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                  <text>Page-:-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Promiscuous doctor should · k·na·w better
Arin

Landers
w t995,

Lo. 'Ang.l.s

TtmH SyndiC.a~ and
CreAIOtS s .,.na.ca!e"

Dear Ann Landers: I've had a
close fri ~n d•" i p with my doctor for
lhe p:bt ,, ,e t ears. "Stu's" marriage
was rocky for a wh:le, and he is now
divorced. Just before lhe divorce,
while we were bolh married. we had
an affair that went on for several
months. For the past two years, Sw
has been wilh several other women.
Here's the problem . Stu and I have
resumed ouraffair since we !lfC still
attracted to one another physically.
When we decided to have sex this
time. I told Stu he had to wear a
condom. His reaction frightened me.
He insisted he wasn't stupid enough
to have contracted any diseases and
said my request was a slap in the face.
He said he's never used a condom and
doesn't intend to stan.
Ann, I know the word on sex these
days ·• either absLain, remain in a

monogamous relationship or use a better ofT if you concentrated on
condom under all circumstances. I improving your sex life with your
respoct and trust Stu as my physician, husband and stopped sneaking
but I'm surprised at his reaction. He around.
Dear Ann Landers: 1bank you for
was extremely angry and said I had
the
response you gave to "No Name"
insulted him .
about
suicide. You said in the vast
I am concerned that it wouldn'tlake
much for my good sense 10 evaporate majority of cases, no amount of love
in the heat of a passionate impulse. or caring can · prevent this from
and I would throw all caution to the happening and a person who is
wind. Stu is annoyed with me and determined to end his or her life will
refuses to discuss the subject further; go ahead and do it.
Our only daughter took her lire
I realize I'm a married woman. but
my attraction to Sw is so s1rong I can't several years ago, when she was
fight it. I w.ant to enJOY a phys1cal 24. She had a brilliant future and
relationship with this man. but I want knew that her family and friends
the sex to be healthy. joyful and cared deeply about her. We didn't
without fear. I need some clear-eyed, have the vaguest idea that she was
unbi ased advice; -- SOUTHERN thinking of killing herself. There were
no clues, no signals for help of any
CALIFORNIA WOMAN
DEAR WOMAN: The fact that Sw kind.
It still huns me deeply when I am
is a physician does not .make him
immune to sexually trans.mitted asked, ·"Why didn't somebody reach
diseases. You know he has. other out to h'er before it was too late?"
women in his life, and chances are, Such Slatemenl suggest&lt; that we
rhey are having other affairs with somehow failed bet Only God knows
the intricate workings of the human
heaven-knows-who.
You need to find another ·doctor blain that would make a penon want
and unload Stu. You would be far to destroy his or her .life, despite the

a

Eastern girls capture district. Page c2

pain it would cause family and
friends. Please, Ann, tell me how to
respond to these questions. --STILL
GRIEVING AND AT A LOSS FOR
WORDS
DEAR FRIEND: You do not owe
an explanation to anyone who is so
insensitive (or mean-spirited) that he
or she would ask a mother of a silicide
why someone dido't reach out to her
child before it was too late.
There are times when the best
response is a spell of cold, stinging
silence, followed by "Why would
anyone ask a mo::lher uch\ a
question?"
orrying.
Gem of the~
The bridges y cross before you
come to them
almost always over
rivers thai aren't there.

Respqnsibility...and a trade

HI: 508

Low: 408
Details

- PageD1

By PASTOR RICK STUPGILL would bring him death because he
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene had a purpose. Paul was a}&gt;le to
Some people just don ' t get it. with sLand persecution because tie
They go through life as if it is just had a purpose. Jesus Himself, in
dress reheaual. Some people do the sovereign plan of God, in order
nothing in life but waste time. They to bring about the salvation of
are couch poLatoes, channel surfing mankind was able to endure the
with their: remote, just waiting to cross because he had a purpose.
A purpose will mouvate you. A
die. Great opportunities are· rare,
great
purpose will worlc on us two
Some people are like the guy who
ways.
We work .on the pUJ]JOSe and
was always looking .for something
the
purpose
works on us. There's
great to happen to him. When
something
about
having a goal that
opportunity finally did knock on
Forger to save some of your his door, he was out back looking motivateS us. The next .time you go
favorite Ann LanderJ columns? for four-leafed clovers.
to the bowling alley just remove
"Nuggets andDoozid' is the answer.
We only go through this life one the pins from the alley and just
Send a se/f-o.ddtessed,long. busillus- time. We only get one shot at it. throw that heavy ball down the lane
size envelope and a checlc or money Life is a precious commodity. Why a few times. What' s the purpose?
order for $5.25 (this includes posttJge should we spend it being mad at Whcre's the motivation?
Goals or a putptise in life will
and luindling) to: Nuggets. c/o Ann someone or trying to get even with
someone
who
has
done
you
wrong?
help
us keep our priorities stnlight.
Landers, P.O. Box ll562, Chicago,
We
need
to
realize
as
James
says,
There's
something about 'a purpose
Ill. 606JJ.(J562. (In Canada. ·send
life
is
as
a
vapor,
you're
here
for
that helps us to distinguish between
$6.25.)
just a moment and then you're the important and the unimportant
gone. Life is too short to waste on When we forget the ultimate, we
things that really aren't that impor- become a slave to the immediate.
Lanl. We should avoid focusing our Someone has said that if the safety
auention .ori trivial things that love pin were to be invented today it
FRIDAY
to devour. the moments, days, would have a halter).'; two lranSisMIDDLEPORT - Church months and sometimes years of our tors and require an otl change every
Women United of Meigs County, life.
six montlis.
annual observance of World Day of
George Washington Carver said,
A purpose will help us io develPrayer at I p.m. Friday, Mount "No individual has any right to op our potential. Its not the trophy
· Moriah Baptist Church, Middle - come into the world and go out of that you and I will receive at the
port.
. it without leaving behind him dis- judgment, its the ttaining that we
tinct and legitimate reasons for are getting on the way that is
ROCK SPRINGS - · Salisbury having passed through it." When important ·Eplts 5:117 says, "These
Township Board of Trustees meet- you look at men in the Bible and are evil times, so make every
ing Friday, 6 p.m. at the township you see those that excelled, you moment count. Don't be stupid. '
hall in Rock Springs.
find that they had a purpose. Noah Instead, find out what Jhe Lord
~uilt an ark and was made a laughwants you to clo. " (CEV) When
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport mg stock because he had a purpose. you leave this world, will you be
Masonic Lodge Friday, 6:30 p.m. Abrah~m left his friendS and family able to say it's a beuer place
annual inspection. Work in Master and went to the promised land because you were here? The Bible
Mason degree.
because he had a purpose. Joseph tells us that we were created lo
his family and lived in Egypt bring glory to our Creator. Is that
left
SATURDAY
because
he had a purpose. Moses true in your life? Is He pleased
SALEM CENTER - Star
left
the
palaces
of Egypt and lead with you? Let's seek out the imporGrange 778 and Sw Junior Grange
his
people
across·
the barren desert Lant things in life. Let's fmd a real
878 will hold regular meeting Saturday, 7:30p.m. at the Jmirlge hall for forty years because he had a purpose for living.
on County Roatl.l..Junior. gr:ange . lll!-'11QSeJ)avid confronted O..oliath',
k~~ers.nec!d· to bring baking con- and asked the question, "is there
COLONY THEATRE
entries . Potluck following not a cause," !xi ause he had a l'urFRI. THRU THURS
meeting. All members urged to pose. Daniel was able to sLay m a
BRAD PITT, ANTHONY
lion'.s den, because he ha&lt;l a purattend.
HOPKINS
HARRISONVILLE - Har- pose} John the Baptist was willing
IN .
to
say,
"I
have
10 decrease so that
risonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM SatLEGENDS OF THE FALL R
uroay, 7:30 p.m:'.Masonic Temple. Jesus can increase," because he had
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Stephen
was
able
to
a
purpose.
Stated meeting. Refreshments to
446-41923
preach·
a
message,
realizing
that
it
follow.

onPageA4
L,;;.;;.;.;;;;.,~;:,J

Rep. Cremeans blasts
federal land purchases
"Th• federtll

Under the big top------., Community
calendar

READYING FOR CffiCUS- Rev. WiUiam
Middleswarth, left, presents circus tickets to
Pomeroy Elementary students Wednesday. The
circus, sponsored by the Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club, will bave shows at 2 and 4:30 p.m.
Sunday at Meigs High School. Tbe Lions Club is

distributing tickets to various schools across the
county. Stlldents from Mrs. Bauserman's class
gets tickets (from left): Bobby Warnecke, Ross
Stewarf, Anthony Tennant, Brandon Randolph,
Tirzah Dodson, Keith Day and Rebecca Houser.
(Sentinel_plioto by George Abate)

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..

·.
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FRESH SHIPMENT!

•

Chamber adopts mission News capsules
statement; starts public
Reynolds
awareness campaign
to speak

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmea.S.ntlnel Steff

POMEROY ··The Meigs CoUJity Chamber of Co)llmerce is using March
which has been declared by Gov. George V. Voinovich as Chamber of
Commerce Month, as an opportunity to increase public awareness about its
goals and objectives.
Pany Calaway, local chamber spokesman, said that. the emphasis '!'ill be on
pulling fonh a strong message. that "by working together with I he business
communities, we can make a ,difference".
·
A goal of the chamber is .to promote economic growth and improve the
quality of life in Meigs County, said Calaway. The chamber is geared to build
a strong favorable business climate in Meigs County for the: nearly 150
businesses, organ!zations, and individuals who are members of the chamber,
· acrording to Calaway.
"Proud of Yesterday and Planning for Tomorrow", is the theme of the local
Chamber which was established in 1989.
The Chamber recently adopted a mission statement which states that the
"Meigs County Chamber of CommerceJs to persistently represent, retain and
expand lhe small business all!l commerCial system and improvements in the
quality of life for the enrichment of the county". .
It defines the EConomic Development Office which works in conjunction
with the ChaQ1her as an agency to "offer in cooperation with other agencies,
. seminars·-dir~led toward developing business and management skills, expanding resources in advenising, finances, safety and employee relations in
order to retain and expand existing business, and to encourage new business
to locate in the area".
It further states that the Chamber "shall orchestrate cooperation among
civic, governmental commercial, educational, agricultural , health and huma11
· service sectors in order to accomplish the mission".
Th'c ultimate goal, according to the mission statement, Is to encourage
membj:rs to support local businesses and through sponsored events to make
valuable business contacts, thereby accomplishing collectiYely what no one ·
could do individually.
;
·
.
As·a part of the observance of Chamber of Commerce month, a "membership blitz" is btingplanned. The goal, Calaway said, is to get30 new members.
Serving on the membership COI!lmittee are Calaway, Judy Williams, John
.
Contlnu.q 011 page A8
. .
·

GOOD MORNING
· A~Ie

elected presiding judge
of Fo1,1rth District Court o( Appeals
ATHENS- Judge Peter B. Abele has been elected

at chamber
banquet
AprilS

pr~sidingjudge ofthe Fourth District Court of Appeals,

GALLIPOLIS
Champion Industries Inc.
Chairman Marshall T.
Reynolds will be the
speaker for the annual
GalliaCountyChambcrof
Commerce banquet at 7
p.m. on Thursday, April6
in the University of Rio
Grande's Student Center
Annex :
· Chamber President Marianne B. Campbell said Reynolds,
who is also president and general manager of Chapman
Printing Co., Huntington, W.Va., has an extensive background in economic development effons.
"No one can beller speak to the economic growth potential of this area," she said. "With the focus on strategic
planning and the need for ongoing industrial development
in Gallia County and the surrounding area, we can learn
mu,ch from a man who has truly made it hlll'pen."
Reynolds bought Chapman Printing in 1962 and has
built it into the largest printing busine~s in the Mountain
State, employing around 600 people.
·
. He was also chairman oft he state's largest bank holding
company before it was sold to Bank One . Champion
Industries, his most recent enterprise, specializes iri print·
ing arid offiwequipment
·
Reynolds, who resides In Wayne,W.Va., ls chairman of
several busine5liCS and a board member for several industrial, commercial and charitable organizations.

..

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\

'

(

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which hears appeals from trial courts in 14southeastern
Ohio counties.
Abele, an Athens resident completing his first term
on the court, served two yea,; as administrative judge
before being named to his present position. He has been
replaced as administrative judge by
Earl E. Stephenson of Ponsmouth . ·..---=---.
Abele will now preside over oral
argument sessions, serve on the Court
of Appeals Association Executive
Committee, sit on the BoardofJudges
of the Courts of Appeal, which reviews alleged misconduct within the
state Supreme Coun, and be responsible for statistical reports to the S~­
preme Court.
"I will strive to continue or effons to improve the
court's efficiency and to ensure that all cases are
decided in a fair and impanial manner," said Abele.
Other judges on the·panel are William H. Harsha and
Roger L. Kline, both of Circleville. Kline was elected
last fall to replace the retiring Judge Lawrence Grey.

Today's Times-Sentinel
20 Sections - 148 Pa11&lt;5

Business
Calendars
Classlfteds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports

Along.tbe Rher
Weather

Dl
82&amp;5
D3-5
Insert
Al .

AS
A4
Cl-6
Bl
A4

•

Columns

Fool Crow
Bob HoeOicb
.Walter Mean
lim Sands

Gallipolis man sentenced on marijuana cultivation charge'
GALI,JPOLIS - A Gallipolis man was sentenced Friday in the U.S. Soul hem District Court
of Ohio to 57 months in prison for lhe illegal cultivation of marijuana plants.
John Blackburn, 31, 803 State Route 141, pleaded guilty to the charge lasl year and had been
awa1tmg sentenctng. U.S. Allomcy Edmund A. Sargus said.
The charge·arose out of a joint investigation by _the U.S, Drug Enforcement Agency and th~
Gallia County Sheriff's Department, Sargus said. . .
~ surveillance was conducted in Galli a County th al"led DEA agents and sheriff's investigator~
to Blackburn 's residence.
·
•
A search of the residence turned up hundreds of plants that were la\er seized, Sargus sai~.

/ .'

�•

March 5, 1995

Commentary

March-5, 1995

Maid's confused testimony leaves O.J. alibi in shreds ·

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A2

By LINDA DEUTSCH
bome at the time prosecutors conAP SJSclal Cor:respondent
tend be was ltiUing bis ex-wife and
. L .s ANGE~. -- StaunchiX her friend two miles away. They
mslsting she was 100 percent
say be drove the Bronco to and
truthful, a Salv_adoran maid finally from the ~urdcr ~ne:
e~caped ,the witness. stand at 0.1 .
Lopez s detenrunauon to return
Sunpson s murder trial Friday, her to her _native EI Salvada disrupted
composure unshak~n but her al1b1 the tnal for a wee~ and placed
story badly undenruned.
Ju rors on bold wb1le attorneys
As a tired Rosa Lopez started to ~g ued about h~r and then quesleave the courtr~ after tbree gru- uoned he_r extenstvely.
e~mg ~ys of tesumony, the Judge
Supenor Court ! udg': Lance Ito
swd, All nght. &lt;?.ood luck, Mrs. refused a prosecution b1d to order
L~z. Thank you. . ..
.
the troublesome wllness back to
_Thank you , s u , she said, court later, and with that, she was
bowmg slightly. "!~~·re very kind wbisked a-:vay.
.
and I appreciate this.
.
One pomt of contenuon between
Lopez _1s the only kn own the leg~ teams was a taJ?ed inte!de fense ':"''tness who ca':' plllce ·v1ew w1tb L?pez that S1mpson s
Simpson s Bronco outside hiS attorneys fa1led to turn over to

Ed Bennett and other Mi&lt;:fdleport greats ·
NeUe Bahr furnished me witb _a
copy of two stori~ that appealed m
the Columbus D1spa1ch on Feb. I
A Division of
~ 8, 1995 about Medal of Honor
wmner Edward A. Bennett. They
w~re wntlen by Steve Stephens, a
D•~ratch staff reporter.
HERO TOOK ON SEVEN
815 Third A..,., GaUipoUr, Ohio
Ill Court Sl, Pomeroy, Oblo
ENEM"\, SOLD~RS. CAME OUT
(6t4) 446-1341
(614) 991,1156
_ ALIVE. A soldier who ~s. the
Medal_~_&gt;f Honor, the nauon. s highROBE RT L :· WINGETI
est m1htary award, 1s unlikely to
Pub Usher
come home. The act of extreme
heroism behind such a medal usuHOBART WILSON JR.
MARGARET LEHEW
ally
takes the winner's life. Edward
b KUIIvt Editor
Coot roller
A. Bennett was among the deeptions: He survived and went on to
A MEMB ER ·of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Preu
I serve his country's armed forces
Association and the American Newspaper Pu blishers Associati on.
for many more years.
Bennett, born in Middleport,
LETI'E RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban
Ohio,
was drafted in January 1944.
: 300 words long. All letters are subject to editing and mUst be: signed with
He
was
a 24-year-old corporal with
· name, addre11 and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
the
Army's
358th Infantry, 90th
: published. leiters sho uld be in good Iaste, addressing issues, ilol
· person alities.
·
:
Infantry Division, 50 years ago
today when his unit advanced on
the town of Heckhuscheid, Germany.
.
As night feU, an enemy machine
gun opened up from inside a house,
pinnin g the Americans. Bennett
tried to crawl around.the house, but
light from a burning building gave
him away and the German gunner
opened
fire on him. Bennett was
By WALTER R. MEARS
able
to
reach
cover behind some
AP. Special Correspondent
trees.
As
the
gunner turned his
W A.SHINGTON -. When the Big Three - the presiden~ the senator
attention
elsewhere,
Bennett
and the speaker - defined visions of America's world role, they talked
resum
ed
his
advance
toward
.the
lik~ allies on the need for U.S. leadership but sounded like riyal powers
back
of
the
house.
on·where and how to enforce iL
·
With his trench knife he .killed a
President Clinton complained of new isolationists, aiming at RepubliGerman
sentry, then charged the
cans, an accusation that is sure to resound through his campaign for a sechouse,
where
seven enemy soldiers
ond term.
waited
in
the
dark. Bennett killed
Sen. Bob Dole, leader of the GOP majority, came with a list of what be
three
with
rifle
fire, bludgeoned
de ~m s missteps by the administration, and said pre-emptive military
another
with
his
rifle
butt, then shot
action could one day be needed to s.lQp the·spread of nuclear weapons.
the
other
three
with
his
pistol. With
Dole seeks the Republican nomination ti&gt; c~allcnge the president in I 996.
th
e
gun
position
wiped
out, the
Speaker Newt Gingrich, who usually thlks toughest, was in his profesU.S.
troops
were
.able
to
sweep
sorial mode; concentrating on economic and other common interests as
the way to weld a high-technology world, while declaring that "the Unit- through and take the town. Minlcued States must lead, period" with tough-minded policies and a'military so lou sly , Benneu was unhurt,
although he was wounded llefore .
powerful as to dominate whenever it must.
While the president took on isolationism, the real· debate isn't over the war ended. Among his other
U.S. power and leadership bu~ rather, whether to pm;eed internationally awards w~re the Purple Heart, the
Silver Star and the Bronze Star.
or to unilateraUy, with Americans (!icking the spots and calling ilie sh~.
On ."Oct.- 12, 1945; Bennett
Clinton took the occasion, a ,onference sponsored by the Richard M.
Nixon library, to underline tbt point that he's in charge and he 'U make the received his Medal of Honor from
decisions. He announced one on the spo~ the withdrawal of 200 tons of President Harry S. t ruman at the
White House Rose Garden. Hissern~clear weapons materials from the U.S. stockpile to show his commitvice to his country wasn't over,
ment to a strengthened and permanent nuclear nOnproliferation treaty.
Earlier, after conferring with Dutch Prime Minister Wim Kok, Clinton though. He spent a shan lime as a
dealt with his chief dispute with the House Republicans, saying he intends Veterans Administration training
to keep the United States involved in .United Nations peacekeeping mis- officer .in Athens, Ohio, then reenlisted in the Army.
sions and not "walk away as some suggest we should" in Congress.
Bcnnctt, who had been promot"It is a policy that under our Constiwtion I can pursue as long as I am
ed to sergeant, served in the Kore-·
the presiden~" he said, adding that Congress could deny him the funds.
; (Walter R. Mears, vice president an,d columnist for The Associated an War, for which he received a
('ress, has reported on Washington and national politics for more battlefield commission. He stayed
in the Army until retiring in 1962.
than 30 years.)
'
as
a major. During his Army
•
career, Bennet! and his family settled in Campbell, Calif., where he
died in 1983. He is buried at Golde n Gate National Cemetery. A
marker at tbe Middleport City Hall
commemorates Bennett's Medal of
Honor.
•
Patton' s tirade still brings
•
Reynoldsburg resident
:: I have tried to put off speaking rled to under the law, so I feel the chuckles.
Roger
Marshall,
served with Medal
rjiy mind about the letter diat Bob · requests are nrit extreme.
of Honor winner Edward Bennett
Murphy had in the paper concemYou mention the "needs of area ·
iilg the veterans of the county, but veterans" and that is what we are in the Army after World War II.
said Bermett loved to tell
:ttter seeing him the other night at a concerned with, but if you feel that aMarshall
story aboui a run- in he had with
IJPbliC meeting, I can no longer be present funding is now sufficient, Gen. George Patton. Fifty years ·
!Mil.
then you obviOusly know little ago last week, Bennett singlechand·: Mr. Murphy seems to insinuate abQut the needs of the veterans .in
tl)at military life was no more than this county. You mention concern ; edly wiped out a German snipers'
nes~ allowing U.S. troops to move
JJuee hots and a cot, and that these for the "hard-working, property- ' through
a German town. Afterward
tilings occurred at the Ritz. Well, owning taxpayer's dollars" and I he was personally
congratulated"by
Mr. Murphy , let me tell you about don't blame you. If rou really Patton. About a week later, Benlji!othcr side of military life that kn ew where a lot of It is going n~n. a corporal, was taking his .two
y{lu are apparently unaware of.
(again homework) you, and the neckties out to wash. (You had to
;. Look up the date of Dec . 21, other residents, would .be a whole wear ties in Patton's outfit, he
tf]44 and see if it mentions any- lot more concerned.
notes.)
tl)ing like a Holiday Inn vacation. · Seeing you at the meeting
Patton's jeep then roars from
' &amp;illed, 8,497. Wounded, 46,000. reminded me that you had run for out of nowhere.
rwssing, 21,000. Christmas dinner commissioner last time out and it
"Corporal, why aren't you wearlilas fro zen turkey in a foxhole. I got me to thinking. Why are you . ,ing a tic?" barked the general. Then
~now, I was there, and for the life coming out' and around now? Do the general hesitated.
of me I can't recall meeting anyone you plan on trying it again? If so, I
"You look damn familiar, son,"
like you who will describe it your would like to state my opinion on · he said. Bennett identified himself.
lliay. I s1rongly suggest..you seek that. I don't speak for aU the veler"Last week you told me 1 was
~rther education on th e matter, ans of this county, but I do speak
going to win the Medal of Honor,
Mr. Murphy, because you appar- for one who is damn proud, and I sir," he adds. Patton then recogi;i1tly didn't learn how _to do your tell you tl\at as far as I'm con - nized the man. 'That was a hell of
h!lmework before speaking. ·
cerncd, ~placing one of those com- a job you did, corporal," Patton
• The taX for the veterans is being missioners we already have with said, "But right now, you're not
collected, as it has been for many, you would have about the same wearing·a tie and that' makes you a
r(jany years. The money is there, so effect as changing seats .on the private. Get those @#%&amp;• ties
it's no "mysterious pot of gold." Titanic.
clean-and put one on." .
IC' e are not wanting anything
Harry Reynolds
"Bennett was as proud of that as
qlxlve, or beyond what we are enti727 Fourth Ave. of anything," Marshall recalled.
Gallipolis
"When you got chewed by Pat•
ton,
you know yo!!'ve arrived"
•
Ben.,eu was mdeed busted in

Leaders voice varied
foreign polic.y stands

rank, but got back his slripe and
received the Medal of Honor a
short lime laler.
Jimmy Stewart•. who died in
·

Fred W. Crow

Vietnam: was also a recipient of
the Medal of Hanoi for his service
in that war. There is a ficl!l named
for him - Stewart's Field - in
Fort Benning, Ga.
The Village of Middleport has
many other great men who have
achieved national prominence .
Some of them are as foUows:
David Diles, former ABC-TV
and radio commentator, news anaIyst and author; Gen. James
Hartinger, a four -star general ;
Arthur "Art" Lewis , a coach at
West Virginia University and also
the former Coach of the Cleveland
Rams pro football team; Walter
Priode, one of the all-time great
footbaU guards at Ohio University;
Dr, Ed . W. W. Lewis, National
Theologian ; Lionel Boggs, outstanding southeastern champion
golfer who refused to turn pro.
Finally, there is Jim Clatworthy.
Jim's greatest honor was being a
Grand Croaker in the Society for
the Promotion of Bullfrogs Inc.
This is an exclusive society with
Ol)ly 15 individuals achieving this
honor. He is also the only living
.resident of Meigs County.. who has
a 33rd Degree in Masonry.
During the heyday of this sodety, there were many outstanding
individuals of foreign exlrac~ion .
visiting Meigs County. They came
from Libya, London, England,
Japan, MichiJ!3!1 and Lower Slobbia. In this connection, Jim was the
ambassador at large who procured
the -presence of many prominent
individuals to visit Meigs County
for the frog jumps. He had been
selected by this society to be its
AMBASSADOR of .FOREIGN
AFFAIRS. He could ~ any foreigner and immedia!ely_enter into a
discussion with him. He was most
adept at lip and mind reading.
There are other individuals who.
should be mentioned here such as
T.A. Riley, Ike Neal, Forrest Bachtel and Martin Essex. In my book
that I am writing about the ftOj!S, I
will go more in detail about Jim 's
accomplishments. The only individual he could not persuade to

come to tbe frogs wai Willie Sutton the notorious bank robber. Circ~rances beyond his control prevented this.
·
Note: Former Mayor Seyler sent
me the following clipning titled
·"Frog went a-courtin~. 'fAn old
man sat on a park,bench feeding
the pigeons when a frog suddenly
hopped over to him. "If you kiss
me." the frog said to him, "I'll tum

into a beautiful princess and grant
you aU your desiies!" T!te old man
picked up the frog, put it in his
pocket and started for home.
"Hey ," the frog shouted, " you
didn't kiss me!" "At my age," the
oldstel exclaimed, 'Td ruther have
a frog that t.alks!"
. Note from reader: You readers
do not know how !bankfull am for
(Continued on A3)

· (Continued from Al)
a word from a reader that enjoys
my columns. There are many times
I have felt like quitting when some. one gives me a pat on the back .
Since I am not a paid employee of
The Sentinel, a nice word goes a
long way in inspiring me to continue writin~ . Thanks, Mrs. Bailey,
for your kind words.
In Gud we trust

Some major ,a i rlin es have jus l
anno un ced th at th ey'll put a cap on
tra ve l agency commissions.
As ,a result, man y travel
agen c ies w ill c hange
their po licy and ch arge
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GIFTWARE

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

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sub§cripdonll by mai l ~rmi ll e d In
whcl'l.': motor carrier scrvi« ts available.

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•
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Emerald, RuJ,y, Sapphire and All

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SUN DAY O NLY
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SUHSC RI PTION RATES
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One Wt:ek........... :, ..................... ., ............. 51.00
On e Year. ...........
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l)lo

Por informati on on AAA
membership and deta il s.
on ou r co m p l(~te tra vel
services, contact your nea rest
AAA office today. Because fo r what
you cold be spend ing in service fees
elsewhere yo u co uld be ge tt i ng,
com pfel~t tra vel services fro m AAA .
_So w_h¥--not join the dub?~---'--

GEMSTONES

FAMILY PUCTICE ·

'

Sunday .....

vacation deslin.'l tion s.

)

Ncw~pape r A s~ ociat.iop .

•

•

leasant Valley Hospital Is pleased to welcome John F. Wiltz., M .D .. a pedlatrldan associated
with The Children·s Olnlc, to 'Its Medical Stalf. Dr. Wiltz. comes to Pleasant Valley from Reynolds A.nny
. Community Hospital, Fort Sill. OK. He did his residency and Internship in pediatrics at the Walter ·
Reed Army Medical Center In Washington, DC. A board certlfted member of the 1\.merican Academy of
Pediatrics . Dr. Wiltz. Is a member of the A.merican Medical Association. As a pedlatridan, he specializes In
the prevention, diagnosis and ·treatment of disease In children. from birth through adolescence. The
Children's Otnlc, locat~d In Suite 215 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant. Is open Monday - Friday.
2 a."l. - 5 p.m,. For ~ppolntmenf! call (3~~675-\107~-·

up grad es on ren tal ca rs, hotels, resor ts,
cru ises and ma ny exci ting

COLORED

..

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D•

~:f rmbt r : The Au,ociated Pr(u. .n.nd lh e Ohio

court day ._ The defense may use the ·
tape later 1f Lopez malces good on a ;
threat to nee to her nauve El Sal- • .
vador.
•
Th~ defense, _ha_vi ng assessed;;
Lopez s vulnerab•hues m tb1s dress:
rehearsal , mig ht also try to pe_r-: ,
suade her to return and appear _m.;
person when the defense begms liS •
case.
.
.
. ,
[)arden clearly 1mphed that 1f, •
Lopez does tes ufy, the prosecution·:
would call her fnend ~y!v1a Guerra,·
as a rebuital w1tness. lbe prosecu-:
lion asserts Guerra will say Lopez :
!Old her Simpson's lawyer~ were' ;
pay mg $5 ,000 for her tesumony •
an~ that G ue~a could collect the :
same amount 1f she, _too, srud she :
saw the Bronco that mght.
''I never said that, sir,'' Lopez:
rep~i.ed . . . •
.
"
:
. Sy lv1a ·S ly10 g?
Darden:.
asked.
" I00 percent, sir," Lopez said.

P

e)(clusive sav in gs, p rivileges an d

AAA Gallipolis
360 Second Ave.

~t'm:blll! .'litimes ~ jentintl

P'uhl1 ~·h~d each Sunday. 825 Third Ave..
etalllpoli ~. Ohio. by tht: Ohi o Valley l'ubli ~hing
~ompan~/Mllltlmedlu. ]l)c. 3tcond class pou·
agt paid nt Gnllipoli s. Ohio 45631 . Entc~d a'
kcond cln.~~ mai ling matter nt Pomeroy. Ohin,
~t1~ t Office.
·

Wecoine

Trav'frwith someoneyou trust - -. -

POMEROY

Do homework before speaking

.

were free.

At A_AA, this current si tuati on h asn 't
cha nged our p o licy at a ll . O ur
me mbers still get o ur complete tr avel
services without' any addit ional costs.
As a me mber&gt;qf AAA, you'll a lso e njoy

.

