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••

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 15, 1995

.,

Gaskill, Blackwood are
named Paul Harris Fellows

SAMANTHA CUMMINS

Celebrates fourth
birthday recently
Samanllla Larie Cummins celebrated her fourth birtbday Nov. 18
with a party at her borne.
A Pocobontas theme was carried
out and cake, sandwiches, chips,
ice cream and punch
served.
Those attending or sending gifts
were Brian and Delani Cummins,
Bob and Karen Baker, Luther
Boothe, Cathy VanNess, Kristi,
Sarah and Jacob Boston; D~ n yan
and Wade Collins: Eric ~ r,· ncer;
Chad Cummins; Amy and Seth
Kline, Betty Millhone, Mike,
Kalcen, Joshua and Breanna Hayman, Dixie Savel and Rhonda
Cogar.
After the party Santa made a
visit.

were

Long time Rotary Ann and
Rotarian Maxine Gaskill and president Lloyd Blackwood were honored as Paul Hanis Fellows by Ule
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
at lbeir Monday night meeting at
Healb Methodist Cbun:b.
Also honored was Bernard Fultz
as a Rotary Foundation Benefacror
for additional contributions beyond
the Paul Hanis Fellow level, wbicb
be bad been awarded previously. .
The Paul Harris Fellow award is
named for Paul Harris, the founder
of Rotary International. The award
is presented in appreciation of tangible and significant assistance
given for the furtherance of better
understanding and friendly relations among peoples of the world.
The awards were prcsemed at
the meeting by Ponney Cisco of
Oak Hill. the imJnediate oast District Governor of District 6690. and
David Lusty of Athens, the current
District Governor of Rotary International.
Cisco was introduced by Rotary
Foundation Committee chairman
and Paul Harri s Fellow Gene
Riggs. Other local Paul Harris Fellows are Charles Blakeslee and the
late Lee McComas.
Cisco noted that the Rotary
Foundation of Rotary International
spent about $65 million on its
world-wide charities in 1993-94

and bas spent over $700 million
since its inception in 1930. No portion of dues mbney goes into the
foundation funds. For the fust tjuee
years after donations are made, the
interest income is used by tbe
Rotary International with 60 per·
cent of the money coming back to
the local district. The remaining
money is spent worldwide.
The most notable example of
~orld wide programs, according to
Mr. Cisco is the Polio Plus Program which is aiming for a world
free of polio by the year 2000. Mr.
Cisco pointed out that 147 countries are now free of polio and over
five hundred million children have
been immunized since 1985.
Other examples of world wide
programs are cataract surgery for
20 people in India, reforesting
5,000 trees to help reforest
· Guatemala. and providing prosthetic limbs for 12 disabled people in
Thailand.
President Lloyd Blackwood was
also honored by Cisco and Lusty
for having brought 14 new members into the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club during the last three
years. Mr. Blackwood presented a
gift to both the speakers and also
reminded the members that the
annual Christmas party for members and their families will be next
week.

•

Deck
the halls!

~ -i~ .. !_'

Cybill has aJrived, again
By LYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - The prime
of Ms. CybiU Shepherd has arrived,
again . And tbe actre ss is nearly
ready for it this time.
' There was acclaim, firs~ for the
provocative ingenue of "The Last
Picture Show." 'fben the surprising
emergence of a deft comedienne on
''Moonlighting .' ' Now the even
defter star. and co-producer to
lxiot, of "Cybill."
With a couple of devastating
intermissions of divorce, tabloid
trashing and "whatever happened
10 ... " as bridges.
When professional success and
oblivion alternate with the predictability of a wash-rinse-spin
cycle, a smart woman gets a handle
on it. Shepherd is very sm1111, but
sbe's still vulnerable.

Cocooned in a recliner in bcr
studio trailer, without makeup or
apparent defensiveness, the actress
examines the joys and perils of getting what you wish for. Over and
over.
"When you achieve that success
again, as I've been blessed to do,
es$Cntially to bavc a third act ... in
a career this long, it's an extraordinary thing," Shepherd said.
"You have to have been where
I've been, to have been IOtally forgotten and doing nothing, to appreciate it," she said. " The only job I
could get was regional (theater)
and playing jazz clubs and singing
outside New York and L.A."
"Just like you get older, right,
and you don ' t ltnow what you've
got 'til it's gone? I've lost it a few
times . I know bow quickly they
forget. "

night In the hospital cafeteria. Following
presentation, board members gave Impromptu
recollections of having worked with Fultz over
the yeats. Fultz, who bas retired as the hospital's attorney, expressed his hopes for the hospital's continued success and commended Lucas
for his work as administrator over the years.

PRESENTED AWARD - Meigs County
Attorney Bernard V. Fultz, leR, was pre.~ented
an engraved plaque In appreciation of his 31
years of service as legal advisor for Veterans
Memorial Hospital by Hospital Administrator
Scott Lucas, right, at the annual Christmas dinner for hospital board members Wednesday

They being fans, like the airpon
security guard who squeals "Ob,
Cybill, I love you!" as she's frisking her. And who probably
wouldn't have loved her last year,
before "Cybill" made a splash
with critics and viewers (it airs 8
p.m . EST Sundays on CBS).
Shepherd sparltJes as an actress
juggling an iffy career, two ex-hus bands and two daughters. And,
with the superb Christine Baranski
as ber wine-swilling foil, sbe is half
of the wittiest gal-pal team around.
Chad Everett returns as Shepherd's love interest in Ibis Sunday's episode, with Baranski doing
her best to undermine the affair.
Shepherd was part of another
popular duo when she and Bruce
Willis starred in the 1985-89
"Moonlighting."

Details

on Page A2

Cookies and punch were served
from table decorated with holly and
poinsettias. Marge Reuter, Bernice
Carpenter and Evelyn Clark were
hostesses.
Plans were discussed for winter
meetings and it was decided that
meetings will be hold on the second Monday of each month at 2 '
p.m in the afternoon. The pastor
gave the group an up-to-date report
on the cooperative parish and an • - -- - · ~ "-...)
offering was taken. He also noted
J ARRET L. DURST ·
that Alice Wamsley has been designated representative 10 the CIH)p
and will attend the meetings.
Tim and Kristi Durst of Middleport announce the birth of a son
Jarrct Lincoln, Nov. 3. He weighed
stx pounds, I I ounces and was 2tJ
inches long.
Grandparents are M itcbell
(Glen) Parsons of Leon, W. Va.,
and Donna Browning of Point
Pleasant, W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Durst of Middleport.

Announce bJ"rth

Over

Baskets
$4.98
To
$29.98

programs
whose
restsfedon
the
re.olutton
oft hefate
current
eral budget impasse is one that
means a lot at this time of the
year to the area"s low-income
residents. the executive director of Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency -.id.
Sidney Edwards said that the
Heating and Energy Assistance
Program is funded for the cur-

of Bulk

Candy

rent year - at a slightly lower level than 1994 - ·but
whether funding is awarded for next year or the program
is eliminated remains unknown.
'"HEAPis oneofthe items
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - on the chopping block."
•HEAP funding for the coming year Edwards said. "'I don ' t think
has been frozen In the budget dispute it'll happen, but then I won "t
anything until the
·b8tween Congresa and the White House. know
budget is approved .""
Some congreaamen have advocated Its HEAP provides assistance
elimination, While others are pleading for to low-income people to
the release of fUnds for the needy until heat their homes· in winter.
the budget Ia approved.
The programcon,ists of two
offerings: regular HEAP to

Board hires
architect for
Racine library
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel StaH
RACINE - An architect to
design a new library building in
Racine has been hired by the
Meigs County Library Board of
Trustees.
Hired to do the design work
has been Burgess and Nipple of
Columbus. Tentative plans call
for a one-story. 3.000square foot.
structure to be built on Tyree
Boulevard at Pearl Street in mid1996.
Meanwhile. advertising began
today on the sale and removal of
a nine-room house OQ the property. The house was formerly
known as the Betsy Tyree Pickens
home, and is located at I Pearl
Street. the proposed location for
the library building.
Bidders will be required to have
the house moved and the lot
cleaned up by April I. The Board
in their advertisement for bids
reserves the right to refu.&gt;e any
and all bids. Questions concerning that sale may be directed to
992-5813.
In September the board purchased the site of approximately
si• acres from Herbert White and
Patsy White.
Plans for building a branch of
the Meigs Public Library in
Racine have been under consideration by the Board of Trustees
for several years .
Earlier a site at the corner of
Fourth and Pearl was donated by
the Home National Bank of
Racine but when the plans were
drawn and the project adverti.sed
Continued on
A2

30
Varieties

6 W' Pot
8" Pot

$12.98
Available In:
Red-Pink-White-Marble

Christmas Trees Now Reduced
White Pine &amp; Scotch Pine

Choice $20.00
Frazier Fir &amp; Douglas Fir •.•..
Reduced Aeeordingly
~

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
1/4 Mile North of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, Mason, wv
Phone (304) 773-5721
OPEN: Mon.·Sal. 8 a.m.· 8 p.m. Sun. 9 a.m. • 8 p.m.

Vol. 30, No. 45
until the budget is approved.
Local HEAP funding for
I YY 5 was cut about 25 per··

Budget impasse threatens
HEAP funds in Gallia, Meigs
By KEVIN KELLY
nmes-Senllnel StaH
CHESHIRE - One of the many social assistance

Pomeroy UMW holds
annual Christmas dinner

Christmas

awarded to bears In several categories. Pictured
with their hears are second graders, Rachatl
Gardner, Ashley Savage, Bobby Thompson,
Kayleigh Ward, William Taylor, Tiffany Green,
Miranda Beha, Nichole Mull, Brand&lt;&gt;il Giles, j.
B. King, Amanda Leniger, Brittany King, Jake
Older, Travis Burbridge, and Josh Parlow.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gall 1pol1s-Pt. Pleasant- December 17, 1995

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

f~t\c.-; Fruit

A TEDDY BEAR TRffiUTE - Students at
Harrisonville Elementary recently celebrated
Teddy Roosevelt's birthday by bringing their
own teddy bears to the school library. F..ach class
was read a story about Pres. Roosevelt by Carolyn Nicholson school librarian. There was a display of books about hears, and prizes were

Clear, colder
ovemlght

tmts -

j •- ~

....

Low: 20s

•

Chelsea Holter celebrated ber
second binhday recently at the
bomc of her parents, Stanley and
tonya Holter.
A Barbie theme was carried out
for ihe party. Attending were ber
brolber, Chrisropher. great-grandfather, Natha Pickens, grandparents,
Glenn and Marie Young, Bob, Carrie. Decca and Matthew Roush,
Chuck, Vanessa and Dessa Jacks,
Armintba Norris, Anita Holter, Bill .
and Joan Pickens, Carrie Roush,
Lester Carol, Michael and Zachary
Mandai.
Sending cards and gifts were
Bill and Linda Holter, Gertrude
Rizer. Kelly Rizer, Kenda and Jon
GASKILL HONORED - Long time Rotary Ann and Rotarian
Campbell, Janet Holter, Kate and
Maxine Gaskill was honored as 11 Paul Harris Fellow at the recent
Dana Holter. Rex and Ethel Coopmeeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary. Pictured are (L to R)
cr. B ill, Dianna, Jill and Jared
past district governor Ponney Cisco, Gaskill, and district governor
David Lusty.
Baker.

l

High: 40s

•Pagec1

NATO orders deployment. Page As

Featured on (JIIge 8 -1

BLACKWOOD HONORED - Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
president Lloyd Blackwood was honored as a Paul Harris Fellow
at the recent meeting of the Rotary. Pictured are (L to R) Blackwood, past district governor Ponney Cisco, and district governor
David Lusty.

Second birthday
observed recently

Montana beats Marshall

•.. With lights
of the season

The Pomeroy United Methodist
Women met for their Christmas
dinner at Crow's Restaurant at 6:30
p.m Tuesday.
There were 21 members and
Pastor Bob Robinson who gave
grace. After the dinner the group
went to the church for a program
by Joann Robinson. Several carols
were sung led by the pastor with
Mrs. Robinson at the organ. She
then set up an easel for a chalk
drawing of the Holy Family. While
sbe was drawing, her music was
played 011 a tape and her voice
reading the Christmas story.

CHELSEA HOLTER

s1 oo

Along the River

.
0

help pay energy bill s. and · emergency HEAP to assisl
eligible applicants in danger of being l"Ul oiT from their
heating source.
Applications fur regular HEAP will be taken by CAA
until March 3 t. and emergency HEAP is availahle unltl
March 15.
Heating aid fund s come from federal sources and are
d1stnbuted to the states. In Ohio's case. the money is
filtered to CAA by the state Department of Development.
CAA handles the local administration of funds .
HEAP fundin g for the coming year has been fro zen in
the budget di spute bet wee nCongress and the White Hnu se
Some congressmen ha ve ad vocated its elimination. wh ile
others are pleadmg for the release of funds for the needy

d

·
n
.
ne
roa
again
Bookmobile
t~L.

returns to
Meigs s_chools
after 20 Years
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel SlaH
POMEROY - After many years
without bookmobile service. Meigs
County schools are again on"the list of
scheduled stops for the "'Dream Machine."'
The bookmobile. on the road under
operation of the Meigs County Library. is making bi-weekly visits to
the grounds of all elementary school s
with the exception of those in
Middleport and Pomeroy where · ti. braries are located.
The Library 's Board of Trustees
recently reinstated bookmobile service to the schools. It has been nearly
20 years since the service was discontinued.
The visits are
open not only to
the students but
also to anyone
else in the community interested in borrowing or returning books
and other library materials.
The new sc hedule started this month
and will include stops every other
week on Monday at Tuppers Plains.
Harrisonville and Bradbury; on Tuesday at Riverview and Rutland, on
Wednesday at Portland and Salem
Center: on Thursday at Letart and
Syracuse and on Friday at Chester,
and Salisbury.
The bookmobile will continue its
schedule of
and its

rjl' D(l Ji ll

( ..11.

f, . .

~! _,,.·('. , .t (.' 1t;JW

(ent . m'•"tl y foradministra-

one
Items on the chopping
block ... I don't think It'll
happen, but then I won't
know anything until the
budget Is approved."
Gollla-Melga CAA
Exec. Dlr.

mor,than
halfway
to goal
for '96

.

"'

.•

•'

li~ ve we'' ill , lay in operation

"" But 1t" s also like your
porketbook - you can·t

Std Ewards

. , pent! wha t' I)Udon 't have."
he add ed. ·
The number o f Gallia and Meig."' n:-. itll'n ts who utili 7_~
both rt'gu lar um1 t: lncrge n(y HEAP ha., rcmai ned the ~a me
over the year'\. he ' aid

Continued on page A2

Regents• budget
request includes
.
nearly $1M for Rio
RIO GRANDE- The Ohio Board ofRe gentssent Gov . George Voinnvir h
a $577 million list of proposed building projects
Friday for the st ale·s in stitution s ofhighereducatiun
that was based on new rul es to curb an appetite for
construction.

The Regents" pac ~ag c includ ed a $1J69,X65 re ·
quest for Rio Grande Communu y Co llege.
Herman Koby . Ph.D.. RGCC\ secretary/treasurer.
said Saturday Rio Granue" s re~u es t for fundin g
reflected two separate budget item s. with $250.000
of the 101al designated toward bas ic huilding renovation ~. repai rs anti mainl ~ nan (( . The remainderofthe
request would be all oc.Jted toward construction of

the in stitution ·s planned College of l-lusmess build ·
mg .
Kohy , who serve s as Ri o Grande · s viet: pre-;idcnt
for facilities and long range planning. ~aid fundin £

for the new bu ilding included a $ 1 million alh&gt;&lt;.·ation prev1oust y approved by
the state. plus the $7 1Y.K75
reyuc' l submilled Friday.
Regional budget requests Additionall y. Rio Grande
Amounts the Ohio 8011rd of Regenlll recommended In construction money for regional unlveraltles, community and technical colleges:
INsmvnoN
Rio Grande
Hocking Tech
Ohio University
Shllwnee State
OU - Chillicothe
OU -Ironton
regular visits to the. nursing homes
and The Maples, an elderly hou sing
facility.
Bookp10biles have been traveling
Meigs County highways and by-ways
for 30 years.
The .service started on Jan. I. 1965.
Discussion began a year or so earlier

when the Pomeroy and Middleport
Library Boardsunderthe pres idency
of Charles E. Blakeslee and lhe late
Lee McComas, decided to pursue
the additional library service.
A Iibrary consu Itant from the Ohio
State Library came to Meigs County

attempting to force unacceptable cuts in programs
affecting the lives of children. the elderly and the
poor.
Republicans responded that the budget blueprint
Clinton has offered is based on smoke and mirrors
and would leave a sea of red ink after seven years.
Clinton insisted that his budget would do the job
without hurting programs for people, harming the
environment or raising ta•es on the working poor.
At midday the President convened a meetmg at
Blair House with a large cross section of congressional Democrats, saying ·he hoped the party would
unify around a single approach and then reach out
again to Republicans.
'"We are determined that Democrats have to work
together wtlh R ~publicans to achieve a balanced
budget that is consistent with our principles, '" Clinton
said as the meeting began. "We hope we can get back
to a constructive dialogue that is consistent with our
values ...
" We want to reach as much agreement among
ourselves as possible." he said.
Clinton again called Republican tactics "wrong

iscontluctinga 'b2rnillitm
capital campaign tit' si ~ net!
to rii se funds for construc -

tion oft he husiness buiiJ.i·
lllg

Linder th e state 's nd\\o
process.
inJividu :.il

TOTAL
969,875

8,285,569

.schools will pay for their
huild ing projee1' from ai ·

26,n3,593
2,070,004
696,867
59,859

l ocation ~

in the ir own op-

erali ng budgets.
The money to build still
will come mainly from the

state. which will utili ze a formul a based on institulu&gt;n:li enrollment.
But advocates of tht: new prou:v.. si..iiU that college~ wouiJ 'ipend Jc s\ ()n
constructi on if they mwa tleducl the mnne)' from their own budgcls .
·' In many respects. the prm:e..;s is more impnrtant than any . ; ingle projecl or
the amount of the budget request.·· Regen!\ ChancelJi&gt;r Elaine Hairston told
the regents .
· ·11 repre.~ ents a major hrcakthrou gh in fund In£ policie s. and pro mise s to

Continued on page A2

United Fund United Fund News capsules
campaign
of Melga County
1996 Cllm{Mign
Partial shutdown of federal government ordered
past halfway
$15,000
WASHINGTON (AP) - Parts of the !ederal govDrive
now
ernment
were ordered shut down Saturday as Presipoint in drive
• Ohio Bureau of Employment Service of·
$12,000
dent Clinton blamed the Republican Congress for
By TOM HUNTER
Sllnllnel News StaH
POMEROY- Successful fund rais·
ing efforts for the United Fund for
Meigs County have brought the organization past the halfway point of their
$18.000 goal for 1996. according to
United Fund president Susan Oliver.
To date. over $9.000 has been received undlor pledged to the United
Fund, with the latest contribution of
$1,529 rai sed through the annuai'Dress a Doll" auction held at Fanners' Bank
on Dec. 9.
The dolls were purchased by the bank, with county residents volunteering
to dress the dolls for the charity auction. Forty individuals supported the
auction. with bank employees supporting the auction by purchasing several of
the llfty-four dolls sold to benelit the United Fund. Oliver said. .
The auction was conducted by Umted Fund Board members, auctiOneer Dan
Smith, and JoAnn Williams, hank vice-president and chairman of the doll
auction.
.
The United Fund for Meigs County was formed in 1993 to provide a local
agency to solicit funds and provide financial assistance to county non-profit
groups and agencies.
One hundred percent of the money raised by the United Fund for Meigs
County is given to groups in Meigs County who have requested support and
are eligible for funding by federa15013C status, Ohver sa1d.
.
In 1995, twelve groups, including the American Cancer Society of Metgs
County, Meigs County Cooperative Parish, Meigs Industries, Middleport Arts
Council, and the Meigs County Museum rece1ved fundmg for spec•al proJects
and events, Oliver added.
The 1996 fundraising drive officially kicked on October 5th, with the annual
kickoff breakfast attended by representatives of funded organizations and
local businesses who were donors to the United Fund.
Continued on page A2

ti veex penses. Edwards said.
What a fulure of potenti~l
federal cutbacks holds con rern s hi m and CAA . he
added.
·
"" I don·l know what it :ll
do to us:· " "d Edwards. who
has headeLI CA A fort he paSt
I J year . . . " I \...now services
won't he the " 'me as they
were in lhe past. but I he-

flees across the state, Including the Gallipolis
ottt-=e which serves Gallla and Meigs counties,
are again prepared for an Influx of federal
workers with 11nemployment claims.
Federal workers who receive notice to stay
home from work should report to an OBES
claim ceriter on Dec. 20, 21 or 22 to file unemployment compensation claims.

and unwarrant~d . ""
"" We should not leave a legacy of debt,"" he said in his
weekly radio address. '" Neither should we leave the neKl
generation a legacy of neglect.··
·"The fact s are plain.'' Clinton said. ' "The Congress has
failed to pass a budget for this next year and they have
deliberately done this to force me to accept their long-term
agenda of big cuts in Medicare . Medicaid. education and
the environment and a tax increase on working people.'"
""For them to cause a government shutdown denying
them the services their tax dollars support as a tactic in the
budget debate is wrong ; I won't give into the threat,"" the
presi~~nt said "I am not going to let them hurt our children .

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Se11tillel
15 Stclions - t6Z Pa~es

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
IIJ
ll3-7

Insert
A6

i\3
A7
-Ct-8
Bl

-·

A1

Columns
Jack Anderson
Jim Sands
Bob Hoenich
Dorothy Savre

A4

Bl
B6
B3

Cabell County woman fo,rced into car•s trunk while sister flees
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- A Cabell County woman was forced into
the trunk of her car by a man who then took her older sister into their house
and threatened to kill her, police said.
Margaret Lansaw, 19, and her sister Catharine Lansaw, 21 , of Huntington,
said they were leaving for a party Friday night when a man jumped out from
behind bushes surrounding the house, police Officerl.M. Zimmerman said.
He forced Margaret Lansaw into the trunk at gunpoint and then took

Catharine Lansaw into the house, covered her up and threatened to kilt her.
The man then went outside and Catherine Lansaw run to a neighbor" s
house. She said she heard two gunshots, Zimmerman said .
Police arrived and helped Margaret Lansaw from the trunk. The man had
fired two shots into the .trunk. grazing her with one of them . Margaret Lansaw
was treated and released from Cabell Huntington Hospital.
A Cabell County deputy said Saturday no arrests had been made .

•

s

�,:J

· Continued from page A1

Continued from page A 1

"We have a lot of people in need in
both counties because their income is
below the poveny guidelines," he said.
"They know it's a wonhwhile program because it keeps people warm
and its saves energy. which is a goal
for the state ."
Also affected is another program
CAA handles. weathenzation of
homes to improve energy conservation and savings.
Edwards allended a meeting in
Manella Friday with the Corporation
for Appalachian Development, which
distributes fede ral funding fort he program, Dunng the meeting, Edwards
presented a preliminary budget for
1996 reflecting a projected 50 percent
cui. Weatherization is different from
the housing rehabilitation program
CAA offers. which has been responsible for a number of home improvements for eligible propeny owners in
the Bidweli-Poner area si nce 1994.
"We won'1 get our bid package for
rehab grants ready until February,"
Edwards said.

Continued from page A1

According to Oliver. employees
of American Electric Power have
played an important part in the success of the United Fund reachong
goals of$6.000 in 1993. and $12,000
in 1994.
AEP's James Gavin power plant
and their employees were the biggest contributors 10 the Uniled Fund
in 1993 and 1994. Southern Ohio
Coal Company and Ohio Power
have also been big contributors over
the past two years. Oliver stated .
Officers for the United Fund for
Meigs County Board of Directors
are president Susan Oliver, vicepresident Vicki Morrow. secretary
Chloris Gaul. and treasurer Tom
Dooley.
Members of the United Fund
board are Cath y Crow. Herb Elliott.
Debbie Haptonstall. Sue Maison.
Cindy S. Oliveri. Emma Paugh, and
John Riebel.

UNITED WAY for Meigs County president Susan Oliver (right) Is
pictured receiving the first donation lor the ~ 996 United Fund drive, a
$1,100 check from Herb Elliott (right) of Southern Ohio Coal Company
at the October kickoff breakfast. To date, over $9,000 has been raised
toward the $18,000 goal set by the United Fund for their 1996 campaign.
Also plctur&amp;d Ia 1996 campaign chairman Dick Warner (center).

Ohio Valley soggy, Midwest cool

OHIO Weather

(AP) - An inch of snow blanketed ground Saturday morning in the ce ntral
Nevada town of Austin and in Maine al Ponland. II was a balmy 75 degrees at
Key West, Fla .. before daybreak.
Rain and some higher elevation snow fell Saturday from the eastern slopes
of the Sierra Nevada and southern California to Wyoming. Colorado and New
Me.,ieo. with heavy thundershowers in places.
A blanket of warm air moving onto the non hem West C'oasl produced rain
,and higher elevation snow over western Washington and Oregqn and overt he
northwestern corner of California.
Rains soaked the Ohio Valley Region overnight, and rain fell Saturday from
eastern Tennessee and Kentucky to parts of Pennsylvania. New Jersey,
Delaware. Maryland , Virginia and Nonh Carolina.
Some snow was mixed in over the central Appalachians.
Seasonably cool conditions prevailed around most of the nation's midsection.
A blast of cooler Canadian air began spreading into New England. and there
was a chance of snow, rain and freezing rain extending into New York. where
patches of drizzle were possible .
Covington. Ohio and Lexington, Ky .. recorded more than a half-inch of min
during a six-hour period that ended at I a.m. Saturday.
The nation's hot spot Saturday was Jacksonville, Fla .. at 85 degrees. The
coldest place was Ely, Minn .. at 1.7 below zero.

Sunday, Dec. 17
Ac c uWealher~ forecast for daytime condilions and

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•lcolumbusl44°

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Bookmobile returns to schools

W. VA

began proce ssing them.
After the purchase of a bookmobile, a contest was held in the schools
and the children named it "M r. Eddy
Educator." At first the bookmobile
administration was through theGallia
County Library, later it was underthe
Stale Library. and finally under the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL).
a group of several count1es which
joined together in December 1975 lo
better provide bookmobile service to
the area.
In 1989 the Meigs County Library
board decided notlo renew its bookmobile service contract with OVAL
and the next spring purchased it sown
vehicle.

Continued from page A1

KY

Showers T-srorms Ra1n

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Pr. Cloudy

Cloudy

Sunny Sunday in local forecast
Regional forecast: Sunday: Mostly sunny. High in the upper 40s.
State forecast: Sunday: Mostly sunny . Highs upper 30s and 40s.
Extended forecast: Monday: Increasing cloudiness with rain developing
from the south. Morning lows from the mid 20s to lower 30s. Highs mid 30s
to mid 40s.
Tuesday: Rain south and rain or snow north. Lows mid 20s to lower 30s.
Highs mid 30s to mid 40s.
.
Wednesday: Chance of snow mainly east. Lows in the 20s. Highs in the low
and mid 30s.
·

to talk about bookmobile service.
Walter Braham. state librarian made
several trips here to meet with the
budget commi ss ion, the library
boards, PTA's and other groups interested in bookmobile service.
After another series of meetings.
some negotiations with GalliaCounty,
and a visit from the acting state librarian, a check for $1500 was sent by the
State Library on July 16. 1964 to be
held in deposit until the service could
actually get staned.
Vilma Pikkoja. working as bookmobile librarian for Gallia County,
headed up the program to get bookmobileservice into MeigsCounty. ln
November, 1964 books staning coming into the county and were taken to
the junior fair building where Pikkoja

for bid, the figures came in well above
the projected cost
Since then the overall project has
bee~ re-evaluated by the Board of
Tru~tees who voted to purchase a
larger area which would accommodate a single floor structure and provide more parking space.
Money for the construction will
come from the building fund established several years ago by the Library trustees. That fund represents
monies received from the state in f' cess of that needed to operate the
main library at Pomeroy, the branch
in Middlepon and the book mobile.
Libraries are funded in Ohio by a
ponion of the personal income tax.
Currently 5.7 percent of that tax collected is allocated for operation of
libraries in Ohio.
The Racine branch will bet he fourth
major expansion in library.services to

GALLIPOLIS - Charles NoU Jr., 22, 26 Chillicothe Road, Gal·
lipoljs, was sentenced to 30 days in lbe Gallia County Jail, and two
years probation, after pleading guilty 10 a charge of aggravated Ires·
passing in Gallia County Common Pleas Court.
. The charge stemmed frotn an August incident at the Gallipolis
Boat Club investigated by city police, according 10 court records. •

Free clothing day scheduled
CHESHIRE- Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency's free
clothing day will be Wednesday from 9 a.m. until noon.
The agency clothing bank is located in the old schoolhouse
building in Cheshire.

City Commission meets Monday

Establishment of a Racine branch
is another step in the Libmry Board of
Trustees' plan to increase library services by making them more accessible to patrons.
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GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Conunission will meet in
special session at 5:30 p.m. Monday in the Gallipolis Municipal
courtroom.
Copies of the agenda will be available at the City Building and
the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library.

Christmas Day, Mon. Dec. 25
11:00 am· 2:30pm

i..

• Honey Baked Ham
w/Ralsln Sauce

• Whipped Potatoes
&amp; Gravy

and all the Trimmings
11: • Roast Sirloin of Beef
i._ • Cod Almandine
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· City offices to close at holiday

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ALL THIS FOR S10

Children 9 and under Only $5.95
Under 3 Eat Freel
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 446-0090

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446·0090

h~u~U:~~~u~~J

Continued from page A1

tot~~~reakdownofthe$577.3million

Mickey Mouse &amp;
Peoples Choice Presents:

M~blr.

The Associntt:d
Newspaper A1110Ciation .

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and lhe Ohio

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•nitr or Motor Routt

oneW..k......... .. ... ...

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No svbsulptions by mnll permined in areas

white motor carrier t.erVice is avrulable.

11x: Sunday 'limes-Sentinel will not be r~pon .
sible ror advance paymeJltsftoode to cruners.

See puzzle on page 02

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•BELTS
•CAR HARTT
•BUCKLES
•JUSTIN
•GEORGIA
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Pre-tour reception with valet parking
Deluxe motorco;.ch transportation inciuding fun and games
1\vo nights accommodations at the Ramada Hotel in Columbia,
South Carolina enroute
Three nights accommodations at the Crown Plaza Hotel at Walt
Disney World Village, including a buffet breakfast each morning and
unlimited shuttle service to all parks
Deluxe admission pass to Epcot, Walt Disney Magic Kingdom, MGM
Studio and more!
Admission and tour of Spaceport, USA at Cape Canaveral
All taxes, tips and gratuities included
Escorted by Mary Fowler, Peoples Choke Coordinator

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Price per person: $685 double occupancy; $850 single occupancy
Non-members please add $100.

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Deposit of $1 00 per person Is due by December 20, 1995.
Final payment due January 15, 1996

hi Peoples
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MIDDLEPORT
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Peoples Choice is a division or the Peoples Bank or
Point Pleasant, Member FDIC. For more information
please contact Mary Fowler, Coordinator, at 675-1121. '

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
anorney David T. Evans was ected vice chair of the Ohio Supr e
Court's Board of Commissioner
on Grievances and Discipline at its
December meeting.
Cleveland attorney Robin
Weaver, who served on the board
from 1988 until 1992, was elected
its chair for 1996.
The board, comprised of 28
. members appointed by the
Supreme Court, issues findings and
recommendations to the court on
ethical misconduct complaints
lodged against Ohio anomcys and
judges.
The board's 'membership
includes four public members,
seven active judges and 17 active
lawyers from around the state.
Evans, a sole practitioner in private practice in Gallia County. is a
member of the American Bar Association, the Ohio State Bar Association and the Gallia County Bar
Association.
He has served on the board of
trustees of the Ohio Academy of
Trial Lawyers. He graduated with
honors from the Ohio Northern
University undergraduate and law
school, and began practicing in

POMEROY - The Meigs County Sheriffs' Dcparlrnent investigated two Friday night accidents. according to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
The first accident occured at 5:25 p.m. on State Route 124 in
Syracuse near D &amp; M Pizza.
Eric Shoults, 21, Racine, was traveling east in his 1969 Plymouth
when he lost conlrOI in a curve and slid left of center off the roadway into a ditch. Damage was listed as heavy 10 Shoults' vehicle.
He was cited for failure to con1rol.
The second accident occured at 6:20 p.m. on SR 143 . Mark
White, 17, Pomeroy, was traveling nonh in his 1986 Pontiac when
he lost conlrOI and went off the roadway on the right side, striking a
utility pole. Damage was listed as heavy 10 the vehicle.

:
Gallipolis Municipal
;GALLIPOLIS -The following
actions were filed recently in the
Gaiiipolis Municipal Court:
·Carolyn M. Stewart, 45,
Cheshire, charged with resisting
ar(est, was fined $75, one year probation; disorderly conduct, $100,
six months probation.
Troy Richard McCormick, 19,
4735 McConnick Road, Gallipolis,
chlu'ged with underage consumption of alcohol, was fined $150.
one year probation, 10 days com·
munily service; open container,
$100.
Donald G. Eubank, 42,
Portsmouth, charged with DUI,
was fined $450, one year probation, three days jail, 180 day
license suspension.
&amp;
Meigs Common Pleas
POMEROY - The following
actions 10 end marriage were filed
recently in the office of Meigs
County Clerk Larry Spencer:
Dissolutions asked - William
Henry Milliron and Connie Sue
Milliron, bolh of Middleport, Dec .
13-; Homer Grimm and Alonna
Grimm, both of Middleport, Dec.
II; April Dawn Jones and James
Dale Jones, both of Middleport,
Dec.8.

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(6111) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

,,Wi,
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RENEE HALFHILL
SBC GRADUATE
SPRING QTR. 1995
EXECUTIVE SEC~ETARIAL
KNOWS THE VALUE
OFA QUALITY
EDUCATION
A few short years ago, I thought Little Kyger Road was the "e nd of the
road ". living in rural Gallia County and raising children just wasn't enough .
That's when I decided to make the commitment to enroll at Southeastern
Business College in the Associate Degree program majoring in Executive
Secretarial. The flexible scheduling and financial planning was convenient

for my family and Southeastern Business College gave me the skills and
self-esteem I needed to graduate and get a good job.

1 would suggest to anyone who has ever thought about returning to
school to consider the benefits of a business education . Southeastern
Business College gave me the skills and self-esteem I needed to succeed.

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BEGIN TRAINING FOR YOUR BUSINESS CAREER.
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Peal &amp; Eat Shrimp
Breaded Shrimp
Breaded Scallops
Fresh Oysters
Crab Cakes
Frog Legs
Dessert Bar

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25% OFF

P.M.

•

• Agreed to close the Meigs
County Courthouse at noon Friday, .
Ike . 22 and In meet Friday at 10
a.m. instead of at I p.m.
Present were Hoffman , Vice ,
President Janet Howard, Commis·
sioncr Robert llartenbach and
Clerk Gloria Klocs.

Neckchains and Braclets
In All Price Ranges

9:00

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Member New Yorto: Stock Exchange
Member SIPC

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

t

5:30

Ohio
Com pi my

es, Pomeroy, for renovations to lbe
recorder's office.
• Received requests for propos- ·
als by Landis &amp; Gyr and Honey- '
well for a proposed SB 300 project ·
for energy saving measures at
county buildings. The board will
examine the requests and meet with ·
com pany representatives prior to ·
making a decision.
• i'aid weekly bills of ·
S707 .H2H li6, consisting of 600 .

Diamond Cluster Rings

Celebrate New Year's
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New Year's Eve

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•Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
•Insured Money Market
Accounts
•IRA's
. Contact:
Jay Caldwell
John Miller .
Account Executives

1

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glas~-lined tank for the Leading
Creek project. Mid-Atlantic Storage's previous bid was for a glasslined tank. A representative from
Mid-Atlantic who allended an
August meeting said that Welding
Inc. has repeatedly taken such.court
action in similar cases and makes
only welded steel water storage
tanks.
In addition, the board opened
bids for the Middleport Levee
paving project. Submilting bids
were Tri-County Asphalt o~ Zaleski, $49,315, and D.B. Weber Construction of Reedsville , $47,944.
The bids were tabled for review by
the prosecuting anomey.
In other business, the board:
• Accepted the low bid as
received by Home Creek Enterpris-

,.~~~~~~~~~~~"~~~~~-q

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Dining Celebration

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Gallipolis in 1975 . •
Weaver. who rcsitlcs in Shaker
Heights, is a partner in the law frrm
Squire. Sanders &amp; Dempsey. A
trial lawyer wilh extensive litigation cxpcncncc in product liability
GLses. he '"" represented a number
otTonu nc 500 companies.
lk is active in the National
Institute for Trial Advocacy and is
a fellow in the American College
of Trial Lawyers and the International Socie ty-of Barristers .
Active in bar a'5ociation circles,
he has served as chairman of th e
Cleveland 8ar' Judicial Sdeelion
Corruninec and is a member of the
Counsel of Delegates for the State
Bar Association.

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Gallipolis attorney elected
high court panel vice chair

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Pa1r01 lodged two men in the Gallia County Jail early Saturday on
drunke)l driving and related charges.
Earl C. Bonecuncr, 30, Point Pleasant, W.Va., was booked at
3:56a.m. on charges of driving under the influence, expired operator's license and improper lane usage, aG(:ording to jail records.
Terry E. Jackson, 39, Batavia, was booked at 5:23 a.m. on
charges of DUI, driving under suspension and improper lane usage.
In other mauers. Gallipolis City Police on Friday cited Lyle S
Sheets. 51, 1390 Orchard Hill Road, Gallipolis, for DUI and driving
under suspension; Rick C. Smith, 40, 1259 Johnson Ridge Road,
Gallipolis, open container; Jeffrey E. Turner. 28, 61 Broad St ..
Thurman, improper lane usage; and Bonnie J. Baker, 38, 668 S.
Third St., Middlepon. red light violation.

I

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OPEN 9 A.M.·8 P.M. WEEKDAYS,
SATURDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
SUNDAYS, DEC. 17TH 12 NOON-S P.M.,
DEC. 24TH 9 A.M.·S P.M.
THE PLACE FOR WORK AND WESTERN

290 NORTH SECOND

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Join your Peoples Choice friends and get out of the cold and snow this
winter to enjoy some fun in the sun! Tour includes:

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March 11-16, 1996

Dally and Sundar
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
J..adf GaDia County
IJ Wed&lt;J...................
....... $2730
26 Weeki
•
......... m 82
::: :::::: :
................ SIOl.l&lt;&gt;
52 a.tct OutiWe Gallll County
13 Weeki.....................
....... 12925

~;~ :::

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WALT DISNEY WORLD
Orlando, Florida

FROM DAN'S

Pvblilhed each Sunday. 825 Third _ A~t: .•
Gallipolis. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pubh~hing
CompanyJOannen Co .. Second class pos1age
paid ac Gallipoli .~. Ohio k45()31 . Entered _:u
~ond clou mailing maner at Pomeroy. Oh10.
Post Office.

&lt;

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• Statewide Initiatives: $96 mil- ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
lion.
• Universitiesand Branches: $375.4
million.
• C:oinmunity Colleges• $77: I million.
• Technical Colleges: $28.7 million.

(USPS 525-800)

"

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County authorities are investigating two
theft repons filed on Friday.
Patricia Boggess, 763 State Route 141, Gallipolis, infonned Gallipolis Cty Police that her purse was stolen from a shopping car at
the Hills· Department Store in the Ohio River Plaza.
The purse contained cash, identification cards and food stamps,
according to the repon.
·
An employee of SuperAmerica, 601 SR 7 North. Gallipolis.
informed the Gallia County Sheriffs Department that an unknown
subject purchased $5 of gas and drove off without paying around
2:50p.m.

Regional court news

Regents• request
move public higher education much
further along the path toward becoming more efficient. effective, affordable and accountable ... she said.
There was one early sign thai the
change had started to work .
Institutions submilled a construction wish list worth $570 million to
the regents earlier this year but scaled
it back to $360 million under the new
formula.
The regents' recommendation of
$577 milli on includes statewide
projects and basic renovations that
would not have tocomeoufofschools'
budgets.
The recommendation now goes to
Voinovich· s Ofllce of Budge I and
Management for review and inclusion in a slate capital improvement
budget that legislators ex peel to considerafterthe March 19 primary.

Thefts reported to Gallia authorities

Sheriff investigates accidents

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GALLIPOLIS - Offices in the Gallipolis City Building will be
closed Monday, Dec. 25 and Tuesday, Dec. 26 for the holiday season, City Manager Matthew Coppler announced. ·

Patrol lodges two men in county jail

1

• Corn O'brien
• Buttered Baby Carrots
:
• Seasoned Green Beans
:
• Salad Bar and Assorted U ;
Desserts
tj 1

95

man.
Corrunissioners said they would
POMEROY - The future of diScuss the matter in January with
lbe Meigs County dog pound was Meigs Health Department Director
among 'lbe topics discussed Friday Jon Jacobs.
by the Meigs County Board1 of
The humane society delegation
Commissioners during its weekly consisted of Fisher, Alden Wain,
meeting.
Sharon McLead and Rita Lewis.
Earlier, the board bad indicated
The board also opened sealed
its interest in the conslrUction of a bids from two companies vying to
new dog pound without issuing any sell a water tank for the ongoing
finn corrunilrnent.
·.
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis"Where do you stand?" asked trict water tank project
Meigs Humane Society Director
Prosecuting Atlomey John R.
Dorothea Fisher.
Lentes advised commissioners to
Commission President Fred open the bids and send them for
Hoffman said the board remains review by the, judge assigned to
interested in a new shelter and said hear the case, which they did.
corrunissioners have discussed try-.
Welding Inc . submiltcd a total
ing to slarl a building fund.
bid of $207,497 while Mid·Allantic
, "We need to see plans and get Storage Systems, Washing ton
an estimate to establish a goal," Court House. submitlcd a bid of
Hoffman added. "We don't have $159,225.
anything to show 'the public at Ibis
The bids were recci ved earlier,
time."
but commiss ioners did not open
Other questions focused on the them due to a federal court order
guidelines any new animal sheller stemming from an action by Weldwould operate under. The delega- ing Inc. , which previously had
tion suggested it operate under claimed it was not allowed to offer
Humane Society of the United a tank bid in a federal lawsuit filed
Stales guidelines.
agains 1 the commissioners in
"Anything we do ought to be a August. That previous suit was dis joint effort between the county and missed by the court
the humane society," said HoffEngmcers have ca lled for a
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff

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BUffET

11:

By JIM FREEMAN

Gallipolis man gets jail time

basi'i..

