.
They are a demanding pair, ·
often screaming in bigb-pltcbed
tones to be fed. They also take long

By MOLLY HALL
DENVER (AP) - Klondike
squealed and flanled his fur·bound
arms and legs in the air when Den·
ver Zoo vet Dr. David Kenny
rolled the baby polar bear on his
back.
Like human babies, be
explained, polar bear cubs can't
easily turn themselves over .
"They're pretty undevelo~ 00111·
pared to most carnivores, ' Kenny
said .
Born Nov. 6, Klondike and his

•

I: I .

•

naps on slabs of ice,
Both are covered with white
fuzz and have now opened their big
brown eyes. They have grown from
just over 1. pound at birtb to around

15 pounds and their paws are biJ.
They'll gel mucb bigger. Aduh
polar bears like their father Olaf
weigh around 1,000 pound s and
(See BEARS on C-6)

CHEVROLET
SILVERADO 4x4,
Automatic, air
cond., amlfm/cass,

power windows,
locks cruise, tilt, ·~......
one owner, alum

wheeb~·~·;:~::::::::;l

(614)

The

(614)

667-3350
Call
John Reeves
or
Coolville,
Ohio L:M::OT::O::R::CO:M:PA:::N::Y~ Jerry Bibbee
667·3350

~.!~=.7

Bibbee

· BLACKPOWDER BUCK- 16-year-old Ricky Yoot Jr. of Rut·

l&amp;lld bagged tbls elabl-polnt hock on J.IIIL 7, the flu! day of Ohlo'lil
primitive .weapon cf...,r HUon. The d""r Is tbe firSt Yost hu killed ·
with a muz:rJe-loadlng rifle.

WANTING TO BUY A HOME?
OR HOW ABOUT
REFINANCING THAT HIGH INTEREST LOAN?
Fmha, FHA, VA and CONVENTIONAL LOANS
AVAILABLE
•Low or NoDownpayment
• Special Financing Programs Available
• Programs for Your Individual Needs
• Low Fixed &amp; Adjustable Rates
• Evening Appointments Available
• Local Representative for 10 Years
• Free Prequalification

E
BONES
VI

~

--

SALE!

LUIDEft

11!1111' FIVE

STAR

CALL VICKIE HAULDREN
(614) 446·4042
CDRPORAnON
MOR11iAfif

•·80()..878·:97~6~7~.!!!~-!~~mi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~

Check Our Selection Of
Used Vehicles
SALE ENDS FEB. 7th
93ACCORD SE

~ doOI. pale ~ue. ail,
~~eo.

aUiomalic.

Tbe Southeastern Ohio and

8

3.8 V-6 eng., PS •. PB, auto.

Open Mon.-Fri. 8:30-8:00

\·

Per
Month

20 Yrs. 10% Down, 11.25% APR

1

1993 MERCURY
SABLE LS 4 DR.
.

A New Dimension In Manufactured
· Home Living Winter Special

$295

I

.~. 8 18,995

• Clevaodo 4l

IVERDALE

..

V-B eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air cond.,
AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise,
leather interior with dual power seats,
cast aluminum wheels, local car.
WAS $19,995

J,le~vcr Loui62. Wclkville 60

.

will host the Obio
Turkey
Seminar, ·Calling Cootest and Banquet on March 4 and 5 at tbe Neisonville· York High School in
Buchtel.
Featured speaker will be Rob
Keele, premier turkey caller and
NWIF executive vice-president.
The schedule is as foUows:
Saturday - business meeting
and. director's report, 11·11: 30
a.m.; award presentations, 11 :30·
11:40 a.m.; turkey in Ohio update
by Bob Stoll, Ohio Division of
Wildlife, 11:40..12; uniq~e turke~
_calls, Rob Keele, 12·12.30 p.m.,
turkey hunting safety, Jim Wentz,
ODOW; 12:30-1 p.m.; preseason
scouting, Jim Stoll, Rohm Brnth·
ers, 1·1:30 p.m;; opponunitics on
WNF, Marsha Wikle, 1:30· 2: 15
p.m.; bow hunting, 2:15·2:45 p.m.;
WLFA activities in Obio, Bill May,
2:45·3 p.m.; smoke pole turkey
bunting, Cbuclc Davis, SEO
NWTF,. 3-3.:30 p.m.; advanced
turkey tactics. Rob Keck, 3:30;4:30
p.m.
Sunday - fr\ction call, George
Bauer, Quater Boy, 9:30-10:15
a.m.; mastering tbe diaphragm call,
Rob·Keck, 10: 15·11 a.m.; NWTF
in Ohio, Walle Ingram, 11·11:15
p.m.; Rocky Boots Obio State
Turkey Calling, 11 :15-3 p.m.; raf·
De drawing, 3 p.m.
In addition, a wild twli:ey bunt·
ing interactive training system will
be In operation both days or lbe
event.
·
Daily admission is as follows:
NWTF members, $3; al!ult non·
member, $5;. spouse/child, $2; kids
12 and under free.
Contacl Bob Boyles at698·2229
(home) or 593-3341 to make reservations for the banquet which will
be held at the Quality Inn in Nel·
sonville on March 4 at 6 p:m. The
cost of attending the banquet is $40
whicb includes a year's NWTF
membership dues.
For more information contact
the Athens County Visitor's .

Youths ages 7·10 and 11·14 will
bave an opportunity to test their
· casting, pitching and Dipping skills
at the Bassmaster Casting Kids
Competition to be held Sunday,
Feb. 12 from 2·5:30 p.m. at tbe
University Mall in Athens.
The contest is free and open to
tbe bile. ..
~nsored by tbe Southeastern Bureau at
Ohio Bass Club, tbe kids w!U .be
judged oo basic casting, pitching
a1ld Dippins slciUs:
Each competitor will receive a
he Bassmuter Casting Kids cer·
tifiCIIte of competition and a copy
of the program's official publica-.
lion, Bassmaster Casting Kids
Magazine. Winners at the local
level also receive a medallion and a
Zebco rod and reel.
· Those who make the national
fmals will compete against young·
sten In their own age group for
$20,000 in scholarships and prizes.
Tbe contest, sponsored on a
natiOnal level by tbe Bass Anglers
Sportsman Society, Zebco and
Rubbermaid, is based on the old
footbaii"Punt, Pass and Kick"
competition. The contest begins on
the local level where each entrant
will be judged on casting, pitching
lind flipping in official lanes, aim·
ing at the standard Bassmaster .
Casting Kids target to ensure com·
petition uniformity. Scoring will be
based op a point system with the
highest points determining the win.
ner in each of two age groups.
From there, lbe winners from
each local competition advano;e to
their "respective state competition
and then on to a national compeli·
tion where only 10 semifinalists
wiD atle!ld 1!1e BASS Masters 9as·
iiC-iii August and compete for the
two titles of national champion: .
For more information write
Southeastern Ohio Bass Club, P.O.
Box 108, Athens, Obio 45701 or
call David Ulbrich at 1·592-2037.

o"'

SIGNATURE SERIES 4 DR. 3.8 V-6 eng.,
PS, PB, auto. trans., AM/FM stereo cassette,
Climate Control, air cond., P. windows &amp; P.
Locks, dual power seats, leather inlerior, cast
aluminum wheels. ·

..•
'.''·
..'

"""·

•~
She urged anyone seelcin~ more
" information about the orgamzation
10 attend the Feb. 271DilCting.
Amon~ tbe servius offered by
the auxiliary are courtesy marine
examinations, boating safety ttain·
ing and other special training,

PHONE 992-2196

Orwell Gr•nd Rinr 68, Elrri• Pint
Bop&lt;. 52 .
Olqo 62, Elm- 47
Oaowo ffiDa 73, Danbury 51 (OD

P...•""'"""

••:

:
Area resldent:s working towards
. establishing a local flotilla of the
.United States Coast Guard Auxil·
iary wiD bold a meeting at tbe Car·
penters Local 650 Hail on Main
Stm:t in Pomeroy, on Feb. 27 at 7
p.m.
.
In addition, a safe boating
· course will be held at the ball start·
, ing March 20 from 7·9:30 p.m.
• Passing the course can earn boat
: owners a discount or up to 10 per·
; cent oo insurance for their boats.
. Coast Guard Auxiliary member
· Carolyn Goodrich commended
" local residents for welcoming the
: USCGA to the area and thanked
: tbe Carpenters Local 650 for open·
• ing its doors to lbe group.
:
"We hope we can help the area
: as much as they have helped the
: U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary," she

992-9943

B•tavil 71, Cin. Landmuk Ott. 46
D•y Villlae 62, Rocky River .53
tJeavct County, P1. 71, VictOI) Cht.

••
...'
'

~ ..

PiclbWJblt. New Ieney, 1:]() p.m.
Ano11c0a" Loo Anpi•,I:05 p.m.

Starting Tuesday, February, 7th
Every Tuesday Night at 7 p.m.
Moderator Bob Arms

AtronSLV·St.M7l,WIIbhJc-uil10
Aleundu 12, R1cinc Southcm n
Alliallcc 70, Muaillon l'a1y 60

•

....
•

6!

eastcm 59

~

T!""J'J a., • Malo. 7 p.m.

EUCHRE TOURNAMENT

Menta 91, B. a...tmd Show 75
64, Cbr. Communi!, 52

Aluon~t«14,SondyVol.47

~

••
'•·

·

o...mtlo74, llomo Union !7

.

Mo.-"· FoaysbwJ 43
lolo:Comb 17, Von a...., 71
lolochoni-._ 74, W. Uhctf Solao

54

Oroatevicw 62. S. OwieJton South·

Ohio H.S. boys' scqres

Hut!onlll Qullbec. 1:30p.m.
~at VanDauvor, .S p.m.

Noowoocl59, Maaal 51
Oak Harbor 77, Sanduaky SL Mary•

·

Go.-.uJo 50, Cnool...... 45
O...o71,1ct!- 57
Clonoo64, N......... 61
CAbooobuo119, Xonou l..obco o4l
Onhun 7f. v...m. 61
Onftd Vol. S2, ..,.,........ Vol. 57
Onftdview 64,11ulC1 51

Great Midwest CoofereDce

.

Today'agames

15
10
10
13
21

Norwalk SL P.ul 57, Collint W•tmn

FranontRA. 57, Napolciun Sl
F""""'' Sl.loocp119l, Mollawt 65
Gahanna 64, WederVille S. !58
o.u;poliost,JI&lt;k.... 47
.

Big TeD

12

~.56

Fad l..cnrnie67,Jacbon CC\I"Ur 57
Fonori• S\, Wondelia 41, Tiffin

Ohio women's
college scores

12 21
0 10 26
1 9 16
o 1 15
2 6 12
2 6 13
2 2 17

TlfiiDIOM.CIJau7, 10:3Dp.m.
Dulillli..-Aqclet, IO:JO p.m.

Noomoi'rAII tn, FnntJin·62
Now Albon1 71, WW..pon 64 (3 OT)
New KnDaville 65, New Branen 57
New Lc&amp;in..., 61, ~ 64
Now IUdwond 82, WilliomobwJ 57
Nil017t, SIIUlhcn S3
Noftlonia 76, L)'nd.hwll &amp;n.b 60
.
N~p69,0W.64 ·
Norwalk 73, Oalion (:JJ

E. Uv...,.,.ll.l, OU Glai, W.Va. 21 ·

Great Midwest C,oni.
t.lo:mpruo 74, Ono:innoti fl:l \OD

.'...

Delph.:. St. John'a 10, POZ\ RECha)'

Educatloni~~~W~ild •r.......;

,
An Obio
.
• Coarse will be held Feb. 14·16
l'rom 6-9 p.m. aDd Feb. 18 from 9·
; 11 a.m. • the MeiRS County Public
Librlwy oo Main Stn:et in Pomeroy.
'The free class Is maodatocy for
all fint time bunters seeking an
Obio bunting license. In addition,
• proof or passing a bunter educatlbn
• ooune is often needed to pun:base
an out-of·state bunting license in
: other lllales.
Foe more Information or. to reg·
: ister for the class, contact.Chief
Instructor Dana Aldridge at 992·
6311.

w-.,..
llollot .. so. Lauii, 1:30 p.m.

. Yacht nic:lng
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Team
New Zealand ~ailed to iis ninth
straight victory in the America's

MluotV.....,71,'Nblldsoll61
N. Adomt 11, Oomaelown 66
N. BaltinKn 67, NGwr Ri.el64
N. C..~m~ 65, Cm~m~ OlaiOok 50
N. Callcae HiD 64, Cin. Scvonllillo 53

Ddl.l90, Bryan 76 ..
0....76,Cloymm145
E. Knoa 64, M.au6clol Ca. 60

Ohio men's
college scores

II

-Rid.

Dc.Gtalf llivcnidc 66, Bcajunitl Lo-

61

""'Ctinlon

61, 5. Rid&amp;c 5!
!.tincr&lt;o 96, Conolltao 60
·
Mlelml tn, Mdl.moa Norlll- 52
-9D,Pullwoy69
Mopdaoll9,- 71
Molod&lt;n n.w 71, s-.~ao 73

aanSS

22

25

l'lodMMW--7:30p.m.
S...Jc..t
7:30 , ....

15

Quobec....---· ' I
Bullalo...- · -· 4 2
a - - ..--·-· 4 2
llullonl ..- ...-. 2 2
- . . t ......,_, 2 2
ea. ... ----· 0 5

......... 62

.
Doy, &lt;llrillion 62, Middlooown 0... 56
Day. Plttenon II , 0.)'. Dunt?u?S

3 16

N.Y.!IaPs•Oaoon.7:30p.m.
N.Y. IolaliiiM• """""-~,7:30p.m.

26

l'll*qlo .. _ ... , 6 0 . 0

9D, lllllfonl S7
MiddldOWft Pmwid: 69, Od'ord T•·

O&lt;
eo.hoc:&amp;oa 61, 0ua'fty60
C.yohop Folia 64, B - 59
Day. Belmcm 91, Dty. Meadowdale

15·
:10

I
I
I
I

- ... a...

Contiaattll 51, Li.bwly c . . . 40
eo-Mow
Allm B. 66

5 11
5 21
5 ' (I
3 I

I . 1 II

Newl...,, ....... 2 3
N.Y.
2 S
l'bllod&amp;lpllio--· 2 5
I '

Miomi Vol. 65, Vol 43
!oiWnioburJ 6 4 , - 61

c....,
69.
c..pl9 63, Tollm.....

88

Cllr. 61, SllokiaohCllr. 41
~ 71,
53
Muieu.I70. Vmc:ra W111111 31
Morion-14.N-61 (01')
Morion Rlwr Vol. 15, Spu!AifiJhlond

Modino 73,1otidpuk 5!
Medina 'Pln1•Bapt. 63, Hcritap Cu.

eo.- Vol.64,~0...51

36
33

14

ot-

21
21

N-DI.W..

Ma1iaol'oay·7 l,B-Locol54
Muyoville 73, Wolllina """orial42
Muailkla Cllr. 66. Solan Raoll.ife41

39

20

•

nme..Santiiiet stall·

Buffalo at
.tpfU, 1 P."'- ·
HW'ood
I:!Op.m.
T....,.&amp;o,al'lllobwJh.I:JOp.m. '
NowleeJ .. ~.I:JO p.m.

7 21

flarido ....... -..... 3 '

w.......-.. . .

Map' wuocf 61, BJc.cmld 63

55

l l 1

Rona•-·

MllVD 93. No a c
&amp;wn S.
Maplo lllo. 75, Wdlaof_bf S. 11

Cal Soulh 10, Col.- 65
Col SL ctwlol61, Col. DoS.-..
Col. W•79,Coi.BoiP51
.
c.t. w....... 72. DubU. 10
CoL Whoulone U , C&lt;il. Em 6$
Coldwalor SS, Muioa l.DCil S4 (01') •
Columbiana 90, ' - U 55
;c!lumbil.na Cna.view 16. Soulheta
Local75
.
.
Com11U1 Ill, Alllubulo SO. 1ollll 5 I

lnclima 11 Cl.EVEU.ND, 7:30p.m.
......... lllloln&gt;il, 7:30p.m.
• Bocoa It New l111HJ,I P-'1'·
Phi.laclelpbialt MilwUee. 1:30 p.m.
Utah 11 D.llu,l:30 p.m.
S1cramento 11 San Anlonio, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. l..akcn 11 L.A . Clippcr1, 10:30
p.m.

Tom~Ba1 .......

Laou71,1ohnotown53
Modioon57,PaincavilleU..... 53

5!

7 20
6 20
6 20

4

I 4 I

11

'hey 'f!~!.ed Saturday

~ . . lfH ~~Eft'

Loodaa.W.SI,W. - . , .

' 62

Z

16

Dlomii5, AnoheHn2

Allu*DI"'loll

cz

~tc 60
c.t. llanloy n, C&lt;il. w......,.n
Col. t..t..,..deocc 75, Col. Morioa·
Fanldin 51
c.t. MiJilin tiS, CoL Nonhlond n
Col Rady 5S, 2anearili8Rolcaana

0

·By Jim·Freeman

13

Pim · S, loraluo l

EASTERN CONFERENCE

IJau 6 . - 66. Dolimoo,.
IJauT. . . 0... 16,1lid-66
LiDooiD'Iiew ~ 0 c..a. I Onwe 63
Lcnio 47, N. lliolfi::4l
Loain Cuh. 66. - w Sl. - · .
5I 0'11

CoL C....u.I69, CoL B t

l '

•

go..., 4, CoJaory 3 (0'1)

NHL standings

rez;

MdCinlor45

Friday's scores ·

•'
••

•k-ft64,Bidpr~

-

---·

19

Friday's llcores .

l..ebMoe 15, P 's wood .59
t.apo;c II, Amodia 43
'
lAliloo- a.
c....o"
Jeri I'F67,M pf....,_6S
l..ibatY--119. c..,.~~o..... !9
IJddoo Hlo. 1D. l..illoori 1.laloa a

. c:u-.Muoto71,Modioall'lalno" .
aavat.f 51 , a- 49
Col. B•ookhnen 46, Col. Lindea•

·

Loo~ --·

l!d"""

t

26

VIIIIOCUWI' -~.. 1 ]

I·k aaad•2.J..k:iinaVaL 39
Lobwood Sl.
69, Clo. a.....
di&lt;tinc67
t:.aaout..n,z.....m.76 cz 01')

Cleu-SJ.Modinoll-,.39 .
CLarmcmt. Nadbllulaa 77, Rim t

1 22
' 19

!'

&lt;16, WcJliaFo 43
ICinp
"
·
62 02
ICllllood 56, .....,
l.oBne 6 2 , - Folia 44

n

lill

19
:tl

cq,y ---- 3 3 I
AaiWm ---· 3 5 0

~F-tn,Falrbom•l

..._.w..

.-.•••

~.

Ito1

It 31
I 23

Podl1c!)Molon
s.aJ-..... __
s l 0 10

, _ _ 10.-55
IWWo 12, OaoriUo 6!

a..

••

' - Sl. Jooopb 74, U...... W.VL
Jchn &lt;lam. 75, WUAw li.,.. V..w 65

aw.!S'/, ..... 53
Owdaa liDO. 63, CIL Coohdlo 54
On. Aibft70,Mamtllooldlf51
Cin. Colonia 74,
w- Hl1ll
69
.
On. El... u, a.. us.u. 6J
a.. LodUoool 57, Cin.Cuioboa"
Cin. - 6 4 , Clo.11141q 5I
Cin. Till 61, a.. Gloa .... 53
On. w..... um. 66. Cin.llotdpoa 52
Cin. Wooohnod 73, Clo.Tlopia &lt;16
C..,._ 16. CIL C.W.wood 61
a.. Em 75, c..
7o
Clc. GlmYillo 92. CIL """'""" 10
C..HoyS'I,CIL-44
Cle. HoOJhlo 54, 1..obwood 51
Clo. lnol&lt;pmdoncol2, - - !9
Clc. MonhoD 71. C.. Bui Tech
(OD
.
a.. s...to 72, Clo. w,.. Todo 69
• Clt. Univenh)' 63, Hudloa Wemn
R......,ll
Clc. VA·SJ 94,1UocorowuC.Ih.71

22.5

C.OiroiCIIarlou----·..29 . 16 .644

117

5 3 0
T -----· 3 3 2

Dol
lu..----· ' 3 I
Wlanit&gt;ol---· I 5 I

lndi.Lake63, Triad 50

vr ,

C&amp;rlWt 14, o. 1.
n (01')
CodU'rillo 6$, Wo-55
Cclino 41, JC.uao 44
92. NOIIbl!dfo 54
Ct:nknille 63, Xeni.a 54

5

11

Polar bear infancy knowledge s~ill young

the Open

l! L J: U U l&lt;t.

D.l:rOia - - - · 6 2 0 12 31
SI.Lauio-- . 5 2 0 10 32

ClllcaJo ·--·

-66,-56
""""' !6, a 1oto 35

Dilood 5I

C.lniDI-

z-

llopcwoll Loudoo 60, a-.m. 55

tcv J.ac.

••

WESTERN CONFERENCE

iiili:f,_,
W..........ltilboumc50
llilla&lt;lalo 7 0 , - 6 0

~19.s-B.60

Orlmdo ... ~·~····~- -3S

10 .771
New Ycd ·----·..29 14 .674
New JCIM}' - - -.. ll 29 .313
801\arl. _____ ~ l6 %1 .372
Miami ..-·~·-·---- US 21 .364
Phllod-lpoh - .... -.1' :11 .219
- 11 31 .262

Caalae 1'lllt. 61 , ~

At theDenver Zoo,

•

l l . r i i n - 59, vc~uo 56 &lt;on
Hc•nll71, Rohoreuh. 41
"""' Clu. 79,1Jckia&amp; Co. a...16

c..fioW 63, ....... ol6
C..O..c.do.61, -'-lloloe S7
C..O..J-,.71,T. . . . CIIr. f5
ObMoa Mc:Kililq 12, )ke:fDce 62
CaaloaS. 57,M fO j
$1

_____

92 SUBARU LEGACY

89 PONnAC 6000

Brown. powerWin&lt;lowl &amp; lod&lt;s,

4 doOI, blue, ail, autOINI~.

cruise, automatic.

stereo.

4doOI,Jan, air. aU1omallc.
stereo.

·

Blaon, 5speed, al, ...... ¥

l·wnlowl,

'I"''"•·· -.., rod.

cUot
·

Per
Mo.
91 CAMARORS
4x~ . air. ~ack. stereo, spon
wheels, bed 11!01, extra low miles.

:,)"~;l~¥· 1

Blue;aif, automalie, f .lops,
810180, Iaiiy -

·

93 &amp; 92 Models, eo Mo. 9.t 5% APR; 91 &amp; 90 Model&amp;, 54 Mo. 9.20% APR; 89 &amp; 88 Models, 48 Mo. 9.24% APR;

ATHENsi·i~ln;m·cARs
'IJ{i£ Jif4.ppY :JlOf}{tJJf4. ¥EOPLT.
•

I

'

·810 E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHIO o~q.,

.

.