145 North Second

would play it for the jury. But he private detective last July 29 that it
spoke to the importance of her alibi was between 10:15 aild 10:20 when
testimony : "This lady ... has said she took her employer's golden
from Day I that she saw th is Bran- relriever out for a walk.
~o ~ut there after 10 o'clock. And
At fl!St, she casually agreed. "If
1f a Jury ·believes that, if two jurors that's what it says, 10:15'to 10:20.
believe that, that's the end of this that' s fine with me," she said.
case for them ."
Darden continued to grill her.
Lopez, who said she grew weary Seizing on a pa use in the. taped
on the witn ess stand , never inicrvicw, be suggesting the detecchanged her story - even when ti ve, William Pavelic, was perhaps
confronled with a tape recording of feedin~ her information to p~vide
he~ own words, spoken in her own a time frame that would help SlDlpvmce, th at contradicted how she son's case. She said that .was not
had described fro m the witn ess so.
stand the hour she saw Simpson's
"Let me say something," Lopez
Bronco.
interjected. '' Wben I beard my
" I saidafler 10," she adamantly name on telev ision with 10:15,
declared_again and again, speaking 10:20 time. 1 called Mr. Johnnie
m Spamsh translated by an inter- Cochran's office and I said I have
prercr.
.
never giventhem aspecific time.''
De put y . Di str ict Attorn ey
. Lopez's trial test imony, in ils
Chns topher Darden played back a third day, was videotaped with the
tape of Lopez tel ling a Simpson jury idle for the si&lt;th consecutive

If you don't like the idea
of paying a fee to book a flight,
,join the club...

Letter to tb.e Editor

•

prosecutors.
Moments after court recessed
for the weekend, Ito slapped $9~0
fines on defense attorneys Johnme
Cochran Jr. and Carl Douglas for
the late disc losu re and false ly
asserting the defense didn' t have a
tape of the interview.
.
.
In a suongly worded ruling, Ito
also wrote th at . if the defe nse
chooses to show JUrors the v1deotape of Lopez's tes timony, . he
.would rell them the lawyers broke
the law.
Lopez, pummeled one last time
by prosec ution cross-examination,
insisted she bad not been paid or
promised anything for her restimony and was not. CX(JCC ti ng a fi nanclal windfall when she reaches El
Salvador.··
Despitc having hiskey witness' s
tesumony preserved on v1deotape,
Carry on, Cochr an decline d 10 say if he
FredW. Crow
·
EDITOR'S NOTE - Longtime attoraey Fred W. Crow Is
the contrihotor of a weekly column to the Sunday Times-Sentinel. Readers wishing to
applaud, criticize or comment on
· any subject (except religion or
p4&gt;6tks) are encouraged to write
to Mr. Crow In care or.thls newsp:aper.

.
B
·
tt
•
·
II
d
enne
IS
reca
e
Ed

...

..

· Sunday Times Sentlnei--Page-A3

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

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404 SECOND AVE•
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631 , :;
:;

�Page-A4-Sunday nmes-sentlnel

.

( 0

March 5, 1995

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

•

Regional
Making
history··

OHIO Weath er
March 5, 1995

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

•"
·~

'•
'I

Students gearing
for major role in
groundbreaking

'•
'~

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Statr .
ROCK SPRJNGS - Six Salisbury Elementary students will
·make history Monday afternoon.
These students will move the
first din on the phase of the U.S.
33/lnterstate 77 connector between
Roclc Springs and Five Points . The
ground~reak.ing ceremony begins
at I p.m. Monday at tbe end of tbe
four-lane near Meigs High Scbool.
bard, sixtb grade; C.J, Estep, fiftb grade;
YOUNG EARTH MOVERS :_ TJiese SalisThen, Kokosing Construction
bury
Elementary
students
will
move
the
fir
st
Meghan
HayeS, fourth grade; Jeremy BlaclcaiOD,
Co. will begin work on tbe 2.25second
grade;
Devin lbmey, first grade; back
dirt
on
tbe
33/lnterstate
77
connector
prOmile section of four-lane highway.
row,
Principal
Don Hanning and Nancy
ject.
The
groundbreaking
will
be
l
p.m.
Monday
The $12.3 million project will conat
tbe
end
of
tbe
four-Jane
near
Meigs
Higb
Yoacbam,
ODOT
spokeswoman.
Not pictured II - •
nect Rock Springs and Five Points.
Scbool. From ldt are, front
row, Abby Hubthird grader Jordan Stotts.
The following students include
,
sixth grade , Abby Hubbard, daughter of Jerry .and Kathy Hubbard;
fifth grade, C.J . Estep, son o f Yoacham said , " It was the 'first Yoacbam said. The rest of the pro- and is large ted for-completion by
ject is divided into four sections 2000 . .
Christina Lee; fourth grad e, designed in-bouse for 30 years."
ODOT
and
Kokosing
officials
Megban Haynes, daughter of Paul
and Jan Haynes; !bird grade, Jordan met last week as pan of a precon.
Stotts, son of Charles and Terry struction conference in Marietta,
Stotts; second grade, Jeremy Yoacbam said.
Fredericktown-based Kokosing
Blackston, son of Roben and Bren·
was
awarded tbe contract.
da Blackston ; and fir st grade.
Construction will end sometime
Devin Barney, son of Darrell and
next
spring, which will complete
Cheryl Barney.
tbc
State
Route 7 bypass around
Selecting tbe top student proMiddleport
and Pomeroy.
jects was difficult, said Nancy
The
Meigs
portion of the project
Yoacham, an ODOT spolceswom·
covers
18.5
miles
between Rock
an. The students had to create a
Springs
and
Ravenswood,
W.Va.,
poster or write an essay.
.
"The kids put a lot of eff&lt;in into
i~" Yoacbam said. "They learned a
lot about ODOT."
·Salisbury students will sit on
portable bleachers near tbe end of
the four·lane so all can see tbe cer. emony, she added.
- · ..- , ." If 1t rains, everybody bring
FAMILY NIGHT
their umbrella, because I just
EVERY . ·.
couldn't rent a tent big enough,"
she added.
'
TUESDAY NIGI;IT
Meigs County highway workers
Y9u Can Enjoy Any StylE!
will direct traffic from tbe main
Personal Size ...
road to nearby county roads and
toward tbe high school, sbe added.
Dirt for the ceremony will be
trucked in from the county garage.
Following a series of speecbes,
a reception at the Pomeroy Gun
Club will be hosted by the Meigs
Chamber of Commerce and the
~OLLEGE
Southeast Ohio Regional Council's
Roule 33 Corridor Committee.
Choosing speakers for the event
was difficult since so many Meigs
· residents and albers have worked
to complete the projec~ she added.
· Ronald Zook, ODOT assistant
director and Chief engineer, will
For Only '1.29
give the keynote address. Otber
or With 1e oz. Soft Drink
speakers will include ODOT DisFor Only '1.99
trict 10 Deputy Director John
Dowler, tbe construction engineer
4 PM ·9 PM ONLY
and design engineer.
HENDERSON, WV
"This project was unusual,"

u.s.

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.......

SOUTtmASTERN
BUSINESS
446-4367

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·

The following numbers were
cboSc:n in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
·
OHIO
Pick 3: 0-0-6
Pick 4: 0-7-7-0
Buckeye 5: 2-8-16-21-34
No tickets were sold llliiAiag all
five numbers drawn in Friday
nig~t's Buckeye 5 drawing for .
S100.000. tbe Ohio Louery said.
. S·ales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$541,888.
There were 191 Buckeye 5 tickets. witb four or tbe numbers, and
each is wortb $250. The 6,014 tickets showing three of tbe numbers
are each WOrtb $10, and tbe 01.-.. ~U'I'l
tickets showing two of tbe nun~lljlf.)
are each wortb $1.
SBies in Pick 3 Numbers ~~t(d
$1,718,936.50, and winners
reeeive $243,662.50.
P-ick 4 Numbers players
wa~red $368,841 and will share
$219.500. '
The jackpot for Saturday's

Free clothing day
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs
Community ActiQ!I will haYe its
fRe clolbing day Tuesday. CAA 's clothing bank is in tbe
old scbooibouse building in

Super Lotto drawing was $40 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 8-0-1
Daily 4: 0-7-1-4
Casb 25: 1-4-8-9-13-20

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The family ol Richard E. "Dick' Vaughan, affectionately ealled

'Grandpa Vaughan' by many, wants to thank all of his friends and
all those who heiped care for him for their many kindnesses
during his last illness. It was appreciated by all of us.
·
To the doctors, nurses, hospitals, Overbrook Center, everyone
who tried lo make his last year on earth as easy as possible,
thank you.
To his paslor, Rev. Bob Robinson, who was always there
when Dad needed him, thank you.
To Opel, our heartfelt thanks go out to you lor making Dad's
last years quality years. Opel and Dad's work at the Clifton
Church was inspiring.
•
To all 'the folks at the Pomeroy Methodist Church where the
Vaughans have been atlending for years, our special thanks go
. .
.
.
out to you. The Church was one of Dad's greatloves in life. '
And especially, we say !hanks to all the earing and loving people.who were so much a part of Dad's life.
Another love of Dad's life was his work. His customers, fellow.workers, and business acquaintances were his friends ..
he appreciated that, and we thank you.
We're not sure how the wealth of a man fs counted.
Bul if loving earing friends are counted, then Dad was a very wealthy person. 1·
.
·
To those of you who loved, eared, counted him as a friend, asked about him, visrted him, we thank you .
It made our loss, our time of grief, more bearable, to knowthat he was eared for and loved by so many of you.
Thank you.
The family of Richard E. Vaughan.
(Richard W., Pal and Martin Vaughan, Suzanne Warner,
and Judy Hunter, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, brothels and sisters.)

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~P~ag~e~A~s;;s~u~n~da~y~ll~m:;es:;;;~Se~n~tl~nel~======~~~~~~~~~~~ls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

March

1995

Along the River

Commissioners
hear tourism request
from page A1
allowing only the county, townships, for county court computer$ystem and
Continued

county," she noted. "People want to
get away from smog and tbe cities."
"We've worked so hard to get our
name out there: we want to keep it
there" said Patty Pickens.
· eo:nmissioners and tourism com·
mittee members also discussed ts.e
possibiiity of enacting a bed tax to
fund tourism activities.
Commission Pres ident Fred
Hoffman said the board is not opposed to helping fund tourism promolion, but added the board should not
bear the full burden.

~::~ ~r!~r:~h·~h~o:~~:it:~:
y· · ·
d 1 ·th Sheriff
In add1t1on, boar me WI
James M.Soulsby anq Prosecutor John
R Lentestodiscuss medical expenses
·
for prisoners.
Soulsby said the county owes Veterans Memorial Hospital $9,200 for
treatment of prisoners dating back to
· responsl"bl e 'oor
1987.· The county IS
paying (or prisoners ' med1cal treatment.
.

Also, SoulsbyandLe~tesds~ussed

the poss
"
ibility of receiVIng estimates
·
f
t'
to deterrnsne the cost old jre~ova mg
·the ex1stmg 1~-year-o .as · .
Hoffmansa1dhewouldhke tosome
· '·he JBI
· 'I com- ·
figures on renovatsng
pa~~ to the cost of bmldsng a new
fac1hty.
.
.
. Dunng a meelmg Wllh County Engmeer Robert Eason and hsghway
department offiCe manager Dave
Spencer, the board agreed to advertise for the purchase of bituminous,
·aggregate and asphalt concrete paving material for the hfighhwday departmcnt and approved o I e epartment
holdl·ng a public auction to di spose of
Old equl'pment.
The board also passed a resolution

villages and school districts to use the
county gravel pit near Le~an . Falls
after learning some pnvat~ mdiVld~als and contractors were u~m~ t~e pst.
By Ohio law, no pnvate mdivsduals
or contractors can get gravel from the
county-owned pit.
In other business, the board:
•Rejected two bsds for the sale of
approximately two-1/2 acre~ of
county-owned property along Hsl~nd
Road in Pomeroy due to the low pnces
offered; .
.
•Established a debt retirement fund

transferred $7,300 snto the fund from
the contsngency fund;
•Requested an advance draw of
$260,000 from real estate tax settlements;
.
•No~ed tw~ calls had been ~1ved
comp~smentsng oog warden.B1ll Dye,
•P~.sd weekly bslls ~f $106,249.63
cons1stmg of 147 entnes. .
.
PresentwereHoffman, Vsce·pre~s ~nt Janet Howard Tackett, Commsss1oner Ro~!' Harte~bach and Clerk
of CommiSSIOn Glona Kloes.

conUnuld from page A1

m1ss1on from the Oh1o Hsstoncal So·
ciety and the Ohio Department of
Trans rtalion to install a historical
'k pol
Stat R
rEagle
mar era ong
e ou1e 7 nea
Rid e Road in Meigs County.
. seeking oonatioils for
~
1
the ~o~!~a~d funds are starting to
P . I "d Mrs Woodall
come
sa1 on appealing
.
She 10,
plans
to .area veterans to support the project.
"He was a veteran - he served
ve honorabl andwashighlydecoteryd .. h rd Bs"erce served Wl"th
ra
s e sa1 .
disti~ction
during the Civil ·War as a
tt the9thlndianalnfantryand
scou or
unded during the
1y wo
was
severe
Battle of Kenesaw Mountain. By the
end of the war, he had been prOII)Oied
to the rank of brevet major.
Also working on the project is Class
.PresidentCindyArrnstead,withMissy
Russell serving as project chairworn'an.
"Theywanttohavesomethingdone
before they graduate," Mrs. Woodall
said.
"I see Ambrose Bierce as the type
h
of person who would
h rather
h d" dave a
marker placed w ere e 1eu, ,no 1
where he was born," she said. nomtunately, we don 't have any choice.
"This is the next best thing we can
do," she said. ·

.

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born Meigs.
.
This happened while the class d1sd h h rt 1 "Occ rrence at
cusse 1 e s 0 . s 0'! . u
·
Owl Creek Bndge, a b1zarre P1ece
that lias become a staple for high
school literature books, sheexplamed.
·
·
d more m
· 1o h"IS l"'e
"I snvesllgate
'''
andwasappalledtolearnth~rewas.no
historic~! mar~er there ID Meigs
County,. ~he sa1d.
.
,
.
In addlllOR, one of Bierce s stones,
1 f p· .. ·
· 19th
"The Is e o . l~es, his s~d1 sndd.
century Galhpohs,_ s e sa1 • a mg
that "The Isle of Pmes" may refer to
· Rsver
·
·1 d 1
First
the OhiO
IS an a ong .
Avenue.
The class research began in Octo-·
ber 1993 and ·Mrs: Woodall got per-

p u bl"I c records
Continued from page A1

Betz said he did not feel he should
pay another county official for public
information, especially when the data
h f ds f
processing budget as un
or repro duc t'100 expen ses .
. ..
"I JUSt
· th"10 k 1·, was .a stall, tact1c. •
Betz said. "I don 't thmk I m bemg
unreasonable in my request. I certainly oon'twant the county to spend
·
Continued from page A1
a lot of money for attorneys to get
Anderson, Julie Houdashelt- public information generated in his
'fhornton, John Weeks, and Karl office."
Keebler II.
Commission Vice President KenAn open house has been planned neth "anner called the practice of
I"
for March 17 from 1 to 6 p.m at the charging
for copies "ridiculous."
new Chamber location in the old GTE
"My feelings on this wlfole G!J.urtPhoneMartbuildingat238WestMain house mess is ... when we go mlo
Street. Plans are also moving for- business for ourselves we undermine
ward, Calaway said, for the annual our purpose as public officials," he
Chamber dinner-dance on April22 at said. "I think this is ridiculous, cbargRoyal Oak Resort, 6 prn . to midnight. · ing each other."
Reeently elected to the board of
Montgomery said inlerdepartmen:
directors for· a two year term were tal charges result in passing county
Roland Wildman, Joyce Quillen, Ron funds back and forth between offices.
McDade, Steve Story. and Steve
"It's just a round robin," he said.
Dunfee. Bill Nease·and John Weeks · "Ourstancerightnowisweshouldbe
are filling unexpired terms of two working together and helping each
members who resigned.
other."
The 1995 officers are Charles
At Thursday's meeting, Canaday
Kitchen, president; Horace Karr, vice agreec! to give the commission a copy
president; John Weeks, treasurer; of the reports and said he would preCalaway, . secretary, and Thornton, pare a copy for Betz some time next
executive director.
week.
·

Chamber·

~==:::'--::~::~
"''•-'1'1 ....,
Comp.!my
BeN
The Ohio Rwer .,. ~ "'""" '""~ ·
t.~i.&lt;laleport, OH 4~760

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Ge•-

HAs HIT
GENE JOHNSON .CHEVY·OLDS·GEO

REMEMBER
too late to have a happy
childhood!
Mon-Fri 9-4
Sat 10-5
Layaway available IS

.
***EXTRA***
Make your Best Deal

We are often asked. "What"s 1hc beSI way of finding out
whether or n ot a doctor of chiroprac ti c can help my
problem?'" ·
·
·
·
.
We believe the answer can he found in a complete ch~r­
opmctic consultation and examination. including X- rays.
And. to help you find out for sure. we do a complete
chiropractic examination, including X- rays (procedures .
that normally cost $128 or more) for $35.
We will make thi s special program available until
March 17, 1995. The only.' exceplion to our offer involves

.

on any new cit or truck
then step to the line
for a free 3·point shot
Make the shot and
you receive an extra .

....•t

acci~­

ents) and public assistance (ADC) in wh1ch case there 1s
no charge billed directly to the patient fo r the fi rst visit.

•

DR. N:P. KIME &amp; DR. N.W. ROBINSON

Regular $128 Program
(Offer Expires March 17.,1995)

A pri vate consuhation with ihc doctor

: ~A thorough spinal examination including ortho~dic &amp; neurological tests

READING LESSON- As part of the DARE program, students
receive a DARE studeat workbook. Here, Ryaa HDI, Keada Smith
aad Nicole Beii!OII read along with the day's DARE lesson, resisting
pressure to use drugs.
·

"I gota lot of weird looks the ftrStday," Wood explained. "One kid even
made oinking noises."
"That!"trStday,lexplainedthatl'mnota 'copper' ora 'pig',butadeputy,"
he said. "They learn to have a lot of respect for the uniform."
Other officers are excited aboUt the DARE program, Wood said. AU
cruisers belonging to the depanment now display DARE stickers by order of !
the sheriff, he said..
:
· "I love teaching the kids about what I know about," Wood commented. •
"My goal is to try to spend more time in the schools and get the program off ]
to a good start."
.
·
"The most satisfying thing about the job is helping the kids," he said. "I
tell myself that ifl just help one student, I think I've done my job."
•
"If we can tum half a dozen kids around ... or even one, it will be !
worthwhile," agreed Soulsby.
!
"But it'll have a bigger effect than thatoncetheysee the dangers of drugs," :
Souls by predict~
· •
·
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"We hoj!e in the future we will see some good resuliS from the DARE : ·
program," said Soulsby.
· ;
The benefiiS of the program extend bCyond the time spent in the class~ •
room, said Meigs County Prosecuting Attorrtey John R. Lentcs.
!
"The program will help in allaspeciS of their lives," he said.
!
Keeping kids off drugs can prevent other types of crime, Lentes ROICd - !
adding that alcohol poses a larger problem in Meigs County than other drugs. : ·
In m0$t of the cases we prosecuae, the offender was using alcohol when 1
the incident happened - especially in violent crimes, Lentes said.
:
Like other programs, donations are always welcomed and Wood said he ;
has been contacted by people interested iri oonatinl! to the program.
•
;\II donations go toward purehasing it..'llls for the program, he said.
'
. People who want to donate to the program can contact him at the Meigs :
County Sherifrs Department: Future foodraising plans may "include a golf :
tournament, he said.
1
Since the grant money can only be used for wages, Soulsby said commu- '
nity donations are very importanttothe program forthe purchase of materials •
and other DARE-related items.
;
"lt.will be a oefinite asset to the community," Soulsby noted.

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: [Jl A referral to the proper specialist if we determine chiropractic can't help you

.)

We've Got the Trucks,

.

THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME OF TH.E
DANGER SIGNALS OF PINCHED--NERVES"' ,

,'
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We've Got the Cars •••

.•,
·I

.. We're Ready

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TO PLAY

[]]Fatigue

C1JHeadache
\

cas

ftrSt Jerm in office to get the program... we were fortunale to get the grant"
"It will have a very gOQd effect, be a very effective program," he said.
The department, with assistance from the Meigs County')'rosecutor's
Office, received a grant for $11,340 to initiate DARE in county schools with
the money being used to help pay the wages of DARE officer Mony Wood,
who works full-time in the county's elementary schools.
In addition, schools use their drug free money to buy different things for
their districts.
The DARE approach is ba3ed on recent research and de-emphasizes
traditional scare tactics that preach the harm of drug abuse.
Kids don't want to be told what to do, instead, teens want to act grown up.
Many of them think smoking, drinking and using exotic drugs are passports to
aduJthood.
·
·
The DARE officer is one of the more ooique features of the DARE
program, The officer's main audience is srudents in fifth and sixth grade who
will soon be teens attending junior high schools.
·
The DARE lessons taught by the instruciOr focus on four major areas:
. providing accuraae information about alcohol and drugs; teaching decisionrilaking skills; showing studeniS how to resist peer pressure; and giving them
ideas for alternatives to drug use,
Students in Mrs. Charlene Smith's sixth-grade at Syracuse Elemeniary
said they like the DARE cl~ses.
"I like iL .. it taches us not to oo drugs," said Tammy Fryar. "They 're blil
for you."
"It teaches us all the different types of drugs," remarked Sarah Ball"...and
not to drink and drive." Mia Bass agreed, she said she likes the program
"because it teaches kids about ctrugs."
"It teaches us to be beaer people," Tamecka Counts commented.
"'It's fun." exclaimed Brandon Smith, "it teaches what can happen to you
.
if you use drugs." ·
The 17 -week DARE curriculum covers the following topics: Personal
safety praetices; Drug use and misuse; Consequences; Resisting pressure to
usc drugs; Resistance techniques, ways to say 'No'; Building self-esteem;
Assertiveness; Managing stress without taking .drugs; Media influences on
drug use; Decjsion making and risk taking; Alternatives to drug use; Role

l

: [SO An explanation of our 1reatment procedure if we determine chiropractic can help you.
.,

•

off your ..
purchase price!

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE:

,

/

. ''The most satisfying 1hing about the job is
helping the kids.l tell myself that if I just help
one student, I think I've done my job."
.:...._ Mony Wood, DARE oHicer

il'~ never

HOW MUCH WILL IT COST? .

. []Jx-rays if necessary.

By JIM FREEMAN
modeling; Forming support systems; Resisting gang pressure; DARE sumTimes-Sentinel staff
mary; Taldng a stand; and Graduation.
POMEROY -Statisticsshowthatonein 16highschoolsrudemssmokes
The· youngsters aren't the only ones who bene{it from the classes,
marijuana daily - that's the reason for Drug Abuse Resistance Education... according 10 Wood. ·
.
or DARE.
·
·
· - -- - - · "I feel great about it,~ WOOd said. ''I'm the type of'jierson who always
The Meigs County Sheriffs De~ent this year initiated the DARE worries about things - I loosen up in the classroom ."
.
program for the ftrSt time in Meigs County Elementary Scbools. The program
Wood currently teaches classes at Racine, Syracuse, Tuppers Plains,
has already been implemented in many other areas of the stale, including Gallia Chester. Bradbury, Rutland, Salisbury and Pomeroy elementary scbools and
County and Gallipolis. ·
plans to add Salem CenJer, Harrisonville, Riverview and Portland elementary
·
DARE, a preventative program originally develope!\ in Los Angeles, uses schools to his list this fall.
uniformed law enforcement officers teach class with the goal of,equipping
"I'm comfortable being in the classroom with the kids," he said. "'I'm not
yooogsters with the skills to resist peer pressure to exPeriment with and use much older than they ate."
harmful drugs.
.
Wood, 23, is a 1989 graduale of Eastern High School and has !Ja:n a
The department has tried several times to .start the program in Meigs deputy in Meigs County for about two years. He said he views his age as more
County with the third time being the proverbial charm -Sheriff James M. of an asset than a liability.
·
"It helps me to bctler relaae to the sbldents," he said.
Soulsby said this is the third year his department has sought funding for the
program.
. hard·to get the Jlllgram,"
~
The· program also helps kids learn to better respect officers. according to
"We worked really
he said. "I tried during my Wood.

FREE
Regular Size NCAA Basketball

Help Me ... ?

: CXJ A cQnfidential report of our findin gs

Teachi·ng Meigs kids· to · say 'No' with
Drug Awareness Resistance Educatio_n,
;

ahop. We've aot ~ for kldl ofALI.
a,NI Prtcea 1t.art at 99 cental

Can Chiropractic

. G]J

D.A.R.E. PROGRAM -The Meigs Couaty Sherilrs Department instituted its Drug Abuse Resistance Edueatioa for county schools in
January.Theprogramusesaunlformedotrlcer,DeputyMonyWood,toteaehchildreatheneptiveconsequencesoldruguse,amoagotberlhings.
Above, Wood talks with SyrtiCUSt Elementary sixth graders. At left, Wood watches on while Keada Smith reads from tbe DARE student
workbook.

Stop in for a Test Drive
Of Any New Car or Truck and
Receive a

.

personal injury cases (worker's compensa.tion, auto

c

·check oUfliUt LntereaUni &amp; unJq~

•

Section B
March 5, 1995

GaIIi a stu~~ nt~ . .
.
10

~imes- jmthttl

Q]Anhritic pain by stiff neck

Tension

[I] Loss of sleep

Backache

I1Jscoliosis

Arm pain &amp; numbsnes

[1]Leg pain &amp; numbness

Whiplash .

'•
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BALL!

1
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IF YOU ARE EXPERIENCING ANY OF THESE
SYMPTOMS, CALL OUR OPFFICE TODAY FOR
. OFFICE

HOURS
Mon.-Wed.-Fri.

AN APPOINTMENT ..--..,--:-r:-ro;::---,
Middleport
City Park

MEIGS COUNTY
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

Closed

9S3 GeneraiJ:!.arting!!:._Parkway
Middleport, Ohio

Thurs., Sat, SUn.

992-2168

8:00

a.m. - 5:00

..

DEl

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·1616 Eastern Avenue
Gallipc~lls, Ohio

1
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(614) 446·3672 .

•

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or ~_

1·800·521·00.4

CLASSROOM SCENES - Weekly exposure to a uniformed oMc:er In the ciMiroom b• helped
studeiuaearnrapectforlawolflcers,saysDAREoiYicerMonyWood. Atlefl, \foodwalluQJongstudents

.....

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at Syracuse Elemeatary. AI right, be talks with Nick
while, from
'' !~!:'!~~~
Tammy Fryar aDd Matt Warner look oa. WoOd said students gave bim ''weird i.
appeared in classrooms.
1

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Sentinel

ements

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

So-called treasures of
Gallia County lead som·e
on a wild goose chase

By JIM SANDS
In the 1890's the Capt. .Albert
CCNTespoadeat
Evans gang that operaled in and
Gallia County has had its share of around Cheshire wasbelievediOhave
"tteasure hunts" in its history. Most buried a treaSure near there. This
IU11ICd out 10 be false, like the Afri. gang robbed numerous storeB in
can-American who showed up one Middleport, Rutland and Cheshire.
day in the 19th century speaing In 1897 one of the gang members,
Gennan. He claimed 10 be a descen- Charles Hysell, carne to Cheshire to
dant of King Solomon. His clan had get married. The ~or was that he
rnigratedin10the
was going to also dig up the treaSure
Black Forest and
for his honeymoon. Several officers
he claimed 10
of the law w,atched Hysell from a
have knowledge
distance. While Hysell and Ben
about a treasure.
Wines. another gang member, were
brought to Gal·
lUICSted. they did not lead the aulipofis from
thorities to the treasure. While under
Germany and
arrestthe"lovesiclc"Hysellagreedto
divulge ·the names of other gang
buriedoutsideof
town. But he ·
. members if he was allowed 10 go
needed financial backing to pay for ahead and get married. He gave the
the hunt ·
namesbuttheauthoritiesiOOkHysell
. Even the most gullible orGallipo- away before he could get married.
titans had a hard time "swallowing" All the gang members were arrested,
this story and in a shon time the man but what happened 10 the treaSure
.moved on to Pomeroy, claiming this . was a mystery. ·
time that the treasure was bidden
Then there was the case of
outside Pomeroy.
"Wandering Hatfield" who lived in a
People hunted for many years for bam near the Gravel Hill cemetery.
a treaSure that was supposed 10 have He came from Kentucky accompa·
been buried at Bush's Mill. It was liied by a full-blooded Cherokee
TABITHA WILLFORD AND JEFFREY CAMPBELL
rumoredtllataHenryJarneshadfound . squaw. Hatfield acquired ,his moni·
the treaSure, and that is why one day ker from the fact that he had wan·
he mysteriously disappeared from dered over most of the United States
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Gary Noble High School, Kendallville, .GalliaCounty, never to be heard from and it was while in Oldalloma that he
Willford of Racine, and Mr. and Ind. He is emplpyed with PDK again.
'
took his Indian bride. He was em·
Mrs. Wilson Whited of New Construction, Pomeroy.
· , Several mtriguing treasure stories · ploye4,at the Hobson Rail Yards.
Knoxville and Robert Campbell of
The open church wedding will
When Hatfield took ills some of
Athens, announce the forthcoming be held March II, at the Racine .relate to the Cheshire area and the
Gravel
HiU
CCfi1etery.
Some
claimed
his
felloW workers went to see him.
: marriage of their children, Tabitha United Methodist Church. Music
the
Shawnee
Indians
who
had
a
TheGallipolisDailyTribunereported
that
;. Jo Willford and Jeffrey Scott . wiU begin all p.m.
:· Michael Campbell.
An open reception will follow , village at Cheshire called "When they reached what served as
The bride-elect is a 1994 gradu· the ceremony at the Royal Oak Kiskimenites buried treasure near thedoorofthebam,theyweremetby
there. Later a man claimed that there the Indian woman ·who became so
ate of Southern High School. Her Resort.
was a cave thai ran from near the frightened that she ran and jumped
•
fiance is a 1991 graduate of East
cemetery over 10 West Virginia, and into bed behind the sick man. The
a valuable treasure was buried in that .· boys went in and found out .that she
cave.
could not talk their lan~e. The

March 5, 1995

March

1995

• Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

o~ AYEL kfL(
CEM£T£lfY

••
TREASURE HUNTS • Gravel Hill Cemetery_at Cheshire bas
beea linked with several "treasure hunts" in its history, iacluding
ones involving Indians, gangs and a man named ''Wandering Hat·
field."
man, who realized that lie was near
his end, admitled that he had not
married the woman, but had kidnapped her. He could talk her language
and had by persuasion and threats
succeeded in getting her to accom· .·
pany him to Ohio."
D12or15exposures.:.'1 OFF
After Hatfield died, the squaw left
the house and found her way to a
24 exposures ............'2 OFF
rocky cliff in the rear of the crude
home, where she went into mourning
36 exposures ............ '3 OFF
for two days, wailing and screaming
C-41 process 35mm full-frame color
in true Indian style. The story further
print film , single prints only. Limit 1 coupon
goes on to say that Hatfield brought a
per order and may not be CQmblned with
large amount of money and buried ~any other offer. l;xclvdes 1 Hour lab, 1/2
Later the squaw was taken to the
frame and panoramk: orders
Meigs County Infirmary. She was a I TO REDEEM :
mass of mud. It was so thiclc on her 1 Write ~'1n/'3 Off KODALUX
Processing· In Special Instructions area ol
that her hair had 10 becut,cleardown I envelope
and seal coupon and roll inslele.
to the scalp. It was conjectured that 1 Coupon expires 3-18-95 . E•cludes
COIO!Watch film processing.
· this was a rite of mourning practiced
1
by the squaw's people. The ireasure
of "Wandering" Hatfield was never I TAWNEY STUDIO
found.
·~ ~
I
James Sands is sp~ial corre· 1
spondentol'tht Sun ay T,unes-Scn· ·
tine!. His address is: tiS Willow 1
Drive, Springboro, Obio 450641.