CtiQI~TMA~

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A3

Commissioners to form dog pound goals

Tri-County Briefs:

Meigs Countians in the post six years,,
all made possible by the change in :
state funding which funnelled thou- ;
sands of dollars into librarie~.
~
In 1989 the Board purchased the ·:
building on West Main Street in ::
Pomeroy for the mam hbrary and :•
immediately went into a major reno- .;
vation and expansion project.
:
The following year the Middlepon :
branch library was remodeled and the :
collection of books increased.
,
That same year th~ county pur- :
chased its own bookmobile and be- :
gan a program of service tocommu~i- :
ties on a frequently scheduled basos. ,
Priorlothallime the bookmobile from '
Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL) ;
came into Meigs County on a periodic :

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_Regional

December 17, 1995

Architect for Racine library

HEAP funds

t

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

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•

Tennis Braclets
Great Gift Idea! Many Styles To
Choose From.

••J

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Upper Rt. 7 • Gallipolis

For reservations call

446-0090
"Walkins Welcome!"

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5

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Commentary
~
December 17 , 1995

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Reports uncover payments to lawmakers

sunctayTimes-sentinei/A6

COLUMBUS (AP) - An attorney for a lawmaker who accellted
multiple checks for a speaktng
event says investigators have been
' PO~ PLEASANf, W.Va. -Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday, Dec. infonned of the payments.
l~. 1?'J5 tn the Silver.Memorial Baptist Cb~rcb, Kanauga, for Robert L.
Senate President Stanley
H1ggmbotham, 66, J'c;ltnt Pleasant, wbo died Thursday, Dec. 14, 1995 in Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and Conner
Pleasant Valley Hospttal.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D· The Re~ . An&lt;Jn:w Parsons, the Rev. Miles Trout and the Rev. Dennis Wbeelersburg, each received six
Parsons wtll offictate, and burial will be in the Beecb Hill Cemetery
$500 checks in 1991 for speaking
S~uthside, W.Y_a. Friends may call at the church on Sunday one hou;
at a breakfast in Cleveland which
pnor to the servtces.
Tbe Limited Inc . and its sub: Bor:n ~ov. 12, 1929 in Southside, son of the late Floyd and Grace Cor- sidiaries sponsored, according to
aell Htggmbotham, he was a retired employee of the Point Pleasant Water published reports Saturday.
Department, with 29 years of service.
The lawmaker.; also each cashed
He attended the Silver Memorial Baptist Church and wa.~ a U.S. Army
two $500 checks from a similar
veteran of the Korean W3!• where be received a Purple Heart.
Franklin County event the compa·
. He was also preceded m death by three brothers and a sister.
ny hosted in 1993, repons said..
• Surviving are his wife, Betty McDaniel Higginbotham· a daughter
Aronoff infonned a grand JUry
Teresa Lynn Torres. of.Mesquite, Texa.&gt;; two sons, Robert L: Higginboth:
about the 1991 payments from The
am Jr. and Ro~cr Htggmbotham, both of Dallas, Texas; 10 grandchildren. Limited and answered questions.
a stepgrandcht!d and two great-grandchildren; five sisters. Nellie Newell Aronoffs attorney, Terry Sherman,
of Southstde, Dorothy Clonch of Gallipolis, Maggie Sheppard of Point
told The Columbus Dispatch .
PJeasam, Zora Rawson of Middleport, and Linda Dunn of Pomeroy· and .
"He did receive multiple honofour brother.;, John Higginbotham of Buffalo, W.Va., Carl Higginboiham
rariums, and as far as we were conOf Henderson, W.Va., and Ray Higginbotham and Charles Higginbotham
cerned, they were from diffQrent
both of Southside.
'
entities,'' Sherman said . "He
.. Arrangements were by the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. Point Pleasviewed each one as a separate
ant.
source.
''We have records for everything, and we have supplied them
: COUJfv!BUS -John R. Stout, 70, Columbus, died Friday, Dec. 15, to the investigating bodies," he
said . "There is nolhing bidden
1995 in the Mount Cannel Medical Center, Columbus.
. The son of the late Noah and Byrd Stout, he was a graduate of from the people that are investigat.
Pomeroy High School and Bliss College, a U.S. Army veteran of World ing this. "
Calls
from
The
Associated
Press
War II, and was retired from the Hospital Insurance Co.
Surviving are a son, Mark (Pam) Stout; two grandchildren; a sister-inlaw, Hazel M. Stout of Albany; and a cousin.
He was also preceded in death by a sister. Nelle Stout; and a brotl1er,
C::Iiftoo Stout.
· Services will be 9:30a.m. Monday in the Maeder-Quint-Tiberi Funeral
Home, 1068 S. Higb St., Columbus, with the Rev. William Snider officiGALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis
ating. Burial will be in the Athens Cemetery. Friends may call at the
youth wa.~ in fair condition Saturfuneral borne from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
day in Childrens Hospital, Columbus, with injuries suffered in a carpedestrian accident Friday on Gallia County Road 8 {Mitchell).
· CALDWELL, Idaho- Jack N. Torrence, 63, Caldwell, died Tuesday,
Dustin K. Mink, 6, 374 Mitchell
Dec. 12, 1995 at his residence.
Road, was initially taken to Holzer
Born Sept. 17, 1932 in Bashan, son of the late Ron and Audrey Torrence, he retired from the U.S. Air Force in~70. During his 20 years of Medical Center by the Gallia
service, he served in Viehlam, the Philippines, ngland and Germany as a County EMS, the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
military police officer.
. Surviving are a son, Gary; two daughters, Jackie and Cathy; and six reported.
He was later transferred to Chilgrandchildren, aU of Caldwell; two brothers, Paul of Indianapolis, Ind.,
drens, an HMC spokesperson said.
and Jimmy of Monroesville, Ind.; four sisters, Marlene Sheppard and DarThe patrol reported that Mink
lene (:assidy, both of Columbus, and Kathleen Morris and Sally Caldwell,
was crossing Mitchell, three-tenths
both of Racine; and several·nieces, nephews, and cousins.
of a mile south of Jackson Pike, at
He was preceded in death by two infant sons and a twin brother, Gene.
4:12 p.m. when he entered the path
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Alsip Funeral Home, Caldwell.
of a southbound pickup truck drivNo calling hours will be observed.
en by Philip R. Carpenter, 24, 5674
State Route 775, Patriot. and was
struck by the pickup.
'
The pickup was moderately
RACINEVFD
POMEROY - Units of tbe
damaged,
according to the patrol.
6:35 a.m. Friday, William
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Troopers
also reported minor
Service recorded 20 calls for assis- Ritchie Bridge, Ravenswood, injuries in two other accidents
tance Thursday and Friday, includ- W.Va .. traffic control for barge investigated Friday in Gallia Couning three transfer calls. Units accident.
ty.
SYRACUSE
respooding included:
Virginia M. Weaver, 36, New
9:26
a.m.
Thur.;day,
State
Route
POMEROY
Haven,
W. va·., was not ueated at
5:59 a.m. Thursday, South 124, William Hoback, VMH;
tl)e
scene
following a one-vehicle
Fl&gt;urth Street, Ron Jeffers, O'Bie- · 2:20 p.m. Thursday, Waters crash at 3:10 p.m. on Cheshire
Edge Apartments, Opal Cummins.
ness Memorial Hospital;
Township Road 633 (Story's Run},
, 7:47 a.m. Thursdiiy, Overbrook VMH;
according
to the patrol.
4:10p.m. Friday, Waters Edge
Nirrsing Center, Holley Green, VetWeaver
was traveling on the
Apartments, Ron Fry, VMH;
Ct;ans Memorial Hospital;
road when she reportedly failed to
5:25p.m.
Friday,
auto
accident,
1'2:43 p.m. Thursday, Barringer
navigate a curve, slid off the right
Ridge Road, George Moore, Pleas- SR I 24 at D &amp; M Pizza, Eric side of the road and struck an
Schultz, refused treatment. Syra·
aQt Valley Hospital;
cuse
VFD and emergency squad embankment. Troopers said the
10:36 p.m. Friday, Mulberry
accident remains under investigaAvenue, Lucy Williams, Holzer responded.
tion.
RUTLAND
Medical Center.
Gina S. Violand, 18, 1644
I :08 p.m. Thursday, Stonewood
MIDDLEPORT
McConnick
Road, Gallipolis, also
·· 2:20 p.m. Thursday, Brownell Apartments, Alva Reed, HMC;
was
not
treated
at the scene after a
7:37 p.m. Thursday, Leading
1\venue, Patricia Randolph, HMC;
two-vehicle
crash
on County Road
4:31 p.m. Thursday, Broadway Creek Road, Patricia Day, VMH;
6 (McConnick) at8:19 p.m.
2:58
a.m.
Friday,
Mount
Union
S,treet, Charles Young, VMH;
Troopers said Violand was
4:31 p.m. Friday, Overbro.ok Road, Clarence Owensby, OBMH . southbound, four-tenths of a mile
TUPPERS PLAINS
C\!llter. Kate Rawson, PVH;
4:04a.m.
Friday, Bashan Road,
, 7:53 p.m. Friday, Overbrook
Ada
Morris.
VMH.
Center, Lee William, VMH.

Robert L. Higginbotham

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Racially polarized voting
underlies legal ·fight
By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Civil rights advocates are worried the Supreme
Court may be ignoring history and political reality as it decides a pair of
cases with no less than the future racial composition of Congress at stake.
"In many parts of the country where there are significant numbers of
black folks, there are many white people who simply will not vote have not voted- for black candidates," says Theodore Shaw, a lawyer
for the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund. ''We are not writing
on a clean slate."

Washington Today

dent AI Gore has publicly rallied
around Energy Secretary Hazel
O'Leary by saying her achievements eclipse the millions of dolIars she's spent on lavish overseas
trips.
But congressional Democrats
say that White House Chief of Staff
Leon Panetta has privately given
them a different explanation for
O'Leary's staying power. These
Democrats say Panetta believes
that O'Leary's race - not her
record- bas prevented President
Clinton from showing her the door.
In a recent telephone conversalion with a senior congressional
Democrat, Panetta allegedly
.e~pressed displeasure with
O'Leary's conduct. Then- in a
moment of political candor and not
bigotry - Panetta said: "Quite
frankly, there's no way we can fue
her- she's a black woman."
Panetta aide Barry Toiv called
the anecdote "untrue" and said
Panetta has e~pressed suppon for
O'Leary. "He's bad no such con-

By Jack Anderson
.
and
Michael Binstein
House."
But this particular Democratic
lawmaker, who says that other
White House officials have been
just as blunt, said the message from
Panella was loud and clear. "He
said it's because she's a black
woman," this source said. "That's
Clinton's problem."
The problem for Clinton is that
he's already under fire from the left
for abandoning two other black
women - Lani Guiuier and Joycelyn Elders - when it suited his
political needs. And many of the
minorities in a Cabinet that Clinton
once promised would "look more
like America'' arc di sappearing:

A 6RINCH 5ToRY?

SURE ...
•

1

Laughlin McDonald or the American Civil Liberties Union says that in
its recent rulings, the coun seems bent on "ignoring the history of discrimination against blacks."
A three-judge federal court took notice of such discrimination this
week, but then invoked .-ecent Supreme Court rulings to redraw Georgia's
congressional map to reduce from three to one tbe number of "minoritymajority" districts in wbicb whites do not outnumber all other voters.
The natioo's highest coun is trying to shape a definitive legal theory
on the validity of creating electioo districts tlmt give minority voters more
political clout.
The court is drafting decisions in disputes that focus on minority·
majority congressional districts created in Texas and North Carolina after
tbe I990 census.
In 1993, the justices sent shock waves through the civil rights community when they ruled that election districts designed to benefit racial
minorities might be unconstitutional.
They dropped another bombshell ·last June when the court ruled that
election districts must be presumed unlawful if race was the "predominant factor" in creating them.
(_
Both previous decisions were reached by 5-4 votes , and the court
---seemed deeply divided once again when the Texas and North Carolina
cases were argued earlier this month. Decisions are expected by July.
Shaw says those rulings could bear bad news just when black congressional representation has reached a level not matched since Reconstruc·
tion.
The number of racial minorities in Congress could drop precipitously,
he says, if the coun makes it even harder to L'lke race into account when
creating election districts.
Few of the 39 blacks now in Congress, or for that matter few of its I9
Hispanics, were elected from mostly white districts. The reason, says
Shaw, is racially polarized voting.
"The example !.cite most ofterf is'Louisiana,'' he says. "Since Reconstruction, no black person has been elected to Congress or to the state
Legislature rrom a white-majority district. and no black person has been
elected to a statewide office.''
During the Reconstruction decades following the Civil War, some 40
blacks were elected to Congress as newly freed slaves voted in enormous
numbers.
Racial violence and more subtle obstacles such a.&gt; poll taxes and literacy tests followed, and the percentages of black-voter participation plummeted. By the tum of tl1c century, just one black remained in Congress North .Carolina's George White.
When he left office in 1901, there would not be another black South·
emer in Congress until 1971, when Barbara Jordan began representing
Texas.
Her old district is one of three now being scrutinized by the Supreme
Court.
It was not until 1992 that North Carolina would be represented by a
black in Congress again. Two were elected in 199~ from the districts now
under high court challenge.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 says that an e!ectior1 district might be
illegal if it denies minorities the opponunity to elect the candidates of
their choice, even if no discrimination was intended.
The act and some favorable c&lt;&gt;un decisions spelled the end or poll
taxes and literacy tests. Greater~ ·" cess fur black canditlatcs for Congress
and state offices followed.
Usc of minority-majority election districts has been a key factor in
complying with the voting act.
Such racial consideration to benefit white candidates clearly is unlawful, but is the Supreme Coun on the verge of banning racial consideration
to bene lit minorities? Employing such terms as " political apartheid" 1o
describe some minority-majority districts, the court's previous rulings
appear headed in that direction.

remember the wor~t part of tha;t
was the denial of her chance for
hearings. We were concerned that
Hazel 0' Leary also be given the
opportunity to face her accuser.;," "
An O'Leary spokesw~an.!ohl
us the secretary bad nothmg to do
with the NAACP statement, but she
added that the congressiona'
"black caucus has shown ongoing
suppon."
O'Leary's detractors say heP
case has nothing to do with race
and everything to do with her
record. O'Leary has embarrassed
Clinton here and abroad by racking·
up the kind of frequent-flyer miles·
usually associated witb a secretaryJ
of state. Her foreign travels have:
cost wpayers millions of dollars:·
and shes often been accompanied:
by dozens of aides . Sen. Richard'
Bryan, D-Nev., likens the arrangement to that of a "potentate."
'·
"When you look ati~ it all converges on a giant ego- even bt
Washington standards," Bryan told
our associate Ed Henry. "I woul~
call it a soaring, vaulting ego."
Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., added;
"In my mind, she is not an honest,
person. In my dealings with her,
she's been deceitful. I think she is.
an untrustworthy person."
·
Both Bryan and Reid are angry·
with O'Leary for promising to get'
their input on a federal projec~
potentially hcatled for Nevada. The
senators picked up the newspa~er.
one moming to lind that the project
had already gone to South Caroli ~

John R. Stout

Jack N. Torrence

"I have dealt with the Rejlgan
and Bu sh administrations ....;;
Republican s who I didn't have a
good relation ship with - but I•
never had one of them lie to me,' ~
Reid complained . ''They were '
always up-front. They would tell us
what tl1ey were going to do, and'
reasonable people can disagree. But
with her, she tells you one thing '
and does something else.''
.-·
O'Leary could let Panetta off
the book by resigning when the
investigations into her spending are
completed. An energy industry !ob-. .
byist told us O'Leary' s seniord
staffers have already put out feelerS"
for new jobs.
Jack Andorson and Michad1
Binstein are writers for Unite!~-:
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
· "~
.;\

Stocks overvalued?________.')·.
NEW YORK (AP) - Worried beautifully fair day is a weather
because so much seems right and breeder; a prolonged period of feelso little seems wrong, Wall Street ing good means you' II catch the
would like assurance that negative flu; no criticism from the boss is.
news exist. Complacency, it complains, too often foreshadows probJohn Cunniff
lems.
The anxiety became acute when reason to ask what's up?
Anxiety compels a search for
the Dow Jones Industrial Average
blitzed through the 5,000-point bad news or an attempt to turn a
''barrier'' like the Desert Stonn positive into a negative. And so, a
army and continued to advance capital gains tax cut might leave
another I 99 poinrs or so before inves10rs with more in the pocket
but it will lead to a surge of selling
pausing.
That left the average, the mar- and lower prices.
And more: Because of big gains.
ket's most popular if not necessarily most important measurement, investors will rebalance their portaround 40 percent higher than a folios at year's end by replacing
year earlier, spreading vertigo stocks with bonds; rich investors
among those who fear it can't con- will take profits; some investors
will "sell on the news" of an intertinue.
Too much of a good thing is est-rate cut.
And then there are those
considered bad on Wall Street.
Without a good deal of negative investors who can't believe the
comment and news, the market bas DJIA is over 5,000 points, don ' t
no stabilizer, no restraint on prices. believe it belongs there, and can't
It needs, as they say, a wall of imagine it staying that high. Low
worry to climb.
dividend yields, they say, prove
The phenomenon is known in their point.
Yes, there's lots of bad news
other area.' of human experience: A

waiting to be recognizer!, and it
will be. Enough bad news: it might
be said, to justify a "good news"
reminder that, while no advance
continues forever, the market isn't
awfully out of joint.
True. dividend yields, the percentage uf profits paid to investors,
arc low. This, however, seems to
have less to do with the high level
of stock prices than the desire of
corporations to reinvest fc&gt;r the
future .

"' ~

Even with tl1is year's surge, says
analyst Gerald Perritt, market history shows the averages are just
about where they should be, and he
goes on to demonstrate:
In late I 945, the Standard &amp;
Poor's Composite Index stood at
I 7 .4, and its earnings during the
previous 12 montlt' were 96 cents.
Today, with the the S&amp;P 500 trad·
ing at about 6 I5 po int.~ . previousyear earnings were $35 . I 5. Both
the index and the earnings have
grown by the same factor.
While conceding the market has
risen powerfully during the past
year. Michael Flament of Wright

Investors' Se.rvice. a conservativ~
manager of btlhons of dollars. suggests a longer-term view purs'
things in perspective.
lie points out that the DJIA of
January 1966 was the market's alk
time real-dollar (inflation-adjusted)
peak, until abouttllrcc months agd,'
a fact widely overlooked in the'
excitement of almost daily new
highs in averages.
.
Since that old high in 1966, the'
DJIA has quintupled - but its
annual rate of increase, adjusted Cct{
inflation, has been a Uilling 0.1
percent. Even with inflation includ- 1
ed, the annual rate has been only
5.6 percent.
· '
That experience can be viewe4
two ways, as can so many mark~
events.
It can be seen as verification
that the past year's market surge i:; .
out of all proportion to that o{"
recent history. Or, perhaps more~:
reasonably. as justifying that surge ·
as merely making up for past'l!
undervaluation.
John Cunniff is an Associated' ' 1
l)ress business analyst.

U.S. cultures can hang together like a patchwork quilt

i' ;:.

. ,.

...

:~&lt;:l

In my recent column, author
Kristin Hunter Lattany of Magnolia, N.J .. noted her wariness of multicultural advocacy.

Wayne Dawkins

can be a psychological assault.··
is facing the reality that it is noti"'And young America experi- cxclusively Anglo or European bt1[•: 1
enced cultural conflict in defining an evolvmg am;tlgam of European;' ' ~
itself, said Rampersad.
Afncan, Asian and indigenous cuT· ' ··~
" (Ralph Waldo) Emerson was lures.
speaking directly to me," said the
The melting pot existed for the· :·
author, when Emerson responded first hair of this century. To cite it· •
to this European put-down in 1844: now is to acknowledge an anachro·
,~, ,
" In the four corners of th e msm.
world, who reads an American
America today is a quilt or ·;.~
book?"
mosaic - loud, muted and beauti,.: 1
Emerson answered, plenty of ful all at once, like tbe quilted clotlr •·;
people, because "for too many behind Rampersad at the podium. : ''
years, we've listened to the musWe can inevitably clash, but
ings of otl1ers."
hang together.
Taken a step further, Noah
Or, un"ravel.
" ;'
·,;·,
Webster, the dictionary man, about
the same .time as Emerson insisted
Dawkins is a columnist and ·"~
on institutionalizing American lan- reporter ror the Camden Co uri·'' C!
guage, replacing J3ritioh words.
er-Post in New Jersey. Write to• ~ll
A century-and-a-half later, in him at 301 Cuthbert Blvd Cher·
1995, the United States of America , ry Hill, N.J. 081102.
"
"" '

She sensed a plot to weaken or
neutralize U.S. blacks ecooomical1y and political! y.
Young author Dinesh D'Souza
does not dig multiculturalism
either, but apparently not for the
same reasons as Lattany.
Maybe, said Rarnpersad dryly,
it's because D'Souza is a "walking
billboard for multiculturalism,"
being Asian, Indian, Catholic and
Ponuguese in body and name.
Maybe D'Souza lashes out at
others because be is unsure of wbo
he is. His 1995 book, "The End of
•.. I.J
Racism," suggests that I9th century slavery was good for AfricanAmericans.
Earnestly', Rampersad said
America is only going through
another tum of world history. Eth- By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Dec. 17, the .351st day of 1995. There arc 14 days r:::
nic and class groups clashing is not
.
left
m the year. The Jewrsh Fesuval of Ltghts, Hanukkah, begins at sun"' M
new or necessarily fatal.
Cultures clashed in England in
~
Today"s Highlight in History:
the 16th century, said Rampersad,
On Dec. 17, 1903, the Wright Brothers- Orville and Wilbur ....Ji)l
when the king "wickedly" nationalized tbe church. Literalure, mean- staged th.e first successful powered-airplane flights near Kiuy Hawk, N.C. uii
On thts date:
1:r1
while, flourished.
In
I
777,
France
recognized
American
independence.
•·
.•&lt;J
In
Rampersad's
native
In
1830,
South
American
patriot
Simon
Bolivar
dieq
in
Colombia.
•
Caribbean, the struggle to break
.
In
1892,,
the
dress
rehearsal.
for
"The
Nutcracker
Suite"
'by
l'etet
free from colonial rulers did not
llytcb Tchaikovsky was staged rn St. Petersburg, Russia (However the'" ,v
necessarily mean maybem.
''Violence does not have to be ballet was poorly received when it officially premiered the follo~ing ,;;
·
an armed struggle," he said. "It night.)

Today in history

-

to Aronofr s borne Saturday were
not answered. Riffe declined comment Friday.
A Franklin County grand jury is
investigating honoraria paid to,Jawmakers. At issue is whether legislators had to report multiple speaking
rces collected at single events.
Under state law at the time, fees
or s5oo or tess did not have to be
disclose d unless they carne from
single so urce. Each violation is a
llrst-degree misdemeanor. punishable by six months in jail and a
$1 ,000 fine .
Meanwhile. newspapers on Sat·
urday reported more cases of $500
payments:
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
said Aronoff received at least four
$500 checks from guests at a I 993
party hosted by Ohio Biodyne Inc.,
in addition to $I ,000 in speaking
fees from the party which the
Akron Beacon Journal reported
about in Friday's editions.
One check was from Biodyne
lobbyist Dennis Wojtanowski and
another from Republican political
consultant Curt Steiner. Aronoff
received aoother ssoo check a rew
days later from lobbyist Thomas
Su·ussion, who was invited to the
pany but did not attend, The Plain
Dealer said.
The senator did not report any

of the payments. And Biodync
failed to disclose its payments on
its initial filings . although it
amended the reports this year, the
newspaper said.
• The Cincinnati Enquirer said

~

a .

A

•

s;

MONDAY, DECEMBER 18TH

l

20% OFF ALL DAY

.

iJ:

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Orne an

My Heart.
Robert Shelton
BRIGHTON ~ England (AP) Robert Sbelton, a former music
critic with The New York Times
who championed the talents of Bob
Dylan and Janis Joplin, died of a
stroke Monday. He was 69.
Shelton joined the Time!l in the
mid- I950s and went on to review
the young folk and country singers
playing in New York's Greenwich
Village in the 1960s.

Actions are filed
POMEROY - The following
actiooa were filed in the office of
Meigs County Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer:
Divorces asked - Charles R:
Kinnan, Racine, from Sberry A.
Klnna11, Pomeroy, Dec. 8; Lewauna Carlene Person from Harold
Person, both of Long Bottom, Dec.

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ear

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Pomeroy's Upper Parking lot.

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He helped launch Joplin's
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Jose Feliciano, the Mothers of
Invention and Peter, Paul and Mary
as well.

Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored granites.
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Hours: 9:Q0-4:00 M-T-Th-F. Others by appointment
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The FTD" Winter
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Deaths of note elsewhere

352 Third Ave.

.

Chra·stmas Sal~ J!j•

·

north of SR 588, when she slowed
her car to tum into a private driveway and was struck in the rear by
another southbound car driven by
Ted K. Smith , 22, 1753
McConnick Road.
Damage to Violand's car was
slight and moderate to the Smith
car. The accident is still under
investigation.

LARGE SELECTION

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
992·2588
VINTON
Ga!lia County Display Yard
155 Main St.
388-8603

ited asked the Jaw linn of Vorys
Sater Seymour &amp; Pease for a legal
opinion about the checks.

.·

EMS units answer 20 calls

Nancy LaMott
:NEW YORK (AP) - Nancy
La,Mott, a cabaret singer who had
perf01med at the White House, died
of.uterine and liver cancer Wednesdaf.. She was 43.
Told that sbe·only bad a few
boors to live, she proposed to.her
companion, actor Peter Zapp, and
they were married in a bedside ceremony.
LaMott began her singing ca.at age 15, performing witb ber
rather's dance band in Midland,
Mich. She went on to sing at
C¥J1egie Hall in New York City
ancl at the White House for President Clinton.
Tbe· Clintons called LaMott
Tuesday to say their thoughts were
wi!h her.
Her albums include Beautiful
Baby (1991), Come Rain or Come
Shine: The Songs of Johnny Mercer
(1993), My Foolish Heart (1994),
and the recently released Listen To

that shortly after the I 991 breakfast, some officials from The Lim-

r~.~""""~~~~·'&amp;'~
STOREWIDE WRAP UP
J

Area youth in fair condition
after being struck by pickup

na.

A quilt tacked to the wall behind
lecturer
Arnold Rampersad cast a
EDITOR'S NOTE - Richard Carelli covers the Supreme Court
fitting
backdrop.
and legal affairs ror The Associated Press.
Most of the 10-by-3-foot cloth
consisted of vertical bars in bold
colors: 131ue, violet, orange, red,
lime.
Overlapping those colors at the
top were muted shades: beige ,
gray, tan, olive and clay.
The scene was inside Steadman
An Gallery at Rutgers UniversityCamden. Rampersad lectured for
45 minutes on "Literary Achievement and the Clash of Cultures.·'
That quilt- loud, beautiful and
serene all at once - complemented
what the writer told I 4 listeners in
mid-November.
Rampersad co-wrote the Arthur
Ashe memoir "Days of Grace."
He also wrote a two-volume biography of writer Langston 1-lughes,
among other works.
The native of Trinidad and
Princeton Univer.;ity literature professor affectionately and earnestly
chronicles a rich portrait of
African-American culture.
That day at Rutgers however,
Rampersad spoke about the furrent
clash of cultures. ·
"I don't believe in the necessary
fatality of American culture," said
Rampersad, who came to the United States 30 years ago.
qk..-~
"I am ambivalent about multiC 1~ by NEA. Inc
culturalism .. .It is neither a panacea
"I'm 'lakin' a page outta YOUR book,' George."
· nor a scourge."
It is a relief to hear such a deliberative view.

Berry's World

Coogress," Toiv told us. "Race i~
simply not an issue in how her situ'
ation is being handled by the White

Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy
resigned over still unresolved
ethics charges, while Commerce
Secretary Ron Brown and HUD
Secretary Henry Cisneros are each
under federal investigation.
O'Leary's allies have made
Clinton's job more difficult by
playing the race card themselves.
When it was reponed last month .
that O'Leary had hired a public
relations finn to " rate" the journalists who cover her department,
several Democrats joined Republicans in calling for her resignation.
But the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-·
pie iiJUnediatcly released a statement condemning the "rush to
judgment."
An NAACP official evoked
Guinicr's name in defending the
press release. " Certainly we were
very proud of (O 'Leary) and saw
her as an African-American
appointee anti were conccrnctl
about the attack on her being meanspirited and unprincipletl,' • the
official told us. "We worked on tile

,Sunba~ ~limt•-,Stntintl • Page A7

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

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Nation/World

December 17, 1995

{\long the River

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

White House examines ()ptions toward
settling Whitewater subpoena dispute
ByPJ&lt;.IEYOST
1\ssociated Press Writer
WASJIINGTON - Trying to resolve a disrute over Whitewater, the
White House is searching for a way to provide the Senate with a presidential aide's notes while preserving President Clinton's claims of allomcyclicnt privilege.
The White House subpoena light with the Senate Whitewater Conunittec escalated Friday as Clinton defied a deadline for fonner associate
White House counsel William Kennedy to comply with the Senate subpoena by giving up the notes.
The commiuee voted to go to federal court to cballcr ge Clinton's
claim of allomey-client privilege for the Nov . 5, 1993, session of four
presidential aides and the Clintons' three rcrsonal Whitewater lawyers.
One White House option being discussed is for the admun stratwn 10
negotiate an agreement wilb Whitewater prosecutors ami o~1cr invcsttgativc bodies ·so that if it surrendered the notes, the president would sttll
have the right to claim other conversations involving his allorneys were
pri valc .
•
" We will continue to pursue all available options to turn over the
notes," said White House spokesman Mark Fabiani.
"We will continue to work" on securing "a common undcrst:mding
among all investigators that making the notes public will not waiw t11e

it:tl under the federation's control.
Originally scheduled for Saturday, the session was rescheduled
for Sunday morning, Bosnian Serb
sources said. No fonnal reason was
given for the postponement.
Fog was hampering landings at
the airpon in Tuzla, Bosnia. on Saturday, slowing deployment of lbe
20,000 American troops joining the
NATO force, said U.S. military
spokesmen.
A sp6kesman for ~lC U.S. European Command at Stullgart, Germany, said orders arrived Saturday
morning from President Clinton
giving lhe go-ahead for full deployment.
Clinton's orders, known as the
"national command authority"
authorizing lbe bulk of U.S. forces
to cross the Sava river from Croatia
into Serb-beld Bosnia, · were
received in Stullgart at 5:30 a.m .
(11:30 p.m. Friday EST), said the
spokesman, who asked not to be
identified.
Most of lbe U.S . forces arc to
move over land, primarily by train,
from their bases in Germany, and
rail shipments continued to build
momentum.
Forty-four trains have arrived in
Hungary, the U.S. staging area, and
Croatia, and 18 more were be.ing
loaded today, said the spokesman.
Not only willlbe forces be setting up in J'uzla; they will also
expana a base camp in Hungary
and build a "life support" camp at
the bridge crossing the Sava, said
the spokesman.
The U.S . Air Force's largest

•.

THE FABRIC SHOP

attorney-client privilege," Fab.iani added.
.
Under the option the While House was considering late Fnday, notes
of a Nov. 5, 1993, Whitewater meeting woulll be turned over and questioning of the four presidential aides who participated would commence.
In exchange, the investigative bodies would agree not to use lbe concession by the White House on the Nov. 5 meeting as an argull!ent tf the
investigators seck to lind out about other meetings that the Chntons say
are protected by attorney-client privilege.
.
Republicans likened the looming court fight, which ~ust ft~sl be
approved by the full Senate, to a Watergate-like confromauon V:htle an
embauled White House continued to search in private for a resoluuon.
"Why are they stonewalling?" asked Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala.,
using a word that was popularized 20 years ago during Watergate to
describe the Nixon White House. "Why are they lighting such a legal battle unless there is something lhere?''
.
Split 10-8 along party lines, the GOP-led Senate Whitewater Comrmttee passed a resolution directing Senate lawyers to start a civil action to
force Kennedy to surrender his notes.
Democrats decried the vote as a needless escalation of a dispute the
White House has offered to negotiate. •'This bas now turned into a polili·
cal game,'' said Sen. Paul Sarbanes of Maryland, the commiuee's ranking
Democrat.

transport planes were wailing at
Rhein-Main and Ramstein air bases
in Germany, but smaller, more
maneuverable C-130s were trying
to hmd at Tuzla despite lhc low visibility, said an Air Force
spokesman.
The flights were taking lighter
loads- one with a "Hum vee" allterrain truck and a trailer - and
about 10 soldiers, and the other
was carrying some military police
offtcer.;, the spokesman said.
The NATO contingent aims to
ensure that Bosnia's rival armies
stick to the military provisions laid
out in the rcace accord, initialed in
Dayton, Ohio, last month.
U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali said Friday that the
transfer of authority from the United Nations to NATO should he
completed within four days.
NATO is expected to officially
tnke over that mission from the
United Nations at a ceremony in
Sarajevo - bringing a close to a
much maligned U.N. operation that
has failed to restore peace.
British Gen. Rupert Smith, the
U.N. commander in Bosnia. will
become deputy commander of the
NATO force. He will also supervise the departure of the U.N . soldiers who are not scheduled to join
tl1e NATO orcration.
The United Nations will still
maintain a significant presence in
Bosnia, performing such tas~s as
helping refugees return to their
homes, investigating human rights
violations and helping with police
duties.

110 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-2284

.

;

.'
•'

MONDAY SPECIALS

ALL SEWING MACHINES

REDUCED
•'

Unlike its U.N. predecessor, the
NATO force will be heavily armed
and commanders will be authorized
to shoot first if they believe their
units arc threatened.
"Our mission is clear, limited in
time and scope and with robust
rules of engagement," Joulwan
said. The operation is expected to
last a year.
Alongside the Americans, the
new rcacekeeping force includes
13,000 British and 10,000 French.

••

Now Open For
Christmas Season
Poinsettias (5 Colors)
Poinsettia Baskets

Grave Blankets

•

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$11 to $16
Open Daily 9-5, Sun. 12-5
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..&lt;•
'•

Lottery numbers
By The Associated Press
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 9-4-9
Pick 4: 4-9-5-3
Buckeye 5: 7-18-23-27-30
. The owner of one Buckeye 5
ticket with the correct live-number
combination may claim an Ohio
Lottery prize of $100,000, lbc lottery announced Saturday.
The winning ticket was sold in
Englewood.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled

$460.172.

The 176 Buckeye 5 game tickets
with four of the numbers are each
worth $250. The 5,188 with three
of lbe numbers are each worth $10.
The 53,253 with two of the numbers are each worth SI.
The Ohio Louery will pay out
$327,775 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
St,777,758.50.
In Pick 4 Numbers. players
wagered $406,493 and will share
St69.600.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing was S12 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
.Daily3: 4-7-t
Daily 4: 4-9-5-3
Ca&lt;;b 25: 3-6-9-10-14-18

as four days.
The National Park Service estimates it lost $75,000 in revenue

to
A Christmas Cantata and Drama for the
'·
Entire Family
Adapted from
"A Christmas in Tin Pan Alley"
by the Wilds music staff

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

By LISA PETERSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS : It seems that the Christmas season is a lillie bit
brighter this year - not just in spirits but in illumination. Lights and
pine bedeck virtually every pole and ledge.
The frequency and extravagance of these displays seem to have
increased through the years. To Barry Thompson, associate professor
of anthropology at the University of Rio Grande, it is no coincidence.
There are several reasons for. an increase in sophistication and number of displays, be said, technology, social class and cultural values
and symbols.
The electric light displays of today reflect Ibe level of technology of ·
our culture, Thompson said. Before electricity, luminaries were used.
But they weren't as functional for grander displays.
. Displays are also a function of social class or soci~onomic forces.
The middle and upper classes may be motivated by lbe idea of conspicuous consumption. be said, with a competitive edge. Whole neighborhoods and communities will compete for lbe best display.
As a reflection of socioeconomic forces, the displays may show !bat
things really aren't that bad in the economy, be said. People are more
able to afford nonessential goods such as Christmas decorations.
A motivating force for many people is cultural values and symbols,
Thompson said. And Ibis varies from person to person.
For one person it may simply be a tradition they are upholding, and
for another it may be religion. Some may use decorative displays to
comment on their spirit for the season. There is no one reason for
everybody, be said.
.
Other cultural celebrations falling in December such as Hanukkah
and Quanza, a harvest celebration, are more reserved in displays.
But one thing true of all cultures at some lime, is wanting to have
displays, Thompson said.
·
·The display in the Gallipolis City Park and along Second Avenue
include 23,000 lights. It was coordinated by the Keep Gallia Beautiful
Committee and Raccoon Creek eounty Park employees. It took 15
people four to live days to complete the display. A new feature in the
park is the carolers and Santa and reindeer, purchased for $2,400 by.
the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association.

PARK DISPLAY· The fountain in theGallipolis City Park, above, is decorated pine garland, lights and bows•
A lit display of carollers and Santa and reindeer have been added to the park display .

r.

,.•
..
..'·
'·
'·
•'·

Sunday, December 17, 1995
7:00p.m.
Dept. 56 Ornaments

· at

204 ']{, 2ruf., Mitfafeport, o:H

First Baptist Church
Fifth Street- Racine, OH
Phone 949-2867
Nursery Provided ~

'Visa, MasterCard, 'Disanler,

Rt. 7 NO!Ih lhru Tuppers Plains

Gallipolis gears up for Christmas

....
,.,.,.

. Tell the Story

992-40551o-5 Mon. t:hru Sat.
OpenSun.l-5 p.m.
See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed
Juat 20 Minutes Ortve Straight Up

ails

,.•

from lbe $10-rcr-car entrance fee,
while park concessionaires put
their loss at $750.000.

1992 CHEVROLET S-10

t .e

'•
,.I
,.,.'

Shutdown won't affect Grand Canyon
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - The
latest government shutdown won't
close up the Grand Canyon.
Hoping to avoid a repeat of last
month's budget impasse !bat closed
the Grand Canyon National Park
for the the flfSt lime in its 76-year
history, lbe state parks board authorized $211,500 to keep it open t2
days if necessary.
The partial government shutdown triggered by the midnight
Friday P.xpiration of a stopgap
spending bill affects far fewer
Americans than the shutdown in
November, partly because it comes
on a weekend.
Under lbe informal deal worked
out between the state and lbe federal Interior Department, the park's
most visited areas on the south rim
of the canyon would remain oren
through a daily $17,625 donation to
the National Park Service. The
money would be paid in advance of
each day or orcration.
Last month's shutdown forced
the Grand Canyon and 21 other
federal parks to close for as many

Section B
Sunday, December 17, 1995

;{'

'Let's go': Bosnian deployment underway
lly RAF CASERT
Associated Pres.• Writer
BRUSSELS, Belgium- Willi a
spare, straightforward order, lbe
supreme allied Commander in
Europe Saturday gave the starting
signal to !be biggest military opera•ion in Europe since World War II.
"My recommendation was simply 'Let's go'," said U.S. Gen.
George Joulwan, who will be overall commander of the Bosnia
peacekeeping operation led by lbe
Western alliance. He said deployment of the 60,000-strong NATOled force would begin in force by
early Sunday. Advance units have
already begun arriving.
Joulwan' s green light followed
the approval of 16 ambassadors of
the North Atlantic Council,
NATO's top political body. They
voted just hours after the U.N.
Security Council passed a unanimous resolution authorizing NATO
to send lbe troops.
Also Saturday, Bosnian Serb
leaders postponed a meeting of
their assembly, apparently to buy
lime to sell the rcace plan to their
people.
The assembly session in Pale,
the Serb-stronghold east of Sarajevo, was scheduled to ratify the
peace accord signed Thursday in
Paris lhat divides Bosnia into two
regions - one controlled by Serbs,
the otber by a Cmat-Muslim federation.
Many Bosnian Serbs oppose the
accord because lbe nine Serb-held
neighborhoods of Sarajevo are to
be reunited with the rest of the cap·

~imes-imt:irttl

..•'

....

DOWNTOWN DECORATIONS· Far left, the door
of Grace United Methodist
Church is decorated for the
season. Second Avenue,
above, of Gallipolis and the
Gallipolis City Park, left, are
decorated with 2~,000 lights.
The display was coordinated
by the Keep Gallia Beautiful
Committe and Raccoon Creek
County Park employees.
Barry Thompson, associate
professor of anthropology at
the University of Rio Grande,
says the increase in decora·
tive displays may be an indication of a boost in the
economy.

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667-3350

Is It To Late Too Stop
the Consolidation of the
Mason County Schools?
It has been reported that the Debt Card from The
Farmers Bank hos been seen being used as a credit
card. a check card, even an ATM card ...

Make your opinion known! Join the
1OO's of other Mason Countians that share
your opinion. Be at the Closure Hearing at
the Point Pleasant Middle School on
December 18th at 6:00 PM!
STOP THE SELL OUT OF OUR MASON. COUNTY
SCHOOL CHILDREN!