92 DODGE DYNASTY, #4693, white, A/C, A{T, air
bag, tlli, cruise, cloth lnt.....................................$6995
89 HONDA CRX, #4808, blue, A/C, AM/FM cass., rear
defroster, sport wfleels .......................... :............ $5665
90 DODGE DAYTONA, 14810, A/C, AM/FM casa., tilt,
air bag, rear defroster ......................................... $5495
90 CHEV. LUMINA, 14829, red, A/C, AfT, AM/FM,
cloth Int., tilt, cruise .......................................... ~ $5995
89 CHEV. S·10, #4807, brown, AM/FM eass, rear
step bumper, dual ·mlrrors .................................. $4995
91 PONTIAC GRAN AM, #4834, A/C, AfT, tilt, cruise,
AMJFM case., cloth Int........................................ $5995
90 FORD TAURUS, 114841, A/C, A/T, tilt, P. mirrors; P.
locka, AM/FM call., cloth Int. ............................ $5495
91 DODGE DYNASTY, #4818, black, A/C, A/T, ·
Alllllr~ft. air bag,.rear defroster ........................... $6675
CHEV. S·10, #4784, 2tooe paint, AM/FM casa.,
rear glider, cloth lnt. ............................................$6495
92 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE, 14696, 4 door, A/C, AfT,
AM/FM, cloth Interior .... :..................................... $6995
89 FORD RANGER XLT, LONG BED, #4837, A{T, A/C,
AM/FM cass., topper, sport wheels, bed mat.... $5995
90 NISSAN TRUCK, 14824, A{T, AJC, bed liner, .
AM/FM, cloth Interior .......................................... $6765
89 CHEV. S·10, #4809, sport wheels, fiberglass
topper, dual mirrors, AM/FM: ..............................$5665
90 NISSAN TRUCK, #4823, white, AM/FM cass.,
bedllner, sport wheela, dual mirrors ......... :.: ..... $6315
90 TOYOTA TRUCK, #4727, AM/FM cass ., A/C,
toolbox, rear bumper .......................................... $6495
92 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 14816, red, A/T, A/C, till,
cruise, air bag, AM/FM, rear defroster ............... $6995
93 DODGE SHADOW, #4754, while, 2 Dr., AfT,
AM/FM, apQrt wheels, clolh Interior .................... $7671
92 DODGE DAKOTA TRUCK, 114772, while, AM/FM
cass., Toneau cover, sport wheels .................... $7525
92 OLDS CIERA, #4773, AM/FM cass, A/C, AfT, rear
defroster, tilt, cruise, cloth int............................ $7464
91 CHEV. CORSICA, 114831, AfT, A/C, tilt, rear .
defroster, P. locks, AM/FM, cloth Interior .......... $6954
91 CHEV. S-10, 114844, Pewter', AM/FM cass., Toneau
cover, dual mlrr,ors, cloth interlor .......,............. ,$5995
85 DODGE CARAVAN, 1148350 Cargo Van, std. trana.,
AM/FM ...................:.............................................. $1995
93 FORD TEMPO GL, 14774, V-6 eng., A/C, A/T,
AM/FM cass.,tlll, P.locks .................................... $8145
CHEV. CAVALIER R.S. WAGON, 114825, AfT, A/C,
~M/FM call, 1111, cruise, luggage rack .............. $8565
90 MAZDA EXTRA CAB TRUCK, 14740, rear seats,
AM/FM cass., Rally wheels, low mlles.......... ,.... $7995
93 NlSSAN SENTRA, #4759, while, 4 door, A/C, AfT,
AM/FM, tiTt, rear defroster ...................................$8557·
93 CHEV. CAVALIER R.S., 14795, A/T, A/C, gr1en,
alloy wheals, P. locks, cloth lnterlor .................. $8982
92 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 114734, A/T, A/C,
F.1 ,AM.IFM cass, cloth Interior, cruise .....•................ $9420
92 DODGE CARAVAN , 14778, 7 Pass., tilt, cruise,
A/C, A{T, AM/FM caBS., P. equip......................... $9520
92 CHEV. S·10 SUPER CAB, -'4780, V·B eng,, rear
flip aeats, A/C, tilt, cloth Interior ........................ $9995
91 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN, 14832, V-6 eng.,
A/C, A{T, till, 7 Pau., P. wlndowa, cloth lnt ....... $9600
P-f9.woa w1111 down poymem ol$1.11011 caoh" ~ade
w 11~o. See lllosmaoiO&lt; dolalb.

'*"

�•

•
•

~age

Pomeroy-Middlepon-Galllpolls, Ott Point Pleasant, WV

C6 Sunday Tlmes-Sentinel

·po•ar
bear.s• • •
·
f,

. According to !&lt;_~rgcnsen, w ••• the
m~ ~uuveness and part1c1pauon 1D youth sports bas
resulted m an ~g. number of
dental :1;11~ fac1al mjunes. One ID
tbrC:C mdhon permanent teeth are
accidentally avulsed (knocked out)
~ Y~. .
Wbile admmiSttators of yootb
and blgb school foolball, lacrosse,
and Ice ~~Y bave ~QDS~ted
respons1b1hty by_ mtroducmg
mandatory protective equipment
rules
otber popular contact
sports such as baseball, -~~thall
and socc~r lag far bebmd, Jorgensen saul

"Using co~~ative estimates, availabletothec:oosumer-SIOCk,
200,000 oral mJuncs 11re prevented . mouthform and custom-fabricated
each year for fOOiball play~n who mouthguards.
w~ m~thguards. ~ most proDennis McTigue, D.D.S., the
leetive p1ece of atbleuc equipment assistant dean of Ohio State Unito prot~t th~ t_ee!b ~nd preve~t versity's College of Dentistry and
tranmauc oral mJunes IS an athletic president-elect of the American
mouthguard."
Academy of Pediatric Dentisuy,
Mouthguanb ba~e been _sbown calls the project w ••• a pragmatic
to be very etrecu~e m n:ducmg the approach 10 a real problem.
number~- se_venty of sports-relat"Wearing a mouthguard is such
ed dental mjunes, sucb as tooth and a simple protective procedure that
!a:W _fractures as ~ell as n~ck it is often overlooked by coacbes
IDJ~S and COIICUSS'?f~S· ~y ~UD§ .and parents as necessary sports
as a sboclc absomer' or' cush100' equipment. Perceived inconve between the Ieeth. There are three nience or cost are the main detertypes of mouthguatds currently rents in all!letes' obtaining and

weariDpmouthpoleetor.
"11115 program opens doors for
. athletes who might not have bad
the inclination to ask for a mouthguard, to now talk to their dentist
about the s!mplest form of prolee·
tion from sports dental injuries,"
McTigue ·added."Although as denlists we prefer the custom mouthguard because of fit and comfort,
we bave no data 10 show that a costom-made moothguard is superior
to any other 1}'11!: ofmouthguard."
National Children's Dental
Health Month (NCDHM) was initialed 46 years ago to promote the
importaiiCe of good oral bealth for

Sports brief

(CootinuedfromC-5)

FootbaU
''Our polar bear breeding pro- and half-cream, safflower oil and
ba ve been known to break a
. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) liuman's neck with one blow to the gram was going down the tubes," vitamins.
The Kansas City. Chl.efs denied
said Mike Sulak, curator of the San
side of the head.
"Trying to come up witb a diet reports that surgery on Joe Moo- UUie Is known about polar bear Francisco Zoo, "so we elected 10 ·is not easy," Kenny said . tana's knee was more difficult than
lufancy in the arctic, so the caretak- hand-raise her."
"Because the fat content in polar expected and said be spent the day
At Zoo Atlanta that year, bear milk Is bigber than a whale, taking flying lessons.
ers of Klondike and Snow are
zookeepers were raising Andy and that's unusual for a mammal."
leamirig as they go.
The operation was notblng dif: "We've even bad polar bear Bear. Coincidentally, Andy Bear
Wben the pair bad bouts of ferent than a number of players
biologists caJJ up and ask if they and Pika now live together in San bloating, lethargy and riCkets, the have following a rugged f901ball
llad hair," Kenny said. "They Francisco.
diet was changed on the advice of . season, said Chiefs spokesman Bob
Sulak said band-raising polar some experts who bad experience Moore.
didn't Jmow . ... 1bey'd never seen
bears means "moving your hands with seals.
tbeln.''
ESPN reported on Super Bowl
: Kenny said mu was a rnt-time fast," to avoid tiny sbarp teeth. It
Klondike and Snow will be Sunday that tJie surgely was more
mother who dido 't sbow signs of also means providing a sterile envi- loaned to other zoos if they sur- serious, and that Montana would
11regnancy but seemed nervous . ronment in the beginning.
vive. For now, the zoo will monitor need a longer recuperation period
"Up in the Far North, in the their condition closely.
Polar bear mothers must feel secure
than was exp&lt;:eted.
during gestation, whiCh Kenny said cave, it's all frozen, and basicaJJy
is difficult to duplicate in a zoo it's bacteria-free," Sulak said.
Polar bears are native to Northern
exhibit.
: "A wild female polar bear climaleS from AlaSka to Labrador,
Diesel - 25 HP - 2 &amp; 4 Wheel Drive, Live Lift, 3 Pt.
would find a snowbank, burrow as well as Denmark, Norway and
into It, bave the babies in a cave Russia
Hitch, Standard Cat. #1.
The wh~lping pen is kept at a
where it's dark, secure, with no
bears around, no people around - · cool 65 degrees to avoid beat
STARTING AT s
.
and the bears would stay in there stress.
Complete line of KING KUTTER Equipment,
"If it's above 70, they start
u_ntil Marcb or April, •' be said.
panting,"
Kenny
said.
. In 1982, the San Francisco Zoo
Kutters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 &amp; 10ft. Rear Blades 6, 7, &amp; 8ft.
Klondike and Snow are bottlecbose to raise Pika, a female born
Regular and heavy duty.
to a mother with a history of babies fed at four-hour intervals with a
mix
of
distilled
water,
half-milk
wbo
young.
. died
.

TUCTOR SEATS

DR. JOHNNA JORGENSEN
lis try, a fellow in the American
Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, a
member of the American Society
of Dentistry for Children, the
American Dental Association· and
its component state and local societies.
Jorgensen lives with ber bus- ·
band, Dr. David K. Smith, and tbeir
two sons, HubbeU and Mackenzie
Boeing. She bas a private practice
limited to pediatric dentistry in
Gallipolis.

tban 3,000 new jobs every year and over 400
WORK PROGRESSES ON NEW AUTO· salaried management positions. All stores open
ZONE STORE • CoJIIItnldlon work Is progresswith a starr of 10 to 14. Nationally, AutoZone
ia&amp; on lbe new Au!oZone store on Upper Rt. 7
employs appni:d11111tely 17,400 people. AutoZone
north of GaiUpolls. Tbe store Is scheduled to
open later Ibis sprl1111. AutoZone is a Memphis· - Is a public oompany listed on the New York
Stock Excba1111e (AZO). Fiscal 1994 sales topped
baed do-lt·yoanelf retaU auto parts ebaln with ·
$1.5 biUion. The lint store opened July 4, 1979,
1,100 slorel In l5 stata. The company Is openIn Forrest City, Ark. All stores an company
. in&amp; more stores per year than any other retail
operated
• there are no franchise operations.
auto parts chain In the nation. Tbls creates more

THE AGENT WHO INSURES YOUR ·

CAR AND HOME CAN ALSO PROTECT

.

Veteran OVEC employees
Eads, Weaver retire

YOUR FAMILY'S
FUTURE. .

,

Used Ford, Massey Ferguson, IH Tractors field
ready.
·

For life insurance that can prov1de financial
security for those you love. call:

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT CENTER
1467 JACKSON PIKE (Old US 35 Wtstt
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
PHONE: 446·9777 OR 446·2484 ·

'
Rutland
Church of God and
presently serves as .Sunday school
superintendent. Eads and bls wife,
Jo Ann, reside in Rutland.
Weaver began his career at
OVEC in 1955 as a maintenance
helper in the Maintenance Department The foUowing year, be uansferred to the Operations Department as an auxiliary equipment
operator, and in 1966 be advanced
to equipment operator. In 1975 he
was promoted to unit supervisor
and in 1985, to assistant sblft operating engineer.
· Weaver is a member of the
Clifton Masonic Lodge No. 23. He
and his wife, Marilyn, reside in
New Haven, W.Va

. · GALLIPOLIS ·- Two Kyger
· Creek Plant employees, each ·with
: _39 years of service, bave retired. ·
'Ibcy are Charles R. Eads, main: tenance mechanic-A, and Ray E.
: :Weaver, assistant shift operating
· engineer.
Eads joined Kyger Creek Plant
in 1955 as a laborer in· the Labor
: Depanment. During that same year,
. he transferred to the Mainlenance
Department as a maintenance
helper.
. In I957 he was promoted to
: mainlenance mecbanic-c; in 1964,
. to maintenance mechanic-S; and in
· 1973, to maintenance mechanic-A.
A native of Rutland, Eads
sen-ed in the U. S. Navy from 1952
to 19SS. He is a member of tbe

100.00

COME SEE THESE AT:

CAROLL SNOWDEN
342 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446-4290; Home 446-4518 ..

.Galli a farmers earn private
.pesticide recertification

:~, State Fann Sells Life Insurance.
State Farm Life Insurance Company
Home Office: Bloomington. Illinois

sa 688**
FIBERIUSS RlltB BOARDS

• Eltended Chass1s

• D11ve~ side "'' aa2

• AnHQCk ·Brakes
• A1r Cond1t1on
· • AutomatiC CN.erdnve
· • Vista Ba~ W1ndows
• Power Steermg

• Power Brakes
•
• T1~ S1eer1ng
• Cru1se
• AMIFM Cassene
• Power W1ndows
• Power Locks
• 4 Caplain Cha11s

• Rear Anti-Lock Brakes·
• Power Steering
· • Power Brakes

• Sola/Bed
, Indirect Ughting

• Premtum Wood Pkg
• Full Convers1on
• Ftbefglass Aunn1ng Boards

·Loaded'

No Doc Fees. D!Mm'

'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S-SERIES PICKUP

BRAIII NEW CIEVY AS1RO EXTEtllED CONVERSION VAN

excitement about management
intensive grazing. I taught a couple
of classes in other counties this
week lllat drew room-capacity
audiences.
Several opp~rtunities will be
available for those who are really
into ll!e &amp;lliZing management concept. Dr. Greg Lambert, scientist at
the New Zealand PasiOraJ Research
Institute, will be visiting Ohio next
week.
He will be at the Lewis Family
Restaurant in Jackson on Friday,
Feb. 10 at 1 p.m. for a seminar and
discussion program. Hank
Bartholomew wiD bost sessiOn and
be "can be contacted at 614-3853222.
· 1be 1DODthly GaJJia County catA1311 Henning, Fulbright Schol. llemen's meeting and OSU Exten- ar and grazing consultant witb 15
sion educational meeting will be years'. experience in dairy farm
Monday, Feb ..6 at 7:30p.m. in the management in New Zealand, wiD
McKenzie Agricultural Center.
be keY. the keynote speaker at the
. Hank Bartholomew, Hocking West Virginia Grazing Manage··County extension agent and graz- ment Conference, Cedar Lakes
.:ing project coordinator, will give Conference Center, Ripley, W.Va
· .the results of several of the grazing John Fichtner (304-372-7325) will
•:researcb·and demonsuation plots in ' be the bosL For those who want to
; southern Obio. A lot of exciting call Fichtner, the pbone number is
·:projects are showing positive for the Roaoe-Jackson Tech Cen:.results. There is currently a lot of
Contlnilild on 0-8

· By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - Fifty-plus
Gallia County fanners earned private pe1ticlde recettlfication. last
· week. Mucb of the time tbls year is
. spent on new record-keeping and
.worker proleetion laws.
A reminder to those who s!ill
need recertification, a class will be
beld Wednesday, Feb. 8 at 7 p.m. ·
in the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
Center. People wbo would like to
be· certified as private pesticide .
·applicators may attend a 7 p.m .
class on Feb. 20 and a followup
.. session on Man:h 2.

• S~11erado
• 4X4

• Power Steeri nQ
• Power Brake~
• Power Door LocKs
• Power Windows
• AMIFM Cassene
• Tilt Steering

• Cru1se Control
.'rrallerm_g P9.ekage " - ..
• Alum1num Wheels

POMEROY - Joe Bolin of sion of the state's 88 county-based
Rutland and Marco Jeffers of SWCDs. As subdivisions of state
Albany, recently elected supervi- government, soil and water eonsersors of the Meigs Soil and Water .vatioo dislricts have legal authority
Conservation District, were sworn to assist landowners with a wide
infO office by Ohio Supreme Court range of soil. water, woodland and
Cbii:f Justice Thomas J. Moyer wildlife conservation objectives.
during the 52nd Annual Meeting of Another important goal is to prothe Ohio Federation of Soil and vide information and education
Water Conversation Districts held .programs on natural resource conin Columbus January 17-19.
servation and management topics
Elected 10 three year terms, the for a wide range of county resitwo officials ·join John. Rice, dents.
Charles Yost and Thomas Theiss in
According ID Bolin, chainnan of
administering tbc Meigs SWCD's tbe Meigs SWD board of supervinatural resource conservation pro- sors, nonpoint source pollution
grams.
education will be a major objective
The Ohio Federation of Soil and for the district in 1995. Nonpoint
Water Conservation Districts was source water pollution results when
organized in 1943 to further the rain and snow-melt carries pollunatural resource conservation mis- tants to rivers, streams and lakes.

'

'95 CHEVY K·1500
PICKUP 350 V·B POWER

BRAND NEW '9511.11SMOBR.E CIERA Sl

• Air Cond~~n
• Aulomal&lt;
• Driver Si&lt;!e Ailbag
·
Brakes

• Power Brakes
• Powe1 Ooo1 Lod&lt;s
• AWI't.l S1e1eo
• Tih Sleenng

• CusiOm Clolh
Bend\ Seals
• Well E&lt;JJipped'

• Air Condition

.:1aoo v~ l'ow&lt;J
· Dual Ailbags

• Anli·Lod&lt; llral&lt;es

• Powsr Steenng
• Power Br:tes ·
·Power Door Locks
• Power W1ndoWS

• AtM'M Slereo
• flh S1eenng
• Custom Cloth lnteMor

• PIS, P/8
• AWFM Cassene
CrUise
•

·Loaded'

•

.......

1

I

BRAIID NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVEIUE.
·Wei E&lt;MI"'!

· Air CM:Iibon
• Dual Airtloo
· AnHW llrakes
• Automalic
·Power

· ·Cruise Contr&gt;
• Power Brakes
• Oela, W!pers
•• """"
Door l.ccks
Power WIOOOWS
·Custom
Cloth lrtericJ
• AtM'~ Cassette

·T·

• Air Coodilioo
• Dual Aftag
·Anti-LOCk Brakes
• AutcrnatC
• AWFM Cassette

• DuO AI Co!OOiienj)
Cmle Como!
• Pow« Antema

• Almi""n WheOs
• Kl!)less R"""le
Enlly s,slem

• Loacled!

TOU FREE 1·8011·822·0411. • 372·2844 ·
,, 344·5947. 422·0756

~~-

are not required to auend a review
session, out rr may ··assisi y_ou iii
focusing your studying efforts.

Runoff from farm fields and livestock feedlots, construction sites,
streets and parking lots, mined land
and virtually all other land surfaces
annually delivers millions of too of
soil, fertilizers, animal waste, salt
and other pollutants to surface
water supplies.
"Nonpoint source pollution
affects the majority of Ohio's river
miles and lakes," said Bolin. "With
tbe cooperation of landowners in
tbe distJ;ict and with the assistance
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Ohio EPA, Natural
Resources Conservation Service
and otber county, state and fcdcral
agencies and organizations we can
find solutions to a problems that
affects all Ohioans."

.'

SWCD OFFICERS SWORN IN - Joe
Bolin, left, and Man:o Jeffers, right, receive cer·
lificates of election from Oblo Supreme Court

Cblef Justice Thomas J. Moyer as newly elected
supervisors or the Meigs Soli and Water Conservation District.

·Deadline for disaster leasing
burley tobacco·set Feb. 15

VICKI CLENDENIN

Clendenin
named to
bank post

An Ohio Deparunent of Agri,
culture representative will be giv"ing the
.
private applicator's test in Meigs
County on Feb. 21 at the Meigs
County Library-Pomeroy B~cb at
216 West Main St. Testing will
begin at 3 p.m .. Please call tbe
Extension Office (992-6696), if
Michael R. Licving, ExccUiivc
you are planning 10 take the test.
Vice-Presidem and Chief Lendin g
Livestock growers and porlc pro- . Officer of the Peoples Bank of Point
ducers, plan on altending Ibis comPleasant , has announced I lie appoml menl of Vi cki R. Clendenin to the
ing weekend, Feb. 10,12. tbe Obio
•
·
.
Pork Congress being beld in Daypqsition of administfativc assistant i_ n
. Many of t~e sess1ons were ton. This jam-pocked weekend prothe bank 's commercial lendin g
: researcb qu~st1ons that growers vides the latest updates in swine department.
• req~sted 8SSI~tance on. Part of~ research, food products and proAccordin g -10 Lie vi ng , Clen: funding fot thiS ~search w~ J131d "duction uends. In addition, this denin's. appoinuncnt-comes-as th
:for from a Mgew-S~I FrUit-and~ annual event proviiDa great · pank implements plans to participate
:Vegetable .~arkeU~g . Order opportunity 10 share your ideas and
more actively iri suuc and federal loan
. As~essment IDIUated 10 1994 by frusuatiom with feUow swine proprograms benefiting small business
. Ob1o vegetable growers upbn ducers
owners.
·
, themselves. If you wish 10 attend,
·
Clendenin was first employed by
Cattlemen, the 1994"95 Obio
·make sure to visit the extensive
Peoples Bank in 1978 and has held
:booth displays by the fruit and veg- Bull Test 56-day report from our
various positions within the barik 's
· etable industry vendors.
Belle Valley Research Farm
Jmin depart'ment. She is a graduate of
· . need of obtain"
_arrived in my office this week.
Point Pleasant High School and
. . _Are you 10.
mg. a Weight gains look good. Copies are attended Marshall University.
~nvate pesucide applicator s available upon request. If you are
Clendenin is the widow of the late
~ to pUtcbasc resutcted pestl- intending to improv~, your herd .G. Michael Clendenin and has two
. c1des for your farm or greenbou~ with a new blood! hie, consider
sons, Jose f. employed by Fruth,
operation? Study material (avad- attending the 26th Obio "PerforInc., and Michael. a student at Marable at cost) m!iy be picked _up mance Tested" BuD Sale on April .shall University. In addition to her
f"roul the Ex~ns1on Of~ce durmg· 15 at 1 p.m. at tbe Belle Valley
.nonilaJ working boors 8.30 a.m. to OSU -Research Station, Belle Val- banking career, she breeds and
exhibits her own line of Pomeranian
4:30p.m.
ley Oblo
·
dogs throughout the United States.
A review session will ~ beld_ on
(H.a Kneen 11 Meigs County's She
resides in Pbint Pldasn nt and is
Monday, Feb. 6 from 7.30-9.30
kulturalextenalonagent.)
a member of St. · Paul' s United
p.m. at the Meigs County Exten- agr
Methodist Church .
siOD OITice. ~ve applicaun

By LISA MEADOWS
the effective farm QUOta. Producers
turaJ ·commodities Dl:,.products, and
GALLIPOLIS - Burley tobacco wishing to lease to their farm there may not be a current burley
disaster leasing is drawing to n end should contact the CFSA office to tobacco quota on the farn:t . THE
for 1994 tobacco sales from Gallia have their names added to tbe list DEADLINE FOR NEW FARM
County. Producers who have mar- of producers desiring poundage and BURLEY QUOTA APPLICA ketcd their tobacco and have to obtain information on lease limi- TIONS t·S WEDNESDAY,
fe'~~~:·l~ remaining on their mar- tatio.ns. THE DEADLINE FOR FEBRUARY 15, 1995.
I
cards due to disaster losses, . DIS ASTER LEASING BURLEY
Tobacco producers are reminded
may
able to lease away tbeir TOBACCO IS WEDNESDAY , to return their marketing cards once
excess poundage-provided that · 1-"EBRUARY 15, 1995.
they finish selling their tobacco.
!bey have filed for disaster credit ·
New farm burley tobacco appli- CFSA bas a certification form tb3t
. prior to harvest (or NOT filed for· cations are c~rronUy .being accept- ' needs to be completed wbcn the
reasons beyond their control.)
ed. Only a small amount of quola is marketing cards arc returned. For
A producer desiring to lease available nationally and tbc condi- information on the burley tobacco
AWAY must bave bad a 20% loss lions of eligibility arc very ·strict . program producers should stop by
of their production, due. to natural · Some requirements for new farm the Gallia CFSA (formerly ASCS)
cau ses ; must have planted an quotas include: producer should in tbe C H. McKenzie Agricultural
acreage sufficient to produce the . have a' history of growing burley Center or caJJ 446-8686.
.
fann's current year effective quola; tobacco in two of tbe .last five
· Lisa Meadows L~ GaJUa Counand must bave made reasonable years, SO% of tolal income must ty's Ct'SA acting necutive direcand cuslomary effmJ.s to produce come from production of agricul- tor.