WILBUR AND LOUISE DENNIS

To note silver anniversary

D
D

MR. AND MRS. DUANE STANLEY

Stanleys to mark 50th
POMEROY - Duane and
Hazel Stanley of Pomeroy, will be
· celebrating their 50th wedding
anniverSf.Y with an open house
Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs Multipurpose Building,
Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
The open house will be bosted
by their son and daughter-in-law,
Steve and Julie Stanley of
Zanesville.

424 2nd Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

------------

. Mr. Stanley and the rormer
Hazel Townsend were married
March 13, 1945 in the Meigs
County Probate Court by Rev.
Ralph Keuther.
They have two grandchildren,
Emily and Andrew Stanley of
Zanesville.
The couple request that gifts be
omitted.
·

...

.Meigs community calendar ·
'
The Community Calendar Is Township Trustees meeting Mon·
published a,s' a free service to day, 6 p.m. at the office building.
non·profit groups wishing to
R:A.CINE - Racine Village
announce meeting and special
·Council,
regular session, 7 p.m. at
events. The calendar is not
Star
Mill
Parle,
Monday. ·
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
POMEROY - Meigs Band
are prinled as space permits and Boosters,
cannot be guaranteed to run a bandroom. Monday, 7 p.m. in the
specific number of days.
TUESDAY
POMEROY
- Meigs County
SATURDAY
Club,
first
meting, Tues·
shepherd
Star
SALEM CENTER
day,
7
p.m.
at
the
Meigs
County
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
Library.
·For
mi&gt;re
infonnation
call
878 wiU hold regular meeting Sat·
Buddy
or
Sally
Ervin,
949-2136.
urday, 7:30 p.m. at the griillge ball
on County Road I. Junior gra11ge
EAST MEIGS - OAPSE
members need to bring baking con·
Union
Chapter 448, Eastern Local,
test entries. Potluck following
Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at the high
meeting. All members urged to.
school.
attend.

Saunders-Dillon
BIDWELL · Mr. and Mrs.
:Doyle Saunders of Bidwell
: announce the engagement and
~ upcominjl marri~e of their daugh·
: ter Bobbt Jo to Rtck Dillon of Gal·
- lipolis. Rick is the~n of Rich Dil·
: Ion of Scouown and Jenny Dillon
- of Bidwell.
- Bobbi is a 1992 graduate of

North Gallia High School and a
student at the University of Rio
Grande majoring in nursing.
Rick is a 1993 graduate of
Symmes Valley High School and is
employed by Mountain Entelprises.
The wedding will be May 27 at
St. Louis Catholic Church with
Mgrs. William Myers officiating.

MONDAY
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees regular meeting
Monday, 7 p.m. at the fire station.

..
FALLS

-

Letart

Professional Wedding Photography

. (614) 446·6700

Speaker announced for 25th
annual chaplain's

GALLIPOLIS -· Rev. John R.
Campbell will be the featured
speaker at the 25th anniversary of
the Holzer Medical Center Volun·
leer Chaplains' Association Appre·
ciation Luncheon and Annual
Meeting 12 p.m. March 14.
Campbell is the Distri~t Super·
intendent of the Buckhannon District of the United Methodist
Church, West Virginia Confere.nce.
He was a HMC Volunteer
Cl]aplain while serving as pastor of
.the New HansetL United. Methodist~
some of them go two abreast.
Church in New Haven, W.Va. from
REV. JOHN CAMPBELL
seem to find something to
1974 to 1986. He left the-area to
upon in th e soft mud in shallow
serve the Firs.t United Methodist
Church in Dunbar, W.Va. before election of officers and a clergy water along th~ shore. Some of the
accepting the appointment as Buck· representiitive-at·large, reports on birds are wearing game commis·
hannon District Superintendent in the continuing work of the associa· sion "neclclaces." Whenever I can
tion and a preview of the ur.:ommg
1990.
.
Seminar set for Apnl25.
In 1994 he was elected Dean or Spring
·Reservations
for the luncheon
the Cabinet of the West Virginia
must
be
confmned
by .March.9.
·
Conference of the United .
Lafayette Mall
Methodist Church in addition to . ... . . . . . serving or several other boards and
~
committees.
¥~
A native of Clarksburg, W.Va., · •
he is a graduate of West Virginia
•
All
Natural C.H. 2001
• ..
W""'
w&lt;CY8fl _C0 IICgC aJl!d U01't••
"" The, •
Wflh Oh,.mlum Plcollno.. ..
ological Seminary, Dayton. He .was •
AIONEVBACKGuARANrEE
a high , ~chool instructor before
'n oo oFF couPoN . LI...,IT 1 1
entering the ministry
• FRUTH PHARMACY •
The program will include the .786 N. 2nd
Middleport_.
presentation of individual awards • • •
• • of merit for chaplaincy service to
14 volunteer Chaplains by Charles
I. Adkins, Jr., Chief Executive offi·
cer of Holzer Medical Center, the

Of .Jaekson

446-3051 286•7297

,P RE·SEASON

•'

On In~Ground &amp; Above-Ground Pools

SILVER CELEBRATION· Wesley and Velma Herrick of
· Bradbury Road, Middleport, will observe their 50th weddiDI
anniversary March 15.

· -cROWN CITY • Larry and
:Sandy Queen of Crown City
·announce the engagement of their

.

son, ]ason to Christy Fleming;
daughter of Merle and Betty Rem·
ingofWayne, W.Va.

A

252 Front St.
Marietta, Oh. 45750

373-3617

Gallipolis

"CHRIS"
Available In Tan

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PRE-SPRING SALE

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* H~alth Care Events

Calll-800~462-5255
.

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;j

8 a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a week,

. a specially trained R.N. is on duty to
answer your questions on health care and
to infortn you about available services. ..

.i

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Medical
Center
Your community .partner in-;;h~n!le~--

:-

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Install the Tr11verse Rods and Drapery, ·
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•

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WINDOW TREATMENTS
SAVE 20% TO 50%

*Physician Referral

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•
•

Now Ia fta ,.lma 7a Schadula
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Of Gallipolis

They have three children Kathy
Kenan, Kevin Dennis and Karen
Stapleton all of Gallipolis and
seven grandchildren.
The reception is open to friends
and relative of the couple. The cou·
pie requests that gifts be omitted.

lbe Shoe Cafe

·. ~~-ic-~
PHOTOGRAPHY

RODENY - Wilbur and Louise
Dennis will celebrate their 50th
wedding ariniversary with a recep·
lion from 2 Ill 4 p.m. Mardt 19 at
Faith Baptist ChiDCh, Rodney.
· They were married March 20 at
Muslcingum Presbyteriail Church,
Dresden by Rev. Ira Lambert. ·
•

read a necklace. I call the game
By DOROTHY SAYRE
When my husband brought me co mmi ssion with the date, area,
kicking and screaming to Meigs and how many birds arc in the
County, be promised we would flock along with the identifying
symbols.
build on the river.
The duck s arc fun to watch. too.
Whenever be mentioned any
property that wasn' t on the river; I In the sununcr. we ~cc wood ducks
would go ballistic; I felt if be and othen, but in U•c winter it is
insisted on living here. and not pairs of mallards. Nothing is more
Denver, we would live on the river. stately and pure perfection in flight
Actually, I don't think be ever seri· than the geese. though. Their land·
ously considered building any ings on the water arc poetry in
place else except alpng his beloved motion. We do sec an occasional
Ohio River.
"header" but it is rare. There is
The house is built but a lot of something magical about watching
landscaping is still needed. We do geese in flight and heari ng their
have the brush and trees under con· bonks. The sky is sometimes fuU of
trol for an unobstructed view of · the magnificent birds. Because of
one of U1e two reasons my husband the bend in the river, we look
retumed to Ohio. (The other reason almost due west and the flights are
is high school basketball .)
especially beautiful at.sunset.
My hu sband loves the river
When snow is on the land and
tmffic. He is acquainted with a few tbe foliage gone, the river area
river boat captains for different changes and has a desolate beauty.
companies, and occasionally we Tbe view is preniest when the
are startled by a loud "toot" or a foliage is on the trees, though, and
loudspeaker saying, "Good Mom· the shadows are ever.chaoging. The
ing," or "Hello."
winter and summer rivers are difI enjoy the river traffic, too, and ferent worlds.
especially in the summer when the
So, whether it is a hawk, or
pleasure boats abound. If we are osprey
after a duck, or just mir·
seated on our deck , we; usually
rored
renecti6ns
in the river, we do
wave a cheery hello to all. If company is present, we can prompt a have "A Room With a View."
boat whistle py pretending to pull a
EDITOR'S NOTE;- Dorothy
light cord. This especially pleased Sayre and her husband, George,
our liulc four-year-old grandson who was reared in Meigs County,
last 'summer. When one of the big . moved here from Denver aboul
passenger vessels, such as the Delta three years ago after he retired.
.or Mississippi Queen arrive. we are They buill a hou.•e on the. bank.•
on the deck, on our,boat dock, or in of the .Ohio River just below
our boat taking pictures.· Last year Syracuse. Sayre, a native of Ore·
we went. to the Racine Locks to gon, wlll be contributing columns
watch the Delta Queen lock for The Sunday Time.•·Sentinel.
'thmugh. As is its custo·m, the Delta
Queen played calliope music while
entering the exiting the lock cham·
ber. We heard a full five songs
For Classes Starting
including. "Five Foot Two." "Dark
Town Struncrs Ball," and "You
April .4, 1995
Arc My Sunshine."
·
•Financial Aid Available
., In the winter and spring, though;
To Those Who Qualify
some of my favorite river traffic
abounds: the water fowl. SomeCaD Bob Baunalli
times we sec as may as 200 Canadian geese parading
the house. ,
~ 1·614-37-3·3617
ai:t,uallly- &gt;;witrnmting just

- Valley BeautfSchool

CHESHIRE-' Tuesday, 9 a.m:
HARRISONVILLE - Har·
·
to
nooq,
free clothing day at the old
risonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM Sat·
high
school
building by the Gallia·
urday, 7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple.
Stated meeting. Refreshments to Meigs Community Action Agency.
follow .
BOBBI JO SAUNDERS AND RICK DILLON

83

A room with a view

S~

Willford-Campbell

Sunday nmes-Seritlnei-Page

'

.

FREE
PROFESSI·ONAL
INSTALLATION
•Raslde•tl•l or C•••erc. .
•FREE PARKING
•FREE DEUVERY
HOURS; 9:00·5:0!) DAILY
(INCL. THURSDAY)
9:Q0-8:00 MON. AND FRI.
EVENINGS

'

�Page-84

Sunday Tlme&amp;-Sentlnel

Marcrh s, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt P~eeunt, WV

\

•

I ~

Beat of the Bend ...

Jl

'

t

.I

,,

•

GALLIPOLIS -The French Art
Colony welcomes Rhonda WhiteWoolum and lobo Sousa to tbe
F~C g~s. ~h ~ tbrougb 29,
wltb thetr exh1btt, Out of the
Boi." The exhibit, sponsored by
Turnpike of Gallipolis, will feature
sculptured boxes and pbotograpby.
Rhonda White-Woolum has
been affiliated with the FAC in
nurnerotul ways. She is a loog time
competitor .in the FAC Fourth of
July competition and has taught
drawing and sculprure Clas'ses for

..

IF'

by Bob Hoeflich

~

Membezs or the livewire Racine
Tlie committee of the Meigs
Area Community ~tion are County !75th birthday observance
currently busy orgaruzing the See- fmally gave up on burying a time
and Annual Racine Flower Festi • capsule as a part of the celebration
val.
because inclement weather kept
I know it''s difficult to think taking place every time the cere"flowers" right at the moment but monies were scheduled. However,
keep the faith, ihey're on the way. the capsule will be buried during
The event will be held on Saturday, Heritage Weekend activities in
· April 22, from 10 a.m. to 6 p,m., June.
again at the popular Star Mill Parle.
Along with the many flower · You probably noted thai Charles
booths to be featured will be a Neece of Rutland and Dan Beam of
parade, the crowning of a flower Gallipolis were presented national
queen, an antique tractor display, Carnegie awards for heroism in
musical entertamment and various saving the lives of nine miners in
food and craft booths.
1993. But did you lcnow that Beam
All flower growers in the area is a son-in-law pf Jim and Eleanor
are cordially invited to participate. Thomas of Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy? .
Last year, the reception by growers
was greaL This year, it is expected
And it's ~etting that time. The
to be greater. ·There will be a $10 Pomeroy High School graduating
fee to reserve a space, and this · class of 1965 will meet at 1:30 p.m.
includes those domg crafts and next Sunday, March 12, at the
other activities as well as growers, · office of Dollll3 Carr in the former
at the park. an~ to do that y~u ~II Pomeroy High School building,
out an applicauon and return 1t w1th second floor. ·All local rnembezs of
your fee. For additional informa- the class are asked to be on hand to
tion or an application contact make plans for a very special 30th
Dolores Cleland at 949-2071. The reunion.
application deadline is AprillO.
And, by ihe way, among the
Researchers have found that 71
entertainers at the park will be the percent Qf us are overweighL If
Dixieland Jazz Band, the Midnight this be true then a,n we have to do
Cloggers, the Billy Lee Show, and is unire and form aUf own political
Steve Porrmeyer. There'll be a party. Hey, with a majority like
kiddie tractor pull and the that, we could rule the world. Do
"McDonald's HambiJrgerler" will keep smiling.
be on the grounds.

Selma Call who was ortice business manager at Vererans Memorial Hospital for a number of years
has gone into full-time retirement.
Selma moved from the business
manager (XISI to a part-time job in
the hospual office a few years
back. Now Selma has given that up
· also.
. ·
She was guest of.honor at a dinner held at Sebastian's in Parkersburg Tuesday nighL She received-•
a number of gifts and was pleasantly surprised with a decorated cake
highlighted with balloons to ~ark
the occasion appeared at the dinner
table.
On hand to send Selma into fulltime retirement were Scott Lucas,
hospital administrator; Doris lhle,
Loraine Venoy, Lois Deem, Bonnie
Kelly, Donna Aleshire, George and
Joan Hoffman. Brubara Fry. Sharon
Pratt, Sally Savage and Sam and
Sarah Stewart, most of whom have
worked with Selma at VMH.

GALLIPOLIS • The Morris and
Dorotb Hadrjn 5 Ariel 1b tre 1w

Meigs science fair winners
POMEROY - Dorothy
Leifheit, right, took top honors in
the secondamual science fair held
ThUrsday at Meigs High School
Her winning exhibit selected
from the 55 .entered was on preservatives in bread and was entitled "Preservalives" Propionic
Acid vs. Cloves." The junior science studentreported she spent 37
hours on live trials making bread
. using different methods to prevent
mold. She was awarded a $100
prize. .
Other students winning $50
each were, pictured above, from
the left, Amber Bennett, "Which
Antacid Neutrali.zes the Best?";
Reggie Pran. ''How Durable Are
Condoms under Ex~ Temperatures?": Alison Gerlach, "The
Effects of Music on Eating Habits"; John Cleland, 'The Hereditary Traits of Cocker Spaniels";

I

Sarah Anderson with her exhibit
"Watu-TaporBouied?";andBrem
Smith, ·~ Effects of Mine Watuon
Loeal StrtMIS."
Junior and senior studentS in
chemistry, biology II, and physics
classes exhibited in the science fair
which was judged by Don Anderson,
environmental engineer 81Gavin; John
Anderson. water and waste warer
supervisor,Pomeroy;Rusty Bookman,
Meigs science teacher; Roy Burdette,
mining engineer, Southern Ohio Coal
Co.; Chip Haggerty,Meigs4-ll Agent:
Bobbi Hill, laboratory technician,
Holzer Hospital; Pam Irvine, veterinarian; Dr. Todd Ragan, optomelrist,
Gallipolis; Ann Sisson, science teacher
81 Southern, and Rita Slavin; retired
biology ieacher at Meigs.
The prize money was conlributed
by Bank One, PDK Construction,
Vaughan's Cardinal, Larry Kennedy,

. .JUST CRUSE ., ....... ., - · · .,....,
7:00 DAlLY MATI...S 8AT/SUM . 1:00
~:10

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Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-2206

OHIO VA~LEY
SYMPHONY
Saturday
March 25, 8 p.m.
Morris &amp; Dorothy Hasklna
Artol 'nl•"" 426 2nd. Avo. Golllpolla, Oh
Call 446·ARTS

ACROSS

1 Callas or
Montessori
6 Actor Baldwin
10 Bedouin
14 Slight error
19 Chimp's cousin
20 Singer Reese
22 Worth
·
24 Cook under a flame
25 Commonplace
26 Roof border
27 Enroll
28 Prick painfully
29 Flexible tube
30 Respond
32, Doctrine
34. Indian ol Peru
35 Turns abruptly
39 Shot of booze
41 City in New York
43 At no time
45 Matinee idols
47 Commence
48 Male sheep
51 Harangue
53 Gym pads
· 55 Depot: abbr.
56 Cigar residue
· 59 Cry of sorrow
61 0•1 stringed
instrument

62 Denomination
64 Paper clip's cousin
66 Fathers .
68 Brooks and Gibson
70·Ciippers
72 Narcotic drug
73 Glued
,
75 Ross or Rigg
77 Supports
79 Hangs down .
80 Uses with others
· 82 Fat
84 Makes level
86 Religious image
88 Facilitates
90 Money in Italy
91 Aflower
95 Seraglio

The Community Calendar is
'p ublished as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
e'!ents. The calendar Is not ,
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers or any type. Items.
are printed as· space·permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specincnumberofdays.

""\

DDS, Harold Brown, DDS, John the Meigs Local Teachers AssoLentz, Meigs County prosecuting at- ciation. (TS Photos by Charlene
torney, Meigs Health Services, and Hoeflich)

CRAFT SHOW

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy Band Boosters w11l be
hosting their ftrst craft show .April
22 and 23 at the Juntor Fairgrounds. For booth information call'
446-6200or446-3887.

•••

97 Got some shut-eye
t 01 Submarine
sandwich
102 Matheo:natical . _
proportion
· 104 Hail
106 Joined metal parts
1OB Oak·to-be
110 Safe
112 Speaker's plaHorm
114 Scoundrel
115 Endured
117 - of passage
118Nail
120 Rate of movement
121 Sight organ
., 122 Soft mass
124 Hefty book
126 Despot
128 Blushing .
129 Tool, for a carpenter
131 Terra 133 Standoffish
1:is Like a ball in shape
139 Browned bread
141 Anticipates
145 Metallic element
146 Old·tashioned
148 Locations
150 Female horSe
151 Men of rank
153 Satan
155 Juice·fifled fruits
157 Church law
158 Something valuable
159 Foe
160 Flower part -~
161 Audibly
162 Prophets
163 Sapling
164 Depend
165 Purple vegetables

DOWN

1
2
3
4

Wool-eaters
Item in a quiver
Elevate
Hospital worker
5 Stone or Atomic
6 Fruity drink
7 Tragic king
8 Fairies

9 Wash

10 Paved way: abbr.
11 -and rave
12 Change
13 - Aires
14 Wt. units
15 Painter or sculptor,
e.g.
16 Aim
17 Because
18 English composer
21 Neck scarf
23 Puts up
31 Mine car
33 "-all, folks!"
36 Former Gl, for short
37 Wicked
38 Antitoxin
40 Rubbish
42 Poetic Muse
44 Assessed
·46 Precipitous
48 Coarse file
49 Assumed name
50 -Swamp
52 Fleur· - 54 Kerchief
56 Of bees
57 Hits
58 Skirt borders
60 Bristle
63 Folklore creature
. 65 Church section
·67 Stroke of a leHer
69 Glut
70 Frankfurter
71 Where Jerez is
74 Furnishings
76 Ark builder
78 Summer hat
material

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City
Schools will recognize School
Breakfast Week March 6 through
10. Each year, schools across the
country celebrate the importance of
a healthy breakfast and encourage ·
their studen!S to eat one evay day.
Over l1800-schools i-n-Ohio
offer breakfdstal'school as an alternative to breakfast at home; School
nurses report fewer students complaining of hc;actaches and giowling
stomachs when students eat breakfast. Breakfast enables these students to focus on academics.
Parents know thai if time is
short in the morning, tlieir children
can eat breakfast at school.

IN

LEGENDS OF THE FALL R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7&gt;30

'

446-0923

.'

81 .lce·cream parlor
drinks
83 Region: abbr.
85 Candle
87 Chile saltpeter
89 Farming rieed
91 Rot
92 •- - by any other

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to plaster. pam_t and do anyt~mg free _and open to the pubhc, scholthat needed domg. An 1~cred1ble arsh1ps _are available for the dance
number of hours and seCVIces were and strmg programs spec1al diS·
donated by local businesses and counts are given to seniors and sturesidents.
dents, and free tickets are available
Seven years later and about 80 through organizations that serve the
percent restored, the Ariel is home needy.
to the Ohio Valley Symphony and
The theatre will .celebrate its
the Ariel Players, a community the· · centennial anniversary this year
atre group. It is the site for cham~r and is. raising funds for final
and solo concerts and commumty restorauon through the "Restore a
events, ~d has established a dance Brick Quick" campaign. The
mstrucl.lon program and an afwr· anmvcrsary event 1s planned for
school string program for young later this year.
people. Symphony rehearsals are
•
.
.
man at French City.Baptist Church
6 p.m.
•••
Monday, Marcb 6

•••
GALLIPOLIS • Support Group
for Grieving Parents 7:30 p.m.
New Life Lutheran Church.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. •
Life, Liberty and Freedom 7 p.m.
Mason County Vocational Center.
••• ·
•
GALLIPOLIS ·Community
cancer support group 2 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Church.

GALLIPOLIS .- Eating Disorders Support Group 7 p.m. Addison ·
United Methodist Church.

•••

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for females &amp; males.
•Birth Control Exams
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•Methods include:
• .oepoProvera-injection • Diaphraghm
• I.U.D.
• Birth control pill
• Condom/Spermicide '
Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
50~

414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS
446-0166

S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992·5912

.--~~-~~-fl!~.-fi!~W- ~-~

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•••

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce 12 p.m.
Stowaway.

•

•

MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760

992-2289.

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He lives in Da~ an~ a~
Bnte!ley Un1vers1ty m lllinou on a
Nauonal ~ent Scholarsh.tp .. He :
graduated 10 1982 •. SIOCC th1s brne, ·
he has taken part 10 several group .
and solo exhibitions.
Gallery. hours are Tuesday
through Fnday 10 a.m . to 3 p.m.
and Saturday and Sunday I to S
p.m.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
or SOU,.HEAS,. OHIO

lion."

Parents can show therr support
of School Breakfast Week by eat·
ing breakfast at their local ·school
or tallcing to their children about
!he importance of -breakfast - at
M~ or at school. __ _
_ .

~

·~·
••

·

Sousa's work appears as ~&amp;;ge
colorOeld abstracuons, but onginates from colorful commonplace
objects such as to;rs, wrapping
paper and window blinds. 1be sub·
Jects are used mainly for their colors or patterns and are intentionally
blurred and distorted similar to
how Sousa would move and blend
painL

GALLIPOLIS · Ralph Work-

4:J;h

...

-

tet will perform at Mt. Zion
Cbureb, 6 p.m.
•••
GALLIPOLIS • Keith Eblin will
preach at Debby Drive Chapel. Services begin at 7 p.m.
.
·
•••
PORTER • Jerry Metzler and
the Royalaires, Trinity United
Methodist Church, 6 p.m. Brother
Chester Lemley and Brother Larry
Lemley, speakers.

name ..."

93 Army post
94 Lawful
. 96 Substantial
98 Drop heavily
99 Writer Poe
100 Two of hearts
101 Healthy
103 ..P,- order
105 Jeweled headband
107 Act
109 More recent
111 Send payment
113 Weighing device
116 Biblical king
119 Kentucky's Fort123 Ten years
125 Love god
126 More yummy
127 Summit
129 Loan provider
130 Dormant
132 Sends by post
134 Woman
135 "-Marner"
136 Ordinary language
137 Oraft animal
138 Crowbar
140 City in Arizona
t42 Kayak
143 Food fish
144 Transmits
147 Thin coin
149 Close tightly
152 Ads.
154 Soap ingredient
156 Cunning
157Taxi

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approximately 70 by 4llteet. ~
approaches these works as pamt·
ings rather ~an photographs and
con~1ders h1mself a conceptual
photographer.
"I have come to use f!IY ~otogmpl_ty as a ~Y .or .creatmg unages
wtth~ut styhst!c .mte!feren~e ~f
drawl!'g and pamttng, he satd. I
seek 1mages and marks that !iCC. a
by:product - those that ex_1st 1n
sp1te of and not because of mten·

School
breakfast week set
.

FRI. THRU TIIURS

· BRAD PITT, ANTHONY
HOPKINS .

Includes:
.
·
.
• Desrgner makeover • Fun for aU ages
·
• Wardrobe changes '
• Professional model style photographer- .

SHEAR DESIGNS 'UNLIMITED

receive original woodcut and
linocut prints made by Portsmouth
artist Ron Davey.
The Ariel was one of nine winners selected out of 8'1 nominalions In 1987 an effort began to
breathe new life into the long-darmant Ariel .Opera House in Gallipolis. The Ariel, built in 1895,
served as an opera house an~ a
movie theatre before closing us
doors in 1963. The job of resurrecting the theatre fell to volunteers
and they came by the hundreds to
clean up 25 years worth of debris.

. CROWN CITY • Laborers quae-

COLONY THEATRE

1t&gt;-~w~
GLAMOUR
~v,v. .PHOTOGRAPHY SESSIONS

ONE DAY .ONLY SATURDAY, MARCH 11TH
No SESSION FEE! •

Sunday Times Sentlnei--Page-85 ·

- - - -·- -......Gal/ia COmmUnJfy ca/endar--T-ue-sda-t.M-arc-b-7-

See Answer to Puzzler on Page G:,-:.~

IC1l

COMING SCIOitl OOS'flll HOrrllAII I
IIJI.GAII Pltmav.JI in •OUTUiu.x•

J\J¥!;~

. ea

Y

been se~~~0th~ctent
;~r
0
the the ,
~ 10
.s
g::v~m!
~~t!:~
10 10
.gory.
~e
11.wa,rds ~erem~ny Will ~
bel~ 10 ,conJuncti~n
the OhiO
.Cluzen s Commlltee or the ~
Advocacy. ~ay ,luncheo
0 n. h,onfn!lg
award reclpten~ and hio s egiS·
lators fro~ 11.30 a.m. to,2 p.m.
March 15, m the Governor s B_allroom ~f the Hyatt o~ Cap1t?l
Square m Columbus. W1nners will

Sunday, March 5

GALUPOLIS • A card shower
is being held for Cecil Queen who.
bas been hospitalized for the past
several months. Cards may be sent
to Room 138A Three West VA
Hospital, Hu~tington, W.Va . .
25701.

•
•
•
•

youths.
.
my worlc reflect these inftuences."
Graduating from the University she said.
of Rio Grande in 1992, WhiteIn addition to monuments such
1\.'Yo.olum. went on to Idaho Stl!fe as. Stoneh~ge and the great pyra• ~mverslly• where she attended mtds of GlZll, other soun:cs of her
school and worked as a graduate' inspirations come froin carvings of
teaching assistant. White-Woolum, ancient Mayan culture and~ the
who works in sculpture, feels giant effigies of the Mound Bwlder
nature, especially geological for- Indians.
mations, ocqn life and plant life,
John Sousa's photography
stron~y inftuences her wad.
works range in size from 2 to 12
"Tfie highly textured biomor- feet. His color photograpl)s mountphic forms that are predominant in ed on honeycombp~nel~ are
.

Ariel theatre recognized for f~rtheri~g the arts.

--Society
scrapbookCARD SHOWER

Mary Lou Hawlcins of Middleport, an employee at the Middleport Elementary School, has had
quite a bout with illness. She's
now at her. home in Middleport
after having undergone surgery.at a
Columbus hospital. She certainly
wants to thank you for all of the
supporL It ."do" help.
And thanks also for making the
"non-birthday" of Belly Kern so
special. Betty was··bom on Feb. 29
~~,so actually-didrr'rhave- a birtJrdll,vthis year. However, even though
she didn't really have a birthday,
she did receive. ll cards, gifts of
over $170 in cash and flowers. She
is pleased.

wv

White- Woolum, Sousa featured in · the FAG.galleries during March

·~

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt Pleasant,

March 5,1995

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Some Rellrieliom Apply
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ports

March 5, 1995

Indians hand Tigers second
straight exhibition loss 8-5

&amp;me. and j,Oi,n aft tAe Gun
and w.in ~~at

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - It
was opening day at Marebant Stadium and things were shaky right
from the start for the Deuoit Tigers
and their replacement players.
· · And it only got worse the rest of
the afternoon Saturday as the
Cleveland Indians defeated Detroit
8-5, handing the Tigers their second strai"ht defeat.
.
,...
It was a split squad for the Indi- .
ans (3-1). They also bad a squad in
St. Petersburg wbich was defeated
4-2 by the St. Louis Cardinals.
"We've got a lot of work to
do, " said interim manager Tom
Runnells, who got stuck with running the team after Sparky Anderson refused to deal with replacement players. ".You know, today
we tilked for an hour about base
running, and only got to flfSt base.
We've still got so much to do.
"Some of these guys have been
away from the game so long,
they're rusty."
Some of the foulups included:
- The souvenir program listed
bios for the regular Tigers - Cecil

2AS\7;11AN'S
AN'ijS
.... - _ _ . - . J ..........

•

-REACHES FOR BALL • Atlanta Braves catcher Dlmerson
Nunrez, left, goes after loose baU after Montreal's George Vlglllo
scores In second Inning of their Grapefruit League game In West
Palm Bearh, Fla., Saturcbly. Montrral won, 8-0. (AP)

.........,;;;:===~

\)

IJ

0

Win one of these
·great prizes!

Stop ·by for FREE ,
Birthday Cake
&amp; Coffee, Friday,
March 'lOth, 9-noon

-.

• A 1 minute &amp; 15 second
Shopping Spree'
(1 awarded at each store)
•A 19" Color Television
(1 awarded at each store)

.Wildcats rout LS.U 127-80
LEXINGTON, Ky . (AP) Tony Delk scored 27 points, and·
No. 5 Kentucky buried LSU with a
season-high 20 baskets from 3point range in routing the Tig~rs
127-&amp;0 on Saturday.
Kentucky (22-4, 14-2) inflicted
most of its long-range damage in
·the ftrst half, m;lldng 12 of 18 3pointers in buUding a 63-36 advantage. Delk made five of six and had
21 points.
During one s.t retch, Kentucky
hit five consecutive 3s in going
from 46-29 to 61-34 lead with .58
seconds left in the half. Reserve
guard Chris Harrison hit two in the
spurt in finishing with a careerhigh 16 points.
LSU (12-14, 6-10), losing for
the seventh time in its last eight
games, suffered its worst los.s of
· the season. Clarence .Ceasar scored
24 ROinis, Ronnie Henderson 22
and Roman Rubchenko 20 for the
Tigers.