WE NEED YOU!
Need a Ride? Cal1773·5049

••.
: · . The 'present Harris Baptist school.
Perhaps one of the more interest: OlUrch building was built in 1917
ing
events
in the long history of the
dedicated July 31, 1918. The con•• ilod
.
church
occurred
in 1933 when hun' ·
gregatton was
dreds
of
people
gathered
there to help
· organized April
celebrate
the
I
OOth
birthday
of Ed4, 1862 by Ira
ward
Narel
Ridgeway.
There
was
Z. Haning.
even
a
basket
dinner
on
that
October
The village of Harris- afternoon. Prof C.O. Clark presided.
One observer reported that Clark
burg dates to
1837 and was was so funny that Ridgeway laughed
laid out by . until he cried and then called Clark
•• •
.Samuel McCarley, Charles Topping an "old fool." Among those who
::&amp;nd Joseph Fletcher. The who's who spoke were Abc Evans, Han')' Wood,
1M Rio Grande College filled the pul- Amy Ridgeway, Edward Ridgeway,
:f&gt;tt in the early years, Haning. W.J. I\. C. Safford, Ed Leonard and Francis
-fulton, Simeon WCj'd and T.E. Peden. Burden. The latter read a piece writf.mong the early n\embers were H.J. ten by Ridgeway himself in which be
.~arr. J. Sherrill, Sam Koons, J.C. Nye remarked that the heavens celebrated
Ridgeway's birth . with a meteor
}Pd R,P. Porter.
',
The first building did not come shower. Singing was led by V.).
ntil 1882. church being held in Niday, and accompaniment was proomes and in the schoolhouse from vided by Ed Blake on the Iiddle.
E.N. Ridgeway lived for many
862to 1882. The first church caught
years
in lbe old brick home on the
, . re Sept. 17. 1916 while Sunday
.
Pleasant
Valley Road. That house had
·$chool was going on, and burned to
at
one
time
20 rooms. it being a stage;OJe ground. Unti I the present church
·was finished services were held in the coach stop in the early days. Many

Da lat lallar•ed.
It is.
"Check" into it today!

Your Bankjn~...
r.;:l
Farmers Bank ,
~ &amp;. Savings Company
• ..._ ..._ ..._ '
UW

Member F.D.I.C.

2U West Second SlrMt
P.O. lo• 626
Pomeroy, OH ~769

··-·2136

Route 7
P 0 lo&gt;&lt; J39
Tuppen Platns. OH
6tAJ667-Jt6t

·'

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~783

til
.......

n

'

..

'

..

··-·-

famous
people
stayed in the house
over the years. and
circuses used to
pitch tents in the
field across from the
house. The house
was built about
1803. a few years after the Ridgeways
came to Ohio. •
E.N. was the
son of William and
Jane Daugherty
Ridgeway, and he
was born Nov. 6,
1833. Ridgeway was
named after one cf
the early French doctors of Gallipolis,
Edward Naret. Jane
Ridgeway was a triplet, and all three
lived to adulthood.
an unusual occurrence in that era. In
his later life E.N .
lived in Harrisburg.

I

tOOTH BIRTHDAY SITE- The Harris Bap·
list Chuil:h hosted in t933 a celebration· Edward
Naret Ridgeway's tOOth birthday. The ch\!rch
building dates to t917, but it was organized in 1862
by Ira Z. Haning.

Before the Civil War. he went to
Pike'&lt; Peak in the.Colorado gold rush
of 1859. He had also spent some time
in Mexico. During the Civil War he
was assigned the work of making up
wagon-trains for carrying supplies to
the army. Much of the work was done
in Cincinnati where loday is located
Fountain Square.
In the last years of the war he
joined the Squirrel Hunters militia. He
was among a number of volunteers
who formed around Gallipolis to protect the town in the fall of 1862 when
the Confederates took over Charleston and were heading down the
Kanawha River Valley toward Point
Pleasant, W.Va. and Gallipolis.
Due to a government foul-up,
E.N. was never officially discharged
from the army until be was 90 years
old. Hence he never received a pension until he Was about 99.
On Nov. 6. 1933 when he turned
100, he was believed to hav~ bcen'at
that time the oldest living person in
southern Ohio. On Dec. 6. 1932 Sallie
McConnick of the Fairfield commu-

nity died at the age uf 100 years. 5
months and 8 days
In an interview with the Tribune
near the time of hi s IOOth birthday
E.N. read aloud. without glasses. the
headlines of that day\ paper. "Bul my
long-distance vision is even beller."
he insisted. "See that rounded treelop over there," he pointed to the
northwest. "I can see it plainly." Yet
it appeared to be nearly half a mile
away. "I can also see," he added. "the
yard and house of mv sister-in -law.
Mrs. Emma Ridgeway."
He anributed his long life to a
diet of cereals and chewing tobacco.
He was married three times, his last
wife being nearly 40 years younger
than him .
Perhaps E.N. is best known in the
history of Rio Grande College as one
of the people that contested the will
that established the Atwood Wood
Trust Fund. At that time public senti ment was with E.N.
James Sands is a spedal correspondent of the Sunday TimesSentinel. His address is: 65 Willow
Drive, Springboro, Ohio 45066.

�..
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 17, 199'5

:sunday, December 17, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Meigs rEWresentati~e~
attend council sess1o11

MR. AND MRS. DOUG MITCHELL

Darst-Mitchel!
Valley High School and is auendOLD KYGER - Summer
ing
Southeastern Business Colle~e .
Dawn Darst became the bride of
MR. AND MRS. CARL A.C. WILLIAMS
The
groom graduated from Pmnt
Doug Milchell, Oct. 21 , 199~at the
Pleasant High School and is
Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
employed at Buckeye Foodland as
Church .
The bride is the daughter of a manager.
The couple resides in Gallipolis
RUTLAND - Kimberly Fay top.
David Darst and~everloy Gibbs.
Ferry, W.Va.
Chapman and Carl Anderson
Matrons of honor were Rebecca The bride groom · the son of Pete
Corbin Williams II exchanged l'oslcr of Pomeroy. and Roberta ami Sandy Mitche I.
The Rev . Bill Little performed
wedding vows in a ceremony on Young of Mason, W.Va. BridesOct. 14 at the Pearl Chapel United maid was Carrie Willi3Ills of Rut- the ceremony. Music was provided
Methodist Cllurch.
by Sue Sigman.
l&lt;mtl, sister or the bridegroom .
NEW YORK (AP) - Michael
The bride was escorted by her
The bride is the daughter of
The honor allendants w\)re lace
is now the king of stop.
Jackson
John and Carolyn Chapman of dresses in hluc and red fashioned father. Harry Woyan setved a.s tbe
The
37-year-old
entertainer was
Albany. The bridegroom is the son with fill ed bodices anti v-ncckines, be st man. Starr Spires was the
ordered
to
take
the
remaining two
of Charles and Karen Williams of and the bridesmaid wore a blue lea matron of honor. The flower girl
weeks
of
I
995
off
to continue
Rutland .
length dres s witll a swe etheart was Brittany Mitchell.
recovering
from
the
ga.suointestinal
The
bride
graduated
from
River
Tbe 2:30 p.m. setvice was con- neckline ru1tl fill ed lace bodice.
ailment that put him I in a hospital
ducted by tlle Rev. Kenneth Baker
Fl ower girl was Kaitl yn Cre and Ronald Wood. Nuptial music means, cousin of tl1e bride, ;mtl ring ~*""'""1t" : ·:: :JI ~~[IIi'!!.:·
1~~
was presented by Jane Wise of Rut- bearer was Keith Moore, cousin of
land and a reception wa.s held at the the bridegroom.
Scipio Volunteer Fire Deparunent
Serving as best man was James
quaners following the wedding.
Kirk·llunt of Jackson . Groomsmen
Escorted to the altar by her were John Tillis of Middleport, and
father and given in marriage by her Richie Wamsley of Racine .
parents, the bride wore a gown of
The bride is a 1990 graduale of
white satin and scbiffli lace with Meigs High School and a 1992
pearl and sequin accent. The gown graduate of Hocking College with
was fashioned with a v-neckline an associate degree in accounting.
and. tapered sleeves with window- She is employed by Seaman 's Carpane accents. A filled bodice over- dinal in Athens.
laid witll lace and accented with
The bridegroom is a 1990 gradpearls fell to a deep basque waist- uate of Meigs High School and a
line over a ballroom style skin.
1991 graduat e of the Nashville
The skirt flowed into a semi- Auto Diesel College, with an a-.ocathedral train and was embellished ciatc degree in auto body repair. He
GET YOUR COPIES OF GAHS 1995 FOOTBALL SEASON
with panes of tulle, sequins and is employed by Luigino's of Jackpearls. The bride's veil was held in son and owns and operates A.C.
place by a halo of flowers made by Arts Custom Graphic s and Carher mother and she carried a bou- toons.
quet of royal blue and red roseThe newlyweds are making their
614·446·
buds, greenery, and baby's breath home on Trout Road in Albany.
with a royal blue bow tied at tile

Chapman-Williams

POMEROY- 'lbree representlltives of the Meigs County County
Council on Aging were in Marieua
last week for the quanerly meeting
of the Regional Advisory Council
oftheAreaAgencyonAging.
Lloyd Blackwood, Cbarles
Blakeslee and Norma Torres represenled the county.
The council heard from State '
Sen. James Carnes on telemarkeling legislation he has drafted protecting consumers from fraud . Each
year Ohio consumers lose more
than $1.5 billion from fraqdulent
telemarketing schemes. The law
wiD also give enforcement officials
new tools for fighting telemarketing scams.
Attorney General Betty Montgomery discussed ways to avoid
telemarketing fraud. Judith Brachman, director of the Ohio Depanment of Aging, emphasized that
older adults are most a1 risk of telc·
marketing fraud due to isolation .
A num her of reports on the
work of the Area Agency on Aging
were presented. A great deal of the

River Reveries:

Johnson-Caldwell
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Lenville Johnson of Gallipolis are
announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter, Tanya Lynn
Johnson, to Bruce Eugene Caldwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Caldwell of Meigs County.
.
I obnson is tbe granddaughter of
:· Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mayse of Gal. lipolis. Caldwell is tbe grnndson of
· :Joanna and the late Everell Cald-

!!'
~

VIDEO TRANSFERS
~~

~·~

Teaching aides threaten
to withhold Yale grades

~

NEW HAYEN, Conn. (AP) Yale University teaching assistants
are threatening to withhold undei: ·
graduates' grades until administrntors agree to negotiate with them.
"I tllink it's the equivalent of
terrorism . We're being beld as
hostages," freshman Michael
Buckstein , 18, of Denver said
Thursday.
The Graduate Employees and
Students Organization represents
about one-fourth of Yale's 2,500
graduate students. It has been uying for five years to be ueated as a
union.

·REAL CERAMIC/
DISHWASHER
SAFE/

A new process transfers your photo
onto a mug in gorgeous, lull color
that's so vibrant and real it seems
three dimensional. The colors are
completely permanent and non·
lading, so it's truly a lifetime gift.
Can be made while you wait. Use
your picture or make one lor you.

HOLZER CLINIC
in conjunction with the

BLACK LUNG PROGRAM
and the
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
IS OFFERING

PULMONARY FUNCTION TESTING
and

CHEST X-RAYS
Testing is being provided at no cost to the patient Costs not covered by patient's insurance will be offset by
the Ohw Department of Health Black Lung Grant and Th e Holzer Clinic Foundafion Grant.
Do )'llU experience::

19 .5 million Americans suffer from
some sort of pulmonary disease. If
you are one of these people, our
Pulmonary Disease program may
be able to help! Give Holzer Clinic
the opportunity to work with you
on the road to recovery.

Call today (614) 446- 5397

HOLZER CLINIC
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

(614) 446-5397

HOLZER CLINIC ...Here For Your Health, Here For Your Lifetime!

•••

THURSDAY
RUTI..AND - Rutland Township uustces, end of year meeting,
Thursday, 6:30 p.m .' at the Rutland
fire station.

PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST

•••
•••

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

0

•e
••
0

Louise Williams
-NeUWynn

+3.4.5

lfele!l catlthers

+33.7

J.tocbaey Williams

+33.3

. Paul Ullman

lf-32.9 .

'

Bette +0

As of December 8, these were the top 5 performing ponfolios out of the hundreds
in our contest. At this point 429 ponfolios arc ahead of Beuc's!

Each contestant chose 5 publicly traded s10cks from a lis! of I00 selected compa·
nics. Contest performance is based upon change in ponfolio value from the close
of business Friday, OCt. 27, 1995, through friday, December 29. The value of all
ponfolios will be tracked. Peoples Bank will award $500 to the top performer,
$250 for second place and $100 for third place.

Portfolio Note: Due to rrwrger of!Ifart in Marietta and l.ockheed Martin, all
adjustrmmts wiD be made lo lockheed Martin for those who chose Marlin
Marietta.
The Peoples Bank Discount Brokerage Service is ideal for investors who do nol
require the benefit of research or recommendations, but who still insist on service
and personal benefits. Peoples Bank Discount Brokerage Services are offered ·
through Olde Discount Corporation, member SIPC, NVSE, NASD. Discount
brokerage funds are not bank deposit~ and are not guaranteed by or insured by
any bank, FDIC, or lillY agency. Investments involve risk 1111d market value changes,
including po~ible loss of principal.

Are you beating Bette?

. She's not tellitig.
· Stop in any ·
Peoples Ba!Jk office to·
see.how you're doil)g. ,

Bette's betting on... Bette's ponfoUo picks include B. F. Goodrich; Cisco systems,
Inc.; Hewlett Packard; Lojack Corporation; and Merck &amp; Company.

j

As&amp;for 11 compllment11ry discount bro&amp;er~~ge fee schedule 111 11ny Peoples &amp;~n&amp; office.
Mariena
373-3155
Belpre
423-7516

Athen~

593-7761

Licking Co.
587-0909

Lowell
896;2369

.

··'

Middlepon
753-6661

Nelsonville
753- 1955

The Plains
797-4547

TDD Only
376-7123

~

'

II

GALLIPOLIS - The American
Red eross Blood Services is urging
Gallia County residents to "wotk a
miracle" this holiday season by
giving blood when its bloodmobile
stops at Grace United Metllodist
Church, 600 Second Ave .• on
Thursday, Dec. 21 .
The bloodmobile will be in
operation from 11:30 a.m . until 6
p.m.
"Each and every day, holidays
included, patients in our·country
need more tllan 20,000 people to
donate blood," explained Sandy
Black, donor marketing specialist
with the Red Cross' Tri-State
Region in Huntington, W.Va.
.
"Every 10 seconds, someone m
our counuy needs a blood trnnsfusion," Black continued .. "Donated
blood is given to people m need in emergency situations and during
planned surgical proced_ures both in and out of hospital settings."
All blood don!llli 20 years old or
older will be receiving free atborne advanced care cholesterol
teSt kiis. she added.
All blood types are needed.
Black said, but due to _tbe greater
potential for car acctdents and ,
otller emergencies over the holidays, hospitals typically experience
an even greater demand ~or type 0
positive and type 0 negauve blood.
the universal blood type.
To be eligible to give blood,
individuals must be at least 17
years o"ld, weigh at least 110
pounds and be in generally good
health. Blood can safely be given
every 56 days. ·
For more information, call the
Red Cross at 1-800~ 344-6603.

custo ms; the batteries were remo ved

from my camera . And. George's keys
were in the top of his backpack. just
we re he had left them'
Dorothy Sayre and her husband ,
George, formerly of Meigs County,
moved here about three years ago
and now reside in a new home facing the Ohio River below Syracuse.

Look who's bpck. in Busiqessl
Bernard &amp;Shelba Rossiter

The new owners of
Bla~en Landing.
We have daily dinners for Only
S4.99 and now until Dec. 24th
gellwo I sn Pinos for oaly
S14.99 FirsI one .9e1 everything,
2nd one choice of two toppings.
So stop by and see us or 1usl call
us at 256-b100.
We Look Forward To Serving You.

•••

POMEROY - Big Bend Chapter
of Good Sam Club, 2-6 p.m .• Royal
Oak Park.

•••

VHOWARD

VINTON - Vinton Fellowship
Chapel Christmas program, 9:30
•a.m.

A MILI.:ER.

•••

If you've got the
perfect spot, we've

GALLIPOLIS - Prospect Baptist Church Christmas program. 7
p.m.

got the perfect finish.
style and price to
fit. your budget.

•••

Featured on the left

Monday, Dec. 18

is the "Lawford"

GALLIPOLIS - Knights of
Columbus, 7 p.m .• St. Louis
Catholic Church Hall. Special presentation on family budgeting.

Cherry lin ish. and

•••

with a Windsor
a trip le c hime
move ment. On

the ri ght is the

•••

"Charlemagne·· with a

Oak Yorkshire finish.
and al so a triple
chime movement.

GALLIPOLIS - Community
Cancer Suppon Group, 2 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Church.

•••

CHESHIRE - TOPS No. 1383.
weigh-in, 8:30-9:45 a.m. Meeting
10-11 a .m. at Cheshire United
Methodist Church.

$1699

and Related Services

Pap Tests
STD Screening
Pregnancy Tests
Birth Control Methods including
• Depo-Provera
•Diaphragm • I.UD.
• Birth Control Pill • Condom/Spermicide
Anonymous lllV tests and counseling

S u g~ . Re w it B2XO

414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS
446-0166

Sugg_Relatl $60.95

VHOWARD

Rosewood IHllSh

Ouartl movemen t
4-1 /4. ran

A MILLER.

509 S THIRD STREET •

MIDDLE~~RT

.S ugg . l&lt; clail $.:.' 11

Great selecton of grandfather, mantel &amp; wall clocks.

Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private insurance.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -South Bethel
New Testament Church choir to

Bloodmobile to stop
in Gallipolis Dec. 21

did receive the message eyen though
their answering device was malfunctioning. "Daughter Dear" came to
our rescue and even had new tooth brushes at their house '
We wish our luggage could talk .
George called at 8 a.m. the nex t
momrng and it was there ' We think
the luggage went to Newark, NJ . and
then 10 the west coast, and bac k to
Dull e~ on the "red eye" ni ght. The
backpacks had . also. been throu gh

Family Planning ·

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Har~
risonville Senior Citizens blopd
pressure clinic and meeting ~or
Christmas dinner and gtfl
exchange, Tuesday, 10 a.m . to
12:30 p.m.

+36.0'

a.m. ~

Confidential Services for Women and Men

RUTI..AND - Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, 6 p.m. Christmas
dinner at the home of Margaret
Bell Weber in Rutland.

The leaders thus far in the Peoples
Bank Stock Picking Contest .. . .

•••

NORTHUP - Northup Baptist
Church Christmas program, 7 p.m.

RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7:30 at Star Mill
Park.

Status Report

GALLIPOLIS - Jack Parsons
will preach the 11 a.m. setvices and
Miles Trout tbe 7 p.m. setvices at
Debby Drive Chapel, Gallipolis.

bered his extra keys were in the top of
his backpack which was checked luggage! (I was "very nice" and did not
say a word. honest' )
As the kids wouldn '! be home for at
least an hour, I suggested we call
AAA and have them unl ock our car's
interior. Then we could use the trunk
latch button to retrieve my keys. We
called AAA. We arrived by cab where
the car was parked only moments
before AAA . Shortly. the AAA man
had our car door open and we popped
the trunk latch. There were house
keys and a note saying. "We weren't
sure you'd make it horne today and
we might have to move the car . so
your keys are home in our des k
drawer."
AAA to the resc ue again . He
dropped us at the nearest public telephonebooth which was inside a Courtyard by Marriott hotel. I tried calling
the kids' home and their answering
device was not working properly! I
tried leav ing a message at least twice
and George and I had nearly resigned
ourselves to a night at the Marriou
without toothbrushes. or else a very
expen sive cab fare to the kids ' h,,use.
The management at the Marriou was
very nice, gave us free coffee. and
invited us to watch the baseball play·
offs 10 their lobby lounge. About 8:20
p.m.. our daughter phoned. Yes. they

CROWN CITY - Kings Chapel
Church Christmas program, 10

•••

RODNEY - Christmas adult
comata, 11 a.m. Youth play and
cantata, 6 p.m. at Rodney Pike
Church of God and Old U.S. 35.

MONDAY
LETART- Letart Township
trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
office building.

11 OZ. SIZE

watched and waited for our luggage.
Finally. we were told, the bags forthe
people standing by for our flight, did
not make the trip. As that was the last
!light of the day for Dulles from
Heathrow, we expected our bags the
. nextday . No problem, we had left our
car with our daughter and son-in-law
·in Fair fax. Virginia. and we were ex·
pected for the night; we would now
simply spend two nights because of
our delayed luggage .
In London. I had called our daughter to find out what the plans were for
meeting us. She and her husband had
planned to go to Philadelphia for the
day and would be home about 7 p.m
They said they would take our car to
our son -in-law' s office parking lot.
near Dulles. and leave us a house key .
I told them George had his car keys.
so to lock my car keys in the trunk
with their house key .
I called the kids answering devrce
and left a mess age when we arrived at
Du lles Airport. I informed them we
would wait to see if our luggage possibl y was boarded on an earlier Oight
and would be found yet that evening.
It was not. George and I thought it
wou ld be easy to take a cab to where
our car was parked. until he remem -

-Gallia community calendar-

RlTI1.AND - Christmas lighting contest, judging Monday, 6 to
10 p.m., sponsored by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners. Includes houses in the village limits, Prizes of
ftrs~ second and third in categories
of religious, secular and doorway.

614-245-9685 or 614-245·9436
1-800-615-9436

MUG

-A welder, insulator, iron or chemical worker, etc.?
-An active or ~ coal minet'l
-A regular or occasional .smoket'l
Do you have:
)
-Emphysema?
-Asthma?
-Chronic()bstructive Pulmonary Disease?
-Asbestosis?
-Occupational Lung Disease?
Wue you l1li!ed in. or are you now in, a smoking household?

SUNDAY
POMEROY - South Bethel
New Testament Church, Chris~
program, Sunday, 6 p.m. Adult
class to present "His Name is
~esus" and the teen class will do
~Miracle Under a Blazing Star."
Refreshments following program.

HI mile from Rio Grande, Ohio
1593 Pleasant Valley R~.•VInton, Ohio

PHOTO

Are you:

;tl
~0_

well of Meigs County.
Johnson is currently auending
Buckeye Hills Career Center in use If.
We arrived in Washington, D.C .
Cosmetology'. Caldwell is a 1994
Dulles
Airport, about 4:30p.m. By
graduate of River Valley High
the
time
we made it through the first
School. He is currently employed
customs
check
and went looking for
at the Hutton's Car Wash in Meigs
our
bags.
it
was
about 5:00. We
County.
There wm be a church wedding
at the Old Bethel Church, Feb. 10,
1996at2 p.m.
·
The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-pront groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
present cantata. "0 Little Town" at events. The calendar is not
the church Wednesday, 7 p.m. and desigrted to promote sales or
'at 10 a.m. Sunday in conjunction fund-raisers of any type. Items
with children• s program.
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist specinc numlier of days.
Chun:h, Route 143, P,omeroy, "No
Greater Gift and "A. Christmas
Adventure" to be presenled at 7
Sunday, Dec. 17
p.m. on Wednesday' and Thursday
GALLIPOLIS - Calvary Chrisnights . Choir will also present tian Center, Jack~on Pike, Christ"Songs of Christmas."
mas program, 6 p.m.

community calendar-~

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
)lon·proflt groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. lteiJI!I
•re printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
~peclnc number of days.

PHOfOGRAPHI( IMPRINtiNG URYI(f~

&amp;

-Occasional shortness of breath?
-T'tgbtness in the chest?
-Burning in the chest and throat areas?

~Meigs

TRADITIONAL SEASONAL
MUSIC WILL BE PERFORMED
BY TH£ QUARTET
"ORDINARY PEOPLE'"
IN THE ATRIUM
FOLLOWED BY
REFRESHMENTS IN THE .
SWITZER ROOM.

o·

If you need a special event .Video
Taped for the Holidays•••Call us.

By DOROTHY SAYRE
October 8. 1995 , was a clear, sunny
day in London. It was the only day of
our nearly three-week trip to Scotland
and England that didn · t appear to
have rain in the forecast. Yes. that is
the day we departed
for
home.
Going to London . from the
U.S., we were
fortunate to
have nown on
oneofBoeing·s
new 777' s. It
sayre
was whi sper
quiet and due to
the air currents, the trip was about an
hour shorter than the return night.
(Our homeward bound airplane was a
747.) As we are seated only after
&lt;veryone ·el se is aboard and empty
seats are available, we felt very lucky
to have been aboard on our return trip.
Sunshine, or not. we were coming
home while the opportunity presented

oo

agency's auention bas been
advocacy at tile federal level for
aging issues witll tile help of tile
Advisory Council.
The luncheon speaker was
Cindy Farson, president of til£
National Association of Area
Agencies on Aging . Ms . Farson
spoke about the ways the proposed
federal budget affects older Amencans. She reviewed the status of the
reauthorization of the Older Ameri cans Act and discussed !,he fulure
direction of the aging network.
Purpose of the council is to
review and comment on all community policies and programs
which affect older Americans, to
assist the Area Agency staff in
assessing the needs of older adults
and identifying resources available
to meel these needs, and to recom- ·
mend to the executive committee
of Buckeye Hills programs which
should be awarded funding, as well
as funding levels.
The next meeting will be held in
March.

THE STAFF
OF BOSSARD UBRARY
IMt'ITES OUR CUSTOMERS
TO ATTEND h MUSICAL
E"ENIN6 MONDAY. 18
DECEMBER 1995 FROM 6:00
PMTO 7:30PM

Preserve your old
~
~ 8MM &amp; 16MM. Have ~
bJJ movies on VHS Tape - f:j
* We can do it for you. ~

,

AAA comes to the rescue in hectic trip home

Jackson told to take
rest of the year off

r!i

,j&amp;unllag tiimt•-J&amp;entiml • Page 83

l

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

992-59~

L

422 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

Recliners
Both For
95

$199

Padded Top

CEDAR
CHEST

.•

Limited
Quantity
One Per

Customer
Open Evenings
tiiB
Sunday 1-4

i wse Corner of 2nd and Grape St.

Iii

I

Gallipolis

446-0332

�-·

Sunday, December 17, 1995

'

. . .-.

•: ......

......

MR. AND MRS. CHARLES DOTSON

Dotsons to note 50th anniversary
GALLIAOUS - Charles and Nellie Dotson will celebrate their 50ib
wedding anniversary on Dec. 20.
They are lhe parents of four children: Dan (Mary) Dotson. Becky
(Dale) Lear, David (Kris) Dotson and Edy (Mark) Smilh. They have 10
grandchildren and one great-grandson. They arc charter members of Failh
Baptists Church.

Powells celebrate their 50th·
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Jerry A. Powell, Racine, celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary on Dec. 12 with a family dinner at Sebastians
in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Following the dinner, the group returned to the couple's home, where
they were SUJllrised with a family video starting with their childhood and
continuing to the present time.
Attending were their daughters and sons-in-law, Donna Rae and
Austin Wolfe and Jane Ann and Roger Hill; grandchildren, Jerry and
Dixie Wolfe, Randy and Aimee Pyles. Scan Hill and his guest. Mary
Byer, and Heather Hill and her guest, Mark Allen; and great-grandchildren, Hannah and Betsy Wolfe, and Charley and Stefanic Pyles. ·
Gifts and cards were presented to the couple.

¥IDDLEPORT - A program geared to help students pass the ninth
grade proficiency tests, a requirement for high school graduation, wm
start this week at Meigs Junior High School.
·
To help the students prepare for the testing, the faculty wiD be offering
sessions on the different areas on Tuesdays from 7 to 8 p.m at Meigs
Junior High through February.
The schedule is Dec. 19, science; Jan. 9, math; Jan. 16, citizenship;
Jan. 23, writing; Jan. 30, reading; Feb. 6, science; Feb. 13, math; Feb. 20,
citizenship, and Feb. 27, math. If school is canceled on any of the scheduled days for any reason, that session will be canceled.
Tbc program will inclnde tips on how to help a child pass the test and
examples of ;'1e types of questions which are a.'ked. Students and parents
will have the opportunity to ask questions concerning the test.
School officials advise that it would be best for both students and their
parents to attend the sessions. Also invited to attend are Meigs High stu_dent who have not passed the test or some particular phase of it.
Questions concerning the testing sessions should be directed to Dave
Gaul, principal of Meigs Junior High, or John Amott, guidance counselor,
992-3058.
Legislation providing for the statewide high school proficiency testing
program for Ohio's high school students was passed in 1987.
Tests are administered to verify student achievement in the areas of
reading, writing, mathematics, and citizenship.
Beginning this year a science test has been added. Passing the ninthgrade science test will be an additional requirement for any student gradU'ating after Sept. 15, 2000.
To receive a diploma, students must pass the ninib-grade proficiency
test$ and meet all curricular requirements established by the state and district boards of education.
After passing the ninth-grade tests. public school students will also be
required to take the 12th grade proficiency tests in the same test areas.
Students taking the ninth-grade proficiency tests may lake only one:
test per day.

PEOPLES' CHOICE -Members of the Floral Friends Garden Club are seen with their
Peoples' Choi&lt;e award-winnin~ tree during the

.Winners

named in ACS Unit's
Jirst Festival of Trees contest

Mall Walker
Suede Leather
Available in Black &amp; Brown

~~e

e

Ches
.

"Antiques
Collectibles"

... and
Pretty
Things"

•••

,.,

MR. AND MRS. 'BILL' PRICE

Prices to note 50th anniversary

MR. AND MRS. LOYD JOHNSON

Golden anniversary slated
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Johnson, Middleport, will
observe their 40th wedding anniversary tomorrow.
They were married on Dec. 18. 1955 at the First Methodist Church in
Westfield, N.Y.• by the Rev. Barnard Howe. They have one daughter,
Sandra Johnson of Reedsville.

Historical unit sells collection
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio
llistorical Society on Friday formally agreed to sell a 150-year-old
collcctton of American Indian artifact s to the Nez Perce tribe in
ldallo.
The society's 18-member hoard
of trustees accepted an offer from
the tribc to purchase 20 items for a
total of $60R. IOO . said society
spokeswoman Ann Frazier.
Nineteen of ibe items have been
displayed at the Nez Perce National
Historic Park in Spalding. Idaho.
since 1979, when the society first
loaned the items 10 the National
Park Service The society sold the
items for a tm;~ or $583. 100.
The trustees also agreed to sell
the tribe a cratlle board, which had
not been displayed with the other
items, for an additional $25,000.
Indian mothers use d the cradle
board to carry llllan ts on their
backs ..
The offer was based on a 1993
appraisal of the artifacL,.
"We're really pleased that the
Nez Perce share our interest in
making the collection accessible to
the public." Ms. Frazier said.
The action followed a meeting
Tuesday of four Nez Perce leaders
and four society tru stees at which
the tribe offered to buy the artifacL'
at the selling price. A Presbyterian
missionary reportedly purchased
the items for $27 during the IK40s
from the Nez Perce.
The loan agreement witb tbe
park se rvice had been renewed
each year since 1979. In January,
the historical socie ty asked the
agency to return the artifacts by the
end of the year so they could be
inspected and stored for an undetennined period.
Almost immediately after making the reques~ the society and the
tribe started talks on a purchase
agreement, Ms. Frazier said.
The Nez Perce have until June I
to pay the society. If payment is ~ot
received, the park serv1ce w11l
return the items to Ohio by June
30, Ms. Frazier said.

LONG BOTTOM - George
William "Bill" and Mary Mourning
Price of 50860 Mount Olive RoM,
Long Bottom, will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary on Saturday, Dec. 23.
Mr. and Mrs. Price were married
in the First Baptist Church in Lawton, Okla., by the Rev. H.J. Wiles.
They are the parents of William
Harvey Price of Indianapolis, Ind.;
David Dale Price and Penny
Mullen of Middleport; Debra Jean
Howard of Pomeroy; and J.R. Price
of Long Bottom . They have eight
grandchildren.
An open reception honoring the
couple will be held from 2 to 4
p.m. on Saturday at the United
Methodist Church of Long Bottom.
It will be hosted by the couple's

11:00 to 7:00 Mon.-Sat.~ 1:00 to 4:00 Sun.

children.
It is requested that gifts be omitted.

American Cancer Society Gallla County Unit's
Fe.~llval of Trees.

.