:Extension Corner

.

,

....rc.....:···.

· Sl~ Belled Tre&lt;

:By HAL KNEEN
. ; POMEROY = Vegetable grow•·
·· erst I will be attending the annual
:Oblo Fruit &amp; Vegetable Congress
:being held in Toledo at the SeaG;de
· ;Convention Hall from Feb. 7-9.
·The theme is "All You Need to
:Grow."
·
· : The congress' general session
:will focus on labor issues, while
' the concurrent tree fruit, small
: fruit, uuck crops, processing cro~.
: farm murkets, potato and popcorn
: sessions will address .Production
: issues important to Ob10's diverse
. growers. •

-

this watershed can bave serious
impacts on the lives of many people in Ibis community.
While there are no quick and
easy answers, a ·great many people
working on a common problem can
have a positive impact Now is the
time to come forward and belp
develop a plan to reduce the future
problems in Ibis area
Patty Dyer t. the Gallla Coun•
ty Farm Bureau and Soil and
Water Conservation District
info.rmatlon coordinator.

'

(
JOINS STAFF - Roxanne
Groff bas joined Diles Hearing
Center as a full time audiologist. Ms. Groff received her
Masters degree In Audiology
from Ohio University. Groff Is
trained to dispense the multifocus and resound programmable
bearing aids which feature the
latest technology for natural
amplified· sound quality. Roxanni· Jjtlns cUnJeal audlolo1ist
and owner Diane McVey In
providing comprel!ensive audi:
ologlcal services including diagnpstic evaluations, counseling
and aural rehabilitation. Diles
bearing eenter Is located In tbe
new Fairview Building at l7S
West Union Street in Athens.
There an two service sites, one ·
at the Holzer Clink in GalllpoUs and at the Holzer branch In
Jackson.

:Labor issues to be main
::topic of Feb. 7-9 session

$21,988

.,188**

~ Doc Fees. 0&lt;4MII'Illf'

·SI~Wkee!s

Nn Doc fees Deneled'

350 V·B POWERJSILVERADO

• 350 V·6 POWel
·Automatic
• A1r CondrtiOn
"Sa~ Pnce lrtildes GMAC F•f1L I - I--;,,,~
T•me&amp;.yerlrunMIIOualtlt«&lt;. ~ -~
Air/Heat

·

988

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4

• Custom Cloth.lnienor
• Steel Belted Tir.es

-·· February 5, 1995

Meigs SWCD officers sworn in.

Farm Flashes

'

Section D

servation District invites the public
By PATIY DYER
GALLIPOLIS - Anyone inter- to attend a 7:30 p.m. meeting
esled in reducing the flooding, and Febrl!aty 14 to discuss the flooding
improving the water quality in the and sedimentation problems related
Chickamauga Creek watershed is to tbe Chickamauga Creek Waterinviled to atlend the publi: meeting shed area. The meeting will be held
on February 14 10 help fonnulate a at the C. H. McKenzie Agricultural
Center meeting room. (Enter
plan to do just that.
In response · to numerous through the double doors facing the
requests from the local landowners bank .)
We ~uld like to have a discusand residents Ibis meeting bas been
scheduled to provide an open sion ol the problems in tbe watershed and develop a list of possible
forum for public debate and input.
The Gallia County Farm Bureau solutions. As everyone who experiand the Gallia Soil &amp; Water Con- enced last years flood remembers,

,------~--------~-------,

100's of Used Items To Choose From:

•

Chickamauga Creek watershed
to be discussed at public meeting

children. Dr. Jorgensen was
appointed 1994-1995 Obio
(statewide) NCDHM chairman by
. Dr. David Rummel, past-president
of the Ohio Dental Association.
Jorgensen received ber doctorate
of dental surgery from OSU in ·
198~. completed ber post-doctoral
uaining in Pediatric DentisUy in
I987 at the Easunao Dental Center
in Rochester, New York, and
achieved board certification in
I994.
·
Jorgenseil is a diplomate of the
American Boan! of Pediiltric Den-.

. NEW SHENNIU FARM TUCTORS

~.imet-jtnthttt

us1ness

Jorgensen champions athletes' use of mouthguards
. GALLIPOLIS -Hoping to
laaease awareness of the ~ 10
~ mouthguanls wbile ~!='pat~~ m .contact s_po~ a~tiVIUes, a
uruq~ pogram ~ bemg m~~
ill Ob10 for Nauonal Children s
Dental Health Month (NCDHM)
hy ~- Jobnna_Jorgensen of Galllpohs. the_Ob10 Dental A~soc1aJioo Stalewide NCDHM -~·
· The program, d!led. Help. us
Stamp out ~tal InJuneS ... wear a
mouthguard. offers stock mout!J·
JUards to student athletes 1D
exchange for a postage stamp at
den':_llLofflces of ODA IJlember
dentists.

.

•

February 5, 1995 .

BRAND NEW'

'95CHEVY
4x4BWER'S
_j_

·FRESH SHIPMENT! -

I

LSANDLT'S

WE'VE GOT THEM ALL!

Monday • Saturday: 9 am · Sunday: Noon - 6 pm ,
•

•

MYSTERY FARM-'- This week's mystery
rMrm, featured by tbe Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District, t. located somewhere In
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate In the weekly contest 11111y do so by guessing
.the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your
guess to tbe GaiUj)()Us Dlllly Tribune, 8%5 Third
Ave. GaUipoUs, Oblo, 45«131, or Tbe Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Oblo, 45769, and

'

you may win a $5 prize from tbe Oblo Valley
·Publishing Co. Leave your name, addreu and
telephone number wltb your eard or letter. No
telephone calls will be ucepled. All contest
entries should be turned In to tbe newspaper
of'llce by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In cue ofa de,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Gallllil:ounty farm will be featured by tbe
Gallla Soli and Water ConserVlltlon District.

�Page-02- Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

·Bond Ladders can offer

temperamental co-workers as you will try·
tng lobe producltve. You will be bener off

ASTRO-GRAPH

Some savv y
investors
are
electing to use a
strategy call ed
' B o ·n d
Laddering .'
.Essentially, a
Bond
Ladder
consists of four or five bonds,
maturing on specific dates,
staggered over several years. For
examp1e, a hypothetical laddered
bood portfolio
.., might contain a like
amouot of ttve bonds maturing six
year, seven years, eight years and so
on out to 10 years. So, ea.ch year
, for
fiIVe years, !be inVestor Will receive
""'_ 2v.,. of the ori~inal principal back.

Each maturi~g bond ierves ·as a rung
on the "ladder "
R; duce risk
Bond Laddering allo ws an
investor to diversify and spread out
interest rate risk over !be life of !be
portfolio.
Longer maturity bonds produce a
higher yield but have the most to
· lose when interest rates go up. This
·
can cause a cap•···....'1oss for mvestors
who need to sell !be bood prior to its
maturity date. Bonds with shorter
maturity dates offer lower yields but
are not as volatile as longer
maturing bonds. Furthermore, if
interest rates decline, investors lose
the opportunity 1o lock in higher rate
for a longer period of time.
Tbe 1adde nng
· strategy d'1sperses
·
the effect of upward and downward
·
1 rate swmgs.
·
If rates .go up,
1nteres
tb e mves 1or can rem
· vest t b e
proceeds of the shorter bonds (as
lh ey mature ) at a b'1g ber y1eld.
·
If
a.
1b .
b
rates wop, e mvestor as at least
locked in a higher yield using !be

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22. Erratic
actio ns will produce chaos todaY . so
employ practical measures to bring about
the desired results.

lbnger boods in !be PQJtfolio.
Financial neilbillty
. Ladde~ing also provides the
m~slor w11b fmancialliquidily and
rem ve stment flexibility . For
1
exampl e, alter the fir st bond '
matures, !be investor may cboose to
use t~e proceeds to fund an I
IJIIIIIedlate need, reinvest in another
investment , or continue the
Sunday. Feb. 5, 1995
"ladderi~g" ~U'lliCgy by reinvesting
the pnnapal mto !be next sequential You may spend a corisiderabte arilount of
"rung."
energy enhancing your security and posi·
l
ion in life. Your plans will be Imaginative
Bond Laddering works best when
const ructi ve. a'nd the end re su lts
and
purchasing large blocks of bonds
should
prove gratifying. ·
particularly municipill bonds:
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 2D·Feb. 19~ Guard
Mums, as !bey are called, trade in
aga inst th e inclination to be more or a
blocks of $5,000 each.
talker than a doer todcly .. W ords won 't
Because of transaction costs
·~vestors can realize a higher Ayield' count for much; it's the bottom line that
1f !bey purchase munis in $25,000 , eveoyon~ will be watching. Aquarius. treat
blocks. This would bring a five yourself to a birthday gift. Send for your
bond laddered portfolio up to Aslro·Graph predictions fo r the yea r
S125,000. Treasuries, STRIPS and ahead by mailing S1.25 to Astro·Graph,
c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box 4465, New
.a gencies are other popular York , NY 10163. Be sure to state your
mstruments used in laddered
zodiac si gn .
portfolios.
PISCES (Feb. 2D·Mtrch 20) Carefully
analyze a new proposition today betore

,F~rm. Bureau officials say
;:Wildlife management needed
By KIM HARLESS
JACKSON . Farmer crop losses
to wildlife are on the increase. Deer
damage corn, nursery stock and
.orchards. Geese damage corn and
' winter wheat and pollute ponds
wilb their droppings. Wild turkeys
damage corn and winter wheat.
CoyOICs kill sheep and calves.
1bis issue does not affect every
farmer nor is each wildlife species
posing a problem slatewide. At !be
recent 'Ohio Farm Bureau Federalion annual meeting in Cincinnati,
wildlife damage was one of tbe
; most discussed issues.
, · One of. !be key business items
• )laodled at each year's annual
; -meeting is lbe development of poli·
' cy, positions for the organization.
: ·Listed below are seven positions
:· !be Ohio Farm Bureau took regard' jng wildlife management:
:
I. Support researc/1 to verify ..
: crop damage from wild turkeys.
,' 2. Establish an additional week
; of gun deer season or include addi; 'tiona! Fridays and Saturdays.
'
3. Decrease the cost of addition·
: ,al deer permits
,
4 .. Support a resident nuisance
• goose season and an increased bag
: limit for geese.
. 5. Urge the implementation of a
I 24 hour loll free boUine for fanners
: and other people to call pertaining
: wildlife damage and piber wildlife
,
.

issues.
6 . Encourage lbe use of livestock protection collars to control
coyotes.
7. Support a fall wild turkey
. season and !be laking of hens.
Farmers are tolerant of some
wildlife damage and !bey do appredate seeing wildlife, but lbe high
concentration of wildlife in some
areas is causing significant economic losses for farmers throughout the state. Farmers cannot conlioue 1o absorb sucb losses.
. The general public also feels !be
. impact of expanding wildlife popu·
lauons. In 1993, 24,813 deer-vcbi·
de collisions were reported at an
esti~.ated damage of $2,000 per
colhswn. This adds up 10 a grand
total of $49.6 million in damages
for 1993.
Farmers, hunters, the general
public and the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources , Division of
Wildlife all have an interest in
Ohio's wildlife. Farmers own mucb
of !be lan'd where wildlife lives and
bunters play an important role in
~ildlife . management. A COO?Cra11 ve spmt among farmers and
bunters is .vital in !be quest to manage tbe state's wildlife. Farm
Bureau encourages its members to
provide hunters reasonable access
to their property and hope in return
!bat hunters understand and show

'
'

..

CAPRICORN' (Doc. 22-Jon. 19) You

try y our nerves today. However,

might be slow getting down to business

minor concessions accompanied by a
few hugs will restore harmony.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A task that
you thought would be as easy as 1·2-3

today, especially in a situation where time
mean s money . Playing catch-up later

By DAVID E. KALISH
" It is in !be interest of Amerl·
AP Bushwo Writer
can workers to see bigber wages
NEW YORK - American ICCII· elsewhere," Frank said. "We want
- agers flipping burgers already earn · to begin to diminish !be differeDfar more than Mexican laborers tial."
" assembling cars. Two develop·
Frank was among various mem·
meots Ibis week suggested !be pay bers of Congress wbo insisiCd !bat
gap could widen- but !be dispori- any agreement 10 give aid to Mexi·
!Y is getting scant notice in W~- co include provisions to lift Meximgton.
can wages (rom depressed levels.
- . President Clinton proposed an • Clinton surprised opponents of
Increase in !be domestic minimum Mexico belp Tuesday, scutUing his
wage. He also revamped his Mexi· original loan guarantee plan and
~ rescue plan, eliminating a pro vi·
offering an altcmatl ve package !bat.
s1on that would have boosted pay doesn' I require congressional
for workers in our soulbem neigb· approval.
bor.
Immediate praise for !be presiFor all !be furious Washington dent's decisive action drowned Ol!,t
debate, few participants saw a most complaints· by politicians.
meaningful trend in !be separate Some of the loudest accolades were
events. But sQme say there are from Wall Street investors and
good reasons why Americans businesses contending !bat Mexi·
should care about inequality in co's main priority must be keeping
North American pay.
·
down inflation and paying !be huge
"The lower !be wages in !be debts lbatlbreaten to undennine its
countries we are competing with, ~nomy.
.
the more competitive disadvantage
· But concerns persist about pay
we are a~" Rep. Barney Frank, D- gaps . One fear is !bat low wages in
Mass., said in a telephone inter- Mexico could drag down U.S. pay.
view Friday.
As domestic companies pres urn·

won't help.

NORTH
610 2

BRIDGE

2-HS

•A Q

+AQI0876
.. 10 9 8

PHILLIP
ALDER
·

can achieve your goals, but only lhrough Bridge. of.course, is only a tiny part
consistent and courageous effort .
· of th e world, but it is a big part of many
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Avoid the of our worlds . We would feel much
temptation to blame your mistakes on poorer without it. Today 's deal is beau-

others today. Confessing to your errors
m~ght even win you some admirers.
CANCER (June 21--July 22) If you pass
hasty judgmenls today, you 'll probably
have to backtrack and apologiZe after
you get all the tacts.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Today you migtit

liful. ll was defended by Edgar Kaplan,
the editor and publisher of The Bridge
World magazine.
The deal occurred back in lhe dark
a ges, when a jump to. two no·trump by
South would have shown 13-15 points
Nowadays , wisely, this re sponse is

have to spend as much time placating

trea_t~d as invit_a ti(mal in competit ion

• 5 3
•K J 7 2

4A K
¥8 6

7 6 5

• K3 2
9 4

•Q 6 s· 3

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
South Wesf North East

Recently. a majo r conferen ce was

·

• J 2

+K

held to diseuss the future of our planet.
In soyears the Earth is going to be in a

on luck to see you through today . You done."

EAST

SOUTH
6Q J 9

By Phillip Alder

objectives.
pie who singly can do noth ing, but li&gt;TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) Do not raly gether can decide that nothing can be

WEST
68 4 3
¥JI0 9 7 5 4
•A 4

Readl'ng th e· card5
for· both s'de
I S

as y our reputat ion . Take care not to Allen wasn't right when he said, "A con·
alienate olhers as you work toward your ference is a gattlering of important peo·

1•

NT
3 NT
I

1 ..

2•

3+

Pass

Pass

Pass

P8ss

Peoples Bank expands
consumer loan department

Opening lead: .o 3
land by mar&gt;y players in an uncontesied auction!.
··
Sitting East, Kaplan placed South .
from the bidding. with the Q·J of
spades and heart king. And as the diamond finesse. if needed. was working
Kaplan realized the defenders had 1~
take the first five tricks. Partner could
hold the club ace. but was most unlikely
to have A-Q -x in clubs. So, after winning the firstlrick with the spade king,
Kaplan continued with the club king
and another club.
Placing East with both top clubs.
South put up his queen at trick three.
After winning with the ace, West' played .
a spade. Kaplan won with the ace and
cashed the J·7 ol clubs: two down.

Michael R.. Lieving, Executive
Vice President and Chief Lending
Officer of the Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant, has announced the appoint·
men! of Jeffrey D. "Mick:' Howell to
the position of vice president of consumer loans. In addition, Melissa
· Scarberry has been promoted to the
' position of consumer loan Qfficer.
Both are employed at the bank's Point
Pleasant office.
In making· the announcement,
Lieving noted that Peoples Bank is
now the largest financial institution
in Mason County, "but we don 't ever
want to gel too big to give personal
attention to every customer. By.
expanding our operations, we can
continue to provide the level of ser·
vice our customers e•pect from us."
Howell, who was employed by
Peoples Bank as a loan officer in
1989 and promoted to ass islant vice
president in 1990, will now ass ume
responsibility for the bank 's con·
sumer lending department.
Howell described the methods by
which the bank will speed up !he loan
process. "All three of our location s

SUNDAY PUZZLER
See Answer to Puzzler on Page B-5
88 Greek goddess
90 Anderson.of TV

ACROSS
1 Rope of wire
6 Underworld god
: ~ ~~~=;~
21 Standoffish
22 In flight
23 Make into one
24 Sharp
25 Thick slices
26 Eateries
2~ Passover meal
29 _ and feather
30 Caliber
31 "- Doubt.tirjl"