-- PILLSBURY
- - - -/FOOD
- -LAND
---$100 GIFf CERTIFICATE GIVEAWAY

INAMc_~--------~-----------1 ADDRESS ________________________ I

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I CITY ___________ STAT..._____

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GRAND PRIZE:

Must be 18 years or older .to e~t e r. Entry 1
.....Blanks
_Must
_Be_
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_11,_
_
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Received
by March
1995_
atany
Foodland:

I No

(one per store)
A· W~_ekendGetaway to

Mtrtle
Beach, Nashville, Gatlinburg or
other select resorts.
Restrictions Apply.
No purchase Necessary. Must be 18
,. years or older to win.

I

~urchase Ne~ess ary.

-------WIN 1 OF 4 FREEZERS!

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I ADDRESS
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•

I TELEPHONE._______________________
l " No PUrchase NeceS$ary. M~st be 18 ~earS Or older to enler.
I
One Freezer to be given away each wec:k in March . En :er at any Foodland.
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EASTMAN'S ..• Your Community-Minded, Low
Priced.
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· Rodrick Rhodes scored 17
points, all coming in the second
half, while Anthony Epps bad 15,
Antoine Walker 11 and Walter
McCarty 10 in Kentucky's offensive assault
No. 17 Purdue 69,
illinois 56
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) Cuonzo Martin scored 29 points,
and 17th-ranked Purdue took over
ftrst-place in the Big Ten with a
69-56 victory Saturday over Illinois .
Purdue (22-6, 13 -3) moved a
half gwne ahead of Michigan State,
which bas occupied first place most
of the Big Ten season. The Spartans play Sunday at home against
Indiana.
·
The lllini (17-11 , 8-8) need victories in their final two games
against lowly Northwestern and
Ohio State to nail down an NCAA
ournament berth.

Foreman loses appeal
- in a meeting room

ONE TO BE GIVEN.AWAY EACH WEEK IN MARCH!

I

I CJ,TY._____:___· ·STA.U:--

basT"all, with ups and downs .
here was a leaping catch by
Detroit third baseman Manuel Garcia, who speared a liner off the bat
of Eric Yelding in the third . And
there was 3 nice bit of relief work
by the Tigers' Bill Kosticb , who
cwne on with bases loaded and one
. out in the Cleveland fifth . Kostich
struck out Shane Turner and got
Adell Davenport on a grounder to

m

f!!e

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1

Cas tin sang the Star Spangled Banner. When the fans realized this ,
about halfway through the anthem,
they joined in and got Castin
tbro~~ti~ollowed was replacement

c

Badgers belt OSU 80-69 ·

•

Hlt~nl.-

- The field microphone wasn't
working as local performer· Gary

the

. CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP)day came during a promotion,
We Go PbiiUes" chant died immeMcGill said.
Darlene. Plummer arg~ed for 15
when Sheryl Lotti of Oviedo, Fla. diately after lhe peanut vendor who
At least one appreciated lhe hisnunutes front of
ticket office
threw a pitch from the mound
started it stopped it
toric value of the game. Bonnie
at Jack Russell Sladium be~ore getthro~gh an 18-by-30-inch net set up
Ma~be the mellow crowd could
Duemig of Valrico, Fla. ur2 ed her
tinli a refund for her su Uckets to bebmd home plate and won be attnbuted to the anonymity of friends to buy a program. •'&lt;'This is
Sat~day's game.
$25,000.
the players . Public address
a flfSt, " she said, waving her copy,
Who wants to see~ bu~~h of
The play that gq t tbe most announcer Chris Wheeler paused as
" and hopefully a last."
yaho?s out there playmg? . she
applause was lhe barehanded stab be went over the names before lhe
Reds pitcher Darrin Hursey
explained.
,
.
of
a
one-hop
foul
ball
by
Cmcmnau
game,
lhen
thought
out
loud,
"
H
started
the Philadelphia rally by
'
Apparently more lhan a few lhird base coach Ray Knight
· we make mistakes, who the heck
plunking Jason Alstead on the belMADISON, Wis . (AP) throws-in the fmt half. But Hoskins
but a lot less lh.an the ~.609 . w.bo
The quality of lhe baseball was will know?' '
met io lead off the fifth . Alstead,
Rashard Griffith scored 14 points
scored 12 points as the Badgers
att~nded
.th.e
Pbtladelpbta
Phtlhes
spotty.
Philadelphia
shortstop
Tim
Most
of
the
fan
s,
while
disapwho
was not hun, came around to
as Wisconsin, taking a 17 -point
took~ 36-30 lead.
.
.
sprmg
trainmg
opener
last
yellf.
Holland,
who
just
Friday
returned
pomt~d
that
the
striking
players
score
the fill-i~ ~hils first run on
lead early in the second half,
Gnffi~ SC?red seven pomts m
.
o
~
course,
these
,
were~
t
.the
from
playing
ball
in
Australia··
~eren
t
on
dtsplay,
swd
they
were
·
pttcher
Chns Gtes RBI single.
•. defeated Ohio State 80-69 Satur----' die flfSt st~ IDinutes,. The 6-foot-11
Philbes,
but
a
non-umon
IIDltalion.
booted
the
game's
first
chance,
~
JUS~~~d
to
be
wat~~ing.
baseball.
Alex
Ojea, '!"ho moved Alstead
day .
sophomore cente! then was held
Instead of Dykstra aJ_ld Daulton, the
hard-hit one-hopper by the Reds'
It s lhe gwne, swd DeHaven to thtrd on a smgle. scored on 'an
The Badgers (13 -12, 7-9 Big
scorelessth~J_eStOflhehalf. .
fans got Stone and Smgley.
George Scott
Slough, 59, of Philadelphia. ·:Guys
RBI single by Stone, and then
Ten) scored the ftrst 11 points of
After tratlmg 22-15, the BuckAn announced crow~ ~f 2,459
Scott, so~ of the former major that make $1 million don't mean a
Stone,and Gies scored on Brent
the half for a 47-30 lead.
eyes tied the game 30-30 with 1:39
saw the replacement Phtlhes rally
leaguer of the same name came damn thmg tome:"
Millers smgle. The Pbillies added
Carlos Davis scored eight
left in th~ hal~. Wisconsin scored
from a 2-0 deficit with a four-run
around to score lhe game' s flfSt run
" I'd just lik~.to ~ them bit it
two more runs in the eighth.
straight points for the Buckeyes (6- · the last stx pomts on two baskets
ftftb that helped them to a 6-~ ~con Don Rohrmeier's RBI single
out of the park, swd 10-year-old
The Reds gotlhetr second run in
21, 2-15) as they closed 'to within
by Brian Kelley and two free
~ver
the
replacement
Cmcm·
·
Philadelphia's
first
batter,
forGreg
Martino
of
Houston.
Texas.
the
~~urth , when Eugene "Motor48-38. But Mosezell Peterson then
throws by Hoskins.
Th eds. ·
bad eight straight for the Badgers
Wisconsin extended the run to
·
mer. regular Phillie Jeff Storie, was
"Aod I'm expecting a lot of foul
boat Jones _led off wtth a walk,
e actual attendance appeared bit by aftitch thrown by Cincinnati balls." .
moved. to thtrd on a single, then
· to suetcb the lead back to 56-38 · 17-0 after halftime. Andy Kilbride
lhe
announced
crowd.
Per.
G
.
·
.
scored
on a double steal
close
to
with 10:28 remaining.
bit two 3-point goals to account for ·
s the Phillies offer of a free bot starter ohn Burgos. Stone, who
The Me til family of Indtan
G'
h .
.
. .
bap
·
made more than his share of Rocks Beach Fla. had written
tes, w o pttcbed four years tn ·
Wisconsin got 13 points from
stx of those pomts.
the Tex~s Rangers chain, got the
. Darnell Hoskins, 12 from Michael
Finley entered lhe game with a ·dog OR . soda for every patron baserunning mistakes when be was " Replacement Fans" on the backs
bel~ bring them &lt;!U~.
in the majors, was picked off ftrst of their shirts . •'We thought we
WID, whtle Hu~sey .PICked up the
Finley and 10 from Peterson.
21.1 scoring average. He didn' t
e. m&lt;?st d~amauc play ?,f the
later in the game.
would come out and root for
loss, Cm~mnatt s thud 10 as many
. Ohio State was led by Doug
make a field goal tintil a layup with .
enthustasuc as 10 the past. a Here
. The crowd wasn't quite as replacement owners," Craig spnng tralrung games.
Etzler with 21 and Rickey Dudley . 7:53 remaining . .
.
.
I
with 20 points.
That started a run in which he
The Buckeyes held Finley, the . scored 10 of 12 jloints for WisconBadgers' leading scorer, to two free
sin, six of lhem on rree·throws .

' -.

Eastman "s Food Iand l~· ,rry

1 •500· Last year, when the Tigers
opened with a l 2 - 5 win over the
Indians, they drew 5,666 fans. Stadium capacity i~ listed as 7,027 .

end lhatlhreat.
rou!i"e flyball to right, ending the
There were a lso fo ur De troit
mnmg. They booed replacement
erro rs, up one from th eir lola!
umptre Geor~e Macri s when he
agamst lhe Dodgers lhe day before
call~ Def:rotl s Bnan Sulli van out
m Vero Beach. Also Detrott starter
on strikesm
fifth .
Randy Marshall and flfSt baseman ·
Joe Mtkuhk and Mel Wearing
Chris Brown collided on Denni s homered for Cleveland. It was the
Hood's foul in front of the Tigers '
se c o~d hom er in tw o day s for
d
· th thir
W
b b. ·
ugout m e
d. And leveland
eanng w o 11 stx at triple· A
left·bander Bo Magee balked in the Rochester last season, the n five
T'
•
fi fth
mo
f
Th d
B
tgers two-run 1 .
re or
un er ay of the
Yelding' s fairly routine flyball Northern League.
landed on lhe warning track behind
. Th e Tigers. led 5-4 after RBI
Detroit left-fielder Rex De La Nuez smglcs by Sullivan and Jim Givens
in the first.
m the SIXth.
.
. " I just can ' t dwell on the
The Indians broke it open with
errors," Runnells said. "That's three off Kostich, 0-1, in the sev- ·
only one way. ?f looking at it. I enth. A two-run dpuble by Darrin·
look at the postuves .. We had a guy Campbell keyed lhe rally, ~pg a
pttch some mce rehef for us . We wmner of 37-year-old right-hander
\
had guys battle back and take the Frank Ricct, 1-0, who hadn't
lead for a while. We're fmding out pitched since 1983 at Miami or'lhe
who can play some ball.' '
class-A Florida State League.
Although there weren ' t many
Cleveland added a run in the
fans, those on hand seemed to eighth and Pep Harris faced five
~~jo~ themselv_es;, Someone yelled, batters inthe ninth .for the save.
Let s go, Ceal, when lhe rotund
Each. tewn used five pitchers.
Brown c~e to b~t wuh a runner The lndtans outhit the Tigers 12on thud m the thtrd. Brown btt a II .

·~ ~~~...~-~~ Ph ;Is hand Reds third straight loss

,.

. "'
F dlands Later,
15 Years And ~e~:"rveo;i'Ve Southern
The Eastman s
. C
Ohio

Fielder, Travis· Fryman and compa1\y.
- The crowd was announced at
2,559, but estimates by reporters
put the number of fans closer to

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - Geo111e Foreman lost the
WBA hoavyweight championship on Saturday in a meeting
room at the Taj MabaL
·
The WBA Exrcutlve Commit~ voted to rejrct the 46-yearold Foreman's ·appeal that It sanction bls April l l light a11alnst
unranked Axel Schulz of Germany. The vote count was not
reveal!Od.
· The committee back!Od up· a 5-0 vote by the ~A'• Champi•
onshlps Committee Jan. _'1.7 t!ll!fForeman rnakt biB Drst ll!le
defense against the top ~available contender or have his title
rrcognltion withdrawn by the organization.
James Binns of the WBA said that Fcw~man had until Sunday to comply, which mea.lt that the title will be declared
vacanL
Tony Tucker, ranked No. 1, and Bruce Seldon, No. l, will
fight for the WBA championship. Both are promoted Don King.
Foreman won the WBA and IBF titles by knocking out
Michael Moorer In the llltb round Nov. 5 at the MGM Grand at
Las .Vegas. The IBF will sanction Foreman's fight against
Schulz at tile the Grand.
·
FcweJIIIln aod promoter Bob Arum have Indicated that they
w'!uld take court action agtdnst the WBA If didn't s~nctlon · the
Schulz llghL
Foreman said In a statement read Saturday that If the WBA
~Jow~d him to 'fl11ht Schulz, he woqld "defepl the title against
11ie challenger designated by the WBA later • year."
Fcweinan also said he would retire late this year or early In
1996.
.Arum, In a letter to the WBA, called Fonman, "one of the
most ~nt American heroes of this eentury.''
·The WBC champion b Ollnl' McC.U. He will defend his title
against 45-year-old LaiTy Holmea April 8 at Caaar1 Palau In
LuVegu,
·
·
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Redskins finish MAC play at .16-2; OU loses

OXFORD, Obio (AP) - Devin
Davis scored 22 points, including
four in a 12-0 run to start the second half, as Miami of Ohio beat
Kent 68-55 Saturday.
The game was the Mid-American Conference finale for both
teams. Miami (21 -5 overall, 16-2 in
the MAC) hosts Kent (8- 18, S-13
MAC) again Tuesday night in the
quarterfinals of tbe conference
tournament.
Kent used the bot shoaling of
Nate Reinking, who finished with
. 27 points, to 'stay even with Miami
at the half, 31-31.
But Miami put the game away at
· the outset of the second half with a ·
12-point spurt - Davis, Landon
Hackim and Kevin Beard each
$coring four points.
The Golden Flashes went scoreless for die first 3:17 of the secorid
half, until Reinking hit another
bucket.
Miami built the lead· to a.S much
as 19 points, and Kent never got
closer than nine points again.
Davis bil'7-of-18 shots from the
field and all eight free throws, plus
had 10 rebounds for the MAC's

dinals cooled off in the second half,
hitting on! y 39 percent of their field
goal attempts, but they made 24-of- ·
29 from lhe line during the period
and 27-of-37 for the game.
Ball St. 96,
Four players were in double fig Ohio.U, 85
~ for Ohio as well, led by Gary
MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Bonzi Trent's 20 points . .G~no Ford
Wells scored 40 (ioints and grabbed scored I 8, Jason Terry 15 and Cur13 rebounds to lead Ball State ·to a tis Simmons 14 points' 10 go with
96-85 victory over Ohio U. in the · 11 rebounds.
Tbe Cardinals outreboundtld the
Mid·Arnerican Conference regularBobcats
43-35.
seas.on finale for both teams Saturday.
' Wells, whb bad 20 points in W, Michigan 51 1
.
each half, led four Cardinals in Bowling Green 4l
KALAMAZOO, 'Micb. (AP) double figures. Steve Payne scored
19, and Marcus NorriS and LaSalle lien Handlogten scored 19 points
and grabbed 13 rebounds as West·
Thompson added I I apiece.
Wells hit 12-of-16 shots from ern Michigan defeated Bowling
the field, including 6-of-7 three- Green 51-42 Saturday.
pointers, and added I 0-of -15 free
The Broncos (14-12, 9-9 Midthrows .
.
American Conference) shot just 28
Ball State (IHO overall, 11-7 percent in the second half but held
MAC), was ahead the entire game, Bowling Green (16-10, 10-8) ta
going up 43-33 at halftime and just 22 percent from the field.
·stretching its lead to as much as 16
The Falcons led 3 I -27 at the
in the second half. .
half after hitting 12-of-21 from the
Wells hit all eight of his shots field in the first half, compared
from the field in the first half as
with just 11-of-29 for the Bronoos.
Ball State shot 58 percent The CarWestern Michigan was helped
regular-season champs and the topseeded tewn in the tournament.
Kenneth Bozeman added 12
points for Miami.

DISTRicr CHAMPIONS - Tbe EUtern Eagles won the Dl..tslon IV District (::hamplonshlp Friday ev~nl1111 with 1 36-JS win
over White Oak- Pictured left to right In the front row are: Head
Coach Scott·Wolle, Chrylllal Holslllller, Mel. . Guess, Amy R!Odovlan, Jessica R•dford, Michelle Caldwell, Joanna Gumpf, and
Matt Bovles manager. Second row: Assistant coach Paul Brannon,

by its free throw shooting, bitting
· 14-of-19 for the game, including 5of-5 in the ftrst half. The Falcon~
bit 7-of-11 attempts and were I for
4 in the second half.
Shane Kline-Ruminski . Jed
. Bowling Green wilh 13 points and
Floyd Miller added 10 before fouling out wilh 2:42 to play. Two of.
Bowling Green's starters, James
Cerisier and Mike Swanson, did
not score.
Joel Burns added· 10 for tile
Broncos.

GSA meeting Sunday
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Soccer Association will hold its
regular meeting on Sunday, ~h
5 at 2 p.m. at Bossard Memorial

Library.
The focus of the meeting wiU be
to attract parents of youths 12- to
17 years old interested in playing in ·
the spring.
'
For more infonnation, caU ~
4624.
.
~

Tracy White, Jealao Karr, Rebecca Evans Beth Bay, Nicole NeiSOJI. Crystal Morris, Patay ·Aelker, Martie Holter, aabtllnt coed.
Penny Aell!er, Josh Hager-mascilt. Eutern will plily In Reato.l
action on Tlnaraday against either FayettevU!t or Jackson center.·
('flmes-Sentlnel' l'boto by Dan Harris)

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�1
Pag~-Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, ott Point Pleasant, WV

llmes-Sentlnel

~rch

5,1995

Eastern girls capture district cage crown
Victory over White Oak
called 'great team effort'
RICIIMONDALE - Rebecca
Evans' layup wilh four seconds
remaining lifted tbe ReedsvilleEastern Eagles to a 36-35 comefrom-behind Disbict Championship
victory over ' tbe Mowrystown
White ·oak WildcaiS (13-11) Friday
ni ght in the Division IV girls title
gam e at Ross-Southeas tern High
School.
Eas tern , now 12- 12, will
,advance to the Regional Tourna'lllCDI as one of Ohio's "Sweet 16"
:where the Eagles will face lhe Van•dalia District upper bracket seed
:winner, which was playoo Saturday
;.tftcmQ9n.
- In claiming the victory, the
Eastern girls have advanced farther
than any other Eastern girls' bas. ketball squad. ·
1n 1985 Eastern' s girls went to
the regionals in softball and on to
become state semi-finalists under
Coach Pmn Douthitt, now the athletic director at the school.
Eastern. having once led by 12
points. was up 29-23 going into the
: final period, but White Oak tied the
. game, 33:33, when senior guard
Kim llratton drilled both ends of a
free throw with 2:21 left, then
gained its fust lead since the opening moments when sophomore post
• - Rebecca Cox hit the front end of a
bonus, but missed the second for a
34-33 advantage.
Eastern's chances appeared slim
when the Eagles fouled on the
miss ed free throw attempt and
Dralton went to the line with 47
seconds left. Bratton, who was 7-8
at the line at the time, made the
front end of the two shot foul for a
35-33 White Oak lead, but Lady

·Cage standings
_

Jearn

Luck shined on the Eagles when
Branon missed her second shot.
PalSy Aeiker was fouled wilh 34
seconds left and hit the first of a
. two shot foul , but missed the second.
Eastern. rebounded, but while
tryinir to set a play, was forced into
a jump ball and the possession ·
went in White Oaks favor. White
Oak inbounded the ball wilh Eastern pressing , but _tbe Wildcats
quickly got the ball down court
where Eastern fouled Cox with 18
seconds left.
Cox missed and an unidentified
Eastern player came up with the
game' s key· rebound, throwing to
Jessica Karr, who dribbled .down
court, and got a nice pick from
Nelson.
Karr drove off Nelson's pick
and into lhe lane, where she drew a
double team. The junior point
guard split the defenders with a
bounce pass. which Evans snagged
from lhe right block to finish off
lhe score with four seconds remaining.
.
White Oak called time, allowing
. Eastern to set up a defense while
lhe Wildcats setup their final play.
East~rn put a player on the ball
with a loosely clad full court
defense. The ouUel went from Hopkins to Jenny Monteith, but the ball
. was muffed and time ran out
Coach Scott Wolfe said, "This
was a huge win, make no doubt
about it. Again it goes down to the
wire and our girls come thfough in
_the clutch. Every girl more than ·
carried their ·weight tonight in
another good team effort. ,It took
everyone we had to put us in position to win, and again it took every

1994-95: all gamM

Gallia sports
notes
CHESHIRE - The River Valley winter awards blinquet will be
held on Tuesday, March 7 at 6:30
p.m. in the River Valley High
School gym.
The meal, catered by Dean Circle Catering of Gallipolis, will have
baked steak, ham, potatoes, green
beans, cole· slaw, drinks, rolls and
dessert.
The meal will cost S5 for aduiiS ·
' and $3.50 for children younger
than 12 years old.
The meals for athletes and
cheerleaders will b~· provided by .
the River Valley Atliletic Boosters
Club.
In Rio' Grande, the Rio Grande
Ball Association will hold its fmt
organizational meeting of the year
on Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Rio
Grande Municipal Building.
In Gallipolis, the Gallipolis
Parks &amp; Recreation Depanment
will hold iiS inilial meeting for the
199 5 baseball and softball season
, on Monday, March 13 at 7 p.m. in
the Gallipolis Municipal Building.
· - Since the focus of the meeting
will be on rules, all interested parents, coaches and league officials
arc encouraged -to attend.
Fo r more information, contact
the P&amp;R office at 441-6021.

Beulah Park results
GROVE CITY, Ohio (AP)Harmony Dancer, rid~en by
Colleen TauZin, won Friday's featured 'tenth race at Beulah Park.
Harmony Dancer covered the
one-mile distance in 1:39.83 and
paid $9, $5.60 and $3.40. Fight at ·
Noon finished a half-length back in
second returning $3.60 and $3.20,
while Briar Hili ·Native paid $8.20
to show.
A crowd of I, 978 wagered
$370,890 at the suburban Colum bus track.

I

-

. SNIPS THF,. NETS • Rebecca Evans takes ber tum at cutting
the nels after Eastern defeated White Oak 3'-JS to claim the dis•
trict championship Friday. It was Evans who bit a layup with four
seconds left In the game to give the Eagles the championship. Eastern will play at Vandalia on Thursday evening In regional action.(
Times-Sentinel Photo by Dave Harris.)

TAKES IT TO THE HOOP - Patsy Aeiker takes It to the hoop
in first half action of Eastern's 36-35 win over Wblte Oak in Fri·
day evening's district championship game at Ross Southeastern
High School. Aelker scored three points and pulled down a team
high 10 rebounds. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Dave Harris.)

girl to pull off the last play."
Wolfe continued, "Amy (Redovian ) kept her man hopest out
fron~ Patsy (Aeiker) lakes her man the opposite way, Jessica (Karr)
made a great coast-to-coast drive,
Nicole (Nelson) seiS lhe pick, and
then Rebecca (Evans) puts it
away."
White Oak coach Todd Graves
said , "It was a great game. Both
teams played well . We made a
great comeback, but missed some
crucial free throws in the end.
Continued on C-3

Eastern girls win district...
Contlnu«&lt; from C-2
Eastern showed a lot of poise going
down tbe stretch, wheo we bad
some momentum going for us .
They have a very nice llall club."
Due for a_ good game , Evans
picked a goo&lt;I. lime to have one.
The junior post poured in 14 poiniS
and grabbed eight rebounds to lead
lbe Eagles. Evans effort included a
6-8 second half, plus live rebounds.
~enior Amy Redovian, a guard,
tJed for top fl!bounding honors wilh
Patsy Aeiker. Bolh had ten caroms,
while Redovian played one of the
best games of her career to end the
game with seven poiniS.
Jessica Karr tallied six points
and had six assists, including lhe
game-winning pass, while Nicole
Nelson, PalSy Aeiker, and Michelle
Caldwell all tossed in thfee poiniS.
Nelson's ball handling, Radford's
defense, and Aeiker's rebounding
were cited as crucial factors in lbc
game.
.
Eastern got good bench efforts
from Jessica Radford, Beth Bay,
Martie Holter, Caldwell, and
Melissa Guess. Other team members contributing were Tracy White
and Crysral Holsinger.
White Oak was led by Bratton's
14 points and 18 rebounds, while
Monteith added 8, all in lbe fourth
quarter. Eastern played a diamond-

and-ooe oo the sophomore standout

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
Regal Diamond won tbe
$8,500 lnaugural Purse at Tbisde·
down on Friday,
-'-'~Regal Diamond, ridden by
Benny Feliciano, settled into fourth
position in a field of seven down
the backstretch of the opening-day
race. As the field reached the top of
the stretch, Feliciano angled Regal
Di;~mond to the outside and
engaged I'll Call Tomorrow Ill the
furlong pole. As the pair raced for
the wire. Regal Diamond gained a
slight advantage that lie held to win

461 SOUTH THIRD

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The winner returned $3.40,
$2.80 to place and $2.60 to show.
I'll Call Tomorrow paid $5 ·and
$3.40, while Ever Amazing finisbeil iliiiilto·return $2.60.
A crowd of 6,510 wagered
$822,785.

Redwomen defeat West Virgi-nia

RIO GRANDE - The ~~~J
and held ber scoreless through of Rio
Grande women' s
three quarters of play, something team outscored West Virginia State
no otbcr team bad done this year.
at Lyne CenEasttrn bit 13-51 from the floor
and was 1-1 on lhree'l with a 9-15
night from the floor. Eastern collected 46 rebounds, 11 steals
(Aeiker 4), 25 turnovers, 11 assists
(Karr 6), and 13 fouls.
·
White Oak bit 12-71 overall
with 0-12 three's, and an 11 :15
night at the line. White Oak bad 38
rebounds, 16- steals (Cox 4), 19
turnovers, eight assists (Cox 4),
and 20 fouls.
Score by quarters:
White Oak 6 8 - 9 1:Z.,35.
Eastern 8 7 14 7=36
Box score:
,
Eastern (36) - Guess 0-0-0,
Redovian 2-(3-6)=7, Radford 0-00, Jessica !Carr 2-(2-3)=6, Nelson
l-{1-3)=3, .Evans 6-'(2-2)=14, Bay
0-0-0, Holter 0-0-0, Aeiker 1-(12)=3, Caldwell 0-1-(0-0)=3. Tolals

ter 89-70 to advance to the third
round of lbe NAIA Division I Mid
South Re2ional toumamenL ·

Sta~e_ 89-70

Rio &lt;frande placed an exceptiona! first balf by outscoring
WVSC 56-'34.
The victory upped Rio's record
to 16-'14
Micb~lle Tabor led all scorers
with 27 points, 'including five
three-point baskets . Stacy Riley
added 23, followed by Megan Winters with 15 points . Rio shot 75
percent from the three-point line in
lhe flfllt half
"I feel .;e played lhe best flfllt
half we've ever play, and shot very
well from the three point line .
Tabor. shot for live, Riley lhree and
!Gm Sowers one. I lbink the game
was definitely de~ermined by our
first half play," said bead q1ach

Davsd ~mallc:y.
Jenn•fer Akers led WSCS scarers w1lh 18 ~o mt s, _followed by
Sarab Levetter s 12.
·
Box soorfe:
WEST VIRGINIA STATE
(70) - Redifer. 0-0-0: Toliver, 3-0--_
6; Akers, 6-0-6- 18; Meeks, 1-0-24; Levette~. 1-0= 10-12; Randolph,
2-1-0-5; 1~ncb, 2- 1-0-5: Allen, 2·
2-0-6; Eldridge, 0-0-0; Iones, 4-15-14. TOTALS 21 -5-23-70.
RIO GRANDE (89) • Winters,
5-0-5-15; Tabor, 8-5·6-27; Collins,
· 1-0-0-2; Sowers. 2-1-4-8; Riley, 7:
3-6-23; Rowlins, 0-0-1 -1; Aoyd, 10-2-4; Dixon, 1-0-3-5; Smith, 0-03-3; Bostic, 0-0-1-1. TOTALS 159-30-89.

CONTFSf WINNER- Brian Lane, a member cl the River Val·
ley Future Farmers or America chapter, shows .Ia prize-winning
buck tbat was tbe tops In I~ field in the Big Buck Contest, spo•sored
by his c"apter. Lane was one or lS members who entered.

ll-1-(9-15)=36.

Focus on your
financial future •••

White. Oak (35)·, Jenny Monteilh 3-(2-2)=8', IGm Bratton 3-(810)=14, Nicki Michael 1-0=2, Carrie Cbrisunan 2-0=4, Emily Cox 10=2, Jennifer Craycraft 1-0=2,
Rebecca Cox 1-(1-3)=3. Totals 1l

What's a sound reaso11 to buy a State Farm
Individual Retirement Annuity?

..0-(11-15)=35. .

'''• '••··

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Wooc£{anc£Centers, Inc.

(AP) -

•

Sunday llmes Sentlnei-Page-C3,

·pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

Thistledown results

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.t-Wbeelersburg ...19. 31774 1402
)-Marietta .......... .17 51487 1181
f,ogan .......... :.......16 61447 1288
l;'airland ............... 15 71576 1436
l"Greenfield ........ 15 61393 1181
~ilrreo Local ..... .14 .7 1214 1136
l:-Rock Hill ........ .13 8 1340 1180
t,hesapeake .........13 8 1302 1108
:~oothem ..............13
91470 1391
]'ortsmouth .......... 11 91383 1305
''Point Plcasant......l1 111315 1309
Meigs ..................10 111289 1363
River Valley ....... .10 13 1420 1508
x-Jackson ..............9 13 1311 1353
Athens .... ............... 8 131213 1256
South.Point............ 8 13 1344 1309
Gallipolis ............... 7 14 1116 1222
Vinton County ......5 16 1252 1554
· x-Still in tourney
Thursday's resuslt:
Division DI district at OU
Wheelersburg 86, Fairland 81 (OT)
Friday's results:
Division U district at OU
Ironton 69 WashingtOn CH 53
New Lexington 67 River Valley 56
Division I sectional finals at AHS
Marietta 67 Logan 50
Saturday's games
Divi.~ion II district at OU
Rock Hill vs. Jackson
Hillsboro vs. Greenfield

·

March 5, 1995

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111118 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 14853, WOOdgrain,
eutomanc, air, tin, cruise, 7 passenger, AM/FM ........ ......... .... s-aoo
11113 OUJS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 141192, dafl&lt; pewler, V8, aw,
automatic, AMIFM, power steering, windows, &amp; locks ........... 111,3$0
1H2 PLYMOt.nli ACCLAIM, 14874, light pewter, air,
automatic, AMfFM, tilt, cruise, rear defroster, clorh interlor ...... $&amp;220
1~

.