\lhe Shoe

~~~=:l~367-799~9~~~=

; GALLIPOLIS - Nearly 75
:.entries were judged during the firSt
;American Cancer Society Unit's
-Festival of Trees Nov. 28 at the
lfoliday Inn, according to Anita
:Littlejohn, general chairperson.
·· Festival committee members
:were Sheri Kerns, Judy Hall,
'Kristin O'Neal, Mary Lee Marchi,
Stephanie Stover, Jeri Allie, Kris
'Cochran, Pat Boyer and Lori
Young.
• Awards were presented in 10
:categories, including Best of Show
·;md People's Choice.
: The winners were:
: Best of Show (large trees) :" ABCs of Christmas," sponsor,
-David Grim of Rio Tire, decora. :tors, Cindy Graham. Phyllis Bran:deberry and Pam Withee; (mid-size
~rees) - "Golden Rule Days,"
':sponsor. The Ohio Company, Jay
;Caldwell. decorator, Sheri Kerns;
'(miniature trees) - "School
:Oays," sponsor and decorator,
:Susie Vanco; (craft) - "The Old
~Bam" by Wilma Thaxton (sweat'Shirt), "Snowmen Will Melt Your
}!eart" by Donna Neal (wreath),
"Country Christmas Wreath" by
.!Eleanor Atkins, Sharon Rees and
Usa Slone; (arrangement) -

"Frosty and Friends" by Mike
Brown; (wall hanging) - "Lone
Star" by Mary Lee Marchi.
Most Creative and the Peoples'
Choice awards went to Floral
Friends· Garden Club's large tree
"Years Gone By" and Ohio Valley
Bank employees' "Stars of Light"

received Most Traditional honors.
Decorated trees and holiday tins
are still available at the Holiday Inn
or at the unit office. For more
infonnation. call446-7479.
Winner o( the 1995 Longaberger cranberry basket offered was
Tomiko Lewis of Gallipolis.

Gannett News Service
Tbc holiday season is fiUed with
excitement for children. as they
open presents and play with new
toys from family and friends. However, the excitement of a new toy
quickly can rum tragic if adults do
not factor safety into their gift-giving.
Last year, roughly 133,000 toyrelated injuries were suffered by
children 14 and under. Innocentlooking toys - such as marbles
and balloons - present a choking
hazard to small children . Other
hazards include toys with small
Pru:ts. sharp points and edges, toxic
pamt, Oammable materials and
long strings that can be a strangulation risk.
Tbe National Safe Kids Campaign, a not-for-profit foundation
based in Washington, recommends
parents choose toys appropriate for
the age and development of their
children, and be aware that
• Toys with small, removable
parts are hazardous particularly to
children under 3.
• Toys with sharp points or
edges may enable a child to unintentionally cut or stab himself or
another person.
• Toys that produce loud noises,
such a,, caps or toy guns, may permanently hanna child's hearing.
• Propelled toys. such as darts
and projectiles, should be avoided.

director. "Parents should defer to
the experts and always use a~e recommendations as the gmdehne for
selecting safe. appropriate toys."
• Infants to age I. The most suitable toys include activity quilts,
stuffed animals without button
noses and eyes, bath toys, soft
dolls , baby swings and squeaky
toys.

P'~~~~~~~~~~"#~~

~Happy Holiday Sale j

l

Everything in Store
Thru Dec. 30

~
~

ia

(304) 675-2786

Ih~~~u~~~.~~d~~~Y~~~
407 Main Street
.. Point Pleasant. WV

BOUTIQUE

BEAT THE CLOCK
XII
X XI

t

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... Don't Let It Beat You!

JLcquisitions :Fine Jewe[ry
Check Acquisition's prices before you buy anywhere!
- Lowest Prices on Diamonds and Gold TWO LOCATIONS
151 2ND AVE.
92 MILL ST.
OH. 446-2842
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 992-6250

rrope's !furniture (ja[[ery
HUGE SAVINGS ON GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
AND CURIO CABINETS
corner of 2nd and
Street,
Oh.

£ ifesty{e :Jurniture
CHRISTMAS SALE ON LA-Z-BOY RECLINERS
WONDERFUL GIFTS FROM $15.00

ANDERSON'S
MONDAY, DEC. 18
9:30 A.M. TO 8:00 P.M.

Beat The Clock This Sunday &amp; Get an
additional discount* on everything in the
store! But come early, because the
earlier you shop ... The more you SAVE!

•

Bringing smiles to our family and friends
faces as we celebrate our Saviour's birth.

BS

Tips on picking safe toys this year

Proficiency test help begin~ ·
this week at Meigs Jr. High

MR. AND MRS. JERRY POWELL

~unball 'G!im.ea-,Sontirul • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Here Is just one ex~mple of how It w~rks:

Gun Cabine,ts •••••••••••••••••••• 25% Off
Curio Cabinets •••••••••••••••••• 25% Off
Televisions ••••••••••••••• EXTRA SAVINGS
Wood Rockers ••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE ~
Berkliner Recliners ••••••••••• 25% Off

•Attractive Styles &amp; Colors - In Stock
•Push Button Comfort
•.Looks And Feels Great
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20%

'•.·

~~ l"n~~~iiiii~!.
...~-~-Now watch television
on an
Adjustable Bed.

The HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE

. '.'

wishes everyone a blessed and safe holiday.
A registered nurse is on duty
8 a.m. to 11:30 p.m., seven days a week
to answer your healthcare questions.

ANDERSON'S

1-800-462-5255

FURNITURE &amp;APPLIANCE
POMEROY

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446-7283
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992·3671

Talk to your physician about medication concerns

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•Stethoscopes
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•Patient Gowns
•Digital Blood Pressure Units
•Cervical Pillows

BOWMAN'S

Reg. $800 23% off (1 :oo·p.m. tll3:00 p.m.) You Pay 5616
Reg. $800 18% off (3:00p.m. til5:00 p.m.) You Pay 5656
Reg. $80015% (5:00p.m. til6:00 p.m.) You Pay 5680
·
, As lhe clock Ticks Away,
The discounts Become Smaller.&amp; Smaller

FURNITURE
SALE POSITIVELY ENDS AT 6 P;M. DEC. tnH

765 E. Main St.
Jackson, Oh.
286-7484
Mon.-Fri. 9:00.5:00 ·. ·

• No Down Payment
• No Delivery Charge
• No Cash • No Problem
* Discounts do not apply to other
advertised specials, watches or prior sales.

5 Ways To Pay:
• MasterCard • Visa • Discover
• Heilig-Mayers Card • In-Store Credit

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

$unday, December 17, 1995

Sunday, December 17, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • ·Point Pleasant, WV

.,Sunllall tllimta-~rntilul • Page 87

How to establish a proper diet ·against the ravages of time
years. The body's need for dietary
calories will be lower because of a
continually decreasing number of
active, calorie-burning cells.
In addition, the digestive system. through which nutrients are
digested and absorbed. gradually
becomes less efficient. The ability
to feel thirst may diminish, resulting in an inadequate water intake.
It's also common for older people
to experience su ch diet-related
problems as difficulty in chewing
and a decreased sense of smell and
taste.
Sometimes other problems, such
as reduced vision. loss of mobility,
loneliness, depression and income
limitations, may affect an individu-•
ar s ability to partake of and enjoy
the eating e~pcrience . Often,

lh EllliLONZ, Ph.D.
. DEAR DR. BLONZ: '1 no longer
seem to he able to eat the types and
amounts of foods that have kept me
slim 1\Y&lt;r decades. I remain active
and I cat healthy, but despite this
my wdght keeps creeping higher
and I mn getting a belly. Many, but
not nil, of my friends are conlronting lbc same issue. How can I
change my diet to betler cope with
the ravages of time?- O.M., West
l'a~n Beach. Fla.
DEAR O.M.: Aging doesn't
happen suddenly. It's a cumulative
process tllat proceeds at different
rates in different people. Besides
the obvious visible signs , the
body · s metabolism goes through
radical chang es as you progress
through midlifc to your senior

despondency over the loss o.f a the body. Free-radical damage bas
partner affects the very desire to been associated with heart disease,
have a meal. All these can lead to cataracts and certain types of candramatic changes in what, how and cer as well as other diseases of old,
age . Research has shown that a few
when people eat.
Many studies have documented nutrients, including vitamin E, vita·
the importance of staying well- min C, beta-carotene, selenium and
nourished as you age. One study, zinc, can combat free-radical dam·
for example. showed that even age.
among older people in good health,
those whose diets contained more
of the essential nutrients performed
better on memory and learning
tests.
Good long -term eating habits
also help when you're ill. 'The payoff includes faster wound healing,
fewer surgical complications and
shorter hospital stays. One widely
held theoryJ!( aging explains bow .___•---!"K~En~•o!....:=~• LIKE AK'"""
the compounds called free-radicals
,..., ....., """"
nu
can cause damage to the cells of SHOP FOR HIM N 11-£ CI.ASSFIEDS.

..

Open Every Night lill 8:00 p.m.*

taking in the program.

'BEES

BALLED &amp; BURLAP
Plant Outside After Christmas

.

. . . .a

~. ~==:

SMELTZER'S
NURSERY
'

,

Register to win $500.00 Shopping Spree J .

(Ed Blonz, Ph.D., Is the author
of the "Your Personal NutrllloBist" book series, Signet, 1!1!16). ·

CHIIIS,MAS

HARRY SIDERS
.·.·
&amp; SONS JEWELERS l .

by Bob Hoeflich

of mail,frsonal replies cannot b~
provide
,

LIVE

.

. p~~~41!1$41$~~~"4'~~

Beat of the Bend ...
What promises to be one of the
he st live Nativity scenes to be
· ollcrcd in the Big Bend area this
year will take place from 6 to II
p.m. Thursday, and you're invited
· to make Lo stop by and view the
seiLing.
Twenty-two teens of the Racine
First Baptist Church. plus animals,
- will be taking part in the scene,
which will be located at the home
of Cookie and Ronnie Salser on
Route 124 near the Southern High
Schoo l A stable has been constructed 10 enhance the presenta-

S11nd questions to: '~On Nuiri·
tion, ' ' Ed Blonz, do Newspaper
Enterprise Assocwtion, 200 Madison Ave,, New York, NY 10016. For
e-mail, address inquiries to:
blo111.hooked.net. Due to the volume

624 JACIIOH

Pl~!6• 1106 GALUPOUS, ON.

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

tion .

There's just a whole lot of
· Christmas stuff going on.
At 7 p.m. Monday, a musical
progr:un will be staged in Pomeroy
under the sponsorship of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association.
The stage on the upper parking lot
will be the selling for the second
· annual Christmas program.
·
Meigs County' s Singin' Sheriff
. Jim Soul shy will emcee the pro. gram. which will include Christmas
music by an instrumental ensemble
from the Meigs High School Band
of Toney Dingess, selections by a
male choral group, plenty of dancing by the Big Bend Cloggers
under the direction of Vivian May
and Soulsby will undoubtedly present one of your favorite Christmas
songs.
The program will conclude with
the arrival of Santa, supplied with
candy canes. Incidentally, the Big
~ Bend Cloggers. who do such a nice
JOb . have n~ade over 20 appear: a nces at vanous events dunng the
. hohday season. Few groups will• ~1ve up tllat much of thet.r personal
~ tune at such a busy tune of the year
to entertam others. .
.
Stores wtll remam open until 8
p.m. for your convenience and I
. hear there'll be some other treats
· appe:~ring. I understand Bobbie
· Karr . owner of Hanover House.
: will have hot chocolate samples
· available and Annie Chapman of
• the Ohio Valley Bulk Store will
: have samples of pretzels on ha.~!l.
The weather promises to be not too
: cold, so all in all you might enjoy

So what are you doing New
Year's Eve?
In case you haven't been invited
to do anything special, perhaps you
will want to attend a party to be
staged at tlle anne~ . across from the
Middleport Post Office, by American Legion Post 128 on Sunday
evening, Dec. 31. •
The time structure is 8 p.m. to I
a.m., and best of all, the party is
free.
Snack tables, soft drinks. party
favors and noisemakers will be
provided by the legion and a
favorile musical group of the area,
The Classics, will be playing from
9 p.m. to I a.m., and you should
enjoy that.
The party is open to the public
and no reservations are needed.
rnmk celebrated his 80th birthday and it was great hearing a lot of
his music during the observances.
'The emphasis, however, seemed to
-be on "I Did It My Way." Somehow, I can't believe that's a very
good philosophy of life Tor most of
us. but whatta I know? Do keep
smiling
·

From.our famiJ.y at

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LOSE ~; 10 LBS.
IN 3 DAYS

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W~t~ ~~:~~~~;·~~:~~te

MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
(S2.00 OFF COUPON - LIMIT 1)

----FRUTH PHARMACY

Middleport

VAUGHAN'S
SUPERMARI{ET

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992-6491 •

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to your family.

:··tii

CHICK lHI ClA~!IfiiD~ fOR All YOUR NUD~!

• • •

Home Cooked rurkey Dinners
•111-12 lb. 7urkey Freshly Prepared
(On·or off the bone)
•2 lbs. Homemade Sweet Potatoes
•2 lbs. Homemade Dressing
•llb.lomemade Cole Slaw
•2 lbs. Greah Beans
•I dozen RoDs Baked Fresb in Our Bakery
·
•1-10" Pumpkin Pie Baked Fresb in Our Bakery

0

-.11:

]

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- ~

::.1
i

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Ham Dinners Freshly Baked

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RAVE A
'A ND

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;'·,1·.··.··.

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0 CredH Terms

1.. ltDIUIIIcolll . ..
MIM.,tlt, ONo UTIO

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1·800-426-5581

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Mon.-Fri. 9-11
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·Sun. 1·5

FURNITURE &amp; JEWEI.RY, INC.

•l-71b. Bam
•2 lbs. Homemade Sweet Potatoes
•2 lbs. Green Beans
•lib. Cole Slaw
•I dozen Rolls Baked Fresb in Our Bakery
•1-10" Pumpkin Pie Baked Fresb in Our Bakery

SAFE
CHRISTMAS

tra
---,_

· ·tl·~~-~~fltUUJSi~UliiitiU~~l14iA!ti.~&amp;-·&amp;•~w~~-litAb'W~·~·~li_.lir#LW~~~
,.

..

•

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page 88 • J&amp;u.Wav Grinu•-J&amp;enlhul

Sports

Sunday, December 17, 1995

'Jumanji' a glorious surprise for game lovers
. boy (Adam Hann-Byrd) discovers
By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
Jumanji in a trunk during excavaAttention, board game lovers: tion at his father's shoe factory.
Beware of something called The boy takes it home and perJumanJL It ts not one of those suades h1s would-be girlfriend
wimpy things like Monopoly or (Laura Bell Bundy) to play it with
Clue Jumanji the game can be him All beck breaks loose, and the
injurious 10 your health. lu11Ulnji hoy disappears into a void.
Next it is 26 years later, present·
the movie is as loaded with glorious surpnscs as a grab bag full of day. The mansion is deserted, the
emeralds.
family having disintegrated after
The story comes from a prize- the disappearance of the son. A
winnin g 1981 children's book by woman moves 111 with her
Chris Van Allsburg. Several rilm- orphaned niece (Kirsten Dunst) and
makers romanced the author over nephew (Bradley Pierce). The
the years. but a deal was never consummated Good thing. Because
Van Allsburg's soaring flight of
fancy could never be filmed properly unul the technology carne of
age.
Ju rass 1c Park and Toy Story
demonstrated what now can be
accomplished with computer
1magery. Jumlln}l profits from such
techniques. along with improved
spcmtl effects and animalromcs.
The story concerns a game so
temtymg lhat a pair of New Hampshire you ths bury it in 1869.
A ce ntury later, a 12-year-old

youngsters discover Jumanji, still
tbumping with jungle drums.
The lost boy. now 38 years old

and looking like a busby Robin
Williams, reappears with s!Ories of
fighting jungle perils.

In NCAA 1-AA football championship,

Montana slips past Marshall 22-20

'Absdule~
H1 l anou5l ~ ,..:_';~

fAmU of tlw BRID[
Pul
, ,n

By MA'IT HARVEY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Dave Dickenson, who came up big
for Montana all season, did it again
in the NCAA Division 1-AA championship game.
Dickenson, who led the division
in passing, drove his team 72 yards
for the game-winning field goal, a
25-yarder by Andy Larson with 39
seconds left, as Montana beat
Marshall 22-20 Saturday for its frrst
national title.
The finish was strangely similar
to Marshall's only title, in 1992.
That year, Thundering Herd quarterback Michael Payton, a record-setter
like Dickenson, drove Marshall for
the game-winning field goal late
against Youngstown State.
Dickenson, sacked 10 times in
the game, showed no fear on the
final drive. He completed six passes
for 69 yards, then scrambled 11
yltrds to Marshall's 8 to set the stage
for Larson.
It was Larson's second field goal
of !be day, but just his lOth of the
year in 14 tries. Montana (13-2),
which outscored opponents 185-34
in the playoffs, seldom needed to
call on him Ibis season.
But Marshall (12-3), which used
stingy defense all season to win, did
a good job containing Montana's
passing attack before a 1-AA cham·
pionsbip record crowd of 32,106 at
Marshall Stadium.

.

7; 10 , 9; 10 DAlLY
~TINEIS SAT/IVJI

1; 10 J: 10

ASK DICK KLEINER

For Thft Speeiallad'

How do you write
to today's stars?
Q. How does one go about writ·
ing to celebrities? - A.P., Salinas,
Calif.
A. If you have that overwhelming compulsion to write to a
celebrity, lhe best way is in care of
tbe network (if it's a TV star). or in
care of tbe studio (if it's a movie
star), or in care of tbe record com·
pany (if it's a recording star). And
don't bold your breath, waiting for
an answer.
Q. Can you please tell me who
played Shoeless Joe Johnson in
Field of Dreams? - P.S., Sun
Lakes, Anz.
A. It was Jackson. not Johnson.
And the actor who played that
baseball hero was Ray Liotta.
Q. A friend of mine and I were
wondering, -what was the name of
the drama series Craig T. Nelson
starred in before Coach? I remember the series took place in the
1960s and be played a military officer.- M.L., Stuart, Fla.
A. That was Call to Glory.
Q. I have been tryin&amp;· to find a
v1deo of an old movie I loved. It is
a war movie with Robert Mitchum. .
and, I think. Deborah Kerr. She
was a nun, on an island, and he wa~
a stranded Marine . She alw ays
answered him with "Heaven
knows, Mr. Allison." I always
thought that was the ulle, but I
can't find it. - R.M ., Prescoll,
Ariz.
A. Heaven knows, you have the
title and stars right, and the reason
you can't find it is that it doesn't
ex 1st. No video of that film bas
been released.
Q. Please tell me the name of
the theme music from the minis·
eries The Thorn Blfds . I believe
!bat this same beautiful melody is
being used by Serta, for their mattress commercials. -Mrs. K.C.R.,
Barker, N.Y.
A. That lovely tune, by Henry
Mancini, is simply called "The
Tbeme From The Thorn B.rds.· •
Q. My family and I enjoyed !be
Father Dowling Mysteries, with
Tom Bosley, very much. We notice
it's not hstcd any more What's
happening ? This program is a
wholesome. dean show. Why take
it off? - L.J .ll .. Mesa, Ariz.
A. You' ve been watching reruns, as the program ha.' not been
made for several years. Why was it
taken off? Probably, low ratmgs,
but ask your local station.
Q. I just watched a very moving
pertonnance by Bernadene Peters
m The Last Best Year . She is such a
weH-rounded perfonner. What does
she do when not appearing in
movies or sitcoms" - D.R P.,
Amherst, N.H.
A. She does stage work and she
sings in clubs.

Stop In and See Our Large
Selection of Women's Winter
Coats and Jackets In
Beautiful Colors

The Wtreless One Network
.
SuperSystem covers over 100,000
square miles in seven stales, all without premium atrttme rates or daily
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20,o50%oFF
992·2351

'

Scoring summary
Montana: Larson 48-yd. FG
Marshall: Openlander 39-yd. FG
. Montana: Wells 24-yd. pass from
Dickenson (Larson kick)
Marshall: Parker 10-yd. run
(Openlander kick)
Montana: Safety, Pennington
intentional grounding in end zone
Montana: Wells 2-yd. pass from
Dickenson (Larson kick)
Marshall: Openlander 21-yd. FG
Marshall: Parker 26-yd. run
(Openlander kick)
Montana: Larson 25-yd. FG
A-32.106.

Team statistics
Department
Mill!L Mru:,
First downs .................. ..21
17
Rushes-yards ............ 29-49 32-112
Passing yards ............... 281
246
Return yards ................. 23
0
Comp.-att ................. 29-48 23-41
Interceptions thrown ..... I
0
Punts-avg ................. 8-28
5-37
Fumbles-lost ................0-0
4-1
Penalties-yards ......... 4-18 12-109
Time of possession .. .30: 14 29:46

Statistical leaders

=

KNOCKED AWAY - Marshall quarterback Chad Pennington
(left) sees the ball knocked away by Montana's Corey Falls during
Saturday's NCAA 1-AA championship game in Huntington, W.Va.,
where the Thundering Herd lost 22-20. (AP)
Rushing
246, Martin 0-1 -0-0.
Montana: Brnnen 6-33, Gales 1Receiving
11, Stesrud 4-5, Dickenson 18-0
Montana : Erhardt 9·90,
Marshall: Parker 23-94, Darling 3· Douglass 8-102, Wells 8-62, Stesrud
8, Thomas 1-7, Gary 3-6, 2-20, Branen 1-5. Gales I-2.
Pennington 2-(minus 3).
Marshall: Wiggins 5·81, Carter 5Passing
56, Todd 5-44. Manin 4-50, Wicks
Montana: Dickenson 29-48-1- 2-11, Thomas 1-7, Parker 1-(mmus
281. Mmhall: Pennington 23-40- I· 3).

Steelers
defeat
Patriots

WinS
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Maceo BasiOn scored 23 points and
blocked a last-second jumper by
Bryant Bostoo as No. 18 Michigan
held on to beat Washington 60-59
Saturday.
Michigan took a 57-50 lead with
4:28 remaining, but the Huskies
carne back to tie it 59-59 on a layup
by Todd MacCulloch with I :05
left.
Travis Conlan, wbo was fouled
by Mark Sanford, sank the rust of
two free throws with 52 seconds
remaining to put Michigan up 6059.
Washington had a final chance
to win after the Wolverines were
called for traveling. But Boston's
jumper with three seconds left was
slapped away by BasiOn.
The Wolverines (8-2) were
coming off a five-day layoff for
final exams. and the rust showed.
Michigan shot only 40% from
the field, missed 17 of 32 free
throws and was outrebounded 4234. But Washington also was sloppy, turning the ball over 27 times
and shooting 42% from the field.
Boston 5cored 13 points for !be
Huskies (3-2), while MacCulloch
bad 12.
In other action, Manhattan 61,
Fordham 58; Mount St. Mary's,
Md. 83, Loyola, Md. 73; Marquette
78, Santa Clara 49; Ohio State 105.
Seton Hall 96; St. Louis 67, S. Illinois 63; Rhode Island 68, Va.
Cmrimoowealth 63; Texas 83, Oregon St. 54; and West Virginia 94,
Ohio69.

MIDDLEPORT

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'

.1:.~

NOT TH~S TIME- New England defensive back Ricky Reynolds
DISTRACTING Washington's Alex Lopez from passing to an
open teammate Is the task of the moment for Michigan frontman
Albert While during the first half of Saturday's game In Ann Arbor,
Mich~ where the host Wolverines won 60-59. (AP)

!bey host the Cincinnati Bengals.
Owner Art Modell wants to move
!be Browns .to Baltimore next season.
The Bengals (6-8) haven't been
mathematically eliminated from a
playoff berth ye~ but !heir meeting
with the Browns (4-10) realistically

Wide Arei
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••

(:U) gets h1s hands up and In to break up a pass intended for

Pittsubrgh wide receiver Ernie Mills during the first half or Saturday's
AFC contest in Pittsburgh, where the Steelers won 41-27to get at least
one home game in the conference playoffs. (AP)

holds little significance beyond !be
possibility that it may mark !be end
of the Browns' 50-year history at
Cleveland Stadium.
Cincinnati coach Dave Sbula,
among many others. would miss !be
place.
"The first game I ever went Ill

professionally was Colts-Browns,
the 1964 championship game. We
lost," said Sbula, who was five
years old when the Baltimore Colts,
coached by his father, Don, were
beaten by the Browns 27-0 for !be
NFL title.
"I was on !be sideline," Shula

said. "I was standing on the bench
with my feet nght next to one of
those blowers keeping warm . I
remember bow bad the game was
for the Colts.
"My lasting impression of that
was when I went into the locker
room after the game and saw a lot of
the Colts players crying. That was
the first time I'd seen a grown-up
cry, a grown man cry. And I realized
how serious this business was. I
think about that every time I go up

there."
That '64 title remains the only
one the Drowns have won 10
Modell's 35 years as their owner.
They have never won, or even
played in, a Super Bowl.
Yet Cleveland fans have been
steadfast in the1r support of the
Browns through good times and bad,
with crowds routinely surpassing
70,000 per game during the 1990s
even as the team has repeatedly been
a. loser. This will be !be fifth hme in
SIX seasons that the Browns have
failed to make tbe playoffs.
"It's a sad day when Cleveland
doesn't have football," said Bengals
· linebacker Steve Tovar, who grew
up near Cleveland and allended
Ohio State University. "When you
say Cleveland. you say Browns in
the same breath. If you're going to
make all your money there and all of
a sudden get up and leave, I don't
think that's fair."
No date has been set for a trial on
a lawsuit by the city of Cleveland
seeking to force Modell to honor a
lease binding the team to !be stadium through 1998. The team has

'

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Aaoss 1m lie IIIII
ol'alle (lyJ'Im

~-

PITTSBURGH
(AP)
Pittsburgh's league-leading defense
scored late in each half, and Neil
O'Donnell threw a 62-yard
touchdown pass to Ernie Mills with
I :28 left as the Steelers rallied to
beat the New England Patriots 41-27.
O'Donnell threw two touchdown
passes, and Stewart ran for his first
NFL 10uchdown on a dnve started by
h1s two passes, while Breqtson
Buckner and Chns Oldham scored
defensive touchdowns. The AFC
Central champion Steelers (11-4)
now arc assured of a first-round bye
and at least one home playoff game
Mills caught the pass ne~r
midfield as defenders Carlos Yancy
and Terry Ray collided, then ran the
rest of the way untouched to extend
Pittsburgh's longest wmning streak
s1nce a mne-game run 10 1979 - the
las t season they won the Super Bowl.
Drew Bledsoe chrew two six-yard
touchdown passes to Ben Coates.
Kordell Stewart hit Mills for nine
yards and Th1gpen for 32, only to
lin e up lwo plays later as a slot
rece 1vcr after O'Donnell's return .
Stewart took O'Donnell's pitch and
sa&gt; led through the nght side of the
l'auiots' defense for a 22-yard
10uchdown tbat made it24-12.
Dledsoc went 39-of-60 for 336
yards and three touchdowns as the
PatriOts (6·9) rallied from 12 points
down to force a 27-all tie with 4:38
left. Curtis Martin, the former Pitt
back, rushed for 120 yards, h1s fourth
stra1gh1 100-yard game, and scored
on a 22-yard receptiOn.

Today•s Bengals-Browns clash tabbed as final ·eattle of Ohio•
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - No one is
quite sure if the time bas come to
say goodbye to Cleveland Stadium.
Unless a court or the NFL rules
otherwise, the Browns will be playing their last home game as a
Cleveland franchise today when

Drifters' concert
slated tor Tuesday
POINT PLEASANT, W.Ya Bill Pinkney and The Original
Drifters will be taking center stage
at the State Theatre in Point Pleasant Tuesday at 8 p.m.
Pinkney is the only living member of The Drifters who signed
with Atlantic Records in 1953. The
group bit the chaos willl such classics as "Under the Boardwalk" and
"Save the Last Dance for Me."
In 1988, Pinkney represented
the group when it was inducted in
the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame.
The Drifters' recording of "White
Cbris1Dl3S" was featured in the box
offace bit Home Alone. The song is
said to be one of !be 10 all-time
best-selling Christmas recordings.
The group's area petformance is
sponsored by the Point Pleasam
Artists Series . Limited tickets
remain for the concert and can be
obtained at the State Theatre.

Marshall ................0 3 7 10 =20

60-59

-lie~

San $100 otT select full
size sels. Valid until 12/24/95.

Smythe, then curled outside for a
24-yard touchdown catch with 59
seconds left in the half to make it
10-3.
On Marshall's first drive,
Pennington pitched the ball at !be
feet of tailback Chris Parker on
fourth-and-one at Montana's 40.
Marshall's Thomas celebrated
after a seven-yltrd gain, costing the
Herd 15 yards and helping to kill
another drive. The next time
Marshall bad the ball, Thomas
dropped a pass on a deep route down
the sideline on which be should have
scored.
However, Montana let Marshall
get away with one big mistake:
Grizzly cornerback Mike Temple
mtercepted Penning!On with less
than a minute left in the half, and
Marshall center Dave Honick added
to llle error by bitting Temple late
out of bounds.
Montana started at Marshall's 36,
but Dickenson was sacked for the
eighih time in the half on the first
play of the drive and !be Grizzlies
eventually settled for a 37-yard field
goal try by Larson that missed wide
left
Marshall was runner-up in 1987,
1991 and 1993 as well as this season.
The Herd lost at borne for only
the fourth time since 1991.
Quarter llllali
Montana ................ 3 7 2 10 22

•

Motorola Tote Bag

Sm $50 otT select twin
size sels. Valid untill2124/95.

While Dickenson set the 1-AA
tournament record with 1,501 yards
passing in four games, be managed
just 281 yards Saturday.
But after Marshall's all-time
leading rusher, Chris Parker. ran for
a 26-yltrd touchdown with 4:45 left
to put the Herd up 20-19, Montana
marched down the field for the winning field goal.
Marshall's defense played well
enough to win, but couldn't overcome the team's offensive mistakes.
Herd running back Erik Thomas
fumbled on his own 20 to set up
Montana's only touchdown of the
second half, a two-yard pass from
Dickenson to Matt Wells.
Also in the second half, Herd
quarterback Chad Pennington
grounded the ball in the end zone,
costing Marshall a safety.
And in the first half, Marshall
played like a team in its first championship game instead of its fourlh
in five seasons.
A late hit and a screen helped gel
Montana's sluggish offense rolling
late in !be sccood quarter.
The hit out of bounds by Herd
safety BJ. Summers moved the ball
from Marshall's 29 to its 44. A play
later, the Grizzlies caught the Herd
unprepared for the screen to wide
receiver Joe Douglass, who went 31
yards down the sideline.
Two plays later, Wells joked to
the inside, freezing Herd safety Scott

Michigan

BAHR CLOTHIERS
145 NORTH SECOND AVE.

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Athens
1015 East State St.
614-592·4911

.,

Lim1ted time offer.
l

'

.l

argued it can break the lease legally
1f II pays the rent for the remaining
three years.
The uncertainty, coach Bill
Belichick said, will prevent him
from getting too choked up about
today.
"It's possible this isn't the last
one," Belichick said. "It doesn't
sound 100 percent definite to me
I'm really not into anything othe;
than thts week against Cincinnati."
Belichick's team has lost s1x
stra1ght ¥ames. a skid that began
r1ght after the news broke that
Modell was planning !be move. The
home field advantage has evaporat·
cd, although Cleveland fans put tbeir
hatred of Modell aside long enough
to support !be Browns when archrival Pittsburgh came to town last
month: the Steelers won anyway
20-17.
'
"The Dawg Pound has been there
for us ," safety Stevon Moore said
"All the fans have been there for us:
The Dawg Pound really sigmfies !be
Browns. Before the game, we'll
probab.ly shake some hands, give
some h1gh-fives."
Browns linebacker Frank Starns
grew up in nearby Akron, so he has
a deep understanding of what the
team means to !be area.
"T II grab some dirt from the end
zone. and maybe I'll charge my
videocam up this week," Stams
said. "I want Cleveland to have a
professional football team. If I'm
~of it, that.would be great. But
II s Mr. Modell s team, and 1 believe
be has a right 10 do with it what be
wants."

�.' .

'

'

'

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

.Trimble boys keep Southern winless with 72-58 vi~fory

By edging Nelsonville-York 66-65,

Meigs boys hike
undefeated mark

Southern was led by Jamie
Evans' 14 points and Spike Rizer
with 13 points. Ironically, Jesse
Maynard, Southern's top scorer
one game ago was held scoreless.
In the previous game, Spike Rizer,
the leading scorer in the first game
was held scoreless.
,
Soutbem coach Howie Caldwell
described the phenomenon as part
of the "Elevator ·season" his club
has been having.
Southern jumped out to a 14-4
lead, but squandered it to 16-12 at
the end of the first period. The
young Tornadoes then held fast to a
34-31 halftime lead, but suffered
miserably through a frigid 26-7

'I

Abbott picked up his fifth foul
with 9.5 seconds left sending
Tbrapp to tbe line. Thrapp missed
both foul shots, but the Buckeyes
grabbed the miss on the second one
only to lose the ban out of bounds.
Pullins then drove the length of
the court aqd hit the short jumper
in the paint while drawing the foul.
Paul then was perfect on the foul
shot to give lhe Marauders their
fourth win in as many tries.
"The cream always rises to the
top in a big game," Marauder
coach Jeff Skinner said after the
game. "The best team won in the
end, but it took two great individual plays from Donald Yost aild l'-dul
Pullins.
"Average teams don't win these
type of games," Skinner said. "I
never thought we were out of the
game because the kids never gave
up . Travis Abbott continues to
carry us on the offensive end, while
Cleland and Abbott continue to

~riod.

• Nelsonville ~arne up with the
olfensive rebound after Tbrapp's
second miss, but lost the ball out of
bOunds giving the Marauders pos~ssion. Pullins took the in bounds
pass and went coast to coast, driv·
ing the paint and hitting a short
jumper from about seven feet out
with 1.5 seconds left while getting
fouled on the play.
: The six-foot senior calmly
Wlllked to the line and bit nothing
bUt the hollom of the net to give tbe
Marauders tbe lead. The Buckeyes
sun had one last chance, but their
despemtion shot hit the ceiling as
the buzzer sounded.
The Marauders took the early
11 -7 lead on a bucket by Haning
with two minutes remaining in the
period. But Nelsonville scored

ttt\~Coullty
tf~

461 SOUTH THIRD

PHONE 992 ·2 196

A-1IDDLEPORT 1 o\'\
ABBOIT SHOOTS -Meigs frontman Travis Abbott, in full view
of teammate Cass Cleland (15) and Nelsonville· York cagers Jason
Waite (42), Josh Swope (30) and Jeromy Schultz (In front of Cleland),
takes a shot In the paint during Friday night's TVC alTair at Nel·
sonvllle.York High School, where the Marauders left with a one-point
victory to stay unbeaten. Abbott finished with a game-high ·20 points.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

7.3 power stroke diesel engine, power
steering, power brakes, auto. trans.,
air cond., AM/FM stereo radio, Limited
slip rear axle, dual rear wheels, cab
lights, spare tire &amp; wheel, 11000 •

dominate the hoards."
4= 16, Donald Yost 2- I -0= 7, Chris
Abbott led all scorers with 20 Lamben 0-0-2=2, Nick Haning 2points, while Pullins added 16. 1-1=8, Brent Hanson 2-1·1=8.
Meigs hit 22 of 62 from the floor, Totals: 22-3-13=66
'
including tbree of five from three·
point mnge for 40%. Meigs went to
NELSONVILLE-YORK
the line 19times hitting 13 of them ·
(15-7-22-21=65)
for68%.
Eric Mitch ell 1-1-4=9, Jerom y
The Marauders pulled in 32 Schultz 1-2-10=18, Ryan Wildman
rebounds, with Abbott grabbing II 0-0·1=1. Jason Waite 2-0-3=17,
and Cleland ~inc. Meigs tumcd the " Shawn Six 7·0·3=17, Jeremy
ball over 15 times and had eight Thrapp 4-0·5=13. Totals: 15-3-16·
assists, wi.th Pullins getting six. 65
Meig!~-.had.tlYe .ste.als. with. Hanson
and Pililin&amp; getting two each.
Jerom~ Schultz led Nelsonville
with I8 points. Shawn Six added
17, and Thmpp had 13. Nelsonville
hil 18 of 59 from the floor incltKl~
ing three of 11 from three-point
mnge (or 32%. The Buckeyes hit
26 of 41 from the floor for 63%.
The Buckeyes pulled in 25
rebounds, with Six gmbbing seven.
Reserve notes: Rick Edwards
won tbe I OOtb game of his coachWe have all
ing career with a 47-35 win. Matt
oliver&amp;
gold
Williams led Meigs witb 16, Collin
$
00
FREE
denomtnallono
Roush added 15. Josh Walker led
ENGRAVING
•
the Buckeyes witb 14.
The future: Meigs wiU tmvel to
STOCKING STUFFERS
Federal Hocking on Tuesday
1 Oz. Pure Silver.
evening, while the Buckeyes tmvel
Many dlfterent styles.
to Miller.

G.V.W.

1993 FORD
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1991 CREVBOLI'r

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4.'6 V-B engine, PS, PB, auto.
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power seats, rear defroster.
'

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We!lnesdav's &amp;l!Jiill
MEIGS at Point Pleasant
Warren at EASTERN

eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air
cond., AM/FM stereo cass.,
sliding rear window, rear step
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Cash back with every Armstrong Air Heat Pump or
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cassene. till and cruise, power
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power seat and power mirrors,
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2 Dr., 3.8 V-6 eng., PS, PB,
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• Color Picture-In-Picture
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• ZDG 1 M High Contrast INVAR Picture Tube
• Trilingual English/French/Spanish On-Screen Display
• Channel Labeling
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4 cyl. engine, power steering,

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rear defroster
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auto. trans., air cond., AM/FM V-6 engine, power steering,
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1-ovo-no, rear defroster.

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Short bed, 4 cyl eng., 5 speed
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MEIGS
(12-15-I5-24--66)
Travis Abbott 8-0-4=20, Cass
Cleland 2-0-2=6, Paul Pullins 6-0-

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1994 PON,IAC
GRAN AM 4 DR.
Power steering &amp; power
brakes, aula. . trans.,
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defrosler.

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Just In Time for Christmas!

Arnold's Food Mart, Crown City
Alcov!l Books,
Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis
Rio Gmnd University Book Store

•••
..•••

.•

Meigs girls record 61-29 victory over Miller
HEMLOCK -Meigs outscored
MiUer 29-9 in the second half to
post a 61-29 win over the Lady
Falcons in girls' Tri-Valley Conference basketball action Thursday
evening at Miller High School,
according to a report released after
deadline Friday.
Cynthia Cotterill paced the
Marauders (3-4 overall &amp; 3-3 in the
Ohio Division) to a 11-5 lead after
one quarter as the senior scored all
six of her points.
Meadows led Meigs with a
career high 14 points, Dassylva
added 12 for Meigs. The Marauders hit 22 of 58 from tbe field
including one of five from three
point mnge for 38%. The Marauders hit 16 of 30 from tbe .foul line
for 53% . Meigs had 32 rebounds
witb Meadows gmbbing eight.
Reserve notes: Meigs ran its
record to 5-2 overall and 4-2 in the
conference witb a 34-21 win. Tricia
Davis, Tonya Miller and Tracey
Coffey led Meigs with six points
each.
The future: Meigs will travel to
Point Pleasant on Wednesday for
the forst-ever meeting between the
two teams.

OPEN
9 a.m. 'til Dark
Tuesday through
Sunday

•.' .i'• ......' ... .,,.
TWIN OAKS • •
CHRISTMAS TREE
FARM

l '

j

4

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From Holzer Medical Center follow olgna north on Rt. 160
CALL EVENINGS • 446-3405

your account when due, al accrued Finance Charges will be added to your account as of the date on wh ich

you laillo make a required payment. As of November 1, 1995, APR: 22.30% (rate may vary): NC. WI : 18%.
Minimum Finance Charge 50¢, except in NC , PR Credit issued through Hurley State Bank. See cardholder
agreement lor details. Credit offer valid through 1/2/96.

II

,~ .

1~r

until

Payments
Low As

8

,r

Per

Monlh"

33% Iff
Stereo cassette
WithE-Bass lor deep,
rich lows. reg . 14.99.

114-1203 Uses 2 " AA" batteries

25" Dff

99

8

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30" OFF

Mini rocker guitar Pencil sharpener LCD alarm watch
Press a key for exciting

Space-saving and easy to Hourly chime. calendar.
use . Witl'l spare blade.

water.resistant case.
reo. 9.99. N63·5034

" AA" batterres

reg. 3.99. 161-2768
Uses 4 "AA" b&lt;tl1ene~

rock music solos. 4 hot
colors! ~60·2565 Uses 2

• For purchases ollhe IBM Aptrva Sy5tem (N25·440, N26-2960,
f26·2881 made on-the AadioShaclt Credit Card. Subjeclto credit
approva . _No Interest until January 1997. Finance Charges will
accrue on your special credit plan from the date of purchase Our·
ing the deferred period and wrll oe added to your accounl if full
paymenlrs no1 made by the end of the deterred period . You will
be required to malta a minimum payment of tho greater ol $10 or
1/33rd olthe New Balance shown on your monthly billing stale·
men! each month. II you fall to make !he required minrmum pay·
men! on the purchase when due. or any required paymenl on your
account when due, accrued Flnanee Charges will be added to
tour accounl as of the date on which you fail to make 8 required
payment. As or October 1, 1995, APR: 22 .3% !rate may 'lOry): NC,
WI: 18%. MrmmtJm Fmance Charge 50¢ . except in NC and PR .
See store for complete details_Credrt oller valid October 26, 1995
through January 2 , 1996

·•

Bob Evans Country Store
Rio Grande
Mill Street Books
Middleport

.....

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1488

19P!h

Breeze R11mer
Pekinese or Brown RC Wild Boss
Radio-controlled racing
Spr1ng suspension .
Bear AM/FM radio truck with oversized
27M Hz. 6'/i' long.
Soft, furry

friends play
AM/FM radio just for you'

tires. 49MHz. B'l•" long.

Bear 112-163, Pup 112 ·164
Each uses 9V ball~

battar1es

~60- 4141

Uses 9Vand 6 "AA"

~5%

OFF

Mini translator
Translates between

English, German, French

"60-4139 Requrres 9V and

and Spanish! reg 19 99

2 •AA " batt&amp;ues

t63 ·666

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'1:·; :"1-,~

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Touch the Future Now 1

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

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2911

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RaHr ChaHenge
With oH-roed tires and
oversized bumpers. 27
or 49MHz. 10'1•" long.
1160·&lt;4145 Requlrea9V and
6 ·AA· batteries

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29BI
2fB
25% OFF .

My Private Dlarr'" Mini kerboard

Create and store sketches With 32 mini keys, 100
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ol your friends! Stores
75 names and numbers.

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NO INTEREST*
----plus-----

FAMILY PRACTICE

V-8 eng., power steering, power
brakes, auto. trans., air cond.,
AM/FM stereo cassette, M &amp;
cruise, all power. 7 passenger.

'

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Cleaned Mechanically
White or Scotch Pine
Up to 12 y, Ft.

No Interest and No Payment Until March 1996. With credit approval. Interest will accrue on your special
credit plan purchase from dato ol purchase during the deferred period and will be added to your account il
lull payment is not made br the end of the delerred period; or if you lailto make any required payment on

HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES

I

. 1=3, Darcy Cook 2-0-o--4. Britnei
Merkle 1-0-0=2, Angie Lucas 2-0·
o--4. Totals: 12·1·2=29
·

YOUR OWN
TREE

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

S,.AftON WAGON

•

I

Meigs
Milln
(5-15·2·7=29)
(11-21-13-16=61)
Holley Berry 3·0·1=7. Step
Cynthia Collcrill 1-1· 1=5, Ash· Merkle 3-1·0=9, Carrie Cook 1-0Icy .Roach 2-0-0=4, Kristen Dassylva 5-0·2=12, Anne Brown 3-0-3=9
CHOOSE
Carissa Ash 2-0-1=5 Eri~
Krawsczyn 2-0·1=5. Drancti MeadAND CUT
ows 4-0-&amp;= 14, Jenny Clifford 2-02=6. Totals: 21-1-1&amp;=61

•

COUrrrRY IQUIRI

Serving Meigs, Mason &amp; Gallia
'1-800-767-4223

TRIMBLE
(12-18-26-15=72)
Zach Miller 7-2-4=24, Mike
McClelland 4-1 -8= 19, Brady T~ "
2-1-3=10, Joey Wright 2-0-3=7.'
Heath Armbruster 5-4-0=22 .
Totals: 20· 7-8117=72

GALLIPOLIS

BOOKS OH SALE

•

WARNER HEATING &amp; COOLING
PT. PLEASANT, WV 255501
304-675-7254

Totals 12·1 0-0/0::58

422 SECOND AVE.

Dr. Danny Fulks, a graduate of Rio Grande, and now a
professional historical writer, wrote the manuscript

•

':.•
:..•

:35615 OAK HILL RD.
:cHESTER, OH 45720
'
614-985-4222

nard 5); 12 turnovers, and 17 fouls. Vinton County on Tuesday.
Tnmble had 16 rebounds (Trace 7);
-•-•four steals, eight turnovers, and 7
SOUTHERN
fouls.
(16-18-7-17=58)
Reserve notes: Southern
Ryan Norris 2-2-0=10, Jamie
dropped the reserve game 61-34. Evans 1-4-0= 14, Spike Rizer 5-1·
Jay McClelland had 19 for Trimble 0= 13 , Jay McKelvey 1-2-0=8,
and Ty Johnson and Troy Hoback Bobby Writesel 0- 1·0=3 , ililly
each had eight for Southern.
Sheppard l-D=2, John Harmon 1-0. The future: Southern hosts 0=2 , Tyson Buckley 3-0·0=6.

TAWNEY JEWELRY

Bevo Francis and 1 (Newt Oliver) have sold our life
story rights to Hollywood Pictures Corp., a subsidiary
of Walt Disney Motion Pictures.
In conjunction with the above, we are releasing our
new book, · "BASKETBALL AND RIO GRANDE
LEGEND". The book is 138 pages and features photos
never before published.

J
:•

Rutland Furniture

romp in the third rou~d. Trimble
held a 57-41 edge gomg mto the
last round and went• on to post the
72-58 win.
Southern bit 12-40 from the
field and 10-29 threes, while no~
going to the foul line at all during
the game; perhaps another record
of some type. Southern collected
31 rebounds, led by John Harmon's
six. while posting nine steals (May-

Marauders win •.&lt;~_on_ti_nu_ed_f_ro_m_c_-2_)_ _ _ _ __

181 WBEEL BASE

(See MARAUDERS on C-3)

1992 FORD
F·I504X2

COMFCNIT ASSURED ..

.GLqU~!ER- Led by threepomt sliooung guards Zacb Miller
and Heath Armbru~ter, the Trimble
Tomcats overpowered the Southern
Tornadoes 12-58 Friday night at
Trimble .High School. ·
Trimble moves to 1-2 overall
and 1-l.in the league, while Soutb·
em drops t? 0-3 and 0-4 overall, its
worst start m many, many years.
Miller and Armbruster led
Trimb!e with 24 and 22 points
respecuvely. They were a big part
in Trimble s shooting 59 .5 percent
from the field. Trimble hil 20 of 37
shots from the field and canned 712 lbree-pointers, while connecting
on 8-17 at the line.

HUSTLING on the
basketball court can
sometimes get players-·
and fans - in trouble, as ·
the Meigs Marauders'
Donald Yost (22) and
Nelsonville· York's Jason •
Wickmann (20) find' out
during Friday night's ·
Ohio Division game in.
Buchtel. Meigs came from
behind to win 66~65.
(Times-Sentinel photo by
Dave Harris)

By

DAVE HARRIS
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
BUCHTEL - Paul Pullins'
lbree-point play with 1.5 seconds
· remaining gave the Meigs Maraud·
ers a dramatic 66·65 come-frombehind victory over NelsonvilleYork in Tri-Valley Conference bas·
ketball action Friday evening at
Nelsonville-York High School.
· Pullins heroics set off a wild
celebration between Meigs fans
aqd players at center court. The
tin capped off a Marauder comel!oack that saw the Marauders erase
~five-point Buckeye lead with 15
~conds remaining.
• Meigs is now 4-0 on the season
lind 3-0 in tbe Ohio Division. Nel~nville drops to 0-2 in tbe division
il!ld 0-3 overall.
: The Marauders pulled out tbe
'l.lctory despite tbe Buckeyes going
til the foul line 4 I times and con~ting on 26 of them. In the fourth
m:riod alone, Nelsonville went to
tile charity line 29 times, hilling on
t7 of tbem.
: But it was foul shooting that
SflClled defeat for the Buckeyes, as
JCremy Thrapp had a chance to put
Uoe Marauders away with 9.5 secGilds left but missed both foul
s~ots . Meigs lost the services of
Nick Haning, Cass Cleland and
tmvis Abbott to fouls in the fourth

,Sun/)1111 ~imt•·.Stntiml • Page C3 · ·:

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

·,

.I

reg. 39.99.

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Page C4 • ;!oun~nu (!Jim••· ~rnlinrl

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

...

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Alexander beats Eastern
61-52 to tally first victory
A combination of hot Alc•:mder
By SCOTT WOLFE
shooting, poor weaksidc Eastern
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
ALB ANY - The host Alexan- defense and a great defensive effort
der Spartans blitzed to a 15-6 sec- from Alex:mdcr in the middle two
ond quarter ouoburst, then repelled quarters decided the game's outa late Ea~tern charge to gain lbeir come. Alcx:mdcr 1wk a 15-6 lead
first victory of the young season early, then Eastem hlUght hack to
Friday night over Eastern in boys' 17-15 atlbe buzzer.
Alexander didn ' t lei up. beating
Tri- Valley Conference action in
Eastern up and down the lloor sevAlbany.
Alcxamlcr improved to 1-3 eral limes on the fast break, while
overall and 1-2 in Hocking Divi- forcing Eastern's pass-and-cut
sion play. while Eastern dropped to offensive arsenal to a perimeter
g:unc with in-your-face defense .
2 -~ overall aud 1-2 inlbe division.
Alex:mder blitzed to a 15-6 secThe Spartans' 6-foot-8 sophomore center, ll10mas I laskell, who ond quarter to lead 32-21 at the
had suffered back problems half. Eric llill had ' ten at the half
thmughout the pre-season and first for Eastern , while llaskell had
few games, came to life for his eight :u1o Jarvis seven fot Alex.
Eastern Iivcned up its offense
hig~cst game of lbe year with 15
points and eight rebounds, while somewhat in the third round. but
Chao Jarvis poured in two game- again poor weaksidc defense
highs - an 18-point offensive allowed Jarvis and Rolston to ISO·
surge and 12 rebounds for coach laic lhc wing man in a one-on-one
Jay Recs' crew.
game or dish of to llaskell inside.
Recs faced former Southern HIS slipped to 46-30 after three
tcamomuc Tony Deem in the coach- rounds .
ing rematch, after the duo split in
One of basketball's nu1s1 bizarre
last year's two meetings. ll1e win plays came when a hard Eastern
. wa s also very big because it was pass hit EllS player Michael BarAlc•andcr's first win of the season nell in the forehead, then caromed
after a slow start.
upward through the net and the
Eastern was led hy Eric Hill's basket in rcrverse fashion . The
-rdlar 26-point perfonnancc.

"head shot" then banked off the
banking bmtnl, rolled around the
rim and fell through li1r two Ea~t­
cm poinl,.
Eastern r:lllied to within five
pnints 54-49 and was at the line
with I :06 left in U1c game. A Hill
hucket and ensuing foul triggered
an Alexander time out as Eastern
rallied hard from a one time 17pninl deficit. Eastern had its
ch;mccs to come back.
llill missed U1e free throw, but
in three of four possessions,
Alexander carne up empty on the
offensive end. Eastern c:une down
and got three back-door lay-up
opportunities. but could not put
them away. Those missed goals
couple with the Alexander score
would have put the score al 56-55
wi1l1 nearly 40 seconds len. The
misses. however. forced r::l SICill 10
foul to stop the clock and Alexander took advan~1gc in securing U1e
win 61-52.
HIS hit 17 -44 from the field
and 4-14 on U1recs, hilling 6-10 at
the line . Eastern had 29 rebounds
(Micah Otto 10, llill 7); II
turnovers, live steals (Otto 3); eight
assists (Dowen 4); and had 18
fouls.
Alexander hit 22-44 twos. 3-11
threes :Uld was 8-19 at U1e line. The
Spartans grabbed H rebounds
(Jarvis 12. llaskell 8, Mace 7); had
II tumovcrs. six steals (Rolston 3);
12 assists (Waggoner 4); and In
fouls .
Rcservt notes: Alexander won
the reserve game 49-35 led by
Chuck Everette's II points and
Nathan Hutchinson's eight. Eastem's Steve Durst had 14 and Rickie Hollon had 12.