DOWN
1 Social class
2 Edgar- Poe
3 Get on a plane
4 Throw in a high

91 Hoi or cold
beverage
92 Decanters
95 Sticky sluff
96 Jargon
98 Western Indian
100 Jolts
101 An ocean: abbr.
102 Burden of proof
104 Drink
105 Slipped
106 Handed over
107 Therefore
108 Of the kidneys
110 Earned as profit
112 Midway attraction
113 Aroma
114 Copfuses
116 Ocean
117 Apple remnant
118 Kepl afloal
119 And others:
Lat. abbr.
121 Word·for-word
· 124 After·dlnner candy
125 Depot: abbr.
128 Laughing or natural
130 Mature.
131 Costa del 132 Recedes
136 Egg layer
137 - Polo
139 Central
140 Costly fabric
141 Cereal grass
142 Excuse ·
144 Lost value
147 Excesstve
t49 Not at all wordy
150 Stage dtreclion
151 Treasure 152 Staircase part
153 Sirloin or T-bone
154 Sleeps
155 Cut
156 Film spools

~~~~~~~~~;;:~~·

35 Ceases

!H~~~~~i:::;lhings

41 Time penoqs: abbr.
42 Walch over .
44 Consecrated
46 Insane. in England
49 Go ashore
52 Acid to the taste
53 Feel poorly
55 Sheltered place for
sh ips
59 Picture
60 Explosive sound
61 Something s)1ot at
64 Artless
65 Clamping device
66 Substantive
67 Kick seen at Miami
Dolphins game
68 Curved line
70 Holier-than-thou one
71 Overhead rails .
72 Restore to health
73 Car for hire
74 Good-bye, amigo'
76 Leiters in genetics .
77 Put back 1n office
79 Rocky hill
80 Nothing but
82 Seafood item
84 Portable sheller
85 Categorize
. 86 Mimicking one
87 Melon

dards of mammographic -testing,
both in results· a11d safety," said
Ted Adams, dcparunent manager. .
Mammography exams can
detect breast cancer irregularities
up to two years before !bey can be
felt. In conjunction wilb self-examination and a physician's exllm,
mammogmphy can be a most valuable procedure.
·

a prudent friend

attitude about you r conflicting opinions

How will 'we house and feed all the ex•
ARIES (M.arch 21·Aprll 19) Succes.s will lra millions? Countless animal species
be important today , but .not a's important will become extinct . 1 JUSt hope Fred

DISPLAY AWARD· Displaying Holzer Clinic's ACR Mammo~raph)' Accreditation ar, left to right, Ted Adams, diagnostic
testmg. center ma~ager; Steve Riftle; Saled Hojat, M,D~ chairman
of rad1ology; Jessae Beaver, X-Ray t..,bnologlst and Cindy Peterson, X-Ray technologist.
of quality performl!Dce and results.
The clinic's six board
certified/board eligible mdiologists
and quality staff of certified registered radiolt~gytechs and niammograpbytccbs and support positions
provided extra effort to documen.t
lb~ ir s upe~~r level. "By receiving
thiS reccruf•callon, Holzer Clinic
has proven to have the highest stan-

be on the safe side, ask
for advtce.

1Y·

concern for !be problems affecliog
farmers.
The general public bas an aes·
!belie interest in wildlife but are
also concerned with the highway
safety aspect of deer. On Sunday,
February 12 at 1:00 p.m. !be Divi·
s•on of Wildlife will bold -wildlife
bearings at its five dislrict offices
· to get input on proposed bunting
s.easo~s and bag limits. The locauons mclude ...
• District I · -1500 Dublin Rd .,
Columbus
• Dislrict 2 • 952 I Lima Ave.
Findlay '
·
'
• District 3 · 912 Ponage tiuc:es
Dr., Akron
• District 4 • 360 E State St.,
Athens
·
• • District 5 • 1076 Old Spring· field Pilce, Xenia ·
In addition, a follow up
statewide bearing will be tbeld Friday, March 3, 9 a.m. at the District
I office in Columbus. 1 encourage
all interested farmers to attend !be
closest hearing. You play an important role in wildlife management
and !be Division of Wildlife needs
to bear from you. Feel free to con·
tact !be county Farm Bureau office
if you are interested in attending ,
one of these hearings.
.
Kim ,Harless is the Farm
Bureau s area organization
director,

-·Why Americans should care about low wages in . Me~ico

effectively managing your resources. To

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Your mate's
might

· ~F~eb:ru~ary~s~,~19~95~~======~~============~~P~o~m~•:~~Y~~M~Idd~~~p~o~rt~G~a~l~ll~po~l~ls~,~OH~=P~o~ln~t!P~Ie~a~sa;n~t;,wv~~============~S~un~d~a~y~Ti~tm~es~~Se~n~ij~ne:·~I~P~~~~~

might not be one of your better days for

committing yourself to anything financial· bad way, unless something i s done now.

:.· ,Holzer Clinic reaccredited as ·
; certified mammography center
GALLIPOLIS · The American
College of Radiologys (ACR ' s)
, Committee on Practice Accredita, 'lion bas issued a three year Cenifi.
: 'Cation of Mammography to 'Holzer
. , 'C linic's main facility. This is the
, clinic's second consecutive three' year cerlificatioQ.
Holzer Clinic's main facility on
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis was !be
, .first mammography provider in
: :Soulbeastern Obio to achieve this
: ·stringent accreditation in late 1991.
; ·: The ACR distinguishes between
, )lccredited and non -accredited
; maJIIIIIOgrapby ih !be training and
;, :experience of the radiology physi;: :cians and technologists, lbe tech'.· .nology of the equipment used and
.:;Jww strictly it is tesiCd and moni: toted, and the quality control
; applied to !be mammography units
. and film devel,opment. The accredi·
; Wion programs came into being as
: a result of the concerns of radiolo. gists,
,: . National medical organizations,
: Jbe govenunent and !be public !bat
: only qualified personnel and opti. inurn equipment be utilized to
.: ·ensure women the best mammo1 grapbii: exams with the least possi. ble risk. To· obtain Ibis ccrtifica: lion, long and rigorous testing stan·
: ilards are applied . Accreditation
· covers !be physicians,
a n d
: equipment and must show a history

might be unexpectedly tough today .
Regroup. be patient, plan each stap and
lty 4·5-6.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) This

focusing on t ~e laHar.

higher yields and stability
By: Bryce L. Smith
AdvHt, Inc.
Most. fued .iurome investcm are
faced WI~ a dilemma. Do they take
a lower y•eld offered by short term
mvestments , such as mon ey
~kets, or do ~ey go long-term
•tb
rule) to capture a

February 5, 1995

curve

' 5 Failing grades

6 English king
7 Watchful
8 Quantity of medicine
9 Newt
10 Spe·ak haltingly
11 Exp lodes
. 12 One - - million
13 Vocalize
14 Preminger, et al.
15 Placed one inside
another

16 Fastening device
17 High card
18 Rosy
19 Ox
20 "- Johnny I"
27 "Exodus" author
30 Eye or piggy
33 The Beehtve Slate
36 Phase
38 Run-down area
39 Core
43 ·"... - I saw Elba"
44 Good thing
bestowed
45 Use a spade
47 Devotee
48 Snare
49 Man in a wet suit

50 Wrile( Zola
51 Dog breed : 2 wds.
52 Heart and 54 Ch1 ef
56 Eagles and owls:
3 wds .
57 Of sheep
58 Kingly
60 Yacht
61 Formal suit, for
&gt;hort.
62 L1vety
63 Three: prefiX
.66 Delic1o us drinks
67 Bit
69 liken

72 Hair dye
73 Ripped
74 Length·times width
75 People in court
78 Gypsy Rose 79 Whistle sound
81 Sword
83 Mineral spring
85 · Inclines ·
. 88 Greek meeting
place
89 -down
(moderated)
92 Grona
93 Bird on the dollar
94 Chide
97 Card game
99 Clear
100 Green gem
103 Special retail event
105 Step
106 Lass
107 Overact
109 Permij
111 -Aviv
112 Horse of a certain
. color
113 Calendar abbr.
115 Long stooy
117 Opposite.of debits
118 Cheal
120 Pantry
122 Stopwatches
123 The "Iliad" is one
124 Shaped
125 Closes
126 Doctrine
127 Agassi of tennis
129 Play part
131 Item for sifting
133 City in Idaho
134 Tower of135 Moves a little
137 Mild-mannered
138 Makes a choice
140 Pack ·
143 "Born in the -"
· 145 Soak flax
146 Macaw genus
147 Timetable abbr.
148 Untruth

• lleoefits offered according 10 Paul
s~-- lr
'.
r ~•fl', president of the Gallia
:-county Farm Bureau
· 'W • talked ·
:.
e ·velb'
to' a number of
·
· J)eOPIe 10 IS year s membersh•p
: effort and have found the attitude
• · be
'ti abo lb
, to very posl ve , ut _e updat~
· ~d member benefits • sa1d Vock1
; Powell. Membcnbip Chairperson.
· ''Th
$1 500 reward
, . . e new •
program
' IS JUSt one example of bow Farm
' Bureau is updating their programs
:This laces !be old $500 reward
'
rep M b
b ld h
,tprogram.
.
. emd ers
. s ou
·ang
new rewar Signs as soon as
llberr
. ·du
'd ~ lb
•
, !beIf
es are Pll. or e year.
.
. One of .~ b1ggest concern s
:among Gallia County farmers is
,''deer popu Iat'10~ controI. A no lb. er ·

.

C?rpet remnants, misc .

Holfday Inn
St. At. 7 North Gallipolis
For all your Video Needs
Transfers, Video Taping etc.
Call VIDEO TRANSFERS

446·6939 or 441-054 7

--t

PRESENTED CERTIFICATE- A certlfl·
cate of achievement was presented by the Oblo
Department of Agriculture Director Fred L.
Dalley, center, to Meigs County Fair Board
members, from the left, Buddy Ervin,. Leonanl
Koenig, Kenneth Buckley, and Ed Holter. Dalley
made the presenialion at the recent Ohio Fair
Mtinagers Association luncheon held in Colum·

CbiJ;lca, ·"

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbu•, Ohio
Bureau of Contract Salta
L8gal Copy Number ~74
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Moiling Dolt 1/27/95
Sealed propoeele will b~
eccopted from all pro·
quollllod bidden 11 the
Bureau of Contract Soleo,
Room 118 ol the Ohio
D 1 p·• r 1 m o n 1
ot
Tronaportatlon, Columbul,
Ohio, unll I 10:00 o.m.
Wodneadoy, February .22,
1te51or lmprovemtnta In:
Alhono, Golllo, Hocking,
Melge, Monroe, Morgen,
Noble, VInton, Wuhlngton
Counlltl, Ohio tor
Improving tocllon ATH 33·
0.00 on Untied Slotoo Routt
33 In tht Vlllogoo of Albany
and Buchtel, In tho Village
of Choohlro, tn tho Village ol
M'urroy City, In tho Vllligu
ol Joruoalom, Lewl1vlllo
end Stafford, In lht Vllltgt
ol Stoe kport, In th t VIII ago
of Summerfield, In 1ht
' fL owe11 ' on d oth or·
VI lloge o

12CIMR2V65N6764911
Tht tole will be held on
lht 15th day of February,
'1985 at 10:00 a.m . . at The
Peopltt Bonking and Truol
Co ., 97 N. Second St.,
Middleport, Ohio.
lnttrllted porlleo .may
arrange lor lnapecllon of
thlt property prior to tho
.. 11 by contacting tho
underalgned during normal
buolntu houro.
Tho undtrolgned roaervoo
tlttl right to bid, and to rt)+el
ony or all bldo and to conctl
thlo oolo prior to the ,abovo
date.
The Peoploo Banking
' &amp; True! Co.
97 N. Second St.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
·
(614) 1192-6661
(2) 5; lTC

varlaua rout•• end uctlona

by lurnlohlng and lnotolllng
k
ra Ioe d pavtmen t mar er
matorlala.
"Tho dolt ut lor
completion of 1hlo work
ehall bt 11 111 forth In tht
bidding j&gt;ropoul.''
.
1
Plano anil Specll cotlono
""ron flltln lhel Department
of ranoportat on.
JtrryWroy
Director of y;ano....,.•tlon
"w·.Fobruory5,12,1995
Public Notice

.'

.I

•

•
,.

..

bedspreads, sheets,

!, fB membership drive underway
"~~dvanu~;~n orru:e =~ ~:mr:~ ·

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

Tables, lamps, chairs,

'.

ma·or c
·
k'
J
oncern u wor mg With · everyone !bat a membership in !be
local reSidents to Implement a flood Gallia County Farm Bureau is the
~~~~ic~J:~~~~~e
best bargain around. .
~
"M be h' . F
B
A new product bemg offered by
em rs 'P 10 arm ureau !be local Farm Bureau is the green
can mean real dollars in your pock
fl · bo
be ·
" 'd Sb
•
.
• re ecuve use num r s•gns. You
531
et.
oemaker. Not JUSt from can purchase a sign wilb two sets
!be many member programs av•'l
• $7
~ ·
of your housenumber •ot
able to families throughout the
y
· k !be ·
·
year but from legislative efforts· GallouS~l plcW
seign up at .!be
'
•a 01 &amp; a1er onservauon
made through the Ohio Farm Dislrict Office in the c H McKen
Bureau All farmers benefit from
: A · ultural c
·y · ·
these ~tivilies and when farmers z•e t gtnc . 'de ~nki~· ou rn•gbt
wan o cons• r p1c ng up two or
are helped, the community and lbree and ivin them to other famconsumers are helped, too"
·1
beg Wgbe
Sb
ak
·
' Y mem rs.
n posted by your
· · oem. er e~courages anyone mail box or driveway; !bey greatly
mterested 10 findm~ out more about enhance the visibility of your
th e mem b e r b ene f'l t s o f F arm address for emergency veh•cles
·
and
8 ureau to contact the Gallia Coun
b 1m
· · b b 1
·
• w o ows 11 m•g t e p to save
ty Farm Bureau office at 1-800- your life.
777-9226
·
p 11 D
1 1 r
1
"We'~e more th an happy to
. rd•l Yto Y,er th• Gn olllarmcat on
coo na r oor e •
ounanswer qh es tions and prove to ty Fann Bureau.

BULLETIN BOARD

to sell

'

•. ByPATIYDYER ·
." : GALLIPOLIS . There is still
:·lime 10 . . F
B

Are staffed and equipped to handle a
loan reques t from start to finish,
which is pretty unu sual these days.
Most lenders are required to send
applications to a central office for'
approval , which not only slows
down the process. but makes the
entire tran saction far less personal,"
Howell said. "Our customers will
always be able to speak to a person
with lhe authority to make them a
loan."
. Prior to joinin~ Peoples Bank.
Howell was employed by City Loan
Financial Service&gt; in Pomeroy, lat·
er serving as branch manager of the
Athens office. He is a graduate of the
West Virginia Bankers Association
School of Banking at Marshall Uni ·
versity and resides in Pomeroy with
his wife, . Deni se, and dau ghter,
Kelsey.
One of Scarberry 's duties will be
to accept loan application s over the
telephone. Th is is the first time the
bank has had a loan oflicer whose pri mary respon sibility is 10 deal with
telephone requests .
·
"It's our_ way of addressing .the

ably ship jobs to low-wage pas- in !be United States are in service COMING UP:
Federal Reserve pushed up short·
tures, American workers could be and retail businesses,; it is manufac·
The Labor Deparqnent reports tenn interest rates another half per·
forced to compete for fewer avail· turers t11at are most likely to trans- on fourth -quarter prod~ctivity and centage point to their highest levels :
able jobs at borne.
·
•fer jobs to Mexico.
the Federal Reserve reports on con- in four years ... United Pacific
Low wages could also drive
But the situation illustrates a sumer credit for December on withdrew its bid for Santa Fe
more Mexicans to illegally immi- fact of Washington life: Most U.S. Tuesday ; Labor also report s on Poclrlc , clea ring the way for
grate in search of bigher paying politicians are more interested in weekly jobless claims on TbursBurUng&amp;on Northern and Santa Fe
U.S. jobs.
.
living standards in the United dl'Y and January producer prices on
to complete a $4 biUion merger ...
The peso's plunge of roughly 40 States than in Mexico.
Friday.
General Motors and Ford report·
percent in recent months bas fur- .
".The problem is that !be whole TICKER :
ed better-lban-expeciCd results for
lber widened .the wage gap.
eco nomic relations between ih e
lbe nation 's unemployment mte 'the fourth quarter amid IUrnal'Ounds
Before the Mexico govern- U.S and Mexico bas been foc used jumped in January to its highest
in operations ... mM decided to
ment's devaluation of !be peso in toward investment protection and level In lbree months, trig gering
relax its notoriously formal dress
Deci:mber, !be difference between · not to protecting workers." Fau x rallies in stocks and boods ... The
code.
' U.S. and Mexican 'factory wages said.
was 7to 1; now it' s as high as 12 to
I, said Jeff Faux, president of lbe
Economic Policy Institute, a Washington-based liberal think tank.
President Clinton appeared to
raise !be poiCntial. stakes even more
wben be proposed Friday raising
lbe minimum wage in !be United ·
States by 90 cents an hour over two
years, from $4.25 to $5.15.
StiU, many economists say there
is little relevance between a higher
BOOTS ·
Male Review
minimum wage in the United
All leather Western Boots
_ States and low wages .in Mexico.
Reg. $149.00 ·
Feb . 7
a~ oo pm
That's because most low-wage jobs
Sale Price $59.00
City Limits
Large Stock
Engineer .... .... .... .......... ..$49.00
For Ladies Only
.Wellington ...... ... ... ... ...... .$49.00
Loggers .... ... , .......... .. ..... $50-55
Harness .............. ......... .$59 .00
Carolina-Georgla-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furnijure 62 Olive St.
' G~llipolis
All U.S. Made
SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
LAYNE FURNITURE
HOWELL
SCARBERRY
• DUI • No Prior
LARGE $ELECTION OF
concc~ns ol our wOrk.m g cu stomers
Insurance
whose schedules don 't penn it them
LIVING ROOM SUITES·
to visit the bank durin g regular
All Ages, All Risks
SOFA&amp; CHAIR
business hours," said Scarberry. "We
PRICED $450 TO $1095
We try to insure
want to make it as easy as possible
to get a loan ."
·
LANE ~OTION SETS
everyone!
Scarberry. who was employed by
· SOFA&amp; RECLINER
AUTOHIO Insurance
. the Peoples Bank in 1985, has held
$1195
various positions involving all facets
Phone (614)446-6111
Mon . thru Sal. 9·5 p.m. 446-0322
of the bank 's lending operations. Pri3 miles out Bulavi.lle Pike
or to joining the bank, she was
Gallipolis
employed by Fruth Pharmacy of
Point Pleasant. A 1980 graduate of
Did Vau know that. .. Planned Parenthood of
Point Pleasant High School, Sc4rSoulheast Ohio in Gallipolis provloes
ONE DAY ONLY!
berry is currently pursuin g a bankin g
conf1demial family planning services to 600
degree through the Marshall UniGall ia County residents each year. Bir1h
Saturday, February 11
Control Servi ces include a physic1an
versity Mid-Ohio Valley Center.
e~~; a rn i nat ion , ~an c er screening, ectucai!On
9
am5
pm
A native of Apple Grove , Scarand binn con1rol supplies. Women and men
berry is a life-long resident of Mason
may receive tests an d trealmenl tor sexually
Cash'n Carry
lfansmincd disease . and anonymous HIV
Cou~ly and currently resides in
tests. Sli ding Fee Scale; Priv ate lns u r~Jnce
Point Pleasant with her . hu sband,
and Medicali:l are accepted. Planning
Remodeling
Sale!
P{e"Vents unintended pregnancy. For an
Bruce.
appt. ca ll (6 14) 446 -0166
Everything priced

bus. He said !bat the "bard work and dedication
of the board members enabled Ohio to maintain
the reputation of having tbe best agricultural
fairs in the country". Fair board delegates froin
Ohio's 94 county and Independent fairs and 1he ·
Ohio State •·air participate in the Ohio Fair
Managers Convention.

PubliC Notice

1---------

1------,.,.-===,..- ·

Head Quarters by
Juanita
446·2673
Great Nails

Public Notice

in Minimum Time

Townahlp, along wllh iha

e;denelon of • ae~tr llnl

from Stole Routt 850 to
State Routo 160 at Holzer
Hoaplltl. Your otatemont of
quolltlcotlona ohould be
dellver+d to tho Golllo
County
Courthouu,
Commllolonor'o Offlco, 18
Loculi Str.. t, Galllpollt,
Ohio 45631 no later than
4:00 p.m. on Thuuday,
February 18, 11195.
Gollla County

United Way of Gallia County
would like to !hank the
following bu sines ses for the
donation· of door prize s for a
United Way Open House Held
November 22, 1994 at Holzer
· Medical Center.
Acquis itions
Amyl's Floral Fashions
Bob's Electronics
Fruths Pharmacy
Holzer Gift Shop
Jolynns
Spring Valley Pharmacy
The Treasure House
Sharon Carmichael
Loaned Executive

Commlaalonere
February 5, 10,1995

Public Notice •
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAnON
Columbul, Ohio
Burtou of Contract Solei
Legal Copy Number 115-090
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Dolt 1~7/95
Sealed propooalo will be
occoptod from all pro·
quolltlod blddoro el tho
Bureau of Contract Salea,

Room 111 of tho Ohio
Doportmont
of
Tron1portollon,
Columbuo,
Public Notice
Ohio, unlll 10:00 a.m.
Wodnoodoy; February 22,
PUBLIC NOTICE
19951or lmprovemenloln:
.Tho Board of Gellla
Golllo County, Ohio lor
County Commluloneu It . Improving varloua routea
oeoklng Staltmon1e ot and oectlono, the Cttlto ol
Proftulonol Ouolltlco11ono Belpre end Marltlto and the
from onglneorlng llrl'!lt Vlllogoo of Clarington and
tnterootod In being Ballo Volley, by herbicidal
conalderod tor the aprey.
''Tho date . eel for
engineering end doalgn of
tho Gelllo County lndullrlol completion of thlo work
Perk Proloct. Preliminary ahall bt 11 111 forth In the
Scopo at Work tor tho bidding P!'OPOttl."
'
proltcl lnvolvu tho
Plano ond Sptclllcatlona
dovolopmont end dulgn of ore on tilt In the Doportmont
approximately ·200 acree of of Tranoportatlon.
·
lnduotrlal park all In tho
Jerry Wray
area of Stott 1Routo 850 &amp;
Director of Tronaporta11on
US 35 In Springfield Febru~ry 5, 12, 11115

Get your best
selectioll"of
Valentine Cards
at

Village Floral
and Card Shop
245~5678

8 years experience at

313 Third Ave.

contlnuouo and compoolto
A588·50 Steal Boom with
reinforced dtck and
aubolruclurt (apona 90' ·0",
100'·0", 71'·0" center to
center boarlngo), ovtr Swan
Creek.
The Ohio Deportment of
Tranaportallon' hereby
notltloe oil pre-qualified
blddora that dloodvontaged
buelnuo ontorprlooo will be
afforded full opportunity to
aubmlt bldo In ro1ponoe to
thlo lnvltotlon ond will not
be dlocrlmlnillod olfalnat on
th e groun d• of roca, co 1or,
or national origin In
conolderotlon for on oword.
Minimum woge ratee lor
thle pro)oct have been
predetermined 11 required
by low and oro oat forth In
tho bid propooal. "The date
oat lor completion of thll
Public Notice
work oholl be •• oot forth In
1he bidding propoool."
.
NOnCE TO BIDDERS
Plana and ·speclllcatlonl
STATE OF OHiO
IIi on lilt allht Deportment
DEPARTMENT OF
of Tronaportallon .
TRANSPORTAnON
- Jerry Wroy
·
Columbuo,
Ohio
Dl
01 ~
Bureou ol Controcl Soloo
r+ctor , ron1portotlon
January 211, 1995
LegoiCopyNumber95-085
Fb
~
51
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT . ,_•_ru_a_ry;._,
_____
_

Moiling Doto1120195
NH-1(188)
Stolod propoulo will bt
accepted from ell pro·
qualified blddtrt at the
Bureau of Contract Soloo,
Room 111 ol tho Ohio
Doportment
of
Tranoportallon, Columbua,
Ohio, untll10:00 a.m.
Wodnetdoy, February 22,
1
1995for lmprovtmtnta n:
GoUla County, Ohio for
Improving oectlon GAL-7·
ua, state Rou1e 7 In Ohio
Townohlp, by grodlng,
dr·olnlng, paving with
. "UC SA' .,
PU
"
....
rolnlorcod
concrete
Tht underolgntd will 1111 p 1 v 1 m·0 n t
and
by
II Public Sale the following: conotructlng Bridge No.
1882 Goo Mt1ro, Serial GAL-7·0552, a three apen

lntrod.ucing Sculpturing
Nails by Robin Hutton

Mary Kay Cosmetics
Call for a free facial ·
Becky VanCleave
lndependanl Beauty Consultant
245-0525

r-

·

Candace Pope,
Holzer Medical Center
_ Community Uascin
Director, will be at the
Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center on
Tuesday, February 7 at
11 a.m. She will be
providing information
about the hospital's
MaxWell 50 program,
· which is free to persons
50 years of age or older.
For more information
call 446-5392 •

..

WANTED
· Couth and Unc;:outh
Characters with known
and unknown Thealerical
Talents for "Ariel Frolics"
Centenial Production in
July. Auditions
Feb.14&amp;15
6:30 • 9:00 p.m .
ARIEL THEATER
Call Lora Snow, 256·
1614 to ~eserve a time.
A · WARD
An opportunity to be a
part of a Celebration of
100 years of the ARIEL!

.

Call 446-2342 ·
or992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

�Page-04-Sunday nmes-Senti nel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

See Scam-Lets on Page D-7
AN$WERS
SCRAM-LETS
AVOUCH
CRISPY
HEIFER
DIGEST
JACKET
EMBODY

OVERD~ESSED

LEGAL NOTICE
Ohio Valley Bank wftl
offer for eele: 111111 Pontiac
Sunblrd
LE,
YIN
t1G2JII54K7M7&amp;111266
Public auction on the
proper1y will bt held at:
Jackaon Pike Branch of
OVII, 3035 St. Rt. HID,
Galllpollt, OH at 1:DO p.m.,
Ftbrulry11,111M.
Valttcle told to hlghaet
bidder •a a It • without
uprontd or Implied
warTiflly. Vehicle may be
- n litho abovt lddrett.
ova rtttn/11 tho right to
accept or rojtCt any and all
bldt, and withdrew proper1y
from Nit prior to Nit.
Term• of Sele: C11h or
Ctrtlfttd Chock
February 5, 8, 10, 111M
Public Notice

S~~~~-~£~~

TO

Lost &amp; Found

11

Found: amall black temele dog 1

WNring red caller, Foodlana

Porklng Lot.

Color

T.V.'1,

RefriQaraton,

turn. St•r wars, gl111, chlna,

3 Sm.tll BI'MCI Mile Doal, Exeal• 1ont Wotch Dogoi14-3M447 or

fumltura,

tools or comJH~•

M-

tatll, Oaby Martin. 614·992·i1141.

-

roto-

to

cate.lmmedlate ornlng• ~ Act

Soo: Jim Amold, - y .
Fobruory 6th, llom-2pm. Apply
at : 84 Lumbar Compan•, s.,.,.
Ja
1
1o p
·~
"'" liduolr I ark,
Rd. i, oloro oft Rt. 35 (lin.
.outh of Rt 32) Jackson, Ott
An E;c'ol Opportunity Employer
MIF D
A''
vOH to buy or ooll, Morilyn Indoponctonl
rep. 304-882-2645 ot
1-110().1192-6356.

F-=..:;:::::=:;;,..,.,.==---

AVON SELLS ITSEU'
Nood Cooh for Wlntar Blllo?
Average $8-$15 at Work --Home.
Torrllory Optional. llidop. Rop. 1·
800·1112-4138.
Bartender /WaHrooo Wontod
Coll614-448-4756.
'

ComplOor ooftwo-ro
tochniclon: -lllng opptlcant to
provide technical advice and
1upport to ataff In 1 varttlt)' of
olfiCo Mlllngo In o munk:ounty
agency. Dutlu would lncludo
ordering new requirement• for

hardware/softwarw and updating
and Install• lion ot tlw 10ftw.1n ..

Trolnlng otoff In ,_ .,..
pllcotlone ond updot• a wall
oo tro 1n1ng ,_ oloH to.,.loting
:;'""""""
Will a.
1 1 11 - - 1 .
t he

putJ,.; :rw;-rr!,t ~thine~

. Alullon
Kooohoundlmlnftut;o
: CoUll pupo; full olD Cotllo

pups; 114-185-3841.
Sm.lll 1 YNr Old BIKk Cocker

Spaniel Ttrrler Pup, 814--251-1337.

Two Adun Female Rabblla, 614-

367-0624.