NISSAN STANZA, 14882, grey. 4 door, AM/FM

cassetle, rear defroster, dual mirrOfs, cloth interior ....... ........ 15900
1889 HONDA CMC CRX, 14808, blue, air, AMIFM
cas&amp;e!\tl ••rear defroster, spo/'1 vmttels ....................... ............... $5&amp;55
1t91 CHEVY $.10, 14784, 2tone paint, sport wheels,
AM!FM CllSSfltle, rear slider, dLJal mlrrora .,..
.. ....... $641115
1~CHEVY LUMINA. 14829, red , air, automatic,
AM(FM, dotn Interior, till, cruise .- ........................................... S5VM
1193 FORO ~SCOR't~ 14871, gold, 23,000 miles.
AM/FM cassetta, cloth Interior .... :......
.. ..................... S8e2Q
1"1 NISSAN SENTRA. 14870, red , automatic,
AM/FM, rear defrostff, 4 door, cloth interior ........................... 11220
19N PLYMOUTH ~UNDANCE, 14810, red, au1omatic,
air, tilt, cruiSe, air bag, AM/H~. rear defroster ..................... .-..... S8lt5
ttt1 DODGE DYNASTY, 1481&amp;. black, air,
automatic, AMIFM, air bag , rear defroster
................. 1&amp;313 ,
1891 CHEVVCAVAUER AS, 14864, -4 door, white,
alloy wheels, air, automatic. AM/FM , rear defroster
........ M9M .
1M1 CHEVY S-10, 14878, aU1omalic, sport wheels,
AM/FM, rear bumper, dual mirrors ... ...............
.. ....... $7110

11112 CHEVY S·IO, M872, red, 35,000 miles,
sport wheels, dual mirrors, rear step bumper ........................ $1105

1iKII NISSAN SENTRA, 14877, automatic, AM/FM
cassette, rear defroster, cloth Interior ...................................... f7S10

111113 CHEVY CAVAUER "S WAGON, 14825, automatic,
olr,AM/FM CUM1le, ti", &lt;nilso. hJggago reeL .............................. 11111 CHEVY CAPRIC!, 14852, llghli&gt;OI'""· V8, a•.
outomollc,NNFMcassellt,powe&lt;-&amp;Iod&lt;t,cruloo, titi ... ·
11112 CH£VY BERmA. , _ , 2 door. oltoy - ··
ar. outomallc. IWJfM. ti"· cruise ............................................ 114111
11113 fORD RANGER XLT, 148111, i.oo(j bod, 2Ione pain!,
AMifM c.N~e, '"! tllder, bed iner, 1ports wtleela .................... smo

NOW

sg 495

'

988
No eo: ree!a. Deii¥1Yoo·

f

BRAIIJ lEW '95 CIEVY AS1111 EX1EDD
I'.IINVRIOI VAll

1889 FORD F·250 XL' SUPERCAB 4x2
V-8 engine power sleering and power
brakes, automatic transmission, air
conditioning, AM/FM stereo cassetle,
tilt and cruise, captain chairs with
console, · power windows &amp; power
locks, 8 foot bed, sliding rear window,
trailer , lowing pkg ., chrome rear step
bumper.

• Extended Chassis
• Driver Sde Air Bag
• AnHocl&lt; Brakes

• Air Condition
• Automatic Overdrive
• Vista
Windows
• Power Steenog

Bar

• Power Bralres

• Ti" Sleerinll

·Cruise
• AM/FM Cassette
• Power Windows
• Power tocl&lt;s
• 4 Captain Chairs

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S-SERIES PICKUP
• Rear Anlflocl&lt; Brakes
• Power Steer•ng
• Power ~ralles

• Sola/lied
• Indirect Lqll1ng
• Premium .Wood Pi&lt;g.
• Futl Conversion

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4
350 V·B POWER/SILVERADO

o Custom Cloth Interior
• Steel Belteo Tires

Power Steenng
• Power &amp;akes
• Power Door loclcs
• Power Windows
• AM'FM'Cassette
• Tm Steemg

• S11verado

• 350 V·8 Power
·Automatic

• Ah.Mninum Running BoardS

·lol¥!ed!

" SAle PTa I~ GlolAC f• ~1
Trme eu,er h::en!lve 1
1Qual,loe!l.

• Cru1se Control ·

o

• 4K4

• A• Cond~ion
• Rear AirtHeal

• Tradenng Padlage
·• Alummum Wheels

$17,888

THIS WEEK'S SPECI"'.S
1974 FORD F-100
PICKUP
6 cyl, 3 speed, ita! bed, good
!Ires, metal rack, j!OOd work
.than • lair
truck, .. better
condition,
At,'I/FM
Stereo
Cassette

SPECIAL

lta3 PONTIAC ORAND AM SE, 14805, whH.e, VS,
IUiomllllc:,lllr, AM/FM cauene, tilt, cruise, power locks .......... SSIITO

11112 HYUNDAl ELAHTRA, 148DO, blacl&lt;, one """'"·
29.000 -.air, automatic, NNFM cwt1to. powe!lllrl root .... 1111111
11113 NISIIAN TRUCK. MM7, tow mllts.IWJfM
Clllttte, ,.., lllder, cl~ Interior, be&lt;l mat ............................ 11320'
111:1 DODGE CARAVAN, 141111, red, ve. otr,
Interior .............................. ..... ..... . 110,100
111113 N1S1A11 TRUCK KINO CAl, 147111, red, automaUc,

OSE FROM!

V-8 engine power sleering and power
brakes, automatic transmission. air
conditioning, AM/FM ste~eo cassetle,
lilt, and cruise,· power window and
power locks, power seat, rear
·defroster. cast aluminum wheels. A-1
Condition. Miles is right .
WAS $10,495

1987

YUGO

• Cruise Control
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· Custom
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• A&lt; Conditioo

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BRAND NEW
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• flit Steenng
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FOR. A COOD DEAL•••
S. Jack Roush, Victor Arms or Bob Ross
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.·FRI. a.s; SAT. 8-12 '
•

...
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344-5947. 422·0756

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' NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.·FRI. 8-6; SAT. 8-3 P.M.

_,
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1984 CHEVROLET
CHEVEffE
.

4 .c.yl ., 5 speed. AM/FM Radio

with cassette.

..

L

I

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

�Page C4

SUnday nm• Sentinel

March 5, 19115

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point "'-'1t. WV

~!.'!~!xi~.[t~~-..~~!lies to hand .River Vaii!Y. (;7-56 defeat

N. Lexington-RVHS stats
•

Onprter 1lfaLt

New Lexington (14-8) ............... ,.......... 14
River Valley (10-13) .........:..................21
~

IS
16

IS
13

New LexiDpoo Pothers

PJaur
~
DOnnie Hannah ................................13·19
DaD Betbei ......................................... ..4-S
Ben Bethel ...........................................2·2
Brian Agriesti............. :.........................3-4
Dustin Ellis ................;.........................0-1
JIS()Q llarvey ........................................ 1·1
Totalll
%3-32

J::IIJ.

():I
·2~

3-4
0-2
.0-0
().()
5·12

20=
6=
[[
1·3
3-4
0-0
0-1
2·2
0-0
6.10

67
- 56

fla.
27

17
13

6
2
2
67

Total FG- 28-44 (63.4%)
Rebounds - 31 (B. Bethel &amp; Hannah 7 each)
Blocked shots - 3 (by Hannah)
Assists- IS (D. Beth!ll6, Agriesti 51
Slealll - 4 (Agriesti 2)

Doug Lloyd ....................... ;.....:.: ..:.....4-12

ore, James............................................. l-3

. Jam~e Graba111 ...................................... 3~
Bruce Ward .......................................... J~
Tim Jenkins ...........................:..............0-0
James Cochrane ......... :....... :.................0-1
Larry Hunt ...........................................0-2
Totals
14-33

3·9
2-9
0-3 .
0-0
0-1
0-1
0-0
9-35

0-0
0-0
0-0
l-3

N.C...._.....,7S,W-Sl

R""on! 6J, N.C.·.......W.4?
Mici-COIIII..t CDIII...ee
· Y..._..,So.90;TIO)'SLI3
Mld-EuiOno Allolcllc C..,....,..

s.n1n....

••

~i::,,J
~:·;·~

:,

,J '

LOOKS FOR OPEN MAN· Rlver.Valley's Doug Uoyd (32)
looks for an open man In DMslon D district tOurnament game at
OU Friday nlgbt agaiDst New Lexington. Panther defender II Don·
lile Hannah (30). Tbe Panthers won 67·56. (T·S photos by G.
Spencer Osborne)
.

14 seconds later to cut the Raiders'
lead to 53-52.
.
Then the Panthers 'began a fast
break to the hoop that saw Hannah
rebound teammate Brian Agriesti's
missed layup and get !be pointblllllk shot ti5 fall. Tbe black-andorange coalition ·was ahead 54-53
with 4:47 left.
· The next 90 seconds saw Hannab pad the Panthers· lead to a 5653 margin witb a layup (3:38)
·before Srout mape lhe River Valley
crQwd happy by sinking a gametying trey from the right corner
(3: 16). River Valley never scored
again.
·
While the bulk of the Raiders'
2-for-11 shooting from three-point
range carne after that deadlock,
New Lexington kept widening lhe
gap until time ran out on" tbe
Raiders.
Analysis: The Raiders' loss was
as much a product of a 1-for-10
effort in the paint in the Second balf ·
as it was a 3-for-15 showing from ·
three-point land in that stretch,
despite the timeliness of those la;;t
treys.
·
Continued on C-5

I• Low

&amp; 3/4 Top

0

IN STOCK!

. i:ll. .
SHOE CAFE

Lafayette Mall . E

TAX REFUND
DEALS
1991 Pontiac
Bonneville LE

••

60
M_ _
nnl Raucl
N. IWooal 62, Loyola, Dl 57
Wrialol So. II; Cionlond SL 11

20000

4 - · • cy1., wetloqulppocl,

15goo
54 mo.

1990 Ford
Taurus LX

Loclll Owner
4 door 8 cyt., euto, elr,

AM/FM, PS, PI, lW, PDL

~'

Tanks Ia Stock .

'888800

'786800

And

'.

AM/FM, Clll, PS, PI
.
PW, POL, TW, CC, Cllen 48

mo.

Fla. lntcm~danal M, SE! t ,.,ici•n•
64,ar

R

~

BEFORE 0CfOBER 1ST, 1995 .

APY

7.18
7.07
7.02
-

6.96
6.70

7Month

APV

6.91
6.80
6.75
6.70
6.43.·

C.H BOD-374~(13 to open , .
account or rtqu.t more Informal/on.

:16
'"
40

.6SS

61/2

.411

20

.315

n

.261

2ll

n

.379

......... 37

.291 26112

21

.631

...........34 22
Clcwolond .........3J 23
Atlaata

.......•...21 29
........21 • 30

Milwa"'""'

·-·.22 36
............21 "

ClDaao
Dolroil

.1m
.!19.

2
3

.413
.379
.375

9
1S
1S

.491 11/2

WESTERN CONFERENCE ·
Midwest Dl¥lsloD

WLP&lt;LGI
Ulolo
........ ..41 16 .719
S..Atooomo __ .. 31 16 ,.704 11/2
Hoooooao
-···--" 22 · .614
6

.. .. - ..25 31
..... _....22 32
MI-... ........16 41

.446 1S 1/2

-

.7!9
.691

Dao..
0a11u

.407 111n
.281
2:1

··-··... 14

-·
•.......•... 38 17
I.A. Ukon .......lS 20
Foxoland
.... - ...30 24
S•cnmenso --·---21 'X1

We Searched far ~
and Wide To
Bring Y~u These s

w-

B011CQ 1UJ,Milwaukeo91
PhiladoljWo 102, New '-Y 91
111, lndiaooa U16
Allanla l4, Dtoou11 71

'

r.un.-tot,-105

''

'

l

I

'
I
'
''.
I

7r/2

12
.509 14112
.29t 261/2
.190
33

FrklaJ'i n.m.

'

417l

.636
.5!6

Oo1don s..lo ....... 16 39
I.A. Cippca •••.... 11 47

'
'

J

l'booaio 122, SOIIthilll, Of
San Aakllli.o 112. Orlanda 111
0.... tOO. Miami 91
L.A. LWa 109, Sacnmento 104.
20T
.. . a..duao 116.1loldoo ..... 16
:-·
. . . . .,.. Gll'IMI
l'odland tl Ulah

Coiooop&gt;ll PhiladdploU

Now Yodr.atCIMand

801WD It Indiana

Dar:roilat Dallu

O.Over MLA' C1ippen

•

SuooclooJ'• aa...

- Milwtube at New Jmcy. 1 p.RL
w~ tt Miami, 1 p.m.
Hou.um rt Su. Anlortio., 1-p.m..
~

,, Ooldcn s~-. 3;3 0 p.m.

Atlantl at Odmdo,. 7;30 p.m.
~" SjCntiiOniO, 9 p.m.

Minnc:Rta rt L.A. Lakcn, 9!30 p.m.

'

92 Ford
4x2
XLT Lariat,
V-8, two-tone,

$

Local Owner. ...........

·

13J995.

Nadonol u....,

23,995

,,j,, ,.11, r! ,,,

r..,..a., .
'

••
I
\

••

''

' .
,.

••

'•~
I

•

'
.
•

'
'-

91 GMC Sonoma Automalic, SL !rim .............................. '6995
89 Dodge Dakota 5 speed, chrome wheels ....................'6495 ?
90 Mazda 82200 Pickup Sharp lihle 1ruck..................'6995 .
i
92 Chevy S-10 5 speed, AMIFM cassette ............. :..........'7995 ''
•
92 Ford Ranger Sport truck, one owner .... " .. ·""": .......... '7995
•
•
91 Ford F-150 XL Auto., good !ruck at affordable price .. '9995 •
i
5
91 Nlssan Hardbody 4x4, very dependable ..,.......... 10,995 .I4' S2 Ford F-150 4x2 Full sized, automatic, work truck .. '11 ,995
•'•

s

92 CHEVY DUALLY C-3500
1 • ,

11•

1 1

I'

f ,• r,tlllll/' IJ 1\t

1 It

1 '·'

l
•
I'
17,995

89 Ford F·150 4X4 XLT va.automatic,clean,ooeowner •. *12,995
92 Ford Ranger 4x4 XLT, V-6, savolhousands •......•:........ '13,995
92 Ford F-250 XLT Auto!"atic, air, oxconont condition .•..•. ... • '13;995
93 Ford Ranger SC ••~. m.anopr~ono ... .....................'14,995

~

T Pit Grllt
J 2:1 61 !2
9to 2 20 !762
N . Y . - ••. I 9 3 19 Sl S9
Aoil•detpltlo .... - I 9 ] 19 59 59
W

N.Y. RqCIII •. 11 I

_.....,

s

u-

EASTIRN CONFEIIEliCE
AllantkDI-

PHOUE 446 ·9971

11 Month

33

P•ll!c Dtqlaa

:'!: llll'~'l_ H 111VI HIHJIW
Cu'\ l llPOll&lt;..:. OlllfJ

APY

.- •.:16 19

lndiaooa

'.

.. 7 I 4

w........., . .

Flatidt

11 4647
17 50 60
13 41 S4

•·•···· 7 11 ]
4 10 s

Pil-... . ..14

N.-tMiUIIM•IIIofl

~

4 2

30 14 64

...... 14 4 2 30 8050
a...., .. -·· 11 6 2 :14 !744
Boofftlo
...... ' I 7 3 19 42 41
Montreal . ..... 1 I 4
11 46 S6 •
Hanfcwd
,~··· 7 10 . 3
17 51 .SJ
OU..wa
'"'" l13 3
7 31 6l
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctnb'al DIYIIIOD
W L T PUGfC.
Doooil
....... 13 5 1 %7 74 39 •
Ooico&amp;o ...... 13 6 I %7 1746
So. Loitit
..... 12 S 1 2S 69SI

r-.

...... 910 l
Do11u
.•••.•.. 710 3
Wimlpoa ····• 6 11 3

21

Colpty
SanJ010

PodllcDivltklo
.. 10 6 4 :14 65
9 9 l
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-..

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··~

5 1 7
.. 712 2
... s 9 4

AotohoUn . ....
Frldotr'• a.-

Friday's S~ loss to the Cleveland
Indians. In all, 84 of the 101 minorleaguers Cincinnati expected to
participatl:' In spring games have
left camp in Pl:mt City,
.
General manager Jim Bowden
thinlts the striking major-league
players union bas targeted Cincinnau because the team bad plans to
proceed with a roster comprised
solely of mmor-leaguers who bad
agreed to play m games.
" I don ' t know it for a fact,"
Bowden said . :·But logically it
makes sense Wtth the amount of
pressure (Reds minor-leaguers)
were under.... We understand the
union sent a bus ro our hotel to pick
up our players and supplied airplane tickets for trips borne."
Bowden said the Reds, who
were down to 3S players (21
replacements and 17 minor-lea-

guers), began spring training with
no intentions of signing replacement players to fill out tbe roster.
Twelve of the players in camp were
signed Friday.
" Basically our plan failed. It's
that simple," the general manager
conceded. " We bad enough minorleague players tha t agreed to
replacement contract language that
we could fill a team. We did not
anticipate thar those players would
all back out."
Now that th ey have , Bowden .
said the show will go on wilh the
players available , including
replacement signees. The depaned
minor-leaguers will return " when
we have minor-league work for
them to do."
''What we need to do at this
point is concentrate on the replacement team," Bowden said. ' ' We

. MI~MI (AP)- for the fust u~r-par64. .
an easy 65 lhe frrst day and then
ume 1n 18 months, lefty Russ
I have no ulea where that came threw away a lot of shots today anrlt"'
Cochran is in contention for a PGA from," Cocbnjn said after complet· still bad a 69
"\..,
· t
u·
D I' Bl
·
Tour ti.tle.
.
.
mg wo 1ps over ora s ue
"But my confidence level is
But, Cochran satd after closmg Mo.~s!fr c~ m 135.
pretty bigb. I'm bitting the ball well
to w1tbm a smgle stroke. of !be
I ve mtssed th~ last three or and driving it almost. as well as 1
bal~way lead beld by Dav1s Love four cuts ~d haven t played good can. I just need to capitalize on my
III m the Dorai-Ryder Open, be forever. ThiS was from out of the chances, get focused a little betdoesn' t even care.
blue:"
"
"Wb • f " c b
·d
It 1
th
1 f
ter.
.
at s un, . .oc ran sa1
a so w~s e resu t o so~e
Coming off a non-winning sea~
Fnday after compthng !.~e best magmfu:ent rron play. Four of hts ;;on last year, Love needs a victory
round of lhe tournament, :ts com- birdies were on putts of one foot or m tbe next five weeks to mate it
mg to a golf tournament like thts, less, and two others were from the mto the Masters _ his announced
~bootmg ~great round, getting . 3-S.foot ran~e. .
.
goal.
mvolved m the lead - and not
I haven thad a low round 10 6But be shrugged away lhe possi·
8
th . Th. · d f. · 1
·
even canng.
commeo~. s.
1s 1s. e m1te y we1- ~ility ~f added pressure due to the
"I'm just happy to be on the
• Cocbran satd.
·
· WlDiediacy of that target.
ragigambt.}rack and playing good
Even though be was one s~oke
"Everybody is playing for
better at 134, Love was co~stdersomething ~very week: keepiryg
Coc!mm, who bas been bothered ably less enthuswuc about bts peryour card, w10nmg your frrst tourby trouble with bis right thumb for fo~e. .
,
~ament, making the Masters, movthe last 18 months, said be was
I feel like I haven tscored well
mg up to No. 1. There's somethin
completely .m~stilied by th~ eagle over the .last two days," Lo~.e said every week," Love said.
.
g
and seven birdies be scored man 8- after bts second:round 69. I bad
Love. however, was q 01 ck to

in the conference top 20, averaging
12.7.
•
Coach of lhe year honors were
banded 'to Wisconsin's Jane
Albrigbt-Dieterle.·Sbe is the frrst
coach to earn that honor in her ftrst
year coaching in the confere!ICI!.
· Albright- Dieterle guided the
Badgers to. a 19· 7 record and third
place in the Big 10 after moving
from Northern lllinois. where she
was the school •s all-time win ·
ningest coach
·
·The all~conference
second team

came a long way to Wl? the prov1s10nal po~ for Su.nda~ s M.arlboro
Grand Pn~ of M1am1 - literally
and ligwauvely.
...
. The 27-year-old Brazlltan, who
JUSt last week .moved btS Enghshbom wife and mfant daogb~r from
London, England, to an lnd1anapolis apartment, was driving in !be
relative o~scur1ty of the European
FJOOO senes last season.
.·
After a long and eventful Fnday
on the slippery I.S3-m!le, 13-turn

was on top of th_e Indy-C!If_worl!!.
for at least one night.
His fast lap of ]04.03S mph was
just good enough to beat 1991
Indy-car PPG Cup champion
Michael Andretti for the top spot
on the opening day of the season.
Andretti, back with the NewmanHaas team after a two-year.
absence, bad a lap of 104.014.
' 'I'm very happy w1th what we
were able 10 do, especially at the
time that we did i~" Andretti said,

New
Lexington
wins
...
Continued from C-4
·
· ·
The Panthers, pn tile other l:!and.
made 10 out of 13 shots in the paint
in the second half and made three
out of six from beyond tbe .arc .
They did this against a River Valley crew that had no one with four
fouls until the game's fmal minute.
New Lexington will face the
Ironton Tigers. who beat Washing-

.
ton Court House 69-53 i~ . the cagefest opener, on Saturday, ·March 11
at 7 p.m. for the district lower·
bracket title .
The Raiders wimcssed the end
of tM prep careers of tbeir four
senior: - Brett Boothe. Lloyd,
Jeff Stitt and Stout, who recorded a
career-high 19 points · to lead his
club.

ou.t m the first of tw.o scheduled JO·
·When it was over, not only was
mmute 9ual1fymg sess10ns. That
the virtually unlrnown de Ferran on
fust sess1on began m the beat of the
the provisional pole. but fellow·
SO-degree afternoon..
Brazilians Mauricio Gugelmin and
But lhat frrst sess1on was slowed
rookie Christian FiUipaldi, nephew
by. hye red flags .brought .out by
of former Indy-car champitiri
spmnmg .and crasbmg cars, extendEmerson FittipaJdi, were third and
10g the tune well mto the late part
fourlh .
of the afternoon. By tbe time de
"It is a good day for BrazilFerran and the rest of the so-called
ians," ·said the slightly stunned de
~lower drivers went out for qualifyFerran. noting that six of them '
mg. the shadows were lengthemn~. . wound up in the top 10
Ute sun was setting and the track ·
·

•

It ooesn't . .

rak~ a ~~~die···

6264

17 !6!3
I! 56 74
47
46 61

17 S9 63
16 !374
14 54 70

./

I

.

TommJ': Boay 11 Hud'mt

,S.,. _.ll Wimipea
B..n'olo • Quoboo
M~ at Vfuhina~m
Calpry .. TGIOnlO

Anadm

.I

· Sundlr'•O.-

Anlboim at Qicaao, 2:30p.m.
Dcltoi.t tl Bdmaaton, 3 p.m.
Bmtcn 11 Hard'ftld. 1 p..m.

Mcn:n.lat Buffalo,7 p.m.

Savings Accounts are for emergenc ies CD's are for the future .
With a ''Life Saver CD" from Farmers Bank, you only need $100 to
start sav1ng foryour future. And AMY number of deposits JM 6tll
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Your Bank~4···

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•

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.,'

BAU.M·. LUMBER

team
~ co~p~sedd of Barb Franke and
ets a n erson of W1sconsm,
Maw:een Holohan of Northwestern,
J~nmfer Jac~by of- Purdue, and a
1 ree -way t.t~ between Sbuley
Bry.ant of lndtana, Shannon Loe~lem 0 { Mmnesota and Peggy
vans 0 0 hm State.
~
KriHonorable menbon bo~ors go to
f; Dup~s of lllinms, L1sa Furlin
0
ndtana, Tta Jackson of lo:ova.
~~ Pearlo;
of ~mnesodta,JM1ssy
R alansedy 0f Puenn_ tate an · annon
o' o rdue .

de
Ferran earns
pole post for Marlboro Grand
Prix
MIAMI (AP) - Gil de Ferran
downtown street course, de Ferran refe.rring lo the facl !bat be went
was cooling down.

N.Y. R......,S,I'!oilode1ploU 3
Da11to 4, Anohoim 0
Chicaao .S,I!cb&lt;:~ilon 2
S.tunbf'IC.mM
Plod.dl a1 New Jc:ney