The future: Eastern, which
hosted Hannibal River Local Saturday night to begin its three-game
home stand. will host Belpre Tuesday.

..

~·

BLOCKED - Alexander's Andrew Stump (411) finds his shot
blocked by Eustem's Michael Barnell during Friday night's TVC
contest at Alexander High Schoo~ where the host• tallied their first
victory of the season. (Scott Wolfe photo)

ALEXANDER (61)
Lance Rolston 3-1 -0=9, Kenny
Waggoner 3-0-0=6. Chad Jarvis 61-3=18, Andrew Stump 1-0-0=2.
Thomas Haskell 7-0-1=15, Matt
Ross 0-1-0=3, Josh Mace 2-0-4=8.
Totals: 22-J.H/19=61

- - - - - - - Lyne Center slate--------RIO GRANDE - Here is the
Today- closed
schedule for lbe week of Dec. 17.
Monday- 6-9 p.m.
24 at the University of Rio
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Grande's Lyne Center.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m . .
t"itness center,
gymnasium
Free-weight room.
and racquetball courts
Through Dec. 20- closed
Today- closed
Monday- 9 a.m. -9 p.m.
Notes: All Lync Center faciliTuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
.
ties will be closed during the
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Christmas holidays. They will be
re-open on Tuesday, Jan: 2, 19%.
Pool
A Lyne Center membership .i~

required to use the facilities. faculty, staff, students and administrators arc admitted with their ID
cards.
Racquetball court reservations
can now be made one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 locally or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All guests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Center membership
holder and a $2 fcc.

SAVE NOW

In other SEOAL action,

Jackson and Logan tally wins
,..
- over Athens &amp; Warren Local
............

• • •• ' &lt;J

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,r

..,...

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I

.'. II

•j

' _,.,...,

BEING THE SHADOW that follows Alexander's Josh Mace (left) is the task of the moment
for Ea.•tern frontman Micah Otto, as the Eagles'
Michael .Barnett (41) watches from a distance

··-during Friday night's Hocking 'Division game In
Albany, where the host Spartans won 61·52.
(Scott Wolfe photo)

'I ' • .J ~·'

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- - - - - - . . . ;"'=-Cage standings·------1995-96: All games
.Team
W L TP
Wheelersburg ........4 0 401
Meigs ....................4 0 255
Chesapeake .......... .3 0 236
Athens ........... ........ 3 I 233
Logan ............ ........4 I 305
Marieua ................. 3 I 264
Point Pleasant.. ...... ! I 152
Fairland ................. 1 2 205
South Point.. .......... 2 2 269
Jackson .................. 2 3 333
Greenfield ............. 2 3 275
Warren Local ........ 2 3 294
River Valley .......... 1 3 239
Vinton County ...... 1 3 283
Portsmouth ............ 2 4 370
Gallipolis ...............o 3 161
Southcm ................O 4 236 ·
SEOAL varsity
Team
W L TP
Logan ................... .3 0 173
Marietla ................ J 0 199
Athens ................... 1 I I 06
Jackson .................. ! I 112
Warren Local ... -.... 0 2 92
Gallipoli5 .. ............ .0 2 90
River Valley ..........0 2 121
TOTALS
8 8 893

OP
146
161
108
131
105
107
135
893

Last night's games
Chesapeake at Gallipolis
125 River Valley at Athens
76 Alexander at Logan
117 Parkersburg at Marieua
95 Warren Local at Waterford
149 Hillsboro at Greenfield
119 Pt. Pleasant vs. Calhoun (Wahama
135 DARE Toumamcnt.)
:ll6 South Point. idle
Tuesday's games:
Friday's results
Logan at Point Plcas:u1t
SEOAL varsity
Vinton County at Soulhcm
Marieua 54 Gallipolis 46
Rock Hill at Portsmouth
Jackson 61 Athens 57
West at Wheelersburg
Logan 56 Warren Local 45
Chesapeake atlluntington St. Joe
SEOAL reserves
Friday's games:
Maricua 65 Gallipoli~ 45
Gallipolis at Athens
Althens 51 Jackson 47
Logan at Marietta
Warren Local 62 Logan 38
Jackson at Warren Local
Wellston 93 Vinton County 83
Vinton County at Chesapeake
Ironton I 08 Portsmouth 60
Huntington St. Joe at Fairland
Miami Trace 46 Grecnlielll43
Pt. Pleasant at River Valley
Trimble 72 Southern 58
Wheelersburg at South Webster
Wheelersburg 73 Waverly 45
Adena at Greenfield
Pt. Pleasant 95 Hannan 38 (DARE Portsmouth at Williamson
TournamenJ)
Dec. 23 games:
Vinson 72 Fairland 65
Fairland at Gallipolis
Meigs 66 Nels· York 65
Trimble at Chesapeake
South Point - idle
Southern at Ross-Southeastem
River Valley- idle
Oak Hi II at Jackson
Athens at Lancaster
(SEOAL reserves)
Team
W L TP
Maricua .. .. ............ J 0 218
Warren Local ........ 2 0 110
Gallipolis .. ........ .. .. I I 98
Athens .. ................ . I I 89
Logan .... ................ ! 2 140
River Valley .. ........O 2 75
Jacksan .......... .. .. .... O 2 86
TOTALS
8 8 1116

ot•

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J

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BOOK VALUE $14,400

OUR PRICE

Only 1600 low miles. like new. LSI option, aula ., air
cond., elc.
FACTORY
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LIST $1s.aoo OUR PRICE

1

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.••,

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"3" IN STOCK
Equipment Varies
Reasonable Offer Accepted!

WAS $14,900

1992 NISSAN 240 SX

OUR PRICE

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120R
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1991 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DOOR
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$976

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PO,.TSMOUTH

CHILLICOTHE

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1993 GRAND PRIX 2 t·R

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OUR PRICE

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WAS $7,995

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48 ,000 tow miles. brand new $3.200 eng .. auto . Interior and body are good. Needs transmission
work . New tires. Mechanic's Special!
Deluxe radio system.

12 OR 20 GA CO~BO
2B'VENT RIB &amp; DEER BARREL

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Black. V-6 engine. automatic. air condilooning. Sharp.

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Local one owner. automatic.

1989 MAZDA RX7 GXL

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REGULAR CAB ONLY

Power seat. cassette. power windows. lilt .
alum . wheels. bumper to bumpe1warranty.

9 95

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Priced Too Cheap'

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29,000 low m1les.
windows.

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SALE

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REDUCED TO

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Power seal &amp; windows , door locks. cassette . bu
to bumper warranty.

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you donate a toy to our Toys for Kids campaign.

GALLIPOLIS .:_ Just two · urday night li1r a rare league con- made it 57-53. In the linal 19 secweeks into the 1995-96 Soulbeast- test.
.onus, Shamel Maxwell scored two
ern Ohio Athletic League basketJackson 61, AI hens 57
Athens baskets sandwiched around
ball title chase the Logan ChiefAt JacksQil, lbe Bulldogs were a pair of free throws by I lowe, and
tains and Marietta Tigers have cruising wilb a 46-38 lead midway Jackson's lead was 59-57.
emerged as the two most likely in the fourth quarter and led 53-50
Just Jive ticks remained on the
contenders to cop the champi- at the two minute mark. With just clock when Jarod Wolford was
onship.
I :52 remaining Jackson's Brad fouled and convened a one-andFriday night, the Tigers invaded I lowe canned a three-point shot to one for the linal score of 61-57.
Gallipolis and downed the Blue knot the score at 53, which ignited
Although ,Aihcns hit 52 percent
Devils 54-46 while the Chiefs trav- a six point JIIS run that saw the of their licld goal attempts (25-48)
eled 10 Vincent and beat lbe War- lromncn grab a 57-531cad with Just the lronmen took 16 more shots .
ren Local Warriors 56-45. Jackson over a minute left.
canning 25 also, hut live of them
also came from way behind to
Following Howe's trifccta, were from three point range. The
defeat visiting Athens 61-57 while Shane Shanton goaled. stole the Jronmcn converted five of 14
River Valley took the night off. Athens inbound pass and dished it threes with Howe getting three of
The Raiders traveled to Albcns Sat- to Jarod Wolford, whose layup
(See SEOAL '"' C-7)

.. •··.

.'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant. WV

' ~ ....j

-·-·-

EASTERN (52)
Brian Dowen 1-1-0=5, Eric Dillard 1-l -2=7, Eric llillll-1-1=26.
Mical1 Ouo 1-1-3=8. Michael Darnell 3-0-0=6. Totals: 17-4-(vl0=52

Sunday, December 17, 1995

·· ·-

.i

'

OPEN
\I(EEKDAYS

9:30-6:00
. , S0:4-.676c2988

·%
I.

NEW STORE HOURS 1.101\t-SAT 9:30·6:00
SAT. 9:30-5:00 OPEN SUNDAY 12:00·5:00
BY t.IASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

POINT PlEASANT W. VA.

OPEN
SUNDAYS

12:00-6 :00
FAX 304-676-2993

··" ....
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�Sunday, December 17, 1995 "'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page C6 • JJunbav 'Gliaus-JJenthul

Outdoors

~!~,e.~.~_fi ~~~~~=~-. ~~-r~~~~, post~~~~~,~~"-~~!'~"~~~.';'"'" ....";,;,:!

ed Marietla Tiger quinte~ after piling up a 17-point lead midway in
lhe third quarter, staved off a late
Gallipolis Blue Devil comeback to
post a 54-46 Southeastern Ohio
League victory in the GAHS gym
Friday night.

dominated five, down 35-17 with
4:50 left in the third period,
outscored the taller Washing'lon
Countians 17-3 during the final
minutes of the quarter, and first
four and one-half minutes of the
final stanza to pull within three

Cia. Co\I.Dtry Day 70,

I

Cir~ .

Joe Vukovic, 6-7 sophomore
Tiger center got free for a layup
with 4:16 left in the g;une to give
MHS a 40-35 advaniage. With 4:01
left to play, officials ealled a jump
ball when a Blue Devil was tied up
in front of the GAHS bench .

•s

Mansfield MadisOn 74, Alhllnd
Maple Ha. 71 , Garfield His. Trinity S9
Maranatha Chr. 71, Grace BfJII. 68
.\1arietta 54, Gallipolis46
Marion Elgin 76, Bucteye Vat. S&amp;
:\ilSsi\lon Jacklon 58. Alliance 41
Vlathcws76. Mineral Ridse S4
Maumee 68, Sylvania Soulhview Sl
Maylidd 48, 0ri1DW,e 46
Maysvtlle 65 , New Lelingtoo 61
McDonald 77, Girard SO
Mechanicsbura: 76, Ridaemont48
Medina Buckeye 58, Colwnbi• SJ
:\11Xiiuil First Bupt. 80, Cr~II'IJBds Otr.

Landmark

~0

Cln. Deer Park 54, Cin. Taylor 34
Cin. Finneytown 64, Cin. Reading 54
Cia. Hughes SJ, Cia. Northwe.4t 44
Cin . Lakota 80, Lima Sr. 64
Cin. LaSalle 9S, Cin . Elder 92
Cin. Moeller 5~. Ci n. St. Xavier 36
Cin. Mt. Ht&gt;althy 71. Cin. Harrison 67
Cin. Princeton 81. Fairfield 61
Ci n. Roger 83con 68, Cin. PLir rcll
Marian 63 (OT)
O n. Seven Ihils 59, Batavia 49
On. St. Bernard j7. Cin. L.oclt.Jand 40
Cin. Sycamore 81. MiddletowD67
Cin. Taft68,Cin. Glen F.ste 41
Cin. Winton Woo&lt;.ls 77, Cia. Walnut
llill• j )
Cin. Withrow 6S. Cin. Aiken 63
Claymont 10, Meadowbrook 67
Cle. Bcoedictine 9S , Cle. Catholic S9
Oe. Collinwood 74, Oe. Hay 72
O e. Easl Tech 83, Cle. Rhodel65
Cle . Glenville 108. Cle. Kennedy n
Cle. Lutheran W. 78, Fain'iew 67
Oe. Marshal l 76, Cle. East 61
CJe. South 91. Ck Lincolll-We&amp;t n
Cle. St. lgDatius 75, Euclid 54
Cle411' Fork 104. Medina Buckeye 60
Clint on- M ~W; ie 77. Greenevie111 48
Col. Beechcron 65, Col. Mifnin 59
Cui. Broolhavl!n 91, Col. Cc: ntl!nnial
43
CoL Hartley 84, Col. Ready 82 (2 on
CoL llerii:JHe 79. Elyria fin;t Bapt 70
Col. lndep!!ndence 6 1, Col. Eastmoor

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AIIMtk Olriskln
~ L lsi.

fum

5 .182

!ill

OJiando ........ ......... 18
New York. .............. 16

6

.727

1.5

Miami .................... ll
801lon .................... 11

8
10

.600

4 ..5
6

Wuhingtollo ........... 10
New Jersey ..............9
Ptliladdphia ............. 3

10
II

524
.SOO
.450

6.5
7.5

l7

.UO

13.5

Cutnl DiTllion
Chicago ................. 11
1 .900
lodiana ................... ll

9

.SSO

7

CLEVELAND ....... IO

II

.476

8.5

Atlanla ................... 10 12
Charloue ............... .IO 13

.4SS
.43S

Dtuoit

.... ....9

12

.429

Milwa .. kee .......... .. .6

I)

.316

Toronto ............ ... 7

11

.292

9
9.~
9. ~

11.5
13

WF..SfERN CONFERENCE
Midw~l

Dlvlllon

.\l' L l.cl.

fum

!.ill

Houston ...... ......... 17

6

739

Uoah ...... .
... 14
S811 Antonio ... 1..... 12

7
1
10
13

.667
.632

I)

.316

9

19

.1 36

I J.~

Deover

..... 10

Dallu . .. ................... 7
MiDDelota ............. 6
Vancou'o'el' ............. J

2
3

.500

~ ~

.JSO

ti.5

PKif1r Dlvbkln
Sacramenlo ........... 14 6 700
Seattle ... ... ....... I~ i 682
Portland .............. 11 10 . ~24
LA. loWn
.J 2 II .522

.421

3.~
~5

L.A.Oippen ...... 8 14
Golden StAte
. .1 14

.l64
.133

1.5

........ 8

Col. Unden-McKinley 59, Col. East
~3

Col. West 11, Col. Marion-Franklin 70
Col. Westland 91, Grovepon 48
Col. Whetstone .SO, Col. Northland 48
Collin5 Wtstern Re~erve 66, Mapleton

7

~· Cohmiliana 71. United Local 51

Friday's scores

Colurrilus Gro'o'e 67, Allen E. S8
Copley 15, Nordonia 54
Creslinc 75, FrcdericktQWD 63 ·
Crossroads Otr. 61, Menlor Cllr. 47
Cuyahoga Val. Chr.71. Ledgernont 31
Day. BdmJnt 72, Day . Colonel White

Detroit 105, Nrw Jefliey 98
Boston 122, Toronto 103
Wulllnaton 122. LA. Lak.m 114
Indiana J 12, Milwaukee 95
OriOildO Ill. Uoah 99
CLEVELAND 100, Minnesota 88
Sa.cnrneoto I 14, Houston 110
Seal lie I08, Golden State I 0 I
Vancouver 104,Portland 100

60

Day. Qui!ilian 62, Miami E. 59
Day. Dunbar 8.5, Day. Meadowdale 69
Day. Oakwood 89. Day. Carlisle 84
COT)
Delaware 84, Coi: Whitehall68
IJrelpho:. Jdfcnwn 72, Ada 46
Dover 59, St. Oairsville 47
E. Clintoo 55, Waywville 49
E. Liverpool 89, Richmond Edison 54
E. Pak.itinc 54, Columbian CrutviL'W

They played Saturday
Detroit at New York. 7:30 p.rn.
Utah at Miami, 7 :30p.m.
Oe11ver at Atlanla, 7:30,p.m
LA. Laken at Chicago, 8:30p.m
Phuenix ai Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Sacn~me nto at San Antonio. 8:)0 p.m
Golden Slate at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Charlol!e at LA. Clippen, 10:30 p m

40
Edgtrton 48, East5ide, Ind. 34
Elmwood ?5, Eastwood 61
Elyria W. 51. Elyria Midview 36
Eric (Pl.) Cathedral Prep 70, Canfield

Today's games

~7

OrlBDdo at Toronto. 5:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Minnesota. 6 p.m.
lndianaal Milwaukee, 7 p.m.
Dcnva at CLEVELAND, 7:30 p.m
WuhiDJIDD at PonJand, 9 p.m.

Fairbanks 62.1ndinn Lake 56
Fairfield Union 64. Canal Winche!iler
~0

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

14

&lt;on

n ,Mw:illon SO
AlCUDcln 61, Reedsville Eastern 52
Amanda-Citartreek 57, Circleville 36
Anna 86, Russia 70
Anthony Wayne 15, Holland Sj'lrina;.
Ak:roa St.V-StM

l3
Frank.lm Moll!oe 60, Arcanum 54
Fredericktow n 75. Cratline 63
Garaway 58, Newcomerstown 40
Gates Mi lh Gilmour Acad . 78,
Smnlle11i 68
Genoa 49, Woodmore 47
Georgetown 66, Williamsburg .59
G1bwnbura 86, C&gt;tstao 83
Graham 72, Benjami n Logan 54
Grandview 58, W. Jerferson 57
Granville 72, Licking Hts . 68
Hamilton 64, Mi lford S2
Hamilton Badin S9, Cin. McNicholas
l4
Hamilton Rou 75. Goshen 56
Hardin Northern 69, Van Buren 65
Hemlock Miller 54, Feder&amp;! Hocking

71
Archbold 73, Evergreen 36
Arli!lgton 77, McComb 49
Ashland 69. L.odi Cloverleaf 39
Austintown-Fitch 67, You. Rayen S7
Avon 55 . Lorain Catll. 44
Avon Lake 65, Elyria CaUl. 58
A yen ville SO. Montp elier 48
Badger 55, Newton Falls S2
Beachwood 80, lutheran E. 66
Beallsville 76. Shenandoah 73
Beaver Local64. Oak Glen, W.Va. 55
Bedford. Mich . 71, Fostoria 5~
Bellaire 75, Un10n I..ocal-41
Bellbrook 8\, Middletow11 Madison 64
Bellefo nlaine jO, Spring. Shawnee 36
Bellevue 90 . Shelby 13
Be rlin Center Western Reserve 61 ,
Spring. I.Dcal 55
Bethel73, Felicity6S
Betuville 54, Fostoria 44
Bclley6), Washington C.H. 62 (OT}
Bia Walnut82. Uckins Val . 43
Bishop (W .Va.) Donahue 55 , Bridgeport S4
Bloom-Carroll 711 , Teays Val. 1 J
Bloomfit\d 56, Newbury 48
Blufnon 50, Uma Perry 311
lklwliDi Green 71, Millbury Lake 46
BrecUville 58, Independence 55
Bri51ol63, Lord5town 55
Bmuk.,.ille 62, Eaton 60
Dru111wick 15, Revere ~3
Bryan 68, Wauseon S6
BucUye Tmil10. Caldwell S6
Burton Berkshire 65 , W. Geauga S7
D ulbnd1e 63, Coshocton 54
Canal Fulton NW 7S, Greensbura
Green S8
Canton Cath. 6~ . Mansfield St. Peter's

•s

.2

Fair l~ 64, Indian Val. 45
Fairview 60, Continenlal 51
Farrell. Pa. 44. Sharon (Pa.) Kennedy

Fayette 58, Pettisville S4
FisherCath. 76, Bane Union 44
Fort Frye 96, Fro1tier 93
Fort Jennings 63. 0\loville 55
Fort loramie 87, Fairlawn 45
Franklin Hts. 71, Watkins MenKJrial

Akron CQventry 77, Sandy Val. S5
Ak:ron Hoban 56, Akron E. 53
Aleron Manchester 76, 1\Jslaw 61
Akron St. Vincent 61. Cuyahoaa Falls
~9

Col. South 96, Col. WalnUI Ridge 15
Co l. St. Charles 62, Col. Briggs 53

canCol. Watterson 61, Col. DeSates 6 3

3.5

II

Ptloeoil ...

~4

bit with a technical foul. Adam
Trautner, 5-8 sophomore guard,
canned both charity tosses to make
it42-35 in f~vor of the visitors.
With 2:50 left to pi!IY· Coach
Tim Tolzda told his team to go into
a four-comers offense. Marietta

61

Mdw.s 6&lt;i. NeJ.onville- York 65
M1ami Trace .46, McClain 43
M i ami~burg 71 , lebanon 57
Middh:towc Fenwick SS, Day. Carroll
~4

Mtdpatk S6. Bay S4
Millenport S3, Uberty Union Sl
Mmrrva 74, Marlington 64
Minford 73.1..ucasville VaL 66
M1nster 61, Marion Local45
Mississinawa Val . 69, Anso nia 34
Morvoe Central 61, Shadytide 4S
Morgan 61, Crooksvil le 60
Mount Gilead 64, Marion Pleasant6J
Mount Vernon 63, Maryiville .59
N. Adams 97, WcslerD Lalham46
N. Canlon 53, Maaillon Perry Sl
N . Canton Hoover 62, LoU!IVille 54
(OT)

N. Central 73, f.don 56
N. Olmsted 54. N. Ridgeville 49
New Albany 6 1, Heath 55
New Bremen 67, Fort Rec&lt;~very SO
New C~tlt: , PH.. 7S, Campbeii·Memonal55
New Knoxville .53, Coldwate-r 49
New London 63, Plymouth S6
Newark 43, Hi lliard 38
Newton 63, Tri-County N. 51
Newton Falls 65, Warren Kennedy 60
Nilt.!i 61, Salem 56
Northmont70, Greer:~ville 53
Northmor 65, Ridgedale 60
Nonhrir.lge 69, Centerburg 47 ,
Norton 69. Coventry 68
N(lrwalk 93. Galion 53
Norwalk St. Poul74, Crestview 6)
Oak Harbor 61, Sandu'lcy Perkins 59
Oak II ill 80, Portsmoutll W. 70
Oberlin 72, Rocky River 62
Old Fori 88, New R.legel 73
Olentangy 67, Utica 49
Olmsted Falls 78, Brook:Jide 68
OnLatio 79, Clear Fork 70
Oregon Clay 86, Fremont Rou 77
Onawa·G iandorf 61, Celina J9
Odord Talawanda 67, Lemon Monroe
6-1

Parma 75 , Panm .,adua 54
Parma Valley Forge 91. Parma Holy
Name 47
Patrick. Henry 5&amp;, Swanton 42
Peeble5 81, Whiteoak 65
Pluto 71, John Glenn 7J (Of)
Piketon 6.5 , Huntington S3
Poland 61, Howland«
Portsrnoulh aay 82, New BOiiton 70
Ponsmoutfl E. 62, Franklin Furnace
Green 50
Prehle Shawnee 88, Day. Northridge
~J

Pymatunina Val. 75, Ki111man Badger
~8

Reynoldsburg 69. Worthington Kilbourne 56
River View 80, W. Muskingum61
Rivt:r~ide 83, Triad 50
Rootstow n 6~. Garreltsville Garfield
ll
Rouford 59, Penysbwg .S4
S. Central 82, Monroeville 43
S. Charlcslon SE .Sl, Yellow Springs

48
S. R.anse 46, McDonald 44
S. Webster 80, McDermott Northwest
66

Salem 64, Beavu LocaJ 61
Salem Real Life 63. Victorv Chr. S9

Sandusky 77 , Lorain Soothvie\¥ 61
Sanduskv St. Marya 70, Marp-ettra 67
Sebring 43, Southern Local 35
Shaker llt s. 83, Elyria 79
Sheridan 59. Tri- Valley 44
Sidnev 711 . W Catr(l\\ton 56
Solon 59, lyndhun;t Bruih 41
Soullliaftoa Cllalker 70, Brislol SO
Sparta I 1g.hland 65, N. Union 42
Spring Nor1h 54, Beavercreek 51
Spring. Northeastern 68, Kenton Ridge

~3

~4

Lcip5ic 64, Miller City S4
Lu.ington 75, Mansfield Sr. 60
Lib'etty Benton 56, Arcadia 43
LibMy Center 79, Delta SO
Lima Bath 73, DeCiaoce 46
Lima Temple Chr . 77, To!. Christiao

By now, most local hunters are
aware of the two records set during
the recent Ohio deer gun season.
The good news - at least for
the hunters - was that a total of
131,811 deer were shot by sporiS·
men during the gun season, up ~
percent from last year's 130,Dll . 11
was the fifth consecutive record,
but about 12,189 shy of the
U9.000 deer harvest projected by
lbe Division of Wildlife.
if"I'he bad news? Hunters set
lher record ......: this one ooncemhunting accidents. Si~ fatal
lings took place, giving Ohio
i!A worst year ever, according to
dl"ision spokesman Dave Wilson.
those, three were self·infiicted,
i~as reported.
;.. In addition, the number of deer
kQied in Meigs and Gallia counties
d~ed lbis year from 3,792 10
31li26 and from _4,360 to 3, 708,
~pectively.

:• Gallia County placed eighth in
number of deer killed during
tlt;e season followed by Meigs
OJUnty in ninth place.
~: Hunters suggested different rea~s for the anomaly, mostly focusil)e on a lack of hunters after the
ft(it few days of the season. The
tlkories:
• The two-week season may
twe reduced some of the sense of
tfcency - turning some sporiSmen
(II "fair weather" hunters, willing
wait a while before striving to
;that deer lag.
~ :• The higher cost of hunting
lltnses. Hunters who would have
!Jtrchased two tags in previous
ars may have simply purchased
e tag lbis year.
• A change in the state's delinin of "tenant." Now "tenants"
t derive more lban half of their
ome from farming a piece of
perty before they can hunt deer~ free.
l • The growing popularity o(
ttw bunting.
• Hunters suggested:
: • Beginning the deer gun season
Thanksgiving Day and continuthe seasdn until the second Satincluditlg the
t~e

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(OT)

V1llage 68, Covington 62
Trimble 72 . Racine Southern Sl
Trotwood-Mad1son 54, Vandalia Butler 45
Troy 57, Pi4ua 53
Tuscarawas CaUl . 64, Slrasbulll 30
Tu§Clll'awas Val. .54. E. CaDton SO
Twin ValleyS . 69, National Trail Sl
Twinsburg 83, Bedford 72 (OT)
Uni.,.ersity 62. Col. Academy 52 '
Upper Arlington 66, Picker ington Sl
Upper Sci(liO Val . 63, Cru:tview S8
Urbana 55, Greenan 38
Valley View 67, Di:llie 60
Van Wen 66, Lmu Shawnee 49
Vanlue 71, Corv-Rawson 72
Vermilion 60, I !t:nrietta Firelands 21l
Vienna Mathcws 71, Brookfield SJ
W. Branch 64, R~venna Soutlleut 62
W. 01ester Lakota 80, Uma Sr. 64
W. Holna 49, Loudonville 48
Wadsworth 79, Green 46
Wap-akoneta S4, Elida SJ (OT)
Warren Kennedy 49, Kennedy Chr. 37
Waynt: 79, l'uirborn 72
Waynesfield·Goshen 92, W. Liberty
Salem 60
Weirton (W .Va .) Madonna 70, Bellaire
St. fohn S3
Wellston 93, Vinlon Cu. 83
Wellsville 17, Conouon Val . 55
Western Brown 7.0. New Richmond 62
Westerville N. 51. Thomas Worthin gton 47
Westerville S. 52, Grove City SO
Wesor~t ~o. Adena 46 COT)
Wesllak.e 69. Berta ~9 (OT)
Wheeltrsburs 73, Waverly 4S
W,i llard 67, Bucyrus 59
WllmingtoD61, Norwood 41
Wooster 78, Orrville 43
World Harveat 76, Central Bapt. 64
Worthington Otr. 70, Danville 63
Wynrord 76, Col. Craw[ord 44
Xenia 64, Falnnont 62 (2 OT)
You. Boardrntn 63, You. East 48
You . Calvary 0\r. 89, You. Wilson 51
You. Chaney61 , You . Unuline 60
You. Uberty 62, Bwuldield 42
You. Moo11ey ~4. You . Uberty ~2
You. RayeD 10. Hubbard S2
You . Wilson S5, Nilec McKillley 4 ~
Zanesville Rosecrans 16, New :uk.
Cal,h. 46

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmea-sentlnel Staff

l"rl·

~

f.

t
l.lN-llrf"J'&gt;H'11

AIU!rltklo. Krt·at

anrt h'rrirtt:

l.il.'\lc

rt·~•.tl a ~ .

I'IDIH\
!•t\ Jro;

N~~(lf (

\1,·IJ.&gt;&lt;'' A i.'( rtl

/lifhl·,·n: r

l'!r&gt; ~· is. aV)Ii~ .Gt "' ,
.R.~~ Feec!'lc:$(1pply_ __ .
J
U.'l' ltw..J

m•

lurnoulmnn UH ~n U

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... -

~.

·---·
-.

.. . -

~-..
---·-·-

,,,

·-·

''--""

.... · J,.,

.J ~

:J .. .... ... ...
,.J ~ . .... -

1988 BUICK LESABRE

R&amp;G F'EED &amp;SUPPLY
399 W. Main

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed
Just20 Mlriutes Drtve Stra~ht Up
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4294!i State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

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Pomeroy, Ohio

The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets, Stables,
Large &amp; Small Animals. Lawns &amp; Gardens

01)
London 40, Jonathan Alder 33
L.oraio Adm King 48, Tol. Libbey 46

Canton McKi nley 87, Timk.en T1
CantonS. 7S, Carrollton S2
C.dington 7-4 , River VaL 63
C.ey 86, Fremont St. Joseph 70
Central Qu. 62, Mansfield Ou. 56
Oap'in Falls7-4, Aurora 64
Olillicothe 15 , Dublin Sclolo 73
Cin. AMmon 17, Amelia 56
Cin. Colaaitl 88, Cin. We.tctn Hills

Lor.~in Keystone 70, Brooklyn 62
Loudonville 66, WayiXdale
louisville Aquinas 71, MMiiiiOD Perry

•s

~3

U:iwellville 45, Jac:boo-Miltoa 38
Madison SB, Ealtlake N. 38
Miadilon-Piains 7.S , Cedarville 58
Malvern 66. freeport lakeland 60

1.

.,

Logan 56, Warren Local 45
At Vincent, the Warriors
outscored the Chieftains from the
field 40-3 1, but their 22 personal
fouls sent Logan 10 the foul line
many times, where they converted
25 of 31 freebies, includin£ a 10for-10 effort by Coy Lindsey.
The Warrior defense limited the
high scoring Lindsey to just one
field goal, but could not collar
Lucas Kline as the big guy canned
21 points, including Logan's only
three goals from three-point nmge.
Warren took a 28-21 halftime
lead but were outscored 35-17 in
lbe second half as the Chieftains
swished one free throw after anoUJer. to remain undefeated in three
road league contests. Having won
at River Valley, Gallipolis and
Warren, they will play at Marietta
Friday in a batHe of the unbeatens .
Down the stretch in the fourth
quarter Logan made 19 of 21 free
throws, including all of Lindsey 's
10 and six for six by Kline. The
Chiefs also led in rebounds 28-22.
Scott Hendricks led Warren
wilb II poiniS, including one threepointer. Chad Spence had a pair of
threes to go with his 10 points.
Shawn Taylor drained th e other
lbree for Warren.

• Mortgage loan

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• College education
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Women's
Thur. Dec. 21 vs Cincinnati 7:00pm
Thur. Dec. 28 vs Canisius 7:00pm

•

Men's
Wed. Dec. 20 vs Rio Grande 7:00pm

. ,..l
~ : ·.

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.:. ': •, · f·

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Q .5

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tfiif~

. Order your tickets now!

-·-·LOGAN

~

;'

(11-10-12-23::56)
Coy Lindsey 1-1 0= 12; Chad
Moore 4-0-1=9; Jeff Maibach 3-04=10; Aaron Pennington 1·0-2=4;
Lucas Kline 2-3-8=21. Totals: 11·
3-25=56

593-1300
Season Tickets ,
• · Still AYailable! :~
,,,

-----.J

Have your name or that of a friend or
family member etched in brick on the
walkway to a new track!

• one 4 11 x 8 11 brick- $100
• one 8 11 x 8" brick - $250
• one 12" x 12" brick - $500
}I/ proceeds go toward the campaign to build a new
running track and increase the endowment fund to
maintain the Stanley Evans Fields athletic complex.

limited number of bricks available for etching.

BUY TODAY.
Call Bob Haner- 614-245-7222 or
pledge cards are available at these locations:
Ohio Valley Bank and Star Bank.

Rio Grande ... America's Best Buy
in Education.

Has The

~

~ldA

, APPY .HUNTER ~Jack Satterfield or Pomeroy bagged this
elg point back wltb a 23-lncb antler spread on the second Monday
of
lo's deer gun season. Satterfield Is an avid bowhunter and an
ollkJal score taker for the Ohio Buckeye Big Bucks Club and Pope
ancl~oung.
·
.

WARREN LOCAL
(18-10-6-11=45)
. Scott Hendricks 2-1-4-11; Chad
Canfield 1-0-2; Chad Spence 2-20=10; Mike Warden 1-0-0=2; Seth
B:uritt 4-0-1 =9; Chip Robinson 2-

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Mason County was lbe highest
harvest area in District IV with
2,561 kills. Counties behind them
in the annual harvest were Putnam
{1,787), Kanawha (1,704), Lincoln
{1,507), Wayne (978), Cabell (872)
and Boone (768).

The University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College have a holiday
opportunity for you.

71tn.Jdtn.
7 W'

JACKSON
(13-9-16-23:61)
Jarod Wolford 2-2-2= 12; Shane
Wolford 6-0-0= 12; Brad Howe 23-4=15; Jason Brown 1-0-0=2:
Craig Sturgell 2-0-0=4; Jere my
Coffey 1-0-0=2; Shane Shanton 70-0= 14. Totals: 20-5-6=61
Reserve score: Athens 51. Jack·
son47

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w/approved credit

Focus on your
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. - 1The
West Virginia Division of Natural
Resources announed the 1995 buck
liarvestrotals.
There were 99,548 bucks reponed killed in the Mountain State this
year. Of those, 19,177 were reported killed in District IV.

7ha.Jata.
Workshop Gifts
That Pacl&lt; A Punch

!1.1 nn .ull' IIIII&gt; , 1' '

tr.•·•oiJhlr •• pc1 lllu n . lnU &gt;1&lt;orn ~nu vclcrm JI!.ar, ,

10.----.&lt;.J ... :)

Sunday following Thanksgiving.
• Reducing the cost of bunting
permits or allowing bunters to pay
one, discounted fee to hunt all Ohio
game species without purchasing
separate tags and licenSes.
Currently, a hunter wanting to
harvest all Ohio game species can
wind up paying the state up to
$II 7, not including the purchase of
a federal migralory hunting and
conservation stamp and state urban
deer permits, a fee many Ohio
hunters say is too high .
"I can hunt in West Virginia for
almost lhe same amount," one outof-county hunter commented. "And
I can use a rifle there; too."
Hunters of forbearing animals
are likewise outraged over a newly
enacted $11 furtakers permit. They
claim forbearers are already overpopulated in the state and that the
special license will simply aggravate the problem.
But back to the supposed lack of
. FIRST BOW KILL - Dave Wandling of Shade killed this eighthunters. At first glance, it would
point
buck with a bow prior to the recent Ohio deer gun sea§on. This
appear lbat an individual hunter's
was
Wandling's
first kill made with a bow and arrow.
odds of bringing home venison
would increase as the number of
other hunters in the woods
decreased, but it just ain't so. ·
~
During lhe daylight hours, deer
often seem to be a little reluctant to
move from their established areas,
willing to stay put until dark before
moving around. This is also why
most deer/vehicle collisions occur
at the times around dusk or dawn.
With little hunting pressure,
some deer become almost completely nocturnal - bedding down
during the day and getting up at
night to feed and socialize.
Such a situation forces hunters
to go to the deer, a daunting task
considering some of the areas deer
are likely to seek cover.
"There aren't enough hunters,"
was a common complaint.
WINS CONTEST - Kathy Mayse, the winner of the Gallipolis
"The deer aren't moving ," was Bass Busters' contest, gets her certificate from chapter treasurer
another. ·
Danny Rose.
Regardless, lbere are still plenty
of deer. Archery season continues
until Jan . 31, 1996, while the
·.s...:.&gt;_ _ _ __
statewide muzzleloading season SEOAL games .. !C_o_n_tin_uc_d_fro_m_c_
runs Jan. 4, 5 and 6.
them and Jarod Wolford the other 0-0,4; Shawn Taylor 1-1·0=5;
two. Meanwhile, Mike Boyd had Steve Elder 1-0-0=2. Totals: 14-4the only three-pointer for Athens as 5=45
he finished with I I points.
Reserve score: Warren 62.
Brad Howe led all scorers with Logan 38
15 poiniS for the winners. Shanton
had 14 with Jarod and Shane Wolford each adding 12 for the Ironmen .
Mike Grippa's 16 points paced
the Athens offense and he also
claimed I 2 of the 28 Bulldog
rebounds.
ATHENS
(14-11-1!1-13=57)
Mike Boyd 3- I -2= II; Shamel
Maxwell 5-0·0=10; Kahieem
Maxwell 5-0-1=11; Everett Gathron 3-0-0=6; Mike Grippa 7-02=16; Nathan Meyer 0-0-1=1;
Terry Smith 1-0-0=2. Totals: 24 I·
6=57

Lincoln view 74 , Paulding 37
Uibon 98, Leetonia 66
Lopn S6, Vincent Warren 45
Loaan Elm 64 , llarnilton Twp. 60 (2

Canton GlcnOak 66, New Philadelphia

BATTERIES

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

•

Mason County records most
bucks killed in District IV

In the open ...

ar

Tipp City Bc:t11d ~7, Bradford 47
To I. CaUloltc 73, Tol. Bowiher SB
To I. CathQiic 80, Garfield Hll. 46
To I. Scott 83. To\. Woodward 66
To I. St. Francis 99, Tol. Waite 51
ToI. St. Juhns 74, Tol. Libbey 64
·rol. Whilmcr 64, Napoleon 47
Toronto 48. Cad iz 46
Tree of life 77, Mansfield Temple 58
Trenton Edgewood 64, Franklin 56

42
Hillsdale 81 , Rillman -68
Houatoo 60, Botk.ina SO
Huron 64, Milan Ediscln 31
Ironton 108, Porurmuth 60
lacbou 61, Athens 57
Jewett.Scio S2, R idg~ood 37
Johnstown 81, Lucas 57
K.ansu lakota 74, Northwood 66
K~nt Roosevelt 57, Tallmadge S4
Kidron Ou. 81, Smithvil le 58
Kinas 48, liltle Miami 46
Kirtlaod 44, Cuyahoga Hta. )4
Kiiki (Pa.) Prep 67, HawkeD 41
LaBrae 69, Hubbard 63
Lakeview 45, Warren Champion 4:2
Lakewood St. Edward 73, lakewood

1989 ISUZU PICK UP

Sprina. Sout h 64, Ceoterville60 (OT)
Springboro 51. Mason 33
St. I lent)' 93. Parkway 65
St. Mary' 50, Kenton 46
Steubenville 77, Steubenville Catb. 6 1
Stow 65, Airon Gwfield S5
Struthers 75, Gll'ard 67
Stryker 67. H1lltop .54
SylvanlaNonJJ\'iew 54, Findlay Sl
Symmt:&amp; Val . 80, Port•mouth Notre
Dame 76
Tecumseh 70, Sprmg. Northwe5tern 57
Temple Du . 54. Col. lincoln Bapt. 46
Tiffin Co lwnbian 72, Upper Sandusky
47

'·

,}l ..,j

63

Sunday Times-Sentinel/C7

'

three-pointers. Joe Vukovtc added 1
13 and senior lim Heslop !2.
•
Marietta connected on 17. of 42 :
field goaJ auempiS for 40.4 percent. '
The Tigers were seven of l5 from;'
downtown . Four of their three pointers came in the third quarter, ·
At the line MHS canned 13 of 23
for 56.5 percent. Marietta was.•r.
whistled for 14 personals. Tbe,,iJ
Tigers had 29 rebounds, seven. by
Joe Vukovic and stx by Mtke: -•:
Wells, 10 turnovers. six steals, tWQ &gt;I
by Heslop and six ass isiS, three by, ~,
Trnutner.
.,
Gallipolis had three player$• .:
score in double figures, led by "~
(See BLUE DEVILS on C-8) ;

final minutes of play to post its
third victory against one setback.
GAHS dropped to 0-3 on the year.
Inside the SEOAL, the defending
league co-champions remained
unbeaten with a 3-0 mark. GAHS
dropped ro0-2 in conference play.
Marietta, with its superior size,
strength and quickness, led 12-7
after one period. The Tigers were
on top 23-13 at halftime, and 37-29
after three ,q uarters of play as
GAHS controlled the game's
tempo.
Marietta placed three players ira
double figures in scoring. Trauhler
led the way wilb 16. Nine of his
total came early in the lbird period

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O'DELL LU BER CO.
61 Vine St., Gallipolis
614-446-1276

Mon-Frl7-6:30 Sate-s Sun 10-4

634 E. Main St., Pomeroy

il

614-992-5500
Mon-Frl 7-5:30 Sat a-s Sun 10-4

'

\

. .... .. ··- ·· · ·

�Sunday, December 17, 199$

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page C8 • ;lu.U.av alimu·;lentiml

8/ueDevils.~oo-ti~oo-oo_mm
__c~~&gt;----------------------------------------------------------------~:
Dave Rucker's 18 markers. Greg
Lloyd and Isaac Saunders scored
12 apiece.
GAI·IS outscored the Tigers
from the field, sinking 18 of 47
field goal aucmpts for 38.3 percent.
The Blue Devils were four of 14
from the three-poinl line. At tbe
foul lane. GABS sank six of eight
auempts. The Blue Devils' had 19
perSOnal fouls, 26 rebounds, six by

Lloyd and five by Rucker. The
Gallians bad nine turnovers, no
steals, and 14 assists, four by Ruck·
er and tbree each by Wes Saunders,
Heath McKinniss, and Isaac Saunders.
Saturday night, GAHS ballled
Chesapeake at home while Marietta
played host 'to arch-rival Parkersburg . Friday, GAHS travels to
Athens and Marietta will host

Logan in a baUle for ftrst place in
league play. GAHS wiD host Fairland Dec. 23.
In Friday's reserve game, Marl·
etta's undefeated JVs raced out to
a 20-10 lead early in the game, then
held off a furious Blue Imps rally
in the final quaner to post a 65-45
victory. Gallipolis pulled within
four poiniS, 49-45, with 3:16 left to
play, on a long jumper by freshman

Jermaine Jackson. However, the
Tigers outsco£00 GABS 18-0 in the
final minutes of action to win going
away. Marietta Jed 20·10, 35-26
and 47-38 at the quartermarks.
Andray Howell led tbe Blue
Imps with 12 markers, Rick Sams
tossed in 13 for the winners. Marl·
etta is now 4·0 overall and 3-0 in
league play. GAHS dropped to 2-1
overall and 1-1 inside the league.

Varsity box score:
MARIETTA (54) • Scott
Strahler. 1-(1)-1-6; Tim Heslop, I·
(3)·1·12; Adam Trautner, 1-(3)·5·
16; Jarred Perrine, 1·1·3: Joe
Vukovic, 5-3-13; Mark Vukovic, 12-4; Todd Woodrich, Mike Wells
and Tim Binegar played, but did
not score .. TOTALS 10·(7)-13-54.
GALLIPOLIS. (46) • Heath

McKinniss, 2-0-4; Isaac Saunderi,
3-(2)-0-12; David Rucker, 5-(2)·2'·
18; Greg Lloyd, 4-4-12; Aaron
Beaver. Wes Saunders, Richar$1
Stephens, Rob Woodward, anil
Chris Smith played, but did noi
score. TOTALS 14-(4)-6-46. i ;
Score by quarters:
; •
Marietta 12 11 14 17 -54 ' ;
Gallipolis 7 6 16 17 -46 :

Area farm, business briefs
·

-----4•

-----Sports briefs

the position of caretaker following the retirement of Otis Layne
effective January 1, 1996.
'
"Mr. Layne has been a reliable and loyal employee for tbe past
12 years," a trustee spokesman said.
The associatloo also exrnssed iiS appreciation for the support it
bas received ~ tbe public, botb past and presenl
l,be asSOCiation ~tir opened II new section in the cemetery.
Choace lots are available, ancluding and perpetual care For further
information call Mr. Reeves at (614) 367-0214.
. ·

•
..

Witfi V.s!
9{gw Year's f£ve r:Basfi
Cover Charge $1 0.00

•

•

Bring a date and celebrate·
the fun begins at half past eight!

•

.,

CHESHIRE • A new ·business The Cheshire Cat SR 7
Cheshire_, (antiques, collectibles) wiil open for business Monday:
Hours will be from 11 am. to 7 p.m. ~onday through Saturday, and
I to 4 p.m. on Sunday. The phone number is 367-7999.

(

.

.Judge Thompson to retire
COLUMBUS -Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Thommy
L. Tho~pson, soo of the late Von Thompson and Cecile Thompson,
Galhpohs, and a 1952 GAHS and 1963 Ohio State University graduate, plans to retire undefeatoo at the end of the current calendar
year.
According lo an ooitorial in tbe Friday, Dec. 8 Columbus Dispatch, Thompson, a Korean War veteran (U. S. Navy) who attended
Rio Gi'ande College one year pripr to entering law school at OSU .
Mter serving in the Franklin County prosecutor's office, Thompson
was elected common pleas counjudge four different terms, the ftnal
one unoppo&lt;OO. He still has tbree years left on this term.
Thompson told the Dispatch he had been debating for some time
whether to step down. He finally made the decision when the General Assembly refusro to grant a 3 jlCrcent cost-of-living raise to
officeholders, including judges.
~ Dispatch continued, "Although he is paid $86,500, Thompson saad be was not concemoo for himself, but believes that unless
there is adequate compensation, the quality of judges might be
diluted. It's a position legislators should coosider."

\.\.~((·

•••

qUARTERDORSE
BAND'

GRABS REBOUND • GAHS center Chris Smith (50) in white
jersey picks off one of Gallipolis' 26 rebounds early in the final
period. Marietta defenders are ScoU Strahler (4), Todd Woodrich
(24) and Mark Vukovk (50). The Tigers won, 54-46.

Cover charge includes:
Entertainment, snacks, party favors,
champagne at midnight. Cash-Bar

TIGERS SHOOT TECHNICAL. Veteran GAHS cage coach
Jim Osborne, who was hit with a technical foul with 4:01 left in
Friday's game with Marietta, watches as Adam Trautner sinks
two free throws to give MHS a 42-35 advantage. Marietta held on
to win, 54-46.

DIABETIC?
Having Trouble Finding Shoes
That Fit Correctly?
Call

NEW YEAR'S EVE ONLY!

ALL ROOMS s48.00
'

.

~,
~~·

Upper.River Rd. • Gallipolis
No Reservations Please
First Come, First Served

TUPPERS PLAINS- Ruth Ann Lance has graduated from the
Hair Experts Barber School, Reynoldsburg.
She successfully completed a program that consisted of personal·
ized instruction in both theoretical and practical aspeciS of barber
styling. The program indudOO advancoo training in precision hair
cutting, razor hair cutting, facial shaving, hair coloring, permanent
waving and barber law.
She plans to work at the Turn of the Century Barber Styling
Sboppe in the Tuppers Plains/Coolville area .

,··

•

-----Business briefs---.. NEW YORK (AP) - Sumito• ·mo Bank Ltd. said it plans to
:.tcquire most of Daiwa Bank Ltd.'s
• '17 U.S. branches, but won't buy
• the scandal-ridden bank's New
· York operatioo, where S1.1 billion
· in trading losses loo to the Daiwa's
:; ;expulsi'?" (rom tbe United States.
•
' ·~·..,.. . '

....

Sumitomo does not want to buy
Daiwa's New York branch or an
office in Los Angeles because it
already has a substantial banking
presence in those cities, said Robert
Rabino, joint general manager and
general counsel or Sumitomo's
U.S. operations.........
·.~
: '., .
~

4.9°/a APR UP m 48
.. . -$24.498

.... 17110
.. ·$1,11411

5

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• AM/Ff,. Cassene
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TOll FREE l·8oo-822-o417 ·• 372· 2844
. 344·5947 • 422-Q756

• Taxes. Taos. Title Fees e.tra. Rebille indt.decl in sale price ol new Wlhicle listed M1efe IR!Iicible. On appuved ad. Not rnponsllle IOrlypOQfiplical errors.

• P,..rBrakes
• Cuslom C~th lntenor
·Welt Equipped!
No llx Foes.DeWoo1·

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

pm

•
,.

-

.

Skits, comedy
feature new
area group
The Marvelous Maidens of
Merriment, a new comedy
troupe that presents skits and
comedy r'o utines for every
occasion, business or social,
are now available for pm·
grams in the area.
The group is made up of
Kathy Frush, Sheila Sheets,
Barb Farley and Gloria ·
Houchens. They will provide
custom skits tu "roast" and
'toast' guests .during special
events.
The cast of characters
include 'The Old Ladies" (top)
consisting of Farley, in front;
Sheets, Frush and Houchens,

on the piano. ''The Cowboys
(bottom) are left to right,
Houchens, Farley and Frush.
"We want to provide people

with something unusual and
fun," said Houchens.

"Gfoo~a?,':~~~~;~~tion, call

"t
t
b
I
6
t:: b
rrUI ' vege a .e growers con.erence set re . 13-15

. .. .. .. . .. .S11 ,5SS

No Doc Fees OeWereO'

West Virginia's II I Chevy, Olds,

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::Dow 5,000! What now?

350V.S""• ALtlmatic

Wiseman named
Ohio's 'Outstanding
ln..dependent Agent'

GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis insur·
ance.executive Thomas E. Wiseman was named Ohio's outstanding
· independent insurance agent for
1995 by the Independent Insurance
Agents of Ohio, Inc. Wiseman is
president of tbe Wiseman Agency,
Inc. The honor was announced dur·
ing tbe association's 98th annual
· convention in Columbus.
Wiseman was prcsenttd the
associalion's most prestigious
award, the Paul Revere Award, for
his "outstanding achievement" in
contributing most of his fellow
agents. "He enjoys the respect of
bis peers and throughout his
involvement in this associatior., he
bas served with selflessness and
dedication to his fellow agents, "
IIAO officials noted during the ceremony.
Wiseman has been active in tbe
FRANK MILLS
DELSIE BURGESS
asi$0Ciation throughout his profes·
sional career and served as its pres·
ident from 1993-1994, after serving
' .
HONORED FOR SERVICE • Frank Mills, a dlredor at Ohio
on the Board of Trustees and as a
, . Valley Bank, and Delsle Burgess, assistant cashier and trust
member of the Legislative Com• . administrator, were recently honored for 40 and 30 years service
mittee.
In 1990, he was presented
with the bank.
the. Young Charger Award as the
outstanding agent in the slate.
A member of Sl Peter's EpiscoInvestment viewpoint:
pal Church, be bas been active in
tbe Gallipolis Rotary Club, the
Chamber of Commerce. and the
Community Improvement Bank.
By JAY CALDWELL
He and his wife Libby reside in
. GALLIPOLIS - With the Dow Jones Industrial Average reaching the 5.000 Gilllipolis with their three children.
milestone. many people are wondering what do we do now? Perhaps it is useful .
to remind ourselves of some important basic investment considerations.
t::
•' Forthelon&amp;ter~investor,youcannotaffordto~iss
inthestock
.· .market. The htstonc numbers are clear and compelling.
~ 'Ibbotson Associates repons that the average annual
~ retum on stocks from 1925-1994 was I0.2 perceni for
By HAL KNEEN
POMEROY - The Ohio Veg ~ large company stocks, and 12.2 for sma!l company
etable and Small Fruit Research
, ·stocks. As lllotson states, "Both large and small comand Development Program released .
:: pany stocks have provided impressive long·term growth
a listing of its 199 5 funded pro.; overthe last 69 years, although With considerable vola·
jects. Over $7 5,000 of growers
• ·tility."
assessment monies were utilized on
~ Maintaining a long term perspective is crucial. From
27 research projeciS. These projects
; . I926through 1994, common stocks produced positive
included new ways to detect and
~ :returns in 70 percent of the one year periods, 89 percent
monitor
insects
in
' ,of the five year periods, 96 percent of the I0 year periods, and I00 percent of raspberries/tomatoes/sweet corn,
i the 15 year periods.
·
communication to growers by com~ · This is powerful information in times like these. Despite the overwhelming pulers· VegNet, cultivar evaluations
i :historical evidence, some investors are currently reluctant to invest with the in tomatoes and potatoes and many
, Dow at record levels, ultimately believing that they can time the.market for other subjects.
; :even better profits. Have you ever really known anyone who is abl~ to
The results of these projects will
; 'consistenll) time the market and achieve superior results?
·
be presented and available in sum~. The futility of the timing approach can be clearly demonstrated by a wealth mary form at 'the Ohio Fruit &amp;
, ·of statistics. One dollar invested in the stock marketin 1925 would have been Vegetable Growers Conference ()n
: ·worth $810.54 through 1994. However, the same $1 investment grew to only February 13-15, Sea gate Center
':$11.51 over the same time frame if it missed the best 30 months in the market. located in Toledo, Ohio. For those
::As the old adage goes, its time in the market, rather than timing the market. n.ot able to at~end, the ltx;al ext~­
; .which makes the difference.
.
, saon .office wtll have copaes avaaJ.
: : Of course the market fluctuates. It goes up and down. The Dow Industrials I able m late February.
· ;plummeted 89 percent from Sepetember, 1929 through July 1932, and it was
For tbose vegetable grower~
: :not until Nov. 23, 1954, that it surpassed its 1929 highs. !iquity investing who are unaware of t~e grower
: ;certainly has its ups and downs along the way, and nobody can foretell when assessmteednt probgramO,ba~oasveproegramtabl
· · h
·· 1 · ·
vo InonFebruary
y
g ande
t.go. Thecnuca
pomttsto k.eep . was
rowers
1993
: :!henextdowntumwr'II be..or how [ arttmr~
: :m aclear~ocus your financaal ne~ds and ObJeCtives and to stay on the n~ht path ~ into law, Section 924.09 of
: :to ftna.ncta[ success. Thts requtres a .well-thought out plan. mcludmg the the Ohio Revisro Code. The grow' .allocation of assets to reduce nsk and rmprove returns.
ers of three or more acres of prO'
. :; Jay Caldwell Ia an Jnvatment b.roker for the Ohio ComJN111y In Ita duetion agreed to assess themselves
•;.Galllpolle office.
·
a tbree quarters of one percent of
L

~

•350 H Power

PROMOTED • R. R, (Rick)
Roach has been promoted to
yard supervisor In the yard
department at the Ohio VaHey
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Plant in Cheshire.
Roach joined OVEC in 11186
as a laborer. He transferred to
the yard department in 11190
as a coal handler, and
advanced to barge attendant
in 11193. In January, 11194, he
was promoted to tripper oper·
ator, and in July, 1994, pro·
gressed to tractor-diesel oper·
ator. Roach and his wire, Debbie, reside In Gallipolis. He is
the father of two sons and
step-daughter.

Lance graduates, accepts post

•'•' •
I

'\\~~\\)\.

IRAN) t-1\Y '95

By GEORGE ANTIIAN
·for every acre protected under million valley acres would be lost
preservation programs.
Gannett News Service
to development and another 2.6
WASHINGTON- A new sur·
In North Carolina, 29,000 acres million acres would lose ability to
vey shows the United States contin- of prime land were lost, 179 acres produce food because of proximity
ues to lose prime farmland to savoo. But programs can work, too. to new residential areas.
development - especially to Maryland saved 8,600 prime acres
But if policy-makers promote
sprawl that gobbles up many more while losing 4,160. Pennsylvania consuuclion of six homes per acre,
acres than are needed for ·comfort- lost barely more than it saved. And instead of three, much of the farm·
able suburban living.
Vermont saved 5,226 acres while land and agricultural support
Ralph Grossi , president of losing 700.
inrrasuucture could be savoo.
American Farmland Trust, which
The farmland trust points to
Local farmers also ask why
promotes land preservation pro· McHenry County, Ill., northwest of developers - and their local govgrams, said, " Typical development Chicago as an example of how ernment allies - insist on building
pauems that see homes built on some of the world's finest farmland on flat, arable land instead of in the
unnecessarily large tracts have con- is being destroyed.
nearby foothills. A huge discount
In bu ted to the loss of some 1 mil·
McHenry bas become the state's store near Lodi, Calif., for example,
lion acres every year ... "
fastest-growing county, attracting was built on flat, rich land where
Doubling the number of homes commuters from Chicago and a soils reached 40 feet in depth.
built on each acre, said Grossi, not new Motorola plant. Once supponMuch of the problem results
only would greatly cut farmland ed largely by a highly successful from the now almost-cOmJ,lete shift
losses but also would save taxpay- dairy industry, McHenry has lost · of American society from agrarian
ers billions or dollars by providing 350 farms since 1987.
to urban and suburban. The vast
servaces to more compact develo)&gt;'
Also threatened is California's majority of people now are
ments.
Central Valley, richest agricultural divorcoo from the realities of food
The National Resources Inven- region in crop value with six of the production and are indifferent to
tory shows a loss of 6 million acres nation's top 10 agricultural coun- plans of developers and local politiof prime land from 1982 to 1992. ties. California agriculture already dans.
Prime land has the best physical has lost its once bountiful Santa
To counter this, enlightened
and chemical characteristics for Clara Valley, now popularly leadership is required from public
producing food.
referred to as Silicon Valley.
officials at all levels. The prospect
The survey dramatizes how the
Tbe Central Valley produces for thrs appears dun tn Washington,
battle lO save land is being lost in 250 crops, especially fruit, vegeta- at least, Where those of the block·
some important fanning regions. In bles, nuts and dairy produciS.
head persuasion seem to be in
California, the leading agricultural
The American Fannland Trust ascendancy on natural resource
state, six acres or prime and unique estimates that under current growth issues.
land were lost during the decade rates over the next half century, I

New business to open Mt:mday

2?Jng In 1J1e
••

CH_ESHIRE • The Gravel HiD Cemetery Association, Inc. of
Cbeshu-e announced Mooday the appointment of Roland Reeves to

returned to BU as football coach.
Masella, 36, succeeds Dan Allen,
who resigned this week to cofcll
Holy Cross. .
· .

CoUege football
BOSTON (AP) - Tom Masei:Ja, who spent five seasons as an
assistant at Boston University
before becoming coach at Fairfield,

The swallowing
of U.S. farmland

Reeves named caretaker

.

.

-

·I

.

gross sales, not to exceed $50 for near open flames or ashtrays. Cut son you are speaking with. Ask to
acreage under 15 acres or three dol- flowers and cut Christmas trees be sent a written brochure of the