2

lnMemory

In loving memory

· ot

MERLE MANLEY
who passed away
Feb. 5th.
3 years .ago.
Sadly missed by
husband, children,
· .grandchildren,
relations &amp; friends.
In Loving Memory of
Richard (Red) Stewart
" who passed away
Feb . 6, 1994
A millio p tim es
we've needed you ,

=-~6-;ti7~~1.i. Standing

Tim·

left a place
That n~ one el se can
fill
Sadly missed by

•

•

image through superior customer service;
• leading and managing an Qperations

and administrative team; and

skills; and be able 10 meel applicable DOT
requirements. College degree preferred . .
We offer a compelitive salary and an excellent
benefits package , i'ncluding profit sharing and an
inveslment plan oplion . Interested candidales should

forward their resume and salary requirements tO:

.FERRELLGAS
Box TP, One Liberly Plaza
Liberty, MO 64068
EOE/ AAP

We encourage applications from minorilies, .females,
veterans, and lhe disabled.
No Agencies Please

No!•- pluo. Tho obllfty to
communk*a wtth .-reon~~ with

45131.

MISStNO YOUR DAYS AS A
MEMBER OF THE MILITARY???
alECK OUI Tho Port·Timo Jobo
Avolllbto In T1oo Wool Vlrt~lnlo
ArmY Nollonll Cluonl. Lot Uo
ProVIdo You Wllh A 11-hly
Poyc_,. Educotlonot jAool•
tonco, A ~- Aollro~nt Pion, .
A Trip To GERMANY· AUG 85,
And Much lloro. Your Ex·
oorto,_ lo fmt10&lt;11n1 To U..
Coli 3Q4:87S.aa:l'r. 304-6~950,
Or In WV, ~:612-3818.
Part time bookbepi'r, computer
•J*Ienc.l nee.... ry. 114-M2~
11140.
Porl~lme -'lion klr RN, LPN,
MED TEcH or LAB TECH tor

financing terms for a Snap-on franchise.
For consideration please call: SnajHln lnc~rporated. 1-800775·7651.

u..on Co. WIC to .tulat In cer-

Utlcotlono
-further
· ot
par·
tlclpanl&amp;. For
lnlormotlon, ooNoct tho llaoon County
Wtc Oftlco, 304-675-527'1 or
wrHo WIC Dlroctot, Mld.Qhlo
Volloy Hoolth Doportmonl, 211
llh Slrwl, Porko,.burg, WV
2tlt01, or ro~phono 304-458-13111.
ANI Estat• Oar..,.. Prol. .•lonal

Snnp·Cflt.
INCORPORATED
K.tnosha, WI
Snap-on iJ an equal opportunity employer

t,.lnlng. ERA Town &amp; Counlry

Root E.,.,, 8rollor, Bocklo
&amp;iln, 3CM.al5-5548.
REGISTERED NURSES, CIISI
Pop Up To $112,000. Jobo
Notlonwtllo. 2 Yoa,. AN Exp. &amp;
Good RofL Coll1-ll0().423-1138.
Small Local Firm Sooldng Full
~ /On Coli Cloonlng loc:lt-

Shell Chamlcal Company's Point Pleaaant
Polyeater Plant focated at Apple Grove (WV)
In Mason County Is seeking qualified
applicants for tha following poaltlon:

Seeking a team orlanted Individual who will
be responsible for planning, designing,
programming, Installation and start-up plus
system and program upgrade, trouble·
shooting, and maintenance of the Fisher
DCS and related contro1 systems. The
person will be required to have a strong

electronics and programming Is required.
Pleasa

send

reaume

Including

aalary

requirements to:

we

Shell Chemical Company
'Human Resource Dept.

...,.®~=
An Equal Oppof!unlty Employer

.1 range

Real Estate General

-

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Phont

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ....: ............ 3118-8828
WILMA WILUAMSON, REALTOR .........286-0036

Main O/fitt·388..1J826
958 Clllllt Clulptl Rd.
· Bidwdl, Ohio 45614

Dl~ CIN Workar. Muet Ba At

Laat 18 Yur1 Old And A High
School Graduate. Wrtle: CLA

Box 348, clo Golllpollo Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Av1nu1, Gil·
llpollo, 011 41563\ Uo!lng Ex.
perllnee In Tr~lnlng Pr•School

Child,.,,

Eom up to $1000 wMkly olufflng

envelopee It ttom.. Start now.

No uper~. F,.. eupplln.
Froo lnfonn.otlon. No Obllgotlon.

EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ................... 44&amp;-1897
LYN.D A FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 446 6806

hotn, 814-JII2.at83.

F1nanc1al

..

Employment Services
_11-.,c::H-::e~lp'=W_a:-::n-:cted:----

IM,
Phone C.llla.

Holld1y
~I

now

Gallipolis,
·

No

-lcol Suppl, Compony
oc:coptlng

1·219-791-1191, Ext. 88.

Applications Ars Now B•lng Aqt
cpeted At Pinecr•st Ctra tan-

HappyAds

r

Is it harder to get.
out of the bed
when you are

"40"?

Happy B-Day
Scott Walton
Feb. 4th
Guess Who?

Isn't
she's so glfty,
We

all

wish this

lawyer a happy
II

&amp; Mike

Meri

50" •
The Thang

person.

Pump, Oa1 Furn~~ca,
Garage. Addlaon Area,

lll!lt NEW USTING • NEW HOME -

I

mn

lor $34,900.001

,_,.,
........"'
In;,

--· -·

Clll!'~fttl, tlflht dotl-1
toil~lllephOI• ordtn• •na

. Pay nogolloble
upon
lit ondlor oxpOrionce.
Sond rwoumo to: otflct Sorvtoo
olid
112 llaln
Sttll.lt, ·pom.roy, Oh 45711.
Poolllor) owoNoble lm,..,lotojy.

s..-.

Openings for three · full
time and one · part time
AN for acute and special care units on second and third shifts.
Must hold current Ohio
license. Experience In
acute or Intensive care
·preferred. Also, one full
time
LPN poshlon
available on our Long
Tenm Care Unit. Shifts
will be varied. Must
hold
current
Ohio
license. Previous Long
Term Care experience
required. Apply at Oak
Hill Community Medical
Center, 350 Charlotte
Avenue, Oak Hifi,Ohlo

45656. (614) 682-n11.
• ' EOE
.

Gang

I

LOCATED IN THE CITY OF GAUIPOUS

-

CALL VIRGINIA bSMITH 446·6806 01'388-8828

Room With Drive

you

lt43. HOME &amp; INVESTMENT • Can be bougrn
together New 3 beclrm. ranch home w/large rms., WMe
brick fronl, channing LA. din. rm .. large rms. throughout.
loads at oak cabinets in kit. , 2 car garage 2 ac. M/l

W/home.

·

•

'

IM4 FOUR BEAIITIFUL ROLUHG LOTS on WMe Rd.
all utilhles available. 2 1/2 Ar.. m/1 ftach make your choice
now! Build your dream hom e In the country and have
everlasting comfort.
•

H33. HOME AND INCOME • Double Home with eamlng
power. You can live In one unit and rem the other. Close
to schools. shopping &amp; churcnes. Cal! for tun information
and an appointment VL Smith 388·8826.
1947. NEW USTlNO - KING SIZE FAMILY HOllE or use
this super nice 5 bedrm . for PRIVATE HOME CARE. 3
baths. 3 ac. m/1. VIrginia L. Smith 388·11826.

tHO LOVELY INDEED THIS 4 BEDROOM 2 112
bath home on 12 acres Is sure to please the
professional •per50n and lovely treed acreage with a
pond that Is stocked with plenty of fish. A must lo
see, call Wilrt.a today tor a view.

decorated on 1/2 acre lot dose to the city, owner
needs more space, great tor the single pemon or
newty weds or the retiree's, .has a 2 car garage that

1113. OLD PLANTATION HOME · Btiln·lfl 1eoo·s waKing
to De restored . Large bam &amp; shed. 117 Ac. Mit, crop land
&amp; pasture I wooded. Glose to Holzer. All utilities

·

~
i

available .

11000 HEW USTING • IMMACULATE. LOVELY &amp;
ntii. COMMERCIAL BUILDING ·.Olive St. 16' &lt;Soar &amp;
ceiling w/IOft fcx storage 210 &amp; 220 elect. water &amp; sewer.
6' cemant to load &amp; unload In front. 30&gt;&lt;80 building approx.
3900 sq. ft. block &amp; bamo. $45,000.

1n

'

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subjec t to
tl"'e Federal Fa ir Housing Act
or 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise yany preference,
limtlalion or dl&amp;erimlnatioh
based on race, color, religion,
se~~: l amiHal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any sucn p re lerence,
!Imitation or discrimination.·
This newspaper will not
knowlingly accept
advertisements for real esta te
which is in violation ot the law.
Our readers are M rel:ly

lnlormeci.Uwu all dwellings

bedroom, 2 baths, fuH basement, 2 car garage In a
nice neighborhood and priced at only $40,000.00,
don't delay ·because this one will go fast and make

32 Mobile Homes
fOrSala

1131 GREAT FARMLAND FOR THE FARMER
minded, 50 acre5 level to sllgi'\Uy rolling with a 4
bedroom farmhouse that needs some TLC and

-·

.. '

Slooplna ,_,. wHh coollln;.
Alto treiW .,.ce on rtvar. ~~
hook-up.t. C.ll .tfter 2:00 p.m.,
-~.llooonWY.

Me rchandise

llpollt, S2i5111o. Utllltloo Pold,
t14 446 WI Ahor 7 P.M.

Sulh-ln

Microwave

No Polo, 814-446-2857.

2bdrm. 1pts., tot•l electric,

~

plloncoo fumlllhtd, foundry
room taciiMIH ciON to achool
In 1-n. Appl~tlono onlloblo
Vlllogo Groon APia. !Mi or
114-G112-3n1. EOH.

41 Houses for Rent
2124 Uneoln Ava, $325/mOnlh.
304-6711-6223.
.
2br., Madison Avo.,

r~~f•renc.

deposit

required, you
utllitln. 304-675-2535.

1:
pay

Post Buildings and
Package Deals . Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Do llars.
Local Sales Represenlati ve

FAST!

HousehOld

Goods

141 Barlow Ad.
Patrioi, Oh io 45658

PH . 614·256·6031
Real Estate General

LOG HOMES
Comfort, convenience,

:rt::

8I011118•ooll Apartment•.,. now
opptloltlono
ond ronl·
1ng
nw~~o
tor oldorly
olid
d
y, one bedroom, .111
lfectrlc.
114-112·3055,
Slonowood A!&gt;lo., lllddloport,
Ohio. EOH.

O.E. Hoovy Duty Wuhor &amp;
Dryor1 _Wotb G- S300 IBolh,

814-2-8108.

G000

USED

Now availble FmHA One BR llpts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $26'9.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, AJC on -site laundry,
Community Room, Ma11agement, ·
Maintenance provided

energy·
durability
and
flexibility In design are
a few of the reasons
why 20,00 families will
build a Jog home this
year!

APPLIANCES

W.lhentL. dryere, refrlg•r.tton,
ra~. :ta.IQQI

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
10oc:., $45,000, Golllootlo ":21
3 old atructura1, off main
Syracuse, Ohio
114ml. 3114-47&amp;-7217.
Rentals

Banners, Vehicle uttering, Magnetidc
Signs, Menu Boards, Commercial Signs, Warning
&amp; ADA Signage, Logos Designed OR Reproduced,
DOT Numbers

WE SL EY MULLET

51

W.lk

1 Bedroom, Khchen, Appll.lne•
Fumlthed
Naar
Holzer
HoapHol. $25tlllo Pluo ~.

FR EE ESTIMATES ON

Appll.tncn, 76

Vlno Stiool, CoiiM-448·13118, 1·
1100-45-34118.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comptoto homo tum~~~~ii'
Hour1; lion-Sat, H. I
03:12, 3 'mlloo 0U1 BYiovllll Rd.
frM O.Uvery.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NowAJood
No appUances, "iiHo04uiioo.tshllctotdllcl fur·
nloNng. V2 mi. Jorrtcho Rd. Pl.
P f - , WV, coli -..75-1450,
11t 118•111.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo Sl., Ollllpollo. Now &amp; Uood
fumlhn, hNtera, W..t•m 1:
Work - ·· 114-446-3\lii.

Appalachian
Structures has been
leader in the log horne I
industry for over 15
y~ars.
Choose
70
standard
over
models or we'll custom
design one for you.
Call or write for more
infomation.

MElGS COUNTY

.BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

1-800-585-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171
'

a

CfPOA11JfiY

LOOKING FOFI A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
11
4.507 acrea mil
'9,000
12
4.615 acrea mil
10,000
13
4. 702 acrea m/1
9,000
14
3.881 acrea m/1 ·
15
4.190 acrea mil
18
5.442 acrea mil
17
6.148 acrea m,ti
18
10.320 acr. . m/1

Appalachian Log

Structures, Inc.
Dept. GOT,
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-458-9990
Real Estate General

Flatwoods
Road. formal dining area. family room, nice sized lot
with above 'ground pool. 21' x 24' detached garage.
$45,000.00
1744
47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD! Aluminum sided 1 1/2
story home, living room, kitchen, over sized detached
2 car garage . FA electric furnance . Additional mobile
home hoo~·up . Must call today lar .,an appointmentl

NEW LISTINGS WANTED!

$3 000 PRICE REDUCTION! Yes, Yes, Yes!
T.h~t's what you'll say when you see this home!
Yes -it's a good location. Yes , It's been
rem'odj~led where II counts . And yes , ifs
·affordable . Large living room. 2·3 ·bedrooms , 1
bath nice kitchen with breakfast nook located
on .25 acre . mil , overlooking the river. $34 ,900.
eettei call Carolyn today before it's too late.
"
1609

Real Estate General

Loceted on Bulavllle Plkt, !his 2 story ho!"e
offers affordilbllity. 3 bedrooms. t bath, l,.;ng
'room eat-in kitchen and full basement. Deck
ove~;,rn.ing nice sized lot. $39,900
1205

Wood Realty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446-1066

Want a new home without tho haaale of
building?? Then we have the home for you.
Built in 1993, this v1nyl &amp; brick split level offers
3·4 bedrooms, 2 baths , living room , family
room, lovely kitchen with dining area, 2 car
garage situated on 1.75 acres , mil. To make
your dream of owning a new home a reality,
call Carolyn tpday at a price of $66,000 you.
can't afforH not to.
1604.

Allen C . Wood, Realtor/Broker-446·4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446·0971
Mose Canterbury, Realtor-446·3408
Jeanette Moore, Reahor· 256·1.745
· Tim Watson. Realtor-446·2027

homo situated on .92 of an acre. Room for
another mobile home with own septic, water
and electric hook ups. Outbuilding. Located on
Hannan Trace Road. $15,300
•too

Make Owners An Olferll They are ready to
sell!I 3 bedroom-, 2 plus acres, close to town,
city schools, nice neighborhood. $43,000 1404

n"iiiNF~'ANiit&lt;lU!ill Beautiful Spring Valley
home. A must see home that you'll just fall in
love with. Outstanding features Include custom
oak kitchen, remodeled bathrooms (2) , living
room with attractive warm fireplace. 3 .
bedrooms and cozy ·denlfemlly room. All in top
notch condition. Plus full basement, 2 car
. garage and a very large tree shaded deck in
the beck yard. Call for appointment. 90'.s 11211

Nix It, Fix Ill This home located on
' Don't
LeGrande Boulevard needs some. work, but at
a price of ·$49.000. you can afford to do the
work . Offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. large ~lichen
w ith dining ar e a , la rge living room, 2 car
garage plus otlice space currently rented .
Bonu s features include a new roof and brick
eKtenor. You can't afford not to call Carolyn
loday.
11600

A
by the low price on this 1 112 story home
located on a large lot in Vinton. Offers 3
bedrooms. 1 bath, living room. dining room.
extra large kilchen plus a full ,basement. All the
work has been done for you, all you have to do
is move in. Priced at only $35 .000 . You couldn 't
rent lor this monthly payment, so new's the
time to become a homeowner.
11610

NEW LISTING· 2 homes located on approximately t 112
acre s. One home has 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, t 112 baths,
living room, dining room, tarnlly, kil~hen . One home has
6 rooms , 4· bedrooms. 2 baths, living room , kitchen,
family room Both have rural water, LP gas Fumece , and
mere. Call for appointment to see.
·

GREEN TOWNSHIP This neat as a pin ranch
home is sure to please. Owners hate to leave
th is 3 b edroom h'Ome but must. Feature s

home on t/2 acre lot. 3
room. family room, dining roo m ,
·lull basement. Priced in the 50's.

ranch
bath, living
kitchen and
t300 -

inclUde form al living room,-famlly room, large
covered deck &amp; lanced yard. 2 car garage,
heat pump and more. Located in a quiet family
oriented neighborhood only minutes from town .
$69 ,900
1201

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, IN_C.
[9 MuHip~UIIIngStrvfce
446-3644
(=)
REALTOR'

someone a lovely "'I"'•· needs a little TLC.

, 1115 NEW USTINO, commerical lot In Point
Pleasant' 'area that hila been ctearec:t and ready tor
use that nas a 2 bedroom home"lllil Is -presently
being rented, call Wilma for more
I

Roome tor .-.nt • WHtc; or monlh.

~=~147 •t 1120/mo. Gatlla Hotel.
I
11180.

lng, et•pa, bloc:ka, 1 y•r
homeowner• lnaurance, and e
montha FREE 1a1 , _ only
$1120 down ond. $184 por mo.
Coii1-II00-837·3238.
HEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 IIIII
for Rent
.,
Ht
;:;n;,::.:
r l:;;l•:.:;od~ln:;;.304
:::;;,·;7!15;::;;;;:n
~tt
~=c I J olld 2_bod room opon_.o,
"'
u tur 1
fumlahed and untumtlhld,
n n ehecl, Very Nk:a, 14 x70• 2 MCurHy d.lpotlt required, no
Bedroome,
Built-In
Srerwo, polo, Bt4-H2~22"1S.

Garage.

advertised In lhls newspaper
are avaltable on an equal
opportunity basis.

H31 OWNER WANTS AN OFFER. on thlo 3·•

'

Rooms

Fumlahed Apartment, 1 Bid.
room, &amp;07 Second Avenue, Glf.

Hlco ll Bodroom 14X7U - - ·
• Eteclrlc • Water. a.twMn 15 .a Gracloua llvl~ . "1 and 2 bed·
P.M. &amp; - 5 .
room •part1n81* • vu~
and
Rl~e
Unturnlthod lloblll Homo, 322 M.tnor
Thlnl Avonuo..L.._OIIIIpotlt, No · Apart.-rto In lllddlloort. From
P.t.l, I'M .....:Jtw 1 1M-U.'11031. 123:1-$355 • Coli 114-11112-6658.
EOH.
·44
Apartment

lt73 NEWER MOBILE HOME, 3 bedroom lovely

1164 NOTICE : ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN Is heated fo• the worilollop person, Call us now.
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUR
MASTERPIECE
IN
THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES MIL ALSO 2.346 ACRES
MIL. CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND H01.2ER HOSPITAL.
ALL LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS.

pi1Ced at $60,000.00, call Wilma !Oday.

Furnished

•
Let Us Help

1 Acre,

1

w/ family rm . ami outside entry to ltle patio. Carport.
Nice quite neighborhood close to Holzer. Call tor
Immediate appointment.

garage · new wln(lows , polished hardwood floors
oak cabine ts. Jenn Air range, microwave.'
dishwasher &amp; 5 ceiling lans. Beautiful treed yard 1
ac. m/1 . Oon"t be the one to say ., could have boug' h1
that.•

Bob

On

.,.._, Potier AIM, IM 311 BDOG.

D. C. IIIII Salts, l1c.
Cannelburg, Inc. 45719
Specia li zing in Pole
Bu ild in gs.
Designe d Ia meet yo u1
needs. Any size .
CHOICE Of 10 COLORS

~-

$82,000,

F- QU In-Ground Pool Wllh
Extroo lArgo Dock. Dolochod 4
Cor Garogo WMh HooL AI&gt;J"'•·
20 Fn~h T,..l, Black Top Orin,
Booutltul Londocoplng, S Aoreo,
·114-448-7&amp;35.

.

"1917 NEW usnNa ·Brick ranch 3 be&lt;lrms, 2 b~ths ,
LA. eat·in, kit. w/ knotty pl"e cabinets, full basement

AFFORDABLE • Close to to~n. located In Green
Twp, 3 bedrms, 1 bath, kit. , din. rm , cozy LR
w/woodburnlng fireplace , lull basement, 2 car

EOII.
C19M To The Utirary, Control
· "'rtdng. LAdy Ago 211-41.
Share Apt, With Chrfetiln
Sc'-4 Toochor. Poy 112 Ront
SUI 1nd UtiMtlee. 114 141 t3S5
(t:0().8:00pml

bediOOiii
apartment,
utiHtloo paid, prtyato parf!Jng,
rtv• vt.w, t:Malmo., 1200
........,,nopol0,114-182.seat.
Unhrnlohod 3 Room, loth, vorY
Cloon, Wotor • Truh Pold, 110

Do YOU Need To Make A
STATEMENT

Two

Room, Roc. Room1 Loundry

honoot doponcloblo olid rell· ·
a~. Mull al1o hn• good driv-

Two story home. full basemen! and garage has a great
dea l to offer Designed l or great living. First Uoor has
formal entry with open s talrwa~. formal ltving room with
fireplace. formal dining room, Charry cabinets line the
wall of lhe B)Cifa large kitc hen. Breakfast . room · and
powder room . Seco nd floor offers four bedrooms and
bath . Bedrooms are king StZft . carpet over hardwood
floors, bath has all new fixtures and Love Tub . Basement
has huge family room wfllreptace, bedroom, e• ercise
. area, laundry ~m and storage room . This home i~ ·or
superb quality as the pl umbing ha s bee n replaced. All
new all covering , beaut iful 'new carpet throughout , new
windows installed. Spacio us kitchen with cherry cabinets,
island tor Jenn -Air range. Only private showing will
decide the value is here.

444j1168.

New 1995 14170, lncludn aklrt~

movlee. Cal 1,......,..2.!SIS8.

heat air, ,...,...cea ,...
qulrod. H14-48HII04.

McCormick Rood For Ront, 114-

Sotup. 304-755-6566.

•

1br, ned to Ubr.try, JJIII'Idng,

LIMITED OFFEAI now 14•10 2·
3br., S59i DOWN, No Paym.tn1a
Syr1. FrM O.llvery 1:

ADortrnent for ron! In Pomoro'(,
ti111mo.; houw In Hew Hawn.
$125hno.; 114-tt2·7511.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 136 Jaclloon Pfko
1rorn 1222 to S2.85. Walk 10 ohop

eei11ral

Court. Phono 814-148-a908, 11444fi.n87.
•ttar

_..,,
-· ...-I'ICOI
roqulrod. 30M.UZ.Z221.

- l y Fum- Apo.,_,

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2l&gt;r Mobllo Homo

2br., lrad Run Ad., $2SO'mo.•

AniiMd Baumenl With Family

or

Starter home. 2 bedrms, 1 bath, LA , kit w/dln. area. 1
rT!Qra land available. WOUld
pass this up
acre

#992 NEW UST1NG, this spacious 3 bedroom 2
· baths mOdular on 1 acre lot in a nice area wi1h lots
of privacy and only $48,500 00

42

Merchandise

Room, E.ll~n Kitchin, WHh
Dlohw•And Trooh Compoctor.· Format Dining Room.

own. Block building 46' JC 96'. Overhead·storage, 1 ac.
m/1 great Income. located on a busv SR. You may be
o.,erlooklng a good-deal $85,000.00.