Vanot~~... IL I..GI

admit be'd like to et rid of that
arti Jar
• g
p .. cl~d 1 target. . th '
..
ove to w10 IS wee.. and
get it behind me" he said
Greg No~ bad his ~nd 68
and led a rou at 1361hat included
Jeff SluJan, ~ustin Leonard, form D 1 ·
B· Gl
cr. ora wmner 111 y asson
and Joe Ozakt of Japan. Sloman
chipped in ·from 20 yards for an
eagle-3 in l!is round of 67.
Leonard, Glasson and Ozaki each
shot 68.
Jack Nicklaus, 55, im roved 10
strok f
b'
·p 7 b
es rom IS opemng 7 ut
only managed to get back to ~ven
par for the tournament It took a
score of 1-under to quaiif for the
final two rounds, and NicJaus was
a casualty
Seve B.allesteros of Spain at 72•
148 B n c
3 '
To~ ;atso~~;~~45. 7aJ~~i~~
the cut.

~~~~~~~;;(A~atis~e.§o~!!t~d !!!~!~rer~9~~~B:~Jg 10

Junior forward Stacy Lovelace, respectiv.ely, in league scoring. ·
· who leads Big Ten Conference coLovelace leads the conference in
champion Purdue in live major cat- blocked shots with 2.67 a gaille,
egories, is the Big iO's 1994-95 and leads tbe Boilermakers wilb
Player of die Year.
14.4 points and eight re?ounds .a·
Lovelace was the only ·.Qnani- game. She ~ also Purdue s best 10
mous first-team selection for tbe steals (2.3 a game) and field goal
Big 10 women's all-conference . percentage (.483).
.
team, joining two members of coTbe F~esbman of the Year 1s .
champion Penn State's team. Angie · Iowa's Tiffany Goo?en. Gooden
Potthoff and Tina Nicboson.
ed~ed out Wtsconsm s Ann Klap. Other first-learners are Logan ~ch and Iowa teammate Tangela
native Katie Smith of Ohio State Smith for the honor.
·
Good en ts
· ber 1earn ' s ..• um berand Ktsba
Kelley o f M'tc b'lgan

6 12 1 13 4170

Pllllbuqb ., BOIIon

don't need any other disuactions. ...
We have 3S players in camp, and
we're ready to play. So maybe (the
union) ought tp try to pick on
another team."
·
Cincinnati, with help from Dan
Robrmeier' s tbree~ run b'omer ,
scored six times in the third inning
to overcome a 6-0 .deficit against
Cleveland on Friday. The Indians
broke the tic with a run·scoring
double in tbe fifth and added another run in the seventh.
Mel Wearing and Rob Nelson
bit · first-inning home runs for
Cleveland, which also beat tbe
Reds on Thursday . Attendance for
the bome opener .of the Indians'
third spring in Winter Haven was
announced at I ,824 - well below
the 4,900 tbe team averaged for 15
dates at Chain of Lakes Stadium
last year.

The 'l ife Saver CD" from Far r~er s Bank. you·l l love the w~y it groiNSI

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WINTER HAVFN, Fla. (AP) The Cincinnati minor-leaguer was
reluctant to answer questions. He
nodded bis bead in agreement or
disagreement before linaiJy speaking.
John Burgos returned to the
Reds on Friday after reconsidering
his decision to refuse to play in
exhibition games that began Thursday. The left-bander expected 10 be
'on tl)e mound Sallllday against the
Pbiladelpbia Pbillies.
"I want to pitch," the 27-ywold from Puerto Rico said, explaining why be changed bis mind while
other minor-leaguers with the team
' continued to leave. ''I've got a
family to take care of, bilis to
pay."
·
The Reds reported tbat SB more·
players became what .the club is
calling "sympathy strikers" before

Love lea"er in Dora/ Ooen at halfway point .

M=ay SL 11, E. K&lt;mucky 12

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totlded, low mllet

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90 Toyota Pickup 5 speed, AM/FM, red, bed liner ......... $5995
90 Chevy S-1 0 AM/FM cassette, air .................................'6495
91 Chevy S·10 5 speed, blue, AMIFM cassette, bedliner.'6995
90 Dodge Dakota Sport Truck Sp. Pkg, AMIFM cass ....'6995
90 Ch
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TIGm DEFENSE - River VaHey's Jamie ·Graham (33) pula
preuure on New Lexington's Juan Har•ey (4:1) during Friday
night's Division D dlstrlc:t tourftllmmt game In the Con¥ocatlon
Center at Oblo Unlvenlty In Athens. New Lexington. won, 67·56.

·

MONTH._Y PAYMENTS
BASED UPON $1,000.00
IDtltWNOR EQUAL VAWE,IN
TIUDE-IN AND BAlANCE
FINANCED THRU
LENDING INSTITUTIONS.
TAXES&amp;FEES
I
NOT

•••IIHI•

The

'

~

Ctwin St. II, Bcau..coctm.u75
N. Cualina Aa.T 70, S. CuOOn. SL

I

•

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'

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Boofftlo ?0, E. truoo;, 6S

..•'

,,

AND SUMMER

.

Llto.t1 !7, Md..iioJtim... c.;..,~ s.o

•

GET READY FOR SPRING

BEFORE MAY 31ST. AND

SS ~ Soulhcm 15, ToWIOII St.

•'

0

Total FG- 23-68 (33.S%)
Rebounds- 34 (Graham II, Lloyd 9)
Blocked shots- I (by Ward)
Assisls --:14 (Graham S, James 4)
StealS- 2 (by James)
Turnovers- 7
Fouls-14

,,..._
••-c""'-

I•

19
17
8
6
6

0
56

II&lt;Ue So. II, w.lio SL 7!
'
-14.E.W'*hj!.. 76,0f
SL II, tdoloo
TOtlaMAMENI!I

I'

fla.

0.{)
().,1
0.{)

Mcii-.So.91 , S...,_P.AU1tin 7l

FAI WJ!ST

'

Fouls-5
[[
1-2
0-0 .

•
'•'

&gt;

Sunday

Burgos returns to Reds; needs money for family

'
. .i,
I

Turnovers- 7·

· River Valley Raiders
Player
·
. l:IIL
J:IIL
Jason S100t .........................................:.3.3
4-12

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

...
,I

Division II boys' district action,

Tlmes·Sentinel Staff
rest of the frame, the Raiders fin.
ATHENS - They only bad to lsbed the first half with an eight·
bold the lead for sill more minuces. point lead.
They didil't do it
"We kepi good composure wben
River Valley's Raidcn, ahead at we were down sill, eight and nine
the end of the tint three quarters of points," said New Lexington boss
Friday night's Division ll district Roger Hooper. "We tried the trian·
semifinal game a'ainst New Lex- gle-and-one in the ru5t balf, but in
ington at Ohio Umversity's Convo- the second half, our 1·3-1 zone did
cation Center, lost tbe lead nearly a good job on their sbooters." ~
halfway into the fourth quarter,
The Panthers didn't miss
wbicb was instrumental in their se'(en tries in the paint in the s •
losing by a67-56 margin.
ond quaner. and despite gettin 10
"You can't score 19 points in of their 18 points outside the paint
the second half and expect to win," (six from lbree-point land and four
said River Valley'bead roach Mike from the left wing), the third quaeJenkins.
ter was a continuation of their pre·
Tbe Raiders. wbo scored the vious plans.
·
game's fust live points, weathered .
River Valley's last double-djgit
two lies and two Panlber leads with leads came on Stout's three-pOinter
. an attack from three-point country from the left comer (this put River
that was cruciaiiO a IS-O run that Valley ahead 42-31 with S:S6 left)
consumed lhe first quaner's last 53 . and junior center Bruce Ward's ISseconds and the first two minutes footer from the foul circle's edge
of the second frame. •
·
(the Raiders went ahead 44-33 with
Though treys from guard Jason 5:45 left). After that, New LexingStout and forwards Greg James and ton outscored River Valley 14~ in
Doug Lloyd gave the rally much of the quarter's remainder to narrow
its strength, it was James' buzzer the gulf 10 a three-point crack at lhe
beater, taken inches from the half- . period's end. .
court stripe in front of the media
: The last eight
table, that caused the River Valley
New Lexington center Donnie
crowd to explode wilb applause Hannah got a layup on a spin move
and cheers.
to the boop lhat cut River Valley's
The Raiders kept trying to Shoot lead 10 50-49 43 seconds into the
three-pointers in the second quae· final quarter. .
.
ter, but it was their work in the
Stout, shooting virtually unde·paint - tbe Gallians eventually fended, buried a three-spot from ·
finished the half wi_th a 7: for-11 the. l~ft wingwilb 6:04_1eft to put
effort in the rectangle - that the Raiders ahead 53-49. But after
extended their lead to a 28-14 mar- Lloyd picked up his second foul
gin before the six-minute mark in _ (5:34), senior guard Ben Bethel
act two.
began a pivotal seven-point rally
Tbougb New Lexington by drilling a trey from the left wing

March 5, 1995

-•·

211 West Se cono Su(ll e t '

Aoute 7

P 0 Bo• 626

P' O &amp;o• 339
,
Tup pers Ptoms. 014 U')t)
.0141667·3•••

:~=~ 1 ~H~·5 7t!Q

1:i:t

.•

.......

( Mom!Mr F.D.LC.
SvbstarJ11al oonalry 101 E!&amp;ly wrthatl!iwal,

.•

'
•

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

Page-C6-S"nday nmes Sentinel

1994AEROSTAR

1995 WIND.STAR GL

March 5, 1995

•

:Fa
.. -

1995 VILLAGER GS

~imes. jtnthttl

us1ness

Section D

March 5, 1995

. • --;.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
••

BEF third
quarter
earnings up

•\.

..

•'

* 7-PASS. BKT. SEATS
*SPEEDfTILT
* LIGHT GROUP
* REAR DEFROST
• AIR CONDITION
* AM/FM CASS.

• POWER WINDOWS
• POWER LOCKS
* POWER MIRRORS
*FLOOR MATS
• LUGGAGE RACK
• LOADEDIII ·

• PAINT STRIPES
• FORGE ALUM. WHEELS
• AMJFM CASS.
• CLEAR COAT PAINT
• AUTO TRANS.
• V..fl ENGINE

*XL TRIM
• 7·PASS/DUAL CPT. CHAIRS
• AIR CONDITION
• CONVENIENCE GROUP
• PRIVACY GLASS
• SPEED CONTROWTJLT ·

COLUMBUS • Bob Evans
Farms Inc, net sales for the third
quarter ended Jan. 27. 1995, were,
$185.6 million , an II percent
increase from $166.6 million for
· the quarter a year ago.

• PRIVACY GLASS
*POWER SEAT
• PREM AM/FM CASS
• ALUM WHEELS
• LUGGAGE RACK
*LOADEDIII

• 7-PASS. BKT; SEATS
• REAR DEFROST .
*SPEED(TILT
* POWER WINDOWS
* POWER LOCKS
* REAR AIR/HEAT

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

'22,34000

'20;21700

$24,04500

. Net income hi~ the quar1er was
$13.9 miUion, or $.33 per share, a
• 14 percent inc~ over $12.2 million or $.29 per share a y~ ago.
Net sales increased 14 percent in
the re'staurant segment, due mainly
to· more restaurants in operation
and a six percent increase in the
same-store sales over the quar1cr a
year ago.

ler's Hlll'ley-bavlson; Sue Johnson, director or
Gallla's Outreack proaram ..d food pantry;
Ben Horton, Foodlaad and Dr. John StraiiSI,
Hlll'ley Owners Group safety db'ector. Not pic·
tared · Michael Tetrick, Kroaer'a ucl Mrs. VIDa
Bnnm of Bnnm'siGA.

DONATE FOOD • Area ~tort~ bave dOllIll·
ed food for Glllla County's Eater food drive.
Left to rlpt 1rt Scott WOI'IIer, GaiUpolil Food·
land; Brent JobniiOn, Jollnson's Supermarket;
:· Rick Mo.taomery, Bla Bear; Joh Cornett,
:- Bank Oae representative: Boll Buter, of Bn·

Net sales in the food products
segment increased six percent for
the Quarter, due mainly to increased
pounds of sausage sold, which
were part ially offset by lower
wholesale prices.

iFood
Drive·will benef·it.
.
~ Gallia County Food Pantry
.

.

·l

Contributing to the increase in ·
the food products segment were
increased sales of charcoal and liq:
uid smoke products at Hickory
Specialties.

(

;: GALLIPOLIS • The Gallipolis
' Chapter of the Harley Owners
; Group is sponsoring a food drive to
• stock the shelves or the Gallia
,, County Food Panlry for lhe 1995
~ Easter season.
" Community businesses and
~ organizations assisting with the
' drive are:
: Bank One, Bill: Bear, Kroger,

YOU MAY NEVER SEE MINI.VAN PRICES THIS
R5T107 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED....WAS ...$24,330.00..... NOW... $19,995.00
S5T146 95 AEROSTAR XLT, 4X4.... WAS ... $25,917.00..... NOW...$22,295.00
R5T11 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ....WAS ... $22,340.00 ..... NOW... $17,995.00 R5T1 02 95 VILLAGER GS, LOADED .... WAS ... $24,045.00 .... NOW ... $19,995.00
R5T4P 95 WINDSTAR LX, LOADED .... WAS ... $24,945.00 .... NOW ... $20,995.00 · R5T29 95 VILLAGER GS, LOADED .... WAS ... $24,045.00 ... ;NOW ... $19,995.00
R5T100 95 WINDSfAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $24,360.00 .... NOW... $19,995.00 R4T224 94 A,EROSTAR XL, LOADED .., WAS ... $20,217 .90 .... NOW...$14;795.00
R5T21 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ...$22,340.00 ...: NOW... $17 ,995.00 R4T329 94AEROSTAR XL, LOADED ... WAS ... $21,642.00 .... NOW... $15,795;00
R5T112 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $24,330.00 .... NOW ... $19,995.00 S5T89 95 AEROSTAR XLT, 4X4 .......... WAS ... $25,554.00 .... NOW... $21 ,995.00
R5T106 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $24,330.00 .... NOW ...$19,995.00 S5T8P 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOAOED ... WAS ... $22,125.00 .... NOW... $17,995.00
.
I
.
R5T108 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS... $24;330.00 .... NOW ... $19,995.00 S5T30 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ...$23,155.00 .... NOW... $18,995.00
.. R5T144 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $23,035.00 .... NOW ...$18,995.00 S5T44 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $23,155.00 .... NOW... $18,995.00
R5T145 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $23,035.00 .... NOW... $18,995.00 $5T97 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $23,360.00 .... NOW...$20,399.00
SST143 95 WINDSTAR GL, LOADED ... WAS ... $23,035.00 .... NOW... $19,073.00

EXTRA

,_

GALLIPOLIS · Champion
Farms, Gallipolis, and Champion
HiU, BidweU, each own two bulls
lisled in the 1995 Spring Sire Eval·
uation Report .publishe\1 by the
American Angus Association .
Issued ino.batb the spring and
ran, the new rePQll features the latest performance 'infonnation avail·
able on more than 3,800 sires.

'

. TAKE AN ADDITIONAL $150.00 OFF THE SALE PRICE LISTED ABOVE IF
YOU ARE PRESENTLY THE OWNER OR LEASEE OF A CHRYSLER MINI
VAN, TO INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING MODELS, CARAVAN, VOYAGER, AND
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY MODELS. CASH INCENTIVE · GOOD TOWARDS
PURCHASE OF ANY NEW WINDSTAR, VILLAGER, OR AEROSTAR,
ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS DO NOT HAVE TO TRADE IN nfEIR CHRYSLER
MINI VAN TO BE ELIGIBLE • .SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS.

*XLTTRIM
*CRUISEfTILT
*AIR COND.
• AMIFM CASS.
• ·POWER WINDOWS

•
1

:
1

~•

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

$21,14900

..
.,
•

•.••
.. ·
•

..
•
•

•

EVERY 4x4
IN STOCK
SALE
PRICED!
•

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1Jenbigh-Cjarrett

372-3673
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thtub
·in\sh\ng

. Taulbee honored by PLA

'·

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Business briefs

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CINCINNATI • Star Bane Corporation has formed a wholyowncd consumer finance company
subsidiary. ·
·
Known as Star Bane Finance •
Inc ,, the finance company will · ]1!
$1&lt;:,l:ll1:J
offer consumers a broader mix of 103
93 Nissan 4x4 $12,995
cre,dit products and services.
Star Bane C~mlion is a $9.4
92 Dakota LE 4x4 ·
RECEIVES &amp;TATE AWARD • Quality Farm &amp; Fleet received
billion
bank holding company with
a stale award recently from tlie 'RebabiHI.ation Ser.vices Comnlis$12,995
headquarters in CincinnaU.
sioa for its support in liiring individuals witb disabiliti_es. Lett to
R.
Griffith
has
been
Kenneth
93 GMC 1500 4x4
rlgbt are Jeremy Dryden, RSC; Jobn Lammers,. manager of Gal~=~~~~lily Farm and Fleet; Debbie Rowe, RSC and Robert named president of Star Bank .
BATHTUB REFINISHING- Chris Scherfel of Pomeroy
$14,995
Finance. Inc. .
recently purchased the Worldwide Refinishing Sntems bathtub
94 Dodge Ram 1500
rermlsblng franchise for this area. Scherfel can rermish old tubs
and other items including tile, even changing the color, as an
$16,995
option to expensive replacement. Scherrel recently moved to
Chevy Full-Size
. COLUMB US - Weldon T a ~lbe e , Felicity ,
Pomeroy from Philadelphia to be closer to family memben.
·
'
Conversion Van $17,995
received an outslanding service award at tbe recent
Producers Livestock employee m~ ling .
Taulbee, an 11 -year employee of PLA. works at
tbe Hillsboro market in cattle sales. He was recognized for tbe quality of .service he provides cusoomers
according 10 Jeff Harding, director of branch opera·
lions for PLA.
CJ" w p r .. il. 20 mil \-in)'l ·
"Weldon Taulbee goes above and beyond for his
~a nd filter. I h.p. moto r: filter
cusoomcrs and has done so on a consistent basis for
.~a nd , v:~~o: uum ~ys i cm , tes t kit ,
many years.:' Harding said. ''This auenlion to service
nun l.:(&gt;rf()SiV(' s.afc=ty l a lld~l'.
is evident in the respect !hat the Hillsboro customers
thru wall 5kimmer , thru wall
have in his abilities as a cattle salesman," he concluqmlct and t.lirc=t:liu nal aim no w.
Plus 50 year
ed.
Producers Livestock is a livestock marketing and
financing coopemlive with 19 locations in Obio and
Indiana. Formed in 1934, PLA now serves more than
30,000 livestock producer.;. Headquaner.; are localed
in Columbus.
MYSTERY FARM- Tbis week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
MEXICO CITY (AP) - The peso closed at an ·
Gallia County. Individuals wlsbi'ng to partid·
all-time
low and tbe government seized a troubled
pate In the weekly contest may do so by guessing
bank.
signaling
a growing link betwce11 Mexico' s
ihe farm's owner. Just mail, or drop olr your
economic
crisis
and
its recent political turmoil .
pess to the Galtipolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Traders
attributed
tbe peso' s slide f riday to a
Ave., GaUipolls, Ohio, 45631, or The Dally Sen·
growing
political
dispute
that erupted after the brmh·
tinel, Ul Court-St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and
er
of
former
President
Carlos
Salinas de Gortari was
you ma1 win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley
arrested
in
the
1994
murder
of
a senior ruliog party
Publishmg Co. Leave your name, address and .
official.
The
peso
sank
to
a
record
low close o! 6.305
telephone number with your card or letter. No
to
the
dollar
from
an
opening
of
~.025
. .
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
. WASHINGTON {AP) - In its most far-reaching
olllce by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case or a tie,
assault
yel on federal regulatio!L'&gt;, tbe House passed a
the winner will be cbosen by lottery. Next week,
bill
that
would allow property owners to seek biUions
a Meigs County rarm will be featured by· the
dollars
for losses caused by restrictions on enviof
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District..
ronmentally sensitive land.
2 Door Civic OX

•

1~800-964-3673

Ripley,

. F-SERIE'S.
EXPLORER'S
BRONCO'S
RANGER'S
THEY ALL.
GOTTAGO!!-

86 Olds
98 $2995
87 Nissan Sentra $2995
88 Pontiac Sunbird$2995
89 Ford Escort
$2995
87 Colt Vista 4x4 $39'95
90 Dodge. Spirit $4995
90 Pontiac Sunbird$4995
90 Dodge Shadow ES .
$4995
Nissan Pickup $8495
Honda Accord $8995
Ford Aerostar $8995
Plymouth Sundance.
"
$8995
93 Chrysler 5th Ave:

, .
24236

* POWER LOCKS
*ALUM. WHEELS
• 235.OWL ALL TERR.
* CHROME PKG.
*LOADED

R5T191 95 F150 4x4, XL, AIR ....WAS ... $19,231.00..... NOW... $16,830.00
R5T192 95 F150 4x4, XL, AIR .... WAS ... $19,231 :00..... NOW .. $16,830.00
R5T170 95 F150 4x4, XLT...........WAS ... $21,149.00.....NOW .. $16,995.00
R5T148 95 F150 4x4, XLT........... WAS ... $22,911.00..... NOW .. $18,995.00 .
R5T77 95 F150 4x4, XLT........... WAS ... $22,792.00..... NOW .. $18,895.00
. R5T149 95 F150 4x4, XLT...........WAS ... $22,911.00...... NOW.$18,995.00
R5T150 95 F150 4x4, XLT...........WAS ... $22,911.00...... NOW.$18,995.00
R5T147 95 F150 4x4, XLT........... WAS, .. $22,911.00......NOW.$18,995.00
R5T140 95 F150 4x4, XLT...........WAS·.,.$23,666.00......NOW.$19,695.00
R5T105P95 F150 4x4, XLT.......... WAS .... $22,830.00...... NOW..$18,995.00
R5T139 95 F150 4x4, XLT..........WAS ...$23,666.00.... ;.NOW...$19,695.00
SST179 95 F150 4x4, XL, AIR;...WAS ... $18,787.00...... NOW...$16,495.00
R5T195 95 F150 4x4, XL, AIR ....WAS ...$18,712.00 ...'... NOW...$16,495.00
R5T172 95 F150 4x4, XLT.......... WAS ...$22,991.00 ... : .. NOW... $19,~.00
R5T196 95 F150 4x4, XL, AIR WAS ... $18,712.00...... NOW... $16,495.00
R5T213 95 F150 4x4, XLT ...... ,WAS... $23,608.00 ....... NOW.. $19,599.00
R5T212 95 F150 4x4, XLT....... ;~WAS .... $21,149.00...... NOW... $16,995.00
R5T169 95 F150 4x4, XLT.........WAS .... $21,149.00......NOW.... $16,995.00
R5138 95 F150 4x4, XLT..........WAS ...$23,666.00 ...... NOW....$19,695.00
R5T173 95 F150 4x4, SUP-CAB WAS $26,546.00 ....... NOW...$22,895.00

MOTORS MANUFACTURED AT RELIANCE· Local manufacturer ReHance Electrk designed aod ma•utactures the motors
used oo the IJivacare Storm Torque Power Wheelchair. The power
wheelcbalr, one or tbe quietest aod most blab performance
wbeelchairs on the market today according to healtb care olllclals,
is avaUable worldwide. The wbeelcbair is available locaUy by Bowman's Homecare. Len to rigbt are Lewi~ Bowman\ Bowman's.
Homecare; Jetr Porter, Reliance Electric and Mma Chang,
lnvacare Corp~ Elyria.

Financial services .
subsidiary formed

.

1995 F150 4X4

Also, panicipating churches will
he asking lheir respecli ve congregations to collect non-perishable ·
foods.
Dr. John SIJliUSs, safety director
for the Harley Owners Group, said,
"We trustlhe good people of Gallia
County will give generously to
help in this effort to assist their less
fortunate neighbors."

Gallia County Angus
breeders recognized

LOW AGAIN!! GREAT SELECTION!!

)

Foodland, Brown' s IGA, Johnson's
Supermarkets, and the Gallia
County Ministerial Association in
affiliation wilh participating area
churches.
Starting March I (through A¢1
15) containers will be placed in
participating grocery stores for wea
shopper~ to donate non-perishable
foods,

"·

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
42945 State Rt 7
Coolville, Ohio 45 ?23
(614) 667-3350

We
SpeCialize
In People
.

rear

Green,

tilt,

24

at

1991 CHEVY
CORSICALT
V-6, Auto, Nicely equipped
with NO, till wheel,

Bank financ_ing
Available wj:th
Approved Credit

cruise

AM/FM w/lape, only
59,000 miles. maroon, local

~nlrol ,

car, excellent condition

•

•

'·

4 Door Civic OX

•22312
.
for months
Leadership Leasing~

1993 FORD EXPLORER
SPORT 2 dr. 4.0 V6;-5Speed, NC ,
cruise,
AM/FM w/cassett, styled .
wheels, new !Ires, brigtll
blue, very nice
a
,low

1

•215~!months

..

ATHENS I: [•J: 1•1!1 CARS
H7'-e ~~~· ~

.w, 'Pe¥/e

H

.

81d E. State St. • (614) 594-8555

�•
Poineroy-Middleport~lllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, wv

March 5, 1995

AIIVEII1lSID ITEM POliCY· EaCh of these adWttlsed Items Is reqtlred ID be readlyavailable for sale In
each Kroger Stbre, except as specif ically noted In this ad. If we do M out of anadVertised Item, we
will offer youyour choice of~ comparable Item, when available, reflecUng the same savings or a
ralnchedc wheh wil enUtle you to purthasethe adYel'tlsed Item at the adYerUsed price wi thin 30
days. Only one vendor coupOn wiH be aa:l!llted per Itan pll'dlasecl.

March
COPYRIGHT 1995 . THE KROGER COl ITEMS AND PIIICE5 CODD SUICAV. MAROIS)
THROUGH SATURDAY MARCH 11. 1995/N GALUPOLIS A POMEROY.

1995

PWIIc Notice

Plblc Notice

0.11111 County

e verified complelnt. If
olgnlflcont public lntereot
n lato, e public meeting
mor. be held. Ao to ony
act on, Including receipt of
verified comp l olnto, o ny
.,.._.,n may obtiln notice of
further a ction• • nd
add lt lono l lnformotlon.
Unleoo oth-lae provided
In notlceo ol particular

WE R£SERI/E THE I!ICHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIES. NONE SOW TO DEALERS.

Public Not...
The
followi n g
were
received/prepared by the
Ohio
Environme n tal
Protection Agency (OEPA)
lut week. Effective !Moteo
of flftll acllono and
loouence da1H of propoeed
actlona ara alated. Flnel
octiono may be appealed In
writing wltllln 30 daya of the
dote of thlo notice to the
Envlronmento l
of

A/ways Good. Always Fresh. Always Kroger.
I

Your Total value Food store.

Review, Room 300, 236
town Street Columbus, OH
43215. Notice of any appeal
shall be flied with the
Director wltllln 3 daye - r
the eppul to EBR.
Propoeed acllono will
become final unlaoo a
wrltlen ad)udlcotlon heerlng
requHt Ia oubmlnad within
30 doyo of the loouance

d1t1,

or

the

Director

revloeo/wlthdrawa the
propQaed action .
Any
parson
may
aubmlt
comments •ndlor request a
mHIIng regarding any non"'"'' action within 30 doya
of the dale Indicated.

"Action" , 11 used above,
d011t1 not

lnclud~

receipt of

actlana, all communlcetlona
ohall be aent to: Hearing
Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box
163669, Columbuo, OH
43216-3669, phone number
(614) 481 -2115. Conault
ORC Chapter 3745 and
OAC Chaptero 3745-47· 12
and
3746·5
for
roqulremom..
ISSUANCE
OF
PRELIMINARY
S T AFF
DETERMINATION, . SANDS
HILL COAL COMPANY, INC.
1161 SHERMAN RD. (T-741)
VINTON, OH, FACIUTY
DESCRIPTION :
AIR
EQUIPMENT DESCRIPTION:
PORTABLE
COAL
CRUSHER,
MATERIAL
HIINDLING,
PLANT
ROIIDWAYS AND PARKING
AREAS. APPLICATION NO:
06· 4273,COMMENTS TO:

az.-.--...DATEIJNEJI

c.l , .1.1100 .........

•

Employmenl

~

45422

Giveaway

4

Adver!loornent date:
!Iorch 5, 1995
--.- - - -- - -

' 112 yr.d to
old good
.... home,
-Shop&gt;oo
,,._

IIZ-2033.

PWIIc Notice

.

1-Coi-QaodF-

Ciil, 114-441--112t.

LEGAL NOnCE
The Galllo Soli and Water
Conoervatlon Dlotrlct lo now
accepting bldo for the ule
of a 6.5 foot Tye no-dll groin
drill. Thlo unit Ia a pull type
drill with one set of
hydroullco. The drill hao
plantod 2432 ecreo In O.llla
County. Bide on the drill
will be accepted until 8:30
p.m., March 27, 1995 at
Gallla SWCD office, at 111
Jackson Pike, Suite 1569,
Gallipolis, Ohio ~631 . All
bldo will be opened 11 thla
time. Gollla SWCD reurveo
the right to eccept or reject
any or all bids.
March 5, 19, 1995

----____
. _
t ..... -

,.

dlroot ..._tton oltllol&lt;

2390 ,Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Oh 446· 2134
Montclair String Quartet
Resident ensemble of the WI/
Symphony, 1994-95 season
Tues March 7·8:00 pm · $8.00
Slate Theatre. Pt. P1304·675·6575
Presenting New Program

YE.S
SUGAR SWI;ET, RED, BLUE &amp;

CHILLED

White seedless
Grapes

Kroger
Ol'ange Juice

Pound

1/2-Gallor.~

SEARS
CHARGE
WELCOME
Western Auto
Payments, too

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF

Whole Boneless
Round Steak

•

r-

CAllE

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

=

'fth,

....

Floio MarUI March ah,
I A.M. 114 448 •201,

71.

GIVERS,

CAR.!; ~=U"L'tfh
Ful

~·

... tm. bald''

dlpl;ve

•

::::'"=.-~:li

--- ·- ---

.
- , to WOftl II...
111111
_....,,
Wooilfor....,.,..
_
_

......

..., , _ lor en oppllcollo!!r_t·

10Nf6.2'112
EOE

Premium

CHOCOLATE CHIP OR SUGAR

CHILDREN'S PROORAM POSI-

TIONS

Jumbo cook·l es

Saltines

Dozen

Buy one Get one
.

··sean • Rite··
.u errerntee
'

Charm In
Bath12-Roll
Tissue
·

If our electronic check:.out system prints and charges a price for
an Item different than the stated price f~ that Item, you get one
of that item ~bsolutely FREE! Items with ·¢ off"' labels will scan
the price on the shelf tag minus :t he amount of the "¢ off" label.
Note: Alcohol and tabacco procucts excludti!d by law.
.

Pirates Cove Restaurant
St. AI 160

388·9823

Bidwell

New Hotn Uon-ThurJ 6-8, Fri &amp; Sat 6 11

Sun 10-8

WANTED

Roofing 20 Yrs. Exp.

AMVETS
FLEA MARKET

ORDER YOUR
EASTER BASKET

..

or

otltor emPlOY_,.
lnhl•l traininG. Prefer thole wfiFi

oxporl..,.. wllh tn0n1o11J II
populltlon Of education
t. In I human MMct fWd;

Elr----

5

Happy Ads

Betty Pugh,
Son &amp;Daughters

for doctor's office .
Send complete res ume to
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Box BB100
825 Third Ave .•
Gallipolis, OH 45831

and candy now. ln time for Easter
All Homemade
Call Pam for details
446-2056

EW\S TANNERY
Open Mon. March 6th
446-1209

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
SR-22
Canceled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior

Insurance
AII'Ages, All Risks
We. try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111

Gallipolis

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR lWIN SIZE
Regular ..... .......... :............... $85
Firm ..... .... ..... ..... .......... ..$95
Extra Firm ..... ... ... :.......... $105
Orthopedic
I ·f&lt;,ng Size Sets .. ...... $350 &amp; Up
Queen Size Sets . ... $295 &amp; Up .
Bunk MaUress .... ...... $48 &amp; Up
Bed Frames .. ,.. ..... $25·$35· $50
Mon lhru Sat . 9·5 p.m. 446·0322
3 miiBs out Bulaville Pike
FREE DELIVERY

WRANGLER'S
Gallipolis Ferry, WV
OPEN.FRIDAY,
MARCH 3rd
Newest Country
Nite"Club in the Area
1·304-675-711 5

.,. }

From the family of

.l'i,'~\

Mae Lawrence,

Henry Gibbs

now in heaven.
Our heat1felt lhanks and
deepesl appreciation to lhe
First Baptisl Church , paslors
Rev. Corth, Rev. Pollard,
wonderful
singers,
pallbearers, friends and
neighbors, Pinecrest Cenler
slaff with all this loving care
and Willis Funeral Home.
Our very special !hanks lo
Nina Dorton. a very spec1al
friend. she stood by her
every step lhrougtm more
than 50 years . To Jay JaNis
and family, lifelong frierros.
We will sadly miss her, bul
yel we celebrate her 97
years lhal God gave her on
!his earth .
Lovingly, niece &amp; nephews
Jack Adams
DerryAdems
Joann Ross

ComOOIIot - . · Wool&lt;
awn ltaun. to SIGI&lt; yr. :M
1111: 'ltWII·DII ut.-

Eoor W«&lt;tl liluoollwtl POJI Ao-

We w ou ld

l ike to

that was held fo r our
benefi t at the Eag les

Club socia l room in
Pomeroy and sponsoreQ
by
th e
"C r ossover
Band " . With out lhese

two g roups workmg
logether, it w ou ld never
Hav e h appened . A lso
thanks 10 all the people

for their cards, flowers,

Slhror ,Colne,
Coin llltap,
111 A-llellpollo.
Wonlod To Buy ~ HolM, CIH 114-4.....ot71.
Wonlod: ,.., Golllo Couitly H'-"
tory
To D.1l~2:i 4.3212
PMch,- llt:vernan,

c....-.

Wonlod:
Ou'-o,
Ducb, Roltbllo, .. Uood 10
ln. Tobie Saw, lllooJ. Hove Cltldt·
· I- A.M. ..
...toiiM-216'
11110,
ToFor
10 P.M.

We luy Junk Citro. 1144U1012.114 441 MAT.

2

lnMamory

Augusll a.Jocb0nii41Z2 · 111lti13
_ , . 311150 - 12112110
T111M&lt;W.-117118-11M4

Only your memory
dear ones
Torernen&gt;Derour'"""

s_...,.. wil

....

Call446·2342
or992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

I t h as truly

and

over -

w hel med u s b eyond

words.

'

Sincerely,
G eorge &amp;. Carolyn Kom
&amp; families

HUI"OIIIISOIIAIKTIOH IlK.
. ANTIQUE AUCliON
MARCH 12AT 10:00 A.M.
AllAN~ 01110
PREVIEW 8:30 A.M. DAY Of AIKTION

lake US 50 and 32 well of Aihens Olio an4 ex~ 01110 50 -~ '-'tk
McAtllu. Audion is q - t11N on leh. • pctlo4.

llllilbox w/ ..,OL 4D"maiJboxes, 6 lod&lt; boxes &lt;n i1
bottom, lhe '""" has ban 11111 a pbe lor I1Kii1dr1111 w/ a money ' -·
This pc is hom Cool Run WYa poll olli&lt;e; one pc oak 'drop lront W: w/ a
boaltcmo lap; dterry ,...,. tupban w I chamlerod panel dooR; oak
do11bllwide hoosier 1ypt cabinlt; 2-llatwal cupboards, oal ~ yam
winder; 411ack oak boaltco!o; 3 door ke box;~ oak 2 door ....... w/
dr- 1n bale; motblt hKerl drill«; 2~oond dn footed llblos; ;
hoheot; oak manfltl; 61in pie 10le; oak curWid ilftm dina rofintl; skill
front dell:, sideboard; di~ w/ ,._ GMelaQs; 2· aok SICJtllly
boaltct~~t~; one door bGoltme; 2 door boaltant; ma• Je: bend!; ilalc
mon11e w/ mirror, lg' pai1tod llaiWiw/ tham~t!! ptNI dooR; 1Mb;
drester min•• and ytiloe~: SMALLS AND COlUOllm: er-.ry- 1t1
w/ .hilt overlay; marx eled. ~llin itt arirj bx.; 111011 by llind enginl;
pidlra lrames; vinloge doting; 1111111 B&amp;W ctrmlel; dildl111ow flrtt
wagon w/ wood wrodts from aboot 40's; llone·jan' 5lone dun' tlassw• al
al~ypes; and adter
smols lUGS: 2-~ Triltal Ammn ltMt
NIIYGjo l.Dh 4.08; anlique
.
lrllalllllkislll&lt;llfm; 11Mr rugs; fiiiW. Dlltrri 6x f, 4• 6, IIIII 3/1 x
6; V"idurian Jndion .......16 X 9; 3......, 0.... ..... J X3; W,
Pinion Horiz 4.0h 6.

Ook

poll olli&lt;e

"'*"

not ha ve been such a
success .

.'

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

IN MEMORY

our

. Love, Bit"
8

As we treasure tho rt18iJil of you
Silly rMMd lfld IOWifr •• a taid br

f am i li es , and
th e
suppor t and prayers o f
all the chu rch es, my
hea rt transplan t would

amaze d

·

lilgel forever

Reihl, Jeffrey, Ill!, G1111ddtinl

frie nds,

Happy Birthday Raymqpd Keefer!

_-_._
But 1M

sh own
u s.
Ex·
cow orkers at the Mei gs
County Courthou se and
lhe l awyers offi ces have
b ee n
es p e c ia ll y
suppo rti ve .
Without

God ,

When hunting season doth begin
And human scent is in the wind
The forrest creatures needn 'I fear
It's only RaymDnd drawing near
For when he raises his rilighty gun
The deer continue in their tun
For when the trlger he doth pull
The safety, he forgot apin, Oh BULL!!

life lh~

consid eration t hey 've

did th em se lves wi th

Big 50

~~~~~~~~~~~u~~.H;;;;~;;~~~~~1111iiiil;~

thanks to the A .E. P. for
th e
ex t raordln ~ry

prayers, and anonymous
donati ons. Businesses
and o rga nizatio ns out

hits

5

In lo~ng meroory of
Hobert E. Day
who passed away
March 6, 1984
Gone but not forgotten.
Sadly missed &amp;loved,

gifts, f ruit, cand y trays,

Smitll ltick

Ita.