lar fee per production acre if over need to be monitored every day to product. Don't give your credit
15 acres or production to raise ensure they don't lack for fresh card number over the phone to
funds for research. Paymeot is due water. If possible the cooler someone soliciting from you. Ask
before December 31st of each year. rooms(60-65 degrees) of your them to send a bill. if the product
Growers can ask for a refund of the borne.
sounds to good to be true, be sure
Calls have been receivoo by area to make further inquiries. Agriculassessment if payment is made on
time and the written request is sub· farmers to purchase mail order tural chemical products must be
mitted within thirty of payment. chemicals. This is the season to be registered with the Ohio DepartFor further information please call on guard for telemarketing fraud. ment of Agriculture. Call 1·800(614) 249-2424 and ask for Mike Many firms are legitimate, fulfill· 282- 1955 and ask for the Pesticide
Pullins, the coordinator of the Ohio ing a valuable role in selling new Division if you have questions or
Vegetable and Small Fruit produciS. However, the occasional neoo to file a complaint.
Hal Kneen is the Agricultural
Research and Development Pro· fraud does occur. When solicited,
ask for the company name and Agent for the Ohio State Unlver·
gram.
This is tbe season in which our address, telephone number and per. sity Extension-Meigs County.
homes are decorated with live
plants, cut greens and vases of
flowers. Proper care can extend the
usefulness of these items. Poinset·
ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. (AP)
As
of a ·restructuring plan,
tias, Christmas cactus and other - Hardee's is bidding "happy
the
nataon
s
founb-largest fast-food
houseplants need sunlight to sur· trails' '· to the unprofitable Roy
restaurant
company
said it will
vive. Over watering and watering Rogers restaurant chain it bought
ICiose
a
plant
in
Rocky
Mount
with cold water haam plants in tbe five years ago.
.
!
putting
232
people
out
of
work.
'
winter season especially· if plants
Hardee's said Friday will sell
remain setting in water. Keep the 450-outlet chain and alSQ plans
planiS free of drafty areas, such a to rrouce the number of restaur:miS
MADRID, . Spain (AP) vents, outside doorways and too in iiS flagship Hardee's system by
Brushing
aside naysayers, western
near windows. Closing window about 4 percent next year. At the
European
leaders launcl d their
·drapes or blinds at sunset will help. end of the third quarter of 1995,
most
daring
integration plan to date
Cut greens look festive but if they there were 3,494 Hardee's restauby
asserting
that Europe will have a
are not placed in water be careful raniS in 41 states and nine foreign smgle currency
as of 2002.
where you place them.. Avoid areas countries.

---Business briefs---P""!

,

�.•

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page D2 • "unhav G!imes-~ntitul

Sunday, December 17, 1995 ·

Sunday, December 17, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Careful consideration needed in
selecting a timber contractor
By CINDY JENKINS
GALLIPOIJS • So you so you
have some timber to sen. Wbo will
you leU itiO, and bow do you know
the person who cut your trees today
will pay you for them tomorrow .
Since tbere is ·no licensing
requirement 10 become a logger in
Ohio, careful consideration needs
to be taken wben selecting a timber
contractor.
First you must select a logger
like you would, a housing contractor • do some shopping, said Pete
Woyar, safety training coordinator
with the Obio Forestry Association.
Woyer said 25 of Ohio's estimated 375 logging companies bave
participated in the OFA's voluntary
certification program.
The program involves logging
safety training, whicb covers sucb
things as best management practices (BMP) for logging activity,
cutting techniques and standards of
the Occupational Safety and Health

FIFfEEN YEAR AWARDS • Fifteen year awards were presented by Daniel E. Evans, left, to Larry Priest, center, Bidwell
plant, and Ray McKinnlss, farm IJillnager.
A THIRTY-FIVE YEAR AWARD is presented to Elizabeth
Fisher, BidweU plant by Daniel E. Evans.

FORTY YEAR AWARD • W. Lowell "Buz" Call, center, vice
president or production, Is presented his 40 year awanl by Dave
Morgan, left, Bidwell plant manager and Daniel E. Evans, right.

140 on hand for BEF
Christmas party
Bob Evans Farms, Inc., Bidwell Plant, Farm Division, and
Ohio Transportation Division, recently held its annual Christ·
mas Party at the University of Rio Grande. Approximately 140
attended. Entertainment was provided by the Rarely Herd
Rand or Athens. Service awards were presented by Daniel E.
Evans, chairman of tbe board of Bob Evans Farms. Years or
service and bonus awards were presented by management.

Business brief

ACROSS

crash.

A year of
change

WASHINGTON (AP)
Charles Schwab Corp., showered.
with favor~bie publicity after saying it would cease cash payments
to attract stock orders from other
brokerages, said it will continue
making !hose payments after all.
Schwab, based in San Francisco,
said some of its customers lhreat ened to take their bu siness else where if it discontinued lhe controversial payments, which some market experts call "hidden kickbacks."
While legal, the so-called " payment for order flow" arrangements
mean a customer order isn't

. exposed to th e broader market,
where it might get a better price.

1 Catch some z's
6 Darn it!
10 Dismissed from
a job
15 Hamburger portion
20Name
21 Author Wiesel
22 Hair dressing
23 Chicago airport
24 South Pole area
26 Heavy
27 French fathers
26 Adolescent
29 Curve part
30 Pacers org.
32 Ship-whart

Traders flooded the market Friday with orders based on the socalled "triple witching" expiration
of stock
ions and futures.

Deal!

By CURT CUNNINGHAM
Economical, BUSTER Dog Food
GALLIPOLIS - The world as
we know is is full of change. No
-----'"\\with 18% Protein
matter how unlik.ed it is, change is
a fact of life we all have come to
.. ·-~
accept. It effects the lives we live 1
each and every day.
~s seasohns c hanghane, peopl!; _
change, or tee no1ogy c ges, we 1
learn to adapt 10 the changes that
effect us.
For Gallia County f;umers, 1995
Buster
bas produced many changes in the
.world of agriculture that they exist.
, """~
~
The Farm Service Agency bas
. . . ll.,. .
·experienced these changes along
.with the producers. In fact, many of
:the changes the Farm Service
·Agency has experienced, has
dfected these producers.
The year 1995, could be called
the "Year of Change" for the FSA.
tn the past year, the USDA agency
has undergone two name changes.
consolidated three agencies into
.one, implemented a new Federal
·CroJ? Insurance program, and
.(;losed several area field offices.
· Not only have the employees of
·'this federal agency had to deal with
·au the changes, area farmers and
·landowners have experienced them
as well . These farmers are to be
commended for their cooperation
during this time of change. As
much as we often wish for change
.10 end, we realize it must exist. The
year 1996 will no doubt include
change.
What will 1996 bring? We can
AFTER
-only speculate. The new farm bill
·wm soon be announced and we can
assure that it will include changes
from current fann policies. With all ·
tbe change that will occur, one
BEFORE
-!bing is fot certain: "Once again,
Candy Cox, LE., C.P.E.
·we wiD adapt."
Curt Cunningham Is a county
Yo~r First
•xec:wtlve dlredor trainee work·
71
Office ViSit
lnll In the Gallia County Farm
Service Agency.
The Blend is the use of 2 distinct electrical currents (Thermolysis and
Galvanic) eith er somultaneously or sequentially. The search shows to
~Business
destroy the greatest number ol hairs at one time. "DON'T RUSH THE
BLEND."
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - The
Using the blend method with the proper intensity and timing will be a
)raditionally sweet holiday shopvery effective form of hatr removal treatment.
ping season bas turned sour for
If the currents are used too high in temperatures in a short amount of
Apple Computer Inc .
time HI GH FREQUENCY BLOWOUT can occur. This can cause skin
• The company said Friday it
damage and more regrowth of hair.
expects to lose money during the
Electrolysis treatments w111 provide you permanent removal of hair,
current quarter, despite higher
plus
the long term be nefits of elimination of any embarrassing physical
~ales, because competition h~s
appearance. and the enhancement of your self image.
forced it 10 slash pnces, erodmg JIS
Only the person who has endmed the burden of unwanted hair will
profit margin.
· It would be the first loss since
value the benefits of electrolysis treatments.
spring 1993 at Apple and ma~ lead
(0 layoffs and more turnover m top
management, analysts said. Apple
itock. feU S3 to close at $35.25 on
(be Nasdaq Stock Market Friday.

connector

34 Gift recipient
36 Penetrate
38 Young man
39 For shame!
42 By way of
43Atma45 Deride
47 Apron part
50 Clothing
52 Make a speech
53 Volcano output
54 Glass section
55 Charm
56 Amusement
57 Cleaned (the
chalkboard)
59 Judicial
proceedings
60 Dairy product
61 Artist's frame
63 God of tove
64 Group character
65 ODE's command
66 Termination notice
69 - Buddhism
70 Dormant
71 Actress Susan 72 Actress MacDowell
73 Cap part
75 Do a cobbler's job
76 Virginia senator
78 Singing voice

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

1519 Kanawha St: 67S·2780 ·

Unwanted

79 Game piece
80 Postponed
diSCUSSiOn Of
81 Extend (a
subscription)
82M~gnate

83 Male sheep
86 Landlord
87 Actress Dawber
88 General -: post
office section
90 Pod veggie
9-1 Jacob's son
92 Walk tamely
93 Restaurant patron
94 Poet Sandburg
95 British gun
96 Canadian province
98 Animal coat
99 More than one
10! Spanish painter
102 "Do - others .
103 Embankment
106 Baby's outlit
107 LyriC poem
108 Greek cheese
109 Vigilant
110 It's a human thing
to do!
111 Solar
112 Ventilate
113 Fudd or Gantry
115 Emulated
Kate Moss
117 Storage space
121 Large tank
'12.3 Lennon's love
124 Matinee guy?
128 Chocolate
substitute
129 Reveal
131. Sodium
bicarbonate
134 Sheeptike
135 Food allowance
136 Prayer ending
137 BiHer
138 German river
139 Coeur d'- , Idaho
140 Uncommon
141 Saunter

DOWN
t RBI or ERA
2 "What's My-?"
3 Small: suff.
4.African antelope
5 According to
6Withdraw
7 Linda Lavin rote
8Twitch
9 Actor Connery
10 Enemy
1t Reflection
12 Detection dev,ce
13 Eve's home ~
14 - Xiaoping
-15 Quick-growing tree
t61n front
17 Mountain lake
18 Arduous journey
t 9 Affirmative reply
22 Neptune or Pluto
25 Relating to poodles
and pugs
3! Phi- Kappa
33 Argue in court
36 Finished
37 Forest unit
39 Delineated
40 Military greeting
41 WWll army saying
43 Chilled dessert
44 Man-made fiber
45 Actor Priestley
46Aiways
47 Pre-wedding
shindig
48 Chant
49Animal
51 Type of pie?
53 Poorer, as
an excuse

54 George C. Scott
role
56 Dervish
58 Barber's tool
61 Ceased
62 Pep up
64 Simply
66 Reception room
67 Near the center

dent of Doll Lumber Company in
Southington, said the landowner
should do preliminary lhings sucb
as ask for reference and observe a
current job.
"There are a lot of 'just loggers'
out there who don't bave mucb
financial base," Doll said. "they
may only bave a skidder and can't
do a good job."
Doll said the three items perspective clients sbould always ask
for are: references, a certificate of
workers compensation, and proof
of liability of insurance.
Get more !ban one bid. It is also
beneficial, from an economic
standpoint, to get more than one
bid for tbe timber, according to
Bruce Woolf of Winona.
When Woolf decided to sell
some trees from his 530 acre
Columbiana County dairy farm last
year, be bad five contractors bid for
the job. There was a $14,000 difference in the live bids. He ulti-

Copper futures nosedive on
signs supplies are growing

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - For
18 years, Mildred Wiley was a
·nurse in the psychiatric ward at a
Veterans AdministraJion hospital ,
caring for patients who smoked so
much that she often worked in a
blue haze.
Last week , the U.S. Labor
Depanment ordered the VA to pay
her widower $21,500 a year until
his death - half of her salary - in
the first workers' compensation
case in the nation linking secondhand smoke to a cancer death .

By DAVID DISHNEAU
AP Business Writer
Copper futures prices plunged
nearly 5 percent Friday on sigils
!hat near-term supply concerns are
easing.
.
The London Metal Exchange
reported a ~harp increase in warehouse inventories of copper, particularly in the United States, prompting speculation the bull market that
recently took prices to six-year
highs is over.
"This basically gave people the

TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE

NEW YORK (AP) - Trading
vo lum e on th e New York Stock
Exdmngc set a record with 653.16
million share s changing bands.
That was well above lhe mark set
U1c day after ihc 1987 stock market
TEN YEAR AWARD· Daniel E. Evans, left, presented a tOyear award to Lonzie lsaac, Ohio Transportation Divi&lt;ion.

-Business highlights-

Administration.
Crews must become certified in
fii'St aid and CPR, ·and the oonttact?r must have workers compensation coverage and liability insurance.
Following completion of each
requirement, the contractor can
apply for a certificate from the
OFA' s Logging Standard Council,
which reviews the applications for
approval. OFA encourages recertification every three years.
Woyar said between 800-900 of
the 1,200-1,500 people employed
in Ohio's logging industry have
completed all or some part of the
voluntary certification program.
Logging safety and BMP training is held monthly in Chillicolhe,
Athens, and New Philadelphia.
Plans are being made for training
sessions in northeast and northwest
Ohio in 1996.
Check it out. When considering
a timber contractor, Jim Doll, presi-

68 Longed (for)
70 Monkey's kin
74 Planted
75 "Message received"
77 Not in aHendance
78 Arizona city
79 Capital of
Delaware
80 Experimented
with
81 Stallone role
82 Graceful dance
84 Make fizzy
85 Croquet
implement
86 Cowboy's rope
87 Religious
statue
89 Long-time convict
92 Fontanne's
partner
94 Actor's signal
96 Question
97 Shellfish
99 Cleric
100 Stnnged

Impression that maybe things aren' t
as tight as they had been, that there
is metal starting to move to the
'market in greater· quantities at a
time that demand is maybe starting
to pull back," said analyst Stephen
Platt of Dean Witter, Discover &amp;
Co.
On other commodity markets,
crude oil prices surged, and cattle
futures rose as traders bet tbe
wrong way on supplies. The Com·
modity Researc~ Bureau's index of
17 commodities fell 0.86 point to

244.95.

instrument

104XI
105 Norm·~ wife
106 Of jungle cats
108"- McGee
and Molly" .
t12Dry as-t 13 Typewriter type
114 Former Russian
leader
1t 5 Card game
116 Dance hall
117Grono
118 "Exodus" author
t 19 Greek goddess
120 Egg-shaped
122 Ski lift
t 25 Actress Diana 126 Gartield's pal
127 Knight's wife
126 Bovine
130 Cedar Rapids
college
132 Doctor's org.
133 School of whales

-Business briefs-

Copper for December delivery
plunged 6.75 cents to $1.3315 a
pound on the Comex division of
the New York Mercantile
Exchange, a drop of 4.8 percent.

wASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices posted their best
record in nearly five .years last
month, showing no overall
increase. Food, energy, clothing
and transportation costs all fell.
Many analysts said the inflation
news, along with a round of European interest rate cuts, increased
chances the Federal Reserve will
lower U.S. rates next week.
PASSES BAR EXAM •
Crystal Renee Richie, daughter of Georgia A. Richie, 303
Lower River Road and Clift E.
Richie of Canada recently
passed the Ohio Bar Examination. She is currently
employed with the National
Gas &amp; Oil Corporation in
Newark as a staff attorney,
Miss Richie received her Juris
Doctor Degree from Capital
University Law School in
May, 1995, graduating In the
top third of her dass.

Scott Pullins appointed
executive director of NTUO
POMEROY - Former Meigs
County resident Scott A. Pullins
has been named executive director
of National Taxpayers Union of
Ohio, the Ohio branch of National
Taxpayers Union.
Founded in 1969, National Taxpayers Gnion is tbe country's
lar,sest pro-taxpayer organization ·
wilb over 300,000 membeJS nation·
wide and over 14,000 members in
Ohio. N11J lobbies the legislatures
and congress and educates the public on the need for constitutional
amendments to enact a balanced
budget and restrictions on tax~
and spending.
·
As executive director, Pullins
will serve as cbief lobbyist and
spokesman for National Taxpayers
Union of Ohio, and will direct its
efforts to expand membership .
SCOIT A. PULLINS
Pullins previously served as a staff
member and lobbyist for National deputy auditor 10 the Athens CounTaxpayers Union of Ohio
ty Auditor.
Since 1992, Pullins bas been a
Pullins is the son of Charles and
partner witb Right Communica- Susan Masb of Pomeroy and the
tions, a marketing communications late Ray Pullins of Athens, and·is
and public affairs consulting fum. the grandson of Agnes Dixon and
From 1990 until 1992 be served as the late Herbert Dixon of Pomeroy.
administrative assistant to the Pullins and his wife, Kathryn
Franklin County Auditor. From Elliott Pullins, reside in Apple Val1987 until 1990 be served as a ley in Knox County.

mately did not go with the highest
bidder, but with the contractor be
had the most respect for.
. Doll said because of the strong
t1mber market in the last several
~ears, a lot of people with no expe·
nence saw instant cash and decided
to become loggers.
It is important 10 make sure the
contractor bas a base where be can
be reached. Ask yourself, does this
person have the physical presence,
and does be give something back to
the community?
"The tree will always be there,
and unless you see a tornado on the
horizon, take your time and get
someone you are comfortable
working with.
For a list of loggers in this
area, or other Information concerning logging, contact Cindy
Jenkins, District Forester, at the
Gallia County Sail and Water
Conservation District, at 4468687,

Iii!, cruise, V6 engine, cloth interior, rear defroster ......... $5495

1990 CHEVY CAVAUER, 15485, blue, automatic,
air, AM/FM cassette. cloth Interior ...
. ................ ~51!52
1991 PONTIAC 6000, 15471, V6 engine, air,
automatic, AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise, cloth Interior ..... $5905
1993 CHEVY BERffiA, 15413, oed. 47,000 miles.,
air, automatic. AMlFM, rear t1elroster, dual mirrors ..... $8276
1994 GEO METRO, 15445, red, automatic, air,
AM/FM, 27,000 miles, cloth interior. balance ol
factory warranty .
... $7995
1994 FORO ASPIRE, 15517, automatic, air,
AM/FM cassette, dual air bags, cloth interior .. .
. .... $7995

1992 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 153!16, green, 44.000
miles, air, automatic, AM/FM, rear defroster,
dual mirrors ...
........ ......... $7795

1992 GEO STORM, 15495, 2 door. while, air,
automatic, AM!FM. dual mirrors, custom stripes,

52,000 miles ............................................................. $71100
1992 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 15474, red, 4 door, air.
automatic, AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise, cloth interior,
sport wheels, power windows &amp; locks .... .

. $7895

1989 BUICK REGAL LIMITED, 15431, 2 door, AM/FM
cassette. tilt, cruise. 65.000 mites, cloth Interior. power
windows, locks &amp; seats, rear defroster, dual mirrors
. $7165

1992 OLDS ACHIEVA S, 15452, air, aulomatlc,
sport wheels , cloth interior, AM/FM cassette ................ . S8955

1993 CHEVY LUMINA, 15515,4 door. white. air.
automatic, V6. AM/FM casset1e, tilt, cruise ........ . ........ $9415

1991 OLDS CUTL.ASSSUPREME, t5501,2door, V6,
air, automatic, AM/FM cassel1e, tilt , cruise , power
windows &amp; locks .. ....... ..

. ..... $9495
1994 FORD TAURUS GL, 15513, white, air, automatic,
AM/FM cassel1e, tilt, cruise, power windows &amp; locks,
rear defroster. air bag, cloth interior. dual mirrors ....... $10,720

1993 FORD THUNDERBIRD, 15516, red, air, AM/FM
cassette. tilt, cruise, power seats &amp; windows, sport
wheels. rear defroster, cloth interior ...
.............. . $10,995

995

cassitti~J:ulse. air bag, power
......................

. ..... .. $11,887

1993 FORO THUNDERBIRD LX, 15512, black, air, aulomalic,
AM/FM cassette. lilt. cruise. power seats, windows &amp; locks,
sport wheels. fog lamps, 20,000 miles, balance of
factory warranty ... . ..................... ................ ...... $11,995
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 15390, red , 33,000 miles.
automatic, air, AM/FM, tilt, cruise, alr bag, dual mirrors,
power locks ..
....... ... .. .........
.. .......... $11 ,495

1994 PONTIAC GRANDAM SE, 15391, red. automatic. air.
AM/FM, dual mirrors, cruise ............... ....................... $10,595

1990 OLDS CALAIS, 15533, blue, AM/FM, clolh
...................... $4995

interior, dual mirrors

WHARTON
* *
JEEP EAGLE
7th &amp; Plumb
Parkersburg, WV

1992 CHEVY S-10, 15528, white, AM/FM cassette, bed
liner, sport wheels, air, custom stripes ..

.. $6895

1!169 CHEVY S-10, 15522, 36,000 miles. AM/FM

NOIN7ERES7

* 0 /a APRAND
FINANCING *
8

cassette, running boards, rear slider, dual mirrors ........ $5495
1991 CHEVY S·t0, 15521, V6, sport wheels, rear
slider, AM/FM cassette, dual mirrors ...
........... ..... $7395
11188 CHEVY 5·10, 15530, 40,000 miles, air,AM/FM
cassette, rear slider, bed liner, sport wheels ..... :..
. $5995
1993 NISSAN HAROBOOY, 15422, white, custom stripes,
automatic, AM/FM cassette, tonneau cover,
sport wheels ... ..
... .... .........
........ $8995

1993 CHEVY 5-10,

15488, 2 tone pain!. Tahoe package,

rear slider, sport wheels, AM!FM cassette. V6 .. ..... ...... $9395

1992 GMC SONOMA SLE, 15458, AM/FM cassette, air,
power windows &amp; locks. sport wheels. bed liner, V6,
46,000 miles, cloth interior .. ....................... ............... .. $9495
19!:~

FORD RANGER SUPER CAB XLT, 155211,33,000 miles,

air, HM/FM cassette. sport wheels, dual mirrors, V6,
rear flip seats, rear slider, blue .................. ....... ........... $10,810

1894 NISSAN KING CAB, 15524, AM/FM cassette.
air, rear slider, bed liner, spon wheels, dual mirrors,
doth interior ............................. ................ ......... ........ $11,870

t988 DODGE CARAVAN LE,

15506, woodgrain, V6,

1 passenger, air, Butomatic, AM!FM, tilt, cruise, power
locks, luggage rack , cloth interior ...... ........... ·
.. $5995

1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 15499, blue. V6,
air, automatic, AM/FM, 1111. cruise. air bag .. .

.... $9995

1992 DODGE CARAVAN GRAN VAN LE, 15514,

lU

NEW 1996 NISSAN SENTRA IE

Electrolysis"
ROV BREEDER OF THE YEAR • Champion Hill, Bidwell,
was honored as the 19!15 Angus RoU or Vktory (ROV) breeder or
the year recently. From left, accepting the award are Lynn and
Paul Hill. ROV 11'innen are determined by accumulated points
earned at designated RoD of Victory shows. The awanl was pre'
sented at tbe 1995 North American International Livestock Exposition In Louisville, Ky.

briefs-·

DETROIT (AP) - Kmart Corp.
-stock tumble!! 15 percent to its
Jowest lev~• in more than a decade
u rum01 esurfaced that the dis· ·
~ount retailer was considering
J!aniauptcy court protection. Kmart
again denied the rumors .

PRICE

1991 DODGE MONACO LE, ISS32, automatic, air,

automatic. AM/FM
seats, locks &amp; windows ...

•

10 OFF

Prtcn&amp;
Paymenta
Clearly
Marked on
Wlndehlolda

~=ro~~~o~~~~~:SiiRAt;iis, .;54,;~; ;~d. vs.'~i~-

Research

0/0

That's The Sound
Of Our Competitor's Pencil
When Trying To Match
Our Low Pricesl

air, AMJFM cassette, till, cruise, air bag. rear defroster,

ON ALL NEW NISSAN
SENTRAS AND ALTIMAS

"New

SNAPI CRACKLII POPI

1993 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE, 15390, black, automat;o,

NO PAYMENtS
tiL MARCH '91

Hair?

"unbav ~imt•·"entitul• Page D3

1992 BUICK REGAL

•
•
•

s..

•
•

•
•
•

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

-

,.

,,

600 Grand Central Ave., Suite 1
Vienna, W. Va. (near Parkersburg)
Hours: Tues.-Fri. 9-07, Sat. 9-4 1·(304)·295-4533

See answer on page A2
1

2 dr, Maroon w/red cloth Interior,

3800 V-6, auto, AC, stereo case,
Pwr windows, locks, cruise, tilt,
rear defrost, 41 K 1-owner
$270 Mo
credit

~

L

~

~

'

.

Jerry Bibbee
Marvn Keebl!ugh
Doc 1-l&lt;&gt;·~m•&gt;n
Clark

,I

.,

grean, air, automatic:, AM/FM cassette, lilt, cruise, air bag,
7 passenger, V6, power seats, windows &amp; miiTors.
sport wheals. 48.000 miles ..............
............ $13,675

Air conditioning, stereo cassette,
rear defroster.

ONLY

$12,999

1991 GEO TRACKER 4X4LSI, 15510, red, automatic,
air, AM/FM, sport wheels .......................................... .... $8995

1993 GEO TRACKER 4X4, 15510, red, AM!FM
casset1e, spor1 wheels, cloth Interior, 27,000 miles .... $10,340

1991 GMC JIMMY 4X4, 154!16, blue, AM/FMcsssene.
tilt, cruise, sport wheels, rear defroster, ·power windows
~. locks, cloth interior ......
. .................... S14,525
1994 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4, 15524, green, ·4 door,
Tahoe"pkg. air, automatic, AM!FM cassette, tilt, cruise,
power windows &amp; locks. sport wheels, luggage rack ... S18,075

;

�'.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page D4 • ~unllav Grimn-~rntinrl

Sunday, December 17,

Sunday, December 17, 1995

1995~

230

House of the Week

II

Home is traditional outside

Professional
Services
. Money for college available.
Recorded message giVes detarts,
614-992-5759 or 614-667-9780

To Order Study Plan

Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Set/It, Ranch Homes, 24 of the most popular from th1s
feature: Practical Home Repairs. w~ich tells how to handle 35 common
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24·
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to . House of the Week, The Sunday- Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. t0116·1562.

Enclosed Is $4 for plan No. - - - - - - - - - - - - Enclosed Is $4.95 each for the booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Street. _____________________________
Ci~-----------------------------------

'

State (ZIP)·------------'-----------------------{

lines and pleasant miled porch with elegant columns present a tmditional,

TilE

Uy BRUCE A. NATIIAN
AP Newsfeatures
The traditional exterior of this
home surrounds a modern. innovative floor plan.
A creative design that features
pl e nty of wide-open spaces and
gathering spots. Plan 1'·80. by
HomeStyles Designers Network,
offe rs 2,705 square feet of living
space.
The wide. covered front porch.
arched windows and symmetrical
lines of this traditional home suggest a hearty welcome.
Inside, the two-story-high foyer
guides guests to the formal areas
at the front of the home. Both the
living room and the dining room
feature views of the front porch. In
the dining room, a built-in china
cabinet provides a place for display
of coUectables. while the fireplace
in the living room is an attractive
focal point
The hot spot of the home is the
great room . A family will enjoy

nights in this room gathered
around the fireplace and the adjacent media wall. Doors on either
side of the fireplace open to a deck.
The kitchen and glassed-in eating
nook overlook the deck and provide access to a mudroom. Meal
preparation will be a pleasure in
the enormous kitchen, which has a
recipe desk and an island cooktop.
H1gh 9-ft ceilings add to the aura
of hospitality found on the main
floor .
Across the home. the secluded
master suite showcases another
fireplace . This private oasis also
features a 13-ft. cathedral ceiling
and a bath with a whirlpool tub.
Upstairs, one bedroom -has a
sloped ceiling and a private bath.
The other three bedrooms share a
skylighted haU bath. The students
and readers of the household wiU
appreciate the built-in bookshelves
in the right, rear bedroolll Both of
the bedrooms at the front of the
plan include a pair of closets.

o ..

Business briefs

face to passersby.

F-80 SfATISTICS
Design f-80 has a living room
dining room. great room, kitchen'
eating nook. mudroom, five bed:
rooms, three full baths and one
half-bath. totaling 2, 705 square feet
of living space. The plan is availzx6 exterior
wau framing
abte awith
and
standard
basement,
crawlspace or slab foundation. A two-car
garage with a utility room provides
443 square feet of space.

.
l...UI···

(For a nwre detailed, scaled plan
of this house, including guides to
estimating costs and /ittancing, send
$4 to House of the Week, P.O. Box
1562. New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.

Be sure to include the pian number.)

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) Federal Express says its shipping
perfonnance has improved despite
a pilots' slowdown during its busiest time of the year.
Some major customers agree
they've bad no problems.
But not ev;ryone Js satisfied,

including investors. FedEx stock ;
tumbled 6.4 percent Thursday.
The stock slid following a company report after the close of tradmg Wednesday which said profit in
the second quarter of its fiscal year rose 4 percent, falling short of ·
expectations.

r=~;:;:;;::;:::==T=========r-========:-r-=::::======:
Public Notice
BIDS FOR
HOUSE FOR SALE
Bids are botng accepted
by tho Meigs County Public
Library BO'Ird of Truotoes
lor the sale and removal of
a 9 room houoe (formerly
known as the Betsy Tyree
Pickens homo) located at 1
Pearl St., Racine,

Public Notice
The Board reserves tho
right the refuse any and all
btds. For more lnlormalton
call992·5813.
(12) 17, 31;
(1) 14, 28i
(2) 11, 25; STC

Public Notice
December 27, 1995 at 7:00
p.m. The reorganization
meeting will be January
1996 at7:00 p.m.
Shirley Watson, Clark
December 17, 19, 21, 1995

Public Notice

Public Notice

OH.

Bidders will bo required to
PUBLIC NOTICE
hava the house moved and
Tho Ohio Twp and of the
tot cleaned by April 1, 1996. year meeting witt be

Public Notice
Oldsmobile, 2 D, Sartat :
M1G3GMt1A7HP329622.
Seat ad bids wtll be
accepted at tne Middleport
Pollee Dept., 237 Race St.,
Mtddtoport, Ohio 45760 unttl
Dec. 18, 1995 at 4:00p.m .
Vehicle can be aeon at the
above address and will be

Special For Month of
December At Micheal &amp; Friends

ACRYLIC NAILS
$35. 00 Reg. $45.00

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"'--;·-.r·A~
'·(\ !'

j'"'r\

,_,
..._

0:·•·'·

F-80

INSIDE, the fonnal living an~lng rooms Oank the foyer at the
front o( the home. A built-in china cabinet adds slyle to the dining
room, while a fireplace provides a focal point In the living room.
Your family wiD enjoy casual gatherings in the great room, which
leads to the gounnet kitchen and an eating nook. Two sets of
doors open to a backyard d~ ~ k. The secluded master suite
includes a romantic fireplace and a private bath, while the upper
floor houses four more bedrooms and two fuU baths.

Questions &amp; answers
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP ,Special Features
Q: Can you explain the working
and purpose of a vent pipe? Some
months ago, during a heavy rain,
water came pouring into a thirdfloor room. Our roofer came and
said it was not a roof defect, that
there might be a break or blockage
inside the vent pipe. He filled a
plastic beverage bottle with water
and inserted it in tbe top of tbe
vent. We bave bad no flooding
since. However, at times I sense an
unfamiliar odor through the boose.
My daughter thinks there may be
some harmful gases seeping
through the bouse.
A: The odor that you smell is
probably from sewer gas, which is
the result of the vent stack being
blocked. The vent pipe must never

be obsuucted. Its purpose is to vent
sewer gas to the atmosphere, and to
maintain atmospheric pressure
within the drainage system.
Eacb plumbing fixture, sucb as a
sink, bas a bend known as a P trap,
as part of its drainage piping. A little water is left in the trap every
time water drains from the fixture.
The trapped water fonns a seal to
block sewer gas (wbich is normally
present in the drain line) from
entering the bouse.
Wben it rains, water enters the
opening at the top of the vent stack.
Normally this is not a problem.
However, if the vent pipe is offset
in tbe attic, and if this offset section
is cracked or has a bole. water will
drip onto the floor and wet the ceil·
ing below.
·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

40

Giveaway·

110o.
3 Beagle Pupptes, 5 Weeks Old.
Ready To Go 614-379-9112
3 blue eyed krnens, 1 whne, 1 Ug·
er, 1 bluelgroy, 6 wks. old 614388-8595.
4 ~I !lens, approx . 6mos old , to
good country home only. Save us
from the pound 304-675-3963
6 Week Old, 112 Austrailtan
Shepherd, 112 Alaskan Hus~y
614-245-9249.
7 Puppres, 7 Weeks Old, Part
Husky 61&lt;1-441 -0725.
8 puppies, German Shephard/
Collte mix Ready for Christmas
304-675-681 B.
Beloved cat, must Ieaiie for
chrld's health. loo kt ng for good
owner 304-675-7129 before 9pm
Clothes To G1veaway, Must Take
All 61 4-446·3599
·
Cute, furry, Chmtmas pupp1cs
Mother part Black Lab &amp; part
Golden Retrtever Father mtxed
304-675-8757
Female Bnttany, 4 years old, has
been grouse hunted . 614 ·992·
2822.
Free Frrewood, You Cut , Eas y
Access, Tops From Summer 61 4
446-9346
Male, 1 Year Old, Fu ll Blooded
Australian Shepherd, Very Gentle
61 4·388-6453.
Par! Wtre 1errter Pups, Can Be
Seen At 1569 Neighborhood Ad
Make Good Pels.
In a survey conducted for ~ed Aus1ra11an Shepherd Pup·
Owens-Coming Fiberglas in Tole- p1es. 8 Weeks Old, 1 Male &amp; 3
do, Ohio, more than 40 percent of Females 61 4·256-6259
prospective home buyers said they Small gray kitten. &amp; large yellow
would pay an extra $500 for sound cat, to good home. 304-675-7029
barriers in interior walls and floors . Yellow Angora 2mos old kitten, to
As a .result, the company is promot- mce home only 304-675-4650.
IDg Jts thermal insulation as a
sound insulation . too. Jim 60 Lost and Found
Schmiedcskamp, a company Found-box of Christmas orna1219195, Rrggs Chrtstmas
spokesman, says a 1995 booklet ments
trees, Reedsvrlle, VICtnHy, call to
titled "Qmet Please" refers to the 10, 614· 792·5702.
insulation as a "comprehensive
70
Yard Sale
acoustical control system."
Prior to the postwar building
Gallipolis
booll_l in the 1950s, Hougland says
&amp; VIcinity
a
mtenor nmses weren't much
problem because walls were built ALL Yard Sales Musl Be Pa1d In
of plaster on lath . That's far too Advanco. DEADLINE : 2:00 p m
expensive today and in some cases · the day before. the ad ts to run
editiOn · 2:00 p.m. Frtda~.
wouldn't meet modern building Sunday
Monday edt!ion -. 10:00 am Satcodes.
urday.
Instead, there are newer prodPomeroy,
ucts and techniques to create sound
Middleport
barriers such as lightweight con&amp; VIcinity
crete for subflooring and metal
channels for walls tbat decouple All Yard Sales ~ust Be Pa1d In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
joists and waUboard.
day before lhe ad is to run, .SunThe door. a first line of defense day edition- 1:OOpm Friday, ·Monagainst unwanted noise. has also day edition 1O:OOa.m. Saturday.
changed. Hollow-core doors 80
Public Sale
replaced solid wood doors as an
and
Auction
industry standard in tbe early 1950s
because they cost less. Unfortu- Wedemeyer's Auction Servtce
~allipolis, Ohio 614-379-2720
·
nately, they filter out less noise.

or

R1ck Pearson Auctton Company,

~1:;;,2-;Be
;-:-:-ag-:-Je-:':M-;al-e""'Pup-p-y,;..,6_14_
,...
-"'3a-a- lul l 11me auciiOneer, complete

auct1or. serv1ce L•censed
II66 ,0h10 &amp; West Vtrgmta, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-544?
90 Wanted to Buy
Complete Household Or Estates I
Any Type Of Furniture, Appl1anc
es, Antique's, Etc Also Appra1sal
Avatlable•614·379·2720
Ant1qu es, collectables, estates,
R1ver1ne Ant1ques , Ru ss Moore .
owner 614-992-2526

AVON I All Area s
Spears, 304-675-1429

r

Shrrley

DRIVER/SALESPERSON
Ferrellgas, a Nat1onw1de Propane
Marketmg Company and a Rec ·
ogn•zed Leader m Our Industry
IS Seekrng a Or111er!Salesperson
lor the Gallipolis, OH Area
Respos1btl1tes Include Dellvermg
Propane. Marntammg Equ1pment. .
Pro111d1ng Servtce to Customers
and ldent1ly1ng and Sell1ng 10 N~
Accounts
Ex cellent Commun1cat1on Skills
and a Genu tne Commitment to
Provtdmg Supenor Customer
Servtce are Abso lute Requ1re·
ments Candidates Must be Able
to Meet Appltcable DOT Requtre·
ments
We Offer a Compet1t1ve Salary
an(j an Excellent Beneltts Pack·
age, tnciiJdtng Proltt Shanng and
an Investment Plan Opuon Inter·
es1ed Candidate s Should Apply 111
Person a!

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer
Sm1th Bu1ck Pont1ac , 1900 East
ern Avenue, Gallipolis
J &amp; 0 s Auto Parts 8uy1ng sal·
vage veh1cles Sellm9 parts 304
773-5033
Top Prtces Pa1d Old US Coms,
Stiver, Gold. Otamonds, All Old
Collectibles, Paperwetghts, Etc
FE RRELLGAS
MTS Corn Shop, 151 Second
8255 SR 5B8
Avenue, Gal11pohs. 614·446-2842
GallipoliS, OH 45631
Used lurn1 ture - ant1ques, one
EOEIAAP
p1ece or complete estates. Osby
We encourage Applications from
Martin. 614-992·7441
M1nonbes, Females, Veterans,
and the Oisalled.
Wanted To Buy L1111a T1kes Toys
No Agenctes Please
614-245-5687
Dnvers-Centrat 14 States $400Wanted To Buy Older Cameras $900
Poss1ble/Wk MaJOrrty Home
614-446-6452.
Wkly, No NY Guy As.srg ned
Conv Tractors. Call 24 Hrs. B00727·5691
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Home Typtsts, PC users needed
$45,000 mcome potential Call 1·
000-513-4343 Ext B-9368.
11
Help Wanted
HVAC INSTALLER
$1,000 Weekly Stuffi ng Envel opes, Free Info. Send Self Addressed Stamped Envelope To Growmg Southeastern Ohto
Explorer Dept 91 6069 Old Can- HVAC Company lookmg For Ex·
ton Road. Box 510. Jackson, MS perienced Self Motivated Installers
39211
Good Pay
$200-$900 weekly Year round
Good Benefl!s
POS1t1ons. Htfln g men. women
ReurementPian
Free room. board, W1Utrarn Call
24hrs 407 ·875·2022 ext Be A Leader And Jom Our Team
0505C49.
Today! 5end Resume To·
' HVAC Installer
$35,000 IVR INCOME Po ten hal
PO. Box 805
Reading Books. Toll Free (1) BOO·
Jackson, OH 45640
898·9778 Ext R-2814 For Oelails
Opportunity sell starter Capable
$40,000 IYR INCOME Potential of handling people Com puter
Home Typtsts !PC Users Toll kII Ad ·
·
Free (1) 800 -898 -9778 Ex1. T· sStllon
I s
mm•stratlve
614-441
·1104 support po 2814 For LlsUngs
Posl!mn available lor Dental AsAGENT AVON SALES
s1stan t For more mlo, call 304·
Earn$&amp; -$15 /Hr. At Work ·Home 773-5822.
Benelilst Dtscountst Flexrble 1 : : - - - - - - - - - Hoursl No Inventory Requtred
Real Estale Career Professional
1-800-7-12-4738
trarning ERA Town &amp; Country
Real Estate, Broker, Beckie Stetn
Apply In Person , Monday and 3:&gt;4-675-5548.
'
Tuesday, 9-5, At Super 8 Motet
321 Upper River Rd.
'
SOCIAL WORKER

o

AVON EARN $$$ aJ home·al
work. Atl areas 304 -882-2645 1800-992-6358. JNDIREP
'
BUSINESS DIRECTOR
EARN SIX FIGURE INCOME
TX Based Co Expanding Nai!Onwrde. SaleSIMgmVFtnance Background Requtred Tra1n 1n Dallas
'214-680-8414'
Busy dental o111ce seektng responsrble adult for dental asstSt·
lrlg posttlon, wrlltng to train. Send
resume to olfice man~ger, PO Box
628. Pomeroy, Ohro 4576Q

WANTED FU LL-TIME COM.
MUNJTV SKILLS IN STRUCTOR '
posllron a..-a•lable to work w1th ·an
adu lt With learnmg hmllallons 1n
Meigs County. Lrve -in positiOn ,
must be able to stey overnrghrs :
day trme hours off. Hours : 3pm
Sunday thru Bam Friday Hrgh,
schoo l dcgroo, valrd d~rver's lr - r
cense, good drtvmg record, three :
years ftcensed dnvrng eKpen- ,
ence, and adequate automobile :
msurance coverage requi red. ·
Trarn~ng provrded Salary· $5.00/ ·
hr. to stan Healthfdental in ~ 1
surance benefits. Vacation/src~

leave benehts If Interested con- ·
tact Cecilia at 1-800-531 -2302. ·
Equal OppornJMy Employer

180 Wanted To Do
Blown Jnsulatton, Jnsurance, Expennce, References, Reasonable 1
Rates, Ca ll For Free Esttmates ,
614-245-5755
:;::-~:---:---:-:---::----- 1'
Child Care In My Gallipolis Area
Home All Ages Welcome, Hoi ,
Meals, Please Call614-441 -0439
Chnsttan CNA Lady Will Care For
Srck And Elderly rn Therr Home ·
Ntgh!s No Weekends, Relerenc:
es 614 256-6109, Leave Message
Extra hand Sktlled handy man
Truck , sca lfold, tool s. Custom .
made wood bed frames . headboards 304-675-6925.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mrlt JUSt call 1
304·675-1957
ProfessiOnal Tree Servtce. Complete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Serv1ce ·50 Ft Reach, Stump Removal. Free Est1maresl In surance, 24 Hr. Emergency Servrce -Call And Save l No Trea Too
B19 Or Too Smalll B1dwell, Ohio
614-388-9643,614-367-7010.
General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Wtndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned Light Haul1ng, 1
Commer1cal, ReStdential, Steve
614-446·8861
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleanrng Serv1ce
dustmg, mopp1ng, wtndows and
more. Complete serv1ce or touchups References on request call
Terry al 614-992·4232 or e14·
992·4451.

3bedroom, Apple Grove, close to
lock! 304-576-2642 or 304 -762-

2330

Year end sale. Save S1,000 on att
new single sect1on homes 1n
stock lncludmg several Hi96
models See at Mountam State
Homes, Pt Pleasant, WV. 304 ·

675-1400

1975 12x6s· two bedroom lur nrshed mobile home. $6000, 614 742-3807
330 Farms for Sale
J.D 450C dozer. Sway, ROP
$17.500. 25,000 Jb lowtxly, $1,000
69 model mobtl e home toter
$700 76 model hlth wheel tractor,
$4500 5000 wan Coleman generafOr, $37500 614-446·8044
350 Lots &amp; Acreage

IN Fl.JTLAND- house lor rent, four
bedrooms one bath, large rooms,
1-'lx14 front room, 14x12 k1tchen.
new carpet, recently remodeled,
central a1r, HUD accepted, $3851
mo. plus deposit. 614-992-281 7
New 3 Or 4 Bedrooms, 2 11 2
Bat~s . large Kitchen , Ut 11t1y
Room. Heat Pump. 2 Car Garage.
Large Lot , C1ty Schools. 4 Mtles
From Gallipolis , $5SOtMo + DePOSII , References. No Pets. 61 44'6-0038.
Small Unlurn1shed 1 Bedroo m
House Near K- Mart, A1r CO ndi tioned , Gas Heat. Microwave,
New Parnt, &amp; Carpet, UpstaHs
Storage Avatlable, $3251Mo +
Gas Etectrtc. Call Between 8 &amp; 1o
P.M Or Before g AM 614-4461822.
Small unlurn•shed hOuse, storage
bu1ld•ng, luU basement, no pets ,
$300/mo plus utilitieS, 614 ·949·
2587 evemngs
Unlurmshed two bedroom house.
n1ce and clean, depos1t requued,
no ms1de pets, 614·992-3090
We1zgat Street. Pomeroy, WI D.
$350/Mo Deposit. 513-922-0294

Pt Pleasant· 1212 Ohto, lot 12ac
lnd Oh10 A1vor lac Sandhill,
comm 205 7fh Sl , lot &amp; house
Galltpolts 12 ac , VIeW 304-675·
5104
Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove, 420 Mobile Homes
1 1 2ac tots, publiC water,
for Rent
Clyde Bowan Jr . ~4-576-2336
RENTALS '
41 0 Houses for Rent
12 mrles !rom Pomeroy- two bed ·
rooms, one bath, lull basement,
heat pump, dishwasher, attached
garage, stltlng room, wood oorner,
no pets , $400/mo . $400 depostt,
references requ lfed, 614 9853900
2 Bedroom Level lot, Heal Pump,
5 M1les From Town , Deposit &amp;
Aelerences 614·446· 1079
20 Second St . 3bedroom. ltvtng
room , d•n•ng room , furnished
k1tchen . full basement, garage.
$300/mo 1yr tease No pets 304·
675-3812
3 Bedroom, Can Be 4, No Pets,
No Sunday Calls 614·24$-5064

•

•

Due to raptdly tncreasing busi- 1::::----::--:--==== ·&gt;'
ness we have an opporJuniJy lor a 210
Business
•
Med1cal Soctal Worker Experi.
·
ence w11h 1npauem and ouJpahenJ
Opportunity
rehabilitation a plus. Must have 1---..:..:~IN;::OT;I::;C;E;:.I~~- .. •.
d~g~~e ~nd lic,ensed or ltcense OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO. '•
e tgt e. ours lexlble Reply lm- recomm_ends that you do buai - ·,·,
medtalely to Mr L1ndeman. Rocksprings Rehab Center, 36759 ness wnh people you know, and 1.,
Rocksprmgs Ad., Pomeroy, OhiO NOT to send money throuph the ,..
, ma1l until you have mvest 1gated ''"
4s 76g
the ollertng.
:;
Stylist Wanted, Full or Part Time. Investment Property In GaufPOua . : :
Salary, Commission, Call Carol AI "'"nor .. 8 Able • H W . .:;
61 4-446 ·8922 · Fmest styling Sa- ~
MOY 0
.o 614·797elp illl .•-'·:
Some Financing,
Call
Jon.
4345 Afler 6 P.M.
1

.

pepperoni, jerky &amp; ·summer sausage.

Cooler kept. Clean &amp; sanitary. We
have hunting supplies Hunting license
&amp; game check station .
CRAWFORD'S GROCERY
HENDERSON, WV

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sat. 9·5, Ph. 446-0322
3 Miles Out Butavilte Pike

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone(
AUTOHIO Insurance

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX SPR INGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
Regular .......... ................ ..... $85
F1rm .
.$95
Extra Firm ......................... $1 05
Orthopedic
King Size Sets .... $350 &amp; Up
Queen Size Sets ..... $295 &amp; Up
Bunk Mattress ........... $4B &amp; Up
Bed Frames .......... $25-$35-$50
Mon thru Sat. 9·5 p m. 446-0322
3 m1les out Bulaville Pike
Willa's Bible Book Store
416 Main St., Pt. Pleasant, WI/
304-675-5833
Holiday Hours· Monday thru
Saturday 9:30a.m. - 8:00p.m.
Closed Dec. 24th &amp; 25th

2 Bedroom Mob1le Homes $225 1
$250 + Utlliues, $100 Deposit, Secluded, On The R1ver, Call 614·
256-1346 Eventngs Only
2 Bedrooms Wall To Wall Carpet,
NaiUral Gas Furnace, Very Ntce,
6, 4-446-2003, 614-446-1409
2 BR apt all elec also 2 BR tra1ler
With gas heat. Ga thpohs area
614-388-926 7
2 Mob1le Homes On McCormiCk
Road, 2 Bedrooms, 614 ·4469669
2bedroom, lurmshed, all electr~c,
ac, washer/dryer, $250/mo plus
uttl1t1es No pets. References &amp;
deposrt. 304~75-4874

420 Mobile Homes
440 Apartments
440
Apartments
Apartments
for Rent
for Rent
for Rent
for Rent
2bedroom . Sandhill Road 304- 1 - - - - - - - - - - 1----~·
675-3834.
Furn1shed 2 Room s &amp; Bath, Garage apt. 2 BR, $300/month
Downstatrs, Ut1l1t1es Furntshed , wnh water mcluded. $200 secunty
Clean, No Pels, Reference, De- deposi t requ1~d . Located 2nd
;_JlO_'_'
IR-:oq~u':. :red.::·_:B_14:_·4:. :4.: 6-_1.::51:..:9::.__ I A.ve Ga111 po1ts. 614- 4 46- 86? 7
Furn 1shed ApartmGnt, 3 Rooms &amp; days, 614-256-1972 ovenmgs
Bath, All Ut1ht1es Patd, Oownsta1rs Gracrous hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
$250/Month , 919 Second Ave apartments a1Vttlage Manor and
614-446-3945
R1vers1de Apartments 1ri Mtddleport From $232-$355 Call 614·
Furntshed Apartment, 920 Fourth 992·5064 Equal Housing OpporAvenue, 1 Bedroo m. $285/Mo rumt 1es
920 Fourth Avenu e, GallipOlis , ,.....---------Ohlo614 446 ·44t6 Aller 1 PM
N1ce one bedroom apar1ment lor
rent 111 Pt Pleasant , 614·992·
Furn1shed Ellictency $225/Mo 5858
'
Ut1t1!1es Pa1d, 920 Fourth Aven ue. ,.....---------Ga ll•polts, 614 -446 44 16 Alter N1ce two bedroom apartment In
:.:P.::M::__ _ __ __ _ _ Porreroy, 614·992-5858.
1

11 0

Help Wanted

HERE'S YOUR
CHANCE
Harris Trucking

Two bedroom mobile homo tn
country, deposit and references
reqUired, cal1614·949 ·2833

HOSPICE REGISTERED
NURSE
A part-tJme Registered
Nurse is needed for the
Holzer Medical Center's
Hosp•ce
Department.
Applicants should have
at least one year
med/surg experience and
must also reside in the
Meigs County area. For
immediate consideration
contact:
Rosie Ward
D ~rector of Human
Resource s
HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
100 Jackson P1ke
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: (614) 446-5000
TOO· (614) 446-5106
EEO/,&amp;,DA Employer

Beech St , Middleport. 2br turn•shed apt. ut11itres pa1d, dep &amp;
ret 304·882·2566
440 Apartments
Country S1de Apanmem, Large 1
is now hiring in
Bedroom. $290/Mo Deposit, 513·
for Rent
922-0294
your area!
Fu rmshed ElftcJency, 607 Second,
GalhpoiiS, Stlare Bath, $185/U!Ih· E)lfa N1ce 2 BR. Alt Elec ., Furn.
Home most
ttes Patd 614·446-4416 Alter Kit.. Close To Spnng Valley Area.
7pm
No Pets, $340/Mo + DD + Rei
weekends 93%
614-446-6157. Alter 5 PM
I and 2 bedroom apanments, furNo Touch
n•shed and unfurmshed, secunty Furmshed 2 Bedroorfl Apanment
deposl\ requ1red no pets 614 - Across Fro m Parle., AC No Pet s
Freight
992·211 B
References. Depos1t, $3501Mo
514·446·8235. 614-446-0577
1 bedroom apanment m MiddleConventional
par ·. ava table December 1 all
Card of Thanks
utli 1t1 es pa1d, $250 per mo~lh
Equipment
$100 deposit, Bam 10 5pm 614·
992 7805
CALL TODAY
Family or Leah Nease
1 bedroom eft1c1ency apartment,
The family wishes to
1-800·929·5003
UtlhlleS InCluded, 614·992-9949
thank Extended Care
20drm apts , total electnc. ap·
of Veterans Memorial
phances furnished, laundry room
SECRETARY II EDUCATION
lac111t1es. close to school m town
Hospital , the ·E wing
Apphcallons avatlabte at Village
time
secretana l position now avai lable.
Green Apts #49 or cal! 614-992· Funeral Home, the
37 11 EOH
Responsibil ities Include general secretarial duties
Rev. Charles Neville,
members and for the Director ol Early Field
2bedroom fu rmshed, utilities pa1d, the pall bearers, &amp; the
Mason, WV 304-773-9009
Placement. Qualifications mclude a high school
ones who visited the
or equivalent required An associate degree
funeral home and
Secretarial Sc1ence is preferred . At least three
attended the funeral.
prev1ous experience working in an office
The ones who sent l"''"'''n JS reqUJred Excell ent oral and mterpersonal
rood, flowers, cards lc,~mmLJn"'"tion sk1 lls reqUJred as well as experience
and donations to the
computers and word processors. Send letter
chun:h. May God Bless
Interest and a resume mcludmg the names and
You All. We love you.
of at least three references before the
The Family IOEJaaune of December 20 , 1995 to Ms . Phyllis
Mason . PHR . D1rector of Human Resources
University of Rio Grande . Campus Post Office Bo~
In Memory •
F27, Rio Grande . OH , 45674
EEO/AA Employer

SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

Phone

(614)446-6111

Gallipolis

Serta Mattress ............ ..... $59.00
Bed Frames .................. $t9.95
Recliners ...... ......... ......... $99.00
4 Drawer Chest .............. $49.95
La-Z-Boy Recliners ..... $299.00
Glider Rocker
with Glider Ottoman .. . . $199.00

FLAIR FURNITURE
657-1371
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV
BOOTS
All leather 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
ln~ulated. Safety. Gortex
Swain Furniture
62 Olive St. Gallipolis

Lordy
Look whos

"40"
Love

In Memory

In Loving
Memory of my
husband.
Arthur C. Barr
who passed
away
Dec. 16, 1994.
Sadly missed by
Sibyl Barr
In Memory

"Pets Plus"

Christmas Evergreens Balled
Spruce, White Pine and Holly
Trees $35.00-$60 00 Free Delivery
$20 planting fee after Christmas
Davison's Greenhouse
256-1t40

20% off everything in stock
(Watch For New Location Ad)

LA CASA DEL QAHWA
"NEW UNIQUE COFFEE SHOP"
404 Ridge Ave. Rio Grande
245-5682
Holiday Hours

The Marvelous Ma•dens of
Merriment Comedy Troupe
Skits and comedy routines for
your Holiday Event
(6t4) 446-8228

(inside GC Murphys)

MOVING SALE

LOST: Diamond Engagement
Ring in Odd Lots parking lot in
Gallipolis, Ohio onDec. 12th.
REWARD!! Please call 304882-3630 or 304-882-3570.
Christmas Trees
$12,$20,$22
New Shipment of wooden
deer &amp; sleighs. Also
small deer &amp; sleigh.
Bulk candy &amp; nuts
Boxed citrus fruit

ATIENTION
General Refuse Service
Customers: Because of the
Holidays, General Refuse
Services trash pickup schedule
will change as follows:
The Dec. 29 pickup will .b e on
Dee. 30, and the January 5
pickup will be on Jan . 6.
Thank you for your
cooperation.

Ivydale Country
Craft and Gift Shop
Oak Quilt Shelf
Goose Outfits
Painted saws &amp; cans
Poplar Porch Swmg
Baskets
Christmas Decorations
2 miles North of Silver Bridge on
SR 7 10-7 Man-Saturday
1-6 Sunday
446-4530

RUTLAND AMERICAN
LEGION BINGO
No Bingo unhl Jan . 3, t996
Starburst Will be $500.00
Four Number $200.00
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL

VILLAGE FLORIST
&amp;

CARD SHOP
"Because of you we
are here. Thanks &amp;
Happy Holidays"

(614) 245-5678
Rio Grande, Ohio
VFW Post 4464
Christmas Dinner
Tues. Dec. 19 6:30 pm
Members &amp; family

Call446~2342 ot

992-2156
~~~~~~FOR MORE INFORMATION