IIMw to clool wfth tho
public, work under prwHu,., be

oHico Millo helpful. lluot bo
obto to rMNrch pJOCiucto for
cUilomer lnlonriltlon.
Exporlenco oo cuhlor ond 1yplng
hotptut. 0\llloo Include, but oro
not Umftod to: woHing on cu•

lotal Electric, Underpl,.
nlng. ANdy To Move Into On
Corner Lot Ptrtt Line Mobile

Miscellaneous

B~utllt!l Homo OvortOott!ng
Ohio Rlvor. -Uppor Fl-. 3 Bod'
,_,,, 3 112 Bllho, F•nll!Y

1094 NEW COMMERCIAL LISTING, Large Apt.
building , 2 units also store rm. for a business ol your

Must

Ing record .tnd be able to make
deUv•riee. Good math akllla and

room,

54

3 Badroonw, 2 Bathe, HNt

114·387·7287.

Loolllng klr ono full-limo olid
pan..tlma

2br. 12l&lt;~t..'?" ,.ntod lot, IIOf.
gont-n, wv. 3114-675-3812. ·
Now 1195 Rodmon 14d4, 211od-

2 ol0f1 Supormorkol,
,....~~~, Hovon
boltoon
floor compiMIIIy remodsl•d, 2
bop: (Iron! bo' 40'1129', roor
boY :12'11231, 100'•40' lot,
m,ooo. 304-tll2·2113.

-GREATLY REDUCED, Large 4 bedrm. home,
2 baths,
new root. 20 Acres at land.
Ownar wants a·~"'

Zlnlx computera. Good communlcat~n tklllt aN .1 must.
Mult ba able to work unsup-

one

1'20mi.L. 2 Botho, Loundry Room,
8x20 &lt;Mek, 8x12 Building, on
Rontod Lot Sit 500 114-44687115.
' •

31 . Homes for Ssle

porlenco CPT ond RCFC
coding. Fomlllor whh OOS ond

week). Send ,...,,. to : Continuity of C.re Inc., ,JJ.O. Box
361, Pomeroy, Otdo 45f6t.

1993 Sunshine 14178 3 Bed-

Real Estale

central and 2 patio's priced to sell at only
$18 ,500 .00, on a rental lOt In Green Terrace Mobile
Home Park.

RepraMnt.ttlvt. Applicant muat
have "prior madk:ai billing ex~

1996 NEW LISTING BARGAIN HUNTERS, t.arg&amp; 7
rm ., 2 story home , 3 bedrms , LR , Kll., din rm , extra living
rm . good forced air furnace . B e ~ut i ful treed lot &amp;
outbu11dings. Price "Sweellj. low."

Hlco 3 bodroom, kllct.l •
•re•,
whllnge 1:
rolrlg-ot, lot 40.120, · - to
ochoolo • morllolo, FAA IP'
prowodl. Somorvllll RoaM,, 17&amp;-30.., or 1711-3431.
One 2 tloclroom Homo; Ono 2
Bodroom Mobllo Homo, In Qol.
llpollo, 614-797-4243,
dining

theolt•lng.

11001 NEW USTING, just on the market this 3
bedroom 2 bath mobile home and owner wants sold
now has a wOOd burning fireplace , total electric wit

Bll~

••. 170 Pinecrest· Drive, Gal- erviMd tnd pot:HA the usual
llpolis.t.. Ohio 45631 For Full Tlma aecrwt•rl•l Hilla. P•rwon hired
And 1-1art Time. State Tntltd wiH bo rMponolbto tor worldng
Nursing Assistants. Compotitlva wHh account recalv.tbiH In ttM
Wages, Differential With Ex ~ colloctlon _H_
old. W•'"' l!t MParfince, Equal Opportunity gotloblo with oxporlonct hours
Employer.
oro tllxlbll (lppro•. 24 por
5

agree

Business
OpportunHy

INOTtCEI
OtiiO'VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
.-.comnwnda thet you do bua~
n... whh peopl• you knowl.ond
NOT to ••nd mon~y throug lM
mall until· you haYe lnYHtfgared

r.e,urneelappllc.ltione tor the tor~

·-POSTAL JOBS k&gt;lwlng port~lmo pooltion:
Now Hiring Entry Laval At $12.36 lng/AccounttColloctiOI)

!Hr. • Benatltl. Clarks. Carriera,
And Sorters. To. Apply For An
Appllcstion And Exam Info. Call

21

Exportoncod ooloopoopll-lllroct
NfM poaltlon of 1 nac....ry

otory, coll814-1192·1303.
Fulftlmo DoH Clork, Apply At

Full Barhs, Sandy, 614-446-1811.

Merchandise

don,

Sand S.A.S.E to Star-ling, Dept.

1849 I,JNIQUE BEAUTY - The remarkable spaciOus
home with 11iew of the county. Italian tile foyer, cathedral
cei ling with balcony, 3 BR, ·2 112 baths, living room with
woodburning fireplace. equ ip. kitchen, breakfast room
~as a lg. window, stereo spe&amp;Xers throughout, brass light
lt xtures and much moro. 2 car anactled garage, anic
storage. 2 acres mn This hOuse is maintenance free of
b_est quality Make your appointment and see if you don"t

zm.

Redman Danville 14x72
With Expando, 3 Sadroorna, 2

Miscellaneous

Sunday Times-Senti

1558

K. P.O. Boa Mt167, Orlando, FL
32814.

1991

Sun Volley Nuroory School.
Chllde.tre M·f 6•m..S:30pm Aael
~K. Young School Ago Dunng
Summor. 3 Doyo por Wool&lt; lllnl(num &amp;14-446-3857.
Will bo~on In my homo In the
Rutlolid oroo, -Iliad, lllxlbto

Brunch 0/fiu • 446-6806
23LocMStSI.
Gallipolis, Olrw 45631

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575
PATRICIA

eo,..,

Apartment
for Rent

hout~0:
to tho m II luot
coli
78·1157.

Real Estate General

vic:•, Inc., P.O. Box 724 Athen1,

Oh, 451111 by Fobruory 15, 111!15.
E.O.E. Employer

/CONSERVATION
JOBS
Game
W.rd«&lt;l1
Security,
llaiNonollC!t Etc. No Exp,
-.v. -Hiring. Fot Info
Coli 2111-'IM-0010 Ext. 11710, i
A.M. To 11 P.M. 7 0.,0.

GttrgM Port.tble Slwmllll

Fieal Estate Gen"ral

In

1813 lloblll - · 14172 ' Bod- .Cottogo tar Pl. PIPf-nlnt,
"""""· 2 Bllho, Woohol And 114-11112-585.1.
Dryor, Now -·
Totally
Redone On lnlkle, $"M-:J87-7M1.
Lorge 3 bod._, lorm - .
porlly fumlllhtd MOO pl..
11190 Cloyton 14d0 112 Aoro IDI, -urHy,
114-9112-5713.
2 BR, 1 Both, CA Cllhodrll
Coiling, 2 Docllo FOncod Yord Now homo undo&lt; conoiNetloft
Clooo To GaiiiPotlo, f28,000: complet• conetructlon In lelu Oi
614-446-6833.
"'"' · located on HorN Creek
Rd. oH Crob Crook Rd. 304-la4-

44

Apartment
for Rent

J:S:r

I

of comput.r ekllla Ia
_,lol. Roepond lo Honey
Doloon, Hoolth Rocovory SOt·

44

3 Bodroom House In Choohlro,
trlmm.,. • mowel"l Hrvlced Qu Hoat, City Woler S350111o.
now It Slden Equlpmant Com- Pluo Ullllll~ $250 o.-H,
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAl.
1
pan,. 30oW75-Jit21.
Bttwoon 6 P.M. .a P.M. 8~
614·992-6419 TOO
For a..aw eo.t Tax Prepera.llon, ~Or 814-448-1337.
. Coli SondN Wllbum 814-446- t11 VJand St., 5 room houM
01701 Have Degree "In Account- wlboth &amp; utlllly room, S300 pluo
, lng.
•
depoalt I ref.-encee, no pete.
Equal Housing Opportunity
' - 1 Molnltno""", PoiN!ng1 304-458-1n8 .
~-·
' Ymf Work Wl,.._o Wooneo
Guttn Ctoonod Ugh! Houllng,
Commorlcol, AMidONial, Sino:
Real Estate Genaral
Real EState General
IM-44t-1Hl

State Route 2

C. Niles, OH 4446. (800) 846 ..
2695. EOE

WILDUFE
'

18 wanted to Do
Ac4t T,.. Service. Complele ,,...
•Cire, 20yn. exp. l lneurad, h:M
· oo!lmotoo. 114-441·1111 or 1.aoo.
S08-t887.
INt th• Spring Rush! Gat your

CRC

prides Itse lf in its
commitment
to quality
rehabilitation.
offer excelle~t
working environments and
benefits, while maintaining a
quality of care that is
unsurpassed, Fot Immediate
consideration, contact Cnristtna ·
0 . Pa lik, ARA, Regional
Recruiter,
Community
Aehabilltation ·Centers, Inc., 918
Youngstown-Warren Ad ., Suite

41 Houses for Rent

From Holur Hosphal, 114--44&amp;3SJII, Or 814-441-3228.

programming and computer electronlce
knowledge. A two year technical dagree or .
Ita equivalent with training In computers,

OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPISTS
S5SK+IYR. DOE
SPEECH-LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGISTS
$46K+IYR. DOE
COTAo&amp;PTAo
$35+/YR. DOE

Homes tor sale

Around Stove In Khch.n. G.tr·
don Tub And Shower Stall1• Sit·
nlclana. MUll a. Depend.tbl.t, ling On Prlvoto Lot, I Mlloo
Golllpollo on SR 218, 1
, R....,oMible, Commhted, Wlll· From
lng To Bt T,.lnod. Send Year · f~H Lot Rant, Prlca:
R....,. To SCCS P.O. lox 1128, $9,000, 814-446·7600.
Kort, 0114tt43.
VENDING: Won, Got Rich
Quick. Wilt Got o Sloody, C.oh 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Income. Prlco To Soli HI0().8204363. .
5 Acre lots For S•l•, 4 Mil•

Engineering Assistant

Gallipolis, OH laclllly:

sales and operations; have outstanding communication

110 -

This is a time-li miled, one year position that serv~s as a training and mutual ev aluari~n period for our franchise progr~m
and other posirions. Solid performance may lead to spec~a l

Start the new year with a new
job at Community Rehabilitation
Centers, Inc. As o ne of the
lastest growing and leading
prov i ders
of
quality
rehabilitation services, we are
the
. expanding , Into
Southeastern OHfWest VIrginia
area and have the following
opportunities available at our

• managing the P &amp; L for the branch, to include a
business plan, and budget.
· The successful candidate will have 3+ years or
progressive management experience in marketing,

Hol&lt;or · Clinic,
.... Dopanmont
Pflr.o, Gollljlolto, Oil

Human -

• Salary Plus Commission
• Full Health Benents
• Valuable Training Pro•ided

A New Year, A New Attitude,
ANew Job

Ferrellgas, a nationwide marketing company and a
recognized leader in our industry, is seeking a hands-on
general manager for our Gallipolis, OH office.
Responsi bi I it i es ·include:
• growing the business by implementing marketing
and sales programs and promoting company

To:

RMUmo

marker from your mobile showroom van.

Physlcal Therapy

GENERAL MANAGER

31

And Blturdoy Momln;. Soiid

. Sell rhe most rcspecred products in the tool and equipment

REHAB PROFESSIONALS
SIGN.ON·BONUS

:,"ra:~=-~=

W1riled To, Buy Used Mobile 1..-..Ung? For the rest of lhe

Home, C. II 614-446-0175.

. Wife Betty
Children, SaQdy, Rick,
Sheryl

45131. 114-44&amp;-n12.
, ....a.. _ ___.__.
_,

Associate's Degree in Computer Science required;
Bachelor's degree in Business , Accounting, MIS, or
Human Services prelerred . Applicant must have
considerable knowledge of computers and electronic
recording of statistical and accounting data. Must have
considerable skill in operation of electronic data entry
and peripheral machines; abiiHy to verity lhe accuracy
of data entered; ability to match names and numbers
quickly and make accurate computations; ability to
establish and maintain effective working relationships
with others . Position based · in the Rio Grande
PASSPdRT Office. Salary $20,000 wifh fully paid
hospitalization, vison, and dental.
Resumes and three letters of reference should be
submitted no later than 4:30 p.m. on February 10,
1995, in the Human Resources Department, Area
Agency on Aging District 7, Inc., P.O. Box F-32, URG,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674. Qualified minorities and
disabled encouraged to apply. E.O.E.

~~='Ions: tfl!pplm~=

odueolion ....1 1o A.B.S. In
computer oyotMn technlcot t1okl
or o _, _ yeor -lot• In AmO whh ,_..,.,, wfl'h o

ment opportunltl.1.1. :sound ln-

A

million
tim e
we've cried
If love could liav e
saved you, you nev er
would of died
In life we loved yo u
dearly
In death we love
you still
In our hearts you

IIIII

Help Wanted

z• Dlnlc. Parl·TirM Evening•

SALES
REPRESENTATIVES
WANTED

OH-Point Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gal

llodlcll Labontory Tochniclon •
Bronch Of Hol-

Cllllclnn

SALES
lnduS1rlal
Mnlmlze Your Potential
Successful, dynamic 65 yr·
old manufacturer of nontechnical chemical products
for schools, industry &amp;
healtncare.
We
need
enthusiastic .men &amp; women
seeking
a
prosperous
career. Our salesforce Is
our #1 asset!
• Local Territory/No Travel.
• Protected accounts.
• Choose Guaranteed Draw
or Salary + Bonus
• Hi Earnings Potential
• Training &amp; Suppon By A
Manager Who Cares
• Bonuses &amp; Contests
• Full Benefits + 401 K
• Management Opportunity
INTERESTED?
Call
Alan Lehrman
1-800 849-7958
Hill menulacturlng Co• .
Inc.
Atlanta, GA 30315 ·
EQEMIFION

5, 1995

Jacltool'l Counly

V.JYina,

'

:n.r.::.r.:·
';.tl
eo,...
m
P f - Dttve, Ollllpolfo, OH
~~.:!lor
Follnaory 1,
P f - c.r.

11

Help Wanted

With Or Without Motors. Call ..mble Product• At Home, C.ll
Lorry Lively. 6'14-388-9303.
Toll Froo. 1-100-467-6566, Ext.
313.

h.tgle, Free For A Loving

· 0no Alolkon K-li&lt;l. ,..11,

ltnlned..._l ~~For Full
11tplo 1111 And E_,
Blllfl, RN
c-potM .. Wo~,
Dl""-lol Willi ~. E-

February

5,1995

W1ntltd To Buy: Junk Aulae &amp;ay Worill Excellent Payl A..

Dlcl1wed, To A Loving Home,

: Fomlly Only 814-245-1305.

lochniQ

,.quiNd.

ogoncy which 1ne1.- tho
CIIHC ooflworo -rom klr tt.

Top Prlc11 Paid : All Old U.S.
: 114-:179-2435.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coln.t, Hem. lMdl provided, No c!Wdft
tlooutllul Colleo KHton, Fomoll1 Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, relecta, Uberal comml11lon1,
I llontho Old, Shoto, Ano 151 Second Avanua, Galllpolll.
local firm, No tfav.ti.L Man•a•

114-2511-111147.
Full blooded male Rat Tarrier, 1
112 1r. old, 614-11!12-6324.
HoH Blue Hootor And HoH

.

Doyo

f14-44HM4 Col

CRIS-E/MIS ASSISTANT

·No knowledge of bulldl~
malertala neceSHry-wa'll teactl.

willing

For ......

p-.,

•r•

bo

From 1:10

1
roouono: Box~ -R·l,
c1o ...
Pl. lady,
- r -_ , _
to lw-n
WI~
200 llal
roqulr-.1.
P I - Rog ..or,
n "'·· 'ISUe28.
Pl.
WY25550.

Help Wanted

Muot

-··-In-.
..:oo,
s....
In-cw:
t'!:..,'n_

Available

S..-.

l.ady
~ To Work
Wool&lt;ondo 8om-5pm To COlo For
Eldotty LAdy CoiiiM-44&amp;-1540.
~ buol,.. , _ hlling .
quollflod oHftnrnent

retrll'ence

JoN

11

ROCOfdod - - OlwM
Oltda, 1~ Ed. 1Z4.

4:30..,...:)0pm 114-

~

14 LUMBER
IIAHAGER TRAINEES
R1 M3 lf'H, IS'tlf.."2·'M80.
84 Lumber Company, lhe ,.....
nltlonll fwnber chain
Loot: Smol~ Block Lob, Yo,_ growing
ca,..r opportunh'- tod.ly.
Rood, Roc:onu, Boon Spoyod• hn
Advoncomonl lo .. pld ond oil
Red Coll.lr, Anaw«a ~Angel
P.r0m0tl0111
from whhln.
Poto Glboon, 61&gt;4:3'11-2!10.
Flrwt )'Mr Nmlngl IYir"qe 1122,000.
Bonoflto
lricludo
l.ool : Young IIIII Ahtdolo
Block &amp; Ton, llob Tollod, ArOUiiiJ hoeplttlllzatlon, profit eharing
Tycoon Lollo, S50 Rowordl 814- and much more. If you enfoy 1
combination of ale• end
245-96!j2.
Dhyalc.l work. h1ve compa.ted
high aehool (aome coll.ge
7
Yal'd Sale
preferrld} ttwn ~ou mil)' qu11ity.

VCR'o, Woohoro,
-ion u - Rt. ~ !W'ollfll· FrooiOrS
Aalln ·Sot, ,.... 4th, AI Dryoro, Etc. lt&gt;I-:IM-1238.
7:00 P.ll. N0xt To Bu~lle Ofl.
J &amp; D'e Auto Part.l ,and S.lv.,
THE PAMPERED CHEF
buying wr.ckl,junk autoe &amp;
"Tllo Kftchon SION Thoot Comoo trucks. Also, parts tor aal1. 304To Your Door." Local C:O..ult.lnt 77).5343 or 7'73-5033.
Anlloble AI:
Timbor Wantod, Seloct And '
.,
114-448-4724
Cltar Cunlng Available. Free On
·
LoovoM-go.
Cltl For Information On Ordw~ Site Estimates. 20 Y11r1 Ex·
lng Homo..._Portloo Or For Buot. perlenc•, 814-367-7088, Or 114-nat
upportunhln.
Fr• 36H054. ·
Brochure Available.
Old button1, costume jewelry,
old llghtoro1..1n&gt;n okllloto, ole·
4
Giveaway

M04.

-

February

Help Wanted

Ocwemmeul

Ellpertel c1 d Farm Hand, Clll

~-mill SehRIUUr, IMWWII

;.::::":1..

2 Pupo, I W- Old Mother
llooalo, 114-3711-2631 11 :30 A.M.
-t:3CJ P.M.
3. Pupploo. Port c - . 814-31111-

s-.. p.,..

IO "McGM .. , Wagner Line/ Rt. 71

Gallipolis - &amp;VIcinity
ALL Yanl Soioo Muot Bo Paid In
Ad wonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lhe dav beror. 1M ad ll to run.
Sulido odHion • 2:00 p.m.
Flldoy.1 Mondoy odhlon • 2:00
P.m. Satur•"·
•
AmO.._o Fllo Marko!, Fob llh
end 'ilh. ()pena a.m. Set Up
$1.00 Per Tobie. G- Woro
CroftoboiRummo••
....
• alid llioml
..,.co
loro. Lunch Sorwod.

11

Help Wanted

bpMera OumkM
oon Ful /Pill Time, BonefHo,
114 ... 4311

5

Spura, 304..&amp;75-1429.

com.......

~

~ 5~9

AVOH I All A,.oa I Shlnoy

~7&amp;-2157.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice It hereby given that
t ho Board ol Education ol
· .tho Mtlga L,oc~f School
Diatrlct, 320 E11t Main S
Stiltt, Pomeroy, Ohio
Public Sale ·
·
o A
I
45768, will offer lor 1111 by
"' U~t On
aoaltd bid at 12:00 noon,
EDt, Mond•y, February 13, Alck Pnrson Aucllon Compilnv.
full time 8uctlonMr,
19Vf, tho following vthlcla:
oucrlon
oorvlco.
LJco:;;;;.,
1110 GMC Pickup Truck 1611,0hlo 1 Wool Vlrglnlo, 304Sa~ai1TCD14AJ513927
773-57S5.
All aealtd envelopeal
Wedemeytr'l Auction S...Vk:a,
cont81nlng bid• ere to be Gallipolis, Ohio 614-~zno.
merked clttrly on lht Auctlonoor Cot Oocor E. Click,
outalde.
Llconu 1 754-84 • llondod,
· Terme of .... will be caeh 304-895-3430.
l
1::::.::::..::::.:______
or c h ec k 1 w llh pol Il ve
ldantlflcatlon.
9
Wanted to Buy
Sold Board reaervei the .,....--....,....:....:...;..::.!..__
Complete
Or Es. . ~ght to welvt lnlormaIIt I II, tatoal
An• HouMhold
Typo Of Fumlturo,
•
· to ··-pt
or
reject
ony
and
A
A
ppl 1ancn, ntlqu1'1, Etc. Also
~ all, or parte or any and ill Appralul Avallablat 1514-379blda. .
2120.
, Mtlga Local School Dltlrlct Cloon Lota 1 Cora Or
' Jane Fry, Treaaurer Trucko, 1987 ModoJo o; N-or.
320 E. Main Street, SmHh Buick Porllloc 11100
P.O. Box 272 Eootom Avonuo, Golllpollo.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Docorotod 111._,., woll (614) 992·5650 phonoo, old
old thor·
(1) 22, 29, (2) 5, 12; 4TC
- - , old
, oNiquo
fumMure. Rlwwlno Antlq-.
Rua.t Moore, owner. 814-112·
Announcements
2528. W• buy nlat.tl,
Don' Junll ftl Sell U. Your NonWorking Major Appllonceo,
3 Aimouncements

-ng

2

.A coecl, had joined a college
soronty. The. 'sisters' didn't like her
much because she was a real
beauty but very conceited . The
house mother told her that if she was
wrapped up only in herself she would J
find out that she was OVERDRESSED.

6

Public Notice

11

WV

DAVID WISEMAN, .BROKER - 446-9555

~

1874. RANCH HOME w-h fUll basement, app. 171 o
living space , gaa heat, , cent air, 2 fireplaces, 3

bedlooms, 2 ba1hl. 2 !&lt;llr ilatached gBillgO, 30lc18 shed, ,
2 small outbuildings, small bame home wlth'2 BR ond t
bath, .2 homes and buildings sliuate don 5 acrao more or
leas priced In tho $70's.
·

12xto lloblll Homo, Llvoobll,
- · Minor Ropolr, Somo Appl'-o, 114-446-2521.

Carolyn Wasch - 441-1007
Loretta McDade·· 446·7729
ny Garnes·

LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SALE· 156 X 100, city water
&amp; sewer. electric to pole. Priced at $14,000. Will sell on
Land Contract- $5, 000 down payment, payments ot
$1 91.23 per month for a pe riod ol 5 yrs. Call tor more
informatk&gt;n.
.
.
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK· .11. bedrooms, 2 baths,
living room, dining r()().l[l,.IIMI&amp;dl'f car garage located
on approxima»ii\ t
mere or less. City
Schools. CALL~'S E E I

I'.C'VI!res

~--

FOR SAlE· VACANT LAND· Approximately 21B acres
located ir\ Gallia &amp; Jaoltson County. Priced et $200 .00 an
acre. CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION .
HOME FOR SALE • 3 bedrooms. · bath, li ving room,
family room, kitchen, fenced in back yard . PRICED AT
$45,000 .00
.
VACANT LAND · Approximately t O acres located on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call tor mofe information .