IN MEMORY

ex tend o ur deepest and
most sincere thanks for
the recent fund raiser

at

-ltle
Produell
,. · Colt
Toll
F-,
t~. Eat.

Hard..ly on
birthdatc
M arch 4th you are thought
everyday, and missed so
much. I remembe r all the

love and kindness you
showed for family, and .
.lfrl•enda. One day we will
reunited forever more,
never 10 be parted
.

Ianm:

(ISh, dteck, Of ~a'lllen clteck1 w/ posi!Ne IQ. Oul olllllt dttcb

r•• abonlc lolfer '~ noi,ISIObi!htd ~~~~-- food sanod.
lbt ......
Idly wdean r11t00111.
·
Aldaoilr .......... 614·698-6706
lklnMrl end landed in Oltio

Your wife

'

fol·-----..................
. . 111181lllip,
nla"'!,
.........
. . . ., .deya,
, up
to tonn. pw - . Con be

Dlllenhlp,
..
-~2.

.,

...

"*:::J

MllllamaUorlllllr tlllt

Porta Porion To llaf!!IGII Paltt
O.p tiMN In hnn E...llll'l'*d

-

•

"

.....

thei r d ona tions for the
au ctmn .
A s pecial

.

on-c.•

- 'd1 ·ltlal
· "~tor
In ..._
County
rr

rr ox~ v«tfy. 31M:
t7U 0 oftlf 5:00PM lor lnl•

3 pc Fried Chicken OiMef w/ Frtsh
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gr""f and RoM $5 99

Secretary/Receptionist

, James Angel and his
wife Audrey would like
to thank everyone who
· prayed for him during
his recent open heart
surgery. The phone
calls, flowers, visits
and many, many cards
touched our family
deeply. Through God
ail things are possible.
Once agaii:i -Thank you all.

•

Inside Movie Station

GALL/A COUNTY AUDITOR. RONALD
K. CANADAY AND THE GALL/A
COUNTY AUDITOR:s DEPUTIES
WILL TAKE THE OATH OF OFFICE.
TO SERVE YOU, AT 6:00 P.M..
TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1995 AT THE
AM VETS BUILDING AT KANAUGA
PLEASE JOIN US FOR THE
CEREMONY AND REFRESHMENTS

SOFTBALL SIGN-UPS .ON THURS.
MARCH 9 FROM 6:00-7:00 PM. AT
ADDAVILLE ELEMENTARY
THIS
INCLUDES: T·BALL (BOYS &amp; GIRLS
AGE 5&amp;61. BOYS BASEBALL (AGES 7•
151 AND GIRLS SOFTBALL (AGES 7·17).
ANYONE INTERESTED IN COACHING
SHOULD ATIEND THE MEETING
IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING SIGN·UPS.

AIDE

hNhld "h .........

shop 701 Second Ave.

Mon. thru Sal. 9· 5, Ph. 446·
0322 3 Miles Out Bulav111e Pike

KYGER CREEK BALL ASSOCIATION
WILL HOlD FINAL BASEBALL I

wN.

wv

'*·

OTR_COL _ _ 1

Second Chance Consignment

Commercial Building
336 Second Avenue
Gallipolis
Length of Lease
Negotiable
614·446-0577

The Holzer Medical
Center
"He&lt;i\rt To Beat"
Support Group
will meet Titrsday,
March 9
j3.111.
in the Fren 500
Room.
Topic: To be
. announced
Refreshments will be
served
Public is invited.

CHARMIN ULTRA OR

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Slow Roasted Beef W/ Mashed
POIJIOH &amp;&lt;bvy, ~ &amp; Aoll $5 99

March 6 &amp; 7th
Opens BAM
446·4208
256-6578

Of .,...,.

beol
- . For ocw-MIII lnlot•
v\ew call or lllnd ....wne to:
o..y w. Kolloy, - Yartl ur.
,...,.,.,, ~. P.O. 11ct1 :tiN,
Cllot1M1on,
213!11. - EOE.
ON-CALL IIIEIITIIL HEALTH

llppiJ In po_, II P - 1
Conlor for -~~ -Hh So&lt;·
vtcoo, Suho 213 oltlto - n t
=AAHoeplol, Polnl - ·

1/2 Off All Winter Apparel

PUBLIC INVITATION

Free Estimates
614-245-0904
Call and Save

NABISCO

BIG CLEARANCE SALE!

LARGE SELECTION
OF
LIVING ROO~ SUITES
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED FROM
$450 TO $1195
FREE DELIVERY

•IETHESIIA

BOOTS
All lealher Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer........ ., .. . .. . .. .$49 .00
Wellington ........ ... ..... .. $49.00
Loggers ... ....... .. ...... ... $50· 55
Harness ... ...........: ..... ... $59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety. Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

For all your Video Needs
Transfers, VideoTaping etc.
- Call VIDEO TRANSFERS
446·6939 or 441 ·0547

...

lngortMII

Ant-

FOR LEASE

Pound

Kroger
$199
Raisin Bran ....... 2(){)z.