MECHANIC

Sheri&amp;

IN MEMORY
PAUL A. BOSTICK
Jan . 13th. 1938
Dec. 16th. 1988
There weren't to many
sons
In this world as fine as
you and that's why you
are remembered today
and all year through.
Loved by:
Mother and family
In Memory

Kanauga, OH

Wtll do srtt1ng wJelderly, evening~ .,.
or ntghls at your house or hospi· 4
tal. 304-675-7541.

We process deer &amp; make h1Ckery
smoked hams. traJI bologna.

LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250.$425
FREE DELIVERY

Rayburn's Market

Sun Valley Nursery Schoot• '
Chlldcare M-F Sam-5:30 pm Agel.
2-K, Young School Age Duflng
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mi,imum 614-446-3657.
'

FINANCIAL

o Houses for Rent

k,.

By BARBARA MAYER

It wasn't even noon and already
Dana Hougland bad fielded pbone
calls from two clients in search of
some qmet. The owner of a large
open-plan bouse in Aspen, Colo..
was bothered by reverberating footsteps. Tbe caller from Vail, Colo.,
wanted to minimize plumbing and
heating noises so he could better
:.
enjoy his new borne theater.
The scenario is repeated almost
.·'• . ...
daily, says Hougland. an acoustical
engineer in Denver, Colo., who
leads the technical committee on
architectural
acoustics for tbe
F-80
.
Acoustical Society of America.
A
noisy
home
is
becoming
a
noA ROMANTIC FIREPlACE and a 13-ft. cathedral ceiling make
no. Whether an open-plan layout or
this secluded masll'r suite an inviting oasis.
·
overcrowded lives set nerves a-jan·
gling, the need for the sound of
silence is rising, especially among
the affluent.
Floors that don't squeak, appliances that arc seen but not heard
and walls that don't talk are held
up as models by those in pursuit of
quiet homes.
"Sometimes, it is even a matter
of 'I don't want to hear my own
teen-agers .... says Hougland, a
principal in the firm of David L.
Adams Associates.
Through the 1970s, a lot of the
residential consuuction was aimed
at first-time buyers, and speed and
cost were factors. Today, the mar~_,..__,j
ket is in luxury homes, and insulation against unwanted sound is
;f ,, J
·"
important.

41

BULLETIN BOARD

sold "aals".

. PUBLIC NOTICE
Minimum btd: $800.00
The VIllage of Middleport
Terms of sale: Cosh upon
witt offer lor sale to the delivery oftttte.
htghoat bidder, a 1987 (12) 3, 10,17; 3TC

The sound
of silence
grows
louder
I For AP Special Features

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Three bedroom. heat pump , at- Year end sale. 28x60 Henderson,
lached garage, 24x24 butld•ng, on
2baths. great room w/
Flatwoods Ad., 614-992·6575 or Jbedroom.
ltreplace, plush carpel Big reduc614·992-2418
tion lor qu1ck. sale, reduced
$5,000. Mountatn State Homes. Pt
Pleasant, WV. 304-675-1400
310 Homes for Sale

1972 Mobile Home, 12' Wrde, 2
Bedroom. New 200 Amp Breaker
Box, 2x4 Walls, $3800, W1ll Trade
For P1ckup ol Equal Value 614245·0437.
1977 12t65 3 bedroom on 10
acres 2 sept1c tanks, 3 water
All real estate advertising In
hookups 4 mrles from town .
tnls newspaper Is subject to
$18 ,500 614 -441 -0947 or 614 the Federal Fair Housing Act
441 1821
of 1968 whtcl1 makes tt Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
1986 Grandville 14x70 2 Bed ·
llmttatlon or dlsor1mlnatlon
rooms. 1 Bath, Total Gas Under based on race. cotor, reWgron,
p•nnmg, 16x12 Deck &amp; F1replace
$12,000, 614-367-0429
sex familial s1atus or national
ortgin. or any Intention to
1990 14~65 Clayton 3 bedroom.
make any such preference,
on 314 acres, out Sr 148, new carlimitation or discrimination. •
pet, new hot water heater, 10K20
co11ered front porch. 2 car carThts newspaper will not
port, very mce $25,000 neg 614992-6440
knowllngly accepl
adventsemenls tor rear estate
Glenwood, 1Om1n from Rt 2 1990
which is In VIOlation of lhe law. 3bedroom
2bath. mob1le home.
Our readers are heret:&gt;y
1acre land, cny waler, $25,000
Informed that all dwellings
Owner f1nanc 1ng w1th $3 ,000
advertised in this newspaper
down , ren t lor $300 couple or
are available on an equal
$350 Wtlh chrld and/or take land
as trade tn or somethmg of equal
oppor1unlty basis.
;~o------1111!-.lj value 3J4-576-2716
L1m1ted Offerl 1996 doublew1de
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, S275i
month Free deiJvery &amp; se tup
REAL ESTATE
Only a! Oakwood Homes N1tro
wv 304-755-5885
.
310 Homes for Sale
Pnce Busterl New 14~70, 2 or
2 Bedroom Bnck Home In Gall• - 3br Only $995 down. $195/rronth
polls. Includes Garace. Central Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Atr, LA, K1tchen And Bath, 614 _ Oakwood HoflleS, Nilro WV 304·
4'6-6578
. 1.:.7:.:55-:..:5B=:B5::__.j.l_ _ _ __
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes Save $1,000 Special reductiOn
For Penntes On $1 Delinquent on new 1996 Commodore 16x80,
Tax , Repo's, REO's . Your Area . 3bedroom., 2baths Bes! buy •n
Toll Free (1 l 80o-a98. 9778 Ext. town, tncludes delivery &amp; set up.
H-2814 For Current LIStings
Mounta1n State llomes, Pt Pleasant, WV. 304-675-1400
Nrno room house- four bedrooms,
newly remodelell, kitchen and Spec1al year end re duct1on
bath. new carpeuno. large corner 28x60 Brookwood display, Jbedlot, $28,000, 614-992·6173 or room. 2baths. den w/f1replace, 2x6
walls, 1nsulated windows, plush
614-992-2015 alter 5pm
carpet, oak cabinets. Pr1ce re·
Three bedroom home tn country, duced $4,000 Mountatn State
Wh1tes H11t Rd , Rutland, one balh, Homes , Pt Pleasant, WV 3041n-ground pool, 614·992·5067
675-1400

Clip this order and return label

~unbav Grimu-~tntinrl • Page D5

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

In Loving Memory
of our brother

Aaron Buffington
who departed this life
December 13, 1994
He has gone home.
Yes he has gone home.
These paths of earth, No
more will he roam.
He was a Son, a Husband
A Brother and an Uncle,
But he's over in Heaven,
W•th our beloved Mother
We miss h1s smile,
And h1s loving Way,
But he has gone home.
With Jesus to stay.
We remember so welt,
The days wh1ch have
_gone by,
Before God came to take
him,

To His Heavenly home on
high.
Our brother named Aaron,
So spec1al was he,
He'll always remam ,
tn our memory.
We sometimes do cry, '
Because he hac to say goodbye,
But we know we'll see him
again,
In that Heavenly home on
high.
Very sadly missed
Sisters,
Nieces and "'4''""'"'

Oyer

I

who passed away
20 years ago today
December 161 1975
A page in the book
of memory
Silently turns today
For memories live
For us they are just
one knows the
I,.;t.,nt heart&amp;ehe,
And tears so often
Only them who have
can tell.
The word was hard,
shock severe,
We never thclUgtht I
death so near.
Only those who
have lost can tell
The pain of parting
without farewell.
Forever missed
by his wife
Julia Caldwell
and
I

Applicant must have a strong mechanical
background. knowledge of and expenence in a
manulacturing environment. A working knowledge of
pneumatics and hydraulics. Must have knowledge of
power CJrcUJtry capable of usmg tesling equipment.
Ability to perform repairs, p.m 's and changeovers.
Ab1hty to troubleshoot on all types of equipment. Two
years as a maintenance mechanic or equivalent
educatiOn 1n a mechamcal held
Positions on third shift Pay rate $8.45 to $10 45 per
hour. depending on expenence
If interested, please send resume to .
TH E PILLSBURY COMPANY
2403 Pennsylvania Avenue
Wellston, Oh1o 45692
Altention: Human Resources-ME
EEO/AA Emp loyer

WANTED; Full-time COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR position available to work with
an adult with learning limitations in Meigs
County. Live-in position; must be able to
stay overnights; daytime hours off. Hours: 3
pm Sunday thru 8 am Friday. High school
degree, valid driver's license, good driving
record, three years licensed driving
experience, and adequate automobile Insurance coverage required. Training provided. Salary: $5.00/hr. to start. Health/dental insurance benefits. Vacation/sick
leave benefits. If interested contact Cecilia at
1-800-531-2302.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

In
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
RUTH BUFFINGTON
who departed this life 15
years ago
December 15, 1980
"Mommie"
We know where you're at,
W1th our God up above,
But we, your fam1ly here,
Miss your precious love.
"Mommie"
We miss the home you
made for us,
Wilh all your love and
care,
But we know Jesus called
you
To H1s home 1n that land
That's oh so fair.
"Mommie"

The lime was drawing
near.
When you had to say
goodbye,
And oft' times when we
cry for you,
We feel your presence
here.
~Mommie"

God really has a precious
pearl
In H1s garden oh so rare,
And we, know you're very
happy,
Baing 1n His loving care .

FORD-MER~URY

TEt:HNit:IANS
WANTED
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
TO BE FILLED
PROGRESSIVE NEW CAR
DEALERSHIP IN RIPLEY, WV,
LOOKING FOR CERTIFIED
TECHNICIANS. FORD-MERCURY
EXPERIENCE A PLUS. WILL
PROVIDE FACTORY TRAINING
TO RIGHT INDIVIDUALS.
CONTACT GUY N. SAYRE JR.

FOR CONFIQENTIAL
INTERVIEW OR APPLY
IN PERSON.