FOR YOU.R CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
t-801H194·1066
FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE. LOCAL BAJ'IKS,
. RETAILSTORES,.SUPERMARKETS, MOTELs· ·
AND RESTAURANTS.

,,

�•

February 5, 1995
Pomeroy-Middlepon--Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page-06--Sunday 11mes-Sentlnel

Peta for Slla

56

63

February 5, 1995

Livestock

Aul-, I1WlNIIM.

-

T -.
1100,

1975 DodM. 111,4 .... -

AKC Pon111111.aan 1M111i111M. 2

64
Coeur

"-nlela For 81._ Adulta I
Puppln, 1114-3n.2721.
AKC Yol- Lob Pupa, Wormed,

Hay r. Grain

A81a,

1

o.-. 304475-3eeo.

......, Akc roglotorod Ool'!lllln
Shophordo one r.m.Jo I rnonlha Square Blloo 01 Conclltonod
11.21 ..... 111 111 1121 Ata one malo z 112 Y••,.. ~-- Hay
tor 8 P.ll.
1:151.

19ee Bulek Coo1tury Cuolcim
Cruloo, Til~ AI• Now • - ·
Slruto, Shoeko, Exeollo,. Cond~
lion. 811000 Ml'-, 12.150, 1144484791 Eva, Wke~.

·3

Aon Evane EnttFDrtlel, Jack·

110n,

OH 1~37.0528.

Dining Room Toblo ond Four
Cholro. Good Condhlon 114-44111171.

SUNQUEST WOlFF
TANNING BEDS
Now eon;......,lal, Homo Unite,
Tanning From S1119.00, Lampo,

Evt,...

Lotlona, Acc:naorln. P•ymenta

E.lld:rlc

WhHichlllr,

Jenning, ElrCIIIont CondHion,
With Boftory Chorgor, · $700,

980 814-44UZD7.

Fl-oad-130 Lood Plek-Up; 140
l,.ojld Dotlvory, L.oeol. 114-371- .

Real Estate General

-

Hlv• Energy? Laee the F.t,
Feel RHI With The Fatburner
Pluo Pill. Coli 614-Z56-tl588,
C.rotyn.

1711-4031.

Autos for Sale

7.

COUNTRY BOY..CITY GIRL
A l)ard to find combination of Country Living and Cl!y
Convenience. This Beautiftll 3 BR., 3 Bath, Custom bulh
Ranch style home Is only approx. 5 minutes from the
Hospital and Shopping Area . FeaiUring a newly remodeled
kitchen, a lovely large family room with wooo · bumer, a
spacious utility room, and a two car "Drive Thru" garage
plus a with auto. Door opener, plus a detached 14' x 16"
insulated workshop , a 24' x 32' metal pole barn with
concrete floor, and a large sliding door .Price reduced to

430 lntomatlonol WINtlo hoy
bolor. 304-175-3241.

Building
Supplies

36 ACRES • All utllftloo avollablo. Nice view !ram

Block, IHick, _ . , olpoo, wl"'
clowll, U.ntela, etc. ClaUde Win.
toro, Rio Granda, OH Coli 114-

bldg. aHa. l.ehlrt Tawnohlp. $26,7110. Same owner
ftnonclng evallablo.

.
.••

.

Real Estate General

with •

be&lt;lrooms,
111

country setting. Only 142,100

Ponaroy- Nothing has been ·ovefiooked in th is newty rernocJeted
rel urtllsMd hamel New ca rpe l, new kitchen cablnels wlappl,
bathroom fixtures, new ceilings and light IIKtures. new aeck,
furnace &amp; alr1 new siding, s.hutters, &amp; doOrs, 3 BR, OR , LA w!fp,
parking area In rear. Warranted home. Low so·a.

a

&amp;

TUPPERS PLAINS- Thi s 3 bedroom home located on almost 1
won 't last long . LA , bath, eat -in kitchen. 1 car anachad
carport . Someof backyard l anced. LA set-up lor woodbumer. El..C:Inc l

.1 0

Complete the chuckle quoted •
by filling In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

~ I ~r:~ I ·I I I ·1 I I I I I I

. ~ ..-:"'"See Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-4
•
73

Real Estate General

Watchers Dreaml Great vacation or weekend
LA wlfp, kill , partial bsmt. Furnished , From porctl
front of house to enjoy watching the rive r tlow. Priced

~---

ILANQ:SVII.LE· Great Hurting! Beautilully remodeled {almos t done)
18 acres m'l. 3 BA, LR, FR, DR. Nlce hOme. Call us loday 1
Only $211,;oo 1

UNIT 1: 2 BRs , 1 large bath, LA,
kitchen w/appliances, baseboard
heat , 2 air cond . units (window) . 1
car garage.
UNIT 2: 2 BAs, 11\ baths, LA. kitCh·
en w/appliances, heat pump, central
air , new, 1 car garage.

EXCELLENT BUSINESS
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
3-4 offices, I 'h balhs, receptionist
area, totally · refurbished, lg . back
deck, 2 car garage . Ample parking ,
heat pump . Could also be use(! as
residential. Only 2Yt miles from Icily.
Priced $80,000.
.
\

Real Estate General

SR 325, LllngaviH•-92 acres plus a trailer w1th lots ot room bu ilt onof 2,044 sq. It Large garage, slorage shed, cellar ~ o use , barn .
Plenty of prt\la~. Good hunting. Asking Only $60.000! Call us today!
Need a ~reat building s ite on t5 t/2 acres along with a gas
I and free gas (and hunting) . Could be 3 or 4 good buildi ng silas.
citn make some money here. Call us. todav.

l~:~~~r~~ Beautiful older 2 story house on a comer tot with an m:tra

IC

lot. This home features a large bay window, big fron t porch &amp;
I . Appliances included w/ kit., 3 BA, 1 1f2.ba th. LR. FA, ba sement .

I I', I \'.'IIi I .11\C K M H ~ Y I :, Ill- AI F S Ti\ 11r,q J ,J ;,) l l j l l ' : '/h()

· Real Estate General

Real Estate General

l'\

ea[t

•
Vana&amp;4WO's

73

74

Vans&amp;4WD's

Inc.

I

Motorcyclel
.

"·

LACKBURNR

-·
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1181 GIIC 112 Ton 4•~ 350 ~
4 Spud T,.... ~ ad, 0
~ , Condllon,
14;ioi· 10, 2 Whoot
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Drl.. 1171 Ford liiCk.Up, $DSO,
·:J~

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1Sl' 514 Second Ave., Gallipolis,

•

.

1893 Ford F-110, 414\!,Cyllndor,
I• ,. 55. Air CondH lrig, 114-

-and

lle!llod
..-r-...• . g::u1
'l.

,

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Hartl'\
!lport"\;1.

18,500,1

Motorcycles

""'...···=JIDII!!,-

446-7101 or 1-800-585-7101
qive f{ls 5l Ca{f...

~

Suzuki 250 tour-whoolor . with
,.""•• ha
electric
.
'13 SuzfAd Kat11n11 600, red, 32oo _ltart, $1000, 114-112mlloo, 13400, 114-11!12·3011 bot·
·-v.m-spm.
76 Auto Parts
11711 Sportotor, 114-ZSI4317.
Accessories
74

:..,
A

Associate 441-IJ 11

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1883 ChoYy Full Size zo sort.. 1810 Honda 200 4-whiNI..-,
4•4, 350, 4 . Spood,
QC&gt;nd. 82400. 30447fl.3824• .
Whooto, Bod UnorlonNew· roo,
Dovldoon 1200
Exoollont Corldk '
81 000 11111
IIIIM, 14,750, 114-446'37!11 Evo,
2 one Bluo I Aqua,
Wkondto. .
'
llalt
~· Extra Chrome,

rac!':acn

Contoro Ia Aecoptlng
lido Fer : 11183 Pa-n·
Van, Robuln Englno,
CondN~Sill:' Mlnlrilum 1H7 Hondl 250R 4-Whleler,
•
'«; Bid, ~Con Bo new motor, n:c. c:oncl., $1800.
Soort AI: Woodland ...... F. 3041.a82-3312.
llonloy, 3081 Blato ROUio 110,
19BT Suzuki LT Z30S 4 - - - .
lido IIUII •• goad oond., S1350 .. trodo '"'
lvod
By:
Fobtuary
13th,
~..,_
jood pk:kup. 3044711-3884.
4:00 P.ll. 814 441 8800 •

tB Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone:
Moor~,

O

11

1884 Ford 4x4. 304-675-4182.

Joe

A coed had jeined a college
sorQrity_.. The 'si_sters' didn't Jitse
her much beGause she was a real
beauty but very conceited. The
house mother told her that if she
was wrapped up only in herself
she would find out that she was

BE D
.

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

'

9

.i!esa ch.v. ' Conv-on V•n-

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Ak~Mour EIKI:f'ICII, WV000301,

HOLLOW RD, MIDDLEPORT- Ranch hOme

Datn, LA, aaH n kitchen. utillt~ room· located on 1 5 acres m/1

"

PH. 446·7699 OR 446·9539

._.ND.ft

ana 1 car garage. 1 floOr plan. A1klng $42,800

lu••88v

R-'•ntlal
or
COII'UMI"Clal
wiring, new .....we. Dr r.pel,..
llatler U'*'Md tlectrlcl•n-

304-67$-1781.

::::~:~=~~~::, atone
home
Is located
Union
Ave kitchen
on 3 loiS.
II
a bath,
a large
living on
room
, eat·ln
, lull

~roy· 4 mi. nor1h on SA 7. One of the finest homes 1n the area 1
now ava ilable! This quality home offers a lg. toyer, LR w/lp, FA
eat-In kitchen w/~ppl., lo!lTial DR , Lg. utility rm. 2 t/2 baths,
BA w/dresslng rm &amp; bath), full bsml, 2 car gar , pmlate bla&lt;:ktop l
I Ci~ve;;;~, pool, 3 stg. bldgs. &amp; lots ol privacy. 2 acres rnJl. Call &amp;
II you for thts home.

~ ~-~~:-~:-.~,I'ITii;l~r.~r~r~l'--r~r~l'~l~'.~['~
· l

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

Real Estate General

T

KA T J E C
M0 Y

KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH. 245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

'

Real Estate General

Don,

Bolh Loool 114-441-1301,
211-6308, wv 002945.

"'
"''
["'

-

'.

.
BUSINESS PROPERTY
EXCELLENT Location For Prolessional Offices, Retail
Store or Repair and Maintenance Shop. 1760 sq . ft . ot
concrete building, 2834 sq . ft. of parl&lt;lng area. On one of
the busiest straels In town.
·~

RIVER VIEW • Nice 4 bedroom home neor
Pomeroy obove all ftooda. Copy home lull
boaement. Juat $27,500.

0

--.

1733

sell.

NEW

St•l B.._ Far Sllaf Winter
Solo -Lim'ltod Inventory Buy
- A t M' Pr'- 3Dx4fk~75,
100.100, COM 1_.1180'
'1150.

1- I

EIOOiole Funta-. F - Eo1-01. H You
Coil Uo Wo

6

8

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U. 4 War 81-, Now Pine,
Bulhlng1_'!P'oekolo, 40.000 lbo. ... llon:ury 4 Cyllndor, 4 Spd.,
Winch 7_, Fl, 1518 cable, ~ No Ruot, Groot Gu llltooga
Hou,.; Loob, AUIW UVH 1100, 114-371-2.568.
GoadiS11,800, 114-888-8241.

sI

'E :G 0

&lt;

•.

haiti A air cond. Fully fnaulated A oqulped
kitchen. Drilled well &amp; 1.8 acraa. Want Juat
$15,000.
.

Real Estate General

CIC
Oonorlll
Molnl- and llobtlo Ropolr. Fer " - ootl-• eon
CIM!I,I14-112-63H.

Real Estate General

·.

...

24S.e12t

Kltehon
huteh, 4 bottom
chw.,.., 2 giUMd doort w/3
ahetv•, doOr In mkldl• leta
down I mokoo dale, $75. 304-

~~

F RI EHE
5

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0197.

:ma.

ne.

4

uooo..e -

Low AI $20.00, COlt Todor FREE
NEW Color C.tilolog. 1~·

55

a'

heat pump. l4tl,too

19ee Moreury Cougor, v...
auton'llltlc1 l&amp;r, lookl 1nd rune
aood, r.auctld IG $2450, IW..
14v-217'1 or &amp;14-MI-2045.
1187 Sundance Two Door,
Autom~~k:44:1r,
1325, I
7001.

Equlpmem ~
1975 88 Folt-AIIIoon eo- 8 112

Ccnc:roto • Plaotk: Soptk:
Tonka, 300 Thru Z,OOO Gallon•

Ent..,rta• T.W.
Latrronc:e, t:l% 0.. Fu.......,
1.4' • Not. Hoot Pumpo •

AClah
nd
IlllMM
IlL AIM.
ANI

TNUM'

Electrical r.
Refrigeration

lA taa

And

SoulhwoOI Plc:k-Up Pono Bodo,
Cabo, llDaro, F-N &amp; llqrL
Aleo, 4K4 Dr1'M Train Parta. 3
llltM S....h Of OaiUpoilt! AI Juotlon
At.NUIIBEA:
7 ' At.. ~~:•• .
PHONE

sI c

p Ry

Fann

Th,.. p6ece living room sulle
don bluo and gray; bluo Oiid
g,.y earpot, 11575/both. 114-Mt2754 •hlf 5pm.
,

T,..•lnlon

'!:'

Transport ation
71

2211

2

Real Estate General

Heating

84

T

uv0 cA

Plumbing r.

Home

=

'

Lovablrde,

Farm Supplies

H

SUnday Timea-Sentlnel~age-07

Improvements

~

•

82

Servtces

Acceaorlel

Jato~IIMIIII

~~• ~824,

Cockatlolo, otc:. Floh Tonk • Pot Urge round hey balM tor ule,
Shop, 2413 Joekoon Avo. Point S20 Mdl, 114-1112-3014.
Pt....nt, 3011-f'75..20a3.
Mixed hoy lor Nt. SUO/bolo,
Oonnan
Shophord
Pupa, calll14 GU 1tt3.
Fullbrod, Big lor-. Wormed,
Bolh Ponanto On p,..,._ No llquoro 11.28 to u~ par
...... Alfalfa, Clover, Oo-oonl
Poporo 175, 114-388 85411.

&amp;

--·~

11113, 814-371-a14.

a Flrot Shoto 1300, 114-zet.
1331 ....... I A.M. Or Aftor 1:30 Good lllxed Hoy R011nd Baloo,
P.ll • .
- r Th..mon, OH 114-2394.
Pa,.keela,

............. up, •

IM1'4211.

Alpha And lll..,d OR/oord Oroa

UOO To $2.25 A Balo 304-1711Ballad Hay 11.10, 814
114-44e.otiD.

-.--..
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Roglolored

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words " below to make 6
simple wo'l'ds.
Print letters of
· each in its line of squares.

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Auto Par1a &amp;

76

b~ CLAY l. I'OLLAN - - - - - - -

Edited

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.....

1141on,fn..- ..... ...

- . 1:200 • 1100. - ~
541!1, nlghlo a -

AKC

.That Intriguing
S©\\~~-Lt~trss
Worr:J Game with a Chuclcle

72, Trucks tor Sale
71 Fonl f'l!llup -

Pomeroy-Middlepon--Gallipolls, OH Point Pleasant, WV

r.

19BT Ford I Ft. Truc:k Bod, Goad
Shape, 114 311 128

·-·-·

4 Toyota P225175R11 ,.clal tlrw•,
wMh - k -Ia, azzs, ad

~

Russell D. Wood, Broker..........................446-4618
Phyllis Miller .............:..... 256-1136
J. Merrill Carter .............. 379·2184
Judy Dewitt .................... 441·0262
Ruth Barr, .......................446-0722

lltii...

Martha Smith .................. 379·2651
Cindy Drongowski ......... 245·9697
Cheryl Lemley ................ 742-3171

HO-

LENDER

-....
~ --~~R~e=a~IE~S1=a~t~e~Ge~ne~ra~I______________R.~e~a_I_Est
__
at_e_G_e_n_era~l--.'... ............,..

POMEROY • Crew Rd. · A large 1 5 acre lot w/Barrington
Doublewlde. sitting on full basement. Home has 4 BR.,
dining &amp; family ro!lm, &amp; in ground pool, back deck. $49,900

Henry E. Cleland ......992-2259
·....".." -~iiif~==l

MIDDLEPORT · N. 4th · A 1. t/2 story .home with 3
bedrooms, dining room, carport, and outbvlldlngs. $10,000

::';:

---.

Tracy L. Brinager ...... 949-2439

~:

-·
·~·
J-·
..
~'
..

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

,.,,;.=-

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

~

RACINE - Rt. 124 . wait till you see this 3 bedroom home
with beautiful hardwood floors in .Jiving room a detached 2
car garage with t bedroom apartment over it. approx. 5
acres
$65,000

DEBBIE DRIVE-EVERYONE SHOU,LD
OWN A NEW HOME AT LEAST ONCE.
This 2 story beauty features 3 JJr 4· br's, 2
baths, beamed ceilings in 111e. LR &amp; family rrn.
cherry ~binets in kitchen, 6 m. outer walls &amp;

much more. Fantastic view.

~~

CAPE COD
offers 63.75 acres, mil, mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40x60 barn, 22x44 block milk
.house. 750' road frontage for possible bldg.
r.ntJN'fAY

sites .

·

·

11461 - EXCELLENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAA Bl,ISINESS - All equipment stays,
bldg., approx. 624 sq. h., 3 half baths, elect.
heaVcent. air, city waler.

11477· LAROE BUILDING WITH LOTS OF
OFFICE SPACE AND GARAGES FOR
TRUCKS· Fronrage on Third Ave. and Grape
Street. Call for details.

~

:~~

Henry E.

-·-·
·:-•

Clel~nd

Ill992-6191

Office ..........................992-2259

' '·
;o
~

~~ 1--""'!'""""'-~0:.£;FF~IC~E~~~~----I

::;
RACINE • Pine Grove Road · .If you have always wanted a
nice home and mini farm . Here it is! The house has 2·3
bedrooms. Central Air, Heat Pump, and equipped kitchen.
Approximately 5 1/2 acres with mas\ of it fenced and a nice
barn and other buildings.
ASKING $55,000 .

,' .

N1409 _FOUR LOTS- 4 BR home, reduced
to $44 ,000, 2 baths . LR , DR. ~ull basement.
gas heat/cen.t. air.-Corner lots ..

PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY · 1 .6
Acres +Or·. 3 BR, 1 112 bath, full basement,
2"4x30 detached garage with 10 ft . doors.
Great for large trucks. Low maintenance vinyl

COURT STREET RESIDENCE· Older home
has 2 sap. units or could be converted back
lo 1 fa,..,ily dwelling . Faces city pari&lt;.

1429-QFFICES, OFFICES, OFRCES. That's
what this 3,000 sqlff. building offers. Located
on
160 near Holzer. Ideal for many uses.

information.

presently being
with new catpet,
new
bath . The family
a fireplace with built-in book
Nice large kitchen With lots pf
cabinets built on room additions! 2 full
baths 2'. 8 baths , large pole bui ding &amp;
some' decking. This spacious home .sits on
approx. 1 1/2 acres 1n a very mce area.
ASKING $64,900

BLAZER ROAD· Ranch home, 3 BRs, 1 112 .
.
.
baths LR, kitchen. 16 x 28 garage. River PLANTZ SUBDIVISION· $56,900· 3 or 4 BR
Valley school district.
bncK &amp; frame tn·level, 1 112 baths, LA, family
rrn, kitchen, new roof, new Siding. CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE.

MIDDLE,PORT · Located on S. 5th Street ·
This 1 1/2 frame home features 3
bedrooms, family room, living room,
kitchen with an office area. Utility area bui~
in book shelves , ceiling fans, central air,
N.G.F.A heat, cement walks, privacy
fencing, full basement. Cute place .. .Lols of
rooml New furnace 6 year warranty.
ASKING
$29,000.
LIVE HERE AND
YOU CAN WALK ANYWHERE IN
SHOPPING I

••

POMEROY- Always wal")ted to won your won business? A
bar bu sine~s includes all sto ck and fixtures. Has M older

'

home, LR, FR, kitchen.
HP, cent. air,
·garage and unattached garage. Rental
house on prop-. -

back bar dthat Is beau tiful. Has a D-3 license until 1 am .
e ~sl ness nlv
- $27,500
1405· NEED A NEW OFFICE+ A RENTAL
APARTMENT? 250 Sec . Ave. Nice office 1422· OLD CHEV·Y·OLDS .BUILDING· 420'
downstairs and apanment and storage up . Front on Second Avenue and 62' frontage on
Convenient to banks and shopping .
Grape .

POMEROY· Fisher Street· Almosl an. acre lot with lots of
frontage could haV'e 2-3 bu ilding sites . Has ·an older house
that needs lots of work.
~
$11,000 .

POMEROY· Willow Creek Rd. · Just off Rl. 7 &amp; 33 close to
P3mida . It has 3 bedrooms. ranc h , w1th 2 bath, equ ipped
kitchen, heat pump, and detached 2 car garage on approx.

2 acres .

$59,900

POMEROY· Beech Street · A 2 story t ~ yr. old colonial
home with a 1an.tastic view. Has 3-4 bedroom s, 2 fireplaces ,

3 1/2 baths. fa mily room , lormal dining room . /inished
basement, in ground swimming pool. solar heal , satellite
dish, 2 car garage, and lots or pricacy, sining on 25 acres .

$133,000
LANGSVILLE· Approx. 18 acre s. Waler and electric
available.
$9,000.00
DOniE TURNER, Broker ..........................lll2·5892
BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................... III2·3058·
JERRY SPRADUNG ........................ .. (304) i82-3498
CHARMELE SPRADUNG ................. (304) 882.34.9 8
OFFIC£ ............................... : .............: .......... 1112·2888

#1482- $25,000 .Just minutes lrom town.
used for rental property now. 3 BRs, bath;
FA , kitchen, OR , gas heat. •
1447· OAK HILL· .former clothing
store .. .$27,900 , corner" lot. Call lor more
Information. .
·
1453· OHIO RIVER PROPERTY· located at
end of White Avenue off Garfield . Several
lois $20,000.
$31 500 84 acreo. Morgan Two .. vacant
lanJ. Possible farming land or recre~tlonal
land.
·
64 ACRES· mil, Corner of Woods Mill and
SR 554, has a really ·. nice homesite old bam,
lots ol pMvacv yet close to school and other
activities.