441-1 046 Of 256·6998

ttltll"r

to~
,....., ~oln
~~~
~,

&amp;Auction

D.J.'s Craft Shop

~

Yooll Ulo lo _."'I for •
,.._. of IIICUIM chlract•r
-~~ ....... ol-lng lltok
awn ........_.In IM ...... Thll.
p!;llllion_
..., ..............
_
. . ._ 0 1,

We would like to thank
everyone for flowers,
cards, prayers, food,
phone calls or
those that helped in
any way during her
illness and death.

The family of
Nora Buchanan

-- - lollotr
Pt PI AI aii~ 1 200 lllln

•.-..-.wv255110.

C.1

Public Sale

We specialize in custom
decks, roofs, remodeling,
landscaping &amp; fencing.
Meeting the needs in the
Ohio Valley.
Free Estimates,
reasonable rates

HelpWanttd

Co.f02---

RAPCA,451
P.O. BOX 172,DAI'TON,

.BULLETIN BOARD
Birthdays, Anniversaries ,
. Showers, Weddings Bring
Sally your Logo or Emblem
she will duplicate it in your
special order. Also wedding
mints and chocolates
Cakes by Sally at

Serv ;ces 11

- ·~-

'--

•

•·

�-

· nrn.-Sentlnel

-

pomeroy-Middleport Gelllpolla, QH-.Itolnt ~ WV

Help Wanted

11

11iil E. ...... - . .. IlL '114
........... II.T.W. H
I.IJi. to 1:00 11:~-r 1:00
toi;GOp,m.l14-1121

Fmanc:al
32 Moblletion)M
for Sale

~

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···-

......,..=u
..
.
.
.
,
.
,
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OroEnlronoo,--

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Collo PI~... Ia...

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cU.nt
to
.. polntmenta.
Require•

ap.
HS
• dlplcnaa'OED, r.tlabte transpor.
· 1..... on:lnllcl-'ollco ....
In po- ...
,C:onlor lor ...,. .. Hoolth lne.; SuHo 213 ol lho
PI
nl Y~r Hoopltol, Polnl
.P l - . EOE/AA

P-·

:Apply
v-.

__.........

Poetel Poattlonl

• 1Z.2tlhr. • benelftL Carrlera,
cloflll. _..., ond molnl. )obo.
For oxom In-Ion l oppllco.llon .. N 7011oa14-1IIGO lit. 38111,

SOUTH REGION

Focllllolo ~ 01 Soollh

~-~OI...~"..!:·F!
~yo~...,rc Chonao 1n TOIIehlng
,ll«thomotlco w
Sel.In K·12. Ap_propiolo
~- Roquln:d;

.==: ~ ayo:;.~

1111 To Onfd' Todt, Praloet Dlo'
Soulh ~..... !lh.nM
s:o:o unm:,..,, PorlomGIIIh,

. Ohio -2-4244.
Roll Elloto CorMr. Proloo-1
lrllnlna. ERA Town l ~
Roll !".!~ lrokor, -10
91oln, .....,,.11541.

. Sop_, pooHiono muo: • oblo lo
1111. lend - - to: P.O. ::n.
p_.,, Ohlo45'111.
SAW, INDUSTRIAL

l..ocal

CrJMr Opporlunlly Wllh
.Tho F - OnMingln:lutlllol
-com~ In Our lncluoiry. Jllrwl
,_~In

Ic....... ...

·~

so

b - IIIII

~- bwP-Foo-

2 Plrw II.
41h ...

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

NlPHOIEROUT£ '
&amp;Acal • F••bl..,_.

sn..

Eom 11.100 WklY. ap.. Z4 HrL

Collt'10o-1114511

Vondlna:
...., Qoj Alch Oo*l:.
Wll
Gil ASI~
,_loSoU.t

.

=..-

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z bolho,

-.,-.w--2
lon:l.- o f -·

12xM
homo, -'J
uaellenl ooncltkw\
wHh-'"-. I N N . Olllo Orily, 114-'IIIWSia orll4-

--========::;
11
r

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1 112
.........
on:l
blilh
....
~ . . . . . . ..
II JJ'tl,

·-~~~~..lon:l, Coil
SOt......
t1l-

11

Help Wanted

r==::;;======::::;;
Medical

Discover
Rehabililation
lm:. and join one of
leading · providers
quality rehabilitation
services. As we continue
expand and grow,
our need for

f
I
•

010

entrepreneurial skills and a
driving ambhion.
job with bid pay
opponunities and benefilS.
MetLifc Reps, in fact, can
actually earn more than our
own CEO does.

After we teach you about our
many financial products and
services. we'll train you to
select tlrgc; markets, so you
can choose your tlic:nts. And
.our training allowance will

now and ask. why you should

want us just as ·much as we
want you.

P.O. Box 87

Parkersburg, wv

...........

--

~nnlna- ­

-

- . l o r olrlortv on:l dlooilllly,
114 IIMOIS, ICIH.

35 Loti &amp; Aci'IIFg&amp;

1Win Rlwra Towor, , _ ICCOI&gt;I•
lng oppUoou- "" ll:r. HUD
oulwlcllzlll opl. fvr· oldorlv ond
hwufla.,pM
EOH ~

4 Alne Conw Of P

I

l.._r

am Trvl

•.td' n 11111.

RoM,

m a-

11.22 -

...... ...............
Infonitlllon
mollod
on ......-.

Fumlshecl
Room1

---.. - - ·
...
-"1111
.-_Oolllo

..

=~~~=~=;~---------lw~~·;~~
~··;·~~-;;~~~~;
.__ ,_ 1e1o, Cloorod uM il :Ins ,_,. ·wllh -..... ·
Acre On ~hbortlaad Aoed.

AIM» ·trllllr ...- •

111111: IIIIo
31J4111.

Crl 2:00 p.m.,
104-7T.I-AIII, ...._, WY.

141, h\1100,

1'YDDOf'l .... -

!boo

114--4117.

36

114- - -

IICN

mobllo - . . ,

wit~-....,,

101,

_ooun:r

Kina - !'lpo
/Cool
Wllh
011....r..:t
IZfiO,
~
•
cu. "- F-. 3 ,_

Old,$110,114 ... •••

.

L1lttl-.- 3 T - . Mill.
.,.._,.._

.

Crrpolo, 114-446-11144.

MWN~rro;N VINTON
STAT 160
OPEN THUA, FRI. SAT.
9T04
.
Glass, Cut Crystal,
Chocolate,
l~&lt;lhe'!l_i!tn, Coin Spot,

tumiiit--.••
w. ·~

-

¢::ltd -

_ . _ .._ .

·-0...w....... - .

_, ou:r••-. 1 y- ....

....y; --WhlrlpoOt
1111 •••
llryor, t208. 1
Wom:nly;
1 Y•r Wornrrly
1305;
- $150;
Oold,
Condfllon.
K"""""" 0ryw - · I l l ;
Kon..... "-- ..
·-·;--cr.;~
Top'
...._liNn, lloelt 011in
Oooro, ~ .. ~ ....,.....

Mora=W

has a

number

openings
in

3114-1'12-4-

, Uht Houllng -

,,...,

AIMOnlblll~

Gallipolis

•sx*:ltt,
' .

llolhor o l - . . l!loliWollln ...
ho:r:o, .........- . 3104.

Prchuh 1t11

tile

11 Fl. l'illbod

8,....,.7114.

TrM

=

energy

4

=
.....

tod Anguo z
..... Angtii - 104-

durabHlty
Oexibilily In design
a few of the reason:s I

why

20,00 families

will

buDd a log home
year!

Appalachian

Log

for

more

infomation.

Structures, Inc.
Dept.GDT,
J&gt;.O. Box 614 .
Ripley, WV 25271
1·800·458-9990

Entrepreneur magazine for the second

area

Wednesday1 'il.tarch· 15, 6:30pm
Holiday Inn
!577 State Route 7
Gallipolis, OH
Ancnda'nce is limired. For reservations
calll-800-775-7652 nttnsion 1000 today.

;;;;;;;/.

Real Estate General

.
. . pol:i:1

oun

12.000,1..

CltfYOior

OFFICE 992-2886

li;,pi, _, -~ .-'.!!.'*
OO(MI,ra(ll, 11700, l't4o-241'-UR.

Syracuse, Ohio
Now -vallble FmHA One BR apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, AJt on ~site laundry,
Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT Up SPECIAL

Real Estate Genaral
-1111-. 11,500, 114 441 1701
72,0110
Allor
4P.II.

Wood Realty, Inc.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

32 locust Street, Gallipolis

.446-1066
Allah C. Wood, Aeallor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reallor/Broker-446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Realtor-446-3406
Jeanette Moore, Aeallor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446-2027

\

HOUSE FOR SALE

-

Nice 3 bedroom wilh

Her
far ._,John
. . " " -or-Hi~or
aaod
_.,,

RIDe, I'Moe17-3217 or ,......,.

basement,

2 1/2 car garage and out
buildings. 1.5 acres flat

ground, nice garden space,
county water in Cheshire

APPLE GROVE· Dorcas Rd .· Approx 6 acres of nice laying
yard and a one slory ranch with 8 rooms, 1 1/2 bath, 3 or
more bedrooms, fatJIIIY room, dining room , and a step saver
kitchen. Also a detached 2 car garage , workshop, and
attache~ shed. $80,000.00

$60,000.00
For more informatio..n call
;367-0407
Shown by appoinlment ooly.

Tra nspo rtat i011

HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom, bath, living room, family
room, kitchen, fenced in back yard. REALTOR OWNED.
PRICED AT $45,000.00

·-

11

NEW LISTING- 2 homes localed on approKimately 1 1/2
·acres. One h~"!e has 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 112 balhs,
l:v:ng room, d:ntng room, family, kitchen. One home has
8 rool)ls, 4 bedrooms, 2 boths, . li•ing ropm, kitchen,
family room. Bolh have rurol water, LP gas Furnace, and
more. Cell for appolnlnienl to see.

AutOI for Sale

1170 ~· 8odr 1Mo 11-.
,__' 'an, lrMrtor, Yin
=..hot:.l MCIO, 111 Ill 08311

ltn Iuick; 1171

lulc~

Sllllon

-11110~h.114-2111-

IICIFI Aoor I P.ll

LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SALE-156 X 100 city water
&amp; sewer, eleclric to j)ole . Priced at $14 ,000. Will sell on
Land Contracl- $5,000 down payment, payments of
$191 .23 per month for a period of 5 yrs . CaN for more
Information.

]HJ,PPIVHOLLOW RO, MIDDLEPORT· Ranch hOme with 41&gt;edrooms,
lR. eat-I n ltitchen, utility room· klcatad on t .S acres mil in a

lcou,ntrvseHing. Onlr $42,1100

.. =

1ltS lulclt Bi:vloril - - .
HOO.OBO, 304-11Wt:n.

Dlr:nl, Aulomollc
T,_
, Good Con:IHion, .
..,.., 114-441o0421.

IPorno,roy·

Nothing has been overlooked in lhis newly remodeled &amp;
nome! New carpet, oow khchen cabinets w/appl, ·new
fixtures, new ceilings and light fixtures, new deck. new
&amp; air. new siding, shutters, &amp;.doors. 3 BA. DR. LA wlfp, new
a'rea in rear. Warranted home. Low 50'e .

1 • c.w.llr luro 8111art It•
lion
~
.....
lmlflltlcMailtte._ ¥4, MJID., llr,

lruPPioRS PLAINS· This 3 bedroom home located ~n almost 1 acre
"a~P&lt;&gt;rt
long. LA. bath , eat·ln kitchen, 1 car attached garage plus
I '-'
. Someot tlackyarcJ fenced. LA set·up tor woodbumer. Electric

""" llllltrr,
_.. or
.,_
famNr,- 12210,
I'M-Mt-2171 . or

,,.__

pump. S4UOO
l ~:'~':r~ ~4 ;mi . north on SA 7. One of the finest homes in

~.

Ir

11

This quality hOme otters a ~ · foyer, LA wtrp.

w/appl., formal OR, Lg. utility rm. 2 112 baths, 4
I r~:;~:: w/dresalng rm &amp; bath), lull bsmt, 2 car gar., private blacktop
li
, , ... cstg . bldgs . &amp; tots of privacy. 2 acres ml'l. CaR &amp; let us
Bottom· River Watchers Dreamt Great vacaUOn or weekend

. 3 BR. bath . LA w/fp, kill, partial bsmt. Fumlshed. Front porch
front o! hOuse to enjOy watchi~g the river flow. Priced

''

GREEN TOWNSHIP
Building Sites. In the process of
being surveyed and approved-.
Exclusive &amp; Restricted. Call for more
details.

EXCELLENT BUSINESS
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
3~4 oHices, 1 V. balhs, receptionist
area, lolally refurbished, lg. back
deck, 2 car garage. Ample parking, ·
heat pump. Could also be used as
residential. Only 2% miles from city.
Priced $60,000.
4CITYLOTS
To build a new office or stM a ·new
business. Also would be ideal for
residential. 4 lots, can be bought
together or SOLD separately. ~ive
us a call for more details.

1

RACINE- Nice 1_112 sjory home with 3·4
bedrooms, largo living room, dining room,
kllchen w/nook. family room. bath, lots of
closel spoce 1 beautifu l hardwood floors,
newer windoWs. siding and roof. Home has
a cellar and a 1 car garage : ASKING ·

So!O,OOO.OO

.

LONGBOTTOM - IT'S A BEAUTY!! Very
· rrlce one floor Frome MrM with 2
bedrooms, 1 1/2 balhs , full basement with
garoge, TPC water, Iorge lot thai ext~nds
out in front of home to th e Ohio River .
including some river fronlagel! The River
· View...you'll have to admire that yoursellto
gel lhe full Impact. Call Today For an
AppOintmentll $50,000.00

~ 514 Second Ave. , Galli1•olio, Oh . 4!i6:11

{I Hanny Blackburn, Broker, Phone : (614) 446-0008

NEW LISTING, 1 YR. OLD LOG
· HOME - Sports appro•. 2700 sq. 11 of
living area: solid wood walls, floors &amp;
ceilings: eiCira large rooms: wrap-around
deck; part basement: attached garage &amp; .
2 barns, located al gage on a sprawling
4.2 acre lract.

This nlce stone home is located on Union Ave . on 3 lots. II
a bath, a large living room. eat-in kitctlen, lull
and 1 car garage. 1 floor plan. Asking $42.800

hOme.

UNIT 2: 2 BAs, 1V. balhs, LR , kitchen wlappllances, heal pump, central
air • new, 1 car garage.

Central Air, free gas , satellite dish, pantry,

utility area. Lots of cabinet space, edra
hook-up for a Mobile Home. 2 car garage,
workshop, 1 car garage, cellar, chicken
house , Implement shed ·and storage
buildings : LOTS OF WOODS! ASKING
$120,000.00

BLACKBURN REALTY
Joe Moore, AoiiOCtate 441 -Fl PI

2 ANDREWS ROAD - Vinton area, large
brick horne offers 3 BRs, 2 1/2 baths, LR.
DR, FR , lull ba!19men1, flreplace, 2 car
garage, heat pump/cent. air, garage
24x48. 49.66 acres of land , appro•. 43
acres In hay.Very nice.

VACANT LAND - Approximalely 10 acres located on
Bob McCormick Rd . Call for more information.

DUPLEX-sPRING VALLEY AREA
UNIT 1: 2 BAs, 1 large bath, LR,
kitchen w/appliances, baseboard
heat, 2 air cond. unlls (window), 1
ci:r garage.

JUST OFF SR. 248 - Chaster Area · 75+
Acres of ground with a Ranch Type Home.
that feature s 3 bedrooms. 1· 112 balhs. 2
kitchens - one electric and one gas!

Real Estate General

RUTLAND- Lasher Rd . · Approx 3 acres with a 2 story
house; 4 to 5 bedrooms. large family room, dining room,
one bath utility room, porches, 3 sided' pole barn and is
partly fenced. $40,000.00

17J.il.

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENnRE LISnNGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS~
•
AND RESTAURANTS.

Real Estate General

~::~

1... Food Folrn:onl Ael ......
31,1011
.. 'U. Ooid,
~- - Trtodo
Condfo
lion, Runo
For
PFcl:-l.lp Truclc, 112 Ton,
Cl!il AIM , . - . . .,.___

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-800-8114-1066

NEW LISTING TUPPERS PLAINS AREA •
Modular located on Christy Rd . This is a
·Handy•Man's Flxe: •Upper: Featuring 2
bedrooms, balh, space for Fireplace Insert.
Part basemen! w/ullllty hook -up . Wooden
outbuilding, garden orea. coveret;f deck
area. TPC water. Nice Country Location.
Home hos many possibililies. But does
need work. ASKING $22,900. MAKE AN
OFFERIII

POMEROY·. Easl Main • Relax on the front porch and enjoy
the view of the River in !his .1 112 story 3 bedroom home,
with equipped kitchen vinyl siding and anderson windows.
ONLY $27,500.00
'

Co . Rd. 10 · Appro• 2 acres of beauliful
and 'electric avaihible , A home or

HOME ON RACCOO-bedrooms, 2 baths,
living room, dlntng roo
·
car garage located
on approxlm-._1
es more or less. City
Schools. CALL~'SEEI
.
.

LETART ROAD - Racine · Come See This
Creslwood Modular wllh added 9 x 18
room, large covered front porch, 1.55 acres.
3 bedrooms, 2 car garage, centrol air. TPC
water, outbuilding, garden space. Really
musl see to app_reciale the &lt;:are !hat has
been given to this property. ASKING
$49,900.00. MAKE AN OFFER II

RUTLAND- Jividen fld. ·. Approx 2 1/4 acres on a dead-end
road : Three to four bedrooms, dini'l_g room , one bath
completely remodeled inside and· newer siding,. Has a
cellar, 24 x 24 workshop with onached shed, and a fenced
area for and animal. $50,000.00

-·

E V E R YONE
DEBBIE DRIVE •
SHOULD .OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE. This 2 story · beauty
features 3 or 4 .br's, 2 baths , beamed
ceilings In the LR &amp; family rm, cherry
cabinets In kitchen, 6 ln. outer walls &amp;
much more. Fanlastic view.
·

POMEROY· Always wonled lo own your own
A
bar business includes all stock and fixtures. Has an older
back bar that is beautiful. Has a D-3 license until 1 AM .
Business Only. $27,500
MINERSVILLE- Appro• 3 acres with a 2 story home wllh
equipped kllch~n. newer roof, double fronl porch. washer.
and dryer. $26,900
•,

a

LOOKING for a commercial lot? Just of ihe main street.
You teally need to check this one ou t. Located on 3rd
slreet, Mi&lt;ldleport. S10,flO!l ·
LAIIIGSVILLE· Approx 18 ac•es .
availoble. $9,000.00

ATTENTION LADIES • combine great
view of the lake and the wonder · of a
greal room lhal combines- your kltcben,
family room, and dining room. 5 minutes
from Holzer Hospilal and 8 minutes from
1own. The sun sets are freetfll 2 car
garage, 2 l/2 baths, very spa~lous.

Water and eleclric

MIDDLEPORT- lincoln Street - Needing rental property or
a fixer upp~r? Here it is , a 3 bedroom 2 story home with a

fenced lol, ond a storage building. $14,000
RUTLAND- Main St.- A vocant lot with city sewage and
water availAble. Nice for a mobile home. $5,000,
MIDDLEPORT· A 1 112 story home thai has 2 bedrooms 2
baths and tuil basement. Has a fenced yard and equipped
kitchen. ONLY $29,900.00
POMEROY- Willow Creek Road - A pretty slitting for lhls 2
bedroom ranch home with a full basoment and apprmc 1
acre of hind with central ai r and ne~er tumace, equipped
kitchen, ond' close lo town . $36,000 ·

•'

1W7 ctw* Lll•ron ti,IOO,
114-.,_. Ahr 4 P.ll.

-.=zt--'llno,-1$ -

flpaot,

Au:-.

4

Car, IZ,GOD, 114-

DOTTIE TURNER, Brolcer ..........................992-5692

BRENDA JEFFERS .....................................992-3056
JERRY SPRADLING ............ ,............. (304) 882-3498
CHARMELE SP"ADLING ................. (304)-882·3498

OFFICE ........................................................ 992-2886 .

I

•

A
on Seneca
· Pomeroy, bricklfrome split foyer home
3 bedrooms, 2 112 baths appliances,
beautiful family room with fireploce, central
air, attached garage . Very nice home,. Nice
lot close lo Elementary/ High school. A
"DREAM HOME" NO MORE ... THIS
COULD BE REALITY ... FOR YOU!!
A$KING $65,000. Come see today._

NEW LISTING - St. 124 Reedsville - 5.00+
Acre s of Vacant Ground . Approx. 1100 x
200 Lot. River Frontage . With a beautiful ,
river view. ASKING $40,000.

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS

_-'il_ Equal ttouslng Opportunity

NEW LISnNGI IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! For lhls 1 t/2
slory home, 3 bedrooms, living rooin, dining room, kitchen
complele w/refngerator &amp; range. 30' x 32' garage situated al
College Avenue. $20's.
1744

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

·

CREW ROAD minutes from
Pomeroy I t .26+ Acres with nice Split Foyer
Home. 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs. appliances.
newer siding, eleclric B.B. Heat. polio, TF'C
water. Located on paved street. very Nice
looation and quiet neighborhood . ASKING
$51,500,00

GOOD BUILDING SITES! Nine lois lo choose from rMging
up to 10 acres. Reasonably priced. Callloday for location .

- · ~1'-loobonaruno

..

'14-992:-641t.TDD

1558

the Beaut i f~l Ohio Riverll 330 foot of River
Frontage for your own Personal Use.
Detached Garag~ V~i!h workshop and
Greenhouse. Approx. 1+ Acre . Shrubs,
flowers, rock garden and fruit trees . Great
Location in Syracuse . ·
ASKING
$109,000.00

~. :J04.471.ZMZ.
Molo leofllooi s _ . . , c.Mr
Millon P' "''"•· oM hi• hod
114-'IU 2114.
•

2. Employed Sales Rtpresenlaiive . If you

av'ailable with rhis 75 year old market leader •
in professional tool s and equipment PJease
m'akc your plans now to ultend bur reception
and seminar-:

z dr.,

1

.

Autos for Sale

lit Food,

.... 114 ... 1111
.
7 - 0111 : . - . : - - . c.Mr flponlol, 11::10, AotrloGliding.~·· Jill
.
lorod. ........ z , _
~~.
For Young CNtdnr:, ~~llool·... :
MO, I
7221.

Appalachian Log

consider the fle xibility and earnings
· potential of a Snup·on franchise -- ranked
the HI new franchise opponun ity by

Don't mi ~s this opportunity 10 hear more
abnur. these and or her career opportunitie s

EXC:EI:i:PiT

LOCATION!
1/2 Story
home. LIYing room. kilchen,
garage. Addfiionai
mobile home hook-up. Call today for your private showing .

31000N
A11snr
MOI:Il:I\IN
HSIOlO
lnN1\IM
Sl3l·Vj\fl:I~S

71

efficiency,

Call ot wri1e

Apartment
for Rent

consecutive year in 1995!

' Su/es

large kitchen with utility area. an open Sun
Room with wood burner that will entrance
you as you take in the Panoramic View of

~30NOA

Uvestoek

Comfort, convenience,

44

.

I. Franchised Dealer · If }IOU are read y to

prefer to "test drive" th e franchise
opponuniry for uplfo pne year while you
receive a salary, commission on your sales
and full health benefi ts. consider this
unique .apprenrice program . Solid
jX:'rformance as a SHies Rep may also lead
to easier down payment and financing
term s should yuu successfully apply to
pur~hase the franchise l ater.

NEW LISTING - Elegantly Decorated 2
Slory Home with 4 bedrooms . 2 baths .

OJ. SlliMSN't'

LOG HOMES

Waolier LillO - · t110j
~-;~-·
Door,
Frooi F- t:IO;
pc:1n1
Waohor ... Slu:latr Apo
~law~ 11 ~ tlhol, 011llo:ollo, -11M, , _ 411

make a solid invcsrmcnt in }lOUr furure .

limited

~.

Township JessieC"-"'k Rd .

Stnrctnres has been
leader in the log ho1ne I
industry for · over
years. Choose from
over
70 standard
models ot we'll custom
design one for you.

Now there are two ways to begin a rewarding

+•r " -

63

~~'!~-~lf''l!~

career wi th a solid. proven leader:

of

,,.. OlllmltM, Z4hr. ........

ing

v-

Mil.

R_vlllo,.,......:IOI.

- ....-.--."'*JJr&amp;

114-44WIU
QuoiHy Hot
l'trrr:nu..
And A:!jlll-. GIMi- On
Cult And Carry! RENT-a-owN
And Lo,_y Aloo Anlloblo.
F- DoiiY:iry - · · .......
Waolier'-Dryw' Color T.V. Cl
Rodlo,
Rofrftpoialor,
114-Za1231.
Whirlpool

plOvlder

KlCPump--.-

-•r

~

Books In Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Apple G(ove, Letart, Henderson ,
Patriot. Coolville, Reedsville, Long Boltom, Syracuse, Wilkesville,
Albany, Vinton, Cheshire, Oak Hill, Bidwell. Rio Grande, Crown City,
Ashton, Glenwood, Patriot and surrounding areas lri Metgs, Gallia
and Vinton counties
To become an independent contractor you must be a! least 18
years old, have the use of an Insu red car. van or truck, and be
available a, minimum of 5 daylight hours dally.

porwn

In F:lo!8o on:l AtCountioo, nr:lrll- !fiiOio on:l
::noc1to. OctltriiM on:l lilontY ol
lLC, T-20 -od, llo:.Co 7,

11-

YrAA FURNITUAI

MuJ..._

-

•
- • · ~-11t1ar1- .
IFONII7.

::.~--:1 IIZaa

All

Roseville,
Art, Etc.
Po:rcellain .

Wanted to Do
8oo ,._ ..,.'!"- Centjllllo troo
ooro. :ao,r.. oxp. I lnourod, -

nun~l IIIII will

by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below. ·

OPJI(IIMIIY

.

llnlo, 1 - , Toronluloo,
n:leo. Flofi Tonk l ..... !!!loP.
2413 ..._
A... .......

Houaehold
Good$

Real Estate
wanted

AKC

Faruln, • • Each. ........_

'm

r~erch al1 d1 Se

electric, 112,100,

'

river.~~

......, 211 • 10 , . _ Solid- oun er-. E Lono Howe. ~ lonl Cordllaoll tm.oO 010.
ToO!rlllpollo,
!11~4~2~4!1~104~1:.__:_::_...:_::.:.._.=_::-=:
Carpel l Yf!IJi In N.OD Yd
a Up 10 Pol- 01 ICFIRental s
Carpol In llook. 0 . H Pot.._ Vlnll In atoak. I' nrlwn

18

'Crr1lflod

,

I the - - -- - •

--14

R!glolorlll
Coai:or
lponlolo Fir lelo •
PUpploo, 111W711-2721.

OFFICE 992-2259

1S:r

-!WW.MIII.ool
·-7
.....

IU&lt;C

&lt;IS ·

r!!lgo 1op

buNd~:g oMo. S13,tl0. RriJb:rm
Rd. fill; t .... rwtrtatlonil. No

-'

- .. Equl_.: cj&gt;onr...-...111-11121.
•

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley .............. 742-3171

C!.:J I I I I I ·fH§ I I I I I

56 ' 5 ' E

. Office .....:.................... 992-2~9

(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

the young is to have it - - -- --

.·3snOH
a~p ONnOl:l\1 11 aAe4 Ol S! BunoA
a41 01 JapeJel(-l !(-leap o) AeM 1saq
.a4.L. 'P!BS pue ap1se aw liOOI Jll!llOW
-pueJE) Aw ua4M sp,uop pue s,op 10
IS!16UOI e 4BnoJ~l auo6 PB4 t'UOS Aw 01
santBA U!l!lJa:l 4~ea1 op6u:AJ1 SeMI

Tw:lll:lp, fM,GOO, 114-111-'11111.

8UAAHCE
VICKIE CASTO, AOENr
~OWNERS I AUTO DiSc
COUNTS
•
UFE l HEALTH
304-511 1257

-

I

•s;.. r r ( r r I' r r r r r 1

o:portmlnlo. Ill

.... _

ln tho-·
- -....Roo,:::
-r.
:IOMJ&amp;.IMO

80 people needed to deliver I he new 'Ohio Valley Telephone

Snap-on

.I.D-=---

K;athleen M. Cleland 99U191

BIG BEND_REALTY, INC.

TI-l e Comple;e the chuckle quoted

111or

Henry E. Cleland Ill 992-6191

MEIGS COUNTY

I was trying tp teach certain
_ values to my son. I had gone ·

'"::·:::·=~·
'"I
ENRy 0 D

1tiZ ll:yh
141170••r2
........ Apooi...:O, -wllh2
..1ho,h
dloport, Ohio- ..............

IN-

iho S:lrfna Ruoi:l Oil your
I lltawua IM'Yloed

car

Real Estate General

3SnOH a~1 ONflOl:l\1

PICKENS RJANI1UAE
.......d
.
No ......_
.... l:ai:l 1uro
-..g. 112 n:l. Ad. Pl.
PIOUOftl. WY, ... !OW7tlo14N,
114-44W111.

trtiiiiMIW

..,L,;.....T
.

-~

Insurance

•
•

.

II
I I I 1=·=:·::::!·

. _ , Du4y Plpo, 1M 211 IDII.

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

NouN: lion 'di
~= oul -villo Pika

9fr,.. od: Plr9modlco EuM Or Pori li:M. Oponlnp
• Avolloblo, RloloY WY, Prlvolo
Ambuloneo Bo:'vk!o, 304-3'12111115.

.

'

Sherri . Hart ............ 742-2357

to . .IHI..t~,_..,..,

LAYNI'II'URN11UAE

Bobyolttor, lldwoll
4noo, Wooltdolll' Allor 4:30 P.ll.
(14 381 8371.

.

oo

_....__._

......

1111, tliOO. h4 •

114

Cornplllo

Waniod:

'

through a tong list of do's and
N
don'ts when my Grandmother
1-,..:.....:;....;.:,.L:......;U;..
· .:.E~..jlook me aside and said, "The
9
e
best way to teach character to

81 Ferm Equipment
1- A- :Nioroo lnllor, 711.

Concrolo l
-~~ llfllo
T..U._ :100 Thru 2,aoo 0o110no
Ron ,...,. Enlofllllooo.
. Jlllllt•
.on, OH 1-100-13'7-ha.. -

26102
Ph: (304) 421J.7146
Fax(304)428-1834

~.-~

_

....,.,l

.

f.-r,l._O,..,.,--T,-T,'"t:.1

DOUILEWIDE AEPO,
- - l n . no -..,..,...t

In real life, we 're looking for
sales reprc:sc:nta;ives who are
more like you. With

Tracy L. Brinager ...... 949-2439 .

-~I· . . '.._..,....._~...._~-1..,)r. 'TW;;_O;:..N~R
I I p 1 I .. .
I
:::::====~'
~;-"TJI_s.,_v .......II ~
r:====:=::==~
1

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Livestock

1111

Metllfe

Woman
'Noodod To C::... - · 114-

-.114--..

Box Spring - - tu· Clot
Huleh Uka lloo!'1 Rll; CoUCii
Ill; Cobod- T.Y. '111, 114-446:1224.

Henry E. Cleland Jr .. 99~6191

aor.

I Is LI 0IH I1D1 ~ I

T• 1l'uall P« olohn Doore

1.118 To

114 •1113

..,.,b..

-

For Sale
or Trade

Colli~

Yo~ rt«&gt;ani•~ Slll!Qpy" In
our ads and commercials,
Snoopy plays the pan of the
world famous MetUfe
Representative.

~

3

............
f:!i

-. . _
141711,
..... .....
.......
1 por
home: m• 1 IMUrlnoe. arid I
FRII loti ,.,._ Only
1120 - . on:l $114 por mo.

have the opponunities. Call

:;;b'

NATIONAL

~

11o1ouMi

Now,_ a.
A..... Aloo, 1177 Ford :114 Ton
410 4 srud, Hlall
For
-lnlo. IHW4Io4:nt.

,_. Aulo,

A:,:,:.:..R
6

a .,

So, if you ha'llc the driye, we

·Woil:ondo. For A Conlldonilol
1n1.....,. Call: Jl:r: Apn - llonA.ll. ' 3 P.M. AI t-800-~
12.

liiEAICAN

1m Ford . _ XLT

-

fi1

an.

{

help fOU SCI Sl&amp;rted.

'wtlh .......,........ ,.......
.And
El:t- Trolnlng
&gt;Pro&lt;nm. No Evonlnso. NO

t3

Ill
,

a.............. rs:t..lurpluo,

Com.,..:or • SX, lll:o 3112
lmonitor
I 114 """" drfw,
YOA
bUtton rnouM,
loodod MIO. 304-77WIIZ.

We 're offering a challenging

lu,. Ado- OOOian, Erwrgy
SovAnd TrPo
En¥1ron...:o1
Flonoflle; R.-1
_,_

·•tuN, ,,

IIIC
"d
Coooool:ound:L

•

I Want You
For MetLife~

,000, ,.,....

lon:l Hll Ad, - . I bodo

-.114-

............ .......
. No. 1100, ... • lilol: 1'1111 Cllc:lol.
2M4411, UJI. _. P.rl.

Help Wanted

I
=-.
-n---2--or
... .
..

~--·

Lal

-4411-0r~··
eon:.ot
'"'"

'.i

31 Homes for Sale

N- Tho

IWiliCd

Real Estate

~

DIRECTOR

......r'o

1i~~~~~~~~~

Rhwr. Juot o r.. 1111...:• IGML Col .......... AooHy,

PROJECI' DISCOVERY

~llon

1171 Chnr lull 112 SilO
~~-- irUCI!. . - .

........__,,I

YM Dlhw. ttt •• lttl.

.lndlvld... -

r.

t':.l

~·
........
0111
........
a..
a...

IMN 4 0ER
P.O. Iox121
ATHENS, OHIO 45701

• Opportunlly Employor rm!DIY.
' PERSONAL CARE PROVIDER
lo .,..• .....- .... ...... lo
• .........., .. - I n lho .........
, ...,_ or lo old In tho
- - - ol lndoponclont
lhtng.
Will · ooolll
wllh
l!oo• I nlng, lounclrr, dloh• ........... oncf
oupor.
p o - ,hrgloilo, ond

-

:o::•.\-1:'

c:.tml16---..:
....... ~Or ...

HUIIAN IIESOURCI

No -

Sunday nmes Sentinel-Page D5 ·

1GI,OCit ITU II.........,

-

53

•

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

1995

___
.... ,.....
.......... -"".....

PEPSI COLA COMPANY

--------

March

MarCh 5, 1985 :

- $56,900 . 3 or
4.
brick &amp; frame trl-level , 1 1/2 baths,
LA, Family rm, kitchen, new roof, new
lkllng , CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
TO SEE.
· '

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE'RE ABOUT
SOLDOIJT

�'

.

•
~entlnel

March 5, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleat@nt, WV
76

Auto Pans &amp;

Accenorles

76

Victory
Circle

Services

Auto Pan. &amp;

Ohio Lottery

Accesaorles

Pick 3:

596
Pick 4:
5182
Super Lotto:
1-9-22-32-37-45
Kicker:

Sports, Page 4 ·
Over 14,000 Sq. Ft. of
office, • warehouse &amp; 563 Jay Drive • 3 BAs,
garage spac e. Over baths, eat-in kitchen,
21 ,000 sq. ft. of parking above ground pool. $67,

700594

Low tonlxhlln tb• 50s, rain.
Tuesday, rafn. Highs In II&amp;.

'·

322'

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

STOP BY &amp; PICK UP A FREE QUALITY HOMES
BOOKLET, TODAY! SEE HOMES IN COLOR!!

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.·
·
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 'fi:t. .
..
·-LENDER

COUNTRY BOY- CITY GIRL
A hard to find combination of Country Living and City
Convenience. This beautiful 3 BR, 3 bath. custom built

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER ........ 446-4618
Judy DeWitl ........................................... 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter....................................379-2651
Ruth Barr..................................., ........... 446-0722

Tammie DeWilt .. 245-00Z2
Martha Smith ........ J79-2651
Cindy Drongowski 245-9697 ·
Cheryl Lemley....... 742-JI71

ranch style home is only approx. 5 minutes from the hos-

pital and shopping area. Featuring a newly remodeled

kitchen, a lovely large family room with woodburner, a
spacious utility room, and a two-car ~ Drive Thru" garage

Gr&lt;!en,brlar St. • Reduced
to $79,000!!1 4· 5 BAs, 3
baths, DR, full basement,
2·car

8210

crete .floor, and a large slidfng door. Price reduced to sell .

1733

natural gas, etectrip, all are available at this lot. Prepare

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
- 446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch • 441-H)07

Loretta McDade • 446-7729

Sonny Garnes - 446-2707

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

CUt

PROFESSIONAL SERVK:E MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER .......... 389-882&amp;
I
WIL.MA WILLIAMSON .................... 2118-0038

o

Gallipolis. Lot#t7. Realtor Owned. ·
1731
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH. 245·5855'
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

•

'

.

--

.

· .~

F,teal Estate General

RANCH- AFFORDABLE!
Priced $30's Largo living

446-6806·

..

MOiil Offict-188-8826
958 Cr.rt Chop•/ Rd.
Bidwtll. O~io 456U

''l

NeaVclean 3 bedro~m brick
ranch, living room w/ fireplace,
garage, carport &amp; more. 1738

· PH. 446·7699.or 446·9539 ·

•

. MH9 NEW LISTING • NEW HOME · Retirement or
Starter home. 2 bedrms 1 bath, LA, kit w/din. area. 1 acre
m/1 more land available. Would you pass this up for
$34,900.00?
11000 NEW LISTING • IMMACULATE • LOVELY &amp;
AFFORDABLE - Ctose to town, lOcated In Green Twp, 3
bedrms, 1 bath , kit., din. rm, cozy LA w/woodburning
fireplace. full basement, 2 car garage · new windows,
polished hardwood floors, oak cabinets, Jenn AJr range
microwave, dishwasher &amp; 5 ceiliflO lans. Beautiful treed
yard 1 ac m"1 Don'l be the one to say " t could have
bo ·
· '·
ughtthal."
1117 NEW USTINO- Brick ranch 3 bedrms, 2 baths, LA,
eat-In, kit. w/ knotty Dine cabirlets, full basement wf family
rm. and o·utside entry to .the patio. Carport. Nice quite
neighborhood close to Holzer. Call for immediate
appointment
·
·
196'4 NOTICE: ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUR

QUIET NEIGHBORHOO•D./1
CONVENIENT LOCATION.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

PART-TIME FARMER!
Story Modern 4

room, dining area, kitchen , 3

~

1185 NEW LISTING. COMMERCIAL LOT In Point
Pleasant area thai has been cleared and reactv for use
that has 8 2 bedroom home that is presenfly being
rented .. call Wilma tor more delails.
me. COMMERCiAL BUILDING - Olive St. 16' door &amp;
ceiling wnofl for storage 210 &amp; 220 elect. water &amp; sewer.
6' cement to load &amp; unload in front. 30x80 building
appro)(. 3900 sq. ft . bloCk &amp; frame . $45,000.
,
1874. RANCH HOME with full basement, ~~710 llv
space, gas heat, ...cent. air, 2 fireplaces,
rooms,
boths . 2 car detached garage, 30)(16 shed, 2 small
outbuildings , small framelmme with 2 BA and 1 bath, 2
homes and buildings situate dOn 5 acres more or less
Prlc ~ .. in the $70's
on~
•
1173 NEWER MOBILE HOME, 3 ·bedroom lovely
decorated on 1/2 acre lot close to the Ctty, owner needs ~
more space areal for the single person .or newly weds or
the retfree•s' llas a 2 car garage tnat ts heated tor the
workshop J)f3rson call us now

'

and nice subdivision just a short ·di Stance out of

~

EUNICE NIEHM ........................,. .....44e-1B97
LVNDA FRALEV ............................. 446 6608
PATRICIA ROSS .........................:... 245-9575
PATRICIA HAVS .............................. 44&amp; 3814
_~

NOW to build your dream home in lhis pleasant, quiet,

EASILY COMMERCIAL SUPER
LOC ATIONI
INVESTMENT PROPERTY! LEGR.ANDE BLVD. ~-4
Frontage ·sA 7 &amp; Pike St. .2 bedrooms, family rOom ,
&amp;
2 . lots .
House
pool
garagew/apartment , and 20'x38' i.nground
w/newer
liner,
nice
lot.
11737
additional buildings.
•739

·bedrooms. Large lawn . . 1725
•

hou$9, 2 baths, 2 car """"""· 1
Lots of raod frontage, ap~orox.1

28 acres.

Branrh 01/i~~ - 446-6806
11 Lot:u~ St.
GaiU,Olls, Ohio 45631 .

1841 A TOUCH OF CLASS -The remaft(able spacious
home with view of the county. Hallan tile foyer, cathedral
ceMing with balcony, 3 BR, 2 112 balhs, living room with
woodbuming fireplace, equip. k~chen, breaktast room has
8 Jg. window, stereo speakers throughout, brass light
fhctures anct mu~h more. 2 car anach9ct garage, ante
starana, 2 acres mil. This house is maintonance free of
•bell quality. Make your appointment and see tr you don't
agree.
- · OWNER-·~ AN OFFER. on lhla 3·4 bedroom,
· -1
""'"'~
2. baths, full basement. 2 car garage In a nice
neighborhOOd and priced at only $40,000.00, don, delay
'"-'"'use 1hla one w&gt;'il ~ last and make someone a lovelu
~
w::'
home, needs a llftle TLC.
1131 GREAT FARMLAND FOR THE FARMER minded,
SO acres level to slightly rolling with a 4 bedroom
farmhouse that 11eeds some TLC; and priced at

MASTERPIECE IN THIS OUTSTANDING .$6000000
caiiWo'lmatodau, .
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES MIL ALSO 2.3-48 ACRES
'
, '
M/L CLOSE TO SHOj)PING AND HOLiER HOSPITAL 1111 GREATLY REDUCED, Large 4 bedrm . l'lOme, 2
n:n. wlfireplace, level lot. Located cl~se to freeway e:dt on ALL LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS. · baths, new carpel. new roof. 20 Acres of land. Owner
· S.A. 5 min from town &amp; Holzer Hospttal. ·- ~
•
wants a quick sale $65,000.
1145 TERIFFIC PRICE S40,000 · HO!fl~ reduced tor
Immediate sale, 3 bedrm. ranch , LR, &amp; dtmng area, family

TWO+ TWQ: 2 Houses &amp; 2 CUTIE PIEI lidy 2 bedroom
lots! Both situated in
Gallipolis . 2 Story w/ · 4 home in good repair. Ideal for
bedrooms, 2 baths, large investment property or an

room s &amp; a 1 bedroom brick excellent starter home. $20's. view, lots of c~binels
«730 kitchen, large dining •uun&gt;,o
home.
t709
family room &amp;,living room

NEW LISTING! SPACE 1021 SECONO AVENUE· 2 w/lireplaces, garage and
INSIDE ANO OUT! Raised story home, 3 be*ooms,. much more to offer, Call today!
ranch with 4 bedrooms, living living room, dining room,
'
1715

room w/new carpet, kitchen, kitchen , 2 car g~rage.' NeW
basement wifh tamily rom &amp; 1
car garage . Concrete drive . carpi3tlng &amp; . more. OWNER BRICK.t 1/2 STORY AT THE

#717 EDGE

Additional lot with mob.ile ·WANTS SOLD $40'S.
home hook-up and oversizeo.

garage. Total acreage approx.

2.92.

OF

bed~ooms,

TOWNI

2 baths , ·li

room, kitchen. large

t748

porch. Convenient.

1712

DON
TATE
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' OH.
GALLIPOLIS,

1-77 connector work begins this week
Local efforts made job's
first phase into a reality
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
Meigs countians have waited,
worried and worked 27 years for
this day.
Today, the county's first state
highway project will begin since
the four-lane was completed
between Darwin and Rock Springs.
After a ceremonial ground
breaking, Kokosing Construction
Co. is to begin building the 2.25mile section between Rock Springs
and Five Points.
The $12.3 million project- the
first phase of. the county's 18.5mile U.S. Route 33/Interstate 77
· connector - should be completed
by spring 1996.
This highway will serve as
· another step toward development,
said Nancy Yoacbam, ODOT
spokeswoman.
"Yes, the governor committed
to tbis project to bring economic
. development here," Yoacbam said
of Gov. George Voinovicb's 1990
campaign pledge.
Since the Ravenswood (W.Va.)
· Bridge was completed in fall of
. 1981, meetings and petition drives
on thew connector have been held
from Fairfield County in Ohio to
Jtickson County, W.Va.

"All those counties designated
Ibis as the first priority," Yoacbam
added. "This is the first step in
what has taken many, many, many
steps to get here."
.
The 2.25 stretch of bigh-xay is
tbe first of five sections between
Roell Springs and Ravenswood.
This portion will also complete the
State Route 7 bypass around Middleport and Pomeroy.
Local people made Ibis project
possible, Yoacham said.
"There are so many local people
that were behind this project; that
have wanted this; that have cried
tears for Ibis," she said. "I wish we
could recognize them all. I hope
an equipment operator uses a bulldozer to prePREPARING FOR CONSTRUCTION they know how greatly they're
pare the site. The road wiD collhect to the end of
· Kokoslng Construction Co. employees set to
appreciated."
·
the
existing four-lane, at right. Groundhreaklng
construct the first section of the U.S. 3311-77
Area residents have been made
for
the connector's first phase from Rock
Connector Road this spring have been busy'
many .promises in· the past, said
Springs
to Five Polnls was held this afternoon: ·
preparing .a location for the company traDer on
Stev,e Story, local connector _coor(Sentinel photo)
Pomeroy Pike near. Melp IUgb School. Above,
dinator.
Julia Houdasbelt-Thornton;
"I'm pleased. It's the first
business. It's possible to upgrade needed progress.
installment on a long overdue · county economic development the utilities on the site," Thornton
"lbe question is, bow long is it
promise made by the state of director, said many industrial and
said.
"But
it's
no!
possible
on
my
going
to take to do tbe second
Ohio," Story said. "The next sec- warehouse sites could be located
part
or
even
the
county
to
put
a
phase?"
Kitchen said.
tion is the most critical part. Then it ncar the proposed highway.
This highway should serve as a
transportation route in."
will be a true connector on both
"It's the most important step
Business traffic typically travels catalyst for local individuals to
, ends."
forward that can happen to the north to south, particularly between · work even harder, be added. The
This portion between the county," Thornton said of the con- Columbus and Charleston, W.Va.
county should try to attract small,
Ravenswood bridge and Rolandus nector.
"Our county has been coming light industry, Kitchen added.
is scheduled nex~ he added.
Some business prospects have together," Thornton $l!id.
"In one way I'm excited,''
"We hope the rest of tbe con- avoided this county beCI\use of Its
Ch~ck_ Kitch~o, Mejgs. County
Kitchen said. "It's going to show
nector can be expedited,'~ Story· · lack-ofbigbway-access;-sbe-added: ·-Chamber
of Commerce president, · ·that Meigs County is fmally getting
said.
"It's possible to get a lead on a said the connector will bnng much- somewhere."

Dole: .CI-issident colleague
By JIM ABRAMS
·Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Senate
Majoiity Leader Bob Dole says be
• re~ted an offer by Sen. Mark Hat·
field 10 resign from the Senate so
that the balanced budget amendment that Hatfield opposed would
·
not go down to defeat.
Hatfield, ~liisting pleas from his
Republican .colleagues, was the
lone Republican to vote against the
coos!itutiooal amendment last
week. He joined 33 Democrats to
send the ametldmen~ which needed
app1:0val by two-thirds of the senators, to a one-vote defeaL
•·
Dole. R-Kan., speaking on
CBS' Face IM Nation Sunday, said
the Oregon senator sliD faces po~si­
ble recriminations from his fellow
Republicans, who are drafting a letter to Dole discussing Hatfield's
defection.
"I haven't made that judgment," Dole said when asked
whether Hatfield might "be forced
to step down from his powerful
position as chairman of tbe Senate

Appropriations Committee. "I can
find other senators who have sort
of strayed away on different votes
this year."
But Dole said Republicans were
frustrated about the Hatfield vote,
and new members in particular
"fed that this ought to be examined."
.
.
He said Hatfield "made a mis·
take. He's pan or the leadership."
Dole said be told Hatfield before
the vote that his opposition was a ·
reflection on the Republican party
and its Senate leader.
Hatfield responded by offering
. to resign before the vote, which
would have given amendment supporters 66 of 99 votes, the twothirds majority.
"He indicated at that time that,
if I wanted him to, he would resign.
That would reduce the number of ·
votes. I said, 'That's not an option, ·
Mark,"' Dole said.
Hatfield confirmed Dole's
account about the resignation offer
in a statement issued later Sunday.
"I made this offer out of loyalty

-·

.

A Pomeroy man accused of"
beating bis girlfriend's 13-montbold baby daughter pleaded guilty
Friday IIIQffiing to a felony charge
of endangering children.
.
Timothy T. Thomas, 3 7,
appeared Friday morning before
Judge Robert Buck .in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Thomas beat ihe child on Dec.
17, 1994, causing heavy bruising
from the child's waist 10 its knees, .
according to court records. He was
arrested later by the Pomeroy
Police Department after the baby's
mother took her to a hospital for
treaunent.
'
Endangering cbildren is a second-degree felony punishable by a
maximum prison term of 1S years
atid a $7,500 fine. Thomas will be
senten~ a1 a later date.
Prosecutors said they _will ask

By GEORGE ABATE
designed, sold and built, she added;
Sentinel News Staff
Also, where the connector ends
While work begins on the con- at Five Points cannot predetennine
ncctor projcc~ other state highway · where the next phase of the conprojects in the regign are in various . nector begins, Yoacbam said. The
stages of completion, acco~ding to interchange cannot be· completed .
an·Ohio Dcpariment of Transpona- because the project would be dislion spokeswoman.
qualified for federal funding.
Next phase
Ath•ns to Dorwln
Tbe next phase of the connector
The
development
of U.S. 33
will be builL between the
between
Athens
and
Darwin
is far.
Ravenswood (W.Va.) Bridge and
ther
along
than
the
highway
nearest
Rolandus, said Nancy Yoacham, ·
tbe Ravenswood bridge, Yoacbam
regional ODOT spokeswoman.
said
.
Consultants have been completThe
project consultant has subing tbe environmental document
a
draft of the environmental
mitted·
surrounding the project, since 'it
had to be updated when American document to federal highway o(fi..
Electric Power agreed to let the cials, she said. Bu~ the federal offistale build across its property, cials are at least four months
behind the deadline.
Yoacham said.
"Once federal highways returns
The document should. be fin ished sometime late Ibis year and it, trust me, DistrictiO will work
will then be submitted for review . diligently to gel the design fin·
by federal highway officials, she ished," Yoacham said.
said.
_
A public hearing will then be ·
"We're hoping to have a public set. It was originally anticipated to
hearing in early spring to summer be beld this October, she added.
of 1996," Yoacbam said.
ODOT bas om set a projecied
Then, the project will be
(Conllnued on l'llge 10)

an abrupt bait, ·and the days since
. By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
have
been dedicated largely to matAssociated Press Writer
ters
outside
the jury's presence,
LOS ANGELES - With the
including:
credibility of ·their star wilhess in
tallers and their wallets $1,900
legal wrangle over the reluc·
lighter, O.J . Simpson's lawyers
now have a chance to give a prose· tant Lopez, who threatened to nee
cutlon witness the Rosa Lopez • to her native El Salvador rather
'
. than wait around a few months to
treaunent.
Tom Lange, the long-absent provide alibi testimony for Simp·
jW)' may vaguely recall, is .one of son;
the lead investigators in the Simp•. the video!ilped testimony of
son case. When last on tbe witness
stand - back on Feb. 23 - be was Lopez, a former maid who used to
being cross-examined about police live next-door to Simpson, who
claims to have seen Simpson's
procedure by Johnnie CQCb{an Jr.
.
That inquiry was scheduled to Bronco parked outside his hou.se at
resume today, followed by prose- about tbe lime of the murders;
cution witne~s Brian ''Kato''
Kaelin, the last person to see Simp• the subsequent grueling crossson before the June 12 ~ashing examination that yielded more "I
deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson don't remembers"· than a Waterand Rooald Goldman.
gate hearing and left serious quesDuring qoss -examinalion of tions al)oul whether the defense
Lange, Cochran tried to portray will ever use Lopez in its case;
police and coroner's investigators
at the scene of the murders as so
. • another legal Agbt, tbis one
sloppy that critical evidence was
ignored. or contaminated, and over tl!e defense's belated submispotential leads in Simpson's favor sion of a taped Lopez interview
that Coc~mm· and another attorney
were missed.
· But Lange's testimony came to · claimed didn't exist., ,

•a

PLEADS GUll.TY - A Pomeroy man accused ot booting bls
glrltriend's baby In December 1994 pleaded guilty Friday to a
charge of endangerin11 c~ildren. Timothy T. Thomas, rlgbt, Is "·
· shown bere with public defender William Safranek. (Sentinel
pboto)
.
.
.
for the maximum penalty but will
not pursue a fine since Thomas i's
Indigent.
In exchange for the plea, prosecutors decided to not prosecute
Thomas on a felonious assault
charge, also a second-degree
felony.
.
"This is a very sad case ... as
-~-

.
•

New roads and portions of exist·
ing highways will -be added to
Meigs County and Salisbury Township road systems as pa~ of the
first phase of 1be 18.S·mtle U.S,
33/1 nterstate 77 connector project
being dedicated today.
The portion of State Route 7
between Pomeroy and Five Points
will be turned over to the county
after this project is finished, said
Nancy Yoacham, an Ohio Department
of
Transportation
spokeswoman.
ODOT will repair and bolster
the slip just south of Five Points
before it is transferred, Yoacbam
said.
.
"The·road will be in best' condition as possible before we give it .
back to the county, ;• she said.
"We've rcpairect 'iinii repaired' ovec
the years. When it's a slip in the
highway like that, to truly nx it,
there has to be some major work."
EventuallY., the Five . Points
interchange w11l be set up different·
ly to accommodate the four-lane
highway, Yoacham said.
"This is going to complete tbe
Route 7 bypass :.s well as start the
Ra venswood Connector,'' sire
added.
.
Salisbury ·Township will also
(Continued on Pase 10) .

Chastened O.J. defense team
turns foe u.s on police witness

Additional charge
·will
be dropped,
.
prosecution says ·

.,

•

to my party and out o.f loyalty to
my leader,'' Hatfield said . "I was
disturbed that some were using my
vote to question his leadership.
Sen. Dole declined my resignation
and I proceeded to vote on tbi: merits of the amendment as I saw
·them."
Oregon's other Republican senalar, Senate Finance Committee
Chalnnan Bob Packwood, said be
didn't think Hatfield would lose his'
cbainnansbip.
Packwood told reporters in OreBOB DOLE
goo, "Nothing is going to happen
to Mark. He will remain as Appro- federal budget is strong,'' Hatfield
priations chainnan, Could somt:Qne said in his statement. "We know
call for his removal? Yes. Will that what to·do and we len ow how to do
happen? No, it will not, and it it. A Republican-led Congress bas
should not.
its first opportunity in 40 years to
"If we start going down that show the American public that we
road, what will be the next liunus can make the politically difficult
test issue? If you start down that choices necessary to balance the
road, we' II soon be eating each budget. We do not need to amend
other; and we will become political ' tbe Constitution in order to do that.
cannibals," said Packwood, who
"It is my inte~tion to lead the
bas bad his job challenged because ·Senate A(lproprialions Committee
~f sexual harassment allegations.
in taking the steps necessary to
" My commiunentto a balanced reduce the deficit immediately."

Beating
suspect
pleads

Township,
county take
over roads

COOT forges ahead
with area ·projects .

may face··payback for vote

~·

'

1 Section, 10 Paget 35 conta
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, -Monday, March 6, 1995

Map on Page 10

plus wilh an auto. door opener. plu5 a detached 14'x16'
insulated workshop, a 24'x32' metal pole bam with con-

LOT- SPRING SUBDIVISION
One large lot approx. t01'x17t '. City water, city sewer,

Vol. 45, NO. 216
Copy;lght1995

•'

bad a crime as we've ever seen
against a child," Said assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenaglia.
"The child bas recovered fully
and will probably not remember
the incident· . wbich is the fortu nate thing," be lidded. ·
Thomas was represented by
public defender WiUiam Safranek.

' jury
During all this time, the
was on Iy in the counroom twice.
The f~rst time was when jurors
were ~ ailed into court in sweat
pants and T-shirts one Friday .
evening, only' to be told the judfe
made a mistake and that tbey d
h~ve 10 go back to their tempoouy
home.
1be second occasion was when
the judge bounced one of their own
for ~nspecified reasons and
replaced that juror with an alternate .

The panel last tasted freedom on
Jan. 10, the day before tbey were I
sequestered.

··--,

--

•

It all boiled over when ·Judge
Lance Ito fined Cochran .and
defense auorney Carl Douglas
$950 each for withholding the
taped interview, and promised, if
Lopez' videotaped testimony is
ever shown to the jW)', to tell panelists the defense broke the law in
withholding the audio tape.

,..; ·
'

-

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