"Mommie"

We will meet you
Heaven's opened door,
And we'll all be together
again
To live forevermore.
Very deeply missed
•
Children,
Grand-children and

1·800·964·3673

�nday, December 17, 1995
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pomt Pleasant, WV
440

540

Apartments
for Rent

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 cemetery lots Metgs Memory
Gardena mcludea 2 vat.Jits &amp; 2 Electr c Whee lcha rs /Scooters
mark9fs $2 500 614-898-431 1
New /Used Scooter t Wheelc ha
25 Sylvan a con sole $199 95 L fts S ta~rway E evators l ft
25 RCA 1e ev son console C ha rs Bowman s Hom eca e

One Oed oom furn shed apart
ment n M ddlepori 614 446 3091

o 6 4 99 2 5304 or 614 992
2 78

$229 95 Magnavo.11 4 head VCR

1129 95 GE VCR $89 95 Sha p
VCR $89 95 F sher VCR $74 95
Mu lt tech VCR $59 95 RCA

::::::::;:;;;.:.;;_;;;:.....:...:..:.;c.:.;__., VCR $ 79 9 5 E me rs on v 1deo
player $44 95 JB Tech nology
450
61&lt;4 441 0950

6 4 446 7283

Jt I

AERATION MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Rebu 11 In S!oc~
Cal Ron Evans 1 000 537 9528

Ke oSun 20 000 BTU Heater E)
cellenr Cond tton Can Be seen At
1549 Ne ghbo h:&gt;od Rd S125

540

Miscellaneous
MerchandiSe

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gelton

560

Pets lor Sale

AKC Re gl stered black lab pup
plea Wtll be 4 weeks Chr stmas

day $200 614-44ll

3435

oo

SAVE I Cal TODAY For NEW

A KC Reg stared Dachshund
Pupp es B nhday Oct 30 95
Smal Oepos t W II Hold For
Chnstmas 614 36 7 7705

1 600 462 9197

:_-----:-- - - - - -1

Building
Supplies

$ t00Month Oays614446
Even ngs6\4 446 7157

41

Block br ck sewer p pes wtnd
ows lintels etc Claude W nters
R o Grande OH Call 614 245
51 21

MERCHANDISE
51

o

Personal zed story txloks You
ch ld s the s!a of h Slher ve y
own book. Makes a great X mas

Ho usehold
Goods

gil 614992 57590 614 667
9780

Year End Sale I Save B1g Bucks!
All Steal Build ngs l mned T1me
On y Call Wh le Su pplies la stt
Saunde1s Co ntract ng 614 441

r e ch C ty Mayrag 6 4 446

Washe s d ye s

anges Sk. aggs Apf&gt;llaloces.
V ne Street Call 614 -446 -7398
1300 .499 3499

Do l Co ll ec\ on &amp; Do ll Furn lure
Cash Only 614 446 8398

$100ea

Fender Squ e Stal And Fender
S de K ck Amp Good Cond 1 on
Schw nn Mtn B ke L ke New 614
446 00 70

AKC Pomeran ans Also Shell e
shots &amp; wormed 304 675-2193

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Com plete

home

Hou s Man

furn sh ngs

Sat 9 5 614 446

032 2 3 m es out Bu av e P ke

~

675-5553

Rell ge a tors Stoves Wa shers
And Dryers All Reco nd toned
And Gauranteed $100 And Up
W II Delver 614 669 6441

AKC Reg female l oy poodle red
6 months old 614 446 9538

Sam Some v lies egu ar Army
camouf age by Sandyv I e Post
Off ce Mon Thu 3 6pm Fr Sun
12noon 6p m 304 273 5655 Ju
no stzes Free Del ve1y PI

AK C Reg stare d B eagle Pups
Tr Color Wean ed Worm ed
Sho s Starte d $55 Eacl'1 Can
Hold T ll Chr stma s Ca I Steve
Sta pl eto n Work 614 446 417 2
Home 614 256- 1619

Copper nose pupp es pure bred
no pape s 6mo old $50ea 18mo
old $100ea 304 675-2075

Mollohan Carpets Rt 7 N 614
Ca pet 8 V nyl

Needs

5595

PICKENS FURNITURE
New Used
304 6 75-1450

SK AGGS SPECIAl SEASON
SALE
May tag Washer / Dryer Set Was
$4 10 Now $375 W th 90 Day
Wa ant y Wh !poo l Washer
Wa s S 50 Now $ 125 Whrlpool
~ashe Was $125 Now $95 3
To Choose F om Wh rlpoo Dryer
Was $ 25 Now $95 May1ag Dry
m Was $150 Now $125 Wh rl
pool Portable Washe Fam ly S ze

$150 Wh poo D yer $95 Elec

HARDWOOD FLOORING
Poplar oak h cko ry ash maple
walnut cherry colon at g a de
$1 20$1 SObd It P emt.Jm g ade
$144 $2610d II All floorng SOI&lt;I
3/4 !h c~ Random w dth &amp; ra n
dom Ieng hs 304 586 382 1
While quam ges las!
H Eflec ency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1
800 287 6308 6 4 446 6308
Duc t Systems And A r Cond ton
ers Free Est mates

Sega Genes s Mortal Kombat 3
lwo 6 button JOystcks 3 button
pad Son c 2 all n boxes plus 2
spans games $150 304 675
7891 (Danny o leave messagel

Hay

&amp; Grain

Grass Hay 4x5 Rot.Jnd Bales $1 2
No Su nday Calls 614 388 8524

2879
95 9t.JICk Regal Custo m V 6 au
1oma t c
all power smo ky
amethyst 10 500 mtes Will sell or
can take over payments f!14

985 3362

1973 Plymoulh Road Runne 318
sma I V 8 automat c atr easy on
gas good I rst ca r n co ntor or
$1500 614 992 411

1919 Z28 20 OOOm on new mo
oriQJ4 773-5840
19jo Mahbu Class c good frame
gold mter or 2dr 355 c u en

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250

790

1991 Rocket Chassts race car all
new rn 91 W lwood best of eve
ry th ng weld three wheels t res
Neal pedals lt.Jel cell on bo ard
f re system rolling chasSis. $5800
neg Ca ll Scott Wo lfe 614 949
2879 614 949 2045 or 614 992

6193

1993 Cad Uac One Owner 28000
Mtle s 614 446 6!37
1993 Mu s ang 4 cyl br ghl red
loaded Woula make a n ce
Chr stmas g It W II se I o loan
value 6149924111

Brandsetter
Subdtvts on m

tn

N2004

A \ cond I on .26 000 ongma
m les lo ad ed serous nqu res
onJ $3 500 614 992 5322
1gf14 Dodge Ar es 4 doo1 statio n

waf'n $500 614 992 3952
1985 Trans Am bl ac k 305 en
g n~ ps pb new transm ss on
t r¥ b1akes shocks front end
altnme nt CO player $3 90 0

30$576 2865
JUST LISTED
Beauttfut
Ranch home located on
Raccoon Ad It has a 2 car
garage and a pool w1th a
split level deck Must see thiS
one It could be 1ust whal
you re
look1ng
Iori
1117
VACANT PROPERTY 21B
acres more or less It Is
located tn Gall1a and
Jackson county bordenng
Little Raccoon Creek
Excellenl hunting ground
$250 per acre CALL
TODAY! Realtor Owned
N2003

Seen At Gall pol s Oa ly Tnbun e
8 25 Th d Avenu e Gall pols
OhiO

1069

1994 Chevy Astr a all wheel
dnvo very n~ee call 614 992
7077

740

520

Sporting
Goods

P nee Con lender
Ten n s Aa cke W !h
Ao lerblade Cool
S~ates M en s S ze
614 446 2359

Overs ze
Cover $15
Ice In I ne
0 1 2 $55

1985 Suz u k 230

$1600 614 446 6956

ThiS has 2

lot Pnced to sell

Two story house in Syracuse 3 or 4 bedrooms new bath

ful basement beautiful woodwork and large two car garage

9mm 12 sho capac ty I tal an
govern ment model pe fo ms 1ke
Ital an berena e.111ra d p new n
bok $325 614 44 1 0558

Busmess for sale Th1s bar has been around for many
years n ow 1s the ttme lor you to go mto b uSiness today
Pnced nght so anyone can be the owner

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

22 cal s s
530

540

1985 Bu1 c~ B ass shower doors
Bathroom cab ne &amp; s nk Tub en
closure R ow ng mach ne E.11er
CISe b ke 304 67r, 5946

NOTHING MISSING
1 In C1ty Local on 2 Moderalely Pr ced 3 3 Bejroom
Home 4 1 F oor Plan Home 5 Easy to Ma1ntam
Call today for an appo ntment to see th1s home or you
w II be the one MISSING out on owmng thiS lovely home
#727

44&amp;4991 614 441 -0354

••

19t6 Po nt ac Grand Am SE Ex
celten l Cond ton Has All Op

Bill Ornck s Home Improvements
additions remode l ng roofmg
sid ng plumbing etc Insured call

Bill Oo~k 614 992 4240

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

F ee man s Healing And Cooling
In stall at on And Serv 1ce EPA
Ce rtified Res dental Commerc al
614 256 811

640

1988 N1ssa n 200SX loaded
5spd 4cyl sunroof securuy sys
terri I ke new $3 900 304 6 75

46sjl

BRAND NEW HOME Tax
abatement Realtor Owned 3
bedroo"' 2 baths Located
1n the c1ty $52 000 1109

fully

44ll 6286

Heat Pum ps Atr Cond ton ng 11
You Don Call Us We Both lose I
F1ee Est males 1 800 287 6308
614 446 6308 WV002945

SARA WINDS SUBDIVISION
Lot #1 2 787 Acres
Lot #2 2 079 Acres
Lot #3 2 085 Acres SOLD
Lot #4 1 776 Acres SALE
PENDING
1 781 Acres
1 785ACres

SPACE
For sale
cond1t1on
Lots of
rkmg
space
4
wathng room
staff lounge
Large back decks central a1r
One car garage

19 76 Chevy 4WO p1ckt.Jp good
I re s and dr ve I ne rt.Jn s great
two new fenders must sell $1550
neg 6149927478or6 4949

2879
19 79 Chevy 4x4 sho rt bed 305
auto new parts shar p 304 773
5840

LOG HOMES
Comfort, convenience,
energy
efficiency,
durability
and
ftexibihty Ia design are
1 few of the reasons
why ZO,OO famUies will
bald a Jot home IIIII
1carl

57 OOOmt like new $8 500 304
675 3656

Stop by or call ror a quality homes m color
booklet ror addlttonallistlngs'

1990 Ford Escort Actual 6 000
M les 2 Door 614 379 2720 AF

BIG BEND REALTY~ INC.

TER6 PM

IB

Real Estate

lir

l-800-585-710lor446-710l

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
Tammte De Will
446 4618
441 0262 Marth a Smtih .................. .
Judy DcWttl
379 2184 Ctndy Drongowskt
J Mernll Carter
446 7101 Cheryl Lemly
"··:···:· ,...
Ruth Barr

POMEROY ExecutiVe type home
29 miles from Parkersburg 5
m1les from Pomeroy on SA 7 Lots
ol pnvacy 4 BA 2 1/2 baths LA
w/lp FA wlfp OR eat m kit bsmt
gar slg bldgs pool many other
amenmes Make Us All Offer

FAMILY ORIENTED! Large 5 bedrooms 2 112 story
home foyer d1n ng room kitchen blown m nsulabon
two lots hardwood floonng garage Let Cheryl show
th1s one'

POMEROY F1sher St
A real
good 3 BR starter home

COMMERCIAL! SO MANY
GREAT OPPORTUNmES
AWAil: frontage along SR
7 Call today for complete
listing Make owners an
offer they cant refuse! 1739

Only $14 500

WHAT A CHRISTMAS

f1 052 OVERLOOK ING THE
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER

$30 000

POMEROY Butternut Ave Great rental property or a
home to move 1nto Th1s 2 story 3 bedroom home s Sitting
on a 40 x 120 lot BeMer take a peek at thiS one $21 000

HOME REDUCED TO SALE $87
Th1s home 1s located on St Rt
RANCH Home located at15063 St Rt Bidwell Ohto It IS bUilt With We1ste,.nll..
160 In VInton Th1s home has 2 Red Cedar custom wood
bedrooms one bath large family room ms1de of home Th1s 3 BR 2 bath horr1el
liv1ng room as well as a d1mng room 1s 4 m1tes from Hospttal It also
Th1s home 1s carpeted New Siding and Anderson Windows sels back tn a a rove II'
1nsulat1on adds to thts home There IS a of trees 5 acres m/1
carport and a large deck on the back of
the home and bsmt $49,000

a bit of wooCiland Huge 4
bedroom 2 story w1th 2 1/2 baths
tormal hvmg room &amp; d mng room
t 5 x 23 tam ly Loads of cabmets
In an equ pped kitchen w ttl
breakfast nook large utility room
se rves as an off ce part •al
basement heated pool room 31 x
53 w1th love y 18 x 36 pool
attached ga age 25 x 29 Home
can be bought with small acreage
or all 115 ac m/1 The land s
beautiful roll ng &amp; treed With Ira Is
throughout
Own er pla nted
approx 25 000 p ne trees W1ldl fe
Abundant V rg ma L Sm1th 338

8826

#763

-..
...
:
--~

-

.

·

~
r-•., "" .

HURRY!
P1ck
up the
telephone and make an
appo ntment to see thiS cute
ranch Newer electnc heat
pump 3 bedrooms large
~
detached 24 x32 approx
~
garage N1ce 63 acre lot w1th
WANT TO BE AN ENTREPRENEUR? That 1s own your
LOT
&amp;
MOBILE
HOMES!
cham
Ink fencmg Satellite &amp;
own bUSiness A local N~ght Club With a restaurant Seats
2
9~ people b1g dance floor band stand all equtpment
Sttuated at the Village of
wtll stay 1803
fixtures stock land and butldmg Is presently d01ng a
Patnot One IS a 1991 3 BR 2
bus1ness Selling lor health reasons
$140 000
bath and the other 1s a 1976
M/LI Mostly
2 BR 1 bath County water 235
MIDDLEPORT· South 2nd Ave A tan bnck home that has
septic paved street clean &amp; allwooded Abundance ol
2 stones an a1t1c 4 5 bedrooms family room d1nmg room llt·~ ·. ,,eaol. Several shade trees w1ldl le excellent hunting
nflwer cab1nets m kitchen 1 1/2 baths part basement 3
land Call today for more
N1ce locauon 11m
really pretty ftreptaces front &amp; s1de porches partly fencell
1nformat1on WVCO
ya,rd and much more Must see
$79,900
NAYLORS RUN RD A 3 bedroom mob1le home wtth heat
PWnP tront porch rear deck equipped kitchen and silting
on.2 9 acres lmmedtate possession
ONLY $22 000
POMEROY· East Matn Street A two story home w1th 3
bedrooms and one bath Front and rear porches $26 900

BELLAMY LANE Rental property! Great money maker!
Call lor complete IISttng'

~

POMEROY· Northern Hts Approx 17 acres of land
ONLY $17000

RUTLAND Depot Street A 1 1/2 story home w1th 4
bedrooms dtmng room and enclosed front porch Also
hO/Tle has mce fenced front yard b1g back yard storage
bulldmg carport and vmyt stdmg
ONLY $38,000

--..
.-

-,:;~

........ --.,!:!:, '·'~"'

~

OFF SR 33 A newer beau11lul log home m a very prtvate
s~ttmg has a loll master bedroom and 2 3 other
bedrooms open hvmg room and k1tchen wtth cathedral
ce1l1ng Kitchen has beautiful oak cabinets Also there IS a
heat pump and a pellet burner 1n the stone f~replace All
stnlng on approx 2 acres
ONLY $75 000

POMEROY· Crew Rd A large 1 5 acre tot w/Barnngton
Doublewlde s11ttng on full basement Home has 4 BR
dtnlng &amp; family room &amp; 1n ground pool back deck #481
$49,900
OEPOT STREET Approx 3/4 acre two story three
bedroom home dining room hv ng room kitchen and
more'
1n9

Drtve
Pnce
reduced to $79 900 but make
an offer" 4 BAs 1 1/2 baths
equtpped kitchen LA DR FR
m lower level 2 c ar garage

New heat pump Extra lot
#605= = = =

Bu s 1ness

remo deled bwldmg wtlh new
roof 0 5 liquor li ce n se
Equtpped
co mm e fCial

Roush

k tthen all turn lure Nearly 1

2 bath house

a cre of ground w1th larg e 2

m/1 located
between Cheshire &amp; Porter
Pr ced to sell at $57 500
#504

t1ered paved parking lot
Much much more $325 000
#227

lmmedtate

P o:ssess~&lt;&gt;n!l

ae~·es,

Gl
·--

-

USTINGI A GOOD
19B7 14 " 70 Mob1le
3 bedrooms complete
underpinning
deck
•a~:~~~~ butldlng. Situated on
lot at Green Terrace
home park Call to see
i .IMMEIJIAl'E POSSESSION!
1115

~

~

Well Mamtalned 30 000 Sq
Ft approx build1ng s~uated
on 1 acre more or tess In
Ctty ol GalllpoUs Lots of
parktng area offioe space
load1ng docks central air &amp;
heat Call for complete
delatls
1780

;ti'IQ
SLASHED PRICEI NOW $49 900 Wtll Land Contrac11 3
bedroom s~uated at edge ol City full basement 1 car
call today!
1713

(!}J/ak,

N1023 EXECUTIVE HOME With 1#1060 Excellently loca ed Ca rry

f1057

room kitchen 1 car garage

COUNTRY SECLUSION
w1th the
convemence of City livtng 5 mms from
Holzer Med1cal Center 5 bedrooms 2
kitchens 4 bathrooms

Carman

lmmedtate PosseSSIOn!!

Loretta McDade· 446-7729
Carolyn Wasch 441-1007
Sonny Garnes · 446 2707

PACKAGE
No w und er
construct on br ck &amp; Vmyl Ranch
Tile home and ntenor s des•gned
lor ef11c encv and comfort Huge
great rm w/f replace Formal
dm ng rm master bedrm 21 x 24
(2 bedrmsj 21 x 13 3 bath rm s
2 car garage porches &amp; 40 x 45
basketball court part al bsmt 2
ac MIL Jt.Jst mmutes from Ho zer
shopp1ng and schools Bt.J 11 by
one of the I nest bu der s n the
area Now IS the time to p ck
colo s &amp; carpet Cat Virg ma 388

INTEREST FREEl
w1ll pay first 3 months
MOTIVATED, ANXIOUS &amp; your mterest
Neat
DETERMINED! ThiS owner bedroom
rancher
has drastically reduced the basement one car garage
prtce ol thts 4 bedroom newer electr c heat
home 2 car aMached garage Call today! Owner Must I
heat pump Approved lor IMMEDIATELY
1764
FHA/VA loan hMie or no
JUST
RIGHT
SMALL FAMILY OR down payment Call for more
1760
SINGLE COUPLE! 1 story deta1ls
, 'I , , 'I'
hom e l oca te d c lose to
'
Gallipolis 3 bedroo"'s liv1ng

JONES ROAD 3 BR home t 1/2
baths 1 car attached garage new 30 x
40 barn large front porch 54 38 acres
m/1 $65 000

Appaladllan
Structures has been
leader In tbe loa home
lndUJtry for over IS
years. Cb005e
over 70 standard
models or we'D custom
deslp one for you.

23B

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
"'
446-3644
'
DAVID WISEMAN
, BROKER- 446-9555

8826/446 6806

BUILT IN FINANCING WITH A
DOWN PAYMENT OF $1,900 Rodlne~·l
Village II home has 3 BR LR
laundry bath &amp; attached garage Broker•
owned IMMEDIATE POSSESSION

OFFICES, OFICES, OFFICES· Just half
way between Gallipolis &amp; Holzer
Hosp1tal on SR 160 14 rooms 3 000
SF Call for more deta1ls

m
..

446 6806

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

1#105· $54,900 2 01 acres =/ very n1ce
home for the growtng famtly 3 BR BA
LR K1f full basement could be eas1ly
flntshed for 4th BR 21 x28 garage/barn
gas heat CiA Call Now'

Bnng Back All the 1BBO s
Charm &amp; Characte r" 2600
sq
ft of hv1ng s p ace
mcludmg 3 large BAs &amp; 1
smaller 2 baths LA FA 2
,,, "·"'"" kitchens &amp; study Backyard &amp;
I,J-:::::::========+::=2~car garage $69 500 N224

PROFESSIONALSERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
.~
.f}&gt;) ./) Cil
VIRGINIA SMtTH BROKER
388-8826
'-::7(;ea/:
EUNICE NIEHM
446-1897
Branch Office LYNDA FRALEY
UUBCMI
Matn Offtce 38B B826
416 3B84
23 Locust St PATRICIA HAYS
958 Clark Chapel Ad
Galhpohs OhiO ETIA SPENCE
446-8426
Bidwell Oh10 45614
CLAUDE DANIELS
446-780!1
45631

l oaded

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

·--

carport on a large lot Pnced
at $37 ooo N611

900 #234

rl/
rf?j) rr/ ,,R
'-"pt'~ ::.( · ".:f/11U(II,

MEIGS COUNTY

A

$3~

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

~

MAKE US AN OFFER OWNERS ARE
READY TO DEAL 1157 2nd Ave hOme
IS vacant &amp; ready to move tnto Features
are 2 BRs large LR K1t 1 112 baths
maintenance proof Sldtng carpon &amp; an
almost new furnace &amp; central a1r cond

d1v1ded 1nto two
uni t has 5 rooms

1970 Chevy C 60 24 Ft Ttlt Bed
Excellent Condll on Low M leage
Good Rubber Mus t See To Ap
prec ate 614 446 1675 or 614

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

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

w1th ftr eplace extra large
k tch en w1th dtnmg area 2 car

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Joe Moore, Assoc1ate 441-1111

E-Z TERMS· $2,500 DOWN· $425 per
month Qualified buyers may have
1mmed1ate possess1on Modern 3 BR
ranch offers a ntce K1t w1th a county
style WB stove LR Bath laundry rm
FR off1ce &amp; a cha1n link fence around
the back yard

14110 SA 7 4 BAs bath LR

Investme nt on

78 Chevy 4x 4 3 4 ton 350 en
gme automat c 1rans m1 ss on

4 door $1 200

1 9~7 Dodge Lanoer $1000 614
4&lt;&amp;6958

Cougar

B43 Second

Opportun ty' 5 000• sq ft

t orfs Low Mleage $4 300 614

1990

Estate General

'1-800-45S.9990

820

Bodk $5475 Ask ng $4 200 614
388-9081

PHONE 446·7699

LENDit: ..

Appaledllan Loa
StriiChlres. lac.
Dept. GOT,
P.O. Box614
Ripley. wv %5211

lNG 614 992 5041

Out s tandtng

446-8320

1968 Red ~a m aro TTo p 2 8 n

KENNETH AMSBARY PH 245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM BROKER PH 446-9539

J1m Htll
742 3009

RUSSELL D WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley
742 3171

Roof ng and gutters commerc ial
and res dental m1nor repa~rs 35
years e..per ence B&amp;B ROOF

720 ll'ucks tor Sale

Antiques

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Appliance Parts And Servtce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
p enance All Work Gua ant ee d
Fren ch C1 y May tag 614 446

42 Henkle Avenue Price
reduced to $49 500 on thiS
remodeled 2 BR home close
to town V1nyl Sldmg central
Sir N401

Four 15 Chevy Wh ee ls W h
Bea uty R ngs $150 6 4 245
94 9 Alter 6 PM

Real Estate General

Buy o sel Rver ne Ant ques
1124 E Ma n S eet on AI 124
Pomeroy Hou rs M T W 10 00
am to 600 pn Sunday 10010
600pm 6 49922526

tabl shed 1975

154 Second Avenue Pnce
reduced to $42 50011 Th1s 2 3
BR home offers the
convenienc e of c11y ilv1n~l
Eat tn kitchen fir eplace tn
LR DR bath and utt llty
room
Easy on th e
pocketbook pncel N204

wv 304-576 2398.

742 2323

le $75 304 675

1564

0015

(6141 448 0870 Or 1814) 237

7795

1993 20 1 Pro XL 20 Strutos
bass boa \ 200 XPHP 614 667
7347 0 614 949 2879

OFFICE 992-2886

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FOR SALE AND SOLD
IS TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Bruce Teaford
992 3325

Ron s TV ServiCe spec1allzmg 1n
Zen1th also serv ctn g most other
b rands Hou se calls 1 800 797

Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone (614) 446·0008

RABBIT· DEER SQUIRREL and who kn ows what else on
thts 68 acres m the Dexte r area Th1s one has an old house
With 2 dug wells Only $35 000

Ru9e 0 22 fie &amp; 4 power scope
$165 20 gauge s s shotgun $60

992-4451

0488 Rogers Waterproof ng Es

1989 Hond a 300 Fourtr ax 2wd
$2250 OBO 989 Yamaha 100

760

no

514 Second Ave, Galhpohs, Oh 45631

12 gauge sno she 1 reloa der
mu 1 stage Pac f c oader w Jots of
e.111 as $1 25 304 675 7129 before
9pnc

Ruger , 1 22 250 6118 Redf eld
sc ope (new) $700 Thompson
Cemer New Englande 50 ca ber
a so new $200 61 4 742 2768

4 Whee ler

Earls Home Ma nrenance v nyl
s dmg roof ng exteriOr and mter
or pa nung power wash
room
addlt ons Free Est matu 614

0

operalmg bus messes down sta1rs and a ful s ze apartment
parl&lt;~ng

Uncondll onal II let me guarantee
Local relerences lu n1shed Call

Ca1hngs textured plaster repa1r
Cal Tom 304 675 4166 20 years
ex penance

Streot stock 83 Monte Carlo 355
eng ne been bat TC trans Fo d
9 rear end d sc brakes ever y
th ng almosl new $4506 cal! 614

Real Estate General

upsta1 s also a large

Motorcycles

DRYWALL

Hang fin1sh repa r

)ec llon Au to A 1 57 000 M les

Snow Bla de &amp; AI achments For
Murray Mowe 614 446 9484

Teaford Real Estate
216 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
(614) 992-3325
Building on Second Street '" Pomeroy

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

VrRA FURNIWRE
614 446 3158
Oual ty Household Furn ture And
Appliances G ea1 DeaJs On
Cash And Carryl RENT 2 OWN
And layaway Also Ava lable
Free OeiNery W th n 25 M les

810

Home
Improvements

614 742 2124

19f 6 BMW 325 Beaut lui Car
Su.rool Cell Phone And All 614

19116 S t.Jnb~rd
614'992 5322

30 Ft Pace Arrow Moror Home
Generator Dual Roof AC Good
Condit on $16 500 OBO 614

SERVICES

0821 ti1 4 446 665
Auto l oans Deal9f w I arrange f
nanc ng even I you have been
tu ned down elsewhe e Up ton
Equ pment Used Cars 304 458

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

94g 3:&gt;21

Mol04 $1 250 080 614 446

2323

•

Allen C Wood Realtor/ Broker 446-4523
Ken Morgan Realtor/Broker 446 0971
Jeanette Moore Realtor 256 1745
Tim Watson Realtor 446 2027
Patnc1a Ross Realtor
NEW VACANT LAND 3 lots

NEW LISTING 2 bedrm 1
bath w1th refm1shable aM1c 2
lots approx 65 x 166
Bidwell area $29 000
1118

72 000 M les $6 000 Can Be

79 Z 28 Camaro an d 80 Z 28
Camara bo lh $250 call 614 742

1944 Bu ick Regal garage kept

closed October 23 1995 Persons
hav ng questions on warranties

pleasecall304 743-1 100

199 Grand Am Fully loaded
Excellen Cond liOn 614 256 1206
Ask For Mat or Arrr;

810

Due to healtt1 &amp; finanaal reasons
Cherokee Classi c Tmung was

1QQ1 G9o Storm $7 000 304

675 352&lt;l
'89 )hunderb rd SC two door 3 8
If&amp; V 6 e hte model tLJ rtlo PS
PB AC 5 spe ed power seats
and locks Great Car $6500
neg 614 992 7478 or 6t4 949

Auto Repair

1986 Jeep CJ 7 V 8 $1200 614
448 Bll58

6Df

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1· 800-894-1 066

t c Range 30 Harvest God Was
$150 Now $125 Chest F eeze
19 Cu F t S 50 Ska gg s Ap
p ances 76 V ne Street Ga I po
Is Oh o 614 446 739 8 1 800
499 3499

1991 Chevy Geo Metro 4 door

g no like new $2500 614 992

REALTORS:

no

vans &amp; 4-WDs

730

304 675 2192

32 LOCUST STREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631

COZV MOBILE HOME
INVESTMENT
Posttloned
3 t /2 acres
OPPORTUNITY 2 homes more or leon
ss
It has 2
located 1n downtown Vinton garages
a carport
L1ve 1n one and rent the workshop shed and a 2
other $75 000 CALL TO room cottage YOU MUST
SEE
1114
SEE THIS ONE! 11504

SIGNS Portable gh ed change
able letter s1gn w/Jetters $329
Free del very leners Plast c let
ters $55 (Second box lree) AAA
S gns t 800 533 3453 anytime

30 X40 X9 Pamted Steel S1des
Galvalt.Jme Steel Roof 15 x8 Sfeel
Sl1der 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Bu lders 1
9:lO 352 I 045

Autos for Sale

1990 Pont ac Grand Am $2 900
304 675 5091

446-1066

BEAUTIFUL HOME Spend
those cool mghls by a warm
!~replace 1n th1s lovely 2 story
home It has 3 bedrooms and
a garage Located on Route
7 tn the Gall pol s C1ty School
D1strtct PRICED TO SElL'
New On The Market A 1111
beauttful 24 x 56 double LOVELY HOME 2 story
wtde w1th a 1/2 acre lot more ho"'e located tn V1nton It
or less It has 3 bedrooms 2 has been remodeled It has 3
baths &amp; a 3 car garage bedrooms an~ a garage
YOU MUST SEE THIS
PRICED RIGHT! 1113
ONE! 1119

Santas Chr stmas Trees Stale
Route 850 Be1wee n At 35 and
Rodney We W II Cut 61 4 245

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL

LET US W0RK FOR YOU I
CALL US TODAY I

Gallipolis $7 000
Chr srmas pups AK C La bs
blacks and yellow s exce l ent
hun! ng stock or grcal fam ly dog
papers an d shots $250 6 14
9492411

2~522

WL~o~~T!!~R~~J1H~!C•

located
Hetghts

Plaasa ~~tl

FeeDet vey
446 74 44 Fa

2063

Pets for Sale

AKC
Oa matlan
puppt es
21emales shot s &amp; wormed

95
WV

Chr stmas l ay a way Spec all
55gal lank &amp; ho od $99 Ftsh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop 2413 Jackson
Ave Pont Ple a sa n 304 675

Mas&amp;tty Fergu son 160 Tractor
$5 950 Massey Fe rguson 175
$5 800 Massey Fergt.Json 135
0 esel $5 495 Fergt.J son T020.
With Bush Hog &amp; Blade $2 650

640
Peavey 6 channel PA syste m w
speakers $795 00 614 446

710

19 77 Manna blt.J e Corvette Ex
col}d 47 200 m1les $9500/obo
61fr441 0624

B g beauthJI AKC Chow puppes
only one blue and one black fe
male left $200 614 992 7574

Groom Shop Pet Groom ng Fea
tUr ng Hydro Bath J u 1e Webb
Call 614 446.0231

\ oo Hnces
Recond toned
Was hers 0 yers Ranges Ref
g a o s 90 Day Gua an ee

R 2 N Sm les P Plea san
lues Sat9 6 Sun 11 5

Me 6PM

0219
560

County Furn ure 30.4 675 6820

AKC Syber an HusK y Pups B ue
Eyes $ 25 One B ue Eye $100
Pet Only B eed ng Restr cted
6 4 446 8627
AKC Ye low Lab Pups Ready For
Chr stmas $300 614 256 6336

1 a er Space For Rem OJ
~d

Shephe d pups

Au stralian
Shols wormed

..

20 H ll sboro W th 4 Dove Tall
Gooseneck Tra1ler Excellent
Condit on 310 long Tra11er low
Hours 814 256-6574

614

Tw o M mature Co lhes (Shelt1es)
AKC Regs e ed Pupp es $200
614 367 0212

$50 6 4 2&lt;6 6765

9060

Ktmba ll Pt a no P ne Fantast c
Condtton One Owner $1300
Bench Sheet t.4t.JSIC Pr ov dad
614 441 1508 Leave Message

Jackson Oho

WHIT ES METAL DETE CTO RS
4336

Eddt Ike new $35000 614446
6591

614 286- 5689

USKC Reg sta red

Sta nless See Daube K chen
S n ~ W !h Metal Cab net 30 Ga
lo Sears Horwater Hea1e Tank
Elec c 3 Months Old Fu ll S ze
Wooden Bed Frame 614 388

Dove

HOLDAY SALE
HUMMINGBIRD MUSIC

Wanted To Buy Older Cameras
614 446 6452
Ron All son 1210 Second Ave
nue Ga I pols Oh10 614 446

Musical
Instruments

Alvarez acoustic gu 1a

Malamutet Ht.Jsky Pupptes Readv
For Christmas Blue Eyes &amp;
Brown Eyes S 00 or Less 614

610 Farm Equipment

Martin &amp; Gibson
Gu tars &amp; More

FRE t Color Catalog

__..,....:_-:--::---::---·1 65 ODD BTU LP Gas Healer

Call 614 368-8043

Poodl e pupp as t ny toy ma les
AKC champton bloodl ne shots
and wormed 614 667 3404

cu1 your own Clmstmas tree $15
Sr 7 top of Eastern School h II
!urn on Lo ct.J sl Grove 61 &lt;4 985

CommefCial Home Umts From
8t.Jy Factory O~rect And

570

Full Blooded Rotrwe ler Pupp1es

388 8962

SUMMERFIELD s TREE FARM

$199

Pets for Sale

955~

Upr ght Flon Evans Enterpr ses
Jackson Ohio 1 800-537 9528.

SUNOUEST WOLFF
TANNtNG BEOS

560

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 17, 1995·

Smart all br ck r anch 3 4
bed rooms 3 full ba th s fu ll
basement Eqwpped k1t and 2 car
garage located mm from town
Owne r wants ACTION Th s s the
best home cho ce near th e c11y

~1044

PRICE REDUCTION

Out bus ness wh ch ncludes all UNBELI EVABLE BU Y on th s
equ pment and stock If 1 has 1986 DW on 1oundatl0n 3 BR S
been your dream to have your 2 Baths LA OR k !ch en w/new
own bus ness th s could be I carpet oven refr g &amp; dishw asher
Dan 1 de lay call Claude Ieday Ut hty room Lots of closet space
2 car garage Shed flog kennel
Appt only
cove red deck 1/2 ac1e M/L Ca ll
FOR SALE OR LEASE N ce lot Pany 446 3884
thai ha s been c leared for
co mmerc al use Also a two &gt;1048 PRICE SLASHED FOR
bedroom home on edge of QUICK SALE Crown Ctv 4 BR
propeny l ew s Stree t
Pt Ranch w/ 12 ac M/L Sp nng water
ava table 2 000 gallon s1stern
Pleasant Call Claude 446 7609
Fue o I &amp;/or wood heat 2
2 sm bldgs Pr1ce
~1064 GALLI POLI S CITY 6 759 porches
Ac MIL Beaut1lul home w/ 3 bay reduced to $32 5001 Call Patty
w ndows 3 bedrm s 2 lull baths Hays 446 3884
Huge L A loads of storage 2 car
garage &amp; deck N ce prwate a ea H1049 PRICE REOUCED $31 000
Vacant MadiS on Ave J bedroom
Call before th s one s GONE
t bath on 2 lots La1ge k1tchen
N1051 PRICE SLASHED 1980 Full basement W th th1s pr ce you
Doublewdewllh 3BRs&amp; 11 /2 could afford the TLC 11 needs Call
oaths on 13 5 ac MIL 2 ca r Pany Hays 446 3884
garage Co ncret e foundat on
paved dr veway pond new v nyl N10t8 Tw o bedroom ranch on
s dmg Great buy' Call Patty Hays Kr ner Ad 5 ac M/l elec BB
heat and woodburner lg kitchen
446 3884
basement sp rmg water barn
1#1055 Two 1/2 ac (mil) o1s It 35 $37 000 Owner also w lhng to
&amp; 36m Rome l'wp Ut lt es ae trade for Ira tor w lh lot Call Patty
ava1labl( Fa111and school d str ct Hays 446 3884
$29 000 Call Patty Hays 446
.¥1028 A V nlon Two story 3
3884
bedroom home Wllh large eat tn
01059 KEMPER HOLLOW AD k Iehan fuel ml heat carpe ted
Immaculate 1993 lndtes Mobtle Aelr1g &amp; stove 1 y r old Fire
Home 2 266 acres m\1 3 BR 2 place Rem odeled 2 years ago
Baths vmyl s1ded pahO central Don I pay rent when you can own
a r shmgle roof trench dra n lh s n ce home for as little as
sec ur ty Hg nt re fng rang e $30 500 Call Patty Hays 446
carpele d lg bu d ng w th dog 3884
kenll91 Call Patty Hays 446 3884

Call VLS 388 8826

1028 B IN COME BOOSTER
f 1062 RUSTIC PRIVACY The V nton Duplex 1 Bedroom each

11035 34 Vnton St Aecen!ly
remodeled 2BA 1B V1nyl s d ng
home on a n ce deep lot Pnce rust
reduced Ia $29 000 Agent owned

quality of th s home w II astound
you AND your Fam1 y W II Love
You when you move nto th s
beat.Jtlful cozy lag cabm home for
Chnstmas Keep yo ur self cozy
warm by the beautllul stone
ftreplace 3 SA s 2 baths EnJOY
the beaut ful hot tub of! the Master
bedroom after a hard day of work
Entav the evenma stars from the
skyl ghts Lenex duel alec &amp; fuel
heat pump cen1ral a r sohd oak
cabinets ceram1c 111e rroors tn
K1tchen and bathrooms love ly
carpet Over look ng beau! ful
Charolars Lake 2+ ac Call Patty
Hays for show ng 446 38B4

Call Claude 446 7609
*1036 2BA spac ous eat n
k1tchen fu I basement and a large
storage bldg on an e:.:tra large lot
In c1ty Reduced to S53 500 Call

Claude for Appt

f994 COM MERCIAL LISTIN G
Large apt bldg wf2 un ts also
store room for a busmess or your
own bldg 46x96 m/1 Great
ncome 2 apts lor rental 1 store
rm 1 mob le home pad
f1 058

vmyl s ded Front Kitchen
w/washer &amp; dryer hookup fuel 011
heat arge L R w/ d n ng area
new carpet and new plumb ng
Range &amp; refr g Back total
electnc carpeted range refrlg
l ve m one and let the rent from
the other help pay your mortgage'
What a deal for $30 5001 Call
Pany Hays tor details

1028 C Vmton Two BA ranch
home electnc heat pump central
a r snack bar carpeted wood
deck range felng storm doors
and w1ndO'fiS Don I rent when you
can have th s mce hom e for only
$34 500 Call Patty Hays 446

3884

TEN ROOM 2 STORY 11 067 NEW LISTING CHESH RE

&amp; C IN COME
AREA 3 BA ranch home w/ 1 5 1028 A 8
baths lg. k1tchen w/lots of cab net BOOSTER/IMMEDIATE INCOME
buy all three homes for JUS! one
space Spac1ous L A ma ster BA
unbelievable pnce!
w/half bath eldra large uld ty rm
OFFER
tam11y rm 2t- acres Great lam ly
oome A so Roy Craft tra tor ntce f1034 LOCATION LOCATI ON
N1 045 NEW LISTING vacant lot tn monthly ncome to help pay your lOCATIONI That s what lh s
town $10 000
mortgage 2 car garage A must place hasa GREAT LOCATION II
Close to the c ty close to the
see Call Patty Hays 446 3884
hospital close to scho ols
50
tt046 Located 1154 &amp; 1154 1/2
2nd Ave 2 homes Very mce t 1038 3 BR 2 Ba1hs on 80 acres m/1 of vacant land All pub! c
bedroom balh krt &amp; LA &amp; DR acres n Jackson 2 rental homes utllltiBS available Land s level ro
ful basement 2 car garage Also on property Let the 2 rentals pay roll ng can Party 446 3884
a 2 bedroom comfortable cottage your monaget
11047 HURRY TO OWN THIS
to rent New kil carpet w1ndows
Call IOf full mtorma110n
1995 2 BR Ranch home on large Cute &amp; Cozy J BR ran ch n
lot n PI Pleasant Cleared for Rodney V llage II Separate ut hly
room Lot w1th fenced yard C ly
f874 CHESHIRE Beaut ful 3 commerc alt.Jse
schools Extras mclude w ndow
bedrm stone faced ho me lam ly
bath lovely LA w/lireplace ft.J\1 1# 101 2 4 BA Ranch home on cfir w ood burner ce11 ng tan s
baseme nt w/1/2 bath lam ly rm Oakwood Dr 2 5 baths gas heat satellite d sh large cement back
porch Pr~ce d to sell Call Patty
also w/f replace 2 car detached cent al a r qu et neighborhood
448 3884
garage 3 ac m/1 $70 000
located close to the C ty of
Gallipolis 4/5 bedrms 2 1/2 baths
2 llreplaces gas heat detached
garage 3 1/2 ac M/L MAKE

RIVER LOTI Over
acre
county
~·•6"''"
available n1ce &amp; level
frontage along SA 7 Let
sell you thts one

t1032 DON T PUT GRAMPS
1964 LOTS AVAILABLE n a OUT TO PASTURE YETI YOU
neighborhoOd with CLASS buy 5
acres more or less for $29 900 or CAN GET THE BE ST FOR
2 1/2 m/1 acres to $15 900 or GRAMPS AND YOUR FAMILY f
comer lots for $18 900 Lakev1ew
Estate has only 2 cho1ce lots 5 ac
for $33 000 and 2 348 acres
$25 900 Restrictive covenants
apply to protect your 1nveslment

11025 1661 MCCORMICK AD A
Rare Jewel close to town 3 BR s
3 bathS cathedral ce1Ung eat 1n

krtcMn formal din nn huge living
room utility back &amp; front porch
~ AC m,1 Secluded Parad1se

Bldg

111068 Apartment on St At 160
1mmed1ate poss Per m t .2Bds
eat mk !chen large I v1ng room
washer &amp; dryer space b g closet
you buy thts beautJiul Dakota has a back porch 1/2 acre m/1
Farm Home wth 4 BA s &amp; 3 Very welllnsulatK&gt;n CALL ETIA
Baths Large &amp; Spacious Rooms
111065 Cozy littl e cott age 2 Bds
12 nch lnsula!1on to g1ve vou the eat 1n kitchen new stm w n small
bes t msulallon and sound out building an large level Jot
proof ng
Lov ely
grade 29 900 can ETIA
sta .nmaster carpet hemlock
siding 5• acres Up sta ut htv rm 111063 VERY mce I vlng room
17 x36 w!FP 48ds d1n1ng room
1g kitchen w/dlmng area custom
eatm kttchen all on x large lot
made ptne cabinets hot point w/bam 45 900 Call ETIA
refng range &amp; d1sh washer bu h
In m1crowave d~posal 3 BR s 2 1 1061 Graham School Ad 8

11012 4 BR Ranch home on
Oakwood Dr 2 5 baths, gas heat full baths beaut"ul LA wN1replace acres m/1 3 Bds 2Bds x large

l1v ng room with fireplace equip
kitchen uthty room elec heat
11038 3 BR 2 Baths on 80 acres Downstairs for GRAMPS K~chen pump and two large out buld1ng In
in Jackson 2 rental homes on w/custom mad e solid oak 1he Cll'/ SChOOl d1Strlc1 caH ETIA.
central atr qu~t netghborhood

wrap around covered porch

property

oablnets r6frlg range 8 bar

w/recessed lights dmlng areas lg 11004 RIO GRANDE corner lot
11039 3BR home on 9 acres MIL LR w/FP 1 BR full bath s1orage zoned commercial 3 office rms
below the Swan room cement porth much mora storage rm UNDERGROUND
TANKS HAVE BEEN REMOVED
"'•· ~.-~'"" for You will love thts llousel $159 500 $50000

I

1

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