DEVELOPERS
AND
t1427· EXTRA NICE tiOME ON ST. RT. 7 ATTENTION
SOUTH· 3 BRs. LR , FA, dining area, lUll INVESTOAS...EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR I:&gt;ORTEA ..
basement, garage . Call today!
Large lake with lake front sites, mobile home
33 ACRES· MIL corner of SR 325 ·11!1d on property at present time, county water,
AND HAVE THE INCOME
Woods Mill Road, recreational land only entire tract consists of 77 acres, mil.
FROM THREE MORE· each• unit has 2
apartments.Facing city pari&lt; with all the
$16,500.
;
conveniences of In town living. •

NEW LISTING · MINI FARM • Acres of
ground located on · Welchtown Hill Rd . 2
bedroom home with living room, kitChen,
bath utility room . Gas warm morning
heat: T.P.C water, some fencing If you'd
nke to have a horse or some cows. Also a
bam and chicken house. Great Garden
Area. ASKIN $13,500 .00 .
LETART RD. • RACINE • COME SEE
THIS .ONEil Crestwood modular with
added 9&gt;&lt;18 room, large covered front
porch, 1 .56 acre. .3 Dedrooms, 2, car
garage,
central
air,
TPC
water,
OutbiJIIdlng, garden space . Really must
to appreCiate the care that has been
given to this 11roperty. ASKING $49,900
MAKE AN OFFER.
·

1419 - JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· Addison
Twp, 386 acre larm, 3 ponds, tobacco base,
44x100 barn with concrete floors . May
consider split. (578)

11411-LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QUIET·This could be II. 49 .66 acres,
Andrews Rd, 8 year-old home with;) BRs, 2
112 baths, LA, OR, FR, heat pump , 2 car
•
garage plus 24x48 detached garage.
•
PRICE
REDUCED TO
$Y7,9001
RIO
'
t1482· 25 ,000 Just minutes from town , GRANDE· L~ke Drive Subdivision . 1 1/2 story
..
.
.
used for r.ental property now. 3 BAs, bath , Brick • 4 BR s, 1 1/2 baths finished basement· $16,800 47 aoros, m/1, Harrison Twp, Elliott
FR , kitchen, DR, gas heat.
Attached garage.
Road.
c

s

•'

' .

BONUS BUYI Included wilh th e sa le of thi s 3
home alrea&lt;ly set up complete wllh an eleclrio
~eat pump. Approx. . 7 acre lol. ca ll tor
·
'725
complete listingl
5 YEAR OLD BRICK/FRAME RANCH I Perlect
for just starting 'oul or settling down! Nice level
lawn, 2 baths , living room, kitchen, 1 car
garage . Call today lor your own personal
·1726
showing!

I

I

'

•
I

~ -· '

YOUR DREAM I'IOUS.E
Located on Seneca D ~
Pomeroy,
Brick/Frame split foyer home with 3
bedrooms, 2 1/2 beths, appliances,
beautfful--tamily room with fireplace,
central air. Attached garage . Very nice
home . Nice lot close to Elemen!@t\1/High
School. A 'DREAM"
HOUSE
NO
MORE... THIS COULD
•
BE
REALITY... FOR YOUII ASKING $65,000
Corrie See Today II
LEBANON
lWP.
Ross
Rd.
Approximately 120+ acres of wooded
ground . Utilities are available • Great
~unting areal! Give us a call for more
inlorrnationll REDUCED TO $350/Acre .
ATTEMTION HOME OWNERSIII!I •
WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING FOR
THE "RIGHT PROPERTY"
SHOULDN'T YOU BE
LISTED WITH US??

NEW LISTING! 'IN A HURRY? Immediate
possession! .No walling on this one . 1 112 story
home w1th v1nyl &amp; alumn. siding, 3 bedrooms
kitchen wilh oak cabinets , newer roof, vlnyi
windows &amp; gutters. Concrete patio &amp; carpon.
Extra

st9rage

area in attic. 21ols being approx.

1.87S acre. $30's.

1734

Don't pass up this brick! Located at SR 588.
1.5 story home w/ 4 BA , 2 BA, LR, kitchen,
large front porch . City schools I Convenient to
downtown Gallipolis.
N712

WANT SOME SPACE? 11 Acres more or less
just off Bulaville Pike! County water available!
$15.000 .00
1690

MIDDLEPORT· Lincoln Street· Needing rental property or a
fixer upper? Here it is a 3 bedroom 2 story home with a
1enced lot, and a storage building .
$14,000

NEW CARPET &amp; FRESH PAINT! IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! Remodeled 1 1/2 story home
with 4 bedrooms , 2 . baths. detached 1 car .
garage, 20 acres, barn &amp; olher buildings. City
schools, located at Stale Route 588 . PRICE
N622
REDUCED!

bedroom ranch home con sis ting o l din ing
room , kitchen, living room &amp; bath , is a mobile

STOPIII PAYING THOSE RENT PAYMENTS
and get ihis 2 story older home at 1021
Second Ave . 3 bedrooms, living room. dining
room, kitchen, 2 car
New carpeting &amp;
I
'
1717
more. Don't delay

1411· LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QUIET· This could be it. 49.66 acres,
Andrews Rd., 8 year old home with 3 BRs, 2
1.2 baths, LR, OR , FR. heat pump, 2 car
garage plus 24x48 detached garage,

1!131· Approx . 5 acres with frontage on
Raccoon, beautiful shaded lot. house has 3
BR, bath, LA. kitchen, ' larg e unattached
no•ooa. Offers a lot of privacy and peace &amp;

room and family room each with a fireplace. 3
bedrooms. 1 112 baths. Lots ot cabinets In
kitchen, large dining area. Super location close
to ltolpltal n1 shopping.
t715

NEW LISTING! WHAT A BEAUTIFUL
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER! Neat 3
bedroom, 2 bath home, living room, dining
area, family room, large att.ached carport, 3
teir decking with an abOve ground pool. Call
today, priced allordablel $30's.
Forml Used as .a dairy ! Over 60 acres,
excellent home site complete with septic and
county water. Large barn approximately 72' x
103', corn crib, silo , feed lot, tobacco base .
Mostly pasture, fenced! Fronlage along
Raccoon Creek.
1724

siding. Includes an above-ground pool. This
IS a must-see. FHA approved.

#1
- MOM &amp; POP OPIE.RJITICIN
SALE - Small restaurant wilh two rental
houses.
is located in Oak Hill . Call

PART· TIME FAIIMiljG?
house built 1978. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
central heating , rura water, 2 car garage
and other appurtenant buildings. Productive
tillable acres . Tobacco and corn bases,
approx. 11 acres of wood land. Lots of road
frontage . Close enough! for off farm
employment. Priced reasonable.
1710'

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ranch, vinyl sldin~. beautiful view. Large living

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'
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ASKING PRICE 141,100
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.
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t721

GEORGES
ROADI $38,600.00·
modualr home with newer Lennox heal pump,
windows &amp; roo!, wolllnsulatad approximately .
.48 acre treed loll
1728
1737 112 CHATHAM
AVENUE· 2 story home. 3 bedrooms, living
room. kitchen , rae. room, 2 car gara ge. City
1729
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kitchen. WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT
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DETAILSI
1713
NOT RESTRICTED FOR MOBILE HOMES
1.207 acre lot. County water available. Paved
1695
.road frontage. Call today!

RIO GRANDE VILLAOEI Vinyl sided home
and mobile home. House consists of 2
balhs, living roo,m, dining room , kitc hen,
Hardwood flooring. 1973 champion mobile
home. Village utllilles . Good rental income.
1732
AIVEAI 2 1
EASY AC9ESS TO THE OHI 0
ots
along Bear Run Road , nice comp lng slles,
access to boatrampl
t706
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.

�Pomero~iddleport-Galllpolls,

Page--08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallia...

Continued from D-1

The Saturday, March 18 "Education Session" will feature two
presentations by Mark Hazard, a
farmer and banker from West
Point, Miss. His southern operation
grazes several thousand stocker
calves each year with virtually no
equipment. I bad the opportunity to
bear him speak about four years
ago. He may be the most interest·
ing "real world" speaker that I bave
ever beard.

forage legumes. This can oftcn be
blamed-for stand problems in fall
seeded alfalfa. If you have fall
seeded legumes, wa!Cb for this disease problem.

participating in the
1
.Unked
For details on borrowing for agricultural purpo&amp;es, call your nearest
Bank One office in Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs or Perry counties
or calll-800-677-4994, Applications must be received by the office
of the Treasurer of State no later than March 17, 1995.

W. R. "Dick" Brown, CLU
Nationwide Insuranc~.386 Stale Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446-1960
Crop Insurance Serviced By
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A Multimedia inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 6, 1995

Copyrlght1995

Clinton's new budget
'lacks-cou-ra-ge': GOP
deficits .... This budget lacks
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
Clltlnlge. It takes no action 10 conAP Economks Writer
WASHJNGTON- President trol the growth of entitlement
. Clinron sent Congress a $1.61 uil- spending, which must be done if
lion budget today, offering voters a we are to reach a balanced budget
modest middle-class tax cut by the year 2002."
The budget, for the 1996 fiscal
financed by reorganizing three
year
tbat begiqs Oct 1, prqx15es 10
Cabinet agencies and 1argeting
spend
$1.612 trillion, a 4.5 percent
nearly 500 programs for ooosolida·
increase
over current levels. The
tion or cutbacks.
budget
forecasts
collecting $1.416
Clinron's drive to make governtrillion
in
revenue,
leaving a deficit
ment smaller and more efficient
gap
of
$196.7
billion.
would save $144 billion over five
To pay for bis tax cuts and
years.
deficit
reduction, CliniOn proposed
He would apply $63 billion or
saving
'$26.2 billion by restructurthat amouDI 10 providing tax relief
ing
five
agencies and abolishing or
aod the odter $81 billion would be
consolidating hundreds of other
used to n:duce the defiCit.
. Republicans, however, attacked smaller programs, $80.5 billion by
the budget us a pale imitation of reducing spending for defense and
their "Contract With America" many domestic progams, and $32.1
which promises far greater tax cuts billion by trimming some benefit
of $200 billion IIPd enough deficit programs and $5.3 billion from
cuts to bring the budget into bal-" reduced interest payments on the
ance by the year 2002. By some national debt.
But Clinton's budget leaves virestimates, that will require $1.2
tually
untouched the government's
trillion in budget cuts.
·
fast-growing
benefit programs in
Clinton's $81 billion in deficit
his
fiscal
1996
budget, which
reduction wouJd make only a mod·
means
the
budget
deficit
will hover
est dent in the flood of red ink
close
to
$200
biUion
for
the
rest of
expected incoming years, a point
the
decade.
that Republicans were quick· to
GOP leaders, who control
DOle.
House Budget Committee .Congress, le( it be known that
Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, . Medicare and Medicaid, the procanplalned that Clinron had shown grams that provide health care for
"no interest in doing the beavy lift- . the elderly and poor, along with
ing needed 10 eliminate all budget other popular benefit_ programs

sucb as farm subsidies, would
clearly be targetS for cutbacks.
The Republicans vowed to press
ahead with their ''Contract With
America" program with its twin
goals of providing $200 billion in
tax relief over the next five years,
while at the same time finding
another $1 uiUion in spending cuts,
enough to balance the budget by
2002.
.
., Clinton's budget sets much
. more modest. and, the administra·
lion insists, more realistic goals.
·~working with Congress in
1993, we enacted tbe largest deficit
reduction packll8e in bis10ry." the
president sai!l in his budget message. "Now that we have brought
the deficit down, we have no intention of.tuniin back."
Clinton· s fcl3 biUion in tax cuts
include offering families a $500.
credit (or each child under 13,
expanding the tax-~ferred benefits .
of Individual Retirement Accounts
for savets and providing deductions
of up to $10,000 for educapon or
job-training expenses.
or the $26 billion in savings
from pro~ram reorganization,
. $22.8 billion would come from
reorganizing the departments of
Energy, Housing ;md Urban Development, and Transportation, along
with the General Services Administration and the Office of Personnel

Governor touts

small _e~pansion

· · &gt;·._. Breakdown

·. Borrowing
. 12% .. ·

in spending plan
By JOHN CHALFANT
COLUMBUS -Gov. George Voinovicb points with pride to culs in
the rate of growth for the six years' worth of stale budgets be bas intro·
. duced.
But the same statistics on wbicb Voinovicb relies show some of former
Gov. Richard Celeste's budgets bad even lower growth rates when the .
increases were compared on a· year-to-year basis, instead of a six-year
span.
. Then again, Celeste_ also produced some whopping double -digit
mereases, the likes of wbacb have not been seen since 1986.
·
Voinovich last week proposed a record $33.7 billion spending plan for
the next two fiscal years starting July I. The Republican portrayed the
budget as a wise inveslment to improve the lot of Ohioans wilhoul
·
increasing the size of government.
He said spending for fiscal years 199llhrough 1997 will be the lowest
percentage growth period in men than 40 years.
Notice the six-year time frame.
,..
A_ s~tis~C&lt;!\ sliii1!Jiary from the Office of Budget and ¥anagemcnt, the
admm.lstral.lon s fiscal agency, showed Voinovicb's farst six years of budgets did reflect the lowest growth rate he claimed - 42.5 percent.
Now look at percentage growth in budgets year-to-year. .
Voinovich anticipates a 6 peroent growth rate in each of the next two
budgety~.
.
.
Celeste.
Democrat forever known .as father o( the 90 percent slate
income tax increase in 1983, turned in budgets with percenlage growth
rates of 5.3 percent in 1985, 5.'1 percent in 1988, and 5.7 percent in 1989.
Those were offset, of course, in other years when growth ral es shot up
10 percent and 12 percent.
·
State Budget Director R. Gregory Browning, the governor"s top
finance officer, said the only reason a six-year time frame was cl1oscn for
the Voinovicb comparison was because it mirrored his years i.n office.
Voinovich is beginning his fifth year as governor, and is submilting his
third, two-year budget.
·
. "There's nothing magic aboul six years whatsoever," Browning said
in an interview. "He's talldng about bis watch, his six years or buqgcting.
That's the only point we·re making."
·
Among governors since 1963. former Gov. James A. Rhodes holds the
record for keeping the lid on year-to-year budget growth . The budget in
1964 was just 0.12 percent greater than tl1e previous year. But it shol up
12 percent the following year.

the

M~ement.

A~~~i!;!:l§;•"

~

Victim's sister returns
to aid case against O.J.
for as ii·uies 10 porll'liY the ex-foot·
By JEFF MEYER
.
ball hero as a wife-beater whose
Asaoc:lated Preu Writer
LOS ANGELES - Jurors in · rage drove him to kill.
Simpson's lawyers, however,
the O.J. Simpson !rial bad the
entire weekend to digest Denise suggested the timing of Brown's
Brown's tearful, gripping indict- appearance was calculatcd for dra·
ment of the man charged with malic effect.
Nearly a dozen witnesses were
slashing her sister 10 deall).
She returns 10 the witness stand called last week to testify about
today, helping prosecutors lay out a Simpson's troubled relationship
case that Simpson was a violent with Nicole Brown Simpson: But
wife abuser, not the benevolent her sister's time on the stand -was
family man defense attorneys the most dramatic.
She testified tbal SimpsOn once
described in their opening state·
grabbed
Nicole's crotch in a
ments.
crowded
bar
aod, on anot.l;ler occa. Such ·emotion-packed testimony
sion,
threw
ber
against a wail and
can leave a powerful image in tbe
minds of jurors. But don't count out of bis bouse.
After the June 12 murders of
the defense out yet, legal experts
Ms.
Simpson and ber friend Ronil.ld
say. ·
Goldman, Brown initially bad said
'
''A trial is a series of skirmishes
and we've only seen, in a sense, she ~idn't believe ber sister was·
baH of the first skirmish on the battered. By November sbe bad
issue of domes!ic abuse," said law changed her views and declared
professor Peter Arenella of tbe that simpson bad ltilled her. •
Defense lawy~rs ar~ sur~ tQ
University of California at Los
p01lnce on her comrad@ioos, but
Ailg~!:§.
.
Denise Brown's breakdown Fri- Arenella said they· must be careful
because jurors will naturally be
day as she· talked of Simpson
sympathetic to bet.
throwing her sister against a wall
"I r sbe was not a sister or the
was all the prosecution_could ask

·-"

' .l··:(::

Abortion .background imperils
nomination of surgeon general
By RON FOURNIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON ....&lt; President
Clinton's selection of Henry Foster
Jr. as U.S . surgeon general is in
jeopardy because the doctor has
performed some abortions and supportcd Planned Parenthood, Senate
Republicans say.
"I do think it is in serious trouble," Sen. Trent Lou, R-Miss., said
Sunday.
"Will it be in some difficulty?
·
Yes,"
Senaie Majoiity Leader·Bob
DENISE BROWN
Dole, R-Kan., said in a separate
inrerview.
victim, then certain aspects of ber
" Foster, a Tennessee gynecolo. d d 1 gist-obstetrician who battled teen
past, including
hercould
admatte
· Nas b vt' IIe bousmg
·
liances
with drugs,
be useda·
to pregnancy 10
challenge her credibility," AreneUa projects, ':"as announced~ Clinsaid.
ton's cbotce Thursday. 1be next
.
· day, the Wbtte House reveal_ed that
"But given ber SlatUS as the VIC· , b b d
f
d f
b
lim's sister, t!tere are tremendous
e a per orme . ewer t an a
~
.
·
dozen hospital ~!"'ons•. mosUy to
dangers to ll!e .ll~ fJII~ m pursll!~~ save the mother s-h!e.or m cases of
a c~=ral~:SS:~ual~o:Cs::fJ.· to rape or ancest. An unspecified numkeep ber remper in check, AreneUa ber apparently were el~uve aborUons. .
.
said.
Desp1te Whtte House efforts to

focus on the 10,000 babies Foster
!lelivcred and his work to promote
abstinence among teen-agers, conscrvalives and anti-abortion groups
mountcd a campaign against him.
Some Republicans, including DOle,
criticized the White House for not
telling them sooner that Foster performed some abortions.
"I'm ... troubled by the fact that
we were not given that information
before the nomination was sent
up."' Dole said on NBC's Meet the .
Press.

Dole, who hopes to shore up
support from conservatives in his
own party for the 1996 presideniial
race, said he bad not decided
whether to oppose the selection,
which must be confirmed by the
Senate.
'.Tm not certain,". he said. "I
_ don't like what I bear, w!!at I
read."
.
Lou said be was not prepared to
recommend Foster's withdrawal.
While House spokeswoman
Dawn Alexander said Sunday that
Clinton knew about the abortions

Voinovich favors appeal
to minority firms ruling ·.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov . . who favors letiing Asfan-Indians
George Voinovich's administration compete for minority contracts .
now favors appealing a judge's rul· "The only people wbo will undering that Asian-Indians are eligible stand this are lawyers."
to compete for state contracts
Voinovicb and Asian-Indian
reserved for minority-owned com- business people were pleased last
panics.
July when a FrankJin County judge
Until this week, Voinovich ruled that tbe ethnic group was
opposed an appeal because be . considered Asian.
.
agreed with the judge's ruling.
•
That is one of fQI!!.i!lliiPS·, "'!!IlL.~
The reversal does not mean bas deslgiiated 10 participate in the
Voinovich bad a change of heart, set-aside program. Blacks, Hispansaid his legal counsel, Michael ics and American Indians also are
Wa_tson. He st~ll believe_s _Asill';l· -· eligible.
Indians are ellgtbleto partiCipate m · Tbe program sets aside 5 perthe contract set-aside program.
cent of all state construction oonjj)ut concems about_otber ~tiga- tracts aod 15· peroent of goods and
tlo'fi promptcd admmastrauon to services contracts for certified
withdraw the opposition. Among minority companies.
the other legal issues is
state's
'fbe ruling meant Voinovicb
appeal ofaJ~K;~ge's ruling ·that over· could restore Asian-Indians to the
turned the Ohio school-finance sys- program. The administration bad_
rem.
dropped them in 1993 after then' 'Tbe administration is con- AtiOrney General Lee Fisher and a
cerned that an adverse ruling in the bearing examiner decided Asian. issue before the Supreme Court Indians were not minorities and
could impact the scb~l funding should not have been invited to ·
·
·
case," Watson said. "We have a participatc
~t deal ,ol oon~rn r~ ~L'' .
Fisher ~pealed, and bis succesI don I fault Vomovicb, satd sor, Betty Montgomery, continued .
Clevelanjl.lawyer Sanllv Kapur, the 'appeal.
-~
· "
'

before the selection and "thinks
Dr. Foster's enormously impressive
history will sland him well in lhe
confirmation process ."
Rep . Nita Lowey, D-N .Y.,
issu-ed a statemcnl in support of
Foster, denouncing suggestions thai
having perfonned abortions should
disqualify bim . "Anti-abortion
politicians want to criminalize
abortions and marginalize the doctors who perform them. We will
fight lhcm every slep of the way,"
she said .
But conservatives are also
· miffed about Foster's long tics to
the Planned Parenthood Federation
of America and th~ fact that his
teen -age pregnancy program in
Nashville, Tenn.'. dispenses contraceptives.
"There's more than J' ust the
abo~on question. There arc other
questions - rnaybe what he has
- advocated or participated in with
the Planned Parenthood,'' Lou said'
on CBS"s FCJce the Naiion .
-·· ~
.
,

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in TV money

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College
basketball
results

Attention Farmers

Crop Insurance For
Tobacco Producers

GALLIPOLIS · The Raccoon
Creek Improvement Committce's
annual meeting bas been scbedoled
for 7 p.m. Tuesday, February 28, in
the feUowsbip room of the Presbyterian Church, 18 South Pennsylva-nia Avenue in Wellston.
The Little Raccoon Creek.
Watershed Management Plan bas
. been completcd aod in the process
or being signed byy ~the:~f~jg~~~: ~
agencies and i:'
~~-.-i':involved in the watershed.
If you have any questions concerning this meeting feel free to
contact Lois Snyder, program
· administrator Gallia SWCD at
(614) 446-8687.

grounds. Potenlial exhibiiOn, call
for asbow Oier.
(Edward M. Vollborn lo the
Galli• County utenslon agent
for agriculture.)

The 1995 Gallia County Preview Sreer aod Heifer Show is just
two weeks away! The sllow will be
beld on Feb. 19, starting at 11 a.m.
at the Gallia County Junior Fair·

Ohio Lottery -

· Page4

~NEW~

RCIC to meet in
Wellston Feb. 28

..

.

Burley tobacco season to date He replaces Joe Wright, who
sales as of Jan. 26 held an average resigned in early January after only
or 184.15 per hundred. The couJd . a short term in office.
be compared 10 the earlier season ·
aYerage of 181.73. The Burley
Dr. Paul Vincelli, plant patholoCooperative (pool) take stood at gist at the University of Kentucky,
8.9 percent. compared to the year warns that weather conditions in
earlier take of 35.1 peroent.
the ftrst half of December were
Rod Kuegel was recently elect- very· cooducive 10 sderotinia infeced the lOth president Of the Burley tions. This is the fungus that causes
Growers Cooperative Association. sclerotloia crown and stcm rot of

ter.

February 5,1995

OH Point Pleasant, WV

ATHENS (AI') - Ohio University trustees have approved a resolution urging Congress not to cut
subsidie.s for public broadcasting;
which they said would bun people
in the region.
Cuts to the Public Broadcasting
Service could affect thousands of
. listeners and viewers in Obio, West
·
and l&lt;en. Joseph Welling. director of the university' s telecommunication center. whiCh operates
l{ti- -WI)T and WOUC television and
radio. •
He said 25 percent of the stations· budget comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcastiilg.
More than 376,000 viewers tune
..
in to WOUB-TV in Athen S' and •
WOUC-TV in Cambridge in abe
•
•
40,000-square-milc region the sla.
tions serve, he said .
-The slations offer news coverage · of the state's Appal achian
region.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
11111 footus soon with the 121-by-'6-foot bulkll"'l
aod other House Republicans have
to be completed by April 10, depending on
considered eliminaling $285 milw'l'tber. The building will be local2d on the site
lion earmarked for the C I'B in
of the fo_rmer .Pleaurs resta11rant. (Sentinel '
1995. .
photo by Jim Freeman)
·
·
·

-.

.

..

~

· BUILDING SIT(.':- Decker General Contractors of Vienna,' W.Va., began surveying a
site on West Main Street In Pomeroy to be the
home of a new Auto Zone store. Det:ker employee Arnold Earl uld w11rlters should start pour-

..'}

\

•

I

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